Agriculture
Months-long saga of runaway cattle in Quebec comes to an end with weekend capture
3 minute read Monday, Jan. 9, 2023MONTREAL - The remaining fugitive cattle that had been on the lam in central Quebec since July were finally recaptured over the weekend, bringing an end to an unusual saga that has involved cowboys and covert nighttime operations.
The last three cattle that escaped from a farm last summer were rounded up Saturday night and returned the next day to their owner in St-Sévère, Que., about 130 kilometres northeast of Montreal, Quebec's farmers union said Monday.
"I don't think we'll soon see 24 cows gone for nearly six months," Jean-Sébastien Dubé, a spokesman for the Union des producteurs agricoles, said in an interview.
The saga began in July, when 24 cows escaped from a farm in Quebec's Mauricie region. About half returned on their own while others crossed a stream and hid in the woods, coming out at night to eat the crops of nearby farms. By late November, the animals had caused up to $25,000 in damage to crops, mostly by lying down in soya fields and beheading ears of corn.
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1 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2023Four runaway cows in Quebec caught in covert operation and returned to thankful owner
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5 minute read Thursday, Nov. 3, 2022The goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions from fertilizer use by 30 per cent kicked up more dust than a tractor on a grid road when it was first announced by the federal Liberal government last summer.
Now that some of the dust has settled, agriculture and industry groups say that goal can probably be met without reducing yields — although maybe not as quick as Ottawa would like.
"Can we get that additional 30 per cent? I think so," said Keith Currie, vice-president of the Canadian Federation of Agriculture and a corn producer from Collingwood, Ont.
"But there has to be a combined, collaborative approach by all involved."
Nutrien earns US$1.6B in third quarter, but lowers full-year guidance
1 minute read Wednesday, Nov. 2, 2022SASKATOON - Nutrien Ltd. says it earned US$1.6 billion in the third quarter of 2022, up 118 per cent from the same three-month period in 2021.
The Saskatoon-based fertilizer giant says its profit in the quarter works out to $2.94 per diluted share, compared to $1.25 in the prior year's quarter.
The Saskatoon-based fertilizer giant, which reports in U.S. dollars, says its profit in the quarter includes a non-cash impairment reversal of $330 million related to the company's phosphate operations.
On an adjusted basis, Nutrien says it earned $2.5 billion, or $2.51 per share, compared to $1.6 billion or $1.38 per share in the previous year's quarter.
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4 minute read Preview Monday, Oct. 31, 2022LOAD MORE