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Richie sale

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    #16
    You guys realize that rb bids themselves on the sale.... thru Internet bidders and then ships equipment all over NA?


    I sold a forage harvester that has been in sales in stoon Toronto Duluth and Florida. .. my old spray air has been in stoon calgary and brandon

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      #17
      Klause, is there any sense to that? Isn't that a complete waste of time and money?

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        #18
        Are you guys following serial numbers on the equipment you're claiming has been in multiple sales "across" North America? Freight isn't free either, even if you had your own tucking fleet! I wouldn't be a bit surprised if there was some internal bidding via the net or even onsite. At the last sale in Saskatoon it is funny how after the opening bid is received on an item it is rammed so fast there is no way the auctioneer could possibly have taken those bids from his bidspotters and with certainty know who is on in the last bid. Then after that episode they work the bidders to get a concrete bid and the pace can be followed by the crowd.

        Buying equipment online without going to inspect it prior to sale would be like buying a pig in a poke. Buyer beware at the best of times.

        It is an amazing sale.... 2 rings simultaneously along with timed auctions.... if you consider the timed auction a ring, you have a three ring CIRCUS.

        With the advent of online bidding, the days of stealing something at auction seems to be a thing of the past. Not saying there are no good deals but the ones that keep you awake at night (if you have a conscience) seem to be few and far between.

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          #19
          in fall 1961, we sold our farm "up north" and moved to the Regina Plains. At the farm we bought, the owner and family took only their clothes and car and left all else behind. Because of the severe drought of 1961, the family abandoned 2 3/4 sections of Regina Heavy Clay. The bins were full, the 2 quonsets were full of machinery. The houses were full of personal possessions. We expected that one day they would return out of curiosity or nostalgia but no, not one of the family ever returned from Victoria. Get to the point : when we sold our farm near Yorkton, the auctioneer advised us to get a few strangers to come down as inside bidders to bid stuff up.

          We took our milk cow Penny, our cat Darrel, our mutt Buster and 3 white geese to the promised land. The locals were amazed to see "the Clampetts. " Sorry to bore you all, but the point of this ramble was the insider bidding. I always remember that when I attend auctions to this day.

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            #20
            Funny you can see the virtue of "Pooling and smart marketing!" of RB sales but not the CWB. Maybe time to change to TOM4RB?

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              #21
              SDG, can you imagine the distaste they must of had for the place to just pull up stakes and leave for a new home without taking much of their possessions along. That feeling doesn't develop in one year.... 1961 was the tipping point for them. You talked about how tough it was for you guys in the 80's, is that stuff that hard to farm? Were the previous owners there for decades/generations? Maybe the last ones never had the fortitude for it or felt obligated until their predecessors died, then said ef it......

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                #22
                He was an officer in the army. He left rooms full and garage packed with army memorabilia and wartime surplus. It is really unimaginable that someone would wake up one morning, grab the family and throw a few things in the car and kiss a life goodbye, never to return. Maybe he had a line on something better in Victoria.

                But he did have full bins, a Quonset full of barley and lots of good equipment ; even a D8 Cat, maintainers, newest augers, irrigation system. When he came from the war he had 15 good years in the fifties and this was 1961. It's still a mystery to us. Just very interesting, the different personalities.

                Maybe he remembered the dirty thirties when farmers in that area watched everything blow away. Farmers up north, near Mikado say they never felt the depression as they never had the relentless drought and their mixed farming guaranteed they never went hungry. I didn't know any who lived beyond their means either. it would be a good cold winter day project to start a thread about the good Ol days while there are a few of us left. Remind me Tom and Farma.

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                  #23
                  Grass farmer, if you liked pooling, maybe you should have realized that changes to the CWB were needed. Many were disenchanted and were not being heard.

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                    #24
                    Changes needed yes, throwing the baby out with the bath water, not so much.

                    But don't let me detract from your stories about the people up and leaving their farms that was interesting!

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                      #25
                      Grass, the _ _ _ is dead.

                      When people lose control of their property, productivity also suffers.
                      Never again will we be forced to pool grain, and have a giant state trading agency singling out one area of the country for property rights abuses.

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                        #26
                        Alrighty then, how bout them Oilers?

                        But seroiusly folks. RB has always been stern about buybacks. Usta threaten to ban you if you were caught. But..... i agree, since internet how could they not somehow be involved in reshuffling. Especially when they gaurantee and or own some of it.

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