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Seed Synergy... what does our Canadian seed system.. need to do?

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    Like others have said , seed growers are not the problem.
    They are just the mouthpiece for the industry.
    We have seen what has happened
    With Canola.
    So we know where this is going.

    Eventually you will be stuck with
    Limited choices ,
    You will not be able treat seed
    Yourself . Safety reasons . Of course.

    Then you can not buy the seed
    Without treatment. Because that is all that they sell.

    Pretty easy to see what is ahead.
    Turn 10$ wheat seed cost into 30-40$ or more . All crops peas etc.80$/acre

    It does not happen instantly.
    That is too big a shock and they have to eliminate the other choices first.

    Their intentions are pretty clear in that the variety owners can pull the registration at any time.
    And use agreement s prohibit
    Holding on to varieties.

    It is not instant. You have to run the others out of town first.
    Public and pulse growers breeding gone in 10 years

    Comment


      The good news is TOM4HISMASTERS has admitted where the triffid flax issues came from....

      The same guys that have been lobbying for years for a seed tax....


      It won't matter quality or variety in our wheat market when the same people **** it up again....

      Every variety of flax was affected by TRIFFID.

      Every variety of wheat will be affected with an outbreak of roundup ready wheat.....it's been here and supposedly cleaned out for years...but still shows up ....

      Will those responsible ever be held accountable....nope....just pay for seed and a seed tax as well...

      Comment


        JVC, When AC Barrie was registered some 30 years ago... it was on the high side for gluten strength of the CWB/CGC GRL assessments for functionality that was needed by bakers for mechanized bread production.
        The ability to use other baking additives, also the more prevalent use of US type baking bread making machinery... along with the functionality of CWRS being widely used to strengthen gluten properties of weaker gluten wheat from the general global wheat production... plus..... the change in grain handling as high throughput interior terminals have become widespread with grain blending before loading ships at port position...
        All mean older low gluten strength CWRS qualifying varieties like Nepawa and Laura... do not meet the needs of many end users in the baking/breadmaking sector. The CGC grain research laboratory has consistently been used to check the functionality of CWRS during the development of all CWRS varieties,,, and if you look on the CGC 'Grains Canada web site... you can see that Brandon meets the 'new' target for CWRS gluten strength... where varieties like Redwater and Harvest are being reclassified. Aussie milling wheat... and US DNS spring wheat in particular... which US Minneapolis futures uses as the standard... has meant that Canadian CWRS traded at a discount to DNS from the US... because our Canadian CWRS had on average lower gluten strength. The recent CGC reclassifications of our western Canadian CWRS varieties... have been done to bring our CWRS quality into alignment with DNS from US sources. BTW... in 2010 I got CWB export licenses for CWExtra Strong... and Columbia Grain was happy to pay DNS premium prices... for the higher gluten strength wheats we grew. Columbia Grain was blending wheat for specific millers and bakers... delivering exact specifications for direct hit delivery to end users. Now Canadian grain buying/handlers... are involved often more directly in this manner also... as premiums can be procured at times by providing specific end use specifications.
        Therefore saying Brandon is substandard quality... is somewhat misleading... as it truly depends on the end users grist requirements... and those quality specifications can vary considerably especially if CWRS is used for upgrading lower quality wheat in the bakers grist to meet specific targets.
        Originally posted by jcv View Post
        Somebody commented that quality is no better? The government went to a different system for evaluating varieties, and many did not have the quality we assumed.
        Brandon wheat is a variety that was not tested thru the new "older" more expensive system, and may not have the qualities of CWRS. If we grow CWRS, varieties will need to change to meet the quality aspects of the variety. Maybe we shouldn't grow CWRS, but CNHR or other similar varieties, if quality is not a factor.

        Comment


          Bucket,
          Not every Canadian flax variety was contaminated at the Breeder seed level. CDC Saskatoon... where Triffid was developed.. was the primary contamination point in the breeder seed stocks.. although some Ag Canada varieties needed to be reconstituted as well. Sweeping generalizations... may be your preferred communication method... yet this is an inaccurate way to describe a very exacting science... that of plant breeding. Cheers Tom
          Originally posted by bucket View Post
          The good news is TOM4HISMASTERS has admitted where the triffid flax issues came from....

          The same guys that have been lobbying for years for a seed tax....


          It won't matter quality or variety in our wheat market when the same people **** it up again....

          Every variety of flax was affected by TRIFFID.

          Every variety of wheat will be affected with an outbreak of roundup ready wheat.....it's been here and supposedly cleaned out for years...but still shows up ....

          Will those responsible ever be held accountable....nope....just pay for seed and a seed tax as well...

          Comment


            Originally posted by TOM4CWB View Post
            Bucket,
            Not every Canadian flax variety was contaminated at the Breeder seed level. CDC Saskatoon... where Triffid was developed.. was the primary contamination point in the breeder seed stocks.. although some Ag Canada varieties needed to be reconstituted as well. Sweeping generalizations... may be your preferred communication method... yet this is an inaccurate way to describe a very exacting science... that of plant breeding. Cheers Tom
            why was triffid ever developed?
            who wanted it ?
            why did they want it ?

            Comment


              Originally posted by TOM4CWB View Post
              Bucket,
              Not every Canadian flax variety was contaminated at the Breeder seed level. CDC Saskatoon... where Triffid was developed.. was the primary contamination point in the breeder seed stocks.. although some Ag Canada varieties needed to be reconstituted as well. Sweeping generalizations... may be your preferred communication method... yet this is an inaccurate way to describe a very exacting science... that of plant breeding. Cheers Tom
              TOM4BEING STUPID

              Every variety lost market share and every flax variety had to be tested before it could be sold....the European premium has been gone and filled by the FSU....


              Keep denying the facts ...your masters have trained you well....must have got a lot of paper bags full of cash to sell out your neighbours the way you have....

              Comment


                Tom4$4Tom

                "US DNS spring wheat in particular... which US Minneapolis futures uses as the standard... has meant that Canadian CWRS traded at a discount to DNS from the US... because our Canadian CWRS had on average lower gluten strength"

                It seems China made the big complaint to GIGI in 2013. Now 29 varieties of CWRS have been moved to CNHR. It's plain to see what's happening here. Limit the amount of varieties in the CWRS class in order that the one controlling the seed can charge what they want for the seed and the royalties.

                The other thing that will happen is CNHR will eventually be discounted to CWRS, which in turn will force farmers to move planting acres to varieties of CWRS . Playing right in to the hands of the Seed companies controlling the seed

                Very interesting the chart below showing where China fits in to importing wheat and how they have declined by 44.7%. They aren't that big of player as they once were. Another thing, the 29 varieties of CWRS were more than adequate to make flat breads and noodles which the majority of buyers on the list live on.

                This in no way is going to be a benefit to prairie farmers in the pocket books as you are claiming!


                Below are the 15 countries that imported the highest dollar value worth of wheat during 2017:
                Indonesia: US$3.6 billion (8.7% of total wheat imports)
                Egypt: $2.6 billion (6.3%)
                Algeria: $1.8 billion (4.3%)
                Italy: $1.7 billion (4.1%)
                Japan: $1.5 billion (3.7%)
                Nigeria: $1.24 billion (3%)
                Bangladesh: $1.22 billion (3%)
                Philippines: $1.22 billion (3%)
                Spain: $1.2 billion (3%)
                Brazil: $1.15 billion (2.8%)
                Mexico: $1.09 billion (2.6%)
                Turkey: $1.04 billion (2.5%)
                China: $1.03 billion (2.5%)
                Netherlands: $1.02 billion (2.5%)
                Vietnam: $965.6 million (2.3%)

                Those countries that posted declines in their imported wheat purchases were led by: Brazil (down -52.4%), China (down -44.7%), Japan (down -32.9%) and Mexico (down -19.9%).

                Comment


                  the reason they are deregistered is so new expensive brands that are no better can be sold
                  same reason old canolas have been deregistered, all about bleeding the farmer dry
                  someone made a comment on here about why farmers are considered end users ?
                  this wasn't addressed but a really good point
                  just charge the seed tax to "real" end users like japan , Italy , etc. , see how that works out ?

                  Comment


                    caseih
                    CDC Saskatoon developed Triffid flax to use products like Refine Extra... for new flax herbicide options... and soil carry over tolerance. As with Roundup Ready wheat... to get the tolerance events approved in Europe became increasingly difficult and unlikely... even though US approval for Triffid was completed... it was decided to wind the Triffid variety down... and eliminate it from the Canadian system... rather than fight the EU.
                    Originally posted by caseih View Post
                    why was triffid ever developed?
                    who wanted it ?
                    why did they want it ?

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by TOM4CWB View Post
                      caseih
                      CDC Saskatoon developed Triffid flax to use products like Refine Extra... for new flax herbicide options... and soil carry over tolerance. As with Roundup Ready wheat... to get the tolerance events approved in Europe became increasingly difficult and unlikely... even though US approval for Triffid was completed... it was decided to wind the Triffid variety down... and eliminate it from the Canadian system... rather than fight the EU.
                      Wonder how much was spent on R&D and development on something that wasn't wanted and only ended up costing the industry?
                      How are we guaranteed that this won't happen again? Already had scare with RR wheat.

                      Seems like every change in the whole industry the last few years comes with no accountability or monitoring and ends up costing farmers money that no one can figure out how to give back to farmers. Self regulation isn't working....

                      Comment

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