Originally posted by Sheepwheat
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Sheepwheat the 900 coyote guy you’re mentioning is probably the guy who traps on on our place. Usually he pulls 150-200 coyotes and a wolf or two just from our place and he has a lot more ground west of us that he covers too. He always brings rum and fish he catches to us but I tell him it should be the other way. No power snares required here and any dogs he catches I don’t ask about since they shouldn’t be there causing trouble anyways.
Had a lynx pass through the yard last week and the dog treed him for a while till he buggered off. He better not come back as I don’t like having that kind of wildlife around with the little kids.
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We had a lot of coyotes prior to the provincial cull, and now the numbers are slowly rising again.
No need for catching mice as we have hundreds of hawks spring to fall, and 10-15 years ago ravens moved into the area as well, getting there share of mice too.
Probably too open here to have the coyote numbers you're talking about, but 1 coyote is 1 too many.
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Our area every one just shoots coyotes. Still a bit of problem but getting better. They have no fear
Listened to the canola council head guy it’s all rah rah for middle man and oh farmers get use to 2.37 a bushel discounts.
We love you keep producing mega amounts.
Same day bobo our ag minister announces the money if flowing to (Quebec) dairy farmers and new money on way to egg and poultry farms with market share loss. We will also discuss risk management.
Canola farmers hurt by Trudeau government peep peep nothing for you.
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Sheepwheat, apart from the income potential of catching coyotes do you not not believe in the theory of leaving the ones that live with your sheep alone? My neighbour does - they have a pair of LGDs that keep the coyotes at bay. Their thinking is if you kill those one more will inevitably move in and possibly will be more trouble to the sheep being unfamiliar with them. If you have some that behave reasonably it's almost like an outer ring of protection beyond you LGDs as new coyotes don't tend to come in and drive existing ones out of their territory.
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“But this all reminds me of the 1980s without high interest or the 1990s when Canadian farmers were told to suck it up buttercup we cant go head to head against the European or USA farmers, You're on your own. “
So we don’t have high interest rates in 2019....big deal!
FACTS:
1980 land price= $125,000/quarter. Interest rate 18% = $22,500.00 cost of carry
2019 land price= $350,000/quarter. Interest rate 6.5% = $22,750 cost of carry.
1980 wheat : $5.00 per bushel
2019 wheat: $5.00 per bushel
Nominally.... what is the difference....play with the numbers if you want but it feels like the 1980’s all over again to me.
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