Look to Manitoba for another farm bought.
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Originally posted by furrowtickler View PostThe price they paid for land here was very high that no normal farm could ever make it work , but they keep buying and expanding.
just seems limitless
Usually what doesn't make sense.....doesn't make sense and we will read about the unwind in the paper.
In the meantime.....best of luck.
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$8500 a quarter rent for 20 pairs if it’s half decent is like $425 per pair. Figure breeding, feed, yardage, vet, and death loss you’re pushing a couple grand break even on fall calves. Not to forget if you paid $3000 for breds you got to work that in. Wow! Just a year ago we couldn’t make the cow thing work.
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And there lies the problem guys think your nuts asking $50/acre for pasture yet sombody will give you $80 to grow a poor crop of canola What are Co-op style pastures charging for pairs now? ( if you can still get into one )
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Originally posted by Old Cowzilla View PostAnd there lies the problem guys think your nuts asking $50/acre for pasture yet sombody will give you $80 to grow a poor crop of canola What are Co-op style pastures charging for pairs now? ( if you can still get into one )
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I find this Western producer story concerning.
The locals somehow believe they should be able to dictate what their neighbors do on their own land?
And the media thinks that landowners removing their own trees is newsworthy enough to send reporters all the way to the scene?
While I sympathize with the local cattle producers tried to compete with that, it sounds like their plan was to leave it in Bush which last I checked doesn't feed very many cows. This looks a lot like the free market at work, someone is willing to spend the money to improve the productivity of the land, therefore it is worth more to them.
Either that or else global warming doesn't occur on schedule, and it all reverts back to pasture land, in which case the locals can buy it back after someone else spent all the money improving it.
Is this what the future holds? Farmers need to consult all potential stakeholders before making any improvements to our own land?Last edited by AlbertaFarmer5; Mar 28, 2024, 14:39.
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What I find interesting is that to sell any canola to Richardsons or a few others , one must sign a declaration stating that you are not to remove bush and or drain wetlands as per an agreement to sell to European markets.
well all the larger farms as pushing bush constantly and their trucks still roll in and out of those elevators.
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