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Edmonton farm show pen of 10 sale

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    Edmonton farm show pen of 10 sale

    I was not at the sale but a friend said bred heifers
    went $1500 to 1900

    #2
    Had a very nice time in Red Deer met allot of very
    friendly people. Tried to pay a guy for loading an
    alleyway section on my truck, wouldnt take the
    money.

    Buddy just texted me the last few bred hfrs sold
    for 1200 to 1300 ouch

    Comment


      #3
      Just came out of Fall Fair in Saskatoon. There was a smaller group of breds that sold this year.

      This is pen of 3 breds. Most $1900-$2050 ea.

      Saskatoon SLS sale the day before had Bred heifers with may calving bringing alot less $$$. Don't have the information on quality from that sale. That sale is always soft.

      Agribition sale is in two weeks. The breds are down for that sale as well. Anticipate a sale stronger than what was at Saskatoon Fall Fair it always is.

      In general the word is way less bred heifers in the country this year. That is how Saskatchewan is shaping up IMHO.

      Comment


        #4
        When bred heifers get down to $1200 I doubt anyone made much money?
        Do any of you guys think this "early winter" will drop demand for bred cattle?

        Comment


          #5
          At the Edam Fall Fair, end of Oct. the Breds averaged $1655. High of 1950.

          Comment


            #6
            In my view when a rancher wants to buy
            commercial working cows he goes to dispersal
            sales. The AB ag cattle sales listings are most
            often over priced speculators. Farm shows (at
            least Edm) are guys expecting to be paid a
            premium for cleaning their animals and pointing
            out how great they look.

            Look at Peak Dot Ranch - the bull 'Old Post' was
            just an average - good looking/working
            commercial bull worth a few 3 or 4 thousand buck.
            Now dressed up he's worth what 75 or 100k??

            My point is there are lots of very good quality, pay
            the bills cattle out already on working ranches.

            Comment


              #7
              Saskatchewan prices from another site:

              "
              --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

              Went to a 500 head cow sale today at the stockyards,fancy 1000 to 1100lb heifers,black or reds out of a dispersal sale bred 4 to 4plus months top ones sold for $1200 down to $1100,average heifers were $1000 to $1150.Best cows were maybe as high as $1100 but not that many sold that high,average cows $800 to $1000 and probably at least 1/3 of the bred cows were bought by a order buyer and headed to a slaughter plant.I was talking to a friend that is a market representative for that stockyards,and i told him i should have bought those fancy heifers and then just resold them privately for $1400.He said good luck with that,lots of people are asking big money for there heifers,but the ones that are being sold are in that $1200 range,and the guys asking $1400 they still have theirs and are still looking for buyers."

              Comment


                #8
                Ok so what you saying is I way over paid for the
                $1250 light open heifers I bought this spring .

                Irrational exuberance on my part

                Sounds like ranchers still running for the exits

                Grass was thin here this year my calves averaged
                462lbs and averaged $1.57

                Comment


                  #9
                  Not necessarily. That was one sale in Saskatchewan....probably not the best of weather that day?
                  If you never take a chance, you'll never win! The long term outlook still makes your buy look pretty good.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Yep, and I told you that at the time Allfarmer - all
                    these folks with grand plans of buying gathered up
                    auction market feeder heifers and running them with
                    bulls to sell onto another guy who would pay $1800-
                    $2000 for them. Didn't think it was going to happen.
                    Many of the successful operators still running cows
                    breed their own replacement heifers - a lot of the
                    opportunists and fair weather ranchers quit in recent
                    years.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      There are known knowns. These are things we
                      know that we know. There are known unknowns.
                      That is to say, there are things that we know we
                      don't know. But there are also unknown
                      unknowns. There are things we don't know we
                      don't know.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Collectively we must know it all ...
                        Unless we don't know that we know!

                        I think that basic math skills and risk/reward raised its' ugly double
                        head to keep a lid on things. That and $14 canola.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Yeah, 28 bu canola at $14. Wonder what basic math
                          skills will lead to on that front next year - more
                          canola or more cows?

                          Comment


                            #14
                            GF - might be a case of understood risk.
                            Understood risk - no rain = no crop can
                            happen any/every year.
                            Less understood risk - E coli shuts down
                            large commodity player.
                            A lot of folks would pick the understood
                            risk over the less understood one.
                            Also, the beef business tends to be slow
                            and steady wins the race. I think in
                            grain it may be easier to envision the
                            big profit potential on the way in.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Talked to a guy from Westlock I know at Red
                              Deer farm show. I asked him how his canola did?
                              He says it did ok (kind of frowning) so I ask what's
                              ok? He says it did 50 .....poor guy.

                              Preg checked 123 cows in 2 hours today 14 open
                              going to town girls!

                              Comment

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