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    #41
    Originally posted by Grahamp View Post
    What I struggle to understand is not that canola might drop to $8, as a risk taking business I am ok with that risk as it seems low and if you worry about everything you’ll never do anything. But what if canola drops to $14? You are underwater. $200 rent with current inputs would put you at $600-650 an acre to grow a 40 bushel canola crop. Can you imagine renting land where a 40 bushel canola crop at $14 has you losing $100 an acre. I’m aggressive, I’d love to grow but it definitely won’t be renting land at anywhere close to those rates.
    $14 canola is almost a sure thing at some point in the not too distant future. There is a saying that the old top becomes the new bottom. Remember when $10 bucks was the old top, the price everyone was waiting for? Well we blew through that in Dec 2007. But we returned to it a while later, even breaking into the 9s. Well guess what, $14 was the new top, and we blew through that in Jan 2021. And as soon as there is a good crop of canola all across the prairies, we will return to the old top/new bottom of $14 or less. Now I’m no analyst, so take it for what it’s worth.
    Last edited by SmallTimeOperator; Dec 13, 2022, 00:22.

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      #42
      Originally posted by jazz View Post
      A bunch of land moved here for $750-800k per Q. Work out what the financing is on that with todays rates and maybe 10% down payment.

      Much more than $200 per acre.
      In my area if someone dangled 750-800,000 per 1/4 there would be a LOT of land up for sale!

      Personally I would take the $200/acre and enjoy a year or two off, update some of my machinery with someone else's $$$ and take my holiday trailer for an extended road trip in the summer.

      Just my opinion.

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        #43
        Originally posted by GALAXIE500 View Post
        In my area if someone dangled 750-800,000 per 1/4 there would be a LOT of land up for sale!

        Personally I would take the $200/acre and enjoy a year or two off, update some of my machinery with someone else's $$$ and take my holiday trailer for an extended road trip in the summer.

        Just my opinion.
        No doubt.

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          #44
          RB auction today.
          There’s market value established by auction.

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            #45
            Originally posted by GALAXIE500 View Post
            In my area if someone dangled 750-800,000 per 1/4 there would be a LOT of land up for sale!

            Personally I would take the $200/acre and enjoy a year or two off, update some of my machinery with someone else's $$$ and take my holiday trailer for an extended road trip in the summer.

            Just my opinion.
            Assuming you own enough outright to be viable afterwards.

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              #46
              Originally posted by blackpowder View Post
              Assuming you own enough outright to be viable afterwards.
              Yep I do ! Just thinking outside of the box.

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                #47
                Originally posted by quadtrac View Post
                RB auction today.
                There’s market value established by auction.
                Close to 200 an acre , must be the new normal, landlords will be happy.

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                  #48
                  Originally posted by GALAXIE500 View Post
                  In my area if someone dangled 750-800,000 per 1/4 there would be a LOT of land up for sale!
                  There isnt an an acre for sale here even with that price. You dont understand how committed the big boys are to this game.

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                    #49
                    Originally posted by blueversi View Post
                    Close to 200 an acre , must be the new normal, landlords will be happy.
                    Shellbrook area must have huge yields or different calculators.

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                      #50
                      It all looks like rich fertile land with 6 inches of snow covering it.********

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