“In essence, soil tests work only when soils are severely phosphorus deficient.” – RIGAS KARAMANOS, VITERRA Bill Toews saw the price of phosphate fertilizer in the fall of 2007 and decided he’d wait until spring before purchasing what he usually applies to his land near Kane. However, by spring 2008 prices had soared from $600
High prices make fertilizer a tougher sell
The system works
Step away from the hollering last week – both in and outside of the House of Commons – for just a minute. Block out the images of television journalists shivering in the damp Ottawa cold trying to find words to fill the minute-by-minute live coverage, the murky handycam footage of an Opposition leader who can’t
Hamster wheel business
”The worst business of all is the one that grows a lot, where you’re forced to grow just to stay in the game at all and where you’re reinvesting the capital at a very low rate of return. And sometimes people are in those businesses without knowing it.” Warren Buffett, 1998 Between 1990 and 2003,
Cancer conference explores risks from pesticides
Does eating foods produced with agricultural pesticides give people cancer? That was one of the questions on surgical oncologist Carman Giacomantonio’s mind when he travelled from Nova Scotia last week to attend the Canadian Cancer Society (CCS) conference titled Exploring the Link Between Pesticides and Cancer. Giacomantonio, who also sits on the cancer society’s board,
Cancer, pesticides and posturing
If you went to Toronto expecting to get a clear, unequivocal answer on the issue of whether pesticides used in agricultural production can be linked to cancer, you might as well have saved yourself the disappointment and gone to the Royal Winter Fair instead. As tempting as that was, it was a worthwhile exercise sitting
Higher rates of breast cancer among Ontario farm women
“You can’t just look at the dose, you must also look at the timing of exposure.” – Vincent Cogliano When researchers began collecting the occupational histories of cancer patients in Essex County, Ontar io during the mid-1990s they hypothesized they would find higher rates of the disease among male industrialized workers. What they found shocked
Conference attracts youth
“If the only message you give them is that they have to work hard, you’re going to lose them.” – Ron Chapman There was something so remarkable about the audience in front of Manitoba’s minister of agriculture, food and rural initiatives that she stopped her speech mid-text. “As I look across this room, I am
Publicity stunt or junk science?
The press release from the University of Manitoba’s National Centre for Livestock and the Environment last week spoke volumes. Unfortunately, it said very little about science. It said a lot about sensationalism and just how politicized science has become. “WHEN IT COMES TO FEEDING COWS, GRASS IS NOT GREENER – GRAIN IS,” the boldface, capitalized
Improving the staff of life
At first glance, the press release issued by the Canadian Wheat Board earlier this month is a classic “dog bites man” story. The board announced the vast majority of Prairie wheat farmers (88 per cent to be exact) grow varieties that are used primarily to produce bread and pasta. What’s more, this is not a
At least land won’t evaporate
There are few winners in a market meltdown like the one we’re experiencing, although we hear rumours that hardware stores are doing a booming trade in shovels. It seems folks figure digging a hole in the backyard and burying their savings is now a safer bet than mutual funds. That’s about the only consolation we