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Organic Operations?

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    Organic Operations?

    Just wondering if there is anyone on here
    thats in organic production? If so what
    are you thoughts on the current markets?

    #2
    The market is always right. I have seen very high
    prices and experienced no bid for 12 months.

    I would call Wilbur Ellis Saskatoon office for
    pricing on feed grains, wheat barley peas
    Grain millers Yorkton for milling oats, barley and
    wheat
    Can oat Barrhead, Ab for milling oats prices.
    Sunrise foods for wheat barley rye oats mustard
    peas. I have sold grain to these buyers and I have
    been paid in full. If you are new to organic
    marketing, I would strongly suggest that you do a
    credit check on any buyer you intend to sell grain
    to. You can hire this service, last one costed me $
    250.00 and it's worth knowing who is a legitimate
    buyer. I think FNA has this new service, called
    market empower or something like that. USE IT.
    I have locked in 2 btrains feed barley for
    $6.80/bushel fall delivery I sell feed barley only
    because the malt game is the same dog and pony
    show as conventional. . I have (begrudgingly)
    locked in one btrain milling oats grain millers
    $4.25 . All prices FOB farm. These were done
    inFebruary to cover my fuel, taxes and land
    payments until 2013.
    The remainder of new crop production is not
    priced. I am not thrilled about the market but it has
    recovered from 2 years ago. I think the feed
    market will be sound until December. I am your
    typical farmer...it's never enough price when you
    are selling! I have managed to make black ink
    every year and I have no intentions to go back
    conventional farming. Organic farming is not for
    everybody.

    Comment


      #3
      Quack grass'll get ya eventually! Unless
      yeah handpick it, root by root, by root,
      and hang the roots on a barbwire fence ta
      dry out. Caution though, event the
      shadows from the quack roots'll grow!!!!

      Comment


        #4
        Not knocking the guys who do it properly but the guys around here who are organic are that because they have no credit and cant afford inputs. Quackgrass and dandelion city. Some days the dandilion fuzz is like a snowstorm.

        Comment


          #5
          hobby have you ever dealt with popular valley organics?

          Comment


            #6
            Groundspeed, understand where you're
            coming from I have a couple neighbours
            who grow 160ac fields of thistle. I
            think the guy had oats but it was really
            hard to tell what was in it other then Canadian thistle. I try to do everything
            I can to keep a field clean, usually
            involves a short crop rotation with
            summerfallow and green crop plow down.

            Hobbyfarmer, i'm thinking the same thing
            prices are better right now but not near
            where they should be. I priced a couple
            loads of wheat at like 14.50 fob farm,
            when i said sold the guy told me they
            didnt have room or didnt need it etc.
            But if I sold it for 9.50 or 10 they
            would have room and needed it right
            away! I am sick of the games these guys
            play, if you have a good quality crop
            then your dockage is too high, if you
            clean your dockage well then the color
            is a bit off or too moisture is .2% too
            high, any excuse in the world to save a
            buck. A certain flour mill in southern
            manitoba will give you a quote at 15bux
            for a couple months down the road on 1
            sided contract when it comes time to
            ship, prices are at 10 and they still
            expect you to sell because hey you
            signed the contract. Its funny the thing
            that is going to drive me outta the
            organic world is the marketing, not the
            weedy fields or relentless
            summerfallowing.

            Comment


              #7
              Nota redneck, I have not sold to poplar valley
              organics. Make sure you do a credit check on new
              buyers. MAKE SURE YOU DO A CREDIT
              CHECK ON NEW BUYERS. Get the hint?
              If buyers do not provide bank references and
              trade references within 2 days get skeptical. If
              they start talking around that subject, and saying
              things like their secretary is on holidays and will
              get that to you when she returns, do not sign
              anything just find another buyer.
              Any buyers I sell to are willing to fax me those
              references with minutes of phone call. Any
              hesitation , I don't bother with them.
              Couple more references
              Lackawanna products,, they are in new York
              state. I have not dealt with Sask Lackawanna so I
              cannot speak about them.
              SunOpta treated me well. They are in Minnesota.
              Once again, do your diligence, These are buyers
              I have sold to over the course of 6 years. Times
              change, economies change stay current on credit
              checks. $ 250.00 is not much money if you are
              selling $40,000.00 loads of flax.

              Comment


                #8
                Groundspeed, I do not profess to be a wonder
                farmer . I am current in all aspects of my farm. My
                money is tied up in antique farm equipment,
                primitive tillage tools, cash, and farmland.
                Im not knocking the conventional guys who are
                doing it right but, I really don't give a **** about
                what my neighbors are spraying. Dandelions are
                a sign of compaction, which comes from minimal
                tillage and conventional farmers who are too
                ignorant to realize that, and they don't spray for
                them. Roll back 10 years ago, and think about
                who's fields were full of dandelions first.

                Comment


                  #9
                  I said some guys organic farm better than others. What i have seen is a disaster.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    If dandilions are from compaction how come the organic guys here are tilling but are still polluted. I have very few on my farm and i am minimum till.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      We farm along side an organic farmer, and his crops are poor at best..mostly weeds..and they blow our way all the time..So that field of ours requires more expensive chemicals as a result..

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Dandelions a sign of compaction?

                        Never heard that one before!

                        Comment


                          #13
                          If so, I would think the dandelion problem would be worse on headlands and where one enters fields but I have never seen that....an old wives tale, me thinks.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            I stand corrected. Compacted soil is only one
                            symptom.
                            http://nwfarmsandfood.com/index.php/what-
                            weeds-can-tell-about-the-soil.
                            Groundspeed, I said some conventional guys
                            farm better than others. Good chance you spray
                            the right product. There was a time in my area the
                            no till fields were full of dandelions, now it is
                            convenient to blame the organic farmers. I find
                            that childish. It's unusual that, when the organic
                            farmers inmy area grow 125 bu/acre oats and 80
                            bushels/ acre barley, and pays cash for
                            everything they buy, nobody talks about that.
                            That's fine, I really don't care, I have respectable
                            neighbors and i am lucky that way. Ultimately
                            everyone is trying their best to make their living
                            farming. The original,post was about marketing, I
                            thought i would help with some marketing
                            information. I thought it was good advice for both
                            organic and conventional farmers. Take it or leave
                            it,.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Pour farmer I have always found hrsw difficult to
                              sell for the reasons you describe. Then there is
                              the protein, dockage, falling number issue. I have
                              learned that the highest price is not the best price.
                              I have started growing soft white,. US millers find
                              it appealing and might sell for,premium. I am a fan
                              of higher yielding and sell into the feed market. If
                              it makes black ink I sell it. I also like to deliver it
                              instead of waiting months on end for elevator
                              space or some buyers whim I have been lucky
                              with feed wheat, feed peas, feed barley. It's not
                              much different than conventional farming, it's
                              about cash flow and profit margins.
                              If you have the ability to load rail cars, i would call
                              Scoular company in Nebraska. You order the
                              producer cars through the CGC. Do not let any
                              buyers order rail cars for you, you will wait for
                              months. Do it yourself. That's the fun/challenges
                              of organic farming. Do credit checks, and order
                              your own rail cars. Look after your business.
                              That's what any other company would do. Auto
                              garages, trucking companies, clothing stores,
                              hardware stores all use a method measuring
                              credit risk

                              Comment

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