Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

The Royal Agricultural Winter Fair

Event Details

The Royal Agricultural Winter Fair

Time: November 3, 2023 to November 12, 2023
Location: Exhibition Place
City/Town: Toronto, Ont.
Event Type: fair
Organized By: OntAG Admin
Latest Activity: Sep 14, 2023

Export to Outlook or iCal (.ics)

Event Description

Come celebrate the best in agriculture, local food, livestock and equestrian competitions from across the country.

The Royal has grown to be the largest indoor agricultural and equestrian event in the world.  The Royal Horse Show is one of the world’s finest equestrian spectacles where international athletes compete.  Every year, 300,000 people come to the fair to celebrate the very best food, livestock and horsemanship this country has to offer.

For more information visit The Royal Winter Fair.

Comment Wall

Comment

RSVP for The Royal Agricultural Winter Fair to add comments!

Join Ontario Agriculture

Attending (1)

Agriculture Headlines from Farms.com Canada East News - click on title for full story

Farm Credit Canada Releases 2026 Hog Outlook

Farm Credit Canada is forecasting a profitable year for the pork sector, similar to last year.

Ag in the House: Feb. 2 – 6

An MP wanted answers about a proposed rail line and how it could affect farmers

Making Soybeans Great Again! And A Fools Gold?

Markets moved sharply during the week of February 2 to 6 as soybeans rallied on trade news while energy, livestock and equities strengthened and metals and cryptocurrencies weakened.

Food Freedom Day 2026 - What Canada’s Grocery Costs Really Tell Us

The Canadian Federation of Agriculture says Canadians reached Food Freedom Day on February 8, 2026 the point at which the average household has earned enough income to pay for a full year of groceries.

USDA Official Calls California’s Prop 12 a Threat to a Unified U.S. Pork Market

A senior USDA official has renewed strong criticism of California’s Proposition 12, calling the state’s animal housing and product sale standards a form of domestic trade protectionism that could disrupt the national pork market and raise costs for producers and consumers. At a recent agriculture policy event, the deputy secretary of agriculture described laws like Prop 12 as creating de-facto trade barriers within the United States. Under the complaint, when a single state sets production standards that apply not just to products sold from within the state but to all products entering its borders, it can place producers in other regions at a competitive disadvantage. Prop 12, first approved by California voters in 2018, sets minimum space requirements for certain livestock and prohibits the sale of pork and other animal products in California that do not meet those standards. Because California represents a large share of U.S. pork consumption but only a small share of production, t

© 2026   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service