Meet
The ACTFA Board
Chair
Bindi Isbister
0428 215 006
bindi.isbister@dpird.wa.gov.au
MORE ABOUT BINDI
Bindi works two days a week for Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD) WA as a Research Scientist on soil amelioration projects. She also works part-time for Agrarian Management as a Precision Agriculture Consultant.
Bindi has developed extensive knowledge of controlled traffic farming and precision agriculture working on state and national projects. This includes writing the NACC Controlled Traffic Farming Technical Manual in 2013 that is a revised version of the original Tramline Farming Manual she wrote in 2003. All this talk of machinery means she has now got tyre kicking down to a fine art!
Vice-Chair
Chris Bluett
0409 336 113
Chris.bluett@hrzconsulting.com
MORE ABOUT CHRIS
Chris Bluett is an agriculturist with broad experience in grain crop agronomy and farming systems, primarily in the High Rainfall Zone of Southern Victoria. His work on new crop development included the initial development, in the early 1970s, of rapeseed (now canola) as a rotation crop for wheat. Other crops in which he has experience include winter feed wheat, linseed, buckwheat and hemp. He led the team that, jointly with grain growers, developed raised bed cropping, a controlled traffic production system that prevents waterlogging damage to HRZ crops.
Treasurer
Jeff Tullberg
0417 134 372
jtullb@bigpond.net.au
MORE ABOUT JEFF
Jeff is an Australian agricultural engineer with broad experience in research, teaching, extension and consulting on technical and economic aspects of farm machinery and its impact on soil, cropping systems and the environment, with field experience in Australia, UK, and USA and China. From the early 1980's he worked on different aspects of CTF, including energy, hydrology, soil health, crop performance, economics and more recently, soil emissions.
Board Member
John McPhee
0407 845 612
john.mcphee@utas.edu.au
MORE ABOUT JOHN
John McPhee worked with Queensland DPI during the 1980’s in grain post-harvest systems, remote area cattle management and controlled traffic for irrigated grain crops in the Burdekin River Irrigation Area, which was his introduction to CTF.
He has worked in the Tasmanian vegetable industry since 1991, first with DPI, and since 2007 with the Tasmanian Institute of Agriculture (TIA) in potato planting and harvest mechanisation, onion storage and transport, organic materials reuse and controlled traffic for vegetable production.
Over the period 2007 - 2014 he led a number of controlled traffic projects covering desk top studies (machinery integration, mapping, economics), field-based research (soil responses) and on-farm application aimed at addressing some of the operational challenges of controlled traffic adoption in mixed cropping.
Other areas of involvement include precision agriculture in vegetable production and soil and water management for small-holder vegetable producers in Lao PDR and Cambodia.
Board Member
Dr Dio Antille
0447 125 583
Dio.Antille@usq.edu.au
MORE ABOUT DIO
Dr Diogenes L. Antille, BSc MSc EngD CEng CEnv MIAgrE M.I.Soil Sci., is a Research Fellow (Conservation Agriculture) at the National Centre for Engineering in Agriculture (NCEA), University of Southern Queensland, Australia.
Diogenes is an Agricultural Engineer who was trained at the National Soil Resources Institute at Cranfield University at Silsoe (U.K.) where he acquired an MSc (Soil Management), and later an Engineering Doctorate from the School of Applied Science (Cranfield University). Diogenes has expertise in soil and water conservation engineering, land rehabilitation, farm mechanization, soil nutrient and fertilizer management. He has over 20 years professional experience both at research and commercial levels in the cotton and grain industries. His research at the NCEA focuses on controlled traffic farming and zero-tillage, nitrogen use efficiency, and greenhouse gas emissions both from irrigated and rainfed cropping systems. Diogenes holds Chartered Environmentalist and Chartered Engineer qualifications through the U.K. Institution of Agricultural Engineers, and is a Professional Soil Scientist through the U.K. Institute of Professional Soil Scientists.
Diogenes serves as Chair of the Soil-Plant-Machine Dynamics Committee of the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers (ASABE).
Diogenes has published >30 journal articles.
Board Member
Luke Clark
0429 840 564
clarkforestview@bigpond.com
MORE ABOUT LUKE
Luke Clark is a partner in a family farming business at Jamestown, in the Mid-North of South Australia.
Their cropping enterprise is a full CTF zero till operation, retaining 100% of stubble to achieve constant ground coverage. There is a separate enterprise of a self-replacing merino flock. Luke has also work as a broad acre cropping agronomist.
He learns a great deal from other like-minded farmers, and fits it all to their environment, using his Degree from the “You-tube Uni” and his Masters from the “Google Institute of Time-wasting.
Board Member
Josh Pearse
0400 892 564
jpearse.wactfa@gmail.com
MORE ABOUT JOSH
Currently employed by Vantage WA, Josh comes from a farming family who ran a sheep and cropping property in the central Wheatbelt district of Meckering.
Josh's passion for precision agriculture and controlled traffic farming prompted him to create an online community for local growers and enthusiasts, the WACTFA Facebook group.
Board Member
Charlie French
0400 165 351
cdfrench2@gmail.com
MORE ABOUT CHARLIE
He has a passion for growing grain and emerging Ag technologies and systems. Away from the farm Charlie is an avid Rugby Union player.
GET INVOLVED
If you're interested in nominating for the ACTFA Board, please contact our chair for more information.
Meet
The ACTFA Staff
ACTFA Secretary
Nickie Berrisford
0428 622 655
nickie.berrisford@actfa.net
MORE ABOUT NICKIE
Nickie has a Bachelor of Commerce and Diploma of Education and has been working in the agriculture service industry since 1990. Her initial work involved delivery agricultural training in business management ensuring that training met the needs of the students, usually adult learners.
In 1996 Nickie took on a 3-year project management role funded by GRDC, managing five self-directed learning groups for Women across Victoria. This led to a national GRDC funded project Partners in Grain.
Nickie has had a strong interest in ensuring that quality professional development is available for farm businesses, especially cropping. In 2010 Nickie supported ACTFA to set up as an incorporated organisation. She has taken a number of rolls as Treasurer, Secretary and has increasingly had input into the facilitation of quality, relevant professional development for all aspects of farming especially CTF, OHS and business Management