Originally posted by furrowtickler
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Originally posted by helmach View Postp&h is by far the hardest graders in our area... a thought shared by many as it shows with hardly any traffic rolling or business at its pits.
That’s what’s interesting here . It’s good wheat and they know it .
The other elevator needs a refresher at a grading course .
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Originally posted by farmboy44 View PostThe two look almost identical. Have seen it called 'environmental stress' in the past to encompass that it could be either. That could be the disconnect furrow.
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Originally posted by walterm View PostYes my question was if Furrow saw the damage and where he thought it compared to guides?I have also seen elevator standards get very distorted from contamination and then elevators are grading harder or softer. Know your grain.
I know my grain, it’s our livelihood
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Originally posted by furrowtickler View PostYup like I said there is a bit of heat stress , zero frost , cause that’s impossible
I know my grain, it’s our livelihood
I was just wondering if heat stress was as bad as what shows in guides? And if you thought it was as bad or not. They can't grade it a lower grade just because they want to.
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Originally posted by walterm View PostKnow your grain was just a slogan one of the producer groups use to get farmers to attend grading seminars etc.
I was just wondering if heat stress was as bad as what shows in guides? And if you thought it was as bad or not. They can't grade it a lower grade just because they want to.
P&H had zero concerns with it
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Originally posted by wiseguywalter and blaithin must be liberals !
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Originally posted by walterm View PostWhat was the degrading factors? Did they all handle samples in the proper manor? If one is getting high degrading factor someone isn't doing it right. You have to watch to see what they do. Just like a teller counting your change or counting your cash.
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Originally posted by Blaithin View PostLet’s put a thesis together about how someone grades grain being an indication for their political leanings.
Sounds plausible….
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Originally posted by wmoebis View PostNot sure what the post you are replying to was suppose to mean but I was only trying to help others who may not understand quality assessment and bring out the possible reasons for multiple grades. If trying to help others is considered a Liberal I guess I fit in.
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Originally posted by wiseguyHeat stress blaithin ??
I don't make the Grain Grading Guide or determine which factors I'm supposed to look for and how they're reflected in grades. I just look for them based on the guide's protocols and descriptions.
If you have an issue with factors used for grading, take it up with the CGC and the markets the grain is being sold in to, not the graders.
Saying a grader shouldn't be calling something heat stress after 6 years of drought would be like getting mad at them for low protein in a wet year. It's a wet year don't you know, so of course my protein is low, as a grader you should just give me higher protein.
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