The western producer march 16, 2017

Page 1

THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 2017

VOL. 95 | NO. 11 | $4.25

ANATOMY OF A SURPLUS | P24

SERVING WESTERN CANADIAN FARM FAMILIES SINCE 1923

|

WWW.PRODUCER.COM

VISIT WWW.PRODUCER.COM FOR BREAKING NEWS, VIDEOS AND PODCASTS Selling grain

Turmoil in Ontario

American farmers want their government to double the market promotion budget to $469 million. | Page 33

The government fires the Ontario Processing Vegetable Growers board. | Page 38

AGRONOMY

Whistle blown on canola danger Creator of the crop says governments might have to force growers to adopt appropriate rotations

GRAIN SALES

BY ED WHITE

THE ONE PERCENT CLAUSE

WINNIPEG BUREAU

Many producers fail to read the fine print about permitted vomitoxin levels for grain deliveries BY ROBIN BOOKER SASKATOON NEWSROOM

SEE CANOLA DANGER, PAGE 5

»

u|xhHEEJBy00001pzYv,:, MARCH 16, 2017 Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to: Box 2500, Stn. Main, Saskatoon, SK. S7K 2C4

tract with a two p.p.m. vomitoxin requirement, which is the standard trade in Canada,” Williams said. “All grain companies trade on that spec., two p.p.m. limit.”

Doug Hilderman of BroadGrain said it’s important for growers to have a clear understanding of all contract terms when signing, but they also need to understand there

is a difference between what is in the Canadian Grain Guide and what processors need for quality. SEE ONE PERCENT, PAGE 4

Rule with an iron fist. With three herbicide Groups and outstanding activity on both grass and broadleaf weeds, Tundra® herbicide is the complete solution for barley and wheat growers. cropscience.bayer.ca/Tundra

1 888-283-6847

@Bayer4CropsCA

Always read and follow label directions. Tundra® is a registered trademark of the Bayer Group. Bayer CropScience Inc. is a member of CropLife Canada. C-59-02/17-10698179-E

»

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

High vomitoxin levels in last year’s wheat crop have prairie growers rereading their delivery contracts. “When a farmer makes a call around to different elevators and such, the DON (vomitoxin) is never really discussed. It hasn’t been in the past, at least,” said Derek Falk of Snowflake, Man., who is facing discounts for rail cars of milling wheat he contracted because of its vomitoxin levels. “We just kind of get a price on a grade, or a price on a No. 2, 13.5, or No. 2, 13, type of thing.” Fusarium thresholds are well understood by growers, but vomitoxin levels are not always clearly communicated when growers and buyers agree on contract terms. The contract’s specifications that Falk signed with Canadian grain handler BroadGrain call for one part per million of vomitoxin, which he said took him by surprise. “I’m pretty sure when I called these guys last year we didn’t discuss the vomitoxin, and I didn’t pick up on it,” he said. “I just picked up on it last week after I filled the cars. So now I find myself needing this one p.p.m.” Dustin Williams of Souris, Man., also took a discount for wheat delivered to BroadGrain by rail after being unable to deliver wheat with less than one p.p.m. vomitoxin. “Everyone is accepting these contracts, thinking they are just a regular No. 2 CWRS, 13.5 protein, con-

One of canola’s fathers thinks farmers might need to force their neighbours to stop over-growing canola. And a leading canola developer thinks canola’s future could be grim if endemic problems aren’t controlled. “If we abuse it, we’re going to lose i t ,” G a r t h H o d g e s , B a y e r CropScience vice-president of marketing and business development, told the Canola Council of Canada convention March 8, referring to the few clubroot-resistant genes that researchers know about. He said short rotations are weakening the crop’s ability to withstand pressure from clubroot, blackleg, weeds, pests and other challenges. “How do we go back to some of the basics like saying we have to go into (good) crop rotation and be better at crop rotation?”


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
The western producer march 16, 2017 by The Western Producer - Issuu