WELCOME rainfall is all that stood between export turmoil and profit for Tamworth dairy farmer Wes Brown.
The fifth-generation dairy farmer was on the cusp of selling off some cattle overseas before rainfall allowed him to hold onto the stock.
Mr Brown said he was sure the stock "would have got tangled up in the coronavirus problem" had he chosen to sell.
"I'm not sure what would have happened if it hadn't rained when it did," Mr Brown said.
"I think the ones I was going to sell would have probably got caught up in it all.
Not all sectors of the Australian agricultural industry have been as lucky as Mr Brown.
Southern Australia's export fishing industry has taken a huge hit due to the outbreak of the virus, while the wool and cotton industries have also experienced downturns.
However, while the crisis overseas is troubling, Mr Brown said people who believed the drought had been broken by the recent rain were mistaken.
"Honestly, I think it will be the better part of two years for things to get back on track," he said.
"I think a lot of people will have had to borrow money and that takes time to pay back.
"Basically, the way I see it, we need the milk price to stay steady and the rain to consistently fall in the next two years to get back on track.
"That would be ideal anyway."
As for the price of milk, Mr Brown urged locals to continue to support the nation's dairy farmers by buying Australian produced milk.