Doesn't help grain markets no snow to push and not 30 below , too easy to load now.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Grain Markets Errol?
Collapse
Logging in...
Welcome to Agriville! You need to login to post messages in the Agriville chat forums. Please login below.
X
-
-
Originally posted by Old Cowzilla View PostDoesn't help grain markets no snow to push and not 30 below , too easy to load now.
At some point this goes from being a convenience to being a concern about moisture next season.
Comment
-
Guest
Sask same except maybe where SF3 is , even the swamp has none and land is drying out even more
apparently there is snow in the forecast for March so that should keep prices down
Comment
-
-
-
Guest
Originally posted by Taiga View PostAnyone using a 400bbl tank for fuel? Looking for larger farm tank but the only thing that is priced reasonably are the surplus 400bbl tanks. If I can buy fuel for under a dollar I will be happy. Not sure we will get there though.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by Taiga View PostAnyone using a 400bbl tank for fuel? Looking for larger farm tank but the only thing that is priced reasonably are the surplus 400bbl tanks. If I can buy fuel for under a dollar I will be happy. Not sure we will get there though.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
That didn’t take long . . . gold reversal. Cattle board under-siege, technically oversold, but still points lower. Soymeal appears leading the charge lower on grain markets.
Comment
-
Originally posted by biglentil View PostDo you have a seperate tank for winter diesel?
We fill the 4000 gallon tank from the 750 BBL tank inorder to be able to track our use. Really hard to understand what is left in the tank otherwise.
We bought 60000 L last spring and had fuel left over. on 5800 acres. With a larger crop we would likely need a bit more fuel but interesting to know the L/acre of our farm. A little over $10/acre.
Our first year we filled at 50 cents/L. Been a guessing game ever since but seems like we save about $3000 per year on delivery costs on 60000 L.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Stats can report.
Canadian farmers reported producing more corn for grain and soybeans, but less wheat, canola, barley, and oats in 2023. Lower production for most crops was driven largely by lower yields, especially in Western Canada where growing conditions were generally drier than in 2022.
oats down 50%
Wheat down 7%
Canola down only 2%. Is that a function of the area where wheat is grown vs canola?
Barley down 11%
Not the disaster it was advertised to be.
Comment
-
You are taking yr to yr, I’m talking the crop got bigger from Sep to now.
The bone heads new better than call me.
Crooks will lower prices and scare us into selling. Oh, but first they will offer a “premium” to fill a train.
Let’s all jump on the train!!
Comment
- Reply to this Thread
- Return to Topic List
Comment