MBC120126

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SOFTWARE INVENTORS CLEAN UP

GPS A LITTLE WONKY?

New farm inventions emerge from the office » PaGe 13

Solar flares cause disruptions » PaGe 18

January 26, 2012

SERVING MANITOBA FARMERS SINCE 1925 | Vol. 70, No. 4

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$1.75

manitobacooperator.ca

4-H’s 100th:

ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL EVENT

Celebrations launched at Ag Days 2013 marks the greatest achievement of all for 4-H — its 100th anniversary as nationwide youth program By Lorraine Stevenson co-operator staff / brandon

L

et the party begin. Manitoba 4-H Council leaders rolled out their plans during Ag Days last week for celebrations leading up to the 100th anniversary of 4-H in Canada. “Manitoba has a very special relationship to 4-H with Roland being the birthplace of 4-H in Canada,” said Manitoba Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives Minister Ron Kostyshyn as he offered his congratulations and the province’s ongoing support for the program. 4-H began in 1913, when the Department of Agriculture through the extension department of University of Manitoba organized eight Boys and Girls Clubs, including the first at Roland plus seven others at Darlingford, Manitou, Neepawa, Oak Lake, Starbuck, Stonewall and Warren. The name was changed in 1952 to 4-H See 4-H on page 6 »

Emily Paramor of the Neepawa Belles Beaux and Builders 4-H Club assists new Manitoba Agriculture Food and Rural Initiatives Minister Ron Kostyshyn while building a puzzle-style illustration at the Manitoba 4-H Council Ag Days exhibit last week.   photo: lorraine stevenson

Farmers get marketing “wake-up call” Deciding whether to grow premium or mid-quality wheat and reading “the fine print” are just two of many issues farmers must now face By Daniel Winters and Shannon Vanraes co-operator staff / brandon

Publication Mail Agreement 40069240

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he open market is coming and wheat farmers have a lot to learn in a hurry, marketing experts told farmers attending Ag Days in Brandon. While seminar speakers filled farmers in on the ins and outs of what is expected to be a new era for grain marketing in Western Canada, representa-

tives of the now governmentcontrolled Canadian Wheat Board reassuring producers it will continue to be there for them too. (see page 3). But whether they go with what they know or deal with the private trade, farmers were told they need to consider their options carefully. “You have to shop it around,” said Brenda Tjaden Lepp of FarmLink Marketing Solutions. “If you can sell $7 new-crop spring wheat to somebody

and it’s a No. 1 13.5 per cent, or you can sell $7 spring wheat to someone else and it’s a No. 2, well you’ve just saved yourself whatever the grade discount was going to be at time of delivery.” Farmers should also think twice about whether they even want to grow high-protein wheat. Calculate whether the premium it will fetch on an open market will cover the extra fertilizer costs, said Tjaden Lepp.

“Mid-grade wheat is simpler to market than high-protein milling wheat,” she said, adding fewer quality risks are associated with mid-grade varieties. Farmers can also expect marketplace volatility to continue to affect wheat prices for months and possibly years to come, said Tjaden Lepp. The expert’s talk left some farmers surprised by how See WAKE-UP CALL on page 6 »

PLUS: CANOLA DEMAND CONTINUES TO RISE » SEE PAGE 18


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