Farming revolution ‘route to water security’

[LONDON] Investing in agricultural infrastructure, from roads to fertilisers, will cut water wastage on a scale greater than any other intervention and is the best way to solve the world’s water problems, a leading specialist has said.

Colin Chartres, director general of the International Water Management Institute in Sri Lanka, was talking to SciDev.Net to highlight the launch of a book he has co-written with colleague Samyuktha Varma. The book describes a ‘six−point plan’ for saving the world’s water supplies.

The message coincides with SciDev.Net’s launch, today, of a Spotlight on Water Security and Climate Change, a collection of feature and opinion articles.

“The most critical thing, and where we can make the biggest inroads, is revitalising agriculture,” Chartres told SciDev.Net, pointing out that agriculture uses 70–80 per cent of water in many developing countries.

“As agricultural infrastructure gets more sophisticated, it should lead to better water management,” he said.

“I think it is critical that we start investing in infrastructure that is going to help some of the smaller countries really build on their agricultural bases to lift their state of development. There is very good evidence in Sub-Saharan Africa, from a number of small economies, that they are totally dependent initially on agriculture — and their gross domestic product then goes up and down with rainfall in various years over the decades.”

Chartres said he was confident that water use in agriculture can be reduced.

“Often there is a combination of factors causing poor crop yields. It may be lack of fertilisers, poor husbandry or agronomy, too much water or too little at the wrong time. There is great potential to improve the way we manage water and manage our crops, to pick up gains we know are quite possible. So that’s why I’m optimistic.”

Chartres mentioned India, where his institute is encouraging farmers to use surface water irrigation systems to recharge groundwater.

Excess water at the surface is siphoned down to replenish ground water, which is then pumped back up for use as necessary.

“We’ve already tried this in [Indian state of] Andhra Pradesh during the wet season,” said Chartres.

But he said that considerable investment would be required in research and development, and in helping countries develop their agricultural economies.

Research would be the “easy part”, Chartres said, citing the plans of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), the international group of agricultural research donors, to lift its funding to around US$1.6 billion dollars.

http://www.scidev.net/en/agriculture-and-environment/news/farming-revolution-route-to-water-security-.html

US: Minnesota and North Dakota Potato harvest ahead of schedule

Minnesota

Normal temperatures and below average precipitation allowed producers to make steadyharvest progress, according to the USDA, NASS, Minnesota Field Office. As of August 22, 23 percent of the potatoes were harvested compared to just 12 percent last year, and the five-year average of 20 percent.

North Dakota

Warm, dry weatherallowed significant harvest progress to be made and aided crop development, according to the USDA, National Agricultural Statistics Service, North Dakota Field Office. Nineteen percent of potatoes had vines killed, ahead of 14 average, and 2 percent ofthe crop had been dug compared to none last year at this time.

http://www.freshplaza.com/news_detail.asp?id=67836

Philippines: RP’s first organic agriculture school to rise in Zamboanga

Construction work has begun on the country’s first organic agriculture school in Zamboanga del Sur province.

Mayor Nacianceno Pacalioga Jr. said the College of Sustainable Agriculture in Dumingag
town in Zamboanga del Sur province will help ease the poverty of farmers and help protect the environment.

“Dumingag is an agricultural municipality. The economy is being driven by agriculture,” he said in an article posted on the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines news site.

He said organic agriculture is his centerpiece program, contrasting with the relatively “easy” farming based on chemicals.

Pacalioga said that despite initial ridicule, he and his wife Girlyn practiced organic farming on a half-hectare rice paddy. Now, he said their hard work and sacrifices are starting to pay off.

“Our people here have now realized that our land have been so degraded because of the years of practicing inorganic farming and using chemicals. They have realized the need to rehabilitate our farm lands so that future generations of farmers will still be able to produce food for our people,” he said.

Dumingag is a third-class town in Zamboanga del Sur. Pacalioga said 90 percent of the 46,039 residents rely solely on farming for their livelihood.

http://www.freshplaza.com/news_detail.asp?id=68714

Crop forecast: soybeans up, corn down

Worthington, Minn. — The latest crop forecast projects Minnesota farmers will see a bigger soybean yield, but the outlook for corn has dimmed a bit.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture predicts Minnesota’s soybean fields will average 46 bushels an acre, a two bushel increase from last month’s outlook. If the prediction holds, state farmers would harvest nearly 341 million bushels of soybeans, a record.

The corn outlook has declined slightly. The U.S.D.A. trimmed the predicted corn yield by a bushel an acre. Minnesota farmers now are expected to harvest 1.24 billion bushels, just under last year’s record.

The state’s sugar beet harvest is estimated at 28 tons per acre. That’s up 18 percent from last year’s crop.

Corn, soybeans and sugar beets represent a combined 80 percent of Minnesota’s $10 billion crop production.

Nationally, the U.S.D.A. cut 2.5 bushels off the expected yield, because of weather problems in states like Illinois and Indiana. The agency though increased the U.S. soybean estimate slightly, up 0.7 bushels.

http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2010/09/10/crop-report/

Minnesota dairy farmer wins Good Farm Neighbor Award

The hot, wet summer has kept many Minnesota livestock farmers hopping to keep their animals comfortable. Among them is Doug Heintz, recipient of the August Good Farm Neighbor Award from the Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA). Heintz and his family are owners/operators of Heintz Badger Valley Farm, located near Caledonia in Minnesota’s southeastern bluff country. Heintz milks about 120 Holsteins and said he’s focused on keeping the cows cool and dry.

“We’ve had one of the hottest, wettest summers that I can remember so using sand bedding and lots of fans has been the best way for me to keep the cows comfortable,” said Heintz.

Because of the bluff topography of the region and a stream on his land, Heintz said implementing good conservation measures is a critical part of his operation.

“I use contour stripping on the side hills to control erosion and have placed a former pasture into the Conservation Reserve Program to preserve water quality of the trout stream,” Heintz said. “Raising livestock is important to the economic viability of this area and we need to do what we can to make sure the animals and the land can co-exist harmoniously.”

Heintz says some of the steepest cropland is enrolled in CRP to control erosion and enhance wildlife habit.

Winners of the MDA’s Good Farm Neighbor Award are selected by a committee representing the University of Minnesota, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, the Minnesota Soybean Research and Promotion Council, the Minnesota Corn Growers Association and the MDA.

http://www.dairyherd.com/directories.asp?pgID=675&ed_id=12233

Bankrupt ethanol co. wants refund from corn farmers

Worthington, Minn. — Farmers in Minnesota and across the Midwest who had the bad luck to sell corn to a bankrupt ethanol company are now being asked to repay most of the money they earned.

VeraSun, based in Sioux Falls, S.D., was once one of the top producers of ethanol, producing over a billion gallons each year. It went out of business after filing bankruptcy in the fall of 2008. The company wants the money back so they can use it to pay off creditors.

VeraSun is finished as an ethanol company; it sold off its plants last year, including two in Minnesota. But the company lives on, as a paper entity, in bankruptcy court. The legal shell of what was once one of the nation’s top ethanol producers wants farmers to repay large amounts of money.

One southern Minnesota corn producer told MPR News that the company is demanding he repay $50,000. That’s about 80 percent of what the company paid him for his corn.

He’s not alone. Hundreds of farmers are being asked for the 80 percent repayment.

Roger McEowen director of Iowa State University’s agricultural law center, said nearly 40 farmers have contacted him.

“Farmers wanting assistance and information as to what’s going on here,” McEowen said.

McEowen said VeraSun has a well-established legal basis for the repayment action. Known in bankruptcy law as a preference claim, it allows the company to reclaim funds it paid out within 90 days of the bankruptcy filing.

That includes money VeraSun used to buy corn. McEowen said there are thousands of claims against the company. He said VeraSun will use the reclaimed funds to pay off as many of those people as it can. Preference claims are meant to make those payouts as fair as possible. That allows people creditors who missed being paid by just a few days because of the bankruptcy filing have a chance to recover some of what they lost.

Despite the law’s good intentions, farmers are feeling the pain, McEowen said. But he said they have options.

“There are some traditional defenses that a farmer can utilize to make the argument at least that they do not have to pay any of it back,” he said.

McEowen said one defense is to show that the money was paid as part of an ongoing good faith business relationship. He said that will demonstrate that there was nothing underhanded about the pay-out.

To prove that, he said, farmers will have to dig out receipts and other documents verifying that they had a corn-for-money agreement with VeraSun.

McEowen said the biggest mistake a farmer could make is to ignore the repayment action. He said if they do that there’s a good chance they’ll be sued for the funds. If they lose in court, the 80 percent compromise figure now in play would probably disappear — and there’s a good chance the court would demand payment in full.

http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2010/09/01/verasun/

Minnesota’s Pumpkin Patches, Corn Mazes, Hay Rides and More

Where you can find a pumpkin patch, corn maze, safe trick-or-treating, hayrides and other Fall and Halloween fun near you!
Many corn mazes are still open in November! Be sure to scroll down the page, some pages are big! ! Click here to see what a trip to a pumpkin patch or corn maize is like! See how to easily make applesauce, apple butter or pumpkin pie (from a fresh pumpkin)! Looking for Pumpkin festivals and weigh-offs in your state? Click here!
NEW: How to make your carved pumpkin last longer!
Farmers: Write me if you will have bulk pumpkins in 2010 to sell locally or to ship!

http://www.pumpkinpatchesandmore.org/MNpumpkins.php

Egg recall: Buyers consider own rules on safety

Washington, D.C. - The egg recall left officials at Costco Wholesale Corp. scratching their heads. How had inspectors for Costco, who looked over the northeast Iowa farm where the chain bought eggs, not noticed the rodent holes in the henhouses?

Rodent holes are a sign that mice could be entering the buildings and infecting the hens with salmonella. Federal investigators who are trying to pinpoint the source of a national salmonella outbreak reported this week finding numerous such holes in henhouses operated by Hillandale Farms of Iowa at West Union.

http://www.desmoinesregister.com/article/20100903/BUSINESS01/9030360/-1/cyclone_insider/Egg-recall-Buyers-consider-own-rules-on-safety

Wild rice management

Minnesota has more acres of natural wild rice (Zizania palustris) than any other state in the country. Wild rice has been historically documented in 45 of Minnesota’s 87 counties and in all corners of the state. Anecdotal information suggests an even broader distribution prior to European settlement.

Wild rice is an important social and cultural component for Native American tribes and rural Minnesota communities.

http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/wildlife/shallowlakes/wildrice.html

Planting the Seeds for Public Health: How the Farm Bill Can Help Farmers to Produce and Distribute Healthy Foods

This report offers a legal analysis of the 2008 Farm Bill and explains key agriculture and nutrition programs that were enacted into law. The report was commissioned by Healthy Eating Research, a national program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

Key findings include:

Fruit and vegetable farmers lack a safety net to protect them from natural disasters in a manner comparable to programs that are available for farmers producing major commodity crops, such as corn, soybeans and wheat;
Crop insurance, disaster assistance, and loan and conservation programs are not designed to address the unique characteristics of fruit and vegetable production and marketing; and
Nutrition program expenditures are not adequately directed to ensure children, including those from low-income households, receive healthy food.
In addition to providing policy recommendations to help farmers grow and distribute fruits and vegetables, the report emphasizes that many of the recommended changes could be made by the USDA without the need for additional direction from Congress. However, if such policy changes do not occur, Congress will need to make changes in the reauthorization of the Farm Bill.

The report can be downloaded at no charge from FLAG’s Web site. A bound copy of the book is available for $20 plus shipping and handling, and orders may be placed by calling FLAG’s office at 651-223-5400 or directly through FLAG’s online publisher, www.lulu.com.

http://flaginc.org/topics/pubs/farmbill.php