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Friday Crop Report on a Thursday

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    #11
    In 40 days, unless we have a miracle, there will be snow still here. A few days coming above zero, then below zero to March 31, isn’t gunna do it. We marvelled at the lack of snow at Regina after hearing about how they had a lot of snow. It blew into the yards. And of course it was plus four in Regina, and minus eight at home.

    Have had a few ewes with toxaemia, sorted out the next group of lambs to put on full feed.

    Gates have never been something I think too much about, until this year. Shovelling them out every time I feed is a must. Glad I made them somewhat flexible. I do worry a bit about what I’ll do when I get to be 70 or so? Maybe some of the kids will farm? It does look promising so far in that regard. But that’s another post for another time. We have enough acres for five families if need be.

    Seeding down another quarter to hayland. Will cost me about thirty bucks an acre. ONCE. For six years. No fertilizer. Just the seed. Maybe a burn off, depending on what the spring is like.

    Seeding down a fenced piece with an annual multi species party mix, (along with a perennial grass blend) that would make the old grain farming me shake my head in disgust. This may cost a whopping 75 bucks an acre.

    I was going to seed some barley again, but I believe I have enough feed for a few years, so I’m wondering about fabas again. Cheap to seed, beautiful to smell while blooming, and they like it wet, and it’s looking wet. Would make a nice blend for feed as well with barley.

    Lambing starts in 45 days, that’s a fact, no matter the weather, we know with certainty within a few days of when it will start. Our favorite time of year. Lol Spring used to get me revved up and not in a good way. In a stressed way. But now spring is the absolute best.

    I pull the late night shift, my wife comes to life and gets up at 4 with a smile. We work together well. It was nice yesterday, as with it being plus one, she came out and did our thing out there together, after months of isolation. (She doesn’t do well with cold!) What’s our thing? We feed the sheep and sit on buckets and observe them as they leave the troughs for the hay. We’re better together! We come out of hibernation, and come alive together. There is nothing we would rather do.

    Finally, thank you Regina and Emerald park folks for buying our lamb, and smashing my wildest expectations of sales. It’s nice to feel like we matter as farmers. I never felt that in grain farming even a little bit.

    Off to feed!

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      #12
      Originally posted by shtferbrains View Post
      What kind of dollars?

      Surprised the Mennonites haven't moved in there.

      I guess they don't normally buy more than about 6 quarters and don't buy communally.
      Prices are on RB page .
      Land was not cheap
      That Versatile bi directional tractor went for a crazy price .
      The rest of the equipment was sold for reasonable money I thought

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        #13
        No more tests needed coming back to Canada if you have your shots as of April 01. Still need a negative test to fly to the USA tho. We were in Vegas last week, prob 10% wearing masks, public transportation still requires masks.

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          #14
          Originally posted by Hamloc View Post
          Do tell.

          So not a K?

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            #15
            Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
            Prices are on RB page .
            Land was not cheap
            That Versatile bi directional tractor went for a crazy price .
            The rest of the equipment was sold for reasonable money I thought
            A couple of thoughts I thought the 8870 New Holland tractor brought top dollar and the 2 Versatile tractors weren’t cheap either.

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              #16
              Originally posted by Hamloc View Post
              Do tell.
              Think they are Jazz’s neighbour

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                #17
                Snow's gone.

                The middle boy was riding his bike around in my pea stubble by the yard... That's how muddy it is.

                Punched a probe in and we're "wettish" for the first 4 inches or so, and then she's dry from there to the water table. Im drying to dig sewer lines into the basement, and where it leached in from the edge its not terrible (no eavestrough yet... In an attempt to get water to slide off the roof and soak the fill so it'll fall into place) but in the middle she's pick axe territory. Always wanted arms like legs...

                Back to crop reports. Aside from dry, It would seem that well positioned dugouts were able to take advantage of the meager run-off that we did have as the late January thaw here put just enough moisture into the ground to make frost that didn't allow the snow to soak in. For cow guys around here that's a BONUS, but lord help us if we dont get a wet, sloppy drop of snow or SIGNIFICANT rainfall early in the season, because those cows won't be leaving the yard. Native and renovated looks like it was mowed on the deck, and that little bit of frost is going to prevent it from greening up in any meaningful manner.

                Fert was booked just after Russia decided to knaw off more than it could chew in short order... Less than quoted december price, but I wouldn't want to be still flapping in the wind. Pre-burn chem is booked, but much to my meager protests, the stuff I thought I had booked back in early august (2 totes at 6.50 and a third at 8) appears to be unfillable... New Price? $16.00 for Transorb as Vector is in such short supply that they cannot guarantee delivery even with a listed price. At least in this area, there is alot of "in-crop" chemical getting blown down for pre-seed (or so say the dealers) which is likely to put a kink into supply in 3 months time.

                Mustard offer was bartered up... Historic... Until tuesday when i got a counter after signing saying it was $0.04/lb higher again. Dare I say, we are living in interesting times.

                Did I mention its dry? I'm young by comparison to most of you... but this is by far the driest I've ever been at this stage of the game! NOAA, BAMWX, and Environment Canada don't hold out much hope. Drew is the outlier this year. He's the only guy laying his neck out saying the "rain train" could (in classic cover your ass Drew Lerner style) start mid to late may and be productive through June.

                Keep your head about ya lad's/lass's... My gut tells me we're in for a roller-coaster ride this year. Good luck.

                Comment


                  #18
                  Hard to believe we are in the same country
                  Taking the 6ft snow from around the house

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                    #19

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                      #20

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