The life of a dairy farmer is long hours and hard graft: awake before dawn, working all day long and unable to rest until the cows come home. But things are changing, thanks to a technology that hands control of the milking process over to an unusual agency — the cows themselves.
Robotic Voluntary Milking Systems, which are increasingly popular, let cows decide when they need to be milked, rather than submitting them to the grind of twice-daily milking that is the routine on most dairy farms. The technology has been pioneered by Dutch engineers, who say it is the perfect solution to farming’s cow conundrum.
Milking robots cost about £60 000 each, and have been rolled out at hundreds of farms in the United States and Europe. The cows wear electronic tags and when they decide they need milking — about six or seven times a day — they enter the shed and are identified by the system.
As they line up to be milked, a laser-guided robot locates the cow’s udder and then latches on to its teats. Developers say that it is easy for cows to grasp the basic mechanics of the system, and letting them control the milking schedules actually increases their productivity.
It’s a revolution that’s been gathering pace since the first virtual milking machines were built in the late 1990s.
”More and more farmers are choosing an automatic system,” says Thierry Perrotin, a manager with DeLaval, and the figures bear him out: his company sold more than 300 milking robots in the first half of this year.
Critics of mass farming say that although voluntary systems are more humane than traditional methods, they do little to alleviate the real problems with factory methods. But few doubt that giving the animals control over when they are milked is a step forward.
And now the revolution is spreading further afield, with Australia the latest nation to take it on board. The government of New South Wales is now pumping more than £2,1-million into finding out what the benefits for the region’s farmers could be. — Guardian Unlimited Â