Originally posted by Partners
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
farm stress line calls....
Collapse
Logging in...
Welcome to Agriville! You need to login to post messages in the Agriville chat forums. Please login below.
X
-
Originally posted by Partners View PostPlus we are the smallest farmers in the area.so it makes sense we should be bought out.we only in the way.
The next question is, when does a person sell the farm? There are places in Sask where farmers are buying/selling at $500,000 per 155 acre quarters. It seems like a person could sell, relocate and buy another 30% more land in a different area. Or else rent it out and live reasonably well if they are careful. Its not something to dwell on but why not say yes when land prices are good instead of not as good?
Comment
-
Originally posted by sumdumguy View PostThere’s a farm for sale in Mexico, just need armoured tanks and machine guns to get there.
The mexican Mennonites are all over up here spending big.....I think if it gets resold....the money is cleaned.....that's the play even at a loss....
And who wouldn't trust a family from Mexico with barely enough to clothe themselves paying top dollar for land....
It's so nice to see politicians are stupid and don't know what's going on or pretend they don't which makes them even more incompetent. ...
Comment
-
Originally posted by chuckChuck View PostThe weather and financial stress is real and dangerous to our health.
You should rephrase that question because no individual or politician controls the weather or markets.
What is causing the stress is the better question.
Ed White in his piece wrote about the end of the commodity boom.
Errol clarified that China's exceptional growth and decline has had a big impact on commodity prices.
Many on this site want to lay the blame on politicians.
Was Harper responsible for the commodity boom? I don't think so.
Trudeau basically single handily pissed off most of our major trading partners... so that did not help
Boom or bust , politics plays a huge role in the net returns for farms .... both here and the US or any exporting country. So politics do control prices but have major influence on what happens to our bottom line . Ask the dairy producers ..... policy rules .
Comment
-
"What does the farm stress line say when a farmer calls in"
Probably same as one could read here, don't dwell on it, do your best, all those in deep shit need is someone to listen. Sharing makes you realize some are worse off, lots like you. Afraid no easy answers unless they say QUIT. Make the best decisions for you and yours. Lived through lots of CRAPPY times/weather /markets in last 50 years of farming.
Comment
-
Originally posted by fjlip View Post"What does the farm stress line say when a farmer calls in"
Probably same as one could read here, don't dwell on it, do your best, all those in deep shit need is someone to listen. Sharing makes you realize some are worse off, lots like you. Afraid no easy answers unless they say QUIT. Make the best decisions for you and yours. Lived through lots of CRAPPY times/weather /markets in last 50 years of farming.
My guess is they know the problem at both the federal and provincial level and choose to do nothing ...
but listen to Brad Wall to fund the abandoned well program so farm boys can make a little money....
Its all a little stupid.....
Comment
-
Originally posted by wiseguysask crop insurance promotes the phoning of the farm stress line !
There's not enough phones in sask to handle the stress they cause !
This is a financial problem even if you had good crops but got downgraded ...farmers are out a fair chunk of change and if its tough grain there may not be a market ...better for it to be in the field....
Comment
-
Originally posted by chuckChuck View PostThe weather and financial stress is real and dangerous to our health.
You should rephrase that question because no individual or politician controls the weather or markets.
What is causing the stress is the better question.
Ed White in his piece wrote about the end of the commodity boom.
Errol clarified that China's exceptional growth and decline has had a big impact on commodity prices.
Many on this site want to lay the blame on politicians.
Was Harper responsible for the commodity boom? I don't think so.
I feel the animosity towards politicians is the constant double standards that we see with regards to policy.
Producers are always at the front end of booms and busts in agriculture. The pain will soon be felt by everyone else from Land Owners to machinery manufacturing and agricultural service providers and ultimately government in the way of tax collection.
Comment
-
Originally posted by mbratrud View PostI don't feel Farmers have a problem understanding that the commodity boom has ended. In the long run farmers are resilient and will find a way for positive margins again.
I feel the animosity towards politicians is the constant double standards that we see with regards to policy.
Producers are always at the front end of booms and busts in agriculture. The pain will soon be felt by everyone else from Land Owners to machinery manufacturing and agricultural service providers and ultimately government in the way of tax collection.
1. Morris Industries received millions
2. DOT received 5 million not too long ago
3. AGT received 117 million
4. Irrigation districts are receiving 40 bucks an acre for 5 years... BTW the local was on the inside of that deal....thanks to BFBB.
5. Evraz received 40 million ...steel for plenty of farm machinery
6. Funding of farm shows
7. funding for a information day for a select few instead of being interactive....
8. Pulse canada received 3 million not long ago
etc etc....
Never a performance standard put on those handouts but give money to farmers and the public goes nuts because a guy buys a new halfton...
Lots of people on the government tit in the name of agriculture
Comment
- Reply to this Thread
- Return to Topic List
Comment