A 200-head dairy farm on the Devon/Cornwall border is to open its gates to show fellow dairy farmers how installing milking robots have helped create a future for the family and the herd.

Newlands Farm is owned by Robert and Elizabeth Haworth. Their daughter Sarah manages the farm with her partner David Luxton and in 2018 the couple chose to make a major investment by introducing a DeLaval robotic milking system.

“Sarah and I had to make a big decision about the future of the herd and the dairy. We knew we needed to invest and robots offered us an opportunity to future proof the farm,” said David.

Three milking robots were installed on the farm in a newly constructed shed designed for the 200 pedigree Holstein herd.

David explained: “We have opted for a guided cow traffic system which gives our cows the choice of when to rest, feed and visit the robots to be milked. It has also given us the opportunity to spend more time managing the farm and its future.”

The previous 16:16 parlour was deteriorating, and the couple worked very long hours milking and maintaining the equipment.

“Our twins were born five years ago. We knew something had to change if we were going to be parents and dairy farmers. It was a case of change the parlour or look at more drastic measures,” said David.

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The cows pass through the guided traffic system which includes a series of gates and automated checks, up to 16 times.

However, each cow will only gain milking permission an average of 2.5 times per day depending on individual yield and stage of lactation.

Each cow is monitored using farm management software that gives David a performance dashboard on his PC and his phone.

The frequency each cow is milked, the yield and any health problems are all available remotely.

He said: “Even if I am away, I know exactly what is happening. I can interpret the data provided by the robots to manage every cow individually.”

David operates a multi cut silage system and in 2019 was able to make five cuts.

His silage is 11.5 ME has a 70 D value and contains 20 per cent protein.

This helps the herd to deliver milk with at least 4.2 per cent fat and 3.2 per cent protein.

In the previous parlour system, the cows yielded an average of 31 litres per head.

This has increased to 33.5 litres, an additional 430 litres every day in the six months the robotic system has been in place.

On April 2 2020 Sarah and David are opening their gates to other curious farmers who want to see how a DeLaval robotic milking system works.

To book a place on the farm tour and hear how Sarah and David are benefitting go to delaval.com or call 01278 652265.