AgriNews March 2014

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AGRINEWS March 2014 page 001_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:12 AM Page 1

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Trevor Crowe of Crowe Productions remotely controls an aerial drone carrying a high-megapixel digital camera, used for eye-in-the-sky videography and photography services offered by his Prince Edward County firm. Crowe showcased the DJI S800 electric hexacopter for the agricultural and agribusiness crowd attending the annual Eastern Ontario Crop Conference, Feb. 20 at the Kemptville Campus of the University of Guelph. The Campus hosts its annual College Royal March 7-8. Zandbergen photo

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 002_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:01 AM Page 1

Page 2 The AgriNews March, 2014

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87th annual College Royal, March 7-8

K

EMPTVILLE — IT’s a royaL wEEKEnd on ThE

KEMPTVILLE caMPus The 87th annual College Royal is opening its campus doors on Fri., March 7 and Sat., March 8, at the University of GuelphKemptville Campus to showcase the work of students and provide families with many opportunities for fun and learning. Admission is free, with the exception of the college concert on March 8, and features many interactive exhibits and demonstrations around the campus. Since its conception in 1927, which now attracts over 2,000 visitors each year, the public have followed in the footsteps of students in programs from horticulture and food science, to equine, agriculture, welding and mechanics. Member Cheryl Nice notes that the committee, along with staff advisors Paul Sharpe and Anne Kotlarchuk, has been working hard to enhance the annual tradition. Members of the 2014 student-based executive are Jane Hickey, Cheryl Nice, Eliza Sylvia, Ben Rarek, Brittany MacIntosh, Nicole Fry, Ashley Wilson, Shaylin Ferguson, Jasmine Smiley, Robert Jelly, Andrew Breckfeild and Sarah Gray. Each year the Royal has a theme — 2014’s is “Cultivating Traditions of Tomorrow� — that will highlight the new directions and technologies the college and the industry are taking. “It is amazing to think of the modern-day accomplishments you’ll discover at College Royal, compared to its humble beginnings 87 years ago,� says College Royal President, Robert Jelly. Events include the Celebrity Farmers Olympics, live auction calf sale, horse show and polo demo, a petting zoo in the Kid’s Zone, to name a few. Two much anticipated events is the all-day hockey tournament taking place on March 7, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the North Grenville Arena and the Kemptville College Foundation pancake breakfast will be held on Sat. March 8 from 7:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Agroforestry Centre on Bedell Road.

Shown are members of the 87th annual Kemptville College Royal organizing committee, front, from left: Jane Hickey, Cheryl Nice, Eliza Sylvia and Ben Rarek. Back, from left: Staff Advsior Paul Sharpe, Brittany MacIntosh, Nicole Fry, Ashley Wilson, Shaylin Ferguson, Jasmine Smiley, Robert Jelly and Staff Advisor Anne Kotlarchuk. Missing are Andrew Breckfeild and Sarah Gray. PJ Pearson Photo

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 003_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:14 AM Page 1

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The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 3

Dairy farmers must kowtow to client demands: DFC official ‘proAction’ rationale explained by Seguin By Nelson Zandbergen AgriNews Staff Writer EMPTVILLE — CLad In Cow suITs, ProTEsTErs froM HoLLywood’s faVourITE anIMaL

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rIgHTs grouP TroTTEd for THE fIrsT TIME ouTsIdE THE annuaL gEnEraL MEETIng of THE daIry farMErs of onTarIo (dfo), wHEn THaT EVEnT was HELd as usuaL THIs yEar durIng THE dEad of wInTEr In THE ProVInCIaL CaPITaL.

A picture of the dubious milestone flashed up on an overhead projector while an official with the Dairy Farmers of Canada (DFC) attempted to sell Eastern Ontario producers on an incoming mandatory program that will further scrutinize their farms — this time for humane practices. “I used to say we would never see PETA [People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals] ‌ in Toronto in minus-20degree weather. But guess what? This year they were there,â€? Guy Seguin told the crowd of 150 gathered at the Feb. 13 Dairy Day conference in Kemptville, a little more than a month after the bevy of bipedal bovines were photographed hoofing it down the streets of Hogtown. Seguin, DFC’s assistant director of policy and dairy production, cast PETA and a lesser-known group in Canada, Mercy for Animals, as the extreme end of a continuum of shifting consumer and client expectations regarding on-farm practices — even if those expectations are often fed by an urban disconnect with the life-anddeath realities of food production. Even mainstream Canadian companies like McDonald’s, Sobey’s and Tim Hortons have established committees to set animal treatment standards for the food offered on their shelves and menus, Seguin pointed out, the screen behind him forming a backdrop of several corporate logos. He lauded the producers in the room for “doing a good jobâ€? and led his speech with a survey highlighting the public’s ranking of the farming profession among the highest of all vocations (several rungs above lawyers, journalists and car salesmen). But he argued their industry must proactively stay

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Guy Seguin of the Dairy Farmers of Canada addresses the annual Dairy Day conference in Kemptville. ahead matters by embracing DFC’s new “proAction� program, which will audit every dairy farm in an era when consumers demand proof that companies and farmers are acting properly.

The alternative is to wait for a potential plethora of divergent industry standards, rather than take a leadership role, according to Seguin. “Some of these companies have demands, and if we’re not careful we’re going to see different demands at different levels from different companies,â€? he said. “And so if we don’t go ahead of the curve, then we’ll have to be accountable and then start, somehow, splitting the milk, and this is not feasible and it’s not convenient. “And in the end, these companies don’t want to have 15 different standards, either. They would rather use a solid standard that’s recognized‌. We have the chance to do this right off the bat.â€? Still, companies have already begun instigating their own programs, and Seguin pointed to Sobey’s and its “Better Food for Allâ€? campaign, which includes promoting “certified humaneâ€? meat. The company hired celebrity chef Jamie Oliver as pitchman for the initiative. In a promotional video played on screen, Oliver praised the retailer as the first in Canada to offer beef, pork and chicken Continued on page 7

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 004_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:13 AM Page 1

The Editorial Page

Page 4 The AgriNews March, 2014

Editorial Mr. St. Albert It’s a worthy choice. l’Union des cultivateurs franco-ontariens, the French-language farm lobby group, will honour Rejean Ouimet, Mr. St. Albert himself, at its annual meeting March 6 in Plantagenet. At its banquet, l’UCFO will make Ouimet an honorary member, a title awarded to major builders of agriculture. He’s also being acknowledged for his involvement in his home community and in the “broad Ontario Francophonie.” The never quite retiring general manager of St. Albert Cheese Factory, Ouimet, 66, was the one who, even as the former factory still smouldered after a devastating fire a little more than a year ago, stood tall and announced, “We shall rebuild.” When Ouimet said it, everybody believed it. He had developed unimpeachable credibility over his decades associated with the co-operative that owns the famous cheese-making operation. At St. Albert for the past 20 years, it was – and still is - what Rejean says goes. So it’s really no surprise that a new factory, bigger and better than before, is scheduled to be back in business this spring. Ouimet promised so it must be so. He directed clearing of the site, had a huge hand in arranging financing, approved the new plans, oversaw reconstruction, and will probably paint the front hallway when the time comes. Laid-off employees, many of whom will be returning to work, say the fire and rebuilding process have united them more than before, making them feel even more like a family. You can be sure Ouimet has a lot to do with that all-pervasive feeling. His contribution has spread far beyond the boundaries of his village and the confines of the factory. Last fall, Ontario’s caisses populaires (French-language credit unions) bestowed their order of merit on Ouimet for his economic and cultural contribution. Simond Durand, l’UCFO’s general manager, describes the meeting’s special guest this way: “He’s a man of action, with passion and integrity. He’s known for being a straight shooter. For him, things have to move quickly; any errors can be corrected later.” He became manager of St. Albert Cheese Factory in 1994, the perfect fit for a man who immediately recognized the potential for growth. Under his administration, annual revenues increased from $13.5-million to $40-million. More than 100 people are employed at St. Albert. Ouimet is proud that the operation with an annual payroll of $5-million has supported several local families for more than a century. You’ve done good Rejean! Why don’t you stick around for awhile?

Sap Cap Flap With maple syrup season right around the corner, it’s time to take a look at the most dramatic development in the industry since pipelines…. the sap cap. Its Vermont developers say the system acts like a sugar-filled straw stuck in the ground: Just apply suction to the topless stems of saplings and stand back. There’s nothing overly sophisticated about it. Each stem is outfitted with a sealed plastic bag kept in place with a plumbing clamp. A vacuum hose collects the sap. University of Vermont’s Maple Research Centre has applied for an international patent; the cap isn’t expected to be generally available until 2016. While maples are typically tapped when they’re fully mature at about 40 years, producing about 40 gallons of syrup from 80 trees per acre, the suction cap would be applied to plantations of 6,000 saplings over an acre, yielding about 400 gallons, beginning at about seven years. While some are calling the sap cap revolutionary, Pembroke’s Ray Bonenberg, president of the Ontario Maple Syrup Producers Association, doubts it’ll lead to a windfall for producers. Production costs using the device attached to saplings would be comparable, with higher yields offset by increased expenses for equipment and labour. The main advantage comes from reduced land requirements. One useful application could be in helping producers recover from major damage such as ice storms, hurricanes or pest invasions. The plantation approach would put them back in business much sooner. Continued on page 5

AgriGab Dr. Naud set to go When Dr. Claude Naud served as guest speaker Feb. 21 at the annual meeting of the Dundas Federation of Agriculture, most of those listening in at Chesterville’s Nelson LaPrade Centre weren’t aware of an important aspect of his presentation. Naud stalwartly soldiered on, optimistically describing future prospects of Kemptville Campus of the University of Guelph, even though he had submitted his resignation as director of that institution. That information was actually readily available on the campus website being projected right above Naud’s head. I guess nobody read the fine print because there were no questions about Naud’s imminent departure after close to four years of Herculean effort trying to turn the campus around. Playing on the wall were the words of Dr. Rob Gordon, Dean of Ontario Agricultural College, thanking Naud for his leadership, support and dedication “during a time of transition and fiscal challenges”. Gordon hopes to announce an interim director shortly. Naud will depart May 30, right after 2014 graduation exercises, about 14 months shy of termination of his five-year contract. He said his reason for leaving is personal, specifically he wants to spend more time with ailing wife Kathryn. He has no intention of leaving his adopted home in Kemptville and “won’t avoid the campus” after he departs. However, he will refrain from being overly active in campus affairs. Plucked out of retirement, when the former military man and former senior vice-president of the Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Science and Technology arrived on campus, the place was moribund. A little more diplomatic than I am, Naud described it as “suffering from benign neglect and in need of TLC”. With his credentials and personality, there’s no way he could have abided for long the status quo or served as a caretaker. “I remember walking home after the first few days on the job and telling my wife I might die of boredom. It sure didn’t turn out that way.” Asked if he accomplished everything he wanted to in close to four years, Naud answered with a blunt “no”. However, he’s satisfied he placed the 550-student U of G satellite campus on a sound track for the future. “I don’t know if I could have added much in a fifth year,” Naud reflected. “What’s needed next is more short-term certificate courses to meet the needs of industry.”

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by Tom VanDusen He has already introduced some of those courses, always in consultation with potential employers. Kemptville’s foundation agriculture program is now under review with the objective of making it more responsive to workplace requirements while equipping students with all of the abilities needed in the technological era to manage multimillion dollar farming operations. Naud’s hiring was experimental in that it was the first time the job had gone to a professional administrator rather than an academic. Prior to his arrival, the campus was in interim mode for several months, with Dr. Renee Bergeron, director of U of G’s Alfred Campus, pulling double duty in overseeing both facilities. Naud had no information on how the situation will be handled this time. Kemptville College Foundation president Mac Johnston said Naud deserves thanks for steering a course towards sustainability. “He shepherded the campus through a difficult period of curriculum renewal, internal reorganization and fiscal realignment.” Smiths Falls farmer John Joynt, who was instrumental in securing a $100,000 donation from the Ottawa Valley Seed Growers Association for the campus dairy innovation centre, applauded Naud for the “new vision” he brought to the job in reaching outside for partnerships with industry and other groups. Shortly after his arrival, it was Naud who reinvigorated the stalled dairy centre project and got it completed. Since he took over as director, no aspect of Kemptville Campus has remained untouched, from the physical infrastructure, to programming that has become more science-based, to the teaching staff. There’s a new sense of renewal and cohesiveness across the campus. He has modernized classrooms, meeting rooms, and the campus cafeteria to the tune of about $1.5million. Simple efficiencies such as reconfiguring classrooms to accommodate 36-40 students rather than 24 have been implemented. Two main meeting rooms now offer state-of-the-art technical services and one has also been outfitted as the Eastern Ontario Agricultural Hall of Fame, a localized version of the central hall in Milton. Continued on page 6

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Editor & Publisher: Robin R. Morris Staff Writers: Tom VanDusen, Nelson Zandbergen, Pamela Pearson Advertising Manager: Julie Lascelle, agrinewsads@gmail.com Advertising Representatives: Norma Smith (613) 213-4006; agrinews.norma@gmail.com, Muriel Carruthers, Christine Lascelle P.O. Box 368, Chesterville, Ont. K0C 1H0 Telephone: 613-448-2321 Fax: 613-448-3260 www.agrinews.ca e-mail: rm@agrinews.ca Annual Subscription $36.75 (HST Included) within Canada All advertisements appearing in The AgriNews are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced without the express written permission of the publisher.


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 005_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:17 AM Page 1

www.agrinews.ca Continued from page 4 At his Mapleside Sugar Bush, Bonenberg pipelines about 1,400 taps a season.

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 5 He has a small stand of saplings but he has no intention of cutting off their tops to equip them with the

sap cap. He believes yield would be limited and worries the process would kill off

OUR Readers WRITE

Paying for power we don’t need Regardless of need, Brinston project will gross $205-million for developer: critic The Editor: We saw your excellent article on the nearly complete South Branch wind power generation project in the January edition of The AgriNews. In it, you discuss the fact that EDP will not be subject to constrained produc-

tion, i.e., paid for power they don’t produce. The project manager Mr. Little was quoted as saying, “We produce power, and we get paid for what we produce.� We thought you might be interested to know how much money we’re talking about. Assuming a 29 per cent efficiency rate, the 30megawatt wind power project, at $135 per megawatt,

will cost Ontario $10,288,620 per year. That works out to more than $205-million over the life of the contract. And, as you point out, that is for power that Ontario doesn’t need, as we are in a situation of surplus. Jane Wilson North Gower Wind Concerns Ontario

Mouthpiece for industrialized farming To Editor Just a note about how I see your paper, The AgriNews, which has become one of the main mouthpieces for “Industrialized Agriculture� in Eastern Ontario. It seems today that “common sense� has been replaced by “self-interest�,

which results in acceptance of larger and larger operations, more genetic manipulation in both plants and animals, more centralization, more automation in the fields as well as the barn, and of course fewer people — and your paper seems very supportive of all of it.

I find this very disturbing and I fear it will lead to disaster and I don’t believe I am the only one who feels this way. I have farmed full time with my wife and family since 1950 and I am very concerned. Ken Marisette Picton, Ont.

young trees. However, he may eventually test the invention on two-inch diameter trees he would normally thin out of his mature bush. “Producers have to understand the impact of this method, what it’s taking out of the ground and what it does to the water.â€? However, Bonenberg doesn’t dismiss the sap cap just because it’s different and veers too far away from the spigot and bucket era. He pointed out that more than 90 per cent of Ontario’s commercial maple bushes are on pipelines. For the most part, a few buckets are kept around for demonstration, education and nostalgic purposes. Maple research funded in part by OMSPA regularly introduces new ideas: “Our position on the sap cap like other new concepts is bring it on‌ let’s see how it works.â€? Bonenberg’s caution in assessing the sap cap is laudatory. As he recognizes, if you stick hundreds of straws in the ground and start sucking, something has got to give.

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Page 6 The AgriNews March, 2014

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Dairy facing charges over river effluent By Pamela Pearson AgriNews Staff Writer USSELL — COCHRANE’S DAIRY IN RUSSELL FACES

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FIVE CHARGES UNDER THE FEDERAL

FISHERIES ACT CITY OF

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OTTAWA EMPLOYEE GOT INTO A FROTH ABOUT WHAT APPEARED TO BE MILK FAT FLOATING ON THE CASTOR RIVER. Flowing from the August 2012 complaint to Fisheries and Oceans Canada, the charges relate to the discharge of waste water from the dairy processing plant into the river, along with failure to notify fisheries inspectors or comply with their resulting orders. The unproven allegations involve a time period between Aug. 23 and early

December 2012. A court date has been set for December 2014. If found guilty, Cochrane’s Dairy could face fines into the thousands of dollars. Known in the Ottawa region for its milk sold in glass bottles and old-fashioned delivery-to-your-door service, there is concern the small, 80-year-old family operation could be scuttled and forced to close its doors if hit with a major penalty. Not a surprise to anybody involved in farming or the dairy industry, a milk processing plant does produce waste water. The lawyer for Cochrane’s Dairy, Robert Houston, has said in the media that effluent from the Russell plant is now trans-

Dr. Naud set to go Continued from page 4 The comfortable, de-institutionalized cafeteria now offers full-day service, with a component permitting students to prepare their own meals. In addition to the dairy centre, Naud directed installation of a new food science lab and a fully equipped equine demonstration area. New instructors have been added, staff development opportunities have been introduced with “tremendous results�, and Naud feels students are once again becoming “engaged�. Also a member of the college foundation, Joynt recalled the director’s most recent presentation to the board not being as upbeat as usual. Naud warned the campus was “threatened� by fiscal constraints and those who supported it would have to remain vigilant. It’s a challenge made that much more difficult without an old soldier standing on guard.

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ported off site for treatment. “All of that has been rectified and there are no problems whatsoever. And as a matter of fact, from our point of view, although the waste water has been flowing into or was flowing into this river for decades, there has been no problem whatsoever,� CBC reported Houston as saying. A tributary of the South Nation River, the Castor

River is monitored by the local watershed authority, South Nation Conservation. The Finch-based SNC was aware of the charges when contacted by The AgriNews. But when asked if SNC knew of any environmental damages to the water or 72 species of fish in the river, an official said they had no files or complaints regarding Cochrane’s Dairy.

Kevin Cochrane of CochraneĘźs Dairy stands at the firmĘźs glass-bottle milk line in this recent file photo.


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 007_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:22 AM Page 1

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Seguin Continued from page 3 raised under the “ethical” standard. “It’s a niche, right?” Seguin said of the effort, noting that “certified humane” comes at a premium price for those consumers willing to pay. “This is a certification from the States, and basically it’s organic food, and a level higher,” he suggested, prompting a ripple of chuckling in the room. “Thats a lie!” blurted a sing-song voice in the audience. “That’s what they claim,” Seguin responded to the comment. “But you’re right. It’s questionable. Thank you.” But such marketing schemes are becoming a reality and it wasn’t his place to judge Sobey’s, he said, while wryly observing that the “good Canadian company” had brought in “a British chef to tell Canadians how to eat.” But “certified humane” milk also exists outside the Canadian marketplace, he said, noting that by definition, such milk can’t be produced in a tie-stall oper-

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 7 ation and must be organic. Dairy Farmers of Canada is not yet under pressure by retailers to adopt that standard in this country, he assured the room. “Not really, not now. But it doesn’t mean that Sobey’s wouldn’t try to get this if this is the type of marketing they want.” “These are the kind of decisions our own clients are making, and I’m putting it to you as fact,” he said, making the case for proAction to head off the trend. He buttressed that argument by pointing to a broader context of “questionable” activities and video footage releases by animal rights groups as well as a mainstream media out of touch with farming. “If you had a camera following me for a month or two and looking at every sin that I did, and put it into 60 seconds, perhaps some of you wouldn’t be talking to me,” he said, as his listeners smiled. The dairy industry “may or may not be next” for a profile by CTV’s W5, he offered, highlighting past shows that have profiled the treatment of chickens and pigs. He heaped particular

scorn on a statement by a Mercy for Animals leader that farmers “doing these abuses aren’t intentionally cruel” but are following a “set of standards and system of rearing animals that are inappropriate, and this is the result, unbelievable suffering.” He deemed the notion of abuse blindly carried out an “insult to the farmers” in the dairy industry. But the originator was intentionally attacking the system more than farmers, he pointed out, thanks to those high public approval ratings for the vocation. In the same vein, he pointed to the Toronto Star’s coverage of a world record lifetime milk production for an Eastern Ontario cow. The otherwise positive article about the famous ‘Smurf’ at Ferme Gillette included a requisite comment from PETA offering to find a shelter for the Holstein. He congratulated the Patenaude family for writing back to explain the cow could never have reached such an age and milestone without maximum care and comfort. But it’s important, he said, for dairy farmers to increase their transparency on such matters. “So what’s the big deal?

The big deal is … that somebody else looks at your farm, and tells the public, or the consumer, or the client that you’re doing a good job.” Farmers don’t buy a tractor anymore on a simple handshake, he said, and by the same token consumers want verification of milk production standards on paper. “We’re asking that you have an independent audit into the way you do things, as uncomfortable and as much as you hate it,” Seguin soothingly intoned. “I understand that, but that’s where we are today.” An outgrowth of the Canadian Quality Milk assurance program (CQM) — to be fully implemented across the country in 2015 — proAction goes beyond the Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points (HACCP) focus of that earlier initiative. While conceding some producers might view the CQM as unnecessary, he noted the program’s successes, including the virtual elimination of “malty milk” shipments through mandated time-temperature

recorders on farmers’ bulk tanks. “Did it help you manage? Yes, I think it did.” CQM also cost Canadian milk producers a combined $500-million upgrade investment on their farms — a fact that has never been promoted. “You guys have a story to tell, and it’s a good story.” He likened the next step, proAction to the creation of a self-regulating professional standards entity for farmers, like the College of Teachers or College of Physicians — hence the ‘pro’ prefix on the word. Seventy per cent of American milk involves cooperatives and buyers utilizing a similar standard as proAction, he said, also highlighting how the Swiss impose a strict 350,000 somatic cell count on their producers. Implemented through DFC and member organizations like DFO, 13 principles guide the mandatory incoming Canadian version, including being designed by farmers for farmers; striving for continuous improvement; and credible and independent audits.

Already approved by the Dairy Farmers of Canada leadership, it will cost dairy farmers a combined total of more than $160-million over a decade. Seguin was asked from the floor about farmers’ return on investment on that expenditure. He suggested the payback came in terms of better public relations, drawing a comparison with those flashy rotating cattle brushes now found as a standard feature in almost every free-stall barn. “The consumer needs to be educated; we don’t need to be regulated,” complained a questioner from the floor. The sentiment seemed to fall in line with an electronic poll of the producers in the room, in which 50 per cent indicated the program would bring “no added value” to their farms. Fifty per cent also strongly disagreed or disagreed with the statement that proAction would “help finance customer and consumer support for the 100 per cent Canadian branding” initiative.

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 008_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:24 AM Page 1

Page 8 The AgriNews March, 2014

2014 Ottawa Valley Farm Show Exhibitors List

A&A E Z Brush & Oiler Inc. 4133 Egremont Dr., Strathroy, ON N7G 3H6 519 245 3807 aajanssen@execulink.com Booth # 2037 ABS Global (Canada) Inc. 1525 Floradale Rd. Elmira, ON N3B 2Z1 519 320 8728 bj.mayfield@genusplc.com Booth # 2009 ADS Canada 250A Boul.Industriel St Germain de Grantham, QC JOC 1K0 819 395 4244 stacy.normandin@ads pipe.com Booth # 2112 Advanced Grain Handling Systems 4124 Cty Rd. 16, P.O.Box 40 Brinston, ON KOE 1C0 613 652 1010 ext.222 peter@aghs.ca Booth # 1325 Ag Dealer 44 Byward St., Suite 230 Ottawa, ON K1N 7A2 519 571 4681

dan.jewer@fbcpublishing.com Booth # 2506 AgMedia Inc. (Better Farming Magazine) 21400 Service Rd. Vankleek Hill, ON KOB 1R0 613 678 2232 sschaerer@betterfarming.com Booth # 109 Agri One Solutions Inc. 133 Olde Towne Ave. Russell, ON K4R 0A6 613 296 1821 ecoagra@yahoo.ca Booth # 1835 Agribrands Purina Can. Inc. 717 Lawrence St., Box 387 Merrickville, ON KOG 1N0 613 266 7380 garyb@agribrands.ca Booth # 2232 Agribrink R.R.1, 8152 Conc. 16 Moorefield, ON NOG 2K0 519 848 5518 j ake@agribrink.com Booth # 20 Agri Co Supply 3145 Hwy. 17, Box 182 L'Orignal, ON KOB 1K0 613 675 1658 agrico98@yahoo.com Booth # 2422 Agricorp Box 3660 Station Central Guelph, ON N1H 8M4 519 826 3984 nicola.tarrant@gmail.com Booth # 110 Agriculture & Agri Food Canada 960 Carling Ave., Rm. 1089 K.W. Neatby Bldg., Ottawa , ON K1A 0C6 613 759 1858

joanne.mcwilliams@agr.gc.ca Booth # 102 Agri King P.O. Box 208 Fulton, IL USA 61252 815 589 2525 diane.schaver@agriking.com Booth # 1103 Agri Trac Inc. 725504 Twp. Rd. 3, R.R.# 5 Woodstock, ON N4S 7V9 519 539 7550 tom@agritraction.com Booth # 2416 Agri Trend Agrology Ltd. 16 Imp. des Iris Gatineau, QC J8R 2C1 613 799 3009 bdalton@agri trend.com Booth # 1212 Agrocentre Belcan 180 Montee Ste Marie Ste.Marthe, QC JOP 1W0 450 459 4288 ext. 234 pmollet@agrocentrebelcan.com Booth # 1427 Agrodrain Systems Ltd. 3976 Nixon Dr., Box 489 Osgoode, ON KOA 2W0 613 826 2388 mpaquette@agrodrain.com Booth # 201 Agtrek Nutrition Inc. 926 Notre Dame St., Box 189 Embrun, ON KOA 1W0 613 443 2946 ext. 231 michelb@coopembrun.com Booth # 2117 Allied Associates LLP, Chartered Accountants 1490 Richmond St., Suite 200 London, ON N6G 0J4 519 673 1940 info@alliedassociates.ca Booth # 1208

Alta Genetics Inc. 1873 rue Osmond Ormstown, QC JOS 1K0 514 605 2106 crember@altagenetics.com Booth # 2223 American Farm Products 4250 John Shaw Rd. Kinburn, ON KOA 2H0 613 880 9772 bmctavish@afpltd.net Booth # 1412 Andre Service Agri 1492 Rte.900 West, Box 157 St.Albert, ON KOA 3C0 613 859 0886 dedeperras@hotmail.com Booth # OD 4 & 5 Argis 2000 Ltd. Box 129. 4479 6th Line Rd. Vernon, ON KOA 3J0 613 774 6400 greg.millard@plantpioneer.com Booth # 1415 Armtec Ltd. 33 Centennial Rd. Orangeville, ON L9W 1R1 519 942 2643 ext.223 vicki.hay@armtec.com Booth # 1605 Artix Distribution Inc. 121 Louise Victoriaville, QC G6T 1P8 819 357 0567 artixdistribution@hotmail.ca Booth # 1205 Ayrshire Ontario 548 Belvedere Rd., RR 1 Hammond, ON KOA 2A0 Booth # Lobby B & B Small Engines 10510 Loughlin Mountain, ON KOE 1S0 613 258 8913 bnb@xplornet.ca

Booth # 411 B & G Loughlin Tractors Inc. 1748 County Rd. 1, R.R #2 Mountain, ON KOE 1S0 613 989 2636 marion@loughlin.ca Booth # 1011 Bahler Building Inc. 4910 Boul. Industriel Sherbrooke, QC J1R 0P4 819 791 7500 dhemond@live.ca Booth # 2012 BASF Canada 445 Colborne St. London, ON N6B 2T2 519 963 1944 raellen@oncommunication.ca Booth # 1623 BearBrook Game Meats 5396 Dunning Rd. Navan, ON K4B 1J1 613 835 7575 info@bearbrookfarm.com Booth # 705 Belisle Solution Nutrition 196, Chemin des Patriotes Saint Mathias Richelieu, QC J3L 6A7 450 658 8733 pvincent@belisle.net Booth # 1601 Beugger Energy Equipment (Sequoia) 376 route 202 Stanbridge Station, QC JOJ 2J0 514 444 2663 beuggermessier@hotmail.com Booth # 2235 Blacks Creek Innovations Inc. 3075 Cty Rd. 20 Kemptville, ON KOG 1J0 613 889 3717 sheldon@blackscreek.ca Booth # OD12 Bluewave Energy Ltd.

www.agrinews.ca 369 Hunt Club Rd. W.,Box 5030 Nepean, ON K2E 1A6 613 225 3793 ext. 26 brent.dyke@parkland.ca Booth # 624 BMO Bank of Montreal 193 Military Rd. Lancaster, ON KOC 1N0 613 347 1224 lila.romanko@bmo.com Booth # 2420 Bourbonnais Equipment (2003) Inc. 3535 Sarsfield Rd., Box 70 Sarsfield, ON KOA 3E0 613 835 2623 bour2003@rogers.com Booth # 2230 Boyd Bros. 5450 Cuddy St. Osgoode, ON KOA 2W0 613 826 2318 jason@boydbrosconcrete.ca Booth # 713 Brister Group (Bush Armstrong Insce. 12 Queen St., Box 249 Crysler, ON KOA 1R0 613 987 2117 lbarter@bristergroup.com Booth # 2425 Britespan Building Systems 37651 Amberley Rd., R. R. # 1 Lucknow, ON NOG 2H0 1 800 407 5846 marketing@britespanbuildings.com Booth # 2228 Bromley Farm Supply Ltd. 5252 Hwy. 60 Douglas, ON KOJ 1S0 613 649 2457 brofarm@live.ca Booth # 1717 Continued on page 9


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 009_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:26 AM Page 1

www.agrinews.ca

2014 OVFS Exhibitors Continued from page 8 Bulls Eye Genetic Services 656627 Line 15, R.R.#1 Tavistock, ON NOB 2R0 519 462 2051 tolsma.hg@gmail.com Booth # 2513 Bunge (Grains) Canada Ont.Agri Centre, Suite 109, 100 Stone Rd. W. Guelph, ON N1G 5L3 519 822 7272 celia.degrave@synthesis network.com Booth # 1311 C & M Seeds 6180 5th Line, R.R.#3 Palmerston, ON NOG 2PO 519 343 2126 rmclaughlin@redwheat.com Booth # 1409 Cadman Power Equipment Ltd. Box 100, 38 Main St. Courtland, ON NOJ 1E0 519 688 2222 ext.211 gsinnesael@cadmanpower.com Booth # 1001 Can.Piedmontese Assoc. 13033 Cnty. Rd. 13, R.R.1 Winchester, ON KOC 2K0 613 448 3454 rosestewart@xplornet.com Booth # Lobby Canada's Outdoor Farm Show 101 160 Research Lane Guelph, ON N1G 5B2 1 800 563 5441 ext.43 info@camadasoutdoorshows.c om Booth # 2419 Canadian Co Operative Wool Growers Ltd. 142 Franktown Rd., Box 130

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 9 Carleton Place, ON K7C 3P3 613 257 2714 ccwghq@wool.ca Booth # 1915 Canadian Foodgrains Bank 484006 Sweaburg Rd., R.R.4 Ingersoll, ON N5C 3J7 519 485 3642 mayberry@xplornet.com Booth # Room D Canadian Imp. Bank of Commerce 98 King St. W. Brockville, ON K6V 3P9 613 342 6651 ext. 400 john.leclair@cibc.com Booth # 2311 Canarm 7686 Cons.16, R. R. # 4 Arthur, ON NOG 1A0 519 820 3733 billkrul@hotmail.com Booth # 2008 Canwest DHI 660 Speedvale Ave. W., Suite 101 Guelph, ON N1K 1E5 519 824 2320 ext.258 sbond@canwestdhi.com Booth # 2234 Casselman Farm Equip./Bobcat of Cornwall 2 Castonguay, Box 529 Casselman, ON KOA 1M0 613 223 7133 dan@casselmanfarmequipmcom Booth # 1421 Casselman Tire Inc. 49 Racine, Box 787 Casselman , ON KOA 1M0 613 764 3308 serge@casselmantire.ca Booth # 1004 Central Boiler Inc./Verch Furnace Sales 957 Marsh Rd., R.R.#4 Pembroke, ON K8A 6W5 613 732 7145 Booth # 231 Centre de Criblage Marc Bercier/Valley Bio 251 Caledonia St. Isidore, ON KOC 2B0

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613 524 2981 info@marcbercier.com Booth # 1111 CH Four Biogas Inc. 102 1390 Prince of Wales Dr. Ottawa, ON K2C 3N6 613 224 8308 ext.100 vdube@chfour.ca Booth # 1130 Christian Farmers Fed. of Ontario 7660 Mill Rd., R.R. # 4 Guelph, ON N1H 6J1 519 820 6856 paul@christianfarmers.org Booth # 2511 City of Ottawa/Drainage Superintendants of Ont. 2155 Roger Stevens Dr. North Gower, ON KOA 2T0 613 580 2424 Ext.22315 marc.gagne2@ottawa.ca Booth # 124 Clark Ag Systems 186 Greens Rd. Caledonia, ON N3W 1X2 905 765 4401 kdorr@clarkagsystems.com Booth # 1501

Claymore Cabinetry 1481 Innes Rd. Ottawa, ON K1B 1C5 613 842 4400 york@claymorecabinetry.com Booth # 9 CNK Ag Tech 12921 Boyce Rd. Chesterville , ON KOC 1H0 info@cnkag tech.com Booth # 325 Comptoir Agricole St. Anne 45, Des Entreprises Ste Anne des Plaines, QC JON 1H0 450 478 0957 jboisvert@comptoiragricole.co m Booth # 1805 Costco Wholesale 1900 Cyrville Rd. Gloucester, ON K1B 1A5 613 748 3011 w511 mkt01@costco.com Booth # 1019 Country Farm Seeds Ltd. P.O.Box 790,18814 Communication Rd.S. Blenheim, ON NOP 1A0 519 676 4202

All workshops 10am - 3 pm Start the business planning process by attending this FREE two-day interactive workshop. You will: • Assess business management practices • Determine priorities and key goals • Develop realistic action plans • Learn about cost-share funding opportunities

Canada-Ontario Environmental Farm Plan (EFP)

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Dr. Komoka, ON NOL 1R0 519 666 1404 kim@dairylane.ca Booth # 2215 Dan.R.Winchester Box 743, 2301 Hwy. 31 Winchester, ON KOC 2K0 613 774 1616 hans@danr.ca Booth # 131 Davon Sales Inc. 50 Lansdowne Ave. Woodstock, ON N4T 1S3 1 800 561 1706 davidkay@sympatico.ca Booth # 1722 DeCloet Structures Ltd. R. R. # 1 Simcoe, ON N3Y 4J9 519 582 3081 ext.213 patrick@decloetgreenhouse.com Booth # 1218 Deerfence Canada Inc. 2470 Dunrobin Rd. Dunrobin, ON KOA 1T0 613 324 1497 deerfencecanada@gmail.com Booth # 3 Continued on page 11

GYFP Workshop Schedule

Producers are invited to attend free EFP (Fourth Edition) Workshops to learn more about: • Best management practices • Develop an action plan for their farm • Learn about cost-share funding opportunities

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countryfarmseeds@xplornet.ca Booth # 1210 CowPots Canada (4259505 Canada Inc.) 19605 8th Conc. Box 1444 Alexandria, ON KOC 1A0 514 941 7350 Michael@laggan.ca Booth # 2525 Crary/Huron Tractor 39995 Harvest Rd. Exeter, ON NOM 1S3 519 235 1115 bw323@hurontractor.com Booth # 1034 Cuisine Sante International 1260 Old Innes Rd., Suite 601 Ottawa, ON K1B 5L3 613 288 9020 mike@csil.ca Booth # 1200 Culligan Real Estate Ltd. 4856 Cty.Rd. 6 Brockville, ON K6V 5T5 613 345 3125 acearle@ripnet.com Booth # 2315 Dairy Lane Systems Ltd./DLS Biogas Inc. P.O.Box 148, 6403 Egremont

All Workshops are from 10am to 3pm

Bethany

Day 1 - Mar. 14 Day 2 - Mar. 21

Alfred (FRENCH)

Day 1 - Mar. 14 Day 2 - Mar. 21

Embrun (FRENCH)

Day 1 - Mar. 17 Day 2 - Mar. 24

Whitby

Day 1 - Mar. 17 Day 2 - Mar. 24

Napanee

Day 1 - Mar. 18 Day 2 - Mar. 25

Avonmore

Day 1 - Mar. 18 Day 2 - Mar. 25

North Gower

Day 1 - Mar. 20 Day 2 - Mar. 27

Spencerville

Day 1 - Apr. 1

Day 2 - Apr. 8

Bloomfield

Day 1 - Apr. 3

Day 2 - Apr. 10

Chesterville

Day 1 - Apr. 15

Day 2 - Apr. 22

EFP Workshop Schedule All workshops 10am - 3 pm Almonte

Day 1 - Mar. 19 Day 2 - Mar. 26

Kemptville

Day 1 - Mar. 24 Day 2 - Mar. 31

Finch

Day 1 - Apr. 2

Day 2 - Apr. 9

Leeds (Elgin)

Day 1 - Apr. 10

Day 2 - Apr. 17

Kemptville

Day 1 - May 7

Day 2 - May 14

Workshops Now Available Register Online at www.ontariosoilcrop.org


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 010_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:34 AM Page 1

Page 10 The AgriNews March, 2014

Prof. justifies supply management By Nelson Zandbergen AgriNews Staff Writer EMPTVILLE — No shouTs of “AMEN!” grEETEd dr. MAurIcE doyoN’s AddrEss To AbouT 200 dAIry

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fEb. 13. All the same, the economist was obviously preaching to the converted as he delivered a spirited yet methodical explanation of the rationale behind the 40-year-old supply management system governing milk production in this country. “Supply management was created to answer a problem,” noted Doyon, after reading aloud a Conference Board of Canada acknowledgement of that fact. In short, that problem relates to marketing a perishable product whose price would otherwise fluctuate without regulation. It’s that perishability that sets dairy farming apart from other sectors of the economy, like natural resources, that are expected to live and die on market

price cycles for their final product, according to the professor of Agricultural Economics and Consumer Science at Laval University. “Gold coming out of the ground is still going to be gold in 50 years, right? Iron is still going to be there. Oil is still going to be there…. So it [the natural resources sector] is different,” he observed. Doyon also pointed to the small size of individual dairy farmers compared with the large corporations operating in natural resources, which are capable of ratcheting down their production “in lockstep” with a declining commodity price. Clarifying his point about the minuscule nature of dairy farms relative to their own industry, he suggested the output of the largest producer in Canada could disappear tomorrow with hardly a blip in the national milk supply. “No one would notice. That’s sad, but that’s the reality.” On the other hand, the shut-down of a single mine may have a measurable

Quota policy debated By Nelson Zandbergen AgriNews Staff Writer EMPTVILLE — dfo’s coLLEcTIVIsT METhod of shArINg ExcEss MILK-ProducTIoN quoTA AMoNg bIddErs oN ThE ExchANgE — coMbINEd wITh A PEr-KILogrAM PrIcE cAP — wAs ALTErNATELy

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PANNEd ANd PrAIsEd by A PAIr of INdIVIduAL dAIry fArMErs oN EIThEr sIdE of ThE IssuE.

The debate between Chris Buchner of Elmwood Farms in Tillsonburg and Dave Loewith of Summithold Holsteins in Ancaster was a featured attraction of the 2014 Eastern Dairy Days in Kemptville and Maxville last month. With OMAF’s Phyllis MacMaster serving as moderator, they took on the motion: “Let it be resolved that the present quota policies are benefitting the Ontario Dairy Producer industry.” Buchner, on the ‘pro’ side, said the quota-exchange reforms brought in by the Dairy Farmers of Ontario were necessary to correct public perceptions about dairy farm income and to end the “inflationary thinking” among producers who were buying quota under the old high-bidder exchange system. Watching the upward action on the exchange, combined with the regular rises in the support price for milk, led producers to expect constantly rising quota values, Buchner argued, adding this attitude also contributed to a fivefold increase in dairy farm indebtedness. And that represented a destabilizing threat to the industry, he suggested. “If farmers started going out of business, especially if interest rates rose a little bit, we could run into some problem with farmers going bankrupt, and we might have a problem filling our [obligations] to the processors, which actually would allow for more imports to come into the country.” But Loewith, who prefaced his remarks by emphasizing his support for supply management and his respect for the members of the DFO board, argued the current quota allocation policies are stifling investment by the most efficient farmers who exemplify the DFO vision statement — A dynamic, profitable, growing dairy industry.” “The most glaring fault of today’s policy is that it slows down or virtually stops quota from flowing into the hands of the most efficient producers. By definition, the most efficient producers can pay the most for quota. How can that be a bad thing?” he asked. The current situation is promoting a “dangerous” lack of reinvestment by farmers, which will “put us at a competitive disadvantage with countries seeking access to our markets.”

impact on world supply for certain commodities. And the CEO of the multi-national corporation undertaking such a decision won’t lose his house or suffer a pay cut as a result. In fact, he’s likely to get a bonus, asserted Doyon. All of that’s in sharp contrast to the farmer who might cease production amid low prices for milk (in the absence of supply management). Agriculture and dairy farming must also contend with a “tragedy of the commons” dynamic that sees producers, when faced with falling prices, react by boosting their output to maintain their income. This only increases the over-supply and depresses the price further (again in the absence of supply management). “That’s a problem a U.S. farmer would face,” he said, explaining, “You kind of hope the neighbour goes bankrupt before you.” While opposing supply management, the U.S. government tends to intervene in a depressed dairy market by

paying producers to slaughter dairy cattle — 226,000 during the last price crisis in 2009. But this approach costs taxpayers money and makes beef producers unhappy, Doyon noted. In Canada, supply management serves as a mechanism that functions horizontally and vertically to prevent such scenarios by coordinating farmers’ production and controlling supply to processors and retailers. Canada isn’t alone in this, the speaker said. In New Zealand, farmers have to buy “delivery shares” — similar to quota — from a single controlling co-op with a milk monopoly in that country, Fontera. “They also have vertical integration because the co-op is owned by farmers.” And don’t confuse Fontera with a company created by the marketplace, asserted Doyon, who pegged the co-op as a government-made entity. In Canada, supply management has also been good to processors, like Saputo, by guaranteeing healthy profits in

This efficient class of farmer owns the latest type of modern barn featuring better animal welfare, greater environmental responsibility and a lower cost of production that — if allowed to proliferate — would slow the rate of milk price increases passed on to the consumer, according to Loewith. Small operations are also more likely to use the labour of family members, he also asserted. “Family members should be involved because they want to, and not because they have to. And not because they’re necessary for the farm’s viability. Young children actively involved is a farm safety issue. No other industry would tolerate the injuries to young people that we do on our farms.” On quota policy, the DFO board behaved “more as union leaders or politicians trying to keep as many members employed or pleased as possible,” he said, adding, “Real leadership means making hard decisions for the future, and not necessarily what the majority thinks is best.” He suggested they get out of the business of “rural

this country, while they set up or buy foreign operations to compete in offshore markets, according to the professor. Supply management has also proven no hindrance to Canada’s signing a variety of comprehensive bilateral trade deals, contrary to what critics used to say, he added, pointing to the recent agreement with the European Union as an example. Besides, only seven per cent of world milk production is traded across borders, with the E.U., New Zealand and the U.S. the principal contributors to that pool. “China, Russia and Saudi Arabia, those are the buyers,” he added. And because of climate, Canadian dairy farmers can’t compete to supply this relatively small world market with operations based in New Zealand and California anyway, he said. Thus, by eschewing the pursuit of international markets for Canadian dairy products, “are we really losing something here? I don’t think so. However, supply management does not prevent exports.” He identified a legal opportunity to increase soft-

www.agrinews.ca cheese exports from Canada to markets in New York and Boston. Canada should encourage small cheese producers to go after this market, and he suggested establishing a program with federal compensation that’s about to be received for the 17-tonne slice of the Canadian cheese market handed over to the Europeans under the E.U. trade deal (CETA). He also poured cold water on the notion that supply management produces a decline in domestic dairy consumption. Canadians may be eating markedly less ice cream over the last several years, down 24 per cent (compared with a two per cent decline in the U.S.), but Canadian cheese consumption went up five per cent in the same period. “Consumption of some dairy products is going down, and quite often it’s related to demographics.” And in a bit of collective advice to the farmers in the room, he suggested their domestic organizational structures haven’t kept pace with their consolidating counterparts in the processing industry over the last 20 years.

social policy,” and stick with the principles of their motto and vision statement. Loewith said he believed quota today would be in the $35,000 to $40,000 range without the cap. However, he acknowledged persistent rumours of operating farm sales in which the buyer pays an effective premium of $60,000 to $90,000 per cow. Producer Peter Ruiter asked Loewith from the floor if, by calling for an end to the quota price cap, he was effectively telling half the producers in the room to exit the industry with the salutation: “Sorry, see you, nice knowing you, this side of the room is going to be left producing the milk.” Loewith bluntly replied, “Yeah, but but I’m not sure why you’re saying ‘sorry’ if you sold out for $40,000 [per kilogram]. An electronic poll of 67 participating farmers in the room found 60 per cent support for the current quota policy, following the debate.


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 011_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:26 AM Page 1

www.agrinews.ca

2014 OVFS Exhibitors Continued from page 9 DeLaval Canada 150 B Jameson Dr. Peterborough, ON K9J 0B9 519 281 9114 paul.prekup@delaval.com Booth # 2301 DeLaval Inc. P.O.Box 4600 Peterborough, ON K9J 7B7 705 741 3100 ext.111 Booth # 2301 Delaware Pump & Parts Ltd. Box 16, 11157 Longwoods Rd. Delaware, ON NOL 1E0 519 652 9611 bill@delawarepumps.ca Booth # 1901 Development Forage Equipment (Dion) 5010 Breen Rd. Putnam, ON NOL 2B0 519 668 9543 hank.wind@lacoop.coop Booth # 333 DFK Equipment & Sales Inc. P.O. Box 938, 475 James St. S. St. Marys, ON N4X 1B6 519 349 2080 wayne@dfkequipment.com Booth # 505 DFK Equipment & Sales

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 11 Inc. P.O. Box 938, 475 James St. S. St. Marys, ON N4X 1B6 519 349 2080 wayne@dfkequipment.com Booth # OD6 DF Coffrages Inc. 780 Paul Lussier Ste.Helene, QC JOH 1M0 450 501 6655 tison@videotron.ca Booth # 24 DICKEY john/Champion Ind. Equip. 2855 Marleau Ave., Suite A Cornwall, ON K6H 7B6 613 938 2900 raydurand@cie eic.com Booth # 521 Distribution V.Y.F. 2300, rue Power Drummondville, QC J2B 0K3 819 475 4492 isabelle.morin@vyf express.ca Booth # 2421 Dow AgroSciences/Mycogen Seeds 965 Beaudry St. Ottawa, ON K1K 3R9 613 863 5054 Booth # 1228 Dramatic Displays 223 Wellington St. W. Merrickville, ON KOG 1N0 613 558 4200 dramaticdisplays@bell.net Booth # 21 Dtech Inc. 1795 Skiroule Wickham, QC JOC 1S0 819 471 7299 robertc@dytec.ca

Booth # 1022 Dundas Agri Systems Inc. 11225 Henderson Rd.,R.R.#2 Brinston, ON KOE 1C0 613 652 4844 levi@dundasagri.com Booth # 2231 DuPont Canada P.O.Box 2300, Streetsville Mississauga, ON L5M 2J4 905 816 3270 sonja.mazurak@supont.com Booth # 1214 DuPont Pioneer 7398 Queen's Line, Hwy 2 West Chatham, ON N7M 5L1 519 352 6350 ext. 6641 rob.mcfadden@pioneer.com Booth # 1517 Earl Horst Systems Ltd. 251 Florapine Rd. Elmira, ON N3B 2Z1 519 669 1300 fernh@horstsystems.com Booth # 2115 East Can Equipment Sales 19711 Cty. Rd. 25 Apple Hill, ON KOC 1B0 613 525 3162 luc@east can.com Booth # 811 Eastern Ontario AgriNews 7 King St., Box 368 Chesterville, ON KOC 1H0 613 448 2321 agrinewsads@gmail.com Booth # 2509 Eastern Ontario Farmers Forum Inc. 2450 17 Lancaster Rd.

Ottawa, ON K1B 5N3 613 247 1334 editor@farmersforum.com Booth # 2417 EastGen Inc. 5653 Hwy. 6 N., R.R. 5 Guelph, ON N1H 6J2 519 821 2150 ext.222 holly.lethbridge@eastgen.ca Booth # 1925 EasyFix Rubber North America 6736 Perth Line 17, R.R. # 1 Kirkton, ON NOK 1K0 519 266 9824 bstephenson@easyfixrubberna.com Booth # 1217

3063 Forward Rd. S. CHESTERVILLE, ONT. K0C 1H0 CANADA

Edward Jones 208 2948 Baseline Rd. Nepean, ON K2H 8T5 613 829 1421 paris.nose@edwardjones.com Booth # 4 Elliott Farm Equipment R.R.#1, 2447 Greenwood Rd. Pembroke, ON K8A 6W2 613 638 5372 elliottschris@nrtco.net Booth # 235 Embro Farm Systems Inc. 375066 Line 37, RR 4 Embro, ON NOJ 1J0 519 423 9595 mail@embrofarm.com Booth # 1028

Empire Construction 12555 Hwy.43 East Winchester, ON KOC 2K0 613 227 0984 Booth # 2026 Energrow Inc. 7389 Road 128 Newton, ON NOK 1R0 519 595 8299 jasmin@energrow.ca Booth # 1307 Engage Agro 1030 Gordon St. Guelph, ON N1G 4X5 519 826 7878 ext.228 daynehorgan@engageagro.com Booth # 1801 Continued on page 12

PHONE: 613-448-2522 FAX: 613-448-1025 EMAIL: pderks@ripnet.com EMAIL: martyderks@gmail.ca

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“The science behind Immunity+ is exciting!” John Schenkels of Whitney, New Brunswick, milks 140 Holsteins. Believing in the science behind the Immunity+ brand, John has been working with EastGen Representative, Alain Blanchette, to customize a mating report to target 25% of breedings to Immunity+ sires.

Kemptville, ON (613) 258-5944

Guelph, ON (519) 821-2150

www.eastgen.ca EastGen Solves. EastGen Leads.

“The science behind Immunity+ is exciting! Incorporating Immunity + sires into our customized mating program (Progen) now allows us to build a genetically more immune healthy herd. The benefit of the increased heritability of immune response is the main reason we are looking at these sires to build a stronger herd. With the lower expected level of disease including mastitis, we feel this science will be more valuable than relying on previous health trait information. As a proud Canadian Dairy producer, we provide a nutritionally, healthy product! Part of producing that product is a healthy cow herd. With science like this, we have the confidence and desire to incorporate Immunity+ sires into our breeding program to take advantage of disease resistant genetics.”


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 012_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:28 AM Page 1

Page 12 The AgriNews March, 2014 Ottawa, ON K1R 6K7 613 237 9060 ext.32 nancy@fmc gac.com Booth # 2405 Farm Supply Sales 3 Unit 5 Industrial Park Kemptville, ON K0G 1J0 613 258 9818 info@farmsupply.com Continued from page 11 Booth # 2430 Farmers Farmacy/Grand Equipements PFB Inc. Valley Fortifiers 1495 Skiroule 39 Elgin St. S. Wickham, QC JOC 1S0 Cambridge, ON N1R 5G3 819 398 7112 519 621 2028 d.stonge@equipmentspfb.com lisaobrien@farmersfarmacy.com Booth # 205 Booth # 2126 Evergreen Liquid Plant Food Farmers Of North America Ltd. 6800 Baseline Rd. 790 St.Charles St. W. RR 1 Wallaceburg, ON N8A 2K6 Breslau, ON N0B 1M0 519 627 4440 519 742 8377 tnead@fna.ca jeff@evergreenlpf.ca Booth # 2531 Booth # 517 Faromor Ltd. Farm Credit Canada P.O. Box 279 1133 St. George, Suite 100 Shakespeare, ON NOB 2PO Moncton, NB E1E 4E1 519 625 8000 506 851 6590 rick@faromor.com annette.deveau@fcc.ca Booth # 901 Booth # 1225 Fawcett Tractor Supply Ltd. Farm Fleet Inc. R.R. # 2,2126 Road 120 R.R.#3, 23703 Wellburn Rd. St.Mary's, ON N4X 1C5 St. Mary's, ON N4X 1C6 1 800 372 7149 519 461 1499 marian@fawcett.ca dave.ball@farmfleet.com Booth # 523 Booth # 1831 FBC Farm King/Buhler P.O. Box 7120 714959 Oxford Rd. 4 London, ON N5V 2Z9 Woodstock, ON N4S 7V9 519 453 5040 ext. 2062 519 539 0435 marketing@fbc.ca jligsa@buhler.com Booth # 2013 Booth # 335 Fellowship of Christian Farm Management Canada Farmers Canada 300 250 City Centre Ave., P.O. Box 401

2014 OVFS Exhibitors

www.agrinews.ca Hawkesbury, ON K6A 2S2 819 242 8063 fcfc@bellnet.ca Booth # 2521 Ferguson Forest Centre 275 Cty. Rd. 44, R.R. # 4 Kemptville, ON KOG 1J0 613 258 0110 ext. 224 ed@seedlingnursery.com Booth # 511 Fibres Vaudreuil 70 rang 4 est Warwick, QC JOA 1M0 819 358 5150 martinvaudreuil@hotmail.com Booth # 2134 Fife Agricultural Services Ltd. 14740 Cty. Rd. 43 Finch, ON KOC 1G0 613 984 2059 fifeag@plantioneer.com Booth # 2017 Frontlink Inc. 509 Schafer Side Rd. S., R.R. #1 Delhi, ON N4B 2W4 519 582 3200 ascholten@frontlinkinc.com Booth # 601 G.B.Equipments Inc. 535 rang St.Patrice St Brigitte des Saults, QC JOC 1E0 819 336 4805 guy.normand@gbequipment.ca Booth # 2205 and # OD19 Gallagher 230 Allan St. Smiths Falls, ON K7A 5E9 800 265 3150 tim.campbell@gallagher.com Booth # 1700

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 013_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:29 AM Page 1

www.agrinews.ca

2014 OVFS Exhibitors Continued from page 12 Gallagher Animal Management Systems 2090 20th Ave.E. Box 576 Owen Sound, ON N4K 5R1 816 421 2005 ext.130 tim.campbell@gallagher.ca Booth # 1700 Gay Lea Foods Co op 3262 Rollin Rd. St.Pascal Baylon, ON KOA 3N0 613 618 9039 skavanagh@gayleafoods.com Booth # 2120 General Seed Company (2000) Ltd. Box 3, R.R. 1, 648 Alberton Rd. S. Alberton, ON LOR 1A0 905 648 2101 Booth # 1220 Genervations Inc. P.O.Box 568, 44 Crawford Cres. Campbellville, ON LOP 1B0 905 873 8700 ext.110 distribution@genervations.com Booth # 2004 GEOShack Canada 15 Grenfell Cres. Unit 7 Ottawa, ON K2G 0G3 613 225 1110 scalhoun@geoshack.ca Booth # 527 Global Repair Ltd. 33 Bellefair Ave. Toronto, ON M4L 3T7 416 686 3690 sales@globalrepair.ca Booth # 2128 GPS Ontario 6558 3rd Line Rd.Box 456 North Gower, ON KOA 2T0 613 489 2932 morley@gpsontario.ca Booth # 1301 Grain Farmers of Ontario 100 Stone Rd. W., Suite 201 Guelph, ON N1G 5L3 519 767 2773 mburke@gfo.ca Booth # 2510 Grandview Concrete Grooving Inc. 7106 Hwy. 6, R.R. # 1 Arthur, ON NOG 1A0 519 843 5185 vfoley@cowcomfort.com Booth # 2537 Green Lea Ag Center 324055 Mt.Elgin Rd., R.R.# 2 Mt. Elgin, ON NOJ 1N0 519 485 6861 jamies@greenlea.net Booth # 933 Green Tech John Deere 6620 rue des Seigneurs Est.,CP 12680 succ ste rosalie Saint Hyacinthe, QC J2R 1S2 450 799 5533 catou@lagueltee.com Booth # OD1 Green Tech John Deere 6620 rue des Seigneurs Est., CP 12680 succ ste rosalie Saint Hyacinthe, QC J2R 1S2 450 799 5533 catalogue@lagueltee.com Booth # 725

Green Valley Heating/Heatmor Outdoor Furnaces 7338 Fallon Dr., R.R. # 3 Granton, ON NOM 1V0 1 800 261 0531 office@greenvalleyheating.net Booth # 628 Gregoire Besson Canada Ltd. 4480 rue Martineau Saint Hyacinthe, QC J2R 1V1 450 799 5615 g.petit@gregoirebesson.ca Booth # 500 505 Grober Nutrition 415 Dobbie Dr. Cambridge, ON N1T 1S9 519 622 2500 ext.219 marketing@grober.com Booth # 1903 GSR Calcium 11603 Waddell Rd. Iroquois, ON KOE 1K0 613 802 8026 newcarefarms@gmail.com Booth # 1127 GTR Scales Ltd. 21 Jackson Lane Arnprior, ON K7S 3G8 613 623 0427 info@gtrscales.com Booth # 2 Hakmet Ltd./Ltee. 41 rue du Moulin Grenville, QC JOV 1J0 819 242 2400 mika@hakmet.com Booth # 2213 Harco Ag Equipment 5808 Hwy 9, R.R. # 4 Harriston, ON NOG 1Z0 519 338 2923 jakeh@harcoag.ca Booth # 625 Harco Ag Equipment 5808 Hwy 9, R.R. # 4 Harriston, ON NOG 1Z0 519 338 2923 jakeh@harcoag.ca Booth # OD16 Hardi North America 337 Sovereign Rd. London, ON K6M 1A6 519 282 6549 gbm@hardi us.com Booth # 935 Harvex Agromart/Summit Seeds 1572 Cty.Rd. 12, P.O. Box 160 Crysler, ON KOA 1R0 613 987 5243/258 3445 slafrac@harvex.com Booth # 1132 Heartnut Grove Inc. 21831 Cooks Rd. Mount Brydges, ON NOL 1W0 519 868 4330 j.pol@sympatico.ca Booth # 1222 Heatmaster (Hwy 511 Heating Solutions) 14406 Hwy. 7, R.R. # 6 Perth, ON K7H 3C8 613 264 0874 hwy511heatingsolutions@ripnet.com Booth # 532 HJV Equipment R.R.#2, 5900 Cty.Rd.10 Alliston, ON L9R 1V2 705 435 3226 chris@hjvequip.com Booth # 1213 HLA/Tubeline/MKMartin 6455 Reid Woods Dr., RR #4 Elmira, ON N3R 2Z3 519 669 9488 stevehorn@horstwelding.com Booth # 1020

Hoermann Thermoenergy Inc. 1 Rideau St., Suite 700 Ottawa, ON K1N 8S7 613 670 5731 canada@hoermann info.com Booth # 2121 Homestead Organics 1 Union St., P.O.Box 39 Berwick, ON KOC 1G0 877 984 0480 tom@homesteadorganics.ca Booth # 1406 Horizon Seeds Canada Inc. R.R.#1, 531 Bostwick Rd. Courtland, ON NOJ 1E0 519 842 5538 ang@horizonseeds.ca Booth # 1206 Horst Choring Aids Inc.

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 13 St. Albert, ON KOA 3C0 69819 London Rd., R.R.# 1 613 761 2184 Centralia, ON NOM 1KO gvezeau@dow.com 519 228 7102 ext.247 Booth # 1614 marketing@kenpal.on.ca Ideal Pipe Booth # 2023 Box 141 Investors Group Winchester, ON KOC 2K0 1730 St. Laurent, Suite 430 613 774 2662 Ottawa, ON K1G 5L1 idealpipe@magma.ca 613 742 8018 Booth # 122 annm.hill@investorsgroup.com Interlock Industries Inc. Booth # 2317 2800 Argentia Rd., Unit 5 iSolara Solar Power Mississauga, ON L5N 8L2 30 Capital Dr. 416 302 2945 Ottawa, ON K2G 0E9 davegbrown1@rogers.com 613 738 2646 Booth # 1627 dcork@isolara.com International Stock Food Booth # 300 Co.Ltd. Continued from page 15

1372 Flordale Rd. Elmira, ON N3B 2Z3 519 669 5439 Booth # 632 Husky Farm Equipment Ltd. R.R. # 2, 7440 Wellington Rd. 17 Alma, ON NOB 1A0 519 846 5329 walter@huskyfarm.ca Booth # 435 Hy Grade Steel Roofing 9029 Ray Wilson Rd. Metcalfe, ON KOA 2PO 613 821 3267 bakkercrest@xplornet.com Booth # 806 Hyland Seeds 903, Du Castor Rd.

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 014_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:31 AM Page 1

Page 14 The AgriNews March, 2014

www.agrinews.ca

New co-op not for all shepherds By Tom VanDusen AgriNews Contributor PENCERVILLE – Not aLL ShEEP PRo-

S

duCERS haVE bEEN quICk to SIgN uP to thE CaNadIaN Lamb PRoduCERS CooPERatIVE that’LL bEgIN PuRChaSINg aNImaLS IN aPRIL.

Gestating since 2010, the co-op is a more likely fit for larger flocks, agreed those attending annual District 10 Sheep Day at the fairgrounds here Feb. 22. Also on the Sheep Day program were presentations on parasites, scrapie, coyote trapping, local marketing, and accessing Growing Forward 2 funds. Producers Bob Garner and Laurie Maus of Dunvegan, who have 20 ewes including some Rare Breeds, and who sell lamb and mutton directly to customers, won’t be joining the co-op because they’re in a limited market where they’re satisfied to remain. “A lot of people like to come to the farm and see how we raise our sheep,” Maus said. On the other hand, Phil Smith with 2,000 head at Sutton, has been a member since the co-op’s inception and clearly sees the benefits, particularly a revolutionary grading system and new collection sites. He was on hand in Spencerville to help promote the co-op with its CEO Terry Ackerman. “It works for us because we raise a lot of lambs,” Smith said. The evolution of the lamb cooperative from concept to reality sneaked up on Colleen Acres, chair of the Ontario Sheep Marketing Agency’s District 10, who has 400 ewes at Osgoode. Acres has adopted a wait-and-see approach as to

Canadian Lamb Producers Cooperative CEO Terry Ackerman shows Laurie Maus a new grading tool at the Feb. 22 District 10 Sheep Day. whether she’ll sign up. The two main considerations are price and convenience of collection sites. Ackerman understands that drop-off of lambs will have to be handy in order to engage Eastern Ontario producers in the co-op. To date, one location has been arranged near Napanee, another is being confirmed at Cobden and a third is being investigated in Stormont County in the Finch area. The co-op was initiated by the Saskatchewan Sheep Development Board as a way of getting more Canadian lamb into both the domestic and foreign markets. It has defined itself as the only agri-food organization in the country focused on increasing members’ cash receipts by marketing their lamb products while building a national and international brand owned by those members. Ackerman said there’s no doubt there’s a substantial market for Canadian lamb. Retail grocers want it but can’t get a guaranteed supply, a problem the co-op intends to rectify. Meanwhile, the void continues to be filled by frozen product from New Zealand. In fact, the co-op CEO

We Can Contracting at Dairy Day

We Can Contracting proprietor Joey van Koppen was among the exhibitors in the annual trade fair at Dairy Day in Kemptville, Feb. 13.

stated, worldwide demand for lamb is consistently outstripping supply, suggesting

offshore possibilities for Canadian producers. “Export opportunity for our lamb in China, the EU, and the Middle East is strong because production in many regions of the developing world is declining due to drought, lack of land base and older producers leaving the industry. New Zealand and Australia are now focusing on the Chinese market which could result in an even greater shortage in North America.” Co-op head office is in Saskatoon with a regional office in Guelph. Each producer who signs up is com-

mitted to a 36-month production agreement to sell to the co-op the number of marketable lambs comparable to his or her number of shares, for a minimum of 25. Since its inception, Ackerman said the co-op has grown from 15 members to well over 100, with some $1.3-million invested. The co-op, he said, will pay $14 more per lamb than the average slaughtering facility. In addition, the co-op’s specialized electronic grader will confirm a premium of 16 per cent more for quality animals. Ackerman displayed a prototype of the device that can measure 16 elements of a lamb with a flick of the wrist; a federal

grant of $1.4-million is being used to develop the new tool. Because Canadian lambs are normally purchased on a live weight basis, there has been little financial incentive for processing plants, feedlots, and auction barns to grade lambs and pay for quality. The ViewTrak instrument grading system will change all that while providing members with management information necessary to improve flock genetics, feeding protocols, and reduce operating costs. “The most important measurement in lamb is lean meat yield,” Ackerman observed. “No mistakes will be made by collection site staff because of this tool.”


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 015_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:33 AM Page 1

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2014 OVFS Exhibitors Continued from page 13 Jad Vent Dist. Ltd. P.O. Box 1140 Ayr, ON N1H 5E3 519 632 7471 jadvent@netflash.net Booth # 1725 Jamesway Farm Equipment 12 Route 249 St.Francois Xavier de Brampton, QC JOB 2V0 819 845 7824 ext.207 ralphf@jameswayfarmeq.com Booth # 113 Jay Lor Fabricating Inc. 0171213 10th Line, East Garafraxa, ON L9W 6Z9 519 787 9353 240 sales@jaylor.com Booth # 1611 Jerry Cummings Painting Inc. 424 Church St. Russell, ON K4R 1A9 613 445 2982 Booth # 1706 Jersey Ontario 9 350 Speedvale Ave. W. Guelph, ON N1H 7M7 519 766 9980 ontario@jerseycanada.com Booth # Jim Tubman Chevrolet 1770 Bank St. Ottawa, ON K1V 7Y6 613 733 4050 kburton@tubmanchev.com Booth # 1727 K.K.Distributors Ltd. 185 Richer St., Box 228 Clarence Creek, ON KOA 1N0 613 448 2174 soern@sympatico.ca Booth # 715 Kane Veterinary Supplies

75 Cowansview Rd. Cambridge, ON N1R 7L2 1 800 361 3232 richard@kanevet.com Booth # 2027 Keenan TMR Mixers 1802 Lockwood Lane Elgin, ON KOG 1E0 613 284 3238 johnferg@superaje.com Booth # 2132 Kelln Solar Box 94, 50 James St. Lumsden, SK SOG 3C0 306 731 2224 donnie@kellnsolar.com Booth # 1033 Kongskilde Industries Inc. 974 Wyldewood Sherkston, ON LOS 1R0 905 933 4304 wyo@kongskilde.com Booth # 1431 Krown Rust Control Systems 35 Magnum Dr. Schomberg, ON LOG 1T0 905 939 8750 cheryl@krown.ca Booth # 128 Kubota Canada Ltd. (Topline Trailer & Equip.) 1226 Cty Rd. 31, Box 940 Winchester, ON KOC 2K0 613 774 0992 scott@toplinetrailers.com Booth # 615 Kubota Canada Ltd. (Topline Trailer & Equip.) 5900 14th Ave. Markham, ON rallison@kubota.ca Booth # 615 Kuhn North America, Inc. 2620 Chemin Plamondon Sainte Madeleine, QC JOH 1S0 450 795 339 peter.vandeborne@kuhn.com Booth # 1631 Kuhn North America, Inc. 1501 West 7th Ave., P.O. Box 167 Brodhead, WI USA 53520

608 897 2131 heather.akins@kuhn.com Booth # 1631 Kverneland Group Canada Inc. 1200, rue Rocheleau Drummondville, QC J2C 5Y3 819 477 2055 fanny.lajeunesse@kvernelandgroup.com Booth # 421 L & R Shelters Inc.

461 Hyw 5, R.R. # 2 Dundas, ON L9H 5E2 905 627 1101 info@lrshelters.ca Booth # 2031 La Coop Federee 9001 boul. l'Acadie, Bureau 200 Montreal, QC H4N 3H7 514 384 6450 ext.3735 marie france.lortie@lacoop.coop

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 15 Booth # 1521 hank.wind@lacoop.coop La Coop Federee Booth # 433 4225 St.Joseph Lanark Leeds Distributors Trois Rivieres, QC G8Z 4G3 Ltd. 519 668 9543 76 Cornelia St.W., Box 321 hank.wind@lacoop.coop Smiths Falls, ON K7A 4T2 Booth # 433 613 283 3438 La Coop Federee/Dispro schokkj@ripnet.com Machinery & Parts Booth # 1219 5010 Breen Rd. Putnam, ON NOL 2B0 Continued on page 16 519 668 9543

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 016_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:37 AM Page 1

Page 16 The AgriNews March, 2014 LEMKEN 379 Presqu'ile St Damase, QC JOH 1J0 450 772 5047 dpalardy17@sympatico.ca Booth # 1811 Les Foundations Brisson Inc. C.P.981, 1345 Route 500 West Casselman, ON KOA 1M0 Continued from page 15 613 764 1530 juliette@foundationsbrisson.com Landini Canada Inc. Booth # 1035 105 Reagens Industrial Pkwy. Lewis Cattle Oiler Co. Bradford, ON L5L 3M3 cheque in mail 905 775 9008 ext.226 Box 414, R.R. # 1 scorreia@landini.ca Dashwood, ON OM 1N0 Booth # 121 519 238 5659 Lapointe Drainage darrell@bay.net 1241 Notre Dame St. Both # 1921 Embrun, ON KOA 1W0 Lloyd Cross Sales & Service 613 443 2954 1296 Ritchance Rd. sdecaire@lapointedrainage.ca L'Orignal, ON KOB 1K0 Booth # 1215 613 675 4697 Lawrence's Dairy Supply lloydcross@xplornet.com (1995) Inc. Booth # 1608 1760 Hwy # 138 Luck//Now Products (Helm Moose Creek, ON KOC 1W0 Welding (1983)Ltd.) 613 538 2559 86386 Lucknow Line, Box 158 dairy@ontarioeast.net Lucknow, ON NOG 2H0 Booth # 2221 Leading Edge Equipment Ltd. 519 529 7000 ghelm@lucknowproducts.com 404917 Beaconsfield Rd. Booth # 1023 Burgessville, ON NOJ 1C0 L'Union des Cultivateurs 519 424 9112 ext.200 franco ontariens wayne@leadingedgeequip2474 Champlain St. ment.ca Clarence Creek, ON KOA 1N0 Booth # 723

www.agrinews.ca

2014 OVFS Exhibitors

613 488 2929 communication@ucfo.ca Booth # 2407 M & P Farm Equipment Ltd. 6656 Cty.Rd. 29,R.R. # 3 Almonte, ON KOA 1A0 613 253 4957 patsy@mpfarm.ca Booth # 2200 MacEwen Agricentre Inc. Box 580, 40 Catherine St. Maxville, ON KOC 1T0 613 229 5953 clare@macewenag.com Booth # 1401 MacEwen Agricentre Inc. Box 580, 40 Catherine St. Maxville, ON KOC 1T0 613 229 5953 clare@macewenag.com Booth # OD13 MacEwen Petroleum Inc. P.O. Box 219 Kemptville, ON KOG 1J0 613 258 3343 a.mcevoy@macewen.ca Booth # 1400 Maizex Seeds Inc. 4488 Mint Line, R.R. # 2 Tilbury, ON NOP 2L0 877 682 1720 kim@maizex.com Booth # 1411 Continued on page 22

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 017_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:38 AM Page 1

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The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 17

New owners take helm at Barkley’s Store 106 years in same family by Nelson Zandbergen AgriNews Staff Writer VONMORE — AftER 106 yEARs, BARklEy’s stORE

A

hAs pAssEd Out Of

BARklEy fAMily hANds. But thE thRiViNg cORNER stORE is kEEpiNg its histORicAl NAME ANd flAVOuR uNdER NEw pROpRiEtORs whO iNtENd tO cARRy ON thE tRAditiON Of RuRAl REtAil ExcEllENcE fORgEd By thREE gENERAtiONs Of

BARklEys. Murray Barkley officially closed the sale with buyers Michael Brown and Johanne GagnĂŠ-Brown early last month. Barkley will continue to be a fixture around the store for the next few months to assist them with the transition. The Cornwall couple,

who intend to relocate to Avonmore, “are keeping it Barkley’s Store,� the past proprietor happily told The AgriNews several days before the deal concluded. “They’re appreciative of the history and the ambiance of the store.� Added Barkley, 65, a history PhD and published author who passed up a career in academia to take over the family business almost exactly 33 and a third years ago: “I will miss it.� He explained that he couldn’t pass up the opportunity to sell now to such qualified prospective buyers who approached him quite some time ago about buying the store. They finally inked a purchase agreement last November. “If I stayed another five years, maybe I’d be stuck. It just seems to be the right time.� He commended the new owners, pointing out that Michael Brown was for many years an assistant manager with a couple of major grocery chains, in which capacity he dealt with Barkley’s Store. “He’s a person who if he

tells you something, you can believe it,� Barkley said, adding that Brown’s wife is an accountant and the “perfect complement� to the enterprise. Barkley said he looked forward to travelling to Germany in the near future to further explore the roots of his ancestors who wound up in North America in the 1700s. His wife, Pilar, recalled not quite believing that her husband wanted to leave a blossoming career at the University of Toronto, to take up a post behind the counter in his rural hometown family business. “I thought it was a phase that might last a year,� she recounted. That was over three decades ago. For his part, Barkley acknowledged the lure of returning to the establishment — originally begun by his grandparents Willis and Jennie Barkley in 1908 — was a “siren song� he couldn’t resist. He took over the operation from his father, Fred. Three hundred people turned out for an event celebrating the store’s 100th anniversary in 2008.

A passing of the torch in Avonmore

From left, new Barkley’s Store proprietors Michael Brown and Johanne GagnÊBrown with former long-time owner Murray Barkley, whose family had operated the store for 106 years. The historic retailer in the rural Eastern Ontario village of Avonmore changed hands Feb. 3. Though it has its roots as Agency Store. has an intact fraternal hall a general store in what was The rambling brick — now defunct — that is a dry town, the operation building for years hosted a very much like a time captoday features an LCBO bank, while the upstairs still sule.

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 018_Layout 1 14-02-28 4:27 PM Page 1

Page 18 The AgriNews March, 2014

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Page 20 The AgriNews March, 2014

Youth Centres Canada Executive Director Les Voakes leads youth on a discussion about careers, during the Feb. 7 Rural Ontario Institute Youth Summit.

Rural forum talks youth employment By Nelson Zandbergen AgriNews Staff Writer HESTERVILLE — PoSTPonEd fRom an

C

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dECEmbER, THE RuRaL onTaRIo InSTITuTE HELd

THE SECond of THREE foRumS on youTH EmPLoymEnT PLannEd aCRoSS THE PRoVInCE aT a muLTI-PuRPoSE HaLL faCILITy ownEd by a LoCaL CHuRCH gRouP In THIS RuRaL CommunITy.

Local economic development officials along with several youth from the Merrickville and Smiths Falls area took part in the half-day event that discussed ways of improving the impact and outcomes of youth employment programs, Feb. 7 at ‘The Gathering House.’ Ontario’s unemployment rate for youth ages 15 to 24 stands at over 16 per cent. The forum highlighted the provincial Youth Jobs Strategy, which aims to create 30,000 positions for young people through a two-year, $295-million investment announced in last year’s Ontario budget. The sum includes a $195million Youth Employment Program that subsidizes employers offering four- and six-month job placements to young people ages 15 to 29, noted Mike Marcolongo, Youth Outreach Strategy Lead with the Entrepreneurship Branch of the Ministry of Economic Development, Trade and Employment and the Ministry of Research and Innovation. An employer can receive up to $6,800 to help offset wages and training for each eligible person hired through the new program, according to the presentation delivered by Marcolongo. An additional $1,000 is available to the hired individual to assist them with job-related costs, such as tools and transportation. Overseen by the Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities, the program has already allocated 7,000 of an intended 25,000 placements since its launch last

September, according to Marcolongo. “There’s a very strong demand for these programs,” he said, adding the rate of subscribership is “on track” with government expectations. Three other funds also comprise the balancer of the provincial jobs strategy — Ontario Youth Skills Connections, Ontario Youth Entrepreneurship Fund, and the Ontario Youth Innovation Fund. Marcolongo also mentioned that the ministry is reprising its popular ‘Make Your Pitch’ online video contest this year; eight to 10 finalists will get a trip to Toronto to make their business pitch to a panel of experts. The top two will get ‘Summer Company’ student entrepreneur grants — an established program — to make their ideas a reality. Fostering “a culture of entrepreneurship” is part of the government’s focus, Marcolongo explained, acknowledging that small businesses create the lion’s share of jobs in Ontario. The particular challenges of creating jobs for youth in rural areas was a focus of discussion. Ranging in age from their early teens to the early 20s, the rural youth attending the summit were quizzed on various facets of their career expectations, how they receive information (none used Twitter, in a surprise to many of the economic development bureaucrats in attendance ), and other similar

www.agrinews.ca matters during a discussion led by Les Voakes, executive director of Youth Centres Canada. In keeping with the youthful theme of the day, 25-yearold mayor North Dundas Township Mayor Eric Duncan — also warden of the United Counties of Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry this year— delivered a speech on the challenges of youth employment. Duncan suggested the trend of young people leaving rural areas for jobs in the city was nothing new and shouldn’t be seen as a failure of any particular rural community. The challenge is faced by rural areas around the world in the face of increasing urbanization everywhere, he pointed out. The mayor proposed a three-pronged approach to meeting the ongoing challenge in rural Eastern Ontario — revolving around broadband improvement, increased online education opportunities, and mentoring businesses “with a strong emphasis on online marketing and product development.” He suggested a need to “keep the gas pedal pressed to the floor” on development of rural broadband while raising awareness about the highspeed networks already in place and the resulting postsecondary courses available online as a result. “So today, it’s possible for a single mother in South Mountain, population 350, to get her college diploma as a legal clerk without having to leave the village,” he said, drawing attention to a particular educational service — contactnorth.ca. On the mentoring front, he noted the example of his township’s popular series of ongoing professional development sessions held in partnership with Candy Pollard of the Cornwall Business Enterprise Centre. The Rural Ontario Institute is a non-profit entity formed by the merger of The Centre for Rural Leadership and The Ontario Rural Council in 2010. Its mission is “developing leaders, initiating dialogue, supporting collaboration and promoting action on issues and opportunities facing rural Ontario.”

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proseeds.ca proseeds .ca Rural Ontario Institute Director, Policy & Stakeholder Engagement Norman Ragetlie (left) and United Counties of Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry Warden Eric Duncan, following the warden’s speech at the rural forum on youth employment in the Township of North Dundas. Duncan, 25, also serves as mayor of North Dundas.

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 021_Layout 1 14-03-03 10:16 AM Page 1

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The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 21

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Page 22 The AgriNews March, 2014 Booth # 1017 Meridian Mfg. Inc. 60 Sheldon Dr. Cambridge, ON N1T 2K1 519 620 6195 cyungblut@meridianmfg.com Booth # 12 Milo Seeds Inc. 277 chemin Industriel Local 8 Continued from page 16 L'Ange Gardien, QC J8L 0A9 819 986 7829 Mapleseed belanger.bac@videotron.ca 1368 Lapasse Rd. Booth # 1621 Beachburg, ON KOJ 1C0 Ministry of Transportation 613 635 3450 3091 Albion Rd., N., Unit #2 brobinson@pickseed.com Ottawa, ON K1V 9V9 Booth # 1416 613 764 2906 Marcrest Manufacturing Inc. matthew.roy@ontario.ca 45010 Cardiff Rd., RR 1 Booth # 138 Ethel, ON NOG 1T0 Mohawk Equipment Ltd. 519 887 9910 P.O. Box 103, 40 Ewart Ave. carol@balebaron.com Brantford, ON N3T 5M3 Booth # 302 519 753 3164 MarketBook mohawkequipment@bellnet.ca 120 West Harvest Dr. Booth # 420 Lincoln, NE USA 68521 Monsanto Canada (Dekalb) 402 458 4774 101 120 Research Lane rayne Guelph, ON N1G 0B4 mclaughlin@sandhills.com 519 780 6602 Booth # 2515 stefanie.k.bech hansen@monMasterfeeds L.P. santo.com 3033 County Rd. #2 Booth # 1133 Johnstown, ON KOE 1T1 Mueller 613 925 2878 1028 Mt. Pleasant Rd. showe@masterfeeds.com Quarryville, PA 17566 USA Booth # 2114 417 872 5715 Maxville Farm Machinery vleininger@muel.com Ltd./Buhler Versatile Inc. Booth # 2321 Box 217, 2508 Highland Rd. Multi Shelter Solutions Maxville, ON KOC 1T0 P.O. Box 1125, 360 King St. 613 527 2834 Unit 5 maxvillefrn@bellnet.ca Palmerston, ON NOG 2PO Booth # OD 7 866 838 6729/519 343 2335 MegaDome norm@sheltersolutions.ca 1044 Principale Booth # 2014 St.Thomas, QC JOK 3L0 Murphy's Sales & Service 450 756 1041 # 260 P.O. Box 69,4147 Brinston Rd. g.galipeau@harnois.com

2014 OVFS Exhibitors

www.agrinews.ca Brinston, ON K0E 1C0 613 652 4802 Booth # 2216 Nachurs Alpine Solutions Inc. 5 Lindsay Dr. Saskatoon, SK S7H 3T1 306 371 9001 balionl@alpinepfl.com Booth # 1201 National Bank 90 Lafleche Blvd., Box 410 Casselman, ON KOA 1M0 613 764 1724 joyce.chollet@nbc.ca Booth # 2505 National Farmers Union 18146 Street Rd. Cornwall, ON K6H 5R6 613 528 0040 les.gills@hotmail.ca Booth # 2523 New Holland Canada 3259 route 148 Luskville, QC JOX 2G0 819 455 2723 simon.alary@newholland.com Booth # 633 New Life Mills Ltd. Box 219,252 14th St. Hanover, ON N4N 305 519 364 3263 Booth # 2016 Norag Resources Inc. 4476 County Rd. 10 Port Hope, ON L1A 3V5 905 753 1180 amenard@norag.ca Booth # 1425 Normand Co. Ltd. 340, Tache St., Box 608 St.Pascal, QC GOL 3Y0 418 492 2712 marc.normand@cienormand.c om Booth # 800

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LICENSED GRAIN ELEVATOR Corn and Soybean Dealer

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We Offer: • Forward Contracts • Drying • Trucking • Storage

We Buy: • Corn • Soybeans • Barley

18408 Conc. 15, Maxville, Ont. marc@bourdon.ca

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Northern Stoker Jack's Sales & Service R.R.#1, 2341 Midlothian Rd. Burk's Falls, ON POA 1C0 705 387 4642 carbonneutralheat@gmail.com Booth # 219 Norwood Industries Inc. 1660 Hwy.11N., R.R.2 Kilworthy, ON POE 1G0 800 567 0404 info@norwoodsawmills.com Booth # 2135 Novozymes BioAg Ltd. 3935 Thatcher Ave. Saskatoon, SK S7R 1A3 1 306 657 8200 jnff@novozymes.com Booth # 1612 NuFarm Agriculture Inc. 330 St Charles St. E., RR 1 Breslau, ON NOB 1M0 226 821 1275 Booth # 1513 Nuhn Forage Inc. 4863 Line 36, RR #5 Stratford, ON N5A 6S6 519 393 5770 terrynuhn@yahoo.ca Booth # 1224 Nuhn Industries Ltd. Box 160, 4816 Line 34 Sebringville, ON NOK 1X0 519 393 6284 nuhnind@nuhn.ca Booth # 1203 Nutritional Feed Additives Inc. 8017 Eramasa Garafraxa Townline, RR 4 Fergus, ON NIM 2W5 519 843 4041 nfaoffice@bellnet.ca Booth # 1837 Oegema,Nicholson & Associates Insce.Brokers Ltd. 1451 Woodroffe Ave. Nepean, ON K2G 1W1 613 224 1455 joegema@ona.ca Booth # 2415 Old Fashioned Fudge Inc. 266 Island View Dr.,R.R. # 6, Perth, ON K7H 3C8 613 720 2047 fudgetime@gmail.com Booth # 1123 Ontario Bison Assoc. 15593 Hwy. 7 Perth, ON K7H 3C8 613 326 0573 rcallan@battleriverbison.ca Booth # Lobby Ont. Blonde d'Aquitaine Assoc. R.R.3, 21 Crystal Rd. Jasper, ON KOG 1G0 613 275 2422 Booth # Lobby Ont. Seed Growers' Assoc. 1 Stone Rd. West Guelph, ON N1G 4Y2 800 265 9751 evelyn.house@ontariosoilcrop.org Booth # 1230 Ont. Sheep Marketing Agency 1145 Clayton Rd., R.R.#1 Almonte, ON KOA 1A0 613 256 1628

Stittsville, ON K2S 1B8 613 831 2642 thelandowner@bellnet.ca Booth # 2503 Ontario Ministry of Agriculture Food 1 Stone Rd., W. Guelph, ON N1G 4Y2 1 519 826 3619 david.doyle@ontario.ca Booth # 108 Ontario Mutuals 350 Pinebush Rd. Cambridge, ON N1T 1Z6 519 622 9220 Ext.2131 marketing@omia.com Booth # 2410 Ontario Plowmen's Assoc. 188 Nicklin Rd. Guelph, ON N1H 7L5 519 767 2928 eventadmin@plowingmatch.org Booth # 2423 Organic Meadow Co operative 24 Sixth Line Bristol, QC JOX 1G0 819 647 6684 wallbridge@organicmeadow.c om Booth # 2110 Orgaworld Canada Ltd. 5123 Hawthorne Rd. Ottawa, ON K1G 3Y3 613 822 2056 ext. 142 tminarik@orgaworld.ca Booth # 140

RE

Continued from page 22

claytonsundowner@yahoo.ca Booth # Lobby Ontario Charolais R.R.# 3 Mount Forest, ON NOG 2L0 Booth # Lobby Ontario Farmer Publications 1147 Gainsborough Rd., Box 7400 London, ON N6H 5L5 519 474 5378 cathy.woodhue@sunmedia.ca Booth # 2527 Ontario Federation of Agriculture 4597 rue Ste.Catherine St. Isidore, ON KOC 2B0 613 524 2100 michel.bourgon@ofa.on.ca Booth # 2500 Ontario Flag and Pole 119 Carolyn St., R.R.#2 Sutton West, ON LOE 1R0 905 596 0040 bruce.cook2@sympatico.ca Booth # 905 Ontario Holstein Assoc. 111 MacLeod Cres. Alexandria, ON KOC 1A0 613 525 0986 krismacleod613@gmail.com Booth # Lobby Ontario Joint Pipeline Group 11200 Weston Rd., Box 790 Maple, ON L6A 1S7 905 832 7333 janice_badgley@transcanada.com Booth # 130 Ontario Landowners Assoc. 6588 Fallowfield Rd.

E ENT / NO INQTUEBE

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The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 23

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 024_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:45 AM Page 1

Page 24 The AgriNews March, 2014

2014 OVFS Exhibitors Continued from page 23 OSCIA 3550 Larry Robinson Rd. Russell, ON K4R 1E5 613 821 3900 arlene.ross@ontariosoilcrop.org Booth # 2409 Ottawa Equip. & Hydraulic. Inc. 2628 Edinburgh Pl. Ottawa, ON K1B 5M1 613 748 9000 2001 mpoiliot@oehinc.com Booth # 1703 Ottawa Valley Angus Club 17 Vera Cres., Box 288 Beachburg, ON KOJ 1C0 Booth # Lobby Ottawa Valley Case IH Dealers 2726 Carp Rd. Carp, ON KOA 1A0 613 836 3033 davidp@reisequipment.ca Booth # 301 Ottawa Valley Harvestore Systems P.O. Box 1490 Kemptville, ON KOG 1J0 613 258 5905 huzenga@ontharvestor.com Booth # 1821 Ottawa Valley Hereford Club 5389 Bowesville Rd. R.R. # 1 Gloucester, ON K1X 1B8 613 822 0884 Booth # Lobby Ottawa Valley Limousin Club 1463 Waba Rd., RR # 3 Pakenham, ON KOA 2X0 613 624 5405 Booth # Lobby

Ottawa Valley Seed Growers 967 Cty.Rd. 29, RR 4 Smiths Falls, ON K7A 4S5 613 283 5971 Booth # 1231 Ottawa Valley Shorthorn Club 5580 Fourth Line Rd. North Gower, ON KOA 2T0 613 838 4726 Booth # Lobby Ottawa Valley Simmental Club 1466 Conc.9A Drummond, R.R. 6 Perth, ON K7H 3C8 613 267 6314 Booth # Lobby Pathfinder Lubricants 2295 Old Hastings Rd., RR #1 Coe Hill, ON KOL 1PO 613 337 5376 sales@pathfinderlubricants.com Booth # 126 Patz Corporation P.O. Box 7 Pound, WI 54161 0007 920 897 9297 barbsailer@patzcorp.com Booth # 801 Penergetic Canada 329 5525 West Blvd. Vancouver, BC V6M 3W6 1 888 737 0907 info@penergetic.ca Booth # 2300 Perth County Fabrication 4812 Road 164 Bornholm, ON 519 347 2789 mike@perthcountyfabrication.ca Booth # OD3 Peter Chase Enterprises 176 Lyndhurst Rd. Seeleys Bay, ON KOH 2N0 613 387 3186 chaseison07@gmail.com Booth # 1128 Pickseed Canada Inc. Box 304, 1 Greenfield Rd. Lindsay, ON K9V 4S3 705 878 9240 pwight@pickseed.com Booth # 1202

www.agrinews.ca PLS Insoles Inc. 632 Armstrong Blvd. Milton, ON L9T 6G8 905 876 3616 lshabaga@cogeco.ca Booth # 1101 Poettinger Canada Inc. 650, Route 112 St.Cesaire, QC JOL 1T0 450 469 5594 marie noel.leduc@poettinger.ca Booth # 1012 Polar Furnace 491 Pierre Laporte L'Ange Gardien, QC J8L 0P3 819 743 6640 david.roy837@hotmail.com Booth # 1300 Port of Johnstown 3035 County Rd. 2 Johnstown, ON KOE 1T1 613 925 4228 ext. 103 rhondac@portofprescott.com Booth # 1524 Portage & Main Boilers R.R.5, Site 16, Box 114 Prince Albert, SK S6V 5R3 1 800 561 0700 products1@portageandmainboilers.com Booth # 1600 PRIDE Seeds P.O. Box 1088 Chatham, ON N7M 5L6 519 354 3210 ext. 221 pwakely@prideseed.com Booth # 1107 Princess Auto Ltd. 1111 Ages Dr. Ottawa, ON K1G 6L3 613 247 1651 admin16@princessauto.com Booth # 1029 Professional Investments 4 John St., Box 219 Delta, ON KOE 1G0 613 928 2784 ffrench100@sympatico.ca Booth # 2414 Protyre Tire Sales & Service 1158 Hwy 60 West Renfrew, ON K7V 4Z3 613 432 9955 protyre@bellnet.ca Booth # OD 9 10

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Quality Seeds Ltd. 368 Little Creek Rd., R.R.#3 Napanee, ON K7R 3K8 613 532 0850 bakeracre@kos.net Booth # 2005 Quebec Farmers' Assoc. 555 Boul. Roland Therrien, Office 255 Longueuil, QC J4H 4E7 450 679 0540 8536 qfa@upa.qc.ca Booth # 2501

R.D. Legault Seeds Ltd. 1614 Rte.900 West St.Albert, ON KOA 3C0 613 987 5494 rdlegault@xplornet.com Booth # 1408 Rare Breeds Can., East. Ont. Chapter 8730 Victoria St. Metcalfe, ON KOA 2PO Booth # Lobby Raven Industries 205 East 6th St.

Sioux Falls, SD USA 57104 605 357 0536 kathy.hansen@ravenind.com Booth # 1211 RBC Royal Bank 6683 Fourth Line Rd., Box 40 North Gower, ON KOA 2T0 613 489 3015 dorothy.hearty@rbc.com Booth # 2325 Continued on page 25

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 025_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:46 AM Page 1

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2014 OVFS Exhibitors Continued from page 24 Reis Equip.Centre 2726 Carp Rd. Carp, ON KOA 1L0 613 836 3033 davidp@reisequipment.ca Booth # 221 & # OD18 Richardson International Ltd. 1239 Ch. du Golf Clarence Creek, ON KOA 1N0 613 488 9793 yves.gadouas@richardson.ca Booth # 1115 Ritchie Feed & Seed Inc. 1390 WindMill Lane Ottawa, ON K1B 4V5 613 741 4430 g_mckenna@ritchiefeed.com Booth # 1905 Robert H. Laning & Sons Ltd. 289 Leamon St.S., Box 940 Waterford, ON NOE 1Y0 519 443 8601 rob@laning.ca Booth # 423 Rostech Electronics 346 Isabey Rd. St.Laurent, QC H4T 1W1 514 521 2196 sean@rostech.com Booth # 1037

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 25 Rutters Elevators 3061 Cty. Rd. 11 Chesterville, ON KOC 1H0 613 448 2153 catherine@rutterselevator.com Booth # 533 Salford Farm Machinery 364018 McBeth Rd. Salford, ON NOJ 1W0 519 485 3977 175 henk@salfordmachine.com Booth # 1713 Sangers Silo 1255 Unity Rd. Glenburnie, ON KOH 1S0 613 561 1802 robsangers@me.com Booth # 620 Scotch River Contracting 19419 Kenyon Conc.8, R.R.5 Alexandria, ON KOC 1A0 613 577 1331 Booth # 2539 Scotiabank Box 100, 55 Main St. E. Vankleek Hill, ON KOB 1R0 613 678 3555 maureena.murphy@scotiabank.com Booth # 531 SeCan 374151 Foldens Line, R.R. 5 Ingersoll, ON N5C 3J8 519 423 6435 mharry@secan.com Booth # 1233 Secco International Inc. 4040, Casavant Ouest St.Hyacinthe, QC J2S 8E3 450 771 0777 dlamarre@seccointernational.c om Booth # 2201

Select Sires Canada Inc. 220 Pinnacle Rd., RR #3 Renfrew, ON K7V 3Z6 613 433 2025 bltbriscoe@sympatico.ca Booth # 1911 Semences Prograin Inc. 145 bas de la Riviere N. St. Cesaire, QC JOL 1T0 450 469 5744 julie.blanchard@prograin.qc.ca Booth # 1232 Sevita Intn'l./Proseeds 11451 Cameron Rd. Inkerman, ON KOE 1J0 613 989 5400 jimm@sevita.com Booth # 1317 SG Ceresco Inc. 164 ch. Grande Ligne Saint Urbain Premier, QC JOS 1Y0 450 427 3831 ext.223 lpomponi@sgceresco.com Booth # 1321 Shepherd's Choice Breeding Stock 1571 Centre Line, R.R.# 2 Norwood, ON KOL 2V0 705 696 1491 john.steele@nexicom.net Booth # 1018 Smellink Realty Inc. 10759 Irena Rd. Iroquois, ON KOE 1K0 613 652 9010 msmellink@gmail.com Booth # 2426 Soleno Inc. 1160 Route 133, C.P.837 succursale Iberbville Saint Jean sur Richelieu, QC J2X 4J5

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613 299 3564 asicotte@soleno.com Booth # 535 South Nation Conservation Authority 38 Victoria, P.O.Box 29 Finch, ON KOC 1K0 613 984 2948 x 251 rbutz@nation.on.ca Booth # 2504 Speare Seeds 1531 County Rd. 15 Picton, ON KOK 2T0 613 661 8422 matt@spearkeseeds.ca Booth # 1216 Spread X 3946 Conc.20 St.Isidore, ON KOC 2B0 613 826 6984 info@spreadx.ca Booth # 8 St. Lawrence Beans Div. of Agrocentre Belcan 180 Montee Ste Marie Ste Marthe, QC JOP 1W0 450 459 4288 ext.225 pmattsson@slbeans.com Booth # 1526 Steqcan 930 Lookout Rd. Westmeath, ON KOJ 2L0 613 633 6321 tulip0canada@gmail.com Booth # 823 Stoll North America Inc. 570 Industrial Dr. Fort Erie, ON L2A 5M4 905 994 9404 kh@stoll northamerica.com Booth # 530

Strongco 54 Iber Rd. Stittsville, ON K2S 1E8 613 836 6633 ajohn@strongco.com Booth # 2432 Stubbe’s Precast 30 Muir Line, R.R. # 2 Harley, ON NOE 1E0 519 424 2183 kirk@stubbes.org Booth # 1305 Sunlife Financial 333 Preston St., Suite 800 Ottawa, ON K1S 5N4 613 567 9700 ext.2221 jennifer winchiu@sunlife.com Booth # 132 Sun North Systems Ltd. 92 Railway St., P.O.Box 668 Seaforth, ON NOK 1W0 519 527 2470 ext.222 cvanneste@sunnorth.com Booth # 2111 Sylvain Leduc Land Clearing 320 Conc. 6 Vankleek Hill, ON KOB 1R0 613 551 2157 leduc1981@hotmail.ca Booth # 7 synAgri 5175 Blvd. Laurier East. St.Hyacinthe, QC J2R 2B4 514 838 1744 sylvie.caron@synagri.ca Booth # 1413 TD Canada Trust 4614 Conc. # 18 St.Isidore, ON KOC 2B0 613 796 1461

sylvain.racine@td.com Booth # 2225 The Co Operators Insurance 100 Madawaska Blvd. Arnprior, ON K7S 1S7 613 623 3789 sue.how@cooperators.ca Booth # 2529 The Door Company 9236 Castor Rd. Ottawa, ON KOA 2PO 613 821 2130 marketing@thedoorcompany.ca Booth # 515 The Kids and Ewe 142 Walkers Rd., R.R. # 2 Fenelon Falls, ON KOM 1N0 705 887 4881 thekids_and_ewe@sympatico.ca Booth # 2015 The Orthotic Works 4998 Sixth Line, RR # 2 Acton, ON L7J 2L8 905 873 4884 michael@theorthoticworks.com Booth # 711 The SAM Group 111 Colonnade Rd. Ottawa, ON K2E 7M3 613 727 0446 sales.thesamgroup@bellnet.ca Booth # 17 18 19 The Western Producer Box 2500, 2310 Millar Ave. Saskatoon, SK S7K 2C4 306 665 3510 nadine.sather@producer.com Booth # 2401 Continued on page 29

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 028_Layout 1 14-03-03 11:17 AM Page 1

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MASSIVE AUCTION SALE

CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FRUIT TREES Apples, local and heirloom varieties, Pears, Plum, Cherry, Peach and Flowering Crab trees $20. Strawberry and Asparagus plants at Barkley’s. Call Bill 613-859-7059, leave message at 613-543-0491 or email billb.otr@gmail.com. 05

FOR SALE 5 ACRES SOLID SET TICO IRRIGATION SYSTEM. 5” and 2” pipes; fully renovated Hale PTO pump; irrigation wagon; Nelson and Toro sprinklers; 4’ risers; quick coupling riser valves. 613839-2931 03

SERVICES LEWIS CONSTRUCTION 613-340-9035 613-652-6299 Renovations/Additions Decks Roofing Siding, Soffit and Fascia Garages Blown in Insulation tfc

WANTED WANTED Old Barns for salvage materials. CASH PAID. 613-8327279. 03

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 029_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:49 AM Page 1

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2014 OVFS Exhibitors Continued from page 25 Tiesma Industrial Coverings Inc. 37584 Huron Rd. Clinton, ON NOM 1L0 519 482 3364 tiesma@xplornet.com Booth # 1833 Town and Country Chrysler 245 Lombard St. Smiths Falls, ON K7A 5B8 613 283 7555 hcolton@townandcountrychrysler.com Booth # 2507 Town and Country Chrysler 245 Lombard St. Smiths Falls, ON K7A 5B8 613 283 7555 hcolton@townandcountrychrysler.com Booth # OD15 Trees Ontario 144 Front St.W., Suite 700

Toronto, ON M5J 2L7 416 646 1193 ext 237 mfuda@treesontario.ca Booth # 513 Triple A Farm Emu Products 514 Cty.Rd. 1, R.R. 4 Smiths Falls, ON K7A 4S5 613 283 6388 Booth # Lobby United Agri Products (UAP Canada Inc.) 789 Donnybrook Dr. Dorchester, ON NOL 1G5 519 268 5917 charlotte.swanson@uap.ca dave.cheer@uap.ca Booth # 1603 Universite de Guelph Campus d'Alfred 31 rue Saint Paul Alfred, ON KOB 1A0 613 679 2218 ext 318 jdubois@alfredc.uoguelph.ca Booth # 2413 University of Guelph, Kemptville Campus 830 Prescott St., Box 2003 Kemptville, ON KOG 1J0 613 258 8336 ext.61655 cnaud@uoguelph.ca Booth # 2514 Usborne Books at Home 3107 Big Creek Rd.,R.R. # 1

Napanee, ON K7R 3K6 613 354 6888 anne.usbornebooks@gmail.co m Booth # 2214 Valley Heritage Radio P.O.Box 945, 3009 Burnstown Rd. Renfrew, ON K7V 4H4 613 432 9873 jason.valleyheritageradio.ca Booth # Room D ValMetal Inc. 230,Industriel Blvd., St. Germain de Grantham, QC JOC 1K0 819 395 4282 Ext.303 marketing@valmetal.com Booth # 313 Van Go Enterprises 14 Pine Grove Rd. RR 4 Marmora, ON KOK 2M0 705 826 0609 gary.vanboekel@gmail.com Booth # 22 Walinga Inc. 5656 Hwy. 6N., R.R. # 5 Guelph, ON N1H 6J2 519 824 8520 263 hjm@walinga.com Booth # 1221 Wallenstein (by EMB Mfg. Inc.)

4144 Boomer Line St. Clements, ON NOB 2M0 519 699 9283 sam@embmfg.com Booth # 1021 Walsh Equipment Sales 7 McGill St., R.R.4 Cobden, ON KOJ 1K0 613 646 7729 Booth # OD2 We Can Contracting 5125 Cty. Rd.31, RR 1 Morrisburg, ON KOC 1X0 613 551 2843 jcvankoppen@gmail.com Booth # 1701 Weagant Farm Supplies Box 940,11250 Hwy. 43 Winchester, ON KOC 2K0 613 774 2887 ault@weagantfarm.com Booth # 607 Weberlane Mfg. (1990 Co.) 5036 Line 86, RR # 4

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 29 Listowel, ON N4W 3G9 9516 Northville Rd.R.R. # 1 519 291 5035 Thedford, ON NOM 2N0 stuart@weberlane.com 519 243 2616 Booth # 1125 info@willsie.com Weber's Woodstoves Booth # 1721 1206 Hybla Rd., R.R.5 Wolf System/Fliegl Bancroft, ON KOL 1C0 980 Stevenson Dr. 613 332 2129 Braeside, ON KOA 1G0 416 988 8870 ervin.webers@gmail.com Booth # 1032 thermoenergy@bell.net Wever Financial/Investia Booth # 1702 Financial Woodmaster of Canada Box 269, 1087 Conc. St., Jack's Sales & Service Russell, ON K4R 1E1 R.R.#1, 2341 Midlothian Rd. 613 445 8624 Burk's Falls, ON POA 1C0 twever@rogers.com 705 387 4642 carbonneutralheat@gmail.com Booth # 2424 Willows Agriservices Ltd. Booth # 219 422 Hartsgravel Rd. Wood Mizer Canada Inc. Delta, ON KOE 1G0 396 Cty.Rd. 36, Unit B Lindsay, ON K9V 4R3 613 928 2371 705 878 5255 scott@willowsagriservices.ca Booth # 1704 dcheel@woodmizer.com Willsie Equipment Sales Booth # 529 & # OD11

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Page 30 The AgriNews March, 2014

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Water enhancement Webb woven at Eco Farm Day By Tom Van Dusen AgriNews Contributor ORNWALL — FOR mORe thAN 25 yeARs, PeteR Webb OF KemPtviLLe hAs

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beeN sOmethiNg OF AN Odd-mAN-Out ALONg the CONCessiONs ANd iN the bARNyARds OF eAsteRN ONtARiO, PROmOtiNg iNNOvAtiONs ANd sOLutiONs thAt sOme hAve FeLt bORdeR ON WitChCRAFt.

But his work to combat stray voltage and its destructive effect on dairy herds and other livestock is largely science-based, Webb insists, outlining many successes he has experienced over the years. Webb presented his latest innovation during Eco Farm Day at Cornwall’s Ramada Hotel Feb. 22, a system designed to tackle herd health through the water supply. Webb calls his new venture Water For Life Technologies. It’s so new that, although the com-

Presenter Peter Webb holds his new device for increasing the vitality of water, at Eco Farm Day last month. pany web site has been tinuation of Webb’s work in designed, it isn’t yet live trying to neutralize the and accessible. broad negative impact of Water For Life is a conelectro-magnetic fields on

farms. He says his system restores and transforms water to resemble that of “a pure mountain spring” with increased vitality, improved hydration, and increased oxygen. No chemicals are used, there are no moving parts and no power and maintenance requirements. Even with sophisticated treatment such as reverse osmosis and membrane filtration, Webb claims that water will still carry the energies and frequencies of contaminants. He says his system picks up where the others leave off. Webb was one of a wide range of exhibitors at the event sponsored by Canadian Organic Growers. Eco Farm Day was founded by Berwick organic guru Tom Manley who was absent this year because he was indulging one of his other passions, politics, in the form of the Liberal Party policy conference held in Montreal the same day. Manley has been a candidate for the party in the past. Exhibitors included everyone from natural food and book merchants, to Russell barn painter Jerry

Cummings who said he sometimes gets asked to use organic products on heritage buildings. The roster of speakers went from Jean-Martin Fortier, a successful small-scale organic

farmer and author based in the Eastern Townships, to Dr. Renee Bergeron, director of Alfred Campus of the University of Guelph. Continued on page 31

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 031_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:53 AM Page 1

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The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 31

Healthy society dependent on healthy trees: speaker By Catherine Thompson AgriNews Contributor EMPTVILLE — A LIVIng TrEE

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fEb. 19 AT wInTEr woodLoT dAy. “One mature tree has the cooling equivalent of 10 air conditioners and one

hectare of trees produces enough oxygen for 45 people to breathe each year. Trees are the lungs of the earth. They inhale carbon dioxide and exhale oxygen. They take care of our lungs and us,� said Trees Ontario CEO Rob Keen. Keen stated forests and trees greatly benefit human health by absorbing pollutants in the atmosphere and

Eco Farm Day Continued from page 30 Bergeron, who has served on several ethics committees on animal welfare, shared the stage with Dr. Elsa Lavasseur of the Organic Dairy Research Centre who’s a member of a committee in charge of developing the animal care assessment protocol for dairy farms in Canada. In their presentation entitled “Moving Towards Welfare-Friendly Dairy Production�, the animal behaviour experts discussed the evolution of societal concern over animal welfare, explained how to measure welfare at the farm level, and reviewed welfare standards from Canada, the U.S. and Europe. Fortier shared the techniques, tools and technology that make his compact, raised bed market garden set on 1.5 acres productive and profitable. His Jardins de la Grelinette generates close to $140,000 in annual sales with a profit margin around 45 per cent.

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sustaining the ecosystem that supports all life. They promote physical activity, introduce children to nature, connect people to the outdoors, reduce stress levels and improve patient rehabilitation. He was discussing a 2012 Trees Ontario report titled “A Healthy Dose of Green: A Prescription for a Healthy Population� that is

In his presentation, “A Bio-Intensive Market Garden�, Fortier described the secret of success as residing in low-tech, high yield methods of production developed by focusing on growing better rather than on growing bigger. Webb’s water enhancement system consists of various-sized magnesium balls contained in a length of one or three inch PVC pipe that can be coupled into a water line close to the pressure tank. The price is $1,500-$2,500 depending on size and the purchaser is responsible for the installation. The idea is to increase the oxygen in the water and thereby the oxygen intake of ruminants, creating more complete digestion of nutrients, with the side benefits of increasing milk production and reducing odour in manure. Farms using his technologies, Webb said, have reported healthier calves with less scours and lower somatic cell counts for lactating cows. The agricultural innovator plans to hold a meeting in Winchester in March where users of his devices can be updated and compare notes.

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based on much scientific evidence. “We all know there is value in the forests. What’s amazing to me is that even with all this knowledge, even with all the facts. . . .is how little we pay attention to make sure we maintain them,� he said. As a registered professional forester who ran a consulting business and had tree planting contracts during the 1980s, Keen pays close attention to the state of Ontario forests. Thirty to 40 years ago, 20 to 30 million trees were being planted annually in Southern Ontario through the Ministry of Natural Resources, but those numbers have dwindled to less than two million since 1998. Keen cited a 2004 Environment Canada report, that recommends a minimum of 30 per cent forest cover in Southern Ontario to maintain a sustainable forest canopy. But in some areas in Southwestern Ontario, there is less than five per cent because of large agricultural operations.

And “even this way, through increased cash crop prices, you can see where agricultural fields are being created and forests are

cleared.� Keen didn’t fault farmers for trying to make a Continued on page 33

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 032_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:55 AM Page 1

Page 32 The AgriNews March, 2014

www.agrinews.ca

New invasive species on scene By Catherine Thompson AgriNews Contributor EMPTVILLE — FroM rEd sPoTs

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Nor is a canker-covered walnut tree or a hemlock infested with wooly fungus. Perhaps that’s why Dr. Richard Wilson wanted to title his talk on Feb. 19, “The Good, The Bad and The Ugly”. Speaking at the Eastern Ontario Woodlot Conference, the pathologist with the Ministry of Natural Resources went on to describe several pests that are destroying Ontario’s trees. Apart from established pests like emerald ash borer, American chestnut

blight and Dutch elm disease, there are three new invasive species. beech bark disease This is a combination of a scale insect that damages the bark and allows fungus to enter through tiny holes. Both the scale and the pathogen are invasive. Red dots appear on the tree that penetrate quickly and become welts that crack the bark, causing the cambium to dry out while secondary pests come in. First, the insect invades the tree and two to 12 years later, the fungus comes in. Beech bark disease came from Europe and moved westward and southward from Nova Scotia in 1890. The scale insect has been in Ontario since 1986 and both the scale and pathogen were recorded in 2004.

Wilson said it’s been monitored since 2012 at 12 sites, including North Ril Lake Rd. near Huntsville. The first year of the fouryear survey showed 60 healthy beech trees out of 67, but in the fourth year, there were only 18 healthy trees remaining. In 2013, beech bark disease reached Killbear Provincial Park on Georgian Bay, where trees started to rot and die very quickly, snapping off and creating hazards for

campers and vehicles. “Those of you who deal with emerald ash borer know the cost of removing a brittle tree is more because it’s more dangerous,” Wilson said. “It cost $1.38-million to take away the hazardous trees from that park. We could have prevented it. Once you have these invasive pests, especially the pathogens, it’s very hard to control.” hemlock woolly adelgid The hemlock woolly adelgid is an introduced species from Asia that was Continued on page 33

Walnuts threatened

During Winter Woodlot Day in Kemptville, Dr. Richard Wilson, a forest pathologist with MNR, talked about invasive pests that are killing Ontario trees.

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 033_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:56 AM Page 1

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The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 33

Continued from page 32 described in the western United States in 1924 and seen in Richmond, Virginia, in 1951. It’s now spreading across North America and killing trees very quickly. Wilson said it was brought in from infected trees and found in Toronto in 2012 and next in the Niagara Gorge. It’s found in upstate New York on fairly large trees. Wilson described it as a “tiny and cryptic insect that’s extremely hard to find. It hides itself in a little waxy material, much like beech bark disease.” “Part of the task is how do you search for something like this, especially with government cutbacks?” he asked. By an apparent fluke, the Asian long-horned beetle was found by a homeowner in a truck and the EAB was found by a pathologist in Michigan who wondered why trees were dying. “They’re found by people looking at other things.” Thousand cankers disease Wilson said this is caused by an invasive tiny insect that creates holes in trees that look like weeping cankers, similar to the butternut canker. The insect burrows into the cambium and kills the tree by cutting off nutrients. Symptoms are similar to a tree affected by drought, with yellowing leaves, dying tops and branches. He said the trees die in three to five years, but the pest could be in the tree for quite some time before you see it’s demise. Found in New Mexico and Arizona, the beetle was described in 1928 and although at first thought to be an exotic, it is now believed to be native to the southwest U.S. It has been going up the coast and damaging walnut trees. Although it’s not here yet, in 2010, the black walnut beetle was found in Tennessee, North Carolina, Ohio and in Maryland in Nov. 2013. The fungus that kills the tree was identified in 2008. Wilson said because the black walnut is a valuable tree, people have moved it and planted it in areas where it grows

Continued from page 31 profit from their own land, but noted it’s a huge challenge to encourage them to maintain some forest cover. There are some programs like Trees Ontario 50 Million Tree Program that helps landowners “significantly” reduce their costs of largescale tree planting. Trees Ontario’s goal is to plant 50 million trees by 2020 as part of a pledge to the UN’s Billion Tree a Year Campaign. It’s based on a partnership with MNR, conservation authorities and local stewardship councils, who work with property owners of more than one open hectare to determine a site, come up with a plan and oversee it. Despite tree planting, Keen said he believed 3,000 hectares of forest has been lost in Southern Ontario over 10 years. That number could be as much as 10,000 hectares of

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“We took no action with beech bark disease and what do we have? Lots of mortality and lots of cost and it’s going to get worse.” “We’ll remove trees like we’re doing now with EAB and Asian long-horned beetle, but the cat’s out of the bag. Stopping this is going to be difficult. Where we can stop is before they get worse. With this one I have a little hope.”

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Eric Thompson (left), executive director of the Ontario Woodlot Association, thanked guest speaker Rob Keen, CEO Trees Ontario, for his talk on trees. land due to urbanization alone, lose their forestry positions. according to a 2010 CNW In addition, environmental report. charities receive only two per He said he’s grateful to the cent of donation distributions, government for supporting the while hospitals get 24 per cent. 50 Million Tree Program, but According to Charity a lot more is needed if the for- Intelligence Canada - June est is to regain the needed 2013, donations to environcover area. mental charities are estimated And overall government at $286-million, but this reprefunding is minuscule in comsents only two per cent of total parison to other areas, such as Canadian giving. the Ministry of Health, “or “It’s a little scary when you Ministry of Sick”, which see all the resources that are receives 38 per cent funding being withdrawn from our through the 2013/2014 environment,” he said. Ontario budget, in comparison Whenever the economy to one per cent for the “starts to take a bit of a noseMinistry of Environment and dive, then the environment Ministry of Natural Resources. goes to the backburner. It’s As of Feb. 21, five districts taken off the table and it’s in Suthern Ontario were to about addressing the economy

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Invasive species

“like stink.” Then when it’s shipped back to Indiana where it’s processed, the disease is introduced to black walnuts in their native range where the trees have no resistance. And “now it appears to be booming.” Still, thousand cankers disease hasn’t yet been detected in Ontario from a three-year survey on 20 sites. He stressed it’s important to take action now, not after the disease is here.

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first. We have to get the message out that a healthy economy and a healthy society is completely dependent on insuring we have a healthy environment.” When asked about municipal tax incentives to not clear lands, Keen pointed to the Managed Forest Tax Incentive Program for owners of 10 or more acres that can reduce property taxes to 25 per cent of the municipal residential rate. While he’s a “strong believer in good sustainable forest management”, that doesn’t exclude planting and cutting trees years down the road for timber production. “It’s a viable industry and extremely important in Ontario.” Keen was asked about the economic outlook of planting on marginal land, which may produce two to three years of crop until input costs become higher. “Over the long term, it’s not a value proposition,” he said.


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 034_Layout 1 14-03-03 10:04 AM Page 1

Page 34 The AgriNews March, 2014

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Solar project impacts local job scene by Nelson Zandbergen AgriNews Staff Writer HESTERVILLE — IT waS bITTERLy

C

CoLd ouTSIdE buT jobS bECkonEd on boynE Road foR HaRdy woRkERS wanTIng To HELp wITH THE fInaL fEw monTHS of ConSTRuCTIon on CanadIan SoLaR’S ‘mIgHTySoLaR’ pRojECT.

The mechanical subcontractor in charge of the panel installation at the 10megawatt held the third in a series of job fairs last month at The Gathering House in the Township of North Dundas. They were looking for employees to fill up to 57 positions, to do the challenging outdoor winter work of augering in thousands of steel helical piles that serve as the foundation system for the panel racks. Many of the installed piles are now visible from Boyne Rd., jutting out of the soil like a field of thousands of toothpicks methodically arranged over 60 acres. “We’re looking for field technicians, labourers, crew leads, team leaders, and machine operators,� said Kirk Vazal at the open house event hosted by the mechanical contractor responsible for the panel installation. Vazal is North American CEO of Standard Sun, Inc., which has been subcontracted by main contractor RES Americas. “It’s going well. It’s a large ground-mounted system,� said the American Vazal, explaining that his

firm has installed many such systems around the continent and Ontario. And while conditions on the ground were definitely frigid as the install work got underway this winter, another of their projects being built in Kapuskasing was even colder, he said. “It was minus 49 degrees with the windchill.� The firm has been hiring local people to work with the Standard Sun’s “core team,� coming up with “a nice mix,� he said. Quite a number were already on the payroll by the time of the Jan. 9 session at The Gathering House, a multi-purpose facility owned by a local church congregation. Vazal described the establishment as “a really nice setting� to meet the job candidates. Approximately three months of work remained at the MightySolar site by that point. Standard Sun will oversee the installation of 5,200 helical piles (posts) at the Boyne Rd. site, followed by attached racks that will hold 48,000 photovoltaic panels. A solar park of this size can cost $30-million to $40million to build, he said, not counting land acquisition costs. MightySolar sits on a field leased from farmer Simon Buma. According to the proprietor of McCloskey Hotel — located just across the South Nation River from The Gathering House — several rooms have been rented to workers building the new

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The folks who bring you the farm show

Ottawa Valley Seed Growers directors take a break from their meeting Feb. 19 to gather for a photo. Seated in the group of directors and farm show organizers are, from left, first VP Cecil Cass, president John Roosendaal, and second VP David Blair. Standing at far left is show manager Tom Van Dusen, centre (immediately behind Roosendaal) is treasurer Mary Joynt and at right (in striped sweater) is past president Bruce Hudson. Jim McCuaig photo

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Page 4B The AgriNews March, 2014

Equipment survey: Maintenance tops for livestock producers, resale value for crop producers

W

hen it comes to farm equipment purchases, livestock producers think more about the ease of maintenance, While crop producers think more about the predictability of it, according to a 2014 survey of 800 livestock and crop producers in the study, sponsored by case ih, Who reported a significant portion of their income as generated from livestock operations say they look for loW maintenance and easyto-service equipment from an innovative manufacturer. those Who reported a significant portion of their income as generated from crop operations also ranked innovation near the top of their list, but reliability and resale value rated even higher.

“A big difference between livestock and crop producers when it comes to equipment is usage,� says Ryan Drollette, Farm Management Specialist from Iowa State University Extension and Outreach. “Livestock producers run their equipment every single day, while crop producers are running them for longer periods of time during select seasons.� The usage differences mean livestock operators are using their equipment every day and are performing maintenance as needed. Making that daily process simpler and less time consuming for producers can

mean higher efficiency for that operation. “Having quick service stations on equipment is key,� says Drollette, a former dairyman himself. “If I can head out to the barn and do my daily maintenance check without having to crawl around the machine, I can get to work that much sooner.� Working out in the field alongside producers, Case IH hay and forage product specialist Brett DeVries says Case IH understands this need. “Case IH talks to customers where they work to identify needs and drive the design of our products, so that we’re giving producers the innovation they need to best meet their needs.� For example, producers can pair an easy-to-operate Case IH MaxxumŽ or FarmallŽ 100A tractor with a new Case IH DC3 series disc mower conditioner. Case IH designers created lightweight, impactresistant access doors for the DC3 to simplify in-field adjustments. Customer input also guided the design of the new Case IH Farmall C tractors with added transmission options and ground-level maintenance features to improve efficiency. The research confirms that livestock and crop producers also retain their equipment differently. While livestock producers may keep their equipment for five to 10 years, crop producers buying new equipment tend to trade more frequently, according to DeVries. Spending is part of this equation,

and the research shows that pricing and discounts are of medium importance to livestock producers while they are at the bottom of the average crop producer’s list. “The longevity of the equipment matters to the more value-oriented livestock producer,â€? DeVries says. “Case IH offers a full line of equipment to meet the needs of all producers, no matter the size, type or location of the operation.â€? Like in any business, the quest for higher profits requires smarter, more efficient technology. The same goes for producers and this concept is not lost on them, which the research proves. Both livestock and crop producers rank an innovative manufacturer as their No. 3 purchase consideration. “Investing in the right new technology can be profitable for any operation, but specifically for a livestock operation if it can help cut down on labor costs,â€? Drollette says. “After all, it boils down to the people: those that are working on your operation and those that are working for your operation.â€? Research results show that dealer experience is important, considering that both the crop and livestock producers ranked dealer responsiveness as No. 5 on their list of considerations.   Case IH understands that people are important, as it continues to put producers first and keep two-thirds of its employees out in the field working alongside producers every day. “Having access to a supportive, responsive dealership is critical for all producers,â€? Drollette says. “An operation’s success is dependent on its ability to stay up and running, and equipment plays a crucial role in that.â€?

www.agrinews.ca This research is the results of 800 producer interviews and is considered to be a representative sample of target producers for Case IH. They include Canadian and U.S. producers from sizable operations who have a final say or share in decisionmaking regarding equipment selection and purchasing. These producers were asked, “Below is a list of attributes you may associate with equipment manufacturers and dealers. Please indicate how important each attribute is when seeking a service or choosing a piece of equipment.� Derived importance is a statistical measurement that takes into account a producer’s likelihood to purchase/repurchase a brand of equipment and how he rates that brand on the attributes. Case IH is a global leader in agricultural equipment, committed to collaborating with its customers to develop the most powerful, productive, reliable equipment – designed to meet today’s agricultural challenges. With headquarters in the United States, Case IH has a network of dealers and distributors that operates in over 160 countries. Case IH provides agricultural equipment systems, flexible financial service offerings and parts and service support for professional farmers and commercial operators through a dedicated network of professional dealers and distributors. Productivity enhancing products include tractors; combines and harvesters; hay and forage equipment; tillage tools; planting and seeding systems; sprayers and applicators; site-specific farming tools and utility vehicles. Case IH is a brand of CNH Industrial N.V. (NYSE: CNHI / MI: CNHI).

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 005B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:11 PM Page 1

www.agrinews.ca

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 5B

Roosendaal heads Seed Growers By Sandy Burns AgriNews contributor INCHESTER — THERE’S a

W

NEW faRmER aT

oTTaWa VallEy SEEd GRoWERS aSSoCIaTIoN (oVSGa), aNd HE CaN’T WaIT To SEE

THE HElm of THE

HoW muCH THE upComING

faRm SHoW bENEfITS THE faRmING CommuNITy THIS yEaR.

John Roosendaal, a cash crop farmer who lives west of Winchester, started his two-year term as president of the OVSGA last summer. The role carries several responsibilities, including running the meetings, helping to organize the Ottawa Valley Farm Show, which is running from March 11–13 at the Ernst & Young Centre in Ottawa, and being a “figure head” at the show, he said. “I get to walk around and smile and talk to people during the show,” he laughed. To become president of the OVSGA, Roosendaal said, “first, you have to live long enough to get there. You join, and then, if you’re capable enough, you get elected to the board of directors, and you move your way up to president.” Roosendaal has already served as both First and Second Vice-President for the association, and has served on several committees as part of the OVSGA, mostly recently as chair of an Eastern Ontario research committee. He is also actively involved in the Dundas Soil and Crop Improvement Association, and has been a member of the Chesterville Rotary Club since immigrating to

John Roosendaal is in the first year of his twoyear term as president of the OVSGA. Zandbergen photo Canada from Holland in 1979. The association is run by a group of four elected volunteer directors. Every year, the OVSGA donates proceeds from the Farm Show to various qualifying agricultural groups and causes in the area. “We give a lot of money away to support agricultural initiatives,” he said. “If there’s something in agriculture that needs to be supported, we help with that. The Ottawa Valley Farm Show is the main moneymaker for the Seed Growers Association. We put all the surplus from the show back into agriculture. This is something we want to keep going for as long as we can.” Roosendaal said the show began simply as a seed show, and has evolved into a seed, machinery and services show. But at its

root – so to speak – the show is still very much about the seeds. “It is still a seed show. We get winners from local county seed shows entering the seed show every year,” he said. This year, seed judging will take place on March 8, and winning entries and trophies will be displayed at the show in the Seed Growers’ booth. The annual Prestigious Pedigreed Seed Sale, which benefits the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, will take place on March 13 at noon. “This is something we’ve always done and we’ll continue to do,” Roosendal said. “We’ve given over $100,000 to CHEO so far. The seeds are donated by companies and individuals, and the auction is always a big part of the show.” A few years ago, the show was forced to change its location from Lansdowne Park to what is now called the Ernst & Young Centre in Ottawa. Roosendaal said that although the change took some adjustment, it has been very positive for the Farm Show. “It’s a better location because it’s made for exhibitions,” he said. “We could use more exhibition space because the show is always sold out and we have a waiting list of exhibitors. We have to disappoint a lot of exhibitors every year because we’re bound by the number of square feet we have, but the show is a great success.” Roosendaal runs his 400-acre farm with his wife, Nelly. They have four grown children.

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 006B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:12 PM Page 1

Page 6B The AgriNews March, 2014

www.agrinews.ca

Gay Lea donates sales

T

he OTTawa Valley Seed GrOwerS haVe aGreed TO leT Gay lea FOOdS COOperaTiVe Sell perSOnal pOrTiOnS OF whiTe and ChOCOlaTe milk in iTS bOOTh aT The 2014 OTTawa Valley Farm ShOw, marCh 11-13.

A major build is being undertaken at the SynAgri operation on County Rd. 9 in North Dundas Township.

SynAgri plans expansion By Jeff Moore AgriNews Staff Writer heSTerVile — The SynaGri Fer-

C

Tilizer OperaTiOn

iS SeT FOr a majOr renO-

VaTiOn TO inCreaSe The Size OF Their planT in

CheSTerVille . The COmpany haS purChaSed mOre land FrOm a lOCal Farmer and haS had ThaT land zOned aS induSTrial FrOm aGriCulTural.

SynAgri is looking to start the multi-million-dollar construction this spring if everything is up and ready, according to a company official. It is an ambitious, twoyear total transition for the site. SynAgri plans to build a new plant, office, chemical storage, and seed storage replacing the current structures at the enterprise. The rezoning was handled as a routine matter at a public meeting inside the Township of North Dundas

Council Chambers this winter. The plant was owned previously by Nutrite and was purchased by Hydro Agri and Cargill Ltd., which changed the name to SynAgi in 2002. The firm last expanded in the spring of 2005 when it raised storage capacity from 600 to 1,000 tonnes in concert with the installation of a 100-foot, 90-tonne ninehopper blending tower. SynAgri now has plants in Chesterville, Richmond, Iroquois, Alfred, St-Clet QC, and an office in Cornwall, that services the Eastern Ontario area. To accommodate its latest plans, SynAgri is buying the 2.54-acre agricultural property from Robert Smith. The parcel of land involved is located at 13306 County Road 9, and SynAgri has requested the acquistion be rezoned to match the current zoning as industrial. Industrial zoning

allows the company to increase the height of potential buildings from (agricultural) 10.5 metres to (industrial) 14 metres. The lot addition is subject to consent from the Counties of S.D.&G. SynAgri manufactures, distributes and markets crop inputs for the crop-production industry, such as fertilizers and seeds. They mix and manufacture their own brand of fertilizer and distribute seeds from DEKALB and Cochrane Seeds. Their competitors in the Eastern Ontario region are Harvex, Agri-Partners, the Co-op, and MacEwen, among others. The company hopes to start construction as soon as this spring, and begin the gradual switch over as their business dictates. The spring is their busiest time of the year so they would have to work around that schedule.

In a 50-50 split, proceeds from milk sales will be donated to 4-H Ontario and to the Cooperative Development Foundation of Canada. Gay Lea has operated the program at other farm shows across the province including Woodstock, London and the Royal Winter Fair. “We were approached and it was a no-brainer for us,� said Seed Growers president John Roosendaal. “We already provide tremendous support to 4-H and we’re willing to help with more.� However, Roosendaal pointed out, the proposal had to be cleared by Great Canadian Plates, exclusive caterer at the Ernst & Young Centre where the OVFS is held. The caterer has the right to veto food sales it sees as competitive. “To GCP’s credit, it has gone along with the plan and may even handle some of the sales in its concessions.� Donations will be made on behalf of the Ottawa show as well as Gay Lea, Hansen explained. He added that milk purchasers have in the past indicated appreciation they’re assisting local and international communities through their participation.

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 007B_Layout 1 14-02-28 9:12 AM Page 1

www.agrinews.ca

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 7B

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 008B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:15 PM Page 1

Page 8B The AgriNews March, 2014

OVSGA reaches CHEO Diamond donor category d uring a donor apprEciation

EvEnt hEld oct. 17 at thE childrEn’S hoSpital oF EaStErn ontario, thE ottawa vallEy SEEd growErS aSSociation waS publicly thanKEd For itS contributionS to thE inStitution ovEr thE

20 yEarS. Hosted by hospital president and CEO Kevin Keohane, the event also recognized other contributors to the hospital foundation and introduced some children who have benefitted from CHEO’s worldclass facilities and resources. The Seed Growers have been included on the hospital’s electronic recognition wall at the Garry Cardiff Entrance. The association reached the Diamond Category ($100,000 - $499,999) of giving to CHEO through the annual Prestigious Pedigreed Seed Sale held as part of the Ottawa Valley Farm Show. The 87th edition is set for March 11-13 at Ottawa’s Ernst & Young paSt

www.agrinews.ca

Smith’s S Equipment Centre has you covered on land, water

mith’S

Farm EquipmEnt

waS ablE to Expand thEir buSinESS in thE Spring oF

2009 bEcauSE oF a high dEmand in thEir trailEr SalES. ovEr thE paSt 5 yEarS, Smith’S EquipmEnt cEntrE in SmithS FallS haS EvolvEd into a Full linE KawaSaKi dEalEr- atv’S, tEryx, mulES, jEt SKiS aS wEll StrEEt, Sport and mx biKES. Smith’s also has a huge selection of cargo, dump, utility, landscape and bike trailers by Canada Trailers

Centre. With the co-operation of seed companies that exhibit at the show and other supporters, more than $100,000 was raised over the 20 years since the sale was first introduced. In addition to bags of seed and other items on the block, the event is used every year to highlight the work of an Eastern Ontario artist. “The sale is a tremendous success because the seed companies are so generous,” said OVSGA president John Roosendaal. “They always come through for us, often buying seed back and re-donating it.” Also gaining from the sale is the Canadian Foodgrains Bank that has as its mission to end global hunger. When the sale is over, many of the bags of seed are given to the CFB. “We’re proud of our support for CHEO over the years,” Roosendaal said. “It’s a cause that gets pretty much unanimous backing because most of us are parents and grandparents.”

and Stealth just to name a few. Stop in to see our selection of compact tractors by Kioti. We are a full-line dealer of these tough and versatile tractors which are ready for any task you are willing to take on. Smith’s has trained staff on site in sales, service and parts to answer any questions you may have about our growing selection of products. Drop by and see what we have to offer. Land or water, we have you covered.

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 009B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:16 PM Page 1

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The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 9B

CDX engulfs Stratford D

espite february’s inclement

weather anD parking capacity challenges, the Doors were

stratforD rotary complex by Dairy farmers from across canaDa anD beyonD. the canaDian Dairy xpo (cDx), with mass once again blown off the

support from inDustry anD proDucers has earneD the title as the largest

canaDa. When asked why the exceptional turnout, Founder and General Manager Jordon Underhill stated “Canadian dairy producers are of the finest in the world and they strive for perfection in the milk commodity they produce. They are hungry for information, innovation and enjoy the camaraderie of coming together in one place.� Total attendance over two days climbed from 11,600 in 2013 to 13,900 in 2014. Survey showed 91% of total attendance were active dairy producers, which speaks to how specialized this expo is. The dominant age bracket in attendance was between 20-35 years of age, followed by 36-50 years of age, representing another youthful and optimistic crowd. Other stats from the expo are: 73% of attending producers reported milking between 50 and 250 cows and 77% reported cropping 250 – 2,500 acres; 66% of Dairy stage in

attending producers milk out of a free-stall barn set-up; 42% of producers said they are considering a milking robot with 19% reporting to already having one or more milking robots in operation; 21% of attendees travelled more than 150km and 16% came from out of province or out of country. The volume of long distance travellers increased significantly for CDX 2014. An interesting result came from CDX attendees when asked what other Ontario based farm shows they attend. “The theory since the inception of CDX was that a specialized dairy focused event would draw not only dairy producers that attend other farm shows, but would also draw those dairy producers that do not attend other farm shows. The latter component is what sets CDX apart and we need to work hard to retain this loyalty on an annual basis.� stated Underhill. Results showed the top three ranking Ontario farm shows were; Canada’s Outdoor Farm Show attracting 53% of the total CDX attendance, London Farm Show attracting 38% of the total CDX attendance and the Royal Winter Fair attracting 21% of the total CDX attendance. These dairy producers not attending other farm shows represent mass buying capacity and definitely add to the overall synergy that surrounds CDX. The attendance increase did not come

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without challenges. Despite doubling their parking capacity from 2013, parking areas were maxed out several times over. One committed producer and family reported parking downtown Stratford and taking a cab into the Rotary Complex on the second day of the expo. “Not ideal� stated Donna Powell, Marketing Manager for CDX. “We plan to fix the parking capacity issue immediately and publically announce the full 2015 parking plan in the next 30 days. By gaining access to the entire Stratford Fairgrounds of old and working with the adjacent land developer, our parking capacity is slated to grow from 20 acres to 60 acres of parking for 2015. We will now guarantee onsite/adjacent parking to our attending dairy families or your admission will be free, that’s our guaranteed commitment to you for CDX 2015.� The City of Stratford also recognizes its responsibility to accommodate visiting industry and producers. City of Stratford Mayor, Dan Mathieson stated, “I can assure you that senior city staff and CDX management will come together to ensure we create an all-round positive experience in visiting the Canadian Dairy XPO and the City of Stratford.  Aside from dramatically increasing overall parking capacity, options such as bus shuttle service from major hotels are under consideration, adding convenience and a reduction in total volume of exhibitor cars onsite.� Even with parking hurdles to overcome,

exhibitors reported positive improvements to move-in logistics, better quality food and smaller food lines, high volume of quality sales leads and less crowded alleys due to nearly doubling the tradeshow footprint for CDX 2014. Representatives from the largest livestock show globally EuroTier based out of Hanover, Germany were in attendance and were reported as stating that CDX felt like a mature 10 or 15 year show. They complimented the quality and focus of the exhibitor displays and professionals. As a result CDX has been invited to exhibit at EuroTier 2014 this November. CDX creates a significant fundraising platform for groups such as the Stratford Agricultural Society, Stratford Minor Hockey, 4-H dairy youth clubs, Junior Farmers and local church groups. The massive 350ft BriteSpan Cow Coliseum will be staying up for CDX 2015, so further fundraising opportunities for these groups and others may be possible throughout the year. “Our ultimate thank you to the dairy industry for the resounding support can be seen in the God Made a Dairy Farmer video we produced and launched at CDX 2014. The video received more than 5,000 views in just two days and for that we are proud,� stated Underhill. If you missed it at CDX, download the Pride In Dairy video at www.dairyxpo.ca.


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 010B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:59 PM Page 1

Page 10B The AgriNews March, 2014

www.agrinews.ca

Horse Country Campground photo contest

at info@horsecountrycampground.com. The Horse Country Campground is holding a contest along with the help of AgriNews. Show us your favourite horse pictures and they will be posted in AgriNews and on

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 011B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:18 PM Page 1

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The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 11B

Les is more for hungry showgoers i t’ll be a cleaR caSe

leS iS moRe at the 2014 ottawa Valley faRm Show, maRch 11-13 at the ey centRe. Les Winters of Kemptville will be bringing his Fat Les’s food wagon to the show and parking it in a prominent location. The trailer will be located outside the centre’s south entrance. Les is known for his fine fries, poutine, onion rings and perch rolls. Those items will all be available at the show, along with an egg and bacon-packed breakfast sandwich. The arrangement has been made possible through the cooperation of Great Canadian Plates, the exclusive caterer at the EY Centre. The company has decided to try the idea put forward by OVFS management on a trial basis; under the agreement, Fat Les’s of

can’t offer items already on the GCP menu. Ottawa Valley Seed Growers, who sponsor the show, felt something was needed to take the pressure off the two GCP inside concessions. At lunchtime, lineups can cause serious congestion in the isles. One possible solution was to provide an outside dining option. “GCP deserves credit for trying this out,� said Lynda McCuaig, chair of the show’s Food Services Committee. “It’s an experiment for everyone, including Les.� McCuaig speculated that farm show visitors will be drawn to Les’ bright orange wagon, a sight familiar to many of them at Ottawa valley rural fairs. She said Winters was selected for the trial because his services are well known to several OVSG directors, includ-

ing herself. Winters also has two permanent stands and operates the canteen at the North Grenville Community Centre. In business for about 10 years, he’s looking forward to offering his menu selections at the farm show. The opportunity allows him to get his mobile wagon on the road earlier than usual and could lead to further involvement in EY Centre events. McCuaig noted that GCP is also providing a third inside location this year, a take-away counter at the rear of the centre. In addition, it’s supplying lemonade, ice cream and roasted nut stands. “In terms of onsite food available to farm show exhibitors and visitors, 2014 is shaping up like a banner year.�

Smellink Realty locally owned

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Realty inc. iS a local mellink

Real eState buSi-

neSS located in

iRoquoiS, on. Marcel Smellink, the owner/broker, has been in the business for 12 years and specializes in farm sales. The brokerage covers a big area from the Quebec border to the east and

Toronto to the west. Marcel is also involved in the farming community through his own cash crop farm, custom spraying and being a member of the Dundas Soil and Crop Association. He is married to his wife Marja and they have four children and two grandchildren. His hobbies are playing

soccer, reading and travelling. If you are thinking about expanding or downsizing, let’s discuss strategies that work for you. Marcel Smellink Broker Smellink Realty Inc. 613-652-9010 613-213-1499  www.farmsinontario.ca

SEE YOU AT THE OTTAWA VALLEY FARM SHOW!

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 012B_Layout 1 14-03-03 9:07 AM Page 1

Page 12B The AgriNews March, 2014

www.agrinews.ca

Books available in United Counties of SD&G

F

INCH — PrINted wItH $10,000 FuNdINg From ottawa Valley Seed growerS’ aSSoCIatIoN, tHe 2015 INterNatIoNal PlowINg matCH & rural exPo Cookbook IS CurreNtly aVaIlable From retaIlerS IN tHe uNIted CouNtIeS oF StormoNt, duNdaS aNd gleNgarry. PrICe: $12. Buy copies at Barbara’s Beauty Shop (Avonmore); Barkley's (Avonmore); Basket Case (Morrisburg); Belle Flower Gifts; Brister Group (Crysler); Chesterville tHe

Pharmacy; Chez Therese (Moose Creek); Cornwall City Hall; Crysler Home Hardware; Darlene's (Avonmore); Finch Feed & Seed; Forever Young; Home Hardware (Morrisburg); Ingleside Home Hardware; Jamieson Campbell; Jimmy's Restaurant (Ingleside); Marlin Orchards; Martintown Vet Clinic; Mary's Craft Shop; McIntosh Inn; Monkland Mini Mart; Mo's Diner (Wendy’s); Ontario Municipal Works; Picket Fence; Quirky Carrot (Alexandria); River Rat Treasures (Iroquois); Sand Road Sugar Camp; SDG Counties Office; Seaway Valley Pharmacy (Winchester); South Stormont Municipal Office; Township of South Stormont; Stoke Fire; Township of North Dundas; Treats and Treasures (Finch).

Recipes for everyone in 2015 IPM Cookbook By Glenda Eden AgriNews Contributor INCH — From

F

Caramel CorN to

etHIoPIaN-Style leNtIlS wItH yamS, tHe StormoNt duNdaS aNd gleNgarry 2015 INterNatIoNal PlowINg matCH aNd rural exPo Cookbook (IPm) boaStS more tHaN 900 reCIPeS From Some oF tHe FINeSt CookS IN tHe CouNtIeS.

As well as decadent desserts and old standards, the cookbook includes lighter fare and recipes for restricted diets and food allergies. There is an entire section devoted to glutenfree dishes. According to cookbook coordinator Diana Legault, of Moose Creek, a core group of about half a dozen volunteers began collecting recipes from various farm and community groups in late 2012. A trickle of farmkitchen tested recipes soon became a steady flow which was a relief, she says, as the cookbook is a major fundraiser for the September 2015 IPM to be held in Finch. It is one of the first challenges to be completed leading up to the event and 7,500 copies were printed. The range of dishes from more than 350 contributors is epic and in keeping with the 2015 IPM motto – Link to the Past Look to the Future – includes heritage recipes and meals with

newer, trendier ingredients. “These are all recipes that people have tried and used,” she says. The cookbook is also a depository of heritage fare. Many are recipes remembered from childhood, that our grandmothers and greatgrandmothers prepared for us. “People wouldn’t put their name to something they didn’t like,” she says. Heritage recipes include maple syrup-laced pudding Chomeur, bread pudding, old-time ginger snaps made with molasses, and brown sugar fudge. The cookbook is also valuable to those who want to introduce more whole grains and pulses to their diets. Recipes and dishes to that end include pumpkin millet muffins, chipotle black bean soup and dah, an Indian curried red lentil soup. It is also seasoned with helpful kitchen tips and hints. What cook wouldn’t want to lower fat and calories by swapping out half the mayo for wholesome Greek-style yogurt in a rich and creamy dressing. And, rubbing your hands over a stainless steel sink really does remove the odour of garlic. The IPM cookbook is a culinary treasury of the three United Counties. It reflects its cultural roots, its locally grown produce and the importance of the family table.

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 013B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:57 PM Page 1

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 13B

Young farmer Ottawa Valley Metal socials at College keeps you well sheltered Royal and Ottawa O Valley Farm Show Over the past 22 years, OVM has accumulated a wealth of knowledge and experience which allows our staff to provide a comprehensive service and quality products. Our delivery trucks can be seen around the Ottawa, Gatineau and surrounding areas twice daily. Call us

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eAsTern OnTArIO ThIs MOnTh — The OTTAWA VAlley fArM shOW (OfVs) beIng One Of The Venues. Held at the Ernest and Young Centre, the OVFS will host farming’s up-andcoming generation on Wed., March 12 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. in Room A. It’s preceded by a similar occasion at the Kemptville College Royal on Wed., March 5, where OFA directors Rejean Pommainville and Peggy Brekveld (Zone 15 Thunder Bay area) will be on hand, along with Past VicePresident of the OFA Executive, Debra PrettyStraathof. Pommainville, who serves as the Ontario Federation of Agriculture’s Zone 14 for Glengarry, Prescott, Russell and Stormont counties, expects that 12 of the Eastern coun-

ties will be represented at the OVFS meeting. “So far, numbers look promising for a good turnout by young farmers ages 19 to 40,” he says. “It is important to connect the older generations with younger so they have a network to discuss topics which affect them. It also provides the OFA with the opportunity to identify some young people interested in the future of agriculture.

So far, numbers look promising for a good turnout by young farmers ages 19 to 40.”

— Rejean Pommainville “These two events are to be considered as ‘social only,’ but the federation does have an eventual goal to have more young voices speak up at the county-level

federation meetings and to have them create activities and policies that are relevant for all generations — which is very important to OFA,” he says. In that vein, the organization already works with the Junior Farmers Association of Ontario to host the Ontario Young Farmers Forum, held in conjunction every year with OFA’s annual convention. Pre-registration is requested for the OVFS social via Brian Hamilton (1-866-434-2613, brian.hamilton@ofa.on.ca); Roch Lalonde (1-866-4841778, roch.lalonde@ofa.on.ca) or Ruth Vogel (1-866-4407291, ruth.vogel@ofa.on.ca). Ontario’s largest farm lobby organization hopes to attract more young and beginning farmers into the OFA, which represents more than 37,000 farm families in the province.

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 014B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:23 PM Page 1

Page 14B The AgriNews March, 2014

www.agrinews.ca

Saskatoon Colostrum presents new Instant Mix product T Convenience with new ‘Instant Mix’ he SaSkaToon ColoSTruM CoMpany IS proud To preSenT The all

new InSTanT

MIx TeChnol-

ogy In our ColoSTruM produCTS.

our new InSTanT MIx produCT offerS eaSy and CoMpleTe MIxIng by hand whISk In

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The faster mixing time is attributed to our investment in a granulator. The granulator uses the colostrum’s existing natural fat to act as a binding agent, ultimately producing larger, free-flowing particles. These larger, freeflowing particles allow the powder to rapidly disperse in water and therefore mix more easily. Colostrum replacer for calves Our bovine dried colostrum products are an essential element of newborn calf management, especially in the following situations: - To ensure adequate immune transfer when maternal colostrum lacks quality or quantity - To provide extra energy for calves born experiencing difficult births and/or cold environments - To prevent disease transfer through maternal colostrum (e.g. Johne’s disease) Quality and Safety guaranteed Our products are regulated by stringent quality control agencies including the CFIA and USDA. Safety and efficacy test-

ing guarantees that the end product meets the highest quality control specifications for global distribution. Our colostrum replacers are certified veterinary biologics as an aid to prevent failure of passive transfer in newborns. For 20 years the Saskatoon Colostrum Company Ltd. has been dedicated to providing 100% natural bovine dried colostrum products. We collect colostrum from Canadian dairy cows and process it in our GMP certified facility into a safe and stable powder with specified levels of immunological, metabolic, and nutritional components. Our success is driven by years of research in veterinary immunology by veterinarians and scientists from the Western College of Veterinary Medicine (Saskatoon, SK, Canada) who continue to direct an experienced team creating the best colostrum products in the world. for more information Alta Genetics serves as your distributor for all colostrum products from the Saskatoon Colostrum Company. For additional information or to purchase the all new Instant Mix colostrum products, please contact either your local Alta Genetics representative or Alta Genetics Canadian Sales Team Manager Ron Bird (519.282.2530 | rbird@altagenetics.com). Visit www.altagenetics.com or scan this QR Code for additional information.

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 015B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:24 PM Page 1

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The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 15B

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Weagant Farm Supplies, biggest OVFS exhibitor By Sandy Burns AgriNews Contributor INCHESTER — “IT’S THE kICk-off To SpRINg!�THIS IS HoW BoB WEagaNT, of WEagaNT faRm SupplIES NEaR

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WINCHESTER, dESCRIBES THE oTTaWa VallEy faRm SHoW. Every year, Weagant Farm Supplies, and their subsidiary, Topline Trailers, display the latest lines of machinery and agricultural supplies at the show. Between both com-

panies’ booths and their presence at their suppliers’ exhibits, Weagant Farm Supplies represents the largest exhibitor at the show. The company has been participating in the exhibition since farm equipment first started appearing at what was primarily a seed show. “Historically, we don’t sell much equipment on the floor, but we talk to a lot of new customers and repeat customers. The Farm Show brings the winter hibernators out to tire kick, and then we follow that up with our annual open house in April. One kicks off the other, and these two events are what kick off spring for us,� he said. “We also distribute our Farmfest News every March. It’s a 32-page catalogue that we distribute at the farm show and there are 18,000 copies that are mailed out.� The open house will take place on April 9 this year. Weagant Farm Supplies will be show-

casing a Great Plains corn planter at the farm show, along with Trioliet mixer feeders, a new line of discbines from New Holland, and a huge, self-propelled forage harvester with a cut-away model. Weagant said this is the third year the farm show will be at its new location at the Ernst & Young Centre, near the Ottawa Airport, and that the new digs were a welcome change. “It’s a beautiful facility, very clean and great lighting. It’s nice to not have to drive the equipment further up Bank Street,� he laughed. “But having the show all in one building is a major advantage. At Lansdowne, it was spread out in three buildings.� But despite already holding the title as the biggest exhibitor, Weagant said it’s not enough. “Each year, the show gets bigger. We’re on the waiting list for more space.�

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 016B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:25 PM Page 1

Page 16B The AgriNews March, 2014

www.agrinews.ca

Sunflowers and Scarecrows is the beautification theme for the 2015 IPM in Finch.

Gardening contest for 2015 IPM By Glenda Eden AgriNews Contributor INCH — It CaN’t Come sooN eNougH, but at tHe taIl-eNd oF a reCord-breakINg wINter, gardeNers at least, Have FouNd some solaCe IN tHe seed Catalogues staCked at tHeIr Feet. For those of us with a passion for horticulture and a desperate yearning for sun on our faces and dirt under our fingernails, the colourful pages have provided a muchneeded promise of spring. Something for home gardeners to consider when filling out their mail orders this year is a yard and garden competition slated for the summer of 2015. It’s still 18 months away but serious gardeners and those with a competitive personality may want to use this growing season to experiment with annuals and perennials in keeping with the Sunflowers and Scarecrows ‘beautification’ theme of the SD&G International Plowing Match and Rural Expo at Finch in 2015. The role of the 2015 IPM Beautification committee is to encourage everyone in the region to make their communities as inviting as possible when as many as 100,000 visitors arrive in late September for that event. “People will be coming from all over the world,” says committee coordinator Sandra Donnelly, and they’d like everyone to think about mowing their grass and having a good-looking yard. To sweeten the pot, have a little bit of fun and to engage everyone in this opportunity to showcase the area, the committee is also planning a beautification competition in August 2015. But, this doesn’t just apply to North Stormont,” she says. “We want everyone to get involved.” The competition will have several categories, such as residential, farm, business and institutional which would include schools, churches, nursing homes and senior residences. Prizes for the competition haven’t been fully fleshed out but it’s expected they will be related to landscaping and the IPM. “We’re encouraging people to not put their gardens to bed too early in 2015, she adds, and to think about plants that will be at their best in late September, and garden décor that reflects the Sunflowers and Scarecrows theme. Sunflowers now come in dozens of colours and sizes, and serious gardeners, pouring over those seed catalogues may want to experiment with new cultivars or vary planting times this spring to determine the best show in late September 2015. Other fall annuals to consider include zinnia, pansy, holly hock, asters and flowering kale and cabbage. Perennial cone flowers, sedum, fall mums, helenium and rudbeckia are reliable and still going strong or reaching their peak in late September. The IPM motto is Link to the Past. Look to the Future, and Donnelly thinks the old-fashioned Dahlia, might also be a bright and easyto-grow choice. You certainly don’t have to have a green thumb or a big budget to get involved. The Sunflower and Scarecrow theme was in fact chosen, she says, because it can be both simple and inexpensive. Donnelly says representatives from many communities are already in place but the committee is still looking for volunteers from Glengarry, Cornwall, Chesterville, Winchester and Akwesasne. Anyone who would like to get involved with the beautification committee or any other IPM committee should look for volunteer forms on the 2015 web page at plowingmatch.org/index.php/home2015.

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 017B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:58 PM Page 1

www.agrinews.ca

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 17B

Exhibitors at Eastern Ontario Crop Conference 2014

John Lounsberry (left) ag specialist with Champion Industrial Equipment, poses at his trade-fair booth with neighbouring representative Eric Harbers of Weagant Farm Supplies, during the Feb. 20 Eastern Ontario Crop Conference at the Kemptville Campus of the University of Guelph. Lounsberry hovers over the latest and greatest electronic grain tester available from his firm — capable of accurate moisture readings of frozen samples. It also shows bushel weight and grade.

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 018B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:26 PM Page 1

Page 18B The AgriNews March, 2014

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Artist Terry Cowan returns to 2014 Seed Sale for CHEO

F

2014 FeaCanadian rural artist, the ottawa Valley Farm show has reaChed baCk or its

tured

to a preVious seleCtion For that honour.

Ottawa artist Terry Cowan was front and centre at the 2009 show. He’s back with a stunning acrylic depiction of a farmer using the power of three horses to operate a thrasher while the family dog looks on. Titled “Not That Long Ago�, the painting will be auctioned March 13 at 12 noon during the Prestigious Pedigreed Seed Sale for the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario. Over 20 years, the event has raised more than $100,000 for the hospital. The creation is set on what was the Cowan family farm near Kinburn. Terry had his great-grandfather in mind when he placed the farmer on the driver’s seat. He deserves credit for making a generous contribution of most of the value of the piece to CHEO. An annual donation from Secan to help acquire the seed

DROP BY OUR BOOTH AT THIS YEAR’S OVFS, MARCH 11 - 13TH, 2014. BOOTH # 2507

sale painting will cover cost of the framing. In addition to several bags of seed and the art, an assortment of other interesting items will be offered at the sale, with Ottawa Valley Seed Growers director and

auctioneer John Joynt wielding the gavel. Terry has been an Armed Forces Peacekeeper in Cyprus and an OC Transpo diesel mechanic. But he has a gentler side too: “I drew and coloured pictures from

early childhood as most children do‌ I just never grew out of it.� While stationed in Cyprus, he made posters that were hung on armoured cars. Working at OC Transpo, he designed a

Attention:

League member has participated in exhibitions across Ontario. “My interest lies in texture, colours and shapes more than subject whether I’m painting a chickadee or a steam train.�

6(( <28 $7 7+( 277$:$ 9$//(< )$50 6+2:

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OFA MEMBERS

company flag as well as logos and pins. In the evening, he painted birds and other wildlife, developing a keen interest in rural subject matter. Now a full-time artist, the Nepean Fine Art

You can now save over $14,000* on your next vehicle thanks to the exclusive Fleet Discount Program brought to you by the OFA, Chrysler Canada, and Town and Country Chrysler.

Town and Country Chrysler is proud to support the OFA and farmers in our communities by bringing you the Ontario Federation of Agriculture Fleet Discount program through Chrysler Canada. This exclusive offer allows the OFA’s 38,000 members to take advantage of substantial savings on the full line of Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, and RAM Trucks. There’s never been a better time to drive to drive a RAM Truck--Motor Trends back to back Truck of the Year, two years running--and right now, you can drive it for less ... much less. It’s the right deal at the right time, and if you’re an OFA member, you’ll save even more.

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Call its today at 1.888.895.7690 to find out how you can take advantage of these prices.

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%XLOGLQJ 6ROXWLRQV IRU DOO <RXU 1HHGV Service hours: Monday-Friday 7:30 am to 5:30 pm, Saturday 8:00 am to 3:00 pm Sales hours: Monday-Thursday 9:00 am to 7:00 pm, Friday 9:00 to 6:00 pm, Saturday 9:00 am to 4:00 pm Parts hours: Monday-Friday 8:00 am to 5:30 pm, Saturday 8:00 am to 3:00 pm

*Prices do not include dealer fees and taxes. Stock units could have Nitro and Paintseal

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 019B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:57 PM Page 1

www.agrinews.ca

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 19B

S SEE EE U US S AT HE AT TTHE O TTAW AWA S OTTAWA SHOW! HOW! Mixerr Level

Rapid Discharge arge

Sevita present at Eastern Ontario Crop Conference 2014

Square Cut Auger

Among those representing Sevita International at the 2014 Ontario Crop Conference in Kemptville last month were Jim Wallbridge (grower liaison) and David Guy (sales manager and IP coordinator).

Shaker Box

C Call all Y Your ocal O Ontario ntario D Dealer ealer for for a Demo Demo Today... Yo our LLocal TTooday...

Chris’s rant about spreading manure in winter

Before delving too deeply into her talk about “manure management, back to basics using new technology,” Ministry of Agriculture and Food Field Crops lead Chris Brown began with her requistie “rant” about spreading the stuff in winter — which she spied in progress last month while in Eastern Ontario for the annual Kemptville Crop Conference. The temptation to spread manure during a winter thaw must be avoided, she said, because the nutrients are wasted and end up as run-off without hardly any infiltration into the soil. “Most of the time, when we get snow melt, it’s always along with rain. The worst thing about this is when they’re looking at phosphorous in the Great Lakes and looking to put regulations in place, this is the surest way ... to ensure we’re going to get new regulations,” she said.

Newtech Ag

Moore Bros.

Byers Farm

Mitchell, ON 519.348.8483

Napanee, ON 613.354.5516

Chesterville, ON 613.448.2185

Green Tractors

Green Tractors

Green Tractors

Omemee, ON 800.563.5601

Earlton, ON 866.563.2134

Port Perry, ON 888.818.9400

Oneida New Holland

Green Tractors

Bromley Farm Supply

Caledonia, ON 905.765.5011

Nobleton, ON 905.859.0581

Douglas, ON 613.649.2457

www.JAYLOR.com

|

800.809.8224


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 020B_Layout 1 14-02-28 4:03 PM Page 1

Page 20B The AgriNews March, 2014

www.agrinews.ca

Bowmanville grower receives 2013 Innovative Farmer of the Year award

m

ississauga — CReativity and advanCe-

ments in CRop Rotation systems in theiR no-tiLL

FaRming opeRation have

tom BaRRie, a BowmanviLLe gRoweR, and his team, the 2013 innovative FaRmeR oF the yeaR awaRd. eaCh yeaR, BasF Canada and the innovative FaRmeRs assoCiation oF ontaRio ReCognize an ontaRio

eaRned

gRoweR who pRomotes innovation and LeadeRship in the agRiCuLtuRe seCtoR to Be named the

innovative FaRmeR oF the yeaR. BASF Canada presented Barrie with the award at the Innovative Farmers Association of Ontario Conference at the Best Western Lamplighter Inn in London on February 25. “BASF is proud to recognize Tom and the Barrie family as growers who implement an innovative and sustainable no-till farming operation,” said Trevor Latta, business representative for BASF Canada. “The operation’s use of soil protection practices is an excellent example of growers regenerating

the landscape and farming for the future.” Barrie, who farms with his brothers Steve and Glenn from Gordon Barrie & Sons, rotates corn, soybeans and canola followed by winter wheat which is under-seeded with red clover. Now in their 21st year of no-till farming, their commitment to improving the efficiency on their farm has led to a crop rotation system that has improved soil structure, lowered fuel costs and equipment needs, and reduced trips over the field. Creating this system has made it easy for Barrie and his brothers to formulate cropping plans. “Adapting technology and cropping methods on our farm has led to great success with crop quality and yield,” said Barrie. “We’re always striving to find better methods to prevent soil erosion and maintain the land. I think the future of agriculture will bring crops that can free up trapped nutrients and tolerate colder and wetter soils for early planting.” For more information visit www.ifao.com.

Pure Bred or Grade Holsteins Top Quality Fresh Heifers and Springers

“Will Trade Fresh Heifers for Open Heifers or Cull Cows.”

MANGAN TEAM FARMS LIMITED 613-561-2521 Ed

Seeley’s Bay, ON 613-382-2911

613-561-2881 Tom

Raats Custom Farming has new manure lagoon crawler

R

Custom FaRming Ltd. aats

has anotheR

FiRst oF its kind.

they nuhn

have puRChased a manuRe Lagoon

CRawLeR and it is the FiRst one avaiLaBLe in

Innovative Farmer of the Year

Trevor Latta from BASF Canada presents Tom Barrie with the 2013 Innovative Farmer of the Year award.

easteRn ontaRio. The Nuhn manure lagoon crawler greatly improves the agitation and mixing of a manure pit. Its mobility is key as it can float and move around to any position in the pit instead of being stationary and anchored to the pit bank by a tractor. Remote control

hydraulics enable the operator to change the position and the direction of the agitator nozzles, and the location and position in the pit. Improved agitation will make for a more uniform nutrient application and a better clean out of the manure storage. The crawler/boat boasts 260 horsepower and six different agitation nozzles which will be especially effective for sand bedded operations to keep sand in suspension with less fuel used than multiple tractor agitators. Continued on page 21B


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 021B_Layout 1 14-02-28 4:07 PM Page 1

www.agrinews.ca

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 21B

Raats

Technology does the dirty job

" 24/ 9 "2 2 $" I /9 02 " 2 04"

Raats Custom Farming Ltd. is touting its sophisticated new Nuhn manure lagoon crawler.

sor in Eastern Ontario. The shredlage process is patented and has been studied extensively to prove the product claims. The corn silage is cut longer and the processor literally shreds the leaves and stalks opening up the cell walls to make the silage more digestible, while eliminating the need for

added straw. You’ll get a superior product when you harvest your corn silage with Raats Custom Farming Ltd. Some local references are available for you to contact so when you are planning for your forage needs give Raats Custom Farming Ltd. a call.

OTTAWA VALLEY FARM SHOW Visit us at Booth 1821 HIGH CAPACITY STORAGE

XL UNLOADERS

SLURRYSTORE

HOPPER FOUNDATION UNLOAD SYSTEM

Move

More

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New – Powerfoil X 2.0 Big Ass Fan

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New – Dual Curtain System

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Give Raats Custom Farming Ltd. a call for more information. But Raats Custom Farming Ltd. doesn’t just pump manure. They can meet your forage harvesting needs as well. If you are looking for more time in the barn, consistent feed quality, reduced equipment investment and labour costs, and a job well done they can help you achieve your goals. Newly available for your haylage harvesting needs this year are two oxbow mergers. Merging your haylage rows together speeds up the harvester, provide consistent moisture levels and reduce compaction. Whether you want them to do a little or all of forage harvesting, they have a solution that will fit your needs. If you want to get the most from your corn silage in the diet of your herd then consider shredlage! Raats Custom Farming Ltd. has the only shredlage proces-

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WHEAT IS KING! T he best choice in Spring Wheat

Wilkin - the yield leader. FURANO - 106 Yield Index! • www.ottawavalleyharvestore.com • 1-613-258-5905

Spring Wheat has good returns compared to other crops this year. Look at FURANO for fusarium tolerance. Call Us today to see which variety best suits your field! 6WHYH %DNNHU 5RRÂż QJ &RQVXOWDQW _ 2WWDZD 21 EDNNHUFUHVW#[SORUQHW FRP

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1-888-733-9432 www.redwheat.com


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 022B_Layout 1 14-02-28 4:08 PM Page 1

Page 22B The AgriNews March, 2014

www.agrinews.ca

Generations of experience at James & Hill Auction Service

f

Or 44 yearS, JameS anD hill auctiOn Service ltD. have prOuDly ServeD eaStern OntariO anD weStern Quebec.

Stewart James and Carson Hill, along with the new generation, are stronger than ever as they offer a team of qualified auctioneers with a combination of experience, professionalism and enthusiasm. James and Hill Auction Service Ltd. specializes in farm machinery, real estate, household estates, antiques and cattle. We pride our-

selves on offering a complete service from the thorough and extensive advertising, professional advice and knowledge, to modern and proficient sale day technology. Our solid understanding of the sale market and a concrete knowledge of all areas of the auction listings helps ensure you are fully satisfied with the outcome of your auction. Selling real estate by auction has become a popular alternative. Selling your property by auction creates a unique energy and interest among prospective buyers and is complimented by

Devries Electric is farm friendly

S

1986, DevrieS electric haS been Serving eaStern OntariO, frOm near KingStOn tO cOrnwall, anD Ottawa SOuth tO the St. lawrence river. Devries Electric is a family-owned and operated business, starting out with Jeff and one small truck, growing over the ince

DE DELL SEEDS SALES REPRESENTATIVE

the sale of your other belongings all on the same day. James and Hill can offer you the confidence and professionalism required during this important transition in your life. Our auction team offers 44 years of experience and knowledge, along with the youthful passion of our next generation of bilingual auctioneers. Call us today to book your real estate, farm or household auction! James and Hill Auction Service Ltd., Stewart James 613-445-3269 or Carson Hill 613-821-2946.

tĹ?ƚŚ Ä‚ Ĺ?ĆŒĹ˝Ç Ĺ?ĹśĹ? Ä?ŽžžƾŜĹ?ƚLJ ŽĨ Íž'DK &ĆŒÄžÄž &Ä‚ĆŒĹľĹ?ĹśĹ?Í&#x;, De Dell Seeds is looking to expand our team of dedicated Sales Representatives. De Dell Seeds is an independent family owned and operated seed Corn Company established in 1999 in London, Ontario. Becoming a Representative for De Dell Seeds will allow you to expand your knowledge of the conventional seed markets and enable you to network within the agricultural community. With a passion for agriculture and awareness of the seed industry, these qualities will enable you to advise customers on making the most profitable and health-conscious decisions, resulting in better yields, cash crop premiums and sustainable farming.

years with the addition of his sons and multiple pieces of equipment to serve their customer’s needs. Specializing in the agricultural and commercial sectors, Devries Electric is equipped for anything from utility construction work, new construction, quick service response and plant and farm automation. Located in our new shop at 21 Precision Drive, in Kemptville, we have a larger amount of in-stock inventory to get you up and running quicker.

De Dell Seeds Incorporated 967 Valetta Street London, Ontario N6H 2Z7

(519) 473-6175

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 023B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:42 PM Page 1

www.agrinews.ca

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 23B

Small bale packaging offered by Marcrest Manufacturing

T

ime is money, and increasing produc-

TiviTy means you

achieve more of boTh. if

This appeals, Then

marcresT manufacTuring inc as manufacTurer of The bale baron and power linx - dual power hiTch, may have jusT The piece of machinery for you.

pack them in With the demand for small bales in the equine and livestock industries, the Bale Baron is essential for getting the most out of this demand and supplying customers with what they need, quickly and efficiently. The Bale Baron is a clever invention that collects individual bales and bundles them up into stacks of 18 or 21, all neatly packaged and bound with twine, using the proven double-knot system. It eliminates the amount of physical labour required for baling and takes away the need for bale throwers, thrower wagons and elevators, accumulator systems and automatic bale wagons. This retains the ultimate in nutritional value in hay crops as less handling means

less opportunity to lose foliage and nutritional value by greatly reducing the number of times a bale is handled, shook or thrown. The Bale Baron’s bale package is easily handled by loaders and forklifts, saving time. The Bale Baron utilizes a shorter bale which maintains a normal or even higher density for good handling characteristics, giving costumers what they want, while maximizing full logistic potential. The Bale Baron bundles can be stacked two high upright or three high flipped over into van trailers or storage. A 53� high cube van trailer will hold 756 bales which is approximately 90 bales more than a hand-stacked load. Whether sold by the bale or by the ton, the Bale Baron tightly-packed bundles can help increase profit margins. do a double take The Power Linx - Dual Power Hitch saves on labour and equipment cost and can provide twice as much baling with one less man and one less tractor. Power Linx takes the PTO power from one tractor (90-150 HP) and splits it in two. A tractor now easily

operates two balers at once getting you out of the field in half the time. The short coupled compact design allows for short cornering for better maneuverability on headlands. Swivel gearboxes take the power to the balers and also allow sharp turning with no driveline chattering for long life and trouble-free operation. The trailing dolly design follows the ground contour well, enabling the baler pickup to make a clean sweep, and it also allows for sharp cornering keeping balers in line with the swaths. Both arms independently hydraulically swing and are controlled via tractor remotes. This gives you the power to adjust to varying field conditions to one or both arms while on the go. One of the best parts of the Power Linx - Dual Power Hitch is that it will work with any baler. No modifications are needed on the balers. Just pin up, attach PTO and go. For more information call 519-887-9910, drop in at our booth at the Ottawa Valley Farm Show in March, or visit marcrestmfg.com

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GRAIN FARMERS OF ONTARIO CONFERENCE March 24, 2014 London Convention Centre, London, Ontario www.gfo.ca/MarchClassic The March Classic is the largest grain-focused conference in Eastern Canada drawing upwards of 700 attendees from government, industry, and farms across Ontario. Agenda includes: • Colonel Chris Hadfield, Canadian Astronaut and Commander of the International Space Station for 2013 • Mark Lynas, Environmental Activist Pro-GM • Cal Whewell, Market Outlook FC Stone • Michelle Painchaud, Farm Business Advisor • Banquet Speaker: Jon Montgomery, Olympian and Host of The Amazing Race Canada Registration Pre-register by February 28th to be entered in the early bird draw for a $25 preferred price gas card. Register online at www.gfo.ca/MarchClassic. Hotel To book a hotel room at the Hilton call 1-800Hiltons and reference group code GRF or visit the March Classic web page. For more information contact Grain Farmers of Ontario at 1-800- 265-0550 x209. •

LAUNCHING ONTARIO GRAINS TO NEW HEIGHTS


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 024B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:43 PM Page 1

Page 24B The AgriNews March, 2014

www.agrinews.ca

Wanna Make It Farm revives abandoned, unused farmland

W

Make It FarM Is a FaMIanna

ly busIness

Moose creek, ont., oWned and operated by the leduc FaMIly. Wanna Make It Farm runs a diversified farming operation, operating a licensed grain buying and dealing elevator, raising corn, soybeans and wheat, and selling Mycogen Seed brand products. Additionally, trucking services, custom work and bio-solid applications are offered. In conjunction to the daily farming operations, Wanna Make It Farm has been bringing abandoned land and woodlots into production, primarily for row crops. This is achieved with a team of highly qualified excavator operators who possess a cumulative of over 50 years work experience. Each excavator is equipped with five attachments: a hydraulic thumb, ditching, digging, root rake and skeleton bucket. located In

act — From (2006-2011) 2,033,920 acres of prime farm land have been removed from agriculture due to urban expansions such as shopping centres, developments and highways, and people concern themselves with farmers improving and clearing a fraction of these acres!

F

The skeleton bucket is used primarily for fence removal, tree removal, excessively stony fields and can pick 5 inch stones and up. Also included is a fleet of rock trucks varying from 25T to 35T; these are used for site preparation, demolition, fence removal and during land clearing. Upon completion of land

clearing, GPS land levelling can be requested to prepare the soil bed. This practice is relied upon in farming practices ensuring sufficient surface drainage. Finally, trucking services comprising hauling grain, aggregates, wood chips, manure, compost, and floating heavy equipment are offered. Each acre of land cleared requires significant amounts of work to bring it into production. Adequate drainage, soil additives, and levelling will greatly assist on maximizing returns on investment. With our knowledge and experience in this area finding the right solution for your everchanging farm needs is possible. Over 2,000 acres of new land has successfully been brought back into production with the qualified and skilled team at Wanna Make It Farm. For more information on our services or how we can assist you and your farm,

feel free to contact us at 613-538-2547 or visit our website at www.wannamakeitfarm.com. Fact — From (20062011) 2,033,920 acres of

prime farm land have been removed from agriculture due to urban expansions such as shopping centres, developments and highways, and people concern

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themselves with farmers improving and clearing a fraction of these acres! CANADA NEEDS FARMERS!

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 025B_Layout 1 14-02-28 4:09 PM Page 1

www.agrinews.ca

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 25B

NuFarm offers Valent’s latest soybean herbicide

g

uelph – ValenT CanaDa inC. reCenTly

nufarm agriCulTure inC. has annOunCeD ThaT

Been appOinTeD The exClusiVe DisTriBuTOr Of

fierCe™ herBiCiDe in CanaDa. Fierce herbicide, containing new chemistry Group 15 (pyroxasulfone)

with proven chemistry Group 14 (flumioxazine), was registered for Canadian soybeans earlier this month. Fierce offers the longest residual and broadest spectrum weed control in both glyphosatetolerant and IP/conventional soybeans in Eastern Canada. “To maximize soybean yield potential, growers require a prod-

uct that controls tough grass and broadleaf weeds and provides lasting residual control,� says Blair Bossuyt, Nufarm’s Eastern Canadian sales manager. Fierce offers Canadian soybean growers an innovative weed control solution that doubles as an effective tool for resistance management. Todd Younghans, Country Manager for Valent Canada, says the two companies are committed to working together to provide customers with products that protect and enhance crops and improve profitability for growers. “The strategic alliance between Valent and Nufarm in Canada began with the

Apply for dairy breeders’ scholarship

T

OnTariO JOinT Dairy BreeDs COmmiTTee (OJDB), an allianCe he

Of all Dairy BreeD assOCiaTiOns

in

OnTariO, is nOw aCCepTing appliCa-

TiOns fOr sChOlarships TO assisT yOuTh in The Dairy inDusTry.

The OJDB Future Leaders Scholarship was established to recognize the contribution of young people in the agricultural industry for their involvement, accomplishments and leadership achievements. Potential applicants will be students who have begun to take on positions of leadership within various organizations or clubs

and who have also demonstrated commitment and shown potential for future achievement. Two scholarships, each valued at $1,000, will be awarded to applicants enrolled in a post-secondary agricultural or dairy apprenticeship program. Students must have successfully completed at least the first year of a university and/or college program and be enrolled in the following year. Deadline for applications is May 15. For information, visit www.ontario.holstein.ca.

distribution agreement for Valtera™ herbicide in 2011,â€? says Younghans. “We’ve seen success with this collaboration ever since, and we anticipate the value we will bring to customers in the future with the launch of Fierce. Our

customers have a proven product to help them battle against tough broadleaf and grass weeds in their soybean crops.� “Nufarm is pleased that we are able to add Fierce to our extensive portfolio,� says Bossuyt. “Fierce offers

new and exciting opportunities for us in the eastern Canadian soybean market.� For additional information, visit the company websites at valent.ca and nufarm.ca.

Manufacturing metal trims and providing metal cladding products in Eastern Ontario since 1991

Let us

STEEL your imagination

Call Luc Bourdeau or Marc Valiquette for a quote

Tel: (613) 745-1296 Fax: (613) 745-9918

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 027B_Layout 1 14-02-28 4:40 PM Page 1

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The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 27B

Peecon introduces new electric-driven feed mixer

P

eeCon, the inventor of the

tMr

Mixer, is leading

the world Market in innovation and teChnology for feed Mixing.

their newest ProduCt, Biga volt, was unveiled at the 2013 agriteChniCa farM show in hannover, gerMany and at the 2013 agriBex farM show in Brussels, BelgiuM. The Biga Volt is the world’s first — and only — electric-powered feed mixer. By using the electric drive, you can save up to 70% of your fuel costs, allowing you to invest in other areas of your business. It is the only good alternative to self-propelled mixers – providing both speed and flexibility, at a fraction of the cost. award-winning innovation At the 2013 Agribex Farmshow, Peecon’s “Biga Volt� was selected as the top winner for their Innovation Award, the coveted “Golden Hoof.� A professional panel of judges reviewed the year’s submisthe

sions, graded them on design, and chose the machine that’s paving the way in agricultural innovation. The vision behind the Biga Volt was to produce a technologically advanced machine that would operate efficiently, ecologically, and cost-effectively. Looking at the rising global fuel costs, Peecon designers wanted a machine that would reduce the need for excess fuel and energy. With a diesel (tractor) driven mixer, the energy needed to operate a feed mixer is approximately 20ct/kW. With the new Biga Volt, this amount can be reduced to 7ct/kw, or even less if using solar energy. design and technology The Biga Volt uses electric battery packs with tub capacities ranging from 350-880 cubic feet with either single or double augers. The batteries are integrated into the heavyduty chassis, providing enough power for two hours of mixing before requiring a recharge, with a lifespan of four to six years.

In case of emergency, a PTO can still be hooked up to the mixer. The Biga Volt is designed for quick and easy mount/dismount, and can be fitted onto a tractor, truck, and even a telehandler to allow for those sharper turns. The Biga Volt comes with the EASYtronic Computer System™, which allows the user to wirelessly connect to and control the machine without needing to leave the cab. Using this system, the user can wirelessly read the mixer data, adjusting speed, volume and other settings as needed. renting and maintenance For those who would prefer to rent, the Biga Volt batteries are available through the Peecon “Volt Rental Package.â€? Through this package, a supplier selected by Peeters Machinery (Peecon) is contracted to maintain the batteries. In case of damage, the batteries are designed so that the replacement can be done on only the damaged cells, reducing costs Continued on page 29B

R.D. LEGAULT SEEDS LTD. ‹ ,SL]H[VY .YHPU +LHSLY ‹ *VU[YHJ[Z (]HPSHISL ‹ 5\[YH -P_ +PZ[YPI\[VY

‹ *VU[LU[Z *HUHKPHU 4PSR

‹ -VYHNL /P 4VPZ[ *VYU 7YLZLY]H[P]LZ

Soybean Micronization Micro Beans and Probiotics – See you The Way at the OVFS Booth 1408 of the Future 1614 Route 900 West, St. Albert, ON

7HO ‡ )D[ E-Mail: rdlegault@xplornet.com

CDX 2015 PARKING MANDATE & COMMITMENT

THERE’S A T7 TRACTOR

JUST FOR YOU. 3X

! CAPACITY

The success of the 2013 and 2014 Canadian Dairy XPO (CDX) has created parking capacity challenges for both our valued exhibitors and attending dairy producers. CDX management, along with the support of the City of Stratford have fully committed to resolving the parking capacity for CDX 2015 and beyond. We understand and respect the value of time, for attendees to get in and out of CDX efficiently. CDX management and the City of Stratford apologize for the inconvenience of not having adequate onsite or adjacent parking. Despite the fact that parking capacity was doubled from 2013, there was still a significant shortage. Any parking tickets received can be sent to CDX head office for 100% reimbursement. This applies to parking tickets issued by the City of Stratford for parking violations in the close proximity to the Stratford Rotary Complex, issued on February the 5th or 6th 2014. CDX is making a commitment that onsite/adjacent parking will be provided to all attending producers for CDX 2015 or your admission is FREE. Through consultation with a professional logistics service provider, onsite/adjacent parking will resolved via: 1. Controlling exhibitor auto traffic through shuttle bus service from major hotels and potentially implementing an onsite exhibitor parking pass system 2. Access to all 25+ acres of the old adjacent Stratford Fairgrounds, allowing for a second CDX parking entrance (North and South access) 3. Access to 20+ acres of adjacent development land. High and dry land with tile drainage In 2014, approx. 20 acres of onsite/adjacent parking was utilized, plus street parking. In 2015, CDX will reduce exhibitor auto traffic by 20% and will increase onsite/adjacent parking capacity to a total of 60 acres, all within walking distance to the main entrances of CDX. Tram/shuttle service will also be made available.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATIENCE AS CDX GROWS AND SEE YOU IN 2015!

New Holland T7 Series tractors deliver big productivity and top-of-the-line comfort in tractors as low as 100 PTO horsepower. T7 tractors let you take control of your operating costs by improving your field performance and improving operator efficiency. Now that’s New Holland SMART. There’s a model to match your specific needs: SELECT YOUR HP: NINE MODELS FROM 100 TO 195 PTO HP SELECT YOUR TRANSMISSION: CVT, SEMI OR FULL POWERSHIFT SELECT YOUR FRONT AXLE: STANDARD FWD, SUPERSTEER™ FWD OR TERRAGLIDE™ FWD SELECT YOUR OPTIONS: FRONT LOADER, FRONT 3-PT/PTO, FASTSTEER™, BLUETOOTH & MORE

Weagant Farm Supplies Limited 11250 County Rd 43 Box 940 Winchester, ON K0C 2K0 (613) 774-2887 www.weagantfarm.com Š2013 CNH America LLC. New Holland is a registered trademark of CNH America LLC.


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 028B_Layout 1 14-02-28 4:10 PM Page 1

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INNOVATIVE SOLUTIONS FOR SOYBEANS

Go long. Go wide. Go

New Fierce® herbicide has soybean weed control completely covered. With the longest lasting residual control of the widest spectrum of weeds, Fierce brings its full game to work on IP, conventional and glyphosatetolerant soybeans. And two active ingredients – new Group 15 (pryoxasulfone) and proven Group 14 (flumioxazin) – strengthen your resistance management strategy.

Contact your local retailer for more information.

Innovative solutions. Business made easy. 1.800.868.5444 Nufarm.ca Always read and follow label directions. Fierce® is a registered trademark of Valent U.S.A. Corporation. 36873-0114

.


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 029B_Layout 1 14-02-28 5:10 PM Page 1

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The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 29B

A sweet time at FCC helps producers sleep better at tax time Fulton’s Pancake House R EGINA – FARm CREdIt CANAdA (FCC) AdvANCEs

F

ultoN's

400 tRANquIl ACREs NEstlEd IN thE hEARt oF lANARK CouNty, oN thE FRINGE oF ottAwA's NAtIoNAl CApItAl REGIoN oF CANAdA, wAKEs up EARly FRom wINtER's slumBER ANd ComEs to lIFE duRING thE spRING mAplE hARvEst, dAIly mId-FEBRuARy thRouGh to mId-ApRIl. A celebration of nature at its best, with four marked walking trails, an outdoor playground, horse-drawn rides, folk music, snow taffy and more. Fulton’s welcomes prearranged group tours in all seasons. The foundation of all activities at Fulton's is the forest. All products and activities come forth from its natural bounty. Local summer fruit and vegetable harvest is handmade into our maple gourmet food line and our spa team produces handmade batches of our Maple Luscious Bath & Body Care line. Our 120-seat restaurant offers authentic Canadian specialties: pancakes, sausages and baked beans smothered in Fulton's pure maple syrup. Delectable maple cheesecake, pies and shortbread cookies are only a few of our mouth-watering end of meal sweets. The Maple Shoppe is open year-round every Tuesday and Thursday: 10 am – 3pm and online shopping is always open. Pre-arranged group visits are welcome in all seasons for forest fun and maple history education. Both our maple gourmet product line and Maple Luscious Bath & Body Care line are available through wholesale purchasing. The maple syrup spring harvest is the foundation ingredient for all products and the forest is the venue for all activities including bushcrafting workshops and demonstrations which are centred around initiatives built in the forest. Additionally, a casual venue for corporate meetings or teambuilding exercises bring the gifts of nature into the program. The Fulton family (now the 4th, 5th and 6th generations) have been a steward of this forest for over 160 years producing pure Canadian maple syrup. Nothing says Canada quite like mmm...maple!! Fulton's Pancake House & Sugar Bush 399 Sugar Bush Rd. Pakenham, ON K0A 2X0 613-256-3867 www.fultons.ca

Peecon

this year and will hit the Canadian Market in 2015. Those interested in learning more about the Continued from page 27B machine (or other Peecon products) and in pre-orderand repair time. Should ing for 2015 are invited to the batteries ever fail to contact Steqcan, authorized operate, the feed mixer can dealer and distributor for still be attached to a tractor Peecon and Tulip products PTO hookup for quick and in Canada, at 613-633easy operation. 6321 or through our webGearboxes can be easily site at www.steqcan.ca or replaced by an onsite by visiting our Facebook mechanic (sent by Steqcan, page at authorized dealer/distribwww.facebook.com/stequter for Peecon Canada), can . with the gearbox repair peecon products at the completed usually within 2014 ottawa Farm show one hour. You can check out the There is a standard five- Peecon line of products – year warranty on each including TMR mixers and Peecon gearbox, with an trailers – at the 2014 average lifetime of 15 to Ottawa Farm Show from 20 years. March 11th-13th at the hitting the Canadian Steqcan Booth # 823. market in 2015 The Biga Volt is selling in the European Market

thE BusINEss oF AGRICul-

tuRE By CoNNECtING pRoduCERs wIth lEAdING FARm mANAGEmENt ExpERts thRouGh FREE

AGRICultuRE KNowlEdGE ExChANGE woRKshops ANd sEmINARs. As a Saskatchewan farmer and chartered accountant, Lance Stockbrugger has been working with agriculture producers for the past 19 years and delivering free FCC tax seminars for more than 10. “Canadian agriculture is filled with professional, forward-thinking, businesssavvy people,� he says.

“They love what they do and see rewards, but occasionally face questions that keep them awake at night, especially during tax time.â€? Although tax time for most producers is busiest from February to April, tax planning is a year-round exercise since decisions made throughout the year can impact the farm operation’s bottom line. To help producers make better financial decisions, Stockbrugger shares his independent advice on three of the most common taxrelated questions; 1. What income splitting opportunities are available to reduce my taxable income? • Paying wages to your

family members who work on the farm is the simplest way to minimize taxes, as it spreads the income over other tax returns. However, wages need to be reasonable and reflect actual duties and job responsibilities. Start paying your children wages as soon as they can start adding value to your business, advises Stockbrugger. • Establishing a partnership can also allow income from the business to be split with family members, reducing the overall taxes. Percentages are based on each partner’s contribution to the farm operation by way of capital and labour/management. • If a farm operation is

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incorporated, ‎family members can own shares and collect dividends. For greater flexibility, a discretionary family trust can be set up to make annual dividend payments to eligible beneficiaries. 2. When does it make tax sense to incorporate? • Stockbrugger says a rule of thumb when considering incorporation is determining if your operation’s average annual net income is more than $89,000 using accrual accounting. Accrual accounting is different from cash basis accounting, which is typically used for tax filing by farmers. With accrual accounting, transactions are counted when they happen, regardless of when the payment is actually received. With cash basis accounting, income is earned when the payment is Continued on page 31B


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Ontario Maple producers 75$&7256 )25 /($6( preparing for sweet spring $OO 1HZ +ROODQG By Carolyn Thompson Goddard AgriNews Contributor VONMORE — IN

A

A shOw Of MEtEORlOgICAl OptIMIsM duRINg thE dEAd Of A BRutAl wINtER, lOCAl MAplE syRup pROduCERs wERE AlREAdy plANNINg fOR spRINg At thE dAwN Of A fREEzINg, fluRRyfIllEd fEBRuARy.

They gathered on the

first of the month at Sand Road Maple Farm for their information day and annual general meeting — precursor to the 2014 sugaring season. Ray Bonenberg, President of the Ontario Maple Syrup Producers Assocation, provided industry information to the almost 60 people in attendance, including the devel-

opment in Quebec of the production of “sap water� as a nutritional drink and he predicts this will become a future sports drink, healthier than some on the market currently. On numerous occasions, Bonenberg stressed the importance of the locals in the organization, reminding those present that the Continued on page 31B

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AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 031B_Layout 1 14-02-28 5:20 PM Page 1

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OMSPA continued from page 30B “strength of the organization is in its locals” as they know their community best. The provincial organization advocates provincially, nationally and internationally for its members. The largest importer of Ontario maple syrup is the United States, followed by Japan and an emerging new market could be found in the European Economic Community. According to Frank Heerkens of “On The Bend

FCC Continued from page 29B actually received and expenses are deducted when they’re actually paid. “Farmers can use deferrals of sales and pre-buys of inputs to reduce their taxable income, but you need to figure out on an annual accrual basis your income and corresponding expenses,” he says. “This will give you a good indication of the profitability of your operation to help to determine if incorporation should be considered.” • Incorporating has many benefits: it provides a larger tax bracket with a significantly lower tax rate on active business income, it limits liability to corporate assets and there’s no need for taking additional financial business risk by prebuying or deferring income for tax purposes. However, there are disadvantages: an initial cost for incorporating, ongoing costs associated with the higher degree of financial reporting, consideration needs to be taken to address the eventual winddown of the corporation and certain tax rollovers can be lost for assets owned by the corporation. 3. What should I consider when deciding to lease or buy equipment? • Cash flow is the most important consideration when deciding to buy or lease farm equipment, according to Stockbrugger. He says leasing equipment can be less strain on your cash flow and is a good strategy for keeping vital equipment current, under warranty and supported by the equipment dealer. “If you have a high-use piece of equipment that is critical to your daily farm operation, leasing might be the best option to keeping it current at the lowest cost,”

The AgriNews March, 2014 Page 31B Sugar Shack” near Chesterville, maple syrup is an expensive and relatively rare commodity in some countries of the EEC, and warrants investigation amid reports that syrup producers in the U.S. are increasing their production, hoping to reduce the amount of Canadian syrup imported to that country. In the U.S. there has been recent research and testing into using the sap from birch, walnut, butternut or hickory trees to produce an alternative to maple syrup. If syrup is produced from these trees, it is not expected to impact the maple syrup industry significantly.

Of more concern to the viability of the Ontario Maple Syrup industry is the effect that the infestation of insects such as the Asian long-horned beetle or the Emerald ash borer has had on tree health. According to Aspen Zeppa of the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources these insects as well as environmental events such as the recent droughts have had intense effects on the forest health. Hardwood trees such as oak and maple are still feeling the effects of the 2012 drought. Merna Brown, of Stonebriar Farm in

Dunvegan, also observed that producers can still recognize the damage wrought by a milestone event of 15 years ago. “It is amazing the way the trees can recover, but you still see changes in the bush because of the [1998] Ice Storm,” she remarked. The resilience of the trees, the expertise of syrup producers in woodlot management and the support of organizations such as the OMSPA all contribute to the production of maple syrup being a growth industry in the Ontario economy, according to event participants.

Stockbrugger says. • If you are planning to keep certain pieces of equipment on your farm for extended periods of time and potentially build equity in the equipment, then you should consider buying certain assets as opposed to leasing them. As well, in most cases, if you want a faster tax write-off of an asset, purchasing it will result in a quicker tax deduction. “You can’t avoid taxes, but try to implement planning strategies that can minimize your annual taxes without taking unnecessary business risks,” he says. For more advice from leading farm management experts, FCC Agriculture Knowledge Exchange events are offered throughout the year across Canada. For dates and information on events in your province, go to www.fcc.ca\exchange.

Follow Farm Credit Canada on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter @FCCagriculture.

advice and producers are encouraged to consult their own tax, accounting and legal advisors before making any significant tax-related decisions.

FCC AgExpert Analyst accounting software makes tax planning easier. Designed specifically for farmers, AgExpert Analyst makes it easy to enter income and expenses, track inventory and capital assets, complete reports and prepare financial statements. FCC is Canada’s leading agriculture lender, with a healthy portfolio of more than $26-billion and 20 consecutive years of portfolio growth. FCC is strong and stable – committed to serving the industry through all cycles, and to being socially and environmentally responsible. FCC provides financing, insurance, software, learning programs and other business services to producers, agribusinesses and agrifood operations. Employees understand agriculture and are committed to the success of customers and the industry. With FCC in the market, producers benefit, agriculture benefits, rural Canada benefits and so do all Canadians. For more information, visit www.fcc.ca.

Editor's Note: FCC does not provide tax

Win $125K in ‘LAAIR’ GUELPH — Fostering innovation in Ontario agri-food by rapid commercialization of research and technologies is the aim of the new Gryphon’s Leading to Accelerated Adoption of Innovative Research (LAAIR) program at the University of Guelph. Based on popular “innovation pitch” television shows, the Gryphon’s LAAIR program will see researchers pitch ideas for commercializing their inventions and discoveries to a panel of industry stakeholders. Winners will receive up to $125,000 to support their proposals. The program is funded through the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food and the Ministry of Rural Affairs-U of G Partnership and Growing Forward 2, a federal-provincial-territorial initiative. Gryphon’s LAAIR is intended to help identify and assess opportunities and risks in speeding up development of University of Guelph-based technologies, said Rich Moccia, associate vicepresident (strategic partnerships). The program will help researchers work with industry collaborators in Ontario’s agri-food and rural sectors, Moccia said. “Improved sector competitiveness and expanded commercial and societal impact of U of G research is the ultimate goal.” Selected applicants will receive training and guidance on how to make a successful pitch. More information about Gryphon’s LAAIR is available online or by contacting John Kelly, program facilitator, at jkelly01@uoguelph.ca, or 519-546-5722.

“Udder Comfort plays into it… quality-in, quality-out.” — Lynn Royer Lynn Royer with his daughters (l-r) Jennifer, Sarabeth and Lindsay at Blossomelle Holsteins.

BLOSSOMELLE HOLSTEINS — 265 cows The Lynn Royer Family, ELIZABETHTOWN, PA RHA 23,000m 3.9f 3.4p — Current SCC 157,000 Home to the 4th-ranked cow, #334 recognized by Lancaster DHIA for lifetime fat and protein: 380,430m 12,980f 11343p

Over the past year, Blossomelle Holsteins, Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania, has brought milk quality into focus and Lynn Royer is happy with the results. “We thought it was unattainable in our herd and setup to get and stay below 200,000,” he says of his 265-cow dairy. “We reached a DHIA average 179,000 last year and now we are at 157,000 the past 4 to 5 months. The 75-cent bonus is helpful in the milk check. I am tickled pink with that. “There’s not just one big thing to get us there. It’s all the little things, and Udder Comfort™ certainly plays into it. I like the blue color because it reminds us and our employees to pay more attention to that off or swollen quarter.

“We also apply Udder Comfort to the udders of our new heifers after each milking for their first few days fresh.” His daughters say “the hard work is paying off. Like Dad says quality-in, quality-out.”

Quality Udders Make Quality Milk

Keep the milk in the system 1.888.773.7153 1.613.652.9086 uddercomfort.com Available at Select Sires, Norwell Dairy Systems, participating Co-ops, Country Depot, Purina, Shurgain, Dundas Agri Systems, Ritchies Feed and Seed, and Lawrence’s Dairy Supply. For external application to the udder only, after milking, as an essential component of udder management. Always wash and dry teats thoroughly before milking.


AGRINEWS March 2014 Page 032B_Layout 1 14-02-28 3:29 PM Page 1

All purchases are subject to the terms of labeling and purchase documents. The DuPont Oval Logo is a registered trademark of DuPont. ® TM SM , , Trademarks and service marks licensed to Pioneer Hi-Bred Limited. © 2013, PHL.

Page 32B The AgriNews March, 2014

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SOME REPS STAND BY THEIR PRODUCTS. WE PREFER TO GET WAIST-DEEP IN THEM.

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