To me it is all relative. In my opinion farm size is irrelevent to ones bottom line. I am a rare young guy who has no need or desire to farm half the country. I would rather farm modestly, with good used machinery, and not have to hire losers to run it. LOL. I know a lot of guys who farm 6000 acres and are struggling constantly to pay bills etc. And I know alot who farm 900, 1400, and 2000 who are timely payers, and who are doing fine without new machinery or hiring guys.
I do believe in economies of scale to an extent, but why farm the land for no reason other than to add headaches of stress.
Am I the only guy who feels this way? If the corps come in and farm the big holdings, I will feel no obligation to farm for them or like them as so many feel. Why should I? Is it the famous little big man attitude or what? I'll farm modestly for as long as I am able, and when/if the time comes where it is impossible to make a decent living on less than 3500 acres, (highly unlikely, IMO) as so many suggest, I'm quitting and moving to Comox where you are not ridiculed for farming smaller and more efficiently...
The next thing is if I wanted to farm another 2000 acres it would be VERY hard to find that much more land, let alone 500 acres where I live.
So many talk as though to farm bigger you just walk out and get the land. Not so here. Most guys here far 1500 to 2000 acres, some less some more, and their boys are coming home to farm, so no bigger operations are dissolving in these parts. Land sells/comes up for rent by the quarter or two, not by 1000 acres chunks.
Sorry for my rant, but farm size is a very sensitive issue for me as you can tell, and we farmers as a whole are what is driving the trends upwards, not because of the need of more acres, but because we generally feel we need flashy machinery, a pile of land to pay for it, and the human greed factor of I need to be the biggest, not necessarily the best I can be. I see it all around me, especially in other areas.
When you look at auction catalogues, how many of these monster operations with 2 or three lines of 2 years old equipment are retiring, quitting on their own free will? Precious few I reckon.
Guys, we as an industry are committing suicide. And we wonder why young guys show no interest. Well for years they see their dads fight for more land, fight to make huge payments, stressing about it constantly along the way, and fighting to get the crop in the bin. And then in the end, when these dads tell the boys they made 15000 bucks net after all costs, and payments, complaining the whole way, they honestly expect their boys to farm? Good Grief.
To conclude, I feel it comes down to what you want in life, how mature you are, and having a grasp on what really matters. Some think it is money, constantly searching for happiness, contentment, and satisfaction, never getting there and dying eventually. Now tell me what did they do it for? What was the point. Did they enjoy their family time they never had, did they feel like they contributed to society, or were they self centered for so long, trying to be the biggest Jones for far too long?
Guys, we can never take it with us when we die.
IMO, I beleive we should worry more about what happens to us when we die, or Iran with nuclear weapons, or Russia supplying these weapons to massacre Israel, and what that will cause, than how much we farm, how much money we make, or lose, or how much we can snicker at those who refuse to follow trendlines.
Thanks for your patience, and happy farming!
I do believe in economies of scale to an extent, but why farm the land for no reason other than to add headaches of stress.
Am I the only guy who feels this way? If the corps come in and farm the big holdings, I will feel no obligation to farm for them or like them as so many feel. Why should I? Is it the famous little big man attitude or what? I'll farm modestly for as long as I am able, and when/if the time comes where it is impossible to make a decent living on less than 3500 acres, (highly unlikely, IMO) as so many suggest, I'm quitting and moving to Comox where you are not ridiculed for farming smaller and more efficiently...
The next thing is if I wanted to farm another 2000 acres it would be VERY hard to find that much more land, let alone 500 acres where I live.
So many talk as though to farm bigger you just walk out and get the land. Not so here. Most guys here far 1500 to 2000 acres, some less some more, and their boys are coming home to farm, so no bigger operations are dissolving in these parts. Land sells/comes up for rent by the quarter or two, not by 1000 acres chunks.
Sorry for my rant, but farm size is a very sensitive issue for me as you can tell, and we farmers as a whole are what is driving the trends upwards, not because of the need of more acres, but because we generally feel we need flashy machinery, a pile of land to pay for it, and the human greed factor of I need to be the biggest, not necessarily the best I can be. I see it all around me, especially in other areas.
When you look at auction catalogues, how many of these monster operations with 2 or three lines of 2 years old equipment are retiring, quitting on their own free will? Precious few I reckon.
Guys, we as an industry are committing suicide. And we wonder why young guys show no interest. Well for years they see their dads fight for more land, fight to make huge payments, stressing about it constantly along the way, and fighting to get the crop in the bin. And then in the end, when these dads tell the boys they made 15000 bucks net after all costs, and payments, complaining the whole way, they honestly expect their boys to farm? Good Grief.
To conclude, I feel it comes down to what you want in life, how mature you are, and having a grasp on what really matters. Some think it is money, constantly searching for happiness, contentment, and satisfaction, never getting there and dying eventually. Now tell me what did they do it for? What was the point. Did they enjoy their family time they never had, did they feel like they contributed to society, or were they self centered for so long, trying to be the biggest Jones for far too long?
Guys, we can never take it with us when we die.
IMO, I beleive we should worry more about what happens to us when we die, or Iran with nuclear weapons, or Russia supplying these weapons to massacre Israel, and what that will cause, than how much we farm, how much money we make, or lose, or how much we can snicker at those who refuse to follow trendlines.
Thanks for your patience, and happy farming!
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