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Cutting Loses...

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    #51
    So all you can do is whine and complain about how bad you have it, and that i don't and don't know what risk is.

    Interesting.

    You have the best career on the planet.

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      #52
      No you do , take absolutely zero risk and take hard working people's money ..
      I can't believe your in the industry

      Comment


        #53
        Yea, all these ****ing subsidies go directly into a term deposit, or do they go to buy fertilizer , overpriced canola seed and machinery, accountants .
        Look who is buying who out to control the market with our subsidies .
        Why do we need cash advances??
        I said it before we are the ones being farmed,

        Comment


          #54
          I will tell you what Tweety , go buy land right now at 2500-3000 an acre , even just 1000 ac . Then go buy inputs for $300 / ac , work 20 hrs a day to get it in and spray it, then harvest whatever you may get . Two years even with the great subsidies you think we get and you will be done crying in a gutter in two years

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            #55
            Twatty is the typical canadian socialist who is so jealous of Everyone who is more successful and smarter than him or her that they have to resort to lies and bullshit to hide their inferiority to make themselves feel better.

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              #56
              ....back to less personal attacks. I recall the crop of 2015...it kinda started the same way for us and it wasn't very good. I just want to touch on the in crop herbicide spraying thing. We gave it what it needed. ...low spots that had adequate moisture to germinate volunteers from the year before required the usual herb app. But of course the whole field gets it. The higher and drier spots of the field couldn't germ the weeds or volunteers early enough to benefit from the spraying. So when it finally did rain, look out, here they came. When we cut the ripe crop the green undergrowth made the fields look green again. This might be playing out the same again...heaven forbid any worse. You know, this whole economic and climatic environment is beginning to feel more and more like the mid eighties early nineties to me. Those weren't fun times...expensive land had a price correction and yields were crappy coupled with poor prices. At least now prices of some grain commodities are pretty decent....for now anyway. Stakes are allot higher too though. Per acre crop inputs(fixed and variable)now probably totalling half of what land was worth back then. ....and the dirt really isn't worth what it's selling for today either. Any bets on where it might be headed?

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                #57
                So its true, misery loves company.

                Not a single farmer doing well enough financially, enjoying what they do on this entire forum? It certainly is WhinerVille then.

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                  #58
                  Thats right tweety.... so don't be fooled by misery and heartache when combined they present themselves as an opportunity in Ag.

                  Best not to hang around here too long, don't want to be dragged down to our level, do you?

                  Comment


                    #59
                    Seriously farma, you don't love what you do? You'd rather be in an office? Or helping customers decide what color floor tile they should choose? Or selling something to a farmer for way more then they can afford?

                    Really?

                    Comment


                      #60
                      Originally posted by tweety View Post
                      So its true, misery loves company.

                      Not a single farmer doing well enough financially, enjoying what they do on this entire forum? It certainly is WhinerVille then.
                      Have to agree with you there tweety. The majority of farmers on here would be millionaires if they sold out, yet the constant negativity by usually the same ones. How many wage earners retire millionaires? Not many. I'm talking blue collar workers. Not corp. execs. Farming can be risky. The greater the risk, the greater the reward. If you don't like farming, sell out and go work at tim horton's. For me, farming is a good life.

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