Originally posted by SASKFARMER
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Why land is worth much more some places
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I was considering your offer, so I checked back on agriville and it turns out that your area has endured 15 years of flooding followed by five straight Years of drought all within the last 10 years. So I think I will pass. But if you really do want to sell, you may want to have a word with whoever has been posting The weather troubles, Might not be a selling feature.Last edited by AlbertaFarmer5; Dec 6, 2020, 15:23.
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Originally posted by LEP View PostSo the most recent sale which was a new high is at $2,500/ acre and you are floating $4,700?
I would say you are a tad high.
I thunk he was including the yard infrastructure, have to assess and value that.
If it's still too high you might have to get him to "throw" in the full line of machinery and all the life-size toy tractors.
If it's still too high you might have to get him to commit to 5 years of free mentorship and labour to show you how to manage the "Garden of Eden", despite the fact AF5 pointed out the Garden of Eden had 20 crop failures in ten years!
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So, if that money can't buy me land in a sure crop area, what will it cost, and where is it?
Just east of me, where land is five to 6000 an acre, Is also the hail capital of western Canada , And too wet as often as not.
Red river valley Has overland flooding issues and excess rain issues
Irrigation land in southern Alberta Might not have very many crop failures But seems like a lot more work and money invested to grow comparable yields to what we get with what falls from the sky.Last edited by AlbertaFarmer5; Dec 6, 2020, 15:54.
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