Farmers Beware! Rural thefts on the rise

Police are warning farmers and tool shed owners in rural areas to ensure their valuables are hidden and sheds locked up.

Cow sheds and shearing sheds have recently been targeted around Awakino /Mahoenui and surrounding areas inland, and tools and farm and shearing equipment are being taken.

The thefts are also serving as a reminder for those in the Bay as well.

"We are asking our farmers to be vigilant and to ensure their farm equipment is locked away out of sight," says Senior Sergeant Karley Hunt.

"If you see something that does not look right, it probably isn't.

Call us on 111 if this happens and take down as much detail as you can.

For example, it could be a vehicle that's been left on the side of the road, one you hear at odd times during the night, or maybe people walking around who look out of place.

"These thieves are taking every opportunity they get to wander onto your farms and go through sheds, which can generally be accessed from the roadside.

Some of these sheds may even be unlocked, which thieves see as an open invitation."

Security options for farmers to consider include installing CCTV or wireless alert systems which can activate an alarm in your house to alert you that someone is in your shed by alarm or light sensors.

These devices are highly effective and can even work in areas across some distance, where there is no cell coverage.

There are also Satellite GPS devices available that can be installed covertly on items such as quad bikes and other machinery which can be tracked if they get stolen.

Satellite devices also do not require cell coverage to track.

'We are seeing this technology more and more and it has been highly effective,” says Karley.

'There have been recent projects across the country where a group of innovative farmers within the same community have paid for a good quality CCTV device and installed it in key areas, such as on an intersection, which can provide good prevention coverage across a number of farms.

'Burglaries are incredibly intrusive, not to mention causing significant inconvenience to our farmers and impacting their livelihoods.

Don't let your farm become the next target for these thieves.”

Suspicious information can be passed on to the nearest police station.

Alternatively, information can also be left anonymously via the Crimestoppers 0800 555 111 line.

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