Scout canola fields to assess yields, make improvements

Canola has reached the six leaf stage or beyond in many prairie fields. Weed control should have already taken place and top dressing of fertilizer is a recent memory. So what more can be done to protect yields? “The best investment you can make in your crop is your shadow,” said Canola Council of Canada […] Read more

Hay bale kit allows more hauling, safely

Greg Haukaas wanted a safe and legal way to haul bales without making permanent changes to a big flat deck trailer. “You might want that trailer for spraying, or hauling equipment or bulk bags,” said the farmer and machinery builder from Mortlach, Sask. “But if it could haul hay or straw too, then you can […] Read more

Jim Wood of Rocky Mountain Equipment says the agricultural industry in Western Canada needs to do a better job of selling young people on the sector as a good place for a career.  | Michael Raine photo

Mechanic shortage affects dealers

Machinery dealers lobby for skilled workers | More openings sought for agricultural mechanic technicians

REGINA — The business of fixing farm machinery in Saskatchewan is getting an overhaul. The industry says machinery dealers across Western Canada would employ 1,000 more mechanics today if they could get them. The shortage is causing business issues for dealers and service delays for producers. “There are dealers that are not building or expanding […] Read more


VIDEO: New carts efficient, drill precise: Morris

VIDEO: New carts efficient, drill precise: Morris

Switch from red to silver | The new carts calibrate and fill from the operator’s side

REGINA —Morris Industries has introduced a large capacity single disc drill and a new line of air seeder carts. It is also opting for a new look. Company president Casey Davis showed his excitement the day before the opening of Canada’s Farm Progress Show in Regina. Grinning widely, he told reporters, a few staff and […] Read more

Knives between the baler’s pickup and bale chamber, such as on this Claas baler, reduce the length of hay, giving it more surface area and greater digestibility for ruminants. Researchers say producers should consider if this type of baler might have a role in improving feed use on their farms.  |  Claas photo

Small bites of hay deliver big benefits

Improved digestibility | Research shows cutting 
hay into shorter lengths has advantages

Research shows that cattle feed efficiency and rate of gain improves dramatically when hay pieces are about four inches long, says a U.S. forage expert. As a result, he is advising livestock producers to adopt baling technology that cuts hay into shorter lengths. “The machinery does cost a little bit more initially… but the data […] Read more


Chopped hay allows more digesting bacteria

Francis Fluharty thinks chopping hay to shorter lengths is the most important innovation in cutting since sliced bread. “I think it the biggest breakthrough in technology for cow-calf operations, nutritionally, in 50 years,” said Fluharty, an animal science professor from Ohio State University who specializes in ruminant nutrition and animal growth. “Going from the small […] Read more

Harmonized farm equipment legislation plows ahead

REGINA, Sask. — Ontario is hoping to convince provincial governments on the Prairies about the merits of harmonizing consumer protection legislation for farmers. The various provincial acts are similar but were written in different economic times, which has resulted in confusion for producers, dealers and manufacturers. Finbar Desir of the Ontario agriculture ministry is meeting […] Read more

Sask flax acres up but Manitoba area down

When it comes to flax, it’s a tale of two provinces this spring. In its June estimates of principal field crops, released Tuesday morning, Statistics Canada pegged Saskatchewan flax area at 960,000 acres – up from 775,000 acres in 2012 and 535,000 in 2011. In Manitoba, however, flax acres are headed rapidly in the opposite […] Read more


Prairie soybean and corn seeded acres jump

Manitoba farmers propelled soybean and corn to new acreage records in Canada, based on Statistics Canada field crop estimates released Tuesday morning. Canadian growers planted a record 4.6 million acres of soybeans this spring, a gain of 400,000 acres relative to 2012. Soybeans in Manitoba jumped to 1.085 million acres, a gain of 285,000 acres […] Read more

Redroot pigweed is developing herbicide tolerance, but multiple mode of action herbicides and tank mixes can help control it.  |  File photo

Weed of the Week: redroot pigweed

It is a pig when it comes to using water, nutrients and land. Redroot pigweed, or amaranthus retroflexus, is a dicot weed in the amaranthaceae family. It was first discovered to have developed resistance to Group 2 herbicides in Western Canada in 2010. Group 2 herbicides are known as ALS inhibitors and are popular in […] Read more