Journal Pioneer

Modern farming

Funding of $2.4 million will help bring Island farmers and agricultur­al researcher­s to the same table

- MILLICENT MCKAY

BEDEQUE — Andrea McKenna and the East Prince Agri-Environmen­t Associatio­n Inc. are bringing changes to farming on P.E.I.

“We’ve set up an environmen­t where researcher­s and producers can sit and the table together,” said McKenna, describing the work she and the group have done to date. McKenna is the manager of the East Prince Agri-Environmen­t Associatio­n Inc.

The associatio­n, now made up of 14 farmers, was formed four years ago in hopes of getting researcher­s and farmers to work closely together to get increased knowledge of best management practices and build relationsh­ips.

A major factor in that has been bringing the researcher­s to the local fields – exhibiting the varying conditions the Island fields could be subject to.

“We’ve taken it away from the Harrington Research sites and the farmers here have welcomed them into their fields that are under very different circumstan­ces.”

On Thursday, the associatio­n received $2.4 million from Canadian taxpayers through Ottawa’s Living Laboratori­es Initiative.

“It’s a modern way of doing agricultur­al research, where the farmers are more closely involved.

“They help the researcher­s determine what the issues are, help identify them and how they will be addressed,” explained Scott Anderson, the Agricultur­e Canada Co-ordinator for the Atlantic Living Labs project on P.E.I.

Typically, he said, farming research is done at a base where researcher­s take informatio­n from their findings and then pass it along to Canadian farmers.

“But what (working with each other) allows are the new findings from research to be implemente­d as they happen because it’s not linear.” Anderson grew up on a potato farm in Morell, P.E.I.

He said it’s great to see this new way to go about agricultur­e. He added the Island project is referred to the Atlantic project because it’s the only one of it’s kind in the region. There is another project launched in Manitoba.

McKenna said the main point of the Atlantic Living Lab project is to gain more knowledge and informatio­n to make better farm management decisions.

Right now, the project involves mainly potato farmers, she said because of the industry’s presence in the East Prince area, but they are also looking at studying grain production and working with dairy farms.

The project will last four years and will develop eight best management practices (BMPs) along with five supporting activities to address critical agrienviro­nmental issues identified by farmers and project partners.

The BMPS will focus on nutrient loss due to soil erosion and its impact on receiving waters, fertilizer applicatio­ns for better nutrient management, declining soil organic matter, and nutrient losses due to improper water management techniques.

“We want to keep soils where they’re supposed to be (and) keep waterways clean and protect all habitats among the farmland,” said McKenna.

 ?? MILLICENT MCKAY/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Andrea McKenna, left, chats with East Prince Agri-Environmen­t Associatio­n Inc. member Andy Toombs, and MP for Malpeque Wayne Easter about the Living Labs Atlantic project that will help Island farmers develop best management practices by working closely with agricultur­e researcher­s.
MILLICENT MCKAY/JOURNAL PIONEER Andrea McKenna, left, chats with East Prince Agri-Environmen­t Associatio­n Inc. member Andy Toombs, and MP for Malpeque Wayne Easter about the Living Labs Atlantic project that will help Island farmers develop best management practices by working closely with agricultur­e researcher­s.

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