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CHC Board of Directors 2019 Summer Tour

The Canadian Horticultural Council (CHC)’s Board of Directors recently hosted their annual summer tour, this year visiting the Toronto and Niagara region of Ontario. The tour group was a cross section of industry and representatives from the Canadian Federation of Agriculture, Agriculture and Agri-Food, the Pest Management Centre, CropLife Canada, Farm Credit Canada, the Fruit and Vegetable Dispute Resolution Corporation, OFVGA, OGVG, The Grower, Flowers Canada, Vineland Research, Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation of Ontario Processing Vegetable Growers, University of Guelph and Holland Marsh Growers.

Tour stops
 
The first stop on this early bird tour was the Ontario Food Terminal http://www.oftb.com/ It is Canada’s largest wholesale fruit and produce terminal and ranks amongst the top four terminal markets in Canada and the United States by volume of produce distributed. The group was fortunate to have staff guides showing the various areas of the sales floor and guided them through what a day might look like for the buyers and sellers at the terminal. Plenty of fruit and vegetable knowledge, family tradition and hard work are visible every step of the way. 
 
The group then travelled tothe Ippolito packing facility in Burlington http://ippolitoproduce.com/ where they house a one of a kind packaging line that packages commodities such as baby spinach, curly spinach and spring mix. Ippolito also provides grower shippers with liquid icing for broccoli and other such commodities. The Ippolito Group is and always has been a family-run business paying special attention to detail, and holding product quality in the most utmost regard. The group was able to follow fresh baby spinach from delivery to shipping in this state of the art operation.
 
The Tour luncheon was hosted by The George Family Vineyards at their farm located on the shores of Lake Ontario, in Beamsville. The Grape Growers of Ontario sponsored the luncheon and local wine tasting after Bill George provided the group with a tour of his vines and equipment used for harvesting and maintaining the crop.
 
The farm had been a producer of pears, apples, plums, peaches, and apricots and then was eventually fully converted to wine grapes production. All grapes are currently sold to Arterra wines.
 
The afternoon began with a visit and wagon tour of the Devries fruit orchards in Fenwick. http://www.devriesfruitfarm.com/. The farm crops include high yield apples, plums and peaches. Fresh picked strawberries and ice cream were served up to the group before a visit to the retail store for a selection of fresh produce, jams jellies and baked goods. The DeVries Fruit Farm has been owned and operated by the DeVries family since 1984.
 
It was then off to the Gambrel Barn at the Country Heritage Center in Milton www.countryheritagepark.com for networking and dinner. Thanks to the Ontario Fruit and Vegetable Growers Association for sponsorship of the dinner event. After a networking opportunity amongst the guests, researchers from the University of Guelph provided updates on some of the CHC Cluster projects.
 
CHC would like to thank Ontario Greenhouse Vegetable Growers for their bus sponsorship and all the attendees and tour stops for making the day such a success.
 
 The CHC Board Summer Tour is an excellent opportunity for growers, industry representatives, politicians and government regulators to become better acquainted with one another and to talk about issues impacting Canadian fruit and vegetable production in a casual and engaging environment. We look forward to welcoming participants again next year when the tour moves to the Prairies.
Source : HortCouncil

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Will the 2025 USDA December Crop Report Be a Market Mover/Surprise?

Video: Will the 2025 USDA December Crop Report Be a Market Mover/Surprise?


Historically, the USDA December crop report is a non-event or another dud report as the USDA reserves any final supply changes to the final report in January of the following year in this case 2026. But after the longest U.S. government shutdown in history at 43 days and no October crop report will they provide more data/surprise and make an exception?
Our China U.S. soybean purchase tracker is now at 26.6% or a total of 3.2 mmt but for traders it’s taking too long to unfold.
The final Stats Canada production report was bearish canola and wheat projection a record crop in both (it adds to the global glut of supplies) and bullish local corn and soybean prices in Ontario/Quebec thanks to a drought. It will not help the fund flow short-term, the USDA may need to offset it?
A U.S. Fed interest rate cut of another 25-basis point next Wednesday (probability 87.1%) could help fund flow and sentiment in stock and ag commodities into year end.
More inflows into Bitcoin this past week saw prices rebound back above 90,000 with support at 82,000 and resistance at 96,000.
A V-shaped bottom in cattle suggest the lows are in after Mexico reported another new world screwworm case. Lower weights, seasonal demand and higher U.S. beef select/choice values with a continued closure of the Mexican border to cattle will result in a resumption of higher cattle futures into yearend.
Australia is expected to produce its 3rd largest wheat crop ever at 36 mmt adding to the global glut of supplies.
Reports of ASF in hogs in Spain the largest pork exporter in Europe could see the U.S. win more pork export business long-term.
If the rains verify into next week of 3-5 inches for Brazil it would go a long way to fixing the dry regions from the last 2-months, but the European weather model has been wrong for the past 2-months!
Natural gas futures are surging to the 3rd price count as frigid hold temps set in.
CDN $ is also surging to end the week on a very resilient economy and better employment numbers suggesting no interest rate cuts next week.
Finally, the CFTC report showed funds were net buyers of soybeans but sellers of corn, canola and wheat. In real time the funds have gone back to selling as they take some profits.