Farmers are being encouraged to check for verticillium stripe in canola

Verticillium Stripe is a fungal disease that was first discovered in Canadian canola crops in 2014, the disease causes lodging and yield loss in canola.

Courtney Boyachek,  an agronomy specialist with the Canola Council of Canada says it's a soil-borne disease.

"Meaning that,  it overwinters in the soil and then it germinates in the soil in the Spring and then the plant uptakes it around flowering."

She says in order to identify the disease producers will want to cut the stem of the canola plant off right at the root.

Canola Council of Canada looking for farmers to help test a new sclerotinia risk assessment tool

Sclerotinia stem rot is variable from year-to-year, region to region and even field-to-field.

Plants are most susceptible when the canola crop is flowering, and in high-yielding crops which create dense canopies and when combined with the right environmental factors is the ideal breeding ground for the disease.

Agronomy Specialist Chris Manchur says sclerotinia stem rot is one of the biggest yield robbers for the crop, as a 10 per cent rate of infection can lead to a 5 per cent yield loss.

Honey Bee launches new products at Canada's Farm Show

Honey Bee headers are a common site in fields at harvest time across the Prairies.

Tuesday at Canada's Farm Show the farm equipment manufacturer unveiled the AirFlex NXT.

Perry Gryde, Honey Bee's North American sales manager says it's the next innovation for the company.

He says several years ago, they introduced a flex table to the marketplace and this takes it to the next step.

CN Rail looking to hire more staff

CN Rail reported a continued slowdown in grain movement for the month of May as farmers' focus shifted to seeding.

David Przednowek,  the assistant vice president of grain for CN Rail says it's not a surprise adding that the majority of grain has already moved through the system.

He notes something that remains a concern is the wildfire situation.