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14 SEEDWORLD.COM JUNE 2015 ELECTRONIC BAGGING SCALES BAGGING SOLUTIONS FOR THE SEED INDUSTRY A leader in the design and manufacture of packaging automation systems and equipment. Established 1969. Robotic Seed Box Denesting System. Taylor Products TRD 2000 is the latest in seed box handling technology. It is designed to automatically take a stack of 3 nested boxes from the infeed side and prepare them for filling. Electronic Bagging Scales. Net and gross weigh scales. Refuge-in-a-bag systems and Seed Calc enabled electronics. Bulk BagBoxDrum Packing. Taylor Products IBC3000 modular design allows complete flexibility from a free-standing manual operation to a fully integrated and automated system handling bags drums and boxes. LEARN MORE BULK STORAGE FILLING ROBOTIC SEED BOX DENESTING SYSTEM Experience Engineering and Equipment in One Neat Package. THEORIGINAL Toll Free 888.882.9567 Phone 620.421.5550 Fax 620.421.5531 2205 Jothi Ave. Parsons Kansas 67357 Visit our new website at www.taylorproducts.com technology Is it going to be around in the next 10 years Or do you want to work with the iPhone 6 technology Sissons points to the yield benefits of newer Roundup technologies which he says are about four bushels per acre or about 35 to 40 per acre depending on commodity prices. Thats pretty close to a bag of seed Sissons says. A test of the market already happened in Canada. There the same soybean trait lost patent protection in 2011. Monsanto Canada spokeswoman Trish Jordan says most licensees of the first-generation of Roundup Ready soybean technology moved on once the patent expired. We were pleased that most of them transitioned to the new technology Jordan says. It makes sense for their own busi- ness but we left that choice completely up to them. Thats about what Patty Townsend CEO of the Canadian Seed Trade Association expected. Farmers here are really eager to pick up new technology she says. If theres a technology out there thats better theyre not necessarily willing to stick with old technology. For many farmers its all about economics. If the lower cost of seed allows them to absorb that yield loss theyre listening. The new varieties that companies are coming out with will be better than older ones says Ron Moore who farms near Roseville Illinois. But farmers are always looking for ways to lower input costs and this is one of them. Grover Shannon a breeder at the University of Missouris Delta Center is also developing soybean lines with the first- generation Roundup Ready trait. He says the technology is still We know well never compete with the technology of today but if we have something that yields well or can compete and save the farmer some money we wanted to do that. West Higgenbothom