THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
VOL. 91 | NO. 43 | $4.25
Winter awaits GROWING WITH FARMERS FOR 90 YEARS
|
What’s in store this winter? One forecaster says we should brace ourselves | P. 4
WWW.PRODUCER.COM
LUNCH BREAK AT THE ROUNDUP
PROCESSORS | SALE
Reopened beef plant a blessing for markets Rancher’s Beef will be sold to Vesta Holdings of Colorado BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
Alberta beef producers are hoping the new owners of the former Rancher’s Beef processing plant in Balzac, Alta., will help strengthen and expand markets. “This couldn’t come at a better time,” said Bryan Walton, chief executive officer of the Alberta Cattle Feeders Association. Tyson Foods recently said it would no longer accept fed cattle from Canada at its plant in Pasco, Washington, because of uncertainty over country-of-origin labelling in the United States. It means fewer bidders for Canadian fed cattle, although Tyson said it would still accept foreign born cattle fed in the U.S. Rancher’s Beef, owned by Sunterra Farms, will be sold to Vesta Holdings, a Colorado investment company as of Nov. 1. SEE REOPENED BEEF PLANT, PAGE 2
Hanna Faulkner, 7, and her father, Corbett, share a laugh during lunch in the cook tent on the second day of the Cypress Hills Stockmen’s Association 95th annual roundup held in the Cypress Hills West Block Provincial Park Oct. 18. FOR MORE PHOTOS, SEE PAGE 15. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO
Deal worth $1.5 billion annually | Canadian meat sector expected to be big winner in deal
Canada and the European Union have inked a tentative trade deal that Canadian agricultural exporters say could be worth as much as $1.5 billion in annual sales. Increased quotas and tariff elimination or phase-out over seven years offers unprecedented market access as long as commitments can be met to negotiate the end of existing EU technical barriers that have often thwarted theoretical quota access. The meat sector expects to be the major beneficiary with projected sales opportunities of more than $1 billion — $600 million for hormone-
free beef and $400 million for pork — once the deal kicks in two years from now. The canola industry expects a doubling of sales to $180 million for the European biodiesel industry once tariffs are eliminated. The pulse industry said there is potential for a dramatic increase in exports of pulse flour to the European market. The grain industry also saw a silver lining, although direct grain exports will not be affected dramatically. “I think for us it eliminates any chance of new tariffs or tariffs going up,” said Grain Growers of Canada president Stephen Vandervalk. “But the big winner in this is hogs, pork and beef, and that means more sales to them of feed grain so that is
an opportunity for us.” The self-perceived loser in the deal is the Canadian dairy industry, which will see potential imports of European high-end cheeses double to 30,000 tonnes. Dairy Farmers of Canada president Wally Smith predicted that the deal will put small artisan cheese producers in Ontario and Quebec out of business because of competition from subsidized European product. The result would be smaller markets for dairy farmers. “This is unacceptable,” he said Oct. 17 after dairy leaders were briefed by the government on the details. “This potential deal is a loss for Canadian dairy farmers and industry.”
The Canadian government, which has cultivated a strong relationship with Canada’s protected dairy industry, disagreed. In Brussels Oct. 18 at the signing of the agreement-in-principle, prime minister Stephen Harper said Ottawa will compensate dairy farmers if there is any evidence of lost sales. Details of how the compensation would work were not available, and federal politicians suggested compensation would likely not be necessary because growing domestic cheese demand would more than cover the additional 17,000 tonnes of imports when the deal kicks in, likely in 2015. SEE TRADE DEAL, PAGE 3
»
The Western Producer is published in Saskatoon by Western Producer Publications, which is owned by GVIC Communications Corp. Publisher: Shaun Jessome Publications Mail Agreement No. 40069240
Canada, EU reach trade deal OTTAWA BUREAU
u|xhHEEJBy00001pzYv/:. OCTOBER 24, 2013 Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to: Box 2500, Saskatoon, SK. S7K 2C4
INTERNATIONAL TRADE | AGREEMENT
BY BARRY WILSON
»
2
NEWS
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Reopened beef plant a blessing Company owner Rich Vesta predicts the facility could be open by next June, following $18 million worth of renovations, but he said it is not likely to function at full capacity of 800 head per day for some time. He did not disclose the selling price. “We have a very disciplined approach to how we start this plant up, and we won’t be in full production for the better part of a year,” Vesta said. The plant has been inactive since Sunterra bought it from the receiver at the end of 2007. Vesta said the facility is state of the art with no changes needed in the receiving or slaughter areas, but he wants to renovate the fabrication floor. “It is as food safe a plant as there is in North America, maybe more,” he said. The plant will be called Harmony Beef, and the brand will emphasize Alberta fed beef. The company plans to pursue niche markets and achieve organic and European Union certification. “We don’t intend to be a commodity beef producer.” The company will start by producing commodity beef to test the plant and then shift to niche products. There is no plan to buy cattle until the middle of the first quarter of next year. The plant is also adding technology to recycle water. Vesta said the company is looking to hire 275 to 325 people to work in the plant. Vesta has 47 years of experience in the meat packing business, starting as a meat cutter at the age of 14. “I’ve run plants from 250 head to 5,500 head a day,” he said. The Rancher’s Beef plant was built
during a time when many groups wanted to construct processing plants to address the oversupply of cattle due to the lack of international markets after BSE was discovered in Canada. Few got off the ground, mostly due to lack of capital. Rancher’s Beef raised $32 million from 47 producer investors, but survived for only 14 months. Many Alberta cattle producers are already familiar with Vesta from when he was at Packerland Packing in Green Bay, Wisconsin, and later at JBS in Greeley, Colorado. “He has got his feet on the ground,” Walton said. “He is the real deal. Guys like this don’t come around every day that have had the experience and know how to make money and turnarounds at plants. He knows the business.” Alberta Cattle Feeders chair Brent Chaffee said having another processor will benefit producers. “Even if we are not directly selling cattle to him, if they are taking supply out of the market, that does drive up the bids a bit,” he said. Alberta Beef Producers chair Doug Sawyer hopes the new plant will fill in markets not served by the province’s two major processors: Cargill at High River and JBS at Brooks. He said the two large Americanowned plants have not aggressively pursued the export of Canadian beef offshore because they can source beef for those markets from their plants in the U.S. “Hopefully, they will be able to move into some different markets than we have been able to do with the two bigger plants,” said Sawyer.
REGULAR FEATURES
INSIDE THIS WEEK
PROCESSORS | FROM PAGE ONE
Ag Stock Prices Classifieds Events, Mailbox Livestock Report Market Charts Opinion Open Forum On The Farm Weather
COLUMNS
On the farm: An Alberta farm couple has found many educational opportunities for their children. See page 24. | MARY MACARTHUR PHOTO
Barry Wilson Editorial Notebook Hursh on Ag Market Watch Taking Care of Business Animal Health TEAM Living Tips
NEWS
CONTACTS
» COLD FORECAST: Long-range » GROUP HOUSING: Scientists » » »
weather forecasters predict a colder than normal winter for much of the Prairies. 4 THRONE SPEECH: Last week’s throne speech was thin gruel for the agricultural sector. 16 VACCINE PROGRESS: An anti-vaccine movement is threatening Africa’s livestock industry. 27 U.S. SUGAR: Canada’s sugar industry worries that the U.S. plans to export more subsidized product. 30
» » »
look for a way to more easily convert hog barns to group sow housing. 31 RECYCLED OIL: A University of Alberta professor says he can turn old vegetable oil into fuel. 34 CWB LAKERS: CWB’s new Great Lakes ships are being built and should be working on the lakes next year. 35 GM ALFALFA: National approval has been granted for at least five genetically modified alfalfa varieties. 72
MARKETS 6
» CANOLA GOAL: Canola growers meet an oil
6
content target ahead of schedule.
» ELUSIVE OATS: Oat prices are rising, but delivering the crop is a challenge.
7
FARM LIVING 19
» WORKER SAFETY: Farmers are urged to
POULTRY | HEALTH
»
Alta. announces poultry institute BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
AIRDRIE, Alta. — A new poultry institute has been established in Alberta to manufacture vaccines and provide diagnostic services for Western Canada. Western Economic Diversification Canada announced a $2.6 million grant last week to buy equipment for the institute, which is based in Airdrie at an Alberta Agriculture facility. Support has also come from the Alberta Livestock and Meat Agency. The Institute for Applied Poultry Technologies will work with producers and the University of Alberta’s poultry research centre, said Tom Inglis, a poultry veterinarian and a board member for the institute. Vaccine work will be done in Calgary, while Airdrie provides diag-
nostic services. Along with diagnoses, the institute will develop, produce and commercialize made-in-Canada vaccines and promote technology for food safety and biosecurity needs on poultry farms, said Nick Allan, the newly appointed general manager. Alternatives to antibiotics are mostly vaccines to fight against food safety related bacteria like salmonella and campylobacter as well as immunization against some bird diseases. “One of the initiatives is early disease detection,” said Inglis. He wants to work with producers, who are the first to notice changes in the birds’ health. Diagnosis and treatment can then be offered sooner. Live birds can be received in newly designed carriers for diagnosis at Airdrie.
84 37 28 9 86 10 12 21 87
better ensure their workers’ safety. 19 B&B HAVEN: A Saskatchewan bed and breakfast is a haven for rest and romance. 24
PRODUCTION 74
» TILLAGE TUNE-UP: Fall tillage starts with a tandem tune-up.
74
» GRAIN INSECTS: Temporary grain storage
increases the importance of insect control. 76
LIVESTOCK 78
» RED ROUNDUP: Red Angus breeders get
together for their annual sale and show. 78
» FEED KALE: An Alberta farmer experiments with kale as a grazing crop.
79
AGFINANCE 84
» PRIVATIZING CWB: CWB will extend its equity plan for another year.
84
» SEED HAWK SALE: The prairie equipment maker is sold to a Swedish company.
85
Subscriptions Ph: 800-667-6929 Advertising Ph: 800-667-7770 Newsroom inquiries: 306-665-3544 Newsroom fax: 306-934-2401 Shaun Jessome, Publisher Ph: 306-665-9625 shaun.jessome@producer.com Joanne Paulson, Editor Ph: 306-665-3537 newsroom@producer.com Michael Raine, Managing Editor Ph: 306-665-3592 michael.raine@producer.com Terry Fries, News Editor Ph: 306-665-3538 newsroom@producer.com Paul Yanko, Website Ph: 306-665-3591 paul.yanko@producer.com Barbara Duckworth, Calgary Ph: 403-291-2990 barbara.duckworth@producer.com Mary MacArthur, Camrose Ph: 780-672-8589 mary.macarthur@producer.com Barb Glen, Lethbridge Ph: 403-942-2214 barb.glen@producer.com Karen Briere, Regina Ph: 306-359-0841 karen.briere@producer.com Ed White, Winnipeg Ph: 204-943-6294 ed.white@producer.com Ron Lyseng, Winnipeg Ph: 204-654-1889 ron.lyseng@producer.com Robert Arnason, Brandon Ph: 204-726-9463 robert.arnason@producer.com Barry Wilson, Ottawa Ph: 613-232-1447 barry.wilson@producer.com
Ask your Salford dealer about spring 2014 program discounts and retail financing options.
Call your Salford dealer today, or visit
10 11 11 8 85 81 22
www.salfordmachine.com Ontario, Canada • 1-866-442-1293
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
3
TRADE DEAL | FROM PAGE ONE
Canada, EU reach deal Harper said the trade deal, four years in the making, is a win for supply management because Europe agreed to recognize the legitimacy of the system. “For the dairy industry and more particularly for cheese producers, it is possible that there might be some losses in some parts of the domestic market on a temporary basis, and we committed ourselves to offering compensation that will fully take into account the unfavourable side effects,” he said. While provinces must agree to the deal and have been involved in negotiations, Harper said the Quebec and Ontario governments have signalled they will support it. Agriculture minister Gerry Ritz, who has been key in nurturing a relationship with the dairy industry, said the deal does not have to erode the trust dairy leaders have had in the Conser vatives to defend them, despite initial objections. He said the goal of the negotiations was to preserve the three elements of supply management: import controls that lend predictability to the system, production quotas and price setting. “Every one of our pillars in the domestic system of supply management has been preserved, and that’s what we said we would do,” he said. “A n y o n e w h o t h o u g h t t h e r e wouldn’t be give and take in this negotiation were under-selling what goes on in negotiations, but we preserved the three pillars and that is what is important.” National business groups applauded the deal and its promise of 80,000 jobs and more than $12 billion in new market access. They argued that the increased 17,000 tonne cheese import into a market of more than 300,000 tonnes of production is small potatoes. The Canadian Federation of Agriculture did not see it that way. President Ron Bonnett said the deal violates the government’s promise of a “balanced position” between export promotion and protection of supply management. While the CFA said it appreciated the promise of compensation, it noted that no details have been announced on how it would happen. It estimated a loss of $150 million each year in dairy sales. The government said that Canadian cheese makers can compete in the market opened for European cheeses.
European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso welcomes prime minister Stephen Harper ahead of a meeting at the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels Oct. 18. The European Union and Canada are expected to close talks on a multibillion dollar trade deal that will integrate two of the world’s biggest economies if they can overcome disagreements ranging from medicine patents to feta cheese. | REUTERS PHOTO / FRANCOIS LENOIR INTERNATIONAL TRADE | CHEESE
Dairy industry cheesed off Trade deal details still vague | Agreement with EU could see cheese imports to Canada double BY BARRY WILSON OTTAWA BUREAU
Martin Van Diemen heard the news last week that a Canada-European Union trade deal could double European cheese exports to Canada. An additional 17,000 tonnes could increase import levels to eight percent of domestic cheese consumption. The dairy producer from Picture Butte, Alta., heard dairy industry leaders denounce it as a betrayal of the industry and an undermining of supply management. Governments said it was no big deal. But by Oct. 21, he still had not heard the details. “At this point, I think it is a negative for the industry and a lot of people are talking about it, but I really don’t have the facts,” he said. “The deal has been made and I’m scrambling for information to find out exactly what is going on.”
Alberta Milk meetings this week could provide answers for producers like Van Diemen about the effect on their farms. However, judgments have already been reached at the national level. Dairy Farmers of Canada president Wally Smith said DFC will fight it as a sellout of the Canadian industry. “This deal would displace our local products with subsidized cheeses from the EU and risk our small businesses being shut down or put out of business,” he said. “This is unacceptable.” The Conservative government, which has worked hard to support supply management, has a different take. It argued that offering Europe an extra 17,000 tonnes of access is not going to disrupt the system in a country that produced 330,000 tonnes of cheese in 2011. As well, with cheese consumption
growing by as much as 8,000 tonnes per year, the increased European market share would be swallowed up by the time the deal takes effect in 2015. “We’re confident growth in the domestic market will easily outstrip the added access,” trade minister Ed Fast said as the government launched a national selling job for the deal. In Brussels, when he announced the agreement-in-principle Oct. 18, prime minister Stephen Harper insisted that rather than a loss for supply management, the deal with the European Union was actually a major victory for the system. “I think it is important to say that this is a major gain for them because here we have a trade agreement, a worldclass trade agreement, that recognizes and protects the system,” he said. “That is a major achievement in the development of the trade system across the world.”
Harper also said the federal government would offer compensation if there is any measurable damage to dairy sector sales. There was no indication if the compensation would apply to small artisan cheese makers affected by increased competition. It was not clear how or to whom compensation could be paid. Agriculture minister Gerry Ritz, who has played the lead role in winning dairy industry support, said he understands initial dairy industry concern, but the facts should calm the fears. “I understand their angst because to them this is the thin edge of the wedge,” he said. “But having said that, dairy farmers and processors control 96 percent of the market now and with the amount being allocated, they will have 92 percent. With consumption increasing, within a couple of years they will be back where they were before.”
INTERNATIONAL TRADE | MEAT PROCESSORS
Beef industry salutes trade deal, access to $1B foreign market BY BARRY WILSON OTTAWA BUREAU
Canada’s livestock and meat processing industries are cheering last week’s agreement-in-principle on a CanadaEuropean Union trade agreement, but significant work remains before the sectors can cash in. The industries saluted it as a chance to access a $1 billion market. “Compared to an average value of
only $54 million of meat exports to the EU during the past three years, the results of the (free trade) negotiations will offer export opportunities with a potential annual sales value of up to $1 billion for Canadian beef, pork, horsemeat, bison and prepared meats,” said the Canadian Meat Council (CMC), which represents packers. However, hurdles and investment requirements exist that have yet to be
surmounted. In the two years before the agreement takes effect, Canada and the EU have agreed to negotiate “technical barriers” that have often made access promises merely theoretical by invoking other rules to block access. Packing plants will have to invest tens of millions of dollars to bring their production practices into alignment with EU rules. And during that time, Canadian
cattle producers interested in accessing the new EU market will have to segregate animals to ensure that hormone-treated cattle are not in the queue. For hog producers, it means ensuring that the feed ingredient ractopamine is not used for hogs destined for the EU market, where it is banned. The CMC estimates the market potential at $600 million for beef and $400 million for pork.
“I have not seen estimates on how much investment would be needed in the industry, but when this deal comes into force in two years, we’re talking access of $1 billion in beef and pork alone,” said Suzanne Sabourin, the council’s director of regulatory and international trade. “We think this would be an opportunity that is worth the investment. But clearly, there is work to do before we are there.”
4
NEWS
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Fields at higher elevations like this one in Longview, Alta., had to put the harvest on hold after an Oct. 10 snowfall. The three-month winter forecast from AccuWeather suggests it could be the start of a long, cold winter across the Prairies. | MIKE STURK PHOTO WEATHER | FORECAST
Get out your woollies, this winter may be harsh Seasonal forecast grim | U.S. forecasting service predicts temperatures below normal across much of the Prairies BY SEAN PRATT
ACCUWEATHER’S WINTER FORECASTS
SASKATOON NEWSROOM
AccuWeather has issued its winter temperature and precipitation forecast for Canada. This might be a good year to invest in a new parka. AccuWeather has released its winter weather forecast for the Prairies, and it is downright ugly. The forecast calls for below normal temperatures for most of Saskatchewan and Alberta. The nastiest conditions are expected in November and December. “You may be looking at some pretty amazingly cold outbreaks,” said Jack Boston, senior meteorologist with AccuWeather. Manitoba is expected to have nearnormal temperatures, except for the southwestern portion of the province, which will be below normal. Boston blames the grim outlook on the jet stream, which will bring blasts of cold Arctic air down from the north and northwest rather than milder Pacific Ocean air from the west. “You (will) get one Arctic air mass after another coming down without much in the way of breaks in between,” he said. “It’s going to be a very cold winter.” How cold? Saskatoon’s average monthly daytime highs and lows will be one to two degrees below normal. That might not sound like much, but a one to two degree drop averaged over an entire month could mean that a few days in that month might have temperatures that are five
Temperature outlook
Precipitation outlook
MAL E NOR ABOV
ABOVE NORMAL NORMAL
AB OV EN OR MA L
Edmonton
BEL OW
NORMAL ABO NOR VE MAL
Edmonton Regina
NORM AL
Regina
BELOW NORMAL
Winnipeg
Winnipeg
Source: AccuWeather.com | MICHELLE HOULDEN GRAPHICS
to 10 degrees below normal. “I think there will be more times where it gets below -30 C this year than there were last winter,” said Boston. He expects plenty of cross-polar flows , in which air masses from Siberia cross the Arctic and then descend into central Canada. Travis Toews, past-president of the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association, isn’t enamored with the forecast. “I hope they’re wrong,” he said. “With cold weather comes a higher calorie requirement for livestock.”
Fortunately, there is an abundance of corn, wheat and barley this year. There is also plenty of forage, but much of it is of low quality so producers may have to supplement it with higher energy feed ingredients. “They should be able to find it and find it at a lot lower cost than they would have a year ago,” said Toews, who operates a cow-calf operation and backgrounding feedlot west of Grande Prairie, Alta. Adequate shelter will also be critical this winter if the AccuWeather
forecast becomes reality. “For producers who don’t step up and respond, the performance of their cattle will be lower (and there will) likely be potential issues at calving with weak calves and higher death loss,” Toews said. Producers might want to get their feed tested if they are unsure of the quality. The AccuWeather forecast calls for above normal snowfall in the Rockies and southern Alberta. The map shows near normal snowfall in east-
ern Alberta, Saskatchewan and southwestern Manitoba. The rest of Manitoba will receive below normal snowfall. However, Boston’s analysis differs from what the map shows. He said Saskatchewan and Manitoba will have below normal snowfall. “The storm track is going to be way too far south and east. The only snow you get is light snowfalls,” he said. “It’s going to be real cold but we’re not looking for any significant snowfalls at this point.”
NEWS INSURANCE | AERIAL SEEDING
Man. farmers want aerially seeded crops included in insurance
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
A LITTLE TO THE RIGHT
CANOLA | STRAIGHT CUTTING
Straight cutting canola: is there an advantage or not? BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
It never hurts to have another tool in the toolkit, which is why Manitoba farmers are seeking crop insurance for aerially seeded canola. “I’ve never seeded canola by air, but guess what, a lot of farmers have,” said Keystone Agricultural Producers president Doug Chorney. “It’s an important tool and in 2011 a lot of acres were seeded that way successfully.” KAP and a delegation from the Manitoba Aerial Applicators Association were scheduled to meet with Manitoba Agricultural Services Corp., the provincial crop insurer, Oct. 21 to discuss the possibility of aerial seeding insurance for canola. The spring of 2011 was an extremely wet and challenging time for growers in southwestern Manitoba. Overland flooding saturated thousands of acres of cropland and most producers failed to seed a crop. However, some growers managed to get their canola in the ground by taking a chance on aerial seeding. Chorney said the amount of aerially seeded canola in 2011 was surprising. He heard that one aerial applicator did 10,000 acres in Manitoba and another company seeded 12,000 acres. The aerial applicators association was expected to present data on acreage and canola yield from aerially seeded crops during the MASC meeting to demonstrate that it is a viable option. A representative of the association wasn’t available to comment. Chorney said insurance for aerially seeded canola might be predicated on crop stand. “We would accept the terms of the insurance being set based on stand viability, much like they do with winter wheat or forage seed crops. They have the option to assess the stand viability and not offer insurance if it’s too thin,” he said. “Once you have stand viability … you’re not taking any more risk than you would with a ground-seeded crop.” Chorney said aerial seeding may represent a tiny fraction of provincial canola acres in a typical spring, but growers should have the insurance option. “It’s not a significant percentage of our acres, but it’s significant for those farmers.” An aerially seeded crop produced record yields on Dale Thorenson’s farm near Newburg, North Dakota, this year. Late snow melt and heavy rain had drenched Thorenson’s fields by late May. Thorenson’s son and nephew seeded canola with an airplane June 1 because they wanted something in the ground to soak up moisture. After incorporating the seed with a harrow and a coulter, the canola yielded 50 bu. per acre. “For canola, I’d say that would match the highest yield we ever had,” said Thorenson, U.S. Canola Association assistant director. “(We) didn’t expect it to turn out as well as it did.”
5
Conway Sauter of Castor, Alta., guides a helper to move the post pounder to the right spot. The pair are building a new fence to keep the cattle out of the wind break. Meanwhile, the silhouette, made by Sauter’s father, Ronald, stands guard. | MARY MACARTHUR PHOTO
LIVESTOCK | IMPROVING TRANSPORT CONDITIONS
Course teaches truckers on livestock Public face of industry | Program has worked with 1,700 livestock truckers since it was started in Alberta in 2007 BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU
Livestock truck transport is a common sight on prairie highways and one of few fleeting connections many consumers will ever make with animal agriculture. That’s one reason it is important to ensure livestock truckers are well trained in proper transport of their live cargo, says one industry expert. But the most important reason is the health and safety of the animals themselves. That is Geraldine Auston’s view. She is project co-ordinator of the Canadian Livestock Transport Certification Program, a training initiative developed in Alberta six years ago that officially became national in scope this month. “It’s an emotional thing for people to see animals on a truck, knowing where they’re going,” she said. “These animals are raised for food. That is a fact. But it doesn’t discount the fact that we do the best for them every step through this chain. That is what this program is about.” More than 1,700 livestock truckers have taken the course since its 2007 inception by Alberta Farm Animal Care, said Auston. That is only a portion of the people who haul livestock for a living or who have an interest in animal
It’s an emotional thing for people to see an animal on a truck, knowing where they’re going. GERALDINE AUSTON CANADIAN LIVESTOCK TRANSPORT CERTIFICATION PROGRAM
transport. Promotion of the course is one of her early goals. The course provides information on animal handling, welfare, regulations, optimal travelling times, trailer design, bedding, loading and offloading and a host of other topics related to transport of cattle, hogs, horses, sheep, poultry and other species. Formerly known as the Certified Livestock Transport training program, the updated version reflects different challenges in different parts of the country, said Auston. For example, rain is a bigger consideration for truckers in British Columbia, while wind chill is a primary concern during Saskatchewan winters. Auston said the program, now organized through the Canadian Animal Health Care Coalition, is training instructors for classroom teaching and is also developing an online version of the course. However, the program continues to be available while this occurs. Once participants have passed
the course, certification is effective for three years, after which it must be taken again to re-certify. There are three certification levels, with material designed for truckers, on-farm handlers, dispatchers, processing plant workers and others with an interest in the process. The cost is $125 per year, for a total of $375. Auston said the coalition is examining ways to offset the cost to truckers. Dr. Karen Schwartzkopf-Genswein, who has studied livestock transport in her work with Agriculture Canada, said she applauds the course becoming national in scope. “I think it’s obviously the way we need to go and has such good benefits for the industry, for the public in general, for the animals. It’s making something we do, better,” she said. “Any training we can put into place for people hauling our animals is a good thing.” For more information, visit www.livestocktransport.ca, email info@livestocktransport.ca or call 519-829-2242.
Is there a yield advantage to straight cutting canola? It all depends on timing, says Thorsten Stanze, who farms near Rosenort, Man. Straight cutting boosted yields by four to five bushels per acre on Stanze’s farm southeast of Winnipeg. His straight cut canola yielded 68 bu. per acre and his swathed canola generated 63 to 64 bu., on average. However, in spite of this year’s results, Stanze isn’t convinced straight cutting outperforms swaths. “The answer is, I don’t know,” said Stanze, who has straight cut part of his canola crop for five years. “If you get the straight cut off with proper timing, you have a higher yield on the straight cut, but you run into the risk of losing crop. We have lost about 400 acres, four or five years ago.” That year, wind shattering knocked his straight cut yield down to 15 bu. per acre. Meanwhile, Stanze’s swathed canola produced 45 bu. Angela Brackenreed, a Canola Council of Canada agronomist in Manitoba, said there’s no clear-cut answer on the yield benefits of straight cutting. “The jury is still out on the allaround benefits of straight cutting,” she said. “But so far there really isn’t indication there is a huge yield increase to straight cutting, although there’s no indication there’s a yield detriment to straight cutting.” Still, the evidence suggests straight cutting improves crop quality, she added. “Bigger seed, higher oil, less dockage. That kind of thing.” Based on her observations, more growers are trying straight cutting or considering it in Manitoba. “(There’s) more straight cutting on the eastern side of province than the western side of the province,” Brackenreed said. “I think the only reason (for) more prevalence in certain areas is a few producers start doing it, then their neighbours might (start) feeling comfortable with it.” Brackenreed advises growers to straight cut a portion of their crop and swath the remainder to manage time and tasks during harvest. Stanze concurred, noting he uses both approaches to mitigate risk. For Stanze, straight cutting is all about timing. If the canola is ripe and set to go, he makes it a priority at harvest. “If you have nice wheat (ready to harvest) and the canola is ready, you have to take the canola (first)…. Ninety-nine percent of the success is timing.” At 68 bu. per acre, Stanze’s straight cut crop produced one of the highest yields in Manitoba. Nonetheless, many canola growers southeast of Winnipeg posted record yields this fall. James Karlowsky, who farms three kilometres west of Brunkild, averaged 58 bu. per acre on his farm. Cam Freeborn, sales representative at the Brunkild Crop Production Services branch, formerly a Viterra outlet, said most canola growers in the region reported yields of 55 to 65 bu. per acre. This year, anything under 50 is a poor canola crop around Brunkild, he said. “The worst I heard is 45 bu.”
6
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
www.secan.com
MARKETS
AC Shaw VB ®
A Better Midge Trap ‘AC’ is an official mark used under license from Agriculture & Agri-Food Canada
MARKE T S EDIT O R : D ’ A R C E M C M ILLAN | P h : 306- 665- 3519 F: 306- 934-2401 | E-MAIL: DARC E.M C M ILLAN @PRODUC ER.C OM | TWITTE R: @ D AR CE MCMILLAN
OILSEEDS | TRAITS
Oil content of canola hits industry target Upward trend | Early returns from 2013 crop show average oil content of 45.1 percent BY SEAN PRATT
CANOLA’S OIL CONTENT
SASKATOON NEWSROOM
There has been much hoopla about canola meeting its 2015 production target two years ahead of schedule, but the industr y could achieve another equally ambitious goal this year. The mean oil content of the 1,088 canola samples analyzed by the Canadian Grain Commission as of Oct. 21 was 45.1 percent. The target established by the Canola Council of Canada in Growing Great 2015, a guiding vision for the industry developed in 2007, was an average oil content of 45 percent. “It’s a tremendous achievement by the industry as a whole,” said Rick White, general manager of the Canadian Canola Growers Association. Not that long ago, people used to refer to canola as a crop that was 40 percent oil and 60 percent meal. Those days appear to be long gone. The oil content number bounces around from year to year, but in general there has been a distinct upward trend. White said the recent 10-year average is close to 44 percent. It is happening at the same time that yields and production are on the rise. Statistics Canada in September forecast 16 million tonnes of production this year, well above the industry goal of 15 million tonnes by 2015. Weber Commodities Inc. said Statistics Canada in the final December report has revised the canola number up in each of the past seven years by an average of 1.5 million tonnes, so the goal could be obliterated two years ahead of schedule. Veronique Barthet, program manager of oilseeds at the Canadian Grain Commission, believes this year’s impressive oil content average is the result of better genetics and superb growing conditions. “If you removed the moisture, you could have 50 percent oil in some of the samples, so it’s pretty high,” she said. The commission has analyzed twothirds of the samples it anticipates it will receive this year. Most of the Manitoba samples are in, and the vast majority of the remaining one-third will come from Saskatchewan and Alberta, where oil content is usually higher. As a result, there’s a good chance the number will stay above 45 percent, although
Oil content bounces around a lot from year to year but there is a general trend towards higher content in the Canadian crop. At one time people thought of canola as 40 percent oil, but the recent 10-year average is close to 44 percent and this year's content looks like it will come close to matching the record of 45.2 percent set in 2011.
Oil content (%) at 8.5% moisture 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 ’80 ’85 ’90 ’95 ’00 ’05 ’10 ’13 * 2013 results for two-thirds of the crop that has been analyzed Source: Canadian Grain Commission Harvest Survey Program | WP GRAPHIC
nothing is certain. The oil content in this year’s crop is nearly two percent higher than last year’s crop. Barthet suspects that is because July was milder than July 2012. Canola doesn’t like the heat. “The planting was a bit delayed, but the weather was good for a long time, and that’s what is doing it,” she said. This year’s oil content will rival the record of 45.2 percent set in 2011 if it stays at the current level. That is prompting calls for the introduction of oil-based price premiums. The Canadian Canola Growers Association has investigated the idea but doesn’t think it is worth pursuing. For one thing, the industry would have to equip elevators with machines to measure oil content, and they would have to be regularly calibrated, which is expensive. “In our view, farmers are getting paid for oil content. It does come through either the futures price that is being offered or the basis levels that are being offered,” said White. He doesn’t believe the extra expense would be worth it, considering grow-
After analyzing 1,088 canola samples, the Canadian Grain Commission reports the 2013 crop has an average oil content of 45.1 percent. The numbers exceed the Canola Council of Canada’s goal of 45 percent to be met in 2015. | CANOLA COUNCIL OF CANADA PHOTO ers are already paid for their efforts. Another problem is that some farmers would win and some would lose. Who wins and who loses would
be largely predicated on weather conditions. “Really, what it does is put the risk of oil content directly onto the indi-
vidual farmer, and that’s a risk that they really can’t manage very well because it is so environmentally driven,” said White.
MARKETS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
7
OATS | MARKETING
GRAINS | OUTLOOK
Futures prices may be hard to realize
Argentine forecast briefly spikes wheat futures
Selling oats | Transportation issues mean growers may not be able to capitalize on good prices BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
The market signal says sell, the elevator says full and the trucking company says sorry. That’s the situation facing prairie oat growers as they look at a big futures market inversion but a commercial rail and trucking system that’s run out of capacity. “It’s just watching a train go by. You can’t jump on it,” OatInsight analyst Randy Strychar said about December oat futures prices that are high compared to March. “It looks really nice on paper, but there isn’t much he can do about it.” Futures prices usually increase the further out they are, with the lowest priced futures being the nearby contract. Farmers often choose to price their crop using deferred months and delivering later, depending on the amount of premium leading into further out months. Inversions, in which nearby futures are priced higher than later months, are rare and seen as a signal to sell immediately because holding crops into the future will likely bring a penalty rather than a premium. It’s the situation now seen in oat futures with the December Chicago oat contract on Oct. 21 standing at $3.35 per bushel and the March contract at $3.14. Farmers who want to move oats now to earn cash, clear bin space and benefit from the inversion are discovering that elevators aren’t taking anything beyond what they are already committed to, while trucking companies are booked for weeks and have increased hauling rates. “Movement has been a little bit tough because of everything being plugged up,” said Brian Voth, an AgriTrend marketing adviser from Ste. Agathe, Man. Farmers have big crops of oats to move but no way to move them. Lorne Boundy of Paterson Grain said farmers and end users are now separated by a logistics system that can’t get the oats from Western Canada to the Minneapolis area, where commercial use is based and the futures contract pegged. Buyers and people with short futures positions have been forced to boost prices in the delivery area, but farmers with crop can’t get it there. “There might be one heck of a smoking bid at the buyer end, but getting it there is a different story,”
BY REUTERS & WESTERN PRODUCER STAFF
There was a bountiful oat harvest in Canada, but logistical problems are preventing deliveries and foiling efforts to capture strong cash bids and nearby futures. | FILE PHOTO said Boundy. Inversions in oat prices, both futures and cash, have become common since spring, perplexing many about their true cause. Oat stocks in the Minnesota area have dropped to low levels after previous years of ample supplies, so the market becomes nervous when problems such as Canada’s congested logistics system arise. The futures market is particularly nervous because of low trading volumes in the oats contract, which allows any sort of squeeze to drive prices quickly one way or the other.
People who are caught short have to chase prices higher to close out their positions, and the physical grain market has a limited ability to m i t i gat e a n d b e n e f i t f ro m t h e spreads because there is no way to get the grain there. Strychar said companies caught too short might even have to import Scandinavian oats and ship them up the Mississippi River, although the price is presently prohibitive. Strychar said farmers aren’t panicking about the situation. Most are bullish about oats, and like oat growers around the world, appear to be
willing to sit on their crops for a few months before selling them. As well, the recent pattern of the oat futures inversion has been for the value of the next month contract rise to match the value of the expiring contract. As a result, waiting hasn’t been a disaster. However, the underlying oat market will likely suffer because of the high price of oats compared to corn. Horse feed demand has plummeted, Strychar said, and southern U.S. feed manufacturers are switching to cheaper alternatives.
CROPS | HANDLING SYSTEM
American growers find more space in elevators BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
North Dakota and the Canadian Prairies produce a lot of wheat, but American farmers are finding theirs easier to move. “For the most part, producers who have wanted to deliver have been able to,” said Jim Peterson, marketing director of the North Dakota Wheat Commission. “It is tight, but I’m not aware of elevators totally plugged where they’re
having to turn producers away.” Many congested prairie elevators in Canada are taking only crops that they have already contracted, but North Dakota elevators are generally able to take more crop. NorthDakotafarmersharvestedexcellent yields of spring wheat, but unlike their northern neighbours, they haven’t hadtofightforrailspacewithothercrops. Corn and soybeans are harvested weeks later than most wheat crops, so wheat has time to move through the system before it has to go head-to-head
with corn and soybeans. An excellent export pace has also helped clear wheat from North Dakota, while significant areas that couldn’t seed because of spring saturation have left room in the logistics system to handle large crops from other parts of the state. Peterson said farmers worry that basis levels could worsen and movement become more difficult now that the corn harvest has started. “There’s a feeling that things might get tighter as the year progresses,”
said Peterson. Farmers also worry that some grain merchants might try to take advantage of the looser rail system in the U.S. northern tier and try to move Canadian grain through there to Portland. As well, they have been fretting over the possible competition for rail crews, engines and capacity with burgeoning oil shipments from northwestern North Dakota. However, Peterson said problems with competing commodities have not been a particular problem.
CHICAGO, Ill. — Chicago Board of Trade wheat futures touched the highest level since June early this week before retreating on profit-taking and technical selling. Wheat futures jumped almost three percent Oct. 18 after Argentina’s agriculture ministry estimated wheat production at only 8.8 million tonnes. The estimate was sharply lower t ha n t h e Bu e n o s A i re s G ra i n s Exchange’s forecast of 10.35 million tonnes, while the U.S. Department of Agriculture put the crop at 12 million tonnes last month. The ministry said last Oct. 21 that the estimate was wrong and it would soon issue a new forecast. Argentina’s wheat crop has been plagued by dry weather and frosts, but many still believe it will be significantly better than last year’s disappointing 8.2 million tonnes. Worries about frost in Argentina over the weekend had also lifted the market but temperatures did not fall as low as expected. Instead, a good portion of the dry wheat belt enjoyed significant rain, which could help yields. The crop will be har vested in December. Wheat was also under technical pressure early this week. “Wheat was overdone, it came up and kissed the 200 day (moving average) and backed off. No one is too enthralled about wheat going much above $7 with corn below $5,” said Sterling Smith, futures specialist for Citigroup. “We’ve gained a lot of ground in the past few days, so maybe it’s time for the market to take a breather,” another European trader said.
WE’RE BUYING
Feed Grains For Sales Call: Landmark 204-355-6223 Niverville 204-355-0006 Winkler 800-644-2814 Souris 204-355-6239 Arborg 888-596-3200
8
MARKETS
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
CROPS | GRAIN
Resumed seeding eases weather risk to Black Sea harvest Seeding conditions improve after wet start KIEV (Reuters) — Thanks to drier weather, seeding of winter crops has resumed on farms in Ukraine and Russia, easing fears of a drastic drop in the winter crop in the region in 2014. Ukraine will only lose up to 1.2 million acres of winter grain sowings for 2014, sharply down from its previous estimate of 3.7 million acres, agriculture minister Mykola Prysyazhnyuk said on Oct. 17. The improved seeding conditions have also helped Russia’s farmers progress with seeding after a wet start to the campaign. Prysyazhnyuk said earlier this month that the winter grain area sown for 2014 harvest could shrink by about 20 percent because of excess autumn rainfall. He said win-
ter wheat area could fall to 15.5 million acres against an initially anticipated 17 million. “We had 10 days of dry weather and we had used them in full (for sowing). The losses of 980,000-1.2 million acres are not critical because next spring we will increase the area sown for spring grains,” he said. In late September, Ukraine’s grain lobby UAC shocked wheat markets when it said winter wheat area might drop as much as 30 percent because of wet weather. Prysyazhnyuk said thanks to drier weather this month the acreage of winter wheat likely won’t fall significantly. Most of the decline will likely come at the expense of winter barley. Farmers had sown 15 million acres of
Ukraine is now expected to lose only 1.2 million acres of winter grain, down sharply from the previous estimate of 3.7 million acres. | FILE PHOTO winter grains, 73 percent of the forecast area by Oct. 14, ministry data showed. The area included 12.6 million acres of winter wheat, or 76 percent of the initially expected sowing area.
Ukraine traditionally grows winter wheat, which accounts for more than 90 percent of its overall wheat output. In Russia, winter grain for the 2014
crop was sown on 29.9 million acres, or 73.9 percent of the planned area as of Oct. 17, compared with 37.3 million acres a year earlier, the agriculture ministry said.
OILSEEDS | MARKETS
Oilseed planting favoured as corn barely covers production costs MARKET WATCH
D’ARCE McMILLAN
T
he bumper U.S. corn harvest is pushing the price of the crop below $4.40 per bushel, a level not seen since 2010.
However, oilseed prices are doing better because of a tighter global supply, expectations that the U.S. Department of Agriculture will trim its U.S. soybean seeded area estimate in the next report and the hot, dry weather in the Midwest in late summer that limited yields. Analysts expect stronger oilseed prices to increase soybean acres and reduce corn acres in South America, where seeding is in progress now. Early predictions are that American farmers will also favour soybeans next year, seeding a record large crop.
.
If the expectations hold true, it would keep downward pressure on the price of canola and other oilseeds next year. Influential private analyst Informa last week forecast that American farmers would seed 83.9 million acres to soybeans next year, an increase of nine percent over this year. Corn area would slide six percent to 91.7 million acres and wheat rise two percent to 57.7 million acres. If realized, the soybean figure would be a record large area, ahead of the 78.1 million acres seeded in 2010.
.
January 14 & 15, 2014 TCU Place Saskatoon, SK The brand-new two-day conference that will take place for the ÀrVt tiPe GXriQJ &rop 3roGXctioQ :eek iQ 6aVkatooQ 6eVVioQV oQ marketing, agronomy, best farming practices, innovation, and leadership
)eatXriQJ ke\Qote aGGreVeV froP Bruce Croxon, Glen Hodgson, Michele Payn-Knoper, aQG Pore
Brought to you in partnership by SaskCanola, Saskatchewan Pulse Growers, Sask Flax, Saskatchewan Oat Development Commission, the Saskatchewan Wheat Development Commission, and the Saskatchewan Barley Development Commission
5eJiVter E\ October 31 to Ee eQtereG to wiQ a Jift carG to the .eJ www.cropsphere.com
The market is signalling against corn acres. The November 2014 soybean futures contract was $11.71 per bushel Oct. 21, 2.42 times the value of the December 2014 corn contract, or a ratio of 2.42:1. Some analysts say soybeans are more profitable to seed than corn when the ratio tops 2.2:1. Others put the ratio a little higher, but 2.42 is a fairly strong signal. Another signal is that the Iowa State University extension division estimates that the break-even selling price for corn in Iowa is $4.18 per bu. However, the cost of production is $4.87 if costs such as depreciation on machinery and buildings, the value of unpaid labour and interest costs on term debt are included. That means today’s corn price falls short of covering all costs. South America looks set to produce a record soybean crop. Oilseed analyst Oil World forecasts that the five top soybean producers in South America will increase seeded area by close to four percent to 134 million acres. There is a strong possibility that the United States will for the first time lose its crown as the world’s largest soybean producer to Brazil. Brazil has already been the top exporter for
several years. For the Brazilian soybean crop, which is considered the 2013-14 crop, analysts have a range of estimates from as low as 85 million to as high at 89.5 million tonnes. That would be up from 82 million tonnes last year. The USDA and several private forecasters are all at 88 million tonnes or more. The current U.S. soybean production estimate is 85.7 million tonnes. The forecasts for Brazil’s corn crop range from 71.4 million to 83.6 million tonnes, compared to 81 million last year. Argentina’s government expects its farmers to seed 51 million acres of soybeans, up 1.6 million from last year. It put the corn seeded area at 14.1 million acres. Could all this mean that oilseeds will experience next year the same sort of price collapse that has plagued corn in recent months? It’s too early to say yet because weather is always a wild card, and we don’t know what demand will be. However, it’s possible there might be no shining star market performer in the lineup of 2014 crop choices. Follow D’Arce McMillan on Twitter @darcemcmillan.
RURAL WATER TREATMENT Tell Them Danny Hooper Sent You
Iron Filters • Softeners • Distillers • Reverse Osmosis “Kontinouous Shok” Chlorinator Patented Whole House Reverse Osmosis System Time Payment Plan O.A.C.
1-800-BIG-IRON (244-4766) View our 29 Patented and patent pending inventions online at
www.1800bigiron.com
MARKETS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
CANFAX REPORT
PALM OIL | PLANTATIONS
FED CATTLE RALLY
Restrictions may curb palm expansion
U.S. cash cattle markets, suffering from tight market-ready supply, flirted with record highs, which supported higher live cattle futures. The Canadian cash market was also up, attracting early marketing of cattle that would have been sold later this month. Weighted average steer prices in Alberta were $121.38 per hundredweight, up $2.59, the highest level in the past 18 weeks and only $1.32 shy of the record high set in June. Heifers averaged $120.52, up $2.41. Basis levels usually strengthen from October to November. Packer interest in the cash market was mixed with most of the buying done by one company. Both the Alberta-Nebraska cashto-cash basis and the Alberta fed cash-to-futures basis strengthened and are in line with the five year average. Plants at Pasco, Washington, and Lexington, Nebraska, are changing Ca na d i a n c at t l e p ro c u re m e nt strategies. They will buy only feeders and then feed them in the United States. The plants will no longer buy Canadian fed cattle because of country-of-origin labelling. Feeder exports are anticipated to ramp up, while fed exports should slow. The effect on the fed market should be limited because of the tight fed supply and carcass weights that are smaller than last year.
COWS DIP Slaughter cow volumes going to market are seasonally increasing, and prices fell about $1. D1, D2 cows ranged $72-$83 to average $76.79 per cwt., and D3s ranged $62-$74 to average $68.64. Rail prices held mostly steady to range $149-$154 delivered. Cows were $12-$13 higher than the same week last year. Butcher bulls were steady, averaging $86.42 per cwt. Weekly western Canadian non-fed slaughter to Oct. 12 rose 12 percent to 7,876 head.
Protecting small producers | Rules will limit new plantations to 250,000 acres FEEDER PRICES UP A good volume of quality calves was offered, and average feeder prices generally rose $2 per cwt. Calves weighing 300-400 pounds jumped $5 per cwt. higher, and 400600 lb. calves rose $3-$4.50. Calves 600-700 lb. rose $1-$2, and 700-900 lb. calves were steady to $1 higher. Yearling steers fell about $1.50, while similar weight heifer prices were steady. Alberta auction volumes have increased over the past four weeks. Sales last week rose 12 percent to 48,832. The calf run has begun with many special calf sales and feedlot buy orders. Auction volumes should swell significantly larger with harvest wrapped up and beautiful weather for roundup and delivery. Keen interest in load-size lots of quality calves should maintain steady prices.
BEEF PRICES RALLY U.S. weekly slaughter volumes are below last year’s pace, which should push beef higher and help packers improve as long as consumers don’t rebel. Urner Barry, a livestock data company, reported U.S. boxed beef prices rose last week, with Choice up $2.95 at $195.14 US per cwt. and Select up $3.93 at $181.42. Weekly Canadian cut-out values to Oct. 11 saw AAA up $4.14 Cdn per cwt. and AA up $2.76. Montreal wholesale prices for delivery this week were steady at $225-$226 per cwt. This cattle market information is selected from the weekly report from Canfax, a division of the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association. More market information, analysis and statistics are available by becoming a Canfax subscriber by calling 403275-5110 or at www.canfax.ca.
WP LIVESTOCK REPORT HOGS RISE The hog market welcomed back the flow of U.S. Department of Agriculture data once the government reopened. Analysts expected it would take a day or two for prices to realign with the official data. Cooler temperatures and cheaper corn values should increase the amount of pork in coming weeks. Packers might slow kill lines to try to improve their operating margins. Retailers had an adequate supply for the rest of October, which is national pork month in the U.S. Iowa-southern Minnesota hogs delivered to packing plants rose to $69 US per hundredweight Oct. 18, up from $67-$68 Oct. 11. The estimated pork cut-out value was $94.30 Oct. 18. Ron Plain and Scott Brown of the University of Missouri noted the average hog price Oct. 18 was 96.2 percent of cutout, which was unusually high. Estimated weekly U.S. slaughter to Oct. 19 was 2.97 million. The previ-
9
ous week data is not available because of the U.S. government shutdown. Slaughter was 2.382 million last year in the same week.
BISON STEADY The Canadian Bison Association said Grade A bulls in the desirable weight range averaged $3.50 Cdn per pound hot hanging weight with sales to $3.70. Grade A heifers sold at $3.45 with sales to $3.55. Animals older than 30 months and those outside the desirable buyer specifications may be discounted.
LAMBS SLIGHTLY WEAK Ontario Stockyards Inc. reported 1,036 sheep and lambs and 130 goats traded Oct. 15. All classes of lambs sold steady to slightly weaker. Sheep and goats sold steady.
JAKARTA, Indonesia (Reuters) — An Indonesian rule limiting plantation areas to just 250,000 acres for new palm oil firms threatens an ambitious production goal of 40 million tonnes by 2020, says an industry group. The country’s soaring palm oil production is expected to hit 31 million tonnes this year, up from 12 million 10 years ago. It has put d ow nw a rd p re s s u re o n g lo ba l oilseed prices, including canola. Analysts say the new rule aims to protect small plantation firms from bigger companies and will close a loophole allowing major players to set up firms in different provinces. The new law exempts state-owned firms, co-operatives and listed firms in which small individual investors make up a majority stake, and will not affect companies that already have plantation permits. “This new regulation is purely to curb oil palm plantation development in Indonesia,” said Timbas Prasad Ginting of the Indonesian Palm Oil Association. “Perhaps this government step is merely to satisfy foreign pressures.” Indonesia is a key player in the battle against climate change and faces international pressure to halt rampant deforestation and destruction of carbon-rich peatlands. Forests in the archipelago are being cut for an expanding swath of palm
A worker collects palm fruits at a palm plantation at Langkat in Indonesia’s North Sumatra province earlier this year. | REUTERS FILE PHOTO oil, mining and pulp and paper industries, which environmental groups blame for hastening climate change and destroying wildlife. “The palm oil plantation restriction will slow annual production growth so that we will not achieve our target of 40 million tonnes in 2020,” Ginting said. Indonesia, home to the world’s third-largest expanse of tropical forests, should not rely solely on expansion to boost yields, said deputy agriculture minister Rusman Heriawan. Better farming techniques could also
increase production, he added. Heriawan said the law will require new palm plantation firms to offer a fifth of their land for development by local farmers where possible and gradually divest 30 percent of new palm oil mills to co-operatives within 15 years of operation, He gave no details of whether the new rule would affect plantations with land licences about to expire or be renewed and how the law would affect existing firms seeking to expand.
10
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
WPEDITORIAL
OPINION
Editor: Joanne Paulson Phone: 306-665-3537 | Fax: 306-934-2401 E-Mail: joanne.paulson@producer.com
EDUCATION | AGRICULTURE
CRAIG’S VIEW
Ag sector interest sends university enrolment up
I
f there was any lingering doubt that agriculture has become a sexy industry, the recent interest shown by young people should put it to rest. Witness the enrolments in prairie universities, where students are flocking to agriculture colleges across the region. The University of Manitoba has seen a whopping 24 percent increase in its degree program this year over last, while enrolment in the diploma program is also up. The University of Saskatchewan’s College of Agriculture and Bioresources has grown by 10 percent, even as the rest of the university’s enrolment has remained flat. Things are also looking up at the University of Alberta, boosted by a new animal health program, while Olds College is full with a number of students on a waiting list. The Western College of Veterinary Medicine, also at the U of S, has recently attracted a significant private donation to enhance its equine component. “The agricultural industry and the Prairies in general has been very strong,” said Brian Amiro, associate dean for academics at the U of M’s faculty of agricultural and food sciences, in a recent WP story. “That’s been going on for quite awhile, but especially lately. Students are realizing that getting an education in agricultural and food science is a great opportunity for a career.” The increase in interest is likely not too surprising if one looks at the commodity cycle of the last five years. High prices and decent crops have put agriculture back into the economic limelight, and as Amiro notes, that’s the big driver. On the less positive side, the anti-farm practice lobby has also catapulted food and its manufacture onto the mainstream radar. It is possible that some students have been driven into the sector by a desire to either improve technology or debunk the rampant myths now pervasive in the media. Whether it’s the economic angle or the
philosophical one, rising enrolments make sense. Still, since the size of farms have increased and the number of farmers decreased over several decades, one might expect fewer farm-raised students to embark on agricultural careers. As a result, the new interest in agricultural study is heartening. Many aspects to agriculture need attention, and new crops of scientists and educated farmers will be required to address them. The issues range from understanding and managing weed resistance, dealing with consumer and activist-led public concerns and developing new crop varieties to keep up with an ever-changing climate, not to mention advanced farm management. As the commodity cycle takes a downturn, which seems to be occurring now, more bright lights will be needed to support and defend the food industry. No matter what happens in the cycle, growing food will always be the most crucial industry in the world. Bringing on the next generation is vital to agriculture’s continued health. We hope that funding for agriculture colleges will be robust and unwavering. There are enormous expenses related to education and research, yet they are not just worthwhile but crucial to the economy. Universities are under pressure to reduce tuitions and cut costs, making program delivery decisions difficult. But in no other field are the returns to society and human health as significant. The young people entering ag colleges in droves likely understand that. Many of them seek good careers, but they also want to make a difference. They are the scientists and farmers of the future. It’s a wonderful thing to see them signing up for agriculture.
CETA | TRADE
The Canadian government has secured real and substantial access to one of the world’s few billion-dollar export markets, and they did it ahead of our major competitors. KATHLEEN SULLIVAN EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, CANADIAN AGRI-FOOD TRADE ALLIANCE
Farmers and processors have worked hard to develop artisan cheese markets. This should not have been sacrificed with the E.U. agreement. RON BONNETT
Bruce Dyck, Terry Fries, Barb Glen, D’Arce McMillan and Joanne Paulson collaborate in the writing of Western Producer editorials.
PRESIDENT, CANADIAN FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURE
TRADE | SUPPLY MANAGEMENT
Canada, European Union trade agreement not so bad for dairy after all NATIONAL VIEW
BARRY WILSON
I
n the simple and complex politics of Canada’s supply management system, the simple truth is that last week the Conservatives broke a promise. They signed a Canada-European trade deal that will double potential imports of European cheese to 30,000 tonnes. The dairy industry is outraged, arguing it is a deal to allow subsidized European cheese to compete with Canadian product.
Eight years ago when a motion was before the House of Commons instructing the then-minority Liberal government not to budge on supply management protections in trade talks, every single Conservative voted for it. The vote was unanimous: 288–0. An election was in the offing, the minority Liberals were vulnerable and the Conservatives needed to convince rural Ontario and Quebec, where the farm vote matters, that this former antiprotectionism party was onside. Mission accomplished. In 2006, the Conservatives won a minority government with strong rural Ontario and Quebec support. Fast forward to 2013 and the signing of what the Conservatives say is the most extensive trade deal in Canadian history, opening a European consumer market of 500 million to Cana-
dian products including up to $1.5 million in agricultural sales. In the complex and simple politics of Canada’s supply management system, the complex truth is that this is a far better deal than the supply managed system could have hoped for as talks progressed. The industry is protesting, as it must. Privately, it must be relieved. The government was under pressure to open up the protectionist supply management system. It will be again in Trans-Pacific Partnership trade talks. Instead, it struck a deal with the EU, the world’s largest trading bloc, to preserve dairy supply management giving the Canadian industry control of 92 percent of the domestic cheese market with that percentage to grow as domestic consumption grows and European imports are capped at
30,000 tonnes in a market of more than 300,000 tonnes. The deal should be a template for future agreements. Agriculture minister Gerry Ritz argues that while dairy farmers have a right to be upset and concerned about future erosion in market share, the EU agreement preserves their right to a vast majority of the domestic market. Besides, the increased access comes through increased tariff rate quotas that define set levels for imports. At the core of supply management is assurance of supplies in the market that allows production quota setting. The deal with the EU slightly increases the imports of cheese but in identifiable quantities that preserve the core of supply management. The fear always has been a trade deal (as New Zealand would like in the
TPP) that would reduce tariff levels, making import levels less predictable. That did not happen with the European deal. In reaction to Dairy Farmers of Canada and Canadian Federation of Agriculture criticism of the concession, Ritz (who voted for the no-concession motion) said give and take in trade negotiations are normal. “Every one of our pillars in the domestic system of supply management have been preserved and that’s what we said we would do,” he said. “The pillars of supply management have been preserved.” He’s right. The chance of a small dairy import concession derailing a multibillion dollar trade deal were nil. Dairy leaders should be privately celebrating even as they do their public political thing.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
11
& OPEN FORUM EDUCATION | CHALLENGES
MARKETS | REPORTAGE
Education gap hurts rural, Aboriginal communities
Dwindling data collection hurts growers EDITORIAL NOTEBOOK
BY KEN COATES
E
ducators have committed themselves to serving the needs of rural and remote learners since public universities and colleges were first formed in the 19th century. After the 1970s, institutions expanded their outreach to include Aboriginal students, many of whom are place-bound in remote communities. The growth of the internet, even with notoriously poor service in northern and remote regions, has now expanded exponentially our ability to reach well beyond the major cities and towns. There are thousands of individual success stories — indigenous and non-Aboriginal rural learners who have completed advanced study using distance education — but the reality is that the effort is not working well overall. Most online learners are either regular on-campus students or from urban areas. Major advances in online education may be exacerbating the urban-rural divide rather than addressing it. Nothing, except for the technical challenges, stops Aboriginal and other rural residents from capitalizing on the educational opportunities available. So, what stands in the way of mass participation? I would highlight five
key challenges: • Poor prior experience — Many rural and Aboriginal adults experienced inadequate high school preparation and had bad experiences with schooling. Students who are not well prepared in terms of basic skills nor keen to learn are unlikely to approach postsecondary institutions. • Shortage of local role models — Most teachers and professionals in these areas come from outside the area. Small groups of students who engage in post-secondary education appear to draw others into the world of advanced learning. • Limited local or accessible mentoring — Online, self-directed learning is difficult in the best of times. The absence of mentors, tutors and people familiar with local social realities in remote and rural communities makes it more difficult for independent learners to progress. • Disconnect between local realities and post-secondary curricula — Rural and Aboriginal communities are unique and fascinating places. Most post-secondary education curricula make scant reference to these socio-economic environments and therefore appear disconnected and less relevant to some learners. • Disconnect in expectations — Many institutions significantly underestimate the challenges
associated with undertaking a postsecondary education. Because of the limited local or regional engagement, many rural and Aboriginal students do not always appreciate the length, intensity and difficulties of distance education. Here are some suggestions on how to expand post-secondary education participation among Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal rural residents: • Develop e-learning familiarity — Build distance education into the last two years of high school so all students in rural and remote communities learn how to study online. Developing a familiarity with e-learning can be beneficial as they enter post-secondary education and create more online learning opportunities. • Improve adult preparation — Use these same high school courses as the core of adult basic education for mature learners and engage high school teachers as mentors for the adult learners. • Unite regional students — Students benefit from recognizing that they are part of a larger and local community, even if they are taking different courses. Students are great at supporting each other. • Engage in proactive recruitment: Colleges and universities are effective at recruiting for on-campus enrolment but are less accom-
plished at finding students for e-learning. Outreach activities focused on people currently in the workforce, particularly if done personally, can help a great deal. • Link programs with reality — Institutions must develop regionally relevant programs with rural and Aboriginal content and provide post-secondary education opportunities that respond to local employment opportunities. Targeted courses that prepare students for local opportunities are most likely to generate enthusiasm and enrolment. Canada has superb rural educators and institutions with exceptional track records for working with northern and remote regions. However, Aboriginal and other rural residents are not fully capitalizing on the educational opportunities available, which contributes to economic and personal challenges in these regions. Proactive and creative policies can help. In all cases, knowing the people and the region is essential. Ken Coates is Canada Research Chair in Regional Innovation in the Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy at the University of Saskatchewan. This article has been edited for length.
CROPS | MARKETING
Growers must consider more than just price HURSH ON AG
KEVIN HURSH
W
e obviously want to sell our grain for the best possible price and buy inputs such as fertilizer at the lowest possible price. However, price isn’t everything, especially this year with its enormous crop on the Prairies. Grain companies, and therefore producers, aren’t going to move all the grain they want, even without a work disruption at Canadian National Railway and even if it’s an easy winter without bitter cold snaps and deep snow. Pricing grain, or at least locking in a basis, can ensure a place in the transportation system.
Unless you reserve a spot on the train, you could be disappointed later. Bins are full, and producers feel pretty good when they multiply current prices by the volume in storage. However, grain in the bin isn’t cash in the bank. Grain can spoil, grain bins can fall over, grain bags can be damaged by wildlife and grain can be stolen. And before we know it, storage space will be needed for another crop. Most farmers are in a strong cash position so they may not need to sell much to meet immediate financial commitments. Someone recently tweeted that with harvest over, it was time to lock the bins until the bears go into hibernation. That could be a counterproductive attitude. Prices go up and prices go down. You can almost always find analysts who are bearish and others who are bullish. However, not many analysts are predicting the return of $14 a bushel canola any time soon. No matter the direction of prices for
the balance of the crop year, there will be serious constraints to how quickly product can move through the system. Price improvement won’t change the reality of transportation logistics. In fact, our movement bottlenecks could mask possible price improvements in the world market. For that reason, this is a different marketing year than most. Some commodities can still be sold quickly and turned into cash, but there isn’t much of a spot market for many of the major grains and oilseeds. Nearby transportation capacity is booked. Waiting to see what happens does not a marketing plan make. Inaction could easily lead to disappointment. This is also the case when it comes to buying fertilizer. Why, you might ask, would anyone be in a hurry to buy fertilizer this fall? Prices have generally softened, and no big upsurge is forecast. Last year, there was little or no price advantage to buying in the fall. And when you buy granular fertilizer early, there are usually more problems with lumps when you go to use it.
On top of that, many farms have nowhere to store granular fertilizer. Fertilizer bins have been filled with grain that hasn’t yet been marketed. For those who use anhydrous ammonia, why apply in the fall when you’re set up to apply it all in a single pass at seeding time? We’re using an ever-increasing volume of fertilizer. Spot shortages in the spring have become common in recent years. This fall, with so many producers holding off on fertilizer purchases, input suppliers report that movement is dramatically slower than normal. That sets up the potential for a logistical nightmare in the spring. It isn’t a happy situation if your seeding unit has to sit while you wait for fertilizer to arrive or if you have to scramble to find a supply from other retailers. Just as with grain, price isn’t the only consideration. Kevin Hursh is an agricultural journalist, consultant and farmer. He can be reached by e-mail at kevin@hursh.ca.
MICHAEL RAINE
Recent turmoil shows need for government data collection programs
D
omestic grain flows are becoming harder to track and analyze. This is partly the result of changes to reporting requirements and processes in the federal Grains Act and the loss of CWB as a markets, shipping and sales reporter. As well, the recent American congressional finance squabble kept the U.S. Department of Agriculture from delivering its monthly crop and livestock production and world agricultural supply and demand estimates on time or at all this month. It shone a bright light on governments’ roles in the market’s ability to accurately account for and analyze the agricultural sector. Analysts began stumbling or at least overstating the obvious, and commodity markets went flat in just a couple of weeks. The objectivity of governmentsupplied data is critical to all players: farmers, merchandisers, cattle feeders, packers, processors, traders and shippers, and of course, the media. Typically, it is available to everyone, for free, which levels the pricediscovery playing field and allows for the educated guesses we all make about the future of prices and for the resulting cropping signals sent to producers. Relying on processors and buyers to provide data is OK for a while in the absence of reliable, comprehensive data. However, they would quickly figure out where their bread is buttered, and the data they supply would either dry up or reflect their interests rather than reality. WP Markets Editor D’Arce McMillan sums up this month’s data shortage by suggesting that a few pundits and analysts look pretty smart in the short term, but as the absence of reporting drags on, accuracy and confidence begins to rapidly slip. As media, we strive to provide objective information, selecting the valuable kernels of truth from the chaff and screenings of irrelevant noise and ideological hyperbole. The more high quality data we have to harvest, the better the fodder we deliver to our readers, and the more informed they are in their farms’ decisions. Data is challenging and sometimes expensive to collect, but it’s a job governments do well. Inaccurate information will cost producers a lot more in the not-so-long run.
12
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
OPEN FORUM LETTERS POLICY:
SAVE DEMOCRACY
Letters should be less than 300 words. Name, address and phone number must be included for verification purposes and only letters accepted for publication will be confirmed with the author.
To the Editor:
Open letters should be avoided; priority will be given to letters written exclusively for the Producer. Editors reserve the right to reject or edit any letter for clarity, brevity, legality and good taste. Cuts will be indicated by ellipsis (…) Publication of a letter does not imply endorsement by the Producer.
I spent a busy day in Brandon … Oct. 9, for it was a day the political leaders were delivering their speeches and declaring nominations. I decided to attend and listen to Green Party leader Elizabeth May. I was not disappointed with my choice. The near two hour presentation, with questions and answers included, was a joy to listen to, and the standing ovation of appreciation was well deserved. Green leader Elizabeth May does not make promises that are only bafflegab by the majority of today’s politicians. She is a superb speaker
and a great parliamentarian that tells it like it is, and makes no bones about it. Her one discussion Save Democracy from Politics, was factual of what is taking place in Canada. It would be a great deal less expensive for all Canadian citizens and taxpayers to send robot drones as our constituent representatives to Ottawa, she tells us, for the grassroots concept has been virtually eliminated. I think the robot drones are definitely a worthy consideration. A little lubricating oil and occasional spray to keep irritating squeaks to a minimum would not be expensive to maintain. Through time, former prime minis-
ters and the (Stephen) Harper government of today have accelerated the PMOs office as the Borg collective control. Resistance is futile and our MPs are assimilated, or cast aside and eliminated. (Those familiar with The Next Generation can relate to the Borg). And like a spreading disease of cancer, this has infected levels of our provincial and municipal governments as well. But seriously, Canadians must speak out and breathe life back into the flickering embers of democracy to restore the flame, or in years to come, anarchy, such as we see and read about in other countries, will become a reality in Canada. Is that what we want?
E C N A FORM
S L A E H R E HIG C PER
Part of your well-balanced farm business.
The T Th e new new High High Hi hP Performance e fo er form rman rm ance an e leader le ea ad de er acro a ac across cro ross sss tthe th he pr p prairies, rai airiies es,, CDC CDC St S Stanley anle an ley y scores sco ore es hi high gh hp points oints oi nts nt with western Canadian growers. With the highest yield results, excellent standability, and a great disease package, CDC Stanley redefines genetic potential, giving growers the power to grow.
It sure is not something that I would want to look forward to for my children and grandchildren. John Fefchak, Virden, Man.
FUTURE OF MEAT To the Editor: Your columnist Kevin Hursh, along with the (Sask. premier Brad) Wall and (prime minister Stephen) Harper governments, always seem to tout “the science” when making claims that (genetically modified organisms) GMOs, hormones, antibiotics, and the like are safe for animal and human consumption. I’m left wondering what science they are using to back up these claims, however. In September 2012, the results of the first ever long-term animal feeding trial of genetically modified corn and glyphosate residue were released, led by Gilles-Eric Seralini of the University of Caen in France. The study results found much higher incidences of tumours, digestive problems, organ damage, and premature death in lab rats fed GM corn and glyphosate residue, the primary ingredient in Roundup. In 2013, the results of a feeding study done on just-weaned pigs were released, conducted by Judy Carman of Flinders University in Australia. It found that a diet of GM corn and soy produced severe stomach inflammation in the pigs, as well as enlargement of the uteruses in female pigs, indicating digestive and reproductive damage from GM diets. Also in 2013, the results of a study on glyphosate excretion in the urine of Danish dairy cattle were released, led by Dr. Monica Kruger. This study found that glyphosate was excreted in varying amounts by all the cattle studied from eight different farms. Blood tests showed toxicity, with a particular effect on liver and muscle cells, indicating glyphosate is toxic to the metabolism of dairy cattle. People don’t want added hormones, antibiotics, steroids, or genetically modified organisms in their food. The beef industry can adjust to this fact and provide what the people want, or it can step out of the way as companies like A&W move forward. Antibiotic, hormone and GMOfree meat is the future. Good job A&W for reading the writing on the wall. Jillian MacPherson, Gainsborough, Sask.
HEALTHY INDULGENCE To the Editor:
Contact your local CPS retail to learn more about the exclusive line-up of High Performance Cereals from Proven® Seed.
CDC Stanley and CDC VR Morris were bred at the Crop Development Centre, University of Saskatchewan. Proven® Seed is a registered trademark of Crop Production Services (Canada) Inc.
Cam Dahl’s belligerent op-ed “Good old days were not always so good” (WP Oct. 3) is rife with simplistic reasoning, starting very early with his inclusion of gluten-free with certain other dietary demands. Whereas many criteria — local, organic, etc. — are on the rise out of concern for future health — bodily, environmental — the rising need for gluten-free food is immediate. Without having Celiac disease, Mr. Dahl can’t comprehend the ill effects
OPINION of eating gluten for one out of 133 Canadians (Canadian Celiac Association). In the good old days, maybe fewer people were gluten-intolerant. Tiring of hearing about the growing list of dietary restrictions/demands, and seeing fit to downplay, dismiss and counter them wholesale, is the indulgence of someone blessed with health — or, in possibly many cases, someone who doesn’t realize he could feel healthier with some dietary changes. Greg deJong, Clearwater, Man.
Sept. 26 paper, on the cover you show a man that is not wearing any safety gear. The man is not wearing coveralls, face mask and a helmet. He did not put a rock under the machinery that he was welding, and the machine could have fallen on him. In school, we learn about farm safety. Your picture is not safe.
Letting go of the past lets us move forward with anticipation SPIRITUAL VIGNETTES
JOYCE SASSE
It’s not about resuscitation. Ours is a resurrection faith
“
W
e can mourn the loss of things of the past,” Bobbie Schuller said, “but we are called on to move forward.”
He was speaking to his congregation at a landmark time in its life journey. Because of cumulative fiscal debt, those who once owned the Crystal Cathedral in Los Angeles, California, were forced to dispose of the iconic property and move the Hour of Power elsewhere. As the moving process wound down, on two successive Sundays the young pastor delivered messages that spoke of wisdom and courage. Roman Catholics now own the property that will be known as Christ Cathedral. Schuller and his Catholic counterpart made it clear they want to maintain a dynamic relationship
between the two communities: a far different way of thinking than would have been possible in previous generations. Naturally, big changes are in store for those whose new home will be Shepherd’s Grove Church. Schuller talked about moving forward. It is not about resuscitation of what we had in the past. Ours is a resurrection faith. “When death comes, don’t pretend it is not going to be. Mourn it. Embrace it. And move on expecting there will be more.” He reminded us “we can’t know how something is going to work out unless we let it die,” all the while believing in God’s promise of new life.
These words are helpful both for a grieving congregation and for all of us as we think back on the losses we have faced in the past and will face in the future. Resuscitation speaks of longing for what once was and not letting go. This carries with it heavy burdens of regret. Resurrection speaks of trust, hope, anticipation, of believing that God will be with us as we move forward, and will show us new vistas we never believed were possible.
Joyce Sasse writes for the Canadian Rural Church Network at www.canadian ruralchurch.net.
Kayla Bertschy, Milo, Alta.
WHAT A BUY To the Editor: Anyone having gone to an auction sale would hear the words, “Wa da buy”. I applied it to my cheque from Viterra shares. Backing up to my original shares in the (Saskatchewan Wheat) Pool and UGG (United Grain Growers), I had approximately $60,000. My monies from the new owners were $615. “Wa da buy!” This treatment seems to carry on in our government. The money from the CWB was taken by the government. The minister of agriculture said we would have a vote before the demolishing of the board. I very much question the use of the word “honourable” in front of the title minister of agriculture. Have a nice day. Gerald Kobelsky, Landis, Sask.
FROSTY FULL MOON To the Editor: A few issues ago of The Western Producer, a front page story stated that full moon and frost have no correlation. I awoke Sept. 20, and discovered that my Environment Canada minimum thermometer registered -2 C. I looked on my calendar and found in large letters on Sept. 19 — full moon. Sure enough, they do not have any correlation at all. It is a fact. Our ancestors living here in Saskatchewan found out quite a long time ago that it was better than a 50-50 chance of frost on or very near a full moon in September. Modern technology is all very fine but 90 percent of the time I will put my money on local legends because they are not run by computers. A frost and the full moon may not occur as often as the dawn of a new day occurring at sunrise, but it certainly can most of the time in September. Delwyn Jansen, Humboldt, Sask.
13
PAST AND FUTURE | REGRET OR HOPE
PICTURE NOT SAFE To the Editor:
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
S ALL M SERIE
14
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
LABOUR TALKS | TRANSPORTATION
Possible rail disruption an issue for grain transport Big harvest to haul | Ag industry watches closely as negotiations continue between CN and its workers BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM & REUTERS
Disruptions at either one of Canada’s major railway companies would have serious consequences for the grain industry, says the head of an organization representing the country’s largest grain handlers. Wade Sobkowich, executive director with the Western Grain Elevators Association, said any disruption to rail service — be it labour related or otherwise — would make the already difficult task of moving this year’s
record crop even more onerous. The WGEA represents major grain handlers including Viterra, Richardson and Cargill. Association members handle 90 percent of Canada’s bulk grain exports. “It’s a large crop … the largest in Canadian history, so it stands to reason that if we have more volumes of grain and oilseeds to move, that we’re going to struggle more than we otherwise would,” Sobkowich said. “So yes, we’re concerned with our ability to do that.”
Last week, the union representing conductors, trainmen, yard workers and traffic co-ordinators at Canadian National Railway said labour disruptions at Canada’s largest railway could occur before the end of the month. Representatives from the union and the railway met with a federally appointed mediator Oct. 21. Entering the meeting, officials from both sides said they were optimistic that progress would be made. However, a settlement had yet to be announced by the Western Produc-
er’s press deadline Oct. 21. Close to 3,000 CN workers represented by the Teamsters have been without an agreement since late July. “While the earliest date for a strike or lockout is … Oct. 29, CN remains optimistic that it can negotiate an a m i c a b l e s e t t l e m e nt w i t h t h e (union) to avoid labour disruption,” CN’s Mark Hallman said in an Oct. 21 email. The threat of any disruptions to rail service, caused by labour, weather or another factor, is causing anxiety among farmers and grain handlers.
ADVANCE
YOUR YIELD.
Genuity® Roundup Ready 2 Yield® soybeans have built-in yield potential to outperform original Roundup Ready® Soybeans, with farmers seeing more 3,4 and 5 bean pods For more beans per pod and more bushels per acre, be sure your soybeans have the trait technology that’s advancing the yield of soybean growers across Canada. Ask for the 2.
GENUITY® BECAUSE EVERY BEAN MATTERS. VISIT YOUR SEED REP OR GENUITYTRAITS.CA ALWAYS FOLLOW GRAIN MARKETING AND ALL OTHER STEWARDSHIP AND PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Details of these requirements can be found in the Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers printed in this publication. ©2013 Monsanto Company
Sobkowich said fulfilment of rail car orders is already low with an estimated 50 percent of orders going unfilled each week for the past month or so. “Grain handling companies are already rationing their sales” to match rail capacity, he said. “The country system is about 91 percent full and terminals have a lot of space left, so we need to move a lot of products from the country to the terminals so that we can … relieve congestion,” he said. Moving this year’s big harvest will require all parties along the supply chain to work together, not just railways, Hallman told Reuters last week. CN expects to have a $100 million expansion to its capacity on the Winnipeg-Edmonton corridor in place by the end of November. Mark Hemmes, president of Quorum Corp, which monitors rail performance in the grain sector, said both of Canada’s major railways are offering a larger number of rail cars for grain than usual. However, moving crops fluidly is also about matching the needs of vessels lined up at port, he said. “The railways are motivated to move as much grain as they can, and they may have a tendency to grab grain from an origin that might not match what’s required in that time frame at the port. That’s where we end up with congestion.” Sobkowich acknowledged that demand for rail cars is higher than normal this year, in step with agricultural production. However, he said current railway performance is failing to meet the grain industry’s requirements. A bigger factor complicating grain movement this year is demand for railway capacity from other sectors of the economy. “I think it’s fair to say that a large part of the problem is because they’re moving a lot more oil and petroleum based products,” he said. Grain companies are incurring monetary penalties related to contract extensions and vessel demurrage, which are ultimately reflected in the payments producers receive for their grain, he added. Sobkowich was also critical of rail service legislation passed by the federal government in June. That legislation gives railway customers the right to negotiate service level agreements with railway companies. However, Sobkowich said nobody in the grain industry is lining up to negotiate a service level agreement, largely because the arbitration process does not include provisions for monetary penalties. “It (the legislation) is not having an effect,” Sobkowich said. “We asked for some amendments to the legislation before it was passed and we didn’t get them, so it’s essentially made the legislation not very useful for grain shippers,” he said. “We don’t see anybody sitting down and negotiating service level a g re e m e nt s w i t h t h e ra i l w ay s because at the end of the day …you can’t negotiate a service level agreement that puts in penalties for poor rail performance.”
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
15
Calling all cattle The Cypress Hills Stockmen’s Association held its 95th annual roundup in Cypress Hills West Block Provincial Park Oct. 15-17. | William DeKay photos
ABOVE: Falling snow blankets herds of cattle as they wait to be trailed home from Adams Lake during the Cypress Hills Stockmen’s Association’s 95th annual roundup. FAR LEFT: Cattle and cowboys head up North Benson Road in the Cypress Hills West Block Provincial Park during the first day of the roundup. LEFT: Nadine McKnight holds the horses as riders eat their meals in the cook tent.
It’s been ten years since we introduced the FlexDraper® to the market and our patented platform has yet to be matched. Featuring MacDon FLEX-FLOAT Technology™, our FD75 FlexDraper® continues to advance harvesting innovation. The FLEX advantage comes from a fixed reel to cutter bar relationship which maintains a small CRITICAL GAP between the reel fingers and cutter bar. While our FLOAT system allows for instant lateral and vertical float response over rolling and uneven terrain. The result of our FLEX-FLOAT Technology™ is smooth, consistent, heads-first feeding that significantly boosts combine productivity. Performance like this is the reason why more top producers and custom harvesters trust MacDon with their harvest.
Fits Most Current Model Combines.
Trademarks of products are the marks of their respective manufacturers and/or distributors.
IMITATED, BUT NEVER DUPLICATED.
MF22912-0913
See the MacDon FD75 FlexDraper® in action at MacDon.com/videos
16
NEWS
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEW PARLIAMENT | FARM POLICY
Conservative government plans trade focus Throne Speech | Government plan for new session has little new in it for agriculture; Ritz non-committal on grain commission changes BY BARRY WILSON OTTAWA BUREAU
As agricultural visions go, last week’s throne speech to launch the last two years of the current Conser-
vative mandate was thin gruel. In a 23-page speech that took governor general David Johnston almost an hour to read Oct. 16, there was just one paragraph about agriculture to launch the new session of Parliament.
It was as much about the past as the future. “Our government has given farmers marketing freedom and is helping them adapt and innovate,” Johnston read.
MAKE WOOD CUTTING QUIC CK & EASY
LIMITED TIME ONLY
STIHL MS 170 Gas Chain Saw
$
229
30.1 cc / 1.3 kW / 3.9 kg (8.6 lb)
†
Displacement (cc)
Power Output (kW)
Weight † (kg/lb)
Feature Price*
MS 180 C-BE
31.8
1.5
4.2 / 9.3
$299.95
Chain Saw Models
NEW
†
95
MSRP $249.95 with 16” 16 bar
“It will continue to develop new markets around the world for Canadian products while supporting supply management.” Agriculture minister Gerry Ritz said later that farmers should not expect grand new initiatives during the next two years of Conservative government. Trade policy will be the key to agricultural success. “As far as agriculture goes, it will be more of the same, free trade agreements and when there are issues like country-of-origin labelling, we use our muscle at the WTO (World Trade Organization) to get those countries to a panel,” he said. “We will continue to focus on trade and the marketplace, not the mailbox.” He said the government wants to see more investment in new varieties and plans to reform the varietal registration process. However, Ritz was non-committal about whether further changes to the Canadian Grain Commission are on the agenda. Last year, the government changed the Canada Grain Act to shift more regulatory responsibility to the grain industry, reduce the number of mandatory services provided by the commission, end the system of regional assistant commissioners and increase commission fees to make it financially self-sufficient. At the time, chief commissioner Elwin Hermanson said the next phase of reform should be to change the governance structure from the current commissioner system to a more typical corporate model.
Ritz said he met with Hermanson last week but would not comment on whether more changes to the commission are in the works. “I’m not going to commit to anything because those discussions are ongoing,” he said. “Everything is on the table at this time.” The throne speech also made scant mention of the long-time Conservative promise of Senate reform, noting that the Supreme Court of Canada will hear a federal reference this autumn to rule on whether Ottawa can act unilaterally to change the Senate without provincial agreement or constitutional change. The Senate is mired in controversy over the expense claims of three Conservative senators appointed by prime minister Stephen Harper. This week, senators are debating a government motion to suspend Pamela Wallin (Saskatchewan), Mike Duffy (Prince Edward Island) and Patrick Brazeau (Quebec) without pay for up to two years. Wallin has vowed to fight any suspension in court. The throne speech said the current Senate is “unacceptable” and must be changed. “The Senate must be reformed or, as with its provincial counterparts, vanish,” said the speech written by the government and read in the Senate chamber by Johnston. “The government will proceed upon receiving the advice of the supreme court.” A court ruling is not expected until next year.
MS 250
45.4
2.3
4.6 / 10.1
$399.95
MS 251 C-BE
45.6
2.2
5.2 / 11.5
$449.95
MS 271
50.2
2.6
5.6 / 12.3
$449.95
MS 291 C-BE
55.5
2.8
6.2 / 13.7
$549.95
MS 261
50.2
2.8
5.3 / 11.7
$649.95
EXPORTS | SUBSIDIES
MS 362
59.0
3.4
5.9 / 13.0
$749.95
International food trade rules unlikely to change at WTO meeting
Power head only. *With 16” bar.
FREE
BY BARRY WILSON
WOOD-PRO KIT ™
OTTAWA BUREAU
WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY ELIGIBLE STIHL CHAIN SAW **
** Limited time offer. Free WOOD-PRO™ Kit offer applies to purchases of new eligible chain saws and is valid until November 29th, 2013, while supplies last. This kit includes: a Woodsman® carrying case, STIHL Heritage Series hat, and a replacement loop of OILOMATIC® chain. Prices do not include HST, PST, GST, QST, where applicable. Featured prices are in effect until November 29th, 2013 at participating STIHL Dealers.
Cervus Equipment Calgary, Coronation, Cranbrook, Olds, Pincher Creek, Stettler, Trochu, AB....................www.cervusequipment.com Timberland Supply Edmonton, AB ....................................................780-452-1863 Northern Metalic Sales Grande Prairie, AB..............................................780-539-9555 Battle River Implements Ltd. Killam, Wainwright, Camrose, Provost, AB ........877-913-3373 Butte Motors & Farm Supply Ltd. Picture Butte, AB ................................................403-732-4406 Redcliff Home Hardware Redcliff, AB.........................................................403-548-3606 Rimbey Implements Ltd. Rimbey, AB .........................................................403-843-3700 St. Paul Home Hardware Building Centre St. Paul, AB ........................................................780-645-3173 Greenvalley Equipment Inc. Morden, Altona, Killarney, Treherne, MB ............866-325-7742 Enns Brothers Steinbach, Brandon, Winnipeg West, Portage La Prairie, Morris, Neepawa, MB.......................www.ennsbrothers.com Fathers Repair Ltd. Swan River, MB ..................................................204-734-9137 ABC Power Tools Winnipeg, MB .....................................................204-224-1760 Accurate Lawn & Garden Winnipeg, MB .....................................................800-456-5950
Nelson Motors and Equipment Avonlea, Estevan, Oxbow, Radville, Redvers, SK .........................................306-868-2022 South Country Equipment Emerald Park, Regina, SK ..................................306-721-5050 Maple Farm Equipment Foam Lake, Moosomin, Preeceville, Russell, Wynyard, Yorkton, SK ..........................www.maplefarm.com Fountain Tire F206 Meadow Lake, SK ..............................................306-236-5489 Cervus Equipment Melfort, Prince Albert, Saskatoon, Watrous, SK ...........www.cervusequipment.com Kevin’s Custom Ag Services Nipawin, SK ........................................................306-862-3611 JD Industrial Supplies Regina, SK..........................................................306-352-5345 Western Sales Rosetown, SK.....................................................306-882-4291 The Rent-It Store Saskatoon, SK ....................................................306-652-0101 Yorkton Small Engine & Repair Yorkton, SK.........................................................306-783-0546
www.stihl.ca
The World Trade Organization heads into a December ministerial meeting in Bali, Indonesia, with modest agricultural expectations, projecting no major breakthroughs in new international food trade rules. W TO a g r i c u l t u re c o m m i t t e e chair John Adank, ambassador from New Zealand, told a recent committee meeting in Geneva that firming up rules to limit use of export subsidies is one possible area of progress. Delegates to a WTO ministerial meeting in Hong Kong eight years ago agreed to end agricultural export subsidies by 2013. However, there was no overall agreement on an agricultural text at the Hong Kong meeting so the commitment was sidelined. Eight years later, subsidized exports remain an issue in food trade. There have been recent examples of countries, including the United States with sugar products, planning to ship subsidized product into export markets. Adank said during his address to the agriculture committee that there is broad agreement on the need to act but less agreement on how. “On export competition, my sense
is that the recent discussions have helped us to move forward to identify what could be the various elements of a possible Bali outcome in this area,” he said. However, even a deal to implement the 2005 agreement is far from certain. “While we can see convergence emerging around some of these elements, it is fair to say that a number of issues still remain far from agreed,” he said. Adank called for at least a declaration from the Bali conference that “export subsidies in all forms are a highly trade-distorting form of support.” Other issues to be discussed include a proposal from developing countries that they be allowed to exceed limits on domestic subsidies if the money is used to buy food for national stockpiles and agreement on how to manage imports allowed under tariff rate quota trade rules that are not trade distorting. For some observers of the WTO process, a failure to make any progress on agriculture after 12 years of Doha Round negotiations will signal the failure of the WTO process. The trade objectives agreed to in 2001 have largely been bypassed, and regional trade deals are becoming more prominent.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
17
WATER | MANITOBA FLOODING
Farmer disputes report on Lake Manitoba flooding Portage Diversion had ‘minimal impact’ | Farmer asks how .09 feet of additional water could cause billions in damage BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
The Manitoba government may be selling the idea that water from the Portage Diversion contributed little to the 2011 Lake Manitoba flood, but ranchers around the lake aren’t buying it. “People are just mystified as to how on earth can (government) state that the Portage Diversion raised it roughly .09 feet, which is an inch,� said Joe Johnson, who farms near Langruth, Man. “Where we are farming, you could stand four feet away from the water and watch it come toward you.� On Oct. 16, the province released a technical report on the 2011 flooding of the Assiniboine River, Lake Manitoba and Lake. St Martin. Manitoba transportation and infrastructure minister Steve Ashton said the water from the Portage Diversion, which moves water from the Assiniboine River to the south end of Lake Manitoba, didn’t flood farmland and residential property. “What the report also shows is the degree to which the operation of the Portage Diversion had very minimal impact on the lake,� he said during a news conference. “I think it had an impact, according
to the report, of .09 feet.� The 2011 flood around the lake’s perimeter inundated thousands of acres of ranchland, forced farmers to move their livestock to higher ground and damaged hundreds of cottages on Lake Manitoba. In response, the province paid hundreds of millions in flooding claims to farmers and property owners for their losses. Despite the compensation, landowners around the lake remain frustrated because the province has never admitted that it was an artificial flood. Farmers insist that the province deliberately flooded Lake Manitoba by expanding the capacity of the Portage Diversion and directing billions of litres of water from the Assiniboine into the lake. The provincial government report, which was audited by an independent engineering firm, rejected that notion. “It is noteworthy that in spite of the significant artificial inflow to Lake Manitoba from the Portage Diversion, there was only a nominal artificial effect on the Lake Manitoba water level,� the report said. Its authors based their conclusion on the assumption that water from the Assiniboine, which flows west to
!
"
east and south of the lake, would have jumped its banks and flowed into Lake Manitoba even if the Portage Diversion didn’t exist. “This means that during a large flood, a portion of the flows on the Portage Diversion are not artificial flows, as they would have occurred anyway under unregulated conditions,� the report said. It said the lake would have been lower from June 22 to Aug. 30, 2011, under natural conditions, or without flood control structures such as the diversion and the Fairford outlet at the north end of the lake, but not much lower. “The regulated peak water level was 817.05 feet on July 23, 2011, versus the computed unregulated peak water level of 816.75 feet on July 1, 2011,� the report said. “The artificial increase in peak water level of .3 feet resulted in an estimated 24,000 additional acres around the lake being flooded.� The report also said the province’s decision to excavate the Portage Diversion channel and expand its capacity from 25,000 cubic feet per second to 34,000 cubic feet per second contributed almost nothing to lake levels. “Restricting the flows on the Portage Diversion to the design capacity
of 25,000 cubic feet per second would have resulted in a peak water level that was only .09 feet lower.� Johnson said the province’s conclusions about the flood are contradictory. For instance, the report praises the diversion for sparing land and property downstream of Portage la Prairie. “Under unregulated conditions, without the benefit provided by the Portage Diversion and other flood protection infrastr ucture, the potential damage on the lower
Assiniboine River has been estimated to be $2.2 billion,� the report said. However, Johnson said that means the province claims the diversion prevented severe flooding between Portage and Winnipeg but also that the diversion had no impact on Lake Manitoba. “They release a report that states the water was so insignificant it raised Lake Manitoba an inch. How on earth could an inch of water on Lake Manitoba cause (billions) worth of damage elsewhere?�
!
LIG GHT YEARS AHEAD PROTINUSŽ seed-applied fertilizer delivers a nutrient boost that gives you faster emergence, larger seedlings and bigger roots. And a stronger start means you can look forward to stronger results at harvest. Use the technology that’s light years ahead. Ask your retailer for PROTINUS or visit PROTINUS.org.
%&'(&)*
) )
()& 3)&1)1 2 &0
' /0)1 ( 2 &0
"# $ % & ' (
) &* +, -# ' &*'
!" #$$$
." " & ' /( 0 ) &* $0 $(+ ' &*'
+#+ # #
1%) #2 3 + 45 67 & ' 8 9 ) &* 2- :+ ' &*'
++ ,- +.+!
3"2 " / 5 - ) &* %, + . ' &*'
!" ,
* ) 2 $ 3 & ' ; < ) &* " % ' &*'
++ ! ! !!.,
'& (' *2 0%
4 5& 2 46
014 &)%62
71''14 2
1 $) $ +#+ < * - < ) *0 ,.& +(% ' *0'
$!" + "#
$ + / ' ( ) /= /2& >2 ' /='
$$ -!, +"+
."$+ / & ' * ?) ;9 +%+ . ' ;9'
"+. #+"
2 " % & ' ( ) ;9 +%% ' ;9'
++ ! !.#!
ÂŽ
I N N O VAT I V E N U T R I E N T S
Š2013 Wolf TraxŽ, Growing ForwardŽ and PROTINUSŽ are registered trademarks of Wolf Trax, Inc. Not all products are registered in all areas. Contact protinus@wolftrax.com for more information or call 1-855-237-9653. 20199 WP
18
NEWS
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
WORLD FOOD DAY | BIOTECHNOLOGY
City becomes centre for World Food Day events International panel discusses biotechnology | B.t. corn has enabled farmers to vary planting season and reduce risks BY LES KLETKE FREELANCE WRITER
DES MOINES, Iowa — The celebration of World Food Day in Iowa has developed into an industry in true American fashion. As Florida has turned baseball spring training into a business that attracts tourists and generates millions of dollars each spring, Des Moines has transformed World Food Day into an event as only America could. The commercialism has not taken
A N
away from the recognition of agricultural scientist Norman Borlaug, the “father of the green revolution” who street banners proclaimed as “the man who saved a billion lives.” The three-day event features everything that is food, and true to form, protesters are also part of the celebration. They decry what they say is cold-hearted profiteering of multinationals like Monsanto and DuPont. Des Moines has set itself up to be the centre of the agricultural world for a week in October, and it does a
I M P O R T A N T
good job of living up to the billing. The state legislature is transformed into a banquet hall that hosts the presentation of the World Food Prize, while a large former city library has undergone a multimillion-dollar renovation to become the World Food Prize Hall of Laureates. Non-governmental organizations and aid organizations vie for attention in the trade show at the Marriott Hotel, which is the centre of World Food Day activities. However, amid all the fanfare, the focus of the event remains figuring
out how the world will be fed in the next two decades. This year, much of the celebration focused on the centenary of Borlaug’s birth in Cresco, Iowa, in March 1914, but a panel of farmers looked to the future and carried on his work with the next green revolution. Gabriela Cruz, who operates a farm in southern Portugal that has been in her family for 100 years, was part of a panel that brought together four farmers and was chaired by Borlaug ’s granddaughter, Julie Borlaug.
A N N O U N C E M E N T
To Western Canadian Growers Seed Hawk owes our success to the growers and dealers who share our vision. Today, we want to make an important announcement to all Western Canadian farmers. As of October 15, the Swedish agricultural equipment manufacturer Väderstad has increased its stake in Seed Hawk from 49 to 100 percent ownership. This will allow Seed Hawk to expand its operations in Langbank, Saskatchewan, even more than we had planned. The company will continue to be known as Seed Hawk, and our dealer and farm customers will work with the same Seed Hawk team they are familiar with. When Väderstad was considering investing in a North American factory, the Seed Hawk management felt strongly that there was no better place to do it than Langbank, Saskatchewan, where our current manufacturing plant is located. But to make an investment of that magnitude, Väderstad wanted controlling interest in the company. When my partner Brian Dean and I looked at what having an even larger factory expansion in Langbank could do for our employees, our community and our province, we felt the best decision was for us to sell. It was very important to Väderstad that Brian Dean and I maintained active, hands-on roles in Seed Hawk. So the two of us will keep doing what we do best – strategic product and market development. We will both be part of the Board of Directors at Seed Hawk, and I am pleased to continue as the company’s spokesman. We are also pleased to announce that Peter Clarke, formerly our General Manager, is now President and CEO of Seed Hawk. He will be an ideal leader in this exciting new part of the Seed Hawk story. This is a winning combination for the future. Seed Hawk and Väderstad have always shared a passion for agriculture and a vision of innovation that is relevant to farmers and the agriculture industry. The deal with Väderstad will allow significant growth at the plant in Langbank, both in manufacturing capacity and in job opportunities at Seed Hawk. We have a great relationship with the Väderstad owners and we know their long-term thinking means that they will continue to build a very strong company in Langbank. We look forward to many more growing seasons with you. Thank you,
PAT BEAUJOT Founder & Director, Seed Hawk Inc.
To find more information and watch interviews with Pat Beaujot, visit SeedHawk.com
Cruz, the third of four daughters, said it was a challenge for her father. “ ‘Who will take over the farm,’ they asked him. ‘One of the girls,’ he said.” Cruz went on to study agronomy and is a recognized leader in no-till in her country. “The European Union asks me to practise safe farming methods that supply them with food, they ask me to reduce the amount of water I use on my crops, they ask me to use less petroleum and control the emissions from my farm,” said Cruz. “But they have no idea of agriculture and what is involved. When I want to use biotechnology to do these things, they say it is wrong.” When asked if she had considered protesting and demonstrating to make her point, Cruz said demonstrations have little impact on governments. Farm associations with strong memberships carry much more value. She works with legislators in her country and the European Union to inform them of new technologies. “I respect that consumers want a choice, and that is fine,” she said. “I would like to have a choice as a producer to use the technology or not to. That is all I ask, is for a freedom of choice in my production.” Santiago Del Solar of Argentina, also part of the panel, outlined the variation of rainfall on his farm and said he has been able to vary his planting season for corn since the introduction of biotechnology and B.t. crops. “We reduce the risk from excessive heat or flooding because we no longer have to plant in a narrow window to avoid the insect season. We are now much more likely to get a crop and have a decent return.” Gilbert Arap Bor of Kenya, a small scale corn farmer and professor at the Catholic University of East Africa, said biotechnology has brought advances to his country but along with that come the threats of losing the European market. “I say we should be developing trade with our neighbours, and if Europe does not want our products, we will find other markets in Africa,” he said. “They will come to find us when they need our products.” His comment brought a response from Tanzania’s agriculture policy minister. “Why do we in Africa allow the Europeans to write our policy? They are banning B.t. crops because they are not ready for them. When it is right economically, they will accept them, but Afr ica is feeling the impacts.” He said myths about B.t. cotton, such as it reducing a man’s virility, were the type of thing that kept technology from being accepted. “Consumers say they do not want biotechnology, but when they are sick and want a cure, they accept the work of a scientist, yet they will not accept that reasoning on biotechnology,” Cruz said. “GMOs seemed to be banned close to an election. Are they more dangerous then?” FOR ANOTHER STORY FROM WORLD FOOD DAY EVENTS IN IOWA, SEE PAGE 73.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
FARMLIVING
19
A FAMILY AFFAIR The Wasyliks have found many educational opportunities for their children on their farm in Alberta, where they produce barley and oats and raise cattle, eggs and turkeys. | Page 21
FARM LIVING EDITOR: KAREN MORRISON | Ph: 306-665-3585 F: 306-934-2401 | E-MAIL: KAREN.MORRISON@PRODUCER.COM
FARM SAFETY | RISK MANAGEMENT
Training key to safe work environment Safety services, programs | Provinces have regulations that producers must follow
Mexican workers harvest pumpkins at Lepp Farm’s market gardens at Abbotsford, B.C., earlier this month. Delegates at the Canadian Agricultural Safety Association conference in Quebec Oct. 9-11 were told it’s important for producers to create safety plans and procedures for workers. That’s especially important for migrant workers who may not fully understand the language and culture, and for new workers who are unfamiliar with potential farm dangers. | KAREN MORRISON PHOTO FARM SAFETY | INJURY PREVENTION
Program makes safety a priority Workplace protocols | Injury prevention program helps identify dangers on the farm STORIES BY MARK CARDWELL FREELANCE WRITER
QUEBEC CITY — Yannick Lavoie knows about the difficulties in finding new farm workers. It’s why he puts a premium on the innovative injury prevention program used on the 4,500-head feedlot he manages in St. Anne de la Pérade, Que. “When a problem occurs between a person and a 1,500-pound animal,
YANNICK LAVOIE FEEDLOT MANAGER
you know who is going to win every time,” Lavoie said in a discussion held during the Canadian Agricul-
tural Safety Association’s annual meeting in Quebec City Oct. 9-11. “We make sure our new employees understand that and we take the measures needed to keep them safe (and) protect our business.” Lavoie said new workers at his operation are given a tour of the yard and study written standard operating procedures for every high-risk area where animals are handled. They can identify safety concerns at
monthly safety meetings. These protocols were developed with the help of a safety expert under a farm injury prevention program started in 2003 by Quebec’s Union des Producteurs Agricoles. It features annual inspections and recommendations by certified safety experts on areas as varied as machinery, configuration of work areas, worker education and training. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
QUEBEC CITY — The approach to farm safety is marked by regional disparities, but that doesn’t mean producers in different parts of the country can’t learn from one another. Just ask workplace security expert Glen Blahey. “No two provinces take the same approach in regards to workplace security,” said Blahey, an agricultural health and safety specialist with the Canadian Agricultural Safety Association and a former farm safety coordinator with the Manitoba labour department’s workplace safety and health branch. “But for producers everywhere, workplace safety is the same business risk management issue.” He said Quebec and British Columbia are the most progressive in terms of workplace safety programs available to producers. Producers in most other provinces, including Ontario and Manitoba, adhere or have access to more general workplace regulations and prevention services and programs. Alberta is making strides in workplace safety, but Blahey said it remains the only province where producers are liable to civil action if they don’t have a disability coverage plan. He said that CASA’s annual conferences, which are held in different provinces every year, help cross-pollinate ideas and approaches to farm safety. “Producers need to hear about the workplace safety and the importance of having a safety plan on their farm at every turn, and making sure that their employees are properly instructed and trained to do the things they are being asked to do,” said Blahey. “It always amazes me that a farmer who might not give the keys to his new $50,000 truck to his 16-year-old wouldn’t think twice about letting an untrained employee operate his $250,000 combine.”
FALL INTERNET 2013 AUCTION THIS ONLINE AUCTION EVENT RUNS NOVEMBER 7 - NOVEMBER 18, 2013 Bidding starts November 7 at 9 a.m. and ends November 18 at 9 p.m. CST SHARP!
Pre-register online at: www.producerauction.com
20
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE
It’s hard enough finding good employees … but it also takes a lot of time and hands-on training before they are effective. Why risk losing them to injuries that can be prevented with proper planning? MARTIN MÉTHOT WORKPLACE SECURITY EXPERT
About 500 of the 12,000 farms in Quebec with salaried workers are members of the program, which gives participating producers a reduction in workers compensation premiums. “An injury is always a dramatic event for the person involved and their loved ones,” said Lavoie. “But it also results in a loss of performance and profitability for our business. It’s hard enough finding good employees … but it also takes a lot of time and hands-on training before they are effective. Why risk losing them to injuries that can be prevented with proper planning?” Martin Méthot, a workplace security expert, said new workers cannot be expected to know how to handle machinery or see and understand dangers that more experienced employees know to avoid.
FARM LIVING “There are risks around every corner on a farm.” He said farm machinery poses a myriad of daily dangers such as rollovers, accidents, moving parts, noxious fumes and loud noises that can affect hearing. Méthot said producers need to be actively engaged in creating safety plans and procedures for workers, which is doubly important for migrant workers who may not fully understand the language and culture. “Farms are unique businesses where the owner works side by side with salaried employees on a daily basis,” he said. “Unlike in a company where the boss works alone behind closed doors, producers have an opportunity to lead by example in terms of workplace security.” Méthot said failure to do so puts both employees and the business at risk.
ALLERGIES | EPIPEN
Using allergy auto injectors HEALTH CLINIC
tell us how and when to use it, so that more people will know what to do?
A: CLARE ROWSON, MD
Q:
My teenaged son is severely allergic to bees. He ended up in the emergency ward after a bee sting and was prescribed an EpiPen in case he ever got stung again. I am concerned that he may not be able to use it in a panic or that others around may not know how to either. Can you
Many people end up in the emergency department with acute allergic or anaphylactic reactions when use of an auto-injector such as an EpiPen would have saved a lot of grief, or possibly a life. EpiPens contain a measured dose of epinephrine, which rapidly treats all of the most dangerous symptoms of anaphylaxis, including throat swelling, difficulty breathing and low blood pressure. Antihistamines work too, but often not fast enough to relieve the more life threatening symptoms. An auto-injector should be used as soon as the person with allergies has trouble breathing, feels tightness in the throat or feels faint and lightheaded. The injection can be made through clothes to save time. An EpiPen is the most commonly used epinephrine injector in this country. The others are similar but the cap colours may be different. To administer, open the cap and remove the pen from its carrier tube. Hold the injector in your dominant hand, making a fist. Keep fingers away from both ends to avoid pricking them. The end with the orange tip contains the needle and should be facing down. Use your other hand to pull off the blue safety release. If it is convenient, pull clothing away from outer upper arm or outer thigh area, otherwise inject through the clothing. To inject, swing and push firmly against the skin or clothing until you hear a click. The device should be at a 90 degree angle or perpendicular to the thigh. Hold in place for 10 seconds to allow all the medicine to be injected. The cartridge window will become obscured. Then remove the pen from the thigh. The orange needle cover will extend to automatically cover the needle. Massage the injected area for 10 seconds. Call 911 in case further treatment is required. Larger sized adults may require a second dose or if symptoms do not improve after five minutes. Do not use the same injector as each machine only contains one dose. EpiPens should come in packages of two. Properly dispose of the used device by taking it to your local hospital or pharmacy. Do not put it in the garbage. Clare Rowson is a retired medical doctor in Belleville, Ont. Contact: health@producer.com.
ANAPHYLAXIS Some food and insect bites can trigger a severe reaction known as anaphylaxis. This reaction can cause shock and is life threatening. Signs and symptoms of anaphylaxis include: • Loss of consciousness • Lightheadedness • Severe shortness of breath • A rapid, weak pulse • Skin rash • Nausea and vomiting • Swelling airways, which can block breathing Even if symptoms improve after an emergency epinephrine injection, visit the emergency department to make sure symptoms don’t return when the effects of the injection wear off.
FARM LIVING
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
21
FAR LEFT: Charlotte, Rick, Johanna, Alexander and Nicholas Wasylik enjoy nature and bird watching and view their Alberta organic farm as a venue for learning. | MARY MACARTHUR PHOTOS
ON THE FARM | EDUCATION
Nature, environment, travel play role in children’s education
ABOVE: Charlotte leads sheep and lambs down the alley with a bucket of grain. The sheep are new to the farm. LEFT: Alexander, left, and Nicholas press apples to make cider.
Flexible home schooling | The Wasyliks help on the farm, raising animals and growing produce BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU
VERMILION, Alta. — The Wasylik family is like any other on a busy fall day. They breathe easier now that the crop is harvested, but bushels of apples still need to be turned into cider, jars of jams and pickles are still on the kitchen counter and need to be taken to the cold room, the sauerkraut is in the corner slowly turning from cabbage to kraut and the garden has yet to be cleaned up before snow. Despite the work remaining before winter, there is a sense of calm in the family that includes three children: Charlotte, 16, Nicholas, 14, and Alexander, 12. The home-schooled children have yet to start their studies for the year and are able to pitch in and help with harvest. “It helps to have a very flexible schedule,” said Johanna. The Wasyliks didn’t set out to home school their children, but a drought in 2002 forced them to sell their cattle, leaving them free to travel. The family spent nine months with Johanna’s family in Nevis, West Indies. “It was a nice education for everyone,” said Rick. While in Nevis, Charlotte attended an old-fashioned British-style kindergarten where she was given a solid start to her education. Instead of repeating the year when they returned to Canada, the Wasyliks opted for home schooling. “We look at each year as it comes,” said Johanna. “It seems to be working. The kids are enjoying themselves and learning.” It’s that freedom from a regular classroom that has allowed the family to take other trips to the West Indies, or to Johanna’s home in New York. It was also in Nevis, on a later trip, that Charlotte fell in love with birds.
She had noticed the colourful American gold finch at the feeders at her Vermilion home, but the Caribbean island was full of birds with bright plumage, and she was soon hooked on birds. Charlotte recently returned from six weeks at the Long Point Bird Observatory, a research and bird monitoring station in Ontario focused on the conservation of birds and their habits. Birding has become an obsession for Charlotte since she spied the American gold finch at age 11. She now takes part in the local Christmas bird count and the May bird count of returning birds and has started her own Alberta Birds Facebook page, with 600 followers. Charlotte counted 20 species of birds during the last Christmas bird count and identified 75 to 80 birds when they returned in May. The toughest birds to identify are gulls, which can look different depending on their age. “It takes a lot of practice. I just kept looking at bird books and memorizing,” said Charlotte. Charlotte started a bird blog during a trip to the West Indies in 2011 as a way to record her bird sightings in a more permanent location and document the sightings. It also has a large following of bird enthusiasts. Johanna said the birding community has welcomed Charlotte into their fold and are willing to share their knowledge with the young birder. While her younger brothers complain about her bird chatter, they occasionally ask Charlotte the name of birds they see fly past the farm. Charlotte’s next wish list trip is the Cornell Lab of Ornithology to study birds and other wildlife. Having children with a flexible schedule also helps with the family’s certified organic farm, where the family raises barley, oats, cattle, eggs, broilers, turkeys and hay. Rick didn’t grow up on a farm, but
he spent a lot of time on his grandparents’ and relatives’ nearby farm, was in three 4-H beef clubs and always knew farming was still in his blood. “It’s fun. There are so many ways to use your abilities on a farm,” he said. With only a small farm, and Rick working full time in his construction business, the Wasyliks knew they couldn’t compete with large conventional farmers. Instead, they chose to be organic. It was during a trip to an organic food market in Herefordshire, England, that the couple realized the potential for organics on their small farm. The couple chose to raise their children on the farm instead of Johanna’s New York City home. While their Vermilion home is different than Johanna’s private school life in New York, the family believes they have plenty of opportunities living in central Alberta. It’s not uncommon for the family to drive to Edmonton or Vermilion for a play or even look at the slough across their road for a natural history lesson. When a pipeline recently went through the slough, the family took an interest, and Charlotte joined the biologists in the amphibian relocation program. She also joined biologists in identifying birds in the area before the pipeline came through. It’s those kind of opportunities the family tries to take advantage of as one more way of living and learning on the farm.
22
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FARM LIVING RECIPES | PASTA
Pasta dishes: quality carbohydrates at work TEAM RESOURCES
SARAH GALVIN, BSHEc
Clockwise from left: Spaghetti aglio e olio, sweet potato gnocchi and stuffed pasta shells are family favourites. | SARAH GALVIN PHOTOS
Add your favourite vegetables to pasta for a healthy, filling meal
P
asta is rich in B vitamins, keeping the skin, blood cells and nervous, immune and digestive systems healthy. Many pastas are also enriched with iron. It is a quality carbohydrate made with durum that digests slowly and keeps you feeling satisfied longer and a quick meal to prepare. Add vegetables, meat and cheese to the sauce for a balanced meal with many variations. How to Boil Pasta Bring water to a full boil. The standard ratio is one quart (1 L) of water for every 1/4 pound (250 g) of pasta. Do not add oil to the water. If the pasta is slick with oil, the sauce won’t stick. Salt boiling water, using kosher rather than iodized salt. The standard ratio is one tablespoon (15 mL) for every two quarts (2 L) water. Stir pasta after adding to boiling water and stir frequently until cooked. The length of time to cook depends upon how it will be served. If tossing with oil or an uncooked sauce, cook all the way to al dente (to the tooth). You can bite through the pasta without any grit inside the noodle and it’s also not soggy. When serving with a cooked sauce, drain the noodles just before al dente. If baking the pasta dish, leave them more firm. Reserve about a cup of the pasta water to thin the sauce, if necessary. The starch in the water will thicken and improve the texture. Do not rinse cooked pasta unless the recipe calls for it. The starch helps the sauce cling to it. Rinsing can make the pasta soggy and dilute the flavour of the sauce. For best flavour, don’t serve it in a heap. If you are cooking the pasta in the sauce, do not stir a lot. That will turn the pasta into mush.
SWEET POTATO GNOCCHI WITH SAGE BROWN BUTTER Gnocchi are dumplings served throughout Italy and usually made with potatoes. Sweet potatoes are a nice change.
WE’RE GROWING WITH AGRICULTURE.
1 lb. sweet potatoes 1/2 c. fresh ricotta
400 g 125 mL
In this business, people make the difference. Like you, we love what we do and we don’t let much slow us down. That’s how, through crazy weather and economic ups and downs, ATB Financial™ has helped Alberta farmers, ranchers and producers succeed. Our roots are here, and we take heart in the patience and knowledge of people whose hard work sustains the land and promises a solid future for our industry. Backed by knowledgeable professionals, ATB Financial will continue to provide the best products and services to support you and to make Alberta agriculture flourish. ATB Financial is a founding member of Ag for Life, a program that delivers educational programming to improve rural and farm safety. Ag for Life also builds a genuine understanding and appreciation of the impact agriculture has on the lives of all Albertans. To learn more about Ag for Life, go to agricultureforlife.ca. Visit ATB Financial at atb.com/agriculture.
06/13-21670_05
Gnocchi can be made with potato or sweet potato.
FARM LIVING 2 tbsp. finely grated 30 mL Parmesan cheese pinch of nutmeg salt and pepper to taste 2 c. all purpose 500 mL flour (approximately) 1/2 c. unsalted butter 125 mL 2 tbsp. chopped fresh 60 mL sage leaves 2 slices prosciutto, chopped, optional freshly grated Parmesan cheese Preheat oven to 375 F (190 C). Prick sweet potatoes with a fork, wrap in foil and place in oven on a baking sheet. Bake until tender, about one hour. When done, remove foil and cool to room temperature. Remove skin, mash and stir in ricotta, nutmeg, Parmesan, salt and pepper. Add flour, 1/2 cup (125 mL) at a time, gently mixing with a fork or your hands. Continue adding flour until it becomes a dough that you can roll into ropes. You want a soft dough. Don’t add more flour than necessary or the gnocchi will be tough and doughy. Cut off a piece of dough and roll into a half inch (3 cm) thick rope on a well floured surface. Cut rope into one inch (5 cm) pieces. Roll each gnocchi across the back of fork tines and set on a parchment lined baking sheet. Place them in freezer until ready to use. If not using right away, place the frozen gnocchi in a tightly sealed freezer bag. They will keep in the freezer up to three months. To serve, bring a large pot of water to a full boil and add salt. Add gnocchi and cook. When they float, they are done. Drain and serve with sauce. Sauce: Browned butter is also called beurre noisette. It is simple but the flavour is complex. The aromas are a nutty caramel and slightly sweet. Melt butter in saucepan and continue to heat until it turns brown but does not burn. Strain to remove milk solids and return butter to pan. Add prosciutto and saute until almost crispy, then add sage leaves. Toss with boiled gnocchi and serve. Garnish with freshly grated Parmesan.
melted. Makes about 18 large shells.
SPAGHETTI AGLIO E OLIO This is spaghetti flavoured with garlic and olive oil. 2 tbsp. 1 lb. 1/3 c. 8 large
kosher salt 30 mL dried spaghetti 500 g olive oil 80 mL garlic cloves cut into thin slivers 1/2 tsp. crushed red pepper 3 mL flakes 1/2 c. minced fresh 125 mL parsley 1 c. freshly grated 250 mL Parmesan cheese, plus extra for serving Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Add salt and pasta and cook to al dente. Set aside one cup (250 mL) of the pasta cooking water before draining. Meanwhile, heat olive oil over
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
23
medium heat in a pot large enough to hold the pasta. Add garlic and cook for two minutes, stirring frequently, until it just begins to turn golden on the edges. Add red pepper flakes and cook for 30 seconds more. Carefully add reserved pasta cooking water to garlic and oil and bring to a boil. Lower heat, add salt to taste and simmer for about five minutes, until liquid is reduced by about a third. Add drained pasta to the garlic sauce and toss. Remove from heat, add parsley and Parmesan and toss well. Allow pasta to rest for five minutes for sauce to be absorbed. Serve warm with extra Parmesan on the side. Sarah Galvin is a home economist, teacher and farmers’ market vendor at Swift Current, Sask., and a member of Team Resources. She writes a blog at allourfingersinthepie. blogspot.ca. Contact: team@producer.com.
Ricotta and spinach are used to stuff pasta shells.
RICOTTA AND SPINACH STUFFED PASTA SHELLS
Cook pasta shells to not quite al dente, drain and set aside. Steam spinach, squeeze out water and finely chop. If using frozen chopped spinach, thaw and squeeze out water. Add ricotta, Parmesan, sundried tomato, nutmeg, salt and pepper. Mix to combine. Saute crushed red chilies, pine nuts and garlic until just turning brown and add to spinach mixture. Cover bottom of baking dish with tomato sauce. Stuff pasta shells with filling and arrange over tomato sauce. Top with more tomato sauce and grated mozzarella. Cover and bake at 350 F (190 C) until warmed through and cheese is
FARM&FAMILY Get succession planning that works for both. Passing your family business to the next generation can seem like a daunting task. As easy as it is to put off, it’s vital to the future welfare for you and your family. With more than 65 years of business succession experience, MNP can assist you with every aspect of the succession process including tax and estate planning, wealth and asset management and valuations. A well-structured plan can also result in significant tax savings and increased value of your operation. Taking stock of your own situation is the first important step. We’re here to help you develop and complete a plan that gives you peace of mind and allows you to successfully transition on your terms. For more information on our TransitionSMART™ program, contact Bruce Tait at 1.800.661.8097 or e-mail bruce.tait@mnp.ca.
AC C O U N T I N G > C O N S U LT I N G > TA X
10/13-21628
1 pkg. large shell shaped 500 g pasta 1 c. ricotta cheese 250 mL 1 bag fresh spinach or 1 pkg. frozen spinach pinch of nutmeg salt & pepper, to taste 2 tbsp. Parmesan cheese 30 mL 3 c. tomato sauce 750 mL 1 c. mozzarella, grated 250 mL 2 tbsp. sundried tomatoes 30 mL 2 cloves garlic, minced 1 tsp. crushed red 5 mL chilies, optional 2 tbsp. toasted pine nuts, 30 mL coarsely chopped
24
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FARM LIVING RURAL BUSINESS | BED AND BREAKFAST
B&B offers haven for rest, romance Homegrown produce | Guests enjoy the Italian cooking and relaxing atmosphere BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
Alfredo Converso and Linda Osachoff opened their doors in 2011 and hope to offer canoeing, horseback riding, snowshoeing and cross-country skiing opportunities to attract guests to their bed and breakfast year round. | KAREN BRIERE PHOTOS
CANORA, Sask. — The man on the phone sounded nervous. So much so that Linda Osachoff wasn’t exactly sure what to think of this guest booking a room at La Campagna, the bed and breakfast she and
VT530 G PROVEN P PR PROV ROV VEN VE EN
®
More
BUSHELS
More EFFICIENCY Top yielding and easy to grow. Proven VT 530 G, the new high performance, Genuity ® Roundup Ready ® canola hybrid. With resistance to Fusarium Wilt, medium maturity, and excellent standability, you’ll swath faster and combine more efficiently, while putting more bushels in your bin. Contact your local CPS retail location and get the power to grow with Proven VT 530 G and the entire Proven Seed portfolio.
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 BiotechnologyDerived Plant Products in Commodity Crops. This product has been approved for import into key export markets with functioning regulatory systems. Any crop or material produced from this product 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 confirm their buying position for this product. Excellence Through Stewardship® is a registered trademark of Excellence Through Stewardship. ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Roundup Ready® crops contain genes that confer tolerance to glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup® brand agricultural herbicides. Roundup® brand agricultural herbicides will kill crops that are not tolerant to glyphosate. Genuity and Design®, Genuity®, Roundup Ready® and Roundup® are registered trademarks of Monsanto Technology LLC, Monsanto Canada, Inc. licensee. ©2013 Monsanto Canada Inc. Proven® Seed is a registered trademark of Crop Production Services (Canada) Inc. CPS CROP PRODUCTION SERVICES and Design is a registered trademark of Crop Production Services, Inc.
her husband, Alfredo Converso, operate from their farm home east of Canora. But he and his girlfriend arrived, supper was served, and the hosts left them alone to eat. “How was everything?” they asked, returning to clear dishes. “It was perfect,” the guest replied, sounding much more relaxed. “She said yes.” Not all the guests come to this B & B with romantic pursuits in mind, but it’s easy to see why they might. From the great room, where the proposal took place, the land gently slopes to the Whitesand River. A large and graceful willow tree dominates the huge yard, which is soon to include a two-acre garlic field. It already contains vegetables, flowers, grapes and herbs, which Converso uses in his many recipes. The work involved is immense but worthwhile. They have seen the stress melt away from their guests since they opened two years ago. This is Osachoff ’s home. She was raised just down the road and has lived on this particular land east of Canora since 1984. Currently, she is acting chief executive officer of Crossroads Credit Union in Canora. Converso, as his name and penchant for cooking suggest, was raised in Italy’s Puglia region and came to Canada in the mid-1960s. By a happy coincidence, La Campagna means company in the language of Osachoff’s Russian heritage and countryside in his. The name reflects what they strive for: to make their guests feel part of their family and their country home. They are apparently doing a good job: La Campagna was selected one of the top 10 bed and breakfasts in the province this year by guests who filled out comment cards. However, they didn’t start out to open a bed and breakfast. “We wanted space for the kids,” said Osachoff. Three sons, a daughter and a granddaughter live from Vancouver to Montreal. So between July 2007 and April 2008 they added on to the small farm home and renovated to add the great room and two suites. One suite is a walkout from the lower level, next to what Converso uses as a summer kitchen. The other is on the main floor but separate from the communal space. However, they then needed to decide what to do with all the space CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
FARM LIVING
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
25
HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION | COMPLAINT PROCEDURE
Reporting workplace abuse will improve lives of everyone SPEAKING OF LIFE
JACKLIN ANDREWS, BA, MSW
Q:
My daughter recently walked off her job because of the verbal abuse she received from her immediate supervisor. Apparently his abuse is acceptable behaviour in the company but I know that it is not right. Rumour has it that the supervisor has more than once abused
his wife and that he verbally abused other women who have since left the company. The management of the company just sweeps these problems under the rug and hires replacement workers for those who have left. Something needs to change. Where in Alberta can my daughter go to lay a complaint?
A:
Workplace abuse is in many ways similar to the abuse seen on playgrounds when children are bullying each other around the sandbox. The bully is concerned about his ranking in the social hierarchy and is trying to impress other children. One of the most effective antidotes to playground bullying is social isola-
tion. In other words, the resolution for bullying is encouraging other children to ignore the bully, leaving him out of group activities. This ultimately confuses and inhibits the bully. The same is true in the workplace setting. Your daughter’s supervisor is trying to attract someone’s attention. He is not likely to change until his environment changes. The company needs a workplace makeover. The best option for your daughter is the Human Rights Commission. With the exception of British Columbia, all Canadian provinces have such commissions. British Columbia has a Human Rights Tribunal that will adjudicate workplace problems but it will not investigate them. If the commission agrees to help
your daughter, it might lead to a workplace study to determine how toxic working conditions are for women employed by the company. It has the ability to apply sanctions if it thinks that the company needs to be encouraged to add sensitivity to its employee relations programs. Before your daughter goes to the commission, she should formally document the abuse. The more specific she can be, the easier it is for the commission to do its job. Her document will be more readily accepted if it ignores rumours of the supervisor abusing his wife and other women. Those are issues for the courts. She also needs to clarify what she hopes to gain by stepping forward
with her concerns. Would she like her job back in the company? Would she like a financial settlement to compensate her for her losses when she had to leave and find other employment? Would she like to see changes that would lead to a more sensitive working environment for everyone? Nothing is going to change unless your daughter or someone who has been in her position steps up and complains to the right people. That may seem to be unfair to your daughter but it is a small price to pay for helping your community evolve into a more rewarding and satisfying home for everyone. Jacklin Andrews is a family counsellor from Saskatchewan. Contact: jandrews@ producer.com.
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE
when the kids weren’t visiting? The B & B opened in May 2011. “We’ve had great support from Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and repeat people from Kansas City,” said Osachoff. Peak season for guests is May to the end of August, which is also when Converso is tending the garden and canning tomatoes, drying herbs and preparing for winter eating. An aficionado of the slow food movement, he isn’t a classically trained chef but says he must have learned something about cooking from his mother. “I grew up in a two-room house,” he said. “You were either in the kitchen or the bedroom, so I was in the kitchen. I must have absorbed something.” Converso has earned rave reviews for his homemade pasta and Italian menus. The couple caters occasionally, usually on-site, for up to 40 people. They accommodate special dietary and menu requests. One of the more unusual was a request for lobster ravioli. He said the need for good quality garlic, and the possibility of selling it, has led to the new venture. The garlic will be considered natural. Although he will be growing it organically, it won’t be certified. Guests are welcome to roam the property, pick berries or pull a weed or two. Osachoff and Converso are hoping to arrange canoeing on the river and horseback riding in the summer and snowshoeing and crosscountry skiing in the winter. “Our experience is that people mainly come here to chill,” he said. One guest came to recover from a health issue. A business traveller stays every few weeks. Couples are often seeking to reconnect, and some simply want peace and quiet. “Honestly, we can say we have not had one bad experience,” said Osachoff. Most who arrive as guests leave as friends.
Experience the complete picture with WR859 CL You won’t miss a single detail when you choose WR859 CL. You’ll get excellent yield and protein potential with a strong disease resistance package including the best rating for Fusarium head blight resistance available in a CWRS wheat variety. WR859 CL is only available at your Richardson Pioneer Ag Business Centre. PIONEER® FOR THE SALE AND DISTRIBUTION OF SEED IS A REGISTERED TRADE-MARK OF PIONEER HI-BRED INTERNATIONAL, INC. AND IS USED UNDER LICENSE BY THE UNAFFILIATED COMPANY RICHARDSON PIONEER LIMITED. Always read and follow label directions. The Syngenta logo is a trademark of a Syngenta Group Company. © 2013 Syngenta.
26
NEWS
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
READERS’ LETTERS | HOUSEHOLD HINTS HELPFUL
Reader appreciates Emmie Oddie’s recipes, advice Western Producer readers have moulded the farms, villages, towns and cities throughout the West into the rich, vibrant communities we see today. We’ve enjoyed being there alongside for the past 90 years. As part of 90th anniversary celebrations, our Tell Us Your Story project invites readers to share their memories and connections.
VERNA BOEHM SASKATOON
W
hen Ernie and I were married in 1960, we received The Western Producer for free because Ernie shipped grain to the pool. We already received the Saskatoon Star Phoenix, but I hadn’t seen a weekly paper since growing up on the farm where my family received the Free Press Prairie Farmer. Anyway, here we were with the WP arriving in our home each week, and I liked it. It was an arrangement that became more comfortable with the passing of years, so when we had to pay for it, we bought it.
I think it began costing $5 for two years. Then it went gradually up and up until it was as now, 53 years later, about $90 per year including taxes. One of the big features in the WP for me was Emmie Oddie’s I’d Like to Know page. Here were recipes submitted by prairie people that
Emmie tested in her own kitchen. Here were household hints, letters from readers with requests for information and hints of their own. In the pre-television days, this was the where-to-go page for canning, sewing, gardening, care of house plants and more.
Emmie was powerful and amazing in the life of prairie folk. She always started her page with a chatty essay about how her week went with those personal glimpses into the lives of her husband and children, Langford, Bill, Rosemary, and later, grandchildren. How eagerly I read her page. It is sadly ironic but perhaps fitting that the WP would celebrate 90 years of publication at the same time that Emmie would pass into eternity three years short of 100. Emmie encouraged people to push on and have dreams and goals. She cited people like Nellie McClung, Violet McNaughton and
others as role models. The women’s movement was important. To improve the role of women was to improve the role of human kind. There are many other appealing features in the WP. Ernie always enjoyed the classifieds and had a special interest in stationary engines and all retired machinery that might be parked in the trees in some remote part of a farm site. Western People was popular in our house with the bird watcher page and the pictures and biographies of talented and interesting people. These are some of the ways that the WP has worked its way into our lives over 50 plus years. In 2012 at the Saskatoon Exhibition, we stopped at The Western Producer booth. The person in charge said, “have you ever thought of subscribing to The Western Producer?” We said, “we have had a subscription for 52 years.” “That’s a long time,” was the reply. We agreed and said, “and I don’t suppose we’ll be cancelling anytime soon. You see, the old Western Producer just might be the glue that’s holding this very satisfactory marriage together.”
READERS’ STORIES | DEVOTED FAN
Reader enjoys WP for 90 years HELEN BERGEN LACOMBE, ALTA.
C
KEEPING IT STRAIGHT.
REBATES! Brandt is celebrating $1billion in annual revenue and we’re thanking our customers by offering special rebates throughout the year.
With roots firmly planted in Western Canada, no one knows precision agriculture better than Brandt. Our innovative Topcon product line will allow you to increase efficiency, improve yields and reduce input and fuel costs throughout the entire farming cycle. And with the Brandtnet GNSS RTK Network providing you with real-time correction services, you’re guaranteed easy operation with reduced equipment and operating costs. That’s Powerful Value. Delivered.
Visit thanksabillion.ca for details.
ongratulations on your 90th birthday. We are the same age. I came to Canada with my parents in 1927 when I was four years old. They subscribed to your paper, and I have read it ever since I was old enough to do so, starting with the comics, of course. We looked forward to the weekly mail, which arrived by train. As newlyweds, we moved to British Columbia, and The Producer followed us there, also when we started farming in Saskatchewan. I especially appreciated Emmie Oddie’s column at the time and now the Team Resources column. Now we are retired and my husband has limited eyesight. I read The Western Producer to him, first the weather, then the Crop Report, Cowboy Logic, Open Forum and so on. It is interesting, informative and helpful. Thank you. Congratulations and best wishes to you all at our favourite paper.
brandt.ca 1-888-2BRANDT “He’s not so smart. I had to show him three times before he got the hang of it.”
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
27
AFRICA | ANIMAL DISEASES
Activists jeopardize livestock vaccine use An anti-vaccine movement may hinder Canadian research project targeting African animal diseases BY BARRY WILSON OTTAWA BUREAU
A Canadian-financed project to develop vaccines to inoculate livestock in sub-Saharan Africa against infectious diseases could produce results within three years, says the project leader. However, anti-vaccination politics could delay or stymie their introduction. Celebrated Canadian researcher Lorne Babiuk leads a project that uses advanced DNA technology to develop vaccine antidotes to deadly and destructive African animal diseases such as Rift Valley Fever, West Nile Virus and lumpy skin disease. Babiuk, the former head of the Veterinary Infectious Disease Organization (now the Vaccine Infectious
Cattle traders wait for customers at a livestock market in Mogadishu, Somalia, Oct. 15. Vaccination research further south in sub-Saharan regions could have wide reaching effects in reducing common livestock diseases throughout Africa. | REUTERS/ISMAIL TAXTA PHOTO Disease Organization) in Saskatoon, is now vice-president of research at the University of Alberta and part of the agriculture, life and environment faculty. He said during a lecture in Ottawa Oct. 8 that success would save the economy of southern African billions of dollars, reduce human illness and economic side-effects and protect European and North Americans from spread of the diseases. “Depending on the funding, we’ll hopefully have the vaccines devel-
oped in another three years, but then it depends on how long the regulatory and other aspects lasts,” he said in an interview following his speech to the International Development Research Centre, which funds the work. “That’s out of our hands.” However, the “regulatory and other aspects” part of the project is the greatest problem. Babiuk complained that anti-vaccination activists in North America, Western Europe and Africa are the
greatest threat to seeing the results of the work save lives. “The science is the easy part,” he said. “I wouldn’t say we’ve lost the battle. It’s a battle we have to continue to fight, but the anti-vaccine lobby group is really quite strong and they have all kinds of reasons why vaccines won’t work or are bad. That’s the challenge we have: how do we contain that very small but vocal group who then convince the less informed to start questioning.”
Babiuk leads a group of scientists that stretches from the U of A and VIDO to the University of Manitoba and scientists in the South African capital of Pretoria. The project, which creates vaccines built from the DNA profile of diseases, began two years ago when IDRC agreed to invest $2 million. “Without IDRC, this wouldn’t be happening,” he said. He hopes the private sector begins to invest once the commercialization potential is in sight.
Join the movement Scout fields for weed escapes
& keep equipment clean.
Optimize weed control on your farm. Now is a great time to inspect your fields for weed escapes, uncontrolled weeds and decreases in weed control performance. As you move from field to field, remember to keep your equipment clean. This will help minimize the spread of weed seeds across the farm.
To find out more about how to implement a successful weed management strategy for your farm visit www.rrwms.ca. The solution takes all of us. ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Monsanto and vine design and Roundup Ready® are registered trademarks of Monsanto Technology LLC, Monsanto Canada, Inc. licensee. ©2013 Monsanto Canada Inc.
28
NEWS
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
AG NOTES JUNIOR GARDENERS RAISE FUNDS Thirty-five children have raised $3,215 for the Canadian Foodgrains Bank’s Acres of Hope growing project in Rivers, Man., by selling fresh produce and home-baked goods. Esther Krahn and her nine grandchildren, who had previously raised money for the foodgrains bank by selling corn, led the sale during three days in August. Krahn said they were helped by the local 4-H club, which assisted at the sale and donated baked goods. Fifteen families were involved in the sale. Most of the children involved were from the Rivers Baptist Church, but others in the community also participated. Among them was eight-year-old Sera Gilbert, who got
involved after seeing the first week of the market. “I asked if I could work here for the next two sales because I wanted to help others who have no food,” she said. Every child had a job to do at the market. Toddlers helped older children put produce into bags for sale, while older children served customers. The Acres of Hope growing project is one of more than 200 across Canada that raises money for the foodgrains bank every year. PULSE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR APPOINTED The Manitoba Pulse Growers Association has hired Larry Taylor as its executive director. The association’s current executive director, Roxanne Lewko, is going on
a one-year maternity leave beginning in January. Taylor obtained his masters of science in agriculture from the University of Manitoba and his masters of business administration from the Olin School of Business in St. Louis, Missouri. He spent 22 years in various positions of increasing responsibility with Monsanto, including research and development manager, product development manager, director of growth and business development, and technology director of biotechnology and seed. Since 2002, Taylor has worked at Technology Focus Inc., an agricultural consulting firm. MPGA has contracted Larry for a 15 month term. For more information, contact the MPGA at 204-745-6488, www. manitobapulse.ca or roxanne@ manitobapulse.ca.
BIRD WATCHING PROJECT People who feed birds in their farmyards or backyards can support bird research and conservation by joining Project FeederWatch and sharing information about birds that visit the feeders between November and April. The information will help scientists at Bird Studies Canada and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology track changes in bird numbers and movements. The 27th season of Project FeederWatch begins Nov. 9 and runs until early April. Participants count the number and kinds of birds at their feeders and enter the information on the FeederWatch website or on printed forms. FeederWatch results provide a
It’s
Unanimous!
detailed picture of weekly changes in bird distribution and abundance. Last season, there were 2,800 Canadian and 17,000 American participants in the project. There are four ways to register in Canada: • Fill out the online form at www. birdscanada.org/volunteer/pfw/. • Email pfw@birdscanada.org. • Write to P.O. Box 160, Port Rowan, Ont., N0E 1M0 (enclose a $35 cheque to Bird Studies Canada). • Call Bird Studies Canada at 888448-2473. A $35 enrolment fee is required and includes a Bird Studies Canada membership and four issues of BirdWatch Canada magazine. MANA MANAGER APPOINTED MANA Canada recently announced Kevin Jacobson will join the company in the new position of Canadian portfolio manager. He will be responsible for managing MANA Canada’s extensive product portfolio, as well as leading the new product development and innovation program. Before joining MANA Canada, Jacobson spent 25 years working in the agriculture industry for Cargill AgHorizons, Monsanto, Richardson International Limited and most recently WinField Solutions as its Canadian business development manager.
COMING EVENTS
Emerge victorious with nitrogen and phosphate.
Nov. 3-10: FarmFair International, Edmonton (www.farmfair.ca) Nov. 10-12: Canadian Bison Association convention, Delta Regina, Regina (CBA, 306-522-4766) Nov. 11-16: Canadian Western Agribition, Evraz Place, Regina (306565-0565, info@agribition.com, www.agribition.com) Nov. 20-21: North American Consulting School (NACS) Investing in Agriculture and Food, Calgary (Adele Buettner, 306-249-3512, office@ agribiz.ca, cmc-canada.ca/go/nacs) Nov. 26-27: Canfax Cattle Market Forum, Deerfoot Inn and Casino, Calgary (canfax.ca/CFX_forum_2013)
The formidable one-two punch in TagTeam® continues to knock out the competition. It beat single-action (nitrogen-only) competitors in farmer-conducted, head-to-head trials by a walloping 8%.* TagTeam boosts nitrogen and phosphate uptake to remain the world’s only undisputed MultiAction® champion. Give your crops twice the fight right from the start with TagTeam.
For more coming events, see the Community Calendar, section 0300, in the Western Producer Classifieds.
MultiAction® Legume Fertility
www.UseTagTeam.ca 1-888-744-5662
Smart farmers read the fine print. *On average, TagTeam pea and lentil inoculants outperformed competitor single-action (nitrogen-fixing only) inoculants by 8% in western Canadian independent large-plot research trials. That’s an average increase of 2.7 bushels per acre. Summary of 30 lentil and 85 pea trials conducted between 1997 and 2012. ® TagTeam and MultiAction are registered trademarks of Novozymes A/S. All rights reserved. 13017 08.13
© 2013 Novozymes. 2011-22927-02
Novozymes is the world leader in bioinnovation. Together with customers across a broad array of industries we create tomorrow’s industrial biosolutions, improving our customers’ business and the use of our planet’s resources. Read more at www.novozymes.com.
MAILBOX History book: Reflections — Dalum and area (Danish pioneer settlement south of Drumheller, Alta.), published in 1990. Hardcopy, 395 pages, $40 plus $5 postage and handling. Order from: R. Pallesen, Box 158, Drumheller, Alta. T0J 0Y0, Ph: 403-823-9796.
“Of course there is room for advancement. You certainly can’t go down from here.”
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
FALL INTERNET 2013 AUCTION
THIS ONLINE AUCTION EVENT RUNS NOVEMBER 7 - NOVEMBER 18, 2013 Bidding starts November 7 at 9 a.m. and ends November 18 at 9 p.m. CST SHARP!
Pre-register online at: Allan $3,304
SELLING PRICE
OPENING BID
SELLING $ Allan PRICE 3,140
330
$
ART 260 dual loop air seeder rate and blockage monitor, displays your rate in seeds per acre or pounds per acre. There are two sensor loops, one for seed and one for fertilizer. The monitor uses infra-red seed flow sensors. You can have up to 120 sensors for each loop. Fast low rate and blockage detection in 1 second or less. Blocked runs are indicated by the number of their sequence in the loop. FOB Saskatoon, SK.
Heats up to 1,600 sq.ft., Max BTU/hr 40,000. Maximum log length 16 inches. Top and Front load design. Efficiency 72.1%, EPA 3.4 gr/hr. Top or Rear vent 6 inches. Ash pan. Options included: Bottom and Rear heat shields. Warming Shelves are not included. Winning Bidder must pickup stove by January 20, 2014. FOB Athabasca, AB.
314
$
SELLING $ Allan PRICE 2,645
OPENING BID
265
$
Watermark Beach Resort Vacation Package Included in the Fall Auction Package $2,645.00. Value each is: 5 night stay with two signature bathrobes on arrival. Valid Monday to Friday. July and August are based on availability.
Agtron Enterprises Inc.
Watermark Beach Resort
301 Tower Road South
242 Robin Crescent
P.O. Box 700 - 15 Park Place
Athabasca, AB 780-628-4835 www.noutilitybills.com
Saskatoon, SK 1-800-667-0640 www.agtron.com
Osoyoos, BC 250-495-5500 www.watermarkbeachresort.com
Wild Rose Hydronics
SELLING $ Prince PRICE Albert 30,805
OPENING BID
Art 260 Dual Loop Air Seeder Rate and Blockage Monitor with 12-1 inch ID Sensors
Resolute Acclaim Wood Stove Classic Black
Item # 126
www.producerauction.com
Item # 334
OPENING BID
3,081
$
12x24 Deluxe Knotty Pine Cabin
Deluxe Knotty Pine Cabins 12x24 ft Shell Package Includes: All pre-assembled wall and roof panels, two 36x36 inch thermo pane slider windows and one solid 36 inch entrance door installed, metal exterior roof (colour options available), all hardware for assembly, easy to follow instruction manual.
Prince$Albert 21,175
SELLING PRICE
Item # 400-401 OPENING BID
2,118
$
Meridian Model 1615 Multi-Purpose Hopper Bin (Fertilizer, Seed or Feed)
Meridian Model 1615 is a 3840 Cubic Feet, 108 MT, 3264 bushel hopper bin. It’s fully equipped with a LevAlert Bin Indicator, bottom cone manway, 8” poke hole and steel skid base. Meridian’s multi-purpose smooth-wall hopper bins are powder coated inside and out for fertilizer storage and include a 10 year structural and 5 year paint warranty.
Knotty Pine Cabins Inc. 10635 184 St
Item # 202
Edmonton, AB 780-484-2224 www.knottypinecabins.ca
Meridian Manufacturing Inc.
Item # 206
1-800-830-2467 www.meridianmfg.com
29
30
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
COLLECTING THE CORN
SUGAR | AMERICAN EXPORTS
U.S. sugar plans worry Canadians Export rules changed | United States expected to increase the amount of raw sugar it can export BY BARRY WILSON OTTAWA BUREAU
The corn harvest is underway in this field north of Morden, Man., Oct. 10. |
JEANNETTE GREAVES PHOTO
The Canadian Sugar Institute is urging the federal government to challenge a U.S. decision to deal with its domestic sugar surplus by sending subsidized sugar into world markets. Institute president Sandra Martin said the United States plans to send
200,000 tonnes of subsidized domestic sugar into the world market over the next six to nine months, some of it possibly destined for Canada. “This is a backward step, and we are asking the government to request consultations at the WTO (World Trade Organization),” she said. A large domestic crop in the U.S., coupled with increased imports from Mexico, means the Americans face the prospect of a large domestic sugar surplus that under law the government would have to buy and store to get it off the market and stabilize prices. Marsden said the American government has instead decided to change the rules around what is called its “re-export credit exchange.” Refiners have traditionally been allowed to import raw sugar for refining and then re-export on a one-toone basis: a tonne of cane import gives the company a credit to export a tonne of refined sugar. The U.S. now says three tonnes can be exported for every tonne imported. The other two would be from the domestic stockpile, produced with farm bill subsidies. Meanwhile, last week Canadian sugar exporters were also being affected by the shutdown of the U.S. federal government, the result of political stalemate in Washington. The U.S. is allowing 8,294 tonnes of global sugar imports this year, which it allots to individual countries. Canada’s share of the quota was 28.6 percent last year, but it doesn’t know what this year’s share will be because the U.S. government employees who administer the quota had been laid off due to the shutdown. The U.S. government has since reached a deal and workers have returned, but it is not known how quickly they will be able to work through the backlog and announce the quota shares. A 12,050 quota for beet sugar is not affected. Kathleen Sullivan, executive director of the Canadian Agri-food Trade Alliance, said Oct. 11 that agricultural exporters with unfettered access to the U.S. market have not been affected. “In general, for those products that are traded freely between Canada and the U.S., the shutdown appears up to now to have had no significant impact on the administration, clearance and transportation of shipments to the U.S.,” she said in an email. “This is not the case for products that are still subject to quotas and rely on quota administration, most notably sugar.”
“The crop circles are from me worrying about this year’s crops.”
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
31
ANIMAL WELFARE | HOG HOUSING
Barn conversion model looks at costs, benefits Pilot project | Two producers will convert their barns to group sow housing to determine the most cost effective design BY DAN YATES SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Converting hog barns to allow for group sow housing won’t be simple or cheap. However, the University of Manitoba and Saskatoon’s Prairie Swine Centre hope to make the process easier for producers. As part of a joint initiative that started this fall, officials are working with two large but undisclosed hog producers in Saskatchewan and Manitoba to develop blueprints for conversion, using a model developed by the U of M. “They’re businesses that both know that they want to look at options for the future,” said Helen Thoday of the Prairie Swine Centre. “Currently, no one is really making any financial decisions whether to convert or not because the code is still unknown.” The project is getting underway as some restaurant chains move toward eliminating sow confinement from their supply chain and as Canada inches toward a new code for managing pigs. It considers the existing dimensions, infrastructure and pig numbers of a facility and provides producers with options for floor plans and feeding systems and offers a cost estimate. The intent is to help producers identify the most cost-effective way to convert barns to group housing using existing infrastructure: slats, drainage systems and slurry pits. Officials will be using the pilot barns to fine-tune the model, identify the positives and negatives of each option and document producers’ concerns about converting. More detailed blueprints will be drawn up with engineers once the producers choose a plan. Their experiences may be valuable to other producers, said Thoday. With costs running as high as $1,000 per animal, a conversion could potentially top $2 million, and there is no one-size-fits-all solution. “Generally, buildings haven’t had much reinvestment done on them, which is a standard thing that happens in all of the livestock industry when no one is making any money,” said Thoday. “If you have a really old house, if you start poking about it, sometimes it’s more problematic than bulldozing it down and starting again. I think some of these barns will have the same problems.” Flooring, concrete and the design and size of existing slurry pits are major concerns and a potential expense, said Laurie Connor, a researcher with the U of M. “Certainly if you get into any type of situation where you have to tear up any of the concrete to enlarge pits … it becomes tremendously expensive,” she said. Connor expects the U of M model will remain viable under an
HELEN THODAY PRAIRIE SWINE CENTRE
updated pig code. “We wanted to ensure as we progressed with it over the past couple of years that we were in line with what we thought was going to be occurring with the code and certainly from what I’ve seen from the code so far, we are.”
COUNTRY DANCE |
Two young horses frolic in a field west of Cayley, Alta. |
Bins to the
BRIM? Big crops can mean limited delivery opportunities. CWB has guaranteed handling capacity, so CWB grain will move. Annual Pool deadline: October 31 Why CWB? An expert sales team, guaranteed payments, grade flexibility and delivery choices. And now, a plan to give you an ownership interest in CWB after privatization visit our website for more details.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 1-800-275-4292 OR VISIT WWW.CWB.CA
MIKE STURK PHOTO
32
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS U.S. FARM BILL | INSURANCE CAP
2013 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11
8:30 AM Canadian National 4H & Youth Judging Competition - Chevrolet GMC Stadium 9:00 AM SGBA Annual CWA Meat Goat Show - Barn 5 11:00 AM Remembrance Day Ceremony - Brandt Centre 12:00 PM Commercial Trade Show Exhibits Open 12:15 PM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 1:30 PM Burning of the Brand - Arena 5 2:00 PM Agribition High School Rodeo - Brandt Centre 2:15 PM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 7:00 PM Agribition High School Rodeo - Brandt Centre
2:30 PM Limousin Show - Chevrolet GMC Stadium West 3:30 PM Charolais Sale - Auditorium 3:30 PM Ranch Horse and Prospect Horse Demonstration - Brandt Centre 4:00 PM Commercial Sheep/Market Lamb Shows - Barn 5 5:00 PM Hereford Sale - Auditorium 6:00 PM Katahdin Junior Sheep Show and Costume Classes - Barn 5 7:00 PM Canadian Cowboys’ Association Finals Rodeo Brandt Centre 9:00 PM Everyday Living Marketplace closes Agribition Building
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15
8:30 AM International Stock Dog Championship Brandt Centre 9:00 AM Commercial Goat Show - Barn 5 10:00 AM Commercial Trade Show Exhibits Open 10:15 AM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 11:00 AM Canadian National Bison Sale - Stock Exchange 11:00 AM First Lady Classic & Futurity Chevrolet GMC Stadium 12:00 PM Youth Showmanship Competition - Auditorium 12:00 PM Ride ‘em Cowboy - Brandt Centre 12:15 PM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 1:00 PM International Stock Dog Championship - Brandt Centre 2:00 PM Youth Team Grooming Competition - Auditorium 2:15 PM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 4:00 PM Goat Sale - Barn 5 6:15 PM International Stock Dog Championship Finals (pre-rodeo) - Brandt Centre 6:00 PM Winners Circle - Chevrolet GMC Stadium 7:00 PM Canadian Cowboys’ Association Finals Rodeo Brandt Centre
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13
9:00 AM Canadian National Speckle Park Show Chevrolet GMC Stadium East 10:00 AM Simmental Show - Chevrolet GMC Stadium West 10:00 AM Commercial Trade Show Exhibits Open 10:00 AM Horse Pulls, Lightweight Division - Brandt Centre 10:15 AM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 11:00 AM Angus Masterpiece Reception - Auditorium 12:00 PM Ride ‘em Cowboy - Brandt Centre 12:00 PM Gelbvieh Show - Chevrolet GMC Stadium West 12:15 PM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 1:00 PM Angus Masterpiece Sale - Auditorium 1:30 PM Horse Pulls, Middleweight Division Brandt Centre 2:15 PM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 4:00 PM Horse Pulls, Heavyweight Division Brandt Centre 4:30 PM Canadian National Speckle Park Sale Auditorium 7:00 PM Simmental Sale - Auditorium 7:00 PM Canadian Cowboys’ Association Finals Rodeo Brandt Centre
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14
8:00 AM Team Cattle Penning - Brandt Centre 9:00 AM Black Angus Show - Chevrolet GMC Stadium East 9:00 AM Red Angus Show - Chevrolet GMC Stadium West 9:00 AM Lowline Show - Auditorium 10:00 AM Commercial Trade Show Exhibits Open 10:15 AM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 12:00 PM Ride ‘em Cowboy - Brandt Centre 12:00 PM Gelbvieh Sale - Auditorium 12:15 PM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 1:30 PM Team Cattle Penning - Brandt Centre 2:00 PM Shorthorn Sale - Auditorium 2:15 PM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4
9:00 AM Canada’s Premier Select Ranch Horse Competition followed by Prospect Horse Previews – 2 & 3 year olds - Brandt Centre 9:00 AM Hereford Show (Polled and Horned) - Chevrolet GMC Stadium East 9:00 AM Shorthorn Show - Chevrolet GMC Stadium West 10:00 AM Commercial Trade Show Exhibits Open 10:00 AM Maine Anjou Show - Auditorium 10:00 AM Canadian National Katahdin Sheep Show Barn 5 10:00 AM Commercial Cattle & Heifer Alley Shows Stock Exchange 10:15 AM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 12:15 PM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 12:30 PM Limousin Sale - Auditorium 2:15 PM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 2:30 PM SSBA Purebred and Purebred Pens Show - Barn 5 2:30 PM Canada’s Premier Select Ranch Horse and Prospect Sale - Brandt Centre 2:30 PM Charolais Show - Chevrolet GMC Stadium West 5:00 PM Bull Pen Alley People’s Choice - Stock Exchange 7:00 PM Angus Sale, Power and Perfection - Auditorium 7:00 PM Canadian Cowboys’ Association Finals Rodeo Brandt Centre
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16
8:30 AM Cowboy Mounted Shooting - Brandt Centre 9:00 AM Prospect Steer & Heifer Show - Auditorium 9:00 AM Canadian Junior Beef Extreme Chevrolet GMC Stadium 10:00 AM Commercial Trade Show Exhibits Open 10:00 AM SSBA Junior Sheep Shows and Costume Classes - Barn 5 10:00 AM Mascot Parade - Cooperators Centre 10:00 AM Bull Pen Alley - Stock Exchange 10:15 AM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 11:00 AM Junior Roping Competition Budlight Loading Chute 11:00 AM Face Painting - Cooperators Centre Entrance 11:15 AM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 12:00 PM Commercial Cattle Sale - Stock Exchange 12:00 PM SSBA and Katahdin Sheep Sale - Barn 5 12:00 PM Family Day Kick Off!! - Brandt Centre 12:00 PM First Group of Wild Wool Riders - Brandt Centre 12:15 PM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 12:30 PM Heavy Horse Demonstration - Brandt Centre 1:00 PM Prospect Steer & Heifer Sale - Auditorium 1:15 PM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 1:30 PM Cowboy Mounted Shooting - Brandt Centre 2:15 PM Milking Demonstration - Barn 4 2:30 PM Katahdin Sheep Sale - Barn 5 3:00 PM Second Group of Wild Wool Riders Brandt Centre 3:45 PM KAOS Dog Sports - Brandt Centre 4:00 PM RBC Beef Supreme Challenge Chevrolet GMC Stadium 7:00 PM Canadian Cowboys’ Association Finals Rodeo Brandt Centre 8:00 PM Tailgate Party - Chevrolet GMC Stadium
www.agribition.com
Reformers hail limit on U.S. crop insurance subsidies WASHINGTON, D.C. (Reuters) — Fa r m s u b s i d y re f o r m e r s hav e praised a vote by the U.S. House of Representatives to make the wealthiest growers pay more for federally subsidized crop insurance. It is the first eligibility limit on a program that costs $9 billion a year. The non-binding House vote Oct. 11 will be a factor in upcoming negotiations with the Senate on a final version of the new farm bill, which is a year overdue. Senators put a similar restriction on farmers with more than $750,000 adjusted gross income a year in their bill. One percent of farmers, or 20,000 people, would be affected by the provision, estimated to save $1.3 billion over 10 years. Crop insurance is the costliest part of the farm safety net. The farm bill would expand the program by up to 10 percent while cutting conservation and food stamps for the poor. Farm bill negotiations were expected to begin soon, although no date was set. The House named 29 of its members as its conferees on the $500 billion, five-year farm bill Oct. 12. The Senate appointed its conferees
A U.S. farm bill proposal would see wealthy farmers pay more for crop insurance, saving $1.3 billion in subsidies over 10 years. | FILE PHOTO weeks ago. Farm bills, written every few years, fund crop subsidies, conservation, public nutrition, food aid, research, agricultural exports and rural economic development programs. Crop insurance reform was the only farm bill “instruction” approved by the House during a series of votes that cleared the way for negotiations with the Senate. The “sense of the House” resolution, approved on a voice vote, is an
indication of lawmaker sentiment but conferees are not bound by it. To reform-minded groups, the House vote was a step to rein in subsidy spending and help family farmers. T h e E nv i ro n m e nt a l Wo rki n g Group, which wants more money for conservation, said the $750,000 adjusted gross income limit was a “modest” reform “to bring a measure of fairness to crop insurance subsidies.”
The Surface Rights Acquisition and Compensation Act A Public Review The Government of Saskatchewan is reviewing the act and is looking for comments from the public and all stakeholders involved. This is an opportunity for you to have your say. To participate in the review, please visit www.economy.gov.sk.ca/ surfacerightsreview, or for more information call 306-787-5727 or email surfacerights@gov.sk.ca.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
33
WORLD IN BRIEF SWEET TOOTH?
Louis Dreyfus sugar buy vexes market
INDIA’S ECONOMY
Food prices drive up Indian inflation NEW DELHI (Reuters) Inflation in India unexpectedly hit a sevenmonth high in September as food prices climbed, increasing the odds for yet another central bank interest rate hike even as the economy stumbles through its worst crisis since 1991. The wholesale price index, India’s main inflation measure, climbed to 6.46 percent last month — its fastest rate since February — pushed up by food prices such as a 322 percent jump in onion prices, government data showed Oct. 14.
NEW YORK (Reuters) — Louis Dreyfus Corp. has bought nearly 1.9 million tonnes of raw and refined sugar in recent weeks in a buying spree worth about $750 million US that has thrown further confusion into a market roiled by excess supplies. One of the world’s biggest sugar merchants was the sole buyer last week of the 1.49 million tonnes of raw sugar in the largest ICE Futures U.S. exchange delivery in at least 24 years. That came on the heels of the purchase of 313,150 tonnes of refined sugar through London’s Liffe
exchange just weeks earlier. Between those purchases and another deal to buy 60,000 tonnes of Thai sugar for delivery in July through September 2014, Louis Dreyfus has bought roughly $750 million worth of sweetener in the last month, based on futures prices and reported premiums. EUROPEAN HARVEST
Rain hampers sugar beet harvest LONDON, U.K. (Reuters) — Rain has complicated sugar beet harvesting in key European countries, and could lead to lower production this year, according to industry groups and analysts. Wet weather has delayed beet
harvesting in Russia and Ukraine, while output looks set to be lower this year in France, Germany and Poland, they said. Russia had harvested 21 million tonnes of sugar beets from 55 percent of the sown area or from 1.2 million acres as of Oct. 14, down from 23.4 million tonnes a year ago, agriculture ministry data showed. At the same date a year ago, 1.5
million acres were completed. France is also heading towards a below-average sugar beet harvest after crops failed to recover from a poor start to the growing season during a cool, damp spring. In Germany, a smaller sugar beet crop is expected after beets suffered from prolonged winter weather in early 2013 and a cool spring, which delayed plantings and beet growth.
DESTINED FOR GREATNESS
Excellent
HARVESTABILITY
SUBSIDY COMPLAINT
EU halts anti-subsidy biodiesel import probe PARIS (Reuters) — The European Union Commission has decided to halt an anti-subsidy probe into biodiesel imports from Argentina and Indonesia after the complainant dropped its action, a Commission document seen by Reuters showed last week. The Commission had received on September 27 a complaint from the European biodiesel lobby group EBB over an alleged unfair subsidizing of biodiesel imports from Argentina and Indonesia. The EBB withdrew its complaint on October 7, the commission said. “In accordance with article 14 (1) of the basic regulation the proceeding may be terminated where the complaint is withdrawn, unless such termination may not be in the Union’s interest,” the document said. This is a separate procedure from a proposal from the European Commission to extend antidumping duties against imports of biodiesel from Argentina and Indonesia, accused of selling the product into the bloc at unfairly low prices.
6060 RR REALIZE YOUR YIELD POTENTIAL WITH 6060 RR In three seasons, 6060 RR has established itself as a yield-leading variety in any herbicide system. 6060 RR has shown market leading performance and consistency of performance in a variety of growing conditions. In addition to the BCT and CPT trials, in over 40 dealer and strip trials conducted between 2010 and 2012, 6060 RR out-yielded the competition by 3%.
FOR BEST
6060 RR produces a heavily-podded impressive crop with excellent standability and is rated R for Blackleg. With an early seeding date and top tier fertility management, 6060 RR shows how great your canola yields are destined to be.
FIRST
YIELD PERFORMANCE
PLANT ME
In the end, it all comes down to performance and BrettYoung brings a new standard of excellence to the field.
brettyoung.ca
•
800-665-5015
GM CROPS WATCHED
Hawaii’s Kauai Island to curb GM testing LIHUE, Hawaii (Reuters) — E, Hawaii (Reuters) — Lawmakers on the tropical island of Kauai, Hawaii, have approved a hotly contested measure aimed at reining in widespread pesticide use by companies testing new crops on the island. Known as Hawaii’s Garden Isle, Kauai’s landscape has become fertile ground for testing of new crops by DuPont Pioneer , Syngenta, BASF and Dow AgroSciences, which together have staked out work on an estimated 15,000 acres on the isolated Hawaiian island. DuPont, which fought to defeat the bill, was disappointed it passed, and may sue to block its implementation, said spokesperson Josh St. Peters.
JON MONTGOMERY
CHEERING FOR JON IN 2014
2010 Olympic Gold Medalist – Skeleton 2008 World Championship Silver Medalist BrettYoung is a trademark of BrettYoung Seeds Limited. ollow grain marketing and all other stewardship Genuity® and Roundup Ready® are registered trademarks and used under license from Monsanto Company. Always follow bili i N i to F i d iin this hi publication. bli i practices and pesticide label directions. Details of these requirements can be found in the Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice Farmers printed 13022 09.13
34
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
ENERGY RENEWAL | FORGE HYDROCARBONS
Energy firm set to turn used oil, grease into fuel BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU
A pilot plant that turns old grease, lard and canola oil into gas and diesel was so successful that a University of Alberta spin-off company will soon begin commercializing the product. Forge Hydrocarbons will use the patented process, which was designed by U of A researcher David Bressler, to turn the renewable feedstocks into “drop-in fuel” without the expensive process and 50 million years it takes to create fossil fuel. The new fuel could replace ethanol and biodiesel, which require special handling. “We’re making a little biorefinery here. We can make all the different cuts, just like a barrel of oil would be,” Bressler said after the announcement of the scaled up process, which will produce 200 to 400 million litres of fuel a year. Bressler, a former oilsands scientist, used his knowledge of the energy industry to turn used oil and grease into an environmentally friendly and inexpensive fuel additive. The triglycerides in fats and oils look similar to energy hydrocarbon but with an acid group attached. Using the right combination of high temperature and pressure, Bressler has found a way to remove the acid group and break down the long molecular chain created from the fat and oil into solvent, gasoline, diesel and jet fuel. “We’re able to use very ugly oil. We don’t just have to use nice clean canola oil. We can use brown greases or tall oil from the forestry sector,” he said. “I think we can undercut the price quite severely of biodiesel and create a better, superior product. I believe we could absorb all the fats and oils that are produced globally that aren’t going into the food system. We love that kind of stuff. It’s ugly and no one can use it, and it’s cheap.” Bressler said one forestry company estimates that directing tall oil to an on-site refinery can cut its diesel fuel use in half. He said 1.5 billion gallons of brown grease from restaurants is disposed of in landfills every year. “This is a highly scalable technology,” he said. “It’s a highly renewable fuel, but it still has the high value chemical sides to it. At the same time, we’re not in a food versus fuel versus feed debate. We don’t need to use those seed stocks. That being said, if there was a bad year and there was off spec canola, we could do something with it. We would be happy to take it.” Bressler began his work in 2003, and was perfecting the process by 2006. He has focused on scaling up production in the last two years. Bressler confirmed that Forge Hydrocarbons is talking about licensing the technology with one of Canada’s largest ethanol producers, one of Canada’s largest biodiesel producers, the largest U.S. biodiesel producer and several multinational energy companies. However, he said he couldn’t identify the companies. “It’s a bit of a bidding war. It is pretty cool. We’re moving down that path pretty quickly now. Basically we’ve
been quiet till yesterday. This is a 10 year overnight success.” Forge Hydrocarbons president Tim Haig, left Biox, an Ontario based biodiesel facility, to join forces with Bressler to bring the technology to production. Bressler said they envision a series of smaller plants with the capability of producing 20 to 40 million litres of product. Some facilities would have several plants in parallel, depending on the scale required. He hopes the new company will begin commercial production by the end of next year.
WINTER DIET |
A farmer loads snow-covered round bales onto a truck following an Oct. 10 snowfall southwest of High River, Alta. | MIKE STURK PHOTO
Bred in Canada to feed the world.
Visit SyngentaFarm.ca or contact our Customer Resource Centre at 1-87-SYNGENTA (1-877-964-3682). Always read and follow label directions. The Alliance Frame, the Purpose Icon and the Syngenta logo are trademarks of a Syngenta Group Company. CASE IH is a registered trademark of CNH America LLC. © 2013 Syngenta.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
35
SHIPPING | LAKER-SIZED VESSELS
CWB expects new ships on Great Lakes next year BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Two new laker-sized vessels being built for CWB by a Chinese shipbuilder will likely be working on the Great Lakes by next year. Construction of the new lakers is underway in China with completion of the first ship slated for late 2013 or early 2014. “There have been slight delays with regards to the shipyards in China, but those vessels are being built,” said CWB president Ian White during an Oct. 17 conference call. “We do expect that the first of the CWB vessels will be delivered to us …
around about the end of this year and the second vessel will be a couple or a few months after that.” The CWB lakers were part of a larger ship order placed in 2011 that also included six vessels to be owned by Algoma Central Corp. and Upper Lakes Group. The CWB investment, originally e s t i mat e d at $ 6 5 m i l l i o n , w a s approved by farmer elected CWB directors just months before federal legislation was passed to end the wheat board’s single desk marketing powers. The first ship will be delivered to CWB in China around the end of 2013 and is expected to arrive in
Canada in early 2014. The trip from China to Canada is expected to take about eight weeks. Algoma has reached an agreement with CWB to operate the ships on the grain company’s behalf. The vessels will haul grain, oilseeds and other cargo and will operate alongside other ships in Algoma’s expanded Great Lakes fleet. “We do expect to have the first (CWB) vessel in service for the full season on the lakes next year and the second for at least part of the season,” White said. The purchase of two laker-sized vessels created a stir in 2011, largely because of its timing.
When CWB announced the deal in early 2011, a majority of CWB directors were vocally opposed to Ottawa’s plan to eliminate single desk marketing, a move that was widely anticipated by the Canadian grain industry. Despite uncertainty surrounding the CWB’s future, wheat board directors approved the $65 million expenditure, suggesting the vessels would save the board $10 million per year in reduced shipping costs. At the time, wheat board directors said the expenditure would be spread over four years and be financed with a $13 million down payment taken from CWB pool accounts.
In the Oct. 17 conference call, White did not say how much is still owing on the ships. Federal agriculture minister Gerry Ritz said in November 2011 that Ottawa had no intention of cancelling the CWB order but instead would allow the ships to be built and then sell them to recoup the costs. “It would cost more to cancel than to recoup so the best advice we have is to let the contract revolve and at some point let it be known they will be for sale,” Ritz told reporters at the time. “We’ll do it in the best interests of farmers so they don’t get caught. We’ll do our damnedest to make sure the pool monies don’t get pirated.”
SWINE | RESEARCH
Cereal seed from Syngenta helps you harvest opportunities wherever they are. We’ve been breeding wheat in Canada for four decades, setting unprecedented standards for yield, quality and sustainability. The world depends on Canadian grain, and Canadian growers count on Syngenta.
Establishing swine welfare chair gains sector interest BY WILLIAM DEKAY SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Industry fundraising has reached the crucial halfway mark in its target to establish a national chair in swine welfare. Sandra Edwards, professor and chair of agriculture at Newcastle University in the United Kingdom, has been selected to fill the position. Edwards has worked in research for 30 years and has won numerous awards. She has also served as senior adviser on industry and government advisory groups. Edwards brings research and on‐ farm experience in the areas of nutrition, applied behaviour and health management. A sample of her research can be found at www.prairieswine. com. She will be a keynote speaker at the Saskatchewan Pork Industry Symposium in Saskatoon in November. Earlier this month, she was the keynote speaker at a sustainable food management summit in Guelph, Ont., where she shared her experience and perspectives on setting and implementing animal welfare standards as well as emerging issues and perspectives in Europe. The proposed swine welfare chair position has been gaining momentum. Six provincial pork associations and four pork processors have committed to the five-year program to develop a team of researchers focusing on swine welfare. The chair application will soon be submitted to the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council as an industrial research chair. That program, which benefits industry development of applied and early discovery research, provides 50-50 matching funds to the industry for approved research programs. For more information, contact Prairie Swine Centre president Lee Whittington at 306‐667‐7447 or Lee. whittington@usask.ca.
36
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Challenger® is a worldwide brand of AGCO Corporation. © 2013 AGCO Corporation. AGCO is a registered trademark of AGCO. Challenger is a registered trademark of Caterpillar Inc. and used under license by AGCO. All rights reserved. AGCO, 4205 River Green Parkway, Duluth, GA 30096.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
37
Classifieds online. If we don’t have it, you don’t need it.
producer.com
WPCLASSIFIEDS
This is where you’ll findit. Buy, sell, rent, trade. Use the best ag classifieds in print and online.
C L A S S I F I E D S A L E S | P : 8 0 0 . 6 6 7.7 7 7 0 F : 3 0 6 . 6 5 3 . 8 75 0 | E M A I L : A D V E R T I S I N G @ P R O D U C E R . C O M
4 EASY WAYS TO BOOK YOUR AD 1 Online at www.producer.com 2 By phone: In Saskatoon 665-3515 Toll Free 1-800-667-7770
LINER AD RATES
$5.85/Printed Line (3 line minimum) NON-REFUNDABLE ADDITIONAL FEATURES Bolding = .75/word/wk Full Color Photo = $39.00/wk Black & White Photo = $25.00/wk Attention Getter = $15.00/wk Ask about our Priority Placement LINER FREQUENCY DISCOUNTS Start after 3 weeks Example: 4 weeks for the price of 3, (8 for 6) (12 for 9) (52 for 39) etc. (Does not apply to bolding)
LINER COMMUNITY CALENDAR RATES 2 For 1 Book an ad to run and the identical ad will appear in a second edition free of charge. (Maximum 4 ads)
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY AD RATES $116/column inch/week Talk with your sales rep about our Volume Discounts
CONDITIONS
producer.com
DEADLINES • Liner ads – Thursday previous to publication, 8:00pm CST • Display ads – Thursday previous to publication, Noon CST
findit
(anywhere in North America)
8:30am – 4:30 pm CST, Mon & Fri 8:30am – 8:00 pm CST Tues, Wed, Thurs. 3 Fax 306-653-8750 4 Email us at: advertising@producer.com
Tributes/Memoriams ..................... 0100 Announcements .............................0200 COMMUNITY CALENDAR British Columbia ..........................0310 Alberta ........................................ 0320 Saskatchewan ............................ 0330 Manitoba ..................................... 0340 Airplanes ........................................0400 Alarms & Security Systems ...........0500 ANTIQUES Antique Auctions .........................0701 Antique Equipment..................... 0703 Antique Vehicles ......................... 0705 Antique Miscellaneous ................0710 Arenas ............................................0800 Auction Sales .................................0900 Auction Schools .............................0950 AUTO & TRANSPORT Auto Service & Repairs............... 1050 Auto & Truck Parts .......................1100 Buses........................................... 1300 Cars ............................................. 1400 Trailers Grain Trailers .............................1505 Livestock Trailers....................... 1510 Misc. Trailers...............................1515 Trucks 2007 & Newer ........................... 1597 2000 - 2006 ............................. 1600 1999 & Older .............................1665 Four Wheel Drive .......................1670 Grain Trucks ............................... 1675 Gravel Trucks ............................. 1676 Semi Trucks.................................. 1677 Specialized Trucks .................... 1680 Sport Utilities ............................ 1682 Various .......................................1685 Vans..............................................1700 Vehicles Wanted .......................... 1705 BEEKEEPING Honey Bees ..................................2010 Cutter Bees ................................. 2020 Bee Equipment & Supplies .....................................2025 Belting ............................................ 2200 Bio Diesel & Equipment................. 2300 Books & Magazines ........................ 2400 BUILDING & RENOVATIONS Concrete Repair & Coatings .......................................2504 Doors & Windows ........................2505 Electrical & Plumbing .................. 2510 Lumber .........................................2520 Roofing.........................................2550 Supplies .......................................2570 Buildings .........................................2601 Building Movers ..............................2602 Business Opportunities ................. 2800 BUSINESS SERVICES Commodity/Future Brokers ........ 2900 Consulting ....................................2901 Financial & Legal .........................2902 Insurance & Investments ....................2903 Butcher’s Supplies .........................3000 Chemicals........................................3150 Clothing: Drygoods & Workwear ................. 3170 Collectibles .................................... 3200 Compressors .................................. 3300 Computers...................................... 3400 CONTRACTING Custom Baling..............................3510 Custom Combining ......................3520 Custom Feeding ........................... 3525 Custom Seeding ........................... 3527 Custom Silage ..............................3530 Custom Spraying ........................ 3540 Custom Trucking ..........................3550 Custom Tub Grinding ................... 3555 Custom Work............................... 3560 Construction Equipment................3600 Dairy Equipment .............................3685 Diesel Engines................................ 3700 Educational .................................... 3800 Electrical Motors.............................3825 Electrical Equipment ......................3828 Engines........................................... 3850 Farm Buildings ...............................4000 Bins ............................................. 4003 Storage/Containers .................... 4005 FARM MACHINERY Aeration .......................................4103
• The Western Producer reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement submitted to it for publication. • The Western Producer, while assuming no responsibility for advertisements appearing in its columns, endeavors 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. • The Western Producer accepts no responsibility for errors in advertisements after one insertion. • 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. • Box holders names are not given out. • NON-REFUNDABLE
Conveyors ................................... 4106 Equipment Monitors ................... 4109 Fertilizer Equipment.................... 4112 Grain Augers ................................ 4115 Grain Bags/Equipment ................ 4116 Grain Carts ................................... 4118 Grain Cleaners ............................. 4121 Grain Dryers ................................. 4124 Grain Elevators ............................ 4127 Grain Testers ................................4130 Grain Vacuums............................. 4133 Harvesting & Haying Baling Equipment ......................4139 Mower Conditioners .................. 4142 Swathers ....................................4145 Swather Accessories .................4148 H&H Various .............................. 4151 Combines Belarus ....................................... 4157 Case/IH ..................................... 4160 CI ................................................4163 Caterpillar Lexion ......................4166 Deutz ..........................................4169 Ford/NH ..................................... 4172 Gleaner ...................................... 4175 John Deere ................................. 4178 Massey Ferguson ....................... 4181 Python........................................4184 Versatile ..................................... 4187 White..........................................4190 Various ....................................... 4193 Combine Accessories Combine Headers ......................4199 Combine Pickups .......................4202 Misc. Accessories ......................4205 Hydraulics ................................... 4208 Parts & Accessories ..................... 4211 Salvage....................................... 4214 Potato & Row Crop Equipment ................................. 4217 Repairs .........................................4220 Rockpickers ................................. 4223 Shop Equipment .......................... 4225 Snowblowers & Snowplows.................................4226 Silage Equipment ........................4229 Special Equipment ...................... 4232 Spraying Equipment PT Sprayers ................................4238 SP Sprayers................................ 4241 Spraying Various .......................4244 Tillage & Seeding Air Drills .....................................4250 Air Seeders ................................4253 Harrows & Packers ....................4256 Seeding Various.........................4259 Tillage Equipment .....................4262 Tillage & Seeding Various.....................................4265 Tractors Agco Agco ......................................... 4274 Allis/Deutz ............................... 4277 White ...................................... 4280 Belarus .......................................4283 Case/IH ..................................... 4286 Steiger......................................4289 Caterpillar ..................................4292 John Deere .................................4295 Kubota....................................... 4298 Massey Ferguson .......................4301 New Holland ............................. 4304 Ford ..........................................4307 Versatile...................................4310 Universal.................................... 4313 Zetor...........................................4316 Various Tractors ........................4319 Loaders & Dozers ......................... 4322 Miscellaneous ..............................4325 Wanted .........................................4328 Fencing ...........................................4400 Financing/Leasing ......................... 4450 Firewood .........................................4475 Fish & Fish Farming...... ................. 4500 Food Products .................................4525 Forestry / Logging Equipment ....... 4550 Fork Lifts & Pallet Trucks ...............4600 Fruit / Fruit Processing .................. 4605 Fur Farming .....................................4675 Generators ...................................... 4725 GPS .................................................4730 Green Energy................................... 4775 Health Care .................................... 4810 Health Foods ...................................4825 Heating & Air Conditioning ........... 4850 Hides, Furs, & Leathers ................. 4880
Hobbies & Handicrafts .................. 4885 Household Items............................ 4890 Iron & Steel .................................... 4960 Irrigation Equipment ..................... 4980 LANDSCAPING Greenhouses ............................... 4985 Lawn & Garden ........................... 4988 Nursery & Gardening Supplies .................. 4990 LIVESTOCK Bison/Buffalo Auction Sales ............................5000 Bison/Buffalo............................ 5001 Cattle Auction Sales ............................ 5005 Black Angus .............................. 5010 Red Angus ..................................5015 Belgian Blue.............................. 5030 Blonde d’Aquitaine ....................5035 Brahman ................................... 5040 Brangus ......................................5042 Braunvieh ..................................5047 Brown Swiss ............................. 5049 BueLingo ....................................5052 Charolais ....................................5055 Dexter........................................ 5065 Excellerator................................5067 Galloway ................................... 5070 Gelbvieh.....................................5075 Guernsey ................................... 5080 Hereford ....................................5090 Highland ................................... 5095 Holstein......................................5100 Jersey .........................................5105 Limousin .....................................5115 Lowline ...................................... 5118 Luing .......................................... 5120 Maine-Anjou .............................. 5125 Miniature ...................................5130 Murray Grey ............................... 5135 Piedmontese ..............................5160 Pinzgauer ................................... 5165 Red Poll .......................................5175 Salers ......................................... 5185 Santa Gertrudis .........................5188 Shaver Beefblend ...................... 5195 Shorthorn.................................. 5200 Simmental..................................5205 South Devon .............................. 5210 Speckle Park .............................. 5215 Tarentaise ..................................5220 Texas Longhorn .......................... 5225 Wagyu ........................................5230 Welsh Black................................ 5235 Cattle Various ............................5240 Cattle Wanted ............................5245 Cattle Events & Seminars .................................. 5247 Horses Auction Sales .............................5305 American Saddlebred ................5310 Appaloosa .................................. 5315 Arabian ......................................5320 Belgian ....................................... 5325 Canadian .................................... 5327 Clydesdale .................................5330 Donkeys ..................................... 5335 Haflinger ....................................5345 Holsteiner .................................. 5355 Miniature ...................................5365 Morgan ....................................... 5375 Mules......................................... 5380 Norwegian Fjord ........................5385 Paint.......................................... 5390 Palomino ....................................5395 Percheron ................................. 5400 Peruvian.................................... 5405 Ponies ....................................... 5408 Quarter Horse ............................ 5415 Shetland.....................................5420 Sport Horses ..............................5424 Standardbred............................ 5430 Tennessee Walker ......................5445 Thoroughbred ........................... 5450 Welsh .........................................5455 Horses Various.......................... 5460 Horses Wanted ..........................5465 Horse Events, Seminars.................. 5467 Horse Hauling ........................... 5469 Harness & Vehicles ....................5470 Saddles ...................................... 5475 Sheep Auction Sales .............................5505 Arcott .........................................5510 Columbia....................................5520
Dorper ........................................ 5527 Dorset ........................................5530 Katahdin.....................................5550 Lincoln ....................................... 5553 Suffolk....................................... 5580 Texel Sheep ................................5582 Sheep Various........................... 5590 Sheep Wanted............................5595 Sheep Events, Seminars................... 5597 Sheep Service, Supplies ...................................5598 Swine Auction Sales ............................ 5605 Wild Boars .................................5662 Swine Various ............................5670 Swine Wanted ............................ 5675 Swine Events, Seminars ..................5677 Poultry Baby Chicks ...............................5710 Ducks & Geese ...........................5720 Turkeys.......................................5730 Birds Various ............................. 5732 Poultry Various ..........................5740 Poultry Equipment..................... 5741 Specialty Alpacas ...................................... 5753 Deer............................................ 5757 Elk ..............................................5760 Goats .......................................... 5765 Llama .........................................5770 Rabbits....................................... 5773 Ratite: Emu, Ostrich, Rhea .................... 5775 Yaks ............................................5780 Events & Seminars..................... 5781 Specialty Livestock Equipment. ................................ 5783 Livestock Various ........................5785 Livestock Equipment .................. 5790 Livestock Services & Vet Supplies ..................................... 5792 Lost and Found .............................. 5800 Miscellaneous Articles................... 5850 Misc Articles Wanted ......................5855 Musical ............................................5910 Notices ............................................5925 Oilfield Equipment..........................5935 ORGANIC Certification Services ..................5943 Food .............................................5945 Grains...........................................5947 Livestock ..................................... 5948 Personal (prepaid) ......................... 5950 Personal Various (prepaid)................ 5952 Pest Control ................................... 5960 PETS Registered ....................................5970 Non Registered ............................ 5971 Working Dogs ...............................5973 Pets & Dog Events ........................ 5975 Photography .................................. 5980 Propane ..........................................6000 Pumps ............................................ 6010 Radio, TV & Satellites ....................6040 REAL ESTATE B.C. Properties .............................6110 Commercial Buildings/Land .......................... 6115 Condos/Townhouses ...................6120 Cottages & Lots ............................ 6125 Houses & Lots ..............................6126 Mobile Homes .............................. 6127 Ready To Move ............................. 6128 Resorts .........................................6129 Recreational Property .................6130 Farms & Ranches British Columbia........................ 6131 Alberta ....................................... 6132 Saskatchewan ............................ 6133 Manitoba ....................................6134 Pastures .....................................6136 Wanted .......................................6138 Acreages ....................................6139 Miscellaneous ........................... 6140 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES All Terrain Vehicles ...................... 6161 Boats & Watercraft ...................... 6162 Campers & Trailers ......................6164 Golf Cars ......................................6165 Motor Homes ...............................6166 Motorcycles ................................. 6167 Snowmobiles ...............................6168 Refrigeration .................................. 6180
Move it! in print and online next day.
RENTALS & ACCOMMODATIONS Apartments & Houses ..................6210 Vacation Accommodations .......................6245 Restaurant Supplies .......................6320 Sausage Equipment ....................... 6340 Sawmills......................................... 6360 Scales ............................................. 6380 PEDIGREED SEED Cereal Seeds Barley ........................................ 6404 Corn...........................................6406 Durum ....................................... 6407 Oats ........................................... 6410 Rye .............................................6413 Triticale ......................................6416 Wheat .........................................6419 Forage Seeds Alfalfa.........................................6425 Annual Forage ........................... 6428 Clover .........................................6431 Grass Seeds .............................. 6434 Oilseeds Canola ...................................... 6440 Flax ........................................... 6443 Pulse Crops Beans ........................................ 6449 Chickpeas ..................................6452 Lentil ..........................................6455 Peas........................................... 6458 Specialty Crops Canary Seeds ............................ 6464 Mustard ......................................6467 Potatoes .................................... 6470 Sunflower...................................6473 Other Specialty Crops................. 6476 COMMON SEED Cereal Seeds ............................... 6482 Forage Seeds............................... 6485 Grass Seeds ................................ 6488 Oilseeds .......................................6491 Pulse Crops ................................. 6494 Various .........................................6497 Organic Seed ................. See Class 5947 FEED MISCELLANEOUS Feed Grain................................... 6505 Hay & Straw .................................6510 Pellets & Concentrates ................ 6515 Fertilizer...................................... 6530 Feed Wanted ............................... 6540 Seed Wanted ................................6542 Sewing Machines ............................6710 Sharpening Services ....................... 6725 Sporting Goods ...............................6825 Outfitters .....................................6827 Stamps & Coins .............................. 6850 Swap................................................6875 Tanks ...............................................6925 Tarpaulins .......................................6975 Tenders............................................7025 Tickets .............................................7027 Tires ............................................... 7050 Tools ............................................... 7070 Travel...............................................7095 Water Pumps...................................7150 Water Treatment ............................ 7200 Welding ...........................................7250 Well Drilling ................................... 7300 Winches.......................................... 7400 CAREERS Career Training .............................. 8001 Child Care....................................... 8002 Construction ..................................8004 Domestic Services .........................8008 Farm / Ranch .................................. 8016 Forestry / Logging .......................... 8018 Help Wanted .................................. 8024 Management ...................................8025 Mining .............................................8027 Oilfield ........................................... 8030 Professional ....................................8032 Sales / Marketing ...........................8040 Trades / Technical .......................... 8044 Truck Drivers .................................. 8046 Employment Wanted (prepaid) ..................................... 8050
Now your classified word ads will go online within one business day from when you book them to run in the Producer Classifieds. And best of all, online word ads are FREE until the end of 2013 when you book your print ad. Our team of Classified Sales Associates has the product knowledge, marketing strategies and access to qualified buyers that is unmatched in the industry. Place your classified ad and experience our professional service first hand.
Monday to Friday, ads will be posted online within one business day. Real Time online will be placed a maximum of 11 days prior to first print insertion.
CLASSIFIEDS.PRODUCER.COM | 1-800-667-7770
38 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
CUBY 1 ULTRALIGHT with 503 Rotax. Fly away for only $4000. For more information call 306-331-8509, Fort Qu’Appelle, SK. 1988 MURPHY ELITE amature built great 2 seater bush plane, 154 hrs, engine Surbaru 2.5L, new 3 blade warp drive prop, new battery, w/A2500A federal skis, asking $45,500 OBO. 306-921-5584, Tisdale, SK. NEED YOUR CESSNA thrush air tractor wings rebuilt? Phone 204-362-0406, Morden, MB. 1959 COMANCHE 250, 4231 TT, 686.9 engine, 188 prop, new Garmin GNC250XL, new 406 ELT, new alternator conversion. All AWDs done, 160 Kts. for $39,900. 403-556-0074 or 403-335-8760 rmay@telusplanet.net Didsbury, AB. 1947 CESSNA 140, 4092 TT, 340 SMOH, hangared, skis/wheel pants, color/shape exc. 306-332-3826, Fort Qu’appelle, SK. 1976 MOONEY 20F Executive, TT 2064, TTE 107, 2-axis autopilot, NDH, speed mods., sporty, $70,500. 403-391-1780, Red Deer, AB. rogersurkan@telus.net
Available at:
Blair’s Fertilizer Limited McLean, SK
(306) 699-2822
1957 TRI-CHAMPION 7FC, TTSN, 3222 hrs, 997 hrs. SMOH, 90 HP, exc. cond, always hangared, $27,000. Call Jim at: 306-228-7337, or Tom at 306-843-3115, Wilkie, SK. 1970 CESSNA 150K, 0-200 Continential, 546 SMOH, 445 on prop, transponder, ra1971 CESSNA 150L, 3769 TTSN, 1864 dios, glide scope, shoulder harness, new SMOH, new C of A, Reg. #GNJW, $20,000 tires and battery, good paint, $25,000. Can OBO. Ph. 306-435-7384, Moosomin, SK. email pics. Bob 204-745-2265, Carman MB
www.dseriescanola.ca
1959 CESSNA 172A, TTSN 1312.4, new dual channel radio w/dual intercom, transponder Mode C, new GPS mapping, clean inside and out, 8/10. 306-838-2131 or 306-460-8530, Kindersley, SK.
BARON 58P, 1983, 3900 AFTT, engines 30/30 TSO, Ram Series I modifications, props 186/30 TSO, de-ice and anti-icing; BARON BE-58, engines 231/791 TSO, props 74/74 TSO, autopilot; CESSNA 414, 9046 AFTT, engines Ram Series VI, 1048/482 TSO, 1057/471 TSO, S-Tec autopilot; PIPER Aztec C, 4280 AFTT, engines 1245/409 hrs. TSO, props 269/269 TSO, new paint and int. 2007; 3 TRAVEL AIR’S, 1964, 1966 and 1968, former flight school aircraft, IFR cert.; BEAVER, 1959, converted from US military L-20A Model, 8184 AFTT, eng. 274 hrs. TSO, overhauled by Covington aircraft eng. 2007; PIPER Navajo, 8859 AFTT, Cleveland wheels and b r a k e s , c a r g o d o o r, K a n n a d E LT. 403-637-2250, Water Valley, AB. 1986 CUBY 1 Ultralight airplane, fly it away for only $4000. For more info call 306-331-8509, Fort Qu’Appelle, SK. LYCOMING 0-290-D, 135 HP, 1100 SMOH, FWF c/w mount and exhaust, exc. cond. Lethbridge, AB., 403-327-4582, 403-308-0062. 1976 CESSNA 182, 300 HP, 2000 TT, 400 since factory engine, 2009 3 blade prop, Gamis, NDH, factory corrosion proofed, Garmin 530 w/traffic, King KX155A, STEC Autopilot with Alt, Garmin 340 Audio, Garmin 330 TXP, JPI700, fuel scan 450, dual vac pumps, strike finder, altitude reporting altimeter. Excellent aircraft. Take small tail dragger in trade. Virden, MB. Call Peter at 204-748-7585 or fsair@mymts.net
1991 RANS S-10 Sakota, midwing two place aerobatic taildragger, 304 TTAF, 583 Rotax, 90 HP, 110 MPH, inverted capa- LYCOMING 0-320, 150/160 HP, excelbility, affordable aerobatics, $24,000 OBO. lent condition, 2200 hours. 403-327-4582, 403-308-0062, Lethbridge, AB. Call 306-625-3922, Ponteix, SK.
CLASSIFIED AD SUBMISSION FORM Complete name, address and phone number need not appear in your ad, although we must have this information for our files. NAME ________________________________________________________________________ DAYTIME PHONE# ___________________________ CELL# _________________________ EVENING PHONE# __________________________________ ADDRESS ________________________________________________ TOWN _________________________________________ PROVINCE _____________
SMALL ADS, BIG RESULTS This is where farmers buy and sell Canada’s largest agricultural classifieds.
Call our team to place your ad
1-800-667-7770
POSTAL CODE ____________________________________________ EMAIL ADDRESS _________________________________________
Entertainment Crossword by Walter D. Feener
PLEASE PRINT YOUR AD BELOW exactly as you want it to appear in the paper, including your phone number or The Western Producer box number. When using a phone or fax number within your ad copy, town and province are required (toll free numbers and WP Box numbers excepted). When using an email and/or website address within your ad copy, an alternative way for readers to contact you is required (ie: phone, fax or mailing address). Ads in the Personal column must be placed under a Western Producer box number or email address. There is a $45.00 charge for a box number ($95.00 International). A signature is required here for all Personal ads._________________________________________________
AD STARTS HERE:
a) Please circle the words you would like in bold print or b) ❑ entire ad.
$5.85/printed line (3 line minimum)
________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ Last Weeks Answers
_______________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ Town (required) ________________________________________________________ Province (required) _____________________________________________________ CLASSIFICATION NAME & NUMBER: ______________________________________ # OF WEEKS ________
Please start my ad in the ________________ issue
ALL PACKAGES ARE NON REFUNDABLE PLEASE SEE FRONT PAGE OF CLASSIFIED SECTION FOR FREQUENCY DISCOUNTS, FEATURE PRICING AND OTHER CLASSIFIED INFORMATION
When we receive your order a classified representative will contact you to confirm order and price. Are you a:
❑ ❑ ❑ ❑ ❑ ❑
❑ Subscriber ❑ Non-subscriber but a farmer ❑ Non-subscriber and not a farmer
Yes, I want a Western Producer box number. (Add $45.00 for handling replies) Yes, I want a photo. Full Colour photo $39.00/wk + line count. Black & White Photo $25.00/week + line count Yes, I want words in my ad bolded. (Add an additional .75¢ per word per week) Yes, I want to bold the entire ad. (Add .75¢ per word per week) Email/Weblink, Yes, I want to link my classified ad to my website or my email address (your website or email address must be in ad) VISA
❑
MC Card No. __________________________________________ Expiry Date _________
SIGNATURE __________________________________________________________
Mail to: The Western Producer Advertising Department, Box 2500, Saskatoon, Sask. S7K 2C4 Ph. 1-800-667-7770
Fax 306-653-8750
ACROSS 1. He played The Accountant in Drive Angry 7. She played The Jackal in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels 12. The Mosquito Coast hero 13. Initials of the actress who starred in Maude 14. Turner of Grimm 15. Actress Davis 16. Silent film actress Bara 18. ___ Man 19. Actor Julia 20. Titan ___ 21. Special Agent with the CBI on The Mentalist 23. Byrnes of 77 Sunset Strip 24. ___ Love Dogs 26. North from Los Angeles 27. Spielberg film, for short 28. When Harry ___ Sally… 29. Villain who wears a hockey mask 30. Former medical TV drama series 31. He won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in Topkapi 34. ___ Abiding Citizen 36. Film starring Rob Schneider (with The) 38. Whip ___ 39. Actor Butterfield 41. ___ in Real Life 43. Nick and ___ Infinite Playlist 44. State of ___ 45. Raid on ___ 46. French film starring Nastassja Kinski and Ben Kingsley 47. Much ___ About Nothing 48. Actress Taylor 50. The Farmer’s wife in Babe 51. Road to ___ 52. Six Feet Under creator (2 words) 55. ___ in the Hole 56. McCrary of Family Matters 58. Swimming with ___
59. ___ Time 60. Stowe of Revenge DOWN 1. Iron Man director 2. The Last House on the Left director 3. ___ Atlas 4. He made his feature film debut in I Heart Huckabees 5. ___ for Two 6. He plays Selleck’s son on Blue Bloods 7. Irving’s role in Yentl 8. Initials of the actress who played the receptionist on Moonlighting 9. Hunter star 10. Actress Sobieski 11. Born ___ 13. Liz’s adoption agent on 30 Rock 17. Christien of Relic Hunter 20. Planes, Trains, and ___ 22. He starred in Shooter 24. The agency that Agents K and J work for 25. ___ Hooker 28. ___ and Bill 32. Cardinal from Alberta 33. She played a vampire princess in Blade II 35. The Outlaw Josey ___ 37. Man of ___ Mancha 38. Film starring Dustin Hoffman 40. Emma of Dynasty 41. Mommie ___ 42. The King ___ (2 words) 44. ___ to a Kiss 49. Actress Eisley 53. ___ of Brothers 54. He played a villain in Lethal Weapon 4 55. O Brother, Where ___ Thou? 57. Lisa Bonet’s daughter
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
ANTIQUE TRAP
AUCTION S a turd a y, N o ve m b e r 9th a t10:00 a .m .
PANCAKE BREAKFAST AT 9:00 A.M.
A l arge s e l ectio n o f co l l ecto r tra ps h a ve b e e n co n s i gn e d fo r th i s a ucti on . Fo r a lis tin g a n d pho to s , vis it o u r w eb s ite:
w w w .clyde a uction e e rin g.com
930 CASE DIESEL with hand clutch, round fenders, always shedded, one owner, runs great! Asking $4000. Call Ron 403-581-1346, Marengo, SK. JD 710 TRACTOR, 4 cylinder diesel, w/Bosch pumps, 3 pt. hitch, PS and hyds., 540 and 1000 PTO, $8500; IHC Farmall C tractor, runs good, good rubber, 540 PTO shaft, $2500; Minneapolis Moline tractor Model Z, SN#00761636, $2500; Call Julian 780-218-2151, Andrew, AB. RARE 1954 MASSEY 33, diesel, row crop adjust axle. Excellent tin and tires. Phone 204-748-7899, Oak Lake, MB. 1961 MF 98, GM dsl; 1958 Oliver Super 99, GM diesel; 1958 Oliver Super 99, gas. Call for pricing and more info 306-539-1882, Rouleau, SK. WINTER PROJECTS: IH W4; IH WD6; IH Farmall M; IH Farmall H; JD AR styled; JD 70 dsl, PS; JD R; JD 1929 D, 2 spd; Oliver 77 row crop, narrow front; Oliver 880 dsl; MH 44 diesel, row crop; MH 55 dsl; Fordson Major dsl. 204-745-7445, Carman, MB.
CLASSIFIED ADS 39
1947 IHC H, restored, $3900; 1949 JD M, restored, $3800; 1951 Cockshutt 30, nice shape $2900. 306-220-2191, Saskatoon SK 1945 IHC FARMALL A, always shedded, good tires, c/w a semi-mount 7’ sickle mower. Was painted 15 years ago, $3500. Please call 306-621-1285, Yorkton, SK. MASSEY 65 COLLECTIBLE yard tractor, exc. condition, new tires, 3 PTH, PTO, belt, with 6’ blade and cultivator, $5,600 OBO. Ph. 306-729-2424, bashutski@sasktel.net Regina Beach, SK. THREE MODEL D JD tractors for sale, ‘35, 1937 BUICK SPECIAL, Model 46 Busi‘39, ‘48 also MH 101 tractor to be restored. nessman Coupe, 2 door, in-line straight, 8 cyl. gas eng, 3 on the floor, 46,000 Call 306-567-4707, Davidson, SK. miles. Won Best Of Show in the Buick ADRIAN’S MAGNETO SERVICE Guaran- meet in Calgary. To be sold at auction, teed repairs on mags and ignitors. Repairs. Wed., October 23rd, Hanna, AB. For more Parts. Sales. 204-326-6497. Box 21232, info and full listing call: 1-800-667-2075, Steinbach, MB. R5G 1S5. www.hodginsauctioneers.com PL#915407 CASE 1832 CROSS mount tractor; Various WANTED: ANY PARTS for a 1925 to 1927 JD D’s on steel; Two Wallace tractors. Chev Touring car, gages, switches or part 306-388-2683, Bienfait, SK. cars. Call 306-383-2867, Quill Lake, SK. 1942 FORD 9N tractor, 4 NEW TIRES, 1966 FORD METEOR Convertible, 390 augood tin, runs well, $2500. 403-382-9128, tomatic, $4200 OBO. Call 403-548-0525, Fort McLeod, AB. Medicine Hat, AB. MM ZAE; ZTS; Model M; 2- Fordson Long- JIM’S CLASSIC CORNER, a selling service horns; Oliver; D4-6U Cat. All not running. for classic and antique automobiles, Good price or trade for car from the trucks, boats. 204-997-4636, Winnipeg MB 1930’s. Kevin 306-845-3056, Livelong, SK. 1952 FORD 1/2 ton pickup; 1928 Model A NICE 1947 SLANTDASH JD-A, $2200; 4 door. Call 306-527-0397, Wilcox, SK. 1953 JD-50, all fuel with rollamatic front, Email ainc@sasktel.net $3600. Call 250-862-7782, Kelowna , BC. 1986 JEEP LAREDO, beautiful condition, 1948 A148 FORD tractor, original, good not modified or off roaded, a collector verunning order. Ph: 306-238-4503 or cell: hicle, $10,000. 306-221-8962 Kenaston SK 306-238-7661 daytime, Goodsoil, SK. WANTED: FORD’S 1928 to 1934 in any 1949 B ALLIS CHALMERS gas tractor, condition. Contact Mark or Rod toll free: shedded, exc., good paint and rubber; 18’ 1-888-807-7878. MH discer w/packers, exc. 306-931-2826, 1975 GMC CABOVER, 350 DD, 13 spd., 306-290-4920, Martensville, SK. 40,000 rears; 1957 Dodge D700 tandem, 1950 MM U, always shedded, c/w mount- 354 Hemi, 5&3 trans., 34,000 rears; 1971 ed saw mandrel, excellent tires. Additional GMC longnose tandem, 318 DD, 4x4 trans. complete parts tractor included, $3000. Sterling 306-539-4642, Regina, SK. Please call 306-621-1285, Yorkton, SK. www.sterlingoldcarsandtrucks.com
AU C T I O N S A L E A N T I Q U E S a n d C o l lectibles. LDT Appraisals and other consignors, Saturday, Nov. 2, 2013 at 10:00 AM, Schmalz Auction Center Hwy. #2 South, Prince Albert, SK. Furniture: oak, maple and pine. Glassware: Royal Doulton and Fenton. Pottery: Roseville, Royal Copely, plus several guns, tins, signs and jewelry. Websites www.globalauctionguide.com or www.schmalzauctions.com Conducted by: Schmalz Auctions: 306-763-2172 or 306-922-2300. PL #911509.
N EXT SALE S ATUR DAY, 9:00 AM NOVEM BER 2 , 2 013 G R EAT PLAIN S AUCTIO N EER S 5 M i. E. o f R egin a o n Hw y. #1
in G rea tPla in s In d u stria lPa rk FOR SALE BY AUCTION Multi Parcel TELEPHO N E (306) 52 5- 9516 Land Auction, Sat. Nov 2, 1:30 PM, Whitew w w .grea tpla in sa u ctio n eers.ca wood Legion Hall, Whitewood, SK. SE SK, w w w .glo b a la u ctio n gu id e.co m RM 153 and 123. 8 quarters: 5 hay and S ALES 1stS ATUR DAY O F EV ER Y M O N TH pasture, 3 cult., barn, house, shop. Option P.L. #91452 9 on 10 more quarters, all in one block. Ross Taylor Auctions 204-877-3834, Reston, MB PBR FARM AND INDUSTRIAL SALE, last Saturday of each month. Ideal for farmers, contractors, suppliers and dealers. Consign now. Next sale October 26, 9:00 AM. PBR, 105- 71st St. West, Saskatoon, SK., www.pbrauctions.com 306-931-7666.
MITEY TITAN INDUSTRIES, 7907 Argyll Rd., Edmonton, AB., Tues., Oct. 29, 2013 at 11:00 AM. Selling Mori Seiki Sl6 CNC Lathe; Okuma Lb-25 lathe; Makino Mc-86 Horizontal milling center; 1992 Mazak Integrex 40 CNC lathe with live milling; 2002 CNC Type Agie Wire Edm Agiecut Classic 2, 1990 Stanko Model Im635 engine lathe, Starrett Rapid Check Parts Measuring Machine CNC; Toyota light duty forklift, 1500 kg cap.; numerous small tools, jaws, tool holders for the machines; hydraulics hoses, electric cables and misc items. Selling live and via Internet: www.Bidspotter.com 1-800-371-6963. See full list and pictures www.montgomeryauctions.com
1929 FORD MODEL A Cabriolet car, fully restored, $30,000 OBO. Ph. 204-764-2642, 1974 VOLKSWAGEN BUG, blue, running Hamiota, MB. WANTED: IMPLEMENT attachments for condition. Call Elmer at 306-387-6587, 1 9 4 9 F a r m a l l C u b t r a c t o r. C a l l 306-428-0007, Choiceland, SK. 780-674-4820, leave message, Busby, AB. 1956 INTERNATIONAL TRAVELALL, 3/4 MH 50 TRACTOR, good shape, c/w loader, ton, motor not stuck, towable, asking good tires, runs nice, $2850. Prince Albert, $3000. 403-883-2580, Donalda, AB. Email: SK., 306-764-2471, 306-960-0145. fraserbeebe@yahoo.ca ANTIQUE JD TRACTORS: JD 820; (2) 1932 FORD V8 overhauled engine, $200. BR’s; Unstyled AR. All reconditioned and 1979 LTD Ford 4 dr. car, gold, orig. owner, running. Ph 780-939-5780, Morinville, AB. $300. Call 403-577-2297, Kirriemuir, AB. 1927 BUICK SPORTSMAN Model 26S Coupe, 2 door, in line 6 cyl. gas eng., 3 on the floor, 1,636 miles, restored. To be sold at auction Wed., October 23rd in Hanna, AB. For more info. call 1-800-667-2075, www.hodginsauctioneers.com PL 915407.
AN TIQUE &
CO LLECTABLE SALE
O c t. 28th – N ov. 3rd M ARK ET M ALL
2325 Preston Ave.S. SASK ATO O N
UNRESERVED PUBLIC AUCTION
LLOYDMINSTER, SK Monday, October 28, 2013 | 9 am
November 6 - 10, Edmonton The Canadian Finals Rodeo is 40 years Strong and Proud, and the party is not to be missed! Great Hotel and Ticket packages are available; get your tickets early to reserve the best seats…
CHAMPIONSHIP SUNDAY LIVE BROADCAST
November 10 12:30 PM - 3:30 PM MST
LIVE WEBCAST
November 6 - 9 See Online Schedule
RoadtotheCFR.com
1956 M-19 FAIRMONT railroad speeder. In good working condition. Asking $5500. 306-869-2782, 250-652-9544 Radville, SK. WANTED: TRACTOR MANUALS, sales brochures, tractor catalogs. 306-373-8012, Saskatoon, SK. WANTED: OLD Anvils and pocket watches. Call 306-946-3304, Watrous, SK.
SUPREME AUCTION SERVICES will conduct a Closeout Retirement Auction for Milne’s Moving and Storage Ltd, 10:00 AM, Sunday, October 27th, 1301 Osler Street, Regina, SK. Trucks, vans, forklifts, pallet racking, storage sheds, office equipment and more. Brad Stenberg 306-551-9411, Ken McDonald 306-695-0121, Indian Head, SK. PL #314604. For details go to: www.supremeauctions.ca UPCOMING AUCTION ANTIQUE and Collectibles Auction, Saturday, Nov. 9th, 2013 9:00 AM. Nelson’s Auction Centre at Meacham, SK. Consign now. To take advantage of our advertising. For more info visit: www.nelsonsauction.com or call: 306-944-4320. CORMACH 180000E6 CRANE. Short notice. Selling at Ritchie Bros. Auction, Edmonton, AB., Oct. 29 and 30th. 110,000 lbs. max, 70’ reach, mtd. on 2003 Fontaine tri-axle specialized. Needs new motor to run hydraulic pack or can be run from truck. $550,000 to rig up. Current model. Contact owner for copy of brochure. Carl 780-982-5411. Email: jennfich@yahoo.ca SHORT NOTICE: Unique items selling at Ricthie Bros. Auction Oct. 29th. See Construction Heading (#3600) for listings.
2010 CASE IH 3330 100 FT
3– 2012 CHALLENGER 540C
2009 JOHN DEERE 1830 62 FT
2007 FREIGHTLINER M2
2011 JOHN DEERE 6115D
Lloydminster, SK East of Lloydminster at the Jct of Hwy 16 & Hwy 303, beside Heartland Auction Mart.
240+ Items in this auction 8– Combines 3– Sprayers 11– Headers Trailers Tanks Attachments
12– Air Drills 5– Swathers 8– Tractors Balers Grain Handling Recreational
rbauction.com | 800.491.4494 Auction Company License #303043 & #309645
2011 NEW HOLLAND P1060 & 2008 AMITY FARGO AIR CONTOUR 57 FT
2– 2010 CHALLENGER SP115C 30 FT
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
A U CTIO N
S N OW M OBILE/ATV
S UN D AY N OV. 10TH @ 9 A.M . Hw y 3 E a s t, T is d a le, S K . HEWAN'S SASKATC OWMOBILE N S T LARGES CTION AU
CONS IGN NOW To This Large Snowmobile Auction Note! Terms on all snowmobile auctions debit card or cash only, no cheques
Toll Fre e 1-866-873-5488
www.schapansky.com
Inc.
City of Regina
CRO P P RO D UCTIO N S ERV ICES
O N -LIN E EQ UIP M EN T AUCTIO N FLEET RED UCTIO N
BIDS CLO S E: THURS ., N O V . 7 – 10AM V IEW : S ATURD AY, N O V . 2, 11AM -2P M
REGIN A CITY S AL V AGE - 148 3 6 Aven u e ZAM BON IS : 520 Ice Res u rfa cer; 2 x 440 Ice Res u rfa cers . S EM IS , TRUCK S & BUS ES : 2 - 1993 F reightlin er F l70 Du m p T ru ck; 2003 Vo lvo S id e Pick-Up Ga rb a ge T ru ck; 2001 Do d ge Ra m 1500; 1997 GM C S ierra 1500 S L ; GM C Dies el Co a ch C1830; 1985 GM C Dies el Bu s . YARD EQUIPM EN T: 3 x JD 2653A Dies el Reel M o w er; 2 x F ro n tier R02060 3 Pt. Hitch M o w er; 3 Pt. Hitch Y o rk T in e L eveler; JD 647 Ro to tiller 3 Pt. Hitch; p lu s s evera l n ew reca p tires . S ee W eb s ite for T erm s , C ond itions & Photos REG IN A D IV IS IO N : 306 -757-1755 or TO LL FREE: 800-26 3-4319 TH
w w w .M cDo u ga llAu ctio n .co m Regin a – S a s k a to o n – M o o s o m in L ic #31448 0 L is t S u b ject To Ad d itio n s & Deletio n s N o t Res po n s ib le Fo r Prin tin g Erro rs
PL #912715
FLEET RED UCTIO N
BIDS CLO S E: M O N ., O CT. 28 – 2 P M V IEW : FRI., O CT. 25, 10 AM -3 P M
Chec k W eb site forView ing Instruc tions, Term s & Cond itions. 8 u n its lo c a te d a tthe C ro p Pro d u c tio n S e rvic e Y a rd : ½ m i W o fHu m b o ld to n Hw y #5 3 u n its a re lo c a te d a tthe W a d e n a s ite : 2 m i N, ½ m i W , S o u th in to ya rd AUCTION EER’S N OTE: Yea rs,Sp ec ific a tions & Deta ils a re to b e used for guid es only. M c Douga ll Auc tioneers Ltd . ta kes no resp onsib ility for errors in p osting. All eq uip m ent is sold on a n “AS IS W HERE IS”. Plea se m a ke yourself fa m ilia r w ith the eq uip m entp riorto p la c ing b id s on this event. L IS TIN G AS FOL L OW S : T a n d em Axle Pu p Cha s s is (fra m ew o rk la y o n to p o fcha s s is n o t in clu d ed ); 2000 W es tern S ta r 4964 F X Ca b & Cha s s is ; 1999 M a ck CH613 Ca b & Cha s s is ; 1998 In tern a tio n a l 9400 Ca b & Cha s s is ; 1997 F reightlin er Da y Ca b & Cha s s is ; 1997 No ra c S in gle Dro p Cha s s is T ra iler; 1994 F reightlin er Ca b & Cha s s is ; 1994 GM C T o p K ick Ca b & Cha s s is ; 1986 F o rd L 9000 Ca b & Cha s s is ; 1989 F o rd Aero m a x L 9000 Ca b & Cha s s is ; 1985 Do ep ker S in gle Axle High Bo y Cha s s is . S ee W eb s ite for T erm s , C ond itions & Photos
McSHERRY AUCTION SERVICE Ltd. Vintage Service Station and Coca Cola, Sunday Nov. 10 at 10:00 AM. #12 Patterson Dr., Stonewall, MB. email: mcsherry@mts.net Two clear vision bowsers - 1 double, 1 single; Texaco elec pump; Air Eco meter; Red Indian oil rack; Two Buffalo globes; Two upright Coca Cola coolers - 1 mod 44, 1 mod 39; Antelope oil metal; Coin operated dispensers; Coca Cola double button metal flange; Coca Cola metal sign; Coffee grinders; 8 pedal cars; Over 150 signs; Clocks; Door bars; Thermometers; Flanges; Two Red Indian signs; White Rose; BA; Ford V8; Ford Wing Model T; Chev; Antelope; FireStone; Goodyear; Texaco; Husky; Black Cat; 2 JD; 10 Cola Cola; Mountain Dew; 6 Orange Crush; McDonalds; Palm Ice Cream; Buffalo oil cans; Red Indian; Oil Jar; Air Plane ash tray; Railway items. Auctioneer Note: This will be Canada’s most exciting advertising sale of the decade! Go to the website for pictures and listing! www.mcsherryauction.com or call: Stuart McSherry, 204-467-1858 or 204-886-7027.
A U CTIO
CO N S IG N N O W !
N
ON LIN E ON LY AUC TION W ED . N OVEM BER 20th
Bruce Sch a p a n s ky Auction e e rs On lin e Sa le s Are Pow e re d Th rough
Auction Tim e .com Expa nding Your Rea ch To M ore B idders W orldw ide! FARM EQUIPM ENT; TRUCKS; TRAILERS; CONSTRUCTION EQUIPM ENT; PARTS; ATTACHM ENTS; M ISCELLANEOUS & M ORE. Adve rtis in g De a dlin e W e dn e s da y
OCTOBER 3 0TH FOR THE NOVEM BER 20TH ONLINE AUCTION LIVE BIDDING OPENS TUESDAY NOVEM BER 19 TH @ 9 AM .
[
Proxy Biddin g Op e n s Nove m b e r 13 th (7 Da ys In A dva nce)
All Biddin g Ca n Be Don e At: w w w .s ch
[
40 CLASSIFIED ADS
a p a n s kylive .com
Re gis te r To Bid In Adva n ce To Be Sure You Are Ap p rove d Th e Da y Of Th e Sa le
REG IN A D IV IS IO N : 306 -757-1755 or TO LL FREE: 800-26 3-4319 L ic #31448 0
w w w.M c D ou g a llAu c tion .c om
SPECIAL LIMITED-TIME FINANCING OFFER | NO PAYMENTS FOR 90 DAYS*
Regin a – S a s k a to o n – M o o s o m in L is t S u b ject To Ad d itio n s & Deletio n s N o t Res po n s ib le Fo r Prin tin g Erro rs
Unreserved public auction
Edmonton, AB
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
Timeless Acres Ltd.– Sterling & Benita Dayne Clearsky Acres Ltd.– Leo & Jean Dayne Hodgeville, SK | Monday, October 28, 2013 · 10am
1999 CASE IH 9370
October 29–30 (Tue–Wed) | 8 am
2002 CASE IH 2388
1500 Sparrow Drive, Nisku, AB T9E 8H6
Featured items
Agricultural tractors Loader backhoes Pickups Generator sets Equipment attachments and much more...
Bid with confidence ▸ No minimum bids ▸ Financing available ▸ Inspect and bid on site
1948 JOHN DEERE A
AUCTION LOCATION: From HODGEVILLE, SK go 7.2 km (4.5 miles) South on Hwy 19, then 2.4 km (1.5 miles) East. Yard on South side of road. GPS: 50.0464889, -106.9269972 A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 1999 Case IH 9370 4WD · 1998 Agco White 8510 MFWD · 2002 Case IH 2388 Combine · 1993 International 9400I T/A Truck Tractor · 2005 New Holland SD440 51 Ft Air Drill · Morris CP-431 36 Ft Cultivator ·
Location
Sell your equipment Don't miss out – call today.
1998 Ford E350 90 Ft High Clearance Sprayer · Plus a large selection of antiques including: 1950 Chevrolet 1434 Pickup Truck · 1943 John Deere H 2WD · 1948 Massey Harris 22 2WD · 1948 McCormick W-4 2WD...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
2012 JOHN DEERE 6115D – LOW METER HOURS
More items added daily Visit rbauction.com for full listings.
Sterling Dayne: 306.677.2221 (h), 306.677.7012 (c) redeye5@sasktel.net
rbauction.com | 780.955.2486
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Darren Clarke: 306.529.5399 800.491.4494
2 DA Y
DA Y
WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 30TH 2013 9:00 A.M. SHARP OVER 1000 LOTS OF INDUSTRIAL • COMMERCIAL SHOP TOOLS & EQUIPMENT
PUBLIC UNRESERVED INDUSTRIAL AUCTION
2
1
PUBLIC UNRESERVED AUCTION
PRELIMINARY ADVANCE NOTICE
Y DA
PRELIMINARY ADVANCE NOTICE
Y DA
1
Auction Company License #303043 *OAC. See rbauctionfinance.com for details
FRIDAY NOVEMBER 1ST 2013 10:00 A.M. SHARP FOR A FREE FULL COLOUR 16 PAGE BROCHURE CALL TOLL FREE 1.877.257.SOLD (7653)
FOR A FREE FULL COLOUR 16 PAGE BROCHURE CALL TOLL FREE 1.877.257.SOLD (7653)
Live Interactive Auction Webcasts!
NS DATIO THE MMO ACCO ABLE AT ERATON AVAILOINTS SH OUTH L P AL NS FOURDMONTO TIONS C IT E RVA 1 OR VIS M E S E R 3 O FOR -465-79 POINTS.C 780 .FOUR WWW
osmanauction.com
Live Interactive Auction Webcasts!
OSMAN AUCTION INC. LIQUIDATION DIVISION 6330 - 75 STREET EDMONTON ALBERTA
PHONE 780.777.7771 FAX 780.469.5081
1.877.257.SOLD (7653)
FO INFO R DETA RMA ILED WWW OUR WE TION VIS NEW .OSMAN BSITE A IT LIST AUC T SO P INGS AD TION.CO M LEAS DED BAC E CHE DAILY K OF C TEN K
Live Interactive Auction Webcasts!
NS DATIO THE MMO ACCO ABLE AT ERATON AVAILOINTS SH OUTH L P AL NS FOURDMONTO TIONS C IT E RVA 1 OR VIS M E S E R 3 O FOR -465-79 POINTS.C 780 .FOUR WWW
Interactive osmanauction.com Live Auction Webcasts!
OSMAN AUCTION INC. INDUSTRIAL DIVISION 6330 - 75 STREET EDMONTON ALBERTA
PHONE 780.777.7771 FAX 780.469.5081
1.877.257.SOLD (7653)
FO INFO R DETA RMA ILED WWW OUR WE TION VIS NEW .OSMAN BSITE A IT LIST AUC T SO P INGS AD TION.CO M LEAS DED BAC E CHE DAILY K OF C TEN K
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
UN RES ERV ED P UBLIC AUCTIO N TUES DAY , N O V EM BER 05, 2 013 8:00 a .m . 932 0 – 52 S treetS .E., CALG AR Y S ellin g on b ehalf of F ortisAlb erta, S ervice Alb erta; W heatlan d Cou n ty, Rocky View Cou n ty, AltaL in k, K eyston e Excavatin g L td ., City ofM ed icin e Hat, T ow n ofCochran e & othercon sign ors. PAR TIAL LIS TIN G : M O TO R G R ADER : 2008 Ca t 160M . CR AW LER DO ZER S : 2008 Kom a ts u D85P; Ca t D7G . HY D. EXCAV ATO R S : 2008 Deere 230C LC; 2007 M u s ta n g 3503 M in i; (2) 2005 Deere 200C LC’s ; 2002 M u s ta n g 1502 M in i; Hita chi EX200LC5; Ku bota KH-026 M in i; Ku bota KX040. W HEEL LO ADER S : 2008 New Holla n d W 170B; 2008 New Holla n d W 190B; 2006 Doos a n M eg a 250V; Deere 644G . S KID S TEER S : 2008 Ca t 277C; 2004 M u s ta n g 2054; Ca s e 60XT. CO M PACTIO N & DIS C: 2008 Ezee-O n 8550 Dis c c/ w 32” Dis cs ; S u p er Pa c 660 Pa d foot; Ca s e 602 S m ooth Dru m ; Pu ll Typ e S heep s foot. FO R KLIFTS & HAN DLER S : 2006 JCB 536 Teleha n d ler; G en ie Z45 M a n lift; S k ytra c 6036. G EN ER ATO R S : (2) New / Un u s ed 2013 G en lite 20 KW G en era tors ; (15) Lig ht Tow ers . EM ER G EN CY V EHICLE: Freig htlin er FL80 Pu m p er Tru ck . TR UCK TR ACTO R S : 2009 Peterbilt388 T/ A ; 2007 Ken w orth W 900 T/ A ; 2007 M a ck T/ A ; 2006 Freig htlin er Colu m bia ; 2006 In tern a tion a l; 2005 Ken w orth T/ A ; 2003 S terlin g T/ A ; 2000 W es tern S ta r. G R AV EL TR UCKS : In tern a tion a l 4900 T/ A ; Ford L9000 S a n d Tru ck ; W es tern S ta r Plow / S a n d ; Ken w orth T800 T/ A Plow / S a n d ; Ken w orth T800; M a ck T/ A . TAN K TR UCKS : 2007 Chev C7500 S / A Lu be; 2006 IHC 7400 6x4 T/ A Hyd ro Va c; Ford LTL9000 T/ A Ta n k ; W hite G M C W G 64 Ta n k ; W hite G M C W G 64 Dis tribu tion Tru ck . TR AILER S : 2008 M id la n d S T3400 Tria xle En d Du m p ; 2008 M id la n d Tria xle Belly; 2008 Ren n T/ A G ra vel Pu p ; 2007 Cros s Cou n try Tria xle En d Du m p ; G erry’s 16 W heel Low boy; 8’x24’ S / A W heeled O ffice Tra iler; 8’x16’ S / A W heel O ffice Tra iler; M a n a c 53’ Tria xle Deck ; A d va n ce Tria xle A lu m in u m BTra in ; A lm a c T/ A A lu m in u m B-Tra in ; W es ta n k W illock A lu m in u m B-Tra in (3) G rea t Da n e 53’ Tria xle Va n s ; W a ba s h 53’ Tria xle Va n ; (5) Utility 48’ T/ A Va n s ; (3) 2014 S ou thla n d 18’ T/ A ’s ; 2006 PJ G oos en eck ; 2002 Big Tex 36’ T/ A G oos en eck ; 20’ & 40’ S tora g e Con ta in ers . TR ACTO R S & FAR M : 2000 Ba il Kin g Vortex Ba ler; M .F. 265; Ku bota B6000; Ku bota L1501; S chu lte 1100 S n ow blow er. M EDIUM DUTY : (2) 2009 IHC CF500 S / A C&C’s ; 2006 Ford F650 C&C; 2003 IHC 4300 W reck er; 2001 IHC 4700 S / A C&C; G M C Top Kick S / A Deck ; (2) IHC 4700 S / A Deck s ; IHC 4700 S / A Va n Bod y; IHC S 1900 S tea m Tru ck . S ER V ICE TR UCKS : (2) G M C 2500 HD 4x4’s . LIG HT V EHICLES : 2011 Ford Exp lorer4x4; 2010 Dod g e DR1500; 2008 G M C 2500 4x4; 2008 3500 Crew Ca b; 2008 Toyota Tu n d ra ; 2008 G M C 2500HD 4x4. R ECR EATIO N : 2011 A rg o 8 W heel A TV; (22) 2010 Clu b Ca r Preced en t 48 Volt G olf Ca rs (Not Flood Rela ted ); (8) 2009 EZ-G o Electric G olf Ca rs (Not Flood Rela ted ). UTILITY & M AIN TEN AN CE: Terex RS -325B Recla im er; G rou n d hog T4 Tren cher; Verm eer RT60 Tren cher; S chw in g BPA 301 Porta ble Con crete Pu m p ; Pow erbos s Floor S cru bber; 2010 S a ls co 810M W ood Chip p er; 2003 W hea thea rtPos tPou n d er; 2002 Ha m m s 89 BBL S teel Ta n k ; 60,000 LtrFiberg la s s Ta n k ; Ba n d it95 Bru s h Chip p er; Cu s tom bu ilt18’ T/ A Con ces s ion s Tra iler; G eobla s ter W et A bra s ive Bla s t S ys tem . Q u a n tity of New / Un u s ed Pa rty, Even t Ten ts & Com m ercia l S tora g e Bu ild in g s . O FF S ITE: 20’x72’ M obile Hom e; 12’x67’ M od u la r Hom e; M od s p a ce 4 Tra iler O ffice Com p lex; M od s p a ce 7 Tra iler O ffice Com p lex; M od s p a ce S k id M ou n ted W a s hroom Tra iler; M .F. 30F FEL Tra ctor; M .F. 40B FEL Tra ctor. Q u a n tity o f N ew Un u sed W ild - Ka t S kid S teer Atta chm en ts Co n sistin g o f Asso rted S n o w Bu ckets & Bla d es, Ha y S pea rs, G ra pple Bu ckets, R o o t R a kes, Bu sh Ho gs, Au ger Atta chm en ts, Pa llet Fo rks In clu d in g Hyd . Fo rk Po sitio n ers, Ba ckho e Atta chm en t; Tree Bo o m ; 4 In 1 Bu ckets. Exca va to rAtta chm en ts, Etc. For a com p rehen s ive brochu re p lea s e ca ll Ca n a d ia n Pu b lic Au ctio n Ltd . 403- 2 69- 6600 o r 800- 786- 0857. Ho m e Pa ge a t w w w.ca n a d ia n pu b lica u ctio n .co m G .S .T. a p p lies . A 10% ha n d lin g fee a p p lies to ea ch lot s ellin g for $5,000.00 or les s , a 2.5% ha n d in g fee a p p lies to ea ch lots ellin g g rea ter tha t$5,000.00 w ith a ca p of$1,000.00 p erlot. Live In tern etBid d in g w w w.ca n a d ia n pu b lica u ctio n .co m a ll in tern et p u rcha s es a re s u bject to a n in tern et bu yer’s fee & a d ep os it m a y be req u ired d ep en d in g on you r p u rcha s e his tory. Au ctio n Licen se # 2 002 78, AM V IC Licen se # 2 002 79.
Download the free app today
VS TRUCK WORKS Inc. Parting out GM 1/2 and 1 ton trucks. Call 403-972-3879, Gordon or Joanne, Alsask, SK. www.vstruckworks.com FOR SALE: FOUR 17” Ford chrome rims w/hubs and wheel nuts, like new, $275. 306-233-7889, Cudworth, SK. SASKATOON TRUCK PARTS CENTRE Ltd. North Corman Industrial Park. New and used parts available for 3 ton highway tractors including custom built tandem converters and wet kits. All truck makes/models bought and sold. Shop service available. Specializing in repair and custom rebuilding for transmissions and differentials. Now offering driveshaft repair and assembly from passenger vehicles to heavy trucks. For more info call 306-668-5675 or 1-877-362-9465. www.saskatoontruckparts.ca DL #914394 WRECKING SEMI-TRUCKS, lots of parts. Call Yellowhead Traders. 306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK. H E AV Y D U T Y PA R T S o n s p e c i a l at www.Maximinc.Com/parts or call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. 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.
UPCOM IN G EV EN TS - HEAL TH FOOD S UPPL EM EN TS S TORE DIS PERS AL CL OS IN G OCTOBER 31 T o Book Your L ive or Online Auc tion C onta c t
M CD O UG ALL AUCTIO N EERS LTD . 1-800-26 3-4193 L ic #31448 0 Book m a rk : w w w.M c D ou g a llBa y.c om Regin a – S a s k a to o n – M o o s o m in
SLEEPERS AND DAYCABS. New and used. Huge inventory across Western Canada at www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. 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., 1-800-938-3323. DIESEL AND GAS ENGINES - Medium Duty. Cummins 5.9; Cat 3116; Ford 6.6- 6 cyl. w/auto trans. Gas: IH 304, 345; Ford 330, 370; GM 366TBI. Phoenix Auto, Lucky Lake, SK., 1-877-585-2300.
2001 DOEPKER SUPER B grain trailers, open end, new alum. slopes, 24.5 rubber, very nice, new safety, $38,500 OBO. Call CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used 3 0 6 - 6 9 3 - 2 5 0 6 , M o o s e J a w, S K . highway tractors, view information at agrarian@sasktel.net www.titantrucksales.com CONTROL TRAILER CHUTE NEW 2014 TANDEM or tri-axle, spring or REMOTE can save you time, energy and air ride, steel or alum. Cheapest in western openers keep you safe this seeding season. FM reCanada. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. mote controls provide maximum range PRESTIGE LODE-KING SUPER B grain trail- and instant response while high torque ers, 11R22.5, powder coat rims, light drives operate the toughest of chutes. package, dual cranks: 2 sets 2009 w/lift Easy installation. Brehon Agrisystems a x l e s , $ 5 5 , 0 0 0 / e a . ; 3 s e t s 2 0 0 8 call 306-933-2655 or visit us online at: $50,000/ea.; 1 set 2004, $40,000. Phone www.brehonag.com Saskatoon, SK. 204-857-1700, Gladstone, MB. 2008 CANCADE TRI-AXLE pup grain trailWANTED: TRIPLE axle grain trailer, 5 to 6 er, 20’ box, roll tarp, stone guard on front, yrs. old, prefer 2 hoppers, no rust. Call less than 30,000 kms, dark grey, exc. cond 306-858-2636, Lucky Lake, SK. $36,000. 306-698-7778, Wolseley, SK. 1996 LODE KING Super B grain trailers, closed end, exc., spring ride, 24.5 tires at DOEPKER SUPER B, steel closed ends, 50%, tarps vg., round fenders, very little 1993, 28’ lead, 31’ rear, redone:- paint, rust, paint vg. Farm used, lower mileage, brakes, drums, bearings and seals, new $37,000. Lloyd Sproule, 403-627-2764 or Michel’s tarps, 24.5 tires. Will separate. Call for details 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. 403-627-7363, Pincher Creek, AB. SUPER B GRAIN trailers: 2003 Doepker; 2008 Doepker; 2006 Lode King; Two 2007 Lode King’s; 2008 Lode King; 2010 Grain Hauler. All safetied. 306-893-4334 or 306-893-7161, Maidstone, SK.
2000 LODE KING Super B grain trailers, closed end, excellent, air ride, 22.5 tires at 50%, tarps vg., flat fenders, very little rust, paint vg., farm used, lower mileage, $41,000. Lloyd Sproule, 403-627-2764 or 403-627-7363, Pincher Creek, AB. SANDBLAST AND PAINT your grain trailers, boxes, flatdecks and more. We use industrial undercoat and paint. Can zinc coat for added rust protection. Quality workmanship guaranteed. Prairie Sandblasting and Painting, 306-744-7930, Saltcoats, SK.
NEW, NEVER USED 2012 Lode-King Super B grain trailer, 24.5 Michelin tires- all new, 3 axle lift, white with light blue background, all alum. w/alum. wheels. Must sell due to health. Ph. 403-335-9719 before 5 PM, fax 403-335-8966, Didsbury, AB 2009 DOEPKER SUPER B hopper bottom, 24.5 rubber, light package, $55,000. 780-876-2667, 780-933-2585, DeBolt, AB. 2- 36’ PRESTIGE LODE-KINGS, low kms. 2005, new tarp, $27,000. 2010, $33,000 OBO. Call 306-548-4315, Sturgis, SK. 1995 DOEPKER TRI-AXLE TRAILER, tires 90%, farm used only, always shedded, exc. cond., $25,000 OBO. 780-499-5884, Andrew, AB. LODE-KING TRI-AXLE GRAIN trailer, triple hopper, fresh sandblast and paint, farm use, $24,000. 403-379-2423, Buffalo, AB.
Available at:
Delta Cooperative Association Ltd. Unity, SK
SCHOOL BUSES: 1986 to 1999, 20-66 pass., $1600 and up. Phoenix Auto, Lucky 2011 LODE-KING SUPER B grain trailers, exc. shape, auto lift axles, used for local Lake, SK., 1-877-585-2300. DL #320074. hauling only, $7400 OBO. 306-874-7696, 306-383-2871, Quill Lake, SK. 2013 FIAT 500 Sport Turbo, $19,975. LODE-KING 16’, hauls approx. 600-700 bu. 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 6 7 - 4 4 1 4 , W y n y a r d , S K . tarp, can be pulled with tractor or tandem truck. 306-654-7772, Saskatoon, SK. www.thoens.com DL #909250.
(306) 228-2624 www.dseriescanola.ca
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
Steven & Delia Trenholm Wynyard, SK | Wednesday, October 30, 2013 · 10am
SOUTHSIDE AUTO WRECKERS located Weyburn, SK., 306-842-2641. Used car parts, light truck to semi-truck parts. We buy scrap iron and non-ferrous metals. TRUCK BONEYARD INC. Specializing in obsolete parts, all makes. Trucks bought for wrecking. 306-771-2295, Balgonie, SK. C H E C K OUT OUR parts specials at: www.Maximinc.Com/parts or call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946.
MAJOR PUBLIC VEHICLE AUCTION
Copeland Road 640
SATURDAY NOVEMBER 2ND 2013 9:00 A.M. SHARP APPROXIMATELY 1000 UNITS • PARTIAL ADVANCE LISTINGS
son Road
PRELIMINARY ADVANCE NOTICE
PARCEL 1 – SK/RM OF BIG QUILL #308
3
DA Y
24/ 7 O N LIN E BID D IN G
Refer to W eb site forTerm s & Cond itions 3 LO CATIO N S – REG IN A, S AS KATO O N & M O O S O M IN : Ho lzm a 1992 Bea m Pa n el S a w ; 2009 Po n tia c G6 S E ; 2009 Do d ge Jo u rn ey; 2008 Chevro let Co b a lt; 2008 Ho n d a Acco rd ; 2007 F o rd E -350 XL T ; 2006 F o rd E s ca p e XL T 4W D S UV; 2005 F o rd F 150 S u p ercrew 4W D T ru ck; 1974 Chevro let Co rvette S tin gra y; 1997 T rip le E M o to r Ho m e - 37’; T erry Res o rt 28’ W Bu m p er Hitch Ca b in T ra iler; 2013 Gu lf S trea m T ra iler; 2012 Ca n -Am Ren ega d e; Ca n a m 500; 2006 M o to b its chi 500; Ho n d a Big Red ; Ca s e W 30 L o a d er; M a gn u m Go ld 4000 E a s y K leen Pres s u re W a s her; M a n u a l T ire Cha n ger; S n a p o n 20 Ga llo n Air Co m p res s o r; Qu a n tu m Pro jecto r - F u ll HD 3D; New 8 ft03-09 Do d ge Ro ll’n L o ck T o p ; Alu m in u m 5 ft Bru te T ru ck Bo x; New M eta l Cro s s Over T ru ck Bo x w /L o ck; Us ed M in u tem a n 200 Ba ttery Op era ted In d u s tria l F lo o r S cru b b er/S q u eegie; New Bu ll Do g Air Co m p res s o r a n d M u ch M o re!! REAL ES TATE: Bo rd er T o w n S a lo o n M in to n , S K ; Bien fa it, S k. - 10 Acres , Ho u s e & S ho p ; M eo ta - 2 Ho u s es ; F o a m L a ke Acrea ge; E lkho rn M B - 1520 s q .’ M o d u la r Ho m e; UP F OR T E NDE R: L a ke L o t o n S tru thers L a ke. BUY N OW : 2006 M o to b its chi 500 Qu a d ; 2006 F o rd F 150; 1969 F o rd T hu n d erb ird ; 2001 Ha rley Da vid s o n F XD Ba tm a n E d itio n ; 2006 Po la ris Da rrell E a rn ha rd t S p o rts m a n S p ecia l Qu a d ; 2008 S a tu rn Ou tlo o k XR; 2006 Ca m p er K eys to n e L a red o ; L /P RT R 1550 Revers e 48” T iller; 4 W heel F a rm W a go n ; New S kid s teer Atta chm en ts ; New 6hp Ga s E n gin e Pres s u re W a s her (34 PS O); T u rco T C180 6’ Ro to tiller; As New K T 1B1 S w a m p Co o ler; Gra n ite Co u n terto p s ; New Res ta u ra n tE q u ip . etc.
WRECKING LATE MODEL TRUCKS: 1/2 tons, 3/4 tons, 1 tons, 4x4’s, vans, SUV’s. Also large selection of Cummins diesel motors, Chevs and Fords as well. Phone Edmonton- 1-800-294-4784, or Calgary1-800-294-0687. We ship anywhere. We have everything, almost. WRECKING 1989 FORD L9000, good front end and cab; 1983 3 ton IHC, V8 diesel, 5 spd., single axle; Volvo trucks: Misc. axles and trans. parts; Also tandem trailer suspension axles. 306-539-4642, Regina, SK.
Y DA
3
Up-to-date news, weather, classifieds and more.
CLASSIFIED ADS 41
2 2a 3 4Krasne Road 5 1a 1 6
1 HOME QUARTER & 7 PARCELS OF FARMLAND
2012 SKYLINE SPRUCE RIDGE 16 X 76 FT *Buyer responsible for loadout
FOR A FREE FULL COLOUR 16 PAGE BROCHURE CALL TOLL FREE 1.877.257.SOLD (7653)
1976 VERSATILE 800
www.osmanauction.com
AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRIAL LIQUIDATIONS
1980 MASSEY FERGUSON 760
500± ROUND HAY BALES
AUCTION LOCATION: From WYNYARD, SK go 17.7 km (11 miles) South on Grid 640, 2.4 km (1.5 miles) West on Krasne Rd. GPS: 51.6006, -104.235 A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2012 Skyline Spruce Ridge 16 Ft x 76 Ft Mobile Home · 1976 Versatile 800 4WD · 1973 John Deere 4230 2WD · 1980 Massey Ferguson 760 Combine · Versatile 20 Ft Swather · Ford F600 S/A Grain Truck · 2001 Chevrolet 1500 4x4 Extended Pickup · 2000 Ford F250
Lariat 4x4 Crew Cab Pickup · John Deere 9350 40 Ft hoe Seed Drill · Morris Seedrite 8014 14 Ft Seed Drill · Bourgault Commander 34-18 34 Ft Cultivator · 500± Round Hay Bales, mix of Brome, Grass, Milkvetch, Crested wheat, Alfalfa · Grain Bins · Tanks · Squeeze Chute · Alley Ways...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com NS DATIO THE MMO ACCO ABLE AT ERATON H IL S A AV OINTS OUTH L P AL NS FOURDMONTO TIONS C IT E VA VIS ESER 7931 OR .COM R R FO -465- POINTS 780 .FOUR WWW
OSMAN AUCTION INC. AUTOMOTIVE DIVISION 6330 - 75 STREET EDMONTON ALBERTA
PHONE 780.777.7771 FAX 780.469.5081
1.877.257.SOLD (7653)
FO INFO R DETA RMA ILED WWW OUR WE TION VIS NEW .OSMAN BSITE A IT LIST AUC T SO P INGS AD TION.CO DED M LE BAC ASE CHE DAILY K OF C TEN K
Steven & Delia Trenholm: 306.554.3789 (h), 306.560.7766 (c) Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Dan Steen: 306.361.6154 800.491.4494
42 CLASSIFIED ADS
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. ALL ALUMINUM TANDEMS, tridems and Super B Timpte grain trailers. Call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946 or see: www.Maximinc.Com NEW WILSON SUPER B’s, tridem and tandem; 2012 Doepker Super B, alum. rims; 2010 Doepker tridem, 3 hopper ahead; 2008 Lode-King alum. open end Super B, alum. rims, air ride, also 2009 w/lift axles; 1994 Castleton tridem, air ride; Tandem and S/A converter, drop hitch, certified; 17’ A-train pup, very clean. 306-356-4550, Dodsland SK. DL #905231. www.rbisk.ca
1996 WILSON 50’ cattleliner, had light usage, CVIP done, tires- good, brakes in new cond., good trailer, ready to work! $17,000 OBO. Daryl 780-914-0551, Stony Plain, AB. THREE- 16’ SOUTHLAND bumper pull stock trailers, good shape, $5000-$6500 OBO. 403-548-0525, Medicine Hat, AB. NEW 20’ CIRCLE D livestock trailers, starting at $10,500. W-W alum. 7x20’ gooseneck, $16,650. Flatdeck trailers available. Leasing now available. Grassland Trailers, Glen at: 306-640-8034, 306-642-3050, email: gm93@sasktel.net Assiniboia, SK. 12’ BERGEN HORSE trailer, has torsion axles, in new condition; also have F. Eamor saddle Model 80-S. Call 306-472-5996, Woodrow, SK. 1979 WILSON 45’ double decker cattle trailer, nose decking, dog house, safety gates, real good farm trailer, $9500. 204-448-2193 evenings, Eddystone, MB. NEW BLUEHILLS GOOSENECK stock, 20’, $13,900; 18’, $11,900. Call 306-445-5562, Delmas, SK. 2002 MERRITT cattle/hog trailer, $28,000; 1996 Wilson cattle/hog trailer, $18,000; 2006 Wilson cattle/hog trailer, $45,000. 403-625-4658, Claresholm, AB. WILSON ALUMINUM STOCK trailer, like new condition, just over 8’ wide, 32’ floor, 8’ on the neck. Winter kit and decking to haul smaller livestock. Call 780-812-8733, Ardmore, AB. 1989 WILSON 53’ tri-axle cattleliner, noncommercial use, brakes and seals done, good condition, $15,000. 403-308-4200, Arrowwood, AB. 1995 MERRITT TRI-AXLE 53’ cattleliner, new brakes and drums, tires 75%, $18,000 OBO. 306-236-5891, Meadow Lake, SK.
24’ GOOSENECK tridem 21,000 lbs, $7890; Bumper pull tandem lowboy: 18’, 14,000 lbs., $3975; 16’, 10,000 lbs., $3090; 16’, 7000 lbs., $2650. Factory direct. 888-792-6283. www.monarchtrailers.com
2010 MIDLAND CLAM gravel trailer, 3 axle, A/R, new MB safety, flip back tarp, vg cond., 11.4x24.5 tires on alum. rims, can deliver. Call anytime, $45,000. Cypress River, MB. 204-743-2324. 2013 PINTLE TRAILER, 8.5’ x 36’ flatbed, 2- 10K axle duals, 16” wheels, 2- 12K jacks, beavertail w/ramps, used very little, $11,500. 403-574-2222, Stettler, AB. DECKS, DRY VANS, reefers, storage trailers at: www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. PRECISION TRAILERS: Gooseneck and bumper hitch. You’ve seen the rest, now own the best. Hoffart Services, 306-957-2033, www.precisiontrailer.com 2000 ARNE’S TRIDEM end dump, air ride, certified. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL #905231. www.rbisk.ca 2009 LODE-KING 53’ tandem stepdeck with slider axle, 60% tread on original tires, aluminum steel combo w/wood floor, 4 load bunks, 1 tool box, $26,000. Contact Brian, 306-536-3484, Rouleau, SK. 2003 LODE-KING 53’ stepdeck alum. combo, extra lights, steel wheels, exc. condition. 780-500-5005, Spirit River, AB. WANTED: USED TANDEM end dump gravel trailer. Call Greig Farms, 204-522-5527, Melita, MB. 1997 WABASH TRIDEM spring ride pup trailer frame, excellent for 20’-21’ box, new sandblast and paint, all new brake pots, 80% brakes and drums, 4 new 11Rx24.5 recaps, 4 at 80%, 4 at 60%, on alum. wheels, $14,000. Email pics available, 403-638-3934 ask for Jeff, Sundre, AB. TOPGUN TRAILER SALES “For those who demand the best.” PRECISION AND AGASSIZ TRAILERS (flatdecks, end dumps, enclosed cargo). 1-855-255-0199, Moose Jaw, SK. www.topguntrailersales.ca
LACOMBE TRAILER SALES & RENTALS WE SELL AND RENT
Hi Boys, Low Boys, Drop Decks, Storage Vans, Reefer Vans and Freight Vans & More. 7 KM West of RED DEER from Junction of HWY. 2 & 32nd St.
403-347-7721
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
53’ AND 48’ tridem and tandem stepdecks; Two 48’ tandem 10’ wide, beavertail, flip ramps, air ride, low kms; 1991 Trail King machinery trailer, hyd. tail; 53’, 48’, 28’ tridem and tandem highboys, all steel and combos. SUPER B HIGHBOYS; Tandem and S/A converter with drop hitch; 53’-28’ van trailers; B-train salvage trailers; Tandem lowboy, 9’ wide, air ride; High Clearance sprayer trailer w/tanks and chem handlers. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL #905231. www.rbisk.ca GOOD TRAILERS, REASONABLY priced. Tandem axle, gooseneck, 8-1/2x24’, Beavertail and ramps, 14,000 GVW, $6900; or triple axle, $7900. All trailers custom built from 2000 to 20,000 lbs., DOT approved. Call Dumonceau Trailers, 306-796-2006, Central Butte, SK. DROP DECK semi style and pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, tandem and tridems. Contact SK: 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336. 53’ HAY TRAILER, hi-boy, tri-axle, air ride, ready to haul, $10,000; 35’ hay trailer, 12 wheels, off road farm, $7995; 30’ hay trailer, 8 wheels, off road farm, $6995; Single off road converters starting at $1495 up to $2395; Tandem off road converters starting at $2495 up to $3495. 20 yard tandem b e l l y d u m p g r av e l t r a i l e r, $ 9 5 0 0 . 204-448-2193 evenings, Eddystone, MB. LOWBEDS, LOWBEDS: 2 and 3 axle, detachables, beavertail, single/double drops, $10,000 plus; New skidsteer trailers, 2 axle, $4500. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. 1991 JC TRAILERS, double drop lowbed, w/hyd. removable gooseneck. Tandem axle spring ride, 28’ in the well. Flip over front ramps, 80% LowPro 22.5 rubber, w/2 new mounted spares, 9 swingouts and 10 lashing rings per side, recent AB safety, nice straight trailer, $20,500. Email pictures available. 403-638-3934, ask for Jeff, Sundre, AB. ALL ALUMINUM TANDEMS, tridems and Super B Timpte grain trailers. Call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946 or see: www.Maximinc.Com LOWBED/EQUIPMENT TRAILERS: 10’ wide, 3 axle scissor necks, flip tail, air ride, $33,700 to $43,500; 2001 11’ wide, 16 wheel detach, beavertail, $44,000; TA detach, $8800; 4 hyd. tail trailers. Pics and prices at www.trailerguy.ca 306-222-2413, Saskatoon/Aberdeen, SK.
Andres
Trailer Sales And Rentals Fina nc ing Is Ava ila ble! Ca ll Us Toda y!
WILSON GOOSENECKS & CATTLE LINERS
WILSON ALUMINUM TANDEM, TRI-AXLE & SUPER B GRAIN TRAILERS
Andres specializes in the sales, service and rental of agricultural and commercial trailers. Call for a quote
W e will m a tc h c om petitor pric ing spec for spec Lethbridge, AB Nisku, AB 1-888-834-8592 1-888-955-3636 Visit our website at:
www.andrestrailer.com
1999 DOEPKER SUPER B, alum. budds, Michel’s tarps, steep slopes clam dump, good for grain, fertilizer, coal, pellets, etc. lots of life left, $26,500. Larry at 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. HAUSER GOOSENECK TRAILERS. Featuring 2 trailers in 1: Use as HD gooseneck trailer and/or bale transporter. Mechanical side self-unloading. LED lighting. Ramps optional. $18,560. Call Hauser’s Machinery, Melville, SK., 1-888-939-4444. www.hausers.ca CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors, view information at www.titantrucksales.com
JUST CAME IN! 2008 Chev Silverado ext. cab 4X4 longbox. Hard to find, fully loaded, only 203,000 kms. On sale for $15,999. Comes with 6 month limited powertrain warranty. Resource Auto, 401 Albert St., Regina, SK. Call Glenn at: 306-522-7771.
2010 DODGE 3500 diesel, manual, 118,000 kms, $32,000 OBO. More to choose from. 306-463-8888, Dodsland, SK. www.diamonddholdings.ca DL#909463 2012 DODGE DURANGO SXT, 7 passenger, loaded, $25,950. 1-800-667-4414, Wynyard, SK. www.thoens.com DL #909250. 2012 RAM LARAMIE dsl, crew, 59,000 kms 2000 FORD F250 XLT Supercab, shortbox, $48,950 PST paid. Hoss 1-800-667-4414, 7.3 dsl., auto, 2 WD, 300,000 kms, new www.thoens.com DL #909250. tires, very nice condition, $6500 OBO. 5th w h e e l h i t c h a n d t a i l gat e ava i l a b l e . CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors, view information at 204-745-7445, Carman, MB. www.titantrucksales.com 2002 B3000 MAZDA Cab Plus, 4 dr, 5 spd. standard, 149,000 kms., w/ATC and box NEW INTERNATIONAL TERRASTAR 3 ton 4x4 at: www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim liner, $6400. 306-442-4322, Pangman, SK. Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. 2003 SILVERADO SS, 225,000 kms, orig. o w n e r, f u l ly l o a d e d , $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 O B O. 306-536-9951, Regina, SK. 2008 PRO-STAR 13 spd., UltraShift automatic tandem grain truck. Paint matches Cat equipment, 2008 IHC ProS t a r, I S X 4 7 5 H P C u m m i n s , l o a d e d w/Jake’s power windows, door locks, alloys, etc. New 20’ New Star grain box, loaded w/Nordic scissor hoist, LED lights, work lights inside box, Michel’s roll tarp, pintle plate, decal kit, plumbed dump valve, etc. $72,900 or lease OAC. Farmer 2005 GMC 2500 HD, 4x4, diesel, Tidy tank, Vern’s Premium Trucks, 204-724-7000, push bar, 319,000 kms, many new parts, Winnipeg, MB. $12,000. 306-768-7740, Carrot River, SK. 2007 FREIGHLINER COLUMBIA grain 2006 DODGE 3/4 TON, 4x4, reg. cab, 5.7 truck, 15L Detroit 465-500 HP, 13 hemi, 8650 GVW, 100,000 kms, $14,000. s p d . E a t o n U l t r a S h i f t a u t o m a t i c , Call 306-628-7582, Mendham, SK. 4-way lockup diffs., loaded, safetied, 2006 FORD F350 V8, white, 224,555 kms, w/20’ New Star box and Nordic scissor SK-U01140A, $18,995. Call for details hoist, $73,900. Farmer Vern’s Premium 1-888-240-2415 or visit our website: Trucks, Winnipeg, MB. 204-724-7000. www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 2006 GMC 3/4 Crew, 4x4, 176,000 kms. Reduced $9950. PST paid. Wynyard, SK. Phone: 1-800-667-4414, www.thoens.com DL #909250. 3800 + 14,000 ACRES: Cattle, bison and elk operations, fenced and cross fenced, Wabumun Lake, west of Edmonton, AB. (Medicine Hat, Alberta) 780-915-1735, roperrealtyltd@aol.com
SEVEN PERSONS ALBERTA
40 FLATDECK SEMI TRAILERS, hi-boys and stepdecks, $2,100 to $25,000. Pics a n d p r i c e s a t w w w. t r a i l e r g u y. c a 5TH WHEEL tri-axle 30’ car hauler trailer, 306-222-2413, Aberdeen/Saskatoon, SK. self-unloading bale rack 32’, 7000 lb. axles GRAVEL TRAILERS: 2008 Cross Country with brakes. 780-724-3669, Elk Point, AB. quad wagon, end dump, $24,900; Quad clam dump wagon, $17,700; Tri-axle wagons, $9200; TA pups, $6800; TA cross dump, $9400. Pictures and prices at www.trailerguy.ca 306-222-2413, Saskatoon/Aberdeen, SK.
CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors, view information at www.titantrucksales.com FOR SALE: LOW rider cover for a Chevy 5 ’ x 8 ” b o x , l i ke n e w, $ 3 7 5 . P h o n e 306-233-7889, Cudworth, SK.
MIDLAND CLAM GRAVEL trailer, 3 axle, S/P ride, near new brakes, drums, tires, alum. rims, vg cond., can deliver $29,000. Cypress River, MB. 204-743-2324.
Please call about Grain Trucks arriving soon!
www.automatictruck.com
N &$77/(0$1
DURALITE
ENDORSED
BULL RIDER & RANCHER
6&277
GOOSENECK IN STOCK
6&+,))1(5
M.. FF..M
RRLLDD W WOO R R IILLEE TTRRAA
STOP
1-877-205-1999 | www.fmtrailerworld.com
ATTENTION FARMERS: Very large selection of tandem grain trucks, AutoShifts and standards, Cancade and Neu Star boxes. Call Yellowhead Sales 306-783-2899, Yorkton, SK. DL #916328. AUTOMATIC 2007 FREIGHTLINER Columbia Series 60 Detroit, 455 HP, Eaton auto trans, brand new 20’ CIM box, $65,000. 306-338-8101, Wadena, SK. DL #312339. AUTOMATIC AUTOMATIC 2010 IH Prostar, premium, Cummins, new 20’ B&H, roll tarp, $72,000. Canora, SK., 306-563-8765. AUTOSHIFT TRUCKS AVAILABLE: Boxed tandems and tractor units. Contact David 306-887-2094, 306-864-7055, Kinistino, SK. DL #327784. www.davidstrucks.com
Detroit Power, 10 speed Autoshift Transmission, 3.73 axle ratio, Southern truck
403-977-1624 JUST CAME IN! 2005 Chev Silverado 2500 4X4, 4 door, Duramax diesel, fully loaded, only 234,000 kms. Drives awesome. On 2001 TRAIL-EZE SLIDING, tandem axle, rawlyn@automatictruck.com sale for $15,999. Resource Auto, 401 Altilt deck, hyd. trailer, winch, 49’, $32,000. bert St, Regina, SK. Glenn: 306-522-7771. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. MUST SELL: 2005 DODGE dually, 4 dr., 1966 FORD 3 ton, 14’ Western Industries NEW PRODUCT!! BEHNKE 53’ air ride longbox, dsl., loaded, white, chrome, B&H, recent tarp, 330 eng., 5 spd. trans., s p r a y e r t r a i l e r o n l y $ 4 2 , 5 0 0 . C a l l 2008 GMC SIERRA 1500 SLT, AC, CC, CD, 4x4, n ew b r a ke s a n d t i r e s , $ 4 7 5 0 O B O. 1-888-435-2626 or visit your local Flaman leather, black, auto, 73,249 kms, Stk# SK- 156,000 kms. 306-654-7772 Saskatoon SK 306-231-7054, 306-231-8173 Englefeld SK U0705, $28,995. 1-888-240-2415 or location. www.flaman.com for more info. www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 1975 CHEV TANDEM, 427 gas, 5/4 gears, 2009 NISSAN TITAN, 5.6L, silver, 40,409 CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used grain box also has silage end gate, very kms, SK-U0721 $24,995. C a l l highway tractors, view information at good rubber. 780-853-2275, Vermilion, AB 1-888-240-2415 or visit our website: www.titantrucksales.com 1975 IHC 1700 tag axle grain truck, air www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. brakes, roll tarp. Phone 306-283-4747 or 306-291-9395, Langham, SK. 2012 RAM LONGHORN 2500, red, loaded w/B&W hitch, 24,000 kms, Sask tax 1976 FORD F600, 15’ B&H, roll tarp, 391 paid, $55,000. 306-442-7623, Khedive, SK. CID, 75,000 miles, shedded, clean, 1 owner, $10,000. 306-874-7843, Naicam, SK. 2013 GMC DURAMAX, 4WD, box liner, side steps, leather, exc. shape, 61,000 kms., 1978 MACK R600, 300+ engine, 15 spd., 20’ BH&T, $16,000 OBO; 1980 Ford F600, NEW END DUMPS available for fall harvest $40,000 OBO. 306-252-2227, Kenaston, SK new 370 engine, BH&T, $6500 OBO; 1964 tandem, Shurlok tarp, steel wheels, 34’ CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used IHC 1800, new- 345 engine, clutch and grey, $36,900. For details. Corner Equip- highway tractors, view information at pressure plate, good B&H, $4500 OBO. Call ment, Dwight, 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. www.titantrucksales.com 306-445-5485, Delmas, SK. C H E C K OUT OUR parts specials at: WANTED: DODGE 3500 Series truck, 4x4, 1979 GMC C70, average condition, asking www.Maximinc.Com/parts or call Maxim auto., long box, 2006-2010, one owner, $6500 OBO. Call 306-445-9833, Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. low mileage. 204-742-3738, Ethelbert, MB. 1998 CHEV 2500, 6.5 diesel, 4x4, 179,000 306-441-6923, Whitkow, SK. kms, $10,500 OBO. More to choose from. C a l l 3 0 6 - 4 6 3 - 8 8 8 8 , D o d s l a n d , S K . 1980 CHEV TANDEM, 8.2 Detroit diesel, 13 spd., 20’ B&H, diff. locks, 80% rubber, ofwww.diamonddholdings.ca DL#909463 fers. Call 306-741-6549, Vanguard, SK. 2 NEW 2013 Ram 2500 Laramie Crewcab, diesel, loaded, $64,500. Hendrys Chrysler, 1983 FORD L9000 tandem grain truck, 20x8x5’ B&H, new roll tarp, Cummins 855, 306-528-2171, Nokomis, SK. DL #907140. NOW IS THE TIME 9 speed Fuller, new turbo, newer tires, 2003 DODGE DUALLY 4x4, 5.9L, fully load- safetied, $22,500 OBO. 204-523-7469, TO UPGRADE YOUR ed, performance chip and other extras. 204-534-8115, Killarney, MB. The only all riveted aluminum trailer with a STOCK TRAILER Repair receipts available. Asking $17,500 smooth interior and proven durability for over 1986 IHC S1900, 6x6 4 spd. Allison auOBO. 306-331-0121, Fort Qu’Appelle, SK. 20 years and a 7 year warranty!! to, tandem, w/20’ container bed, 42,000 2005 GMC SIERRA NEVADA 4x4, $9950, orig. miles, exc. cond., 56,000 GVW, BY PROFESSIONAL PST paid. 1-800-667-4414, Wynyard, SK. high/low range, asking $26,000. Ideal for 20’ $17,274 www.thoens.com DL #909250. grain truck. 480-267-2394, Saskatoon, SK. 25’ $18,375 2006 FORD F-350 Lariat, 6.0 litre diesel, 6 1997 MACK 350, 10 spd., w/5 yr. old 20’ 30’ $25,857 spd. standard, crew cab, short box, Loadline grain box, 730,000 kms, excel163,000 kms., 306-843-2934, Wilke, SK. lent, $35,000. Call 204-546-3438, DEALERS FOR: Duralite Stock, Rainbow Car Equipment and 2006 HONDA RIDGELINE 4x4, dark green, 204-638-2722, Grandview, MB. Stk# SK-S2590A, 93,000 kms, $16,995. 2001 FL80 FREIGHTLINER grain truck, Dump, Royal/Southland Cargo and Dump DL #914077. Call 1-866-980-0260 or 3126 Cat, 275 HP, 158,000 kms, new 21.5’ Trailers. Selling Gates and Corral Panels. www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca B&H, good rubber, new injectors, $48,000. 2006 RAM 3500, Cummins diesel, 4x4, 306-621-7050, Yorkton, SK. COME BY BOOTH quad cab, LWB, $17,650. 1-800-667-4414. 2001 FREIGHTLINER FL80, 300 HP, 9 AND CHECK www.thoens.com DL #909250. OUT OUR SHOW speed trans., new 16’ ultracell BH&T packSPECIALS! 2007 DODGE RAM 3500 diesel, 4x4, C&C, age, exc. cond., no rust, only $37,500. Call $19,999; 2008 Dodge Ram 5300 diesel, for details, 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. 2 LOCATIONS 4x4, $24,999. 1-800-667-4414, Wynyard, 2004 IHC 4400 new body style, 466 AlliSK. www.thoens.com DL# 909250. son auto., C&C, will take 20’ box, low low VULCAN | 403-485-8154 $39,900; 2001 IHC 4900, 466 Alli& SEE US AT 2007 FORD F150 Lariat, 4x4, leather, red, miles, 8km W of Vulcan on Hwy 534 auto., 18’ BH&T, 130,000 miles, E 5 . 4 L 9 0 , 3 4 7 k m s , S t k # S K - U 0 4 6 0 , son AGRI – TRAD $44,900; IHC 8100, C&C, 370 HP STRATHMORE | 403-934-6833 $ 2 6 , 4 9 5 . C a l l 1 - 8 6 6 - 9 8 0 - 0 2 6 0 o r Cummins,2003 3 6 spd. Allison auto., will fit BOOTH #112 www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. From Walmart on Hwy #1Go, 18-20’ box, $29,900. K&L Equipment, T AG – WES 3km N, 3 km E & 1km N to 244051 2008 RAM 5500 diesel 4x4, C&C, 84” C.A. R e g i n a / I t u n a , S K . D L # 9 1 0 8 8 5 . C a l l 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 6 7 - 4 4 1 4 , Wy nya r d , S K . 306-795-7779, 306-537-2027 or email: www.thoens.com DL #909250. ladimer@sasktel.net
O ATTENTI
2007 FREIGHTLINER COLUMIBA, Det., 13 spd. Eaton Ultrashift. 2006 IHC 9200 Eagle, ISX Cummins, 12 spd. Meritor auto. Both with new 20’x65” CIM B&H, fresh SK. safeties. 306-270-6399, Saskatoon, SK. www.78truxsales.com DL 316542. 2007 IH 9200 tandem, ISX Cummins, Eaton Fuller auto, new Cancade 20’ box, $68,000. L&B Friesen Ltd. 204-721-2010, Brandon, MB. www.lbgraintrucks.com
2006 Freightliner Century
11’ WIDE, 16 wheeler beavertail, safetied, $34,000. 9’ wide tandem lowbed, beavertail, $26,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. TRAILERS- ADVANTAGE AUTO AND Trailer. Livestock, horse and living quarter, flatdeck, goosenecks, tilts, dumps, cargos, utilities, Ski-Doo and ATV, dry van and sea containers. Call today over 250 in stock, 204-729-8989 in Brandon, MB. on the Trans Canada Hwy. www.aats.ca
2001 STERLING, 330 HP Cummins, 10 spd, new 20’ Berg’s grain box, new paint, new MB. safety, clean truck, $56,900 OBO. Call Henry at 204-324-7593, Altona, MB. 2004 IHC 8600, ISM Cummins, 400HP, 10 spd, air ride, AC, Jakes, new 20x65 CIM BH&T, new batteries, Certified $49,990. Phone 306-256-3569 or 306-230-4393, Cudworth, SK. DL#917908. 2005 IH 9200 AutoShift and 2007 T800 KW, 13 spd. UltraShift, Cat C15, new 20’ BH&T; 1976 GMC 6500, 366, 5&2, 16’ wood box. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL #905231. www.rbisk.ca
BERG’S GRAIN BODIES: When durability and price matter, call Berg’s Prep and Paint for details at 204-325-5677, Winkler, MB. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors, view information at www.titantrucksales.com COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL MFG. for grain box pkgs., decks, gravel boxes, HD combination grain and silage boxes, pup trailers, frame alterations, custom paint, complete service. Visit our plant at Humboldt, SK or call 306-682-2505 for prices. FOR SALE: FERTILIZER or seed funnel, for 16’x8’ grain box, like new, $475. Phone 306-233-7889, Cudworth, SK. FREIGHTLINER AUTOSHIFT GRAIN TRUCK, 2010 Cascadia, DD15 engine at 560 HP, 18 spd. AutoShift, 12 and 46 axles with full locks, 3.90 gear ratio, full maintenance history, new 20’ CIM Ultra II B&H, PTO and controls, loaded except leather. Call Ross, Canada West Truck Centre 306-221-4264, Saskatoon, SK. DL 914300. REMOTE CONTROL ENDGATE AND hoist systems can save you time, energy and keep you safe this harvest season. Give Brehon Agrisystems a call at 3 0 6 - 9 3 3 - 2 6 5 5 o r v i s i t u s o n l i n e at www.brehonag.com Saskatoon, SK.
16’ DUMP, 2006 Western Star, 475 HP, 8LL trans, 20/46 Henderson susp., tarp, $65,000. 780-913-0097, Edmonton, AB. 2005 STERLING TANDEM dump truck new BH&T, hitch, C13 Cat, 10 spd., black/black, $44,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. 2006 and 2007 IHC 9200, both have new 16’ Cancade gravel box and tarp. Phone Yellowhead Sales 306-783-2899, Yorkton, SK. DL #916328. GOOD SELECTION: OLDER gravel trucks including Kenworth and Western Star. Call 306-338-2674, Kuroki, SK. SINGLE AXLE AUTOMATIC DUMP, 14’ box, 2007 IH 4300, 466 dsl., hyd. brakes, $36,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. TANDEM AXLE Gravel trucks in inventory. New and used, large inventory across Western Canada at www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & Trailer 1-888-986-2946
1990 MACK SUPERLINER, long wheel b a s e , 4 0 0 6 c y l . M a c k e n g i n e , n ew 1200x22.5 rear tires, large front tires, $9500; 10x20 tires on Dayton rims; 6 1000x20, 4 grips, 2 front, Dayton rims. 306-960-3000, St. Louis, SK. 1997 KENWORTH T800 w/16’ flatdeck N14 engine, 435 HP, 18 speed, $12,900. 403-575-1275, Consort, AB. 1997 WESTERN STAR daycab tractor, 244” WB, 156 C.A., 430 HP Series 60, 15 spd., 40 rears, 3-way locks, 80% rubber, new AB safety, $19,800. 403-638-3934, Sundre AB 2000 IH 8100, daycab, tandem, 370 HP Cummins, 10 spd., air ride, premium, no rust truck, only $24,500. Call for details, 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
WE can help you every step of the way into your new Truck! From Premium Used Truck Sales, Engine Performance to Accessories we have it all! Our units get a fresh 3rd party safety & any over $30,000 come with a 30 day major component warranty. We stand strong behind our product! Authorized dealers for PDI and Steinbauer offering you engine services that can up your Horsepower and Lower your fuel usage on all your truck and AG Equipment! Call our friendly staff today and let us know what we can do for you!
1-888-405-8457 306-493-2506 For A Full List of Inventory View
CLASSIFIED ADS 43
2011 WESTERN STAR, small sleeper, 18 spd. trans., 46 rears, 400,000 kms., Detroit 15 500 HP, new safety, excellent condition. Lloydminster, AB., 780-871-4743.
2 CATTELAC 600 mixer feed lot trucks, Workstar 7400 International, 2012 and 2013, 500 and 100 mixing hours, single axles. 780-878-4518, Czar, AB.
2012 and 2011, 389, ISX Cummins, 18 spd., 46 diffs, Peterbilts; 2007, 2006 and 2005, 379 Peterbilts; 2006 T800 KW daycab, Cat, 18 spd., lockers; 2005 W900 KW, daycab, Cat, 18 spd., 46 diff, Rubar bumper; 2007 and 2005 IHC 9900i’s, 18 spd., 46 diff, lockers; 2003 Freightliner Classic, Cat, 18 spd., new rubber; Two 2001 Western Stars 4964, N14 Cummins and Cat, 13 spd; 1999 9300 IH, dual stacks dual breathers 60 Detroit, 13 spd.; 1989 T600 KW, 425 Cat, 18 spd. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL #905231 www.rbisk.ca
SPECIALTY TRUCKS AVAILABLE: Fire/ emergency trucks, garbage, bucket, deck and dump trucks. See us at our new location on Cory Rd., Saskatoon, SK. Summer of 2013. 306-668-2020. DL #90871
S E L L E B R AT I N G 5 0 Y E A R S W I T H CHRYSLER. 2012 Dodge Journey RT AWD, $25,950, PST paid. 1-800-667-4414, Wynyard, SK. www.thoens.com DL 909250
3- 2007 PETERBILT 378’s, 500 HP, C15 Cat, 63” bunk, 12,000 fronts, 46,000 rears. $49,900 ea. 403-852-4452, Calgary, AB.
www.kandkent.ca
3- INT. 8600’s, S/A, 10 spd., Cat and Cumm i n s p owe r. C a l l Ye l l ow h e a d S a l e s 2000 IHC 9200, C12 Cat, 430 HP, 10 spd. 306-783-2899, Yorkton, SK. DL #916328. AutoShift w/clutch petal, 3-way locks, 51” flattop sleeper, 60% rubber, new rear brakes, cold AC, new AB safety, $15,000. Email pics avail. 403-638-3934, Sundre AB 2004 FREIGHTLINER M2, tandem, Allison auto, excellent cab and chassis or box pkg, only $39,500. Call for details, 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. 2004 WESTERN STAR, 14L Detroit, 15 spd. Super 40 rears, positive air shut-off, steering tires 90%, drivers tires 60%, short hood, $25,000. Kitscoty, AB. 780-846-2833 780-808-9072. ATTN FARMERS/ GRAVEL/ OIL HAUL2005 FREIGHTLINER CLASSIC FLD120, ERS: 2006 Freightliner FLD 120 Classic, 515 Detroit, 18 spd., 4-way locks, 46 rears, 550 Cat twin turbo, dual exhaust, twin air 36” flat-top sleeper, new rad. and turbo, breathers, 18 spd., 12/40, 3.58 gears, 36” 662,700 kms, rubber good, excellent bunk, 144” cab to mid axle, double full cond., $48,900 OBO. 306-567-7100 or lockers, 10 brand new 22.5 tires not recaps, new SK. safety, odometer reads 306-963-7904, Imperial, SK. 1,067,290 kms, $44,900. 306-242-2508 or 2007 IHC 9200 Eagle, C13 Cat, 625,000 fo r fi n a n c i n g c a l l G o r d at H o r i z o n kms. 2006 IHC 9200 daycab, ISX Cum- 306-934-4445, Saskatoon, SK. mins, 650,000 kms. Both w/13 spd. Eaton Ultrashifts and fresh SK safeties. Phone 306-270-6399, www.78truxsales.com at Saskatoon, SK. DL 316542.
2002 Ford F150 X L T reg cab T13422B 168,068km s....................$7,900 2006 D odge Ra m 2500 S L T M ega cab T13534C 180,315km s.........$23,900 2007 C hev Tra ilbla zer S S 6.0L T13490A A 103,000km s..............$18,900 2009 C hev 2500 S L E C rew 6.6L T14138A 111,500km s................$36,900 2009 C hev 1500 L TZ C rew 5.3L T14107A 128,400km s................$24,900 2010 D odge Ra m 1500 S L T C rew T13429A 113,980km s................$26,900 2010 D odge Ra m 3500 S RW C rew R 4991A 95,353km s....................$38,900 2011 C hev 2500 L TZ C rew T1496A 92,500km s..................................$43,900 2013 C hev Ta hoe Leather load R 4985 27,300km s.......................$49,900 2013 G M C Yu kon X L S L E R 4989 26,645km s..................................$44,900 5 05 H w y 7 W e s t R o s e to w n , S K 1-87 7 -97 9-7 999 • 306-882-2691 w w w .ro s e to w n m a in lin e .n e t
2000 FREIGHTLINER FL80 w/24’ flatdeck, 300 HP diesel, 9 spd., safetied, vg cond., no rust, $19,500. Call for details, 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. 2000 GMC 7500 24’ van truck, Allison auto., diesel, 175,000 miles, 3000 lb. lift gate, safetied, ready to go, only $12,500. C15 CAT w/eng. warranty until Sept 2016. Call 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. 2006 Western Star 4900, ex-factory, set 2001 FREIGHTLINER FL60, ex Snap-On 625 HP and 2050 torque, 244” WB, 68” Tools truck, 20’ box w/shelves, side door, bunk, loaded truck, Cat platinum rebuild, propane furnace, power inverter, interior May/2014 safety, new: brakes, drums, lights, 1600 lb. lift gate, walk thru cab, starter, battery, etc ., 760,000 kms, $29,000. 250-565-4733, Prince George, 2007 IHC 9200, Cummins ISX engine, 10 $64,500 OBO. 403-512-1021 Irricana, AB. BC. E-mail: bgeates@gmail.com spd. auto trans, approx. 1.6M kms, new CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used ECM, TCM, trans sensors, good rubber. highway tractors, view information at M ED IUM D UTY TR UCK S/TR AIL ER S Former FedEx unit, good cond., MB. safety, www.titantrucksales.com $23,500 OBO. 204-856-3396 Gladstone MB SLEEPERS AND DAYCABS. New and used. 2007 VOLVO VN670 D-16, 13 spd., 40 Huge inventory across Western Canada at rears w/lockers, 1,400,000 kms, 11R24.5, www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & $39,000. 403-831-0088, Carstairs, AB. Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. glen@firstcontinentalfreight.com WET KIT, HEAVY SPEC, 2006 FL, 500 2008 INT. PROSTAR PREMIUM, big blocks HP, 15 spd., 14/46 axles, lock-ups, fresh Cummins, 435 HP, auto, $32,500. Larry at safety, $32,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. 2009 T800 KENWORTH, 485 ISX, 18 spd., 46 rears, 770,000 kms, loaded, $69,500. 24’ FLATDECK off 2006, steel deck, w/ Call 306-752-4909, Melfort, SK. sliding winches, $3950. K&L Equipment 2009 PETERBILT 389 tractor, 565 Cum- Regina, SK. DL# 910885, 306-795-7779, mins, 18 spd., 46 rears on Pete air track, 306-537-2027. Email ladimer@sasktel.net 4-way locks, 3.91 ratio, 244” WB, 48” stand up bunk, 13,480 hrs., 778,000 kms, new CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used caps on rear, 60% front rubber, new AB highway tractors, view information at www.titantrucksales.com safety, $63,000. 403-638-3934, Sundre AB 2009 PETERBILT 389, 600 HP Cummins, VAN TRUCKS 24-26’ single axle. 2006 M2 PDI delete, platinum interior, 63” bunk Freightliner, hyd. tailgate, side door; 2007 w/fridge, 825,000 kms., dual Webasto sys- IH auto, hyd. brakes. Both diesel, $22,000 tem, new drives, exc. cond., one owner, your choice. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. $80,000. Call 306-921-9776, Kinistino, SK. 1988 CHEV ONE ton bale truck w/hydra deck, new: motor, clutch, carb., radiator, and tires, $8,000. 780-656-4187, Smoky Lake, AB., or zenko@mcsnet.ca
201 4 K ENW O R TH T370 TAND EM 350 HP Paccar(Cu m m in s )Die s e l,Allis o n Au to ,Lo ad e d ,8.5’x20’x65” CIM Ultrace l Bo x,Ho is t,Ele ctric Tarp,Re m o te Ho is t an d En d g ate ,Re d M SRP $1 62,374 .....SAL E PRICE $1 4 4 ,9 9 5 201 4 K ENW O R TH T4 4 0 TAND EM 370 HP (Paccar)Allis o n Au to , Lo ad e d ,8.5’x20’x65” Ultrace lBo x,Ho is t, Tarp,Re m o te Ho is tan d En d g ate , W hite w ith Te alBo x M SRP $1 95,867. . . . .SAL E PRICE $1 54 ,9 9 5 2007 FR EIGHTL INER CO L U M BIA D AY CAB TAND EM S 4 35 HP M e rce d e s Die s e l,1 2 Spd . M e rito rAu to Shift,20’ Bo x, Ho is t,Ele ctric Tarp,Re m o te Ho is t+ En d g ate Co n tro ls ,950,000 km . $6 8,9 9 5
2003 FREIGHTLINER FL70, w/5th wheel, SA, Cat diesel, Allison auto., clean, safet i e d , l ow m i l e s , o n ly $ 1 6 , 5 0 0 . C a l l WANAWAFEL FRANCHISE in Calgary, 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. AB. Get in on the Hottest trend! Mobile 2005 GMC C6500, Allison trans., S/A, Food Cart business comes ready to operC&C, 9,000 front/19,000 rears, hydraulic ate with training, $63,000; UKRAINIAN brakes, long WB, available w/wo 24’ deck, FINE FOODS Restaurant in Calgary, AB. $15,900; 2005 GMC, C6500, Allison auto., Well established family run catering, mohy d r a u l i c b r a ke s , w / 2 4 ’ va n b o dy, bile/retail and restaurant business special$18,900. K&L Equipment, Regina/Itu- izing in Ukrainian style foods, $279,000; na, SK. DL #910885. 306-795-7779 or CUSTOM ABBATTOIR and Butcher Shop in Stettler, AB. Provincially licenced and 306-537-2027 email: ladimer@sasktel.net inspected upscale butcher shop. Sale in2006 FREIGHTLINER M2 van truck 22’, cudes all equipment, building and land, Cat diesel, Allison auto., AC, rust free Cali- $749,900. Call 403-506-7171, Ed Katchur, fornia truck, $26,500. 306-946-8522, Sas- Maxwell Real Estate Solutions Ltd. katoon, SK. EAST CENTRAL SK livestock CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used THRIVING for sale in the heart of cattle counhighway tractors, view information at market try. 306-675-2077, Leross, SK. www.titantrucksales.com FOR SALE BY TENDER: 2301 sq. ft. modern restaurant w/attached residence in small friendly village in busy oil and farming area of west central Sask. Tenders close November 12, 2013. Mail tenders to: Village of Denzil, Box 100, Denzil, SK., S0L 0S0. For info call 306-358-2118. WANTED: LEAFCUTTER BEE nesting boxes (older wafer style). Please call Bill at BUSY SMALL TOWN restaurant/ hotel/ 306-648-8207, Gravelbourg, SK. tavern for sale. Located on main hwy. to 24 hr. border crossing. Oil activity in area. Must sell due to health reasons, asking $125,000. Call for details 306-861-3451, Minton, SK. LEW DUDDRIDGE NEW BOOKS. Lew and Len Duddridge were pilots in WW2- MUST SELL: Restaurant and gas bar. LoLen flew 2 tours on Spitfires from Malta- cated along Hwy. #5 in Margo, SK. Enviro Lew flew Wellingtons and Lancasters out study done. 1.2 acres, semi parking, 50 of England. An Autobiography “The Flying seat dining, pizza oven, chicken cooker, Duddridges” tell their story Price $18. The absolute turnkey. Movable. 306-272-7762, Murder came later. A novel by Lew. WW2 or email: missysrestaurant@hotmail.ca pilots return home as heroes but all is not well in their prairie town. The President of TURNKEY BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY! the local WAAF is raped and murdered, New state of the art, 8-bay carwash for one of the returning pilots is killed in a sale in thriving Saskatchewan community. suspicious helicopter crash. His war bride Located on 1.5 acres with great location widow does not give up… it is filled with on highway. Great customer base! Selling romance, suspicion, surprise. $15. Who due to health concerns. Serious inquiries cares now, a 500 page book, with chapters only please! Call 306-232-4767. about ‘My brother was a hero,’ ‘Ray and JUST SOUTH OF SASKATOON- One mile Lew comrades at arms’, etc. $15. I will re- s o u t h o n B oy c h u k D r i ve E x t e n s i o n fund in full to any unsatisfied reader. Now NW-6-36-4-3, MLS #473077, 160 acres, a free book. Google the following, and asking $2,200,000; NE-6-36-4-3rd, MLS read online. “Our Roots,” University of Cal- #473155, 160 acres, asking $2,200,000; gary, “The Best 70 Years of my Life by Lew SW-6-36-4-3rd, MLS #475040, 132 acres, Duddridge” (re: shipping) order any book, asking $1,850,000. Inside the future and add $3.75. When the book arrives, planned perimeter road and planned for mail us your cheque to: Lew Duddridge, rezoning. Earl Cooper of Sutton Group 419 - 829 Goldstream Ave. Victoria BC V9B Norland Realty® 306-241-7751 Saskatoon 2X8, Ph. 250-474-3413, hmd@shaw.ca EQUIPMENT RENTAL BUSINESS WITH PROPERTY, Biggar, SK. Main shop 40’x60’ with 16’ ceiling, and 20’x40’ mezzanine. Second shop is 26’x42’ with 8’ ceiling. Both 3 phase power, $325,000. MLS®. Call Tr e n t L i p k a , R e / M a x S a s k a t o o n , 306-222-0716, t.lipka@sasktel.net
WINDOWS! WINDOWS!
A COMPLETE FULL LINE OF WINDOWS!!! See our Showroom for the best selection & savings in Sask.
Take Home Windows Feature!
Low E Argon No Extra Charge Sealed Picture Window ............From $39.95 Horizontal Gliders .....................From $69.95 Vertical Gliders .......................From $115.00 Casement Windows ...............From $199.99 Basement Awning Windows ...From $144.79 Storm Doors ..........................From $159.99 Steel Insulated Doors .............From $139.99 Fibreglass Insulated Doors “Maintenance Free” ...............From $299.99 “Out swing” Insulated Doors From $199.99 Patio Door Units .....................From $499.99 Garden Door Units ..................From $789.99 Special Size Door Units 30” & 34” ..............................From $169.99
VINYL SIDING CLASS “A” #1 PRODUCT • • • •
.60 ¢
Popular Profile Good Colors! 1st Grade Sq. Ft Matching Accessories Available!!!
7 COLORS
Burron Lumber
306-652-0343, Saskatoon, SK
2-2005 V O LV O TAND EM S w ith G rain Bo xe s Arrivin g s o o n . . . . . . . . . sta rting a t$56 ,9 9 5
2012 Peterb ilt 38 8 Cu m m in s IS X 525 h.p ., 18 s p d ., s u p er 40’s , 390,000 o rigin a l K M ’s , b u n k & en gin e hea ter, a s kin g $102,900 (2) 2010 Freightlin er Ca s ca d ia ’s DD15, 560 h.p ., 18 s p d , 46 rea rs , p a rk s m a rts ys tem s (w ith w a rra n ty), exten d ed w a rra n ty, a lu m in u m m o o s e b u m p er, u n d er 600,000 K M ’s 2010 V o lvo 78 0, 77” Co n d o s leep er, Cu m m in s IS X 400 h.p . tha tca n b e u p gra d ed . E xten d ed w a rra n ties o n en gin e, in jecto rs a n d tu rb o . Un d er 690,000 K M ’s 2010 M a ck CX U6 13, M P8 485 h.p ., 18 s p d , ca b a n d en gin e hea ter 3 w a y lo ck u p s , 608,390 K M ’s 2008 M a ck CX U6 13, M P8 480 h.p ., 18 s p d ., 12,000 fro n t, 40,000 60’ M id ro o fs leep er, 804,000 K M ’s . 2006 V o lvo 6 70, D12 465 h.p ., 61” Ra is ed ro o fs leep er, 12 s p d ., M erito r, 12 & 40’s . 2001 GM C C6 500 235 h.p ., ga s en gin e No E m is s io n s ,5 s p d , 16’ va n b o d y, On ly 13,000 o rigin a l K M ’s , As kin g . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $28 ,000
Regin a , S K 1-8 00-6 6 7-046 6 S a s k a to o n , S K 1-8 8 8 -242-79 8 8
2004 M2 FREIGHTLINER, C7 CAT, auto, hyd. brakes, 280,000 kms., 24’ van, powertail gate, alum. walk ramp, side door, fresh Sask safety, vg, anyone can drive it! $25,900. Cam-Don Motors, 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK.
1 992 GM C TO P K ICK Cat31 1 6,21 5 HP, W hite 1 4 9,1 27 km ,Du al50 G alSte p Tan ks 1 54 ” W .B.,1 3’x81 ⁄2 De ck,He ad ache Rack, Utility Bo xe s & Draw e rs ,AirBrake s ,Traile r Brake ,Bu cke tSe ats ,Blu e De ck,V e rtical Exhau s t. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1 7 ,9 9 5 1 971 IHC L O AD STAR 1 600 S/Axle ,304 V 8,5& 2,8’x1 5’x4 1 ” w o o d b o x,ho is t, 900x20 ru b b e r,o ran g e & w hite cab ,b lu e b o x,o n ly 39,577 m ile s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8,9 9 5
201 3 3 500 H D R eg.Ca b 4 W D Ca b & Cha ssis.
1997 F-800, 8.3L Cummins, auto, A/R, 24’ deck, tool boxes, winches, fresh Sask safety, only 99,000 kms! $18,900. Cam-Don Motors, 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK.
Western Star Bale Trucks · 2001 Western Star, Cat C-15 Single Turbo 550 hp, 18 spd., 4 way lockers, 14,600 front, Chalmers susp. · 2005 Western Star, 460 HP Mercedes, Allison auto, 4 way lockers, air ride suspension
403-977-1624 or 306-740-7771 Located at Medicine Hat, AB
201 3 GM C SL E, 4 W D,C& C,Du alRe ar W he e ls ,Du ram ax Die s e l,Allis o n Au to , Lo ad e d ,w hite M SRP $59,4 60. . . . . . . . . Sa le Price $4 7 ,9 9 5 201 3 GM C SIER R A 3500 HD , 2 W D,Re g . Cab & Chas s is ,6.0L V -8,Au to ,A/T/C,W hite M SRP $4 5,21 0. . . . . . . . . Sa le Price $3 1 ,9 9 5 201 3 GM C SIER R A 3500 HD , 4 W D,6.0L V -8,Au to ,A/T/C,w hite ,1 61 .5” W B,84 .9” C/A M SRP $4 5,21 0. . . . . . . . . Sa le Price $3 4 ,9 9 5 Clea rin g O u t 50 - N ew 201 3 M od el G.M .Tru c ks,Ca rs & Sport Utilities. H uge D iscounts, 2.99% fina ncing!
W ATRO US M AINLINE M O TO R PRO DUCTS LTD. H IG H W
AY
#2 EA ST – W
ATRO US,SK
306-946-3336
w w w .w atrousm ainline.com DL#907173
ROUGH LUMBER: 2x6, 2x8, 2x10, 1” boards, windbreak slabs, 4x4, 6x6, 8x8, 10x10, all in stock. Custom sizes on order. Log siding, cove siding, lap siding, shiplap, 1” and 2” tongue and groove. V&R Sawing, 306-232-5488, Rosthern, SK.
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.
BARN PAINT: White, black, Western red, green. Limited quantities. $50.00 per 18.9 litre. 306-477-5555, Saskatoon, SK.
HOBBY, NURSERY, LANDSCAPE business. 5 acres 2 miles north of Courtenay, BC. Buy inventory and equipment with lease, $150,000, or buy everything $674,000. Beautiful view, near 4 golf courses, skiing, hunting and big salmon. Build your retirement home and enjoy mild winters. 250-218-0142. www.ospreystoneandbamboo.com/ForSale2012/ SMALL MANUFACTURING SHOP and residence. 40 yrs of operation with established product line. Owner retiring. Turnkey operation. 306-445-5562, Delmas, SK. WELL EQUIPPED WELDING/MACHINE shop for sale in Moose Jaw, SK. Includes: mobile welding machines, 10,000 lb. telehandler, 15 ton carry deck crane, plus much more equipment. Retiring from the business. 306-693-8556 or 306-631-6052. 7 ACRE COMMERCIAL ACREAGE LOT on Hwy. 5 East just 9 miles from Saskatoon, MLS #474598, Asking $129,900. Call Earl Cooper of Sutton Group Norland Realty® 306-241-7751, Saskatoon, SK. MANUFACTURING BUSINESS- welding and light fabricating. A rare opportunity! Unique patented product. Mainly agricultural. Peak sales from Sept. to March. Owned for 27 yrs., still room for growth. Moveable anywhere. North American markets. $195,000 plus inventory at cost. 50x70’ shop on 157x370’ lot, $295,000. Can be a turnkey operation or addition to an existing business. Must sell for health reasons. 306-446-4462, North Battleford, SK. Email glelias@hotmail.com WELL ESTABLISHED 3,456 sq. ft. Autobody repair business located in the heart of potash country in east central SK. Excellent clientele, large area to draw from w/unlimited potential. 72x146’ lot w/adjacent 80x146’ lot, next to Yellowhead Hwy at a major intersection. 306-621-7722, 306-399-7723, Churchbridge, SK.
FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS We also specialize in: Crop insurance appeals; Chemical drift; Residual herbicide; Custom operator issues; Equipment malfunction. Qualified Agrologist on staff. Call Back-Track Investigations for assistance regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779.
IN STOCK CARHARTT’S 30-50% off!! Fantastic deals on Helly Hansen and Irish Setters. Tons of hunting gear on sale. Lots of weekly in-store specials. Visit Davidners Clothing and Western on River Street in Prince Albert, SK. Phone 306-763-3707. Open 9am-6pm Monday to Saturday. Open Sundays in December 12pm-5pm.
CUSTOM HARVESTER looking for acres to harvest. 4- new JD S670 combines, 1100 bu. grain cart, and Peterbilt semis. Headers for all crops. Will travel anywhere. 306-421-9270 leave msg., Bromhead, SK. CUSTOM COMBINING: 2388 Case/IH, 30’ cutter. Call Pete Wierenga 403-877-2020, 403-782-2596, Lacombe, AB. CUSTOM HARVESTER looking for acres, newer equipment, straight cut or swaths. Will travel. Available immediately. Call Ken at 780-808-1414.
SELF-LOADING/UNLOADING round bale truck. Max. capacity 34 bales. Custom hauling anywhere in AB. or SK. Phone Bernd, Bales on Wheels, Tofield, AB., 403-795-7997 or 780-922-4743. TRUCKS AVAILABLE FOR HAY to US destinations: flatdeck, dropdeck or van. Call 701-202-8099, Edmonton, AB. or email BigSky.Dwayne@Gmail.com CUSTOM BALE HAULING, self-loading and unloading 17 bale truck. Radisson, SK. 306-827-2269 or 306-827-7835. CUSTOM BALE HAULING have 2 trucks and t r a i l e r s , 3 4 b a l e s p e r t r a i l e r. C a l l 306-567-7100, Imperial, SK. TTS BALE HAULING LTD. custom round picking and hauling. Two self-loading/unloading units, 17- 34 bales. Ph. Tyson 306-867-4515, 306-855-2010, Glenside SK LOWDERMILK TRANSPORT IS providing one call service for all Equipment/Hay hauling. Very experienced, multiple trucks serving AB., SK., and MAN. 780-872-0107, 306-252-1001, Kenaston, SK.
CUSTOM TUB GRINDING: operate a Haybuster H1100E- 425 HP machine. Phone Greg 306-947-7510, Saskatoon, SK.
FENCE LINE, BRUSH mulching and clearing shelter belts and scrub land. Call Jonah at 306-232-4244, Rosthern, SK. REGULATION DUGOUTS: 120x60x14’ $1900; 160x60x14’ $2700; 180x60x14’ $3100; 200x60x14’ $3500. Saskatoon, SK, Phone: 306-222-8054. MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, stumps, caraganas, etc. 12 years of enviro friendly mulching. Call today! 306-933-2950. Visit: www.maverickconstruction.ca EXPLOSIVES CONTRACTOR: Beaver dams, rocks, stumps. Reasonable rates. Northwest Demolition, Radisson, SK., phone 306-827-2269 or 306-827-7835.
Available at:
Hawk’s Agro Central Butte, SK
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. NEED A LOAN? Own farmland? Bank says BRUSH MULCHING. The fast, effective n o ? I f y e s t o a b o v e t h r e e , c a l l way to clear land. Four season service, 1-866-405-1228, Calgary, AB. competitive rates, 375 HP unit, also avail. trackhoe w/thumb, multiple bucket attachments. Bury rock and brush piles and fence line clearing. Borysiuk Contracting, HYDRAULIC SAUSAGE STUFFER, 25 lb. ca- www.borysiukcontracting.ca Prince Albert, pacity, $1,995. Call Gene at 306-382-3750, SK., 306-960-3804. or 306-291-7461, Saskatoon, SK. NEUFELD ENT. CORRAL CLEANING, payloader, Bobcat with rubber tracks and vertical beater spreaders. Phone 306-220-5013, 306-467-5013, Hague, SK. IF YOU SPRAYED LIBERTY and received CUSTOM SEEDING/ BALING/ SWATHING. crop damage call Back-Track Investiga- Also parting 567 baler; Some hay for sale. Call Alan: 306-463-8423, Marengo, SK. tions for assistance 1-866-882-4779.
(306) 796-4787
www.dseriescanola.ca
PRE-ENGINEERED METAL BUILDING PKG, 40x60x14’, includes doors, windows, eaves, downs. 306-948-2140, Biggar, SK. B R A N D N E W M E TA L B U I L D I N G , 30x40x18.5’H, manual and engineered blueprints, everything incl. Still on pallets, $21,000. 306-370-2590, Saskatoon, SK.
PRIVE BUILDING MOVERS Ltd.! Bonded, licensed for SK. and AB. Fully insured. Moving all types and sizes of buildings. Call Andy 306-625-3827, Ponteix, SK. www.privebuildingmovers.com
44 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
2001 KOMATSU 250 loader, QT forks, 2 buckets, $58,000; Angle blades for D6D’s and D6H’s. Call 306-246-4632, Speers, SK. CLIFF’S USED CRAWLER PARTS. Some o l d e r C at s , I H a n d A l l i s C h a l m e r s . 780-755-2295, Edgerton, AB.
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 ATTACHMENTS: SKIDSTEER: pallet forks buckets, augers, hay spears. Conquest Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. 2003 CAT 322CL trackhoe, 12,485 hrs., just serviced, nice condition, ready to go. One owner since 2004, c/w clean out bucket, tooth bucket and Q/A, asking $60,000. 306-221-9266, Martensville, SK.
2011 C ATERPILLAR WHEEL LOADER, IT-38-H, low hour machine, Europs, AC, ride control, Q/C, 20.5/R 25 tires, c/w 3.5 yd. bucket, exc. condition, $168,000. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.
ROAD GRADERS CONVERTED to pull behind large 4 WD tractors, 14’ and 16’ ROTARY DITCHER: Cut and/or maintain blade widths available. CWK Enterprises, drainage channels. 4 models w/flywheels 306-682-3367, 306-231-8358, Humboldt, from 32”, 42”, 62” and 72” in diameter and SK., www.cwenterprises.ca power requirements from 50- 350 HP. For larger channels make multiple cuts. Cut new ditches or maintain existing ones. Digs and spreads up to 600 cu. yds. per hr. max. Dirt is spread up to 150’ away for superior drainage. Works in all conditions including standing water and overgrown ditches. 204-436-2469, Fannystelle, MB.
P O RTA B L E TO I L E T S A L E S / C O L D W E AT H E R JA C K E T S . 5 Pe a k s D i s tributors selling stylish Five Peaks Technologies portable toilets with fitted cold weather jackets, reasonable prices, quan- 2- TRACTOR MOUNT hydraulic scrapers: tity discounts. 5peaksdistributors.ca Reynolds 14 yd. and Icon 18 yd. Take the pair very cheap. Cat 70, Cat 80, Cat 463. 1-877-664-5005. Contact 204-667-2867 or fax 204-667-2932, Winnipeg, MB.
ROME PLOW AND KELLO DISC blades and bearings; 24” to 36” notched disc blades. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. www.kelloughs.com 1965 CATERPILLAR D6B Crawler dozer, well maintained, manual angle blade, standard trans., Hyster winch, canopy with sweeps, rear screen, engine covers, U/C 50%, direct start, propane engine coolant 1981 CAT D8K, rebuilt trans, motor, heater, recent cutting edge on blade, retorque, final drive. Like new U/C, tilt shank cent brakes, asking $17,000 OBO. Call ripper, warranty, $86,000, trades consid- 306-697-7897, Grenfell, SK. ered; Also 16’ root rake avail, $9000. Can COMPACTORS FOR RENT/SALE: 84” deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. smooth drum and 66” pad foot. Conquest Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK.
CORMACH 180000E6 CRANE. Short notice. Selling at Ritchie Bros. Auction, Edmonton, AB., Oct. 29 and 30th. 110,000 lbs. max, 70’ reach, mtd. on 2003 Fontaine tri-axle specialized. Needs new motor to run hydraulic pack or can be run from truck. $550,000 to rig up. Current model. Contact owner for copy of brochure. Carl 780-982-5411. Email: jennfich@yahoo.ca RECLAMATION CONTRACTORS: Bigham 3 and 4 leg mechanical trip 3 pt. hitch Paratills in stock; parts for Bigham and Tye Paratills. Call Kellough’s: 1-888-500-2646.
EQUIPMENT RENTALS: loaders, dozers, excavators, compactors, etc. Conquest CAT 330CL, 2005, 11,300 hrs, $64,000; JD 772D, 2005, 8700 hrs, $125,000; JD Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. 872D, 2007, 8030 hrs, ripper/wing, MQ 70 GENERATOR c/w trailer, 56 kW, $145,000. 403-291-1010, Calgary, AB. ultra silent, switchable phases (1 and 3), Isuzu power, 800 hrs., like new condition. 1997 TS14D TEREX scraper, CAH, Michelin tires at 60%, recent w/o on 780-990-9604, Edmonton, AB. trans., in good working cond, exc. cosmetics. Call 780-983-0936, Westlock, AB. CAT IT28B WHEEL loader, 2.5 yd. QA, GP bucket, pallet forks, auxiliary hyd., cab, heater, 17.5x25 tires, good cond. Call 306-621-0425, 306-782-4425, Yorkton, SK CAT D8K, TILT blade, 70% undercarriage left. Engine needs work, $15,000. 306-232-5040, 306-232-7799, Rosthern, SK. Email neufeld.sand@sasktel.net
CONTERRA GRADER for skidsteers and tractors. Excellent for road maintenance, floating and levelling. 518S-SS, $2499. Conterra manufactures over 150 attachments. Call 1-877-947-2882, view online at www.conterraindustries.com
2006 CASE 621D wheel loader, 165 HP, 4,474 hrs, 4 spd. PS trans, hyd. Q/A, 2.75 Q/A bucket and pallet forks, 3rd valve, new 20.5-25 tires, C/A/H, exc. cond, 2 0 0 4 D E E R E 9 5 0 - C L G P, 4 3 9 7 h r s , $89,900. Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, straight twin tilt blade, new UC, 26” pads, exc. working condition, 3 shank HD ripper, Pincher Creek, AB. job ready, CAH, full warranty 60 hours 60 day whichever comes first, $165,000. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.
CAT IT 28G loader, quick coupler, third valve, bucket, forks, 20.5R25 tires, exc. cond. service records, vg paint, clean unit, 780-990-9604, Edmonton, AB. 12 HEAVY LOWBEDS and equipment trailers. Pics and prices www.trailerguy.ca 306-222-2413, Saskatoon/Aberdeen, SK.
HYDRAULIC SCRAPERS: LEVER 60, 70, 80, and 435, 4 - 20 yd. available, rebuilt SKIDSTEER ATTACHMENTS: rock buckets, for years of trouble-free service. Lever dirt buckets, grapples and more top Holdings Inc., 306-682-3332, Muenster SK quality. Also have truck decks in stock. IMAC/CWS PIPE grapple, CAT IT lugQuality Welding and Sales 306-731-3009 ging, low time usage, excellent condition. or 306-731-8195, Craven, SK. 780-990-9604, Edmonton, AB.
EXCAVATOR HITACHI 120 LC, $38,000; Loader JD 544E, $38,000; Backhoe JCB 215E, $38,000; JD 310SG, $38,000; Skid- PEAT MOSS/SOIL GRINDER or processor steer Cat 247B tracks, $24,000; Bobcat Selling at Ritchie Bros. Auction, Edmonton, AB, Oct. 29th. Comes with 150 HP 853, $13,500. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. elec. motor. Owner Carl, 780-982-5411. NEW 2011 NH L223 hyd. QA bucket, CAH, 14x17.5 tires, 78” lp bucket, $2237.57. S/A with 25% down OAC. 306-682-9920, Humboldt, SK. or www.farmworld.ca
‘06 GENIE Z45/25 ARTICULATING BOOMLIFT - 45’, 4x4, Deutz 3 cyl diesel, 48hp, 1,347 hrs., max. load 500 lbs, $32,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
D760 Champion grader; Skidder, tree farmer, new 18.4x34 tires; Case 580 Super 1993 VOHL 920 4x4 snowblower. Short M extend-a-hoe; Grousen dozer blade, fits notice. Selling at Ritchie Bros. Auction, J D 8 9 7 0 , 1 6 ’ ; N ew s t e e l q u o n s e t , Edmonton, AB., October 29th. Ford diesel, 35x52x18H, in crate, super price; 2004 Dodge Rumblebee, $12,500. Call self-propelled. Owner Carl, 780-982-5411. 306-236-8023, Goodsoil, SK. D65E-6 KOMATSU DOZER, very clean and straight, cab, LED lights, multi-shank CAT 60 SCRAPER, good set of matched ripper, angle dozer, hyd. tilt, new sprock- tires, good cond., $27,000. 306-621-7050, ets, guarded w/sweeps. 780-983-0936, Yorkton, SK. Westlock, AB. HYDRAULIC PULL SCRAPERS, 6 to 40 WANTED: HOUGH 65C wheel loader, in yards: Caterpillar, AC/LaPlante, LeTourreasonable condition, or parts/part ma- neau, Kokudo, etc. PT and direct mount avail., tires also avail.; PT motor grader, chine. 807-227-2361, Vermilion Bay, ON. $14,900; 2010 53’ Stepdeck, $24,995; New 1999 CAT 902 wheel loader, .5 yd. QA Agricart grain cart, 1050 bu., c/w tarp, bucket, cab, auxiliary hyd., good cond. Call $27,500. 204-822-3797, Morden, MB. 306-621-0425, 306-782-4425, Yorkton, SK 1979 235 EXCAVATOR, selling due to health reasons. Very good machine, everything including all gauges work. Good appearance, heated cab, 1 digging bucket, new batteries, alternator and starter overhauled, 80%+ UC, inspection invited. 204-845-2418, Elkhorn, MB.
1000 AND 1500 gal. bunk tanks, 450’ of 1” barn cleaner chain, barn cleaner drive unit 10 HP, 450’ of 3” SS pipeline, 450’ of 3” PVC vacuum line, 4 tunnel ventilation fans, 1 plate cooler, 1 elect milk panel, assort. of stalls. Offers. 306-221-2970, Osler, SK.
ATCO 6 BUNK sleeper unit, 10’x30’, A/C and heated, clean condition, $16,000 OBO. 2009 DOUBLE 10 parallel Westfalia parlor, 780-987-2859, Spruce Grove, AB. global 90i, complete, Metatron 21 meters, used 3.5 yrs, exc cond., $80,000; 1500 gal. CAT HYDRAULIC PULL SCRAPERS: milk tank, $9000; 2009 NDE 2804 vertical 463, 435, 80, 70, and 60, all very good mixer, twin screw, 1200 cu. ft. capacity, condition, new conversion. Also new and used 3.5 yrs., 6 loads/wk., always shedu s e d s c r a p e r t i r e s . C a n d e l i v e r. ded, paid $80,000, sell for $50,000. Morin204-793-0098, Stony Mountain, MB. ville, AB., 780-961-3512 or 780-619-4427.
ENGINES: 353, 453, 471, 8.2L Detroit, 4BT Cummins, 3208 Cat. Western Diesel 1-800-667-1164. GREAT PRICES ON new, used and remanufactured engines, parts and accessories for diesel pickups. Large inventory, engines can be shipped or installed. Give us a call or check: www.thickettenginerebuilding.ca Thickett Engine Rebuilding. 204-532-2187, Russell, MB. DIESEL ENGINES, OVERHAUL kits and parts for most makes. Cat, Case/IH, Cummins, Detroit, Mack. M&M Equipment Ltd., Parts and Service phone: 306-543-8377, fax: 306-543-2111, Regina, SK. CUMMINS DIESEL POWER unit, c/w trans., mounted on a skid, $8000 OBO. 306-370-1603, Saskatoon, SK.
FARM AND INDUSTRIAL ELECTRICAL motor sales, service and parts. Also sale of, and repairs to, all makes and sizes of pumps and phase converters, etc. Tisdale Motor Rewinding 1984 Ltd., 306873-2881, fax 306-873-4788, 1005A- 111 Ave., Tisdale, SK. www.tismtrrewind.com PHASE CONVERTERS, RUN 220V 3 phase motors, on single phase. 204-800-1859.
WOOD POST BUILDING packages. Incl. 29 gauge #1 colored metal walls, Galvalume roof, starting at $12,145. 1-800-667-4990, www.warmanhomecentre.com
40x80 WOOD QUONSET for removal, offers. 306-464-2135, Lang, SK. USED, REBUILT or NEW engines. Specializing in Cummins, have all makes, large POLE BARNS, WOODSTEEL packages, inventory of parts, repowering is our spe- hog, chicken, and dairy barns, grain bins cialty. 1-877-557-3797, Ponoka, AB. and hoppers. Construction and concrete 2001 FORD 7.3 diesel engine, 96,000 kms, crews available. Mel or Scott, MR Steel $2900. K&L Equipment, Regina/Ituna, Construction, 306-978-0315, Hague, SK. SK. DL #910885. Call 306-795-7779, BEHLEN STEEL BUILDINGS, quonsets, 306-537-2027. Email ladimer@sasktel.net convex and rigid frame straight walls, 3406B, N14, SERIES 60, running engines grain tanks, metal cladding, farm - comand parts. Call Yellowhead Traders, mercial. Construction and concrete crews. Guaranteed workmanship. Call your Saska306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK. toon and northwest Behlen Distributor, CARLSON WLP800L ASPHALT windrow 290 CUMMINS; 350 Detroit; 671 Detroit; Janzen Steel Buildings, 306-242-7767, elevator. Short notice. Selling at Ritchie Series 60 cores. 306-539-4642, Regina, SK Osler, SK. Bros. Auction, Edmonton, AB., Oct. 29th. Out of season to buyers advantage. Owner Carl, phone 780-982-5411. 1- 8 77- 5 2 5 - 2 002 w w w .pio n eero n es teel.co m 1 S TEEL BUILD IN G S LETOURNEAU LSO, 14 yd. scraper, good tires, $19,000; 16 yd. Woolridge scraper, W E H AVE A B UILDING T O S UIT A LM O S T A NY NEED! CA LL US W IT H YO URS ! n ew f r o n t t i r e s , $ 2 3 , 0 0 0 ; C at 4 3 5 , $ 3 0 , 0 0 0 ; C at 6 0 , 7 0 a n d 8 0 ’ s a l s o available. 306-338-7114, Clair, SK.
1985 CASE 450C crawler, 6-way dozer, HYDRAULIC EXCAVATORS: 2008 Hitachi 65% UC, $18,500. 204-525-4521, Minito- ZX350 LC-3; 1998 Cat 325BL. Edmonton, AB. 587-991-6605. 2008 ARNIE’S TRI-AXLE slider end nas, MB. www.waltersequipment.com dump, excellent condition, just safetied CAT 463 PULL scrapers, 3 to choose from, and ready to go. All new brake drums, FOR RENT: 24’ Pulldozer, daily and week- $12,000 each. Phone 204-795-9192, Plum shoes and cam’s, power tarp. Asking ly rates available. Call 204-745-8909 or Coulee, MB. 204-242-4588, Manitou, MB. $40,000. 306-221-9266, Saskatoon, SK. CHAMPION GRADER model 720, snow wing, in good operating cond, ready to go, $21,000. Call 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. QUALITY UNDERCARRIAGE PORTABLE TRUCK SCALE, 10x60. Short & REPAIR PARTS FOR USE ON Selling at Ritchie Bros. Auction, WANTED: 350B CRAWLER for parts or EQUIPMENT MANUFACTURED BY: notice. Edmonton, AB., Oct. 29th. Approx. 50 ton. u s e d t r a c k o r p a d s f o r s a m e . 306-741-2701, Swift Current, SK. Owner Carl, phone 780-982-5411.
Cat, Case, Deere, Hitachi, Kobelco, Komatsu, Volvo and other fine manufacturers
SEALED & GREASED EXCAVATOR CHAINS Excavator links are lubricated using “Extreme Pressure Synthetic Grease” and fitted with the latest style Polyurethane Seal Groups tomaximize lubrican retention and insure long life.
SEALED & LUBRICATED DOZER/LOADER CHAINS Lubricated Dozer Chains are sealed with Polyurethane Seals and Metal rings to extend operating life and to eliminate the possibility of dry joints between “west turns”.
FORGED LINKS ITR Links are forged from Boron Steel, quenched, tempered, and induction hardened using the latest automated link hardening equipment to ensure excellent wear resistance under even the most severe working conditions.
PINS & BUSHINGS Pins and bushings are critical to track chain wear life and are manufactured and dimensionally matched to ensure a perfect fit and sealing and joint integrity. Outside Surface Hardness is > Rockwell C58 to a depth of > 4mm with a core hardness of > Rockwell C34.
CHAIN ASSEMBLY Lubricated Chains are assembled on fully automated chain assembly lines. Seal installation, Plug introduction and Oil fill quantities are 100% computer controlled and every joint is individually pressure tested to eliminate the possibility of leakage during working conditions. Min / Max interference fit tolerances between the Pins, Bushings and Links are maintained automatically by min/max press force specifications. This process minimizes link breakage and
pin/bushing drifting.
780-413-1740
(Phone) 1-877-413-1774 (Toll Free) • info@terrateam.ca • www.terrateam.ca 9004B Yellowhead Trail, Edmonton NEW MANAGEMENT SINCE 2012
UN RES ERV ED P UBLIC AUCTIO N
TUES DAY , N O V . 05, 2 013 8:00 a .m . 932 0 – 52 S treetS .E., CALG AR Y
S ellin g on b ehalf of F ortisAlb erta, S ervice Alb erta; W heatlan d Cou n ty, Rocky View Cou n ty, AltaL in k, K eyston e Excavatin g L td ., City ofM ed icin e Hat, T ow n ofCochran e & othercon sign ors.
Fo rFu rtherDeta ils S ee “ Au ctio n ” S ectio n For a com p rehen s ive brochu re p lea s e ca ll Ca n a d ia n Pu b lic Au ctio n Ltd . 403- 2 69- 6600 o r 800- 786- 0857. Ho m e Pa ge a t w w w.ca n a d ia n pu b lica u ctio n .co m G .S .T. a p p lies . A 10% ha n d lin g fee a p p lies to ea ch lot s ellin g for $5,000.00 or les s , a 2.5% ha n d in g fee a p p lies to ea ch lots ellin g g rea tertha t$5,000.00 w ith a ca p of$1,000.00 p erlot. Live In tern etBid d in g w w w.ca n a d ia n pu b lica u ctio n .co m a ll in tern et p u rcha s es a re s u bject to a n in tern et bu yer’s fee & a d ep os it m a y be req u ired d ep en d in g on you r p u rcha s e his tory. Au ctio n Licen se # 2 002 78, AM V IC Licen se # 2 002 79.
S TR AIGHT W ALL 40’ X 60’ X 16’ Rig id fra m e bu ild in g a va ila ble for s m a ll reta il ou tlets to la rg e in d u s tria l fa cilities . This s ize for on ly $29,418.
ALP INE 32 ’ X 5 0’ X 18 ’ In clu d es fra m ed op en in g for 14x14 overhea d & 4’x7’, s ervice d oor, excellen t s hop or s tora g e bu ild in g , com es w ith fou n d a tion d ra w in g s & m a n u a ls , d elivered to m os ta rea s . O n ly $15,500.
CALL TO D AY AN D AVO ID STEEL PRICE IN CREASES!
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $ $ $ $ $ $ 7 5 TR UC KLOAD S $ $ 29 G AUG E FULL H AR D 100,000 P S I $ $ H IG H TEN S ILE R OOFIN G & S ID IN G $ $ 16 C OLOUR S TO C H OOS E FR OM $ $ 2 $ B-G r. Colou red . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70¢ ft $ 2 $ M u lti Colou rM illen d s . . . . . 49¢ ft $ $ $ BEAT THE P RICE $ $ IN C R E A S E S $ $ AS K ABO UT O UR BLO W O UT $ $ CO LO RS AT $0.6 5 S Q . FT. $ $ CALL N O W $ $ $ $ F o u illa rd S teel $ $ S u p p lies L td . $ $ S t. La za re, M a n . $ $ 18 005 103303 $ $ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
P RICED TO CLEAR!!!
G RAI N H AND LI NG & STO RAG E w w w .skyw aygrainsystem s.com HU TCHIN SO N G rain Pum ps LA M BTO N Bucket Elevators LA M BTO N Drag Conveyors (Seed Com patible Conveyors) Rail Load-O ut System s Pulse Crop Equipm ent W ESTEEL G rain Bins SU KU P A eration & Bins G rain G uard Bins and A eration
G RAIN SYSTEM S IN C.
1-800-561-5625
CLASSIFIED ADS 45
WHEN
Quality COUNTS
• The HEAVIEST metal • The STRONGEST posts • SUPERIOR craftsmenship Choose Prairie Post Frame
EXPERIENCED POST FRAME BUILDERS REQUIRED 1-855 (773-3648)
www.prairiepostframe.ca
Fo r A llY o ur Fa rm , C o m m ercia l& Industria lN eeds
1-800-665-0470 S to ny Pla in O ffice 780-975-3748 A irdrie O ffice 403-470-4570 M B S a les 204-534-2468 S a sk. S a les 306-737-8788 V erm ilio n O ffice 780-581-5822 DISMANTLED SPRUNG North American made quonset alum. construction, 35x50’, 16’ inside, 2 doors 10x10’, 1 man door, skylight, propane heater, approx 9 years old, excellent cond., $60,000 new, asking $19,500 OBO. Delivery available. Can email pics. 604-989-1177, Calgary, AB. DIAMOND CANVAS SHELTERS, sizes ranging from 15’ wide to 120’ wide, any length. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.starlinesales.com STRAIGHT WALL BUILDINGS, 16’ wall 32x48x16 colored walls 29 gauge, $12,340 materials. For info call 1-800-667-4990, www.warmanhomecentre.com SILVER STREAM SHELTERS Super Fall Fabric Building Sale. 30x72 single black steel, $4700; 30x70 double truss P/R, $6995; 38x100 double truss P/R, $11,900; 42x100 double truss P/R, $14,250; 12-1/2 oz. tarp, 15 year warranty. Trucks running w e s t w e e k l y, d e l i v e r y a v a i l a b l e . 1-877-547-4738. silverstreamshelters.com
Es te va n , S K . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 306-6 3 4-5111 M cLe a n , S K . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 306-6 9 9 -728 4 Tis da le , S K . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 306-8 73 -443 8
w w w .w ood-coun try.com FAR M BUILD IN G S : • Dim e n s io n a l Fra m e • Po s tBu ild in gs • En gin e e re d S te e l Bu ild in gs C o lo re d ro o f m e ta l, co lo red w a lls a n d trim s (o u ts id e co rn ers , b a s e fla s h, ea ve fla s h, ga b le fla s h, J cha n n el, d rip fla s h), S teel In s . W a lk In Do o r a n d L o cks et. 40x60 - 16’ tre a te d 6x6 po s tb ld g. c/w 20x16 s teel s lid in g d o o r. . . . . . .$16,47 9.26 Pho n e w ith yo u r b u ild in g s ize req u irem en ts fo r a free es tim a te.
IntegrityPostStructures.com
#1 M ETAL C LAD D IN G M a n y typ es a n d p rofiles a va ila ble. Fa rm a n d In d u s tria l, g a lva n ized , g a lva lu m e, a n d colored , 26, 28, 29 & 30 g a u g e m eta l. ~ P H ON E FOR P R IC IN G ~
FARM BUILDINGS
FARM BUILDINGS
www.zaksbuilding.com
3UH (QJLQHHUHG /DPLQDWHG 3RVWV
SD L H OP P E R CONE 306-324-4441
PH:306-445-5562 www.evertightanchors.ca
M ARG O ,SASK.
2750 BU. WESTEEL ROSCO, 3300 bu. Chief Westland. Both need new floors. Asking 95¢/bu. Call 306-738-4906, Gray, SK. USED FEED BINS, up to 250 bushel; 1 heated canola oil bin. Make an offer. 306-882-1919, Rosetown, SK.
CAN ADIAN BUIL T FOR CAN ADIAN CON DITION S
REN N M ill Cen ter In c.
RR#4 L a co m b e, AB T 4L 2N4 CAL L THE FACTORY FOR YOUR L OCAL DEAL ER
(403) 78 4-3518
w w w .ren n m ill.co m GRAIN STORAGE BIN RINGS, 50’ dia., height 38”, holds 12,000 bushels. Call 306-728-8676, Regina, SK. WESTEEL, GOEBEL, grain and fertilizer bins. Grain Bin Direct, 306-373-4919. BROCK (BUTLER) GRAIN BIN PARTS and accessories available at Rosler Construction. 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK. FOR RENT: 5000 bu. condo at Richardson Pioneer at Corinne, SK. For Sale: 3300 Westeel bins on wood floor at Riceton, SK. 306-464-2135.
CHIEF WESTLAND AND CARADON BIN extensions, sheets, stiffeners, etc. Now available. Call Bill, 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.starlinesales.com 1 LEFT! $6000- 4000 bu. Twister 19-5 steel floor bin. Last year’s inventory blowout. Includes steel floor. Set up extra. Call Flaman- Saskatoon today, 1-888-435-2626 S U K U P / R OT H H O P P E R B OT TO M BINS, 4800 bushel, $13,700. Saskatoon, S K . w w w. C a l l B e r t F o r S u k u p . c o m GRAIN BINS: 3500 bu. Meridian/Behlen bin/hopper combo, 10 leg hopper and 306-664-2378 (Bert). skid, roof and side ladder, safety fill, constructed, limited supply for $10,195 FOB at Regina, SK. Leasing available. Peterson Factory To Farm Grain Storage Construction, 306-789-2444. Galvanized • Flat Floor • Hopper Bins LIFETIME LID OPENERS. We are a stocking dealer for Boundary Trail Lifetime Lid Smooth Walls • Fertilizer • Grain • Feed Openers, 18” to 39”. Rosler Construction Aeration • Rockets • Fans • Heaters 2000 Inc., 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK.
Authorized Dealer
Westrum Lumber
www.westrumlumber.com
1-888-663-9663 R o ulea u,S K
WANTED: SOMEONE TO dismantle 2 old barns. Drop siding barn boards, 2” and 1” spruce and fir lumber. Pay or share basis. 306-592-4426, Buchanan, SK. CSA CONSTRUCTION LTD. is offering stud framed buildings that last! Ranging from small to big, 12’ high to 20’ high. We do it from the ground up. Concrete to the electrical. Serving Western MB and Eastern SK. We can offer leasing, with engineered buildings and 3yr warranty, you don’t need to worry. Steven Penner at 204-212-2970, or email: csaconstruction@hotmail.com
TEMPORARY GRAIN BINS, selected 3/8” fir plywood with all holes drilled. Wood sizes from 1750 bu., $431 to 11,700 bu., $852 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 AERATION AND UNLOAD KITS available for Twister bins. 306-664-2378 (Bert), www.CallBertForSukup.com Saskatoon. GRAIN BIN REPAIR. Concrete and setup for large diameter bins. Quadra Development Corp 1-800-249-2708, Rocanville, SK 1 LEFT! $7500- 6500 bu. Twister 22-6 steel floor bin. Last year’s inventory blowout. Includes steel floor. Set up extra. Call Flaman Saskatoon today, 1-888-435-2626.
M & K WELDING BINS & CONES
Saskatoon, SK
Phone: 306-373-4919 grainbindirect.com
S U K U P / R OT H H O P P E R B OT TO M BINS, 10,000+ bushels, $2.40/bu. Saskatoon, SK. www.CallBertForSukup.com 306-664-2378 (Bert). FOR ALL YOUR grain storage, hopper cone and steel floor requirements contact: Kevin’s Custom Ag in Nipawin, SK. Toll free: 1-888-304-2837. WESTEEL EXTENSION PARTS 19’ standard corrugation bins. All new parts. In stock and competitive pricing. Willwood Industries 1-866-781-9560. Get details and prices at: www.willwood.ca NEW UNASSEMBLED WESTEEL flat bottom bin packages for sale. Sizes from 6000 to 12,000 bushel, up to 20% off. Steel floors included, assembly may be available. Saskatoon Co-op Agro Centre 306-933-3834, Saskatoon, SK.
New1 8-05 Meridian Hopper Bin (Approx. 5000 bu.)
HopperC one for 14 ft Westeel Rosco up to 2000 bu.
• Manhole • 7 legs • 37 degree slope • Single 8x4x188w skid base
• Ladders • Remote lid opener • Safety-fil Indicator • 12 leg hopper • 37 degree slope • Manhole • Double 6x4x.188w skid base
$2,750.00 HopperC one for 19 ft Westeel Rosco up to 3300 bu.
$10,575.00
Other sizes of new bins also available.
• Manhole • 10 legs • 37 degree slope • Single 10x4x188w skid base
REMOTE LID OPENERS For Most Sizes of Bin Starting at $129.00
$4,900.00
We make hopper cones for all makes & sizes of bins.
Prices do not include setup or freight. Prices subject to change. Quantities are Limited.
M & K WELDING 1-877-752-3004
Em a il: s a les @ m kw eld ing.ca | Melfort, Sask | w w w.m kw eld ing.ca
DARM AN I G RAIN S TO RAG E
Bu ild in g Be tte r Bin s
S im ply pu t - DARM ANI o ffe rs the b e s t va lu e in G ra in s to ra ge . DARM ANI a s s u re s c u s to m e rs tha t the y a re re c e ivin g the b e s t pro d u c ta tthe b e s tpric e . DARM ANI o ffe rs e ve rythin g fo r o n fa rm gra in s to ra ge . Lo c a te d in W e s te rn C a n a d a DARM ANI o ffe rs a ll s e rvic e s in c lu d in g m a n u fa c tu re , d e live ry, o n fa rm s e t u p, re a d y to m o ve b in s , fin a n c in g a n d a fte r s a le s e rvic e . FAC TORY DIREC T a llo w s DARM ANI to b e a b le to s u pply e ve rythin g w ith o n e s im ple pho n e c a ll: 1-8 6 6 -6 6 5-6 6 77 w w w .d a rm a n i.ca
H o pperb o tto m
PORTABLE GRAIN RINGS made of steel. New 20 gauge wide-corr steel sheets 48”H. Sizes from 3650 bu., $2072 to 83,000 bu., $11,447 including hardware. All sizes in stock. All rings 4’H. Best quality available. Canadian made quality silver cone shaped tarps avail. 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 all pricing, details, pictures visit our website: www.willwood.ca
FACTOR YA REBATE UGER S UP TO $
1750
P LUS V A LUA B MERIDIA N C OUP L E ONS !
1\Z[ PU [PTL MVY /HY]LZ[¯ @V\ ^PSS YLJLP]L HU PUZ[HU[ YLIH[L ^P[O [OL W\YJOHZL VM H 4LYPKPHU (\NLY 73<: `V\»SS HSZV YLJLP]L H ]HS\HISL JV\WVU YLKLLTHISL [V^HYKZ [OL M\[\YL W\YJOHZL VM HU` 4LYPKPHU WYVK\J[ ;OPZ PZ H SPTP[LK [PTL VMMLY ZV ]PZP[ `V\Y (\[OVYPaLK 4LYPKPHU (\NLY +LHSLY MVY M\SS KL[HPSZ
Fla tBo tto m
La rge D ia m eter
S teelFlo o r/ Cem en t
1805 H OP P ER BIN
FLAT BOTTOM BIN S (N O AIR )
FLAT BOTTOM BIN S (AIR )
FEATUR ES D AR M AN I BR AN D W Lid Ope n in g S ize 52” 3 3 -52” W a ll C o rru ga tio n 4” 4” G a lva n izin g G 115 G 115 Ro o fS tre n gth #5000 #4-5000 Ro o fS lo pe 30deg 30deg La d d e rs S td . S td . C o n e s lo pe 35deg 35deg # le gs 9 9 Le g thic kn e s s .125 .188 Ra c k a n d pin io n Yes Yes Pa in te d in s id e /o u t Y e s Yes BES T IN ON TH E M AR KET
FEATUR ES D AR M AN I BR AN D W Lid Ope n in g S ize 52” 3 3 -52” W a ll C o rru ga tio n 4” 4” G a lva n izin g G 115 G 115 Ro o fS tre n gth #5000 #4-5000 Ro o fS lo pe 30deg 30deg La d d e rs S td . S td . Do o r (in n e r pa n e ls ) No Yes Do o r (c a n o la pa n e l) Y e s No Do o r (V e rtic a l lift) Y e s NO Ava ila b le S te e l flo o r Y ES NO Ava ila b le S e a l Fo rm Y ES Y ES D OOR UN LOAD UP TO 10,000 BUS H ELS
FEATUR ES D AR M AN I BR AN D W Lid Ope n in g S ize 52” 3 3 -52” W a ll C o rru ga tio n 4” 4” G a lva n izin g G 115 G 115 Ro o fS tre n gth #5000 #4-5000 Ro o fS lo pe 30deg 3 0 d e g. La d d e rs S td . S td . S w in g Air o ptio n Y ES No Fu ll flo o r o ptio n Y ES Y ES UNLOAD S Y S TEM o ptio n Y ES Y ES Ava ila b le s te e l flo o r Y ES NO Ava ila b le S e a l Fo rm Y ES Y ES BIN S AVAILABLE UP TO 40,000 BUS H ELS
BO O K N O W - a sk a b o u to u r N
G RAIN BINS W ITH AIR AND UN L OAD P RICED FRO M
$1.00/ BUS HEL 4LYPKPHU 4HU\MHJ[\YPUN 0UJ 9LNPZ[LYLK ;YHKLTHYRZ <ZLK <UKLY 3PJLUZL
10 gauge bottom ,8” or 12” Side Wall (1)O r (2)piece construction 12’- 28’sizes Tru ck ing Av a ila b le
Canadian Built Insurance Certified Bin Anchors
Temp Cables
“Today’s Quality Built For Tomorrow”
Hague, SK | (306) 225-2288
SDL STEEL BIN FLO O RS
Grain Bin Direct
CLEARANCE G a ra g e P k g . – M c Le a n Loc a tion 2 0’x2 4’- 8’- 6/12 ro o f pitch, 2 x4 w a lls, vin yl sid in g, 2 5 yr. shin gles, so ffit& fa scia , a ll ha rd w a re in clu d ed . 36” w a lk in d o o r, 16x7- R 11 in su la ted d o o r. $5,526 .8 6 plu s ta x.
FOR ALL YOUR STRUCTURAL STEEL, roofing and siding needs, big or small. Call Fouillard Steel Supplies, St. Lazare, MB. 1-800-510-3303. Remember nobody sells roofing and siding cheaper!! Nobody. WOOD POST BUILDING pkgs. 29 gauge AFAB INDUSTRIES POST frame buildings. #1 colored metal walls, Galvalume roof For the customer that prefers quality. 40x64x16, $26,750. 1-800-667-4990. Built 1-888-816-AFAB (2322), Rocanville, SK. onsite. www.warmanhomecentre.com
BUILDING SUPPLIES & CONTRACTING
1-866-974-7678 FREE QUOTE
SD L HO PPER C O NES
14’Hopper 8 leg H/Duty .................$2,285 15’Hopper 8 leg S/Duty ..................$2,6 00 15’-10” Hopper 10 leg H/Duty .........$2,9 9 0 18’Hopper 12 leg M/Duty ...............$4 ,09 5 19’Hopper 12 leg M/Duty ...............$4 ,535 21’& 24’Hopper Cones...................$P.O .R.
- 16 ” DIAM ETER ROL L S - CAPACITY UP TO 4000 BU/HR - PTO OR EL ECTRIC - RE-GROOV IN G AN D S ERV ICIN G OF S TEEL , CARBURIZED & CAS T ROL L S - AN Y M AK E, AN Y M ODEL
Download the free app today.
W O O D CO UN TRY
w w w .go o do n.co m
RROLLER ENN M ILL
50’ VENTED GRAIN ring tarp with tie downs, 6.1 oz., $950. Call Flaman at 1-888-435-2626 today. NEW MERIDIAN GRAINMAX bins for sale, up to 35% off MSRP. 2300, 4000 and 6400 bushel sizes, all with aeration installed. Free delivery within 200 kms of Saskatoon, SK. Saskatoon Co-op Agro Centre Call: 306-933-3834. POLY HOPPER BINS, 100 bu., $900; 150 bu. $1250. Call for nearest dealer. Buffer Valley Ind., 306-258-4422, Vonda, SK.
O PAYM EN TS FO R UP TO 6 M O N THS • • • • • •
AVAILABLE Air fa n s S K Y -LIFT Te m p m o n ito rin g Exte n s io n Tie rs Re tro -fits te e l flo o rs Re tro -fitDo o rs a n d lid s
1-866-665 -667 7
O CTO BER S P ECIALS
C a ll fo r in s to c k s pe c ia ls o n b in s /flo o rs a n d fa n s
S e rvin g All o f W e s te rn C a n a d a a n d N o rth e rn S ta te s
w w w .d a rm a n i.c a
1-86 6 -6 6 5-6 6 77
46 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
BIN PARTS available for repair for 3008 GRAIN HANDLING FACILITY FOR SALE. Darmani bins. 306-664-2378 (Bert), Saska- Must be dismantled and moved. 9000 bu. toon, SK. www.CallBertForSukup.com per hr. grain leg; 100’ tower; Drag conveyor; Screw conveyor; 2 Westeel widecore, SUKUP GRAIN BINS ON TEMPORARY 27,000 bu. bins; 2 Westeel 1908 bins on FLOORS, various sizes. Ask about my bin Miller hoppers; Twister 5000 bu. bin on floor trade-in program. 306-664-2378 Miller hopper; Approx. 16’x24’ building (Bert). www.CallBertForSukup.com w/electrical control panels; Includes all electrical motors, downspouts and truck Saskatoon, SK. load-out. Call 780-777-5227, Viking, AB. SUKUP 10,600 BUSHEL flat bottom bins, $17,990. www.CallBertForSukup.com at 306-664-2378 (Bert), Saskatoon, SK.
s a les @ jtlin d u s tries .ca
w w w.jtlin d u s tries .ca N E IL BU RG, S AS K ATCH E W AN
N eilb u rg S K S tettler AB “ The Pea ce Co u n try” W in d tho rs tS K M a n ito b a
TOP QUALITY BEHLEN/ SAKUNDIAK BINS. Book now for best prices. Example: all prices include skid, ladders to ground, manhole, set-up and delivery within set radius. Behlen Hopper combos: 3500 bu. $10,450. SPECIAL 5000 bu. $13,990. We manufacture superior quality hoppers and steel floors for all makes and sizes. Know what you are investing in. Call and find out why our product quality and price well exceeds the competition. We also stock replacement lids for all makes and models of SHIPPING CONTAINERS FOR SALE. All sizbins. Leasing available. Hoffart Services es, Turnkey modifications from design to Inc., 306-957-2033, Odessa, SK. completion and delivery. 1-866-990-2226, Leduc, AB. www.seaboxdepot.com
1-306 -8 23-48 8 8 1-78 0-8 72-49 43 1-78 0-8 72-49 43 1-306 -224-208 8 1-204-371-5400
SEA CAN CONTAINERS FOR SALE/ RENT. 20’-53’ containers avail. Delivery, shelving, rollup and man doors, windows and custom builds available. For inventory and pricing call 780-910-3542, St. Albert, AB. Containers and Chains.
JTL is n o w o ffe rin g c o rrug a te d b in s s e tup o n o ur a w a rd w in n in g “F o rc e ” ho p p e r, o ur “L e g a c y” 6 ’ hig h fla tflo o r o r o n c o n c re te p a d .
20’ AND 40’ SEA CONTAINERS, for sale in Calgary, AB. Phone 403-226-1722, 1-866-517-8335. www.magnatesteel.com
Com e S e e U s a t Agritra d e N ov 9- 12, R e d D e e r, AB .
LOOKING FOR a floater or tender? Call me first. 33 years experience. Loral parts, new and used. Call 403-650-7967, Calgary, AB. NH3 RATE CONTROLLER, 3 section Raven/ Greenstar section control, currently 60’, 36 run, can be changed, complete system to tractor rear plug-in. 204-649-2276, 701-389-1042, Pierson, MB. DICKEY JOHN NH3 sectional control system, 6 section capability, $1500 firm. 780-842-8917, Edgerton, AB.
F la t F lo o r Bin s up to 1,000,000 Bus he ls !
THE “FORCE” LINE AGR I- TR AD E IN N OVATION AW AR D W IN N ER 20 12
• 4” co rru ga tio n a n d 50 k s i yield s tren gth (6 5 k s i ten s ile) s teel a re s till u tilized . • 10 yea r w a rra n ty o n co rru ga ted b in s
• Re pla c e yo u ro ld • Le g-s tyle b in s a n d flo o rs a n d a d d u p to re pla c e m e n t ho ppe rs w ith a n 1500 b u s he ls a e ra tio n s ys te m tha t c a pa c ity to u s e s the b a s e a n d yo u r e xis tin g b in s . le gs a s the ple n u m • No m o re fightin g to fo rc e the a irin to w ith yo u ro ld d o o rs . the ho ppe r. Ou rpa te n te d JTL • Ae ra tio n s ys te m d o o ris gu a ra n te e d c o m e s a s s ta n d a rd to m a ke yo u s m ile e qu ipm e n t fo ra ll e ve rytim e yo u “ Fo rc e ” b in s & u s e it! con es.
Choiceland, SK www.dseriescanola.ca
TWO VIDIR HIGH Clearance bins, 15’ 9” diameter, approx. 2300 bu. capacity. Custom built for overhead with equipment below. Four legs for easy enclosure, one side open for equipment installation. Located near Gladstone, MB. $13,900/ea. or $25,000/both. Call Jim at 204-385-2012 or cell 204-856-3396.
L EA S IN GL E A V A IL A B
Ca ll for pricing.
Pineland Cooperative Association Ltd. (306) 428-2175
S H O W S P ECIAL S N O W IN EFFECT.
LO O K I N G FO R LA R G E B U S H E L S TO R A G E ?
Available at:
20’ TO 53’ CONTAINERS. New, used and modified. Available Winnipeg, MB; Regina and Saskatoon, SK. www.g-airservices.ca 306-933-0436.
THE LEGACY LINE
HORNOI LEASING NEW and used 20’ and 4 0 ’ s e a c a n s fo r s a l e o r r e n t . C a l l 306-757-2828, Regina, SK.
The o n ly c lo s e d in ho ppe r/a e ra tio n b in o n the m a rke t.
SHIPPING CONTAINERS FOR SALE. 20’53’, delivery/ rental/ storage available. For inventory and prices call: 306-262-2899, Saskatoon, SK. www.thecontainerguy.ca CONTAINERS FOR SALE OR RENT: All sizes available. Also, tilt deck services. 306-861-1102, Radville, SK.
AG / FAR M
EXG 300 AKRON
FERTILIZER STORAGE TANKS- 8300 Imp. gal. tanks available. Contact your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626 or visit www.flaman.com
IN D USTR IAL STOR AGE Ne w Us e d & M o d ifie d S e a C o n ta in e rs fro m
REBATES ON SAKUNDIAK augers up to $1750 off: 8x39, $12,750; 10x39, $14,050; 8”x53’, $14,900; 10”x53’, $16,250. Rebates incl. in price. All w/mowers, engs., clutches, lights. 306-648-3321, Gravelbourg, SK.
In dus tria l D ire ct In corp ora te d
REPLACEMENT FLIGHTING FOR
20’ AND 40’ SHIPPING CONTAINERS, large SK. inventory. Ph. 1-800-843-3984, 306-781-2600.
FROM
THE
FERTILIZER TANKS, 10 yr. limited warrant y, 5 0 0 0 U S g a l l o n s o n s a l e . C a l l 306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228. While supplies last. www.hold-onindustries.com
G re a t, S e c u re s to ra ge fo r a ll yo u r c he m ic a l, s e e d , fu e l, to o ls a n d a ll o fyo u r va lu a b le s . M o d ify yo u r s to ra ge u n itto m e e t yo u r n e e d s w ith e xtra d o o rs , w in d o w s , po w e r, c u s to m pa in t, in s u la tio n ,e tc .
Ca ll BOND Toda y Ph. 306-373-2236 fx. 306-373-0364 w w w .b on din d.com e m a il joe @ b on din d.com
2006 CASE 4510, AutoSteer, FlexAir 70’ booms, 7400 hrs., $124,000; 2005 Case 4010 sprayer, 2 product delivery system, $93,000; 2005 Case 4010 w/3020 G4 Newleader bed, $93,000; 2005 Case 4520 w/70’ flex air, 4000 hrs., $129,000; 2005 Case, 3000 hrs., $138,000; 2001 Case 4300 w/60’ flex air, $68,000; 2003 Loral AirMax 1000 70’ booms, chemical bins, $93,000; 2004 Loral, 70’ booms, $93,000; 2005 AgChem 1064 sprayer, 2400 hrs., w/1100 gal. tank, 90’ booms, $105,000; 2 0 0 4 A g C h e m R o g at o r, w / a i r b e d , $66,000; 2002 Sterling spreader w/AgForce spinner spreader, $69,000; 2002 Dempster w/spin spreader, 2300 hrs., $58,000; 1999 Loral, w/AirMax 5 bed, 5700 hrs, $51,000; 1999 AgChem, 70’ booms, $64,000; 1997 AgChem, 70’ booms, $38,000; 2008 Adams Semi tender, self contained, $38,000; 2003 25 ton Raymond Semi tender, w/vertical auger, $38,000; 2007 Timpte belt Semi tender, $39,500; 1987 Ford w/22 ton Raymond tender w/vertical auger, $44,000; 8 ton Doyle vertical blender with scale, 40 HP, new auger, $18,500; 5 ton Tyler blender, 40 HP, $7500; 2000 Skidsteer Wrangler loader, w/quick detach bucket, $16,500; 1993 Wrangler loader, $13,500; 10 propane trucks in test date with 2800-3000 gal. tanks, w/hose reels, pumps and meters from $16,000 to $33,000. Northwest’s largest used selection of fertilizer equipment. 406-466-5356, Choteau, MT. For more equipment and photos view website www.fertilizerequipment.net FOR ALL YOUR
GREAT CAPACITY, 300 TON/HOUR 1 BUSHEL CLEAN UP AT THE END OF THE BAG. FULLY WINDS UP GRAIN BAG CHABOT IMPLEMENTS Elie, MB 204-353-2392 Neepawa, MB 204-476-3333 Steinbach, MB 204-326-6417 F.V. PIERLOT & SONS Nipawin, SK 306-862-4732 GREENFIELD AGRO SERVICE Rosetown, SK 306-882-2600 KROEKER MACHINERY Winkler, MB 204-325-4311 MARKUSSON NEW HOLLAND Emerald Park, SK 1-800-819-2583 MARTODAM MOTORS Spiritwood, SK 306-883-2045 MOODY’S EQUIPMENT LTD. Saskatoon, SK 306-934-4686 Perdue, SK 306-237-4272 Unity, SK 306-228-2686 Lloydminster, SK 306-825-6141 Kindersley, SK 306-463-2335 Olds, AB 403-556-3939 High River, AB 403-652-1410 Balzac, AB 403-295-7824 NYKOLAISHEN FARM EQUIPMENT Kamsack, SK 306-542-2814 Swan River, MB 204-734-3466
NEERLANDIA CO-OP Neerlandia, AB 780-674-3020 PARKLAND FARM EQUIPMENT North Battleford, SK 306-445-2427 REDVERS AGR. & SUPPLY LTD. 306-452-3444 ROBERTSON IMPLEMENTS (1988) LTD. Shaunavon, SK 306-297-4131 Swift Current, SK 306-773-4948 SCHROEDER BROS. Chamberlain, SK 306-638-6305 WHITE AG SALES & SERVICE Whitewood, SK 306-735-2300 AR-MAN EQUIPMENT Vulcan, AB 403-485-6968, 1-866-485-6968 BILL’S FARM SUPPLIES INC. Stettler, AB 403-742-8327 CAOUETTE & SONS IMPLEMENTS St. Paul, AB 780-645-4422 FOSTER’S AGRI-WORLD Beaverlodge, AB 780-354-3622, 1-888-354-3620
Email: craigyeager@grainbagscanada.com or aaronyeager@grainbagscanada.com
HI LINE FARM EQUIPMENT LTD. Wetaskiwin, AB 780-352-9244, 1-888-644-5463 ROCKY MOUNTAIN EQUIPMENT Falher, AB 780-837-4691, 1-866-837-4691 Grimshaw, AB 780-332-4691, 1-800-746-4691 KASH FARM SUPPLIES LTD. Eckville, AB 403-746-2211, 1-800-567-4394 E. BOURASSA & SONS: Assiniboia 1-877-474-2456 Estevan 1-877-474-2495 Pangman 1-877-474-2471 Radville 1-877-474-2450 Weyburn 1-877-474-2491 RAYMORE NEW HOLLAND Raymore, SK 306-746-2911 WATROUS NEW HOLLAND Watrous, SK 306-946-3301 YORKTON NEW HOLLAND Yorkton, SK 306-782-8511
Call Your Local Dealer
or Grain Bags Canada at 306-682-5888
www.grainbagscanada.com
FARM KING- BUHLER swingaway 13x85, excellent condition, $15,750. Lloydminster, AB., 780-871-4743. SAKUNDIAK (MERIDIAN) AUGERS: Brandt 10”x60’ swing away, $6500; Sakundiak 8”x53’, $4500. In stock: Convey-All TCSNH-1045 hyd. drive, c/w mover kit, and 38 HP Kohler diesel, list $38,900. Leasing available. Phone Dale at Mainway Farm Equipment, 306-567-3285 or 306-567-7299, Davidson, SK. Website: www.mainwayfarmequipment.ca MERIDIAN GRAIN AUGERS: SP kits and clutches, Kohler, B&S engines, gas and diesel. Call Brian ‘ T h e A u g e r G u y ’ 204-724-6197, Souris, MB. SAKUNDIAK GRAIN AUGERS available with self-propelled mover kits and bin sweeps. Contact Kevin’s Custom Ag in Nipawin, SK. Toll free 1-888-304-2837. NEW “R” SERIES Wheatheart Augers: With engine, mover and electric clutch. R-8x41, cash price $12,250; R-8x51, cash $12,750; R-10x41, cash $13,240. 306-648-3321, Gravelbourg, SK. WESTFIELD 10”X60’ SWING out, $4000; Sakundiak 8”x45’ w/Wheatheart mover, $7500. 306-648-7766, Gravelbourg, SK. 2011 WESTFIELD 10x41 SP auger, 30 HP Kohler, like new condition, $10,500 OBO. 306-747-2514, Shellbrook, SK. SAKUNDIAK HD8x1400 w/24 HP engine, Wheatheart mover and binsweep, elec. clutch. 306-464-2135, Lang, SK.
FERTILIZER
BEAVER CONTAINER SYSTEMS, new and used sea containers, all sizes. 306-220-1278, Saskatoon and Regina, SK.
EQUIPMENT NEEDS ADAMS SPREADER & TENDER CALL US FOR PARTS ON ALL
augers, seed cleaning plants, grain cleaners, combine bubble-up augers.
Rosetown Flighting Supply 1-866-882-2243, Rosetown, SK www.flightingsupply.com
WESTFIELD 13x70 SWING auger, tube damaged in windstorm, hardware, hyds. and swing good. 403-831-0088, Carstairs, AB. glen@firstcontinentalfreight.com 7”x45’ SAKUNDIAK WHEATHEART c/w bin s w e e p a n d m o v e r, $ 6 7 0 0 O B O . 306-834-8100, Major, SK. AUGERS: NEW and USED: Wheatheart, Westfield, Westeel, Sakundiak augers; Auger SP kits; Batco conveyors; Wheatheart post pounders. Good prices, leasing available. Call 1-866-746-2666.
GRAINMAXX HIGH CAPACITY AUGERS 8 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM
NEW SEE VIDEO ON WEBSITE
6000
SERIES TELESCOPIC
SWING AUGER
1 800 667 8800
www.grainmaxx.com S A K U N D I A K A U G E R S I N S TO C K : swings, truck loading, Hawes Agro SP movers. Contact Hoffart Services Inc. Odessa, SK, 306-957-2033. NEW 10x51 WHEATHEART auger, comes with 35 HP motor and mover kit. Get more capacity! Call your nearest Flaman Sales store or call 1-888-435-2626.
SPREADER/TENDER MAKES AND MODELS
1 800 667 8800
CALL FLAMAN for your aeration fan and duct work needs. We have a full line of aeration fans, propane heaters, and Grain G u a r d R o c k e t s . w w w. f l a m a n . c o m 1-888-435-2626.
www.nuvisionfhs.com
KEHO, STILL THE FINEST. Clews Storage Management/ K. Ltd., 1-800-665-5346.
FULL-BIN SUPER SENSOR
KEHO/ GRAIN GUARD Aeration Sales and Service. R.J. Electric, Avonlea, SK. Call 306-868-2199 or cell: 306-868-7738.
Equip yo ur a uge r to s e n s e w h e n th e b in is full. 2 ye a r w a rra n ty. Ca ll Brow n le e s Truckin g In c. Un ity, 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.
Never Clim b A B in A ga in
306-228-297 1 o r 1-87 7 -228-5 5 98 w w w .fullb in s upe rs e n s o r.co m
WHEATHEART 8x51, 25 HP Kohler, mover, electric clutch, excellent condition, $4900. 306-540-8762, Palmer, SK. REMOTE CONTROL SWING AUGER movers, trailer chute openers, endgate and hoist systems, wireless full bin alarms, digital wireless tractorCam, the Simpler Sampler portable combine. All shipped directly to you. Doing it right, keeping you safe, by remote control. Phone Brehon Agrisystems at 306-933-2655 or visit us at www.brehonag.com Saskatoon, SK.
2008 FARM KING 13”x70’ swing auger w/hyd. winch and hopper mover, reverser, 540 PTO, new $23,000, best offer; Also 9600 JD combine cyl. spiders, used, good cond. 204-526-7829, Holland, MB.
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 USED SAKUNDIAK 7X52’, $3250; Sakundi1-866-567-3101, Loreburn, SK. ak 8x33’ SP kit, 18 HP B&S, $6175; MeBATCO CONVEYORS, new/used, grain ridian 14x72’ demo, Agremote mover, augers, grain vacs, SP kits. Delivery and spout, 3 yr. warranty, $21,875. Call Brian 204-724-6197, Souris, MB. leasing available. 1-866-746-2666.
BRANDT 8510 GRAIN bag unloader, excellent, in new condition, $31,500. 403-578-3308, Coronation, AB. WANTED: OLDER 9’ to 10’ grain bag unloader. Call: 780-662-2617, Tofield, AB.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
USED GRAIN EXTRACTORS FOR SALE. Limited Supply. Serviced and field ready. Phone Southey, 1-888-235-2626 or Prince Albert, 1-888-352-6267. www.flaman.com Flaman where farming starts. PRO-GRAIN BAGGER 1110, 2011, c/w conveyor and hydraulic mover. Phone 306-287-8062, Watson, SK.
2009 KILLBROS, 1100 bu., 900/60/32 Trelleborgs, factory tarp, hyd. spout, shedded, exc. cond., $32,500. 204-751-0046, Notre Dame, MB. 2005 BRENT 880, 850 bu. 30.5x32 rubber, tarp, vg shape, $23,000. 306-842-5891, 306-861-7488, Weyburn, SK. 2009 UNVERFERTH 1110, hyd. spout, scales, tarp, camera, walking beam axle, PTO drive, 38” tires, $38,000. Delivery available. Troy 306-831-9776, Rosetown, SK. Email: troysanderson77@gmail.com N E W 4 0 0 B U. G R AV I T Y WAG O N S , $7,100; 600 bu., $12,000. Large selection used gravity wagons, 250-750 bu. Used grain carts, 450-1050 bu. 1-866-938-8537. www.zettlerfarmequipment.com
SPECIAL OFFER
Can-Seed Equipment Ltd. has received some Buhler Sortex Demo machines and we are able to pass this unique sale onto you. We have a Z+1BL, Z+1B and a Z+1VL available for $65,000 to $93,500 these full colour optical sorters come with 1 year warranty. Call Can-Seed Equipment Ltd today at 1-800-644-8397 for more details on these great deals!
COLOUR SORTER SERVING YOU OVER
N E W S ATA K E 5 chute color sorter, mounted in 5 ton Freightliner truck, c/w genset and compressor. Edwin Bronsch, 403-652-5643, High River, AB. DUAL SCREEN ROTARY grain cleaners, great for pulse crops, best selection in Western Canada. Phone 306-259-4923 or 306-946-7923, Young, SK.
NEW AND USED grain dryers. Contact 1999 JD 566 baler, 14,000 bales, good 2012 NH H8040 Prairie Special c/w Franklin Voth, Manitou, MB. 204-242-3300 shape, $7500 OBO. Phone 306-252-2227, 600/65R28 front tires, del. cab, $122,800. or cell: 204-242-4123, www.fvoth.com Kenaston, SK. 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for FARM FANS AB250 grain dryer, AutoBatch, NEW IDEA 4865 round baler, 5x6 bales, full online listings. propane, single phase, canola screens, hyd PU, 2300 bales, shedded, good shape. WANTED: SWATHER TRANSPORT for 18’ $20,000. 306-245-3750 eves., Francis, SK. to 20’ swather, in good cond., reasonably 306-944-4325, 306-231-8355, Bruno, SK priced. 306-734-2970, Chamberlain, SK. NEW SUPERB GRAIN DRYERS and Moridge TRI HAUL SELF-UNLOADING dryer parts in stock. 306-272-4195, Foam 1995 36’ MACDON 2900 SP swather, new Lake, SK. PU reel, $30,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm ROUND BALE MOVERS Equip. Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. SUKUP GRAIN DRYERS: 1 or 3 phase, liq- 8’ to 29’ lengths - 6 to 18 bales uid propane or nat. gas, canola screens. also excellent for feeding cattle 1981 INT. 4000 24.5’ SP swather, larger In stock and ready for immediate delivery. tires, MacDon 9352 cab with wiring, in the field - 4 bales at a time $14,500 complete, or sell cab separately, 204-998-9915, Altamont, MB. with a pickup. $10,250. Ph. 204-476-2649, Neepawa, MB. AEROMATIC GRAIN DRYER w/propane and gas burners, c/w propane hose, regu9260 HESSTON swather, w/36’ 2010 1-800-505-9208 lators, moving wheels and 12’ of duck header w/PU reel, like new, big cab and www.LiftOffTriHaul.com hose, $4500. 306-554-2685, Wynyard, SK. big power unit, Hesston same as Challenger and Massey. Power unit is a 2005 HessDRI-ALL PROPANE DRYER, continuous HAYBUSTER 2650 bale shredder, exc. ton, very nice, $70,000. 204-871-0925, flow, completely rebuilt, PTO, 200 bu./hr., cond. $11,900; New Idea 484, $2200; NH MacGregor, MB. $10,000. Ph. 306-549-4701, Hafford, SK. 855, new chain, $3500; Laurier round bale picker, $8900. Pro Ag Sales anytime 2009 30’ H8040 NH, SP, PU reel, transport, sliding cable, $95,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm 306-441-2030, North Battleford, SK. Equipment, 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. HESSTON 5500 round baler, overhauled, field ready. Call 306-466-4428, Leask, SK. BALE SPEARS, high quality imported from Italy, 27” and 49”, free shipping, excellent pricing. Call now toll free 1-866-443-7444, Stonewall, MB.
www.canseedequip.com
KILLBROS 1175; BRENT 776; Demco 800, hyd./PTO; A+L 700, hydraulic drive. 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Rama, SK.
SEED CLEANING PLANT capable of cleaning product to certified status, 100-200 bu./hr. Building is 30 yrs. old, 36x20, on 4x6 floor. Could be easily moved. Includes: hoppered steel dockage bin 400 bu., Wheatland 1600 bu. hopper bin, Wheatland 1200 bu. hopper bin, chaff bin. Cleaning equipment includes: 245 Carter 4-roll, triple bank Carter indents, 620 Carter screen machine, Carter 4-roll sizer, heated office space. Sold as a unit only. Ideal for small pedigreed producer or organic producer. Contact Tim Geiger at Leader, SK. for specific details and price 306-628-4335, 306-628-7896. CUSTOM COLOR SORTING chickpeas to mustard. Cert organic and conventional. 306-741-3177, Swift Current, SK. DELTA COLOUR SORTER, set up for ergot removal, 15 to 25 tons per hr. used 2 yrs. Installed in 26’ insulated van on levelling jacks w/surge bin, Atlas Copco air compressor and all necessary wiring. Call Lars at 306-937-2575, Battleford, SK. DUAL STAGE ROTARY SCREENERS and Kwik Kleen 5-7 tube. Portage la Prairie, www.zettlerfarmequipment.com or call 204-857-8403. VARIOUS EQUIPMENT: (1) Clipper 49B; (2) blanket cleaners; (6) Simon Day model D bucket elevators; (4) Indoor hoppers; (3) Phase motors and control switches, intrinsically safe. 204-851-5520, Cromer, MB
CLASSIFIED ADS 47
50 YEARS
FLAMAN GRAIN CLEANING AND HANDLING OFFERS COLOUR SORTERS 150–1100 bu/hr. If you have ergot problems this year, call us for the solution.
FLAMAN 1-888-435-2626 Visit us at
www.flamangraincleaning.com
Available at:
Pioneer Coop Agronomy Centre Swift Current, SK
(306) 778-8876 www.dseriescanola.ca
(2) 30A HESSTON stackers w/movers, always shedded, excellent condition, $5000 OBO takes all. 780-645-2206, St. Paul, AB.
GSI GRAIN DRYERS. Ph. Glenmor, Prince Albert, SK., 1-888-708-3739. For all your NH 1049 SP bale wagon, 160 bale cagrain drying needs! www.glenmor.cc We pacity, good shape. 306-283-4747 or 306-220-0429, Langham, SK. are the GT grain dryer parts distributor. MF 128 SQUARE , 1/4 turn chute, wide PU, low bales, shedded, good shape. SELLING GRAIN LEGS, distributors, con- 306-944-4325, 306-231-8355, Bruno, SK. veyors and truck scales. Also other eleva- BALE SPEAR ATTACHMENTS for all tors parts. 403-634-8540, Grassy Lake, AB. loaders and skidsteers, excellent pricing. GRAIN HANDLING FACILITY FOR SALE. Call now 1-866-443-7444. Must be dismantled and moved. 9000 bu. per hr. grain leg; 100’ tower; Drag conveyor; Screw conveyor; 2 Westeel widecore, 27,000 bu. bins; 2 Westeel 1908 bins on 1996 MACDON 4930, 3750 hrs., turbo 2 Miller hoppers; Twister 5000 bu. bin on speed, c/w MD 960 header, PU reel, Miller hopper; Approx. 16’x24’ building $39,500. 306-682-9920, Humboldt, SK or w/electrical control panels; Includes all www.farmworld.ca for full online listings. electrical motors, downspouts and truck 1990 VERSATILE 4750, 22’ with DSA, UII load-out. Call 780-777-5227, Viking, AB. PU reels, 200 acres on new guards and knife, 1692 engine hrs., shedded, $12,900 OBO. 780-736-3886, Thorhild, AB.
OPI TEMPERATURE and moisture cables accurately monitor grain in the bin. InteMORRIDGE 8770 PTO batch dryer, pro- gris system monitors from your computer. pane, $5000. For more information call Start $265/bin. Flamans 1-888-435-2626. 780-777-5227, Viking, AB.
2- 2013 MF 9740s, 30’, DS, 99 hrs, $126,000 OBO; 36’, 97 hrs, big tires, $129,000 OBO. AutoSteer and warranty on both. 403-412-4456, Three Hills, AB.
2005 NH HW325, 918 hrs, c/w 36’ Honeybee header, cab and rear axle suspension, MC 900 CONTINUOUS, 3 phase, natural gas or propane; 3 phase generator also 2011 REM 2700 grain vac, 78 hours, exc. $88,000. 306-682-9920, Humboldt, SK. or www.farmworld.ca for full online listings. available. 780-847-3792, Marwayne, AB. shape. 306-745 -7168, Esterhazy, SK. MF 885, gas engine, 25’, batt reels, asking VERTEC 6500 PROPANE grain dryer with $6500 OBO. Call 306-445-9833, PTO or elec. drive, $19,000. Calgary, AB. 306-441-6923, Whitkow, SK. 403-279-4767, clayfarm@abnet.ca
CASE/IH COMBINES and other makes and models. 5 years interest free on most units. Call the combine superstore. Trades welcome, delivery can be arranged. Call Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. 2005 CASE 2388, 1400 engine hrs., 1100 rotor hrs. Call Steve at 780-674-8080, Cherhill, AB.
’96 HB SP25’ Swather Head UII PUR w/ plastic teeth, good canvas, factory transport, dbl knife drive. $7,800. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. Financing available. www.combineworld.com
TWO - 1997 CASE/IH 2188: 1) 3095 hrs., 1015 PU, specialty rotor, chopper, new tires. 2) 2818 hrs., 2015 PU, specialty rotor, chopper, hopper topper, Case work orders completed in 2012, new clutch packs in both, $40,000/ea. or both for $75,000; Also have two - 1020, 30’ flex headers, 2008 and 2004, exc. cond., low acres, $18,000 and $16,000, or both for $32,000. Call 306-867-7466, Loreburn, SK.
NOW IS THE TIME to check the hydro pump drive hub and splined input shaft. We have lubricated splined drive hubs for all models 1440 through 2388. Exchange reman. and tested hydros in stock. Hydra2011 T’S E-ZUNROLLER round to square tec Hydraulics 1-800-667-7712, Regina, bale processing equipment, c/w Cum- SK. www.hydratec.ca mins engine powerplant, control booth, conveyors and electric fan. Complete unit, 1996 CASE 2188, PU, 30’ header, 2800 all for $20,000 OBO. Call 306-370-1603, sep. hrs, well maintained, shedded, exc. Saskatoon, SK. cond, $67,000. 780-888-2245, Hardisty AB
24” 135,000 BTU Caldwell heaters, $1850. 6 left in stock! Propane powered. Phone Flaman at 1-855-435-2626. TOX-O-WIK MODEL 5800 continuous flow, canola screen, PTO drive, propane, with 500 gal. tank, $5000. 306-731-3015 or 306-530-9267, Lumsden, SK. TWO MD600 CONTINUOUS grain dryers: 1 wind damaged. Both for $3500. Call 204-729-7630, Brandon, MB.
CURT’S GRAIN VAC SERVICES • N ew & Us ed Gra in V a cs • Blo w er & Airlo ck Repa ir • Pa rts & S ervices Fo r AL L M a k es & M o d els
P h :306 - 734- 2228 Cra ik, SK.
GRAIN VACS: REM 552, $3500; REM 2500 HD, $9500; Brandt 4500, $7500; Weigh wagon with digital scale, $3500. 1-866-938-8537. 2008 REM 2700 HD grain vac, 112 hrs., always shedded, like new, $15,995. 403-369-9020, High River, AB. CONEYAIR GRAIN VACS, parts, accessories. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.starlinesales.com
JD 567 ROUND baler, Mega wide pickup completely reconditioned, field ready. 403-321-2105, Blackie, AB.
Move it! in print and online next day. Now your classified word ads will go online within one business day from when you book them to run in the Producer Classifieds. And best of all, online word ads are FREE until the end of 2013 when you book your print ad. Our team of Classified Sales Associates has the product knowledge, marketing strategies and access to qualified buyers that is unmatched in the industry. Place your classified ad and experience our professional service first hand.
Monday to Friday, ads will be posted online within one business day. Real Time online will be placed a maximum of 11 days prior to first print insertion.
CLASSIFIEDS.PRODUCER.COM
1-800-667-7770
48 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
2001 CIH 2388, 2400 sep. hrs., hopper 1995 NH TX68, 2554 engine hours, 1764 topper, AFX rotor, Swathmaster PU, Y&M, threshing hours, good condition. Asking excellent condition, $65,000 OBO. Killar- $35,000. 306-358-4342, Denzil, SK. ney, MB. 204-523-7469 or 204-534-8115. 2008 NH CX8080, $199,000. Yorkton New 2005 CASE/IH 2388, 1600 hrs., w/PU Holland, call 306-783-8511, or visit: mint cond. 403-308-2297, Lethbridge, AB. www.yorktonnewholland.com 2008 CASE/IH 8010, 1630 hrs., w/PU 2004 CR960, $119,000. Yorkton New great cond. 403-308-2297, Lethbridge, AB. Holland, call 306-783-8511, or visit: www.yorktonnewholland.com 2004 STX 500, 4520 hrs., 800-38 tires, very good shape, $159,500. Located at 2011 NH CR9070. $278,000. Watrous Viscount, SK. 403-312-5113 New Holland, call 306-946-3301, or visit: 2000 CASE 2388, 1015 PU, hopper ext., www.watrousnewholland.com long auger, HHC, fore/aft, rock trap, chopper, vg cond., vg tires, shedded, $49,000. Call 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. 2007 JD 9760, 1480 sep. hrs., 0 hrs. on 1993 CASE/IH 1666 combine, 12’ Swath- new eng. w/2 yr. warranty, over $30,000 master PU, Kirby spreader, 800 acres on Greenlight, deluxe cab, long unload auger, new Howard concaves, 3070 hrs., well 710/70x38 duals, Manurer big top, terrain maintained, shedded, $22,000 OBO. Luse- tracer, AutoSteer ready, $150,000 OBO. land, SK. 306-834-7481. Also w/woe 2008 JD 615 PUB header, $20,000 OBO. 306-948-6059, Biggar, SK. IF YOU OWN a 1688/2188/2388 you should know we have forward direction 2006 JD 9760 STS, 1800 sep. and 2300 hydro hose improved assembly. Big $$ eng. hrs, Greenlighted yearly, new injecsaving, our price $399.24, represents $400 tors, concave, feeder house, yield and saving and it’s a better hose assembly. moisture, Touchset, vg cond. $145,000. Call Hydratec Hydraulics, 1-800-667-7712, Call Jon 306-230-2736, Assiniboia, SK. Regina, SK. www.hydratec.ca 1994 CASE 1680, on of the last 4 ever made. Shedded, all updates, AFX rotor, Sunnybrook concaves, chaff spreader, chopper, cross flow fan, PU header, 3184 hrs., routine Uptime inspection w/bills. Phone 306-697-7210. Grenfell, SK. CASE 8010, long auger, chopper, 900 tires, 1600 hrs., SwathMaster PU, good cond. $150,000. 403-647-7391, Foremost, AB. 1997 CASE/IH 2188, 3000 sep. hrs, auto HHC, chopper, very good tires, rock trap, long auger, 1015 PU header, exc., cond., $42,000. 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. 1994 CASE/IH 1688, 2412 engine hrs., one owner, mint, $49,000. 306-563-8482 or 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. 2006 CIH 8010 AFX, 16’ PU header, 2100 engine hrs., 1700 sep. hrs., all upgrades, $135,000. 306-831-7273, Rosetown, SK. PROBLEMS W/SPLINE DRIVE on hydro? We can save big $$. We have new lubricated and hardened couplers and improved pump input spline shafts. All combines from 1440 through 2388 have this problem. Hydratec Hydraulics, Regina, SK. Phone: 1-800-667-7712, www.hydratec.ca
MOST OF YOUR HYDRAULIC hoses are metric. We have the best metric hydraulic hose program in the industry. Hydratec Hydraulics, 1-800-667-7712, Regina, SK. www.hydratec.ca
’96 JD CTS 2,318 sep hrs., HHC, fore & aft, hopper topper. Loaded, nice & clean! $36,800 w/o header. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 2010 JD 9770 STS, 625 sep. hrs., c/w 2012 JD 615P PU header w/only 100 hours on header, Contour-Master high torque variable spd. feeder house, high cap lift cyl., 22’ high cap unload auger, wide spread fine cut chopper, 800/70R38, small and large grain concave’s, always shedded, exc. cond., $235,000. Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 2003 JD 9650 STS, field ready, 1945 sep. hrs, 2715 eng. hrs, variable speed feeder house, yield and moisture, fore/aft, hopper topper, 914 PU, AutoStar ready, $105,000. 204-749-2083, Rathwell, MB. 2000 JD 9650 W, fine cut, 615 PU, $60,000. 1995 JD 9600, 6-belt, $39,000. 1990 9600, 7-belt Sunnybrook bars, $30,000. All shedded. Call 306-524-4960, Semans, SK.
2007 LEXION 580R Cat, 1799 eng. hrs., clean, vg condition, shedded, Swathmaster TWO 2010 JD 9770, 400 bushel hoppers, AutoSteer, never done peas, always shedpickup. Info. 306-398-7713, Cut Knife, SK. ded, 533 eng./383 sep. hrs., 663/493 hrs., 2003 CHALLENGER 660, 1660 sep. hrs., mint condition. Will have Greenlight, $22,000 spent in repairs, shedded, field $260,000 each; 35’ hydra flex header, ready. Pickup head and 30’ flex header d o n e 1 , 0 0 0 a c r e s , a s k i n g $ 4 0 , 0 0 0 . available. Fraser Farms Ltd., Pambrun, SK, 780-365-3537, 780-995-6807, Andrew, AB call 306-741-0475. SAVE SOME TAX DOLLARS and get an exNEED HYDROSTATIC TRANS. UNITS. cellent reliable combine: 1998 JD 9510, Pump and motors in stock. Call us with w/914 PU, 2067 threshing hrs., hopper your name plate info. Hydratec Hydraulics topper w/cover, chopper and chaff spread1-800-667-7712, www.hydratec.ca e r, s h e d d e d , $ 5 5 , 0 0 0 O B O . C a l l 306-338-2710, Hendon, SK. NEW HOLLAND TR70, good condition, Ford engine, diamond tires good. Phone Fred 306-228-2862, Unity, SK. 1995 NH TR87, 1596 eng. hrs., 1271 rotor hrs., nice shape, always shedded, $30,500 OBO. 1/3 down, balance April 1, 2014. 780-736-3886, Thorhild, AB. 2009 NH CR9070, 617 hrs., MAV chopper 16’ sm PU, HID roof lights, $227,500. 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for 1998 JD CTS II, fine cut chopper, JD chaff spreader, w/JD 914 header, 2900 sep. hrs, full online listings. $46,500 OBO. 204-526-5332, Treherne MB 2003 NH CR970, 2775 hrs., deluxe cab, Y&M, engine overhaul 09/10, $105,000. 1992 CASE/IH 7120 Magnum, 7100 hrs., 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for 20.8 singles, orig. owner. 306-283-4747, 306-291-9395, Langham, SK full online listings. 2009 NH CX8070, $119,000. Raymore 1998 JD CTS11 Maximizer 1861/2579 New Holland, call 306-746-2911, or visit: hrs., 914 PU, fore and aft, hopper topper, fine cut chopper, shedded, $61,500. www.raymorenewholland.com 306-441-4477, located at Lake Lenore, SK. 2006 CX 860, 1550 hrs., Y&M, shedded, t o p c o n d i t i o n , $ 1 1 5 , 0 0 0 O B O. C a l l 2004 JD 9760, 1030 sep. hrs, Precision PU, hopper topper, Y&M, yearly Green780-672-7340, Camrose, AB. l i g h t , s h e d d e d , ve r y r e l i a b l e , fi r s t 2007 NH CR9070, 1367 hrs, coolant, heat- $140,000. 780-208-4808, Two Hills, AB. er, awning plates, rotors, screen, brush, deluxe, $183,500. 1-888-442-6084 or 2005 9660 STS, 2350 eng. hrs., 1750 www.farmworld.ca for full online listings. threshing, duals, high cap. unload auger, 1997 TR98, $31,000. Watrous New 1500 precision header w/Rake-Up pickup. Holland, call 306-946-3301, or visit: Howard concaves, hopper cover, shedded, Greenlighted every year, JD AutoSteer www.watrousnewholland.com ready, $130,000 OBO. 306-843-7070, 2006 NH CX840, $129,000. Raymore New 306-658-2122, Wilkie, SK. Holland, call 306-746-2911, or visit: www.raymorenewholland.com 1981 7720, 2800 hrs., c/w 212 PU and 2010 CX8090, 600 hrs, like new, $210,000; 230 straight cut hdr., recent Greenlight. 2011 2162/fd70, 40’ flex, like new, Offers. 306-693-9847, Moose Jaw, SK. $65,000. 204-372-6056, Fisher Branch, MB 1997 JD 9600, 2600/3450 hrs, new rub 1994 TX66, $23,500. Raymore New bars and feeder chain, hopper topper, Holland, call 306-746-2911, or visit: chaff spreader, exc. cond. 306-283-4747, 306-291-9395, Langham, SK. www.raymorenewholland.com
1984 JD 8820, 3100 hrs., dual range cyl., airfoil sieve, chopper, chaff spreader, 212 PU, exc., $18,000. 230 JD available with Keho air reel. 403-379-2423, Buffalo, AB. TWO SHEDDED, FIELD ready JD 9600 combines: 1996 w/3000 sep. hrs.; 1997 w/3520 sep. hours. $85,000 spent on Greenlight in last 2 yrs. Also pickup heads, 36’ HoneyBee headers, 30’ flex headers and chaff collectors available. Fraser Farms Ltd., 306-741-0240, Pambrun, SK. REDUCED PRICE: 1998 JD 9610 combine, 914 PU, real nice shape, low hrs. Call 306-654-7772, Saskatoon, SK. 2004 JD 9860, 20.8x42 and 28L-26, 2260 sep. hrs, hopper topper, gd shape. Call 306-842-5891, 306-861-7488 Weyburn SK 2010 9770 STS JD, w/1615 PU header, 20.8x42 duals, large rear tires, $275,000. Call A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment Ltd., 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. 2001 9650 WALKER with PU head, Y&M Contour-Master, 2800 sep. hrs., $69,000; 1994 9400 w/PU, 2700 sep. hrs., 24,900. 306-948-3949, 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. 1998 JD 9610, 2973 hrs, 914 PU, newer rice tires, ext. auger, elec. hopper tarp, hopper topper, fine cut wide spread chopper, $75,000; 1998 JD 9610, 2250 hrs, 914 PU, rice tires, Mud Hog RWD w/Michelin deep lug tires, hopper topper, fine cut chopper, $95,000; both Greenlighted since new. JD 930F w/Crary air bar, fore/aft reel, $19,500; JD 930F w/Crary air reel $19,500; JD 930F, fore/aft reel, $15,500. All stored inside and in mint condition. 204-785-3626, East Selkirk, MB. SELLING TWO- 2002 JD 9750 STS, 2180 sep. hrs., clean, vg cond., shedded, Mav chopper, Swathmaster PU, upgraded accelerator. 306-398-7713, Cut Knife, SK. THEY DIDN’T WANT us to get our hands on cores to remanufacture for 9500/9600 CTS Hydro drives, but we’ve got them. We offer for JD from 6600 through current CTS combines all remanuf. Hydros. All in stock and all parts. Hydratec Hydraulics 1-800-667-7712, Regina. www.hydratec.ca 1993 JD 9500 combine, 3315 sep. hrs., dual spd. cyl. with slow down kit, Rodono fine cut chopper conversion, tires 80%+, extensive maintenance program every year. New within last 2 years -elevator and feeder chains, rub bar, concaves and beater blades, Walker crank and bearings, all augers replaced. Very good running cond., asking $32,500; Also JD 930 straight cut header, new knives, guards and skid plates last year, batt reel, asking $5500. Can help arrange delivery. For more info call 403-502-1237, Bow Island, AB.
1997 MF 8570, $35,000. Yorkton New Holland, call 306-783-8511 or visit: www.yorktonnewholland.com 1997 MF 8680, 2140 sep. hrs., many new parts, $45,000; Agco draper header, 30’, exc. cond., $12,500. Call 306-463-3132, 306-460-7837, Kindersley, SK. 1987 MF 8590 c/w Melroe 8 draper PU, Rodono chopper, airfoil chaffer, 2760 eng. hrs, rotor and vanes reconditioned. New feeder chain, bottom roller for PU, straw chopper rotor and airfoil chaffer also available. 780-434-1322, Calmar, AB. 2002 MF 8780 XP, 2300 eng., 1800 thresh. PU header w/30’ straight header available, one owner, well maintained, shedded, $80,000. 306-874-7843, Naicam, SK.
2012 CIH 9120, duals, $319,000; 2010 NH CR9080, duals, $229,000; 2010 CIH 9120, lateral tilt, $259,000; 1986 CIH 1660, $16,900; 2006 NH CR970, duals $139,000; 1992 CIH 1680, $29,900; 1995 CIH 2188, $42,900; 2004 CIH 8010, duals, $135,000; 1998 CIH 2388, accelerator, $69,900; 1996 CIH 2188, accelerator, $49,000; 2004 CIH 2388, 2200 hrs, $105,000; 2011 CIH 8120, duals, $289,000. Call Hergott Farm Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK. MF 860 w/PU header, 20’ grain header, $6500; MF 410 combine, PU header, $800; HoneyBee 36’ draper header, PU reel, pea auger, fits Case 2388 and 2588 combines, $13,500 OBO. 306-236-8023, Goodsoil, SK.
1990 JD 843 corn head; 8 row, 30”, field ready, fits all John Deeres, $11,500; 1997 JD 893 corn head, 8 row, 30”, knife rolls, field ready, $18,900; 1991 JD 843 corn head, 8 row, 30”, totally reconditioned, new chains, sprockets, paint, $14,900; 2002 JD 893 corn head, 8 row, 30”, totally reconditioned, new sprockets, chains, etc. Mint, $28,900; CIH 1083 corn head, 8 row, 30”, totally reconditioned, $14,900. Reimer Farm Equip., Hwy #12 North, Steinbach, MB. www.reimerfarmequipment.com Gary Reimer at: 204-326-7000. 2004 JD 936D, hyd. fore/aft, pea auger. 2010 JD 635 hydraflex, full finger auger, hyd. fore/aft, vg. Both headers shedded and low acres. 780-232-9766, Tofield, AB.
’08 40’ MacDon FD70/CIH 2162 w/ transport, hyd. tilt, 8.5/10 condition, choice of adapters CNH/2388/JD…$56,800 w/ warranty. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
2007 HONEYBEE SP36, red/black, 36’, AFX/CR/CX adaptor, $38,500. Brandon, MB., 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586. 2008 NH 72C rigid header, 30’, transport included, $23,000. Phone 780-973-6042, Edmonton, AB. 2009 MACDON D60, JD adapter, hyd. tilt, fore/aft, slow speed transport kit, 35’, exc. cond., delivery available. $38,000 OBO. 306-831-9776, Rosetown, SK. Email: troysanderson77@gmail.com
’09 CIH 2016 2016 head w/ Swathmaster pick-up. Overall 85% cond’n. $20,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
’11 16’ MD PW7/Swathmaster Pickup Heads Brand new “old stock”, only two left in stock!..... Trade/Finance/Lease $20,800. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com TWO 30’ HONEYBEE DRAPER headers, 2001 and 2005, both in exc. cond., w/JD adapters. Call 306-298-4445, Bracken, SK. JD 925 HEADER 25’, heavy skid plates with transport, stored inside, $9500. Drumheller, AB. ph. 403-912-0632, 403-823-0708. IN STOCK: CAT, CIH, JD, AGCO. Cat FD40 flex; CIH 820, 1020, 2020; JD 920, 925, 930, 630, 635; Agco 525. We have adaptors in stock to fit JD platforms on CIH, Agco, NH combines. Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy #12 North, Steinbach, MB. Gary Reimer at: 204-326-7000. www.reimerfarmequipment.com 30’ CASE/IH DRAPER HEADER for 8010 or 8020 combine, $25,000. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. 2008 HONEYBEE SP36, 36’, UII PU reel, pea auger, JD adapter, JD green color, $42,000 OBO. 403-317-4976, Burdett, AB.
FLEXHEADS: C/IH 1020, 30’, $8000; C/IH 1020, 25’, $5000; C/IH 1010 rigid, 30’, $4500; IH 820, $2000; JD 925, $6500; JD 930, $7000; IH 810 Sunflower header w/trailer, $3500. 204-857-8403, Portage, 2011 MACDON PW7 PU head, JD 60/70 MB. www.zettlerfarmequipment.com hookup, under 1000 acres, like new CASE/IH ADAPTER for 88 series for 2020 $19,500. 306-230-2736, Assiniboia, SK. headers; 2020 knives and heads, 1/2 price HONEYBEE 25’ DRAPER header, pea auger, or offers. 306-741-6549, Vanguard, SK. 2006, asking $27,000. Call Steve MF 9230 30’ straight cut head, batt reel 780-674-8080, Cherhill, AB. w/Quick Cut knife, vg cond., will fit Mas- 2- 2010 MACDON FD70 flex draper headsey 9700, 8560, 8570 and some 8780 ers w/transport, hyd. tilt, full poly skid combines. With transport, asking $5500. shoes, Empire end wheels and JD adapter. Call 403-502-1237, Bow Island, AB. Deposit will hold and store until spring. 306-397-2678, Edam, SK. 1997 30’ CASE/IH 1010 auger header, PU reel, transport, $12,500; 2002 30’ Cat F20 2009 MACDON D60, 35’, 60/70 JD hookauger flex header, PU reel, transport, 4 up, transport, fore and aft, vg cond. wheel trailer, $25,000; 30’ Cat D30 auger $53,500. 306-230-2736, Assiniboia, SK. header w/Sunflower pans and drum, $8000; 1999 36’ Case/IH 1042 draper TWO 2002 JD 936D draper headers, factoheader, Case 88 combine adapter, PU reel, ry trans., canola augers, fore/aft, single transport, $26,500; 1999 30’ CIH 1042 point hook-up, always shedded, excellent draper header, Case 88 adapter, PU reel, condition, $59,000 for the pair. Marquette, transport, $28,500. A.E. Chicoine Farm MB. Phone 204-375-6653 or 204-461-0610 Equip. Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK.
’03 Swathmaster PU 14’ pickup w/ new belts, hyd. wind guard. $10,950. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
’01 IH Swathmaster 14’ pick-up w/ hyd. wind guard. $8,480. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
NEED PICKUP HEADERS? ’01 NH Precision, $7,800; ‘91 JD 914 $4,900; ’08 16’ MacDon PW7, $12,800; ’93 14’ Gleaner, $1,850. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
GR A TTON C OUL EE A GR IP A R TS L TD .
1987 MASSEY 850, 1149 hrs., 9001 header c/w Melroe PU, $12,500; 1985 MF 850, 9001 header c/w Victory PU, $10,500; also, 9024 and 2381 (22’) headers, c/w PU reels. 780-662-2617, Tofield, AB. ’92 914 JD Header & Pick Up Call for details….$7,280. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
2009 MF 9795, duals, shedded, vg, 550 threshing hrs., 0% for 24 months or 0% for 12 months OAC, complete with 1 year/300 hr. extended warranty. Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. WANTED: MF 8780, low hrs., or Premium MF 8570 combine. 780-662-2617, Tofield, AB. 1985 MH 860, picker header, chaff spreader, $8500. 306-421-3077, Estevan, SK.
FALL SPECIALS- IN STOCK: JD 216: 920-925-930; JD 630 (2004-2006), 635 (2009); CIH 1020, 25’-30’; CIH 2020, 30’-35’, ready to go to work. Air reel flex platform, 2001 925 w/Crary air reel, full finger, $18,900; 1998 930 w/Crary air reel, $14,900; 2003 930 w/Crary air reel, $19,900; 3 NH 973, 30’, one with Crary air reel. See: www.reimerfarmequipment.com Reimer Farm Equip, Hwy #12 North, Steinbach MB. Gary Reimer 204-326-7000.
NH 971: 2 headers, 30’ w/Inter steel sunflower pans and drums. Adapted to CC series NH combines, $9,500/$8,500 OBO. 204-724-0287, Souris, MB. RECONDITIONED rigid and flex, most makes and sizes; also header transports. Ed Lorenz, 306-344-4811, Paradise Hill, SK. www.straightcutheaders.com WANTED: MACDON FD70 35’ or 40’ header with Gleaner adapter; Wanted: Stripper header for Gleaner. Chris 306-628-7840, Eatonia, SK.
Available at:
Rack Petroleum Ltd. Unity, SK www.dseriescanola.ca
1999 (3645/2 756 Hrs) AFX R o to r, 1015 w /14FT R a ke Up, Fa cto ry Cha ff/S tra w S prea d er, 3rd LiftCylin d er, Clea n Un it Choice for
2012 JD 640FD w/AWS air reel, height sensing, reel flip kit, anti-wrap kit, stored i n d o o r s , l i k e n e w, 3 a v a i l a b l e . 306-533-4891, Gray, SK. 1997 JD 1293, Calmers rolls and sprockets, STS driveshafts, Headsite, field-ready, $25,000. 701-897-0086, Garrison, ND.
(306) 228-1800
2388 IN TERN ATIO N AL
’07 40’ MacDon FD70 w/ transport, hyd. tilt, 9/10 condition, choice of adapters CNH/2388/JD........$56,800 w/ warranty. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
ra Ce le b
$
54,90000
2004 CX86 0
(32 49 EN G . HR S /2 2 48 S EP HR S .) W /HHC; FO R E/AFT; LAT Tilt; Lo n g U n lo a d Au ger; Fa cto ry H o pperEXT, C ho pper& C ha ff S prd r; 900/60R 32 & 540/65R 30 Tires. $
74,50000 Co m e See Us @ Agri-Trade in the W estern er Park,R ed D eer N o v 6-9,201 3 Bo o th # ’s 200-202.
tin g
RS 25 BYuEsA in e ss in
W ID E S ELECTIO N O F S TRAIG HT CUT HEAD ERS Ava ila b le (JD, CIH, Ho n ey Bee, M a cDo n , N H, AG CO – G lea n er, M F, W hite)
Ca ll for Ap p lica tion s & Pricin g (X 8 ) M ACDON D50, 9 6 0, 9 6 2, 9 72, 9 74 M ODEL S ..................S ta rtin g @ $4,500 (X 5) HON EYBEE S P25, S P30, S P36 , M ODEL S .......................S ta rtin g @ $12,9 00 1010 CIH 19 9 0 30FT W /BATT REEL . . . .$7,450 1010 CIH 19 9 0 30FT W /BATT REEL . . . .$7,450 1010 CIH 19 9 3 30FT W /BATT REEL . . . .$7,9 50 9 25 JD 19 9 4 25FT FL EX W /PU REEL . . .$8 ,9 50 9 25 JD 19 9 2 25FT RIGID W /BATT REEL ...................................$7,9 50 9 25 JD 19 9 0 25FT FL EX W /PU REEL . $10,750 9 25 JD 19 9 7 25FT RIGID W /PU REEL . $9 ,450 9 30 JD 19 8 8 30FT W /BATT REEL . . . . . . .$6 ,750 9 30 JD 19 9 5 30FT FL EX W /PU REEL . $12,9 50 9 36 D JD 2000 36 FT W /BATT REEL . . . $23,9 00 300 GL EAN ER 19 8 2 27FT W /BATT REEL $5,000 9 71 N H 19 8 7 24FT W /BATT REEL .......$5,9 50 9 71 N H 19 8 6 30FT W / BATT REEL ......$6 ,500
9 71 N H 19 9 6 30FT RIGID W /PU REEL . .$7,9 50 9 71 N H 19 9 3 20FT RIGID W /PU REEL . .$4,9 50 18 59 M F 20FT W /BATT REEL ..............$3,250 18 59 M F 20FT W /PU REEL ..................$1,250 18 59 M F 20 FT W /PU REEL .................$2,750 18 59 M F 20FT W /PU REEL ..................$3,750 9 022 M F 22FT W /BATT REEL ..............$3,500 9 022 M F 22FT W /PU REEL ..................$4,450 9 024 M F 24FT W /BATT REEL ..............$4,500 9 230 M F 19 9 0 30FT W /BATT REEL .....$7,500 AC L M GL EAN ER 20FT W /BATT REEL ....................................$2,750 AC L M GL EAN ER 22FT W /BATT REEL .......................................$1,750 AC L M GL EAN ER 19 8 5 24FT W /BATT REEL ..........................$4,000 F30 CAT 2000 30FT FL EX W /PU REEL ......................................$10,9 50
1-8 8 8 -3 2 7-6 76 7 w w w .gcpa r ts .com
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
GRATTON COULEE
AGRI PARTS LTD. IRMA, AB. TRADE IN YOUR JD 615, NH 76C OR CIH 2016 for a brand new Macdon PW7 header w/ 16’ Swathmaster pickup, pay as little as $2,000 with trade-in. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
NEW PICKUP REELS – GUARANTEED AVAILABILITY. Hart Carter 25’,$5,795; 30’, $6,795; 35’, $7,300; 36’, $7,900. UII 25’, $6,830; 30’, $7,900; 36’, $8,900. Plastic teeth, fit JD/NH/CIH/MacDon headers & Swathers. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
HEADSITE HEADER HEIGHT CONTROL, like new, $2500 OBO. Call: 306-648-7766, Gravelbourg, SK.
1-888-327-6767 www.gcparts.com
Huge Inventory Of Used, New & Rebuilt Combine & Tractor Parts. Tested And Ready To Ship. We Purchase Late Model Equipment For Parts.
Combine World 1-800-667-4515, www. combineworld.com; 20 minutes E. of Saskatoon, SK on Highway #16. Used Ag & Industrial equipment, new, used & rebuilt parts, & premium quality tires at unbeatable prices! 1 yr. warranty on all parts. Canada’s largest inventory of late model combines & swathers. Exceptional service.
Harvest Salvage Co. Ltd.
CLASSIFIED ADS 49
WRECKING COMBINES: IHC 1482, 1460, 915, 914, 715, 503, 403; JD 7701, 7700, 6601, 6600, 106, 105, 95, 630; MF 860, 850, 760, 751, 750, 510, 410, S92; NH TR70, 95, 1400, 995; White 8900, 8800, 8700, 8650, 8600, 7800, 7600; CFE 5542; Gleaner C, F, L, M; CCIL 9600, 960, 951; Versatile 2000. 306-876-4607 Goodeve SK
Now an Authorized Dealer for STEINBAUER Performance Engine Products. The latest technology from Austria can boost horsepower and torque while giving you lower fuel consumption on all your farm equipment. Easy to install and economical this investment will give your tractor a new life! Call now and see what we can do for you!
1-888-405-8457 306-493-2506 For A Full List of Inventory View
www.kandkent.ca
FYFE P ARTS
gallantsales.com Large inventory of new and used potato equip. Dealer for Tristeel Mfg. wash line equip. Dealer for Logan Equipment. Call Dave 204-254-8126, MB. BRAND NEW alum. boom tips for Rogator sprayer, ext. 100’-120’, new $12,000, asking $9500 OBO. 306-843-7260, Wilkie, SK. 1998 WILLMAR 8400 Eagle, 3968 hrs., 120’ boom, 1200 gal. SS tank, 2 sets tires, Outback GPS ready, air ride, triple nozzles, $50,000 OBO. 306-821-7500, Marshall, SK. 2010 CIH 4420, 1000 hours, 80 duals, Pro 600, AutoBoom, $290,000. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK., www.redheadequipment.ca 2012 JD HIGH CLEARANCE 4830, two sets of wheels, 140 spraying hours. Call: 306-937-2857, Battleford, SK.
1- 8 1- 8 1- 8 1- 8
00- 667- 98 71 • Regin a 00- 667- 3095 • S askatoon 00- 38 7- 2 768 • M an itob a 00- 2 2 2 - 65 94 • Ed m on ton
DEGELMAN 3 BATT ground drive rockpicker, rock curtain, exc. cond., $4500 OBO; Bergen rock hook, exc. cond., $7500. 306-747-2514, Shellbrook, SK.
“ Fo rAllY o u rFa rm Pa rts”
w w w .f yf e p a rts .c om
6’ FARM KING SNOWBLOWER, w/hyd. chute, very good condition, $900 OBO. 204-745-7445, Carman, MB.
AGRA PARTS PLUS, parting older tractors, tillage, seeding, haying, along w/other Ag equipment. 3 miles NW of BattleYOUNG’S EQUIPMENT INC. For all your ford, SK. off #16 Hwy. Ph: 306-445-6769. silage equipment needs call Kevin or Ron TRIPLE B WRECKING, wrecking tractors, toll free 1-800-803-8346, Regina, SK. combines, cults., drills, swathers, mixmills. etc. We buy equipment. 306-246-4260, 306-441-0655, Richard, SK. DEUTZ TRACTOR SALVAGE: Used parts for Deutz and Agco. Uncle Abes Tractor, 519-338-5769, fax 338-3963, Harriston ON
Specia lizing In N ew, Used & Reb uiltAgricultura l And C onstruction Pa rts Call Today
1-877-527-7278
2007 NH SF216, 100’ suspended boom, 1350 Imp. gallon, Raven AutoBoom, windscreens, foam marker, rinse tank, triple nozzles, one owner, nice condition, asking $29,500. Call 306-725-4286, Bulyea, SK. FLEXI-COIL 62 PT sprayer 80’ booms, 800 gal. tank, hyd. pump, asking $5000. 780-745-2560, Paradise Valley, AB. 1997 ROGATOR, 100’ booms, Trimble GPS, 3 different sets of tires, 5000 hrs. Will except trade of camper trailer, 5th wheel or airplane. $69,000. John at 204-856-9422 or 204-857-4863, Portage la Prairie, MB.
STEIGER TRACTOR PARTS for sale. Very affordable new and used parts available, made in Canada and USA. 1-800-982-1769
1983 MF 4840 tractor motor and trans. for sale. 306-896-2817, Churchbridge, SK.
S EX S M ITH , ALTA. w w w .u sed fa rm pa rts.co m Em ail: fa rm pa rt@ telu spla n et.n et
YOUR ONE STOP FOR NEW , USED & REBUILT AG PARTS. Dis m a n tlin g a ll m a jor m a ke s a n d m ode ls of tra ctors , com b in e s , s w a th e rs , b a le rs a n d fora ge h a rve s te rs . Plu s M u ch M o re!
EUROPEAN TRACTORS FOR SALVAGE. Good selection of diesel engines and loader buckets, fall specials. 306-228-3011, Unity SK. www.britishtractor.com Bu yin g Fa rm Equ ipm en t WRECKING: JD 4020 is complete. We ship Fo rD ism a n tlin g parts anywhere. Call 780-875-0270, COMB-TRAC SALVAGE. We sell new and Lloydminster, SK. used parts for most makes of tractors, LOEFFELHOLZ TRACTOR AND COMBINE combines, balers, mixmills and swathers. Salvage, Cudworth, SK., 306-256-7107. Phone 306-997-2209, 1-877-318-2221, We sell new, used and remanufactured Borden, SK. www.comb-tracsalvage.com parts for most farm tractors and combines. We buy machinery.
1-8 00-340-119 2
2010 NH 70’, P2070 precision drill, 430 bu. P1060 VR cart, 10” spacing, double shoot dry w/liquid fertilizer kit, low acres on openers, dual hi-floatation tires on front, dual fans, tow hitch on cart, extra rollers included, field ready, $149,000. Financing available. Deposit will hold until spring. Call 306-535-7708, Regina, SK. 66’ SEEDMASTER, 2008, slim fold, tire in tire, lift hitch, smart hitch, dual caster on wings and main frame, big floatation tire on main frame, tips are at 50%, with TBH 430 JD cart. Cart has duals, conveyor, rear hitch. Call Martin at 780-220-8144, Legal, AB. or email for pics: at cyrmr@telus.net
2009 SEED HAWK 800, 84’, sectional control, liquid kit w/variable rate control, 12” spacing, DS, run monitors, new fert. knives. Winter wheat seeding special. Will consider trades. 306-435-8008 Wapella SK 2005 BOURGAULT 8810 40’, MRB’s, 4-bar quick change harrows, 5250 Bourgault tank, has 3 tanks with 2 system metering and a 491 monitor. Both have been shedded, in good condition, $85,000. Will sell separate. 204-745-6228, Homewood, MB. 2009 P1060 TBH, $63,000. Yorkton New Holland, call 306-783-8511 or visit: www.yorktonnewholland.com 2011 BOURGAULT 9400 60’ deep tillage cultivator, heavy trips w/Bourgault air p a c k , r e a r h i t c h a n d Po i r i e r b o o t s , $88,000. A E Chicoine Farm Equipment Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. 2007 SEEDHAWK 60’, 10” spacing, c/w 3380 TBT, $159,000. Raymore New Holland, visit: www.raymorenewholland.com or call 306-746-2911.
WIRELESS BLOCKAGE MONITOR (no wires) provides quick and accurate notification of blockages anywhere in the drill. Info call 306-202-7157, Saskatoon, SK. BOURGAULT 2-195 TANK, w/Honda motor on fan, chrome augers, stored inside, good shape. Can email pics. Call Bob 204-745-2265, Carman, MB. 2009 P2070 70’, 12” spacing, $112,000. Raymore NewHolland, call 306-746-2911 or visit: www.raymorenewholland,com BOURGAULT 5250 AIR SEEDER tank, 3 tank metering, vg cond., $32,500. 780-877-2339, 780-877-2326, Edberg, AB. 2010 CIH 3380 TBT, $62,000. Watrous New Holland, call 306-946-3301 or visit: www.watrousnewholland.com 1998 MORRIS MAXIM 55’, 10” spacing, c/w 2320 TBH, $43,000. Watrous New Holland, www.watrousnewholland.com or call 306-946-3301.
Call for information. Offer Ends Dec. 20/13
B uying Ag & Construction Equipm ent For D ism antling
2010 SPRA-COUPE 4660, 80’, autoboom, Norac autoheight, Ekay crop dividers, 12.4 and 16.9 tires, 410 hrs., $92,000 OBO. Call 780-878-1646, Ferintosh, AB. or GOODS USED TRACTOR parts (always email: admin@mannafarms.ca buying tractors) David or Curtis, Roblin, 2006 APACHE AS1210 SP sprayer, 1200 MB., 204-564-2528, 1-877-564-8734. gal. SS tank, Cummins 5.9 dsl. eng., Raven G.S. TRACTOR SALVAGE, JD tractors AutoBoom and monitor, Outback S3 guidance system, AutoSteer, 102’ boom, fenceonly. 306-497-3535, Blaine Lake, SK. line nozzles, triple nozzle bodies, 1626 engine hrs., $134,900 OBO. Phone 780-658-2125, Vegreville, AB.
2005 NH SD440, 33’ Dutch openers w/SC 230 DS, var. rate cart, exc. cond. $65,000. Call Greg 306-883-2568, Spiritwood, SK.
Recycle your old seed monitor (any brand) and get a great discount on one of these systems.
M edicine Ha t, AB .
S EXS M ITH US ED FARM P ARTS LTD .
1820 JD 61’, 10” spacing, liquid sideband openers. Agtron all run monitors, c/w 2008 1910 430 bu. tank. Equipped with conveyor, excellent shape, $72,500. Call Jim at 306-482-7445, Carievale, SK. CONCORD 4010 air drill, Dickey John NH3, Dutch openers, harrows, c/w 3,000 tank, $43,000 OBO. 306-873-5788, Tisdale, SK.
2005 52’ SEED HAWK, 10” spacing, 1000 gal. on board, newer knives/packers, 2009 3315 Ezee-On TBT cart, var. rate, 315 bu., $85,000. Stockton, MB. 204-526-5017. 2008 6012 SEEDMASTER w/Smart Hitch, DS, 2007 4000 Ezee-On air cart w/variable rate, asking $145,000; Also w/wo 2000 2250 Ezee-On air cart TBT, 40 bu. aux. tank, $25,000. 306-843-7260, Wilkie, SK. 1999 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 45’, 9” spacing, 4” stealth paired row w/4” rubber packers, double shoot, very good condition, $22,500. 780-307-5023, Neerlandia, AB. 2006 SEED HAWK air drill, 51’, 9” spacing, big rubber, with frame for NH3 tanks; 2008 Flexi-Coil 3850 TBT tank, always shedded, 3 compartments, 4 meter rollers, low acres, $147,500. Photos available. 780-608-5697, 780-372-2356, Bashaw, AB. 2010 50-12 SEED HAWK 45 series, fully loaded, SCT, SBR, liquid and dry fert. kits, blockage, 500 bu. triple tank, hyd. meter2012 NH SP.275R, 120’, 1200 gal. SS, full ing, conveyor, cameras, Pattison CB3200 l o a d , R av e n G P S , F WA , $ 2 9 0 , 0 0 0 . caddy. 204-534-0637, Boissevain, MB. 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for 2006 MORRIS MAXIM II 55’ air drill, 10” full online listings. spacing, 8370 TBT, single shoot, Pattison 1996 WILLMAR 765 SE, 75’, 600 gal. tank, liquid kit. 306-448-4819, Manor, SK. air ride, Outback mapping, Rinex AutoBoom control, 2800 hrs., 3 nozzle bodies, 2008 BOURGAULT 3310, 10” spacing with tires- 70%, very good condition, $47,500. dry MRB’s, 3/4” knife, 55’ full run Agtron blockage monitor, $150,000. Call Robin 306-429-2785, 306-424-7575 Glenavon SK 306-463-8128, Kindersley, SK. CASE 4420, 1200 gal., Aim Command, AutoBoom, AccuBoom, 120’, Viper Pro, 650 2010 JD 1830, 40’ air drill, 10” spacing, t i r e s , 1 1 5 0 h r s . , a l w a y s s h e d d e d , Bourgault 3/4” liquid sideband openers, liquid kit, all run blockage monitors, with $290,000. 403-647-7391, Foremost, AB. 2005 JD 1910 air cart, 270 bu. dual tank, 2010 MILLER CONDOR G75 1200 gal, 120’ JD 1800 monitor and harness, single booms, full load, Raven GPS, elec. adj, 380 shoot, VR drive, new fan motor, rear hitch, R90/46, $198,000. 1-888-442-6084 or $69,500. 306-356-4605 or 306-932-7025, Dodsland, SK. www.farmworld.ca for full online listings. 55’ MORRIS MAXIM air drill, 10” spacing, 7300 TBT, single shoot, great shape. Phone 306-283-4747, 306-291-9395, TRIDEKON CROP SAVER, crop dividers. 306-220-0429, Langham, SK. Reduce trampling losses by 80% to 90%. Call Great West Agro, 306-398-8000, Cut 2006 MORRIS 40’ horizontal fold no-till disc air drill, markers, 7240 TBT tank, low Knife, SK. acres, excellent for winter wheat, canola YEAREND CLEARANCE! New tires and a n d f l a x , $ 6 9 , 0 0 0 O B O . P h o n e rims. 710/70R42 Michelin, for 4940 and 306-693-9847, Moose Jaw, SK. 4930 JD, $19,400; 650/65R38 Michelins, for Case and JD, $14,000; 900/50R42 DAVIDSON TRUCKING, PULLING air drills/ Firestone, 4940 and 4930 JD, $25,500. air seeders, packer bars, Alberta and Sask. 30 years experience. Bob Davidson, Drum306-697-2856, Grenfell, SK. heller, AB. 403-823-0746. BOOM SHUT OFF valves and controls off a Rogator 854, $800 OBO; Air induction noz- BOURGAULT PARA-LINK AIR drills, zles, sizes #2 and #4, quantity of each 48, large selection of good late model units. Other makes and models avail. Will deliv$400/set. Ph. 204-648-7136, Ashville, MB. er. Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. 34’ MORRIS MAXIM air drill, 12” spacing, 7180 TBH, double shoot Dutch side band o p e n e r s , l o w a c re s , $ 4 0 , 0 0 0 O B O. 306-454-2725, 306-861-9816, Ceylon, SK.
www.mhtractor.ca
USED PICKUP REELS - 21’ UII, $3,180; 25’ Macdon, $3,850; 21’ UII, $3,780; 24’ UII, $4,480; 36’ HCC, $5,980; 36’ UII, $5,980; 42’ UII, $7,800. Trades welcome. Call 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com ALLISON TRANSMISSIONS Service, Sales and Parts. Exchange or custom rebuilds available. Competitive warranty. Spectrum Industrial Automatics Ltd., Blackfalds, AB. 1-877-321-7732.
2008 SEEDMASTER, 80’, 12” spacing, w/double air shoot plus liquid kit, w/2011 Bourgault 6550, 4 tank metering, upgraded Zynx monitors, $245,000 OBO. Located near Regina, SK. Trent 306-540-5275 or Tyler 306-533-8834.
2012 CIH 4430, 600 hours, 120’, Aim C o m m a n d , Au t o B o o m , l u x u r y c a b , PRO700, $310,000. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK., www.redheadequipment.ca 2004 CASE/IH SPX 4260, 8.3L Cummins, 90’ booms, Aim Command, 1200 gal. SS tank, surveyor cab, Raven AutoSteer, mechanically solid, 4654 hrs, high hrs. but always well maintained and serviced, $130,000. Wes at 306-232-7663, Laird, SK 2005 PREDATOR 2010, 103’ conventional and AirBoom, 1000 gal tank, 3-way nozzle bodies, AutoBoom shut-off, GPS EZ-Steer 500, crop dividers, 2 sets tires, 1800 hrs, $110,000. 780-307-5023, Neerlandia, AB. 2004 JOHN DEERE 4710 sprayer, 90’ boom, 1697.5 hrs. w/complete GPS 2600 display, SwathPro, Norac, traction control, hydraulic tread adjust, 2 sets of tires, asking $140,000. Phone 780-991-6499, Sherwood Park, AB. Email: graylake@shaw.ca
SMITH’S TRACTOR WRECKING. Huge 7’ SCHULTE SNOWBLOWER front mount inventory new and used tractor parts. older style, hyd. chute, $800. 7’ Leon blade, $600. 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. 1-888-676-4847.
M e d icine Ha t Tra ctor Sa l va ge I nc.
1999 FLEXI-COIL 6000 air drill, 30’, 2340 Flexi-Coil TBH w/3rd tank, variable rate, single or double shoot, 10” spacing, near n e w d i s c s , s e m i h o p p e r, $ 3 2 , 0 0 0 . 306-587-2764, 306-587-7729, Cabri, SK.
1995 Willmar 745 1,900 hrs., 500 gal. tank, JD diesel, excellent tires. $32,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
1-866-729-9876
Tractors Combines Swathers
2012 MORRIS 8370XL TBT, 3rd tank, 10” auger, 2009 61’ contour drill, 12” spacing, dual shoot, dual front casters, blockage monitors, 5” pneumatic packer, excellent condition. Ph. 306-723-4799, Cupar, SK. 2004 BOURGAULT 5710, 64’, 12” space, 2” openers, mid-row shanks, NH3 or dry, 3-1/2” steel packers, 5-1/2” pneumatic packers, 5440 tank, excellent shape. 306-287-3826, Watson, SK. WANTED: 5 1/2” RUBBER packers for DEMONSTRATOR 2013, MORRIS C2, 71’, Flexi-Coil 5000, 9” spacing. Will trade 12” spacing, DS, 8650 TBT mech. Huge Fall 4 1/2” steel. 403-793-1705, Brooks, AB. Savings! Cam-Don Motors Ltd. Perdue, SK. 306-237-4212,
SELLING USED COMBINE parts off MF 860’s and older; JD 7720’s and older; IHC 1480, etc. J M Salvage, 204-773-2536, Russell, MB.
5150 Richmond Ave. East Brandon, MB
www.harvestsalvage.ca New Used & Re-man parts
2009 CIH 4420 120’, full guidance, 650 floaters, Aim Command, luxury cab $260,000. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK., www.redheadequipment.ca
’97 AG Shield P/T sprayer, 1,250 gallon tank, 100’ boom. $8,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com DROP DECK semi style and pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, tandem and tridems. Contact SK: 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336.
2009 JD 4830, 1000 gal., $209,000; 2009 RoGator 1084, 1000 gal., $215,000; 2012 CIH 3330, 1000 gal., $269,000; 2012 CIH 3230, 100’, $249,000; 1998 Patriot, GPS, $49,900; 2009 CIH SRX160, 120’, 1600 gallon, $39,900. Hergott Farm Equipment 2012 JD 1895, 36’, 1910 TBH, 430 bu. cart, w/fertilizer kit. Call Steve 780-674-8080, 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK. Cherhill, AB. 2012 JD 4940, 120’, 505/189 hours, 2 sets BOURGAULT 5440 air cart, 3 tanks and tires, hi-flo pump, GS3 screen. Call for meters, 491 monitor and wiring harness, pricing. 204-522-0926, Medora, MB. Michelin rubber. 780-434-1322 Calmar, AB
AR T 16 0 /2 6 0 R a te a n d B lo c ka ge M o n ito r • Ra te is s ho w n in s e e d s pe r a cre o r po u n d s pe r a cre . • Blo cke d ru n s a re in d ica te d b y n u m b e r. • S ta in le s s s te e l s e n s o rs .
“Ica n tra de in m y old seed m onitor?
GREAT!”
AR T 10 0 B lo c ka ge M o n ito r • Blo cke d ru n s a re in d ica te d b y n u m b e r. • S im ple “d a is y cha in ” w irin g s ys te m . • S ta in le s s s te e l s e n s o rs .
NETWORK WITH PROGRESSIVE NO-TILL FARMERS AT THE
th
7 Annual Master Seeders Conference November 27, 2013
■
Regina, SK
Go to seedmaster.ca/conference for more information
CAN AR T • U n lo cks the po w e r o fIS O BU S , w e ’ve go t a m o d u le tha t ta lks to the IS O BU S s ys te m o n yo u r tra cto r. • S e e d ra te a n d b lo cka ge s ho w u p a s fu n ctio n s o n the virtu a l te rm in a l yo u a lre a d y ha ve in yo u r tra cto r.
1.800.667.0640 agtron.com
50 CLASSIFIED ADS
2011 BOURGAULT 6700 full load, X20, $175,000 OBO. Trades? 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. 2013 MORRIS 8650XL, $159,000. Yorkton New Holland, call 306-783-8511 or visit: www.yorktonnewholland.com
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
ATTENTION C ONSE R V A PAK
COMPLETE SHANK ASSEMBLIES: JD 1610, $135; JD 610, black, $180; JD 1600, $90; Morris 7-series, $135. 306-946-7923, 306-946-4923, Young, SK.
&
JD 1870 OW NE R S SIN G L E R O W SE E D O P E N E R S
$110
SE M I-P N E U M A T IC P A C KE R W H E E L S $285 F E R T IL IZE R KN IV E S A VA IL .
FAC T OR Y D IR E C T E a r l yb ooki ng d i sc ou n ts Shi pp i ng p a i d on ea r l yor d er s H om e ofthe or ig in a l C onserva Pak
V AL E SOL U TION S L TD .
Available at:
Prince Albert Cooperative Association Ltd. Prince Albert, SK
(306) 764-6488 www.dseriescanola.ca 2003 FLEXI-COIL 85 heavy harrow, 82’, field ready, $21,500 OBO. 306-231-7054 or, 306-231-8173, Englefeld, SK. HIGHLINE 40’ ROTARY harrow w/coil packers, 1-3/4” coils, exc. cond., $10,000. Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 2011 PHILLIPS 45’ rotary harrow, like new. Call 204-729-6803, 204-769-2393, Deloraine, MB. BRANDT COMMANDER 7000, 70’ heavy harrow, mint condition. 306-277-4503, Gronlid, SK. 2001 BOURGAULT 60’ heavy harrow, all hyd. adjustments, lots of tine length left, good cond., $23,000. Ph. 780-878-1550, Camrose, AB. GATES VERTICAL TILLAGE DISK, 2012 40’ with 2 bar 5/8x30” harrows and rolling baskets, 13.5x30 tire upgrade. Gainsborough, SK. 306-482-7931. HARROWS AND MORE HARROWS FALL BLOW-0UT PRICES. Delmar 82’ heavy harrow, $17,500; Bourgault 7200 heavy harrow 2000, $23,800; Bergen 72’ heavy harrow, $10,500; Bergen 72’ heavy harrow w/Valmar, $10,900; Gates n e w 84’, $37,500; Delmar 5500 82’ mid harrow with granular air pack, $ 17,500. Call Corner Equipment at 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. 2012 70’ BOURGAULT MODEL 6000 mid harrow, as new. Phone 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. 2008 BG 7200, 84’, Valmar, $39,900; BG 7200, 72’, $27,900; 2008 Degelman 80’ Landroller, $54,500; 2010 Degelman 82’, Valmar, $48,500. Call Hergott Farm Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK.
CASE/IH 3580 TBH tank, 2013, dual shoot, Deluxe auger c/w remote, 3 tank var. rate, Ultrasonic bin level sensors, air velocity meter, rear folding ladder, 3 c o a r s e r o l l e r s , 1 e x t r a fi n e r o l l e r, 800/65R32 front tires, 650/75R32 rear duals. Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. MORRIS CONCEPT 2000 33’ cult. w/7180 3 comp. air tank, Flexi-Coil 85 heavy harrow, 50’. 780-352-8858, Camrose, AB.
1980 BC III ST225, $16,900. Watrous New Holland, call 306-946-3301 or visit: www.watrousnewholland.com 1986 PUMA 1000, $27,000. Yorkton New Holland, call 3.06-783-8511 or visit: www.yorktonnewholland.com
Indian H ead,SK
306 - 6 9 5- 246 0
1994 AGCO ALLIS 9690, 20.8x42 duals, FWA, 5300 hrs., exc. cond. $34,000. MoCO-OP CULTIVATOR 808, 54’, HD Sum- rinville, AB. 780-961-3512, 780-619-4427. mers harrows, 104 walking axles- redone, cylinders and wheel bearings redone, $18,000 OBO. 204-612-8379, Starbuck MB 2005 JD 637 rock disc, 35’, gauge 1993 STEIGER 9270, 3400 orig. hrs., new wheels, fore&aft levelling, vg cond., rubber, standard, Case Up-time, mint shape. Call 306-744-8113, Saltcoats, SK. $45,000. 204-648-7085, Grandview, MB. 2002 EZEE-ON 3650 tandem disc, 32’, nice CASE 2390, motor gone, 4 good tires, new shape, asking $25,000. Call 306-842-3525, hydraulic pump, rebuilt torque limiter, AC, good rad., $3500. Terry 403-882-3349, Weyburn, SK. Castor, AB. WANTED: 50’ CULTIVATOR, must be in good shape. Call Jim at 306-862-8518, 2010 CIH STX535, std. Quadtrac, luxury cab, 1000 rpm, ind. PTO, high cap hyd. Choiceland, SK. pump, $357,000. Call 1-800-667-9761, 1 5 ’ A E RWAY A E R ATO R , c u s h i o n e d Saskatoon, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca gangs, new teeth, $7900. Consider tandem d i s c o r b a t w i n g m o w e r i n t r a d e . 1999 CASE/IH 9380, N14 engine, 400 HP, 24 spd., 3490 hrs., 55 gal. hydraulic pump, 306-441-0398, Battleford, SK. triple, 20.8x42, shedded, good condition, KELLO-BILT 210 BREAKING DISC, 14’ $100,000. 306-621-9604, Yorkton, SK. wide, 24” blades, good shape, $7000. Call CASE/IH 4240, 104 HP, 2200 hrs., 3 PTH, Peter at 403-302-2545, Ponoka, AB. LPTO, big hyd. pump, heavy duty 15’ steel DISC BLADES, NEW: 26” notched, 5/16” flail mower, plus front hyd. PTO pump, thick, $90/each. Phone 250-567-2607, $15,000. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. Vanderhoof, BC. 1 9 7 9 CIH 2590 $7,500. Call us at: KELLO-BILT DISC PARTS: Blades and 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK., or bearings. Parts to fit most makes and online at: www.redheadequipment.ca models. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. 2011 CIH STX450, 111 hours, full autowww.kelloughs.com guidance, 800 duals, front weight frame, 32’ EZEE-ON 4600 DISC, $42,500. $315,900. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, Phone 306-421-0205, Estevan, SK. SK., www.redheadequipment.ca WANTED: PT SUBSOILER, 10’-15’ wide. 2009 CIH MAGNUM 180, 3 remotes, L780 Call 306-867-8141, Glenside, SK. loader, S2 Outback AutoSteer, 3 PTH, WANTED PARTS FOR: JD disc 235. Call $155,000. Ph. 1-800-667-9761, Saskatoon, 204-734-2573, 204-734-8429, Swan River, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca MB. E-mail: info@skithunderhill.ca WANTED: 4WD TRACTOR, 300HP or betKELLO-BILT 8’ to 20’ offset discs w/24” ter. Must have powershift, PTO and be in to 36” notched blades; Kello-Bilt 24’ to 38’ good condition. Will consider 5 to 15 year tandem wing discs w/26” and 28” notched old units, depending on condition and blades and oil bath bearings. Red Deer, AB. hours. Moose Jaw, SK. Phone or text 306-684-5425. Email: ferg.ga@sasktel.net www.kelloughs.com 1-888-500-2646. JD 230 25’ tandem disc, new bearings, exc 2008 CIH PUMA 125, 540/1000 PTO, 3 PTH, 3 rear remotes, c/w LX760 loader condition. 306-423-5595, Domremy, SK. $89,900. www.redheadequipment.ca or JD 1610 33’ chisel plow, Degelman 3-bar 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. harrows, $8500; JD 1610 27’ chisel plow, 1982 IHC 5088, 8979 hrs., triple hyds., $5500. 780-679-7795, Camrose, AB. Leon 707 FEL, $17,500. 204-525-4521, JD 1810, 61’, 12” spacing, Summers har- www.waltersequipment.com Minitonas MB rows, Dickey-John cold flow, $65,000; JD 2410, 58’, 16” spacing, JD mounted har- 2010 CIH 485, 800 duals, PTO, $269,000; rows, banding knives, cold flow, $65,000. 2010 CIH 435 quad, PTO, $279,000; 2011 CIH 450, 800 duals, $263,000; 2009 CIH 780-876-2667, 780-933-2585, Debolt, AB. 535 quad, 36” tracks, $289,000; 2007 CIH 50’ FLEXI-COIL 200 Friggstad cultivator, 5 430, AutoSteer, $199,000; 2012 JD 9460R, plex, 3 bars, $5250 OBO. 306-231-7054, or PTO, $289,000. Phone Hergott Farm 306-231-8173, Englefeld, SK. Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK. BOURGAULT 9400 chisel plow, 60’, very 1992 CIH 7110, 2 WD, duals, no loader, good condition. Call Garry 306-563-6355, $24,900. Call us at: 1-800-219-8867, Swift Canora, SK. Current, SK., or check us out online at: www.redheadequipment.ca
2010 SALFORD 570RTS vertical tillage, 24’, harrows, rolling baskets w/1200 lb weight kit, like new cond., $34,000. Carrot River, SK. 306-768-2151, 306-768-7399.
2011 CIH STX500, 800/38 duals, leather seats, full HID, guidance HP/XP, 6 remotes, $279,000. 800-535-0520, Lloydminster, SK., www.redheadequipment.ca 2 0 0 6 S T X 4 3 0 H D, s c r ap e r ve r s i o n , 710-70-42 duals, 3060 hrs., powershift, diff. locks, tow cable, front weights, $140,000. 306-922-8155, Prince Albert, SK CASE/IH 9370, 4 WD, 20.8x42 triples, 4390 hrs, nice shape, shedded, field ready. 306-595-2180, 306-594-7696, Pelly, SK. 2013 CIH PUMA 130 CVT, MFD, cap susp., L765 loader, 95” bucket and grapple, $159,000. www.redheadequipment.ca or 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK.
2011 JD 9630, $265,000. Yorkton New Holland, call 306-783-8511 or visit: www.yorktonnewholland.com JD 7220, 7400, 7700, 4640 FWD’s; Loaders in stock. Will trade for JD tractors that need work. 204-871-5170, Austin, MB. 1995 JD 8400 tractor, PS trans., 3 PTH, rear 900/50R/42, front 600/70R30, 3 hyds., 1000 PTO, 3 pt, 6605 hrs., $69,500. www.reimerfarmequipment.com Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy. #12 N, Steinbach, DEMONSTRATOR 2013 VERSATILE 500, powershift, PTO, 800x32 duals, weights, MB. Gary Reimer, 204-326-7000. 1.9% OAC, good trades needed. Super Fall Programs. Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 1981 JOHN DEERE 4640, 160 HP, 16 spd. VERSATILE BI-DIRECTIONAL HYDROS in quad trans., 3 SCVs, 1000 PTO, 20.8R38 stock- reman. 150 thru TV145. Call us duals, completely rebuilt engine, excellent 1-800-667-7712, Hydratec Hydraulics. condition, $19,900. Call Jordan anytime 1995 FORD VERSATILE 9880, FWD, 6580 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. hrs, 400 HP, 12 spd, 20.8R42 triples, Bour2010 JD 7215R, 550 hours, loader, 3 PTH, gault Commander, 38’ cult. Must sell, offront suspension, like new, $185,000. fers accepted. Call Balicki Auctions, 306-961-7553, Prince Albert, SK. Phone 306-297-7986, Shaunavon, SK. UTILITY JOHN DEERE Tractors: JD 2130 w/146 loader, $9900; JD 1840, 3 pt., $7900; JD 2130 3 pt., $7900. Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy. #12 N, Steinbach, MB. www.reimerfarmequipment.com Call Gary Reimer, 204-326-7000.
w w w .valesolutions.ca
2010 55’ BOURGAULT Paralink drill c/w MRBs, 10” spacing, single shoot with liquid package, Agtron seed monitors. Used only in Wilcox, SK. area, heavy clay. No wear, in premium condition. Mark 306-536-8910 or Anthony 403-606-0996. SEED TENDERS FOR hauling seed or fertilizer to your planter. Few remaining at 2013 pricing. Check online for more info: www.dandf.ca 204-746-8260, Morris, MB.
1997 JD 1900 Air Tank 350 bushels, new auger, good cond’n. $24,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
CASE/IH STEIGER built, 4 WD/Quads; Plus other makes and models. Call the Tractor Man! Trades welcome. We deliver. Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. 2010 CIH MAGNUM 215 2/LX780 loader, luxury cab, PTO, hitch ready, 262 WAAS receiver, $185,000. Call: 1-800-667-9761, www.redheadequipment.ca Saskatoon, SK. 1981 CASE 4586, 5880 hrs., good engine, n ew c l u t c h a n d b at t e r i e s , $ 1 5 , 0 0 0 . 306-383-2739, Quill Lake, SK.
JD 7810 MFWD; JD 7710 MFWD. Low hours, can be equipped with loaders. Call 204-522-6333, Melita, MB. 1997 JD 9200 4 WD, 12 spd., 4 SCV, diff lock, 20.8x42 duals, EZ-Steer 500 AutoSteer, 4128 hrs., good shape, $98,500. Phone 780-632-8838, Mundare, AB. CHALLENGER HD 6-WAY DOZER fits all flat track Cat Challengers, IMAC 12’6” power angle tilt, all hyd. hoses, 2 hyd. junction boxes, moldboard in like new cond., c/w new cutting edge, front stump pan, $29,500 not installed. PTO, will fit all flat track Challengers 65, 75, 85, 95, c/w transmission clutch pack, controls, valving, $21,000. 780-996-7364, St. Albert, AB. email: plodoen@shaw.ca
1988 JD 8870, 4WD, 12 spd., 20.8x42 duals, S2 Outback GPS and AutoSteer, $89,000 OBO. 306-753-7913, Macklin, SK. JD 9400 4WD, 1997, 6623 hrs, 800 duals, 24 spd., 4 hyd. outlets, Outback AutoSteer, $98,000. 306-356-4605 or 306-932-7025, Dodsland, SK.
STEVE’S TRACTOR REBUILDER looking for JD tractors to rebuild, Series 20s, 30s, 40s or 50s, or for parts. Will pay top dollar. Now selling JD parts. 204-466-2927, 8960 JD, 4 WD, 20.8x42 factory triples, 204-871-5170, Austin, MB. w/radials at 70%, radar, diff lock, shedded, exc. shape, SCV’s rebuilt at JD, $64,000. 306-767-2675, Zenon Park, SK. 2009 MASSEY FERGUSON 7480, 960 FEL with grapple, 3 PTH, CVT trans., $94,500. Call 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca 1995 JOHN DEERE 8770, 300 HP, approx. 7000 hrs, full AutoSteer w/mapping, 24 INDUSTRIAL MASSEY FERGUSON 202 spd, diff. locks, 4 SCVs, 650/65R38 duals, Model tractor, c/w FEL, PTO hitch, canopy, 14’ Degelman 6 way dozer blade. Excellent gas, $6000. 780-218-2151, Andrew, AB. shape, $57,000. Call Jordan anytime 1979 MF 275, 1780 hrs. since new, load403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. er, bucket, live PTO, 3 PTH, rear remotes, WANTED: JOHN DEERE 9400, 9520, 9620. exc., $12,900. 204-641-2211, Arborg, MB. Tracks or triples must be in good shape, WRECKING FOR PARTS: Massey 2705, no junk. 306-460-9488, Kindersley, SK. vg running engine, good sheet metal. Call 1997 JD 9100, 18.4/38 duals, 4 hyds., 24 1-877-564-8734, Roblin, MB. spd. trans., $83,900. Call 1-800-535-0520, Lloydminster, SK., or visit us online at: www.redheadequipment.ca 1992 JD 2555 tractor/ loader, cab, air, NEW 2011 NH T9.6155, single Beacon MFWD, 3 pt., joystick, 80% tires, JD 245 SL light, high cap., hyd., lux cab, F&R HID, loader, 6’ bucket, 9291 hrs., $28,500. ballast, 100 lb./HP55/HID cab, PH2721. Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy. #12 N, 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca Steinbach, MB. Gary Reimer 204-326-7000 2011 NH T9.505 HD, $289,000. Raymore www.reimerfarmequipment.com New Holland, call 306-746-2911 or visit: 1997 JD 9400, CAHR, 20.8x42 triples, www.raymorenewholland.com 4500 hrs., 12 spd., always shedded, 2011 NH T9-390, 400 hrs, loaded, used $115,000. 204-745-6228, Homewood, MB. one season, complete AutoSteer, touch LOOKING FOR: JD 30, 40, 50 series trac- screen, 5th remote, 16 spd. PS, 710x38 tor in good cond. with mechanical issues. tires, $179,900. 403-318-7266, Canora, SK Call 306-621-7170, Yorkton, SK. 1997 NEW HOLLAND 9682, 20.8/42 duJD 8400, powershift, 1000 PTO, 4 hyd., als, 12 spd. standard, 4 remotes, $79,000. 7900 hrs., Performax Service done. Call: 1-800-535-0520, Lloydminster, SK., $64,900; JD 840 loader available, $12,900. www.redheadequipment.ca www.reimerfarmequipment.com Reimer VERSATILE BI-DIRECTIONAL USERS see Farm Equipment, Hwy #12 North, Stein- our info. on our website: www.hydratec.ca bach, MB. Gary Reimer at: 204-326-7000. for cold weather operation. 1997 JD 9300, approx. 6300 hrs., Outback AutoSteer, 24 speed, PTO, $95,000. 306-383-2867, Quill Lake, SK. JD 9120, powershift, 1000 PTO, 3 pt. hitch, 4 hyd., GPS, AutoSteer, 6900 hrs., Performax Service Inspection, $115,900. www.reimerfarmequipment.com Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy #12 North, Steinbach, MB. Gary Reimer at: 204-326-7000. 2010 JD 9630, powershift, 2100 hrs., 800x38 Michelins, lots of weights, leather seat, $229,000. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. JD 7810 MFD, quad with LHR, loaded, 4900 hrs., mint condition. 780-990-8412, Edmonton, AB. 2007 JD 9320, 4 WD, $179,000, 1900 hrs, deluxe cab, active seat, 4 SCV hyds., 24 spd. trans, 710x42 duals, 12.5L engine w/warranty, 1 owner, mint cond., AutoSteer ready. 780-918-3522, Leduc, AB. 3130 w/HINSON CAB, includes JD 148 loader, approximately 10,000 hrs., good shape. Call 306-748-2727, Neudorf, SK.
2006 CIH STX480, luxury cab, guidance ready, 16 spd. powershift trans., PTO, diff. lock, $195,500. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK., www.redheadequipment.ca LIZARD CREEK REPAIR and Tractor. We buy 90 and 94 Series Case 2 WD, FWA WRECKING FOR PARTS: 4020 diesel, tractors for parts and rebuilding. Also have very good running engine, good sheet r e b u i l t t r a c t o r s a n d p a r t s fo r s a l e . metal. 1-877-564-8734 Roblin, MB. 306-784-7841, Herbert, SK. 2004 JD 7920 FWD, 1050 hrs, IVT 2008 JD 9530 P/S trans, full weight pkg, trans., 3PTH, 746 loader, HID lighting, 800 Michelins, 4 remotes, full guidance, $135,500. 780-603-7833, Vegreville, AB. $235,000. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, 1070 JD, FWA, 1998, 1800 hrs, aux. SK., www.redheadequipment.ca hyds., good shape. Phone 204-267-2292 or 204-856-9595, Oakville, MB. 2008 JD 9530, 4 WD, 2368 hours, 2003 CASE/IH MX210, 210 HP, 5976 hrs., 800/70Rx38 Firestone duals, kept inside, 18 spd. powershift w/shuttle, MFD, 3 PTH, Greenstar ready, instructional seat, vg dual PTO, CAH, 480/80R46 duals, always cond., warranty until 2015. $218,500. Kinshedded, $59,900. Call Jordan anytime dersley, SK. 306-463-3023, 306-463-8774 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 1976 JD 4430 quad, 3 hyds., 85% rubber, excellent. Call 306-744-8113, Yorkton, SK. WRECKING FOR PARTS: Case 2294, vg powershift; Case 2290, vg running engine. JOHN DEERE 3010, early 60’s, c/w loadCall 1-877-564-8734, Roblin, MB. er and blade, $4000. Phone 306-446-2399, 1486 w/LEON high lift grapple FEL, rebuilt North Battleford, SK. motor, trans. and hyds., $14,000 OBO. 1975 JD 4230, standard, good rubber, 780-763-2214 780-853-0237 Mannville AB $8500. Call 306-744-8113, Saltcoats, SK.
1985 VERSATILE 856 tractor, 8700 hrs, 18.4R38 Firestone duals, good condition, $25,000. 204-796-1370, Birtle, MB. 1985 VERSATILE 936, powershift, approx. 6000 hours, $29,000. 306-948-3949, 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK.
1976 VOLVO T800, 106 HP, 1000/540 PTO w/reverser, 5700 hrs, cab, great chores tractor, good shape, asking $5500. 780-632-4253, Vegreville, AB. 2012 KIOTI CK30 w/loader 30HP, HST, $19,999 + gst cash in lieu price. Ray’s Tr a i l e r S a l e s . C a l l C o r y o r D o n 780-672-4596, Camrose, AB. 2014 WILSON FOREMAN 30’ stock trailer 3x700lb axles, $29,999 + gst. Ray’s Trailer Sales, call Cory or Don 780-672-4596, Camrose, AB. GRATTON COULEE AGRI PARTS LTD. Your #1 place to purchase late model combine and tractor parts. Used, new and rebuilt. www.gcparts.com Toll free 888-327-6767. BIG BUD 360/30 HP; Small tractors, 30 to 50 HP, MH, JD, Ford and Cockshutt. Call 403-504-0468, Medicine Hat, AB. 2003 MCCORMICK MTX110, $53,000. Raymore New Holland, 306-746-2911 or visit: www.raymorenewholland.com 2008 MCCORMICK XTX 200, FWA, 2450 hrs., 3 PTH, duals, vg, $85,000. Gravelbourg, SK., 306-648-3418, 306-648-7518. 1975 810 VOLVO w/9’ Leon blade, good rubber, always shedded, runs well, asking $4500. Ron 403-581-1346, Marengo, SK. D19 ALLIS CHALMERS gas, good running condition, $3500; 9N Ford tractor, good running condition, $2000. Will trade for hay or cattle. 403-577-3785, Consort, AB.
EZEE-ON 2100 like new, joystick, 84” bucket, $8500. Pro Ag Sales anytime, 306-441-2030, North Battleford, SK. DEGELMAN 13’ 6-WAY blade with mounts for John Deere 8450, $12,000. Phone 780-798-2280, Plamondon, AB.
2006 VOLVO LOADER L110E, ride control, 8700 hrs, 4.5 yard bucket, QC, vg working condition, $115,000. Can deliver. Call 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. CAT 70 SCRAPER round bottom converted, in excellent shape, $26,000. 306-287-3826, Watson, SK. TD9 AND TD14 Cat for parts or salvage. Call Glen at 204-683-2551, St. Lazare, MB. LEON 707 front end loader with 6’ bucket, $3600. Call 306-960-3000, St. Louis, SK.
’09 NH T7040 180HP FWA tractor 3PTH & PTO w/ FEL & grapple, 2,600 hrs. Excellent condition w/ warranty! $109,800. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. Financing available. www.combineworld.com 2004 TV145, W/7614 loader, 5100 hrs., 540 and 1000 PTO, diff. locks, hyd. and drawbar at both ends, 16.9x38 tires, buck- 2001 D6R XL, 6000 hrs, cab, air, A dozer et, grapple, manure tines, 3 PTH, $61,500. double tilt, winch, UC about 65% new Cat Call 204-748-8303, Elkhorn, MB. 2 4 ” s h o e s , a s k i n g $ 1 2 9 , 0 0 0 O B O. 403-244-7813, Calgary, AB. 1997 NEW HOLLAND 8260 loader and g r a p p l e , M F D, s h e d d e d , $ 4 4 , 9 0 0 . 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca 2008 NH T1520, $16,400. Raymore New Holland, call 306-746-2911, or visit: www.raymorenewholland.com
1986 VERSATILE 976 4 WD tractor, air, 22.8x42 triples, 40-80%, 12 spd. trans., 4 hyd., return line, consignment. $37,900. Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy. #12 N, Steinbach, MB. Gary Reimer 204-326-7000 www.reimerfarmequipment.com
FIAT ALLIS FD 12B wheel loader, 3 yd. bucket, rebuilt trans 2 yrs. ago, no leaks, quick attach, c/w a set of forks, vg working condition, can deliver. $36,000. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. 148 LOADER w/5’ bucket and tines, 1983 VERSATILE 835, 5770 hours, one JD JD mounts, exc. condition, reasonable owner, excellent condition, $28,900. Call c/w offers. 306-944-4431, Watrous, SK. 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. WANTED: FEL for 70 Series Case tractor 1982 VERSATILE 835, Atom Jet, approx. with mounting brackets. Must be in good 6 7 0 0 h r s . , E Z - S t e e r, $ 2 2 , 5 0 0 O B O. condition. Call 780-916-8719, Tofield, AB. 306-796-7441, Central Butte, SK. 2013 LS P7040CPS 97HP, w/loader, FWA, 2002 CIH MX240, 3 PTH, powershift, rear 2009 JD 9630T 4 hyds., 36” tracks, hyd. d u a l s , D e g e l m a n 1 2 ’ , 4 - w ay b l a d e , hitch, air bags, no PTO, full GPS, shedded 1985 VERSATILE 836, 210 HP, 4WD trac- 3rd function, $58,750+gst. Ray’s Trailer tor, 4800 hrs., good condition, $32,000. Sales. Call Cory or Don 780-672-4596, $90,000. Call 1-866-659-5866, Estevan, $295,500. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, Call 306-491-6977, Maymont, SK. Camrose, AB. SK. www.redheadequipment.ca SK., www.redheadequipment.ca
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
2011 DEGELMAN 7900, 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122; blade, 6-way, ESTATE SALE: 2002 Flexi-Coil 51â&#x20AC;&#x2122; air drill, 2â&#x20AC;&#x2122; silage extension, very good. Fits 30 se- 3450, $55,000; 10x70 Brandt auger, ries JD. 306-227-4882, Vanscoy, SK. $5500; 8x46 Wheatheart auger w/mover, $7900; AC Industrial scraper, $16,000; SWINGER ARTICULATING LOADER, Per- LuckNow 375 mixer wagon, $9900; Mackins diesel, lifts approx. 2000 lbs. $14,000 Don 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; PT swather, $3500; IHC 786 OBO. 306-322-4569, Rose Valley, SK. MFWD, rare, $16,000. Maple Creek, SK., Phone 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586. JD MODEL 54 manure spreader, $3200; 1995 Ford E350 retired ambulance, diesel, auto, $6500; MF Super 90 tractor, diesel, Leon loader, excellent cond., $8900; 1970 GMC 2 ton, B&H $3500. Pro Ag Sales anytime, 306-441-2030, North Battleford, SK.
1998 D6M, cab, air, 6-way dozer, straight steering, ripper, UC 60%, 15,000 hrs, straight, clean, reasonably tight, runs great, asking $55,000. Ph. 403-244-7813, Calgary, AB.
CLASSIFIED ADS 51
ONE TIME FENCING, sucker rod fence posts for sale. Also fencing for grain bags. www.onetimefencing.ca Call toll free 1-877-542-4979.
F I R E W O O D : C u t a n d s p l i t , d e l i ve r y available. 306-862-7831, 306-862-3086, Nipawin, SK.
LETOURNEAU 11 YD. PT Ind. hyd. scraper, $16,500; JD 914 PU header, wide tires, $7500; Sakundiak 8x45 auger, vg, $1500. 306-423-5983, 306-960-3000 St. Louis, SK
1988 D8N, 18,000 hrs, one owner for 20 yrs, has new Cat UC, fresh components, dry tight multishank ripper, SU dozer, ready to work. 403-244-7813, Calgary, AB. 2004 S130 BOBCAT, 525 hrs., $23,000 OBO. Call: 306-831-9649, Elrose, SK. 2007 850J JD dozer, cargo winch, AC, heat, good condition, 4780 hrs, $149,500. Terry 204-746-4131, Rosenort, MB. DOZERS AND LOADERS, prices reduced. Crawler loader, 2-4 WD loaders. Over 20 to choose from. 931 Cat loader; 941 Cat loader; Fiat Allis FL9 w/new UC; Cat 933; Cat 977 20A series; Dresser TD-92 series; Cat D2 w/loader, only $4900; HD6 Fiat Allis; 2- Massey 600 series; Fiat Allis 12G cab, ripper; 320 Clark Volvo 9 yd. bucket; Fiat Allis 975; 988 Cat; JD 644; Dresser 530; L70 Volvo; 45B Clark; Fiat Allis 345B; Cat 966 w/highlift; 840 Fiat Allis. We have dismantled for parts 35 loaders and many crawlers and tractors. 1500 ind. tires in stock of all types. 300 loader backhoe buckets. 100 sets of forks. Many new parts at low low prices. Call Cambrian Equipment Sales Ltd. 204-667-2867 or fax 204-667-2932, in Winnipeg, MB. 2006 JD 746 front end loader, fits 7720, 7820 and 7920 tractors, 96â&#x20AC;? bucket and grapple, exc. cond., $12,500 OBO. Shellbrook, SK., 306-747-2514. 2012 24K JOHN DEERE wheel loader, 3.5 yd. bucket, 1 set of tire chains, 60â&#x20AC;? pallet forks, 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Degelman Icebreaker blade 8â&#x20AC;&#x2122; center w/4â&#x20AC;&#x2122; folding wings, only 28 hrs, $238,000. 403-548-0525, Medicin Hat, AB LEON 10â&#x20AC;&#x2122; BLADE, ram, hoses, c/w CIH 2096 mount, $1600. Call 306-493-6460, Delisle, SK. 2003 850C JD dozer c/w winch, bush guards, Pro-heat, good working cond., rebuild eng. and pump in last 2000 hours, $89,000. Terry 204-746-4131 Rosenort MB
(403) 8 2 0- 3134 s erious inq uiries only* Com b in e s 2 x Ca s e 9120 Com b in e s + He a d e rs
S e e d in g Eq u ip m e n t 1 x Ca s e 4010 D rill 1 x Bou rg a u lt Ta n k
C OM P LETE W ITH : Chim n ey, F ro n tDo o r & Ven tin g. W ire m es h flo o r a p p ro x. 2 ft fro m the b o tto m . S ep a ra te d o o r a t b o tto m fo r ea s y a s h rem o va l. Ho o ks fo r ea s y u n lo a d in g. W ILL LAST Ap p ro x. 5-6 ftta ll. A LIFETIM E W eight: a p p ro x. 1600 lb s ea ch. Ava ila b le in Ca m ro s e AB a n d S a s ka to o n S K C a ll: (306) 95 5 -3091 o r e m a il: a w pipe @ s a s kte l.n e tfo r e xce lle n tprice s FURTHER SAVINGS IF PURCHASING 2 OR M ORE
BLOCKED SEASONED JACK Pine firewood and wood chips for sale. Lehner Wood Preservers Ltd., 306-763-4232, Prince Albert, SK. Will deliver. Self-unloading trailer.
DONâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;T GET STUCK without a Tow Rope! Best selection of tow ropes and straps in SEASONED SPRUCE SLAB firewood, one C a n a d a . F o r t r a c t o r s u p t o 6 0 0 H P. cord bundles, $99, half cord bundles, $65; Blocked and split wood also available. Call 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com V&R Sawing, 306-232-5488, Rosthern, SK. ODESSA ROCKPICKER SALES: New Degelman equipment, land rollers, Strawmaster, rockpickers, rock rakes, dozer blades. Phone 306-957-4403, cell 306-536-5097, Odessa, SK. BEVâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S FISH & SEAFOOD LTD., buy difresh fish: Pickerel, Northern Pike, 2- SINGLE AXLE DOLLIES for semi, can be rect, and Lake Trout. Seafood also used with farm tractor, good tires, asking Whitefish available. Phone toll free 1-877-434-7477, $ 2 5 0 0 e a c h . C a l l 3 0 6 - 7 4 6 - 7 5 0 4 o r 306-763-8277, Prince Albert, SK. 306-746-2248, Raymore, SK.
FARM EQ UIP M EN T AV AILABLE
H EAVY DU TY
BU RN IN G IN CIN ERATO RS
RAIN MAKER IRRIGATION Zimmatic by Lindsay pivots/Greenfield mini pivots, KLine towable irrigation, spare parts/accessories, new and used equipment. 32 years GENERATORS: 20 KW to 2000 KW, low in business. www.rainmaker-irrigation.com hour diesel and natural gas/ propane units Call 306-867-9606, Outlook, SK. Abraham Generator Sales Co. Phone: 701-797-4766 or 701-371-9526, Coopers- FOR SALE: 1600â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Reinke pivot, 780â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Reinke pivot and 2 Bauer travelling guns; town, ND. www.abrahamindustrial.com Also looking for diesel pumps. Call 306-858-7351, Lucky Lake, SK.
BISON HERD DISPERSAL: 15 2.5 yr. bison heifers and five 3.5 yr. old bison cows that are half Wood. Pasture bred to Silver Creek (Millar) Wood bison bull. Also, 3.5 yr old Silver Creek bison breeding bull. Bull weighed 1800 lbs. at 2 yrs. old. Females, $2,250 each. Bull, $4,500 OBO. Bison cows dehorned, in exc. cond. and all bison have shots. Some calves also avail. Located at The Pas, MB. Call or text 204-307-6217, arcticbison@hotmail.com WANTED TO PURCHASE cull bison bulls and cows for slaughter. Oak Ridge Meats 204-835-2365 204-476-0147 McCreary MB SASKOTA NATURAL is looking for finished bison. Cash on delivery. Paying market prices. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Producers working with Producers.â&#x20AC;? Call 306-231-9110, Quill Lake, SK
ZIMMATIC 4 TOWER towable, self conPORTAGE AND MAIN Model 3600 wood tained pivot, $22,000. 306-843-3115 or WOOD CROSS BISON yearlings for sale. outdoor furnace, used 12 times, vg cond., 306-843-7153, Wilkie, SK. 33 bulls, 21 heifers. Rainy River, ON., 3 $8500. 780-939-5659, Morinville, AB. h o u r s f r o m M B b o r d e r. C a l l D av e 807-852-1726 or Dean 807-852-3865.
Ca s e 4420 S p ra ye r
O the r
ZZZ QRXWLOLW\ELOOV FRP
Bra n d t 1390 Au g e r Ku hn 2054 M a n u re S p re a d e r D e g e lm a n La n d Rolle r
COMPLETE HERD DISPERSAL of 120 bison cows. Preg tested for Dec. 2013 shipping. Contact Paul 780-777-2326, Athabasca, AB
3RODU ,QGRRU 2XWGRRU :RRG %RLOHUV
&RQVWUXFWHG RI $60( 6$ %RLOHU 3ODWH 6WHHO
7UDGLWLRQDO (3$ 3KDVH
*S u b j ectT o Ava ila b ility DIECI 621 2006 Telehandler, 21â&#x20AC;&#x2122; reach, KIRCHNER V DITCHER, vg cond.; also, 6000 lb., 1100 hrs., $33,500. Corner Leon 850 scraper. Both used very little. Equip., Dwight, 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. 306-272-4382, Foam Lake, SK. SUNFLOWER HARVEST SYSTEMS. Call for literature. 1-800-735-5848. Lucke Mfg., www.luckemanufacturing.com
WANTED: 12â&#x20AC;&#x2122; HAY HEADER or Int. 4000 or 5000 swather. 403-638-2232, Sundre, AB.
7LWDQ &RDO 0XOWL )XHO 6WRNHU %RLOHUV ,QGRRU &RDO *DV *UDLQ 3HOOHW 2LO :RRG %RLOHUV &RRN 6WRYHV )LUHSODFHV +HDWHUV )XUQDFHV 6WRYHV
WANTED: USED, BURNT, old or ugly tractors. Newer models too! Smithâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Tractor Wrecking, 1-888-676-4847.
LOOKING FOR small off-set disc or tandem disc and a molehill leveler. Yorton/Whitewood area, SK. Call 306-877-4585.
BISON WANTED - Canadian Prairie Bison is looking to contract grain finished bison for growing markets. Roger Provencher at 306-468-2316. roger@cdnbison.com
TEN 2012 WOODS cross yearling bison heifers, good breeding, quiet group, $1800. Call 306-237-7782, Perdue, SK.
DENHARCO HEAD, Model DT3000, many new parts and components, new inner boom and winch, all parts will fit onto 3500 head. 1989 Tanguay 125 slasher, new 60â&#x20AC;? saw blade, machine in good shape. 1980 Ford cement truck, London 8 yd. cement mixer, needs some work. 50â&#x20AC;? NEED TO MOVE water or irrigate? 6â&#x20AC;?-10â&#x20AC;? circular saw mill, totally hyd. Will trade for OUTBACK RTK BASELINE unit, with 2 rov- alum. pipe, pump units. Taber, AB. Dennis older D6 Cat, cattle, or bigger log loader. ers, $7500 OBO. 306-834-8100, Major, SK. at: 403-308-1400, dfpickerell@shaw.ca For more info 204-843-3747 Amaranth MB IRRIGATION TURBINE WATER pumps, 6â&#x20AC;?-8â&#x20AC;?, 4 cyl. dsl., 600-1000 gal./min., very efficient; HYD. PIPE SPINNER for oil/ water pipe. 403-878-6302, Grassy Lake, AB
S p ra ye r
SET OF TRACTOR tire chains to fit 18.4x38 tires, 306-595-4780, Norquay, SK.
BISON HERD: 80 plus, mixed. Nothing older than 5 years. Located at Kenosee Lake. Call Craig at 306-577-8462.
â&#x20AC;&#x2122;00 LULL 644D34 TELEHANDLER, 6,000 lbs., 34â&#x20AC;&#x2122; reach, w/ cab, well maintained, good shape. $29,800. Trades welcome, financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com.
2012 JOHN DEERE 2520, 86 hrs., 26HP, c/w 200 CX loader w/53â&#x20AC;? bucket, 60â&#x20AC;? box scraper w/packer, 3rd spool, FWA, diff. lock, warranty until March 2014, $21,500. 306-946-2035, Watrous, SK.
2012 BISON HEIFERS, $2500. Contact greg@homesteaderbison.com or Glenn at 780-831-5760, Hythe, AB. We need more bison producers! 30- EXPOSED 2 yr. old heifers; 2- 2 yr. old bulls; $2500 each. Phone 403-485-0059, Champion, AB.
JLG T350 TOW behind bucket manlift, 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, $21,000; Loader, 2006 Komatsu WA50, 1 TATONKA RANCH SELLING 75 top end yard bucket, forks, boom, $27,000. yearling heifers, excellent quality, $2500 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. per head. 250-263-3152, Fort St. John, BC. JD 318 RIDING LAWNMOWER, c/w 52â&#x20AC;? BISON BULLS and HEIFERS, 2011 and cutting deck, 42â&#x20AC;? hyd. rototiller, $3500 2012; 4 yr. old breeding bull, good disposiOBO. Ph. 306-682-4061, 306-231-6088, tion. 204-447-3332, Ste. Rose du Lac, MB. Humboldt, SK.
GRAIN/PELLET STOVES. Prairie Fire Grain 2014 BAD BOY mowers. Pre-order yours Energy. Call 306-369-2825, Bruno, SK. now for 2013 pricing on 2014 mowers. Trailer Sales. Call Cory or Don BUDERUS WALL HUNG boiler, nat. gas, Raysâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 149,000 btu., 2 settings, 4 zone valves, 2 780-672-4596, Camrose, AB. pumps, approx. 3 yrs. old, exc. cond., good for in-floor heating or baseboard, $3800 OBO. 604-989-1177, Calgary, AB.
FORKLIFTS FOR RENT/SALE: JCB 940, WANTED: MF #36 DISCERS, all sizes, 8000 lbs; 930, 6000 lbs., RT 4x4. Conquest prompt pick-up. Phone 306-259-4923, Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. 2-3/8â&#x20AC;? OILFIELD TUBING, has cement and 306-946-9669, 306-946-7923, Young, SK. plastic lining, $20/ea. Truckload quantities 12â&#x20AC;&#x2122; LEON DOZER BLADE, 1020-40, fits only. Call 306-861-1280, Weyburn, SK. 2WD of MFWD, new cutting edge, $4500. 306-960-3000, St. Louis, SK. GUARANTEED PRESSURE TREATED fence posts, lumber slabs and rails. Call Lehner Wo o d P r e s e r ve r s L t d . , a s k fo r R o n WIRELESS DRIVEWAY ALARMS, calving 306-763-4232, Prince Albert, SK. barn cameras, backup cameras for RVs, trucks and combines etc., home and shop 6â&#x20AC;&#x2122; CHAINLINK FENCING, rails and hardSPRUCE FOR SALE! Beautiful locally video surveillance - View from any com- ware, 2 gates, barbwire holders, approx. grown trees. Plan ahead and renew your puter or Smart phone. Free shipping. Call 500â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, $3400. 604-989-1177, Calgary, AB. shelterbelt or landscape a new yardsite, 403-616-6610, Calgary, AB. get the year round protection you need. CUSTOM FENCING. Will travel. Call for â&#x20AC;&#x2122;79 SELLICK 6000 Sellick 6000 Rough We sell on farm near Didsbury, AB. or deTerrain Forklift, 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122; reach, 6,000lb capacity, RETIRED: JD 9660 WTS, 374 hrs; 9350 pricing and booking. 306-221-8806. 3cyl diesel, w/ cab. $10,800. Trades wel- RODâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S WELDING: 2â&#x20AC;? and 2-3/8â&#x20AC;? pipe in liver anywhere in western Canada. Details Westward 972 swather, 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; sliding; 922 MULCHING TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. 1-800-667-4515. come. Financing available. hay header; JD 567 MegaWide netwrap; 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122; and 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; lengths. 2â&#x20AC;? is $0.85/ft, 2-3/8â&#x20AC;? phone 403-586-8733 or check out our website at www.didsburysprucefarms.com 1400 HD Hayhiker; all are field ready. Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: www.combineworld.com is $1.05/ft. 403-746-5455, Red Deer, AB. www.maverickconstruction.ca Tractors, cattle equipment and more. Call 306-468-2773, Canwood, SK. TOP QUALITY PRESSURE treated posts, rough lumber, all delivered. Call Bob at Prince Albert, SK., 306-961-2555 or (5) JD 63 5 Fle x He a d e rs POWER PLANT PERKINS, dsl 4 cyl. capable 306-764-8852. C a t53 5 Fle x of operating a 3HP aeration fan, large fuel 6â&#x20AC;&#x2122; BLACK CHAINLINK fencing w/rails and tank, asking $2000 OBO. Cash Deal Only. Ideal for Heating: C a tF3 0 Fle x hardware, approximately 300â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, $1800 OBO. 306-297-3128, Shaunavon, SK. â&#x20AC;˘ Garages (2) JD Ad a pto rs FD 70â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Call 604-989-1177, Calgary, AB. â&#x20AC;˘ Wood Shops M D 900 s e rie s JD a n d NH Ad a pte rs 2007 MQ 25 kW trailer mount diesel genCUSTOM FENCING AND corral building, no erator, excellent, $9,000. 306-642-3225, â&#x20AC;˘ Farm Shops JD 2410 61â&#x20AC;&#x2122; C u ltiva to r j o b t o o b i g o r t o o s m a l l . C a l l or 306-640-7149, Assiniboia, SK. â&#x20AC;˘ Cattle Barns C a t70 S c ra pe r 306-699-7450, Quâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Appelle, SK. HANG ON NEW AND USED generators, all sizes from For all your WARMAN HOME CENTRE can design, 5 kw to 3000 kw, gas, LPG or diesel. Phone Agri-Trade Heating & Plumbing supply and install a home fence pkg. that for availability and prices. Many used in Show Specials A. T. TWETEN ESTATE/Farm Sale. Equip- works for you incl. vinyl. 1-800-667-4990 stock. 204-643-5441, Fraserwood, MB. Nov. 6, 7, 8, 9 ment: well maintained, shedded, some or www.warmanhomecentre.com DIESEL GENSET SALES AND SERVICE, machinery for parts only. As is, where is. McMullens Refrigeration & Heating Ltd. SOLIDLOCK AND TREE ISLAND game wire 12 to 300 KW, lots of units in stock, used 306-387-6337 evenings. Lone Rock, SK. and all accessories for installation. Heights and new, Perkins, John Deere, Deutz. We CLEARVIEW 125 Clearwill Ave from 26â&#x20AC;? to 120â&#x20AC;?. Ideal for elk, deer, bison, INDUSTRIAL PARK RED DEER COUNTY, AB T4E 0A1 ROTARY MOWERS: Woods 10â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, $4000; also build custom gensets. We currently 15â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, $6000; 7â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, $3000; 6â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, $1600; JD 1518, sheep, swine, cattle, etc. Tom Jensen have special pricing on new John Deere www ww w.mc w. mcmu cmu mull lle ll ens. ens en s.ca s.c ca ph/fax 306-426-2305, Smeaton, SK. $8500; JD 7â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, $3000. 1-866-938-8537. units. Call for pricing 204-792-7471.
NEED HEAT IN YOUR GARAGE OR SHOP?
204-9 8 1-429 1
403-342-1155
Available at:
Saskatoon Cooperative Association Ltd. Saskatoon, SK
(306) 933-3835 www.dseriescanola.ca 50 PURE WOOD/ Wood Cross bison, avg. price $2000/head. Contact Dr. Marshall Patterson, 306-475-2232, Moose Jaw, SK. ELK VALLEY RANCHES, buying all ages of feeder bison. Call Frank 780-846-2980, Kitscoty, AB. or elkvalley@xplornet.com HARD ROCK HYDRAULIC bison squeeze for sale. Call 780-787-0059, Minburn, AB. NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for over 15 years, is looking for finished Bison, grain or grass fed. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If you have them, we want them.â&#x20AC;? Make your final call with Northfork for pricing! Guaranteed prompt payment! 514-643-4447, Winnipeg, MB. 200 HEAD of bison: cows, calves, bulls. Must retire for health reasons. Call Ron 204-937-2448, Roblin, MB.
52
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
1.888.986.2946 2014 TIMPTE GRAIN
2013 TIMPTE 3 HOPPER
AVAILABLE 2013-10-16. Grain, Air Ride suspension, Tandem axle, Outside Aluminum/Inside Steel rims, 20 king pin, Tarp: Rollover Black, Hoppers: Ag Hoppers Black w.Interior Access steps, Width: 102in, Length: 36ft. Regina, SK. Stock #EB142085
AVAILABLE 2012-09-27. Grain, 3 hopper, Air Ride suspension, Tridem axle, Aluminum (polished out) rims, 20 king pin, Tarp: Rollover Black, Hoppers: Ag Hopper w/3rd Hopper Black w.Interior Access steps, Width: 102in, Length: 45ft. Winnipeg, MB. Stock #DB138603
CALL 1995 GREAT DANE DRY VAN Storage, Tandem axle, Aluminum Duct floor, Width: 102 in, Length: 53 ft. Calgary, AB. Stock #SW078803U
$
5,500
2014 INTERNATIONAL 4400 6X4 Tandem Axle Cab & Chassis, MaxxForce 9 engine, Allison (Auto) transmission (6 speed), Air brakes, 14000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, 4-Way rear lockup. Winnipeg, MB. Stock #3475-14-1
$
108,820
2009 INTERNATIONAL 9200I 6X4 Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISM engine, Eaton Fuller Auto Shift transmission (10 speed), ABS brakes, 412,000 km, 12,000 lbs front axle capacity, 40,000 lbs rear axle capacity, 3-Way rear lockup, A/C. Prince Albert, SK. Stock #V492718
$
85,000
2009 INTERNATIONAL 8600 4X2 Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISM engine, Eaton Fuller transmission (10 speed), Air brakes, 849000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, A/C, new Cancade grain box. Brandon, MB. Stock #V291145
$
75,000
2009 EAST DROP PLATFORM Deck, Hendrickson Air Ride suspension, Tridem axle, Aluminum (polished out) rims, 1 1/2â&#x20AC;? EXT. Floor w/3 Nailers floor, 18 king pin, Winches: 22 Canadian Style 3-Bar, Width: 102 in, Length: 53 ft. Regina, SK. Stock #9RK43880U
$
41,900
2014 INTERNATIONAL 4400 6X4 Tandem Axle Grain Truck, MaxxForce 9 engine, Allison (Auto) transmission (6 speed), Air brakes, 14000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, 4-Way rear lockup. Regina, SK. Stock #5648-14
$
135,520
2009 INTERNATIONAL PROSTAR PREMIUM Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISX engine, Eaton Fuller Ultra Shift transmission (13 speed), Air brakes, 990000 km, 13200 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, 4-Way rear lockup, A/C. Brandon, MB. Stock #V492754
$
79,500
2007 PETERBILT 386
CALL 2001 UTILITY REEFER VAN Reefer Van, Air Ride suspension, Tandem axle, Reefer: Thermo King SBIII, Steel rims, Flat Grocery Floor floor, Width: 102in, Length: 48ft. Winnipeg, MB. Stock #1M446903U
$
12,900
2012 INTERNATIONAL 4400 6X4 Tandem Axle Grain Truck, MaxxForce 9 engine, Allison (Auto) transmission (6 speed), Air brakes, 146000 km, 14000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, 3-Way rear lockup, A/C, 20 foot Cancade grain box. Winnipeg, MB. Stock #V221315
$
99,500
2008 KENWORTH T300
*Not correct picture, unit is yellow. Brandon, MB.
$
77,900
2005 INTERNATIONAL 7600 6X4
Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISX engine (450 HP), Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (13 speed), Air brakes, 1147000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, Diff Lock rear lockup, A/C. Brandon, MB. Stock #8216-07A
$
69,900
Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISM engine (310 HP), Eaton Fuller transmission (10 speed), Air brakes, 370000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, A/C, getting new grain box. Brandon, MB. Stock #0047-5A
$
CALL
2008 KENWORTH T300 Tandem Axle Cab & Chassis, Cummins engine (300 HP), Allison (Auto) transmission (5 speed), Air brakes, 14000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, Diff Lock rear lockup, A/C. Winnipeg, MB. Stock #5699-08A
82,500
$
2009 INTERNATIONAL PROSTAR
Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Paccar PX8 engine (330 HP), Eaton Fuller transmission (10 speed), Air brakes, 14000 lbs front axle capacity, 46000 lbs rear axle capacity, 3-Way rear lockup, A/C, Stock #5149-08A
1991 LODE KING SUPER B AVAILABLE 2013-11-01. Grain, Spring Ride suspension, Tandem axle, Steel rims, Tarp: Rollover , Hoppers: Ag Hoppers , Width: 102 in, Length: 28 ft. Brandon, MB. Stock #MW004835U
69,900
Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISX engine, Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (13 speed), Air brakes, 825000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, 4-Way rear lockup, A/C, power tailgate, New 20 foot Silage Box. Regina, SK. Stock #V492713
77,500
$
2008 INTERNATIONAL 4300 4X2 Single Axle Grain Truck, International DT466 engine (225 HP), Allison (Auto) transmission (5 speed), Air brakes, 253000 km, 10000 lbs front axle capacity, 17500 lbs rear axle capacity, Diff Lock rear lockup, A/C, perfect body for roofing company. Winnipeg, MB Stock #1177-08A
49,900
$
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
SY EA SITE E ON ANC N FI
HUGE ALL-MAKE TRUCK SALE ON NOW! ÊUÊFORDÊUÊDODGEÊUÊCHEVÊUÊTOYOTAÊUÊNISSANÊUÊHONDA DURAMAX
POWER-STROKE
CUMMINS
2012 DODGE RAM 3500 4X4 LOADED! Cummins Diesel, Tow pkge, power options $ SPECIAL $
$46,400
TRA ALL WE DES A LCO RE ME
DIESEL
DIESEL
PRICE
39,995
DIESEL
F250 CREW CAB 4X4 OUTLAW EDITION
CHEV 2500 CREW CAB FLAT DECK
LOADED! 2-tone leather, chrome bars & wheels, fender flares $ SALE
329 $31,440 B/W
PRICE
$
26,944
LOADED and ready for immediate work! $
269
$28,385
B/W
4x4
$179 B/W
53
SPECIAL $ PRICE
24,885
229 B/W
$239 B/W
LOADED FORD F150 SUPER CREW
2011 FORD F150 SHORT BOX
2009 FORD RANGER SPORT
2011 F150 CREW FX4 4X4
LOADED! Chrome pkg, Rims, many extras!
4x4, all power options, alloys, access doors
Excellent Value! Exceptional economy!
LOADED! Ecoboost, tow pkg, leather, extras
LOW
$20,650 PRICE $17,999
$24,250
WOW
$
19,995
$12,825
4x4
WOW
$
9,889
4x4
4x4
$139 B/W
LOADED FORD F150 SUPER CREW LARIAT
CHEV SILVERADO LTZ
DODGE RAM 1500 CREW
LOADED! Heated leather, buckets, boards
LEATHER & LOADED! 4 doors, bose stereo
4 doors, All power options, fog lamps, 20” wheels
SPECIAL $14,575 VALUE $9,999
LOW
$34,750 PRICE $28,997
$19,500
WOW $ ONLY 14,799
$15,825
WOW
$
11,555
4x4
2008 CHEV AVALANCHE LTZ LEATHER, custom wheels, fresh trade!
LOW
$29,470 PRICE $24,377
DIESEL
4x4
PRO-LIFT
$199 B/W
DODGE DAKOTA CREW CAB
2007 GMC SIERRA E/CAB
HARLEY DAVIDSON F150 CREW
LOADED! Moulded boards, alloys, box cover
F350 CREW CAB LARIAT
Excellent Value! Loaded with features!
LOADED! Sun-roof, 22” chrome wheels
LOADED! A MUST TO SEE! ONE OF A KIND!
4x4
DIESEL
2013 RAM 1500 SLT CREW
RAM 2500 QUAD CAB LARAMIE
2007 RAM 3500 LARAMIE
Loaded! Low kms, One owner. All options
Many extras! Garage kept, very low kms!
4X4, Tow pkg, chrome pkg, leather seats
GREAT
$39,770 PRICE $32,555
LOW
$33,890 PRICE $27,444
PARTIAL LISTING OVER 500 UNITS IN STOCK AND ON SALE NOW! DON’T MISS OUT!
609 WINNIPEG STREET (306)525-6700 REGINA, SASKATCHEWAN 1-888-763-6700 www.autogallery.com Prices include any trade worth $2500 or cash equivalent. DL#917632
SALE
$33,745 PRICE $29,211 OPEN ROAD
4th Ave.
Ross Ave. AUTO GALLERY
Ring Road
SUBARU
2012 TOYOTA TACOMA TRD Loaded! Off-road pkg, hood scoop, as new!
Do na ld St
$269 B/W
LOADED DUALLY
SALE $38,955 PRICE $32,444
LOW $ $33,555 PRICE 29,988
Mc
DIESEL
WOW
$25,375 ONLY $20,888
Adams St.
4x4
LOW
$19,950 PRICE $16,440
609 Winnipeg St.
ONLY $7,777
Broad St.
GREAT TRUCK
Victoria Ave. Hwy #1 E
54
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Water Line Tanks
Fertilizer Tanks 10 Year limited warranty 8,400 Imperial gallons 10,080 U.S. Gallons
270 US GAL. 225 IMP. GAL.
Reg.
360 US GAL. 300 IMP. GAL.
$
370
Sale
$
265
Reg.
$
575
$
Sale
375
Tanks will fit through standard door and are food grade safe with a 10 year limited warranty
1500 US GAL. 1260 IMP. GAL.
Reg. Made in Canada
Reg.
$
00
7428
Sale
Sale
$
5600
$
895
$
625
Plus a free all-in-one banjo ball valve
306.253.4343 or 1.800.383.2228 www.hold-onindustries.com While supplies last.
GUARANTEED Do you have an iron filter or water softener that is not working properly? Most of these systems simply are not designed for tough rural water problems.
ELIMINATE • Rust • Smell • Bad Taste • Hardness • Color • Sodium • Odor • Total Dissolved Solids • E Coli and Coliform Bacteria • Plus Many More
NEVER
Purchase or haul those heavy bags of water softening salt or that expensive bottled water ever again.
Winnipeg, MB Ph: 204-943-4668
Saskatoon, SK Ph: 306-242-2561 (Head Office)
Calgary, AB Ph: 403-291-3667
Edmonton, AB Ph: 780-421-0084
For your FREE water consultation and system inspection, contact us today... Call Toll Free Anywhere in Canada
1-800-664-2561
Email: sales@thewaterclinic.com Website: www.thewaterclinic.com
“Canada’s Largest Rural Water Purification Company” “Let’s make one thing perfectly clear . . . WATER!”
TO WORK OR
YOU DON’T PAY No Payment Up To 1 Year OAC
Rural Water
Farms - Acreages Multi-Pure P Membrane M b System S t
2000 gallons/day Eliminates: • Tannin (colour) • Hardness • Total dissolved solids, nitrates, sodium, arsenic, uranium Benefits: • No need to have bottled water • Eliminates water softeners • Bottled water quality throughout the entire home
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
55
Don’t Overpay, Visit
2013
l e d o M nce a r a e l C Now On WWW.CHEGUSRVSALES.CA
Raptor 31DS MSRP: $51,567
Raptor 367SE MSRP: $65,899
Raptor 365LEV MSRP: $98,437
SALE PRICE: $37,900
SALE PRICE: $47,900
SALE PRICE: $64,900
2013 TRAVEL TRAILERS Laredo 296RL MSRP: $39,610
Bullet 246 RBS MSRP: $28,510
Springdale 303BH MSRP: $33,421
SALE PRICE: $29,900
SALE PRICE: $21,900
SALE PRICE: $24,900
Springdale 297BH MSRP: $30,632
SALE PRICE: $22,590
Springdale 282BH MSRP: $29,339
Premier 32BH MSRP: $38,872
SALE PRICE: $21,490
2013 TOY HAULERS
SALE PRICE: $29,900 Laredo 294RK MSRP: $35,839 .......................... SALE PRICE: $26,900 SOLD
More 2013 TRAVEL TRAILERS
2013 MOTORHOMES
Energy 236 MSRP: $39,298 ................................. SALE PRICE: $27,900 Laredo 301RL MSRP: $35,803........................... SALE PRICE: $26,900 SALE PRICE: $21,900 SOLD Energy 280 MSRP: $40,777 ................................ SALE PRICE: $29,900 Springdale 296BH MSRP: $30,092 ............... Springdale 294BH MSRP: $31,205 ................. SALE PRICE $22,900 Bullet 230BHS MSRP: $26,422 ........................ SALE PRICE: $20,900 Premier 30RE MSRP: $38,836 ........................... SALE PRICE: $29,900 SOLD Springdale 266RL MSRP: $29,023 ................ SALE PRICE: $20,900 Laredo 291TG MSRP: $33,540 ......................... SALE PRICE: $25,900 Laredo 298RE MSRP: $36,246 .......................... SALE PRICE: $26,900 Laredo 303TG MSRP: $39,900 ......................... SALE PRICE: $29,900
A.C.E 27.1 MSRP: $99,657 ......................................SALE SOLDPRICE: $90,668 A.C.E 30.1 MSRP: $105,087 ..................................SALE SOLDPRICE: $95,629
2013 FIFTH WHEELS
Springdale 249BH MSRP: $29,425 ............... SALE PRICE: $22,900 Laredo 266RL MSRP: $42,582 .......................... SALE PRICE: $31,900
for more information and details visit
www.chegusrvsales.ca Watson, SK 306-287-3999
Sales@chegusrvsales.ca
OPEN: Monday-Friday
9am-5pm Evenings & Weekends: By Appointment Only
56
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
See the very latest 100+ horsepower tractors from New Holland. They use EcoBlue™/SCR engine technology to give you increased power and productivity. And, by cutting your costs with best-in-class fuel efficiency and longer service intervals, these New Holland tractors deliver a generous payback. That’s New Holland SMART. CLEAN-RUNNING, ECOBLUE™ TECHNOLOGY TIER 4 ENGINES THAT SAVE FUEL AND MONEY
EXPLORE THE POWER OF BLUE T7 SERIES TRACTORS 100 TO 195 PTO HP
$290,000 K
T8 SERIES TRACTORS 195 TO 290 PTO HP
$290,000 K
$190,000 P
2012 NH SP.275R
2011 NH SP.365F
2010 Miller CONDOR G40
Sprayer, 120’,1200 G SS.FULL LOAD RAVEN GPS,FRT WHL AST
Sprayer, 1600 SS, 120’ 10 SEC, ELEC AGIT & RINSE, BOOM DRAIN & BLOW
Sprayer, 988hrs, 100’ BOOM, 5 SEC, 1000G STAINLESS TANK, DUALS, CROP DIVIDERS
$300,000 P
$25,500 K
$26,000 P
T9 SERIES 4WD TRACTORS 390 TO 670 MAX ENGINE HP
2009 New Holland ST830 Cultivator, 3 BAR - 12” SPACING 400 SERIES NH3 KNIVES RAVEN NH3 KIT . . $82,000 1995 Flexi-Coil 5000 Air Drill,57 FT,NH3 MIDROW SHANK,SS AIR KIT,3” RUBBER PACKERS,500 LB TRIP,BLOCKAGE MONITORS,2003 FL SC380 TANK,TOW BEHIND,VARIABLE RATE,DUAL FAN,DUAL SHOOT W /NH3 HITCH . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$56,000 (K) 1999 Flexi-Coil 5000 Air Drill, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$39,000 (K) 1997 Morris MAXIM Air Drill, 10” SPACING STEEL PCKRS DBL SHT AIR KIT C/W 7180 MORRIS CART .$33,000 (H)
AWARD-WINNING SIDEWINDER™ II ARMREST CONTROL OPTIONAL FULLY INTEGRATED INTELLISTEER™ GUIDANCE
$198,000 K
$125,000 K
$299,000 P
2010 Miller CONDOR G75
2007 FieldHawk MF608
2010 RoGator 1386
Sprayer, 1200 GAL ,120’BOOMS,FULL LOAD RAVEN GPS, ELEC. ADJ,380 R90/4
Sprayer, 926hrs, 1200 GS, 90’ BOOM, RAVEN GPS, 20.8 FLOATS, 380 SKINNY HEIGHT
Sprayer, 925hrs, 120’ BOOM, END ROW NOZZLES, RAVEN SMARTRAX, SHARPSHOOTER
$21,000 P
$21,000 P
$145,000 P
2005 Bourgault 6350 Air Tank, TRAILING - SINGLE FAN R.T.H CTM & CRA 28L-26 RICE TIRES . . . . . .$55,000 (K) 2006 Haybuster 2650 Bale Processor, . . . . . . . . . . .$11,500 (P)
2012 NH T9.560
1979 Ford FW60
2008 NH BR7090
Tractor, 440hrs, 16 SPEED PS TRANSMISSION, 6 HYDRAULIC OUTLETS, LUXURY CAB
Tractor, 5405hrs, NEW STARTER, 5405 HRS, HEAT, AIR, 4 REM, 20 SPD, DUALS
Baler - Round, ENDLESS BELTS, WIDE PICKUP, BALE COMMAND, HYDRAULIC PICKUP
$256,000 P
$205,000 P
$183,500 P
2008 New Holland BR7090 Baler - Round, HYD PICKUP LIFT, AUTO WRAP TWINE, LACED BELTS, STANDARD PICKUP. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$21,000 (K) 2004 New Holland BR780 Baler - Round, HYD PU LIFT XTRASWEEP PU . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$14,900 (H)
2006 NH BR780A
2006 NH BR780A
2004 NH CR970
Baler - Round, 2006 New Holland BR780A - 1000 PTO, HYD pickups, laced belts
Baler - Round, 2006 New Holland BR780A Baler - 1000 PTO, Laced Belts
Combine, 1983hrs, 14 FT RAKE UP HDR HYD WIND GUARD POWER MIRRORS AUTO CLIMATE
$199,000 P
$215,000 P
$105,000 P
New Holland 853 Baler - Round,CHAIN BALER, OILER / BALE COMMAND, WIDE P/U, . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,700 (K) 2002 New Idea 4865 Baler - Round, . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4,900 (K)
2009 NH CR9080
2008 NH CR9070
2007 NH CR9070
1990 Vermeer 605J Baler - Round, . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2,950 (H)
2008 NH CR9070
2005 NH CR9070
2003 NH CR970
Combine, 617hrs, AIR, LEATHER, DELUXE NH CHOPPER, SM MONITOR, YIELD & MOISTUR
Combine, 960hrs, REDEKOP CHPR, REDEKOP PU 16’, SERVICE LIGHTS, TOUCH SCRN
Combine, 1367hrs, COOLANT HEATER AWNING PLATES ROTORS SCREEN BRUSH DELUXE
2008 Honey Bee SP25 Combine Header, DETACHABLE TRANSPORT,GUAGE WHEELS,SINGLE REEL,... .$31,000 (K)
Combine, 988hrs, SMALL GRAIN SIEVES, ROTOR COVERS, BEATER COVER PLATE
Combine, 729hrs, HYDRAULIC LIFT PACKAGE, YIELD MONITOR, ROTOR COVERS, HYD DR
Combine, 2775hrs, DELUXE CAB Y AND M ENGINE OVRHAUL 09/10 NEW CLEAN
$279,000 K
2004 Honey Bee SP36 Combine Header, 36’,HYD FORE/AFT, PEA AUGER, TRANS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$31,000 (K)
$215,000 P
$289,900 H
$77,000 P
$25,000 H
$35,900 H
2010 Honey Bee SP36 Combine Header, UPPER CR AUG,CR ADAPT. FORE/ AFT,HYD TILT,POLY CUTTER BAR $Call (P)
2008 NH CR9070
2009 NH CR9080
Combine, 764hrs, HYDRAULIC LIFT PACKAGE, YIELD MONITOR, SM GRAIN SIEVES
Combine, 919hrs, INTELLIVIEW II TOUCHSCREEN, LEATHER SEAT, MAV CHPR, LONG AUG
$55,000 H
$55,000 H
2010 JD 9870 STS Combine, 615P JD P/U HEADER $279,000MUST GO ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED
$14,900 K
2011 MacDon D60 Combine Header,40ft Double knife,Poly skid shoes,4 sensor headsight, . . . . . . . .$79,000 (P) 2004 New Holland 94C Header - Combine, CR ADAPTER, FORE/AFT REEL, CROSS AUGER, GUAGE WHEELS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$35,000 (H) New Holland 94C Combine Header, 30’,CR/CX ADAPT.SGL KNIFE,SGL REEL,UII PU REEL, . . . . . . . .$33,000 (K)
2000 Case 2388
2001 MacDon 962
2000 NH 994
Combine, 3090hrs, YIELD & MOISTURE, CHAFF SPREADERS, CAREY BIG TOP, 2 NEW RADS
Header, PU REEL, SNGL KNIFE DRIVE, EMPIRE GUAGE WHEELS, TR ADAPT
Header, HYDRAULIC FORE/AFT, STORAGE TRANSPORT, TR ADAPTOR, CROSS AUG
$21,000 K
$50,000 P
$28,500 H
2002 New Holland 94C Combine Header, TRANSPORT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$29,500 (H) 2011 Rem 2700 Grain Vac, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$18,900 (K)
2010 Honey Bee SP36
2010 Honey Bee SP36
1988 Versatile 4700
Header, CR ADAPTOR, FORE/AFT, PICKUP REEL, HEADSIGHT HHC 36’
Header, CR ADAPTOR, FORE/AFT, PICKUP REEL, GUAGE WHEEL W TRANSPORT
Swather, 25’ MACDON PU REEL HYDRO
2001 Flexi-Coil SYS85 Harrow, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$19,500 (H)
1992 Hesston 8100
2011 NH C232
2009 Farm King 16X104
Swather
Skid Steer Loader
Auger
2009 Massey Ferguson 9430 Swather, . . . . . . . . . .$89,000 (P)
Hwy. #3, Kinistino Hwy. #5, Humboldt Hwy. #2 South, PA 306-864-3667 306-682-9920 306-922-2525 Bill .................... 306-921-7544 David H ............. 306-921-7896 Jim ................... 306-864-8003 Kelly.................. 306-961-4742
Paul .................. 306-231-8031 Tyler.................. 306-231-6929 Perry ................. 306-231-3772
Brent................. 306-232-7810 Aaron ................ 306-960-7429
Sprayer Dept., Kinistino David J. ............ 306-864-7603
Check out our website at www.farmworld.ca
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
THE ALL NEW
SUBARU BRZ
2013 OUTBACK
1,500
SPORTY, PERFORMANCE & LUXURY ALL IN 1 PACKAGE!
THE MORE YOU GET OUT,
THE BETTER IT GETS
INSPIRING $
2013 TRIBECA
THE ALL NEW
STUNNING LOOKS ARE JUST THE START!
MSRP FROM
27,295**
$$
CASH PURCHASE DISCOUNT
LOW FINANCE RATES FROM .5% OR $2,500
LOW FINANCE RATES FROM .5% OR $6,000 ** CASH PURCHASE DISCOUNT
MSRP FROM
27,295
$$
CASH PURCHASE DISCOUNT
2009 SUBARU FORESTER
2008 FORD ESCAPE LIMITED 4X4
AC, CC, CD, HTD SEATS, PWR GRP!
22,995 4WD AC, CC, CD, DVD, LTHR, DIESEL Stk# SK-U0704
2008 SUBARU TRIBECA LIMITED PREMIER
29,995
21,995
$
$
2008 FORD F-350 SD KING RANCH
2011 CHEVROLET CRUZE LT
MANY MORE UNITS IN STOCK... OPEN 24 HOURS AT
TURBO
Stk# S3016A
42,995
$
WWW.SUBARUOFSASKATOON.CA
CALL
ELITE AUTOMOTIVE GROUP INC. O/A
Open 24 Hours @
38,995**
$$
Stk# SK-U0898
Stk# SK-U0738
$
MSRP FROM
AC, CC, CD, DVD, NAV, HTD SEAT, LT
AC, CC, CD CHNGR, LTHR HEATED SEAT
Stk# SK-U01056
57
www.subaruofsaskatoon.com
SUBARU OF SASKATOON 471 CIRCLE PLACE • 306-665-6898 OR 1-877-373-2662
Open 24 Hours @
www.bramerauto.com
BRAMER AUTOMOTIVE GROUP CORNER OF SARGENT & KING EDWARD • CALL 204-474-1011 • TOLL FREE 1-877-474-1011
INDUSTRY LEADING FLEXI GRAIN STORAGE SYSTEM
Bale Slice
www.bagyourgrain.com
for 4’ x 5’ and 5’ x 6’ Wide Bales
Model R-950 Grain Bagger
www.keltec.ie
Removes twine and plastic while splitting the bale...
• 9’ for 200’, 250’ & 300’ long bags • Capacity: 11,400 bu/hr
• Bale Slice will remove twine, net
Model R-1050 Grain Bagger
wrap and plastic while splitting the bale • Split the bale directly into feed wagons, vertical screw mixers or into round feeders • Bale Slice cuts silage, hay & straw bales with ease
• 10’ for 250’, 300’ & 400’ long bags • Capacity: 23,600 bu/hr NEW Deflector plate and rubber side guards to prevent grain flowby NEW Passive breaking anchor creates increased compaction and less demand on the brakes Option: Truck Unloading System
The NEW EA-910 Unloader Capacity: 12,000 bu/hr Min. HP Req.: 60 Conversion: From transport to working position in minutes Bag Size: For 9’ & 10’ Weight: 4180 lbs.
3-Pt. Snow Blowers
NEW Scooped delivery to discharge auger NEW Offset cross-auger drive to increase output NEW Bag roller disconnect
Premium Grain Bags 9 x 250 9 x 300 12 x 500
10 x 250 10 x 300 10 x 330 10 x 400
Wheat-Belt Industries Balzac, Alberta
403-291-1489
1-800-644-6050
www.wheat-belt.com
Manually adjustable deflector spout 540 RPM Shear bolt PTO Includes skid shoes 50” to 76”: Cat I, 3-Pt. hitch Hydraulic chute rotator optional • 86” to 100”: Cat. II, 3-Pt. hitch Hydraulic chute rotator standard • • • • •
Visit us at:
AGRI-TRADE
Red Deer, AB November 6-9, 2013
Call for More Information and Dealer Names
58
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
USED EQUIPMENT
Spraying Equipment
2004 New Holland SF115, 90’ Sus PT, 1600g, W/Screens, Dbl Nozzle, 16.9R X 38 Tires ..............$24,900 2004 Brandt SB4000, 100’ Suspended, Wind Cones, Double Nozzle ................................................$29,900 2000 Flexi-Coil 67, 100’, 1000US Gal, Wheel Boom, Auto Rate ............................................................$19,800 2010 Hardi 6600, 134’ Susp, 1850 Gal, Triple Bodies, Hyd pump ......................$59,900 $49,900 CASH 2002 Flexi-Coil 67XL, 120’, 1500Gal, Auto Rate, Curtains, Hyd Pump ...............................................$21,900 2009 Miller Pro A75, 103’, 1000g, Hyd Autosteer, Extra Tires, Crop Dividers ............................... $215,000 2011 New Holland SP275R, 120’, 1200g, 380/90R46, Fact Autosteer, Triple Nozzle Bodies ... $212,000 1998 Flexi-Coil S67XLT, 120’ Wheel Boom, 1600G Split Tank, Dual Boom, W/Scrn ......................$14,900 2012 New Holland SP365F, 120’ 1600Gal SS, Viper Pro, GPS ............................................................. $346,000 2001 Willmar 8400, 1000g SS, 120’, Chem Injector, 14.9R46 Tires ......................................................$64,000 2009 Spray Coupe 7660, 90’, 725g Poly, Trp Noz, Radar, Foam Mrkr .............................................. $139,000
Construction Equipment 2012 New Holland L230, 2Spd Pilot, Cab, Air Seat, 84” Bkt, Hyd Quick Attach .............................$41,900 2008 New Holland C190 Track Loader, Cab, Htr, A/C, 84” Bkt, Pilot ...................................................$39,900 2008 Case 580SM3 Backhoe, 4wd, Ext Hoe, Frt & Rear Quick Attach, Cab .....................................$64,900
SMART CHOICES. MORE SAVINGS. During this year’s Value Bonanza sales event, take advantage of more SMART ways to save, including 0% FINANCING, CASH BACK and ever-popular BONANZA BUCKS on select New Holland products. You’ll find the best savings of the year on that New Holland tractor and equipment you’ve had your eye on. But time is not on your side—Value Bonanza ends November 30, 2013 so hurry into your New Holland dealer today!
*For commercial use only. Customer participation subject to credit qualification and approval by CNH Capital Canada Ltd. See your participating New Holland dealer for details and eligibility requirements. Down payment may be required. Offer good through November 30, 2013. Not all customers or applicants may qualify for this rate or term. CNH Capital Canada Ltd. standard terms and conditions will apply. Taxes, freight, set-up, delivery, additional options or attachments not included in suggested retail price. Offer subject to change or cancellation without notice. © 2013 CNH America LLC. All rights reserved. New Holland and CNH Capital are registered trademarks of CNH America LLC. New Holland Construction is a trademark of CNH America LLC.
EXPLORE THE POWER OF BLUE T8 SERIES TRACTORS 195 TO 290 PTO HP
T9 SERIES 4WD TRACTORS 390 TO 670 MAX ENGINE HP
See the very latest 100+ horsepower tractors from New Holland. They use EcoBlue™/SCR engine technology to give you increased power and productivity. And, by cutting your costs with best-in-class fuel efficiency and longer service intervals, these New Holland tractors deliver a generous payback. That’s New Holland SMART. CLEAN-RUNNING, ECOBLUE™ TECHNOLOGY TIER 4 ENGINES THAT SAVE FUEL AND MONEY AWARD-WINNING SIDEWINDER™ II ARMREST CONTROL OPTIONAL FULLY INTEGRATED INTELLISTEER™ GUIDANCE ©2013 CNH America LLC. New Holland is a registered trademark of CNH America LLC.
Grain Handling Equipment 2010 Westfield MK130-91, 13”x91’ , Hyd Winch, Hyd Swing Mover ..................................................$20,900 1996 Brent 520, 520 BU Cart, PTO Drive, 23.1x26 Tires ..........................................................................$17,900 2006 REM Mfg 2500 Grain Vac, Manual Fold Auger, Cleanup Wand .................................................$11,900 2009 REM Mfg 2700 Grain Vac, Hyd Fold Auger, Cleanup Wand ........................................................$14,900
Feeding Equipment
See all the SMART deals at nhvaluebonanza.com
T7 SERIES TRACTORS 100 TO 195 PTO HP
Tillage Equipment 1980 Case 4700, 36’ Field Cult, 3bar Hrw .......................................................................................................$5,000 2011 Riteway JH8178, 78’ Hvy Harrow, 9/16” Tines ...............................................$37,500 $33,750 CASH 2000 Bourgault 7200, 48’ Hvy Harrow, 9/16” Tines ..................................................................................$23,900 1995 Flexi-Coil S85, 70’ Hvy Harrow, 9/16” Tines ....................................................$18,800 $16,800 CASH
1997 Supreme 700S Scale, Sngl Screw, Ext Conv...................................................$21,900 $19,500 CASH 2006 Supreme 1400T, 1400bu, Twin, Hyd Conveyor, Wireless Control ............................................$49,900 1997 Supreme 700S, 700bu, Single Screw .................................................................................................$18,900 2007 Degelman 3100, Rh Discharge 31x15.5-15 Tires, Hyd Defl, Knife Kit .....................................$17,500 2010 Degelman 3100HD RH Discharge, Hyd Deflector, 16.5 Tires ....................................................$19,900
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
1089 eng hrs, 752 sep hrs, auger 24’ unloading, cast drum, mod conc ABR.
2008 NEW HOLLAND CX8090
$
239,000 100 ft. booms, full GPS, 1000 gal. tank, chem injection.
Equipment Sale 1994 FLEXI-COIL 5000 AIR DRILL
2002 FLEXI-COIL 5000 AIR DRILL
1998 MORRIS MAXIM AIR DRILL
45 ft c/w 2320 TBH tank
51 ft
55 ft c/w 6180 TBH Tank
2008 MILLAR A40 HIGH CLEARANCE SPRAYER
$
$
43,500
$
33,000
$
$
400 hrs., 275 HP, 100’ boom, 1200 gal. tank, SmarTrax auto steer.
137,000
275,000 SP Windrower, 2480 hrs, 16.5 995 Rotary header
2002 MORRIS MAX II AIR DRILL
2007 NEW HOLLAND HW325 WINDROWER
49 ft c/w 6300 Air Tank
49 ft
30 ft.
2006 JD 4995
$
211,000
2013 NEW HOLLAND H8040 36’
53,000
28,000
2000 MORRIS MAXIM AIR DRILL
68 hrs., 126 HP, cab adn rear axle susp., 600/65R28.
$
2003 McCORMICK MTX110
$
2008 NEW HOLLAND CX8080
$
2869 hrs., 420/70R38 FRT, 18.4/38 RR, F17 ldr, 3 PT.
2012 NEW HOLLAND SP.240F XP
160,000 1120 hrs, 506 Sep Hrs, RU/PU, Y&M Mon., Small Color Display, Chf Blwr
$
30,000
$
33,000
$
73,000 796 hrs, 365hp, 1600 gal, fenders, real wheel nozzle, 120ft.
79,900
2004 NEW HOLLAND CR960 COMBINE
1997 MASSEY FERGUSON 220 WINDROWER
2007 SEEDHAWK
1733 hrs
25 ft., 2515 hrs.
60’ 10” c/w 3380 TBT.
2011 NEW HOLLAND SP365F
$
319,000
290 hrs, 683 sep. hrs., CX8070 small grain, chaff blowers, HD lift cylinders.
2158 hrs, 80’ boom, 650 gal., 20” spacing, chemical inductor
2009 NEW HOLLAND CX8070
$
199,000 3654 hrs., 2295 sep. hrs., Redekop 3150 straw chopper, Terrain tracer
1997 NEW HOLLAND TR98
$
31,000
2011 NH T9.505
$
Luxury cab, Autoguidance 262, WAAS receiver, 4 remotes, F&R diff lock
289,000 1015 hrs.
2007 CASE-IH WDX 1202 36’
$
96,000 1407 hrs., 30 ft. UII PU reel.
2005 NEW HOLLAND HW305 30’
$
74,000
59
2000 WILLMAR 7200
$
119,000
SEEDING
2013 MR 8650XL......................... $159,500 2013 MR 8650XL......................... $159,500 2012 MR 8650XL......................... $139,500 2010 CIH 3380 TBT ....................... $62,000 2009 NH P2070 70’ X 12” ........... $112,000 2009 NH P1060 TBH ...................... $63,000 2009 NH P1060 TBT ...................... $53,000 2007 NH SD550 70’ X 12” ............. $74,000 2007 SEEDHAWK 60’-10” C/W 3380TBT .................................. $159,000 2002 FC 5000-51’-9” .................... $33,000 2002 MR MAXIM 2-49’-10” ........... $33,000 2000 MR MAXIM 49’-10” C/W 6300 .......................................... $30,000 1998 MR MAXIM 34’-10”............... $30,000 1998 MR MAXIM 55’-10” C/W 6180TBH .................................... $28,000 1996 SEEDHAWK 28’-10” .............. $21,800 1994 FC 5000-45’-9” C/W 2320 TBH ............................................ $43,500 1994 FC 1720................................ $16,500
COMBINES
2011 NH CR9070......................... $278,900 2009 NH CX8070 ......................... $199,000 2008 NH CX8080 ......................... $199,000 2008 NH CX8080 ......................... $180,000 2008 NH CX8090 ......................... $239,000 2008 NH CX8080 ......................... $205,000 2006 NH CX840 ........................... $129,000 2005 NH CX860 ............................. $95,000 2004 NH CR960........................... $119,000 1998 NH TR98 ............................... $50,000 1997 MF 8570 ............................... $35,000 1997 NH TR98 ............................... $38,000
$
33,000
1997 NH TR98 ............................... $31,000 1994 NH TX66 ............................... $23,500 MF 8780 ........................................ $54,000
COMBINE HEADS
2002 NH 73C-30’ ......................... $17,000 1999 HY 994-30’ R65/R75/MF ...... $25,000 1998 JD 930F................................ $20,000 1998 NH 994-30’ TX ...................... $24,000 1998 NH 994-30’ TR/TX................. $28,000 1987 CIH 1010-25 ........................... $5,500 NH 971-30’...................................... $7,000 NH 971-30’...................................... $6,000 HY SP25 .......................................... $9,500
MOWER CONDITIONERS
2011 NH H7460 ............................. $31,900 2006 CIH DCX161 .......................... $21,000 2002 NH 1475 C/W 2316............... $15,900
SPRAYERS
2012 NH SP.240F XP 1200 GAL 100’ ......................................... $275,000 2011 NH SP365 F - 1600 GAL 120’ ......................................... $311,000 2008 MILLER A40-1000 GAL 100’ ......................................... $169,000 2007 APACHE AS1010 ................. $147,000 2000 WM 7200 .............................. $39,900
TRACTORS
2011 JD 9630 ............................. $265,000 2011 NH T9.505HD...................... $289,000 2008 NH T1520 ............................. $16,400 2003 MCORK MTX110 ................... $53,000 1986 ST PUMA1000 ...................... $27,000 1980 ST BC III ST225..................... $16,900
$
$
159,000
39,900 1200 hrs., 90’ boom, 1000 gal., Raven auto height control.
SWATHERS
2013 NH H8040-36’ .................... $137,000 2011 NH H8060-36’ .................... $134,000 2007 CIH WDX1202-36’................. $96,000 2007 NH HW325-30’ ..................... $79,900 2006 JD 4995-16.5’ DB................. $73,000 2005 NH HW305-30’ ..................... $74,000 2000 AH 8450 C/W 8050-30’ & 8020-18’ .................................... $48,900 1997 MF 220-25’ .......................... $33,000 1997 MF 220-30’ .......................... $41,000 1996 MF 220 ................................. $26,900 1993 CIH 8820 .............................. $15,000
2007 APACHE AS1010
$
Tow between, single shoot, variable rate cart.
2010 CIH 3380 AIR CART
$
ROUND BALERS
2007 CIH RBX563 .......................... $16,900 2007 CIH RBX563 .......................... $21,000 CIH 8465A ....................................... $7,500 2011 NH BR7090........................... $23,900 2007 NH BR780A........................... $16,700 2005 NH BR780............................. $12,267 2005 NH BR780............................. $10,900 2005 NH BR780............................. $14,900 2005 NH BR780............................. $16,500 2003 NH BR780............................... $8,900
147,000
62,000 Pea auger, TR/TX
1998 NEW HOLLAND 994 30’
$
28,000
MISCELLANEOUS
ADAPTER 2011 MILLER MILLER/NH SPRAYER SWATHER ADAPTER MACDON ...................................... $5,500 MOWER/ZERO TURN 2007 CK RZT54 ..................................... $2,679.00 GRAIN AUGER 2010 FK SWING AWAY 16X104 ...................................... $28,500 DEEP TILLAGE 1995 MR 8900 ........ $17,900 ATV 2009 CK 3100S......................... $9,250
High stubble kit, DCX161 15’ 7” cut discbine, stored inside.
2006 CASE-IH DCX161 MOWER CONDITIONER
$
21,000
Highway #2 South
Highway #6 North
Highway #10 East
Ph: 306-946-3301
Ph: 306-746-2911
Ph: 306-783-8511
Fax: 306-946-2613 watrousnewholland.com
Fax: 306-746-2919 raymorenewholland.com
Fax: 306-782-5595 yorktonnewholland.com
www.agdealer.com/raymorenh
60
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
2012 CIH 9120
2011 Case IH 9120
2010 CIH 9120
2012 CIH 8120
luxury cab, auto guidance, 620 duals, HID lighting, 412 hrs...$325,500
Powerplus cvt feeder, c/w 3016 pick up header...$300,000
861hrs, autoguide Nav II, c/w 2016 pu header, lat tilt...$299,000
671hrs, lat tilt, hyd fold topper...$275,000
SEEDERS
TRACTORS CONT.
2010 CIH ATX700 (SC) 60ft, 10” spacing, ADX3430 tank, double shoot, sideband.........................................................................................$188,000 2008 Seed Hawk 60-12 (SA) TBT JD1910, TBT 270BUH, 2000 gal TBH liquid, no quick pin..............................................................................$185,000 2006 Seedmaster 6612 (ES) c/w JD 1910 TBH tank, primary blockage, conveyor, triple shoot......................................................................$166,000 2008 JD 1820 (ES) 61ft, 12” spacing, dbl shoot, atom jet side band openers, JD 1910 cart.....................................................................$129,900 2008 NH P1060 (SA) 60ft, c/w SC430 tank, 3.5” packers, dbl shoot adam jet triple shoot................................................................................$109,000 2003 Bourgault 5710 (SC) 54ft, 9.8” spacing, single shoot, 3 1/2” steel packers, 5350 tank, double shoot............................................................................$107,500 2004 Bourgault 5710 (SA) 63ft, 12” spacing, 491 monitor, midrow banders, 3/4” opene, steel packers..................................................$99,500 2005 Bourgault 5710 (SA) 64ft, 9.8” spacing, mrb, 3 1/2” steel packers, double shoot, 5440 tank, 591 mon..........................................................................$90,000 1998 Bourgault 5710 (SC) 54ft, 9.8” spacing, 2 1/4” steel packers, 2002-5440 tank, 3 tank metering...................................................................................$89,900 1999 Bourgault (ES) 54ft, 12” spacing, 4350 cart, MRB’s, 3.5 steel packers...$85,000 2000 Flexicoil 7500 (SC) 50ft, dbl shoot, 10” spacing, 3.5” steel packers, 3450 TBH tank 3” tips..............................................................................$64,500 2004 Morris Maxium II (SA) 49ft, 10” spacing, single shoot, 7240 TBT tank...$55,000 2000 Flexicoil 7500 (SC) 60ft, 10” spacing, rubber packers, single shoot, TBH 3450 tank.........................................................................................$45,900 1997 Flexicoil 5000 (SA) 51ft, steel packers recapped, 2320 tank, 10” spacing, blockage............................................................................$44,900 1999 Flexicoil 5000 (SA) 39ft, 1720 tank, steel packers, NH3 kit, atom jet single openers..............................................................................$41,000
TRACTORS 2WD Tractors
2010 CIH Magnum 215 (SA) w/LX780 loader, luxury cab, PTO, hitch ready, 262 WAAS reciever................................................................$185,000 2013 CIH Puma 130 CVT (SC) MFD, cap suspension, L765 loader, 95” bucket & grapple..................................................................$159,000 2009 CIH Magnum 180 (SA) 3 remotes, L780 loader, S2 outback autosteer, 3 point hitch.............................................................$155,000 2009 Massey Ferguson 7480 (SC) massey 960 FEL loader w/ grapple, 3 point hitch, CVT transmission.................................$94,500 2002 CIH MX240 (ES) 3 point hitch, rear duals, powershift, degelman 12ft 4 way blade............................................................................$90,000 2008 CIH Puma 125 (SC) 540/1000 PTO, 3pt hitch, 3 rear remotes, c/w LX760 loader....................................................................................$89,900 1997 NH 8260 (SC) loader & grapple, MFD, shedded...................$44,900 1992 CIH 7110 (SC) 2wd, no loader, duals...................................$24,900 1979 CIH 2590 (SC)........................................................................$7,500
4WD Tractors
2011 CIH STX450 (SC) 111hrs, full autoguidance, 800 duals, front weight frame................................................................................................$315,900 2009 JD 9630T (SC) 4hyds, 36” tracks, hyd hitch, air bags, no PTO, full GPS, shedded....................................................................................$295,500 2011 CIH STX500 (LL) 800/38 duals, leather seats, full HID, guidance HP/ XP, 6 remotes.....................................................................................$279,000 2008 JD 9530 (SC) p/s trans, full weight pkg, 800 michelins, 4 remotes, full guidance...................................................................................$235,000 2006 CIH STX480 (SC) luxury cab, guidance ready, 16 speed p/s trans, PTO, diff lock..$195,500 1997 NH 9682 (LL) 20.8/42 duals, 12spd std, 4 remotes...........................$79,000
2010 CIH STX535 (SA) std quadtrac, luxury cab, 1000rpm IND PTO, hi cap hydr pump........................................................................................$357,000
HEADERS 2013 CIH 2152 (SC) 40ft, single knife, AFX adapter, new, never used...$79,500 2009 CIH SP40 (SA) 40ft, AFX adapter, dbl knife, UII pu reel, AHH, hyd F&A...$57,879 2007 CIH 2162 (ES) 40ft, 5 bat reel, cross auger, AFX adapter, AHHC, transport...$55,000 2012 CIH 3020 (SC) 30ft, dbl knife, AFX adapter, AWS air reel............$48,500 2011 CIH 2020 (SC) 35ft, AWS air reel, hyd F&A..................................$47,500 2006 CIH 2042 (SA) 36ft split reel, 8120 adapter, new canvas, knives, & guards.$45,000 2010 CIH 2020 (SC) 35ft, AWS air reel, 6 batt pu reel.............................$44,500 2011 CIH 2020 (SC) 35ft, air reel.........................................................$39,000 2008 CIH 2020 (SC) 35ft, 3” knife. 6 batt pu reel, ASW air reel, bergen header trailer...................................................................................$38,900 2007 CIH 2062 (SC) 35ft, upper cross auger, AFX adapter, shedded...$37,500 2007 HoneyBee (SC) 36ft, UII pu reel, transport, 2588 adapter..........$35,900 2009 CIH 2020 (SC) 30ft, pu, 2588 adapter, all new skid plates.........$34,500 2002 CIH 1042 (ES) 30ft, pick up reel, 2388 adapter..................$28,500 2004 JD 635 (SC) 35ft, pu reel......................................................$27,500 2009 CIH 2020 (SA) 35ft, trailer, pu reel......................................$25,000 2004 CIH 1020 (SC) 30ft, crary air reel, trailer.............................$24,500 1998 HoneyBee SP36 (SC) 36ft, pu reel, transport, cross auger, 2388 adapter..$22,900 1995 HoneyBee SP30 (SC) 30ft, pu reel, transport, 2388 adapter...$19,500 1997 Macdon 960 (LL) 36FT, p/u, pea auger, 2388 adapter.........$17,900 2006 Macdon S30 Header (SC) 30ft swather pick up reels.......$17,000 2003 CIH 3015 (SC) sun pick up...................................................$14,900 2001 CIH 2015 (SA) 14th rake up....................................................$13,000 1993 JD 930 (SC) 30ft, batt reel straight..........................................$13,000 1994 CIH 1010 (LL) 30ft, p/u reel, transport.................................$11,900 1994 CIH 1020 (SC) 25ft, p/u reel, F&A...........................................$9,500 1997 CIH 1015 (SC) rake-up pick up..............................................$9,500
SWATHERS 2013 CIH WD1903 (ES) c/w DH362, upgraded cab, cab suspension, hyd freeform swath roller.........................................................................$149,00 2010 CIH WDX2303 (SA) upgrade cab, cab suspension, dbl knife, 323 hrs, DHX362 header..................................................................$135,000 2012 CIH WD1203 (SC) c/w DH362, cab, rear suspension, dbl knife, UII pu reel.................................................................................$135,000 2008 CIH HDX182 Conditioner (SC) 18ft, steel rollers..................$26,900 2006 MacDon S30 (SC) 30ft, pick up reel...................................$17,000 1987 CIH 730 (SC) pull type, 30 ft, bat reel....................................$3,500
Saskatoon (306) 934-3555 800-667-9761
Swift Current (306) 773-2951 800-219-8867
SPRAYERS 2012 CIH 4430 (SC) 600hrs, 120ft, aim command, autoboom, lux cab, PRO700...$310,000 2010 CIH 4420 (SC) 1000hrs, 80 duals, pro 600, autoboom..........$290,000 2009 CIH 4420 (SC) 120ft, full guidance, 650 floaters, aim, luxury cab..$260,000 2010 JD 4830 (SC) 100ft, 1000 gal tank, full auto guidance.........$245,000 2009 Apache 1210 (LL) 100ft, 1200gal, triple nozzle body w/tips, duals, raven envisio pro, smart trax.............................................................$185,500 2005 JD 4720 (SA) 90ft, 800 gal tank, 2 sets of tires, autosteer, fence row nozzles...............................................................................................$175,000 2005 CIH 3185 (SA) 90ft, aim command, 270 tires..............................$105,000 2001 CIH 3200 (SC) 5200hrs, 90ft, aim command, 800 gal s/s tank, norac autoboom, 5 way nozzle...........................................................$78,500 2000 CIH 4260 (SA) 90ft, new boom tips, no aim command, S3 outback steering, floaters...............................................................................$69,000 2009 Flexicoil S68XL (SC) pull type, 100ft, 1600gal, pro 600, autoboom....41,900 2003 Flexicoil S67 (SC) 90ft, 1500 gal tank, suspended boom, autoboom.....26,900 2005 Brant 4000 (SC) pull type, 1600gal, 100ft, 9000 monitor, cones.....$19,500 2007 NH SF216 (LL) 100ft, 1600 gal tank, chem eductor...............17,500 2006 Ag Shield (SC) pull type sprayer, 100ft, suspended boom, GPS, auto height, 1250 imp gal............................................................................$16,900 1988 Flexicoil S65XL (SC) pull type, 1200gal, 100ft, auto-rate, 3-way nozzle body...$4,500
COMBINES 2009 CIH 9120 (SA) lat tilt, c/w 2016 pu header, 900 hrs.......$265,000 2007 CIH 7010 (SC) 1550 rotor hrs, 800 singles, chopper, lat tilt, AFX rotor...$187,000 2004 JD 9760 (SA) duals, shedded, c/w 914 pickup header.......$182,000 2009 CIH 7088 (SA) lat tilt, AFX rotor, 800 tires, straw chopper........$180,000 2005 CIH 8010 (LL) 1500hrs, new feeder floor, top sieve...................$142,000 2004 CIH 8010 (SA) fine chopped, y&m, 900 tire, c/w 2015- 16ft pu header...$135,000 2004 CIH 2388 (LL) AFX rotor, chopper, hopper topper, lateral tilt, c/w swathmaster pu.............................................................................$134,900 2004 JD 9660 (SA) jobber duals, michels topper, y&m, new feeder chain, c/w 914 pu hdr.............................................................................................$120,000 2004 CIH 2388 (SC) 2110 rotor hrs, topper, chopper, c/w 2015 swathmaster...$115,900 2005 CIH 2388 (SC) chopper, y&m monitor, 2904 hrs, 2321 rotor hrs....$89,500 2000 CIH 2388 (SC) hopper topper, outback steering, c/w 1015 pu, 2069 hrs, 1543 rotor.....................................................................................$78,500 2002 CIH 2388 (SC) chopper, hopper topper, specialty rotor, 2500 hrs, 1900 rotor hrs..............................................................................................$74,500 1999 CIH 2366 (SC) 3659 hrs, 810 pu header, w/25ft honeybee hdr....$48,500 1997 NH TR98 (SC) new rub bars, concaves, top seive.................$47,500 1995 CIH 2188 (SC) topper, specialty rotor, new accelerator, chopper, newer tires, 2976 rotor hrs.................................................................................$39,500 1996 NH TR98 (SA) c/w pickup header, new rear tires...........................$32,500 1987 CIH 1680 (SC) rear beater, hopper extensions...............................$22,000 1987 CIH 1680 (SC) new bushings, c/w 810 pu header with melrow pu, 4098 hrs...$15,000
Lloydminster (306) 825-3434 800-535-0520
Estevan (306) 634-4788 866-659-5866
w w w . r e d h e a d e q u i p m e n t . c a
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
61
W W W. M E DA L L I O N - H O M E S . C A Modular Homes for Delivery Anywhere • Immediate Delivery • Homes available for fall delivery
THE MANSURA
1584 Square Feet (22’ x 72’) Q 8’ ceilings Q Insulation: R-20 walls and floors, Ceiling - R-40 Q 10 year warranty Q 25 year fibreglass shingles Q 2” x 6” walls Q maintenance free vinyl lap siding and metal fascia Q 100 amp service
Allegiance Floor Plan
THE WESTHILL TUDOR Q 8’ ceilings Q Insulation: R-20 walls and floors, Ceiling R-36 Q 10 year warranty Q 25 year fibreglass shingles Q 2” x 6” walls Q Maintenance free vinyl lap siding and metal fascia Q 100 amp service Q Natural Gas Furnace
Medallion Homes Mfg.
1520 Square Feet (20’ x 76’)
Westhill Tudor Floor Plan
Inc.
Prince Albert, SK
1-800-249-3969 kent.medallion@sasktel.net
Titan Truck Sales Box 299 MacGregor, MB R0H 0R0
204-685-2222 2007 IH 9400I
2005 IH 9400I
435 HP ISX Cummins, 13 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 4:11 gears, 224” WB, 72” mid-rise bunk, 1,214712 KM.
$
24,000
2009 PETERBILT 388
450 HP Cummins ISX, 18 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 3-way diff. locks, 3:55 gears, 244” WB, 63” midrise bunk, 1,145,366 KM.
$
49,000
2010 INTERNATIONAL LONESTAR
Cummins ISX 475 HP, 13 SP, 3:73 gear ratio, 12000 lbs front, 40000 lbs Rear, 22.5” aluminum wheels, 244” wheel base, 3-way differential locks, 819,866 KM.
$
65,000
2007 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA
475 HP Cat C15, 13 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 224” WB, 72” midrise bunk, 3:73 gears, 1,394,203 KM.
515 HP Detroit, 18 sp, 12 front super 40 rear, 4:11 gears, 4-way diff. locks, 22.5” alloy wheels, 209” WB, 800,487 KM.
$
$
22,000
2009 KENWORTH T800
525 HP Cummins ISX, 18 sp, 12 front super 40 rear, 4-way diff. locks, 196” WB, 410 gears, 22.5” alloy wheels, 866,438 KM.
$
59,000
40,000
2007 IH 9400I
www.titantrucksales.com 2007 INTERNATIONAL 9200I
Cummins ISM 410 HP, 13 SP, 4:33 gear ratio, 12000 lbs front, 40000 lbs rear, 22.5” aluminum wheels, 220” wheel Base, 51” mid-rise bunk, 1,174,848 KM. Manitoba Safety Certification available at time of purchase.
$
22,000
2007 INTERNATIONAL 9900I
475 HP Cummins ISX, 18 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 244” WB, 3:73 gears, 3-way diff. locks, mid-rise bunk, 1,321,515 KM.
$
37,000
2010 PETERBILT 388
435 HP ISX Cummins, 13 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 4:11 gears, 222” WB, 72” mid-rise bunk, 1,219,321 KM. Manitoba.
$
24,000
550 HP Cummins ISX, 18 sp, 12 front super 40 rear, 3-way diff. locks, 410 gears, 22.5” alloy wheels, 244” WB, 63” midrise bunk, 806,334 KM.
$
72,000
2009 IH PROSTAR
485 HP Cummins ISX, 18 sp, 12 front 46 rear, 170” WB, 430 gears, 218,305 KM.
$
55,000
2007 INTERNATIONAL 9900I
475 HP Cummins ISX, 18 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 244” WB, 3:73 gears, 3-way diff. locks, mid-rise bunk, 1,113,501 KM.
$
37,000
2007 PETERBILT 387
430 HP Cat C13, 13 sp, 12/40, 3:55 gears, 22.5” alloy wheels, 238” WB, high-rise bunk,975,608 KM.
$
29,000
62
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
GREENLIGHT T RUC K & A U T O
2012 DODGE RAM 3500 LARAMIE 2011 FORD F350 LARIAT DIESEL 6.7L DIESEL MEGA CAB, DUALLY Y L 6.7 EL S E I D
L FUL DED A O L
LEATHER SUNROOF NAVIGATION, 55KM
JUST IN!
2 TO CHOOSE FROM!
2006 DODGE RAM SLT
WOW 6.7L DIESEL WITH NAVIGATION LEATHER PST PD
2 TO CHOOSE FROM!
LY FUL DED A O L
NEW STOCK
LY FUL DED A O L
DIESEL PST PD 6.7L 4X4 CERTIFIED
T MUSEE S
NOW
$18,995
2010 FORD F150 FX4
LEATHER SUNROOF 5.4L 4X4 126KM PST PD
E SAV $ $$
LEATHER SUNROOF NAV 5.7L HEMI 127KM 4X4
$33,995
STARTING FROM
$29,995
PST PD 4X4 6.4L LEATHER SUNROOF NAVIGATION, MINT! 5,000KM ON NEW ENGINE
2 TO CHOOSE FROM!
MEGA CAB 4X4 PST PD ONLY 58KM
L 6.7 EL S E I D
2008 FORD F350 LARIAT DIESEL LY FUL DED A LO
NEW STOCK
2010 DODGE RAM 2500 SLT
FX4 WITH LEATHER AND PLATINUM ALSO AVAILABLE
NOW 3 TO CHOOSE FROM!
CREW CAB DIESEL, SUNROOF, NAV DVD,126KM PST PD
$42,995
2012 FORD F150 XTR ECO BOOST
5.9L CUMMINS 4X4 AUTO, LOADED 290KM PST PD
WAS $21,000
2011 DODGE RAM 2500 LARAMIE
LY FUL DED A LO
LY FUL DED A O L
2010 DODGE RAM 2500 LARAMIE
$35,995 $29,995
2011 FORD F350 KING RANCH E SAV $ $$
6.7L 4X4 PST PD LEATHER SUNROOF NAVIGATION
2011 FORD F250 LARIAT
$39,995
2 TO CHOOSE FROM!
2006 FORD F150 XLT
LOADED PST PD 4X4 ONLY 78KM
T MUSEE S
MUST SEE
View ALL INVENTORY ON-LINE www.GreenlightAuto.ca
$17,995
Call FINANCE HOTLINE 306-934-1455 2715 FAITHFULL AVE., SASKATOON, SK. SERVING SASKATOON & AREA FOR OVER 25 YEARS
WARMAN HOME CENTRE
w w w. w a r m a n h o m e c e n t re . c o m
CATTLE SHELTERS
Material
Material & Labour
30x36
$4,915
$7,615
30x48
$6,095
$9,695
30x60
$7,230
$11,730
30x72
$8,425
$13,825
30x84
$9,565
$15,865
30x96
$10,725
$17,925
READY TO MOVE HOMES
CUSTOM BUILD TO OUR PLAN OR YOUR PLAN
GREAT PRICES, EVEN BETTER SERVICE Size
3¼ x 6 Doweled ........................$3.70 3¼ x 7 Doweled ........................$4.97 4¼ x 6 Doweled ........................$5.30 4¼ x 7 Doweled ........................$6.40 1x6 - 8’ Spruce Rough Cut.........$2.00
Barb Wire, 12-1/2 gauge Canadian ......... $87.99
Delivering homes ON TIME to happy customers in Sask., Alta., and Man. for over 25 years MT. BLANCHARD
Size 16 ft. Walls
Materials (Coloured Walls)
Material & Labour
Size 16 ft. Walls
Materials (Coloured Walls)
Material & Labour
32x48x16
$12,465
$19,915
32x48x16
$12,750
$20,700
40x56x16
$16,220
$24,845
40x56x16
$16,310
$25,435
40x64x16
$17,670
$27,520
40x64x16
$18,170
$28,525
48x80x16
$24,945
$39,725
48x80x16
$24,800
$40,085
48x96x16
$29,270
$47,010
48x96x16
$28,140
$46,380
60x120x16
$43,525
$71,965
60x120x16
$41,995
$70,935
PACKAGES INCLUDE: •29 Gauge #1 Colored Metal Walls and Galvalume Roof •1 Large Sliding Door •1 Steel Walk-In Door OPTIONS: •Other Sizes and Wall Heights Available •Windows •Overhead Door South Railway Street West, Warman, Sask.
Phone 306-933-4950 Toll F ree: 1-800-667-4990
DL#311430
SALE PRICE
175,000
$
HOUSE NAME MT CHAPMAN MT BLANCHARD MT ROBSON MT VANIER MT MICHENER MT FOSTER MT COLUMBIA MT RAE MT FOSTER MT DOUGLAS MT RAE MT ASSINIBOINE MT DOUGLAS MT WHITMORE MT DALHOUSIE
SQ. FT. 1712 1296 1443 1680 1644 2144 1341 1319 1702 1254 1319 1393 1267 1710 1650
PRICE $189,991 $191,285 $161,715 $222,083 $200,425 $376,264 $152,174 $151,000 $229,528 $142,000 $139,367 $164,432 $140,314 $217,087 $207,516
SALE PRICE $183,143 $175,000 $155,943 $215,363
FOR MORE HOMES AVAILABLE NOW SEE OUR WEBSITE OR CALL FOR DETAILS
WWW.WARMANHOMES.CA Toll-Free 1-866-933-9595
HOURS:
Mon.- Fri., 7:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Sat., 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
JOB 1206 1217 1259 1275 1306 1310 1329 1350 1371 1355 1369 1364 1372 1367 1382
SASKATCHEWAN
NEW HOME WARRANTY
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
CLASSIFIED ADS 63
SELLING: BLACK ANGUS bulls. Wayside COMPLETE DISPERSAL of approx. 120 Angus, Henry and Bernie Jungwirth, head of 1 iron home raised 3-7 yr. old fancy Hereford cows. Must sell as 1 pkg., very 306-256-3607, Cudworth, SK. quiet, good udders and feet. $1750/head. 44 BRED BLACK ANGUS HEIFERS, Bred Red Angus June 23 to Aug. 23rd. great quality Black Angus heifers bred to Take delivery mid-Nov. Reputation herd. well suited black Angus bull. Preg. checked 403-378-4893, Patricia, AB. Sept. 11, due Mar. 25. Located in Kipling, SK. Call 306-540-7080 or 306-736-8894.
RED ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, semen tested, guaranteed breeders, delivery available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com 3- COMING 2 YEAR old bulls, growth and quality, calving ease, semen tested. Little 60 BRED COMMERCIAL Cattle White Face Dominant, Hereford influence. The de Ranch, 306-845-2406, Turtleford, SK. genetics you need for the cattle you want! Some straight Hereford, Hereford Angus cross, H1 Commercial BWF and BBF, young and middle age. Due to start calving April. REGISTERED PUREBRED BRAUNVIEH A l l va c c i n at i o n s , I vo m e c a n d p r e g bred cow and bred heifer, bred to a Reg. checked, $1675 and up. Call and see Purebred Braunvieh bull for spring 2014, calves on these cows! Sheldon Archibald, SS Cattle Co., Irma, AB., 780-754-2850, $2500/ea. 780-887-0664, Camrose, AB. sscattle@telus.net YORKTON EXHIBITION ASSOCIATION 25th Annual Harvest Showdown Commercial Cattle Show and Sale, Oct. 31 and Nov. 1, Yorkton Exhibition Grounds, Yorkton, SK. Pens of 3 and 5 bred heifers POLLED 2 YEAR old and yearling Charolais from some of the top commercial herds in bulls, some Red Factor. Kings Polled the province will sell at 4:00 PM, Nov. 1st. Charolais, 306-435-7116, 306-645-4383 or For more info contact Yorkton Ex. Assoc. 306-645-2955, Rocanville, SK. FRESH AND SPRINGING heifers for sale. 306-783-4800 or yorkton.ex@sasktel.net Cows and quota needed. We buy all class12 PB HEIFERS, AI bred to LT Ledger or es of slaughter cattle-beef and dairy. R&F Kaboom, natural bred to JCAV49Z, No Livestock Inc. Bryce Fisher, Warman, SK. Doubt Grandson. Also 4 PB red factor Phone 306-239-2298, cell 306-221-2620. COMPLETE HERD DISPERSAL of 540 cows. Will keep until December. Call Don Black Angus bred cows for sale. Calve May Railton 306-727-4927, Sintaluta, SK. 1st. Full vaccine program. Strict culling program. Average age is 5. 306-295-7990, BIG ISLAND LOWLINES Premier Breeder. Eastend, SK. or travis.invis@gmail.com Selling custom designed packages. Name REGISTERED ANGUS COWS mostly 2-5 60 COWS BRED Angus and Shorthorn; 40 your price and we will put a package toyears old. Both black and red available, 2nd calvers bred Dexter; 25 heifers bred gether for you. Fullblood/percentage Lowgood feet, udders and disposition. One Dexter; 80 Dexter bull and heifer calves. line, embryos, semen. Black/Red carrier. Darrell 780-486-7553, Edmonton, AB. group bred for Jan./Feb. calving and an- 403-845-5763, Rocky Mountain House, AB. o t h e r g r o u p b r e d fo r A p r i l . E m a i l brandl@mcsnet.ca Phone 780-954-2599, www.brandlcattleco.com Jarvie, AB. CANADIAN MAINE-ANJOU ASSOCIATION. BLACK ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, se- GENUINE GENETICS GALLOWAY SALE, Power, performance and profit. For info on men tested, guaranteed breeders, delivery November 23. View: LiveAuctions.TV Call Maine-Anjou genetics. Call 403-291-7077, Calgary, AB., or www.maine-anjou.ca available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, Russell 403-749-2780, Delburne, AB. Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com 18 REGISTERED BLACK Angus cows, start 3 BRED GALLOWAY cows (2, 4, and 5 yr. calving April 1, 2014. Asking $1300/ea. old) each with May born calves at side. SHORTHORNS FOR ALL the right reasons. One bred heifer. All bred to Galloway bull. 204-428-3625, Portage LaPrairie, MB. Raised on grass, no grain, birth unassisted. Check out why and who at website BIRCHAM RANCH BRED HEIFERS sell- Pure Galloway but not registered. $6500 www.saskshorthorns.com Secretary 306-577-4664, Carlyle, SK. ing at the Yorkton Harvest Showdown for all. 306-419-9051, Watrous, SK. Commercial Cattle Show and Sale, Nov. HILL COUNTRY CLASSIC 8th Annual 1st at the Yorkton Exhibition Grounds, Shorthorn and Speckle Park Sale. Selling Yorkton, SK. One pen of 3 black brockles, 35 Shorthorn lots, herdsire prospect, heifone pen of 3 straight blacks, one pen of 5 calves and bred heifers. One pkg. of 5 blacks. All bred Black Angus and due MATERNAL EDGE - GELBVEIGH Influ- er commercial bred heifers, bred March 2014. Complete herd health and fall enced Female Sale: Open and bred fe- Shorthorn Park. Matlock Stock Farm, October processing. For more info Wayne Birchman males. November 30th, 12:00 noon at VJV Speckle 27th, 2013, 1:00 PM CST. Jct. of 675 and 306-558-4514 wayneerin50@hotmail.com Ponoka, AB. For info phone 780-718-5477. 774, 1/2 mile east. For more info contact Bouchard Livestock at 403-813-7999 or 60 BLACK ANGUS HEIFERS, bred July 8 Creta Haydock at 780-522-9350. View to August 22, to 69 lb. BW Black Angus www.bouchardlivestock.com for catalogue bulls, preg checked, full herd health proand video or www.matlockshorthorns.com gram, $1500. Laventure Ranch 306-948-2326, Biggar, SK. PUREBRED SHORTHORN FEMALES for sale, heifers and cows. Reds, Roans and 10 BRED ANGUS heifers: Daughters of Whites. Call 306-442-2090, Radville, SK. Coneally Thunder, BC Eagle eye, Wildfire, Emblazon and our herd bull. All heifers bred to Soo Line Motive 2068. Due starting mid Jan. Also a few select regist e r e d o p e n h e i fe r s a n d b r e d c o w s SIMMENTAL COWS AND CALVES selling at available. Call Garry at Ravenworth Cattle V&V FARMS SHARE THE HERD SALE Viking Auction Mart, October 24. Featuring 306-231-7567, Middle Lake, SK. Saturday, November 23, 11:00 AM at the Reds, Blacks, and Fleckviehs. Papers Redcliff, AB. Complimentary lunch available. Call 780-336-2209 or Dale PUREBRED BLACK ANGUS long yearling farm, Selling 300 head- bred mature and 780-853-2223. bulls, replacement heifers, AI service. served. yearling and the 2013 bull and Meadow Ridge Enterprises, 306-373-9140 heifer calffemales crop. For info. contact: Vern and or 306-270-6628, Saskatoon, SK. Vivienne Pancoast 403-548-6678, Kirk HERD DISPERSAL: 100 Bred 3-8 yr. old Hurlburt 306-931-2551 or Don Savage PLAN TO ATTEND the 3rd annual Western Black Angus cows to start calving Apri Auctions 403-948-3520. The video of all Elite Speckle Park Sale, Sat. October 15th. 306-248-7405 days or 306-845-2263 sale cattle will be online at www.dlms.ca 26, 1:00 PM at Notta Ranch, Neilburg, SK. Featuring purebred heifer calves and bred Catalogue at www.donsavageauctions.com eves., no call after 10 PM, St. Walburg, SK. females. Also Speckle Park influence prospect females and steers. For catalogues or more info. contact Jason Goodfellow 306-893-4620; John Herbert 306-893-4096 or T Bar C Cattle Co. Ltd. at 306-933-4200. PL #116061, View the catalogue online at: www.buyagro.com Watch and bid online at: www.dlms.ca ALL BREEDS PRESORT Calf Sale: Featuring Speckle Park and Speckle Park Influence. Wed., Nov. 6 at 8:30AM at Heartland Livestock Ltd., Lloydminster, SK. To book calves in call Doug Heath at Heartland the day prior to the sale at 306-821-6668. For information contact Doug or John Herbert at Heartland, 306-893-7520. CROWFOOT CATTLE CO. COMPLETE Red and Black Angus Dispersal, Nov. 29th and 30th at the ranch, Standard, AB. Broadcast live via TEAM. 450 cows with calves at foot, 150 bred heifers, herdsires, semen. “The Final Chapter”. Videos of sale offering and catalogue can be viewed at www.crowfootcattle.com Call Dallas at: 403-934-7597 or Chris 403-901-5045.
CWA SPECKLE PARK Sale, Wed. Nov. 13, at 4:30 PM. Featuring heifer calves, bred heifers, embryos and semen. For more info or a catalogue contact T Bar C Cattle Co. Ltd. 306-933-4200. PL #116061 View catalogue online: www.BuyAgro.com
THE D EC IS ION IS S TIL L B L A C K A ND W HITE! Farm fair International Edm onton,AB
80 CLEVER WAYS to cut corral costs and improve cattle flow plus 12 One-Man plans 120 diagrams. OneManCorrals.com 75 COMMERCIAL BRED heifers mostly black, bred Red Poll, $1450 whole lot or $1650 you pick. Can email pictures. 250-262-5638, Fort St. John, BC. FOR LEASE: 50 Black Angus cows. Please reply to Box 5588, c/o The Western Pro- DIAMOND J TRAINING is now taking bookings. Extensive knowledge in training ducer, Saskatoon, SK. S7K 2C4. and showing for cowhorses, ranch, cutting, HERD DISPERSAL: 125 Charolais and An- barrel, rope and colt starting. Ph Amos Abgus cows, young herd. Charolais bulls out rahamson, 306-661-8191, Maple Creek, SK June 1 to July 31. Can keep until Nov., QH BELGIAN GELDING, broke to drive, $1350. 306-882-3239, Rosetown, SK. $1000 or may consider trade. Also will 80 SIMMENTAL and Simmental Red Angus b r e a k h o r s e s t o d r i ve . C a l l o r t e x t H. S. KNILL TRANSPORT, est. 1933, spe- cross, start calving Mar. 1, bred Simmental cializing in purebred livestock trans- or Red Angus, will keep until after harvest. 306-814-0014, Preeceville, SK. portation. Providing weekly pick up and Call 306-762-4723, Odessa, SK. delivery service across Canada and the USA. Gooseneck service available in Onta- COMPLETE HERD DISPERSAL: 150 rio, Quebec and USA. US and Canada cus- Simm./Charolais/Red Angus cross bred toms bonded carrier. Call 877-442-3106, cows, bulls out May 22, gate run $1400, or fax 519-442-1122, hsknill@pppoe.ca or take your pick, $1450; Also 40 cross bred www.hsknilltransport.com 155 King Ed- heifers bred to Black/Red Angus, $1600. Bulls out on May 22. Good quality animals. ward St., Paris, Ontario, N3L 3E3. at Medstead, SK. For more info 109 RED/TAN SIMMENTAL cross, bred red Located Simmental, young herd, $1350. each. call 306-342-4626 or 306-883-9382. PANKO RANCH DISPERSAL: Selling 500 204-734-7038, Swan River, MB. bred Angus females and 20 herd bulls. SEE BIRCHAM RANCH BRED HEIFERS. Top genetics, reputation herd. Monday, Under Black Angus cattle, Heading #5010. December 16, 1:00PM Heartland Livestock DISPERSAL: 10 COW/CALF pairs for sale, in Swift Current, SK. Call 306-630-7911, s o m e b l a c k a n d s o m e r e d . C a l l www.pankoranch.com 204-326-1904, Steinbach, MB. HUSBAND PROMISED ME a calving barn, COMPLETE HERD DISPERSAL, 145 Simm. so I have to part w/some of my girls to cross Angus cows, average age 5.3 yrs. make it happen! 50 bred heifers for sale, Start calving Feb. 1st; Also 60 heifers bred Black, Angus/Angus cross heifers calving March 4 - May 24/2014 to calving ease Red Angus. Ph. 306-931-1256, Clavet, SK Angus bulls. Quiet, home raised, no 70 BLACK ANGUS cross bred heifers. Bred brands. Full herd health program. Will be to easy calving Black and Red Angus. Calv- preg checked and given Dectomax in Nov. ing April 1. Home raised, $1500. Call Ian Entire group or gate run $1500/head, se306-246-4544, Richard, SK. lected from group $1650/head. 10% derequired to hold until Nov. Call Susan 60 BRED HEIFERS, black and red bred posit or cell 780-656-0880, NewBlack Angus. Bulls in June 25, preg 780-576-3300 brook, AB. c h e c ke d . $ 1 4 5 0 e a c h , t a ke s a l l . 306-682-3717, Guernsey, SK. 40 ANGUS COWS, mainly Black Angus bred Black Angus for May/June calving. Can COMPLETE DISPERSAL of approx. 120 keep until November, asking $1600 per head of 1 iron home raised 3-7 yr. old fan- cow OBO. 204-247-0388, Roblin, MB. WWW.ELLIOTTCUTTINGHORSES.COM cy Hereford cows. Must sell as 1 pkg., very 35 plus years of training, showing, sales, quiet, good udders and feet. $1750/head. 20 RED and 20 Black heifers, had 1 calf, of- clinics, lessons. Clifford and Sandra Elliott, Bred Red Angus June 23 to Aug. 23rd. fers. Phone 306-283-4747, Langham, SK. Paynton, SK. Phone 306-895-2107. Take delivery mid-Nov. Reputation herd. 403-378-4893, Patricia, AB.
Available at:
South West Terminal Ltd. Gull Lake, SK
(306) 672-4112
www.dseriescanola.ca
RK AN IM AL S UPPL IES - Be o n ta rget, Us e the p ro d u cts en d o rs ed b y the p ro fes s io n a ls . RK & S UL L IV AN S UPPL IES C a ll fo r d e ta ils a n d a fre e c a ta lo gu e
1-8 00-440-26 9 4. w w w .rka n im a lsu pplies.co m
WANTED: CULL COWS for slaughter. For bookings call Kelly at Drake Meat Processors, 306-363-2117, ext. 111, Drake, SK. DO CUSTOM CATTLE FEEDING, backgrounding, also bred cattle. 403-631-2373, 403-994-0581, Olds, AB.
55 RED/BLAZE SIMM. cross Angus cows, HORSE SALE, JOHNSTONE AUCTION calving Feb/Mar. Can feed until Dec. 15 or Mart, Moose Jaw, SK., Thursday, Nov. 7, 2013. Tack Sells: 2:00 PM; Horses Sell: sell you hay. 306-699-2317, Qu’Appelle, SK 4:00 PM. All classes of horses accepted. 60 BLACK ANGUS/SIMMENTAL bred 306-693-4715, www.johnstoneauction.ca heifers, some white faces, bred to Reg. PL #914447. Black Angus bulls, July 1 - Sept 30. Choice $1550, take all $1500. 306-842-5055 or HORSE AND TACK Sale, Friday, October 25, Heartland Livestock, Prince Albert, SK. 306-861-0753, Weyburn, SK. Tack at 5:30 PM. Horses to follow. Contact 16 YOUNG COWS, bred to Charolais bull, Brennin at 306-981-2430 for more info. will preg test, Offers. 306-826-5675, CANDIAC AUCTION MART Regular Horse Lloydminster, SK. Sale, Sat., Nov. 2nd. Tack at 10:30, Horses 95 RED ANGUS/SIMMENTAL COWS, at 1:30. Each horse, with the exception of bred Simmental, very good quality. Come colts must have a completed EID. Go to and see with calves on. Can pasture until the website candiacauctionmart.com to Oct. Call 306-327-4550, Kelvington, SK. get the form. For more info contact 306-424-2967. 60F-1 HOME RAISED Red Angus fleck Simmental heifers bred Red Angus. Calving Apr. 20th, avg. BW on bulls 69 lbs. The sisters to a highbred bull production pro- BLACK PUREBRED REGISTERED Arabian gram for MC Quantock. Call Harv Veri- mare, 10 years old, approx. 15 HH, broke, shine, 306-283-4666, Langham, SK. all shots and deworming up-to-date, 400 YOUNG Black and Red Angus bred $1100 OBO. 306-485-7485, Alameda, SK. c ow s , m o s t ly 2 n d a n d 3 r d c a l ve r s . Available October 1st. 306-773-1049, Swift Current, SK. MINIATURE DONKEYS, males and feBRED COWS FOR SALE. 306-488-2103, males. 306-483-7964, Frobisher, SK. Holdfast, SK.
HWY
21
Feeders
W ANTS TO BUY YOUR CATTLE DIRECT
Agribition,Regina,SK
HILL COUNTRY CLASSIC 8th Annual Shorthorn and Speckle Park Sale. Selling 26 Speckle Park lots, heifer calves, bred heifers, bred cows, and commercial heifer calves. One pkg. of black commercial bred heifers bred Speckle Park. Matlock Stock Farm, October 27th, 2013, 1:00 PM CST. Jct. of 675 and 774, 1/2 mile east. For more info contact Bouchard Livestock at 4 0 3 - 8 1 3 - 7 9 9 9 o r C r e t a H ay d o c k at 780-522-9350. View or catalogue and video at www.bouchardlivestock.com for www.matlockshorthorns.com
LOOKING TO LEASE to own 100-200 Red WANTED: HALFLINGER MARES or fillies, Angus or Red Angus cross cows. Email me b r o k e t o d r i v e w o u l d b e g r e a t . at cattleranch_7400@hotmail.com 780-688-2224, Holden, AB.
50 BRED COWS, Red Angus and Red Angus/Simmental cross, due to start calving Feb. 20th, $1550 or $1475 take all. 306-323-2090 or 306-322-7220 eves., Archerwill, SK.
S ho w a t4:00 p.m . No ve m b e r 6th, 2013
NATIONAL SHOW & SALE a t9:00 a .m . & Na tio n a l S a le a t4:3 0 p.m No ve m b e r 13 th, 2013 S a le c a ta lo gu e a tw w w .b u ya gro .co m THE CANADIAN SPECKLE PARK ASSOCIATION Offic e a t403 -946-463 5 w w w.ca na d ia ns p ecklep a rk.ca
MARES IN FOAL to Alberta sires, well broke to drive. 306-561-7823, Davidson, SK.
TEXAS LONGHORN And RANCH HORSE Fall Select Sale, Saturday, Nov. 16th, 1:00 PM, Crossroads Centre, Oyen, AB. On offer: Reg. cattle including heifer calves, bred heifers and cows, bull calves. Commercial cattle including trophy steers, bred cows and bred heifers bred to Longhorn or Shorthorn bulls. Crossbred Longhorn heifers bred Longhorn. Also good ranch broke horses. For info. or catalogs contact: Ron Walker 403-548-6684 or 403-528-0200. walkersu7texaslonghorns@gmail.com TEXAS LONG HORN Herd Dispersal: Happy Campbell, Rafter U Ranch, 60 head Texas Long Horn cow’s, bred to Long Horn bull’s. Available November 2013. Please contact Bill Campbell 403-379-2155 evenings or 403-866-2155 (cell), Buffalo, AB.
•N o co m m issio n s • N o tru ckin g co sts •N o so rtin g fo r gen d er n eed ed •Flexible w eigh co n d itio n s • O ptio n o freta in ed o w n ersh ip • Pu rch a sin g fro m 4 w estern pro vin ces C ALL S C OTT@ 403 546 -2278 EX T. 1 27 GOOD QUALITY Hereford influence heifers. Preg checked. Erwin Lehmann, 306-232-4712, Rosthern, SK. BRED YEARLING HEIFERS, red and black Angus cross. Exposed from June 14 to Aug. 14th to easy calving bulls. Your choice $1700; 50 or more $1650 or $1600 for all 90. Ph 204-683-2208, St. Lazare, MB
THE LIVERY STABLE, for harness sales and repairs. Call 306-283-4580, 306-262-4580, Hwy #16 Borden Bridge, SK. METAL CARTS- 1” tubing, seats 2, motorcycle wheels and detachable shafts, $550. 306-561-7823, Davidson, SK. GEORGE’S HARNESS & SADDLERY, makers of leather and nylon harness. Custom saddles, tack, collars, neck yoke, double trees. www.georgesharnessandsaddlery.com Call 780-663-3611, Ryley, AB. SANTA CLAUS CUTTERS, bobsleighs, buggies, miniature buggies or wagons, all new or completely rebuilt. Call 306-483-7964, Frobisher, SK. ONE SET OF chrome parade harness, 1400 to 1800 lbs., new condition, $2500. Call: 780-363-2216, Chipman, AB.
EAMOR MODEL 60. Must be seen! Asking $2500. Phone 306-278-7509, Porcupine Plain, SK.
SHEEP AND GOAT SALE, Sat., Nov. 9th, 1:00 PM, Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, SK. Accepting all classes of sheep and goats. Sheep ID tags and pre-booking mandatory. www.johnstoneauction.ca 306-693-4715. PL #914447. SPECIAL PRE-SORT SHEEP, Lamb and goat sale, Friday, Oct. 25 at 11 AM. Heartland Livestock, Prince Albert, SK. All sheep and goats must be delivered Thurs. by 6 PM for sorting. Contact Brennin at 306-981-2430 AMARETTO MINIATURE HORSES, top for more info. quality registered. 403-948-7080, Airdrie, AB. www.amarettominiaturehorses.com RIDEAU ARCOTT EWES purebred and cross for sale. For more info. call BLACK OVERO, PALOMINO overo and solid Charolais black APHA mares, bred back to top 306-228-3065, Unity, SK. quality APHA stallions. 306-845-4440. Spruce Lake, SK. TOP DORPER RAM LAMBS for sale. Email us at cunningham@bcinternet.net 2- REGISTERED MARES, black, R Bar Three Hills, AB or phone 403-443-2640. breeding, 9 and 10 yrs old, not bred, had 3 sets of foals. 780-679-0608, Camrose, AB. COMPLETE DISPERSAL OF small flock of Dorset all season breeding ewes. 3 yrs and REG. 2010 BAY FILLY by He’s A Standout younger. 306-743-5471, Langenburg, SK. by Straw Fly Special, Dam is By I Take Time. Will have speed to run barrels, $850. 403-527-8560, Medicine Hat, AB. FLOCK DISPERSAL: 194 cross ewes, 2-6 Bay 10 year old AQHA GELDING, 15.2 HH, yrs. old, $245 each. 50 ewe lambs, $165. ranch horse deluxe, $7500. Other horses All dewormed and vaccinated. 6 rams, 2 guard dogs and equip. Pkg. deal available. available. 403-701-1548, Strathmore, AB 306-236-4578, Meadow Lake, SK. HERD REDUCTION OF top quality AQHA broodmares. Working bloodlines. Bred 100 EWES OUT of flock of 300, Clun Forback to Palomino and Perlino stallions. est, Canadian Arcott, and Dorset crosses, ages 1-4, $180. 306-845-2404 Livelong SK 306-845-4440, Spruce Lake, SK.
64 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
CLUN FOREST FLOCK DISPERSAL plus NORHEIM RANCHING HAS a full line of North Country Cheviot/Blue Face Leicester high quality livestock handling equipment at discount prices. 20’ of continuous steel cross ram lambs.306-784-3370 Herbert SK fence only $120! Gates; free standing panels; loading chutes; bunks; self unloading hay trailers, etc. 306-227-4503 Saskatoon, SK. www.norheimranching.com NH 359 MIXMILL, power bale feeder, shedded, $5500. 80 bu. hopper wagon, $650. 306-731-7657, Lumsden, SK. HIGHLINE BALE PROCESSOR 6800, exc. HIGH PERFORMANCE Olibs cross Ile de condition, used very little, $5950. Call France ram lambs for sale, top 5% selected 204-748-8303, Elkhorn, MB. from an accelerated lambing system, high health status flock, out of season breeding, carcass quality and bone structure. Volume discounts and partial delivery available. Thistledown Farms, Swan River, MB, 204-281-1885. RAMBOUILLET/POLYPAY CROSS: 100 ewes, mostly 3 to 4 yrs; Also 130 ewe lambs. $150. 306-246-4468, Richard, SK. PUREBRED ICELANDIC SHEEP for sale: Registered and unregistered. Rams, Ewes and ewe lambs. Ask for Erika, 306-823-4482, Neilburg, SK.
RENN 1380 MIXER/FEEDER wagon, 4 augers, chain discharge, weigh scale, 1000 SHEEP DEVELOPMENT BOARD offers PTO, spare rebuilt planetary gear box, very extension, marketing services and a full good condition, $18,000. Phone Leon l i n e o f s h e e p a n d g o a t s u p p l i e s . 780-387-5450, Millet, AB. 306-933-5200, Saskatoon, SK. 1000 - 5800 gal. livestock trough systems, FDA/Food grade approved polyethylene. 306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228. While supplies last. www.hold-onindustries.com GREG’S WELDING: Free standing corral BUYING WILD BOAR pigs/swine for 20 panels, windbreak panels, calf shelters, years, all sizes. 1-877-226-1395. Highest belting troughs, etc. Many different styles $$$. www.canadianheritagemeats.com to choose from. Call for pricing, delivery available. 306-768-8555, Carrot River, SK. JD 550 TA manure spreader, $5500; NH 795 manure spreader, $7250. Both field ready. Call 204-525-4521, Minitonas, MB. PHEASANTS, WILD TURKEYS; Chuckars 250 JIFFY BUNK feeder with scale, 1000 and Bobwhites. Pickup only. Dirt Willy PTO, good shape, $6500. 780-853-2275, Gamebird Farm, Rick at 780-983-4112 cell Vermilion, AB. Ardrossan, AB. www.dirtwilly.com ARROW FARMQUIP LIVESTOCK handling solutions. Solar West. Port. windbreaks. Custom built panels and gates. Phone EXOTIC BIRD and Small Animal Sale at 1-866-354-7655, Mossbank, SK. Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, SK, YOUNG’S EQUIPMENT INC. For your Sunday, October 27th, 11:00 AM. Accept- livestock feeding, cutting, chopping and ing peafowl, guineas, bantams, ducks, handling headquarters. 1-800-803-8346. geese, pigeons, birds, llamas, alpacas, hamsters, rabbits, ferrets, miniature hors- SVEN ROLLER MILLS. Built for over 40 es, donkeys, etc. All small animals must be years. PTO/elec. drive, 40 to 1000 bu./hr. boxed and in yard before 10:00 AM. Example: 300 bu./hr. unit costs $1/hr. to 306-693-4715, www.johnstoneauction.ca run. Rolls peas and all grains. We regroove and repair all makes of mills. Call Apollo PL #914447. Machine 306-242-9884, 1-877-255-0187. www.apollomachineandproducts.com 2009 NDE MODEL 2804 vertical mixer, twin screw, 1200 cu. ft. capacity, used 3.5 years, 6 loads/wk., always shedded, paid $80,000, sell for $50,000. 780-961-3512 or 780-619-4427, Morinville, AB.
YOUNG’S EQ U IPM EN T IN C. BROWN AND WHITE Lohman Layers, ready the last week of October. Excellent hearty birds, white $9, brown $9.50. Also taking orders for June, 2014. Call: 306-225-4446, Hepburn, SK.
3 WHITE TAIL bucks, approx. sizes are 180, 170 and 150. Pictures available on request. Call 306-764-7320 Prince Albert, SK
LENIUS HANDLING SYSTEM; Elmer 9000 self-contained squeeze; 12’ posts; 8’ wire 300’ and 400’ rolls; Paxar tranquilizer rifle; Australian stock still; Variety of gates; 20’ and 30’ grain troughs made w/conveyor belts and pipes. 306-862-5207 Nipawin SK ATTENTION ELK PRODUCERS: If you have elk to supply to market give AWAPCO a call today. No marketing fees. Non-members welcome. info@wapitiriver.com or 780-980-7589. NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for over 15 years, is looking for Elk. “If you have them, we want them.” Make your final call with Northfork for pricing! Guaranteed prompt payment! 514-643-4447, Winnipeg, MB.
FOR ALL YOUR LIVES TOC K FEED IN G , S P R EAD IN G , C H OP P IN G AN D H AN D LIN G N EED S . W E C AR R Y FAR M AID , H AYBUS TER & N D E.
Ca ll K evin o r Ro n
1-8 00-8 03 -8 3 46 w w w .yo u n gs eq u i pm en t.co m
GERMAN SHORT-HAIRED Pointer puppies. Parents are excellent hunters and pets. Ready to go early Nov. Pups have first shots, tails docked, dewclaws removed, $700. 306-628-7973, Leader, SK.
MORAND INDUSTRIES Builders of Quality Livestock Equipment, Made with Your Safety in Mind!
1-800-582-4037 www.morandindustries.com CATTLE SHELTER PACKAGES. Packages 30’x36’, materials $4935 or $7635 material and labour. For info call 1-800-667-4990, www.warmanhomecentre.com
Ta king Delivery on a ll
OR GANIC CER EAL GR AINS ,
PORTABLE PANELS 30’ freestanding 3bar windbreak frames, 5-bar, 4-bar panels w/wo double hinge gates and more. On farm welding. Oxbow, SK., 306-485-8559, 306-483-2199.
FEED GR AINS ,
STEEL VIEW MFG: 30’ portable wind breaks, HD self-standing panels, silage/ hay bunks, feeder panels. Quality portable p a n e l s at a f fo r d a b l e p r i c e s . S h a n e 306-493-2300, Delisle, SK.
P EAS AND FLAX.
FROSTFREE NOSEPUMPS: Energy free solution to livestock watering. No power required to heat or pump. Prevents backwash. Grants available. 1-866-843-6744. www.frostfreenosepumps.com SEVERAL METAL GRAIN and bale selffeeders. Selling online- Hodgins Auction Oct 24-30th. 780-787-0056, Minburn, AB.
SIMPLE & RELIABLE Toll Free
1-866-843-6744
S P ELT, N ew Eleva to r Lo ca tio n s in Prela te, S K & Cu lro ss, M B.
• Energy-free watering • Works well summer and winter • Cost effective
www.FrostfreeNosepumps.com
RED BORDER COLLIE PUPS, born Oct. 5, good working parents, guaranteed to work, 1 male, 4 females, $450 each. Cell/text 306-774-6647, Success, SK. BORDER COLLIE PUPS, out of very good working parents, ready to go. Phone: 306-843-7606, Wilkie, SK.
Precision Ag Services Inc. Carnduff, SK
(306) 482-4343 www.dseriescanola.ca
3 06 -6 52-4529 (AB a n d SK) 204-9 56 -209 0 e xt 427 (M B) w w w .g ios i.c om USED MOTOROLA VHF 2-way radios, 1 year warranty, small, exc. shape, $250. Also new Vertex radios. Antennas and radio repairs. Phone Glenn, Future Communications, 306-949-3000, Regina, SK. www.futurecommications.ca
M&M ORGANIC MARKETING is buying milling oats and the following feed grains: wheat, flax, oats, peas, soy beans, lentils, barley. 204-379-2451, St. Claude, MB.
SUN HILLS RESORT at Lake of the Prairies, only 40 minutes East of Yorkton, SK. Lots selling now! Starting at $56,000, fully serviced! Phone 306-597-4660 or visit www.sunhillsresort.com LAC DES ISLES- 5 acre treed lake lot, $295,000. 2 acre lot, $125,000 near boat launch. Adjacent to Meadow Lake Prov. Park area. $10,000 down, remainder due Jan 1. 306-373-4808, loiselh@msn.com
ESTATE: GRAND FORKS, BC. For sale or WANTED CERTIFIED ORGANIC grass fed rent 3 bdrm., 2 bath house, hardwood M E D A L L I O N M F G H O M E S , h o m e s slaughter beef. Peter Lundgard, Nature’s floors, attached garage, large riverfront lot available for fall delivery, competitive prices. Call to view at: 306-764-2121, Prince close to downtown. Info 250-443-9142. Way Farm, 780-338-2934, Grimshaw, AB. Albert, SK., www.medallion-homes.ca THE SUNRISE ON MURRAY LAKE! Located just 20 mins. north of North Battleford. Lot prices from $105,900 for lakefront to as low as $52,900 for lakeview. Potable water, power, nat. gas, and phone. MLS®. Trent Lipka, Re/Max Saskatoon, 306-222-0716, t.lipka@sasktel.net
2003 NDE 801 vertical cutter mixer feeder w/extended conveyor, not used for last 4 years. 306-937-2952, Battleford, SK. 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. GRAIN TROUGHS, 30’ c/w skids, made of conveyor belting and pipe, $700/each. 306-538-4685, 306-736-7146 Kennedy, SK FREESTANDING WINDBREAK PANELS, up to 30’, made from 2-3/8” oilfield pipe. Square bale feeders, any size. Can build other things. Elkhorn, MB. 204-851-6423, 204-845-2188, 204-851-6714. MALE SEEKING FEMALE companion between 55-70 years. Old fashioned values. 2009 LUCKNOW 2270 mix wagon, excel- Willing to relocate. Photo and ph. number lent cond., $38,000 OBO. 306-647-2649 or please. Reply: Box 5589, c/o The Western 306-621-0956, Theodore, SK. Producer, Saskatoon, SK. S7K 2C4. PAYSEN LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT INC. We manufacture an extensive line of cattle handling and feeding equipment including squeeze chutes, adj. width alleys, crowding tubs, calf tip tables, maternity pens, SINGLE? WINTER IS the perfect time to gates and panels, bale feeders, Bison fall in love and hibernate with someone! equipment, Texas gates, steel water Meet the Matchmaker! In-person intertroughs and rodeo equipment. Distributors views October 23 and 24th in Regina and for Cancrete concrete waterers, El-Toro Saskatoon. 19 years successful matchmakelectric branders and twine cutters. Our ing. Call to book your appointment: squeeze chutes and headgates are now Camelot Introductions, 204-888-1529 available with a neck extender. Phone www.camelotintroductions.com 306-796-4508, email: ple@sasktel.net WANTED QUALITY BACHELORS. Check website: www.paysen.com o u t m y c o u n t r y l a d i e s p r o fi l e s a t www.countryintroductions.com or call Cheryl at 1-877-247-4399.
WINTER WATERING: FREEZE proof, motion eye, 24”/36” drain back bowl. Call toll free 1-888-731-8882, Lumsden, SK. MOCCASINS/ MUKLUKS, many colours Or visit: www.kellnsolar.com and styles. AJ Shoe Renue, Confederation Mall 306-683-0835, Saskatoon, SK. GREAT SHAPE 21’ right-handed collapsible Hi-Hog S-alley, w/2 rolling doors, plus cat walks; also assorted tub panels and load-out panels. Call 403-321-0359 or 403-321-0448, Hussar, AB.
FEED WAGON LUCKNOW 525, 525 cu. ft., 1000 PTO, 3’ two auger discharge, hyd. raise/lower discharge, 2 scale heads w/liners, $18,000 OBO. 306-476-7747, CANADA ORGANIC CERTIFIED by OCIA Canada. The ultimate in organic integrity Rockglen, SK. for producers, processors and brokers. Call BOER/KIKO AND/OR SPANISH cross buckRuth Baumann, 306-682-3126, Humboldt, lings, $250 each. Also 5 yr. Spanish buck SK, rbaumann@ocia.org, www.ocia.org $400. 204-737-2207 eves., St. Joseph, MB. PRO-CERT ORGANIC CERTIFICATION. PUREBRED ALPINE GOATS for sale: 2 Canadian family owned. No Royalties! Ph. billies and 1 doeling. Ask for Erika 306-382-1299 or visit www.pro-cert.org 306-823-4482, Neilburg, SK. 75% AND HIGHER Boer or Kalahari cross bucks for sale, $350 each. Call Marlis at 306-872-4442, Naicam, SK. WANTED: ALL WHEATS, malt and feed barley, feed oats, feed peas, brown and golden flax, spelt. For fast delivery and immediate payment, please call today SILVER STREAM SHELTERS. Super Fall AQUA THERM A pasture proven trough. Growers International 306-652-4529. Fabric Building Sale. 30x72 single black Winter water problems? Solved! No elecsteel, $4700; 30x70 double truss P/R, tricity required. 3 sizes - 100, 200 and 525 BUYING ORGANIC WHEAT- Nutrasun $6995; 38x100 double truss P/R, $11,900; ga l l o n . Ke l l n S o l a r, L u m s d e n , S K . Foods is buying Organic Wheat for our flour mill in Regina, SK. Ph. 306-751-2040. 42x100 double truss P/R, $14,250; 12-1/2 1-888-731-8882, www.kellnsolar.com oz. tarp, 15 year warranty. Trucks running BUYING ORGANIC BROWN and golden w e s t w e e k l y, d e l i v e r y a v a i l a b l e . GRAIN TROUGHS 20’ and 30’, made with flax, rye and other grains. CGC bonded. conveyor belts and pipes. 306-862-5207, Payment on the driveway. 204-665-2384, 1-877-547-4738. silverstreamshelters.com Cal@Vandaeleseeds.com Box 144, Medora 450 CATTELAC SILAGE wagon, 3 augers, Nipawin, SK. shedded, very good cond., $18,000. CATTLE SQUEEZE, c/w palpation chute MB. R0M 1K0. 306-877-2014, 306-877-4402, Dubuc, SK. and auto head gate, $1200; Speedrite WANTED: BUYING ORGANIC grains. FOB 357 NEW HOLLAND MIXMILL, good condi- electric fencers and solar panels, rea- farm or delivered, Loreburn, SK. Prompt sonable offers. 306-834-8100, Major, SK. tion. 306-488-2103, Holdfast, SK. payment. Call 306-644-4888.
Available at:
Fo rcu rren tprices a n d d elivery d a tes ca ll
BEST COOKING PULSES accepting samples of organic and conventional green/yellow peas for 2013/2014 crop year. Matt 306-586-7111, Rowatt, SK See us at AgriTrade Nov. 6th-9th and Agribition Nov. 11th-16th
AUSTRALIAN SHEPHERD PUPS from working parents, blue and red merles, black tri’s and bi’s, $400. 306-782-5852, Yorkton, SK. FIVE PUPPIES! Ready to go. Dad Purebred Australian Shepherd, Mom is a Heeler. Good farm dogs! 306-725-4510, Bulyea SK 2 MALE PYRENEES PUPS, first shots, dew o r m e d , v e t c h e c ke d , $ 2 0 0 O B O . 306-656-4445, 306-230-2499, Harris, SK. KUVASZ/PYRENEES: born March, raised around calves and lambs, 3 males and 1 female. 403-502-9470, Medicine Hat, AB. GREAT PYRENEES PUPPIES, good working parents, will deliver or meet part way. 306-965-2603, Coleville, SK.
FOR TENDER: Winterized 1200 sq. ft. cabin, attached single garage, 3 bdrm, 6 GIVE AWAY YOUR snow shovel, retire to appliances, air, built in 2009. For more Comox Valley, Vancouver Island, BC. Call: info call 306-682-4820 or 306-231-5340, email: lyzanne@sasktel.net Bids must be 250-334-7253. submitted by Nov. 20/13. All bids over $305,000. considered, but not necessarily accepted. Greenwater Provincial Park, SK. CEDAR LOG HOMES AND CABINS, sidings, paneling, decking. Fir and Hemlock 20 MINUTES EAST OF REGINA, 24 acres flooring, timbers, special orders. Rouck at service road exit off #1 Highway, com- Bros., Lumby, BC, www.rouckbros.com mercial development potential, $975,000. 1-800-960-3388. M L S # 4 6 7 2 6 6 . S h i r l ey M a c F a r l a n e , Realtor®, Exit Realty Fusion, 306-536-9127, Regina, SK. View at: www.shirleymacfarlane.com FORMALLY THE MOSSBANK Noodle Factory, 7500 sq. ft. commercial building with adjoining Atco trailer office. Three phase power, large water supply, boiler, large lot included, Mossbank, SK. 306-476-2501. THE RM OF BAILDON #131 is requesting tenders for the following property for sale: Part of SW-28-15-26-W2 Parcel B Plan 74MJ12734 Ext 0. Surface Parcel Number: 104296619. Parcel Size: 0.809 hectares (2.00 acres). Site Description: RM of Baildon No. 131 Administration Office/Workshop and yard. Zoning: Country Commercial. Highest or lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. For more info, please contact the R.M. office at 306-693-2166. Please return your tender by 4:00 PM, Nov. 1, 2013 to the undersigned. Council, RM of Baildon #131, P.O. Box 1902, Moose Jaw, SK. S6H 7N6. WARMAN HOMES CUSTOM built commercial buildings, to your plan or ours. Call 1-866-933-9595 or www.warmanhomes.ca
LAKEFRONT THUNDER LAKE, west of Barrhead, AB. Full-time luxury home or family retreat. Attached front garage and boat house MLS®31942. Listed by Janet Kuehn Re/Max, 780-706-9670, Whitecourt, AB.
WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to go! Mt. Robson, 1443 sq. ft. was $161,715. Sale price $155,943. Call 1-866-933-9595, www.warmanhomes.ca
R E A D Y TO M O VE H O M E S
REGISTERED GERMAN SHEPHERD pups, working bloodlines, hip guaranteed, tattooed, dewormed, shots, black, grey, black and tans, ready Nov. 20th. 306-236-4678, Meadow Lake, SK.
LASSIE BORDER COLLIE pups, 6 males, 3 females, great pets and great with children, very gentle, ready to go October 21, born Sept. 8, $100 OBO. Ph. Brendon 306-225-5720, Osler, SK.
A re you plan n in g to b u ild a h om e in 2 01 3. W ood C ou n try w ill b u ild you a R T M or a cu s tom b u ilt h om e on s ite to m eet you r requ irem en ts . W ood C ou n try prid es its elf on b u ild in g top qu ality h om es w ith a h igh level of cu s tom er s atis faction s in ce its in ception in 1 980.
C all L eigh at 306 -6 9 9 -7284 Ce rtifie d Hom e Builde r
M cL ean , S K .
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
RANCH IN NORTHERN B.C. 3 quarter sections plus grazing lease, w/another 6 quarters plus buildings adjoining if buyer wishes. 250-719-0343, 250-719-8006, Dawson Creek, BC.
SUPER DEAL! ENERGY efficient 3 bdrm. home in Fort Qu’Appelle, SK. View pictures and information at: shaverauction.com Phone 306-332-5382. TO BE MOVED. 1963 bungalow with 2 car att. garage, 1300 sq. ft., main floor fully renovated, 2/3 hardwood floor. Selling with stove, fridge, furnace, water treatment system, hot water heater and sewage pump, asking $80,000. Call 306-338-7114, Clair, SK. WARMAN HOMES. LOTS for sale in Langham, SK. or Warman Legends or Southlands. www.warmanhomes.ca to view or call 1-866-933-9595. MEDALLION MFG HOMES, the Westhill Tudor, 152 sq. ft. (20’x76’). Competitive prices. To view call: 306-764-2121, Prince Albert, SK., www.medallion-homes.ca WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to go! Mt. Vanier, 1680 sq. ft. was $222,083. Sale price $215,363. Call 1-866-933-9595 or go to www.warmanhomes.ca REAL ESTATE AUCTION, November 1, 2013 at Weyburn Travelodge at 10:30 AM. This farmland is located 14 miles straight south of Weyburn on Hwy #35. Two quart e r s e c t i o n s , N W- 3 3 - 5 - 1 4 - W 2 a n d SW-4-6-14-W2. Features include an old farm house, mature trees, certified organic land and currently used mostly for wheat and oats. Soil association is Brooking Clay Loam and the soil class is G. Three surface leases are available but are not included in this sale. Plan now to attend and visit w w w. c e n t u r y 2 1 . c a / h o m e t o w n o r w w w. l a c k e y a u c t i o n s . c o m o r c a l l 306-842-1516 for more info. PL #915482. PRIVATE, QUIET, CUL-DE-SAC bungalow, low maintenance, 3 bdrms, 3 bthrms, attached garage. All amenities. Lethbridge, AB. 403-328-3935 or 306-384-7359. HOUSE FOR SALE by tender in Denzil, SK. 1800 sq. ft., 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, attached single car garage. Closing bids on Dec. 1, 2013. Must be moved off property. Contact James at 306-358-4323 or Ron at 306-358-4332. 1925 EATON HOUSE two storey for sale to be moved, always lived in, complete plumbing, some renos done, but still 90% original $20,000 OBO. 306-287-7928, Quill Lake, SK. WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to go! Mt. Blanchard, 1296 sq. ft. was $191,285. Sale price $175,000. Call 1-866-933-9595, www.warmanhomes.ca MEDALLION MFG HOMES, comp. prices, turnkey opps. Rocanville, SK. subdivision now open. Blair or Bette, 306-842-2627 or 306-421-4229, www.medallion-homes.ca HOUSE FOR SALE BY TENDER. 108 Martin St., Pangman, SK. 1064 sq. ft., 4 bdrm bungalow with 2 baths. Built in 1976 with concrete basement. Central AC, water heater and storage shed, no appliances. Viewing of the house available by appt., call 306-442-2020. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Written, sealed tenders will be accepted until 5:00 PM, Thursday, Nov. 14, 2013 at the Pangman Co-op, Box 190, Pangman, SK., S0C 2C0. 1365 SQ. FT. BUNGALOW with full basement suite, large double garage, huge lot. Built 1976. Located in town with grocery, bar, school, restaurants, fuel, arena. Newer furnace, water tank, windows, flooring. Ug sprinklers. All appliances. $153,000. 306-679-7117, Burstall, SK.
TO BE MOVED: 1977 remodeled 14x70 Fleetwood mobile home w/7x11 factory built living room addition. 3 bdrms, 2 baths, shingled roof, metal skirting, Supreme low E windows, asking $15,000 OBO 403-935-4582, Wheatland County, AB MUST SELL! A well built spacious 16x36’ addition for a mobile home, must be moved, $12,000 or will trade. Pictures available. 306-554-3235, Wynyard, SK. 1992 SHELTER INDUSTRIES 16x60 to be moved, 3 bdrm, 1 bath, some renos done, great starter home. Appliances included, asking $29,000 OBO. 780-789-2555, Thorsby, AB. 1978 GRANDEUR ELITE mobile home, 14x76, new floor, nice kitchen, 2 bdrm, big living room, washer/dryer, new furnace in 2005. Call 306-560-8145, Wynyard, SK. MOBILE HOMES, why not a manufactured home? Factory PRO exclusive 10 yr. warranty. 306-764-2121, Prince Albert, SK. www.medallion-homes.ca SMART SPACIOUS STYLISH! At a great price. New modular showhomes in all shapes and sizes. Immediate delivery. Call 1-855-380-2266, craigshomesales.com MEDALLION HOMES 1-800-249-3969 Immediate delivery: New 16’ and 20’ modular homes; Also used 14’ and 16’ homes. Now available: Lake homes. Medallion Homes, 306-764-2121, Prince Albert, SK. 1976 MOBILE HOME, 14’x64’, for removal, 3 bdrm, 1 bathroom, 200 amp. service, elec. furnace, 3 appliances incl., $11,000 OBO. 306-861-5168, Yellow Grass, SK.
CLASSIFIED ADS 65
Available at:
Blair’s Fertilizer Limited Watrous, SK
(306) 946-3150 www.dseriescanola.ca 12X54’ HOUSE TRAILER, 2 bdrm., elect heat, furnished, stove/fridge, stackable washer and dryer, good for lake, hunting cabin or summer employees, $6000 OBO. Can move. 306-642-4916, Assiniboia, SK.
READY TO MOVE HOMES
Completely customized to your ideas. Visit our homes on site! You order it, we’ll build it.
306-370-3870 or scott@laserconstruction.ca
READY TO MOVE SHOW HOME. 1594 sq. ft. Front overhang for deck, deluxe cabinets, stone front, vault, tiled shower. Taking orders for 2014. Swanson Builders, (Saskatoon, SK. area) 306-493-3089, www.swansonbuilders.ca
TIMESHARE VACATION for sale, Las Vegas 2 bedroom w/full kitchen. Selling due to health. 306-453-2958, Carlyle, SK.
LAKE HAVASU CITY, AZ. REAL ESTATE! Inexpensive warm winter homes. Dave Chambers, 928-846-1443, Re/Max Prestige Properties, findlakehavasuhomes.com ON THE GREENS COTTONWOOD, AZ. Gated 55 plus manufactured home golf course community located in the heart of Verde Valley just 20 mins south of Sedona, 1 hr from Phoenix, Prescott and Flagstaff. All homes come complete with garage, covered deck and landscaping. Land lease fees include $1 million clubhouse, large indoor lap pool, hot tub and complete gym. Also includes water, sewer, trash pickup and reduced golf fees. For information call 1-800-871-8187 or 928-634-7003.
MEDALLION MFG HOMES. We offer competitive prices and turnkey opportunities. Call: 306-764-2121, Prince Albert, SK. View us online: www.medallion-homes.ca
VANCOUVER ISLAND: 5 acre poultry farm. Poultry barn, 300’ long, 2 storey, clear span. Also landscape supply and composting operation. Turnkey. Seller retiring. Serious inquires. 250-246-7681, Duncan, BC.
SECTION OF LAND by Jarvie, AB. Three quarters pasture 468.75 acres, good fences, good water (dugout and spring). One quarter cultivated, 176.5 acres, approx. 120 acres open, got 9.6 ton silage per acre (no fertilizer), has power, gas, well, stock waterer, dugout, fenced. Yardsite ready. 780-646-6132, Lcnorrie@gmail.com RANCH FOR SALE in Northern Alberta, 160 acres, great area to raise cattle, horses or sheep. 1600 sq. ft. house, 40x60 heated shop, misc. other outbuildings. 500,000 gal. dugout/water system, new 100’ deep well, drilled in 2008, feeds corral and house. 780-672-0337, High Level, AB.
309 ACRES RIVER bottom land, 1.6 km Skeena shore line, lush pastures, hay fields, barns, fantastic mountain views, 2900 sq. ft. rancher, successful B&B, $850,000. Hazelton, BC. Ph 250-842-5400, www.trakehnerhof.ca
RED DEER / SYLVAN LAKE, 125 acres on blacktop, 10 min. from city on Burnt Lake Trail, prime location for new yard development, $6000/acre firm. 403-575-1146.
BREATHTAKING RANCHERS HOME
On 3+ acres located 7.5 km from Red Deer. Over 3450 sq. ft., 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, log features, large master suite - all with excellent views. Also attached 2 car garage & workshop area plus another oversized 2 car detached garage all on a well treed private lot. MANY MANY EXTRAS!!
Bob Wilson
RE/MAX real estate central alberta 403-782-4301 bpwilson@remax.net albertafarmland.com QUARTER OF LAND in Dunvegan, AB. 1600 sq. ft. home. Stables with riding arena attached, large bale shed. Fenced and crossfenced for cattle, horses, sheep. 780-835-2709. 298.76 ACRES all cultivated farmland 2.5 miles east of Tofield, AB. on 626. Good #2 soil, no bush, no stones, very flat, annual s u r f a c e l e a s e r e ve n u e $ 3 2 0 0 . M L S MH0013867. Southland Realty, call Len Rempel 306-741-6358, Medicine Hat, AB BEAUTIFUL RECREATIONAL QUARTER w/yard, borders Clearwater River plus creek, west of Red Deer; Large cattle property, 2 homes, lots of water, good yard, surface lease income, exclusive; Ranch and grain property west of Edmonton, approx. 400 cow/calf and approx. 2500 acres. Have buyers for large farm properties, very confidential. Call if you are thinking of selling. I specialize in agricultural properties. Don Jarrett, Realty Executives Leading, 780-991-1180, Spruce Grove, AB. TITLED (DEEDED) W1/2-06-88-21-W5th, located 35 miles NW Peace River area, in District of Reinwood. 35 min. from Peace Pulp and 35 min. Peace River, AB. Yardsite consists of spruce and aspen, ample supply of water and community dugout. Power in yard, gas available. 135 acres cult. excellent soil, grain canola, grasses and legumes, asking $217,000. 780-219-3420. A L B E R TA L A N D : I D 1 0 0 1 3 7 a n d ID100138, Irrigated crop land near Hays, 3 parcels together totaling 370 acres, $39,500 annual surface lease revenue. Mature treed yard, 1400 sq. ft. bungalow. #2031, Very private! Brooks, AB. 162 acres, irrigation, 2626 sq. ft. home with 1235 sq. ft. suite attached, landscaped. #2067, Broiler Breeder Farm, Edmonton, AB., 18,131 units quota. ID100116, approx. 320 acre irrigated crop farm near Taber with extensive set of buildings, feedlot (older), 2 homes, surface revenue. ID100120, approx. 290 acres irrigated farm land with surface revenue, share sale, SW of Tilley. #1898, Starter farm Iron Springs, AB, 78.32 acres, irrigation, vacant dairy, heated shop, 1800 sq. ft. home and more. ID100139, Great starter crop farm, 320 acres flood irrigated land with gated pipe, good set of buildings, just off Hwy #36 west of Scandia. #2025, Irrigated crop farm Vauxhall, AB, with a complete set of buildings. 147 acres, 115 acre water rights. #2055, 398.44 acres prime irrigated land, Vauxhall, AB, 17,000 bu. steel grain bins, 96’x40’ quonset, 1150 sq. ft. home. #2065, Large irrigated crop f a r m , Picture Butte, AB. 928 acres. #2013, Large hay and crop farm, Lethbridge, AB. 964 acres, 2 homes, very private, river frontage. Real Estate Centre, w w w. f a r m re a l e s t a t e . c o m o r c a l l 1-866-345-3414. VALLEYVIEW, AB AREA. Two bison ranches. Half section connected and one section in a block. Fenced for bison, paige wire and steel posts. Both w/homes. Bison and equipment optional. 780-523-9676 or 780-524-4084.
.L[ [OL 7V^LY
80 ACRE ACREAGE, scenic view. Country home for your family, horses and pets. Washer/dryer, fridge, deep freeze, stove dishwasher and microwave. Well maintained buildings, new log fence around the home. Excellent outbuildings, heated double garage w/guest room, sauna and small carpentry shop. Quonset good size for RV and yard tractors. All equipment necessary for acreage maintenance- tractors, mowers, rototiller, ATV and more incl. Indoor training arena, great for ‘starting’ horses. 20 mins. East of Olds, AB. MLS C3570693. $649,900. For more details call Marie 403-443-1450 or Gary 403-852-3326, MaxWell South Star Realty. RANCHLAND 1/2 SECTION titled land with a building site, water well, power and septic. 6 quarters leased grazing land. Asking $495,000. MLS® 31646. Janet Kuehn, Re/Max, 780-706-9670, Whitecourt, AB. FOR SALE: Quarter section, Valleyview/ Sunset House, AB area. Bush quarter paradise for hunters. More info. 780-524-8413 YELLOWHEAD COUNTY: 320 acres Deeded, plus 160 acres Leaseland, all adjoining and fenced. NW and NE-8-55-9-W5, 12 miles NW of Wildwood, AB. Contact 780-621-7700 or 780-325-2522. EQUESTRIAN CENTER: 25+stall barn, indoor riding arena, conference center w/complete kitchen, office and washroom facilities, full quarter, 2 residents. Located between Sylvan Lake and Rocky Mountain House, AB off hwy. #11. Endless opportunities, this facility could be many things, $850,000, quick possession. Call Ann Craft, Coldwell Banker 403-357-8628. AGRICULTURAL LAND FOR SALE, 2880 acres on Hwy. #23, beautiful mountain view, lots of water (3 artesian wells and large creek). Private sale, brokers welcome. Call Don 403-558-2345, Brant, AB. suzannedepaoli@yahoo.com
LAND FOR SALE IN GRAVELBOURG RM #104- NE10-12-06-W3rd new assess 71,300; SW06-12-06-W3rd, new assess 70,200; GLENBAIN RM #105NE-01-12-07-W3rd, new assess. 64,500; NE-23-11-07-W3rd, new assess. 74,800; NE-14-11-07-W3rd, new assess. 72,400; SE-23-11-07-W3rd, new assess. 65,500; NE-34-10-07-W3rd, new assess. 72,400; SE-34-10-07-W3rd, new assess. 65,600; SW-34-10-07-W3rd, new assess. 41,200; NW-34-10-07-W3rd, new assess. 70,100 less yard; 11 acres acreage on NW34-10-07-W3rd, 64,900. Please submit tenders to: ‘Meyer Tender’, Box 69, Lafleche, SK. S0H 2K0. Phone: 306-648-8181 or email: jasonmeyer@sasktel.net Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Tender closes Friday, November 15, 2013. RM 169: 1760 acres grain and pastureland. 306-773-7379, John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com 320 ACRES, 280 acres broken, fenced, 32x80’ barn, power, abundance of exc. well water, located between Canora and S t u r g i s , S K . O n e m i l e o f f # 9 H w y. $250,000. 306-548-4733. RM LEASK #464 - PRICE SLASHED! 319 acres w/250 acres in tame hay, balance is bush and natural pasture. This is quite a property with many rolling hills and is located just across the road from Iroquois Lake. Also started on this property is a large 3 storey timber framed house but still needs lots of work. There is also an older home with the yard and farm buildings. Endless possibilities. Must be seen to be appreciated. Motivated seller. Possibility of additional pasture. MLS® 472602. For viewing call Lloyd at Re/Max of the Battlefords 306-446-8800, 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK. RM 49: 960 acres of Native pasture, all adjoining. John or Joel Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., 306-773-7379, Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com HUDSON BAY, SK. Leaf Lake area: 3 adjoining quarters, prime hunting, marke t a b l e t i m b e r a n d p e at . N E , N W, SE-06-46-01-W2. Phone 250-427-6036.
RM 139: 6720 acre ranch, good set of buildings. Call 306-773-7379, John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com GRAINLAND FOR RENT in RM of Cana #214. 141 cultivated acres on 161 acres. Contact Robin Liu, 306-690-6786, Melville, SK. or robingliu@hotmail.com For details visit: www.JustinYin.com RM 49/51: 6720 acre ranch, set of buildings. 306-773-7379, John Cave, Edge Realty, Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com RM 45: APPROX. 4160 acre ranch. 2 yard sites. Full set of buildings. 306-773-7379, John or Joel Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com RM 18: 10,720 acre grain farm, full set of buildings. Call 306-773-7379, John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com RM LEASK: PRICE REDUCED- 1094 acres of remarkable pasture of which approx. 580 acres are seeded to tame hay. Balance is natural and bush pasture, with some harvestable spruce. The water supply is a dugout and small lake 30’ deep, fenced with 4 wires and treated post, plus 7 cross fences. MLS® 473297. To view call Lloyd at Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK. FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS We also specialize in: Crop insurance appeals; Chemical drift; Residual herbicide; Custom operator issues; Equipment malfunction. Qualified Agrologist on staff. Call Back-Track Investigations for assistance regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779. RM SPIRITWOOD #496 and RM Meeting Lake #466. This amazing 2988 acre ranch does have approx. 802 acres of cult. tame pasture. The balance is natural and bush pasture, mainly fenced with 4 wires, 2 sets of corrals, power, well, older house. There is a good supply of pasture water. The RM road runs through the centre of the property with pasture on each side and very easy to move cattle. This is also an amazing big game hunting area. For info on this in-house exclusive ranch property, call Lloyd Ledinski. I am in need of grain land in most of my trading areas. Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK. RM CANWOOD #494, 4 quarters, grain, pasture and hay, lots of water, 400 acres cultivated. On school bus route. Power on 2 sites. House, 2 large garages, grain storage on home quarter. Close to lakes and Parkland. 306-747-2775, Shellbrook, SK. RM 79: APPROX. 640 acres of grain land located North of Dollard, SK. John or Joel Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., 306-773-7379, Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com
FO R
S ALE
GRAIN FARM CLOSE to Estevan. Large home, second yard, hip roof barn, shop, quonset, prime land, approx. 3178 acres, organic status. #2064 MLS®. Ranch near Mankota, 4481 total acres with 1598 deeded and 2883 acres lease land ideal for summer grazing or wintering cattle. Ravines, streams, and great access. MLS® (offer pending). #2050. Contact Real Estate Centre, 1-866-345-3414, www.farmrealestate.com TWO QUARTERS FARMLAND, 250 acres in hay, cattle facilities for 300 head, grain storage, older house, garage, $350,000. 780-573-3181, 306-839-4613 evenings 8-10 PM. Located in Pierceland, SK. area. RM 155. PRIME well drained farmland, 1200 total acres, 1,000 acres cultivated 200 acres pasture and yardsite. 507,000 assessment. 2-1/2 storey brick home, 4 bdrms., 2 baths, large living/dining room, large modern kitchen w/island. New 160x104’ steel pole shed, 40x80’ machine shed, 40x100 arch rafter shed, lots of bins and corrals, Asking $1300/acre. Grenfell, SK. Call 306-697-2988 or 306-697-2901. RM OF BARRIER VALLEY #397. 7 quarters including home quarter with house and attached garage built in 2000, power, gas phone, well, shop, 30,000 bu. steel storage, pole shed. Assessment 479,800. All accessible from highway. 175 acres grass and pasture, plus 745 acres annual crop. Some fenced. 306-873-5426, Tisdale, SK RM 96: Approx. 320 acres Pasture with yard site. Selling by tender. John or Joel Cave. Edge Realty Ltd. 306-773-7379, Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com FOR SALE BY TENDER. RM Francis #127, 2 quarters, 320 acres, NE-34-16-13-W2 and NW-33-16-13-W2. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Tenders close Nov. 8, 2013. Send tenders to: Box 863, Indian Head, S0G 2K0. 306-695-2004. WANTED: GRAIN LAND TO RENT, 25 mile radius of Rouleau, SK. Call 306-776-2600 or kraussacres@sasktel.net RM PRINCE ALBERT #461, 719 acres, 13 miles South of Prince Albert. 1129 sq. ft. bungalow, 66x50x14 steel building, 60x42 steel quonset, 30x28x10 garage. Owner retiring. Also available full line of modern equipment and grain storage for negotiation. Phone Jeff Kwochka, Realty Executives, 306-280-6408, Saskatoon, SK.
21 QUARTERS GRAINLAND, west central Sask. Priced to sell. For more info phone 306-867-9495. MINERAL RIGHTS. We will purchase and or lease your mineral rights. 1-877-269-9990. cndfree@telusplanet.net
TH R EE G R EAT S AS K ATC H EW AN P R O P ER TIES
L a rge ra nch/pa s ture for s a le w ith a bea utiful hom e a nd ya rd . 7,991 tota l a cres , 750 cow /ca lf yea r round s elf s ufficient ca rrying ca pa city. N um erous ‘out’ build ings from Q uons ets to hea ted s hop, m a chine s hops , a nd ba rns . R.M . of O ld P os t, Rock G len, S a s ka tchew a n Field m a chinery a nd lives tock not includ ed , but a va ila ble. $4,100,000 E xcellent G ra in Fa rm 60 km s outhea s t of M oos e Ja w , S a s ka tchew a n. This 2,560 a cre property is lis ted a t a grea t price of 3 tim es the a s s es s ed va lue, genera ting a 15% RO I. The hom e q ua rter s ection ha s a good hom e, s hop, 110,000 s teel bins bus hel ca pa city. $3,250,000 C om bina tion crop fa rm a nd ca ttle ra nch for s a le in S outhern S a s ka tchew a n. 5,280 d eed ed a cres w ith ya rd s ite. 500 cow /ca lf yea r round s elf s ufficient ca rrying ca pa city or com bina tion crop ca ttle. L a nd currently rents a t 5% RO l, or genera tes 15% RO l on crop la nd . $3,500,000
P L EAS E C AL L M AR C EL L EBL AN C AT ( 403 ) 3 50-6868 F O R IN F O R M ATIO N O N AN Y O F TH E 3 P R O P ER TIES L IS TED .
THINKING OF SELLING FARMLAND? FARMLAND WANTED! We have investors across Canada looking to buy farmland all over SASK. Single or large blocks of grain land or pasture. Rent back available. Call Farmland Agent Justin Yin 306-230-1588, justin.yin.ca@gmail.com. See our farmland solds at
-867,1 <,1 )DUPODQG $JHQW
www.JustinYin.com Sutton Group Norland Realty, SK
OUR RECENT FARMLAND SOLDS Central ............................52 1/4’s South East ......................20 1/4’s
East ................................78 1/4’s South West ..................... 49 1/4’s
>P[O JVUULJ[PVUZ PU TVYL [OHU JV\U[YPLZ ^VYSK^PKL W\[ [OL WV^LY VM [OL 9, 4(? IYHUK [V ^VYR MVY `V\Y JVTTLYJPHS PUK\Z[YPHS HNYPJ\S[\YHS PU]LZ[TLU[ VY PU[LYUH[PVUHS YLHS LZ[H[L ULLKZ ;V ]PL^ JVTTLYJPHS WYVWLY[PLZ VY ÄUK H 9, 4(? *VTTLYJPHS WYHJ[P[PVULY ULHY `V\ ,HJO VMÄJL PZ PUKLWLUKLU[S` V^ULK HUK VWLYH[LK ]PZP[ JVTTLYJPHS YLTH_ ^LZ[LYU JH
66 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
FOR SALE BY TENDER. RM of Manitou Lake, SW-35-45-26-W3. Call Vern McClelland, Re/Max Lloydminster 306-821-0611. Details at www.polkinghornetender.ca FOR SALE BY OWNER: approx. 640 acres, located RM of Preeceville. Incl. 3 bdrm house, 1276 sq. ft., w/attach. garage, nat. gas heating, central air, steel machine shed, steel grain bins, and more. Excellent location. 306-547-4681, Preeceville, SK.
C a ll Jim o r S h e rry to d a y
3 QUARTERS in the RM of Parkdale. 370 acres cultivated, includes 900 sq. ft. home, 13,000 bu. grain storage and 2 small shops. Mike Janostin Realty Executives at: 306-481-5574, www.mikejanostin.com Email mikejanostin@realtyexecutives.com
3 06 -46 3 -6 6 6 7 ®
G ro up W e s tR e a lty Kin d e rs le y, S K
w w w .kin d e rs le yre a le s ta te .co m RM 250: Approx. 320 acres Grain Land. John or Joel Cave, Edge Realty Ltd. 306-773-7379, Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com
THIS MIGHT BE your last crop, but the farm is your legacy. Rely on over 56 years of experience in Western Canada with Hodgins Auctioneers. Partner with us to ensure your assets are well managed and expertly auctioned. Contact Hodgins Auctioneers today to book a confidential on-site meeting and evaluation, and learn more about our unique farm auction program. 1-800-667-2075, Hodgins Auctioneer - Supporting farmers since 1957. PL # 915407. RM 126: Approx 640 acres pasture, full set of buildings. John or Joel Cave. Edge Realty Ltd. 306-773-7379, Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com
L OOK IN G F OR L AN D
GRAINLAND FOR RENT in RM of El Capo #154. 188 cultivated acres on 208 acres. 24.5 QUARTERS BETWEEN Saskatoon and Contact Robin Liu, 306-690-6786, Grenfell, Rosetown, SK. Priced to sell. For more info SK. or robingliu@hotmail.com For details visit: www.JustinYin.com call 306-867-9495.
LAND FOR RENT R M #157 S O U TH Q U ’APPELLE 25 m in u tes EastofRegin a, T ran s C an ad a H w y. For Grain Growing Purposes ONLY All land one block connected together. 1. NW 17-18-15 W2 2. NE 17-18-15 W2 3. SE 20-18-15 W2 4. SW 20-18-15 W2 5. SE 19-18-15 W2 6. SW 21-18-15 W2 7. NW 21-18-15 W2 8. SE 21-18-15 W2 9. NW 22-18-15 W2 Average seeded acres approximately 1234. Fertilized and continuous crop for the last 8 years. Taking offers for cash rent: 50% required by March 31, 2014 and the remaining 50% by November 15, 2014. All offers to be in writing by October 28, 2013. ADDITIONAL CONNECTED LAND: 1. SW 22-18-15 W2 2. NW 15-18-15 W2 121 Acres Same terms as above. Contact: Grant Wilson Box 14, McLean, SK S0G 3E0 E-mail: grantwilson@sasktel.net H: 306-699-7213 C: 306-699-7678 F: 306-699-2979
RM MONTROSE #315. NW-19-31-07-W3. DWEIN TRASK REALTY INC. RM of Rudy 142.7 acres for sale, fenced/hay, last cult. #284, all of Sec-36-30-06-W3, West of 2003, $850/acre. James at 403-901-7318 Hanley, SK. Approx. 590 acres cultivated, HUMBOLDT RM NO. 370, South of Pilger C.I. soil, Class L and M, FMV 255,000. Levon hwy. 20, 18 miles N of Humboldt, SK.: el and stone-free with renter available, NE portion 29-39-23 W2, 120 acres avail. $785,900. Call Dwein today 306-221-1035. for sale. Offers ending Nov. 30, 2013. Pur- RM 49: APPROX. 640 acres irrigation and chaser will have option to rent additional dry land with buildings. 306-773-7379, land. Contact Dennis 306-682-3626. John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd, Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com RM OF REFORD: 327 acres: 80 verified to have gravel, possibly more; 188 acres cul- RM 110/139: Approx. 1600 acres Pasture. tivated w/60 planted to wheat, remaining John or Joel Cave. Edge Realty Ltd. cultivated acres seeded to tame grass, bal- 3 0 6 - 7 7 3 - 7 3 7 9 , S w i f t C u r r e n t , S K . ance is partly fenced native pasture. 2300 www.farmsask.com sq. ft. bungalow built 1985. MLS®470122. GRAINLAND SW24-03-09-W2nd in RM of Call Wally Lorenz, Re/Max of the Battle- Estevan. Seven miles west of Estevan, off fords, 306-446-8800, North Battleford, SK. Hwy. #39, $160,000. 306-634-7949. www.remaxbattlefords.com 2 QUARTERS OF GRAINLAND FOR FOR SALE BY TENDER: Farm Land in RM of RENT in RM of Lipton #217. Robin Liu, Souris Valley, SK. #7: NW 12-02-14 W2 306-690-6786 or robingliu@hotmail.com (135 cult. acres) and SW 01-02-14 W2 For details visit: www.JustinYin.com (115 cult. acres). Tenders will be accepted on each individual parcel or both parcels together. The highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Only the successful bidder will be contacted. Tenders will be w /Aggrega te Potentia l accepted until noon on Nov. 15, 2013 and CENTRAL BUTTE, SK. 592 acres plus 31 In Sa ska tchew a n can be sent to: Bonnie J. Tytlandsvik, PO acres lease, 1880 sq. ft. bungalow, large Box 67, Tribune, SK. S0C 2M0. shop, quonset, double garage, great liveCa ll PO TZU S LTD. stock setup, over 1 mile steel corral panWANTED: LAND TO RENT in RM 261 els, gates, cattle squeeze, nat. gas, loads Phone: 30678274 23 Chesterfield or neighboring areas. Cono f w at e r, $ 5 5 9 , 0 0 0 . 3 0 6 - 7 9 6 - 4 4 1 0 , tact Francis Family Farms, Ryan Fa x: 306-786-6909 403-275-8008. Real estate offers welcome 403-391-1728, Bill 306-463-9103 or Chris 403-597-0366, Mantario, SK. E-mail: Em a il: info@ potzu s.com RM COUTEAU, W-1/2-35-24-08-W3. This ryan.francisfamilyfarms@outlook.com land is committed to irrigation which in3 QUARTERS OF HAYLAND/PASTURE volves an extra fee. Highest or any tender FOR RENT in RM of Weyburn #67. Call not necessarily accepted. Tenders close Robin Liu, 306-690-6786, Weyburn, SK. or October 26, 2013. Send tenders to: Box For details, visit: 26, Birsay, SK., S0L 0G0. Phone for info. 45 QUARTERS, mixed farm, good cattle fa- robingliu@hotmail.com. 306-858-2623. cilities, good modern home. Priced to sell. www.JustinYin.com More land available. Real Estate offers welcome 306-867-9495, west central SK.
3 QUARTERS GRAINLAND FOR RENT in RM of Colonsay #342. Call Robin Liu, 306-690-6786, or robingliu@hotmail.com Colonsay, SK. View at: www.JustinYin.com 2 QUARTERS OF FARMLAND for Tender. RM of Barrier Valley, west of Archerwill, NE-03-40-14-W2 and SW-11-40-14-W2, 320 acres, 265 cultivated, rest hay and pasture. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Deadline October 31, 2013. Send to: Gordon Formo, Box 485, LOOKING TO RENT LAND in RM of Grandview #349 or RM of Reford #379. Naicam, SK. S0K 2Z0, 306-874-2913. 306-658-4860, 306-948-7807, Biggar, SK.
REALTY EXECUTIVES BATTLEFORDSMike Janostin. Wanted: Grainland, pasture or bushland in SK, have cash buyers. Ph 306-481-5574, www.mikejanostin.com Email mikejanostin@realtyexecutives.com UPDATE: 2 QUARTERS farmland, RM Snipe Lake, SK. NW and SW quarters of 32-27-20-W3. Will sell as parcel or separately. Tenders open until Dec. 1, 2013. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Submit sealed tenders to: L. Clark, Box 944, Macklin, SK. S0L 2C0. Call: 306-753-2209. RM 184: Approx. 160 acres farm land. Phone 306-773-7379. John or Joel Cave, Edge Realty Ltd. Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com
L AN D F OR S AL E BY TEN DER RM #260 N ew com be
RM #259 S nipe L a ke
RM #290 Kindersley
N W -7-26-22-W 3 N E-20-25-22-W 3 SE-20-25-22-W 3 SW -20-25-22-W 3 N W -16-25-22-W 3 N E-24 -25-22-W 3 N W -24 -25-22-W 3 SW -35-25-22-W 3
SE-12-25-21-W 3 SE-12-27-18-W 3 SW -12-27-18-W 3 N W -1-27-18-W 3 SW -1-27-18-W 3 SE-1-27-18-W 3 SW -26-23-21-W 3 SE-26-23-21-W 3 N E-24 -23-21-W 3 N W -19-23-21-W 3
SE-34 -28-20-W 3 N W -27-28-20-W 3 N E-27-28-20-W 3 *RM #290 L a nd Inclu des a pprox. $33,092.50 of pipeline com pensa tion.
REPRESENTING %X\HUV DQG 6HOOHUV
7HG &DZNZHOO³Anin Expert the Field
³
NEAR ALSASK 3 Qtrs cu tl vi a ted w /ga s w ell. . $500,000 LUSELAND AREA 57 Qu a rters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $19 ,570,500 LUSELAND AREA 25 Qu a rters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6 ,8 8 5,000 LUSELAND AREA 6 Qu a rters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,3 9 5,500
RM MCCRANEY/LOST RIVER 6202 acres .MLS#459945...$5,550,000 RM ST. PETER 300 acres ...............................MLS#475294 ..$1,470,000 RM ST. PETER/SPALDING 627 acres .........MLS#475302...$1,155,000 RM SPALDING 640 acres S ...........................MLS#475296 ..$1,065,750 OLD HUDSON BAY 1436 acres .............................MLS#470573 ... $599,000 BARRIER VALLEY 319 acres..................MLS#454105...... $299,000 RM OF SPALDING 160 acres S ..............MLS#478072 ...... $267,500 OLD RM OF SPALDING 150 acresS ..............MLS#475300 ...... $262,500 OLD HAZEL DELL 308 acres ...............MLS#463971...... $220,000 PREECEVILLE 152 acres ............MLS#470141...... $180,000 PREECEVILLE 319 acres ...................MLS#470144...... $160,000 BARRIER VALLEY 160 acres ...........MLS#454681...... $150,000 PREECEVILLE 159 acres ................MLS#451628 ..... $119,000 BARRIER VALLEY 146 acres ........MLS#454111........ $89,000
Ted Cawkwell Agriculture Specialist
W ritten Tenders Accepted U nti l NO O N N ovem ber 6, 2013. G .H . S chw eitzer Enterprises L td. Box 222 Eston, S K S 0L 1A 0 Inqu iries to: G a ry S chw eit zer C ell: 306-962-7722 A 5% Depositw ou ld be requ ired w ithin 7 da ys of the a ccepta nce of tender. ForSa le in Pa rtorPa rcel. Highestora ny Tendernotnecessa rily a ccepted.
Thin kin g o fBuying o r Selling Fa rm La n d ?
Harry Sheppard 3 06 -53 0-8 03 5 e -m a il: h a rry@ s h e p p a rdre a lty.ca Vis it our w e b s ite : w w w .s h e p p a rdre a lty.ca
LAN D FO R S ALE RM # N ea res t To w n 34 Lampman 34 SO L D L a m p m a n 42 W illo w Bu n ch 66 SO L D Griffni 66 Creelm a n 68 Y ello w gra s s 68 & 69 Ra d ville 70 Ogem a 94 SO L D K is b ey 97 W eyb u rn 100 & 101 Avo n lea 127 Vi ba n k 127 T yva n 157 E d gel y 190 M o o s e Ja w 190 & 222 Cha m b erla in 216 I tun a 248 Cu p a r 221 & 251 Pen za n ce & L bi erty 275 T heo d o re 277 L ero s s
# o f Acres 318 960 1,361 623 199 479 960 1,022 1,887 626 1,653 629 479 445 1,600 1,043 1,586 1,029 1,596 2,352 730
ACREAG ES FO R S ALE RM # 34
S u tton G rou p-R E S U L TS R E A L TY - R egin a, S K
N ea res t To w n Lampman
# o f Acres 10
BLUE CHIP REALTY
1-306-327-7661 www.tedcawkwell.com email: ted@tedcawkwell.com
FARM LAND W ANTED • N O FEES • N O CO M M IS S IO N S
PURCHASING : S in gle to L a rge Blo c ks o f L a n d . P rem ium P ric es P a id w ith q uic k p a ym en t. FARM AND PASTURE LAND AVAILABLE TO RENT M a n y Referen ces Ava ila b le
SUM M ARY OF SOLD PROPERTIES Cen tra l...........................19 1 1⁄4’s S o u th...............................70 1⁄4’s S o u th Ea s t.......................31 1⁄4’s S o u th W es t......................6 5 1⁄4’s
N o rth..................................6 1⁄4’s N o rth W es t.......................12 1⁄4’s Ea s t..................................51 1⁄4’s
R EN T B ACK AVAIL AB L E
CALL DOUG 3 06 -9 55-226 6 Em a il: s a s kfa rm s @ s h a w .ca
FARM LAN D FO R S ALE BY TEN D ER
RM O F G ULL LAKE #139 JO HN S TO N FAM ILY FARM
L ega l To ta l Cu lt. Des criptio n : Acres : Acres : As s es s : S E 15-13 -19 W 3 Appro x. 158 Appro x. 118 59,200 Pa rto fNE 15-13 -19 W 3 Appro x. 13 5 Appro x. 75 48,900 Pa rto fNW 14-13 -19 W 3 Appro x. 150 Appro x. 105 58,200 S 1⁄2 o fNE 14-13 -19 W 3 Appro x. 78 Appro x. 78 3 7,500 ** S a le o f the pro perty is N OT s u b ject to Firs t Right o f Refu s a l Im pro vem en ts co n s is t o f: T he p ro p erty is a co m b in a tio n o fgo o d q u a lity fa rm la n d a n d fen ced p a s tu re. T he p a s tu re ha s a d u go u ta n d creek ru n n in g thro u gh it. T here a re m u ltip le o il w ells a n d a ls o a n o il b a ttery o n the la n d w hich gen era te a p p ro x. $55,000.00/yea r s u rfa ce lea s e reven u e. T he T ra n s Ca n a d a Highw a y, the #37 Highw a y, a n d the CP Ra il M a in L in e ru n a d ja cen tto a n d thro u gh the p ro p erty. **S u rfa ce lea s e reven u e n o tto b e a d ju s ted . Co n d itio n s o f Offers : 1. All o ffers to b e s u b m itted o n o r b efo re 3:00p m , Oct. 29, 2013, m a rked “ Jo hn s to n L a n d T en d er” to : Ed ge Rea lty L td . #122-12 Chea d le S t. W es t S w ift Cu rren t, S K . S 9 H 0A9 Attn : Jo hn Ca ve 2. All o ffers a re to b e a cco m p a n ied b y a d ep o s itcheq u e m a d e p a ya b le to “ E d ge Rea lty L td ” fo r 5% o fthe T en d ered a m o u n t. Bid d ers a re en co u ra ged to co n ta ctJo hn Ca ve a tjca ve@ s a s ktel.n et o r 306-773-7379 to o b ta in a b id d o cu m en t. T he b a la n ce o fthe p u rcha s e p rice is d u e w ithin 30 d a ys a fter a ccep ta n ce o fthe ten d er. E a ch p a rty is res p o n s ib le fo r their o w n lega l fees a n d clo s in g co s ts . 3. Ifthe s u cces s fu l b id d er d o es n o tco m p lete the p u rcha s e a fter a ccep ta n ce o ftheir ten d er the d ep o s its ha ll b e fo rfeited . T he s u cces s fu l b id d er w ill b e co n ta cted b y E d ge Rea lty L td . w ithin 5 b u s in es s d a ys o f the clo s e o ften d ers , to b e n o tified tha t their o ffer ha s b een a ccep ted , a n d a s ked to co m p lete a w ritten p u rcha s e a greem en t. 4. Offers w ill o n ly b e co n s id ered o n the en tire p a cka ge. 5. Highes to r a n y o ffer n o tn eces s a rily a ccep ted . 6. Pers o n s s u b m ittin g o ffers m u s trely o n their o w n res ea rch a n d in s p ectio n o fla n d a n d im p ro vem en ts a s to co n d itio n a n d n u m b er o fa cres . 7. M in era l Rights n o tin clu d ed . T he o w n er ho ld s n o in teres tin the M in era l Rights . 8. No o ffers w ill b e co n s id ered w hich a re s u b jectto fin a n cin g. 9. Plea s e fo rw a rd a ll b id s a n d in q u iries to : John Ca ve
ED G E REALTY LTD .
#12 2 - 12 Chea d le S t. W es t S w iftCurrent, S K. S 9H 0A9 Office: 306- 773- 7379 Cell: 306- 75 0- 8 8 76 Fa x: 306- 773- 738 7 w w w.fa rm s a s k.com
FARMS FOR SALE: RM Fertile Belt: Some 4180 acres of grain land, 3 homes, 97,000 plus bushels of grain storage and other outbuildings. The land is all in close proximity, has been very well farmed, lots of bush has been cleared; RM Keys: Some 762 acres of grain land in a good growing area, has a good tenant in place, w/good ROI, asking $780,000; RM Lumsden: 154 acre parcel of land, 92 acres are zoned commercial, balance is AG, located only 15 miles north of Regina on No #6 Hwy, includes 2 houses plus a wide variety of buildings. Buildings have potential for multi purpose business opportunities, asking $950,000; RM Norton: 6 quarters of grassland, some land is within a controlled flood plain, which can produce some excellent hay crops in dry years. Asking $444,000. For more information contact Bob Young, Homelife Prairies Realty Inc, Emerald Park, 306-586-0099 or e-mail: saskfarms@sasktel.net
P RIM E W EST FIN AN CIAL
REAL ESTATE AUCTIO N SAL E SUN . O CT. 27, 201 3 @ 2 P M
O pen H ou se:O ct. 19@ 1:00 – 3:00 PM O ct. 23@ 4:40 – 6:30 PM D irec tion s:H w y 7 & H w y 6 0 20.3 km s Sou th,R a n ge R d 3 4 2-A 1 km W est. L oc a tion :P a rc elA N W 1 8-3 4 -06 -W 3 rd R M ofV a n sc oy,SK
1257sq.ft. Bungalow on 20 acres w ith natural trees. O ak kitchen, vaulted ceiling kit/din & living, hardw ood floor in living room . 2 bdrm s, 2 baths, m ain floor laundry, attached 22’ x 24’ garage. G arden doors off living room , entry into basem ent. Year built 2001. 30’ x 40’ heated shop w ith a 24’ x 40’ lean-to.O nsite w elland septic tank.
b o d n a r u sa u ctio n eer in g .co m O ffice:30 6-975 -90 5 4 (30 6)227-95 0 5 1 -877-494-BID S(2437) PL #318200 SK PL #324317 A B SECTION 09-23-15-W2 in the RM of Lipton #217. This section surrounds the village of Dysart, SK. 440 cultivated acres. West 1/2 taxes to RM of Lipton, avg. assessment $65,150/quarter. East 1/2 taxes to village of Dysart, avg. assessment of $33,525/quarter. Please contact Robert at 306-535-7930 for more details. LAND FOR SALE By tender in RM of Snipe Lake #259, near Plato. SW-33-25-18-W3, assessment 120,000; SE-33-25-18-W3 assessment 117,300. Highest tender over $400,000/quarter will be accepted. Send tenders by Nov. 15 to: Jackson Tender, Box 31066, RPO Broadway & Taylor, Saskatoon, SK. S7H 5S8. 1 HOUR FROM SASKATOON, .75 hrs. from North Battleford, 160 acres, asking $115,000. RM 377, NE-12-40-13-W3, 140 acres cult., 2 miles from Hwy. 376, Sonningdale, SK. area. Class K soil, good area for yardsite, exc. ground water for well. Call/text 306-630-4237. Offers close Oct. 31. Email dharrison@riversidemission.ca
144 CULT. ACRES on two titles 5 west of Lumsden, overlooking Qu’Appelle Valley. FARM/RANCH/RECREATION, buying or 20 minutes from Regina, SK. 9000 bu. selling. Call Tom Neufeld 306-260-7838, steel storage, $3100/acre. 306-536-5055. Coldwell Banker ResCom Realty.
FARM LAN D FOR SALE BY TEN DER R.M . of LAKEVIEW N O. 337 LegalDescription N W 21 35 14 W 2N D (Pasw egin area) • N o b u ild in gs s itu a te d o n the la n d . • Bid d e rs m u s t re ly o n the ir o wn re s e a rch a s to va lu e o fla n d . • S u b m it te n d e rs with ce rtifie d che qu e fo r 1 0% o fprice to M a rqu e tte La w O ffice , Bo x 699, W a d e n a , S a s ka tche wa n S 0A 4J0. • S u cce s s fu l b id d e rs will ha ve 20 d a ys to co m ple te fin a n cin g. • H ighe s t o r a n y o ffe r n o t n e ce s s a rily a cce pte d a n d fin a l s a le s u b je ct to the co n s e n t o fthe b e n e ficia rie s o fthe Es ta te o fJo s e ph Za ro wn e y TEN DERS CLOSE Decem ber 2, 2013 at 12:00 N OON
Ca ll M ic h elle G. M a rq uette fo r a n y furth er d eta ils o r in q uiries a t (3 0 6 ) 3 3 8 -2 554
Q u ick Clo su re – N o Co m m issio n
306-5 84 -364 0 in fo @ m a xcro p.ca
CALL
PU RCH ASIN G FARM LAN D
REN TERS W AN TED w w w .m a xcro p.ca
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
CLASSIFIED ADS 67
S AS K ATC H W C S AS K GR AIN
D AV ID SON : 315.81 ac. - 294 cult. ac.,som e bush/sloughs,avg. new scale assess.65,300/qtr. D AV ID SON : 1268 ac. -952 ac. deeded & 316 leased ac. 748 cult ac. som e bush/slough,several dugouts.new scale assess54,710 per 1/4. E L R OSE : 3318 ac. -2572 cult.,avg. new scale assess. 77,580/160 ac., fencing, rural water pipeline, 82,000 bu. steel grain storage, shop, hom e 1: 1,400 sq ft bungalow,hom e 2: 1,100 sq ft bungalow,hom e 3: 1,540 sq ft bungalow. F a rm m a ch in ery & surfa ce lea se reven ue in cl.! Addition a l la n d a va ila b le! L ACA D E NA :11152 ac.-5,051 deeded ac.+ 6,101 leased ac.3,000 cult. ac.balance pasture.Som e bush/slough,4 strand barbed wire fencing, m any dugouts,14 water troughs,2 m iles water pipeline,12 watering bowls. Steel grain storage, shops, barn, quonset, corral system (16 pens),roping arena,riding arena,pum phouse,fuel shed,shelter,feed lot. 2 storey 1200 sq. ft. hom e & bunkhouse. M a n y m ore fea tures, ca ll us for deta ils! All th e la n d presen tly in gra ss. L U CK Y L A K E : 318.55 ac. -311 cult. ac.;no bush,som e sloughs,avg. new scale assess.74,500/qtr. Loca ted S E ofLuck y La k e, S K ! L U CK Y L A K E :158.93 ac.-144 cult.,new scale assess.44,900. TY N E R :319.21 ac.-262 cult.,avg.new scale assess.56,450 per 1/4.
L IVE STOCK
AY L E SBU R Y: 157.3 ac.-all grass,som e bush,fenced on 3 sides,A rm River crossesproperty,power adjacentto property.Corn ers H w y #11! BIR SAY: 315.68 ac.-137 cult.ac.,174 ac.native grass,no bush,som e sloughs,fenced (3 strand barb),avg.new scale assess.44,850/qtr.
ACR E AGE S
AY L E SBU R Y: 33.48 ac. -overlooks A rm River Valley,all grass,som e bush,fenced on 2 sides,power along property.Borders H w y #11! BIG G A R : 3.33 ac.-W ell,shed,1320 sq.ft.bungalow. Loca ted N orth of Bigga r, S K just offH igh w a y # 4. D ’A R CY: 3.5 ac. -500 gallon cistern & water wagon,wood shop,tractor storage shed, chicken coop, 1300 sq. ft 1 1/2 storey cottage, includesA llisChalm ersW D 45 tractor. SW A N SON :159 ac.-150 cult.ac.,little bush,steel grain storage, insu lated shop,1600 sq.ft.2 storey hom e.
S W S AS K GR AIN
CH A P L IN :317 ac.-207 cultac.avg.new scale assess.72,450 per 1/4. E A STE N D : 2880 ac.-1177 cult.,m ostly fenced,avg. new scale assess. 25,520 per 1/4,dugouts,well,dam . STE W A R T VA L L E Y: 158.55 ac.-90 cult. + 10 tam e grass,new scale assess.42,900.Just 1 m ile from D iefen b a k er La k e!
L IVE STOCK
E A STE N D : 3680 ac.-1440 deeded + 2240 leased.(Certified Organic), 1227 cult.,bal.native pasture,all fenced,wells,dugouts,shop,calving barn,corrals. 1100 sq.ft1 1/2 storey hom e. M OR SE : 959 ac.- 764 tam e grass, bal. native grass, m ostly fenced, dugouts, springs, 2,750 bu. steel grain storage, shop, sheds, barn, cattle barn,bunk house,garden shed,1,140 sq ftbungalow. STE W A R T VA L L E Y: 793.95 ac.-220 cult.,60 hay,bal.pasture,all fenced, well,dam s,cistern,6,400 bu.steel grain storage,shop,barn,corrals,well house,1,200 sq ftbungalow.Righ t b eside S a sk . La n din g Provin cia l Pa rk ! W OOD M OU N TA IN : 543 ac. - 78.19 deeded + 464.9 lease, all grass, perim eter fenced,dugout,lake.
ACR E AGE S
A SSIN IBOIA : 10.00ac. -Very well treed,located on H ighway #2 just South ofA ssiniboia,SK. 20’well,2 dugouts,water softener,hip roof barn,2 Q uonsets,double garage,2500 sq ft1 1/2 storey. CA D IL L AC:7.22 ac.-well,quonset,double garage,pum p house,other outbuildings,1,036 sq ftbungalow.On H w y #13! CE N TR A L BU TTE : 160.29 ac.-125 cult.,bal. pasture,well,quonset, barn,corrals,garage,m isc. other outbuildings,well treed yard site, 1,344 sq ftbungalow. CE N TR A L BU TTE : 159.91 ac. - all tam e hay; no bush/slough; good perim eter fencing (cross fenced),well,3 dugouts,2 hydrants,1 watering bowl,shed,quonset/shop,barn/cattle shed,1352 sq ft B ungalow. Loca ted S E ofCen tra l Butte, S K ! M OOSE JAW : 9.88ac. - (pending subdivision) located 10 m inutes North ofM oose Jaw,SK justoffH ighway # 2.W ater line crosses prop erty,steel grain bin (older),2 fuel tanks,optional 24’x24’garage.
EC S AS K GR AIN
CU PA R : 474 ac. -381 cult ac. som e bush/slough. well,dugouts,cistern. 1,650 bu. steel grain storage,wooden grain bins. shed,shop. 1064 sq ft. walk out house. Option a l-squeeze ch ute, 60 b red cow s, 3 b ulls & h a yin g equipm en t. ITU NA :662.84 ac.-487 cult.,avg.new scale assess.73,475 per 1/4,2,000 bu.steel grain bin,well,barn,vacanthouse,phone & power in yard. L IP TON : 2049 ac. -2000 cult.,hom e section fenced,wells,hydrants, water bowls,dugouts,68,000 bu. steel grain storage (~1/2 hoppered/ aerated),work shop,quonset,garage,cattle handling facilities,barn, corrals,1,700 sq ftsplitlevel hom e.F ull lin e ofm a ch in ery a va il.! L OCK W OOD : 159.90ac. - 150 cult. ac., few bush, som e sloughs, new scale assess.55,400. M E LV IL L E : 796.58ac. -650 cult. ac.;som e bush/sloughs;1 dugout (on SW -27).A vg.new scale assess.69,860 qtr. M E LV IL L E :320.63 ac.-295 cult.,avg.new scale assess.83,500 per 1/4, shed,several other older outbuildings& brain bins.Just offH w y #47! M E LV IL L E : 1279 ac. -1015 cult.,hom e three 1/4s fenced,well,dugouts,29,110 bu.steel grain storage (all aerated),50’x120’com m ercial building,shop,cattle facilities,well treed yard,1,930 sq ftbungalow. Just offH w y #47! W A L D R ON : 637.17 ac.-542 cult.,avg.new scale assess.73,975/160 ac., well,dugout,27,050 bu.steel grain storage,barn,vacanthouse,power & recent landscaping in yard. M a ch in ery & Pa rtia l M in era l R igh ts Option a l!
E W AN F ARM S
& RAN C H
W IL L OW BR OOK :159 ac.-135 cult.,all fenced,new scale asses.63,400 per qtr. YOR K TON : 638.71 ac. -485 cult. ac. + 60 ac.A lfalfa/Tam e Grass;som e bush/slough;30 ac.fenced on NE -15;3 dugouts,2013 avg.assess.79,725/ qtr. Addition a l qua rter of gra in la n d w ith h ouse/ya rd ca n b e purch a sed w ith th is la n d!
L IVE STOCK
CU PA R :159 ac.-125 alfalfa/grass.new scale assess.61,000 per qtr. D YSA R T: 2686 ac. -1983 ac. tam e hay,gravel/sand deposits,wells, waterers, 4 steel grain bin, shop, barn, cattle shelter, corrals. B ungalow hom e. W Y N YA R D : 403.6 ac.-345 alfalfa/brom e (chem . free since ‘05),avg. new scale assess.81,580/160 ac.,10 ac.yard site (well,1,350 bu.steel grain bin),nat.gason hom e 1/4.
ACR E AGE S
FOA M L A K E :318.90 ac.-82 ac.alfalfa/tim othy/brom e (2012),105 ac. tam e grass (back to native state),10 ac. broadcast alfalfa/tim othy/ brom e;10 ac. cropped;som e bush/slough,fencing around yard. 30’ well;1,350 bu. steel grain bin. Shop/barn,m isc. other outbuildings, 1000 sq.ft.bungalow.P rivate road to m ature treed acreage. H OL D FA ST: 306 ac.-flattopography;all native grass,som e sloughs. Approx. 1/2 m ile ofla k efron t on La st M oun ta in La k e! ITU NA : 10 ac. -well,water softener & iron filter,dog kennel/run, 1188 sq ft.B ungalow,E quip.Optional. K E L L IH E R : 160 ac.-67 cult.ac.slough,watering bowls,steel grain storage,shop. 1500 sq ft B iL evel hom e,m any fruit trees,large garden. L E M BE R G : 40.16 ac. -~30 tam e grass,fencing,well,hydrant,water bowls,horse barn,barn,corrals,outdoor riding arena,1,225 sq ft bungalow. P U N N ICH Y: 130 ac. -36 cult. ac.,balance native grass;som e bush/ slough,older perim eter fencing,well,watering bowl,hydrant,water softener,shed,hip roofbarn,corrals,chicken coop,1280 (on m ain) sq ft 1 1/2 Storey. Pa rk -lik e settin g in a priva te loca tion ( en d of dea d-en d roa d) ; M a n y F ruitTrees ( ta m e a n d w ild) R E G INA : 12.45 ac. -located just20 m inutes North ofRegina! Shop, H ip RoofB arn,chicken coop,corrals,1 3/4 storey house. R E G INA : 12.47 ac.,well treed & private yard with 7 ac. of fenced pasture, 80’ well (large bore, new pum p), B ig Iron W ater system , quonset,holding corral,round pen,2 storage sheds,110v electric fencer,1140 sq.ft.double wide trailer.Loca ted n ea r Qu’Appelle Va lley N orth ofRegin a ! R OCA N V IL L E : 157.45 ac-86 cult ac. 65 ac. pasture. E lk Fence 8’x4 strand barb wire 65 ac.fencing split.well,dugouts,shop.2000 sq ft. 1/4 storey.3.3 acre yard site(house & buildings) available separately. R OU N D L A K E : 13.33 ac.-hillside topography,som e bush,services nearby,located on H wy #247 with beautiful view ofRound L ake. 21 k m to Crook ed La k e Provin cia l Pa rk ! W H ITE W OOD : 45ac. - gently rolling land with som e bush/slough, fenced,24’well,reverse osm osis,two open front sheds,other m isc. outbuildings,985 sq.ftbungalow,sheltered yard site.Loca ted just off H igh w a y #9 a n d #1! W OL SE L E Y: 42.34 ac.-located in the town ofW olseley,1/2 m iles off H wy #1. YOR K TON :20.54 ac.-15 cult.,som e bush/slough.On H w y #16 close to York ton ! YOR K TON : 55.04 ac.-53 cult. ac.,well treed yard,few sloughs,27’ well,well house,water softener,quonset,1263 sq. ft. bilevel hom e. W ell k ept a n d tidy ya rd w ith m a ture sh elterb elt...m ust b e seen ! YOR K TON : 155.19 ac.-70 cult.ac.,som e bush/slough,som e fencing, well,2 watering bowls,steel grain storage,cattle shed,1246 sq ft1 1/ 2 Storey.4 a ddition a l qua rters ofgra in la n d ca n b e purch a sed w ith th is a crea ge!
OTH E R
YOR K TON :41.79 ac.-located between the cities ofYorkton & M elville, 3,815 feetofH wy #10 frontage.G rea t com m ercia l developm en t poten tia l!
NW S AS K GR AIN
W A K AW : 320.34ac. -284 cult. ac.,som e bush/sloughs,avg. new scale assess88,350/qtr.;average old scale assess5,200/qtr.
L IVE STOCK
SH E L L L A K E : 3090 ac. - 2624.51 deeded + 466.27 leased, 154 cropped,330 hay,bal.pasture (tam e & native),all fenced,well,Shell River on 1 section,watering stations,8,250 bu. steel grain storage, shop,horse barn,barn,2nd yard site (house,shop,wells),3rd yard site (hom e,shop,storage building,wells),m ain yard site (1,425 sq ft bungalow,1,744 sq fthom e).F a rm Equip. & Livestock Option a l!
E S
Property is a dja cen t to Torch River Provin cia l F orest; H un tin g, F ish in g, a n d Recrea tion a l Activities a t n ea rb y Tob in La k e! P R E E CE V IL L E : 319.39 ac. - 65 cult. ac. + 225 ac. A lfalfa, B rom e, Tim othy (seeded in 2003);bush m ostly cleared,som e sloughs,som e fencing,avg.new scale assess.51,400 qtr.dugout(on NE -7);Spring (on NE -7). TOBIN L A K E : 435.59 ac. -311 ac. of grass (cropped in past years), balance bush (m any large trees) and wetland.A vg.new scale assess. 41,580/160 ac.;taxes 1,160 yr. 1 m ile from Tob in La k e a n d Tob in La k e R esort Villa ge. Property suita b le for H un tin g a n d R ecrea tion w ith F ish in g n ea rb y!
ACR E AGE S
CA R R OT R IV E R : 10 ac.-m ature treed yard,3 cult.ac.balance pasture,30’ well,water softener,garage,720 sq. ft. bungalow hom e. S uita b le for H un tin g a n d Recrea tin g; F ish in g n ea rb y a tTob in La k e! M E L FOR T: 157.77 ac.-97 cult.,wells,cistern,spring,4,600 bu.steel hopper bottom bin,grain ring,shop,barn,garage,m isc. other outbuildings,1,552 sq ft1 1/2 storey hom e. P R E E CE V IL L E : 159.64 ac -54 cropped ac.,38 ac. seeded to grass/ alfalfa blend, balance pasture (fenced), som e bush/slough, well, water bowls,4 dugouts,3000 bu.steel grain storage,additional 1,500 bu. bin on side, barn, quonset, shop, garden shed, corral system , num erous outbuildings,1470 sq. ft bungalow. W ell m a in ta in ed a n d sh eltered ya rd; la rge ga rden a rea a n d fruit trees! P R E E CE V IL L E : 160.35 ac. - 100 tam e hay (organic since 1992), perim eter fencing,yard & garden fenced,dugout,2 utility sheds, garden shed,solar power system ,private location,well treed yard, 1,024 sq ft2 level splithom e.
OTH E R
P R IN CE A L BE R T: 137.69 ac.-Greenhouse B usiness -100 ac. tam e grass,greenhouse well,house well,2 x 1,650 bu.hopper bottom bins, shop,boiler shed,sheds,3 greenhouses,header house,1,064 sq ft raised bi-level,432 sq ftprivate suite. TOBIN L A K E : 59.67 ac.-Recreational property located offH ighway #255,just1 m ile from Tobin L ake ResortVillage 1/4 m ile from Tobin L ake,all land currently hay,3 F ull Service RV Sites,gazebo,storage shed & shop. Natural gas along E ast boundary of property. S uita b le for H un tin g a n d Recrea tion ; F ish in g n ea rb y a tTob in La k e!
S E S AS K GR AIN
A L ID A : 1671 ac. -1436 cult. ac.,bush m ostly cleared,som e sloughs, well,steel grain storage,shed,several m isc. storage buildings,shop, 1500 sq ft 1 1/4 storey. In cludes 25 S urfa ce Lea ses! F a rm M a ch in ery Option a l. G R E N FE L L : 161.79 ac. -50 cult. ac,70 ac. native grass,som e bush/ slough with treed area suitable for recreation/hunting,1 dugout,new scale assess.40,800. G R E N FE L L : 626.93 ac. - 570 cult. ac., bush m ostly cleared, few sloughs,m unicipal well (across road),2,400 bu. steel grain storage. Loca ted on H igh w a y # 1 b etw een S um m erb erry & G ren fell, S K . Option a l - a ddition a l 8,550 b u. steel stora ge. IN D IA N H E A D : 783 ac. -719 seeded ac. in 2013,som e bush/slough, gravel on S1/2 -6 5 year lease,dugout;cistern (4,800),steel grain storage,shop,storage shed,846 sq ft.raised bungalow,2 bunkhouses. K IP L IN G : 2062 ac. - 1324 cult.,fencing around pasture,6,900 bu. steel grain storage,well,calving barn,calving shed,work shop,barn, 1,600 sq ftbungalow.S urfa ce lea se reven ue in cl.! R OU L E AU : 319.29 ac. -all cult.,avg. new/old scale assess. 63,300/ 7,100 per 1/4. W IN D TH OR ST:160 ac.-130 cultac.New Scale A ssess.76,200 per qtr. W IN D TH OR ST: 2231 ac. - all in a block,2052 cult. (m ostly zero-till since ‘95),dugouts,93,700 bu. steel grain storage (over 40,000 bu. hop pered),work shop,shop,sheds,cattle shed,well treed & landscaped yard,2,270 sq ft2 storey hom e.S urfa ce lea se in cl., fa rm equip option a l!
L IVE STOCK
K IP L IN G : 1265 ac. - 230 cropped + 612 tam e hay, som e native pasture,
perim eter fenced with som e crossfencing,well,dugouts,watering bowls,6,850 bu.grain storage,shed,corrals,1,212 sq ftbungalow.S urfa ce lea se reven ue in cl.! M IN TON : 1422 ac. -315 ac. deeded + 1106 leased ac.,native grass,som e sloughs,perim eter fencing.70’well,2 dam s,water softener,water filter.H ip roofbarn,shop,quonset,450 bu.SelfFeeder,1,350 bu.Steel Grain B in,1632 sq ft.B ungalow.Loca ted S outh ofM in ton , S K on H igh w a y # 6! M IN TON :4373 ac.-3262 leased ac.395 ac.hay,balance pasture.dugouts, well,steel grain storage,barn,shop,corrals. 600 sq ft. Cabin. Ra n ch h a s H istoric Buffa lo Jum p! OX BOW : 429 ac. -282 cult,power borders property,grid road access to property with private road through property. STOU G H TON : 319.95 ac.-230 ac.tam e hay/grass,one 1/4 fenced & cross fenced,clay pit,avg. new scale assess. 54,450,dugouts,well,quonset,skid shack,corral system .In cludes surfa ce lea se reven ue!
ACR E AGE S
CA R LY L E : 106.50 ac. -all cult. (except yard),m ostly open land with few
NE S AS K GR AIN
H U M BOL D T: 479.26 ac.-380 cult.ac.,few bushes,som e sloughs.A vg. new scale assess.52,700/qtr;taxes$964/year.
L IVE STOCK
CH OICE L A N D : 477 ac.-24 cult.,+ 211 tam e pasture + 90 ac.red clover + 21 ac. tam e hay,bal. nat. past,fenced,shop,horse shelters, chicken coop,corrals,850 sq ftbungalow H A ZE L D E L L : 158.73 ac. -95 ac. alfalfa/grass m ix (hay) New Scale A ssess.60,300. L E R OY:80 ac.-alfalfa/grass,fenced & crossfenced (bison page wire), well,5,000 sow farrow barn,hoppered grain storage (approx. 10 day storage).Adjoin in g 2,453 a c. a va ila b le! L E R OY: 2453 ac. -all in one block,2052 ac. alfalfa/grass,fenced & cross fenced (bison page wire),wells,dugouts,shops,office building, corral system (designed for 500 cow bison),quonset,2,904 sq ftbun galow.Adjoin in g 5,000 sow fa rrow in g opera tion on 80 a c. a va ila b le! N IPAW IN : 479.03 ac. - all native grass, NW -13 m ostly large trees, som e bush on other 2 qtrs. perim eter fenced (m ostly barbed wire) with som e crossfencing,well,water softener,1,350 bu.steel grain bin (on concrete pad),garage/shop,1460 sq.ft.1 1/2 storey walkouthom e.
sloughs,well,steel grain storage,shed, 3 double garages,church,1108 sq ft m odular hom e & 1 1/2 storey.Loca ted a dja cen t to W oodsw orth . FIL L M OR E :160.19 ac.,150 cult.ac.,som e bush/slough,cistern,3 dugouts, quonset,2400 sq fthom e. K R ONAU : 79.57 ac.-16 ac.tam e hay,balance native grass,no bush,som e sloughs,well (subm ersible pum p),greenhouses,large garden space,store, 1440 sq.ft.1 1/2 storey. M OOSOM IN : 329.89 ac.- 232 cult. ac. (currently leased); som e bush/ slough,land is adjacent to Regional Park located SW of M oosom in,SK. Approxim a tely 3/4 m ile ofM oosom in La k e fron ta ge! N OR TH G ATE : 321.57 ac. - 250 cult. ac., bush m ostly cleared, very few sloughs,well (deep),m ature treed yard,older workshop,3 steel grain bins,1 3/ 4 storey house.SW -5 with yard site avail.separately,10 ac.yard site (pending subdivision) avail.separately. Loca ted on th e U S A Border W est ofN orth ga te, S K ! QU ’A P P E L L E : 14.4 ac. -som e bush/slough,dugout,well (seepage),overhead power line (runs across property).Loca ted on H igh w a y #1 a dja cen t to Qu’Appelle, S K . W H ITE CITY:22 ac.-well treed yard with slag driveways,close to th e city of Regin a ! 32’well,reverse osm osis water system ,garage,horse barn,shop, corrals(3 watering bowls),2400 sq.ft.2 storey hom e. W H ITE W OOD :160.65 ac.-60 cult+ 67 ac tam e grass,bush m ostly cleared, fenced and cross fenced,well,4 wooden grain bins,1448 sq ftm obile hom e, second house setup asdog kennel business.
CU R R EN T L I STI N G S
S a s ka tchew a n’s Fa rm & Ra nch S pecia lis ts ™ 140 Regis tered S a les in 2013 W ITH OV ER 30 YEARS IN THE BUS IN ES S .
Ph : 3 06 -56 9 -3 3 8 0
la n e re a ltycorp @ s a s kte l.n e t
Vis itu s a t w w w . l a
n erea lty. c om
To v iew fu llc olor fea tu re sheets for a llofou r Cu rrentL istings a nd Virtu a lTou rs ofselec t properties - v isitou r w ebsite a t w w w .la nerea lty.c om
“ Now repres enting b uyers from a cros s Ca na da , a nd a round the w orld!” for fu llc olou r lis tin gs
Callus at
1-866-345-3414
REAL ESTATE CEN TRE w w w .farm realestate.com
5 QUARTERS OF HAYLAND/PASTURE FOR RENT in RM of Hazel Dell #335. Contact Robin Liu, cell 306-690-6786, Preeceville, SK. or robingliu@hotmail.com For details visit: www.JustinYin.com
6 QUARTERS GRAINLAND FOR RENT in RM of Pinto Creek #75. Call Robin Liu, 306-690-6786, or robingliu@hotmail.com Kincaid, SK. View at: www.JustinYin.com
GOING SOUTH FOR the winter? 2006 Sandpiper, model 325 Luxury Edition, 2 slides, winter model, fantastic shape, $25,900. 403-628-2010, Lundbreck, AB. 2012 YAHAMA KODIAK 450 quad, w/power steering and winch, bought new March 2013 BULLET 230BH Travel Trailer, MSRP: 2013, only 22 kms., $7000, no tax. $ 2 6 , 4 2 2 . S a l e p r i c e : $ 2 0 , 9 0 0 . C a l l 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: 306-232-7810, Rosthern, SK. www.chegusrvsales.ca 2007 HONDA 500, Fourtrax Foreman, 140 kms w/winch; ATV quad trailer, alum. body w/tilt. 306-693-7291, Moose Jaw, SK FARMLAND FOR SALE BY TENDER: 2008 POLARIS RANGER 4x4, 3500 lbs. Sealed, written tenders for property in the winch, half windshield, excellent shape, RM of Morris will be received by Harry Wi- $6500. Ph. 306-297-7986, Shaunavon, SK. ens Law Office until 5:00 PM, Thurs, Nov. FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS 28, 2013 for NW-1/4-33-5-2WPM, except- We also specialize in: Crop insurance aping Water Control Works Plan 1242 MLTO peals; Chemical drift; Residual herbicide; (approx 159.70 acres). For terms and con- Custom operator issues; Equipment malditions contact Harry J. Wiens or Joan function. Qualified Agrologist on staff. Call Franz at: #2 - 500 Main St., PO Box 99, Back-Track Investigations for assistance Winkler, MB. R6W 4A4. Call 204-325-4615, regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779. fax: 204-325-6712, or Email offers to: 2013 HISUN R700XI UTV 2WD/4WD, harry@hjwienslaw.ca joan@hjwienslaw.ca windsheild, roof, doors, EPS $10,599 + SOUTH OF McAULEY, MB; 320 acres, 205 gst. Ray’s Trailer Sales. Call Cory or Don sowed to alfalfa, rest in wild hay; 3 bdrm 780-672-4596, Camrose, AB. 2013 SPRINGDALE 249BH Fifth Wheel, bungalow. Leave message: 204-722-2013 2011 ARGO 750, 8 wheel w/tracks, roll MSRP: $29,425. Sale price: $22,900. Call bar, winch, bilge pump, extra seat, 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: www.chegusrvsales.ca $19,000. 306-982-4888, Prince Albert, SK. MIXED FARM FOR SALE- retiring, The Pas, MB. Clean, well maintained, all in one piece, no rocks. 1470 deeded acres, 900 cultivated; 2640 acres long term Crown rental, 500 cult. acres. 2 houses- 5 bdrm. house, wheelchair accessible and 1 bdrm. house. Heated shop, machine shed, hay shed, pole barn, Hi-Hog chute system, 40,000+ bu. grain storage, large 30,000 sq. ft. insulated tinned barn, machinery and cattle available. Call 204-623-5029.
WANTED: LARGE PARCEL of grainland, preferably within 2 hrs. of Saskatoon, SK. MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. Call Walter 306-221-2208. Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: 2013 RAPTOR 31DS Toy Hauler, MSRP: www.maverickconstruction.ca $51,567. Sale price: $37,900. Call 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: AS PART OF DUCKS Unlimited Canada’s re- www.chegusrvsales.ca RM EAGLE CREEK No. 376, 184.8 acres, 50 volving land program, we are selling land acres are farmable. Land has underground in AB. and MB. with a conservation ease- 2 0 1 3 LAREDO 298RE Travel Trailer, springs, 4 creeks, wild berries and is ready ment placed on it. Land parcels can be MSRP: $36,246. Sale price: $26,900. Call to be developed. Is fully fenced with cor- viewed at www.ducks.ca/landauction and 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: rals. Has to be seen to be appreciated. can be bid on using our online auction tool www.chegusrvsales.ca MLS® 477149. Call Pamela Nykolaishen, until November 14. For more info contact 2013 LAREDO 296RL Travel Trailer, MSRP: Royal Lepage Varsity at 306-361-0030 for your local DUC office. $39,610. Sale price: $29,900. Call more info, Saskatoon, SK. 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: www.chegusrvsales.ca EAST HALF OF 23-52-21 W3, RM 499, north of Turtleford, SK. west side of Island 2013 RAPTOR 367SE Toy Hauler, MSRP: Lake. Scenic, recreational or pastureland. $65,899. Sale price: $47,900. Call creek, 4 wire fence, corrals, access road 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: from north and south. Call 306-845-2665. www.chegusrvsales.ca RM DEER FORKS #232, 1 cult. quarter, 2 0 1 3 PREMIER 32BH Travel Trailer, SW-19-22-28-W3. Closing tender date MSRP: $38,872. Sale price: $29,900. Call Nov. 20, 2013. Highest or any tender not 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: necessarily accepted. Adeline Miller, Box www.chegusrvsales.ca 461, Leader, SK., S0N 1H0. 306-628-3391. 2 0 1 3 LAREDO 291TG Travel Trailer, www.33acreslacombecountyab.com 2001 FARMLAND FOR RENT - RM of May- ICF block constructed, 3340 sq ft., 5 bdrm, MSRP: $33,540. Sale price: $25,900. Call field, SK. No 406: SE 25-42-12 W3, ap- 3 bath ranch style bungalow just minutes 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: prox. 135 cult. acres; SE 27-42-12 W3, ap- to Lacombe, AB. Attached garage 28x33, www.chegusrvsales.ca prox. 145 cult. acres. Closing date for shop 40x48 built in 2006, heritage barn o f f e r s O c t o b e r 3 1 , 2 0 1 3 . P h o n e 30x40 plus 33 acres perfect for any kind of 2013 RAPTOR 365LEV Toy Hauler, MSRP: 306-222-9528 daytime or 306-254-2180 hobby farm or business. Highway frontage, $ 9 8 , 4 3 7 . S a l e p r i c e : $ 6 4 , 9 0 0 . C a l l 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: evenings or e-mail: tvme@sasktel.net good soil, cross fenced, shed, creek, stock www.chegusrvsales.ca RM CUT KNIFE 439: NW-25-44-22-W3rd, waterer, pipe gates and corrals, good proSW-36-44-22-W3rd, SE-20-44-21-W3rd, ducing well. $879,900. Call 403-391-0383 2013 SPRINGDALE 294BH Travel Trailer, MSRP: $31,205. Sale price: $22,900. Call NE-17-44-21-W3rd. Tenders close Oct. 31, or email: chigwell2@hotmail.ca 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: 2013. Send offers to: Box 75, Baldwinton, www.chegusrvsales.ca SK. S0M 0B0 or Jl.carlton@hotmail.com 2009 BIG COUNTRY 3490, 35’, 3 slides, RM LEASK #464: 4499 acres all but one bunks, Corian counter tops, double pane quarter in a block. Has approx. 3164 acres windows, plasma TV, queen bed, lots of tame hay cultivated pasture mix. Mainly storage, exc. cond., 3 yrs. factory warranty fenced with 3 and 4 wire fencing and l e f t , n e ve r s m o ke d i n , $ 2 9 , 5 0 0 . treated post. 36x51 straight wall shop, 306-843-7260, Wilkie, SK. with attached 20x36 ranch hand living quarters, heated with nat. gas in-floor 2013 SPRINGDALE 303BH Travel Trailer, heat. Power, sewer system and good well. MSRP: $33,421. Sale price: $24,900. Call With talk of community pasture closing 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: and higher beef prices, this may be the www.chegusrvsales.ca p r o p e r t y fo r yo u . Wat e r i s l o c at e d BUY NOW! Taking offers on House, throughout the pasture and mainly stone Buildings and 10 acres, 16 kms South 2013 ENERGY 236LFSWE Toy Hauler, of Moosomin, SK. Beautiful 1980’s bunfree. Good bluffs of bush for shelter. MLS MSRP: $39,298. Sale price: $27,900. Call ®468365. For viewing call Lloyd Ledinski, galow, wood structure- main floor: approx. 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: RE/MAX of the Battlefords, and take con- 3600 sq. ft., 5 bdrms, 1 full bathroom, www.chegusrvsales.ca trol of your own pasture needs. North Bat- master bdrm/full bathroom. All bdrms have walk-in closets. Library, lounge, din- 2013 SPRINGDALE 297BH Travel Trailer, tleford, SK 306-466-8800, 306-441-0541. ing room, breakfast room, office, laundry MSRP: $30,632. Sale price: $22,590. Call ONE QUARTER SW-34-35-32-W1 for sale. room, 2011 new kitchen and appliances, 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: 16 miles NE of Norquay. 115 cult., 45 for- walk-in pantry, games/family room, solid www.chegusrvsales.ca est/creek, assess. 59,900. 306-781-4988, oak floors through house, partial base2 0 1 3 BULLET 249RBS Travel Trailer, 306-537-3772 cell, Pilot Butte, SK. ment. Well: 95’ deep with ample supply of MSRP: $28,510. Sale price: $21,900. Call water. 50’x30’ shop attached to house. 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: Outbuildings: 60’x40’ enclosed pole www.chegusrvsales.ca shed/cold storage, older barn with power, 1 QUARTER GRAINLAND FOR RENT in concrete loading ramp, garden shed. RM of Wallace #243. Contact Robin Liu, Land: 10 acres- 6 acres fenced. View at 306-690-6786 or robingliu@hotmail.com www.McDougallAuction.com - Moosomin Division: 1-800-263-4193. PL #314480. Yorkton, SK. View at: www.JustinYin.com FOR SALE BY TENDER Mineral Rights 7-1/2 ACRES, three miles north of Rockon half share of 1/2 section 03-23-03-W2. glen, SK. Power, water, corrals and older Submit written tenders to Box 364, Salt- house. 306-476-2501. coats, SK. S0A 3RO. Closing date Thurs., October 31, 2013. Highest or any tenders EVANSBURG close to Edmonton, AB. not necessarily accepted. newer house, large industrial shop, 4 lots, $349,000 at $125,000 down, balance at 2011 BIGHORN 5th wheel, 40’, 4 slides, air ride hitch, king size bed, fireplace, am5%. Call 1-888-709-0884. ple cupboard space; 2011 GMC Denali, ELK POINT, St. Paul County, AB. 7 acres, diesel, loaded, quad cab. Will sell together 20 yr. old house, $265,000 with $125,000 or sperate. Willing to trade for lakefront property. 306-934-7573, Saskatoon, SK. down, balance at 5%. Call 1-888-709-0884. 2013 SPRINGDALE 282BH Travel Trailer, SHELL LAKE, SK. Approx. 114 acres ad- MSRP: $29,339. Sale price: $21,490. Call joining No. 3 Hwy. less than a quarter mile 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: north of Jct. No. 12 and No. 3 Hwys. This www.chegusrvsales.ca 1440 sq. ft. family home with full basement was built in 1978, has a large shop HEARTLAND SUNDANCE 2009 2900 and other buildings, excellent well, and is MK 5th wheel, no smoking, no pets, 31’8” in a great community to live in. Enjoy the long, awning, 3 slideouts, only used for 3 12 lakes within 15 miles, some with fair to winter trips, fully loaded, 88° turning radigood fishing. You can enjoy the lake sports us, $22,000. Ray 306-536-0399 Regina, SK plus great big game hunting in the area as 2 0 1 3 LAREDO 303TG Travel Trailer, well as great quading and snowmobiling MSRP: $39,900. Sale price: $29,900. Call throughout. MLS® 479374. For viewing or 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: further info call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of www.chegusrvsales.ca the Battlefords, 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK. 2013 LAREDO 301RL Travel Trailer, MSRP: $35,803. Sale price: $26,900. Call 20 ACRE YARD next to 40 hunting Crown- 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: land quarters. House, barn with hayloft. www.chegusrvsales.ca Good water. 204-858-2555, Hartney, MB. 2013 SPRINGDALE 266RL Travel Trailer, MSRP: $29,023. Sale price: $20,900. Call GET BACK TO the farm. 80 acres, chemi- 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: cal free, 2 dugouts, 30 acres treed yard, www.chegusrvsales.ca horse grass, 50 acres cultivated rented to a good tenant. Low crime area, good 2013 LAREDO 266RL Travel Trailer, MSRP: neighbors, schools and churches. 1 hour $ 4 2 , 5 8 2 . S a l e p r i c e : $ 3 1 , 9 0 0 . C a l l from Regina on good all weather roads. 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: 2000 sq. ft. older recently renovated www.chegusrvsales.ca home, extra insulation, 2 bthrms, 3 bdrms, 2013 ENERGY 280LSABWE Toy Hauler, 160 ACRES GOOD productive Red River good well water, vinyl siding, single car MSRP: $40,777. Sale price: $29,900. Call Valley, MB. Farmland, SE quarter 05-05-05 garage. Barn, greenhouse, and various 306-287-3999, Watson, SK. Website: WPM. Good soy bean and cash crop soil. outbuildings. Asking $250,000. Could give www.chegusrvsales.ca Contact Melvin Toews at Golden Plains Re- a good walk away price on almost all your needs. Call Archie or Margaret MacDonald, 2011 LANDMARK 38’ 5th wheel, 3 slides, 4 alty, 204-745-3677. 306-939-4520, Strasbourg, SK. door fridge/freezer, fireplace, all-wood cabinets, king bed, stackable washer/dryFARMLAND FOR SALE in the RM of Thompson, MB. SE quarter 05-05-05 WPM, CANORA, SK, 10 acres with 1230 sq. ft. er, generator, auto-leveling, Moryde hitch, 159.4 acres. Contact Melvin Toews, Gold- bungalow, shop, sheds, outbuildings, nat. electric awning, exc. cond., $47,500. Call 306-759-7999, Tugaske, SK. gas, underground power. 306-651-1041. en Plains Realty Ltd., Ph. 204-745-3677.
GOLF CART SHEDS, vent system, lockable HD doors, no rotting, rust, painting, or staining. www.hold-onindustries.com or call 306-253-4343, 1-800-383-2228.
Malt Barley/Feed Grains/Pulses best price/best delivery/best payment
Licen s ed & bon d ed 1- 800- 2 58- 7434 ro ger@ seed - ex.co m
D
Welcome
612
'6
W E HAVE QUALIFIED BUYERS FOR IRRIGATED FARM LAND IN THE OUTLOOK,SK AREA
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
%, 5
68 CLASSIFIED ADS
:
STAY IN Canada’s Desert
during those long winter months. Great Winter Rates are offered for short or long term. Rentals $695./mth & up. 1 and 2 bdrm Suites available. Within walking distance to town. Indoor Pool, Hot tub, Fitness Room, Aquatic classes and Social Events. Free WIFI & Local Calling!
CHOOSE THE OSOYOOS HOTEL LINK FOR MORE PICS!
www.coasthotels.com
250.495.6525
Eston, SK
(306) 962-4132
www.dseriescanola.ca
w w w .fp gen etic s .ca
A C ® L eggett V e ry high yie ld ing w hite m illing o a t w ith cro w n ru st re sista nce .
Ca ll yo u r lo ca l S e e d G ro w e r Re ta ile r: S O R G A R D S EED S C hu rchbridge, SK .....306-896-2236
1-877-791-1045 w w w .fp gen etic s .ca
SAWMILLS from only $4897 - Make Money and Save Money with your own bandmill. Cut lumber any dimension. In CERTIFIED AC LEGGETT and CDC Baler. stock, ready to ship. Free Info and DVD: Sorgard Seeds, Churchbridge, SK. Call www.NorwoodSawmills.com/168 or call 306-896-2236. Visa and M/C accepted. 1-800-566-6899 ext. 168. WOOD-MIZER PORTABLE SAWMILLS, eight models, options and accessories. BUYING RYE, all grades. CGC bonded. Call 1-877-866-0667. www.woodmizer.ca the Ryeguy: Cal@vandaeleseeds.com Box 144, Medora, MB. R0M 1K0. Phone 204-665-2384 or 204-522-5410.
2008 MONACO DIPLOMAT, 400 Cummins, 29,000 miles. 4 slides, washer, dryer, fully loaded including fireplace, 40’ long. Asking $149,000 OBO. Call 780-877-2513 for more information or to view. Camrose, AB. 2005 MONACO CAYMAN 34PDD, 35’, 5.9 Cummins, 300 HP, 21,500 miles, auto, satellite, air over hyd. brakes, 5.5 KW Onan dsl. gen.- 148 hrs, exc. cond., 2 slides, $85,000. More photos on our website www.can-amtruck.com Can-Am Truck Export Ltd 1-800-938-3323. DL #910420.
ELIAS SCALES MFG., several different ways to weigh bales and livestock; Platform scales for industrial use as well, non- WANTED: WINTER TRITICALE seed off the electric, no balances or cables (no weigh farm or from seed dealer. 316-249-1907. like it). Shipping arranged. 306-445-2111, WANTED: WINTER TRITICALE seed off the North Battleford, SK. www.eliasscales.com farm or from seed dealer. 316-249-1907. 8X14 NORAC LIVESTOCK scale, certified, l i ke n e w, s h e d d e d , $ 1 1 , 5 0 0 . C a l l 306-744-8113, Yorkton, SK. PORTABLE 10x10 MASS load scale, $1500 O B O. N e e d s l o a d c e l l s c h e c ke d . 204-238-4491, Bowsman, MB.
2007 BERKSHIRE, 350 Cummins, 6 spd. Allsion, 39’, 4 slides, sat. dish, W/D, 7500 dsl. Onan gen., may consider RV or truck on trade. 306-374-3180, Saskatoon, SK. 1995 TRIPLE E 35’, 138,000 kms, large slide, 5000 KW genset, central vac, always shedded, many more extras, $24,900 firm. 306-442-4322, Pangman, SK. 2005 MONACO DIPLOMAT, 40’, 400 HP Cummins, 4 slides, NS/NP, 8 kw Onan generator, power cord reel, auto satellite tracker, dual AC, shedded, loaded, 37,000 miles. 306-533-6889, Rouleau, SK.
200 BU. WEIGH WAGON. 2 units remaining at 2013 pricing. D&F Manufacturing 204-746-8260, Morris, MB. www.dandf.ca 2004 MONACO SIGNATURE top line, Class A, 44’, 3 slides, 500 HP series 60 Detroit, Aqua Hot, 12,500 kw generator, NP, NS, new tires, new batteries (2013), $175,000. Call 306-776-2390, Rouleau, SK.
C D C U tm ostV B H ighe st yie ld ing CD C CW RS w he a t w ith m id ge to le ra nce & stro ng stra w . Ca ll yo u rlo ca l S e e d G ro w e rRe ta ile r: A L BER TA C H S D Y N AG R A C aresland,AB .............403-888-1031 S A S K ATC H EW A N M C C A R TH Y S EED FA R M L TD . C orning,SK .................306-884-4848 S O R G A R D S EED S C hurchbridge,SK......306-896-2236 R O L O FA R M S L TD . Regina,SK.....................306-543-5052 S M ITH S EED S Lim erick,SK..................306-263-4944 VA N BU R C K S EED S StarC ity,SK..................306-863-4377
1-877-791-1045 w w w .fp gen etic s .ca
CERT. CARBERRY, CONQUER VB, Glenn, Infinity, CDC Utmost and Vesper VB. Sorga r d S e e d s , C h u r c h b r i d g e , S K . C a l l 306-896-2236. Visa and M/C accepted.
PARTING OUT Polaris snowmobiles, 1985 to 2005. Edfield Motors Ltd., phone: 306-272-3832, Foam Lake, SK.
A C ® M u chm or e V e ry high yie ld ing, se m i-d w a rfCW RS ,sho rt stro ng stra w .
Ca ll yo u r lo ca l S e e d G ro w e r Re ta ile r: A L BER TA C H S D Y N AG R A C aresland,AB...............403-888-1031 S A S K ATC H EW A N M C C A R TH Y S EED FA R M L TD . C orning,SK...................306-884-4848 M A N ITO BA C O U R T S EED S Plum as,M B....................204-386-2354
RENTAL-3 BEDROOM furnished home. All services, close to golf, rec. centre, University. Available January 1 -March 31, 2014. NS, NP, $1000/mo. Nanaimo, BC. Email: ndsterno54@gmail.com
Available at:
Emerge Ag Solutions Inc.
1-877-791-1045
info@coastosoyoosresort.com
Osoyoos, BC 1995 37-1/2’ WINNEBAGO Suncruiser with 13’ slide, 88,000 miles, exc. shape, $20,000 OBO. 306-425-7776, La Ronge, SK 2009 FOREST RIVER Charleston Model 410FS motorhome, 425 HP, 5 slides, loaded, full warranty until Jan. 2018, 16,000 miles, $300,000+ new, asking $149,000. 306-921-8003, 306-752-3653, Melfort, SK.
A C ®Su m m it
H igh yie ld ing m illing o a t w ith the b e st m u lti-ge ne cro w n ru st re sista nce . Ca ll yo u rlo ca l S e e d G ro w e rRe ta ile r: C O U R T S EED S Plum as,M B ...................204-386-2354
1-877-791-1045
PARK MODEL IN Country Roads RV Resort in Yuma, AZ. Lots of amenities. Call for more info 250-498-7294. SNOWBIRD ACCOMMODATION: Oliver, BC. Cute, clean farmhouse, on River Stone Estate Winery, 2 bdrm, 1 bath, sleeps 6, 815 sq.ft., furnished, pets welcome, NS, $1200/mo. Call Ted 250-498-7798. YUMA, ARIZONA: 38’ fifth wheel for rent on 2 acres of land across from Yuma Lakes RV Park. Rent $850/month includes utilities, washer/dryer and Arizona room. Available November and December, 2013. Ph/fax 306-867-9199, Outlook, SK. 2 BEDROOM/2 bathroom bungalow condo in gated community on Osoyoos Lake. Garage, pool, hot tub, social/rec room. Snowbirds welcome. Nov.-April, $1300/month incl. utilities. 780-919-9830, Osoyoos, BC. TAKE A BREAK, Osoyoos, BC. Sun Beach Motel, 250-495-7766. Start at $595. $750 w/lake view. sunbeachmotel@persona.ca
w w w .fp gen etic s .ca
A C ®Tr a nscend Be st fo r yie ld ,d ise a se a nd e nd -u se .
A C ® N ew da le
Ca ll yo u rlo ca l S e e d G ro w e rRe ta ile r:
V e ry high yie ld ing 2R b a rle y w ith p lu m p ke rne ls. Ca ll yo u rlo ca l S e e d G ro w e rRe ta ile r: VA N BU R C K S EED S StarC ity,SK .................306-863-4377
M C C A R TH Y S EED FA R M L TD . C orning,SK..................306-884-4848 S M ITH S EED S Lim erick,SK .................306-263-4944 R O L O FA R M S L TD . Regina,SK.....................306-543-5052
1-877-791-1045 w w w .fp gen etic s .ca
1-877-791-1045 w w w .fp gen etic s .ca
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
WHY NOT KEEP MARKETING SIMPLE? You are selling feed grains. We are buying feed grains. Fast payment, with TOP QUALITY CERTIFIED alfalfa and grass prompt pickup, true price discovery. Call seed. Call Gary or Janice Waterhouse Gerald Snip, Jim Beusekom, Allen Pirness, David Lea, or Vera Buziak at Market Place 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK. Commodities Ltd., Lethbridge, AB. Email: info@marketplacecommodities.com or phone: 1-866-512-1711.
BUYING BROWN FLAX farm pickup. Call 1-877-752-4115, Naber Specialty Grains Ltd. Email: nsgl@sasktel.net CERTIFIED PRAIRIE SAPPHIRE. Sorgard Seeds, Churchbridge, SK. 306-896-2236. Visa and M/C accepted. BUYING QUALITY BROWN and golden flax. CGC bonded. Cal@Vandaeleseeds.com Box 144, Medora, MB. R0M 1K0. Phone 204-665-2384 or 204-522-5410.
EAGLE COM M ODITIES S OARIN G TO N EW HEIGHTS
Bu yers o f co n ven tio n a l a n d o rga n ic gra d es o f len tils , pea s , m u s ta rd , w hea t, b a rley, o a ts , rye, ca n o la , fla x, etc.
C a ll for your on fa rm b id . TOLL FREE
1-8 8 8 -3 28 -9 19 1 Le th b ridge , AB.
GrainEx International Ltd. WANTED
LENTILS, CANARY AND CHICK PEAS. Call GrainEx International Ltd. for current pricing at 306-885-2288, Sedley SK. Visit us on our website at: www.grainex.net
CERTIFIED CDC MEADOW and CDC Tucker. Sorgard Seeds, Churchbridge, SK. Call 306-896-2236. Visa and M/C accepted
TOP PRICES PAID FOR FEED BARLEY, WHEAT, OATS, RYE, TRITICALE, PEAS, LENTILS, HEATED OIL SEEDS Priced at your b in.
PEARMAN GRAIN LTD. Saskatoon
306-374-1968
XPELLER PRESSING. Offgrade oilseeds needed! Lethbridge crusher looking for offBUYING CANARY SEED, farm pickup. grade canola, flax, camelina and canola or Call 1-877-752-4115, Naber Specialty flax screenings. Prompt payment. Phone: Darcy at: 403-894-4394, Lethbridge, AB. Grains Ltd. Email: nsgl@sasktel.net or email: xpellerpressing@gmail.com
1-306-771-4987 BESCO GRAIN LTD. Buyer of all varieties of mustard. Call for competitive pricing. Call 204-736-3570, Brunkild, MB.
*5$,1
M illiga n B iofu e ls is b u yin g
Tou gh, H e a te d , and Gre e n Ca n ola . Prom pt Paym ent,B onded and Insured, Freight O ptions. O nline estim ate equipped. Let us m anage your offgrade canola.
1-866-388-6284
w w w .m illiga n biofu e ls .c om
BUYING PEAS: Maple, 4010, Austrian, etc. CGC bonded. Cal@Vandaeleseeds.com Box 144, Medora, MB. R0M 1K0. Phone 204-665-2384 or 204-522-5410. NEW CHICKPEA VARIETY, 75% nines or better. For more info call 306-631-1688, Brownlee, SK. BUYING YELLOW AND GREEN PEAS, all grades, farm pickup. Naber Specialty Grains Ltd., 1-877-752-4115, Melfort, SK. email: nsgl@sasktel.net
&*& OLFHQVHG DQG ERQGHG
NOW B UYIN G O ATS!
AL L GRAD ES Com petitive Ra tes P ro m pt P a ym en t
SweetGrass CONTRACTING
SMALL SQ. BALES, horse qualify, shedded, grass or second cut alfalfa. 306-492-4751, 306-221-0734, Dundurn, SK. HAY FOR SALE: Large amount of 5x6 grass/alfalfa round bales, baled w/JD 568 baler, net wrap. Phone 306-435-7223, Wawota, SK. or email: lazyk@rfnow.com EXCELLENT QUALITY ALFALFA/BROME, 1400 lbs. round bales, 13% protein, 57% TDN. Full forage test available. 1500 bales, $70/ton. 306-948-6533, Fiske, SK. 1500 LB. BROME/ALFALFA hay bales, $50 a bale at Weyburn and Halbrite, SK. Ph. 306-842-7082 or email johnh@sasktel.net
103 -3240 Id ylw yld Dr. N . S a s k a to o n
3 06 -9 3 3 -1115 TIRE & W HEEL
N EW STATE OF THE ART FACILITY
â&#x20AC;˘ PAS S EN GER, L IGHT TRUCK , S EM I, AGRICUL TURE, CON S TRUCTION â&#x20AC;˘ M ECHAN ICAL & AL IGN M EN T FOR CAR, BUS RV , TRUCK & TRAIL ER â&#x20AC;˘ TIRES /W HEEL S & CUS TOM DUAL & TRIPL E K ITS â&#x20AC;˘ TIRE V UL CAN IZIN G â&#x20AC;˘ 24 HOUR M OBIL E TRUCK S FOR ON S ITE W ORK
Available at:
Crop First Agro Grenfell, SK
ROUND ALFALFA/HAY BALES. Delivery available. Contact Tim at 306-594-2305, Norquay, SK.
Linden, AB
P AUL M O W ER 4 03 - 3 04 - 1 4 9 6
D AV E K O EH N
CAN AD A PASKAL CATTLE FEEDLOT Company in Lethbridge area, looking for feed barley. Call Roxanne at 1-800-710-8803.
HEATED CANOLA WANTED â&#x20AC;˘ GREEN â&#x20AC;˘ HEATED â&#x20AC;˘ SPRING THRASHED
LIGHT/TOUGH FEEDGRAINS â&#x20AC;˘ OATS â&#x20AC;˘ BARLEY
SULFUR for CAN OLA â&#x20AC;˘ Inexpensive Source â&#x20AC;˘ Agricultural Gypsum
www.dseriescanola.ca COMBINE DUAL KITS IN STOCK, JD 94009600/10/CTS/CTSII kit w/o tires starts from $9,850; JD STS dual kit w/ new 20.8x38 tires, $15,046; CIH 1680-2588 kit w/ new 20.838 tires, $13,900. Trade in your singles for duals. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
Call
NORTHSTAR GYPSUM Saskatoon, SK
(306) 242-1109
â&#x20AC;˘ WHEAT â&#x20AC;˘ PEAS
DAMAGED FLAX/PEAS â&#x20AC;˘ HEATED
(306) 697-3377
4 03 - 54 6 - 006 0
L IN D EN ,AL BER TA
WESTCAN FEED & GRAIN
1-877-250-5252
BUYING RYE M USGRAVE ENTERPRISES Ph : 204.8 3 5.2527 Fa x: 204.8 3 5.2712
K en ya /Ta n za n ia ~ Jan 2014 In d ia ~ Feb 2014 Chile/Argen tin a /Bra zil ~ Feb 2014 V ietn a m & Ca m b o d ia ~ M ar 2014 Chin a /M o n go lia ~ M arch 2014 Ja pa n ~ M ay 2014 Irela n d & S co tla n d ~ June 2014 Uk ra in e ~ June 2014 Au s tra lia /N ew Zea la n d ~ Jan 2015 Portion oftours m a y b e Ta x Ded uc tib le.
Se le ct Holida ys WANTED LARGE YELLOW peas and Triticale. Call Norbert at Saskcan Parent 204-737-3002, St. Joseph, MB.
â&#x20AC;˘ DISEASED
GREEN CANOLA
RURAL & CULTURAL TOURS
CLAMP ON DUALS 20.8 x 38 Titans in very good condâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;n, adapts to 30.5x32 inside rims, w/ adapters & hardware. $5,250. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
HUNTING CAMP FOR SALE, 40 miles north of Carrot River, SK. Includes log cabins and equipment. Ph 306-547-5524.
2 - 450 GALLON double walled fuel tanks, w/115 volt pumps, never used, $2200/ea OBO. 403-548-0525, Medicine Hat, AB. TURTLE TANKS, 225-480 US gallons ava i l a b l e , s t a r t i n g at $ 2 3 0 . C a l l 306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228. While supplies last. www.hold-onindustries.com
NEW 20.8-38 12 PLY $795; 16.9-30 12 ply, $595; 18.4-38 12 ply, $789; 24.5- 32 14 ply, $1,749; 14.9-24 12 ply, $486; 16.9-28 12 ply, $558; 18.4-26 10 ply, $890. Factory direct. More sizes available, new and used. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com
1- 800- 661- 432 6 w w w .selectho lid a ys.co m CANADA - CUBA FARM TOURS. Feb. 3rd to 17th. All inclusive. Deductible. 7 nights 5 star, 7 nights country hotels, 3 days Varadero, 8 day farm tour, 3 days Havana. Max 26. Farmers and family members only. $3200/person, 2 sharing, plus air. Early bird discount. Wendy Holm P.Ag, wendy@wendyholm.com 604-947-2893, www.wendyholm.com AG-VENTURE TOURS to South America, Kenya, Romania/Hungry, partially tax deductible. rwthomas@start.ca Ph: 519-633-2390. www.rwthomastours.com
FIBERGLASS SEPTIC Tanks- Various sizes available, starting from 250 gal. up to 34,000 gal. Visit Flaman store today or call YEAREND CLEARANCE! New tires and 1-888-435-2626, or www.flaman.com rims. 710/70R42 Michelin, for 4940 and 4930 JD, $19,400; 650/65R38 Michelins, POLY TANKS: 15 to 10,000 gallons; Blad- for Case and JD, $14,000; 900/50R42 der tanks from 220 to 88,000 gal; Water Firestone, 4940 and 4930 JD, $25,500. and liquid fertilizer; Fuel tanks, single and 306-697-2856, Grenfell, SK. double wall; Truck and storage, gas or dsl. Wilke Sales, 306-586-5711, Regina, SK.
LACKAWANNA PRODUCTS CORP. Buyers and sellers of all types of feed grain LOW PROFILE LIQUID fert. comp. tanks ECOSMARTE/ADVANCED PURE WATER. and grain by-products. Call 306-862-2723, 100-2500 US gal., $175-$2250. While supGuarantee 99% pure, no salts, chemicals, Nipawin, SK. plies last. 306-253-4343, 1-800-383-2228, SAWS, PLANERS, GRINDERS, air nailers, or chlorine. 306-867-9461. Fall discounts. www.hold-onindustries.com press drill, 13â&#x20AC;? DeWalt wood planer, car500 GALLON PROPANE TANK, 250 PSI. penter tools and scaffolding. 511 3rd St. Davidson, SK. 403-318-7589, AB. cell. Phone 403-854-2258, Hanna, AB. SOLID CORE ROUND alfalfa, alfalfa grass, 9â&#x20AC;? SOUTH BEND Model A lathe. 9â&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x54â&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;&#x2122; green feed, grass, and straw. Delivered. bed on wooden cabinet, S/N #155610. SA200 LINCOLN WELDER for parts, all FEED BARLEY, WHEAT, Call 306-237-4582, Perdue, SK. Quick change gearbox. 5â&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 3 jaw and 6â&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 4 good except the block. 306-634-4115, RYE, TRITICALE and WA N T E D : A L FA L FA / G R A S S lar ge jaw chuck plus other tooling, $1500. Estevan, SK. ALL TYPES OF SCREENINGS! TEMPORARY GRAIN BIN replacement round bales. We are interested in all 403-380-4825, Lethbridge, AB. tarps for all sizes from 22â&#x20AC;&#x2122; diameter to 105â&#x20AC;&#x2122; qualities of hay delivered to the ranch. Call Also AGENTS for Chickpeas, dia. Best quality available Canadian made OXYGEN GENERATOR NITRO T-10, com306-638-3051, Bethune, SK. Lentils, Field Peas quality silver cone shaped tarps available 300 ALFALFA/GRASS round bales, 5x6 for all sizes. All sizes in stock. Shipped plete working system. Generate welding COMPETITIVE! PROMPT PAYMENT! oxygen in your own facility for your STAUBER DRILLING INC. Water well hard core, approx. 1700 lbs., exc. quality, overnight to most major points in Western quality Swift Current, SK and to sell to others. 4 cyl. Champion drilling and servicing, Geotechnical, Envi$60/bale. 306-535-7292, Cupar, SK. Canada. For all pricing, details, and pics use Toll Free: 1-877-360-0727 air compressor complete Nitrox, T-10 gen- ronmental, Geothermal. Professional serour website at www.willwood.ca or erator system including E-Mail: wheatlandcommodities@sasktel.net concentrator, vice since 1959. Call the experts at 2500 ROUND WHEAT/STRAW BALES, visit Willwood Industries toll free air dryer and 8 cyl. fillinggas station. 26K cyls. 1-800-919-9211 info@stauberdrilling.com n e t w r a p p e d f o r s a l e . P h o n e phone 1-866-781-9560, fax 306-781-0108. and 18S cylinders and lockable cylinder 780-878-4655, Ferintosh, AB. T raders of Feed G rain , Pulse C rop s & S creen in gs cage. Air is free - Oxygen is valuable. Call 480 ALFALFA GRASS round bales, 80 alfal- SHUR-LOK TRUCK TARPS and replacement Del, 403-638-3934, Sundre, AB. for online KORNUM WELL DRILLING, farm, cottage CGC L icen s ed & Bo n d ed fa round bales. Asking $90/ton OBO. Baled tarps for all makes of trucks. Alan, pics and pricing. Email: delsgal@live.com and acreage wells, test holes, well rehabili306-723-4967, 306-726-7808, Cupar, SK. w/567 JD. 306-478-2625, Mankota, SK. tation, witching. PVC/SS construction, expert workmanship and fair pricing. 50% GREENFEED OAT 5x6 bales, $55 each. Will TARPCO, SHUR-LOK, MICHELâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S sales, HEAVY DUTY KENT-MOORE engine government grant now available. Indian service, installations, repairs. Canadian counter bore tool, good condition, $1500. load. Phone 306-327-7433, Lintlaw, SK. Head, SK., 306-541-7210 or 306-695-2061 company. We carry aeration socks. We 204-648-7136, Ashville, MB. BALE SCALES, CRADLE, 3 PTH or skid now carry electric chute openers for grain BEST PRICESÂ FO R steer; truck mounted bale movers; cattle trailer hoppers. 1-866-663-0000. scales and hopper feeders. 306-445-2111, HEATED O R HIG H LARGE CAPACITY TARPS to cover grain www.eliasscales.com North Battleford, SK. G REEN CANO LA. piles of varied sizes. Cover long grain piles CUSTOM BALE HAULING with 2 trucks and with 53â&#x20AC;&#x2122;W, 90â&#x20AC;&#x2122;W, or 109â&#x20AC;&#x2122;W piles of any A lso b uying b arley, w heat etc. t r a i l e r s , 3 4 b a l e s p e r t r a i l e r. C a l l length. 253,000 bu. pile covered for $11,666. All sizes in stock. Best quality 306-567-7100, Imperial, SK. available Canadian made quality silver The Cannon will blast water over 4 acres in a 190 degree ROUND MIXED ALFALFA bales, approx. tarps avail. for all sizes. Shipped overnight THE WATER CANNON arc to dry out low spots fast and efficiently. 1000, approx. 1200-1400 lbs., $160/ton to most major points in Western Canada. G RA IN M A RKETIN G Saving you time, fuel & wear and tear on your equipment. UNITS WILL DISTRIBUTE prepaid. 403-638-2232, Sundre, AB. For all pricing, details, and pictures visit: 1000 U.S. GALLONS www.willwood.ca or Willwood Industries Lacom be A B. w w w.eisses.ca 1500 LB. ROUND ALFALFA hay bales, a l l t o l l f r e e 1 - 8 6 6 - 7 8 1 - 9 5 6 0 , f a x PER MINUTE 1-888-882-7803 $50/bale. Midale, SK. Phone or text c306-781-0108. 780-753-0346, email: kcl@xplornet.com NOW INTRODUCING THE GRAIN MARKETING HEADQUARTERS. DOUBLE A FERTILIZER WAGON Buyers of all grains. On farm pricing. Quick 450 ROUND HAY bales, 1450 lbs., no rain. With sizes ranging from payment assured. Call Cory 306-842-2406, 306-736-2445, Kipling, SK. 1750 to 5250 US gallons! Double Z Ag Sales, Weyburn, SK. 1600 TO 1700 LB. alfalfa brome hard core 2- 24.5x32 RIMS from NH PT sprayer; 2CUSTOM OPTIONS ARE AVAILABLE. round hay bales, $55/bale. Close to 24.8x34 clamp-on duals, no spacer, serviceable tires 306-463-4866 Kindersley, SK Southey, SK. Call 306-726-2201 evenings.
WANTED
ARE LOW SPOTS SLOWING YOU DOWN? We can solve the problem with
WE BUY DAMAGED GRAIN
WANTED HEATED CANOLA. No broker involved. Sell direct to crushing plant. Cash on delivery or pickup. Unity, SK. Call: 306-228-7306 or 306-228-1502.
NUVISION COMMODITIES is currently purchasing feed barley, wheat, peas and milling oats. 204-758-3401, St. Jean, MB. WANTED: FEED/ OFF-GRADE Pulses and tough, heated green oilseeds and also cereals. Prairie Wide Grain, Saskatoon, SK., 306-230-8101, 306-716-2297.
%8<,1* )((' *5$,1
:H DUH D IXOO VHUYLFH IHHG JUDLQ LQJUHGLHQW VXSSOLHU LQFOXGLQJ PHUFKDQGLVLQJ GLVWULEXWLRQ DGPLQLVWUDWLRQ
www.jglgrain.com 877-907-1517 e:info@jglgrain.com 720 Duchess St - Saskatoon, SK 306-374-1517
TOP QUALITY ALFALFA, variety of grasses and custom blends, farmer to farmer. Gary Waterhouse 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK.
WANTED: FEED GRAIN, barley, wheat, 1000 CRESTED WHEAT Brome, alfalfa peas, green or damaged canola. Phone bales, approx. 1500 lbs. and 1000 Brome Gary 306-823-4493, Neilburg, SK. alfalfa bales, $60/ton; 250 oat greenfeed, $70/ton. 306-459-2802, Ogema, SK.
â&#x20AC;˘ FROZEN â&#x20AC;˘ HAILED â&#x20AC;&#x153;ON FARM PICKUPâ&#x20AC;?
Schluter & Maack NOW BUYING BROWN & YELLOW MUSTARD All grades of Green Peas Laird & Richlea Lentils Yellow Peas
CLASSIFIED ADS 69
Green and/or heated Canola/Flax, Wheat, Barley, Oats, Peas, etc. BOW VALLEY TRADING LTD.
1-877-641-2798
BARG FARMS, Brooks, Alberta. First and second cut round bales, mostly Alfalfa w/trace of grass. Call for delivered price. 403-793-7461. ROUND BARLEY STRAW bales, 2013 crop, net wrapped, $45/ton. Delivery can be arranged. 306-867-8249, Outlook, SK. HAY FOR SALE, round bales, mixed alfalfa and brome grass, no rain, good quality. Call 306-466-4428, Leask, SK. SMALL SQUARE WHEAT straw bales for sale. Call 306-237-4406, Perdue, SK.
TWO NEW TITAN 710/70R/42, load rate 12,300 lbs., $2900 each; 2-13.6x24 Galaxy 8 ply, $300/pair. Ph. 306-922-8155, Prince Albert, SK. SCRAPER AND LOADER TIRES available. All sizes. Quick Drain Sales, Muenster, SK. Ph: 306-682-4520, 306-231-7318. G O O D U S E D T R U C K T I R E S : 8.25/ 900/1000/1100x20â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s; 11R22.5/11R24.5; 9R17.5. Fresh load arriving Oct. 1. Pricing from $90. Call Ladimer, 306-795-7779, Ituna, SK; Chris 306-537-2027, Regina, SK
THE WATER CANNON
ORDER NOW FOR FALL DELIVERY!
DOUBLE A TRAILERS & CONTRACTING
780-657-0008 website: www.doubleatrailers.ca email: doubleaa@telusplanet.net
LEASING OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE
70 CLASSIFIED ADS
U-DRIVE TRACTOR TRAILER Training, 25 years experience. Day, 1 and 2 week upgrading programs for Class 1A, 3A and air brakes. One on one driving instructions. 306-786-6600, Yorkton, SK.
HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATORS for late model Cat equipment: motor scrapers (cushion ride), dozers, excavators, rock trucks, graders (trim operators). Camp job. Competitive wages plus room and board. Valid drivers license required. Send resume, work references to: Bryden Construction and Transport Co. Inc., Box 100, Arborfield, SK S0E 0A0. Fax 306-769-8844, brydenconstruct@xplornet.ca
HELP WANTED ON cow/calf operation for calving season (Feb.-April) with possible longer employment. Must have calving and farm equipment experience. Resumes can be sent to cattlefarmer2011@hotmail.com or Box 957, Foam Lake, SK. S0A 1A0. FARM/FEEDLOT MECHANIC required at Ballco Feeders custom feedlot. Must have minimum 5 years heavy duty mechanic and welding experience. Class 1 license an asset. Competitive wages and benefits package offered. Brant, AB. Fax 403-684-3345, Email: mike@ballco.ca AJL FARMS is seeking full-time permanent feed truck driver. Duties: Feed cattle, maintain grain handling and processing system. Also one general feedlot worker required for general feedlot maintenance and cattle check. Basic computer skills required for jobs. Fax 780-723-6245, Niton Junction, AB. chajlfarms@xplornet.com DAIRY WORKER REQUIRED for 120 cow barn. Wages negotiable. Rental accomm. available. Call 306-771-4318, Balgonie, SK. DAIRY WORKER REQUIRED for 100 cow dairy farm. Competitive wages. Call Keith 306-946-9513, Young, SK. FARM JOBS/ EMPLOYEES, Agemploy can help with both. Tony 403-732-4295, email: tonykarenk@hotmail.com Western Canada. OPPORTUNITY: ARE YOU looking to expand/start your operation? Feed and maintain 100 head cowherd, new mobile home, works with off farm job, or lease 1500 acre cattle operation, mobile home, all existing facilities, steel corrals, 15 watering bowls. Cattle experience absolutely required. Ray 780-826-5477, Bonnyville AB TWO PERMANENT FULL-TIME rancher/farmer wanted for beef and hay ranch, Merritt, BC. 1) Calving, range riding, hay and silage crops, machinery. 2) Management of irrigation system and 2 seasonal employees, machinery, hay and silage crops. Great career opportunity for young motivated person, interested in farming and ranching. Accommodation and benefits offered. Fax resume to 250-378-4956, or email info@ranchland.ca LOOKING FOR PEOPLE interested in riding feedlot pens in AB or SK, with above average horsemanship skills, willing to train. Wages depending on qualifications, benefits available.403-701-1548 Strathmore AB
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
POSITION AVAILABLE, Cypress Hills, SK. area. Background and yearling grasser operation. Modern facilities and equipment. Good working environment. Class 1 preferred. Wages negotiable depending on A U S T R A L I A N H A R V E S T ! Po s i t i o n s experience. 306-295-4138, 306-295-7473. available from Oct.- Dec., $22-28/hr., food FULL-TIME FARM LABOURER HELP. and accommodation incl. Experienced op- Applicants should have previous farm exerators with relevant working holiday visas perience and mechanical ability. Duties need only apply. Visit our website to find incl. operation of machinery, including out more about visas or to register your tractors, truck driving and other farm interest! www.ruralenterprises.com.au equipment, as well as general farm laborer duties. $12-$18/hr. depending on experiFULL-TIME DAIRY HERDS PERSON e n c e . C o n t a c t W a d e F e l a n d a t wanted immediately. Must have experi- 701-263-1300, Antler, North Dakota. ence in dairy herd health, computer and be mechanically inclined. Self-motivated and AUSTRALIAN GRAIN HARVEST STAFF willing to learn. Rental property available NEEDED. Operators wanted for Australian in Nov. near Outlook, SK. Email resume: grain harvest from Oct. to Dec., 2013. jakeboot@yourlink.ca Fax: 306-867-9622. Must be able to work long hours and be Phone 306-867-9926. proficient in driving late model chaser bins/grain carts. Also be Qualified in FULL-TIME AND SEASONAL people to assist in driving new model Case combine/headers. operating a large modern grain farm. Prefer- Accommodation and most meals will be ence given to experience as a Mechanicâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s help- supplied!! An International licence would er and Class 1 driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s license an asset. Wages be helpful and a bonus. A working holiday based on experience, range $12-20/hr. but not Visa will be required. You will be working limited to. Housing available. Apply to Galvin on a family run farm. This position would Farms Ltd, 204-748-8332, Virden, MB., suit a fit 20 to 30 year old. All enquires john@galvinfarms.com to: Eastgrove Farming Pty Ltd./Harvest Staff tribal@westnet.com.au FULL TIME CATTLE RANCH Labourers wanted for Tyvan, SK. Duties include: WANTED FULL-TIME LABOURER able feeding and tending to livestock; operating to run farm equipment on cattle and grain and maintaining farm equipment; cleaning farm. Duties include but not limited to: stables and pens and detecting disease cattle help, herd health, calving, seeding, and health problems in livestock. Experi- harvesting, haying, and general farm opence and qualifications required. 3 vacan- erations and maintenance. Driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s license cies at $16.60/hr. All applications to: required. Wages negotiable with experience. Send resume with references and youngslandc@gmail.com driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s abstract to 403-552-2359 or email BEEF HERDSMAN(S) with experience in to clarkconstruction@telus.net Altario, AB. cow/calf and feedlot required for mixed SEMI RETIRED NS for cow/grain farm. farm NW of Edmonton, AB. Duties include Class 1 an asset. Housing provided. calving, animal health and record keeping. 403-334-9977, Rosedale, AB. Wages $16.50/hr, full-time position. Apply to: Paul Meunier & Sons Farms Ltd, Barr- HELPER WANTED for day to day activities head, AB. Email meunierfarms@mcsnet.ca on our cow/calf operation. Feeding and or fax: 780-674-8136. calving cows, maintaining equipment. Room/board incl. Ph Allan or Aline, McRae CENTRAL AB. MIXED farm requires ma- AB., 780-726-3802, akuzma@mcsnet.ca ture, reliable, independent individual for full time, year round work. Duties include: WANTED: FARM LABOURERS able to management of hog and cow/calf enter- run farm equipment on cattle/grain farm. prises as well as machinery operation and F u l l - t i m e wo r k ava i l a b l e . C a l l M i ke maintenance. Basic carpentry skills, me- 306-469-7741, Big River, SK. chanical aptitude and experience with ani- FULL TIME GRAIN Farm Labourer: Applimals are assets. Salary: $15-$20/hr. Apply cants should have previous farm experito Brian at: conveylyons@mcsnet.ca ence and mechanical ability. Duties in780-984-5026, Ryley, AB. clude operation of machinery, tractors, truck driving and other farm equipment, as SIMPSON RANCHING HAS a full-time well as general farm labourer duties, Ranch Hand position available for versa- $18/hr. with little to no experience, but tile and self-motivated individual. Start considerably more with experience, negodate flexible, help required by Feb. 2014 tiable. Please contact Thunder Creek calving season. Experience with cattle, Farms at 204-773-3113, Russell, MB. or horses and equipment operation/mainte- email: shekira8@hotmail.com nance is required. Proof of valid driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s license is required. Accommodations pro- FULL-TIME FARM LABORER required vided. Performance bonus available. for mixed farm. Valid drivers license rePlease include three references on re- quired. Housing avail. Provost, AB. Fax resume. Cochrane, AB. Fax: 403-932-4342, sume: 780-753-2962 or ph 780-753-2952. email: heidi@simpsonranching.ca or call FULL-TIME POSITION AVAILABLE on 403-473-4571 for more info. mixed farm west of Calgary, AB. Family LOOKING FOR SOMEONE to help with day house provided. Experience required. to day activities on our cow/calf opera- Email zink2@colpittsranches.com for info tion. Duties include cattle help, calving, sheet or application. haying, fencing, general ranch operations and maintenance. References and drivers required. Own horse preferred. Housing available. Call 403-652-5191, Nanton, AB. HIRING FULL-TIME POSITION for an experienced individual on a cow/calf operation near Elk Point, Alberta. Duties include: assisting in calving, feeding and handling cattle. Seeding, haying, and harvesting also included in duties. Mechanical knowledge, Class 1 license, welding also an asset. Equipment is modern and well maintained. Family size lodging with fenced yard, basic utilities and appliances incl. in wage package. 5 minutes from town with schools and amenities. Fax resume and driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s license to: 780-724-3202 or email: altafarmgirl@hotmail.com 780-724-2090. BEEKEEPERâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S HELPERS (4), for the 2014 season May to Oct, $12-$15/hr depending on experience. Contact Ron Althouse, 306-278-2747, Porcupine Plain, SK.
How to Contact Us.
Clip & Save
ClassiďŹ eds OďŹ&#x192;ce Hours: MONDAY to FRIDAY 8:30AM - 4:30PM Phone Line Hours: TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY until 8PM
1.800.667.7770 | Email: advertising@producer.com
Subscriptions OďŹ&#x192;ce Hours: MONDAY to FRIDAY 8:30AM - 4:30PM
1.800.667.6929 | Email: subscriptions@producer.com
Newsroom OďŹ&#x192;ce Hours: MONDAY to FRIDAY 8:30AM - 4:30PM
1.800.667.6978 | Email: newsroom@producer.com
Submit your ad online anytime at
www.producer.com
DAIRY, BEEF, CROP, hog and sheep farms in Europe, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, and Japan are looking for help! AgriVenture arranges host/employer, work permit, insurance, airfare and support. Young adults 18-30 with interests in agriculture/horticulture are urged to apply. www.agriventure.com 1-888-598-4415. 2 EXPERIENCED PLASTERERS required. Full-time year round work. $19-$24 per hour depending on experience. Min. 3 yrs. experience w/application of plaster according to blueprints or oral instructions. Must be able to provide clean drug and alcohol test results and police certificate. Apply: McMorrow Construction Ltd., 2207 1st Ave. North, Saskatoon, SK. S0K 0A1 mcmorrow@sasktel.net fax 306-244-9731 12 TRUSS ASSEMBLY Workers wanted A S A P. F u l l - t i m e y e a r r o u n d w o r k , $12.-$16/hr. Some labour experience is an asset. Willing to train to assemble wood trusses. Apply to: Warman Truss, PO Box 1000, 700 South Railway St. West, Warman, SK. S0K 0A1 or fax 306-933-2991 or rbedient@warmantruss.com PRAIRIE LIVESTOCK, LOCATED 1 mile outside of Moosomin, SK. is hiring multiple permanent, full-time night yard staff. Starting wage $19/hour plus health benefits. Wage negotiable with experience. Responsibilities include: loading/unloading trucks; penning cattle; feeding and cleaning yard. Experience working with livestock is necessary. Candidates must be able to work with little supervision in a fast-paced atmosphere, be well organized and have the ability to keep accurate accounts. Employees hired will be required to work nights and possibly weekends. Mail applications to: Prairie Livestock, Box 964, Moosomin, SK. S0G 3N0, Attn: Dion or email: dion@prairielivestock.ca
GRATTON COUL EE AGRIPARTS L TD. Is a pro gre s s ive , e xpa n d in g a gric u ltu ra l s a lva ge pa rts c o m pa n y s pe c ia lizin g in la te m o d e l tra c to r a n d c o m b in e pa rts a n d lo c a te d a tIrm a , Alb e rta . W e a re looking for
M E CH ANICAL AS S E M BL E R S
GENERAL FARM WORKER, April 1 to Dec. 31, 2014, Vision Farms Corp, Weyburn, SK. One seasonal job: plant, cultivate, harvest crops. Service machinery and make in-field repairs. Must be motivated and responsible and take pride in work. Valid driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s license, clean driving record, non-smoker required. Must have at least 1 yr. or more of experience, $18/hr., 40 hrs./wk. Email: klschneid@sasktel.net Call 306-842-3525
CONTROLLER, BALLCO FEEDERS: This position is a combination of accounting clerk, payroll clerk and financial manager. The ideal candidate will have 5+ years of accounting, payroll and financial skills. Professional designation not mandatory. Strong knowledge of Quick Books, Easy Pay, Excel, Word and Microsoft Outlook. Salary is negotiable and includes a full range of benefits. E-mail resume with references to: michelle@ballco.ca or fax 403-684-3345, Brant, AB.
VEGETABLE PACKER NOC8611
Greenhouse vegetable packaging facility located in Redcliff, AB is accepting applications for full time packaging line workers â&#x20AC;&#x201C; with additional duties relating to a packaging facility (receiving, sorting, sanitation). Physically demanding, bending, lifting, repetitive tasks, cold/hot work environment, extended standing. Steel toed foot wear required. Work references and criminal record check may be required. Shared accommodation available, $75.00 per week. Wage $11.00 per hour 40.0 hour week.
Red Hat Co-operative Ltd. 809 Broadway Ave. E. Redcliff, AB T0J 2P0 Fax: (403) 548-7255 P lease apply for the job in the m anner specified,failure to do so m ay result in your application not being properly considered for the position
THIS IS WHERE IT STARTS Create memories in our Northlands Events department. Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re looking for an Event Manager to oversee Farmfair International and the Farm and Ranch Showâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;someone who possesses a keen knowledge of agriculture, is highly organized, has the right experience and is looking for a position whose beneďŹ ts include the ability to serve our community. Learn more at: northlands.com/employment
HUNTING GUIDE REQUIRED. Seasonal employment, training provided. Call 306-426-2772, Shipman, SK. 2 RESIDENTIAL ROOFERS required. Fulltime year round work. $17- $22 per hour depending on experience. Min. 3 yrs. experience with installing, repairing and replacing residential pitched roofs. Must be able to work all seasons, on roofs up to 50â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, and able to carry repeatedly 50 lbs. Must be able to provide clean drug and alcohol test results and police certificate. Apply at McMorrow Construction Ltd., 2207 1st Ave. North, Saskatoon, SK. S0K 0A1 mcmorrow@sasktel.net fax 306-244-9731
(4 va ca n cies ) Perm a n en t, fu ll tim e p o s itio n s -44 hrs p er w eek. S a la ry $19.25 to $20.00/hr. Va lid d rivers licen s e. Previo u s exp erien ce a n a s s et. To a pply fo r a po s itio n w ith u s , plea s e e-m a il res u m e to : m a rc@ gcpa rts .co m o r s en d fa x to 78 0-754-2333 Atten tio n : Alvin W a n n echk o 5 KITCHEN HELPERS needed, full-time year round work, split shifts and weekends $10-11.50 per hour. Assists cooks with preparation of meals, maintains and cleans kitchen, stores supplies, keeps storage areas organized. Previous experience is an asset but willing to train. Apply at Beilyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Ultralounge, 2404 8th St. East, Saskatoon, SK, S7H 0V6. Email: daler@beilys.ca or fax 306-477-4755.
COPELAND SEEDS LTD., ROSETOWN, SK. is looking for a Mill Operator, a General Labourer and a person with a 1A driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s license. All full-time positions with benefits packages. Our facility is 20 minutes south of Rosetown. For more info HELPER WANTED on mixed farm. Steady contact Bob at 306-378-2286. Send rejob for right person. Room and board avail. sume to: copeland.seeds@sasktel.net or 403-631-2373, 403-994-0581, Olds, AB. fax 306-378-2366. LARGE GRAIN AND Poultry Farm, North of Edmonton, AB. looking for a farm worker with a potential future in farm management. We have an up-to-date beautiful farm. Class 1A, experience with livestock, large equipment and computers is necessary. We offer accommodations. Wages will be discussed. Only serious applicants. Send resume to: Martin and Catharina, fax 780-961-3967, or catacyr@hotmail.com or call 780-220-8144, Legal, AB.
DIDSBURY SPRUCE FARMS: Seeking two full-time permanent farm supervisors. Near Disbury, AB. Must have experience in agriculture and horticulture. Must be able to operate and service equipment. Capable of supervising and working well with others. Required to have experience in tree care tree harvesting and landscaping. Will be required to perform all general farm duties. Wages $13.50/hr. For inquiries contact Brett at: 403-586-8733, fax: 403-335-4423, RR #2, Site 11, Box 2, D i d s b u r y, A B . T 0 M 0 W 0 . e m a i l : brett@didsbury sprucefarms.com
PARTS PERSO N REQ UIRED W ellEsta blished M u ltilin e Agricu ltu ra lDea lership in Ea st Cen tra lAlberta IsLo o kin g Fo rAn Ho n est,Aggressive & Am bitio u s
PARTS PERSO N . Agricu ltu ra lBa ckgro u n d a n d Co m pu terExperien ce W o u ld Be An Asset. Fu ll-Tim e Po sitio n , $15 to $20 per ho u r.Ben efits,(a fter6 m o n th perio d ).
Plea se Fo rw a rd Resu m es to M a rc a t G ra tto n Co u lee Agri Pa rts Ltd ., B o x 4 1,Irm a ,AB T0B 2H 0 o r S en d Fa x to 780-75 4 -2333.
50.(639&7320+8429&7 7.84516 89 1-) $ '$% $#$% '& $ &#$!% ' ! '&
2 positions
Agro Manager and Agronomist
519704
Ste. Rose Agro Branch at our
& $%' !% " ' !! " &#$ "' # ' $# '&'"453,(9639 18)9 7289-0 5,'9 &%$#! &' $ ' &' " ' #$ $ $!%' ! & ' "#&$ ' $%" ! &#" ' $%' # "' "& #' ! ' # "' & &% ' " $!%' #' $% #" ' ! ' # " "& #$ ' $ $% ' ! %#&$%' &#$!%& ' & ' &% ' # "' ' ! %#&$% ! $% $& ' & 895489288#63*953963-6 6-05/9%61(95921473*9%74#63*9#37%/8-*8 7$9 $8416/6 84'9 288-'9 ,(8+6,5/9 53-9 .8147/80+'9 529 %8//9 529 *77,7+.01849 2#6//2)9 !9 6./7+5'9 8*4889 639 !*46,0/10489 749 &8416$68&47.9 !- 62749 &&! 9 5,,48-61516739 %70/-9 "89 539 522819 "019 371 82283165/) (8920,,822$0/9,53-6-5189+0219"895928/$92154184'9.482831921473* .72616 89/85-842(6.'963184.842735/953-9,7++036,5167392#6//2) 7639 7049 185+'9 50.(639 &77.9 7$$8429 539 8 ,6163*9 ,54884 $# ! ! # %$# ' ! ' & &% " "%# ' & !% ' $# ' &' ! "#$#$ "' & & ! # #&% $% ' "% $!%' &% '&% '" " "%#' "%" $# ' ' % " ' "%#& &% ' " $ & ' &%
50.(639&7320+8429&77. !11831673 9 5-659 .6#0/59&4 9 535*84974 /89 70/-2"7470*(9 6 9!*479 535*84 9 9 4-9! 8)9 ) )'9 50.(63'9 9 9
498 +56/94820+8917 3)2.6#0/5 -50.(63,77.),7+974 /)*70/-2"7470*( -50.(63,77.),7+ 626197049%8"26189%%%)-50.(63,77.),7+
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013
ASSISTANT FARM MANAGER. Torch River Agricultural Corp. 12,000 acre mixed grain farm near Choiceland, SK. Our philosophy and approach is to work effectively with, and within, the local community to produce high quality, profitable crops through good farming practices. We believe that larger scale farming can be done responsibly, and devote a large amount of time and effort to caring for and protecting our land so that it remains productive. Pride in our approach is reflected in the high satisfaction levels shown by our loyal and long standing customers. Seeking an experienced Assistant Farm Manager to work closely with our Farm Manager. The successful candidate will assume responsibilities for the day to day operation of the farm, be involved in the overall planning and control aspects of running the business. Strong leadership, management and organization skills are essential. We require the candidates to have completed a 4 year agriculture degree or equivalent, together with a minimum of 4 years management experience, ideally in a grain farming environment. As a growth oriented company we offer excellent career options, a competitive salary and benefit package in a constructive, supportive team environment. If this fits with your future goals, forward your resume to David Hughes: david@torchriverfarms.com We appreciate the interest of all applicants, only those considered for an interview will be contacted. No phone calls.
Lloydminster, AB Requires 5 Service Rig Derrick Hands @ $29.50/hr – 40 hrs/wk and 12 Service Rig Floor Hands @ $27.00/hr – 40 hrs/wk, for work in the Lloydminster area.
Please fax resume to 780-871-6908 or email: royalwel@telus.net
7(55,725< 6$/(6
0DQDJHU
8,) 8)66-836= 7%0)7 1EREKIV MW EGGSYRXEFPI JSV QE\MQM^MRK EPP EGXMZMXMIW EWWSGMEXIH [MXL WEPIW SJ RI[ QEGLMRIW ERH TEVX WEPIW [MXLMR E HI½RIH XIVVMXSV] PMEMWI [MXL HIEPIVW ERH KVS[IVW XS FYMPH VIPEXMSRWLMTW ERH WXVEXIKMGEPP] WIPP XLI GSQTER]´W TVSHYGXW % WYGGIWWJYP GERHMHEXI [MPP LEZI E QMRMQYQ SJ ]IEVW SJ TVSKVIWWMZI I\TIVMIRGI MR EVIEW SJ 7EPIW ERH %KVSRSQ] GSQFMRIH [MXL E &EGLIPSV MR %KVMGYPXYVI QENSVMRK MR EKVSRSQ] WSMP WGMIRGI GVST WGMIRGI TPERX WGMIRGI EK IGSRSQMGW SV E VIPEXIH QENSV % GSQFMREXMSR SJ I\TIVMIRGI ERH IHYGEXMSR [MPP EPWS FI GSRWMHIVIH 7IRH VIWYQI XS ) QEMP LV$WIIHLE[O GSQ *E\
[[[ WIIHLE[O GSQ
CLASSIFIED ADS 71
5 CARPENTERS NEEDED. Full-time year round work, $17. - 22/per hr. 4 years experience constructing, fitting, repairing and installing structures made of wood. Apply to: Warman Cabinets, 701 South Railway Street West, Warman, SK. S0K 0A1 or fax to 306-933-1868 or email to toddw.warmancabinets@sasktel.net WANTED: JOURNEYMAN PLASTERER and metal Lather. A-1 Stucco and Masonary. Lather req’d to have knowledge in application of building paper, stucco wire and metal lathe. Plasterer required to perform all applications of stucco. Exp. in both preferred, $21/hr. starting. Some benefits included. Must be able to work from scaffolding. Weyburn, SK. area, phone 306-842-5696, jim_rubin@hotmail.com
ASSISTANT PARTS MANAGER wanted for multi-store New Holland dealer. Journeyman preferred, but experience will also be considered. Benefits, RRSP package, moving allowance, and signing bonus. $22 t o $ 2 8 p e r h o u r. E m a i l r e s u m e t o parts.triag@telus.net Wainwright, AB.
LONG HAUL SEMI Drivers and Owner Operators required to haul RVs and general freight. Drivers paid 40¢/running mile and pick/drop/border. Owner Operators paid 85% of gross revenue. Benefits, company fuel cards and subsidized insurance. Must have valid passport and ability to cross border. Call Jeremy at 1-800-867-6233, 10 CONCRETE FINISHERS needed. Sea- Saskatoon, SK. www.roadexservices.com sonal full-time position starting April 1st. $18-$24 per hr. Min. 3 years experience CLASS 1 AND 3 Vac/Water/Tractor Trailer w/forming and placing concrete sidewalks Operators. 3 to 5 years driving experience and curbs. Apply to: Sautner Concrete Ser- in remote conditions. Knowledge of the vices, Suite 214, 220 20th Street West, safe operation of vacuum and/or water Saskatoon, SK. Fax 306-242-3548 or truck and auxiliary equipment (pump, agiemail: info@scsconcrete.com tator, TPC, etc.). Safety Training: H2S, Aid, TDG, WHMIS, PST/CSTS, ConS O U T H C O U N T RY E Q U I P M E N T LT D. First Space (training can be provided). Heavy Equipment Mechanics, 6 full- fined email/fax current resume, driver’s time. Functions: Repair, overhaul, trouble- Please a b s t r a c t a n d s a fe t y c e r t i fi c at e s t o shoot and maintain JD HD agricultural ops@movac.ca 403-201-3684, Calgary, equipment; Use testing equipment to di- Lac La Biche, Ft.orMcMurray, AB. Long term agnose malfunctions and determine extent positions with camp coming available. of repair required; Test repaired equipment to ensure compliance with JD specifications. Requirements: Journeyman SELECT CLASSIC CARRIERS immediateor minimum 4-6 years of equivalent expe- ly requires Leased Operators with new rience as heavy duty equipment mechanic. model 1 tons and 5 ton straight trucks/ Wages: $25-32/hr. depending on qualifi- tractors, and Company Drivers; Also recations/experience. Qualified candidates quire 1 driver with 5L or Class 1 license for would be assigned to work in any of the operating a haul and tow. Transporting following locations: Weyburn, Emerald RVs/general freight, USA/Canada. Clean Park, Raymore, Moose Jaw, SK. How to abstract required. Competitive rates. Fuel apply: Please reply in writing, fax, or e- surcharge/benefits. 1-800-409-1733. mail with Attention to Drew Watson or Chris Clements by: fax 306-842-3833, CLASS 1A HD Tow Truck Driver required email: watsondrew@southcountry.ca web- for Lloydminster, AB, area. Permanent fullsite: www.southcountry.ca Phone Drew time position. Will train. Abstract required. Watson 306-842-4686. John 780-846-0002 or fax 780-846-0005. AUTOMOTIVE MECHANIC WANTED located in Carnduff, SK. Journeyman, second WANTED: DRIVERS/OWNER Operators or third year apprentice. Offer competitive for grain and fertilizer hauling, based in wages. For info call Lee 306-482-3827, or Kenaston, SK. Phone Leon at TLC Trucking 306-252-2004 or 306-567-8377. email resume to goertzfarms@sasktel.net
Tr u ck Driver sW a n ted ~Big g a r Tr a n s p or t~
Co m pa n y Drivers& Lea sed O pera to rs to pu llSu perB’sin bu lk gra in & fertilizerd ivisio n Co m petitive w a ges& ben efits& Sign in g Bo n u s S en d Resu m e & DriversAbstra ctto ro d p a cik@ tra n sa llg ro u p .co m o r fa x:3 06 -24 2-2077 C a ll:Ro d Pa cik 3 06 -24 9-6 85 3 3 06 -3 81-6 5 3 5 CLASS 1A TRUCK DRIVERS wanted for hauling crude oil in Southern SK. Must have fluid hauling experience working 5 days on/ 5 days off schedule (flexible), competitive wages, full-time position. Fax resume, drivers abstract and current safety tickets to: 306-245-3337, Weyburn, SK. ROCKPORT CARRIER CO. is hiring full-time Semi Drivers for long haul trips within Canada and US. Require: Class 1A license with air brakes and at least 2 years experience, clean driving abstract, criminal record check. Wage: mileage based or $20/hr. Moose Jaw, SK., E-mail resume with abstract to: gerry@rockportcarrier.ca
DRIVERS WANTED: CLL Holdings Ltd. is looking for water and vacuum truck drivers. Servicing the oil and gas drilling rigs and Winter Ice Roads Projects. Looking for responsible self-starters with mature attitude. Experience an asset, willing to train. Excellent wages with full benefits including safety awards. Requires H2S, First-Aid, CPR, 3A license (prefer 1A). Accommodations supplied while on the job. New equipment. Fax or e-mail resume and driver’s abstract to: matt@cllholdings.ca or 780-875-2586 (fax). Phone 306-441-5962, Lloydminster, SK. CLASS 1A DRIVER, full-time position, hauling grain and fertilizer in SK and AB. Benefits after 3 months. Contact Guy Trucking Ltd. at 1-888-304-4888, email: to guy.truck@sasktel.net RWB RANCH IS LOOKING for full-time Class 1 Drivers and Lease Operators to haul livestock and hogs to and from SK, MB, AB, BC and USA. Year-round work. Experience required, paying top wages, new equipment, benefits and safety bonuses. 403-625-4658, Claresholm, AB.
Meridian Manufacturing Inc. is an industry leader in the manufacture of steel, smooth-wall storage systems used in agricultural and commercial applications.
REGIONAL SALES MANAGER Continued growth has created a need for a Regional Sales Manager for the Western Saskatchewan region, preferably based out of the Saskatoon location. Your focus will be to develop anE maintain long term relationships with established customers in the region, and achieve the annual sales budget for the assigned territory through the promotion of Meridian products. • • • • •
Min. 3 years sales experience in agricultural or related industries. Customer service oriented, sales driven Exceptional written and oral communication skills. Demonstrated computer skills Ability to travel generally two weeks per month
Qualified candidates should forward their resume and cover letter, stating salary expectations, by November 1, 2013 to: HRWinkler@meridianmfg.com or www.meridianmfg.com
120,000 print and 65,000 online Western Producer readers know us for our great content... but when it comes to classifieds you know us for our great service. in print and online next day! When it’s time to sell, turn to The Western Producer’s team of Classified Sales Associates. Our product knowledge, marketing strategies and access to qualified buyers is unmatched in this industry. Place your classified word ad with us and view it online within the next business day. Online delivery FREE until December 31. Call NOW and talk to the experts at... Monday to Friday, ads will be posted online within one business day. Real Time online will be placed a maximum of 11 days prior to first print insertion.
CALL US AT: 1-800-667-7770 | CLASSIFIEDS.PRODUCER.COM
72
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
GENETIC MODIFICATION | ALFALFA
First GM alfalfa varieties receive approval Only for Eastern Canada | At least five varieties are registered for commercial use, but plans have yet to be finalized BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Canada’s first Roundup Ready alfalfa crops could take root in Ontario and Quebec as early as next spring, according to officials from a pair of Canadian seed companies involved in registering and selling the crops. Documents posted on the Canadian Food Inspection Agency’s website confirm that at least five Roundup Ready alfalfa varieties have already been registered for commercial sale and production in Canada. The first of those lines — WL 373HQ. RR — was registered by the CFIA’s variety registration office April 26. Four more lines received CFIA approval Aug. 22 and will be marketed under variety names 428RR, Ariad RR, Freedom RR and Mission RR. The Canadian representative for all five varieties is listed as Gold Medal Seeds of Brooks, Alta., a subsidiary of U.S. based Forage Genetics International (FGI), which holds commercial rights to Monsanto’s Roundup Ready alfalfa varieties in Canada. Canadian distributors for the varieties include Growmark Inc. of Kitchener, Ont., Quality Seeds of Vaughan Ont., Pride Seeds of Chatham Ont., Pickseed Canada of Lindsey, Ont., La Co-op Fédérée of Longueuil Que., and Synagri of Saint-Hyacinthe, Que.
Stephen Denys, vice-president of sales and marketing with Pride Seeds, said Canada’s first commercial plantings of Roundup Ready alfalfa could occur as early as next spring. “Potentially, but that’s going to depend,” he said. “We want to make sure that all the stewardship requirements are in (place) before we go to market.” Denys, a past-president of the Canadian Seed Trade Association, said Pride Seeds will begin selling Freedom RR seed once Monsanto and FGI finalize stewardship agreements that govern the sale and production of Roundup Ready alfalfa seed in Eastern Canada. He said it is not clear how long it will take for stewardship agreements to be drafted, reviewed and approved. “I believe Monsanto and Forage Genetics are working on those stewardship agreements,” Denys said. “That all needs to be in place before the varieties can be commercialized so they won’t be in place this fall, that’s for sure.” Erick Lutterotti, general manager with Gold Medal Seeds, said spring is more likely. “I don’t see it being available until probably next spring but that’s going to be up to Forage Genetics and … (the distributors) to decide.” The introduction of GM alfalfa vari-
The companies involved in the project say they want stewardship plans in place before the varieties are released. | FILE PHOTO eties in Canada has been several years in the making. Health and environmental approvals have been in place for some time, but officials representing FGI have repeatedly said that the company will not bring the products to market until certain steps are taken. They include industry-wide consultations and the development of a co-existence plan to address the concerns of conventional alfalfa producers, alfalfa seed growers and alfalfa hay and seed exporters. A co-existence plan, facilitated by the Canadian Seed Trade Association, was released earlier this year.
The plan, which was criticized by environmentalists and organic farmers opposed to GM alfalfa, contained a series of best management practices aimed at limiting the potential for commingling and cross-pollination between GM and non-GM alfalfa crops. CFIA officials have confirmed that the five RR alfalfa varieties registered in Canada were granted national registration, meaning they can be marketed anywhere in the country. However, Denys and Lutterotti said there are no plans to expand the sale of GM alfalfa to Western Canada. Alfalfa growers in the Prairies and
British Columbia would have to demonstrate that adequate demand exists for the product before it is sold in the West, they added. Stakeholders in the western forage and alfalfa seed industries would also be consulted and a co-existence plan drawn up for western Canadian production. Denys said the co-existence plan released earlier this year pertains exclusively to the production of GM alfalfa as a hay crop in Eastern Canada. An FGI spokesperson issued a short statement Oct. 16 confirming that Roundup Ready alfalfa has been approved for use in Canada. “Forage Genetics International is considering opportunities in Eastern Canada for Roundup Ready alfalfa for use as forage,” said Rebecca Lentz, a corporate communicator with the U.S.-based farmer co-operative Land O’Lakes, the parent company of FGI. “No decision has been made on sales in Canada.” Lutterotti said Gold Medal Seeds has no plans to sell or distribute Roundup Ready alfalfa. “We registered the varieties, but all of those varieties will be available for sale in Eastern Canada only,” he said. All seed production is done in the U.S..… There is no seed production in Canada and none planned … for the near future.”
Move it!
in print and online next day.
Now your classified word ads will go online within one business day from when you book them to run in the Producer Classifieds. And best of all, online word ads are FREE until the end of 2013 when you book your print ad. Our team of Classified Sales Associates has the product knowledge, marketing strategies and access to qualified buyers that is unmatched in the industry. Place your classified ad and experience our professional service first hand. Monday to Friday, ads will be posted online within one business day. Real Time online will be placed a maximum of 11 days prior to first print insertion.
CLASSIFIEDS.PRODUCER.COM
1-800-667-7770
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
73
WORLD FOOD DAY | SPECIAL CROPS
Company eager to expand beneficial niche crops Marigolds, echinacea | Kemlin Industries does business in more than 90 countries, helping producers grow high value crops BY LES KLETKE FREELANCE WRITER
DES MOINES, Iowa — Plants that produce special oils and nutrients were heralded as a potential solution for western Canadian farmers in the 1990s, when grain prices were reeling from the U.S.-European trade war. Acres of echinacea and purple cone flowers were planted but the factories to process the components never became a reality, despite the efforts of community development committees across the Prairies. The industry did develop, just not in Western Canada. The reality of the industry was brought home recently when farmers from 15 countries visited Kemlin Industries in Des Moines as part of a Global Farmer Roundtable meeting held in conjunction with World Food Day. “Our companies intent is to have a product that reaches half of the world’s population,” said company founder R.W. Nelson. “We are not there yet, but we reach about 1.7 billion people with our molecules, and that is a pretty good start.” Nelson, who started the company in 1961 with his wife, Mary, has committed to the future with a new facility that houses the core of the company’s research. “The scientists don’t like it when I say it, but I tell them that we need 10, $50 million products in the next three years to pay for this place” he said. The company employs 2,000 workers in manufacturing plants in eight countries and conducts business in
R.W.NELSON KEMLIN INDUSTRIES FOUNDER
more than 90 countries. The company is growing 24,000 acres of marigolds in India with the help of 12,000 farmers. The flowers are processed for their lutein, which is sometimes called the eye vitamin and aids in the prevention of macular
degeneration. Canadian representative Gerrid Gust, who farms 16,000 acres near Davidson, Sask., said the possibility of producing marigolds for a company like Kemlin held little promise. He might see increased value in crops by extracting other products from them, but the labour of flower production, especially hand transplanting, would be a problem. Gabriela Cruz, who farms 2,000 acres in Portugal, was more interested. “Our country is divided in two by a river,” she said, “In the north, we have small farms and lots of rain. In the
Sask. growth plan going well BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
One bumper crop does not an accomplished goal make, but Saskatchewan premier Brad Wall said this year’s harvest goes a long way toward it. The growth plan he announced last fall calls for crop production to increase by 10 million tonnes by 2020. Last year, production was 26.4 million tonnes and this year’s estimates are for more than 30 million tonnes. “The crop production goals are going to be facilitated not by one great year,” he told reporters after updating the Regina Chamber of Commerce on the plan’s progress. “That’s helpful, but they’re going to be facilitated by us continuing to lead in terms of crop variety development that focused on quality and yield.” Wall, who just returned from a trade mission to Southeast Asia, said 30 percent of all Canadian exports to the countries that belong to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations come from Saskatchewan. Another growth plan goal called for an increase in exports of food and agricultural products from $10 billion in 2011 to $15 billion by 2020. The total hit $11.2 billion in 2012.
corn or beans in the first year of production and then moves to a blended approach in the second year, when they get a small harvest. By the third year of production they are paid on the biomass that they produce. “With a crop like rosemary, we realize that producers need to be paid in the first two years, so we work with them to get a fair return,” he said. “Eighty percent of world production is still clear cut from hillsides that causes tremendous erosion.… We are trying to change that with managed production that recognizes the life cycle of the plant.”
FALL INTERNET 2013 AUCTION THIS ONLINE AUCTION EVENT RUNS NOVEMBER 7 - NOVEMBER 18, 2013 Bidding starts November 7 at 9 a.m. and ends November 18 at 9 p.m. CST SHARP!
Pre-register online at: SASK. ECONOMY | OUTLOOK
south, it is dry and the farms are much larger. We could be producing crops like flowers that are of high value.” Lydia Sasu from Ghana not only thought flower production would work in her country but wondered if Kemlin supplied a seed and fertilizer package because farmers could not afford the cost of quality seed or nutrients for traditional crops. John Greaves of Kemlin said the company recognizes there is a time lag before harvest with many of the crops it contracts. As a result, it pays producers the amount they might receive from traditional crops such as
SELLING $ Osoyoos PRICE 1,010
OPENING BID
www.producerauction.com
101
$
SELLING $ Wetaskiwin PRICE 699
Grain Bag Zipper
OPENING BID
70
$
Full-Bin Super Sensor
Grain Bag Zipper TM Seal in the quality of your grain! Seal with one person, one pass, in one minute! Works in all types of weather Zipper Strips are reusable for many years. Package includes: 1 - Complete Grain Bag Zipper Kit (as per picture shown). 10 – Poly-Fastener Zipper Strips (one size fits all bagger sizes).
Never climb a bin again. Equips your auger to sense precisely when the bin is full. Fits any auger or conveyor. FOB Unity, SK.
Pick up at Curry Industries in Winnipeg, MB. Curry Industries
Item # 1200-1203 SELLING PRICE
19 Burnett Avenue
Brownlees Trucking Inc. Box 1172
Winnipeg, MB 204-661-1729 www.curryindustries.com
Unity, SK 306-228-2971 www.fullbinsupersensor.com
Item # 307
20,640
$
OPENING BID
2,064
$
24,000 lbs Power Pak 20 Granular Fertilizer 12 - 2000 lbs Bags, your choice of 8-18-18 OR 8-34-8 P-K-S blends Approx 20lbs per acre does 1000 acres. All Blends with Micros. For Further Information on application call Greg at Power Rich Corp 1-800-491-8984 or visit www.powerrich.com
Item # 203
Power Rich Corporation Unit B 1865 Borrows Ave Winnipeg, MB 1-800-491-8984 www.powerrich.com
74
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
PRODUCTION
CORN HARVESTING Corn harvest has come to Saskatchewan. A 140 acre grain corn harvest demonstration at Nortth Battleford drew area producers to see what goes into and comes out of a corn field in the northern grainbelt. | Page 76
PR ODUC TI O N E D I TO R: M IC HAEL RAINE | P h : 306- 665- 3592 F: 306-934-2401 | E-MAIL: M IC H AEL.RAIN E@PRODUC ER.C OM
TILLAGE | DISC HARROWS
Fall tillage starts with tandem tune-up Keeping everything in harmony | Pulling a poorly adjusted disc harrow is like playing a violin that’s out of tune
BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU
Conquering B.t. corn root balls and stalks has become an industry unto itself in the past decade. The older disc harrows and field cultivators just don’t have the weight or aggressive design to cut, slice and chop the residue of genetically modified corn, says Sunflower Manufacturing tillage specialist Larry Kuster. “I can recall dozens of conversations with farmers complaining that
1 Excellent
their old tillage tools had been working just fine for years,” said Kuster. “Then all of a sudden they started having trouble with Roundup Ready soybean stubble and B.t. corn stalks. That precipitated a complete revamping of our entire tillage line. We went heavier, more aggressive and bigger. It wasn’t just Sunflower. The whole industry had to upgrade.” Discs are among the most significant advances. Heavier implements moving at higher speeds required better discs that kept their edge longer. Kuster said standard disc thickness
CANTERRA 1970 2 Very Good
3 Good
is now 0.25 inch, and most discs are boronized, making them far more durable than previous discs. “Ingersoll developed the boron process for discs. We just don’t see issues with blades anymore, but they can go dull in time. So Ingersoll developed a grinder that puts a good edge back on the inside of the blade. They call it the Edge Care System,” he said. “We have a new blade we call the Sunflower Sabre Blade. It’s exclusive to us from Ingersoll. We put it on our series 600 vertical till tool. Ingersoll
DOES YOUR STANDABILITY MEASURE UP?
calls it their SoilRazor. It has a serrated edge. Just like a good steak knife, it seems to stay sharp forever. People think it sharpens itself, but of course that’s not possible. It just seems like it sharpens itself.” The SoilRazor has a rippled outer diameter that maintains a razorsharp cutting edge. The flutes change shape as the steel in the blade begins to wear down. The high points become the depressions and the depressions become high spots, always exposing a new sharp edge.
Ingersoll makes two versions of the SoilRazor. The VT is a vertical tillage blade that was developed in Hamilton, Ont., by Krause Corp. Most other vertical tillage blades have rounded edges that let residue escape, but the SoilRazor VT re-mains sharp so it slices the residue before it gets away. The CT is designed with extreme clod-smashing abilities and extreme residue cutting characteristics in soft soil, which tend to move away under a disc. Kuster said all types and all brands of
ONLY AVAILABLE AT SELECTED RETAILERS.
Always follow grain marketing and all other stewardship practices and pesticide label directions. Details of these requirements can be found in the Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers printed in this publication.
OPPOSITE PAGE: Setting up tillage tools correctly improves the quality of the job and uses less horsepower in the process. THIS PAGE, TOP LEFT: Gauge wheels are especially important on flexible tillage tools in sloping or uneven terrain to prevent frontwing corners from gouging. When set correctly, these wheels should move slightly side to side when kicked. TOP RIGHT: Disc technology is advancing rapidly. The new Ingersoll SoilRazor is boronized and is serated similar to a steak knife. ABOVE: As the high points on the SoilRazor wear and become depressions, the depressions become the new high points, exposing a new cutting edge. | AGCO PHOTOS
cultivators have one thing in common: they are meant to run level front to back and level left to right. He said this is important, whether farmers are managing residue or preparing the seed bed, and whether they’re using tandem discs or shovels and sweeps. A poorly adjusted cultivator wastes fuel, contributes to erosion and is hard on the tillage equipment as well as the seeding rigs, sprayers and harvest implements that will be on the field next year. “In fall tillage, you’re trying to achieve a smooth, flat field so the planter runs across the surface without bumps or jumps that shake the seeds off the disc,” Kuster said. “Whether you have positive air like our White planter or a conventional vacuum, you actually can shake the seed off the disc if the field is rough. Then your singulation and spacing are out the window. The goal should be to achieve a consistent, level soil surface across the entire width of the machine, leaving no ridges or furrows.” How a machine is set and used has a major impact on a farmer’s goals, he
said. Setup also determines how effective the machine will be at cutting crop residue, sizing it consistently and mixing it into the soil to promote breakdown over the winter. Although the owner’s manual gives all the infor mation for proper machine setup, Kuster said people tend to put it off until it’s time to get in the field, even though it takes only an hour or two to do the adjustments on most machines. He said farmers have so many acres they need to cover in the fall that they figure they can’t waste time adjusting the machine. As a result, they do a bad job. Worse yet, they often do such a bad job they have to make a second pass. The other excuse is that the machine was working well last time they used it so there’s no need to re-adjust everything. Kuster said some parts wear and other parts become bent, and the machine may not have been working as well last year as the operator assumed. He said farmers waste money when they put too much power in front of the tool. The general rule is eight to 10
horsepower per foot pulling a tandem disc harrow at five to six m.p.h., but the design of some new tillage tools allows faster ground speeds. On the other hand, going faster than the recommended speed creates ridges and furrows and causes tillage tools to bounce, messing up the depth. It’s important to adjust the tongue to match draw bar height to keep the tillage tool level and moving smoothly through the field. Components such as the draw bar and level lift receive extra down pressure if the tool is operated either nose down or tail down. The goal should be a straight line of draft to the tool. Purging air from the hydraulic lines is the only way to ensure the wings stay level with the machine’s centre section. Raise and lower the implement several times to allow the system to cycle fully while the hydraulics are connected to the tractor. Air is more easily compressed than oil, so air in the hydraulic lines can allow the wings to sag. “If the operator is in a hurry and doesn’t bring it to a full lift, then the hydraulic system won’t phase properly,” Kuster said. “It can build up pressure and that will mess up your side to side level. If the cylinder sags one-third inch, for example, that could allow the wing to drop approximately one inch. That is significant when the tillage depth you’re working toward is only five or six inches.” The wider the machine, the more important it is to level it from side to side and from front to back so it works at a consistent depth without gouging or ridging. This allows the machine to handle crop residue with less bunching or plugging. Height of the wings and centre frames should be consistent from side to side. Checking means lowering the tool to the ground and stopping the drop when the disc blades almost touch the soil. Measure from the bottom of the frame to the centre of the pivot pin on the walking tandem, or the top of the wheel spindle if a single or dual wheel is present. The measurements should be the same. To ensure the integrity of the centre lift components, check the centresection wheels left and right. Now set the wings at identical depths by measuring from the bottom of the frame to the top of the wheel spindle or pivot pin of the walking tandem. Adjust the measurements accordingly if wings wheels are smaller than the main transport wheels. “The great thing about this method is the operator can use it at the shop or in the field. You don’t need a level slab of cement,” Kuster said. As a preliminary adjustment, the
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
fore-aft level should be set so the front and rear blades are an equal distance from the ground. Travel 300 feet in the field with the tool lowered in the working position and then stop to see if the fore and aft level is still correct. To be sure soil is flowing properly through the unit, inspect the soil at the centre rear where it’s returned by the rear gangs. It will produce a complete and level fill of the valley cut by the front gangs when the front to rear level is correct. The rear of the tool is too high if a valley depression is formed by the soil and too deep if a ridge is formed. Depth depends on field conditions and what farmers want to accomplish. A disc harrow is typically set to a maximum depth equal to onequarter of the blade diameter. Some implements have a singlepoint depth control with a hand crank that raises or lowers in half-inch increments with each handle rotation. “When setting machine depth, be sure the machine carries some weight on the wheels, because the wheels are the base of all tool adjustments previously made,” Kuster said. “When the tires don’t have some soil contact, control of the implement is lost.”
75
DOEESS DOES YOUR YIELD MEASURE UP?
How to achieve the maximum depth of a disc harrow: • Operate the tool with the wheels fully retracted and tires off the ground. Work the soil for a few hundred feet and allow the disc to achieve maximum depth. Then stop and lower the wheels until the frame begins to lift. • Release the valve to stop the rise of the frame. Stop the tractor, but leave the tool in the ground. • Adjust the single-point depth-control crank until the striker plate contacts the hydraulic poppet valve. • Raise the tool until the audible click of the poppet valve engages, which stops the oil flow. The implement’s maximum depth is now set. Control of the tool is retained. Setting the gauge wheels is the final step in setting up a tandem disc. Gauge wheels are critical on flexible tillage tools to prevent front-wing corners from gouging. Those that have been set correctly should move slightly side to side when kicked. Measure to make sure the settings are the same for both gauge wheels. Operators’ manuals will have full details for specific settings on specific brands and models of machine. For more information, contact Kuster at 404-234-5258 or visit www. sunflowermfg.com.
ONLY AVAILABLE AT SELECTED RETAILERS. 101% of 5440
102% of 45H29*
*2012 YieldWorks and Demonstration Trials Always follow grain marketing and all other stewardship practices and pesticide label directions. Details of these requirements can be found in the Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers printed in this publication.
PRODUCTION
76
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
PRODUCTION
CEREAL | AGRONOMY
Corn project draws interest from early adopters Big, yellow cereal | Grain corn attracts a few, experimental acres outside of southern Manitoba BY MICHAEL RAINE SASKATOON NEWSROOM
NORTH BATTLEFORD, Sask. — Demonstration corn plots are becoming field scale in Western Canada as potential acres reach an estimated 10 million. Producers and agronomists braved spitting rain and cool fall temperatures last week at one of these plots in North Battleford to observe a grain corn harvest in action. Debbie Stiles of DuPont Pioneer said her company has been developing shorter season corn hybrids that will fall into the 1,850 corn heat unit range by 2018. Only a few on the market now reach the 2,200 range. The flint type corn growing on a field behind a North Battleford farm equipment dealership would typically have been used as a forage or silage feed, but it can also be grown for grain. It reached maturity ahead of the first killing frost and had fallen to 30 percent moisture before harvest. Grain corn harvest would ideally start when the crop falls to 25 percent, but further drying takes a long time this time of the year in the northern Prairies, said Aaron Miller, a Pioneer agronomist from Saskatoon. Corn is considered harvestable at 30 percent moisture or lower.
A corn demonstration project near North Battleford, Sask., drew area farmers and agronomists to observe a corn harvest in action. For many, it was the first time they had seen the big cereal combined. | MIKE RAINE PHOTO He said producers growing corn, whether in the American Midwest or on the Canadian Prairies, have to be prepared to dry it. According to research by Manitoba Agriculture, standing corn can dry at
a rate of 0.3 to 0.5 percentage points per day in October, falling to 0.15 to 0.2 per day in November. Corn at 35 percent Oct.1 might reach 25 percent by the beginning of November and take another month to drop an addi-
tional five points. Farmer’s Edge agronomist Thom Weir said growers should approach their corn with a three-part, staged drying strategy that first puts it on air to ensure it is cool so it resists mould.
The corn then goes through a dryer in two phases: the first taking it down to about 18 percent moisture and the second pulling it down to a more stable 15.5. Rapid, high heat drying can crack the corn, making it unsuitable for some milling markets, said Weir. Kevin Hadley of Norsask Farm Machinery set up and ran the combine until rain put a stop to the demonstration. “The corn header is a little different. It floats on the field and takes off the cobs and a minimum of other material,” he said. “We ended up setting the combine similar to harvesting peas. Wider concave and slower cylinder speeds. Lots of air and once its set, the crop threshes easily.” Boyd Risling set up the field scale, 140 acre trial, which began with seeding in mid-May. He said he has clients who are trying corn. “Generally they have livestock handy to feed, either with grazing or silaging, in case a corn crop doesn’t reach maturity,” he said. “It’s been pretty successful so far. The market for the grain is either for ethanol or feed milling.” The North Battleford corn crop was yielding 80 to 120 bushels per acre, according to the combine’s monitor.
GRAIN STORAGE | INSECTS
DO YOUR COSTS MEASURE UP?
Keep stored grain cool to keep insects at bay BY MICHAEL RAINE SASKATOON NEWSROOM
ONLY AVAILABLE AT SELECTED RETAILERS.
Hybrid $60/acre CANTERRA
Always follow grain marketing and all other stewardship practices and pesticide label directions. Details of these requirements can be found in the Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers printed in this publication.
1918 $45/acre
Not all of the large 2013 crop got put away in steel bins or plastic bags. Some of it is piled in quonsets, outdoors on tarps or in temporary storage after bags and machines became scarce. And that means it is subject to insect infestations. Noel White of Agriculture Canada’s Cereal Research Centre in Winnipeg said the grain insect risk for this crop is significant due to the way it is stored. “The insects will find it and make a home in it. The challenge is to get that grain moved into the marketing stream first, otherwise it is going to be tough to hold it without problems,” he said. White and his colleagues at the centre have been studying grain bag storage for three years and say that solution is effective at preserving grain safely, provided the bags stay closed at the ends. “Provided the grain is dry, it should be good for the winter. But we recommend moving it out before spring to maintain the grade though,” he said. Insects in the grain won’t multiply if the grain is below 20 C, so producers with air can keep infestations from growing if it is cooled well.
“The hard part is when grain is stored in very large quantities and it can’t get a chance to cool,” he said. Rusty grain beetles remain the main pest problem for producers. Blaine Timlick of the Canadian Grain Commission said his organization recently launched a new grain insect identification tool on its website, www.grainscanada.gc.ca. That system allows producers to use a computerized decision tree that provides photographs of the insects that could be present in Canadian crop commodity production and allows a step by step identification process based on the insects’ features. White says once pests are discovered, producers should act quickly to deal with them. Turning the grain at very cold temperatures will kill the insects and reduce any war m, spoiled grain to a stable temperature. “If you can, wait for one of those minus 20 days and you’ll have great success,” he said. Producers who chose to store grain in older, wooden structures that had previously fallen out of use will probably find those bins reliable because of their small size and the ability to cool grain temperatures quickly as the weather turns cold.
INSECTS WON’T MULTIPLY IF STORED GRAIN IS KEPT BELOW
-20 C
PRODUCTION
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
77
ORGANICS | BOOK REVIEW
New organic production manual updates science details ORGANIC MATTERS
BRENDA FRICK
Second edition provides updates and advice on how to market products
T
he Saskatchewan Organic Directorate has released its new production manual, Organic Farming on the Prairies, second edition. The original edition focused on organic grain production and combined practical how-to information with principles and research. It was incredibly popular, a text for introductory workshops and courses and a reference for practitioners. The second edition retains the balance of practical information and guiding principles and updates the science behind organics. Of course, grain production is still pivotal, but the second edition adds chapters on fruit, vegetable and livestock, as well as an expanded emphasis on marketing. Topics range from crop production to the philosophy and history of organics, while crucial topics such as soil fertility and weed management are expanded. Specifics and practical information are shared for each crop type. As well, sections on the principles behind the techniques are provided so that producers have a more solid foundation from which to experiment. All major chapters are team efforts, bringing together the expertise of academic researchers, government specialists, subject specialists, and of course, the true experts, organic practitioners, who understand what happens when philosophy meets reality. Featured throughout the second edition are more than 20 profiles of producers and businesspeople, who share their passion and first-hand experiences.
cies in the green manure provide better competition for weeds and bigger biomass. The legumes provide nitrogen and the cereals add bulk fibre and energy to feed soil organisms, and the benefits to the soil are obvious.” On paying attention to Mother Nature, Jerry Kitt of First Nature Farms near Goodfare, Alta., said: “Shoot your TV. Spend time outside and learn from observation.” Organics, like any good agriculture, requires planning, and Dwayne Logan of Logan Farms Organic Meat near Nesbitt, Man., said: “Start small and manage growth. Pencil out and plan the farm season in the fall and winter, map out a budget and be pre-
pared to be flexible.” Marketing is key to success in organics, and Tony Marshall of Highwood Crossing Foods near Aldersyde, Alta., suggests that farmers should “go where you are loved.… Discover your special niche in the market and go after it.” Anita Oudshoorn of Fairwind Farm near Fort McLeod, Alta., suggests that farmers should “be passionate about your products. Love them and eat them yourself.” On how organics has worked for them, Terry Toews of Penny Lane Organic Farm near Swift Current, Sask., said: “I think it’s good for us, it’s good for the soil and I really think it’s important to give consumers a
choice in the marketplace.” Doug Bone of Greenan Organic Growers near Elrose, Sask., said: “I doubt very much I would be farming today if I hadn’t made the switch. You have to have the moxy to just go out and do it.” Angie Schmidt of Meridian Organics near Rockglen, Sask., said: “When we farmed conventionally, it seemed we were fighting nature all the time, whereas now we don’t. We put in a green manure. We go about our business and it grows.… Farming this way, we are working closer with nature instead of trying to control it.” These experts, combined with the expertise of scientists and other spe-
cialists, offer enough insights to keep a reader thinking for the whole winter. Is it time, once the crops are in and the bills are paid, to look again at the possibility of going organic? Are you wondering what new techniques and options might be available? Wanting to consider some tweaks to your existing system? Perhaps it is time to settle in with a good book. The Organic Farming on the Prairies, second edition, is available at www.saskorganic.com. Brenda Frick, Ph.D., P.Ag. is an extension agrologist and researcher in organic agriculture. She welcomes your comments at 306-260-0663 or email organic@usask.ca.
ALL OF OUR SEED IS FIELD TESTED. JUST LIKE OUR REPS.
Growers share reasons They offer a wealth of wisdom, and I thought it might be interesting to hear a little from each of them in this column. Some discuss why they went organic. For instance, Keith Neu of Etomami Community Organics near Hudson Bay, Sask., said: “Desperation got us into organic farming. We figured there had to be a better way than giving all our profit to the chemical companies.” When it comes to weed control, Alvin Boyko of Boyko Farm near Yorkton, Sask., said: “People sometimes think you have to kill all the weeds; you don’t. You just have to slow them down a little bit. Even pre-emergent harrowing works a few days after seeding. You cover up some of the shallow weeds and you give the grain a bit of a head start.” Feeding the soil from the point of view of Steven Snider of Little Hen Mills near New Norway, Alta., is described this way: “More plant spe-
45S54 • High yielding canola hybrid • Pioneer Protector® Sclerotinia resistance trait built-in • Rated R for blackleg • Very good standability
Sclerotinia can be one of the most devastating diseases your crop will face. But with Pioneer Protector® brand canola hybrids from DuPont Pioneer, you’ll get the protection you need without sacrificing yield. Pioneer Protector® Sclerotinia Resistant canola hybrids, like 45S54, are some of the highest yielding canola hybrids on the market. Plus, your sclerotinia protection is built right into the seed. Which means you’re getting more than just great seed, you’re getting a good night’s sleep too. Talk to your local Pioneer Hi-Bred sales representative or visit pioneer.com for more information.
Our experts are grown locally Field results show that Pioneer Protector ® Sclerotinia resistance can reduce the incidence of sclerotinia in a canola crop by over 50%. Individual results may vary. Depending on environmental and agronomic conditions, growers planting Pioneer Protector® Sclerotinia resistant hybrids may still require a fungicide application to manage sclerotinia in their crop. Pioneer® brand products are provided subject to the terms and conditions of purchase which are part of the labeling and purchase documents. The DuPont Oval Logo is a registered trademark of DuPont. ® TM SM , , Trademarks and service marks licensed to Pioneer Hi-Bred Limited. © 2013, PHL.
@PioneerWCanada
78
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
LIVESTOCK
DIRECTORS SCARCE The Saskatchewan Cattlemen’s Association will hold elections in only six of its 11 districts in coming weeks. Few are willing to stand as directors, which is a concern for the outgoing president. | Page 81
L IV EST O C K E D I TO R : B A R B G LEN | P h : 403- 942- 2214 F: 403-942-2405 | E-MAIL: BARB.GLEN @PRODUC ER.C OM | TWITTER: @BA R B GLE N
SALE | ANGUS
Red Angus sale has helped breed grow Red Roundup | Red Angus bull sale averages $5,027; top seller, a female, draws $20,000 for half interest BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
RED DEER — The founders of Red Roundup simply wanted a gathering place for like-minded breeders when they came up with the idea of a special event dedicated to the Red Angus breed. That was 41 years ago, and the annual event has since become a premier weekend for breeders and has drawn international attention, said Michael Wheeler, president of the Canadian Red Angus Promotion Society. It offers a futurity event as well as a sale. “This sale sets the bar of all breeds in the fall,” he said of the event, which this year was held in Red Deer Oct. 18-20. Corrine Gibson of Six Mile Ranch at Fir Mountain, Sask., who is president-elect of the Canadian Angus Association, said the event was intended to raise the breed’s profile. “The reason the Red Angus Promotion Society formed was because we had no presence in Canada,” she said. Both colours are equally popular today and have the same genetic background. They are both registered with the Canadian Angus Association, while the United States has separate registries. “People just realized that Red Angus have all the merits of Angus cattle. They are Angus cattle,” said Gibson, whose grandfather, Ken Frazer, was among the 12 founders of the society. Reds are not eligible for the certified Angus beef program because one of the specifications is a black hide. However, other branded beef programs welcome Angus of any
A half interest in this two-year-old bull named Red Glesbar Capone 28Y sold for $10,000 at Red Roundup, held in Red Deer Oct. 18-20. Consigner Glen Glessman is showing the bull. | BARBARA DUCKWORTH PHOTO colour, and animals with proven parentage may wear green electronic ear tags in Canada, which are unique to the Angus breed. The big breakthrough for the reds was when commercial producers accepted them for cross breeding, which accelerated demand for the breed. “We have to thank our forefathers for sticking it out and persevering because there were some times when it was tough sledding if you had a red
one,” Gibson said. The futurity bull grand champion at this year’s show came from Bar EL Angus, owned by Dave Longshore of Byemore, Alta., while the reserve came from Six Mile Ranch. Both young bulls will be seen at major shows this fall such as Canadian Western Agribition in Regina Nov. 11-16. The 2013 sale offered 61.5 lots, which grossed $309,150 to average $5,027. A breakdown of the sale saw
21 bred heifers average $5,148 and the 33 open heifers average $3,265. A single male lot from Glesbar Cattle Co. of Barrhead, Alta., sold a half interest for $10,000. The genetics portion of the sale offered four flush opportunities, which grossed $39,300 to average $9,825, and 2.5 donor females totaled $44,000 to average $17,600. Twenty frozen lots grossed $32,300. The high seller of the event was a half interest in a donor female born in
2008. Named Red Rainbow Lois 7U, it was consigned by Rainbow Red Angus of Cherhill, Alta., and sold for $20,000 to Christy Collins and Wildcat Creek Ranch of Peabody, Kansas. Mar Mac Farms of Brandon sold a bred heifer for $16,500 to Brylor Ranch of Pincher Creek, Alta. Another high seller, at $16,000, was for another donor female born in 2006. It was consigned by Blairs. Ag Cattle Co. of Lanigan, Sask., and will be going to Saik Management of Red Deer.
HOGS | GROUP HOUSING CONVERSION
Pork code development hijacked by sow housing issue BY BARRY WILSON OTTAWA BUREAU
Developing an animal welfare code of conduct for Canada’s hog industry has been contentious, controversial and costly, says a Canadian Pork Council official. Associate executive director Catherine Scovil told a recent National Farm Animal Care Council conference in Ottawa that while the code has been a work in progress since 2009 and the industry supports it, the process has been hijacked by the issue of sow housing. “It has become all about sow hous-
ing as the key issue,” she said. “The danger in this is that it minimizes everything else in the code. I do worry that we are losing sight of everything else in the code that isn’t as controversial.” The code proposes group housing for hogs after 2014, which has become a major industry issue since the proposal became public and open for comment, Scovil told the conference. “It has become a difficult conversation in the public comment period,” she said. Many producers think group housing is not necessarily best for hogs,
which can be aggressive and inflict injury on other pigs in the pen. “They see the best outcome as maintaining the welfare of animals and the worst outcome is more injury.” Still, the code calls for different housing arrangements, feeding protocols and space for hog group dynamics. Scovil said the industry is committed to the animal welfare code that is becoming standard in the livestock sector, but there are significant costs to convert current barns to new standards. She estimated it could cost more than $1,000 per sow to change existing housing arrangements.
“That’s half a billion dollars for our industry as a whole,” said Scovil. “Given the economics of the industry in the past few years, there is a risk that banks will not extend the credit to make this conversion work.” As well, she said there is no public commitment to share the cost for conversion of hog facilities, despite a public policy demand that animal welfare rules change. “There is no indication of cost sharing, and this is a real sore spot,” she said. “Producers are being asked to do these things, but there is no financial incentive to do what is necessary.”
Scovil said some producers have told the pork council they may leave the industry if they have to make costly changes without compensation. There is also the broader issue of who speaks for society and what is expected. Activist groups are vocal and some retailers are setting their own rules, but farmers are not always clear. “There’s lots of fear, and some producers are wondering why there is a code,” she said. “There’s lots of fear, and sides are being taken. Farmers are insulted that their practices are being challenged so publicly.”
LIVESTOCK
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
WEATHER | SOUTH DAKOTA BLIZZARD
FORAGE TRIAL | KALE
Donations pour in after South Dakota storm kills up to 30,000 cattle
Alberta forage trial puts kale potential to the test
REUTERS NEWS AGENCY & KAREN BRIERE, REGINA BUREAU
Donations of money and cattle have been rolling in for South Dakota ranchers after a blizzard killed tens of thousands of cattle earlier this month. It was one of the state’s worst agriculture tragedies. Dozens of minimum-security prison inmates were aiding the clean-up effort, gathering debris in three towns in the western part of the state hit by record snowfall that felled trees and knocked out power lines. “This is a very tough time in western South Dakota,” said South Dakota governor Dennis Daugaard. “Many ranchers suffered devastating losses, putting them in an unthinkable position.” South Dakota state veterinarian Dustin Oedekoven said 15,000 to 30,000 cattle were estimated to have died in the storm. Animals suffocated as more than a metre of snow piled up. Others suffered from hypothermia, fell off rocky ledges or were hit by vehicles as they wandered onto roads in the blizzard. The deaths are expected to result in tens of millions of dollars in lost income for ranchers, who were preparing to sell young calves valued at $800 or more each. Cows pregnant with calves that would have been born in the spring also died. South Dakota had 3.85 million head of cattle in January, the sixth largest herd in the United States, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. More than $190,000 has been donated to the South Dakota Rancher Relief Fund, said Regina Jahr, executive director of the Black Hills Area Community Foundation, which is administering the aid. The CHS Foundation, which is the charity arm of farm co-operative CHS Inc., donated $100,000, while $70,000 was pledged online from people across the United States and Canada, Jahr said. “Ranchers across western South Dakota suffered significant loss of cattle, sheep and other livestock as a
result of this storm, the vast majority of which is not covered by insurance or other programs,” CHS Foundation president William Nelson said. Cattle were spread out over a wide expanse of land, so it could be weeks or months before a final tally of losses is available. Ranchers were also seeking donations of pregnant cows and heifers of breeding age to help rebuild their herds. Parts of Colorado and Wyoming saw heavy snowfall during the storms, which also brought more than a dozen tornadoes to Iowa and Nebraska, injuring at least 15 people, damaging homes and knocking down power lines. Meanwhile, the losses will also affect producers in Canada, said the chair of the Saskatchewan Cattlemen’s Association. Mark Elford said markets are affected any time that many cattle are taken out of the system. “In the near term, that can raise the price,” he said. “However, in the long term, in my opinion, we’re way down on numbers.” It will eventually affect feeders and packers, he added. Elford said the U.S. storm comes after a deadly spring for Saskatchewan producers that went largely unreported. “In the south and in the west, where ranchers calve on the grass, there was a pile of calves that never made it,” Elford said. “There was also a lot of cows that died.” An extra six weeks of winter caused feed shortages and cut into calving, particularly in areas where producers don’t have facilities. He said losses were seen south of Highway 16 and more acutely south of the Trans-Canada Highway, where producers were less prepared to feed six weeks longer than usual. “It was dramatic, and nobody wanted to draw attention to it, but there were big issues.” Elford said some ranchers experienced losses of more than 10 percent. “You start losing that kind of infrastructure in a sector, that’s not good,” Elford said.
79
Overwintering issue | Cattle will graze on the kale this winter and regrowth will be monitored in the spring BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
AIRDRIE, Alta. — Planting kale seemed like an interesting experiment for one southern Alberta grazer. If it works well, Graeme Finn may try it again. Kale is part of the brassica family, which includes turnip, radish, cauliflower, cabbage, broccoli and canola. It produces plenty of leafy material and long taproots and has a high nutrient value. As well, the cows seem to like it. “If you take a stalk and chew on it, it is really flavourful,” Finn told a tour group from the Foothills Forage and Grazing Association Oct. 8. European farmers have used turnips and cabbage for fodder as long as there has been domesticated agriculture. However, this experiment could be a first for the area, and the American seed supplier, PGG Seeds, wants to see how it handles climate extremes. PGG Seeds produces and markets cool season forages, grasses and forbs. Company representative John Snider thinks they might survive in the foothills. “I would not have brought them up here if I did not think they had a
chance of working here,” he said. “All these plants are bred and designed to regrow, oftentimes under less than ideal management.” There has been success with kale in some of the mountain states. “Overwintering these is problematic, and we have got to find out how that is going to work here. They definitely are not following any of the climate zone maps as far as their behaviour. They are pretty tough plants,” he said. Constant regrowth is one advantage. Finn planted three pounds of the kale along with seven lb. of rye grass per acre in a 140 acre field that was used for oat swath grazing the previous year. Oat volunteers are plentiful, but the kale grew well throughout the field. It is fast growing, and feed analysis came up with a crude protein level of 18 to 25 percent. “It would be great on a rotational grazing pattern when you need summer feed,” said Finn. The variety was called Winfred, a turnip-kale cross with a taproot rather than a bulb. “You are not beholden to the strict 90 to 110 day period that you would require plus the moisture you would require for a turnip,” Snider said. Finn plans to turn his cows out in
Livestock producer Graeme Finn is testing kale as a forage. | BARB GLEN PHOTO
the field this winter and will monitor how well the cattle and plants work. He will put in electric fences and move the cows regularly so they can clean up what is offered. Regrowth of both species will be monitored early in the spring.
The Hay and Tillage Tool Specialists
Over 175 Years of Innovation
Invest in Quality! Kuhn is committed to helping you succeed by creating innovative and durable equipment. From a total system for hay conditioning, tedding and raking, to a broad range of cultivation tools for seedbed preparation, Kuhn products provide quality and value. www.KuhnNorthAmerica.com
Brooks Farm Centre Brooks, AB
Tri-Ag Implements Consort, AB St. Paul, AB Wainwright, AB
Central Alberta Hay Centre
H & L Motors
Nick’s Service Emerald Park, SK
Red Deer, AB
Glenboro, MB Steinbach, MB
Matsqui Ag-Repair
T.I.C. Parts and Service
Novlan Bros. Sales Lloydminster, SK Paradise Hill, SK
Abbotsford, BC
Neepawa, MB
Noble Tractor & Equipment
Van L Equipment Reston, MB
John Bob Farm Equipment
Fort Macleod, AB
Armstrong, BC Kamloops, BC
E. Bourassa & Sons
Outlook, SK Tisdale, SK
Roszko Farm Equipment
Huber Farm Equipment
GMS Mechanical & Equipment
Mayerthorpe, AB
Prince George, BC
Assiniboia, SK Estevan, SK Pangman, SK Weyburn, SK
80
LIVESTOCK
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
DONATION | OLYMPIC SUPPORT
EDUCATION | ANCESTRAL TIES
Alberta ranch donates Oldingen sitter pĂĽ skolebenken igjen â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;nutritionâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; to Canadian national luge team COWBOY LOGIC
Each team member will get 225 kg of grass-fed beef
RYAN TAYLOR
BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
One southern Alberta ranching family w ill be paying special attention to the 2014 Olympics winter games in Sochi, Russia, when they cheer for the Canadaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s luge team. The Barnert family of Okotoks decided to support the athletes with a large donation of beef. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We felt it was one of those things we could give back. We couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t give a cash donation, but we could donate nutrition,â&#x20AC;? said Jeremiah Barnert, one of the owners of Pin to Point Gelbvieh. The donation of 600 pounds of grass-fed beef resulted in each member of the team receiving 100 lb. of beef. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We are officially named the official beef supplier to the Canadian national luge team,â&#x20AC;? he said. The athletes receive some government support, but for many it is a hand to mouth existence. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If they canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t afford to pay rent or make the car payments, nutrition
If they canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t afford to pay rent or make the car payments, nutrition is the next thing to go. JEREMIAH BARNERT PIN TO POINT GELBVIEH RANCH
is the next thing to go,â&#x20AC;? Barnert said. The ranch raises purebred seed stock with sales around the world. They also have a grass-fed beef business. The team, which includes Sam Edney, Alex Gough, Kimberly McRae, Arianne Jones, Tristan Walker and Justin Snith, placed in the top 10 at the 2012 world championships. The luge team started its fundraising campaign in 2009 when it placed a sign on top of a community toboggan hill in Calgary, which netted them more than $200,000.
T
his year, as we packed up the backpacks and sharpened the pencils for our kids to return to school, I went back to school too. I didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have to board the yellow school bus with our youngsters in the morning, or even drive to a college campus. I just had to make sure the internet was working and remember my user name and password to log into my virtual classroom. What subject could be so necessary that a fella who finished his college degrees 21 years ago would be driven to humble himself by re-entering the college student population? Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a language. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s my effort to break out of the ranks of monolingual world speakers and become, at the least, partially bilingual. Now, there are a lot of languages to choose from when going back to college to take a foreign language course. I could have chosen the language of romance, French. Or Spanish, the loving tongue, as they say, an important and popular language here in the Western Hemisphere. Or to get away from the romance languages of
Europe, I could have looked to the Slavic â&#x20AC;&#x153;manly languagesâ&#x20AC;? such as Russian or Bulgarian to toughen up my lingo. I could have attempted to learn the most widely spoken language in the world, by sheer numbers: Mandarin Chinese. Or Hindustani, spoken in the worldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s second most highly populated country, India. Or I could have gone old school and picked Arabic, one of our planetâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ancient languages. Nope, none of those dialects were deemed worthy of my valuable learning time. Instead, I chose to study Norwegian, which is the language of â&#x20AC;Ś well, Norway. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a language spoken fluently by at least seven one hundredths of a percent of the world population, but theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re a darned important 4.9 million people because theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re my relatives in the home country where three-fourths of my blood originated. Norwegian was the first language of my mother when she grew up in the Norwegian immigrant home of her parents, whose roots were in Hallingdal and Gudbrandsdal, Norway. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s my heritage and I yearn to touch it by speaking the words that my grandparents and great-grandparents spoke. To heck with the practical value of it all. I reckon itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the same yearning that a young person growing up on the lands of the Standing Rock tribe might have to learn Lakota. We just need the schools and the languageâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
fluent speakers to learn the words of our ancestors. My classroom is a computer screen linked to the campus of the Universitetet i Nord Dakota. I suppose I could have bought a set of tapes like I did when I was going to learn Spanish 15 years ago. Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re still in mint condition, if youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d like to borrow them. I guess thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s why I chose to pay tuition to be in an actual class. I needed deadlines and expectations and encouragement. Otherwise, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s another set of tapes gathering the dust of good intentions. So Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m laying it on the line to snakke norsk lik mora mi, morfar min og bestemora mi (speak Norwegian like my mother and grandparents). Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m putting in time to get up early and study before the kids are awake, investing treasure to pay for the books and tuition, and risking reputation to earn a respectable grade, hopefully. And Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll have to swallow my pride and face up to my waning years when the university sends me the emails targeted to their â&#x20AC;&#x153;non-traditional students,â&#x20AC;? which means several things, but, to me, it means Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m now the â&#x20AC;&#x153;old guyâ&#x20AC;? in class overanalyzing test questions and fretting over the homework. Make that the old Norwegian guy. En Nordmann olding (I think). Ha det bra!
Ryan Taylor is a rancher, writer and senator in the state legislature from Towner, North Dakota.
FORESTER CHOSEN
BY CONSUMER REPORTS The 2014 SUBARU FORESTER is ranked as THE TOP-SCORING SMALL SUV BY CONSUMER REPORTS. The Newly Designed Forester earned a remarkable 88 points out of a possible 100. This score is 11 points higher than Honda CRV, 13 points higher than Toyota Rav4 and 14 points higher than Mazda CX5. The Subaru Forester â&#x20AC;&#x201D; the logical choice!
ALL NEW TOTALLY REDESIGNED
2014 FORESTER
JUST ARRIVED!
â&#x20AC;˘ 46 MPG â&#x20AC;˘ 2014 IIHS + TOP SAFETY AWARD
INTRODUCING THE ALL NEW
THE ALL NEW
2013 SUBARU XV CROSSTREK
Âł Full off-roading capabilities with symmetrical AWD Âł Up to 1,500 LB towing capacity* Âł Generous ground clearance Âł Sporty handling Âł Class leading fuel efficiency up to 51 MPG highway
THE GAME CHANGING COMPACT CROSSOVER!
1,500
$
THE ALL NEW
CASH PURCHASE DISCOUNT
24,495**
$ MSRP FROM $
2013 WRX & STI
1,500
$
CASH PURCHASE DISCOUNT
27,295*
$ MSRP FROM
2013 OUTBACK
THE MORE YOU GET OUT,
THE BETTER IT GETS
38,195*
MSRP FROM $ ELITE AUTOMOTIVE GROUP INC. O/A
Open 24 Hours @
INSPIRING
THE ALL NEW
â&#x20AC;˘ ONLY RALLY SPORT CAR THAT YOU CAN DRIVE SUMMER OR WINTER â&#x20AC;˘ 0 TO 100 KM IN 4.3 SECONDS!
INDULGE IN PURE, UNMITIGATED PERFORMANCE
SUBARU BRZ
STUNNING LOOKS ARE JUST THE START
&,5&/( 3/$&( Â&#x2021; 25
CASH PURCHASE DISCOUNT
Open 24 Hours @
27,295*
$ MSRP FROM
YEAR END CLEARANCE SALE ON NOW!
www.subaruofsaskatoon.com
SUBARU OF SASKATOON
LOW FINANCE RATES FROM .5% OR $2,500
www.bramerauto.com
BRAMER AUTOMOTIVE GROUP
&251(5 2) 6$5*(17 .,1* (':$5' Â&#x2021; &$// Â&#x2021; 72// )5((
LIVESTOCK
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
TECHNOLOGY | VACCINATIONS
81
SASKATCHEWAN CATTLEMEN’S ASSOCIATION | ELECTIONS
Many benefits with needleless vaccination Few step up for SCA elections ANIMAL HEALTH
ROY LEWIS, DVM
A
new technology will soon be released into our market that will revolutionize how cattle in Canada are vaccinated. Beef quality assurance, biosecurity, disease transmission and meat tenderness are all on the minds of consumers these days, and this new approach should dispel a number of consumer concerns. It involves vaccinating with compressed air, carbon dioxide or nitrogen. The product is then delivered through a small orifice equivalent to one-seventh the size of an 18-gauge needle. The system eliminates the problems one now encounters with broken, bent or burred needles, hide damage and the potential for infection from dirty needles. In nature, animals are protected from natural exposure to disease such as direct contact or erogenous transmission. It is no wonder then that the next step in a more natural vaccination process would be needleless. We are already seeing mass numbers of poultry vaccinated in chambers using an aerosolized vaccination process. Perhaps vaccination by that method or by way of oral vaccines in the feed are in the foreseeable future for cattle, but for now we should be happy with this needleless technology. The technology also eliminates the issue of disease transmission through blood, such as can happen with diseases like bovine leukosis. The beef industry now gives all intramuscular shots in the neck muscles, but reactions and scarring can occur along the needle track, which reduces meat tenderness and adds gr istle that then must be trimmed out. Buying the equipment that’s required to move away from needles will have an initial cost, but the money saved by not having to buy needles will eventually pay for that investment. It will also eliminate disposal issues, which will ease environmental concerns. The vaccination gun works by pressing against the hide. The gun discharges the set amount of vaccine Apply for a Cash Advance Today!
ADVANCE PAYMENTS PROGRAM - HIGHLIGHTS
• $100,000 Interest Free • Over $100,000 to a maximum of $400,000*
Prime minus 0.25%, subject to change CASH ADVANCE FORMS AVAILABLE ONLINE at: www.manitobalivestock.com Cash Advance Program Applies to: • Manitoba cattle, bison, sheep and goat producers • Saskatchewan cattle, bison, sheep and goat producers • Alberta sheep, bison and goat producers • British Columbia bison and goat producers • Quebec bison producers only
Call: 1-866-869-4008 to start your application** *Per applicant, includes all APP Programs.
when enough pressure is reached. It can discharge in increments of 1/2 cc to 2 1/2 cc. For higher amounts, such as a four cc dosage, the gun is set on two and discharged twice. There are also plans to develop larger guns that will handle up to five cc dosages and be able to eventually handle antibiotics as well. The gun can administer product either intradermally (within the skin), subcutaneously or intramuscularly depending on how the pressure is set. There is a permanent mount model and a portable backpack unit, which we hope will soon be able to be demonstrated to producers and feedlot processors. This route of administration has been tested against the conventional route and response has been as good or better with the newer approach. Intervet USA, which is marketing the new technology, has found that the new approach is efficacious. Although not statistically significant, there was a slight advantage to the new technology over administration with a needle. The epidermis, or outer skin layer, is a mammal’s protective covering, so lots of cells are present to mount an immune response when exposed to a disease challenge. It makes more sense, then, to keep vaccinations near the surface or even in between the skin layers, like we do when we test an animal for tuberculosis. This is a totally new method of administration, which means the current vaccines would have to be run through trials to prove their efficacy with the new technique. The risk of accidental vaccination is much less with this method because pressure must be applied to discharge the product. The cattle tolerate this application far better than a needle, although proper restraint speeds up the process with any route of administration. O p e rator f ati g u e w i ll be le s s because compressed air does most of
Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers 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. This product has been approved for import into key export markets with functioning regulatory systems. Any crop or material produced from this product 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 confirm their buying position for this product. Excellence Through Stewardship® is a registered trademark of Excellence Through Stewardship. ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Roundup Ready® crops contain genes that confer tolerance to glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup® brand agricultural herbicides. Roundup® brand agricultural herbicides will kill crops that are not tolerant to glyphosate. Acceleron® seed treatment technology for corn is a combination of four separate individuallyregistered products, which together contain the active ingredients metalaxyl, trifloxystrobin, ipconazole, and clothianidin. Acceleron® seed treatment technology for canola is a combination of two separate individually-registered products, which together contain the active ingredients difenoconazole, metalaxyl (M and S isomers), fludioxonil, thiamethoxam, and bacillus subtilis. Acceleron and Design®, Acceleron®, DEKALB and Design®, DEKALB®, Genuity and Design®, Genuity Icons, Genuity®, RIB Complete and Design®, RIB Complete®, Roundup Ready 2 Technology and Design®, Roundup Ready 2 Yield®, Roundup Ready®, Roundup Transorb®, Roundup WeatherMAX®, Roundup®, SmartStax and Design®, SmartStax®, Transorb®, VT Double PRO®, YieldGard VT Rootworm/RR2®, YieldGard Corn Borer and Design and YieldGard VT Triple® are trademarks of Monsanto Technology LLC. 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. Respect the Refuge and Design is a registered trademark of the Canadian Seed Trade Association. Used under license. ©2013 Monsanto Canada Inc.
the work. This is especially true these days, where high numbers of treatment crews are women and the automatic guns have really not been designed with them in mind. The automatic guns require a larger hand, but this is not an issue with compressed air. The system must become more portable to use in the field and must be able to stand up in our inclement weather, but I envision the day when all vaccinations could be given this way. It may also become mandatory, just as Canadian Cattle Identification Agency ear tags are now mandatory. This would be to the benefit of our entire industry. Remember, no matter how good vaccination technology becomes, it is still not a replacement for poor management. Response to vaccinations will be greater if you are well managed with regards to nutrition and parasite control. Roy Lewis works as a technical services veterinarian with Merck Animal Health in Alberta.
BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
Saskatchewan cattle producers aren’t stepping up to take leadership positions in their industry, and that concerns the chair of the Saskatchewan Cattlemen’s Association. The SCA annual fall district meetings began earlier this week, and elections were scheduled in six of the 11 districts. In three of those, just one candidate stepped forward. In three others, no one came forward before the nomination deadline. At a meeting last week, the board appointed the incumbents in two of those districts after they agreed to stay on. The remaining district will be filled at a later date. “It’s certainly a concern to me,” said Mark Elford, who completes his term in January and did not let his name stand again in District 3A. He said most cattle producers are stretched to the limit. The lack of profitability in the sector the last few years has forced them to cut personnel. “So you have good people that have
stepped forward that are saying, ‘I can’t commit this much time anymore,’ and then you’ve got people who just say ‘there’s no way. I can’t commit to that’,” Elford said. “How to fix it, I don’t know.” The SCA was formed in 2009 as a development commission to administer the beef checkoff. It is also supposed to provide a unified voice for all beef producers. The organization is governed by 11 regional directors as well as two directors appointed by the Saskatchewan Stock Growers Association and another two by the Saskatchewan Cattle Feeders Association. The directors acclaimed or appointed this year take office at the SCA annual general meeting in Saskatoon during the January beef industry conference. They will be: District 1, Ryan Beierbach, Whitewood, incumbent; District 3A, Laurie Disney, Rockglen, acclaimed; District 4, Rick Toney, Gull Lake, incumbent; District 6, vacant; District 8, Michael Spratt, Melfort, incumbent; and District 9B, Dean Moore, Paradise Hill, incumbent.
22ND ANNUAL CONFERENCE
Fence Lines to Corporate Board Rooms Conference Renowned speakers will address issues ranging from understanding and meeting consumer needs to the future of agriculture messaging in a constantly changing world. Our unique mix of prominent speakers exploring timely topics includes the following: • Liz Stewart, Director, Sustainability, Subway Restaurants – Corporate Social Responsibility and the Importance of Animal Welfare; • Dr. Alice Johnson, VP, Food Safety, Butterball LLC – Crisis Management – Protecting Your Brand When the Heat is On; • Florian Possberg, Polar Pork Farm – Welfare, Politics and Pigs; • Julie De Young, Communications Consultant, Perdue Farms/SaveFarmFamilies.org – One Farm’s Triumph Over Activists’ Legal Propaganda Campaign; • Janet Hufnagel Thompson, Economist and writer – One Decade Down Under; and • Greg Peterson, Peterson Farm Bros. – Advocating Agriculture Through Social Media.
December 4 & 5, 2013 Travelodge Hotel, Saskatoon, SK Phone: 306.249.3227 Email: facs@sasktel.net Website: www.facs.sk.ca Adele Buettner, Executive Director
82
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
$'9(57,6,1* )($785(
Technotill shines even when it rains Doug Hannah believes with the feast or famine nature of agriculture and is ready to adopt any technology that can mitigate the risks. After experiencing years of drought in Alberta’s Peace River Region, he wasn’t prepared for three years of extremely wet conditions when the family relocated to a farm in east-central Saskatchewan. Landing in the middle of “flood” conditions in the Foam Lake area in 2010, he soon discovered the Technotill seeding system was one of the best risk management tools he could employ on the farm — rain or shine. “The Technotill seeding system, with that unique packing plate feature, was originally designed to work in drought conditions,” says Hannah, who along with his wife, Brenda, farms with his three children and their spouses. “But we have found over three very wet growing seasons, it is also the best system we can use to get the crop seeded.
seeded,” he says. “The conditions here have been extreme, but we have been able to get some or most of the crop seeded, which is a huge advantage.” The Hannahs arrived in Foam Lake in 2010 and were able to get only about 10 percent of the farm seeded with their existing Flexi-Coil air seeding system equipped with one-inch wide, double shoot openers before some 40 inches of rain flooded the area. They switched to a used 40-foot wide Technotill system later in the These are pictures of the same field. Canola seeded into sod in extremely wet conditions in 2012. Oats direct seeded in 2013. year and managed to get 1,400 Although Hannah has yet to experience dry had been here for years said they hadn’t seen that acres of winter wheat seeded when conditions in the Foam Lake area, he is confident much rain since at least the mid 1950s.” many other farmers weren’t able to seed at all. in drier years with the Technotill system he can “That summer we had plenty of time to think In 2011, with another 25 inches of rain, the place seed deeper to moisture, but still maintain a about our options, and I had investigated the Hannahs managed to get 85 percent of the crop quarter inch of packed soil on top of the seed row. Technotill system before, but I had also liked the seeded. In 2012, there was another 20 inches Flexi-Coil air seeding equipment. of rain, but they managed to seed the crop in a “Technotill is really designed to work in dry 14-day seeding window. Conditions started to imconditions as you can seed down to moisture and Along with being an excellent direct seeding prove and they had excellent seeding conditions the packer plate packs a quarter inch of soil over tool into standing wheat and canola stubble, for 2013. the seed. I liked the idea that it also leaves some Hannah says the Technotill system has also “Using the Technotill seeding system has really loose soil on top of the seed row. On our farm we worked well to establish annual crops in pasture been a risk limiting factor for us,” he says. “We have clay conditions and it is prone to crusting.” and hayland sod. have been able to seed, we have been able to seed The Hannahs decided to give Technotill a try “Some of the land we bought had been pasture earlier, we have been able to get good crops estaband found a good used 40 foot air seeding system and hayland for years so we are gradually bringing lished and growing, and we haven’t been getting equipped with Technotill openers. The fall of that into annual crop production.” stuck or pulling equipment apart in the process. 2010, they seeded 1,400 acres of winter wheat. They did about 300 acres in 2010, another 500 It is equipment that allows you to make the best “We had so much rain that most people weren’t acres in 2011, 1,100 acres in 2012 and still have of a bad situation and as conditions improve, it able to get on the land at all, but with that air a few more pasture acres to go. Along with their continues to do an excellent job. “ seeder equipped with the Technotill seeding sysown farm, they have also custom seeded into sod tem we were able to get the winter wheat seeded.” for neighbours. The spring of 2011 was still very wet. Hannah To make the conversion, Hannah sprays the After experiencing several years of dry condiliked how well the Technotill system worked in forage crop with two litres of glyphosate applied tions in the Peace River region, the Hannahs 2010, so he bought a second used 40 foot system with 10 gallons of water in early spring. He then moved to the Foam Lake area. Technotill air seeder and seeded 85 percent of the likes to go right in after to seed a glyphosate-toler“May of 2010 was shaping up as not too bad a farm in 2011. ant canola with the Technotill seeding system. season,” says Hannah. “We got the first 800 acres In 2012, as wet conditions persisted, he bought “I use the higher rate of glyphosate and plenty seeded and then it started to rain. We tried to a new 60 foot air seeding system that he outfitted of water to get a good kill on the perennial grass seed with our Flexi-Coil air seeder but we just got with the Technotill seeding system. Using the new and then we just go ahead and seed,” he says. stuck. We couldn’t get the seed in the ground.” 60 foot unit along with one of the 40 foot ma“And again it does an excellent job. We are usIn a last ditch move they rented a harrow, chines, he got the crop seeded in 14 days. ing a ¾ inch wide opener that slices into the sod broadcast applied seed and fertilizer and harrowed “Seeding conditions were much improved for and the packer plate slides right into that narrow it in. They got about 30 percent of their crop the 2013 growing season and we got everything opening to pack the seed. And we have excellent seeded as rain continued to fall. “We’d never seen seeded,” says Hannah. “We still had about 16 emergence. anything like it,” he says. “But even farmers who inches of rain this past year, but we had no trou“If we were using equipment with a wheelble getting seed in the ground.” type packer, you only have that ¾ to one inch He has since ordered another new 60 foot opening and the 3 ½ wheel would ride on top of air seeding system, and plans to use two units the sod. But the Technotill packer plate follows equipped with the Technotill seeding system for right into the seed row providing excellent seed-to 2014. soil contact.” With seeding equipment set on 10 inch row Hannah estimates that for $30 to $50 per acre spacing, Hannah places a small amount of granu(including herbicide and application costs) he can lar fertilizer in the seed row, with the bulk of the establish an annual crop without multiple tillage blend side-banded by the Technotill seeding syspasses. tem to the side and just above the seed row. “It just does a consistently, excellent job whether you are working in adverse or ideal soil We will be at conditions,” he says. “The seed is placed and G r a i n Millers packed and we’re seeing nice even emergence. Harves There is enough distance between seed and fertilt Show down izer that we’re not seeing any damage to the seedYORKTO ling, yet the nutrients are there as the crop needs N, SK Oct. 30 – them. We’re getting the seed placed at the depth Nov. 2 we want, but there is no crusting so the crop can grow.”
WORKS WELL IN SOD
“We have been able to seed sooner, and through very wet conditions, and get more crop in the ground, when others using other systems have been delayed or unable to turn a wheel.“ Hannah says the packing plate on each seed boot, which under drier conditions packs soil on top of the seed for good seed-to-soil contact, also helps carry the weight of the air seeding equipment under wet field conditions. He says while 2013 has been the most normal seeding season in the four years he has been farming at Foam Lake, he has learned the Technotill system handles a wide range of field conditions. They crop about 7,000 acres of canola, wheat and oats. “When you are dealing with adverse conditions, you have to do what you can to get the crop
WHOLE NEW EXPERIENCE
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
83
POULTRY | ANIMAL WELFARE
Laying hen producers phase out traditional cages Alberta egg producers | Producers vote to ban conventional or enrichable cage systems after 2014 deadline BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
Alberta egg producers are changing the way laying hens are raised by switching to more open housing systems. In a vote earlier this year, Egg Farmers of Alberta decided that producers who are raising hens in conventional cages will be able to continue but no new conventional or enrichable cage systems may be installed in Alberta after Dec. 31, 2014. Enrichable systems are built with standard cages but can be enlarged and refitted with scratch pads,
nests and other comforts at a future date. “Farmers realize these (newer) systems have benefits. They also know they are more expensive and they know right off the bat they are not going to recover all their costs on the newer systems but they k n ow t h e y a re d o i n g t h e r ig ht thing,” said chair Ben Waldner. There are more than 150 members in the organization. Waldner said no new barns built in recent years have installed conventional battery cages. The Calgary Co-op grocery chain passed a resolution at its annual
meeting last spring not to buy eggs from farms that use battery cages. However, the farmers were already making changes on their own. The new policy will be integrated into the egg farmers’ animal care polic y, giving the board authority to regulate hen housing in Alberta. The changes present a new way of doing things on the farms that usually keep about 11,000 birds, said Waldner, who raises laying hens at the Byemoor Colony in central Alberta. The biggest change for producers will be monitoring birds to make
sure they remain calm and do not fight or cause other behaviour problems. “If we want to enhance the welfare of the hen all the way through, we re a l l y hav e t o u n d e r s t a n d t h e behaviour of the birds,” he said. For example, even though birds are vaccinated for common diseases at the hatchery, open barns could increase risks of spreading sicknesses. Breeding companies have also selected birds that are calmer so they can adapt to these new systems, Waldner said. Retooling a barn could cost about
25 percent more than a traditional system. Farmers pay for the changeover, which Waldner said would take about 10 years to pay off. “The main thing is we need to enhance the welfare of the animal, but we need to make sure producers still make a profit as well as enhance the welfare of the birds,” he said. The national code of practice for laying hens is under revision by committees at the National Farm Animal Council and is expected to usher in more changes to how hens are housed and treated.
CANADA BREAD | REVIEW
Maple Leaf may sell bakery TORONTO (Reuters) — Maple Leaf Foods is considering selling its controlling stake in Canada Bread Co. as it determines whether to leave the bakery segment and focus on its meat business. The company said it recently completed a review of opportunities to accelerate profitable growth across its bakery business. However, before committing resources to implement this strategy, it has decided to explore strategic alternatives, including selling its 90 percent stake in Canada Bread. “We are confident that our bakery business can deliver significantly higher levels of profitable growth; the only question is how best to realize the future value of this business,” Maple Leaf chief executive officer Michael McCain said in a statement. In the event of a sale of the business, Maple Leaf said it would consider using the proceeds to pay down debt, reinvest in its business and return capital to shareholders. The company cautioned that there could be no assurance that a sale of the business will occur. Maple Leaf expects to conclude the strategic alternatives process in early 2014. In a separate statement, Canada Bread said it has appointed a special committee comprising its independent directors to ensure that all of its shareholders are treated fairly and that the company’s interests are taken into account during this process. The Toronto-based company said it also engaged CIBC World Markets Inc. to act as its financial adviser. Canada Bread, in addition to bread sold under the Dempsters brand, sells pasta and other products under banners such as Olivieri, Ben’s, POM and Sunmaid.
Download the free app today.
Flushing weed control worth bragging about. ( In moderation of course. )
More and more people are talking about Ares™ herbicide for Clearfield® canola. And smart growers are listening. Because only Ares controls the toughest flushing weeds and keeps them from coming back. Which means you save time and money in the process. So go ahead, and tell every canola grower you know. They’ll thank you for it, providing you don’t overdo it. To find out more visit agsolutions.ca/clearfieldcanola or contact AgSolutions® Customer Care at 1-877-371-BASF (2273).
Always read and follow label directions. AgSolutions is a registered trade-mark of BASF Corporation; Clearfield and the unique Clearfield symbol are registered trade-marks and ARES is a trade-mark of BASF Agrochemical Products B.V.; all used with permission by BASF Canada Inc. © 2013 BASF Canada.
84
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
AGFINANCE
CDN. BOND RATE:
CDN. DOLLAR:
1.8887%
$0.9712
2.20%
0.980
2.10%
0.970
2.00%
0.960
1.90%
0.950
1.80% 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
0.940 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Bank of Canada 5-yr rate
Oct. 21
A G F IN ANC E E D I TO R : D ’ A RC E M C M ILLAN | P h : 306- 665- 3519 F: 306-934-2401 | E-MAIL: DARC E.M C M ILLAN @PRODUC ER.C OM | TWITTE R: @ D AR CE MCMILLAN
AG STOCKS FOR OCT. 14-18 Stock markets rose when U.S. politicians broke the deadlock on raising debt ceiling, but the issue returns early in 2014. For the week, the TSX composite rose 1.9 percent, the Dow rose one percent, the S&P was up 2.4 percent and the Nasdaq advanced 3.2 percent. Cdn. exchanges in $Cdn. U.S. exchanges in $U.S.
GRAIN TRADERS NAME
EXCH
ADM NY Alliance Grain TSX Bunge Ltd. NY ConAgra Foods NY W.I.T. OTC
CLOSE LAST WK 38.02 15.65 80.79 31.17 13.00
36.59 15.49 78.86 30.85 13.15
PRAIRIE PORTFOLIO NAME
EXCH
Assiniboia FLP OTC Ceapro Inc. TSXV Cervus Equip. TSX Input Capital TSX Ridley Canada TSX Rocky Mtn D’ship TSX
CLOSE LAST WK 61.621 0.045 21.00 1.60 14.24 12.37
61.621 0.045 20.40 1.59 13.95 11.40
FOOD PROCESSORS NAME
EXCH
Hormel Foods Maple Leaf Premium Brands Tyson Foods
NY TSX TSX NY
CLOSE LAST WK 43.06 13.30 19.30 28.45
43.10 13.28 19.25 29.76
FARM EQUIPMENT MFG. NAME
CWB will offer farmers $5 in privatization equity in the company for every tonne of grain they deliver to it. |
FILE PHOTO
CWB | PRIVATIZATION PLAN
EXCH
Ag Growth Int’l TSX AGCO Corp. NY Buhler Ind. TSX Caterpillar Inc. NY CNH Industrial N.V.NY Deere and Co. NY Vicwest Fund TSX
CLOSE LAST WK 40.80 64.20 7.20 87.34 12.18 84.19 12.65
39.56 61.15 6.65 85.61 12.73 82.31 12.66
FARM INPUT SUPPLIERS
CWB equity deal targets farmers Farmer equity | The date of privatization is not set but must be complete before August 2017 BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
A CWB plan that offers prairie farmers equity in a privatized grain company will likely remain in effect for the 2014-15 crop year. However, the terms of the equity offering are subject to change after Aug. 1, 2014. Under the privatization plan, farmers will be offered $5 worth of postprivatization CWB equity for each tonne of grain they deliver to the company this year. Other details, including a proposed date of privatization, potential corporate partners and the form that farmer equity will take, are still being worked out. The privatization date is still up in the air, but CWB officials hope to have the plan executed before a government imposed August 2017 deadline. “We’re trying to come up with a plan … where farmers have a permanent shareholding in the CWB,” said company president Ian White during an Oct. 17 conference call. CWB’s plan to establish a network of grain handling assets across the West will require outside capital, he added.
When asked how producers could be assured that their equity in a privatized CWB would not be eroded as it was in the former Saskatchewan Wheat Pool, White said CWB’s ownership model will differ from the one employed by the prairie pools. “When we look at the sorts of things that we think are going to be necessary for the CWB to develop — the sort of network that’s required and the capital that’s required — we do expect to have some outside, very much aligned shareholders that aren’t necessarily associated with the stock markets,” White said. “We’re looking to develop a structure that tries to keep the farmers’ shareholdings as intact as possible…. We don’t believe that the sort of model that was set up with the prairie pools years ago was necessarily a very sustainable model.… We’re looking for something that will be more sustainable as we move forward and protect farmers interests.” The amount of post-privatization equity held by farmers will depend on the amount of grain marketed through CWB and the estimated value of the company once it is privatized. In the first year of grain market
deregulation, CWB officials suggested that the company was aiming to handle one-third of the wheat and barley produced in Western Canada, or 10 million tonnes. It has since acknowledged that the amount of grain committed to CWB programs in 2012-13 fell short of that amount. Some industry observers have estimated that it was closer to 10 percent. CWB has since expanded its sales program to include peas, canola and other crops, but the company’s expected market share is unclear. Total production of barley and wheat in Western Canada, including durum, is expected to come in at 40 million tonnes in 2013-14. If CWB pool programs attract 10 percent of that volume, farmer equity derived from the sale of those two grains would amount to $20 million this year. Dayna Spiring, CWB’s chief strategy officer and general counsel, said farmer response will determine how much equity is held by producers. “We’re still finalizing our plans for the future, but we anticipate that farmers will own a minority interest in the CWB as we go forward,” Spiring said. “How long the equity offering will
be available to farmers depends in large part on farmers’ response to this program.… We anticipate that (the equity offering) will be a multiyear plan. It will certainly be for longer than this year. The equity value that will be attributed to farmers every year will vary, but for this year it’s $5 per tonne for each tonne a farmer delivers.” Some farmers have criticized the equity plan, suggesting it offers producers equity in something that they already own. However, Spiring said CWB assets were built up over a long period and were debt financed through CWB’s retained earnings rather than from money generated through CWB pool accounts. “While there has been various investments made, those investments haven’t been made out of the pool accounts,” she said. “There have been investments that have been financed, and there’s been money that has been borrowed to pay for those investments. So … no, farmers don’t yet own the CWB, but we want them to be owners of the CWB, and that’s our plan. We value farmers. We want them to be our partners and we do want them to play a meaningful role in our future.”
NAME
EXCH
Agrium TSX BASF OTC Bayer Ag OTC Dow Chemical NY Dupont NY BioSyent Inc. TSXV Monsanto NY Mosaic NY PotashCorp TSX Syngenta ADR
CLOSE LAST WK 89.29 100.47 123.80 41.31 59.62 2.64 105.74 46.61 33.11 79.56
86.12 97.25 118.55 41.07 57.93 2.58 106.58 45.47 32.46 79.54
TRANSPORTATION NAME
EXCH
CN Rail CPR
TSX TSX
CLOSE LAST WK 109.84 135.37
109.49 134.08
Toronto Stock Exchange is TSX. Canadian Venture Exchange is TSX Venture or TSXV. NAS: Nasdaq Stock Exchange. NY: New York Stock Exchange. ADR: New York/American Depository Receipt. OTC: Over the counter. List courtesy of Ian Morrison, financial advisor with Raymond James Ltd. in Calgary. Member of CIPF. Equity prices are from Thomson Reuters and OTC prices from Union Securities Ltd, Assiniboia Farmland LP. Sources are believed to be reliable, but accuracy cannot be guaranteed. Within the last year, Raymond James provided paid advice regarding securities of Cervus Equip. Contact Morrison at 877-264-0333.
Yara, BASF discuss U.S. ammonia plant Yara, which has suspended plans to expand its nitrogen plant at Belle Plaine, Sask., because of high construction costs, is in talks with BASF regarding a possible joint venture for a large ammonia plant at the U.S. Gulf Coast. Yara wants to increase its presence in the United States, and BASF, which uses ammonia in its U.S. manufacturing activities, wants more ownership of its supply chain.
AGFINANCE
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
85
LIFE INSURANCE POLICIES | PROTECTION
Life insurance provides security TAKING CARE OF BUSINESS
COLIN MILLER
A Seed Hawk’s Pat Beaujot and Brian Dean have steered the family-owned company, which will remain headquartered in Saskatchewan following its sale to Swedish manufacturer Vaderstad. | FILE PHOTO MACHINERY | SEEDING
Seed Hawk sold to Swedish maker Manufacturing | Partnership leads to new ownership for Langbank, Sask., company BY MICHAEL RAINE SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Seed Hawk, a reduced tillage seeding company from Saskatchewan, has been sold to the Swedish farm machinery maker Vaderstad. Pat Beaujot and Brian Dean have sold their family business to another family, this one 7,000 kilometres away from Seed Hawk’s home base in Langbank, Sask. “The Starks run a great company and they will bring those European styles of management and (factory) building with them to Saskatchewan,” Beaujot said last week after the sale was announced. “It will be great for Seed Hawk.” C h r i s t i na St a rk ’s f a m i l y w i l l assume control of the Saskatchewan equipment company immediately, with Beaujot and Dean remaining with the organization’s product development arm and as members of the board of directors. Beaujot said there was discussion about an eventual sale to the larger Swedish company when his company began to work with Vaderstad in 2006 to expand international distribution of both brands and fund expansion at Seed Hawk. “Everyone needs an exit strategy of some sort if you are in business, and this was ours,” Beaujot said about the sale of his company’s 93,000 sq. foot facility. “It just came about earlier than planned.” Vaderstad is making a major move into North America with its high speed, precision planter technology. Most of its machines, such as the Tempo planter and vertical tillage tools, are destined for the American corn belt. Langbank was considered a good place for the Seed Hawk and Vaderstad equipment to be built, both for
the prairie and U.S. great plains markets. “To make a major expansion at Langbank, the Starks wanted to have controlling interest in the company,” Beaujot said. “Brian and I talked about what it would mean for our employees and the community and decided the kind of investment they would make would be excellent for everybody, so we agreed to sell.” Seed Hawk has 190 employees. Beaujot said the Starks are setting up a new business structure that will place Vaderstad and Seed Hawk on separate, sister-type corporate platforms, each reporting to the family’s board of directors and management. Seed Hawk’s air seeding tools are exported to regions that have semiarid growing conditions and practice broad acre farming similar to what takes place on the Prairies and Great Plains. Vaderstad’s products are geared to more European-type regions where tillage and planting takes place in higher moisture conditions, not unlike those of the American Midwest. Vaderstad joins other European companies, such as Horsch, which are expanding sales and product development in North America. Seed Hawk will keep its headquarters in Saskatchewan, and the current general manager, Peter Clark, will take over from Beaujot as chief executive officer. Beaujot said he has observed the way the Starks run their business in t h e p a s t s e v e n y e a r s, a n d w a s impressed by what he saw. “If anything, it will only be an improvement to this family-owned business,” he said. “It’s another family that takes being in the farm equipment business personally.”
good strategy for managing financial burdens that can result from one’s death is never a bad idea. Life insurance is one tool for farmers to consider. It might not always be necessary, but it is prudent to consider the types of life insurance and how they might help plan for the future, particularly if an estate contains a business or significant assets. Most family farms will roll over to the next generation on a tax deferred basis, but this is not always the case. A tax deferred rollover may not be applicable if the next generation is a non-resident or does not meet the Canada Revenue Agency’s definition of a child. In these circumstances, farmers can be left with significant tax bills. A life insurance policy might significantly reduce such burdens in certain circumstances. There are several types of life insurance policies: • Term insurance — This is the sim-
plest type of life insurance. The premiums are fixed for a specific number of years. The term of the insurance depends on how long the policy is needed and can be for any specified number of years that is required. The policy carries no value and cannot be borrowed against or paid out if cancelled. • Term to 100 — Like term insurance, this has no cash value. The difference is that the premium is set for life and will not increase. This may mean higher premiums in the early years of the policy when compared to term insurance, but it will likely be cheaper in the latter years. The policy doesn’t charge premiums once an individual reaches the age of 100, but the policy is still in place. • Whole life (universal life) — Whole life insurance is different in that part of the premiums are paid into an investment account, which can then be built up over time. This increase in value is called the cash surrender value. The cash surrender value within the policy is paid to the insurance holder if the policy is cancelled. The policy holder has to pay a minimum premium to hold the policy and can pay up to a maximum. The investments are usually mutual funds. • Joint policies — cover more than one individual and can be cheaper than having individual policies. They can be set up as “first to die”
or “last to die.” Under the first to die version, as soon as one of the covered individuals dies the policy pays out to the surviving policy holder or other named beneficiary. Under the last to die version, the policy pays out upon the death of the surviving policy holder. The money can help with the estate issues such as covering taxes on capital gains and equalizing the inheritance among several children. There are many situations where life insurance may be appropriate: to ease the transfer of business to future generations, protect the business for key personnel or deal with the death of shareholders. It is also a way to ensure that there is money for children’s education and a spouse isn’t left with financial burdens in the case of an unexpected death. Life insurance policies can be a useful tool when one child wants to farm and the other does not because it ensures both children are treated fairly and equal. Speaking with a professional about whether a life insurance policy would be appropriate for your situation could be the difference between success or distress in the future of the farm. Simon Janhunen and Karl Hendrickson of KPMG contributed to this article. Colin Miller is a chartered accountant and partner with KPMG’s tax practice in Lethbridge. Contact: colinmiller@kpmg.ca.
86
MARKETS
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
CATTLE & SHEEP Steers 600-700 lb. (average $/cwt) Alberta
GRAINS Slaughter Cattle ($/cwt)
Grade A
Live Oct. 11-17
Previous Oct. 4-10
Year ago
Rail Oct. 11-17
Previous Oct. 4-10
121.50 100.73-128.70 n/a 103.00-111.75
n/a 108.68-128.00 n/a 103.00-108.50
106.80 110.34 n/a 96.00
202.00-202.50 201.00-206.00 n/a n/a
196.50-198.50 201.00-204.00 n/a n/a
n/a 111.67-125.65 n/a 102.00-108.00
n/a 104.76-122.15 n/a 102.00-107.00
107.49 107.29 n/a 94.25
202.00-203.00 200.00-205.00 n/a n/a
198.50 200.00-203.00 n/a n/a
$160
Steers Alta. Ont. Sask. Man. Heifers Alta. Ont. Sask. Man.
$155
*Live f.o.b. feedlot, rail f.o.b. plant.
$170 $165 $160 $155 $150 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Saskatchewan $165
$150
Feeder Cattle ($/cwt)
$145 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Manitoba $165 $160 $155 $150 $145 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Heifers 500-600 lb. (average $/cwt) Alberta $155
Canfax
Steers 900-1000 800-900 700-800 600-700 500-600 400-500 Heifers 800-900 700-800 600-700 500-600 400-500 300-400
Cattle Slaughter
Sask.
Man.
Alta.
B.C.
131-140 135-150 140-160 147-169 154-179 168-192
127-145 135-150 137-158 147-172 153-179 164-197
132-144 140-154 147-161 154-169 162-184 172-196
123-144 131-148 138-157 149-166 151-174 168-197
122-138 126-137 129-145 133-154 138-168 154-176
120-138 127-143 130-145 132-155 136-160 142-170
127-140 130-144 133-150 138-156 150-168 160-180
123-138 124-140 127-154 135-157 140-173 144-188 Canfax
$150 $145
Average Carcass Weight
$140 $135 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Oct. 12/13 888 818 681 883
Canfax
Steers Heifers Cows Bulls
Saskatchewan $150 $145 $140
Oct. 13/12 896 841 671 1005
YTD 13 874 817 677 897
YTD 12 876 820 680 1026
U.S. Cash cattle ($US/cwt)
$135 $130 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Manitoba $150 $145 $140 $135 $130 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Heifers n/a n/a n/a n/a
Feeders No. 1 (800-900 lb) Steers South Dakota 154.25-169.25 Billings 152-158.35 Dodge City 160-164.75
Trend n/a n/a n/a USDA
Basis Cattle / Beef Trade
Cash Futures Alta-Neb Sask-Neb Ont-Neb
-12.22 n/a -15.46
-11.68 n/a -14.92
Canadian Beef Production million lb. YTD % change Fed 1458.3 -6 Non-fed 225.1 -2 Total beef 1683.5 -5
Exports % from 2012 n/a (1) n/a n/a (1) n/a 129,593 (3) -15.2 182,537 (3) -10.8 Imports % from 2012 n/a (2) n/a 44,312 (2) +38.4 139,377 (4) +5.0 178,315 (4) +4.2
Sltr. cattle to U.S. (head) Feeder C&C to U.S. (head) Total beef to U.S. (tonnes) Total beef, all nations (tonnes) Sltr. cattle from U.S. (head) Feeder C&C from U.S. (head) Total beef from U.S. (tonnes) Total beef, all nations (tonnes)
(1) to Oct. 5/13 (2) to Aug. 31/13 (3) to Aug. 31/13 (4) to Oct. 12/13
Canfax
Agriculture Canada
Close Oct. 18 Live Cattle Oct 129.88 Dec 132.03 Feb 133.88 Apr 134.78 Jun 128.85 Feeder Cattle Oct 166.08 Nov 166.85 Jan 166.60 Mar 165.40 Apr 165.78
128.80 132.48 134.13 135.28 129.75
+1.08 -0.45 -0.25 -0.50 -0.90
126.30 127.28 131.00 134.78 131.20
167.48 169.28 168.75 168.00 168.45
-1.40 -2.43 -2.15 -2.60 -2.67
146.15 148.38 150.23 152.20 153.73
Index 100 Hog Price Trends ($/ckg) Alberta $180 $175 $170 $165 $160 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Nov 10-Nov 23 Nov 24-Dec 07 Dec 08-Dec 21 Dec 22-Jan 04 Jan 05-Jan 18 Jan 19-Feb 01 Feb 02-Feb 15 Feb 16-Mar 01 Mar 02-Mar 15 Mar 16-Mar 29 Mar 30-Apr 12
This wk Last wk 225-226 225-226
Yr. ago n/a Canfax
Sheep ($/lb.) & Goats ($/head) Oct. 11 Base rail (index 100) 2.40 Range 0.00-0.21 Feeder lambs 1.15 Sheep (live) 0.30
Previous 2.20 0.11-0.23 1.15 0.30
Oct. 15 1.57-2.19 1.70-2.10 1.85-1.90 1.82-2.10 1.70-1.85 1.20-1.50 0.80-0.90 0.80-0.95 65-110
New lambs 65-80 lb 80-95 lb > 95 lb > 110 lb Feeder lambs Sheep Rams Kids
Ontario Stockyards Inc.
$180 $175 $170 $165 $160 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Sltr. hogs to/fm U.S. (head) Total pork to/fm U.S. (tonnes) Total pork, all nations (tonnes) (1) to Oct. 5/13
(2) to Aug. 31/13
1.20-1.25 1.27 1.11-1.29 0.25-0.35
Wool lambs >80 lb Wool lambs <80 lb Hair lambs Fed sheep
$180 $175
$165 $160 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Dec Feb Apr May
Close Oct. 18 87.95 90.05 89.85 93.68
Close Oct. 11 86.50 88.90 89.85 93.20
To Oct. 12 Canada 15,600,995 15,808,557 -1.3
Fed. inspections only U.S. n/a n/a n/a Agriculture Canada
+1.45 +1.15 0.00 +0.48
Year ago 79.63 85.70 90.80 98.10
164.30 167.00
Man. Que.
167.00 170.00 *incl. wt. premiums
Import n/a 164,571 (3) 173,477 (3)
% from 2012 n/a -0.3 + 0.1 Agriculture Canada
EXCHANGE RATE: OCT. 21 $1 Cdn. = $0.9712 U.S.. $1 U.S. = $1.0297 Cdn.
$270 $260
$240 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Milling Wheat (Dec.) $250 $245
$230 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Close Oct. 18 95.65 93.80 91.90 80.30
Laird lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Laird lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Richlea lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Eston lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Eston lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Sm. Red lentils, No. 2 (¢/lb) Sm. Red lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Peas, green No. 1 ($/bu) Peas, green 10% bleach ($/bu) Peas, med. yellow No. 1 ($/bu) Peas, sm. yellow No. 2 ($/bu) Maple peas ($/bu) Feed peas ($/bu) Mustard, yellow, No. 1 (¢/lb) Mustard, brown, No. 1 (¢/lb) Mustard, Oriental, No. 1 (¢/lb) Canaryseed (¢/lb) Desi chickpeas (¢/lb) Kabuli, 8mm, No. 1 (¢/lb) Kabuli, 7mm, No. 1 (¢/lb) B-90 ckpeas, No. 1 (¢/lb)
Cash Prices Canola (cash - Nov.) $480 $470
Oct. 21 20.00-22.50 16.00-17.50 17.75-20.00 17.00-19.25 13.00-14.25 16.75-19.50 14.50-15.00 11.30-11.50 10.30-10.50 6.40-7.00 6.30-6.55 11.25-13.50 5.00-8.60 37.75-38.75 35.75-37.75 27.30-28.75 23.25-23.75 21.40-22.50 21.90-23.00 17.10-18.00 18.00-21.00
Avg. Oct. 11 21.00 21.38 16.63 16.63 18.96 19.61 18.14 18.75 13.42 14.08 18.32 18.39 14.88 14.88 11.46 10.56 10.46 9.46 6.58 6.58 6.46 6.46 12.15 11.85 6.36 6.36 38.25 38.25 36.42 36.42 28.27 28.27 23.46 23.39 22.13 22.13 22.73 23.70 17.78 18.78 19.00 20.00
Cash Prices Oct. 16 Oct. 9Year Ago No. 3 Oats Saskatoon ($/tonne) 166.49 161.68 190.71 Snflwr NuSun Enderlin ND (¢/lb) 19.10 19.10 25.25
U.S. Grain Cash Prices ($US/bu.)
$450 $440 9/13 9/20 9/27 10/4 10/11 10/18
Canola (basis - Nov.) $-15 $-20 $-25
Trend +0.52 +0.32 +0.75 +0.90
Year ago 100.83 100.33 99.25 88.20
No. 1 DNS (14%) Montana elevator No. 1 DNS (13%) Montana elevator No. 1 Durum (13%) Montana elevator No. 1 Malt Barley Montana elevator No. 2 Feed Barley Montana elevator
$-35 9/13 9/20 9/27 10/4 10/11 10/18
Feed Wheat (Lethbridge) $230 $220 $210 $200 $190 9/13 9/20 9/27 10/4 10/11 10/18
$540 $530 $520 $510 $500 9/13 9/20 9/27 10/4 10/11 10/18
Barley (cash - Dec.) $190 $185
Basis: $32
$175 $170 9/13 9/20 9/27 10/4 10/11 10/18
Canola and barley are basis par region. Feed wheat basis Lethbridge. Basis is best bid.
Corn (Dec.) $460 $450 $440 $430 $420 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
$1350 $1320 $1290 $1260
Oats (Dec.) $340 $330
Oct. 18 7.05 6.45 7.00 4.56 3.12
Grain Futures Oct. 21 Oct. 11 Trend Wpg ICE Canola ($/tonne) Nov 489.00 480.10 +8.90 Jan 499.70 490.30 +9.40 Mar 508.30 497.80 +10.50 May 515.20 504.50 +10.70 Wpg ICE Milling Wheat ($/tonne) Dec 238.00 241.00 -3.00 Mar 245.00 245.00 0.00 May 251.00 246.00 +5.00 Wpg ICE Durum Wheat ($/tonne) Dec 247.00 247.00 0.00 Mar 253.00 253.00 0.00 Wpg ICE Barley ($/tonne) Dec 152.00 152.00 0.00 Mar 154.00 154.00 0.00 Chicago Wheat ($US/bu.) Dec 6.9975 6.9225 +0.0750 Mar 7.0975 7.0100 +0.0875 May 7.1275 7.0275 +0.1000 Jul 7.0000 6.9250 +0.0750 Chicago Oats ($US/bu.) Dec 3.3650 3.1675 +0.1975 Mar 3.1450 3.0400 +0.1050 May 3.1325 3.0200 +0.1125 Chicago Soybeans ($US/bu.) Nov 13.0325 12.6675 +0.3650 Jan 13.0050 12.6625 +0.3425 Mar 12.8175 12.5400 +0.2775 May 12.6450 12.3950 +0.2500 Chicago Soy Oil (¢US/lb.) Dec 41.64 40.28 +1.36 Jan 41.95 40.61 +1.34 Mar 42.36 41.01 +1.35 Chicago Soy Meal ($US/short ton) Dec 415.7 403.4 +12.3 Jan 410.2 400.9 +9.3 Mar 399.4 394.2 +5.2 Chicago Corn ($US/bu.) Dec 4.4400 4.3325 +0.1075 Mar 4.5675 4.4625 +0.1050 May 4.6525 4.5450 +0.1075 Jul 4.7200 4.6200 +0.1000 Minneapolis Wheat ($US/bu.) Dec 7.5175 7.5475 -0.0300 Mar 7.6150 7.6400 -0.0250 May 7.6800 7.6625 +0.0175 Jul 7.6800 7.6850 -0.0050 Kansas City Wheat ($US/bu.) Dec 7.6125 7.6025 +0.0100 Mar 7.6050 7.5900 +0.0150 May 7.5875 7.5600 +0.0275
Year ago 615.20 614.20 612.70 606.40 307.50 317.00 320.00 312.40 319.00 250.00 253.00 8.7825 8.9025 8.9350 8.5650 3.9550 3.9900 3.9775 15.4650 15.4925 15.1775 14.7400 51.66 52.04 52.49 471.0 464.3 450.8 7.6125 7.5925 7.5325 7.4475 9.4750 9.4800 9.5400 9.5000 9.1550 9.2750 9.3250
$320 $310 $300 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Close Oct. 11 95.13 93.48 91.15 79.40
USDA
$-30
$1230 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
% from 2012 n/a +10.2 -0.2
Jun Jul Aug Oct
$280
Soybeans (Nov.)
Index 100 hogs $/ckg
(3) to Oct. 12/13
Trend
Durum (Dec.)
Chicago Nearby Futures ($US/100 bu.)
Chicago Hogs Lean ($US/cwt)
Manitoba $170
Export n/a (1) 235,069 (2) 778,560 (2)
$145 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
$180
Oct. 21
Hogs / Pork Trade
Saskatchewan
$150
Flax (elevator bid- S’toon) 1.67-2.35 1.90-2.17 1.91-2.12 1.90-2.06 1.30-1.76 1.30-1.70 0.85-0.90 0.80-1.10 65-110
Hog Slaughter
Alta. Sask.
$155
SunGold Meats
To date 2013 To date 2012 % change 13/12
Source: STAT Publishing, which solicits bids from Maviga N.A., Legumex Walker, CGF Brokerage, Parrish & Heimbecker, Simpson Seeds and Alliance Grain Traders. Prices paid for dressed product at plant.
$460
Est. Beef Wholesale ($/cwt)
Fixed contract $/ckg
Pulse and Special Crops
$160
$235
Close Trend Year Oct. 11 ago
HOGS Maple Leaf Hams Mktg. Oct. 18 Oct. 18 152.89-154.78 152.43-154.32 152.89-158.09 152.43-157.63 158.56-158.56 158.10-158.10 155.29-155.73 155.05-155.27 156.24-158.61 156.00-158.36 161.92-162.39 161.68-162.15 163.34-164.76 163.10-164.51 159.84-163.81 159.65-163.57 159.84-160.31 159.65-160.12 157.00-159.36 156.81-159.18 159.17-160.12 159.07-160.01
$165
$240
Chicago Futures ($US/cwt)
Sask. Sheep Dev. Bd.
Due to wide reporting and collection methods, it is misleading to compare hog prices between provinces.
Barley (Dec.)
$250
To Oct. 12 Fed. inspections only Canada U.S. To date 2013 2,039,929 n/a To date 2012 2,139,679 n/a % Change 13/12 -4.7 n/a
Montreal
Slaughter cattle (35-65% choice) Steers National n/a Kansas n/a Nebraska n/a Nebraska (dressed) n/a
ICE Futures Canada
Minneapolis Nearby Futures ($US/100bu.) Spring Wheat (Dec.) $810 $780 $750 $720 $690 9/16 9/23 9/30 10/7 10/11 10/21
Canadian Exports & Crush (1,000 To tonnes) Oct. 13 Wheat Durum Oats Barley Flax Canola Peas Lentils Canola crush 146.5
To Oct. 6
151.8
Total to date 2238.5 595.6 17.9 909.1 595.6 131.6 1242.1
Last year 2750.1 931.9 297.4 217.9 22.9 1557.4 490.9 1469.3
WEATHER
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 24, 2013
Halloween is approaching and pumpkins were ripe for the taking in a field near Portage la Prairie, Man., last week. | JEANNETTE GREAVES
PUMPKIN PATCH |
PHOTO
PUBLISHER: SHAUN JESSOME EDITOR: JOANNE PAULSON MANAGING EDITOR: MICHAEL RAINE Box 2500, 2310 Millar Ave. Saskatoon, Sask. S7K 2C4. Tel: (306) 665-3500
ADVERTISING
TEMP. MAP
TEMPERATURE FORECAST
PRECIP. MAP Much above normal
Oct. 24 - 30 (in °C)
ADVERTISING RATES Classified liner ads: $5.85 per printed line (3 line minimum) Classified display ads: $6.50 per agate line ROP display: $9.25 per agate line
Oct. 24 - 30 (in mm)
Above normal
Churchill 9.7
Churchill - 5 / - 12
Vancouver 11 / 5
Normal
Edmonton 3/-5 Saskatoon Calgary 3/-7 6/-6 Regina 4/-7
Below normal
Winnipeg 3/-6
Prince George 17.8
Vancouver 41.1
Edmonton 5.5 Saskatoon Calgary 4.2 2.5 Regina 2.9
Much below normal
1-800-667-7770 1-800-667-7776 (306) 665-3515 (306) 653-8750
HOURS: Mon.& Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Tues., Wed., Thurs. 8:30 a.m. – 8 p.m. e-mail: advertising@producer.com Advertising director: KELLY BERG Classified sales mgr: SHAUNA BRAND
PRECIPITATION FORECAST
The Western Producer reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement submitted to it for publication. Classified word ads are nonrefundable.
CANADIAN HERITAGE ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Winnipeg 6.7
We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Periodical Fund of the Department of Canadian Heritage. Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to Subscriptions, Box 2500, Saskatoon, Sask. S7K 2C4
The numbers on the above maps are average temperature and precipitation figures for the forecast week, based on historical data from 1971-2000. Maps provided by WeatherTec Services: www.weathertec.mb.ca n/a = not available; tr = trace; 1 inch = 25.4 millimetres (mm)
Publications Mail Agreement No. 40069240
Assiniboia Broadview Eastend Estevan Kindersley Maple Creek Meadow Lake Melfort Nipawin North Battleford Prince Albert Regina Rockglen Saskatoon Swift Current Val Marie Yorkton Wynyard
13.9 12.1 12.9 13.1 16.0 16.0 17.4 13.8 15.1 17.6 15.9 13.3 12.7 16.0 14.0 14.0 13.3 12.6
-6.2 -7.2 -7.4 -4.0 -4.9 -6.5 -9.2 -3.7 -5.2 -10.1 -4.9 -8.6 -4.7 -5.8 -4.8 -10.6 -6.1 -4.6
Precipitation last week since Apr. 1 mm mm %
0.0 2.9 4.7 3.0 0.5 4.5 0.7 2.0 3.0 0.8 2.9 1.4 2.6 0.7 0.6 2.3 2.6 1.1
275.1 299.6 383.8 480.3 261.0 380.2 250.6 262.5 301.3 212.2 354.0 242.1 354.4 211.4 264.1 365.4 243.9 238.1
95 89 134 148 102 140 80 84 89 72 108 80 129 73 94 146 70 73
News stories and photos to be submitted by Friday or sooner each week. The Western Producer Online Features all current classified ads and other information. Ads posted online each Thursday morning. See www.producer.com or contact webmaster@producer.com Letters to the Editor/contact a columnist Mail, fax or e-mail letters to joanne.paulson@producer.com or newsroom@producer.com. Include your full name, address and phone number for verification purposes. To contact a columnist, write the letter in care of this newspaper. We’ll forward it to the columnist. Coming Events/ Stock Sales/ Mailbox Please mail details, including a phone number or call (306) 665-3544. Or fax to (306) 934-2401 or email events@ producer.com If you’d like to buy a photo or order a copy of a news story that appeared in the paper, call our librarian at (306) 665-9606. Printed with inks containing canola oil
MANITOBA Temperature last week High Low
Brooks Calgary Cold Lake Coronation Edmonton Grande Prairie High Level Lethbridge Lloydminster Medicine Hat Milk River Peace River Pincher Creek Red Deer Stavely Vegreville
Newsroom toll-free: 1-800-667-6978 Fax: (306) 934-2401 News editor: TERRY FRIES e-mail: newsroom@producer.com
Member, Canadian Farm Press Association
ALBERTA Temperature last week High Low
$4.25 plus taxes
EDITORIAL
™
LAST WEEK’S WEATHER SUMMARY ENDING OCT. 20 SASKATCHEWAN
Subscriptions: 1-800-667-6929 In Saskatoon: (306) 665-3522 Fax: (306) 244-9445 Subs. supervisor: GWEN THOMPSON e-mail: subscriptions@producer.com
SUBSCRIPTION RATES Within Canada: One year: $82.92 + applicable taxes Two years: $154.24 + applicable taxes Sask., Alta., Ontario & B.C. add 5% GST. Manitoba add 5% GST & 8% PST. Nova Scotia add 15% HST. United States $179.66 US/year All other countries $358.19 Cdn/year
President, Glacier Media Agricultural Information Group: BOB WILLCOX Contact: bwillcox@farmmedia.com Phone: (204) 944-5751
Classified ads: Display ads: In Saskatoon: Fax:
SUBSCRIPTIONS
Per copy retail
The Western Producer is published at Saskatoon, Sask., by Western Producer Publications, owned by Glacier Media, Inc. Printed in Canada.
Prince George 3 /-4
87
16.7 17.0 14.4 17.9 16.5 17.3 12.4 17.6 16.6 17.1 17.0 15.3 15.4 16.5 15.9 17.2
-5.7 -3.3 -2.1 -7.6 -8.9 -3.3 -5.8 -3.6 -5.4 -3.2 -2.3 -5.3 -5.1 -5.7 -0.6 -8.7
Precipitation last week since Apr. 1 mm mm %
5.6 11.4 2.4 0.2 0.7 0.3 1.0 6.3 0.3 4.4 8.2 0.2 8.4 7.1 9.1 0.0
308.2 452.8 267.4 268.6 304.8 324.2 270.7 397.5 267.7 364.2 367.8 330.8 452.2 337.2 594.9 244.0
123 132 84 94 87 104 100 141 86 149 123 114 121 86 177 79
Temperature last week High Low
Brandon Dauphin Gimli Melita Morden Portage La Prairie Swan River Winnipeg
15.0 14.4 15.3 14.1 14.1 14.6 13.2 14.8
Precipitation last week since Apr. 1 mm mm %
-6.2 -4.9 -4.0 -5.3 -2.7 -2.8 -8.1 -2.8
3.8 0.9 0.5 2.9 5.0 5.5 3.2 0.0
468.4 440.5 291.9 475.7 438.8 431.6 459.6 335.9
132 121 74 147 111 113 120 83
-4.9 -4.1 -2.4 -3.4 -3.4
2.0 0.0 0.3 0.5 4.3
382.2 380.8 174.7 268.9 326.4
151 123 94 122 95
BRITISH COLUMBIA Cranbrook Fort St. John Kamloops Kelowna Prince George
12.0 16.2 17.2 14.7 16.9
All data provided by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s National Agroclimate Information Service: www.agr.gc.ca/drought. Data has undergone only preliminary quality checking. Maps provided by WeatherTec Services Inc.: www.weathertec.mb.ca
FALL INTERNET 2013 AUCTION THIS ONLINE AUCTION EVENT RUNS NOVEMBER 7 - NOVEMBER 18, 2013 Bidding starts November 7 at 9 a.m. and ends November 18 at 9 p.m. CST SHARP!
Pre-register online at: www.producerauction.com
88
OCTOBER 24, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Growing today for tomorrow. Farming, the biggest job on earth.
The population is increasing, but farmland isn’t. So the pressure is on for farmers to maximize yields and produce high-quality crops to meet the needs of a growing planet. This is why BASF is working with farmers to create chemistry that will increase the yield and quality of crops. With help from BASF, it’s in the farmers’ hands. To learn more about BASF’s commitment to sustainable agriculture, check out our videos at agsolutions.ca/sustainability.
©2013 BASF Canada Inc. All Rights Reserved.