AAFC researcher Fengqun Yu, right, and a research team member inspect an infected plant at Saskatoon’s
research and development centre.

Clubroot ‘race profiling’ can help boost resistance in canola

Research team sets stage for next generation of resistance to pesky crop disease

Reading Time: 4 minutes Racial profiling is not a term most people would want to be associated with. But with clubroot it’s different; it means the ability to select a canola variety that not only resists clubroot in general, but specific “races” of the disease of canola and other brassica plants. When it happens, thank an AAFC research team […] Read more


Members of the Hamill family toast the success of Red Shed Malting with glasses of whisky made from malt barley grown on the family’s Red Deer-area farm. From left to right: John, Susie, Matt, Joe and Daelyn Hamill.

Challenges and rewards greet Alberta craft maltsters

Value-added ventures beckon families back to the farm

Reading Time: 4 minutes At the end of a recent forum on craft malting, podcaster Don Tse asked his guests a surprising question: “Are you happy with your business decisions?” For three rural Albertans involved in the burgeoning industry, the consensus was “yes, but.” Yes, they’re happy with their choice, but anyone hoping to do the same had better […] Read more

“This solution was developed specifically for this market and has proven performance on major pulse diseases regardless of a pathogen’s resistance status.” – Sylvain Mialon.

Growing resistance drives new fungicide for pulses

Product a response to Group 11 resistance in lentils and field peas, says company

Reading Time: 2 minutes Growing resistance in some Western Canadian pulse crops has prompted the development of a new fungicide earmarked for a 2024 release. Reports of Group 11 resistance starting in 2019 caused BASF Canada to “pivot” its strategy around RevyPro, billed by the company as “Designed in Western Canada for Western Canadian growers.” “Group 11 resistance has […] Read more


A 3D reconstruction of microscope image data from 
a lygus bug nymph treated 
with fluorescent nanoparticles. The red channel is the nanoparticle fluorescence, which shows the path of the nanoparticle and helps researchers discover the location in the pest where the active ingredient will be most effective.

A (very) small solution to big ag problems

Nanotech may be the future of precision crop protection, says Lethbridge scientist

Reading Time: 4 minutes In just a few years, crop spraying could become largely a thing of the past. Nanotechnology may take its place using its ability to target specific crop pests. Farmers hear a lot of such whizzy claims. But a Lethbridge researcher is so confident in nanotech-based crop protection that he’s working to ensure it doesn’t follow […] Read more

“Whether you’re in
Alberta, Saskatchewan
or Manitoba, this data
is from those provinces
and targeted towards
those pradducers
(and) the varieties
being grown and the
management practices
being used here.”

New tool helps producers measure nutrients leaving the soil

Nutrient removal calculator first of its kind for Western Canada

Reading Time: 3 minutes Farmers may do regular soil tests but do they measure the nutrients that leave via harvested crops? There’s a calculator for that. The Prairie Nutrient Removal Calculator helps farmers calculate or anticipate those numbers. Although not a new idea, it’s the only one designed specifically for Western Canadian farmers. “Whether you’re in Alberta, Saskatchewan or […] Read more


Climate policy expert Darrin Qualman agrees farmers should be rewarded for their stewardship efforts -- but says sequestering carbon in soil is highly problematical.

The Big Divide: Are carbon credits a good idea or waste of time?

No one’s against carbon sequestration but the best way to reward good stewardship is a tricky question

Reading Time: 4 minutes Should farmers be paid for the amount of carbon stored in their fields? Or for the practices that put the carbon there? That depends on who you ask. The head of the country’s largest bank recently backed the former, saying a “carbon soil market could be worth as much as $4 billion. But right now, […] Read more

“There can be no doubt that
when you have a higher cost at
the processing level, over time
that gets reflected back on what
producers get paid.”

Beef sector speaks out on costly processing rules

Producers, smaller processors bear the brunt of costs from BSE-era regulations

Reading Time: 4 minutes Alberta beef producers still feel the fallout from BSE through regulations intended for processors, though it is 20 years since the crisis began. Canadian beef processors pay millions more than their U.S. counterparts to process and dispose of specified risk material (SRM), first targeted during the BSE era, in cattle older than 30 months (OTM). […] Read more


Jason Lenz.

Green light for gene editing heralds new age in farming

New guidance from Ottawa puts gene-edited varieties on par with their conventionally bred cousins

Reading Time: 4 minutes In what many believe will be a turning point for agriculture here, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency has legalized the growth and marketing of crop varieties developed with gene editing. That has fired up Jason Lenz’s imagination about the technology’s impact on food waste and food security — and also on flea beetles. “Food security […] Read more

“The fundamental rule is no matter how you use the funds, you still have to repay your cash advance as you sell your inventory.” – Dave Gallant.

Cash advance applications soar along with interest rate

With the interest-free portion being upped to $350,000, producers would save thousands — or even invest it

Reading Time: 5 minutes There’s been a surge in the number of farmers seeking cash advances thanks to soaring interest rates and a big increase in the interest-free portion of the loan. And the deal might even be tempting farmers who don’t need an operating loan. On April 3, the opening day of the 2023 program, the Canadian Canola […] Read more