Seed capital makes hay on family farm

A growing global appetite for agricultural assets is revolutionising farming in Australia and spawning new investment models that depart from the traditional family-run farm. The Australian Financial Review reports that even as the most talked about model for city investors to take a stake in agriculture - through managed investment schemes - is under challenge after high-profile collapses, new alternatives are emerging. NFF president David Crombie told AFR that "there's a lot of interest at the moment from funds from Europe, Asia, the Middle East, the United States. They're all looking at Australian agriculture." A partner at business advisory firm PKF, John Kelly, said this interest was motivated by the opportunities for long-term capital growth, the sense that global food security concerns supported a positive future for farming and that Australia was a stable investment environment. "On the one hand, you've got capital circulating around looking to land on a farm. Then on the other hand, you've got a farmer who may need some...
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Wheat market rebound lifts optimism

Author: GREGOR HEARD IT’S BEEN a tough few months for grain prices, but the last two weeks have seen a rebound from Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) December 09 futures contract lows. Futures had slipped by early October to US456 cents a bushel, but have risen sharply to US520c/bushel this week. This has resulted a mild rebound in Australian contract prices, although the sky-high Aussie dollar has absorbed much of the CBOT rise. Nominally, the spike is due to weather concerns in the US. “The weather hasn’t been great in the US, and the production estimates have come off from that real top-end scenario,” said Australian Crop Forecasters’ managing director Ron Storey. “There’s also a bit of an issue with the winter red wheat plant in southern areas through the Mississippi Delta, due to wet conditions.” He said the wet, combined with pricing, has steered southern US growers out of cereals and back into soybeans. AWB acquisitions manager, Jon White, said his company’s take on the situation...
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A Woman’s Nation Changes Everything

Executive Summary By Heather Boushey and Ann O’Leary This report describes how a woman’s nation changes everything about how we live and work today. Now for the first time in our nation’s history, women are half of all U.S. workers and mothers are the primary breadwinners or co-breadwinners in nearly two-thirds of American families. This is a dramatic shift from just a generation ago (in 1967 women made up only one-third of all workers). It changes how women spend their days and has a ripple effect that reverberates throughout our nation. It fundamentally changes how we all work and live, not just women but also their families, their co-workers, their bosses, their faith institutions, and their communities. Quite simply, women as half of all workers changes everything. Recognizing the importance of women’s earnings to family well-being is the key piece to understanding why we are in a transformational moment. This social transformation is affecting nearly every aspect of our lives—from how we work to...
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Ryegrass toxicity spreading – Western Australia

THE Department of Agriculture and Food has warned farmers to start checking their livestock and paddocks for signs of annual ryegrass toxicity as the organism which causes the disease is spreading. DAFWA scientists have warned most areas in the Wheatbelt were now known to contain ARGT organisms and that the Lakes District and surrounding areas north to Hyden could be ‘hot spots’ for ARGT this year. The disease costs Western Australian farmers an estimated $40 million each year in lost production and livestock deaths, and economist David Kessell said a new map of ARGT affected areas showed the potential for the disease was spreading. “The organisms that cause the disease are now present from Northampton, throughout the agricultural areas and the coastal plain through to Esperance,” he said. Mr Kessell said pasture paddocks that were in crop last season were particularly at risk. “It is important that farmers in at-risk areas look for deformed ryegrass heads and maybe yellow slime,” he said. “If they have any...
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Economic good times for WA, but we’re not out of the woods

WA seems to have dodged the global bullet and is set to power ahead, but there are a couple of flies in the ointment, a leading economic forecaster says. Access Economics' latest business outlook says the state, despite its international focus, is benefiting more than usual from domestic economic measures, such as the stimulus package and low interest rates. While the effects of the former subside, and the latter start to rise, other factors such as strong population growth - and the effects of the $43 billion Gorgon gas project - would keep the WA economy ticking along nicely. But while Gorgon might have helped WA sidestep the worst effects of the global financial crisis, it also served as a timely reminder. "That crises come and go, whereas the demand to feed industrial developments in Asia will be with us for many decades to come," the report says. "But you'd have thought that the worst year in the global economy since the global economy since...
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Straight planting

New trends in the planting methods reveal higher benefits for soil preservation Direct planting, or “no tillage”, is a planting and fertilizing method involving the least possible movement of the soil at the moment of seed insertion, which is done through a small opening in the soil, which is then closed. In this way, the soil remains intact from planting until harvesting, leaving the residues from the previous harvest over the soil, which thus become organic fertilizers for the soil. This method not only allows preserving the soil structure, but also offers the following benefits: • Prevent the erosion and wash of the soil generated by the rain and wind, that normally lead to the loss of valuable organic mass – mulch – which, in this way is being increased • Less evaporation caused by the soil labour, with the consequence of saving water, allowing for early planting, higher productivity per ha., especially in places where the water is scarce • Less nitrogen lixiviation...
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Martin Facundo Reto – agriculture engineer

Martin Facundo Reto - Agriculture engineer with solid understanding of advanced agriculture production systems, such as Argentina’s, one of the most developed agricultures world-wide. Broad range of farming skills, from livestock and farm management to the design of irrigation systems, plague control, soil fertilizing or farm market valuation. Practical farming experience enhanced when working for large farms in New Zealand and Australia, dealing with a large variety of tasks from pastures managements to artificial insemination and animal health...
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