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PETER VANDER ZAAG RECEIVES AWARD

 
Congrats to Dr. Peter Vander Zaag! He’s a humble potato breeder and grower in Canada, a hero in third-world countries. He’s just won an Honorary Life Membership from the Potato Association of America. It held its 103rdannual general meeting in Winnipeg, Manitoba from July 28 to August 1.  
 
Vander Zaag is known globally as an outstanding potato scientist, educator, mentor, innovative potato producer and breeder. He has also contributed to making the humble potato a staple in developing countries such as China where rice has been the number one staple food. 
 
To dig a little further into his background, go to the website of Sunrise Potato Storage.  
 
The first VanderZaags emigrated from Holland in 1949, successfully transplanting their extensive knowledge of potato production onto Canadian soil. The next generation, Dr. Peter Vander Zaag and his wife Carla, spent almost 20 years overseas, studying and developing potato production methods in countries as diverse as Rwanda and the Philippines. Two generations now grow 1000 acres of potatoes annually near Alliston, Ontario. 
 
“Today, we focus on the sustainable production of our conventional chipping and table potatoes, organic potatoes and seed production,” writes Vander Zaag. “Our state-of-the-art storage facilities hold 400,000 cwt (18,000 tonnes) in 20 bins, which allows us to ship the crop from September’s harvest to the following July.” 
 
As Eugenia Banks, consultant to the Ontario Potato Board points out, “Rarely, a well-known global potato scientist is also an outstanding potato farmer. Vander Zaag is well respected by growers and researchers across Canada. He is constantly evaluating new potato production practices, and best of all, he shares what he learns with others.” 
Source : The Grower

Trending Video

Seeing the Whole Season: How Continuous Crop Modeling Is Changing Breeding

Video: Seeing the Whole Season: How Continuous Crop Modeling Is Changing Breeding

Plant breeding has long been shaped by snapshots. A walk through a plot. A single set of notes. A yield check at the end of the season. But crops do not grow in moments. They change every day.

In this conversation, Gary Nijak of AerialPLOT explains how continuous crop modeling is changing the way breeders see, measure, and select plants by capturing growth, stress, and recovery across the entire season, not just at isolated points in time.

Nijak breaks down why point-in-time observations can miss critical performance signals, how repeated, season-long data collection removes the human bottleneck in breeding, and what becomes possible when every plot is treated as a living data set. He also explores how continuous modeling allows breeding programs to move beyond vague descriptors and toward measurable, repeatable insights that connect directly to on-farm outcomes.

This conversation explores:

• What continuous crop modeling is and how it works

• Why traditional field observations fall short over a full growing season

• How scale and repeated measurement change breeding decisions

• What “digital twins” of plots mean for selection and performance

• Why data, not hardware, is driving the next shift in breeding innovation As data-driven breeding moves from research into real-world programs, this discussion offers a clear look at how seeing the whole season is reshaping value for breeders, seed companies, and farmers, and why this may be only the beginning.