Originally posted by blackpowder
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Originally posted by blackpowder View Post
The operations you mention are a thing of the past.
Where they do still exist, it's on equity, for now....
Or more specifically, they want to be tractor drivers, preferably shiny.
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I understood.
And meant no disrespect to them.
Those are hobby farms, they just don't know it.Last edited by blackpowder; Feb 5, 2025, 16:01.
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What's viable?
There are so many variables. Debt load, lifestyle, land productivity, profitability, labour(owner's and hired).
It's been TWO decades since I've added land to the Balance Sheet.
Everything is a million bucks. You don't "need" new machinery to operate a farm but once you've had some.... even if the stuff I bought wasn't the "ego building popular brand".... it was still new. So it feels like I'm going backwards if I can no longer afford to replace our equipment with new.
New machinery requires a certain economy of scale. And farm size is somewhat incremental based on how much/many(pieces) needed to operate. How much land needs to be farmed to pay for fulltime "good" hired men.
We would have room for a few more acres based on the iron we already own, but I'm not going to spin my wheels for everyone else just to say I'm jumping into the next increment, not at this stage of my career anyway.
To each their own, but the older I get the less time I spend thinking about expansion. My shadow is getting longer, maybe the Apprentice should step out of my shadow and cast his own. I did my part....
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what's viable indeed?
I'd add the actions of the forefathers to your list farmaholic. Neighbours with aggressive dads and granddads are coasting along with similar acres to us, they have new equipment every 2-3 years. We farm same size but since half our owned acres were bought in the last 10 years, payments take priority, no big equipment was bought new and none is any newer than 10 years old, and off-farm jobs are worked to have a lifestyle.
you're alright to coast along with what you got, extra cashflow can go into fun, or investments to earn passive income instead of land payments. How does the apprentice factor in though?
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