Better Farming Ontario May | 2024

45 Story Idea? Email Paul.Nolan@Farms.com Better Farming | May 2024 Better Farming and Farms.com are accepting applications/resumes for the following position. It’s Farming. And it’s Better. APPLY TODAY TO JOIN OUR TEAM: Paul.Nolan@Farms.com FARMING JOURNALIST New full-time or potential part-time home-based role with popular farming magazine. You love farming and can write engaging, insightful stories about our industry and its farming families. You possess a professional, team-oriented attitude with strong language skills. You are comfortable proofing copy for errors and factchecking for accuracy. You enjoy taking interesting farm photos with your mobile device. If this sounds like you, please let us know! to achieve a 425 bpa yield, but that the Canadian smoke added carbon and sulphur to the soil and corn plants. Agronomist Ken Ferrie, with CropTech Consulting from central Illinois, referred to the crop water use or “evapotranspiration” (ET). ET is the combination of water evaporation (E) from soil and plant surfaces as well as water used by plants for growth and transpiration (T). Transpiration refers to the water lost to the atmosphere. At the end of June, the ET rate was just as high or worse than 2012. But the diffusion of the sun’s radiation and rays to the lower canopy of the corn crop (which usually does not happen) and haze from the smoke protecting the corn crop from heat and stress helped add yield and drop the ET rate. The smoke came at the right time during the growth stage and not at the grain-fill stage in July and August when it was smoke free, as it could have had very devastating effects. Wildfires were blazing during March 2024 in northern Texas and the adjoining states, but this need not have the same effect as the Canadian wildfires last year. We can’t quantify the impact of these wildfires on (better-than-expected) yields, but as more of these events happen, there is still much to learn. As the old saying goes, “When you are good, you are lucky.” The good refers to the genetics, but all the experts we spoke to agreed that they are not bulletproof, and farmers got lucky with yields in 2023 from the timely smoke in June and rains in July. With a La Niña looming and expected to return by May of 2024, farmers may not be so lucky! BF BOURBONNAIS EQUIPMENT Sarsfield • 613-835-2623 G.J.’S HARVEST CENTRE INC. Burgessville • 519-424-9374 Milverton • 519-603-8374 HAWLEY’S GARAGE Belleville • 613-969-5525 J&H SALES & SERVICE Chesley • 519-363-3510 J&J EQUIPMENT REPAIR INC Powassan • 705-724-6565 M&P FARM EQUIPMENT Almonte • 613-253-4957 MARK McCABE TRACTOR SALES Lindsay • 705-799-2868 PROFOTA’S FARM EQUIPMENT Chatham • 519-354-5100 YURKE SALES & SERVICE Comber • 519-687-2209 MOE AGOSTINO & ABHINESH GOPAL Maurizio (“Moe”) is chief commodity strategist with Farms.com Risk Management and Abhinesh is head of commodity research. Moe’s Market Minute

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