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The Rural Voice, 2005-01, Page 35of natural bark, though plants can be trained on a trellis, stake or even pruned into a bush form. The plant has thick, leathery, dark green leaves, three to four inches long, richly glossy. In summer, older plants display clusters of small, waxy white flowers, with pink centres, Sweetly scented and long lasting they develop on "spurs"; do not cut them after the blossoms have faded, since the new crop will appear on them the following summer. To be successful with wax plants you have to let them rest during the cool winter months. Water just enough to keep them from shriveling and keep them cool. In early spring increase the warmth to 70 degrees F. to stimulate new growth and flowering. Use a humusy soil, as you would for begonias although they will do fine in ordinary soil. There are some lovely varieties with Tight green leaves edged with white and where the new leaves have areas of pink on them. A miniature version from India with similar oval, pointed leaves only an inch long can be easily found in most plant centres. 1 have a small list of great new leafy house plants 1 would like to find but I have to work on the one doing the vacuuming before I bring another plant home.0 AgriTech The bellowing of a province Janice Becker is a computer entlnusiast and journalist living near Walton, ON. We are all accustomed to seeing burnished cornstalks in autumn. fields, browning soybeans and grains turning amber from green. However, there has been a yellowing of Southwestern Ontario over the past several years. It began with a field or two of yellow blooms, and to the unacquainted, it brought questions about just what was growing there. But, Ontarians have now become accustomed to seeing larger expanses of those blooms. Canola has arrived. As a farm girl growing up in the southwestern region of Middlesex County (just a few years ago), canola was unheard of, at least to me. After moving to Huron County in the early 1990s, I began to notice its appearance. Very popular on the Prairies, canola (Canadian oil) was produced in the 1970s after Canadian plant breeders worked to increase its nutritional value, says the Canola Information Service at www.canolainfo.org. Though not the same, canola was derived from rapeseed. Traditional plant breeding methods were used to eliminate or reduce the unwanted components in rapeseed while improving upon the sought-after nutrients. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recognized it in 1985 as safe for human consumption and the name canola was registered three years later. The seed is crushed for canola oil and the rest is ground for livestock feed. The site offers numerous recipes that use canola oil for stirfrys and marinades, salad dressings and low-fat choices. Several other interesting uses are also listed. The Canola Connection, found at www.canola-council.org, details the 38th annual convention to be held in Halifax, Nova Scotia from July 17 to 19. The focus will be expanding the industry and breaking down barriers. Information on the canola/rapeseed technical meeting, planned for late June in Winnipeg, can also be found on this site. From the Canola Council of Canada link on the left of the homepage, review information on the industry, press releases, crop facts and myths and memberships. Though most of the executive and board members are from the west, there are connections in Oakville and Georgetown From here, 1 found a link to the Ontario Canola Growers Association. Board members are located across mid -western Ontario from Alliston and Arthur to Lucknow and Palmerston with the current president living near Meaford. You can also link into the OMAF site to read a report on the benefits of canola as a winter crop. A section 1 found interesting was the discussion groups, where readers e-mail comments on topics such as biotechnology. nutrition or the industry in general. There have been responses from around the world. A few other sites to check out include Alberta Agriculture. Food and Rural Development - Canola. www.agric.gov.ab.ca/navigation/crop s/canola, Canola Guide, www.agcanada.com/cn/cn.htm (if you can make the connection) and Canola Market Information. www.statcom-online.com/canolahome. In spite of industry research and governmental approval, some organizations still voice concerns over the safety of canola. The Canola Information Service offers links to some of those reports and I imagined a search of the web would surely elicit other sources. By simply entering canola in my Google search engine. I came up with 167,000 canola-related sites. If you look beyond the first few pages where those industry sites tend to be. and skip to page 12. you will see articles with a decidedly different perspective. As always. form your own opinion with knowledge from a variety of sources. Contact me at jlbecker@wightman.ca or through The Rural Voice office.0 JANUARY 2005 31