Dears,
We wish you a healthy and prosperous start to 2021.
Enjoy the festive season,
Syngenta Group Media Relations
Also included is this interesting information. For larger image, click on it.
Dears,
We wish you a healthy and prosperous start to 2021.
Enjoy the festive season,
Syngenta Group Media Relations
Also included is this interesting information. For larger image, click on it.
The 2021 Cattle Industry Annual Convention and NCBA Trade Show has been rescheduled as a live event for August in Nashville, but there are still business meetings to be held and members to be updated. To take care of that, a brand new virtual 2021 Cattle Industry Winter Reboot will be held February 23-24 featuring education, industry updates, market outlook and a virtual market place with some of the top companies in the industry.
Sessions will include an update from Washington D.C. and what to expect with the new administration, as well as ten educational sessions covering topics such as sustainability and an introduction to tech tools. The program will conclude with a preview of the 2021 Cattle Industry Convention & NCBA Trade Show happening August 10-12 in Music City, Nashville, Tennessee.
Registration will open on January 6. Find out more here.
Here’s a message from CEO Bill Even about how the Pork Checkoff is taking lessons learned in 2020 to prepare the industry for the future.
While 2020 has been far from what any of us could have imagined, as we begin the holiday season we are optimistic about what is in store for 2021. We will continue to leverage all that 2020 has taught us as we pave a path forward for the pork industry.
I know the holidays will look different this year, but I hope you find time to rest, restore and connect with family and friends.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
Bill Even
CEO
As growers look back on 2020, they saw another year where low commodity prices meant more bushels were the best path forward. Syngenta‘s Dane Bowers pointed to Acuron corn herbicide as a great weed resistance management tool.
“Certainly, understanding the value that a herbicide product brings is really important. I think what I would like growers to think about is not just saving money, but thinking about what is the return on the money that I spend on my herbicide?” said Bowers, who serves as the Technical Product Lead on Syngenta’s Herbicide Team.
Acuron contains four active ingredients and three different sites of action, and has shown a 5-15 bushel yield increase in multiple trials. Bowers said that’s in part due to a unique active ingredient called bicyclopyrone, which sets Acuron apart from many other corn herbicides on the market
“I know resistance just continues to grow in the marketplace so it’s really important for growers to make sure that the herbicides they choose have multiple, effective sites of action that will control the target weeds, the weeds that are really giving them fits,” said Bowers, who participated in the National Association of Farm Broadcasting virtual Trade Talk event.
He said growers need to plan on using two-pass programs, as well.
2020 NAFB Interview with Dane Bowers, Syngenta herbicides lead 6:05
Two long-time agribusiness industry communicators are retiring from the business the next month.
One of the best farm broadcasters in the business is retiring from Brownfield Ag News. After a 43-year career in agriculture, anchor/reporter Ken Anderson will sign off for the last time on December 30. Ken has received many awards over the years, including NAFB Farm Broadcaster of the Year Award in 2014 and the American Coalition for Ethanol (ACE) 2018 Media Excellence award (pictured, with Ken’s wife Ardella).
Ken and Ardella have four children and ten grandchildren. “I love what I do and working for Brownfield for the past 12 years has been a wonderful experience,” Anderson says. “But I am looking forward to a slightly slower pace, spending more time with my wife Ardella, seeing more of our kids and grandkids, and doing some traveling as well.”
Mark Lambert is also looking forward to spending more time with the grandkids in his retirement, but his 33 years of work on behalf of corn growers, first in Illinois and then nationwide, will never be forgotten.
In his Facebook announcement, Mark says, “I have spent 44 years, first as a journalist and then a Communications Director, working with the nation’s family farmers. In an era when we are all so distant from the land, the farmers who care for it, and the hand that feeds us, it seemed a noble task to try to close the gap and build understanding.”
Mark’s retirement will be official January 15, 2021.
Congratulations to both of you – wish we were there!
The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA) hopes to voluntarily increase price discovery in the cattle industry with its new “75% Plan.”
A shortage of price discovery, particularly in the fed cattle market, has existed because people are using alternative market agreements instead of negotiated trade in many cases, said Tanner Beymer, NCBA Director of Government Affairs and Market Regulatory Policy.
“That decline in negotiated trade is problematic because that direct buyer/seller interaction between cattle feeders and packers is what sets the tone for the whole market. It gives everybody an idea of where the market is at any given time,” said Beymer.
Producers need access to good data and true price discovery to make informed marketing decisions, which is why industry leaders began to look for solutions at the organization’s summer business meeting in Denver. The member-developed approach lays out a framework to increase negotiated fed cattle trade and incentive each of the major packers’ participation in such cash trade. The plan provides benchmarks for the industry to strive toward, beginning at 75 percent with hopes of increasing that number over time.
2020 NAFB Interview with Tanner Beymer, NCBA 9:24
The Field Notes podcast series from Koch Agronomic Services (Koch) breaks down the science and technology behind agronomy to help growers do more with less.
The experts we’ve heard from on our previous episodes have covered topics ranging from how different crops use nitrogen to the 4R’s of Nutrient Stewardship and how growers and retailers work together to choose the best input for an operation. If you haven’t checked out the previous prior six episodes, you can find them on your favorite podcast platform.
Koch Agronomic Services & Koch Fertilizer
In this episode, we discuss the relationship between Koch Agronomic Services and Koch Fertilizer. You’ll hear from Tim Laatsch, director of agronomy for North America for Koch Agronomic Services, and Scott Boyd, director of sales for Koch Fertilizer in the western U.S. They’ll explain how the two businesses work together to bring innovative products to market to help growers protect their nitrogen investment and touch on what the fertilizer industry anticipates for spring.
You can listen to the program here: Koch Agronomic Services & Koch Fertilizer
And to make sure you don’t miss an episode, choose an option to subscribe
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The CSS in ASTA CSS & Seed Expo stands for corn, soybeans and sorghum, but in recent years a little wheat has crept into the rotation.
“Hybrid Wheat – What is Different This Time?” was the title of the last session at the 2020 Seed Expo, featuring a panel of experts from the world of wheat. One of them was Jessie Alt, Global Wheat Lead for Corteva Agriscience. You might remember Dr. Alt from a few years ago when she starred in a video on plant breeders for the American Seed Trade Association.
In this interview, Alt discusses the role of newer breeding techniques and genomic knowledge enabling and complementing hybrid wheat breeding.
ASTA Interview with Jessie Alt, Corteva Agriscience (8:20)If you want to see the entire wheat session, it is still available on-demand for registrants of the 2020 CSS & Seed Expo. Just click here.
Interviews and other media content from the event is available in the 2020 ASTA CSS AgNewsWire virtual newsroom.