I have a few friends in this area and from what I have been told, good land sells in the $80,000 - $140,000 medium quality at $35,000 - $80,000, and poor cattle type land in the $20,000 - $35,000 range. From what I am told , under proper fertility and good managment themselves and neighbors they are getting yields that are close to their better land. My questions is buy two $60,000 quarters and or one $120,000? Assuming 260 acres on the poorer land and 160 on the good, and a 40 bushel crop on the good land and 30 on the poor, i would grow 7800 bushels on the poorer land and 6400 on the better land.I dont own land in this area but am thinking of purchasing.Any thoughts?
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Good rule of thumb. Is there anyone still living there,(The PFRA manager doesn't count) or have they all gone broke and moved to town?
There's a reason that land is "cheap".
If you ever get a chance to improve on land, take it. Your variable costs are all the same, as are most of the fixed. That being said you can pay too much for land.
Like someone said in a previous thread.
Competition keeps everyone in check.
Remember everyone's cost of production, and tolerance for risk is different
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All these areas are inhabited, lots of 4- 6 quarter cow/calf small grain farms.
I know the whole east central sask area was wet last year and much of the land I am talking about wasnt seeded.The yields are from from 2005-2009.All of it has some type of limitation, sloughs, stones, some gravel/sand, that is why it is cheaper, but with some drainage and bush removal, some of these guys have made this productive land.
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Most farms are 2000ac farms, not to many with cattle any more. Most land is productive with pockets of poor land or cattle land. It is all refected in the assessment, land with assessment over 40,000 new assessment is worth buying and und 40000 is not. I have a section too far from my home base that I am concidering selling. Assessment over 50,000 per quarter. 630 cultivated acres. Canola yields average 40 bus/ac, oats 130bus/ac,wheat 50bus/ac.I usually use 75 lbs/N,25lbs phos,15 lbs/sulfer,15 lbs potash, half of this for oats. Land like this I would start at $75000/quarter any takers.
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gust
You make a good point. I watch so called farmers move into an area. They drive by the best run farms in the area, don't have the brains to stop and ask local farmers why they don't buy the land for the price they are willing to pay. Then everyone thinks their land is worth outrageous money to grow 40 bpa of feed wheat.
The next guy comes along with 80-90 grand a quarter - I'm gone.
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