White wine and canola oil: N.L.'s budding crop opportunities - Action News
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White wine and canola oil: N.L.'s budding crop opportunities

Two successful experimental crops grown in western Newfoundland last summer could plow the way for new agricultural opportunities.

Experimental crops yielded promising results for the province

Working with independent farmers in western Newfoundland, the province harvested 46 pounds of red and white grapes this summer. (Department of Fisheries, Forestry and Agrifoods)

Thanks to the success of some unconventional crops grown last summer, western Newfoundland might soon add canola and grapes to its list of agricultural products.

There was a huge opportunity for grapes [in Nova Scotia], and there was no one commercially growing grapes here.- Karen Kennedy

Working with independent farmers, the provincial Department of Fisheries, Forestry and Agrifoods experimented with the two crops that aren't traditionally grown in the province.

The hope was those first-time cropscould sow the seeds fornew farming industries.

Yes, we can-ola

While canola farming is big business in the prairies, it's unheard of in Newfoundland and Labrador.

But when Vanessa Kavanagh was brainstorming for a nutritiousbut cost-effectiveoption for cattle feed, canola seemed like it could work in the cooler climate.

The canola field in Pasadena, N.L., in full bloom. (Joanne Chaytor)

"Yes,we're a lot different from Saskatchewan, but perhaps we might have a little better conditions than Iceland or northern Norway," said Kavanagh,the province's alternative feedco-ordinator.

"So perhaps this was a crop that may work here too."

It turns outshe was right. Planting 12 hectareson private farmland on the island's west coast,inPasadena,Kanvanagh saidthe yield was of a metric tonne per acre which is on par with the rest of Atlantic Canada.

A golden byproduct

The chief aim of the experiment was to provide quality feed for the dairy industry, and Kavanagh considers the results "fantastic."

Seventy per cent of the crop was turned into canola meal for cattle.The remaining 30 per cent can be used for a slick byproduct: oil.

Using a cold press, the province extruded its first batch of cold-pressed virgin canola oil. (Brian McHugh/CBC)

So far, Kavanaghsaid, she and her team have extruded some oil, butthat's still a work in progress.

"We have a cold press, so we have virgin cold-pressed canola oil that restaurants would like to try and sell."

The oil can also be used as a biofuel, she said.

Wine not?

Like canola, the idea to grow grapes in Newfoundland was germinated in another province.

"There was a huge opportunity for grapes [in Nova Scotia]," says Newfoundland and Labrador's fruit-crop development officer Karen Kennedy. "And there was no one commercially growing grapes here."

If it's planted correctly the first time, Karen Kennedy says, a grape vine should last for 30 years. (Department of Fisheries, Forestry and Agrifoods)

Buoyed by stories of backyard gardeners growing grapes, Kennedy planted the first experimental vines four years ago in Humber Village, a small community inHumber Valley, as well as in Brooklyn, on the Bonavista Peninsula.

Taking into account the cooler climate, she focused her efforts on "colder, hearty varieties" of grapes, such as l'Acadie blanc and Frontenac gris.

While enjoying a cool chardonnay can be quite relaxing, Kennedy describes starting a vineyard as an "arduous process" of planting, weeding, spraying and thinning vines so they get as much sunlight as possible.

Kennedy holds some of the grapes grown in Newfoundland's experimental vineyards. (Department of Fisheries, Forestry and Agrifoods)

It took two years before they grew their first grapes, Kennedy said, butin2016 they harvested 42 poundsand made their firstbatch of white wine before Christmas. Theyare planning to create a red wine in January.

Plowing the way for new industry

The Newfoundland and Labrador governmentis planning to continue the experimental canola and grape crops.

A number of farmers in Cormack want to try their hand at canola this spring, and Kennedy saidshe hopes the idea of vineyards starts to spread.

If so, Newfoundland and Labradorcould see a grape-based wine industry bloom.

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