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Water Management: Understanding Issues
in the Rural Context
A Maritime Event Rural Water Policy Symposium
November 8, 2006
NSAC recognizes the considerable challenges that exist
with respect to the management of water resources in our rural communities.
As a result, NSAC is pleased to announce that it is hosting a water
policy symposium on November 8, 2006. The symposium
is being supported through the NSAC Class of 1956, as part of their
50th anniversary activities, Agriculture and Agri-food Canada and
the Nova Scotia Federation of Agriculture. Please click here for
complete article.
Funding for the symposium is provided by the Agricultural
Policy Framework, a federal-provincial-territorial initiative.
More information is available, including registration
and program details at: http://nsac.ca/water/
or by contacting Terra Jamieson at (902) 956-0580 or nsfa_jamieson@hotmail.com
Homecoming Weekend 2006
NSAC alumni and their families are welcomed back to NSAC on October
20 and 21, 2006 for Homecoming Weekend. This weekend is a great
way to bring you together with students, alumni, family and freinds.
We wish you a welcome back to NSAC and hope that you will take
this opportunity to renew your ties to the NSAC community and
enjoy the exciting events and activities planned. The Reunion
Program will honour graduates from Class years ending in 1 and
6. If you would like any help getting your class organized please
let us know at alumni@nsac.ca.
The Homecoming schedule is available at
nsac.ca/alumni/Homecoming/homecomingSchedule.asp
NSAC Agricola News
The summer 2006 edition of the NSAC Agricola News is now available
online at the following link
nsac.ca/alumni/agricola_news.asp
Class of ’56 reunites at NSAC
Open House
Twenty three members of the Class of ’56 met
in Truro during the NSAC Open House event and visited that weekend,
bringing along their spouses to catch up with old friends and professors.
Celebrating their 50th reunion, class members came from BC, Alberta,
Ontario, NB and across NS. One class member even came all the way
from Connecticut.

The group gathered to take in the festivities of the
Open House event and held a class meeting that evening. One highlight
of the reunion was a visit to the Bio-Environmental Engineering
Centre at the AgriTech Park where Dr. Rob Gordon, with other speakers,
outlined many of the programs and projects undertaken by BEEC. The
Class of ’56 is a sponsor of a Water Quality Management Symposium
to take place November 8th and 9th.
Several former professors were guests at the anniversary
dinner held in Jenkins Hall Friday evening and a brunch was held
Saturday morning at the home of Douglas and Shirley Byers in West
New Annan which brought the reunion to a delicious close.
Plans have been made to hold an informal gathering
next summer in New Brunswick.
Where are they now?
Here is your chance to let other alumni know where
you are and what you’re doing! Please send us an email at alumni@nsac.ca
and let us know what you’re up to – you just might be
featured in an upcoming issue of Alumni e-News. We look forward to
hearing from you! Please send along a picture if possible!
Laura
Byrne (Hooper) completed her B.Sc in Pest Management at NSAC in
1995 and lived in Chapman House during her Freshman year. Here is
what Laura has been up to recently.
Name: Laura Byrne (Hooper)
Education: Class of 1995 B.Sc. Pest Management
(MSc 1997 from Memorial University)
Hometown: Shubenacadie Nova Scotia & Current
Residence: Sooke, British Columbia
Plans for the Fall: Well, I had a baby and that
has been a great adventure but we have only traveled as far as the
mailbox. The beach is on our doorstep and I live in one of the most
beautiful parts of the county so there is no need to go too far!
This summer I won the 2006 Biodiversity Conservation Award from
the District of Saanich. Fall plans include running our Bed and
Breakfast (Quail's Roost) and enjoying our baby Camille.
Plans for the future: I will be returning to work
in the spring to carry on conservation efforts for species at risk
in the Garry Oak Ecosystem.
Favorite NSAC Memory: My favorite memory isn't
any single event - though so many great instances enter my head.
I think my favorite memory of NSAC is the feeling of the place and
the time. The feeling of being part of a family, pride in a school
and a way of life, and the feeling of home. I miss the feeling of
NSAC the most.
What did you enjoy most about your time at NSAC?
- All of the extras that NSAC had to offer -organizing the woodsmen
competition, working at the athletic centre, soccer, rugby, weed
science club etc. All of these extras, and what I was able to take
away with me from those experiences, have made the most difference
in my life. The quality of education goes without saying!
Laura and Mike Byrne
Quail's Roost Bed and Breakfast
7046 Richview Road, Sooke, BC, Canada
V0S 1N0 250.642.2406
NSAC’s Atlantic Canadian Centre for Poultry
Research
With the walls now raised, construction for NSAC’s
Atlantic Canadian Centre for Poultry Research is well underway.
The Centre will provide research capabilities in all
phases of poultry production from hatching to value added product
processing. It will also provide facilities for the Atlantic Poultry
Research Institute to coordinate poultry research among scientists
from Agriculture & Agri-Food Canada, University of Prince Edward
Island and NSAC.
The
core of the research facilities is a complex that will house poultry
under commercial conditions with state of the art environmental
controls and computerized data collection to facilitate science
research. New to NSAC will be a fully functional hatchery for generating
research stock and a federally inspected processing facility to
facilitate food safety and meat quality research.
The combination of these animal facilities and current
laboratory capability will allow fundamental research on nutrition,
physiology, poultry waste management, post-slaughter muscle metabolism,
food safety, and provide opportunities for the development of new
and innovative research directions important to support the Atlantic
Poultry Industry.
Contractors are running on schedule and expect the
facility, which is estimated to cost 11 million dollars, will be
complete by the end of this year.
Atlantic Agricultural Hall of Fame Nominees
Announced
Truro, NS - The Atlantic Agricultural Hall of Fame
was established by the Atlantic Livestock Council in 1968 as a means
of honouring individuals in Atlantic Canada for their contribution
to the development of the livestock industry in the region. Each
year, one person from each of the four Atlantic Provinces is honoured
at an induction ceremony and reception held at the NSAC during the
month of October.
The
2006 nominees include Jack Johnson, NS; Robert Acton, NB; Walter
Fiander, NL; and the late Colburne Clow, PE. Click here for the
complete article
Induction ceremonies will be held on Thursday, October
26 beginning at 1:00 p.m. in Alumni Theatre, on the NSAC campus.
The Atlantic Agricultural Hall of Fame operates as a result of the
support given by agricultural organizations, public agencies, corporations
and private individuals.
Make Way for Youth
Make Way for Youth is a pilot initiative based on
Place Aux Jeunes; a youth attraction program running successfully
in Quebec for over 15 years. The program is funded through the Atlantic
Canada Opportunities Agency, Nova Scotia Office of Economic Development
and the Rural Secretariat. The cornerstone of the program are the
Exploratory Weekends in which youth, who are from here or away,
will be brought together over three exploratory weekends to learn
more about the community, business opportunities and employment
in Colchester.
Applications are now available for youth interested
in participating in the Colchester Exploratory Weekends. Applications
are on line at www.corda.ca/youth.html
and printed copies are at the CoRDA front desk.
Deadline for applications, Sept 20,
2006
NSAC Seminar Series
Join Dr. Georgia Mason, Canada Research Chair in Animal
Welfare, from the University of Guelph for a seminar entitled:
Why do captive animals perform stereotypic
behaviours?
September 22, 2006 11:00 a.m. - Noon Haley Institute,
Room 200
Stereotypies are repetitive behaviour patterns which
serve no obvious function such as pacing and tongue rolling. Join
Dr. Mason to learn more about these behaviours exhibited by pets,
and farm and zoo animals.
This seminar is sponsored by the Canadian Centre for
Fur Animal Research and the NSAC Seminar Committee.
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