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Canola In Cattle Feed

Drive by canola fields in the province and you’ll see them in various stages, from full bloom to early pod stage. Barry Yaremcio, beef and forage specialist at the Ag-Info Centre, says crops at that stage require about six weeks to maturity. He says instead of combining, you can cut it for green feed or silage.

Interview with Barry Yaremcio (1:13 minutes) (576 Kb)

Source : Agriculture and Forestry

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No-Till vs Tillage: Why Neighboring Fields Are World Apart

Video: No-Till vs Tillage: Why Neighboring Fields Are World Apart

“No-till means no yield.”

“No-till soils get too hard.”

But here’s the real story — straight from two fields, same soil, same region, totally different outcomes.

Ray Archuleta of Kiss the Ground and Common Ground Film lays it out simply:

Tillage is intrusive.

No-till can compact — but only when it’s missing living roots.

Cover crops are the difference-maker.

In one field:

No-till + covers ? dark soil, aggregates, biology, higher organic matter, fewer weeds.

In the other:

Heavy tillage + no covers ? starving soil, low diversity, more weeds, fragile structure.

The truth about compaction?

Living plants fix it.

Living roots leak carbon, build aggregates, feed microbes, and rebuild structure — something steel never can.

Ready to go deeper into the research behind no-till yields, rotations, and profitability?