Improved pulse crop demand is just around the corner, says one of the world’s largest lentil processors. “An expected return to normal buying in many regional markets, which is viewed by (us) as the start of the replenishment of longstanding depleted local market stocks, is expected to materialize in 2012,” said Alliance Grain Traders Inc. […] Read more
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Pulse exporter expects resumption of demand
Innovation awards presented at Agritechnica
HANOVER, Germany — A driverless tractor and a round baler that doesn’t stop won gold at Agritechnica, the world’s largest agricultural show. Agco was awarded a top prize in agricultural innovation for a tractor that follows the lead of another machine in the field. A master machine with an operator runs through the field with […] Read more
Devotion to British breed pays off for ranching family
EDMONTON — Wendy Bishop was up at 4:30 a.m. a few weeks ago working with her cattle when the sky burst into a cascade of northern lights. “What could be better than that?” she thought as she went about her chores on her farm near Holden, Alta. “Farming is the only way to go, the […] Read more
Ending single desk won’t change realities of wheat market
The rhetoric on both sides of the Canadian Wheat Board debate has become totally overblown. Extreme pro CWB advocates say that vast swaths of farmers will go out of business and Canadian consumers won’t be able to buy food with Canadian grown wheat if the single desk goes. If the CWB was the only thing […] Read more
Build here, reap benefits, says Kazakhstan ag minister
HANOVER, Germany — Kazakhstan has told farm equipment manufacturers that the first companies to begin building large scale machinery in that country could receive exclusive access. The country, which is the world’s largest exporter of wheat flour, represents a significant market for farm machinery and an opportunity for agricultural investors. Asylzhan Mamytbekov, Kazakhstan’s agriculture minister, […] Read more
Growing concern about disease
Respiratory disease has emerged as a significant cause of death in Alberta bison herds. “In my opinion, it’s the biggest single most significant disease affecting the North American bison industry,” said Dr. Roy Lewis, a veterinarian in Clyde, Alta., who is part of a team conducting autopsies on bison to identify causes of death. He […] Read more
Canfax Report – for Nov. 24, 2011
FED PRICES RISE The fed steer weekly average was $114.35 per hundredweight, up $1.77, and heifers were $113.82, up $1.66. The stronger U.S. cash market and weaker Canadian dollar encouraged buying interest from the United States. Open cash offering accounted for a third of the list, and the Alberta-Saskatchewan show list volumes were the smallest […] Read more
Committee reviewing gun registry hears from both sides
For the Conservatives last week, front-line police officers like Murray Grimmer and Randall Kuntz were the face of why the government is killing the long gun registry. Det. sgt. Grismer, a firearms specialist and instructor with the Saskatoon Police Service, told a House of Commons committee studying Bill C-19 that the registry is an ineffective […] Read more
Red Simmental draws $21,000 at Headliner sale
EDMONTON — Maureen Mappin-Smith had the sale of her career when her 10-month-old Simmental heifer sold for $21,500 in an all breeds sale at Farmfair in Edmonton. “We got lucky. All the stars lined up. This is the most money we ever got for an animal,” she said. “I really didn’t do much work with […] Read more
Western Producer Livestock Report – for Nov. 24, 2011
HOGS FALL Ample hog supply lowered prices. Iowa-southern Minnesota cash hogs delivered to plants closed at $61 US per hundredweight Nov. 18, down from $62 Nov. 11. The cash U.S. pork carcass cut-out value closed at $90.18 Nov. 18, down from $90.53 Nov. 11. The U.S. federal weekly slaughter estimate was 2.36 million, up from […] Read more