Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1982-11, Page 11ON THE SUBJECT OF CORN Who's doing what? by Rhea Hamilton Ontario Grain Corn Council A monthly newsletter published by the Ontario Grain Corn Council keeps far- mers abreast of what is happening in the market. Figures,from who is using grain corn and where, to elevator buying prices and Chicago futures. More information comes in the way of alerts to frost and how it can affect prices, to export information on Canadian corn,including references to the U.S. agreements with the Soviet Union. The council was organized by the provincial government in December 1971 at a conference in Ridgetown, to offer to growers representation and information. From the council comes the monthly market letter. The thirteen members of the council are appointed by an order in council and funded through the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food. Eight farmers and five industry people from all across the province meet with their secretary -treasurer Ed O'Meara on a monthly basis to go over the material he gathers for the letter. Mr. O'Meara, who works out of Toronto, collects data from many sources and drafts the letter. A smaller committee of three go over the material and edit the copy. "We are very dependent on American informa- tion", Said O'Meara. "There just isn't much Canadian stuff available." If you do not already receive the market letter from the Ontario Grain Corn Council, their address is 10th Floor, 801 Bay Street, Toronto, Ont., M7A 2B2. With the distinct possibility of a provincial association of corn growers being formed through the efforts of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, Mr. O'Meara noted that corn producers may have less need for the Ontario Grain Corn Council. The proposed association would represent the corn growers (grain pro- ducers) as spokesman, and to monitor product trends, inform producers on policy changes or other developments in the industry and lobby for greater financial stabilization. Ontario Corn Committee The corn committee publishes a report listing the hybrids, indicating their heat unit rating, yields, and rate of maturity. The committee is made up of represen- tatives of Agriculture Canada, The On- tario Ministry of Agriculture and Food, the University of Guelph, the Ontario Soil and Crop Improvement Association, the Ontario Seed Corn Growers' Marketing Board, the Canadian Seed Trade Associa- tion and the Canadian Seed Growers' Association. Each year tests are conducted on test sites throughout the province by the following agencies: Research Station, Harrow; Ridgetown College of Agricul- tural Technology, Ridgetown; Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph; Kemptville College of Agricultural Technology, Kemptville; Research Station, Ottawa; and the Research Station, Smithfield. Seed samples are taken at random from seed stock at the producer's or distribu- tor's warehouse. Planted alongside regu- lar crops they receive equal fertility and weed control. Ross McBeath of R.R. 3 Kippen has been participating in the field trials for close to eight years. McBeath explained that an acre of his land is rented and he works the ground. A group, in this case, from the University of Guelph, working for the Ontario Corn Committee plants the hybrid seed. When the rest of the corn around the test plot is fertilized and sprayed for insecticide by McBeath,so is the test plot. The harvest of that test plot is undertaken by the group to record yield and maturity. When they are finished with the corn,it is turned over to the land owner. The data from the performance trials are then compiled and published in a pamphlet available through the local Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food offices. The report offers interpretations of the results, and recommended hybrids suitable for Ontario conditions. Explana- tions of heat units and how to choose a hybrid available that would do well on your particular farm is also covered in the Ontario Corn Committee report. Ontario Seed Corn Growers' Marketing Board Growing seed corn for sale is a metriculous and time consuming job. There are 450 growers in the province. The job entails detassling the male plants and pollinating the female. The yield per acre from this work is only a fraction of what regular corn produces. Due to the loss in yield and the work involved, the farmers have formed the Ontario Seed Corn Growers Marketing Board. Chairman Tom Johnston of R.R. 2 Kentbridge explained the mandate of the group as negotiating contracts between the farmers and the seed companies. To grow seed corn a farmer must either be contacted by a company or seek out the company himself. Mr. Johnston said the price of the seed produced is determined through a compli- cated formula. Seed growers may only produce in the neighbourhood of 50 bushels per acre as opposed to normal or regular grain corn which produces in the neighbourhood of 142 bushels per acre depending on the variety. "Everyone seems happy so far with the arrange- ment," said Mr. Johnston. THE RURAL VOICE / NOVEMBER 1982 PG. 11