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John Deere 8335RT with tiller doing first pass

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    #13
    Ya you bet will post pic's. Hopefully Joe puts
    some of that FCC advertising money toward
    engineering a photo and video uploaded toolbar
    for Agriville

    Comment


      #14
      Good point wilagro, unfortunately the mixed farming
      approach is usually abandoned in favour of
      unsustainable monoculture cropping. I would doubt
      global warming will be much of a friend to that part
      of northern Alberta. Maybe warm it up a degree but
      more likely to suffer worse droughts in an area
      already bad for them. How far are you from
      permafrost Allfarmer - 50 miles or less? that's got to
      be extremely marginal land by any definition.

      Comment


        #15
        Grassfarmer: It may be monoculture(per field) on a yearly basis but long term is anything but. How many different species do you have grazing on your grass that you use to make a living on?

        Comment


          #16
          Grassfarmer: It may be monoculture(per field) on a yearly basis but long term is anything but. How many different species do you have grazing on your grass that you use to make a living on?

          Comment


            #17
            Lets compare apples to apples. I have many, many
            species growing in my pastures often 15-20 in one
            small field. Asking how many species I use to harvest
            it is like asking you how many different types of
            combine you use - irrelevant to the topic.

            Comment


              #18
              Ya pretty marginal land on Tuesday some may
              sell for 275k/ quarter. 2 droughts in my 9 yrs here

              Comment


                #19
                Grassfarmer: takes much more iron to get a crop to the bin than a combine. If you don't agree with modern grain farming that is fine with me. Things have changed. Grain farms have flourished here. Soils are improving with diverse crop rotations and no summmerfallow(for nearly 20 years). We grow cereals(wheat durum barley canaryseed), flax, canola(mustard), pulses(peas lentils). If that is your definition of unsustainable monoculture so be it.

                Comment


                  #20
                  Farmaholic is correct. I've worked up
                  there in the winter (and short summer
                  stints) for years. Its an amazing area
                  with great potential.
                  Todays mixed farm up there (and
                  elsewhere) is grain farming and making
                  60 to 100 thousand off-season who wants
                  to **** around with chickens, pigs,
                  cows, goats and a partridge in a pear
                  tree?
                  Also remember that this is virgin soil.
                  What weeds do they have? They can push
                  rotations way harder than we do because
                  there is no history there.

                  Comment


                    #21
                    Most of the harvesting is done in the
                    Spring, cousin theys often gets snowed
                    under!

                    Comment


                      #22
                      Burbert, Maybe they will get done sooner cause of all the auction sale machinery getting hauled up there.

                      Comment


                        #23
                        I was surprised when I looked at a heat unit map
                        of Alberta and this area. Some broad acres crops
                        are more suitable here than much further south.
                        A trip up there this winter with the kids for hockey
                        confirmed lots of new development. Was
                        interesting to see freshly broken land and we are
                        not talking about the odd bush line. Day length
                        advantage has served this area well and all the
                        best to these enterprising farmers braking new
                        land on this scale.

                        Comment


                          #24
                          Thanks North Farmer I thought I would toss a little bullshit in with Burbert's message. I have respect for yu guys up there. Litterally up there.

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