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Two Solid Weeks of Favourable Weather Needed to Complete Manitoba Harvest

Manitoba Agriculture reports another two solid weeks of warm dry weather will be needed to complete this year's harvest.
Manitoba Agriculture's weekly crop report, released yesterday, indicates the harvest moved from 80 to 84 percent complete over the past week.
Anastasia Kubinec, the Manager of Crop Industry Development with Manitoba Agriculture, says farmers took advantage of a few days of drier weather, especially in the northwest, but most areas received more rain or snow over the weekend which has shut things down for another couple of days.

Clip-Anastasia Kubinec-Manitoba Agriculture:

We are probably needing two solid weeks of dry weather, warm weather and windy weather.
Initially we're going to need that dry, warm and windy weather to dry down plant material, also to firm up the soils.
That is one thing that producers have been remarking about, that they can get in and combine their crops but in some crops like soybeans where they're having to cut quite low on the plant, with the moist soil conditions, the tires on the combine are starting to go down a little bit and then they're having issues with control of where their header is to make sure that they're not actually pushing dirt and that they're actually cutting the plants.
That is a concern there, so we do need fields to firm up.
We need stalk tissue and the heads or the pods to dry down a bit so we can have fairly good easy threshing out of material out of the head material and hopefully that some of that grain starts coming off as dry so we're not having to use dryers and aeration as much to bring that harvested grain down to a dry moisture basis.
Because a lot of the crop coming off right now is at a damp or even a wet moisture basis.

Kubinec says, in canola, grain corn and sunflowers the quality remains and in soybeans the quality of crops coming off now is actually better than the crop that came off in August because they've had more time and moisture during dry down resulting in less green seed.

Source : farmscape

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Why Your Food Future Could be Trapped in a Seed Morgue

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In a world of PowerPoint overload, Rex Bernardo stands out. No bullet points. No charts. No jargon. Just stories and photographs. At this year’s National Association for Plant Breeding conference on the Big Island of Hawaii, he stood before a room of peers — all experts in the science of seeds — and did something radical: he showed them images. He told them stories. And he asked them to remember not what they saw, but how they felt.

Bernardo, recipient of the 2025 Lifetime Achievement Award, has spent his career searching for the genetic treasures tucked inside what plant breeders call exotic germplasm — ancient, often wild genetic lines that hold secrets to resilience, taste, and traits we've forgotten to value.

But Bernardo didn’t always think this way.

“I worked in private industry for nearly a decade,” he recalls. “I remember one breeder saying, ‘We’re making new hybrids, but they’re basically the same genetics.’ That stuck with me. Where is the new diversity going to come from?”

For Bernardo, part of the answer lies in the world’s gene banks — vast vaults of seed samples collected from every corner of the globe. Yet, he says, many of these vaults have quietly become “seed morgues.” “Something goes in, but it never comes out,” he explains. “We need to start treating these collections like living investments, not museums of dead potential.”

That potential — and the barriers to unlocking it — are deeply personal for Bernardo. He’s wrestled with international policies that prevent access to valuable lines (like North Korean corn) and with the slow, painstaking science of transferring useful traits from wild relatives into elite lines that farmers can actually grow. Sometimes it works. Sometimes it doesn’t. But he’s convinced that success starts not in the lab, but in the way we communicate.

“The fact sheet model isn’t cutting it anymore,” he says. “We hand out a paper about a new variety and think that’s enough. But stories? Plants you can see and touch? That’s what stays with people.”

Bernardo practices what he preaches. At the University of Minnesota, he helped launch a student-led breeding program that’s working to adapt leafy African vegetables for the Twin Cities’ African diaspora. The goal? Culturally relevant crops that mature in Minnesota’s shorter growing season — and can be regrown year after year.

“That’s real impact,” he says. “Helping people grow food that’s meaningful to them, not just what's commercially viable.”

He’s also brewed plant breeding into something more relatable — literally. Coffee and beer have become unexpected tools in his mission to make science accessible. His undergraduate course on coffee, for instance, connects the dots between genetics, geography, and culture. “Everyone drinks coffee,” he says. “It’s a conversation starter. It’s a gateway into plant science.”