Videos
AGCanadaTV: In Case You Missed It – Your National Ag News Recap for the year ending 2022.
AGCanadaTV: In Case You Missed It – Your National Ag News Recap for the week ending December 23, 2022.
How to keep invasive weeds from making a home on your pasture
While your cattle’s tastes and preferences are likely to keep them from eating invasive weeds if they crop up on your pasture, over time they will reduce its carrying capacity if they become too abundant. So what can you do to avoid invasive weeds from getting a foothold on your land? At Ag in Motion
Seed treatment meets portability
If you were at Ag in Motion this past summer, an on-farm seed treatment applicator may have caught your eye on the show grounds. This portable seed treatment unit from USC can handle up to 3,500 lbs/minute and has two pump stands which allows producers to apply two chemicals at the same time. In this
AGCanadaTV: In Case You Missed It – Your National Ag News Recap for the week ending December 16, 2022.
Dec 15 to 31: Precision ag takes to the skies
Daniel McCann, CEO of Precision AI, talks about how his company uses a drone and artificial intelligence to deliver crop inputs, help manage in-field crop production and how, in a not-too-distant future, the Precision AI system will provide farmers with a wealth of in-field data.
AGCanadaTV: In Case You Missed It – Your National Ag News Recap for the week ending December 9, 2022.
Finding efficiencies in fertilizer applications
With the federal government’s goal to achieve a 30 per cent reduction in nitrous oxide emissions – not to mention the high fertilizer costs incurred by farmers in 2022 – there’s a great need to use these products to their full potential without causing additional harm to the environment. But some of the research out
AGCanadaTV: In Case You Missed It – Your National Ag News Recap for the week ending December 2, 2022.
Dec 1 to 15: Seed treatment gives canola growers consistency
A canola seed that's irregular in size can result in poor seed placement, even causing a planter to skip. To help solve these issues, Syngenta has created 'Pelta technology,' a treatment that creates a uniform seed size to ensure consistent seed placement and avoid competition in the seed row. In this video, Bryan Briggs with Syngenta Canada talks about Pelta and the benefits it offers for canola growers.