A wheat crop heads for the ripening stage in southeast Saskatchewan, July 20, 2024.  Photo: Greg Berg

Rain aids some Saskatchewan crops

Soil moisture largely adequate

There was some relief for crops in Saskatchewan following sporadic showers. The provincial agriculture department said farmers are hoping for more rain to aid head and pod filling, but the weekly crop report for the week ended July 28 noted that more moisture wouldn’t help the yields for more advanced crops.




An aerial view of the "patchwork" of crops showing a high percentage of blooming, yellow canola fields.

Increasing farmland prices blamed on investors

Firm estimates nine to 15 percent of farmland transactions involve ‘non-farming buyers’; an investor disagrees

a major tax and financial services firm says investors are driving up the value of farmland, preventing young farmers from entering the business. Robert Andjelic said that is bullshit.







File photo of stormy conditions over Alberta fields. (Larry Stickney/iStock/Getty Images)

Rain brings relief to parts of Alberta

Some regions improve, other slip back

Major crops throughout Alberta remained relatively steady during the week ended July 22. The provincial agriculture department rated the crops at 65 per cent good to excellent, a dip of one point from the previous week.

Concerned Chinese investors look at prices of shares (red for price rising and green for price falling) at a stock brokerage house in Jiujiang city, east Chinas Jiangxi province, 8 July 2013.

Chinese stocks tumbled on Monday (8 July 2013) on speculations that the resumed trading of Treasury bond futures and new share offerings will hurt stock prices. The Shanghai Composite Index dropped 48.93 points, or 2.44 percent, to 1,958.27 at the close.No Use China. No Use France.

Bond market seen as crop price threat

A market analyst says the global bond market is on the verge of collapse, which would be bad for agriculture commodities

A grain market analyst believes the bond market is about to collapse and that could drive down commodity values.