THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 2014
VOL. 92 | NO. 3 | $4.25
Jed Lawson of Williams Mobile Power Wash in Saskatoon sprays equipment before it heads indoors at Prairieland Park in preparation for the Crop Production Show, which runs during Crop Production Week in Saskatoon, Jan. 11-18. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO
CROP WEEK | WHEAT
Farmer-run wheat breeding considered BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
GROWING WITH FARMERS FOR 90 YEARS
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LOOK FOR MORE COVERAGE OF CROP PRODUCTION WEEK NEXT ISSUE AGRONOMICS | CANOLA
Shorter canola rotations said OK Canola council changes policy | Researchers worry the new recommendations will lead to future troubles
New directors to the Saskatchewan Wheat Development Commission say the concept of a producer-funded, farmer-controlled wheat breeding program deserves serious consideration. “We want to invest producers’ money the most efficient way we can to maximize their profitability (and) … we’re going to explore all avenues to do that,” said Glenn Tait, a farmer from Meota, Sask., who was elected to the SWDC board last month. “Farmers are just a small cog in the wheel..… They have very little discretionary power with respect to breeding programs …” SEE BREEDING PROGRAM, PAGE 2
SASKATOON NEWSROOM
There has been a seismic shift in agronomic philosophy at the Canola Council of Canada. A group that once preached sticking to longer rotations now suggests that growing canola once every two years might not be a bad idea. “Our best wisdom is changing, and growers are leading the way,” the council said in a document outlining the science behind its new target of producing 26 million tonnes per year of the oilseed by 2025. “Growers have taught us that more intensive rotations can be managed sustainably and profitably in many soil zones and regions of the Prairies.” It is a significant departure for an association that in the past has warned growers against tightening their rotations.
“It is a bit of a surprise to me,” said Faye Dokken-Bouchard, a plant disease specialist with Saskatchewan Agriculture. “It sounds like a bit of a shift.” She believes growers should be sticking with the previous recommendation of a one-in-four year rotation. “We still know the longer the rotation the better, just from a biological point of view,” said Dokken-Bouchard. “Definitely from a disease perspective, I still recommend that growers put the breaks in there as long as they can.” Alberta Agriculture crop specialist Harry Brook thinks the council may be resigned to the fact that growers have gone to a canola-wheat rotation regardless of what the experts tell them. “They’re probably bowing to the inevitability of human nature,” he said. Saskatchewan Agriculture data shows growers in northeastern crop
districts seed half of their arable land to canola every year, which indicates they have embraced a one-in-twoyear rotation. “What’s the point of recommending something that is basically being ignored,” said Brook. However, he takes issue with the claim that a one-in-two year rotation is sustainable. “When it comes to blackleg, one of the worst things you can do is have a two-year rotation because it’s the second year after canola that the crop residue has the highest spore load for further infection,” said Brook. If clubroot is in the area, the minimum rotation should be one canola crop every four years. Sclerotinia can also become a bigger problem for growers pushing rotations. Crop insurance data shows that consistently growing canola back-toback results in a 20 percent yield loss
RELENTLESS ON WEEDS. SAFE ON WHEAT. FLUSH-AFTER-FLUSH™ CONTROL.
in the second year. Patti Miller, president of the canola council, said canola-on-canola is a bad idea, but the break between crops may not have to be as long as once thought. “The latest farm reported results indicate there is recovery of yield potential with just a one year break between canola crops,” she said. “A break of two years gives you higher yield, but the difference in that rotation is quite marginal.” She said the council no longer advocates a one-in-four rotation or any set rotation. The new strategy is to help individual growers make decisions on their farms based on factors such as environment, soil type, risk tolerance and willingness to adopt new technologies. SEE NEW RECOMMENDATIONS, PAGE 2
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u|xhHEEJBy00001pzYv+:. JANUARY 16, 2014 Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to: Box 2500, Saskatoon, SK. S7K 2C4 The Western Producer is published in Saskatoon by Western Producer Publications, which is owned by GVIC Communications Corp. Publisher: Shaun Jessome Publications Mail Agreement No. 40069240
BY SEAN PRATT