June 22, 2015

4-H CANADA REBRANDING UNDERWAY WITH NEW LOGO . . . DAIRY PRICES HIT SIX-YEAR LOW – BUT MILK POWDER STABILIZES . . . THE BUZZ ABOUT BLUEBERRY POLLINATION . . . ONCE AND FUTURE NUT: HOW GENETIC ENGINEERING MAY BRING BACK CHESTNUTS . . . NOVA SCOTIA RURAL SCHOOL CLOSURES THREATEN COMMUNITIES, SAY RESIDENTS . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

4-H CANADA REBRANDING UNDERWAY WITH NEW LOGO
Source: FCC 4-H Canada has a new logo. The 102-year-old youth development organization unveiled the update – the first in more than 50 years – at its annual general meeting in Fredericton, N.B., on June 11. Sporting a maple leaf at its centre, the new logo is part of a major rebranding for 4-H Canada to make it more relevant to today’s youth. “Agriculture has changed dramatically since 1913, and so has 4-H,” says Shannon Benner, chief executive officer of 4-H Canada. “We need to talk to young people today in the language that they speak and the brand is part of packaging 4-H to this generation of young people.” (read more)

DAIRY PRICES HIT SIX-YEAR LOW – BUT MILK POWDER STABILIZES
Source: The Bullvine
Dairy prices fell to a fresh six-year low at GlobalDairyTrade auction, amid continued doubts over demand, although there were signs of stabilization in the important milk powder market.
The GlobalDairyTrade index, which is based on prices paid at its bi-monthly dairy auctions, fell 1.3 percent from the last trading event to its lowest level since July 2009. Prices of anhydrous milk fat led the retreat, falling by 8.9 percent. The decline at the auction, run by the New Zealand milk giant Fonterra, was the seventh in a row – a spree in which prices have slumped by 30 percent – and chimed with continuing pessimism in the dairy market. (read more)

THE BUZZ ABOUT BLUEBERRY POLLINATION
Source: West Prince Graphic
With blueberries in bloom beekeepers do their final touches before moving them for pollination. The benefit is two-fold: blueberry growers depend on pollination while beekeepers supplement their income and can harvest honey by moving their beehives into the blueberry fields. Ken Peters, a beekeeper located on the O’Leary Road currently runs a 35-hive operation, or, at least, that is the number he put into pollination. Ken’s Honey Bee Farm lost 22 hives over the winter with a few more being too weak to survive and had to be combined with other hives. (read more)

ONCE AND FUTURE NUT: HOW GENETIC ENGINEERING MAY BRING BACK CHESTNUTS
Source: NPR One of the great autumn pastimes of the 1800s was nutting – where families, friends, and farmers went around clubbing stately chestnut trees, or shimmying up 100-foot tall trunks to pound the branches. A fusillade of nuts would fall to the ground and be scooped up instantly, to be transformed into pan-fried bread, porridge, pickles, preserves, cream pie – and countless other nutritious favorites of colonial times. Then, in the early 1900s, a plague decimated American chestnut trees. The deadly fungus, known as blight, caught a ride to the U.S. on a much smaller and fungus-resistant Chinese chestnut. The stately, soaring American tree was utterly vulnerable. Almost overnight, a quarter of our Eastern forests – 4 billion trees – vanished and with the trees went a nut that for centuries had nourished wildlife and humans alike. (read more)

NOVA SCOTIA RURAL SCHOOL CLOSURES THREATEN COMMUNITIES, SAY RESIDENTS
Source: CBC.ca
Provincial politicians need to take risks and jump on board with more innovative and entrepreneurial ideas if Nova Scotia is to thrive, says an expert in community development and social policy. "We have to figure out how to do way more, so that we don't have way less. That means we have to say yes to a lot more things and we have to be creative in developing a lot more things that fit the place we are and want to be," said Mark Austin. (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

BEE LOSSES CONSISTENT ACROSS ONTARIO
http://www.producer.com/daily/bee-losses-consistent-across-ontario/

WET, WET, WET: EQUINE HEALTH AT RISK WHEN RAIN KEEPS FALLING
http://horsetalk.co.nz/2015/06/18/wet-wet-wet-equine-health-risk-rain/#axzz3dk8Ri8dl

INTERNATIONAL NANOTECHNOLOGY CONFERENCE FOR RENEWABLE MATERIALS
http://www.pulpandpapercanada.com/events/event-details.aspx?id=61225&er=NA

HOW TO GROW FRUITS, VEGETABLES AND HERBS IN A CONTAINER GARDEN
modernfarmer.com/2015/06/how-to-grow-fruits-vegetables-and-herbs-in-a-container-garden/

June 18, 2015

LOCAL OYSTER FARMER FINALIST IN CANADIAN AWARD CONTEST . . . “HOLLYWOOD SHARK” LAWYER TAKES ON MONSANTO . . . PAPER EXCELLENCE WILL BE HERE FOR A CENTURY, SAYS EXECUTIVE . . . N.S. AQUACULTURE NEEDS BETTER RISK MANAGEMENT: AUDITOR GENERAL . . . J.D. IRVING, PORT HAWKESBURY PAPER SUBSIDIES ARE IN U.S. CROSSHAIRS . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

LOCAL OYSTER FARMER FINALIST IN CANADIAN AWARD CONTEST 
A hardworking West Prince entrepreneur has been given the opportunity to compete for a prestigious award. Martin O’Brian the President of Cascumpec Bay Oyster Company Ltd has been chosen as a finalist for the Business Development Bank of Canada’s 2015 Young Entrepreneur Award (BDC). According to the BDC website, this contest rewards outstanding Canadian entrepreneurs between the ages of 18 and 35. The grand prize of $100,000 is awarded to the recipient based partially on public vote (online), and partially on the score given by a national deciding committee. (read more)

“HOLLYWOOD SHARK” LAWYER TAKES ON MONSANTO
Source: Epoch Times
When genetic engineering first came on to the food science scene a few decades ago, it promised the consumer many new possibilities. Since then, a few novel inventions have come and gone, but the bulk of biotechnology has been focused on a feature the consumer never sees: weed management. The vast majority of the corn, soy, and canola sold in the United States today has been genetically engineered with a single trait: to survive exposure from an herbicide called glyphosate. This chemical is perhaps better known by the Monsanto trade name, Roundup, but today several biotechnology companies sell glyphosate. Most of the world’s supply now comes from Chinese manufacturers. (read more)

PAPER EXCELLENCE WILL BE HERE FOR A CENTURY, SAYS EXECUTIVE
Source: Pulp & Paper Canada
On the occasion of the re-start of Paper Excellence’s Chetwynd pulp mill, the media-shy company opened up a bit in an interview with Business in Vancouver. The company’s deputy CEO, Pedro Chang, said the company is in Canada for the long haul. “Many pulp manufacturers look at the pulp industry (to be in) sunset,” Chang told the magazine. “Paper Excellence, our vision is different. We look at it as sunrise. We will be here for a century – as far as Asia continues emerging.” While there is a family connection between Paper Excellence and Asia Pulp and Paper (Jackson Widjaja is the son of Teguh Widjaja, chairman of Sinar Mas Group, which owns APP), Chang told Business in Vancouver that Paper Excellence is not a subsidiary of either company. (read more)

N.S. AQUACULTURE NEEDS BETTER RISK MANAGEMENT: AUDITOR GENERAL
Source: The Chronicle Herald
A disease outbreak could occur at an aquaculture operation without the provincial government knowing because there is no provincial regulatory requirement for operators to report fish disease outbreaks. That is just one of the findings in auditor general Michael Pickup’s June report, released Thursday. (read more)

J.D. IRVING, PORT HAWKESBURY PAPER SUBSIDIES ARE IN U.S. CROSSHAIRS
Source: CBC.ca
The U.S. government is investigating whether to impose trade sanctions on paper exports from the Maritimes because of industrial subsidies that producers receive from the New Brunswick and Nova Scotia governments. The U.S. International Trade Commission said in a preliminary ruling in April that American paper manufacturers have been hurt by the low price of subsidized paper coming from J.D. Irving Ltd. and Port Hawkesbury Paper in Nova Scotia.  (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

LANDFILL OF LETTUCE: WHY WERE THESE GREENS TOSSED BEFORE THEIR TIME?
http://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2015/06/16/414667913/landfill-of-lettuce-what-happens-to-salad-past-its-prime

SASKATCHEWAN HOG FARMERS URGED TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF BIOSECURITY PROGRAMME
http://www.thepigsite.com/swinenews/39876/saskatchewan-hog-farmers-urged-to-take-advantage-of-biosecurity-programme/

FORGET SHARKS, YOU SHOULD BE AFRAID OF BEES: A LOOK AT AMERICA’S DEADLIEST ANIMALS
http://news.nationalpost.com/news/world/forget-sharks-you-should-be-afraid-of-bees-a-look-at-americas-deadliest-animals

TINY NUMBER OF BEES ACCOUNT FOR MOST CROP POLLINATION, STUDY FINDS
http://www.agcanada.com/daily/tiny-number-of-bees-account-for-most-crop-pollination-study-finds

June 17, 2015

EXCITEMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL FORESTRY EVENT BUILDS . . . ALMA BERRY PRODUCER PREDICTS DELAYED STRAWBERRY SEASON . . . CAMPBELL CARRIAGE FACTORY SET TO OPEN FOR 2015 SEASON . . . CHARLES “ARNOLD” MEISNER PASSES AWAY . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

EXCITEMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL FORESTRY EVENT BUILDS
Source: Master Promotions
Excitement is growing and planning is well underway for the 2016 edition of DEMO International®, taking place September 22-24, 2016 in Maple Ridge, BC. Owned by the Canadian Woodlands Forum (CWF) and produced by Master Promotions Ltd., this world-class event is unlike any other in Canada. A show this big only happens every four years, so it is definitely seen as a “must-attend” for those in the industry.  (read more)

ALMA BERRY PRODUCER PREDICTS DELAYED STRAWBERRY SEASON
Source: West Prince Graphic
Cold weather has set things back by a few weeks, leaving Alma farmer Alan Rennie of Rennie’s U-Pick strawberry farm, predicting it is going to be a late year for most berry producers. Last year, Rennie was accurate with his late season prediction, when he estimated berry season to start eight to 10 days later than usual. Although Rennie stated the record amount of snow fall this past winter season, proved beneficial to his 10 acres of strawberry plants, providing a protective snow cover; the issue was the snow didn’t leave quick enough. “The season will not start much later than last year,” said Rennie, who figured strawberry picking season will start around the week of July 6. (read more)

CAMPBELL CARRIAGE FACTORY SET TO OPEN FOR 2015 SEASON
Source: The Sackville Tribune Post
Anyone looking for a great way to spend an afternoon of family fun should consider attending the Campbell Carriage Factory Museum’s (CCFM) official opening on Sunday, June 21. Visiting the CCFM offers a look back at the various methods of handmade carriage production as well as the evolution of the Campbell family’s company from 1855 to the factory’s closing in 1949. (read more)

CHARLES “ARNOLD” MEISNER PASSES AWAY
Source: AtlanticFarmer.com
Former Maritime Lumber Bureau Chairman Charles “Arnold” Meisner of Liverpool, Nova Scotia passed away peacefully June 3, 2015. He was 88. Arnold worked for Mersey Paper Co Ltd. (Bowater) for 41 years, beginning at age 17 working in the woods as a scaler. Arnold was tasked with developing the lumber business for Mersey in Nova Scotia. He went on to spearhead the building of, and then to manage the Bowater Sawmill at Oakhill, where he developed overseas lumber markets and loaded ships in Bridgewater destined for the UK. After retiring from Bowater, Arnold spent 12 years operating Eacan Timber Ltd., a successful lumber sales company he founded with his son, Brad, who continues to run the business today, celebrating its 35th anniversary this year. Arnold served as the chairman of the board of the Maritime Lumber Bureau for the term 1967-68, and was honored as the Bureau’s Lumberman of the Year award in 1986 and again in 1999.

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

FDA ORDERS FOOD MANUFACTURERS TO STOP USING TRANS FAT WITHIN THREE YEARS
http://www.canadiancattlemen.ca/daily/quebec-to-halt-asra-for-veal-sector?module=under-carousel&pgtype=homepage&i=

QUEBEC TO HALT ASRA FOR VEAL SECTOR
http://www.canadiancattlemen.ca/daily/quebec-to-halt-asra-for-veal-sector?module=under-carousel&pgtype=homepage&i=

TIGHTER THAN AVERAGE SUPPLIES OF WINTER WHEAT EXPECTED THIS YEAR
http://www.thepoultrysite.com/poultrynews/35254/tighter-than-average-supplies-of-winter-wheat-expected-this-year/

FEED CONVERSION RATIO ‘IS NOT MEASURE OF DAIRY EFFICIENCY’
http://www.thebullvine.com/news/feed-conversion-ratio-is-not-measure-of-dairy-efficiency/

June 16, 2015

FALMOUTH FIRE DESTROYS BARN, HORSES PERISH . . . TWO LOCAL BUSINESSES TO BENEFIT FROM MICHELIN DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY LOAN PROGRAM . . . MIGHTY FARMING MICROBES: COMPANIES HARNESS BACTERIA TO GIVE CROPS A BOOST . . . WEBINAR: FARMLAND INVESTMENTS AND WATER RIGHTS . . . MAKE HAY WITH A SCYTHE: FREE HANDMOWING WEEKEND JULY 4 – 5 . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

FALMOUTH FIRE DESTROYS BARN, HORSES PERISH
Source: CBC.ca
A barn fire near Falmouth, N.S. this morning claimed the lives of a number of horses, and the horse community in Nova Scotia is coming together to support the owner of the stable. The blaze destroyed a barn at Crosby Stables, owned by Kevin Crosby who is a well-known breeder in the equestrian community. Heavy black smoke could soon be seen from as far away as Windsor and Highway 101. Windsor Deputy Fire Chief Daniel Lavers said it was a difficult fire to knock down. “We're deep into Falmouth. No hydrants.” Lavers confirmed many horses were in the barn and that some of them didn’t make it out. (read more)

TWO LOCAL BUSINESSES TO BENEFIT FROM MICHELIN DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY LOAN PROGRAM
Source: Truro Daily News
TruLeaf/GoodLeaf and Forever Memories Equestrian, both based in Bible Hill, are recipients of loans through the partners of Bergengren Credit Union, Northern Opportunities for Business Limited (NOBL), Guysborough CBDC, and Michelin Development. The loans were announced on Monday and the businesses are two of 18 small businesses in total from Antigonish, Colchester, and Pictou counties to receive loans through the program. (read more)

MIGHTY FARMING MICROBES: COMPANIES HARNESS BACTERIA TO GIVE CROPS A BOOST
Source: NPR
What if farmers, instead of picking up some agricultural chemicals at their local dealer, picked up a load of agricultural microbes instead? It's something to contemplate, because some big names in the pesticide business – like Bayer and Monsanto – are putting money behind attempts to turn soil microbes into tools that farmers can use to give their crops a boost. (read more)

WEBINAR: FARMLAND INVESTMENTS AND WATER RIGHTS
Source: International Institute for Sustainable Development
A new IISD report, Farmland Investments and Water: the legal regimes at stake, examines the relationship between the international legal regimes governing water rights and investment in farmland, and the implications for several key African water basins. IISD hosting a webinar on Wednesday, June 17, at 3pm (Central European Time) (read more)

MAKE HAY WITH A SCYTHE: FREE HANDMOWING WEEKEND JULY 4 – 5
Source: Harrison Lewis Centre
Join Maritime champion handmowers Peter and Helene Redden for a weekend sponsored by Rural Delivery magazine learning and perfecting how to mow grass with a scythe. Whether it’s to make hay for small livestock or to clean up your lawn, yard, field, or ditch, imagine being able to hear what’s going on around you (and smell the flowers and fresh air instead of gas fumes) as you mow. Come to the Harrison Lewis Centre in Sandy Bay, N.S., next door to Thomas Raddall Provincial Park, the weekend of July 4 and 5 to learn and share knowledge using and maintaining scythes, as well as other implements for harvesting hay and grain. Bring your own scythe if you have one. We have at least two school scythes. With the generous support of Rural Delivery we are able to offer free instruction, and accommodation (meals, a bunk, or tent site) for $60 and some help preparing and cleaning up after meals. (Musicians bring your voices and instruments for evenings around the campfire.)
HLC@eastlink.ca 

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

THE ROLE OF GROUND BEETLES (COLEOPTERA: CARABIDAE) IN WEED SEED CONSUMPTION
http://www.bioone.org/doi/10.1614/WS-D-14-00067.1

DOES EQUINE PPID AFFECT IMMUNE RESPONSES TO VACCINATION?
http://www.thehorse.com/articles/35920/does-equine-ppid-affect-immune-responses-to-vaccination

DEADLINE FOR EFP STEWARDSHIP AWARD NOMINATIONS
http://www.nsfa-fane.ca/efp/award-application/

U.S. LIVESTOCK: CME LIVE CATTLE END MOSTLY FIRM
http://www.canadiancattlemen.ca/daily/u-s-livestock-cme-live-cattle-end-mostly-firm?module=carousel&pgtype=section&i=1

June 15, 2015

MAYOR REMAINS HOPEFUL NEW USE WILL BE FOUND FOR FORMER MCCAIN PLANT … EGG-CESSIVE? SUPERSTORE GRADING STANDARDS HURTING CAPE BRETON FARM … FOREST INDUSTRY INTERNS BEGIN THE GREEN DREAM … ATLANTIC DAIRY AND FORAGE INSTITUTE SHUTDOWN STUNS WORKERS …OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

MAYOR REMAINS HOPEFUL NEW USE WILL BE FOUND FOR FORMER MCCAIN PLANT
Source: Island Farmer
This time last year, the McCain plant was a major employer in the community of Borden-Carleton. Now, the only occupants are security guards, and the McCain logo that instantly identified the plant has been scraped off. McCain Foods closed the plant last October, citing a decline in sales and the fact the facility was small and in major need of an upgrade. The province has been working to attract a new business or businesses to the plant and Mayor Dean Sexton remains hopeful those efforts will soon pay off. In fact, it looked like an announcement was coming just prior to the spring election call. (read more)

EGG-CESSIVE? SUPERSTORE GRADING STANDARDS HURTING CAPE BRETON FARM
Source: The Chronicle Herald
The owners of Eyking Farms in Millville are preparing to lose one of their biggest egg buyers in Atlantic Superstore. Chris and Theodore Eyking say they can no longer afford to meet what they call the grocery chain’s excessive egg grading standards that cost the business about $70,000 in added costs and paperwork each year. “Every year it’s something different,” said Theodore. “You’re trying to hit a moving target. It seems like every year, they’re increasing the amount of things they want changed. Your station could be perfectly fine last year but it’s not as good this year. It’s almost like they’re looking for something different.” (read more)

FOREST INDUSTRY INTERNS BEGIN THE GREEN DREAM
Source: Pulp & Paper Canada
Fifteen students are receiving a scholarship and an iPad Mini from the Forest Products Association of Canada as part of the 2015 Green Dream Internship program. The students will blog about their adventures as interns in Canada’s forest products industry. The blogs will be posted on TheGreenestWorkforce.ca, an online resource tool highlighting the future direction of the forest products industry and job opportunities available across the country. (read more)

ATLANTIC DAIRY AND FORAGE INSTITUTE SHUTDOWN STUNS WORKERS
Source: CBC.ca
The only dairy research farm in the Maritimes abruptly shut down earlier this week and left almost a dozen farmhands without work. The Atlantic Dairy and Forage Institute (ADFI), a private 60 hectare working dairy firm in Fredericton Junction, shut down last week. Farm manager Robert McLaughlin worked there for years and said he and the staff were stunned by how quickly the shutdown happened. McLaughlin said two board members gathered the staff together and gave them their two weeks notice. “By probably 3:30 that day, they had sold the cows and Wednesday morning by quarter after 12, we had them all loaded on a truck headed for P.E.I.,” he said. (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST
    
CONSIDER ALTERNATIVE TO PIGLET CASTRATION: VET
http://www.producer.com/2015/06/consider-alternative-to-piglet-castration-vet/

THE TOP 10 RESPONSIBILITIES OF SUCCESSFUL HERD MANAGERS
http://www.thebullvine.com/news/the-top-10-responsibilities-of-successful-herd-managers/

RESEARCHERS UNCOVER STRUCTURE OF ENZYME THAT MAKES PLANT CELLULOSE
http://www.thecropsite.com/articles/1916/researchers-uncover-structure-of-enzyme-that-makes-plant-cellulose/

GM NOT TO BLAME FOR COW SICKNESS 
http://www.thebeefsite.com/news/48086/gm-not-to-blame-for-cow-sickness/

June 12, 2015

ALARMS RAISED ABOUT LYME DISEASE IN N.S . . .TELECOM COMPANY TO RUN TRIAL OF WHEAT STRAW PAPER . . .KINGS COUNTY FARMS HARNESSING THE POWER OF TECHNOLOGY . . .4-H YOUTH PROGRAM REBRANDS AND HEADS INTO NEXT CENTURY . . .OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

ALARMS RAISED ABOUT LYME DISEASE IN N.S.
Source: The Chronicle Herald
Certain species of ticks found in Nova Scotia are primary carriers of borrelia, the bacteria that causes Lyme disease. Veterinarians across the province are dealing with unusually high numbers of tick bites and Lyme cases this spring. “We are seeing quite a few bites and new cases of Lyme," said Dr. Dana Power, owner of Annapolis Animal Hospital in New Minas. “We diagnosed probably six or seven cases in my practice last year. This year, we’ve got at least seven or eight new ones already." She said Nova Scotia is a hot spot for ticks, especially around the South Shore. “We carry a very high population of deer ticks with the borrelia bacteria," said Power. “This is a high-risk area for Lyme disease." (read more)

TELECOM COMPANY TO RUN TRIAL OF WHEAT STRAW PAPER
Source: Pulp & Paper Canada
Sprint will test the use of paper made from wheat straw in a two-month pilot project, a company executive said recently during the Sustainable Brands conference. According to a report in the Guardian newspaper on June 4, explained that Sprint is seeking an alternative to wood-based paper. “Wheat straw is ready for prime time. Hopefully we will pave the way for creating national demand,” said Keanon Swan, manager of strategic partner relationships and postal alliance at Sprint, according to the Guardian story. (read more)

KINGS COUNTY FARMS HARNESSING THE POWER OF TECHNOLOGY
Source: NovaNewsNow
A software development company born out of a shared desire to strengthen regional food systems is introducing farmers to some new tools of the trade The Kings County-based company, aptly named HarvestHand New Media Communities, offers Community Shared Agriculture (CSA) producers management software that is meant to increase profitability while building valuable connections among farmers and their shareholders. HarvestHand’s software has been a game changer for Patricia Bishop, who owns and operates TapRoot Farms in Port Williams with her husband, Josh Oulton. (read more)

4-H YOUTH PROGRAM REBRANDS AND HEADS INTO NEXT CENTURY
Source: Global News
The century-old youth program “4-H” is modernizing, with leaders spending Thursday trying to push the program into the next century. The program started in 1913 in Roland, Man., with a foundation in agriculture but quickly spread across Canada as a popular youth development and leadership program. “4-H is about setting kids up to be successful in life and building confidence, responsibility, and the opportunity to contribute to their community and to caring and contributing young leaders,” said 4-H Canada’s CEO Shannon Benner. (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

PROFIT TAKING TRIMS LIVE CATTLE FUTURES; HOGS WEAKER
http://www.producer.com/daily/profit-taking-trims-live-cattle-futures-hogs-weaker/

ALMA ONT MAN FINED FOR ILLEGAL MEAT PROCESSING
http://www.ontariofarmer.com/sitepages/

ASSISI ANIMAL HEALTH DISCUSSES THE HORSE HEALTH TRACKER APP FOR SMARTPHONES
http://consumerelectronicsnet.com/article/Assisi-Animal-Health-Discusses-the-Horse-Health-Tracker-App-for-Smartphones-3933027  

CHICKEN PRODUCTS FALSELY LABELLED ORGANIC, EX-EMPLOYEE AT POULTRY FARM SAYS
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/chicken-products-falsely-labelled-organic-ex-employee-at-poultry-farm-says-1.3110059

June 11, 2015

LET’S HELP CREATE MORE FARMERS . . . FORMER GM OF CORNER BROOK MILL JOINS BOARD OF SOUNDVIEW PAPER . . . PRIVATE RESEARCH IN N.L. LEADS TO POTENTIAL HERBICIDE ALTERNATIVE . . . ISLAND HOLSTEIN INDUSTRY PLANNING TO DOCUMENT HISTORY . . . THERMALWOOD CANADA BRINGS “BAKED WOOD” TO BATHURST . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

LET’S HELP CREATE MORE FARMERS
Source: New York Times
Just about everyone agrees that we need more farmers. Currently, nearly 30 percent are 65 or older, and fewer than 10 percent are under 35. The number of farmers is likely to fall further with continuing consolidation and technological innovation. We need to put more young people on smaller farms, the kinds that will grow nourishing food for people instead of food that sickens us or yields products intended for animals or cars. The problem is land, which is often prohibitively expensive. Many farmers have no choice but to rent land for a year or two before being asked to move and start all over, because the purchase of even the smallest plot is out of their reach. (read more)

FORMER GM OF CORNER BROOK MILL JOINS BOARD OF SOUNDVIEW PAPER
Source: Pulp & Paper Canada
Soundview Paper Company has announced senior management changes, including the addition of longtime tissue and paper industry executives Steve Ziessler and Bob Snyder to the Board of Managers. Snyder served as CEO and president of Orchids Paper Products from 2007 to 2014. From 2002 to 2005, he worked for Kruger, Inc., where he served as vice-president and general manager of Corner Brook Pulp and Paper Limited in Newfoundland, an operation that was comprised of a newsprint mill, timberlands, and power generation facility.  (read more)

PRIVATE RESEARCH IN N.L. LEADS TO POTENTIAL HERBICIDE ALTERNATIVE
Source: The Telegram
A small patch of grass along Old Pennywell Road in St. John’s, edged by sidewalk and parking lot pavement, looks much like any other streetside patch at a distance. As you get closer, you can notice color differences, one marked area to the next. Variances in green are set with dark spots of blackened dandelions. The patch is in front of the home base of Green Lawn, a local lawn care company. Owner Don Barry has used it to create a reference to his larger-scale research plots, looking at the use of iron for weed suppression. (read more)

ISLAND HOLSTEIN INDUSTRY PLANNING TO DOCUMENT HISTORY
Source: Island Farmer
Holstein cattle have been a fixture on Island dairy farms for over a century and the organization that represents the breed is now in the process of documenting that legacy. While a great deal of information has been gathered for other books and publications on the success the breed has enjoyed in Canada’s smallest province, the three member history committee of P.E.I. Holsteins is now in the process of compiling the first book dedicated to the breed. “The idea was first discussed after the national Holstein Canada convention was held in the province in 2007,” said Fred VanderKloet, who serves on the committee along with Cynthia Frizzel and Mary Ellen Godfrey. (read more)

THERMALWOOD CANADA BRINGS “BAKED WOOD” TO BATHURST
Source: CBC.ca
A Bathurst wood supplier is smoking the competition by baking its building products. Thermalwood Canada takes planks from across the province – and some from Ontario – and cooks them in a giant kiln at high temperatures to darken the color. Aesthetics are the biggest selling point, but Pierre Friolet, Thermalwood’s general manager, said the benefits to putting the wood through this process go far deeper. (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

IT’S WORTH GETTING GOOD GROUNDING IN LIGHTNING SAFETY
http://halifaxchronicle.can.newsmemory.com/?token=tGQIuNt0dByjXUWH0w6o3g%3d%3d

STAFF CHANGES AT CANADIAN ORGANIC GROWERS
https://madmimi.com/p/dd7356?fe=1&pact=30904826466

FOR BAKERS AND RESTAURANTS, EGG SUPPLY IS GETTING UGLY
http://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2015/06/10/413206232/for-bakers-and-restaurants-egg-supply-is-getting-ugly

LINEAR MEASURING IMPROVES GENETICS OF GRASS-FED CATTLE 
http://www.thebeefsite.com/news/48047/linear-measuring-improves-genetics-of-grassfed-cattle/

June 10, 2015

LAST CHANCE TO COMPLETE OUR BARRIERS TO FARM GROWTH SURVEY! . . . FEDERAL GOVERNMENT SAYS AVIAN FLU THREAT OVER AFTER SURVEILLING B.C. FARMS . . . TTIP TALKS: FOOD FIGHTS BLOCK EU–US TRADE DEAL . . . STATUE PLAN FLIES IN FACE OF FEDS’ POLICY, SAY FORMER STAFFERS . . . N.B. REPORT STUDIES WHERE THE MARITIMES WILL GET NATURAL GAS IN THE FUTURE . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

LAST CHANCE TO COMPLETE OUR BARRIERS TO FARM GROWTH SURVEY!
Source: ThinkFarm
Do you want to grow your farm? Are there barriers preventing you from achieving the size of farm you would like to have? The Nova Scotia Department of Agriculture (NSDA), through its ThinkFarm program, would like to hear about the barriers that you face in trying to grow your farm and are requesting that you complete an anonymous survey to tell us. The survey will take 5-10 minutes to complete and will help us to understand the issues you are facing. It is the hope that with your input the NSDA can assess its current programs and services to address some of the barriers that you identify. Complete our survey before Friday, June 12! (read more)

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT SAYS AVIAN FLU THREAT OVER AFTER SURVEILLING B.C. FARMS
Source: MySask.com
British Columbia farms have been declared free of avian flu after a three-month surveillance period to ensure eradication of the disease in domestic poultry. The CFIA says about two dozen countries that had restricted import of birds and bird products from B.C. may now resume normal operations. The H5N2 influenza outbreak that began last December affected 11 commercial chicken and turkey farms in the Fraser Valley, as well as a couple of backyard coops. At the time, the agency created a control zone across the southern half of the province to stop the spread of the virus, but now says it will work toward resuming trade as quickly as possible. The CFIA says it expects countries that restricted trade from Canada as a whole will keep restrictions in place until Ontario is also declared free of avian flu. (read more)

TTIP TALKS: FOOD FIGHTS BLOCK EU–US TRADE DEAL
Source: BBC
The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) would dwarf previous free trade deals. The European Commission estimates that by 2027 it could boost the size of the EU economy by €120bn (£94bn; $152bn) – equal to 0.5 percent of GDP – and the US economy by €95bn (0.4 percent of GDP). European opponents argue that TTIP risks watering down EU regulations in the drive to remove trade barriers. There are tensions over TTIP in the European Parliament, whose draft recommendations proved too controversial for MEPs to vote on it this week. What divides the EU and US on food safety? The transatlantic dispute over genetically modified organisms (GMOs) has been raging for years.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-33055665

STATUE PLAN FLIES IN FACE OF FEDS’ POLICY, SAY FORMER STAFFERS
Source: The Chronicle Herald
More than 20 former senior parks employees say the Canadian government is defying its own policies as it moves ahead with a project that would see the construction of a towering war monument at Green Cove. Nikita Lopoukhine said the group is speaking out against an apparent fast-tracking of the Never Forgotten National Memorial Foundation’s Mother Canada statue that is planned for Cape Breton Highlands National Park. A retired director general for national parks, Lopoukhine said it appears Ottawa has aborted public consultation on the project. (read more)

N.B. REPORT STUDIES WHERE THE MARITIMES WILL GET NATURAL GAS IN THE FUTURE
Source: Global News
A new report highlights the importance of securing a stable source of natural gas before the current supply is exhausted. The report was commissioned by the Atlantica Centre for Energy and examines the natural gas supply and demand for New Brunswick and Nova Scotia between 2015 and 2025. “Demand has grown since 1999,” said Colleen Mitchell, the group’s president. “It’s really just rocketed forward. Now we’ve built up that demand, where are we going to get the supply from?” (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

TURMERIC A WINNING SUPPLEMENT FOR INSULIN RESISTANCE
http://www.hpj.com/livestock/turmeric-a-winning-supplement-for-insulin-resistance/article_3475e788-e959-5b07-8ab2-99bada46bea4.html

ONT. NEONIC RULES TO INCLUDE $20,000 FINES
http://www.producer.com/daily/ont-neonic-rules-to-include-20000-fines/

LOCAL PRODUCE: HOT DEMAND FOR COOL PRODUCTS
http://www.thegrower.org/readnews.php?id=1f8w1r4r3i4d

PHOTO REVIEW: INTERNATIONAL BIOMASS CONFERENCE & EXPO
http://biomassmagazine.com/articles/11952/photo-review-international-biomass-conference-expo

June 9, 2015

UPDATE: HARRISON LEWIS CENTRE HANDMOWING WEEKEND 2015 . . . MINISTER ISSUES DECISION ON TWO APPEALS, EXTENDS DEADLINE ON ANOTHER . . . WAR IN THE WOODS COULD RETURN AS LOGGING COMPANY TARGETS WALBRAN VALLEY . . . LARGE-SCALE COMPOSTING COMING WITH TIME: MINISTER . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

UPDATE: HARRISON LEWIS CENTRE HANDMOWING WEEKEND 2015
Source: Harrison Lewis Centre
Is the grass in your yard knee deep and harboring who knows what? Are your pastures getting ahead of your animals? Why not try a scythe? Imagine being able to hear what’s going on around you as you clean up your lawn, yard, field, or ditch. Come to the Harrison Lewis Centre July 4 and 5 to learn the ins-outs-ups-downs-and around the corners of scything under the swift blades of Peter and Helene Redden. The husband and wife team are well known for their skill in using, building, and maintaining scythes and other traditional hand-held implements used to put up hay and grains. Join us for cutting, stooking, peening, and more. We will learn in the daylight hours and have music and good food in the evening. Bring your own scythe if you have one. A major sponsor has come forward to provide core funding for the handmowing weekend. With their generous support, we are able to offer the weekend program at minimum cost to participants. The new dates for the weekend are July 4 and 5. Email HCL@eastlink.ca for details.

MINISTER ISSUES DECISION ON TWO APPEALS, EXTENDS DEADLINE ON ANOTHER 
Source: N.S. Dept of Environment
The Minister of Environment has completed a review of two of three appeals for the industrial approval issued March 9 to Northern Pulp. The appeal from Clean Pictou Air focused on concerns the industrial approval did not address the department’s need to protect the health and wellness of citizens and businesses. It included a request for more monitoring of the area’s ambient air quality and emissions from the mill. The minister denied the appeal, finding the industrial approval represents the department’s role in protecting citizens and the environment. The appeal from Pictou Landing First Nation focused on a perceived insufficient Aboriginal consultation, and stated the industrial approval does not reflect agreements between Pictou Landing First Nation and government. The Minister has denied this appeal on the grounds that meaningful consultation on the industrial approval took place with Pictou Landing First Nation before the approval was issued.   (read more)

WAR IN THE WOODS COULD RETURN AS LOGGING COMPANY TARGETS WALBRAN VALLEY
Source: Wilderness Committee
One of Canada’s most important old-growth rainforests is under direct threat of clearcut logging. New maps obtained by the Wilderness Committee show logging company Teal Jones has laid out eight new cutblocks in the central Walbran Valley on Vancouver Island, a focal point of the War in the Woods for decades. (read more)

LARGE-SCALE COMPOSTING COMING WITH TIME: MINISTER
Source: The Aurora
A completed consultant’s study looking at large-scale composting in the province (Nfld), costing more then $160,000, will not be thrown away by the government. Municipal Affairs Minister Keith Hutchings says it will be of use, despite a delay in planned composting infrastructure, as announced last week in an update of the provincial waste management strategy. (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

ONTARIO AND QUEBEC MAYORS WORRIED ABOUT REPUTATION FOR SUSTAINABLE FORESTRY
http://www.pulpandpapercanada.com/news/ontario-and-quebec-mayors-worried-about-reputation-for-sustainable-forestry/1003655152/438qvsM3oyW6x08yM2vx/?ref=enews_PP&utm_source=PP&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=PP-EN06032015

SUPPLY CHAIN PROFESSIONALS GATHER IN HALIFAX
http://www.peicanada.com/island_farmer/article_4ac8034a-0dec-11e5-bf19-b77e44cc1486.html

PITMASTERS EMBRACE NEW BARBECUE TRUTH: RESTED MEAT IS SUBLIME
http://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2015/06/08/411778404/pitmasters-embrace-new-barbecue-truth-rested-meat-is-sublime

CANADA GEESE IN MICHIGAN DISCOVERED TO HAVE BIRD FLU
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/09/business/canada-geese-in-michigan-discovered-to-have-bird-flu.html?rref=collection%2Fsectioncollection%2Fscience&_r=0

June 8, 2015

DISCUSSION ON CARBON PRICING NEEDED IN ATLANTIC CANADA SAYS HEAD OF COMMISSION … SAPUTO TO REFUSE TO BUY MILK FROM FARMERS THAT DON’T TREAT ANIMALS HUMANELY … ROBOTICS MODERNIZES NOVA SCOTIA DAIRY FARM IN RURAL HANTS COUNTY … GLOBAL DAIRY COSTS DROP TO 5-YEAR LOW ON RECORD MILK PRODUCTION OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

DISCUSSION ON CARBON PRICING NEEDED IN ATLANTIC CANADA SAYS HEAD OF COMMISSION
Source: GlobalNews.ca
The chairman of Canada’s Ecofiscal Commission says the time is right for governments in Atlantic Canada to consider some form of carbon pricing. Chris Ragan says the idea is a growing global trend with 40 national and 20 sub-national jurisdictions involved in either carbon tax or cap-and-trade initiatives. Ragan says a carbon tax in particular is a better option for the economy and the environment for provinces looking to increase revenues than other options such as increasing corporate, personal, and sales taxes. He says it’s a matter of being at the forefront of an increasing worldwide demand for low-carbon products. (read more)

SAPUTO TO REFUSE TO BUY MILK FROM FARMERS THAT DON’T TREAT ANIMALS HUMANELY
Source: Canadian Business
Canada’s largest diary processor, Montreal-based Saputo, is hoping to spur the adoption of global animal welfare standards by refusing to buy milk from farmers that don’t treat their animals humanely. The change is part of a new animal welfare policy the company released Monday, nearly a year after it became entangled in a controversy when an undercover video was made public showing cows being punched, kicked and beaten with pipes at one of its suppliers. (read more)

ROBOTICS MODERNIZES NOVA SCOTIA DAIRY FARM IN RURAL HANTS COUNTY
Source: NovaNewsNow
Caseydale Farms, a dairy farm in West Hants, is oddly quiet. You don’t hear the telltale mooing you might expect when you walk inside the barn. The cows happily munch on feed, lay on their beds, and plod along at a slow pace. Brian Casey, co-owner of the farm says that’s because the cows are happy. “Usually when you come in the door at a dairy farm you’ll hear cows balling and blatting,”Brian said. “You don’t hear a single cow here, and that’s a good sign.” Brian said it’s because their recently upgraded barn uses robots to milk the cows. That’s right. Robots. (read more)

GLOBAL DAIRY COSTS DROP TO 5-YEAR LOW ON RECORD MILK PRODUCTION
Source: The Bullvine
An abundance of milk from New Zealand to Europe is driving global dairy costs to the lowest in five years. Prices have plunged almost 40 percent from a record in February 2014 as farmers ramped up production and Chinese demand slowed, according to a United Nations measure of dairy products. Global production of milk, cheese, and butter will rise to records this year, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

NEW WAY TO MONITOR BODY FAT IN HORSES DEVELOPED
http://www.horseandhound.co.uk/news/body-condition-index-developed-to-assist-weight-loss-in-horses-496961

SYNGENTA REJECTS SECOND TAKEOVER APPROACH FROM MONSANTO
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/09/business/dealbook/syngenta-monsanto-second-2nd-takeover-bid-rejected.html?module=WatchingPortal&region=c-column-middle-span-region&pgType=Homepage&action=click&mediaId=none&state=standard&contentPlacement=2&version=internal&contentCollection=www.nytimes.com&contentId=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2015%2F06%2F09%2Fbusiness%2Fdealbook%2Fsyngenta-monsanto-second-2nd-takeover-bid-rejected.html&eventName=Watching-article-click&_r=0

TRADER JOE’S EX-PRESIDENT OPENS STORE WITH AGING FOOD AND CHEAP MEALS
http://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2015/06/04/411777947/trader-joes-ex-president-opens-store-with-aging-food-and-cheap-meals

NZ FARMERS KEEN TO BOOST LAMB, BEEF EXPORTS OVERSEAS 
http://www.thebeefsite.com/news/48048/nz-farmers-keen-to-boost-lamb-beef-exports-overseas/

June 5, 2015

WTO BOOKED TO HEAR CANADA’S COOL TARIFF CASE . . . ENDANGERED BIRD RETURNS TO CANADA AFTER SURPRISING BAHAMAS JAUNT . . . FRACKING HAS NOT HAD BIG EFFECT ON WATER SUPPLY, E.P.A. SAYS WHILE NOTING RISKS . . . HEALTHY EATING TOUGH IN HALIFAX . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

WTO BOOKED TO HEAR CANADA’S COOL TARIFF CASE
Source: Canadiancattlemen.ca
The World Trade Organization’s Dispute Settlement Body is set to hear Canada’s request in just under two weeks for revenge against the U.S. over country-of-origin labelling (COOL).
Canada on Thursday filed its request for authorization of retaliatory tariffs, to be considered at a DSB meeting on June 17, the federal government said. Barring a repeal of the U.S. government’s COOL legislation, Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz said Canada expects to have its tariffs in effect late this summer. The authorization, if approved as requested, would allow Canada to impose up to C$3.068 billion in new tariffs per year on imports of U.S. goods. (read more)

ENDANGERED BIRD RETURNS TO CANADA AFTER SURPRISING BAHAMAS JAUNT
Source: CBC.ca
One of four endangered Piping plovers born at White Point Beach, N.S. last summer has come home. ET was spotted on a beach in the Bahamas in early May, leaving those who track the birds to wonder if he would return to the south shore. Donna Hatt confirmed the little bird has safely completed the long journey back from the Bahamas after Nova Scotia's long, cold winter. (read more)

FRACKING HAS NOT HAD BIG EFFECT ON WATER SUPPLY, E.P.A. SAYS WHILE NOTING RISKS
Source: New York Times
A landmark Environmental Protection Agency report on the impact of hydraulic fracturing has found no evidence that the contentious technique of oil and gas extraction has had a widespread effect on the nation’s water supply, the agency said Thursday. Nevertheless, the long-awaited draft report found that the techniques used in hydraulic fracturing, known as fracking, do have the potential to contaminate drinking water. (read more)

HEALTHY EATING TOUGH IN HALIFAX
Source: The Chronicle Herald
Halifax is the worst place in the country to live if you expect to eat healthily, especially if you’re black, aboriginal, or an immigrant. That’s one of the conclusions of Food Counts: Halifax Food Assessment, a report released Wednesday by the Halifax Food Policy Alliance. The alliance is co-chaired by Public Health Services and the Ecology Action Centre, and its report was researched for two years. Among the findings are that Halifax “has the highest reported household food insecurity among 33 major urban centres in Canada, and one in five households has trouble affording healthy food.” (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

TRAIL HORSE HOOF CARE
http://www.thehorse.com/articles/35877/trail-horse-hoof-care

NEW PROVEN FACTS ON STRESS FACTORS FOR DAIRY COWS
http://www.thebullvine.com/news/new-proven-facts-on-stress-factors-for-dairy-cows/

SCIENTISTS CAST DOUBT ON AN APPARENT “HIATUS” IN GLOBAL WARMING
http://www.npr.org/2015/06/04/411998275/scientists-cast-doubt-on-an-apparent-hiatus-in-global-warming

TRANSPORTING ANIMALS DURING HOT AND HUMID WEATHER
http://www.inspection.gc.ca/animals/terrestrial-animals/humane-transport/transporting-animals/eng/1374601368429/1374601895769

June 4, 2015

JUNIORS BRING THEIR BEST TO THE SHOW . . . RESOLUTE WILL ENTER TISSUE MARKET; ADDING TO CALHOUN MILL . . . NEW INDUSTRY-LED PERENNIA BOARD MEETS . . . DAIRY FARMERS OF ONTARIO CELEBRATES 50TH ANNIVERSARY WITH OPEN FARMS DAYS . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

JUNIORS BRING THEIR BEST TO THE SHOW
Source: The Eastern Graphic
A large crowd gathered at the Dundas Plowing Match Grounds for the Maritime Junior Hereford Roundup. Fifteen young competitors from P.E.I., New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia, all junior members of the Canadian Hereford Association, displayed 10 head of cattle at the show. (read more)

RESOLUTE WILL ENTER TISSUE MARKET; ADDING TO CALHOUN MILL
Source: Pulp & Paper Canada
Resolute Forest Products has decided to enter the tissue market. Traditionally known as a producer of newsprint and forest products, Resolute announced plans to diversify into the tissue business with a state-of-the-art facility to manufacture at-home, premium private label tissue paper, including bath and towel, at its mill in Calhoun, TN. (read more)

NEW INDUSTRY-LED PERENNIA BOARD MEETS 
Source: N.S.Dept of Agriculture A new industry-led board of directors for Nova Scotia Crown corporation Perennia has been appointed. Members were selected based on their expertise in business, academia, primary agriculture, and processing and agri-food production. The members are: Noël Després, Comeau Seafoods Ltd., Saulnierville, Digby Co.; Dannie Hansen, Louisbourg Seafoods Inc., Louisbourg; Bill Hay, TruCorp, Truro; Ray Ivany, Acadia University, Wolfville; Charles Keddy, C.O. Keddy Nursery Inc., Kentville; Victor Oulton, W.G. Oulton and Sons Ltd., Windsor; Christina Penney, Clearwater Fine Foods Inc., Bedford; Edgar Samson, Premium Seafoods, Arichat, Richmond Co.; Don Sproule, retired farmer and businessman, Bridgetown,  Annapolis Co.; Milton Wood, Oxford Frozen Foods, Oxford, Cumberland Co. Perennia has three divisions: extension and advisory services; quality and food safety; and bioventures, business and innovation development. (read more)

DAIRY FARMERS OF ONTARIO CELEBRATES 50TH ANNIVERSARY WITH OPEN FARMS DAYS 
Source: The Canadian Business Journal
In celebration of Dairy Farmers of Ontario’s (DFO) 50th Anniversary, farms across the province will participate in “Open Farms Day,” a unique opportunity for the public to learn about Ontario’s agricultural industry. Open Farms Day is an event that will see 15 dairy farms open their doors to the public, providing fun and engaging ways to learn about life on a farm. “Ontario dairy farmers are proud to produce high-quality reliable milk for Canadians. We are thrilled to welcome visitors to our farms to understand the first step in the journey from farm to table,” said Ralph Dietrich, Dairy Farmers of Ontario Board Chair, and a Dairy Farmer from Mildmay, Ont. (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

CHEAP SOLAR PANELS OFFLOADED INTO CANADA, WATCHDOG SAYS 
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/economy/cheap-solar-panels-offloaded-into-canada-watchdog-says/article24786110/

AVIAN FLU OUTBREAK HAS U.S. BAKERS BEGGING FOR EUROPE’S EGGS
http://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2015/06/03/411713405/avian-flu-outbreak-has-u-s-bakers-begging-for-europes-eggs

EXPERT VIDEO: WHAT TO FEED YOUR CHICKENS
http://www.thepoultrysite.com/poultrynews/33229/expert-what-to-feed-your-chickens/

CME LIVE CATTLE FUTURES FALL AS BEEF DEMAND FADES; HOGS LOWER
http://www.producer.com/daily/cme-live-cattle-futures-fall-as-beef-demand-fades-hogs-lower/

June 3, 2015

NEW BRUNSWICK MAN TO LEAD ATLANTIC BRANCH OF CANADIAN CONSERVATION GROUP . . . FOOD SAFETY REGULATIONS: ENGAGEMENT SESSIONS WITH CFIA . . . ABATTOIR WASTE AND CARCASS DISPOSAL GUIDELINES . . . NFU BRIEF TO SENATE STUDY ON INTERNATIONAL MARKET ACCESS PRIORITIES . . . MEAT TRAINING NEEDS SURVEY . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

NEW BRUNSWICK MAN TO LEAD ATLANTIC BRANCH OF CANADIAN CONSERVATION GROUP
Source: Brandon Sun
A New Brunswick man has been chosen to lead the Atlantic branch of the Nature Conservancy of Canada. Don Floyd of Lower Queensbury takes over the two-year position as chairman from Doug Deacon of Stratford, P.E.I. Floyd was the dean of forestry and environmental management at the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton. He also led a task force on private wood supply issues a few years ago. The conservancy, a not-for-profit group, says it has protected about 28,000 hectares of wetlands, forests, and coastal shoreline areas in Atlantic Canada. (read more)

FOOD SAFETY REGULATIONS: ENGAGEMENT SESSIONS WITH CFIA
Source: Farmers’ Markets of Nova Scotia The Canadian Food Inspection Agency is conducting two free face-to-face events in Halifax on June 4 to help small and micro food businesses with regard to compliance for the eventual passage of Government’s Safe Food for Canadians Regulations. Essentially, they are “going across the country to meet with micro and small food businesses to get their input and advice on regulatory options to ensure they're not hurt by the eventual regulatory changes.” (read more)

ABATTOIR WASTE AND CARCASS DISPOSAL GUIDELINES
Source: Agricultural Alliance of New Brunswick
The Abattoir Waste and Carcass Disposal guidelines have been combined into one document and are available online on the DAAF website under the livestock section.  (read more)

NFU BRIEF TO SENATE STUDY ON INTERNATIONAL MARKET ACCESS PRIORITIES
Source: NFU
The National Farmers Union (NFU) is a voluntary direct-membership, non-partisan national farm organization made up of thousands of farm families from across Canada who produce a wide variety of commodities, including grains, livestock, fruits, and vegetables. The NFU was founded in 1969, with roots going back more than a century. The NFU works toward the development of economic and social policies that will maintain small and medium-sized family farms as the primary food-producers in Canada. (read more)

MEAT TRAINING NEEDS SURVEY
Source: ThinkFarm
Extended Learning at Dalhousie University, Agricultural Campus is conducting a Meat Cutting Training Needs Survey. This survey is for anyone who is interested in anything from red meat slaughter, red meat cutting, marketing new products, meat processing, poultry slaughter, and more. Taking this quick 10 question survey will help us gather information on the areas of training that is needed. Your feedback is much appreciated!  (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

PRACTICAL MANAGEMENT OF STRANGLES OUTBREAKS IN HORSES
http://www.thehorse.com/articles/35865/practical-management-of-strangles-outbreaks-in-horses

SHODDY BIOSECURITY AT U.S. LABS EXPOSED
http://www.ontariofarmer.com/sitepages/

DAIRY STILL THE CREAM OF CALIFORNIA CROPS
http://westernfarmpress.com/blog/uc-report-dairy-still-cream-california-crops

CUCUMBER INDUSTRY COULD AID PIG DISEASE PREVENTION
http://www.thepigsite.com/swinenews/39732/cucumber-industry-could-aid-pig-disease-prevention/

June 2, 2015

TAKE PART IN ACORN’S ONLINE DISCUSSION FORUM! . . . AT WORLD’S FAIR IN ITALY, THE FUTURE OF FOOD IS ON THE TABLE . . . A BEEHIVE THAT TAKES THE STING OUT OF THE HARVEST . . . NEW GUIDE FOR PROPERTY OWNERS WHO WANT TO ALTER WATERCOURSES . . . PASSING OF NSFA SENATE MEMBER . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

TAKE PART IN ACORN’S ONLINE DISCUSSION FORUM!
Source: ACORN
From finding land to organizing bulk purchases, to learning how to farm or finding particular resources to support your needs and CSA development – it helps to know what is available in your region and where to look for support! (read more)

AT WORLD’S FAIR IN ITALY, THE FUTURE OF FOOD IS ON THE TABLE
Source: NPR For the next six months, Italy is hosting a dinner party – and the entire world is invited to attend. The event, called Expo Milano 2015, is the latest World’s Fair. This year’s theme is “feeding the planet, energy for life.” The global population is projected to pass 9 billion by 2050, and Expo organizers want to start a global conversation now about sustainability, biodiversity, and food security. With exhibits from 145 countries over a 12-million-square-foot area, the expo is a showcase for the many cultures of food and environmental technology. Some pavilions have vertical farms. Brazil has transplanted a tropical forest. And some countries are exhibiting jointly their staple products – such as rice, coffee, and cocoa. (read more)

A BEEHIVE THAT TAKES THE STING OUT OF THE HARVEST 
Source: New York Times
Cedar Anderson sometimes drizzles an entire jar’s worth of honey on his food. “Some people call me Pooh Bear,” he says. To feed his habit, Mr. Anderson, 35, keeps bees in the backyard of his home in Broken Head, a village on Australia’s east coast near Byron Bay in New South Wales. He comes from a family of hobbyist beekeepers. Ten years ago, he grew impatient with the traditional, labor-intensive methods of extracting honey. In a backyard shed, he and his father, Stuart, invented an alternative setup called Flow Hive, and this year they began to sell it. (read more)

NEW GUIDE FOR PROPERTY OWNERS WHO WANT TO ALTER WATERCOURSES  
Source: N.S. Dept of Environment
A new online guide on altering rivers, streams, lakes, and ponds can help property owners and construction and forestry workers follow new rules to protect them. The Guide to Altering Watercourses explains when to call in experts, requirements for work with a higher risk to the environment, and how to lessen damage to waterways and aquatic life. Examples of altering watercourse beds or banks include installing a culvert or bridge, or stabilizing banks. Many jobs that can be completed between June 1 and Sept. 30 now only require notifying the department, rather than a more costly and time-consuming approval. The guide explains the process and new rules that came into effect last October. (read more)

PASSING OF NSFA SENATE MEMBER
Source: NSFA
The NSFA staff and members extend sincere condolences to the family of Don Cox of Truro on his recent passing. Don served as the provincial swine specialist for many years and was an honorary member of the NSFA Senate Club. (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

CANADA TO CHECK INDIA’S FEED CORN FOR AFLATOXIN
http://www.agcanada.com/daily/canada-to-check-indias-feed-corn-for-aflatoxin?utm_source=Subscribe+to+FCC+Email&utm_campaign=4526478072-FCC_Express_May_29_20155_29_2015&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_ecca3657d7-4526478072-18202745

RESEARCH SHOWS HOW TO GET THE MOST OUT OF HAY
http://www.thecountrytoday.com/horses/article_0c6f600e-087c-11e5-8567-b7145a6f2fab.html

COW URINE TO BE USED IN INDIAN GOVERNMENT HOSPITALS
http://www.thebeefsite.com/news/48002/cow-urine-to-be-used-in-government-hospitals/

WANT EGGS? RENT THE CHICKEN
http://www.thebeefsite.com/news/48002/cow-urine-to-be-used-in-government-hospitals/

June 1, 2015

NEW MARKET DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM LAUNCHED . . . WORLD OCEAN DAY EVENTS IN ATLANTIC CANADA . . . ALTERNATIVE ANIMAL BEDDING OPEN HOUSE . . . INNOVATIVE PEST CONTROL WINS INTERNATIONAL AWARD . . . AUSTRALIA COULD HIT CANADIAN BEEF IMPORT QUOTA . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

NEW MARKET DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM LAUNCHED
Source: N.S. Dept. of Agriculture
The agriculture, agri-food and seafood industries will benefit from a new program to expand market share and foster economic growth. The three-year Market Development and Investment Attraction program begins in the 2015-16 fiscal year, with $450,000 available annually. (read more)

WORLD OCEAN DAY EVENTS IN ATLANTIC CANADA
Source: ACZISC
See the COINAtlantic website for a list of events happening in Atlantic Canada. (read more)

ALTERNATIVE ANIMAL BEDDING OPEN HOUSE
Source: NSFA Competition for wood products for biomass plants in N.S. has increased the cost and reduced the availability of sawdust, wood shavings, etc. for animal bedding. Halifax C&D Recycling and LP Consulting invite you to an open house at the new bedding facility in Hardwoodlands. June 26, 10 am –2 pm. (read more)

INNOVATIVE PEST CONTROL WINS INTERNATIONAL AWARD 
Source: FCC A British Columbia program that controls a devastating orchard pest without the use of chemicals has received recognition from the international community. The Okanagan-Kootenay Sterile Insect Release program received the international integrated pest management award of excellence after nomination by the pesticide risk reduction program of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, at a recent IPM symposium in Salt Lake City, Utah. The award celebrates that chemical sprays in B.C. orchards to control the codling moth – an alien pest of pomme fruits such as pears and apples – are almost a thing of the past, as is the pest itself. (read more)

AUSTRALIA COULD HIT CANADIAN BEEF IMPORT QUOTA
Source: The Meat Site
Strong beef exports to Canada so far this year suggest Australia could hit the annual 35,000 tonnes tariff-free quota, according to the April issue of Steiner Consulting’s Canada Meat Market Report. Meat and Livestock Australia said that Canadian authorities issued almost 12,000 tonnes to Australian exporters for the year-to-April period, up 21 percent year-on-year. If the quota is exceeded, Australian product will be imposed a 26.5 percent tariff. (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

CALLING ALL NATURALISTS! BIOTA SURVEY AT OTTER POND DEMO. FOREST JUNE 27
http://halifaxfieldnaturalists.ca/hfnWP/?p=2921

TWEETS FROM THE FARM
http://www.thetelegram.com/News/Local/2015-05-31/article-4165262/Tweets-from-the-farm/1

AUSTRALIA PRESSING CANADA FOR GREATER ACCESS TO WINE IN TPP TRADE TALKS
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/australia-pressing-canada-for-greater-access-to-wine-in-tpp-trade-talks/article24715730/

ENERGY EAST PIPELINE PROTEST DRAWS HUNDREDS 
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/energy-east-pipeline-protest-draws-hundreds-1.3094245

May 28, 2015

OPEN FARM DAY . . . COMMUNITY FORESTS INTERNATIONAL SELLING NATIVE TREES AT SACKVILLE FARMERS’ MARKET . . . CATALYST UPGRADING RECOVERY BOILER AT RUMFORD MILL . . . N.S. GOVERNMENT SEEKS FEEDBACK ON ENVIRONMENT ACT PENALTIES . . . MONARCH BUTTERFLY CONSERVATION… OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

OPEN FARM DAY
Source: NSFA Mark your calendars! Every year, NSFA asks Nova Scotia farms to open their gates to the general public. This year, Open Farm Day will take place on September 20. We welcome all new and returning farm participants. To participate, all that we ask is: that you are a registered farm and member of the Nova Scotia Federation of Agriculture; that a visit to your farm will provide an educational experience to the public; that you not charge admission to visit the farm on Open Farm Day (specific activities offered on your farm, however, may have an admission charge, eg. entry to a corn maze or other activities). (read more)
 
COMMUNITY FORESTS INTERNATIONAL SELLING NATIVE TREES AT SACKVILLE FARMERS’ MARKET
Source: Sackville Tribune Post
With the snow in Sackville having finally disappeared, businesses and homeowners can now turn their attention to planting trees at home and in the greater community. To get you started, on June 6, Community Forests International will be selling a variety of trees native to the region at the Sackville Farmers’ Market. (read more)

CATALYST UPGRADING RECOVERY BOILER AT RUMFORD MILL
Source: Pulp & Paper Canada
Catalyst Paper has announced an investment of nearly $16 million in the Rumford pulp and paper mill in Maine. It will constitute the company’s single largest maintenance expenditure in 2015. Approximately $11.4 million will be invested in various maintenance projects including upgrading the Rumford mill's Recovery Boiler C. (read more)

N.S. GOVERNMENT SEEKS FEEDBACK ON ENVIRONMENT ACT PENALTIES
Source: N.S. Dept of Environment
Government is seeking feedback from Nova Scotians on proposed changes to the Environment Act that would allow new monetary penalties for companies that do not comply with environmental approvals. The penalties would apply to people and companies with approvals for programs with industrial activities, asbestos, dangerous goods, municipal sewage, water treatment, solid waste, and registered public water suppliers. The penalties would be levied by the department, rather than through the court system. The province is encouraging those with approvals and the public to review a discussion document and submit comments by June 24. (read more)

MONARCH BUTTERFLY CONSERVATION
Source: CFGA
In 2014 Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his U.S. and Mexican counterparts committed to “establish a working group to ensure the conservation of the Monarch butterfly, a species that symbolizes our association.” (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

CANADA ADDS CONCUSSION COURSE TO EQUESTRIAN COACH REQUIREMENTS
http://horsetalk.co.nz/2015/05/27/canada-adds-concussion-course-equestrian-coach/#axzz3bOIDfEka

U.S. FOREST SERVICE ANNOUNCES $1.9 MILLION FOR COMMUNITY FORESTS
http://www.fs.fed.us/news/releases/forest-service-announces-19-million-community-forests

CANADIAN FISHERMEN TARGET HADDOCK OVER PERCH
http://www.thefishsite.com/fishnews/25738/canadian-fishermen-target-haddock-over-perch/

CCA REPORT: AN UPDATE ON CANADA’S BEEF TRADE
http://www.canadiancattlemen.ca/2015/05/26/cca-report-an-update-on-canadas-beef-trade/?module=popular&pgtype=article&i=

May 27, 2015

NORTHERN PULP CLOSURE SEEN AS FATAL TO PROVINCE’S FOREST INDUSTRY . . . HAND MOWIN’ AT THE FOX RUN FARM IN EAST MONTPELIER . . . FOODIE REVOLUTION MEETS SMALL-TOWN CHARM IN NOVA SCOTIA . . . RECALL ISSUED IN LATEST FOOD TAMPERING CASE . . . KANSAS STATE RESEARCHERS DEVELOP AVIAN FLU VACCINE . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

NORTHERN PULP CLOSURE SEEN AS FATAL TO PROVINCE’S FOREST INDUSTRY
Source: The Chronicle Herald
There was free fried chicken deep in the woods on McLellans Mountain on Monday. The chicken came with the brand new $450,000 forwarder delivered to Next Generation Forest Management Ltd. The eight-wheel-drive machine, which picks up logs cut by a harvester and delivers them to tractor- trailer trucks waiting at roadside, is the third new purchase by the Pictou County forest management company. “If I’d known when we ordered what was going on now, I might not have bought it," said company founder Calvin Archibald. Archibald was referring to the impasse between the provincial government and Northern Pulp over the kraft pulp mill’s industrial approval. (read more)

HAND MOWIN’ AT THE FOX RUN FARM IN EAST MONTPELIER
Source: AtlanticFarmer.com
We had so much fun mowing, learning and hearing stories in the last five years that we’ve decided to do it again this year. Workshops/Instruction/Discussion/Practice on scything techniques, peening, and sharpening.  Sunday, June 14, 2015, 8am to noon. Potluck, bring a dish to share and your own silverware, cup and plate. At Fox Run Farm, in East Montpelier off the County Road about 5 or 6 miles from Montpelier, between Templeton Road and Haggett Roads. Bring your own scythes and equipment.
Contacts:  Paul Cate 802-223-6466 Richard Czaplinski rczaplinski@madriver.com.

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FOODIE REVOLUTION MEETS SMALL-TOWN CHARM IN NOVA SCOTIA 
Source: The Globe and Mail
Daikon radish fritters with sesame sauce, beef tartare with preserved egg yolk, confit chicken leg with miso marinated lentils – these dishes would have been unimaginable on a table in Halifax not too long ago. But at Edna, a bistro in Halifax’s North End, they’re regularly on the menu. The communal dining restaurant is at the forefront of the city’s burgeoning new food scene. Aesthetically, it’s like a Montreal bistro with the ambiance of a backyard party in rural Nova Scotia – the decor is urban cool, but the service is true, warm, East Coast hospitality. (read more)

RECALL ISSUED IN LATEST FOOD TAMPERING CASE
Source: Island Farmer
Loblaw Companies Limited and Strang’s Produce Inc. are voluntarily recalling certain Farmer's Market and Strang’s Produce brands of Russet potatoes from the marketplace due to possible food tampering with nails and needles. Tampered potatoes have been found over the last three weeks at Loblaw locations in the Montague and in two locations in Nova Scotia. RCMP are not commenting on whether the cases are linked to an investigation on potato tampering last fall which saw Linkletter Farms issue a voluntary recall. Potatoes from another unnamed growers were also discovered to be tampered with when they were sent to Cavendish Farms for processing. The P.E.I. Potato Board has offered a $100,000 reward for information leading to an arrest in that case but those responsible still remain at large. (read more)

KANSAS STATE RESEARCHERS DEVELOP AVIAN FLU VACCINE
Source: The Poultry Site
A vaccine has been developed for the H5N1 and H7N9 strains of avian influenza, using a method based on the Newcastle disease virus, according to a study from Kansas State University and others. The strains have led to the culling of millions of commercial chickens and turkeys as well as the death of hundreds of people, though they are not responsible for the current epidemic in the US, which is caused by the H5N2 strain. (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

THINKING ABOUT HIRING A SAFETY CONSULTANT
http://www.agcanada.com/grainews/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/GNN150519.pdf#_ga=1.32196472.772944913.1432051498

BARRIERS TO FARM GROWTH IN NOVA SCOTIA
https://surveys.gov.ns.ca/TakeSurvey.aspx?SurveyID=8lL07n41

ENSURE HORSES ARE VACCINATED AGAINST EEE, WNV, AND RABIES
http://www.thehorse.com/articles/35842/ensure-horses-are-vaccinated-against-eee-wnv-and-rabies

JAPAN TO IMPORT MORE BUTTER AS SHORTAGE WORSENS
http://www.dairyherd.com/news/japan-import-more-butter-shortage-worsens?ss=news

May 26, 2015

KLASSEN: STRONG BEEF PRICES SPILL OVER INTO FEEDER MARKET . . . FAMILY ELBOW DEEP IN N.B. TRADITION PICKING FIDDLEHEADS . . . RURAL NOVA SCOTIA SURVEY . . . WOODLOT OWNERS TO GATHER FOR MEETING IN TRURO . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

KLASSEN: STRONG BEEF PRICES SPILL OVER INTO FEEDER MARKET
Source: AGCanada.com
U.S. wholesale beef prices surged higher this past week as stronger retail and restaurant demand absorbed the larger beef stocks in storage. Alberta packers’ average purchase price was $202.50 and with pen break-even closeout prices near $188, the healthy margin structure renewed buying confidence in the feeder market. (read more)

FAMILY ELBOW DEEP IN N.B. TRADITION PICKING FIDDLEHEADS
Source: GlobalNews.ca
New Brunswickers across the province are putting on their rubber boots and hitting the riverbanks for a New Brunswick tradition. For the Lewis family, they’re all about tradition. The family has been picking and packing fiddleheads, ready to sell, for years. “It’s a very short season so people get very excited about it and you got to strike while the iron is hot,” said Craig Lewis. (read more)

RURAL NOVA SCOTIA SURVEY
Source: Rural Communities Foundation of Nova Scotia
The Rural Communities Foundation of Nova Scotia is doing a survey about a renewed vision for rural Nova Scotia.  It would be great to get your input on this.  The survey has 10 questions and will be available for the next 5 days: (read more)

WOODLOT OWNERS TO GATHER FOR MEETING IN TRURO
Source:  FNSWO
Anyone interested in learning more about Nova Scotia’s woodland owner community and woodlot management is encouraged to attend the Federation of Nova Scotia Woodland Owners annual general meeting being held in Truro. The meeting is set for Saturday, June 6 at the Holiday Inn on west Prince Street. The registration desk and coffee will open at 9am with the meeting to commence at 9:30. The registration fee is $20 and includes lunch, nutritional breaks, and a chance to win some door prizes. Peter deMarsh, President of the Canadian Federation of Woodland Owners and Chair of the International Family Forestry Alliance will be speaking on Woodlot Owner Organizations and “making change happen.” (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

MANITOBA RAISES CAPS ON CATTLE LOAN GUARANTEE PLAN
http://www.agcanada.com/daily/manitoba-raises-caps-on-cattle-loan-guarantee-plan?utm_source=Subscribe+to+FCC+Email&utm_campaign=596bc6c0c6-FCC_Express_May_22_20155_22_2015&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_ecca3657d7-596bc6c0c6-18200761#_ga=1.59959663.390510484.1426545529

CALF HEALTH RISK WITH WET WEATHER
http://www.thebullvine.com/news/calf-health-risk-with-wet-weather/

FORESTRY RESEARCH FACILITY RECEIVES $5.6 MILLION IN FEDERAL FUNDING
http://www.pulpandpapercanada.com/news/forestry-research-facility-receives-5-6-million-in-federal-funding/1003633068/

WHEAT IMPORTS RISE IN INDONESIA AS BREAD TOPS RICE 
http://www.agweb.com/article/wheat-imports-rise-in-indonesia-as-bread-tops-rice-blmg/

May 25, 2015

U.S. COMMITTEE VOTES TO REPEAL MEAT LABELLING LAW . . . NSPE TO FEATURE REDUCED NUMBER OF BEEF CATTLE THIS YEAR . . . CANADIAN ORGANIC SECTOR TO BUILD AND EXPAND MARKETS . . . ROD CUMBERLAND SAYS LUMBERJACK GAMES GAINING POPULARITY . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

U.S. COMMITTEE VOTES TO REPEAL MEAT LABELLING LAW 
Source: FCC A committee of the U.S. House of Representatives has voted to get rid of labels on packages of meat that say where the animals were born, raised and slaughtered. The House of Representatives agriculture committee voted 38-6 to repeal a "country-of-origin" labelling law for meat on Wednesday — just two days after the World Trade Organization ruled against parts of it. The WTO ruled Monday that the U.S. labels put Canadian and Mexican livestock at a disadvantage, rejecting a U.S. appeal after a similar WTO decision last year. (read more)

NSPE TO FEATURE REDUCED NUMBER OF BEEF CATTLE THIS YEAR
Source; Truro Daily News
That is type of tough decisions that have to be made in order to get the financially stricken Nova Scotia Provincial Exhibition (NSPE) back on solid ground, facility manager Steve Pottie says. “An exhibition without cattle, sure it would be horrible, but you can't have an exhibition if you lose money. You can’t have a business,” he said. Pottie’s comments came in response to emailed comments submitted to the Truro Daily News from Pictou East Conservative MLA Timothy Houston. Houston said he was recently told by Agriculture Minister Keith Colwell that there would be no cattle at this year's Ex because of the high cost of housing them. (read more)

CANADIAN ORGANIC SECTOR TO BUILD AND EXPAND MARKETS
Source: Farm Focus
Canada’s organic exports are estimated at over $550 million per year and growing. And to ensure they continue to grow, the federal government has invested $785,000 in the organic sector to build and expand markets at home and abroad. The investment will enable the Canada Organic Trade Association (COTA) to attend international conferences and trade shows and lead missions to raise product awareness in key markets in Europe, United States, Asia and Latin America. (read more)

ROD CUMBERLAND SAYS LUMBERJACK GAMES GAINING POPULARITY
Source: CBC.ca
Rod Cumberland started out competing in lumberjack competitions for almost 30 years, now he commentates on them. Four years ago, Cumberland, a six-time New Brunswick provincial lumberjack champion, started working for The Sports Network (TSN), using his expertise in woodsmen competitions to provide color commentary on the television broadcasts.  Cumberland, who lives in Keswick Ridge, has travelled the country and the world for the job. He said the sport is a big deal in many small communities across the country, particularly on the east and west coasts. (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

JEFF RUBIN ON WHY CANADA’S FOOD INDUSTRY MAY SOON BE MORE VALUABLE THAN OIL
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/video/video-inside-the-market-jeff-rubin-on/article24564149/

ENVIRONMENTALISTS CRITICIZE OBAMA PLAN TO SAVE BEES
http://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2015/05/20/408017267/pollinator-politics-environmentalists-criticize-obama-plan-to-save-bees

NEW BODY FAT INDEXING METHOD DEVELOPED FOR HORSES
http://horsetalk.co.nz/2015/05/22/body-fat-indexing-method-horses/#axzz3bBGbWifa

INTERNATIONAL FARMING ORGANISATIONS UNITED ON TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP
http://www.thepoultrysite.com/poultrynews/35121/international-farming-organisations-united-on-transpacific-partnership/

May 22, 2015

SUPPLY MANAGEMENT PROTECTS RURAL JOBS, ECONOMY . . . MIDWEST FARMERS RUSH TO DISPOSE OF CHICKENS KILLED TO CONTAIN AVIAN FLU . . . NORTHERN PULP BLASTS N.S. RULES . . . EL NINO COULD “DISRUPT FOOD MARKETS” . . . WHO TO STUDY MEAT FOR CARCINOGENS . . . OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST...

SUPPLY MANAGEMENT PROTECTS RURAL JOBS, ECONOMY 
Source: N.S. Dept of Agriculture
Nova Scotia is calling on the federal government to protect Canada’s supply-management system during international trade negotiations. Agriculture Minister Keith Colwell wrote to his federal colleague Gerry Ritz on Wednesday, May 20, to underline the need to preserve the benefits of supply management for agricultural industries. (read more)

MIDWEST FARMERS RUSH TO DISPOSE OF CHICKENS KILLED TO CONTAIN AVIAN FLU
Source: NPR
The USDA says 38 million chickens must be killed to stop the spread of one of the worst outbreaks of avian flu in North America. Northwest Iowa officials are scrambling to dispose of the dead birds. (read more)

NORTHERN PULP BLASTS N.S. RULES
Source: The Chronicle Herald
Northern Pulp alleges its most recent industrial approval is an attempt by the provincial government to “impose conditions” that require the company to cease using Boat Harbour as an effluent treatment facility sooner than scheduled and render the mill unviable. The information is contained in the company’s appeal of the industrial approval, released after a freedom of information request. Northern Pulp, the Pictou Landing First Nation, and the Clean Pictou Air group all appealed the approval, issued earlier this year. (read more)

EL NINO COULD “DISRUPT FOOD MARKETS”
Source: BBC
Global food markets could be disrupted by the El Nino event predicted for later this year. A strong El Nino is likely to increase prices of staple foods such as rice, coffee, sugar, and cocoa, say scientists. Forecasters agree that the El Nino effect, which can drive droughts and flooding, is under way in the tropical Pacific. (read more)

WHO TO STUDY MEAT FOR CARCINOGENS
Source: The Western Producer
The World Health Organization plans to evaluate red meat and processed meat as human carcinogens later this year. The WHO’s International Agency for Research on Cancer will form an expert panel that will meet in France in October to classify red and processed meat into one of four groups. Possible outcomes include rating meat as a possible or probable carcinogen. (read more)

OTHER NEWS OF INTEREST

POLICE WORK TO IDENTIFY METAL OBJECT FOUND IN POTATO PURCHASED IN MONTAGUE
http://www.peicanada.com/eastern_graphic/article_b6a9ac64-ffee-11e4-a2a6-d36c6d8fc301.html

NAILS REPORTEDLY FOUND IN POTATOES PURCHASED AT NOVA SCOTIA STORES
http://thechronicleherald.ca/novascotia/1288153-nails-reportedly-found-in-potatoes-purchased-at-nova-scotia-stores

REARING SYSTEMS INFLUENCE PIGLET BEHAVIOUR
http://www.pigprogress.net/Breeding/Housing/2015/5/Rearing-systems-influence-piglet-behaviour-1764759W/

COMMISSION REPORTS KNOCK BACK COUNTRY OF ORIGIN LABELLING PLANS 
http://www.thebeefsite.com/news/47995/commission-reports-knock-back-country-of-origin-labelling-plans/