It would seem that most of the agribusiness in this country had a very good year? I would suggest most farmers had a fairly poor year? Grain and oil seed prices really suck and inputs are pricey? Top it off with some pretty ugly weather this year in a lot of places?
The neighbor bought his fertilizer and canola seed for next spring just before Christmas. He showed me the bill and anhydrous was $760 and the canola seed was $294/bag...and that didn't include the $15/acre patent fee!...well sure hope canola is worth more than $5/bu next year!
I rent some grainland out to a cousin and there was a 5000 bu bin that was getting shaky. The original bin was built early nineties and cost $5000 with a wood floor. Anyway we decided to replace the floor and one ring(the idiots who built it crimped it and it was started to get a good slant). Total cost including a steel floor and 12 yards of gravel- $3910, which I paid for. Don't know if that was very smart or not but at least I can sell it somewhere down the road when my cousin gets sick of losing money growing grain!
I guess my question is this: How smart is it to keep farming with high inputs for little or no return? This year my cousin sprayed for wildoats, broadleafs, later Tilt and finally a preharvest roundup shot...all by a custom operator. It was a very good crop but harvest was tough and the barley is sitting in the bin at 16% moisture, moving slowly but steadily to a feedlot!
I believe next year is canola in my cousins rotation and that usually does all right but sure hope the price is better than this year?
The neighbor bought his fertilizer and canola seed for next spring just before Christmas. He showed me the bill and anhydrous was $760 and the canola seed was $294/bag...and that didn't include the $15/acre patent fee!...well sure hope canola is worth more than $5/bu next year!
I rent some grainland out to a cousin and there was a 5000 bu bin that was getting shaky. The original bin was built early nineties and cost $5000 with a wood floor. Anyway we decided to replace the floor and one ring(the idiots who built it crimped it and it was started to get a good slant). Total cost including a steel floor and 12 yards of gravel- $3910, which I paid for. Don't know if that was very smart or not but at least I can sell it somewhere down the road when my cousin gets sick of losing money growing grain!
I guess my question is this: How smart is it to keep farming with high inputs for little or no return? This year my cousin sprayed for wildoats, broadleafs, later Tilt and finally a preharvest roundup shot...all by a custom operator. It was a very good crop but harvest was tough and the barley is sitting in the bin at 16% moisture, moving slowly but steadily to a feedlot!
I believe next year is canola in my cousins rotation and that usually does all right but sure hope the price is better than this year?
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