The Southwest Soil and Crop Improvement Associations and the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs present… in Ridgetown, Ontario Tuesday & Wednesday January 6th & 7th • 2 2015 Rising UP to the Challenges! PRE-REGISTRATION ONLY Register online, by phone, fax or mail by December 22, 2014 With Support From Farm Producers, Agribusiness, and www.southwestagconference.ca Follow us on Twitter @SWAgConf Join the conversation #SWAC15 Feature Speakers TUESDAY, JANUARY 6, 2015 Join Us At... INDUSTRY TRADE SHOW AGRICULTURE’S “ROAD WARRIOR” Exhibits located in the RDC Auditorium. Refreshments available. With more than 9 million miles of travel, coupled with years of research, David applies cutting edge information to deliver a unique perspective into the future trends of the agricultural industry and economy. RDC Auditorium Dr. David Kohl Presideent of AgriVisions President AgriVisions, LLC Professor Emeritus, Department of Agriculture & Applied Economics, VA Tech. Blacksburg, Virginia "TASTE ONTARIO" RECEPTION Tuesday, January 6 4:00 - 6:00 pm End the day with a complimentary reception featuring fine Ontario foods. BROUGHT TO YOU BY: Brochure Sponsors • Columnist for Corn and Soybean Digest and other ag lending publications • Author and workshop leader Sponsored by: WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7, 2015 THE TORNADO HUNTER “Build the best legacy you can!” Greg Johnson will inspire, enthrall and enlighten, as he convinces you to chase your passions with the lessons he has learned while pursuing his: Tornados! Greg Johnson Storm Chaser and Severe Weather Expert Regina, Saskatchewan • Correspondent with The Weather Network • Author of Blown Away Sponsored by: Brochure printing sponsored by: Don’t Miss These... Dr. Dave Hooker U of G, Ridgetown Campus Morris Sagriff Pioneer Hi-Bred International Inc. 1 MAXIMUM Corn! Raise the bar on corn yield! Interactions between inputs are the next wave in higher yields. Learn what WORKS, and what doesn’t. Dr. Tony White Monsanto Company, St. Louis, MO 7 Soybeans: The Next Level Soybean genetics are rapidly opening the door to bigger yields, with more traits added at every turn. But AGRONOMICS are the KEY to realizing this yield potential. John Kolk Farmer and Environmentalist 9 Colliding Expectations Conflicting views between Production Agriculture and the Environment challenge us all. John’s innovative and environmentally conscious management on his 4000 acre ranch provide the ideas you can use on your own farm. Dr. Peter Scharf University of Missouri 17 Nitrogen Knowledge!! Rain, Y-drops, rates, sensors, nitrogen uptake timing? The where, when and why of nitrogen: how to make more yield and put bigger profits in your pocket! Prof. Raj Khosla Colorado State University 35 Making Precision Management Work! Where do you draw the lines? Yield maps, satellites images, soil information, the list is endless. The critical components and years of data needed to define management zones, and what to do once you have them. Robert Ludwig, The Hale Group 37 Big Data!? The solution to almost everything could be in this nebulous “cloud”, where all your data is going. How to make sure you stay in control, and that the answers delivered help YOUR bottom line. Conference Info CONFERENCE PRE-REGISTRATION RREGISTER EGISTER ONLINE O NLINE ... to be eligible to win a handheld Wind Meter! SPONSORED BY: www.southwestagconference.ca Registration deadline is December 22, 2014 Register by December 5th to get discounted registration rates and be eligible for these weekly Early Bird Prizes! See Registration Panel for complete pricing details. DRAW DATES NOVEMBER 21 Sunday Brunch for Two - Country View Golf Course Overnight Accommodation - Comfort Inn, Chatham NOVEMBER 28 5 Drawer Steel Tool Cabinet Carter Home Hardware, Ridgetown Dinner for Two - Glitters Fun Eatery, Chatham DECEMBER 5 Soil Probe - SGS Agri Food Laboratories Sunday Brunch for Two - Country View Golf Course Tune in to CFCO 92.9FM or 630AM for the draw winners and other conference updates. REFRESHMENTS AND MEALS Registration includes LUNCH served at 11:00 am or noon. Box Lunch Pickup: RDC Auditorium and Agronomy B30. Refreshments available at the Industry Trade Show all day. CONFERENCE WORKBOOK Speaker & sponsor info, session notes, maps, CEU’s and more included with your registration. ACCOMMODATIONS COMFORT INN 1100 Richmond Street, Chatham Phone: 519-352-5500 From Highway 401, take Exit 81 (Bloomfield Road). Travel north for 3km, and turn right at Richmond Street into hotel. Starting at $82.99 per room per night (plus applicable taxes) - INCLUDES BREAKFAST Please call by December 16, 2014 and quote "Group #1728972" Dr. Shannon Osborne USDA-ARS 40 Building Soils Soils are our livelihood! After years of mining the soil, is it even possible to build back the soil organic matter that we survive on? YES! And Shannon will tell you how. UNABLE TO ATTEND If you have pre-registered and are unable to attend, your registration may be transferred to another individual or applied towards registration at the 2016 Conference. No refunds will be granted. Tuesday, January 6, 2015 t Agronomy AAg Th Theatre* Agronomy 126 Agronomy 127** Agronomy B34/B35 Livestock Pavilion† RDC Don J. Pestell ‘62 Auditorium RDC Pioneer Hi-Bred Lecture Theatre RDC 102 - Ridgetown Community Classroom RDC 110 Classroom†† RDC 111 Sun-Brite Classroom Workshops 9:00 - 9:50 8:00 - 9:00 Rudy H. Brown Rural Development Center (RDC) REGISTRATION LOCATION 35 21 2 39 7 Making Precision Management Work! Glyphosate Resistant Weeds Making Strip Tillage Work The Crop View from 400 Feet Soybeans: The Next Level 10:00 - 10:50 9 Colliding Expectations 8 Tillage Options Donneybrook 11 The Need For Speed 45 Windbreaks Work 4 BUFFET LUNCH Served: 11:00 or 12:00 Herbicide Carryover on Cover Crops Sponsored By: Grain Marketing Update 40 Building Soils Subsurface Irrigation 30 for Field Crops? 32 DIY Tiling 42 Dirt Poor or Soil RICH! 43 Disease Decisions 34 The Cost of Erosion! 15 23 The U.S. Farm Bill and You Wicked Weeds Next Door 14 The Hot CORN-er 26 Red Clover and Beyond! BOXED LUNCH 37 Big Data!? Moving into 41 Management RDC Auditorium or Farm Employer Agronomy B30 44 Crash Course E1 ENGINEERING CLASSROOM 4 1:00 - 1:55 Grain Marketing Update 33 Fungicide Facts! 8 Dr. David Kohl FFeature eature Speaker Speakeer AGRICULTURE'S ROAD INDUSTRY TRADE SHOW / REFRESHMENTS WARRIOR Pick-up: Sponsored By: 12:00 - 12:50 Tillage Options Donneybrook The Art of Beneficial Insect 25 29 Spraying Well Bonanza What’s Next 17 Nitrogen Knowledge!! 12 in Wheat? 38 Variable Rate Seeding in Willson Hall INDUSTRY TRADE SHOW / REFRESHMENTS 20 11:00 - 11:50 22 Top Weed Control Questions Sponsored By: HELD IN AGRONOMY B29 E1 ENGINEERING CLASSROOM Ridgetown High School Gymnasium 11:00 - 11:50 12:00 - 12:50 1:00 - 1:55 4:10 - 5:00 40 Building Soils 10 Protected Nitrogen 38 Variable Rate Seeding 36 Greenseeker Gold 42 Dirt Poor or Soil RICH! Red Clover and Beyond! Beneficial Insect 29 Bonanza Sprayer Tools and Toys Farm Employer 44 Crash Course Breaking 13 Bean Barriers 26 1 MAXIMUM Corn! 19 33 Fungicide Facts! 32 DIY Tiling 3 Production Pundits INDUSTRY TRADE SHOW / REFRESHMENTS Soybeans: The Next Level The ALUS Biodiversity 6 Proposition 18 Soil Bugs and Bucks 19 3:10 - 4:00 24 Fertilizer Forum 7 34 The Cost of Erosion! Sprayer Tools and Toys Edible Bean 18 Soil Bugs and Bucks 31 Opportunities Wicked Weeds Next Door Soil Insect Identification 23 28 2:10 - 3:00 27 28 Saving Fuel in Heavy Trucking Soil Insect Identification Making Precision Management Work! The Crop View 39 from 400 Feet Phosphorus Losses 16 from Cropland Edible Bean 31 Opportunities 35 15 The U.S. Farm Bill and You Taste Ontario Reception RDC Auditorium 4:00 - 6:00 pm SPONSORED BY: HELD IN AGRONOMY B29 Wednesday, January 7, 2015 Agronomy AAg Th Theatre* t Agronomy 126 Agronomy 127** Agronomy B34/B35 Livestock Pavilion† RDC Don J. Pestell ‘62 Auditorium RDC Pioneer Hi-Bred Lecture Theatre RDC 102 - Ridgetown Community Classroom RDC 110 Classroom†† RDC 111 Sun-Brite Classroom Workshops 9:00 - 9:50 8:00 - 9:00 Rudy H. Brown Rural Development Center (RDC) REGISTRATION LOCATION Breaking Bean Barriers Making Strip Tillage 2 Work 13 11 The Need For Speed Herbicide Carryover on Cover Crops Grain Marketing 5 in a Down Market 20 10:00 - 10:50 9 Colliding Expectations 42 Dirt Poor or Soil RICH! 38 Variable Rate Seeding 43 Disease Decisions BUFFET LUNCH Served: 11:00 or 12:00 6 The ALUS Biodiversity Proposition Sponsored By: 17 Nitrogen Knowledge!! 34 The Cost of Erosion! 25 The Art of Spraying Well *All sessions held in the Ag Theatre are sponsored by Farm Credit Canada 41 45 23 Sprayer Tools and Toys 13 Breaking Bean Barriers 40 Building Soils 12 What’s Next in Wheat? 24 Fertilizer Forum 33 Fungicide Facts! 36 Greenseeker Gold BOXED LUNCH E1 ENGINEERING CLASSROOM **All sessions held in Agronomy 127 are sponsored by Bayer CropScience 22 HELD IN AGRONOMY B29 Greg Johnson Feature Speaker The Crop View from 400 Feet Soybeans: 7 The Next Level 39 INDUSTRY TRADE SHOW / REFRESHMENTS Top Weed Control Questions Beneficial Insect Phosphorus Losses Pick-up: 16 Bonanza from Cropland RDC Auditorium or Moving into Edible Bean Agronomy B30 31 Opportunities Management Sponsored By: Farm Employer 44 Windbreaks Work Crash Course Wicked Weeds Next Door Soil Insect Identification 28 37 Big Data!? 29 19 10 Protected Nitrogen in Willson Hall INDUSTRY TRADE SHOW / REFRESHMENTS 24 Fertilizer Forum 14 The Hot CORN-er Making Precision Management Work! Saving Fuel in 27 Heavy Trucking Herbicide Carryover 20 on Cover Crops THE TORNADO HUNTER 35 9 Colliding Expectations 23 Wicked Weeds Next Door E1 ENGINEERING CLASSROOM † All sessions held in the Livestock Pavilion are sponsored by DuPont †All 2:10 - 3:00 Glyphosate Resistant Weeds Making Strip Tillage 2 Work 3:10 - 4:00 26 Red Clover and Beyond! 21 11 The Need For Speed 37 Big Data!? Tillage Options Donneybrook Making Precision 35 Management Work! Grain Marketing 5 in a Down Market 1 MAXIMUM Corn! 8 10 Protected Nitrogen 1 MAXIMUM Corn! 14 The Hot CORN-er 43 Disease Decisions 3 Production Pundits INDUSTRY TRADE SHOW / REFRESHMENTS 18 Soil Bugs and Bucks Sponsored By: 25 The Art of Spraying Well 17 Nitrogen Knowledge!! 32 DIY Tiling Phosphorus Losses Moving into 41 from Cropland Management The U.S. Farm Bill Subsurface Irrigation 15 30 and You for Field Crops? Soil Insect Identification 28 16 Ridgetown High School Gymnasium 4:10 - 5:00 HELD IN AGRONOMY B29 †† All sessions held in the RDC 110 are sponsored by Syngenta ††All 36 Greenseeker Gold Program Details 1 MAXIMUM Corn! Dr. David Hooker, U of G, Ridgetown Campus; Morris Sagriff, Pioneer Hi-Bred International Inc. Nitrogen, population, fungicides, genetics: the key interactions of these big drivers for yield. 2 Making Strip Tillage Work Mike Cornelissen, Watford; Michael Schouten, Richmond; Harry Biermans, Chesley Shanks, coulters, fertilizer, cover crops, spring or fall. These producers put it all on the table. 10 Protected Nitrogen Dr. Sylvie Brouder, Purdue University ESN, Agrotain, eNtrench and more: so many N additives. The when, where, how and IF you should use them. 11 The Need For Speed Hauke Claussen, Claussen Farms; Steven Reynolds, John Deere; Lars Thylén, Väderstad, Sweden Can new age corn planters actually deliver great stands at 10MPH? 3 Production Pundits Pat Lynch, Independent Agronomist; Peter Johnson, OMAFRA; Peter Gredig, AgNition Inc. - Moderator Opinionated and adversarial, Peter and Pat argue over questions from the audience. 4 Grain Marketing Update Mike Mock, Senior Risk Manager, The Andersons Inc. in Ohio What’s ahead in the markets in 2015-16? Marketing strategies that work. JANUARY 6 ONLY 5 Grain Marketing in a Down Market Stephen Kell, Grain Merchant, Parrish & Heimbecker LTD. Tough days ahead? Market strategies that work. JANUARY 7 ONLY 6 The ALUS Biodiversity Proposition Bryan Gilvesy, Alternative Land Use Solutions Discovering the value of turning marginal lands or small corner fields into ecological paradises and pollinator habitat. 7 Soybeans: The Next Level Dr. Tony White, Monsanto Company, St. Louis, MO Combining advanced agronomics, traits and germplasm to achieve new soybean yield levels. 8 Tillage Options Donneybrook Roger Buurma, Watford; Tyler Vollmerhausen, Innerkip; Eric Dietrich, Lucan Three young farmers “duke it out” over tillage systems. Which one works for you? 9 Colliding Expectations John Kolk, Farmer and Environmentalist 4,000 acres, a tireless agvocate, a land steward for sustainability and diversity. John is keenly aware of market trends and knows that the way things used to be are not the way they will be. 19 Sprayer Tools and Toys Dr. Jason Deveau, OMAFRA From the latest gadgetry to the tried and true, features that will work for you. 20 Herbicide Carryover on Cover Crops Dr. Darren Robinson, U of G, Ridgetown Campus Previous herbicides may injure specific cover crops. Learn what the "watch-outs" are. 21 Glyphosate Resistant Weeds Dr. Peter Sikkema, U of G, Ridgetown Campus The distribution and spread of glyphosate resistant weeds in Ontario. Control strategies in corn, soybeans and wheat. 22 Top Weed Control Questions 12 What’s Next in Wheat? Jim Orson, Research Director, NIAB/TAG, England, UK. Melding the most recent science with field realities: what can we learn next from the Brits? 13 Breaking Bean Barriers Dr. Shaun Casteel, Purdue University From seed treatments to foliars, biologicals to pesticides, the individual inputs and management combinations that work across the Midwestern US. 14 The Hot CORN-er Greg Stewart, OMAFRA Fasten your seatbelts; 4 great corn ideas for 2015. 15 The U.S. Farm Bill and You Dr. David Schweikhardt, Michigan State University What is the new bill? How will it affect U.S. farming decisions, and how might it affect Canadian farmers? 16 Phosphorus Losses from Cropland Kevin McKague, OMAFRA; Dr. Merrin Macrae, University of Waterloo How does what we do on the field contribute to this? Recent field studies give direction. 17 Nitrogen Knowledge!! Dr. Peter Scharf, University of Missouri What’s real in nitrogen? Can we predict when more N is needed? Will late N applications add yield to corn? All these answers and MORE! 18 Soil Bugs and Bucks Dr. George Lazarovits, A&L Biologicals Show me the money! Manure, compost or cover crops: can feeding microbes fight off disease, improve plant health, and put cash in my pocket? Dr. Peter Sikkema, U of G, Ridgetown Campus Best answers for the toughest weed control questions from producers. 23 Wicked Weeds Next Door Dave Bilyea, U of G, Ridgetown Campus See and identify weeds like Palmer Amaranth, Wooly Cup Grass and Jointed Goat Grass, all weeds causing massive challenges just south of the border. 1 HOUR WORKSHOP - PRE-REGISTER, SPACE IS LIMITED 24 Fertilizer Forum Peter Johnson, OMAFRA; Dr. Sylvie Brouder, Purdue University Four great fertility ideas for 2015. 25 The Art of Spraying Well Mike Cowbrough, OMAFRA; Steven Johns, Syngenta Top tips to improve your weed control success, avoid “jello”, and synergize herbicides. 26 Red Clover and Beyond! David Start, Woodstock; Blake Vince, Merlin Red clover is anything but consistent. What are the other options, and do they pay? 27 Saving Fuel in Heavy Trucking Mike Roeth, North American Council for Freight Efficiency From tire pressure to idle speed reduction, the pros, cons and realities of the best fuel saving technology. 28 Soil Insect Identification Tracey Baute, OMAFRA; Dr. Chris DiFonzo, Michigan State University; Jocelyn Smith, U of G, Ridgetown Campus Can you tell a millipede from a garden symphylan? Learn how! 1 HOUR WORKSHOP - PRE-REGISTER, SPACE IS LIMITED Program Details continued on back cover Program Details - CONTINUED - 29 Beneficial Insect Bonanza Dr. John Tooker, Penn State University Most insects are beneficial! Learn how to increase beneficial populations to reduce the need to spray. 30 Subsurface Irrigation for Field Crops? Peter White, U of G, Simcoe Station; Todd Boughner, Judge Farms; Ray MacKenzie, Vanden Bussche Irrigation New technology exists for permanent subsurface irrigation. Learn how feasible it is, cost, yield increases, and payback. 31 Edible Bean Opportunities Daryl Vermey, Ontario Bean Growers With a new united organization and high profit potential, edible beans are an opportunity to consider! FOCUS ON PRECISION 41 Moving into Management 35 Making Precision Management Work! Prof. Raj Khosla, Colorado State University The key information needed to define management zones, and what to do next. 36 Greenseeker Gold Dr. Peter Scharf, University of Missouri; Steve Redmond, Hensall District Cooperative; Nicole Rabe, OMAFRA The why, what and how of using the Greenseeker to make you more green. 37 Big Data!? Robert Ludwig, The Hale Group It’s coming from your tractor, your combine, your sprayer. Who owns it? Who should get access to it? Can it deliver? Ernie Kramer, Rutherford; Rick Kraayenbrink, Port Lambton; Mac Ferguson, St. Thomas; Greg Vermeersch, Tillsonburg The do’s and don’ts of doing your own tiling from these experienced growers. Greg Vermeersch, Tillsonburg; Aaron Breimer, Veritas; Jason Robinson, Courtland More seed, less seed, or leave it alone? This panel reviews their wins and losses in the variable rate game. Dr. David Hooker, U of G, Ridgetown Campus; Albert Tenuta, OMAFRA Northern Corn Leaf Blight? White mould? R1 or R2.5? The latest research findings on when and where to make fungicides work. Dale Cowan, AGRIS and Wanstead Cooperatives A common sense, practical assessment on the use of UAV technology to evaluate and guide management decisions. Dr. Rick Cruse, Iowa State University Brownouts, washouts, rills, gullies. What does erosion cost agriculture, and what are the solutions? 43 Disease Decisions Peter Sykanda, Ontario Federation of Agriculture; Dean Anderson, Workplace Safety and Prevention Services Are you prepared? The regulations, due diligence, and critical health and safety information you need to know when bringing workers onto your farm. 45 Windbreaks Work 40 Building Soils 34 The Cost of Erosion! Adam Hayes, OMAFRA; Anne Verhallen, OMAFRA Explore soil health: measuring it, what soil management practices improve it, and how to get there. 44 Farm Employer Crash Course 39 The Crop View from 400 Feet 33 Fungicide Facts! 42 Dirt Poor or Soil RICH! Albert Tenuta, OMAFRA From Sudden Death in soybeans to rust, 2014 was definitely a disease year. The management impact for 2015. 38 Variable Rate Seeding 32 DIY Tiling Adam Garniss, Wingham; Jeff Cook, London; Will Heeman, Thorndale; Margaret May, OSCIA - Moderator on 6th; Ken McEwan, U of G, Ridgetown Campus - Moderator on 7th Want the farm to stay in the family, be successful and NOT destroy your retirement? Learn how! John Enright, Upper Thames River Conservation Authority The benefits of windbreaks in crop production. Learn all about preferred species and how to establish them. Dr. Shannon Osborne, USDA-ARS Cash crop. Residue removal. Cover crops. The latest research on how to leave your soil in better condition than you found it. Contact Info & Directions RREGISTER EGISTER ONLINE ONLINE 22 Annual The t be to be el eeligible iggibble le ttoo wi w winn a hand ha ndhe nd held he ldd W Wi ind Me in M ter te handheld Wind Meter Exit 90 Exit 81 AG BUSINESS CENTRE Mitton House, University of Guelph, Ridgetown Campus 120 Main Street East, Ridgetown ON N0P 2C0 Phone: 1-866-222-9682 • Fax: 519-674-1512 E-Mail: rcabc@uoguelph.ca Blenheim Exit 101 Exit 109 Ridgetown Campus is located 6 km. south of Hwy. 401 (Exit 109) on Chatham-Kent Road 17 (Victoria Road) and 6 km. north of Chatham-Kent Road 3 (Talbot Trail at Morpeth) on ChathamKent Road 17 (Hill Road). We are located on the east side of Ridgetown. w w w. s o u t h we s t a gco n fe r e n c e . c a ✃ REGISTER ONLINE at www.southwestagconference.ca Registration to be eligible to win a handheld Wind Meter sponsored by REGISTRATION INFORMATION (PLEASE print clearly) 22 Annual The NAME: ADDRESS: Tuesday, January 6, 2015 Wednesday, January 7, 2015 CEU’s have been applied for each session. Check the website for the approved list. TOWN/CITY: PROVINCE: COUNTY: PHONE: ( FAX: ( ) Buffet Please select one. If no choice indicated, buffet is assumed. ) E-MAIL: CONFERENCE ATTENDANCE (Check your choice) MEAL CHOICE POSTAL CODE: Box Lunch FULL CONFERENCE TUESDAY ONLY Buffet Lunch Sponsored by: WEDNESDAY ONLY Box Lunch Sponsored by: WORKSHOPS WORKSHOP PRE-REGISTRATION (Check the box for preferred time) 23 Wicked Weeds Next Door 28 Soil Insect Identification See and identify weeds like Palmer Amaranth, Wooly Cup Grass and Jointed Goat Grass, all weeds causing massive challenges just south of the border. Can you tell a millipede from a garden symphylan? Learn how! JAN. 6 - 10:00am JAN. 6 - 12:00pm JAN. 7 - 10:00am JAN. 7 - 12:00pm JAN. 6 - 11:00am JAN. 6 - 2:10pm 1 HOUR WORKSHOP HELD IN E1 ENGINEERING CLASSROOM JAN. 7 - 11:00am JAN. 7 - 2:10pm 1 HOUR WORKSHOP HELD IN AGRONOMY B29 Workshops confirmed via e-mail provided by registrant, and will appear on name badge. REGISTRATION FEES (Includes refreshments, lunch and conference workbook) REGISTER ONLINE www.southwestagconference.ca Early - 1 Day Early - 2 Day Regular - 1 Day Regular - 2 Day REGISTRATION Until Dec. 5th REGISTRATION Dec. 6th to 22nd OSCIA Member OSCIA Non-Member* Student $65.00 $105.00 $80.00 $135.00 $75.00 $115.00 $90.00 $145.00 $40.00 $75.00 $40.00 $75.00 *A $10 voucher for NEW OSCIA MEMBERS is included in the registration package. Redeem at the OSCIA Trade Show booth. PRE-REGISTRATION ONLY Door Registrations will not be accepted. Register Online, by phone, fax or mail. Registration ends December 22nd, 2014. AMOUNT PAYABLE ALL FEES INCLUDE HST. $ HST # 136774445 Post-dated cheques will not be accepted. Mail must be post-marked by Dec 22nd or earlier to be accepted. MasterCard / EXPIRY: / / to be eligible to win a handheld Wind Meter sponsored by SeCan BY PHONE OR FAX Cheque Enclosed - payable to Southwest Ag Conference or SWAC. CARD NO: GO ONLINE www.southwestagconference.ca METHOD OF PAYMENT VISA REGISTRATION OPTIONS / CVV: NAME ON CARD: A receipt and workshop confirmation will be issued electronically via e-mail as provided by registrant. All others will be issued at the conference. Registration will be processed upon receipt of payment. No refunds will be granted. If you are unable to attend, you may transfer your registration to another person or it will be applied toward registration for the 2016 Southwest Agricultural Conference. With Visa or MasterCard Phone: 1-866-222-9682 • Fax: 519-674-1512 BY MAIL With Payment To: Ag Business Centre, U of Guelph, Ridgetown Campus 120 Main Street East, Ridgetown, ON N0P 2C0 The personal information you provide to the Ag Business Centre, University of Guelph Ridgetown Campus is used solely to administer the registration and process payment for the Southwest Ag Conference. If you have any questions about this collection, please contact the Ag Business Centre at 1-866-222-9682.
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