Originally posted by jazz
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Trains
Collapse
Logging in...
Welcome to Agriville! You need to login to post messages in the Agriville chat forums. Please login below.
X
-
-
Guest
movement here is crazy . seems you can haul whatever you want whenever you want . best we have had for years . we had about 30% of crop contracted . it's all gone plus some decent spot priced stuff also . we did dry nearly all of it , though. had a 22 cent canary target in , it went yesterday and it's gone . sure helped with bins
Comment
-
Originally posted by Klause View PostA lot of the people I haul for... pre harvest contracts, and lots of canola being dumped by guys without dryers... locals running specials buying up to 13 as dry.
Klause, what's your strategy, just curious? Sitting tight here, will freeze up tough canola with air and hold till I can get $11.25 or so.
You seem to post very interesting things, often leading edge from other countries. Your farm must do very well and your parents must be very proud.
Comment
-
Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View PostDo you still find time for trucking along with directional drilling and harvest?
When I'm not out there I'm in my truck lol.
Today, ardent Mills in Saskatoon
Comment
-
Originally posted by jazz View PostI've learned that when you panic, you make rash decisions. Patience pays in this business IMO.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Richard5 View PostKlause, what's your strategy, just curious? Sitting tight here, will freeze up tough canola with air and hold till I can get $11.25 or so.
You seem to post very interesting things, often leading edge from other countries. Your farm must do very well and your parents must be very proud.
We bought into the ag more than ever and Canada is the best place for ag bullshit and spend spend spend to grow a crop. I regret doing that but every experience in life makes you wiser.
The thing that bugs me the most is I knew this info in the back of my head but just chose to ignore it at the time.
We are doing quite drastic changes... Because conventional production ag, working for "ag industry" is a zero sum game imho.
Most profitable.crop on the farm?
Gone 3 weeks ago for $11. Ran 25-30 straight cut it, grew it on the N from the prior pea crop added p and s. Applied some edge. No in crop spray.
Cost $176/acre to grow grossed $300.
It's not about growing the highest yield. It's about growing highest profit. Another lesson I wish I had learnt 5 or 10 years ago.
So yeah I share the information I do in the hopes of others not falling into the same traps.
I believe understanding our competitors and their advantages / hindrances is important. We can't believe were the best because that complacency ruins our business, our industry, and our country.
I see major clouds on the horizon and want to be mobile... have a family to think about and want what's best for them too.
I count myself fortunate that learning comes easy, and that my parents taught me to question everything at all times and be flexible... and I've had the opportunity to gain many skills and knowledge in diverse fields quickly.
Farming is my love second to my family, but there's neat things one can do to put food on the table and build equity... And I believe there's also lots of texh ology that hasn't been thought of invented or brought to market... Which is one of the fields I'm very excited to be involved in... It's also where knowledge of other countries agriculture industries comes in.
Still want to change the world, hoping the stuff I'm working on will eventually save lives and help feed millions.
Anyway enough of a rant. My turn to dump again.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Klause View PostThis deserves a far longer response... But no 2016 caused us a lot of grief. Lost half the crop and crop insurance was useless...
We bought into the ag more than ever and Canada is the best place for ag bullshit and spend spend spend to grow a crop. I regret doing that but every experience in life makes you wiser.
The thing that bugs me the most is I knew this info in the back of my head but just chose to ignore it at the time.
We are doing quite drastic changes... Because conventional production ag, working for "ag industry" is a zero sum game imho.
Most profitable.crop on the farm?
Gone 3 weeks ago for $11. Ran 25-30 straight cut it, grew it on the N from the prior pea crop added p and s. Applied some edge. No in crop spray.
Cost $176/acre to grow grossed $300.
It's not about growing the highest yield. It's about growing highest profit. Another lesson I wish I had learnt 5 or 10 years ago.
[ATTACH]3467[/ATTACH]
So yeah I share the information I do in the hopes of others not falling into the same traps.
I believe understanding our competitors and their advantages / hindrances is important. We can't believe were the best because that complacency ruins our business, our industry, and our country.
I see major clouds on the horizon and want to be mobile... have a family to think about and want what's best for them too.
I count myself fortunate that learning comes easy, and that my parents taught me to question everything at all times and be flexible... and I've had the opportunity to gain many skills and knowledge in diverse fields quickly.
Farming is my love second to my family, but there's neat things one can do to put food on the table and build equity... And I believe there's also lots of texh ology that hasn't been thought of invented or brought to market... Which is one of the fields I'm very excited to be involved in... It's also where knowledge of other countries agriculture industries comes in.
Still want to change the world, hoping the stuff I'm working on will eventually save lives and help feed millions.
Anyway enough of a rant. My turn to dump again.
Comment
-
- Reply to this Thread
- Return to Topic List
Comment