Farmers Weekly Anyone who attended the regenerative agriculture festival Groundswell last month must have been impressed by how the meeting has grown since its early days. I enjoyed this year’s event, held over two days at!-->…
Farmers Weekly A small seed hopper, levelling boards and a “traction control” system to improve tractor grip are some of the new options available for Pottinger’s 4m to 6m Terria tine cultivators. The Tegosem applicator comes!-->…
Farmers Weekly On the 25th anniversary of the NFU Cymru Wales Woman Farmer of the Year Award, this year’s prize was awarded to third-generation hill farmer Katie Rose-Davies at the Royal Welsh Show. Judges of the award, which!-->…
Farmers Weekly Whether it’s a legal, tax, insurance, management or land issue, Farmers Weekly’s Business Clinic experts can help. Mark Charter, head of estate management at Carter Jonas, and Gavin Smith, of the private client!-->…
Farmers Weekly A passion to impart grassland wisdom to fellow farmers and improve business resilience is driving this year’s three Farmers Weekly Grassland Manager finalists to maximise grazed grass and experiment with mixed!-->…
Farmers Weekly Hello and welcome back to This Week in Farming – your weekly update on the best Farmers Weekly content from the past seven days. Here are five of the biggest topics we’ve covered this week and a look ahead to!-->…
Farmers Weekly July has been the wettest month since October last year for Lincolnshire grower Colin Chappell, who has battled harvest rainstorms including 92mm in 16 days, and lodged winter barley. “We’ve been harvesting the!-->…
The work stoppage by members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union at Canadian West Coast ports may have cost Canadian Pacific Kansas City $80 million in lost revenue, executives said during the railway’s!-->…
The bad news for France’s CMA CGM, the world’s third-largest ocean carrier: Profits continue to slide. The good news: The company is still raking in over a billion a quarter, net profits and revenue per container are still!-->…
DETROIT — The U.S. government wants to raise the fuel economy of new vehicles 18% by the 2032 model year so that all new vehicles would average about 43.5 miles per gallon in real-world driving.
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