Following
our visit to Mike Solari's, Steve and I headed on to a very last minute appointment
having seen an article in a farming magazine all about the use of drones in
Agriculture. Neil and his son Mark have
been developing remote control drones (helicopters) to help with livestock observations
and monitoring on their 446 Ha family farm. When some technical issues have
been ironed out this technology is going to be a game changer for livestock and
arable farmers, of that I am sure. So what
are the boys up to?
The drone, which can currently fly for 22 minutes has the ability to
follow a flight path or as Mark, who’s 13 – (the pilot), calls it ‘the
mission’. Following GPS coordinates the
drone can fly out to inspect water troughs to look for leaks and record video footage of any that are
currently not working or leaking. The drone is also
able to record its flight paths through a Go-Pro camera which can record what
it sees. This means that video footage
of the sheep paddocks can be viewed to count sheep or check for cast sheep or
those having difficulty lambing. The
drone flies high enough to not disturb the livestock, which is a massive
benefit. The drone can check the water troughs
around the farm in 20 minutes, a task that tasks 2 hours on a quad bike. Imagine the savings in fuel and labour, all
lowering the carbon footprint of the farm.
If an issue is identified then direct action can be taken to go straight
to the problem immediately.
The camera is able to take still images of the paddock and using
software developed for counting penguins in Antarctica sheep numbers, including
differentiation between ewes and lambs, can be recorded.
Mark and Neil are very confident about the wide range of uses for
the equipment. In an arable situation it
could easily be used to monitor leaf area index or crop emergence at the far
end of the field, saving time by not having to walk everywhere. Imagine crop walking 440ha in and hour or so
and having recorded footage to monitor immediately or later in the season. It could be used to check crop emergence or
to identify weeds around the paddock. Leaf
area index maps could easily be constructed with farm software to create
variable rate fertiliser plans. Imagine
using the drone to round up the cows before milking so they are ready and
waiting for you at the cow shed when you turn up having spent an extra half and
hour in bed!
From a farm safety angle it
could be deployed to round up deer or herd sheep in form the steepest farmland
avoiding the need to take a quad bike up onto difficult terrain. The
possibilities are endless and it was great to hear the passion and vision that
Neil has for the project and it will be very interesting to see what the
project evolves into.