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XtraBlatt Issue 02-2017

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  • Krone
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  • Forage
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  • Maize
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MENSCHEN INTERNATIONAL

MENSCHEN INTERNATIONAL Rudolf Bigler’s cows produce an impressive 7000 l from the forage ration alone. the same as far as guaranteeing a profitable end-price is concerned. With the example of Emmental cheese, this managed an annual production of 50,000 t over many years. Nowadays this figure is 17,000 t. Unfortunately, nowadays half the world produces large-hole cheese like Emmental, with a sad effect on price and the Swiss dairy farmer. Also, here applies: (too) many hunters kill off the hares. Therefore: off to pastures new. Rudolf Bigler is already on his way towards a better future. His daily work is all about milk. Not that he has to himself milk his 120 cows. His two Lely robots take care of that twice or, depending on milk production, thrice per day. And the feeding, too, is handled by colleague robot. What keeps him busy currently, taking up about one third of his work output, is the marketing of his milk, naturally with the long-term target of better milk price margins, not only for himself but also for thousands of his colleagues. “GREENEST” CHEESE IN EUROPE 44 Alongside honorary undertakings in the milk branch organization, Rudolf Bigler is also administrative president of “aaremilch” (www.aaremilch.ch). Behind this is a milk pool from 2,000 farmers from Canton Bern that together market their milk to various processors. Now, the organisation takes a big step forward, planning its own cheese making plant. “We aim to build the greenest cheese plant in Europe,” enthuses Rudolf Bigler. “With our own cheese production, we see better added value and also because environmentally friendly production is a marketing argument.” But what does “greenest” cheese actually mean? “Green, i.e. very protective of the environment, because the system will be energy-efficient and sustainable. We aim to get energy from regionally produced wood chips with warm water and electricity produced on the roof. In the future a proportion of the whey will be used in biogas production,” he hopes. The fathers of the “aare-milch” reckon on a yearly cheese production of 2000 to 3000 t. Already, the marketing of their own cheese has led to very many contacts signed in other countries, because most of the cheese will be for export. The Swiss cheese market is mostly satiated. Naturally, of great importance to the survival of this aare-milch project is not only sufficient and stable milk supplies, but also personnel skilled in production and marketing. Equally essential: the right retail customers. All this, says Bigler, is possible and – partially – already home and dry. However, most of the 2000 dairy farmers still keep their beasts in traditional byres bound by the neck. Bigler is uneasy about the fact that one factor is unescapable: new cow accommodation will have to be built by many members. The current housing, he fears, could have a negative effect on image and the marketing of the products from the planned cheese plant. Nowadays, consumers are very critical in terms of animal welfare. He says that the construction of an own cheese plant at Oey Diemtigen is well underway and that marketing via a daughter society is also well ahead, with contracts already agreed with future customers. Hay milk, but also silage milk, is to be cheesed. A public limited company has been chosen as society form, such an arrangement being more flexible, reckons Bigler, and faster-acting than a cooperative. The 2000 dairy farmers are shareholders within aare-milch which in turn is main stock-holder of the new society formed to build the cheese plant. Currently, 0.5 Rp/l is withheld from producers’ payments in order to build-up own capital for the new plant. The architectural blueprints were submitted in summer. And it’s planned that production will start in 2019. “This is ambitious. But this way we move onwards, getting results more quickly and how it will suit farmers and customers. That’s for sure.”

THE BIGLER BUSINESS IN SHORT Farm: 3302 Moosseedorf, Switzerland. Rudolf Bigler and wife Christine. Children: Anja (27), Manuela (26), Daniela (25) and Simon (22). 120 cows plus followers, over 7000 l from forage, average production life: 4 lactations. 130 sows farrow to finish. 70 ha land, 15 ha woodland. Labour: Crops: Feed: Farmer and wife, three employees and one farm student. 10 ha potatoes, 15 ha cereals, 4 ha sugar beet, 15 ha grain/forage maize, 15 ha grassland, 5 ha permanent pasture. Average five grass cuts of which the 1st and 5th are for silage (made with silage additive). Other cuts for hay (in-barn ventilation). Grass is drilled into stubble after cereal harvest. This catch crop grass is cut once in autumn and once again in spring before establishment of maize, beet and potato crops. Bought-in is feed from around 50 ha of forage and grain maize. Harvesting: Grass with own mower, tedder and forage wagon. Maize harvested and chopped to 20 mm by contractor and mixed with beet pulp in the clamp. 45