• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

if you are growing durum??????

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    if you are growing durum??????

    Do you :

    1. Buy the latest greatest variety when durum is a discount to wheat?

    2. Do you sell to the feedlots to make sure the price goes up...by reducing supply? But see #1???

    3. Do you do what you have always done and see some positives in the market?

    4. Take any new crop offers of 7 bucks without knowing the protein issues.....the market won't say if 11-15 protein will be treated the same???

    Just wondering because as why is everyone else's risks covered off but the primary producers?


    Protein and grade scales are not outlined until harvest.....or later...

    It seems odd that after years of getting protein to 0.1 scales its been thrown out ...where higher grades of durum are basically just thrown into the same bin.....

    #2
    Switch out a few acres to CWRS or maby feed barley then, if the budget allows, try a small amount of a newer variety of durum then you will have seed multiplied for when the market returns. Certified Durum seed is a dime a dozen this year so it should be cheaper then usual to try something new.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by RedLentil View Post
      Switch out a few acres to CWRS or maby feed barley then, if the budget allows, try a small amount of a newer variety of durum then you will have seed multiplied for when the market returns. Certified Durum seed is a dime a dozen this year so it should be cheaper then usual to try something new.
      How do farmers decide what variety they should try? Yield, midge, straw length, Fus, Sawfly? What if you choose Fus resistant but it isn't an issue this year but midge or sawfly is, or vise versa?

      Do farmers seed a field of each to lower risk or can they blend seed varieties and seed together to cover risk?

      Comment


        #4
        Was reading this morning US durum acres on the rise for 19. Intentions are for 2.5 mill ac, up considerably from 18. Acres in Canada will drop because of the obvious, but from what I’ve heard not as much as most think.

        Comment


          #5
          The following is a public service message brought to you by Fusarium Fighters.





          Every time I think it's a good idea to grow durum I look at these pictures to remind myself maybe its not such a good idea.

          LEST WE FORGET.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
            The following is a public service message brought to you by Fusarium Fighters.





            Every time I think it's a good idea to grow durum I look at these pictures to remind myself maybe its not such a good idea.

            LEST WE FORGET.
            What’s wrong with that stuff? A good colour sorter and gravity table would bring that up to a 3, that’s what the world wants anyway. 😂😂

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by bigzee View Post
              What’s wrong with that stuff? A good colour sorter and gravity table would bring that up to a 3, that’s what the world wants anyway. 😂😂
              Yes you might be able to sort but then the grain company wouldn't be able to sell dockage removed and they would lose money or have to charge farmers more for cleaning and likely pay less for grain to cover loses.

              Comment


                #8
                If I remember correctly the bottom pic was the harvested sample and the top was the screenings off a gravity table. I think there was something like 26% clean out and I was able to sell the screenings to a co-op feed mill...must have been made into chicken feed or thinly blended into a feeder cattle ration.

                As OK as that whole scenario turned out, with the overall reduced yeild and dealing with the cleaning headache, selling screenings headache and kissing buyer's ass....the whole thing turned me off. Then two years later was dumb enough to try again...the end result wasn't as onerous but nevertheless still a challenge, polished(cleaned) a portion of that crop and the rest wasn't as bad. Sold that production the following November a year after harvest...did even better than the first time but the risks are too high here.

                To be honest I did miss a couple of decent low disease production years lately but who knows....seems I'm out of sync with the good years and in sync with the bad.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Maybe durum production is more suited to local areas than most alternative crops.
                  Our farm has tried it a few times without much success as a profitable crop.
                  Think present over production situation is result of too many recent good profit years.
                  Growers can be thankful for feed grain markets that eat up surplus production.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    I think we are a fringe growing area, where results can go either way. Chickpeas would likely not work at all. Lentils, Durum, Soybeans are precarious. Peas(without root rot pressure) and canola aren't too bad. Wheat and flax seems to work best. Mustards work if fields are pretty clean. Barley is no bin buster here with thins. Oats...better buy a grain bagger and then theres the group one resistant wild oat issue.

                    As with any area, we probably stand a chance of growing a decent crop of any kind if conditions are conducive to it.

                    Keep the rotation varied.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      The value of the world durum market in USD has been shrinking since 2014.

                      The cheap CAD has helped a little but still a tough market.

                      To top if off it seems the difference between the port price realized and the farmgate price is usually close to or over $100CAD/t

                      Plan to grow a great crop.....

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by bigzee View Post
                        What’s wrong with that stuff? A good colour sorter and gravity table would bring that up to a 3, that’s what the world wants anyway. 😂😂
                        Looks like $6.50 durum in June of 2018 to me.

                        Thoughts and prayers for 16 carryover

                        Comment

                        • Reply to this Thread
                        • Return to Topic List
                        Working...