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: 3705

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion


MitchellBranch profile

MitchellBranch Hoping to get rolling with Soybeans this week :)


DevinHomick profile

DevinHomick First load of soybeans since the rains just came into Delhi. Moisture was @ 15.3%.

AshDee_10 profile

AshDee_10 Maizex RR2 Titanium Soybeans running 67bpa @ 15% in Culloden today !!! @KDDempsey@d_mccolm #yabuddy #harvest11

ScoutingFields profile

ScoutingFields Soybean plots and sidexside's this afternoon in the Mt.Albert and Uxbridge area. Pleasantly surprised with yields. 50-63 bushels at 14-14.5%

AdrianVanDyk profile

AdrianVanDyk http://t.co/P7ydT8Wv Soys coming off east of Blenheim on the back ridge.


TVRSCIA profile

TVRSCIA Combining #soys in Drumbo. First load yesterday @ 13.5%. #ontag http://t.co/MfHeGB64

Cropper01 profile

Cropper01 Back at #soybean #harvest11 this morning moisture is 14 http://t.co/FdlyLHEJ

Dave_Curry profile

Dave_Curry Soybeans are starting to flow into the Harmony elevator. Moisture's are hovering around 13-14% so far.

HustonFarms profile

HustonFarms Finally began #harvest11 with soys here in sunny SW Ont. Chance to vote and combine all in the same day #sweet.

stacey_at_dfi profile

stacey_at_dfi We're getting close here in Dover. Soy harvest should begin by tomorrow afternoon #ontag #harvest11

BarlowFarms1843 profile

BarlowFarms1843 Started the combines up today in soys, ground not quite fit for wheat. Crappy yield but 12.5% moisture

Dan_Foster_ profile

Dan_Foster_ #harvest11 soybeans in Highgate #PRIDE PS2290NR2. Excellent yields. http://t.co/kX4Nlh62

Reply to Discussion

RSS

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

*Webinars* Strategies for Reducing Calf Losses: Veterinary Insights from Across Canada

Are calf losses cutting into your beef operation’s productivity and profitability? You are not alone! The BCRC is hosting two 90-minute webinars featuring veterinarians from across Canada who work directly with cow-calf operations like yours. A March 18 webinar will feature veterinarians who work with Eastern Canadian cow-calf operations, sharing insights on practical prevention strategies to implement before, during and after calving to increase calf survivability. During the March 25 webinar, Western Canadian veterinarians will outline regionally relevant approaches for reducing calf losses, highlighting essential pre-calving strategies and practical management techniques to use during calving to help ensure healthier outcomes for both cows and calves.   Both webinars will include an extended Q&A session, giving you plenty of time to ask questions. Each webinar will also be available for?one continuing education (CE) credit for veterinarians and registered veterinary technologists

China halts tariffs on some Canadian ag

Some Canadian ag products will have tariff-free access to China as of March 1

Farmers Face Harsh Truths While Refusing to Abandon Their Way of Life

A recent post on social media by a friend asked to add a line from a movie that fans of it would instantly recognize. One of my contributions was, “You can’t handle the truth.” While that line came in a courtroom scene from one of my favorite movies with Jack Nicholson yelling it at Tom Cruise, it actually got me thinking about farming. Many of us who grew up on a farm have seen both good and tough times. That is the truth. But what are we currently experiencing and can we handle these truths? American Farm Bureau recently said there was a 46% increase in farm bankruptcies in 2025. That’s pretty sobering. Those of us who grew up during the farm crisis in the 1980s, when more than 250,000 farmers filed for bankruptcy, never want to hear about someone losing a farm. For a few years I’ve personally been concerned about what’s happening in our farming communities. Interest rates have been plenty high; input costs don’t seem to come down when market prices do. Farmers have always been pr

As US agriculture flails, farmers see big corn acres as best bet to break even

U.S. farmers, though punished by slumping prices after last year’s monster corn harvest, are expected to cut back only slightly on their plantings of the grain in 2026 as they brace for a fourth straight year of narrow profit margins or even losses. Farmers expect corn, the most widely grown U.S. crop, to hew close to break-even levels this year, supported by strong usage. Some see soybeans as riskier, given rising competition from Brazil and a volatile U.S. trade relationship with top buyer China. “Right now, you absolutely cannot make money on beans,” said Tim Gregerson, who farms in eastern Nebraska. “You can probably break even on corn, but you are going to have to have an extraordinary yield, or a price increase,” Gregerson said. Most growers in America’s Midwest farm belt grow both crops, alternating what gets planted on each field from year to year to boost soil health. Many add wheat, sorghum, cotton or other crops to their rotations. But among farmers who have some flexible

This is Agriculture: Producer, advocate, industry leader

Jill Verwey lives and breathes agriculture. Her roots growing up on a mixed grain and cattle operation in rural Manitoba lend themselves well to her current roles – the office manager for Verwey Farms Ltd., president of Keystone Agricultural Producers (KAP), and first vice president of the Canadian Federation of Agriculture (CFA). Jill’s pride in Canadian agriculture is unmistakable. Learn more about her career and advocacy journey below. Describe your job or product in one sentence. My role includes managing the day-to-day administration and financial operations of our family farm, overseeing food and animal safety and human resources, and representing agricultural producers provincially and nationally through leadership roles with KAP, CFA, and various boards and advisory groups. Where did you grow up? Was it an agriculture or urban environment? I grew up in rural Manitoba on a mixed grain and cattle operation. I have been married for 32 years, and my husband and I are involved in

© 2026   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service