Adding those kinds of acres involves exponential risk in this business.
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Originally posted by jazz View PostAdding those kinds of acres involves exponential risk in this business.
Fcc and some lenders will kiss your ass the bigger you are much more lenient when things go south. I know this first hand when I didn’t farm as much they were on my case steady I had lots of equity for what I owed and they still gave me the gears.
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Originally posted by fjlip View PostIn this weather challenged country 2000 is enough, those tryin more acres always lose grade, dry more, work till winter.
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I realize not everyone is playing at the same craps table, but what's stopping anyone from rolling bigger dice? Relatively speaking.
...."if" they want to?
Do the BTO's judge the STO's for being lazy and averse to risk? Mock them for being a single combine farm? Stagnant or worse yet....getting left behind? Bucking the "trend"? Suffering from sour g****s?
Or calling them an Old McDonald e-i-e-i-o farm if they are diversified into livestock.
Or call cattlemen hay-seed shit-kicking cowboys if they only raise cattle?
Put the shoe on the other foot, and I have nothing to defend or justify?
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Look at the scorn and contempt some people have for supply management sectors.
What is it? The barrier to entry or the COP plus profit assurance.....IF YOU DO IT RIGHT.
Some dairy families did a better job than others around here!Last edited by farmaholic; Aug 20, 2019, 21:14.
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Originally posted by furrowtickler View PostWe run one on 5700
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Originally posted by Hamloc View PostFurrow, have to admit that is impressive. But my curiousity is getting the best of me. In my area 2500 acres per combine would be the max. So I am interested how you do it? Class 8,9 or 10 combine? Grain cart? Header size? Crop rotation? Land all close? I realize that is a lot of questions, as I said just curious.
9240 case
Mad concaves
45 ft flex head
All land within 2 miles of bins
Most fields are 300 acre or so
Crops are in harvest order , well try lol
Peas
Blackbeans
HRSW
Canola (80/20 swath / straightcut)
Soybeans
Two years ago we had no issues at harvest. Last year after it snowed for two weeks we rented one combine , a 9230.
Crop rotation used to be pea/canola/wht
But the helped lead to root rot in peas
Now we switched to canola / pulse / wheat
The pulse year is switched from peas to Blackbeans to soybeans to break up disease cycles now .
Again all our land is close , we are generally dry at harvest , last year a very odd 1 in 20 for us.
Land is in big blocks seeded and harvested as such as well .
What helps a lot is two seeding outfits .
Speeds up early seeding thus earlier harvest .
Wheat gets seeded first with a Bourgault 8910 , then peas
The planter seeds canola , and beans
Seeding window we try 12 days . Makes harvest much more efficient, for us .....
Every area very different .
Even crop maturity is also very keyLast edited by furrowtickler; Aug 21, 2019, 06:31.
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I know of that family heated shop good mechanics by older used equipment. Funny how liberals are always jealous of there neibour aka grassfarmer
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In this country, most guys are at 1500 acres a machine maximum. No way one machine could do 3 or 4000 in our conditions. Not in a million years! Those numbers shock me. Most of you all must generally have fine harvestweather and it looks like most harvest in August asa rule.
Must be nice! Lol
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Originally posted by Sheepwheat View PostIn this country, most guys are at 1500 acres a machine maximum. No way one machine could do 3 or 4000 in our conditions. Not in a million years! Those numbers shock me. Most of you all must generally have fine harvestweather and it looks like most harvest in August asa rule.
Must be nice! Lol
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