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    Land for rent...

    In the productive black soil zone. Highly assessed. Highest or any offers not necessarily accepted. Offers.

    ps. Clubroot pathogen found on it.


    Would the presence of clubroot on land available to rent sway your decision to bid on it and farm it?

    If you were operating a kind of closed farming model, where little to no outside traffic happened inside the confines of your acreage, would you be extra cautious about the spread of clubroot onto the land in your control.

    I realize it is nearly impossible to completely stop the spread but I think measures could be taken to drastically slow it. Water, wind and wildlife are uncontrollable.

    Would you pass up on known clubroot infected land for fear of introducing it onto your own?

    If you were a landlord, would canola rotation limitations be part of the rental contract?
    How would such a clause affect rent values?
    Last edited by farmaholic; Jan 18, 2019, 17:53.

    #2
    Is infected land public knowledge, or should it be?

    Infection supposedly isn't a death sentence and is "somewhat" manageable with rotation and resistant varieties.

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      #3
      If you want I have parcels of 1000 acres and up. I would like to get just $100 a acre. Please send pictures of equipment.

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        #4
        Depends how much land and severity of the infection. If the infection is bad it would be spread to your farm. Probably not worth it in the long run unless pea prices get closer to pea protein prices and wheat hits $8

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          #5


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            #6
            There are several grain producers on here from north central Alberta who would know very well , that area has been dealing with clubroot for almost a decade already. They would by far have the best advice / knowledge.

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              #7
              Here is what our RM sent out to all ratepayers. Has everyone seen such "suggestions"?


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                #8
                Nobody seems too concerned here anymore.
                Which is a little dangerous.

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                  #9
                  Look we’re its happening on the Saskatchewan map. it’s always the canola snow canola guys. Or canola barley canola canola wheat.

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                    #10
                    Well I have canola on a 3yr rotation but if I get clubroot from that or somebody else infects me, its default back to flax. No worries.

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                      #11
                      Clubroot in this county for quite a few years. Nobody concerned much. Seed all clubroot varieties. Volunteer control very important. County publishes a map in the paper of positive clubroot finds from their surveillance program. Gives the agricultural 'services' staff something to do. The other thing they do is run the chamomile gestapo. Otherwise they just drink coffee and smoke if needed. If positive, you have to do three years of no canola or related crops. Wheat and canola the norm here.

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                        #12
                        Not even sure if they enforce the three year rule here anymore. If ever.

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