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Considering fababeans as an alternative to field peas

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Published: February 5, 2015

One crop that Agriculture Canada didn’t talk about in its 2015 acreage outlook deserves a mention, according to the owners of two seed labs.

“A very hot topic here is fababeans,” said Trevor Nysetvold, president of BioVision Seed Labs in Sherwood Park, Alta.

Farmers are impressed with the crop’s standability and see it as a good substitute for peas, which causes harvest problems because of its tendency to lay flat on the ground.

Nysetvold said fababeans provide an option for farmers who want to keep a pulse crop in their rotations. He estimates growers in Alberta planted 15,000 acres of the crop last year and thinks a lot more will be planted this year.

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“It’s going to grow for sure,” he said.

Limited seed supply is the only problem.

“We are hearing that there is some shortages of seed,” he said.

Bruce Carriere, owner of Discovery Seed Labs, is shocked by the increase in fababean samples coming through his Saskatoon lab.

“We would probably be up 700 percent,” he said.

Carriere believes Saskatchewan growers will plant 10,000 to 15,000 acres of the crop.

“I think they’re looking at it as an alternative to some of the other crops,” he said.

“Fababeans don’t mind wet feet.”

Carriere agreed that the acreage will come at the expense of peas in places like northwestern and southwestern Saskatchewan, where pea growers have been fighting aphanomyces, a new type of root rot disease.

Bert Vandenberg, a fababean breeder with the University of Sask­atchewan’s Crop Development Centre, once said it has the potential to be a million acre crop.

About the author

Sean Pratt

Sean Pratt

Reporter/Analyst

Sean Pratt has been working at The Western Producer since 1993 after graduating from the University of Regina’s School of Journalism. Sean also has a Bachelor of Commerce degree from the University of Saskatchewan and worked in a bank for a few years before switching careers. Sean primarily writes markets and policy stories about the grain industry and has attended more than 100 conferences over the past three decades. He has received awards from the Canadian Farm Writers Federation, North American Agricultural Journalists and the American Agricultural Editors Association.

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