World Jersey Cattle Bureau
Press Release
15th February 2005
Announcing the winners of the International Young Jersey Breeder Educational
Travel Award
The World Jersey Cattle Bureau has announced the winners of the JETA
programme and five fortunate young people will be attending the 17th
International Conference in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada at the end of June
2005.
This is the first time that the award has been presented and it is fitting
that the conference theme "Shaping Tomorrow" should feature these five winners
as part of the "Farmers Forum" portion of the programme on Monday June
27th – the very first day of the conference.
Each representing a region of the world, the winners are Waweru Gathecha of
Kenya, Mark Shaw of New Zealand, André van Weerdenburg of Denmark, Eduardo
Kashiwagi of Brazil and Aaron Ray Tompkins of the USA.
is a 33-year old Kenyan who is a practicing architect and
also manages the family farm, Tigoni Farm Ltd situated 30 km north-west of
Nairobi.. The herd at Tigoni is mixed but more than half of the 74-head herd are
registered Jerseys. Waweru currently holds the chair of the Jersey Cattle
Society of Kenya, and is a driving force in the current trend towards increasing
Jerseys in his country.
Mark Shaw is a fourth-generation Jersey breeder in New Zealand and now
farms with his wife Judy on their 150-hectare farm with 650 milking Jerseys.
Mark and Judy also host the Jersey JET scheme, where two-year-old heifers from
around New Zealand are milked together to compare different genetics. Mark has a
high profile in New Zealand dairying having been featured on national television
and being named the Westpac Trust NZMP Farmer of the Year in 2002.
André van Weerdenburg, 36, was born and raised on a Dutch Holstein dairy
farm, and moved to Denmark following education at agricultural school. He worked
on several Danish dairy farms, until 1994 when he bought his own farm with a
mixed herd of cows. It was not long before André expanded the enterprise and
considering the economics, decided on Jerseys. Today, the herd has 95 cows plus
young stock with plans to increase to 130 cows. André is the chair of the local
Jersey Cattle Club and is a Danish A.I. Centre representative as well as a
Jersey judge at local and regional shows.
Eduardo Kashiwagi manages the family-owned dairy farm with 170 Jersey
cows and 100 followers. He graduated as an Agronomic Engineer with emphasis in
Dairy Management in 1997 at the University of Sao Paulo, before attending a
Dairy Science course at Virginia State University in the USA. He has since had
work experience with Jersey herds in New Zealand and the USA. Eduardo is working
hard to bring his international experiences to the Brazilian dairy
industry.
Aaron Ray Tompkins began his registered Jersey herd just ten years ago
and now operates a 125 head dairy in North Carolina. Described as a unique young
person, Aaron attended Virginia Tech while leasing a dairy about 10 miles from
the campus to milk 60 cows! He has a vast knowledge of dairying and the industry
and is extremely enthusiastic, winning a range of awards in national and
regional competitions.
Congratulations to these five young men who have already proved their value
to the Jersey business, and we wish them well in their future. We will also
welcome them to the 17th International Conference of the Jersey breed
in Canada in June.