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Salute to Salute to Agriculture MARCH 18, 2015 National Farmers Union warns corporate greed threatens Canada’s food sovereignty PAGE 2 Dairy farmers rely on strong family commitments for the future of the industry PAGE 11 D D D D

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Section X of the March 18, 2015 edition of the Stettler Independent

TRANSCRIPT

Salute to Salute to Agriculture

MARCH 18, 2015

National Farmers Union warns corporate greed threatens Canada’s food sovereignty

PAGE 2

Dairy farmers rely on strong family commitments for the future of the industry

PAGE 11

DDDD

Wednesday, March 18, 2015Page 2 - Salute to Agriculture

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Alarming report from

NFU on threats to Canadian agriculture

Mustafa EricIndependent Editor

With the Agricultural Growth Act, known widely as Bill C-18, now having reached royal assent and practically become part of Canadian legislation, Cana-dian farmers have a lot more reasons to be concerned about their future as farm-ers, according to a recent re-port by the National Farmers Union (NFU).

The report “Losing Our

Grip-2015 Update” portrays a quite grim picture with re-gard to corporate interests encroaching on the farming communities of Canada and warns that the currently ex-isting trends could amount to an existential threat for Canadian food sovereignty within a few decades.

“Canadians want family farmers to produce our food and to have the autonomy to do it in a way that supports their communities and takes

care of the land for future generations. Without better farm policy and laws with real teeth, absentee landlords seeking to make the high-est possible return for their shareholders will be calling the shots, and the work of farming will be done by low-paid seasonal employees or farmers forced to lease land, making it difficult for them to make long-term investments to care for the land,” said Jan Slomp, NFU President in a statement on the occasion of the release of the report. “We are calling for policies, pro-grams and laws that will en-sure that Canada’s farmland is under the control of local farmers, which is one of the key elements of food sover-eignty.”

The latest publication is actually an update to a ma-jor report by the NFU on Canadian agriculture and the challenges it faces which was released in 2010 with the name “Losing Our Grip: How Corporate Farmland Buy-up, Rising Farm Debt, and Agribusiness Financing of Inputs Threaten Family Farms and Food Sovereign-ty”.

The executive summary of the latest update states that the traditional farming system of Canada, whereby farming land is owned and worked by indi-vidual farmers, farmer fami-lies or cooperatives “is under serious threat by corporations and investors –including some of our own pension funds – that are seeking greater control over Canada’s agriculture and a bigger share of the wealth that farmers produce.”

continued on page 3

Wednesday, March 18, 2015 Salute to Agriculture - Page 3

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NFU: threats to Canadian agriculture

continued from page 2

The report underlines both demographic and economic trends as feed-ing into the continuation and acceleration of the phenomenon with young-er generations of the farm-er families seeking their future in urban commu-nities while the farming land increasingly becomes a commodity rather than a fundamental asset to maintain a way life.

With multinational corporations targeting more and more farming

land to operate in order to expand their businesses, including trying new seed breeding technologies, in addition to foreign gov-ernments and investment institutions buying up land all around the world, ag-ing farming communities in Canada are fast becom-ing easy prey to corporate greed, with many older farmers having to sell their farmland when they are unable to meet their debt obligations to creditor in-stitutions, according to the report.

The data published in the report shows Canada’s farming land shrank by seven million acres, or by about 4 per cent, describ-ing this development as a serious threat to Canada’s food sovereignty.

In addition, the rise in the price of farmland over the last decade has been

a source of double nega-tive impact: While retiring farmers find it convenient to sell their farmland to new owners who may not always be willing to work the land, the high prices deter many young people

from dreaming of buying up their piece of land to launch farming operations.

Rising farm debtThe NFU report also

looks at the increasing farm debt and warns that the newly introduced Agri-

cultural Growth Act could play a major part in accel-erating the trend in just a few years as farmers will now face the possibility of having to pay fees for their own seed.

The figures quoted in the report show that farm debt has grown by more than 10 per cent in just three years from 2010 to 2013, reaching almost $80 billion.

Unhealthy and “unreg-ulated” lending practices whereby farmers have to receive loans in exchange for future harvests at low fixed prices are also put-ting great pressure on the borrowers, according to the report.

RecommendationsThe main emphasis

of the recommendations listed in the executive summary of the report is on the matter of securing

the land ownership for Canadian farmers. The re-port urges a unified set of land ownership framework to be adopted by all the provinces and territories, with adequate taxation ar-rangements being made to ensure that Canadian own-ership of farming land is encouraged.

“The Government of Canada and the provinces must set up mechanisms for farm family intergen-erational land transfers that do not rely on loans and interest payments. Governments must find ways for young and new farmers to gain secure access to farmland that does not require massive indebtedness,” the report stresses.

It also urges strict re-strictions to the transfer of farming land to non-agri-cultural use.

“Farmland investment companies are shifting Canadian farmland ownership from actual farmers

to a new class of absentee landlords.”

LOSING OUR GRIP-2015 UPDATE REPORT

Wednesday, March 18, 2015Page 4 - Salute to Agriculture

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Complementary medicine can add to animal comfort

Stacey LavallieIndependent reporter

When Donna Weatherly arrived at the farm, she went right to the stall of the horse she had been called to see, a 14-year-old gelding suf-fering from laminitis, and who could no longer stand because of the problem with his feet.

She found him lying on his side in his stall, qui-etly suffering. The owner, a friend of hers, had brought the veterinarian to see the gelding, who had suffered

from laminitis in the past, but had been in remission for years. The disease, which affects the foot, basically re-sults in the separation of the living section of the foot and the non-living section.

“It’s a bunch of little horns that fit together, like how you’d lace your fin-gers together,” Weatherly explained. “When laminitis begins to occur, these horns die and they pull apart. The sole holds the bottom bone of the foot and it supports all the pressure.”

For the 14-year-old gelding, the outcome wasn’t good. He hadn’t responded to traditional treatment and could no longer walk.

“It’s career ending for sure,” Weatherly said. “It’s something that doesn’t ever completely go away.”

When her friend called Weatherly, it was as a last resort for the horse, a hope that maybe she could help him.

Weatherly, who studies tongren, an Eastern medi-

cine discipline, began ap-plying what she knew to the gelding, as well as treating him with a mix of herbs es-pecially designed for him.

“By the next morning, he was up,” Weatherly said. “Two days later, he was at his pawing at his gate, look-ing for his feed.”

For Weatherly, who be-lieved but wasn’t sure this was what her calling would be, felt it cement right there and then.

“This was remarkable,” she said. “This was a mir-acle.”

Today, Weatherly, who runs Spirit Horse Herbs, continues to study in vari-ous Eastern medicine modalities. She said she believes that Western medi-cine and Eastern medicine work best together, rather than alone.

“I’m definitely not the sort that will say ‘Don’t go to a veterinarian,’” she said. “If your horse is sick, the vet should be the first visit.”

In fact, the herbs Weath-

erly prepares are sold by a local veterinary clinic she has partnered with.

“(What I do) is comple-mentary medicine,” she said. “It’s alternative thera-py done in conjunction with normal veterinary care.”

When she started in the mid-90s, she started with a healing modality called “touch for health.” She took several courses in it for humans, and then one for horses, and it was like a light went on over her head.

“I’m the oldest in my family, and I grew up around rodeo horses,” she said. “I thought my grand-pa could fix anything – he could. Any crippled, broken horse that came to him, he fixed it. And that’s where my passion for horses and for healing started.”

Though she’s done other jobs over the years to make ends meet, she always came back to horses, so she launched her business to tend to them.

continued on page 5

Wednesday, March 18, 2015 Salute to Agriculture - Page 5

Animal comfort through medicinecontinued

from page 4“When I started 20 years

ago, there was only a hand-ful of us who did this,” she recalled. “It was quite for-eign to everyone back then. Even my own dad (Stan Weatherly), very much the old-fashioned cowboy (nev-er believed).”

That changed when he decided to humour his daughter and let her work with some of his horses, she said.

“He saw results and be-came a believer,” she said. “Things evolve and they shift and they change. What I do is becoming more ac-cepted. Right now, my goal is to work hand-in-hand with the local vets to improve the health of horses.”

It’s not just horses that the herbs, muscle therapy,

colour therapy and treat-ments help. It can help all sort of livestock, she said.

“We have a local guy who does this with bulls, and he’s outstanding,” she said.

In one case, Weatherly had friends who bought a mare for barrel racing. The family who bought her knew the mare had cysts on her ovaries, meaning it would be near impossible for her to ever be bred.

“It was a mess in there,” Weatherly recalled.

Over the years, the mare excelled at barrel racing, and was treated by Weatherly. When the mare was retired, the family had her checked out by a veterinarian, who found that the cysts had van-ished – all except for one.

“She caught the first time they tried to breed her,”

Weatherly said.The healing came in part

from treatment from a vet, but also from years of good living and balancing the horse’s humours through the application of herbal mixes in the food, Weatherly avers.

Someday, Weatherly wants to retire to just selling herbs, but she knows she’ll never stop the hands-on-healing.

“When you love what you do, you do it,” she said.

Her dreams also include a perfect world where both Western and Eastern medi-cine meet and mix with re-spect, something she said has been the experience here in Stettler.

“We totally respect each other’s gifts, education and modalities,” she said. “This comes from education and acceptance. I don’t negate

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Wednesday, March 18, 2015Page 6 - Salute to Agriculture

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A disease rotation can fight effectively

Stacey LavallieIndependent reporter

A field of canola sways slightly in the breeze, the bright yellow flowers papering the gently rolling land in a golden hue. But here and there the gold is less brazen and a bit patchier, and the reason for that is club-root.

A soil-borne disease, clubroot spores can hungrily infect plants in the brassica-ceae (cruciferae) family - cauliflower, broc-coli, mustard, turnip, radish, and canola. It also infects certain weeds like stinkweed and shepherd’s purse, which can help the spread of the soil-infecting spores.

“Clubroot forms a gall, or a club, on the root of the plant that prevent the uptake of water and minerals, therefore slowing its growth and stunting the plant, and result-ing in not-good yields,” explained Quinton Beaumont, director of agricultural services for the county. “It can stop the plant from ripening at the right time, resulting in green kernels.”

The county’s pest control program has placed the detection and prevention of club-root fairly high in its program, and has held clubroot education sessions for the public already this year.

In 2012, the first clubroot infections in the county were discovered after root sam-ples were brought to the county for testing.

“Three fields were found that year,”

Beaumont said. “In 2013, three more fields were found - in 2013, two were fields, one was a garden. In 2014, we had nine fields.”

It doesn’t affect crops like wheat or barley, and Beaumont notes that he and his staff don’t even inspect those fields for the soil disease right now, focusing instead on fields growing mustard and canola.

The disease doesn’t move without help, Beaumont noted. Theoretically, a patch of infected soil will remain put and not grow in size. However, if the soil moves, whether it’s blown by the wind, washed downslope by water, carried on boot or tire, or even in the digestive tracts of animals, it can be deposited elsewhere. If crops or weeds are grown in infected soil, they can help gener-ate and spread more spores.

Because of the infectious nature of the disease, staff perform random inspections of canola fields throughout the season.

“You cannot see it with the naked eye,” Beaumont said. The spores are invisible to the naked eye - a lone tablespoon of club-root-infected soil can host up to one million spores. There’s no smell, no change in tex-ture, and no taste to infected soil.

“The only way to positively identify (clubroot) is to get a lab test,” so through-out the season, staff take root samples and send them to the laboratory and wait for the results.

continued on page 7

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Wednesday, March 18, 2015 Salute to Agriculture - Page 7

continued from page 6Before entering a field, though, staff take precautions

to prevent the spread of any disease, including the club-root for which they search. Staff will stand in a chlorine solution for several moments to sanitize their boots, then wear plastic booties over their feet. Once they leave the field and remove the booties, they’re disposed of and the staff stand in the chlorine bath again to kill any spores.

The precautions are necessary. Once a field is infect-ed, spores can be present for up to 20 years.

“Clubroot is like a tick,” Beaumont said. “If you re-move the host, you can remove the pest.” The spores have a half-life of four years, meaning that teaspoon of soil with a million spores will have 500,000 after four years.

“If you don’t plant canola (or any other susceptible plant) for four years, you halve the number of spores in the soil”, Beaumont said.

That’s one of the reasons why plant rotation is so im-portant, Beaumont noted. The province of Alberta, in its clubroot management best practices, recommends a one in four cycle for planting canola, meaning that for one year, canola is planted and then for three years, a non-cruciferae crop like wheat or peas.

“There’s nothing made to help control it - yet,” Beau-mont said of fungicides, herbicides and pesticides.

As of April 2007, the disease is on the provincial pest act. When farmers don’t have the disease in their soil, all the county can do is recommend best practices to the landowner when it comes to which crops are planted and weed control.

continued on page 8

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continued from page 7“We have the power to enter land at any reasonable

hour, without permission, to inspect for pests and collect samples,” Beaumont said. “We can mitigate and manage it through various management plans.”

“I can suggest to you until I’m blue in the face you should rotate crops. Once we find clubroot in a field, you have to follow county policy,” Beaumont said. This means if a field is found infected, the county can say “You cannot plant canola here for four years.”

While the worst infections of clubroot aren’t in cen-tral Alberta. Red Deer County, Lacombe County, Camrose County, and Flagstaff County have all found clubroot in-festations in addition to Stettler County, to varying degrees. However, nearby counties Paintearth, Starland and Special Areas have remained clubroot free.

What can we do to prevent the spread and establishment of clubroot?

“Rotation, rotation, rotation, is number one,” Beaumont said. “We are suggesting a one in four year rotation. You grow canola once, and for the next three years you grow something else.”

Beaumont said that farmers should use clubroot resis-tant seeds when seeding susceptible crops, which will help prevent infections and the creation of more spores.

A huge piece on rate-payer’s end of things, and any-one going in and fields is the removal of soil. By cleaning equipment of soil, it can reduce the chance of spreading clubroot by 95 per cent. Knocking soil off tires and shov-els, spraying equipment down with a two per cent bleach solution - soaking it well enough to remain wet for about 20 minutes.

Planting a patch of grass at the gates, where equipment can be cleaned, can help, Beaumont noted. The grass essen-tially acts as a pad, catching the soil and preventing it from

being blown or knocked around.Susceptible weeds and volunteer crops must be culled

within three weeks, Beaumont noted. After three weeks, the plants, if infected, will begin to produce spores.

Changing the type of canola crop grown can make a difference, too.

“Switching between a Liberty Link canola and a Roundup-ready canola can help control volunteers,” Beau-mont said.

Farmers who know they have clubroot-infected soil can ensure they don’t spread the disease by ensuring equip-ment is thoroughly cleaned between fields, and by not go-ing back-and-forth between infected and uninfected fields, Beaumont said.

Before disinfecting, farmers should knock the soil away. The organic matter and soil will neutralize any dis-infectant, making the wash worthless. By parking unneces-sary vehicles on the road, and not in the field, people can reduce the amount of work needed in cleaning equipment and vehicles.

Direct seeding is a better option when it comes to seed-ing land, as it disturbs the soil less than conventional seed-ing. Making sure the seeds are clean of soil is important, too.

Avoid using straw or green feed in infected areas, as if consumed, it can survive the digestive tract of animals.

“Cattle make good broadcast seeders,” Beaumont said. However, seeding fields down with alfalfa and ranching on the land is a feasible option.

Finally, though it is extra work with the county, creat-ing a new entrance to infected fields, so there’s direct ac-cess to the land without going through infected areas, is a good idea, Beaumont said. This involves working with the county to create new approaches to the field, but in the end, it can save 20 years of work to clean a field of the disease.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015 Salute to Agriculture - Page 9

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Seed cleaning plant open for business after major upgrades

Joel van der VeenIndependent reporter

After a six-month clo-sure for upgrades and new equipment, the Stettler County Seed Cleaning Plant is again open and ready to serve local farmers.

The chairman of the plant board told the Inde-pendent that he hopes farm-ers in the district will give their business to the plant, which is run as a co-opera-tive effort with the support of the County of Stettler.

“We just want to get the word out to everyone that the plant is open for busi-ness,” said Bob Anderson. “We’re hoping farmers in the community will support us now.”

Two major pieces of equipment - the indent cylin-der machine and the gravity table, both used in the sort-ing and separation process - were replaced at the plant.

The main goals were to increase the plant’s capac-ity and phase out older ma-

George Leggott holds out a tray of cleaned seeds, while standing in front of the gravity ta-ble, one of the new machines recently installed at the Stettler County Seed Cleaning Plant.

Joel van der Veen/Independent reporter

chines that had been in use for decades. Anderson said the upgrades have doubled the speed at which the plant can process seeds.

“We’re up and run-ning,” said George Leg-gott, the plant’s general manager. “We’ve doubled our cleaning capacity (and we’re) doing a better job, as

far as I’m concerned.”Anderson said that re-

locating the equipment to place all the machines on the same level keeps the plant employees from con-stantly having to run back and forth, adding, “That can wear on you over the course of a long day, as anybody knows that has a basement.”

However, delays in completing the upgrades forced the plant to stay closed for six months. The renovations began in June, and while the goal was to reopen the plant in time for last year’s harvest, the plant did not resume operations until February. continued on page 10

Wednesday, March 18, 2015Page 10 - Salute to Agriculture

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now opencontinued

from page 9“That obviously im-

pacted our customers,” said Anderson, while Leg-gott said the installation of the new equipment was “a headache.”

Anderson estimated that the plant has between 50 and 75 active shareholders, which reflects the growing size of farms and, accord-ingly, the diminished num-ber of landowners.

The upgrades were originally budgeted at $200,000, Anderson said, but Leggott said the total

cost is closer to $350,000.“That’s a lot of money

for this little plant,” said Anderson, calling it a ma-jor investment in the plant’s future.

In addition to seed cleaning, the plant also provides treating services for cereal grains - applying chemicals to present dis-ease and fight attacks from certain insects - as well as grading services.

The plant was con-structed in the late 1950s and incorporated in 1960, funded in three equal parts by the province, the county

and local farmers, who sold shares to pay for its con-struction.

Before long, the prov-ince had scaled back its contributions. The plant is overseen by a board of directors, consisting of six farmers and one represen-tative from the County of Stettler.

Leggott, raised on a farm in rural Saskatch-ewan, moved to Alberta in 1968 and began working at the plant in 1980.

He said that treating seeds used to make up more than half of the plantís business, but changes in the seed industry since then have eliminated most of that work.

Anderson said the new machines were tested be-ginning in mid-February, and despite some ìteething problems,î are now running at full force.

He was apologetic for the impact the closure had on the plantís customers, saying, “We really need their support.”

The plant is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Mon-days through Fridays, with extended hours as neces-sary. For more informa-tion, call 403-742-2905.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015 Salute to Agriculture - Page 11

The Holstein dairy cow is typically recognized by her white body with black splotches.

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Milking it: Alberta’s dairy farmers optimistic about the next generation

Joel van der VeenIndependent reporterTom Kootstra grew up

on the family farm near Pitt Meadows, B.C., and for almost 20 years, he has run a dairy operation in the Ponoka area.

And even as the num-ber of dairy farms in Al-

berta continues to shrink, Kootstra is confident about the future of the business — partly because he knows his family will be a part of it.

“Two of my three sons are engaged in the farm here with us,” Kootstra, who serves as board chair-

man for Alberta Milk, told the Independent.

Of the 11 members of the Alberta Milk board, he said, 10 of them have chil-dren who have committed themselves to a future in the dairy industry.

“There is definitely a sense of optimism,” he said.

“If you work hard and use the equity in the farm . . . there is an opportunity.”

Karlee Conway, who serves as corporate commu-nications co-ordinator for

Alberta Milk, said there is a sense of confidence in the in-dustry about the future.

“I think we’ve got a really strong next generation com-ing into the dairy industry in

Alberta,” she said, explain-ing that younger farmers are highly engaged, communi-cating via social media and attending meetings.

continued on page 12

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place in Canada help to ensure a stable future for the industry and prevent price fluctuations for dairy prod-ucts.

Conway reported that there are about 550 dairy farms in Alberta — all of them family-owned and op-erated — though the count has continued to shrink.

She explained that as farmers adopt “smarter” practices, they become more efficient, so production levels remain roughly the same even as the number of farms declines, a trend seen across the country.

Conway said there are several reasons for the de-cline, some as simple as the required investment of time. Dairy farmers must milk their cows twice a day, every day of the year, and that’s more of a time com-mitment than many people are willing to make.

“It’s not without its challenges,” she said. “I think it’s more labour-intensive than, possibly, some other farming industries. . . Sometimes it’s not as attractive to stay in the industry.”

Conway said one unique element of the Alberta dairy industry is the high percentage of farms based on Hutterite colonies, which produce 26 per cent of the province’s total dairy output.

“They are big contributors to our industry,” she said, adding that colony-based farms have won the provincial milk quality award for five out of the last seven years.

Looking toward the future, challenges for the in-

dustry will include maintaining strong relations with dairy processors and ensuring “everybody at the table is satisfied,” Conway said.

In July of 2013, the Dairy Farmers of Canada ad-opted the proAction initiative, which involves pro-grams targeting six key areas: milk quality, food safe-ty, animal care, livestock traceability, biosecurity and the environment.

Conway said the initiative is designed to strength-en public trust in the industry by providing tangible evidence of farmers’ efforts to maintain the quality of their products and serve as stewards of the environ-ment.

Kootstra said that the Alberta Milk organization will continue to promote supply management prac-tices.

“I think there’s some concern with our govern-ment as it continues to negotiate with (Trans-Pacific Partnership) partners,” he said, adding that allowing foreign producers access into the Canadian market would damage the dairy industry.

He also observed that online activists concerned about animal welfare have contributed to a lot of “me-dia noise,” some of it targeted at dairy farming.

Kootstra said he’s particularly annoyed by celebri-ties who have taken up the cause of environmentalism but seem to have little connection to the land them-selves.

“Most of them probably couldn’t grow a potato or milk a cow to feed themselves,” he said, arguing that most farmers demonstrate respect for their animals and for the natural environment.

“You can’t continue to farm if you don’t respect the land,” he said. “I think a farmer, by definition, is an environmentalist.”

For more information on dairy farming in Alberta, visit albertamilk.com.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015Page 12 - Salute to Agriculture

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Growing demand for bison meat has proven to be a boon for farmers in Alberta, according to an industry representa-tive.

“I think we’ve got a pretty bright future all around,” said Linda Sautner, office manager of the Bison Producers of Al-berta, based in Nisku.

Sautner, who was busily preparing for the Wildrose Bi-son Convention, held March 13 and 14 in Ponoka, said that while the bison industry here hasn’t reached the peaks of its late-‘90s heyday, there’s plenty of reasons to be optimistic.

Bison meat has developed a reputation as a healthy sub-stitute for other meats, leading to what she called a “para-digm shift” and a growing demand for the product, as many heart and health experts have recommended it to patients.

“The meat is very nutritious,” she said, explaining that it is high in protein and iron, and low in fat and cholester-

ol compared to other types of red meat. “A serving can be smaller and still fill you up the way a larger serving of an-other kind of meat can.”

The re-opening of the U.S. border and the decreased val-ue of the Canadian dollar has also helped expand the market for Alberta’s bison meat, and as a result, Sautner said, farm-ers are having a hard time keeping up with the demand.

“When something pays well, people look to it as an op-portunity,” she said.

The Alberta organization has 127 member farms regis-tered for 2015, but Sautner said she estimates there are about 200 bison farms in the province in total.

She added that many of these also have other operations in addition to raising bison, estimating that there are about 65,000 bison in the province altogether.

Commercial bison farming in Alberta reached its prime in the late 1990s, as an up-and-coming industry that seemed rife with opportunity.

“There was money in the oilfield and a lot of people were using it that way,” recalled Sautner.

However, the closing of the U.S. border in 2003 follow-ing the mad cow disease scare hit the industry hard, as the ban applied to all ruminants. This effectively cut off 75 per cent of the market.

“We could no longer send our animals or our meat across the border,” Sautner said. “A lot of people decided to get out of raising bison.”

The market has slowly built back up, especially in the last five years. Sautner said that while she doesn’t anticipate it reaching those peak levels again, today the prices are good and demand is high.

She said the “energy and excitement” in the industry is evident from the registration numbers for this year’s conven-tion, with 125 registered for the Friday night banquet and 140 expected to attend their annual general meeting and other events on Saturday.

For more information, visit bisoncentre.com or call 780-955-1995.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015 Salute to Agriculture - Page 13

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Wednesday, March 18, 2015Page 14 - Salute to Agriculture

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A love affair with gardening

Stacey LavallieIndependent reporter

A few bright flowers mixed in with home gar-

dens can lead to a better yield at the end of the sea-son by helping keep unhelp-ful bugs at bay while invit-ing the helpful ones into the garden.

Marigolds, with their bright ruffled golden flow-ers, can help keep away cabbage moths, which sim-ply can’t abide the flower. Borage will help attract bees and other pollinators, as it’s extremely attractive to those insects. Calendula

and Nasturtiums are edible plants that can help create borders in the garden and look pretty to boot.

And while they aren’t any particular help to gar-dens, citronella geraniums will help keep away mos-quitos, which is a great help to the gardener, according to Beth Fulton.

For home growers, the right mix of plants is just as important as picking the right place to set a garden and en-

suring the soil is healthy and free of pests like disease and bugs, said Fulton, one of the owners of Echoglen Gardens south of Donalda.

Fulton has been in busi-ness with Echoglen Gar-dens for nearly a decade now, and for years before that, she worked at a gar-den centre in Red Deer. Her love affair with all growing things began in her child-hood, though.

“I grew up doing this,” Fulton said. “My mom had a two-acre garden. I always had a portion of it and I grew up doing it. Everyone wants to be a kid and play in the dirt, and I get to make a living out of it. How great is that?”

“Anything and every-thing” will grow well in prairie soil, especially here in central Alberta, but some plants will do better if plant-ed from sprouted plants or from seeds.

“You don’t want to put a tomato seed in the ground, because you’ll never get to-matoes,” Fulton explained. “You can plant a plant, though, and get a yield. A lot of people do it.”

When picking a place for a new garden, the first thing gardeners need to consider is light and water.

“In order for vegetables to produce and grow, they need a minimum of six hours of direct, non-shadow sunlight,” she said. “That’s one of the first challenges.continued on page 15

Beth Fulton overlooks the start of her herbs at her gardening centre, Echoglen Gardens, south of Donalda. It will be about a month before the centre opens, and these seedlings will be ready to head home to be planted in gardens and windowsill boxes.

Stacey Lavallie/Independent reporter

m

continued from page 14

“You can have a bright sunny place without good access to water, which means you will have to bring in water. You can have a place with great water but not enough light, and that just won’t work.”Once a bright and sunny place is found, the next step is soil acidity, or PH.

“You may find a sunny spot, but the soil isn’t right for growing the type of plants you want,” Fulton said. In some cases, PH can be balanced, but in other cases it could simply be too acidic, or too base, for the effort.

Soil nutrients are im-portant to check as well, as some soils, especially ones that have been used for gardening or farming be-fore, can suffer from lesser nutrients. A good compost or manure can really help there.

“You can crush egg-shells and put them around your garden to help keep out slugs,” Fulton said. The slimy creepy-crawlies can’t cross over the sharp shells, and the shells in turn biode-grade and release nutrients into the soil.

When planting root veg-etables, like turnips or pota-toes, mixing in crushed egg-shells around the sprout can help keep away maggots as well. So instead of pull-ing up vegetables in the fall and seeing creepy crawlies, a bit of shell can result in a healthier plant.

It’s important for home gardeners to keep track of where they plant what every year, so they too can en-sure crop rotation. Though home gardens are smaller than wide fields of grain or canola, like these crops they need to be rotated to prevent stripping the soil of nutri-ents and prevent the spread of diseases, Fulton noted.

“Make yourself a map,” she said. “If you planted peas in one place, plant something different the next year.”

Rookie Gardener TipsFor people new to gar-

dening, Fulton has a few tips.

“Avoid overplanting,” she said. One of the most common rookie mistakes are planting seeds too close,

resulting in crowded plants. Plants need space for roots to expand and for air to flow, but when the soil is barren it’s easy to plant them too close without realizing how much they’ll spread.

“Then there’s the trial and error of watering,” Ful-ton added. Rookie garden-

ers often swing far to the left or right on the watering scales, drowning or parch-ing their plants. The best time of day to water is in the morning and in the eve-ning, before the sun reaches its height and can evaporate the water before the plants can absorb it.

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Trays of herbs await the gardening season, grown up from seeds in the safety of a warm greenhouse. Mixing herbs in with a vegetable garden can help spruce it up, and some help keep away unwanted pests.

Stacey Lavallie/Independent reporter

Gardening a labour of love

Wednesday, March 18, 2015 Salute to Agriculture - Page 15

Wednesday, March 18, 2015Page 16 - Salute to Agriculture

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Jeffrey Heyden-KayeBlack Press reporter

Transparency in the livestock industry is increasingly becoming a priority for consumers and retailers are following suit, creating a tight squeeze for farmers.

The best way to tackle that is to increase transparency of farm operations, says Charlie Arnot, CEO, the Center for Food Integrity. He was the keynote speaker at a conference called Social License in Agriculture Thursday, March 12 in Leduc.

Hosted by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, the conference’s goal was to educate producers on social trends and how they could help educate consumers.

What does Social License mean for live-stock producers?

Arnot said there is an increased desire from consumers for transparency and rather than fight it, he suggests producers embrace it. “There’s significant economic value with maintaining social license.”

While farmers may already be follow-ing safety and personal ethics standards with regards to operations and animal treatment, he suggests one mistake could make or break a farmer. Arnot suggests there is a tipping point between social license and social control.

Social control usually comes into play when there is some sort of disaster in an industry and when that happens, the public will demand more rigid regulations, which becomes costly for producers. However, if they follow a strong social license, farmers will have more flexibility in their work.

“There’s no premium for doing what’s right but there’s a significant cost for doing it wrong,” suggested Arnot.

He says four key values will cost less and have less regulation:

EthicsValuesSetting expectationsSelf-regulationThese values are important because con-

sumers are looking for answers to their health questions, they have a greater social awareness and information is easily created. Arnot sug-gests farmers and producers must assume that everyone has a camera and can make a video and if they are already conducting their business with the four key values, then they have nothing to fear.

Farmers trusted the most Consumers trust farmers the most, says

Arnot, which is why he advocates they engage buyers and welcome questions and doubts rath-er than inundate them with data. “We’ve always assumed the public doesn’t have enough infor-mation.”

However, research has found that people are more likely to trust a producer if they have core values in place. “Values are three to five times more important in building trust.”

“If you’re already doing the right things for the right reasons, it costs you nothing to go to the top,” said Arnot.

When a producer faces criticism or ques-tions, Arnot suggests the best thing to do is to welcome them. This goes a long way in alleviat-ing concerns.

Consumers crowd-source knowledgeIn today’s digital age, it is easy for a person

to search out information that is in line with their moral standpoint, whether or not the informa-tion is right.

Arnot says the reality is that people are

using peer groups to gather information, but throwing scientific data at them is not going to help, and it is not going to work. A farmer should speak up and engage with comments like, “How can we be a resource to you?”

“Not being an expert doesn’t preclude people from having a strong opinion,” he added.

The challenge farmers and producers face is letting go of their independent nature, which will help consumers overcome their doubts. “In-creasing transparency has the most impact on skeptical people,” Arnot stressed.

There will always be detractors and people who cannot be swayed, but Arnot said the en-gagement is for the individuals who are looking for answers.

“Who you are is as important, if not more important, than what you know,” stated Arnot.

He recommends seven elements in building trust in consumers:

Motivations: act in an ethical manner. Disclosure: share important information

such as risks and how they are being tackled. Stakeholder participation: acknowledge

people’s concerns. “Even if you make decisions they don’t agree with, involve them in the pro-cess.”

Relevance: share information stakeholders feel is relevant.

Clarity: ensure information is easy to un-derstand.

Credibility: admit mistakes, apologize and accept responsibility.

Accuracy: information shared should be truthful and accurate.

“It’s not personal folks,” said Arnot, refer-ring to questions consumers ask. He recom-mends livestock producers make their process available to the public to help alleviate doubts.

Consumers want transparencyin the livestock industry

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