A FLARE for agriculture
For FLARE magazine, it was an idea to attract readers. For Amanda Brodhagen, it was a chance to shatter so many farm stereotypes
Two minds
More couples like the De Groots are taking advanced farm business training together, and report that it’s good both for the farm and for their marriage
Who’s too old?
Farm families know that age diversity makes them stronger. But did you know that a spread of ages in your employees adds strength too?
Is agriculture ageist?
We tend to respect our elders more in agriculture,” says Tracy Biernacki-Dusza. Even so, ageism is one of the last and most common areas of bias
Prairie corn: Agronomics and economics
A four-year project in Manitoba has some notable findings on tillage economics and the reliability of heat unit ratings
Flax opportunities
Agronomics and yield are the big priorities for flax growers in Western Canada
Going big
FarmLead takes aim at the U.S., with leaders who learned their lessons on the farm
In the deep end
Sarah Jackson had been planning for her farming future since she was 17 years old, knowing her father Tom would be working right alongside her. So when he died suddenly eight months ago, she was thrown into a maelstrom. It’s an old story in agriculture, but because of new attitudes and modern connections, it ends with some surprising twists
Season too short for cover crops? Maybe not
They could have a fit for Western Canada, but they require just as much planning as any other crop choice
Three farm families, five years later
Country Guide revisits three young Manitoba farm families building their future in agriculture