After the CWB issue resolves itself one way or the
other, we have a new challenge emerging. I am
involved with an institute in Calgary that is devoted
to educating urbanites about the western Canadian
grain industry and its vital importance to our food
supply, global nutrition and its contribution to our
economy. We do it in both a historical and
contemporary format. Recently, more and more
visitors raise questions about environmental issues
and stewardship as they relate to the grain
business. A linkage I'm seeing is that most major
urban centres have banned the use of herbicides in
controlling dandelions for example. Question I've
heard more than once - "if its poison on our soccer
fields, why are chemicals being used on our food"?
For starters, my question is do you as a farmer use
your land base strictly as a business tool to extract
maximum production and profit for yourself or do
you treat your land more as a long term proposition
to which you must provide good stewardship? I ask
this as an introductory question to benchmark a
basic mindset among todays farmers. And don't
sweat Pars, we also cover off on the organic
production as well. PS - we do not present sides of
issues, only the facts and and a snapshot of what is.
other, we have a new challenge emerging. I am
involved with an institute in Calgary that is devoted
to educating urbanites about the western Canadian
grain industry and its vital importance to our food
supply, global nutrition and its contribution to our
economy. We do it in both a historical and
contemporary format. Recently, more and more
visitors raise questions about environmental issues
and stewardship as they relate to the grain
business. A linkage I'm seeing is that most major
urban centres have banned the use of herbicides in
controlling dandelions for example. Question I've
heard more than once - "if its poison on our soccer
fields, why are chemicals being used on our food"?
For starters, my question is do you as a farmer use
your land base strictly as a business tool to extract
maximum production and profit for yourself or do
you treat your land more as a long term proposition
to which you must provide good stewardship? I ask
this as an introductory question to benchmark a
basic mindset among todays farmers. And don't
sweat Pars, we also cover off on the organic
production as well. PS - we do not present sides of
issues, only the facts and and a snapshot of what is.
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