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I would be more optimistic.
If this land/climate proves to be better suited to pasture/hay than cropping, and this venture fails, the locals may have the option to buy vastly improved land for below what was invested in the improvements.
Last I checked, cows prefer to eat grass than poplar trees. But the economics of clearing land for marginal pasture may not work. Let someone else do it.
Either that or else the drought is perpetual and this area is the new breadbasket. The the displaced cattlemen can become ranchers in southern Sask on land where grain can no longer be grown.
Originally posted by wrongway
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If this land/climate proves to be better suited to pasture/hay than cropping, and this venture fails, the locals may have the option to buy vastly improved land for below what was invested in the improvements.
Last I checked, cows prefer to eat grass than poplar trees. But the economics of clearing land for marginal pasture may not work. Let someone else do it.
Either that or else the drought is perpetual and this area is the new breadbasket. The the displaced cattlemen can become ranchers in southern Sask on land where grain can no longer be grown.
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