Fair and square, grassfarmer, it sure didn't pay me enough to keep doing it and rather than continue beating my head against the wall, I let evolution take over. Decided to simply go with the flow and the majority rule was "we want a place to live, and then maybe, just maybe, after we've afforded all our toys, we'll see if there's any left over for that "eating experience" you all keep talking about." I keep telling you, food is the first to go when normal consumers need to cut their own costs (like when their rent and fuel goes up!)
The real estate wave has been phenomenal to say the least and I don't doubt for one second, Wilson, that what goes up can't be shot down. Give me just a whisper more credit than that. I still remember sitting in my truck just before the twin towers went down looking at my herd and listening to a CALGARY radio station (not even some farmer station but a HIP-HOP station...now you all know what I dance to!) and the dee-jay going on and on about the windfall of cash flowing into cattle producers hands. God how that felt good!
And then...
My favorite expression...
JENGA!
The States decide to go on a man-hunt and make everybody nervous about opening their wallets and then...
BSE shows up only 8 months later and the world as all cattle producers knew it changed. Completely, totally, permanently...
And how many of you sold out when prices were phenomenal...
I didn't either, but sure as hell got smarter real fast as I watched in angst neighbor after neighbor going down. Still watching it, and like you grassfarmer, trying to save a few of my favorites from total bankruptcy, teaching them how to use their farms for anything other than farming.
I didn't go bankrupt, I continued doing what I have always done, given the consumer what they demanded...houses, no one wants live cattle and I even did and still do pretty darn well as far as individual prices of my breeding stock and embryo and semen exports go.
Just that the land, taxes and interest rates did pretty darn better and I wasn't really in the mood to move my family to the moon just to lower the biggest costs, my land and interest payments.
Anyway, all been said before. I can still assure you, Wilson that greed is not the deciding factor, the mental stability of my family is and when the gravy train of real estate is done in Alberta, it'll be time for something else. We talk quite a bit about time to cash out, just like I "should have" called the truck and sold everything that day that hip-hop station went on and on about now is the time to be a cattle farmer. Then was, now ain't.
I will keep giving the consumer what they ask for, that I believe is the mindset of an entreprenuer, not to tell consumers what they "should" want. That ain't an entreprenuer, that's a bully (or an American! LOL!)
If you guys got enough customers to bring in a buck or two and so few amenities that your costs are zilch, my hat is off to you and I mean that sincerely.
I still like beef and still need some guys to produce it.
Thank you to those who are and can afford to do so. I can't. Mine are now pets that I thoroughly enjoy, and life has since gotten a whole lot better since I was able to recognize what can and cannot be done. Thanks for reading and have a good day all!
The real estate wave has been phenomenal to say the least and I don't doubt for one second, Wilson, that what goes up can't be shot down. Give me just a whisper more credit than that. I still remember sitting in my truck just before the twin towers went down looking at my herd and listening to a CALGARY radio station (not even some farmer station but a HIP-HOP station...now you all know what I dance to!) and the dee-jay going on and on about the windfall of cash flowing into cattle producers hands. God how that felt good!
And then...
My favorite expression...
JENGA!
The States decide to go on a man-hunt and make everybody nervous about opening their wallets and then...
BSE shows up only 8 months later and the world as all cattle producers knew it changed. Completely, totally, permanently...
And how many of you sold out when prices were phenomenal...
I didn't either, but sure as hell got smarter real fast as I watched in angst neighbor after neighbor going down. Still watching it, and like you grassfarmer, trying to save a few of my favorites from total bankruptcy, teaching them how to use their farms for anything other than farming.
I didn't go bankrupt, I continued doing what I have always done, given the consumer what they demanded...houses, no one wants live cattle and I even did and still do pretty darn well as far as individual prices of my breeding stock and embryo and semen exports go.
Just that the land, taxes and interest rates did pretty darn better and I wasn't really in the mood to move my family to the moon just to lower the biggest costs, my land and interest payments.
Anyway, all been said before. I can still assure you, Wilson that greed is not the deciding factor, the mental stability of my family is and when the gravy train of real estate is done in Alberta, it'll be time for something else. We talk quite a bit about time to cash out, just like I "should have" called the truck and sold everything that day that hip-hop station went on and on about now is the time to be a cattle farmer. Then was, now ain't.
I will keep giving the consumer what they ask for, that I believe is the mindset of an entreprenuer, not to tell consumers what they "should" want. That ain't an entreprenuer, that's a bully (or an American! LOL!)
If you guys got enough customers to bring in a buck or two and so few amenities that your costs are zilch, my hat is off to you and I mean that sincerely.
I still like beef and still need some guys to produce it.
Thank you to those who are and can afford to do so. I can't. Mine are now pets that I thoroughly enjoy, and life has since gotten a whole lot better since I was able to recognize what can and cannot be done. Thanks for reading and have a good day all!
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