2012 Nuffield winners named

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: February 2, 2012

The scholarship is to help individuals carry out innovation and ideas in their industry

Two Albertans have been selected as the 2012 recipients of the Canadian Nuffield Farming Scholarship.

Brenda Schoepp of Rimbey and Ryan Bonnett of Airdrie will join Crosby Devitt of Guelph, Ont., as this year’s scholars.

The Nuffield program provides $15,000 to each scholar.

Schoepp is a marketing adviser and publisher of Beeflink, a weekly newsletter on beef and cattle marketing.

She also coaches corporate executives in production agriculture, research and agribusiness.

Schoepp and her husband own and operate a ranch near Rimbey.

Read Also

A perennial forage crop at the Parkland Crop Diversification Centre in Roblin, Manitoba.

Manitoba Parkland research station grapples with dry year

Drought conditions in northwestern Manitoba have forced researchers at the Parkland Crop Diversification Foundation to terminate some projects and reseed others.

She plans to study the needs and successes of women in agribusiness so that she can build a Canadian mentorship model, according to a Nuffield news release.

Bonnett is a marketing adviser for Farmlink Marketing Solutions, which specializes in crop marketing and sales consultation. He is originally from a grain farm near Gravelbourg, Sask.

Bonnett plans to explore grain marketing and production risk management around the world and use the information to develop new practices for growers in Western Canada.

Devitt works for Grain Farmers of Ontario and plans to investigate grain research partnerships.

Scholarships are awarded to people “who are judged to have the greatest potential to create value for themselves, their industries and their communities through the doors which will be opened and the opportunities provided,” said the news release.

Applications for 2013 scholarships are due April 30.

About the author

Barb Glen

Barb Glen

Barb Glen is the livestock editor for The Western Producer and also manages the newsroom. She grew up in southern Alberta on a mixed-operation farm where her family raised cattle and produced grain.

explore

Stories from our other publications