The AgriPost
April 28, 2017
Delay in Pricing Determined This Year’s Crop
Passion for Clydes
Eight-horse hitch of Clydesdale horses in the Keystone Arena at the Royal Manitoba Winter Fair.
By Joan Airey Brad Delgaty along with Clarke Wallace drove a magnificent eight-horse hitch of Clydesdale horses in the Keystone Arena at the Royal Manitoba Winter Fair. The front four horses of
the hitch belong to Clarke and Sherry Wallace of Dauphin and the back four belong to the Delgaty family of Minnedosa. Their Clydesdale’s take hours of care each day and can eat fifty pounds of hay a
day as well as drink thirty gallons of water plus some grain and vitamins. To put on an excellent performance as this eight-horse hitch did it takes years of training. “We have thirteen Clydesdale horses on our
Photos by Joan Airey
farm at the moment, including a new colt that was born a week ago. We started raising our own replacements three years ago. Every day we spend hours with our horses feeding them, grooming them and training them. It’s a hobby we thoroughly enjoy,” said Sherry Wallace.
By Les Kletke Gilbert Sabourin said 2017 is the first year in memory that his farm has no plans for wheat or barley. Even with 10 years of success in malt barley, this year it took too long for the maltsters to release their prices. “I had acres for barley but the oat price kept moving up and there was no quote on the barley so I made a commitment to oats,” said Sabourin who farms at St. Jean Baptiste. He has contracted some oats with three mainline companies and when he received a better offer from Emerson Milling, he committed more acres to the crop. Then he had an offer of $3.60 a bushel from Anderson Grain through Nu Vision at St. Jean Baptiste and he made an even larger commitment. He has now committed to 540 acres of oats and if all goes well he could end up with a storage problem. “I am hoping that some of the companies will be able to take some right off of the combine,” he said. “That will help. The volume of the crop also makes it attractive to deliver to Nu Vision in St. Jean. Malt has always gone to Winnipeg so that helps a bit with the transportation.”
While he has been successful with malt barley, he said the slow movement of the 2016 crop has become a factor and he is still holding some of last year’s crop as he heads into seeding. “They tell me there is a glut of malt barley and the 2015 crop is being processed so it did not seem too promising,” said Sabourin. “It was a high input crop with 2 or 3 treatments of fungicide and the fertilizer requirement.” He was not able to get as much fertilizer down last fall as he usually does and sees that might be the first order of business this spring. He plans on banding some fertilizer with his air drill where he will plant his corn. The land he had originally allocated to wheat has been switched over to canola. “I will grow some NextEra and some other speciality canola on contract,” he said. “We have not found a yield drag with them but they are Clearfield and we grow Clearfield sunflowers which makes it hard to control the volunteer crop.” He leaves the Roundup Ready weapons for his corn and soybeans. He reported that some neighbours had been out seeding by April 22 but he did not plan to get on his land until the beginning of May if weather cooperated.