So you're selling 50 @ $14??
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Originally posted by TOM4CWB View PostInteresting question on what we should pay or are paying…
$20/ac straight hail insurance
$25/Ac crop insurance premiums,
Hedge costs 5/ac so far;
That is close to $1/bu insurance costs on our Canola.
Not cheap but covers $700/ac Revenue which is possibly the best ever…
Once in a lifetime return possible!
Cheers
And swing in yields that happen in some areas , some years 30 bus , some 50 ish ... in this area anyway
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Originally posted by blackpowder View PostSo you're selling 50 @ $14??
50bu/ac would be an astonishing miracle unlikely to happen, 17bu/ac flat priced. Rest expected covered in Commodity Account to 60%.
CheersLast edited by TOM4CWB; Jul 24, 2021, 13:26.
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Originally posted by jwabDon’t worry, a couple more lean years around the globe and you won’t have to worry about contracts or what price you get for your commodity. The government will take control and you will get the amount deemed correct. Sound communist, you got it.
Don’t laugh, a starving public would make for some extreme policies.
Highly unlikely but not impossible.
Perhaps that will come with the Davos’reset’ wiping out all government debt… but not ours of course…
All so we can ‘save’ ourselves from climate change… which is all our fault of course… especially North Americans…
Saw province in China got 200mm in one hour… perhaps they shouldn’t hog all the rain!!!
Cheers
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I just put myself in the buyer’s position. I have signed a production contract with Joe Blow then checked out logistics, currency, boats etc.found a buyer for my shipload in Burma. Then oh darn a drought reduces production, price of Canola doubles and producer comes in saying he’s going to deliver none because he is writing the field off. Now what?
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Originally posted by sumdumguy View PostI just put myself in the buyer’s position. I have signed a production contract with Joe Blow then checked out logistics, currency, boats etc.found a buyer for my shipload in Burma. Then oh darn a drought reduces production, price of Canola doubles and producer comes in saying he’s going to deliver none because he is writing the field off. Now what?
It seems importing countries cancel contracts on a whim sometimes, like China . There must be a protection system in place on one end or the other ?
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Originally posted by sumdumguy View PostI just put myself in the buyer’s position. I have signed a production contract with Joe Blow then checked out logistics, currency, boats etc.found a buyer for my shipload in Burma. Then oh darn a drought reduces production, price of Canola doubles and producer comes in saying he’s going to deliver none because he is writing the field off. Now what?
Cheers
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Originally posted by TOM4CWB View PostHopefully that grower is in Alberta and has crop insurance… it has folded into it the variable price feature that provides the grower with compensation equal to the average Daly October 2021 prices, which should look after the problem, if you were careful who you bought your Canola from!
Cheers
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Originally posted by Sodbuster View PostYou farmer’s in Alberta have a great crop insurance program compared to Saskatchewan where here they set price in February and usually low ball the price to boot. Wish our government would do the same but would sooner spend 4 billion for a few elite farmers + $40/ acre for the next 5 years and more money to the oil sector rather than investing in all farmers. Taking a page out of Buckets book.
Ask your MLA what the phuck is going on.
Chances are they can't or won't.
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I have some contracted grain and have no problem with paying the differential in price if need be. It is the f uckage factor I have a problem with.
For example we were hauling lentils to Viterra, farmboy44’s employer on a .25 cent contract, with spot price at .23. So I am about 11 tonnes short. They say oh you need to pay .27 if you are short. Excuse me but your spot price is .23 and the trucks are lined up a quarter mile waiting to dump. Nope if you are short it’s.27. So I find someone with overage who was offered .23 to deliver on my .25.
It has happened more than once over the years.
Pretty much the same as setting grade discounts at the time of delivery. Never works in the farmer’s favour. Need a contract that is closer to Australia’s.
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