Farms.com Home   News

Manitoban Receives Nuffield Scholarship

 
Ryan Boyd of Forrest, Manitoba is one of five Canadians and the sole Manitoban to receive a 2019 Nuffield Agricultural Scholarship. He'll be receiving the Western Canadian Grains Research Foundation Scholarship.
 
“These five scholars will spend the next two years enhancing their leadership and organizational skills while exploring issues critical to Canadian agriculture,” said Ian McPhadden, Chairman of Nuffield Canada. “A Nuffield Scholarship is a life-changing experience, providing unique opportunities and perspectives that are invaluable to the Canadian agricultural climate. Nuffield Canada is very proud of its 2019 candidates and grateful to alumni and program investors for supporting the award of these five scholarships.”
 
Ryan is is the managing partner of South Glanton Farms, a family farming operation of annual crops and beef cattle. He will study grazing ruminants as a resilient solution for long-term agriculture profitability, productivity and climate change.
 
In March of 2019, the scholars will meet with others from around the globe for a week-long conference, focusing on global agriculture, business, and personal development, in Iowa.
 
Nuffield scholarships are awarded to individuals who are judged to have the greatest potential to create value for their industries and for Canadian agriculture through a program of international study. Scholars have the opportunity to study the best production, management and marketing systems in the world, while gaining a deeper understanding of the politics, cultures and challenges of global agriculture. Nuffield Scholar final reports are shared extensively and considered valuable resources for Canadian agriculture.
 
Source : Steinbachonline

Trending Video

From Drought to Deluge: North Carolina’s Long Road Ahead - Kathie Dello

Video: From Drought to Deluge: North Carolina’s Long Road Ahead - Kathie Dello

What fell from Hurricane Helene was historic in the state of North Carolina. The amount of rain was put into perspective of enough to fill Lake Mead. Dr. Kathie Dello doesn’t usually do comparisons like that, but does plenty of figuring on what happened in the weather and climate each day in her job as the state climatologist of North Carolina. Some of the biggest rainfall amounts were in the 20 to 30 inch range over a three day period that will likely change the state for the next three decades or more. We get into 100, 500 and 1,000 floods, the closing of I-40 for a year and how -- if at all – certain things should be rebuilt.