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    #31
    Farmers might sign a contract for march thru june delivery on wheat and then go borrow the interest free advance money.

    Before it was trying to have cash flow without any guarantee from the board about delivery, price or acceptance.

    Comment


      #32
      Bucket: Without sounding arrogant or
      smug, we were operating from a fairly
      strong financial position. We were able
      to keep the bills paid with the trickle
      of CWB cheques and "short term" lines of
      credit until the deferrals came in(quit
      that horse shit with incorporation).
      How much better off could have the farm
      been if this new environment existed for
      a decade or more is a hypothetical
      question I can't answer.

      Haven't sold any wheat, durum or barley
      yet either.

      Comment


        #33
        Great discussion about choice.
        Like Parsley, I am an organic farmer and I
        choose to subscribe to weber commodities even
        though it does not directly impact my farm.
        Weber has figured out a way to get market
        information to farmer clients that they find
        valuable. End of story.

        Thinking of choice, Stubblejumper, I suggest you
        choose your words wisely. I find your statement
        vs. weber commodities shocking. I'm am one of
        those not to smart farmers, but wow that is a very
        bold statement. Agriville is a forum with farmers
        from western Canada, eastern Canada, Australia,
        and the U.K.. I hope you can back your statement
        vs. Weber Commodities with facts. Presently, just
        a dumb farmer reading this thread, here is how I
        regard what you have written.

        In common law jurisdictions, slander refers to a
        malicious, false,[2][not specific enough to verify]
        and defamatory spoken statement or report, while
        libel refers to any other form of communication
        such as written words or images.[3] Most
        jurisdictions allow legal actions, civil and/or
        criminal, to deter various kinds of defamation and
        retaliate against groundless criticism.

        Choose your words carefully.

        Comment


          #34
          I will quote webber "**** you and the horse you rode in on"

          Comment


            #35
            Marleters have really helped Saskatchewan grow.
            i have lived life in the free market. Special crops
            saved farmers from going under while they tried
            to out live the wheat board.

            Marketers carry on, and hold your heads high.
            You have worked hard to stay abreast of world
            demand and transfer that wealth to us. Let these
            buffoons find their own markets.

            They can say what they like, but never has the
            farmer had more power and the giztapo does not
            like it!

            Comment


              #36
              Like transgenic and the terms around it,
              marketing is the same way.

              Market as noun, market as verb, market
              as entities and businesses, markets as
              collections of the above, super market,
              farmers market. It can get quite
              confusing to discuss if we don't know
              what the actual topic is.

              I think a lot of farmers see traders as
              adding cost to a commodity, ie taking a
              profit from the food chain yet adding
              nothing to the product. Yet, it would
              seem, it is the cost of price discovery
              for that commodity.

              So the topic is.... "marketing?" What
              exactly is the original post about
              anyways?

              Comment


                #37
                Lol,just when i thought this place was was getting a
                little boring you guys go and totally redeem
                yourselves,lol.

                Comment


                  #38
                  stubble quoting Weber.

                  Who'd have thunk it!

                  Comment


                    #39
                    How much snow do you have , cott? Could we
                    pool it, and sell it to the Global Warmists so they
                    can melt the evidence. Pars

                    Comment


                      #40
                      Wd9, I agree with your thoughts. The fact is, the
                      only reason brokers exist is, because the farmer
                      is too lazy to do his own price discovery. This is
                      conditioned behavior from years of having it done
                      for them. The wheat board was only one part of
                      this conditioning. The local elevator system also
                      contributed to this behavior. When I was a 16 yr
                      old farmer, i would watch the locals walk into the
                      elevator, begin dialogue. Then the agent would
                      walk them through everything, and eventually the
                      farmer would choose yes or no. If yes, agent
                      would look after all the forms and documents and
                      farmer would sign at the bottom. Man you should
                      have seen the look on a farmers face when he
                      had to hold a pen and sign. The other classic
                      action the farmers would do, was when it was
                      time to pay for his stuff he would pull out his
                      cheque book and push it across the desk for the
                      agent to fill out. It was the weirdest action I ever
                      saw. The farmer was all smug making the agent
                      do the administrative side. I would look at that
                      farmer and wonder how much education he had.
                      Fast forward to the 90s and the next generation of
                      farmers would deflect any market/administrative
                      responsibility to "the old lady", because they don't
                      even know how to turn on the computer.
                      That is the kind of behavior that necessitates
                      brokers. Until farmers (and they are gaining by
                      leaps and bounds) do more price discovery for
                      themselves, there will always be brokers and
                      middlemen.
                      Farmers should always do credit checks and take
                      accounts receivable insurance on new buyers. Of
                      course that means some phoning and faxing and
                      about $500.00 in cost. The alternative is let
                      someone else make an uninsured sale for you. If
                      it goes right, he is smart as ever. If it goes wrong,
                      then he goes for coffee and tells everyone how he
                      got screwed for thousands. Same old broken
                      record, no attempts to find proactive solutions.

                      Comment

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