Manitoba farmers want gov’t to make clubroot control a priority

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Published: October 31, 2013

Now that clubroot is officially in Manitoba, a farmer in the province’s oil patch wants petroleum industry companies to wash vehicles before entering farmland.

Carlyle Jorgensen, who farms near Cromer, said cleaning trucks and other equipment is a standard protocol in Alberta and should become customary in Manitoba.

“In our area of our province, an existing oil and gas facility could see traffic in the year of up to 400 (visits). A new exploration could see in the thousands in a year,” Jorgensen recently told a Keystone Agricultural Producers meeting in Portage la Prairie.

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“Alberta has had clubroot for decades and when I worked out there … it was mandatory that (trucks) had to be cleaned,” he said.

“The pipeline industry is the same…. They stop at the edge of a quarter, the equipment is washed (before) they move to the next quarter.”

Manitoba Agriculture officially confirmed in September what had been suspected for months: clubroot is in Manitoba. Provincial plant pathologists had detected clubroot galls on two canola fields this summer.

Manitoba Agriculture said cleaning equipment before entering farmland is a key practice to limit the spread of the soil-borne disease.

Landowners can request a “clean before enter” provision when they sign a lease, but Jorgensen said farmers are out of luck if the company refuses.

He said companies can ask the provincial government for right of entry if they fail to agree on a lease and the language in that boilerplate document doesn’t mention equipment cleaning.

Chuck Fossay, who farms near Starbuck, Man., said farmers should ask all companies, including petroleum firms, crop input suppliers and utilities, to clean equipment.

“If you hire a custom sprayer or custom fertilizer applicator, you say before you come on my field, ‘I expect that machine to be washed,’ ” he said.

Manitoba Agriculture hasn’t released the locations of fields with confirmed cases of clubroot.

Fossay said it’s unnecessary for the government to do so because cleaning trucks and heavy equipment should be a normal biosecurity protocol to protect farmland from weed seeds, insects and plant disease.

About the author

Robert Arnason

Robert Arnason

Reporter

Robert Arnason is a reporter with The Western Producer and Glacier Farm Media. Since 2008, he has authored nearly 5,000 articles on anything and everything related to Canadian agriculture. He didn’t grow up on a farm, but Robert spent hundreds of days on his uncle’s cattle and grain farm in Manitoba. Robert started his journalism career in Winnipeg as a freelancer, then worked as a reporter and editor at newspapers in Nipawin, Saskatchewan and Fernie, BC. Robert has a degree in civil engineering from the University of Manitoba and a diploma in LSJF – Long Suffering Jets’ Fan.

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