Soil Constraints and Nutrition – Free Webinar with Dr Cass Schefe
Unlock the full potential of your paddocks!
Join us for an informative FREE webinar designed for Wimmera farmers who want to optimise productivity by addressing soil constraints and maintaining system fertility. Learn how to position your business for a low-carbon future while improving yields and reducing emissions.
Meet the Presenter
Dr Cass Schefe is a leading soil scientist and farm emissions expert. Cass has worked with farmers across Australia to understand emissions profiles and implement practice changes that boost productivity while reducing emissions.
Topics include
- Identifying and addressing common constraints in Wimmera soils
- Maintaining system fertility – beyond nitrogen
- Managing soil carbon
Event Details
- Date: Wednesday, 18 February
- Time: 7:30 PM – 8:30 PM
- Cost: FREE
- RSVP by: Monday, 16 February
- Register Here
Further Information and Question
Contact Bronwyn Bant, 0427 529 232 or bronwyn.bant@wcma.vic.gov.au
The Victorian Carbon Farming Outreach Program is delivered with funding support from the Commonwealth of Australia through the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water under the National Carbon Farming Outreach Program.
The Program is delivered through a partnership between Agriculture Victoria, 10 Catchment Management Authorities and Landcare Victoria and other bodies.
Wimmera CMA and Glenelg Hopkins CMA present to farmers across Victoria a webinar designed to help them unlock the full potential of electronic identification (eID) technology in sheep production.
Join Elise Bowen, founder of Sheep Data Management and a respected expert in sheep production, in this webinar where she talks about the practical implementation of eID data to improve flock productivity and reduce methane emissions.
Topics include
- Key benefits of adopting eID technology
- Practical tips for effective data management
- Aligning data collection with farm goals
- Building a tailored data calendar
- Turning raw data into actionable insights
The Victorian Carbon Farming Outreach Program is delivered with funding support from the Commonwealth of Australia through the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water under the National Carbon Farming Outreach Program.
The Program is delivered through a partnership between Agriculture Victoria, 10 Catchment Management Authorities and Landcare Victoria and other bodies.
A Livestock and Landscape Farm Tour to the Otways next month will take Wimmera farmers to a grazing property where 30 years of improvements have transformed productivity and the landscape.
We are inviting farmers and Landcare groups to jump on the bus on Monday October 20 to visit the Stewart’s Yan Yan Gurt West Farm.
The bus will leave from Horsham and stop at Stawell, Ararat, Skipton and Beeac (pick up and drop off times are listed at the bottom of the page). Corangamite and Glenelg Hopkins CMAs are co-hosting the tour.
- Register for the Livestock and Landscape Farm Tour HERE
- Cost: FREE, includes meals
- Places are limited, please register before 15 October 2025
- If you would prefer to make your own way to Yan Yan Gurt West, please contact Bronwyn Bant for times and directions at Bronwyn.bant@wcma.vic.gov.au or phone 0427 529 232.
Wimmera Sustainable Agriculture Facilitator Bronwyn Bant said the tour was a great opportunity to visit a successful working farm that’s gained productivity benefits through revegetation and strategic farm planning.
“We’re pleased to be able to take Wimmera farmers outside of the region to see how the Stewarts have changed their landscape and farming system over the past three decades,” Ms Bant said.
“While the Wimmera doesn’t have the same soil types, climatic conditions or annual rainfall experienced in the Otways, Yan Yan Gurt West Farm provides a working example of the productivity benefits that can be gained through the integration of biodiversity.
“With a land area of around 230 hectares it is also a great case study of successful farm diversification.”

Fourth-generation farmer Andrew Stewart along with his wife Jill and daughters Kristy, Hannah and Michelle and their families, manage their family-owned grazing and agroforestry property.
Since completing a whole farm plan in 1991 they have planted more than 55,000 trees and shrubs across 42 hectares, to cover 18 percent of the farm area. They also plant deep-rooted, multi-species pastures to improve soil health, and continually trial to discover the benefits of other multi-species including chicory and plantain.

Andrew said increasing vegetation cover on the farm had not reduced their agricultural production.
They run 1300 breeding ewes, producing 1600-1800 lambs annually. They are reducing the emissions intensity of their livestock through sheep genetics, optimising feed and live-weight monitoring.
They have been able to generate new income streams and have a commercially successful banksia and wildflower foliage business that supplies florists, restaurants and function centres.
“The goal is to make our farm sustainable for the long-term and to improve the wellbeing of livestock, native animals and people living in this landscape,” Andrew said.
He said they have a strong focus on production efficiency through using pregnancy scanning and maximising lamb survival which ranges from 85 to 95% for twins and singles, respectively.
“Sheep genetics, drench efficacy testing, rotational grazing, autumn saving and set stocking at lambing are also important.”

The carbon account – all emissions and sequestration within the operational boundary – showed the farm enterprise was carbon neutral in 2022-2023.
“Our target is 20 percent tree cover and through this and other tools in our farming system’s toolbox, we aim to achieve a zero carbon footprint into the future,” Andrew says.
Andrew won the 2021 Bob Hawke National Landcare Award and is a founding member of the Otway Agroforestry Network and member of the East Otway Landcare Group. He has been on the Australian Landcare Council, is a recipient of a Norman Wettenhall Foundation Landscape Restoration Fellowship and a former chair of the Victorian Farmers Federation Farm Tree & Landcare Association.
“Over the past 30 years we’ve been part of a community that have collaborated strongly. By joining forces to share ideas and be part of a community of ‘doers’ we have all built up our knowledge about good landscape functionality. At the same time we’ve had a good social time and the general sense of wellbeing that’s resulted continues to inspire us,” he said.
- The tour is in partnership with Agriculture Victoria and Landcare Victoria, as part of the Carbon Farming Outreach Program funded by the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water. The program aims to support farmers and land managers in accessing accurate and independent information about reducing farm emissions, accounting and markets.
Livestock and Landscape Farm Tour
Monday 20 October
Pick up and drop off times:
- Horsham (Horsham Angling Club, Dixon Drive) – departing 7am, returning 7.45pm
- Stawell (Church St Carpark near Woolworths) – departing 7.50am, returning 7.00pm
- Ararat (Town Hall, Vincent St Ararat) – departing 8.20am, returning 6.30pm
- Skipton (Montgomery St, near the public toilets) – departing 9.10am, returning 5.40pm
- Beeac (Main St, near public toilets) – departing 9.50am, returning 4.50pm
Join Dr Cassandra Schefe as she provides a comprehensive overview of the carbon cycle, emission sources common to farming, global external factors driving the need to track farm emissions, how emissions can be calculated and the relationship between best practice farming, high productivity and lower farmer emissions.
This webinar is supported by The Victorian Carbon Farming Outreach Program, delivered with funding support from the Commonwealth’s Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water under the National Carbon Farming Outreach Program.
The Program is delivered through a partnership between Agriculture Victoria, 10 Catchment Management Authorities and Landcare Victoria.
