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Historic Shows
Virtual Cereals 2020
Webinar - 11th June - New Specialist Crop Markets - 08:00 08:45
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<blockquote data-quote="CerealsEvent" data-source="post: 7026539" data-attributes="member: 133628"><p>Questions during this webinar from the attendees:</p><p></p><p>Q: Andrew Probert - whats the most interesting specialist crop you are looking at at the moment? </p><p></p><p>Q: With the reduction of OSR area, does the panel see any of the specialist crops filling this gap?</p><p></p><p>Q: Skye Van Heyzen - What new crops are giving the greatest benefit to soil/biodiversity and at the same time are competitive on the market?</p><p></p><p>Q: are chickpeas and harricot at all possible in the north west or need to be dry? What other conditions?</p><p></p><p>Q: Is food barley naked barley?</p><p></p><p>Q: To what extent are you focusing on new crop varieties that add value by benefiting consumer health in multiple ways e.g high Omega3. Please could you list few of the crops that add the most value?</p><p></p><p>Q: Can Micanthus be used like straw for housebuilding?</p><p></p><p>Q: Kevin Lindegaard - why are we still looking at monoculture woodland (open to disease? e.g ash dieback) but with arable crops we seam to be going the other way e.g herb rich leys and planting a variety of species in one field?</p><p></p><p>Q: There is often the misconception that these specialist crops are more expensive to establish and more difficult to grow, what is the financial incentive for farmers to integrate them as past of their rotation?</p><p></p><p>Q: is their a place for stubble turnips in an arable rotation in furthers ??</p><p></p><p>Q: What net zero ambition challenges are there for organic production?</p><p></p><p>Q: will willow suffer from the high temperatures, seen this spring?</p><p></p><p>Q: do you see the reduced growing area for energy crops in future ??</p><p></p><p>Q: For Kevin L. Will perennial bio energy crops provide more resilience in wet autumns conditions and flood prone land?</p><p></p><p>Q: do you see an increase in the return to mixed farming systems ?</p><p></p><p>Q: Will SRC Willow and Miscanthus , Polar be rewarded for the high value for biodiversity and natural flood management, carbon that it offers?</p><p></p><p>Q: Are the crops all suited to direct drilling or the arm equipment that already exist on-farm from conventional crops?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CerealsEvent, post: 7026539, member: 133628"] Questions during this webinar from the attendees: Q: Andrew Probert - whats the most interesting specialist crop you are looking at at the moment? Q: With the reduction of OSR area, does the panel see any of the specialist crops filling this gap? Q: Skye Van Heyzen - What new crops are giving the greatest benefit to soil/biodiversity and at the same time are competitive on the market? Q: are chickpeas and harricot at all possible in the north west or need to be dry? What other conditions? Q: Is food barley naked barley? Q: To what extent are you focusing on new crop varieties that add value by benefiting consumer health in multiple ways e.g high Omega3. Please could you list few of the crops that add the most value? Q: Can Micanthus be used like straw for housebuilding? Q: Kevin Lindegaard - why are we still looking at monoculture woodland (open to disease? e.g ash dieback) but with arable crops we seam to be going the other way e.g herb rich leys and planting a variety of species in one field? Q: There is often the misconception that these specialist crops are more expensive to establish and more difficult to grow, what is the financial incentive for farmers to integrate them as past of their rotation? Q: is their a place for stubble turnips in an arable rotation in furthers ?? Q: What net zero ambition challenges are there for organic production? Q: will willow suffer from the high temperatures, seen this spring? Q: do you see the reduced growing area for energy crops in future ?? Q: For Kevin L. Will perennial bio energy crops provide more resilience in wet autumns conditions and flood prone land? Q: do you see an increase in the return to mixed farming systems ? Q: Will SRC Willow and Miscanthus , Polar be rewarded for the high value for biodiversity and natural flood management, carbon that it offers? Q: Are the crops all suited to direct drilling or the arm equipment that already exist on-farm from conventional crops? [/QUOTE]
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Virtual Cereals 2020
Webinar - 11th June - New Specialist Crop Markets - 08:00 08:45
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