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Organic flax prices.....

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  • farmaholic
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2010
    • 17471

    Organic flax prices.....

    A marketing newsletter I receive stated a load of organic flax FOB farm(Manitoba) traded at $37/bu.

    Anyone doing a decent job of organic farming..... I realize there may be other expenses related to growing the crop..... a year of lost production to a plow down or something but with a modest yield that is quite the gross return per acre..... good for you guys!
  • farmaholic
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2010
    • 17471

    #2
    That's nearly 3 times the price I sold for.

    Comment

    • mustardman
      Senior Member
      • Aug 2006
      • 2105

      #3
      Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
      That's nearly 3 times the price I sold for.
      Yea same here ,sold mine for $12 and even at that it gave me $200 More Net per acre than my Canola !!

      Comment

      • farmaholic
        Senior Member
        • Sep 2010
        • 17471

        #4
        Our yields were poorish, 18bu/ac x $12.85=$231.10...Yikes

        Comment

        • fjlip
          Senior Member
          • Oct 2002
          • 9788

          #5
          Neighbor sold organic wheat for next fall, $19/ bu, says average 35 bu/acre...$665/acre
          2017, 50 bu x 19= $950/ acre

          Comment

          • TraderJoe
            Senior Member
            • Feb 2014
            • 110

            #6
            Organic flax markets have traded anywhere between $35 and $42 picked up across the Prairies in the last 3 years. That is one of the strongest organic markets out there.
            Organic HRS wheat with 13+ protein has been up as high as $22 this year, and as high as $28 in the past few years when supplies of good milling wheat were tight.
            Organic oats generally run double the conventional market, and barley is much the same. Earlier this year you could sell organic malt barley for $13 picked up.
            There is increasing demand for organic grains, and with that, has come strong and stable pricing. It used to be that there were huge fluctuations in most of the organic grain prices, as there were only small opportunities to sell some commodities. Now, with the increase in organic food sales, those markets have become much more stable.

            Comment

            • hobbyfrmr
              Senior Member
              • Feb 2008
              • 3177

              #7
              This sounds like coffee shop/pub stories.

              Don’t do it. There is no money in it. Consider the exceptionally poor yields without buying fertilizer. Consider dockage, weeds for generations, thistles blowing everywhere, polluting your neighbors’ farms cultivation, disking, erosion, more tractor hours, faster depreciation, less time at the lake. The neighbors will talk about you, your land will decrease in value. More fuel burned, carbon emissions advancing climate change.

              Comment

              • farmaholic
                Senior Member
                • Sep 2010
                • 17471

                #8
                Originally posted by hobbyfrmr View Post
                This sounds like coffee shop/pub stories.

                Don’t do it. There is no money in it. Consider the exceptionally poor yields without buying fertilizer. Consider dockage, weeds for generations, thistles blowing everywhere, polluting your neighbors’ farms cultivation, disking, erosion, more tractor hours, faster depreciation, less time at the lake. The neighbors will talk about you, your land will decrease in value. More fuel burned, carbon emissions advancing climate change.

                Let me judge for myself....send me your coordinates.

                You know where I farm...google: "Slum of the Ghetto".

                Methinks hobbyfrmr doth protest too much. ;-)
                Last edited by farmaholic; Feb 3, 2018, 16:10.

                Comment

                • bucket
                  Senior Member
                  • Jan 2008
                  • 17020

                  #9
                  Hobby... why do I sense sarcasm and and a sense of market protectionism...?

                  Lol.

                  Comment

                  • farmaholic
                    Senior Member
                    • Sep 2010
                    • 17471

                    #10
                    With those kinds of prices I could retire on my first crop after the three year certification process! Seed the whole farm to grass for three years...bust it, seed it, harvest it, sell it, **** it!!!!

                    Comment

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