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    Hello.

    Well, I am alive and well. I did check in once in a while, and noticed a few have asked how or where I was, so I thought I would give a shout out. Had to change my name to get back on here.

    Still farming. A bit. Shifting our focus still to sheep. Building fences, getting ready to hay.

    Seeded canaryseed and flax and oats this year. Stopped feeding the system. Seeded some fall rye for grazing, some oats for green feed. Summerfallowing a fair bit to fix the ridiculous mess made by the last decade of too much rain. Those acres are slated for timothy for seed. I am trying hard to not feed the trolls. Seeding went good, still no dust, but seeded through most areas finally. Good news is the 1 inch we got here, actually never caused run off. For the first since 2006, an inch of rain did not fill the ditches and creeks! Praise be! lol

    A year from now we will generate a good revenue from livestock for the first time. I have no debt tied to them, and costs are so low it is laughable, so we should make out ok. We have a target in mind of maybe 4-600 ewes in a few more years. We have tapped into the restaurant supply, which we plan to try and grow and work on more. Good prices there...

    A large part of the reason I left the site, is I feel very misunderstood. I am on such a different page than most, it can be hard to stay sane when so few seem to understand. I simply see no future in grain farming for my family. Land is unattainable and tied up, and I refuse to pay stupid rent. The only way I can see getting more land, is if a bunch of 30 something farmers, backed by their well healed fathers and grandparents, die. Just the way it is.

    Anyhow, for those wondering, I am doing good, enjoying life more with far less stress. My oldest son is raising chickens again, and buying a quad with last years proceeds. Course now, my younger son had to get in on the action. He put his life savings towards 3 pigs he is raising. My daughters are dabbling in specialty chicken breeds, and plan to milk goats and make soap to sell.

    I will always grow some grain; I am simply not putting my life and my all and relying on it alone for once. This year, with a decent plan in place, the actual decision made to go hard on the livestock side, the promise of a good lamb crop, and far less inputs, I enjoyed seeding so much, that my wife texted me at one point after I told her I was having fun seeding: "Is this my husband? Where did you put my husband?"

    A real life changing shift for us has occurred... A few more hurdles and we should arrive on better footing.

    Cheers all, and thanks for asking.

    #2
    Good to hear from you!

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      #3
      Welcome back free sheep there is nothing wrong with changing course in life. If you can make it go with what you are doing good on you I know what you mean by getting screwed over seeding for the big corps bottom lines. Money isn't everything but happy and healthy is.

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        #4
        Glad you stopped in to say hello. I always liked reading your posts and you always would say the things I was thinking only you could say them better than I could.

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          #5
          You are a maverick and add a lot to our Agriville group of friends. We missed you as we miss quite a few old posters. i have faith they will return.

          Do you have goats too? Around Regina there are small farmers doing very well with the ethnic cityites. My friend sold a small breeding herd of goats for $50,000 two years ago and now she has restored her numbers for another sale. People come out to slaughter their animals and take home the meat. Her old barn has a new life. She also raises about 40-60 sheep but the coyotes hang around here big time.

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            #6
            Way to go freesheep. I think you are doing what everyone wishes they could. There is nothing better in the world than loving what you do.

            Everyone could do with less stress. I am envious.

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              #7
              Every time I heard a forecast or saw a weather map for your region this spring I thought about you, and wondered how you were coping. Glad to hear you have found an amicable solution. Can only fight mother nature so long. I suspect there are a lot of operations where the weather cycle has turned against them who may need to make the same decision before one is made for them.

              Of course, how it usually works here, is when I finally admit that mother nature wins and I need to adapt rather than wait for her to return to "normal", she makes a 180.
              I've been contemplating and dabbling in a lower inputs change of focus for a few acres too, but for different reasons. I think we face many of the same challenges and share a similar philosophy. We tried to connect by phone at one point but never succeeded, if you still have my number, feel free to give me a call or message.
              Last edited by AlbertaFarmer5; Jun 16, 2017, 13:26.

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                #8
                Great to hear from you. I realized this winter I'm going to be the last grain farmer in my family. 4 kids but with 6-7000 an acre land grain doesn't pencil out. My wife is trying to talk me into sheep and I'm doing math. Good luck and glad you're back.

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                  #9
                  Missed you on here for sure ! Were still wet lol

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                    #10
                    Glad to see you back. Happy life is on the upswing for you.

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                      #11
                      Sounds like you have a good game plan. 👍🏻

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                        #12
                        Originally posted by Ronski View Post
                        Great to hear from you. I realized this winter I'm going to be the last grain farmer in my family. 4 kids but with 6-7000 an acre land grain doesn't pencil out. My wife is trying to talk me into sheep and I'm doing math. Good luck and glad you're back.
                        "I'm going to be the last grain farmer in my family" , let me know in 10 years. That's what I thought, but the bug bit every one of our kids. Yep!

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                          #13
                          Good for you sheepwheat. You are certainly diversifying your risk as you diversify your operation and I think that's a good thing. You'll get into some work running these bigger numbers of sheep, as I know from experience, but hopefully the reward is there for you.

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                            #14
                            Welcome back..Good on you for changing your life style..Less stress is good for all..

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                              #15
                              Good to hear from you. Glad you have found a system that works for you. Something similar may have to happen here since this land in the Edmonton area is now also unfarmable due to too wet and cool. I would never sleep at night with sheep though since there are way too many coyotes around here.

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