Catt-Trax 2 - Cordoba http://blogs.bcit.ca/catttrax2/taxonomy/term/102/0 en Argentina - Life on the Farm (It's Kind of Laid Back) http://blogs.bcit.ca/catttrax2/node/464 <p align="center"><img class="image preview" src="/catttrax2/sites/blogs.bcit.ca.catttrax2/files/images/DSC_3434.preview.JPG" alt="Argentina Sunset - On the Pampa, Cordoba" title="Argentina Sunset - On the Pampa, Cordoba" width="500" height="336" /><span style="width: 498px" class="caption"><strong>Argentina Sunset - On the Pampa, Cordoba</strong></span></p><p align="left">I have spent very little time on farms in my life. When I traveled in the South Pacific many moons ago I spent a few days on a dairy farm (in Australia) where I even attempted to milk a cow (it is a lot harder than it looks!!). In Argentina I had a chance to spend a few days on a family farm in the province of Cordoba… so I took advantage of the opportunity.</p><p align="left">After disembarking the Professor Multanovskiy in Ushuaia, Argentina I hopped a flight to Buenos Aires and then an overnight bus to the community of Rio Cuarto. I was met by a dear friend whom I had met many moons ago when I was a graduate student at SFU. We had kept in touch over the years and I had warned her that at some point I would make it to Argentina for a visit… and here I was!</p><p align="left">Their farm has been in the family for generations. Years ago they raised beef cattle (one of Argentina’s largest exports) but in recent years they have been growing crops including maize (corn) and soybeans.</p><p style="text-align: center"><img class="image preview" src="/catttrax2/sites/blogs.bcit.ca.catttrax2/files/images/DSC_3374.preview.JPG" alt="Riding through the Fields of Soybeans &amp; Maize, Cordoba, Argentina" title="Riding through the Fields of Soybeans &amp; Maize, Cordoba, Argentina" width="500" height="336" /></p><p align="center"><span style="width: 498px" class="caption"><div align="left"><strong>Riding through the Fields of Soybeans &amp; Maize, Cordoba, Argentina</strong></div></span></p><p align="left">As I learned quickly, farming is a lot of incredibly hard work and along with the long hours there is the stress that goes with it. Farming is risky business – you just never know what Mother Nature is going to have in store for you – will you get drought? Will you get flooded out with too much rain? Will a pest insect, virus or disease cause havoc with the crop? In the case of my friend’s farm the corn crop was significantly damaged this year by a disease – Mal de Rio Cuarto. Mal de Rio Cuarto is the most important disease of maize in Argentina with the value of yield losses reaching more than 120 million USD (country wide).</p><p style="text-align: center"><img class="image preview" src="/catttrax2/sites/blogs.bcit.ca.catttrax2/files/images/DSC_3395.preview.JPG" alt="Corn infected with the Mal de Rio Cuarto disease" title="Corn infected with the Mal de Rio Cuarto disease" width="500" height="336" /></p><p align="center"><span style="width: 498px" class="caption"><div align="left"><strong>Corn infected with the Mal de Rio Cuarto disease</strong></div></span></p><p align="left">The Mal de Rio Cuarto attacks the corn at a very early stage of development and results in very poor development and crop yield. It was a valuable learning experience to see the crops and spend time in the farmed landscape.</p><p style="text-align: center"><img class="image preview" src="/catttrax2/sites/blogs.bcit.ca.catttrax2/files/images/DSC_3394.preview.JPG" alt="Always Smiling Farm Dog" title="Always Smiling Farm Dog" width="500" height="336" /></p><p align="center"><span style="width: 498px" class="caption"><div align="left"><strong>Always Smiling Farm Dog</strong></div></span></p><p align="left">I also had the chance to see a variety of birds of prey on the farm (raptors) from caracaras to hawks to falcons (including the American Kestrel, the smallest falcon found in North America) as well as two species of owl that we also have in British Columbia: the Barn Owl and the Burrowing Owl.</p><p align="left">I was kept awake for part of the first night by the Barn Owl who had taken up residence in the chimney of the building I was staying in. I did not realize that the Barn Owl has one of the widest distributions of any bird in the world. The distribution in Canada is limited to south-west BC and southern Ontario but on a global scale they can be found in North, Central and South America, Australia, Asia and Europe! Wow! To see the global distribution of the Barn Owl check out the following website: <br /><a href="http://www.waza.org/virtualzoo/factsheet.php?id=220-001-002-002&amp;view=Strigiformes&amp;main=virtualzoo">http://www.waza.org/virtualzoo/factsheet.php?id=220-001-002-002&amp;view=Strigiformes&amp;main=virtualzoo</a></p><p style="text-align: center"><img class="image preview" src="/catttrax2/sites/blogs.bcit.ca.catttrax2/files/images/DSC_3499.preview.JPG" alt="Burrowing Owl, Cordoba, Argentina" title="Burrowing Owl, Cordoba, Argentina" width="500" height="330" /></p><p align="center"><span style="width: 498px" class="caption"><div align="left"><strong>Burrowing Owl, Cordoba, Argentina</strong></div></span></p><p align="left">The Burrowing Owl is also a species with an impressive distribution. It extends from British Columbia (and Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba), down into the US, Central America and all the way down to Patagonia in Chile &amp; Argentina. In British Columbia we are at the very northern range of the Burrowing Owl and it is considered a species at risk in the province. Burrowing Owl habitat is being lost in the province due to agriculture and urban development. There are ongoing efforts, by groups like the Burrowing Owl Conservation Society of BC, to stabilize the population and re-introduce it into areas of its historical range. The BCIT Fish, Wildlife and Recreation Program, has also been involved in this project for the past number of years.</p><p align="left">It was great to see so many Burrowing Owls in Argentina as it is a fairly rare sighting to see them in BC.<br /></p> http://blogs.bcit.ca/catttrax2/node/464#comment Argentina Argentina Cordoba Farming Sun, 08 Apr 2007 10:30:54 -0700 Danny Catt 464 at http://blogs.bcit.ca/catttrax2