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Peter Darbishire INTRODUCTION: Rising with the biofuel tide
Written by Peter Darbishire   
In mid October... In mid October, we heard about a Canadian farmer who figured if so many US acres are likely to be committed to produce biofuel crops, he was getting set to buy land: commodity prices are heading up and land prices will follow, he declared! The futures market watchers are sure to be making projections this winter using the same line of logic and they, and our farmer friend may be right.

In the meantime, looking for ways to improve farming techniques is what we are concentrating on. Several stories in this issue look at fertilizer and its use, as well as the sage advice of our columnist John Harapiak, who has a warning about excessive use of ammonium sulphate. The plant health vs. nutrition debate gets an airing too, with ideas about ergot, what promotes it and what reduces it. As well, we have added a story to fuel the biofuel discussion.

There's also a collective call to be careful about what we send to the markets we serve. We are 'on notice' that some traits in varieties introduced some time ago are not welcomed by some importers. There are two positive answers and one negative: we can decide to grow what the market demands, within the tolerances it stipulates; we can keep records to show we are able to do it consistently; ...or we can kiss our markets goodbye!

If more commodity crop acres are going to be converted to biofuel production, the demand for sources of quality and even end-use specific food grains and oilseeds will rise as well. -30-

Peter Darbishire, Publisher and editor