Queensland beef producers Michael and Terri-Ann Crothers are in the early stages of participating in the pilot project, which is aimed at introducing biosecurity planning across the OBE group.
“Biosecurity is important for an organic property, but I think it’s important for everybody, especially in a country like Australia, where we don’t have a lot of the issues that they have in Europe and Asia, but we want to protect that,” Mrs Crothers said.
“We’ve got people coming onto the property, we’ve got trucks, agents and visitors so we need to protect our product and our livestock and in doing so also be good neighbours, because a biosecurity issue is about agriculture as a whole and it’s important to look after one another.”
The Crothers manage the property ‘Gilling’, which is located 40km east of Goondiwindi and is part of Brook Pastoral. The property has been handling organic cattle for OBE for around six years.
They finish about 4000 head per year, with cattle coming in from other Brook Pastoral blocks at Birdsville and the Channel Country.
“Our organic beef is being bought by consumers in New York and Dubai, and it’s important to them – and in fact to everyone who eats food – that it comes from a healthy place and that producers are looking after their animals as well as their land. I think biosecurity is definitely a part of that,” Mrs Crothers said.
“What we’ve found in those initial discussions with LBN is that a lot of what we are already doing through our organic management planning and auditing is actually very similar; there’s not a lot of adjustments,” Mrs Crothers said.
“We feel that it will flow on very easily from what we are doing as an organic property.