Volume 38, Number 16 | OCTOBER 22, 2012
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PRACTICAL PRODUCTION TIPS FOR THE PRAIRIE FARMER
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Ten new cereals for 2013
The new wheat, barley and oat varieties available to western farmers come with higher yield and improved disease resistance BY LEE HART
T
here aren’t a lot of new cereal varieties coming to the western Canadian market in 2013, but many of the 10 wheat, barley and oat varieties being introduced have significant improvements in disease resistance and agronomic traits worth noting. Both Syngenta and Canterra have new Canada Prairie Spring (CPS) varieties available in 2013. Canterra’s AC Conquer was available on a limited basis
Five new wheat varieties for 2012 and has much wider availability this year. Along with high yield and good agronomics, it also has wheat midge resistance. Syngenta is releasing SY985 CPS wheat — one of the first high yielding CPS varieties — with milling quality comparable to a hard red spring wheat, says Todd Ormann, cereal portfolio manager for Syngenta. “Farmers can get the best of both worlds,” he says. “The potential for quality wheat, with all the yield that comes with CPS.” Among SeCan’s new varieties, AC Vesper is a new Canada Western Red Spring (CWRS) wheat. It is the fourth midge-tolerant variety SeCan has introduced, and this one comes with a “real yield bump,” says Todd Hyra, SeCan’s business manager in Western Canada. SeCan is also introducing AC Whitehawk, a hard white spring wheat which will be produced under IP contract through Richardson Pioneer. Hyra says Whitehawk has “a great quality profile” that really defines the hard white wheat class.
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There are 10 new wheat varieties on the market for Western Canadian farmers to consider when making plans for 2013. FP Genetics, based in Regina, has the only new durum variety for 2013. With good agronomics and an improved disease package, AC Transend apparently “sets a new standard” for amber durum on the Prairies. SeCan’s CDC Carter barley has improved smut tolerance which may be of interest to a lot of farmers, but is of particular interest to organic growers, who aren’t able to use chemical fungicides. And AC Bradley is a good all round white hulled milling oat. Although it was developed by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada in Ottawa, AC Bradley appears to have a very good fit in
Western Canada, both yield-wise and agronomically. The other new oat variety, CDC Seabiscuit, marketed by Canterra Seeds, is one of the newest milling oat varieties to come from the University of Saskatchewan’s Crop Development Centre, with features that offer great promise for both farmers and processors. Bob Mastin, a seed grower from Sundre, Alta., northwest of Calgary, has the only new winter wheat variety released in 2013. Pintail was developed by Alberta Agriculture breeders at Lacombe. “It is a great variety with the highest level of winter hardiness of all winter wheats,” says Mastin.
“And it has the 20 to 25 per cent improved yield that winter wheats deliver over hard red spring wheat.” He was very impressed with a stand that produced many seven-inch long seed heads.
WHEAT Here are five new wheat varieties reported by western Canadian seed companies available for commercial production in 2013. SY985, CPSR Syngenta The first high yielding Canada Prairie Spring Red wheat with milling quality.
In This Issue
A CPS variety with: • medium milling quality; • medium protein (meeting the needs of most milling wheat markets); • higher milling quality than U.S. hard red winter wheat (the highest volume milling wheat type in the world); and, • fast, strong and uniform emergence. This variety has a high test weight, with excellent protein (up to one per cent higher than the pack of leading varieties), and excellent harvestability.
» CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
Wheat & Chaff ..................
2
Features ............................
5
Crop Advisor’s Casebook
8
Columns ........................... 21 Machinery & Shop ............ 30 Cattleman’s Corner .......... 35
Goss’s wilt more prevalent in corn fields ANGELA LOVELL PAGE 6
Canada’s Outdoor Farm Show
SCOTT GARVEY PAGE 32
FarmLife ............................ 41