On crops, a few SAD notes. Keep in mind I am beef and lamb (and occasionally pork) farmer, I also do hay. I am nt a cash croper but many of my neighbours and friends are.
-Canola. Doesn't matter who buys it, in my opinion, this is one of the filthiest and nastiest crops grown for human consumption. It shouldn't be. But its got a big industrial push behind it. My advice? Never consume this shit.
-Corn. A big chunk grown for animal feed (and the by product), most of it for industrial ingredient (HF corn syrup), some for ethanol, a tiny bit for booze (the only way people should consume it), and a very tiny bit for people feed. Honestly? Its most useful as a livestock feed, something people should keep out of their dietary consumption
-Soy. I get it, there is money involved. Why do we insist on growing a tropical legume in a non-tropical environment? Personal thoughts, peas (many varieties) are better and tolerate cold much better
-Wheat. Obviously grown for everything bread, pasta, donuts, etc and as livestock feed. I think people consume too much wheat myself but it easier to grow.
-Barley. We need her for the beer damn it. And livestock. and some people consumption.
-Oats. Excellent livestock feed, ok for people food. Easy as hell to grow.
-Rye. OK livestock food, has limited people food use. Grows in the most coldest weather you can mange (gets real tall too).
-Sunflower. Becoming more popular. I love it for livestock feed/supplement, its much easier to extract oil from sunflower than the crazy shit they do with canola. Its also very good soil remediator. I plant about 80-200 sunflowers every year. Yes you can combine sunflower.
So Rick's sustainable takeaway (and opinion) is Canadian farmers should ditch Canola, soy and corn. Canola is shit for everything and corn and soy are better grown in much warmer climates. I personally feel we should gow the cereals and peas but the market has lower demand for that stuff.