Colour wraps for cancer awarness

Wrapping hay and silage in pink is a novel way to raise awareness of breast cancer – and next season blue bales will do the same for prostate cancer.

The pink bales of silage and pink and black bales of hay that have appeared near highways in farming districts this season are an initiative by crop packaging supplier Agpac to get people talking about women’s health and in particular breast cancer prevention.

A percentage of the sales from pink silage wrap will go to Sweet Louise, which supports women with secondary breast cancer.

Agpac general manager Chris Dawson says his company worked with its overseas suppliers to develop the pink wrap and pink and black netwrap.

Agpac is donating a percentage of the sales of the pink products to Sweet Louise, which provides practical support to improve the lives of Kiwi women with secondary breast cancer and their families.

“The limited supply of the pink silage wrap and pink and black netwrap we had this year is selling very well.

“The support we have received from farmers, contractors and from rural newspapers that have picked up the story has been very gratifying. Thanks to this positive response, we will expand the programme next year.”

Next year Agpac will increase its volume of pink bale wrap and pink and black net wrap to cater for the extra demand that has been created. It will also add a blue bale wrap to raise awareness of men’s health and prostate cancer in support of Prostate Cancer Foundation NZ.

Te Awamutu contractor Maurice Forkert was one of those who supplied the pink wrap. He says it was very popular with his dairy farmer clients and especially their wives.

“It was all sold by word of mouth. One the farmers who bought it wasn’t so keen at first but his daughter insisted and he came around.”

Chris says many of those who ordered the pink products have a wife, mother or sister who has had an experience with breast cancer.

“We want to thank everyone who bought these products, not least because it will enable us to donate to the Louise Perkins Foundation, which is doing fantastic work helping women who are in the difficult final stages of breast cancer.”

Sweet Louise is a charitable trust that works to improve the lives of New Zealanders women with secondary breast cancer. The support services Sweet Louise provides range from counselling and emotional support to haircuts, wigs and hats, to helpers who do chores around the home.

Sweet Louise CEO Fiona Hatton says she is thrilled that Agpac wants to support the organisation and raise awareness about breast cancer in regions that are otherwise hard to reach.

“We are grateful that Chris and the Agpac team have chosen to support us. I think we have built a genuine partnership with them. They have a real affinity with us and understand some of the difficulties our members go through.

“We provide services throughout the North Island, including nurses who work in rural areas. We have members in the South Island and are looking to expand our services there.

“But we are still a small organisation, and we would never manage to do the kind of marketing in rural areas that the pink bale initiative has achieved,” Fiona says.

Chris thanks Agpac’s overseas suppliers that made the pink bale campaign possible. They are the Israeli company Tama Plastic Industry, which supplied the pink and black striped netwrap, and Swedish company Trioplast, which supplied the pink bale wrap.

“Our Australian parent company Tapex has picked up the idea and is promoting breast cancer awareness in rural communities there. Tama is rolling out its pink and black netwrap in Europe and Israel.

“The story has been picked up by social media and we have requests for information from around the world.”


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