00:00From afar, Brian Munro's farm in Essay's South East looks green and lush.
00:08But on the ground, producers are coming out of one of their driest ever winters.
00:12It's left the normally fodder-rich limestone coast short of the feed needed for livestock.
00:17I haven't been able to find quality fodder within 500km radius of Mount Gambier is generally
00:23what I've found and I've actually bought in hay.
00:26We've had a massive shortfall.
00:27But nearby Millel, Nathan and Amelia Collins are also finding it tough.
00:32They run a dairy farm with more than 300 cows.
00:36On the end of the good milk prices, we thought we'd get ahead and then it's gone all to feed
00:43and now we're lucky we're sort of well stocked and we're selling stock to then pay for bills.
00:49The situation is so bad, a charity that donates feed is delivering to the region for the first
00:54time ever.
00:55We bought 22 or 23 truckloads in and that's pretty much 1,000 bales and that's been split
01:03up amongst about nearly 70 families I think.
01:07Dry conditions and economic pressures impacting farmers across the state has led to more requests
01:12for help from Need for Feed this year than usual.
01:15But that's meant that some farmers have missed out, forcing them to consider their backup
01:20plans.
01:21We've been to Laura and Ururu and I don't know, Peterborough, places like that earlier
01:27in the year and it looks like if it doesn't rain, it doesn't rain or keep raining, we'll
01:32probably have to go back there and that might be the focus of our next delivery.
01:35But farmers say they're staying positive and looking at other ways to future-proof their
01:40businesses like sowing summer pastures earlier.
01:44It's good to actually get together with other people and kick around a few ideas and do
01:48something that you've never come across before.
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