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Canterra Seeds and Richardson's partner on Enterprise Durum

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    Canterra Seeds and Richardson's partner on Enterprise Durum

    <a href="http://www.realagriculture.com/wp-
    content/uploads/2011/06/BJD072605ac_strongfiel
    d_durum.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-
    thumbnail wp-image-5822"
    title="BJD072605ac_strongfield_durum"
    src="http://www.realagriculture.com/wp-
    content/uploads/2011/06/BJD072605ac_strongfiel
    d_durum-150x150.jpg" alt="" width="150"
    height="150" /></a>The end of the single desk in
    the West means that things will change in a number
    of areas. One of those areas is market development
    of crops like durum. Whereas the Canadian Wheat
    Board held the bulk of that responsibility under the
    single desk, that job now has to be spread out to
    other companies looking to find and develop
    markets for their products.

    It's under that new landscape that <a
    href="http://www.canterra.com/">Canterra
    Seeds</a> and <a
    href="http://www.richardson.ca/products-and-
    services/pioneer">Richardson</a> have come
    together for the Enterprise Durum variety. The
    variety is exclusive to Richardson Pioneer and was
    developed in Western Canada. The partnership is
    beneficial to farmers from both an agronomic
    standpoint, from the seed company aspect, but also
    the marketing and market development strategy
    standpoint as well. I spoke to Brent Derkatch of
    Canterra Seeds about their new partnership at <a
    href="http://www.cropweek.com/cpw.html">Cropw
    eek 2012</a> in Saskatoon.

    <a href="http://www.realagriculture.com/?
    s=cropweek 2012">SEE MORE CROPWEEK 2012
    COVERAGE</a>.

    If you cannot see the embedded video below <a
    href="http://youtu.be/IqzBgmfTXk0">click
    here</a>.

    <iframe
    src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/IqzBgmfTXk
    0" frameborder="0" width="560" height="315">
    </iframe>

    #2
    >

    Comment


      #3

      Comment


        #4
        Just what we need another "IP" durum. First it was Navigator, then Patterson's Eurostar, and now Enterprise. I was in the Navigator program for a couple yrs till i realized how unfair it was to pay such an enormous price for seed, then have to give it all back at such low level returns. Course it had to go back to Viterra. Enterprise will be the same thing as the rest. They will offer a so called "premium" to get the gullable ones to grow it, then when they get enough acres there goes the premium. There is no real insentive to grow any IP variety. It will be too bad if all of a sudden that is all there is to grow is these varieties, seed costs will kill us.

        Comment


          #5
          Sorry to break it to you but in the new open wheat
          market these kinds of IP programs are going to
          become very much the norm. We are going to say
          more of them and less of just grow it and we will
          market it.

          Comment


            #6
            Totally agree with you, bigzee, on your post.

            However, Navigator didn't have to be IP for Viterra. It was the cheap sell out of our WGRF checkoff dollars by WGRF that developed it that cause Navigator to slip from public domain. It is the reason why I have ever since asked for the checkoff return. WGRF can't be trusted that it wouldn't do the same thing again. No real problem for them though. They'll just get their funding indirectly from farmers through rail cap overages with a government wink (perk).

            It doesn't have to be shaney's way if enough of us refuse to buy in. Just transfer over what a pissed off public on the control of the internet can cause. We could have the same power over the control of seed.

            Comment


              #7
              Checking,

              My way? Its not exactly my way. Not participating
              in an IP opportunity because you have to buy
              certified seed seems odd but its your decision.

              Lots of farmers, handlers and processors want
              these programs and as I mentioned they are going
              to grow in drastic numbers now that the CWB is
              gone.

              If you don't believe its an opportunity for your farm
              then you are correct, you don't have to participate.

              Comment


                #8
                Totally agree with BigZee. The problem is
                that the companies cannot resist the
                opportunity to manage the process in order
                to harvest farmer equity. ie the grade is
                never good enough along with over priced
                seed. If our checkoff money is developing
                these varieties, they need to have more
                than one company distribute it otherwise
                it guarantees monopoly abuse. All
                monopolies private and public will abuse.

                Comment


                  #9
                  I like these contracts if they make me more
                  money. I have the choice.

                  Comment

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