• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Crop insurance dates?

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #11
    food4u

    That's a little different.

    Winter wheat and fall rye should have the decisions made before August 30, then if its a disaster by the following April, you are covered.

    But for spring seeded crops April 30 makes sense.

    Comment


      #12
      I think farmers have answered their own question about deadline dates. You knew the rules about it, and chose not to participate.

      You didn't sign up for too wet to seed insurance because your favourite weather guru told you it would be a cool, dry spring. Why waste money paying the too wet to sow premium.

      All winter, you could have crossed any of your fields in a 4x2 vehicle. You likely could have seeded everything in March with the warm ground temperatures save for the fact that frost would catch you with that cool spring forecast. No problem. That leaves lots of time to wait for the normal start date. You just saved yourself a chunk of cash. It's dry. It's early. It isn't going to rain. Gerus are never wrong.

      Well, now you have something in common with the canola economists who told you that the high was in months ago. You are on the wrong side of the forecast. So the outcome is that now you complain about needing another month to cover a gamble that didn't go your way.

      Man up. We wouldn't be hearing a peep about deadline dates being too early if you were putting your drills away tomorrow.

      Comment


        #13
        checking, You make assumptions for YOUR
        area. The reason I never topped up is
        that I felt that the chance of having 5
        years in 7 too wet to seed was slim to
        none from a historical basis. It had
        nothing to do with anyone's forecast

        We had three feet of snow in the winter,
        so no, I could not drive in the fields
        with a 2X4 or even a 4X4!

        March, we still had snow. I did not
        think it was a gamble, it was common
        sense. Like Alberta's insurance, where
        they have until the end of April to
        decide.

        I will manage, whatever happens, but you
        sound a bit like you have no real idea
        about what wet is. Course we in the wet
        spots are worried, we know the hell that
        too wet is all too well. We have had
        unseeded acres in 4 of the last 6 years.
        I think I am entitled to have some grave
        concern.

        And I blame myself entirely, btw! I
        think other than too wet acres, there
        are many reasons to have an extended
        deadline in the future. Contract price
        reasons, last minute change reasons,
        etc.

        Comment


          #14
          Freewheat.

          I'm getting tired of walking in rubber boots, but I'm curious if anyone in your area has gone "old world" and now automatically carries an umbrella.

          I'd tell you that your weather patterns are evolving, but ...

          And I'm not sure I know many, regardless of markets, or contracts, who will change their rotations, except if weather forces them.

          Comment


            #15
            ha ha, yup I carry an umbrella on the
            tractor with me.....lol

            Comment

            • Reply to this Thread
            • Return to Topic List
            Working...