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'Carnage': Family upset as slaughterhouse on wheels starts up next door

Author
Ben Leahy,
Publish Date
Sun, 19 Oct 2025, 8:46am
Dairy Flat homeowner Kevin Bell says most weekends a mobile abattoir sets up in the paddock behind him leaving him and his wife upset. Photo / Michael Craig
Dairy Flat homeowner Kevin Bell says most weekends a mobile abattoir sets up in the paddock behind him leaving him and his wife upset. Photo / Michael Craig

'Carnage': Family upset as slaughterhouse on wheels starts up next door

Author
Ben Leahy,
Publish Date
Sun, 19 Oct 2025, 8:46am

An Auckland couple say a makeshift abattoir that began operating next door has turned 25 years of peaceful rural living into regular scenes of distress and 鈥渃arnage鈥.

Dairy Flat homeowner Kevin Bell said an abattoir-on-wheels now rolled into the next-door paddock most weeks to kill a small number of his neighbour鈥檚 sheep and cattle.

Bell said he wanted answers about how a 鈥渃ommercial slaughterhouse鈥 could be set up so close to his Blackbridge Rd home and in view of his lounge window.

Auckland Council and the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) confirmed they had each received a complaint and were looking into the matter.

Bell said he didn鈥檛 pay council rates on his $1.8 million, 4ha property 鈥渢o look at an abattoir鈥.

鈥淣ow I get to watch 300-plus animals killed 6m outside my boundary each year.鈥

Neighbour David Taylor said the number of slaughtered animals was more likely to be about 100 annually.

Taylor said he鈥檇 tried to minimise disruption by offering to build an embankment to shield the operation from Bell鈥檚 view but that his offer was rebuffed.

The truck visiting Taylor鈥檚 property is understood to be the first of its kind in New Zealand.

If the model takes off, the pair鈥檚 clash could be the first of more backyard abattoir stoushes elsewhere in the country.

Farm-to-table: Will mobile abattoirs become more common?

Truck owner Logan Wait, who started company Earth First, said he was working with NZ Food Safety with the aim of rolling the model out widely.

It needed to first prove to MPI the operations were safe.

His truck had been travelling from Hawke鈥檚 Bay to Northland to test the concept, with the Herald reporting in August how it was being used at Kaipara鈥檚 Danbri Farm to produce a new premium meat brand.

Taylor was also one of a handful farmers licensed to harvest and sell his own meat directly to the public.

Kevin Bell says he wants answers on how a "commercial slaughterhouse" could be set up on his boundary fence. Photo / Michael Craig
Kevin Bell says he wants answers on how a "commercial slaughterhouse" could be set up on his boundary fence. Photo / Michael Craig

He said he was hiring the mobile truck to kill about three to four of his own animals each fortnight for sale at his Dairy Flat shop, The Local Farmer Butchery.

The concept had great support from customers, he said.

鈥淓veryone鈥檚 getting right behind it.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e buying local 鈥 they鈥檙e buying animals that are farmed just up the road from where they live, which people seem to like.鈥

It was also opening new opportunities for farmers by 鈥渃utting the big boys out 鈥 the supermarkets have held us all over a barrel for so long鈥.

Supporters of the model also say avoiding trucking animals to big abattoirs reduced stress and improved their meat.

The whole thing is quite disturbing: Bell

However, Bell believed the stress was being transferred on to his family and his own sheep and cattle.

鈥淭he whole thing is quite disturbing to be honest 鈥 my wife doesn鈥檛 enjoy seeing it happening and neither do I.

鈥淢y stock walking up and down my land watching their brethren being killed on the other side of the fence isn鈥檛 cheering anybody up either.鈥

The operation occurs about 150m-200m from Bell鈥檚 window but close to his property鈥檚 boundary.

Races are used to move animals into position to be killed behind screens, with the meat kept inside the covered truck.

Bell claimed he could hear the 鈥渞ifle shot鈥 used to kill animals as well as the noise of generators.

He said he had also seen offal and other waste being put into rubbish bins and worried blood could be draining into waterways.

Wait and Taylor said they had licences to operate and that each kill was dictated by a registered risk management programme that included having a veterinarian or meat inspectors present.

The mobile abattoir also visits Danbri Farm in the Kaipara, where a family-run regenerative property uses it to create a premium Angus beef brand. Photo / Michael Craig
The mobile abattoir also visits Danbri Farm in the Kaipara, where a family-run regenerative property uses it to create a premium Angus beef brand. Photo / Michael Craig

Given the model was a new one, Wait and Taylor said they were keen to work with neighbours like Bell to make improvements.

Taylor said he鈥檇 鈥渂ent over backwards鈥 to help Bell in the past, including helping slaughter some of Bell鈥檚 own animals and helping him do things such as drench his stock.

He also offered to build the embankment so the operation would be shielded from sight.

He claimed Bell told him he鈥檇 consider the offer before Bell texted back to say he鈥檇 see Taylor in court.

鈥楲ooking into the matter鈥: MPI and Auckland Council

NZ Food Safety deputy director-general Vincent Arbuckle said his team had received a complaint about whether the operation was 鈥渕eeting the necessary rules around slaughter鈥.

鈥淲e have spoken with the complainant and are looking at the information provided and requesting further details,鈥 he said.

All food producers must be registered and meet food safety requirements to ensure what they produce is fit for humans to consume.

MPI rules stated mobile abattoirs did not necessarily need resource consents from local councils to operate but that could depend on how the operations affected the environment.

A photo taken by Kevin Bell of the mobile abattoir in operation on the neighbouring property on Blackbridge Rd, Dairy Flat. Photo / Supplied
A photo taken by Kevin Bell of the mobile abattoir in operation on the neighbouring property on Blackbridge Rd, Dairy Flat. Photo / Supplied

Auckland Council compliance manager Adrian Wilson said resource consents had not been sought to operate a micro-abattoir at the Blackbridge Rd property.

鈥淎n issue has been raised with the council relating to the slaughter of animals and the [potential] fluid run-off into a stormwater drain and nearby stream,鈥 he said.

鈥淭his matter is under investigation by the council鈥檚 compliance team.鈥

Taylor and Wait said they were working with MPI and council closely to answer all questions about the operation.

They believed the mobile abattoir was a promising business model for small farmers.

But Bell, meanwhile, said he鈥檇 keep fighting to stop 鈥渢his carnage in front of my home鈥.

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