Manitoba co operator

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The big bill

Earning accolades

Soil degradation costs farmers billions annually » PG 23

A University of Manitoba plant breeder wins a big award » PG 3

SERVING MANITOBA FARMERS SINCE 1925 | Vol. 75, No. 37 | $1.75

september 14, 2017

Proposed tax changes could hit family farms hard More taxes and more complexity in succession planning expected

manitobacooperator.ca

Manitoba sees very  limited dicamba drift There were dicamba drift complaints in Manitoba, but nothing like in parts of the U.S.

BY LORRAINE STEVENSON Co-operator staff

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ax law experts fear a nasty surprise awaits many farmers as the end of har­ vest nears and they begin to grapple with changes the fed­ eral government is proposing to the income tax act. Federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau announced tax reforms July 18 in a move the Liberals say is aimed at limiting

BY ALLAN DAWSON Co-operator staff

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E N T E R

There’s talk of restricting dicamba use in Arkansas following many crop injury complaints there this growing season, but there’s no such talk in Manitoba. Manitoba Agriculture’s Terry Buss spoke about a plot demonstrating dicamba drift damage at the Crop Diagnostic School in Carman in July.   PHOTO: ALLAN DAWSON

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here’s talk of restricting dicamba applications in Arkansas and pos­ sibly other states, but not in Manitoba. “I don’t think we are any­ where near the situation that they are having in the States (with dicamba crop injury c o m p l a i n t s ) ,” M a n i t o b a Agriculture weed specialist Jeanette Gaultier said in an interview Sept. 7. “We seem to be in a much better situation, although it is still occurring.” The University of Missouri says 3.1 million acres were damaged by dicamba, an older and more volatile herbicide that has renewed popularity with the recent introduction of Monsanto’s Roundup Ready 2 Xtend Soybean and cotton with XtendFlex® Technology — both of which tolerate dicamba and glyphosate. To control dicamba drift Monsanto and BASF devel­ oped a dicamba formulation that’s less volatile. The labels on both require farmers to follow a strict protocol when applying the weed killer.

Bu t e a r l i e r t h i s s e a s o n the states of Arkansas and Missouri temporarily banned dicamba applications after a raft of complaints that dicamba drift injured nearby susceptible crops. Then last month Arkansas’ plant board recommended prohibiting dicamba applications after April 15 — a move Monsanto opposes, saying it’s not based on scientific data. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is separately considering banning dicamba applications after a set dead­ line next year, Arkansas offi­ cials advising the agency told Reuters news service. A cutoff date aims to pro­ tect plants vulnerable to the chemical. In Arkansas, the proposed April 15 deadline would also prevent most farm­ ers from spraying dicamba weed killers on growing soy­ beans, a major selling point for the products. In an email Sept. 8 the Pesticide Management Reg­ u­l a­t ory Agency said it would respond to questions about dicamba injury complaints in Canada next week. See dicamba drift on page 6 »

A CALL FOR HELP:  STARS APP GETS AID FAST   »   PAGE 8

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C H A N C E

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The Ultimate Rocky Experience is where equipment, service and technology converge. And it’s how we celebrate 10 years of dependability.

Enter online at ultimaterockyexperience.com. See Bumper yields on page 6 »


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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

INSIDE

Did you know?

LIVESTOCK

Soy strains Adding commercial soybeans in developing countries brings unique challenges

Price reporting The cattle industry grapples with price transparency

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CROPS Whole hemp Hemp producers seek OK to fill nutraceutical market

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FEATURE Horse camping Spruce Woods Provincial Park has an equine option

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CROSSROADS Barn birthday A WestMan farm family sees their barn turn 100

4 5 8 10

Editorials Comments What’s Up Livestock Markets

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Grain Markets Weather Vane Classifieds Sudoku

STAFF

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n t r o d u c i n g s oy b e a n s into a developing country’s agriculture community is more complex than just putting the seeds in the ground. It also requires a major shift in thinking in relation to crop production and management, according to a University of Illinois agriculture economist. Peter Goldsmith says only with this shift in thinking will the new crop meet expectations of increasing profits and better pay for workers. “Convincing farmers in d e ve l o p i n g c o u n t r i e s t o grow soybean as a commercial crop involves a change in how they far m,” said Goldsmith. “It will be different than what they’re used to. It may require new equipment and training. Farmers who have been growing native staples like cow peas for generations have tacit knowledge about the seed, how to store it or where to buy it locally next year, the best row spacing, and other production details.”

Farmers don’t just need soybean seed. They also need the whole production package to make it successful.   file PHOTO

It’s only when these practices are adopted that enough profit is left on the table for improvements to quality of life. Under the lowest-input scenario there was no profit at all as a result of adopting soybean. “To me, the traditional low-input scenario in northern Ghana is unacceptable,” Goldsmith says. “Asking farmers to grow soy without inputs is like giving them a tractor

with three wheels or a pump with no handle. The outcome is going to be bad. Farmers will get frustrated, produce one crop and then stop. It’s a waste of donor dollars.” Goldsmith says his findings from the three scenarios aren’t pessimistic about soybean catching on in developing countries. Rather, it is a caution to be realistic and appropriately investing in these programs.

READER’S PHOTO

11 16 33 40

ONLINE & MOBILE Visit www.manitobacooperator.ca for daily news and features and our digital edition. (Click on “Digital Edition” in the top right corner.) At our sister site, AGCanada.com, you can use the “Search the AGCanada.com Network” function at top right to find recent Co-operator articles. Select “Manitoba Co-operator” in the pull-down menu when running your search. Scan the code to download the Manitoba Co-operator mobile app. PHOTO: donna gamache

www.manitobacooperator.ca Editor Gord Gilmour gord.gilmour@fbcpublishing.com 204-294-9195

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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

U of M plant breeder earns international accolades The University of Manitoba’s Rob Duncan is a rising star in the world of plant breeding and just earned a prestigious U.S. award BY ALEXIS STOCKFORD

“It was a very nice honour, a nice surprise to be recognized by the National Association of Plant Breeders and peers.”

Co-operator staff

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Manitoban is the first Canadian to earn a major international plant-breeding award. Rob Duncan, a brassica breeder with the University of Manitoba, has been named winner of the National Association of Plant Breeders (NAPB) Early Career Scientist Award. Duncan, who grew up in rural Manitoba, was given the award in early August during the NAPB annual meeting at the University of California-Davis, the same school Duncan graduated from with his doctorate in 2009. “It was a very nice honour, a nice surprise, to be recognized by the National Association of Plant Breeders and peers,” Duncan said. “I have many people to thank over the years — different mentors and breeders whom I’ve worked with at the University of CaliforniaDavis and Texas A&M and the University of Manitoba and excellent staff to thank for it.” The award was given to a researcher who “exhibits the ability to establish strong research foundations, to interact with multidisciplinary teams, and to participate in relevant professional societies,” and who received his or her doctorate in the last decade. Jim McFerson, award committee chair, called Duncan a “simply outstanding early career scientist,” and a “humble, gracious and dedicated scientist who inspires and leads by example.” “Even as an early career scientist he has been quite successful in obtaining external funding and shown extraordinary leadership in team research. He has served the University of Manitoba on a whole range of committees,” McFerson said.

Coming home Duncan had made a name for himself internationally before the award, having completed a university stint in Sweden, received

Rob Duncan

is among those transferable topics. In 2016, Manitoba’s canola disease survey found that blackleg was present in over 80 per cent of fields, making it the second most common pathogen in the province after sclerotinia. Dr. Rob Duncan (l) is the first Canadian to be given the Early Career Scientist Award from the National Association of Plant Breeders.   Photo: National Association of Plant Breeders

team mainly focus on developing improved hybrid cultivars that are high in erucic acid — which is mainly used for industrial purposes, lubricants, cosmetics, a lot of household products — in comparison to canola that would be for edible uses.” The university has paired with industry partners on the project, he added. In 2013, Duncan’s team received what was, at the time, the third-largest Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada’s (NSERC) Collaborative Research and Development grant and one of the largest grants for high-erucic acid rapeseed (HEAR). At the time, Duncan guessed that the five-year, $3.885-million grant would help increase yield over open-pollinated cultivars by “at least” 10 to 15 per cent. Three new hybrids have already hit the market in Western Canada out of Duncan’s program. “Those hybrid cultivars have improvements in terms of agronomic performance and yield and disease resistance and seed quality,” he said, adding that much of the research also applies to canola, rapeseed’s close genetic cousin and one of Manitoba’s most popular crops. Blackleg, one of the most prolific canola diseases in Manitoba,

his doctorate from the University of California and joining Texas A&M University as the wheat and oilseed specialist. He grew up on a certified seed farm near Miami, Man., and now he’s come full circle back to Manitoba. He attended the University of Manitoba, now his employer, after high school, graduating with a bachelor of science in agronomy in 2001 and a master’s degree in plant pathology two years later. Duncan spent the next years taking his skills abroad, completing a university stint in Sweden before relocating to the United States for his doctorate and eventually taking a job as an assistant professor and wheat and oilseed specialist with Texas A&M University. By 2012, however, he had returned home to Manitoba, setting up shop with the University of Manitoba and beginning work developing canola and rapeseed genetics. That work, particularly his efforts to develop high-erucic acid rapeseed, helped push his name to the top of the candidate list, McFerson said. “We have an excellent team here of seven technicians and many students have been on the project over that time,” Duncan said. “That research and that

CORRECTION

McFerson also pointed to Duncan’s experience as an educator. His classroom skills have earned him awards including the faculty of agriculture and food sciences teacher of the year and teaching merit awards from both the University of Manitoba and the North American Colleges and Teachers of Agriculture. Since heading the brassica breeding program at the University of Manitoba, Duncan has mentored 14 graduate students and his students have gone on to win 19 awards both in and outside Canada. “Those graduate students who are in the research program, they do a lot of the basic scientific research on different traits that are applicable to canola or higherucic acid rapeseed and when they have any breakthroughs or findings, we can bring those over into our variety development program,” Duncan said.

astockford@farmmedia.com

Manitoba’s Controlled Crop Residue Burning Program

Always Call Before You Burn

1-800-265-1233 Stubble burning restrictions

In the Sept. 7 issue of the Co-operator there was an error in the table presenting MCVET winter cereals data. The table incorrectly listed the variety AAC Gateway three times. We apologize for any confusion this inadvertent error may have caused. Here is the corrected table: Winter Wheat Yield Comparisons Table

If you must burn, be responsible Stonewall

Winnipeg 96 95 108 115 100

54

89

92

Consider the alternatives

78

71

104

77

84

84 77 5.4 7 Yes

77 69 11.4 14 No

100 94 6.6 15 No

94 83 7.8 11 Yes

104 99 9.3 14 Yes

In most years, crop residue management practices can reduce or eliminate the need to burn. For more information, contact your local Manitoba Agriculture office or visit manitoba.ca.

Melita

77 73 80 91 77

Hamiota

Rosebank

Before you burn straw, stubble or chaff this fall, call 1-800-265-1233 or visit manitoba.ca to find out whether burning is allowed in your area that day.

86 97 77 104 96

Carman

Canada Western Red Winter 77 76 44 AAC Elevate ~ AAC Gateway ~ 76 79 51 AAC Goldrush ~ 77 76 44 AAC Wildfire ~ 89 86 52 CDC Chase 84 83 65 Canada Western Special Purpose 75 85 30 CDC Falcon Canada Western Experimental 84 90 67 CDC Icefield ~ Varieties supported for registration by the PRCWRT 92 94 69 W520 SITE GRAND MEAN (bu/acre) 83 54 CV% 6.9 9.7 LSD (bu/acre) 10 9 Sig Diff No Yes

2017 Yield (bu/acre)

Carberry

Beausejour

Arborg

2017 Average Yield (bu/acre)

Manitoba’s crop residue burning regulation restricts daytime burning between August 1 and November 15. Burning at night is illegal. Burning within Burning Permit Areas requires a permit issued by Manitoba Sustainable Development. If you do not comply, you may be fined as much as $50,000.

Class/Variety

Class is in session

“Probably one of the biggest advantages to our breeding program here is that the students in our brassica breeding program can train within an academic breeding program that’s releasing commercial cultivars, which in today’s academic breeding settings is quite rare either in Canada or the U.S.,” he added. The program has since added canola protein to its list of interests. Duncan says his team will be working with industry and the Canola Council of Canada on both the quantity and quality of protein. “Our canola industry, its main product is the oil but we’re really focusing on improving protein products coming out of that and potentially turning the meal and the protein into a co-product rather than a byproduct of the oil extraction process and improving the value of the protein coming out of there, maybe one day even utilizing it for human consumption,” he said. Duncan has been asked to speak at next year’s NAPB annual meeting in light of his win. The meeting will be held in Guelph, Ont., the first time Canada has hosted the gathering.

85 79 85 96 91

84 84 86 97 96

76 72 70 85 79

69 62 67 73 73

85

92

69

100

89

102 90 57.7 12 Yes

107 92 11.5 16 No

Burning is permitted only on days when the weather conditions allow for effective smoke dispersion. It is essential that you make sure appropriate fireguards are in place during a burn and you must supervise your fires at all times.

~ Indicates a variety that is protected by Plant Breeders’ Rights or a variety where protection has been applied for but not yet granted at time of printing.

Crop Residue Burning Program 2017 ad Publication: Manitoba Cooperator 2 cols (4") wide x 100 lines


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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

OPINION/EDITORIAL

Talking taxes

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few years back I found myself watching an HBO Canada series set in Winnipeg called “Less than Kind.” One of the key characters was the patriarch of the Blecher clan, Sam, played by Maury Chaykin. Sam was a part-time driving school operator and full-time wheeler-dealer. Another recurring character was Tito, whom Gord Gilmour Sam had taken under his wing. Editor In a particularly funny scene between the two, Sam found himself under the auditor’s microscope one day at his shop at precisely the same time Tito stopped by to talk a bit of business. Not realizing the third party in the room was the taxman, Tito was a bit too free with his words and revealed too much. His final statement, right before he found out he was talking to the auditor was, “It’s like you always tell me Sam. It’s our job to make it and hide it. It’s their job to find it.” I tell this tale because it’s important to realize who you’re talking to when you’re talking taxes, and just how much you’re revealing. And talking taxes, it would appear, is going to be an ongoing theme for agriculture in the coming weeks and months. In the past few weeks the issue of changes to personal corporations has really risen on the public agenda. I hear people talking about these changes. One of the most common phrases I also hear is “doctors and farmers.” As in, that’s who will be hit hardest by these changes. In one way it’s good that people realize it will affect farmers and are sympathetic enough to you that you’re held up as an example. In another way, however, know you’re being used. Doctors and farmers are sympathetic characters and it’s no mistake they’re the face of the opposition. A lot of different professions use these kinds of personal corporations, from plumbers to marketing gurus and everything in between. During the energy boom it was apparently very popular amongst petroleum engineers, for example, who were able to lower their tax burden on healthy six-figure salaries to somewhere around 25 per cent, compared to the far higher rates their salaried colleagues were paying. But you don’t hear anyone waxing on about poor engineers or lawyers, they’re simply not as sympathetic. The risk here, of course, is your sectoral goodwill will be depleted by others and won’t be there when you need it for other crucial conversations. How this tax conversation is held is going to be very important. I’ve been following some of the back-and-forth in opinion columns and even online forums, just to get a sense of things. One thing I have seen, repeatedly, is that the folks who are arguing against the changes often take an unfortunate tone. It can be summed up as a smug superiority, that they’re better and more deserving of these breaks than the chumps who work for a salary because they’re braver and take on more risks and create jobs. In the worst cases, they couldn’t contain their contempt for the people they were interacting with. In some cases the job creation argument is undoubtedly true. In other cases, as noted, it’s a lot more debatable, and incorporation really is a shell game to lower taxes. Regardless the reality of the situation, taking that confrontational approach isn’t going to win any friends or influence many people. It could, in fact, see people get their backs up and result in an outcome nobody wants to see. One issue that seems to gain traction amongst those who don’t really have a strong opinion one way or the other, is the question of “income sprinkling” where a corporation pays family members such as spouses and children, thus lowering the overall tax burden. They look at it and wonder, “why can’t I do that?” The answer, of course, is because the country could never afford it. It would leave a smoking crater in the national bottom line. So I am coming to suspect that one will be tough to defend because allowing only one group to do it smacks of unfairness to wage earners. Another way to look at this is in its similarity to the Harper government’s crackdown on income trusts. That government saw a tax strategy becoming too popular for its own good, affecting revenues dramatically, and killed it, ignoring all protests. Like it or not, that precedent suggests change is coming, which is going to make how this conversation is held even more important. Farmers need to decide on the elements that are really important to the sector, what they can live without, and the substance and tone of the conversation they’re about to have. Having a united front with clear goals for the sector is paramount. They’ll also need to decide just how much water they’re willing to carry for someone else — and how willing they are to have their good name used. gord.gilmour@fbcpublishing.com

Groundhog Day BY ALAN GUEBERT Farm & Food

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he calendar may show Labour Day but it feels more like Groundhog Day. The movie, I mean, not the shadowy holiday. The reason why, as Bill Murray’s boorish character learns, is because we’ve been here before. In agriculture, old-timers see these repetitive, big harvest-low price loops as the proverbial “farm problem.” After decades of these endless loops, however, maybe the real “problem” isn’t on the “farm.” Maybe the real problem is our loopy farm policy that all but guarantees long stretches of little-to-no profit interrupted by short bursts of (usually) disaster-inspired, low yields and high profits. That’s our past and it will likely remain our future because farmers, ranchers, and taxpayers are about to go for another lap in the farm policy hyperloop machine. Congress is back in Washington working on the 2018 Farm Bill. By all accounts, however, the new law will mirror the old law because nobody has any appetite for change. New ideas, it seems, are as rare in rural America as they are in Washington. That means the well-worn, low-and-goinglower price centrepiece of recent Farm Bills, crop insurance, will again be the centrepiece of the new Farm Bill of the future. Like crop insurance, other tired policy elements won’t even bother to shower and shave before going back into the new law: there will be no meaningful conservation cross-compliance, no program payment caps, no increases in Land Grant research funds, no needed increase in rural infrastructure spending, and no new money for beginning farmer programs. All, either individually or collectively, could be a starting point to meaningful farm policy reform. But, no, no, no, no, and no.

OUR HISTORY:

We know this because, as Bill Murray finds out over and over in the 1993 movie, no is easy. Here’s how Senate Ag Committee chairman Pat Roberts (R-KS) recently explained why the status quo will remain: “This is no time to be proposing revolutionary ideas with the Farm Bill... crop insurance is, for many, the most valuable tool in the risk management tool box.” Besides, he added, he “doesn’t want to make cuts in crop insurance, but rather reduce regulations that impact farmers and ranchers.” While chairman Roberts didn’t point to any specific regulation, his committee colleague, Nebraska Republican Sen. Deb Fischer, did recommend the elimination of one that not only isn’t a regulation now, it won’t be in your lifetime or mine. Fischer said there is a “movement by some activists,” reported the Columbus (NE) Telegram, “to tie more conservation programs into any kind of farm payments.” That would be very bad, she said, because “... putting an extra burden on our farmers isn’t the way to go.” “Extra burden” is an interesting and revealing phrase for what should be at the very centre of all Farm Bills: a clear public benefit in return for the subsidies received by farmers. Accountability, after all, is how well-deserving farmers and ranchers build trust with hungry, helpful taxpayers. But today our farm and political leaders often are so scared of their own shadow — a primary challenger, a knee-buckling White House tweet, some awful “activist” with an idea that challenges convention — that few pause to consider what change could mean for rural America’s economic and cultural future. And yet change is what is needed to make tomorrow a new day, not another Groundhog Day again and again and again. The Farm and Food File is published weekly through the U.S. and Canada www.farmandfoodfile.com.

September 1961

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ur Sept. 7, 1961 issue reported on “high productivity and drought resistance” on a new “synthetic grain species” developed at the University of Manitoba. The cross between durum wheat and rye, later named triticale, had been grown on 35 acres on the farm of A.V. Arnott at Darlingford, and it was estimated it would yield 50 bushels per acre. The year had been the driest on record in Western Canada, and wheat in the same area was yielding only 15 bushels. A large advertisement from Carling Breweries (beer was not mentioned) touted Churchill’s merits as a seaport. “In late July, the first ocean ships come down The Bay, and tie up at Churchill. From then until early October, the port hums with activity. Cars, tractors, china and other goods arriving from Europe are loaded for their 1,000-mile rail journey south to Winnipeg and their connection with transcontinental railways.” It also said, “In addition to being a busy seaport, Churchill is also one of Canada’s leading whaling centres.” The editorial in the following week’s issue was titled “Rapeseed is here to stay,” noting 1960-61 crop year exports of 485 million pounds (9.7 million bushels, 220,000 tonnes) and forecasting that plantings could reach two million acres in the next few years.


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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

COMMENT/FEEDBACK

Give peas a chance If we do, they’ll grow the western economy By Naomi Christensen and Carlo Dade

The global market for specialty food ingredients, such as pea protein, is about US$100 billion annually and growing.

Canada West Foundation

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Letters

he Canadian Prairies are well known for being global leaders in pulse production and exports, but we didn’t get here by being complacent. We are now in the midst of an opportunity to become the premier region for pulse fractionation, a relatively new processing technology that breaks pulses into protein, starch and fibre fractions for use as ingredients in food processing. The Prairie provinces already have an encouraging start. Developing a fractionation hub next to our existing multibillion-dollar pea, lentil and bean industries will cut shipping costs and turn what was once a competitive disadvantage — distance from market — into an advantage. Already, millions of new investment dollars in fractionation facilities have been earmarked across the Prairies. But competitors in Europe and the U.S. are also starting to realize that the opportunity is huge — and will only grow in the future. The global market for specialty food ingredients, such as pea protein, is about US$100 billion annually and growing. The greatest annual growth in the ingredient sector is from plant proteins, including pulses. While there are more than 34,000 food and beverage product manufacturing establishments

in Canada and the U.S., only a minority incorporate pulse ingredients into their production. The opportunity for expansion in the North American market alone is enormous, with pulses processed on the Prairies ideally located close to both the pulse producers and the customers — food product manufacturers. In North America, the EU and even China, the health and nutrition food sectors are key markets for ingredients derived from pulses, such as protein and fibre. Pea protein, for example, is used in granola and energy bars, high-protein pasta, baby food, veggie burgers, egg alternatives and even beverages and smoothies. Pulses have a higher concentration of protein than cereal crops and rice and can be used as ingredients to achieve gluten-free status. Pulse fractions are useful in non-niche food processing, too — fractions stabilize viscosity in sauces and dressings, add crispiness in breaded products by reducing oil absorption and retain moisture in meat products. In addition to human food, protein fractions are used in pet and animal feed, and the global pet food industry, already valued at nearly US$50 bil-

We welcome readers’ comments on issues that have been covered in the Manitoba Co-operator. In most cases we cannot accept “open” letters or copies of letters which have been sent to several publications. Letters are subject to editing for length or taste. We suggest a maximum of about 300 words. Please forward letters to Manitoba Co-operator, 1666 Dublin Ave., Winnipeg, R3H 0H1 or Fax: 204-954-1422 or email: news@fbcpublishing.com (subject: To the editor)

Sicker cows I read Martha Hall Findlay’s Aug. 13 article (Canada’s supply management system for dairy is no longer defensible) bashing the Canadian dairy industry with some amusement. It was particularly ironic to note her use of the sick cow metaphor. It might be easier to find sick cows in countries like the U.S., Mexico, Brazil, and Russia, where they allow the use of bovine somatotropin to boost a cow’s milk output by up to 20 per cent. The use of synthetic somatotropin is banned in Canada, Australia, N.Z., Europe, Japan and Israel, probably because its use results in a higher incidence of mastitis in dairy cows which requires the increased use of antibiotics. In the U.S., direct govt. dairy subsidies and growth hormones can result in lower retail milk costs. North of the border we may pay a little more for dairy but usually quality costs more no matter what you are buying. Let’s hope NAFTA negotiators can keep enough tariff in place to prevent the dumping of subsidized dairy products on the Canadian market by countries whose quality standards don’t match ours. Brian Duncan Miami, Man.

lion, is growing more than five per cent annually. The three Prairie provinces share characteristics that make them attractive locations for fractionation. They are the heart of Canadian pulse production; all lentil and chickpea crops seeded in Canada are in the west, as is 98 per cent of dry peas and more than 50 per cent of beans. Transportation infrastructure to move processed pulses along the supply chain impacts investment. Manitoba and Saskatchewan’s inland ports are attractive, as are Edmonton and Calgary’s freight transportation hubs. Our rail and road links to West Coast ports and into the U.S. ensure pulse fractions can be shipped to key international markets. Thanks to the oil downturn, the Prairies have an available supply of technically skilled workers, especially in Alberta and Saskatchewan. Governments do not need to initiate new spending to increase fractionation; rather, some policy changes at all levels can reduce the challenges that affect investment. For example, provinces or municipalities may need to review axle weight restrictions on roads that would

serve as key transportation routes to and from fractionation facilities. Operating costs, including labour and electricity, play a large role in investment decisions. French plant-based ingredient company Roquette specifically made note of sustainable hydroelectricity availability in its announcement earlier this year of a $400-million pea-protein facility in Portage la Prairie. Portage was chosen out of 40 sites under consideration in Canada and the U.S. As Alberta and Saskatchewan rapidly move away from the cheapest source of electricity (coal) to a greater volume of more expensive renewables, they must consider how changes in electricity policy affect future investments in other sectors such as agri-food processing. The federal government also helps by negotiating tariff reductions with key markets, as tariffs are often higher on processed products than on raw commodities. In the past year, plans for new fractionation facilities have been announced in Bowden, Alta., Moose Jaw, Sask., and Portage la Prairie. But we should not be satisfied with this alone. Governments at all levels should make sure their policies are not impeding further investment in fractionation facilities. The opportunity for the Prairies to be a global leader in pulse production, exportation and processing is waiting to be seized. Naomi Christensen is senior policy analyst and Carlo Dade is director of the Trade & Investment Centre at the Canada West Foundation.

Technology troubles

Human nature and the cycle of technology adoption affects commodity price cycles BY SKIP TAYLOR NDSU

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oday, we are in the middle of an agricultural downturn. Just a few years ago, the production agriculture sector was booming, along with most input suppliers. Now, net U.S. farm income has fallen 81 per cent and the near-term prospects are not positive. Production agriculture has been through this phenomenon many times in the past, and each cycle brings hope that we have learned from our mistakes of the past. The first step in understanding this is to ask the question: Why does this occur and what may be the recurring reason? Most events that triggered a boom in agriculture can be identified as external to agriculture. The last few are the First World War (1914-19), the Second World War (1941-45), the Russian Grain Deal of 1972-73 and the Bioenergy Policy Act of 2005. Each time, prices increased rapidly as demand increased, but within a few years, producers responded by increasing supply enough to push prices back to pre-event levels, beginning a period of low incomes and financial stress. There are many reasons, but technology is an important part of this equation. An individual farmer knows that his action will have no impact on the markets. Farmers can produce and sell as much as they desire with no impact on prices. A producer’s logical response to a market event is to maximize production and income by incorporating all of the new available technology.

A producer’s logical response to a market event is to maximize production and income by incorporating all of the new available technology.

This is shown in the representative supply-and-demand curves for an individual producer. The supply curve is almost vertical because the producer cannot change output substantially once a production cycle is started. The demand curve is horizontal because the producer can sell as much as he is able to produce at a constant price. His production has no impact on the price level. When a positive price shock occurs, the producer responds during the next production cycle by increasing production to capture higher prices, knowing that his production will not impact the price level. When supply increases, the price level does not change. In recent price shocks, producers responded during the next few years with increased production (46, 35, 24 and 22 per cent, respectively) to capture the short-term increases in demand and prices. The after-effect comes from the aggregate impact of the agricultural industry sector. In an economist’s terms, the supply and demand for agricultural commodities at the industry level are very inelastic,

which means that small changes in supply have a relatively larger impact on price. Producers within a production cycle cannot change production (supply). Once an enterprise is started, it has to finish. The same is true on the demand side. Most commodities are eaten by some biological agent and that agent can consume only so much. The shift of the supply curve, due to increased production during the following production cycle, lowers the price. That price decrease lowers the industry’s gross income and, in turn, lowers the farmer’s net income. The rapid increase in production during a high-price period is due to farmer’s use of new technology. This sets off a new cycle of low prices, during which producers cut back and new technology is not used until the next price cycle. With the different supply-anddemand schedules for the individual and the industry, what is good for the individual has an undesirable effect on the industry. The growth in technology will continue during this low-price period and will be waiting until the next demand shock to be implemented. This will end the highprice part of the cycle and return the industry to the longer low-price part of the cycle. This cycle will continue because human nature does not change. Producers will continue to respond to rising prices with new technology to increase production, which will set in motion the next price cycle. Skip Taylor is a professor in North Dakota State University’s faculty of agribusiness and applied economics.


6

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

FROM PAGE ONE dicamba drift Continued from page 1

Arkansas had more dicamba complaints than other places because the state didn’t approve use of the new, less volatile dicamba formulations, Monsanto spokeswoman Trish Jordan said in an interview. “We truly, truly believe their (Arkansas’) situation was made worse by the fact that, one, they never approved our (new dicamba) technology, and two, because it was never approved they had no training or education for growers in that process — none,” Jordan said. “That’s a big problem. It really shows how important that education and that outreach is.” Just two states over in Georgia where farmers and applicators were trained to use the new formulations there were “virtually no complaints,” she said. Almost all farmers in the U.S. and Canada had a positive experience with the new Xtend crops, and where there were problems, they can be corrected, Jordan said. “I am very grateful we are not in the same situation (as the U.S.),” Gaultier said. There have been 15 to 20 Manitoba cases of suspected crop injury due to dicamba drift or spray tank contamination, she said. That fits with the 19 or so calls Jordan said Monsanto Canada received involving about 430 acres. With Manitoba soybeans under stress from diseases and dry soils it was sometimes hard to figure out what was ailing the crop, Gaultier said. In some cases dicamba-damaged crops can recover, especially if they are young, she said. “I was surprised when I went back (to plots of non-Xtend soybeans sprayed with dicamba to simulate spray tank contamination) and looked at them weeks

later and they recovered quite well,” Gaultier said. Both Gaultier and Jordan agree there’s still room to reduce dicamba drift. “The thing to do this fall and winter is to work together with Monsanto and BASF and agronomists and producers to try and refine those application methods that reduce the risks,” Gaultier said. There are lots of hypotheses about why there were more dicamba complaints in the U.S. than Canada. For starters there were 25 million acres of Xtend soybeans and cotton in the U.S. versus 700,000 acres of Xtend soybeans in Canada — 250,000 in the West, most of which were in Manitoba. “We exceeded our targets by quite a bit in Canada in terms of Xtend acres,” Jordan said. “In the East we were budgeting somewhere around 385,000 acres and I think we had 450,000. In the West we were almost double what we expected.” Jordan also partly blames the media for keeping the story in the news and failing to put the complaints in perspective. “What we’ve seen is 99 per cent of all farmers had a very positive experience with the technology,” she said. But Jordan also said Manitoba farmers plant more wheat and canola than their American counterparts — two crops that are not susceptible to dicamba drift damage. Manitoba is typically cooler and drier too, perhaps making temperature inversions less likely. Monsanto says tank mixing and then applying herbicides such as dicamba and glyphosate, with two different ways of killing weeds, is a good way to combat herbicide-resistant weeds. Weed scientists agree saying it’s more effective than rotating herbicides. allan@fbcpublishing.com

Reminder Public Notice

You’re Invited

to share your views about the proposed rate increases from Manitoba Public Insurance The Manitoba Public Insurance Corporation (MPI) has applied to the Public Utilities Board (Board) for a 2.7 per cent increase to Basic Autopac vehicle insurance rates and premiums, effective on March 1, 2018. Further details are available at the MPI website, www.mpi.mb.ca or the Board’s website at www.pubmanitoba.ca. A public hearing on the proposed increases will be held on: Monday, October 2, 2017 9:00 a.m. Public Utilities Board Hearing Room 4th Floor, 330 Portage Avenue., Winnipeg, MB R3C 0C4 If you are interested in learning about these rate increases, you are encouraged to attend the hearing, observe the hearing via live streaming, or provide your perspectives through the Board’s on-line comment tool. If you wish to speak at the hearing or make a written submission, please contact the Board secretary no later than September 1, 2017 at 204-945-2638 or toll free 1-866-854-3698. For more information, visit www.pubmanitoba.ca. Manitoba Public Utilities Board 400-330 Portage Avenue Winnipeg, Manitoba R3C 0C4 Phone: 204-945-2638 | Email: publicutilities@gov.mb.ca

Mighty majestic

This matched pair of horses enjoy a warm fall day south of Portage la Prairie.  PHOTO: JEANETTE GREAVES

Tips to reduce dicamba drift Cleaning out the spray tank is a critical step for preventing damage to other crops BY ALLAN DAWSON Co-operator staff

T

he best way to avoid dicamba drift is to follow label directions. Although dicamba can be applied to Xtend soybeans from pre-emergence to early flowering, applying pre-emergence has advantages. One is if your crop isn’t up your neighbour’s might not be either and can’t be damaged by drift. “Dicamba provides residual control for a short period of time,” Terry Buss, a pulse crop extension specialist with Manitoba Agriculture, said during the Crop Diagnostics School in Carman in July. Research shows earlier weed control boosts crop yields. Monsanto also recommends applying dicamba with nozzles that produce coarse, to ultra-coarse, droplets such as Turbo TeeJet Induction and Air Induction. Those nozzles require application rates of at least 10 gallons of water an acre. Spraying should take place when wind speeds are three to 15 kilometres an hour and at sprayer travel speeds of no more than 24 kilometres an hour. Boom height should be no more than 50 centimetres, Monsanto says. Farmers shouldn’t spray during inversions or when wind conditions are dead calm, Buss said. The spray might not penetrate the crop canopy and could move to a neighbouring field. “There is potential for a lot of drift damage if we are not doing things properly,” he said. Farmers and their employees should also pay more attention to what they and their neighbours are growing to avoid not only drift, but spraying the wrong field, Buss said. Also be aware of recropping intervals. Manitoba’s Guide to Field Crop Protection 2017 says after applying one litre of Monsanto’s dicamba (called XtendiMax with VaporGrip Technology) per acre, farmers should grow only cereals, corn, soybeans or white beans the year after. After applying a half-litre per acre, only grow cereals, corn, soybeans, white beans or canola the next year. “If applications are made after Sept. 1, or if

dry weather persists after application, crop injury may occur the following spring,” the guide states. Cleaning all the dicamba out of a spray tank isn’t hard, but critical. “Eight ounces of dicamba solution — not the concentrated product, but the solution left in a big sprayer filled up with something else — can cause (injury) symptoms,” Buss said. “If you leave three gallons of solution in that sprayer... and then fill up and go spray something else susceptible you can actually cause yield loss.” Monsanto’s XtendiMax with VaporGrip Technology label calls for cleaning sprayers immediately after application and using a triple-rinse procedure as follows: 1. A fter spraying immediately drain the sprayer, including boom and lines. Do not allow the spray solution to remain in the spray boom lines overnight prior to flushing. 2. Flush tank, hoses, boom and nozzles with clean water. 3. Inspect and clean all strainers, screens and filters. 4. Prepare a cleaning solution with a commercial detergent or sprayer cleaner or ammonia according to the manufacturer’s directions. 5. Take care to wash all parts of the tank, including the inside top surface. Start agitation in the sprayer and thoroughly recirculate the cleaning solution for at least 15 minutes. All visible deposits must be removed from the spraying system. 6. Flush hoses, spray lines and nozzles for at least one minute with the cleaning solution. 7. Repeat above steps two additional times to accomplish an effective triple rinse. 8. Remove nozzles, screens and strainers and clean separately in the cleaning solution after completing the above procedures. 9. Appropriately dispose of rinsate from steps one to seven in compliance with all applicable laws and regulations. 10. Drain sump, filter and lines. 11. Rinse the complete spraying system with clean water. All rinse water must be disposed of in compliance with municipal, provincial, and federal guidelines. allan@fbcpublishing.com


7

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

TAXES Continued from page 1

the use of private corporations to reduce personal income taxes. But as Oct. 2 and the end of the 75-day public consultation period looms, farm advisers grow increasingly worried their clients have yet to figure out just how significantly these new rules will affect them.

Succession planning This impacts nothing less than farmers’ ability to pass a farm to the next generation, said Mona Brown, an attorney and tax law expert with Brown and Associates Law Office in Carman. “They’re really harming that possibility of keeping the family farm in existence because there won’t be a way to do it without paying huge tax,” she said. “And the reality is these rules are now going to be so complicated that people will be forced to hire professionals who will be forced to charge a bunch of dollars just to try to sort out the rules for each and every situation. I cannot think of one farm client who will not be affected by these rules.” Brown has prepared a document that details how restricting capital gains deductions earned by minors and restricting the use of family trusts will affect farmers and small-business owners. This is targeting critical tax planning strategies used by many farmers and small-business people and doing so retroactively, she states in that document. Income splitting, paying dividends to family members, and use of lifetime capital gains deductions, will all be subject to new restrictions. For example, children under the age of 18 who receive a capital gain will not be able to use their deduction on any property, and capital gains allocated from a family trust will no longer be eligible for a deduction. All capital gains earned by an individual who is related to the farmer will be subject to a “reasonableness test.” Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) will be looking at whether the amount is “reasonable” given the work done for the business by the person claiming the exemption, and any income over what CRA deems reasonable will be taxed at the highest marginal rate.

the capital gains exemption,” she writes in her summary. “If the sale is to a related party, it won’t even be treated as a capital gain, but as a dividend, with even worse tax treatment. This can be a major problem where two brothers are farming together and one brother is buying out the other’s family.” As of January 1, 2018 family trusts can no longer be used to allocate capital gains to beneficiaries to use their capital gains exemptions either. Tax law experts also have significant concerns with the provision of a one-time ‘special election,’ allowing individuals to use capital gains deductions under the current tax rules until Dec. 31, 2018. For starters, doing so will mean paying a tax called the alternative minimum tax (AMT) — and it will be steep. It’s an option that basically favours the wealthy, Brown said. “There’s a number of reasons why people won’t be able to use that exemption,” she said. “The

main one is they won’t be able to pay the alternative minimum tax. It could be $50,000. If you’re a wealthy person you may be able to afford that. But if you’re a farmer who doesn’t have that kind of disposable income, it’s just going to be beyond you.”

Little consideration What this essentially boils down to is higher taxes looming, and far greater complications for succession and estate planning, making selling the farm to family members more costly than selling to someone outside the family from a tax point of view. There seems no regard at all given as to how this will affect the family farm corporation, Brown said. “I don’t think it was the intention to muck about with farmers, but they seem to have no concept of what they’ve done.” “They should have exempted farmers from all of this. These

rules were made in Ottawa and Toronto by employees who were trying to attack certain very specific transactions predominantly done by professionals who had management companies and management partnerships. But what they’ve done is used a sledge hammer to try to solve a problem that only needed a thumbnail clipper. They’ve tarnished everyone with the same brush and changed the rules for everyone.” At the end of last week pressure continued to mount from a new 42-member Coalition for Small Business Tax Fairness to abandon the scheme. Farm organizations across the country, which are part of the coalition, have also decried the timing of the consultations, saying it doesn’t give farmers enough time to tackle the complexities nor allow for meaningful consultation. The Canadian Federation of Agriculture (CFA) is urging farmers and their organ-

izations to contact their MPs immediately. Along with other farm groups it wants these tax reform proposals taken off the table and reconsidered until more fulsome consultation has taken place. “These tax proposals represent transformative changes that would bring about major uncertainty for farms that are incorporated, especially for multi-generational family farms,” said CFA president Ron Bonnett in a news release August 31. lorraine@fbcpublishing.com

For further reading: www.brownlawoffice.org www.cafanet.ca www.mnp.ca/en/posts/howproposed-tax-changes-couldimpact-you-and-your-business

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Family labour As well, the government is tightening rules that recognize the labour of farmers’ children under the age of 25 who work on the farm. If they’re not working there on “a regular, continuous or substantial basis,” they will not be considered to be working there at all, and therefore not eligible to receive dividends, Brown also says in her summary document. The practice of having children and spouses subscribe for common shares in the farm corporation to split income is also being targeted. “If the government decides that the contribution of labour and capital by the child is insufficient, the proceeds of a sale can be taxed and be considered ‘split income’ and the capital gain will be taxed at the highest rate and not eligible for

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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

FESTIVALS Contact us with your event, dates, location and contact info at news@fbcpublishing.com. Sept. 15-16: Manitoba Fibre Festival, Red River Exhibition Park, 3977 Portage Ave., Winnipeg. Visit manitobafibrefestival.com. Sept. 15-17: Harvest Moon Festival, Clearwater. Visit www. harvestmoonfestival.ca. Sept. 22-24: Scarecrow Days, Souris. Visit www. sourismanitoba.com. Sept. 23: 25th annual Teulon Pumpkinfest, Teulon Rockwood Centennial Centre, 14 Main St., Teulon. Call 204-467-9064 or visit teulonpumpkinfest.com. Oct. 7: Roland Pumpkin Fair. Visit rolandpumpkinfair.pbworks. com. Oct. 25-28: Manitoba Ag Ex, Keystone Centre, Brandon. Call 204-726-3590 or visit manitobaagex.com.

New STARS app calls for help 24-7 Smartphone app ideal for those working alone and in remote locations, say STARS officials BY LORRAINE STEVENSON Co-operator staff

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new smartphone app w o n’t m a k e h a r v e s t safer, but it could make it easier to get help if emergencies occur. Farm workers who are working alone in remote locations now have access to a new technology developed by Shock Trauma Air Rescue Service (STARS). SOLUS™ is a new smartphone app that enables a person to receive 24-7 emergency assistance anywhere in Canada where a cell signal can be received. When activated, the paid service connects the individual with a live person in the STARS Emergency Link Centre (ELC). STARS notifies the user’s predefined emergency contacts, while at the same time dispatching the necessary emergency response. Mapping software provides the location of the person in trouble.

“Our goal for this app is the same as always... to help someone on what is likely their worst day, possibly saving their life.” Erin Sharp STARS’ director, business development

The integration with STARS’ Emergency Link Centre is what sets it apart from other apps that monitor individuals. “The difference in this membership-based service is that when you activate the button you are connected directly to Emergency Link Centre that then connects you to the 911 call centre in your area and to emergency service personnel if that’s what you require,” said Grant Therrien, base director for STARS in Manitoba.

“It’s certainly not a way to bypass 911. It’s more of an enhancement.” An additional feature of the service is STARS’ Neighbour Helping Neighbour safety network, which can include others the user wants notified in an emergency. They can often get there before emergency services and can provide a first line of assistance. SOLUS™ users are encouraged, though not required, to enrol in the program. SOLUS™ was developed as a personal version of the safety and monitoring services STARS offers larger companies, among the 4,000 registered sites with its Emergency Link Centre. “Our goal for this app is the same as always... to help someone on what is likely their worst day, possibly saving their life,” said STARS’ director, business development, Erin Sharp. The app is suitable for anyone working, travelling or playing alone in rural or dangerous environments, where medical

assistance may be far away and difficult to connect with. The word solus is derived from the Latin word meaning “alone” or “unaccompanied.” STARS understands the agricultural workplace very well and sees this as an important safety tool for farmers, Therrien said. “We are hopeful that this is something that will meet the need in this industry and others who work alone and in remote areas who want a quick solution to activate some help,” he said. “We’ve already started responding to unfortunate incidents related to that sector. We just want producers to be safe and know we’re there if something happens.” Users can subscribe online for $9.99 per month and download the app from iTunes and Google Play stores. For more information log on to: https://www.stars.ca/mb/ what-we-do/stars-emergencylink-centre/industry-services/ solus. lorraine@fbcpublishing.com

WHAT’S UP Please forward your agricultural events to daveb@fbcpublishing. com or call 204-944-5762. Sept. 14: First Aid for Horses Clinic with Dr. Dave Snell, 7-9 p.m., Poco-Razz Farm, 130 Greenview Rd., Winnipeg. For more info or to preregister (required) visit www. pocorazzfarm.ca/?page=12 or call 204-255-4717. Sept. 15-16: Manitoba Fibre Festival, Red River Exhibition Park, 3977 Portage Ave., Winnipeg. For more info visit manitobafibrefestival.com. Sept. 17: Manitoba Open Farm Day. For more info or to register your farm), visit openfarmday.ca. Sept. 23-24: Manitoba Plowing Association’s Plowing Days, two miles north and half a mile west of junction of Hwys. 1 and 5 near Carberry. For more info call 204-834-2659 (evenings). Sept. 25-28: Agricultural Bioscience International Conference (ABIC 2017), RBC Convention Centre, 375 York Ave., Winnipeg. For more info or to register visit www.abic.ca/ abic2017. Oct. 14: Manitoba Rural Women’s Day: A Healthy Mind is a Treasure to Find, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Minnedosa Community Conference Centre, 63 Main St N., Minnedosa. For more info visit www.mbwi.ca/manitobarural-womens-day-2017/. Oct. 18-19: Wolf and Carnivore Conference, Riverlodge Place, Thompson. For more info visit www.thompsonspiritway.ca/ conference/. Oct. 28: Manitoba Rural Women’s Day: A Healthy Mind is a Treasure to Find, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Community Hall, 76 Second Ave., Komarno. For more info visit www.mbwi.ca/manitobarural-womens-day-2017/.

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Nov. 2: Keystone Agricultural Producers fall advisory council meeting, 9:30 a.m., William Glesby Centre, 11 Second St. NE, Portage la Prairie. For more info call 204-697-1140.

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9

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Foodgrains Bank harvests rolling in The grassroots harvests help ensure food security throughout the world BY LARRY GOMPF Co-operator contributor

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group of Glenlea-area farmers took time to CHIPIN for global food security late last month. Under a blue sky and ideal harvesting conditions on the morning of August 30, the farmers gathered with their equipment to quickly thresh 115 acres of Brandon spring wheat for the Canadian Foodgrains Bank under the Creating Hope In People In Need program known as CHIPIN. With support from local businesses and volunteer time and equipment from local farmers, the 115 acres were seeded, fertilized, sprayed and nurtured under ideal growing conditions in 2017. On harvest day there was an accumulation of five combines, an equal number of grain carts and enough trucks of various sizes to whisk the grain away to the nearby G3 elevator as fast as it came off the field. The yield was excellent measuring 88 bu./acre with a protein level of 13 per cent and a bushel weight of 65 pounds, making the project a great success in the eyes of the organizers. Amanda Thorsteinsson, communications manager for the Canadian Foodgrains Bank, said the excellent

Glenlea-area farmers took off 115 acres of spring wheat for the Canadian Foodgrains Bank recently.   PHOTO: LARRY GOMPF

yields this year from many of the 250 projects across the country are especially significant because it will mean access to more funds from other sources too. “What is donated from the sale of crop production from all the projects across Canada is matched by the Government of Canada on a 4:1 basis,” she said. “It is a commitment to a maximum of $25 million a year for a five-year program, so it’s very significant.”

In 2016-17, the Canadian Foodgrains Bank provided over $41 million of assistance to support 900,000 people in 35 countries. The grassroots efforts are organized by local farmers who wanted to help share their success with those less fortunate. Doug Bartmanovich who is secretary-treasurer of the Glenlea project, credits its success to the various business partners who contributed to bring the project together. The land is leased from the University of Manitoba at Glenlea. The SeCan seed variety Brandon was donated by Manness Seeds of Domain, fertilizer was compliments of Domain Co-op and other crop inputs were provided by Bayer CropScience, BASF and CPS of Ste. Agathe. In addition, the local G3 elevator tacked on a $5/tonne premium on the delivered grain. “We are thankful that CHIPIN Glenlea was able to produce a great crop of wheat in 2017 thanks to many helping hands including the Lord’s,” said Bartmanovich. The Foodgrains Bank is a partnership of 15 churches and church agencies working together to end global hunger. Other harvests throughout the province will also be coming off in the next few weeks, including a Killarney-area harvest of 160 acres of canola that were taken off this week.

Fatal ATV collision A 55-year-old man is dead following the incident STAFF

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n Se p t e m b e r 4 , just after 7 p.m., Tre h e r n e RC M P received a report of an all-terrain vehicle collision in the RM of Victoria on Road 40 North, close to the intersection of Road 65 West. When officers arrived on scene, the ATV was in the middle of Road 40 Nor th and an AT V trailer was flipped over in the north ditch. Early investigation indicates the ATV was travelling eastbound on Road 40 North when the driver lost control and the ATV overturned. It is undetermined at this time if the ATV did a complete rollover. The 55-year-old male dr i ve r a n d l o n e r i d e r from Holland, Manitoba was transported to hospital, where he was pronounced deceased. He was not wearing a helmet. Alcohol does not appear to be a factor in the collision. He was travelling alone at the time of the incident. The investigation is ongoing.

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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

LIVESTOCK MARKETS (Friday to Thursday) Winnipeg September 8, 2017 Slaughter Cattle Steers — Heifers — D1, 2 Cows Not available D3 Cows this week Bulls — Feeder Cattle (Price ranges for feeders refer to top-quality animals only) Steers (901+ lbs.) — (801-900 lbs.) — (701-800 lbs.) — (601-700 lbs.) — (501-600 lbs.) — (401-500 lbs.) — Heifers (901+ lbs.) Not available (801-900 lbs.) this week (701-800 lbs.) — (601-700 lbs.) — (501-600 lbs.) — (401-500 lbs.) —

Heifers

Alberta South 133.00 - 133.75 133.75 - 133.75 82.00 - 98.00 78.00 - 87.00 — $ 161.00 - 185.00 172.00 - 200.00 180.00 - 208.00 190.00 - 213.00 193.00 - 216.00 200.00 - 227.00 $ 149.00 - 170.00 155.00 - 179.00 162.00 - 184.00 164.00 - 189.00 174.00 - 192.00 185.00 - 200.00

($/cwt) (1,000+ lbs.) (850+ lbs.)

$

(901+ lbs.) (801-900 lbs.) (701-800 lbs.) (601-700 lbs.) (501-600 lbs.) (401-500 lbs.) (901+ lbs.) (801-900 lbs.) (701-800 lbs.) (601-700 lbs.) (501-600 lbs.) (401-500 lbs.)

Futures (September 8, 2017) in U.S. Fed Cattle Close Change October 2017 106.23 0.82 December 2017 111.13 2.03 February 2018 115.15 2.80 April 2018 116.08 2.73 June 2018 109.55 2.02 August 2018 107.90 1.90

Feeder Cattle September 2017 October 2017 November 2017 January 2018 March 2018 April 2018

Cattle Slaughter Canada East West Manitoba U.S.

Ontario 114.15 - 130.65 97.05 - 131.25 58.22 - 77.44 58.22 - 77.44 78.08 - 98.25 $ 155.69 - 190.45 168.30 - 186.82 170.85 - 202.37 161.90 - 205.80 174.16 - 223.89 193.94 - 241.90 $ 132.28 - 148.98 136.62 - 156.30 152.13 - 182.38 164.49 - 190.59 152.72 - 188.72 170.15 - 213.89

Previous Year­ 58,895 12,496 46,399 NA 613,000

Close 145.55 146.15 145.93 143.95 142.10 142.35

Change 3.38 3.75 3.45 4.20 4.25 3.80

Week Ending Sep 2, 2017 635 28,973 19,757 1,293 1,275 5,484 276

Prime AAA AA A B D E

Previous Year 987 33,783 14,847 484 1,507 6,307 397

Hog Prices (Friday to Thursday) ($/100 kg) E - Estimation MB. ($/hog) MB (All wts.) (Fri-Thurs.) MB (Index 100) (Fri-Thurs.) ON (Index 100) (Mon.-Thurs.)

Source: Manitoba Agriculture Current Week 166E 154E 156.39

Last Week 178.69 165.95 168.95

Last Year (Index 100) 164.75 152.14 150.58

162.82

176.24

155.73

PQ (Index 100) (Mon.-Fri.)

Close 61.45

0.05

December 2017

58.28

0.25

February 2018 April 2018 May 2018

63.28 68.15 73.90

0.63 1.00 1.48

CNSC

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olumes are slowly increasing at cattle markets across Manitoba as more auction marts open for the fall season. Nearly 3,000 cattle made their way before buyers during the week ended Sept. 8, compared to a little over 1,000 animals the week before. “The good-quality yearlings were very decent; we had about 100 new-crop calves here this week, so we’re just getting started,” said Robin Hill of Heartland Livestock at Virden, adding the animals arrived at a good time. “It’s been a while since large drafts of yearlings sold at a live auction.” Around the province, live cattle and feeder cattle prices generally improved by $3-$5. Many of the purchases came from local operators as well as buyers from the west. More cattle will come to market as the month progresses and farmers get off their combines, Hill said. “Definitely by the end of the month.” Prices for butcher cows and bulls slipped a bit around the province. At one outlet, prices for cows fell $10 as ranchers brought in a large number of animals due to the dry weather. Bulls traded a little easier, though. Some softening on the slaughter side is typical for this time of year, Hill said. “The packers know there’s lots of cows that are going to come to town… This is when they

Reuters

Sheep and Lambs Winnipeg Wooled Fats — — Not Available This Week — —

Chickens Minimum broiler prices as of April 13, 2010 Under 1.2 kg..................................................$1.5130 1.2 - 1.65 kg....................................................$1.3230 1.65 - 2.1 kg....................................................$1.3830 2.1 - 2.6 kg.....................................................$1.3230

Turkeys Minimum prices as of September 11, 2017 Broiler Turkeys (6.2 kg or under, live weight truck load average) Grade A ................................................$1.925 Undergrade ........................................$1.835 Hen Turkeys (between 6.2 and 8.5 kg liveweight truck load average) Grade A .................................................$1.915 Undergrade .........................................$1.815 Light Tom/Heavy Hen Turkeys (between 8.5 and 10.8 kg liveweight truck load average) Grade A .................................................$1.915 Undergrade .........................................$1.815 Tom Turkeys (10.8 and 13.3 kg, live weight truck load average) Grade A................................................. $1.890 Undergrade......................................... $1.805 Prices are quoted f.o.b. producers premise.

Japan picks ‘Wagyu Olympics’ winner BY MEGUMI LIM

Other Market Prices Choice (110+ lb.) (95 - 109 lb.) (80 - 94 lb.) (Under 80 lb.) (New crop)

“We are seeing the CME go higher today but with the dollar increasing we haven’t gained anything probably.”

DAVE SIMS

robin hill Heartland Livestock

come. Usually we see a slide in the kill market this time of year.” St re n g t h i n t h e U . S . f u t u re s m a rk e t occurred early in the week. On Thursday, wholesale beef prices turned lower. Hill noted the rising Canadian dollar was also cutting into ranchers’ profits. “On the feeder cattle, it’s not going to help in the marketplace,” he said. “We are seeing the CME (Chicago Mercantile Exchange) go higher today but with the dollar increasing we haven’t gained anything probably.” On the feed side, Hill said there wasn’t as much grass for cattle to eat these days. “Pasture conditions are drier than they have been over the past five years.” Moving forward, Hill advised farmers to call ahead and book their cattle, as bookings are already being made for sales down the road. “So there should be a lot of cattle coming to town.” Producers are also reminded to get their premise ID numbers from the government this fall. The measure becomes mandatory in 2018. Dave Sims writes for Commodity News Service Canada, a Winnipeg company specializing in grain and commodity market reporting.

Change

October 2017

$/cwt Ewes Lambs

A softer slaughter cattle market isn’t unusual right now

briefs

Futures (September 8, 2017) in U.S. Hogs

Autumn gradually arriving at Manitoba cattle markets

$

Cattle Grades (Canada)

Week Ending Sep 2, 2017 58,274 12,531 45,743 NA 622,000

$1 Cdn: $0.8242 U.S. $1 U.S: $1.2132 Cdn.

column

Cattle Prices

Slaughter Cattle Grade A Steers Grade A Heifers D1, 2 Cows D3 Cows Bulls Steers

EXCHANGES: September 8, 2017

Toronto 128.01 - 165.13 214.66 - 236.14 215.18 - 242.42 219.84 - 252.61 220.69 - 277.63 —

SunGold Specialty Meats —

Eggs Minimum prices to producers for ungraded eggs, f.o.b. egg grading station, set by the Manitoba Egg Producers Marketing Board effective November 10, 2013. New Previous A Extra Large $2.00 $2.05 A Large 2.00 2.05 A Medium 1.82 1.87 A Small 1.40 1.45 A Pee Wee 0.3775 0.3775 Nest Run 24 + 1.8910 1.9390 B 0.45 0.45 C 0.15 0.15

More than 500 cattle paraded through a ring in northern Japan in the “Wagyu Olympics” to win prizes and renown as the most fertile — and mouthwatering — examples of “wagyu” beef, increasingly popular among foodies. The six-day contest that ended on Sept. 11 saw breeders of wagyu, prized for its luscious marbling, compete for fame in categories such as best beef cattle, best bull and most fertile cow. “I really can’t believe it,

I’m so happy,” said 69-yearold Tadanao Sato, who claimed a trophy and bragging rights for nurturing Fumiayame, who won top prize for her beauty and high fertility. Fertility is judged by the shape of the cow’s shoulders, its toned legs, and the “topline,” or the flatness of the back. Beef quality is judged by the cattle’s fat marbling and leanness. Overseas demand for wagyu has soared since widespread import bans were lifted more than a decade after an outbreak of mad cow disease in 2001. In 2016, beef was Japan’s top export in the agricultural and livestock category, raking in 13.6 billion yen (US$125 million).

“These last few years, the boom in Japanese food, as well as widespread praise for the high quality of wagyu, have caused overseas demand to grow rapidly,” said Toru Takano, an official of the National Federation of Agricultural Co-operative Associations. Though “seed cattle” winners at the five-yearly event, such as Fumiayame, go home to be cosseted and produce future generations of winners, the beef division winners are slaughtered the day after the judging and are promptly frozen and auctioned at the Olympics. The most expensive beef went for 54,001 yen (US$498) per kilo, and the most moderate for 3,241 yen (US$29.77).

Goats Kids Billys Mature

Winnipeg ( Hd Fats) 190.00 - 245.00 250.00 - 390.00 —

Toronto ($/cwt) 111.21 - 225.38 — 125.35 - 263.84

Horses <1,000 lbs. 1,000 lbs.+

Winnipeg ($/cwt) — —

Toronto ($/cwt) 18.55 - 30.00 40.00 - 65.00

Looking for results?  Check out the market reports from livestock auctions around the province.   » PaGe 14


11

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

GRAIN MARKETS column

Manitoba Elevator Prices

Off-the-combine sales are bearish on canola values

Average quotes as of September 11, 2017 ($/tonne) Future

Basis

E. Manitoba wheat

237.64

6.13

243.78

W. Manitoba wheat

237.64

-8.97

228.67

E. Manitoba canola

489.70

-25.05

464.65

W. Manitoba canola

489.70

-31.62

458.08

Irma and Harvey create a cautious tone in U.S. markets Phil Franz-Warkentin CNSC

I

CE Futures Canada canola contracts fell to the bottom edge of their two-month trading range during the week ended Sept. 8, as seasonal harvest pressure and a soaring loonie provided a double whammy of bearish news. Weather conditions were close to ideal for farmers to make good progress across much of the Prairies, and the resulting influx of sales off the combine saw the commercial pipeline fill right up. Visible canola supplies in the country had dropped to their tightest level in four years the previous week, at 511,500 tonnes. However, with farmer deliveries of over half a million tonnes over the following week and only lacklustre exports, the stocks were back at the much more comfortable level of 803,700 tonnes in the latest Canadian Grain Commission data released Sept. 8. The seasonal harvest pressure should keep a lid on canola over the next month, with any upside dependent on outside factors in the meantime. The Canadian dollar climbed well above 82 U.S. cents during the week, following an unexpected move by the Bank of Canada to raise interest rates. The rising currency cut into crush margins by about $10 over the course, and could also dissuade some future export business.

Cash

Source: pdqinfo.ca

Statistics Canada also released its ending stocks report for the 2016-17 crop year on Sept. 6. The canola carry-out of 1.3 million tonnes was at the lower end of trade expectations. However, any support for prices was short lived, as all eyes remain focused on the new-crop harvest. Wheat ending stocks of about 6.9 million tonnes were at the top end of pre-report estimates, but were also largely brushed aside in the face of the 2017 harvest and generally better-than-expected yield reports. In the U.S., the bulk of the corn and soybean harvest is still to come and the futures kept to relatively sideways trading ranges during the week. The U.S. Department of Agriculture releases its monthly supply/ demand report on Sept. 12, and the data should provide some nearby direction for the markets. Average trade estimates call for slight declines in both soybean and corn yields, which should be somewhat supportive. The threat of Hurricane Irma was also in the background, as the massive storm was set to make landfall on Florida over the weekend (Sept. 9-10). While the storm may not have an immediate impact on major grain- and oilseed-growing regions, the general sense of caution was still felt in Chicago. Activity in currency and financial markets stemming from both Irma and Harvey could provide some nearby direction as harvest operations start up in the U.S. Midwest. Phil Franz-Warkentin writes for Commodity News Service Canada, a Winnipeg company specializing in grain and commodity market reporting.

For three-times-daily market reports and more from Commodity News Service Canada, visit the Markets section at www.manitobacooperator.ca.

Port Prices As of Friday, September 8, 2017 ($/tonne) Last Week

Weekly Change

U.S. hard red winter 12% Houston

179.67

17.27

U.S. spring wheat 14% Portland

274.38

-3.02

Canola Thunder Bay

499.70

-7.60

Canola Vancouver

514.70

-2.60

Closing Futures Prices

Â

As of Thursday, September 7, 2017 ($/tonne) Last Week

Weekly Change

ICE canola

489.70

-7.60

ICE milling wheat

233.00

1.00

ICE barley

145.00

0.00

Mpls. HRS wheat

231.58

6.71

Chicago SRW wheat

152.03

-2.48

152.67.63

1.29

135.52

1.67

Oats

151.24

6.32

Soybeans

351.46

5.33

Soymeal

331.59

8.49

Soyoil

762.71

-15.88

Kansas City HRW wheat Corn

Cash Prices Winnipeg As of Friday, September 8, 2017 ($/tonne) Last Week

Weekly Change

Feed wheat

n/a

n/a

Feed barley

156.16

0.46

Rye

n/a

n/a

428.32

-22.44

n/a

n/a

Oats

174.42

-7.13

Soybeans

363.40

3.31

Sunflower (NuSun) Fargo, ND ($U.S./CWT)

17.45

n/a

Sunflower (Confection) Fargo, ND ($U.S./CWT)

Ask

Ask

Flaxseed Feed peas

Rising loonie cuts into western Canadian wheat bids Seasonal harvest pressure also drags on cash wheat values BY PHIL FRANZ-WARKENTIN CNS Canada

H

ard red spring wheat bids in Western Canada continued to trend lower during the week ended Sept. 8, as seasonal harvest pressure and a soaring loonie weighed on values despite gains in the Minneapolis futures. Depending on the location, average Canada Western Red Spring (CWRS) wheat prices were down by $2-$6 per tonne across the Prairie provinces, according to price quotes from a crosssection of delivery points compiled by PDQ (Price and Data Quotes). Average prices ranged from about $228 per tonne in western Manitoba to as high as $245 in Alberta. Quoted basis levels varied from loca-

Average (CWRS) prices ranged from about $228 per tonne in western Manitoba to as high as $245 in Alberta.

tion to location, but generally softened by about $14, to range from about $9 below the futures to $8 per tonne above the futures when using the grain company methodology of quoting the basis as the difference between U.S. dollardenominated futures and Canadian dollar cash bids. When accounting for currency exchange rates by adjusting Canadian prices to U.S. dollars, CWRS bids ranged from US$188 to US$202 per tonne, which was unchanged on a U.S. dollar

basis on the week. That would put the currency-adjusted basis levels at about US$35-$49 below the futures. Looking at it the other way around, if the Minneapolis futures are converted to Canadian dollars, CWRS basis levels across Western Canada range from $42 to $59 below the futures. Canada Prairie Spring Red (CPSR) wheat bids posted small gains in most regions, with prices ranging from $155 to $170 per tonne. Average durum prices were steady to

down by as much as $19 per tonne, with bids in Saskatchewan coming in at about $265-$269 per tonne. The December spring wheat contract in Minneapolis, off of which most CWRS contracts Canada are based, was quoted at US$6.4675 per bushel on Sept. 8, up 15 U.S. cents from the previous week. Kansas City hard red winter wheat futures, traded in Chicago, are more closely linked to CPSR in Canada. The December K.C. wheat contract was quoted Sept. 8 at US$4.415 per bushel, up 2.75 U.S. cents compared to the previous week. The December Chicago Board of Trade soft wheat contract settled Sept. 8 at US$4.3775, down one U.S. cent on the week. The Canadian dollar settled Sept. 8 at 82.43 U.S. cents, up roughly two cents on the week.


12

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

LIVESTOCK h u s b a n d r y — t h e s c i e n c e , S K I L L O R ART O F F AR M IN G

Plotting course for the future of fed cattle price reporting Canada’s cattle industry has been watching with a wary eye as price data thins, but how to fix the problem? BY ALEXIS STOCKFORD

“We want to see which options float to the top. I don’t know that there’s any of them that we want to say ‘this’ is our preferred option or not.”

Co-operator staff

T

he cattle industry is weighing its options for a better price-reporting system that will address a chronic shortfall of information. In recent years cattle price data has become thin on the ground, something that has big implications for insurance programs, trade disputes and day-to-day decisions that rely on accurate market information. Canada’s reporting system is voluntary, said Brenna Grant, manager of Canfax Research Ser vices, the organization responsible for collecting cattle price data in Western Canada. “It’s always a challenge and we’re always encouraging producers to report,” she said. “We have confidentiality rules that we comply with in order to have a certain number of different sources reporting, but we also have to see repeatability in the prices reported. If you don’t meet those criteria, then we can’t publish prices.” Many producers, she noted, either forget or neglect to call Canfax with their prices. Brian Lemon, Manitoba Beef Producers general manager, pointed to the impact on insurance programs, which use market prices to establish compensation, as well as price data’s role in the country-of-origin labelling (COOL) dispute between Canada and the U.S. The law required pork and beef to be marked with which country an animal passed through at various stages of production, causing Canadian cows and pigs to be segregated and, it was argued, less attractive to U.S. processors. The issue went through multiple dispute settlement rounds and appeals before the World Trade Organization ruled that Canada and Mexico could impose over $1 billion in retaliatory tariffs in December 2015. COOL was repealed soon after. “The price reporting that we had in the past was a big part of us being able to show the damage that the U.S.’s mandatory country-of-origin labelling had done to our industry here in Canada and it was a big part of our World Trade Organization fight against the COOL policies in the U.S., so it’s important that we have that information as an industry,” Lemon said. At this point, it is unclear if that same trade dispute role will come back into the forefront now that the North American Free Trade Agreement renegotiation has opened. Lemon said the conversation on fed cattle price reporting is “not about preparing for NAFTA or any changes that might be coming,” although he added that

Brian Lemon Manitoba Beef Producers general manager

she said. “You might have large volumes, but it’s still a struggle to meet those confidentiality requirements and the robustness in terms of repeatability.”

Ongoing issue Lack of data is affecting the price transparency of the cattle market, with a number of knock-on effects.  PHOTO: canada beef

price reporting will be critical if the U.S. and Canada clash on cattle in the future. Grant, however, noted a different, more immediate tie-in with NAFTA talks. “Going into any trade agreement or a renegotiation of something like NAFTA, the first thing you’re going to do is evaluate where you’re seeing value in trade and live cattle trade is very important for the Canadian beef industry because with a free trade agreement, prices are arbitraged in the larger U.S. cattle market. By having price discovery here in Canada, we’re then able to see how prices are changing relative in relationship to the U.S.,” she said.

Asking for feedback This summer, the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association (CCA) asked for member feedback on seven possible courses of action, and the pros and cons of each, on fed cattle price reporting: • Do nothing; • Communicate with government and producers on thin market reporting impact; • Study the risks of low reporting to each beef sector; • U pgrade reporting agencies’ systems for automatic (and therefore easier) data downloads; • Delay price reporting; • Pay producers to report; and • E xplore mandator y price reporting. The online survey ran from June 5 to July 14 and results were presented to the Price Discovery Task Force and during CCA meetings in early August. “We want to see which options float to the top,” Lemon said. “I don’t know that there’s any of them that we want to say ‘this’ is our preferred option or not. I think at this point we’ll let the survey do its work and let the

folks around the table have their debates.” Sector-specific risk assessment would fill a gap left by the 2014 Price Discovery Task Force, but critics say the importance of robust data on pricing mechanisms is already well established and that such a sector-by-sector risk study would be of limited value. Likewise, upgraded systems may lower the effort it takes for producers to report, but may prove costly. “It becomes very expensive very quickly for a couple of reasons,” Grant said. “First, there are a lot of different programs out there that feedlots use and so you have to provide interoperability with a lot of different programs. Second is that not all of the feedlots use all of the functions within those programs, so they maybe use them for performance data collection, but not their prices. Their prices might be kept separately in a spreadsheet, so trying to get something that actually works in terms of making automatic data downloads from producers very easy for them to do has the potential to be quite expensive.” More communication, however, may be more feasible, she added. “In a voluntary system we always have to be communicating the reason why producers are doing this and recognizing the fact that producers have been doing this voluntarily for over 40 years and have been able to successfully have very robust cash reporting,” she said. The survey noted, however, that Canfax has already attempted reaching out to producers. “An information-only approach has had limited success,” the survey reads. “The value of this approach assumes that this topic is not well understood at this point.”

Fewer cash sales The thinning cash market has added to price discovery concerns. Reporting agencies in both the U.S. and Canada have noted smaller volumes passing through cash markets as more and more producers turn to formula pricing and forward contracts. “We need to recognize that’s a change that’s happened across the North American industry and be accommodating and adjusting to those marketing realities and also continually encouraging those producers to continually report,” Grant said. The survey argues that the thin cash market may mean data is insufficient even if producers are paid to report. In a 2014 paper published by the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association, Ted Schroeder of Kansas State University noted that weekly data sets were including fewer transactions as the cash market thinned, to the point that prices reported by Canfax or the U.S. Department of Agriculture were questionable in some weeks. “In such situations, relatively small numbers of transactions that are not representative can have economically important influences on reported prices,” he wrote. In fall 2014, Canfax introduced enhanced price reporting, which covers the expanding forward contract and net formula prices as well as the cash and grid markets. By 2016, Grant noted that cash volumes had over doubled, although part of that increase was due to marketing incentives making cash more attractive. Formula and contract volumes had also increased, although enhanced price reporting is still thin in those areas. “That comes down to the consolidation within the industry,”

It’s not the first time the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association has wrestled with price discovery and scarcity of market data. In 2013, Canfax had four weeks where no fed steer prices were reported in Alberta and three weeks without fed heifer prices. The next year, those numbers increased to nine weeks without steer prices and 25 weeks when no heifer prices were reported. The lack of data raised concern about the Western Livestock Price Insurance Program, which requires weekly prices to operate. In 2014, the CCA made a concerted effort to bolster reporting, passing a motion that “fed cattle price reporting to a third party (e.g. Canfax, BFO, FPBQ) become a program requirement for all federal/provincial programs that require fed cattle price data to operate.” The motion hit an obstacle, however, when it was brought before the federal government. The government was concerned that reporting as a program requirement would be hard to enforce, cause logistical and administrative problems, might affect different beef sectors unequally and might lower participation in business risk management programs. Two and a half years after the motion was tabled, government asked industry to revisit the issue. “In part, I think it’s as much about logistics,” Lemon said. “You know, who collects the data? Who owns the data? Making sure that privacy rights and commercial sensitivities are maintained, proprietary information is not shared unwittingly. It’s about doing it the right way, I think, as much as anything else, but I think that everybody accepts that this kind of information is important to our industry.” The Canadian Cattlemen’s Association is still meeting with provincial and federal governments on the issue, Grant said. astockford@farmmedia.com


13

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Ramping up on phosphorus Building soil phosphorus when fertilizer prices are lower may have big impacts for future profit, tour attendees heard Aug. 30 at the Manitoba Beef and Forage Initiatives Brookdale site BY ALEXIS STOCKFORD Co-operator staff

P

roducers got a side-byside comparison of different phosphorus treatments in alfalfa Aug. 30. The phosphorus ramp, presented during the Manitoba Beef and Forage Initiatives (MBFI) Brookdale field tour, showcased consecutive strips of alfalfa grown with progressively more phosphorus. The ramp tracks crop impact in the three years following a one-time phosphorus application ranging from no fertilization to 100 pounds per acre. “Basically, it’s a determination of what application rate of phosphorus is ideal for alfalfa in your environment,” presenter Ray Bittner of Man­ itoba Agriculture said. “Every environment is different with different moisture, different soil types.” Two ramps were established in spring 2016 at the MBFI Brook­dale site north of Brandon and in the Interlake. Final results are expected at the end of 2018. Phosphorus is a farmer’s friend in the alfalfa field. Higher phosphorus treatments showed progressively better yields in both locations, Bittner reported, although protein content showed little difference between high and low applications. Bittner found that a 60pound-per-acre treatment best balanced economic cost and yield benefit in the Interlake, although he stressed that the ideal treatment will depend heavily on what soil phosphorus levels are prior to the ramp-up. “Both of them benefited from higher phosphorus levels in yield,” Bittner said. “Possibly more importantly, we noticed that the plant forage phosphorus levels were higher on higher application rates, so the plants knew that they were being more fertilized. They were actually putting more into the forage for phosphorus. It actually did make it into the system even though we did apply it in May and started harvesting in the end of June.” Soil sat at roughly nine parts per million of phosphorus at Brookdale when plots were seeded in 2016. Bittner estimates that soil will need to reach 14 parts per million on the Olsen scale (a common measure that estimates available phosphorus) before the field will begin yielding fully. While protein counts yielded little difference, the relations h i p b e t we e n p h o s p h o r u s and number of stems flipped over the two years. In 2016, researchers saw higher-phosphorus plots with fewer stems, while in 2017, the opposite was true.

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“Take your alfalfa earlier,” Bittner advised. “Almost everybody is guilty of taking alfalfa too late and getting a high yield, but a low leaf yield in com­ parison to stems.” Bittner also argued that any phosphorus application might be more effective in midsummer, directly after the first cut and timed to take advantage of the midsummer rains to move it into the soil.

Building up The largely economic argument stemmed from years where phosphorus prices spiked, causing farmers to take a hit to their wallets if they wanted to fertilize. In 2008, global fertilizer price skyrocketed, including phosphorus-based products. According to a 2016 report by the University of Guelph, which tracked regional farm input prices over the last decade, some

“Both of them benefited from higher phosphorus levels in yield. Possibly more importantly, we noticed that the plant forage phosphorus levels were higher on higher application rates.” Ray Bittner Manitoba Agriculture

fertilizer prices jumped four to five times in the United States from 2007-08. At its peak, phosphorus-based fertilizer topped $1,000 or even $1,200 per tonne in both the U.S. and Canadian Great Lakes region, the report read. At the same time, media reports in May 2008 stated phosphorus prices had more than doubled, from $608 to $1,364 per tonne, in the few months since December the previous year. By 2009, prices had fallen once again.

Bittner encouraged farmers to build soil phosphorus during low-cost years and limit expense during times when phosphorus cost is high. Glenn Friesen, forage business development specialist with Manitoba Agriculture, said the phosphorus ramp might also impact best practices for stand longevity and weed competition, along with yield and forage quality. “For us to showcase a phosphorus ramp in that part of the world — it’s new to that

part of Manitoba. We haven’t done that kind of work before,” he said. “We know that fertility is very important in forages. It’s often thought of last in some areas and just based on the economics in the last while, it’s not on the forefront of a management priority for hay lands and so we thought that it would be valuable to have a demonstration on the farm to show that in those soil types, phosphorus fertility can play a very important role in your hay stand performance.” Stand longevity is being studied through the phosphorus ramp, although current data is limited since both the Interlake and Brandon stands are young, Bittner said. More definite longevity data is expected by the end of the experiment. astockford@farmmedia.com

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14

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

LIVESTOCK AUCTION RESULTS Weight Category

Ashern

Feeder Steers

Gladstone

Grunthal

Heartland

Heartland

Brandon

Virden

Killarney

Ste. Rose

Winnipeg

6-Sep

NO SALE

NO report available

6-Sep

6-Sep

NO SALE

8-Jun

11-Sep

50

Closed for

n/a

509

548*

n/a

710

500

Over 1,000 lbs.

n/a

summer

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

145.00-158.00

900-1,000

n/a

n/a

n/a

165.00-181.75

168.00-178.00

n/a

n/a

155.00-178.00

800-900

130.00-198.00

n/a

n/a

175.00-190.00

181.00-190.00

n/a

n/a

170.00-188.00

700-800

169.00-194.00

n/a

n/a

185.00-205.00

184.00-204.00

n/a

n/a

180.00-208.00

600-700

n/a

n/a

n/a

195.00-214.00

195.00-212.00

n/a

210.00-245.00

200.00-216.00

500-600

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

200.00-218.00

n/a

220.00-265.00

205.00-227.00

400-500

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

210.00-229.00

n/a

225.00-275.00

200.00-238.00

300-400

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

230.00-277.00

n/a

n/a

n/a

155.00-170.00

149.00-167.00

n/a

n/a

130.00-164.00

800-900

140.00-166.00

n/a

n/a

160.00-175.00

165.00-176.00

n/a

n/a

150.00-177.00

700-800

165.00-174.75

n/a

n/a

170.00-183.00

173.00-184.75

n/a

180.00-205.00

158.00-182.50

600-700

163.00-185.25

n/a

n/a

175.00-187.00

177.00-188.00

n/a

195.00-225.00

165.00-190.00

500-600

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

177.00-189.00

n/a

220.00-265.00

175.00-205.00

400-500

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

180.00-197.00

n/a

225.00-281.00

185.00-215.00

300-400

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

195.00-227.00

No. on offer

67

n/a

n/a

10

n/a

n/a

337

170

D1-D2 Cows

70.00-80.00

n/a

n/a

80.00-91.00

78.00-83.00

n/a

100.00-111.00

78.00-84.00

D3-D5 Cows

n/a

n/a

n/a

68.00-80.00

74.00-78.00

n/a

n/a

68.00-76.00

No. on offer

Feeder heifers 900-1,000 lbs.

Slaughter Market

Age Verified

82.00-87.75

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

95.00-125.00

Good Bulls

90.00-103.00

n/a

n/a

100.00-111.00

98.00-112.00

n/a

100.00-123.00

102.00-109.00

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

Butcher Steers Butcher Heifers

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

Feeder Cows

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

Fleshy Export Cows

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

Lean Export Cows

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

Heiferettes

n/a

n/a

n/a

n/a

95.00-125.00

n/a

125.00-157.00

n/a

* includes slaughter market

(Note all prices in CDN$ per cwt. These prices also generally represent the top one-third of sales reported by the auction yard.)

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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Going green all the way to the bank

A new pilot will pay producers for sustainably sourced beef, but exact payment amounts are still up in the air BY ALEXIS STOCKFORD Co-operator staff

S

elect beef producers may soon get paid for sustainability, something that has been a long-dangled carrot for farmers who have been told that auditing their farms will add value. The recently launched Canadian Beef Sustainability Acceleration pilot, run through Cargill, Verified Beef Production Plus (VBP+) and beef tracker Beef InfoXchange Systems (BIXS), will pay credit back to participating farms during its minimum oneyear tenure. Virgil Lowe, VBP+ business manager, said the pilot hopes to establish a confirmed supply chain for sustainable beef and test the chain of custody system with which meat sourcing is tracked. Participating farms must be audited through VBP+ before joining the pilot. Animals are tracked through BIXS to confirm they were raised and finished on VBP+ operations before being shipped and processed through Cargill. Meat is then sold to participating customers, who have agreed to fund the producer credit in exchange for access to verified sustainable beef. The pilot will then distribute credit back to the producer. Major retailers McDonald’s and Swiss Chalet are the first to sign on with the pilot. Both restaurant chains have submitted a target volume of sustainably sourced beef based on the amount of meat

they currently purchase from Cargill. “This is proof that we do have dollars coming down the supply chain from end-users saying, ‘We will pay producers to do further VBP+ on-farm practices,’ and that’s extremely encouraging, I think, for our industry and for the whole sustainability initiative in general,” Lowe said. Emily Murray, Cargill’s general manager for McDonald’s beef, compared the pilot to a Kickstarter campaign, where potential customers can fund a product they would like to see hit the market. Cargill hopes to see more enduse customers join McDonald’s and Swiss Chalet. The company has reached out to their beef customer bases, including grocery stores, to gauge interest. “There’s definitely other customers of our system that we believe might be interested in being able to talk about this sourcing from sustainable sources,” she said.

Open to expansion VBP+ producers may be the first paid for their efforts on sustainability, but Murray says she hopes they will not be the last. Cargill plans to align the pilot project’s standards with the incoming Canadian Roundtable for Sustainable Beef (CRSB) framework, expected later this year. The roundtable, which includes dozens of members ranging from producer groups and packing plants to retailers and researchers, is currently finalizing its sustainability guide-

“Our goal is just to get as many people as we can because I suspect the demand is going to outstrip the supply, at least in the near term... ” Virgil Lowe VBP+ business manager

lines for processors. The finished framework will include sustainability indicators for multiple points through the beef supply chain. “Producers need to be audited to the CRSB standards that are being set and so, as the CRSB recognizes other auditing bodies, then we’d recognize those audits as well and as they recognize other chain of custody and tracking methods, we’re open to recognizing those too,” Murray said. The Cargill employee also said she would be open to partner with other processors if a customer wanted to join the pilot, but did not buy meat from Cargill.

Logistics and hurdles Lowe maintained that there is an ample supply of beef from audited farms, despite the ongoing transition from Verified Beef Production to VBP+. The previous program expanded its scope last year. “I would encourage anyone who is VBP registered now to tran-

sition to VBP+ as soon as possible because the credits are only going to be available for VBP+ registered operations, not VBP operations,” Lowe said. Already registered farmers must complete a new round of training to bring themselves up to date before changing over to VBP+. As of June, an estimated 1,000 producers were registered with both VBP and VBP+ combined. The challenge, Lowe said, will come from a complex production cycle, which often includes multiple ownership changes that must now be tracked, along with the sustainability status of each farm an animal goes to. “Our goal is just to get as many people as we can because I suspect the demand is going to outstrip the supply, at least in the near term, and the more people we can get signed on sooner, the more supply we will have,” he said. The pilot is a leap of faith at this early stage, Murray admitted. The credit has been promised, but no dollar amount has been set, and Murray says those amounts will largely depend on the number of producers and end-use customers in the pilot. “We’re really hoping to, in the next couple of weeks, lock down a couple of other customers. So, knowing how many different customers are going to be contributing over the same supply will help us give an indication of how much the credit will be,” she said. “The other aspect is how many producers are on board and carcass weights and efficiency gains and all these things that we’re going to be looking at.”

Growing interest Murray added, however, that she has been impressed with both the producer interest and customer commitment to the program thus far. “They’re willing to fund now to make a claim later,” she said. “They can’t say anything that’s third-party endorsed to the consumer today about the sustainability of their beef, but they’re paying for it anyway. That should reinforce the interest of our endusers in this kind of a program. Do you know if you’re going to get paid right now during the pilot? There is not a guarantee of the exact amount or how that will work, but if we don’t build a supply chain, then we won’t deliver anything to these customers who are saying they’re interested and then we’re setting ourselves up for defeat.” The pilot will begin tracking cattle and beef volumes as of October, with the first payouts expected in early 2018. Cargill hopes to evolve the pilot into a more permanent program, although Murray says the CRSB’s marketing guidelines, such as logo use, should come first. “Once that’s done and we have a sense of what the standard is for the consumer side messaging, then we really understand what our North Star is and we really know what our customers are going to want and that’s when we can build a program,” she said. “As long as our customers are saying, ‘We want this,’ we will build a program around it.” astockford@farmmedia.com

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16

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

WEATHER VANE “Everyone talks about the weather, but no one does anything about it.” Mark Twain, 1897

Continued warm, but wetter Issued: Monday, September 11, 2017 · Covering: September 13 – September 20, 2017 Daniel Bezte Weather Vane

T

he weather models were surprisingly accurate over the last week or two, thanks in part to a fairly persistent ridge of high pressure. For this forecast period it looks like we will see a shift in our overall weather pattern. The question is whether this will be a temporary shift or a more permanent one. This forecast begins with a large and relatively slow-moving area of low pressure, something we haven’t seen in a while. The general flow across our region over the last month or so has been out of the northwest, which has kept us fairly dry. This flow will now become southwesterly, which will help open the doors for some moisture to move into our region. The weather models show a large area of low pressure developing to our southwest on Wednesday and then lifting northeast during the second half of the week. We’ll see increasing clouds on Thursday with a chance of showers and thundershowers developing in the afternoon. Most areas will likely see a continuation of showers on Friday as the main area of low pressure begins to move in. Currently, it looks like

the best chance for measurable rainfall will be during the day on Friday and into Friday evening, as the main energy from the low pushes through. Temperatures, even with the cloud cover and showers, look to be mild, with highs expected to be around 20 C with overnight lows in the low teens. Saturday will see a mix of sun and clouds along with the chance of some more showers as we deal with the back side of the departing low. Things should clear out by Sunday as high pressure builds in. This area of high pressure will slowly slide to the east during the first half of next week, giving us some nice dry weather. Temperatures will start off cool on Sunday, but we will see temperatures warm up each day, with highs by Wednesday expected to be in the low to mid-20s. Looking further ahead, the weather models are not showing any signs of a significant cooldown right through to the end of the month. Usual temperature range for this period: Highs, 13 to 24 C; lows, 2 to 11 C.

MOISTURE CONDITIONS MAP — MANITOBA

Top 0-30 cm Soil Moisture September 05, 2017

Moisture Condition Very Dry Dry Adequate

Minitonas !

Swan Valley !

Wet Very Wet Fork River !

San Clara ! Pipe Lake !

Rorketon !

Moosehorn ! Fisherton !

St Rose !

Keld !

Inglis !

Arborg !

Taylor's Point Eriksdale ! !

Ruthenia !

Russell !

Alonsa !

This issue’s map shows the moisture conditions in the top 30 cm of the soil across agricultural Manitoba as of Sept. 5. Most regions are reporting dry conditions, with a few very dry locations. We will watch to see how much of an impact the predicted rainfall for this week will have.

Narcisse !

Oakburn ! St. Lazare !

Inwood !

Birtle !

Teulon ! Minnedosa !

Hamiota !

Souris ! Glenboro ! Argue !

Waskada !

20

Miles

40

Minto !

Baldur !

Treherne !

Elm Creek !

60

Elma !

Vivian !

St Adolphe !

Brunkild !

Steinbach ! St. Pierre !

Somerset !

Ninette ! Manitou Boissevain ! ! Killarney Mountainside Winkler Clearwater ! ! Cartwright ! ! ! Snowflake Windygates ! !

Pierson !

10

Dugald !

Starbuck ! Reston ! Findlay !

0

Portage East !

Virden !

Kola !

Selkirk ! Beausejour !

Woodlands !

Gladstone !

Forrest !

Bede !

Daniel Bezte is a teacher by profession with a BA (Hon.) in geography, specializing in climatology, from the U of W. He operates a computerized weather station near Birds Hill Park. Contact him with your questions and comments at daniel@bezte.ca.

Drifting River !

Grandview !

Kane !

Source: Manitoba Agriculture

Morris !

Altona !

Zhoda ! Gardenton !

Based on weather data recorded from MB Agriculture Weather Program The colours on this map represent measured soil moisture values from automated instruments at sites across Manitoba Qualitative range (very dry to very wet) is based on the amount of current soil moisture relative to saturation in the spring

Menisino !

0

15

30

Kilometres

60

90

For more information, contact your local Manitoba Agriculture office.

A summer of average temperatures

Manitoba also saw a low number of significantly heavy rain events this summer BY DANIEL BEZTE Co-operator contributor

A

s we hit the second full week of September there has been another Category 4 hurricane to hit the U.S. mainland; this time it was hurricane Irma. Irma made landfall near Marco Island, Florida early on Sept. 10. While the damage inflicted by Irma looks to be significant, the storm will not bring the torrential rains like Harvey did, due to the relatively fast motion of the storm. With hurricane season entering the peak period, we’ll continue to watch the tropics to see what else might be in store. Now, on to this week’s topic, the summer of 2017 across agricultural Manitoba. If I was forced to use just two words to describe this summer it would have to be average and dry. In fact, when we look at temperatures across the three main centres of Winnipeg, Brandon and Dauphin, it’s surprising just how average it was. Summer is typically seen as the three-month period encompassing June to August. In this past summer’s data, Winnipeg’s mean summer temperature was 18.5 C, which was bang on the average. Brandon had a mean summer temperature of 17.3 C, which was 0.1 C below the long-term

I think everyone could have guessed it has been a dry summer. I know I am starting to see cracks in the soil that are big enough for me to slide my hand into.

average. Meanwhile, Dauphin had a mean summer temperature of 17.8 C, which was 0.4 C above average. I decided to look at a longer period of time and figured out the average temperature since the beginning of April to see if anything changed. Turns out that both Winnipeg and Brandon were both 0.1 C above their longterm average, while Dauphin was about 0.3 C above average. All in all, from a temperature point of view, summer was pretty darned close to average, with maybe the exception of Dauphin, which was a little above average. Now on to precipitation. I think everyone could have guessed it has been a dry summer. I know I am starting to see cracks in the soil that are big enough for me to slide my hand into. The question, then, is, “Just how dry has it been?” I looked at the total amount of precipitation that fell during the three-month summer as well as the April-to-August period and created the tables you see here. Table 1 shows the Juneto-August period, with total rain-

fall, followed by the average, with the final column showing the per cent of average. Table 2 covers the April-to-August period. For the three summer months, both Winnipeg and Brandon saw similar amounts of precipitation and both stations came in at the low 60 per cent range when compared to average. Dauphin was a little “wetter” as it saw about 85 per cent of average precipitation during the summer. When April and May were added in, we find Winnipeg’s per cent of average stayed the same at 62 per cent and Brandon dropped from 65 down to 60 per cent of average, while Dauphin dropped down to 76 per cent. Looking through the data for all the agricultural Manitoba weather stations for the period of May to August, the driest location I could find was Kane in the central region, with only 43 per cent of average precipitation. The wettest station was Ethelbert in the northwest region, which saw 105 per cent of average precipitation. What I found interesting — and it makes sense when you

Table 1: Precipitation from June through August (mm)

2017

Average

Per cent of average

Winnipeg

146.6

235.2

62

Brandon

144.0

220.0

65

Dauphin

184.9

216.4

85

Table 2: Precipitation from April through August (mM)

2017

Average

Per cent of average

Winnipeg

202.9

325.9

62

Brandon

181.6

304.9

60

Dauphin

228.8

300.9

76

look at the totals — was the low number of large rain events this year. Digging through the data of over 60 stations, I counted a total of 16 events that had rainfall totals greater than 40 mm. Over half of these events occurred on either June 14 or on July 22. The heaviest one-day event I was able to find occurred on July 19 when 79.3 mm of fell in Reston. Since I couldn’t find another station nearby reporting any significant rainfall on that date, I decided to check the historical radar images for that area. When I checked out the radar, at first it didn’t seem to be a correct value, as there were no afternoon or evening thunderstorms on the radar images. I then checked to see if there was maybe an earlymorning thunderstorm, and there it was. Around 6 a.m. a line

of heavy thunderstorms moved through the southwest corner of Manitoba, directly over the Reston area. These storms looked very intense on the radar so I would say that the 79.3 mm at Reston is more than likely legitimate. So, it was a near-average summer, temperature-wise, and overall, with only a few exceptions, it was a drier-than-average summer. Looking back at the forecasts it would appear no one was able to correctly predict the near-average temperatures, and I was the only one to say near- to below-average amounts of rain. That would mean I get the nod for having the most accurate forecast, but if you check back you might see that my forecast was really just a lucky guess, and even then it was only half right.


17

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

CROPS Regulations force hemp producers to destroy valuable nutraceuticals Health Canada will consult with hemp industry in lead-up to cannabis legalization BY SHANNON VANRAES Co-operator staff/Dauphin

R

od Fisher is an old hand at what is still a relatively new Canadian crop — hemp. When production was legalized in 1998, Fisher and his two brothers obtained a Health Canada licence and dipped their toes into the water with a few dozen acres. Today, they plant between 1,500 and 1,600 acres each year. “We were working with Canterra seeds when hemp first came in... it was a distributor and it just kind of grew from there,” Fisher said. “We tried a field audit and it worked well.”

Good fit Part of the crop’s appeal is that it can be seeded late in the season after wet fields dry out, Fisher said, adding he’s harvested mature plants after seeding as late as July 6 or 7. “It’s a unique crop,” said Fisher. “And on our farm it’s been one of the better-paying crops.” But while hemp can be grown for seed and fibre in Canada, producers are still shut out of the potentially lucrative nutraceutical market. “It’s a lost opportunity,” Fisher said. Keith Watson, an agronomist and plant breeder with Parkland Industrial Hemp Growers Co-op, agrees with that assessment. W h i l e m a n y Ca n a d i a n s h e rald cannabis legalization as the way to increase the availability of CBD or cannabidiol, which is prized as a potential anxiety medication and anti-convulsive, Watson notes hemp also produces the medically significant cannabinoid. “We’re into hemp and we’ve always consciously made a distinction between hemp and marijuana and kept it separate, so we don’t want to cloud it with that issue,” Watson said. “But we have devel-

Rod Fisher stands in a hemp field near Dauphin.   Photo: Shannon VanRaes

oped (hemp) varieties which are higher in CBD.” While only a small portion of the hemp plant — the brac surrounding the seeds — contains cannabidiol, the agronomist argues it could go a long ways towards supplying a medical market. “Agriculturally we could supply them and it would be a huge opportunity, but the regulations are holding us back,” said Watson. “Even if you were only getting five per cent of it, you’d still be getting a lot of it to supply that medical market.”

Whole plant Organizations like the Canadian Hemp Trade Alliance are pushing Health Canada to move towards allowing the entire hemp plant to be used and away from regulations

created in an era when cannabis was seen as a dangerous and forbidden narcotic. President Russ Crawford said the organization has met with Bill Blair — the police chief turned politician who led the government’s task force on cannabis legalization — and hopes their concerns have reached the right people. “The prime minister has said that the goal is to make marijuana legal by July 1, 2018. Our request of that process is to exclude industrial hemp from those regulations and to acknowledge that it is different and it should not be treated in the same fashion,” Crawford said. “And the reason we’re asking that is because we

“Industrial hemp regulations were developed as an enabling legislation to allow for the production of hemp. So it’s our friend, it’s not our enemy, but it’s also becoming limiting in terms of what you can and can’t do.”

Russ Crawford

See HEMP on page 18 »

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18

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Clubroot reaches northwestern Saskatchewan

Awaiting harvest

Scouting is best done before or during swathing STAFF

C Canola swaths cover the landscape as they dry down and get closer to combining day.

HEMP Continued from page 17

don’t want to get caught up in a regulatory structure that will be heavily monitored and heavily controlled.” Hemp doesn’t produce the psychotropic cannabinoid THC or tetrahydrocannabinol, but it is still regulated by the Controlled Substances Act. “So it’s considered to be a narcotic and it’s treated in the same fashion as heroin and cocaine. It was simply done that way because there was not really the ability to distinguish industrial hemp from marijuana when this act first came into place,” Crawford explained. “Industrial hemp regulations were developed as an enabling legislation to allow for the production of hemp. So it’s our friend, it’s not our enemy, but it’s also becoming limiting in terms of what you can and can’t do.”

Valuable market According to a report completed by The Hemp Business Journal, the market for CBD and CBD-containing produ c t s c o u l d re a c h a s a l e s value of $2.1 billion by 2020

in the United States alone, about a quarter of which is expected to come from hemp. Canadian imports could be a big part of U.S. sales if the regulatory environment was more conducive to exports, said Crawford. Proponents of CBD tout it as a cure for everything from diabetes and acne, to fibromyalgia, schizophrenia and mad cow disease, but research into the isolate is in its infancy, with most scientific inquiries focused on its effect on seizures. But health claims can be made with cannabis products and Health Canada has already approved products c o n t a i n i n g c a n n a b i n o i d s. These products are classified as “therapeutic” under the Food and Drugs Act and are reviewed for safety, quality and efficacy, said a Health Canada spokesperson. “Health Canada is aware that the hemp sector has proposed regulatory reforms that would permit hemp producers to use the whole hemp plant, including the leaves and flowers that producers are currently required to destroy under the exist-

photo: jeannette greaves

ing framework,” the spokesperson continued. “Health Canada will be considering these and other stakeholder views as it prepares new regulations under the proposed Cannabis Act.” Some interim changes to the oversight of industrial h e m p h a v e a l re a d y b e e n made. In 2016 an exemption was issued under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act to better align industrial hemp regulations with its “demonstrated low public health and safety risk.” One example of this was the elimination of THC testing for most crops and the extended validity of licences, allowing the sale and purchasing of products grown in the previous year.

Farmer benefit Crawford believes that if Canada moves forward prudently, hemp could open the door to countless products and opportunities, positioning Canadian producers at the forefront of a growth sector. “There’s a financial benefit to farmers and there’s the financial potential of a valueadded industry being devel-

oped in Canada,” he said. “It’s challenging to grow, but we’re developing varieties that are easier to harvest and more suited to their agricultural applications.” But with so many hurdles still ahead, Watson said hemp needs help to break into the mainstream and out of its regulatory confines. “It needs all the lobbying it can get, people need to know about the benefits and why we can’t just harvest those parts of the plant,” the plant breeder said. Dauphin-area hemp producers plan to introduce a resolution to lobby the federal government at the next Keystone Agricultural Producers meeting and the organization’s president Dan Mazier confirms the matter “is on their radar.” But regardless of regulatory hurdles hemp production in the province continues to be on the upswing. “There was a bit of a setback in 2016... acres were down a little, but it is a growing crop,” Fisher said. “Like any other new crop it’s got hiccups, ups and downs, but it is growing.” shannon.vanraes@fbcpublishing.com

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lubroot has made its presence known in the far northwest of Saskatchewan’s canola-growing region, with the discovery of a “heavily infested” field. SaskCanola on Aug. 28 re p o r t e d t h e d i s c ov e r y o f the disease in a field in Crop District 9B, but didn’t give its specific location. District 9B is a group of 16 rural municipalities east of Lloydminster, west of Meadow Lake and n o r t h a n d w e s t o f No r t h Battleford. “We’ve been advised that one new field in the northwest region of the province is heavily infested with clubroot,” SaskCanola executive director Janice Tranberg said in a release. The repor t follows news the previous week that clubroot has made its way further northwest up into Alberta’s Pe a c e r e g i o n — f i n d i n g s which the Canola Council of Canada said Aug. 28 “should encourage all canola growers in Western Canada to scout fields for the disease.” In clubroot-infected canola, swellings or galls appear on roots, cutting off a plant’s water and nutrient supplies so it prematurely ripens and dies. Typical yield losses run around 50 per cent but can run up to nearly 100 per cent in fields under severe clubroot pressure. The soil-borne fungal disease is established in Canada mainly in vegetable-growing regions of Quebec, Ontario, Atlantic Canada and British Columbia. Its first appearance in Canadian canola was in Quebec in 1997, but it took until 2003 to appear on the c a n o l a - r i c h Pra i r i e s, n e a r Edmonton. Cases have since been confir med in hundreds of canola fields elsewhere in Alberta, mainly in central regions and particularly around Edmonton, but also as far south as Medicine Hat. The pathogen has also been seen in a handful of fields in Manitoba, Ontario and northcentral and west-central Sask­­atchewan. Be f o re o r d u r i n g s w a t h ing is the best time to scout for club­r oot, the council said Aug. 28, because diseased patches will be most obvious and club­root galls, if present, will be at their largest. “Dig up plants in all areas that show premature ripening and check a few random plants at each field entrance looking for galls on the roots,” said Curtis Rempel, the council’s vice-president for crop production and innovation. Severely infected roots will lead to stunted growth and premature yellowing on the plant above ground, but spore-producing galls “can be present even without obvious above-ground symptoms,” he said.


19

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Time to plant winter wheat

On average winter wheat still has a yield advantage over spring wheats, but there are other factors to consider “If you wait for a rain all you are doing is delaying the time for the plant to emerge if we do get a rain.”

BY ALLAN DAWSON Co-operator staff

T

Lionel Kaskiw

September 1 to 15 is the ideal time to seed winter wheat.   photo: allan dawson

barley stubble are other options. •  Seeding date is important. “The quicker you get it in the ground in the fall, the

quicker you’ll harvest it in the following year.” •  Seed heavy. Aim for 30 to 35 plants per square foot. A thicker stand will be more

weed competitive, reducing the need for a grassy weed herbicide. It will also result in more even crop maturity and less tillers, making it

easier when timing a fungi­ cide application. •  Seed shallow to take advan­ tage of fall rains. •  A p p l y a s e e d t r e a t ­ ment because sometimes winter wheat sits in the ground a long time before ger­min­ating. •  Treat winter wheat like a special crop. “You have to throw the fertilizer at it to get the high yields.” allan@fbcpublishing.com

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he first two weeks of September is the best time for seeding winter wheat and with many canola crops already harvested there are fields suited for seed­ ing now, says Lionel Kaskiw, Manitoba Agriculture’s farm production adviser in Souris. But interest in winter wheat is declining, with some farm­ ers saying they can get almost t h e s a m e y i e l d s g r ow i n g spring wheats in the Canada Western Red Spring (CWRS) and Canada Northern Hard Red (CNHR) classes. It’s true. Last year some spring wheats yielded as much as winter wheat and many are yielding even better this year. “In individual cases it (win­ ter wheat) may not yield as good as your hard red wheat, but... it’s still one of the crops that is yielding better, on average, throughout the prov­ ince,” Kaskiw said during the CropTalk Westman webinar Sept. 6. Crop insurance data reported in Yield Manitoba 2017 shows in 2016 Canada Western Red Spring (classi­ fied as hard red spring by the Manitoba Agricultural Ser­ vices Corporation), Canada Northern Hard Red (classi­ fied as feed wheat) and winter wheat averaged 52, 65 and 72 bushels an acre, respectively, province-wide. The 10-year average yield for those classes is 47, 64 and 65 bushels an acre, respectively. There are other reasons, in addition to yield, for consid­ ering winter wheat, includ­ ing spreading out the spring seeding and fall harvest work­ load, Kaskiw said. Winter wheat, especially when seeded early, will be har vested before springseeded crops when the days are longer and harvest con­ ditions are usually better, Kaskiw said. Winter wheat will take advantage of moisture sooner than spring-planted crops. “If you’ve got fields that have been issues before (due to excess moisture) it might be something for you to still get a crop off some of those acres (planted before they get too wet),” he said. Winter wheat is another tool for managing herbicideresistant weeds, including wild oats. “It does give you a break in a use of wild oat herbicide for the one year because usually winter wheat gets going early enough in the spring that it chokes out any wild oats that are growing,” Kaskiw said. Here are Kaskiw’s tips for seeding winter wheat: •  Don’t wait for a rain, even if the soil is dry. It doesn’t take a lot of moisture to germi­ nate shallowly sown winter wheat. “If you wait for a rain all you are doing is delay­ ing the time for the plant to emerge if we do get a rain.” •  Plant into canola stubble, which is best for trapping snow to insulate the win­ ter wheat crop and reduce winterkill. Chemfallow and

H S TA R G E N E

TI

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www.northstargenetics.com © NorthStar Genetics 2017 Monsanto Company is a member of Excellence Through Stewardship® (ETS). Monsanto products are commercialized in accordance with ETS Product Launch Stewardship Guidance, and in compliance with Monsanto’s Policy for Commercialization of Biotechnology-Derived Plant Products in Commodity Crops. These products have been approved for import into key export markets with functioning regulatory systems. Any crop or material produced from these products can only be exported to, or used, processed or sold in countries where all necessary regulatory approvals have been granted. It is a violation of national and international law to move material containing biotech traits across boundaries into nations where import is not permitted. Growers should talk to their grain handler or product purchaser to con rm their buying position for these products. Excellence Through Stewardship® is a registered trademark of Excellence Through Stewardship. ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Roundup Ready 2 Xtend® soybeans contain genes that confer tolerance to glyphosate and dicamba. Agricultural herbicides containing glyphosate will kill crops that are not tolerant to glyphosate, and those containing dicamba will kill crops that are not tolerant to dicamba. Contact your Monsanto dealer or call the Monsanto technical support line at 1-800-667-4944 for recommended Roundup Ready® Xtend Crop System weed control programs. Roundup Ready 2 Xtend® and Roundup Ready® are registered trademarks of Monsanto Technology LLC, Monsanto Canada Inc. licensee. ©2017 Monsanto Canada Inc.


20

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Five Manitoba commodity groups still seeking farmer input on proposed merger A discussion paper is expected to be ready for the CropConnect conference in February BY ALLAN DAWSON Co-operator staff

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Five crop commodity groups exploring merging want farmers to give their input, says Pam de Rocquigny, general manager of the Manitoba Corn Growers and Manitoba Wheat and Barley Growers associations.   PHOTO: ALLAN DAWSON

armer input on the prop o s e d m e rg e r o f f i v e of Manitoba’s checkoff-­ funded crop commodity groups is still being sought and encouraged. A dedicated email — rob@ mbcrops.ca — has been set up for that purpose. In the spring the Manitoba Corn Growers Association (MCGA), Manitoba Pulse & Soybean Growers Association (MPSG), Manitoba Flax Growers Association (MFGA), National Sunflower Association of Canada (NSAC) and the Manitoba Wheat and Barley Growers Association (MWBGA) signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) to work towards merging. The goal

is giving farmers a bigger bang for their checkoff bucks. All but the flax growers already share an office in Carman. Rob Hannam of Synthesis AgriFood Network has been hired to help co-ordinate the effort. After merger steering committee meetings Aug. 1 and Aug. 22 all agreed it’s important to hear from as many farmers as possible, Hannam said in a news release Aug. 30. “There was that realization that this is going to take time,” Pam de Rocquigny, general manager of the corn and wheat and barley associations said in an interview. “It’s a process and we definitely want member input and consultation and that’s why there’s a big focus on members’ ability to provide feedback. There is no timeline per se in terms of a decision (on merging) because we don’t

know what that end position is at this point.” Although farmers are busy harvesting now, they can still provide input this winter, she added. The groups hope Hannam completes a report by December, said de Rocquigny. She also expects farmers will have a chance to comment on it, perhaps during CropConnect in February — an annual conference organized by the five groups, plus the Manitoba Canola Growers and Manitoba Seed Growers associations. (The canola and winter cereals associations were part of earlier merger discussions, but for now want to continue on their own.) “It’s working towards a package of what things could potentially look like, and within that package there could be potentially one, two, three options...”

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de Rocquigny said. “Part of this whole thing is figuring out what is the question. “There are more questions being raised as we continue to work through it.” However, the groups agree their focus is, and remains, research, agronomy and market development, she added. “We don’t see any change in that going forward.” In addition to farmers emailing their views on merging, they can contact the associations’ directors and staff, de Rocquigny said. The merger talks, which had their genesis with discussions on increased collaboration in the spring of 2014, is supported by Manitoba Agriculture Minister Ralph Eichler and the Keystone Agricultural Producers. allan@fbcpublishing.com

Prairie barley groups continue CMBTC funding The funds will allow continued support for malt barley value chain STAFF

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he Canadian Malt Barley Technical Centre will continue to get funding from the three Prairie barley groups. Following the July 31 conclusion of the interim Western Canadian Deduction checkoff, which provided the CMBTC with three cents per tonne of barley delivered to Canadian Grain Commission facilities over the previous five years, the Manitoba Wheat & Barley Growers Association (MWBGA), the Saskatchewan Barley Development Commission (SaskBarley) and Alberta Barley have all stepped up to the funding plate. The three provincial barley associations have taken over the collection and administration of the checkoff for their respective provinces and committed to continue supporting the CMBTC. “The MWBGA is pleased to partner with SaskBarley and Alberta Barley to provide core funding to the CMBTC,” said Fred Greig, MWBGA board chair. “The CMBTC is a leader in providing market support, technical services and training to the malting barley value chain and its customers, with the goal of improving net returns for Manitoba and Canadian barley farmers.” Canada is one of the world’s largest producers and exporters of malting barley and malt, with combined domestic and international sales revenues of $1 billion annually. “Continued funding from farmers will support the CMBTC’s operations, including our work to introduce promising new varieties to our domestic and international customers,” said Peter Watts, managing director of the CMBTC. “With improved yield and disease resistance, and equal or better quality than existing varieties, the new lines will create value for farmers and help make malting barley an attractive crop to grow.”


21

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Diesel prices could rise further

Great Harvest

Hurricane Harvey kicked off the party but harvest demand is keeping it going BY DAVE SIMS CNSC

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iesel prices in Western Canada have risen by approximately six to seven cents a litre since Hur­ri­ cane Harvey ravaged the petro­ leum-rich Texas Coast. An expert with the fuel indus­ try says harvest pressure will likely keep the diesel market from correcting downward, and push prices up a bit more. “So it (the market) appears to be levelling off from the Harvey hit but harvest is a factor on (future) price hikes,” said Dan McTeague of Gasbuddy.com. The impact on gasoline has been more pronounced than die­ sel but the two are linked none­ theless. McTeague says for every cent diesel went up, gasoline went up two cents. “A week or two from now it could be more,” he said, in refer­ ence to the ongoing harvest. Prices for diesel in Western Canada mostly ranged from 95 to 99 cents a litre, according to Gasbuddy.com. Diesel traditionally goes up in the fall meaning some of the bump will likely be factored in to the market. The approach of another storm has also sparked concerns it could impact the energy sec­ tor. Hurricane Irma, featuring sustained winds of 185 miles per hour has already been labelled as the strongest hurricane ever. “This is going to be a far more active season for hurricanes, the third most since 1950,” said McTeague. According to another ana­ lyst, the impact from Harvey will continue to be felt for some time. “You are looking at some upward pressure on prices,” said Tom Kloza of the Oil Price Information Service in Florida. “Prices are as high as they’ve been in 2017 for diesel.” He adds one thing that will help cushion the blow at the pumps for diesel operators, is the looming startup of a major refin­ ery in Alberta. North West Upgrading is expected to begin processing 50,000 barrels of low-sulphur diesel fuel a day by late 2017. “So we’ll see plenty of new supply coming on stream,” said Kloza. He adds a deal by the Organi­ zation of the Petroleum Expor­ ting Countries (OPEC) is also due to expire on March 31. The agree­ ment saw major oil-producing countries slashing oil production in a bid to improve prices.

At 89 years of age, Don McEwan has seen a few harvests and he says this year is one of the best yet.  photo: les mcewan

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22

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Trio of groups want to create Alberta-based agri-food ‘supercluster’ Agrium, Olds College, and MDA apply for federal program aimed at boosting key economic sectors Staff

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grium, Olds College, and global satellite communications corporation MDA have submitted an application to the federal government to form an agri-food ‘supercluster.’ The Liberal government committed up to $950 million (over five years) in its March budget to create hubs that would focus on key economic sectors in an effort to kick-start investment, boost exports, and create jobs. The proposed Smart AgriFo o d Su p e r C l u s t e r “ i s intended to create a panCanadian platform to help the sector’s diverse, and sometimes disparate, “silos” align more coherently to identify and resolve challenges in the

agri-food value chain,” its three proponents said in a news release. “We felt it important to create something that constructively brings together all the players that comprise the ways we do farming and food,” said Bill Whitelaw, chair of the group’s steering committee. “Our approach is intended to resolve some of the fragmentation dynamics that often hinder innovation efforts.” The group’s goals include promoting innovation in cropping, livestock, digital and agri-food processing technologies, the news release stated. If successful in obtaining federal seed money, the cluster would seek to involve businesses, notfor-profits, research organizations, and post-secondary institutions in projects that create new jobs, export oppor-

tunities, and safer and more sustainable food production. “Ottawa would like to see innovation as the driving force that significantly improves Canada’s already strong ag and food leadership position globally,” said Whitelaw, a senior executive with Glacier Media Group (the parent company of the Manitoba Co-operator). “Moving the country upward in global export rankings could create billions of new economic impact.” If its proposal is funded, the Smart Agri-Food Super Cluster would be administered from Calgary but would seek out partners from across the country, he said. The supercluster concept has been successfully applied in California’s Silicon Valley, Canada’s Kitchener-Waterloo region, and cities such as

Berlin and Tel Aviv, the federal government said in announcing the program. The creation of superclusters will depend on what proposals are submitted, Innovation, Science and Economic Devel­ op­­ment Minister Navdeep Bains told the Toronto Star earlier this year. But he identified agri-food — along with areas such as advanced manufacturing, digital technology, and health/biosciences — as sectors where Canada is well positioned to become a stronger global player. Calgar y-based Agr ium is in the process of merging with Potash Corp. to form a new company to be called Nutrien. MDA (formerly known a s Ma c D o n a l d , De t t w i l e r and Associates) is based in Vancouver and has annual revenues of more than $2 billion.

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The government says it’s prepared to act quickly provided certain conditions are met BY DAVE SIMS CNSC

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he Canadian gover nment says it’s prepared to restore rail service to residents in Churchill. The rail line was closed in the spring of 2017 after flooding damaged multiple sections of the route to the northern Manitoba community. T h e ow n e r o f t h e l i n e, OmniTrax, said repairs would cost as much as US$60 million and it wasn’t prepared to pay without government assistance. Residents of Churchill maintain the line is a public utility and has to be repaired before winter arrives. Some residents even travelled to Winnipeg to hold protests over the issue. Previously, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the Denverbased company had legal obligations to restore service to the community. However, in a release today, the government said it is prepared to “facilitate discussion for the transfer of the rail line to a new owner and will work with that new owner to restore rail service.” At least two different groups comprised of northern Manitoba First Nations have expressed interest in taking over the line. Recently, the government of Manitoba said it would be willing to pay as much as C$500 million over 10 years to fix and maintain service. It wasn’t initially clear however, how much of that money would be entirely new. In the release, Ottawa said it’s fully prepared to act quickly to provide such support, provided that: •  The assets are transferred at a reasonable price taking into account OmniTrax Inc.’s obligations; •  The new owner has support from First Nations and other communities along the route; and •  The new owner has a viable business plan to operate the rail line safely, reliably and cost effectively. OmniTrax bought the gove r n m e n t - ow n e d p o r t a n d Canadian National Railway’s (CN) rail line in 1997. The port and rail line, built in the 1930s, were meant to serve northern communities and provide an alternate shipping route in to and out of Western and Central Canada. Canada’s only Arctic port moved 184,600 tonnes of grain during its 2015 shipping season, well off its average of 500,000 tonnes. OmniTrax closed the port in 2016. canada’s ag-only listings giant

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23

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Degraded soils cost farmers billions annually Yet soil care remains a low priority for policy-makers as well as farmers “We have reduced soil loss but we haven’t reduced the history of soil loss.”

BY LAURA RANCE Editorial director/Guelph, Ont.

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armers have reduced the amount of soil they lose through annual cropping practices, but they continue to carry a costly legacy of degraded soils, a University of Manitoba soil scientist says. David Lobb used crop production data and computer models to estimate how much lost productivity has occurred over the past four decades due to soil erosion. The numbers he came up with were startling. “When we did the analysis, looking at the accumulated soil loss and its impact on yield accounting for changes in tillage systems, cropping changes that have occurred across the country the actual loss in production, the actual loss in associated economic value is about $3.1 billion on an annual basis,” Lobb said in an interview following his presentation to the Soil Conservation Council of Canada soil summit here. “I f y o u l o o k e d a t w h a t cumulatively would have occurred from the 1970s to now you are probably looking at between $40 billion and $60 billion lost in terms of economic potential for the ag industry,” he said. Increased applications of fertilizer and better genetics may help mask some of the effects, but they come at a cost too. The cost is actually much higher because Lobb only looked at the direct effects on crop production. “We didn’t look at the inefficiencies associated with higher input use like pest i c i d e s a n d f e r t i l i ze r t h a t commonly occurs in highly degraded landscapes, and we didn’t look at any of the offfield effects like sedimentation in ditches and navigable waterways or any ecological services associated with algal blooms or eutrophication of surface waters,” he said.

David Lobb University of Manitoba soil scientist

“The indirect costs associated with off-site impacts and water quality is often assumed to be equal if not larger than the on-site effects,” he noted.

Perceptions Lobb said he wanted to quantify the cost of degraded soils in economic terms to hammer home the message that even though progress has been made on reducing erosion, little has been done to address the damage that has already been done. “I think there was a perception that if you want to no till and you stopped the soil erosion, the soil would regenerate or restore itself,” he said. But that doesn’t happen on its own, at least not for a very long time. Bob McIntosh, a Perth County farmer who has been practising zero tillage for 27 years, said restoring degraded soils is a “lifelong” pro­cess with mediocre results. His experience mimics the results of long-term cropping studies in the area that show gains in soil organic matter, even under careful management, are slow. He said efforts must continue to reduce tillage and incorporate cover crops into farming systems. Lobb said farmers in some areas are trying to speed up the natural soil-building process by applying high organic matter inputs, such as adding high rates of manure to their eroded knolls, growing forages or cover crops. The economics also support transporting soil that has been moved by tillage and water erosion into low spots back onto the tops of knolls.

Ad a m Ha y e s, a n e x t e n sion adviser with the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs (OMAFRA), told participants in the summit tour farmers can recover the cost of landscape restoration within four to six years through increased productivity. Restoring eroded knolls in that fashion can result in yield improvements of between 40 and 130 per cent in dry years and two to 33 per cent in wet years. Lobb said governments and farmers need to realize that every soil loss event has longterm implications for a farm’s productivity, yet soil conservation seems to be falling through the cracks. “There has been a steady decrease in interest in soil conservation,” he said. Farmers’ best defence is a good offence, avoiding the loss of soil in the first place, he said. D o n Re i c o s k y, a re t i re d soil scientist with the USDA Agricultural Research Service, told the conference that in his view, the term “conservation tillage” is an oxymoron. Conservation tillage is defined as retaining 30 per cent residue cover on the surface. “That means there is 70 per cent bare soil,” he said. Man-made tillage in any form destroys the soil’s structure and is catastrophic to the microorganisms living within it, he said.

Conservation agriculture True conservation agriculture focuses on building carbon in the soil, not its steady depletion. “CO2 loss is proportional

Bob McIntosh, who farms in Perth County, says it can take a lifetime or longer to repair degraded soils.   Photo: Laura Rance

to the volume of soil disturbed,” Reicosky said. “The solution lies in conservation agriculture, which brings together innovation, new technology and systems concepts focused on carbon management,” he said. Don Lobb, a retired Ontario farmer who was inducted into the Canadian Conservation Hall of Fame in 1992 for his support of research to better understand soil health, said part of the problem is the industry’s focus on increasing production. He’s calling for “an agronomic shift in focus” from crop production to soil care. “This is essential for reliable,

sustainable, environmentally friendly food production,” he said. He also noted that past civilizations who mismanaged their soil resources simply moved to a new frontier when their soils became unproductive. “We are on a familiar path,” he said, noting that with most of the world’s productive land already in use, and with most of it at various stages of degradation, there may be nowhere to go. “The only remaining ‘new frontier’ is intensive, scientifically sound, responsible soil management,” he said. laura@fbcpublishing.com

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24

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

CROP REPORT

Heat hastens harvest and crop progress Manitoba Agriculture crop report, issued September 11, 2017 Southwest Region Normal to above-normal temperatures were experienced last week with no frost reported to date. Most areas of the region did not receive any precipitation; a few locations had trace amounts. Field work has been limited due to dry topsoil conditions. Post-harvest herbicide application is on hold until rains stimulate weed growth. Spring cereal harvest is close to complete south of Highway 1, and 60 to 80 per cent complete north of Highway 1. Yields are reported to be average to above average with good quality. Canola harvest is 40 to 50 per cent complete with good quality and yields ranging from 35 to 45 bu./acre. Swathing is approaching completion for late-seeded canola fields, and some pre-har vest applications continue for straight-cut canola. Field peas harvest is complete with yields above the long-term average. Flax continues to dry down, and desiccation is beginning. Soybeans are in R6.5 to 7 with early-maturing varieties approaching R8 or 95 per cent brown seed pod. Sunflowers are in R7 to earlyR8 stage. Corn silage harvesting has begun with above-average yields. Grain corn is at the R5 stage. Pastures are drying up and producers have started to move cattle to harvested fields. Second-cut alfalfa has been completed with average yields.

Northwest Region Warm weather this past week with no rainfall allowed for good harvest progress throughout the region. There were no reports of frost this week. Crops are generally in good to excellent condition with the exception of areas suffering from extremes of moisture

where crops are in fair to poor condition. Spr ing wheat har vest is mostly finished in the Roblin area, with about 75 per cent complete around Swan River, and 70 to 80 per cent complete in the Dauphin and Ste. Rose areas. Yields are reported to be 75 to 80 bu./acre around Roblin and 60 to 90 bu./acre around Swan River. Approximately 50 per cent of canola fields have been harvested around Swan River, 75 per cent around Roblin, and 50 to 80 per cent of canola combined in the McCreary, Dauphin, and Ste. Rose areas. Yields are reported to be 50 bu./acre around Swan River, and 50 to 60 bu./acre around Roblin. Soybeans and fababeans are approaching maturity with generally all fields still standing. Pea yields range from 60 to 80 bu./acre in the Roblin and Swan River areas. The flax crop is 50 to 75 per cent ripe with the remainder in the boll stage. Combining of winter wheat and fall rye is complete. Tame haying season is complete with the exception of second-cut alfalfa that will be cut after a killing frost. There are reports of light frosts around Rorketon showing effects on alfalfa fields. Native hay harvest is wrapping up with lots of bulk as producers are haying areas that were unreachable in previous years. Native hay harvest has been earlier, but quality may still be questionable due to increased unpalatable species.

Central Region Last week had sunny, warm, and windy conditions with minimal amounts of rain. No frost reported. Soil moisture conditions continue to deteriorate in annual cropland, hay, and pasture. Spring cereal harvest is 85 to 100 per cent complete. Early yield reports: hard red spring wheat 55 to 100 bu./acre;

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northern hard red wheat 80 to 100 bu.; barley 75 to 120 bu.; oats 110 to 180 bu. Quality, test weight and falling numbers are generally reported as excellent. Protein in wheat is variable, generally average to below average. Swathing of canola is complete. Western areas report 75 per cent of canola harvested, while eastern areas are 99 per cent complete. Canola yields range from 40 to 65 bu./acre with very good quality. Moisture levels lower than normal. Flax harvest has begun; early yield reports 27 to 32 bu./ acre. Straw is being baled and moved. Corn is advancing rapidly with warmer weather conditions. Most fields are in the dough to dent stage, with some early varieties approaching physiological maturity. Field pea harvest is complete, with yields ranging from 50 to 90 bu. Soybean harvest has started in some early-maturing varieties. Stands are good, but dry conditions have resulted in some upper pods not filling. Early yield reports range from 28 to 35 bu./acre; seed size is either small, or a mix of large and small. The first of the edible beans have been harvested. Early yield reports in the first few fields are 1,800 to 2,000 lbs. pintos, and cranberries 2,000-plus lbs. Undercutting continues. Backs of sunflower heads are yellow; bracts are starting to brown. Some basal stalk rot is evident. Post-harvest harrowing and cultivating operations continue, but in many cases are limited due to dry topsoil. Scraping for drain maintenance is underway; good progress being made. Second-cut hay is complete. Yields are below average due to dry conditions. Some fields were browning due to the lack of moisture.

Pastures continue to deteriorate. Pastures on lightertextured soils, and overstocked pastures are browning off, with no regrowth. Rainfall is needed to replenish dugouts.

Eastern Region Temperatures were seasonal to below seasonal for most of the week, with above-normal temperatures on the weekend. Rainfall accumulation was less than seven mm across the region. Soil moisture conditions on cropland across the region were rated as 75 per cent adequate and 25 per cent short. Soil moisture conditions on hay and pasture land were rated as 10 per cent adequate, 40 per cent short, and 50 per cent very short. The driest soil conditions are in the southern districts. Spring wheat harvest is ongoing with approximately 95 per cent complete in the region, and yields in the 65 bu./acre range. Protein levels range from 11 to 13 per cent. Oat yields are reported to be in the 150 bu./ acre range. Canola harvest is ongoing with approximately 75 per cent of the crop harvested. Yields are in the 45 to 55 bu./ ac. range. Some winter wheat is being seeded in the region. Soybeans are in the R7 growth stage with leaf drop and pod colour change very apparent. A few fields are in R8 and dr ying down. Har vest was attempted in some fields over the weekend but did not continue. Sunflowers were in the R8 growth stage and remained in overall good condition. Tillage and fall fertilizer application were also ongoing last week. Pastures are drying up fast with more producers started to feed on pasture. Some dugouts have very little water left in them while some have gone dry. Livestock winter feed supplies were rated as 20 per cent surplus and 80 per cent adequate for hay and straw and adequate for greenfeed and

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ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Roundup Ready 2 Xtend® soybeans contain genes that confer tolerance to glyphosate and dicamba. Agricultural herbicides containing glyphosate will kill crops that are not tolerant to glyphosate, and those containing dicamba will kill crops that are not tolerant to dicamba. Contact your Monsanto dealer or call the Monsanto technical support line at 1-800-667-4944 for recommended Roundup Ready® Xtend Crop System weed control programs. Roundup Ready® technology contains genes that confer tolerance to glyphosate, an active ingredient in Roundup® brand agricultural herbicides. Agricultural herbicides containing glyphosate will kill crops that are not tolerant to glyphosate. Acceleron® seed applied solutions for corn (fungicides only) is a combination of three separate individually-registered products, which together contain the active ingredients metalaxyl, prothioconazole and fluoxystrobin. Acceleron® seed applied solutions for corn (fungicides and insecticide) is a combination of four separate individually-registered products, which together contain the active ingredients metalaxyl, prothioconazole, fluoxystrobin, and clothianidin. Acceleron® seed applied solutions for corn plus Poncho®/ VOTiVO™ (fungicides, insecticide and nematicide) is a combination of five separate individually-registered products, which together contain the active ingredients metalaxyl, prothioconazole, fluoxystrobin, clothianidin and Bacillus firmus strain I-1582. Acceleron® Seed Applied Solutions for corn plus DuPont™ Lumivia® Seed Treatment (fungicides plus an insecticide) is a combination of four separate individually-registered products, which together contain the active ingredients metalaxyl, prothioconazole, fluoxastrobin and chlorantraniliprole. Acceleron® seed applied solutions for soybeans (fungicides and insecticide) is a combination of four separate individually registered products, which together contain the active ingredients fluxapyroxad, pyraclostrobin, metalaxyl and imidacloprid. Acceleron® seed applied solutions for soybeans (fungicides only) is a combination of three separate individually registered products, which together contain the active ingredients fluxapyroxad, pyraclostrobin and metalaxyl. Visivio™ contains the active ingredients difenoconazole, metalaxyl (M and S isomers), fludioxonil, thiamethoxam, sedaxane and sulfoxaflor. Acceleron®, Cell-Tech®, DEKALB and Design®, DEKALB®, Genuity®, JumpStart®, Monsanto BioAg and Design®, Optimize®, QuickRoots®, Real Farm Rewards™, RIB Complete®, Roundup Ready 2 Xtend®, Roundup Ready 2 Yield®, Roundup Ready®, Roundup Transorb®, Roundup WeatherMAX®, Roundup Xtend®, Roundup®, SmartStax®, TagTeam®, Transorb®, VaporGrip®, VT Double PRO®, VT Triple PRO® and XtendiMax® are trademarks of Monsanto Technology LLC. Used under license. BlackHawk®, Conquer® and GoldWing® are registered trademarks of Nufarm Agriculture Inc. Valtera™ is a trademark of Valent U.S.A. Corporation. Fortenza® and Visivio™ are trademarks of a Syngenta group company. DuPont™ and Lumivia® are trademarks of E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company. Used under license. LibertyLink® and the Water Droplet Design are trademarks of Bayer. Used under license. Herculex® is a registered trademark of Dow AgroSciences LLC. Used under license. Poncho® and VOTiVO™ are trademarks of Bayer. Used under license.

These bales catch the early-morning sun of late summer.   photo: Les Rankin

feed grains. Pasture conditions were rated as 30 per cent fair, 50 per cent poor, and 20 per cent very poor.

Interlake Region Dr y conditions and war m winds hastened crop maturity and allowed for significant crop harvest progress this past week. Temperatures ranged from -2.6 to 30 C with frosts in some lowlying areas. Rainfall throughout the region varied from zero to 3.7 mm. Accumulated growing degree days and corn heat units are 95 to 103 per cent of normal; however, rainfall since May 1 is 62 to 88 per cent of normal. Cereal harvest continues with over 80 per cent harvested in the south Interlake. To date bushel weight and quality are very good, with most grading No. 1 and No. 2. Canola harvest is 75 to 85 per cent complete in the south Interlake with 40 to 65 bu./acre yields. In the north Interlake canola harvest is near 50 per cent complete, with yields from 30 to 50 bu./acre. Leaf colour change and leaf drop are noticeable in many soybean fields. Soybean harvest has started in the south Interlake. Dry conditions have resulted in some top pods not filling. In the north Interlake, soybeans are in the R5 to R7 stage. Little post-harvest weed control being done as there is little growth. Soils are working up lumpy, so tillage is being delayed. No reports of fall fertilization to date. Soil moisture conditions across the region on cropland are rated as 20 per cent adequate and 80 per cent short, while conditions on hay and pasture are rated as 15 per cent adequate and 85 per cent short. Well-managed pastures are showing their resilience, while continuous hard grazed pastures are going dormant in some areas.


25

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Higher Canadian dollar a new reality for rest of 2017 The roaring loonie is resulting in lower domestic prices for Canadian farmers BY TERRY FRIES

“We’ve grown a crop, say on a 75-cent dollar and now we’re taking off a crop on an 82-cent dollar, and that’s a totally different scenario.”

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igher interest rates and a stronger Canadian dollar relative to the American currency is giving Canadian farmers a double whammy. According to Farm Credit Canada’s chief agricultural economist it is a situation farmers will likely have to deal with for at least the remainder of the year. J . P. G e r va i s, F CC ’s c h i e f agri­culture economist, said he thinks farmers and agribusinesses will be able to manage the higher interest rates, but the higher dollar may prove more problematic. He said during the past two to three years, Canadian farmers have been shielded from a slowdown similar to what’s been happening in the U.S. farm sector largely because the favourable exchange

Dan Mazier Keystone Agricultural Producers

rate mad e s e l l i n g e x p o r t s based in U.S. dollars more profitable. “Because I know given current pricing in the marketplace — and that’s across all sectors: grains, oilseeds, livestock — that a dollar at 85 cents is really a threshold or a point we’re starting to see margins getting a little bit of pressure,” he said. The Canadian dollar was trading at 82.37 U.S. cents at noon today. Back on April 3 it was at 74.72 U.S. cents. G e r va i s s a i d f o r t h e t i m e being, the dollar’s main influencing factor is no longer oil,

but rather the spread between American and Canadian interest rates. “I think if you are looking at the spread between Canadian rates and the U.S. rates, I think for some terms we actually have higher rates in Canada than in the U.S. I think that’s consistent with a dollar around 82, maybe slightly higher than that.” He said as long as the U.S. Fe d e ra l Re s e r v e h o l d s i t s present course and doesn’t raise its interest rates, the loonie’s strength relative to the American greenback will continue. He expects it to last at T:10.25”

least until the end of the year, he said. The Bank of Canada yest e rd a y r a i s e d t h e b e n c h mark overnight lending rate to 1.0 per cent from 0.75 per cent. Gervais said he expects Canada’s central bank will not apply any further rate increases until it has time to assess the effects of the latest hike. He added there may be some upside to the rising dollar in that input or equipment purchases priced in American dollars will be more affordable for Canadian producers, but on the balance a lower Canadian dollar is more important to the long-term health of the agricultural industry. He added he doesn’t believe the higher interest rates will have a serious effect on farmers’ debt servicing because that depends more on income than on assets. However, if the dollar goes up again, further cutting

far mers’ margins, it could affect farmers’ ability to meet t h e i r d e b t o b l i g a t i o n s, h e said. D o n M a z i e r, p r e s i d e n t of Keystone Agricultural Producers, said the dollar isn’t exceptionally high yet, but it still will have an impact, especially because farmers entered the growing season with a much lower dollar in play. “We’ve grown a crop, say on a 75-cent dollar and now we’re taking off a crop on an 82-cent dollar, and that’s a totally different scenario.” He said many of the crop decisions would have been based on a lower dollar and h i g h e r- v a l u e e x p o r t s t h a t go along with that. Many of those plans will have to be reworked. He added producers can take some actions to minimize the damage, such as locking in basis levels or hedging dollars.

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26

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

COLUMN

Making sense of the squiggly lines Technical analysis can help give you a clearer picture of commodity markets David Derwin

Chart 1 & 2

Feeder cattle & canola markets

Hedging your bets

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picture is indeed worth a thousand words so when it comes to markets, there is no better picture than a price chart. Charts are a visual interpretation of market behaviour that encompass all news, research and analysis of economic business activity by all investors, trader and hedgers. It is an illustration of the cumulative fear and greed of the marketplace. Unfortunately, many market psychology and behavioural economic studies have shown that humans often see things in pictures that don’t exist. This can lead to less-than-optimal decision-making. There are many “price patterns” that catch the eye as well as the imagination which don’t have a strong or consistent enough history to have any predictive value. There are, however, many valid price patterns and trends in financial markets that persist over time that are worthwhile taking a closer look at. The mind can play tricks on you and people can fool themselves into believing their point of view. So, hedgers and traders should crunch some numbers and perform data analysis to develop some objective technical chart analysis. Thomas Bulkowski’s book Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns does a great job of helping in

Chart 3 & 4

this area. His research offers a thorough and serious analysis using a database of 500 stocks over a five-year period that generated over 15,000 chart formations to uncover around 50 chart patterns. As he writes in the introduction to his book, “It suggests which chart patterns work best and which ones to avoid.” It covers many technical chart patterns you have heard of like head and shoulders, dead-cat bounce and doubletops, showing which patterns tend to be reversal or consolidation patterns, which typically have the biggest moves and those with the highest success rate. Many of the top chart performers are trending patterns; meaning there is momentum moving prices either up, down or sideways steadily over time like in Chart 1 and 2. Once this momentum changes, that up, down or sideways trend may change as well.

“This doesn’t mean you are going to be right every time, but at least you can strive to be more right over time.”

Another important pattern to look for is a consolidation pattern with a lot of sideways choppy price action. These are some of the most consistent patterns. Whether it’s signalling a beginning, continuation or end of a trend, markets often move sideways ahead of another important price move. Many of the chart patterns you may find useful are ones that look like Chart 3 and 4 — almost like the calm before the storm. What I like about Bulkow­ski’s research is that it provides a high-probability approach to

technical chart analysis that is supported by some hard numbers. This allows you to apply both the art and science of technical analysis along with other market research tools to real-time hedging and trading decisions. This doesn’t mean you are going to be right every time, but at least you can strive to be more right over time. Now, here are a couple of current real-time commodities to look at. First, after a 30 per cent move higher from about 115 to 145 during the winter and spring, feeder cattle has since been moving sideways for the past three months. Whether this breaks out higher to continue the uptrend or breaks down through price support to signal a reversal in trend remains to be seen. However, given this trading range is already a few months old, any sustained break below 135 on the charts and the odds are that this recent cattle uptrend may be turning lower. Regardless of whether cattle ultimately moves higher or lower, prices are good. If you haven’t protected your cattle revenues, now is a good time to use live or feeder cattle option strategies for downside floor price protection but that still give you some upside potential as well. Next, canola has also been showing a wide trading range but over a much longer period of time. The weekly canola chart shows a channel between C$450/tonne and $530/tonne over the past few years going back to 2015. With such a

defined range, we have a good sense of where near-term tops and bottoms are and can plan hedging strategies accordingly. Canola may still go sideways yet and there is some upside potential. All the more reason to use canola option strategies to protect your downside without locking in, without limiting your upside and without committing to delivery. Bottom line, charts don’t always reveal the future but a numbers-based analysis, along with options and futures hedging strategies, can help you benefit from pricing opportunities for your farm com­modities. Keep your chart and technical analysis simple. Markets can only go up, down or sideways so look for trends, a break­out from an existing sideways range or a change in price direction. Don’t overcomplicate things and don’t worry about every daily 25-cent move. You’ll drive yourself crazy and likely spend a lot of time for very little reward Instead, focus on bigger-picture medium- to longer-term trends. Incorporate proper hedging strategies that are right for the current market conditions to help you meet your operational as well as financial budgets and targets. This approach should help make all those squiggly lines a more meaningful part of your overall marketing plan. David Derwin (dderwin@pifinancial. com) is a portfolio manager and commodity and investment adviser with PI Financial Corp. (www.commodityoptions.ca), a member of the Canadian Investor Protection Fund. The risk of loss in trading commodity interests can be substantial. You should therefore consider carefully whether such trading is suitable for you and your personal financial condition. This is intended for distribution in jurisdiction where PI Financial Corp. is registered as an adviser or dealer in securities and/or futures and options.

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27

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Pod of Pelicans

A group of pelicans bunches up on the water near Lockport hoping to spy a fish for supper.

photo: les rankin

New bee study points finger at neonicotinoid Thiamethoxam can prevent egg laying and hive formation CNS Canada

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commonly used neonicotinoid pesticide is being blamed in a new report for increasing bumblebees’ risk of extinction. Ontario researcher Nigel Raine, at the University of Guelph, said thiamethoxam can reduce the chances of bumblebee queens starting new colonies by about 25 per cent. The results of the study were published in Nature Ecology & Evolution. Raine said bumblebee queens exposed to the pesticide were 26 per cent less likely to lay eggs to start new colonies. Researchers then applied a mathematical model and found that this rate of decline could threaten extinction of wild bumblebees. Bee populations have been falling worldwide, with parasites, climate change and pesticides regarded as leading causes. Bees are key pollinators for more agricultural crops, and bumblebees are known especially for pollinating fruits and vegetables. Most of the research into bees until now has focused on honeybees. Raine and his colleagues exposed more than 300 queen bees to stressors commonly found in the environment, including parasites. Half of the bees that emerged from hibernation were fed syrup with pesticides at levels similar to what the bees might find in the environment. The queens given the pesticide were far less likely to lay eggs than the half that had the parasites only. Bumblebee queens carry out the work of setting up their colonies alone, unlike honeybee queens that receive help from drones. Thiamethoxam is used as a seed treatment for soybeans and corn and other crops.

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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

COUNTRY CROSSROADS CON N EC T I NG RU R A L FA M I L I E S

Dodds family marks centennial of unique barn, history of farm It’s been 100 years since Arthur Drummond built a banked barn on his yard site northwest of Brandon. Now, the latest generation of the family, Cameron and Bea Dodds, are marking its centennial BY ALEXIS STOCKFORD Co-operator staff

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istory is far from buried on the Dodds farm near Kenton, Man. In fact, it’s a point of pride for current owners, Cameron and Bea Dodds. Their 117-year-old brick farmhouse sits nestled in between old-growth trees and longestablished gardens, providing a backdrop for the memorial cairn beside the lane, added to commemorate the farm’s over-135year history. This year, however, it is the barn’s turn to shine. Built in 1917 by Ar thur Drummond, Cameron Dodds’ great-uncle, and set into the hill overlooking open pasture to the south, the red barn is easily the farm’s most eye-catching feature from a distance. Outside of the classic style and colour, the building’s exterior betrays few hints at its real age. Bright paint and new windows show the signs of recent maintenance, while the original roof has been covered with metal to preserve it. Inside, however, the barn is peppered by the remnants of history. The structure of the building has been largely untouched. Some doors have been widened to fit modern equipment, Dodds said, while the barn now sports a “cow cam,” used to monitor animals during calving. “We’ve taken out some of the stanchions to make it easier to put in gates for moving cattle about because the way it was set up before, to get from one side of the barn to the other was only one access, so you had to sort of go outside with the livestock to go around,” Bea Dodds said. In the bottom level, taken up largely by livestock pens, a stringer of metal runs along the ceiling, once used to hang lanterns before hydro was installed in 1947. In the top level, still used to store hay, the open space is broken by a ventilation system encased in wooden pillars, used to whisk out heat and moisture, while an insulated room in the corner was once a source of winter water, pumped from a nearby reservoir to a wooden holding tank. “It had a sort of mechanical manure-handling system in the barn on a rail system and in the loft too, it had the forks — grapple forks — to move the hay from the wagons into the loft,” Cameron Dodds said, pointing out some of the structure’s quirks, many of which would have been state of the art at the time of construction.

Wooden pens and lantern-hanging wire stand as a testament to 100 years of history at the Dodds barn south of Kenton, Man.

Cameron Dodds stands outside his 100-year-old barn south of Kenton, Man.   Photos: Alexis Stockford

Changing with the times Now mainly used for hay storage and winter calving, as well as a home for the healthy farm cat population, the barn was once the hub of the farm’s small dairy herd, a legacy still reflected in the milking stalls standing in the barn’s lower levels. “We still kept dairy cattle for quite a while — and then it went more into the beef cattle and before that there was an era where we used to use it for hogs, you know, finishing hogs,” Dodds said. “I guess at times there was, maybe, some small area for chickens at one time. It’s seen a big variety of livestock over the years.” “Actually, there is an old henhouse there which we’ve transformed now into a pump room, but through the ’50s and ’60s, they kept a large flock of laying hens and sold eggs for both hatching and for commercial use,” his wife, Bea, added. “They’d take the eggs to the train, even, when the train came to Harding and take the eggs to Brandon that way or, later, it was delivered mostly by themselves to Brandon,” she said. “Cream was the same thing.” Most farms milked at least a few cows at that time, Cameron

Dodds said, although most were crossbred rather than true dairy breeds. That cream later became critical to the region’s farms, he added, and his family’s farm was no exception. Trucks, sent out to pick up the fresh cream from farms, eventually replaced rail and became a valuable source of income as well as products like butter. “What really kept a lot of people going was the cream trucks, especially back in the Dirty ’30s and that kind of thing,” he said. “I guess you could say (the barn) was built in a time that was quite affluent, getting close to the end of the war and after the war — the First World War — and things were quite good. Then the ’20s were very good economically, and then, of course, the crash of ’29 and all during the ’30s was quite difficult — very little income on farms.”

Deep roots The barn is the latest, but far from the first, structure on the Dodds’ yard to mark a centennial. The farm dates back to 1881, when Dodds’ great-grandparents, Matthew and Margaret Drummond, settled in what is now the southwest corner of the property with their seven children.

Bea Dodds displays a picture of the farm’s founders, Matthew and Margaret Drummond and their family, taken at the original homestead in the southwest corner of the Dodds property.

In 1898, Matthew Drummond purchased the north half of the section including the current yard site and soon laid the foundations for a new, more elaborate, farmhouse. By 1900, the multi-storey brick home was complete. The farm’s founding father died soon after, leaving the business to his son, Arthur. A generation later, the farm’s surname changed from Drum­ mond to Dodds. The farm was rented out during the ’20s, when Arthur and Ella Drummond temporarily retired to Winnipeg. In 1930, however, the pair returned. “Which was probably the worst time to step back into the farm,” Bea Dodds noted, referencing the grim economic times that hit farmers in the 1930s. That same era of financial challenges brought Dodds’ father and Drummond’s nephew, Les Dodds, to the farm to work. Drum­­­mond later passed the operation to his nephew, paving the way for Cameron Dodds to take the reins in 1992. “I’ve been here all my life,” Dodds said. “Even as, maybe, five, six years old, I’d be helping my dad do chores and up in the loft.” The barn was both workplace and playground for the younger Dodds, who remembers bringing

hay into the loft by hand, grinding grain during cold winter days, playing with kittens and puppies and working with livestock. “There’s been lots of changes with all of the modernization, all the machinery — just so many changes,” he said, comparing his current farming style to his childhood. “(There is) a lot less hand labour and more machinery, which is all right. It’s a good thing.” Today, the Dodds farm is a mixed grain and beef operation, spanning about 400 acres of crops, plus pasture and hay land for their 60 head of cattle. The Dodds recently expanded further into beef, renting land to bolster their pasture acres. “One thing we’ve tried lately is grazing corn,” Dodds said. “We do that. We like that. And I guess you could say we’re conservative minded in respect to the soil and that. On rolling land here we have runways to protect the soil from erosion from water and then we have a dam on the property to save the water from getting away too fast, using it for our livestock and gardens. “We’re not big farmers in today’s standards, but it still keeps us busy and with the livestock we have lots to do,” he added. astockford@farmmedia.com


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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

COUNTRY CROSSROADS

Prairie fare Ovens are for baking, not canning To avoid foodborne illnesses, use research-tested recipes and follow them carefully BY JULIE GARDEN-ROBINSON NDSU Extension Service

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n the past few weeks, I fielded questions for some of our extension agents while they took well-earned annual leave. I learned a lot about what people do as they harvest their bountiful garden produce. As the questions reached my office, I also began exploring the internet to see what was being shared by some blogs, Pinterest, Facebook and websites. Some of the questions and information I found online surprised me. Some frightened me. Some of my callers had found their information on questionable sites. Always proceed cautiously with food preservation information you find online; it’s not all safe. Here are some tips to remember: Ovens are for baking food, but not for canning. Dishwashers are for washing dishes and canning jars, but not sealing canning jars. Microwave ovens are for heating foods and beverages quickly, but not canning foods. A friend of mine told me that some people are sealing jars in bathtubs, but I couldn’t find that online. Maybe she was pulling my leg. Just in case, I’ll add another tip: Bathtubs are for bathing, not sealing canning jars. “Boiling water baths” are a method for canning acidic foods and the method is done on a stovetop, not in your bathroom. Why would some of this information scare me? Botulism, one of the deadliest types of foodborne illness, is caused by eating improperly canned food, especially home-canned food. Commercial canners are extremely cautious about their canning procedures, but they have occasional safety recalls due to a botulism risk too. If you have bountiful tomatoes, be sure to add the recommended amount of lemon juice or citric acid before canning because the acidity of tomatoes can vary, depending on where they were grown and the variety. Don’t invent a salsa recipe and expect it to be safe for canning; freeze your inventions and use research-tested recipes for your canned goods. Vegetables and meats are low-acid foods, meaning they do not contain enough acid naturally to prevent spores (forms of bacteria) from surviving and growing. Spores can

produce a deadly toxin in an airtight environment, such as a sealed jar, unless the food is acidic or has been heated under pressure for a specified time. Boiling food will not kill the spores. For safe canning of low-acid foods such as green beans, corn, carrots and most mixtures of foods, a pressure canner must be used. Using a pressure canner allows the mixture to reach a higher temperature than a boiling waterbath canner. Unfortunately, foods containing the botulism toxin usually do not have an unusual taste or appearance. You cannot tell it is there. Blurred and double vision are hallmark signs of botulism. Besides vision problems, slurred speech, difficulty swallowing and muscle weakness can occur 18 to 36 hours after eating foods contaminated with the toxin. Without treatment, the illness can progress from head to feet, weakening muscles and

Always proceed cautiously with food preservation information you find online; it’s not all safe.

Julie Garden-Robinson is a North Dakota State University Extension Service food and nutrition specialist and professor in the department of health, nutrition and exercise sciences.

Using the appropriate time, temperature and equipment is key to safe home canning.  PHOTO: THINKSTOCK

Sweet Pickle Relish 3 quarts chopped cucumbers 3 c. chopped sweet green peppers 3 c. chopped red peppers 1 c. chopped onions 3/4 c. canning or pickling salt 4 c. ice 8 c. water 2 c. sugar

If you have cucumbers, peppers and onions, you can make your own sweet pickle relish.  PHOTO: PIXABAY

potentially paralyzing your respiratory system. Death can occur without prompt treatment. I probably have scared readers by now. However, I assure you that safe home canning is entirely possible. You just need to follow carefully the latest instructions from credible sources such as university websites or the National Center for Home Food Preservation. When you are canning food, such as tomatoes, salsa and green beans, think of yourself as a chemist and physicist. Measure accurately, and follow the directions, processing times and methods exactly. If someone offers you some home-canned goods, don’t be shy about asking the person how the food was prepared. Visit https:// www.ag.ndsu.edu/food for the researchtested information about canning, freezing or drying fruits and vegetables, and making jelly, sauerkraut and wine. Click on “Food Preservation” for free information. If you have some cucumbers, peppers and onions, make your own tasty relish with this recipe developed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

4 tsp. each of mustard seed, turmeric, whole allspice and whole cloves 6 c. white vinegar (5 per cent)

Add cucumbers, peppers, onions, salt and ice to water and let stand four hours. Drain and re-cover vegetables with fresh ice water for another hour. Drain again. Combine spices in a spice or cheesecloth bag. Add spices to sugar and vinegar. Heat to boiling and pour mixture over vegetables. Cover and refrigerate 24 hours. Remove spice bag. Heat mixture to boiling and fill into clean, hot jars, leaving 1/2- inch head space. Process in a boiling water-bath canner 10 minutes at 0 to 1,000 feet altitude, 15 minutes at 1,001 to 5,999 feet or 20 minutes if you live at an altitude greater than 6,000 feet. Let cool, undisturbed, 12 to 24 hours and check for seals. Makes about 9 pints.


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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

COUNTRY CROSSROADS

Spruce Woods Park equestrian campgrounds Considered one of the best in Manitoba, riding enthusiasts should check it out By Donna Gamache Freelance contributor

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pruce Woods Provincial Park is considered one of the best equestrian campgrounds in Manitoba, so if you are a riding enthusiast, this is a place for you. My husband and I recently stopped at the two camp­ grounds provided for riders and their horses. At midweek both were deserted, but park workers said that the main campground was often buzzing with activity on weekends. Spruce Woods Park is located on No. 5 Highway about 22 km south of Carberry and 17 km north of Glenboro. It has, according to its website, 120 km of equestrian trails, as well as two special campgrounds available for horseback riders. The main one, called the “Barn Campground,” is located nine km east from Kiche Manitou Campground. It has 10 electrical sites as well as unserviced ones, with firepits, wood and showers all available, as well as many corrals for the horses and standing stalls inside the barn. The second campsite, called “Canoe Campground No. 2,” is beside the Assiniboine River, and is available for both canoeists and riders, with many pens available for horses. The facilities are more basic with pit privies and a solar shower, but the campsites are large and well shaded. To reach this campsite a different route

This is considered one of the best campgrounds for horses and their riders.   Barn Campground and corrals.

GAMACHE PHOTOS

is taken. Drive north on “Park Road” (71W) off Highway No. 2, approximately one kilometre east of Cypress River, for about 15 km. Riders at this campground should be sure to visit the nearby “Hogsback” for a scenic view of the river and surrounding area. The Hogsback is a razorback ridge rising above the river, with a bowllike depression on the other side. A one-kilometre hike there is worthwhile. Fees at both campgrounds are collected on an honour system, and are on a first-come, firstserved basis, except reservations are required for large groups of riders. All fees collected from the equestrian campgrounds go towards the “Friends of Spruce Woods” organization, which recently provided funds for the

Fees at both campgrounds are collected on an honour system, and are on a first-come, firstserved basis, except reservations are required for large groups of riders.

construction of new corrals at the Barn Campground. Horse enthusiasts might also be interested in attending one of the long-distance endurance races that are usually held several times a year in the Spruce Woods by different organizations such as the Distance Riders of Manitoba and the Manitoba Trail Riding Club. Competitions are usually

timed events of several different lengths over a marked trail, sometimes varying up to 160 km or more. Horse and rider teams are checked by veterinarians at intervals during and after long-distance rides to assure their health and safety, and scoring includes a demerit system for soundness, condition and manners of the horse. Some teams take the

rides to a highly competitive level, while others use it as a recreational/social activity or a way of exploring some new region. If you’re in the area, remember that some of the same routes are used by vehicles, horses and bicycles, so travel with care. If you’re interested in using the equestrian trails or campgrounds, or would like to attend a competition there, and want more information, contact the Carberry District office at 204-834-8800. For information about Spruce Woods Park call the Interpretive Centre at 204-8278850 or check out the website: https://www.gov.mb.ca/sd/parks/ popular_parks/western/spruce_ info.html. Donna Gamache writes from MacGregor, Manitoba

Lamianstrum — a favourite perennial There are hundreds of varieties of this plant and will add interest to any landscape

problems although slugs will sometimes hide under the edge of the thickly foliated plants. Sprinkling some coarse sand around the clumps in spring helps to deter them. It is very drought tolerant — in fact it resents being overwatered.

By Albert Parsons Freelance contributor

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esearching a favourite perennial ground cover, I discovered that it is a close relative — simply another variety — of another plant in my garden. I was researching lamianstrum, commonly known as nettle vine, and the close relative in my garden is also a lamianstrum, commonly called “Hermann’s Pride.” The lamianstrums belong to the mint plant family (lameacea) and members of this family are recognized by their square stems. Basil is another well-known member, as are all nettles. There are hundreds of varieties of lamianstrum, including the perennial lamiums that so many of us use to fill in spaces in shady areas of our gardens. The two lamianstrums that I have are both varieties of lamianstrum galeobdolon. One is lamianstrum galeobdolon “Hermann’s Pride,” and the other is lamianstrum galeobdolon “Variegatum” — I think! It could also be lamianstrum galeobdolon “Florentinum”; the two are almost indistinguishable from one another.

Hermann’s Pride Like most lamianstrums, Hermann’s Pride is versatile when it comes to exposure — it will grow in full shade or full sun. The growth habit will be slightly more floppy in shade and the bloom will not be as prolific. It is an upright-

Nettle vine

Nettle vine makes a great container plant.

Hermann’s Pride forms attractive shrub-like clumps.  PHOTOS: ALBERT PARSONS

growing plant that gets about 45 cm tall. A clump-forming plant that sends up innumerable stems to form a thick bush, it actually resembles a small shrub when it reaches its mature height. The clumps get wider with age and every three years I dig the clumps up and reduce their size, using the pieces I slice off to establish new plants or to give away. Hermann’s Pride’s foliage is green splashed with silver, making it an attractive accent plant. It flowers briefly in the spring, its whorls of two-lipped yellow

blooms being produced on short side stalks that grow from its many stems. In full sun, bloom is prolific and a magnet for bees. About midway through the summer, particularly after a heavy rain or if the clumps are quite mature and fairly wide, the clumps will split in half and tend to topple over somewhat. This is easily remedied by tying a piece of heavy garden twine around the bottom of the plant about 15 cm from the ground and pulling it tight until the plant is tightly packed and no longer appears “split.” Tie the string and if needed add a stake to keep the plant upright. This is one of the earliest perennials to get going in the spring, survives early-fall frosts and looks good in the garden until fall cleanup. It has no disease or pest

This plant also has attractive green leaves that are splashed with silver, but the silver is more patterned and not as random as it is on Hermann’s Pride. It is a trailing plant and spreads rapidly over a wide area — making it a great ground cover in shade or sun. It will need consistently moist soil to look good in full sun and it does perform best in shade or part sun. Like Hermann’s Pride, nettle vine is not particular about soil type and experiences few pest problems. It forms a loose mound about 25 cm high and the long trailing stems grow outward from the clump. The stems will root at their leaf axils as they creep along the ground. It has flowers similar to Hermann’s Pride which appear briefly in early spring. While nettle vine is used mostly as a ground cover, Hermann’s Pride is used as an accent plant in flower borders or positioned in a row along a path or at the front of a rose bed. Nettle vine also makes a great addition to a mixed container and will soon act as a spiller when its stems begin tumbling over the edge. Both of these varieties of lamianstrum will add great interest and beauty to the landscape. Albert Parsons writes from Minnedosa, Manitoba


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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

COUNTRY CROSSROADS

Paddling for a cause Drawn together by a common experience team raises awareness of breast cancer and importance of early detection

Roblin country music artist making a name for himself Ryan Keown has reached many of his musical ambitions and he’s still going strong

By Candy Irwin By Darrell Nesbitt

Freelance contributor

Freelance contributor

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t was heartbreaking to learn that in the 18 years since the Westman Waves of Hope (WOH) dragon boat team has been in existence, 14 of the members have passed away. But WOH isn’t about death — it’s about living your life to the fullest and appreciating every single day. The team draws its members from a 200-mile radius of Brandon and is currently comprised of 33 ladies, all of whom have fought breast cancer and survived. As a symbol of their vitality they race dragon boats — while at the same time raising awareness, promoting the early detection of breast cancer and inviting those similarly afflicted to climb aboard the aptly named “Kindred Spirit.” The name of the boat refers to people who have been drawn together by a common experience — a diagnosis of breast cancer and the resultant medical treatment. Kindred Spirit is deeper than a good-size canoe and holds 22 lifejacketed people — 20 paddlers, a steersperson and a drummer. The steerer calls out commands, which are repeated by the drummer, who keeps a steady beat, and team coach and motivator is Evelyn Clegg from Onanole. OK, dragon boating is fun, “but, the price of admission is pretty dear,” said Diane Harrington of Basswood, who has been a WOH member for 16 years. “All of us here have coped with and survived breast cancer.”

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The Kindred Spirit can hold 20 paddlers, a steerperson and a drummer.  PHOTO: CANDY IRWIN

Betty Stewart, the team’s most “seasoned” member at 78 years old, said that if requested by the grieving family, fellow dragon boat team members will honour a lost teammate with a “paddles up” honour guard and the ceremonial placing of a special bouquet. Along with Stewart, Edna Verhelst, and Joyce Johnson, all from Brandon, and Marg Rycroft from Onanole, have been with the team for all 19 summers since the club’s inception. What motivates these longtime members and others to continue? “Being part of the team inspires me to keep fit,” said Bev Roman of Erickson. “You need to be fit and flexible in order to do this,” agreed Verhelst. “I just love being on the water,” said Dianne Michaluk, who has been a member for seven years.

The name of the boat refers to people who have been drawn together by a common experience — a diagnosis of breast cancer and the resultant medical treatment.

The team shares comradery, friendship, sisterhood — that feeling of family — supporting each other physically, emotionally and spiritually. For further information check out www.wavesofhope.ca. Candy Irwin writes from Lake Audy, Manitoba

yan Keown has energized audiences over the years, retracing roots back to the age of 14, when he joined a band of older guys in the Roblin area and began to hit the road. “I enjoy covering classic country songs early in the night, playing the current radio hits then finishing the night with a few surprise cover songs from artists that you would not expect us to do, said Keown. “It makes for a lot of fun and a lot of dancing!” Keown said he actually started playing guitar when he was 12, absolutely falling in love with it. Memories of those bar moments, had this young guitar player standing in the corner, playing through kitchen doors, as “I wasn’t old enough to set foot inside a licensed establishment.” Today this rural country artist, who has had incredible support from various clubs and organizations primarily in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, has reached many of his musical ambitions. The family man earned the 2015 Single of the Year at the Manitoba Country Music Association (MCMA) awards show, and was named the 2016 Male Artist of the Year and 2016 Fan’s Choice. For Keown, who is also an insurance broker and real estate seller, the accolades have led to some incredible music opportunities. “I opened a sold-out Club Regent Casino concert in Win­ nipeg for the legendary Tanya Tucker,” said Keown. “That’s

Ryan Keown  PHOTO: COURTESY ORA WALKER PHOTOGRAPHY

prob­a bly one of the coolest things I get to do as an artist — meet and open for some really amazing entertainers.”

Family support Wife Zoe, an elementar y school teacher, and their three boys, Austin (14), Ethan (12), and Corbin (10), enjoy being together with him as a family, whether it be camping, snowmobiling or dirt biking. Keown said 2017 is a very busy year with shows, and selections to appear at the Canadian Country Music Association Spotlight Competition, and the Josie Music Awards in Nashville, Tenn. With three active boys and coaching and volunteering, he finds it difficult to find a lot of time to dedicate to songwriting, but appreciates all the support. “From family to fans, I would just like to thank everyone for their continued support of my music and hope they come out to a show,” said Keown. “Links to my social media can be found at www.ryankeown.com.” Darrell Nesbitt writes from Shoal Lake, Manitoba

This Old Elevator

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n the 1950s, there were over 700 grain elevators in Manitoba. Today, there are fewer than 200. You can help to preserve the legacy of these disappearing “Prairie sentinels.” The Manitoba Historical Society (MHS) is gathering information about all elevators that ever stood in Manitoba, regardless of their present status. Collaborating with the Manitoba Co-operator it is supplying these images of a grain elevator each week in hopes readers will be able to tell the society more about it, or any other elevator they know of. MHS Gordon Goldsborough webmaster and Journal editor has developed a website to post your replies to a series of questions about elevators. The MHS is interested in all grain elevators that have served the farm community. Your contributions will help gather historical information such as present status of elevators, names of companies, owners and agents, rail lines, year elevators were built — and dates when they were torn down (if applicable). There is room on the website to post personal recollections and stories related to grain elevators. The MHS presently also has only a partial list of all elevators that have been demolished. You can help by updating that list if you know of one not included on that list. Your contributions are greatly appreciated and will help the MHS develop a comprehensive, searchable database to preserve the farm community's collective knowledge of what was once a vast network of grain elevators across Manitoba. Please contribute to This Old Grain Elevator website at: http://www. mhs.mb.ca/elevators. You will receive a response, by email or phone call, confirming that your submission was received. Goldsborough is interested in hearing all sorts of experiences about the elevators — funny, sad, or anything in between. Readers willing to share their stories can leave messages at 204-474-7469.

Built in 1927 for United Grain Growers, a 30,000-bushel grain elevator in the village of Hilton, on the CNR Wawanesa Subdivision in what is now the Rural Municipality of Prairie Lakes, was closed in July 1966, never having had an annex built beside it. The last of three elevators that once stood at Hilton, the building was traded to Manitoba Pool in 1976 and moved 12 miles to Ninette, where it replaced an elevator that had collapsed suddenly. It stood there until demolition in 1989.  Source: University of Manitoba Archives & Special Collections


B:10.5” T:10.25”

32

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

S:9.75”

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Always read and follow label directions. InVigor ® is a registered trademark of the Bayer Group. Bayer CropScience Inc. is a member of CropLife Canada.

T:15.5”

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33

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

pLaCe ads 

CANADA’s Ag-ONLY LIstINgs gIANt

BY EMAIL: classifieds@farmzilla.com

AD DEADLINEs Liner ads Thursday one week prior to publication at noon CST dispLay ads Thursday one week prior to publication at noon CST

GUN & MILITARIA SHOW

Sunova Centre West St Paul Rec Centre 48 Holland Rd Located North of the North Perimeter Hwy between McPhillips & Main St off Kapelus Rd WINNIPEG, MB. SUNdAy, SEPTEMBER 17TH, 2017 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. Adults $5.00 – Women free Children under 12 accompanied by an adult free There will be dealers from Ontario, Saskatchewan and Manitoba Show Sponsored by the MCC of C

BY PHONE: 1-800-667-7770

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$11.25/week, minimum Ask our customer service consultants about our additional features Ask about our 10% pre-payment discount

CLAssIFIED DIsPLAY AD RAtEs $32.20/column inch/week

UNRESERVED ANTIQUES And Collectibles Saturday, September 23, 2017 at 10 AM, Schmalz Auction Center Hwy #2 South, Prince Albert, SK. Over 500 Lots Internet Bidding and Live Auction. This sale has some rare and unique items all from the same long time collector. This is only a partial listing, watch our websites for more details. Schmalz Auctions 306-763-2172, 306-922-2300, Prince Albert, SK. PL #911509. www.schmalzauctions.com www.globalauctionguide.com

35 STEEL WHEELS drill etc.; Rolex watch, $1200; 2 horse show wagon, $950; 600 LP records, large assortment; Steam engine bell; 1973 Pontiac; 1995 Buick Roadmaster. $1250 ea; Phone booth with phone; 5000 hub caps chrome car and truck; Older motor home; 25’ Sky Jack electric, $1200; 500 gal. fuel tanks w/stands, $150 ea; 7 wood stoves; Trophy elk head; 18’ refinery tower with stairs; Alum. beams 18’; Lots of steel; Misc. antiques; Many more items. 204-482-7251, Selkirk, MB. area.

WANTED: TRACTOR MANUALS, sales brochures, tractor catalogs. 306-373-8012, 1956 COCKSHUTT 50, gas, new battery, Saskatoon, SK. #1534 tires, runs, good cond., $6500 OBO. ANTIQUE BARBER CHAIR for sale, mint 403-400-1068, Moose Jaw, SK. condition. For more information e-mail: FORD TRACTOR PARTS. Specializing in possibilities789@gmail.com 8N, 9N, and 2N tractor parts and engine kits. Plus all other Ford models. Manuals. www.diamondfarmtractorparts.com Call 1-800-481-1353. AGRO WESTERN AUCTION RESULTS! Know before you go! Harvest is here, time is short, know your equipment prices before you go to auction or the dealers yard! Our website is fast and easy to access, see us at: www.agrowestern.com MULVEY “FLEA” MARKET. Osborne and Mulvey Ave. E. Winnipeg. Saturday’s, SunONLINE AUCTION: “Ready, Aim, Consign” day’s, Holidays, 10AM-5PM. 40+ vendors. Monthly Firearms Sale. Bids close A/C. Debit, Visa, MC. Table or booth rental September 28th. 203-60th St. East info call 204-478-1217, mulveymarket.ca Saskatoon. Call Derek 306-227-5940. www.McDougallAuction.com PL #33187. 2000 OSPREY AMPHIBIAN Lycoming 0-320, 2 seater, 146 hrs., Payload 650 lbs. Needs Canadian registration. Serious inquiries NEW TRACTOR PARTS. Specializing in only. $30,000 OBO. Call 306-631-6692, engine rebuild kits and thousands of other parts. Savings! Service manuals and deLashburn, SK. cals. Steiner Parts Dealer. Our 43rd year! www.diamondfarmtractorparts.com Call 1-800-481-1353. 1955 FORD 800 tractor, new cond., offers. David Minkus 204-868-0277, Minnedosa, MB. 2S AUCTIONEERS LTD. will be having Online Timed Auctions closing weekly! Our Online Auction Centre is located at 522 Grand Ave, Indian Head, SK. On offer: comic books, jewellery, antique furniture, vintage cameras, NASCAR memorabilia, Wade Pottery, Blue Mountain Pottery, shop tools, antique tools, real estate & more! Visit our website to sign up and bid! Call Brad 306-551-9411, Nicole 306-660-7377. www.2sauctioneers.ca PL# 333133. ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES DOWNSIZING Auction for Ferdy Justik, Saturday, September 16, 10:00 AM, 801 Buxton Street, Indian Head, SK. Viewing of items: September 15, 5-7 PM. On offer: antique furniture, lamps, signs, glassware & 100's of other items! Call Brad 306-551-9411, www.2sauctioneers.ca PL# 333133. WHITE FOX VINTAGE SNOWMOBILE & Al & Grace Pinkney Auction, Saturday, Sept. 30 at 10 AM. Located across Nipawin Bridge Hwy. #55, Turn East on TWP Rd 513, go to dead end, turn north and go 3.6 kms. Watch for signs. Items up for auction include vintage snowmobiles. 1978 Polaris TX 440; 1977 Polaris Colt SS 340; 1979 Polaris Centurion; 1978 Polaris TX 440; 1975 Ski-Doo Olympic; 2000 Polaris XCSP600; 1974 Sno-Jet SST 340; 1977 Sno-Jet Astro Jet; 1978 Polaris Cobra 340; 1993 Ski-Doo Skandic II; 1977 Ski-Doo RV Mountain; 1974 Ski-Doo TNT 340 fan; 1972 Merc 340; 1976 Merc Trail-Twister; 1969 Yamaha 340; 1981 Polaris TXL Indy; 1975 Colt 250 FA; 1978 Kawasaki Intruder 440; 1986 Honda Fourtrax 250; 2001 Polaris Touring 340; selection of misc. snowmobiles; Parts service manuals; shop and household items. Sale conducted by: Rick McAuley Auctions, White Fox, SK., 306-276-5792, 306-276-8497. PL 913568. ‘No Buyers Fee” Visit us on FB or view at: www.rickmcauleyauctions.com

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1938-39 MASSEY HARRIS 101 Super, fair cond., $1500; Massey 44, 4 cyl., good rubber, nice running cond., $2000; Minneapolis Moline G1000, ready to go, $2500; McCormick Deering 1530, on steel, $900; Hart Parr 36, on steel, running, $2000. 204-773-2075, Russell, MB. IHC W450 TRACTOR, dsl., good tires, $1200; IHC Farmall Super M, $1200; Camper: 1997, 26’ gooseneck, good shape, $8000. 204-855-2212, Oak Lake, MB. ADRIAN’S MAGNETO SERVICE. Guaranteed repairs on mags and ignitors. Repairs. Parts. Sales. 204-326-6497. Box 21232, Steinbach, MB. R5G 1S5.

ONLINE AUCTION: Hot Water Boilers And Centrifugal Pumps Auction located at 2305 Victoria Avenue, Regina, SK. Bids close September 28th, 12:05 PM. Visit www.McDougallAuction.com for details or call Patrick 306-536-7418 between 9:00 AM- 2:00 PM. PL #319916.

BY FAX: 306-653-8750

CONDItIONs

• Manitoba Co-operator reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement submitted to it for publication. • Manitoba Co-operator, while assuming no responsibility for advertisements appearing in its columns, exercises the greatest care in an endeavor to restrict advertising to wholly reliable firms or individuals. • Buyers are advised to request shipment C.O.D. when purchasing from an unknown advertiser, thus minimizing the chances of fraud and eliminating the necessity of refund if the goods have already been sold. • Ads may be cancelled or changed at any time in accordance with the deadlines. Ads ordered on the term rates, which are cancelled or changed lose their special term rates.

McSherry Auction Service Ltd

JOHN DEAR

HERMAN REMPEL

Sun. Sept. 17th @ 10:00 am

Sat., Sept. 30th @ 10:00 am

Teulon, MB 1 Mile South on Hwy 7 Then West 4 Miles On Hwy 415 Then South ¾ Mile on Rd 5 E

Stonewall, MB #12 Patterson Dr. Contact: (204) 254-5255

Contact: (204) 797-2019 Tractors, Skidder & Crawler * Equip * Vehicles * Trailers * Recreation * Yard * Misc * Tools *Antiques * Household * Stuart McSherry (204) 467-1858 or (204) 886-7027

www.mcsherryauction.com

McSherry Auction Service Ltd

1918 Buick Roadster * Int TD6 Crawler 88 Hrs * Int TD 9 * 6 More Tractors * Large Amt New & Used Tractor Parts * Specialty & Regular Tools * Manuals * Antiques Stuart McSherry

Estate & Moving Auction

(204) 467-1858 or (204) 886-7027

Wed., Sept. 20th @ 4:00 pm

McSherry Auction Service Ltd

Yard * Recreation * Tools * Misc * Antiques * Household * Go To Web!

Auction Sale Marilyn Brounstein

Stuart McSherry

Sun. Sept. 24th @ 11:00 am

Stonewall, MB – 12 Patterson Dr.

(204) 467-1858 or (204) 886-7027

www.mcsherryauction.com

www.mcsherryauction.com

Dugald, MB 1 Mile West on Hwy 15 Then North 1/3 Mile on Vernon Road Long Lane – West Side Over 60 Vehicles * Featuring : 70 Chev El Camino Mdl 55 * 66 Ford Mustang 2 D * 73 Plymouth Duster 2 D * 50’s Morris Panel Sedan * 81 Dodge Charger 2 D Hatchback * 93 VW Jetta Dsl * 94 Ford Explorer 4x4 * 79 Ford 250 * 78 Dodge 300 Tow Trucks * Universal 650 MFWA 3PH & FEL * Fordson 60 HP Tractor 3PH & FEL * 3PH Mower * 3PH Snow Blower * All Vehicles Stored Outdoors & Nothing Will be Running On Sale Day. Full List & Pictures on Web * Stuart McSherry (204) 467-1858 or (204) 886-7027

WANTED: GROUND DRIVE BINDER in working condition. Consider any make. Prefer McCormick Deering. 306-577-9041.

McSherry Auction Service Ltd

RUMELY OIL PULL; Bulldog Tractor. Call 306-304-1959, Goodsoil, SK. 1958 FORDSON MAJOR 4 cyl. dsl. tractor, w/3PTH, runs great, asking $6000 OBO. Call Sheldon, 306-291-2072 Saskatoon, SK

JIM’S CLASSIC CORNER - We buy or sell your classic/antique automobile or truck. Call 204-997-4636, Winnipeg, MB. OLD MODEL T: UC vg cond., body fair, c/w running boards, fenders, wooden spoke wheels. Tires, windshield, radiator in good condition. Motor, trans. & all pedals complete. Pics avail. 306-795-7995, Ituna, SK. WANTED: 1983 Oldsmobile Delta 88, 2 or 4 door. Must be in decent condition, call 306-390-8005, Cut Knife, SK.

www.mcsherryauction.com

Florent & Isabelle Desrochess Sat. Sept. 16th @ 10:00 am Lorette, MB North 2 Miles on North Station Road Then 1/8 East on Robin Road #15 Contact: (204) 781-2751 Vintage Car * Recreation & Yard * Tractor & Equip * Trailers & Truck * Tools * Misc * Antiques

Announcements & Calendars.0100 - 0340

Farm Machinery .....................4103 - 4328

Airplanes .............................................0400

Livestock .................................5000 - 5792

Antiques Sales & Auctions ....0701 - 0710

Organic ....................................5943 - 5948

Auction Sales ......................................0900

Personal ..................................5950 - 5952

Auto & Transport ....................1050 - 1705

Real Estate Sales ....................6110 - 6140

Business Opportunities.....................2800

Recreational Vehicles ............6161 - 6168

Contracting & Custom Work ...3510 - 3560

Rentals & Accommodations .6210 - 6245

Construction Equipment ..................3600

Seed (Pedigreed & Common).6404 - 6542

Farm Buildings .......................4000 - 4005

Careers ....................................8001 - 8050

for a Complete Category list visit us online at farmzilla.Com

ONLINE TIMED REAL ESTATE Auction for Kathy Peet & Marlin Shain, Oxbow, SK. Bidding closes 6:00 PM, Monday October 16th. To bid on this property go to www.2sauctioneers.ca Open House: Sept. 17th & 24th 2:00-5:00 PM. Contact: Kathy Peet at 306-485-7751, Marlin Shain at 306-485-9750, or Brad Stenberg at 306-551-9411 for more details. All bids are subject to owner’s acceptance. 2017 Taxes: Lot #1: $1158.01; Lot #2: $618.77; Lot #3: $744.61. Lot #1: NW 18-03-01-W2 (159 ac.) House is on NW corner of this quarter (can be subdivided). Details: 6 bdrm - 3 up, 3 down. 2 full bathrooms, 1 half bath off mudroom; Air exchange system; Cold room & connected storage room; Natural gas furnace, water heater & dryer; Attached 2 car garage. Insulated & drywalled with extra plugs & lights. 2nd electrical panel box in garage; Central vac; Renos in October 2010; All new doors, vinyl triple pane windows, French doors, vinyl siding, shingles & eavestrough; All new flooring, paint, trim & baseboards, toilets, sink & faucet in main bath & oak stairs; New wall oven in 2013, all appliances included; Custom made oak cabinets in kitchen, bathrooms & basement bar; Mature fruit trees; 2 garden sheds, tack shed & 3 hitching posts; Tin covered pole shed & shop; Four fenced horse pastures around yard of various sizes. All the land is fenced; Water source is dugout. Currently no treatment system. Lot #2: SW 19-03-01-W2 Ext 1 & 2 split by Highway 18 (62 ac. N side & 79 ac. S side). Lot #3: SW 18-03-01-W2 (156 ac.). All quarters are seeded to grass, fenced and have dugouts. All quarters have pumpjacks w/Surface Rights only. Terms: 10% non-refundable option to purchase due on sale day. Balance due within 30 days. www.2sauctioneers.ca PL#333133 ONLINE AUCTION: Premium 20,000 sq. ft. portable Convention Tent complex with 1999 Wabash 53’ covered storage trailer van and 2004 Western trailer; 48’ alum. deck trailer. Located 20 minutes South of Saskatoon. Used 5 times only. Contact Terry 306-380-3074. Include ‘See Auction Section” for separate ad. For details visit www.McDougallAuction.com or call toll free 1-800-263-4193. PL #331787. We know that farming is enough of a gamble so if you want to sell it fast place your ad in the Manitoba Co-operator classifieds. It’s a Sure Thing. Call our toll-free number today. We have friendly staff ready to help. 1-800-667-7770.

Stuart McSherry

www.mcsherryauction.com

canada’s ag-only listings giant

1-800-667-7770 |

.com

Dowler Auct ion rt & po

Winkler, MB • 1-204-325-4433

LENTON JIM AND DOREEN RETIREMENT AUCTION SAT., OCT. 7, 10 AM

MIAMI MB, 2 MILES NORTH OF MIAMI CEMETERY

Svc

Classified Category index

SHIANNE NECHVATEL AND ESTATE OF John Nechvatel Farm Auction, Ukrainetz Auctions, Yarbo, SK., Saturday, September 23, 2017 at 10:00 AM. Directions: from Esterhazy, 13 kms east on Hwy 80. Contact: 306-745-6376. Tractors: Case 2470 tractor, yellow model; White 2-70 tractor, homemade cab, 18.4x34 tires (good cond.), 4 hyds., 8574 hrs., w/Jobber FEL. Misc Equip. & Truck: Degelman stone picker, very good cond.; MF #30 sixwheel rake; 1949 Chev 1 ton, steel B&H (needs wood floor); IHC #55 30’ chisel plow and harrows. Yard & Rec: White GT1650 garden tractor, tire chains w/front mount snow blower; Rally 12HP 38” riding lawn mower; Roper garden tractor, c/w garden cultivator w/motor; Small cultivator, potato hiller and blade for a garden tractor; Lawn sweep; Yard sprayer; Wheelbarrow; 14’ utility trailer (new tires and floor); Older Bombardier snowmobile parts. Shop, misc., and more! Visit www.ukrainetzauction.com for updated listing and pictures. PL #915851

(204) 467-1858 or (204) 886-7027

CLASSIC CAR, like new condition, 1976 Mercury Grand Marquis. Priced to move! 306-296-4527, 306-293-7777, Frontier, SK Go public with an ad in the Manitoba Cooperator classifieds. Phone 1-800-667-7770.

farmzilla.com

• Manitoba Co-operator accepts no responsibility for errors in advertisements after one insertion. • If you wish to have replies sent to a confidential box number please add $5.00/week to your total. While every effort is made to forward replies to the box numbers to the advertiser as soon as possible, we accept no liability in respect of loss or damage alleged to arise through either failure or delay in forwarding such replies, however caused. • Advertisers using only a post office box number or street address must submit their name to this office before such an advertisement is accepted for this publication. Their name will be kept confidential and will not appear in any advertisement unless requested.

ANTIQUE TRACTOR PARTS; Chevy, Dodge, and Ford trucks and parts for sale. Call 306-864-2994, Melfort, SK.

COMPLETE 3 PTH for Ford 5000 or power major tractors. Category #2 hitch, good cond $500. 306-279-4706 Yellow Creek SK

i

McSherry Auction Service Ltd

Lam

PRINT | MOBILE | ONLINE

.com

Farm retirement auction for William Klaprat

Saturday, Sept 23 10am - Seven Sisters, MB Directions: From jct of Hwy #11 and Hwy #307, east 1.1 miles. Watch for auction signs. Driveway is just west of bridge into Seven Sisters. Driveway marker 62074.

Upcoming auction with a large selection of well maintained equip., tools, antiques, and household items. For full listing and photos, please view www.lamportanddowler.com Hope to see you there! www.lamportanddowler.com Tim Dowler 204-803-6915 or John Lamport 204-841-4136

LARGE AMOUNT OF TOOLS, YARD EQUIP., NEW MERCHANDISE FROM PLUMBING SHOP, SOME HOUSEHOLD ETC 1995 FORD F-250 DIESEL SAFETIED, IHC B275 DIESEL TRACTOR, SUPER WD6 W/DUAL LOADER JD 140 YARD TRACTOR WITH BLOWER, MOWER, TILLER, ALSO JD HYDRAULIC DRIVE TILLER ONLY OFF 316, ETC, LOTS OF TOOLS AND MISC. OWNERS 204-745-6424

See our website: www.billklassen.com for complete listing or call 204-325-4433 cell 6230

BILL KLASSEN AUCTIONEERS


34

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Hwy #205, Grunthal • (204) 434-6519 GRUNTHAL, MB., CHECK BODNARUS AUCTIONEERING FOR ONLINE BIDDING.

CONSIGNMENT SALE

1000 pto JD 2130 good rubber 3pth, pto, 2xhyd.Massey Harris 44 good rubber, pto, front mount saw mandrel and rear mount log splitter, Massey Harris 30: yr between 1946-1952 runs good pto and running belt pully. Allis B pto/running belt pully. JD 2120 good rubber, joystick, allied quick attach loader, bucket, 3 pth Case 2290 with duals JD 2950 new rubber and tubes, 7800hrs, w jd 260 loader quick attach and FWA Case 930 hand clutch w new tires JD 3130 4500 original hrs, factory 3pth and cab. Massey 90 x2. MISC: JD tractor Cab, JD tractor fenders, Fuel tank & stand, Pollyland Tank approx. 2000 gallon, 4 good year tractor tires 23.1-34, assorted plastic hog penning, assorted barn ventilation, 2 large diesel heaters, Railway ties 5x25 bundle, 2 hot water heaters, ramps, shop vac, pressure system w 1/3 hp pump, 1hp motor w fan, jerry cans, assorted elec., tackle box, assorted fittings, hitches, assorted doors, chimney, golf clubs. ANTIQUES/HOUSEHOLD: Deep freezer, several chain saws, sinks, wood stoves (several) , Coca cola machine, retro tables, antique sewing machine, kitchen ware, Oak table set, Antique GE fridge, Antique trunk, Grain crusher. ATTACHMENTS: Kongskilde grain vac w hoses, Allied 795 self leveling loader w mounts & 7ft bucket, IH 80 7ft snow blower single auger, 7ft McKee dual auger snow

AUCTIONS

Sept 17th (Sun) @ 10AM

Community Complex, Souris, MB.

SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 23,2017 at 10 am

FEATURING 2 MOVING SALES TRACTORS: JD 4650 w Duals 20.8 r38, 10796 hrs, 3xhyd,

PRAIRIE LANE

blower, 6.5ft McKee 66 single auger snow blower , JD 5.5ft pull type brush mower, 7.5ft 3pth cultivator, 5ft 3pth double disc , 13ft 3pth HD hyd angle disc, IH 770 5 bottom reset plow, 2 bottom 3pth plow, 6ft HD roto tiller, Woods 3pth 60” tiller (like new), 6ft farmex 006 3pth cultivator, JD 3 bottom plow, JD 7ft blade, quick attatch bale forks, Massey Harris 3 bottom plow, HD fel bale forks, 6ft push blade, new idea sickle mower . SHOP: LKS welder 250, press, welder w generator, air compressors, vices, barrel pump, elec.fuel pump, tractor carbs & mags, parts washer, power fist 3500 w generator, sorting bins, auto parts, bench grinder, work bench, assorted bolts and fasteners, air tools, 13g air compressor, torch gauges, mig welder, socket sets, tap & dye sets, wrenches, chop saw, drill press, jacks, ladders, tool box, drills, angle grinders, ext. cords, level, table saw, 220 ext. cord. VEHICLES/SPORTING: 999 Ford xlt 4x4 ext. cab 300,000km, 2000 Isuzu rodeo fully loaded 18700km, Aluma snowmobile trailer w sno-cap cover, 2010 Yamaha mtx 4 stroke w windshields & cover 5800km, 1979 Kawasaki kd motor bike 100m, 2004 artic cat 400 DVX 4 wheeler, Evinrude boat motor, ATV snow blade, Comfort trailer camper, YARD: diamond harrows, wheel barrow, hose, Tiller, horse shoe game set, hedge trimmer , master craft snow blower, 12hp riding lawn mower. PLUS MUCH MUCH MORE Please visit Bodnarus Auctioneering for online bidding.

Collectibles, Coins, Household, Misc, Tools, Riding Mower, ATV, Snowmobile & 1999 Ford Ranger Truck. Another big one! Details @ www.prairielaneauctions.com Don (204)724-7510

canada’s ag-only listings giant PRINT | MOBILE | ONLINE

1-800-667-7770 |

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BERG’S GRAIN PUP 20’ single hopper, spring ride, chip guarded hoppers, hitch and front, Michel’s tarp and Berg’s quality finish, $28,600. 204-325-5677, Winkler MB

NORMS SANDBLASTING & PAINT, 40 years body and paint experience. We do metal and fiberglass repairs and integral to daycab conversions. Sandblasting and paint to trailers, trucks and heavy equip. Endura primers and topcoats. A one stop shop. Norm 306-272-4407, Foam Lake SK. 1998 DOEPKER SUPER B, 30’-32’x72 insides, closed ends, air ride, 11x24 tires 60%, some rust. 306-593-4419, Rama, SK. PRAIRIE SANDBLASTING & PAINTING. Trailer overhauls and repairs, alum. slopes and trailer repairs, tarps, insurance claims, and trailer sales. Epoxy paint. Agriculture and commercial. Satisfaction guaranteed. 306-744-7930, Saltcoats, SK.

For on farm appraisal of livestock or for marketing information please call Brad Kehler (Manager) a Cell 204-346-2440 Auction Mart (204) 434-6519 MB. Livestock Dealer #1436

NEW EMERALD GRAIN trailers in stock now! Manufactured in Western Canada. Buy now - these are always in short supply for harvest! Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK.

WWW.GRUNTHALLIVESTOCK.COM

A U C T I O N THE LATE RAYMOND PRAIRE ESTATE & BANK REPO’S SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 23RD 10:00 AM LOCATION: 218 BRANDT ST. STEINBACH, MANITOBA TRACTORS: Allis Chalmers D17, 540 PTO, Loader *1956 Ford 640 Workmaster, 3pt, 566 hrs * Kubota B8200 Compact Utility, Diesel, 80 Allied Loader, 3pt * 1968 4020 John Deere, Syncro-Range 8 spd, 3pt *1600 Cockshutt Diesel, Allied Loader, Cab, 3 pt* EQUIPMENT: *2008 New Holland 1442 Disbine, 16’ impeller conditioner *2008 Case IH DCX161 Mower Conditoner, Steel on Steel Rollers *Co-op Implements 203 Cultivator *New Holland 270 Square Baler *Pull Type Potato Digger w/ Steel Wheels *Massey Harris No. 8 Hay Unloader *Horse Drawn Cart *Horse Drawn Potato Heaper * Horse Sleigh* New Holland 276 Small Square Baler*Vicon 6 Wheel Hay Rake* 846 New Holland Round Baler*TRUCKS & TRAILERS: *2008 GMC Sierra 2500HD, 6.6L Duramax Diesel, 4X4,Crew Cab, Leather, 419K *1998 Sundowner T/A Aluminum Livestock Trailer *1952 International Harvester L-Series Truck *1986 General Coach Citation 30ft Fifth Wheel Camper* 2008 20ft T/A Car Hauler Trailer, 7000lb Axles* 2000 Green Valley 20ft Gooseneck Livestock Trailer, T/A, 7000lb Axles* 1999 Green Valley 18ft Gooseneck Livestock Trailer* VEHICLES & ATV: *2014 Chevrolet Cruze LTZ, Leather,Push Button Start, safetied, 83K, Very Clean *1998 Chevrolet Blazer, 351K, (not running) *2009 Yamaha XVS650 V-Star Silverado, 650cc *2001 Honda Foreman Rubicon 500cc, 2 up seat *2004 Polaris 400 4X4 *1983 Yamaha 200 3 Wheeler *2 heated Snowmobile Helmets *Large Angora Leather Snow Suit* 2009 Chevrolet Malibu Hybrid, Safetied, 306K* LAWN & GARDEN: *216 John Deere Riding Lawn Mower *1976 Massey Ferguson 1655, Tiller, Mower Deck *Hydraulic Log Splitter (shop built) *37 Ton Horizontal/Vertical Gas Log Splitter w/ GX390cc Honda (new) *(2) Powerhorse Chain Saws *55 gal UTV 12V Spot Sprayer *16 gal ATV Broadcast & Spot Sprayer ATTACHMENTS & TIRES: *5ft Tebben 3pt TC10-500 Rotary Mower *60” Allied 3pt Self-Contained Snowblower w/ Gas Engine *60” 3pt Finish Mower *(2) 900/200 Skid Steer Hydraulic Trencher *5ft Farm King

3pt Roto-Tiller *72” Skid Steer Sweeper Attach *(4) 86” Hydraulic Snow Plow/Dozer Blade *(3) 80” 3pt Heavy Duty Rotary Tiller *(2) 3 pt Heavy Duty Wood Chipper *84” Skid Steer Attachment 4 in 1 Bucket *(8) 10-16.5 N.H.S Skid Steer Tires STORAGE BUILDINGS, SEA CANS & BUILDING MATERIAL: *Full Container Load Sheet Metal Siding Various Colors 18ft,16ft,14ft,12ft (Sold in bundles 50, 65,89,100,130) *QTY Windows *QTY OF (6) HD Warehouse Steel Shelving Racks *(4) 40ft Sea-Can Shipping Container *20ft SeaCan Shipping Container *20ft 2017 One-Way Shipping Container *(2) 30ftX65ft Peak Ceiling Double Door Fabric Storage Building *(3) 20ftX30ftX12ft Peak Ceiling Storage Building *10ftX14ft Cabin/ Hunting Shack w/ Doors, Windows, Chimney *8ftX10ft Garden Shed *(2) 8ftX10ft Twin Wall Green Houses *(3) Instant Popup Tents 10ftX20ft *16ftX22ft Marquee Event Tent AUTOMOTIVE & SHOP TOOLS: *HD Tire Changer Machine *100 Ton Air/Hyd Shop Press *HD Shopbuilt Hyd Press *(4) 10ft 20 Drawer HD Metal Work benches w/ peg Board *72” 15 Drawer Stainless Workbenches w/ Upper Cabinet & Peg Board *(3) 8800lb HD Two Post Auto Lifts *Powerfist DF6500 Generator *(2) 2000W Inverter Generators *Gas Water Pump *30 gal Portable Air Tank *20 gal Horizontal Gas Air Compressor w/ GX160 Honda, Belt Driven *3/8”X50ft Air Hose Reel w/ Hose *Miller 225 Thunderbolt Welder *(2) Blacksmith Anvils *Magikist Pressure Washer CONTRACTOR EQUIPMENT: *2012 Terex AL-4000 Light Tower, 6KW Kubota Diesel Generator *Reversible Plate Compactor Model C160B *Reversible Plate Compactor Model C125 *6.5 HP C60 Plate Compactor *(2) HD TMG Plate Compactors *LIVESTOCK HANDLING EQUIPMENT: *Approx 100 7ft Mesh Sheep/Goat Panels *Qty Horse Box Stall Panels *Qty Med Duty 9ft 6in Panels *Qty HD 9ft 6in Panels *Qty Light Duty 9ft 6in Panels *Hog Penning HOUSEHOLD GOODS & ANTIQUES: *Household Goods, Furniture & Antiques, Taxidermy Mounts will sell *at the end of the Auction.

REMINDER: EVERYTHING SELLS. NO RESERVE BIDS. NO OWNER BUY BACKS ALLOWED. 3 WAYS TO BUY: 1. Attend in Person 2. Call and Leave a Proxy Bid 3. Register to Bid Online. *HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL? CALL US TODAY 204-326-3061

NEW 2017 GERMANIC R20-2800 tandem scissor frame tub style end dump, 28’x102”, air ride, hyd. lift gate, 11R22.5 tires, steel wheels, electric tarp, new Manitoba safety, $48,000 can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.

MOHAWK MOBILE COLUMN Automotive Lifts, 16,000 x 4 = 64,000 lbs. total capacity, very good working condition, $27,000. Serious inquiries only. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.

2016 KANE M675-1.8 trailer, good for silage, grain, manure, gravel, dirt, hyd. rear door w/grain hatch, silage extension sides, tractor wagon, $42,500. Call anytime 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. HAUSER GOOSENECK TRAILERS: Feat. 2 trailers in 1, use as HD gooseneck trailer and/or round bale transporter. Mechanical side self-loading. LED lighting. Ramps optional. Hauser’s Machinery, Melville, SK. 1-888-939-4444, www.hausers.ca

PRECISION TRAILERS: Gooseneck and bumper hitch. You’ve seen the rest, now own the best. Hoffart Services, Odessa, SK. 306-957-2033 www.precisiontrailers.ca TRI-HAUL SELF-UNLOADING ROUND bale movers: 8’ to 29’ lengths, 6-18 bales. Also exc. for feeding cattle in the field, 4 bales at time with a pickup. 1-800-505-9208. www.trihaulbalemovers.com SEMI COMBINE TRAILER, TRI-AXLE, 2000 Janzen, 12’ wide, Sask. safety, $18,700. Call 306-222-2413, Saskatoon, SK. www.trailerguy.ca 30 GRAVEL TRAILERS, END dumps, clam dumps, cross dumps, side dumps. Check prices on: www.trailerguy.ca Call 306-222-2413, Saskatoon, SK.

2005 LODE KING TRIDEM grain trailers, 6 NEW RECAP FLOATATION TIRES, 48’, air ride, 3 hoppers, SK safetied, 425/65xR22.5, all for $500; 8’ truck cap, $40,000. Can-Am Truck Export Ltd., white, $250; Hoffman 3 phase wheel ba- 1-800-938-3323, Delisle, SK. lancer, $800; Ridgid RS-200 air cond. recovery unit, $800; 1 radial 1000xR15TR on rim 90%, $250. 204-785-0498 E Selkirk MB WRECKING SEMI-TRUCKS, lots of parts. Call Yellowhead Traders. 306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK.

1986 BEDARD 18,000L Tank pup trailer, T/A, air brakes, good water hauler, $7900. Call 1-800-667-4515 or visit our website at www.combineworld.com

TRUCK BONEYARD INC. Specializing in obsolete parts, all makes. Trucks bought for wrecking. 306-771-2295, Balgonie, SK. ONE OF SASK’s largest inventory of used heavy truck parts. 3 ton tandem diesel motors and transmissions and differentials for all makes! Can-Am Truck Export Ltd., 2006 LODE KING PRESTIGE Super B grain 1-800-938-3323. trailer, air ride, 24.5 tires, SK safetied and TRUCK PARTS: 1/2 to 3 ton, new and ready to go, $42,000. Can-Am Truck Exused. We ship anywhere. Contact Phoenix port Ltd., 1-800-938-3323, Delisle, SK. Auto, 1-877-585-2300, Lucky Lake, SK. NEW WILSON and CASTLETON tridems WRECKING VOLVO TRUCKS: Misc. axles and Super B’s. 2014 Wilson Super B; 6 othand parts. Also tandem trailer suspension er used Super B’s; 2005 Lode-King Super axles. Call 306-539-4642, Regina, SK. B; 2001 Castleton tridem 2 hopper; 1996 Castleton tandem. Ron Brown Imp. call SASKATOON TRUCK PARTS CENTRE 306-493-9393, Delisle, SK., DL #905231. Ltd. North Corman Industrial Park. www.rbisk.ca New and used parts available for 3 ton trucks all the way up to highway tractors, BREAKING NEWS! NEW 2018 Berg’s trifor every make and model, no part too big axle 45’ grain trailer, air ride, $51,900; or small. Our shop specializes in custom Save $10,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. rebuilt differentials/transmissions and clutch installations. Engines are available, CHEAP TANDEM GRAIN trailer for sale. both gas and diesel. Re-sale units are on Good tires, good tarps, nice condition. Call the lot ready to go. We buy wrecks for 306-290-6495, Saskatoon, SK. parts, and sell for wrecks! For more info. call 306-668-5675 or 1-800-667-3023. www.saskatoontruckparts.ca DL #914394

2018 SOUTHLAND 22’ Tri-Axle trailer, 7000 lbs axles, 6’ ramps, max cargo 17,204 lbs., $9480. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com

2009 HUTCHINSON 34,000L TANK tridem tank trailer, air susp., 1 compartment, good condition, 2018 SK. safety, $16,900 1990 BOBCO CATTLE TRAILER, 24’x8’, 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com two new 7000 lb. axles w/electric brakes, new 10 ply tires, floor recently redone, rubber mats, divider gates, $11,000. 204-768-9524, leave msg., Ashern, MB.

WRECKING TRUCKS: All makes all models. Need parts? Call 306-821-0260 or email: junkman.2010@hotmail.com Wrecking Dodge, Chev, GMC, Ford and others. Lots of 4x4 stuff, 1/2 ton - 3 ton, buses etc. and some cars. We ship by bus, mail, Loomis, Purolator. Lloydminster, SK. CALL GRASSLAND TRAILERS for your best deal on quality livestock trailers by Titan, Duralite and Circle D. 306-640-8034 cell, 306-266-2016, gm93@sasktel.net Wood SCHOOL BUSES: 20 to 66 passenger, Mountain, SK. 1998 to 2007, $2700 and up. 14 buses in stock! Call Phoenix Auto, Lucky Lake, SK. 2014 KIEFER BUILT alum. bumper pull stock combo trailer, 7x18’, slide-in plexi1-877-585-2300. DL #320074. glass windows, angle divider that swings back, removable saddle rack bridle hangers, rubber mats, very good condition, $14,000. 306-858-7772, Lucky Lake, SK. 2016 CHRYSLER 200, LX 2.4L 4 spd., cruise, keyless entry, 7,000 kms., $21,500. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca ALL TRAILERS COST LESS IN Davidson 2016 CHRYSLER 200, LX 2.4L 4 spd, Blue- 1-800-213-8008 www.fasttoysforboys.com tooth, keyless entry, 5,595 kms., $21,900. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 24’ GOOSENECK 3-8,000 lb. axles, $7890; 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca Bumper pull tandem lowboys: 18’, 16,000 lbs., $4750; 16’, 10,000 lbs., $3390; 16’, 2011 FORD MUSTANG, 3.7L, V6, heated 7000 lbs., $2975, 8000 lb Skidsteer, $1990 leather, keyless entry, 65,775 kms $14,900 Factory direct. 1-888-792-6283. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. www.monarchtrailers.com 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca TRAIL-TECH FLAT deck, 2-1000 lb. 2016 SUBARU IMPREZA consumer reports 2009 exc. cond., $10,500. 306-421-4474, as best small call starting at $23,360! Call axles, for best price!! 1-877-373-2662 or Oxbow, SK. barbjh@sasktel.net www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. INNOVATIVE TRANSPORT SYSTEM: Rolling SPECIAL PURCHASE OF new and near- floor system to convert 53' trailer. 4 new 2014-2015 Crosstrek XVs. Save up to sections to fit short trailer or warehouse. $5000. Come in quickly!! 1-877-373-2662. Used very little. $4500 OBO, trades considwww.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. ered. Call 204-761-6884, Brandon, MB., grant.tweed@gmail.com

2008 WALINGA TRIDEM live bottom, 107,493 kms, alum., 12 comp., hydraulic control, very good condition, $54,900. 1-800-667-4515 www.combineworld.com 3 TRIDEMS, 3 TANDEM stepdecks; S/A 28’ stepdeck; tandem, tridem and Super B highboys; 28’ to 53’ van trailers. Tanker: tandem alum. 8000 gal.,; Single axle and tandem converters. Ron Brown Imp. 306-493-9393, Delisle, SK. DL #905231. www.rbisk.ca BEHNKE DROP DECK semi style and pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, tandem and tridems. Contact SK: 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336. 2012 TROJAN GRAVEL quad, new brakes, new safety. Call 403-625-4658, Claresholm, AB. NEW 2015 DOEPKER 53’ stepdeck trailers with hay racks, new safety. Call 403-625-4658, Claresholm, AB.

Full Listing At www.pennerauctions.com

Sale Conducted by: Toll Free: 1-866-512-8992 www.pennerauctions.com PENNER AUCTION SALES LTD.

218 Brandt Street Steinbach, MB Ph: 204.326.3061 Fax: 204.326.7529

2017 RAM 1500 SPORT, crew cab, loaded, sublime green, MSRP $65,240, all taxes paid for $52,500 total. Call Hoss 306-554-7063 or 1-800-667-4414. BERG’S END DUMP grain trailers w/Berg’s 2007 MIDLAND END Dump Gravel Trailer, 2017 FORD LARIAT F150 4WD 5.0L V8 6 signature quality finish. Call for pricing tarp, new cyl., nearly new tires, new MB spd, tailgate lock, 16,413 kms., $52,900 and 30 day trials. Berg’s Grain & Gravel safety, job ready, $36,000 can deliver. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. Body 204-325-5677, Winkler, MB. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca


35

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

CAB AND CHASSIS: 2010 Chev 3500 1 ton dually, will take 10’-12’ deck, 6L gas, 195,000 kms., fresh Sask. safety, $8900; 2010 Chev 3500 1 ton dually, 2WD, 6.6 L Duramax, 330,000 mi., $6900. Call K&L 2015 RAM 1500, crew 4WD 5.7L V8 8 spd, Equipment, 306-795-7779, Ituna, SK. heated seats, 67,015 kms., Now $34,900! DL #910885. ladimer@sasktel.net Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca 2007 MACK, 400 HP Mack eng., AutoShift trans., A/T/C, new 20’ BH&T, new rear 2015 GMC SIERRA 1500 SLT, 5.3L V8, 6 tires, 716,000 kms, exc. shape, $67,500; speed, 48,097 kms. Now only $41,900. 2009 IH Transtar 8600 w/Cummins eng. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 10 spd., AutoShift, new 20’ BH&T, 742,000 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca kms, exc. tires, real good shape, $69,500; 2015 CHEV SILVERADO, 5.3L V8, 4 spd, 2007 IH 9200, ISX Cummins, 430 HP, running boards, 46,813 kms. Now $28,200 AutoShift, alum. wheels, new 20’ BH&T, Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. fully loaded, 1,000,000 kms, real nice, $67,500; 2009 Mack CH613, 430 HP 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca Mack, 10 spd., AutoShift, new 20’ BH&T, 2014 RAM 1500 Laramie Longhorn 4WD alum. wheels, 1.4 million kms, has bearing 5.7L V8, heated front and rear, $34,900. roll done, nice shape, $69,500; 2007 Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. Kenworth T600, C13 Cat, 425 HP, 13 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca spd., AutoShift, new 20’ BH&T, alum. wheels, new paint, 1.0 million kms, exc. 2014 GMC SIERRA 1500 SLT, 5.3L V8, 6 truck, $71,500; 1996 Midland 24’ tandem speed, 67,474 kms. Now only $39,900. pup grain trailer, stiff pole, completely reMainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. built, new paint and brakes, exc. shape, 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca $18,500; 1999 IH 4700 S/A w/17’ steel 2014 CHEV Silverado 1500 LTZ 5.3L V8 6 flatdeck, 230,000 kms, IH dsl., 10 spd., spd., heated leather, 66,440 kms., $33,900 good tires, $19,500; 2005 IH 9200 tracMainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. tor, ISX Cummins, 430 HP, 13 spd., alum wheels, flat-top sleeper, good rubber, 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca $22,500. All trucks SK. safetied. Trades 2013 DODGE RAM 1500 ST 4.7L V8 6 considered. All reasonable offers considspeed, 134,720 kms. Now $21,900. Call ered. Arborfield SK., call Merv at Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-276-7518 res., 306-767-2616 cell. DL 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca #906768. 2012 RAM 2500 Laramie 4WD 6.7L heated 1980 MACK TANDEM, 18’ B&H, roll up front seats, 170,756 kms., Now $38,900! tarp, good condition. Phone Bill Gordon Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-768-2879, Carrot River, SK. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca 1989 FORD 700 DIESEL, 6.6L, Ultracell 2010 DODGE RAM 1500 SLT, quad cab, box, Michelin tarp, good condition, used 4x4, 5.7L V8 Hemi, 28,500 kms., $26,500 for grain only. 306-862-5207, Nipawin, SK. firm. Greg 306-883-2568, Spiritwood, SK. AUTOSHIFT TRUCKS AVAILABLE: Boxed 2012 RAM 1500 LARAMIE. 5.7L V8, 4 spd. tandems and tractor units. Contact David heated steering & front seats, $25,900. 306-887-2094, 306-864-7055, Kinistino, Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. SK. DL #327784. www.davidstrucks.com 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca 1979 F600 GRAIN truck, Lux B&H, remote 2012 RAM 1500, crew, 4WD, 5.7L V8 hoist and tailgate, very good condition, hemi, 6 speed, 85,374 kms. Now $22,850. $7000 OBO. Call 306-369-7794, Bruno, SK. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. RETIRED: 1977 FORD F600, steel B&H; 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca 1979 F600, steel B&H. Both in good cond. 2011 RAM 2500 SLT 4WD 6.7L V8 5 spd, 306-944-4325, 306-231-8355, Bruno, SK. htd front seats, 80,535 kms., $39,900. 1976 GMC 6500 3 ton, real nice truck, alMainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. ways shedded, 16’ Lux BH&T, $7500. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca 306-233-7305, Cudworth, SK.

SANDBLASTING AND PAINTING of heavy trucks, trailers and equipment. Please call for details. Can-Am Truck Export Ltd., 1-800-938-3323, Delisle, SK. TWO 2007 IHC 9400, Cat 500, 18 spd., 46 rears and lockers, 51” sleepers; (2) 2009 Mack, 485 HP, 18 spd., 46 rears and lockers, 51” sleeper; 2008 Freightliner, 515 HP, 18 spd., 46 rears and lockers, wet line kit. Yellowhead Sales 306-783-2899, Yorkton.

2016 RAM 1500 Longhorn 4WD 5.7L V8, 8 spd., heated front seats, $46,900. Call Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca

2011 RAM 1500 crew 4WD 5.7L V8, heat- FORD F900 GRAIN truck, tag, good B&H; ed seats/steering, 90,758 kms., $24,900. Also several 3 tons. 306-283-4747 or Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-291-9395, Langham, SK. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca 2005 IH 4400, Allison auto., 19’ BH&T, low 2006 RAM 3500 Laramie, 4WD, 5.9L, kms; 2008 IH 7600 tandem, ISX Cummins heated front seats, 261,074 kms., $25,900. 10 spd., new 20’ BH&T; 2007 Peterbilt 330 Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. S/A, Allison auto., new 16’ BH&T. Ron 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca Brown Imp. 306-493-9393, DL #905231. 2006 DODGE RAM 1500 SLT, 5.7L V8, 6 www.rbisk.ca spd. power sunroof, 121,986 kms, $15,900 20+ TANDEMS: Standards & Automatics. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. Yellowhead Sales, 306-783-2899, Yorkton, 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca SK. 2006 DODGE RAM 1500 SLT, 5.7L V8, 6 RETIRING: KENWORTH T800 Cat eng., spd, power sunroof, 121,986 kms. $15,900 18 spd., 20’ B&H roll tarp, Heavy Spec, SK. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. safetied $43,000.306-563-8765 Canora SK 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca CONTROL ENDGATE AND 1994 CHEV 3/4 ton diesel, manual trans, REMOTE systems can save you time, energy long box, extended cab, asking $600. hoist and keep you safe this seeding season. Phone 306-297-3209, Shaunavon, SK. Give Kramble Industries a call at 1977 FORD F100, not used and shedded 306-933-2655, Saskatoon, SK. or visit us last 4 years, like new tires, very little rust, online at: www.kramble.net offers. 306-278-2542, Porcupine Plain, SK. 2007 MACK, 10 speed Eaton auto., new 20’ CIM B&H, 940,000 kms., fresh Sask. safeties. Call 306-270-6399, Saskatoon, SK. www.78truxsales.com DL #316542. 2016 RAM 1500, 4x4 Longhorn crew, 5.7L V8 hemi, 8 spd. Now $47,900 or $315 b/w 1985 FORD 700 tag axle grain truck, gas Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. motor, $7500. Call 780-875-5195 or text 780-808-3816, Lloydminster, AB. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca

NEED LEASING OR FINANCING for all types of equipment? Call Horizon Leasing at 306-934-4445. Saskatoon, SK. 2004 IH 7600 tandem truck, 670,000 kms, 13 spd., 425/65R22.5 front (20,000 lbs.), 11R22.5 rear (46,000 lbs.), $55,000. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. 1975 GMC TREE Spade truck, 350 auto, with Vermeer TS44T, clean unit, 73,000 kms, $21,000. 306-276-2080, Nipawin, SK.

SPECIAL PURCHASE OF new and near new 2014-2015 Crosstrek XVs. Save up to $5000. Come in quickly!! 1-877-373-2662. www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077.

2005 PETERBILT C15 eng., 18 spd., w/2016 Timpte trailer. Both units in exc. cond. w/safety papers. $105,000 for both units. Will separate. For more details, 204-918-4029, 204-981-3636, Cartier, MB. 1998 PETERBILT 379. Online Only Unreserved Auction Oct. 11- 17th. Info. call 306-865-7660. www.championassets.ca 1999 KENWORTH W900. Online Only Unreserved Auction Oct. 11- 17th. Info call 306-865-7660. www.championassets.ca

2016 RAM 1500 SLT quad cab, 4x4 3.6L V6, 27,661 kms., $29,900. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. 1999 STERLING LT9513 T/A dump www.mainlinechrysler.ca truck, 269,825 kms, Eaton 13 spd., 15’ 2017 RAM 1500, 4x4 SLT crew cab, 3.6L gravel box, fresh Sask. safety, $29,900. V6 8 spd. Now $36,654 or $223 bi-weekly 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 2005 IH 4400 tandem, new motor, Allison 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca auto., gravel box; 16’ IH 9200 Detroit, 10 2016 RAM 1500 SLT crew 4x4 3.0L V6, spd., 16’ gravel box; 2013 Decap tridem turbo diesel, 25,650 kms. Now $39,900. belly dump; Used tridem end dump. Ron Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. Brown Imp. 306-493-9393, Delisle, SK. DL 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca 905231. www.rbisk.ca 2017 RAM 1500, 4x4 Laramie crew. 5.7L V8 Hemi. Now $43,754 or $274 bi-weekly Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca 2017 RAM 1500, 4x4 SLT crew cab, 5.7L V8 Hemi. Now $37,900 or $249 bi-weekly Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca

1998 FL80 FREIGHTLINER grain truck, box added 5 years ago, 424,688 kms., SA, 400 bu., 3126 Cat eng., $8000. 403-870-0091, Prince Albert, SK. gleia@wolffleia.ca 1977 IHC 1600, B&H, roll tarp, 27,000 GVW, 74,000 kms, $4000; 1984 GMC 335 HP, Detroit, 13 spd., wet kit, 12&40 axles, 345,000 orig kms, $10,000. 204-785-0498, East Selkirk, MB. ALLISON AUTOMATIC TRUCKS: Several trucks with auto. trans. available with C&C or grain or gravel box. Starting at $19,900; Call K&L Equipment, 306-795-7779, Ituna, SK. DL #910885. ladimer@sasktel.net

2016 DODGE GRAND Caravan CVP, 3.6L V6, cruise, PW, PL, 4,606 kms., $19,900 Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca 2011 DODGE GRAND Caravan, crew, 3.6L V6 6 spd. 249,089 kms., $10,900. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca

2000 FORD F550 XL S/A, 579,720 kms, TOW TRUCK, 1993 F700, 10 spd., Vulcan 7.3L, 5 spd. std, 16’ van body w/powered towing unit (will separate). Pro Ag Sales, tailgate, $9980. Call 1-800-667-4515, 306-441-2030 anytime North Battleford SK www.combineworld.com 2012 FREIGHTLINER CASCADIA day cab, DD15-505 HP, 13 spd., 798,000 kms., $42,900. Norm 204-761-7797 Brandon MB

2015 DODGE Durango Citadel 4WD, 5.7L V8, power sunroof, 91,165 kms, $32,900. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 1994 WESTERN STAR 4964F Crane 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca truck, 584,000 kms, T/A, Cat 3406, Eaton 18 speed, Ferrari 8300 Kg crane, fresh 2012 DODGE JOURNEY RT AWD, 3.6L, 2013 VOLVO 630 mid-roof, flat deck spec, safety, $19,800. Call 1-800-667-4515, leather heated seats, 80,037 kms, $18,900 Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. Volvo D13, I-Shift, 784,000 kms., $64,800. www.combineworld.com 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca Call Norm at 204-761-7797, Brandon, MB. 2016 SUBARU FORESTER name top pick for 2016. Starting from $29,360. Great selection to choose from!! 1-877-373-2662, www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. SPECIAL PURCHASE OF new and nearnew 2014-2015 Crosstrek XVs. Save up to $5000. Come in quickly!! 1-877-373-2662. www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 2012 MACK PINNACLE CXU613 day-cab, Mack MP8-455HP, Eaton 13 spd., $39,900. 1998 GMC T6500 COE, 686,000 kms, Call Norm 204-761-7797, Brandon, MB. S/A, 3116 Cat, Eaton manual, 16’ van body, excellent condition, $9980. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

2010 IHC PROSTAR, new long block ISX, 485 HP, new clutch (1 year warranty on clutch & engine), 18 spd., full lockers, new rubber, ready to work! Call for pricing Cam-Don Motors 306-237-7667 Perdue SK 2010 PETERBILT 388, safety up to date, TNT 4” pump, newer tires, new engine (2015 install), new trans and clutch (2016 install), $65,000. 306-228-3251, Unity, SK.

ATTENTION GRAVEL HAULERS: 5 tandems in stock, 1998-2007; Tri-axle 18’ dump. Yellowhead Sales, 306-783-2899, 2015 INT. LONESTAR, eng./emission warranty till 2020, 270,000 kms, 550 Yorkton, SK ISX Cummins, 46 rears, 3.90 ratio, 4-way lockers, much, much more, including 2.5 years warranty left. Reduced! $133,500. More info. Dan 306-233-7488, Wakaw, SK. KENWORTHS: 2007 T800 500 Cat 18 spd., 46 diff. lockers; 2009 T660, new preemission, 525 ISX, new 18 spd. and clutch, 46 diff., lockers; 2008 T800 daycab, 500 Cat, 18 spd., lockers, new clutch and trans; 2014 Western Star 4900, 46 diff. Detroit, 18 spd., 4-way locks; 2008 Freightliner Cascadia, daycab, Detroit 515, 18 spd., lockers; 2007 IH 9900i, 525 ISX, 18 spd, 3-way lockers; 2007 IH 9200 daycab, 450 ISX, 13 spd; 1996 T800, Cat, 13 spd., rebuilt trans., diffs and injectors; 2006 Pete 379, daycab, 500 Cat, 18 spd., lockers, 2012 VOLVO VNL 630 - A great truck & new rebuilt eng., new clutch; 2005 Mack trailer combo for $90,000 OBO. 2008 CH613, 18 spd., lockers, wet kit, 450,000 Wilson Super B trailers. Truck specs: 46,000 kms; 2- 1996 FLD 120 Freightliners, 425 lb rear, 500 HP D13, 3.55, 744,000 kms. Cat, 430 Detroit, lockers. Ron Brown ImTrailer specs: Alum. grain trailers w/tires plements, Delisle, SK., 306-493-9393. DL 75%+. 204-795-0950, Winnipeg, MB. 905231. www.rbisk.ca

ROUGH LUMBER: 2x6, 2x8, 2x10, 1” boards, windbreak slabs, 4x4, 6x6, 8x8, all in stock. Custom sizes and log siding on order. Call V&R Sawing 306-232-5488, Rosthern, SK.

2016 JEEP PATRIOT Sport/North 4x4, heated leather seats, low kms., $26,900. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca 2009 BUICK ENCLAVE VXL 4WD, 3.6L V6 6 speed, 130,000 kms., $14,900. Phone Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca

2014 RAM 3500 Laramie 4x4, 6.7L Cummins 6 speed, 63,587 kms. Now $54,900. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca

2017 RAM 1500, 4x4 crew. 5.7L V8 Hemi, 6 spd., Now $32,900 or $218 bi-weekly Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca

2006 F-250 5.4L auto, 4x4, service body, 2007 KW T800 Boom Truck, 40 ton, WBAA nice unit, fresh Sask. safety, only 88,000 Unit Model WHL-40T C97, 14,670 hrs., 5th kms, $13,900. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., wheel, new MB safety, crane has new in- 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. spection, state DOT, headache rack, wet kit, knuckle boom crane, excellent cond., $249,500. 204-743-2324, Cypress River.

2009 F550, 6.4L diesel, 2WD, 11’ deck, only 222,000 kms, new front rubber, $15,900. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-7667, Perdue, SK.

2015 FORD F250 Super Duty Lariat 6.7L V8, 6 speed, 132,861 kms., $45,800. Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 2012 IHC TRANSTAR, low pro, Max 300 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca HP dsl., Allison auto. trans., S/A, loaded 2016 RAM 1500 Longhorn crew 4x4 5.7L cab, 13’ Armstrong landscape dump, price V8 hemi, 8 spd., 43,850 kms. Now $42,900 reduced $29,900; 2010 CHEV 1 ton Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. dump truck w/10’ gravel dump, $14,900. K&L Equipment and Auto. Call Ladimer, 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca 306-795-7779, Ituna SK. DL #910885. 2008 GMC SIERRA 1500 SLE, 5.3L V8, 4 2011 VOLVO 730 mid-roof, Volvo D16-550 speed. Now $6500. Mainline Chrysler HP, 18 spd., 1,265,000 kms., $34,900. Call Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. Norm at 204-761-7797, Brandon, MB. www.mainlinechrysler.ca 2013 KW W900, LOW KMS. Online Only 2015 RAM 2500 Longhorn crew 4x4 5.7L Unreserved Auction Oct. 11- 17. Info. call V8 hemi, 8 spd. 16,652 kms. Now $54,900. 306-865-7660. www.championassets.ca Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca

2016 RAM 1500 ST, quad cab, 4x4 3.6L V6, cruise, 95,976 kms. Now $21,900. 2005 STERLING L9500 T/A dump Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. truck Cat C15, 10 speed Eaton, 15’ gravel box, fresh Sask. safety, $39,800. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 2017 RAM 1500, 4x4 SXT quad cab, 5.7L V8 Hemi. Now $33,754 or $212 bi-weekly Mainline Chrysler Rosetown, DL #C7755. 306-882-6000. www.mainlinechrysler.ca

CAN-AM TRUCK EXPORT LTD., Delisle, SK. 1-800-938-3323. 1997 FL80, 5.9 Cummins, auto, 40 rears w/lock, air ride, 16’ grain box, new tires, $30,000; 2006 IHC 4200, VT365, auto, 12’ deck, 260,000 km., $12,500; 1985 IHC S1700, 6.9 diesel, 5&2, w/45’ manlift bucket, ex-SaskPower unit only 109,000 km., $14,000; 2006 Western Star C15 Cat, 18 spd., 46 rears, 36” sleeper, $48,000; 1998 Timpte 48’ convertible grain trailer, tandem, air ride, $17,000; 2009 Western Star C&C, 60 Detroit, 18 spd., 46 rears w/4-way lock, 460,000 km., $50,000; 2003 Freightliner Columbia, 60 2003 FORD F750 Refuse truck, 169,642 Detroit, 13 spd., 40 rears, $18,000; 2008 kms, side load, 25 cu. yd., A/T, Cummins KW T800 daycab, C15 Cat, 18 spd., 46 5.9L, $13,800. Call 1-800-667-4515, rears w/4-way lock, $62,000; 2002 Peterwww.combineworld.com bilt 320, 3126 Cat, auto, w/side load garbage packer, $28,000; Gen sets avail. from 45KW to 800 KW. Financing available OAC. www.can-amtruck.com DL #910420.

2008 IH 7600 tandem 24’ van body, power tailgate, 10 speed ISX; 2007 Freightliner auto. trans., 24’ flatdeck. Ron Brown Imp. 306-493-9393, Delisle, SK. DL #905231. www.rbisk.ca

BELOW FACTORY DIRECT PRICING!!!

OVER 100 TRUCKLOADS OF COLOURED METAL ROOFING + SIDING!! LOADS ARRIVING DAILY.

#1 Gr. Coloured .............. 79¢/ft 2 #1 Gr. Galvalume ............ 75¢/ft 2 B-Gr. coloured ............... 65¢/ft.2 Multi-coloured millends.. 55¢/ft.2

CALL NOW FOR BEST SELECTION OF LENGTHS AND COLOURS! ASK ABOUT FUEL ALLOWANCE.

FOUILLARD STEEL SUPPLIES LTD. ST. LAZARE, MB. 1-800-510-3303

CONTINUOUS METAL ROOFING, no exposed screws to leak or metal overlaps. Ideal for lower slope roofs, rinks, churches, pig barns, commercial, arch rib building and residential roofing; also available in Snap Lock. 306-435-8008, Wapella, SK.

GOT PAIN? Find out why half our patients are happy Western Canadian farmers Affordable alternative to surgery without the down time Hundreds of Western Canadian farmers treated Located in Park City, Utah close to the Salt Lake City airport.

www.docereclinics.com (435) 604-0438


36

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Quality Post Frame Buildings

SKIDSTEER LOADERS: 2008 Case 440, Series 3, approx. 2400 hrs., $24,500; 2007 Case 420, approx. 1600 hrs., $20,500. 204-794-5979, Springfield, MB.

BEHLEN STEEL BUILDINGS, quonsets, convex and rigid frame straight walls, grain tanks, metal cladding, farm- commercial. Construction and concrete crews. Guaranteed workmanship. Call your Saskatoon and Northwest Behlen Distributor, Janzen Steel Buildings, 306-242-7767, Osler, SK.

CAT D8H DOZER. Online Only Unreserved Auction Oct. 11- 17th. Info. call 306-865-7660. www.champion assets.ca 2003 JD 310 SG BACKHOE. Online Only Unreserved Auction Oct. 11 - 17. Info. call 306-865-7660. www.championassets.ca

www.goodon.com

Experienced, Efficient and Affordable!

Over 50 years in business!

Ask about current promotions and lease options.

1-800-665-0470

CAT 966E w/WBM QA wheel loader. Online Only Unreserved Auction Oct. 11- 17. 1978 CHAMPION 740 motor grader, De306-865-7660. www.championassets.ca troit 6 cylinder, showing 2568 hours, 14’ FEL MOUNT TAYLOR Made Cement Mixer: Moldboard, scarifier, cab, New rear tires, It’s Back! 16 cu. ft. Mix your own cement $19,900. Call 1-800-667-4515, or visit: for about 1/2 the cost of premixed. A fast www.combineworld.com & efficient way to pour your own cement. Call 1-844-500-5341 or visit our website at www.affordablelivestockequipment.com

SKIDSTEER ATTACHMENTS: Buckets, rock buckets, grapples, weld-on plates, hyd. augers, brush cutters and more large stock. DUGOUTS: 120x60x14’, Top quality equipment, quality welding CONCRETE FLATWORK: Specializing in REGULATION and sales. Call Darcy at 306-731-3009, place and finish of concrete floors. Can ac- $2000; 160x60x14’, $2950; 180x60x14’, 306-731-8195, Craven, SK. commodate any floor design. References $3450; 200x60x14’, $3950; Larger sizes available. Travel incl. in Sask. Gov’t grants available. Alexander, MB. 204-752-2069. available. 306-222-8054, Saskatoon, SK. www.windandweathershelters.com COMMERCIAL GRADE Wind and weather shelter buildings available in widths from 20’ to 90’. Prices starting at $2495. If you 2006 JD 850J LGP dozer; 2006 JD 750J have bought an auction building and need LGP dozer; 2006 Volvo A30D 30 ton arto upgrade to more durable material or ticulated truck; 2006 Komatsu WA-320-5 parts, we can help! Contact Paul wheel loader, QA bucket, forks, $55,500; 306-641-5464 or Ladimer 306-795-7779. 1989 D6H Cat LGP crawler dozer, direct Located in Yorkton, SK. drive, 90% UC, $39,500; Robert Harris, 204-642-9959, 204-470-5493, Gimli, MB. Pics/info. at: robertharrisequipment.com

STEEL STORAGE SHED, 34'x72'x16' walls. Bi-fold door is 32' wide, side overhead door is 12'x12'. A walk-in door is incl. Everything is disassembled, ready to move, very good condition, $20,000. Call 306-230-6879, Vanscoy, SK. shockeyfarms@sasktel.net

2004 CAT D6N dozer with 6-way blade EXTREME DUTY BRUSHCUTTER. Made in and ripper, $68,750. Call 204-871-0925, Canada, 1/4” steel, 66” cut Omni HD gearMacGregor, MB. box & Parker hyd. motor. Cuts up to 4” trees, two 1/2”x3”x24” blades on a stump EXCAVATOR BUCKETS, various shapes jumper, c/w hyd. hoses and flat face couand sizes for different excavators. Call plers. Std. flow operation, open rear dis204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. charge prevents under deck build up, fits most skidsteers, $4995. 72” & 80” also in 2012 KOMATSU WA380-6 wheel loader, stock. Agrimex, 306-331-7443, Dysart, SK. hyd. QA, AC, ride control emergency steer- Or 306-529-8043, Regina, SK. ing, AutoLube, 23.5x25 tires, 3135 hrs., $135,000 w/4 yard bucket or $140,000 ATTACHMENTS PARTS COMPONENTS w/4 and 8 yard bucket; 2008 JD 850J WLT for construction equipment. Attachments crawler dozer, c/w ROP’S, 12’ 6-way blade, for dozers, excavators and wheel loaders. SBG pads, 8700 hrs, $95,000. Used, Re-built, Surplus, and New equip204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. ment parts and major components. Call Western Heavy Equipment 306-981-3475, Prince Albert, SK.

OUTFITTING ALLOCATIONS FOR SALE, Ministikwan Lake, SK. 25 bears, 25 deer. Call 306-837-4731, pospisil@sasktel.net LARGE INDUSTRIAL BUILDING in heart of Balken oil play for lease/sale; Development lands around Regina/Saskatoon; Large building and property on Broadway Ave, Yorkon; 3 lots on South Service road, Weyburn; Tempo/Tire shop #48 Windthorst; Hotel & Restaurant on #48. Brian Tiefenbach, 306-536-3269, Colliers Int. Regina, SK. www.collierscanada.com

1998 VOLVO A35C, engine rebuilt 800 hrs. ago, transmission rebuilt 700 hrs. ago, both cylinders resealed, new tires 400 hrs. ago, very good condition, $82,000. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.

BARBER SHOP FOR SALE: North Battleford SK. Excellent clientele, only shop in town! Easy parking. 2 chairs, includes 1 sideline, everything goes. Expandable. Owner retiring. E-mail: possibilities789@gmail.com

DEBTS, BILLS AND charge accounts too high? Need to resolve prior to spring? Call us to develop a professional mediation plan, resolution plan or restructuring plan. Call toll free 1-888-577-2020. FARM/CORPORATE PROJECTS. Call A.L. Management Group for all your borrowing and lease requirements. 306-790-2020, Regina, SK.

1979 D8K CAT, 40 hrs. on rebuilt engine, new rails segments and rollers, enclosed cab bush guarded straight tilt blade, Hyster winch, LED lights, exc. cond., $125,000. Can deliver. 60 hour warranty. (Please serious inquires only). Call anytime, 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.

TROUBLED WITH CREDIT CARD BALANCE? Maxed out your credit cards? We can pay off your credit card debts or line of credit! With low rates from 1.99% Bad credit okay. Call 780-566-1349 or 1-800-917-3326, Edmonton, AB.

CUSTOM SILAGING with Claas Chopper and all support equipment. 306-527-2228 Regina, SK., or 250-878-3382 Melita, MB.

LONG LAKE TRUCKING, two units, custom hay hauling. 306-567-7100, Imperial, SK.

2013 CASE CX 210 B Excavator, c/w 42” bucket, hydraulic thumb, loaded, only 1400 orig. hrs, mint condition, $168,000. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.

EQUIPMENT TOWING/ HAULING. Reasonable rates. Contact G H Wells Services and Trucking, 306-741-9059, Morse, SK.

CUSTOM GRAIN/SEED conventional and organic processing with color sorter. Upgrade grain, food grade standards. Wheat, Oats, Fall Rye, Hemp Seed, Flax, Mustard. Call Dale at Intelseeds for scheduling and price quotes- 204-999-4025, Oakville, MB. NEUFELD ENT. CORRAL CLEANING, payloader, Bobcat with rubber tracks and vertical beater spreaders. Phone 306-220-5013, 306-467-5013, Hague, SK. BRUSH MULCHING. The fast, effective way to clear land. Four season service, competitive rates, 275 HP unit, also avail. trackhoe with thumb, multiple bucket attachments. Bury rock and brush piles and fence line clearing. Borysiuk Contracting Inc., www.bcisk.ca Prince Albert, SK., 306-960-3804.

TEREX 8240 B Crawler Dozer, V8 871 Detroit eng., powershift, 26” pads, straight tilt dozer, full bush canopy, 4957 hours, excellent working condition, c/w warranty, S/N #56729, $69,000, can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. CATERPILLAR 482 SCRAPER, 28 yards, mint condition, $39,000 OBO. Phone 204-648-7129, Grandview, MB. 1980 D8K CRAWLER, dirt tilt blade, bush sweeps, good undercarriage, $38,000. 204-525-4521, Minitonas, MB. Website: www.waltersequipment.com

MULCHING- TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. 2010 CAT 287C skidsteer, rubber tracks, hi Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: flow hyds., AC, heater, 1900 hrs., vg cond., www.maverickconstruction.ca $46,000. 204-748-8303, Elkhorn, MB.

SHIPPING CONTAINERS FOR SALE. 20’53’, delivery/ rental/ storage available. For inventory and prices call: 306-262-2899, Saskatoon, SK. www.thecontainerguy.ca

WOOD POST BUILDING packages or built on site. For early booking call 1-800-667-4990 or visit our website: www.warmanhomecentre.com INSULATED FARM SHOP packages or built on site, for early booking call 1-800-667-4990 or visit our website: www.warmanhomecentre.com STRAIGHT WALL BUILDING packages or built on site. For early booking call 1-800-667-4990 or visit our website: www.warmanhomecentre.com HORNOI LEASING NEW and used 20’ and 40’ sea cans for sale or rent. Call 306-757-2828, Regina, SK.

BEHLEN GRAIN RING, 6500 bu. c/w tarp, 48" high, $1500. Please call 306-456-2522 20’ and 40’ SHIPPING CONTAINERS and storage trailers. Large Sask. inventory. or 306-861-4355, Weyburn, SK. Phone 1-800-843-3984 or 306-781-2600. TIM’S CUSTOM BIN MOVING and Haul- 20’ TO 53’ CONTAINERS. New, used and ing Inc. Up to 22’ diameter. 204-362-7103 modified. Available Winnipeg, MB; Regina binmover50@gmail.com and Saskatoon, SK. www.g-airservices.ca FOR ALL YOUR grain storage, hopper 306-933-0436. cone and steel floor requirements contact: 2013 WACKER NEUSON 750T Telescop- Kevin’s Custom Ag in Nipawin, SK. Toll ic wheel loader, 164 hrs., Deutz 60 HP tur- free: 1-888-304-2837. bo, 4 wheel steer, like new! $68,800. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com

HYDRAULIC PULL SCRAPERS 10 to 25 yds., exc. cond.; Loader and scraper tires, custom conversions available. Looking for Cat cable scrapers. Quick Drain Sales Ltd., 306-231-7318, 306-682-4520 Muenster SK 1984 CHAMPION 740 grader, in good shape, asking $23,500. Call 306-236-5031, leave message, Meadow Lake, SK.

TEMPORARY GRAIN BINS, selected 3/8” fir plywood with all holes drilled. Wood sizes from 1750 bu., $452 to 11,700 bu., $883 including hardware. All sizes in stock. All rings 4’ high. Best quality avail. Canadian made quality silver cone shaped tarps available for all sizes. All tarps in stock. Complete packages include freight to any major point in Western Canada. Overnight delivery to most major points in Western Canada. Willwood Industries toll free 1-866-781-9560, fax 306-781-0108. For pricing, details, pics: www.willwood.ca

YELLOW ROSE CONSTRUCTION has a Genset tower van 45’, 3406 Cat eng., 400 KW genset, 25 electrical cord outlets and switches in the tower, from 5-150 HP and 1100 gal. belly fuel tank, excellent cond., ready to go!; 2008 Ingersoll Rand L120 generator light plant with 2 extra 30 amp. plugs and 75’ of extra electrical cord, very few hrs.; Shop van with welder, tools, drill press, vice, working benches and lots of shelving; 1996 JD 644G loader, 4 yd. buck- PORTABLE GRAIN RINGS made of steel. et, A1 condition. Call Bill McGinnis, New 20 gauge wide-corr steel sheets 48”H. Sizes from 3650 bu., $2072 to 83,000 bu., 306-567-7619, Craik, SK. $12,147 including hardware. All sizes in 2006 KOBELCO SK290LC excavator, stock. All rings 4’H. Best quality available. 5708 hrs., tracks and undercarriage 75%, Canadian made quality silver cone shaped digging bucket, nice condition, $59,800. tarps avail. for all sizes. All tarps in stock. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com Complete packages include freight to any major point in Western Canada. Overnight delivery to most major points in Western Canada. Willwood Industries toll free 1-866-781-9560, fax 306-781-0108. For all pricing, details, pictures visit our website: www.willwood.ca

BEAVER CONTAINER SYSTEMS, new and used sea containers, all sizes. 306-220-1278, Saskatoon and Regina, SK.

KEHO/ GRAIN GUARD/ OPI STORMAX. For sales and service east central SK. and MB., call Gerald Shymko, Calder, SK., 306-742-4445 or toll free 1-888-674-5346. SUKUP 15 HP aeration fan, comes with cart transition air sock, used very little, reasonable. Call 306-595-2180, Pelly, SK. KEHO/ GRAIN GUARD Aeration Sales and Service. R.J. Electric, Avonlea, SK. Call 306-868-2199 or cell 306-868-7738. TWO AERATION FANS, 3 HP with screens and all; Like new scooter; Treadmill. Call 306-233-5241, Wakaw, SK.

BUILD YOUR OWN conveyors, 6”, 7”, 8” and 10” end units available; Transfer conveyors and bag conveyors or will custom build. Call for prices. Master Industries Inc. www.masterindustries.ca Phone 1-866-567-3101, Loreburn, SK.

2014 BATCO 15x120 under bin conveyor 30HP, 3 phase 600V motor, like new cond, MERIDIAN GM4000 Grain Max, 40° cone, $18,000. 306-472-7704, Woodrow, SK. man way, view glass, 24x8 aeration, dou1990 CHAMPION 740 Grader, exc. cond., new rubber, new AC system, perfect glass. ble skid, has only had flax in it, $15,000 firm. 306-738-2046, Riceton, SK. bailiffservices@sasktel.net Saskatoon SK. BIN MOVING, all sizes up to 19’ diameter, w/wo floors; Also move liquid fert. tanks. 306-629-3324, 306-741-9059, Morse, SK. GREAT PRICES ON new, used and remanu- MERIDAN 53 TONNE fertilizer bin, like 1986 GRADALL G660C wheeled excava- factured engines, parts and accessories for tor, 7605 mi./4404 excavator hrs, GM 8.2L diesel pickups. Large inventory, engines never had fertilizer in it. Asking $9000. frt/4.7L rear engines, air brakes $14,900. can be shipped or installed. Give us a call Call 306-369-7794, Bruno, SK. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com or check: www.thickettenginerebuilding.ca SUPERIOR HOPPER BINS: Concrete Thickett Engine Rebuilding. 204-532-2187, mount, steel floor mount hopper bins all BRANDT 1545 SP conveyor, 35 HP Russell, MB. sizes; 21’ 8000 bu., triple skids, set up 2014 $15,900. Call Cam-Don Motors $20,400; 24’ 10,000 bu. triple skids, set up Kohler, Ltd., 306-237-7667, Perdue, SK. 3406B, N14, SERIES 60, running engines $26,900; 18’ 5000 bu. double skids, and parts. Call Yellowhead Traders, $13,350. Freight extra on all bins. Call Middle Lake Steel, 306-367-4306, 306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK. 306-367-2408. www.middlelakesteel.com IHC 6400 54’ chisel plow, 12” spacing, new WANTED DIESEL CORES: ISX and N14 NH3, boots and openers, new hoses, new Cummins, C15 Cats, Detroits Ddec 3, 4, walking beam shafts. Nipawin, SK. DD15. Can-Am Truck 1-800-938-3323. 306-862-7138 or 306-862-5993. 290 CUMMINS, 350 Detroit, 671 Detroit, Series 60 cores. 306-539-4642, Regina, SK

CAT D7G DOZER, 13 1/2’ blade, twin tilt angle blade, 26” pads, full bush canopy, rebuilt final drives, 90% undercarriage 2005 NH LV80 Skip loader, 1477 hours, CUSTOM HARVESTER looking for acres (warranty), $76,000, can deliver. 75 HP, 2 WD, FEL, 3 PTH, 7’ box scraper to harvest. 6- new JD S series combines, 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. with scarifier, canopy, $19,800. grain carts and Peterbilt semis. Headers 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com for all crops. No job too big or small Will travel anywhere. 306-421-9270 leave msg., Bromhead, SK. CUSTOM COMBINING. Booking acres for the 2017 crop. Call Stan at 306-309-0080, Pangman, SK.

CONTAINERS FOR SALE OR RENT: All sizes. Now in stock: 53’ steel and insulated stainless steel. 306-861-1102 Radville, SK.

DIESEL ENGINES, OVERHAUL kits and parts for most makes. Cat, CIH, Cummins, Detroit, Mack. M&M Equipment Ltd., Parts and Service phone: 306-543-8377, fax: 306-543-2111, Regina, SK.

MERIDIAN GRAIN AUGERS available with self-propelled mover kits and bin sweeps. Call Kevin’s Custom Ag in Nipawin, SK. Toll free 1-888-304-2837.

MERIDIAN AUGERS IN STOCK: swings, truck loading, Meridian SP movers. Call POLY GRAIN BINS, 40 to 150 bu. for grain Hoffart Services Inc., Odessa, SK., cleaning, feed, fertilizer and left over treat- 306-957-2033. FARM ELECTRONIC COURSE: We are ed seed. 306-258-4422, Vonda, SK. RM45 MERIDIAN, $34,500; RM55 Meputting together a training course on elec- www.buffervalley.com ridian, $36,500. Call 306-648-3622, tronic trouble shooting for farmers. We Gravelbourg, SK. would like your feedback. Courses near Regina to start with. Email me for more USED AUGERS: 2013 R10x41 Wheatheart, info. anyelectronics@accesscomm.ca loaded, $9995; 2014 TL12-39, loaded, 306-352-7466, Regina, SK. $14,995; 2014 Meridian HD853, loaded, $10,995. All excellent condition. 2006 JD 270C LC hyd. excavator, 10,464 306-648-3622, Gravelbourg, SK. hrs., 12’ stick, Q/C bucket, $69,800. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com MK 13x71 WESTFIELD swing out auger, FARM AND INDUSTRIAL ELECTRICAL $9500. Call 306-960-3000, Borden, SK. motor sales, service and parts. Also sale of, and repairs to, all makes and sizes of SAKUNDIAK AUGERS: 7”x45’ w/16 HP pumps and phase converters, etc. Tisdale Kohler eng.; 7”x41’, no eng., 7”x37’, 16 HP Motor Rewinding 1984 Ltd., B&S eng.; 8”x52’ PTO; 10x65 swing, PTO 306-873-2881, fax 306-873-4788, 1005A- BIN MOVERS. Lil Truck Hauling Ltd 2016. hyd. drive; 5 yard Ashland scraper, good 111th Ave., Tisdale, SK. tmr@sasktel.net Good rates. For more info or estimates call condition; Flood Dale swath roller, PBH. Merle 306-338-7128, Fred 306-338-8288. Website: www.tismtrrewind.com 306-944-4325, 306-231-8355, Bruno, SK. 2- 3300 BU., 2- 2000 bu., 3- 1650 bu. bins, $1/bu. Will sell separate. Floors fairly 2012 SAKUNDIAK 52’, 29 EFI HP engine, mover kit, elec. clutch, like new, used very good. Gary 306-823-4493, Neilburg, SK. little, $11,000. 306-369-7724, Bruno, SK. AFAB INDUSTRIES POST frame buildings. ONLY 2 LEFT! 3500 bu. Meridian/Behlen For the customer that prefers quality. bin/hopper combo, 10 leg hopper and NEW FARM KING 10”x70’ and 13”x70’ grain 1-888-816-AFAB (2322), Rocanville, SK. skid, roof and side ladder, safety fill, con- augers in stock now. Cam-Don Motors 2013 VOLVO L50G-TP/S wheel loader, structed, $10,595. FOB Regina, SK. Peter- 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 1323 hrs., 117 HP, hyd. quick attach, auto son Construction, 306-789-2444. SWING AUGERS: Buhler Farm-King 1370; leveling, excellent condition, $89,900. CUSTOM GRAIN BIN MOVING, all types Westfield MK10-61, like new; Bergen 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com up to 22’ diameter. 10% spring discount. 10-70. Call 306-944-4520, Viscount, SK. ROAD GRADERS CONVERTED to pull Accurate estimates. Sheldon’s Hauling, REMOTE CONTROL SWING AUGER behind large 4 WD tractors, 14’ and 16’ 306-961-9699, Prince Albert, SK. movers, trailer chute openers, endgate blade widths avail. 306-682-3367, CWK BROCK (BUTLER) GRAIN BIN PARTS and hoist systems, wireless full bin alarms, Ent. Humboldt, SK. www.cwenterprises.ca and accessories available at Rosler Con- swing belt movers, wireless TractorCams, LEON 550 SCRAPER, good cond., $12,000 struction. 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK. motorized utility carts. All shipped directly OBO. 306-931-2587, 306-260-3407, No FALL SPECIAL: All post & stud frame to you. Safety, convenience, reliability. Sunday Calls. Martensville, SK. farm buildings. Choose sliding doors, over- LIFETIME LID OPENERS. We are a stock- Kramble Industries at 306-933-2655, head doors or bi-fold doors. New-Tech ing dealer for Boundary Trail Lifetime Lid Saskatoon, SK. or www.kramble.net HYDRAULIC SCRAPERS: LEVER 60, 70, Construction Ltd 306-220-2749, Hague, SK Openers, 18” to 39”. Rosler Construction 80, and 435, 4 to 30 yd. available. Rebuilt 2000 Inc., 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK. for years of trouble-free service. Lever POLE BARNS, WOODSTEEL packages, Holdings Inc. 306-682-3332 Muenster, SK. hog, chicken and dairy barns. Construction WESTCO 2600 BU. metal bin for sale, wood 1980 D6D DOZER, wide pad, winch; 1993 and concrete crews available. Mel or Scott, floor, on skids, excellent condition, $5200 2015 LOFTNESS GRAIN Bagger, comes with D37 P6 6-way dozer, cab. 306-304-1959. MR Steel Construction, 306-978-0315, OBO. 403-933-2717, South of Moose Jaw, one new bag, new condition, $32,500. SK. E-mail: barber.della@yahoo.com 306-435-7405, Moosomin, SK. Goodsoil, SK. Hague, SK.


37

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

NEW HOLLAND 1033 Automatic Bale Wagon, $3500. 306-232-4731. Rosthern, SK. NEW HOLLAND 1033 Stackliner bale wagon, very good cond., 105 bales. Rosetown, SK. 306-831-9979 or 306-882-3141.

Manufacturing

2002 JOHN DEERE 567, Stock #180684 $16,250. 306-542-2823, Kamsack, SK. www.pattisonag.com

®

Check out A & I online parts store www.pennosmachining.com

Neeralta.com Toll Free: 1.866.497.5338

Welcome to the new standard in flexible grain storage by the leader in grain bagging innovation. PARKER 838 GRAIN CART, approx. 850 DRYAIR GRAIN DRYING SYSTEMS: bu., excellent condition, $26,500 Cdn OBO. New and used available. Expand your Call 218-779-1710. Delivery available. Harvest window. Low temperature drying. Clean, safe, and contamination free. Main2013 DEMCO 1150 bu., never used, 900 tain grade value. Low supervision and tires, 1000 PTO, tarp, no scale. Call for maintenance. Perfect aeration day 24/7! pricing, 204-522-6333, Melita, MB. Call Factory at 1-888-750-1700 for more information. St. Brieux, SK. GRAVITY WAGONS: New 400 bu, $7,400; 600 bu., $12,500; 750 bu., $18,250. Large selection of used gravity wagons, 250-750 bu. Used grain carts, 450 to 1110 bushel. View at: www.zettlerfarmequipment.com Ph. 204-772-6 9 9 8 , 1-866-938-8537, Portage la Prairie, MB. 12 Ba n go r Ave. W in n ipeg, M B R3E 3G4 GRAIN CARTS: Brent 672, 674, 770, 772, 774, 874, 974, 1080; 1082; Unverferth: 7000, 8000, 9200; Ez-Flow 475, 675, 710; NEW Hyd. drive UFT 725, 750, 760, 4765. We Model 919® have others. 35 gravity wagons, 200 - -750 Automated Grain bu. 1-866-938-8537, Portage la Prairie MB. www.zettlerfarmequipment.com Moisture Tester The fastest 919® EVER!!!! 2003 UNVERFERTH 8200, tarp, $28,000 • NO Temp. Measurement OBO. 306-563-8482, Estevan, SK. or Paper Charts required • same Model 919® ACCURACY 2012 UNVERFERTH 1115, tarp, scale, one • Large LCD Display owner, $45,000 OBO. Call 306-563-8482, • USB port for Data Collection & Printer Port Swift Current, SK. • Developed, Manufactured & Serviced in CANADA • Fast, Repeatable Results FOR SALE FOR PARTS: J&M 22” unload auger, tube and flighting, top sect. w/spout SIMPLE and slider ext. 306-452-7799, Redvers, SK.

SAMPLER

Portable Combine

Now Available!

DOCKAGE SIEVES

Canola, Cereal, Flax, Soybean sets, New Lentil, Pea & Corn sets. White ABS frame. Largest selection available.

NEW WI-FI BIN PROBE 10’ long with infra-red sensor. Instant temp. readings displayed on your Smart Phone. Completely wireless. Refurbished PROTEIN TESTERS Available • WHT & Durum: $4,900 (2 Units) • WHT & BLY & DURUM: $8,900 (2 Units) vis it w w w .la b tro n ics .ca fo r m o re in fo .

DUAL STAGE ROTARY SCREENERS and Kwik Kleen 5-7 tube. Call 204-857-8403, Portage la Prairie, MB. or visit online: FEED BLOWER SYSTEMS, Sales and Serwww.zettlerfarmequipment.com vice. Piping, blower and airlock repairs. John Beukema 204-497-0029, Carman, MB DUAL SCREEN ROTARY grain cleaners, great for pulse crops, best selection in 2007 BRANDT 5000EX grain vac, premium Western Canada, 306-946-7923 Young, SK cond., shedded, from small acre farm, used very little, must be seen to be appreCUSTOM COLOR SORTING chickpeas to ciated. $19,500. 306-338-3369 Wadena,SK mustard. Cert. organic and conventional. 306-741-3177, Swift Current, SK. REM 1026A GRAIN Vacuum; Westfield R100 10” swing auger, 51’. For more information, call 780-205-8100, Lashburn, SK. FARM FANS CF/SA 3200 continuous grain dryer w/dual fans, single power, natural gas, 1174 hrs., load/unload auger w/1500 bu. hopper dry bin, vac to blow grain into adjoining bins, good cond. Weyburn, SK. Jerry 306-861-5414, 306-842-4066.

WESTERN GRAIN DRYER, mfg. of new grain dryers w/advanced control systems. Updates for roof, tiers, auto moisture controller. Economic designed dryers avail. 1-888-288-6857, westerngraindryer.com

Rebuild combine table augers Rebuild hydraulic cylinders Roller mills regrooved MFWD housings rebuilt Steel and aluminum welding Machine Shop Service Line boreing and welding

Penno’s Machining & Mfg. Ltd. Eden, MB 204-966-3221 Fax: 204-966-3248

®

DEMO COLOUR SORTER Available Now: VistaSort 2 Chute Full Colour LED Sorter used as a demo machine only. Capacity up to 250-300 BPH based on wheat. $48,000 CAD in Saskatoon. VistaSort 5 Chute Full Colour LED Sorter used as a demo machine only. Capacity up to 600 BPH based on wheat. $65,000 CAD in Saskatoon. Please call Chris at LMC 800-667-6924, ext. 24, 306-222-6193, chris@lewismcarter.com www.lewismcarter.com Saskatoon, SK.

Rebuilt Concaves

1-519-887-9910

www.marcrestmfg.com

SUPERB GRAIN DRYERS: Grant Service Ltd. have dryers in stock at winter pricing! SQ28D, 30 HP, quiet fan, 576 bu., single MORRIS HAY HIKER, 8 bale, fair condition, phase power, 12,000,000 BTU, only 2 in $8000. Call 306-476-2501, Rockglen, SK. stock. Call 306-272-4195. Foam Lake, SK. BALE SPEARS, high quality imported AERATION SYSTEM: Home built, portable, from Italy, 27” and 49”, free shipping, excoal fired, hot water system c/w 5 HP 220 cellent pricing. Call now toll free volt centrifugal fan. Auto. elec. controls for 1-866-443-7444, Stonewall, MB. coal stoker and water temperature, $1000 OBO. Can also be used as space heater! BALE SPEAR ATTACHMENTS for all Call 306-449-2412 evenings, Redvers, SK. loaders and skidsteers, excellent pricing. DRYAIR GRAIN DRYING SYSTEM. 1.2M Call now 1-866-443-7444. BTU boiler on propane, mounted on trailer. 4 large heat coil radiators on wheels. NH BALE WAGON 103 PT, used very little, Large quantity of hose w/quick couplers. good shape, $2395. Call 204-967-2009, Shedded, excellent cond., used very little. Kelwood, MB. 306-873-9221 306-323-2099 Archerwill SK 2006 VERMEER 605M baler, wide tires, USED DRYAIR 2000 drying system, bale kicker, net/twine, all updates, exc. 1,200,000 BTU, 4 radiators, and hoses. cond, $16,500. 204-748-8303, Elkhorn, MB 306-862-1420, 306-873-8549, Tisdale, SK MASSEY 124 square baler; NH square balSUPER B GRAIN Dryer, AS-600G, single er; NH chain round baler; 1033 bale wagphase, 5200 hrs., good condition, $18,000. on; Several pull bale wagons. Langham, 306-885-4545, 306-537-2563, Sedley, SK. SK., call 306-283-4747 or 306-291-9395.

RECON 300/400. Reduce drying time by 35-65%. Crush stems & move swaths to dry ground. One pass with mounted tedder for fastest dry down. Make quality hay dry faster! 1-888-907-9182 www.agshield.com NH 14’ HAYBINE; MF 128 square baler; NH 1033 bale wagon; NH 268 square baler; NH chain round baler. 306-283-4747, 306-220-0429, 306-291-9395 Langham SK

RICHARDTON DUMP WAGONS, #1200, #700, #750; JD 3970 harvester; Balers: JD 510, $1500; JD 535, $4500; Vermeer R23 hyd. rake, $9000; NH 216, $5000; Hay conditioners, $800 and up; Gehl haybine, 14’, $2500; JD 15’ batwing mower, $6000; JD 20’, $10,000; JD 5’, $1000; JD 7’, $2000. 1-866-938-8537, Portage, MB.

2005 CASE/IH 1042 36’ draper header, PU reel, hyd. fore/aft, new raptor canvases, $14,000; 30’ CI 722 SP swather, Izuzu dsl., $8500; IH 6 belt PU, good belts and teeth, $600; New 30’ UII PU reel for late model MF (Hesston) swathers; 3 (21.5x16.1) tires, for swathers, seeders, Bergen 10x60 grain auger, $1100. 1985 MF 885 swather, used 20 years w/no etc.; problems, good cond, $5000. Prince Albert, 306-960-3000, Borden, SK. SK. Call 403-870-0091, gleia@wolffleia.ca RAKE-UP COMBINE PU, 8 belt, exc. cond., $3500; 20’ MacDon PU reel, $2000; 2015 JD 450D 35' swather, Farm equip. Swath roller, 7’, $500; Hydraulic Kleendispersal. 140 eng. hrs., 95 header hrs., Cut crop divider, $750. Pro Ag Sales, AutoSteer, exc. cond., $150,000 OBO. 306-441-2030 anytime North Battleford SK 780-623-1147, Lac La Biche, AB. MACDON 155 2013, 650 hrs., 35’, D65 header, large tire option, rear roller, Trimble GPS, asking $125,000. Low rate financing available. Call 204-248-2359 or cell 204-242-4214, Notre Dame, MB. 2014 CIH WD1203 Series II, 36’, w/D365 header, Roto-Shears, 139 hrs., mint cond., $85,000 OBO 204-648-7129 Grandview MB 2013 CASE 1203, 36’ 6 batt UII PU reel roto-shears, double knife, big tires, 244 eng. hrs, $75,000. Will take smaller MacDon on trade. 204-937-3933, Roblin, MB. 1997 MACDON PREMIER 2920, 25’ 960 header, vg cond., Cummins eng. w/1800 hrs., shedded. 204-734-8178, Swan River. 2008 NH H8040 SP windrower, 36’, PU reel, fore/aft, Roto-Shears, rear axle susp., 920 hrs., pea auger. Must sell $49,900 OBO. Can be seen at Shoal Lake Farm Equipment, Shoal Lake, MB. Call Ron at 204-895-1064. YOUR CHOICE $52,000: 2007 JOHN DEERE 4895, 30’, PU reel; 2010 Case 1203, 36’, PU reel. Both have new knifes & guards. Call 306-746-7307, Semans, SK. 2004 MF 220XL, 25’, SP, PU reel, rotoshears, very good condition, $35,000. Bill Gordon 306-768-2879, Carrot River, SK. 1998 35’ WESTWARD 9300, 960 header, PU reel, turbo, big tires, $29,500; 1995 30’ MacDon Premier 2900, PU reel, 960 MacDon header, 21.5-16.1 tires, $19,500; 1995 Case/IH 8820, 30’ header, PU reel, 21.5-16.1 tires, $17,500. All swathers in exc. cond. 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. 2014 CASE DH362 header 35’, to fit CIH swather, like new, $19,500. 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. NEVER USED MF Hesston WR9735, 130 HP, 30’ UII, PU reel, fore/aft, axle suspension, $99,000, 306-699-2442, McLean, SK. CIH WD1203 SALVAGE, good cab, engine, hyd. parts and auto guide. Call 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 2013 M155 c/w D65 40’ header, transport, 700 hrs., shedded, $119,000. Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. NEW 2016 M205 c/w D65 40’ header, transport, weight box, last ones w/o DEF. Cam-Don Motors 306-237-4212 Perdue SK MASSEY FERGUSON 9420, shedded, 948 hrs., new guards and knife, GPS AutoSteer, $50,000. Call 306-944-4520, Viscount, SK. 28’ PT SWATHER, very nice, good canvases, asking $800. Phone 306-297-3209, Shaunavon, SK. 2012 JD D450 w/35’ header, PU reel, mtd. roller, Roto-Shears, 550 hrs., exc., $75,000 OBO. 306-297-7400, Shaunavon

2004 CASE/IH 2388, 1850 rotor hours, field ready, good condition, $75,000. Call 306-745-7653, Stockholm, SK. 1991 CASE 1680, Cummins engine, specialty rotor, hopper topper, new rear tires, all updates, very good condition, c/w 1015 PU and 1020 30’ Flex Header, $19,500 OBO. 204-746-5671, Arnaud, MB. BOOKING NORCAN SOYBEAN Common #1. Put the new big red in your shed, not the seed dealers! Buy a bigger Case/IH combine! Early discounts. Call Norcan Seeds, 204-372-6552, Fisher Branch, MB.

2004 FORD/NH CR960 SP combine, good and cheap, 1800 engine hrs. Everything works, used this year. Includes 36' Honeybee flex header and pickup head, Rake-Up pickup, very good condition, $75,000. 406-765-7568, 406-765-1568, Plentywood, MT. Email: Campbellgrain@hotmail.com 2011 CR9070 NH combine, 1318 thres/ 1656 eng, 15' Swathmaster PU, $30,000 in maintenance since harvest 2016, excellent condition, $185,000. Call for details, 306-497-7511, Blaine Lake, SK. BOOKING NORCAN SOYBEANS Common #1. Keep the gold in your tank, buy a bigger NH combine! Discounts on now! Call Norcan Seeds at 204-372-6552 Fisher 2013 JD S690, 1830 eng./1174 sep. hrs., loaded w/all the premium features, incl. Branch, MB. Harvest Smart, 400 bu. folding grain tank, NH TR85, ONE OWNER, 3600 hrs., hy- 5 spd. feeder house, RWA, Rice and Cane dro, electric stone trap, big tires, excellent tires all around, well maintained, always condition, 204-867-5363, Minnedosa, MB. shedded, Extensive repairs wear parts, 1994 TR97, 2681 thres/3630 eng. hrs, in- complete list can be provided. $320,000. take & exhaust valves done, Swathmaster 204-612-6531, 204-981-3636, Cartier, MB. PU, Redekopp chopper, hopper topper, JD FINAL DRIVES: Used and rebuilt for $15,500 OBO. 306-929-4580 Albertville SK 9400-9610, CTS & STS. Sold w/warranty. TR85 HYDRO, always shedded, 2500 hrs., 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com near new rubber, $7900. Pro Ag Sales, 2013 JD S690, 730 sep. hrs., 615 PU head306-441-2030 anytime North Battleford SK er, 520x42 duals, powercast tailboard, ProDrive, power fold hopper ext., $15,000 w/o, $319,000. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. 1985 GLEANER N7; 1984 Gleaner N7 and 1990 JD 9501 combine, great condition, 1984 Gleaner N6. All 3 combine are in ex- $15,000. Call Albert 306-254-2179, cellent field ready condition. Phone 306-230-0154, Dalmeny, SK. 306-675-4419, Ituna, SK. 2002 JD STS, 914 PU header, 2938 threshGLEANER S77 SALVAGE, duals, pickup ing hrs, 4329 eng. hrs, good tires, Redekop and many good low hour parts still fine cut chopper, long unloading auger, available. Call us now! 1-800-667-4515 or Howard Concave, one season on new elements, $25,000 Greenlight done last winvisit: www.combineworld.com ter, $67,500. 306-843-8223 (msg), Landis. R-7 GLEANER w/30’ straight cut header, two 14’ PU headers w/PU’s, exc cond, ask- 1982 JD 8820 combine; 36 PTO swather. Phone 306-283-4747 or 306-291-9395, ing $12,000. 306-944-4520, Viscount, SK. Langham, SK. 2 GLEANER R7’s complete with PU, both work well. $15,000 and $10,000. 1986 JD 8820 Titan II combine w/PU header, $12,000. Good cond., field ready. 403-556-2609. Olds, AB. 306-493-2762, 306-493-7324, Delisle, SK. 2- JD 8820 combines, one w/new motor, one has been shedded, both field ready. (2) JD CTS Combines: 95-2750 sep, 96- 780-205-8100 leave msg., Lashburn, SK. 3700 sep., 914 PU, professionally maintained, very reliable, many options, updates 2009 JD 9870 STS w/615P as is, 1560 & modifications make machines suitable for sep. hours, $175,000. Call 306-334-2492, all crops & gentle on pulses. 930F and 30' Balcarres, SK. cpetrichuk@maplefarm.com HoneyBee also available. $39,000. Call www.pattisonag.com 306-690-8010, Moose Jaw, SK. 2007 JD 9660 combine, Stock #187362, $125,000. 306-542-2814, Kamsack, SK. www.pattisonag.com 2013 JD S690 w/615P, 713 sep. hrs., Stock #10070, $389,500. 306-682-2572, Humboldt, SK. www.pattisonag.com

2005 CIH AFX 8010, 2378 eng. hrs., 1855 sep. hrs., fully loaded, mint cond., shedded $110,000. 204-751-0046, Notre Dame MB.

2014 JOHN DEERE S690, Stock #187781, $385,000. 306-542-2815, Kamsack, SK. www.pattisonag.com

1992 CIH 1680 combine, Cummins eng., Specialty Rotor with accelerator kit, hyd. reverser, airfoil chaffer, CIH 1015 PU header. All new Shaker bushings, field ready condition, $16,000; 25’ grain header also avail. 204-447-2590, 204-447-3116, 1990 JD 843 Corn Head, new rollers, shedded, good condition, $7000 OBO. Ste Rose du Lac, MB. Please call 204-324-4240, Altona, MB. 2013 CASE 8230, duals, ext. auger, fine Email: Rschwartz4240@icloud.com cut chopper, 640 sep. hrs, $320,000. Take trade or financing. 306-563-8765, Canora 1997 JD 9600, 2322 threshing/3086 eng. hrs, dual range cyl., DAM AHHC, DAS auto 1994 CIH 1688 with speciality rotor, hop- PU/reel speed, JD chopper & chaff spreadper topper, internal chopper and 1015 PU, er, frequent Greenlights, well maintained, $15,000. Call 306-483-8323, Carnduff, SK. shedded, exc. cond., $52,000. Muenster, 2007 CASE/IH 7010, dual wheels, w/2016 SK. 306-682-4188, jimmes@sasktel.net header, $170,000. Call A.E. Chicoine Farm 2000 JD 9650STS, 2957/4123 hrs., 914 PU, Equipment, 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. 2016 Greenlight, big top, shedded $64,500; 2000 CASE/IH 2388 w/1015 header, 930F, AWS air reel, fore/aft, lentil/pea $65,000; 2004 2388 w/2015 PU header, dividers, Trailtech flex carrier, exc. cond., $115,000; 2006 2388 w/2015 PU header, $14,500. 306-230-2417, Alvena, SK. $130,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment, 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. 2003 JD 9750STS, Contour Master, 914 PU, 1998 2388, 4200 eng., hrs, 3200 thresh- upgraded air cleaner, 2016 Greenlight, big ing hrs., $26,000; 2002 30’ 1020 flex head- top, GreenStar, duals, $112,500; 2008 630F Hydra Flex header, 2016 AWS, fore/aft, er,$9500, 306-567-3128, Bladworth, SK. lentil/pea dividers, Trailtech flex carrier, 1997 CASE/IH 2188, 3000 sep. hrs, auto exc. cond., $32,500. 306-230-2417, Alvena. HHC, chopper plus ready cut chopper, hopper extension, very good tires, rock 2006 JD 9860, 615 PU, 900/60R32, trap, long auger, 2015 Swathmaster PU Contour-Master. New in 2016: Feeder chain, header, excellent, condition, $29,500. chopper, grain elevator chain, rear beater, 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. good cond., $102,500 OBO. 306-540-9339 1994 1688 CIH, 4200 hrs., 395 Melroe PU, Raymore, SK. tbenson@sasktel.net AFX rotor, internal chopper, tires are good, field ready, lots of work done by Young’s 2009 JD 9870, farm equip. dispersal. 1475 Equipment, asking $20,000 OBO. Call hrs., 1070 sep. hrs., exc. cond., $205,000 OBO. 780-623-1147, Lac La Biche, AB. 306-539-4564, Francis, SK.

2011 JOHN DEERE 9870 STS - used, Stock #192087, $207,000. 306-773-9351, Swift Current, SK. www.pattisonag.com

1995 CASE/IH 2188 combine, 3044 reg. 3957 eng. hrs., 1015 header, Rake-Up PU, new drapers, chopper, Kirby spreader, pea concave, hopper extension, long auger, new parts, (feeder house drive and rever2015 JD W150 with 40D- SPI, Stock ser), oil change, new batteries, excellent #190201, $145,000. Call 306-682-2574, rubber, field ready and stored inside. ReHumboldt, SK. www. pattisonag.com tired! $34,500 OBO. Call 306-252-2810 or 2015 JD W150 with 40D- SPI, Stock 306-567-7281, Kenaston, SK. #190202, $145,000. Call 306-682-2574, 1990 CIH 1680, all updates, vg cond, 4500 Humboldt, SK. www. pattisonag.com hrs, PU & PU header. Norm 306-857-2117, 2011 JD D450 swather w/630D- used U , 306-867-3998, Strongfield, SK. Stock #193430, $87,500. 306-463-2683, CIH 8010 CAB complete, in good condiKindersley, SK. www.pattisonag.com tion, $13,800. Call 1-800-667-4515 or visit 2011 JD D450 swather w/630D- used U , www.combineworld.com Stock #193427, $87,500. 306-463-2683, 2012 CIH 8230, 1301 eng. hrs., 868 rotor Kindersley, SK. www.pattisonag.com hrs., exc. cond., field ready. 780-872-8209, 2015 JD W150 with 40D- SPI, Stock 306-823-4456, Neilburg, SK. #190203, $145,000. Call 306-682-2574, 2006 CASE 2388, w/straight cut header, Humboldt, SK. www. pattisonag.com 2409 original hrs., new eng. 3 yrs. ago, serviced Dec./16. Have WO 2016 JD W150 w/435D -SPI U, Stock currently one owner, field ready, $80,000 #171073, $152,500. Call 204-773-2149, records, firm. Ph 306-861-1015, Weyburn, SK. Russell, MB. DaveBray@pattisonag.com www.pattisonag.com 2005 CASE/IH 8010, chopper, PU header, duals, very nice condition, priced to sell! 2016 JD W150 w/435D -SPI U, Stock Call 306-654-7772, Saskatoon, SK. #171075, $152,500. Call 204-773-2149, Russell, MB. DaveBray@pattisonag.com 2002 CASE/IH 2388, PU, long auger, hopwww.pattisonag.com per topper, chopper, field ready, priced to sell! Call 306-654-7772, Saskatoon, SK. 2015 JD W150 w/440D -SPI U, Stock #168086, $137,500. Call 204-773-2149, Russell, MB. DaveBray@pattisonag.com www.pattisonag.com 2014 760TT, loaded 700/1000 hrs., 2016 JD W150 w/435D -SPI U, Stock $325,000 Cdn OBO; 2014 760, 600/900 #171071, $152,500. Call 204-773-2149, hrs., RWA duals, exc. cond., $285,000 Cdn Russell, MB. DaveBray@pattisonag.com OBO; 2011 750, 900/1400 hrs., duals exc. www.pattisonag.com cond., $189,500 Cdn OBO; 2010 560R, only 500 sep. hrs., exc. cond., field ready, 1991 VERSATILE 4750 swather, Ford dsl., $159,500 Cdn OBO; 2006 590R, 22’, very good condition. $10,000. Call 1800/2900 hrs., loaded, duals, RWA, 403-556-2609, Olds, AB. $99,500 Cdn OBO; 2013 MacDon FD75, JD 2420 SWATHER, gas motor, 21’ double 35’ flex draper, exc. cond., $65,500 Cdn swath, $3500. Call 780-875-5195 or text OBO. Delivery available. 218-779-1710. 780-808-3816, Lloydminster, AB. LEXION 400 & 500 Salvage, wide & narrow body, walker & rotary. Lots of parts! 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com

2016 JD S680 PRWD combine, 372 hrs., 580/85R42s with duals, high wear pkgs., chopper w/PowerCast tailboard, 26’ auger, PowerGard Warranty til September 2021, $319,500 USD. www.ms-diversified.com Call 320-848-2496 or 320-894-6560. 2011 9870, loaded w/options, only 700 sep. hrs., $214,500 Cdn OBO; 2010 9770, loaded w/options, only 690 sep. hrs., $209,500 Cdn OBO. Both excellent & only used on small grains. Call 218-779-1710. LATE MODEL S670, 680 & 690 combines, various hours and options. Starting at $230,000 Cdn OBO. Call 218-779-1710. Delivery available. WRECKING: JD 8820 combine for parts. J M Salvage 204-773-2536, Russell, MB.

2011 JD 9770 used, 1629 sep. hrs., Stock #9403, $182,500. 306-375-2302, Kyle, SK. www.pattisonag.com 2011 JOHN DEERE 9870 STSused, Stock #192085, $207,000. 306-773-9351, Swift Current, SK. www.pattisonag.com

WRECKING: MASSEY 860 combine for parts. Call J M Salvage 204-773-2536, Russell, MB. 1983 MF 850, only 1080 orig. hrs., 354 turbo, 9001 PU header, Melroe 388 PU and chopper, always shedded. This machine is in showroom new condition all around, $29,000. 306-338-3369, Wadena, SK. TWO 1986 MF 860’s: 1 has V8 hydro and 1 is 6 cylinder inter-cooled. Both have 2100 hrs., 9001 headers, Victory Super 8 PU’s, always shedded and maintained, premium condition, new sieves, rads., belts, bearings and numerous other repairs. Call for details, 306-338-3369, Wadena, SK. MF 9790, w/4000 header, Swathmaster PU, 2953 eng. hrs., 2080 sep. hrs., S/N 9790HM36152. 306-736-2850, Kipling, SK. 2013 CHALLENGER 560C (Massey 8560) fully loaded, 587 sep. hrs., c/w PU header, duals. Retired, mint unit. $320,000 OBO. 306-345-2039, Pense, SK. 1975 MF 750 SP diesel combine, chaff spreader, straw chopper, PU, shedded, exc. shape. 306-549-4701, Hafford, SK. 1994 MF 8460 Conventional, 2850 hrs., Mercedes, Rake-Up PU, shedded, good. 306-944-4325, 306-231-8355, Bruno, SK. MF 850 combine with pickup; 36 PTO swather. 306-283-4747, 306-291-9395, Langham, SK. 1983 MF 550, diesel, 2404 hrs., c/w 18’ straight cut header with pickup header, AC, always shedded, $5550. Nice. 306-283-4170, Langham, SK. 2013 MF 9540 800 sep. hours, shedded, MF pre-season check over, ready to go! Local trade, vg. 0% OAC. Cam-Don Motors 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK.

2012 CHALLENGER 540C (MF 9540), 1110 threshing hrs, shedded, vg, MF pre-season check, local trade, 0% OAC. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 2013 JD S 690 combine, loaded, AutoSteer ready, S/N #1H0S690STD0755260, exc. working condition. No header included. $295,000. To view combine: it is located in 1984 WHITE 8900 combine, Perkins Kamsack, SK. Can deliver. Call any time, diesel, Melroe pickup, 20’ straight cut header, 4353 hrs., bought new, always 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. shedded. Call 204-886-2247, Teulon, MB. 2000 JD 9750-STS, 2980 separator hrs., 3966 engine hrs., w/dual wheel kit, 2 - WHITE 5542 combines for sale. Always shedded. Running or for parts. Of$60,000. 306-896-2311, Langenburg, SK. fers. 204-838-2243 meal time. Lenore, MB. 2003 JD 9650 STS w/PU, 1927/2780 hrs., Big Top hopper with cover, $96,000 OBO. Quit farming. 306-383-4000, Quill Lake, SK JD 7721 PT Titan II, very little acres last in five years, needs a gearbox, shedded, open to offers. 306-577-7164, Kisbey, SK.

STRAW WALKER COMBINE, ideal for 2014 CASE DH362 header 35’, to fit CIH 2002 MACDON 872 ADAPTER for Cat baling: 2006 JD 9660 WTS, 914 PU, duswather, like new, $19,500. 306-861-4592, Lexion and Claas, $5500. 306-693-9847, als, 2300/1550 hrs., $132,500. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment, 306-449-2255, Fillmore, SK. Moose Jaw, SK. Storthoaks, SK.

1996 MADON 960, 30', with adapter to fit New Holland TR, field ready $12,000 OBO. Please call 306-745-3883, Esterhazy, SK. Email: cnn12986@gmail.com

2001 JD 9650 STS, 2843 threshing hrs., 4108 eng., 18 hrs. since Greenlight, 2 sets NH HW325 SALVAGE cab, axle, engine, LIKE NEW 2014 CR8090, loaded, only 300 of concaves, new small wire concaves, lots of good parts. Call 1-800-667-4515 or sep. hrs., $299,000 Cdn OBO. Call very nice, $77,000. 306-648-2801 or visit www.combineworld.com 218-779-1710. Delivery available. 306-648-7848, Gravelbourg, SK.

2014 JD 635D header, premium condition, cut 2500 acres total, cross auger, poly skids, and transport. Retiring, must go! $60,000 OBO. 204-734-0361, Swan River, MB. cgust@xplornet.com


38

2010 NH (HONEYBEE) 88C 42’ flex draper, cross auger, vg cond., c/w factory transport, field ready, $32,500 Cdn OBO.; Also available late model Class/Lexion, MacDon & John Deere flex heads and flex drapers for various combines. Call 218-779-1710. Delivery available.

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

2004 36’ HONEYBEE header, JD adapter, always shedded, very good condition, $24,000. Call 306-536-1650, Truax, SK.

2013 140A FARMALL Case/IH w/loader, 1800 hrs., $82,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment, 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK.

PEA AUGERS for MacDon and Honeybee. 35’ for $4950 or 40’ for $5450. Call 1-800-667-4515 or visit our website at www.combineworld.com

2009 CIH 435, Outback guidance, 710/70 tires, rear weights, std. trans., 4 hyds., 1700 hrs., shedded, asking $163,000. Phone 306-862-7138, 306-862-5993, Nipawin, SK.

HONEYBEE SP36 RIGID Draper Header, AFX adapter, PU reel, fore/aft, pea auger, auto height, new knife, factory transport, field ready. $22,000. Please call 306-689-2660, 306-587-7785, Lancer, SK.

LIZARD CREEK REPAIR and Tractor. We buy 90 and 94 Series Case, 2 WD, FWA tractors for parts and rebuilding. Also have rebuilt tractors and parts for sale. 2004 CIH SPX3185 SP HC, 90’, 2159 306-784-7841, Herbert, SK. 2011 MF 8680 MFWD, 2342 hrs., PTO, hrs., 750 gal., AutoSteer, AutoBoom, nice CVT, front and rear duals, $124,800. cond., $74,800. Call 1-800-667-4515, or 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com visit www.combineworld.com

2008 JD 936 straight cut header, w/transport, PU reel, canvas, 3 height sensors, 1 new spare knife, good condition, $27,500. Call Ray, 204-248-2032 or 204-745-7134.

2012 JD 4730, 456 hrs., Stock #71490, $219,000. 306-783-9459, Yorkton, SK. dallas.bond@maplefarm.com Website www.pattisonag.com

2010 HONEYBEE SP40, DKD, transport, for CNH combines, nice condition, $29,800. Call us at 1-800-667-4515 or visit www.combineworld.com RECONDITIONED rigid and flex, most makes and sizes; also header transports. Ed Lorenz, 306-344-4811, Paradise Hill, SK www.straightcutheaders.com 1994 CASE/IH 1010 straight cut header, 2012 MACDON FLEX draper header 45’, 30’, batt reels, fore&aft., skid plate, $8500 cross auger, split reel, JD hook up, slow w/transport, excellent condition, always spd. transport, very good condition, field shedded. 306-661-7477, Fox Valley, SK. ready, $72,000. Can deliver. Call any time 2014 JOHN DEERE 635D, Stock #186759, 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. $57,700. 204-734-3466, Swan River, MB. SELLING USED COMBINE parts off MF www.pattisonag.com 860’s and older; JD 8820’s and older; IHC 2013 JOHN DEERE 640D- used, Stock 1480; L2 Gleaner, etc. J M Salvage, #187210, $49,000. Phone 306-542-2821, 204-773-2536, Russell, MB. Kamsack, SK. www.pattisonag.com WRECKING COMBINES: IHC 1482, 1460, 2013 JOHN DEERE 640D used, Stock 915, 914, 815, 715; JD 7721, 7701, 7700, #185163, $42,000, Call 204-734-3466, 6601, 6600, 105; MF 860, 850, 851, 760, Swan River, MB. www.pattisonag.com 751, 750, 510, S92; NH TR70, 95; White 2014 JD 15’ pickup w/179” BPU, Stock 8900, 8800, 8700, 8650, 8600; CFE 5542; #97377, $27,000. Call 306-682-2573, Gleaner C, F, L, M; CCIL 9600, 951; Vers. 2000. Call 306-876-4607, Goodeve, SK. PEA AND CROSS AUGERS. Harvest Humboldt, SK. www.pattisonag.com bushy crops with a draper header. 50% to 2005 JOHN DEERE 936D- as is, Stock G.S. TRACTOR SALVAGE, JD tractors 100% increase in productivity. Pay for #180684, $26,500. 306-542-2816, only. Call 306-497-3535, Blaine Lake, SK. themselves in 400 acres or less. In stock Kamsack, SK. www.pattisonag.com and ready for delivery!! Call 2012 JOHN DEERE 640D - used, Stock SMITH’S TRACTOR WRECKING. Huge 1-888-907-9182, www.agshield.com #187010, $48,900. Call 306-542-2820, inventory new and used tractor parts. 2014 CIH 3152 40’ straight cut header, Kamsack, SK. www.pattisonag.com 1-888-676-4847. mint condition, $36,000. 204-648-7129, Grandview, MB. 2011 JD 635F - as is, Stock #58317, $30,800. 306-773-9351, Swift Current, SK. COMB-TRAC SALVAGE. We sell new and FLEX HEADS: JD 925, 930, CASE #1020 www.pattisonag.com used parts for most makes of tractors, 30’; #2020, 35’; 1010 PU header, $3000. combines, balers, mixmills and swathers. 1-866-938-8537, Portage la Prairie, MB. 2013 JOHN DEERE 635D header, Stock 306-997-2209, 1-877-318-2221, Borden, #187608, $53,000. Call 306-542-2818, SK. We buy machinery. WHITE MF 9230 30’ straight cut header, Kamsack, SK. www.pattisonag.com fits White 9700, 9720 and MF 8570, 8590, $4000 OBO. 204-794-5979, Springfield MB 2010 JD 640D- used, Stock #187276, LOEFFELHOLZ TRACTOR AND COMBINE $34,600. 306-542-2819, Kamsack, SK. Salvage, Cudworth, SK., 306-256-7107. 2008 NH 88C FLEX DRAPER, 42’, PU reel, www.pattisonag.com We sell new, used and remanufactured poly skids, reconditioned, delivery includparts for most farm tractors and combines. ed, $19,900; New Harvest International, 2013 JD 635D, Stock #187716, $47,000 42’ header trailer, brakes, lights list price Call 204-734-3466, Swan River, MB. AGRA PARTS PLUS, parting older trac$12,900. Price with platform $6500. Gary www.pattisonag.com tors, tillage, seeding, haying, along w/othReimer, 204-326-7000, Reimer Farm 2011 JOHN DEERE 635D- used, Stock er Ag equipment. 3 miles NW of BattleEquipment, Hwy.#12 North, Steinbach MB #186194, $39,600. 306-542-2817, ford, SK. off #16 Hwy. Ph: 306-445-6769. NEW HOLLAND FLEX PLATFORMS: Kamsack, SK. www.pattisonag.com 1998 NH 973, 25’, reconditioned $12,900; B WRECKING, wrecking tractors, 1998 NH 973, 25’ reconditioned $15,900; 2014 JD 15’ pickup w/179” BPU, Stock TRIPLE cults., drills, swathers, mixmills. 1999 NH 973, 30’ reconditioned $16,900; #83362, $27,000. 306-375-2302, Kyle, SK. combines, etc. We buy equipment. 306-246-4260, 2002 NH 73C, 25’ reconditioned $17,900. www.pattisonag.com 306-441-0655, Richard, SK. Gary Reimer, 204-326-7000, Reimer Farm 2015 JOHN DEERE 635D, Stock #187720, Equipment, Hwy.#12 North, Steinbach MB $68,900. 204-734-3466, Swan River, MB. AGCO FLEX PLATFORMS: 1996 GI 500 www.pattisonag.com flex platform, 30’, $12,900; 1999 GI 800 flex, 30’, reconditioned, $17,900; 2000 GI 2015 JOHN DEERE 635D, Stock #187821, RETIRING: FULL LINE of potatoe equip8000 flex, 25’, reconditioned, $18,900; $62,900. 204-734-3466, Swan River, MB. ment to do large or small potatoes, 32” row spacing; 2 row bunker harvesters; Live 2003 GI 8000 flex, 30’, reconditioned www.pattisonag.com $19,900; 2005 GI 8000 flex 30’, air reel, 2013 JD 635 draper header, factory trans- bottom trucks and trailers; Pilers and confield ready, $24,900. Gary Reimer, port, poly skids, Greenlight last year, veyors; Sizer; Lots of screens; Lots of 204-326-7000, Reimer Farm Equipment, $45,000; 2011 Roadrunner 536 36’ header spare parts. Very reasonable. Can supply Delivery available. Hwy.#12 North, Steinbach, MB. trailer, lights and dual brakes, $7500. financing. 306-445-5602, North Battleford, SK. JD FLEX PLATFORMS: JD 925 flex plat- 306-621-4950, Yorkton, SK. forms, 25’, steel divider, field ready 2002 CASE/IH 1042 (962), 30’, PU reel, $10,900; JD 925, 25’ poly divider, recon- hydraulic fore&aft., 2388 adapter, $18,000 ditioned, $14,900; JD 925F, full finger au- OBO. 306-240-6787, Meadow Lake, SK. ger, poly divider, reconditioned, $16,900; CLAAS ORBIS 750 corn head, 10 row, 25', JD 930F, f/f auger, field ready, $17,900; AutoContour option, low acre unit in great JD 930F, f/f auger, reconditioned, field ready condition, $68,500. Call $18,900; 2004 JD 635 hydra flex, 35’, field 204-867-0939, Brandon, MB. ready, $14,900; 2007 JD 630 hydra flex, (3) 2015 JOHN DEERE 615P Headers, 30’, reconditioned, $24,900; 2008 JD 630 approx 1800 ac., $26,500 each. Tisdale, SK. hydra flex, 30’, reconditioned, $25,900; 620-213-2633, btharvesting@hotmail.com JD 5830 SILAGE Cutter w/6 row corn header, 12’ PU header, kernel pro, iron 2009 JD 630 hydra flex, 30’, reconditioned $26,900; 2004 JD 635 hydra flex, 35’, air SWATHMASTER AND RAKE-UP Belt guard metal alert, 4 spd. hydro. RWA, rereel, field ready, $20,900; 2008 JD 635 Rollers available brand new! Save vs. versing fan to clean rad., 28L-26 front, hydra flex, 35’, reconditioned, $26,500; OEM prices. Call us now! 1-800-667-4515. 14.9-24 rears, AC, motor rebuild 500 hrs. ago, runs great. New stationary knife and 2009 JD 635 hydra flex, 35’, reconditioned, www.combineworld.com $27,900; 2009 JD 635 hydra flex, 35’, air WANTED: 30’ PU reel for Cereal Imple- fan blades, some new knives, 56 knife bar, reconditioned, $33,900; 2011 JD 635 ments 702, 722, 742 or MF 200, 210, 220. drum $43,995. 204-967-2009 Kelwood MB hydra flex, 35’, reconditioned, $32,900. Call 306-960-3000, Borden, SK. Gary Reimer, 204-326-7000, Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy.#12 North, Steinbach MB CIH FLEX PLATFORMS: 1998 CIH 1020 flex platforms, reconditioned, 25’ $14,900; 30’ $15,900. Air reel add on $6000; 2009 CIH 2020 flex platforms, reconditioned; 30’, $19,900; 35’, $24,900. Air reel add on $6000; 2011 CIH 3020 flex platform, reconditioned, $27,900; 35’, $32,900. Air reel add on $6000. Delivery included. Gary Reimer, 204-326-7000, Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy.#12 North, Steinbach MB MACDON 974 FLEX DRAPER w/873 Case adapter, single point, fore/aft, hyd. tilt, skid plates, pea auger, transport, new cen- HEADER TRAILERS & ACCESSORIES. tre canvas. 204-648-4649, Dauphin, MB. Arc-Fab Industries. 204-355-9595 2004 JD 630R straight cut header, PU reel, charles@arcfab.ca www.arcfab.ca hyd fore/aft, full fingered auger, very nice, $22,000. 306-743-7622, Langenburg SK. DUALS AND TRACKS Combine World has dual and track solutions for a multitude of 2000 MACDON 972 Draper, 36’ adapter agriculture equipment! Call us now! to fit JD 9600 and 50 Series, good cond., 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com $20,000 OBO. 306-483-8691, Alida, SK. IH 1010 30’ header, PU reel, new wobble box, knife and guards, $6000. Call 306-483-7234, Carnduff, SK. 2002 CIH 30’ 1042 draper header with PU The Real Used FaRm PaRTs sUPeRsToRe reel, pea auger and lifters, $15,000. Call 306-483-8323, Carnduff, SK. • TRACTORS • COMBINES COMBINE DRAPER HEADERS: 2002 42’ SP42 HoneyBee, PU reel, transport, pea auger, Cat adapter, $16,000; 2000 36’ 1042 Case/IH, PU reel, Case adapter, $14,000; 2010 40’ 2152 CIH, PU reel, transport, AFX adapter, $55,000; 2013 40’ 2152 Case/IH, PU reel, transport, AFX adapter, $60,000; 2010 40’ D60 MacDon, PU reel, pea auger, transport, JD adapter, $60,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK.

2011 JD 635 flex platform, hydra flex 35’, poly skids, single point hookup, Crary air reel system, field ready, $33,000; 2010 JD 635 flex platform, hydra flex, single point hookup, Crary air bar system, field ready, $31,000. Gerald or Glenn Walkeden, 306-861-6849, 306-861-7782, Tribune, SK MACDON 974 36’ flex straight cut header, slow mover, split reel, fore/aft, pea auger, Case/IH and NH adapter. 306-862-5993, 306-862-7138, Nipawin, SK. INTERNATIONAL 30’ 810 rigid header, batt reel, good shape, $3000 OBO. Call 306-539-4564, Francis, SK. 2004 MACDON 973 30’, JD adaptor, always shedded, low acres, excellent condition, 306-476-7542, Rockglen, SK.

• SWATHERS • DISCERS

WATROUS SALVAGE

Eastwood Products 244 2nd Avenue, Arborfield, SK

Dan Edwards:

(306) 769-8663 or (306) 812-8144 danjo.edwards@sasktel.net

Harvest Screen

2008 NH TC35A, Equine, hobby farm perfect fit. Lots of attachments, exc. cond., $20,000. 306-716-5508, Dundurn, SK. farandwide80@gmail.com

SKINNY TIRES: Four (4) High Clearance sprayer tires off Patriot 4- 12.4x42, $3800. Call 306-563-8765, Canora, SK.

2008 CIH 535 Quad Trac, 535 HP, 5204 (3) TRIDEKON CROP DIVIDERS, (1) E-Kay hrs., 16 spd. PS, weights, 30” tracks, new plastic crop divider, $2000 for all but will front tracks, nice cab, $182,800. separate. 306-696-2297, Broadview, SK. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com FLOATER TIRES: Factory rims and tires: John Deere 4045, 710/60R46, $19,500; 800/55R46, $23,500; JD 4038, Case 4420, 650/65R38 Michelin tires and rim, $13,500. Sprayer duals available. Phone 306-697-2856, Grenfell, SK.

FLEXI-COIL 5000 AIR drill, 51', w/2320 DS cart, 9" spacing, 4" rubber packers, plumbed for liquid fert., good working order, $20,000 OBO. Also 1700 gal. Bandit liquid cart available. 306-690-8105, Moose Jaw, SK. Apsca@sasktel.net 2011 SEED HAWK 50’, 12” sp., tool bar with 600 cart dual wheels auger and bag lift. $229,000; 1997 39’ Morris Magnum air drill, 10” spacing, Atom openers w/Morris 180 cart, $23,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment, 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. 2010 BOURGAULT 3310 65’, Paralink, 12” spacing, mid row shank banding, double shoot, rear hitch, tandem axles, low acres, $140,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment, 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK.

ORIGINAL!!

Investing in a Harvest Screen® will give you a quick return on investment.

WaTRoUs, sK. (306) 946-2222

2004 SPRA-COUPE 4640 High Clearance PRINT | MOBILE | ONLINE Sprayer, 2398 hrs., 400 gal. tank, 80” boom w/hyd. fold, telescoping hitch, EZSteer 500, crop dividers, new front tires, REDEKOP MAV CHOPPERS, used and $52,250. 204-764-0361, Decker, MB. new: JD, CIH, NH, Lexion, AGCO. We take trades! Call us at 1-800-667-4515 or visit 2012 JD 4940, 120’, 1200 gal. SS tank, fulwww.combineworld.com ly loaded, 2500 hrs. c/w both sets of tires, $189,000. Call 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK.

FORD TW25, FWA, 6000 hrs., w/894 Allied loader, grapple, $19,500. 306-640-8034, 306-266-2016 Glen, Wood Mountain, SK. FORDSON 671 TRACTOR w/7’ cult., SelectO-Speed trans., exc. cond., pics available if interested. Call 306-378-7789, Elrose, SK.

1992 FORD/VERSATILE 946, 20.8x42 duals, AutoSteer JD Globe and monitor, very nice, $39,500 Cdn OBO. Delivery available. Call 218-779-1710. 2009 CIH PUMA 165 MFWD, 2345 hrs., 18 spd. PS, 540/1000 PTO, 3 hyds., singles, LH reverse, very clean unit, $79,800. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com QUAD TRAC UNDERCARRIAGE parts: Bogies, idlers, bearings, seals, tracks...in stock, factory direct! 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 1996 CASE/IH 9370 Steiger 4 WD, triple 20.8R42, EZ-Guide 500 AutoSteer and GPS Nav. w/display, 5445 eng., hrs., N14 Cummins 360 HP, 12 spd. synchro range trans., all clutches in exc. cond., 4 sets remote hyds. with new quick couplings, S/N #JEE0037740, very clean, exc. cond., $72,900 OBO. 306-374-5887, Clavet, SK.

2010 SEED HAWK 60’ Toolbar, 12” sp., w/Seed Hawk 400 cart, 2 fans, seed & fer- 2015 CASE/IH QT580 - as is, Stock $435,000. 306-448-44687, tilizer distributing kit auger. Also NH kit & #170699, winch $170,000. 306-449-2255, A.E. Chi- North Battleford, SK. www.pattisonag.com coine Farm Equipment Ltd., Storthoaks SK. 2013 JD 9410R, 4WD, PS, 1480 hrs., 1000 2009 SEEDMASTER, 4 product VR, 50', 12" PTO, high flow hyd. w/5 remotes, leather 8370XL 440 bu Morris TBH, 1600 lqd cart, trim, premium HID lights, 620/70R42’s, $199,500 USD. www.ms-diversified.com Raven monitor, $195,000. 306-335-7494. Call 320-848-2496 or 320-894-6560. BOOK NORCAN SOYBEANS Common #1 so you keep more green. Buy a bigger JD 2013 45’ KELLY Harrows, CL1 heavy chain, with the savings! Early discounts. Norcan low acres, excellent condition, $78,500. Seeds at 204-372-6552, Fisher Branch MB. 204-764-0361, Decker, MB. STEVE’S TRACTOR REBUILDER special2013 RITE-WAY heavy harrow, 90’, 20”- izing in rebuilding JD tractors. Want Series 24”x5/8” tines, adjustable pressure and 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, 7000s to rebuild or for angle, $31,900. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. parts. pay top $$. Now selling JD parts. 204-466-2927, 204-871-5170, Austin, MB. 2003 JD 6920 MFWD, 160 HP, front suspension, IVT transmission, 5700 hours, $50,000. 204-648-7129, Grandview, MB. WRECKING FOR PARTS: JD 8850 4WD, c/w (8) 24.5x32 Goodyear Dyna Torque tires 80+% tread, very good sheet metal. 1-877-564-8734, Roblin, MB.

VERS. 500, newer hyd. pump and rad, new batteries, 15 spd., 3 hyds., 3 PTH, PTO Big 1000, 18.4x38 duals adj. axles, recirculationg heater 1500 watt, Cummins V8, AC, $10,000 OBO. 204-967-2009 Kelwood, MB

2017 VERSATILE 550, PS, Hi-flow, weight package, 520 triples, diff locks, PTO, AutoSteer, LED lights. Looking for good low hour trades. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd. 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. VERSATILE 895, 4 WD, 4755 hrs., 4 hyds, plumbed for air drill, 24.5x32 duals, Outback S2, Accutrak AutoSteer, very good condition, $32,500 OBO. 306-690-8105, Moose Jaw, SK. Apsca@sasktel.net

Big Tractor Parts, Inc. Geared For The Future

STEIGER TRACTOR SPECIALIST

RED OR GREEN 1. 10-30% savings on new replacement parts for your Steiger drive train. 2.We rebuild axles, transmissions and dropboxes with ONE YEAR WARRANTY. 3.50% savings on used parts.

UTILITY TRACTOR: JD 6200, 2 WD, open 2017 MORRIS 70’ & 50’ heavy harrows, station with loader. Call 204-522-6333, 9/16x28” tines. Lease and financing Melita, MB. available. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-7667, Perdue, SK. 2000 JD 7710, 5130 hrs; 2000 JD 8300; 2001 JD 7810; 2008 JD 7830, 5200 hrs. All MFWD, can be equipped with loaders. 204-522-6333, Melita, MB. 2006 SUMMERS SERIES 10 38' diamond 2010 JD 9630, 530 HP, Michelin disc, bought new in 2008, $49,500 OBO. 800/70R38 tires, JD AutoSteer, $239,000. www.bigtractorparts.com 204-461-0192, St. Francois Xavier, MB. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. Seanbraun1@gmail.com 2005 MCCORMICK MTX120 with Quicke 2009 JOHN DEERE 9430, 4WD, 425 HP, 24 loader, 3100 hours; 2006 MTX150. Call AERWAY CCT 15' tool bar, new bearings, spd., 4 hyds., 710/70R42 duals, 4257 hrs., 204-522-6333, Melita, MB. field ready, good condition, $25,000 OBO. original owner, nice condition, asking 306-690-8105, Moose Jaw, SK. $185,000. 306-725-4286, Bulyea, SK.

1-800-982-1769

MAGNUM I MORRIS chisel plow, 43° 1995 JD 8100, MFWD, 840 loader, powshanks, 1 brand new $246, 4 used $123. ershift, new tires, 9043 hrs., exc. cond., $492 takes all. 204-537-2455 Belmont, MB $76,000. 306-472-7704, Woodrow, SK. 2007 9620 W/PTO, 4060 hrs., leather, 800 tires. 48 gal/min, dozer to sit avail., $189,000 ,306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. 1983 JD 4450 MFWD w/Ezee-On FEL 2130 grapple, 15 spd PS, 3 hyds., 7925 hrs showing, 14.9-26F, 20.8R32, duals avail. 306-283-4747, 306-291-9395 Langham SK

If it doesn’t say harvest screen its not the

NH 22HP diesel yard tractor, 770 hrs., 5 attachments, $10,000 OBO RB. For info. call Scott 204-590-6631, Winnipeg, MB.

2015 FARM KING 29’ Disc, 10” spacing, used on 1000 ac., blades like new, $49,500 1983 JOHN DEERE 8450 4WD, quad shift, can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River. PTO, 8200 hrs., $22,250 OBO. BREAKING DISCS: KEWANEE, 14’ and 306-275-4446, St. Brieux SK. 12’; Rome 12’ and 9’; Towner 16’; Wishek 14’ and 30’. 2- DMI 7 shank rippers.; 2015 JOHN DEERE 9470R - SPI Stock #168556, $405,000. Call 306-547-2007, 1-866-938-8537. Preeceville, SK. wjaeb@maplefarm.com IHC 6400 54’ chisel plow, 12” spacing, new www.pattisonag.com NH3, boots and openers, new hoses, new walking beam shafts. 306-862-7138 or 2015 JOHN DEERE 9570R tractor, Stock #187808, $450,000. 204-734-3466, Swan 306-862-5993, Nipawin, SK. River, MB. www.pattisonag.com JOHN DEERE MODEL 337 disc, 35’, very good condition, $32,500. 306-643-2763, 1977 JD 4430 w/606 PT mower behind, 306-648-7595, Gravelbourg, SK. very low hrs., always shedded, excellent IHC #55 CHISEL plow, 37’, NH3 attach- condition. 306-717-2971, Saskatoon, SK. ment; IHC #55 chisel plow, 15’; IHC 4700 vibra chisel 31’. 306-369-7794, Bruno, SK. MORRIS MAGNUM CULTIVATOR $5650. 306-946-7923, Young, SK.

45’,

2014 CHALLENGER MT765D, 620 hrs., 3502 HP, Trimble Autopilot, 18” tracks, PTO, 3PTH, $229,800. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com

JOHN DEERE 740 FEL, self-levelling with bucket & grill guard, plumbed for grapple $7000; Bale forks available, $500. 306-236-1980, Meadow Lake, SK.

EQUIPMENT, TREES AND HAYLAND: Combines: IHC 914, NH 1500, Massey 860; Co-op 550 swather; IHC TD crawler; Parting out: Allis 8030 tractor; Melroe 5 or 6 bottom plow; Tractor tires/rims; DT cult. For Rent Pasture/hayland, yardsite; Standing poplar. 204-268-1888, Beausejour, MB.

COMPLETE SHANK ASSEMBLIES; JD 1610, Morris Magnum, $135; JD 610, Morris Magnum II, $185. 306-946-7923, Young, SK.

CONCAVE FOR 1976 IH 914, completely rebuilt to Ray Stueckles specs, barely used $300 OBO. 204-537-2455, Belmont, MB.

JD 1650 DT 51’ Cultivator, $3000+ on tires, hyd. rams, bearings, etc., 3-bar Degelman harrows. $18,000. 306-493-7871, Harris, SK.

510 WALINGA VAC-U-VATOR, hoses nearly new, incl. clean up hoses, always shedded; two Grainguard bullet style aeration for 18’ diameter bins. For more info call 204-747-2495, Deloraine. MB.

2010 JD 4830, Stock #188089, TRACTORS, COMBINES, SWATHERS, $209,000. 306-542-2822, Kamsack, SK. ploughs, cultivators, tires and rims, hyd. www.pattisonag.com cylinders, balers, older trucks, crawlers. 204-871-2708, 204-685-2124, Austin, MB. 2015 JOHN DEERE R4045-SPI, Stock GOODS USED TRACTOR parts (always #167884, $425,000. Call 306-783-9459, 2001 MX120 w/loader; 2000 MX135; and buying tractors). David or Curtis, Roblin, Yorkton, SK. www.pattisonag.com Email 2008 Maxim 140 w/loader. 204-522-6333, MB., 204-564-2528, 1-877-564-8734. Melita, MB. dallas.bond@maplefarm.com

ODESSA ROCKPICKER SALES: New De2014 MF 8680 MFWD, 667 hrs., PTO, gelman equipment, land rollers, StrawCVT, 5 hyds., rear duals, $174,800. master, rockpickers, protill, dozer blades. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 306-957-4403, 306-536-5097, Odessa, SK. MF 90 w/LOADER; MF 1100 w/loader; FLAX STRAW BUNCHER and land levelers. Case 2290 w/loader. 306-283-4747, Building now. Place orders and don’t delay! 306-220-0429, Langham, SK. 306-957-4279, Odessa, SK.


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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

FARM LIQUIDATION: Antiques (cars, tractors, trucks); Augers; Combines; Cultivators; Diskers; Fencing posts; 1/2 ton trucks; Harrow/packer hitch; Haying equipment; Grain trucks; Rock picker; Rodweeder; Seed drills; Swather; Other smaller items. Truax, SK. For complete list, pics & pricing e-mail: p.tice@hotmail.ca 1986 JD 7721 Titan II combine; Versatile 4400 24’ swather, gas, with PU reel; (2) Goebel 2300 bu. hopper bins on skids, 1 with 3 HP fan and propane burner; (2) Goebel 2500 bu. bins on wood floor; Metal Industries Ltd. 2700 bu. hopper bin on skids; Westeel 1650 bu. hopper bin on skids. 306-365-4643, Lanigan, SK. WANTED: WOOD CHIPPER, must be well maintained, no smaller than 8”. 403-575-5667, Coronation, AB.

WANTED: Older and newer tractors, in running condition or for parts. Goods Used Tractor Parts, 1-877-564-8734. WANTED: A FINE CUT straw chopper to fit a JD 9600. Call 204-655-3458, Sifton, MB.

The Icynene Insulation System® • Sprayed foam insulation • Ideal for shops, barns or homes • Healthier, Quieter, More Energy Efficient®

www.penta.ca

1-800-587-4711

Factory Direct Outlet DELUXE WOOD & WATER OUTDOOR FURNACES CAN YOU FIND A CHEAPER WAY TO HEAT? CSA APPROVED TH

25 ANNIVERSARY BLOWOUT Now available North American wide at prices never seen before

$ MF #36 DISCERS. Will pay top dollar and pick from anywhere. Phone Mike 306-723-4875, Cupar, SK. WANTED: USED, BURNT, old or ugly tractors. Newer models too! Smith’s Tractor Wrecking, 1-888-676-4847.

$

HAGMAN’S TRUCKING for all your bison transport. Local and long distance. Humane and ease of loading/unloading. Can WANTED: CULL COWS and bulls. For bookhaul up to 50,000 lbs. to the USA. Call ings call Kelly at Drake Meat Processors, 306-363-2117 ext. 111, Drake, SK. 306-773-5909, Swift Current, SK. OFFERING 8 PROVEN bison cows with breeding bull prospect, calves at side. Call Dr. Marshall Patterson, Kirkwall Moor Ranch, 306-475-2232, Moose Jaw, SK. We know that farming is enough of a gamble so if you want to sell it fast place your ad in the Manitoba Co-operator classifieds. It’s a Sure Thing. Call our toll-free number today. We have friendly staff ready to help. 1-800-667-7770.

4,997 500

4,497

LIMITED QUANTITIES!!! ALL MODELS ON SALE!!!

CANADA’S BEST PRICE

Hwy #205, Grunthal • (204) 434-6519

REGULAR CATTLE SALES

Friesen Built Inc.

**September 19th, 26th **

TUESDAY at 9 am

Thursday Sept 14th 12:00pm Dairy Sale - For more information call Ed 204-392-8442 or Brad 204-346-2440

DRILL STEM: 200 3-1/2”, $45/ea; 400 2-3/8”, $34/ea; 1000 2-7/8”, $36/ea. 306-768-8555, Carrot River, SK. 2-7/8” OILFIELD TUBING, $40 each; 3/4” sucker rods, $6 each. Truckload quantities 16’ PEELED RAILS, SPECIAL 2-3” $3 ea., only. Call 306-861-1280, Weyburn, SK. 125/bundle; 3-4” $9.25 ea, 100/bundle. Vermette Wood Preservers, Spruce Home, SK., 1-800-667-0094. info@vwpltd.com WESTERN IRRIGATION: CADMAN Dealer. We BUY and SELL traveling guns, pumps, pipes, etc.; Also EcoSmart water purification systems, no salt, no chemicals. Phone 306-867-9461 or 306-867-7037, Outlook, MULCHING- TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. SK. E-mail: derdallreg@hotmail.com Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: Used pumping motors, PTO carts, 6” - 10” www.maverickconstruction.ca alum. pipe. Call Dennis to discuss your needs! 403-308-1400, Taber, AB.

ANNUAL PRE-SORT FALL SALE: Hosted by SSDB, Sat., Sept. 23/17 at 1 PM, Saskatoon Livestock Sales. All pre-booked stock must be in by 4 PM on Friday, Sept. 22rd. Ph 306-933-5200, web: www.sksheep.com or e-mail: sheepdb@sasktel.net

Saturday Sept 23rd, 10:00am Consignment Sale

For on farm appraisal of livestock or for marketing information please call Brad Kehler (Manager) Cell 204-346-2440 Auction Mart (204) 434-6519 MB. Livestock Dealer #1436

WWW.GRUNTHALLIVESTOCK.COM

GUARANTEED PRESSURE TREATED fence posts, lumber slabs and rails. Call Lehner Wood Preservers Ltd., ask for Ron 306-763-4232, Prince Albert, SK.

Memory assistance.

WHITEWOOD LIVESTOCK SALES

WANTED: BUTCHER HOGS SOWS AND BOARS FOR EXPORT

P. QUINTAINE & SON LTD. 728-7549 Licence No. 1123

HIGHWAY #1 WEST WHITEWOOD, SASK.

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FALL HORSE SALE

Receiving Friday till 7 pm and Saturday morning FOR MORE InFORMATIOn OR TO COnSIGn PlEASE CAll 306-735-2822

BLOCKED AND SEASONED FIREWOOD: $180 per 160 ft.≥ cord; bags $80 (incl. refundable deposit for bag). Bundles of 4’-5’ or 6.5’ also avail. Vermette Wood Preservers 1-800-667-0094, Spruce Home, SK.

SELLING: BLACK ANGUS BULLS. Wayside Angus, Henry and Bernie Jungwirth, 306-256-3607, Cudworth, SK.

SEASONED SPRUCE SLAB firewood, one cord bundles, $99, half cord bundles, $65. Volume discounts. September Clearance Special - Buy 2 get 1 free! Call V&R Sawing, 306-232-5488, Rosthern, SK.

BLACK ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, semen tested, guaranteed breeders. Delivery available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, BLOCKED SEASONED JACK Pine firewood and wood chips for sale. Lehner Wood Pre- SHAVINGS: BULK PRICING and delivery Englefeld, SK. www.skinnerfarms.ca servers Ltd., 306-763-4232, Prince Albert, available. Vermette Wood Preservers, Spruce Home, SK.. 1-800-667-0094. Email PUREBRED BLACK ANGUS long yearling SK. Will deliver. Self-unloading trailer. bulls, replacement heifers, AI service. info@vwpltd.com View www.vwpltd.com Meadow Ridge Enterprises, 306-373-9140 or 306-270-6628, Saskatoon, SK.

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SPRUCE FOR SALE!! Beautiful locally grown trees. Plan ahead and renew your shelterbelt or landscape a new yardsite, get the year round protection you need. We sell on farm near Didsbury, AB. or deliver anywhere in Western Canada. 6 - 12’ BEELINE TREELENGTH LOG TRAILER spruce available. Now taking fall orders BREED HOLSTEIN HEIFER, and some jer(one of 3) Online Only Unreserved Auction while supplies last. Phone 403-586-8733 seys for sale. Call 519-323-3074, Heifer October 11- 17th. For more info. call or visit: www.didsburysprucefarms.com Ville Holstein Inc., Holstein, Ont. 306-865-7660. www.championassets.ca FRESH AND SPRINGING heifers for sale. 2004 NEW HOLLAND EH215 Processor Cows and quota needed. We buy all class(one of 3) Online Only Unreserved Auction es of slaughter cattle-beef and dairy. R&F October 11- 17th. For more info. call Livestock Inc. Bryce Fisher, Warman, SK. 306-865-7660. www.championassets.ca Phone 306-239-2298, cell 306-221-2620.

ARE YOU SINGLE and would rather be in love? Camelot Introductions has been successfully matching people for over 23 years. In-person interviews by Intuitive Matchmaker in MB and SK. Call 306-978LOVE (5683), 204-257-LOVE (5683) www.camelotintroductions.com

FREESTANDING PANELS: 30’ windbreak panels; 6-bar 24’ and 30’ panels; 10’, 20’ and 30’ feed troughs; Bale shredder bunks; Silage bunks; Feeder panels; HD bale feeders; All metal 16’ and 24’ calf shelters. Will custom build. 306-424-2094, Kendal, SK.

CHESAPEAKE BAY RETRIEVERS, 3 males ready to go, 1st shots and dewormed. Great family & hunting dogs. Mother is a great bird dog, both upland and water. $800. 306-861-6196, 306-861-2510, Weyburn SK. BLUE HEELER PUPPIES, 1st shots, dewormed, $300. Mother is Blue Heeler and father is Red Heeler. Call 204-895-1894, Oak Bluff, MB.

FFS- FUCHS FARM SUPPLY is proud announce that we are the new Farm Aid Manufacturing Dealer for Sask. Stocking mix wagons and a full supply of parts. GREAT PYRENEES/AKBASH CROSS pups, 306-762-2125, Vibank, SK. www.fuchs.ca born May 2, with sheep, both working parents, $250. 306-845-2404, Livelong, SK. 72” ROLLERMILL WITH power take off, portable on trailer. Call 306-475-2664, Kayville, SK.

4500 SQ. FT. HOUSE on 11 acres in Crawford Bay, BC. Call for more information 250-227-9696.

Call our toll-free number to take advantage of our Prepayment Bonus. Prepay for 3 weeks SVEN ROLLER MILLS. Built for over 40 and we’ll run your ad 2 more weeks for free. years. PTO/elec. drive, 40 to 1000 bu./hr. That’s 5 weeks for the price of 3. Call 1-800Example: 300 bu./hr. unit costs $1/hr. to 667-7770 today! run. Rolls peas and all grains. We regroove and repair all makes of mills. Call Apollo Machine 306-242-9884, 1-877-255-0187. www.apollomachineandproducts.com COMMERCIAL LOT, READY to develop. 100' HI-HOG CATTLE SQUEEZE. Call frontage x 300'. High elevation w/no flood 306-773-1049 or 306-741-6513, Swift issues & lots of fill for landscaping. Services adjacent to property. 2017 taxes paid. Current, SK. $45,000. Candle Lake, SK., 306-960-6253, 2002 521DXT CASE payloader with grapple 306-922-6232, thecorrigals@sasktel.net BROWN AND WHITE Novogen Layers, fork. Call 306-773-1049 or 306-741-6513, ready end of August. Hardy and good egg Swift Current, SK. production. 306-225-4446, Hepburn, SK. Call our toll-free number to take advantage of our Prepayment Bonus. Prepay for 3 weeks and we’ll run your ad 2 more weeks for CONDOMINIUM, "CASH TO Mortgage" free. That’s 5 weeks for the price of 3. Call purchase, 664 sq. ft 1 bdrm first floor at the Daxton in Silverspring. Modern decor, large 1-800-667-7770 today! bdrm & closet area, garden door to east facing deck, in-suite laundry, 1 titled UG parking stall. All appliances incl. Condo fees NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for $187. A/C, in floor heat, camera security over 15 years, is looking for Elk. “If you LINDEN POST POUNDER, 540 PTO, $750. entrance, close to all amenities. Direct bus have them, we want them.” Make your fi- Call 306-567-3128, Bladworth, SK. route to Campus. Must qualify to assume nal call with Northfork for pricing! Guaranmortgage. Immediate possession. Call Kim teed prompt payment! 514-643-4447, 306-290-4256. FSBO $204,900 OBO. SaskaWinnipeg, MB. toon, SK. kimkrienke@sasktel.net IMMACULATE & BRIGHT Top Floor Corner Condo, built in 2005, 1272 sq. ft., 2 bdrm+den, 2 bath, wrap around balcony, underground parking and car wash, will sell furnished or unfurnished, $324,999. 306-491-0901, Wildwood - Saskatoon, SK.

TO BE MOVED: Cabin or hunting cabin, 16x24 square timber, open rafter, w/loft. 306-240-6003, Dorintosh, SK.

BUCKLING'S 4 MONTH to 1-1/2 yr. PB reg. Kiko and Boer crosses avail. 204-324-7941, St. Joseph, MB. Email: julisebr@sdnet.ca

ELMER 9000 HYDRAULIC Elk squeeze, self-contained. 306-862-5207, Nipawin, SK

RESIDENTIAL LOT, ELBOW, SK for sale. Lot 7, Blk 2, Plan 88MJ16836, 125 Putters Lane. One block from golf course. 24.5 Meter frontage. Serviced by town. Will consider trade of RV, boat, truck, car, etc. $29,500. Call Gerry 403-389-4858.

4 SPECKLE PARK, 1 cow, 4 heifers, bred to HARMONY NATURAL BISON buying all Speckle Park Bull. Call 306-594-2904, Nor- COWS WANTED for winter feeding, feed types of bison. Call or text 306-736-3454, quay, SK. and space for 300 head. Call for details SE Sask. dean@harmonhealthyfoods.ca 306-360-7000, Guernsey, SK.

NEED a back yard retreat? We have tiny pre-built log cabins ready to be loaded onto your trailer. Plug and play models! Also log cabin logs and log siding. Call Rouck Bros., Lumby, BC., 1-800-960-3388 or visit: www.rouckbros.com

BISON WANTED - Canadian Prairie Bison is looking to contract grain finished bison, as well as calves and yearlings for growing markets. Contact Roger Provencher at 306-468-2316, roger@cdnbison.com QUILL CREEK BISON is looking for finished, and all other types of bison. COD, paying market prices. “Producers working with Producers.” Delivery points in SK. and MB. Call 306-231-9110, Quill Lake, SK.

CUSTOM FEEDING CATTLE: Shortage of hay? Winter feeding for cows or finishing and back grounding available. Organic or conventional. Please call Clem for prices, 306-862-7416, 306-767-2711. Tisdale, SK.

12V. or Hydraulic

Electronic Scale Opt. WANTED ALL CLASSES of bison: calves, yearlings, cows, bulls. Willing to purchase H. S. KNILL TRANSPORT, est. 1933, speany amount. dreyelts1@rap.midco.net cializing in purebred livestock transportaCall 605-391-4646. tion. Providing weekly pick up and delivery service across Canada/USA and Mexico. NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for Gooseneck service available in Ontario, over 15 years, is looking for finished Bison, Quebec and USA. US and Canada customs 1 877 695 2532 www.ezefeeder.ca NEW AND USED generators, all sizes from grain or grass fed. “If you have them, we bonded carrier. Call 1-877-442-3106, fax 5 kw to 3000 kw, gas, LPG or diesel. Phone want them.” Make your final call with 519-442-1122, hsknill@pppoe.ca or for availability and prices. Many used in Northfork for pricing! Guaranteed prompt www.hsknilltransport.com 155 King Ed- WANTED: PORTABLE GRAIN roller mixer with tank. Call 204-842-3692, Birtle, MB. stock. 204-643-5441, Fraserwood, MB. payment! 514-643-4447, Winnipeg, MB. ward St., Paris, ON. N3L 0A1. 1976 CASE 586 rough terrain forklift, 4 spd. hydro, 6000 lbs. 15’ lift, 4 cylinder diesel, 5760 hrs, nice condition, $11,900. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

GREG’S WELDING: Freestanding 30’ 5 bar panels, all 2-7/8” drill stem construction, $450; 24’x5.5’ panels, 2-7/8” pipe w/5- 1” sucker rods, $340; 24’x6’ panels, 2-7/8” pipe with 6- 1” rods, $365; 30’ 2 or 3 bar windbreak panels c/w lumber. Gates and double hinges avail. on all panels. Belting troughs for grain or silage. Calf shelters. Del. avail. 306-768-8555, Carrot River, SK.

RED ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, semen tested, guaranteed breeders. Delivery available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, Englefeld, SK. www.skinnerfarms.ca BUYING ELK for local and international meat markets. Paying up to $12 per kg FOB plant. Phone Ian at 204-848-2498 or 204-867-0085. COMING 2 YR. old polled PB Charolais WANTED: 400 plus bull elk and reindeer bulls, come red factor. Call Kings Polled bulls. Shewchuk Seeds, Blaine Lake, SK. Charolais, 306-435-7116, Rocanville, SK. 306-497-3576 or text 639-317-4645.

canada’s ag-only listings giant

WANTED: ORGANIC LENTILS, peas and chickpeas. Stonehenge Organics, Assiniboia, SK., 306-640-8600, 306-640-8437.

1001 NDE VERTICAL cutter mixer, good condition, $25,000 firm; Vermeer 605M round baler, monitor, kicker, new PU, good condition, field ready, $12,000 OBO. 306-335-7875, Lemberg, SK

STEEL VIEW MFG. Self-standing panels, windbreaks, silage/hay bunks, feeder panels, sucker rod fence posts. Custom orders. Call Shane 306-493-2300, Delisle, SK. www.steelviewmfg.com

** TACK - 10 AM ** HORSES - 1 PM ALL ADuLT HORSES muST HAVE EID FORmS AT TImE OF DELIVER

PRECAST FEED BUNK: 10' long, large capacity, slick finish w/chamfered corners allows cattle to clean up feed while high back cuts down on feed waste. High quality, high strength rebar reinforced concrete for years of trouble free feeding!! If one gets backed into and breaks it's easily replaced with a new 10' section, unlike poured inplace troughs. Will deliver anywhere in Sask and Alberta! $315. Neilburg, SK. 306-823-3519, tracy@lconindustries.com www.lconindustries.com

CATTLE SHELTER PACKAGES or built on site. For early booking call 1-800-667-4990 or visit our website: www.warmanhomecentre.com

SATURDAY, SEPT 30, 2017

Network

WANT THE ORGANIC ADVANTAGE? Contact an organic Agrologist at Pro-Cert for information on organic farming: prospects, transition, barriers, benefits, certification and marketing. Call 306-382-1299, Saskatoon, SK. or info@pro-cert.org

BOYES REGISTERED QH PRODUCTION Sale, Saturday, September 23, 6:00 PM, at CRATE STYLE ELECTRONIC LIVESTOCK Chopper K Auction Mart, Alameda, SK. For Scale, with wheels that can be towed, like new condition; Also, bandsaw for cutting info. call 306-483-7691, 306-925-2030. meat and a meat slicer. 204-383-5802, It doesn’t get any better than this. Prepay 204-383-0100, Woodlands, MB. your ad for 3 weeks and get 2 weeks free! KELLN SOLAR SUMMER/WINTER WACall today! 1-800-667-7770. TERING System, provides water in remote improves water quality, increases KINDERSLEY ANTIQUE THRESHING Club areas, productivity, extends dugout life. Antique Threshing & Horse Drawn Binder pasture St. Claude/Portage, MB. 204-379-2763. Demo. Sept. 24th, 12:00-4:00PM, Kindersley Museum. Lunch available. Call Greg SCHWARTZ SILAGE FEED WAGON, 306-463-8080 or Lionel 306-463-8352. working scales, excellent condition, Kindersley, SK. lgweinhandl@gmail.com $12,000. 204-828-3483, 204-745-7168, Stephenfield, MB.

GRUNTHAL, MB. AGENT FOR T.E.A.M. MARKETING

Guarantee on Comparable model

1-204-388-6150 • Toll Free 1-855-897-7278

HERD DISPERSAL: 70 Black Angus cross pairs and 70 mixed pairs. Full herd health program. Reduced! $2600 per pair firm. Call 306-335-7875, Lemberg, SK.

100 THIRD TO FIFTH Black Angus cow/calf pairs. 306-773-1049, NILSSON BROS INC. buying finished bison 306-741-6513, Swift Current, SK. on the rail, also cull cows at Lacombe, AB. For fall delivery and beyond. Smaller 300 RED AND BLACK Angus 1250 lbs. heifgroups welcome. Fair, competitive and as- ers with calves. Call 306-773-1049, sured payment. Contact Richard Bintner 306-741-6513, Swift Current, SK. 306-873-3184.

-$

FC30HD Unit plus accessories

SOLIDLOCK AND TREE ISLAND game wire and all accessories for installation. Heights from 26” to 120”. Ideal for elk, deer, bison, sheep, swine, cattle, etc. Tom Jensen ph/fax: 306-426-2305, Smeaton, SK.

WANT TO PURCHASE cull bison bulls and cows, $5/lb. HHW. Finished beef steers and heifers for slaughter. We are also buying compromised cattle that can’t make a long trip. Oak Ridge Meats, McCreary, 204-835-2365, 204-476-0147.

Buy Used Oil NOTRE •• Buy Batteries DAME • Collect Used Filters USED • Collect Oil Containers OIL & • Antifreeze FILTER Southern, and DEPOT Eastern Western

Tel: 204-248-2110 Manitoba

224 BROADWAY AVE, Pilot Mound, MB. Great new price! Call today 204-807-2204, Kelly Tame, RE/MAX Home Team. TIMBER FRAMES, LOG STRUCTURES and Vertical Log Cabins. Log home refinishing and chinking. Certified Log Builder with 38 years experience. Log & Timber Works, Delisle, SK., 306-717-5161, Email info@logandtimberworks.com Website at www.logandtimberworks.com


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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Crosswor ossword Cr osswor d PRINT | MOBILE | ONLINE

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One who comes in last Low lying wetland Tasmanian ___ Wray of "King Kong" fame Sphere, basically Developer of the 45 rpm. record Per item High-and-mighty Jamboree equipment In the buff Understand, in Robert Heinlein books Poker player's fee Advise against Big, in combinations Brings back to health Missing from morning roll-call, briefly Like instantly Press the wrong button Like uncombed hair Big haunt for hippos Midterm concern Boast

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Item dropped for quick trip in the sixties Wooded area Philanthropist ___ Khan IV On the hook for Mysterious, to all except a few Samovar, basically Ward off disaster "Hey, ___ so fast!" Top of the line Favourite from a griddle Drop down a notch Tight as a drum Newly recruited infantry guy, slangily A lot of U. of M. grads. Deep South side dish Sort of creepy Give a new name to Fez decorations Bell MTS Place, for one Makes doilies Net judge's cry Totally commits, in a way Take another shot at Theoretical substance, to physicists Remove a seatbelt Mythical Muslim maiden Bacardi product Sonny and Cher's song about owning a 1995 movie star?

Steven Tyler's "___smith" Guy who handles the helm Small boxed-off map section More tacky #1 tennis player of 1975 Huge name in heavyweight boxing Hero sandwich A sizeable piece of Hawaii Thick lumps Fertilizer from bats Small tree-shaded area Mediaeval battle tactic "Armageddon" author Leon Pantihose hue Plant growing places "That'll be ___ day!" Nay's off-setter Bit of left over dinner, say

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CONDITIONS Manitoba Co-operator reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement submitted to it for publication. Manitoba Co-operator, while assuming no responsibility for advertisements appearing in its columns, exercises the greatest care in an endeavor to restrict advertising to wholly reliable firms or individuals. Buyers are advised to request shipment C.O.D. when purchasing from an unknown advertiser, thus minimizing the chances of fraud and eliminating the necessity of refund if the goods have already been sold. Ads may be cancelled or changed at any time in accordance with the deadlines. Ads ordered on the term rates, which are cancelled or changed lose their special term rates. Manitoba Co-operator accepts no responsibility for errors in advertisements after one insertion. If you wish to have replies sent to a confidential box number please add $5.00/week to your total. While every effort is made to forward replies to the box numbers to the advertiser as soon as possible, we accept no liability in respect of loss or damage alleged to arise through either failure or delay in forwarding such replies, however caused. Advertisers using only a post office box number or street address must submit their name to this office before such an advertisement is accepted for this publication. Their

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The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

PARK MODEL for sale, friendly smaller park in Yuma, AZ. Includes Arizona room, carport, fully furnished, 2 pools, rec hall. Call 780-467-1915, Sherwood Park, AB.

LOG AND TIMBER HOMES, Saskatoon, SK. Visit www.backcountryloghomes.ca or call 306-222-6558.

TAKING OFFERS FOR the following lands: W 1/2 of 36-22-06 W3, yard site; E 1/2 of 01-23-06 W3; NW 01-23-06 W3; NE 12-23-06 W3, grass; S 1/2 of 12-23-06 W3; NW 06-23-06 W3 lease grass; SE 06-23-06 W3, lease grass; SW 06-23-05 W3; SW 07-23-06 W3, lease grass. All land is adjoining and in the RM of Maple Bush No.224. Highest or any offer not necessarily accepted. Closing date September 30th, 2017. “Land to be sold as a unit”. Please WORLD CLASS EQUESTRIAN CENTRE! send offers to: PO Box 57, Riverhurst, SK., Sunnyside Stables is close to Lethbridge, S0H 3P0. Leases subject to qualification. AB. on 39.49 acres. The 37,400 sq. ft. facility has a 2100 sq. ft. indoor arena, hay KINDERSLEY AREA: 123 acres, 2 homes, shed, heated barn (with laundry and show- 2 shops, Kindersley waterline, cash renter ers), 10 box stalls, 2 tack rooms and an of- in place, $695,000. Arlene Boisjoli, Royal fice. 28 more stalls have attached outdoor LePage Wheat Country Realty, Kindersley, runs and automatic waterers. A 7 bed, 4 SK, 306-463-4910, 306-460-7785, email Amy Greenwood, bath 2520 sq. ft. home w/30’x40’ garage royal3@sasktel.net and 40 acres SMRID water rights are also 306-460-8692, amygreenwood@royallepage.ca www.royallepagekindersley.ca included. Water comes from Lethbridge City Coop. ID# 1100603. MLS® Real Estate Centre, 1-866-345-3414. For NORTH BATTLEFORD AREA: 644 acres all our listings view our website: riverfront property, 2 log cabins, fenced, fantastic views, $875,000; Near Elrose: 4 www.farmrealestate.com quarters deeded, 8 quarters leased, new TURNKEY BISON OPERATION: 7 quarter home, complete yardsite w/outdoor riding sections of mixed bush/open ac. 2 devel- arena, $1,850,000; South of Kindersley: oped yard sites, barn shop, auto. waterers, 160 acres with 2880 sq. ft. log home, Bison herd, equipment, annual hay already shop, garage, beautiful property, in stack yard. Ready to move in and carry $990,000. Could be subdivided as an on. Must sell due to health issues. Peace acreage, $690,000. Arlene Boisjoli, Royal River. 780-618-7007, Jbarj12@icloud.com LePage Wheat Country Realty, Kindersley, SK., 306-463-4910 or 306-460-7785. Email royal3@sasktel.net View listings at www.royallepagekindersley.ca

DWEIN TRASK REALTY INC. Great selection of quality affordable homes in rural SK. Check out 901 Ave. O South in Perdue. MLS#SK701830; 119 6th Ave E. in Delisle, MLS#SK612719; Klassen acreage in Grandora, MLS#SK608373. For further info on these lovely homes and many more call Dwein Trask 306-221-1035; Amanda Cobler 306-221-5675; Victoria Bester 306-270-9740.

YELLOWHEAD MODULAR HOME SALES, Canadian built by Moduline. Elite price event on now: 960 sq. ft., 2 bdrm, 2 bath, $79,900; 1216 sq. ft., 3 bdrm, 2 bath, $89,900; 1520 sq. ft., 3 or 4 bdrm, 2 bath, $109,900. 306-496-7538, weekend calls. www.yellowmodularhomesales.ca 2007 HOMARK C536, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 16’x80’ plus 12’x20’ 2 room addition. F/S/WD/DW, water softener with reverse osmosis system, skirting, 504 sq. ft. deck, includes electric furnace. $70,000 firm. 306-830-9335, Edam, SK.

WWW.MEDALLION-HOMES.CA modular homes/lake houses/RTM’s. Visit our sales lot, or check online for stock, homes and all other plans. Factory direct orders built to your specs! Trade-ins welcome, buy and sell used homes. Hwy 2 South, Prince Albert, SK. Call 306-764-2121 or toll free 1-800-249-3969.

Call our toll-free number to take advantage of our Prepayment Bonus. Prepay for 3 weeks and we’ll run your ad 2 more weeks for free. That’s 5 weeks for the price of 3. Call 1-800-667-7770 today! RM BENSON #35: For rent or crop share 80 acres hayland, brome/alfalfa mix for baling. For information call 306-931-6660.

PERFECT COTTAGE OR Granny Suite. 384 sq. ft., 1 bdrm, 1 bath, 16'x30' built in 2011 w/covered entry. Metal roof, vinyl siding. New furnace, duct work and insulated crawl J&H HOMES: Save $10,000-$17,000 on sein 2016. Very cozy! All appliances included. lect RTM showhomes like the “Palo” shown $35,000. Prince Albert, SK., 306-940-7780, here - www.jhhomes.com 306-652-5322. 306-922-6232, tannerc__@hotmail.com RTM OR SITE BUILT Custom Homes and Cottages. 40 years experience. Call or text VEGAS TIMESHARE: INT’L exchanges, 2 204-324-7179, Don Ginter Construction, bdrm, 2 bath, full kitchen, laundry, fireAltona, MB. place, pools, selling due to health. 306-453-2958, Carlyle, SK. RTMS AND SITE built homes. Call 1-866-933-9595, or go online for pictures 2009 DELUXE PARK MODEL in gated 55+ park, Yuma, AZ. One owner, fully furnished and pricing at: www.warmanhomes.ca w/extras, dishwasher, washer/dryer, garHOME HARDWARE RTM Homes and Cot- burator, RO, electric water softener, outtages. Phone 1-800-663-3350 or go on- door furniture, screened room, car port, line for floor plans and specs at: 10x12 shed on 40x61 landscaped lot, $59,900 Cdn. 403-329-9240. www.northbattlefordhomehardware.com It doesn’t get any better than this. Prepay If you want to sell it fast, call 1-800-667-7770. your ad for 3 weeks and get 2 weeks free! Call today! 1-800-667-7770.

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630 ACRES FARMLAND: 60 acres hay, 570 acres cultivated. 403-933-2717, South of Moose Jaw, SK. barber.della@yahoo.com FARMLAND FOR SALE: RM of Mount Hope, 2097 acres w/2 yardsites; RM of Elcapo, 945 acres w/yardsite; RM of Last Mountain Valley, 641 acres; RM of Lipton, 520 acres. Contact Adam Hungle, Century21Dome, 306-531-8854. View all MLS® land listings at: www.skfarmland.ca FARMLAND NE SK(Clemenceau) 4 quarters plus 36 acre riverside parcel w/5 bdrm. home. Featuring: bins on concrete with direct hit on railroad cars, 40 acres of mostly mature spruce timber, 2 farmyards- 1 bordering Etomami River and 50 miles of provincial forest, excellent elk hunting and other big game and goose. 580 acres wheat, mustard, barley & peas. Full line of farm and sawmill equipment also available Will separate. Reg Hertz, 306-865-7469.

ATTENTION WILDLIFE ENTHUSIASTS! Whether you are a hunter or photographer, check out this exceptional 82 acres of ideal property located just south of R.M.N.P. Also great for snowmobiling, snow shoeing and hiking into the park. All season creek for 2.7 ACRES ADJACENT to Ministkwan Lake, trapping. Call Mike Kufflick 204-721-1347 SK. Fully serviced. Call for information. mkufflick@remax.net 306-837-4731, pospisil@sasktel.net

RM OF SPIRITWOOD No. 496: Located 8.5 miles NE of Spiritwood, SK. is this 36.8 acre acreage with a 2100 sq. ft. 2 storey family home and double attached garage built in 1992. A well sheltered groomed yard, 32x48 natural gas heated workshop with cement floor and insulated walls. 40x60 high profile quonset, dirt floor. 2 water wells, 3 water bowls, older hip roofed barn and corrals with underground power. All major appliances remain and are natural gas. This acreage is a must see as it has so many possibilities! MLS® 610213. For viewing call Lloyd Ledinski at RE/MAX of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512.

CANADIAN FARM REALTY Call one of our team members for your no obligation consultation or to list your farm for fall 2017. Royal LePage Riverbend

Sheldon Froese Stacey Hiebert Dolf Feddes Junior Thevenot Henry Carels Catharina Carels

204-371-5131 204-371-5930 204-745-0451 204-825-8378 204-573-5396 204-720-4779

NEAR KRONAU, SK, 1/2 hour from Regina Visit our farm listings and videos 80 acres w/character home & out buildat www.canadianfarmrealty.com ings; Near Pilot Butte 68 acres w/yard site; near Pilot Butte 80 acres w/yard site. Call our toll-free number to take advantage Brian Tiefenbach, 306-536-3269, Colliers of our Prepayment Bonus. Prepay for 3 weeks Int. Regina, SK. www.collierscanada.com and we’ll run your ad 2 more weeks for free. That’s 5 weeks for the price of 3. Call 1-800TOM@SASKFARMLAND.COM Hunting 667-7770 today! Quarter. Heavy big game activity. Meadow Lake, SK. area. Quick possession for the JOSEPH AND KIM STREKER of Inwood, hunting season, $89,500. Call anytime for MB are offering the following private land information package. MLS® Tom Neufeld, for sale: N 1/2 06-19-01 W, SW 07-19-01 306-260-7838, Coldwell Banker Signature. W. The successful purchaser will be considered by Manitoba Agriculture for posBIG RIVER, SK. AREA: This gorgeous sible transfer of the Crown land forage home/lodge is approx. 3100 sq. ft. on 3 lease associated with this ranch unit. This levels including attached garage, with lots forage lease currently consists of the folof open wood, large windows and local lowing: N 1/2 05-19-01 W, S 1/2 natural wood staircase. The home is heat- 06-19-01 W. If you wish to purchase the ed with in-floor propane plus wood fire- private land contact the Lessees Joseph place, solar panels and windmill. Most fur- and Kim Streker at PO Box 307, Inwood, niture is included. The quarter is 154 acres MB R0C 1P0. If you wish to comment on mainly bush, of which 140 acres is fenced or object to the eligibility of this Unit w/8’ game fence and 1 electric wire. The Transfer write the Director, Manitoba Agrisellers also have a contract for raising or- culture, Agricultural Crown Lands, PO Box ganic chickens. There is just so much 1286, Minnedosa, MB., R0J 1E0, or Fax about this property to see and enjoy! 204-867-6578. MLS®611536. For viewing call Lloyd Ledinski, RE/MAX of the Battlefords, FRONTIER FUN!! Approx. 875 acres of 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512. prime farmland, hunting land & timber land near the Canadian Shield, Lee River Stretch your advertising dollars! Place an ad and Winnipeg River in Lac du Bonnet, MB. in the classifieds. Our friendly staff is waiting Parcel A is 480 acres plus crown leased for your call. 1-800-667-7770. land for $294,900. Adjacent Parcel B has PRIME FARMING LOCATION! Great op- 395 acres, 40x50 heated shop w/14’ door, portunity for the start-up farmer who 3 bdrm., 2 bath home and two or three wants to be not too far out of a major city. tree stands for $475,000. Cam Harland, This farm is perfect if you are in the mar- John Angus Realty, 204-340-1666, ket for a start-up farm or want to add email: charland44@gmail.com more land to your existing land base. Looking for a hand around the farm? Place Property has a 1/4 section of good culti- a help wanted ad in the classifieds. Call vated land. While an older dairy with other 1-800-667-7770. outbuildings complete the package. ID#1100599, Osler, SK. Real Estate QUARTER SECTION: 40 minutes east of Centre, 1-866-345-3414. For all our Hudson Bay, SK. 250,000+ yds of gravel. $200,000, 204-918-9513, Winnipeg, MB. listings visit: www.farmrealestate.com

OPPORTUNITY IS KNOCKING! BEAUTIFUL FARM! 2 homes on 320 ac. owned / 1280 ac. leased land. Completely renovated 1232 sq. ft. bungalow & outbuildings including 2 barns and heated shop. MLS# 1714632, $439,900, Inwood, MB. Call Claudette: 1-888-629-6700, LJBaron.com 3 QUARTERS w/YARDSITE: 477 acres in a block. Mixed farm, 300 arable acres. Fenced and cross fenced, 2 shallow wells., 40’x60’ machine shed, 34’x44’ pole shed, barn, corrals, hay fence. 24’x32’ bungalow, w/double attached garage. Located beside the Riding Mtn. National Park. Contact Karen Goraluk-Salesperson, 204-773-6797. NorthStar Insurance & Real Estate. MLS ®1701622. www.north-star.ca CATTLE FARM - 11 quarters and 2 Crown quarters in a block. Near Roblin, MB. along the Duck Mtn. Prov. Park. Approx. 1100 workable acres, majority is hay. Fenced. Dugouts. May consider selling parcels. Scenic area. Yardsite has a 30’x66’ pole shed/work shop. 2 cattle shelters. Corrals. MLS #1627477, Karen Goraluk, Salesperson, 204-773-6797. NorthStar Insurance and Real Eastate, visit the website at www.north-star.ca BINSCARTH, MB- 142 acres of land in and overlooking the beautiful Assiniboine Valley! 3090 sq. ft. house w/walkout. Detached double car garage. 50’x80’ insulated shop, in floor heat, 400 amp. single phase power. 28’x80’ insulated shop. 40’x60’ storage shed. Close to Esterhazy Potash Mines. MLS®1704293. Karen Goraluk, Salesperson. 204-773-6797. NorthStar Insurance & Real Estate, north-star.ca We know that farming is enough of a gamble so if you want to sell it fast place your ad in the Manitoba Co-operator classifieds. It’s a Sure Thing. Call our toll-free number today. We have friendly staff ready to help. 1-800-667-7770. RICHARD AND BERNICE LETKEMAN of Rorketon, MB are offering the following private land for sale: SE 23-28-16 W, N W 23-28-16 W, NW 35-28-16 W. The successful purchaser will be considered by Manitoba Agriculture for possible transfer of the Crown land forage lease associated with this ranch unit. This forage lease currently consists of the following: W 1/2- 27-28-16 W, N 1/2- 28-28-16 W, SE 28-28-16 W. If you wish to purchase the private land contact the Lessees Richard & Bernice Letkeman at Box 161, Rorketon, MB. R0L 1R0. If you wish to comment on or object to the eligibility of this Unit Transfer write the Director, Manitoba Agriculture, Agricultural Crown Lands, PO Box 1286, Minnedosa, MB. R0J 1E0, or fax 204-867-6578.

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MULCHING- TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: www.maverickconstruction.ca We know that farming is enough of a gamble so if you want to sell it fast place your ad in the Manitoba Co-operator classifieds. It’s a Sure Thing. Call our toll-free number today. We have friendly staff ready to help. 1-800-667-7770. Do you want to target Manitoba farmers? Place your ad in the Manitoba Co-operator. Manitoba’s best-read farm publication.

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

Guttino Hybrid Fall Rye High yielding - excellent for silage Very good lodging resistance Highest falling number for milling Excellent winter survival AND

AAC Gateway Winter Wheat

High yielding with FHB resistance Call 403-715-9771 for more information

www.seednet.ca $249,900 SUBDIVIDABLE 35 acres! 60'x34' barn w/serviced tack room, outdoor riding arena, beautiful spot! Moncton, NB. MLS® $249,900 35 acres! 60'x34' M113482. SUBDIVIDABLE Phone 506-866-3291. barn w/serviced tack room, outdoor riding arena, beautiful spot! Moncton, NB. MLS® 20 ACRES Phone w/1742506-866-3291. sq. ft. 3 bdrm., 2.5 bath M113482. house, full basement, 300 sq. ft. screened room, 2 side(s) wrap-around deck, 3 car garage, wired, 2 sheds, open end shelter, large barn, some bush, approx. 7 acres landscaped. For sale by owner, $325,000 OBO. Call 306-886-2227 or 306-852-8483, Bjorkdale, SK. Email: bjork@sasktel.net RM OF BLAINE LAKE No. 434: What an acreage! 80 kms. from Saskatoon, off Hwy #12. 12 acres w/power, two drilled wells, 40x70 metal Quonset on cement footings, older barn. Property is on an all-weather road, there is some bush in the yard area. Good bird and big game hunting in the area. The sellers have applied for a sub-division. MLS®SK705206. Lloyd Ledinski, RE/MAX of the Battlefords, North Battleford, SK., 306-446-8800, 306-441-0512. 36.9 ACRES of PRIME LAND just 2 kms. from the city of Swift Current, SK. 3700 sq. ft. home w/high end finishes. Equestrian paradise w/indoor & outdoor riding arena, hay barn, 12 horse stables and paddocks. Highly sought after development location. MLS ®SK614344. Phone Bobbi Tienkamp, Re/Max of Swift Current, 306-714-2853.

FARMERS, RANCHERS, SEED PROCESSORS BUYING ALL FEED GRAINS Heated/Spring Threshed Lightweight/Green/Tough, Mixed Grain - Barley, Oats, Rye, Flax, Wheat, Durum, Lentils, Peas, Canola, Chickpeas, Triticale, Sunflowers, Screenings, Organics and By-Products √ ON-FARM PICKUP √ PROMPT PAYMENT √ LICENSED AND BONDED SASKATOON, LLOYDMINSTER, LETHBRIDGE, VANCOUVER, MINNEDOSA

1-204-867-8163

Get a Jump on spring with FALL seeded crops! Hazlet Fall Rye AAC Gateway Winter Wheat Emerson Winter Wheat Winter Triticale

Give Us a Call or Visit us online for Marketing opportunities! Holland, MB 204.526.2145 sales@zeghers.com Zeghers Seed Inc. is a Pedigreed Seed dealer and Exporter of speciality crops. Specizlizing in Flax, Mustard, Rye, Triticale, Peas, Canary, Damaged Canola, Millets, and Others!

www.zeghers.com CERT. MOATS CWRW, 99% germ., 0% fusarium. New Fdn. AAC Wildfire CWRW. Big Dog Seeds Inc. 306-483-2963, Oxbow, SK.

REG. AND CERT. CDC Beuto and Moats, 4 WHEEL BOMBARDIER Rotex, 250 hrs, high germ., no disease, Call Palmier Seed like new, $4000; Wanted: 14’ bumper hitch Farms, Lafleche, SK., 306-472-7824. dump trailer. 306-304-1959, Goodsoil, SK. CERTIFIED #1 CDC MOATS winter wheat. Hickseed Ltd., Mossbank, SK., Barry 306-354-7998 or Dale 306-229-9517.

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Ca n ola W a n te d

S P R IN G TH R ES H ED H EATED - GR EEN

All D a m a ge d Ca n ola W e lc om e FR EIG H T O PTIO N S D ELIVER Y C O N TR A C TS SC H ED U LED D ELIVER IES C O N TA C T U S:

1-8 66-38 8 -628 4

w w w .m illiga n biofu e ls .c om

SELECT CDC GO seed, hand picked from breeder seed. Contact: mastinseed.com Call or text 403-994-2609, Olds, AB.

BUYING:

HEATED CANOLA & FLAX • Competitive Prices • Prompt Movement • Spring Thrashed “ON FARM PICK UP”

1-877-250-5252

30 GOOD USED rock truck or scraper tires, 23.5R25; 6 good condition, used 30/65R25 rock truck or loader tires. $1500 or lower each. Will take offers for all tires. Ph Jake 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. MR. TIRE CORP. For all your tire needs, call Mylo at 306-921-6555 or Jeremy at 306-921-0068. Serving all Saskatchewan.

NUVISION COMMODITIES is currently purchasing feed barley, wheat, peas and GOODYEAR COMBINE TIRE: 800/65R32, excellent shape, $1500 cash. Call Greg at milling oats. 204-758-3401, St. Jean, MB. 306-883-2568, Spiritwood, SK. WANTED: FEED BARLEY Buffalo Plains Cattle Company is looking to purchase TIRES TIRES TIRES Radial, Bias, New, barley. For pricing and delivery dates, call Used. 20.8x42, 18.4x42, 20.8x38, 18.4x38, Kristen 306-624-2381, Bethune, SK. 20.8R34, 18.4x34, 900/60R32, 800/65R32, 24.5x32, 18.4x30, 23.1x30, WANTED: OFF-GRADE PULSES, oil seeds 16.9x28, 28Lx26, 18.4x26, 19.5Lx24 and and cereals. All organic cereals and spe- more! Semis, skid steers. Best price and cialty crops. Prairie Wide Grain, Saskatoon, value guaranteed! 1-800-667-4515. SK., 306-230-8101, 306-716-2297. www.combineworld.com JD 4830: FOUR like new 600/65R38 tires, $9500 for the set. Phone 306-948-7223, ROUND ALFALFA/ALFALFA GRASS solid Biggar, SK. core greenfeed 5x6 JD hay bales for sale. Call 306-237-4582, Perdue, SK. 450 FIRST CUT Alfalfa bales, no rain,1400 lbs., 5.5x5', .08¢/lbs., heifer trade, OBO. 306-526-8318, Qu'Appelle, SK. ALFALFA HAY: LARGE rounds, 425 1st cut (1400 lbs.) & 265 2nd cut (RFV 200 - 1900 lbs.) Baled with new Vermeer 605N. No rain, net wrap, analysis available. Manor, SK. area. Call 403-510-6965. BIG ROUND BALES, alfalfa grass mixture, solid core, 1200 lbs., $35/bale, excellent quality; Also oat and straw bales from a conventional combine, $15/bale loaded in field. 204-886-2083, Teulon, MB. 1000 ROUND GRASS HAY bales, netwrapped, avg. 1350 lbs., $30 to $40 per bale OBO. 204-642-2572, Riverton, MB. LARGE QUANTITY OF 2016 and 2017 round hay bales. Alfalfa, Brome, Timothy, Orchard Grass mix, reasonably priced. Call Mark at 204-981-7315, Marquette, MB. HAY AND ALFALFA for sale. Can deliver. Can also custom haul. Call 306-434-6038. ROUND HAY BALES, first/second cut, approx. 1550 lbs., grass/alfalfa, no rain, $65/bale. 204-539-2453, Swan River, MB.

AgriculturAl tours

Australia/New Zealand ~ Jan 2018 Costa Rica/Panama Canal ~ Jan 2018

South America (Galapagos/Peru) ~ Jan 2018

Brazil/Argentina/Chile ~ Jan 2018 Tanzania/Victoria Falls ~ Jan 2018 India ~ February 2018 Portugal & Spain ~ March 2018 Egypt/Jordan ~ March 2018 Vietnam/Cambodia/Thailand ~ Feb 2018

Romania & Hungary Land Tour ~ June 2018

Danube River Cruise ~ June 2018 Portion of tours may be Tax Deductible.

Select Holidays

1-800-661-4326 www.selectholidays.com

ROUND MIXED GRASS and alfalfa bales for sale. Call 204-422-5216. Ste Anne, MB. ASSORTED HAY FOR SALE. Can load, deliver and also purchase hay. Phone or text Hay Vern 204-729-7297, Brandon, MB.

2012 APLINE 3700E, dual A/C, plumbed for washer/dryer, fireplace, 2 door fridge, 3 tv’s, King size bed, sleeps 4, very low mileage and use, $34,900. Would consider farm tractor or heavy truck on trade. 306-237-7667, Perdue, SK.

WANTED: FARM COUPLE to spend winter (Nov.-March) in our well equipped beautiful home in Saskatoon, SK. Lakeview area. References required. Call 306-374-9204.

SPECIALIZING IN: BESCO GRAIN LTD. Buying all varieties of mustard. Also canary and some other specialty crops. 204-745-3662, Brunkild, MB Looking for off grade mustard, lentils or chickpeas. Custom color sorting of all types of crops. Ackerman Ag Services, 306-631-9577, Chamberlain, SK.

TOP QUALITY ALFALFA, variety of grasses PARK MODEL FOR SALE in Araby Acres RV and custom blends, farmer to farmer. Gary Resort, Yuma, AZ. Friendly, active park. Waterhouse 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK. Asking $15,000. Ph. 780-458-9495 for info SUN BEACH MOTEL, 1 bdrm suite, $750, Lakefront 2 bdrm, $950. 250-495-7766, Osoyoos, BC. www.sunbeachmotel.net

Rye, Flax, Barley, Peas, Oats, Corn, Wheat, Soybeans, Canola, Soy Oil, Soymeal

- Licensed & Bonded Farm Pick-Up Pricing Across Western Canada

Contact Us Toll Free: 888-974-7246 www.delmarcommodities.com

HAY BALES, small squares, grass and alfal- CUBA FARM TOUR, 2 weeks! Jan. 15-29 fa. Call 306-781-4988 or 306-537-4072, Unwind 3 days at 5 star Melia Varadero then head to the countryside for an 8 day Pilot Butte, SK. farm tour. Visit large co-op farms in 4 1400 LARGE SQUARE grass/alfalfa/hay, provinces. Take Russian army truck into no rain, 1400 lb avg./bale. 306-457-2935 mountains for pig roast. Visit farm markets and organoponicos. Enjoy lobster on Cayo after 6, Stoughton, SK. Coco. Finish in Santiago de Cuba w/city HORSE QUALITY HAY bales - small tour & 2 nights 5-star Melia. Fly to Havana squares, grass or alfalfa. Call for 3 nights 5-star Hotel Nacional. All in306-290-8806, Dundurn, SK. clusive. Deductible. 20th year. Escort: Award-winning farm columnist Wendy APPROX. 400 3x4x8 LARGE square bales. Holm. Hurry! 25 only! Call 604-417-2434, Variety of grades from 4¢ to 7¢/lb. Bowen Island, BC. Visit: wendyholm.com 306-320-1041, Leroy, SK. E-mail: wendy@wendyholm.com

Inc.

WE BUY:

FARM HELPER REQUIRED on grain farm. Class 1, farm experience and some mechanical skills would be an asset. Wages depending on experience. Phone or text 306-228-8333, Tramping Lake, SK.

WANTED: ORGANIC & Conv. Brown Flax FOB or deilvery pricing available. 2017 new crop. Call 306-782-8804, Yorkton, SK. mike@tafoods.ca www.tafoods.ca

• 2 and 6 row Malt Barley • 15.0+ protein Hard Red Spring Wheat and 11.5 Protein Winter Wheat • Feed Wheat, Barley, Corn and Pea’s

Farm Pick up Available

1-800-258-7434 matt@seed-ex.com

Best pricing, Best option, Best Service

For Pricing ~ 204-325-9555

NOW BUYING Confection and Oil Sunflowers, Brown & Yellow Flax and Red & White Millet Edible Beans Licensed & Bonded Winkler, MB.

6 FULL-TIME EGG Collector POSITIONS at Pedigree Poultry near Regina Beach, SK. Hiring starts December, 2017. Duties include: Egg collection, packing and sorting, cleaning poultry equipment, manure removal and barn checks, $10.93/hr. No education or experience required. Must be able to lift 50 lbs. and have no allergies to dust or odor. Criminal Record (abstract). Please send resume fax: 306-731-2399, or email: agrologic@myaccess.ca Address: Box 619, Regina Beach, SK. S0G 4C0.

GEOLOGIST WITH DRILLING Rig providing gravel and water exploration, reporting service to land owners. Contract or royalty COVER CROPS. Do you want to be free of rate available. 306-782-0378, South SK. fertilizer bills and have cleaner fields? N Fixation P&K scavengers. Taproot short KORNUM WELL DRILLING, farm, cottage and long season plants. Limited quantity. and acreage wells, test holes, well rehabiliGive me a call 204-851-2101, Virden, MB. tation, witching. PVC/SS construction, expert workmanship and fair pricing. 50% government grant now available. Indian Head, SK., 306-541-7210 or 306-695-2061

37 4th Ave. NE Carman, MB R0G 0J0 Ph. (204) 745-6444 Email: vscltd@mts.net A Season to Grow… Only Days to Pay!

EXPERIENCED FT HELP for large grain farm, Class 1 an asset, competitive wages. Call 306-550-4894, Indian Head, SK.

FARM & RANCH HELP Wanted in southern Saskatchewan. Must have some experience and drivers licence. 306-539-2010.

Licensed and Bonded Grain Brokers

Andy Vanderveen · Brett Vanderveen Jesse Vanderveen

LAURIER GRAZING CORPORATION is offering contract for tender of Management of Laurier Grazing Corporation contract commencing April 1, 2018. Yearly contract with review. Pasture consists of 37,000 acres. Grazing allotments approximately 2100 adult head. Tender closes October 1, 2017. Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Successful applicants will be contacted for interview(s). For more information, and/or to submit a tender, contact: Laurier Grazing Corporation Chairman - Blaine Ward, Box 3, Colgate, SK., S0C 0V0. 306-456-2638.

BIG ROUND STRAW Bales for sale, wheat $33, green lentil $40, flax $15. Call 306-375-7761, Kyle, SK.

Vanderveen Commodity Services Ltd.

RESTAURANT STYLE BOOTH seating, steel frame, plywood seats and tops, exc. cond., WANTED HEATED CANOLA. No broker 306-664-3377, Saskatoon, SK. involved. Sell direct to crushing plant. Cash on delivery or pickup. 306-228-7306 or 306-228-7325, no texts. Unity, SK.

HELP WANTED for cattle and grain operation. Seeking self-motivated person, potential for year round work. Goodeve, SK. Call 306-795-2710 or 306-795-5210.

FULL-TIME RANCH HAND wanted for cow/calf operation and caring for Draft horses. Experience an asset but can also train. Beautiful Lumsden, SK. area. Call 306-731-2821 or 306-596-0507.

ROUND HAY BALES grass or alfalfa mix. Can deliver or will load other trucks. Scale on site. Near Roblin, MB. Ph 204-638-5581

WINKLER, MANITOBA

FARM LABOURER REQUIRED for livestock operation. Duties include: operating, maintaining seeding & harvesting equip. Smoke free enviro., $17/hr. Housing avail. Lyle Lumax, 204-525-2263, Swan River, MB.

WELLIGTON COMMUNITY PASTURE Corp., seeking proposal for FT Seasonal Manager. Call for complete informational package, 306-861-3704, Francis, SK.

LONG LAKE TRUCKING, two units, custom hay hauling. 306-567-7100, Imperial, SK. TOP QUALITY CERTIFIED alfalfa and grass seed. Call Gary or Janice Waterhouse 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK.

JED FARMS is looking for full-time General Farm Workers. Job duties include driving farm tractors, minor farm equipment maintenance and some minor recordkeeping, etc. We are located 11 miles northeast of Arborg, MB. Weekend work required. Experience an asset but not required. Starting wage (depended on experience) $13 -16/hr. Please forward all resumes to standueck2017@gmail.com or mail to Box 1320, Arborg, MB. R0C 0A0

BEAR HUNTING, TWO respectable and ethical hunters seeking farmers that have problems with black bears eating their crops and would allow hunters to hunt on land. Manitoba, MB. cmart@mymts.net

POLY TANKS: 15 to 10,000 gal.; Bladder tanks from 220 to 88,000 gallon; Water and liquid fertilizer; Fuel tanks, single and double wall; Truck and storage, gas or dsl. Wilke Sales, 306-586-5711, Regina, SK.

TEMPORARY GRAIN BIN replacement tarps for all sizes from 22’ diameter to 105’ dia. Best quality available Canadian made quality silver cone shaped tarps available for all sizes. All sizes in stock. Shipped WE BUY OATS overnight to most major points in Western Canada. For all pricing, details, and pics Call us today for pricing LACKAWANNA PRODUCTS CORP. Buy- visit our website at www.willwood.ca or Box 424, Emerson, MB R0A 0L0 ers and sellers of all types of feed grain phone Willwood Industries toll free and grain by-products. Contact Bill Hajt or 1-866-781-9560, fax 306-781-0108. 204-373-2328 CERTIFIED PRIMA FALL RYE. Hickseed Christopher Lent at 306-862-2723. Ltd., Mossbank, SK., Barry 306-354-7998 TARPCO, SHUR-LOK, MICHEL’S sales, clent@lpctrade.com bhajt@lpctrade.com or Dale 306-229-9517. service, installations, repairs. Canadian CANARY SEED SCREENINGS, 15%-17% WANTED: FEED GRAIN, barley, wheat, company. We carry aeration socks and CERTIFIED HAZLET. Bailey Bros Seeds Protein, $60/MT FOB. Call 306-366-2158, peas, green or damaged canola. Phone grain bags. Also electric chute openers for St. Gregor, SK. 306-935-4702, Milden, SK. Gary 306-823-4493, Neilburg, SK. grain trailer hoppers. 1-866-663-0000.

RANCH HANDED WANTED: 1000 cow ranch, all aspects of ranching, haying, operating equipment and knowledge of pivots a plus. Top wages and housing included. Alexis Creek, BC. Call 250-394-4623, Email: c1ranch99@gmail.com

U-DRIVE TRACTOR TRAILER Training, 30 years experience. Day, 1 and 2 week upgrading programs for Class 1A, 3A and COUPLE OR FAMILY WANTED for cattle air brakes. One on one driving instructions. operation in Saskatchewan. Must have experience in herd health, cattle nutrition 306-786-6600, Yorkton, SK. and cattle handling. Knowledge in running haying equipment essential. Must be selfmotivated, ambitious and able to work with little or no supervision in a smoke environment. Accommodations supGRAIN BIN BUILDERS - Ontario: We are free looking for construction workers to help us plied. 403-844-7818. billr@eldp.ca build grain bins in Southern Ontario. There is enough work to keep several people busy for 50 to 60 hours per week until at least the middle of October. We're paying a ELECTRICIAN APPRENTICE: BRIDGE City competitive hourly rate, and food and lodg- Electric is currently accepting applications ing will be provided by the company while for entry level apprentice electricians. you're working in Ontario. Apply at Experience preferred but not required. We recruiting@horstsystems.com, or call us at are a commercial electrical contractor 519-669-1300 and ask for Tim. working in Saskatoon and area. Email resumes to len.bykowy@sasktel.net or deliver in person to Bridge City Electric, 100 - 4015 Brodsky Ave, Saskatoon, SK. 306-244-1588, ext. 2, 306-229-2321. AUSTRALIAN HARVEST STAFF Needed Operators wanted for Australian grain harvest from mid Oct. to early Dec. 2017. Must be able to work long hours and be proficient in driving late model tractors, AZ DRIVERS NEEDED to haul freight to chaser bins/grain carts. Be qualified in western Canada and cattle to Ontario. No driving new model Case header/combines. US loads. Settlement upon arrival. Willing Accommodation and evening meal will be to train qualified personnel on cattle porprovided. A working holiday visa will be re- tion. Fax resume to 519-923-3108, e-mail: quired. Also an international licence (valid faye.ryan@bell.net or call 519-923-3879. in Australia) would be an advantage. You will be working on a family run farm. CLASS 1A DRIVERS to haul oil in Peace These positions would suit, fit 19 to 30 River, AB area $400/day, 7 days on, 7 off. yrs. All enquiries to Eastgrove Farming Pty Accommodation and crew car supplied out Ltd-Harvest staff tribal@westnet.com.au of Lloydminster. Call Ross 780-872-1849, or email rngknight@sasktel.net FULL-TIME FARM LABOURER HELP. Applicants should have previous farm ex- CLASS 1A DRIVERS to haul crude oil from perience and mechanical ability. Duties in- Slave Lake. AB. area to Wainwright, AB clude operation of machinery, including area. 7 days on, 7 off. $400/day. Call Ross tractors and other farm equip., as well as 780-872-1849 or rngknight@sasktel.net general farm laborer duties. $25/hour depending on experience. Must be able to LOG TRUCK DRIVERS wanted for winter cross US border. Location: Pierson, run. Tractor/trailer experience a must. MB/Gainsborough, SK. Feland Bros. Farms, Will train for logs. Ph 780-836-2538. Send Greg Feland and Wade Feland, Box 284, resume to: Albert Greschner Holdings Ltd., Box 447, Manning, AB. T0H 2M0. Pierson, MB. R0M 1S0. 701-756-6954.


43

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

You can’t change the weather. But you can be ready for it.

More stations, more data, more forecast tools for farmers Weatherfarm gives you the tools to stay constantly informed about the weather on your farm – and in your region. WeatherFarm is supplied by a growing dedicated network of more than 650 professionally maintained monitoring stations, most owned by farmers, with current conditions updated throughout the day. WeatherFarm gives you a full set of accurate weather-monitoring tools that show you detailed forecasts, current conditions and historical comparisons. Detailed local weather maps can show accumulated rain, maximum temperature and minimum temperature for a specific day, week or month. WeatherFarm’s exclusive Analyze Weather function allows you to view a growing set of data points over a wider area to see where the most rain fell, where it’s the hottest and more. WeatherFarm is dedicated to the Canadian farming community. Our focus is on growing and improving our weather services based on the feedback we get from our network of farmers who own stations... and from you. For more information on WeatherFarm or purchasing a weather station please call:

1-855-886-8515 info@weatherfarm.ca

weatherfarm.com

OVER 650 REPORTING STATIONS An extensive, live-updating network that gives you current and 7 day forecasted weather data for your farm or surrounding area


44

The Manitoba Co-operator | September 14, 2017

*For commercial use only. Offer subject to credit qualification and approval by CNH Industrial Capital Canada Ltd. See your New Holland dealer for details and eligibility requirements. CNH Industrial Capital Canada Ltd. standard terms and conditions will apply. Depending on model, a down payment may be required. Offer good through [September 30, 2017], at participating New Holland dealers in Canada. Offer subject to change. Taxes, freight, set-up, delivery, additional options or attachments not included in price. © 2017 CNH Industrial Capital America LLC. All rights reserved. New Holland Agriculture is a trademark registered in the United States and many other countries, owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates. CNH Industrial Capital is a trademark in the United States and many other countries, owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates.

USED EQUIPMENT www.agdealer.com/raymorenh

COMBINES 2015 NH CX8090 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$417,000

COMBINE HEADS

TRACTORS

2015 MB D65-35FT CNH . . . . . . . . . . . . . $73,000 2015 MB D65-35FT CNH . . . . . . . . . . . . . $73,000 2015 MB D65-35FT CNH . . . . . . . . . . . . . $73,000 2015 NH 840CD-35 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $69,000 2015 NH 840CD-35 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $69,000 2013 NH 840CD-35 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $57,000 2013 NH 840CD-35 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $57,000 2010 NH 94C-42FT CR/CX . . . . . . . . . . . $65,000 2009 NH 94C-42FT CR/CX . . . . . . . . . . . $50,000 2005 HY Grainbelt-36FT CNH . . . . . . . . $29,000 2003 JD 936 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $27,000 2000 CIH 1042-36 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $24,200 1998 NH 994-36FT CNH . . . . . . . . . . . . . $22,000

2017 SOFTER 20 Disc, 20FT, 22” NOTCHED DISCS FRONT AND BACK, RUBBER MOUNT INDEPENDENT TRIPS, TA

$56,000

$39,000

849933

2006 Case IH ATX400-40FT-12IN Air Drill, 40FT, 12” SPACING, 550LB TRIPS, 4” RUBBER PACKERS, 4-RUN TBH DOUBLE SHOOT A

2011 New Holland P1060 TBH Air Cart, 430BU, TBH, 6 RUN DOUBLE SHOOT, MECHANICAL, 10” FILL AUGER, FIELD LIGHTING

$73,000 $139,000

$60,000

2013 JD 4730 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $255,000 2012 NH SP.240F XP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $234,000 1998 CIH MX120 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $43,000 2012 NH T9.505 HD AG . . . . . . . . . . . . . $258,000 2011 NH T8.275 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $164,000 1997 NH 8670 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $47,000

SEEDING 2013 JD 1910 JD c/w 5012 Seedmaster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $160,000 2011 NH P1060-TBH-MEC . . . . . . . . . . . . $56,000 2007 SHAWK 50FT-10IN c/w 777 TBH $99,000 2006 CIH ATX400 40-12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . $39,000 2003 JD 1820 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $30,000 1998 JD 1900 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$13,900 1997 MR MAXIM-50 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $29,500

837638

$Call

$21,500

831144

845425

$133,000 SPRAYERS

2015 New Holland SP200 Windrower / Swather, 40FT, 600/65R28 DRIVES, 16.5L REAR TIRES, AIR BAGS, 6CYL, 190HP TIER III EN

1995 FC 2320 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$13,000 1984 BO 28-32 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8,500

MISC. Truck 1991 MACK DMM6906EX . . . . . . . $25,000 ATV 2009 CK 3100S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9,250 Tires 2012 GDYR 380/90R46 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ Track Loader 2013 CA TV380. . . . . . . . . $55,000 Mower/Rotary 2014 SU XH1500 . . . . . . $22,900 Deep Tillage 2010 CIH Flex Till 600 . . . .$80,714 Forklift 2006 JC 940 RTFL . . . . . . . . . . . $40,000 Forklift 2004 SX SD 80. . . . . . . . . . . . . . $64,000 Grain Auger 2011 FK 10x70TMMR . . . . . .$10,000 Grain Auger 2011 FK TMR10x70 . . . . . . . . $9,500 Grain Auger 2016 WHEAT R 8-51. . . . . . . $15,250 Grain Vac 2014 REM VRX . . . . . . . . . . . . .$21,500 Grain Vac 2009 REM 2700 . . . . . . . . . . . .$15,000 Harrow Heavy 2015 ELMER Super 7. . . $42,900

837639

837642

$484,000

2014 NH H7460. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $36,500 2010 NH BR7090 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $22,000 2007 NH BR780A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11,500 1993 AH 565A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$7,500

2013 NH CX8080 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $344,000 2011 NH CX8070 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $199,000 2004 JD 9660 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $125,000

2013 Case TV380 Track Loader, 520hrs, 84HP, Seat Air Suspension Cab w/Heat & Air Hyd Heavy Duty Coupler, Complete set

2015 Versatile 450DT Tractor, 30” TRKS, 55GPM, 6EH REMOTES, LUX CAB

2013 John Deere 4730 Sprayer, 1065 HRS, 245 HP, 800 GALLON POLY TANK, 100FT BOOMS, 7 SECTI

2015 Versatile 500DT Tractor, 500DT DeltaTrack with 30” Agricultural Tracks, Deluxe Cab Pa

849935

851720

851722

2012 MacDon M205-40FT Windrower / Swather, 230 HP, 600/65R28 DRIVE TIRES, 16.5L-16.1 TAIL WHEELS, HYD TILT, 40FT D65 H

2013 New Holland CR9090 Combine, 620 DUALS, 750 REARS, TWIN PITCH ROTORS, DSP STONE TRAP, HID LIGHTS, LEATHE

$327,000

HAY

2014 Elmers Haulmaster 1600 Grain Cart, 1600BU, TRACKS, TARP, PIVOTING AUGER, BLUE, SCALES

815869

$249,000

2015 NH SPEEDROWER 200-40FT. . . . $139,000 2013 CHLGR WR9740. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $88,000 2012 MB M205-40FT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $125,000 2008 CIH WD1203-36FT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $65,714 2008 MF 9220-30FT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $47,900 2007 JD 4895-36FT. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $53,000 2002 MB 2952-36FT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$51,000 1999 MB 9200-30FT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $36,000 1989 JD 590 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,500

2014 Rem VRX Grain Vac, 125hrs, Std hoses & attachments 1 one load out nozzle 3’ long 1 On

814499

2015 MacDon D65-35FT CNH Header, 35FT, CNH ADAPTER, TRANSPORT, ROCK RETARDER KIT, X-AUGER

$339,000

2012 New Holland SP.240F XP Sprayer, 4WD, 1050hrs, 275HP, 275HP, 1000 GALLON POLY TANK, 100/60FT 5 SECTION 20IN, 3-WAY

SWATHERS

825937

$59,000 808504

746039

2015 New Holland 840CD-35FT Header, 35FT, DOUBLE KNIFE, TRANSPORT, GAUGE WHEELS, AHHC, X-AUGER

$409,000

2011 New Holland T8.275 Tractor, MFD, 1435hrs, 275HP, 18F/4R POWERSHIFT, 480/80R46 DUALS, 380/85R34 FRONTS

2010 New Holland 94C-42FT CR/CX Draper Head, 42FT CR/CX, GUAGE WHEELS, SPLIT UII REEL, HYD F/A, HYD TILT

$234,000

807147

$164,000

781371

2014 SeedMaster CT6012 Air Drill, 60FT 12IN, TIRE N TIRE, HD FRONT CASTERS, ISO, 8 RUN DBL SH

$125,000

2009 New Holland 94C-40FT Header, Excellent cond., DOUBLE KNIFE DRIVE, 6 BAT UII SPLIT REEL, DOUBLE DRIVE, HYD FORE/AFT, TRANS

736273

$69,000

718052

$203,000

693358

$54,900

677932

2013 New Holland CX8090 Combine, 520 DUALS, 600 REARS, CAST CYLINDER, HID LIGHTS, YIELD & MOISTURE, DIFF LOC

Highway #2 South

Highway #6 North

Highway #10 East

Fax: 306-946-2613

Fax: 306-746-2919

Fax: 306-782-5595

Ph: 306-946-3301

Ph: 306-746-2911

Ph: 306-783-8511


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