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2002

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    #16
    2004 froze bad here in south central Sk. Had a 40 bu B-90 chickpea crop coming and they froze green. Combined then spring of 05, sold them for a whopping 7 cents/lb. Didnt dare put tough green seed in the bin so we left them out. Malt was going to make 80 plus, sucked the weight right out of it. Durum didn’t fair much better. Was a good year to carry crop insurance.

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      #17
      Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
      04 here as well. Bought a section that spring and a section of crop froze on us that fall to the the point of basically 0% production, half section of flax and a half of wheat.....had to combine it all to get rid of the straw. It was 25% of our acres. Ag Stability later paid on that year then asked for some back........I blame Sumdumguy!

      😉

      Who me? No way!

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        #18
        Don't worry about august it will freeze between June 5 and June 10 to minus 8 to minus 10 degrees.

        @parkthecombineforayear.

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          #19
          2004, Before farming was cool, and nobody was coming back to the farm except the diehards. Had our pick of land.

          Seeding was on time that year but the summer was very cold, crops were behind normal development when the aug19 -5 hit. Ended up losing about 2/3 of our crop. Was the largest crop up to that point but mother nature took it at the last minute.

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            #20
            After the 2002 frost then the 2004 frost farming really wasn't cool. You savings got a huge kick in the nuts and if you had none your farming life was over. Lots left after 2004 because they were done.

            Farming was cool. That's so funny.

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              #21
              Fall frost is bad and we are due for one. Farming may not be cool if it does happen

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                #22
                Originally posted by bgmb View Post
                Fall frost is bad and we are due for one. Farming may not be cool if it does happen

                What we're inputs in 2002/2004? Half of now? A third?


                I'm talking everything... Fert seed chem fixed costs land equipment...

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                  #23
                  Originally posted by Klause View Post
                  What we're inputs in 2002/2004? Half of now? A third?


                  I'm talking everything... Fert seed chem fixed costs land equipment...
                  Canola seed, less than half. Fert same ish. Chem. Higher, depending on what you were spraying. Land cost and machinery cost are voluntary numbers. I assume most ppls costs now in those categories are three times higher.

                  I would guess half, all things considered. Depends on priorities. Iron, vs. Production investment.

                  Freaking cold this morning. Might run out of hay. Got extra hay, Klause?
                  Last edited by Sheepwheat; Apr 6, 2018, 09:43.

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                    #24
                    But you can make it up on volume....lol.

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                      #25
                      Originally posted by Sheepwheat View Post
                      Canola seed, less than half. Fert same ish. Chem. Higher, depending on what you were spraying. Land cost and machinery cost are voluntary numbers. I assume most ppls costs now in those categories are three times higher.

                      I would guess half, all things considered. Depends on priorities. Iron, vs. Production investment.

                      Freaking cold this morning. Might run out of hay. Got extra hay, Klause?
                      Yeah hay market is a sleeper. A extra three weeks of feeding cows will turn this around. Will help me as I make some hay every summer. Maybe it will be worth while this year.

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                        #26
                        Honestly 2/3 Klause

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                          #27
                          Originally posted by ajl View Post
                          Yeah hay market is a sleeper. A extra three weeks of feeding cows will turn this around. Will help me as I make some hay every summer. Maybe it will be worth while this year.
                          If you got hay to sell get advertising. Hwy 2 is hay truck after hay truck heading south. No surplus at all Red Deer south. We pulled 5 loads from the north that we shouldn't have needed but started early and feeding late along with cold, they burn through a lot.

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                            #28
                            Never seen a frost like you guys talk about here. Have had some downgraded canola and bran type frosts maybe even some making lighter grain but never a zero yield. I think part of the reason is we get cold nights all summer and often light frosts here and there and likely the plants are hardened a bit better than some areas. Also have lots of moisture and dew as a rule that helps.

                            Definitely higher costs than 02/04 but lots are self inflicted costs of new iron, overpriced rents and snake oils.

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                              #29
                              Other thing is interest rates were higher back then

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                                #30
                                2002 was the smoking hot summer when we had no runoff and hardly had moisture to get the crop started. July long weekend was so hot you wanted to hide in the basement but had to try and do something with the kids. I had just got the canola swathed in early Aug. and it started raining and rained for a month.
                                All the crop started growing again and the canola swathed disappeared under re growing canola. I had to get a high clearance sprayer to spray the flowering canola fields so I could find the canola swathed. The wheat we also sprayed to take out the second growth. The oats and barley we left the second growth grow and combined some light weight junk about the middle of Dec.

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