Originally posted by caseih
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Don't know your area or what the market is like for feed. If you get 3 bales/acre @1500lb @4c/lb that's $180/acre, allow $20/bale to get it made custom if you don't want to touch it yourself. Potentially $120/acre if the yield and weather cooperate but not without risk either. At 4c/lb you would have had guys prepared to haul it all over the prairies last year - most here was 6-8c/lb, a lot over 10c/lb in Alberta.
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Guys are in full panic mode around here about the feed situation, and how dry it is. Just got a call from auction mart still looking for hay, 160 to 180+ per bale ( and around here, it seems that a bale is a bale, regardless if it is 4 feet tall or 6'6" and tight). Might be able to remove some of the risk from that equation, and presell a portion of your production right now, while demand is still high. Bales are being trucked hundreds of miles.Originally posted by grassfarmer View PostDon't know your area or what the market is like for feed. If you get 3 bales/acre @1500lb @4c/lb that's $180/acre, allow $20/bale to get it made custom if you don't want to touch it yourself. Potentially $120/acre if the yield and weather cooperate but not without risk either. At 4c/lb you would have had guys prepared to haul it all over the prairies last year - most here was 6-8c/lb, a lot over 10c/lb in Alberta.
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I wonder how long it can go on though? Had 2 years of huge feed costs, would think if its dry again this year most without feed would be better off selling out. Even a few ponies might end up at the glue factory.Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View PostGuys are in full panic mode around here about the feed situation, and how dry it is. Just got a call from auction mart still looking for hay, 160 to 180+ per bale ( and around here, it seems that a bale is a bale, regardless if it is 4 feet tall or 6'6" and tight). Might be able to remove some of the risk from that equation, and presell a portion of your production right now, while demand is still high. Bales are being trucked hundreds of miles.
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That is what I keep hearing too. Can't pay those prices two years in a row, rather sell. Which is where you might find someone willing to hedge their bets for next year's feed at a price somewhere between long term average and today's, before the 2019 feed situation is known.Originally posted by GDR View PostI wonder how long it can go on though? Had 2 years of huge feed costs, would think if its dry again this year most without feed would be better off selling out. Even a few ponies might end up at the glue factory.
But as for the ponies, My neighbor, a well paid professional lady Took on a second job in retail driving an hour each way Just to feed her horses. Another is considering bankruptcy but still won't get rid of the ponies.
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Most seem to have squeaked through with just enough feed here. Bales being advertised now are being snapped up at 6-7c/lb. I thought it would have been 10c this spring. Grass is growing, but from a poor start given how abused most pastures were last year and how dry it continues to be. Seeding in full swing now all around.
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