Ruralco Shop
Shop Online
Where Can I Use My Card
Online Terms of Trade
In Season Deals
Join Ruralco
Become a Shareholder
Become a Merchant
Make The Most Of Local
Terms & Conditions
Fuel & Energy
Energy
Electricity
Gas
Solar
Fuel
Fuel Cards
Bulk Fuel
Fuel Storage and Monitoring
Home Heating
Bulk Fuel Order Form
Farm Advice & Services
Animal Health
Boost
Dairy
Fertiliser
Seed & Agronomy
Ruralco Pasture Packs
Grain Report
Agronomy Guide
Weather
About Us
Real Farmer
Ruralco Careers
Annual Report
Sponsorship
Legal Policies
Ruralco Privacy Policy
Ruralco Energy Privacy Policy
Ruralco Hardship Policy
Contact & Support
Our People
Our Stores
Ruralco Shop
Shop Online
Where Can I Use My Card
Online Terms of Trade
In Season Deals
Join Ruralco
Become a Shareholder
Become a Merchant
Make The Most Of Local
Terms & Conditions
Fuel & Energy
Energy
Electricity
Gas
Solar
Fuel
Fuel Cards
Bulk Fuel
Fuel Storage and Monitoring
Home Heating
Bulk Fuel Order Form
Farm Advice & Services
Animal Health
Boost
Dairy
Fertiliser
Seed & Agronomy
Ruralco Pasture Packs
Grain Report
Agronomy Guide
Weather
About Us
Real Farmer
Ruralco Careers
Annual Report
Sponsorship
Legal Policies
Ruralco Privacy Policy
Ruralco Energy Privacy Policy
Ruralco Hardship Policy
Contact & Support
Our People
Our Stores
Search within results
Login
My Dashboard
|
Create a login
Login
Search within results
My Dashboard
|
Login
+
Ruralco Shop
Shop Online
Where Can I Use My Card
Online Terms of Trade
In Season Deals
+
Join Ruralco
Become a Shareholder
Become a Merchant
Make The Most Of Local
Terms & Conditions
+
Fuel & Energy
+
Energy
Electricity
Gas
Solar
+
Fuel
Fuel Cards
Bulk Fuel
Fuel Storage and Monitoring
Home Heating
Bulk Fuel Order Form
+
Farm Advice & Services
Animal Health
Boost
Dairy
Fertiliser
+
Seed & Agronomy
Ruralco Pasture Packs
Grain Report
Agronomy Guide
Weather
+
About Us
Real Farmer
Ruralco Careers
Annual Report
Sponsorship
+
Legal Policies
Ruralco Privacy Policy
Ruralco Energy Privacy Policy
Ruralco Hardship Policy
+
Contact & Support
Our People
Our Stores
Shopping Cart
Your cart full of all your selected items
Order Total
$0.00
Checkout
 
0
item(s)
$0.00
Dargaville
Kerikeri
Kaikohe
Whangarei
Auckland
Hunua
Kumeu
Manukau
North Shore
Pukekohe
Waitakere
Warkworth
Whitianga
Thames
Paeroa
Matamata
Te Awamutu
Tokoroa
Te Kuiti
Rotorua
Te Puke
Whakatane
Taupo
Gisborne
Ruatoria
Mahia
Eastern Rangitaiki
Hastings
Waipukurau
New Plymouth
Hawera
Taumarunui
Waiouru
Whanganui
Ohakea
Palmerston North
Levin
Otaki
Te Horo
Dannevirke
Castlepoint
Martinborough
Masterton
Judgeford
Kapiti
Lower Hutt
Lyall Bay
Ohariu Valley
Porirua
Upper Hutt
Wainuiomata
Wellington
Blenheim
Kaikoura
Motueka
Takaka
Westport
Hokitika
Haast
Franz Josef
Waipara
Darfield
Rakaia
Timaru
Methven
Culverden
Omarama
Twizel
Banks Peninsula
Christchurch
Eastern Suburbs
Hill Top
Lincoln
Marshlands
Port Hills
Oamaru
Alexandra
Queenstown
Wanaka
Dunedin
Mosgiel
Middlemarch
Waitati
Nugget Point
Te Anau
Lumsden
Gore
Hamilton
Kaitaia
Napier
Paihia
Paraparaumu
Tauranga
Ashburton
Invercargill
Milford Sound
Mount Cook
Queenstown
Home
About Us
Latest Ruralco News
Latest News
Latest News
For everything Ruralco and Real Farmer
Buy now, split the payments with your Ruralco Card
Split the payment over three months for larger purchases with Dan Cosgrove, Ensol & FMC.Simply advise the participating supplier that you would like to split your payment. Your invoice will then be split into three equal interest-free payments over the following three months.
Read More
Speckle Park breed joins the dots for success
Surrounded by dairy farms in Culverden, Robbie and Anna Clark could be forgiven for feeling under siege by the industry, but instead have managed to turn their situation into an opportunity, both for them and their dairying neighbours. The Clarks have established Parkvale Speckle Park Stud, home to one of the country’s fastest growing cattle breeds that is helping dairy farmers meet the challenges of reducing calf wastage, and providing some valuable new genetics to New Zealand’s beef sector.
Read More
Farmer plots a regenerative journey
Canterbury is becoming a hub for growing commitment to regenerative farming. The region’s tapestry of farming regimes and a new generation of farmers keen to try alternative approaches mean regenerative practices are becoming more commonly accepted, and widely discussed. Ashburton farmer Ryan Cockburn is part of the movement, taking the family’s long-time cropping and livestock farm down the regenerative pathway.
Read More
Farm reinvented as wedding venue
Once home to one of the country’s leading red deer herds, Mark and India van der Wilt have put Bangor Farm back on the map, transforming it into a thriving wedding venue and function centre.
Read More
Big challenges align for 2021
For many people around the world, farewelling 2020 came with the hope that 2021 would somehow bring a break to the gloom and depression of the Covid-19 epidemic. But many in Europe and North America may well have felt 2021 has so far offered little such respite, particularly as winter descended. Meantime in New Zealand the sense of being a lifeboat country amid the tumultuous global epidemic continues. This was only heightened amid the swirl of festive events and holidays as the country enjo...
Read More
Primary sector powers NZ through tough times
Recent data from Rabobank provided a very upbeat overview of how well the primary sector has weathered the turmoil of the Covid-19 pandemic. Amidst that turbulence, New Zealand growers and farmers are poised to enjoy the fifth consecutive year of profitability in 2021. Whether it is milk solids, Manuka honey, wine, kiwifruit, or red meat prospects appear sound as the world’s consumers align their diets with good quality, healthy food from a country increasingly seen as an oasis against th...
Read More
When every kilo counts
New rules soon to come into force mean getting the most from nitrogen (N) applied is more important than ever. The rules, which apply from 1 July 2021 for the 2021/22 season, cap synthetic N use at 190 kg N/ha/year on any grazed hectare of pasture (excluding forage crops).
Read More
Catch cropping to reduce nitrate leaching
The risk of nitrogen (N) leaching from urine patches, deposited while stock are grazing winter crops, is considerable. Soils that are left fallow, post-winter grazing, create a high probability of soil drainage and nutrient losses, which in turn may affect spring and annual production. Catch crops are used to cover the fallow ground and take up the urinary N deposited during winter grazing, reducing the risk of nitrate leaching.
Read More
You’ll rate it too
Latest independent performance trials for New Zealand pastures have reinforced what farmers have already discovered for themselves with one of Seed Force’s leading perennial ryegrasses.
Read More
SustaiN principles (SustaiN vs urea)
There’s a convenient, cost-effective way to keep your nitrogen investment in the ground for plant use.
Read More
Page 23 of 40
First
Previous
21
22
[23]
24
25
Next
Last
Fertiliser
(22)
Farmer Stories
(13)
Interest
(31)
Technical
(57)
Lifestyle
(21)
Wellbeing
(10)
Card
(4)
Our farmers
Pork
Future Farmers NZ
Christmas
Technology
Real Farmer
Ruralco News
Our Merchants
Beef + Lamb NZ
Places To Visit
FMG
Feed Out
Hynds Ashburton
Animal Health
Energy
Recipe
Agriculture
Technical
Farming
Decor
20150419
Account Selector
Do not show again