Humans of Agriculture

Humans of Agriculture
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Apr 13, 2026 • 1h 6min

Fuel, Fertiliser & Feeds: How Charlie Blomfield Is Rewriting Ag’s Public Narrative

Charlie Blomfield isn’t just building a farm business, he’s building a voice that agriculture can’t afford to ignore.In this episode of Humans of Agriculture, Oli sits down with Charlie Blomfield at Boridgeree, just outside Canowindra in Central West NSW. Farmer, business owner, marketer and one of the most talked-about voices in Australian agriculture right now, Charlie shares what’s driving him, how he’s built GreatHAY, and why he’s chosen to step so publicly into conversations around ag, media and advocacy.From growing up in a tough era for agriculture, to working across Northern Australia and the Middle East, to building a modern mixed farming and hay business from the ground up, Charlie’s story is shaped by curiosity, conviction and a willingness to back himself.But this conversation goes beyond the farm gate.It explores the role agriculture must play in telling its story better, why traditional industry communication is falling behind, and how humour, clarity and honesty are helping Charlie connect with audiences far beyond agriculture.This episode is about leadership, relevance, building teams, making hard decisions under pressure, and why the future of agriculture depends on more people being willing to speak in ways the rest of the country can actually understand.Key insights from the conversationHow Charlie went from asset management and private equity to building BoridgereeWhy water security and flexibility shaped their move to CanowindraThe evolution of Boridgeree from mixed farming into a branded hay businessWhy GreatHAY was built around simplicity, clarity and cut-throughHow social media became more than marketing and turned into a platform for advocacyWhat agriculture gets wrong when it tries to communicate with the broader publicWhy humour, character and storytelling are powerful tools for building trustHow Charlie thinks about leadership, team culture and accountability on farmThe value of coaching, perspective and creating time for what matters mostWhy agriculture needs more voices that are credible, human and willing to say what they really thinkChapters:00:02 Introduction and why this conversation matters02:03 Who Charlie is and what drives him05:13 Growing up in ag and forging his own path06:21 Global experiences and gaining perspective10:30 Starting in business and backing himself early12:00 Moving into farming and building Boridgeree14:16 Water strategy and evolving the farm business17:35 Building GreatHAY and the power of simplicity20:27 Social media, storytelling and cutting through22:57 Building teams, culture and leadership27:47 Coaching, performance and managing priorities34:31 Stepping into media and why ag comms is broken40:10 Using influence to drive change in agriculture46:28 Momentum, opportunity and staying relevant53:18 Decision-making, perspective and what matters most01:00:05 Advice for the next generation and future of ag
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Apr 9, 2026 • 34min

Optiweigh, Succession, Markets & Ag Supply Chains: 4 Voices from CommBank Cultivate:

This is a special Humans of Agriculture “radio-style” episode recorded at CommBank’s Cultivate event in the Hunter Valley — bringing together voices from across the agricultural supply chain.Across four mini-conversations, we unpack the key forces shaping modern agriculture: Innovation and ag tech adoption  Succession and family business transition  Financial strategy and risk  Market dynamics and global demand This episode captures the energy of the room — where farmers, advisors, innovators, and financiers are all working toward a stronger, more resilient industry.👥 Featured GuestsRoddy Brown (CommBank) — Why Cultivate exists and the importance of next-generation farmers Bill Mitchell (Optiweigh) — Turning a farm frustration into a global ag tech business Glenn Calder (Viridian Financial Group) — Practical realities of succession, structure, and long-term planning Tash Greenwood (CommBank) — Supply chain insights and why there’s still strong optimism in agriculture 🔑 Key Themes Why bringing the right people together matters more than ever  The shift from intuition to data-driven decision-making  The reality of ag tech adoption — and why effort still matters  Succession as the most important (and often avoided) conversation in farming  Structuring farm businesses for long-term success and risk management  The role of global markets and why demand for Australian agriculture remains strong  The growing importance of communication, leadership, and peopleChapters:00:00 Introduction and context from CommBank Cultivate 02:10 Roddy Brown on why Cultivate exists and next generation focus 07:20 Innovation in agriculture and the role of technology 08:10 Bill Mitchell on building Optiweigh from a farm problem 12:30 Lessons in ag tech adoption and customer-driven insights 16:30 Why succession remains agriculture’s biggest challenge 17:40 Glenn Calder on structuring farm businesses and managing risk 20:40 Practical steps to start succession and investment conversations 23:00 Empowering teams and building scalable businesses 25:50 Tash Greenwood on supply chains and market confidence 28:00 Global demand, volatility, and optimism in agriculture 30:40 Reflections on community, collaboration, and the future of ag 32:30 Final takeaways from CommBank Cultivate
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Apr 6, 2026 • 56min

How This Sydney School Built Australia’s Largest Ag Cohort with Scott Graham

What if agriculture’s biggest opportunity isn’t on farm, but in the classroom?In this episode of Humans of Agriculture, Oli sits down with Scott Graham, Head of Agriculture at Barker College in Sydney. From a a student base that’s almost entirely from the city, Scott has built the largest Year 12 agriculture cohort in Australia, completely reshaping how young people see the industry.Scott isn't focused on just one school, he is also completing a PhD focused on engaging metropolitan students in agriculture, and what he’s learned challenges how the entire industry thinks about talent, careers and perception.This conversation dives into what’s holding agriculture back from attracting the next generation and what needs to change if we’re serious about building the workforce of the future.Key insights from the conversationWhy agriculture needs to move beyond farming stereotypes to attract urban talentHow Barker turned agriculture into one of the most in-demand courses in the schoolThe missed opportunity: 70% of ag careers exist off-farm, yet most students never see themWhy “plate to paddock” is a more powerful way to teach agriculture than traditional approachesWhat Scott’s PhD through Charles Sturt Uni reveals about the biggest barrier to students choosing agHow parent perceptions can make or break subject selectionThe rise of agribusiness, agtech and city-based careers among studentsWhy even small increases in student numbers can have a huge impact on the future workforceChapters:00:00 Introduction and why this conversation matters02:17 Scott’s journey and influence as an educator04:15 Reimagining agriculture for urban students08:39 Purpose, passion and careers in agriculture10:54 Transforming Barker’s agriculture program13:54 Changing perceptions and building credibility17:56 The role of industry in showcasing careers21:28 Off-farm opportunities and the future workforce24:44 What today’s students are interested in27:44 The rise of agribusiness and agtech pathways32:29 Scott’s PhD and understanding student engagement36:31 Barriers to scaling agriculture in urban schools39:30 Rethinking how agriculture is introduced to students42:17 “Plate to paddock” and making ag relatable46:55 Key findings from Scott’s research50:29 Why narrative matters for the future of ag52:34 What keeps Scott motivated
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Mar 30, 2026 • 26min

“For New Zealand to remain relevant on a global ag stage…” with Jack Ternouth

In this episode of Humans of Agriculture, we sit down with Jack Ternouth, Head of Commercial Operations at Zentera (formerly New Zealand Merino Company), for a conversation that captures what’s possible when curiosity, grit, and opportunity collide in agriculture.Jack didn’t grow up on a farm, but through sheer determination and a willingness to learn, he’s built a career from the ground up in one of the most complex and globally connected parts of the ag industry. From classing wool and working alongside growers to now leading commercial conversations with global brands, his journey is a powerful example of what’s possible in ag today.On this episode, we explore what it takes to build a career in agriculture without a traditional background, the critical role of mentorship, and why value creation - not scale - is the future for countries like Australia and New Zealand. Jack also shares how Zentera is helping create more certainty for growers in a volatile market through traceability, long-term contracts, and global brand partnerships.This episode is about ambition, learning on the go, and the next generation shaping agriculture’s future.Key insights from the conversation:Jack Ternouth’s journey from outsider to commercial leader in the wool industryWhy curiosity, hunger, and alignment matter more than backgroundThe power of mentorship in accelerating a career in agricultureHow Zentera is creating stability for growers in volatile marketsWhy storytelling still matters in a data-driven worldThe shift from commodity to value-added agricultureThe importance of traceability, certification, and global consumer trustOpportunities for young people to build careers in ag without farming rootsChapters:00:00 Intro & Why This Conversation Matters01:48 Jack’s Background: From Zimbabwe to New Zealand04:10 Starting at NZ Merino & Learning the Wool Industry06:30 Moving Into Commercial & Global Brand Relationships08:05 Advice for Young People Entering Agriculture09:40 Learning the Industry Without a Farming Background11:30 Storytelling vs Data in Modern Agriculture12:45 Zentera’s Growth & Global Strategy14:40 Certifications, Traceability & Market Access16:20 Supporting Growers & Moving Away from Mulesing18:10 Volatility, Contracts & Creating Certainty20:15 The Future of Wool & Global Demand22:10 Long-Term Vision for the Industry24:10 Opportunities for the Next Generation in Ag25:45 Wrap Up
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Mar 23, 2026 • 40min

“If we don’t fight for wool, we’ll become a cottage industry” with Zentera CEO Angus Street

(Image: Supplied)In this episode of Humans of Agriculture, Oli and Mick Corcoran sit down with Angus Street, CEO of Zentera (formerly New Zealand Merino), for a full-circle conversation on leadership, legacy, and the future of wool.From growing up on a farm in northern NSW to navigating job loss during the GFC, launching startups in China, and leading major ag businesses, Angus shares an honest reflection on a career shaped by curiosity, risk, and relationships.Now at the helm of Zentera, Angus unpacks the company’s evolution from a grower-led wool collective into a global, purpose-driven brand focused on traceability, sustainability, and premium markets. He explains why the wool industry must fight for relevance in a synthetic-dominated world, and how consumer trends in Europe, China, and the US are creating new opportunities.The conversation dives deep into leadership, what it takes to step into an existing culture as CEO, why “discovery before diagnosis” matters, and the importance of putting people at the centre of transformation.This episode is equal parts strategy, storytelling, and self-reflection - grounded in agriculture but globally relevant.Key insights from the conversationAngus Street’s journey from journalism to global ag leadershipLessons from failure and starting businesses in ChinaThe evolution of New Zealand Merino into ZenteraWhat “whakapapa” means in a business contextHow wool is competing in a synthetic-dominated marketLeadership lessons: curiosity, culture, and managing changeWhy the future of wool depends on collaboration and storytellingChapters:00:00 Intro & Why This Conversation Matters02:10 Meet Angus Street03:50 Early Career, China & AuctionsPlus Journey08:00 From NZ Merino to Zenterra: The Rebrand11:30 What Zenterra Does & Global Brand Partnerships14:40 Moving to NZ & Leading an Existing Team18:05 First 90 Days as CEO: Curiosity Over Action21:00 Culture, Change & Leadership Lessons26:40 Global Wool Demand & Market Trends30:45 Premiums, Growers & Industry Challenges33:40 The Future of Wool: Niche or Opportunity?35:20 Dream Job, Family & Life on the Land38:40 Wrap Up
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Mar 16, 2026 • 39min

What Happens When You Put Nature First on a 20,000 Acre Cattle Property? with Carly Baker-Burnham

What happens when you put nature first in a cattle business?In this episode of Humans of Agriculture, Oli sits down with Carly Baker-Burnham from Bonnie Doone Beef in Queensland’s North Burnett. Together with her husband Grant, Carly has helped reshape their grazing operation by focusing on landscape health, intensive rotational grazing and long-term stewardship.That shift eventually led them to take part in one of Australia’s early soil carbon projects, resulting in one of the country’s largest issuances of Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs). But beyond the headlines, Carly shares what actually matters: improving soil, increasing biodiversity and building a business that works with nature.This conversation explores the realities behind soil carbon, the importance of measurement and scientific rigor, and why observation of the land remains one of a farmer’s most powerful tools.Key insights from the conversationWhy shifting to a nature-first approach transformed productivity and nearly tripled production on the same land baseThe practical changes behind their grazing system: more paddocks, rest for pastures and better dataInside one of Australia’s early soil carbon projects, including the measurement, audits and long timelines involvedWhy Carly welcomes scepticism around carbon claims and the importance of science-backed resultsThe role farmers can play in removing carbon from the atmosphere through healthy soilsWhy observation and connection to the land remain critical for better decision makingChapters:00:00 Introduction and life at Bonnie Doone 03:58 Family history and finding their path in agriculture 08:19 Succession, family business and hard decisions 13:22 Moving from reactive farming to strategic business thinking 16:13 Practical grazing changes and adopting a nature-first approach 21:26 Inside Bonnie Doone’s soil carbon project 29:02 Carbon claims, scepticism, and scientific rigour 33:08 Involving the next generation in environmental stewardship 35:05 Where farmers can start with soil carbon thinking 37:57 What Carly is most proud of today
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Mar 12, 2026 • 26min

National Resilience Expert: What Australia's Fuel Challenge Actually Means and where to next?

As fuel pressure builds across parts of regional Australia, we wanted to step into the conversation in a way that is clear, factual and useful. Not to add to panic, but to help our audience understand what is actually happening, what it means for agriculture, and what bigger questions this moment is exposing around resilience, preparedness and national priorities.And when it comes to conversations like this, Andrew Henderson is one of our go-to voices.Andrew is the founder and principal of AgSecure and has built his career working across biosecurity, national resilience and the vulnerabilities that sit inside the systems agriculture depends on. He brings a rare combination of strategic insight, practical understanding and calm analysis, which is exactly what a topic like this needs.In this episode, Andrew helps unpack the current fuel challenge facing Australian agriculture and Australia more broadly. He explains how the fuel system works, why regional areas are feeling the pressure first, what the Liquid Fuel Emergency Act means, and why this is about much more than a temporary supply scare.This is a conversation about fuel, but it is also a conversation about resilience, leadership and the reality of operating in a world that is becoming less stable, less predictable and more exposed to disruption.In this episode, we cover:Why the fuel challenge matters to Australian agriculture right nowWhy Andrew Henderson was the right person to help unpack itHow Australia’s fuel system actually worksWhy regional Australia feels these pressures firstWhat the Liquid Fuel Emergency Act means in practiceWhy this moment is exposing bigger resilience gaps in the systemWhat farmers and agricultural businesses should be thinking about next
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Mar 11, 2026 • 11min

Meet the 2026 Zanda McDonald Award Winners Bryce Neyland (AU) and Karn Dhaliwal (NZ)

A short sharp and quick chat with the 2026 Zanda McDonald Award Winners.2026 Winners:Karn Dhaliwal (NZ): Founder and owner of Ohinewai Harvest Ltd and Dhaliwal Ag Ltd in Waikato, recognised for his entrepreneurial approach to horticulture.Bryce Neyland (AU): A civil engineer for Select Harvests in New South Wales, focused on large-scale, transformative rural developments and almond orchard infrastructure.Bryce Neyland, 35, from Gol Gol in New South Wales, is a civil engineer for Select Harvests, leading projects across their almond orchards and processing facility. Combining a farming background with strong engineering and project management expertise, he manages large scale, transformative rural developments.Karn Dhaliwal, 32, from Te Hoe in Waikato, is the founder and owner of Ohinewai Harvest Ltd and Dhaliwal Ag Ltd. He has built a diverse horticultural and cropping business and is recognised for his entrepreneurial approach to growing, leadership within the vegetable industry and commitment to creating opportunities for the next generation in horticulture.Zanda McDonald Award Chairman Shane McManaway said both winners demonstrated outstanding leadership and a strong vision for the future of the primary industries.
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Mar 9, 2026 • 42min

“You don’t need a unicorn idea. You need to find a real gap and solve it" - Johno Mackay

Johno Mackay grew up remote in the Northern Territory, shaped by hard work, risk-taking parents, and a deep love for the bush. In this conversation, Johno shares the path from School of the Air and station life to building a contract mustering and fencing business in Northern Australia, before an accident in his team pushed him into an entirely new chapter: ag tech.What followed was the creation of JobSafe Pro, a practical safety and compliance platform designed to help agricultural businesses simplify paperwork, think more clearly about risk, and build stronger safety systems without adding more complexity.This episode is about far more than an app. It is about backing yourself young, learning to lead, finding opportunity in tough moments, and recognising that agriculture today can open more doors than ever before. Johno also shares his belief in the value of the North, the importance of mentors, and why the people who get ahead are often the ones willing to work hard, show initiative, and keep having a crack.It is a grounded and forward-looking conversation about agriculture, ambition, safety, and building something meaningful from the bush.In this episode we coverGrowing up remote in the Northern Territory and the influence of familyLife after School of the Air and heading to Emerald Ag CollegeStarting a contract mustering business at 21Building a life and business in Northern AustraliaThe opportunity that still exists for young people in the NorthLessons in work ethic, leadership and earning trustA serious workplace accident and the reality of risk in agricultureWhy farm safety needs more attention across the sectorTurning a hard experience into the idea for JobSafe ProWhat Johno learned through Farmers2FoundersBuilding partnerships with AgForce and EldersBringing Patrick into the business after a life-changing accidentWhy the future of agriculture will belong to people willing to learn, move and adapt
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Mar 5, 2026 • 23min

Rabo Community Fund & How it can help your community!! (Partnered ep)

Australian agriculture runs on more than crops, livestock, and markets. It runs on people and communities.In this episode, Skye Ward shares the story behind the Rabobank Community Fund, a program designed to invest directly into grassroots initiatives across rural and regional Australia.Since launching in 2021, the fund has invested over $4 million into projects that strengthen leadership, improve wellbeing, and support the resilience of rural communities.Skye also shares her personal story of growing up in the Monaro region, the experience of moving towns and building community as an adult, and why belonging remains one of the most powerful drivers of strong rural places.From succession workshops and financial literacy programs to melanoma skin-check trucks and simple community events that bring people together, the fund supports practical initiatives that make a real difference on the groundThis conversation highlights why investing in people and community capability is just as important as investing in farms and businesses.In this episode we exploreWhy strong communities underpin successful agricultural regionsThe thinking behind the Rabobank Community FundHow grassroots funding creates real impact on the groundExamples of initiatives supported across rural AustraliaThe role of leadership development and wellbeing programsWhy collaboration and community capability matter for agriculture’s futureFind out more & apply now!!Applications for the 2026 Rabobank Community Fund close on 15 March.If you’re part of a local group, community initiative, or organisation looking to make an impact, this could be the opportunity to bring your idea to life.Learn more and apply via rabobank.com.au.

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