Why the huge differences? I thought there was supposed to be parity.
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US vs Canadian durum prices
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That's what I thought too. But if you want those big prices you are supposed to truck it to the states.
Really it's a license to print money for the canadian graincos. And the government applauds it. They were worried before what the cwb was doing and say absolutely nothing now that graincos do it.
Actually it pisses me off.
And it's also absurd to truck grain south to upgrade their crop and be no closer to port and drive by 15 Canadian elevators.
But have at it.
Don't get me wrong, the arrogance of the board I can do without. All I want is to haul grain when it's convenient for me and stick to the contracts I signed within reason.
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Ah my dear bucket, do not forget about the mighty Missippi or the awesome Missouri that flows into it. It is interesting that where the Missouri turns South to Helena near Havre Montana, it used to turn North up into Canada and paddle steamers took supplies up toward Edmonton, but in the 1800's the army core blasted the crap out of the North route and extended the Missouri farther west toward Helena and Yellowstone. Can you imagine the economic benefit to Alberta and Western Sask if they were connected to the Missouri today?
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I have said it more than once we have to look for a north American solution.
More trains are needed for not only ag products but other products as well.
If anyone in the transportation system had been paying attention, goods and people would be moving by rail economically.
Instead we have the mess we do.
Wrecking highways with product that can be easily moved by rail.
If governments had any backbone farmers in my area wouldn't be driving past a viterra elevator in eyebrow to deliver to viterra in moose jaw. They could just issue fees to viterra, not the farmer, for forcing the grain onto the highway.
I drive 45 minutes north to deliver to gardiner dam terminal right beside a ****ing railway that turns around and takes the grain back south past what should have been my delivery point of eyebrow.
Rail and grain logistics in canada are ****ed.
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What huge price difference? Just called around again yesterday. My best canadian bid was only $0.75/bu less than the American one, and needed me to truck much further.
The American bid was actually lower, but the currency exchange makes a big difference right now
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Shareholders/investors are not on the list, only creditors.
I think some of them are actually land renters to Broadacre. Maxcrop is the one the comes to mind as being owed rent from this current crop year. There are a couple others as well that simply rented their land to Broadacre and wont get paid.
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