Originally posted by caseih
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I have a question for those who remember trading wheat for goods.
If the board was the only legal buyer.
What did the takers of grain for goods do with it?
Store it and wait for the quota to open and sell on their book? Still hard for a dealer to pay JD with a 4 bu quota.
Smuggle it?
Needing more stories to tell the young guys. How could anyone defend that stuff??
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Dad tells me back in those days with 4 bu quota they’d haul on quotas of hill farmers and drunks who didn’t grow much more than wild oats and feed. When final payment came out the drunks had a good drunk. The honest old guys would give it to dad which would be split. I honestly couldn’t understand how anyone with half a brain would support the you know what if remembering those times.Originally posted by blackpowder View PostI have a question for those who remember trading wheat for goods.
If the board was the only legal buyer.
What did the takers of grain for goods do with it?
Store it and wait for the quota to open and sell on their book? Still hard for a dealer to pay JD with a 4 bu quota.
Smuggle it?
Needing more stories to tell the young guys. How could anyone defend that stuff??
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Offered old crop $17/bu today for our Cwrs 13.5 wheat!Originally posted by WiltonRanch View PostDad tells me back in those days with 4 bu quota they’d haul on quotas of hill farmers and drunks who didn’t grow much more than wild oats and feed. When final payment came out the drunks had a good drunk. The honest old guys would give it to dad which would be split. I honestly couldn’t understand how anyone with half a brain would support the you know what if remembering those times.
&16.80 yellow peas.
$28.49 for Nexera Canola.
No final payment needed, cash, no quota, No export license needed or required.
Astounding how CWB disciples were blinded by smooth talking communism.
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Here we are a hour from the bc border, it was big business to load boxcars bc side to the interior. Also forced more on farm animal feeding. The local jd dealer loaded cars so no doubt some weird deals.Originally posted by blackpowder View PostI have a question for those who remember trading wheat for goods.
If the board was the only legal buyer.
What did the takers of grain for goods do with it?
Store it and wait for the quota to open and sell on their book? Still hard for a dealer to pay JD with a 4 bu quota.
Smuggle it?
Needing more stories to tell the young guys. How could anyone defend that stuff??Last edited by makar; May 16, 2022, 19:28.
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I'm sure. A fair spread from interior milling or feed to an initial. Full sarcasm.Originally posted by makar View PostHere we are a hour from the bc border, it was big business to load boxcars bc side to the interior. Also forced more on farm animal feeding. The local jd dealer loaded cars so no doubt some weird deals.
I remember trucking it from Van rail yard to WA in mid 80s. Very open arbitrage lol. I've heard stories of hiding wheat surrounded by other cargo on trucks.
Good stories everyone. Thanks.
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It was a bit before I started farming when all this "black market wheat" was going on but any dealers turned around and sold it to feeders mostly. A lot of farmers sold directly to feedlots as well, I remember my cousin selling barley 3 bushels for a dollar - yes 33 cents a bushel. I have an old American magazine that ran an article about the mess in Canada at that time. They talked to one farmer who traded wheat for a new half ton truck. He said they emptied one bin, and another, and so on. When they started on about the fourth or fifth bin he got to thinking maybe it wasn't such a good idea after all. Trouble was a couple years later, in 1972 and 1973, the Soviets were in the market big time. The Americans still call it the "great grain robbery." It was about like this past year with prices unheard of at the time. Farmers had a few good years until 23% interest rates hit. The Liberals and Otto Lang brought in "Operation Lift" in 1970 to try to reduce the grain surplus by paying farmers $6.00 and acre to leave land fallow. A lot of this mess was caused by Canada being a boy scout and sticking to the International Grains Agreement that tried to put a floor price on wheat. It was a great idea except all other exporters didn't abide by the IGA leaving Canada under the Trudeau government standing out in the rain looking in through the window. It was also about this time that sob Trudeau told a bunch of protesting farmers "Why should I sell your wheat?" The stupid bastard didn't understand that because of the CWB, it was his job.Originally posted by WiltonRanch View PostDad tells me back in those days with 4 bu quota they’d haul on quotas of hill farmers and drunks who didn’t grow much more than wild oats and feed. When final payment came out the drunks had a good drunk. The honest old guys would give it to dad which would be split. I honestly couldn’t understand how anyone with half a brain would support the you know what if remembering those times.
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Key point being half a brain !Originally posted by WiltonRanch View PostDad tells me back in those days with 4 bu quota they’d haul on quotas of hill farmers and drunks who didn’t grow much more than wild oats and feed. When final payment came out the drunks had a good drunk. The honest old guys would give it to dad which would be split. I honestly couldn’t understand how anyone with half a brain would support the you know what if remembering those times.
There is no other explanation?
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