• Menu
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Country Life In BC Logo

The agricultural news source in British Columbia since 1915

  • Headlines
  • Calendar
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • About
  • Archives
  • Contact
  • Search
  • Headlines
  • Calendar
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • About
  • Archives
  • Contact
  • Search

Primary Sidebar

Current Issue:

NOVEMBER 2025
Vol. 111 Issue 10

Subscribe Now!

Sign up for free weekly FARM NEWS UPDATES

Select list(s) to subscribe to


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: Country Life in BC. You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact
Your information will not be
shared or sold ever

Follow us on Facebook

Comments Box SVG iconsUsed for the like, share, comment, and reaction icons

2 weeks ago

FarmFolk CItyFolk is hosting its biennial BC Seed Gathering in Harrison Hot Springs November 27 and 28. Farmers, gardeners and seed advocates are invited to learn more about seed through topics like growing perennial vegetables for seed, advances in seed breeding for crop resilience, seed production as a whole and much more. David Catzel, BC Seed Security program manager with FF/CF will talk about how the Citizen Seed Trail program is helping advance seed development in BC. Expect newcomers, experts and seed-curious individuals to talk about how seed saving is a necessity for food security. ... See MoreSee Less

Link thumbnail

BC Seed Gathering - FarmFolk CityFolk

farmfolkcityfolk.ca

Save the date for our upcoming 2023 BC Seed Gathering happening this November 3rd and 4th at the Richmond Kwantlen Polytechnic University campus.
View Comments
  • Likes: 1
  • Shares: 0
  • Comments: 0

Comment on Facebook

4 weeks ago

BC has reported its first case of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) in the eighth wave of the disease since 2021. Canadian Food Inspection Agency officials confirmed October 13 that a premises in Abbotsford tested positive for the disease, the first infected premise in BC during this fall's migration. The farm is the 240th premises infected in BC since the current national outbreak began four years ago with a detection in Newfoundla#BCAg#BCAg ... See MoreSee Less

BC has reported its first case of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) in the eighth wave of the disease since 2021. Canadian Food Inspection Agency officials confirmed October 13 that a premises in Abbotsford tested positive for the disease, the first infected premise in BC during this falls migration. The farm is the 240th premises infected in BC since the current national outbreak began four years ago with a detection in Newfoundland.

#BCAg
View Comments
  • Likes: 50
  • Shares: 195
  • Comments: 444

Comment on Facebook

But the ostrich’s have the cure ….

I don't believe anything the CfIA says, like saying ostriches are chickens so that's why everything has to get culled.

Who in BC has reported this, not a word in the news. Why are you spreading fear propaganda? If you cannot add a source do not post this crap! It appears your page knows absolutely nothing about COUNTRY LIFE IN BC OR ELSEWHERE!

Just put one-way arrows on the floor of the chicken coop, keep them 6ft apart from each other and stock up on toiletpaper for them. 😉

Source? I can't find anything to corroborate this story.

Perhaps if they had allowed the ostrich to be tested and discovered how they developed antibodies we could quit culling our food supplies. Yes I know ostrich are not chickens

This only made the news to confuse those interested in the ostrich farm, relax, has nothing to do with the ostriches

How convenient that carney has a pocket in this 🤔

The ostriches eggs can save your flock

Weird how it only affects birds we eat. Kinda like how no homeless people got convid.

How convenient. Now it's off to the ostrich farm, right?

Have you went chicken catching for 8 hours all night 36000 birds

My advice take your chickens and run!

Have none of you guys ever seen the hundreds of birds falling from the sky? Ya me nether

Brainwashing if you ask me

just like on people- that mask looks like its doing a lot of nothing on that rooster!

Is it as deadly as monkey pox?? 🐵

Quick kill all the food! Perhaps we should study the ostriches...

Ostriches not chicken and not reproduced for human consumption

The condom is too small for the CO?K

I don't know how you do it, but invest in egg futures RIGHT NOW. The price will be skyrocketing.

So is it the first or the 240th?

240th. So how many birds culled is that now? The stamping out policy is working so well, isn’t it? Maybe cramming millions of stressed birds, receiving no sunlight, into facilities, all within a few kilometres apart (talk about having all your eggs in one basket) is not the brightest idea. Maybe we should scrap the Quito system, allow regular folks to have more than 100 birds and supply their neighbourhoods with meat and eggs. Maybe we should raise more robust birds with better immune systems. Maybe we shouldn’t give birds sunlight, less crowded conditions, and give them a full 24 hours to lay an egg, instead of artificially giving them shorter days, trying to squeeze more eggs out of them. Maybe, without the quota system, instead of a few mega farms, egg producers would again dot the entire province.

Lol are they going to blaim the ostriches

You mean to tell us all, THE CULL isn’t working, maybe, just maybe we should try something just a bit more humanly and have maybe a slight hint of scientific evidence!!!

View more comments

1 month ago

Here we go again!

With no immediate end in sight for the Canada Post strike, we have uploaded the October edition of Country Life in BC to our website. While it's not the preferred way to view the paper for most of our subscribers, we're grateful to have a digital option to share with them during the strike. The October paper is printed and will be mailed soon as CP gets back to work! In the meantime, enjoy!

... See MoreSee Less

Link thumbnail

CLBC October 2025

news.countrylifeinbc.com

CLBC October 2025
View Comments
  • Likes: 7
  • Shares: 4
  • Comments: 2

Comment on Facebook

The 1 person in Canada who contracted avian flu speaks to Rebel.news

STOP SPREADING LIES ABOUT AVIAN FLU NO BIRD GETS THIS

1 month ago

... See MoreSee Less

View Comments
  • Likes: 8
  • Shares: 0
  • Comments: 0

Comment on Facebook

1 month ago

... See MoreSee Less

View Comments
  • Likes: 6
  • Shares: 0
  • Comments: 0

Comment on Facebook

Subscribe | Advertise

The agricultural news source in British Columbia since 1915
  • Email
  • Facebook

BC potato crop down

BC growers seeded 5,900 acres this past spring, down from 6,500 in 2020 and a peak of 7,250 in 2016. The onset of fall weather meant about 200 acres of spuds were left in the ground. Photo | Ronda Payne

December 18, 2024 byPeter Mitham

BC’s potato crop lagged its five-year average in 2024, according to Statistics Canada, weighing in at 1,878,000 hundredweight (cwt).

Yields were largely consistent with past years at 329.5 cwt per acre but lower acreage compared to historical levels contributed to a smaller harvest.

BC growers seeded 5,900 acres this past spring, down from 6,500 in 2020 and a peak of 7,250 in 2016. The onset of fall weather meant about 200 acres of spuds were left in the ground.

The net result was a harvest 5% below the five-year average of 1,971,000 cwt.

The final numbers reflect growers’ expectations at the annual potato field day in Delta this past August.

“The yield will be down this year because we had such a late spring,” Rod Burr of Burr Farms in Ladner said at the time. “I think the yield will be down for everyone.”

The crop was also facing tough comparables following high yields in 2023. Growers didn’t take last year’s yields for granted, declining to overplant rather than gambling on similar results this year.

That was a good thing, given an early blast of fall weather that made it difficult to get the last of the crop out of the fields.

The smaller crop in BC was at odds with the national trend.

Statscan reported earlier this month that Canadian growers harvested a record crop of nearly 127 million cwt. Yields were on par with BC at 330.9 cwt per acre, but harvested acreage was up versus previous years at 383,666 acres.

BC is one of the smallest producing regions in Canada, with just 1.5% of the national harvest. The majority of potatoes are sold fresh, with Kennebec potatoes being the primary chipping variety in favour with foodservice establishments.

With files from Ronda Payne

 

Related Posts

You may be interested in these posts from the same category.

Moderate potato crop expected

Previous Post: « BC producer groups give back
Next Post: BC Fruit Growers list test orchard »

Copyright © 2025 Country Life in BC · All Rights Reserved