BASF Announces Summer Training Series

Cindy Zimmerman

BASF Ag Products is planning what is expected to be the largest training effort in the company’s history for this summer, reaching 24 states and focusing on weed management, application best practices and overall stewardship of BASF herbicides.

basf-media-14-luke“We are committed to ensuring growers’ success with new technologies,” said Luke Bozeman, Technical Market Manager, Herbicides, BASF. “The more knowledgeable growers are about precise stewardship practices, the more successful they will be in their applications.”

The educational training and plot tour series will include an introduction to BASF’s Engenia™ herbicide, which is expected to be registered for use next year. The series will provide information about best practices for stewardship of future Engenia herbicide applications in dicamba-tolerant (DT) crops.

basf-media14-johnfAt many of the summer training events, attendees will also have the chance to participate in the On Target Application Academy, a BASF spray application training led by industry professionals which has reached more than 4,000 growers in 21 states since it was started in 2012, This training is focused on proper application techniques – including the importance of boom height, weed size, nozzles and equipment cleanout – and their impact on the desired application.

The summer training series will be held in 24 states across the country, with the largest training events occurring at BASF research farms in Story City, Iowa; Pine Level, North Carolina; Beaver Crossing, Nebraska; and Seymour, Illinois. To participate in a training event in your area, contact your local authorized BASF retailer, your BASF Innovation Specialist or visit the On Target Application Academy website for more information.

At the BASF Ag Media event last week I visited with both Luke Bozeman and BASF herbicide group agricultural biologist John Frihauf about some of the what farmers will learn during these summer field days.

Bozeman (pictured top right) talks about the On-Target Academy and the importance of targeted application with dicamba formulations. Interview with Luke Bozeman, BASF

Frihauf (above left) discusses the status of Engenia and the importance of developing new herbicides to fight weed resistance. Interview with John Frihauf, BASF

2014 BASF Ag Media Summit Photo Album

Agribusiness, Audio, BASF, Crop Protection

Jerry Harrington Retires Dupont Pioneer

Chuck Zimmerman

Jerry HarringtonI am still looking for a photo of Jerry Harrington, DuPont Pioneer Sales & Marketing Public Relations manager, that I want to use for this post. When I find it I will update it. In the meantime you get the pensive, paying attention Jerry Harrington from a conference at Dupont Pioneer headquarters in Iowa.

The big news is that after 16 years of dedicated service, Jerry has retired. He not only contributed much to the business over the years but is a personal friend to me and many, many in the agricultural media. I like Jerry’s sense of humor and the fact that he was always so responsive to any requests. We’ll miss him at Pioneer but we’ll be in the good hands of Jane Slusark, Dupont Pioneer Senior Communications Consultant. We had a lot of fun with Jane in Argentina last year at the IFAJ Congress.

Please join us in wishing Jerry well.

Agribusiness, Pioneer

NAMA Happenings and Update

Chuck Zimmerman

ZimmCast 442The Executive Committee of the National Agri-Marketing Association met yesterday and even though I could not make it thanks to plane problems and weather I got all caught up with President Kenna Rathai this morning. So this week’s program is our conversation in which Kenna talks about what the committee discussed or did during the quarterly meeting.

NAMA 2014 Fall ConferenceFirst up is the annual NAMA Fall Conference. This year the conference will be held at the Hotel Chicago on Sept. 16-17 with a pre-conference farm tour arranged by the Chicago NAMA Chapter. Speakers and sessions have been announced. Check your schedule and get registered. It’s going to be a good one!

NAMA 2014 Boot CampAlthough Kenna and I didn’t talk about NAMA Boot Camp I’m putting a plug for it here since you need to get registered. It will take place in Kansas City August 19-21.

Some other items on the committee meeting agenda included a proposed overhaul of the NAMA website back end operating system. This needs to be done and will create a better website that will be easier for the staff to manage and keep up to date. Our organizational finances are in great shape and we’ve got money budgeted for this project.

Another item we talked about are some upcoming NAMA industry alliance events. The next one will be a July 28 reception we’re co-hosting with the NAFB during the Agricultural Media Summit. We will also have one during the Farm Progress Show again this fall in Iowa.

Listen to this week’s program and hear more about what is going on with NAMA: NAMA Update

Thanks to our ZimmCast sponsor, GROWMARK, locally owned, globally strong, for their support.

Subscribe to the ZimmCast podcast here.

Ag Groups, Audio, NAMA, ZimmCast

Biobased Products – How Important for Ag?

Talia Goes

New Holland ZimmPollOur latest ZimmPoll asked the question, “How would you rate the job farmers are doing telling consumers where their food comes from?” It looks as though many of you feel their efforts are good to fair, but as farmers continue to engage in storytelling activities such as the Food Dialogues and social media, more can be done.
Our poll results:

    • Great – 10%
    • Good – 30%
    • Fair – 35%
    • Bad – 20%
    • Other – 5%

Our new ZimmPoll is now live and asks the question, “How important are bio-based products for agriculture?” “We want to get to the point where we’re using everything we grow and everything we raise” to create jobs, help the environment and reduce petroleum use, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said in an interview with USA Today. What do you think – will it encourage growth in rural communities and encourage consumers to understand what’s in the products they’re using?

ZimmPoll

Teaching Starts at Home

Melissa Sandfort

20140617_103748As a mom who works in the agriculture industry, it’s important that my children know where their food comes from. For instance, when I read “Johnny Tractor” books with my 2-year-old daughter and she sees the picture of the cow, she knows the cow has an udder and we get milk from a cow. As a sidebar note, the movie “Barnyard” still bothers me because there are cows with udders and male voices. Anyone else see something wrong with that? I’m off my soapbox now.

As we drive to and from town, I point out tractors, cattle, sprayers, and all things agriculture I possibly can. And when we turn by our John Deere painted mailbox and head up the driveway to the house, this is a field of dryland corn that runs the length of our drive.

The other day, my son (who is almost 6) told me he is excited for the corn to be ready to eat. I quickly corrected him that it was field corn, not sweet corn, and he replied, “Oh, cows eat it, not people.” Proud moment.

I believe educating our children about food and where it comes from starts right here at home. Are you teaching your children about our safe, healthy food supply, then thanking our farmers for what they do to put food on our dinner tables?

Until we walk again …

Uncategorized

Elevance Exemplifies Biobased Product Diversity

Cindy Zimmerman

usb-bio-elevanceOne of the many biobased product companies represented at the USB Biobased Products Stakeholders’ Dialogue this week was Elevance Renewable Sciences, which produces a wide array of materials from renewable oils like soybeans.

“We make products targeted at three broad market industries,” says Andy Shafer, EVP for sales and marketing. “The consumer and industrial space where we make ingredients for cleaners, detergents and solvents, we make ingredients for personal care products, and we make high-performance waxes. In our lubricants and additives space, we make base oils for lubricants and additives for lubricants and fuels, and in our engineered polymers and coatings area we make building blocks for engineered polymers, high-performance plastics, and coatings and adhesives.”

Shafer says they came to the USB event because it gave them an opportunity to talk with government officials, both on the demand side and on the regulatory side. He even had a chance to ask Deputy Agriculture Secretary Krysta Harden directly about the potential of a loan guarantee for their new plant being built in Mississippi. Interview with Andy Shafer, Elevance

I had the chance to catch Krysta Harden on video visiting with Elevance as she toured through the USB event this week – watch it below.


2014 USB Soy Biobased Dialogue Photo Album

Audio, Soybean, USB, USDA, Video

NAMA Exec Comm Meets

Chuck Zimmerman

NAMA Executive Committee Mtg.Thanks to our fearless National Agri-Marketing Association President, Kenna Rathai, I can share a photo from today’s Executive Committee Mtg. I should be there. But I’m not. I want to be there. But I’m not. And it’s not Delta’s fault.

I got as far as Atlanta today. My flight to the meeting in Chicago was delayed and after we boarded we found out we had mechanical troubles and had to de-plane. Our new plane was an hour away and as we were boarding it we found out that O’Hare airport was on a ground stop due to weather. After two hours of waiting on this I gave up. Missed the meeting and turned around to go home. A first in all my years of travel!

So, I have communicated with some of the NAMA execs and business is getting done while I’m on my way back to ZimmComm World Headquarters. #ILoveTravel

NAMA

Zimfo Bytes

Talia Goes

Zimfo Bytes

  • Syngenta and Anheuser-Busch InBev announced a partnership to secure the sourcing of high-quality malting barley, the key raw material for the beer industry.
  • Periscope, announced that BASF Corporation has selected Periscope as its new agency of record for the Agricultural Products North America Business Unit including U.S. Crop Protection, its Specialty Products Division and Functional Crop Care.
  • Syngenta and Delta F.A.R.M. (Farmers Advocating Resource Management) jointly will develop commercial farmland into pollinator habitats.
  • NAMA member nominations are due by July 25th for the Professional Development Awards of Excellence.
Zimfo Bytes

Meet ASTA’s New Second Vice Chair

Cindy Zimmerman

asta-14-hermannMark Herrmann with Monsanto’s vegetable seed division is the new second vice chair of the American Seed Trade Association (ASTA) after elections held during the annual meeting last week in Indianapolis.

“The seed industry has been an exciting place to be for the last 30 years,” said Herrmann, who has been involved with ASTA for about 20 of those 30 years. “I see it as an organization that doesn’t focus on companies, it focuses on what we can do as a group of people to make sure there are policies that help a healthy industry operate.”

Herrmann says agriculture as fundamental for humanity “and seed is at the very root of agriculture, helping to drive that engine.” He looks forward to being a part of implementing ASTA’s strategic objectives in the years ahead as part of the organization’s officer team. Interview with Mark Herrmann, ASTA Second Vice Chair

ASTA Annual Meeting Photo Album

ASTA, Audio, Seed, specialty crops

Farm Progress Show Outdoor Concert Announced

Jamie Johansen

FPS14-flagThe 2014 Farm Progress Show and the Iowa State Center are pleased to present Jerrod Niemann with special guest Craig Campbell in an outdoor concert at the newly renovated ISU Harvester Plaza on Wednesday, Aug. 27, in Ames. This concert is held in conjunction with the 2014 Farm Progress Show to be held in Boone, Iowa on Aug. 26, 27 and 28 and is sponsored by Syngenta.

“We are excited to showcase Syngenta and our Golden Harvest® and NK® seed brands alongside standout performers like Jerrod and Craig during the 2014 Farm Progress Show,” said Eric Boersma, head of corn seed product management, Syngenta. “Our customers and country music fans will be in for a real treat. Jerrod and Craig are passionate about their music, just as we are passionate about providing growers with top-performing hybrids and varieties that will help them grow more corn and soybeans.”

Concert gates open at 5 p.m., Craig Campbell is scheduled to start at 6:30 p.m., followed by a 30-minute intermission and Jerrod Niemann is scheduled to start at 8 p.m. The general admission, lawn seating concert will be held in the newly renovated Harvester Plaza at the Iowa State Center. The ISU campus is located east of the FPS site in Ames.

Ticket price is $28 and go on sale Friday, June 13 at 10 a.m. Tickets are available at the Iowa State Center Ticket Office, Monday – Friday, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. Tickets are also available at all Ticketmaster Centers (convenience surcharges apply), by phone (800)745-3000 or online at www.TicketMaster.com. Concert admission is separate from show admission. The public is welcome. There are no ticket refunds or exchanges.

Jerrod Niemann exploded onto the music scene with his chart-topping major-label debut, 2010’s Judge Jerrod & The Hung Jury. The album, on Sea Gayle/Arista Nashville records, included the Number One smash and RIAA-certified Platinum digital single, “Lover, Lover,” and the follow-up Top 5 single, “What Do You Want.” Niemann — who has also written songs for and with such artists as Garth Brooks, Blake Shelton, and Lee Brice — returned in 2012 with the acclaimed, musically adventurous release, Free the Music. All the while, he’s continued playing 200 shows a year on the road, year in and year out.

Agribusiness, Farm Progress Show