Saskatchewan raises salvage threshold for parched crops

Saskatchewan's provincial crop insurance agency is raising the yield threshold at which drought-damaged crops can be grazed, baled for greenfeed or cut for silage with no penalty on future coverage. Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corp. said Wednesday it would double the "low yield appraisal" threshold values on cereal or pulse crop acres put to feed. SCIC[...]


Prairie hay shortage on horizon

MarketsFarm -- While rain across the Prairies has eased concerns of an all-out drought, worries of a hay shortage going into winter haven't ceased. Darren Chapman, a Virden, Man. producer and chair of the Manitoba Forage and Grassland Association (MFGA), explained that regrowth following the first cut of hay has been strong. First-cut hay crops[...]

Forage supplies starting to dip on dry Prairies

CNS Canada -- Forage supplies are starting to dwindle across Western Canada following a long, cold, winter and rain is needed soon to make for a good forage crop this year. "People tended to kind of blend hay this year and they managed to get through. But the prolonged cold spring really I think put[...]


Hay producers see increased competition, lower prices

CNS Canada -- Canada's export hay prices have come down from summer highs and now sit at less than half their previous levels, but despite competition from other growing regions, a weak loonie is helping Canadian producers. South Africa, Eastern Europe and Argentina have increased their alfalfa production, said Edward J. Shaw, director of market[...]

Prairie forage crops to benefit from early spring weather

CNS Canada -- Forage crops in Western Canada are in a much better place this spring compared to a year ago, as spring's early arrival will benefit crop development. The milder winter was also beneficial in preserving forage supplies, with feed stocks adequate to good in many regions, said Terry Kowalchuk, a provincial forage specialist[...]