Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

Mel Luymes
  • Female
  • Guelph, ON
  • Canada
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To Spray or Not to Spray? Panel Discussion at Online

February 12, 2021 from 10am to 12pm
Off-target pesticide movement can have serious consequences. Not only to a crop, but it can increase insurance premiums, damage reputations and hurt our entire industry. In this all-star panel discussion, we’ll discuss the risks and best practices associated with crop protection in Ontario. See More
Jan 19, 2021
Mel Luymes posted events
Dec 11, 2020
Mel Luymes posted events
Dec 7, 2020

Profile Information

How are you involved in agriculture?
Farm Crops, Ag Association

Comment Wall (3 comments)

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At 7:09pm on August 7, 2019, James P said…

Good Day,

How is everything with you, I picked interest on you after going through your short profile and deemed it necessary to write you immediately. I have something very vital to disclose to you, but I found it difficult to express myself here, since it's a public site.Could you please get back to me on ( mr.jamespollard01@gmail.com ) for the full details.
Have a nice day
Thanks God bless.

At 6:09am on February 17, 2016, Etienne AVOUAMPO said…
Avofarm is involved in organic agriculture and sustainable development. With your generosity, Avofarm must increase production and meet consumer needs for organic vegetables. Please go to the website in the "Contact us" and please enter "Donate" and give generously. thank you very much. www.avofarm.fr
At 3:43am on December 24, 2015, Joe Dales said…

Welcome to the Ontario Agriculture community website at www.OntAg.Farms.com
Happy Holidays,
Joe Dales
Farms.com

 
 
 

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

10% of the Cows, Half the Beef Exported: How Canada Punches Above Its Weight

With just under 3.5 million beef cows and a fed kill shy of 3 million head, Canada raises a fraction of North America’s cattle — but exports roughly half of what it produces as live cattle or beef. Canadian Cattle Association (CCA) General Manager Ryder Lee says Alberta–Saskatchewan cow country, Ontario and Alberta feeding hubs, and U.S. packing plants in Washington, Utah and Pennsylvania are tightly interlinked, making border access and science-based trade rules non-negotiable for producers on both sides. Raised on a commercial cow-calf operation in southern Saskatchewan — just 20 miles north of Montana — Lee grew up in what he describes as “cattle country.” After earning an animal science degree, he spent six years in agricultural sales with Dow AgroSciences before stumbling into cattle industry association work. He spent a decade in Ottawa doing policy lobbying, then served seven years as CEO of the Saskatchewan Cattlemen’s Association before joining CCA as General Manager three y

Agricultural giant at centre of urban-rural housing divide in Ontario border city

It's been all about building as many new homes as possible in Ontario recently, but now a big corporation wants to stop housing projects in the Sarnia area — something that’s pitting rural and urban communities against one another. Cargill wants the provincial government to utilize its Minister’s Zoning Order (MZO) for the opposite reason it was originally intended. The tool has become increasingly common as Ontario pushes to build 1.5 million homes by 2031. An MZO allows the housing minister to override the local planning process and make decisions directly. Usually, that means speeding up development. But in Sarnia, Cargill wants Minister of Municipal Affairs of Housing Rob Flack to step in and block new homes from being built near its property. The company is one of the biggest agricultural corporations in the world, and it operates a large grain terminal at Sarnia Harbour. This is where farmers truck their corn, soybeans and wheat at harvest time. Some of the product also comes

KIOTI entering mini excavator market

On June 2 the manufacturer announced the release of the MX Series mini excavators

CFIA Reports Show Strong Canadian Food Safety Compliance Across National Testing Programs

New CFIA testing results show consistently high compliance across Canada’s food supply, supporting consumer confidence and trade credibility.

: Ontario Crops Show Strong Start Despite Weather Challenges

Ontario crops show steady progress with near-complete planting, early growth challenges, and rising weed and disease concerns across corn, soybean, and wheat fields.

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