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From a mate in Epicentre of drought

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    #16
    Originally posted by tweety View Post
    You don't farm like Canadians do by being the highest price per acre producers in the world and then beg constantly for government welfare handouts when the crop isn't perfect. I'm not sure who actually has it worse in the end, them or us. Probably us since it is not sustainable in any way.

    They just have drought to deal with. We have rich entitlement which is far worse.
    Oh wow.......I wonder how many other reps in the ag industry agree with tweety?

    Comment


      #17
      Originally posted by Oliver88 View Post
      Oh wow.......I wonder how many other reps in the ag industry agree with tweety?
      All of them ...thats why our farm's equity is going against other countries treasuries...

      Read what Kevin Hursch has to say about adhoc.payments..

      Funny though dairy will be OK...

      ....and the 40 bucks an acre for Irrigation districts in this province will do just fine.....

      The good news is the WCWGA made some noise about the dairy payment...

      Sadly that will keep the politicians twiddling their thumbs...

      Comment


        #18
        Kevin has never been in touch with ag. Even when he drove his little truck around

        Comment


          #19
          You can either stick your head in the sand, most likely conclusion, or realize we need to farm way cheaper to compete in the future against all the countries that formerly imported but are now exporting. And you wonder why we keep losing markets - its not all political, see the entitlement comment.

          Comment


            #20
            Originally posted by tweety View Post
            You can either stick your head in the sand, most likely conclusion, or realize we need to farm way cheaper to compete in the future against all the countries that formerly imported but are now exporting. And you wonder why we keep losing markets - its not all political, see the entitlement comment.
            So in an exporting nation, instead of reciprocal trade deals and agreements and govt adults and farm groups who actually manage and promote the file, ag producers will just be the dollar store alternative waiting for whoever has us over a barrel in any given year to buy our discounted product. Sounds dreamy.

            Comment


              #21
              As ive said before we live in driest state dreist continent and frsotiest as well.

              A area in mid north of our state crops probably not at crucial stage just yet but grain head could be in the boot. Anyway 2 nights ago they had minus 5c only for about 30 min utes but was a frost for about 6 hours in total.

              Only insurance is have good hay gear and knock her down if you think its frosted.

              Some guys in these areas who know and understand frost often start cutting within 24 hours of a frost event.

              ps my wife was actually in the "area" of the guys photo about 40 kms away she said thousands of acxres just nothing as far as eye could see and were it was green, crops about 12 inches high with a pissy little head

              Comment


                #22
                Tamworth is some of the best blue ribbon grazing country in australia

                https://www.news.com.au/technology/environment/climate-change/a-birds-eye-view-of-nsws-heartbreaking-drought/news-story/849c52511d6c8cf8d9e473298d8726d6 https://www.news.com.au/technology/environment/climate-change/a-birds-eye-view-of-nsws-heartbreaking-drought/news-story/849c52511d6c8cf8d9e473298d8726d6


                This should be lush green with feed 18 inches high

                Click image for larger version

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                Last edited by malleefarmer; Aug 26, 2019, 14:13.

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                  #23
                  Originally posted by tweety View Post
                  You can either stick your head in the sand, most likely conclusion, or realize we need to farm way cheaper to compete in the future against all the countries that formerly imported but are now exporting. And you wonder why we keep losing markets - its not all political, see the entitlement comment.
                  I'll farm for half the money.....if all the Goods and Services guys sell and work for less than half of what they are now!

                  Inflation is an ugly dragon that needs slaying sometimes, reset time.

                  Comment


                    #24
                    We have a guy on here who farms on the other side of the globe, we should be asking him what a brand new combine sells for in Oz, cash no trade. What is a tonne of Phos or Urea worth? How much is a liter of gas and diesel? What's a sixty foot drill worth and a 500 HP tractor.

                    Their domestic grain prices shamed ours last year.

                    Is everything relative? ..... prices, yeild, costs?

                    Comment


                      #25
                      Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
                      We have a guy on here who farms on the other side of the globe, we should be asking him what a brand new combine sells for in Oz, cash no trade. What is a tonne of Phos or Urea worth? How much is a liter of gas and diesel? What's a sixty foot drill worth and a 500 HP tractor.

                      Their domestic grain prices shamed ours last year.

                      Is everything relative? ..... prices, yeild, costs?
                      domestic prices were drought induced but then again you had a drought as well

                      combines only know retail 900 to 1.2 mill

                      diesel 1.49 a litre gas about 1.42

                      urea low $500s

                      MAP/DAP $540 i think

                      60 ft drill with air cart no idea really but suggest high 400s even mid 500s

                      Wheat $296 Feed Barley $245 export prices subtract $30 for on farm.

                      Domestic suggest wheat similar but feed barley maybe $10 higher

                      If drought worsens prices will inch higher as world prices lower, if worl prices lift our prices may reach lofty highs of last year who knows.

                      But far out killing people keeping stock alive at current hay and grain prices.

                      will get son to check new machinery prices

                      Comment


                        #26
                        Urea seems a bit higher than here right now
                        Phos seems a good chunck lower here right now.
                        You're diesel and gas prices are very high compared to here.
                        My harvest fill for diesel was about 83.4 cents a liter and gas is a bit under a buck....both bulk and delivered.
                        Combine seems very high.....to me retail means nothing....just "shock" value!

                        Comment


                          #27
                          Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
                          Urea seems a bit higher than here right now
                          Phos seems a good chunck lower here right now.
                          You're diesel and gas prices are very high compared to here.
                          My harvest fill for diesel was about 83.4 cents a liter and gas is a bit under a buck....both bulk and delivered.
                          Combine seems very high.....to me retail means nothing....just "shock" value!
                          Could be wrong on combine who knows combine and 45 ft d****r front

                          I dont shop new means im deemed a "lesser" farmer perhaps

                          3 yr old combines sprayers in particular lose value ultra quick

                          Think combines here have a 15% import duty to protect australian manufacturers which there are none and havent been for say 20 yrs thyeve forgotten to remove the tax

                          Comment


                            #28
                            Originally posted by malleefarmer View Post

                            Think combines here have a 15% import duty to protect australian manufacturers which there are none and havent been for say 20 yrs thyeve forgotten to remove the tax
                            Well, at least you know that the duty was effective then.

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