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    #11
    IT'S CALLED VOLUME ECONOMICS. Get wit the
    program, er get runned over by yer
    neighbours and investers. Everthin
    changes whether Saskframer 3 likes it er
    not. Back from holidaze already?

    Comment


      #12
      I would be interested to know what land prices in
      the late seventies were adjusted for inflation. I
      wasn't around so maybe somebody older can fill
      us all in.

      Comment


        #13
        I can tell you land in the county or Red Deer And thats good black land 5 ft deep was 150/225/acre in the early 70ts. 1/4s with buildings was about $35000. 1973 bly was 2.50 feed mill price fat cattle was .44 hogs was .60 that fall good bred cows around $180/200, fuel die/per gal .18 gas .23 I have no idea what that would be adjusted for inflation, O yes rent was 1/3 or $10/acre cash a new 70ish HP tractor $13/15 thou, The average farm was about 3 1/4s .And we all made a living and life wasnt too bad but it seems that since someone figured out they wanted thier neibours share to things have gone down hill, but then mabey its just old age catching up to me and all this new technology you know where you give someone $1oo and they show you how to almost get it back.

        Comment


          #14
          In 73, land was $130/ cult acre here. Int rates 5%. Diesel 25 cents a gallon. A brand new JD 4430, $14000. New Half ton about $4000.
          Costs were SFA/ acre. Risk was low.

          Comment


            #15
            freewheat I don't see that in my area that the young guys with no family are buying land etc. What sense is it really? But anyways I could probably make a buck cause I know a few hot looking Chinese ladies interested in cleaning up on them if they are interested lol. Its all business right through to break up and then its business as usual. But I find it strange that someone with no family and their dad is 60 that they would be hourding land and assets yet. At least I had a dad that quit, been an amazing experience to keep things going some times.

            Comment


              #16
              Flip I kick myself everytime I hear a story like yours cause I through out my dad's old books. Not sure why I ever done that. Anyways from memory I could be wrong a bit but canola was a buck a bushel in about 1971 or 1970, or was it wheat that was a buck, but anyways things were tight for a few years. Then things sorta went nuts just after that.

              Comment


                #17
                Hopper, there are 4 young farmers within
                2 miles of me, who are single, between
                the ages of 32 and maybe 40, with 3 000
                acres each or more, who farm with their
                dads aged 60-75, and have no women, no
                kids, yet put ads in the paper for more
                land. No hired labour either. I think
                when the dads finally say enough is
                enough with the piggy bank backing,
                there is going to be a rude awakening in
                this countryside.

                Me, I have a wife, four kids, and with
                half the land, have no interest
                whatsoever to put an ad in the paper for
                more. And our land prices are "only" in
                the 700 buck an acre range. MAX. And I
                can not pencil it. And if I can not, I
                guarantee they can't either, with
                equivalent crops, but certainly not
                equal costs, with their brand new
                machinery. Oh yeah, I forgot, they are
                being bankrolled by old, paid for land.
                lol...by the massive profits in these
                parts from the 1980's.

                How guys are pencilling 2 and 3 grand an
                acre in western Canada is mind numbing
                to me.

                Comment


                  #18
                  Its easy to 'pencil' when there are
                  certain assumptions. Like the price of
                  land will double, as it always has, in
                  ten or so years.

                  2k land becomes 4k which is 200 bucks an
                  acre per year.

                  So goes the thought process. If they are
                  wrong, the corp goes bankrupt, and they
                  walk away or at least break even. If
                  they win, they win big.

                  You did the exact same thing SF3, then
                  numbers were just a little different.
                  You have lots of land today because you
                  didn't whine about it, you bought it.
                  You risked it.

                  Why is it that most of the posts in
                  Agriville say land is going to crash?
                  Isn't that the herd mentality that
                  allows the risk takers to become rich?

                  Comment


                    #19
                    WD
                    I am not following your logic, shouldn't be as easy
                    as just walking away from a broke ass farm corp,
                    all shareholders sign personal guarantees on that
                    debt, least that's the way it's been since I started
                    expanding 17 yrs ago. If some of these fellas and
                    their creditors feel comfortable stickin their necks
                    out that far, it's maybe because their hopin that
                    there will debt right downs and interest rate
                    breaks like the 80's for the bozos that bid up land
                    that they couldn't afford, dont think ur average tax
                    payer will have the stomach for bailouts this time
                    around, that been said, me and few other vultures
                    have begun circling.

                    Comment


                      #20
                      If there was a NHL style salary cap, but it was to
                      limit the price of land to 20% of the gross income
                      of wheat on a annual basis with a five year
                      average (high and low tossed out) what would the
                      farms look like, communities etc look like in 20
                      years from now?

                      Better, same or worse in general?

                      Comment

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