Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

Soybean harvest in Ontario, some have started, have you? When will your fields be ready? Check out the results ...

There have been a few post on Twitter today - see below - on soybeans being harvested. Have you started? When will your fields be ready?

 

Views: 3406

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

 


ScoutingFields12:37pm via Twitter for BlackBerry®

Soy,White and Adzuki beans all being harvested on this beautiful fall Sept day in central On

 


Dan_Foster_ Soybeans planted after Wheat in Tecumseh. Looks like a 30 bushel crop!
#ontag
yfrog.com/ntv54xgj

 

 


AshDee_1012:08pm via Twitter for BlackBerry®

Maizex Titanium Soybeans coming off in Tillsonburg area !! Customer happy with yields so far :) 



You know ontario soy harvest is late when there is only 1 truck at jri's terminal to unload yfrog.com/nu36493766j

 


CharlesWert11:12pm via Twitter for BlackBerry®

91M01 73.68 bushels per acre!

 


nstirk3:13pm via web

Corn silage coming into full swing. Early soybean fields ready, majority will be 1-2 weeks. #Peel #Ontag

 


lolamayfarms3:28pm via Twitter for iPhone

@OntAg nothing happening in Brant. Few acres off. Avg yield so far. Hope to start this weekend

d_mccolm profile

d_mccolm RR2 Cobalts coming off at 59 bu in St-Marcel. Off to a great start to bean harvest!


Fergus9 profile

Fergus9 Dust is flying in Dundas Cty. PRIDE PS 0650R2 59.5 Bu/ac. http://t.co/FfhqDzwA

denver679 profile

denver679 Combine ready just waiting for rain to stop. Think 45/bpa is going to b good this year

cropwiz profile

cropwiz Trying to beat the rain here with W. Bean harvest. Hope to get at least one field done. Some wheat going in around here also.

SunderlandCoop profile

SunderlandCoop Hoping to combine some soybean plots this week. Beans took on a lot of moisture over the weekend. Sun please come out!!

Reply to Discussion

RSS

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

Collaboration builds stronger, flood-resilient Township of Langley

Farmers and families in the Township of Langley will be better prepared for flooding with work underway to improve pump capacity on flood plains and irrigation systems that will strengthen the area’s food security. “The reality of a changing climate means we could see more frequent and intense flooding in the Fraser Valley, and it is vital we work together to keep our communities safe and our food supply stable,” said Pam Alexis, Minister of Agriculture and Food. “This is why we’re supporting collaborative projects that will help keep food on the table, protect the livelihoods of farmers and ensure the health of local ecosystems in the face of future flooding.” The Township of Langley, in partnership with the Kwantlen First Nation and Rivershed Society of BC, is working on a multi-phase project that includes upgrading water infrastructure and adding pumping capacity to manage flooding in the area. These upgrades will improve water flow and storage, increasing the flood resiliency of

Deal to protect ranch from development means family can keep raising cattle there

An agreement to protect a sprawling ranch in southern Alberta from development is the largest of its kind in the country, the Nature Conservancy of Canada says, and will allow the family that owns it to continue raising cattle there. The 22,000-hectare McIntyre Ranch was founded south of Lethbridge, Alta., in 1894 by William McIntyre and it remained in his family until his son, Billy, died in 1947. A longtime family friend and employee, Ralph Thrall, bought the property after Billy’s death and the Thrall family continues to own and operate it today. “We’ve just maintained the legacy of sustainable ranching that the McIntyres began when they came up from Texas and saw the overgrazing that had occurred through the Midwest, and so they learned through others’ mistakes and left the grass rather than taking it all,” Ralph Thrall III said Sunday in a phone interview from Lethbridge. The agreement, formally announced Monday in recognition of Earth Day, is a partnership between the Thrall

B.C. to increase local milk production with $25-million factory investment

The British Columbia government is contributing up to $25 million toward the expansion of a milk production plant aimed at boosting the supply of locally sourced food. The province said the construction expansion to Vitalus Nutrition’s plant in Abbotsford, B.C., will begin this summer and will increase local milk production by 50 per cent, to 1.4 billion litres annually. The project will boost local production for dairy products such as butter, which is currently required to be shipped from Eastern Canada to fill local demand, the government said in a statement. Premier David Eby told a news conference announcing the project Tuesday that it will also create up to 100 more jobs at the site. Eby said the pandemic as well as recent climate disasters, including the atmospheric river that swamped southwestern British Columbia in November 2021, impacted supply chains, elevated grocery prices and showed a need to produce more food locally. “We understand that we still need to ensure that

No-Till Farmer & Farm Equipment Named Finalists for National Writing Awards

Lessiter Media’s No-Till Farmer and Farm Equipment editors were recognized by the American Society of Business Press Editors with regional awards in the association’s 2024 Azbee Awards of Excellence and have been announced as national finalists for the program as well.

Award-Winning Dealers Share Precision Revenue Growth Opportunities & More

A trio of representatives from Precision Farming Dealer’s Most Valuable Dealerships (MVD) shared their keys to success during the 2024 Precision Farming Dealer Summit in Indianapolis.

© 2024   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service