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Statement
For
further information contact:
Edwina
Clowes,
RIRDC
Rural Women's Award National Coordinator.
Phone:
07 5445 7282
Mobile:
0417 727 544
clowesedwina@bigpond.com
©
2010 RIRDC
 |
New
South Wales - Gillian Hogendyk |
2009
Runner-Up for New South Wales - Gillian Hogendyk
Gillian is a Veterinarian, however, her commitment
to primary industries and its sustainability is principally through her
voluntary work. She has represented the Macquarie Valley on the National
Parks and Wildlife Community Advisory Committee, having served on this
committee for 11 years. Through the Committee Gillian has developed a strong
interest in the Macquarie Marshes and in how the irrigation community can
be involved in conserving the marshes. She along with 30 other local landholders
helped form a unit trust to purchase a small property in the Marshes called
‘Burrima’ and to manage it for conservation outcomes. Burrima is now regularly
visited by school, university, research and NRM groups for educational
purposes.
Gillian is deeply concerned over the national
water issue and the current arrangements of buying water as the sole means
of achieving environmental outcomes. Her group, the Macquarie Marshes Environmental
Trust, purchased a small property in the Macquarie Marshes, removed cattle
from it and set about actively revegetating it. The response has been spectacular,
with reed beds regenerating rapidly, native plants choking out invasive
weeds, and increasing biodiversity. The work has shown what environmental
gains can be achieved through improved land and water management. Gillian
would like to see a larger proportion of the funds currently earmarked
for water purchase being used to fund on ground projects like the one she
helps to manage. In this way she believes rural communities can be sustained
and can be part of the water solution.
.
Gillian’s Award ambition is to a tour a number
of wetlands in the Murray Darling Basin, focusing on those that are managed
for conservation by non government or community organisations, exploring
the costs, benefits, problems and solutions they have encountered with
a view to applying her learning’s to the Marshes and more widely in the
Basin.
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Queensland
- Wendy Agar |
2009 Runner-Up for
Queensland - Wendy Agar
Wendy Agar and her family own and operate Myendetta
Station, a 18,000 hectare property thirty kilometres south west of Charleville.
Myendetta Station is a sheep and cattle property and a rural tourism venture
and has been in Richard Agar’s family since 1890. Wendy is an active participant
in a number of rural organizations including Agforce, the Future Farmers
Network and the Queensland Rural Women’s Network. She was also a delegate
to the Queensland government’s Rural Women’s Symposium in Roma.
Wendy is passionate about learning and education
and about promoting and marketing the bush. She has undergone a steep learning
curve in the last seven years, including undertaking training in holistic
management, business management and personal development to build her business
skills and decision making. She has also completed a number of short tourism
courses, and in 2003 in response to drought, Myendetta Station through
the Outback Queensland Tourism Association commenced a tourism operation.
Wendy’s Award ambition is to develop a series
of educational webinars and teleconferences for other women on the land
who have experienced the harsh realities of drought and fluctuating commodity
prices.
The webinars will not only provide valuable information
and discussion with informed speakers, but will also provide a network
for women coping with drought and with isolation to share their experiences
and to support each other.
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Western
Australia - Doris Parker |
2009 Runner-Up for
South Australia - Doris Parker
Doris Parker, along with her husband and family,
has been managing Peedamulla Station in the Pilbara pastoral industry for
the past ten years. The station was bought for Doris’ community back in
1975, when at its peak it ran 15,000 sheep and 1,500 cattle. But drought,
lack of money and the fall in wool prices brought trouble to the community;
Trevor and Doris took over the running of the station in 1981 and began
the huge task of repaying the community’s outstanding debts, building up
the cattle herd and restoring the station back to a viable concern. Doris
also works as a Customer Service Officer for the Department of Child Protection
at Onslow, fostering children and providing a safe rural haven for many
out on Peedamulla Station.
Her life story is one of how an Aboriginal woman
can have a significant impact on the sustainability of the Pilbara pastoral
industry, by combining her cultural heritage and wisdom, organizational
ability and maternal instinct, to become a role model for future generations
of Aboriginal pastoralists.
Doris’ vision is to free the next generation from
their dependence the welfare system and on alcohol and drugs, and to instill
in them her passion for the land and the stock, and to encourage in them
the skills to run a top performing cattle station.
Her Award ambition is to write a book documenting
her life story, so exposing the next generation to the wisdom of their
elders and by doing so provide leadership and encouragement, to steer for
them a path of higher expectations. She is also seeking training in leadership
to assist her with engaging the youth in culture and to voice the wisdom
of Aboriginal women in steering the younger women to believe in themselves
and in their future.
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Northern
Territory - Moira Lanzarin
|
2009 Runner-Up for the
Northern Territory - Moira Lanzarin Moira comes from modern pioneering stock and is
currently a Director of family-run Coodardie Brahmans. They operate 2 cattle
properties, Coodardie and Numul Numul Station in the Mataranka region of
the Northern Territory. They run approximately 3000 head of Brahman cattle
and Moira co directs the business, selling and promoting Coodardie stud
cattle across the north.
Moira is an active member of Australian Women
in Agriculture, she was a keynote speaker at the 2000 National Conference
in Darwin, she has represented Northern Australia on the Deputy Prime Minister’s
Inaugural Regional Women’s Advisory Council, and she has represented the
Territory at the World Congress of Young Farmers in Paris in 2003 and was
appointed to the first Federal Council of Young Farmers in 2006.
Moira believes that rural Australia is facing
increasingly difficult times that will require new skills and greater adaptability
to handle change. She believes holistic management is a decision
making framework that provides real tools to help individuals make better
decisions which will simultaneously lead to a more environmentally, economically
and socially sustainable land, business and community.
Moira’s Award ambition is to become a Certified
Educator in Holistic Management for northern Australia. Her ambition is
to be accepted into the Holistic Management International’s Certified Educator
Program,
to undertake training, to travel to the International Holistic Management
Institute in Albuquerque in the US to meet with HM practitioners, and to
return with greater knowledge and exposure and to share her learning’s
through her local Learning Community with northern Australia.
|

Victoria - Kate Wilson |
2009 Runner-Up for
Victoria - Kate Wilson Kate Wilson has been a broadacre agronomist for
the past fifteen years and at the forefront of advising growers on sustainable
agricultural practices. She is also a partner with her husband in a 5,000
hectare broad-acre cropping operation.
Kate’s key roles as a consultant include developing
farm plans based on profitability and sustainability, providing clients
with advice on crop rotation and variety selection, assisting with fertilizer
and nutrition decisions, along with in crop nutrition and herbicide advice,
disease and pest identification and gross margin analysis. She is also
an active member of the Birchip Cropping Group’s Advisory Committee, having
undertaken consultancy work and delivered group training workshops to the
group.
Her vision is for growers to consistently achieve
their potential yields through better understanding the interaction between
soil, water and the crops they grow, so that broadacre farming becomes
more profitable, viable and sustainable.
Kate’s Award ambition is to undertake a study
tour of the United States and Canada to gain a greater understanding of
soil biology. She is particularly interested in the work of Dr Dwayne Beck
at the Dakota Lakes Research Farm. Her new learnings’ and ideas she will
disseminate back to her client base, to the Birchip Cropping Group and
to the regions’ farmers.
|

South Australia - Ulli Spranz |
2009 Runner-Up for South
Australia - Ulli Spranz Ulli Spranz is a pioneer in biological and organic
farming in South Australia and she with her husband Helmet are the Principals
of B-d Farm Paris Creek and Paris Creek Cheese Pty Ltd. which include a
biodynamic dairy farming property, a milk processing plant and cheese manufacturing.
They have 38 employees, process 2.9 million litres of milk a year and in
2008 sold in excess of $5 million of product.
She was one of the founding members of the Biodynamic
and Organic Agricultural Bureau, a farmer organization established to network
and exchange experiences, and she is currently Chair of Biodynamic Agriculture
Australia Ltd, recognized as the most successful biodynamic organization
worldwide.
Ulli’s passion is to educate others in biodynamic
and organic farming principles. Her Award ambition is to continue to grow
the work she currently does in educating others in biodynamic farming,
through conducting courses and workshops to promote biodynamic and organic
farming principles and making the workshops available to not only farmers
but a variety of interested people at low cost and in various geographic
locations.
She plans to travel overseas to Europe to exchange
information with rural women groups and to discuss environmental issues
that hold worldwide significance.
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Tasmania - Jane
Huntington |
2009 Runner-Up for Tasmania
- Jane Huntington Jane and her husband are the principals in the
family farm business The Two Metre Tall Company. The business is based
at their property ‘Charlemont’ in the Derwent Valley in southern Tasmania.
Jane and her husband came to farming via the wine
industry and they have successfully transferred their understanding and
expertise in the winery to a grain growing and brewery business. They value
add their grains by making naturally fermented and hand made real ale on
farm. Diversification into real ales has significantly drought proofed
their farm and made their business much more robust than had they been
relying on commodity markets for sale of grain alone.
She has a vision for beer manufacturing that uses
much larger percentages of Australian grown and processed malt as well
as a greater selection of grain varieties for an increased flavour spectrum.
Jane’s Award ambition is to travel to England
to research their well established malt barley industry. She wants to study
relationships as they already exist between contracted grain growers and
the specialist floor malting companies. She also wants to tap into their
experience on the relationship between grain variety and beer quality.
Jane’s believes the study tour, in bringing back
new knowledge from the established malt barley industry will not only be
extremely valuable to the expansion of her business but to the future development
of this niche industry nationally. |
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