It is carried out in all the growing areas in Canada. The quality of the crop can vary from one area to another. By surveying all growing areas, the Canadian Grain Commission provides a good representation of crop quality.
Each fall, thousands of grain producers participate in the Canadian Grain Commission's Harvest sample program. They send us samples of their crops and we put them together to make larger samples, or composites. Composite samples of wheat, oilseeds and pulses are milled, mixed, baked, crushed, and cooked, and analyzed for their processing characteristics. We post the results of these tests on our web site. The results of the tests tell millers, bakers, brewers and food manufacturers how the new crop will perform in processing.
Data from analytical tests give the finer points about the processing quality of each class and grade, each year. The data is important because environmental conditions can cause a variation in processing quality within in each grade, from year to year.
It is the most efficient way to obtain samples from each growing area.
The more harvest samples we have, the more representative the quality data.