Scott Varilek, Kooima Kooima Varilek, says corn and soybeans fell heading into the weekend on profit taking and technical selling, plus lower crude oil and a higher dollar.
University of Minnesota Extension The fact that feedlot producers rely on corn as a main component of their cattle diets is not news to anybody. However, those days of $2 per bushel ...
Ag News Wire By Jeff Coulter, University of Minnesota Extension corn agronomist Proper harvest management is critical for high-quality corn silage, which increases milk production in cows. It all ...
The Flakall Corporation -- which produced animal feed in Wisconsin in the early 1930s -- developed a process for producing ...
Despite the delay in U.S. President Donald Trump's planned tariffs, there is plenty of uncertainty in the Western Canadian ...
There won't be a whole lot of movement of feed grains on the Canadian Prairies any time soon, stated Darcy Haley, vice-president of Ag Value Brokers in Lethbridge. He said not only are the end-users ...
Matt Bennett, AgMarket.Net, says corn made new highs for the move with the March contract reaching a high of $5.04 1/2 before reversing and ending lower on the day. The key is was it topping action?
The number of cattle on feed around the country declined by 1%, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service report issued in late January.
The Alberta barley market is expected to strengthen by $30-$40 per tonne over the next couple of months, which may have tempered the upside for 700 pound and heavier replacements. The market for ...