It looks like Canada’s new Ag Minister is retreating from making changes to the Canadian Wheat Board, at least not quickly. In meeting with CWB officials, Manitoba’s Ag Minister Rosann Wowchuk, and reporters after the meeting, Strahl said, “What I said to the wheat board’s board of directors is the same thing that I’ve been saying publicly . . . that our campaign promise was to move toward dual marketing.”
Strahl also said his controversial plan to let western farmers market their wheat without going through the board won’t happen in the near future. “I don’t anticipate any quick changes to the Canadian Wheat Board, and certainly not without lots of consultation with both farmers and the wheat board.” Some producers feel they could get better prices on their own, and point out that Ontario wheat farmers don’t have to sell through the board. But others, including the National Farmers Union, say an experiment with a voluntary board in the 1930s hurt producers and led to lower prices.
Strahl will discuss the issue further at a meeting of federal, provincial and territorial agriculture ministers, set tentatively for March 20. I’m all for a dual market in Western Canada, but the thing that concerns me is that our American friends want to do away with the CWB too. That’s what doesn’t figure in my books. I’m thinking farmers have an advantage, but the Americans think they have a disadvantage. Go figure!

I sometimes get asked how you can find something to write about everyday, much less multiple times a day. I’ve been blogging over a year and haven’t run into that problem yet. There’s inspiration everywhere, like alongside the Missouri River today. Since it was so warm here in Missouri I took a break for some biking on the Katy Trail. All I had was my Treo phone camera.
Then there was this guy out spreading what I assume was fertilizer. He was moving fast which is partly why it’s not a good picture. I love my Treo but great camera it is not. I think he was hurrying to get done so he could get home and pack before flying out to
Kicking off our coverage of Commodity Classic 2006 is an interview with Tami Craig Schilling,
Thanks to Andy over on
The folks at
It’s Commodity Classic week here on AgWired. That means you must enter our 