THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
VOL. 92 | NO. 5 | $4.25
SYSTEM UPGRADE? GROWING WITH FARMERS FOR 90 YEARS
|
Study looks at getting grain moving again. | P. 3
WWW.PRODUCER.COM
SWINE | HEALTH
Deadly virus could cost hog industry millions Multiple cases of PED confirmed in Ontario BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU & REUTERS NEWS AGENCY
Virginia Peters brushes hay off of a day-old calf at Peters Simmentals west of Perdue, Sask., Jan. 24. The farm has been dealing with calving season for two weeks. This is the first year producers in all four western provinces will be able to take part in the Western Livestock Price Insurance Program, which will enable them to lock in a minimum price for their hogs or cattle. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO
SEE PED VIRUS, PAGE 3
Livestock producers get insurance Risk management | New program available to hog and cattle producers provides stability CAMROSE BUREAU
A price insurance program that has proved popular with Alberta livestock producers is now available to cattle and hog producers in all four western provinces. The Western Livestock Price Insurance Program is designed to protect against roller coaster prices by allowing producers to lock in a minimum price, similar to crop insurance.
Canadian Cattlemen’s Association president Martin Unrau said expanding the program to other provinces will add stability and help the industry to grow in Western Canada. “The crop industry has had this base, which has allowed them to get lower interest rates on operation loans,” Unrau said when the insurance pilot program was announced in Camrose Jan. 24. “That will now transfer into the
BULK UP NOW. EARN UP TO
cattle industry. As soon as cattle farmers, feeders, finishers recognize that, they will realize this program is not just getting the payout at the end of the day if the prices fall. It is also about saving the interest rates on the loans.” The Cattle Price Insurance Program has been available to Alberta producers since 2009 and is a popular risk management tool for cattle producers. In 2013, 900,000 of Alberta’s three
million cattle and 13,000 of the province’s one million hogs were insured by 3,800 cattle and eight hog producers. Federal agriculture minister Gerry Ritz said the program, which is available for feeder and fed cattle as well as calves, will be reassessed after four years. Insurance on feeder cattle has made up the largest use of the program in Alberta. SEE WEST GETS INSURANCE, PAGE 2
$1.00/ACRE MORE.
High-performance cereal herbicides. Convenient BULK UP savings. Even more Grower Dividends. Calculate your Dividends at dowagrodividends.ca today.
® TM
Trademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow. 12/13-22626-01
Deadlines February 20, 2014 March 20, 2014
PrePassTM XC TandemTM, SimplicityTM, Liquid AchieveTM, AttainTM XC, OcTTainTM XL, FrontlineTM XL, PrestigeTM XC, StellarTM
REWARDING HIGHER PERFORMANCE
u|xhHEEJBy00001pzYv!:; JANUARY 30, 2014 Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to: Box 2500, Saskatoon, SK. S7K 2C4 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
LIVESTOCK PRICE INSURANCE | HOGS, CATTLE
BY MARY MACARTHUR
Ontario Pork producers are bracing themselves after two positive cases and a possible third case of PED were discovered in Ontario farms over the past week. If the virus were to spread across Canada, within one year it would cause an estimated $45 million in damage to the Canadian hog industry, said Amy Cronin, a hog farmer and chair of Ontario Pork. The first positive case in a 500 sow farrow to finish barn in Middlesex County was announced Jan. 23 and almost 100 percent of the two- to fiveday old pigs in the barn have died. The second case in a 3,000-sow finisher barn in nearby Chatham/ Kent region was confirmed on the weekend.
2
NEWS
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
West gets insurance Saskatchewan agriculture minister Lyle Stewart said farmers have asked for tools to help offset the volatility of livestock prices. “By providing livestock price insurance across Western Canada, we will be able to level the playing field insuring all producers have access to an important risk management tool.” Alberta will be the central administrative body for the program. In Saskatchewan, livestock producers can access livestock insurance through the crop insurance program. Manitoba is part of the program, but was not included in the announcement because of byelections in the province. British Columbia will also be part of the program. Unrau, former head of the Manitoba Cattle Producers Association, said producers have looked enviously at Alberta’s program since it was introduced four years ago. “It will be a tremendous, tremendous benefit to us as cattle producers. It is another tool we can use to manage price and basis risk for all the Canadian industry.… This program offers increased stability for the whole industry.” CCA vice-chair Dave Solverson
said expanding the insurance program would end the distortion in cattle markets. “When a risk management program is only available in one region, it can tend to artificially distort movement in the feeders,” he said. “This will restore market driven competitive business environment.” Solverson said he and his brother have insured all the cattle they have marketed for the past two years. “When the price of feed doubled and one of the major processors was down, cattle price insurance absorbed the volatile price movement.” He said the unplanned bonus of the price insurance program is reversing the amount of forward contracts that producers sign with processors. Buying price insurance eliminates the need to contract finished cattle and allows producers to take advantage of cash pricing by packers. “We have been able to insure to the level ver y close to the contract offered by the packers,” he said. “This has given us the confidence to leave our cattle available to the cash market. Fed cattle selling this week are returning $10 more than the January contract.”
NATURAL GAS | ANIMAL WELFARE
Man. rupture disables barns BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
A natural gas pipeline explosion south of Winnipeg Jan. 25 disrupted service to Fred Fast’s hog barns, but he and his staff rigged up portable heaters and diesel generators to keep weanlings warm and prevent waterlines from freezing. Fast, who manages and is a partner in a couple of hog operations near Marchand, Man., said Jan. 26 was a chaotic day of scrambling and troubleshooting. Thanks to the help of electricians and dedicated staff, the animals are doing fine. “All our heat is natural gas in the barns,” he said. “We’re very fortunate. We have good tradesmen and suppliers, and my barn managers are just the best.” A TransCanada natural gas pipeline exploded near Otterburne, Man., in the early morning hours of Jan. 25, cutting off gas to thousands of households in southeastern Manitoba while temperatures dropped to -30 C. The shutdown affected dozens of
REGULAR FEATURES
INSIDE THIS WEEK
LIVESTOCK PRICE INSURANCE | FROM PAGE ONE
hog, chicken and dairy barns in a region of Manitoba with a high concentration of livestock operations. Fast said 200 or more barns were likely affected. “I think easily. There were so many chicken farms that are still (without natural gas,” he said. “Lots of people I work with, their hog barns are all out. I think easily that number.” Ma n i t o b a Tu rk e y P ro d u c e r s spokesperson Bill Uruski said approximately five turkey barns are located in the area without natural gas. Several of those producers rely on propane, but others had to install electric heaters to keep poults warm. “All in all, they’ve weathered it fairly well,” he said. Lorne Loeppky, a grain and hog producer near Niverville, Man., also lost service following the explosion. He said waterlines are a major concern. “We’ve plugged in heaters where he can to keep the water from freezing in certain rooms,” he said. “I guess we’re getting by.” Natural gas service was expected to resume late Jan. 27 or Jan. 28.
Ag Stock Prices Classifieds Events, Mailbox Livestock Report Market Charts Opinion Open Forum On The Farm Weather
COLUMNS
Making ice: A Saskatchewan man will help make perfect curling ice at the Olympic winter games. See page 19. | KAREN MORRISON PHOTO
NEWS
» » »
farmer bypasses the transportation backlog by selling to the U.S. 4 PULSE PRICES: The Indian government considers lifting an export ban on pulses, which could lower prices. 14 PRODUCT CLAIMS: Farmers are urged to take care when deciphering crop input claims. 17 SOYBEAN EXPANSION: Variety selection is the most important decision when getting into soybeans. 29
» » »
Gardiner was Canada’s longest serving agriculture minister. 30 INSECT TROUBLE: Alberta’s latest insect survey identifies hot spots for the upcoming year. 34 DISEASE WOES: Stripe rust, fusarium and Goss’s wilt in corn are among the diseases causing trouble in Alberta. 35 INTEGRATED AG: Four distinct farm business sectors are coming together in a new type of service. 36
10 11 11 8 85 82 23
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
MARKETS 6
» SOY ACRES: Soybean acres in Manitoba and
6
Saskatchewan could be huge this year.
» SHOP AROUND: Farmers are advised to
shop around when marketing their crop. 7
FARM LIVING 19
» DINER INFO: A new program gives
restaurant diners nutritional information. 22
» ON THE FARM: This Manitoba family takes an holistic approach to raising cattle.
26
PRODUCTION 74
» HERBICIDE SURPRISE: Residue surprises can be a nightmare in the field.
74
» SEED CARE: Poly cupped flighting proves better at handling delicate seeds.
76
LIVESTOCK 81
» PED IS HERE: Quick response is key to
controlling porcine epidemic diarrhea. 81
» COOL APPEAL: A date has been set for Canada’s appeal of COOL.
82
AGFINANCE 84
» RECOVERY: An economist believes the global economy is turning the corner.
www.salfordmachine.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
positive about the agricultural market. 84
Grain Growers of Canada does not support lifting the revenue cap. Due to an editing error, a story on the front page of the Jan. 23 issue was incorrect.
Barry Wilson Editorial Notebook Hursh on Ag Market Watch Managing the Farm Animal Health TEAM Living Tips
CONTACTS
» SELLING SOUTH: A Manitoba » THEN AND NOW: Jimmy
» ECONOMIC FORECAST: A major bank is
Correction
84 39 70 9 86 10 12 26 87
85
Barry Wilson, Ottawa Ph: 613-232-1447 barry.wilson@producer.com
Ontario, Canada • 1-866-442-1293
NEWS
WEED MANAGEMENT
3
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
CROPS | TRANSPORTATION
Grain handling system studied Transportation analysis | $3.2 million will fund a study to examine rail capacity BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
First year ag business students Jaylyn Gapka of Oakburn, Man., and Kaitlan Patterson of Minnedosa, Man., get help from Keith Loney of the Manitoba Weed Supervisors Association as they pack up a weed display at Manitoba Ag Days Jan. 21-23 in Brandon. | SANDY BLACK PHOTO
Farmers frustrated by their inability to reliably move grain to market are taking another look at logistical problems affecting Canada’s grain handling and transportation system. Canola, wheat, pulse and soy growers, as well as industr y groups involved in the grain, oilseed, pulse and special crops trade, announced last week that they will spend $3.2 million over the next five years looking for ways to measure and improve the system’s capacity to get products to market on time. Ottawa is contributing $1.5 million to the effort, which will be led by Pulse Canada and supported by a variety of industry groups, including the Canadian Canola Growers Association, the Alberta Wheat Commission, the soy growers of the Manitoba Pulse Growers Association, members of the Western Grain Elevators Association, the Inland Terminal Association and the Canadian Special Crops Association. The initiative was announced in Winnipeg as Canada’s farmers struggle to market a record crop that was harvested last fall. Greg Cherewyk, chief operating officer with Pulse Canada, said the initiative will not focus solely on the performance of Canada’s major railway companies. Instead, it will look at all components in the Canadian supply chain. “I don’t want to make it about the (rail) situation … but there are some interesting facts out there,” Cherewyk said Jan. 22. “As of yesterday, (we’ve got) 28 grain vessels waiting for product at Port Metro Vancouver. We know that prairie terminals are at or near capacity and we know that year-todate, we’re about 40,000 cars behind (grain industry expectations). To me, all of this means that we’re not meeting our customers’ needs. “There’s no question that we’ve got a tarnished reputation, and this is only furthering that (perception).…
Right now, we’re telling buyers to go elsewhere for their grain.” Frustration is growing across the West over the transportation system’s apparent inability to move Canadian grain quickly enough into the global marketplace. Wade Sobkowich, executive director of the Western Grain Elevators Association, said the project announced last week is part of a longterm process aimed at identifying problems and implementing solutions. One of the project’s objectives is to identify key performance indicators in the grain handling and transportation system and develop standardized methods of measurement. However, the project will not provide short-term relief to the current problems facing the grain industry, he added. “It’s a five year project to gather data … on how the industry is performing in a number of different areas,” Sobkowich said. Federal agriculture minister Gerry Ritz said Ottawa’s $1.5 contribution to the initiative is part of an ongoing commitment aimed at improving the efficiency of Canada’s grain export pipeline. “This project will help ensure the industry has the right tools and processes in place to achieve measurable improvements in supply chain performance, leading to greater profitability,” he said in news release. The announcement prompted a less-than-enthusiastic reaction in other circles. Lynn Jacobson, president of the Alberta Federation of Agriculture, said the grain industry has been calling on Ottawa for years to take concrete steps aimed at improving rail service. Until it takes concrete steps to improve market access, farmers will continue to ship grain as quickly as rail companies see fit to move it. “We’ve been down this road before and nothing’s been solved.” “There’s a reluctance by the federal government to touch the railroads.”
SWINE | FROM PAGE ONE
Deadly piglet virus draws concern from Canadian industry, producers While PED doesn’t affect older pigs as much, 15 to 20 percent of the pigs in the barn are showing clinical signs of vomiting and diarrhea, said Dr. Greg Douglas, Ontario’s chief veterinary officer during a conference call Jan. 27. Pigs in a third suspected case in a 2,000 head finisher barn, also in the Chatham-Kent region, are showing signs similar to the second case. Douglas said an ongoing investigation from sampling and surveillance identified other areas of concern and officials are investigating. “We are still are under the impression there are strategies we can work
on to help mitigate and slow the spread of this virus in Ontario. However the confirmed second case and the third under suspicion certainly does change the reality here in Ontario,” said Douglas of Guelph. Ontario is Canada’s second-biggest hog-producing province, after Quebec. Olymel, one of Canada’s biggest pork processors, also detected the virus at an unloading dock of its Saint-Esprit slaughter facility northeast of Montreal. PED is not a concern for food safety or other animals, but it is deadly to young pigs. The disease has been
endemic in Asia for years and causes chronic problems. The disease was first identified in the United States and has killed more than three million pigs in the U.S. and infected 15 to 20 percent of the barns. Cronin said hog producers are worried. “We do understand this will be tough on the Ontario industry. It all depends on where it goes from here.” The source of the virus is unknown, but Ontario’s chief provincial veterinarian said investigators are retracing the activity of trucks, people and animals on the southwestern Ontario farm.
Dr. Harpreet Kochhar, chief veterinary officer for Canada, said there are no plans to close the border to American pigs. The Canadian pig industry depends on U.S. markets for sales, but few pigs are imported to Canada. It’s likely the virus hitched a ride back on a truck through contaminated manure. None of the pigs, either dead or alive, have left the farm, but Ontario does not have the legal ability to quarantine the barn. The owners are co-operating to help stop the spread of the disease. Douglas said they haven’t ruled out any future actions, including intro-
ducing regulatory controls. “As chief veterinarian for Ontario, my chief concern is to prevent the spread of a hazard in a realistic, logical fashion.” Alberta swine veterinarian Dr. Egan Brockhoff said after the discovery of the first case, Alberta officials carried out an electronic trace and called all producers, and could not find any boars or gilts that moved from Ontario to Alberta in the past month. None of the barns bred purebred pigs for sale. FOR MORE ON PED, SEE PAGES 4, 81
»
4
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NOW, WHICH BIN WAS IT … |
NEWS
Ben Teichroeb walks toward a row of grain bins on the Parkland Hutterite colony near Parkland, Alta., Jan. 9. | MIKE STURK PHOTO
WHEAT SALES | U.S. PRICE OPTIONS
BANFF PORK SEMINAR | INDUSTRY OUTLOOK
Wheat growers advised to look south for best price
Hog industry outlook looked rosy — until PED
Rail service hurts price | Manitoba farmer gets $1.06 more per bushel
Future looked profitable | First confirmed cases of hog disease in Canada threatens optimism BY DAN YATES
BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Farmers should be exploring opportunities to ship their wheat to the United States, says a Manitoba farm leader. Doug Chorney, president of Keystone Agricultural Producers, sold his entire spring wheat crop last week to a major U.S. grain company for more than $6 per bushel. He said he will net $5.75 per bu. after paying to load his 17,000 bu. of wheat onto producer cars. Ninety percent of it will be paid up front. The best quote he had from elevator companies in the Winnipeg area where he farms was $4.69 per bu. “That’s a heck of a difference,” said Chorney. He will be netting an extra $18,000 for his No. 2 Canada Western Red Spring 12.5 percent protein wheat by shipping it to the United States. “That’s a lot of money to leave on the table for farmers, so I really encourage producers to investigate these options,” said Chorney. He believes his wheat will move on the Lake Line short-line railway in February. Chorney said quotes for No. 1 CWRS 13.5 percent wheat at Manitoba Ag Days were $4.50 to $4.80 per bu. “I find $5.75 pretty disappointing. I can’t imagine living with $4.50 a bushel,” he said. “When you look at the cost of growing a crop right now, that is below the cost of production, I’m nearly sure, depending on your yield, of course.”
Chorney said his U.S. deal is proof that prices quoted at elevators in Western Canada do not reflect reality. “You know pretty quickly there is something drastically wrong here.” However, he doesn’t believe grain companies are to blame for that conundrum. “I don’t think it’s that at all. This is just a clear, clear financial indicator of how much this is costing farmers when you have poor rail service,” said Chorney. Some growers are convinced they are being gouged by the grain companies based on a comparison of prices at the West Coast versus the local elevator. Agriculture Canada data shows west coast prices for No. 1 CWRS 13.5 percent wheat and No. 1 CWAD 13 percent durum have barely budged since Aug. 2, while the average prices for those two commodities at a collection of Saskatchewan elevators have fallen by one-third over the same time frame. The west coast prices are asking prices rather than actual sales. Charlie Pearson, provincial crops market analyst with Alberta Agriculture, said some farmers become irate when they see that the selling price for grain on the West Coast hasn’t moved while the inland buying price has plummeted. However, he said the comparison is deceiving. Most of the ships at the West Coast are being filled with grain that was forward priced in the fall or early winter. The west coast cash price mainly reflects the small amount of trade
between grain terminals to top up a vessel that might be a little short of a particular type of wheat. “There is always kind of a cash market in Vancouver that will look after that 5,000 tonnes or whatever it is,” he said. Pearson said growers wonder how much of the basis at their local elevators reflects actual costs and how much is caused by widening grain company margins. “There are some additional costs for sure, but I would expect there would be some additional profits in the system as well,” he said. Errol Anderson, an analyst with ProMarket Wire, doesn’t believe grain companies are making out like bandits. “Sure, the margins are going to be way bigger than normal but they’re going to move a lot less (grain), too,” he said. Anderson said grain companies are paying extra storage and demurrage fees these days. “Everybody thinks the grain companies are getting rich over this. They’re not.” He said the unattractive basis is primarily a message to growers that grain companies don’t want their grain. That message could be around for the remainder of the crop year or even longer, he added. Pearson also worries that the transportation problem will linger. Road bans could be in effect by late March and seeding will be underway in some areas by April, so the window for moving the significant amounts of grain stored on farms is rapidly closing.
SASKATOON NEWSROOM
BANFF, Alta. — The first appearance of porcine epidemic diarrhea in Canada comes as economists begin forecasting profits for the industry for the first time in years. Low interest rates, reduced feed costs and a declining Canadian dollar are positive signs for the Canadian hog industry, officials and economists said at the Banff Pork Seminar last week. J.P. Gervais, chief agriculture economist at Farm Credit Canada, called it “moderate optimism.” The outlook isn’t strong enough to expect producers to take on new debt or see widespread expansion right away, but operations that have struggled are likely to begin repairing balance sheets after several volatile years. Gervais said operations with 3,000 or more sows have probably broken even over the least three or four years, but smaller producers have lost money for as many as seven. He said feed costs over the next year will favour producers in Western Canada, where the price of barley has dropped significantly, over eastern growers, who have already seen a dip in corn prices. “Looking into the future for the next 18 months, profitabilities look really positive,” said Gervais. PED was the elephant in the room at the Banff Pork Seminar. The deadly virus has devastated American producers, resulting in millions of hog deaths — primarily piglets — and costing producers hundreds of millions of dollars since it first
STEVE MEYER PARAGON ECONOMICS
appeared last spring. The first confirmed cases of the virus were discovered in a barn in southwestern Ontario last week. “It’s looking like a great 2014 and unfortunately PED might take some of those profits away,” said Claude Vielfaure of Hylife. Steve Meyer of Paragon Economics said PED has yet to be priced into the market because the first impact on slaughter numbers didn’t appear in December. Cases of the virus, which thrives in cold weather, escalated in the U.S. over the fall. Hogs in that country are carrying more weight, both because of lower feed costs and PED, but it won’t make up the difference. “We’re just into the losses of pigs from this,” said Meyer. Meyer had expected futures market prices to rise through the spring to numbers in the high $90s, but he has changed his forecast because of the widespread affect of PED. “We think we’re going to go well above $100,” said Meyer. At the same time, Meyer expects American producers to expand the sow herd by two or three percent in the coming years. A lower Canadian dollar, hovering around 90 cents relative to the U.S. at press time, is expected to see more animals sent to the United States.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
5
WEYBURN INLAND TERMINAL | SALE PENDING
P&H offer goes to Weyburn terminal shareholders $94.6 million | Two Weyburn board members against the sale resigned, saying it was a disservice to farmer shareholders BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
One of Western Canada’s first and largest farmer-owned grain terminals could soon be turned over to a private-sector grain company. Weyburn Inland Terminal announced Jan. 24 that it has agreed to sell all outstanding shares in the company to Parrish & Heimbecker for $94.6 million, or $17.25 per share. Rob Davies, chief executive officer of WIT, said the agreement with P&H is expected to boost WIT’s grain handling volumes and ensure that its customers have reliable access to world markets through P&H. He said board members are unanimously recommending the sale to shareholders. He added that the $17.25 per share valuation represents a 33.7 percent premium over WIT share prices as of
Dec. 12, 2013, the day WIT board members announced they were considering offers to sell. Parrish & Heimbecker is a 105-year-old Canadian company involved in most aspects of the grain business. Davies said the company’s reputation and its experience in the industry were important considerations. “P&H is a company that we have a lot of respect for,” he said. “They’re very experienced in a lot of areas and they have very good channels in both domestic processing and international markets…. The things that we felt were important to ensure a strong competitive environment were all there.” WIT has 1,500 shareholders who own 5.5 million outstanding common shares. The company’s assets include a 105,000 tonne concrete grain termi-
nal at Weyburn, fertilizer and farm input retail operations and a specialty crop processing and marketing firm near Sedley, Sask. WIT also has a controlling interest in NorAmera BioEnergy Corp., an ethanol production facility in Weyburn, which has recently been identified as a drain on its overall profitably. The deal to sell the company is subject to approval by two-thirds of WIT shareholders. Approval will be sought at a meeting scheduled for late February or early March. Support among WIT investors is not a sure thing. In mid-December, shortly after WIT announced that it was considering expressions of interest from potential buyers, two members of the WIT board — Allan Richards of Rouleau, Sask., and Dale Mainil of Weyburn — announced their resig-
nations, citing fundamental differences with other directors. Mainil said earlier this week that he feels a decision to sell the company would be a disservice to farmers and investors. “I’m totally not in support of either the price or of selling … the Weyburn Inland Terminal,” said Mainil. “The Weyburn Inland Terminal over its histor y has had a lot tougher issues than this to tackle, and it has come out stronger every time when it (bases its decisions on) the overall shareholder base,” he said. “That’s what built this company. It was a bunch of farmers and good local investors that built it and it’s turned out to be a very profitable business … so why would we sell it for a minimal short-term gain?” Mainil disputed statements suggesting that the $17.25 share valuation represents a significant premi-
um over mid-December values of less than $12 per share. He said WIT shares were trading at $16 per share as recently as last week. He said P & H is a well-respected company, but that is no reason to sell a farmer-owned company whose operations outside of ethanol have consistently generated positive returns. Shareholder liquidity is a concern for all publicly traded companies from time to time, he added, but those could be addressed through other means. Parrish & Heimbecker vice-president John Heimbecker said in a news release that the acquisition of WIT would be a good fit. “WIT will fit very well within P & H’s existing network of grain assets…. We expect the proposed acquisition to be beneficial both to producers and the Weyburn community.”
GRAIN TRANSPORTATION | CUSTOMER COMPLAINTS
Unreliable rail service draws attention from investors, foreign buyers BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Saskatchewan’s premier says the grain transportation quagmire is c au s i n g l o s t s a l e s i n A s i a a n d potentially missed opportunities for international investment in the province. “The situation is increasingly serious,” Brad Wall told reporters during a Jan. 22 scrum at the legislative building in Regina. “There is certainly more and more concern every day in terms of when
we can move the grain to the ports.” Thirty-seven ships were waiting to be loaded with grain at the Port of Vancouver at the time he made his comments. “The port itself is probably half capacity and yet we have the elevator system plugged and there’s a car issue.” It will be the most important item on the agenda when Wall meets with his Alberta and British Columbia counterparts in March as part of the New West Partnership Trade Agreement.
While participating in a trade mission to Southeast Asia last fall, Wall spoke to a major wheat miller from the Philippines who told him he no longer buys wheat from Canada during December and January because of concerns it won’t arrive when needed. The conversation made such an impression on Wall that he had a chat with prime minister Stephen Harper about the miller’s concerns when he returned. Wall also heard from a company planning to build a pulse crop han-
dling facility near Hanley, Sask. Company executives told him they were happy with the chosen location, the province’s business climate and the crop mix of area farmers. However, they had serious reservations about rail service. “They were moving ahead, doing the planning, doing the due diligence and found out from the rail companies that they simply couldn’t get the spots they needed,” Wall said. He said the project is still on the books, but it highlights how transportation bottlenecks are hampering
Saskatchewan’s ability to expand its agriculture sector. Carl Potts, executive director of Saskatchewan Pulse Growers, isn’t surprised to hear customers complaining about Canada’s unreliable rail service. “Having worked in export market development for a number of years, it’s certainly something we hear and have heard from customers,” he said. “I would imagine that’s even larger in a year like this when we have this large of a crop to move.”
6
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
MARKETS
www.secan.com
NEW
AC Carberry CWRS Wheat ®
Start strong. Finish fast. ‘AC’ is an official mark used under license from Agriculture & Agri-Food Canada
M A RKE 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
Seed sales and other indicators hint at expansion of soybeans in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, which could see total area for the crop in Western Canada exceed 1.5 million acres. | FILE PHOTO CROPS | INNOVATION
Prairie soybeans poised for growth Growers hunt for seed | More than 1.5 million acres of soybeans could be seeded on the Prairies in 2014 BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
Seed sales in Saskatchewan and grower intentions in Manitoba indicate that soybean area on the Prairies could exceed 1.5 million acres this spring. Claude Durand, product development manager w ith Nor thStar Genetics, one of the largest soybean seed dealers in Manitoba, said sales in Saskatchewan are booming. “Already, our seed bookings in Saskatchewan have doubled over last year,” he said at the NorthStar booth at Manitoba Ag Days, the annual ag expo in Brandon, during the third
week of January. NorthStar usually sells most of its soybean seed before Christmas, but this year has been exceptional. “Typically at this time of year, most of our (seed) bookings are done. We’re still getting bookings in, especially out west,” Durand said. Saskatchewan farmers planted an estimated 170,000 acres of soybeans last year. If NorthStar sales are indicative of grower adoption, Saskatchewan acres may hit 350,000 this year. Dennis Lange, a Manitoba Agriculture farm production adviser who spoke at Ag Days, polled soybean growers in the audience to gauge planting intentions.
The largest share of growers said they plan to increase their soybean acres by 10 to 30 percent, which mirrors Lange’s expectations. Manitoba area will increase from 1.08 million acres last year to 1.3 million this year if it’s assumed that seeding will rise 20 percent, which is the mid-range of estimates. When combining the early estimates, 1.65 million acres of beans might be planted in Manitoba and Saskatchewan this spring. Lange told the Ag Days meeting it is possible for Manitoba to reach two million acres of soybeans, but it will likely take five or more years. “We have to manage our rotations;
you can’t just flop all of your acres to one crop,” he said. “(Plus), you’ve got to learn a lot of things when you start growing a new crop.” Soybean industry representatives have said further acreage gains would have to occur outside Manitoba’s Red River Valley because that region is nearly maxed out. Those expectations became reality last year when the rural municipalities of Dauphin and Bifrost in Manitoba’s Interlake posted the biggest acreage gains of all RMs relative to 2012. Lange also listed 25 RMs that had sizable acreage gains last year, many
of which were in non-traditional soybean regions, including southwestern Manitoba. On the negative side, many farmers planted varieties that weren’t appropriate for their growing region. Durand said supply of early maturing varieties was insufficient last year because the 2012 drought in Manitoba constricted soybean seed replication. Soybean yields averaged 39 bushels per acre last year in the province, boosting the amount and variety of seed available this winter. Still, Durand said growers shouldn’t wait much longer to book seed because supplies of early maturing varieties are dwindling.
SOYBEANS | EXPORTS
Access to China advantageous for western Canadian soybeans Established relationship | Vancouver’s shorter distance to China’s growing market is an advantage as acreage grows BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Western Canadian farmers who decide to grow soybeans this year shouldn’t have a problem selling them. “The size of the marketing opportunity is actually quite unique and very, very exciting,” said Marlene Boersch, a partner in Mercantile Consulting Venture. “Soybeans are probably the biggest single marketing opportunity that
you will find on any of the crops.” Saskatchewan Pulse Growers hired Boersch to investigate the long-term marketing potential for a crop that is generating mounting interest from the province’s growers. A U.S. Department of Agriculture projection shows that global soybean demand will increase by 51.8 million tonnes by 2024-25. China w ill account for 47.6 million tonnes of the increase. China has been the driver in soybean markets for some time, with
imports rising to 63.4 million tonnes in 2012-13 from 17 million tonnes in 2003-04. The USDA is forecasting about 110 million tonnes of Chinese demand in another 12 years. It is tremendous news for growers in Western Canada because of their competitive shipping advantages to that market. Brazil and the United States are the world’s largest soybean exporters. Boersch said Canada is the handsdown winner when comparing sail-
ing times to China from Vancouver, Mobile, Alabama and Santos, Brazil. “We made some comparisons in terms of distance and sailing times with our major competitors, and that is a very, very positive story for us,” she told Crop Sphere 2014. It takes about 18 days for a vessel to sail from Vancouver to China, 35 days from Mobile and 39 days from Santos. Boersch said 75 percent of U.S. soybean exports to China move through the Gulf of Mexico and the rest are
shipped through ports in the U.S. Pacific Northwest. U.S. soybeans shipped through Pacific Northwest ports would have a slight shipping advantage compared to Canadian soybeans. However, there is no comparison for the three-quarters that move through the Gulf. Ocean freight rates to China from Vancouver are $22 per tonne compared to $45 per tonne for beans shipped out of the Gulf. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
»
MARKETS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
7
» CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE “It puts you into a very good position to participate in that increasing market from the West Coast,” she said. It is a much more preferable market outlook than a crop like wheat, where most of the growth will be in markets such as Africa and the Middle East. Canada is at a shipping disadvantage there to competitors in South America and the Black Sea region. Boersch said U.S. soybean exports are forecast to remain stead over the next 12 years, and China will rely heavily on Brazil to fill its growing demand. “To achieve this from South America would be a major challenge,” she said. Not only would it be difficult for Brazil to grow that many beans, but it would be a major hurdle to get all the extra production to market because of Brazil’s ongoing transportation challenges. It is why the global soybean supply and demand outlook looks so promising for an up-and-comer like Western Canada. Boersch said Canada has long established relationships with Chinese canola buyers, and many of those companies also trade soybeans. “We know the buyers. We know the route. We know the market channels,” she said. Boersch thinks there is more opportunity growing and selling genetically modified soybeans than non-GM soybeans. She said the non-GM market is expected to grow by 1.1 million tonnes over the next 12 years compared to a total increase in demand of 51.8 million tonnes. China’s 12 million tonnes of annual soybean production is all non-GM. T h e c o u nt r y t y p i c a l l y e x p o r t s 200,000 to 450,000 tonnes a year and has the potential to ship more. “That’s why the non-GM premium has a very hard time to get beyond a certain level,” said Boersch. One other advantage when growing and shipping soybeans is that they don’t have to be cleaned at port, which could help maximize west coast port capacity. There could also be a domestic market for soybeans. Canola crushing plants in Western Canada could be retrofitted to crush the oilseed.
Analysts aren’t forecasting big changes in the current wide basis levels and congested grain handling system, meaning farmers might as well start pricing the 2014 crop. | FILE PHOTO MARKETING | STRATEGY
Farmers advised to shop crop around Prices changing daily | Delivery opportunities can pop up one day and close the same day BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
BRANDON — Get marketing but also get shopping, adviser Brenda Tjaden Lepp of FarmLink Marketing Solutions told farmers at Manitoba Ag Days. There’s no reason to hold back from moving old crop and contracting delivery for new crop, but farmers shouldn’t just take whatever bid their usual buyer is offering. “You’ve got to shop around bids,” said Tjaden Lepp during the Manitoba Canola Growers market outlook session. “There is a dollar to two dollars a bushel difference between buyers on
any given day in every community.” Tjaden Lepp said basis volatility is wild across the Prairies. It can change by dozens of dollars a tonne at a moment’s notice, and often is a meaningless concept if grain companies aren’t actually accepting crop at that location. “When there’s no bid, you don’t have a posted basis,” said Tjaden Lepp. The average basis for canola in central Saskatchewan recently was about $50 under, but on the day she spoke the basis in Yorkton, Sask., was just $35 under, she said. However, that could disappear any time, which was the point. For instance, she said one grain company had been offer-
ing a $55 under basis, improved it to $38 under for 18 hours and then pushed it back out to $52 under. The same instability also applies to delivery possibilities. For example, an eastern Alberta grain elevator had been plugged, was suddenly able to move some crop, offered a cash price of $9 per bushel for canola and found lots of farmers rushing to respond. “It lasted an hour and a half” before the offer was ended. Tjaden Lepp said farmers don’t have a good reason to hold back from contracting off the combine or early 2014-15 sales because the appalling basis levels and glutted grain system will remain well into the new crop
year. Farmers hate to lock in historically bad basis levels, but cash flow requirements need to be balanced against that reluctance. “Don’t just know that (you need to make harvest time sales),” said Tjaden Lepp. “You have to have a plan to deal with that. I’d get that plan moving sooner rather than later, otherwise you could be out of luck.” The same goes for selling old crop now. There’s no reason, based on fundamentals of supply and demand, to justify generally better prices, so farmers need to make sales. The best bet for getting a better return is to get the best basis possible, which is done by calling around.
CATTLE | SALES
Lingering effects of BSE continue to limit American beef exports to Asia BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
DENVER, Colo. — The United States posted record beef exports in recent years, but sales might have been better if not for BSE. While 2012 was a record export year and 2013 is shaping up to be even better at $6 billion worth of sales, the curse of BSE still taints market opportunities, said Phil Seng, head of the U.S. Meat Export Federation. The U.S. probably lost at least $16 billion in sales and spent $10 million a year since 2004 in recovery, he told the International Livestock Congress in Denver Jan. 13. Increased audits, carcass segregation, inspections and trade missions have increased packer costs. Many countries still limit the trade to beef from animals younger than 30 months.
And while the U.S. was shut out, other competitors stepped into the lucrative Asian market. The U.S. now competes against Australia, Canada, Mexico and New Zealand in the wealthy markets of Japan, South Korea and China. Mexico is the newest entrant into Japan and its exports have grown nearly 50 percent in recent years, promoting “tasty beef from the sunshine country.” “Our competition is very export focused,” Seng said. New Zealand exports 80 percent of its beef, and Australia follows closely at 60 percent. Seng said they are masters at customer service. “They will meet the specs of whatever country they are dealing in, and this is a huge advantage,” he said. “The United States is always looking at the domestic market first and then maybe international as an after-
thought.” The U.S. exports 15 to 19 percent of its beef. Mexico, Japan and Canada are the prime destinations. Changes to BSE trade rules at the World Organization for Animal Health have improved access to many markets. It also opens the door to new competitors. Ireland, France, the Netherlands and Poland have been approved to ship beef to Japan. The European Union’s decision to triple funds for international promotion of agricultural products helped their efforts. The EU has become more export oriented, especially on pork and beef. “We are starting to see a ver y aggressive push by a lot of European markets in the Asian theatre, not only in Japan but in South Korea and China,” Seng said. Still, the U.S. has had considerable success in Japan, even though it can
ship only youthful beef and is still subject to a 38.5 percent tariff. U.S. beef exports to Japan were up more than 50 percent at the end of November from the same time last year. The BSE experience taught the U.S. that its all or nothing approach to regaining market access did not work. “We got a lot of nothing. That approach is still out there,” Seng said. However, the best customers for U.S. beef remain Mexico and Canada. Continuing disagreements over country-of-origin labelling laws in the U.S. and threatened retaliation from Canada must be taken seriously. “We don’t want to do anything that will jeopardize those kind of sales because probably 40 percent of exports either go north or south, so it is very important how we deal with Canada or Mexico,” he said.
U.S. Department of Agriculture statistics as of the end of November estimated beef production for 2013 at 25.7 billion pounds, nearly the same as 2012. However, production is expected to drop to 24.3 billion lb. in 2014, said the report. The U.S. exported 2.5 billion lb. last year and imported 2.2 billion lb. The USDA forecasts export volumes may fall to 2.3 billion lb., with imports steady at 2.2 billion pounds. The U.S. also imports live cattle, buying 1.3 million head from Mexico in 2012 and 750,000 from Canada. It imported 842,390 head from M e x i c o b e t w e e n Ja n u a r y a n d November of 2013, while Canada sent 917,280. This includes all classes of cattle. Canada imported 170,000 tonnes of U.S. beef in 2012, which accounts for 17 percent of its consumption.
8
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
MARKETS
RANCHING | MARKETING
Despite profits, cattle herd isn’t expanding Beef profitability improving | Producers are seeing positive margins, but aren’t making moves to expand operations BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
High profitability is not persuading beef producers to add cows to their herds. Brian Perillat of Canfax says it is probably the result of low long-term profits and the fact that there are more profitable ways to use an acre of prairie land than grazing or growing hay. “They have seen some positive margins, but what’s the real incentive to grow cattle versus grain,” said Perillat in a presentation at Manitoba Ag Days. Grain has been more profitable, he added. More “has been on the grain side.” American farmers have begun rebuilding their herds, which shrank during the years of high grain prices and consecutive droughts, but Cana-
dian farmers have not. However, the present slump in feedgrain prices and continuing high beef prices could push more cows and heifers into production this year, he said. “This is going to be the big factor in 2014, 2015,” said Perillat. Record high retail beef prices have allowed packers to demand high prices from grocery stores. As well, cattle feeders have been able to demand high prices from packers and cow-calf producers have been able to demand high prices for calves. Profitability for cow-calf producers was good last year, despite high feedgrain prices, because of high beef prices. However, the profitability picture is much better now that barley and corn prices have slumped. “This is an exciting chart, unless you’ve got grain to sell,” said Perillat, sparking a wave of chuckles from
farmers, about a price chart he showed of Lethbridge barley prices that have fallen from around $300 per tonne a year ago to about $175 now. Cropland has for years produced much higher profits than cow-calf production, which has encouraged farmers to focus on growing crops and converting marginal hay and grassland into cropland. Marginal land now appears to provide high beef profitability and losses for crop growers, but Perillat said the profit incentive to expand herds doesn’t appear to have provoked cattle producers yet. Canfax estimates the herd is now 1.5 to two percent lower than it was a year ago, and recent bred cow sales in Alberta have not shown strong demand. As well, cow slaughter rates are high. “Really, it’s a full-on liquidation, unfortunately, of the cow sector
still,” he said of the recent 14.6 percent cow slaughter rate. Beef producers have suffered immensely since the 2003 outbreak of BSE, not only from the massive market impact caused by closed borders but also by sky-high grain prices starting in 2006. Last year’s temporary closure of the XL Foods slaughter plant in Brooks, Alta., didn’t help, creating a big discount to U.S. prices. Many producers have been repairing their finances from those bad years as great prices for cows, heifers and calves encourage many of them to make sales. However, Perillat said he’ll be watching this year to see if the new market signals reverse the trend of cuts to the cow herd. “The signals are there, but the reactions aren’t there yet,” he said.
COUNTING CATTLE Canada’s beef cow herd peaked in 2005 at 5.28 million head but has now fallen to the smallest level since the early 1990s. Canadian cattle in millions as of Jan. 1: 2013 3.93 2012 3.96 2011 4.05 2010 4.23 2009 4.52 2008 4.91 2007 5.00 2006 5.25 2005 5.28 Source: Statistics Canada | WP GRAPHIC
“I think it had as much as anything to do with grain prices and profitability.”
CURRENCY | INVESTMENTS
Emerging economies hammered as Fed tapers stimulus
I
f your eyes have widened at the surprise of seeing the Canadian dollar fall, think what a shock
Argentines are feeling as their peso falls 20 percent. Currencies are gyrating around the
world and emerging market stock prices are falling as global investors rejig their portfolios to take advan-
tage of what they think the U.S. Federal Reserve will do. The U.S. central bank meets this week to determine its next step in the delicate art of manipulating the money supply to maintain the resurgence of the world’s largest economy. The Fed, as it is known, had for the past few years kept its trend setting interest rates ultra low. But that was not enough to stimulate enough business activity to grow the economy. Since September 2012 the Fed also spent $85 billion a month buying U.S. bonds. In essence, it was creating money. The program kept commercial borrowing costs even lower and weakened the U.S. dollar. Some of that money gushing out initially found its way into commodity markets, supporting commodity prices. But the Fed isn’t the only force in the global economy. High commodity prices spurred increased commodity production and rationed demand. China’s explosive growth of the middle of the last decade slowed as its infrastructure spending slowed and its economy matured. Commodity prices sagged just as the United States’ economy began to gain traction. Investors, still benefiting from that gusher of money coming from the Fed, shifted to stock markets, helping to fuel the amazing run up in U.S. stock market prices in 2013. Some of that money also found its way into emerging markets in South America, Asia and Africa. But late last year the Fed decided that the American economy and employment picture were showing enough strength that it could start to trim its stimulus. In December it said it would cut its stimulus to $75 billion a month beginning this month. Now there is an expectation that it will trim the amount by another $10 billion. This tapering of the stimulus is lifting U.S. interest rates and making the U.S. buck more attractive. It is happening at the same time that there is
MARKET WATCH
D’ARCE McMILLAN unrest in several countries, including Egypt, Thailand and Ukraine. Investors are pulling money from the currency and markets of emerging markets. There are several implications for Canadian farmers. Just as a falling loonie makes it more expensive to buy American made equipment, a weaker currency in emerging countries such as India or Turkey makes it more expensive for them to buy grain priced in U.S. currency. That can hurt demand for crops such as pulses. Argentina’s peso has been slammed particularly hard as the government gave up defending its currency. Argentine farmers stopped selling soybeans. Because the soybeans have a value in U.S. dollars they maintain their worth but if they sell, their payment in pesos will be devalued as the currency sinks. It is hard to know how this will play out. There is always a risk of contagion, with a panic sweeping through emerging markets creating the kind of disruptions seen in the currency crises of the 1990s that hit Mexico, Asia and Russia. Lessons learned during those crises have lessened the risk of contagion. However, the situation could cause enough of a drag on global growth that it could, ironically, depress the very growth in the U.S. that the Fed is addressing in its stimulus trimming. Follow D’Arce McMillan on Twitter @darcemcmillan.
MARKETS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
9
OATS, SPRING WHEAT | PRICE OUTLOOK
The worst is yet to come for oats, wheat prices: analyst BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
BRANDON — Farmers who are blue about today’s futures prices for oats and spring wheat should get ready to be bluer, says technical analyst David Drozd. He said oat futures will probably drop to $2.15 per bushel and spring wheat to $5.35. “Oats values could be worse,” Drozd told the Manitoba Oats Growers Association’s annual meeting at Manitoba Ag Days held here Jan.
21-23. “If you’re only normally going to be locking in 15 or 20 percent (of planned new crop acreage), this year you might want to do a little more.” Oat futures are artificially high because of the transportation problems getting them to the main U.S. oat milling areas, including Minneapolis. Oat futures would now be $2.65 to $2.80 if it wasn’t for the problem of getting oats to Minneapolis, Drozd said. On Jan. 27 March oats were trading around $4 a bu. and December new
I believe that yesterday was a good day to sell, today is the next best and they won’t be as good tomorrow. DAVID DROZD ANALYST
crop at $2.91. If corn futures prices are falling toward $3.80 per bu., which he believes they are, then oats will likely fall to about $2.15 per bu.
CANFAX REPORT SIGNS OF RALLY EXHAUSTION U.S. cash fed prices in the south hit a record $147 US per hundredweight, and prices in the north were $1-$2 higher than that. Most of the dressed trade was at $240 per cwt., up $11-$12 over the previous week, but the rally might be running out of steam. U.S. fed prices were at a strong and rising premium to Canadian prices, which prompted American buyers to be active in the Canadian market last week and helped push Canadian fed prices up $4 Cdn per cwt. Alberta fed steers rose to $142.52 and heifers were $142.21. Dressed trade Jan. 23 were $237$240 per cwt. delivered. The prices that American buyers paid were at a premium over Canadian live prices. The sales volume rose one percent to 11,292 head, which was eight percent smaller than the same week last year. The Alberta cash-to-futures basis widened $2.53 to -$17.19, the widest seen since mid-March last year. Weekly western Canadian fed slaughter to Jan. 18 rose two percent to 29,566 head. Slaughter is up 11 percent this year. Weekly fed cattle exports to Jan. 11 rose 16 percent to 6,024 head. They are up seven percent to 9,013 so far this year. Cattle futures are technically overbought and U.S. boxed beef prices began to weaken, which indicates that a selloff could be starting. However, feedlot inventory across North America is tight and feedlots can comfortably step back from the market and give cattle more days on feed.
COW PRICE FALLS Larger non-fed supplies appeared at commercial auctions, pressuring prices down $2.50 per cwt. D1, D2 cows were $75-$85 to average $79.83, and D3s ranged $65-$76 to average $70.93. Cow prices are $6-$6.50 higher than last year and are only $6 shy of record highs set in June 2012. Rail grade prices last week ranged between $159-$164 per cwt. With calf and feeder prices strengthening, fewer bred cows might enter the slaughter mix compared to November and December. Export demand should be strong because Canadian prices are at a sizable discount to the United States.
WP LIVESTOCK REPORT years that weekly Alberta auction volumes in January have exceeded 40,000 head. The rally has been unprecedented over the last three weeks with prices up $19-$25 per cwt. on calves and light stockers and $8-$16 on feeders heavier than 700 pounds. Year over year, the largest price increase is in the 500-700 lb. category, fueled by demand from those who want to put the cattle on pasture and strong interest from eastern buyers. Compared to 2013, steers are trading $40-$43 higher while heifers are $35 stronger. Alberta auction volumes are up 58 percent so far this year, and Saskatchewan is up four percent compared to the same point last year. Weekly feeder exports to Jan. 11 totalled 1,633 head, down nine percent from the same week last year. More wheat is entering feedlot rations as grain producers look for cash flow. This is expected to be a trend, put-
ting a cap on the feed barley market. With feeding margins positive, feedlots are expected to keep buying.
U.S. boxed beef posted new record highs with Choice up $9.76 at $238.55 US and Select up $11.42 at $236.93. However, prices at the end of the week were down a little. Weekly Canadian cut-out values to Jan. 18 hit records with AAA up $12.33 at $224.44 Cdn and AA up $13.09 at $223.08. The Montreal wholesale price for delivery this week rose to $226-$228 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.
Our Professional Agronomy Network delivers PRS CropCast™ using the biologically meaningful Plant Root Simulator (PRS™) Technology. A complete crop selection, nutrition and yield forecasting service, PRS CropCast has been applied to millions of acres and has empowered farmers with the knowledge to Grow More Profit.
(888) 978.0373
westernag.ca
™ PRS and PRS CropCast are trademarks of the Western Ag Group of Companies. 13089 01.14
ter to Jan. 25 was 2.222 million, up from 2.263 million in the previous week. Slaughter was 2.133 million last year in the same week.
BEEF AT NEW RECORDS
Grow Your Farm’s Future
AUCTIONS BUSY Record high prices accelerated marketing. This is the first time in six
Drozd said the $3.80 price for corn and $2.15 for oats are a key technical points where the upside price breakout occurred in July 2010. He said it makes sense to retrace to that point,
considering the ample ending stocks for both crops. He also expects wheat to track back to those July 2010 break-out levels, with Minneapolis spring wheat falling to $5.35 per bu., Kansas City hard red winter wheat to $5.15 and Chicago soft red to $5.05. Drozd sees no lasting upside potential for crop prices right now, which makes marketing both old and new crops important for farmers. “I believe that yesterday was a good day to sell, today is the next best and they won’t be as good tomorrow.”
BISON PRICES STEADY HOG PRICES CREEP UP U.S. hog prices edged higher with rising pork values, but trade could fall off temporar ily this week because of cold weather in the U.S. Midwest. In futures markets, traders bought summer hog futures in the belief that the spread of porcine epidemic diarrhea virus could limit hog supplies in that time frame. Iowa-southern Minnesota hogs delivered to packing plants sold for $60-$60.50 US per cwt. Jan. 24, up from $59 Jan. 17. The estimated pork cut-out value was $88.11 per cwt. Jan. 24, up from $87.51 Jan. 17. The estimated weekly U.S. slaugh-
The Canadian Bison Association said Grade A bulls younger than 30 months in the desirable weight range sold as high as $3.85 Cdn per pound hot hanging weight. Grade A heifers sold at prices up to $3.70. Animals outside the desirable buyer specifications may be discounted.
LAMB PRICES DOWN Ontario Stockyards Inc. reported 2,026 sheep and lambs and 61 goats traded Jan. 20. All classes of lambs sold $15-$20 cwt. lower. Sheep sold barely steady to $5 cwt. lower. Goats were steady.
10
JANUARY 30, 2014 | 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
GRAIN MOVEMENT | RAIL CAPACITY
CRAIG’S VIEW
Railways, gov’t, farmers must share info, resources
T
he inadequacies of Canada’s grain logistics system are costing prairie farmers at least $1 billion and likely much more this year. When looking only at Canada’s record 1.14 billion bushel wheat crop, insufficient shipping capacity puts prices in Canada at a $1 per bushel discount to the United States, where transportation is less of an issue this year. Western Canada’s grain transportation issue is not only a problem of inefficiency. It is also a problem of capacity and to solve it will require investment in railways, highways and ports. Canada’s export economy is increasingly oriented toward the Pacific. The federal government recognizes this and has spent money on improving transportation corridors. However, the need is greater. The federal Conservatives believe a good way to support farmers is to increase access to foreign markets and invest in market development. However, that effort goes to waste if Canadian farmers can’t get their products to market. That is the case this year. The railways are moving a near record amount of grain, but it still falls short of the demand. Grain companies have ordered 40,000 rail cars that the railways have been unable to deliver. Under ideal conditions, the railways move about 10,000 grain cars a week, so that is a four-week backlog. The results include depressed grain prices, wide basis, lack of farmer cash flow, demurrage charges at port, unhappy customers and a tarnished reputation. It is good that Ottawa is contributing $1.5 million to a $3.2 million industry-led effort to create efficiencies in the agriculture supply chain over the next five years. When announcing the investment, agriculture minister Gerry Ritz spoke of a “new normal” in the demands on the grain transportation system. This year’s crop is a record bin buster, but advances in crop genetics and the demand pull from Asia could mean that what is exceptional now is routine in the future. It is not just agriculture demanding
more from railways. Coal, minerals and container traffic are all rising, not to mention the boom in the controversial movement of petroleum products by rail. Canadian National Railway and Canadian Pacific Railway each plan to spend about $1 billion in 2013 to replace aging infrastructure and invest in increased capacity. However, it appears that more money must come from somewhere to allow even more funds to be spent on rail improvements. One possible way is to let the free market have a greater role in rail grain movement. The western grain revenue cap will likely be a target of discussion, but it might be hasty to assume that a regulation that allows the railways a return on investment and that is tied to inflation is an impediment to increased movement. Government investment in rail infrastructure is tricky. Unlike publicly owned highways and airports, the rails are privately owned. And the railways are posting good profits. Nevertheless, given their vital role in the economy, government might have a nation-building role to leverage increased investment in rail, particularly if it also holds the railways more accountable for performance failures. In the meantime, the agricultural industry must make the most efficient use of available resources. Better information dissemination about grain company export programs and freight expectations would help the transportation sector know what demands it will face. Grain companies should also consider ways to better employ the underused eastern Thunder Bay shipping route. Government could increase the limit on its cash advance program. And farmers could build more storage, which would allow them to use market tools to be paid to hold their grain. As a result, there would be less panic selling in situations like today. Bruce Dyck, Terry Fries, Barb Glen, D’Arce McMillan and Joanne Paulson collaborate in the writing of Western Producer editorials.
POLITICAL PERCEPTIONS | THE NEW REALITY
Having fingers in many past or present pies can lead to pie on face NATIONAL VIEW
BARRY WILSON
N
inety years ago, British jurist Gordon Hewart, lord chief justice of England and Wales, articulated one of the most enduring and cryptic principles of the BritishCanadian legal system. “(It) is of fundamental importance that justice should not only be done, but should manifestly and undoubtedly be seen to be done,” he wrote. These days in politics, or at least in
political Ottawa, the same applies. Just ask former federal agriculture minister Chuck Strahl, well liked and almost universally respected during his 18 years as a Fraser Valley MP until his 2011 resignation. He served as agriculture and transport minister, as well as opposition House leader, and showed political grit in 2001 when he left the Canadian Alliance caucus with a handful of others during the train-wreck leadership of Stockwell Day. Strahl became a loyal and trusted disciple of Stephen Harper in opposition and government, rewarded in his retirement with a part-time appointment from his former boss as chair of the Security Intelligence Review Committee, which oversees the work of the national snoop agency Canadian Intelligence Security Service
(heavy on security, not so much on intelligence). Few begrudged the perk for a wellliked former MP. Then his instincts failed. In politics, as in justice (or in this case political appropriateness), the right thing must be done and be seen to be done. Stahl resigned his position as SIRC chair late last week, under pressure after he registered as a British Columbia lobbyist to press the provincial government on behalf of an oil company hoping to build a pipeline from Alberta through B.C. to the coast. He was not lobbying former federal colleagues and he promised parliamentary ethics commissioner Mary Dawson that he would not be involved in any SIRC files relating to the energy and pipeline issue. Dawson
said he met all the lobbying rules. But with CSIS reportedly collecting information on the energy industry and the Northern Gateway pipeline a highly sensitive and controversial issue, the critics piled on. “It is alarming to many Canadians that the chair of the CSIS oversight committee is engaged in this kind of lobbying,” said NDP House leader and B.C. MP Nathan Cullen. There were calls for his resignation. Strahl initially resisted, responding that the criticisms were “entirely spurious and unfounded.” But with the Conservatives facing questions on several ethical fronts and Parliament resuming this week, he quickly decided to cut his losses. “I retired from politics three years ago and do not wish to be in the centre of the political fray,” he said in a
Jan. 24 letter to prime minister Stephen Harper. This is the new political reality in Ottawa, driven in part by Harper’s Accountability Act and made more sensitive these days by evidence of former Conservative senators playing fast and loose with expense claims. Opposition MPs howl about conflict of interest, proven or unproven (as Conservatives did in opposition and will again when they are back someday in that position), and players must understand the new rules. In retrospect, it is amazing that a seasoned politician like Strahl would not have smelled the likely reaction to a federal appointee with access to sensitive information lobbying on a controversial issue near and dear to the Conservative’s agenda. In politics, sometimes instincts fail.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
11
& OPEN FORUM PLANT BREEDERS’ RIGHTS | UPOV 91 OPPOSITION
BROADCAST MEDIA | VIDEO
Growth Act: growth for whom?
Liven up your Saturdays with WPTV
BY JAN SLOMP
T
he Omnibus Bill C-18, the Agricultural Growth Act, went to Parliament for first reading Dec. 9. Passing Bill C-18 would make Canada compliant with UPOV 91, a much more restrictive form of plant breeders’ rights than we currently have. The second part of the act will prepare Canada’s regulatory regime for fast track approval of feed or food additives, drugs or other inventions that are already approved in jurisdictions with which we trade. Bill C-18 also opens the door for farmers to tap into multi-year advance payments secured by crops in storage or grown in the future. After a ground swell of farmer-led opposition to adopting UPOV 91 in 2005, the Liberal government of the day let it quietly die as it became clear that farmers would be drastically restricted in their ability to save, reuse, exchange and sell seed. The Canadian public clearly demanded that genetic resources remain a public good. Before reintroducing UPOV 91 through Bill C-18, agriculture minister Gerry Ritz has been actively spreading the myth and managing to convince many farm organizations and commodity groups that saving seed is enshrined in this bill. It is obvious that UPOV 91 gives plant breeders significantly more rights and tools for royalty collection, while farmers’ seed-saving right is reduced merely to “privilege.” A privilege was typically given to
EDITORIAL NOTEBOOK
JOANNE PAULSON, EDITOR
P Bill C-18 should be rejected because UPOV 91 gives plant breeders more rights while farmers need permission to save seed and may have to pay a royalty, says the author. | FILE PHOTO peasants by feudal lords and could be arbitrarily and unpredictably retracted. A closer look at the text of Bill C-18 reveals that it indeed talks about a farmer’s ability to save seed. However, the farmer needs the permission of the holder of the plant breeders’ rights when storing that saved seed, which may or may not be given. Of course, the breeder also has the right to charge royalties. Bill C-18 also empowers government to remove, restrict or limit the farmer’s seed-saving privilege by passing regulations, a process that
can happen quickly and without public debate. UPOV 91 has many provisions for royalty collection: after a crop has been harvested, when seed is cleaned in seed cleaning plants and when a crop is moved off the farm for sale at elevators and other points of transaction. Canada should reject UPOV 91 and defeat Bill C-18. Instead, we should reinforce our public plant breeding programs. With the continued allocation of farmer check-off money, there will be ample funding for essential variety development. There is absolutely no need to grant transnational plant
breeders more tools to extract excessive funds from farmers. Adopting UPOV 91 may result in some genetic improvements of crops but at significantly higher costs than a public breeding system, which benefits the whole Canadian economy. UPOV 91 would result in significantly higher costs for farmers and growth in profits for seed and chemical companies headquartered outside of our country. Jan Slomp is president of the National Farmers Union. He manages a 65-cow dairy farm near Rimbey, Alta.
GRAIN MOVEMENT | PAY MORE, GET MORE?
Thought required in reassessing revenue cap HURSH ON AG
KEVIN HURSH
T
here are no no quick fixes to the grain logistics backlog, but make no mistake, the primary source of the problem lies with the railways. They haven’t supplied enough cars and locomotives to match the huge crop that needs to move. Even if they allocated more resources to grain movement, some observers say they don’t have enough trained engineers to run the additional trains. No doubt west coast ports have their own issues, but export terminals have lots of empty space while scores of vessels wait to load. The grain just isn’t arriving in time to meet sales commitments. Yes, there are system and commu-
nication issues involving the entire logistics chain, but the most pressing need is to increase rail capacity, and that leads to discussions about changing or removing the grain revenue cap. Unfortunately, misconceptions abound over what the revenue cap entails and how it works. The formula takes into account the amount of grain hauled and the average length of haul. Thus, the revenue cap is not a disincentive to move greater volumes. The cap rises in tandem with volume moved. When the railways exceed the cap and have to pay the excess to the Western Grains Research Foundation, it’s because they set their rate per tonne a bit too high. A volume-related composite price index is also part of the annual formula. It accounts for any increase or decrease in labour, fuel and other expenses. Cost changes move the revenue cap up and down in relation to the base year of 2000-01, but a lot has changed since the cap was set. Many argue that the railways have
benefited from efficiency gains because of fewer elevators and more movement in large car blocks. As a result, they say, there should be a new costing review. Others are convinced that the only way to get better service is to let the railways charge higher rates. After all, they argue, high freight rates would be no worse than the ridiculously wide basis levels being subtracted from grain prices. Elevator companies are paying demurrage on ships that have been waiting for weeks on end. A widening basis should be a disincentive for producers to sell, but producers have remained anxious to move grain despite dropping values. As a result, many companies have stopped buying by posting no bids for nearby months. It’s important to note that the revenue cap does not apply to grain moving into the United States and Mexico. Nor does it apply to grain moving to domestic destinations such as the Fraser Valley. And yet service outside of the revenue cap doesn’t appear to be any better.
And many other sectors also complain about rail service. For years, the Coalition of Rail Shippers, which comprises all the main exporters, fought for the right to have service level agreements with the railways. Unfortunately, the legislation fell short of what is needed to actually make a difference. People point to the United States, where there’s a bid system for cars, as proof that paying more means better service. However, there are big differences between the two countries. America consumes much more of its grain domestically and it also has the Mississippi River system for a great deal of its exports. Lots of questions need to be addressed before we volunteer to open our wallets to the railways. Giving them the ability to charge what they want is no guarantee of improved service. Kevin Hursh is an agricultural journalist, consultant and farmer. He can be reached by e-mail at kevin@hursh.ca.
our yourself a cup of coffee, settle into a comfy chair in front of your computer and tune in to WPTV. As most of you know by now, The Western Producer’s print journalists are taking a leap into broadcast journalism online. It’s a bit of a new world for us, but old dogs (sorry, staff) really can learn new tricks … even if it takes a little practice. “TV isn’t TV anymore,” managing editor Michael Raine says. “TV is video. Internet is now broadcast. We’re just taking what we already do and delivering it in another way.” Our newest offering, a weekly wrap of markets and other news, hit our website two Saturdays ago. Most weeks, you’ll see Michael and markets editor D’Arce McMillan chatting in a news anchor format in our newly configured studio. That has required some creative thinking on the parts of Michael and video editor Robin Booker. I was at Robin’s computer the other day while talking to web editor Paul Yanko, and glanced at his screen to find one of his internet searches displaying the Fabricland website. Why is Robin searching for fabric? Making a suit, perhaps? Paul explained that Robin was out seeking green material to serve as a “green screen.” Green screens, in case you are unaware, are used to block out backgrounds on TV or in movies. As Robin explained when he returned, WPTV is still a work in progress. “There may be some changes in style as we go along,” he said. “(For example), from the first week to the second week, we went from a partial green screen to a full one.” Robin also tried various ways to capture audio, “most of which failed,” he said with a laugh. However, determination produced results. “Now that we’ve done it once, we’ve learned a lot,” he said. “We will continue to refine it.” He is also planning to add footage provided by our correspondents and Saskatoon reporters from wherever they are shooting. You will, for example, see Ed White reporting from Manitoba in this week’s edition. The goal is to have our little TV show loaded before noon on Saturday, but this is partly dependent on how fast the computer will move. Hopefully, it will be online in time to enjoy with that Saturday morning coffee.
12
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
OPEN FORUM LETTERS POLICY: 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. 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.
ONE-SIDED STORY DISAPPOINTING To the Editor: After reading “North America called out of step with rest of world on GM food” by Barb Glen (WP Jan. 2), I felt it was unfortunate that no one was called upon to represent the other side. These people continue to fuel the fear of genetic modification technology in spite of the fact that regulating bodies around the world, including the European Academies Science Advisory Council, Health Canada and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, have determined that geneti-
cally modified crops are as safe as conventional crops. This is not “ignorance and industry propaganda,” as Mark Benson claims in the article. More than 1,500 research studies have said the same thing. There really shouldn’t even be a debate about this anymore. Thierry Vain, retired from Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, is now an organic farmer on the west coast of Canada. He is on the speaking circuit against GM technology. Every argument that he uses has been dismissed by the experts. Unbelievably, he still talks about Gilles-Eric Séralini as if he is a respectable scientist, even though Séralini’s flawed research using rats
EVERY CROP NEEDS A SUPERHERO. Someone who fights for higher yields, giving crops the nutrients they need when they’re needed most. Someone who trusts field-proven technologies to more effectively feed crops, save time and boost the bottom line. Be a superhero. Ask your retailer for Wolf Trax Innovative Nutrients.
Better nutrition. Better crops. Better farming.
as test subjects has been thrown out as junk science, retracted by publisher Elsevier from its Food and Chemical Toxicology journal, and officially withdrawn. Vrain’s arguments against genetic modification are based on logical fallacies, not science: the “appeal to nature” fallacy that says nature is always good; the “appeal to antiquity,” or assuming that something is better or correct simply because it is older or traditional; along with the “correlation proves causation” argument. And of course, anyone who counters him is dismissed as an “industry shill,” which instantly shuts out any chance for reasonable debate. Genetic modification is an impor-
tant, effective and safe tool that should be available to more scientists. GM technology can do a great deal of good: It allows for zero-till agriculture, which not only reduces soil erosion, but also captures a significant amount of carbon in the soil; reduces the amount of pesticide required; and can increase nutrients in foods, especially important in developing countries where politics make fair distribution of food difficult. Study after study has proven that there is nothing to fear and much to gain. It is time that we start listening to the real experts and questioning the motives of those so vehemently against the technology. Jackie Robin, communications director Ag-West Bio Inc. Saskatoon, Sask.
RICH IN CHARACTER To the Editor: Re: Man of many hats lured by quest for perfect bull (WP, Nov. 28) What a heartwarming article concerning Wayne and Charles Fipke. With the character, resiliency and diversity that these gentlemen displayed, even when young students in their colorful careers, their parents certainly prepared them well for their future endeavours. They were taught creativity and organizational skills from the very beginning. I do not think they were poor by any stretch of the imagination, but they were raised without a lot of money. There is a difference. Margaret E. Mitchell, DVM Westerville, Ohio
EDUCATORS DESERVE ANSWERS To the Editor:
wolftrax.com
1-855-237-9653
©2014 Wolf Trax® is a registered trademark of Wolf Trax, Inc. Not all products are registered in all areas. Contact infomaster@wolftrax.com for more information. 22716 WP
Seemingly Don Morgan, Saskatchewan minister of education, has decided P3s, private for profit corporate bundling plan for building schools, are acceptable. Little respect (is) shown for: a consultative process with education stakeholders or a former minister who decided P3s too expensive; school boards’ complaints and alternate ideas; concerns of construction industry, other companies and workers who fear losing jobs and contracts to out-of-province companies. P3s engage companies-corporations to finance, design, build, own and then lease to government for use of schools and services. When a 30-year lease is up, the corporation owns the schools that public taxpayers paid expensive leases for and so contributed to profits of shareholders. Future generations inherit these costs. Isn’t this a misappropriation of taxpayer dollars? Governments of, for and by the people are elected to provide, via taxes, public schools and education for our precious students. Education isn’t a commodity to provide shareholders’ profits. Haven’t our numerous education
OPINION ministers researched the pitfalls experienced by other jurisdictions: lack of transparency, quality, efficiency, competition and the high cost of private borrowing. (Premier Brad) Wall’s (government) had seven boom years plus $1.3 billion left in GR from the Calvert government and time to plan the building of schools. Wall hired John Black’s U.S. giant corporation for homeland security to overhaul medicare and introduce lean initiatives, whose managers oversee health-care workers. The plan is to have Dan Florizone introduce lean initiatives in education; again, top down approach lacking consultation with stakeholders. Educators, in charge of our children’s education, deserve answers from this government.
community mailboxes. Chopra was placed as CEO of Canada Post by Stephen Harper and draws a salary of between $440,900 and $518,600 with a “guesstimated” bonus of 33 percent. Apart from Chopra, there are 22 presidents and vice-presidents, each with their mouths wide-open waiting for bloated handouts. This small group of top management accounts for $10 million in salaries alone — not to mention their perks and bonuses. Many of the 22, along with Chopra, were placed by Harper as a favour to his Conservative buddies who failed to get into their ridings. Nepotism is alive and flourishing under the Harper government.
Joan Bell, Saskatoon, Sask.
Joyce Neufeld, Waldeck, Sask.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
TRUTH AND RECONCILIATION COMMISSION | HEALING
Birthing new relationships a blessing SPIRITUAL VIGNETTES
JOYCE SASSE
H
as the truth and reconciliation commission process made a difference in your life? For those who participated, and those who witnessed the outpouring of stories from both natives and nonnatives, their lives will be forever changed. It was not an easy journey. Those whose ancestry has been
rooted in this country centuries b e f o re t h e Eu ro p e a n s a r r i v e d showed openness and hospitality to the newcomers. Without the indigenous people, those naïve in the ways of the Canadian wilderness could not have survived. However, in the name of God and sovereignty, the invaders enacted programs intended to convert or eliminate First Nations people. The assumption was that it was appropriate to take control of land, resources, families and culture away from people “who were inferior.” Only in recent years do non-natives realize how evil the governmentadministered, church-staffed Indian residential schools were. Lawyers advised the churches to
refuse to accept any responsibility for what occurred, but how could we respect ourselves if we didn’t turn to truth-telling and make apology? Part of the settlement was the establishment of a truth and reconciliation commission. The healing journey could begin only after the pain, anger and tragedy of what happened was brought to the surface. Following truth and reconciliation gatherings across the country, a national assembly will be held in Edmonton March 27-30. What blessings could come our way as the birth of new relationships begin. Joyce Sasse writes for the Canadian Rural Church Network at www.canadian ruralchurch.net.
NEPOTISM FLOURISHING To the Editor: Re: the recent announcement eliminating door-to-door delivery for urban residents and the massive postal rate increases by Canada Post. President and CEO Deepak Chopra repeatedly pointed out it was a Conference Board of Canada recommendation — a private research organization of which Chopra is a member. Chopra claims 66 percent of Canadians currently get mail at community mailboxes, when in reality only 25 percent do, while 33 percent get door-to-door, 25 percent by apartment lobby mailboxes, 12 percent general delivery and five percent at rural mailboxes — 2012 Canada Post report. At a special emergency meeting of the transport committee, when questioned by MPs as to how the elderly will be especially hard hit by the loss of home delivery, Chopra had the audacity to state that seniors have told the corporation they want more exercise and fresh air offered by
Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers
Just Try Me.
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.
13
Defend against tough-to-control weeds with confidence. BASF and Monsanto have once again partnered to optimize weed control through the use of multiple modes of action and are offering growers a $0.50 /acre discount on select Roundup® agricultural herbicides when purchased with matching acres of HEAT® and/or DISTINCT® herbicides.* For complete details see your retailer or visit JustTryMe.ca *The Roundup Transorb® HC, Roundup Ultra2®, HEAT and DISTINCT offer off-invoice discount acres will be calculated using the following label rates: One case of HEAT = 640 acres (one jug of HEAT = 80 acres), one case of DISTINCT = 80 acres (one jug of DISTINCT = 40 acres), Roundup Transorb HC 0.67L = 1 acre (10L = 15 acres, 115L = 172 acres, 450L = 675 acres, 800L = 1,200 acres), Roundup Ultra2 0.67L = 1 acre (10L = 15 acres, 115L = 172 acres, 450L = 675 acres, 800L = 1,200 acres). Predetermine the compatibility of tank mixtures by mixing small proportional quantities in advance. ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Tank mixtures: The applicable labelling for each product must be in the possession of the user at the time of application. Follow applicable use instructions, including application rates, precautions and restrictions of each product used in the tank mixture. Monsanto has not tested all tank mix product formulations for compatibility or performance other than specifically listed by brand name. Always predetermine the compatibility of tank mixtures by mixing small proportional quantities in advance. Roundup®, Roundup Transorb® and Roundup Ultra2® are registered trade-marks of Monsanto Technology LLC, Monsanto Canada, Inc. licensee. AgSolutions® and DISTINCT are registered trade-marks of BASF Corporation; and HEAT and KIXOR® are registered trade-marks of BASF SE; all used with permission by BASF Canada Inc. MERGE® is a registered trade-mark of BASF Canada Inc. © 2013 Monsanto Canada, Inc. and BASF Canada Inc.
14
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
INDIAN PULSES | EXPORTS
Indian gov’t to consider lifting pulse export ban to boost prices BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
India is considering lifting an eightyear ban on pulse exports just as farmers harvest what is expected to be a record crop. Business Standard is reporting that the agriculture ministry will soon recommend that cabinet lift the ban to stop the decline in domestic pulse crop prices. “Those (recommendations) often get adopted, although once in a while they get rejected,” said Chuck Penner, an analyst with LeftField Commodity Research. Stat Publishing is forecasting a record 13 million tonne rabi (winter)
pulse crop harvest. Growers had already planted a record 38.67 million acres of pulses as of Jan. 24, up nine percent from the same time last year. Penner said it will be interesting to see how the Indian government handles the agriculture ministry recommendation, given that it’s an election year. “The difficulty for the government is to decide, ‘OK, who are we going to try to make happier, farmers or consumers?’ ” Farmers and farm labourers make up a substantial portion of India’s population. “To make farmers happy, they would get rid of these export limits or
restrictions. That should then push prices higher because they can participate in world markets.” Penner expects a decision by March 31, when the current export ban is set to expire. That is around the same time that this year’s rabi crop will be coming off. He doesn’t think lifting the export ban will have much of an impact on this year’s pulse markets because it is too late for Indian farmers to adjust plantings. However, it could definitely influence pulse markets going forward. “I don’t think there is any way of spinning it so that it’s a positive thing,” he said. India used to export desi chickpeas
and red lentils before the ban, mostly by truck or train to nearby countries such as Pakistan and Bangladesh. The ban on kabuli chickpeas was recently lifted, which Penner believes has had a price-depressing effect on that commodity. He thinks red lentils would be most influenced by the end of the export ban. In the meantime, it is the forecast of a record chickpea crop that poses the biggest threat to Canadian growers. Penner said there has been a big increase in India’s chickpea acres, which typically account for 72 percent of rabi pulse plantings. Pea plantings are above average, and lentil acreage is normal.
“We did have good moisture conditions going in, but for the most part that tap turned off at the beginning of November,” he said. Parts of northern India have had barely any rain since the beginning of November, which will primarily effect lentils and peas. “I don’t see big (lentil and pea) yields this year,” said Penner. It’s a different story for chickpeas, which are more widely grown across the country. “It could be some significant volumes. It’s not going to be good for Canadian yellow pea exports.” He thinks exporters will feel the pressure of a record Indian chickpea crop as early as late February.
FLAX | GM TESTING
PROTECT THE
FLAG
WITH BUMPER OR BLANKET
Choose your best defense Over 50 percent of the yield in cereal crops is determined by the health of the flag and upper leaves. Early or late, MANA Canada has the fungicide protection you need. Protect the flag with Bumper®, containing propiconazole, or Blanket AP™, containing azoxystrobin and propiconazole. Support choice – ask for Bumper or Blanket AP by name.
Bumper
Fungicide
®
Propiconazole
418 EC
SAME ACTIVE AS TILT®
SAME ACTIVES AS QUILT®
manainc.ca ®Bumper is a registered trademark and ™Blanket AP is a trademark of Makhteshim Agan of North America, Inc. All others are registered trademarks of their respective companies. Always read and follow label directions. 13046.12.13
Flax growers to pay for GM test BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Canadian flax growers will soon bear the full cost of testing their flax crop for the presence of genetically modified material. Funding for the Flax Farm Stewardship program will end Feb. 28, says the Flax Council of Canada. After that, the full cost of testing will be borne by farmers. Will Hill, president of the Flax Council of Canada, said farmers are strongly encouraged to get their testing done now, while funding is still available and grain movement is slow. “Get your testing done early and then you’ll be ready to go when (grain movement) improves,” said Hill. “I’m assuming we’ll get a fairly good push on by farmers to get their testing done prior to (Feb. 28) to take advantage of the funding that is available.” The Flax Farm Stewardship program, in place since 2010-11, reimbursed farmers for 50 percent of the cost of a flax test, up to a maximum of $100 per test. A test usually costs around $200. Labs accredited to conduct the test are listed on the flax council’s website at www.flaxcouncil.ca. Hill said the funding that is still available should be sufficient to cover all samples submitted by farmers between now and the end of February. Nonetheless, growers should submit their samples as early as possible to avoid disappointment. “We think we have enough (funding) to run a program of the size that we have in previous years,” he said. Testing of commercial flax at the farm level was a key part of the flax industry’s overall plan to detect the presence of GM material and ensure that commercial flax supplies destined for GM-sensitive markets were free of the GM variety CDC Triffid. Hill said producers will be required to continue testing flax at the farm level for at least another year. After that, the industry will reassess the situation and decide if farm level testing is still required. Hill said commercial level testing of flax in rail cars and bulk cargoes will continue until the industry is reasonably sure all traces of Triffid have been eliminated from the Canadian flax supply.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
15
INSECTICIDE | MANAGEMENT
Neonicotinoids jeopardize Manitoba buckwheat exports Residue limits exceeded | Japanese inspectors reject containers because of the presence of insecticidal seed treatment BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
Manitoba buckwheat processors are feeling anxious about exports after Japanese inspectors rejected a shipment of buckwheat for neonicotinoid contamination. Rejean Picard, a Manitoba Agriculture farm production adviser and buckwheat expert, said Japan refused two containers of buckwheat grown in Manitoba. The buckwheat exceeded Japan’s maximum residue limit (MRL) for thiamethoxam, an insecticidal seed treatment. Thiamethoxam, a Syngenta insecticide, is better known by its brand names Helix XTra and CruiserMaxx. The neonicotinoid is applied to canola, corn and soybean seeds in Western Canada. Picard said the buckwheat with neonicotinoid residue was grown in 2012 and exported in 2013. “I understand that there were two (containers) that were shipped,” he said. “It exceeded the MRL in Japan, so the shipments were refused and returned…. Glyphosate also showed up in the results, but it was within the MRL.” Marc Durand, a buckwheat grower in Notre Dame de Lourdes, Man., said processors and others in Manitoba’s buckwheat trade can’t understand how thiamethoxam got into a buckwheat shipment. One possibility is that the crop grown before buckwheat received a seed treatment and the neonicotinoid remained in the soil. “We’re not sure if it’s residues in the soil or farmers are not cleaning out their equipment properly,” said Durand, while standing at the Manitoba Buckwheat Growers Association booth at Manitoba Ag Days last week. Picard said on-farm contamination is improbable because producers use specific equipment to handle seed treated with insecticides and fungicides. “Producers won’t use equipment to load grain that they would use to load treated seed. They usually would have different augers for that,” he said. “We haven’t ruled it (contamination) out completely, but we think it’s an unlikely cause…. These neonics are widely used on other crops. We’re thinking possibly the previous crop might have been treated with that. Maybe poor breakdown (of the insecticide) in the soil.” Buckwheat is an unlikely candidate for testing positive for pesticides because so few chemicals are registered for use on the small acreage crop. However, nearly every corn, canola and soybean seed in North America is treated with a neonicotinoid. The three most popular neonics are clothianidin, imidacloprid, which are Bayer products, and thiamethoxam. Christy Morrissey, a University of Saskatchewan toxicologist who has studied neonics, said the insecticides persist in soil for years. “Neonicotinoids break down very slowly in soil,” she said in an email. “Half lives vary by compound and environmental conditions, but data for clothianidin is 300 to 1,400 days….
In Saskatchewan soils, 91 percent of the original compound was still present in soil (after) four to six months.” Picard said thiamethoxam is registered for use on buckwheat, but that source of contamination is unlikely. “I’ve never heard of anybody using any seed treatment … on buckwheat.” The neonic contamination is worrying Manitoba processors about future shipments to Japan, where buckwheat is used to make soba noodles. One processor said federal and provincial governments should take the risks associated with neonics
more seriously, especially the trade risks. Durand said Manitoba processors might not buy buckwheat from growers if Japan refuses more containers for neonic residues. “It is a big concern,” he said. “There are not many buyers (in Manitoba) … and if they’re having this risk, they might not take the risk.” Gord Kurbis, Pulse Canada director of market access and trade policy, said he’s never heard of a Canadian special crop rejected for neonicotinoid contamination. He said inconsistent rules for maximum residue levels likely caused the
recent rejection in Japan. “These sorts of things aren’t a story about food safety risks. This is a story about not having coherent international regulations,” he said. “No doubt, this is where this buckwheat problem (arose) as well.” Kurbis said Japan doesn’t have a specific MRL for thiamethoxam and buckwheat, so the country uses a default MRL of 0.01 parts per million. In comparison, Japan has significantly higher MRLs for thiamethoxam on other food products. It’s five p.p.m. for cabbage and three p.p.m. for lettuce and beets, which is 500 and 300 times higher than the
default levels. Kurbis said inconsistent rules within countries and varying regulations from country to country force Canadian exporters to navigate through a byzantine system of MRLs. “We’re moving (commodities) to 150 countries and there are potentially 30 or 40 actives (pesticides) across a half dozen minor crops and pulse crops. This is a pretty formidable combination,” he said. “That risk is taking us into a world where these hypothetical trade risks of having zero tolerances on the books start to morph into real trade risks.”
Meridian Manufacturing Inc. is all about solving industry issues with technology and a commitment to the highest quality. We’ve spent decades manufacturing industry-leading storage solutions that set the standard in product excellence. Our products are designed to make your job easier and safer, while saving you time and allowing you to capture valuable market opportunities. VISIT OUR DEALER LOCATOR AT WWW.MERIDIANMFG.COM
© 2014 Meridian Manufacturing Inc. Registered Trademarks Used Under License.
16
NEWS
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
MEAT RECALL STUDY | SALES IMPACT
Consumers eventually return after meat recall: study Safety assurance needed | In some regions like Asia and Europe, recalls reduced consumption by 50 percent and never fully recovered BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
Consumer confidence is shaken every time there is a meat recall, but they usually start eating meat again once they receive the all clear, at least in North America. “People tend to return to their past consumption,” said agriculture economist John Cranfield from the University of Guelph, who examined the effects on demand following Canadian Food Inspection Agency
initiated recalls between 1998 and 2010. Beef demand is an indication of consumers’ willingness to buy, and refers to how much beef will be consumed at a given price. Most consumer studies show price is the most important consideration among shoppers, but safety and quality are ranked next. Canfax commissioned the study, which evaluated national impacts on a quarterly basis. It did not look at individual shoppers’ reaction to a
food recall, even though the opinions of the person buying and cooking the food are influential. “The perception of the food shopper of the home is a very important thing,” he said. “That shapes everything that goes into the shopping cart or what goes on the table.” The study calculated that a one percent increase in beef recalls leads to a 0.037 percent decrease in Canadian beef demand. In terms of volume, it means a 2,260
INNOVATIVE SOLUTIONS FOR BURNDOWN
Cleaner canola. Period. Put our pre-seed team to work in your canola field.
CleanStart® • Takes down the tough weeds that glyphosate alone leaves behind • Proven pre-seed burndown that combines Group 14 and Group 9 chemistry • Two modes of action for effective resistance management
Consumers usually revert back to normal purchasing patterns after the CFIA assures the public of its safety. | FILE PHOTO tonne reduction in beef consumption per quarter with a value of about $26.5 million at the retail level. This is
the equivalent to a one percent drop in consumer beef expenditures. Pork recalls reduced demand for pork but had no impact on beef or chicken demand. Chicken recalls had a negative impact on beef sales and a positive change for pork, but no difference in poultry demand. Recalls in the United States did not have a measurable impact on Canadian beef demand. Cranfield said it is hard to determine how long consumers might reject a product, but some U.S. statistics show a downturn could drag on for three quarters of a year. However, food recalls in Europe or Asia may influence people to stay away from a product for a long time or abandon it altogether. Although no beef was recalled in the BSE crisis of 2003, the disease’s impact had a major impact among certain consumers. Beef consumption actually improved in Canada as widespread publicity assured people the product was safe to eat. That was not the case in Japan, where consumption fell by more than 50 percent when it was diagnosed in 2001. “BSE left Japan reeling,” Cranfield said. “In Japan, consumption patterns don’t always revert. That is a permanent change.” Consumer surveys after the listeria recall involving Maple Leaf Foods in 2008 found that many consumers said they no longer bought prepared lunchmeats. It did not last. “People revert back into their previous consumption patterns,” Cranfield said. The study found that there were no recalls during some quarters, but there was a spike in 2008. In addition, there are more recalls in pork and beef, although that might be partly connected to increased surveillance and better detection methods since mid-2008. This study did not include consumer reaction after the XL Foods beef recall in Brooks, Alta., because full data was not available at the time. The full report may be read at www. beefresearch.ca/files/pdf/factsheets/canadian_beef_demand_ response_to_food_safety_quality_ cranfield_sept2013.pdf.
Amitrol 240
A proven Group 11 pre-seed burndown product that reduces early weed competition.
Innovative solutions. Business made easy. 1.800.868.5444 Nufarm.ca Always read label before using. CleanStart® is a registered trademark of Nufarm Agriculture Inc. 01/14-22649
Download the free app today.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
17
PRODUCT RESEARCH | WEIGHING INFORMATION
Learn to decipher data on product claims: expert Evaluating research | Consider number of years data has been collected and how researchers explain their conclusions BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
Terry Buss struggles to contain his contempt when he sees the phrase “positive yield response.” Buss, a Manitoba Agriculture soybean specialist in Beausejour, Man., said “positive yield response” regularly appears in literature promoting foliar sprays and soil fertility products. He said those claims are often meaningless because they’re rarely supported by valid data. “Positive yield response … is that greater than zero?” said Buss, who spoke about the validity of agricultural research during a presentation at Manitoba Ag Days in Brandon Jan. 22. “I don’t like it.… I’m seeing it more and more. The reason I don’t like it is because… I don’t know what it means.” Buss said he regularly receives calls from growers who have questions about the latest or greatest agricultural product and associated yield boost claims of five to 10 percent. “A lot of soil fertility products, a lot of foliar applied things … more and
The information overload can be overwhelming when sifting through the claims made by crop input marketers, but a crop adviser says it’s possible to separate fact from fiction. | FILE PHOTO
TERRY BUSS SOYBEAN SPECIALIST
more fungicide type products.” Buss said the marketing campaigns for such products typically feature data, graphs and tables to support the claims. The information overload can be overwhelming, he added, but it is possible for growers to separate the bona fide from the b.s.
“It’s not that complicated. You don’t need to get a master’s degree or a PhD to evaluate research.” He said products often cost less than $10 per acre and typically promise yield increases of 10 percent or less. Growers are more likely to bite when the financial risk is low. “I’ve had people say that to me. The product is $5 per acre…. If it works, great. If it doesn’t, I’ve only lost five bucks.” Still, $5 adds up quickly if the product is applied to 1,000 acres. “Do you have $5,000 to throw away? I don’t,” he said. “I’m saying, don’t spin the wheel until they’ve shown you something that you consider valid.”
Rigas Karamanos, senior agronomist with Koch Agronomic Services, said several years ago that there is a basic rule for claims surrounding fertilizer supplements: distinguish between Type A and Type B claims. A Type A claim is when a fertilizer supplement vendor says its product will boost yield by five to 10 percent. The Type B claim is when the vendor says its supplement will produce the same yield but with less nutrient inputs. Karamanos said the simple rule for farmers is that Type B is possible and Type A is impossible because yield is determined by crop genetics, solar radiation, water and nutrients. “When you get to the maximum yield with best management prac-
tices … you will find that it is very difficult to push the yield potential (higher).” Buss said recognizing the quality of agricultural research is another way to decipher product claims. A graph with a low bar and a high bar to represent yield differences isn’t reliable if researchers don’t explain how confident they are in the data, he added. “Two very common confidence levels that are used are 95 percent and 90 percent confident,” he said. “I see more and more stuff where there is no discussion of that (statistical confidence) at all.” Promotional results should also show the least significant difference, he said. Using soybean research on tillage systems as an example, Buss said the least significant difference in that experiment was 2.8 bushels. As a result, any yield difference less than 2.8 bu. is statistically insignificant and should be ignored. “That’s the type of thing we should be able to get in all of the research we look at, that ability to determine real differences,” he said. “Anything else won’t do.” Experimental design is another consideration. Buss said growers should look for information on site years of data and the number of replications. Karamanos has touted the importance of replication for years. “In God we trust. All others bring replicated data.”
oktire.com
Service THAT STACKs UP.
OK Tire carries a wide range of tires for farm equipment - everything from tractors to combines. The best part is we service every tire we sell – and with locations across the country, you’re always close to help when you need it. For the latest specials on firestone farm tires stop into your local OK Tire or visit oktire.com.
100
$
REBATE
on qualifying Firestone Radial Agriculture Tires
™ The OK Tire mark is a trademark of O.K. Tire Stores Inc.
®
From December 1, 2013 to March 31, 2014
Firestone is a registered trademark of Bridgestone Licensing Services Inc., used under license.
18
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
RELENTLESS ON WEEDS. SAFE ON WHEAT. ™ FLUSH-AFTER-FLUSH CONTROL. It’s rare to find a herbicide you can count on for long-lasting stopping power that’s also safe on wheat. The advanced safener technology in EVEREST® 2.0 makes it super selective for best-in-class crop safety. Safe on wheat, it’s also relentless on weeds, giving you Flush-after-flush™ control of green foxtail, wild oats and other resistant weeds. And a wide window for application means you can apply at your earliest convenience. It’s time you upgraded your weed control program to the next generation: EVEREST 2.0. To learn more, visit everest2-0.ca.
SAFE ON WHEAT
RELENTLESS ON WEEDS
FLUSH-AFTER-FLUSH CONTROL
CONTROLS HARD-TO-KILL GRASS WEEDS
INCREASED YIELD POTENTIAL
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
FARMLIVING
19
LIVING IN HARMONY WITH THE NATURAL WORLD Protecting wildlife habitat is part of the Hodgins family’s strategy to create a healthy, productive diversified organic operation. | Page 26
FARM LIVING EDITOR: KAREN MORRISON | Ph: 306-665-3585 F: 306-934-2401 | E-MAIL: KAREN.MORRISON@PRODUCER.COM
EDUCATION | ONLINE COURSE
Rural students click on to U of S business course BY KAREN MORRISON SASKATOON NEWSROOM
WINTER OLYMPICS | ICE MAKER
Meet Canada’s ice man Skims over pebbles | Ice technician hopes he plays a role in Olympic team bringing home gold BY KAREN MORRISON SASKATOON NEWSROOM
DALMENY, Sask. — James Gordon shuffles backward along the curling sheets, squirting a fine spray of water from a tank mounted on his back. Making perfectly pebbled ice is a priority for Gordon, who was one of more than 20 volunteer ice technicians chosen for the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, in February. This evening, he plans to curl with his team after spending an hour or two preparing the ice at the curling club in Dalmeny, Sask., his home base. He’s already put in a full day of work in shipping and receiving at Crestline Manufactur ing in Saskatoon. “Being a curler myself, I like to play on good ice,” said Gordon, who has curled in juvenile and high school provincial curling championships and aspires to eventually getting a team into the national tournament. He started ice making as a teenager through a love of the game and a strong desire to learn about what changes rink conditions. “It takes a lot of hard work to be good at it,” he said. “If you’re not good at making ice
Ice technician James Gordon has been perfecting his craft for a decade and knows what makes curling rocks sail on the ice. He is one 20 volunteers who will travel to Sochi, Russia, for the Winter Olympics. | KAREN MORRISON PHOTO or if you don’t prep it right, the ice may have more friction on the rocks,” said Gordon. “Faster ice is a lot nicer to play on.” The Dalmeny rink is his second home, where he is the ice technician and serves on the club’s curling executive. At 23, he has spent the last five
years honing his craft here and at elite events such as Canadian men’s championships and the world women’s curling championships. He has attained a Level 2 in ice making, with the top being Level 4. Gordon credited his experience and particularly work with the Brier’s head ice technician, Hans
Wuthrich of Winnipeg, with helping to tip the scales in his favour during the Olympics selection process. “I know what needs to be done,” he said. Accommodations and meals are provided at the games, but he had to raise the rest of the money himself. He hosted a glow curling event fundraiser in Dalmeny, which raised $750. Crestline also contributed $500. Gordon has now raised all but $500 of his expenses, which includes $2,200 in airfare and a $250 work visa. While there, he’ll be part of a team creating the sheets atop the concrete pad, pebbling the ice, installing the logos and hacks and scraping and maintaining the ice between games. He was surprised and pleased to be picked and is looking forward to watching curling and other elite sporting events. “As long as there are open seats, I can get in free,” Gordon said. “It’s one of the things I’ll look back on later on.”
» To see the full schedule for
Olympics curling, visit www. sochi2014.com/en/curlingschedule-and-results.
Saskatchewan high school students now have a window into the world of commerce and a chance to earn university credits through a program offered by the Sun West School Division. The division teamed up with the University of Saskatchewan’s Edwards School of Business to create an introduction to business course online. Keith Willoughby, Edwards’ associate dean of research and academics, said the course is an overview of concepts in a business degree program and includes modules in subjects ranging from leadership to human resources to finances. “This could be a model for the future for us to look at in the north and remote communities without access to things folks in the city enjoy,” he said. Eight faculty members recorded lectures for the one-semester program. Eight of 12 students who participated in the course last year have since joined the Edwards school. “Here’s a way of whetting their appetite and giving them an opportunity to come into Edwards with three credits under their belt,” Willoughby said. Darren Gasper, Sun West’s superintendent of education, said it’s a big advantage for rural schools such as Beechy’s with only 80 students. “Normally, their choice of courses are very limited, but now they have a range of courses to choose from that’s larger than a large urban high school,” he said. The division delivers its online classes to 3,000 students, half of which are in Sun West. This year, it is also offering programs with the university’s arts and science, computer science and agriculture faculties. Gasper conceded it can be challenging at first. “They need to be independent. Our focus is all about preparing students for future careers.” “We can give them a taste of what university is like, so that can help make that step easier for them and the transition smoother,” he said. Terissa Ousdahl of Rosetown, Sask., took the course last year and entered the Edwards’ school this past fall, while Alex McFie has just completed the course online at a Saskatoon high school. McFie, who plans a career in accounting, said one assignment required him to learn about an entrepreneur’s challenges and rewards. “It got you thinking, building up your understanding,” he said. Both students said it was more challenging than traditionally taught courses because it was assignment heavy and required self-motivation and discipline.
20
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FARM LIVING
BAKED SPINACH AND ARTICHOKE DIP WITH GOUDA 1 tbsp. 1 small 2 cloves 10 oz. bag 1/4 tsp. 1/4 tsp. 8 oz. pkg. 1/4 c. 1 c.
canola oil onion, chopped garlic, crushed baby spinach, torn or chopped cumin salt cream cheese, softened sour cream canned lentils, drained well
15 mL 300 g 1 mL 1 mL 250 g
4 oz. jar marinated 110 mL artichoke hearts, drained and coarsely chopped 1/2 c. grated aged 125 mL Gouda, divided 1/2 c. freshly grated 125 mL Parmesan cheese, divided dash ground black pepper dash sea salt
60 mL 250 mL
In a large, heavy skillet, heat oil over medium-high heat and saute the onion for five minutes, until soft. Add the garlic and spinach and cook for three to four minutes until the spinach wilts and any excess moisture has cooked off. Add the cumin and salt, stir to combine and remove from the heat. Preheat the oven to 350 F (180 C). Place cream cheese, sour cream, lentils, artichoke hearts and spinach mixture in a food processor and pulse, scraping down the sides of the bowl,
until almost smooth. Add half the Gouda and Parmesan and a pinch of salt and pepper. Pulse until combined. Transfer to a shallow baking dish, cover loosely with foil and bake for 20 minutes, until warmed through. Remove the foil, sprinkle with remaining Gouda and Parmesan and bake another 10-15 minutes, until the cheese is melted and the edges are bubbly. Serve warm with pita or tortilla chips, sliced fresh baguette, or grainy crackers. Serves about 10.
LENTIL CAPRESE SALAD 2 c. chopped baby 500 mL kale or spinach 11/2 c. halved cherry 375 mL tomatoes 1 c. bocconcini cheese, 250 mL drained, rinsed and sliced 1 c. cooked lentils 250 mL 2 tbsp. finely sliced basil 30 mL 1 green onion, sliced thinly Combine kale, tomatoes, cheese, lentils, basil, and onion together in a large bowl. In a separate bowl, whisk together
Dressing: 3 tbsp. balsamic vinegar 45 mL 3 tbsp. olive oil 45 mL 1 tsp. whole grain 5 mL mustard 1/4 tsp. coarse black pepper 1 mL sea salt
the dressing ingredients and season with salt. Before serving, toss the salad with the dressing. Serves four to six.
COUNTRY KITCHEN
DOROTHY SANDERCOCK
Lentils:
C
anada grows some of the healthiest food in the world. If the top 10 health foods are Googled, the list is bound to include oatmeal, blueberries, flax, quinoa and other super food grown or raised here. One of those superfoods is lentils. Why are lentils a superfood? Fibre: One-half cup (125 mL) of cooked lentils has almost eight grams of fibre, which is about 30 percent of what is required for the day. Eating a diet high in fibre helps lower cholesterol, reduces the risk of heart disease and makes the digestive system happy. Potassium: Bananas are often touted as being high in potassium, but 1/2 cup (125 mL) of cooked lentils has more than 350 milligrams of potassium, which is 10 percent of the daily requirement and the same amount as a large banana. Potassium is essential for maintaining fluid and electrolyte balance and helps regulate blood pressure. Folate: Lentils are high in folate, (folic acid) and vitamin B-9 that is instrumental in cell development and repair and important for pregnant women. It helps prevent neuraltube defects, such as spina bifida. One-half cup of cooked lentils is 45 percent of the daily requirement for folate. High protein, low fat: One-half cup (125 mL) of cooked lentils contains 115 calories and less than half a gram of fat. The serving also has nine grams of protein, which is almost 20 percent of the protein required daily. Blood sugar control: Lentils have a low glycemic index value, which means they are digested slowly and don’t spike blood sugar levels. This is
good for people with diabetes or at risk of developing diabetes and helpful if trying to lose weight. Buying lentils When buying dried lentils, look for bright colour, uniform size and smooth skins without chips or shrivelled seed coats. It is a good idea to rinse and sort lentils before cooking. They also don’t take long to cook. However, canned lentils offer quick convenience for recipes that call for cooked lentils. Simply drain, rinse and add to the recipe. Note: A 19 oz./540 mL can of lentils drained is approximately equivalent to two cups (500 mL) of cooked lentils. Storing Dry lentils will keep almost indefinitely stored in a tightly covered container in a cool, dry place. If exposed to light, pulses tend to lose their colour but flavour, nutrition and texture will not be affected. The longer lentils are stored, the drier they become. This means they may take longer to cook and remain slightly chewy after cooking. It is best to use dry lentils within one year of purchase.
Cooking Tips No pre-soaking is required. It’s important to use unsalted water, because salt hardens and toughens lentils when cooking. Seasoning can and should be added at the end of the cooking. One cup (250 mL) of whole, dry lentils plus 2 1/2-3 cups (625–750 mL) unsalted water cooked for 20 to 30 minutes equals 2 1/2 cups (625 mL) cooked lentils. One cup (250 mL) of split, dry lentils plus two cups (500 mL) unsalted water cooked for five to 15 minutes equals two cups (500 mL) cooked lentils. Here are a sampling of lentil recipes from lentils.ca.
FARM LIVING
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
21
BACON LENTIL BURRITO LENTIL PUREE My kids love these burritos but they don’t know why. I do though. Lentils are flavour sponges and do a good job absorbing the flavours of the Southwest. 4 thick slices of bacon, chopped 1 onion, diced 1 tsp. chili powder 5 mL 1 tsp. cumin powder 5 mL 1 tsp. dried oregano 5 mL 1 c. dry green lentils 250 mL 4 c. water 1L 1 c. corn 250 mL 1 tsp. salt 5 mL 1 tsp. favourite hot sauce 5 mL
To assemble the burritos: 4 large soft tortillas 1 carrot, shredded 4 oz. taco blend shredded 113 g cheese 1/4 c. salsa 60 mL cilantro leaves and tender stems
Begin by crisping the bacon. Toss it into a saucepot along with a little water. Bring the mixture to a simmer. As the bacon begins simmering, the water will encourage it to cook evenly. When the bits are crisp, strain them out and reserve. Toss the onion and seasonings into the pan and stir until the flavours brighten and the textures soften for about five minutes. Pour in lentils and water and bring the mixture to a slow, steady, simmer. Continue cooking as the lentils absorb the moisture and begin softening. Stir occasionally and keep an eye on
the works. Eventually they’ll become tender and absorb the water, about 45 minutes. If the mixture still seems wet for a burrito filling, simmer a few minutes longer. In the last few minutes of cooking, stir the corn, salt and hot sauce into the works. Lay four tortilla shells on the work surface and evenly divide the filling between them. Top with grated carrot, grated cheese and salsa. Sprinkle on the crisp bacon and top with lots of cilantro. Fold in the sides and roll the works up tightly. Serves four. Source: Michael Smith and lentils.ca.
Place cooked lentils in a food processor. For every cup (250 mL) of cooked lentils, add 1/4 cup (60 mL) water. Blend until smooth. Lentil puree has a similar consistency to canned pumpkin. Add additional water one tablespoon (15 mL) at a time if more moisture is needed. Store in the refrigerator for up to four days, or freeze for up to three months. FILE PHOTO
LENTILS.CA PHOTOS
Canadian grown superfood EASY WAYS TO ADD MORE LENTILS TO THE DIET • Puree and use lentils to make a dip like hummus. Check out the baked spinach and artichoke dip with Gouda recipe. The lentils are processed with the cream cheese and sour cream. • Add them to soup, stew, salad or a stir fry. Try using split red lentils for some added colour. • Enjoy a vegetarian entree or side dish made with lentils. • Use lentils to stretch ground meat. Simply add split red lentils or pureed lentils to the ground meat.
LEMON LENTIL SOUP 2 tsp. canola oil 10 mL 1 onion, chopped 2 cloves garlic, finely chopped pinch hot red pepper flakes 1 tsp. cumin 5 mL 1 1/2 c. dry split red 375 mL lentils, cleaned and rinsed 2 tsp. canola oil 10 mL 1 onion, chopped 2 cloves garlic, finely chopped pinch hot red pepper flakes
1 tsp. cumin 5 mL 1 1/2 c. dry split red 375 mL lentils, cleaned and rinsed 6 c. chicken stock .5 L 2 tbsp. lemon juice 30 mL 2 tbsp. fresh parsley, 30 mL finely chopped salt and pepper to taste 6 c. chicken stock 1.5 L 2 tbsp. lemon juice 30 mL 2 tbsp. fresh parsley, 30 mL finely chopped salt and pepper to taste
Heat oil in large saucepan or Dutch oven. Add onion, garlic and hot pepper flakes and cook on low heat for five minutes. Add cumin and lentils, combine well. Add stock, salt and pepper and bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover and
simmer until lentils are tender and soup is beginning to thicken, about 30 minutes. Add extra stock or water to thin if necessary. Add lemon juice. Serve sprinkled with parsley. Serves five to six.
RED LENTIL, WHITE BEAN AND BEEF SLOPPY JOES 3 lb. ground beef 1.5 kg 2-19 oz. cans navy beans 540 mL 2 c. dry split red 500 mL lentils 28 oz. can crushed 796 mL tomatoes 28 oz. can diced tomatoes 796 mL 3 carrots, chopped 2 celery stalks, chopped Preheat oven to 375 F (190 C). Place uncooked ground beef into large roaster, stir in the rest of ingredients, except for salt and pepper. Bake
4 cloves 12 c. 1/3 c. 1/3 c. 1 tbsp. 1 tbsp. 1 tbsp. 1/2 c.
garlic, chopped water 4L molasses 75 mL brown sugar 75 mL garlic powder 30 mL onion powder 30 mL basil 30 mL apple cider vinegar 125 mL salt and pepper to taste
for about 2.5 hours. Stir two or three times during cooking. Add salt and pepper to taste. Serves about 16.
22
FARM LIVING
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
HEALTH | INFORMED DINING
PRE-ADOLESCENCE | MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES
New program to give diners the goods on nutrition
Adolescent kids present challenges for parents SPEAKING OF LIFE
BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
JACKLIN ANDREWS, BA, MSW Many Canadians go to restaurants to forget about calories, salt and fat content for an evening, but others like to know exactly what is in their bowl of French onion soup. To satisfy that crowd, the Canadian Restaurant and Foodservices Association is touting an initiative called Informed Dining, in which consumers can find nutrition information before ordering their favourite dish. The CRFA said 17 major restaurant chains, including A&W, McDonalds, Milestones, Montana’s and Tim Hortons, have committed to Informed Dining and intend to implement the program sometime this year. CRFA president Garth Whyte said customers are seeking comprehensive nutrition information that doesn’t fit on a fast food menu board. “Canadians want more than just a calorie count,” he said. “What (customers) are telling us they need varies tremendously from one person to the next. The Informed Dining program provides the information Canadians are looking for in a manner that is accessible, visible and presented in a consistent way across the country.” The program, which was developed by the British Columbia government in collaboration with the restaurant industry, provides information on calories and 13 nutrients through a website. Participating restaurants will display the Informed Dining logo and a statement on their menu or menu board telling customers that nutrition information on each dish is available. Tammy Ives, a registered dietician and executive director of Dieticians of Canada in Manitoba, said eating out is “positively correlated with total caloric intake and weight status.” In other words, Canadians eat too much when they dine in restaurants. “Dietitians of Canada agrees that consumers should have easy access to complete nutrition information, as well as education to help them put this information into context,” Ives said. “(But) I can’t stress enough that ongoing evaluation is needed to determine the most effective method of providing nutritional information to consumers.” The B.C. and Manitoba governments have endorsed the program, and Whyte hopes other provinces join. The Ontario government is considering legislation that will require restaurants to post nutrition information on menus or menu boards, and Canadian cities are also contemplating their own restaurant nutrition guidelines. However, Whyte said CRFA members don’t want a “hodge podge” of nutrition information systems. The CRFA is lobbying provincial governments to support the program because restaurant chains want a standardized approach from Corner Brook to Comox. “We want a system that’s consistent across the country,” he said. “And the customer doesn’t want a different system (at) different restaurants.”
Q:
We are running out of options for our son. We have tried grounding him, taking away his cellphone, cutting back on his allowance and selling his Xbox. Nothing seems to work. He continues to sass his mom while blaming his younger sister for all that has gone wrong in
his life and carrying on like rules are not meant for him. We are worried about him, as are his teachers. He was always a teacher favourite when he was younger but by Grade 6, things started to deteriorate. Our son is in Grade 7 now and the principal says he may stay there for an extra year if he does not smarten up. What can we do to help him?
A:
Your problem is fairly common in families where the children are nearing adolescence. But punishing your son is not likely to help him settle down. Your son is operating from the impulsive part of his brain. Your punishment is directed toward his rational being so it
is not connecting with him. Your son’s impulsive thinking may be overwhelming his rational thinking. He is still driven by impulse and is likely oblivious to your consequences when he gets the urge to do something stupid. This is a phase. He will grow out of it as his rational thinking improves but he might need guidance with decisions to direct him away from harm. That is why you have curfews, regular routines and an expectation that everyone in his family will be treated with respect. Help your son strengthen his rational thinking by engaging him in problem solving exercises. Look at tasks around the farm like
fixing machinery or nurturing crops. Remember, whatever issues you choose, the goal is to encourage your son to practise rational thinking, not necessarily to agree with what you think would be a reasonable resolution to the problem. Problem solving means clarifying issues, collecting information, checking out various options and choosing a strategy. This will speed up his way out from impulsive control and leave him better prepared to face the challenges waiting for him. Jacklin Andrews is a family counsellor from Saskatchewan. Contact: jandrews@ producer.com.
WHAT MATTERS MOST?
Keller Farms is the largest irrigated farm in Canada. Globally, our products feed millions; locally, our business helps employ thousands. Syngenta is a huge part of my operation. The research they do around the world helps us to keep growing here. Mark Keller, owner/farmer, Keller & Sons Farming Ltd., Carberry, MB
Visit SyngentaFarm.ca or contact our Customer Resource Centre at 1-87-SYNGENTA (1-877-964-3682). Always read and follow label directions. The Syngenta logo is a registered trademark of a Syngenta Group Company. © 2014 Syngenta.
FARM LIVING HOW TO PREVENT WASTE
• Preserve single jar batches while food is fresh. • Buy what you need each day on the way home from work when you know what you feel like eating.
• Find a farm or pet store that will feed wilted produce to animals. • Make “refrigerator” soup once a week.
Waste not, want not, food for thought TEAM RESOURCES
• Don’t have an overstocked refrigerator. More food is wasted when the refrigerator is messy. • Store food properly. • Make a menu plan for the week and shop just for it.
SARAH GALVIN, BSHEc
• Become a leftover master. • Practice “first in, first out” in the refrigerator, freezer and cold room. • Keep a log of what is thrown out, and stop buying so much of it. • Over-buying often happens when packages are too large or there is a big sale. Buy what you need. FILE PHOTO
23
FOOD WASTE | PREVENTION
Friends offered these suggestions on how to prevent food waste • If I over-purchase or over-cook, excess food is shared with neighbours.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
T
he statistics on food waste are staggering. We like to blame transportation, overproduction, processing and packaging but 51 percent of all food waste in Canada is in the home, according to Statistics Canada. Wasting food also wastes resources,
including the water used to produce and transport the food. Providing better information on food care and storage is one solution, but other causes of food waste include over-purchasing and poor use of leftovers. Canada requires food with a shelf life of 90 days or less to be labelled with a best before date. The producer or manufacturer assumes a certain level of care by the consumer in selecting this date. Many people discard food when the best before date has passed, but it may not be necessary. Best before dates are not for food safety but for peak quality. Dairy products may be consumed safely if unspoiled. Trim mould from
cheese. The remainder of the block is completely safe for consumption. Eggs are safe to eat even if stale, but do not eat rotten eggs. Cereals and bread products may be eaten until they are mouldy or rancid or have an unpleasant flavour. Stale bread can be made into croutons. Trim fruit and vegetables to remove spoiled parts. Many fresh fruits and vegetables may be cooked to prolong their life. For example, wilted fresh raspberries plump up when cooked in a thin sugar syrup. They then make a nice dessert or may be frozen. Prolong the freshness of greens by wrapping in damp tea towels and placing in plastic bags. Herbs may be kept in a bag with a damp paper towel to prolong freshness. Most herbs can be chopped and frozen for later use. Soft vegetables can still be used in smoothies. Check the temperature of the refrigerator. The proper temperature is 4 C. Check the door seals by trying to pass a piece of paper through while it is closed. The freezer should be at -18 C. Proper storage of root vegetables, including onions, garlic, ginger root, carrots and potatoes, is in a cold room or root cellar rather than the refrigerator. This also applies to winter squashes. Use it all. Don’t peel cucumbers and potatoes. Steam broccoli stems along with the florets. Save mushroom stems for soup. Keep a bag in the freezer to collect vegetable trimmings for making stock. Less cooked food will be discarded if proper mealtime portions are cooked. Freeze leftovers in individual servings. Large bottles of condiments and salad dressings are not a good buy if not used quickly enough. Make a simple vinaigrette dressing from scratch rather than buying it. Opened meat should be stored in a closed container in the refrigerator. It cannot be frozen again after defrosting until cooked in a recipe. When you purchase meat, take note if it has been previously frozen. If you buy a large package of meat that won’t be used right away, repackage it into smaller bags and freeze. Composting is a last resort. Composting returns the nutrients to the soil and keeps waste out of the landfill or garbage dump. Food does not compost in a landfill. Light and air are required for composting, and there are neither in a landfill. The plan for not wasting food will be different in every household. Do what works for your family. Awareness of the food that is wasted will help plan a strategy. Don’t forget to teach your children and grandchildren that wasting food is inappropriate. Throwing food away has become more commonplace. Those of you who remember the Second World War know about the stigma of throwing away food and the scarcity of food in our own country. We won’t feed all the starving people of the world by not wasting our food, but we will develop a healthy respect for the value of food in our homes and on our planet. 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.
24
FARM LIVING
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
LOOKING BACK | CENTENARIAN
Farming, dancing sustain Borden man for a century Seeing the bright side | Pioneer farmer wasn’t one to lose his temper BY KAREN MORRISON SASKATOON NEWSROOM
John Newbold reminisces with his niece, Mary Jane Newbold, about the early days. The centenarian says farming is a good life and he still enjoys having the sun shining on his face in the morning. | KAREN MORRISON PHOTO
BORDEN, Sask. — At the age of 18, John Newbold travelled alone by train to market the family’s cattle with his spending money pinned to the inside of his clothes for safekeeping. The money was intended for a hotel room for the night, but instead he
chose to take in a live show and sleep in the caboose. It’s just one of many tales from John’s 100 years of life operating a farm in central Saskatchewan. He also once rounded up 300 pound pigs after they escaped from his truck while en route to Saskatoon from his Borden farm. His niece, Mary Jane Newbold, said
TM
...serving farmers since 1984 “In the four years I have been using PowerRich’s balanced nutrient packages I have found my yields have been excellent and the advantage of handling half the volume of fertilizer has greatly increased efficiency at seeding time.” Barry Webster Imperial, SK
5
¢/lb
EARLY DELIVERY AND PAYMENT REBATE ON NOW!
1.800.663.4769 Phone: (204) 786-5736 • Fax: (204) 783-9740
www.powerrich.com Member of Agriculture Canada Quality Assurance Program
he chased all seven of them, tackling and wrestling each one back into the truck box, all without injury. “Must have been quite a funny sight,” she said. Just a decade ago, Mary Jane recalled seeing John sprinting across the yard to move the truck forward to avoid grain spilling out the top. John related another incident when his brother, Ted, was driving the tractor and the wheels fell off, causing the tires to roll into the discer being pulled behind. The tractor came to rest on the axle, tilting the cab so badly it was difficult to get out. “We sure laughed about it,” said John. Another chuckle came for John and a group of men while watching his brother-in-law, Colin Foley, drive through three fences before coming to a stop after his truck brakes gave out. Mary Jane said John kept good humour and an even temper through such ups and downs in farming. “He was cool as a cucumber,” she said. “I’ve never seen him mad in my 57 years. “He is a gentleman and always thought a handshake was a man’s word, and he’s been royally ripped off on that a few times.” Family and friends keep close tabs on John, who continues to live in the 1960s-era house he built in Borden with his late wife, Lillian. The Newbold family gathers each spring and fall to seed and harvest wheat and oats on their 1,100 acre farm. The annual work bees follow a tradition set by John and his siblings. The families park their RVs in John’s yard, visiting, eating meals together and squeezing in some dancing, a favourite pastime of John’s. “They did it because they loved to do it,” said Mary Jane. “We come because our fathers did it.” Mary Jane said John and Lillian did not have children, but they taught their nieces and nephews about farming, running equipment and how to inspect grain. Wheat remains John’s favourite crop to grow. “It can be straight combined and it holds its grain well and doesn’t shell out,” he said. Borden has been home for all of John’s 100 years. He was one of six children, including Earl, Ruth, Olive, Ted and Don, born to Abraham and Florence Newbold. They had emigrated from England in 1913 seeking free homesteads offered by the Canadian government. John married Lillian in 1937, “a terrible dry year.” He rented land in 1942 and harvested a bumper oat crop, so the next year he bought a half section for $4,000 and started producing grain and cattle, which numbered as many as 300 head at one time. All but $1,000 was paid in cash, with the remainder paid the next crop year.
FARM LIVING
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
25
NUTRITION | HEALTHY LIFESTYLE
Is vegetarian diet OK?
He is a gentleman and always thought a handshake was a man’s word, and he’s been royally ripped off on that a few times.
HEALTH CLINIC
MARY JANE NEWBOLD NIECE
“He’s a man that likes to get things done,” said Mary Jane. John added quarter sections to the farm operation through the years and used summer fallow in his rotations. Herefords were his preferred breed. “They have a thick hide and can take the cold weather better than other animals seem to be able to.” He said cattle made up the shortfall when crops were poor, citing one incident where hail damaged all but 10 percent of his uninsured crop. “I had cattle to sell so I didn’t get taken down to the ground,” said John. John also dabbled in trucking grain and raising mink. He once shipped pelts to New York hoping for a better price. John found the price was lower than the $7.50 that was offered in Saskatoon, so he had them shipped back. The Newbold brothers established many businesses in Borden through the years, including Abraham’s butcher shop, Don’s restaurant, Earl’s hotel and Ted’s butcher shop. Looking back, John is glad he got to farm. “It’s nice to get out there in the fields in the morning when the sun is shining. It’s a good life, really.”
CLARE ROWSON, MD
John Newbold, driving a 1944 John Deere tractor, has weathered good years and bad while farming near Borden, Sask. | NEWBOLD FAMILY PHOTOS
Q:
One of my neighbours is a vegetarian, and we sometimes have discussions about which is the healthier lifestyle: vegetarianism or eating some meat in the diet. Do you think it is healthier to be a vegetarian?
A:
Brothers Don, left, Ted and John, with brother-in-law Colin Foley, gather each year at seeding and harvest.
Vegetarians can get all the important nutrients they need to stay healthy if they also consume milk and eggs. Key minerals such as iron, zinc and calcium are found in eggs, cereals, beans, peas and green vegetables. Drinking a glass of orange juice each day helps a person absorb these minerals and provides vitamin C. Eating an orange is healthier because a glass of juice contains the equivalent of 12 teaspoons of sugar. Vitamins B-2 and B-12 can be found in dairy products such as milk, cheese and yogurt. Vegans, who do not consume any type of animal product, including milk and eggs, may need to take daily vitamin and mineral supplements.
They are most likely to be lacking in Vitamin B-12, found mostly in meat. Low levels of this vitamin can lead to depression and pernicious anemia. Vegetarian diets are lower in saturated fats, cholesterol and animal protein, and higher in fibre and folate than meat inclusive diets. They tend to have reduced risks for obesity, heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes mellitus, osteoporosis and possibly some forms of cancer. In North America, the average vegetarian does tend to live longer than the non-vegetarian. This may be partly because of lifestyle, which for vegetarians usually includes not smoking, having a lower body weight and exercising regularly. I do not think I have ever met an obese vegetarian. People who choose this way of life are also often concerned with social issues, such as animal well-being, and are active in their communities. I know several who are avid GMO protesters and also organic farmers. Whether the latter are healthier or not is open for debate. On the other hand, it is possible to be a vegetarian and eat lots of ice cream, high fat cheese, french fries, cookies and cakes, less healthy options. Clare Rowson is a retired medical doctor in Belleville, Ont. Contact: health@producer.com.
CHOSEN #1 2014 SUV OF THE YEAR The 2014 SUBARU FORESTER IS RANKED AS THE TOP-SCORING SMALL SUV BY CONSUMER REPORTS and The newly designed Forester earned a remarkable 88 points out of a possible 100. This score is 11 points higher than a Honda CRV, 13 points higher than Toyota Rav4 and 14 points higher than Mazda CX5.
The Subaru Forester, the logical choice. It’s not hard to see why. With more cargo space, better fuel efficiency and Subaru’s symmetrical fulltime AWD, you’ll be ready for any adventure. Combine that with X-MODE*, a newly developed system that helps you navigate the most brutal terrain, and you’ve got an SUV unlike any other.
25,295
MSRP $ FROM
*
subaru.ca CONSUMER REPORTS TOP SCORE FOR PREDICTED RELIABILITY
JUST ARRIVED
46 MPG, 2014 IIHS + TOP SAFETY AWARD
MANY MORE UNITS IN STOCK... OPEN 24 HOURS AT WWW.SUBARUOFSASKATOON.CA ELITE AUTOMOTIVE GROUP INC. O/A
Open 24 Hours @
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
26
FARM LIVING
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
ON THE FARM | COMMUNITY SPIRIT
Cattle farm takes holistic approach Striving for sustainability | What’s good for the farm is good for the environment and wildlife, says producer BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
Cameron Hodgins checks on his organic cow-calf beef herd as it winter grazes on the farm near Lenore, Man. | ED WHITE PHOTO
Breaking the yield barrier NEW
Pasteur
GENERAL PURPOSE WHEAT
Aim higher ✔ top-yielding General Purpose variety ✔ very late, but huge yield potential
✔ low DON accumulation ✔ exceptionally strong straw
Genes that fit your farm. 800-665-7333 www.secan.com ®
Developed by Wiersum Plant Breeding, The Netherlands. Genes that fit your farm® is a registered trademark of SeCan.
LENORE, Man. — The Hodgins’ life exists within a geographically small circle, revolving around the family’s modest beef cattle operation near the Manitoba-Saskatchewan border. However, sometimes it revolves pretty fast. “It gets challenging when both Cameron and I have off-the-farm jobs, then you come home and there’s busy farm things too,” said Lisa, a schoolteacher now on maternity leave with six-month-old Chase. “It’s important to have quality family time, even if that’s us all checking on the cows together.” Lisa and Cameron farm closely with Cameron’s parents, who live just half a mile down the road in this bushy, wetland-rich part of Manitoba. They operate a 50-pair organic cow-calf beef herd and custom graze 500 yearlings. Cameron works off the farm four days per week, commuting to Brandon to work as a firefighter. It’s a busy life, made busier by the high management demanded by the farming system Cameron and his father operate. Producing organic beef is more time-consuming than producing conventional beef and requires more intensive management of pastures and hay fields. “Staying small can be a benefit … but you have to be able to generate a profit,” said Cameron in his comfortable kitchen as Chase cackled in the other room while playing with his mother. Carrie, their shy three-yearold daughter, is hiding in her bedroom while a stranger visits. Cameron and his father embraced holistic beef production after learning about the approach at meetings organized by the local grazing club. Speakers described what it would take to operate a holistic beef cattle operation, and the Hodgins family thought they could do it. They still meet with club members to discuss innovative ideas. “It gets you thinking, will it work here? Could that be the cog for that wheel to make it finally turn,” said Cameron. The Hodgins have experimented with a wide variety of pasture plants, including radishes and turnips, as well as seeding barley and clover together and growing forages such as cicer milk vetch for bale grazing. The cattle are walked through a rotational grazing system, which requires lots of work but creates high grass production on the pastures. Some of the speakers Cameron listened to were supported by grants from Ducks Unlimited, as was some of the equipment the Hodgins family received to turn some of their worked fields into pastures and protect their sloughs. Cameron didn’t embrace a grassbased system just to help the ducks and geese, but he sees protecting wildlife habitat as part of developing
a healthy, productive farm. “By making the soils healthier, we’re making our animals healthier, and a byproduct of that is seeing more wildlife,” said Cameron. “If you went and tilled all that, it would change the diversity a lot.” A particular delight for the family is to take Cameron’s off-farm siblings to see eagles nesting in the bush on part of their land. And it was an exciting day when moose came through a few months ago. Lisa loves being on this farm, which is near the one she grew up on near McAuley, Man., on the Saskatchewan border. She didn’t plan to stay near home, but felt a calling after graduation from university south of the border. “I said, ‘no, I’m too much of a home person. I want to be closer to family and Cameron. I just want to be closer.’ ” She and Cameron lived in Virden and Brandon but jumped at the chance to move into a house down the road from Cameron’s parents. “When I was a teenager, I was more into sports and being away, instead of helping out (around the farm),” said Lisa. But when she and Cameron were a few years out of high school, “we realized we were on the same page. We wanted to start a family and we both wanted to raise our family in a small community.” Lisa teaches at nearby Oak Lake Community School, which connects her tightly to her neighbours. “I can go to the rink and see the kids playing, or see them at the fair. In the city, you might not run into your students out there,” said Lisa. “It’s nice to grow up in a small town, live in a small town and teach in a small town. You can relate to what’s going on.” So even though Cameron and Lisa have busy lives with off-farm jobs, a demanding farm and two active children, they seem relaxed and confident as they look forward. Cameron said he feels more confident about the sustainability of the farm when he sees more wildlife also calling it home. “We can see our pastures improving, and that should be good for not just cattle but wildlife, too,” said Cameron.
Carrie, left, Chase and Lisa visit the sheep. | HODGINS FAMILY PHOTO
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
“Too many things slow me down. I need to cover
more acres.”
We hear you.
Visit GoTechTour.ca to see how we’re redefining herbicide performance.
Growers in Western Canada asked us to “make spraying less complicated.” So, our R&D teams are focused on finding solutions. Enter to WIN an LED Sprayer Nozzle Light Kit at GoTechTour.ca.
® TM
Trademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow. 0114-22297-B_35736-B WP
27
28
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
SLIM PICKIN’S
AGRONOMY | PUSHING THE ENVELOPE
Problems loom from improper agronomy Crop diseases, pests | Herbicide resistance is also a threat of poor agronomic practices BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
A covey of grey partridges forage for spilled grain and seeds at the edge of a gravel road near Craik, Sask. | MICKEY WATKINS PHOTO.
ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, Man. — Dangerous cropland problems are coming home to roost after years of prairie farmers pushing rotations and overusing key tools, agronomy experts said during St. Jean Farm Days. Clubroot, blackleg, multiple herbi-
IF THERE’S A MORE ADVANCED PULSE FUNGICIDE OUT THERE, ONLY THE GOVERNMENT KNOWS ABOUT IT.
It’s the pulse fungicide “they” don’t want you to know about. New Priaxor® DS fungicide is incredibly advanced chemistry that packs an impressive range of benefits. It provides more consistent, broad-spectrum disease control through its multiple modes of action, and it delivers the unique benefits* of AgCelence®. In short, that means greener leaves and stronger stems for higher yield potential**. Visit agsolutions.ca/priaxords to find out everything insiders already know. *AgCelence benefits refer to products that contain the active ingredient pyraclostrobin. **All comparisons are to untreated, unless otherwise stated.
Always read and follow label directions. AgSolutions is a registered trade-mark of BASF Corporation; and AgCelence, and PRIAXOR are registered trade-marks of BASF SE, all used with permission by BASF Canada Inc. PRIAXOR DS should be used in a preventative disease control program. © 2014 BASF Canada Inc.
cide resistant weeds and chemical resistant insects are all nibbling at the edges of Manitoba’s cropland productivity, threatening to become major management issues. “It’s likely in Manitoba now, and it’s something you are going to have to look out for,” Manitoba Agriculture farm production adviser Ingrid Kristjanson said about glyphosate and multiple herbicide resistant kochia. As well, multiple herbicide resistant giant ragweed and palmer amaranth are moving toward southern Manitoba, carried on rivers and streams and spread wide by floods. Other production specialists voiced the same note of caution about the threat of clubroot to canola fields, the danger of overusing neonicotinoids against insect pests and the host of problems created by pushing agronomic practices. Years of high returns for soybeans and canola have encouraged farmers to tighten their rotations to levels many advisers consider dangerous. Soybean-on-soybean and canolaon-canola rotations have occurred, and many farmers have employed two-year rotations for their biggest money-making crops. It has created a fertile ground for crop diseases and pests, which find homes in the roots, trash and soil that linger for more than a year after a crop has been harvested. Farmers have also relied heavily on glyphosate for pre-seeding, in-crop and post-harvest weed control, creating ideal conditions for glyphosate resistance to naturally develop. Farmers often use glyphosate on every field every year at least once, and sometimes numerous times. As well, farmers have sometimes used seed treatments and other tools to compensate for the risks they’re taking with tight rotations, allowing the treatments to begin to lose effectiveness by repeated exposure to diseases and pests. Dennis Lange of Manitoba Agriculture warned farmers that seed treatments aren’t silver bullets or bulletproof armour and won’t entirely make up for pushing rotations or taking other obvious risks. Experts also noted a risk that many farmers might be unaware of: using resistant crop varieties or control products when problems have not yet appeared. They said this can ruin the effectiveness of those controls and be counterproductive. Manitoba Agriculture oilseeds specialist Anastasia Kubinec said research has shown that resistant crop varieties can lose their clubrootfighting powers after being grown two or three times. “If you are not finding clubroot, you can stay with the canola variety that you have,” said Kubinec. Kristjanson said fighting multiple resistant weeds can demand a tool most farmers have little experience with these days: hand-and-glove. “It’s worth (hand) picking the straggler,” he said about lone weeds in a field surviving a chemical treatment.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
29
AGRONOMY | SOYBEANS
Sask. growers keen on soybeans despite little research VARIETY TRIAL RESULTS
BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Garry Hnatowich’s first piece of advice to Saskatchewan soybean growers is to take it slow, but he knows he will be ignored. Saskatchewan farmers do not dabble. Instead, they tend to do things in a big way. With soybeans, acres have gone from almost nothing in 2011 to an estimated 200,000 acres last year. “At that rate of growth, we could be under sizeable acres in a short period of time,” he told growers at CropSphere 2014. Hnatowich, a research agronomist with the Irrigation Crop Diversification Corp., has conducted soybean research since 1979, but most of his work was done outside the province. He said there are no experts on growing soybeans in Saskatchewan, and it would be wise if farmers waited until researchers had solid agronomic advice based on years of working with the crop. However, he knows that’s not going to happen, so he provided them with an educated guess based on his experience with the crop in other provinces and states and limited research he has conducted in Saskatchewan’s Lake Diefenbaker area. Hnatowich said variety selection is the most important decision a farmer can make. Growers need to plant the earliest maturing varieties they can find.
These trial results show corn varieties from breeding programs in southern Ontario and southern Manitoba. Growers are advised to choose varieties with the lowest corn heat units and days to maturity as possible. Heat ratings might not be accurate for Saskatchewan. Yield data is based on four to six years of trials and is compared to average yields from variety 23-10RY. There have been open falls for the last three trial years, resulting in higher than anticipated yields for some of the longer maturing varieties. yield % corn heat days to Variety type* of 23-10RY units maturity Sampsa RR TH 32004R2Y 24-10RY 004R21 NSC Reston RR2Y 900Y61 900Y71 23-10RY Pekko R2
RR2 RR2 RR2 RR2 RR2 RR1 RR1 RR2 RR2
* RR1 = Roundup Ready type 1
+18 +14 +14 +14 +9 +5 +1 same -1
2,425 2,425 2,425 2,425 2,325 2,425 2,450 2,325 2,325
127 126 129 130 124 127 128 122 121
RR2 = Roundup Ready type 2
Source: Irrigation Crop Diversification Corp. | MICHELLE HOULDEN GRAPHIC
“The bottom line is only in one year out of the last 10 or so did a later maturing variety outperform the earliest maturing varieties that we have acquired,” he said. Growers should use the Saskatchewan Agriculture website to find our what the average corn heat units are in their area and then find a variety suited to that rating. The soybean yield ratings in the guide published by the Canada-Saskatchewan Irrigation Diversification Centre can differ from those con-
tained in Saskatchewan Agriculture’s guide. Hnatowich said his trials are conducted under dry land and irrigated conditions. Monsanto’s Roundup Ready 2 soybeans have quickly taken over a big chunk of the market. The company claims the new trait delivers more pods per plant and more seeds per pod. “I was a little skeptical. I thought maybe this was a marketing gimmick,” said Hnatowich. “It’s not. We’re finding at least a 10 percent yield advantage over the
GARRY HNATOWICH AGRONOMIST
original Roundup Ready material.” He said there are definitely more pods per plant, but he hasn’t seen more seeds per pod. Soybeans are a long season crop that typically takes about 125 days to grow, but it should not be planted until the soil temperature is 10 C, which in the Outlook, Sask., area is around May 15. “If there is one thing to remember on this talk, this is it,” he said. “Do not rush it because you’re not going to be doing yourselves any favour.” Soybeans should be handled gently because it is a fragile crop. Farmers should consider using elevation rather than augering. Seed treatments should be used, and seeding depth is critical. Soybeans should be planted 19 to 38 millimetres into the soil. The seeding rate should be 180,000 plants per acre for solid seeded fields and 160,000 per acre for row cropping. Nitrogen inoculation is critical because there are no native species of the bacteria required for nitrogen fixation in Saskatchewan’s soil. Some Manitoba growers are double inocu-
Fertilizer advice made to fit
Agronomy
1st
from CPS
Get the most out of your fertilizer through better agronomic advice from CPS. Our agronomic advisors are here to offer you expert recommendations on your fertilizer needs based on what’s best for your crop. We have the experience and resources to meet the diverse needs of prairie farmers like you. cpsagu.ca CROP PRODUCTION SERVICES and Design is a registered trademarks of Crop Production Services Inc.
lating their soybean crops. Fifty percent of a soybean’s nitrogen requirements come from fixation and the rest is obtained from the soil. Soybeans are sensitive to phosphorus, so it should be placed away from the seed if possible and limited to 15 lb. per acre. It can be bumped up as high as 25 lb. if soil moisture is good. The crop is an effective scavenger of phosphorus. The crop is a poor weed competitor until the canopy is formed, but most varieties are Roundup Ready so weed control is straightforward. Soybeans are susceptible to root rots, pythium, rhizoctonia and fusarium, which is why seed treatments are a must. Wireworms, cutworms and grasshoppers are the only insects to worry about. The crop is ready for harvest when 95 percent of the pods have a buckskin brown colour. It is best to allow the crop to dry down to 14 percent moisture before combining. “It’s a beautiful crop to combine. It’s relatively shatter-proof.” A flex header is a must and an air assist reel is a bonus. Splits and cracks are not major problems. Buyers can allow up to 15 percent splits and five percent green seed. Hnatowich said producers in Manitoba and the United States suggest that growing back-to-back soybean crops doesn’t hurt yields. Soybeans don’t like heavy trash from the previous crop.
30
NEWS
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
then th now n &n
THERE IS A GLORIOUS STORY, truth or fiction, that has been handed down through generations of farmers’ union members about a former federal agriculture minister. | BY BARRY WILSON, OTTAWA BUREAU
THE MAN WHO MADE AGRICULTURE A KEY FEDERAL PORTFOLIO
The ‘relentless Liberal’ who became agriculture minister
H Jimmy Gardiner’s take-no-prisoners style didn’t earn him the appreciation of then-prime minister William Lyon Mackenzie King. | FILE PHOTO
e is the reigning king of tenure in the agriculture ministry: 22 years from 1935 to 1957. Jimmy Gardiner, a member of the Canadian Agricultural Hall of Fame, is credited by historians as an important architect of modern federal agriculture policy and, in a 1997 Agriculture Canada booklet on agriculture ministers, for having expanded the department’s authority. All of that aside, his legacy remains contentious as the enduring story illustrates:
In the 1950s, Manitoba Farmers’ Union president Jake Schultz was watching television on his Interlake farm, TV being a newfangled communications medium at the time, and Gardiner appeared on screen to extol the virtues of Liberal policy for farmers. Schultz, later briefly a CCF MP in 1957-58 and father-in-law of future premier and governor general Ed Schreyer, was so outraged he grabbed his rifle and blew out his television screen. In Saskatchewan, farmers’ union president Joe Phelps heard about it and organized a fundraiser among
members to buy Schultz a new TV. Such was the power of Gardiner to inflame opinion. Even in his day and within his own government, this Saskatchewan farmer-politician was divisive. Prime minister William Lyon Mackenzie King, exasperated by Gardiner’s belligerence in cabinet in defence of his farm policy demands and his take-no-prisoners style, wrote in his diary that the agriculture minister’s defects included going in the “Hitler direction.” CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
»
Breakthrough in plant health. The Stress Shield® component of Raxil® PRO Shield provides superior emergence, increased vigour and a healthier plant that’s better able to withstand unforeseen seasonal stresses. This NEW formulation combines three different fungicide actives, including NEW prothioconazole, for complete systemic and contact protection from the most serious seed- and soil-borne diseases. To learn more about Raxil PRO Shield, visit BayerCropScience.ca/Raxil
BayerCropScience.ca/Raxil or 1 888-283-6847 or contact your Bayer CropScience representative. Always read and follow the label directions. Raxil® and Stress Shield® are registered trademarks of the Bayer Group. Bayer CropScience is a member of CropLife Canada.
C-55-01/14-10150465-E
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
31
EDITORIAL | APRIL 24, 1941
My sense is he was a great believer in co-operation and the idea of consulting with the pools or farmers was a natural political disposition.
NO SUGAR ON PILL
DAVID SMITH
EDITORIAL
UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEWAN
Yet this hyper-partisan Liberal, former Saskatchewan premier and Lemberg, Sask., farmer, has also been lauded for turning the federal agriculture department into one of the key economic portfolios in Ottawa during the Second World War. He fought to get wheat marketing policy out of trade and into agriculture, improve the clout of agriculture within the government and create income policies for farmers. “His greatest achievements were in the federal field, when as the minister of agriculture for 22 years, he promoted and expanded the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration, introduced the Prairie Farm Assistance Act and granted aid toward the reclamation of low-lying lands in the Maritimes,” said the citation when Gardiner was inducted into the Canadian Agricultural Hall of Fame in 1962. Norman Ward and David Smith from the University of Saskatchewan wrote in their 1990 biography of Gardiner, Relentless Liberal, that he was a successful agriculture minister. “He had arrived in the capital determined to raise agriculture into the front rank of portfolios from what he judged to be its previous adjunct, support role for the provinces,” they wrote. “And he succeeded.” During the war, he used belligerence, cabinet bullying and hard work to make agriculture’s effort to feed Britain, allies and the troops one of Canada’s key Canadian contributions. However, in 1941, it would have been difficult to convince The Western Producer and its Saskatchewan Wheat Pool owner that Gardiner was on the farmer’s side. Prices were dropping that year, following a record wheat crop of 514 million bushels in 1940 and the sudden closing of the European market after Germany’s capture of most of the continent. The surplus piled up, farm incomes tanked and Gardiner worked feverishly behind the scenes in Ottawa to find a way to compensate farmers. He was a free marketer who was quickly converting into an interventionist to save the prairie farm industry, say Ward and Smith. Yet he had no instant answers, and in a radio address, according to an outraged Western Producer editorial, he said: “There is no use sugaring the pill by trying to convince you we are trying to do something for you.” The newspaper demanded Gardiner be moved to another portfolio because he had been ignoring farmer interests since 1935. A principle for the minister, said the front page editorial in the paper’s
April 24, 1941, edition, was that farmers should be ignored. “First amongst these (principles) was the determination that organized farmers as such must be excluded from the formation or direction of agricultural policy,” it said, citing dissolution of the advisory committee to the then-voluntary Canadian Wheat Board. In fact, within government Gardiner was fighting for unprecedented help to deal with the 1941 wheat market meltdown. The end result was an early version of the controversial Lower Inventories for Tomorrow (LIFT) program introduced by CWB minister Otto Lang almost 20 years later to deal with another glutted wheat market. In the end, the result for Gardiner was unprecedented government intervention: farmers were limited in their deliveries through quotas, paid to store grain on the farm for the first time and subsidized to grow coarse grain rather than wheat. As well, Ottawa implemented a government price support system and, for the first time, a two-price wheat system that forced millers in Canada to pay more. And there were farm income supports. Ward and Smith said the minister consulted widely with the pools and the Canadian Federation of Agriculture, and over much opposition within the government, ensured a stable wheat sector income for the year. “My sense is he was a great believer in co-operation and the idea of consulting with the pools or farmers was a natural political disposition,” Smith said in a recent interview. Gardiner also morphed from being an anti-CWB free trader in the 1930s to a supporter of the 1943 decision to make the wheat board’s marketing desk mandatory. Through a political career that spanned more than 40 years, he gained enemies and critics but also admirers. In 1959, the University of Saskatchewan gave Gardiner an honorary degree with the citation: “While he will best be remembered in Canada as a champion of the farmer’s cause, throughout the western world he will be remembered as the man who made an outstanding contribution to the Allied victory in the Second World War through his efficient and energetic direction of the mobilization of the food resources of Canada.” But these days, in Canada or the western world, the longest serving Canadian agriculture minister who fought to transform federal responsibility for agriculture policy is barely remembered.
In an address over the radio last week, Hon. James G. Gardiner, Federal Minister of Agriculture, said: “There is no use sugaring the pill by trying to convince you we are trying to do something for you.” That is a commendable attitude. Plain, honest, frank speaking is always best and never better than when times are blackest. We need, therefore, make no apology for following the minister’s example. Since he took over the portfolio of Agriculture in 1935, Mr. Gardiner has adhered fairly consistently to one or two principles. First amongst these was the determination that organized farmers as such must be excluded from the formation or direction of agricultural policy. The advisory committee to the Wheat Board, which contained strong producer representation was, therefore, immediately dissolved. Next the Wheat Board itself, established by his predecessors and which was built substantially, though not wholly, to the specifications submitted by the western Wheat Pools, was scuttled.
Barley on tap for 2014 NEW
CDC Kindersley ✔ 6% higher yield than AC Metcalfe ✔ earlier maturity than AC Metcalfe ✔ strong straw
Genes that fit your farm. 866-665-7333 www.secan.com ®
IN THE FEB. 6 ISSUE:
Then & Now: Was life really better in the good old days? Cost of living calculations can be a complicated business. See the rest of this series online at www.producer.com.
*Compared to AC Metcalfe in Coop Registration Trials Developed by Crop Development Centre, University of Saskatchewan Genes that fit your farm® is a registered trademark of SeCan.
32
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
FENCES ARE MADE FOR JUMPING
ALBERTA FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURE | POLICY MEETING
Farm group tackles transfer of livestock ownership issue Alberta Federation of Agriculture to look at how ownership contracts can be improved BY DAN YATES SASKATOON NEWSROOM
A white-tailed deer jumps a fence while other members of the herd wait their turn in a field southwest of High River, Alta. | MIKE STURK PHOTO
BANFF, Alta. — The Alberta Federation of Agriculture will be taking a closer look at contracts for livestock
Always read and follow label directions. INFERNO and the INFERNO DUO logo are trademarks of Arysta LifeScience North America, LLC. Arysta LifeScience and the Arysta LifeScience logo are registered trademarks of Arysta LifeScience Corporation. All other products mentioned herein are trademarks of their respective companies. ©2014 Arysta LifeScience North America, LLC. INF-020
Tough broadleaves and flushing grassy weeds have met their match. No burndown product is more ruthless against problem weeds in spring wheat than new INFERNO™ DUO. Two active ingredients working together with glyphosate get hard-to-kill weeds like dandelion, hawk’s beard, foxtail barley and Roundup Ready® canola, while giving you longer lasting residual control of grassy weeds like green foxtail and up to two weeks for wild oats. INFERNO DUO. It takes burndown to the next level.
BRING THIS AD TO LIFE! HOLD YOUR TABLET / MOBILE DEVICE OVER THIS AD AND WATCH INFERNO DUO DESTROY WEEDS LIVE! DOWNLOAD THE APP AT infernoduoalive.ca
sales in Alberta. The issue of ownership, and when precisely it’s transferred, was raised Jan. 21 at the organization’s annual general meeting. “We sent down some slaughter heifers. They were delivered to a slaughter facility on Sunday and were slaughtered on Monday, when the plant had taken possession of them,” said Grace MacGregor, who recounted an alleged bad deal with an Alberta meat packer. “During the slaughter process, one of the heifers went down in the killing chute — this was after their first inspection — and was taken out of the line and was disposed of separately.” MacGregor, who operates a grain farm, cow-calf operation and small feedlot with her husband near Hughenden, said she was charged a disposal fee by the company, which she asked not be mentioned by name. “It was clear to me that the plant owned these animals but we were not paid for that animal.” MacGregor introduced a resolution at the meeting, which was passed, that asked the federation to talk with livestock producer groups and governments to determine if others have had similar problems. The resolution also asked the federation to explore how the industry may pursue a standardized contract that would more clearly outline terms and conditions. “What it does is it emphasizes the disparity between a multinational corporation and the lack of power of the individual producer,” said MacGregor. The meeting was the federation’s first under its new name, which was changed from Wild Rose Agricultural Producers earlier this year. Among the motions passed Jan 21 was one that eliminated “non-relevant resolutions” from the organization’s policy manual, including three notes regarding CWB. “A lot of these apply to the old CWB and the old situation,” said president Lynn Jacobson. “They didn’t apply to the situation as it is now and we have policies on the books to apply to the new situation and what we’re urging the government to do,” One resolution being removed states: “We support the goal to create a commercial, accountable and suitable grain handling and transportation system for the future. We also believe that the CWB must be a key participant in such a system.” Added Jacobson: “We have another policy back in there saying that the CWB should be a viable player within the system. They don’t have to be the key individual anymore because basically they aren’t … but we want them to be a viable organization within this whole thing. The government made some promises when they changed the CWB that we think they should live up to. That’s what we are basing our policy on now.”
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
33
MANITOBA SUNFLOWERS | PRICE OUTLOOK
Confection sunflowers promise profits this year BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
Production contracts above 30 cents per pound should make confection sunflowers one of Manitoba’s most profitable crops this year. Confecs were priced 10 cents higher than black oil sunflowers in the third week of January, said Mike Durand, sales and purchasing manager with Nestibo Agra, a sunflower processor in Deloraine, Man. Old crop confectionary sunflowers were selling around 30 cents per lb. and old crop black oils were at 19 cents per lb. Contracts for new crop confecs were approximately 30 cents per lb. and black oils were 20 to 22 cents per lb. It is a significant price gap relative to historic variances, said Ben Friesen, commodity purchasing manager with Keystone Grain, a special crops processor in Winkler, Man. “Traditionally, we’ve never had more than a five cent difference,” Friesen told Manitoba Ag Days in Brandon. “Now we’re sitting at a solid 10 cents.” Manitoba farmers have taken notice of the price gap and want to grow confectionary sunflowers again, he added. “There are guys coming back into the sunflower growing market that haven’t grown sunflowers for five or six years,” Friesen said. “They’re looking at the crop chart…. At 32 cents (per lb.), confecs pencil out really well.” Sunflower production in the United States was down 27 percent last year from 2012, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. It was the smallest harvest since 1989. An extremely wet spring in North Dakota, which dominates U.S. production, prevented growers from seeding sunflowers last year. Statistics Canada reported that Manitoba growers planted 70,000 acres of sunflowers in 2013, down from 100,000 in 2012. The lack of acres has created a shortfall of confectionary sunflowers and driven up prices, Friesen said. “We’re going to run out of them this year. By the time the new crop comes around, the confecs will be all cleaned up.” Keystone had little trouble filling its acreage quota for confecs in 2014, when it offered new crop contracts at 32 cents per lb. “Our confection contracts are already filled up,” Friesen said. “We’re already maxed out on the confection contracts.” Argentina’s sunflower harvest, which takes place in late February and early March, will dictate confectionary prices for the rest of this year. “If Argentina has a huge crop, it’s really going to hit the sunflower market,” Friesen said. “If they have a crop, they don’t hold it. They blow it out. They don’t care about the prices. They’ll drop the world price.” Durand said a weakening market for canola and oilseeds this winter dragged down the price of black oil sunflowers,
which have become more popular with Manitoba growers. Manitoba farmers have historically planted more confec sunflowers than black oils, but price differentials between black oils and confecs were narrow in 2012 and 2013 and black oils were sometimes higher. Provincial acreage has been evenly split in recent years, but confecs are poised to reclaim their old status, Friesen said. “We’re going to go back to where confecs will be higher (in acreage).” Friesen expects Manitoba sunflower acreage to top 100,000 this year, which would be similar to 2012.
;OL 4VZHPJ *VTWHU` (SS YPNO[Z YLZLY]LK -\ZPVU PZ H [YHKLTHYR HUK 4PJYV,ZZLU[PHSZ PZ H YLNPZ[LYLK [YHKLTHYR VM ;OL 4VZHPJ *VTWHU` 4,:
Fewer acres boost price | Confection contracts with Keystone Grain already full
North Dakota sunflower growers planted fewer acres last year, which has created a shortfall and increased prices. | FILE PHOTO
What fertilizer are you using?
While every farmer dreams of amazing yields, not all realize the fertilizer they use is responsible for up to 60 percent of yield. So it makes sense to use the most advanced fertilizer available. Choose MicroEssentials®, with FusionTM technology. Every granule offers perfect distribution of nutrients for uniform coverage, and improved nutrient uptake. For more information, visit MicroEssentials.com, or speak with your local fertilizer retailer.
The next generation of fertilizer.
I N N O V AT I O N B Y T H E M O S A I C C O M P A N Y
34
NEWS
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
ALBERTA PESTS | FORECAST
Alberta pest maps warn of insect hot spots Scout fields regularly | Insect populations are expected to be similar to last year but environmental conditions can alter risk BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU
Scott Meer’s crystal ball shows that crop-eating insects aren’t going to disappear this year from Alberta fields. Alberta Agriculture’s Insect Pest Monitoring Network has released its 2014 insect forecast maps for the top Alberta pests. Meer, an insect specialist with the department, recently hosted a chat with producers on Twitter and released the latest maps.
Studies and insect traps conducted last year indicate that Alberta farmers need to be vigilant in scouting for pests this spring and summer.
Grasshoppers
Wheat midge The 2014 wheat midge forecast indicates a general decrease for midge risk in southern Alberta but a large increase for midge risk in the eastern Peace River region. Producers should pay attention to midge downgrading in their wheat samples and use this as an indication
FILE PHOTOS
of midge risk in their fields. Individual fields throughout Alberta may still have economic levels of midge, and farmers must assess risk.
This year’s grasshopper forecast map is based on adult grasshopper counts conducted in early August. The number of adults gives an indication of the number of eggs laid. Environmental factors will also have an impact. “My impression of the grasshopper forecast is that it is very similar to previous years.” The Peace River region, which struggled with grasshoppers last year, will continue to have problems .
Farmers are advised to monitor areas that have traditionally higher grasshopper populations. As well, grasshoppers tend to lay their eggs near areas of green growth in the fall that will provide potential food sources for emerging young the following spring. Keep an eye out along fence lines and roadsides. Bertha armyworm
Pencil it out – any way you want – the profit flows with Nexera canola. And for even healthier profits, EclipseTM III delivers the best broad-spectrum weed control for your high-yielding Roundup Ready® canola hybrids. Get bonus flexibility and value at your Nexera crusher or retailer. Or visit healthierprofits.ca.
Bertha armyworm was monitored last year through a series of pheromone-baited traps. Populations are normally kept in check by weather and natural enemies. Meers believes it is possible to see a complete collapse of the population in central Alberta this year.
Nexera RR Hybrids rank HIGHEST in grower satisfaction†.
Cabbage seedpod weevil The pest was first discovered infesting canola in southern Alberta in 1995 and it now covers the province. “We are now recommending careful scouting for CSPW in all counties south of and touching Highway 1 in Alberta,” said Meers. Canola producers in southern Alberta and southern portion of central Alberta will have to check crops as they come into flower, he warned. The earliest flowering crops are at the highest risk and should be monitored closely. Larval feeding can result in yield losses of 15 to 20 percent.
MAKE IT NEXERATM
AND MAKE MORE.
Pea leaf weevil Damage from this pest will likely be in similar areas as last year. “Pea leaf weevil damage was lower in 2013, but don’t let that fool you,” Meers said. “A warm spring in 2014 would change all that.” Low levels of damage were found in central Alberta, but serious risk is unlikely. Moisture in August appears to be a significant predictor of population changes. Wheat stem sawfly The forecast is based on 71 fields in 17 municipalities in southeastern Alberta. The most significant populations were in Forty Mile County. “Wheat stem numbers are down, but there are still several areas with a population for a rebound if dry weather returns,” said Meers. †
According to Canola Evaluation and Intentions, Canada, 2012, Stratus Agri-Marketing, Inc.
TM Trademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow. ® All other products are trademarks of their respective companies. 0114-36473_36511 WP
To see Alberta Agriculture insect forecast maps visit http://bit.ly/ 1f7nmeT
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
35
CROP DISEASES | ALBERTA OUTLOOK
Control measures urged to keep diseases from spreading BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
LETHBRIDGE — Bumper crops made headlines across the Prairies last year, but plant diseases also reared their smutty heads. “The single most important factor that affects the development of infectious diseases is the weather,” said Ron Howard of the Alberta Crop Development Centre in Brooks, Alta. Mike Harding, a plant pathologist with Alberta Agriculture, warned that 2014 could be another bad year. “We have had three years in a row where we have had a significant reservoir of diseases,” he told the Irrigated Crop Production Update in Lethbridge Jan. 21. Harding said Alberta weather was variable last year. Some parts experienced the wettest growing season in 50 years while most of southern Alberta was near normal or moderately high for precipitation. “There were a lot of situational things going on, so not everyone had the same environment, even if they were living within 20 miles of each other,” he said. Climate change could increase disease severity or cause more warm weather infections to occur. Infected plants, equipment, containers that hold plants, agricultural machinery, insects or wind could introduce new troubles. “Soil moving on machinery is one
of the main ways we are getting fields infested with clubroot in canola,” Howard told the conference. Stripe rust, fusarium and Goss’s wilt of corn were diagnosed last year. Stripe rust on wheat and barley was found in several regions. The disease thrives in cool nights and can reduce yields by 70 percent if not controlled. Spore showers on the wind usually come from Washington, Oregon and California. It is spreading north and east on the Prairies into Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Alberta’s Peace River district. Fusarium likes warm, humid conditions. New strains are occurring that produce more toxins and may be even more infectious. “It was first found in Manitoba, but in the past two decades it has moved westward and is now established in southern Alberta,” Howard said. Last year was ideal for fusarium head blight and ergot, according to Canadian Grain Commission surveys. Southern Alberta crop districts had different strains of fusarium. It usually occurs in two to 10 percent of samples, but it was as high as 20 to 25 percent last year. The disease was also detected in central Alberta along the Highway 16 corridor. “It is not commonly found outside irrigated Alberta,” Harding said. “There is reason to believe that could be changing.” Northern Alberta saw a few con-
Ergot often starts in ditches so mowing grass is advised. | firmed cases last year, but it is rarely found in that region. Ergot cases spiked in Canadian western red spring wheat in 2012 and increased slightly last year in some isolated regions. It often starts in ditches, so farmers should mow down grass before it heads. “We don’t have any technology that we can buy and spray on them to reduce ergot,” Harding said. Goss’s wilt in corn was seen for the first time in Alberta last year. It was discovered in Manitoba in 2009 and has spread throughout the province. Last year it was found in five of 45 fields that were surveyed in Alberta. Canola producers continue to fight against clubroot and blackleg. New blackleg strains are challenging disease resistant varieties. A large provincial survey is underway to track it and discover what strains are present. Clubroot affects canola, mustard and other members of the cabbage family and has been found at varying levels in 24 Alberta counties. Some
FILE PHOTO
infested fields have been found in Saskatchewan and Manitoba. It was first seen in 12 fields in 2003 and was up to 1,500 positive fields in 2013. “There are probably significant fields that have not been detected,” Howard said. Verticillium wilt cannot be controlled with fungicides. It does well in the southern Alberta environment and could easily establish without variety resistance or chemicals to control it. Alberta pulses are seeing more blight, although it usually needs higher temperatures and more humidity to establish itself. Peas are susceptible to root rot. A 2013 survey looked at 150 fields in Alberta and found most had root rot of various types Aphanomyces root rot was seen in sugar beets, but no one is sure if it has crossed over to peas. “Some fields were literally hammered with root rot, and in other fields it wasn’t common,” Harding said.
Late blight occurs worldwide in potatoes, and outbreaks started in 2010-11 in Alberta. It started in garden tomatoes and has the potential to spread to commercial potato production through seed. “We are really aiming at the home gardeners and market gardeners to control their seeds,” Howard said. Cereal diseases were prevalent last year, said Harding, including barley scald, net blotch and tan spot and septoria and stripe rust on wheat. A disease survey in central Alberta found a 65 percent incidence of scald, ranging from mild to serious. The situation was probably similar in the south, said Harding. “They found net blotch in every barley field they visited.” There was a 25 percent incidence of barley spot splotch and about the same amount of stripe rust in winter wheat fields, he said. However, the incidence was low enough in many cases that it did not need to be sprayed with fungicide. As well, loose smut was found on barley and a variety of wheat leaf diseases such as septoria, tan spot and stagonospora. “These are the dominant pathogens we see on wheat. There were lots of examples in wheat fields where there was disease pressure,” Harding said. Sclerotinia is seen every year and is common on irrigated areas. Plant scientists thought it would be a lot worse, but it was not as serious as expected in canola and dry beans.
The most comprehensive seed lineup on the prairies is ...
Available at more than 260 CPS retail locations Throughout the prairies, nobody offers more seed varieties across more crops than Proven Seed. Nobody. And our powerful team of seed experts at Crop Production Services will work with you to help you choose the right agronomic seed solution for your farm. Contact your local CPS retail location today or visit cpsagu.ca.
Proven Seed® and The Power to Grow® are registered trademarks of Crop Production Services (Canada) Inc. CROP PRODUCTION SERVICES and Design is a registered trademarks of Crop Production Services Inc.
36
NEWS
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
DIVERSIFICATION | LINKING INFORMATION
Input companies embrace integrated agriculture Fingers in many pies | Companies that provide a product or service are keen on integrating information to diversify BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
Integrated agriculture will likely be one of the Top 10 buzzwords at North American farm conferences and workshops this year, but it will be nothing new for Jim Budzynski. Budzynski, managing partner of MacroGain Partners, an Indiana investment and consulting firm specializing in agri-food and energy, has been using the phrase for at least a year. In a presentation he gave at an ag innovation conference in St. Louis
last fall, Budzynski described integrated ag as a convergence of four distinct farm business sectors: crop protection, seeds and biotechnology, crop nutrition and equipmentprecision ag. He said farmers can improve crop yields, increase the efficiency of inputs and promote environmentally sustainable practices if they successfully combine those four sectors. “All four of these areas are kind of m o r p h i n g i nt o o n e p l at f o r m,” Budzynski said in a recent interview.
“For example, if Monsanto takes one of their varieties and (uses) a biological product that helps resist fungal pathogens, a biological that improves nutrient availability and site specific plant seed planting equipment… what business are they in? All of them…. They are building platforms across all these lines. At the end of the day, that is about getting efficient.” Monsanto announced Jan. 8 that it has developed a new technology service called Integrated Farming Systems. The company described it as a ser-
vice that will help “farmers get more from every acre by integrating expertise in seed science, field science, data analysis and precision equipment.” Monsanto said it will use integrated data and technology to provide customized agronomic solutions for a particular field. “The data driven, scientific technologies Monsanto is developing are things we’ve never had before,” Iowa farmer Jeff Frank said in a Monsanto news release. “As farmers, we have to take advantage of any opportunity we can to
What’s the
BIG HAIRY DEAL?
Dual inoculation for even bigger yields Supercharge your soybean crop for maximum yields, especially in new ground, with TagTeam® and Optimize®. Two products, one bin busting team. TagTeam promotes root hair growth, increasing sites for nodulation, and Optimize starts the nodulation process earlier. The result? Your soybean crop gets nitrogen earlier, for a longer period which ultimately drives yields. And that’s the big hairy deal.
increase our yield potential.” Monsanto shocked many in the ag investment community in 2013 when it bought Climate Corp., a California firm that provides field scale weather data, for $930 million. Ignacio Martinez, a partner with Flagship Ventures, a Massachusetts investment firm, said the Climate Corp. purchase was a signal that Monsanto is serious about diversifying beyond seeds, traits and crop protection. It wants to become a service provider, selling information and advice to farmers. “ You see Bayer, Syngenta and Monsanto talking about offering integrated solutions to their customers,” Martinez told an agriculture innovation conference in Winnipeg last fall. Budzynski said combining knowledge and data from crop nutrition, crop protection, biologics and seeds and biotech could help tackle an agricultural challenge such as phosphorus. “Phosphate is a perfect example. Rather than continuing to apply more than we need and face some of these non-target effects, how do we make sure the product we put down is available to the plant and not available to wash away and end up in a waterway?” he said. “To me, these are the science questions as an industry we need to be focused on.” Budzynski has his own buzzword to describe the trend toward integrated agriculture: Agriculture 3.0. He said it is similar to sustainable agriculture, with one important caveat. “To me the missing link in the sustainable ag story is it’s primarily driven by an environmental message,” he said. “The real driver of Ag 3.0 is the combination of environmental and an economic message.” Water, fertilizer, seed, technology and other input costs have skyrocketed over the last several years, and it’s now too expensive to grow food inefficiently. Budzynski said farmers would embrace integrated systems that increase profitability and benefit the environment. “Economic rationale is always what it takes to get adoption in a price driven industry.”
FIELD PRESCRIPTIONS:
Working together for even better yields
For more information on how to increase your yields, visit useTagTeam.ca and useOptimize.ca 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. Contest is open to commercially active farmers in Western Canada (namely the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and the Peace River region of British Columbia). Full contest details at WinThisBin.ca.
WinThisBin.ca
® TagTeam, MultiAction, Optimize and LCO Promoter Technology are registered trademarks of Novozymes A/S. All rights reserved. Meridian Trademarks used with permission. 13018 09.13
© 2013 Novozyemes 2013-12500-01
AND
As part of its foray into agricultural information and consulting, Monsanto is launching a service called FieldScripts in Minnesota, Iowa, Indiana and Illinois this year. The Monsanto website describes FieldScripts as a service that provides “hybrid matches and a variable rate planting prescription to improve corn yield opportunity.” Growers usually plant a consistent amount of seed across a field, or plant a variable rate with limited information on “yield environments,” Monsanto says. Instead, FieldScripts uses information on how particular corn hybrids respond to plant population density to plant less seed in areas with low potential and more seed in high potential areas.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
37
BECKER KNIFE | PROS AND CONS
Ka-Bar Becker Campanion jack-of-all-trades, master of none
KIM QUINTIN
T
he Ka-Bar Becker Campanion is a medium to large knife manufactured in the United States. The all black, 10.5 inch tool was designed by Ethan Becker and is made from 1095 Cro-Van high carbon steel with a 5.25 by two inch blade that is 1/4 inch thick along the spine and weighs one pound. Becker, who is known as an expert cook, knife designer and wilderness person, has collaborated with a number of respected knife brands. However, his main series of knives is produced by Ka-Bar, the same company that manufactures the well-known U.S. Marine Corps knife. The Becker Campanion is marketed as an all-around knife capable of chopping kindling, preparing campsite meals and skinning game. The handle has a full tang for strength and removable Zytel scales for cleaning ease. The handle butt is exposed and flattened to be used as a hammer and has a lanyard hole for optional safety. A thick, black coating protects the high carbon steel from exposure to the elements. The combination of design and
JAPAN | TRACTOR MAKER
Kubota eyes North America OSAKA, Japan (Reuters) — Japan’s Kubota Corp. plans to sell powerful, large tractors in North America and Europe next year. Company president Yasuo Masumoto said Kubota was seeking a joint venture with a European or U.S. company this year to produce the tractors, which will have a horsepower of at least 200. The company had previously raised the prospect of adding the 200 h.p. tractors to its line-up through acquisitions, but Masumoto said that route would take too much time. “There’s no progress on an acquisition and we have to get into big machines,” he said. Kubota is targeting sales of about 300 units of these larger tractors in the year to March 2016, he added. The North American market for large tractors is dominated by Deere & Co., CNH Industrial NV and Agco Corp. Kubota is one of the world’s biggest manufacturers of equipment used in paddy farming, but it wants to expand into the market for wheat, corn and soybeans, which globally cover about four times the land area used for rice cultivation. The company’s tractors now go up to 135 h.p. at most, which is insufficient for large farms. Last year, Kubota invested $55 million in a plant in northern France, and plans to produce up to 170 h.p. tractors in April 2015 for the North American and European markets.
execution gives this knife some serious shortcomings. The lightly textured handle surface becomes slippery when wet. The thick blade material combined with the Saber grind makes for poor game processing. The out-of-the-box edge would tear but not slice paper. The overall length is not conducive to wood chopping and feels short when used in this manner. In tests, the Becker Campanion was excellent at batoning tree branches less than three inches in diameter. The coating resisted wearing well. The knife responded easily to sharpening, which elevated its performance, but one would be wise to carry an additional smaller, thinner knife for more effective food and
game processing. The Becker Campanion is a tool that tries to do too much. It can serve in a variety of outdoor tasks but does not excel at any one of them. The tool would serve well enough in almost all situations if it was the only one available, but if other options are present they will probably get the job done more effectively. This knife is definitely a jack-of-alltrades but is a master of none. The knife has a suggested price of $125, but it can be found for a little less at retailers. For more information, visit www.kabar.com. Kim Quintin is a Saskatoon outdoor enthusiast and knife maker. He can be reached for column content suggestions at kim.quintin@producer.com.
Always read and follow label directions. FMC and Authority are trademarks and Investing in farming’s future is a service mark of FMC Corporation. ©2014 FMC Corporation. All rights reserved. F101-032481 1/14 Kochia image by Howard F. Schwartz, Colorado State University, Bugwood.org
OUTDOOR PURSUITS
www.fmccrop.ca
The Ka-Bar Becker Campanion is a versatile knife. |
MICHAEL RAINE PHOTO
38
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Today’s smart choice for preventing weed resistance. herbicides with different modes of action
NOTHING GETS PAST BARRICADE II. ®
When tough broadleaf weeds invade your cereal crops, it’s no time for half-measures. You need action now. With a new and more concentrated formulation, DuPont™ Barricade® II herbicide leverages the strength of three active ingredients from 2 different groups (Group 2 and Group 4) to keep broadleaf weeds far away from your crop. Powered by Solumax® soluble granules, Barricade® II also delivers one-hour rainfastness and easier, more consistent sprayer cleanout. It’s no wonder growers made it Western Canada’s premier broadleaf herbicide for cereals.
Barricade® II. Raise the bar on your broadleaf weed control. Questions? Ask your retailer, call 1-800-667-3925 or powered by Solumax® visit barricade.dupont.ca
soluble granules, combining
ow-leaved hawk’s beard, kochia, cleavers, flixweed, lamb’s-quarters, cow cockle, volunteer canola
multiple modes of action from two groups – Group 2 and Group 4.
An effective, time-saving formulation. Barricade® II is powered by DuPont™ Solumax® soluble granules, combining the c As with all crop protection products, read and follow label instructions carefully. The DuPont Oval Logo, DuPont™, The miracles of science™, Barricade® and Solumax® are registered trademarks or trademarks of E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company. E. I. du Pont Canada Company is a licensee. Member of CropLife Canada. © Copyright 2014 E. I. du Pont Canada Company. All rights reserved.
cereal
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
39
News. If it’s ag news, we cover it.
producer.com
CLASSIFIEDS
This is where you’ll findit. Daily updates. Weekly features. Stay informed.
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 $118.80/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 Newest to Oldest ....................... 1595 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 Conveyors ................................... 4106 Equipment Monitors ................... 4109
• 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
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. 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
40 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
BASF KNOWLEDGE HARVEST. Join growers from your area to watch live plant demonstrations, speak to experts about what is new with biologicals and get strategies for managing herbicide resistance from industry leaders. Hear from acclaimed visionary and financial analyst Richard Worzel about the future of agriculture. February 25- Lethbridge; February 27- Portage la Prairie; March 4- Regina; March 6- Saskatoon; March 11- Yorkton; March 13- Edmonton. Register now at www.agsolutions.ca/knowledgeharvest
YORKTON FARM TOY SHOW 2014 St. Mary’s Cultural Center, Feb. 08 and 09. Sat. 9 AM - 5 PM; Sun. 9 AM - 4 PM. Pedal Tractor Raffle, 100% proceeds going to ‘Love for Leif’. 306-742-4772, Yorkton, SK.
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. LYCOMING 0-320, 150/160 HP, excellent condition, 2200 hours. 403-327-4582, 403-308-0062, Lethbridge, AB. 1972 CESSNA 150L, TTSN 1425 hrs., 0-320 Lycoming 150 HP, TT 948 hrs., LR tanks, intercom push to talk, tow hook, always hangared, new C of A, updated transporder, family owned, $38,000 OBO. Colonsay, SK. 306-280-3231, 306-255-2611.
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 AIRs, 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 brakes, cargo door, Kannad ELT. 403-637-2250, Water Valley, AB.
JD 830, 820, H, A, AR, 3010 gas, Hart Parr PERKINS POWERED DSL. airplane, tugger 1836, Cockshutt, IHC, Massey, Case, Ford. rated for 12.4 tonnes towing capacity, 274 Model A chassis, T28 Chev, IHC motors, hrs., $10,500. 306-668-2020, Saskatoon, IHC trucks. 306-627-3445, Blumenhof, SK. www.northtownmotors.com DL #908171. MASSEY 444 TRACTOR excellent rubber, good motor; Case 990 w/front end loader, 3584 hrs. 403-443-5366, Three Hills, AB.
WIRELESS DRIVEWAY ALARMS, calving barn cameras, backup cameras for RVs, trucks and combines, etc. Home and shop ARCTIC ENGINE COVERS, used. Cessna video surveillance. View from any comput1 7 2 , 1 8 2 , 1 8 5 ( 2 ) , 2 0 6 , N ava j o ( 2 ) . er or Smart phone. Free shipping. Call $225/ea. 250-579-9583 or 250-319-1724, 403-616-6610, Calgary, AB. Kamloops, BC.
WANTED: 18-35 ROCK Island tractor parts. WANTED: 1958 PONTIAC or Chev 2 door A l s o M M J e t s t a r s e r i e s t r a c t o r s . hardtop in restorable condition. Call 204-223-0923, Winnipeg, MB. 204-522-8456, Melita, MB. O L D M O T O R C Y C L E S O R PA R T S WANTED RESTORED MASSEY HARRIS WANTED, any condition, size or make. Pony tractor in good running cond., little 1979 or older. Will pickup, pay cash. Call or no rust. 780-674-2868, Barrhead, AB. Wes 403-936-5572 anytime, all enquiries answered. Calgary, AB. 1948 JD D, complete, running, shedded, FORD 8N WITH one-way cultivator, Vibra$2500 OBO. Located in Regina, SK. Email 1980 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL, 2 dr., 352 shank, sickle mower, harrows and blade, motor, could be easily restored, $750 OBO. jackseitz@mac.com Phone 832-799-9008. $5000. 306-343-7357, Saskatoon, SK. 204-669-9626, Winnipeg, MB. JOHN DEERE 730, diesel, SN #732308 w/pony start, asking $4500; JD 830, diesel, SN #830138 w/pony start, asking $6000; Set of fenders for JD 4020, ofWHEELOCK (NEW YORK Pianola) upright fers. 780-372-2491, Bashaw, AB. piano, refinished, good condition. Contact 306-735-7250, Whitewood, 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. 1977 CESSNA 182Q, 3246 TT, 430 SMOH, Edo 2960s, Sportsman STOL, wing ext. SUPREME AUCTION SERVICES will con306-230-9258 or lcsharp@sasktel.net duct an Antique and Collectible Auction for Saskatoon, SK. several consignors at 11 AM, Sunday, Feb. at the Kronau Memorial Hall in Kronau, 1973 S2R-600 THRUSH 8498 TT, geared 23 Huge selection of good quality items. engine with albatross prop., 804 SPOH, SK. Brad Steinberg 306-551-9411; Ken 910 SMOH Covington, fresh annual, AC, Call McDonald 306-695-0121. For details go to metal tail, cool seat, Satloc 99, VGs, radio www.supremeauctions.ca PL#314604. and more. Morden, MB., ph 204-362-0406, pembina.air@gmail.com BODNARUS AUCTIONEERING. Delisle 1991 RANS S-10 Sakota, midwing two Mid Winter Classic Antique & Collectible place aerobatic taildragger, 304 TTAF, 583 Auction Sale, Sunday February 9, 2014 @ Rotax, 90 HP, 110 MPH, inverted capa- 9:00 AM, Delisle Town Hall, Delisle, SK. bility, affordable aerobatics, $24,000 OBO. Featuring: Advertising signs; Tins; Toys; Lamps & lanterns; Paper related; GlassCall 306-625-3922, Ponteix, SK. ware; Household; Furniture & numerous 1964 CESSNA 172E, TTA 2731.9, 130.9 miscellaneous items. Call 1-877-494-2437 prop, 1434.2 TT. New: glass, paint, seats or 306-277-9505 or check our website: head liner, full orig. panel, Nav/Com, ELT, www.bodnarusauctioneering.com NDH, $43,000. 204-322-5614, Warren, MB PL #318200.
BORDER CITY COLLECTOR SHOW, Lloydminster Stockade Convention Centre, SK-AB, Sat. Mar. 8, 9AM to 6PM, Sun. Mar. 9, 10AM to 4PM, 2014. Featuring antiques, farm toys, coins and more! Mark your calendar now. Special this year, large model train display courtesy of the Edmonton Model Train Club. Must be seen. Brad: 780-846-2977, or Don: 306-825-3584. WORKING STEAM TRACTORS! Double acting brass cylinder and piston, forward, reverse and neutral controls, plus working whistle. Flywheel has grooved pulley to run accessories! Runs 15 min. per fueling (fuel supplied). D405 Steam Tractorregular $449.95. Winter Sale $299.96. Shipping $18.95. Our 40th year! www.YesteryearToysCanada.com Ph. 1-800-481-1353.
NEW TRACTOR PARTS. Specializing in engine rebuild kits and thousands of other parts. Savings! Service manuals and decals. Also Steiner Parts dealer. Our 40th year! www.diamondfarmtractorparts.com Call 1-800-481-1353. 2- JD AR tractors, in running order, one 1939 unstyled, one styled, $2000 ea. OBO. 780-336-4061, 780-390-0075, Viking, AB. ADRIAN’S MAGNETO SERVICE GuaranBRITISH DORMAN DIESEL engine, 130 HP, teed repairs on mags and ignitors. Repairs. used 18 hrs., early 1950’s, stored inside, Parts. Sales. 204-326-6497. Box 21232, Steinbach, MB. R5G 1S5. $7500. 306-854-2030, Elbow, SK.
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES, Piapot Lions Club 15th Annual Show and Sale at Maple Creek Armories, Maple Creek, SK. Feb. 1, 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM and Feb. 2, 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM. Call 306-558-4802. VINTAGE METAL with 3 different 1914 designs. 306-295-3778, Eastend, SK. WANTED: TRACTOR MANUALS, sales brochures, tractor catalogs. 306-373-8012, Saskatoon, SK. WANTED DECOYS: duck, geese and wood birds. I can refurbish. 403-933-2833, Black Diamond, AB.
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 your order, price and payment options. 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)
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 Paulie the hitman in Weekend at Bernie’s 6. Paul the mall cop 11. He plays Sam Evans on Glee 13. ___ Happened One Night 15. ___ Witch Mountain (2 words) 16. Billy ___ 19. Actress Kazan 21. My Night at Maud’s director 22. He plays Mayor Tilman in Mississippi Burning 23. Actress Reed 24. The ___ Whisperer 25. ___ Castles 27. The Postman Always Rings Twice director 28. What’s ___ Pussycat? 29. ___ Bravo 30. Actress Poots 34. He plays Ptolemy in Alexander 37. Actor Arana 38. Rita Hayworth’s co-star in Gilda (2 words) 41. ___ Alligator 42. Cat on a Hot Tin ___ 43. ___ McBeal 44. Rapace from Sweden 46. She plays Mercedes de Rosas in The Count of Monte Cristo 47. Actor Ventimiglia 48. Martha’s character in Our Town 49. ___ to Billy Joe 50. Janet Leigh’s character in Prince Valiant 51. Archie Bunker’s wife 52. He plays Grady Wilson On Sanford and Son 53. Black Snake ___
DOWN 1. He plays Dr. Carrington in The Thing from Another World 2. Wood’s wife on Evening Shade 3. She stars on Switched at Birth 4. Dangerous Liaisons director 5. British sitcom (4 words) 6. She plays Frasier’s wife on Cheers and Frasier 7. Actress Thompson 8. Fatal ___ 9. He stars in Emergency! 10. He plays Jethro Bodine on The Beverly Hillbillies 12. He plays Byam in Mutiny on the Bounty 14. She plays Kumiko in The Karate Kid, Part II 17. ___ Story (2 words) 18. ___ for Two 20. Limon from Mexico 23. David Hyde ___ 26. Film starring John Travolta 31. ___’ Better Blues 32. One of the stars of Yes, Dear 33. Carla of Bones 35. Who’s ___ of Virginia Woolf? 36. High ___ 38. ___ & Juliet 39. Film starring Jeremy Irons and Melanie Griffith 40. Taylor from Australia 43. Turturro of The Sopranos 45. Dr. Feinstone’s name in The Dentist 47. Sitcom starring Anna Faris and Allison Janney 48. A Nightmare on ___ Street
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
GA S & OIL F IEL D EQ UIP M ENT A UC TION
24/7 ONLINE BIDDING
(Tony & Cheryl Pavlovic) CITY O F REG IN A EQ UIP M EN T
Medicine Hat, AB. (403) 548-0525
Bid s C lo s e
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2014 AT 10:00 A.M. M.S.T.
O N LIN E AUCTIO N
M O N D AY, FEBRUARY 3 - 2P M F o rd F 150 -2W D - L o n g Bo x; Chevy 3500; 2007 M a ck - M o d el No . M R688S ; 2007 F o rd E 450 Pa ra T ra n s it Bu s ; 2004 F o rd F -150; 2004 F o rd Va n ; 1999 No va Bu s ; 1998 GM C 1500; 1996 F o rd F 150; 1995 Orio n Bu s ; 1995 F reightlin er F L 106; 1992 Chevy 2500; 1989 Greyho u n d Bu s ; 1988 Greyho u n d Bu s ; Dies el T ra s h Pu m p o n T ra iler; & M o re!
w w w.M c D ou g a llAu c tion .c om 1-800-26 3-4193 Re g in a 306 -757-1755 Regin a * S a s k a to o n * M o o s o m in
P.O. Bo x 308 1 Regin a , S K . S 4P 3G7 Dea ler L ic #319 9 16
SASKATCHEWAN AUCTIONEERS ASSOCIATION
40th Anniversary Convention & Auction Era Induction Ceremony Friday February 7th, Saturday February 8th, 2014 Best Western Seven Oaks Inn Regina, SK Annual General Meeting 1:30 PM Friday February 7th Banquet - 5:30 pm includes Presentation of 40 year members Auction Era Induction Fund Raiser Auction Entertainment:
Tom Liske Comedian Call: 306-441-2265
for m ore in form ation Saskatchew an Auctioneers Association
HUGE FARM TOY AUCTION: Friday Feb. 7th, Legion Hall, Yorkton, SK. Doors open 4 PM, auction starts at 6 PM. Pictures and info. at www.jakz.ca or ph: 306-641-5850.
N EXT SALE S ATUR DAY, 9:00 AM AP R IL 5 , 2 014
Location: 2047 Bullshead Road in Cypress County. Located between Medicine Hat & Dunmore on #1 Hwy. on NE side of #1 Hwy. (2 blocks down from Harley Davidson Building) (GPS: N49.58.47; W110.36.32) BOILER/STEAMER TRUCKS - 2003 Diesel Ford F-750 Super Duty Boiler/ Steamer Truck, 73,000 kms., 5250 hrs., Insulated Van body, Saskatoon Boiler, 3 cyl. 20 hp. Kubota power plant, 5880 hrs., 630 gal. water tank, 150 gal. aux. fuel tank, TV, microwave, outside lighting *1993 Diesel Ford L8000 Boiler/Steamer Truck, 7685 hrs. 250,660 kms. Insulated Van body, Saskatoon Boiler, Kubota 3 cyl. 20 hp. motor, 8kw diesel power plant w/11,360 hrs., 850 gal. water tank, 2-110 gal. aux. fuel tanks, TV, Microwave, outside lighting PAY LOADER & BLADE - 2012 JD 624K Pay Loader, auto trans., quick detach hook-ups, 198 hp., Z-Bar Linkage, 2 Function Joystick w/F-N-R switch & aux. hyd., Hyd. Frt. Diff. & Rear Diff. Standard, Ether Start Aid w/block heater, Deluxe Cab, Pin Disconnect Valve & Plumbing, Cast Rear Ht., Positive Air Shutdown, Quick Detach 3.5 Yd. Bucket, 8’ 8” wide, only 35 hrs. *Quick Detach Adj. Pallet Forks *16’ Degelman Ice Breaker Blade, 8’ centre w/4’ hyd. fold out wings (If the Payloader & Blade hasn’t sold by Feb. 1, 2014 it will be in the auction. Payloader & Blade sell subject to the owners acceptance of the highest bid) BACKHOE - 2005 Case 580 Super M Series 2, MFWA Backhoe, extendahoe w/24” bucket, shuttle shift w/left hand reverse, 7’8” bucket, frt. wts., ride control, full vision cab, 1214 hrs. *Bale Spear & Trash Fork, fits Case 580 Bucket *Pallet Forks for backhoe SERVICE TRUCK, VEHICLES, TRAILERS, FIREFIGHTING EQUIP. - 2008 Ford F450 XLT Super Duty Crew Cab Diesel 4x4 Truck, back air bags, in-box 5th wh. ball, metal deck, side tool boxes, 95 gal. slip tank, 68,300 kms. (Truck safetied Oct. 2012) w/1996 Unic A290 Picker, 7000 lb. lifting capacity, dual controls, 360 degree (Picker safetied July 2011) *1994 Ford 4x4 Explorer *2004 Southland Bumper Pull Stocktrailer, tandem axle *2000 Southland Bumper Pull Stocktrailer, front toilet (Both stocktrailers used for fighting Fire) *2-200 gal. Fire Fighting Units (1 w/Honda Motor, 1 w/Power Eze Motor) *2005 Lucky Bumper Pull Trailer *2004 Homebuilt Bumper Pull Flatdeck Trailer *2004 Homemade Dump Trailer BOBCAT & ACCESSORIES -1991 Bobcat 743, hst., 5’ smooth bucket, diesel motor, 960 hrs. showing *8’ Homemade Snow Bucket *5’ Digger Bucket *Pallet Forks *Premier HD hyd. Auger w/9” bit TRACTORS - 2008 NH T2310 HST MFWA Diesel Tractor, 40 hp., super steer, canopy, 3 pt. ht., 1 hyd., 540 pto, lights, 115 hrs. *MF 97 Diesel Tractor, New 23.1-26 back tires, New 3-Rib Frt. Tires, 2 hyd., 101 hp., rear cast wts., 6700 hrs. showing (Restored) *2-MF 97 Diesel Tractors w/cabs, running 3 PT. HT. - 5’ NH Tiller *6’ NH Rotary Mower *9’ Bridge Harrow Yard Drag *5’ HI-CO (Howse) Tandem Disc COLLECTIBLE CARS - 1966 T-Bird 2-dr. Hard Top Car, 428 motor, auto, PW, PS, fender skirts, swing away steering, 160,000 miles *1966 Meteor S33 Montcalm 2-dr. Convertible Car, 390 motor, auto, PS, PW, PD, 77,644 miles showing *1986 Jaguar 4-dr. Car, V6, sun roof, auto, leather seats, needs repair *Old Rat Rod project ATV’S & MOTORBIKES - 2003 Yamaha Grizzly 660 ATV, 4x4, winch, 4’ snow blade *1995 Suzuki King Quad 4WD ATV, winch *Kawasaki 110cc Dirtbike *2 Yamaha 50cc ATV’s *Soap Box Cart *Sm. 49cc Motorbike *14’ Vanguard Alum. Boat SHOP EQUIP. - Twin Hyd. Press w/40 ton & 80 ton hyd. rams, A-Frame w/1 ton Chain Hoist *Lincoln 255 Power Mig Welder *Clarke Mig Welder *Rigid 535 Power Head Threader on stand w/dies *Air 22 ton hyd. Truck Jack *Manual Rigid Pipe Threader & dies *Safe *Gas Valves & Fittings *Dayton 170,000 BTU Shop Heater *Texas Gate *Bridge Timbers *500 Metal Posts. Plus Other Items Too Numerous To Mention. OFFICE, HOUSEHOLD, ANTIQUES For more detailed info & pictures go to www.switzerauction.ca Note: All items must be removed from property by Feb. 25, 2014. For further info phone (403) 548-0525. Terms: Cash or Cheque w/Letter of Guarantee. Machinery & Vehicles Sell at 2:00 pm. Selling w/2 Rings.
SWITZER AUCTION (306) 773-4200
G R EAT PLAIN S AUCTIO N EER S
Bruce Switzer
Glenn Switzer
P LUS W EEKLY ON -LIN E AUC TION S 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
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 P.O. Bo x 308 1 Regin a , S K . S 4P 3G7 Dea ler L ic #319 9 16
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 VOLVO TRUCKS: Misc. axles and parts. Also tandem trailer suspension axles. 306-539-4642, Regina, SK. ONE OF SASK’s largest inventory of used heavy truck parts. 3 ton tandem diesel motors and transmissions and differentials for all makes! Can Am Truck Export Ltd., 1-800-938-3323. 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.
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 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. 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. TRUCK BONEYARD INC. Specializing in obsolete parts, all makes. Trucks bought for wrecking. 306-771-2295, Balgonie, SK. 1987 LT9000, 18 speed, wet kit, needs motor work, $3500. Call 306-445-5602, North Battleford, SK.
2004 LODE-KING SUPER B open end grain trailers, 11x22.5 tires 70%, air ride, safetied, good condition, asking $32,500. Phone 204-857-1700, Gladstone, MB.
TWO NEW COMPLETE pairs OF 8” alum. hopper augers, c/w wireless remote to fit 2013 30’ Lode-King AHV. Call Dan at: 403-533-2205, Rockyford, AB. 1997 DOPEKER SUPER B grain trailers, closed end, 24.5 tires, spring ride, $22,000 Will split. 306-424-2690, Montmartre, SK. 2007 TIMPTE TANDEM trailer, 34’ long x 8.5’ wide x 6’ high, like new, $28,500. 306-452-7755, Alida, SK. 1994 DOPEKER SUPER B grain trailer, new pots and slacks, brakes and tarps are good, fresh safety, 11/24.5 at 75%, $27,000 OBO. 306-287-3826, Watson, SK.
SCHOOL BUSES: 1986 to 2002, 20-66 pass., $1600 and up. Phoenix Auto, Lucky MANY TRAILERS TO CHOOSE FROM. Lake, SK., 1-877-585-2300. DL #320074. 2005 Doepker tri-axle, $34,000; 2007 Doepker tri-axle, $36,000; 1995 Doepker tandem 31’, $11,000; 2014 new PLG tandem grain end dump 32’, $34,000. Fresh arrivals Neville trailers fully Loaded with options. 36’ tandem, $34,900; 38.5’ tan2002 LODE-KING closed end tri-axle, air dem, $35,300; 45’ tri-axle, $45,000; 45’ ride, 3 hopper, with Michel’s augers, tri-axle, elec. tarp and traps, $49,750. Cor$ 2 5 , 0 0 0 O B O . 7 8 0 - 8 4 2 - 4 0 8 8 o r ner Equipment 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. 780-806-3439, Wainwright, AB. SANDBLAST AND PAINT your grain trailboxes, flatdecks and more. We use inREMOTE CONTROL TRAILER CHUTE ers, undercoat and paint. Can zinc coat openers can save you time, energy and dustrial for added rust protection. Quality workkeep you safe this seeding season. FM re- manship guaranteed. Prairie Sandblasting mote controls provide maximum range and Painting, 306-744-7930, Saltcoats, SK. and instant response while high torque drives operate the toughest of chutes. Easy installation. Brehon Agrisystems call 306-933-2655 or visit us online at: NEW AND USED MERRITT aluminum stock www.brehonag.com Saskatoon, SK. trailers. Darin 204-526-7407 Cypress River 2000 LODE-KING SUPER B grain trailers, MB www.merrittgoosenecks.com DL 4143 closed end, exc., air ride, 22.5 tires at 50%, 2007 WILSON cattle/hog trailer, $52,000; tarps very good, flat fenders, very little 2007 MERRITT cattle/hog trailer, $52,000. rust, paint vg, farm used, lower mileage, 403-625-4658, Claresholm, AB. $41,000. Ph Lloyd Sproule, Pincher Creek, AB., 403-627-2764 or 403-627-7363. WILSON ALUMINUM STOCK trailer, like new cond., just over 8’ wide, 32’ floor, 8’ 2009 CANCADE TRIDEM pup trailer, 20’ on the neck. Winter kit and decking to haul alum. box, 68” sides, air ride, low miles, smaller livestock, $27,000. 780-812-8733, $34,500. 306-743-2862, Langenburg, SK. Ardmore, AB. 1996 LODE-KING SUPER B grain trailers closed end, exc., spring ride, 24.5 tires at YEAR END PRICING: On all in stock stock 50%, tarps vg, round fenders, very little trailers, 20’ and 24’, steel and aluminum. rust, paint vg. Farm used, lower mileage, Starting at $10,500. Assiniboia, SK. Call $37,000. Lloyd Sproule, 403-627-2764 or Glen 306-640-8034, gm93@sasktel.net 403-627-7363, Pincher Creek, AB. NEW WILSON SUPER B in stock, tridem, one 2 hopper, two 3 hoppers, also tandem; CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used 2012 Doepker Super B, alum. rims; 2008 highway tractors, view information at Lode-King alum. open end Super B, alum. www.titantrucksales.com rims, air ride, also 2009 w/lift axles; 1995 Castleton tridem, air ride; 17’ A-train pup, SNOWMOBILE TRAILERS are in stock at very clean, certified. 306-356-4550, Dods- Flaman. Check out the 2 place enclosed S u m m i t S e r i e s s t a r t i n g at $ 8 , 9 9 5 . land SK. DL #905231. www.rbisk.ca www.flaman.com/trailers 8’x23’ CARGO TRAILER, rear ramp, side door, double floor and walls, roof AC, 50 amp service, new cond. View at 511 3rd NORMS SANDBLASTING & PAINT, 40 St. Davidson, SK. 403-318-7589 (AB. cell). years body and paint experience. We do metal and fiberglass repairs and integral to NEW PRODUCT!! BEHNKE 53’ air ride daycab conversions. Sandblasting and 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 paint to trailers, trucks and heavy equip. 1-888-435-2626 or visit your local Flaman Endura primers and topcoats. A one stop location. www.flaman.com for more info. shop. Norm 306-272-4407, Foam Lake SK. BEHNKE DROP DECK semi style and CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, highway tractors, view information at t a n d e m a n d t r i d e m s . C o n t a c t S K : www.titantrucksales.com 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336.
PRELIMINARY ADVANCE NOTICE
MAJOR PUBLIC VEHICLE AUCTION
2
PUBLIC UNRESERVED AUCTION
AC C EP TIN G C ON S IG N M EN TS N OW !
DIESEL AND GAS ENGINES - Medium Duty. Cummins 5.9; Cat 3116; Ford 6.6- 6 cyl. w/auto. trans. Gas: IH 304, 345; Ford 370; GM 366TBI. Call Phoenix Auto, Lucky Lake, SK., 1-877-585-2300. 290 HP GM performance crate engine, 3 year 100,000 km. warranty, 5500 kms on engine, asking $1750; 4L60 transmission, 2 year 100,000 km warranty, 2500 kms on trans., $1250; Raider Low-rider fiberglass topper for Chevy shortbox stepside, $250. Call Brett 306-690-9844, Tuxford, SK.
Y DA
PRELIMINARY ADVANCE NOTICE
1
DA Y
Swift Current, Sk. Sk. Lic.914494 Ab. Lic. 313086 Website: www.switzerauction.ca
Y DA
1
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 TELEPHO N E (306) 52 5- 9516 w w w .grea tpla in sa u ctio n eers.ca w w w .glo b a la u ctio n gu id e.co m S ALES 1stS ATUR DAY O F EV ER Y M O N TH P.L. #91452 9
UP C OM IN G EVEN TS : L ive Un res erved Ha rd w o o d Flo o rin g Au ctio n s to Ta k e Pla ce in Bo th Regin a a n d S a s k a to o n o n Feb ru a ry 15th On lin e Au ctio n fo r M a ple L ea f Ba k ery Co m plete Co n ten ts o f Co m m ercia l Ba k ery - Excellen t Equ ipm en t Clo s in g Feb ru a ry 20th Regin a : On lin e Au ctio n - Firea rm s (Res tricted & N o n -Res tricted ) & Cro s s Bo w Archery - Thu . Feb . 20 N o o n
2
For TP OILFIELD SERVICES LTD.
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 : V ehicles : 2008 F o rd F 350 K in g Ra n ch; 2007 GM C S ierra GF X 4x4 T ru ck; 2007 Po n tia c M o n ta n a . Tra ilers : T rip le Axle 28` E n clo s ed 5th W heel T ra iler. Recrea tio n a l Equ ip.: 2013 S kid S u m m it XM ; 2010 Y a m a ha Y Z450F Dirt Bike; 2006 Do u b le T ree E lite S u ite T ra vel T ra iler. Ho m e Ren o . M a teria l & S pecia lty Equ ip: 20’ S ea Ca n (1 tim e u s e) Drive thro u gh Do o rs ; Jo b Bo x (2’ 2” H x 4’ L x 2’ W ) S ta in les s S teel Alla s Prep Co u n ter w ith Refrigera to r a n d S in k. Bu y N o w : Us ed 53’ All. In s u la ted Co n ta in er; New T o o l S hed ; M a gn u m Go ld 4000 E a s y K leen Pres s u re W a s her; Gra n ite Co u n terto p s ; New K itchen Ca b in ets ; New Res ta u ra n tE q u ip . & M o re. REAL ES TATE: 10 Acres , Ho u s e & S ho p ; E lkho rn M B - M o d u la r Ho m e; L a ke L o t S K ; Bu n ga lo w F o r Rem o va l - (Ap p ro x 1120 s q ft).
DA Y
CHOICE OF 2 ice resurfacers: Zamboni or Olympia, x-government, $17,500 - natural gas, $20,500 - propane. Call 306-668-2020 www.northtownmotors.com DL #908171.
CLASSIFIED ADS 41
WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 5TH 2014 9:00 A.M. SHARP OVER 1000 LOTS OF INDUSTRIAL • COMMERCIAL SHOP TOOLS & EQUIPMENT
SATURDAY FEBRUARY 8TH 2014 9:00 A.M. SHARP APPROXIMATELY 1000 UNITS • PARTIAL ADVANCE LISTINGS
FOR A FREE FULL COLOUR 12 PAGE BROCHURE CALL TOLL FREE 1.877.257.SOLD (7653)
FOR A FREE FULL COLOUR 12 PAGE BROCHURE CALL TOLL FREE 1.877.257.SOLD (7653)
Live Interactive Auction Webcasts!
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
Interactive osmanauction.com Live 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 DED M LE BAC ASE CHE DAILY K OF C TEN K
www.osmanauction.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
AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRIAL LIQUIDATIONS
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 AUC T LIST SO P INGS AD TION.CO DED M LE BAC ASE CHE DAILY K OF C TEN K
42 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
2- LODE-KING DROPDECK 48’ sprayer trailers, w/cradles, 3250 gal. tank, 3” pump and handler. Call 306-397-2678, Edam, SK. 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 PRECISION TRAILERS: Gooseneck and bumper hitch. You’ve seen the rest, now own the best. Hoffart Services, 2013 CANCADE ROUND tub end dump 306-957-2033, www.precisiontrailer.com gravel trailer, air ride, 16,000 kms, 11R24.5 on outside alum. rims, new MB. s a f e t y , $ 4 9 , 0 0 0 . C a n d e l i v e r. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. 1991 STAINLESS TANKER, Tremcar Super B insulated tankers, 4500 Imp. gal. per tank, Spring Ride Reyco susp., recent safety, 22.5 Dayton wheels. Set up to transport liquid fertilizer, water, etc. Comes with Honda motor w/John Blue pump, $35,000. Call 306-861-5911, Weyburn, 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, $19,000. Email pictures available. Jeff 403-638-3934, Sundre, AB.
2005 and 2003 ADVANCE TC406 alum. tankers, 34,000 liters, air ride VIPK, safetied, $38,500. 306-752-4909, Melfort, SK. 53’ AND 48’ tridem and tandem stepdecks, w/wo sprayer cradles; 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; A-train tanker will separate water or fert.; Tandem and S/A converter with drop hitch; 53’-28’ van trailers; B-train salvage trailers; Tandem lowboy, 9’ wide; High clearance sprayer trailer w/tanks and chem handlers. 306-356-4550, www.rbisk.ca DL # 905231. 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
Andres
Trailer Sales And Rentals Andres specializes in the sales, service and rental of agricultural and commercial trailers. W IL S O N G O O S EN EC K S & C ATTL E L IN ER S
WWW.TITANTRUCKSALES.COM to view information and to check out our inventory of quality used highway tractors! RING IN THE New Year with a great truck from Greenlight Auto & Truck. A huge selection of 2013 leather GM DuraMax’s. Saskatoon, SK. www.GreenlightAuto.ca CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors, view information at www.titantrucksales.com 2013 GMC SIERRA 3500 SLT, (3), 6.6L, loaded, dsl., leather, sunroof, 40,000 kms. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL#311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 2013 CHEV SILVERADO 3500 LTZ, loaded, dually 6.6L, 4x4, 15,000 kms, leather, sunroof, nav. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL#311430. 2012 DODGE RAM 2500 SLT Outdoorsman, 4x4, 6.7L, 89,000 kms, loaded, $41,995. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL#311430. 2011 GMC SIERRA 2500 SLT, 6.6L, leather, dsl., 60,000 kms, DVD, sunroof, $48,995. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon. DL#311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 2011 FORD F350 XLT, flat deck, 4x4, 6.2L, loaded, 50,000 kms, $33,995. PST paid. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 2011 FORD F250 XLT, longbox, 6.7L, loaded, diesel, 4x4, $72,000 kms, $35,995. PST paid. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 2009 NISSAN TITAN, 5.6L, silver, 40,409 kms, SK-U0721, $24,995. DL #914077. Call 1-888-240-2415 or visit our website: www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca 2009 FORD F150 FX4, 5.4L, 49,000 kms, loaded w/sunroof, now $24,995. PST paid. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL#311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 2008 GMC SIERRA 1500 SLT, AC, CC, CD, leather, black, auto., 73,249 kms, Stk# SK-U0705, $28,995. 1-888-240-2415 or www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 2007 GMC SIERRA 1500 SLE, 5.3L, 4x4, 116,000 kms, loaded w/sunroof, $20,995. PST paid. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon. DL#311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 2006 FORD F350 V8, white, 224,555 kms, SK-U01140A, $18,995. Call for details 1-888-240-2415 or visit our website: www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077.
W IL S O N A L U M IN U M TA N D EM , TR I-A X L E & S U P ER B G R A IN TR A IL ER S
TR A N S C R A F T F L AT D EC K S & D R O P D EC K S AVA IL A B L E
Fina ncing Is Av a ila b le!C a ll Us Tod a y! Callfor a quote - We w illm atch com petitor pricing spec for spec. Lethb rid g e,AB 1 -888-834 -859 2 Led u c,AB 1 -888-9 55-36 36 Visit o ur w e bsite a t:
www.andrestrailer.com
1995 BEELINE TRI-AXLE LOG TRAILER, 12x22.5 tires, extra bunks, air ride, safetied, winter use only, not used in last 6 years, good and straight. Phone Ken 306-468-7909, Canwood, SK. 2006 MUVALL MACHINERY trailer, 53’ triaxle, hyd. beavertail and winch, aluminum pullouts to 14’, $50,000. 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB. 2011 DOEPKER RGN machinery trailer, 53’ tri-axle, c/w alum. pullouts, rear strobes, and pullout lights, side winches, alum rims $60,000. 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB.
LIVING QUARTERS/ truck storage, 2400 sq. ft., 2006 built. West of Saskatoon 10 m i n s . 2 a c r e s u b fe n c e d l o t . M L S $479,000. Coldwell Banker Rescom Realty, Tom Neufeld 306-260-7838.
Trucks, Trailers, Truck Bodies, “The right choice, is AUTOMATIC!” Specializing in top quality, affordablypriced, work-ready trucks with boxes or as tractors, mostly 10-speed Autoshift or Ultrashift transmissions. Most trucks are from large American fleets: very little rust, strictly maintained, and all highway miles. Also a dealer for Cancade, truck bodies and trailers. Grain Trucks, Silage Trucks, Bale Trucks, Highway Tractors
2006 FREIGHTLINER Columbia, Mercedes 460 HP, 12 spd. AutoShift, new 20’ Berg’s grain box w/remote chute/hoist, good rubber, full lockers, complete pintle plate, good clean truck. Contact Henry for price at 204-324-7593, Altona, MB.
2007 AND 2010 KENWORTH T800 trucks, AUTOSHIFT, 10 spd., new B&H, ISX Cummins, very clean. Also trucks available with no box. 2010 trucks have Cat engine. Call 204-673-2382, Melita, MB. DL #4525.
Hwy. 3, Seven Persons, AB (Medicine Hat, AB)
PH. 403-977-1624
rawlyn@automatictruck.com
www.automatictruck.com 1985 CHEVY 7000 3 ton, 8.2L diesel, 2 speed automatic w/hoist. New tires, runs and starts great, $13,000 OBO. 306-287-3785, Watson, SK.
BERG’S GRAIN BODIES: When value and 1987 FORD F700, 16x8.5’ B&H, seed tank, durability matter, ph. Berg’s Prep and Paint vg 370 gas engine, vg radial tires, 5 spd., for details 204-325-5677, Winkler, MB. $8900. Phoenix Auto, Lucky Lake, SK. 1-877-585-2300. DL #320074. COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL MFG. for grain box pkgs., decks, gravel boxes, HD 1997 T800 KENWORTH, N14 Cummins, 13 combination grain and silage boxes, pup spd., new tires, will have new B&H. Boisse- trailers, frame alterations, custom paint, vain, MB. 204-534-7911 or 204-534-7747. complete service. Visit our plant at Hum2001 FREIGHTLINER FL80, 300 HP, 9 boldt, SK or call 306-682-2505 for prices. Regin a , S K 1-8 00-6 6 7-046 6 spd. trans., new 16’ ultracell BH&T pack- REMOTE CONTROL ENDGATE AND age, exc. cond., no rust, only $37,500. Call hoist systems can save you time, energy S a s k a to o n , S K 1-8 8 8 -242-79 8 8 for details, 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. and keep you safe this harvest season. 1993 FREIGHTLINER, SERIES 60 Detroit Give Brehon Agrisystems a call at 430 HP, 8LL, 3-way locks, 11/22.5 at 75%, 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 $12,000 OBO. 306-287-3826, Watson, SK. www.brehonag.com Saskatoon, SK. 2- 2005 IH 9100 tractors, 550 Cat, 13 WANTED: 3 TON GRAIN TRUCK, GM or speed, 4-way locks, $30,000 each. Call Ford, in good shape, 1980’s-1990’s. Brian 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. 306-873-2437, 306-873-7067, Tisdale, SK. 2000 IH 8100, daycab, tandem, 370 HP Cummins, 10 spd., air ride, premium, no rust truck, only $24,500. Call for details, 2001 STERLING 3-PEDAL, 10 spd. Auto- 2005 STERLING TANDEM dump truck new 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. Shift, 430 HP 60 series Detroit, new rear BH&T, hitch, C13 Cat, 10 spd., black/black, 2000 IHC 9200, C12 Cat, 430 HP, 10 spd. grips, air ride, 1.1 kms, auto greaser, new $44,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. AutoShift w/clutch petal, 3-way locks, CIM BH&T, fresh Sask. safety, very good, 51” flattop sleeper, 60% rubber, new rear fleet maintained truck, $57,900. Cam-Don brakes, cold AC, new AB safety, $15,000. Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. Email pics avail. 403-638-3934, Sundre AB 2004 FREIGHTLINER M2 tandem, Cat 2001 FREIGHTLINER, 12.7 Detroit, 13 spd. dsl., Allison auto, new 20’ CIM box pkg, w/ trans., 40,000 rears, good running truck, tarp, safetied, no rust California truck, only $12,500 OBO. 306-397-2599, Meota, SK. $59,500. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon SK Tru ck S to ra g e/ L iv in g Q u a rters • In FloorHea t • 2400 S q. Ft. 2004 IHC 4400 new body style, 466 Alli10 m inutes w es tofS a s ka toon son auto., C&C, will take 20’ box, low low miles, $39,900; 2001 IHC 4900, 466 Alli(2)14’x14’ O HD / 2 a cre fenced ya rd 2005 KENWORTH W900B tractor, 530 son auto., 18’ BH&T, 130,000 miles, Cummins, 18 spd., 46 rears, 4-way locks, M L S $47 9,000 $44,900; 2003 IHC 8100, C&C, 370 HP new bearing roll, oil pump and clutch, BeaCummins, 6 spd. Allison auto., will fit cons, headache rack and chain hangers, 18-20’ box, $29,900. K&L Equipment, TO M N EUFELD 60% rubber, new AB. safety, $51,000. Call Regina/Ituna, SK. DL #910885. Jeff 403-638-3934, Sundre, AB. 306-795-7779 or 306-537-2027, or email PETERBILT 379L, 63” bunk, C-15, ladimer@sasktel.net Bu ying /Selling /Fu ll Serv ice Ag ent 2005 1,245,000 kms, 24.5 rubber, 13 spd. 2005 FREIGHTLINER, 300 HP Cat, 10 trans., good cond.; 2007 PETERBILT 378 spd., new 20’ B&H, elec. tarp, $59,900; daycab, heavy spec. truck, C-15, 411,000 1970 GMC 2 ton, B&H, $3800; 1995 Ford kms, full lockers, wet kit, 14,000 fronts, 46 E350, diesel, new auto. retired ambulance, rears, 22.5 rubber, 18 spd. trans., good $6500. Call Pro Ag Sales 306-441-2030 condition. Call 204-638-1068, Sifton, MB. anytime, North Battleford, SK. 2007 FREIGHTLINER CLASSIC, 820,000 kms, 11x24.5 rear tires, 12,000 fronts, 2005 IH 9200 AutoShift and 2007 T800 40,000 rears (supers), 1 owner, only used KW, elec. tarp, pintle hitch, 13 spd. Ultrain long haul. Certified until November, Shift, Cat C15, new 20’ BH&T; 1976 GMC 2014. 780-387-1172, Wetaskiwin, AB. 6500, 366, 5&2, 16’ wood box. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL #905231 2007 PETERBUILT 379L Super B spec., www.rbisk.ca ISX 525, 700,000 kms, full locks, 54” midrise, excellent rubber, leather guts, fresh AUTOMATIC AUTOMATIC 2010 IH Prosafety, shedded, premium truck, $70,000; star premium, Cummins, new 20’ B&H, roll Also 2001 aluminum Lode King super B, tarp $72,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. new virgin caps, shedded, real nice, $35,000. 403-823-1987, Standard, AB. AUTOSHIFT TRUCKS AVAILABLE: Boxed tandems and tractor units. Contact David 2007 WESTERN STAR, daycab, 550 Cat, 18 1990 FREIGHTLINER FLD 120, 235 WB, 306-887-2094, 306-864-7055, Kinistino, newer 425 CAT, 15 spd., 3.90, 40 rears, spd., 720,000 kms, 46 rears, wet kit. Call SK. DL #327784. www.davidstrucks.com safetied Oct. 2013, truck completely gone 780-990-8412, Edmonton, AB. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used through front to back, new 24.5 tires, 60” 2008 STERLING DAYCAB tandem, 750,000 highway tractors, view information at d o u b l e b u n k . T h u n d e r b o l t Tr u c k i n g kms, C13 Cat, 13 spd., 4-way lockers, wet 403-504-9740, Medicine Hat, AB. www.titantrucksales.com kit, Webasto, new clutch, fresh safety, $34,000. 306-554-8220, Dafoe, SK. 2008, 2- 2007, 2005, T800 KWs, 500 Cat, 18 spd., 46 diffs, 4-way locks w/Roobar bumpers; 378 and 379 Pete, 4- 2006s, 2005, 2004, 2003, Cat, 18 spd., 4-way locks, all w/Roobar bumpers; 2006 W900 KW daycab, Cat, 18 spd; 2007 T800 KW, Cat C15, 13 spd. UltraShift; 2003 Freightliner Classic, Cat, 18 spd, new rubber; 1999 9300 IH, dual stacks, dual breathers, 60 Detroit, 13 spd; 1996 T800 KW 500 Cat, recent work orders. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL #905231 www.rbisk.ca
FO R SALE
306-260-7838
1999 GMC 7500, 3 tonne w/24’ box. $3700 recent work done, works great. $16,500 OBO. 519-983-2484, Osler, SK. 1969 CHEV 1/2 ton, 327 V8 motor, runs good, needs body work. Contact 306-735-7250, Whitewood, SK.
2004 FORD F-350, diesel, 6 spd., 4x4, 11’ flatdeck, 5th wheel trailer hitch, safetied, great farm truck, $8000. 1-866-938-8537. 2006 HONDA RIDGELINE 4x4, dark green, Stk# SK-S2590A, 93,000 kms, $16,995. DL #914077. Call 1-866-980-0260 or www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca 2007 DODGE 2500 crewcab, 4x4, 5.7 HEMI eng., auto. trans., PW, 269,000 kms, $10,900. Phoenix Auto, Lucky Lake, SK., 1-877-585-2300, DL #320074. 2007 FORD F150 Lariat, 4x4, leather, red, 5.4L 90,347 kms, Stock #SK-U0460, $26,495. Call 1-866-980-0260. DL #914077. www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca 2012 WHITE DODGE Ram, 4x4 Quad Cab, 4.7 V8, fully equipped, running boards and rails, 10,000 kms, lots of warranty $26,000 no taxes. 306-384-2428, Saskatoon, SK.
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. 2007 TRAIL KING sliding axle trailer, 10’ wide, 55 ton rating, 20,000 lb. winch, in real good condition. 306-677-7303, Hodgeville, SK.
CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors, view information at www.titantrucksales.com DIESEL 2006 JEEP Liberty Sport, 115,000 kms, 4x4, auto., mint cond., $14,900; 2013 Lincoln MKX AWD SUV, black, 32,000 kms, heated/cool seats, balance of warranty, $38,900. K&L Equipment, Regina/Ituna, SK. 306-795-7779, 306-537-2027 or email ladimer@sasktel.net DL #910885. RING IN THE New Year with a great truck WANTED: TRI-AXLE 53’ hay trailer, air from Greenlight Auto & Truck. A huge selection of 2013 leather GM DuraMax’s. Sasride preferred. 306-753-2667, Macklin, SK. katoon, SK. www.GreenlightAuto.ca
QUALITY DOES NOT COST, IT PAYS.
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
1975 FORD F350, B&H, stock racks, approx. 45,000 miles, good condition. 780-336-4061, 780-390-0075, Viking, AB. 1976 CHEVY GRAIN truck w/hoist, C60, 350 Motor, 4 spd., 19,526 miles, $8700 +GST. Perfect for acreage owner (hauling water) or roofing contractor. Call Jan at 306-374-2733, Saskatoon, SK.
1984 IH BULK fuel truck, 18,600 litre capacity, 5 compartments, N14, 18 spd., $32,000. 306-861-7294, Weyburn, SK.
1993 INTERNATIONAL w/Wilmar fertilizer tender, 3406 Cat eng., 15 spd., $18,000 OBO. 403-894-0435, Lethbridge, AB. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors, view information at www.titantrucksales.com 1997 FORD F250 Supercab, 4x4, 7.3 diesel, 5 spd, A/T/C, service truck, w/wo equipment, $7,000. 306-861-1680, Griffin, SK. 24’ FLATDECK off 2006, steel deck, with sliding winches, $3950. K&L Equipment Regina, SK. DL# 910885, 306-795-7779, 306-537-2027. Email ladimer@sasktel.net
Western Star Bale Truck · 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 MOBILE STEAMER/PRESSURE WASHER, very clean unit, 2002 FL80 Freightliner, SA, 280 HP Mercedes Benz, air susp., air brakes, new clutch, new 10 spd. trans, rebuilt 20’ van body, 1260 gal. water tanks, 880,000 BTU burner w/new coil, 650 Cat pump, 3 cyl. Isuzu dsl. eng., extra hoses, tooled and ready to work. Serious inquiries only. Call 780-524-2179, Valleyview, AB. 1998 KENWORTH T-800, stainless steel paving box, 30” live belt, $30,000. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. WANTED: TANDEM MANURE truck(s) w/full hyd. McKee spreader. Prefer autoshift or auto., must be in very good cond., 350+HP. 780-842-2909, Wainwright, AB. 1981 INTERNATIONAL DIESEL single axle livestock truck w/aluminum body, 400,000 kms. $9000. 780-305-3547 Neerlandia, AB. 1996 CHEV CHEYENNE 1500 4x4, dually, dsl., std., w/8’x7’ Trailtech flatdeck w/fuel tank, needs eng. and rear tires, rest good. Best offer. 306-267-4471, Coronach, SK. 2007 WESTERN STAR 4900, 315,000 kms, w/2010 Bunning vertical spreader, good condition, $83,500. 306-621-0956, 306-647-2649, Theodore, SK. 3 MANURE SPREADER TRUCKS 2011 IHC 7600 tandems, 350 HP, auto. trans., air ride, full lockers, w/two McKee 800 manure spreaders, full hyd., one w/Burley Ironworks 20’ full hyd. swing out beaters. Approx. 3000 hrs. on units. $145,000/ea. Trucks and boxes can be sold separately; Hyundai 757 loader, skidder tires, 3000 hrs. Dennis 403-308-1400, Taber, AB. X-GOVERNMENT AND fleet trucks, single axle, Detroit dsl., power pumper truck, extra cab, telesquirter, auto train, $17,500; 1997 Ford F450 4x4 pumper truck from British helicopter base at Suffield, 7.3 dsl. eng., auto, low kms; X-SaskPower digger and bucket trucks, service trucks, tandem axle picker trucks; F450 Haul-All, side load/end dump, 7.3 dsl. eng., auto; 2006 Freightliner M2 with Mercedes diesel eng., $34,500. 306-668-2020, Saskatoon, SK. www.northtownmotors.com DL #908171.
2002 PETERBILT FUEL AND LUBE Truck, Cat C15, 475 HP, 102,000 kms, 6 spd. Allison, 46,000 rears, 20,000 fronts, 200 gal. fuel tank, 7 oil tanks w/air operated pumps and hose reels. Open to trades and offers. 780-679-7062, Camrose, AB. 1978 L8000 FORD cement truck, 8 yard mixer, $3800. Call 306-445-5602, North Battleford, SK.
2004 HONDA CR-V AWD, new studded winter tires, leather, heated seats, power everything, A/T/C, sunroof, command start, 161,000 kms (mostly highway), $12,500. 306-497-2710, Blaine Lake, SK.
LACOMBE TRAILER SALES & RENTALS WE SELL AND RENT
2011 V o lvo 6 30, 61” m id ro o fs leep er, D16 515 h.p ., 18 s p d , 46,000 rea rs , F u ll lo ckers , Reb u iltT ra n s m is s io n , On ly 598,000 km s , AS K ING . . . . . . $79 ,9 00 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 km 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 km s . 2008 IHC 9 9 00i, IS X 525 h.p ., 18 s p d , 46,000 rea rs , F u ll L o ckers , M o o s e Bu m p er, 70” high ris e s leep er, 949,000 km s . 2008 IHC 9 200i, Da y ca b , IS X 435 h.p ., 13 s p d ., 12&40’s , 11R22.5 tires , 510,000 km 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 km s . V HD Gra vel Tru ck , Ju s to ffs ho rtterm lea s e, 2013 VHD gra vel, D13 425 h.p ., I-s hifta u to m a ted , 12&40’s , 16’ gra vel b o x, p in tle hitch fo r p u p , lo ckers , o n ly 10,600 km s . V HD Gra vel Tru ck , Ju s to ffs ho rtterm lea s e, D13 425 h.p ., I-s hifta u to m a ted , 12&40’s , fu ll lo ckers , 16’ gra vel b o x, 6,500 km s .
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
NEU-STAR.COM 1470 Willson Place / Winnipeg, Manitoba / R3T 3N9 Phone 204-478-STAR (7827) / Fax 204-478-1100 / Email: info@neu-star.com
2011 PROSTAR IHC 500 HP Maxxforge 15 engine, 18 spd. trans., 46,000 rears, 236 WB, 3-way lockers, only 137,000 kms, Webasto engine and bunk heater, alum. rims, 11R22.5 Michelin tires at 90%, full rear Cain rack w/doors, moose bumper, 73” bunk, gear ratio 3.73 GVW 52,000, $94,000. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB
2000 FREIGHTLINER FL80 with 24’ flatdeck, 300 HP diesel 9 spd., safetied, vg cond., no rust, $19,500. Call for details, 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. 2005 IH 4300, 24’ van truck, Allison auto., 466 eng., 3000 lb. lift gate, premium California truck, no rust, 118,000 miles, only $24,500. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK.
CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors, view information at highway tractors, view information at www.titantrucksales.com www.titantrucksales.com
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
2002 FORD F350, 12 passenger van, 7.3 diesel, 282,000 kms, good heater/AC, no rust, excellent condition, private owned. ABOVE AVERAGE WAGE opportunity to op403-393-0219, 403-833-2190. erate you own business. Be your own boss representing, Lifetime Cookware, kitchen products. Consider a rewarding and exciting commission based career with Lifetime (Since 1909). Complete training will be provided. Serious persons only apply please. Mail resume to: Brian Kakuk, PO Box 2378, Drumheller, AB. T0J 0Y0. HONEY RANCH! Turnkey honey operation Or e-mail to: bmkakuk@hotmail.com comes fully equipped with everything re- Contact Brian for additional information quired for beekeeping and 2 residences. 403-820-2789. Sellers willing to train. Val Marie, SK. COMPUTER BUSINESS in large northern MLS® ID#481220. 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 town of 7000 includes stationery and other income generating business. Living quar1-866-345-3414. ters can be developed. On #11 Hwy in AUSTRALIAN PACKAGE BEES, mite Craik, Bar and Grill, turnkey, housing free. April delivery. Australian and US available. Development Lands. 136 queens available. Morley at 306-534-2014, Acre, development lands in Elbow. Res306-534-4462, Spy Hill, SK. taurant, store, and 2 houses. All can be bought as a group or individually. 76 Acres, in city of Melville, destined for residential and/or commercial development. SELLING LEAFCUTTER BEE incubation 30 Acres, part of Craven, can be develtrays wood and poly units, 200 of ea, good oped residentially, includes large 2 storey cond. FOB in Shell Lake, SK. 306-477-1021 house. 68 Acres, east of Regina on #46 WILL DO STYROBLOCK cocoon harvesting; near Pilot Butte, with a home, secondary Wanted: plastic shelters. Call Maurice serviced site adjacent town land. 93 Wildeman 306-365-4395, 306-365-7802, Acres, north Saskatoon on #11 Highway. Investment: Davidson, 2 heated shops Lanigan, SK. excellent for trucking or heavy mechanics operation, on approx. 2 acres. Hanley, near #11 Hwy, former bake shop, gas bar, confectionary, has 3 work bays and living WANTED: SERVICE MANUAL and parts quarters. Lintlaw, 4 acres, school with manaul for 60 Series Volvo 810. Call: gym, good shape, many applications. On #39 Hwy. in small town, 7300 sq. ft. 306-839-4438, Pierceland, SK. building on 2 acres land, sale or lease. Seed cleaning and processing plant on CP rail line 40 miles north of Regina. Brian Tiefenbach, NAI Commercial Real Estate (Sask) Ltd. 306-536-3269, 306-525-3344. WELL ESTABLISHED 3456 sq. ft. Autobody Repair business located in the heart of CONTINUOUS METAL ROOFING, no ex- potash country in East Central SK. Excelposed screws to leak or metal overlaps. lent Clientele, large area to draw from Ideal for lower slope roofs, rinks, church- with unlimited potential. 72x146’ lot with es, pig barns, commercial, arch rib build- adjacent 80x146’ lot, next to Yellowhead ing and residential roofing; also available Hwy at major intersection. 306-621-7722, in Snap Lock. 306-435-8008, Wapella, SK. 306-399-7723, Churchbridge, SK. CONCRETE COMPANY in central Alberta. Includes 2 trucks, trailer, and all tools too STEEL BUILDING BARGAINS. Allocated many to mention, asking $65,000. Growdiscounts. We do deals, 30x40, 50x60, ing clientele yearly. Gary 403-843-3546. 100x100 and more. Total construction and BENITO FOODS FOR sale: This well estabblueprints available. Ph. 1-800-964-8335, lished business is the only grocery store in www.gosteelbuildings.com Source #18X the community. Call Bill or Darlene 204-539-2583, Benito, MB.
CLASSIFIED ADS 43
KIR-ASH CONTRACTING LTD. Hauling farm equipment of all types, throughout BC., AB., SK. Call us to book today, 780-978-2945, Grande Prairie, AB.
G R AV E L S C R E E N E R - c o nve y o r b e l t , 2004 BOBCAT 325 excavator, ROPS, dsl., 16”x30’L, screener 28”x8’L. 306-654-4802, 24” Q/A bucket, 4600 hours, $23,995. For Prud’Homme, SK. info call 306-764-2325 or 1-888-708-3739, www.glenmor.cc or glenmor@sasktel.net BOBCAT MT52 WALK behind loader, dsl., comes with bucket, 935 hours, $12,995. Call 306-764-2325 or 1-888-708-3739, www.glenmor.cc or glenmor@sasktel.net USED DELAVAL MILKING equipment, 4 2006 CASE 621D wheel loader, 4498 hrs, weigh jars, Duravac vacuum pump and CAH, ride control, 3rd valve, 20.5-25 tires- compressor, all working. Asking $2,000. 90%, WBM hydraulic QA, c/w 2.75 cu. yd. 306-547-5501, Preeceville, SK. bucket and pallet forks, $89,900. Jordan WESTFALIA VACUUM PUMP, (60 CFM), 45 anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. free stalls with bedding mattresses, 800 gal. bulk tank, feeding augers, Badger pis1981 D7G CAT c/w enclosed cab, twin tilt ton manure pump. 306-933-2805, email angle blade, UC 90%, rebuilt trans., final sp.dyck@sasktel.net Warman, SK. drives, about 500 hrs. on rebuilt eng., canopy, job ready, $85,000. Warranty. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.
RANCH OIL CONTRACTING LTD. is in the grain hauling business. Truck and Super B, looking for work in NW SK and NE AB. Call 306-238-4800, Goodsoil, SK. ROUND BALE PICKING and hauling, small or large loads. Travel anywhere. Also hay for sale. 306-382-0785, Vanscoy, SK. 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 SKIDSTEER ATTACHMENTS: rock buckets, 306-567-7100, Imperial, SK. dirt buckets, grapples and more top quality. Also have truck decks in stock. Quality Welding and Sales 306-731-3009 or 306-731-8195, Craven, SK. CAT D6D angle dozer, guarding, sweeps, tilt, winch, nice Cat. Call 780-983-0936, Pacesetter Equipment, Westlock, AB. O3 EQUIPMENT HAULING Ltd. Profession- 2006 544J, 5100 hrs., rubber 85%, choice al transportation of equipment in Western of bucket, or bucket w/grapple, 9 of out Canada and NW USA. Call 780-305-3547, 10 condition, immaculate. 306-744-8113, Saltcoats, SK. Barrhead, AB. www.o3hauling.com
JIM’S TUB GRINDING, H-1100 Haybuster with 400 HP, serving Sask. 306-334-2232, Balcarres. CUSTOM TUB GRINDING: operate a Haybuster H1100E- 425 HP machine. Phone Greg 306-947-7510, Saskatoon, SK.
REGULATION DUGOUTS: 120x60x14’ $2000; 160x60x14’ $2950; 180x60x14’ $3450; 200x60x14’ $3950. Government grants available until 2018. 306-222-8054, Saskatoon, SK. BRUSH MULCHING. The fast, effective way to clear land. Four season service, competitive rates, 375 HP unit, also avail. trackhoe w/thumb, multiple bucket attachments. Bury rock and brush piles and fence line clearing. Bork Contracting, www.borysiukcontracting.ca Prince Albert, SK., 306-960-3804.
HAULING COMPANY: 3 2013’s, 1 2006 truck w/pumps to haul oil. Shop and living quarters all on same lot, c/w client base $900,000. Pat 306-460-6024, Conquest SK THRIVING ABATTOIR and catering business on 15 acres near Strasbourg, SK. Included with the fully equipped shop are: 1628 sq. ft. home, a hip roof barn and outbuildings. Couple looking to retire. Find out more at: leaningmaplemeats.com or HAND CRAFTED, STURDY solid pine pole/ call 306-725-4018. storage sheds, can be built to suit your THRIVING APPLIANCE STORE FOR SALE needs. Metal exterior roof, color options in beautiful Kelowna, BC. Specializing in available. Call 780-645-4455, ext. 241, St. used appliances, parts and a full service Paul, AB, or check out our website at: department. Est. 1978, owner retiring. Call MASTER STONE MASONRY. Custom www.bqlogcabins.com for more info. or to 250-765-3769 or 250-765-1511. fireplaces and stone masonry. Specialize in request a quote. fieldstone and restorations. Willing to F U T U R E S T E E L B U I L D I N G approx. travel for work in rural areas. WETT Certi30’x30’x14’. No front or back walls. Cert. fied Inspections. Call 306-280-1845, Sasengineered drawings and manuals for SK. katoon, SK. E-mail: adam_kent@live.com Complete assembly instructions. Stock GRAVEL SCREENING. Will custom screen #C8957465T. CSA A660-04. Cert. gauge g r ave l at y o u r l o c at i o n . C a l l D ave AAAA steel. Delivered, never assembled, FARMERS NEED FINANCIAL HELP? Go to: 306-368-2595, Lake Lenore, SK. t o o b i g fo r o u r y a r d ! $ 9 0 0 0 fi r m . www.bobstocks.ca or call 306-757-1997. 306-352-3052, Regina, SK. NEUFELD ENT. CORRAL CLEANING, 245- 1055 Park Street, Regina, SK. payloader, Bobcat with rubber tracks and vertical beater spreaders. Phone 306-220-5013, 306-467-5013, Hague, SK. WANT SHORT TERM FINANCING? Good MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, stumps, caraganas, etc. 12 years of enviro friendly return. For more info. ph 306-221-2208. WANTED: GAS BARS/ CONVENIENCE mulching. Call today! 306-933-2950. Visit: Stores. Bill Nesteroff, Re/Max Saskatoon, DEBTS, BILLS AND charge accounts too www.maverickconstruction.ca 306-497-2668, billnesteroff@sasktel.net high? Need to resolve prior to spring? Call CUSTOM SEEDING/ BALING/ SWATHING. COUPLE REQUIRED TO OPERATE country us to develop a professional mediation Also parting 567 baler; Some hay for sale. hotel in a great location. Partnership may plan, resolution plan or restructuring plan. Call Alan: 306-463-8423, Marengo, SK. Call toll free 1-888-577-2020. be available for interested parties. Call 306-352-4134. NEED A LOAN? Own farmland? Bank says MEAT PROCESSING PLANT - Abattoir. n o ? I f y e s t o a b o v e t h r e e , c a l l 11,600 sq ft building (2007) located on 7.3 1-866-405-1228, Calgary, AB. industrial acres in Vegreville, AB. Business FARM/CORPORATE PROJECTS. Call A.L. is showing positive growth with excellent Management Group for all your borrowing 1977 D7G CAT dozer. Powershift, bush returns. Please do not approach business and lease requirements. 306-790-2020, equipped, ripper, twin tilts, angle blade. directly. Craig Stenersen, 780-233-9939, Regina, SK. Lots of recent work done. Can be seen Realty Executives Devonshire (the park), working. 306-745-7168, Esterhazy, SK. craig@working4u.ca 2004 JCB 520 Loadall telehandler, cab HOME PLUS INCOME! Live in the Resort w/heat, max. lift cap. 4400 lbs. and max. Village of Manitou and live for next to lift height 16.4’, 76 HP, 2600 hrs., $38,995. nothing. The Canadian dream is to earn re- FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS Call 1-888-708-3739 or www.glenmor.cc tirement income owning this small motel We also specialize in: Crop insurance apwith principal residence. Contact Lorne peals; Chemical drift; Residual herbicide; 2000 NH LS180 skidsteer, 3800 hrs, high Purdy 306-222-5984, Remax Saskatoon or Custom operator issues; Equipment mal- flow hyds., cab heater, $13,500. Call Terry function. Qualified Agrologist on staff. Call 306-554-8220, Dafoe, SK. view online at: www.homebuyerconnect.ca Back-Track Investigations for assistance ROME PLOW AND KELLO DISC blades RAMSAY PONY RIDES and Concession regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779. and bearings; 24” to 36” notched disc have for sale concession bus (blue), blades. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. 1982 IHC propane bus, 5 spd. std., great www.kelloughs.com concession bus or would make great camper. 2- 1983 supply buses, Detroit dsl., CHAMPION 730 GRADER, c/w snow wing Allison trans. 306-386-2490, Cochin, SK. FARM ACCOUNTING/ UTILITIES Soft- and V-plow, clean, orig. paint. Pacesetter It’s totally new and better than Equipment, 780-983-0936, Westlock, AB. SMALL MANUFACTURING SHOP and resi- ware. Farmtool - Farm Accounting Softdence. 40 yrs of operation with established ever. Farmtool Companion - Field, Ser- 2005 CAT 950 G LOADER, 6100 hrs., new product line. Owner retiring. Turnkey op- ware; vice, Inventory records and more. Wil- Michelin tires, quick attach, sweeper, eration. 306-445-5562, Delmas, SK. Tech Software Ltd. Burstall, SK. Ph/fax forks, and snow blade, $125,000. Call TURNKEY LOG FURNITURE BUSINESS. 306-679-2299, email: wiltech@sasktel.net 403-818-8615, Nobleford, AB. 3000 sq. ft. heated shop w/all tools. 2 www.wil-techsoftware.com LINKBELT LS 98 crawler crane, 50’ boom homes. On 6 fenced lots. Trailers for haulCat power, long UC, c/w all rigging including logs. 24’ custom built trailer for moving yard 1/2 and yard 1/4 drag buckets, ing furniture. No shortage of wood or ready to go, $15,000 OBO. 204-669-9626, work. Best steelhead fishing in the world. Winnipeg, MB. Lots of mountain life, mountains and rivers. Selling for health reasons. Hazelton, 1992 TAYLOR DD60 PT Padfoot packer, BC. 250-842-0005, 250-842-8996. 60” drums, $12,500. Terry 204-746-4131, FEITSMA SERVICES IS booking 2014 alfal- www.equipmentpeople.com Rosenort, MB. EST MASSAGE and Laser Therapy busi- fa, cereal and corn silage acres. Serving all STEEL SERVICE TOOLBOX for 1/2 ton, 3/4 ness and building in busy oilpatch town in of Sask. Jason 306-381-7689, Hague, SK. or 1 ton truck, 6 compartments, 79” wide, SE SK. For info: 306-457-8220, Stoughten. 8’ long, good shape, $750 OBO. TURNKEY BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY! 204-669-9626, Winnipeg, MB. New state of the art, 8-bay carwash for sale in thriving Saskatchewan community. LOWDERMILK TRANSPORT IS providing HYDRAULIC PULL SCRAPERS 10 to 25 Located on 1.5 acres with great location one call service for all Equipment/Hay yds., exc. cond.; Loader and scraper tires, on highway. Great customer base! Selling hauling. Very experienced, multiple trucks custom conversions available. Looking for due to health concerns. Serious inquiries serving AB., SK., and MAN. 780-872-0107, Cat cable scrapers. Quick Drain Sales Ltd., 306-252-1001, Kenaston, SK. 306-231-7318, 306-682-4520 Muenster SK only please! Call 306-232-4767.
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. 2006 VOLVO EC 210 BLC excavator, 5100 hrs., 72” hyd. twister bucket included, vg UC, 51,000 lbs, hyd. quick coupler access., 6 cyl. Volvo turbo, $79,000. Can deliver. Call 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.
USED, REBUILT or NEW engines. Specializing in Cummins, have all makes, large inventory of parts, repowering is our specialty. 1-877-557-3797, Ponoka, AB. 3406B, N14, SERIES 60, running engines and parts. Call Yellowhead Traders, 306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK. 290 CUMMINS, 350 Detroit, 671 Detroit, Series 60 cores. 306-539-4642, Regina, SK ENGINES: 353, 453, 471, 8.2L Detroit, 4BT Cummins, 6CT8.3, 3208 Cat and 3306 Cat. Call 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.
EXCAVATORS FOR SALE/RENT: JD 270D, JD 240D, Cat 320D. Conquest Equipment, 2006 HITACHI ZX270, LC-3, hydraulic 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. excavator, c/w hyd. thumb, multi function NEW EQUIPMENT FOR SALE/RENT: aux. hydraulics, WB quick attach, 2 buck- 30 yard surge bin, 3670 triple pack conets, catwalks, ROPS, Proheat, positive air veyor, 36”x50’ and 60’ transfer conveyors, shutdown, 6720 hrs., AC. 587-991-6605, P6203 portable screen plant and 36”x75’ Edmonton, AB. radial stacking conveyors. Hikon Industries ANTIQUE CATERPILLAR COLLECTION, Ltd. at 306-244-4533, Saskatoon, SK., (1932 and up) 35 machines, running, parts email: hikon@sasktel.net books and toys. 204-748-1567, Virden MB 2005 BOBCAT S185G skidsteer, CAH, SAND DRYING PLANT. 7 cu. yd. insulat- bucket, keyless ignition, 4000 hours, ed feed hopper; 5’ dia. x24’ drum dryer/ 4 $18,900. 306-764-2325, 1-888-708-3739, to 12 million BTU burner on nat. gas; two www.glenmor.cc or glenmor@sasktel.net 20”x32’ conveyors; one 5’x14’ - 2-1/2 deck screening plant; 45 TM drive-under out- 2011 MIDLAND TRI-AXLE quarter frame load bin; 240 TM dry bulk storage hopper end dump, w/vibrator and liner, 2 air lift bin; 55’ bucket elevator; switch gear and axles, $45,000. 306-726-7938, Southey SK electrical panel with 10 switches; 1982 2008 VOLVO G970, 5200 hrs., ripper, 250 Drott 50E track excavator. All equipment HP, $168,000. Will take older trade. Call o p e r a t i n g a n d i n g o o d c o n d i t i o n . 306-445-5602, North Battleford, SK. 306-945-2270, Waldheim, SK. 1996 JD 648G skidder, 10,300 hrs, rear 2005 HITACHI 270, hyd. excavator, chains, ready to work, excellent condition, w/hyd. thumb. Pacesetter Equipment, a s k i n g $ 3 0 , 0 0 0 . P i c s a v a i l a b l e . Westlock, AB., 780-983-0936. 780-926-9540, Buffalo Head Prairie, AB. 2012 JD 444 wheel loader, 1000 hrs., quick attach bucket. Call 780-983-0936, 2006 HITACHI ZX270, LC-3, hydraulic excavator, c/w hyd. thumb, multi function Pacesetter Equipment, Westlock, AB. aux. hydraulics, WB quick attach, 2 buck1997 TS14D TEREX scraper, CAH, ets, catwalks, ROPS, Proheat, positive air Michelin tires at 60%, recent w/o on shutdown, 6720 hrs., AC. 587-991-6605, trans., in good working cond, exc. cosmet- Edmonton, AB. ics. Call 780-983-0936, Westlock, AB. 1997 JD 770 grader, 16,000 hrs, powerKOMATSU D37P CRAWLER, 1993, 6-way shift, front blade and snow wing, tires blade, hydrostatic, cab, heat, winch, joy- 75%, $55,000. 306-554-8220, Dafoe, SK. stick controls, runs great, $23,600. 2006 CAT 320 EXCAVATOR, QA, clean 306-526-9382, Shaunavon, SK. out bucket, 10,000 hrs., nice, $65,000. CLIFF’S USED CRAWLER PARTS. Some 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. 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 . ROAD GRADERS CONVERTED to pull 780-755-2295, Edgerton, AB. behind large 4 WD tractors, 14’ and 16’ CAT D8K angle dozer, guarding, sweeps, blade widths available. CWK Enterprises, ripper, vg running cond. 780-983-0936, 306-682-3367, 306-231-8358, Humboldt, Pacesetter Equipment, Westlock, AB. SK., www.cwenterprises.ca DX110, 13006 DEUTZ; 90 dsl. Massey, 318 2705 Massey, 354 Perkins; 2675 JD 750 crawler tractor, c/w 6-way dozer, Perkins; 354 Perkins; 2290 Case, 504; heated cab and ripper. Call 780-983-0936, Massey, 3394 Case, 504; 1070 Case, 451; 1586 Pacesetter Equipment, Westlock, AB. IHC, 436; 8430 JD complete OH. All above engines in good running condition. 1-877-564-8734, Roblin, MB.
2010 LUXURY BY DESIGN, 4 to 8 people, living quarters, exc. cond., forced air heating, AC, 5 pull-outs, 2 washrooms, 2 showers, cooking area, 54’, $37,000. Can deliver. 204-526-0321, Cypress River, MB. CONTERRA GRADER for skidsteers and tractors. Excellent for road maintenance, 1993 CASE 621B wheel loader, CAH, floating and levelling. 518S-SS, $2499. hyd. Q/A, 2.75 yd. Q/A bucket, 20.5-25 Conterra manufactures over 150 attachtires, excellent condition! $39,500. Jordan, ments. Call 1-877-947-2882, view online anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. at www.conterraindustries.com 2008 HITACHI 350 hyd. excavator, hyd. 2008 JOHN DEERE 770 GRADER, S/N thumb. Pacesetter Equipment, Westlock, DW770DX616885, w/snow wing, good AB., 780-983-0936. cond. Highest or any tender not necessariATTACHMENTS: skidsteer, pallet forks, ly accepted. Written tenders received no buckets, augers, hay spears. Conquest later than 9:00 AM, March 18, 2014. 306-463-7043, fax 306-967-2424, RM of Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. Chesterfield, Box 70, Eatonia, SK, S0L 0Y0. 2004 BOBCAT 325 excavator, ROPS, dsl., 24” Q/A bucket, 1550 hrs., $22,900. For 2006 CAT 320CL excavator, 6800 hrs, 2 info call 306-764-2325 or 1-888-708-3739, buckets, thumb, aux. hyds., Webasto, $79,000. Terry 306-554-8220, Dafoe, SK. www.glenmor.cc or glenmor@sasktel.net
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
WISCONSIN MOTOR PARTS for VG4D: Crank shaft, heads, fly wheel, starter, manifold and carb, $1000 OBO. 204-669-9626, Winnipeg, MB.
BEHLEN STEEL BUILDINGS, quonsets, convex and rigid frame straight walls, grain tanks, metal cladding, farm - commercial. Construction and concrete crews. Guaranteed workmanship. Call your SaskaCAT 60, 70, 80 and 463’s available. Also EQUIPMENT RENTALS: loaders, dozers, toon and northwest Behlen Distributor, Allis Chalmers direct mount scrapers. Call excavators, compactors, etc. Conquest Janzen Steel Buildings, 306-242-7767, 306-338-7114, Clair, SK. Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. Osler, SK. WANTED: OLDER WHEEL loader, Case W9D, Clark Michigan 75, or others, running or not. 306-276-0167, Choiceland, SK JD 772D 2005 AWD, 8700 hrs., $125,000; CAT TH360B telehandler, 2005, $28,000; New ripper, Cat 140M, $12,000. Call 403-291-1010, Calgary, AB.
BUILDING SUPPLIES & CONTRACTING
1997 CAT IT28G wheel loader, cab w/heat, hydraulic Q/A bucket and pallet forks, 3rd valve, new 17.5-25 tires! Very nice! $48,500. Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB.
FARM BUILDINGS
“Today’s Quality Built For Tomorrow”
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. EXCELLENT SELECTION Used skidsteers, track loaders, forklifts, zoom booms, mini excavators. Visit www.glenmor.cc for details, specs and prices. Glenmor, phone 306-764-2325, Prince Albert, SK. 12’ 6-WAY MINI PULL DOZER; 16’ 6-Way Supreme pull dozer; 8’ to 14’ tilt land levelers. Call 403-312-4202, Linden, AB. D65E-6 KOMATSU DOZER, very clean and straight, cab, LED lights, multi-shank ripper, angle dozer, hyd. tilt, new sprockets, guarded w/sweeps. 780-983-0936, Westlock, AB.
Hague, SK | (306) 225-2288
www.zaksbuilding.com
3UH (QJLQHHUHG /DPLQDWHG 3RVWV
44 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
WHEN
Quality COUNTS
w w w .go o do n.co m
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
• The HEAVIEST metal • The STRONGEST posts • SUPERIOR craftsmenship Choose Prairie Post Frame
EXPERIENCED POST FRAME BUILDERS REQUIRED 1-855 (773-3648)
www.prairiepostframe.ca
W O O D CO UN TRY
EACH DOOR IS CUSTOM MEASURED, BUILT, DELIVERED AND
PROFESSIONALLY INSTALLED. THE POWERHOUSE OF THE DOOR INDUSTRY
Northern Alberta Southern Alberta Saskatchewan Manitoba
1-866-497-5338 1-855-532-4475 1-306-355-2718 1-855-542-5117
www.powerliftdoors.com DIAMOND CANVAS SHELTERS, sizes ranging from 15’ wide to 120’ wide, any length. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.starlinesales.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
#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 ~
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. 40x80x16’ tre a te d 6x6 po s tb ld g. c/w 20x16 s lid in g d o o r................$19,15 4.5 4 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.
FREE
1-866-974-7678 QUOTE IntegrityPostStructures.com AFAB INDUSTRIES POST frame buildings. For the customer that prefers quality. 1-888-816-AFAB (2322), Rocanville, SK.
FARM BUILDINGS
www.westrumlumber.com
1-800-561-5625
s a les @ jtlin d u s tries .ca
POLY HOPPER BINS, 100 bu., $900; 150 bu. $1250. 306-258-4422, Vonda, SK. Call for nearest dealer. www.buffervalley.com
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
w w w.jtlin d u s tries .ca N E IL BU RG, S AS K ATCH E W AN
INVITATION TO TENDER: Sealed tenders are invited by the Saskatoon Co-op Agro Center for bin hauling for the 2014 season. The contract involves moving approx. 130 new galvanized grain bins from our yard to various customer yards around Saskatoon. Tender package and details available by calling Saskatoon Co-op Agro Center at 306-933-3834 or in person at 1327 North Service Road, Hwy #16 West, Saskatoon, SK. Deadline for tenders is 12:00 noon, Friday February 14, 2014. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted.
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
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 yo ur c o n c re te p a d .
TAK E AD VAN TAG E O F W IN TER B O O K IN G N O W !!!
SPECIAL WINTER PRICING! 10,000 bu. Twister hopper bins. See your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626
L EA S IN GL E A V A IL A B
BROCK (BUTLER) GRAIN BIN PARTS and accessories available at Rosler Construction. 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK.
F la t F lo o r Bin s up to 1,000,000 Bus he ls !
CROP PRODUCTION SHOW SPECIALS Westeel 10,300 bu. hopper bin: triple skid, Edwards 24” air tube, OPI temperature cable, set-up included, $2.35/bu. Delivery extra. Only 30 left. Call 306-373-4919, Grain Bin Direct, Saskatoon, SK.
• 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 rw a rra n ty o n co rru ga ted b in s
WESTEEL, GOEBEL, grain and fertilizer bins. Grain Bin Direct, 306-373-4919. 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.
THE “FORCE” LINE
STEALTH BIN PRODUCTS- Goebel bins, Westeel bins, 14’ hoppers. Early booking CHIEF WESTLAND AND CARADON BIN specials. 587-280-0239, Vegreville, AB. extensions, sheets, stiffeners, etc. Now www.stealthbins.ca available. Call Bill, 780-986-5548, Leduc, Download the AB. www.starlinesales.com
AGR I- TR AD E IN N OVATION AW AR D W IN N ER 20 12
free app today.
• 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.
THE LEGACY LINE 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.
LIFETIME LID OPENERS. We are a stocking dealer for Boundary Trail Lifetime Lid BOOKING SPECIALS ON large diameter bin Openers, 18” to 39”. Rosler Construction erection, concrete and damage repair. 2000 Inc., 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK. Call Quadra Development Corp. 1-800-249-2708, Rocanville, SK. TOP QUALITY MERIDIAN/ BEHLEN BINS. Book now for best prices. Example: DARMANI - Building Better Bins DARMANI - Building Better Bins DARMANI - Building Better Bins all prices include skid, ladders to ground, manhole, set-up and delivery within set radius. Meridian Hopper combos: 3500 bu. D $10,450. SPECIAL 5000 bu. $13,990. We D manufacture superior quality hoppers and steel floors for all makes and sizes. Know A what you are investing in. Call and find out A JANUARY SPECIALS why our product quality and price well exceeds the competition. We also stock reGrain Bins placement lids for all makes and models of R Factory Sales Reps FLAT MOUNT HOPPER MOUNT R Steel Floors bins. Leasing available. Hoffart Services Inc., 306-957-2033, Odessa, SK. CEMENT MOUNT 306-227-8171
WINTER SPECIALS 1-866-665-6677 FACTORY DIRECT PRICING
At
Westrum Lumber
G RAIN SYSTEM S IN C.
INVITATION TO TENDER: Sealed tenders are invited by Saskatoon Co-op Agro Center for a bin construction crew for the 2014 bin building season. The contract involves construction and/or repair of approx. 130 new and/or existing galvanized grain bins in various locations around Saskatoon. Tender package and details available by calling Saskatoon Co-op Agro 306-933-3834 or in person at 1327 North Service Road, Hwy #16 West, Saskatoon, SK. Deadline for tenders is 12:00 noon, Friday February 14, 2014. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted.
CROP PRODUCTION SHOW SPECIALS: 5000 bu. Superior bin combos, $10,800; 8000 bu. Superior combos, $16,800. Limited quantity available. We make hopper bottoms and steel floors for all makes of bins. Try our U-Weld kits. Call 306-367-2408 or 306-367-4306, Middle Lake, SK. www.middlelakesteel.com
POLE BARNS, WOODSTEEL packages, hog, chicken, and dairy barns, grain bins and hoppers. Construction and concrete crews available. Mel or Scott, MR Steel Construction, 306-978-0315, Hague, SK.
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
P RICED TO CLEAR!!!
NUMEROUS HOPPERS and some flat bottoms. Hoppers from 1500 bu.-5000 bu., most w/air, some w/fans, some fertilizer. Flat bottoms from 2500 bu.-6000 bu., some w/air and fans. Priced to sell. Phone Barry 306-946-7805, Young, SK.
M
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.
G RAI N H AND LI NG & STO RAG E
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $ $ $ $ $ $ 7 5 TR UC KLOAD S $ $ 29 G AUG E FULL H AR D 100,000 P S I $ $ H IG H TEN S ILE R OOFIN G & S ID IN G $ $ 16 C OLOUR S TO C H OOS E FR OM $ $ 2 $ B-G r. Colou red . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70¢ ft $ 2 $ M u lti Colou rM illen d s . . . . . 49¢ ft $ $ $ BEAT THE P RICE $ $ IN C R E A S E S $ $ AS K ABO UT O UR BLO W O UT $ $ CO LO RS AT $0.6 5 S Q . FT. $ $ CALL N O W $ $ $ $ F o u illa rd S teel $ $ S u p p lies L td . $ $ S t. La za re, M a n . $ $ 18 005 103303 $ $ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
ASSIE IN D USTR IES w e specialize in
H UGE H O PPER ED STO R AGE. A ll our units are eng ineered to insure that the safest prod uct is d elivered to you our valued custom er. W ith 27 years in the business of m anufacturing hoppers w e are confid ent that w e can bring your project to com pletion w ith ease. O ur g oal as a m anufacturer is to g ive you the best prod uct w ith the best price. Actnow in order to have these larger units delivered on tim e for the 201 4 harvest. 27x8 tier M erid ian c/w hopper and louvered aeration,17,50 0 bu.
$3 1 ,6 7 5 .00 cost per bu .$1 .81
1-888-663-9663
Totalheig ht 54 ’10 ” M erid ian aug er required SL M D -14 -95
R o ulea u,S K
27x7 tier M erid ian c/w hopper and louvered aeration,15,70 0 bu.
A N I
Unload Systems Swing Air /Cross Air/Full Floor Temp Monitoring Aeration Fans Bins (steel only) from .60/bushel ONE CALL CAN SAVE YOU $1,000’s
306-831-5060 306-831-5854 306-831-5856 306-831-5857
M
4,000-40,000 bushel pkgs
N
www.darmani.ca
I
MANUFACTURE---FINANCE---DELIVERY---SET UP B I
Hopper Bottom Grain Bins 4,800 BUSHEL PKG = from $2.20/Bushel
B
(bin/air/steel floor)
(bin/hopper/skid foundation)
N
31,000 bushel pkg = from $1.08
10,400 bushel pkg = from $2.16
Flat Bottom Grain Bins 19,106 BUSHEL PACKAGE = from $20,235 = $1.06/Bushel
N
S (bin/cross air/unload/sweep/steel floor) DARMANI - Building Better Bins
(bin/hopper/skid foundation)
DARMANI - Building Better Bins
FROM
27x6 tier M erid ian c/w hopper and stand ard aeration 13,90 0 bu.
$25 ,7 1 5 .00 cost per bu .$1 .85 Totalheig ht 4 7’4 ” M erid ian aug er required SL M D -79 27x5 tier M erid ian c/w hopper and stand ard aeration 12,10 0 bu.
$21 ,901 .00 cost per bu .$1 .81 Totalheig ht 4 3’6 ” M erid ian aug er required -SL M D -72 W e also sellsm ooth sk in bins and M eridian au gers.
Ca llfo r d eta ils
A SSIE IN D USTRIES B ox 4 00 St.Brieu x,SK .
S
EXG 300 AKRON
THE
Totalheig ht 51’1” M erid ian aug er required SL M D -85
CallD on Phone: 30 6-275 -21 75 Em ail: a ssie@ sa sktel.n et
I
DARMANI - Building Better Bins
$28,888.00 cost per bu .$1 .84
FO B St.Brieu x setu p isextra Check ou r a d in the green book pg.27 7
A
GREAT CAPACITY, 300 TON/HOUR 1 BUSHEL CLEAN UP AT THE END OF THE BAG. FULLY WINDS UP GRAIN BAG Email: craigyeager@grainbagscanada.com or aaronyeager@grainbagscanada.com
Call Your Local Dealer
or Grain Bags Canada at 306-682-5888
www.grainbagscanada.com
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
RROLLER ENN M ILL
ARE YOU LOOKING for a pressurized, pump-assisted anhydrous ammonia fertilizer application system? I have several on hand, including some good-used systems. I am very familiar with NH3 application systems, as I have developed two of the pump-assisted systems for sale in Western Canada. I am one of Western Canada’s largest independent MaxQuip dealers and have new and some used traditional and Pump NH3 systems and used ammonia 1995 AG CHEM 1844 dry floater, JD 8.1L tanks as well. Contact Double HH Ag. Sales w/TerraShift, 7290 hrs., front tires- 25%, n Services at 780-777-8700 or email me HORNOI LEASING NEW and used 20’ and rears- 45%. Air Spread and Dickey John at: doublehhag@shaw.ca Fort Sask., AB. 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 controls. Ag Leader and Satloc GPS. Fert. and seed boxes. All working. $26,500. WANTED: 4 TO 8 ton fertilizer spreader. 306-757-2828, Regina, SK. Call 306-837-4493, Loon Lake, SK. 250-417-9159 dlamb@intref.ca Cranbrook
- 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
AG / FAR M
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 CAN ADIAN BUIL T FOR CAN ADIAN CON DITION S
In dus tria l D ire ct In corp ora te d
REN N M ill Cen ter In c.
(403) 78 4-3518
Grain Bin Direct
Galvanized • Flat Floor • Hopper Bins Smooth Walls • Fertilizer • Grain • Feed Aeration • Rockets • Fans • Heaters Temp Cables Saskatoon, SK
Phone: 306-373-4919 grainbindirect.com
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. $
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
SD L H OP P E R CONE M ARG O ,SASK.
HOPPER DROPPER
• This d evice M OUN TS T M AGN ETICAL L Y to the b o tto m o f yo u r ho pper b in . • Allo w s yo u to o pen the chu te w id e o pen w ith N O CHAN CE OF S PIL L S . • REDUCES s plittin g o f pea s a n d ca n o la b lo w in g a w a y in the w in d . S ee w eb s ite fo r m o re d eta ils o r Ca ll
N EW
PR O D U C
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. KEHO/ GRAIN GUARD Aeration Sales and Service. R.J. Electric, Avonlea, SK. Call 306-868-2199 or cell: 306-868-7738. KEHO, STILL THE FINEST. Clews Storage Management/ K. Ltd., 1-800-665-5346.
Brow n le e s Truckin g In c. Un ity, S K
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 SHIPPING CONTAINERS FOR SALE. 20’53’, delivery/ rental/ storage available. For inventory and prices call: 306-262-2899, Saskatoon, SK. www.thecontainerguy.ca 20’ AND 40’ SEA CONTAINERS, for sale in Calgary, AB. Phone 403-226-1722, 1-866-517-8335. www.magnatesteel.com
Patent pending jack/hitch system. Only 42 lbs for easy handling. Hoppers are built to fit each size to eliminate leftover grain in hopper. The only hopper that will work with The Lump Buster for your fertilizer needs.
1.306.642.3460
www.thehopper.ca
1 800 667 8800
www.nuvisionfhs.com
2010 4520 AutoSteer, 1100 hrs., 70’ booms, $223,000; 2008 CASE 4520, 3 bin system, 70’ booms, AutoSteer, 2780 hrs., $180,000; 2006 Case 4510, AutoSteer, FlexAir 70’ booms, 7400 hrs., $114,000; 2005 Case 4520 w/70’ flex air, 4000 hrs., $129,000; 2005 Case, 3000 hrs., $138,000; 2005 Case 4010 w/3020 G4 New leader bed, $93,000; 2004 Loral AirM a x 1 0 0 0 , 7 0 ’ b o o m s , i m m a c u l at e , $93,000; 2002 Case 4260 w/1100 gal. tank, 80’ booms, $96,000; 2004 AgChem Rogator, w/air bed, $66,000; 2003 Sterling spreader w/AgForce spinner spreader, $75,000; 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, $39,500; 25 ton Wilmar tender w/spread axles, $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, $18,500; 1993 Wrangler loader, $14,500; 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 FERTILIZER TANKS, 10 year limited warranty, 5000 US gallons on sale. Call 306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228. While supplies last. www.hold-onindustries.com
OPTIONS INCLUDE:
Manufactured by
M & K WELDING BINS & CONES
Hopper Cone for 14 ft Westeel Rosco up to 2000 bu.
4DJ
FARMS LTD.
800-446-0316 www.norwoodsales.com
Sold & Serviced by
4DJ FARMS LTD.
email: hj4dj@platinum.ca | 403-588-3913
IF YOU PLAN ON LONG TERM STORAGE OF LIQUID FERTILIZER, DEMAND NOTHING BUT THE BEST!
Hopper Cone for 19 ft Westeel Rosco up to 3300 bu. • Manhole • 10 legs • 37 degree slope • Single 10x4x188w skid base
$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
Box 69, Penhold, AB T0M 1R0
of liquid fertilizer
$2,750.00
· “Fertank” single tank capacity of 9900usg · Stainless steel tanks with capacities up to 77,000usg Your single supplier of liquid handling products
1-866-509-0715
NEW BUHLER FARM King 1385 swing auger, $21,500. Call RJ Sales & Service, 306-338-2541, Wadena, SK. or www.rjsales.ca for more information. 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.
GRAINMAXX
www.liquidsystems.net
2011 BRENT 1594 grain cart, OEM, 36” HD tracks, like new condition; tarp, hyd. door, scale, 22” auger, $105,000. two to choose f r o m . C a n d e l i v e r. C a l l a n y t i m e , 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. BRUNS 400 BU. gravity grain cart, like new condition, $4800 OBO. 306-755-2084, Tramping Lake, SK.
HIGH CAPACITY AUGERS 8 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM
NEW
6000 SERIES
TELESCOPIC
SWING AUGER
1 800 667 8800
www.grainmaxx.com 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. NEW 10x51 WHEATHEART auger, comes with 38 HP motor and mover kit. Get more capacity! Call your nearest Flaman Sales store or call 1-888-435-2626. 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. Call 306-648-3321, Gravelbourg, SK. SAKUNDAIK 8x44’ AUGER with Hawes mover in excellent shape, 25HP. First $9500 takes. 780-768-2294, Two Hills, AB. 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 SAKUNDIAK AUGERS in Stock: Used: Brandt 10”x60’ S/A, $6500. In stock: New Convey-All TCSNH-1045 hydraulic drive, c/w mover kit, and 38 HP Kohler diesel, list $38,900. Leasing available. Call D a l e at M a i n w ay F a r m E q u i p m e n t , 306-567-3285 or 306-567-7299. Davidson, SK. View www.mainwayfarmequipment.ca 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.
REPLACEMENT FLIGHTING FOR augers, seed cleaning plants, grain cleaners, combine bubble-up augers.
Rosetown Flighting Supply
SORTEX-Z CLASS 1V color sorter, single module w/2 monochromatic cameras, very low hrs., in new cond., c/w IngersollRand rotary compressor, 10HP, w/cooler and dryer. Call 204-724-6673, Souris, MB. MOBILE GRAIN CLEANING business for sale: 2 self-contained grain cleaners plus clientele in West Central SK., c/w screens, in-feed, discharge augers, scale, bin sweep mounted on Isuzu cab-over trucks. Quick set up and total clean out. Will provide training. 306-463-5955, Kindersley, SK. DUAL SCREEN ROTARY grain cleaners, great for pulse crops, best selection in Western Canada. Phone 306-259-4923 or 306-946-7923, Young, SK. DUAL STAGE ROTARY SCREENERS and Kwik Kleen 5-7 tube. Portage la Prairie, www.zettlerfarmequipment.com or call 204-857-8403. KIPP KELLY 300 gravity table, less motor, $3200. Call evenings, 306-795-3314, Ituna, SK. FORSBERG VACUUM GRAVITY table, model 250V w/Forsberg industrial fan model 23HA. Both refurbished and ready to work. Call 204-724-6673, Souris, MB.
USED SEED CLEANERS: Clipper 668 air screen, 400 BPH, $38,000; Carter 32 Uniflow, 300 BPH, reconditioned w/brand new cylinders, $28,500; LMC Marc 300 gravity, 200 BPH, $25,000; LMC model 401 gravity, 100 BPH, $5,000; LMC model 641 gravity, 200 BPH, $14,000; Carter 6 roll grader, $3000; Superior T4B indent, 300 BPH, $3500; Northland trommel dockage cleaner, $2200; Crippen J-254 bean polisher system, $35,000; Clipper SX5868D, 300 BPH, $15,000. Call 1-800-667-6924 or 306-222-6173, LMC Canada, Saskatoon, SK. www.lewismcarter.com CUSTOM COLOR SORTING chickpeas to mustard. Cert organic and conventional. 306-741-3177, Swift Current, SK. WANTED: FORAGE SEED blender, blends up to 1 ton of seed. Leonard Friesen 204-685-2376, Austin, MB. 2004 GJESDAL Five-In-One, M400X, exc. condition, extra screens, hopper extension, electric eye, $13,500. 306-773-9058, Stewart Valley, SK.
www.flightingsupply.com
WANTED: SPELT DEHULLER. Also Clipper seed cleaner, any size. Call toll free 1-866-563-2180.
USED AUGER SPECIAL. 2009 BH 8x51 Wheatheart w/30 HP, Kohler, mover and clutch, $8500; 2012 R 8x41, Wheatheart, slightly used w/29 EFI Kohler, mover, clutch and light kit, $10,900. 306-648-3321, Gravelbourg, SK.
SUKUP GRAIN DRYERS: 1 or 3 phase, liquid propane or nat. gas, canola screens. Early order discount pricing now in effect. For info call: 204-998-9915, Altamont, MB.
1-866-882-2243, Rosetown, SK
• Liquid Conversion per Cube • Wireless Remote Package (Controls Conveyors, gates, lids, all on one remote) • Stainless Steel Conveyors (for Long Life Fertilizer Needs) • Complete Trailer Tender • Hyd Gates, Hyd Lids, Self Contained Hyd • Longer Conveyor for Extended Reach • Custom Designs Available Including Colours & Logos • Spray Trailer Kit with One Tank used as your Hot Tank
SUPERIOR STORAGE
• Manhole • 7 legs • 37 degree slope • Single 8x4x188w skid base
NH3 RATE CONTROLLER, 3 section Raven/Greenstar section control, currently 60’, 36 run, can be changed, complete system to tractor rear plug-in. Priced to sell $6000 firm. 204-649-2276, 701-389-1042, Pierson, MB.
SEE VIDEO ON WEBSITE
BUILD YOUR OWN conveyors, 6”, 7”, 8” and 10” end units available; Transfer conveyors and bag conveyors or will custom build. Call for prices. Master Industries Inc. www.masterindustries.ca Phone 1-866-567-3101, Loreburn, SK. BATCO CONVEYORS, new and used, grain augers and SP kits. Delivery and leasing available. 1-866-746-2666.
CONTAINERS FOR SALE OR RENT: All sizes available. Also, tilt deck services. Call LOOKING FOR A floater or tender? Call me first. 34 years experience. Loral parts, new 306-861-1102, Radville, SK. and used. Call 403-650-7967, Calgary, AB. BIN MOVING FLAT bottom and hoppers, up to 22’. binmovers@hotmail.com Call 2 HOLD-ON 4200 gallon liquid fertilizer Tim 204-362-7103. Get organized now! tanks with all fittings, asking $2,000 each. 306-488-2103, 306-527-1389, Holdfast SK Morden, MB. NH3 NURSE WAGON, twin 1000, new M5 20’ AND 40’ SHIPPING CONTAINERS, inspection, new paint and decals, vg cond., large SK. inventory. Ph. 1-800-843-3984, $14,000. 204-649-2276, 701-389-1042, 306-781-2600. Pierson, MB. 20’ TO 53’ CONTAINERS. New, used and TORMASTER NH3 WAGON, with 2- 1750 modified. Available Winnipeg, MB; Regina gal. tanks, 21.5L-16.1SL front, 900/60R32 and Saskatoon, SK. www.g-airservices.ca rear, new safety, $50,000. 306-486-4826, 306-933-0436. Frobisher, SK.
REMOTE LID OPENERS For Most Sizes of Bin Starting at $129.00
BEST HOPPER
BEAVER CONTAINER SYSTEMS, new and used sea containers, all sizes. 306-220-1278, Saskatoon and Regina, SK.
306-324-4441
$10,575.00
SPREADER/TENDER MAKES AND MODELS
FERTILIZER SPREADERS: 4- 8 ton. Large selection. 204-857-8403, Portage la Prairie, MB. www.zettlerfarmequipment.com
Most efficient way to load fertilizer. 6 rows of studs driven by the augers hydraulic pack eliminate fertilizer lumps to allow you to save time when loading your air seeder cart.
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
Other sizes of new bins also available.
CALL US FOR PARTS ON ALL
CHOICE
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 .
SDL STEEL BIN FLO O RS
• Ladders • Remote lid opener • Safety-fil Indicator • 12 leg hopper • 37 degree slope • Manhole • Double 6x4x.188w skid base
EQUIPMENT NEEDS ADAMS SPREADER & TENDER
FARMERS
Factory To Farm Grain Storage
New 18-05 Meridian Hopper Bin (Approx. 5000 bu.)
FERTILIZER STORAGE TANKS- 8300 Imp. gal. tanks available. Contact your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626 or visit www.flaman.com
FOR ALL YOUR
FERTILIZER
2000 GALLON NH3 tanks on an offset axle, Wadena steel trailer, rear fill, $21,500. 306-873-7349, Tisdale, SK.
w w w .ren n m ill.co m
THE
JOHNSON NH3 WAGON, with 2- 1250 gal. tanks, 19L-16.1 tires, cert. July 2012, $21,000. 306-486-4826, Frobisher, SK.
1995 TERRAGATOR 1844 floater, 60’ boom, micro-bin, second owner, vg cond., $37,000. Call 780-853-7205, Vermilion, AB
RR#4 L a co m b e, AB T 4L 2N4 CAL L THE FACTORY FOR YOUR L OCAL DEAL ER
Authorized Dealer
CLASSIFIED ADS 45
NEW SUPERB GRAIN DRYERS and Moridge dryer parts in stock. Call Grant Service Ltd. 306-272-4195, Foam Lake, SK.
SELLING GRAIN LEGS, distributors, conveyors and truck scales. Also other elevators parts. 403-634-8540, Grassy Lake, AB.
Winter Sale on Meridian Augers c/w E-Kay Movers and many options to choose from
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 BUHLER FARM King 1370 swing auger, $17,500. Call RJ Sales & Service, 306-338-2541, Wadena, SK. or www.rjsales.ca for more information.
OPI TEMPERATURE and moisture cables accurately monitor grain in the bin. Integris system monitors from your computer. Start $265/bin. Flamans 1-888-435-2626.
GRAIN VACS: REM 552, $3000; REM 2500 HD, $9500; Brandt 4000, $7000; Brandt 4500, $7500; Weigh wagon with digital scale, $3500. 1-866-938-8537. 2011 BRANDT 7500 HP grain vac hose arm, dust exhaust kit, approx. 145 hrs., nice condition, $22,000 OBO. 780-787-8293, Vermilion, AB.
FLAMAN 710 10’ grain bagger, c/w conveyor truck unloader, exc. cond., $12,500 OBO. 780-787-8293, Vermilion, AB.
BRENT AVALANCHE 1594 grain cart, TA, floater tires, auto. scale, tarp, mint cond., used 2 seasons. Call Ron 204-626-3283 or 1-855-272-5070, Sperling, MB. 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
CONEYAIR GRAIN VACS, parts, accessories. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.starlinesales.com 2700 REM grain vac, 51 hours, shedded, exc. cond., $15,900 OBO. Grandview, MB, 204-546-2131, 204-572-5032. 2001 TURB-O-K VAC 990, super deluxe, excellent shape. Contact 306-488-4683, Penzance, SK.
46 CLASSIFIED ADS
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.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
TWO 480R CAT combines, 2002/2003, both in great shape. If interested phone for more info. 306-287-3955, Watson, SK. 2006 580R, 1216 sep. hrs, big tires, Sunnybrook cyl., rotor bearings done, P514 PU, Y&M, cebis, very nice, $116,000 OBO. Call 403-312-5113, Viscount, SK.
3- 2005 HONEYBEES, 36’ with transports, gauge wheels, 1 piece PU reels, pea augers, includes adapters for 2388 Case; JD 635F, HydraFlex, 35’ with pickup reel. 306-622-2069, Gull Lake, SK.
2002 JD 9650 combine, 2300 sep hrs., long auger, dual spd. cylinder, fine cut chopper, good overall condition, many new parts, been a very reliable machine. $79,900 OBO. 403-901-3024, Standard, AB 2009 JD 9770, duals, Contour-Master, shedded, 1290 hrs., $159,000. Call 204-822-3797, Morden, MB.
2005 JD 9660W, 2453 eng. hrs, 1798 sep 2006 CR960, 1800 hrs, 76C 15’ PU head- hrs, 80065R32/42085R26, inspected by er, 200 hrs. on bars and concaves, shed- mechanic yearly, field ready, hopper ext., ded, vg. 306-648-3511, 306-648-7695, $110,000 US. 701-263-1467 Sherwood ND 306-380-7769, Gravelbourg, SK.
‘11 40’ MD FD70 Flex Draper Header transport, hyd. tilt, adapter to fit CAT, JD, or CNH included. $62,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
2009 MACDON D60, 35’, 60/70 JD hookup, transport, fore/aft, vg cond, $53,500. Call 306-230-2736, Assiniboia, SK. BALE SPEAR ATTACHMENTS for all loaders and skidsteers, excellent pricing. Call now 1-866-443-7444. WANTED: NEW HOLLAND bale wagons, any size. Farmhand small bale accumulators or Hoelschler fork or grabber, 8 to 18 bale size. Also, 336 or 346 or newer JD small square baler. Roeder Implement, Seneca, KS, 785-336-6103. NH 855 ROUND baler, $2000 OBO; NH 848 round baler w/gathering wheels, $1200. 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. 1982 MCKEE 1578 soft core round baler, field ready, one owner, always shedded, new floor belts and bearings all around, $2000. Call 403-318-8135, Delburne, AB.
JD 216 16’, $1950; JD 920 20’, poly skids, recond. $6900; JD 924 24’ steel pts., poly skids, $4950; JD 925 25’, steel pts., poly skids $4500’; 2001 JD 925 25’, poly pts., poly skids, full finger auger, recond., $13,950; 3 JD 930 30’, steel pts., poly skids, start at $3950; two 2003 JD 930 poly skids, full finger auger, recond. ‘01 TR99 Combine New rear tires, new $15,900; 2003 JD 930 air reel, poly skids, chopper blades on 4150 Redekop, hopper full finger auger, recond., $20,900; 2004 cover, lateral tilt, Yield & Moisture, sold w/ to 2006 JD 630 Hydra Flex, poly skids, HD 971 & Rake up! $39,800. Trades welcome. auger, start at $14,900; 2004 to 2011 JD Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. 635 Hydra Flex, poly skids, mint, start at ’92 914 JD Header & Pick Up www.combineworld.com $14,900. www.reimerfarmequipment.com Call for details….$7,280. Trades 2003 CX 840, 1950 eng./1500 threshing Reimer Farm Equip, Hwy. 12 North, Stein- welcome. Financing available. hours, Rake-Up, very good shape, $95,000 bach MB. Gary Reimer at: 204-326-7000. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com OBO. 403-652-7980, High River, AB. 2011 MACDON PW7 PU head, JD 60/70 SP30 HONEYBEE DRAPER header, new hookup, under 1000 acres, like new, k n i fe , a l w ay s s h e d d e d , e x c . c o n d . , $28,000. Call 780-678-6054, Daysland, AB. $19,500. 306-230-2736, Assiniboia, SK.
’09 CIH 2016 head w/ Swathmaster pick-up. Overall 85% cond’n. $19,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com CIH 820 FLEX, 20’, $1500; 1995 to 1999 CIH flex, 1020 25’, poly skids, nice start $7900; 1996 to 2002 CIH 1020 flex, 30’, poly skids, nice start $10,900; 2010 CIH flex 2020 30’, poly skids, recon. $18,900; 2007 to 2010 CIH 2020 flex, 35’, poly skids, recond. Start $18,900. Gary Reimer: 204-326-7000, Reimer Farm Equipment, H w y. 1 2 N o r t h , S t e i n b a c h M B . www.reimerfarmequipment.co 1993 NH 973 flex, PU reel, 30’, good working order, $8900; 1998 NH 973 30’, Crary air reel, poly skids, $12,900. Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy. 12 North, Steinbach MB. reimerfarmequipment.com Call Gary Reimer, 204-326-7000.
40’ MacDon FD70 w/ transport, dbl knife drive, new knife, new adapter canvas, overall 8.5/10 condition. Incl: choice of adapters JD STS, CNH, CAT... $56,800.00 w/ warranty. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
‘13 40’ MD D65 Header hyd. tilt, dbl knife drive w/ JD adapter. $59,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
2009 MACDON D60 header, reel endguards, float optimizer, skid shoes, JD adapter, w/2010 Mauer M38 header trailer, $43,000. 403-818-2816, Oungre, 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.
Why would you buy a used John Deere?
2007 NEW HOLLAND 1475 haybine, 16’, f i e l d r e a d y, v e r y g o o d c o n d i t i o n . 306-845-2406, Turtleford, SK.
)RU WKH VDPH UHDVRQV \RXŤG EX\ QHZ 2001 TR99 Combine w/ $50,000 work order, 1757 sep. hrs...$69,800. Financing available. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
2012 CASE/IH WD1903, DH362 Honeybee header, JD AutoSteer, 2013 Freeform roller, Roto-Sheers; 409 hours, $130,000. 2011 NH CR9090E, 482 threshing hrs, 306-230-1920, Allan, SK. shedded, loaded, 0 hrs. on NH Triple In2005 PRAIRIE STAR 4940, MacDon 972 spection. Call 780-210-3799, Myrnam, AB. 25’ Draper header, orig. owner, 1543 header hrs., 2114 eng. hrs. Very clean and well maintained, field ready, $68.000. Enchant, AB., 403-634-3593. www.stampseeds.com WANTED: 1996 or 1997 R72, must have Email: nathan@stampseeds.com Cummins engine; also looking for a corn 2008 JD 4895, 25’ HoneyBee header, 600 header to fit a Gleaner R series combine. header hrs., loaded w/Roto-Shears, pea Chris at 306-628-7840, Eatonia, SK. auger, AutoSteer harnesses, big rubber, shedded, exc. cond., $85,000. Call 780-349-9505, Westlock, AB. 2010 JD 9770 STS, 774 sep. hrs., c/w 2012 MACDON M155, 1013 engine hrs, 2012 JD 615P PU header w/only 100 600-65R28 drive tires, HID, hyd. center hours on header, Contour-Master high link, c/w MacDon 35’ D60 header w/new torque variable spd. feeder house, high canvas, slow spd. transport pkg., $105,000 cap lift cyl., 22’ high cap unload auger, OBO. Call 306-861-1046, Weyburn, SK. wide spread fine cut chopper, 800/70R38, small and large grain concave’s, always WANTED: VERSATILE SP swather model shedded, exc. cond., $235,000. Call Jordan 4700 or 4750, 25’, double knife drive. Call anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 204-635-2600, Stead, MB.
TWIN HESSTON HYD. side delivery rakes, #3831 and #3830, exc. cond., $7900 for both OBO. 780-798-2280, Plamondon, AB. CLAAS 340 BALER, wide PU, net wrap, made approx. 100 bales; Case/IH 9.2’ Discbine, cut 75 acres; Morris single bale wrapper. Package price $30,000. Call 250-992-2375, Quesnel, BC.
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.
‘97 JD CTS Combine 2,117/2,861 hrs., Big Top, 2 spd cyl, long auger, hyd F/A, F/C chopper, chaff spreader, pickup included. $39,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
1998 CTS II, 3785 eng./ 2707 sep. hrs., GreenStar Y&M monitor, new tires and many new parts in the last 4 yrs., always shedded. Must be seen to be appreciated. $45,000; 1994 9600, 4812 eng./ 3429 sep. hrs., 1 season on new concave and rub bars, 3 yrs. on Firestone tires, always shedded, $45,000. Both machine owner operated. 403-575-5783, Veteran, AB. 1992 JD 9600, 3500 threshing hrs, dual range cylinder, new tires, hopper ext, 9610 sieve updates, c/w 914 header, always shedded, exc. cond., $45,000 OBO. 930 30’ straight cut header c/w transport, $6500 OBO. 403-345-3770 or 403-634-2048, Coaldale, AB. 2013 S680, 258 hrs, 650 duals, 750 rear, 29’ unload auger, 615 PU, loaded, never done pulse crops. 2012 45’ MacDon flex, used 1 season, double knife, pea auger. Call 306-834-7610, Major, SK.
2006 JD 9760 STS, 1800/2300 hrs., 2- 2010 CASE/IH 8120 w/634 sep. hrs, Greenlighted yearly, new injectors, conc/w 2016 Swathmaster, PU headers, exc. cave, feeder house, Y&M, vg cond., cond., always shedded, $218,000. Located $145,000. 306-230-2736, Assiniboia, SK. in Kamsack, SK. can deliver. 204-526-0321 ROUND BAR CONCAVES for 50, 60 and WANTED: SET OF SPREADERS for Case 70 series STS JD combines, $1500 OBO for 2188. Call Frank at 306-394-2131, the set. 306-552-4905, Eyebrow, SK. 306-394-7000, Coderre, SK. 2005 9660 STS, 2350 eng. hrs., 1750 2- 8120 CASE COMBINES, 1006 and threshing, duals, high cap. unload auger, 1256 sep. hrs., small tube rotor c/w 2016 1500 Precision header w/Rake-Up pickup. Swathmaster PU, dual wheels on front, Howard concaves, hopper cover, shedded, near mint cond., shedded, $190,000 ea. Greenlighted every year, JD AutoSteer ready, $130,000 OBO. 306-843-7070, 306-695-8162, Indian Head, SK. 306-658-2122, Wilkie, 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. 2007 9760 STS 300 bu., 340 HP, chopper, topper, 1000 hrs., c/w 2010 FD70 36’ flex draper $200,000 OBO; Also, 1998 9610, new separator, feeder house, chains, belts, tires. Hopper topper, fine chopper c/w MacDon 974 36’ flex draper, $70,000 OBO CASE/IH 8120 Combines: Two 2009’s to 406-895-2527, Plentywood, MT. choose from, c/w headers, threshing hrs. from 1041 to 1232 hrs., field ready. Can 2008 JD 9870 STS, c/w 615 PU, gone d e l i v e r. C a l l f o r m o r e o p t i o n s . through shop, shedded, 1 owner, $175,000 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. OBO. 306-231-8969, Humboldt, SK.
There are many reasons to buy a pre-owned John Deere tractor or combine, and they all come down to one thing. Value. Technology. Consider–a 3-year old John Deere 8R. When it came off the line it was AutoTrac™ Ready and JDLink™ enabled*. With one phone call to your dealer, you can begin using precision technology to help reduce inputs, improve yields, and get more done in less time. Uptime. You can’t make money standing still. Pre-owned John Deere equipment, like a 9770 Combine, comes fully supported by your John Deere dealer. The pay-off: reliable, consistent performance, backed by an unrivaled dealer network. Resale value. John Deere tractors and combines are among the best in the industry at holding their value. So when the time comes and you’re ready to trade up to another used or new John Deere tractor or combine, your investment delivers yet again. Now is a great time to buy. Visit 0DFKLQHƟQGHU FRP to search our impressive selection of used John Deere equipment, then schedule some time with your John Deere dealer DQG DVN DERXW VSHFLDO SUH RZQHG GHDOV DQG LQFHQWLYHV 6SHFLDO ƟQDQFLQJ DOVR DYDLODEOH through John Deere Financial. New or new-to-you, Nothing Runs Like a Deere.™ $FWLYDWLRQ VXEVFULSWLRQ UHTXLUHG 6RPH DGGWLRQDO DFFHVVRULHV DQG RU FRPSRQHQWV PD\ EH UHTXLUHG 6HH GHDOHU IRU GHWDLOV
0DFKLQH)LQGHU FRP
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
AGRICULTURAL PARTS STO RE
JD 843 flex, 8 row, 30”, totally reconditioned, mint, $14,500; JD 893 flex, 8 row, 30”, field ready, $19,500. Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy. 12 North, Steinbach, MB. reimerfarmequipment.com Gary Reimer 204-326-7000. RECONDITIONED rigid and flex, most makes and sizes; also header transports. Ed Lorenz, 306-344-4811, Paradise Hill, SK. www.straightcutheaders.com
CLASSIFIED ADS 47
NOW SELLING
H ydra ulic Pa rts & D oin g H ydra ulic R e p a ir NEW PICKUP REELS EARLY BUY. 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. Pay 50% d/p, balance upon delivery in May 2014. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
FYFE P ARTS
1- 8 1- 8 1- 8 1- 8
Ca ll NODGE Firs t
Swift Current, SK
• Pic ku p Be lts & Te e th • Ele va to r C ha in s & S pro c ke ts • Fe e d e r C ha in s & S pro c ke ts • C o m b in e pa rts • C a n va s • Tra c to r Pa rts w w w .n od gem fg.c om
• S e e d Bo o ts & Tips • Air S e e d e r Ho s e • Pa c ke rW he e l C a ps • Nic ho ls S ho ve ls • Ha rro w Tin e s • Ba le r Be lts • Ha yin g & Ha rve s t Pa rts & S u pplie s
1-800-667-7421
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
Harvest Salvage Co. Ltd. 1-866-729-9876 5150 Richmond Ave. East Brandon, MB
www.harvestsalvage.ca New Used & Re-man parts Tractors Combines Swathers
“ Fo rAllY o u rFa rm Pa rts”
TRADE IN YOUR JD 615, NH 76C OR CIH 2016 for a brand new Macdon PW7 header w/ 16’ Swathmaster pickup. HHC & Reel speed. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
NEW SALVAGE TRACTORS, Volvo 810, 650; IH 885; MF 165, S90; JD 7800; Ford 7600, 3600, Super Major; County; Nuffield. www.britishtractorwreckers 306-228-3011 Unity, SK.
AGRA PARTS PLUS, parting older tractors, tillage, seeding, haying, along w/other Ag equipment. 3 miles NW of Battleford, SK. off #16 Hwy. Ph: 306-445-6769.
w w w .f yf e p a rts .c om ’03 Swathmaster PU 14’ pickup w/ new belts, hyd. wind guard. $10,950. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
FARM EQUIPMENT: 1983 JD 7721 combine w/JD 912 PU; 2000 MacDon Premier swather w/finger reel; Morris Magnum II cultivator; JD discers; International 310 discers; Rite-Way harrow packer drawbar; Wheatheart 8” grain auger w/mover; 1982 GMC 6000 V8 3 ton truck w/Strong Box; 1965 IH 2 ton truck w/wooden box. Dinsmore, SK. For more info please call Cliff 306-846-2175 or e-mail: cab@sasktel.net 2- 24.5x32 RIMS, fit high clearance New Holland 1600 gallon PT sprayer. Call 306-463-4866, Kindersley, SK.
COMB-TRAC SALVAGE. We sell new and used parts for most makes of tractors, combines, balers, mixmills and swathers. Phone 306-997-2209, 1-877-318-2221, Borden, SK. www.comb-tracsalvage.com We buy machinery.
Call 1-888-920-1507
DEUTZ TRACTOR SALVAGE: Used parts for Deutz and Agco. Uncle Abe’s Tractor, 519-338-5769, fax 338-3963, Harriston ON LOEFFELHOLZ TRACTOR AND COMBINE Salvage, Cudworth, SK., 306-256-7107. We sell new, used and remanufactured USED PICKUP REELS - 36’ HB HCC $5,980, parts for most farm tractors and combines. DEGELMAN ROCKPICKER Model #7700, 36’ MD $6,980, 36’ HB UII $6,980. 42’ HB UII S u p e r P i c ke r I I , g o o d s h ap e . C a l l $7,800, 30’ MD $2,780. Trades welcome. Call MEDICINE HAT TRACTOR Salvage Inc. 250-992-2375, Quesnel, BC. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com Specializing in new, used, and rebuilt agricultural and construction parts. Buying ag and construction equipment for dismant l i n g . C a l l t o d a y 1 - 8 7 7 - 5 2 7 - 7 2 7 8 , MORI-SEIKI SL 80F CNC lathe, 8.5” spindle bore, 25” air chuck, Fanuc controls, SMITH’S TRACTOR WRECKING. Huge www.mhtractor.ca Medicine Hat, AB. $59,000; Hitachi-Seiki CNC lathe, model inventory new and used tractor parts. 50G, 6.25” spindle bore, $31,000; Stan1-888-676-4847. dard-Modern lathe, 20x120, $10,500; Kent 12x24 fully automatic surface grinder, $9000; Acer milling marching, $4000. Call 403-850-8876, Calgary, AB.
S EXS M ITH US ED FARM P ARTS LTD .
Call 1-888-920-1507
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.
NEED PICKUP HEADERS? 914 $3,500 & up; JD/Precision - $3,000 & up; 212/214/971 NH - $500 & up. Trades welcome. 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. STEIGER TRACTOR PARTS for sale. Very affordable new and used parts available, made in Canada and USA. 1-800-982-1769
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!
1-8 00-340-119 2 Bu yin g Fa rm Equ ipm en t Fo rD ism a n tlin g
SCHULTE AND FARM KING snowblowers, In stock at Flaman. Call today to book yours 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com DEGELMAN 2-WAY BLADE off a PTA 280 good condition, $10,000 OBO. Combine World 1-800-667-4515, www. Steiger, combineworld.com; 20 minutes E. of 780-872-8209, 306-823-4456, Neilburg SK Saskatoon, SK on Highway #16. Used Ag & USED 12’ LEON dozer blade/snowplow, Industrial equipment, new, used & rebuilt $4995. Call Roy 780-955-8042, Leduc, AB. parts, & premium quality tires at unbeatable prices! 1 yr. warranty on all parts. Canada’s 9’ ERSKINE INDUSTRIAL universal front largest inventory of late model combines & mount blower, 540 RPM, good condition, $8500. 306-268-7400 or 306-268-7550, swathers. Exceptional service. Bengough, SK. GOODS USED TRACTOR parts (always buying tractors) David or Curtis, Roblin, PARTIAL LIST ONLY. Snowblowers and attachments: JD Spitfire snowmobile, MB., 204-564-2528, 1-877-564-8734. $999; NEW Cub Cadet 54” snowblowers, G.S. TRACTOR SALVAGE, JD tractors $599; NEW 8’, 2-stage, 3 PTH, PTO snowblower, $2999; 8’, 3PH, PTO snowblower; only. 306-497-3535, Blaine Lake, SK. 2- walk behind snowblowers, Toro and Airens; NEW 5’ front drive 3PH snowblower; Trackless 4WD diesel w/5’ blower; 6- Sicard and Oshkosh trucks w/blowers; Holder 4WD diesel w/5’ blower; snow blades for trucks and loaders; snow buckets from 1 to 10 yard; snow buckets for skidsteers; 10- fire engines, many types; parting out 18- graders. Attachments of all types, hundreds of items on 2 yards, over 50 acres. Over 75 sets of pallet forks in stock; severIRMA, AB. al Crawler loaders; large stock of construction tires; over 25 forklifts, man lifts and scissor lifts; 12- loaders from 1.5 to 9 yard. Over 50 Gensets from 3.5 to 193 KW. 12- sets of forks for loaders and dozers. New replacement parts. Central Canada’s largest wreckers of construction equipment. Cambrian Equipment Sales Ltd. 204-667-2867, fax: 204-667-2932. SCHULTE 8’ FRONT mount snowblower, model 800, fits Case 2294 or 7110, 1000 RPM or 540 RPM, good condition, $8500. 306-272-7878, 306-593-7644, Margo, SK. SCHULTE 8’ FRONT mount rotary snow plow, hydraulic deflector, new cutting edge, $3,000. 306-963-2722, Imperial, SK.
GRATTON COULEE
AGRI PARTS LTD.
1-888-327-6767 www.gcparts.com
Move it! in print and online next day.
Huge Inventory Of Used, New & Rebuilt Combine & Tractor Parts. Tested And Ready To Ship. We Purchase Late Model Equipment For Parts.
TRIPLE B WRECKING, wrecking tractors, combines, cults., drills, swathers, mixmills. etc. We buy equipment. 306-246-4260, 306-441-0655, Richard, SK.
Now your classified word ads will go online within one business day from when you book them to run in the Producer Classifieds. 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
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.
SPRAY-AIR 120’ 3600, 1300 gallon tank, good condition, $20,000 CDN. Located just south of Coronach, SK. Contact Charlie at 406-783-5510. cahillseeds@nemont.net 2007 CASE SRX 160, JD rate controller, sectional control, AutoBoom, $35,000. Call 780-678-6054, Daysland, AB. 2002 FLEXI-COIL 67XL suspended boom, 90’ booms, 1200 gal. tank, induction tank, clean water tank, foam markers, triple nozzles, mint cond., $19,000. 306-487-2712 or 306-487-7966, Lampman, SK.
2007 APACHE 1010, 1275 hrs., 103’, Raven Envisio Pro monitor w/hyd. SmarTrax steering, Phoenix 200 receiver, Raven AccuBoom and Raven AutoBoom, sharp shooter nozzle control, five nozzle body, shedded, well maintained $162,500 OBO. Lumsden, SK. Call Jim 306-530-8433 or email: info@LLseeds.ca for photos 2009 JD 4830, 1000 gal., $199,000; 2009 CIH SRX160, 120’, 1600 gallon, $39,900; 2010 CIH 3230, $219,000; 2000 RoGator 1254, 1200 gal., $89,900; Brandt 4000, 100’, 1600 gal., $29,900; 2013 CIH 4430, loaded, $365,000; BG 1450, 100’, 1200 gallon, $5,900; 2004 RoGator 1064, 1000 gal., $117,500; BG 850, 112’, $4,900. Call Hergott Farm Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK. 2009 1286 ROGATOR, 1540 hrs., 1280 gal. tank, 100’ boom, chem. inductor, floodlight kit, Raven Viper Pro, AccuBoom, Smart-Trax, 2 sets of tires, recent dealer winter service, field ready, $210,000. Call 306-722-3894, 306-861-3268, Fillmore, SK 1998 ROGATOR 854, 4103 hrs., 2 sets of tries, $12,000 spend on wheel motors last year, professionally serviced every year, Trimble AutoSteer, sectional boom control $75,000 OBO. Young, SK. 306-259-4990 or 306-946-6424. 2009 CIH 3185 high clearance, 90’, 2 sets of tires, AIM command, inspected, 1452 hrs., $148,000. 306-738-4603, Gray, SK. 1996 WILLMAR 765SE, 600 gal. tank, 75’, 60% tires, triple nozzle body, gauge wheels, Outback mapping, Rinex AutoBoom, vg cond., 2800 hrs, $44,000 OBO. 306-429-2785, 306-424-7575 Glenavon SK 2007 JD 4830, 1000 gal. SS tank, 100’, 2 sets tires, GPS: 2600 SF1, auto-sect. shutoff, exc. cond., 3200 hrs, 2nd owner, loaded, $152,000. 204-355-8305 Ste Anne, MB 2005 CIH 4410, 3300 hrs., 90’ booms, 380 skinny’s, 650 floaters, Outback SPS mapping and AutoSteer, sec. boom control, 4600 Raven monitor, SS tank, $143,000 OBO. 306-281-2275, Prud’Homme, SK. 2009 CIH HIGH clearance sprayer, 90’ booms, 750 gal., Raven GPS, AccuBoom, AutoBoom, 2 sets tires, 990 hrs., always shedded $160,000. 306-230-1920 Allan SK SPRAYTEST REMOTE BOOM CONTROL Use wireless remote to turn on individual boom sections for nozzle checks. Easy install with plug and play harness to fit your sprayer. Order your SprayTest today. Ph: 306-859-1200 spraytest@sasktel.net
www.spraytest.com
2010 CASE 4420, loaded, Aim command, Viper Pro, AutoBoom, AccuBoom, 120’, 2 sets tires, active susp., shedded, $285,000. 403-647-7391, Foremost, AB. 1999 APACHE 790, 2600 hrs., all new tires, new solution pump, new hydraulic pump, YOUNG’S EQUIPMENT INC. For all your EZ-Steer GPS, always shedded, excellent silage equipment needs call Kevin or Ron condition, $70,000. Call 306-642-5632 or 306-536-9811 cell, Assiniboia, SK. toll free 1-800-803-8346, Regina, SK. NEW KEMPER HEADERS, 6, 8 and 10 row, 2012 ROGATOR 1300, 133 gal. 100’ boom, plus Kemper parts. Harry Vissers Farm GPS, 2 sets tires, $325,000. 306-934-1546 E q u i p m e n t , L e t h b r i d g e , A B . C a l l : Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift 403-327-0349, 403-330-9345 www.harry- Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com vissersfarmequipment.com 2012 HAYBUSTER CMF-700 feed wagon, two screws, scale, $55,000. 780-675-9276, Athabasca, AB. NH FR9080 forage harvester, c/w 8 row corn head, 15’ pickup head, 900 hrs. 403-394-4401, Lethbridge, AB. 2010 SCHUITEMAKER RAPIDE 240 silage wagon, always shedded, $125,000. Call 780-675-9276, Athabasca, AB. JD 4920, 2005, 1600 hrs, 120’ boom, 1200 gal. SS tank, Autotrac, swath control, Norac, 710/70R42 Michelin and 380/105R50 Firestone tires, $169,900. 519-949-2351, Hensall, ON. 2011 CASE/IH 3230, 4 WD, SS tank, 2007 FLEXI-COIL 67XL, mint condition 100’ boom, shedded, 0 hrs, 2 sets tires, very low acres, autorate, AutoHeight, loaded. 306-764-7760, Prince Albert, SK. $28,500. 306-963-2722, Imperial, SK. 2008 MILLER A75, full load, 103’ Spray-Air 1993 FLEXI-COIL 65 100’ high profile boom, hypro nozzles, 1000 gal., crop diwheeled, 800 gal. windscreens w/endcaps, viders, AutoSteer, AutoBoom, AccuBoom, chem tank, dual nozzles, foam markers, $145,000. 780-674-7944, Barrhead, AB. clean water tank, adj. axles, lug tires, 2 seasons on pump, 1 season on solonoids, NEW 2013 MILLER CONDOR SPRAYER, 120’ booms, 1200 gal. SS tank, 4WD, Ra$7500. 403-878-6985 cell, Richmound, SK. ven GPS and boom levelers, loaded, new 2006 TOP AIR TA2400 suspended boom sprayer at used price, $299,000. Call sprayer, 120’ booms, duals, $44,500. 208-267-1973, Bonners Ferry, Idaho. 306-981-5489, Prince Albert, SK. 2006 JD 4920, 120’, loaded, exc., hi-flow, 2001 FLEXI-COIL 67, susp. boom, 90’, 800 eductor, Trac control, Raven powerglide, gal., dual nozzles, Norac II, boom height ultra-glide, 5-ways, 380s, 15” spacing, control, vg. 306-537-3400, Regina, SK. $139,500. 204-242-4074, Manitou, MB. 2004 NH SF110 high clearance sprayer 2012 JD 4940, 622/246 engine/spray hrs., w/Norac height control. Dinsmore, SK. fully loaded. 2nd set of wheels and tires (710’s) avail. 403-892-3303 Carmangay AB 306-846-2175 or e-mail: cab@sasktel.net
48 CLASSIFIED ADS
2001 ROGATOR 854 High Clearance, 3790 hrs., 100’, 800 gal. SS tank, foam markers, Raven Invisio Pro monitor, AutoSteer, AutoBoom Height w/gauge wheels and Sonar boom Height, 5 sec. AccuBoom control, 2 set wheels, always shedded, exc. cond., $86,000 OBO. Can deliver. Pictures avail. 306-497-3126, 306-497-7511, Blaine Lake, SK. lakeridgefarms@sasktel.net
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
2008 BOURGAULT 5710, 59’, MRB’s new tips, 12” spacing, c/w 6450 tank, singles, $179,000. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca
ONE POWERFUL NETWORK SAME LOCAL ADVANTAGE.
BOURGAULT PARA-LINK Air drills, large selection of good late model units. Other makes and models available.
2013 BOURGAULT 3320 76’ XTC drill with 7950 cart. 4.5” V-style packer, double shoot air kit for mid row shanks, liquid kit for side band with 1” knife, full blockage seed and fert. ISO adapter, X30 monitor, 12” auger and bag lift. Call 306-746-7638 for info., Raymore, SK. 2011 BOURGAULT 3310, 75’, 12” spacing, DS, 6550 tank, X20 map link, MRB 25, $298,000. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca 2010 CIH ATX700, 60’, 10” spacing, ADX3430 tank, DS, side banders, $199,900. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca 2004 BOURGAULT 8810, 40’, 10” spacing, NH3 on MRB’s, steel packers, SS, 5350, $50,000. 1-866-659-5866, Estevan, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca 2013 MORRIS CONTOUR II 71’, Demonstrator, 12” spacing, c/w 650 bu. TBT cart. Financing, leasing OAC available. Huge cash discounts. Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK.
2010 40’ Case Precision disk air drill w/ matching 3430 tank & liquid fertilizer kit. Field ready w/ warranty. Trades welcome, transportation available. $138,800.00. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com BEHNKE DROP DECK semi style and pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, tandem and tridems. Contact SK: 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336.
2011 BOURGAULT 3310, 65’, 12” spacing, 6450 tank, w/duals, $279,000. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca 2006 K-HART DRILL and 2006 ADX 3430 tank (Flexi-Coil), 60’, 10” spacing. New and rebuilt parts, some new tires for drill also included, $100,000 OBO. 306-463-9229 or 306-460-7426, Eatonia, SK. 1999 33’ FLEXI-COIL 5000, double shoot, 12” spacing, 3.5” steel packers, 1720 TBH cart, excellent condition, $40,000 OBO. 780-986-3356, Leduc, AB.
’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 TRIDEKON CROP SAVER, crop dividers. Reduce trampling losses by 80% to 90%. Call Great West Agro, 306-398-8000, Cut Knife, SK.
2000 FLEXI-COIL 7500, 50’, DS, 10” spacing, 3.5” steel packers, 3450 TBH tank, 3” tips, $64,500. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca 2011 AMITY SD50, no till disc drill, MRBs, weight kit, 350 bu. cart, 10” fill auger, liquid fert. var. rate distribution kit. 50’. Used 2 seasons $170,000 OBO. Plentywood, MT. 2009 NH SD 550, 60’, 10” spacing, 3.5” steel packers, DS, SC430 tank, $109,500. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca
2012 BOURGAULT 3320 PHD, 60’, 10” spacing, 4.5” V-Style packers, MRB-III, 6550ST tank, X20 monitor, var. rate, 491 drill control, like new! $339,000. Jordan, anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 2008 JD 1830, 10” spacing, gen openers, 1999 FLEXI-COIL 2340 TBH cart w/3rd Pattison liquid kit, 1910 cart w/duals, tank, variable rate, semi hopper, $24,000. variable rate, stored inside, many options, $135,000. Can deliver. Call 306-445-5602, 306-587-2764, 306-587-7729, Cabri, SK. North Battleford, SK. 1998 MORRIS MAXIM air drill TBT 7180, 29’, 7-1/2” spacings, steel packers, tank is 2000 BOURGAULT 5710, 25’, 10” space, single shoot, w/2000 2155 tank. Drill and double shoot. 306-395-2791, Chaplin, SK. tank shedded, seeded 400 acres yearly, MOON HEAVY HAUL pulling air drills/ air $34,000. 403-533-3810, Rockyford, AB. seeders, packer bars, Alberta and Sask. 30 years experience. Call Bob Davidson, 2000 BOURGAULT 5710, 47’, MRB’s, Raven Auto-Rate controller for NH3, 5350 tank Drumheller, AB. 403-823-0746. w/bag lift, $60,000. Glenbush, SK. 2013 K-HART AIR Drill 66’, 560 bu., SS 306-342-4251 or 306-342-7781. w/4612 openers, 10” spacing, deluxe packers, 560 bu. Salford w/variable rate, 36’ JD 730 double disc with 1900 TBT ISO controller and scales. Selling because cart, $30,000 or 1900 cart $24,500; JD we a g o i n g t o K - H a r t w i t h M R B ’ s . 787 TBT cart, $12,500. Can deliver. MacGregor, MB. 204-856-6119, 204-685-2896. 306-378-7709 or 306-378-7759, Elrose, SK 2011 MORRIS CONTOUR, 61’, DS, 12” 2010 MORRIS CONTOUR 71’, SS, 12” spacing, TBT, $260,000. 306-934-1546, spacing, TBH, $269,000. 306-934-1546, Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com 2011 BOURGAULT 65’ 3310, 10” spacing, MORRIS MAXIM II, 2002, 34’, 10” spacMRB, 2” tips, 4.8” semi-pneumatic packers, ing, liquid kit, w/7180 TBT cart, $42,000. primary blockage, stored inside, mint Call RJ Sales & Service, 306-338-2541, cond., $155,000. Contact 306-662-3388, Wadena, SK. or www.rjsales.ca for info. Maple Creek, SK. 2011 MORRIS CONTOUR, 51’, DS, 12” 2008 JD 1820, 61’ 12” spacing, DS, Atom spacing, TBT, $235,000. 306-934-1546, Jet side band openers, w/JD 1910 cart, Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift $129,9800. 1-866-659-5866, Estevan, SK. Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com www.redheadequipment.ca 2009 BOURGAULT 55’ Paralink drill, c/w BG 2155H, $2500; BG 2195H, $7900; BG MRB’s, excellent condition. 306-666-2153 54’ 5710 w/5350, $79,900; BG 5710 74’, or 306-662-7471, Fox Valley, SK. $89,900; BG poly packers, $6900; CIH PH800 60’ w/3430 TBT, $179,000; BG 65’ 2003 BOURGAULT 5710, 54’, 9.8” spacing, 3310 w/6700ST, $329,000; BG 4350, PDM SS, 3.5” steel packers, 5350 tank, DS, auger, $27,500; BG 5710 64’ w/5440, $107,500. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, $110,000; 2013 BG 3320 76’ w/6700ST, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca loaded, $415,000; Morris Contour w/8370, 47’, $135,000. Ph Hergott Farm Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK. 40’ MORRIS MAXIM air drill, 10” spacings, 7240 TBH tank, double shoot, one season on Atom Jet boots, asking $32,000. 306-443-2437, Alida, SK. 2001 39’ FLEXI-COIL 5000, 12” spacing, 2340 TBT tank, var. seed rate, var. flow anhydrous. 306-747-3635, Shellbrook, SK.
2003 MORRIS MAX II, 49’, 7.5” spacing, SS, w/7240 TBH, $59.000. 306-934-1546, Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com 2008 SEED HAWK 60-12, TBT, JD 1910, TBT 270BUH, 2000 gal. TBH liquid, no quick pin, $185,000. 1-800-667-9761, Saskatoon, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca 1997 SEED HAWK 32’, 10.5” spacing, onboard seed, liquid kit, excellent shape. Phone 306-675-4932, Kelliher, SK.
2001 SEED HAWK 357 Magnum, 40’, 12” spacing, 350 lb. 3rd tank, vg cond, some extra parts. Delivery may be possible. Asking $65,000 204-785-0457 East Selkirk MB WE WILL DELIVER. DEPENDABLE IS WHAT WE DO. 2001 BOURGAULT 54’ 5710 Series II, 9.8” spacing w/newer 3.5” steel packers and CALL GORD MRB’s, NH3 tip, all new main frame tires, 403-308-1135 - Lethbridge, AB. c/w 2002 L-5350 Bourgault tank, DS, tank shedded, $130,000. 306-231-8229, 1998 BOURGAULT 5710, 54’, 9.8” spacing, always 2 1/4” steel packers, 2002 5440 tank, Watson, SK. $89,900. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, 2013 JD 1870 Conserva Pak, 57’, c/w SK. www.redheadequipment.ca full run blockage monitor and 430 JD TBT 65-10 SEEDMASTER with dual liquid cart, seeded only 3000 acres, $225,000 and dry manifolds, active wing brace, OBO. Ph. 780-778-0796, Mayerthorpe, AB. Smart hitch, Agtron blockage monitor, JD 1992 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 45’, 9” spacing, 1900 air cart TBH dual shoot, asking DS w/stealth openers sideband, 4” capped $130,000. 306-742-5912, 306-742-4772, rubber packers, $39,500. 1-866-659-5866, Churchbridge, SK. Estevan, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca 2013 JD 1830, 61’, w/2013 1910 550 bu. 2004 BOURGAULT 5710, 63’, 12” spacing, cart. Steel packers, auger, single shoot, 491 monitor, MRB’s, 3/4” openers, steel $200,000. 306-463-7527 or 306-460-7222 packers, $99,500. 1-800-667-9761, SaskaKindersley, SK. toon, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca WANTED TO BUY: air cart to pull behind Flexi-Coil 5000, must be in good condition. MORRIS MAXIM II, 49’, 10” spacing, DS, w/7300 TBT, 3rd tank, $64,000. Call RJ Call 204-476-6137, Neepawa, MB. Sales & Service, 306-338-2541, Wadena, 2004 BOURGAULT 5710, 10” spacing, 1” SK. or www.rjsales.ca for more info. Atom Jet liquid side band opener. VR sec- 2001 JD 1820 w/JD 1900 air cart. Dintional control w/JD rate controller, 450 lb. smore, SK. For more info. please call trips, c/w 2001 Flexi-Coil TBT 3450 air 306-846-2175 or e-mail: cab@sasktel.net cart. Only used liquid since 2011, one owner drill, $90,000 OBO. 306-336-2684, 2005 JD 1820 10” spacing, 4” steel packor 306-331-8636, Lipton, SK. ers, double shoot, w/Bourgault opener, MORRIS MAXIM II, 55’, 10” spacing, 1920 JD air cart, 430 bu. triple tank, conw/7300 TBT, 3rd tank, NH3 coulters, veyor, TBH, very clean, $78,000. Call $79,900. Call for info: RJ Sales & Service, 780-841-1496, Fort Vermilion, AB. 306-338-2541, www.rjsales.ca Wadena SK 2005 JD 1820, 61’, double shoot, 10” 2009 JD 1870, 56’, 12” spacing, full block- spacing, 320 tank w/singles, $79,000. age, single castors, 1910 TBH cart, con- 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. veyor, $199,900. 1-866-659-5866, Este- www.redheadequipment.ca van, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca 2008 SEEDMASTER 80’, 12” spacing, 66’ SEEDMASTER, 2009, slim fold, tire in w/double air shoot plus liquid kit, w/2011 tire, lift hitch, smart hitch, dual caster on Bourgault 6550, 4 tank metering, upgradwings and main frame, big floatation tire ed Zynx monitor, $215,000 OBO. Located on main frame, tips are at 50%, with TBH near Regina, SK. Trent 306-540-5275 or 430 JD cart. Cart has duals, conveyor, rear Tyler 306-533-8834. hitch. Call Martin at 780-220-8144, Legal, JD 610 35’, 10” spacing, 550 lb. trip, TechAB. or email for pics: at cyrmr@telus.net notill seeding system, 777 JD 160 bu. 70’ FLEXI-COIL 7500, DS dry c/w 3450 tank, rear hitch for NH3 kit w/cooler. TBT tank, $55,000; 5300 Bourgault air cart $30,000. 306-827-7611, 306-827-7740, Radisson, SK. TBH, $28,000. 306-247-4818, Scott, SK.
FLEXI-COIL SYSTEM 95 harrow packer drawbar, 80’, 5-bar tine harrows, P20 packers, $10,000. Rouleau, SK., phone 306-776-2394, 306-537-0615. FLEXCI-COIL 36’ packer set, P30 packers, down pressure kit; Flexi-Coil 40’ packer set, P30’s, w/down pressure kit; 30’ packer set, P30 packers. Harry Vissers Farm Equipment, 403-327-0349, 403-330-9345, www.harryvissersfarmequipment.com Lethbridge, AB. 2000 BRANDT COMMANDER 5000 50’ h e a v y h a r r o w, l i k e n e w. C o n t a c t 306-488-4683, Penzance, SK. FLEXI-COIL 85 HEAVY harrows, 70’, excel2012 Bourgault 3320QDA Stk# B21999A, lent condition. 403-321-2105, Blackie, AB. single shoot, rear duals, liquid knife, liquid BRANDT 7000 HEAVY harrow, 70’, hydraulVR kit, Edge-on frnt knife holder, $198,000 ic tilt, mint condition. Call 306-277-4503, Cash. 1-888-442-6084, www.farmworld.ca Gronlid, SK. 1999 BOURGAULT 5710 Stk# B21677D, BOOKING SPECIALS for all makes of har54’, 9.8” spacing, 3” carbide tips, MRBs, row tines: mounted, std. drawbars and u p d at e d w i d e p i vo t , $ 3 8 , 5 0 0 C a s h . heavy harrows. Ex: 9/16x26” straight, (De1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca gelman, Brandt, Bourgault, Flexi-Coil, Rite2 0 1 1 B O U R G A U LT 3 3 1 0 P H D, S t k # Way) 100 or more, $21.95 ea.; 3/8x15” PB2965, DS, MRB II’s, rear duals, couple bent, (Rite-Way, Morris, Herman) 100 or walking casters, rear drop hitch, $355,000 more, $8.60 ea. Special ends Feb. 14, 2014. March delivery. Fouillard Implement cash. 1-888-462-3816, www.farmworld.ca Ltd., St. Lazare, MB., 204-683-2221. 50’ BOURGAULT 8810 cultivator, 10” spacing, air kit, liquid fertilizer kit, speed locks, 3” shank mounted valley packers, 24,000 a c r e s s e e d i n g o n l y, $ 4 0 , 0 0 0 . C a l l 306-335-2513, Lemberg, SK. FLEXI-COIL 420 CULT. 40’, c/w 1610 tank, mounted gang packers, Dutch openers, hyd markers. 306-749-2649, Birch Hills, SK 40’ FLEXI-COIL 400 cultivator, 9” spacing, knock-on shovels, c/w 1110 air cart, HARROWS AND MORE HARROWS: 72’ H H B o u r g a u l t 1 9 9 9 7 2 0 0 Va l m a r, $7500 OBO. 306-297-7624, Shaunavon, SK $25,500; 84’ HH Bourgault 7200 2005 and 2011 BOURGAULT 9400 60’ deep tillage 2007 choice, $26,500; 84’ HH Bourgault cultivator, heavy trips, rear hitch, $78,000. 7200 2004, $25,000; 84’ HH Bourgault A . E . C h i c o i n e F a r m E q u i p m e n t L t d . 7200 2004, $25,000; 72’ HH Degelman 7000 2004, $24,500; 72’ HH Delmar HH, 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. $16,500; 60’ gates HH new, $30,000; 72’ BOURGAULT AIR CART/ MISC. AIR gates HH new, $34,500; 84’ gates HH SEEDERS: Bourgault 5350 air cart, double demo, $37,500; Bergen 72’ HH, $10,000; shoot, TBH, hyd., 3rd tank. Air seeders: 40’ Delmar mid harrow with air kit, $16,500. Dutch tool bar, single shoot with Barton Selection can’t be beat. Corner Equipment openers; 32’ Concord 3212, double shoot 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. with knives or sweeps. Call 306-243-4216, Outlook, SK. 2013 BOURGAULT 7200, 84’ heavy har1999 FLEXI-COIL 2320, TBH, excellent row, loaded, like new, $46,000. Millhouse condition, $14,900 OBO. 306-563-8482, Farms Inc. 306-398-4079, Cut Knife, SK. 306-782-2586, Yorkton, SK DEGELMAN 80’ LANDROLLER, $54,500; 2010 Degelman 82’ heavy harrow, Valmar, BOURGAULT 5350 air tank, dual fans, 3 $ 4 8 , 5 0 0 ; B r a n d t 7 0 ’ h e av y h a r r ow, tanks, Rice tires, 491 HP monitor, 2008 NH $24,900; 2011 BG 7200 72’ heavy harrow, ST830 tillage tool, 50’, 12” spacing, 530 $38,900. Call Hergott Farm Equipment trip, w/Technotill seeding system, unit 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK. shedded, sold as unit. Contact Gregoire S e e d F a r m s L t d . , 3 0 6 - 4 4 5 - 5 5 1 6 o r 1998 RITE-WAY 70’ harrow packer bar, 306-441-7005, North Battleford, SK. very good condition, low acres, $6500. 306-963-2722, Imperial, SK. NEW AGRI-TECH 45’ land roller, $36,000. DEGELMAN STRAWMASTER 7000 harrow C a l l f o r d e t a i l s 4 0 3 - 3 3 0 - 7 9 8 2 o r drawbar, 50’, $21,000. Gene Zdunich 403-824-3737, Nobleford, AB. 306-252-2790, 306-381-6363 Kenaston SK 55’ LAURIER HARROW packer bar, P20 packers, $3500 OBO. Call 306-297-7624, 2 4 0 VA L M A R G R A N U L A R ap p l i c at o r, Shaunavon, SK. $1700. Phone 306-395-2668 or 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. 2009 JD 1830 40’ c/w 1910 350 bu. cart, only 6500 acres, like new cond., 3.5’’ split row Dutch openers, Pattison liquid kit, $105,000. 204-574-6401, Brandon, MB. 1995 BOURGAULT 3195 Stk# HR3113B; trailing mechanical drive, single fan, RTH, $13,300. Call 1-888-446-9572 or visit our website: www.farmworld.ca BOURGAULT 8800 48’ w/front spreader, harrows and poly packers, 4250 dual shoot air cart, asking $35,000. 306-742-5912, 306-742-4772, Churchbridge, SK. BOURGAULT 64’ 5710, MRB’s and 6350 Bourgault air cart w/in-cab controls. 306-277-4503, Gronlid, SK.
2004 MORRIS MAXIM II, 49’, 10” spacing, single shoot, 7240 TBT tank, $55,000. Phone 1-800-667-9761, Saskatoon, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca 2011 BOURGAULT 3310, 75’, 10” spacing, 1997 FLEXI-COIL 5000 w/1995 JD 787 air no MRB’s, c/w 6700 tank, duals, 4 tank cart, 170 bu, 33’, 9” spacing, 3.5” steel meter, $305,000. 1-800-219-8867, Swift packers recapped, single shoot, 550 lb. trips, markers, $30,000 OBO. Warner, AB. Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca Call: 403-642-3762. WANTED: 5-1/2” RUBBER packers for Flexi-Coil 5000, 9” spacing. Will trade 1997 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 51’, steel packers recapped, 2320 tank, 10” spacing, block4-1/2” steel. 403-793-1705, Brooks, AB. age, $44,900. 1-800-667-9761, Saskatoon, 1997 BOURGAULT 5710, 60’, 7” spacing, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca SS, speed lock adapters, 3/4” carbide knives, 3” steel packers w/mud scrapers, WANTED: FLEXI-COIL 6000, 30’ tool bar, granular kit, 2004 5350 TBH tank, center prefer 7.5” spacing, SS, in good working WINTER DISCOUNTS on new and used tank metering, DS, 2 fans, rear tow hitch, condition. 780-205-3322, Lloydminster, SK rollers, all sizes. Machinery Dave, Bow Is$85,000. 306-264-3721, Mankota, SK. 2010 64’ 5710 Bourgault air drill, MRBII, land, AB., 403-545-6340, 403-580-6889. 9.8” spacing, dual castor wheels, 3/4” tips, 6550 ST tank, 591 monitor and deluxe auger, exc. cond., field ready, $220,000 OBO. Ph. 780-753-4406, Provost, AB. 2010 65’ 3310 Bourgault paralink, 12” spacing, mid row shank banding, DS, rear hitch, $157,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK.
2004 MORRIS MAX II, 60’, 70” spacing, SS, 8370 TBT, $105,000. 306-934-1546, Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com 2010 P1050 NH 380 bu. air tank, TBH, SS, dual fans, bin level, velocity. Intelliview II 2002 FLEXI-COIL 3450 TBH, 10” auger monitor, hitch, hoses, shedded; 2002 w/air seeder hopper, very good condition, Case/IH 32-12 Edge-on spring shanks double shoot, mechanical drive, rear hitch, w/Farmland boots, disc closers, shedded. $37,000. Call 780-221-3980, Leduc, AB. Call 204-734-2526, Swan River, MB. 2007 72’ SEEDMASTER, 12” spacing, semi- CONCORD AIR DRILL 4010 c/w 3000 pneumatic tires on shank w/Bourgault tank, Dickey John NH3, Dutch sideband 6700 ST cart, dual wheels, conveyor, openers, one pass seeding, field ready. $230,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equip. Ltd. 306-873-5788, Tisdale, SK. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. 55’ MORRIS MAXIM, 10” spacing, blockage 2010 BOURGAULT 3310, 55’, 12” spacing, monitor, Atom-Jet openers, 7300 TBT 4.8” pneumatic packer, S25 MRB’s, c/w tank, exc. cond. Phone: 306-291-9395, or 6550, $279,000. 1-866-659-5866, Estevan, 306-283-4747, Langham, SK. SK. www.redheadequipment.ca MORRIS MAXIM II, 34.5’ air drill, double 2011 SEED HAWK, 60-10, semi-pneumat- shoot, carbide tips, 7180 tank, excellent ic packers c/w 2010 6700 Bourgault tank, shape w/low acres, asking $39,000. D S, c o nveyo r, l ow a c r e s , $ 3 2 5 , 0 0 0 . 403-647-7827, Foremost, AB. 204-522-5189, Waskada, MB. 2002 BOURGAULT 5710 drill w/mid-row banders, 54’, 9.8’’ spacing, 3’’ rubber packers, $50,000. 780-678-6054, Daysland, AB. 2001 MORRIS MAXIM II, 40’, double shoot, 10” spacing, 7240 TBH tank, 3rd tank. 306-266-4362, Glentworth, SK.
HAYBUSTER ZERO TILL DRILLS: 107, 147, 1000, 1068, 3107 air drill. Looking for worn down 1000 drill discs. Call Rudy 403-627-5429, Pincher Creek, AB. WANTED: HOE DRILL, JD 930, 30’ to 60’ wide in good seeding condition. Call King Ranch 250-827-3901, Montney, BC. FLEXI-COIL 1720 SEED cart, 18.4x26 rears, 16.5x16.1 fronts. 306-622-2069, Gull Lake, SK. area.
How to Contact Us.
Clip & Save
Classifieds Office 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 Office Hours: MONDAY to FRIDAY 8:30AM - 4:30PM
1.800.667.6929 | Email: subscriptions@producer.com
2008 SEEDMASTER TOOLBAR, 64’ on 12” spacing, c/w Flexi-Coil 3450 var. rate cart, brand new fert. knives, asking $150,000. 306-421-1086, 306-634-9330, Macoun SK 2001 JD 1920 drill, 41’, 12” spacing, 4” steel packers, double shoot, new openers, 2001 JD 1900 270 air cart, new fertilizer meter box. Will take grain on trade. 306-831-7782, Harris, SK.
WIRELESS BLOCKAGE AND Flow Monitor. Using acoustic sensors, it’s the most accurate monitoring for your air seeder. Say goodbye to wire problems. 2012 BOURGAULT 3320, 68’, 12” spacing, Seed and fertilizer flow rates are sent 4 tank metering, X20 cameras, blockage wirelessly to an iPad in your cab. It’s simmonitor, $329,000. 1-800-219-8867, Swift ple, reliable and accurate. Call Zane at Intelligent Ag Solutions 306-202-7157, Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca Saskatoon, SK. www.IntelligentAg.com 820 FLEXI-COIL 40’, 9” spacing, c/w 1720 TBH tank, dual front caster, 320 third tank, Broadcast kit and 4 bar harrows, very good condition. 306-749-2649, Birch Hills, SK. BOURGAULT 8810, 52’, 330 trip, 9” spacing, 3/4” carbide knives w/2.5” independent packers and 4 bar harrows and 5350 DS tank, w/wo MRBs. Cudworth, SK. Call Gary 306-256-3510, or cell 306-233-7348.
Newsroom Office 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
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
CLASSIFIED ADS 49
2011 JD 1790 32 row 15� planter, drawbar hitch, Esets w/corn, sunflower, soybean and canola plates, in-furrow fert. $130,000 COMPLETE SHANK ASSEMBLIES: JD 1610, $135; JD 610, black, $180; JD 1600, $90; OBO. 306-452-7931, Redvers, SK. Morris 7-series, $135. 306-946-7923, CASE/IH 3580 TBH tank, 2013, dual 306-946-4923, Young, SK. 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. JD 7200 PLANTER Alpine fert. kit, 1992, 2007 CHALLENGER MT865B, 525 HP, Cat 16 rows, 30� spacing, tested and maintain C18, 3953 hrs, exc. cond., HD tracks 80%, 99% accuracy, 1.75 bu. hopper, 3 PTH pull, PTO, big pump, 6 SCVs, RTK GPS and more, $209,000. 780-206-1234, Barrhead. $26,000. 306-436-7566, Regina, SK.
2013 CASE/IH 550 HD wheeled tractor, 1280 hrs., warranty until Spring 2015, $292,000. Call Terry at 204-746-4131, Rosenort, MB. equipmentpeople.com WANTED: CASE/IH 2294 FWA. Also older Case and JD tractors in need of repair. 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. 2003 CASE STX 450, PTO, 16 spd. powershift, weights, GPS, 710-42’s, 3600 hrs., $158,000. 403-443-1207, Trochu, AB. 2002 STX 450 quad, power shift, PTO, 7500 hrs., $125,000. 306-831-8963, Rosetown, SK.
2011 CASE MG340, 1350 hrs., loaded, JD 750 SEPARATE placement no-till drill 2008 AGCO LT95, FL45 FEL, joystick grap- duals front/rear, exc. cond. Tractor will do c/w grass seed attachment. 100 acres on ple, FWA, 95HP, $69,000. 306-934-1546, almost anything you would like! $180,000 Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift OBO. 403-652-7980, High River, AB. new discs. 780-842-7981, Wainwright, AB. Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com CASE/IH STEIGER built, 4 WD/Quads; Plus other makes and models. Call the Tractor Man! Trades welcome. We deliver. LEMKEN RUBIN 8 meter 26’ disc, demo Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. model, as new, $95,000. 204-574-6401, Brandon, MB. CASE 2594, 3600 hrs., 24 spd., IHC 684 c/w FEL, 3 PTH, 2400 hrs., 403-394-4401, RT-300 JOKER! 2011, 30’ wide, approx. Lethbridge, AB. 3500 acres, asking $69,500. Please Contact James 403-312-0776, Calgary, AB. 1992 CASE/IH 7120 Magnum, 7147 hrs, original owner, 20.8x38 singles, 3 24’ KELLO-BILT DISCER, $18,000 OBO. hyd., 18 spd. power shift, exc. cond. 780-888-2245, or 780-888-1217, Hardisty, 306-291-9395, 306-283-4747 Langham SK AB. SALFORD 40’ RTS, 2011, $69,500. For m o r e i n fo c a l l R J S a l e s & S e r v i c e , 306-338-2541, Wadena, SK. or www.rjsales.ca 48’ LEON RODWEEDER w/harrows, $850; Morris 35’ cultivator w/harrows, $1200. 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK.
AGROPLOW MODEL 19SAP2H, all options, including tow hitch or 3 PTH, used on 350 acres so like new. Pics available or google the model no., $38,000 OBO. Bruce at 780-405-8638, Fort Saskatchewan, AB. 34’ CASE DISC, Model 370, 2008; 32’ JD disc, Model 650; 24’ White disc; 47’ cultivator w/3-bar harrows, like new. Harry Vissers Farm Equipment, Lethbridge, AB. www.harryvissersfarmequipment.com 403-327-0349, 403-330-9345 FRIGGSTAD C5 47’ cultivator, mounted harrows, Beeline chem applicator, nice shape, $8500. 306-963-2722, Imperial, SK KELLO-BILT 8’ to 20’ offset discs w/24� to 36� notched blades; Kello-Bilt 24’ to 38’ tandem wing discs w/26� and 28� notched blades and oil bath bearings. Red Deer, AB. www.kelloughs.com 1-888-500-2646. SALFORD 50’ RTS, 2011, new bearings and discs, $88,000. For more info contact RJ Sales & Service, 306-338-2541 at Wadena, SK. or www.rjsales.ca 60’ BOURGAULT CULTIVATOR, 10� space, Summers harrows, no welding on frame, NH3 ready, Atom Jet no freeze tips, $55,000; NH3 tank, twin 1450’s, $32,500. $80,000 for unit. 780-933-2585, Debolt AB SUMMER HEAVY HARROWS, new and used. Harry Vissers Farm Equipment, www.harryvissersfarmequipment.com 403-327-0349 403-330-9345, Lethbridge. KELLO-BILT DISC PARTS: Blades and bearings. Parts to fit most makes and models. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. www.kelloughs.com
BOOK YOUR RITEWAY landroller for spring delivery. Be ready for seeding. Call Flaman today- 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com WANTED: 49 - 2� shank mount packers; Selling JD 737 air drill, 31’, SS, 7.5� spacing w/787 TBH cart 160 bu., $16,500, just cart $10,000. 306-867-8477, Outlook, SK. 2010 JD DB60 PLANTER, 24/47 row, Precision air force, E-sets, 20/20 monitor, row command, row cleaners, Keaton seed firmers, liquid kit. Call 306-456-2749, 306-861-2013, Oungre, SK.
2011 FENDT 933, GPS, front and rear weights, duals, eng brake, 710/42’s, 1130 hrs., warranty till March, 2014. Fendt maintained, $210,000. 806-717-7337, Hartley, Texas. drostland15@gmail.com 2010 FENDT 712, 900 hrs., 580/42 rear, 540/26 front, 3 PTH, exc. shape, fast, great on fuel, $95,000. Call 403-652-7980, High River, AB.
2 0 0 8 CHALLENGER MT855, extreme tracks, PTO, PS, $255,000. 306-934-1546, Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com CHALLENGER 55, 6500 hrs., 3 PTH, Trimble 750 AutoSteer w/Subscription, 4 hyds. vg cond. $65,000. 204-937-7411, Grandview, MB.
1980 CATERPILLAR D7G Crawler tractor. Eng. recently overhauled, UC redone 2 yrs. ago, tracks redone, showing 4965 hrs., CASE 2290’s, rebuilt trans., brand new all bills of service avail. Reason for selling: dually tires, interiors totally redone, exc. Upgrading, $65,000. Call Gilbert for more shape, 5500/8000 hrs. Two to choose info., 204-745-8029, Somerset, MB. from. Call 250-263-5992, Charlie Lake, BC. CAT 75D, 36� tracks, 4396 hrs., nice 2010 CIH 485, 800 duals, PTO, $269,000; 1997 $60,000. Call 204-825-8121, 2010 CIH 435 Quad, PTO, $269,000; 2011 condition, CIH 450, 800 duals, $263,000; 2009 CIH Morden, MB. 535 Quad, 36� tracks, $283,900; 2012 JD 9460R, PTO, $279,000; NH Boomer 3045 w/FEL, $31,900; CIH Magnum 210, 3 PTH, $139,000; CIH Magnum 235, low hrs., 1976 JD 4430 quad range trans., 18.4x38 $165,000; 2003 JD 9520, PS, $169,000; duals, good running order, $12,900. 1986 CIH 4494, $23,900; 2012 CIH 550Q, www.reimerfarmequipment.com Reimer PTO, $359,000; 2011 CIH Maxxum 125 Farm Equipment, Hwy. 12 North, Steinw/FEL, $97,500; 2004 NH TJ500, PS, bach MB. Gary Reimer at: 204-326-7000. $175,000; 2009 CIH 535 QUAD, 36� tracks, 1999 9400 JD, 4WD, powershift, PTO, $296,000. Call Hergott Farm Equipment 6791 hrs, Greenlight, wired for AutoSteer, 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK. excellent, shedded, $130,000. Indian 4230 4X4, with near new Alo loader, 3000 Head, SK. 306-695-0441, 306-421-0091. hours, excellent condition, $20,000. Call 2006 JD 7520 Stk# HN3108A, 5801 hrs., 250-992-2375, Quesnel, BC. 150 HP, 2 WD, 3 PTH, powershift trans., 3 hyd. outlets, air seats, $75,000. Call 1-888-446-9572 or www.farmworld.ca 1992 CASE/IH 7110 Magnum, 1285 original hrs., 18.4x38 duals, 3 hyd., 18 spd. power shift, premium condition. Phone: 306-291-9395, 306-283-4747 Langham SK 2004 CASE STX500, Firestone triples, luxury cab, 16 spd. powershift, 2300 hrs, $175,000. 403-647-7391, Foremost, AB. QUAD TRAC AND PTO, 2006 STX500 HD, very nice, 36� tacks, 2900 hrs, $209,000. Located Yorkton. 306-948-7223, Biggar SK WANTED IHC TRACTORS: 1206, 1026, 1456, 826, 4 WD’s 4166, 4100, 4156, 4186. Must have 3 PTH and PTO, running or not. Call 204-665-2461, Melita, MB. 2012 500 QUAD, luxury suspended cab, 1000 PTO, diff. locks, 30� tracks, twin pumps, 6 hyds., elec. mirrors, AutoSteer, equipped w/Pro700, 495 hrs., exc. cond., $340,000. 780-618-5538, Grimshaw, AB. 1983 CASE 2294, 2WD, 10,300 hrs., c/w 10’ blade, good condition for it’s age, $14,000. Call 403-740-6316, Castor, AB. CASE/IH: 7120 MFWD w/loader, 7500 hrs., duals, $48,500; 7120 MFWD, 8500 hrs., duals, new tires, 3 PTH, $49,000; 7130 MFWD, 5500 hrs., duals, $45,000. All in vg cond. 204-937-7411, Grandview, MB. LIZARD CREEK REPAIR and Tractor. We buy 90 and 94 Series Case, 2 WD, FWA tractors for parts and rebuilding. Also have 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 . 306-784-7841, Herbert, SK. 1986 CASE/IH 4894, 7100 hrs., asking $25,000. 306-287-4243 or 306-287-7573, Watson, SK.
2005 JD 9520, 3700 hrs., powershift, PTO, 800 duals, weights, serviced, mint, $179,500. 204-574-6401, Wawanesa, MB. JD 4450, 6844 hrs, MFWD, 3 PTH, powershift, $39,000; JD 7800, 7900 hrs, MFWD, 3 PTH, powershift, $57,000; JD 7700, 7300 hrs, powerquad, MFWD, 3 PTH, $54,000; JD 7600, 6400 hrs, powershift, MFWD, 3 PTH, $49,000; JD 7600, 7100 hrs, powerquad, MFWD, 3 PTH, $46,000; JD 7810, 6020 hrs, powershift, MFWD, 3 PTH, new big tires, $65,000; JD 4450, 8035 hrs, powershift, MFWD, 3 PTH, engine rebuilt, $39,000; JD 4050, 8450 hrs, powershift, MFWD, 3 PTH, $29,500. 306-231-3993, www.versluistrading.com Humboldt, SK. 8420T, 2005, 3325 hrs., 24� tracks, GPS ready, 4 remotes, powershift, vg cond. 780-954-2005, 780-283-2005,Westlock AB
2007 7420 Stk# HN3300A, 6000 hrs, 135 HP, MFWD, 3 hyd. 3 PTH, dual PTO, c/w 741 JD loader, bucket, grapple, $69,000. 1-888-446-9572 or www.farmworld.ca JD 3140 w/sound guard cab, AC, quad 1997 JD 9400, 4WD, 7265 hrs., 24 spd., range, dual hyds., 540/1000 PTO, $15,000 weight package, new 710 tires, Universal AutoSteer, $105,000; 16’ Degelman dozOBO. 306-743-7622, Langenburg, SK. er blade fits 9000 series JD 4WD, hyd. 9630T JOHN DEERE, premium cab and angle, snow extensions, used for snow onlighting pkg., 530 HP, 3500 hrs., tracks at ly, $17,000. 306-421-1110, Torquay, SK. 8 0 % , g r e at s h ap e , a l w ay s s h e d d e d . LOOKING FOR: JD 30, 40, 50 Series trac$208,000. Ron 204-941-0045, Rosser, MB. tor in good cond. with mechanical issues. STEVE’S TRACTOR REBUILDER looking Call 306-621-7170, Yorkton, SK. for JD tractors to rebuild, Series 20s, 30s, 40s or 50s, or for parts. Will pay top dollar. 2002 JD 9120 powershift, 1000 PTO, 3 Now selling JD parts. 204-466-2927, PTH, 900 metric duals, 6065 hrs, $119,000 www.reimerfarmequipment.com Reimer 204-871-5170, Austin, MB. Farm Equipment, Hwy. 12 North, Steinbach MB. Gary Reimer at: 204-326-7000.
KELLY DISC CHAIN HARROW A Concept so simple
A Tool so rugged and reliable that you wonder why all Shallow tillage
like you’ve never seen before. Learn Why at
www.kellyharrows.com
2000 JD 8100, FWA, 20.8x42 duals, 6000 hrs., mint, $63,900. Phone 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. 1986 JD 4450, approx. 6200 hrs., factory duals, quad range. 306-726-2151, Southey, SK.
you won’t believe it! machines aren’t built this way!
JD 4640, 8965 hrs., quad shift, 20.8x38 2007 JD 7520, IVT trans., 741 loader, de- 2009 VERSATILE 375, PS, 710 duals, PTO, duals, 8 front weights, excellent condition. tachable grapple fork, FWD, 3 PTH, 4400 1174 hrs., GPS, $189,000. 306-934-1546, 306-283-4747, 306-291-9395 Langham SK hrs, $85,000. 780-853-7205, Vermilion, AB Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com 2012 JD 9410R, 1300 hrs., 18 spd., power2002 BUHLER VERSATILE 2270, 4 WD, shift with efficiency manager, 710x70R42 tires, PTO, warranty. 306-752-1948 or 2013 MF 4610 FWA, rental return, 84 HP GPS, 3100 hrs., vg cond., $78,000 OBO. 306-445-5551, North Battleford, SK. 306-921-6693, Melfort, SK. PTO, self-levelling loader, cab, AC, hyd. 1998 JOHN DEERE 9400 4 WD, 4370 hrs., shuttle, joystick, 3PTH, 110 hrs. Warranty. 946 VERSATILE, 24.5x32 duals, Atom Jet 12 spd, weight pkg, 750x65x38 Treleborg 2.9% for 72 months OAC. Cam-Don Motors hyds., Outback Guidance, $53,500 OBO. 403-823-1894, 403-772-2156, Drumheller. dual tires, $109,000 OBO. 403-529-7134, Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. Medicine Hat, AB. 2007 MF 1540, FWA, $24,900; 1992 MF VERSATILE 936, 7200 hrs, 24.5x32 duals, 2006 JD 9520, c/w 2012 Degelman 3690 FWA, 170 HP, $37,000. Saskatoon, standard shift. Phone 306-266-4362, model 7200, 16’, 6-way quick detach SK. 306-934-1546 or Swift Current, SK. Glentworth, SK. blade, 3560 hrs, PTO, 4 hyds., AutoSteer, 306-773-7281, www.fulllineag.com VERSATILE 2525, 525 HP, 2 track, air ride, heavy weight package, $205,000. Will split WANTED: MASSEY 698 tractor, running 1400 hrs., $75,000. Call 204-822-3797, package. 306-379-4530, Fiske, SK. or not w/wo loader. Phone 780-635-2232, Morden, MB. FOR SALE BY TENDER: 1998 JD 7410 self- Glendon, AB. 2006 VERSATILE 435, 4700 hours, 800 levelling loader, 10,500 hrs., 3 hyds., all WRECKING FOR PARTS: Massey 2675, rubber, $129,000 OBO. 306-563-8482, new tires May 2012. Equipment sold as is. very good engine, 18.4x38 tires, excellent 306-782-2586, Winnipeg, MB. Highest or any tender not necessarily ac- sheet metal. 1-877-564-8734, Roblin, MB. cepted. Tenders close February 11, 2014. Send tenders to: RM of Auvergne #76, Box 60, Ponteix, SK. S0N 1Z0. For more info ph John 306-625-7152 or Dale 306-625-7797. 2012 T9.615, 535 HP, 800-38’s, PTO, high 1981 JD 8440, 20.8x34 duals, 1000 PTO, cap. hyd., HID lighting, 16 spd., auto guidtriple hyds., 2300 hrs. showing, excellent, ance w/262 receiver, cold start pkg., cast front and back, 780-450 working hrs., not $35,500. 306-473-2711, Willowbunch, SK. smoked in, new cond., full warranty until 1976 4630, 6100 original hrs., duals, all spring 2014, asking $280,000. Drinkwater, new rubber, immaculate. 306-744-8113, SK. 306-693-5054, drtt.thul@gmail.com Saltcoats, SK. 2012 T9.560, Stk# PN2993A, 440 hrs., 4440 JD, quad range, 3 PTH, 20.8x38 500 HP, 4 WD, 16 spd trans, 6 hyd outlets, tires, very well maintained, $26,500 OBO. luxury cab, cold weather start, $347,500. VERSATILE 875 TRACTOR w/duals, 700 403-823-1894, 403-772-2156, Drumheller. 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca hrs on major $19,000 engine overhaul. ReRETIRING: TWO 1982 JD 4640 tractors, 2011 NH T9050, 1215 hrs, 485 HP, 4 WD, cent new tires, return line for air drill, field vg condition, one with vg radial duals. powershift, IntelliVeiw II Plus, HID’s, full ready $35,500. 780-307-8571 Westlock AB 306-638-4550, 306-630-7609, Findlater SK IntelliSteer Omnistar unlocked, $238,000. D145 VERSATILE WITH 12’ Degelman blade, runs good, $6500 firm. Call: 1976 JD 4430 quad, 3 hyds., 85% rubber, 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca 306-397-2599, Meota, SK. excellent. Call 306-744-8113, Yorkton, SK. 1981 835 VERSATILE, 7100 hrs., asking 2009 JD 9770 STS, 1107 rotor hrs., 4 WD, $20,000. 306-287-4243 or 306-287-7573, Contour-Master, full load, $169,000 OBO. Watson, SK. 306-552-4905, Brownlee, SK. 2010 BUHLER VERSATILE 485, 900-42 1981 JD 8440 4WD, 7457 hrs, power duals, 1940 hrs, 4 SCV, 12 spd., $170,000. quad trans, 1000 PTO, 3 remotes, 18.4x38 Call 204-825-8121, Morden, MB. duals 65%. Completely rebuilt motor, new injection pump and injectors, new clutch and brakes, shedded! $29,900. Jordan, anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. GRATTON COULEE AGRI PARTS LTD. Your #1 place to purchase late model combine NEW JD 741 front end loader, frames for and tractor parts. Used, new and rebuilt. 20/30 Series, $13,900. Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy. 12 North, Steinbach MB. ’09 NH T7040 180HP FWA tractor www.gcparts.com Toll free 888-327-6767. Call: Gary Reimer at 204-326-7000. 3PTH & PTO w/ FEL & grapple, 2,600 hrs. Excellent condition w/ McCORMICK MTX110, with loader, 4850 www.reimerfarmequipment.com warranty! $104,800. Trades welcome. hours, $59,000. Call RJ Sales & Service, JD 7130, MFWD w/740 Classic loader, Financing 1-800-667-4515. 3 0 6 - 3 3 8 - 2 5 4 1 , W a d e n a , S K . o r available. www.rjsales.ca for more information. bale spear, like new, 870 hrs., $92,500. www.combineworld.com Phone 306-726-7455, 403-308-4200. McCORMICK MTX125, 4000 hours, with loader and grapple, $65,000. Call RJ Sales 2012 JD 9460R 4WD powershift, 600 & Service, 306-338-2541, Wadena, SK. or hrs., 800/70R38’s, prem. cab, leather trim, www.rjsales.ca for more information. HID lights, 4 remotes, weight pkg, Cat V drawbar, $234,500 US. 320-848-2496 or McCORMICK MC120, w/cab and loader, 320-894-6560 www.ms-diversified.com 630 hrs., $84,900. Call RJ Sales & Service, Fairfax, MN. 306-338-2541, Wadena, SK. or www.rjsales.ca for more information. 1997 JD 9100 and 1990 JD 4555 tractors. Dinsmore, SK. For more info. call Cliff MF 2675, like new tires; MF 1505, $2500; 306-846-2175 or email: cab@sasktel.net MF 255, 3 PTH; Versatile 800 Series II, $8500. 403-394-4401, Lethbridge, AB. 2 0 0 8 J D 9 5 3 0 , 4 W D, 2368 hours, 800/70Rx38 Firestone duals, Greenstar ready, instructional seat, vg cond., warranty until 2015, $218,500. Kindersley, SK. ‘09 NH TV6070 Tractor 105hp, 306-463-3023, 306-463-8774. new tires, loader w/ new bucket, EZEE-ON #125 FEL, high lift, 8’ bucket, hrs., $59,800. Trades welcome mounts and controls included, as new, 1981 JD 8440, 7500 hrs, 300 hrs. on new 3,812 Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. $5000. 250-567-2607, Vanderhoof, BC. motor, PTO, no winter use, shedded. Call www.combineworld.com 306-297-8548, Simmie, SK. 740 JD FEL, c/w 8’ bucket, grapple and T9.560, 280 hrs, 800 metric tire, de- joystick, virtually new, fits 10, 20, 30, 40 WANTED FOR PARTS: JD 1840 with 2013 luxe cab, 6 hyds., tow cable, weights, MFWD tractor. 403-932-2445, Calgary, AB. $330,000; 2013 T9.390, 270 hrs, 480x50� and 50 Series tractors, $8800 OBO. 403-823-1894, 403-772-2156, Drumheller. Email: diduckg@pathcom.ca row crop tires, PTO, 4 hyds., powershift, 1985 JD 8650, quad range, 3 hyd., tow cable, cloth seat, $280,000; 2012 10’ REM DOZER with hoses and hydraulic AM/FM, AC, diff. lock, rebuilt eng., tires- T7.185 MFWD loader grapple, 460 rear, cylinders, off a JD 4440, $1000. Gerald 85%, shedded, $33,900. 204-761-5145, 420 front 70% tread, weights, CVT trans, 3 306-962-4505 or 306-460-8780, Eston, SK h y d s . , 5 4 0 / 1 0 0 0 P TO , 1 2 2 0 h r s . , Rivers, MB. $100,000. 204-534-7651, Boissevain, MB. DIGITAL HOUR METER repair and programming on heavy equip. and farm trac- 2012 T9.670, Stk# HN3227A, 450 hrs., tors. 403-809-3903 Prospeedo Calgary, AB 670 HP, 4 WD, diff. lock, 6 hyd. outlets, high cap. drawbar, lux cab, $345,000. WANTED: JOHN DEERE 4020 with front 1-888-442-3816 or www.farmworld.ca e n d l o a d e r a n d s i d e e n t r a n c e c a b. 780-672-3755, Camrose, AB.
JOHN DEERE 8640, immaculate condition, 1000 PTO, cab all redone, complete motor just redone, 20.8x38 tires like new, 7315 hrs., $29,700. 306-369-7992, Bruno, SK.
&ROG :HW 6SULQJ 6((' ($5/,(5
1998 JD 9400, 24 spd., newer 710x38s, 5303 hrs, $99,000. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK.
Limited quantities available for Spring.
LOOKING FOR: 4230, 4430, 4240 or 4440, in reasonable condition. 306-446-0164, North Battleford, SK. JD 7400, 7410, 4640 FWD’s; 1998 Ford 9782, low hrs. Loaders in stock. Will trade for JD tractors needing work. Austin, MB. 204-871-5170.
2006 CAT 924G wheel loader, 5500 hrs, 1 owner, used for farming and snow removal, good shape, always serviced at Toromont Cat, lots of attachments available, $89,000. 204-633-8888, 204-782-4114, Winnipeg, MB. 2007 NH TV145, 4200 hrs., one owner, well equipped: high lift FEL, hyd. couplers, PTO and 3 PTH tractor and cab end, bi-directional tires, grapple fork. New pins and bushings in centre hinge. Well maintained 8’ LEON 3 point hitch blade, $500 OBO. and serviced. 306-457-2935 Stoughton, SK Call: 306-377-4726, Fiske, SK. STILL OVER 25 2 WD and 4 WD loaders and crawlers in stock. We have dismantled 1998 FORD/NH 9682, 710 rubber, 12 many units for parts. Large stock of new speed, low hours, excellent condition. and used parts. 2 locations, over 60 years in business. Cambrian Equipment Sales, 306-277-4503, Gronlid, SK. phone 204-667-2867, fax 204-667-2932, Winnipeg, MB. D5H CAT, CAB, winch, 6 way dozer; Steel quonset, in crate, 52’x35’x18’; Ford 5000 dsl w/loader. 306-236-8023, Goodsoil, SK. WE SPECIALIZE in manufacturing all kinds of buckets including large snow buckets to fit any loader. Call Reimco Industries, 403-312-4202, Linden, AB. 1993 Ford 9880 4WD Tractor 400HP, 7,886 hrs., $48,800.00 as is, or $59,800 with duals + 8 new radial tires. Sold w/ warranty. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com FORD 7700 w/FEL and Ford 7710. Both with cabs, 3 PTH’s, good cond., $14,000 to $24,000. Call 204-322-5614, Warren, MB. 1979 FORD FW60, Stock # C22221, 5405 hrs., 335 HP, 4 WD, new starter, 20 spd., duals, $25,500. 1-888-442-6084, or www.farmworld.ca
Distributed by:
Call Your Local Dealer
Email: craigyeager@grainbagscanada.com or aaronyeager@grainbagscanada.com
or Grain Bags Canada at 306-682-5888
www.grainbagscanada.com
1976 CATERPILLAR 980B loader c\w integrated tool carrier and forks. This machine has approx. 2000 hrs on rebuilt engine and trans. Engine doesn’t burn oil and shifts great. Serial #89P04511. Asking $35,000. 306-741-2251, Swift Current, SK. 2005 JD 6420 MFWD, w/640SL loader, 3 PTH, 2991 hrs, 95 HP, 540/1000 PTO, 3 VERSATILE 800 SERIES I. Good tractor, 10 YARD LATOURNEAU scraper, converted hyds, good rubber, shedded, nice tractor. one bad cylinder. Best offer. 306-343-7357 to hyd., good condition. 403-393-0219, Ph or text 403-741-2099, Stettler, AB. 403-833-2190. Saskatoon, SK.
50 CLASSIFIED ADS
SUNFLOWER HARVEST SYSTEMS. Call for literature. 1-800-735-5848. Lucke Mfg., www.luckemanufacturing.com SOYBEAN SEED TREATER, USC LP2000 portable seed treater, c/w seed wheel, peat, liquid applicator, spare conveyor belts, great cond, used last season, shedded. 2000 lbs per min. treating speed, can be used to treat all crops/seed, asking $55,000. Call 204-746-0391, Arnaud, MB. ESTATE SALE: 8-row Monosem corn planter c/w liquid fert. kit, $10,000; New Idea power unit w/4-row SP corn harvester, $15,000; 2-row SP corn harvester, $5000. Dennis 403-308-1400, Taber, AB. QUIT FARMING: 2008 CIH 8010 combine 4 WD, 30’ flex draper, $200,000; 2011 Massey 9260 36’ swather, big cab w/swath roller, $65,000; 2005 STX 450 quad, new tracks, $130,000; 2008 STX 430 4 WD, new tires, $160,000; 2- 2005 IH 9100, 550 Cat, 13 spd., 4-way locks, $30,000 ea.; 2003 Advance Super B grain trailer, $ 2 8 , 0 0 0 ; 1 9 9 5 S u p e r B f l at t r a i l e r, $10,000; 2011 Farm King 13x85 auger, $20,000; Farm King 10x70, $6,000; IH 3320 sprayer, $200,000; 2012 Convey-All tender unit, $10,000; 2001 JD 1780 15x31 planter, $50,000; 2010 Salford 41’, as new, $70,000; Heavy harrows, $16,000; 2013 Geringhoff 8x30” corn head, chopping header, $86,000; 2013 Killbros grain cart, w/scale, tarp, lights, $45,000; 2-105 White, rebuilt, $9,000; Hutchmaster tandem, $8,000; Convey-All belt con. 10x85, $6,000; Roadrunner header haul, $8,000; MacDon 30’ draper header, $20,000; tandem trailer w/duals to haul sprayer, $5,000; IH 4240 tractor w/15’ mower, $12,000; Westco 16x30 cult., $3,000; Band sprayer 16x30, $3,000; 3- 10,000 gal. poly fert. tanks; 2004 Chev 2500 4x4 dr. w/8’ deck, new tires, new safety, $6500; 1998 Kenworth T-800 SS paving box, 30” live belt, $30,000; 2006 Cat 320 excavator, 10,000 hrs. nice, $60,000; Reynolds 18 yd. pushoff scraper, $30,000. Will sell as pkg. or separate. 204-871-0925, MacGregor MB 1988 VERSATILE 876 TRACTOR 4 WD, 4070 hrs; 1,000 gal. poly water tank; JD 590 30’ PT swather, batt reels, frame mtd. swath roller, Keer Shear; Brandt quick fold 90’ PT sprayer, 800 gal., PTO pump, foam marker. All equip. field ready. Take offers. 306-487-7203 anytime, Lampman, SK NH 358 MIXMILL w/Forrester auger attachment, not rusted out, excellent shape. 306-291-9395, 306-283-4747 Langham SK
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
BIRCH FIREWOOD, sold in bags of approx. 1/2 cord, split and seasoned, $200; Pine also available in same quantity, $120. 306-763-1943, Prince Albert, SK.
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. TRIMBLE EZ-BOOM SECTIONAL control, only with Trimble 500 display, BLOCKED AND SPLIT seasoned Spruce works firewood. Call V&R Sawing, 306-232-5488, $1000 OBO. 306-424-7312, Candiac, SK. Rosthern, SK.
WHOLE HOUSE INSTANT on demand water heater, approved for Canada, only $689, 4.3 GPM, propane or natural gas. Replace your hot water tank, 780-952-4884, Edmonton, AB. Visit our BEV’S FISH & SEAFOOD LTD., buy di- website: www.shop.firepitfundamentals.ca rect, fresh fish: Pickerel, Northern Pike, Whitefish and Lake Trout. Seafood also WWW.NOUTILITYBILLS.COM - Indoor available. Phone toll free 1-877-434-7477, coal, grain, multi-fuel, gas, oil, pellet and propane fired boilers, fireplaces, furnaces 306-763-8277, Prince Albert, SK. and stoves. Outdoor EPA and conventional wood boilers, coal / multi-fuel boilers. Chimney, heat exchangers, parts, piping, pumps, etc. Athabasca, AB, 780-628-4835. KEET’S FISH FARM has Rainbow Trout fingerlings for spring stocking. Gill nets available. 306-260-0288, Saskatoon, SK. www.keetsfishfarm.com
BIRD WATCHERS CALL To The Far North! Bird stands and natural locations available. Year round bird and wildlife watching. Tree stands, ground blinds, and natural locations available. North Western Saskatchewan. Ron Kisslinger 306-822-2256 or email: p.r.service@sasktel.net
’00 LULL 644D34 TELEHANDLER, 6,000 lbs., 34’ reach, w/ cab, well maintained, good shape. $26,800. Trades welcome, financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com. OVER 20 FORKLIFTS in stock, many parted out. Over 75 sets of pallet forks from small to large. Cambrian Equipment Sales, phone 204-667-2867, fax 204-667-2932, Winnipeg, MB.
ODESSA ROCKPICKER SALES: New Degelman equipment, land rollers, Strawmaster, rockpickers, rock rakes, dozer blades. Phone 306-957-4403, cell 306-536-5097, Odessa, SK.
WANTED: 8”x51’ PTO auger in good cond., Sakundiak preferred. Call 306-531-6119, Balgonie, SK. WANTED: MASSEY 698 tractor, running or not w/wo loader. Phone 780-635-2232, Glendon, AB.
2008 GRADALL/JLG TELEHANDLER 534D9 DSL, 4WD, 9000 lbs, c/w heated cab, 45’ reach w/auxiliary hydraulic lines to articulating swing carriage c/w adjustable HD forks, full block heater, hydraulic tank heater, 1800 hrs, $89,000. 403-580-0649, Medicine Hat, AB.
FORKLIFTS FOR RENT/SALE: JCB 940, WANTED: 1026, 1456 or 826 IH; Also JD 8000 lbs; JCB 930, 6000 lbs, RT 4x4. Ph. 6030, 3020 or 4020 tractors, any cond. Conquest Equip., 306-483-2500, Oxbow SK 701-240-5737, Minot, North Dakota. WANTED: 70 to 100 HP 2 WD tractor with cab, in good condition. Ph: 306-210-8901, Unity, SK. GENERATORS: 20 KW to 2000 KW, low WANTED: MF #36 DISCERS, all sizes, hour diesel and natural gas/ propane units prompt pick-up. Phone 306-259-4923, Abraham Generator Sales Co. Phone: 306-946-9669, 306-946-7923, Young, SK. 701-797-4766 or 701-371-9526, CoopersWANTED: FLEXI-COIL or JD 50-60’ cult.; town, ND. www.abrahamindustrial.com Also Ford 9030 4 WD tractor in good cond. DIESEL GENSET SALES AND SERVICE, 306-452-3955, Bellegarde, SK. 12 to 300 KW, lots of units in stock, used WANTED: GRANULAR TANK for air seeder, and new, Perkins, John Deere, Deutz. We can be any make. 306-795-2708, Hubbard, also build custom gensets. We currently have special pricing on new John Deere SK. units. Call for pricing 204-792-7471. WANTED: NH BALE WAGON 1037, 1033, 1036, 1032, JD 7810 tractor, MFWD, FEL, 2007 MQ 25 kW trailer mount diesel generator, excellent, $9,500. 306-642-3225, 3 PTH. 403-394-4401, Lethbridge, AB. or 306-640-7149, Assiniboia, SK. WANTED: USED, BURNT, old or ugly tractors. Newer models too! Smith’s Tractor Wrecking, 1-888-676-4847. WANTED: 160 to 200 HP 2 WD tractor, in good condition. 306-210-8901, Unity, SK. WANTED: TWO SETS 4’ Flexi-Coil mounted packers, 12” spacing. 204-662-4432, or 204-264-0693, Sinclair, MB
SOLIDLOCK AND TREE ISLAND game wire and all accessories for installation. Heights from 26” to 120”. Ideal for elk, deer, bison, sheep, swine, cattle, etc. Tom Jensen ph/fax 306-426-2305, Smeaton, SK. 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 306-763-4232, Prince Albert, SK.
NEW AND USED generators, all sizes from 5 kw to 3000 kw, gas, LPG or diesel. Phone for availability and prices. Many used in stock. 204-643-5441, Fraserwood, MB.
1-888-92 0-1507
MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: www.maverickconstruction.ca
BISON AUCTION- Kramer Auction Ltd will be having a Sweetheart Bison Auction on Feb. 12, 2014. Over 350 head of bison already consigned. This Auction will feature top notch genetics of Registered Canadian Wood Bison from the Living Legends Consignors: Beaver Creek Wood Bison Ranch, Providence Wood Bison, Rioelta Bison Ranch. Auction also includes approx. 175 head of bison from Elk Island National Park. We have many other producers also included in this Auction with excellent Wood cross and Plains Bison. For more info see www.kramerauction.com or call 1-800-529-9958. NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for over 15 years, is looking for finished Bison, grain or grass fed. “If you have them, we want them.” Make your final call with Northfork for pricing! Guaranteed prompt payment! 514-643-4447, Winnipeg, MB. NILSSON BROS. INC. buying finished bison on the rail at Lacombe, AB for Feb delivery and beyond. Fair, competitive and assured payment. Richard Bintner 306-873-3184. 15- 2011 BRED Plains Bison heifers, pasture raised, preg checked Oct. 22, 2013, $2200/ea. 250-782-0124, Tomslake, BC. ELK VALLEY RANCHES, buying all ages of feeder bison. Call Frank 780-846-2980, Kitscoty, AB. or elkvalley@xplornet.com YOUR PICK: 2011 bred heifers. One to 150 head. Contact Bruce 403-651-7972, Youngstown, AB. QUALITY BISON for sale, grass fed calves, yearlings, 2 year olds and exposed cows. 250-489-4786 leave msg., Fort Steele, BC. PREMIUM BREEDING STOCK, $1500 to $2000/head. Dr. Marshall Patterson, 306-475-2232, Moose Jaw, SK.
BONE CHINA, Old Country Rose, 265 pcs., asking $2900 for whole set. Will sell individual pieces. 204-728-9104, Brandon, MB.
WANTED: I-BEAM, 6” preferred, any length, looking for a minimum of 80’. Call 306-531-6119, Balgonie, SK. DRILL STEM PIPE: 2-7/8” $35 each, 2-3/8” $37 ea. 30’ pieces. Sucker rod also. Call Justin 306-621-0487, Yorkton, SK.
RAIN MAKER IRRIGATION Zimmatic by Lindsay pivots/Greenfield mini pivots, KLine towable irrigation, spare parts/accessories, new and used equipment. 33 years in business. www.rainmaker-irrigation.com Call 306-867-9606, Outlook, SK. IRRIGATION EQUIPMENT or move water? 6”-10” pipe, 4 cyl. motor and pump on cart, $4500. 403-308-1400, Taber, AB. PHIL’S IRRIGATION SALES: Reinke pivots, lateral and minigators, pump and used mainline travelers and pivots. 22 years experience. 306-858-7351, Lucky Lake, SK. www.philsirrigation.ca
Swift Current, Sask.
B R ED C OW & HEIF ER S A L E
Th urs da y, Fe b rua ry 13 , 2014 1 p .m . Com p le te He rd Dis p e rs a l for Ke ith Fra ze r, Silton , SK
76 Fa n cy Sim m e n ta l Cow s - In clu d in g 40 - 2n d a n d 3rd Ca lvers Bred S im m en ta l- Bu lls o u tJu n e 23, 2013
Com p le te He rd Dis p e rs a l for Ra ym on d & Lillia n Ch ris tm a n n , Ch a p lin , SK 150 Youn g Ch a r X Cow s - In clu d in g 56 - 2n d a n d 3rd Ca lvers Bu lls o u tJu n e 16, 2013
Com p le te He rd Dis p e rs a l for Dua n e La rs on , Kyle , SK
MJT Cattle Co. Ltd. M ick & D eb Trefiak 2 0th Annua l
“BACK TO THE BASICS” Bull Sale Feb 8th 201 4 -1 :3 0 PM (M ST) a tthe Ra nch 14 m iles Ea stof W a inw right,AB.on H i-w a y 14 a nd 111⁄2 m iles N orth on seconda ry H i-w a y 89 4 .
L unch served . CallM ick anytim e at 780-755-2224 or 780-842-8835 Em ail:m ick@m jt.ca Catalogue online:buyagro.com Selling 35- 2 yr old H orned H ereford Bulls and Polled 80- 2 yr old Black Angus Bulls 3 yearling Black Bulls Bulls delivered Free to CentralPoints
LABATTE SIMMENTALS 34th Annual Bull and Open Heifer Sale, Friday, February 28, 1:00 PM, Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, SK. Guest consignor Meadow Acres Farms. Offering: 80 red and black purebred Simmental bulls and 30 red and black purebred open heifers. For catalogue or DVD: labatte.simm@sasktel.net Call Barry LaBatte 306-815-7900 or Blair Fornwald 306-487-7662. View catalogue on-line at labattesimmentals.com
O N E S TO P
CATTLE FIN AN CIN G BC, ALBER TA, S AS K. “ Fa rm e rs He lping Fa rm e rs ”
FOOTHILLS
LIV ESTO C K C O - O P
GLENNIE BROS. 18 reg. bred heifers, sell at Heartland, Swift Current, Feb. 13. AI’d to Krugerrand 410H and Cedar Ridge to start calving March 15. Cattle located in Carnduff, SK. Call Wes at: 403-862-7578.
NORDAL LIMOUSIN AND ANGUS Bull Sale, Thursday February 20, 2014. Saskatoon Livestock Sales, Saskatoon, SK. Selling: 50 Red and Black Angus 2 yr.old bulls. Rob Garner, Simpson, SK. 306-946-7946. Catalogue at: nordallimousin.com BRED HEIFERS, purebred Black Angus, calving April/May, papers available. Call Everblack Angus, Ernest Gibson, Vermilion, AB., 780-853-2422.
SANCTUARY LANDSCAPE CONSULTATION FOR FURTHER INFORM ATION: Services. Shelterbelt design, yard/acreage 3 06 -773 -3 174 tree planning, 35 years experience. Phone DISPERSALS, BRED HEIFERS and more 306-695-2019, Indian Head, SK. Saturday, February 8, 1 PM at Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, SK. Mucha dispersal plus more expected. PL #914447. 306-693-4715, pictures and details at: www.johnstoneauction.ca
SELLING: BLACK ANGUS bulls. Wayside MADER RANCHES, Pearson Simmen- Angus, Henry and Bernie Jungwirth, tals and Diamond T Cattle Co. 25th 306-256-3607, Cudworth, SK. Annual Bull Power Sale, Friday, Feb. 14, 2014, On the Farm. 1 PM Sale Time. 90 Polled, Red and Black Simmental, Salers, and Angus bulls. Also 10 Simmental heifers. Easy calving bulls for heifers, high performance bulls for cows, 85 lb. average birthweight, gaining almost 4 lbs per day. Free wintering until April 1st, delivery assistance, 2/3 down option. You can watch and bid online at: www.liveauctions.tv Free catalogue or view at: www.maderranches.com Ryley 403-337-4014, Carstairs, AB. JOHNSTON/FERTILE VALLEY Black Angus Bull Sale, Friday, April 11 at 1:00 PM, C.S.T. at Saskatoon Livestock Sales. 90 thick, easy fleshing bulls, sired by the BLACK AND RED ANGUS bulls on moderate leading AI sires in the industry including: growing ration, performance information Special Focus, Excitement, Imprint, Conavail. Adrian or Brian Edwards, Valleyhills sensus, Hoover Dam, EXAR 263C, SAV Mustang, Impression, SAV Brand Name Angus, Glaslyn, SK., 306-342-4407. OLE FARMS 9TH Annual Family Day Sale: and Stiz Upward. Many of these bulls are 170 top Red and Black Angus 2 yr. old suitable for heifers. All bulls are semen bulls, 180 commercial Black Angus bred PUREBRED BLACK ANGUS long yearling tested with complete performance and heifers. Monday, February 17, 2014, 1:00 bulls, replacement heifers, AI service. carcass information available. Deferred PM at the farm. Athabasca, AB. Phone: Meadow Ridge Enterprises, 306-373-9140 payment program with 60% sale day, 40% or 306-270-6628, Saskatoon, SK. 780-675-4664. www.olefarms.com interest free, due Dec. 01, 2014. Dennis and David Johnston, 306-856-4726, or T Bar C Cattle Co. 306-933-4200. Call for a 8th Annual or view on our website at: 100% “Forage-Developed” catalogue www.johnstonfertilevalley.com
BULL SALE
February 13th 2:00 pm Stettler Auction Mart Stettler, AB
HERD DISPERSAL, 40 exposed cows, 30 two and three year old heifers, 35 calves, 3 bulls. Call 250-785-4674 , Fort St John, BC FOR SALE: One 3 yr. old bull; three cows; two spring calves; one 2 yr. old heifer. Make an offer. 306-672-7618, Hazlet, SK.
SASKOTA NATURAL is looking for finCANADA’S EQUIPMENT LEASING EXPERTS ished bison and cull cows. COD, paying market prices. “Producers working with 1999 CUMMINS LTA10-G1 Standby gen Producers.” 306-231-9110, Quill Lake, SK. plant, 280 hrs, 250 KW, single and/or 3 phase, 120/240 volt, c/w 1000 amp, 3 60- 2011 WOOD cross bison heifers. ExF 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 phase robonic transfer switch, very nice posed to Wood cross bison bulls puravailable. 306-862-7831, 306-862-3086, shape! $16,000. Call Jordan anytime chased at 2012 MGM Grand Genetics Sale. $2500. Derrick 306-441-5209, Meota, SK. Nipawin, SK. 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB.
YOU ARE INVITED to Carlrams 5th Annual Bull Sale, Friday, Feb. 7th 5 miles North of Cut Knife, SK. Come for dinner. Sales start at 2:00 PM. 14 Super Angus Bulls, from RNR Flicek. Bred right and fed right. Call Rick or Ruby 306-823-3933, or Larry 306-823-3957. Bid or watch on dlms.ca Catalogues online at: buyagro.com
w w w.foothills lives tock.ca
Roc k y M ou n ta in Hou s e , AB
18 Pure b re d Blk He ife rs A.I.’ed - M a rch 15, 2013
WANTED TO PURCHASE cull bison bulls and cows for slaughter. Oak Ridge Meats 204-835-2365 204-476-0147 McCreary MB
33rd ANNUAL EARLY Sunset Ranch Bull and Female Sale on Friday, February 28, 2014 at 1:30 PM at the farm near Edam, SK. “Only the good ones sell.” Offering: 62 lots, 23 Angus yearling bulls, 14 Simmental yearling bulls, 11 Angus yearling heifers, 14 Simm. yearling heifers. Contacts: Jim and Peggy Grant 306-441-3590, Rob Holowaychuk, OBI 780-916-2628. View www.cattlemanagement.ca for catalogue. Online bidding with DLMS.
No Res triction s ; Pu rcha s e a n d m a rk etin g - You rchoice
12- MATURE PURE PLAINS bred bison cows, $1300 each. MFL Ranches, 403-747-2500, Alix, AB.
LOWEST PRICES IN CANADA on new, high quality generator systems. Quality diesel generators, Winpower PTO tractor driven alternators, automatic/ manual switch gear, and commercial duty Sommers Powermaster and Sommers/ Winco portable generators and home standby packages. 75+ years of reliable service. Contact Sommers Motor Generator Sales for all your generator requirements at 1-800-690-2396 sales@sommersgen.com Online: www.sommersgen.com
19TH ANNUAL Cattleman’s Connection Bull Sale, March 7, 2014, 1 PM Heartland Livestock, Brandon, MB. Selling 100 yearling Black Angus bulls. For catalogue or more info. call Brookmore Angus, Jack Hart, 204-476-2607 or 204-476-6696, email brookmoreangus@gmail.com Guest consignor, HBH Farms manager, Barb Airey 204-566-2134 or 204-761-1851, email rbairey@hotmail.com Sales Management Doug Henderson 403-350-8541 or 403-782-3888.
Toll Free 1-8 66-8 48 -6669
Gle n n ie Bros , Ca rn duff, SK
BISON WANTED - Canadian Prairie Bison is looking to contract grain finished bison for growing markets. Roger Provencher at 306-468-2316. roger@cdnbison.com
100 TOP CUT black heifers AI’d June 29 and pasture bred to 6 Mile & Co.’s Northern Lite for 60 days after. 80 Black and Red Angus cross heifers bred to Breed Creek heifer bulls, sons of HF Hat Trick and Six Mile’s Trademark. Bulls turned out July 1. Full health program, ultrasound preg checked. Kevin 306-295-3371 Eastend, SK.
Bred cow program ! Feeder Program !
50 Youn g Re d & Ta n Cow s Bred Red An gu s - Bu ll o u tJu n e 15, 2013
SPRUCE FOR SALE! Beautiful locally grown trees. Plan ahead and renew your shelterbelt or landscape a new yardsite, get the year round protection you need. We sell on farm near Didsbury, AB. or deliver anywhere in western Canada. Details phone 403-586-8733 or check out our website at www.didsburysprucefarms.com
RANCH READY BULL SALE on March 20, 1:00 PM at Heartland, Swift Current, SK. 23 tanky 2 yr. old Angus bulls from Bar CR Angus and 30 Hereford bulls from Braun Ranch. Catalogue at www.braunranch.com Contact Linda Froehlich 306-221-4088, caledonian@sasktel.net
Starhuixin. Robot bull. 2008. Panoramio, Changning, Shanghai. 4 Dec 2012. <www.panoramio.com>
Canada’s Largest Offering of 100% “ForageDeveloped” 2 Yr. Old Bulls Angus & Red Angus
ENGINEERED TO BREED COWS & BUILT TO LAST
Developed exclusively on grass and hay Predictable grass-based maternal Angus genetics 2 Yr. Old bulls born in 1st & 2nd calving cycle Will continue to grow & gain weight breeding More years service on your bull investment Environmentally sorted to be the right kind of bulls for most commercial cattle operations 64 years & 3 generations of supplying purebred bulls 550 Forage-Developed bulls sold to satisfied customers to-date across Canada indicate versatility, virility, and value! Request or view catalog at: www.chapmancattle.com Silas Chapman (403) 741-2099 | Shane Castle, Castlerock Marketing (306) 741-7485 Auctioneer: Don Raffan (250) 558-6789
STEWART CATTLE CO. & Guests Bull Sale: 40 Black Angus bulls; 8 Simm. cross Angus bulls; 11 Purebred Angus heifers. February 27, 2014, 1:30PM, Neepawa AgPlex, Neepawa, MB. Contact: Brent Stewart 204-773-2356(h) or 204-773-6392(c). Or Email: stewartcows@wificountry.ca Visit our website: www.stewartcattle.com BRED HEIFERS: Bred to easy calving Angus bulls. Start calving April 1st. 306-287-3900 or 306-287-8006, Engelfeld, SK. BLACK ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, semen tested, guaranteed breeders, delivery available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com ISLA BANK ANGUS CONSIGNING TO Ward’s Red Angus and Guests Bull Sale, Sat. March 1, 2:00 PM, Saskatoon Livestock Sales. Selling 50 pasture two year olds, super long yearlings and top cut yearlings. As well as 50 open commercial heifers. Wintering and volume discounts available. For a catalogue or info. contact Iain 306-280-4840 or T Bar C Cattle Co 306-220-5006. View the Catalogue online at www.buyagro.com PL #116061.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
COMBINES
TRACTORS
HEADERS
SEEDERS
SPRAYERS SWATHERS
Saskatoon (306) 934-3555 800-667-9761
Swift Current (306) 773-2951 800-219-8867
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
51
52
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
:,17(5 ($5/< %22.,1* ',6&28176 67,// $9$,/$%/( 3ODFH \RXU GHSRVLW QRZ WR HQVXUH VSULQJ GHOLYHU\ IRU DOO RI WKHVH PRGHOV &DOO *OHQPRU IRU GHWDLOV
Degelman Simplicity
Experience
SALFORD
WET OR DRY. WORK IN THE MOST CHALLENGING CONDITIONS
RTS SERIES
Glenmor welcomes Salford
Glenmor offers you Degelman Degelman designers are passionate about getting it right. Farm tools with the least amount of moving parts will simply last longer. Degelman is renowned for building overbuilt and under complicated equipment. Less is always more. A Pro-Till® cultivator has the unique ability to cultivate and warm the soil during cold wet conditions when all other forms of tillage plug and fail. In the midst of a long wet spring, getting seed in the ground to allow adequate time for the growing season is critical. Heavy cold soils need to be black and warm for ideal germination conditions. In as little as one day and after one pass, frigid heavy residue soil is cut, turned, mixed, reactivated, warmed, topically dried and ready for planting/seeding. Pro-Till® in the spring can mean the difference between success and failure. Call Glenmor today, or visit www.degelman.com
Glenmor proudly welcomes Salford Farm Machinery as their newest line of farm equipment. The Salford RTS series are high speed residue management tools that take on cool wet soils in spring to help accelerate soil warming and improve seed to soil contact. The RTS helps to alleviate compaction, and independently mounted coulters have almost no residue limitations. Salford also offers a full line of tillage tools and precision air seeding equipment. Experience the Salford Difference. Call Glenmor today, or visit www.salfordmachine.com Ontario, Canada • Osceola, Iowa • 1-866-442-1293
Shape your own land with the PULLDOZER
Professional Farming by
/(0.(1
AVAILABLE TO 18’ AND 24’ LENGTHS
LEMKEN HELIODOR & RUBIN 12
Glenmor salutes the Pulldozer from Bridgeview Manufacturing
Glenmor presents /HPNHQ
Pulldozer land shaper 1810, 2410 and 2410XL Are you looking for a better way to groom your land, ditch, maybe grade, level or simply move dirt? If so, you might be thinking of 3 or 4 different options, from dozers to scrapers, graders to V ditchers. You really only have to look at one: the Pulldozer land shaper by Bridgeview Manufacturing. The Pulldozer land shaper is all this and more wrapped up in one complete, efficient, and virtually indestructible package. Call Glenmor today, or visit MANUFACTURING INC. www.bridgeviewmanufacturing.com
BRIDGEVIEW
For more information contact Glenmor
www.glenmor.cc 1-888-708-3739
Through the expansion of maize cultivation in the past few years in particular, the plough has regained its importance as a primary cultivator. The reduction of plant diseases, mechanical pest control due to increasing chemical resistance, and the fight against new pests, are among the most important tasks facing a plough today. Recent research has shown that loosening and aerating the root zone, with a plough, can improve the formation of rape roots, for example, thus laying the foundation for high and guaranteed yields. Call Glenmor today, or visit www.lemken.com/en/
GLEN MOR
Old Hwy No. 2 South Prince Albert, SK S6V 5T2
1-888-708-3739 glenmor@sasktel.net
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
Titan Truck Sales Box 299 MacGregor, MB R0H 0R0
204-685-2222 2007 WESTERN STAR 4900SA
515 hp Detroit, 13 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 358 gears, 232 WB, 892,837 km.
39,000
$ 2005 IH 9900I
2006 VOLVO 630
29,000
$
550 HP Cat C15, 18 sp, 14.6 front 46 rear, 4-way diff. locks, 3:91 gears, 244” WB, 22.5” alloy wheels, 880,780 km.
49,000
$
2010 PETERBILT 388
465 HP D12, 18 sp Autoshift, 14.6 front 46 rear, 430 gears, 240” WB, 927,814 km.
27,000
$
2009 KENWORTH T800
500 HP Cummins ISX, 18 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 244” WB, 3:73 gears, 4-way diff. locks, 72” midrise bunk, 1,428,989 km.
2007 WESTERN STAR 4900FA
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
$
www.titantrucksales.com 2003 PETERBILT 379L
2007 IH 9900I
475 HP Cat C15, 13 sp, 14.6 front super 40 rear, 370 gears, 22.5” alloy wheels, 260” WB, air trac suspension, engine warranty till July 2015, 1,647,845 km.
65,000
$
2005 IH 9900I
45,000
19,000
$
37,000
$
2007 WESTERN STAR 4900SA
475 hp, Cat C15, 13sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 3:55 gears, 1,941,975 km.
515 HP Detroit, 18 sp, 12 front super 40 rear, 4-way diff. locks, 3:91 gears, 22.5” alloy wheels, 209” WB, 759,564 km.
35,000
40,000
$
2009 PETERBILT 388
475 HP Cummins ISX, 13 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 244” WB, 3:73 gears, 72” midrise bunk, 1,409,137 km.
475 HP Cummins ISX, 18 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 244” WB, 3:70 gears, 72” midrise bunk, 1,370,760 km.
$
2005 PETERBILT 379
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, 739,252 km.
$ 2007 IH 9400I
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.
455 HP ISX Cummins, 13 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 4:11 gears, 222” WB, 72” mid-rise bunk, 1,210,399 km.
49,000
$
22,000
$
HUGE IN–HOUSE
e l Sa
NEW LOCATION Across from Emerald Park
FEBRUARY 8th – 23rd
ExtendSehdow
Hours of
-6pm Mon. 9am -6pm Tues. 9am -6pm Wed. 9am -9pm Thurs. 9am pm Fri. 9am-6 pm Sat. 9am-6 m -5p Sun. 12pm
775-1006 | Hwy#1 East, North Service Road |
53
www.reginamarine.com
54
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
USED EQUIPMENT Grain Handling 2010 Westfield MK130-91 13”x91’ , Hyd Winch, Hyd Swing Mover .................................................. $20,900 2010 Farm King 13X85 13” x 85’ Swing Auger, Electric Winch, Hyd Swing Mover ...................... $19,500 1996 Brent 520 520 BU Cart, PTO Drive, 23.1x26 Tires .......................................................................... $17,900 2009 REM Mfg 2700 Hyd Fold, Cleanup Nozzle...................................................................................... $14,900 2006 REM Mfg 2500 Manual Fold, Cleanup Wand .................................................................................. $11,900
Tractors
SPRING WILL BE HERE BEFORE YOU KNOW IT! It’s Pre-Season Savings and that means it’s time for 0% FINANCING* or choose CASH BACK on select New Holland tractors and hay & forage equipment. Early buyers get the best savings on equipment built New Holland SMART. Buy NOW — before the season starts — and save big! Stop by today or visit www.newholland.com/na for complete details. Offer ends March 31, 2014. *For agricultural 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 March 31, 2014. 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. © 2014 CNH Capital America LLC. All rights reserved. CNH Capital and New Holland are registered trademarks of CNH America LLC.
THE MOST ADVANCED AIR DELIVERY TECHNOLOGY AVAILABLE New Holland P1000 Series air carts allow you to apply seed and fertilizer efficiently and accurately, so you can apply several products in a single pass for single- and double-shoot applications. Choose from five models from 280 to 580 bushels, all designed for fast filling and cleanout, as well as easy transport. PATENTED DOWN DRAFT METERING BLENDS AIR AND PRODUCT PRECISELY CHOOSE ELECTRONIC VARIABLE RATE TECHNOLOGY OR MECHANICAL DRIVE SIMPLICITY 10-INCH HIGH-CAPACITY ORBITAL-DRIVE AUGERS FILL AND EMPTY QUICKLY METER ROLLER OPTIONS TO SUIT A WIDE RANGE OF SEEDS
©2013 CNH America LLC. New Holland is a registered trademark of CNH America LLC.
2011 NH TV6070 Bidi, 14’ Loader, Grapple, Diff Lock, 2 EE Hyd, Third Pedal .............................. $129,000 1962 JD 4010 2WD, Loader, 18.4X34 Rears10:00x16 Frt.......................................................................... $8,900 2010 NH T7.250 FWA,20.8R42 Dls, 540E/1000 PTO, 4 Hyd, Frt Fenders ...................................... $119,000 2009 NH T8020 FWA, FEL, 4 Hyd, P/S Trans, 710/70R38 Tires .......................................................... $149,900 2003 McCormick MTX140 FWA, 2795 Fel, 96” Bkt, 520/85R38 Rear, 16 Spd, LHSS, 3 Hyd ........ $55,000 2011 NH T7.235 FWA, FEL, Grpl, CVT Trans, 540/1000PTO, 4 Hyd, Weights ................................ $149,900 1996 NH 8870 FWA, FEL, P/S Trans ............................................................................................................... $36,900 2011 NH T7.235 FWA, FEL, Grpl, P/S Trans, 540/100PTO, 4 Hyd, Weights .................................... $139,900 2008 NH T7040 FWA, FEL, Grpl, 4Hyd, Supersteer, 3pt Hitch, P/S Trans....................................... $112,900 2013 NH T9.560 520/85R46 Triples, PTO, Diff Lock, HC Pump,4 Hyd, Dlx Cab,Weights .......... $329,000 2013 NH T9.560 800 Duals, Pto, P/S Trans, 55gpm Hyd, HID Lights, Wts ..................................... $319,000 2013 NH T9.560 800 Duals, Factory Autosteer P/S Trans, 55gpm Hyd, HID Lights, Wts ......... $329,000 1994 JD 8570 18.4x38 Duals, PTO, Chipped ............................................................................................. $68,800 2013 NH T9.560 800 Dls, PTO, Diff Lock, HCap Pump, Four Hyd, HID Lights, Weights ............ $319,000 1998 Case IH 9370 710 Duals, 12F/3R PS, Frt Wts, 4 Hyd...................................................................... $87,900 2010 NH T9050HD 800 Duals, P/S Trans, 55Gpm Hyd, Weights HID Lights ................................ $279,000 2011 NH T9060HD 800 Duals, P/S Trans, 57Gpm Hyd, Weights, Diff Lock .................................. $325,000 2013 NH T9.615 800/70R38 Duals, HC Pump, Weights, Diff Lock, Lux Cab, HID lights ........... $335,000 1996 NH 9882 20.8/R42 Triples, 12 Spd Trans .......................................................................................... $82,500 2013 NH T9.615 520/85R46 Triples, Diff Lock, H/Cap Pump, Four Hyd, Dlx Cab, Weights..... $329,900
Seeding 1998 Bourgault 5710 54’, 9.8” Sp, 3.5” Stl Pkr, MRB, SS Dry, NH3 ........................................................ $44,500 2004 Bourgault 5710 64’, 9.8” Sp, 3” Rbr Pkr, MRB, D/S Dry, 3/4” Cbd knf ....................................... $74,900 2002 Bourgault 5710 47’, 9.8” Sp,MRB,3.5” Stl Pkr,NH3 .......................................................................... $82,500 2011 NH P2070 60’, 10” Sp, Precision Drill, 430Bu VR TBH Tank ....................................................... $205,000 2003 Flexi-Coil 5000 58’ 10” Sp, 4’ Rbr Pkr, SC430 TBH VR Tank ....................................................... $117,000 1997 Flexi-Coil 5000 57’, 12” Sp, 3.5” Rbr Pkr, 2320 TBT Tank ............................................................... $55,000 2002 Flexi-Coil 5000 57’, 12” Sp, 3.5” Stl Pkr, D/S, Dutch Opnr ............................................................ $58,000 2000 Bourgault 5710 54’ 9.8” Sp, MRB, 3”Rbr Pkr &2.25 Stl Pkr, S/S, NH3 ....................................... $43,900 2008 JD 1835 60’ 10” Sp, 3” Stl Pkr, MRB, Dbl Shoot, 430bu cart, Conveyor, CRA ..................... $141,000 2002 Flexi-Coil 5000 50’, 9” Sp, 5” Rbr Pkr, Atom Jet Openers, 3450 TBH Tank .............................. $69,900 2005 Bourgault 5710 64’, 9.8” Sp, 3.5” Stl Pkr, MRB, SC430 TBT Tank ............................................. $139,900 2012 NH P2050 57’, 10” Sp, 4” Rbr Pkr, P1060 TBT Tank, Duals, Var Rate....................................... $184,900 2007 Bourgault 5710 54’,9.8” Sp, 3.5”Stl Pkr, MRB, DS Air Kit .............................................................. $72,000 2008 Bourgault 3310 55’ 10” Sp Precision, MRB, 4.8” Pn Pkr, 550Bu TBH Tank, CRA, D/S ...... $220,000 2013 NH P2070 60’ 10” Sp Precision, High Float Tires, TBH Air kit, Scrapers .............................. $154,000 2010 Bourgault 3310 65’ 12” Sp Precision, 4.8” V Pkr, D/S, Hyd MRB, Dbl Caster ...................... $198,500 1997 Flexi-Coil 5000 57’, 9” Sp, 4” Rbr Pkr, 4350 TBT Tank, Blockage, Scrapers ............................. $53,900 1991 Flexi-Coil 5000 57’ 7.2” Sp, 3.5” Stl Pkr, S/S, 2320 Tank ................................................................ $31,900 2011 SeedMaster 5010XXL 50’ 10” Sp, D/S, 2100g Onboard Liquid tank, Tire in Tire Pkr ...... $139,000 2000 Bourgault 5710 64’, 9.8”Sp, 3.5” Stl Pkr, S/S Air Kit........................................................................ $42,500 2001 Ezee-On 7550 48’ 12”Sp, 3” Rbr Pkr, Mid Row Shanks, 350bu Tank........................................ $41,900 2000 Flexi-Coil 5000 39’ 9”Sp, 4” Rbr Pkr, 3450 350bu TBH tank, VR, Dual Fan, D/S .................... $62,000 2010 NH P2060 60’ 10” Sp Fold Back, 4.5” Stl Pkr, 430bu TBH Tank, Dual Fan, VR, D/S ............ $154,000 2012 JD 1830 61’ 10” Sp,4” Stl Pkr, 430bu TBH Tank, VR, Duals, Power Cal .................................. $186,000 2008 Bourgault 3310 55’ 10” Sp Precision, MRB, 4.8” Pn Pkr, 450Bu TBH Cart, D/S, Dlx Auger ................................................................................................................................................................ $203,000 2011 NH P2070 60’ 10” Sp Precision D/S, 430 VR TBT Tank ............................................................... $215,000 1992 Flexi-Coil 5000 45’ 9” Sp, D/S, 3.5” Pkr, 1” SB Openers ................................................................. $24,900 2006 Bourgault 8810 60’, 10” Air Seeder, 450 lb Trips, 3.5” Steel Packers, Single Shoot Air Kit, Single Run Blockage Monitor, Weight Kit, NO MRB’S, 3/4” Carbide Knives, Single Front Casters.... $61,900 1990 Morris Magnum II 31’ 12” Sp Air Seeder, 3Bar Hrw, Gran Kit, 130bu TBH Tank w/3rd tank ...................................................................................................................................................................... $24,900 2002 Flexi-Coil 3450 340bu TBH, Variable Rate, 30.5 Tire..................................................................... $39,900 1997 Flexi-Coil 1720 TBH, Mech, S/S, 18.4x26 Rear ................................................................................ $12,900 2002 Flexi-Coil 3450 350Bu TBT Cart, Mech Drive, 30.5x32 Tires ...................................................... $27,900
Feeding 1994 Haybuster 256 LH Discharge, 11Lx15 Tires ....................................................................................... $6,250 2010 Degelman 3100HD RH Discharge, Hyd Deflector, 16.5 Tires ................................................... $19,900 1997 Jiffy 900 LH Discharge, 12.5Lx15 Tires................................................................................................. $6,700 2003 Brandt VSF LH Discharge ......................................................................................................................... $6,800
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
Sales and Service
Highway 5 East, Wadena, SK
(1991 Ltd.) AIRDRILLS
NEW SALFORD RTS VERTICAL TILLAGE • • • • •
C2 CONTOUR
MISCELLANEOUS
Morris Contour II - 71’, (2013) w/8650 TBT cart, demo ...................................................... CALL Morris Contour I - 71’, (2010) double shoot, w/8370 TBT ............................................ CALL Morris Contour I - 61’, (2008) dbl shoot, w/8370 VR TBH tank ............................... CALL Morris Maxim II - 60’, 10” sp, single shoot, 7300 tank............................................... CALL Morris Maxim II - 55’, 10” sp, w/7300 TBT, 3rd tank,NH3 coulters .............................. $79,900 Morris Maxim II - 49’, 10” sp, DS, w/7300 TBT w/3rd tank ......................................... $64,000 Morris Maxim II, (2002) 34’, 10” sp, liquid kit, w/7180 tow between cart .................. $42,000 Morris Maxim I, 49’, 10” sp, liquid kit, 7300 tank............................................... CALL Morris Maxim 49’AD,10”sp, packers ....... $24,900 SeedMaster (New 2013) TXB-50’, 12” SP .... CALL SeedMaster (2004) TXB - 44’, 10” spacing, DS, dry, 5 plex .......................................... $76,000 Flexi-Coil 7500, 60’ air drill .................... $24,000 Flexi-Coil 5000, 57’, 9.8” sp, DS , w/3450 tank ........................................... CALL Harmon 4480, 44’ AD, DS w/3100 air cart$28,000 Ezee-On 36’ FH cultivator, 8” sp, mtd pkrs, w/4000 TBT cart (240bu) & liquid cart............. $28,000 JD 1820 - 52’, 10” sp, SS, 3” Rbr, w/JD 1910 340 bus VR tank ................................ $70,000
60 FT 525 DISC DRILL 50 FT RTS SHD 1-2100 41 FT RTS SHD 1-2100 41 FT RTS HD DEMO 29 FT 5100 DEMO
CALL CALL CALL $88,000 CALL
306-338-2541 2013 Morris Contour C2,
Independent Opener Drill
61’ w/8370 XL TBT
$CALL
Salford 50’RTS (2011), new brgs and disks ........................................... $88,000 Salford 40’ RTS (2011) ........................... $69,500 NEW Degelman 7200 rockpicker ............ $27,500 NEW Degelman 82’ heavy harrow ............... CALL NEW Degelman 70’ heavy harrow ............... CALL NEW Rite Way 55’ heavy harrow, hyd tine ............................................. $35,500 Rite Way 90’ heavy harrow, hyd tine ............ CALL Rite Way 78’ heavy harrow, hyd tine, Demo ................................................ $47,500 NEW Kello-bilt 225,16’,w/26”discs.............. CALL Morris 70 ’heavy harrow ........................ $22,500 Morris 50’ heavy harrow ............................. CALL Salford RTS Heavy Duty 41’ (Demo) ........ $88,000 Bourgault 8810, 40’, w/3225 tank.......... $40,000 Bourgault 8810, 52’, liquid kit, Atom Jet openers, w/4350 tank ...................................... $60,000 Bourgault 8800, 28’, harrows, packers, w/2115 tank ...................................... $22,500
www.morris-industries.com
THE C2 CONTOUR SHEDS TRASH LIKE NEVER BEFORE The next generation C2 Contour let you cut through trash and makes opener adjustments easier. The independent opener features parallel linkage for ultra-precise seed and fertilizer placement. Adjustable packing pressure lets you pull through damp spots. Opener spacing options are 10” and 12”. At the heart of the C2 Contour’s improved ability to shed trash is the design of the single shank. The reclined 12-degree angle moves trash up and off the shank faster. The distance from the ground level to the catch point has been increased to 21 inches on the C2 Contour, greatly reducing the potential for straw bunching.
USED TRACTORS McCormick MC120, w/cab & loader, 630 hrs .............................................. $84,900 McCormick MTX125 4000 hrs, w/loader & grapple ............................ $65,000 McCormick MTX110, w/loader, 4850 hrs $59,000
AUGERS
Sales and Service (1991 Ltd.) Wadena, SK
NEW Buhler Farm King 1385, swing auger ....................................... $21,500 NEW Buhler Farm King 1370 swing auger ....................................... $17,500 Buhler Farm King 1370, 70’ swing auger .. $8,900
306-338-2541
READY TO MOVE HOMES
CUSTOM BUILD TO OUR PLAN OR YOUR PLAN Delivering homes ON TIME to happy customers in Sask., Alta., and Man. for over 25 years
JOB 1206 1217 1259 1275 1306 1310 1329 1350 1371 1355 1369 1364 1372 1367 1382 1379 1396 1395 1394 1380
MT. BLANCHARD
, , Q - Q
Q - SALE PRICE
Book Now For Delivery Of Your Home in
2014
175,000
$
FOR MORE HOMES AVAILABLE NOW SEE OUR WEBSITE OR CALL FOR DETAILS
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 MT AVERILL MT AVERILL MT KALLEIGH MT BRETT MT HAYDEN
SQ. FT. 1712 1296 1443 1680 1644 2144 1341 1319 1702 1254 1319 1393 1267 1710 1650 1129 1129 1395 1619 1470
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 $125,198 $134,609 $212,911 $208,223 $187,303
WWW.WARMANHOMES.CA
Toll-Free 1-866-933-9595
SASKATCHEWAN
NEW HOME WARRANTY
SALE PRICE $183,143 $175,000 $155,943 $215,363
55
56
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
THE ALL-NEW 2013 SUBARU XV CROSSTREK
THE ALL-NEW 2013 WRX & STI
INDULGE IN PURE, UNMITIGATED PERFORMANCE
THE GAME CHANGING COMPACT CROSSOVER! LOW FINANCE RATES FROM .5% OR $2,000 CASH PURCHASE DISCOUNT
LOW FINANCE RATES MSRP FROM FROM .5% OR $4,000 $
24,495*
MSRP FROM $
2013 LEGACY
2013 OUTBACK THE MORE YOU GET OUT, THE BETTER IT GETS!
2013 TRIBECA
28,495
$
*
MSRP FROM
SPORTY, PERFORMANCE & LUXURY ALL IN ONE PACKAGE!
LOW FINANCE RATES FROM .5% OR $6,500
CASH PURCHASE DISCOUNT
CASH PURCHASE DISCOUNT
MSRP FROM
CONSUMER REPORTS TOP PERFORMING MID SIZE CAR
LOW FINANCE RATES FROM .5% OR $4,500
LOW FINANCE RATES FROM .5% OR $2,500
24,495*
CASH PURCHASE DISCOUNT (WRX), $2,500 (STOI
CASH PURCHASE DISCOUNT
23,495
$
*
38,495*
$
MSRP FROM
MANY MORE UNITS IN STOCK... OPEN 24 HOURS AT WWW.SUBARUOFSASKATOON.CA ELITE AUTOMOTIVE GROUP INC. O/A
Open 24 Hours @
www.subaruofsaskatoon.com
Open 24 Hours @
SUBARU OF SASKATOON
www.bramerauto.com
BRAMER AUTOMOTIVE GROUP
471 CIRCLE PLACE • 306-665-6898 OR 1-877-373-2662
CORNER OF SARGENT & KING EDWARD • CALL 204-474-1011 • TOLL FREE 1-877-474-1011
GREENLIGHT TRUCK & AUTO 2011 FORD F250 XLT LONG BOX 4X4
DED A O L 6.7L IESEL D
2007 GMC SIERRA 1500 SLE 4X4
PST PAID, 72KM
ONLYM 116K
$35,995
2012 DODGE RAM 2500 SLT
ED LOAD
OUTDOORSMAN 4X4 6.7L 89KM
5.3L PST PD LOADED WITH SUNROOF
MUS ST SEE
2011 GMC SIERRA 2500 SLT
ONLYM 60K
$41,995 2008 DODGE RAM 3500 DUALLY
SLT MEGA CAB 4X4 PST PD LOADED 6.7L 248KM
$26,995
$20,995
2013 GMC SIERRA 3500 SLT
STARTIN NG AT
2009 FORD F150 FX4
6.6L LEATHER DIESEL DVD AND SUNROOF
$48,995
WOW
6.6L FULLY LOADED DIESEL LEATHER SUNROOF 40KM
3 TOSE O CHOO ! FR M
$52,995
2013 CHEV SILVERADO 3500 LTZ
DED LOAA LLY DU
6.6L 4X4 15KM LEATHER DVD SUNROOF NAVIGATION HEATED COOLED SEATS
ALSO HAVE 2013 SIN NGLE AXLE
BLACK BEAUTY
2011 FORD F250 XLT
2011 FORD F350 XLT FLAT DECK
PST PD 5.4L 49KM NAVIGATION LOADED WITH SUNROOF
6.2L 4X4 LOADED 50KM PST PD
6.7L 4X4 167KM LOADED
$24,995
$33,995
$29,995
WAS $26,995
NOW
2008 FORD F450 LARIAT
2008 FORD F250 XLT
DUALLY FULLY LOADED 6.4L 150KM
6.4L 4X4 PST PD 150KM
$30,995
$26,995
HUGE INDOOR SHOW ROOM
2008 FORD F250 LARIAT FULLY LOADED LEATHER DIESEL 6.4L 4X4 185KM PST PD
MUST! SEE
WAS S $30,99 95
NOW
$27,995
www.GreenlightAuto.ca
Call FINANCE HOTLINE 306-934-1455 2715 FAITHFULL AVE., SASKATOON, SK.
DL#311430
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
Choose New Holland T9 Series 4WD tractors, and not only do you get powerful new engines with EcoBlue™ technology to meet stringent Tier 4A emissions standards, you also get the award-winning Sidewinder™ II armrest, the largest cab in the industry and high-performance choices like optional MegaFlow™ hydraulics.You get the power you need with the comfort you want. BEST-IN-CLASS POWER AND PERFORMANCE INDUSTRY-LEADING HYDRAULIC FLOW AND PERFORMANCE BALANCED CHASSIS DELIVERS MORE POWER TO THE WHEELS INDUSTRY-FIRST COMFORT RIDE™ CAB SUSPENSION OPTION INBOARD PLANETARY DRIVE AXLES FOR ADJUSTABLE WHEEL SETTINGS 2 WIDE FRAME MODELS FOR BROAD ACRE WORK 4 STANDARD FRAME MODELS ARE ROW-CROP READY
YOU’LL BE HARD PRESSED TO FIND 670 HORSES THIS WELL TRAINED S/A Payment
$
7,718 + GST
2012 NEW HOLLAND T7.170
AutoCommand CVT, suspended front axle, 125 HP, 30 mph road speed, 20.8R38 tires, electronic joystick loader ready, PTO engage on rear fender, suspended cab
$
347,500
$
S/A Payment
$
7,662 + GST
S/A Payment
2013 NEW HOLLAND LM5020
17,479 + GST
2013 NEW HOLLAND T9.505
85 HP, 71” total width, 3750 lb lift cap. to full height, 5500 lb max cap., 1750 lift cap. at full reach, 19’ max lift height, aux hyd. on boom, air cond., bucket and pallet forks incl in price
75,000
$
Powershift, 800’s, diff lock, 57 gpm pump, HID lights, full Omnistar Intellisteer, demo use 187 hrs
TRACTORS
440 HRS, 500 16 SPEED PS TRANSMISSION, 6 HYDRAULIC OUTLETS, LUXURY CAB, ELECTRIC MIRRORS, COLD WEATHER START
$
25,500
2006 JOHN DEERE 7520 5801 HRS, 150 3 POINT HITCH, POWER SHIFT TRANSMISSION, 3 HYDRAULIC OUTLETS, AIR SEAT
$
17,600
450 HRS, 670 DIFF LOCK, 6 HYD OUTLETS, HIGH CAP DRAW BAR, LUX CAB, MEGA FLOW HYD, MONITOR $ DISPLAY..........................................
345,000
2011 NEW HOLLAND T9050
1215 HRS, 485 POWERSHIFT / 800 FIRESTONE TIRES, INTELLIVIEW PLUS II WITH OMNISTAR $ UNLOCKED, HID LIGHTING...............
238,000
2011 NEW HOLLAND T9050
1215 HRS, 485 PWR SHIFT, INTELLIVIEW II PLUS, HID LIGHTS, FULL INTELLISTEER, $ OMNISTAR UNLOCKED ....................
2007 JOHN DEERE 7420 1979 FORD FW60
5405 HRS, 335 NEW STARTER, 5405 HRS, HEAT, AIR, 4 REM, 20 SPD, DUALS
$
6,000
2005 FLEXI-COIL SF115
120’ WHEEL BOOM, SINGLE NOZZLE BODIES, END BOOM NOZZLES, AUTOFOLD, RINSE TANK, 1250 GAL
$
36,000
238,000
6000 HRS, 135 3 HYD, POWER GUARD, 3 PT HITCH, DUAL PTO, CAST REAR WHEELS, C/W 741 JD $ LOADER, BUCKET & GRAPPLE ...............
69,000
1996 NEW HOLLAND 9882
5900 HRS, 425 TIRES 710/70R38 INNER & DUALS, PERFORMANCE MONITOR, $ 12 SPD TRANS ................................
103,000
$
13,300
1995 BOURGAULT 3195 TRAILING, MECH DRIVE, SINGLE FAN, REAR TOW HITCH
2 TANK, 300 BU, 23.1X26 REAR RICE LUG, 16.5X16.1 LUG FRONT, 6 RUN, IN CAB RATE ADJUST, $33,000 CASH
$
54,000
2003 MORRIS MAXIM II 49’, 10 SPACING, LIQUID KIT, 4 STEEL PACKERS, SINGLE SHOOT, C/W 7300 MORRIS TANK
1999 BRANDT QF2000
195,000
1500 GAL, 90’ BOOM, WINDSCREENS, SINGLE NOZZLE BODIES, WIND CONES, $ FOAM MARKER .....................................
10,000
$
96,900
2012 MORRIS 8370
VR TBH TANK, TOPCON EAGLE MONITOR, 3RD TANK, SINGLE 17 FAN, TOW BEHIND, FIELD HITCH
$
3,783 + GST
2013 NEW HOLLAND L220
12 spd mech controls, enclosed cab and heater, suspension seat, high flow package, 78” low profile bucket w/bolt on cutting edge
5,900
2005 JOHN DEERE TRAIL BUCK 650
$
$
4,665 + GST
2013 HONEY BEE SP36
16’ cross auger, hyd header tilt, F/A, CR or CaseIH adapter, transport, UII reel
95,000
$
25,000
94,000
2005 BOURGAULT 6350
TRAILING, SINGLE FAN, CTM $ & CRA, RICE TIRES, R.T.H ......................
55,000
32’ AIR KIT W/ 2130 $ TANK S/N 5030 .....................................
24,500
W/HYD TINE ADJUSTMENT, $ 16.5X16.1 CART TIRES..........................
19,500
BOURGAULT 8800
2001 FLEXI-COIL S85 FLEXI-COIL 5000
57’, 12 SPACING WITH MID ROW SHANKS, 4 OPENERS/PACKERS, DICKIE JOHN NH3, $ LEAD 3450 TANK ..................................
1995 FLEXI-COIL 5000
39,000
C/W FL SC380 TANK, MIDROW, SINGLE SHOOT, 3 RUB PACK, NH3, $ VARIABLE RATE .....................................
56,000
2008 HLA 3000
96 HYD ANGLING SNOW BLADE, $ WITH FLIP UP END PLATES..........................
www.farmworld.ca
3,500
2005 SUZUKI KINGQUAD 700
4100 HRS, GREEN, WINCH, WINDSHIELD, NEW RUBBER @ 3300 KMS
DOUBLE SHOOT AIR KIT, REAR TOW HITCH, 9.8 SPACING, TANK HAS DUAL FAN, 591 MONITOR, $95,000 IS CASH
125,500
$
2010 BOURGAULT 3310 PHD 55’, 12 SPACING, DBL WALK CAST, DUAL REAR TIRES, LIQUID KIT, SINGLE SHOOT AIR KIT
$
38,500
Paul .................. 306-231-8031 Tyler.................. 306-231-6929 Perry ................. 306-231-3772
1996 BOURGAULT 5710 54’, SERIES 20 MRBS, RAVEN NH3 KIT, 3/4 CHROME TIPS, 3 RUBBER PACKERS
198,000
$
2012 BOURGAULT 3320QDA
SINGLE SHOOT, REAR DUALS, LIQUID KNIFE, LIQUID VR KIT, EDGE ON FRONT KNIFE HOLDER
355,000
$
4,950
FOR MORE PHOTOS AND DETAILED DESCRIPTIONS OF ALL OUR USED EQUIPMENT VISIT
$
1998 BOURGAULT 5710
CALL!
SCHULTE BX-62 3PTH SNOWBLOWERS CALL FARM WORLD AT 306-682-9920 ABOUT OUR SPECIAL PRICING!
1999 BOURGAULT 5710 54’, 9.8 SPACING, 3 CARBIDE TIPS, MRBS, UPDATED WIDE PIVOT, $38,500 IS CASH, 330 TRIPS
$
50,000
1998 MORRIS MAXIM 60’ DRILL, CARBIDE TIPS, REAR TOW HITCH, SS AIR KIT, COMES WITH MORRIS 6300 TBH CART, $50,000 CASH
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
S/A Payment
3 TANK METERING, STD AUGER WITH LISFELD HOPPER, NH3 LINE, CTM, SINGLE $ FAN, 900 SINGLES ................................
MISCELLANEOUS
1200 GAL POLY, 100’ TRUSS BOOM, 1 INLINE FILTERS, FENCE ROW NOZZLES, $ FOAM MARKER ............................... 2001 JOHN DEERE 1900
$
2008 BOURGAULT 6450
SPRAYERS 2010 MILLER CONDOR G75
FLEXI-COIL S82
S/A Payment
SEEDING & TILLAGE
2012 NEW HOLLAND T9.670
2012 NEW HOLLAND T9.560
©2012 CNH America LC. New Holland is a registered trademark of CNH America LLC.
Brent................. 306-232-7810 Aaron ................ 306-960-7429
Sprayer Dept., Kinistino David J. ............ 306-864-7603
2011 BOURGAULT 3310 PHD
DOUBLE SHOOT, MRB IIS, REAR DUALS, DOUBLE WALKING CASTERS, REAR DROP HITCH
$
56,000
2004 MORRIS MAXIM II 60’, 10 SPACING, ATOM JET OPENERS 4, PACKERS, LIQUID KIT, DRILL ONLY
Check out our website at www.farmworld.ca
57
58
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Water Line Tanks
Fertilizer Tanks
10 Year limited warranty 8,400 Imperial gallons - 10,080 U.S. Gallons Reg. $742800
Sale $5600 Made in Canada
270 US GAL. 225 IMP. GAL.
Reg.
$
370
Sale
Reg. 2200
Sale
575
$
Sale
375
1500 US GAL. 1260 IMP. GAL.
• 6’ 8” in height from front to back - Plenty of seating area • 8’ Long - Reflective decals located all around • Three vents - Built in tow hooks and tie downs • Tinted window front and back - Molded runners for easy movement • Lockable heavy duty door- Large built in shelf • 5 fishing holes Optional spring loaded hitch
00
265
$
Tanks will fit through standard door and are food grade safe with a 10 year limited warranty
Large Deluxe Ice Hut
$
$
Reg.
360 US GAL. 300 IMP. GAL.
Reg.
Sale
$
1700
$
895
$
625
Plus a free all-in-one banjo ball valve
plus free shipping or $100 off pick up at factory
Some conditions apply for free shipping
306.253.4343 or 1.800.383.2228 www.hold-onindustries.com While supplies last.
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!”
GUARANTEED
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 | JANUARY 30, 2014
59
306•934•1546 - Saskatoon, SK 306•773•7281 - Swift Current, SK
PRE-OWNED EQUIPMENT SPRAYERS
‘13 TerraGator TG8400..................................................$357,500 ‘12 RoGator 1300, 1300 gal, 100 ft boom, GPS loaded, 2 sets of tires, sharp shooter, 446 hrs .......................................$375,000 ‘12 RoGator RG1100, 1100 gal, 100 ft boom, GPS, fully loaded, Viper Pro, 2 sets of tires, 750 hrs................................$315,000 ‘12 RG900, 100 ft boom, 900 gal, 450 hrs, Viper Pro, SmarTrax, AccuBoom, AutoBoom, 2 sets of tires .........................$285,000 ‘09 RoGator 1286C, 120 ft, 1200 gal, Viper Pro, loaded, GPS, 1121 hrs, 2 sets of tires .............................................$289,000 ‘09 RoGator 1286C, 1200 gal tank, 100 ft boom, GPS, loaded, 2 sets of tires ................................................................$285,000 ‘08 RoGator 1074SS, 1000 gal, 100 ft boom, 2650 hrs, Viper Pro, SmarTrax, Accuboom, AutoBoom, two sets of tires......$187,000 ‘08 RoGator 874 SS, 800 gal, 90 ft boom, S3, E-Drive, automatic, AutoBoom, 2 sets of tires, 990 hrs..............................$185,000 ‘05 RoGator 1064, 1000 gal, 100 ft boom, S3 Outback c/w eDrive, automatic, 1450 hrs, 2 sets of tires, foam marker ......$165,000 ‘05 RoGator 1074, 90 ft boom, 1000 gal, eDrive, S3, AutoMate, AutoBoom, 2 sets of tires, 2500 hrs............................$145,000 ‘05 RoGator 1074, 100 ft boom, 1000 gal, E-Drive, automatic, Outback GPS, AutoBoom, 3100 hrs, 2 sets of Tires .....$145,000 ‘04 RoGator 864, 800 gal, SS tank, 100 ft 1300 boom, 2800 hrs, S3 mapping, E-Drivex, AutoMate, Sec. Control, AutoBoom, 3 sets of tires ................................................................$155,000 ‘03 RoGator 1064, 120 ft boom, 1000 gal, front reload, Invisio Pro, SmarTrax, 2 sets of tires, 3649 hrs ......................$155,000 ‘95 RoGator 854, 800 gal ss tank, 100 ft boom, 3 way nozzle bodies, S2 + eDrive AutoSteer, auto section controls, 2 sets of tires .............................................................................$69,900 ‘03 SpraCoupe 4640, 80 ft boom, 400 gal tank, S2 light bar, dual rear tires, std trans, 1288 hrs, fit crop dividers .............$62,000 ‘97 Willmart 7200, 750 gal, 90 ft boom, 3 way nozzles, 500 Trimble AutoSteer and section control, rear duals, 3000 hrs, auto. ............................................................................$60,000
AIR DRILLS
‘03 Flexi-Coil 3450, tow between cart, DS, variable rate .$45,000 ‘11 Morris Contour 61’, DS, 12” sp, 5.5 packers, c/w 8370XL tow between, 3 tank air cart .............................................$260,000 ‘04 Morris Max II, 60 ft, 70” spacing, single shoot, 3 1/2” sp, c/w 8370 tow between cart ..............................................$105,000
‘03 Morris Max II, 49’, 7.5” sp, single shoot, edge on shank, dutch openers, 3.5” packers c/w 7240 tow behind tank.........$59,000 ‘10 Morris Contour 71’, SS, 12” sp, 5.5” packers c/w 8370XL tow behind w/third tank VRT, NH3 kit, side band openers ..$269,000 ‘11 Morris Contour, 51 ft, D.S., 12” sp., c/w 8370 XL tow between tank ...........................................................................$235,000
SWATHERS
‘12 MF 9740, c/w 30 ft DSA, UII PU reel, header & AutoSteer, 1 of 2 ................................................................................$138,000 ‘98 MF 220, c/w 26 ft Draper DS, UII PU reel, MF 220 16 ft hay header, Fits MF 220, 220 Series II and 220XL ...............$35,000 ‘12 MF WR9740 c/w 30 ft headers UII pick up reel, DSA, low hrs, 1 of 2 .........................................................................$140,000 ‘13 MF WR9740 c/w 36 ft UII PU reel, header, 323 hrs ..$145,900
TRACTORS
‘08 Agco LT95, c/w FL45 frt end loader, joystick grapple, FWA, 95 hp ................................................................................$69,000 ‘07 MF 1540, FWA, hydro, 40 hp, 3pth c/w ldr ................$24,900 ‘07 MF 1533, 33 hp, hydro, 3pth, frt end ldr, 375 hrs ......$23,900 ‘92 MF 3690 FWA, 170 hp ..............................................$37,000
4WD TRACTORS
IN STOCK NOW!!!!!!
MT 875C Challenger, 585 hp track 36” extreme, poly mid wheels, hyd. swing draw bar, 1 of 2 MT 865C Challenger, 525 hp track 36” extreme, poly mid wheels, hyd. swing draw bar, PTO, 1 of 6 MT 855 Challenger, 475 hp track 36” extreme, hyd. swing drawbar, PTO, 1 of 2 MT 955C, 475hp, 4WD, powershift, PTO, diff lock, 5 hyd, remotes, dual, 800/70R38, 1 of 2 MT 945C, 440 hp, 4WD, powershift, PTO, diff lock, 5 hyd, remotes, dual, 800/70R38 ‘09 375 Vers, powershift, 710 duals, PTO, 1174 hrs, GPS............................................................................$189,000 ‘08 Challenger MT855, extreme tracks, full height picker, PTO, powershift ..................................................................$255,000
HEADERS
‘09 MF 7200, st. cut header, 35’ .....................................$29,000 2 -‘07 MF 8200 flex header, 35’ (1 of 2) ..........................$33,000
MF 220 16 ft hay header, fits MF 220, 220 Series II, 220 XL .........................................................................$17,500 ‘11 Dyna-Flex 36 ft Flex, c/w pea auger ..........................$69,000 ‘10 Agco 5100 draper, 36 ft, absolutely mint ...................$45,000 ‘05 Honey Bee SP30 c/w pea auger, PU reel, fits Gleaner ........................................................................$39,000 ‘03 Honey Bee SP30 draper, 30 ft, fits MF8570 or MF8780 .......................................................................$35,500 ‘96 MacDon 960, 36 ft draper fi ts R-65 .........................$24,500 MF 8200, 30 ft w/UII PU header, 1 of 3 ............................$28,000
USED COMBINES
‘11 MF 9895, 139 hrs, chopper/spreader PU header .....$385,000 ‘10 MF 9895, chopper/spreader PU header ...................$289,000 ‘09 MF 9895 c/w PU hdr, chopper, spreader, 555 hrs ....$299,000 ‘11 MF 9795, 360 hrs, c/w 4200 PU header, chopper/ spreader, duals..........................................................................$267,000 ‘10 MF 9795, 775 hrs, c/w 4200 PU header, chopper/spreader, 900 rubber, powerfold hopper ....................................$255,000 ‘06 MF 9790, 726 hrs, chopper/spreader ......................$195,000 ‘05 MF 9690, 1582 hrs, c/w 4220 PU header, chopper/ spreader ....................................................................$134,000 ‘03 MF 9690, 2000 hrs, c/w 4000 PU header, chopper/ spreader ....................................................................$100,000 ‘01 MF 8780 XP, chopper/spreader, 1280 hrs ..................$99,000 ‘97 MF 8780, chopper/spreader PU header .....................$65,000 ‘08 Gleaner R75, 1077 hrs, PU header ..........................$225,000 ‘06 Gleaner R65, 1546 hrs, PU header ..........................$149,000 ‘06 Gleaner R65, pu header ..........................................$149,000 ‘05 Gleaner R65, 1058 hrs, PU header ..........................$115,000 ‘05 Gleaner R65, 1748 hrs, PU header ..........................$115,000 ‘03 Gleaner R75 c/w 1800 sp PU header, chopper, spreader ....................................................................$145,000 ‘98 Gleaner R62..............................................................$89,000 ‘11 A86 Gleaner‘04 Challenger 670, 750 hrs, chopper/spreader c/w PU header ...........................................................$129,000
MISCELLANEOUS
Snow Dozer Blade Horst ...................................................... CALL
More info on used with pictures at www.fulllineag.com OR email rick.r@fulllineag.com
)XOO /LQH $J FA R M E Q U I P M E N T S U P E R S T O R E
306•934•1546 - Saskatoon, SK 306•773•7281 - Swift Current, SK Dealers for:
SASKATOON SALES: Chris Purcell Dave Ruzesky Doug Putland SWIFT CURRENT SALES: Ross Guenther Tim Berg Murray Weston
60 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
GENUINE GENETICS GALLOWAY Internet Bull Sale, March 6 - 10th, 2014. Contact Russell at 403-749-2780. Visit website: www.bigdealgalloways.com
ROB & LORNA STORY NETHERHILL, SK
SELLING
Registered Black Angus
by Private Treaty off the Farm Offering a Great Selection of Two Year Old (Virgin) & Yearling Bulls Featured AI Sires: SAV 707 Rito 9969, SAV Brand Name 9115, SAV Providence 6922, Mohen Dynamite 1356, BJ’S Fort Walsh 823 Delivered Free 1st 150 Miles • All bulls semen tested and delivered • Bulls are available for viewing anytime Home Phone - (306) 463-3225 Lorna’s Cell - (306) 460-8520 Rob’s Cell - (306) 460-7620 www.dolittleangus.com Directions from Kindersley, SK 10 miles East on Hwy #7 and 1.5 miles North
90 YEARLING AND 2 year old Red Angus bulls. Guaranteed semen tested and delivered in spring. Bob Jensen 306-967-2770, Leader, SK. 2 YEAR OLD and yearling Red Angus Bulls, calving ease, semen tested. Little de Ranch, 306-845-2406, Turtleford, SK. KENRAY RANCH OPEN HOUSE, Feb. 22 on offer 35 yearling and 5 two year old Red Angus bulls. Sheldon 306-452-7545, Redvers, SK. www.kenrayranch.com SOUTH VIEW RANCH has Red and Black Angus coming 2 yr. old bulls. Shane at: 306-869-8074, 306-454-2688, Ceylon, SK. OVER 20 YEARS of raising and selling sound quality Registered yearling bulls. Natural and AI sires. Calving ease, solid feet, thick hair coats. Vet inspected, semen tested, guaranteed breeders. B-elle Red Angus. Glen and Evelyn Bloom, 306-845-2557, Turtleford, SK. Email: evandglen@littleloon.ca DOUBLE BAR D FARMS BEST OF BOTH Worlds Annual Bull and Female Sale, Saturday, February 15 at the farm, 1:00 PM, Grenfell, SK. Offering 200 head of Simmental and Red Angus bulls and females. Ken 306-697-7204, 306-697-2474, Brian 306-451-7205. View catalogue at www.doublebardfarms.com MAPLE RIDGE ACRES has yearling purebred Red Angus bulls for sale. AI sires Sakic and Honky Tonk. Les Saunders, 306-997-4507, Borden, SK. BRED HEIFERS: Bred to easy calving Angus bulls. Start calving April 1st. 306-287-3900 or 306-287-8006, Engelfeld, SK. RARE OFFERING. PACKAGE of 2 bred heifers and 3 open yearling heifers out of our “Lassie” cow family. No other cow has influenced our herd as much as Red KBJ Lassie 836F (daughter of KBJ Round Lassie 18T) $12,999. B-elle Red Angus, 306-845-2557, Turtleford, SK. Email: evandglen@littleloon.ca
NORDAL LIMOUSIN AND ANGUS Bull Sale, Thursday February 20, 2014. Saskatoon Livestock Sales, Saskatoon, SK. Selling: 50 Red and Black Angus 2 yr.old bulls. Rob Garner, Simpson, SK. 306-946-7946. Catalogue at: nordallimousin.com 17 REGISTERED RED Angus open heifers, excellent brood cow prospects. Call Little DAVIDSON GELBVIEH/ LONESOME de Ranch, 306-845-2406, Turtleford, SK. DOVE RANCH 25th Anniversary Bull Sale REGISTERED 2 YEAR OLD BULL. Used Saturday March 1, 2014 at Our Bull Yards sparingly last summer. Sound, quality bull. (heated facility), Ponteix, SK. Dinner at B-elle Red Angus, 306-845-2557, Turtle- 11:00 AM, Sale at 1:00 PM. Selling 85+ stout, semen and performance tested, ford, SK. Email: evandglen@littleloon.ca easy fleshing purebred bulls both Red and Black. View the bull sale video at our websites or for online bidding access, register 2 days prior to the sale at www.DLMS.ca Presale viewing all day Friday, Feb. 28th. Call us anytime for catalogue or further info Davidson Gelbvieh Vernon and Eileen Davidson 306-625-3755, 306-625-7863, 306-625-7864 www.davidsongelbvieh.com or email davidsongelbvieh@sasktel.net Lonesome Dove Ranch Ross and Tara Davidson and Family, phone 306-625-3513, SELECT NOW. Get later. Superior quality. 306-625-7045, 306-625-7345. Website: For sale. DKF Red and Black Angus bulls www.davidsonlonesomedoveranch.com at: DKF RANCH, Anytime, Gladmar, SK. lonesomedoveranch@sasktel.net Agent for: Solar and Wind Water Systems and Allen Leigh Calving Cameras. Dwayne SASKATOON GELBVIEH BULL And Feor Scott Fettes, 306-969-4506. male Sale: March 22, 2014, Saskatoon, WARD’S RED ANGUS AND GUESTS Bull S K . To r e q u e s t a c a t a l o g u e c a l l Sale Sat. March 1, 2:00 PM, Saskatoon 306-865-2929, www.gelbviehworld.com Livestock Sales. Selling 50 pasture two BECK McCOY BULL SALE, Sat., Feb. 22, year olds, super long yearlings and top cut 2014 at 1 PM, Optimum Genetics, Regina, yearlings. As well as 50 open commercial SK. 100 CHAROLAIS, HEREFORD and heifers. Wintering and volume discounts G E L B V I E H B U L L S o n o f fe r. Wa d e available. For a catalogue or info. contact 306-436-4564 or Chad 306-436-2086. Clarke 306-931-3824 or T Bar C Cattle Co Catalogue online at www.mccoycattle.com 306-220-5006. View the Catalogue online at www.buyagro.com PL #116061. TWIN BRIDGE FARMS 3rd Gelbvieh Bull and Female Sale, Monday, March 17, 2014, 1 PM at the Silver Sage Community Corral, Brooks, AB. Selling 40 yearling HEJ CHAROLAIS BULL SALE, Friday Gelbvieh Bulls and a select group of open Feb. 28, 1 PM, Innisfail Auction Mart. Purebred heifers. Red and black genetics Offering 60 ranch ready Charolais yearling on offer. Guest Consignors Carlson Cattle bulls, red, white, black and tan. Wintering, Company and Keriness Cattle Co. For info. delivery, sight unseen purchase program contact: Ron and Carol Birch and family available. All bulls vet inspected, semen 403-792-2123 or 403-485-5518 or Don tested. For catalogues or info. contact the Savage Auctions 403-948-3520. Catalogue Rasmussens at 403-227-2824 or T Bar C online at: www.donsavageauctions.com Cattle Co. 306-220-5006. View catalogue online at www.buyagro.com PL #116061. REG. AND COMMERCIAL Gelbvieh cows, BECK McCOY BULL SALE, Sat., Feb. 22, vet checked, safe in calf. Chad at McCoy 2014 at 1 PM, Optimum Genetics, Regina, Cattle Co., Milestone, SK. 306-436-2086. SK. 100 CHAROLAIS, HEREFORD and G E L B V I E H B U L L S o n o f fe r. Wa d e 306-436-4564 or Chad 306-436-2086. Catalogue online at www.mccoycattle.com 50 PUREBRED CHAROLAIS cows, white and red factor; also yearling and 2 yr. old Charolais bulls. Creedence Charolais Ranch, Ervin Zayak, Derwent, AB. 780-741-3868 or cell, 780-853-0708.
12 REGISTERED CHAROLAIS open heifers, sired by a son of JDJ Smokster and by CSS Sir Breadmaker 2W. Call Pruden Charolais 306-383-2961, Quill Lake, SK. 12 REGISTERED WHITE CHAROLAIS heifers bred to easy calving Kaboom Son RANCH READY BULL SALE on March 20, for sale. Call 306-492-4634, Dundurn, SK. 1:00 PM, Heartland, Swift Current, SK. 30 soggy, stout, Hereford bulls from Braun Ranch and 23 Elite 2 yr. old Angus bulls 2 YEAR OLD RED ANGUS BULLS. Easy from Bar CR Angus. Catalogue online at calving, high performance and structurally www.braunranch.com Contact Craig Braun sound. Semen tested and guaranteed. Deat 306-297-2132. livery available and can keep until spring. Prices $3500 and up. Bulls are ranch raised and come from a working cowherd. Call Rock Creek Ranching, Jordan Newhouse 306-276-2025, White Fox, SK. RED ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, semen tested, guaranteed breeders, delivery available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com
Lazy R C R anch B u ll S ale M onday
3
Febru ary
at the Lazy RC Ranch 2014
R ed Lazy R C ElS enro 8125U
66
R ed & B lack A ngus Long Y earling B ulls (C om ing Tw o’s)
Inform ation & C atalogue (w hen available) online @w w w .la zyrcra nch.com
Ca n’t M a ke it to the Sa le?
BI D ON L I N E
visit w w w .dlm s.ca or call 780.699.5082 for m ore info S A LE LO CATIO N : La zy RC Ra nch a t Beechy, S K . - 1:00 pm
Hea ted Sa le Fa cility !
Lazy R C R anch
R uss & C indy Sibbald Ph:306.859.2244 • C ell:306.859.7726 B ox 329, B eechy, SK S0L 0C 0 Em ail:lazyrcranch@ xplornet.ca W ebsite:w w w .lazyrcranch.com
RAWES RANCHES LTD. 31st Annual Performance Tested Charolais Bull Sale, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2014, 1:00 PM at the ranch, Strome, AB. On offer: 132 two year olds. Calving ease, performance, longevity. All built into one superior package! Bull videos and catalogue online at: www.rawesranches.com Call Philip at 780-376-2241 for more info. REG. CHAROLAIS BULLS, 2 year olds and yearlings, polled and horned, some red, quiet, hand fed. 40 plus bulls available at the ranch. Call Wilf, Cougar Hill Ranch, 306-728-2800, 306-730-8722, Melville, SK CREEK’S EDGE LAND and Cattle Purebred Charolais Bulls for sale off farm. Our largest selection yet. 20 two year olds and 40 yearlings. Thick, hairy, good feet, and quiet. Call Stephen 306-279-2033, cell 306-279-7709, Yellow Creek, SK. Website www.creeksedgecharolais.ca to learn more about our program. REGISTERED POLLED YEARLING bulls, performance and semen tested. Guaranteed breeders. Will keep until May. $2200-2500. Charrow Charolais, Marshall, SK. 306-387-8011 or 780-872-1966. CHAROLAIS BULLS for sale, yearlings and 2 year olds. Wintering available. 780-582-2254, Forestburg, AB.
SQUARE D BULLS for sale: over 60 to choose from, spring and fall yearlings and two year-olds, performance and semen tested, halter broke and quiet, kept until June 1. Delivered. 306-538-4556, Langbank, SK. View videos and pictures at: www.square-dpolledherefords.com YOU ARE INVITED to Carlrams 5th Annual Bull Sale, Friday, Feb. 7th 5 miles North of Cut Knife, SK. Come for dinner. Sales start at 2 PM. 35 Hereford bulls from Carl and Cal Ramsay and Robin and Randy Flicek. Big thick bulls, lots of hair, not over fed and guaranteed. Carl 306-398-7879, R a n dy o r R o b i n 3 0 6 - 8 2 3 - 3 9 1 2 , C a l 306-398-7343. Sale on dlms.ca Catalogues online at: buyagro.com MISTY VALLEY FARMS 38th Annual Production Sale of Horned Herefords, Wednesday, February 5th, 2014 at the ranch, 1:00 PM MST. On offer: 50 coming 2 yr. old bulls; 35 bred registered heifers; 60 bred commercial Hereford heifers; 8 open heifer calves. Bulls semen tested. Heifers preg. tested. Misty Valley Farms, RR #1, Maidstone, SK., S0M 1M0. Harold Oddan 306-893-2783; Maurice Oddan 306-893-2737.
BECK McCOY BULL SALE, Sat., Feb. 22, 2014 at 1 PM, Optimum Genetics, Regina, SK. 100 CHAROLAIS, HEREFORD and 40 OLDER COWS bred Angus/Shorthorn; G E L B V I E H B U L L S o n o f fe r. Wa d e 30 2nd/3rd calvers bred Dexter; 25 heifers 306-436-4564 or Chad 306-436-2086. bred Dexter; Dexter bull and heifer calves. Catalogue online at www.mccoycattle.com 403-845-5763, Rocky Mountain House, AB. BANNERLANE HORNED HEREFORDS PUREBRED DEXTER HERD: Selling herd of Annual Sale, Tues., Feb. 4, 2014, 2:00 PM approx. 20 Dexter cows and heifers. Ex- CST (1 PM MST) at the farm, Livelong, SK. posed to Reg. Polled bull, due to calf early On offer: 60 head: 26 coming 2 yr. old spring. Ages range from 1-9 yrs. old. Ask- bulls, semen tested; 18 bred commercial ing $775 OBO for bred horned; $875 OBO heifers; 5 bred reg. heifers, preg checked; for Polled; 3 year old Reg. polled bull 1 reg. heifer calf; 10 BBF open heifers. $1800 OBO; 2 non Reg. 2 yr. old polled Lunch at noon. Central point free delivery. bulls $1400/ea. OBO. Would consider bannerlane@littleloon.ca Rob Bannerman, package deal. 306-287-3181, Watson, SK. 306-845-2764. View at: www.hereford.ca
15TH ANNUAL MID-WEST Horned Hereford Sale, Thursday, Feb 6, 2014. Lloydminster Exhibition Grounds, Lloydminster, SK, at 1:00 PM MST. On offer: 41 two yr. old bulls; 2 purebred heifers; 25 bred commercial heifers; 5 Black Baldy heifer calves. For catalogues or more info: Lanni Bristow 7 8 0 - 9 4 3 - 2 2 3 6 , o r To d d B y g r o v e 3 0 6 - 8 2 5 - 3 5 7 7 , o r D av i d M i t c h e l l 306-893-2838.
SIMMENTAL BULLS: BLACK and Black Simm. Angus, registered and guaranteed. 306-662-5006, Golden Prairie, SK. www.hertersimmentals.com
85 BLACK ANGUS cross Simmental heifers, bred to small birthweight Black Angus bulls. All one herdm home raised, herd health program. Calving start date March 20th, for 42 days and bulls polled. 1ST ANNUAL YOUNG GUNS and Guests 780-645-0022, Vilna, AB. Simmental Bull Sale, Feb. 12, 1:00 PM, Wainwright, AB, Equine Centre. Offering 60 Full Fleckvieh and Purebred yearling and 2 year old Simmental bulls. For catalogue or for more info call Winston Ford 780-842-9623, Greg Arneson 7 8 0 - 7 5 5 - 2 4 6 8 , M a r k Tr a b y s h 780-208-2375 or T Bar C Cattle Co. FRESH AND SPRINGING heifers for sale. 306-220-5006. View the catalogue online Cows and quota needed. We buy all class- at www.buyagro.com es of slaughter cattle-beef and dairy. R&F Livestock Inc. Bryce Fisher, Warman, SK. DOUBLE BAR D FARMS BEST OF BOTH Phone 306-239-2298, cell 306-221-2620. Worlds Annual Bull and Female Sale, Saturday, February 15 at the farm, 1:00 120 DIAGRAMS OF new corral plans and OPEN HOLSTEIN HEIFERS for sale. Also PM, Grenfell, SK. Offering 200 head of ideas that save on labour and corrals some short breds available. Please call Simmental and Red Angus bulls and fe- costs- free look! OneManCorrals.com John at 403-382-1963, Fort Macleod, AB. males. Ken 306-697-7204, 306-697-2474, TOP QUALITY home grown bred heifers. Brian 306-451-7205. View catalogue at 30 Red Angus cross, 9 Hereford and 11 www.doublebardfarms.com Black Angus cross. Bred to calving ease Black Angus bulls. Preg. checked, mid QUALITY 2 YEAR old and yearling bulls for BROOK’S SIMMENTALS 2014 Polled Policy March calving start. Up-to-date vaccinasale. Also open and bred females. Merv Private Treaty Bull Sale: Yearling polled tions and Ivomeced. Winston or Meggan full blood bulls, first come first served. SeSpringer, Leslie, SK. 306-272-0144 men tested, fully guaranteed. Delivery Hougham 306-344-4913, Frenchman POLLED RED AND black thick hairy Limou- available. Catalogue available on-line: Butte, SK. magnumranching@gmail.com s i n b u l l s fo r s a l e . Pay n e L i ve s t o c k brookssimmental.wix.com/polledfullblood 2 0 0 YO U N G A N G U S b r e d c o w s . Call Konrad 306-845-9434 (cell) or 306-773-1049, Swift Current, SK. 306-825-4056, Lloydminster, SK. 306-845-2834 (home), Turtleford, SK. COMPLETE HERD DISPERSAL: 220 bred ERIXON SIMMENTALS BULL and Female cows and 30 fancy bred heifers. Char/Red Sale, February 26 at Saskatoon Livestock Angus influence closed herd, hardy and Sales. Dave: 306-270-2893, Clavet, SK. moderate sized. Bred to easy calving Char Catalogue at: www.erixonsimmentals.com and Red Angus bulls, start calving 3rd week of April. Full vaccination program, Ivomeced and preg checked. Approx 85 red mix, 80 tan mix, 35 white and 20 black or gray. Truckloads preferred. Call: 306-728-3488, Melville, SK. or email: zlranch@yourlink.ca NORDAL LIMOUSIN AND ANGUS Bull 26 RED ANGUS/SIMMENTAL bred heifers, Sale, Thursday February 20, 2014. Saskapreg. checked, start calving March 10, toon Livestock Sales, Saskatoon, SK. Sellbred to Red Angus bull, $1400/ea. Call ing: 30 Polled Black and Red 2 yr. old Lim306-752-3862, Melfort, SK. ousin Bulls also 50 Red and Black Angus. Rob Garner, Simpson, SK. 306-946-7946. ASHWORTH FARM AND RANCH 11th COMPLETE DISPERSAL of 25 Lowline Angus cross cows bred Red Angus. Very effiCatalogue at: nordallimousin.com Annual Bull Sale, Monday, March 3rd, 1 PM cient and hardy cattle. Bull out March at the farm. 8 miles south of Oungre, SK. 2 0 t h . $ 8 0 0 - $ 1 1 0 0 y o u r p i c k . C a l l Hwy. #35, 2-1/2 miles east. Offering 65 306-322-7789, Spalding, SK. Red and Black Simmental bulls. For cataBIG ISLAND LOWLINES Premier Breeder. logue or more info call Kelly Ashworth 200 GOOD BLACK Angus Bred Heifers. Selling custom designed packages. Name 306-456-2749, 306-861-2013 or Bouchard All one herd, home raised, preg. checked, your price and we will put a package to- Livestock 403-946-4999. View catalogue calving in May and Ivomeced, $1400. Call Bernard 306-984-7272, Spiritwood, SK. gether for you. Fullblood/percentage Low- online at: www.bouchardlivestock.com Email for photos: tetrb@hotmail.com line, embryos, semen. Black/Red carrier. Darrell 780-486-7553, Edmonton, AB. 12 SELECTED COWS and bred heifers. Club Calf bred females, AI to Leading Club Calf bulls like: Choppin Wood, Ohio Senator, I67, Bodacious and Monoploy Money. Start CANADIAN MAINE-ANJOU ASSOCIATION. calving April 1st, $1800. each. Call Power, performance and profit. For info on 780-808-4064, Dewberry, AB. Maine-Anjou genetics. Call 403-291-7077, MERCER MEADOWS EXPERIENCED Calgary, AB., or www.maine-anjou.ca grazing has space available for 1000+ yearlings or 500 cow/calf pairs. Call early for particulars and company contract. REG. FULLBLOOD BULLS, yearlings and a Ranch at Whitewood, SK., 306-735-2645. REG. PB RED or Black Salers bulls, bred few 2 year olds. 110-115 lb. birthweight, heifers and replacement heifers. Elderber- no creep feed, no silage. Delivery can be RED SIMMENTAL CROSS HEIFERS, ry Farm Salers, 306-747-3302 Parkside, SK Bodybuilder bloodlines, bred to 6 Mile arranged. 204-720-3103, Wawanesa, MB. bulls. Exposed June 1 to August 1st. Home POLLED POLLED POLLED- Salers bulls raised. Fir Mountain, SK., phone Kai for sale. Call Spruce Grove Salers, Yorkton, 306-266-4505 or Kim 306-266-4848. SK, 306-782-9554 or 306-621-1060. SPECKLE PARK AND Polled Hereford year- BLACK ANGUS, 2nd time calvers, bred ling and two year old bulls, low BW, high back to Black, calving March and April. Call performance, semen tested, delivered. 204-745-7917, St. Claude, MB. Stock Farm, David: 306-893-2714, SELLING GLENFORD Just Right 4W grand Johner 20 BRED COWS for sale, start calving end champion at Agribition 2010. Bender or Justin: 306-893-2667, Maidstone, SK. of March. Call 306-291-9395 or Shorthorns 306-748-2876, Neudorf, SK. 306-283-4747, Langham, SK. BLACK, RED AND BALDIE Angus bred SHORTHORNS FOR ALL the right reasons. Check out why and who at website YEARLING PUREBRED REGISTERED bull h e i fe r s fo r s a l e , g o o d q u a l i t y. C a l l and 4 month old purebred bull calf. Call 306-466-4428, Leask, SK. www.saskshorthorns.com Secretary 306-225-4546, Hague, SK. 306-577-4664, Carlyle, SK. 50 ANGUS CROSS cows, bred Angus, calve April and May, $1400/ea. 306-845-2624, Spruce Lake, SK. PUREBRED WAGYU AND F1 cattle, bull BRED COWS/HEIFERS, Simmental Angus prospects. Call 587-877-2649, Red Deer, cross. Bred to calve from March 10 to May 10, preg checked, vaccinations up to date. AB. E-mail: aherron@ualberta.ca 35 HD first calvers. Stan 204-855-2810 or Cameron 204-855-2069, Oak Lake, MB. GOOD BRED SIMMENTAL cross cows for 100 BRED HEIFERS, bred Red Angus bulls sale. Call 306-984-4606, Leoville, SK. June 1: 60 Black Angus/Simmental cross; 40 Charolais/Red Angus, preg checked, 80 SIMMENTAL and Simmental Red Angus BENDER SHORTHORNS and Star P Farms $1500/ea. Call Gerald at 306-867-7558 or cross, start calving March 1, bred Simm. or Red Angus. Will keep until February 15. will be selling 40 Shorthorn bulls, 2 yr. Terry at 306-867-7533, Outlook, SK. Call 306-762-4723, Odessa, SK. olds and yearlings, also replacement heifers, Tuesday, March 18, 2014, 1:00PM, at 30 BRED HEIFERS Black Angus Simmental SELLING GOOD REPLACEMENT quality the East Central Bull Power Sale at York- cross, bred Black Angus. Choice $1400 or heifers, Fleckvieh and Red Angus cross, ton, SK., Exhibition Grounds. Internet bid- all $1250. 306-698-7787, Wolseley, SK. PB Simmentals, 800+ lbs., quiet. Also ding DLMS: www.dlms.ca Call Ryan 12 BRED COMMERCIAL cows, due to calf also yr. old PB Red Angus bull. Curtis Mattson 306-748-2876 or 306-728-8613, Neudorf, e a r l y s p r i n g , b r e d B l a c k A n g u s ; 5306-944-4220, Meacham, SK. SK. Rayleen 306-682-3692, Humboldt, SK. 306-222-7709, Saskatoon, SK. website: www.bendershorthorns.com 150 QUALITY RANCH raised Red and Black 5th ANNUAL BATTLE RIVER SHORT- Angus heifers, bred to the same bull out HORN BULL & FEMALE SALE, Saturday, May 20th. You pick $1450, gate, $1400. WANTED: CULL COWS for slaughter. For bookings call Kelly at Drake Meat ProcesMarch 8th, 2014, Ponoka, AB. Selling a top 403-308-4200, Arrowwood, AB. sors, 306-363-2117, ext. 111, Drake, SK. selection of 2 year old and yearling Shorthorn bulls and a select group of open year- 150 SIMMENTAL ANGUS cross cows, start ling heifers. For info. contact Ken Hehr calving April 1st, $1300 take all, $1400 403-783-4350, Kirk Seaborn 403-729-2267 you pick. 780-774-2287, Woking, AB. or Don Savage Auctions 403-948-3520. BLACK ANGUS/SIMMENTAL cows, bred Catalogue www.donsavageauctions.com Black Angus, due April 1, vaccinated and HORSE SALE, JOHNSTONE Auction Mart, ivomeced. 306-567-0622, Davidson, SK. Moose Jaw, SK, Thurs., Feb. 6, 2014. Tack BRED HEIFERS, black and BWF, and Red sells: 2:00 PM, Horses sell: 4:00 PM. All BONCHUK FARMS ANNUAL Bull Sale ,on Angus cross heifers, bred Black Angus, due classes of horses accepted. 306-693-4715. www.johnstoneauction.ca PL #914447. February 16th at 1:00PM, Heartland Live- Apr. 1st calving. 306-493-2969, Delisle, SK stock in Virden, MB. On offer: 70 Reds, HORSE SALES UNLIMITED, Blacks and Fullblood yearling and 2 year BRED HEIFERS: 8 Red and 53 Black Angus WESTERN 2nd and 3rd, Saskatoon, SK. Entry old Simmental bulls. For more information and Angus cross, full health program, bred May d e a d l i n e M a r c h 1 s t . F o r m o r e i n fo to proven easy calving bulls, exposed 60 call Dave at 204-773-0467. View the catadays max. starting June 14. Choice $1550 w w w. we s t e r n h o r s e s a l e s . c o m o r c a l l logue online: www.bonchukfarms.com or all $1500. St. Lazare, MB. 204-683-2208 306-436-4515. PHESANTDALE CATTLE CO. 10th An- or 306-434-6980 cell. nual Bull and Female Sale, Thursday Feb. 27th, 1:00PM at the farm, Balcarres, BRED COWS BRED Black or Red Angus SK. Offering: 60 head of polled yearling and Charolais. Pick from 300. Start calving TWO REGISTERED BELGIAN herdsires for and long yearling Simmental bulls: 10 M a r c h / A p r i l . C o c h i n , S K . , p h o n e sale. Proven pasture breeders. Ph Robert 204-821-5011, Birtle, MB. open Purebred heifers and 12 Simm. cross 306-386-2213 or 306-386-2490. replacement heifers. For catalogue, DVD 450 AGE VERIFIED cows, 1 owner, 2/3rds or more info. call Lee 306-335-7553 or black, 1/3 red, bred for May 1st calving. Lionel 306-335-2828. View catalogue on- $1300/ea. 204-522-5428, Deloraine, MB. QUALITY MAMMOTH DONKEYS for sale. line at: www.bohrson.com 40 HOMEGROWN ANGUS/Char/Gelbvieh View: www.bigearsdonkeyranch.ca or call 2 YEAR OLD and yearling Red and Black cross cows, bred to Angus/Char/Gelbvieh 204-535-2141, 204-825-0113, Baldur, MB. Simmental bulls, moderate birthweights, bulls, mostly Angus. You pick 40 from 65, good temperaments. All bulls sold by pri- $1250/ea; Or $1400/heifers, $1300/cows. vat e t r e at y. B i l l o r V i r g i n i a Pe t e r s 306-692-1296, Moose Jaw, SK. 306-237-9506, Perdue, SK. DRIVING MARE 14.3 HH, 500 QUALITY ANGUS cross ranch heifers PLEASURE sorrel w/star, asking $4000 OBO, or part YEARLING BULLS FOR SALE: Reds, Tra- to mature cows w/calves. Pick up starting trade. 306-643-2117, Rocanville, SK. ditionals and Simmental/Red Angus cross. April 1st as they calve on ranch SE of McVicar Stock Farms, Colonsay, SK. Strathmore, AB. On full health program. WILL BREAK HORSES to drive. Call or text 306-814-0014, Preeceville, SK. Bulls also available. Call 403-308-4200. 306-255-2799 or 306-255-7551.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
CERT. EQUINE MASSAGE THERAPIST offering massage for injury, behavioral problems and better performance. Call Anna 306-466-2068, Shellbrook, SK.
YOUNG’S EQ U IPM EN T IN C.
RAMSAY PONY RIDES have for sale wellbroke kids ponies and saddle horses. All broke horses sold with a written guarantee. Also new and used saddles and tack. 306-386-2490, Cochin, SK.
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 JIFFY, FAR M AID , H AYBUS TER & N D E.
WWW.ELLIOTTCUTTINGHORSES.COM 35 plus years of training, showing, sales, clinics, lessons. Clifford and Sandra Elliott, Paynton, SK. Phone 306-895-2107.
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 ip m en t.co m
RANCH ROPING CLINIC with Canadian Champion Scott Sapergia, Feb. 8 and 9th. Email beavercreekranch.ca@gmail.com or ALBERTA ELK RANCHERS Production call 306-731-2943, Lumsden, SK. Sale. Live Video Auction- Online bidding available Feb. 14, 2014, 7 PM Nisku Inn, Nisku, AB. Watch www.gwacountry.com for updates and online catalogue or call THE LIVERY STABLE, for harness sales and Gateway Auction Services 1-866-304-4664 repairs. Call 306-283-4580, 306-262-4580, NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for Hwy #16 Borden Bridge, SK. over 15 years, is looking for Elk. “If you have them, we want them.” Make your final call with Northfork for pricing! GuaranSADDLE & HARNESS MAKING SCHOOL teed prompt payment! 514-643-4447, Phone: 780-576-2756, Newbrook, AB. Winnipeg, MB. www.rodssaddlemakingschool.com 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 phone 780-980-7589. SHEEP AND GOAT SALE, Sat., Feb. 15, 1:00 PM, Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw. Accepting all classes of sheep and goats. Sheep ID tags and pre-booking mandatory. www.johnstoneauction.ca 306-693-4715, Moose Jaw SK. PL#914447
SUNGOLD SPECIALTY MEATS. We want your lambs. Have you got finished (fat) lambs or feeder lambs for sale? Call Dwayne at: 403-894-4388 or Cathy at: 1-800-363-6602 for terms and pricing. www.sungoldmeats.com 6 0 0 S H E E P, 3 0 0 R a m b i o u l l e t ewe s , $225/ea. Award winning wool. 300 Rambioullet/Suffolk lambs, $130/ea. Averageweight 75-80 lbs. 250-457-1199, Clinton, BC. www.outlawmeats.com
CLASSIFIED ADS 61
HERD DISPERSAL: 26 purebred Alpines. 15 are bred, 1 buck. All CAE and CL free. Great milkers. Would like to sell as one pkg.; Also have PB Nubian bred does and Nubian bucks. 306-365-3211 Humboldt 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. BALE PICKER, 2 prong, single bale mover, quick and easy, electric over hyd., $2495. Also livestock scales and hopper feeders. 306-445-2111, North Battleford, SK. www.eliasscales.com FREESTANDING WINDBREAK PANELS, up to 30’ (2-3/8” oilfield pipe); Square bale feeders, any size; Can build other things. Elkhorn, MB. 204-851-6423, leave msg. GREG’S WELDING: Free standing corral panels, windbreak panels, calf shelters, belting troughs, etc. Many different styles to choose from. Call for pricing, delivery available. 306-768-8555, Carrot River, SK. ELECTRONIC SENSTEK LIVESTOCK scale w/cage, 2000 lbs; Livestock trailer; Steel panels, 1” tubing, 8 and 10’; 15” saddle and new blanket. 204-877-3346, Reston, MB.
STEEL VIEW MFG: 30’ portable wind breaks, HD self-standing panels, silage/ DOUBLE FACED LIGHT up SIGN, 10’Wx6’H hay bunks, feeder panels. Quality portable with aluminum case and 35’ pole. Offers. 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 306-446-1398, North Battleford, SK. 306-493-2300, Delisle, SK. FROSTFREE NOSEPUMPS: Energy free solution to livestock watering. No power required to heat or pump. Prevents contamination. Grants avail. 1-866-843-6744. www.frostfreenosepumps.com 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, gates and panels, bale feeders, Bison equipment, Texas gates, steel water troughs, rodeo equipment and garbage incinerators. Distributors for El-Toro electric branders and twine cutters. Our squeeze chutes and headgates are now avail. with a neck extender. Ph. 306-796-4508, email: ple@sasktel.net Web: www.paysen.com
CLASSY, PRETTY, SLIM, WF, 69 wishes to meet gent. 62-74. Attributes: Generous, compassionate, financially secure. My interests: Travel, fishing, animals. Am sincere, loyal, honest, compassionate. Have 2 horses, 10 cows. Permanent w/right partner. Horse whisperer would be nice. South or Central AB. Serious replies only w/picture and phone # to: Box 2009, c/o The Western Producer, Saskatoon, SK S7K 2C4
PRO-CERT ORGANIC OPTION - 2014. For information on organic farming: prospects, transition, barriers, benefits, certification, and marketing contact one of our agrologists. wallace.hamm@pro-cert.org call 306-382-1299, www.pro-cert.org
SINGLE? WINTER IS the perfect time to fall in love and hibernate with someone! Meet the Matchmaker! In-person interviews January 28th and 29th in Regina and Saskatoon. 19 years successful matchmakWITH 24 YEARS experience, Alberta Or- ing. Call to book your appointment: ganic Producers Association (AOPA). Is Camelot Introductions, 204-888-1529 Alberta’s only organic member driven or- www.camelotintroductions.com ganization. Serving producers and process o r s . To g e t c e r t i fi e d c a l l K at hy at PSYCHIC READING by Jessica. Helps in 780-939-5808 for a free consultation or all problems! Immediate results within 12 hrs. Call for free reading, 305-456-9714. FREE STANDING CORRAL panels and visit: www.albertaorganicproducers.org windbreak frame for cattle, horse, bison and sheep. Large variety of length, height and bar spacings. Sample price: 21’x6 bar, 5’HLW, $199; 21’x5 bar, 5’H, very sturdy, GOT GRAIN FOR SALE? All organic $239; 24’x5 bar, 5’H, med. duty, $239; wheats, durum, feed oats, brown flax and GOPHERS BE GONE! We go for gophers 21’x7 bar, 6’H bison, $299; 30’ windbreak spelt. Call Growers International today in AB and SK. 3 mature hunters willing to frames $399 less boards; New mount to 306-652-4529, Saskatoon, SK. travel and control your gopher problems post continuous corral panels, 24’x5 bar, for free. Contact: Peter 780-622-7968, $169. Haysaver horse feeders, feed WANTED: BUYING ORGANIC GRAINS. Email: 378Blackwood@telus.net troughs, bunk feeder panels and RB feed- FOB farm or delivered, Loreburn, SK. Call ers. Call Jack Taylor 1-866-500-2276. F.W. Cobs Company ph. 1-888-531-4888. www.affordablebarns.com DIVERSIFY WITH QUINOA. Organic con2001 JIFFY 920 bale shredder, electric lift- tracts available. Competitive returns, exon shield, excellent condition, $8750. pert resources, guaranteed market. Northern Quinoa, 306-933-9525, Saskatoon, SK. 306-473-2711, Willowbunch, SK. FOR CERT. organic feed oats and NH 358 MIXMILL w/Forrester auger at- LOOKING barley. Call Bryce at Pristine Prairie tachment, not rusted out, excellent shape. feed Organics 204-522-0842, Pipestone, MB. 306-291-9395, 306-283-4747 Langham SK FOR SALE: SLIDE IN 40 bushel hopper fe e d e r fo r p e l l e t s o r g r a i n . P h o n e 403-627-2601, Pincher Creek, AB.
CATCH THE HABIT, eat Sask. rabbit. For sale: oven ready meat, breeding stock, and furs, colored and white. Call Joy at 306-744-2508, Saltcoats, SK.
MORAND INDUSTRIES TRAILER TYPE PTO drive hydraulic post pounder, $1750. Phone 306-395-2668 or WINTER WATERING: FREEZE proof, Builders of Quality Livestock 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. motion eye, 24”/36” drain back bowl. Call Equipment, Made with Your toll free 1-888-731-8882, Lumsden, SK. Safety in Mind! 12 NORTH COUNTRY Cheviot ewe lambs HIGHLINE 8000 BALE processor, right Or visit: www.kellnsolar.com and 5 Suffolk ewe lambs. To lamb mid hand discharge, big tires, $9500. Call 2007 HIGHLINE 8000 bale processor, big 780-916-2333, Spruce Grove, AB. April. 306-648-3568, Gravelbourg, SK. 1-800-582-4037 tires, PTO update, $9500. Take bred heifwww.morandindustries.com ers on trade. 306-883-2935, Spiritwood SK FOR SALE: ROLLER mill, 5 HP electric mo- WANTED: 425 LEON manure spreader, tor. Phone 306-845-2665, Turtleford, SK. must be in good shape. Call SHEEP DEVELOPMENT BOARD offers 950 JIFFY BALE shredder, $7000 OBO. 306-386-2490, Cochin, SK. extension, marketing services and a full Phone 306-342-4447 or 306-441-1410, LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT: Feed alley line of sheep and goat supplies. Glaslyn, SK. panels, super size bale feeders, steel frame 306-933-5200, Saskatoon, SK. PORTABLE PANELS 30’ freestanding 3- calf shelters, freestanding panels. Planning IF YOU HAVE sheep that need shorn, call bar windbreak frames, 5-bar, 4-bar panels s o m e t h i n g b i g ? A s k a b o u t l e a s i n g . Rod or Bryce at 403-579-2520 or w/wo double hinge gates and more. On 306-485-8559, 306-483-2199, Oxbow, SK. 403-863-8937, Byemoor, AB. Will travel. farm welding. Oxbow, SK., 306-485-8559, USED JIFFY SLIDE-IN round bale handler, AQUA THERM A pasture proven trough. 306-483-2199. Winter water problems? Solved! No elec- ARROW FARMQUIP LIVESTOCK handling in good condition. Phone 403-627-2601, tricity required. 3 sizes - 100, 200 and 525 solutions: Portable windbreaks. Custom Pincher Creek, AB. ga l l o n . Ke l l n S o l a r, L u m s d e n , S K . built panels and gates. 1-866-354-7655, 5800 GAL. LIVESTOCK trough systems, 1-888-731-8882, www.kellnsolar.com www.shadowranch.ca Mossbank, SK. FDA/Food grade approved polyethylene. BUYING WILD BOAR pigs/swine for 20 6600 HIGHLINE BALE shredder, upgraded 306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228. While years, all sizes. 1-877-226-1395. Highest to 6800 w/new PTO, good shape, $5000. 2003 REM BALEMAX 3600R bale shredder, supplies last. www.hold-onindustries.com used very little, done 800-900 bales, not $$$. www.canadianheritagemeats.com Pictures available. Phone 306-463-3132, used last 4 years, sold cattle, $6500 OBO. JIFFY BALE SHREDDER, good condition, 306-460-7837, Kindersley, SK. 306-358-4620, 306-753-7682, Denzil, SK. $5800. 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB. NH 358 MIXER mill, w/power bale feeder, DURATECH, HD-8, JD engine, 239 hrs., BERKSHIRE BOARS AND Gilts; Also Tam- in working order. Phone 403-318-8135, new battery, new tires, pulled by a 1/2 14’ SUDENGA 3 compartment feed box, sworth. Delivery avail at cost. Troy Collin- Delburne, AB. ton, trees, pallets, bales, $22,500 (over w/top unloading auger, very good for filling tall bins. 204-871-4365, Oakville, MB. gridge, 204-828-3317, St. Claude, MB. COMPLETE CALVING CAMERA package $80,000 new). 306-526-9382, Regina, SK. BUYING: PIGS/SWINE, raised outside, all with two wireless cameras, cables and 1999 BALE KING 2000 bale processor, HARSH 375H SILAGE WAGON, always sizes. Highest $$$. 1-877-226-1395. controller, used two seasons, $2750. good condition, $3000. 306-726-2151, shedded, rubber and wagon in vg cond. 306-456-2596, 306-861-6849, Tribune, SK www.canadianheritagemeats.com Southey, SK. 403-575-0712, 403-577-2243, Consort, AB
L IM ITED K A M UT CO N TRA CTS AV A IL A B L E N O W CAL L 1 -30 6-869-2926 w w w .p hso rg a n ics.co m
)PVYPNPUHS -VVK :JPLUJL *VYW IHZLK PU :HZRH[VVU PZ HJ[P]LS` I\`PUN 6YNHUPJ -SH_ MVY [OL JYVW `LHY 0M PU[LYLZ[LK WSLHZL ZLUK HU SI ZHTWSL [V [OL MVSSV^PUN HKKYLZZ! ([[U! :HUK` 1VSPJVL\Y )PVYPNPUHS -VVK :JPLUJL *VYW 4LS]PSSL :[YLL[ :HZRH[VVU :HZRH[JOL^HU : 1 9 7SLHZL Z[H[L [OL =HYPL[` 8\HU[P[` MVY :HSL
-VY TVYL PUMVYTH[PVU WSLHZL JVU[HJ[ :HUK` H[!
W\YJOHZPUN'IPVYPNPUHS JVT
CKC REGISTERED BOXER puppies! Vet checked, vaccinated, tails docked, dewclaws removed, microchipped. Pups come with 1 year health guarantee and 6 wks free puppy insurance. CKC non-breeding contract and spay/neuter contact to be signed, $1000. Call 306-366-2224, St.Gregor, SK. E-mail: lncboxers@hotmail.com REG. GERMAN SHEPHERD pups, health and hip guaranteed, working bloodlines, ready. 306-236-4678, Meadow Lake, SK.
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPS, ready to go. Phone Ed 306-272-3848, leave message if not in. Foam Lake, SK. GERMAN SHEPHERD MALE pup for sale, 4 mos. old, sable, vet checked, has had shots, $500. 306-264-3834, Kincaid, SK.
COYOTE OR WOLF problems on your farm? Sarplaninac puppies. Strong guarding qualities, good work ethics, amazing livestock guardians, exc. personal protection dogs. Ph 204-638-8854, Dauphin, MB. NON REGISTERED AUSTRALIAN Shepherd puppies, 8 weeks, red, black, merle, $250. Call 306-441-2550, North Battleford, SK. TRUE BLUE HEELERS have pups off good proven working Blue Heeler parents, ready for early Feb. $300 with first shots and dewormed. References avail. Delivery can be arranged. 306-492-2447, 306-290-3339, Clavet, SK. KUVASZ/PYRENEES PUPS, farm raised, born Sept./Oct., 7 males and 6 females. Call 403-502-9470, Medicine Hat, AB.
BEST COOKING PULSES accepting samples of organic and conventional green/yellow PB AUSTRALIAN SHEPHERD PUPS peas for 2013/2014 crop year. Matt from working parents, tails docked, ready 306-586-7111, Rowatt, SK to go, $300. 780-853-2783, Vermilion, AB.
WANTED CERTIFIED ORGANIC grass fed slaughter beef. Peter Lundgard, Nature’s Way Farm, 780-338-2934, Grimshaw, AB. TURNKEY LOG FURNITURE BUSINESS. 3000 sq. ft. heated shop w/all tools. 2 homes. On 6 fenced lots. Trailers for hauling logs. 24’ custom built trailer for moving furniture. No shortage of wood or work. Best steelhead fishing in the world. Lots of mountain life, mountains and rivers. Selling for health reasons. Hazelton, BC. 250-842-0005, 250-842-8996.
WELL ESTABLISHED 3456 sq. ft. Autobody Repair business located in the heart of potash country in East Central SK. Excellent Clientele, large area to draw from with unlimited potential. 72x146’ lot with GWM RANCH HAND 54, non-smoker, seeks adjacent 80x146’ lot, next to Yellowhead same in East Central, AB. Please reply to: Hwy at major intersection. 306-621-7722, Box 2004, c/o The Western Producer, 306-399-7723, Churchbridge, SK. Saskatoon, SK. S7K 2C4. WARMAN HOMES CUSTOM built commerCLASSY COUNTRY GAL, 60 going on 50, cial buildings, to your plan or ours. Call 5’2”, 140 lbs, active, NS, SD, widowed, en- 1-866-933-9595 or www.warmanhomes.ca joy horses, travel, dancing. Looking for strong man with spunk, between 58 and LOOKING FOR Commercial or Invest65, 5’9” plus, into horses, friends first, with ment Property. Specializing in Buyer recent photo please. Edmonton, AB. area. Agency Services. Key Dyck, Broker, Reply to: Box 2008, c/o The Western Pro- Mountain View Realty, Dauphin, MB., 204-638-0057. ducer, Saskatoon, SK. S7K 2C4.
62 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
GLASLYN POWER & EQUIPMENT Inc: This 10,000 sq. ft. shop can be sold as a turnkey operation, or as an empty building and property at a reduced price. This property and building could be used as a fabrication shop. Part of the inventory is a large lathe plus a milling machine and most in the building stock and office equipment, delivery truck and trailer, Belarus tractor and front end loader. This is a must to see. Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the Battlefords, call: 306-446-8800, or 306-441-0512. MLS® 485161
MESA, ARIZONA- Greenfield Village 55+ RV Resort. For sale oak park model trailer, fully furnished, totally landscaped 40x50’ lot. More info. and website call Howard at 306-374-0259, Saskatoon, SK.
14 Qu a rters in the Ou tlo o k, S K a rea . Ap p ro x 10 Qu a rters in the E lb o w , S K . a rea . M o s tly p ivo tirriga tio n . In clu d es irriga tio n eq u ip m en ta n d gra in s to ra ge.
LAKE HAVASU CITY, AZ. REAL ESTATE! COSTA RICA PACIFIC coast beach prop- Inexpensive warm winter homes. Dave erty, zoned commercial hotel, permits in Chambers, 928-846-1443, Re/Max Presplace to rebuild w/liquor license. For tige Properties, findlakehavasuhomes.com sale/trade. Approx. value, $650,000. Phone: 306-267-4552.
LAC DES ISLES- 5 acre treed lake lot, R M H A Z E L D E L L , S K : 1 6 0 a c r e s , $295,000. 2 acre lot, $125,000 near boat SE-10-37-09-W2, bush/grassland. Ideal launch. Adjacent to Meadow Lake Prov. for hunting with cabin. Ph 306-634-5032. Park area. $10,000 down, remainder due Jan 1. 306-373-4808, loiselh@msn.com CEDAR LOG HOMES AND CABINS, sidings, paneling, decking. Fir and Hemlock flooring, timbers, special orders. Rouck Bros., Lumby, BC. www.rouckbros.com 1-800-960-3388. FARM FOR SALE OR RENT: Bindloss, AB., all in 2-22-W4th. Family farm for 100 years. Owner retiring. Located on oiled Hwy. 555 and 15 kms west of Hwy. 41. 19 WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to quarters, approx. 3000 acres deeded in 1 go! Mt. Vanier, 1680 sq. ft. was $222,083. block. 3 quarters are native grass and Sale price $215,363. Call 1-866-933-9595 yard. Balance is farmland seeded to tame grass. 2 residences. Central air and heator go to www.warmanhomes.ca ing. 2 garages. Excellent purebred and HOUSE IN BURSTALL SK. One bedroom seed grain operation. 2 large calving main floor, 2 bdrms. up, central air, vinyl barns. Steel corrals. 3 excellent water siding, single garage, big lot. Will sell or wells. Great hunting and fishing area. Adtrade for land, equipment or cattle. Call jacent to large government community 403-647-7440 or cam@cjbventures.com pasture. 50,000 bu. grain storage. 40x78 heated workshop. 520 acres water rights WARMAN HOMES. LOTS for sale in Lang- from Red Deer River. 30 acres flood irrigaham, SK. or Warman Legends or South- tion. 3 stock dams. Mineral surface leases. lands. www.warmanhomes.ca to view or Call 403-528-5425, 403-548-1299. call 1-866-933-9595. TO BE MOVED: 1963 bungalow with 2 car NW-7-22-26-W4, 30 minutes east of attached garage, 1300 sq. ft., main floor Calgary, AB. 53 acres, located beside hardfully renovated, 2/3 hardwood floor. Sell- top, near light industrial, in County of ing with stove, fridge, furnace, water Wheatland, asking $550,000. Great terms. treatment system, hot water heater and Wes 403-936-5572. Prime investment plot sewage pump, asking $80,000. Call beside Agrium Industries. Sale pending. 306-338-7114, Clair, SK. 3300 ACRES OF pasture for rent. 800 cow/calf pair capacity, multiple pastures, HOUSE FOR SALE, near Hague. To be handling facilities, Hwy 16 access, $35 per moved. 985 sq. ft., asking $25,000 OBO. acre. 403-819-2000, Niton Junction, AB. Needs to go. 519-983-2484, Osler, SK. FARMLAND FOR SALE in Cypress County. TO BE MOVED: 1440 sq. ft. bungalow, Two quarters of cultivated farmland and very well built, open floor plan, 10’ walls, option for long term lease of adjacent 80 oak kitchen, make excellent cabin or acres. Includes grain bins and surface home. 306-281-8398, Saskatoon, SK. lease on NE quarter, except 11 acre homeWARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to stead subdivision on NE quarter. NE/SE go! Mt. Blanchard, 1296 sq. ft. was 30-11-07-W4. Call 780-460-0313 for info. $191,285. Sale price $175,000. Call Submit written bids to: 206, 51 Inglewood Drive, St Albert, AB. T8N 4E7. 1-866-933-9595, www.warmanhomes.ca FOR SALE, 4 quarters deeded, 3 WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to PASTURE Section 16-83-2-W6, NW-, NE- and g o ! M t . R o b s o n , 1 4 4 3 s q . f t . w a s leased, SE-17-83-02-W6. logging, round-up $161,715. Sale price $155,943. Call corrals, hunting,Some quading, $375,000. 1-866-933-9595, www.warmanhomes.ca 780-596-0000, Peace Country, AB.
CANADIAN BUILT BY Moduline. 20x76’ Temora, $99,900; 16x76’ Oasis, $79,900; 16x60’ Tuscan, $69,900. Show homes available for viewing in Yorkton, SK. Call Stan, 306-496-7538 or 1-888-699-9280. www.affordablehomesales.ca 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.
IR R IGATE D L AND F OR R E NT
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
1421 Acre s For Sa le
N e a r R o ckyfo rd , AB. H igh pro d ucin g cultiva te d fa rm la n d . G re a tre ve n ue po te n tia l fro m re n t& o il/ga s righ ts . P le a s e ca ll fo r m o re gre a td e ta ils . C ra ig Bra s s a rd - R e a lto r
P h . H a rry S h e ppa rd a t306-5 30-8035 S utto n G ro up - R e s ults R e a lty, R e gin a , S K. h a rry@ s h e ppa rd re a lty.ca w w w .s h e ppa rd re a lty.ca ALBERTA LAND FOR SALE: Trailer Business for sale! Prime location on approx. 20 acres, only 2 miles East of Lethbridge on the North side of Hwy. 3 with high visibility and easy access. Residence and various buildings included. ID#1100183- Purple Springs: Productive section of dry land 14 miles south of Purple Springs. Approx. 639 acres with Class 3 soil, suitable for all cereal and oil seed crops. ID#1100188- Bassano: Starter farm, ideal for row crop or alfalfa/ Timothy hay. 92.8 acres of land with 53 acres of EID water rights. More land available, adjacent parcels have 208 acres of irrigated land. ID#1710- Chin: Modern 350 sow farrow to finish operation, isolated from other hog operations. New hog finishing barn, new feed mill, permit to expand to 500 sows. 1762 sq. ft. home and shop. Livestock included, loose housi n g s o w s , e l e c t r o n i c fe e d s y s t e m . ID#753- Dairy goat or dairy cow operation. Irrigation farm in the scenic Belly River valley, 320 acres, 2 pivots, 2 homes. Milking parlor with capacity for 1500 goats. Also facilities for 1746 head calf raising operation or 107 cow dairy. ID#100162- Craigmyle: Approx. 303.19 total acres of farm land east of Craigmyle in the County of Starland. Approx. 288.19 acres cultivated. Number 3 soil. MLS® Real Estate Centre 1-866-345-3414 www.farmrealestate.com 3800 + 14,000 ACRES: Cattle, bison and elk operations, fenced and cross fenced, Wabumun Lake, west of Edmonton, AB. 780-915-1735, roperrealtyltd@aol.com
5 QUARTERS PRIME GRAINLAND for sale in RM of Ponass Lake, No. 367. Highly assessed value with F, G soil classification. For land details visit: www.JustinYin.com or call agent Justin Yin at: 306-230-1588, info@justinyin.com Sutton Group Norland Realty, Saskatoon, SK.
3 OR 5 QUARTER PRIME GRAINLAND for sale in RM of Excelsior Lake, No. 166. Was owned by a hog farm and hog manure has been applied to the land for many years. Can be purchased in smaller parcels. For land details: www.JustinYin.com or call agent Justin Yin 306-230-1588 info@justinyin.com MLS #484247, Sutton Group Norland Realty Saskatoon, SK. “PIVOT IRRIGATION”: APPROX. 218 acres of grain land. Phone 306-773-7379, John or Joel Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com TIM HAMMOND REALTY Johnston Farm located by Grenfell, RM #155. 1829 acres cultivated and 635 acres hay as per SAMA. Great livestock operation, corral system, 34x60 barn, excellent water supply. Yard includes 1356 sq. ft. home (1945), 4 beds, 2 baths, asking $3,495,000. MLS#478193. Call G u y S h e p h e rd , 306-434-8857, http://Johnston.FarmsofCanada.com FOR SALE BY TENDER: Located RM Excel #71. NE-32-8-26-W2, NW-32-8-26-W2. Prospective purchasers must rely on their own research of the property to determine acreage, condition, improvements, and assessment. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Please submit certified cheque for 5% of bid with tender, payable to Lewans & Ford In Trust, Barristers & Solicitors, Box 759, Assiniboia, SK. S0H 0B0 and clearly mark envelope “Schneikart Land Tender”. Tenders will close February 21, 2014 at 2:00 PM.
403 .3 6 1.0143 WANTED: OLDER MOBILE HOME 12’, 14’, Em a il: cb ra s s a rd @ cirre a lty.ca or 16’ wide, to be moved, suitable for lake c o t t a g e . 3 0 6 - 6 2 7 - 3 3 1 2 l e ave m s g . , LARGE GRAIN AND cattle property, Exclu306-648-7516, Swift Current, SK. sive listing; Also a beautiful recreational quarter, borders Clearwater River, West of Red Deer, AB.; Other cattle properties and summer grazing available. Ph. Don Jarrett, MARVIN HOMES, BUILDING RTM’S since Realty Executives Leading, 780-991-1180, 1976: 1320 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, $75,000 and a Spruce Grove, AB. 1520 sq.ft, 3 bdrm., $90,000. Call Marvin Homes 204-326-1493 or 204-355-8484, 298 ACRES CULT. farmland 2.5 miles east of Tofield, AB. on 626. Good #2 soil, no Steinbach, MB. www.marvinhomes.ca bush, no stones, very flat, annual surface lease revenue $3200. MLS MH0026833 READY TO MOVE HOMES S o u t h l a n d R e a l t y, c a l l L e n R e m p e l 306-741-6358, Medicine Hat, AB. RM 139: 6720 acre ranch, good set of Completely customized to your ideas. buildings. Call 306-773-7379, John Cave, Visit our homes on site! WATER problems? Canada’s Largest rural Edge Realty Ltd. www.farmsask.com water purification company. No more waYou order it, we’ll build it. ter softeners or bottles. The Water Clinic, LASER CONSTRUCTION 1-800-664-2561, www.thewaterclinic.com 306-370-3870 or Custom FARMLAND, BLACKIE, AB. 160 acres info@laserconstruction.ca RTM good productive cultivated land, $395,000. www.laserconstruction.ca Homes Call Don 403-652-8763.
FARMLAND FOR SALE BY TENDER. Approx. 157.90 acres located in RM Huron #223, SW-07-22-01-W3, Ext. 0. Bids must include: Full legal name, mailing address and phone number; Purchase price for above land with signature and date; Cert. cheque, money order or bank draft payable to McKercher LLP for 10% of total bidthe Deposit. Send bid in sealed envelope with Deposit addressed to: McKercher LLP, Barristers and Solicitors, 500- 2220 12th Ave., Regina, SK., S4P 0M8. Attn: Ryan O. Malley. All bids must be received no later than 5:00 PM, Friday, February 14, 2014. Highest or any bid not necessarily accepted. If bidder does not complete the sale within 30 days of notification by signing an unconditional Agreement for Sale the Deposit will be forfeited. Seller will deliver clear title to the lands to the successful bidder subject only to existing registrations respecting utility and similar easements. Vendor has entered into a wind power development lease, term 60 years, expiring May 19, 2071, with a right of renewal of 25 years. No development so far. Deposits of unsuccessful bidders will be returned. For info contact: Mr. Ryan Malley 306-565-6500, fax: 306-565-6565, r.malley@mckercher.ca
LAND FOR RENT THE PUBLIC GUARDIAN AND TRUSTEE OF SASKATCHEWAN, as OFFICIAL ADMINISTRATOR FOR THE SAM FOFONOFF ESTATE, will accept a cash rental bid for one year on the following land located in the R.M. Buchanan #304:
LAND: NW 11-32-6 W2 150 cultivated acres Sealed bids clearly marked “FOFONOFF Tender”, c/o the address below to be received no later than 5:00 pm on January 31, 2014. The highest or any bid not necessarily accepted. Public Guardian and Trustee of Saskatchewan 100-1871 Smith Street REGINA SK S4P 4W4 For more information please contact Jack Pool @ 787-8115
A re you plan n in g to b u ild a h om e in 2 01 4. 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 .
R.M. of Mount Hope #279 SW-31-25-20-W2 NE-07-26-20-W2 NW-07-26-20-W2 Fair assessed land
RM 342, COLONSAY, SK. 1100 acres. Located only a few miles N of Hwy 16 E. N W- a n d S W- 1 9 - 3 5 - 2 7 - W 2 , S e c t i o n 17-35-27-W2, NW-5-35-27-W2. $1900 per acre. All within close proximity. Section 17 presently fenced and seeded to hay. Well and power in yardsite, 8900 bu. storage. All land details available on request. Call Joanne at 306-255-7602.
R.M. of Last Mountain Valley #250 SE-4-26-21-W2 SW-3-26-21-W2 Cultivated land R.M. of Last Mountain Valley #250 7 Quarters of cultivated land mostly broke, with some pasture, and a 1500 sq ft custom built 4 bdrm bungalow with attached garage. For more information call
RM OF MERVIN 499, quarter of land SE-04-54-21-W3, 155 acres broke. Asking $175,000. 6 miles East of St. Walburg, SK. and 5 miles West of Brightsand Lake. Call Joe Helperl 306-862-6880, 306-862-5127.
Elmer Klassen (306) 631-1984 elklassen@sasktel.net Doreen Heinbigner (306) 630-6643 d.heinbigner@shaw.ca
SASK. LAND FOR SALE. UP FOR BIDS 2014, Dinsmore, SK. 8 quarters of prime Sask. land in the RM of Milden. Call for a complete bidding package. ID#1100169. Grain Farm Close To Estevan. (Offer pending). Large home, second yard, hip roof barn, shop, quonset, prime land, approx. 3178 acres, organic status. MLS® ID#2064. Best View in the Maple Creek area. 25 acres on a hill beside the highway on the way to the Cypress Hills Interprovincial Park. Bare land perfect for new construction, 2 wells, power and telep h o n e i n p l a c e , g o o d w at e r. M L S ® ID#479810. Real Estate Centre, phone 1-866-345-3414 or view website www.farmrealestate.com
Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate Signature Service 104 River St E, Moose Jaw, SK, S6H 1L7 (306) 692-9999 www.farmandranch.ca FOR SALE OR RENT: RM of Milton #292, NW-17-30-27-W3rd; NE-17-30-27-W3rd; SE-17-30-27-W3rd; SW-19-30-27-W3rd, oil revenue $8600; SE-19-30-27-W3rd; NW-30-30-27-W3rd; NE-30-30-27-W3rd; SW-31-30-27-W3rd, oil revenue $2800; NW-24-30-28-W3rd, oil revenue $12,800; NE-23-30-28-W3rd, oil revenue $2600, chemfallow; SE-35-29-27-W3 chemfallow and 60 acres of alfalfa. Offers with or without oil revenue. Highest or any bid not necessarily accepted. Mail bids before Feb. 18, 2014 to: Box 63, Marengo, SK. S0L 2K0. Phone: 306-460-7601.
RM 241 CALDER, CATTLE OPERATION by owner. Nine quarters deeded in grass and hay. Full cattle facilities, calving barn, shelters, Morand handling system, etc. Will handle 200 plus cows. 3 bdrm. 1-1/2 storey house, exc. water, $1,100,000. Near Wroxton SK. 306-786-2121, 306-621-8551
SMILEY, SK. RM PRAIRIEDALE #321, farm/ranch/recreation, 152 acres for sale, close to town on pavement, lots of water, oil leases, house and buildings, $250,000. Farm antiques available. 403-986-3280.
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.
MINERAL RIGHTS. We will purchase and or lease your mineral rights. LAND FOR SALE or RENT in the RM of 1-877-269-9990. cndfree@telusplanet.net Emerald #277. Serviced, treed yardsite. RM OF 442 Manitou Lake SE-03-46-26-W3 N-1/2-NE-30-29-13-W2. Contact Bev farmland, canola last crop, 145 cultivated acres. 306-821-7541, Neilburg, SK. FOR SALE BY TENDER: 3 adjoining quar- Shewchuk at 306-576-2017, Wishart, SK. ters of farmland, in the RM of Chesterfield #261. 2 of these quarters lie beside hwy. #21, 3-5 miles South of Eatonia, SK. Bids will be received on any quarter or any combination of quarters. Closing date for bidding is February 10, 2014. Highest or any offer not necessarily accepted. SW-35-25-25-W3, (approx. 110 cult.); NE-26-25-25-W3 (approx. 120 cult.); SW-26-25-25-W3 (approx. 150 cult.). SubL a m p m a n W es t - 7,500 excellent cultiva ted a cres for s a le, plus $95,000 a nnua l mit bids to: Ken Martin, Box 103, Eatonia, s urfa ce lea s e. SK. S0L 0Y0. 306-967-2235 for more info.
FO R
S ALE
F AR M L AND F OR R E NT # o f QTR S
RM
2 7 20 16 12 10 14 9 13
96 99 184 213 214 224 284 394 520
Plea se go to our w eb site to view a d d itiona l sm a ller p a rc els of la nd for rent (1 to 3 Qua rters). F o r m o re in fo rm a tio n p lea s e vis it
w w w .s h e ppa rd re a lty.ca Co n ta ct: H a rry S h e ppa rd S utto n G ro up - R e s ults R e a lty R e gin a , S K E-M a il: s a s kla n d 4re n t@ gm a il.co m Pho n e: 306-352-1866 F a x: 306-352-1816
FARM LAN D FO R REN T
R E A D Y TO M O VE H O M E S
Land For Sale
LAND FOR RENT: RM 99 Caledonia E-1/2-32-11-19-W2, soil Class B, $85/acre Submit bids by February 15, 2014 by fax: 306-775-2045. Inquiries to Don at HCI Ventures Ltd., 306-775-2049. Regina, SK.
RM 331 -N W -23-34-31-W 1 •S W -30-34-30-W 1 •S E-26-35-30-W 1 •S E-22-35-30-W 1 •S W -22-35-30-W 1 •S W -19-35-31-W 1 •S E-19-35-31-W 1 •N W -19-35-31-W 1 •S W -18-35-31-W 1 •S W -16-35-31-W 1 •N W -36-34-32-W 1 •S W -11-35-31-W 1 •N W -2-35-31-W 1 •N E-2-35-31-W 1 •S E-35-34-31-W 1 •N E-26-34-31-W 1 •S W -26-34-31-W 1 •S E-26-34-31-W 1 RM 96 – N E-19-10-11-W 2 •N W -19-10-11-W 2 •S E-19-10-11-W 2 •S W -19-10-11-W 2 •N E-32-10-11-W 2 •S E-32-10-11-W 2 •S W -33-10-11-W 2 •S W -26-10-12-W 2 -C a ll N o rm a n a t3 06 -5 70-195 1 RM 213 – N W -19-23-3-W 2 •N E-19-23-3-W 2 •S E-19-23-3-W 2 • N W -18-23-3-W 2 •S W -18-23-3-W 2 •N W -25-23-4-W 2 •N E-25-23-4-W 2 • S E-25-23-4-W 2 RM 275 – S W -24-28-9-W 2 RM 184 – N E-5-20-4-W 2 RM 335 – N E-35-34-9-W 2 • S E-30-34-8-W 2 • N W -32-34-8-W 2 RM 69 -N W -36-9-21-W 2 •N E-36-9-21-W 2 -C a ll N o rm a n a t3 06 -5 70-195 1 RM 185 – S E-29-19-9-W 2 •N W -28-19-9-W 2 RM 70 – N E-31-08-22-W 2 •N W -31-08-22-W 2 •S W -31-08-22-W 2 C a ll N o rm a n a t3 06 -5 70-195 1 RM 246 – N E-3-26-11-W 2 •N E-23-26-11-W 2 •N W -1-26-10-W 2 •S E-12-26-10-W 2 •S W -12-26-10-W 2
n orm a n l@ m a x crop.ca | 3 06-201-785 8 | 800-610-6128
F IV E G R EAT S AS K ATC H EW AN P R O P ER TIES
M oos e Ja w S K . - excellent gra in fa rm 60 km S outhea s t of M oos e Ja w . 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. G ood hom e, s hop, 110,000 s teel bins bus hel ca pa city. $3,250,000. E s tev a n , S K . - 4,500 a cres E a s t of E s teva n for s a le. L a rge ra nch w ith oil a nd gra vel revenue. $53,000 a nnua l s urfa ce lea s e revenue. Rock G len S K . - 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 hop, a nd ba rns . Field m a chinery a nd lives tock not includ ed , but a va ila ble. S w ift C u rren t, S K . - E xcellent 2,240 cultiva ted a cres S E of S w ift C urrent. Reg in a - W AN TE D : 2,000-5,000 a cres crop la nd w ithin 30 m inutes of Regina . Alb erta /S K . - W AN TE D : 5,000 -15,000 a cres cropla nd .
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 5 P R O P ER TIES L IS TED .
L A N E
R E A L TY
For the m ost VALU E & EXPO SU RE that you deserve w hen selling your farm or ranch property,contact one of our Farm & Ranch Specialists today! B O B L A N E - B rok er (306) 569-3380 J A SO N SE L IN G E R - R egina/South C entral
(306) 539-7975
E D B E U T L E R - Y ork ton/W hitew ood
(306) 620-7260
J A SO N B E U T L E R - Y ork ton/E stevan
(306) 735-7811
G A R T H H E N D R Y - M oose J aw /South C entral
(306) 631-0802
J E F F H E G L A N D - Sask atoon/P rince A lbert
(306) 270-9050
D O U G J E N SE N - M elville/R aym ore
(306) 621-9955
ST A N H A L L - D avidson/Strasbourg/H um boldt
(306) 725-7826
M O R W E N N A SU T T E R - M elfort/W adena
(306) 327-7129
M U R R AY M U R D O C H - O utlook /R osetow n
(306) 858-8000
D A R R E L L H E R A U F - D airy/Poultry
(306) 761-1863
D A L E M U R D O C H - Sw ift C urrent/K indersley
(306) 774-6100
D A R R E N SA N D E R - N orth B attleford/N W Sask .
(306) 441-6777
S a s ka tchew a n’s Fa rm & Ra nch S pecia lis ts ™ 185 Regis tered S a les In 2013!
Ph : 3 06 -56 9 -3 3 8 0
W ITH O V ER 30 YEARS IN THE BUS IN ES S “Now representing purchasers from across Canada,and around the w orld!”
Visitour w ebsite at:
w w w.la nerea lty.com
to view currentlis tings a nd virtua l tours
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
N O FEES N O CO M M IS S IO N S
PURCHASING: SINGLE TO LARGE BLOCKS OF LAND. PREM IUM PRICES PAID W ITH QUICK PAYM ENT. 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...............................75 1⁄4’s S o u th Ea s t.......................40 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
RENT BACK AVAILABLE
Ca ll DOUG
3 06 -9 55-226 6 Em a il: s a s kfa rm s @ s h a w .ca
L AND F OR SAL E O ver25,000 acres forsale throu ghou tS ask. Visit
w w w.s hep p a rd rea lty.ca
TIM HAMMOND REALTY. For Sale by Tender RM 217 Lipton. 6 quarters with 809 cultivated. 2 well treed yard sites, one on t h e S W- 2 1 - 2 3 - 1 3 - W 2 , o n e o n t h e NW-22-23-13-W2, both with power, phone and a total of 4150 bu. grain storage. Total farmland Assessment 487,100 (avg. 79,933/quarter). Tender deadline is 5:00 PM, February 12, 2014. MLS #485201. Call Alex Morrow, 306-434-8780, http://Rumancik.TimHammond.ca L AND
F OR S AL E BY TE ND E R
RM OF BIG QUIL L N O. 308 S E-26-31-18-W 2
In clu d es 143 cu ltiva ted a cres .
S W -26-31-18-W 2
In clu d es 146 cu ltiva ted a cres .
S E-33-31-18-W 2
In clu d es 155 cu ltiva ted a cres .
S W -34-31-18-W 2
in clu d es a S teel Qu o n s et, 7 W es teel Ro s co Bin s w ith w o o d flo o r, 2 W es teel Ro s co Bin s o n ho p p ers , 1 p a in ted /w eld ed S teel Ho p p er Bin , S m a ll Rigid F ra m e S ho p , elect rica l s ervice a n d 130 cu ltiva ted a cres .
W -1/2 o f N W (LS D 12&13) 34-31-18-W 2
In clu d in g 70 cu ltiva ted a cres .
RM OF PRAIRIE ROS E N O. 309 S E-26-32-19-W 2
Ha yla n d
M INERAL RIG HT S NO T INC LUDED.
In teres ted pa rties s ho u ld s u b m it ten d ers ON OR BEFORE FEBRUARY 28 , 2014 Ad d res s ed to : K o ha ly, Ela s h & L u d w ig L a w Firm L L P 1312 - 4th S treet, Es teva n , S K S 4A 0X 2 306 -6 34-36 31 F o r in fo rm a tio n co n ta ctBren d a Reiter a t 78 0-9 9 8 -78 57 Or Neil W a lla ce a t011-31-229 -506 -9 39 All ten d ers s ho u ld b e in w ritin g a n d s ho u ld b e a cco m p a n ied b y a d ep o s ito f10% o f the ten d ered a m o u n tp a ya b le to K o ha ly, E la s h & L u d w ig L a w F irm L L P. in tru s t. Highestor a ny tend er notnec essa rily a c c ep ted . RM of LOREBURN #254: NW35-26-4-W3 2013 assess 76,600; SW6-27-4-W3, 2013 assess 79,900; SE6-27-4-W3, 2013 assess 84,100. All adjacent to Hwy. #44 truck route (Skudesnes Road) SE6 has yardsite w/natural gas. Water line and power available. For more info. contact Ken 250-837-4572 or email kjb01@sasktel.net Taking written offers until Feb. 28th, 2014. Ken and Jan Brown, 1757 Piotrowski Rd, Revelstoke BC V0E 2S1.
to view all ou rcu rren tlistin gs. H arry S h eppard S u tton G rou p - R esu lts R ealty R egin a, S K .
IR R IGATE D L AND F OR R E NT
em ail h a rry@ sh eppa rdrea lty.ca
14 Qu a rters in the Ou tlo o k, S K a rea . Ap p ro x 10 Qu a rters in the E lb o w , S K . a rea . M o s tly p ivo tirriga tio n . In clu d es irriga tio n eq u ip m en ta n d gra in s to ra ge.
306-530-8035
RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure membrane system; 2000 gal./day. No more bottled water.The Water Clinic, www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561.
P h . H a rry S h e ppa rd a t306-5 30-8035 S utto n G ro up - R e s ults R e a lty, R e gin a , S K. h a rry@ s h e ppa rd re a lty.ca w w w .s h e ppa rd re a lty.ca
S AL E OF F ARM BY TEN DER The follow ing la nd, together w ith hou se, ba rn, Q u onset a nd gra in bins w ill be offered for sa le by tender u nder the direction ofJoel A . H esje, Q .C ., Ba rrister a nd S olicitor:
N W 1⁄ 4 2-4 2-15 W 2 (RM of Ba r rierV a lley N o. 397) S ec 3-4 2-15 W 2 (RM of Ba rrierV a lley N o. 397) W 1⁄ 2 10-4 2-15 W 2 (RM of Ba r rierV a lley N o. 397) N W 9-4 2-15 W 2 (RM of Ba rrierV a lley N o. 397) N E 24 -4 1-15 W 2 (RM of Ba rrierV a lley N o. 397) 1.A llbids m ust be in w riting and subm itted by registered m ailor delivered personally in a sealed envelope at the address below by 5:00 p.m .on Friday, February 21, 2014. 2.Each bid shallbe accom panied by a certified cheque or solicitor’s trust cheque in the am ount of10% ofthe bid.Ifthe bid is not successful, the deposit w illbe returned to the bidder. 3.W ithin 15 days ofthe opening ofbids, the successfulbidder shallprovide either: (a) the balance ofthe purchase price; or (b) paym ent ofthe sum equalto the difference betw een the balance ofthe purchase price and any m ortgage financing, together w ith an unconditional and unequivocalletter ofcom m itm ent from a recognized financialinstitution to the m ortgagee to finance the successfulbidder’s purchase ofthe land for the price stated in the bid, w ith the m ortgage financing to be advanced w ithin 30 days ofthe opening ofbids. 4.Ifthe successfulbidder does not com plete the purchase on the term s and w ithin the tim e specified, the deposit w illbe forfeited. 5.The land shallbe sold subject only to such taxes as accrue due after D ecem ber 31, 2013. 6.The land m ay be sold as separate parcels.Ifbidding on m ore than one parcel, the bid should specify the am ount bid for each parceland w hether the bid is conditionalupon being successfulon allparcels included in the bid. 7.The highest or any bid m ay not necessarily be accepted. 8.Further inform ation including the fulllegaldescription ofthe land and description ofthe buildings and im provem ents on the land m ay be obtained from : M cKercher L L P 374 -3rd Avenu e S ou th S a ska toon, S K. S 7K 1M 5 A ttention: Joel A . H esje, Q .C . Telephone: (306)653-2000 Fa csim ile: (306)653-2669
FOR SALE RM OF KELVINGTON #366, NE-18-38-12-W2. Cert. Organic 159 acres, 120 open. Submit offers by Feb. 15, 2014. Highest or any offer not necessarily accepted. Clearly state any buyer conditions. Send signed offer to Brian/Brenda Finch, Box 566, Kelvington, SK., S0A 1W0. Fax 306-327-4379. FOR SALE OR RENT in RM of Milton #292, NE-24-30-28-W3rd, oil revenue $5700; SE-13-30-29-W3rd, chemfallow. RM of Antelope Park #322, SE-7-31-27-W3rd, 120 acres seeded grass, 40 acres native grass; NE-7-31-27-W3rd; NW-8-31-27-W3rd, 10,000 bushel bin included. Offers with or without oil revenue. Highest or any bid not necessarily accepted. Mail bids before Feb. 18, 2014 to: Box 67, Marengo, SK. S0L 2K0. Phone: 306-460-7898. RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure membrane system; 2000 gal./day. Eliminates: Tannin (color). The Water Clinic, www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. 16 QUARTERS GRAINLAND FOR RENT/ Sale, RM of Livingston #331. Can be rented or purchased in smaller parcels. Contact Justin Yin at 306-230-1588, Sutton Group Norland Realty, Saskatoon, SK: Email: info@JustinYin.com For land details visit: www.JustinYin.com FARMLAND FOR SALE: RM of Lajord. NE-27-13-18-2 ext 0, NW-27-13-18-2 ext 0. January, 2014 possession. Canola stubble, no storage, well farmed, $700,000 OBO. Contact 306-536-6611, Regina, SK. RM OF REFORD: 327 acres, 80 verified to have gravel, possibly more; 188 acres cult. w/60 planted to wheat, remaining cult. acres seeded to tame grass, balance is partly fenced native pasture. 2300 sq. ft. bungalow built 1985. MLS®470122. Call Wally Lorenz, Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800, North Battleford, SK. www.remaxbattlefords.com WANTED: LAND TO rent and/or buy in the surrounding areas of Moose Jaw, Marquis, Chamberlain and Craik. Ph 306-631-8454. RM 184: Approx. 160 acres farm land. Phone 306-773-7379. John or Joel Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., www.farmsask.com RM OF BATTLE RIVER: 2 quarters within the town of Battleford limits. Unlimited development potential, beautiful rolling hills. For more information on MLS® 474403 call Dorothy Lehman, Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800 or 306-441-7782. RM ROCANVILLE #151: 6 quarters, 856 cultivated acres, SE-19-16-32-W1st, SW-20-16-32-W1st, NE-13-16-33-W1st, NW-13-16-33-W1st, SE-23-16-33-W1st, SW-24-16-33-W1st. Total assessment 486,700. Jason 403-820-0566, Rocanville. 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. Also an amazing big game hunting area. For info on this EXCL Listing 188, call Lloyd Ledinski. I am in need of grain land in most of my trading a r e a s . R e / M a x o f t h e B at t l e fo r d s , 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK.
M e a dow N orth Re a lty Ltd.
3
JOHN HARRISON
M obile: 306-839-7770 E-m ail: john.m nr@sasktel.net H om e: 306-839-4411 FAX: 306-839-4439 P.O. Box 115 Pierceland, SK S0M 2K0
w w w .m eadow north.ca REAL ESTATE AUCTION
JDT PROPERTIES - WHITEWOOD, SK Saturday, February 15, 2014 - 1:30 p.m. WhiteWood Legion hall Sale features 9 deeded quarters and 1 leased quarter of produc-tive farm land in the R.M. of Willowdale and R.M. of Silverwood TO BE SOLD BY MULTI PARCEL BIDDING SYSTEM • Parcels # 1 thru #5 will be offered in separate auction • Parcels # 6 thru #9 will be offered in separate auction • All quarters are fenced • 6 quarters are sown to tame hay and pasture • 3 quarters are summerfallow • Lease quarter is native grass R.M. OF WILLOWDALE Parcel # 1 NW ¼ 3-16-3-2 Parcel # 2 SW ¼ 6-16-3-2 • Includes yard site with 2 storey house, barn and heated shop Parcel # 3 SE ¼ 6-16-3-2 R.M. OF SILVERWOOD Parcel # 4 NW ¼ 31-15-3-2 • Sells with right to lease SW ¼ 29-15-3-2 Parcel # 5 NE ¼ 31-15-3-2 Parcel # 6 SW ¼ 31-15-3-2 Parcel # 7 SE ¼ 31-15-3-2 Parcel # 8 NW ¼ 30-15-3-2 Parcel # 9 NE ¼ 30-15-3-2 FOR INFORMATION OR TO VIEW CALL JACK 403-888-0045 OR 204-264-1301
L OOK IN G F OR L AN D
RM 126: Approx 640 acres pasture, full set of buildings. John or Joel Cave. Edge Realty Ltd. 306-773-7379, www.farmsask.com
Ca ll PO TZU S LTD.
RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure membrane system; 2000 gal./day. No more water softeners. The Water Clinic, www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561.
w /Aggrega te Potentia l In Sa ska tchew a n Phone: 306-782-74 23 Fa x: 306-786-6909 Em a il: info@ potzu s.com
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 GRAINLAND SW24-03-09-W2nd in RM of regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779. Estevan. Seven miles west of Estevan, off Hwy. #39, $200,000. 306-634-7949. FOR SALE IN RM PRAIRIE ROSE: 150 cultivated acres, NW-31-33-18-W2, near 3 QUARTERS in the RM of Parkdale. 370 BHP Potash mine. Assessment at $50,200. acres cultivated, includes 900 sq. ft. home, Easy access off Hwy 6. Make an offer. Call 14,000 bu. grain storage and 2 small 306-287-3785, Watson, SK. shops. Mike Janostin Realty Executives at: 306-481-5574 or www.mikejanostin.com Email mikejanostin@realtyexecutives.com FOR SALE BY TENDER: Located in RM of Waverly #44. NE-7-5-6-W3; SE-7-5-6-W3; SW-7-5-6-W3; NE-6-5-6-W3; SE-6-5-6-W3 Land has 5 dugouts and access to creeks. Prospective purchasers must rely on their own research of the property to determine acreage, condition, improvements, and assessment. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Please submit certified cheque for 5% of bid with tender, payable to Lewans & Ford in Trust, and clearly mark envelope “McCrea Land Tender”. Tenders will close Feb. 7, 2014, 2:00 PM. 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 FOR RENT: 8 QUARTERS- RM of Kingsley 124. One quarter pasture, approx. 1100 cultivated acres ready for seeding. Contact 306-735-7250, Whitewood, SK. DWEIN TRASK REALTY INC. RM of Rudy #284, all of Sec-36-30-06-W3, West of Hanley, SK. Approx. 590 acres cult., C.I. soil, Class L and M, FMV 255,000. Level and stone-free with renter available, $785,900. Call Dwein today 306-221-1035. LAND FOR SALE, RM of Kingsley #124: Written tenders only will be received for SE-26-13-05-W2, 160 cultivated acres (2013 crop was flax); NE-26-13-05-W2, 140 cultivated acres (2013 crop was flax); NW-26-13-05-W2, 126 cultivated acres (2013 crop was oats). Quarter sections will not be sold separately. Submit written tenders to: Randy and Mary Lou Seier, Box 783, Kipling, SK. S0G 2S0. Deadline for tenders February 20th, 2014. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. APPROX. 5400 ACRES prime SW Sask. farmland, includes buildings, bins and 2 yardsites. Call Laural Hunt 306-630-3910, Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate Signature Service.
16 ,000 a cre s h igh q ua lity gra in la n d Lus e la n d Are a $
3 4,03 5,000 C a ll Jim o r S h e rry to d a y
3 06 -46 3 -6 6 6 7
o r e m a il fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n
re m a xkin de rs le y@ s a s kte l.n e t ®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
LAND FOR SALE: RM of Good Lake #274: 1120 acres, 30 mins. North of Yorkton, SK., $1125/acre, all within close proximity. Call 306-783-3914 or 306-621-7973 LAND FOR SALE: RM OF HARRIS, NE 11-32-11-W3, NW 11-32-11-W3. For more info., contact Heather Love at Busse Law Professional Corp. before February 15, 2014. 306-948-3346, Biggar, SK. Email busselaw.ofc@sasktel.net QUARTER SW-34-35-32-W1, 16 miles NE of Norquay, SK. 115 cultivated, 45 forest/creek, assess. $59,900. 306-781-4988, 306-537-3772 cell, Pilot Butte, SK. THREE QUARTERS Jedburgh SK, grid road, 2 fenced, 1 in grass, corrals, shed, good well. Offers. 306-627-3445, Blumenhof, SK
WANTED: 200 - 300 head cow/calf ranch in SK or BC. Can start with partial purchase and work with someone wanting to retire. No agents please. Box 2005, c/o The For details on Multi-Parcel selling call LAND FOR SALE: RM Mountain View. Western Producer, Saskatoon, SK S7K 2C4 Ross at 204-877-3834 NW-10-32-16 assessment 74,900, NE- 2 QUARTERS FOR RENT IN RM 187, 10-32-16 assess. 85,800. For more info., south of Dysart, SK., 250 acres, $42/acre TOLL FREE 1-877-617-2537 call Stuart prior to January 31, 2014 at OBO. Call 306-269-7791. VISIT OUR WEB SITE FOR FULL LISTING Busse Law Professional Corp., Biggar, SK., AND PHOTOS 306-948-3346, busselaw@sasktel.net WANTED: LAND TO RENT in RM 261 www.rosstaylorauction.com Chesterfield or neighboring areas. ConRM WAVERLY #44 and RM Mankota #45, t a c t F r a n c i s F a m i l y F a r m s , R y a n PL# 909917 near McCord, SK. NE-06-04-06-W3rd; 403-391-1728, Bill 306-463-9103 or Chris NE-07-04-06-W3rd; SE-18-04-06-W3rd; ONLINE LAND AUCTION: NW-35-9-11-W2 NW-01-04-07-W3rd; SE-03-04-07-W3rd; 403-597-0366, Mantario, SK. E-mail: quarter in RM of Griffin. PL #914816. Info SW-02-04-07-W3rd; NE-02-04-07-W3rd. ryan.francisfamilyfarms@outlook.com at paslawskiauctions.ca or 306-722-3752 Total assessed value 190,995. Sold as a WANTED: GRAIN LAND TO RENT, 25 Griffin Fillmore, SK. package. Please submit tenders: N. Wiens, m i l e r a d i u s o f R o u l e a u , S K . C a l l Box 45, Halbrite, SK. S0C 1H0. Ph./email 306-776-2600 or kraussacres@sasktel.net 306-458-2689, nj.wiens@sasktel.net Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. FARM/RANCH/RECREATION, buying or Tender close February 28, 2014. selling. Call Tom Neufeld 306-260-7838, Coldwell Banker ResCom Realty. RM 49: APPROX. 640 acres irrigation and dry land with buildings. 306-773-7379, FOR RENT FARMLAND, approx. 100 cult. John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd, Swift Current, acres, SW-33-17-17-W2. Located near RM SK. www.farmsask.com of Edenwold, SK. Info call: 480-998-1924.
ROSS TAYLOR AUCTION SERVICE
:$17(' SASKATCHEWAN FARMLAND
7HG &DZNZHOO³Anin Expert the Field
³
FARM LAND W ANTED
FOR CASH RENT by tender in RM Mountain View #318 and RM Winslow #319. N E - 1 4 - 3 3 - 1 9 - W 3 ; S W- 3 6 - 3 3 - 1 9 - W 3 ; SW-07-33-17-W3; NW-26-32-18-W3; SE-26-32-18-W3. Written offers to Skelton Turner Mescall Law Office, 314 Main Street, Box 1120, Rosetown, SK. S0L 2V0. Fax: 306-882-3969 by 5:00 PM Feb. 17, 2014. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Enquiries call 306-882-4244.
CLASSIFIED ADS 63
A solid understanding of Saskatchewan agricultural business built from years of farming and Ag. Industry involvement. Strong work ethic and exceptional customer service. Database of qualified buyers-both investors and local buyers.
Ted Cawkwell Agriculture Specialist BLUE CHIP REALTY
1-306-327-5148 www.tedcawkwell.com 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
S AL E OF F ARM BY TEN DER The follow ing la nd w ill be offered for sa le by tender u nder the direction ofJoel A . H esje, Q .C ., Ba rrister a nd S olicitor:
W
⁄ 2 29-4 2-16 W 2 (RM of Plea s a nt da le N o. 398)
1
N E 29-4 2-16 W 2 (RM of Plea s a ntda le N o. 398) S E 29-4 2-16 W 2 (RM of Plea s a ntda le No. 398) Crow n Lea s e 1.The lands contain aggregate deposits.The vendor m akes no representation as to the quantity or quality ofsuch deposits.Purchaser shallbe responsible for m aking their ow n assessm ent ofthe deposits. 2.A llbids m ust be in w riting and subm itted by registered m ailor delivered personally in a sealed envelope at the address below by 5:00 p.m .on Friday, February 21, 2014. 3.Each bid shallbe accom panied by a certified cheque or solicitor’s trust cheque in the am ount of10% ofthe bid.Ifthe bid is not successful, the deposit w illbe returned to the bidder. 4.W ithin 15 days ofthe opening ofbids, the successfulbidder shallprovide either: (a) the balance ofthe purchase price; or (b) paym ent ofthe sum equalto the difference betw een the balance ofthe purchase price and any m ortgage financing, together w ith an unconditional and unequivocalletter ofcom m itm ent from a recognized financialinstitution to the m ortgagee to finance the successfulbidder’s purchase ofthe land for the price stated in the bid, w ith the m ortgage financing to be advanced w ithin 30 days ofthe opening ofbids. 5.Ifthe successfulbidder does not com plete the purchase on the term s and w ithin the tim e specified, the deposit w illbe forfeited. 6.The land shallbe sold subject only to such taxes as accrue due after D ecem ber 31, 2013. 7.The land m ay be sold as separate parcels. Ifbidding on m ore than one parcel, the bid should specify the am ount bid for each parceland w hether the bid is conditionalupon being successfulon allparcels included in the bid. 8.The highest or any bid m ay not necessarily be accepted. 9.Further inform ation including the fulllegaldescription ofthe land m ay be obtained from : M cKercher L L P 374 -3rd Avenu e S ou th S a ska toon, S K. S 7K 1M 5 A ttention: Joel A . H esje, Q .C . Telephone: (306)653-2000 Fa csim ile: (306)653-2669
64 CLASSIFIED ADS
If you ’re sellin g la n d , plea se ca llP eter a t 3 06-3 4 7-83 28
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. 2008 DUTCH STAR 4304 Class A diesel pusher, 43’ long, 4 slides, beautiful cabinetry, rear bath and bedroom, washer and dryer, island king bed, mint! Stk# 4416 MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. $188,500. Call 1-866-346-3148 or shop Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: online 24/7 at: allandale.com www.maverickconstruction.ca PASTURE WANTED for at least 300 head, anywhere in Alberta. Phone 780-933-2585.
CERTIFIED METCALFE and Meredith. Call 2010 WOODMIZER LT40 hyd. bandsaw Greenshields Seeds Ltd., 306-524-2155, sawmill, can be seen working, c/w sharp- 306-524-4339, Semans, SK. ener and tooth setter, $18,000 OBO. Phone 403-638-6536, Caroline, AB. WOOD-MIZER PORTABLE SAWMILLS, eight models, options and accessories. FOUNDATION, REGISTERED, CERTIFIED, AC Transcend Durum. Ace Crop Care Ltd., 1-877-866-0667. www.woodmizer.ca 306-831-8963, Rosetown, SK.
ELIAS SCALES MFG., several different ways to weigh bales and livestock; Platform scales for industrial use as well, nonelectric, no balances or cables (no weigh like it). Shipping arranged. 306-445-2111, North Battleford, SK. www.eliasscales.com
RM OF CARON #162, pasture for rent SW-01-T16-R29-W2. Interested parties call 306-631-4782, Moose Jaw, SK. AVAILABLE FOR THE 2014 Season: 12-1/2 quarters of tame pasture and one quarter farmland for rent near Melville, SK. All quarters are adjoining, individually fenced with good barbed wire and have deep dugouts. Approx 400 - 450 cow/calf capacity. Working corrals and a solar water system 2014 TUSCANY 36MQ Class A dsl. pusher are also available. Call 306-728-3488 or 37’.9” long, 360 HP ISB, Cummins turbo dsl. eng., 4 slide-outs, king bed, fireplace, email: zlranch@yourlink.ca lar ge over-size shower. Stk# 8418. LOOKING FOR PASTURE in Southern Al- $192,000 CND. Call 1-866-346-3148 or berta or Southern Sask. Long term or short shop online 24/7 at: allandale.com RM LEASK #464, Ranch Property, 4499 term. Will pay top dollar for right location. acres all connected except one quarter. 403-362-0672. Approx. 3164 acres cult. tame hay pasture mix. 3 and 4 wire fences with treated PASTURE FOR RENT: For 300 cow/calf posts. 36x51 straight wall shop, with att. pairs or 500 yearlings. 4-wire fence, not 20x36 ranch hand quarters, heated with grazed for 5 years. Lots of grass, water, in-floor nat. gas. Power, sewer, well and good corrals, supervised daily. North of lots of in pasture water. Ample bush shel- Biggar, SK. Nathan Bugler, 306-937-7445. ter. Property is mainly stone free. MLS® 468365. For viewing call Lloyd Ledinski, LOOKING TO RENT pasture for 100 Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800, cow/calf pairs, for 2014 grazing season, in South Central Sask area. Ph 306-642-4022 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK. 2014 TUSCANY 44MT, Class A diesel pushFOR SALE BY TENDER: RM of Orkney PASTURE FOR 60 Pair or 100 yearlings. er, 44’.11” long, 450 HP ISL Cummins turNo. 244: NW- and SW-13-26-6-W2nd and Crossfenced, good water, checked daily. bo diesel engine, 3 slide-outs, full high SE- 24-26-6-W2nd, with 3- 2000 bu. West- 306-256-7087, Cudworth, SK. gloss porcelain throughout. Stk #8214. eel Rosco steel bins. Conditions of Offers: WANTED: PASTURE TO RENT in south $294,000. Call 1-866-346-3148 or shop All offers to be submitted in writing on or east Sask. or south west Manitoba. Phone online 24/7 at: allandale.com before January 31, 2014. Highest or any 306-452-7605, Wauchope, SK. offer not necessarily accepted. Mineral rights not included. No offers will be considered which are subject to financing. 2003 HARLEY DAVIDSON Ultra Classic AnPlease forward all bids and enquiries to: niversary, mint, has reverse gear, asking Beaty Beaubier, Q.C. at Stevenson Hood WANTED: 1) IRRIGATED or dry land $12,500. 306-247-4808, Unity, SK. Thornton Beaubier LLP, 500- 123- 2nd Outlook/ Hanley area. 2). Land in RM of Ave. South, Saskatoon, SK., S7K 7E6. Hoodoo. 3). Bushland. 4) Natural pasture. Bill Nesteroff 306-497-2668 Re/Max Sas306-244-0132, bbeaubier@shtb-law.com katoon, email: billnesteroff@sasktel.net CLOSE-OUT SALE: 2012 Arctic Cat M1100 RM OF MERVIN- 2 quarters of farmland turbo, 500 miles, $11,995. CDN; 2013 AC for tender, 1 deeded, other Crown lease, WANTED TO PURCHASE FARMLAND XF1100 turbo, high country, 650 miles, Approx. 240 cultivated acres total. Fenced with lots of oil wells and battery sites on $11,995. CDN; 2011 AC M800 1400, $8995 property. 780-499-2367, Edmonton, AB. perimeter. Excellent forage crop potential CDN; 2007 AC M1000 Snopro, 900 miles, or use as tame pasture. Adjacent 60 acres mint! 2012 Ski-Doo Summit 800, $8995 also available under cash lease. Details at: CDN. Call Swenson RV, 1-800-735-5846, www.cloverhilltender.ca Tender closes Minot, ND www.swensonrv.com Feb. 11, 2014. Phone Vern McClelland, VARIOUS SIZES AVAILABLE, West of Saskatoon, SK. Call 306-384-4512, leave a TOY BOX II large ice fishing shacks, Re/Max Lloydminster, 306-821-0611. message. 80”Hx97”L. While supplies last!!! Call RM OF BIGGAR #347, Taking offers until 306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228. Feb. 20th, 2014. SW-12-36-17-W3rd; 155 8.9 ACRES, 1-1/2 storey home handyman www.hold-onindustries.com cultivated acres. Assessment 101,100. Call special, foundation good, stone veranda, 45x50’ shop w/20x14’ door, well treed, 1970 SNOWCRUISER MODEL 2000, Bob 306-658-2042. well graveled, no high water issues, Craig- stored inside, original seat, wide track, LAND FOR SALE in RM 250 Last Mountain myle, AB. area. 2 miles off #9 Hwy, good taking offers. 306-298-4536, Orkney, SK. Valley, NE-1/4-13-26-22-W2 approx. 90 neighbours, beautiful setting in the Hand- PARTING OUT Polaris snowmobiles, 1985 cultivated acres. FMV 55,900. For more hills, 15 minutes to Hanna, 45 from Drum- to 2005. Edfield Motors Ltd., phone: info. ph. 306-484-4443 or 306-725-7413. heller. Please call for photos and more info 306-272-3832, Foam Lake, SK. All offers mailed to Sheila Wilde, 38 Searle 403-358-8933, nelsontruckandtractor.com PARTS FOR VINTAGE snowmobiles, 1990 Bay, Regina, SK. S4R 7L9. Highest or any RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure and older. Call Don at 780-755-2258, offer not necessarily accepted. membrane system; 2000 gal./day. No Wainwright, AB. doncole@telus.net FOR SALE OR RENT in RM of Milton 292, more water softeners. The Water Clinic, SE-21-30-28-W3, NW-27-30-28-W3. 290 www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. acres cultivated. Gas revenue $4300/year. RM 137. APPROX. 40 acres w/2 houses, Submit written tenders to PO Box 277, quonset, adjoins City of Swift Current on Medicine Hat, AB. T1A 7G1. Closing date Hwy #4 South. 306-773-7379, John or Feb. 15, 2014. Highest or any tender not Joel Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Current, necessarily accepted. Info. 403-580-1053. SK. www.farmsask.com RM OF LOREBURN, SK, taking offers until 1196 SQ. FT. 3 bdrm. house on 10 acres, Feb. 28th on Section 21-26-5-W3. Total 1.6 kms east of Lintlaw, SK. Nat. gas heat, FULLY FURNISHED PARK model trailer in assesement 307,100. Approx. 635 cult. newer shingles, energy efficient furnace, Apache junction, AZ. Available March and April, $1200/mo. Call Glen 306-795-2806. acres. Phone: 306-867-3716. 3/4 finished basement, vinyl siding and large deck, c/w fridge, stove, microwave, W&D. Asking $175,000. 306-327-7433. 20 ACRE YARD next to 40 hunting CrownFARM FOR SALE: Avonlea, SK. 640 acres in land quarters. House, barn with hayloft. one block, 488 acres of cultivated land, Good water. 204-858-2555, Hartney, MB. 152 acres of pasture w/dugout. 7 grain bins, 3 steel, 2 with hopper bottoms, 4 plywood; 24x40 shop/garage; 32x60 cattle shed; older 2 bdrm, 1-1/2 bath house w/newer shingles, well water system, large yard overlooking scenic valley. Located 2 miles north and 2 miles east of Avonlea, SK., RM of Elmthorpe: Section 36, Twp 12, Range 23-W2, known as Jake 2005 YUKON XL Denali, 7 passenger, fully Jaschinsky farm. Close to Dunnett Dame loaded. Please call John at 403-382-1963 Provincial Park and Long Creek Golf Fort Macleod, AB. Course. Offer to include all land and build- ARGO’S: 2011 8 wheel, tracks, winch, ings, bids accepted. Include name, ad- canopy, 169 kms, $17,500; 2009 8 wheel, dress and phone number. Possession date winch, 600 kms, $9500. 306-563-8765. April 16th, 2014. For info contact L.S. Schikowsky, Lethbridge AB. 403-327-5631.
CERTIFIED #1 AC STRONGFIELD. Wiens Seed Farm, call Brennan at 306-377-2002, Herschel, SK.
CERTIFIED CDC ORRIN. Berscheid Bros. Seeds, 306-368-2602, Lake Lenore, SK. CERTIFIED AND REG. Metcalfe, Copeland, Newdale, Meredith barley. Frederick Seeds, 306-287-3977, Watson, SK. CERTIFIED AC MORGAN and CDC SO-1 Oats: High germination and low disease. Call Wilfing Farms Ltd. 306-236-6811 or 306-236-7797, Meadow Lake, SK. E-mail: rjwilfing@sasktel.net WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Certified CDC Meadow yellow peas. Call 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK.
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: REG., CERT. CDC MEREDITH, AC Metcalfe, 9 9 % g e r m . Te r r e B o n n e S e e d F a r m 306-921-8594, 306-752-4810, Melfort, SK.
A C ® N ew da le 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 B U R C K S EED S StarC ity,SK..................306-863-4377
1-877-791-1045 w w w .fp gen etics .ca
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 etics .ca
SORGARD SEEDS, Leggett, Souris, CDC Baler feed oats. Call 306-896-2236, E-mail: s e e d s @ s o rg a rd s e e d s . c o m Churchbridge, SK. CERTIFIED AND REG. Souris, Leggett. Frederick Seeds, 306-287-3977, Watson, SK. FOUNDATION, CERTIFIED Leggett, Souris. Ardell Seeds, Vanscoy, SK, 306-668-4415.
WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Cert. AC MorSORGARD SEEDS, Feed Barleys: Cow- gan, Souris, Triactor, milling oats; CDC boy and Conlon. 306-896-2236, Church- Baler forage oats 306-752-4060 Melfort SK bridge, SK. seeds@sorgardseeds.com FDN., REG., CERT. AC Morgan. Terre WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Cert. CDC B o n n e S e e d F a r m 3 0 6 - 9 2 1 - 8 5 9 4 , Meredith, CDC Copeland, AC Metcalfe, 306-752-4810, Melfort, SK. 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK. CERTIFIED SOURIS AND Triactor. Northland Seeds Inc. 306-324-4315, Margo, SK. CERTIFIED AC MEREDITH, AC Metcalfe, CDC Copeland malt barley. Conlon, FDN, REG. AND CERTIFIED #1 CDC Orrin, Sundre feed barley. Order early for max Leggett. Fenton Seed Farm Ltd., Tisdale, discounts. Visa/MC. www.llseeds.ca SK. 306-873-5438. 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK C D C B OY E R , CERT., early maturity, FOUNDATION, REGISTERED and/or Certi- straight cut, 99% germ., 98% vigor. Stoll’s fied: CDC Copeland; AC Metcalfe, CDC Seed Barn 306-493-2534, Delisle, SK. Meredith, CDC Kindersley, Legacy. Berscheid Bros Seeds, Lake Lenore, SK. 306-368-2602. REGISTERED CERTIFIED MEREDITH, germ 99%, vigour 96%; Certified Copeland, high germ and vigour. Redman Seed Farm, 306-324-4235, 306-272-7878, Margo, SK. CERTIFIED CDC AUSTENSON high yielding s e e d . E n n i s S e e d s , G l e n avo n , S K . , 306-429-2793. CERTIFIED CDC MEREDITH, Newdale, AC Metcalfe, CDC Copeland, Legacy, CDC McGwire, CDC Cowboy, CDC Austenson. Va n B u rc k S e e d s , S t a r C i t y, S K ., 306-863-4377.
Malt Barley/Feed Grains/Pulses
O ffe rs e xce p tio na l yie ld s, a co m p re he nsive d ise a se p a cka ge a nd go o d nu tritio na l q u a litie s. 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
1-877-791-1045 w w w .fp gen etics .ca
CERTIFIED SEABISCUIT. Greenshields Seeds, Semans, SK., 306-524-2155, 306-524-4339.
CERTIFIED SADASH WHEAT for sale. Phone Antelope Creek Ent. Ltd., 306-395-2652, Chaplin, SK. CERT. CDC UTMOST, Carberry, Cardale, AC Splendor, Pasteur, AC Enchant. Van Burck Seeds, Star City, SK., 306-863-4377. CERTIFIED PASTEUR, 94% germination, 0% Graminearum. Bailey Brothers Seeds 306-935-4702, Milden, SK. LARGE QUANTITY OF Certified Harvest wheat, wholesale pricing, selling in truck load lots only; Also, Certified Newdale 2row malt barley. Phone 204-683-2316, Inland Seed Corp., Binscarth, MB. CERTIFIED VESPER/ WASCADA midge resistant, Stettler, Carberry. Greenshields Seeds Ltd., Semans, SK., 306-524-2155, 306-524-4339. REG., CERT. AC Shaw VB, AC Vesper VB, C D C O s l e r. Te r r e B o n n e S e e d F a r m 306-921-8594, 306-752-4810, Melfort, SK. AC ANDREW CERTIFIED #1, 98% germination. Excellent quality! Nakonechny Seeds, Ruthilda, SK., Call 306-932-4409. M&M SEEDS LTD. has Certified No. 1 AC Goodeve VB, CDC Utmost VB and AC Shaw VB. Cash and volume discounts. 306-258-2219, St. Denis, 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: S A S K ATC H EW A N S O R G A R D S EED S C hurchbridge,SK......306-896-2236 H ER L E S EED FA R M W ilkie,SK......................306-843-2934 VA N BU R C K S EED S StarC ity,SK..................306-863-4377 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 etics .ca
CERTIFIED SHAW-AC DOMAIN MTW, AC Unity-Waskada MTW, AC Andrew high yielding wheat. Order early for max discounts. Visa/MC. www.llseeds.ca 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK. AC CONQUER VB (new) midge tolerant CPS. High yields, 0% Fusarium Gram. Wilkie, SK. 306-843-2934, www.herle.ca
Bin looking for higher yields? With Novozymes BioAg products like TagTeam®, JumpStart®, Optimize® and Cell-Tech®, we can help you increase your yield and get a better return on your investment!
best price/best delivery/best payment
Sign up with Novozymes and be entered to WIN THIS BIN! Licen s ed & bon d ed 1- 800- 2 58- 7434 ro ger@ seed - ex.co m CERT. AC METCALFE and CDC Meredith barley, excellent germ. and disease. 306-741-0475, Pambrun, SK.
RM OF KINDERSLEY: All of Section 26-30-23-W3rd, total assessment 232,900. Oil revenue approx. $8400 annually, Brad Edgerton 306-463-7357, Edge Realty Ltd.
FDN., REG., CERT., CDC Austenson, CDC Cowboy, CDC Copeland, AC Ranger. Ph. Ardell Seeds, Vanscoy, SK, 306-668-4415. CERT. #1 AC Metcalfe, CDC Meredith, CDC PolarStar. Wiens Seed Farm, call Brennan 306-377-2002, Herschel, SK.
RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure membrane system; 2000 gal./day. No more water softeners. The Water Clinic, www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. WATER problems? Multi-Pure membrane system. Never purchase or haul water or softener salt ever again! The Water Clinic, 2014 PALAZZO 33.2 Class A diesel pusher 1-800-664-2561, www.thewaterclinic.com 34’.8” long, 300 HP Cummins ISB dsl. eng., 2 slide-outs, dream booth dinette, sideLOCATED NORTH OF TREHERNE, MB. aisle bathroom with oversized shower on Assiniboine River, 300 acres cultivated Stk# 7962, $154,900. 1-866-346-3148 or land w/8 tower pivot and buried pipe to shop online 24/7 at: allandale.com river. Christianson Soils Ltd. 204-239-6086 2005 MONACO CAYMAN 34PDD, 35’, 5.9 FOR SALE BY OWNER: 11,500 acre mixed Cummins, 300 HP, 21,500 miles, auto, farm and ranch. Located 50 miles from satellite, air over hyd. brakes, 5.5 KW Ste. Rose du Lac, 7000 acres cleared, 8960 Onan dsl. gen.- 148 hrs, exc. cond., 2 acres fenced, 3000 acres cropland, 4000 slides, $85,000. More photos on our webacres hay and pasture. 65,000 bu. grain site www.can-amtruck.com Can-Am Truck storage. Two modern homes, 1 shop, 1 Export Ltd 1-800-938-3323. DL #910420. cattle shelter, 28 pen feedlot, 3 wells, 40 dugouts. Dyck Enterprises Ltd. Contact: WANTED: TOWABLE RV vehicle, SUV or Gordon, 204-656-5000, Waterhen, MB. car. 780-663-2201, Ryley, AB.
FDN., CERT. AC STRONGFIELD durum. Sean Miller, Avonlea, SK., 306-868-7822. CERT. STRONGFIELD, AAC Current, CDC Verona durum. Order early for max discounts. Visa/MC. www.llseeds.ca 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK. CERT. #1 CDC Verona and Strongfield Durum. Call Shawn Fraser 306-741-0475, Pambrun, SK. Email: foc@sasktel.net C E R T. C D C V E RO N A D u r u m . P h o n e 306-296-2104, 306-296-7434, Frontier, SK FOUNDATION, REGISTERED, CERTIFIED Transcend Durum. Call Craswell Seeds, Strasbourg, SK., 306-725-3236.
C D C M instr el
CERTIFIED #1 AC Newdale (2R), Legacy (6R). Call Fenton Seed Farm Ltd., Tisdale, SK. 306-873-5438.
GRAND PRIZE Meridian® 4120 bushel GrainMax GM4000 grain bin equipped with AirMax vertical aeration system, HD skid base and more (SRP $22,600) 2nd Prize - $5,000 of Novozymes products 3rd Prize - $3,000 of Novozymes products
Visit WinThisBin.ca
H I G H Q UA L I T Y C E RT I F I E D B a r l ey Seed: CDC Copeland, Newdale and CDC Meredith. High germination with low disease levels. Call Wilfing Farms Ltd. 306-236-7797 or 306-236-6811. Meadow Lake, SK. E-mail: rjwilfing@sasktel.net CERTIFIED CDC MEREDITH, CDC Copeland and AC Metcalf. Northland Seeds Inc. 306-324-4315, Margo, SK. SAWMILLS from only $4897 - Make Money and Save Money with your own bandmill. Cut lumber any dimension. In stock, ready to ship. Free info. and DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/168 or call 1-800-566-6899 ext. 168.
CERT. #1 COPELAND BARLEY. Discounts available on large or early orders. Blaine Lake, SK. 306-290-7816, 306-497-2800. WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Certified CDC Austenson highest yielding feed barley. 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK.
Contest is open to commercially active farmers in Western Canada (namely the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and the Peace River region of British Columbia). Full contest details at WinThisBin.ca. 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. ® TagTeam, JumpStart, Optimize and Cell-Tech are registered trademarks of Novozymes A/S. All rights reserved. Meridian Trademarks used with permission. Printed in Canada. 13048 11.13
© 2013 Novozymes 2013-17050-01
Lookin g for fa rm la n d in th e R M s of P en se,Ba ild on , R ed bu rn , a n d M oose Ja w .
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
AC UNITY VB, certified, 99% germ., 96% vigor, 0% Graminearum fusarium. Stollâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Seed Barn 306-493-2534, Delisle, SK. CDC UTMOST VB Midge HRS wheat. Early, high yield, 0% Fusarium Gram. 306-843-2934, Wilkie, SK. www.herle.ca AC ANDREW SOFT white wheat. Most popular variety, 0% Fusarium Gram. 306-843-2934, Wilkie, SK. www.herle.ca REGISTERED CDC GO Hard Red Spring wheat. 306-296-2104 or 306-296-7434, Frontier, SK. CERTIFIED UNITY WASKADA and Carberry wheat, exc. germ. and disease. Pambrun, SK., 306-741-0475. Email foc@sasktel.net
FOUNDATION, REGISTERED and/or Certi- CERTIFIED #1 CDC Impower, CDC fied: AC Vesper VB, AC Unity VB; CDC Ut- Greenland. Wiens Seed Farm, Brennan, most VB, Certified Andrew and Sadash. 306-377-2002, Herschel, SK. Berscheid Bros Seeds, Lake Lenore, SK. 306-368-2602. FDN., REG., CERT. CDC Utmost VB, AC Shaw VB, AC Vesper VB, AC Carberry, Cardale, Conquer VB (CPS red). Ardell Seeds, WANTED Vanscoy, SK, 306-668-4415.
GrainEx International Ltd.
LENTILS, CANARY AND CHICK PEAS.
TOP QUALITY CERTIFIED alfalfa and grass seed. Call Gary or Janice Waterhouse SORGARD SEEDS, WHEAT: Carberry, 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK. Glenn, AC Vesper, CDC Utmost, Cardale, CPS Conquer and Pasteur. Churchbridge, SK. Phone 306-896-2236, E-mail: seeds@sorgardseeds.com FDN, REG. AND CERTIFIED #1 Vesper VB, Goodeve VB, CDC Utmost VB. Fenton Seed HYBRID AND OPEN-POLLINATED Canola Farm Ltd., Tisdale, SK. 306-873-5438. varieties at great prices. Cert. #1 Synergy FOUNDATION AND/OR CERTIFIED CDC (Polish). Call Fenton Seeds, Tisdale, SK. Utmost VB and Lillian Wheat. Call Craswell 306-873-5438. Seeds, Strasbourg, SK., 306-725-3236. CERTIFIED FOREMOST CONVENTIONAL, FOUNDATION, REGISTERED, CERTIFIED, Rugby Round-up Ready, Canterra canola AC Muchmore, AC Shaw VB. Ace Crop va r i e t i e s . G r e e n s h i e l d s S e e d s L t d . , 306-524-2155, 306-524-4339, Semans, SK Care Ltd., 306-831-8963, Rosetown, SK. CERT. VESPER VB, Pasteur GP wheat. P re c i s i o n A g S e r v i c e s , Griffin 306-457-2220, Carlyle 306-453-2255, Carnduff 306-482-4343.
A C ÂŽTr a nscend Be st fo r yie ld ,d ise a se a nd e nd -u se . Ca ll yo u rlo ca l S e e d G ro w e rRe ta ile r: 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 etics .ca
CERTIFIED SHAW, 98% germ. Hansen Seeds, Yellow Grass, SK., 306-465-2525 or 306-861-5679. Email jsh2@sasktel.net CERTIFIED AC SHAW VB, midge resistant; Certified AC Carberry. Ennis Seeds, 306-429-2793, Glenavon, SK. WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Cert. SWW Sadash, GP Pasteur and CPS Crystal, Enchant VB. 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK. CERTIFIED AND REGISTERED Utmost VB, Harvest, Andrew, Conquer VB. Frederick Seeds, 306-287-3977, Watson, SK. AC VESPER VB. FDN., Reg., Cert. #1. High yield. Excellent quality! Nakonechny Seeds, Ruthilda, SK., 306-932-4409. WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Cert HRS. CDC Utmost VB, Carberry, Shaw VB, Harvest. 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK. CERTIFIED #1 UNITY, Waskada, Lillian. S h ew c h u k S e e d s , B l a i n e L a ke , S K . 306-290-7816, or 306-497-2800. H I G H Q UA L I T Y C E RT I F I E D W h e a t Seed: CWRS, CPSR and CWSW. Harvest, CDC Utmost VB, AC Shaw VB, Alvena, AC Enchant VB, AC Crystal, AC Foremost and AC Sadash. Call Wilfing Farms Ltd. 306-236-7797 or 306-236-6811, Meadow Lake, SK. E-mail: rjwilfing@sasktel.net CERTIFIED #1 AC Vesper VB, AC Shaw VB. Wiens Seed Farm 306-377-2002, Herschel, SK.
A C ÂŽ 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: S A S K ATC H EW A N S M ITH S EED S Lim erick,SK..................306-263-4944
CLASSIFIED ADS 65
Call GrainEx International Ltd. for current pricing at 306-885-2288, Sedley SK. Visit us on our website at: www.grainex.net CERTIFIED CDC DAZIL, CDC Imax, CDC Impower. Hansen Seeds, Yellow Grass, SK., 306-465-2525, 306-861-5679. CERTIFIED IMPOWER, INVINCIBLE, New CDC Scarlet Lentils, high germ, low disease. Phone Antelope Creek Ent. Ltd., 306-395-2652, Chaplin, SK.
Schluter & Maack NOW BUYING BROWN & YELLOW MUSTARD All grades of Green Peas Laird & Richlea Lentils Yellow Peas
1-306-771-4987 MUSTARD SEED: We carry a full line of high quality cert. mustard seed. Bare, treated, large or small bags. Can arrange delivery anywhere. Great pricing!! (Looking for low grade mustard). Call Ackerman Ag Services 306-638-2282, Chamberlain, SK. C E RT I F I E D ANDANTE YELLOW. Call Greenshields Seeds Ltd., 306-524-2155, 306-524-4339, Semans, SK. BESCO GRAIN LTD. Buyer of all varieties of mustard. Call for competitive pricing. Call 204-736-3570, Brunkild, MB.
M illiga n B iofu e ls W AN TS YOU R CAN OL A
W e a re b uyin g a ll gra de s of ca n ola . #1, 2, a n d 3 a s w e ll a s h e a te d, gre e n , s p rin g th re s h e d. Top p rice s , fre igh t op tion s , de live ry con tra cts , p rom p t p a ym e n t. Bon de d a n d in s ure d.
1-866-388-6284
w w w .m illiga n biofu e ls .c om
HEATED OIL SEEDS Priced at your b in.
CDC BASTIA, Certified. Excellent quality! Limited supply! Nakonechny Seeds, Ruthilda, SK., 306-932-4409.
â&#x20AC;˘ GREEN â&#x20AC;˘ HEATED â&#x20AC;˘ SPRING THRASHED
LIGHT/TOUGH FEEDGRAINS â&#x20AC;˘ OATS â&#x20AC;˘ BARLEY
â&#x20AC;˘ WHEAT â&#x20AC;˘ PEAS
DAMAGED FLAX/PEAS
PARTNER WITH NORTHERN QUINOA. LET U S M A N A G E Y O U R C A N O LA returns, 20 years agronomic FOUNDATION, REGISTERED, CERTIFIED Competitive guaranteed markets. ConvenCDC Redcliff and CDC Maxim CL. Craswell experience, tional and organic contracts available. Seeds, Strasbourg, SK., 306-725-3236. 306-933-9525, Saskatoon, SK. GREEN PEA SEED, new variety, 99% germ. CERTIFIED CDC DAZIL., CDC Impower, Phone Antelope Creek Ent. Ltd., Ace Crop Care Ltd., 306-831-8963, Rose306-395-2652, Chaplin, SK. RECON., REG. AND CERT. CDC Sorrel, CDC town, SK. B e t h u n e . Te r r e B o n n e S e e d F a r m BUYING YELLOW AND GREEN PEAS, all 306-921-8594, 306-752-4810, Melfort, SK. grades, farm pickup. Naber Specialty Grains Ltd., 1-877-752-4115, Melfort, SK. CERTIFIED TAURUS. Van Burck Seeds, )PVYPNPUHS -VVK :JPLUJL *VYW M&M SEEDS LTD. Has Certified No. 1 email: nsgl@sasktel.net Star City, SK., 306-863-4377. IHZLK PU :HZRH[VVU HYL SVVRPUN CDC Treasure and Meadow. Cash and volFABA BEANS, zero tanin variety, $10/bu. WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Cert. Recon ume discounts. 306-258-2219 St.Denis, SK [V JVU[YHJ[ )VYHNL HJYLZ MVY [OL for sale at the bin. Contact 780-909-6108, CDC Bethune, CDC Sorrel flax. \WJVTPUN NYV^PUN ZLHZVU Calmar, AB. NEW! CDC SAFFRON, Foundation, Regis306-752-4060, Melfort, SK. tered, Certified. High yield. Good stander. CERTIFIED PRAIRIE SAPPHIRE and Re- Now booking! Nakonechny Seeds, Ruconstituted CDC Bethune flax. Pambrun, thilda, SK., 306-932-4409. Â&#x2039; .YLH[ WYVĂ&#x201E;[ WV[LU[PHS IHZLK VU SK., 306-741-0475. foc@sasktel.net `PLSKZ WYPJLZ HUK SV^ PUW\[ JVZ[Z CANARYSEED, COMMON CLEANED. Wiens CERTIFIED CDC MEADOW, and 40-10, Seed Farm, call Brennan, 306-377-2002, BUYING BROWN FLAX farm pickup. Call CDC Leroy silage peas. Va n B u rc k Herschel, SK. 1-877-752-4115, Naber Specialty Grains Seeds, Star City, SK., 306-863-4377. ([[YHJ[P]L VPS WYLTP\TZ HUK MYLL Â&#x2039; Ltd. Email: nsgl@sasktel.net ZLLK KLSP]LY` HUK VU MHYT WPJR \W FOUNDATION, REGISTERED and/or Cert. CERTIFIED PRAIRIE GRANDE flax. Ph. CDC Meadow and CDC Saffron peas. Ph. Greenshields Seeds Ltd., 306-524-2155, Berscheid Bros Seeds, Lake Lenore, SK. 306-524-4339, Semans, SK. Â&#x2039; -SL_PISL JVU[YHJ[PUN VW[PVUZ 306-368-2602. H]HPSHISL HZ ^LSS CDC SORREL CERT. reconstituted, 92% H I G H Q UA L I T Y C E RT I F I E D Ye l l ow germ., 89% vigor, 0% pasmo. Stollâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Seed Peas: CDC Meadow, CDC Treasure, CDC -VY TVYL PUMVYTH[PVU Barn 306-493-2534, Delisle, SK. Saffron and Abarth. High Germination with WSLHZL JVU[HJ[ *HYS 3`UU 7 (N FDN, REG. AND Certified #1 Reconstituted low disease levels. Call Wilfing Farms Ltd. VM )PVYPNPUHS H[! CDC Sorrel, Fdn and Reg. AAC Bravo. Call 306-236-7797 or 306-236-6811, Meadow WANTED HEATED CANOLA. No broker Fenton Seeds, Tisdale, SK. 306-873-5438. Lake, SK. Email: rjwilfing@sasktel.net JLSS involved. Sell direct to crushing plant. VMĂ&#x201E;JL CERT. AND REG. CDC Sorrel reconsti- CERTIFIED MEADOW. Call Greenshields Also limited amount of #1 canola. Cash on tuted. Available in Moose Jaw and Swift Seeds Ltd., 306-524-2155, 306-524-4339, JYVWZ'IPVYPNPUHS JVT delivery or pickup. 306-228-7306 or Current, SK. Good germ. and vigor. Visa, Semans, SK. 306-228-1502, Unity, SK. M/C accepted. Call Simpson Seeds Inc. FDN, REG, CERT, CDC Hornet, CDC Patrick L O O K I N G F O R A L L t y p e s o f fe e d 306-693-9402 or toll free 1-877-252-9431. (green), CDC Limerick (green). Ace Crop grains, paying top dollar. Booking new CDC SORREL, Registered, Certified, re- Care Ltd. 306-831-8963, Rosetown, SK. crop. Prompt movement. 1-855-752-0116. constituted. Large seed. Good lodging rewww.cactuscommodity.com sistance. Now booking! Nakonechny REG., CERT. CDC MEADOW, CDC Treasure. Ardell Seeds, Vanscoy, SK, 306-668-4415. WHY NOT KEEP MARKETING SIMPLE? Seeds, Ruthilda, SK., 306-932-4409. BORAGE WANTED. Dandilee Spice Corp. You are selling feed grains. We are SORGARD SEEDS, Prairie Sapphire NEW CERTIFIED CDC Saffron, high germ. is buying Borage seed for prompt delivery. buying feed grains. Fast payment, with Churchbridge, SK. Phone 306-896-2236, and vigor. Volume discounts. Fast Seed Very attractive prices. Also offering 2014 prompt pickup, true price discovery. Call Farm, 306-463-3626, Kindersley, SK. Email: seeds@sorgardseeds.com Production Contracts with early season Gerald Snip, Jim Beusekom, Allen Pirness, CDC SORREL FLAXSEED. Cert. and reg. REGISTERED AND CERTIFIED #1 CDC movement and Act of God clause. Contact David Lea, or Vera Buziak at Market Place Germination, vigour, thousand seed Meadow. Fenton Seed Farm Ltd., Tisdale, Jack Valleau, Ridgedale, SK. 306-277-4208 Commodities Ltd., Lethbridge, AB. Email: info@marketplacecommodities.com or or Dandilee Spice Corp. 306-585-9080. weight and disease all tested. LaForge SK. 306-873-5438. phone: 1-866-512-1711. Farms, 306-773-0924, Swift Current, SK. SORGARD SEEDS: CDC Meadow yellow FOUNDATION, REGISTERED and/or Certi- peas. 306-896-2236, Churchbridge, SK. TOP PRICES fied CDC Sorrel reconstituted flax. Bers- Email: seeds@sorgardseeds.com cheid Bros Seeds, Lake Lenore, SK. PAID FOR AC EARLYSTAR NEW YELLOW PEA. 306-368-2602. High germination. Contact 306-843-2934, FEED BARLEY, Wilkie, SK. www.herle.ca CLEANED HIGH BULK greenfeed OATS, CERT. CDC MEADOW. Order early for 16,000 bu., 98% germ., $5/bu. if paid by WHEAT, OATS, max discounts. Visa/MC www.llseeds.ca Feb. 15. 780-872-3611, Lloydminster, SK. 306-530-8433, Lumsden SK RYE, TRITICALE, CLEANED COMMON DURUM seed, 97% g e r m i n at i o n a n d 0 % s p r i n g w h e at . CDC ORION kabuli chickpea, registered. PEAS, LENTILS, 306-296-2104, Frontier, SK. Sean Miller, Avonlea, SK., 306-868-7822.
CERT. #1 CDC Impala (Red) CL lentil. Call Fenton Seed Farm Ltd., Tisdale, SK. 306-873-5438. CERT. CDC IMPOWER CL large green; New CDC Scarlet reds. High germ. Fast Seed Farm, 306-463-3626, Kindersley, SK.
HEATED CANOLA WANTED
PEARMAN GRAIN LTD.
â&#x20AC;˘ HEATED
â&#x20AC;˘ DISEASED
GREEN CANOLA â&#x20AC;˘ FROZEN â&#x20AC;˘ HAILED â&#x20AC;&#x153;ON FARM PICKUPâ&#x20AC;?
WESTCAN FEED & GRAIN
1-877-250-5252
*5$,1 %8<,1* )((' *5$,1
:H DUH D IXOO VHUYLFH IHHG JUDLQ LQJUHGLHQW VXSSOLHU LQFOXGLQJ PHUFKDQGLVLQJ GLVWULEXWLRQ DGPLQLVWUDWLRQ
&*& OLFHQVHG DQG ERQGHG www.jglgrain.com 877-907-1517 e:info@jglgrain.com 720 Duchess St - Saskatoon, SK 306-374-1517 NUVISION COMMODITIES is currently purchasing feed barley, wheat, peas and milling oats. 204-758-3401, St. Jean, MB. LACKAWANNA PRODUCTS CORP. Buyers and sellers of all types of feed grain and grain by-products. Call 306-862-2723, Nipawin, SK. OFFERS ON A large volume of heavy oats and feed barley for sale. Call 306-874-7590, Naicam, SK.
BUYING W INTER TRITICALE & 4010 SILAGE PEAS M USGRAVE ENTERPRISES Ph : 204.8 3 5.2527 Fa x: 204.8 3 5.2712
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 Linden, AB
BUYING CANARY SEED, farm pickup. P AUL M O W ER D AV E K O EH N Saskatoon Call 1-877-752-4115, Naber Specialty 1-877-791-1045 4 03 - 3 04 - 1 4 9 6 4 03 - 54 6 - 006 0 Grains Ltd. Email: nsgl@sasktel.net 306-374-1968 w w w .fp gen etics .ca CERT. CDC MAXIM CL, CDC Impower L IN D EN ,AL BER TA CERTIFIED, REGISTERED AND FDN CDC WANTED: FEED GRAIN, barley, wheat, CL Clearfield lentils. Order early for max CAN AD A peas, green or damaged canola. Phone PASKAL CATTLE FEEDLOT Company in d i s c o u n t s . V i s a / M C w w w. l l s e e d s . c a Togo. Northland Seeds Inc. 306-324-4315, Margo, SK. Gary 306-823-4493, Neilburg, SK. 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK. Lethbridge area, looking for feed barley. AC CARBERRY REGISTERED certified #1, Call Roxanne at 1-800-710-8803. 96% germination. Superior agronomy CERTIFIED CDC DAZIL, CDC Maxim, CDC CERTIFIED CANTATE, highest yielding package. Ready for pickup! Nakonechny Impower, CDC Greenland lentils. Pambrun variety. Hansen Seeds, Yellow Grass, SK., TOP QUALITY ALFALFA, variety of grasses 306-465-2525, 306-861-5679. SK., 306-741-0475, foc@sasktel.net Seeds, Ruthilda, SK., Call 306-932-4409. and custom blends, farmer to farmer. Gary Waterhouse 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK. SOLID CORE ROUND alfalfa, alfalfa grass, CERISE RED PROSO COMMON MILLET. green feed, grass and straw. Delivered. Book early to avoid disappointment. 93%+ Call 306-237-4582, Perdue, SK. germ., 0% Fusarium Graminearum, makes great cattle feed, swath grazed, silage, dry Green and/or heated 2013 ALFALFA, conventional and organic, 1500 lb. bales, net wrapped, hard core, and silage bales, drought tolerant, very Canola/Flax, Wheat, JD baler. 306-370-8897, Tessier, SK. high in protein and energy. Delivered in 50 lb. bags at nearest points in SK. and AB. Barley, Oats, Peas, etc. RM #369, FIRST cut alfalfa, no rain, 1500 Call Reynald at Millet King Seed of Canada lb. bales, net wrapped, 123 RFV. Call: BOW VALLEY TRADING LTD. Inc., St. Claude, MB., 204-526-2719 or 306-682-1704, Humboldt, SK. 204-379-2987, leave msg. Cell and text 204-794-8550, all calls returned. Over WANTED: ALFALFA/GRASS, large round 2000 satisfied producers and our 11th year WANTED: FEED/ OFF-GRADE Pulses and bales and feed barley. We are interested in in business. www.milletkingseeds.com tough, heated green oilseeds and also all quantities of hay and feed grain delivor email: reynald@milletking.com cereals. Prairie Wide Grain, Saskatoon, ered to the ranch. Call 306-734-9001, Brownlee, SK. ORGANIC SAINFOIN SEED, called â&#x20AC;&#x153;Healthy SK., 306-230-8101, 306-716-2297. Hayâ&#x20AC;? in Europe (sainfoin.eu). An ancient, 2500 ROUND WHEAT/ STRAW BALES, non-bloating, nutritious, low input, perennet wrapped for sale. Ph: 780-878-4655, nial forage loved by all animals. Better flaFerintosh, AB. vored meat and dairy. Call 306-739-2900, GOOD QUALITY HAY, AB, big rounds. Wawota, SK. jhusband@primegrains.com Call for delivery prices. Phone: or primegrains.com/prime-sainfoin.htm 403-758-3041, Magrath, AB. HAY FOR SALE. Call Roger Britnell at S OARIN G TO N EW HEIGHTS 306-243-4215, Macrorie, SK. Bu yers o f co n ven tio n a l a n d WANTED: ALFALFA HAY. Call Brenton Mundt, 403-664-9734, Oyen, AB. o rga n ic gra d es o f len tils , pea s , XPELLER PRESSING. Offgrade oilseeds m u s ta rd , w hea t, b a rley, 480 ALFALFA GRASS round bales and 80 needed! Lethbridge crusher looking for offalfalfa round bales. Asking $70/ton. o a ts , rye, ca n o la , fla x, etc. grade canola, flax, camelina and canola or 306-478-2625. Located at Mankota, SK. flax screenings. Prompt payment. Phone: C a ll for your on fa rm b id . LARGE HARD CORE, certified organic, oat Darcy at: 403-894-4394, Lethbridge, AB. TOLL FREE straw bales $20./each. Located at junction or email: xpellerpressing@gmail.com Hwy 20 & 41, 306-279-4325, Tarnopol, SK. FLAX SEED, 98% germination. Hansen LARGE ROUND ALFALFA brome mixed hay. Seeds, Yellow Grass, SK., 306-465-2525 or Le th b ridge , AB. Call 306-764-6372, Prince Albert, SK. 306-861-5679. Email jsh2@sasktel.net
WE BUY DAMAGED GRAIN
1-877-641-2798
EAGLE COM M ODITIES 1-8 8 8 -3 28 -9 19 1
66 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
1500 LB. BROME/ALFALFA hay bales, $55 a bale at Weyburn and Halbrite, SK. Ph. LOW PROFILE LIQUID fert. comp. tanks 100-2500 US gal., $175-$2250. While sup306-842-7082 or 306-861-7092. plies last. 306-253-4343, 1-800-383-2228, 15,000 SQUARE ALFALFA and alfalfa/grass www.hold-onindustries.com mix bales, 3x4x8, no rain, feed test done. POLY TANKS: 15 to 10,000 gallons; BladPhone 306-648-7540, Gravelbourg, SK. der tanks from 220 to 88,000 gal; Water WA N T E D : A L FA L FA / G R A S S lar ge and liquid fertilizer; Fuel tanks, single and round bales. We are interested in all double wall; Truck and storage, gas or dsl. qualities of hay delivered to the ranch. Call Wilke Sales, 306-586-5711, Regina, SK. 306-638-3051, Bethune, SK. SECOND CUT ALFALFA round bales, no rain, heavy hard core bales. Feed tests avail., $90/bale. 306-270-2893, Clavet, SK CUSTOM BALE HAULING with 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. LARGE SQUARE DURUM/STRAW bales, 3x4, $16/each. Delivery available. Call 306-631-8854, Moose Jaw, SK. LARGE SQUARE BALES, alfalfa Brome crested wheat. Call 306-630-3078, Moose Jaw, SK.
M AGNUM TANKS
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. 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
• U P TO 1 000 GAL L O N Financing • ISO 9001 :2008 available. Appro ved Inqu ire • SINGL E W AL L SQ U AR E TANK at ou r • TR ANSP O R T CANAD A AP P R O V ED dealers. SAWS, PLANERS, GRINDERS, air nailers, press drill, 13” DeWalt wood planer, carAvailable at Magnum Fabricating & our dealers penter tools and scaffolding. 511 3rd St. Davidson, SK. 403-318-7589 (AB. cell). w w w .m a g n u m fa brica tin g .com
M AGN UM F ABR ICATIN G LTD . M a ple Creek, SK P h: 306-662-2198
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 BULK FUEL TANK Clearance Sale at Saskatoon Co-op Agro Center. Single wall and double wall bulk fuel storage tanks, brand new but older models, some have slight cosmetic damage. From 500-7500 gal. in stock and ready to go. Pumps and LIQUID HUMIC ACID. Add Humika or accessories available. Call 306-933-3834 PlantXL to existing fertility program to or 306-385-3434 for details and prices. protect your liquid phosphorus (ie. Alpine/10-34-0) or nitrogen fertilizer investment from tie-up and allow your fertilizer to work more efficiently. Promote the growth of larger healthier root systems. SHUR-LOK TRUCK TARPS and replacement Improve your soils health. Increase your tarps for all makes of trucks. Alan, crops yield. Ph. 519-749-5488, Bright, ON. 306-723-4967, 306-726-7808, Cupar, SK. E-mail: mosburgerfarms@hotmail.com TARPCO, SHUR-LOK, MICHEL’S sales, service, installations, repairs. Canadian company. We carry aeration socks. We now carry electric chute openers for grain trailer hoppers. 1-866-663-0000. BUYING GOOD QUALITY hay, picked up or delivered, large or small quantities, p r o m p t p ay m e n t ! 3 0 6 - 2 4 5 - 3 3 1 0 o r 701-340-3607, Tyvan, SK. CRAMER LIVESTOCK NUTRITION, backgrounder pellets, cow maintenance pellets, feedlot supplements and cattle minerals. Available in bulk, across southern SK. Doug 306-520-3553, Tony 306-520-4277, Jenn 306-741-5577. cramerlivestock.com
WANTED LARGE YELLOW peas and Triticale. Call Norbert at Saskcan Parent SCRAPER AND LOADER TIRES available. 204-737-3002, St. Joseph, MB. All sizes. Quick Drain Sales, Muenster, SK. Ph: 306-682-4520, 306-231-7318.
BUYING WILD FURS, coyote, fox, coon, beaver, etc. in the whole or finished. Fur license or treaty number required. DL#5971. Call 306-889-2070 or cell 306-852-8802, madtrapper@hotmail.ca Mistatim, SK. CLAMP ON DUALS 20.8 x 38 Titans in very good cond’n, adapts to 30.5x32 inside rims, w/ adapters & hardware. $5,250. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
NEW 20.8-38 12 PLY $765; 16.9-30 12 ply, $495; 18.4-38 12 ply, $789; 24.5- 32 14 ply, $1,495; 14.9-24 12 ply, $486; 16.9-28 12 ply, $558. Factory direct. More sizes available, new and used. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com REDUCED TO CLEAR: Over 1500 new and used tires. About 300 for farm applications, balance industrial construction type, many sizes up to very very large. Cambrian Equipment Sales. Phone 204-667-2867, fax 204-667-2932, Winnipeg, MB. ONE SET GOODYEAR radial 20.8x38 duals off JD 7800 Series tractor, tires 60%-70%, $5000. 306-267-4471, Coronach, SK.
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
• PAS S EN GER, L IGHT TRUCK , S EM I, AGRICUL TURE, CON S TRUCTION • M ECHAN ICAL & AL IGN M EN T FOR CAR, BUS RV , TRUCK & TRAIL ER • TIRES /W HEEL S & CUS TOM DUAL & TRIPL E K ITS • TIRE V UL CAN IZIN G • 24 HOUR M OBIL E TRUCK S FOR ON S ITE W ORK 8- 24.5X32 TAKE-OFF tractor tires, 20-40% tread, 403-393-0219, 403-833-2190. GOOD USED TRUCK TIRES: 700/8.25/ 900/1000/1100x20s; 11R22.5/11R24.5; 9R17.5, matched sets available. Pricing from $90. K&L Equipment and Auto. Phone Ladimer at: 306-795-7779, Ituna, SK., or Chris at: 306-537-2027, Regina, SK. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors, view information at www.titantrucksales.com WANTED: USED 18.4x38, or 20.8x38 rears, prefer at least 75% tread. Call 306-531-6119, Balgonie, SK.
BE A U of S student here! Small class sizes, less tuition, more personalized attention from Profs! On-campus residence. Start your university education for: Ag, Vet Med, Education, Nursing, Social Work, Engineering, Commerce, Pharmacy, Kinesiology and more! Fitness centre, rink. Over $40,000 in SPC scholarships available plus eligible U of S scholarships! Muenster, SK. E-mail: lholowaty@stpeters.sk.ca or www.stpeterscollege.ca
SEASONAL FULL-TIME Riding position GOT FROZEN PIPES? We can help. available on Connor Creek PGR. Must have www.arcticblaster.com Call 403-638-3934, riding, roping and cattle health exp. PrefSundre, AB. erence given to applicant who will use available accommodations. Wages negoREMOTE PIPE CRUSHER with 6” ram, 5 HP tiable. Call 780-674-1759, 780-674-4121, 230V, remote hyd. system; 3 HP 230V 14” Barrhead, AB. HD cut-off saw. 780-663-2201, Ryley, AB. GRAIN FARM SUPERVISOR required on Hartman Farms, Elrose SK. Send resume with 3 references to: Box 568, Elrose, SK, S0L 0Z0. Email sales@khartindustries.com Full-time experienced. Co-ordinating workers, grain operations, production records, work schedules. 75% duties: planting, harJa pa n ~ M ay 2014 vesting, spraying and equip. maintenance. 25% at K- Hart Industries in winter. Duties: Irela n d & S co tla n d ~ June 2014 basic welding, fabrication and assembly. Uk ra in e ~ June 2014 Work hours: 8 hrs/day, 40 hrs/week, Cdn $22-$24/hr. See www.khartindustries.com Yu k o n /N W T ~ July 2014 Icela n d /Green la n d ~ July 2014 CHERHILL RANCH IS currently hiring a pasture rider for Apr. 15th to Nov. 1st M id -w es t US A ~ O ctober 2014 grazing season. Pasture Riders are required to check, treat and move cattle on Au s tra lia /N ew Zea la n d ~ Jan 2015 horseback, repair, maintenance fence and K en ya /Ta n za n ia ~ Jan 2015 water. Call: 780-983-4088, Cherhill, AB. Portion oftours m a y b e Ta x Ded uc tib le. FARM MANAGER/ LABOURER for our Se le ct Holida ys 4000 acre contemporary grain farm with current equipment. We are looking 1- 800- 661- 432 6 for a self-motivated experienced person to w w w .selectho lid a ys.co m run our farm. Experienced in all farm activities including seeding, spraying, harvesting, etc., as required. Mechanical aptitude and welding skills considered assets. Applicant should have good communication skills and be able to manage one or 6” FAIRBANKS MORSE water pump w/4 more employees. Valid driver’s license is cylinder Ford Industrial engine on trailer, required. Nine hour days, except variations approx. 1/2 mile lay flat 4” Cam Lock con- dictated by season, and weather, or job nector hoses. 780-663-2201, Ryley, AB. timeliness. Weekends off except when the farm work dictates otherwise. Position can be full-time or seasonal, negotiable. Wages $20-$30/hr. We would consider, for the right employee, help in getting started farming or a co-farming arrangement. Contact Stan or Donna Yaskiw, Birtle, MB., 204-796-1400 or 204-842-5252. PTO AUGER WATER PUMPS, 6000 gal. per minute. Simple, tough, NO Prime. Handles SWINE HERDSPERSON, full-time permamud, ice, plants, other debris. Call Jan nent position at Sunderland Hog Farms 204-868-5334, Newdale, MB. Partnership. Duties: Supervise breeding programs; Perform farm duties; Formulate feeding program; Recognize and treat certain hog’s health problems; Supervise farm operations; Develop work schedules and WATER Problems? Eliminate total dis- establish procedures; Maintain quality solved solids, E.Coli and Coliform bacteria, control and production records; Maintain p l u s m a ny m o r e ! T h e Wat e r C l i n i c , hog performance records; Train workers. www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. Benefits: clothing for inside work at our barns and boots. Requirements: Grade 12. WAT E R T R E AT M E N T for the whole 3 yrs. experience or post secondary certifihouse to commercial units, hot tubs and cate. Extended work hours as needed, evepools. Over 50 years experience. No salt, ning/early mornings or weekends. $14.68 chemicals or chlorine. 99% pure, 100% sat- to $17/hr, 40 hrs/week. Send resume to isfaction or your money back. Also offering Sunderland Hog Farm Partnership c/o WWQ ionizers and portable ultra-sonic Dale Sunderland, Box 160, Paradise Valley, flow meters. Contact Bob 403-620-4038, AB., T0B 3R0. Fax 780-745-2888, e-mail: Prairies Water, High River, AB. dale.sunderland@hotmail.com
RURAL & CULTURAL TOURS
WATER PROBLEMS? ELIMINATE rust, smell, bad taste, hardness, color, sodium o d o r. T h e W a t e r C l i n i c , t o l l f r e e 1-800-664-2561, www.thewaterclinic.com
FOUR PART-TIME SEASONAL farm labourers wanted for farm near Carnduff, SK. Experience in the operation of planting and harvesting equipment and Class 1A preferred, $18/hr. Call Paul 701-263-7013.
WATER problems? Canada’s Largest rural water purification company. No more wa- 800 HEAD RANCH immediately requires ter softeners or bottles. The Water Clinic, Cowboys with calving experience, also for 1-800-664-2561, www.thewaterclinic.com range riding in summer. Farm Laborers spring for irrigation and machine operaNEW TO CANADA, Ecosmarte/Advanced in Drivers license preferred. Housing pure water. Guarantee 99% pure, no salts, tion. available for both. References required. chemicals, or chlorine. Good for residen- Email: fordpj5@xplornet.ca tial, farm and town systems, hot tubs and 250-453-2550, Ashcroft, BC. or phone/fax: swimming pools. Phone 306-867-9461, Outlook, SK. Dealer inquiries. SHEWCHUK FARMS is looking for experienced help on mixed grain and cattle farm, Class 1A and farm experience is an asset, wages based on experience. Call Shawn at 306-287-7880 or farm at: 306-287-3763, KORNUM WELL DRILLING, farm, cottage Watson, SK. and acreage wells, test holes, well rehabilitation, witching. PVC/SS construction, ex- WANTED FULL-TIME FARM worker for pert workmanship and fair pricing. 50% large semi-remote NE BC ranch. Must be government grant now available. Indian able to work flexible hours under various Head, SK., 306-541-7210 or 306-695-2061 weather and environmental conditions. STAUBER DRILLING INC. Water well Strong mechanical aptitude is required for drilling and servicing, Geotechnical, Envi- operating equipment, repair and mainteronmental, Geothermal. Professional ser- nance. Wages are $15.50/hr. and housing vice since 1959. Call the experts at is available. For more information, or to apply, email: cfl@pris.ca Fort St. John, BC. 1-800-919-9211 info@stauberdrilling.com
FAMILY RUN GRAIN farm in Lipton, SK area, is hiring for a full-time position. Wanted, an experienced individual with 1A license and farming background. Must be able to work with large, modern equipment. Housing available. Wage based on experience. Start date: April 2014. Call 306-675-5703 or email tltlutz@sasktel.net AARTS ACRES, 2500 sow barn near Solsgirth, MB is seeking experienced Breeding and Farrowing Technicians. The successful applicant must possess necessary skills, an aptitude for the care and handling of animals, good communication skills and ability to work as part of a highly productive team. Fax resume to: 204-842-3273. or call 204-842-3231 for application form.
MARDELL FARMS LTD., a large, modern grain farm operation, located at Snowden, Hoey, Aberdeen and Colonsay, SK, is currently seeking Seasonal Farm Labourers/Equipment Operators for the 2014 cropping season. Duties may include: O p eration and maintenance of equipment; Regular maintenance of farm yards, buildings, etc; Construction of farm buildings; General day to day tasks for operations of the farm and farm camp; Other duties as they arise. Requirements: Excellent communication skills; Extensive farm experience with modern machinery; Mechanically inclined; Energetic; Self-motivated; Work independently and/or in a team atmosphere; Willing to work long hours when necessary; Valid driver’s license mandatory w/clean driver’s abstract; Class 1A an asset. Employment Details: Room and board avail.; Salary $3200-$5000/mo. based on experience; Work commences April 1 - October 31, 2014. Seeding and/or harvest only positions also available. Email detailed resumes to Mardel Farms Ltd at: mardellfarmsltd@sasktel.net
HICK O RY CO RN ER FARM S Hicko ry Co rn erFa rm sisa fo u rth gen era tio n m ixed fa m ily fa rm . O u rphilo so phy isto co m bin e o u r stro n g w o rk ethic,ed u ca tio n a n d experien ce fro m bo th reta ila n d resea rch levelsto m a xim ize o n the la test o ppo rtu n itiesin techn o lo gy a n d pro d u cts.W e a re d ed ica ted to the gro w th o fo u rfa rm bu sin ess a n d o u rpeo ple to en su re lo n gterm su ccess.
Gen era lFa rm La bou rer W e a re cu rren tly recru itin g fo ra Fu llTim e Fa rm La bo u rer.The su ccessfu lca n d id a te w illbe in vo lved in a llfa rm in g pra ctices fro m seed in g a n d ha rvestin g to eq u ipm en t m a in ten a n ce w ith em pha siso n ha u lin g gra in a n d ca ttle.Cla ss1A licen se ispreferred , bu t n o t req u ired a slo n g a syo u w o u ld be in terested in o bta in in g o n e.Ifin terested plea se feelfree to ca llTylerto d iscu sssa la ry a n d ben efits. Plea se su bm it you rresu m e or requ est a n Em ploym en t Applica tion : Tyler Ha n la n Bo x 264,Briercrest,S K ,S 0H 0K 0 Em a il: hicko ryco rn erfa rm s@ sa sktel.n et Pho n e:(306)799-2006, Fa x(306)799-2060
LESANN LAND AND CATTLE COMPANY looking for a full-time employee on mixed grain and cattle farm. Duties include operating and maintaining all cattle and grain machinery, haying, calving, and grain related duties. Cattle experience a must, valid driver’s licence needed and Class 1 an asset. Wage between $18 to $25 an hour. based on skills and experience. Call Joel at 204-623-4357, The Pas, MB or email us at: lesannjp@gmail.com References required. FULL-TIME AND SEASONAL help needed in operating a large modern grain farm. Preference given to experience as a Mechanic’s helper and Class 1 driver’s license an asset. Wages based on experience, range $12-20/hr. but not limited to. Housing available. Galvin Farms Ltd., Virden, MB., 204-748-8332, john@galvinfarms.com LARGE CATTLE RANCH in Southern Alberta requires a full-time year round hand. Must be experienced at moving cattle on horseback and able to work with others. Requires own tack and horses. The job entails feeding cattle in the winter, haying in the summer and riding horses to move cattle the rest of the year. Resume and references required. Call 403-344-2205 or 403-344-4333, Milk River, AB. or contact milkrivercattle@rossranch.ca
DOUBLE M FARMS
Located east of Acme, AB has
IMMEDIATE POSITIONS FOR • CLASS 1 DRIVERS • EQUIPMENT OPERATORS *SEEDING, SPRAYING, HARVEST AND FALL OPERATIONS, GRAIN/BALE HAUL* Full time or Seasonal, Excellent Wages & Benefits, Advancement Opportunities. Submit resume with references to resumes@highway21group.com or fax 403-546-3709 LARGE MIXED FARM near Chauvin, AB. w/newer equipment, looking for full-time farm workers. Must have proof of valid driver’s license. Housing is available. Email resume: schopferfarms@gmail.com or call 780-842-8330 for more info.
SEASONAL FARM LABORER required. Must have some farm exp. w/mechanical welding ability or Class 1A license. Preference given to applicants experienced in both. May 1 to Oct. 31. $15-$25/hr. 101008187 SK Ltd., Corey Fehr, Call: 306-338-7561 or PERMANENT FULL-TIME HELP required to f a x : 3 0 6 - 3 3 8 - 3 7 3 3 , W a d e n a , S K , start as soon as possible by a family cfehr9860@hotmail.com owned grain and cow/calf farm by Milden, SK. Requires helping and working with EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY near Mossothers at all aspects of the operation. Avg. bank, SK. for reliable self-motivated per40+hrs/wk. Starting $15/hr., accommo- son interested in large grain farm operadations avail., vehicle supplied for work. tion. Applicant should be experienced in Located 1/2 mile from Milden with school mechanics, operating large farm machinbus to the door. Willing to train. Please ery and able to take on farm tasks indecontact Gordon Head 306-831-8296. pendently. Class 1A an asset. Great wages available. Phone Mike 306-354-7822 or email: nagelm44@hotmail.com
LARGE MIXED FARM in Alberta’s peace country looking for: Manager/Operator/ Joint Venture Partner. Farm is combination of agriculture land and cattle operation. Unique opportunity for the right individual. Flexible on structure, anything from salaried Manager to Joint Venture Partner, in crop and/or cattle operation. Do you have your own equipment or cattle, but can’t afford land? We can help. Interested parties please send resume to: Unit 720, 903-8th Ave SW, Calgary, AB. T2P 0P7. Or e-mail: dkaye@postellenergy.com
FEED LO T P ERS O N N EL REQ UIRED Rid ers , Pro ces s o rs , Feed Crew , M a in ten a n ce/Equ ipm en t Crew Opera tio n n ea r Acm e, AB. Ba ck g rou n d in beefca ttle & k n ow led g e ofva ccin es p referred a lthou g h w illin g to tra in . Com p etitive W a g es & Ben efits . S u b m itresu m e w ith referen ces to resu m es@ highw ay21grou p .com F ax 403 546- 3709
GENERAL FARM LABOURER for our 4000 acre contemporary grain farm w/current equipment. We are looking for a self-motivated experienced Farm Labourer. Experience in all farm activities including driving trucks, tractors and using farm equipment an asset. Other duties would be: machinery and building maintenance, yard and farm work. Must be able to work with limited supervision. Would be willing to train. Valid drivers license is required. Position can be full-time or seasonal, negotiable. 8 hours a day unless dictated by the season or weather. Some weekend work is required. Wages $17-$21/hr. depending on experience and ability. Contact S t a n o r D o n n a Ya s k i w, B i r t l e , M B . 204-796-1400, 204-842-5252. FARM MANAGERS/ SUPERVISORS with post secondary diploma or university equivalent (NOC Code 8251). Three fulltime permanent positions on larger grain farm, Terrador Farms Inc., near Oxbow, SK Duties include: planting, fertilizing, spraying and harvesting crops as well operating, maintaining all farm machinery, supervising and training farm employees. Wages $3600/mos. Fax resumes: 306-483-2776. Mail: Box 368, Oxbow, SK. S0C 2B0. Email: terrador.farms@sasktel.net Call Gerry at 306-483-7829 for more info. FARM HELP WANTED: Two positions available for general farm work, Alsask, SK. Class 1 license needed, training possible. Wages negotiable depending on experience. Call 403-664-9878 or send your resume to: heathermundt@gmail.com
WANTED: DELAGE FARMS LTD., a large modern grain farm north of Indian Head, SK. requires 1A Truck Drivers and Equipment Operators for modern, well maintained machinery. Duties may include seeding, spraying, swathing, combining, trucking (Super B, tridem axle trailers) and general farm duties. Farm experience preferred. Competitive wages base on experience. Send resume to: Marc Delage, email: marc@delagefarms.ca Fax: 306-695-2608 HELPER WANTED ON mixed farm. Steady Call: 306-695-3959. job for right person. Room and board avail. DAIRY, BEEF, CROP, hog and sheep farms 403-631-2373, 403-994-0581, Olds, AB. in Europe, United Kingdom, Australia, New LOOKING FOR FARM help? Looking for Zealand, and Japan are looking for help! farm work? Agemploy.com can help with AgriVenture arranges host/employer, work both. We are the top Ag Employ site for permit, insurance, airfare and support. farm employment. Serving Western Cana- Young adults 18-30 with interests in agrida, MB, SK, AB, BC. Phone 403-732-4295 culture/horticulture are urged to apply. or e-mail: agemploy@gmail.com www.agriventure.com 1-888-598-4415.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
FULL TIME POSITION available on large grain farm. Duties include: Operating and maintaining newer JD and NH equipment. Class 5 license required, Class 1 an asset. Well equipped heated shop to work in. Home cooked meals available. Must be willing to work in a team environment. Non-smoker. Competitive wages depending on experience. Kincaid, SK. Phone 306-642-7880 or fax 306-264-3664. Email: laneview@hotmail.com LEAD FARM HAND, very competitive wages, working w/cattle and buffalo. Experience w/farm animals a must, driver’s license required. Foreign worker? LMO opportunity available, flexible work schedule, duties include: feeding, moving, vaccinating animals, fence maintenance, using and maintaining equipment. email: lyle@marksmeninc.com HELP WANTED FOR 1800 acre grain farm, April 15 to Oct. 31. $12-$18/hr, depending on experience. 306-335-2777, Abernethy. FULL TIME AND seasonal positions on a seed farm in Melfort, SK. Must be able to run large modern equipment and work independently. Willing to train the right person. Mechanical experience and/or 1A license a definite asset! Very competitive wages and benefits. Flexible hours in summer and winter. Great snowmobiling trails and fishing! Fax resume to: 306-752-9676 or email: abeuker@sasktel.net FULL-TIME PERMANENT FOREMAN position on 10,000 acre grain farm in Lampman, SK. Must be willing to work long hrs during seeding, spraying and harvesting seasons. Successful applicant should have: Class 1A license w/clean abstract; Farm management education including basic Agronomy and Farm Apprenticeship training; Experience operating modern JD equipment w/ability to program and operate John Deere’s AMS technology. Other duties include: Hiring, training and managing farm employees; Maintenance of all farm equipment; All crop spraying operations and coordinating swathing and harvest operations, $3600/month. Phone Ole Michaelsen at 306-487-7816 or fax: 306-487-2770, Michaelsen Farms Ltd., Box 291, Lampman, SK., S0P 1N0. FULL-TIME PERMANENT farm/ranch position in Cypress Hills, SK. Cattle experience and Class 1 beneficial; machinery and basic mechanical experience a must. Stable job record, reliability, work history, resume and references required. Housing available. Possible land or cattle partnership. 306-295-4050, Eastend, SK. LOWE RANCHES LOOKING for someone to aid in the care and maintenance of livestock. Responsible for feeding, cutting hay, calving, etc . $12.50/hr. Email: lowe.tyson@gmail.com Must have some training or experience, Nanton, AB. HELP NEEDED TO calve 130 cows, starting March 1st, room and board available. 403-652-7253, High River, AB.
CLASSIFIED ADS 67
CUSTOM HARVEST HELP wanted for 2014 USA harvest. Combine and truck drivers needed as well as grain cart operators. Must have clean driving record. Full room and board provided plus wages. Fill out HELP WANTED ON MIXED FARM: Some application www.carlsonharvesting.com cattle experience an asset. New shop for Goodridge, MN. anyone mechanically inclined. Driver’s licence a must, 1A an asset. Must be willing FULL TIME POSITION available on cattle to do manual labour and operate and operation. Duties include: Check and maintain equipment. Paynton, SK. Send maintain cattle and grass; Help process, resume to: buggfarms@hotmail.com feed and look after cattle in a small feedlot; Help with haying operations. Class 5 liPh/fax 306-895-4601. cense required. Non-smoker. Competitive FULL-TIME FARM LABOURER needed for wages depending on experience. Home grain farm in SE SK. Duties include: ma- cooked meals available. Kincaid, SK. Phone chinery operation and other farm duties, 306-642-7880 or fax 306-264-3664. Email: Class 1A preferred. Housing available. laneview@hotmail.com $18-$20/hr. dependant on experience. ESTABLISHED AG RETAIL centre located 306-452-7743, Redvers, SK. in Mossleigh, AB. seeking full-time agriculA MIDDLE AGED couple running a 200 tural equipment operator; also, seasonal head cow herd NE of Edmonton are look- equipment operators and truck drivers. ing for a young person or couple to assist Email: cneustaeter@pandh.ca or call Corwith the responsibilities of operating a nelius at: 403-534-3961. successful cow/calf operation. An excellent opportunity to develop your own herd RANCH HAND for large cow/calf operaand experience a way of life. To schedule a tions in south AB. and east central SK. Dup e r s o n a l i n t e r v i e w, p l e a s e p h o n e ties: calving, feeding, haying, etc. Relevant experience required. Wages as per experi780-656-5665, Newbrook, AB. ence. Start Feb. 1st. Ph. 403-308-4200. WANTED: FARM LABOURERS able to run farm equipment on cattle/grain farm. FULL-TIME OR SEASONAL POSITIONS 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 on cow/calf and grain farm. Class 5 license required. Class 1A an asset. Modern 306-469-7741, Big River, SK. JD equip. Duties include: operating and CERTIFIED ORGANIC MIXED FARM in servicing equipment, working with cattle, the north Okanagan, with beef, sheep, and field work and other general farm duties. dairy, hay, irrigation looking for experi- Housing available. Call 306-648-8081, fax: enced farm help. Duties in all areas of the 306-264-5179, Kincaid, SK. hts4@live.com farm. $40,000 per year. Housing available. Meat allowance. Apply with references to: WE ARE LOOKING for a Ranch Foreman. valefarms@telus.net Fax 250-547-6080, Our operation consists of purebred beef cow/calf, bull backgrounding feedlot for call 250-547-2382, Lumby, BC. our annual bull sale. We do a tremendous PERSON REQUIRED TO work with farm amount of work with rotational grazing management on an irrigation farm located and electric fence as well as perimeter in the east Saskatoon, SK. area. Operating wire fencing. The ability to find and treat knowledge of seeding and harvesting animals is very important. We are not equipment mandatory, 1A an asset, full- looking for someone who just wants to time year round employment available. ride, this is a modern working ranch that Reply to timmermanj@yahoo.com uses horses, but also uses quads, trucks your ability to walk. You would be reMACHINERY OPERATOR NEEDED for our and for supervising several other farm, full or part-time. Must have some sponsible employees, delegating work and enoperator and basic mechanical skills. ranch suring the work completed. We do farm Wages dependant upon level of experi- and crop aboutis1000 acres for feed but ence. Phone 306-642-5806, Assiniboia, SK. most of our land is pasture. We bale hay LOOKING TO HIRE RANCH MANAGER/ and straw. A Class 1 would be very useful, Assistant Manager. We are a family run but not necessary as long as you are willBlack Angus purebred/ commercial ranch. ing to obtain it. We truck our own cattle Looking for a person or couple wanting to and haul our own feed. Mechanical ability be hands on operator/s with all aspects of would prove to be an asset. We have modthe day to day ranch operations. Position ern housing in the yard for the right candiavailable ASAP, wages negotiable depend- date. We live close to Lloydminster so ing on experience. Housing available on work or school is 15 minutes away. Wages site, but in a separate yard. Email resume paid according to experience and ability. t o : 6 6 @ 6 6 r a n c h l t d . c o m o r f a x t o : Company Health Care Plan offered. Scheduled days off with the exception of 403-378-4320, Duchess, AB. busy seasons. Please email your resume, FULL-TIME FARM LABOURER HELP. references and driving abstract to the folApplicants should have previous farm ex- lowing: info@hill70quantock.com or fax perience and mechanical ability. Duties to: 780-875-8332 or you can call us: Hill incl. operation of machinery, including 70 Quantock Ranch Ltd., Lloydminster, AB. tractors, truck driving and other farm 780-875-8794 ask for Bill or Sherry. equipment, as well as general farm laborer duties. $12-$18/hr. depending on experience. Contact Wade Feland at 701-263-1300, Antler, North Dakota. ALL CANADIAN GRAIN, INC. Lafleche, SK. is seeking a full-time equipment operator in South West Sask. Duties include organizing and performing maintenance tasks, hauling inventory, and all tasks relevant to seeding, spraying, and harvest operations. The successful candidate will be a self-motivated team player capable of working independently. A valid driver’s license is required, a Class 1A license is an asset. Training will be provided along with medical benefits and holiday time. Starting wage $20/hr. Email resume and references to: shawn@allcanadiangrain.com BEEKEEPER’S HELPERS (5), for the 2014 season May to Oct, $12-$15/hr depending on experience. Contact Ron Althouse, 306-278-2747, Porcupine Plain, SK.
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
(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
PRIME MOVER/MULCHER Operators Ace Vegetation is hiring Mulcher, HydroAx and Posi-Track operators. Class 1 license an asset. For details 780-955-8980. Send resume to: ACE at 2001 - 8th St., Nisku, AB., T9E 7Z1, fax: 780-955-9426 or email: acemail@acevegetation.com 10 PERMANENT FULL-TIME POSITIONS available at County Fresh Farms Greenhouses in Cypress County, AB. Job includes daily picking and pruning of vegetable plants. Work is in a greenhouse environment with some lifting required. $10.03/hr. for 40-50 hrs./wk., may vary according to crop cycles, no experience required, must have transportation. Email: countyfreshfarms@hotmail.com BUSY ROOFING COMPANY requires labourers for work in Edmonton, AB. and area. Free room and board. Hutterites welcome. Call Ron 780-220-5437, Jordan 780-934-2932. SCOOP LAKE OUTFITTERS is hiring Sheep/Elk Guides for our season. We operate in NE BC in Region 751/52. Applicant must be comfortable in a remote location (100 air miles from town) for 3 months. Must have guiding experience for sheep and elk. Horse experience an asset. Successful applicant should have experience with international clients, outdoor cooking skills and wilderness living. Good communication skills and working as a team essential. Wages are based on experience and meet current industry standards. Due to our remote location room and board is supplied. Please email resume to info@scooplake.com Watson Lake, YT. RM OF CHESTERFIELD is hiring Seasonal Grader and Buggy Operators, April to Nov. State wage expected. Fax: 306-967-2424 or reply to: Box 70, Eatonia, SK, S0L 0Y0. 3 FORKLIFT OPERATORS needed for night shift. Full time, year round employment. Hours: From 2:00PM to 10:30PM, $16.00$20.00 to start depending on experience, plus benefits (after probationary period). Work experience as forklift operator is an asset but not required. Apply with resume to: Igloo Building Supplies Group Ltd., 21421-111 Ave, NW, Edmonton, AB, T5S 1Y1. Fax to: 780-447-3247, or e-mail to: HR.Resource@igloo.ca 6 PERMANENT FULL-TIME Positions available at Rolling Acres Greenhouses in Medicine Hat, AB. Job includes daily picking and pruning of vegetable plants. Work is in a greenhouse environment with some lifting required. $10.03/hour, 40-50 hrs/ week, may vary according to crop cycles. No experience required. Must have transportation. acramer@canopycanada.net GC JENSEN ACRES INC. seeking multiple general farm workers to assist with seeding and harvest operations near Milden, SK. Duties include: operating machinery, maintenance, yard work. Minimum hours 8 AM- 5 PM, Monday to Friday, Apr. to Oct. Starting $15/hr+, includes accommodation. Must be able to work well and communicate with others. Farm experience an asset. Box 10, Milden, SK. S0L 2L0. Call 306-935-4523, fax resume: 306-935-2201. APIARY WORKERS: 3 positions available, applicants should have a minimum of one yr. experience in commercial beekeeping. Duties include general work related to the management of honey bee colonies, such as: feeding, applying medication, requeening, splitting, starting nucs, harvesting and processing of honey. Full-time seasonal April to Sept., $11.35/hr. Apply to: Hilbert Honey Co. Ltd., Humboldt, SK., phone 306-682-3717, fax 306-682-3096. The R.M .o f M eo ta #468 is a ccepting a pplica tio ns fo r a sea so na l
FU L L -TIM E P ATR O L O P ER ATO R
The successfulca ndida te m ust be proficient in va rious m a intena nce a nd construction techniques a nd fa m ilia r w ith different m a kes a nd m odels of gra ders.M echa nica la bility w ould a lso be a n a sset.M ust be a tea m pla yer. The M unicipa lity offers a com petitive sa la ry to be pa id in a ccorda nce w ith qua lifica tions a nd experience in a ddition to a sta nda rd SARM benefit pla n. Apply by M a rch 4,2014. Interested individua ls m a y send resum e’s a nd references to:
R.M .o f M eo ta #468, Bo x 80,M eo ta ,Sa sk.S0M 1X 0 Fa x :306- 892- 2449 Em a il:rm .468@ sa sktel.net Only those candidates chosen for interview s w illbe contacted.
3 TRUSS ASSEMBLY Supervisors needed. Full time, year round work, $17.00-$20.00 per hour depending on experience. Minimum 3 years experience as a supervisor in truss assembly or wood manufacturing. Apply by mail/in person at: Penn Truss Manufacturing Inc. Box 418 Saltcoats, SK, S0A 3R0. By fax to: 1-888-432-1891 or by email to: charles@penntruss.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 ).
BEEKEEPERS WANTED for 2014 season. 2 positions available, experience necessary, $11.35/hr. Fax 306-937-2095 or email Stuart, Stuhoney@yahoo.com Battleford. FULL-TIME SALES POSITION: ACE is looking for individuals interested in selling and managing vegetation control projects for our clients across western Canada. Assets include: strong interpersonal skills, sense of humour and ability to communicate. Service is key to this position. Email your resume to: acemail@acevegetation.com or fax: 780-955-9426, Nisku, AB.
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.
FULL-TIME BOOKKEEPER. Bookkeeping duties including accounts payable and receivables, payroll and general journal monthly entries. Experience with Microsoft Office and familiar with Sage 50 Accounting. Experience in agriculture an asset. Salary depending on qualifications and experience. Accommodations provided. Fax resume to: 250-459-2624, Attn Larry, email: admin@gangranch.infosathse.com Gang Ranch, BC. PATROL OPERATOR REQUIRED. Applications are presently being accepted for a seasonal, full-time, Patrol Operator for the Rural Municipality of Glenside No. 377. Grader experience preferred but may consider applicant with heavy equipment experience. Mechanical skills are preferred. Initiative, ability to organize duties and time management skills are required. Class 1A driver’s license with air endorsement is an asset. The position offers pension, health and dental benefits and disability coverage. Please forward resumes including references, experience, driver’s license PIC# and salary expected by March 6, 2014 to rm377@sasktel.net or mail to: RM of Glenside No. 377, Box 1084, Biggar, SK. S0K 0M0. We thank all applicants for their interest. Only persons selected for interviews will be contacted.
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
MANITOBA CASE IH DEALER HIRING: Ag Equipment Sales Reps: Elie/Portage la Prairie; GPS Representative: Portage la Prairie; Ag/Heavy Duty Techs: Neepawa/Steinbach. Full details at: www.chabotimplements.ca/careers
W e Trade W ith Trust AboutAgrocorp International
CAR EER O P P O R TUN ITIES
Ag ro co rp In te rn atio n alis a w ho lly o w n e d s u b s id iary o fAg ro co rp In te rn atio n alPte . Ltd . o u t o f Sin g apo re ,o n e o f the larg e s t pu ls e trad in g ho u s e s in the w o rld . Brin g in g fo rth a te am o f d ive rs e cu ltu re an d e xpe rie n ce ,Ag ro co rp In te rn atio n alis po is e d to b e co m e an in d u s try le ad e r an d in n o vato r in the trad e o fCan ad ian ag ricu ltu ralco m m o d itie s . W e are cu rre n tly e xpan d in g in to m u ltiple lo catio n s in Can ad a an d s e e kin g m o tivate d an d d e tail o rie n te d pro fe s s io n als fo r o u r pro ce s s in g facilitie s in Cen tra l Alb erta , In n isfa il an d M o o se Ja w , Sa ska tc hew a n . W e are lo o kin g fo r plan t m an ag e rs as a prio rity, b u t hirin g for a llposition s - pro cu re m e n t s pe cialis ts ,lo g is tics an d ad m in is trative s taff. Fo rm o re in fo rm atio n ,vis it o u rw e b s ite atw w w .a g ro c o rp.c a
Responsibilities • o ve rs e e in g the o pe ratio n s o fo u rg rain pro ce s s in g facility to e n s u re o ptim al e fficie n cy an d co m plian ce w ith in d u s try s afe ty po licie s an d pro ce d u re s • w o rkin g as a te am m e m b e r in a fas t pace d ,phys ically d e m an d in g e n viro n m e n t, lo ad in g an d u n lo ad in g railcars o fg rain an d frac s an d • o pe ratin g an d m ain tain in g he avy e q u ipm e n t (tracto r,s kid s te e r,co n ve yo rs ) • b u yin g (o rtrad in g ),re ce ivin g an d g rad in g g rain • b u s in e s s d e ve lo pm e n t- e xpan d in g cu s to m e r b as e an d b u ild in g o n o u rg ro w e r re latio n s hips
Q ualifications & Requirem ents The s u cce s s fu lcan d id ate m u s t b e ab le to w o rk e xte n d e d ho u rs in clu d in g e ve n in g s an d w e e ke n d s an d w o rk in all w e athe r co n d itio n s an d b e d rive n to e xce e d cu s to m e r e xpe ctatio n s b y po s s e s s in g : • an ag ricu ltu ralb ackg ro u n d an d u n d e rs tan d in g o flo g is tics as an as s e t(n o tre q u ire d ) • s o u n d an d tho ro u g h kn o w le d g e o fco m m o d ity m arke ts as an ad d e d as s e t • g rain g rad in g e xpe rie n ce • m e chan ical/e le ctricalaptitu d e an d b e ab le to tro u b le s ho o tin d ifficu lt s itu atio n s • s tro n g w o rk e thic,po s itive attitu d e an d e xce ptio n alco m m u n icatio n s kills
H ow to Apply? If yo u are in te re s te d in pu rs u in g a po s itio n w ith o u r co m pan y, w ith po te n tial d e ve lo pm e n t in to a re w ard in g care e r, ple as e fo rw ard yo u r co ve r le tte r an d re s u m e to c olin @ a groc orp.c a . P lea se in c lu d e ‘yo u r n a m e_in terested po sitio n _d a te’ in the em a il su b jec t (fo r exa m ple Jo hn Sm ith_P la n t M a n a g er_Ja n .30.201 4 ).
68 CLASSIFIED ADS
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
Built on family values and a mission TO CARE, TO CONTRIBUTE, TO SOLVE; the world’s water quality needs. Prinsco Inc is seeking a top performing, full-time Sales Representative to join our team and manage accounts in Alberta, Canada. Job duties consist of: Calling on new and existing customers and assisting them with their project needs, quoting new projects, maintaining pricing and credit terms, following up on new leads and referrals in the assigned territory, attending trade shows and promotional events, identifying and resolving customer concerns. Must have three years sales experience in the industry. Proficiency in computer skills including Microsoft office products. Must be selfmotivated. Excellent communication and time management skills. Willingness to travel 100% of the time to promote our high growth product lines. Prinsco acknowledges the importance of balance between our work lives, our personal lives, and our spiritual growth. Prinsco offers competitive compensation, and the ability to create own schedule. Contribute to a greater environmental cause and apply online at
www.prinsco.com/Careers
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014
HEAVY DUTY MECHANIC, experienced in hydraulics, diesel engines, prime movers, tracked vehicles, as well as spray equipment. This is an opportunity for field and shop work. Please send resume by email to: acemail@acevegetation.com or by fax: 780-955-9426 or send by mail to: ACE, 2001- 8 St. Nisku, AB. T9E 7Z1.
SASKATOON HOTSHOT TRANSPORTER is hiring power units w/wo stepdecks 3/4 and 1 tons, for RV and freight hauling throughout Canada and the U.S. Year round work, lots of miles and home time, fuel subsidies, benefits, excellent earnings. 306-653-8675, Saskatoon, SK. Website www.saskatoonhotshot.com
HEAVY DUTY MECHANIC/APPRENTICE required for preventative maintenance, repair and service of heavy equipment fleet. Experience with Cat, JD, and Hitachi. Appropriate credentials and/or certifications. Valid drivers license. Both camp and shop locations. Service truck and accommodations provided. Wage negotiable. Send work references and resume to: Bryden Construction, Box 100, Arborfield, SK. S0E 0A0. Email: brydenconstruct@xplornet.ca P&K FARM TRUCKING requires company CAL GAS IS seeking full-time or seasonal drivers and lease operators to pull Super B drivers for propane delivery and a picker Fax: 306-769-8844. grain trailers. Competitive wages and operator in the oilfield, Kerrobert, SK. ASSISTANT PARTS MANAGER wanted benefits. Send resume and drivers abstract area. Prefer 1A license, will consider Class for multi-store New Holland dealer. Jour- t o p k s t r u c k i n g @ g m a i l . c o m F a x : 3A. All oilfield tickets, H2S, First Aid, Dangerous Good etc. are also required. We ofneyman preferred, but experience will also 306-957-0003. 306-537-8457, Odessa, SK fer competitive wages and comprehensive be considered. Benefits, RRSP package, moving allowance, and signing bonus. $22 OWNER/ LEASE OPERATOR required to health plan. Send resume to: Gerald Heimt o $ 2 8 p e r h o u r. E m a i l r e s u m e t o haul livestock in western Canada, mostly becker at: gheimbecker@calgasinc.com parts.triag@telus.net Wainwright, AB. AB. work. Experience required. Nanton, AB. fax 306-834-5501, phone 306-834-7793. 2 ROOF AND EWP Floor Designers needed. 403-862-4345, lkvtrans@gmail.com Full time, year round employment, $25-32 to start depending on experience, plus benefits. Minimum 2 years experience in designing floors or roofs with excellent understanding of building materials and the truss industry. Experience with Keymark and Mitek design software. Diploma from recognized architectural, civil or construction engineering program. Apply with resume to: Igloo Building Supplies Group, G ibs on En erg y U LC is a p rog res s ive, g row th orien ted , N orth 21421-111 Ave, NW, Edmonton, AB, T5S A m erica n m id s trea m oil & g a s com p a n y. W e a re cu rren tly s eek in g 1Y1 or fax to: 780-447-3247 or e-mail: HR.Resource@igloo.ca en thu s ia s tic, res u lts orien ted p rofes s ion a l d rivers for ou r S ou th Ea s t NELSON MOTORS & EQUIPMENT LTD. 2 full-time Heavy Equipment Ag Mechanics required. Duties: repair, overhaul, troubleshoot and maintain JD heavy duty agricultural equipment; Use testing equipment to diagnose malfunctions and determine extent of repair required; Test repaired equipment to ensure compliance with JD specifications. Salary: $27-$29/hr. Education: Completion of Secondary School; Experience: Minimum 4 years of experience. Qualified candidates would be assigned to one of the branches listed: Estevan, Redvers, Oxbow, Avonlea, Radville. To apply send resume by email, fax or mail to: P.O. Box 300, Avonlea, SK. S0H 0C0. Contact Ken at fax: 306-868-4840 or by email to: service@nelsonmotors.com
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. 4 DELIVERY DRIVERS Needed: Full time year round employment, $18.00-$21.00 to start, depending on experience and drivers license, plus benefits (after probationary period). Delivers and handles merchandise in Alberta. Previous driving experience an asset but not required. Must have Class 3 or Class 5 license w/Air Brake (Q) endorsement and a clean driver’s abstract. Apply with resume to: Igloo Building Supplies Group: 21421-111 Ave, NW, Edmonton, AB., T5S 1Y1. Fax: 780-447-3247 or email to: HR.Resource@igloo.ca
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, Saskatoon, SK. www.roadexservices.com
S a s k a tchew a n O p era tion s in : Fro b isher, Esteva n , W eyb u rn .
CO M P AN Y D RIV ERS S W AM P ERS O W N ER O P ERATO RS Q u alifications requ ired: • Drivers m u s tp os s es s a va lid Cla s s 1 or3 licen s e w ith a iren d ors em en t • S w a m p ers m u s tp os s es s a va lid Cla s s 5 licen s e • 2+ yea rs d rivin g exp erien ce • O ilfield exp erien ce is a n a s s et G ibs on En erg y ULC offers a com p etitive com p en s a tion p a ck a g e. In teres ted ca n d id a tes a re a s k ed to fa x res u m es to: 306- 48 6- 2 02 2 , orem a il to: d frob is her@gib s ons .com w w w.gib s ons .com
MAY I HAVE YOUR ATTENTION, PLEASE.
Make your classified ad the best it can be. Attract more attention to your ad with attention-getters! There are many ways to catch buyers’ eyes. Ask our friendly classified ad team for more information. We’ll be happy to assist you with expert advice on how to get your item sold!
Place your ad on producer.com or call us at 1-800-667-7770
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
69
PRAIRIE LIVESTOCK, FORAGE PRODUCTION | FEDERAL AND PROVINCIAL FUNDING
Alberta, Sask. forage, livestock sectors get funding Federal funding for Canadian pork marketing | Federal and provincial funds also announced for 27 research projects in Saskatchewan BY DAN YATES, KAREN BRIERE, MARY MACARTHUR
Saskatchewan livestock research
SASKATOON NEWSROOM, REGINA, CAMROSE BUREAUS
In Saskatchewan, the federal and provincial governments increased research spending for more livestock and forage projects. The two governments announced $4.2 million in research spending for 27 projects, which is up from $3.4 million for 23 projects last year. Provincial agriculture minister Lyle Stewart said innovation drives increases in production. “We’re on the northern fringe of the livestock producing area of North America and so we find that it pays big dividends for us to do research in Saskatchewan for what works best,” he told reporters after the announcement at the Saskatchewan Beef Industry Conference. Projects include $1.8 million for beef research, $1.1 million for swine, nearly $472,000 for dairy, $335,000 for poultry and $282,500 for forage. The University of Saskatchewan will receive nearly $1.4 million of the total, and the Vaccine and infectious Disease Organization will receive $890,000. Other re cipients include the Western Beef Development Centre, the Western College of Veterinary Medicine, the Prairie Swine Centre, Agriculture Canada and the Saskatchewan Alfalfa Seed Producers
The federal government was busy making funding announcements last week pertaining to livestock and forage production and marketing. At the Banff Pork Seminar, agriculture minister Gerry Ritz’s announcement of $15 million to support pork marketing initiatives at home and abroad was received positively by industry officials, whose attention didn’t drift from major issues of trade and market access. “It’s good to hear some support today, but we could do more, we can do better, at supporting our pork industry,” Maple Leaf’s Troy Warren told the conference. “I would suggest probably as an industry in Canada we receive some of the least amount of support with respect to marketing money for international trade development, fighting for our rights in terms of negotiating with countries,” he said. The five-year financial commitment will fund promotional efforts domestically, where Canadian pork fights for customers with American meat, and in markets such as Japan, the European Union and South America. “We need to be fully recognized at
EDOUARD ASNONG CANADA PORK INTERNATIONAL
home and abroad as a reliable supplier of high quality pork products,” said Edouard Asnong, chair of Canada Pork International, which will receive the funds. Speaking at the event and to reporters, Ritz touted Canada’s Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement with the European Union, which will allow for up to 75,000 tonnes of Canadian pork into that market, up from the previous quota of 6,000 tonnes. “They’re professional protectionists. They’re really good at it,” said American economist Steve Meyer of Paragon Economics. “I don’t know if it’s as big a deal as what it’s being made out to be by the government.” Industry officials expressed greater interest in the Trans-Pacific Partnership and ongoing talks with South Korea, where the U.S. has already established a free trade agreement. “Another year can’t pass without us getting a deal,” said Warren. “It’s just not acceptable from my perspective.”
Development Commission. “There’s a project to try to improve the yield and marbling in beef cattle, a project to develop a new legume forage plant,” Stewart said. Another will examine how to reduce the effects of ergot-contaminated feed. Industry spokespeople said the research dollars are welcome because they lead to long-term benefits. Producers attending the Saskatchewan Cattlemen’s Association’s annual meeting and the Saskatchewan Stock Growers Association semiannual meeting last week passed resolutions of support for the Saskatchewan Forage Network to coordinate research priorities on behalf of all livestock producers. The network was announced a year ago as a way for industry partners to work together to direct research. Rancher Murray McGillivray of Radville, Sask., said it is particularly important for the network to continue and work with the incoming forage research chair at the U of S. “There is a lot of strength in the forage network,” added SCA director Ryan Sommerfeld in addressing the motion during the SCA meeting. The government contributions are funded through Growing Forward 2 and Saskatchewan’s Agriculture Development Fund.
Forage in Peace district The federal funding announcement in Alberta will help maintain forages as part of the crop rotation in the Peace River region. Jennifer Otani, an entomologist with Agriculture Canada, hoped the $923,000 will continue to show the importance of forages in a crop rotation, especially in Alberta and British Columbia’s Peace River region. Historically, forages have been an important part of the crop rotation for farmers in the Peace River region, especially with its shorter number of growing days but longer day length. Like other crops, forage seed is losing the acreage battle to high income crops such as wheat and canola and forage acres have been taken out of production. One of the biggest barriers to forage production is the difficulty getting forages in and out of the crop rotation. The federal research station in Beaverlodge will use a portion of the funds to examine the soil and nutrient benefits of forages and show how forage is a good alternative financially over the four year life of the crop. “We feel forage seed has a vital role in crop rotation,” she said. Forage crops don’t generate as much income as canola or wheat, but they also don’t use the same input costs.
Protect Your Investments. Protect Your Floor. For a free quote call: 1.800.852.2638 winklercanvas.com
12’ - 130’ widths with a variety of lengths.
*:( ( *LY[PÄLK *>) *LY[PÄLK
1.800.852.2638 | winklercanvas.com
70
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
WARY OF PREDATOR ON PATROL
AG NOTES STARS AIR AMBULANCE RECEIVES DONATION Money raised at last year’s Canadian Western Agribition has been donated to STARS Air Ambulance in Regina. The service recently received $30,125 during a cheque presentation involving Canadian Western Agribition, the Canadian Bison Association and Bouchard Livestock. FUNDING TO PRODUCE WATER BUFFALO MILK
A small band of horses moved into alert mode, watching the fence line, as a distant coyote approached their pastures near Millarville, Alta. | WENDY DUDLEY PHOTO
A Quebec company will receive $300,000 in federal and provincial funding to produce and process water buffalo milk in Quebec. Elevages Buffalo Maciocia, located
Meet Ken Dutton Started farming: 1974 Crop rotation: Chemfallow, durum, spring wheat, barley First vehicle: ‘64 Chevy Half-Ton Loves: Family, Saskatchewan Roughriders Hates: Kochia, Edmonton Eskimos Will never sell: His 4020 John Deere tractor, a gift from dad Most memorable farming moment: “Last year, we filled all the bins.” PrecisionPac® blends: DB-858, DB-8454
in the Richelieu region, has the province’s only water buffalo dairy farm. It is working with Fromagerie Polyethnique to develop products for the North American market. The first steps include processing milk and selling products such as cheese and yogurt. INVESTING $7 MILLION INTO CROP RESEARCH Forty-six crop-related research projects will receive $7 million in federal and provincial funding in Saskatchewan to improve yields through disease control, weed management, herbicide tolerance and new technologies. Projects being funded this year include: • The performance of direct-cut harvest systems in canola • Improving nitrogen fixation of peas • Improving disease resistance in wheat • How residue from soybeans contributes to nutrition and yield in cereal crops the following year • Identifying new mustard varieties with improved yields • Honeybee health and the management of varroa mites • The use of lentil bran as a food ingredient • Weed control practices For more information, visit www. agriculture.gov.sk.ca/ADF. MANITOBA CANOLA GROWERS ELECT BOARD MEMBERS Four members have joined the Manitoba Canola Growers Association’s board of directors: Larry Bohdanovich of Grandview, Brian Chorney of East Selkirk, Charles Fossay of Starbuck and Ed Rempel of Starbuck. The association mailed 8,921 ballots, and 985 were counted in the tabulation. Producers could rank the candidates in order of preference. Candidates needed to attract more than 50 percent of the active votes to win one of the positions. Association members elect four directors every two years to represent them for a four year term.
COMING EVENTS
JUST LIKE KEN, EVERY GROWER IS UNIQUE. THAT’S WHY WE HAVE PRECISIONPAC . ®
As a matter of fact, so is each and every farm in Western Canada, in terms of its field sizes, crop rotation and weed spectrum. It’s good to know there’s a weed control solution that’s as individual as you and your farm. DuPont™ PrecisionPac® herbicides are 12 customized blends of powerful DuPont crop protection, geared to your weed targets and calibrated down to the precise acre. You mix, you go, no mistakes, no waste. How’re we doing so far, Ken?
For custom herbicides as unique as your fields, visit precisionpac.dupont.ca or call 1-800-667-3925 to find a certified PrecisionPac® herbicide retailer near you. As with all crop protection products, read and follow label instructions carefully. The DuPont Oval Logo, DuPont™, The miracles of science™ and PrecisionPac® are registered trademarks or trademarks of E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company. E. I. du Pont Canada Company is a licensee. All other products are trademarks of their respective companies. Member of CropLife Canada. © Copyright 2014 E. I. du Pont Canada Company. All rights reserved.
Jan. 30-Feb. 2: Guelph Organic Conference and Expo, Guelph University Centre, Guelph, Ont. (guelphorganicconf.ca, www. guelphorganicconf.ca, 519-8244120, ext. 56311) Feb. 5: Indian Head Agricultural Research Foundation soil and crop management seminar, Southey, Sask. (IHARF, 306-695-4200) Feb. 18-19: CropConnect Conference, Victoria Inn Hotel and Convention Centre, Winnipeg (Leanne Campbell, 204-479-1115, leanne@mcgacanola. org or Roxanne Lewko, 204-7456488, roxanne@manitobapulse.ca, info@cropconnectconference.ca) Feb. 24-25: Wild Oats Grainworld ag outlook conference, The Fairmont Hotel, Winnipeg (800-567-5671, 204-942-1459, wildoatsgrainworld. com) March 19-21: Saskatchewan Association of Watersheds conference, Saskatoon Inn, Saskatoon (306-541-9902, info@saskwatersheds.ca) For more coming events, see the Community Calendar, section 0300, in the Western Producer Classifieds.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
HITTING THE SLOPES
CANOLA | CHOOSING VARIETY
Don’t give top priority to canola yield: expert Consider agronomic factors and disease resistance BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
All farmers want a high-yielding canola crop. However, it should be the last thing they worry about when choosing a canola variety. “Ignore the yield,” Angela Brackenreed, an agronomy specialist for Manitoba with the Canola Council of Canada, recently told Manitoba Ag Days. “If you’re looking at an Excel spreadsheet or something like that, cover up the yield column and first select for the traits you desire on your farm or on a field by field basis.” Farmers usually look first for the highest-yielding varieties and then select from those for what looks like the best for their farm. However, Brackenreed said that is doing things backwards. She said canola is not just a highly valuable crop, but one with many risks that can ravage its yield, such as diseases and weeds. Yield potential is only one factor. Farmers who want to produce a good canola crop should focus first on crops with good resistance to diseases they suffer from, which operate within the herbicide tolerance regime they want to employ and which contain the special agronomic
ANGELA BRACKENREED CANOLA COUNCIL OF CANADA
abilities they value. Some varieties are strong against blackleg, which has been a problem in Manitoba in recent years. Some produce plants that stand independently, while others lodge. There is a huge range of attributes that a farmer can choose, but no variety has them all, so farmers need to decide what’s most important. Brackenreed said farmers need to work out the package of features they want in their canola crop and then look at their options. That’s when they can start looking at yield as a factor among the crops that offer what they are looking for. Brackenreed said with so many good varieties from which to choose, farmers don’t just need to run for a handful of high-yielding varieties to get a crop. Instead, they have a few dozen to look at, so they can take more care with choosing the right package for their farm, she added.
Slower seeding showed better seed placement. |
FILE PHOTO
SEEDING SURVEY | SPEED FACTOR
Easing up on gas pedal boosts germination, emergence BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
BRANDON — Many Manitoba farmers have a lead foot when they’re seeding, and a canola specialist is telling them to ease back on the accelerator. “Apparently, Manitobans have the need for speed when it comes to seeding,” Angela Brackenreed, the Canola Council of Canada’s agronomy specialist for Manitoba, said during a session at Manitoba Ag Days. Twenty percent of the province’s farmers exceed six m.p.h. when seeding, according to a canola council farmer survey. It’s well above recommended speeds and likely to create a poor crop. “There is conclusive evidence that shows that you get better survivability, more uniform emergence with lower speeds,” said Brackenreed. Manitoba farmers tended to travel
faster than either Saskatchewan or Alberta farmers when seeding, she added. Brackenreed said the survey identified farmers with low and high yielding crops in each region and then looked for common characteristics of each group. The high yielders tended to drive slower than five m.p.h., while 56 percent of the low yielders were driving faster than five m.p.h. The crucial impact of seeding speed was obvious even in a research project that involved different groups. One team that drove three m.p.h. was able to keep seed placement in a band from half an inch to 1.25 inches deep, while a group going five m.p.h. and trying to place seed half an inch into the soil ended up with seeds one to 2.25 inches deep. “It just shows you what just a little bit slower can do for you as far as consistency,” Brackenreed said.
Taking advantage of a warm day Jan. 9, children from the Parkland Colony school near Nanton, Alta., went sledding during afternoon recess. | MIKE STURK PHOTO
71
72
NEWS
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
CLUBROOT | PREVENTION
CLUBROOT | AGRONOMY
Limit soil transfer on equipment Shorter rotations to minimize risk of clubroot give clubroot Remove clumps of soil to prevent spores infecting clean fields BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
BRANDON — Making farm equipment 99.9 percent free of clubroot risk is more than almost any farmer is willing to do, says an Edmonton area canola agronomist. However, farmers shouldn’t think that it isn’t worth getting equipment 95 percent free. “I truly believe that the movement of soil is much, much more than we ever thought,” Dan Orchard, a Canola Council of Canada agronomist, said during a panel discussion at Manitoba Ag Days Jan. 21. Orchard said soil moved by farm equipment is the biggest way clubroot spores get moved from infected to clean fields. Getting that soil off of the equipment before it gets into the field is key to control. Orchard said maximum protection with sterilizing and bleaching is probably more than any farmer can feasibly do at seeding time. “It’s hard to justify cleaning a drill for 12 hours when it’s beautiful out and you’ve got 2,000 acres to seed,” said Orchard.
DAN ORCHARD CANOLA COUNCIL OF CANADA
However, farmers can probably eliminate most of the risk to their fields by “taking a shovel and knocking off the loose, visible debris and soil.” Partial control is better than no control. Clubroot will get into most fields over time, but it only become a crop-crashing problem if it gets out of control. That typically happens when farmers push rotations and allow lots of clubroot-containing soil to come into the field. No one thinks 100 percent protection from soil is possible, but tiny amounts aren’t a true threat. “Really, a little bit of soil on your shoe isn’t going to cause an outbreak,” said Orchard. “It’s the big clumps of dirt coming in on seeding equipment.” Orchard also asked farmers to be
reasonable with oil service workers and others coming onto farmland because control measures need to be equally shared. “I think it’s unfair to ask them to do more than you’re doing,” said Orchard. “If you’re not doing anything at all and someone wants to drive into a right-of-way on your field, and you go ask them to go disinfect and sterilize and bleach everything, and you’re not doing it, I’m not sure that’s fair.” However, he said asking everyone, including yourself, to knock off clods and clumps of dirt from machinery is essential to keeping infection levels low enough to be handled by adequate rotation spacing. “You have to understand the risks you’re taking by cutting some of these corners,” said Orchard.
Visit us online at www.producer.com to see a video about this story.
Limit Risk in Difficult Conditions • Successful direct seeding in all conditions. • Very wet, very dry or into sod.
the advantage Lessons from Alberta | Farmers pushed rotations for financial reasons and paid the price BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
BRANDON — Dangerous rotations were one of the two main causes of the mass outbreak of clubroot in the Edmonton area a decade ago, those close to the situation say. However, it’s hard for farmers to always follow the recommended rotations when they have to stay in business. “When it comes to rotating it, it’s easy to talk about, but if you’ve got bills to pay … it puts you between a rock and a hard spot,” said central Alberta farmer Richard Petherbridge, recalling the early 2000s. Petherbridge saw his fields ruined by clubroot, a disaster for thousands of central Alberta farmers who lost the ability to grow their best moneymaking crop for years. A lot of heavy harrowing and discing takes place in the heavy soil of that region, mixing it up and allowing clubroot spores to spread wide and deep. No resistant varieties were available at the time and canola rotations were too short. As a result, the spore load ran rampant, and the Alberta outbreak was devastating. Dan Orchard, a Canola Council of Canada agronomist in the Edmonton area, said most farmers grew canola every second year, while 10 to 20 percent grew the crop two out of every three years. Only a small percentage grew canola every third or fourth year, which is the recommended frequency. However, they were the ones who survived. “It’s the guys who grew it every third or fourth year that weren’t finding those large patches on their field,” said Orchard. Those farmers eventually saw patches of clubroot-crippled canola but not entire ruined fields like those with shorter rotations. “It never got to the point that they lost a crop from it,” said Orchard. “I think that intense rotation combined with excessive tillage was probably your main culprit.”
RICHARD PETHERBRIDGE ALBERTA FARMER
See what your neighbors are using at:
780-352-9890
www.technotill.com
Petherbridge said everyone knew too-short rotations were dangerous, but farmers found it often impossible to make any money in farming those days. As a result, they became convinced that growing canola back to back or every two years was financially necessary.
There are only a few clubrootresistant canola varieties available and if they aren’t rotated they will lose their resistance. | FILE PHOTO
He said he remembers $1.65 per bushel barley and $3.50 wheat from that time but much better prices for canola. It is what drove local farmers to seed canola again and again. Orchard recalls a friend worrying about losing out on good canola prices if he stuck to a four year rotation. “It’s so much about economics,” said Orchard. However, even though it can be hard to grow a less-returning crop than canola, farmers need to realize the dangers they’re playing with if they don’t stick to good rotations. Orchard said only a couple of clubroot-resistant families of canola are available, and those will lose their resistance if they’re not rotated. Farmers also probably don’t want to choose from only a handful of varieties, which is their fate if they become heavily clubroot-infected. Keeping fields to only low levels of clubroot spores leaves farmers with a wide range of seed choices, but heavily infected fields force farmers to grow nothing but resistant varieties.
NEWS
73
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
NATIONAL WESTERN STOCK SHOW | MARKETING
Canadian breeders find buyers in Denver Hereford sales | Canadians make the long trip to Western Stock Show to capitalize on lucrative American market BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
DENVER, Colo. — For two longtime Hereford breeders, the National Western Stock Show in Denver is the place to be if they want to trade cattle. Hills Galore Stock Farm at Hazlet, Sask., has been in the Hereford business for 54 years. Owner Alvin Pawlitza had travelled to Denver since 1997 until the BSE crisis blocked him in 2003. He decided to return last year, and the response was so good that he made selling registered Herefords part of his business plan. “We seem to be able to find a market for them here,” he said. “This is where it’s hot.” Pawlitza and his wife, Mary-Kate, annually sell 60 to 70 purebred Hereford and Angus bulls from the ranch. This year they took a pen of heifers and a pen of bulls to show and sell. “We had a good response last year so we decided to come back,” he said while relaxing in his booth in an area of the show referred to as “the yards.” It is part of the historical Union Stockyards where cattle, sheep and hogs were bought, sold and sent to nearby packing plants. Today, the corral pens are taken over by breeders, who show their cattle outdoors whether it snows, rains or blows. There were windy days this year, but the temperature hovered around 10 C. The stock show is not as large as it once was, which is a reflection of North America’s smaller cow herd, said Pawlitza. Yet for him, it remains a major marketplace to showcase his cattle to visitors from around the world. Canadians offer different pedigrees and genetics, and displaying them outdoors allows potential customers to take a good look beyond the well primped animals presented in the show ring. Pawlitza sold semen and 20 heifers off the farm because of contacts he made at the show last year and he was hoping to repeat that success.
LIMOGES
It is a big commitment that takes him and his crew of helpers away from home for 12 days. The work gets done with help from his children, nieces, nephews and friends. Karl Lischka of ANL Polled Herefords is another longtime competitor at Denver going back to the late 1980s. “This is a good place to market cattle,” he said. Half the cattle from his annual production sale end up stateside, which he attributes to his presence at the stock show.
We seem to be able to find a market for them here. This is where it’s hot. ALVIN PAWLITZA HILLS GALORE STOCK FARM
He sold two heifers from his stalls in Denver to a buyer in Missouri. They will not come back to Canada. He would like to take advantage of
the latest marketing opportunity: selling females into the growing junior program. Heifers are going for up to six figures to youth members. His family has been breeding Herefords for 50 years, and even though he has bought many American bulls, he feels he can still offer something different from what is found in the larger U.S. herd. The U.S. is a lucrative market because Americans are willing to pay top dollar. Interest in Herefords is rebuilding as producers look for straight bred cattle as well as viable
crosses with their Angus. These animals retain the hardiness of a British breed and can be sold into the Certified Angus Beef program or the certified Hereford beef scheme in the United States. They can also handle rough conditions presented to them in the U.S. Plains. “There is more land that is harsher than Canada,” he said. Denver is 1,300 kilometres from his farm at Steelman, Sask., but he considers it the Super Bowl of beef shows.
It’s
Unanimous! Emerge victorious with nitrogen and phosphate. 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.
MultiAction® Legume Fertility
Fusarium Free Seed AC Foremost CPS RED
© 2013 Novozymes. 2011-22927-02
SEED FARMS
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.
www.UseTagTeam.ca 1-888-744-5662
WinThisBin.ca
CDC Austenson HIGH YIELDING FEED BARLEY
® ™
Richard & Marcel Limoges
780-324-3024
Contest is open to commercially active farmers in Western Canada (namely the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and the Peace River region of British Columbia). Full contest details at WinThisBin.ca. 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. Meridian Trademarks used with permission. 13017 08.13
74
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
PRODUCTION
GENTLE HANDLING Cup-shaped soft, plastic flighting pampers delicate seeds better than the traditional rubber belt conveyors, which increases germination rates. | Page 76
PR O DU C TI O N E D I TO R : MIC HAEL RAINE | P h : 306- 665- 3592 F: 306-934-2401 | E-MAIL: M IC H AEL.RAIN E@PRODUC ER.C OM
Good sprayer sanitation is the key to preventing crop damage from incompatible herbicide residues. The sprayer needs to be cleaned out with at least water before switching products, but a full cleanout is the safest route after any prolonged period of inactivity. | FILE PHOTO EQUIPMENT | SPRAYER CONTAMINATION
Spray good for one, not good for other The ‘ticking time bomb’ | Crops, particularly canola, can be damaged by residue of other herbicides left in the sprayer BY WILLIAM DEKAY SASKATOON NEWSROOM
More awareness of the potential for carryover during crop spraying could result in fewer injured canola crops, says a weed control specialist. Clark Brenzil of Saskatchewan Agriculture said an increasing number of cases have come through the Crop Protection Lab in Regina in which producers apply one herbicide and see injury symptoms from another. The lab says that sprayer contamination caused all of the cases last year. “The key sign about tank contamination is when you’ve got injury that runs in a straight line, and only
equipment runs in a straight line,” he said during an integrated canola pest panel discussion at CropSphere in Saskatoon Jan. 14. Sprayer contamination becomes a bigger problem in diversified cropping systems with different sensitivities to different groups of herbicides. “That means that we have to be really on the ball about making sure our sprayers are cleaned out when we go from one crop to the next,” Brenzil said. Contamination occurs when herbicide deposits form in the sprayer, whether in the tank, screens, nozzles or the overall plumbing during previous applications. “There may be successive layers that build up over time. It may be
even two or three crops beyond the one that you’re treating is the one that ends up showing injury, but it tends to be in crops that are very sensitive to herbicide injury,” he said. “That’s a ticking time bomb for when you get one of those cleaning type herbicides or adjuvants that come into the system and flush all that stuff out and injure the crop.” Most lab cases in the past five years have involved Liberty applied to LibertyLink canola. The adjuvants in Liberty are soapy and act as detergents in the tank, which break down fatty substances. Other herbicide applications involving solvent based adjuvants, such as Merge or Turbocharge, can also clean fatty substances out of the tank.
Brenzil said a Group 2 herbicide is the contaminant herbicide in most cases, but it isn’t what necessarily causes the deposit. That usually occurs when it is applied in association with something with an oil or fat based adjuvant. The fat can layer over the Group 2 herbicide and trap it in the sprayer’s plumbing. Damage can also occur several loads after the contaminant herbicide was applied. “Canola is probably one of the most susceptible crops to Group 2 injury, so you’ve got the perfect storm occurring when you’re applying to LibertyLink canola,” he said. A common assumption is that multiple tanks of another herbicide that isn’t a contaminant type will clean
enough of the problem herbicide out of the tank so that no cleaning is necessary before going into a sensitive crop. “That’s not necessarily the case,” he said. Brenzil said he saw a scenario last year in which several tanks showed no injury and then one tank “completely obliterates the canola in that area and then subsequent tanks are fine.” It was the first time he had ever seen that occur. Lab tests determined that the tank load that caused the injury had sat for a significant time with Liberty inside the sprayer. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
»
Western Barley Growers Association in Conjunction with the Barley Council of Canada A MUST ATTEND CONFERENCE…FEATURING The Revitalized Barley Industry An excellent line-up of speakers and an exciting agenda!
February 12,13 &14, 2014 Deerfoot Inn & Casino – Calgary, AB Convention info: 403.912.3998 Agenda and Registration: wbga@wbga.org Hotel Reservations: 403.239.7529 or reservations@dfic.ca
PRODUCTION
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
75
CROP MANAGEMENT | DISEASE
Root rot becoming menace in pea fields BY REBECA KUROPATWA FREELANCE WRITER
Alberta pea growers have a new enemy to worry about. “Root rots on pea crops have become more common and more severe in some fields in Alberta in the past four years,” says Michael Harding, a research scientist with Alberta Agriculture. “The main culprit causing root rot on pea crops has been identified as fusarium avenaceum, but there are other species that are part of a complex of fungi that also cause problems on pea roots.” Harding said the root rot complex has been active in some pea fields,
prompting additional research to determine why the problem in some areas is increasing in incidence and severity. “A survey of 145 pea fields in Alberta in 2013 showed us that fusarium root rot was found in 98 percent of the fields,” he said. “However, the severity of the disease ranged from very low in some fields to extremely high in others.” The overall severity was highest in east-central Alberta and lowest in southern Alberta, although no sampling was done in the Peace River region last year. “We know that aspects of field history, soil quality and environmental conditions will affect root rot, but at
this stage of the investigation, we can’t pinpoint exactly why some fields were nearly destroyed by root rot while others were unaffected.” Harding said climate and precipitation are likely major factors. “In Alberta, there has been significant and often above-average precipitation in many regions from May to June for the past four years,” he said. “This environment, with abundant precipitation, flooding and cool wet soils, give a distinct advantage to root rot and often increases root rot disease severity.” Management practices are available to alleviate the problem and fall into three categories:
• Avoid fields with poor drainage or a high risk of flooding. • Use healthy seed with high vigour, which avoids a slow, weak start to the crop. Slow, weak seedlings are at greater risk for root and seed rot, especially in cold, wet soil. Also, apply a registered fungicidal seed treatment to protect the developing seedling and promote rapid, healthy crop stands. • Prepare a good seed bed, targeting optimal seeding timing, depth and seeding rate. Provide good fertility for the seedling and, where possible, optimal water via irrigation. However, avoid over-irrigating. Practice good crop rotation to limit the pathogen’s ability to live in the soil.
WHAT IS ROOT ROT? • “Rot” refers to a condition of softening and/or discoloration of plant tissues caused by a pathogen infection (i.e. bacterium or fungus). • Root rot often involves the invasion of healthy plant roots by soil-borne fungi, causing discoloration, stunting and softening of root tissues. • Damage prevents the root system from adequately suppling the plant with nutrients and water, which causes wilting, stunting and yellowing. • Not all plants are susceptible to all root rot pathogens, but no crop is resistant to all root rot pathogens. All crops are to some degree susceptible to root rot.
» CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE “It’s got more time to do more cleaning and so it pulls out a very concentrated amount of that contaminant herbicide and goes out on the field and it completely kills the canola,” he said. The late start to seeding and variable weather combined to cause significant problems last year. As a result there were sporadic periods when sprayers operated for a day or two and then sat for two or three days. “That’s not only going to contribute to more layering on the front end of the contaminant but it’s also going to contribute to those really catastrophic removal events where you get complete death to that one tank load.” Brenzil said many farmers also assume that spraying glyphosate will alleviate the problem. “There’s an assumption out there that glyphosate will clean things out of tanks after you’ve got Group 2 combination ahead of time,” he said. Brenzil said the new glyphosate formulations are oily and easily layer on tanks. This may coat more fat over the top of the contaminant and trap it even more. Prepass and Priority products also stood out last year as some of the primary contaminant sources by forming solids and settling. Good sprayer sanitation is the key. Brenzil said the sprayer needs to be cleaned out with at least water but preferably a full cleanout after any prolonged period of inactivity. “Don’t let that stuff sit in the tank and layer things on the inside of the sprayer,” he said. As a short-term solution during the summer, Brenzil advised letting water sit in the tank after it’s been emptied and cleaned before resuming spraying. Using an ammonium based cleaner is recommended for Group 2, but it is not a strong enough grease cutter. “Don’t be afraid to add detergent into that ammonia rinse or even use one of the commercial tank cleaners that have both of those as a component,” he said. “The detergent breaks down the oil, the ammonia solubilizes the Group 2 and they all go out in the rinse.” For more information, contact the Agriculture Knowledge Centre at 866-457-2377.
Visit us online at www.producer.com to see a video about this story.
SOME SEED REPS STAND BY THEIR PRODUCTS. WE PREFER TO GET WAIST-DEEP IN THEM.
45H31 • Outstanding yield potential • Superior standability and harvestability • Rated R for blackleg
If you’re looking for your local Pioneer Hi-Bred sales representative, try the nearest farm. You see, we’re always out walking the fields, talking to our neighbours and checking the crops. In fact, we make it our mission to know everything there is to know about our local growing conditions. That way, we can help our partners get the best yield possible. It’s this kind of passion that’s helped Pioneer Hi-Bred sales reps become leaders in the seed business and in their communities. Talk to your local Pioneer Hi-Bred sales representative or visit pioneer.com for more information.
Roundup Ready® is a registered trademark used under license from Monsanto Company. 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. ® , ™, SM Trademarks and service marks licensed to Pioneer Hi-Bred Limited. © 2014, PHL.
@PioneerWCanada
76
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
PRODUCTION
AGRONOMY | SEED AUGERS
Poly cup flighting gives tender seeds more TLC Rubber belts don’t measure up | Cup shaped soft plastic flighting prevents breakage, improves germination BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU
The ability to auger seed at the same rate as a rubber belt conveyor but with 4.4 percent less seed damage might catch farmers’ attention. Researchers at Ohio State University recently moved soybean seed through a six-inch auger with poly cupped flighting, and ended up with a germination rate of 86 percent. A rubber paddled belt conveyor, which was previously thought to be the best way to move delicate seeds, did not fare as well. Soybeans from the same seed lot had only 81.6 percent germination when moved through a six-inch tube with a rubber paddled belt. Soybean seeds had an 80.8 percent germination rate when moved through either a conventional sixinch brush auger or a six-inch steel auger. Seeds in the control group that were handled carefully by bucket to avoid damage had a germination rate of 87.5 percent, which was only 1.5 per-
cent better than seeds moved by the poly cupped auger. A five percent increase in germination is significant to the farm economy, considering that 80 million soybean acres are seeded in North America annually. OSU researcher Randall Reeder, who was trying to find the best way to lift soybean seed with the least amount of damage, said he was surprised by the results. Conventional wisdom for the past 20 years has been that the rubber conveyor is the gentlest means possible for moving seeds. “Our most surprising conclusion was that the rubber belt did not come out as the winner. That was a real shock,” said Reeder.
The other big surprise was that the poly cupped auger seeds germinated nearly as well as the control group, which were moved without machinery. Reeder has no experience with canola, but he was willing to extrapolate from his soybean project. “The more prone any seed is to damage, the more important it is to have the gentlest conveyance possible. Sensitive seeds simply need better treatment.” Canola growers who typically see a germination rate of 50 to 60 percent are taking note of the poly cupped technology and wondering if it might work for their tiny round seeds. However, research hasn’t been
Amity’s SF9930 sunflower air seeder cart is one of the few units available in Western Canada using poly cupped auger flighting. | AGCO PHOTOS
done on how poly cupped auger flighting might benefit canola seeds coated with protection products
that easily flake off because of rough handling. There’s an assumption that gentler
Runs in the family. There’s no stronger tie than the family who works together on the same land. For them, farming’s a tradition. And although each new generation has their own ideas, there are some things they will be reluctant to change, the things that have consistently performed for them, the things that aren’t broken. InVigor® – proud to be part of your family farm for over 17 years.
Winkler Family, LANGDON, AB BayerCropScience.ca/InVigor or 1 888-283-6847 or contact your Bayer CropScience representative. Always read and follow label directions. InVigor® is a registered trademark of the Bayer Group. Bayer CropScience is a member of CropLife Canada.
C-66-09/13-BCS13097-E
PRODUCTION
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
77
In field trials the conventional steel auger, above, and the brush auger, right, had a germination rate of 80.8 percent compared to poly cupped flighting with an 86 percent germination rate.
The manufacturer of the poly cupped auger says clearance between flighting OD and pipe ID can be tight enough to move small seeded crops like flax and canola. | RANDALL REEDER PHOTOS
handling of canola seeds will result in less flaking, but nobody knows for sure without validated field trials, said Todd Botterill, western Canadian distributor of Travis seed carts, one of the few companies bringing poly cup technology to Western Canada. Reeder said it’s difficult to distinguish the shape factor from the soft plastic factor in the unique poly cupped flighting. Either may have a positive effect on small canola seeds. However, he said the one thing he’s sure of is that the combination of the two factors reduces seed damage. “This flighting has a distinct cup shape around the tip of the flighting,” he said. “It’s designed to reduce damage caused by seeds being trapped and crushed between the flighting edge and wall of the tube.” One theory is that the cupped edge directs stray seeds back into the main herd rather than allowing them to be stuck against the inside of the tube.
r.p.m. Seeds run through the same auger at 370 r.p.m. had a germination rate of 85.5 percent, representing a full seven percent benefit as a result of the slower auger r.p.m. The team determined that slower was better because more grain in the auger served as a buffer and reduced the number of seeds that contacted the edges of the flighting. As well, seed exit speed was reduced at the nose when r.p.m. was reduced. Reeder said seed damage can be dramatically reduced by installing padding at the nose on all types of augers and conveyors. “The research team is convinced that the conveyance mechanism isn’t the only factor at play in moving seed,” he said. “What happens when seed hits the top end of the auger is also important. Regardless of what auger or conveyor type you use, ensure that padding is installed at the nose where the seed changes direction. In
“I think the softness of the poly might be more important than the cup shape, but that’s so hard to determine,” he said. “But we know that steel flighting is thinner and has more of a harsh edge compared to the poly, which has a thicker gentler edge.” Reeder said OSU embarked on the study because the small seeding window and expanding farm size have forced growers to become more efficient at seeding time. As a result, many producers use a dedicated gravity wagon as temporary seed storage and then transfer seed from the wagon directly into the product tank on their planter or drill. Reeder said the process of lifting seeds from the gravity box and transferring them to the tank is where a lot of seed damage occurs. Research projects conducted in the 1990s support Reeder’s statement. They compared conventional steel augers of the time to the new rubber
belt systems and found that rubber belts on seed carts improved germination rates. The OSU experiment that compared the poly cupped flighting to the steel auger, brush auger and rubber belt conveyor used seed lifting machines that were 16 feet long and set at a 35 degree angle. All machines were adjusted to move 10 bushels per minute. This volume is at the low end of the range used on the farm, but it’s also the rate that causes the least amount of seed damage, so it gives better comparison results. Speeds were varied with each type of machine, but the volume remained 10 bu. per minute. The germination tests found that lower r.p.m. with a tube carrying more grain proved to cause less seed damage than higher r.p.m. with less grain in the tube. The most extreme case was with the brush type auger. The germination rate was 78.5 percent running at 800
any kind of operation, seed damage is always greatest at the point where it changes direction.” A plastic deflector isn’t the same as padding because many plastic products have a surface hardness rating comparable to metal. Reeder said seed damage is greater if the auger shows wear or wobbles within the tube. Worn out motor mounts, bearings, shafts or any other component that causes excess bounce or shaking should be repaired before running seed through the machine. What works for commercial grain criteria isn’t necessarily good enough for seed. “The important thing we can take away from this is that the combination of the poly material and the cup shape flighting create a huge benefit to the producer.” For more information, contact Reeder at reeder.1@osu.edu. FOR A RELATED STORY, SEE PAGE 78
Unsung hero. She is the glue and her job description is endless. She does it all: chief cook, bottle washer, nurse, housekeeper, disciplinarian, groundskeeper, grandmother, babysitter and part-time truck driver. But ask her and she’ll say she just makes sure everyone’s been looked after. InVigor® needs Liberty® the same way. Because powerful Liberty herbicide is the backbone of the LibertyLink® system and together, they’re partners.
Evelyn Winkler, LANGDON, AB BayerCropScience.ca/Liberty or 1 888-283-6847 or contact your Bayer CropScience representative. Always read and follow label directions. InVigor®, Liberty® and LibertyLink® are registered trademarks of the Bayer Group. Bayer CropScience is a member of CropLife Canada.
C-61-09/13-BCS13097-E
78
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
PRODUCTION
SEED HANDLING | POLY CUPPED FLIGHTING
Poly cup results prove ‘dollar impact’ of better germination BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU
Soybean seed moved with this poly cupped flighting had a germination rate of 86 percent, up to five percent higher than conventional methods. | RANDALL REEDER PHOTOS
Lundell Plastics supplies poly cupped flighting kits for farmers wanting to upgrade existing augers.
Canola’s tendency to lose its protective coating doesn’t make it an easy seed to work with. The tiny seeds becomes susceptible to a myriad of soil borne diseases and insects when the coating flakes off, often driving the germination rate down into the 50 percent bracket. Losing half their seeds to flaking is a major financial headache for farmers when seed costs $10 a pound. As well, that flaky coating can plug metering discs when farmers use a planter. Some companies concentrate on new ways to make protective coating adhere to the seed, while others
PRE-SEED
PRIORITY # 1
Get your crop off to a great start with the right pre-seed burndown. This spring add Priority™ to your glyphosate to get the same active ingredients, weed control and performance as PrePass™. When mixed with glyphosate for pre-seed burndown, Priority controls a broad range of hard-to-kill broadleaf and grassy weeds. Get the power of florasulam without the hassle of a bundle, exclusively from MANA Canada.
Contains Florasulam
Support choice – ask for Priority by name.
manainc.ca ™ Priority is a trademark of Makhteshim Agan of North America, Inc. All others are registered trademarks of their respective companies. Always read and follow label directions. 13049.12.13
focus on ways to handle the seed more gently. Spurred on by research at Ohio State University, some manufacturers now offer poly cupped flighting in their augers. “We sell many different kinds of seed carts and we have poly cup augers on all of them as standard equipment,” said Glen Parrett of HitchDoc in Jackson, Minnesota. HitchDoc began selling its Travis seed carts in Western Canada this winter. It stopped selling conventional auger and rubber belts five years ago. “We don’t even sell conveyor systems anymore,” he said. “Would we sell a rubber conveyor to a farmer just to fill a perceived need? No. We don’t do business that way. The poly cups are definitely a superior product.” Parrett said the cupped flighting is a solid poly material rather than steel with a synthetic outer layer. However, while the material’s softness factor helps cushion delicate products such as canola seed, he thinks the shape of the cup is more important. “I think it’s mainly the shape. You gently hold the seed in that cup and carry it up the auger instead of forcing it with hard steel. The seed sort of rests in the cup,” he said. “We lean pretty heavily on (OSU researcher Randall) Reeder’s tests at Ohio State. Farmers see the data and they put two and two together. They pretty quickly realize the dollar impact of having more of their seed germinate.” Iowa company Lundell Plastics developed plastic cupped flighting when it began building poly cupped flighting to move livestock manure. It still makes manure augers, but flighting for lifting seeds has become its main market. “We sell flighting to about 20 different OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) and they use it in various applications for seed moving equipment,” said Matt Roeder, product engineer at Lundel. However, Roeder said poly cupped flighting hasn’t found its way into western Canada until recently. His closest OEM customers are Market Farm Equipment in Ontario and HitchDoc in Minnesota. He said Lundell builds the flighting in only a handful of different sizes. It’s up to his customers to insert it in their tube of choice, thus determining the clearance between the flighting’s outside diameter and the tube’s inside diameter. “If you want tight clearances for canola or other small seeds, the most popular flighting is five inches in diameter. For soybeans, that goes into a six-inch tube, leaving about 3/8 inch clearance,” he said. “For small seeds, it’s a matter of using a slightly smaller ID tube or else buy our flighting that’s 5 5/8 inches in diameter and put it in a six inch ID tube.” Roeder said Lundell Plastics sells a lot of poly cupped flighting to farmers who retro-fit existing augers. In Western Canada, poly cupped auger flighting is now available as standard equipment on Amity Sunflower sold by Agco and Travis seed carts distributed by Todd Botterill. For more information, contact Glen Parrett at 507-847-4049 or www. hitchdoc.com, Matt Roeder at 877367-7659 or www.lundellplastics. com and Todd Botterill at 204-8715004 or www.botterillsales.com.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
79
BEEF PROCESSING | EU EXPORT TARGET
Harmony Beef owner eager to get plant door open $18 million in renovations | Alberta cattle producers hope the former Rancher’s Beef facility will be open this summer BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
LETHBRIDGE — Rich Vesta was impressed with the overall design and concept of the Rancher’s Beef plant when he visited it for the first time. The plant in Balzac, Alta., had been closed since 2005, but peering through the dust and cobwebs, he could see the potential of what had been a dream of western ranchers who invested in a state of the art beef processing plant at the height of the BSE crisis. “We want to vindicate why this plant was built. It is a world class facility,” he told the Alberta Cattle Feeders Association annual meeting in Lethbridge Jan. 22. “Another plant like this will never be built.” He said the cost to build a facility of this type is out of reach in today’s dollars. As well, Vesta has a different vision for the facility as more plants close in the United States because of a lack of cattle and profits. He sealed the deal to buy it last November and with $18 million in renovations, it is expected to be open this summer. Vesta has renamed it Harmony Beef. Located east of Balzac and northeast of Calgary, it is the largest European Union certified plant in Canada and can handle 800 head per shift. “There is no other plant like it in North America on a food safety or technological basis,” he said. Vesta is also realistic. He has been in the meat business since he started working for a butcher as a 14-yearold Illinois farm boy. He worked his way to the top and gained a reputation as a fixer who could turn struggling plants into profitable businesses. He worked with all the big ones over the years, such as Land O’ Lakes, Swift’s, Montfort, Packerland and JBS USA. He bought Packerland with financing from John Hancock Insurance and turned it around. “We killed Holsteins and cows, but we did it better than anyone else,” he said. JBS owner Wesley Batista then offered Vesta a two year contract to turn the Brazilian company’s U.S. acquisitions into viable businesses. One of his approaches when overseeing a troubled plant was to reduce waste. For example, the JBS plant in Greely, Colorado, was killing as many as 6,000 head per day. He cut the line speeds back to 4,200 so that workers had more time to do the job properly. There was less waste, and the beef yield improved. He looked at the Balzac plant when he retired from JBS and finally bought
HARMONY BEEF WILL HAVE A DAILY SLAUGHTER CAPACITY OF
800
it from the Price family of Acme, Alta., which owns Sunterra Meats and a chain of high end grocery stores in Calgary and Edmonton. Vesta said it took two years to get the deal done. “We’re very determined,” he said. Western Canadian producers are placing considerable hope at his feet after packers and feedlots have bled red ink in recent years. A new plant with different marketing plans that might include Europe may renew producer confidence. “At 800 head a day we are not going
There is no other plant like it in North America on a food safety or technological basis. RICH VESTA HARMONY BEEF OWNER
to be a cure all for Western Canada, but we are going to make a difference,” he said. While many plants tried to start
EXPENDITURES
Seed
31%
Fertilizer
27%
Crop Protection
18%
Parts and Service 12% Fuel
9%
Feed
3%
Get the inputs you need to keep your business rolling. When you’re empowered with a fast and easy alternative to cash, there’s no stopping what you can do. A multi-use account ensures you have the øe[ibility to purchase the inputs reTuired to keep your business moving forward. Do more with a company that’s been empowering producers for more than 175 years. To learn more, visit JohnDeereFinancial.com/Advantage.
Customers earn one (1) AIR MILES reward mile for every $50.00* charged to their multi-use account. E[cluding fees, late payment charges, interest on late charges and interest on past due interest. AIR MILES rewards miles are awarded based on monthly net purchases. Account must be in good standing. ®™Trademark of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under license by LoyaltyOne, Inc. and John Deere Financial. CR3210870
during the BSE situation, this one was among a couple that actually processed some beef. However, it eventually succumbed to a lack of
cash and struggles with regulations and food safety. This time round, the Alberta Cattle Feeders’ Association has passed a resolution to work with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency to ensure the proper food safety procedures are in place so the plant is able to open in June. “We can’t force anybody to do anything, but please, somebody, communicate back to the Alberta cattle feeders that Harmony Beef will open without a hitch,” said Rick Paskal, who feeds cattle at Picture Butte.
80
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
ADVERTISING FEATURE
SASKATCHEWAN EQUINE EXPO, February 14 – 16, 2014
Going into the 3rd year of the annual Saskatchewan Equine Expo at Saskatoon’s Prairieland Park expectations are running high for another outstanding event. Each year organizers offer a number of different programs, while continuing the everpopular NAERIC Trainers Challenge and the trade show where vendors showcase the latest technology, nutrition and information for horse enthusiasts. The three-day weekend event includes equine related lectures, presentations, demonstrations, entertainment, competitions and opportunities all focusing on the equine industry. Whether participants and spectators are amateurs or professionals, they will experience the newest equine products, techniques and services. It is evident that based on the previous number of attendees that Saskatchewan is embracing this weekend that is specifically focused on the equine industry. 2014 will be the second year that we will welcome competitors for the exciting, Canada’s Ultimate Cow Horse Competition. This three-day competition includes reined work, herd work, fence work components and will be one of the features of the two evening Equine Extravaganza performances. Canada’s Ultimate Cow Horse Competition attracts top horsemen and horsewomen from across Canada. Dale Clearwater from Hanley, SK will return to defend his championship title for the 3rd year in a row in the Trainers
Challenge. Competing for the title are two outstanding horsemen. Doug Mills, from BC who is well known for his “Training Thru Trust” program and many other accomplishments across Canada, the United States and Europe. Lachlan Bell was born and raised in Chinchilla, Queensland, Australia and came to Canada in 2004 where he owns and operates Lachlan Bell Performance Horses in Cochrane, Alberta. The audience will be captivated by the horsemanship skills of these professional trainers. The Equine Extravaganza is again scheduled for both Friday and Saturday evenings. To accommodate the large crowd at the Ag Centre we have decided to open another building in the trade centre where a live video feed will show all of the excitement and entertainment of the evening. Patrons will be able to watch the event in comfort and enjoy a variety of food and beverage items. New events that will be featured throughout the weekend include: Battle of the Breeds - Seven breeds will be represented and compete in 4 events to determine the overall “best breed”. Driving & Harnessing Demonstrations - by Harvey MacFarlane, including his impressive 8-horse hitch during the Equine Extravaganza Horseback Cow Dog Demonstration a showcase of riders and their stock dogs where cattle are brought into the arena and then maneuvered through a series of obsta-
cles designed to test the skills of handler and dog, while keeping the cattle under control. Living Sky’s vaulting - The sport of vaulting combines dance and gymnastics performed on the back of a moving horse. Rooted in horsemanship training of ancient Greece, vaulting has become very popular in Canada and is even the national youth sport of Germany. Hunter Jumper clinic - Presented by well known horsewoman Connie Dorsch. The clinic will include: Hunter Clinic: What does the hunter judge look for? Jumper Clinic: What makes the jumper course difficult? Connie will walk the course explaining each obstacle, the difficulties encountered and ways to make riders better understand and execute. Riders will ride the courses and be coached followed by a question and answer session. Jonathan Field - World renowned Jonathon Field will be offering his expertise in a two-day riding clinic focusing on “Developing a Great Riding Horse from the Ground” and “Develop a Comfy Canter: Using bend and balance the horse and rider learn lead departures and smooth transitions”. In addition Jonathon will present a daily seminar in the information theatre in the trade centre. Day1 - SaddleDesignforHorseandRiderComfort Day 2 - Reading Horse Behavior: The Primary Equine Language and the 6 C’s Day 3 - A Bit of Knowledge: A 5-Step Biting Program.
Also offered once again, a guided tour of the Ryan/Dubé Equine Performance Centre at the University of Saskatchewan. Tour will include information and sessions involving some or all of the following: • Advanced medical imaging tools including a standing equine MRI, CT and nuclear scintigraphy. • The Large Animal Clinic’s equine ward and large animal surgery suites. • A high-speed treadmill and a computerized force plate system. • A paved indoor runway for lameness examinations on a smooth, even surface. • A longeing arena. • Other equine diagnostic tools including endoscopes and ultrasonography. Pre-registration is required and a limited number will be accepted. Registration includes tour and return transportation from Prairieland Park. Information and forms are available on the website. Throughout the weekend the Western College of Veterinary Medicine will also conduct seminars and demonstrations in both the Ag Centre and in the Information Theatre in the trade centre relating to current equine issues. WCVM Seminars (Information Theatre - Hall B) • The Foaling Mare; What’s Normal and What’s Not; Common Lamenesses in Performance Horses • Nutrition for the Horse; The Pre-Purchase
Examination; Pastern Dermatitis, aka “Scratches” • End of Life Decisions for Your Horse; Equine Insurance; Equine Ophthalmology; Behavioural Problems in Horses; Advanced Diagnostic Imaging WCVM Demonstrations (Wash Rack - Ag Centre) • Body Condition Scoring and Weighing Your Horse; Bandaging/First Aid; Dentistry (Oral Examination, Tooth “Floating); Acupuncture for Horses; Farrier/Xray Demo; Endoscopy (Respiratory Tract, Stomach) • Ultrasound (Limbs, Heart, Intestinal Tract) Prairieland Park’s Trade and Convention Centre will host the trade show which has been expanded adding an additional 13,000 square feet of space. Attendees will have the opportunity to see everything from horse trailers and stalls to western art, décor and the very latest in equine technology, products and services.The trade show venue will also include the Information Theatre hosted by the WCVM veterinarians and industry experts providing information on various equine related topics. Prairieland Park is pleased to present The Saskatchewan Equine Expo in partnership with the Equine Health Research Council of the WCVM and the Saskatchewan Horse Federation. For full schedule, details and entry forms and visit the website at www.saskatchewanequineexpo.com
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
LIVESTOCK
81
WTO SCHEDULES HEARINGS ON COOL The WTO is set to hear arguments from Canada and Mexico Feb. 18-19 regarding an appeal of amended U.S. country-oforigin labelling rules. | Page 82
L IV ES T OC K ED I TO R: B A R B G L EN | P h : 403- 942- 2214 F: 403- 942- 2405 | E-MAIL: BARB.GLEN @PRODUC ER.C OM | TWITTER: @BARBGLE N
PORK SEMINAR | INFO SHARING
Vets told to step up to improve info network BY DAN YATES SASKATOON NEWSROOM
BANFF, Alta. — A disease surveillance system is generating useful information for the Canadian hog industry but demands greater participation from veterinarians, says Chris Byra, the network’s manager. The Canadian Swine Health Intelligence Network has established a system that allows veterinarians who visit hog farms and work with producers to enter information into a database. The system records the health issue, diagnosis, whether tests were sent to a laboratory and the results. Information is collected and used to produce reports that are distributed to practitioners. Resulting data shows disease trends, emerging threats and the efficiency of vaccinations. “Our goal is that 100 percent of the farmers that produce pigs have a veterinarian who knows what is happening in the country,” Byra told the Banff Pork Seminar. CSHIN was established in 2012 after the Canadian Swine Health Board identified surveillance gaps in the Canadian hog industry. Byra said every practitioner working with swine in Canada has now been notified of the data entry system. “Right now all the focus is on PED, but every few years there seems to be a new one,” said Byra. “We’re really developing a system to go forward and always be on the lookout.” Fifteen veterinary practices are participating in the program, which accounts for 32 veterinarians, or half of the practitioners working with hogs. Byra said it represents 40 percent of production. The system receives 75 to 80 submissions a week from British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec and Prince Edward Island. “We do have to increase our participation,” said Byra. Information that has been collected shows a recent increase in porcine circovirus in Western Canada, where participation by veterinarians is greater, he said. “This (increase) is in spite of vaccination, and we know the vaccines work,” he said. Id e nt i f y i n g t h e p ro b l e m ha s allowed officials to ask questions and identify problems with vaccine application. “We’re finding that people cut down on doses,” he said. The development of systems that would allow data entry over phones or tablets or through voice recordings may help encourage use. Practitioners already receive a nominal sum of money for each entry.
Porcine epidemic diarrhea causes dehydration and can lead to death. The virus poses the greatest risk to piglets. |
FILE PHOTO
BANFF PORK SEMINAR | PORCINE EPIDEMIC DIARRHEA
Quick response key to PED control Same day diagnosis | Swift lab analysis in Canada’s first case put control efforts into action BY DAN YATES SASKATOON NEWSROOM
BANFF — Veterinarian Doug MacDougald had been optimistic about Canadian producers’ ability to manage porcine epidemic diarrhea before its discovery on a southwestern Ontario hog farm was announced last week. And while he remained positive late last week as news spread of the countr y’s first case of PED, he warned that the Canadian industry is already late in responding to a virus that is wreaking havoc on the American industry. In that countr y, the virus has affected millions of pigs and cost the industry hundreds of millions of dollars since it first appeared in May 2013. Cases of the virus, which thrives in cold weather, began to escalate in mid-fall in the United States. Its reach is expected to spread over the winter. MacDougald said the Canadian industry requires an aggressive national surveillance effort, and fast. “If we allow it to escape in Canada with the information and the unique opportunity we’ve had to not have it until we can learn some stuff, if we let it escape, shame on us,” said MacDougald of South West Ontario Veterinary Services. Some estimates say as much as 30 to 40 percent of the U.S. sow herd has been infected. “We learned too late on this issue,” Dallas Hockman of the United States’ National Pork Producers Council told the Banff Pork Seminar last week. “We’re playing catch up.”
A working group was established in Ontario in November with the assistance of Ontario Pork and the Ontario Swine Health Advisory Board. The effort allowed officials to be ready when a suspicious case materialized.
MARTIN MISENER VETERINARIAN
“Who’s going to take the lead? It was the end of September, into October, and the answer was nobody and that’s an unacceptable answer,” said Martin Misener, also of South West Ontario Veterinary Services. “So we just sort of took off and started.” Confirmation of the first case of PED in Canada happened quickly. The producer first observed scouring in piglets Jan. 21. They were treated but looked worse the next day, which is when the case became suspicious. Officials were able to take a sample, which was returned the same day, leading to the diagnosis that night and public confirmation Jan. 23. MacDougald said at least four other “suspicious” cases had previously been investigated in the province, with negative results. Those cases also saw lab results returned swiftly. Other jurisdictions need to be able to replicate that response and quick turnaround, he added.
Chris Byra of the Canadian Swine Health Intelligence Network, which operates a network in which veterinarians voluntarily submit data about diagnoses and farm visits, told the seminar early detection isn’t easy. “We were under the impression it was going to be pretty easy to do. Piglets start dying, we get massive diarrhea and that’s what we’re monitoring right now,” he said. “But in fact, in these grow finisher barns its less obvious.” MacDougald encouraged producers to contact a veterinarian if there are changes in pigs’ diarrhea. Detection of PED is not easy or obvious with laboratory testing. “It does not have to be highly explosive watery diarrhea. This is a concern for Canada in early detection.” PED-related efforts and response plans have been developed in other provinces, including Alberta, where the virus has been listed as reportable and some supports made available to producers. MacDougald said other jurisdictions must follow the lead of the Ontario Pork Board. Funds have to be made available to allow qualified professionals to plug gaps in insecurity. “We absolutely need to do this right now in the other regions of Canada, and continue to drill down in every region, including Ontario,” he said. Trucks crossing the Canadian border have been identified as a major risk of being cross-contaminated with the virus. Evidence collected in Ontario shows that a minority of trucks arriving in Canada are carrying some amount of PED.
DOUG MACDOUGALD VETERINARIAN
Officials also want to ensure that pig trailers returning from the U.S. are washed and disinfected to the OSHAB’s standards, which includes a separate protocol for cold weather disinfection. MacDougald said producers should assess their own biosecurity as well as that of service providers and transport companies with which they work. However, thousands of hog and cattle trucks cross the border every year. Logistical challenges include wash bay capacity and the use of recycled water. Misener said Ontario has only 33 percent of the wash capacity required for a major disease control initiative. Corn and dried distillers grain are another potential source of contamination. Misener said some producers in the U.S. are using pellets as a precaution. Birds are another source, he added. “Hammer the things you can control,” he said. “This virus is going to get tracked into your barn from a way that wasn’t thought of.” Misener said there is no hope of containing or eliminating the virus in the U.S., where producers will have to adapt to its presence. Some vaccines are marketed for PED, and others will come, but he said they are unlikely to be effective.
82
LIVESTOCK
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
CALVING | EARLY IS BETTER
Calving distribution provides insight into herd profitability
JOHN CAMPBELL, DVM, DVSC
M
ost cow-calf producers have a calving book in their pockets at calving time. A few may have made the technological leap to a smartphone application or a computer-based recording system, but the tried and true pocket calving book is still common. This record keeping system may not be high tech, but it can tell you more than which calf belongs to which cow. One of the simplest ways to track the reproductive success of a cowcalf herd is to graph a calving distribution. This is simply a graphical representation of how many calves are born in each 21 day period of the calving season. Most computer based cow-calf record systems can generate a calving distribution, but you can also create a simple calving distribution by recording calf births on a calendar or in your calving book. Calving distribution is important because it is the only easily accessible reproductive event in a cow-calf herd.
CALVING DISTRIBUTION
In most herds, we don’t know the exact breeding dates for each cow unless we are using artificial insemination. The only reproductive event that is easy to track is the cow’s calving date. However, we know that the other reproductive events, such as when a cow comes into heat and when it is bred, are highly related to the date on which it calves. To create a calving distribution, count the cows that have calved during the first 21 days of the calving season. Divide this number by the total number of cows that calve in the calving season and multiply by 100 to get the percentage of cows calving in the first 21 days. Repeat this process for each of the next two 21 day periods to calculate the percentage of cows that are calving in each 21 day period of the calving season. The goal is to have at least 65 percent of the herd calving in the first 21 day period of the season. These cows were probably cycling at the start of the breeding season and were bred in the first 21 days of the previous breeding season. They are also more likely to be cycling at the start of the next breeding season and will be more likely to become pregnant in the following year, provided that they are in good body condition and on a good plane of nutrition.
Percentage of cows that calve
ANIMAL HEALTH
70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
0-20
21-42 43-63 OPEN
Calving periods (days) Tracking the median calving date is another way to measure the success of the calving distribution. The goal is to have half of the cow herd calve by day 18 of the calving season. Reproduction is one of the most important economic indicators of success in a cow-calf operation. A live calf on the ground in the spring is the first step toward having a product to sell at the end of the year. There are lots of reasons for trying to achieve the goal of 65 percent of the cow herd calving in the first 21 days of the calving period. Cows that calve in the first 21 days will wean heavier calves at the end of the year. Each extra 21 day period before weaning can result in at least an extra 50 pounds of weaning weight for the calves born in this time period. Heifer calves born in the first 21
Calves born in the first 21 days of the calving period are heavier when weaned at the end of the year. | FILE PHOTO days that are retained as replacement heifers are heavier and more likely to be cycling as a yearling heifer. Having a large proportion of calves born in the first 21 day period also creates a more even and uniform calf crop, which simplifies management procedures and results in a marketing advantage. Lots of producers with mediocre calving distributions are still getting by with reasonable pregnancy rates, but they could significantly improve their economic returns by focusing on improving their calving distribution.
Less than ideal calving distributions are often a reflection of poor reproductive management or poor nutritional management, especially over the winter feeding period and into the early breeding season. An ideal calving distribution will result in fewer open cows and heavier calves at weaning time. It’s easy to calculate and interpret. What does your herd look like? John Campbell is head of Large Animal Clinical Sciences at the University of Saskatchewan’s Western College of Veterinary Medicine.
TRADE | COUNTRY-OF-ORIGIN LABELLING
Canada’s WTO appeal of COOL set for Feb. BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
MANITOBA BEEF PRODUCERS 35TH ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING AND PRESIDENT’S BANQUET EVENT INFORMATION February 4 to 5, 2014 • Victoria Inn Hotel & Convention Centre 3550 Victoria Avenue • Brandon, MB Engage with MBP directors and fellow producers, debate issues that affect your bottom line, and set policy which will impact the future of your industry. $
90 REGULAR REGISTRATION *INCLUDES BANQUET TICKET 50 SINGLE BANQUET TICKETS $ 40 MEETING ONLY $
NEW! MBP Members are encouraged to mentor and register a young producer (ages 18 to 39). Young producer receives a complimentary registration with mentor’s registration.
EVENT FUNDING PROVIDED BY:
REGISTER AND BUY TICKETS AT www.mbbeef.ca OR CALL 1-800-772-0458.
35th Anniversary President’s Banquet Imperial Ballroom, Victoria Inn Hotel & Convention Centre, Brandon Feb. 4, 2014
FEATURING: • Reception • Grand Roast Beef Buffet • Awards • Keynote Speaker:
Bruce Vincent, Libby, Montana “With Vision, There Is Hope” Ag Advocacy as a business line item
LETHBRIGE — The World Trade Organization has set aside Feb. 18-19 for public hearings on U.S. countryof-origin labelling. The hearing will be in Geneva, Switzerland, and could take up to two years to complete. The WTO said public viewing is available via closed circuit television. For more information, visit www. wto.org/library/rss/latest_news_e. xml. Canada and Mexico requested the appeal after the U.S. Department of Agriculture amended the labelling law last May. The legislation requires complete information on where an animal was born, raised and slaughtered, and the amended rule tightened up requirements even further than the previous version of the law. The appellants argue that the law discriminates against live cattle and hogs and has cost their industries billions of dollars. The Canadian Pork Council completed a study last year and determined the total damage to its business up to October 2012 totalled $1.9 billion with the greatest damage being against slaughter hogs. COOL resulted in 10.4 million fewer slaughter hogs exported, representing a value of $1.5 billion. Other losses were incurred when feeder pigs were not exported to the United
States for fattening, said the study. Canada and Mexico first challenged the law in 2009 and won the first round in 2012. When the amendment was released May 23, Canada published a list of about 30 products for tariff retaliation if the law was not changed. Canadian politicians have lobbied hard in Washington seeking a change to the law through means outside the courts. They have focused on how the law could ultimately hurt Americans. “Telling the Americans that COOL hurts Canada does no good. The threat of retaliation is getting attention,” said Alberta agriculture minister Verlyn Olson. If legislators realize the listed items could have a negative impact on their state, they are more likely to take notice, Olson told the Alberta Cattle Feeders Association’s annual meeting in Lethbridge Jan. 22. “We have a very strong ally in the packing industry. It is an issue of jobs and economic health in many communities in the states,” he said. The latest information is that changes might be made within the U.S. farm bill, but Olson was skeptical. “We have heard that before.” The farm bill is complex and there are about 30 contentious issues, including management of the multibillion-dollar food stamp program. “Our issue is probably number 30,” he said.
LIVESTOCK
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
83
WEATHER | STRANGE EVENTS
Polar vortex gives weather buffs plenty of impressive lingo COWBOY LOGIC
RYAN TAYLOR
Arctic temperatures belong in the Arctic not whirling over North Dakota
I
thought an Alberta clipper was the worst thing old man winter could throw at us, but then he introduced me to the polar vortex. Just like the television weather reporters, I love saying “polar vortex.” I’d say it was a cool pair of words, but we now know they’re more than cool, they’re downright cold.
If I had some real musical ability, I’d start a band and we’d call ourselves the Polar Vortex. I’m not sure what kind of music we’d play, but I know it would be indoors and we’d make sure the last one in shut the dang door. If we were just a garage band, I’d make sure it was a heated garage. I hate to jump allegiances, but before polar vortex came into my vocabulary, I was pretty fond of the term Alberta clipper. It made for a good visual of a stately clipper ship flying her Canadian colors, her sails full of frigid air as she swooped in over our unprotected border and dumped cold air and high winds on us Americans, unable to do anything but go inside and shut the door. One of my northern neighbours once told me through the slit in his ski mask and the tunnel-tied hood of his fur-lined parka: “Up here, we call that
a Manitoba chinook.” I like that term, too. It’s a perfect example of wry Canadian humour. In all three cases, it makes for a lot of news and misery wherever these weather systems travel and land. However, it maybe makes a little less news in North Dakota when the polar vortex drops the temperature to 35 below zero Fahrenheit than, say, Atlanta when the temperature hit eight degrees above zero. It’s serious business in those places, no doubt, when they’re not used to it, but setting up cold weather shelters in Florida when the temperatures dip below freezing amuses us northerners a little. When we hit 30 degrees Fahrenheit in the winter, we’re out soaking it up in our shirt sleeves as we tuck our earlappers back inside our caps. Even in North Dakota, when we tire of the cold temperatures, it’s good to remind ourselves that there’s an
entire nation north of us. Stay strong, Canada, as you’re humoured by your neighbour’s winter struggles to the south. We’d probably all appreciate it if Mother Nature would keep her vortices (that’s the plural of vortex, I just looked it up) where they’re supposed to be. The polar vortex is also called the polar cyclone or, get this, an even catchier term than polar vortex, a circumpolar whirl. The whirl is supposed to be twirling around above the pole, not getting all lopsided and sliding down to Georgia. So, when the vortex is strong, it spins nice and tight and stays up on the pole. When it weakens, it gets all loosey goosey, gets away from the pole and we get cold in New York and Tennessee and a little extra cold on the Taylor Ranch. Scientists say the diminishing ice in the Arctic is having an effect on the
vortex and knocking things out of whack. When I was in Norway, people said they know there’s less ice and a warming Arctic because shipping channels are opening up in places that used to be pure ice. If you don’t believe them, there’s some light reading in the Journal of Geophysical Research called “A link between reduced Barents-Kara sea ice and cold winter extremes over northern continents.” Not nearly as catchy a set of words as polar vortex or circumpolar whirl, but, hey, that’s science. At any rate, I’d rather see more ice in the Arctic, less ice in my cow’s stock tank and more cold air swirling above the Arctic and less of it swirling around me while I’m doing chores. Ryan Taylor is a rancher, writer and senator in the state legislature from Towner, North Dakota.
NATIONAL WESTERN STOCK SHOW | ANGUS
First time Sask. Angus exhibitor gets itch to show more after racking up awards BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
A first time foray into the big time netted a Red Angus breeder the premier exhibitor award at the National Western Stock Show in Denver, Colo-
rado, Jan 14. “I’ve only ever shown two Red Angus. I thought I would give it a whirl,” Mike McDonald said. He had attended the show in past years as an observer and decided to enter six animals.
All placed first, second or third in their respective classes. Those placings earned points that resulted in the exhibitor award. He participated in an online auction, where his four heifer show calves and a yearling bull sold to buy-
ers in Tennessee, Texas, Nebraska and Kansas. Most were sold to people who plan to use them as show cattle. He participated in the Denver show partly to promote his spring bull sale and also to get more involved in the
show side of the business. “Now that I’ve got the itch to show more, I’ll see where it goes,” he said. McDonald and his wife, Shannon, run Windy Hill Livestock, southwest of Moose Jaw, Sask., where they raise purebred Red Angus and grain farm.
Unsung hero.
She is the glue and her job description is endless. She does it all: chief cook, bottle washer, nurse, housekeeper, disciplinarian, groundskeeper, grandmother, babysitter and part-time truck driver. But ask her and she’ll say she just makes sure everyone’s been looked after.
Evelyn Winkler, LANGDON, AB
InVigor® needs Liberty® the same way. Because powerful Liberty herbicide is the backbone of the LibertyLink® system and together, they’re partners.
BayerCropScience.ca/Liberty or 1 888-283-6847 or contact your Bayer CropScience representative. Always read and follow label directions. InVigor®, Liberty® and LibertyLink® are registered trademarks of the Bayer Group. Bayer CropScience is a member of CropLife Canada. C-61-08/13-BCS13105-E
84
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
AGFINANCE
CDN. BOND RATE:
CDN. DOLLAR:
1.618%
$0.9040
2.00%
0.940 0.930 0.920 0.910 0.900 12/16 12/27 1/6
1.90% 1.80% 1.70% 1.60% 12/16 12/27 1/6
1/13 1/20 1/27
Bank of Canada 5-yr rate
1/13 1/20 1/27
Jan. 27
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
ECONOMY | CANADA
AG STOCKS JAN. 20 - 24
Falling dollar good for exports
Emerging nation markets and currencies spiralled down on expectation that the U.S. Federal Reserve will reduce its stimulus. Anxiety washed into North American markets with the TSX falling 1.2 percent on the week, the Dow down 3.5 percent, the S&P 500 2.6 percent lower and the Nasdaq off 1.7 percent.
Loonie predicted to fall to 87 cents US | Interest rates critical to farmers with large debt loads
Cdn. exchanges in $Cdn. U.S. exchanges in $U.S.
BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
BRANDON — The bottom won’t drop out of the agricultural markets in the next few years if Royal Bank of Canada economists are right. “Our general view is that crop prices should remain historically high … higher than what were prevailing, say, in the 1990s or in the early part of the (2000s),” said RBC assistant chief economist Paul Ferley in a presentation at Manitoba Ag Days Jan. 21. Ferley said RBC thinks continuing economic recovery in the United States will increase demand there and help Europe recover, while a Chinese economic growth rate of about seven p e rc e n t w i l l k e e p c o m m o d i t y demand strong, if not growing as quickly as in the mid-late 2000s.
However, Canadian exporters outside of agriculture will continue to show the weakness they demonstrated last year. If those conditions apply, then a number of beneficial factors will help Canadian farmers: • The Canadian dollar should drop to about 87 cents US by the end of 2015. • Interest rates won’t greatly increase, although 10 year bond rates will probably increase by 140 basis points by the end of 2015, or 1.4 percentage points on an interest rate. Short-term rates should increase by .25 percent on an interest rate. • Commodity prices will hold onto the higher plateau levels reached in the 2000s. Ferley said interest rates could rise sooner if U.S. growth and/or Chinese growth are stronger than expected. As well, increased Canadian exports could lead to a higher loonie. However, the dollar could fall lower than 87 cents if China and the U.S. slip, and commodity prices, including crop and livestock prices, would suffer. Ferley said there are many promising signs that the U.S. economic recovery is picking up momentum, while Chinese growth does not appear to be faltering.
Those two dynamics underpin the entire global economy, so the general outlook is moderately good. China’s growth rate probably won’t be high enough to drive commodity prices back to bull market highs, and other emerging markets probably won’t do it either because they are weaker now than a few years ago, Ferley said. As well, U.S. economic growth is modest and will still likely cause unemployment levels to stay historically high, restraining both demand and inflation to low if positive values. “We’re not talking about further gains from where we are now, but generally maintaining those higher levels,” said Ferley about overall commodity prices. Interest rates are key to farmers who carry big debt loads, and Ferley said farmers should expect to see a gradual rising of rates even before central banks begin raising their key rates in 2015. Short-term commercial debt will probably increase by .25 percent over current rates, while 10 year debt will increase by 1.4 percent on an average interest rate. Ferley said a lower Canadian dollar will help all exporters, and the outlook for the currency is much lower than it was just a few months ago. Until six months ago, RBC expected that the loonie would range 92 cents to $1 US over the next two years, but weak exports in the second half of 2013 prompted economists to suspect that the relatively high Canadian dollar was dragging more significantly on exporters than previously thought.
He said the loonie needs to drop a few cents to 87 cents US to come back into balance, in which the dollar is at a level that allows for strong exports and recognizes that performance. The loonie is historically strong compared to the early 2000s and late 1990s but softer than for most times in the last decade.
LOONIE SWOONS Prospects that the Bank of Canada will stimulate the economy by keeping interest rates lower than American rates have weakened the loonie. Royal Bank economists think the loonie will stay weak for two years, falling to about 87 cents U.S. by the end of 2015.
Canada-U.S. exchange rate
GRAIN TRADERS NAME
EXCH
ADM NY Alliance Grain TSX Bunge Ltd. NY ConAgra Foods NY W.I.T. OTC
CLOSE LAST WK 39.57 17.67 77.64 32.75 16.00
41.01 18.68 81.30 33.42 16.00
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 2.346 0.115 23.97 2.21 15.79 13.19
2.346 0.12 23.94 2.53 14.85 13.38
FOOD PROCESSORS NAME
EXCH
Hormel Foods Maple Leaf Premium Brands Tyson Foods
NY TSX TSX NY
CLOSE LAST WK 45.14 15.75 22.53 34.77
45.85 16.33 22.53 35.04
FARM EQUIPMENT MFG.
$1.05
NAME
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
1.00 0.95
CLOSE LAST WK 45.67 53.08 6.98 86.17 11.14 85.55 10.92
45.71 55.41 7.11 91.44 11.79 89.35 11.60
0.90
’13 ’14 0.85
J FMA M J J A S O N D J F M
Source: BoC | MICHELLE HOULDEN GRAPHIC
Visit us online at www.producer.com to see a video about this story.
FARM INPUT SUPPLIERS 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 98.78 105.83 134.92 43.41 59.97 4.11 107.94 45.38 35.19 74.47
103.13 107.22 136.84 43.07 64.02 4.40 113.11 48.54 37.49 77.31
TRANSPORTATION NAME
EXCH
CN Rail CPR
TSX TSX
CLOSE LAST WK 57.93 156.88
58.58 163.94
List courtesy of Ian Morrison, financial adviser with the Calgary office of Raymond James Ltd., member of the Canadian Investor Protection Fund. The listed equity prices included were obtained from Thomson Reuters and the OTC prices included were obtained from PI Securities Ltd., Assiniboia Farmland LP. The data listed in this list has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but accuracy cannot be guaranteed. Within the last 12 months, Raymond James Ltd. has undertaken an underwriting liability or has provided advice for a fee with respect to the securities of Alliance Grain. For more information, Morrison can be reached at 403-221-0396 or 1-877-264-0333.
AGFINANCE FINANCIAL REVIEW | DECISION TIME
CROP SHOW | GLOBAL ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
Farm management in the new reality MANAGING THE FARM
ERIC OLSON
The dip in crop prices may force operational changes
T
he last few years have been extremely positive for the grain sector, but now there’s a new reality. Grain prices have dropped significantly since the summer, and there is no indication that they will rally soon. Projected crop returns for this year are much lower than desired, with some crops projected to have negative returns for the first time in many years. At the same time, land prices and rent have rapidly increased to historical highs, and the high grain prices of the past led many producers to make significant investments in their operations. Some borrowed substantial amounts to make these investments. Having made these long-term investments based on short-term prices, these producers are now faced with having to pay back loans with significantly less cash flowing into the business. In light of these changes, grain producers need to start playing defence. If farmers want to weather this period, they need to start planning now how they’re going to do that. If you are in this situation, the first thing to do is a good old-fashioned reality check. Take a close look at what’s happening inside and outside of your operation so that you know
85
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
where you stand. This may be uncomfortable, but discomfort is a clear sign that it is something that must be done immediately. Look at your external situation. Farmers sell into commodity markets, and sometimes there are periods when they are forced to sell for a loss. That is simply how commodity markets work. Take the time now to look at the commodities you produce and the factors influencing their markets. Is there relief in sight or do you need to work with the current price levels for the next few years? Next, look at your internal situation. Do an annual projection, including all fixed expenses, to determine your cost of production and cash requirement to run the farm this year. If it is showing negative returns and negative cash flow, you need to think about the implications and understand the magnitude of the situation. Do you have the equity and cash resources to handle the losses? If not, it’s time to start looking at what you can change in your operation to keep going. Once you have a clear picture of the reality of your situation, including a strong understanding of the fundamentals of your markets, you can start planning how you are going to manage. As every producer knows, markets dip and eventually come up again. By actively managing the farm and making the right decisions for the new reality, producers can mitigate the impacts of today’s lower grain prices and position themselves for success when prices rise again. Eric Olson is a farm management consultant with MNP in Winnipeg. For more information, contact Olson at eric.olson@mnp.ca or 877-500 0795, or visit mnp.ca
Global economy on the mend U.S. is global engine | Japan, Asia Pacific adding to the momentum BY SEAN PRATT
U.S. GDP
SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Annual U.S. real GDP growth (percent change) 4 Glen Hodgson was pumped to deliver the keynote presentation at 3 CropSphere 2014. 2 “I have a good news story to tell 1 about the global economy for the first time in probably five years,” said 0 the chief economist of the Confer-1 ence Board of Canada. -2 The world economy has been lan-3 guishing since the financial crisis of 2007-08, when the U.S. housing mar’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’10 ’11 ’12 ’13* ’14* ’15* ket crashed and banks around the * forecast world imploded. “It has been really tough, but I’m Source: Conference Board of Canada | MICHELLE HOULDEN GRAPHIC here to tell you that we’re finally turning the corner,” said Hodgson. cents US for the rest of the year. A The main positive factor is the weak dollar is good for export-orirebounding U.S. economy, projectented industries such as agriculture. ed to grow by three percent this year, “I think there is probably more up from less than two percent last chance of (the dollar) going up than year. down,” he said. GLEN HODGSON “They’re back to normal five years One bad news story for the CanaCONFERENCE BOARD after the financial crisis,” he said. dian economy is the amount of perOF CANADA The United States is still the biggest sonal debt consumers have economy in the world and has a big amassed. Canada ranks No. 3 in the influence on the health of the global two percent growth in real gross world for personal debt load behind domestic product for that country. economy. the Netherlands and South Korea. “Japan is finally kind of the half Hodgson thought the turnaround “We’re in the highest level of perwould happen last year, but the U.S. good news story for the first time in sonal indebtedness ever in Canada’s Congress got in the way by constant- 20 years,” said Hodgson. history,” said Hodgson. The European Union economy, ly bickering over the budget, which Higher interest rates would spell “sucked the life” out of consumer after two straight years of recession, trouble for many people. However, confidence and discouraged busi- is forecast to grow by nearly one per- he doesn’t expect short-term rates nesses from investing in their opera- cent this year. will rise much above today’s ultra The big growth continues to be in low levels for the next couple of tions. Confidence has returned now that emerging markets in the Asia Pacific years. Congress has hashed out a two-year region. The region is expected to “If ever you have to refinance debt, budget agreement announced in grow by 6.5 percent if Japan is now is the time to do it. You will nevexcluded. It is good news for Cana- er see the price of money cheaper December. The U.S. Federal Reserve’s quanti- dian agriculture, which conducts a than right now,” he told farmers. tative easing program successfully lot of business in that part of the There could be an increase coming stimulated the economy by injecting world. for long-term rates, such as the Hodgson expects the Canadian 10-year mortgage rate. it with money through the purchase economy to grow 2.4 percent, up of government bonds. A labour shortage, especially in Quantitative easing has also fueled from a tepid 1.7 percent last year. Saskatchewan and Alberta, will also Growth could hit 2.7 percent if the hold back growth in Canada, he a turnaround in Japan’s economy. The conference board is forecasting Canadian dollar remains around 90 added.
CDC Austenson
2-row feed barley
The new sheriff that’s bustin’ yields. ✔ top grain yield ✔ large plump kernels ✔ high test weight ✔ short strong straw ✔ improved disease resistance
Genes that fit your farm. 800-665-7333 www.secan.com
®
Developed by Crop Development Centre, University of Saskatchewan. Genes that fit your farm® is a registered trademark of SeCan.
86
MARKETS
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
CATTLE & SHEEP
GRAINS Slaughter Cattle ($/cwt)
Steers 600-700 lb. (average $/cwt)
Grade A
Alberta
Live Jan. 17-23
Previous Jan. 10-16
Year ago
Rail Jan. 17-23
Previous Jan. 10-16
137.00-148.50 124.51-150.12 n/a n/a
134.00-140.00 113.18-145.08 n/a n/a
115.10 113.56 n/a n/a
233.50-238.00 228.00-242.00 n/a n/a
n/a 226.00-234.00 n/a n/a
148.50 132.70-147.97 n/a n/a
n/a 130.38-143.04 n/a n/a
114.42 117.21 n/a n/a
233.50-238.00 227.00-241.00 n/a n/a
n/a 225.00-233.00 n/a n/a
$200
Steers Alta. Ont. Sask. Man. Heifers Alta. Ont. Sask. Man.
$180
*Live f.o.b. feedlot, rail f.o.b. plant.
$220 $200 $180 $160
n/a n/a $140 12/23 12/27 1/6
1/13 1/20 1/27
Saskatchewan $220
$160
n/a
n/a
Feeder Cattle ($/cwt)
n/a
$140 12/23 12/27 1/6
1/13 1/20 1/27
Manitoba $190 $180 $170 $160
n/a
n/a
n/a
$150 12/23 12/27 1/6
Canfax
1/13 1/20 1/27
Heifers 500-600 lb. (average $/cwt) Alberta $180
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
Man.
Alta.
B.C.
145-156 152-166 160-181 171-193 181-214 185-220
140-155 148-168 155-179 165-191 180-202 185-222
142-158 150-168 160-179 174-195 185-209 190-215
Report not available -
135-153 142-163 150-172 158-187 164-191 167-195
130-154 140-160 150-170 155-181 160-190 159-190
140-155 145-164 155-174 162-181 168-191 175-195
Report not available Canfax
$170 $160 $150
Average Carcass Weight n/a
n/a
$140 12/23 12/27 1/6
1/13 1/20 1/27
Jan. 18/14 846 793 665 974
Canfax
Steers Heifers Cows Bulls
Saskatchewan $200 $180 $160
Jan. 19/13 881 813 677 948
YTD 14 848 790 669 936
YTD 13 884 823 671 971
n/a n/a $120 12/23 12/27 1/6
n/a 1/13 1/20 1/27
Manitoba $180 $170 $160 $150
n/a n/a $140 12/23 12/27 1/6
n/a 1/13 1/20 1/27
Slaughter cattle (35-65% choice) National Kansas Nebraska Nebraska (dressed)
Steers 148.01 147.81 149.36 240.00
Heifers 147.80 147.62 148.59 240.00
Feeders No. 1 (800-900 lb) Steers South Dakota 155-168.25 Billings 153.50-164.50 Dodge City 160-166
Trend steady/-1 n/a steady/firm USDA
Basis Cattle / Beef Trade
Cash Futures Alta-Neb Sask-Neb Ont-Neb-
-23.96 n/a -26.88
-17.19 n/a -20.56
Canadian Beef Production million lb. YTD % change Fed 88.1 +5 Non-fed 21.1 -7 Total beef 109.2 +3
Exports % from 2013 20,643 (1) -3.1 1,783 (1) -32.3 183,207 (3) -1.6 257,902 (3) +1.3 Imports % from 2013 n/a (2) n/a 55,634 (2) +8.4 7,638 (4) -27.6 8,786 (4) -38.0
Sltr. cattle to U.S. (head) Feeder C&C to U.S. (head) Total beef to U.S. (tonnes) Total beef, all nations (tonnes) Sltr. cattle from U.S. (head) Feeder C&C from U.S. (head) Total beef from U.S. (tonnes) Total beef, all nations (tonnes)
(1) to Jan. 11/14 (2) to Nov. 30/13 (3) to Nov. 30/13 (4) to Jan. 18/14
Canfax
To Jan. 18
Fed. inspections only Canada U.S. To date 2014 137,705 1,695,589 To date 2013 130,369 1,756,868 % Change 14/13 +5.6 -3.5
Agriculture Canada
Close Jan. 24 Live Cattle Feb 143.40 Apr 140.10 Jun 132.13 Aug 130.15 Oct 132.93 Feeder Cattle Jan 170.70 Mar 168.88 Apr 169.48 May 170.20 Aug 171.33
140.35 139.30 131.45 129.55 132.50
+3.05 +0.80 +0.68 +0.60 +0.43
126.30 130.75 126.53 127.25 131.53
170.00 167.93 168.65 169.50 171.10
0.00 +0.95 +0.83 +0.70 +0.23
144.70 147.95 151.15 154.33 159.58
Est. Beef Wholesale ($/cwt)
Canfax
Sheep ($/lb.) & Goats ($/head) Jan. 17 Base rail (index 100) 2.78 Range 0.02-0.18 Feeder lambs 1.30-1.40 Sheep (live) 0.35
Previous 2.78 0.12-0.13 1.20-1.30 0.25
Jan. 20 1.70-2.25 1.60-2.01 1.60-1.70 1.60-1.70 1.45-1.60 1.30-1.70 0.82-0.94 0.85-1.00 60-100
New lambs 65-80 lb 80-95 lb > 95 lb > 110 lb Feeder lambs Sheep Rams Kids
Index 100 Hog Price Trends ($/ckg) Alberta $160 $155 $150 $145
n/a $140 12/23 12/27 1/6
n/a 1/13 1/20 1/27
Feb 16-Mar 01 Mar 02-Mar 15 Mar 16-Mar 29 Mar 30-Apr 12 Apr 13-Apr 26 Apr 27-May 10 May 11-May 24 May 25-Jun 07 Jun 08-Jun 21 Jun 22-Jul 05
Ontario Stockyards Inc.
1.35-1.40 1.45 1.25-1.35 0.25-0.40
Wool lambs >80 lb Wool lambs <80 lb Hair lambs Fed sheep
$160
Sltr. hogs to/fm U.S. (head) Total pork to/fm U.S. (tonnes) Total pork, all nations (tonnes)
$155 $150 $145 $140 12/23 12/27 1/6
(1) to Jan. 11/14
(2) to Nov. 30/13
To Jan. 18 To date 2014 To date 2013 % change 14/13
Agriculture Canada
$160 $155 $150 1/13 1/20 1/27
Feb Apr May Jun
Close Jan. 24 86.38 94.03 100.55 102.35
Close Jan. 17 86.18 91.90 99.60 101.58
n/a 159.02
Man. Que.
159.00 161.26 *incl. wt. premiums
+0.20 +2.13 +0.95 +0.77
Year ago 86.83 88.93 96.35 97.08
% from 2013 -28.0 +13.9 -1.3
Import n/a 10,088 (3) 10,425 (3)
% from 2013 n/a -4.1 -6.2 Agriculture Canada
Jul Aug Oct Dec
EXCHANGE RATE: JAN. 27 $1 Cdn. = $0.9040 U.S. $1 U.S. = $1.1062 Cdn.
$245 $235 12/23 12/27 1/6
1/13 1/20 1/27
Milling Wheat (March) $195 $190
$175 12/23 12/27 1/6
Close Jan. 24 100.80 98.30 84.38 79.65
1/13 1/20 1/27
Canola (cash - March) $410 $400
Trend +0.60 +0.52 -0.25 -0.20
Year ago 97.08 96.15 86.48 83.30
Laird lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Laird lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Richlea lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Eston lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Eston lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Sm. Red lentils, No. 2 (¢/lb) Sm. Red lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Peas, green No. 1 ($/bu) Peas, green 10% bleach ($/bu) Peas, med. yellow No. 1 ($/bu) Peas, sm. yellow No. 2 ($/bu) Maple peas ($/bu) Feed peas ($/bu) Mustard, yellow, No. 1 (¢/lb) Mustard, brown, No. 1 (¢/lb) Mustard, Oriental, No. 1 (¢/lb) Canaryseed (¢/lb) Desi chickpeas (¢/lb) Kabuli, 8mm, No. 1 (¢/lb) Kabuli, 7mm, No. 1 (¢/lb) B-90 ckpeas, No. 1 (¢/lb)
Jan. 27 19.50-22.00 13.75-15.50 16.50-19.00 15.50-18.00 12.00-15.00 18.25-20.00 14.50-18.00 9.30-11.00 8.30-8.50 4.85-6.25 4.85-5.35 11.00-12.50 5.00-5.50 34.00-35.75 33.00-34.75 27.30-28.75 18.50-21.00 18.50-19.50 14.00-18.00 9.00-14.00 9.00-18.00
Avg. Jan. 20 20.50 20.63 14.88 15.54 18.10 18.10 16.63 17.16 13.50 13.90 19.46 19.46 16.25 16.25 9.76 10.56 8.46 9.46 5.40 5.83 5.28 5.71 11.75 11.96 5.15 5.15 35.17 35.17 34.31 34.31 28.27 28.27 19.68 20.50 19.17 21.63 14.00 14.00 9.00 9.00 12.00 12.00
Cash Prices Jan. 22 Jan. 15 Year Ago No. 3 Oats Saskatoon ($/tonne) 149.43 149.19 192.09 Snflwr NuSun Enderlin ND (¢/lb) 19.15 19.30 22.55
$390 $380 $370 12/20 12/26 1/3
U.S. Grain Cash Prices ($US/bu.) 1/10 1/17 1/24
Canola (basis - March) $-35 $-40 $-45 $-55 12/20 12/26 1/3
$180 $170 $160 $150 $140 12/20 12/26 1/3
1/10 1/17 1/24
$520 $480 $440 $400 $360 12/20 12/26 1/3
1/10 1/17 1/24
Barley (cash - March) $165 $160
Basis: $26
$150 $145 12/20 12/26 1/3
1/10 1/17 1/24
Canola and barley are basis par region. Feed wheat basis Lethbridge. Basis is best bid.
$420 12/23 12/27 1/6
1/13 1/20 1/27
$1340 $1320 $1300 $1280 1/13 1/20 1/27
Oats (March) $420 $400 $380
No. 1 DNS (14%) Montana elevator No. 1 DNS (13%) Montana elevator No. 1 Durum (13%) Montana elevator No. 1 Malt Barley Montana elevator No. 2 Feed Barley Montana elevator
Grain Futures Jan. 27 Jan. 20 Trend Wpg ICE Canola ($/tonne) Mar 428.80 435.50 -6.70 May 438.60 444.70 -6.10 Jul 447.40 453.40 -6.00 Nov 462.80 467.30 -4.50 Wpg ICE Milling Wheat ($/tonne) Mar 180.00 182.00 -2.00 May 186.00 186.00 0.00 Jul 189.00 188.00 +1.00 Wpg ICE Durum Wheat ($/tonne) Mar 245.00 243.00 +2.00 May 249.00 247.00 +2.00 Wpg ICE Barley ($/tonne) Mar 126.50 127.00 -0.50 May 128.50 129.00 -0.50 Chicago Wheat ($US/bu.) Mar 5.6350 5.6350 0.0000 May 5.6975 5.7050 -0.0075 Jul 5.7525 5.7700 -0.0175 Dec 5.9650 5.9850 -0.0200 Chicago Oats ($US/bu.) Mar 4.0075 3.9950 +0.0125 May 3.5800 3.5725 +0.0075 Dec 2.9100 2.9825 -0.0725 Chicago Soybeans ($US/bu.) Mar 12.8775 13.1650 -0.2875 May 12.7100 12.9725 -0.2625 Jul 12.5650 12.8200 -0.2550 Nov 11.0150 11.2500 -0.2350 Chicago Soy Oil (¢US/lb.) Mar 37.06 37.74 -0.68 May 37.41 38.06 -0.65 Jul 37.77 38.43 -0.66 Chicago Soy Meal ($US/short ton) Mar 430.9 434.5 -3.6 May 414.0 420.7 -6.7 Jul 404.0 411.9 -7.9 Chicago Corn ($US/bu.) Mar 4.3175 4.2400 +0.0775 May 4.3800 4.3175 +0.0625 Jul 4.4400 4.3850 +0.0550 Dec 4.5250 4.4900 +0.0350 Minneapolis Wheat ($US/bu.) Mar 6.0650 6.1775 -0.1125 May 6.0975 6.1500 -0.0525 Jul 6.1900 6.2250 -0.0350 Dec 6.4125 6.4275 -0.0150 Kansas City Wheat ($US/bu.) Mar 6.2250 6.2325 -0.0075 May 6.2025 6.2100 -0.0075 Dec 6.3825 6.4200 -0.0375
Year ago 617.80 607.00 596.30 558.40 291.00 294.00 296.00 312.40 316.40 241.50 242.50 7.7925 7.8800 7.9250 8.1425 3.6125 3.6900 3.7000 14.4775 14.3350 14.2275 13.1000 51.89 52.28 52.56 420.3 415.7 409.6 7.2925 7.2925 7.2050 5.9000 8.6650 8.7875 8.8700 8.9000 8.3275 8.4375 8.7325
Canadian Exports & Crush
$360 1/13 1/20 1/27
Minneapolis Nearby Futures ($US/100bu.) Spring Wheat (March) $680 $660 $640 $620 $600 12/23 12/27 1/6
Jan. 24 6.06 5.46 6.88 4.56 3.12
USDA
1/10 1/17 1/24
Feed Wheat (Lethbridge)
$340 12/23 12/27 1/6
Close Jan. 17 100.20 97.78 84.63 79.85
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.
Cash Prices
$1260 12/23 12/27 1/6
(3) to Jan. 18/14
Trend
$250
Soybeans (March)
Index 100 hogs $/ckg
Chicago Hogs Lean ($US/cwt)
$165
$255
Fed. inspections only Corn (March) $440 Canada U.S. $435 1,123,356 6,344,457 $430 1,141,668 6,436,925 -1.6 -1.4 $425
1/13 1/20 1/27
Manitoba
$145 12/23 12/27 1/6
Export 20,918 (1) 334,049 (2) 1,085,989 (2)
Durum (March)
Chicago Nearby Futures ($US/100 bu.)
Hogs / Pork Trade
Saskatchewan
1/13 1/20 1/27
$155
Hog Slaughter
Alta. Sask.
$120 12/23 12/27 1/6
Flax (elevator bid- S’toon) 1.85-2.65 1.70-2.32 1.80-2.07 1.90-2.05 1.70-1.90 1.30-1.70 0.85-1.00 0.85-1.00 60-100
Jan. 27
Fixed contract $/ckg Maple Leaf Thunder Sig 3 Creek Pork Jan. 24 Jan. 24 169.09-176.36 155.75-177.07 177.89-179.92 174.05-175.43 176.36-178.90 173.32-177.06 178.77-179.79 176.62-179.68 182.33-185.39 181.29-188.36 191.84-195.41 193.58-196.75 198.97-203.04 195.19-200.04 197.95-199.48 199.19-200.67 201.00-202.02 202.78-204.33 203.79-204.57 199.16-203.41
$130
SunGold Meats
HOGS (Hams Marketing)
$140
$-50
215
Pulse and Special Crops
$150
$180
Close Trend Year Jan. 17 ago
Sask. Sheep Dev. Bd.
Due to wide reporting and collection methods, it is misleading to compare hog prices between provinces.
$160
$185
Chicago Futures ($US/cwt)
This wk Last wk Yr. ago Montreal 226-228 n/a
U.S. Cash cattle ($US/cwt)
$140
Barley (March)
$240
Cattle Slaughter
Sask.
ICE Futures Canada
1/13 1/20 1/27
(1,000 MT) Wheat Durum Oats Barley Flax Canola Peas Lentils (1,000 MT) Canola crush
To Jan. 19 137.83 173.82 16.58 11.32 2.89 103.16 22.3 12.07 Jan. 22 130.1
To Jan. 12 86.72 20.53 8.63 8.19 0.37 66.79 13.26 0.04 Jan. 15 135.6
Total Last to date year 6920.82 6403.9 2111.5 2230.3 488.69 620.1 480.51 785.0 169.6 152.8 3207.8 3938.5 904.52 885.4 160.95 n/a to date Last year 3219.1 3460.7
WEATHER
FIELD GAMES |
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JANUARY 30, 2014
The Pady family plays pond hockey on a slough on the family farm near Edenwold, Sask., after clearing the snow with a tractor. The family hosts an annual “Fun Day in the Snow” in January. | CHERYL PADY 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
Churchill - 22 / - 30
Normal
Edmonton - 2 / - 14 Saskatoon Calgary - 9 / - 20 - 2 / - 13 Regina Winnipeg - 8 / - 18 - 10 / - 20
Below normal
ADVERTISING RATES Classified liner ads: $5.85 per printed line (3 line minimum) Classified display ads: $6.70 per agate line ROP display: $9.50 per agate line
Jan. 30 - Feb. 5 (in mm)
Above normal
Prince George 10.4
Vancouver 37.8
Much below normal
Churchill 3.4 Edmonton 3.4 Saskatoon Calgary 3.1 2.3 Regina 2.7
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
Much above normal
Jan. 30 - Feb. 5 (in °C)
Vancouver 8/2
PRECIP. MAP
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 3.7
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)
Assiniboia Broadview Eastend Estevan Kindersley Maple Creek Meadow Lake Melfort Nipawin North Battleford Prince Albert Regina Rockglen Saskatoon Swift Current Val Marie Yorkton Wynyard
3.8 1.8 6.5 2.8 4.4 9.9 5.1 0.7 1.3 4.4 2.8 2.6 5.5 3.5 4.5 7.4 1.4 1.4
-26.9 -35.0 -20.9 -29.9 -24.6 -17.0 -30.8 -31.2 -33.5 -26.5 -33.5 -28.7 -24.6 -27.4 -23.5 -20.2 -28.8 -33.2
Precipitation last week since Nov. 1 mm mm %
1.3 6.0 0.7 7.5 1.2 0.8 0.2 4.7 6.4 0.2 5.1 1.3 0.4 1.1 0.0 0.0 5.1 5.8
28.9 53.8 31.6 63.4 61.6 43.3 58.3 61.5 86.2 72.0 106.7 44.3 38.1 59.8 33.2 53.1 47.6 58.7
70 90 58 113 170 87 111 125 160 156 205 96 86 136 77 130 79 112
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 daily. 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
™
Publications Mail Agreement No. 40069240
LAST WEEK’S WEATHER SUMMARY ENDING JAN. 26 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 - 2 / - 11
87
8.7 12.4 7.3 5.3 7.6 8.8 10.9 13.4 4.6 10.9 12.4 7.4 7.6 9.0 14.2 5.6
-18.2 -12.4 -24.7 -21.8 -20.1 -15.6 -29.0 -13.1 -23.5 -15.8 -13.6 -19.9 -16.7 -21.5 -12.2 -22.5
Precipitation last week since Nov. 1 mm mm %
0.0 1.6 3.6 0.5 0.6 0.0 0.0 1.6 0.0 0.1 2.9 0.9 5.8 0.3 2.5 0.0
42.5 104.1 111.6 42.9 115.9 201.9 42.9 31.0 59.6 49.9 40.2 113.7 68.8 142.3 66.9 55.0
122 302 215 111 227 281 63 72 122 121 79 173 91 306 136 120
Temperature last week High Low
Brandon Dauphin Gimli Melita Morden Portage La Prairie Swan River Winnipeg
1.3 0.4 -2.2 2.0 1.1 -0.1 0.8 -1.8
Precipitation last week since Nov. 1 mm mm %
-33.3 -31.6 -35.1 -30.0 -27.4 -29.7 -32.2 -33.6
11.4 6.5 5.5 5.3 4.9 5.6 5.3 5.7
84.9 49.2 50.9 43.3 44.8 45.2 52.2 42.4
140 81 79 70 64 64 77 62
-10.7 -11.2 -3.6 -5.0 -14.2
7.3 0.3 0.5 0.0 5.0
101.0 222.9 85.0 90.9 169.5
81 293 104 83 114
BRITISH COLUMBIA Cranbrook Fort St. John Kamloops Kelowna Prince George
-1.9 10.2 2.2 3.8 1.3
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
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. 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
88
JANUARY 30, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
At Case IH, we understand that better yields start with better growing environments. That’s why all of our equipment, like our new Ecolo-Tiger® 875 Disk Ripper, is agronomically designed to help you get the most out of every seed and every acre it grows on. The Ecolo-Tiger 875 is engineered to size tough harvest residues, fracture root-limiting compaction and leave fields level. With better rooting and seedbed environments, plant stands can utilize more nutrients, water and sunlight, helping to create better yields. The world of farming is changing. Will you be ready? Learn more at caseih.com.
BE READY.
©2014 CNH America LLC. All rights reserved. Case IH is a registered trademark of CNH America LLC. www.caseih.com
ECOLO-TIGER 875 Tiger Point