Apparently protein is 10 ish in the great white north.
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Have some 16 protien here but falling numbers low
So its all feed with high protien that they can use for blending
Be ****ed if i will sell it for feed
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Originally posted by caseih View PostHave some 16 protien here but falling numbers low
So its all feed with high protien that they can use for blending
Be ****ed if i will sell it for feed
It is what it Is! Probably even unblendable, if it's even possible in a good year...there is just so much of it out there now.
I don't know how borderline stuff can be dealt with but mine isn't there so not for me to worry about.
It's an open market and maybe you can find a buyer who will take it for a higher than feed price based on its specs.
Not too long ago feed prices were at a small discount to #1 HRS, GAP.....widening.
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Originally posted by caseih View Postours are 160-290
lots sold wheat here as a 1 and 2 before the falling number craze started
To me the 290 stuff should be blendable....anything borderline.
Do cookies, flatbreads, noodles....anything unleven need high falling number specs?
That's what we need to know!
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I'm done with wheat.
In the past 8-10 years the graincos have used the following excuses to buy my wheat cheap:
Low protein, it's garbage worth $4
'Frost' damage, garbage worth $4
Fusarium, garbage worth $4
Ergot, gotta clean it, oops missed one, garbage worth $4
'Heat' damage from hot air drying from too high a moisture content. There isn't even a grading factor for this but it's garbage, worth $4
And now this year it's falling number!
That's it for me, I'm out. Someone else can take that beating
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Shawn,
The CGC grain grading guide provides the ammunition, a whole arsenal of It, to be used as grading demerits.
It's really unbelievable.
Down graded grain isn't "worthless" but is "worth less".
Know what you have! There are independent grading services out there. If you use them you may not be subject to "buyer bias". Remember the paradigm shift I mentioned.
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Interestingly enough I can't find the falling number test or the range used to determine if it falls into any specific grade category in the CGC grain grading guide. The only thing they are using in the grain grading guide that I can see is an objective count of sprouted and severely sprouted kernels in a certain size sample.
The good thing about the falling number test is it takes the objectivity out of the grading, anything borderline....wouldn't you rather rely on the subjectivity of a methodically approved test? If it's close, maybe something can be negotiated.
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Because it isn't.
Falling number isn't a grading factor in Canada. Haven't been privy to the discussions at the standards committee for about 15 years but they wouldn't bring it in then because of the inability to test quickly and repeatedly on the driveway so the proposal was scrapped back then, however the rest of the world buys on falling number so it's a mess.
The graincos will have minimum FN specs on export sales.
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Originally posted by mcfarms View PostBecause it isn't.
Falling number isn't a grading factor in Canada. Haven't been privy to the discussions at the standards committee for about 15 years but they wouldn't bring it in then because of the inability to test quickly and repeatedly on the driveway so the proposal was scrapped back then, however the rest of the world buys on falling number so it's a mess.
The graincos will have minimum FN specs on export sales.
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