We’ve been no till for almost 30 years and I’m not about to give my straw away for cheap for the gains I’ve made in my soil profile.
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Canada's first wheat-based pulp mill planned near Regina
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Originally posted by Sodbuster View PostWe’ve been no till for almost 30 years and I’m not about to give my straw away for cheap for the gains I’ve made in my soil profile.
On top is the moisture preserving soil conditioning attributes of straw as mulch... easy together worth $200/ac. We have more fiber in northern Canada... there is no justification possible to do this in Regina area... unless it can be sustained with recycled paper garbage... efficiently.
Cheers
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If it could be done efficiently with recycled paper and cardboard, then Fiber Form would still be in business.
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Originally posted by AllisWD45 View PostMaybe they could salvage some equipment from the Kamsack plant. It never turned a wheel before it closed. Then there was the flax plant at Canora. Every "investor" got stuck helping guarentee the loan when it went broke. What could go wrong?
And milking the grant money until someone questions the logic...
Absolutely nothing could go wrong...unless they actually build it...in 2022.
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Originally posted by Sodbuster View PostWe’ve been no till for almost 30 years and I’m not about to give my straw away for cheap for the gains I’ve made in my soil profile.
You know, the geniuses who think a vaccine is a higher risk then the disease? Its their inability to do math that justifies them to sell nutrients for 10$ and replace them for 100$.
They most likely read Agriville and knew it would work in Regina area.
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Originally posted by tweety View PostBut there are plenty of Agriville farmers dumb enough to not know the value, and that is what they are banking on.
You know, the geniuses who think a vaccine is a higher risk then the disease? Its their inability to do math that justifies them to sell nutrients for 10$ and replace them for 100$.
They most likely read Agriville and knew it would work in Regina area.
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It was tried at Elie Manitoba, and shut down in a few years.
Stacks of wheat straw scattered on forty acres remind on site for years.
Huge eye soar for the beautiful town of Elie. Regina should look at the photos and see how it will look.
I guess their thinking is with the recent increase in lumber prices, money can now be made?
Good luck Regina!
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Originally posted by shortbox View PostI used to think that chuck was the biggest dyck on the site but you are fast becoming his main competition!!
It seems that Chuck is going to have to step up his game a few notches, if he wants to keep that hard fought title.
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