Contact negotiations in the past have been rocky on occasion, sometimes resulting in Lantic threats to close the only sugar beet processing plant in Canada located in Taber, Alta., as well as grower refusal to accept Lantic's offered acreage and pricing. | File photo

Alta. sugar beet growers extend contract with processor

Alberta Sugar Beet Growers have signed a two-year contract extension with their processor, Lantic Sugar Inc., which they expect will provide stability through to the 2020 growing season. The current contract allows for 28,000 acres of sugar beets to be planted in 2018, but information about acreage for subsequent years was not available at press […] Read more

A calf on the Cervo ranch near Fort Macleod, Alta., finds one of the few snowless spots in the calving pasture in which to take a nap.  |  Barb Glen photo

Harsh weather takes toll on calves

Some dry spots finally free of snow were just beginning to appear in David Cervo’s calving pasture. Then came another 10 centimetres of overnight snow. That’s how it’s been during calving season in southern Alberta and across much of the Prairies, resulting in higher calf losses, shortages of hay and straw, and increased stress on […] Read more

Fees charged to veterinary drug makers could increase 39 to 500 percent if current fee proposals go into effect as planned in April 2019, according to a study commissioned by the Canadian Animal Health Institute.
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Feds propose vet drug fee hike

Initial Health Canada proposals to increase service fees for veterinary drug approvals and reviews could drastically increase the cost of products for livestock producers, a recent study indicates. Fees charged to veterinary drug makers could increase 39 to 500 percent if current fee proposals go into effect as planned in April 2019, according to a […] Read more


Supporters of a draft plan to manage and protect the Livingstone-Porcupine Hills region of southern Alberta made their views known April 9 at a news conference where they articulated the benefits.
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Debate over land use plan focuses on OHV use

Province looks for public input on draft plan for Livingstone-Porcupine Hills region in southwestern Alberta

Supporters of a draft plan to manage and protect the Livingstone-Porcupine Hills region of southern Alberta made their views known April 9 at a news conference where they articulated the benefits. Albertans have until April 26 to provide feedback on two plans tabled earlier this month by the provincial government: the land footprint report and […] Read more

Brady, Jenny and Leena Vandersteen pose on an antique settee often used in Jenny’s photo shoots at the family’s ranch west of Pincher Creek, Alta.  |  Barb Glen photo

Young Alberta family returns to farm roots

On the Farm: Jenny and Andy Vandersteen met at a firebase and eventually worked their way back to the farm


BEAVER MINES, Alta. — A winding gravel road through the foothills west of Pincher Creek, Alta., brings visitors to a ranch where the scenery fosters two families, a 60-head cow-calf herd and a photography business. Jenny and Andy Vandersteen and their children Leena, 7, and Brady, 5, ranch with Jenny’s parents, Ron and Terry Watrin. […] Read more



More farms, ranches sought for Open Farm Days

This year will be the sixth Open Farm Days event in Alberta, and public participation grew from 17,800 visitors in 2016 to 20,000 last year

Agricultural groups often talk about the widening gap between urban and rural people and public misunderstandings about how food gets from field and pasture to table and plate. Alberta farmers and ranchers can do something about that gap. They can open their properties to the public during Open Farm Days, this year scheduled Aug. 18-19. […] Read more

Sage Shade, a pen rider at VRP Farms near Picture Butte, Alta., says it is difficult for First Nations people to leave the reserve and seek employment. “It’s like going to another country.”  |  Barb Glen photo

Cultural divide separates farmers, Indigenous workers

Sage Shade rides his horse through the feedlot pens at VRP Farms, checking for cattle that need treatment. It’s spring and the pens are muddy from melting snow and ice, so the job of pen rider isn’t at its most pleasant. Still, Shade says he likes the job and the variety it offers. He is […] Read more


Dragonflies, left, lady beetles and spiders are some of the beneficial insects that farmers should protect.  |  file photos

Farmers urged to protect beneficial insects

Farmers’ arsenal against insect pests in crops can easily include weapons of mass destruction that are free and require little maintenance. They come in all shapes and minute sizes and their presence contributes to ecosystem stability. These weapons are otherwise known as nature’s array of beneficial insects, those that battle pest species that reduce crop […] Read more

This photo shows the click beetles and their respective wireworms, which are the beetles’ larval form. These three are all prominent pest species collected in 2017. From left, they are Hypnoidus bicolor, Selatosomus aeripennis destructor and Aeolus mellilus. S. destructor can destroy three to 10 times as many seeds as H. bicolor, and is the main wireworm pest on the Prairies.  |  Barb Glen photo

Click beetles, wireworms focus of new Alberta field study

Research on wireworms lagged when effective pesticides came into wider use in Canada. Now that those same pesticides, notably lindane, are no longer in use, wireworm research is being revived. Haley Catton, research scientist and cereal crop entomologist with Agriculture Canada in Lethbridge, is in year two of a three-year study designed to see how […] Read more