THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
VOL. 92 | NO. 15 | $4.25
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TRANSPORTATION | GRAIN STOCKS
PED takes a toll | Virus hard on animals, heartbreaking for hog producers who get the news and are faced with tough decisions BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU
There is an as yet unexplored human cost to porcine epidemic diarrhea virus. Dr. Egan Brockhoff, an Alberta veterinarian who has seen PED do its deadly work in Asian and American hog barns, has also seen the emotional toll it takes on hog producers who have it in their barns. “It’s a heartbreaking disease. This isn’t just going to be devastating to the animals, its devastating for the people,” Brockhoff said in an interview April 2 after speaking to Lethbridge area hog producers. “I think without question it is extremely devastating to them. You see people just quitting, in the big barns. Some people give it three or four days and then they just say, ‘I can’t watch this,’ because they know they’d have to watch (piglets die) for the next three or four weeks. So there’s a human cost to this disease that we haven’t talked a lot about.” PED virus is fatal to young piglets and producers can expect near total mortality of newborns. Older pigs stand a better chance of recovery. It is spread by fecal-oral contact, and even a small amount of virus can grow and cause an outbreak, with symptoms of extreme diarrhea and vomiting in pigs. Forty-seven Ontario barns were confirmed with PED as of April 4. Single cases in Manitoba, Quebec and Prince Edward Island were controlled before the virus could spread. The most recent Ontario cases were confirmed in finisher barns, and Brockhoff said PED can be easily missed in older animals because diarrhea can be attributed to several causes. “It’s often very subtle in mature pigs. A lot of people can miss the disease in a grow-finish population,” he said. SEE PED COSTS, PAGE 3
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Historic agricultural fair building refurbished
Churchill’s ambitious export plans
Dominion Exhibition Display Building No. II is one of the few remaining buildings from the Dominion fair era in Canada. It just got a facelift. | Page 16
The Port of Churchill hopes to export more than 700,000 tonnes of prairie grain this year. To accomplish that goal, it needs rail cars. | Page 40
Faster rail | New federal orders will have little effect on stocks BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
The federal government’s grain delivery mandate won’t have much impact on Canada’s burdensome carryout, say analysts. Agriculture Canada is forecasting 22.8 million tonnes of ending stocks for grains and oilseeds in 2013-14, which is not likely to be adjusted much. “Right now we’re still leaning towards leaving our carryout, not making significant changes to it,” said Chris Beckman, an oilseed analyst with Agriculture Canada. SEE STOCKS FORECAST, PAGE 2
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u|xhHEEJBy00001pzYv,:! APRIL 10, 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
Dark days for the hog industry
Speedier handlings won’t cut carryout
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Stocks forecast Ottawa has told the railways they have to haul one million tonnes of grain per week, which would require 11,000 rail cars. It represents a large increase over what was hauled in the winter, but Beckman said Agriculture Canada was already counting on increased spring and early summer movement when it calculated the carryout. “When we put together our S&Ds (supply and disposition), we kind of assumed that movement would start picking up anyway when temperatures improved,” he said. The government mandate is for the shipment of all Schedule II grains, which includes value-added products such as canola oil, canola meal, wheat flour and barley malt. It means the 11,000 cars in the government’s mandate are not all hauling crops. Oil and meal movement alone requires 1,200 to 1,400 rail cars per week, which is another reason why Agriculture Canada is leaving its carryout forecast intact. However, Beckman believes there has been too much fixation on the carryout number. The 22.8 million tonnes on hand at the end of July will be a much smaller number by the time the 2014 harvest rolls around. “We should have, I’m guessing, maybe six weeks of solid grain movement before most of the crop starts coming off in a significant way,” he said. Beckman believes rail shipments through much of August and September will be more than twice the usual amount for that time of year. He figures the railways will be moving close to the mandated one million tonnes per week by that time, and the ports should be less congested. “That’s the time of year you see a lot of rail cars sitting along the sidings. This year you probably won’t see that as much. They’ll be moving grain,” said Beckman. “By the time harvest starts, farmers will probably have five or six million tonnes less grain in their bins than they had July 31.” It would leave 17 to 18 million tonnes of carryout, which while burdensome isn’t overwhelming. It would also represent 19 percent of 2013 production, which isn’t as
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Ag Stock Prices Classifieds Events, Mailbox Livestock Report Market Charts Opinion Open Forum On The Farm Weather
Oil and meal movement alone requires 1,200 to 1,400 rail cars per week, which is another reason why Agriculture Canada is leaving its carryout forecast intact. bad as some years. For example, Beckman said an entire year’s worth of grain was carried forward in 1969. “We’ve seen worse and made it through worse,” he said. Derek Squair, president of AgriTrend Marketing, also isn’t tweaking his export and carryout numbers because of the government’s rail car mandate. He was already counting on 8,000 to 10,000 rail cars carrying grain to port position every week during the spring and summer months. He doubts the railways will be able to do much more than that. “I think the 11,000 (rail cars) is a real stretch,” said Squair. He said he was tempted during the winter to erase the 8.5 million tonnes of canola exports in his supply and demand charts. “Now we’re getting a little more confident we should be close to that near the end,” he said. Squair said Agri-Trend’s export forecast is probably more optimistic than most analysts, who are anticipating 7.5 million tonnes of canola shipments. He thinks there will be an opportunity to make sales into the European biodiesel market through Thunder Bay. Renewed strength in the export market should result in 3.1 million tonnes of carryout, which is slightly below Agriculture Canada’s forecast of 3.3 million tonnes. If the railways are able to haul 11,000 rail cars per week, it would give exporters the confidence to put more sales on the books, which could further reduce canola carryout. “We could get it down below 2.5 (million tonnes),” said Squair. “That would cut 25 to 30 percent off the basis levels that we’re seeing today.”
COLUMNS Editorial Notebook Hursh on Ag Market Watch Managing the Farm Animal Health TEAM Living Tips
4-H Day: It was all about the judging at a recent 4-H Day in Alberta. For more photos, see page 20. | DAN RIEDLHUBER PHOTO
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» OPEN HOUSING: Producers » » »
who adopt open sow housing will have practical considerations to ponder. 4 SLOW SPEED CHASE: A tractor heist takes the RCMP on a slow speed chase through rural Alberta. 16 INSECT SURVEYS: Insect researchers in Alberta vow to be less intrusive this year as they do their surveys. 18 CN FIRES BACK: CN says grain companies must also be held accountable for the grain backlog. 26
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growers aren’t lining up to buy seed that is free of neonicotinoids. 27 BUD MCBRIDE: A long-time Angus breeder in Alberta remembers his years in the business. 30 WORKING MODEL: A model grain handling system is a big hit at the Royal Manitoba Winter Fair in Brandon. 37 PREPURCHASE EXAM: A prepurchase examination is a good idea when buying a horse. 35
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could soon be a major buyer of canola.
» ALFALFA SEED: Prospects look good this
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FARM LIVING 19
» ON THE FARM: Daylilies replace turkeys on
this Manitoba farm. 21 REGIONAL HITS: A country singer revels in playing to the regions. 23
PRODUCTION 84
» AUTOPROBE: An automated soil sampler can test 500 to 700 acres per day.
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BOOM CONTROL: A new spray boom control system keeps things on an even keel. 87
» PED RESEARCH: The U.S. is fast tracking
A story on page 56 of the April 3 issue incorrectly stated that the Port of Longview is considering construction of a coal terminal. The terminal being considered is down the Columbia River at Millennium Bulk Terminals.
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LIVESTOCK | FROM PAGE ONE
MARKETING | CANOLA
PED costs
Seed-based canola sales unlikely
“That creates potential downstream exposure to processors, which creates more potential exposure back to you. So finisher sites have to be more diligent with this than a farrowing site. A farrowing barn is never going to miss this.” Brockhoff, who is managing PED testing in Alberta, said no virus has been found after taking more than 5,150 samples at federal processing plants, truck washes and assembly yards. “Don’t rest comfortable with that,” he warned hog producers. “This is an early detection system.” He said strict barn biosecurity remains the best protection, which has been emphasized throughout the Canadian industry. PED is considered endemic in the United States, where it has infected barns in 28 states and killed hundreds of thousands of piglets. The economic cost of PED is easier to calculate than the human emotional toll, and the Prairie Swine Centre near Saskatoon has attempted to measure the cost of a PED outbreak on the Prairies. President Lee Whittington said researchers modelled two scenarios; one in which immediate PED identification was made and actions taken, and another in which reaction was less focused. Assumptions were made for farrowing rate, pigs born alive and preweaning losses. In the best-case scenario, PED infection in a 600-sow farrow to finish operation would cost $216 per sow that year. In the worst-case scenario, the annual cost was estimated at $338 per sow. “I think it would be quite easy for that scenario to grow to be twice as much losses in the barn where I didn’t jump right on top of that,” said Whittington. “Hopefully, nobody in this room is ever going to see it.” Brockhoff said no effective vaccine is available for PED, and the virus can still be a threat even when all pigs in a barn have been exposed. He estimated that 30 percent of infected barns in the U.S. see further outbreaks. As well, he cautioned against introducing the virus to forestall its more devastating effects. “Doing feedback today will do nothing for you tomorrow if you don’t have PED. You cannot create (immune response) memory to something that was never introduced originally.” PED is not a threat to human health or pork quality.
Significant innovation needed before companies would sell by seed count BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
MY FAIR LADY |
Celina Cummings of Kennedy, Sask., leads a Clydesdale to the hitching ring during an afternoon show at the 107th running of the Royal Manitoba Winter Fair held in Brandon March 31 to April 5. The horse is owned by R.K. Clydesdales of Langenburg, Sask. FOR MORE FROM THE FAIR, SEE PAGES 37 & 82. | SANDY BLACK PHOTO
LAND MANAGEMENT | SHELTER BELTS
Weyburn group negotiates interim lease for former shelter belt centre BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
The federal government is negotiating an interim lease with HELP International of Weyburn, Sask., to operate part of the former federal shelter belt centre at Indian Head, Sask. The lease is expected to be for a portion of the site for six months and at market value, but a government spokesperson said the exact terms are still being finalized. The interim lease came about after negotiations with the Carry the Kettle
(CTK) First Nation were not concluded by the March 31 deadline. The First Nation wants to acquire the property through the Treaty Land Entitlement process, “This interim lease solution is supported by the CTK,” Agriculture Canada’s Patrick Girard said in an emailed statement. “This will allow for a timely start of tree harvest and distribution for the 2014 season.” Ottawa announced two years ago that it would no longer support the tree nursery at Indian Head. Estab-
lished in 1901, the centre shipped more than 610 million free trees across the Prairies to establish field shelterbelts and protect farmsteads. The program employed about 60 people at peak season and cost the federal government $3 million a year. Funding ended at the end of 2013. HELP (Health, Education and Livelihood Project) International is a notfor-profit organization that has experience with agro forestry and phytoremediation, which is the process of growing trees to help break down soil contaminants.
Chief executive officer Rodney Sidloski has said that HELP has a 300,000-tree nursery of willows and hybrid poplars. Several million trees are in the ground at Indian Head. Last fall, Sidloski criticized a decision to lease the shelter belt centre to the Rural Municipality of Indian Head, which fell through because the RM didn’t have the manpower to operate the facility. He said in an email that the current lease will involve First Nations. He also said the trees will cost about $1.50 each to start.
Canola isn’t going to be sold the same way as corn or soybeans anytime soon, says a major seed company. Growers on an Agriville.com chat room are speculating that it won’t be long before canola is sold by seed count rather than weight. George Shelswell, director of marketing for oilseed crops with Bayer CropScience Canada, expects that will eventually happen, but growers shouldn’t hold their breath. Significant innovation would have to occur in crop breeding and seeding equipment before companies would consider selling the crop that way, he added. Corn and soybeans are sold by seed count because plant emergence is greater than 90 percent, partly due to large seed size allowing seeds to germinate under a wide variety of conditions. Seed companies can confidently recommend targeted seeding rates for corn and soybeans because of the predictable emergence rate. However, Shelswell said germination rates for canola can be 30 to 90 percent, depending on weather, planting techniques and seed bed condition. And that’s germination, not emergence. “The challenges that we have in canola is the agronomics that we have to get over,” he said. Shelswell suspects the growing popularity of corn and soybeans in southern Manitoba is prompting grower interest in buying canola by seed count. Farmers are becoming familiar with precision planters and want to use them to seed their canola. He believes the canola industry will eventually go that route, but canola is where the soybean industry was 20 years before it switched to unitized seed sales. In the meantime, Shelswell would like to see more grower awareness of the importance of achieving targeted canola plant populations. The Canola Council of Canada says the ideal plant stand for yield potential and uniform growth is seven to 14 plants per sq. foot. Shelswell said the problem is that canola seed size can vary by as much as 200 percent within the same variety, depending on the seed lot. According to the council, thousand kernel weight for canola seed can range from less than three grams to more than six grams. A six gram hybrid seeded at the standard five pounds per acre results in 8.7 seeds per sq. foot. The council says that at 60 percent seeding survival, it would result in 5.2 plants per sq. foot, and that is a high survival rate under average conditions. It is below the safe minimum stand, which could result in decreased yield potential. Shelswell said recent survey results indicate that 60 percent of canola growers don’t know what the plant population is in their fields.
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS RAIL SERVICE | FEDERAL MANDATE
Sask. wants stricter rules for railways BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
Alain Labrecque welcomed a new report that called on energy companies to reduce emissions and odours. Heavy oil production tanks are visible in the background of this 2013 image. | FILE PHOTO ODOUR POLLUTION COMPLAINT | ALBERTA ENERGY REGULATOR REPORT
Families applaud emissions report Heavy oil operations | Report recommends requiring gas capture by area energy companies BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU
Alberta families who have long complained about the effects of oil and gas emissions feel vindicated by a recent report from the province’s energy regulator. “Odours caused by heavy oil operation in the Peace River area need to be eliminated to the extent possible as they have the potential to cause some of the health symptoms of area residents,” said a March 31 report by the Alberta Energy Regulator (AER), a government agency mandated to ensure the safe, environmentally responsible development of Alberta’s oil and gas resources. It made several recommendations requiring that all produced gas be captured within four months in the Reno and Three Creeks area, which are the areas of biggest concern to nearby landowners. “The report confirms what we’ve been saying for years, that emissions have the potential to cause health concerns and sickness,” said Alain Labrecque, who moved his family
from Alberta to northern British Columbia to escape problems of emissions from nearby oil activity. “It’s a very, very good start.” The Labrecques are one of seven families that have moved from the Reno area because of the heavy oil activity. The re commendations were aimed at all companies using cold heavy oil production systems (CHOPS) in the Peace River region. Heavy oil, which is thick and doesn’t flow easily, is augered from the ground and heated in production tanks before being transported for further processing. It’s the emissions vented from these tanks during the heating process that have caused the most problems for nearby residents. They want all tanks to have tank-top gas control systems. Complaints from residents began to increase in 2009 when oil industry activity increased. The report also recommended operational changes to eliminate venting, reduce flaring and conserve produced gas where feasible.
It said the AER should develop local regulations to deal with the heavy oil industry in the area. Keith Wilson, a lawyer for a group of landowners, said the unique heavy oil in the area is key to the problem. The heavy oil produced in that particular geological formation falls through a “regulation gap,” he added. “The regulators don’t have the authority to deal with the problem,” he said. The CHOPS process doesn’t need to follow the same regulations as more conventional oil and gas production. “The regulators never envisioned this production method on this scale so close to families,” said Wilson. Brian Labrecque said he is pleased with the panel’s findings. “It confirms and supports everything we have been saying for the past 10 years,” said Labrecque, who also moved his family off the farm. The pollution control equipment would eliminate odours and greatly reduces emissions, said Labrecque. The AER will likely comment on
the report’s recommendations by the middle of April, but it may be months or years before some of them become law. In January, the Labrecque families and some of their neighbours filed an injunction against Baytex in the Court of Queen’s Bench. They’ve asked that Baytex, the main operator in the Reno field, halt its operations for eight months until they put the necessar y emission capturing equipment on their tanks. Wilson said pollution equipment on oil tanks limits production capacity. The 86 heavy oil tanks in the Reno field are concentrated in an area 1 1/2 kilometres wide by 10 km long and are only half a kilometre from the closest farmhouse. The main production systems in the Three Creeks area are larger but farther away from the closest home. “It’s a problem for both communities. It’s more of an acute problem in Reno,” said Wilson. He expects the Court of Queen’s Bench judge to rule on the injunction by April 21.
Saskatchewan has formally requested changes to proposed federal legislation aimed at improving grain movement. The province sent a letter last week to the House of Commons’ standing committee on agriculture, which is hearing from stakeholders on Bill C-30. The letter asks for service level agreements between shippers and railways, including reciprocal penalties and an expedited arbitration process, service for all customers and all shippers in all corridors, a minimum of 13,000 grain cars each week from the two major railways, penalties up to $250,000 per day if the railways don’t meet targets and removal of the 2016 sunset clause. Saskatchewan agriculture minister Lyle Stewart said he would have been happy to present the requests in person, but the committee said there wasn’t enough time to hear from governments. “I’m fairly confident that at least the vast majority of the stakeholders that will be presenting before that committee will take a position very similar to ours,” he said. “We’ll see if the committee has the influence that a committee of that sort should have or not.” Stewart said Western Canada’s economy “rolls on rail wheels,” and better service is required across the board. “We have to win this,” he said. Saskatchewan has been adamant about an increase in penalties from $100,000 per day to $250,000. Federal agriculture minister Gerry Ritz has said the lower figure is standard. However, Stewart said that amount doesn’t seem to persuade the railways to meet obligations. “In our meetings with the senior executives of the railways, it became apparent that they planned on carrying out their business as usual with or without $100,000 a day fines,” he said. “The message was that we’ll pay $100,000 a day until we’re ready to stop.”
HOG OPEN HOUSING | ADJUSTMENTS
Increased activity under open housing may require diet changes BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU
The move to group housing for sows, which is mandated in the new pig code of practice, presents practical considerations for hog producers. Will sows have higher energy requirements if they are more mobile? Will their nutritional needs or productivity vary? Will their carcass condition change? Research scientists are exploring these and other considerations at the Prairie Swine Centre near Saskatoon. One of them, Denise Beaulieu, shared some of the results April 2 with swine producers in Lethbridge. A show of hands indicated no one
in the room was contemplating immediate conversion of hog barns to open housing. Producers have 10 years to make the conversion, although all new barns must have open sow housing as of July 1 to be in compliance with the code. “Sows spend 80 percent of their time lying down, regardless of housing, and we want that,” said Beaulieu. “We want them to eat and lie down. This is the ideal situation.” Data indicates that pigs use more energy while standing than do sheep and cows. Sows that spend more than four hours per day standing will require more food energy than those who stand less. Electronic feeding systems may
DENISE BEAULIEU RESEARCH SCIENTIST
require sows to walk more to eat, and hunger-related aggression is also a factor in group situations that might increase energy needs per sow. Beaulieu said increasing fibre in the sow diet promotes feelings of satiety, reducing fights over food and encouraging the animals to lie down. She referred to European studies that found that sows on high-fibre
diets spend less time sitting, standing or exploring. A study that added ground wheat straw to sow diets also showed potential for improved reproductive performance. Fermentable feed, such as sugar beet pulp or pea fibre, is more effective at improving satiety and decreasing sow activity, according to Beaulieu’s data. New guidelines also recommend “phase feeding” for sows, which means different rations at different times in the gestation cycle. Increasing feed per day as farrowing nears is common, said Beaulieu, but changing both amount and diet composition to suit the maturity of the sow
and the stage of gestation would be ideal. This isn’t possible in all feeding systems and might be more difficult in group housing situations. As well, it can be more difficult to gauge individual sow condition when in groups. “One of the challenges when we move into groups is monitoring body condition score,” said Beaulieu. Weighing animals and using ultrasound are good tools, though not always available. She recommended calipers as another way to determine sow body condition. Calipers are also useful when training new barn employees how to gauge body condition.
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
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MARINE RESEARCH | NEW PROJECTS
Scientists propose $28 million centre Port of Churchill | Facility would study impact shipping has on Arctic ecosystems while reinforcing Canada’s northern presence BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Researchers at the University of Manitoba hope to raise $28 million to build a new marine research centre at the Port of Churchill in northern Manitoba. David Barber, an Arctic research expert from the University of Manitoba, said the Churchill Marine Observatory, if approved, would host 100 scientists a year from around the world. The observatory would serve as a base for research projects, most notably the impact of increased shipping and industrial activity on Arctic ice and marine ecosystems. A key area of research would examine the potential environmental impacts of accidental spills of contaminants shipped through the port, including crude oil, fertilizers and chemicals. “We believe, from a scientific perspective, that we need to get a much better handle on the ability to detect any kind of spill of oil on sea ice,” said Barber, a Canada research chair in Arctic system science. “We need to be able to look at the impacts of that on the marine ecosystem and we need to develop different mitigation strategies so that if we do have a spill, we have ways of cleaning it up.” The proposed centre would include two large, self-contained pools that would be used to grow and observe sea ice. Once established, the ice could be exposed to contaminants in a closed environment under controlled conditions. The pools would be enclosed by a retractable roof, which could be opened and closed to expose the ice to sunlight, wind and other environmental conditions. The proposed facility would be built on Port of Churchill property, close to the pier but far enough away to ensure that it would not interfere with ship traffic. “We believe this kind of research is
Gaining a better understanding of Arctic ice in and around Hudson Bay could eventually lead to an extended shipping season at Churchill. | essential for moving forward to make sure we understand the consequences of this industrial development in the Arctic,” said Barber, who spoke recently to members of the Hudson Bay Route Association. Another key component of the proposed research centre would be remote, automated instruments designed to observe environmental conditions in shipping lanes, including sea ice thickness. The remote instruments would be located in Hudson Bay and Hudson Strait and would be part of a larger national monitoring system in Baffin Bay, the southern Beaufort Sea and
the Canadian Arctic archipelago. “These (remote) observatories will tell us about the transportation corridors to and from the Port of Churchill,” Barber said. The sensors would assess current ice conditions and allow scientists to formulate more accurate predictions of future sea ice conditions. Gaining a better understanding of Arctic ice in and around Hudson Bay could eventually lead to an extended shipping season at Churchill. The Canadian universities involved in the project include the U of M, the University of Calgary, the University of Victoria, Laval University and Dal-
housie University. The province of Manitoba is also a partner. OmniTrax Canada, which owns the Port of Churchill, has also been identified as a potential contributor. Merv Tweed, president of OmniTrax Canada, said his company is aware of the plans and is examining the proposal to ensure it does not work at odds with the port’s other priorities. “We have an asset that we’re trying to grow and develop, and if you plunk any kind of another facility down there, it could create challenges for us in the future,” he said.
FILE PHOTO
“What he (Barber) is proposing … is to put a facility on our property at the port. We’re fully supportive of what he’s doing, but we just have some details that we have to work out to satisfy both our company and the scientists that want to be there.” Tweed said OmniTrax Canada sees increased crude shipments through the northern port as a significant business opportunity. “We were advised by the federal government and the province of Manitoba … that we have to look at alternatives to expand our operation,” he said. “We see (crude oil) as an opportunity.”
TRADE | COUNTRY-OF-ORIGIN LABELLING
U.S. Court of Appeals to consider if COOL violates first amendment rights BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU
The Canadian livestock industry will receive an unexpected chance to fight U.S. country-of-origin meat labelling May 19 — this time using the American constitution. The controversial legislation will be considered on the basis of freedom of speech under the U.S. constitution’s first amendment. Last week, the U.S. Court of Appeals vacated a ruling made March 28 that denied a request from U.S. and Canadian meat and livestock groups to prevent application of COOL rules. A full panel of 11 judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals will now consider whether COOL violates the first amendment or is legal under various precedents.
“We are encouraged that we get another crack at this,” said John Masswohl, the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association director for government and international relations. The CCA and the Canadian Pork Council are plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed last July. The suit is led by the American Meat Institute and also includes other American and Mexican meat and livestock groups. It is rare for the full U.S. Court of Appeals panel of judges to hear a case. The constitutional angle gives it further prominence. “The rareness of it, it’s getting a lot of attention from the legal community, but I think more substantively because they’re really expected to focus on the first amendment constitution argument, that’s really going to take on a lot of additional signifi-
cance,” Masswohl said. Other groups will have the opportunity to file amicus briefs before the hearing, which might draw submissions and arguments from factions with an interest in free speech rather than meat labelling rules. The court will consider whether rules that compel meat processors to label products with information on where animals were born, raised and slaughtered is a form of compelled speech allowed under the first amendment. Such compelled speech is allowed when health or safety concerns are involved, such as forcing tobacco companies to label their products. However, plaintiffs will argue that precedent does not apply to meat labels. “In this case, there is no health or
safety reason for compelling the origin,” said Masswohl. “So … does the court believe that the U.S. government has the ability to violate the constitution, to tell information on where products are produced, just because some people are curious about that? The freedom not to speak is as important as the freedom to be able to speak.” However, Masswohl said the U.S. Department of Agriculture has now raised a different constitutional precedent in its defence of COOL. It said government can compel speech to prevent fraud and deception, a precedent it said would apply to labelling. Masswohl said the USDA has not raised that line of defence until now. “We’re not aware that there is any fraud or deception that COOL is
intended to remedy,” he said. “In fact, you could argue that something like this creates more opportunity for fraud and deception.” The American Meat Council said it was encouraged by the decision to allow a full court to hear the case again. “We remain hopeful that consideration of the case by the full court will lead to an injunction against the protectionistic and costly country-of-origin labelling rule that is hurting livestock producers and meat companies while offering little benefit to consumers,” it said in an April 4 statement. COOL is estimated to have cost Canadian cattle and hog producers at least $1 billion per year since it was implemented. An appeal through the World Trade Organization is also in progress.
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
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WEATHER | DROUGHT
Looming El Nino could bring ‘huge losses’ Warming Pacific Ocean | A change in weather patterns could see India hit hard BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
An evolving El Nino will likely disrupt pulse production in the world’s largest import market and one of the largest export markets, says a weather expert. Warm water below the surface of the eastern Pacific Ocean is starting to well up and heat the surface. Surface temperatures need to be .5 C above normal for three months to be declared an official El Nino, but it won’t take nearly that long to feel the impact, said Drew Lerner, president of World Weather Inc. “Be very, very careful. The anomalies of world weather patterns will change long before anybody is ready to declare it as an El Nino,” he said. “As soon as (the warming) becomes significant, which will probably be in the next few weeks, we’ll start seeing world weather patterns change abruptly.” India is one of the countries that could be hurt by an El Nino. It would reduce the intensity of the summer monsoon rain, which falls from June to September. Indian farmers usually plant their kharif (summer) pulse crops in June and July. “By then the El Nino will be in full force most likely,” said Lerner. “If their rains are not well timed and sufficient to support their crops, they can have some huge losses.” He stopped short of forecasting drought for India because other weather events would have to occur for that to happen. However, current conditions are not encouraging because sea surface temperatures in the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal are colder than normal,
Drought was already an issue for eastern Australian ranchers in February when prime minister Tony Abbott, right, and agriculture minister Barnaby Joyce, left, toured the region and met with rancher Phillip Ridge. | REUTERS/ANDREW MEARES/POOL PHOTO which means the amount of water vapour moving into the atmosphere to feed the monsoon rain is less than usual. “At this point, I’m looking for a moderate impact that will probably see rainfall significantly below normal in at least portions of the country that will hurt some production,” said Lerner. A disappointing summer monsoon would also affect India’s rabi (winter) season production. The effects of a developing El Nino will first be felt in the tropics, such as
Indonesia, Australia, northern South America and Central America. Australia is a major exporter of pulse crops to the Indian subcontinent, where imported Australian desi chickpeas compete with imported Canadian yellow peas. Queensland and New South Wales are the two Australian states most directly impacted by El Nino. They also produce 97 percent of the country’s desi chickpeas. “A lot of times their rainfall reductions are rather dramatic,” said Lerner. Portions of Queensland and New
South Wales have already been suffering from prolonged drought. Good rain fell recently, but some areas in the two states are still extremely dry. The desi chickpea crop is planted in May and early June and harvested from late October to early December. Peter Semmler, principal of Agrisemm Global Brokerage, expects seeding will be down from the 1.06 million acres planted last year. He said in an email that Australian chickpea farmers will likely be “starting behind the eight ball” and that an
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El Nino would result in reduced yields, forcing buyers in the Indian subcontinent to source product from Canada, Ukraine or Russia. Lerner said most of the drought damage would happen during the reproduction period in late August and September when El Nino is likely to be quite strong. El Nino’s influence on Canada is usually relatively minor. In recent years, it has lead to a drier bias in the Prairies, which is already a bit of a concern for 2014, so that is something to keep an eye on.
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BIODIESEL | CANOLA
Growing biodiesel demand may spark canola exports California market | Canadian canola meets the EU’s sustainability requirements for biodiesel feedstocks BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Ontario’s greener diesel rule may be good news for canola growers. |
FILE PHOTO
ONTARIO BIOFUEL | MANDATE
Canola sector watches Ont. for biofuel mandate effects Greener Diesel rule | Crushers may look west for canola but the cost will be weighed against imports of other forms of biodiesel such as tallow BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Ontario’s renewable diesel mandate should create a new market for Canadian oilseeds, but the size of that market is in question. The province’s “greener diesel” rules went into effect April 1. Two percent biofuel will be blended into regular diesel during the first compliance period, which runs from April 1, 2014, to Dec. 31, 2015. However, it is two percent with an asterisk, said Ian Thomson, president of the Western Canada Biodiesel Association. The greenhouse gas reduction requirement for the first compliance period is an average minimum of 30 percent. Blenders receive a credit for using biofuel with a higher greenhouse gas reduction rating, which is pretty much ever y biodiesel or hydrogenation-derived renewable diesel on the market. For example, canola biodiesel reduces greenhouse gas emissions by 96 percent compared to regular diesel. That means that if the average greenhouse gas reduction from the combination of biofuels used by blenders was 90 percent, then the blenders would be able to comply with the regulation by using .66 percent renewable diesel compared to the two percent stipulated for the first compliance period. The rules call for three percent renewable diesel with an average minimum 50 percent greenhouse gas reduction in 2016 and four percent at an average minimum green-
IN 2017, THE RULE CALLS FOR A GREENHOUSE GAS REDUCTION OF
70% house gas reduction of 70 percent in 2017. Thomson welcomed the mandate but wishes it was a straight volume mandate like those in Western Canada. British Columbia has a four percent mandate and the prairie provinces have two percent mandates. “WCBA looks forward to working with Ontario over time to realize the full potential of renewable diesel fuels and ensure that Ontario’s agricultural producers, rural communities and urban residents benefit from production and use of sustainable, low carbon biofuels,” said Thomson. He said it is difficult to say if the mandate will pull in canola-based biodiesel from Western Canada, where there is excess capacity, although he doubts it w ill. Four biodiesel plants in Western Canada have a combined capacity of 350 million litres. “I don’t think the western biodiesel plants look to Central and Eastern Canada as key markets,” said Thomson. It’s possible that Ontario crushers will buy canola from Western Canada to feed the province’s biodiesel plants, although that will depend on
whether the price, including transportation costs, is competitive with imported soybeans from the U.S. Midwest. There will also be competition from hydrogenation-derived renewable diesel shipped from Singapore and Rotterdam, as well as other forms of biodiesel, such as tallow biodiesel. Dennis Rogoza, an adviser on sustainability for the Canola Council of Canada, thinks the mandate will create a significant market for oilseed-based biodiesel despite the greenhouse gas credits because of the large number of trucks that operate in Ontario. “How much of that will be canola (biodiesel) is not clear yet, just because of the market dynamics,” he said. Rogoza said Ontario’s biodiesel market is five times the size of Western Canada’s. Another encouraging development for North American biodiesel producers is that the U.S. Senate finance committee passed a package of tax provisions last week, including an extension of the $1 per gallon biodiesel tax incentive, which expired Dec. 31. “If Congress approves the legislation, the incentive would be reinstated retroactive to Jan. 1, 2014, and would last through Dec. 31, 2015,” Thomson said. “It would continue to apply to Canadian plants, so a Canadian producer can ship fuel to the States and receive a credit if it is blended in the States.” He said the tax credit would be generally supportive for biodiesel production in North America.
After years of unfilled promise, the biodiesel market is poised to become a substantial source of demand for canola, says an expert in the field. Dennis Rogoza, sustainability adviser for the Canola Council of Canada, is most excited about the potential for the fuel in California, but he also believes the European biodiesel market could also consume plenty of Canadian canola. California passed legislation in 2006 requiring a reduction in state greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2020. That will require extensive use of renewable diesel in a state that is home to more people than all of Canada. Rogoza recently attended a conference in California where a company that works with state regulators provided an estimate of how much canola biodiesel will be used to help meet the carbon reduction targets. The forecast called for 800 million litres of canola biodiesel consumption in California by the end of the decade. “I thought, wow, if that is true, if that forecast is even anywhere close, then that would require something like 1.75 million tonnes of canola seed from Canada just to supply that,” said Rogoza. “That’s a startling number.” He agreed that canola biodiesel should be a popular choice for the state. Hydrogenation-derived renewable diesel would likely be too expensive, which means blenders would turn to crop-based biodiesel. Rogoza said it would be cheaper to transport canola or canola oil from Western Canada than to bring in soy or soy oil from the U.S. Midwest. As well, canola biodiesel delivers better greenhouse gas reductions. The biodiesel industry has been slow to evolve in Canada, but mandates are now in place in the four western provinces and Ontario, which implemented its greener diesel regulation April 1. Rogoza is also optimistic about European demand prospects, where canola has suddenly become pricecompetitive with European rapeseed and imported soy. The European Union has slapped punitive tariffs on South American soy biodiesel, which should create an opportunity for canola in the world’s largest biodiesel market. Rogoza helped implement a program in Canada that allows canola to meet the EU’s sustainability requirements for biodiesel feedstocks. About 1,000 farmers are now able to ship their canola or canola oil to the EU for use in the biodiesel sector. “We think the conditions in fact are ripe for the shipment of canola to
Europe in whatever form,” he said. Rogoza has been receiving calls from traders interested in shipping canola to the EU. Derek Squair, president of AgriTrend Marketing, said the landed price of Canadian canola is about $10 per tonne more than European rapeseed, but canola provides more meal than rapeseed, so it should be an attractive feedstock for crushers. “There is an opportunity for them to import our canola and use it for biodiesel and still make money at it,” he said. Squair expects the EU to import 500,000 tonnes of Canadian canola through the Port of Thunder Bay for the remainder of 2013-14, which should help reduce what is expected to be a substantial carryout. Rogoza expected shipments to be a lot higher than that in the future if canola remains price competitive. “There is growing interest,” he said. Rogoza said the biodiesel market in Canada, the United States and the EU will become an important source of demand for a crop that the council believes will reach 26 million tonnes of production by 2025. “It could be a three to four million tonne a year business,” he said. To put that in perspective, future biodiesel demand could completely mop up this year’s expected carryout of 3.3 million tonnes. Rogoza said the nice thing about the biodiesel market is that demand may be initially hard to get going, but it is a regulated demand that won’t go away once it is in place. As a result, it is not subject to the whims of international trade.
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FORAGE | ALFALFA SEED PROSPECTS
Supply, demand stay balanced for alfalfa seed Good time to be a grower | Strong prices last fall declined only slightly over the winter, and demand may increase BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU
BROOKS, Alta. — The delicate balance of supply and demand is tipped slightly in favour of alfalfa seed growers, say seed distributors. It bodes well for the coming year’s profit possibilities. “It’s very good times,” Jose Arias, director of alfalfa seed production for Forage Genetics International, said after an April 1 speech to the Alfalfa Seed Commission of Alberta. “Supply and demand is even. The end product, which is the alfalfa, the market and worldwide demand is very strong and consequently so is the dairy market, so it’s a very healthy situation right now.” Nathan Penner of Imperial Seed in Winnipeg gave Alberta growers a similar assessment. “We have a pretty reasonable balance,” he said. “It’s one of those times where the supply, the demand, the acres of production are all fairly well balanced.” Southern Alberta growers have more than 30,000 acres in alfalfa seed production, and that may increase based on today’s market signals. Penner said strong alfalfa seed prices last fall declined only slightly during winter. Harsh weather may lead to alfalfa winterkill in some parts of the Prairies, which could boost seed demand. The weak Canadian dollar also bolsters prices for the Canadian alfalfa seed industry, which exports much of its production. As well, Penner said leafcutter bees, which alfalfa seed growers use to pollinate crops, are expensive and in
Harsh weather may lead to alfalfa winter kill in some parts of the Prairies, which could boost seed demand. | short supply, preventing quick entry into the alfalfa seed business. He also said farmers are growing far fewer acres of common alfalfa seed, and a higher percentage of acres are contracted to seed distribution companies. Companies tend to keep supply and demand in balance by measuring their seed needs. Penner sees a slight increase in alfalfa seed crops in Saskatchewan and Mani-
toba this year, some of which is driven by crop insurance coverage levels. Higher insurance coverage availability leads to more acres. Arias said the export outlook is also rosy. Ninety-three percent of Canadian alfalfa seed production is exported to the United States, where higher milk prices are leading to more interest in forage production and greater alfalfa
FILE PHOTO
seed requirements. Arias said dair y producers in drought-stricken California are now paying $340 per ton for hay, up from $285 per ton only a year ago. As a result, interest in forage production is strong. The U.S., a major alfalfa seed producer, sells eight million pounds annually to Mexico and nine million lb. to the Middle East, although Arias said the latter market could shrink
because of water shortages. It would mean more forage exports to the Middle East, which also bodes well for alfalfa seed markets. Arias said China is a burgeoning market for alfalfa seed as that country increases milk production, which is likely to generate higher Canadian exports. FOR MORE ON ALFALFA, SEE PAGE 29.
»
FORAGE | MARKET OPPORTUNITIES CHANGING
Exporter says new markets are ripe for Canadian forage BY REBECA KUROPATWA FREELANCE WRITER
New market opportunities have developed for forage products, particularly in China, India, Vietnam and the Middle East. The new opportunities are coming at a time when historical forage markets are flattening in Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and the United States. Edward J. Shaw, president of International Quality Forage and Feed Inc. in Carstairs, Alta., recently attended livestock shows in the United Arab Emirates. He said the UAE forage market
increased to 600,000 tonnes from 60,000 tonnes in one year seven years ago. It is now a 1.5 million tonnes a year market, and demand is expected to increase to 2.1 million tonnes by 2021. The Saudi market is expected to exceed 3.8 million tonnes in three y e a r s, h e a d d e d , a n d C h i n e s e demand increased from zero to 600,000 tonnes four years ago. India and Vietnam are just opening up. “It’s no surprise, when one considers the combined population of China and India represents over 40 percent of the total world population,” he said. “With both giants gaining higher
standards of living and changing to more meat and milk products in their diets, it’s easy to see the endless proposition coming to life. The question is, ‘who will be able to meet the increasing demand?’ ” Many countries compete for this market segment, but Shaw argued that few have the ability to provide the quality, reputation and clean environment that Canadian producers offer. He said water is one of the biggest limiting factors faced by most competitors and Canada has a significant advantage. However, shipping costs are the big-
gest hurdle for Canadian producers. Shaw said most international forage trade is done through networking and follow-up work to establish a reputation. There is some tender business, but he does not advise producers to develop a business plan around tenders. “Consider switching to being a forage expert only if it meets your rotation and cropping needs,” said Shaw. “Notwithstanding, in most cases, producers should look at it, but they must be competitive to consider doing it.” Shaw said Canada has vast areas of
land fed by rainfall and doesn’t rely on irrigation from ground water or rivers. “Canada can be a major force to supply the emerging needs if we can get our freight rates competitive, if we can get mixed hays more readily accepted into the goat, camel, and sheep markets.” He said the industry needs to do more research into forage crops, including applied practical research in country feed trials, to demonstrate the benefits of Canadian forages. “We’ve been and are continuing to lobby governments and other associations to work on this,” said Shaw.
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CANFAX REPORT FED PRICES STRONGER Weighted average steer prices were $145.32 per hundredweight in light trade, down 25 cents, and heifers were $146.79, up $2. There was some U.S. buyer interest, but significant trade did not develop. The cash to futures basis narrowed $2 to -$14.52. Total sale volume fell 21 percent to 7,727 head. Weekly western Canadian fed slaughter to March 29 fell 10 percent to 35,288 head. Weekly Canadian fed exports to March 22 rose 19 percent to 11,891 head. The week’s offering included pen cleanups of varying cattle types and quality. Recently, marketed carcass weights were lighter than anticipated, and slaughter summaries indicate cattle should now be staying on feed longer. Prices will likely edge lower on a seasonal trend.
COWS POST RECORDS Despite weather and political risks there is a good chance for ample supply to depress 2014-15 grain prices. | USDA PHOTO COMMODITY MARKETS | CARRYOUT EXPECTATIONS
Time to protect against downside risk MARKET WATCH
D’ARCE McMILLAN
I
doubt the recent rally in crop prices is the start of a sustained bullish market. We’ve had several situations coincide to spark a rally — the crisis in Ukraine, dry weather in the southern U.S. Plains and the usual spring “buying of acres.” However, barring a weather disaster in a major producing region, and we can never rule that out, I think the market will slump again. South America is har vesting record soybean and corn crops. A record soybean acreage will be seeded in the United States, and several analysts think the recent U.S. Department of Agriculture prospective planting report underestimated the eventual area seeded to soy and wheat. Soil moisture in the U.S. Midwest is good. Canada will carry over a huge amount of grain into the new crop year and if farmers here produce just an average size crop this summer, the total amount of grain available will be similar to the amount in the
current crop year. Europe had a mild winter, and the crop is a few weeks ahead of normal development. There is no major weather problem in China. Despite the political issues, crop production in Russia and Kazakhstan is forecast to be average. Ukraine’s winter wheat came through the cold season fine, and grain exports have not been disrupted. The International Grains Council sees global grain stocks rising at the end of 2014-15, due mostly to corn stocks rising to 171 million from 155 million. Global wheat stocks are forecast to remain at 190 million tonnes and rice at 109 million tonnes, which is steady with the current crop year. On that outlook, there is a good chance prices could weaken once the U.S. crop is in the ground. There are risks to that assessment. The dry conditions in the southern U.S. Plains could settle into drought that severely hurts wheat production. However, no global weather system is raising the risk of a drought on the Plains. It is also dry in Ukraine and Eastern Europe. Another potential disrupting factor is the chance that cold weather could linger in the U.S. Midwest and Canadian Prairies and delay seeding. It could cause a further shift toward short season soybeans from longer season corn.
Iowa and Illinois, the biggest corn states, normally begin seeding around the middle of April. However, spring delays would likely be a temporary factor on prices, unless excessive rain increases the amount of unseeded crop land. Another risk to my forecast is if the developing El Nino becomes severe, bringing drought to Australia, India and palm producers Indonesia and Malaysia. If that happens, it could be a game changer. And then there is the situation in Ukraine. If Russia becomes more aggressive against Ukraine, the Black Sea grain export system could be disrupted and stiffer economic sanctions could make it difficult for Russia to export. Be aware, the risk of these potential developments is already reflected in grain prices. If worst case scenarios are fully realized, then there is upside potential. But at this point, I think the potential for lower prices is greater. Remember, the USDA’s annual price average projections for the new crop year are lower than the current year. If you have not already done so, it is time to use this spring rally to consider locking in price protection for a portion of your crop before the demands of seeding take over. Follow D’Arce McMillan on Twitter @darcemcmillan.
PLAINS | DRY
U.S. winter wheat condition slips again SASKATOON NEWSROOM
The condition of the winter wheat crop in the southern U.S. Plains deteriorated again last week, raising the need for widespread coverage from storms expected late this week.
Eastern parts of Kansas and Oklahoma received showers last week, but western areas are desperate for rain. The Oklahoma panhandle has received only 18 percent of normal moisture since March 1.
Dust storms have been common in the region. Twenty-nine percent of the Kansas crop was rated good to excellent April 6, similar to last year, but Oklahoma and Texas are considerably worse than last year.
Record highs were set for all classes of non-fed cattle as butcher cows and bulls traded $1-$3 stronger on tight supply. Western Canadian slaughter volumes have fallen to 5,800 per week from 7,200 over the past month. Seasonal highs tend to be set in mid-April. D1, D2 cows traded in a range of $97-$115 to average $105.42. D3 cows ranged $80-$102 to average $91.75. Rail grade cows were $200-$205.
FEEDERS STRONGER The market saw strong local, eastern and U.S. demand, which supported prices. The April Chicago feeder contract traded within 200 points of the contract high. Bullishness in the feeder complex is mostly supply driven. Feeder procurement strategies now favour lighter cattle because of cheaper feed grains, compared to last year when the market favoured heavier cattle. Barley prices are down 35 percent from last year, improving the eco-
nomics of cattle feeding. Feedlots are bidding aggressively against grass buyers to procure midweight stockers. Alberta average steer prices are trading at a slight premium over Saskatchewan and Manitoba, except for 400-600 pound heifers. The eastern Prairies are closer to the Nebraska market, and these light stocker heifers could be going south. Weekly feeder exports to March 22 were 17,107 head, the most since September 2008. There appears to be little risk for sellers in forward pricing cattle into May. May is fetching a premium over current cash prices. Prices next week might be a little lower because of the strength in the loonie and a decline in Chicago feeders late in the week. Bred cows were $1,350-$1,925 last week, while bred heifers were $1,275$1,900 and cow-calf pairs were $1,700-$2,750.
BEEF PRICES DOWN U.S. Choice fell $7.30 US last week to $231.95 per cwt., and Select fell $9.80 to $221.41. Canadian data has fallen behind. Canadian cut-out values for the week ending March 21 were mixed with AAA down $1.42 Cdn per cwt. at $237.19 and AA was up 82 cents at $240.71. Warmer weather in Western Canada is expected to support middle meat prices, which could help narrow the AAA-Choice spread when combined with lower U.S. prices. Montreal wholesale prices for delivery this week were steady at $262-$264 per cwt. This cattle market information is selected from the weekly report from Canfax, a division of the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association. More market information, analysis and statistics are available by becoming a Canfax subscriber by calling 403275-5110 or at www.canfax.ca.
WP LIVESTOCK REPORT HOG PRICES RETREAT U.S. packers slowed operations and bought fewer high-priced hogs last week, causing cash prices to retreat. Hog futures turned lower as the market debates the impact of porcine epidemic diarrhea on pig numbers. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s March 28 hogs and pigs report indicated that the herd is larger than expected, which weighed on prices. Record heavy hog weights are creating more pork product, which pressured wholesale pork prices. Iowa, southern Minnesota hogs delivered to slaughter plants fell to $95 US per hundredweight April 4, down from a record $97-$98 March 28. The estimated pork cut-out value at plant climbed to $133.74 per cwt. April 2 but fell to $130.99 April 4, down from $131.32 March 28. U.S. federal slaughter to April 5 was estimated at 2.030 million, down from 2.033 million the previous
week. slaughter totalled 2.097 million last year at the same point.
BISON STEADY The Canadian Bison Association said Grade A bulls with desirable weights were $4 Cdn per pound hot hanging weight. Grade A heifers sold up to $3.85. No new live market data was available. Animals outside the desirable buyer specifications may be discounted.
HEAVY LAMBS FALL Ontario Stockyards Inc. reported 2,169 sheep and lambs and 88 goats traded March 31. All well-finished light lambs sold actively at strong prices while heavy lambs were under pressure at prices $15-$20 cwt. lower. Good sheep sold $3-$5 cwt. lower, with fatter types under pressure at $5-$10 cwt. lower. Good kid goats sold steady, and others were lower.
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WPEDITORIAL
OPINION
Editor: Joanne Paulson Phone: 306-665-3537 | Fax: 306-934-2401 E-Mail: joanne.paulson@producer.com
ENVIRONMENT | CLIMATE CHANGE
CRAIG’S VIEW
We can’t afford to ignore latest climate change report
A
global panel on climate change issued dire warnings last week that the world faces water and food shortages, violent natural disasters and even civil wars if swift action is not taken. The report by the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said there was no doubt our climate is changing, and humans are “probably” responsible for it. Responsibility has long been the crux of the debate around climate change. Naysayers argue that climate change is largely natural and in some cases a positive thing, while the environmental movement claims the human way of life is turning the planet into toxic soup. Either way, this is not a report that should be ignored. It may seem alarmist and in some cases dwell on the worst case scenario, but do we as humans and as agriculture industry participants want to take the risks outlined in the report? Prudent action, then, is called for, particularly since the report highlights food security as a significant concern. For example, it indicates that crop yields for corn, rice and wheat will all take hits in the period up to 2050, with some projections showing yield losses of more than 25 percent. Yet North America, and particularly Canada, will escape some of the worst of climate change as it affects food production, at least until 2050. A map prepared by World Resources Institute shows that Western Canada, Quebec and a few northern states are largely immune from significant crop yield change for the next 30 or so years, as are parts of northern Europe, Ukraine and Russia. Meanwhile, most of Africa, Australia, South America, India, Japan, Indonesia, and the southern United States could see up to a 50 percent drop in crop yields if the temperature rises by 3 C. Furthermore, the report identifies North America as one of few regions where decreased food production and quality are not key risks.
While positive for Western Canada, these are still daunting prospects. If the map and report are correct, our nation’s farmers will be relied upon to feed a much larger part of the global population than once expected. Socioeconomic and human security issues will likely emerge from that expectation, as people from hot climates that become unbearable move north. That aside, there are more direct and immediate ways to start managing food production and water for the future, here and around the world. Since weather will become more volatile, which is potentially the factor that will affect Canada the most, we can expect good years and bad, with more extreme storms, rains and droughts. Diverting water in wet times and saving it for dry times will increasingly become crucial, and a national look at this must take place. How will we divert water and where will we store it? Who is responsible for developing and managing such a system? Equally important will be the global storage of grain, but that starts locally. Huge harvests could be managed better if technology can help solve storage issues. Eliminate food waste. Much has been written and discussed lately about the incredible amount of food that is being wasted, partly because there is not adequate storage or transportation, but also because too much is thrown away. Focus on technologies that improve the resiliency of crops, helping them stand up to wet or drought conditions. Keep up with environmentally friendly farming techniques, and use them whenever possible. It’s little enough. Clearly more must be done to improve our chances of holding back climate change. In agriculture, however, we can start to improve by planning for a hungry future. Bruce Dyck, Terry Fries, Barb Glen, D’Arce McMillan and Joanne Paulson collaborate in the writing of Western Producer editorials.
A sure sign of spring is the arrival of the mountain bluebird to the foothills of southern Alberta. Males like this one and females have started checking out nest boxes on rural roads. | MIKE STURK PHOTO
SPORTS | FRIENDLY COMPETITION
Supporting small school sporting events a tradition that lives on COWBOY LOGIC
RYAN TAYLOR
I
should have written this column last night, but I was busy watching some Class B girls basketball on television. I don’t watch a lot of sports on television, so when I do it’s a special occasion. Dad was more of a work outside guy than a watch sports on the television inside type, so I guess I picked up his habits. The only sports I remember him coming inside to watch were
boxing and horse racing. He became a boxing fan in the army when they had a boxing ring on the ship that took him to the South Pacific in the Second World War, and all cowboys like to watch horses run around the track. Of course, we would also come in to watch a rodeo if one happened to get televised. But that was about it. However, everyone in North Dakota from towns that are more towns than cities, including me, watches, listens or goes to the Class B basketball tournaments. I’m not sure where the line is drawn that would separate a town from a city, but our high school activities association draws the line between Class A and Class B schools at 325 high school students. A lot of Class B schools in North
Dakota won’t hit 325 for the entire school: kindergarten through Grade 12. As a result, you’ll see a lot of variety in Class B schools, from the smallest of rural school districts to the growing towns and bedroom communities of big cities that bump right up against the cutoff. No one in North Dakota, at least not in our Class B communities, considers “B” to mean second rate, a step below or a lower grade. We figure we’re equal; we just have smaller schools. If anything, the “B” in Class B might stand for better turnout at the games and tournaments. When a Class B school plays a game out of town, they pretty much roll up the streets and turn out the lights behind them. A few of us stay back to feed the cows and keep the water
lines trickling if it’s an exceptionally cold night, but we will tune it in on the radio. Our hometown girls basketball team had a really good year, finishing second in its region. The girls lost the region to the No. 1 ranked team in the state. It was a private school, and don’t get us started on that topic. My wife’s hometown team, the Watford City Wolves, won its region and did make it to state championship. As a writer, I always appreciate a team that can alliterate its mascot name with the school name. It’s catchy. The best part was, we have three nieces playing for the Wolves. It was a big deal for the family. It was fun to watch their opening game on TV, more fun yet for my wife to go see it in person. I stayed back with the kids and cows.
I especially enjoyed the pre-game colour commentary, in which they laid out the strategy that each team would have to take. The Casselton team, they said, would have to “contain the Mogens.” I smiled with pride because that was our nieces they were referring to as the threat to the Casselton Squirrels. As it turned out, the Squirrels beat the Wolves. That would never happen out in the wild kingdom, but on the hardwood floor, the Squirrels proved to be tougher than the Wolves. I was still proud of the team, and my nieces, and of the tradition of Class B basketball on the prairie. Me, I give all the “B” players an “A” grade. Well done. Ryan Taylor is a rancher, writer and senator in the state legislature from Towner, North Dakota.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
11
& OPEN FORUM CLIMATE CHANGE | ADAPTATION
FARM MANAGEMENT | POSITIVITY
Help farmers adjust to climate change
Corporate culture is vital for farms
BY CAROL THIESSEN
C
rop yields are in decline. Water resources are threatened. There is a significant risk of rising hunger. These are the alarm bells sounding on global food production in a world of climate change. A major new report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change argues that these are not distant threats. Climate change’s impacts are already felt everywhere, and it’s threat to global food security is real and imminent. The report, Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability, is also clear that the need to help farmers around the world adapt to climate change is urgent. Adaptation can significantly decrease the threats to global food security, at least in the short term. This report is deeply concerning to the Canadian Foodgrains Bank. Those who already live on the edge of hunger will struggle even more. Our partners in the developing world, many of whom depend on small-scale agriculture to survive, have long been telling us their seasons are changing, and they are experiencing more floods and more droughts. These stories from the field increasingly align with scientific research and suggest our mission to end hunger is only getting more difficult. However, there is also cause for hope. Much of the agricultural programs that the foodgrains bank supports, such as conservation agriculture, small scale irrigation projects and
Wilson and Essie Mpofu of Zimbabwe say they see their neighbours’ crops being affected by climate change. They feel lucky they had support in switching to conservation agriculture. | CANADIAN FOODGRAINS BANK PHOTO
reforestation efforts, are already helping farmers adapt to warming temperatures and increasingly variable weather. These efforts make a real difference in helping farmers feed themselves and their families. More government funding for adaptation at a large scale will also make a critical difference in reducing the threat of hunger from climate change. This will in turn help reduce the need for migration, lower the threat of conflict and support economic growth worldwide. The foodgrains bank has been calling for the federal government to support adaptation in developing countries to meet these rising needs.
The IPCC report estimates that global adaptation will cost $70 to $100 billion US per year from 2010-50 in developing countries. These estimates are substantially greater than current adaptation funding and investment. Much more is needed. The report is also clear that adaptation without concurrent action to slow climate change is not enough. Mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions over the next few decades can substantially reduce risks of climate change after 2050. The scenarios start to sound downright scary without sufficient action on adaptation and mitigation. Food production could fall by two
percent per decade after 2030 if temperatures continue to rise, with the risk of even more severe impacts after 2050. This is set against the backdrop of rising demand for food production. Half of the wheat growing area of the Indo-Gangetic Plains in India, which now produces 15 percent of the world’s wheat, could become significantly heat stressed by 2050. In Africa, all major cereal crops will suffer in the future. Crop yields could be slashed by up to 30 percent in parts of the continent by midcentury. Drought also threatens livestock, which the report calls critical given the extensive rangeland in Africa. The report’s message is mixed for Canadian farmers. Climate change effects tend to be lowest in temperate regions. At low levels of warming, some areas may benefit from longer growing seasons and more heat units. However, the arrival of new pests, an increase in weather variability and the possibility of water stress in some areas would suggest that complacency isn’t in order. The foodgrains bank remains hopeful that a world without hunger is still possible, but the task isn’t getting any easier. For the poorest people already living on the front lines of climate change, action on all fronts is urgent. Carol Thiessen is a senior policy adviser at the Canadian Foodgrains Bank, which is a partnership of 15 Canadian churches and churchbased agencies working together to end global hunger.
CROP REPORTING | BETTER WAY TO SURVEY
Statistics Canada needs to fix its ag reporting HURSH ON AG
KEVIN HURSH
T
he grain transportation backlog has put Statistics Canada field crop reporting under the microscope. Why didn’t we know that a huge crop was coming last year? How were the railways supposed to gear up when initial estimates were tens of millions of tonnes below what was actually produced? Suddenly, the entire industry has a graphic example of why accurate yield and production estimates serve useful purposes. Whether the railways would have heeded the production forecasts is another question, but not having accurate information soon enough gives them yet another excuse for not mobilizing adequate
resources to do the job. Agricultural economist Richard Gray has suggested a network of agrologists doing yield determinations across Western Canada during the growing season as a replacement for Statistics Canada’s farmer surveys. It’s his contention that farmers can’t always accurately estimate their potential production. Some official yield determinations at benchmark locations may be a useful addition to production forecasts, but fixing how Statistics Canada operates is a bigger part of the solution. It does thousands of surveys with farmers in each province multiple times during the growing season, but in many ways it is stuck in the past and mired down by process. It’s rare to find a farmer who likes Statistics Canada and who thinks its field crop reporting is a useful service. The process for this year is just beginning. In recent weeks, Statistics Canada has been badgering producers for their seeding intentions. Many farmers either try to avoid the calls or lie through their teeth.
Since the survey taker typically knows nothing about agriculture, they’ll accept stupid answers and not realize they’ve been scammed. Most farmers think that survey results just drive down market prices. For example, Statistics Canada will release the result of its seeding intentions survey April 24. Whatever crops are showing a larger acreage increase than expected will be targeted by analysts as crops that may see pricing pressure. There’s never been a public relations exercise to convince farmers that good information is valuable to the entire industry. If there was no government survey, you can bet that grain buyers would be making their own internal estimates, and those results wouldn’t be shared with producers. There’s no use surveying producers who don’t want to participate. Explain why good information is useful and seek the co-operation of competent growers who agree to be part of the process. Even pay them a bit for their time and effort. Most importantly, Statistics Canada has to join the 21st century. It
needs to use the tools that are available to dramatically shorten the time between collecting information from producers and when the data is tabulated and released. The way it is now, the information is old and out of date by the time it’s announced. A few weeks of lag time can make a big difference in acreage estimates in the spring and can make a huge difference in yield estimates in the summer and fall. On many of the minor crops, acreage estimates obtained through surveys have long been suspect. Seeded acreage information from crop insurance should be used to verify the survey results coming from producers. Satellite imaging should also play a role, but it shouldn’t be viewed as a replacement for talking to people on the ground. The whole process needs a shake up from process to public relations. Kevin Hursh is an agricultural journalist, consultant and farmer. He can be reached by e-mail at kevin@hursh.ca.
EDITORIAL NOTEBOOK
JOANNE PAULSON, EDITOR
W
hile presenting a writing workshop recently, it kept occurring to me that many of my points about journalism, news releases, creative branding, clarity, truth and authenticity related directly to corporate culture. Allow me a short example and cautionary tale. XL Foods during its E. coli crisis didn’t talk much to journalists or issue news releases, had no creative branding and avoided clarity, truth and authenticity. Its culture was messed up. It no longer exists. Corporate culture comes from the top, and that is the case whether you own a store, factory, slaughter facility or farm. It got me thinking that pre-seeding is a perfect time to look around and see how your culture is chugging along. Are people engaged, happy, worried, cranky? At WP managing editor Michael Raine’s farm, managing the culture starts with a vision that boils down to this: safety for you, productivity for the farm and value for customers. The most important thing to Mike? “Everyone goes home at night.” One of the nicest things about Mike is that his priorities are solidly in place. Once you have the vision basics in place (safety, productivity, value), you can expand your checklist: • Do I have good leadership skills? • Am I strong, decisive, and clear? • Does my staff know what I expect? • Am I caring, even-handed and supportive? • Do people follow me, and if not, how can I improve? • Do I empower my staff, or ignore or smother them? • Do I run my business with integrity? Integrity includes taking care of finances, environmental responsibility and awareness of how a business affects its community. • Do I present a positive perspective? Larry Katzen, who wrote And You Thought Accountants Were Boring, says positivity is one of four crucial cultural values, along with integrity, being a leader and making health and well-being a priority. If executives or managers have negative attitudes, especially in times of crisis, employees will too, he says. “You and your employees are not just doing jobs, you’re on a mission to improve people’s lives with the product or service you provide,” he writes. “The team that embarks on a mission with no hope of achieving that mission will not achieve it.” Well put. Developing a positive culture turns mission impossible into mission accomplished.
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
OPEN FORUM LETTERS POLICY:
BILLIONS AT STAKE
Letters should be less than 300 words. Name, address and phone number must be included for verification purposes and only letters accepted for publication will be confirmed with the author.
To the Editor:
Open letters should be avoided; priority will be given to letters written exclusively for the Producer. Editors reserve the right to reject or edit any letter for clarity, brevity, legality and good taste. Cuts will be indicated by ellipsis (…) Publication of a letter does not imply endorsement by the Producer.
The inability to export this record crop is having a profound impact on farm grain prices across the Prairies. With West Coast No. 1 wheat prices close to $11 per bushel and cash prices in Saskatchewan at $5.25 per bu., farmers are currently paying $160 per tonne beyond normal freight and handling costs to export their crop. With record high crush margins, canola producers are facing similar increases in the basis between their cash price and what it is worth on international markets.
These record high basis levels are costing farmers $100 to $200 per acre in foregone revenue and several billion dollars in total. At the same time, these margins have substantially increased the bottom line of grain companies and processors. The federal government is now taking action to increase rail grain movement with new legislation. Even if rail movement is increased by this legislation, a new crop harvest is only six months away. With the large impending carryover, Agriculture Canada is forecasting that grain stocks remain high for the next crop year as well, meaning at least another year of high basis levels.
While increased rail movement is critical, it is only part of the solution. West coast grain handling capacity is currently limited to about 20 million tonnes, and this capacity is tightly controlled by three privately owned grain companies, who will likely post record profits this year. Wi t h p ro j e c t e d g ra i n e x p o r t demand of 36 to 40 million tonnes, most of the additional rail movement will be used to send more shipments east and south. However, the basis will remain high as these are long and costly routes to salt water and a very long way to the large Asian markets. If governments are going to address high basis levels over the long term,
and increase the bottom line for grain producers, they need to also c o n s i d e r h ow t o s i g n i f i c a nt l y increase the west coast export capacity because this remains a critical bottleneck for grain exports. Billions of dollars are at stake. Richard Gray, professor University of Sask., Saskatoon, Sask.
ALL THINGS CONSIDERED To the Editor: Re: New pig code requires group housing in all new barns (WP, March 13) Pig producers are making great strides in bringing their industry up to par with other livestock industries when it comes to advancements in housing. The commitment to phase out restrictive sow gestation stalls in favour of group housing is but one step. When making this change, producers are strongly encouraged to consider pig comfort and manure management as part of the equation. Provision of bedding has a positive effect on improving foot and leg health and reducing lameness rates, something well documented in dairy industry research. Existing slatted flooring does not allow for the use of bedding, but flooring changes are possible with new constructions, something the hog industry is considering anyway given that most existing barns are nearing their expiration date. Furthermore, the addition of bedding to manure shifts its makeup to a value-added compostable product worth considering given the high costs of trucking liquid slurry and manure separation technologies. Brandy R. Street, SPCA supervisor, Vancouver, B.C.
PROVINCIAL TRADE PROPOSAL To the Editor: The citizens of Alberta would like to propose a trade with the province of Saskatchewan. We will send to you our ex-premier, Alison Redford, Wild Rose leader Danielle Smith, NDP leader Brian Mason and Liberal leader Raj Pannu in exchange for your premier, Brad Wall. We would consider throwing in R i d e r- E s k i m o ga m e t i c k e t s i n Edmonton. Please respond to confirm trade as soon as possible.
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Ernie Boese, Tofield, Alta.
ONE-SIDED ASSUMPTIONS To the Editor: This letter is in response to Ms. Dunlop’s letter to the editor, Farm worker safety (March 13). The tone and content of her letter has lost any support she may have had from me. Having been a safety co-ordinator in the past, I know too well the dangers involved with the work farmers do daily.
OPINION They work with machinery and large equipment regularly, often under time pressure and alone. I fully support accident investigations to help make farming as safe as possible for all our owner-operators and their employees. Where she lost me was when she capitalized on a tragedy to promote her cause. Her lack of compassion or respect for the owner-operators of this farm is hypocritical. She says she is disgusted that so few people care about the worker, yet she shows she cares nothing about the family who lost their co-worker and friend. She found quotes about what a good man the victim was but didn’t spend a second looking into the family he worked for. This is a wonderful, thoughtful and car ing family who hired a friend to work alongside them. She took no time to mention what
kind of operation the farm was because an accident on a careful farm doesn’t promote her cause like a faceless operation who hired some farm worker. Some compassion towards the owners and acknowledgement that they did their best to provide a safe environment would have benefited her cause. I am insulted that she claims the accident was “inevitable … predictable and very preventable.” I live with someone who survived an identical accident to this one — his was investigated — and it was none of these things. Accidents and deaths still occur in workplaces with unions and safe work procedures. Safety programs reduce risk; they don’t eliminate it. Don’t assume it’s all callous negligence. Jamie Van Cleemput, Delisle, Sask.
REMEMBER THIS To the Editor: In the March 13 issue of The Western Producer on page 52, the photograph captures the grain movement problem in a nut shell. The picture shows 11 grain hopper cars and then oil tanker cars as far back as an eye can see. The oil has to get to market too, but the railways are so busy hauling oil they forget about the lowly farmers. We are a captive market; we don’t have any pipeline the wheat can go in. I wish someone would organize a convoy of super Bs. That would take some of it away. The grain companies are doing the farmers a real disservice as they have booked ships at port and now they can’t get the grain there. … The Saskatchewan Wheat Pool and the Canadian Wheat Board were
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
organized because grain companies were doing the same thing back in the ’30s and ’40s. My grandfather and another fellow drove around and got people to sign up for the SWP. There were other good honest men, and Jack Wesson made it happen. They had a good organization that treated the farmers fairly and it ran until the suits got in there and wrecked it. There is no shortage of markets. If the wheat was at the West Coast, it would all move at a good price. Our customers who are buying our wheat are still paying in the plus $6 range and the futures market in Minnesota is in the $7 a bushel range. The price on the Prairies is half. I am sure that the grain will eventually all move and these criminal prices will be a thing of the past. As farmers, we need to remember how the grain companies treated us in the past year and be ever on guard so
they can’t do it again. Why should farmers bankroll a bunch of suits’ errors in judgment? We have done it enough. Victor Hult, Waseca, Sask.
“Any idea where I can get some Woolite?”
BEGINNINGS | PARADISE
Paradise: God’s garden and ours SPIRITUAL VIGNETTES
JOYCE SASSE
A
ccording to the earliest stories, God created a magnificent Garden of Eden and turned it over to Adam and Eve. However, because they were not prepared to handle the knowledge associated with Eden, they were separated from the paradise that surrounded them. Through the centuries, Old Testament believers tried but could not reconnect with what was lost. Amos, for example, longed to have his people “seek good and not evil,” but reality eluded them. Finally God said, “Let me show you.” To illustrate how much he cared for what had been created, God gave us Jesus, who reversed the earlier consequences associated with Eden. Through an act of love, all the darkness that hung over the images of the garden was wiped away. It became possible that believers could again find meaningful life in the restored paradise. John the gospel writer spelled out the connection between the two eras when he noted that “God did not send his son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.” That connection was affirmed by Jesus. “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me (and) I am come that you might have life, and have it to the full.” Today, those whose faith formation enables them to feel empowered by paradise are compelled to live generously, compassionately and justly, and always governed by truth. As participants in paradise, we become conduits for God’s love. For deeper understanding about the meaning of “paradise,” see the historical-theological text Saving Paradise by Rita Brock and Rebecca Parker.
Joyce Sasse writes for the Canadian Rural Church Network at www.canadian ruralchurch.net.
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
FERTILIZER | AVAILABILITY
Urea shortage expected to keep fertilizer prices high Worsening situation | A decline in on-farm storage, fertilizer shipments and production problems contribute to urea shortage BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Winter warnings about a urea fertilizer shortage turned out to be accurate, says a retailer. “The rubber hit the road, bounced off the ditch and landed in the pasture,” said Brian Gross, product strategy manager of crop nutrition with United Farmers of Alberta. A variety of factors have conspired to create a substantial shortfall of the most popular type of fertilizer used in Western Canada. It started last fall when urea prices were in the $450 per tonne range, which is lower than prices had been for years. Gross said farmers saw falling commodity prices and thought fertilizer prices would move even lower, so they held off on purchases. They were also contending with a bin-busting crop that filled bins usually reserved for fertilizer, so there was nowhere to store the product. The result was that Canadian urea shipments for the first half of 201314 were down 29 percent from the previous year, according to Statistics Canada. Gross said it would be difficult to make up those volumes during the second half of the year under normal circumstances, but 2013-14 hasn’t been a normal year.
Production problems at all of the major Canadian nitrogen fertilizer manufacturing facilities caused an 11 percent decline in urea production during the first half of the year. Urea prices began to climb, and retailers scrambled to find alternative sources, but importing urea became problematic because of rail logistics problems and increased truck demand. To make matters worse, the delayed demand for fertilizer that began to materialize during the winter was stronger than usual because of last year’s bumper crop. “It drew the nutrients out of the soil and left the soil reserves lower than they’ve been in some time,” said Gross. To top it off, analysts expect growers to plant more canola than last year, which requires more nitrogen than wheat. So demand is up, supply is down and the transportation gridlock isn’t providing any answers. “It has been a gong show,” he said. Gross said he feels there may be a 20 percent shortfall between urea demand and supply. Prices have risen much higher than $750 per tonne, but the price is immaterial because farmers can’t get their hands on the product. “I’ve heard of dealers actually calling their customers and saying, ‘I’m going to write you a cheque and give you your money back because I can’t get the product,’ ” said Gross.
UFA sold a lot of nitrogen in the fall in conjunction with a bin promotion program. “The fertilizer price has changed so much that anybody that bought a bin on this program has more than paid for it in one year,” he said. Gross knew it was time to push the panic button and start searching for alternative supplies when a major manufacturer informed UFA late last year that it would be providing far less than half of the supplies UFA had ordered for the season. The situation will only get worse. Agrium Inc. announced last week that there has been a malfunction with the primary boiler at its nitrogen fertilizer production facility in Carseland, Alta. “It brought the plant down what we call hard,” said Agrium spokesperson Richard Downey. “The boiler has to be replaced.” The plant is expected to be out of commission for six or seven weeks, and the shutdown is expected to lower urea availability by 100,000 tonnes and ammonia availability by 20,000 tonnes. The company declared force majeure on supply contracts with its dealer network for that plant. Brian Kenyon, director of sales and marketing for Yara, said the loss of 100,000 tonnes of urea production is a big blow. “That’s going to create a huge prob-
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lem for those that were relying on it,” he said. Growers are indicating they want to use as much urea as last year but Kenyon doesn’t think that’s possible. He anticipates the western Canadian market will be two million tonnes this year versus 2.4 million tonnes last year. Kenyon believes the shortfall between demand and supply will be in
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A shortfall of urea will leave producers looking for alternative fertilizer options. | FILE PHOTO
the five to 10 percent range. Some growers are bound to be disappointed but the late start to spring means manufacturing plants will have more time to crank out product. Downey said the rail transportation quagmire is contributing to the shortfall, but Agrium is doing everything it can to get product to its dealer network in the Prairies. “Because our plants are in Western Canada, there are options for trucking,” he said. “We’ve been scrambling to get additional trucks in place and move a lot more product than we normally would by truck, given the shortage of rail cars.” Gross said the urea shortage is creating increased demand for alternative fertilizer products. “Everybody is buying whatever ammonium sulfate they can find because there is nitrogen in it.” Gross anticipates growers will be scrimping on nitrogen applied to pastures and green feed crops to free up product for use on high value crops such as canola. There is also a mounting phosphorus shortage. Gross can find supplies at plants such as J.R. Simplot Co. in Idaho, but he can’t find the trucks to bring them north. He expects a huge demand for nitrogen fertilizer this fall because of this year’s shortage.
14’ OCTAGON *:( ( *LY[PÄLK *>) *LY[PÄLK
TRAMPOLINE
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
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ENVIRONMENT | WEATHER
Prairie farmers urged to prepare for climate change Climate change report | Researcher says farmers around the world will have to adapt to floods and droughts BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
Prairie farmers are the most adaptable people on Earth, says a Saskatchewan climate researcher. The latest report on global climate change suggests they should prepare for anything. Dave Sauchyn of the University of Regina spent the past year reviewing the 2,500 page Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, which was released last week. He said on the face of it, farmers stand to gain from a warming climate, because longer growing seasons and greater heat units offer advantages. “But it’s also advantageous for other living things, not just crops and pasture and grasses but things we don’t want in the pasture and the crops,” Sauchyn said. A greater diversity of pests and diseases associated with warmer climates are likely, including those that affected animal agriculture but in the past had been killed off in the cold winters. Sauchyn said farmers are always adapting to climate and diseases, and that is likely to continue. Those who are more adaptable are also better prepared. “Some of them are reading this stuff
and some of them are saying, ‘OK, we’re adapting anyway, let’s make sure we can handle a flood or a drought or a storm that’s worse than what we’ve seen,’ ” he said. “That’s the key — are you adapting to extremes that are beyond your personal experience. You don’t have to run a fancy computer model to know that you should be prepared for weather that you’ve not seen.” The latest IPCC report reviewed the scientific research done in the last seven years since the previous report from Working Group II. Working Group 1 had examined scientific aspects of climate change. The review found that all continents are already experiencing the effects of climate change, and the world is mostly ill-prepared for the risks. “It shouldn’t be a surprise to anybody because we’ve been studying this stuff for decades, and the outcome of the research isn’t that much different,” Sauchyn said. “The body of evidence is just getting bigger and bigger and bigger.” Thousands of independent studies have now reached the same conclusion, and while climate change can’t be blamed for all extreme weather events, enough data is available to s ay t h e re i s a t re n d t o g re at e r extremes in terms of floods, droughts
Extreme flooding incidents are expected to occur more frequently because of climate change, say researchers. | FILE PHOTO and storms, he said. Working Group II is expected to produce another report in seven y e a r s, b u t Sau c hy n a d d e d t h e reports aren’t done for scientists who are constantly looking at the research. “They’re done for decision makers, policy makers in industry, government,” he said. “The next stage is communicating.” The report doesn’t identify specific risks or impacts on the Prairies. Instead, it takes a continental approach. However, one of the consistent con-
cerns is the impact of climate change on water. “In many regions, changing precipitation or melting snow and ice are altering hydrological systems, affecting water resources in terms of quantity and quality,” said the report summary. Terrestrial, fresh water and marine species have all altered their geographic ranges, seasonal activities, migration patterns and other aspects of their lives in response to climate change. The report also notes that many studies examining crops found more nega-
tive than positive impacts on yields. “Climate change has negatively affected wheat and (corn) yields for many regions and in the global aggregate,” the report said. “Effects on rice and soybean yield have been smaller in major production regions and globally. Observed impacts relate mainly to production aspects of food security rather than access or other components of food security.” Extreme floods, drought, storms and increased frequency and intensity of wildfires were also noted. Debra Davidson, an environmental sociologist at the University of Alberta, was one of two Canadians who helped write the report summary for decision makers. She told the CBC Radio program Quirks and Quarks that governments have a role to play in helping people adapt. “I’m confident in the ability of individual households and farmers and municipalities to recognize the seriousness and to do what they can to adapt to the current and the projected impacts of climate change,” she said during the April 5 broadcast. “But in the end, we do need national level support and co-ordination of those efforts simply because the capacity to adapt is not equally distributed around the country.”
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
HISTORY | DOMINION FAIR BUILDING
Historic agricultural fair building refurbished Dominion Exhibition Display Building No. II | It is one of the few remaining buildings from the Dominion fair era in Canada BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
Visitors almost needed welding helmets to look directly at the four silver domes and gleaming white walls of Dominion Exhibition Display Building No. II on a brilliant but chilly day in early April. The roof, walls and windows look fully refurbished after years of renovations on the building, which was built in Brandon in 1913 for the Dominion Fair. Local fundraisers are now lobbying the federal and provincial governments for additional cash to complete interior renovations on the only display hall remaining in Canada from the dominion fairs. “The Dominion Fair was a federally sponsored fair that moved around Canada (and) showcased agriculture,” said Gord Peters, co-chair of the fundraising team with his wife, Diane “They don’t build buildings like this anymore…. Architecturally, it’s very important.”’ In 2009, the Heritage Canada Foundation listed the domed building as one the most endangered structures in the country. Parks Canada, on its website, described the building as a “rare sur-
viving example of the late 19th and early 20th century type of exhibition halls” built for agricultural fairs. The building later served as a display space for the Royal Manitoba Winter Fair, the Manitoba Summer Fair and Manitoba Livestock Expo. It deteriorated over time and was eventually used for storage. Renovations began in 2009, and Daryl Knight, project manager for the restoration, said it’s been an education because contractors and volunteers had to maintain the building’s historical integrity. “We’ve got to keep things the proper way, and it takes a lot of research and a lot of looking for material.” Knight and his team have tackled difficult tasks such as placing new footings around the structure, installing a new floor and restoring windows. The interior of the building looks solid, but timbers are exposed on the roof and walls. Drywall, electrical, plumbing, heating and other modern renovations are required to finish the job. Once complete, the Provincial Exhibition of Manitoba and other tenants will use part of the building for office space. “There’s going to be an interpretative museum in the back half of the
Dominion Exhibition Display Building No. II on the Provincial Exhibition grounds in Brandon is a rare example of halls built for agricultural fairs in the late 1800s and early 1900s. | ROBERT ARNASON PHOTO building … all related to agriculture,” Peters said. The $3 million project has cost $1 million less than anticipated, thanks to the assistance of local volunteers.
The provincial and federal governments have already contributed $1 million each to the project. Peters and his team need another $3 million from government and private
sources to reach the finish line. Another $1 million will need to be raised in private donations. FOR A RELATED STORY, SEE PAGE 37.
CRIME | STOLEN TRACTOR
THE FIGHT FOR FAIR FARMLAND POLICY ISN’T SEXY ...SO WHO’LL BE YOUR SUPERSTAR?
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Tractor heist takes cops on slow speed chase BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU
A slow speed police chase across fields involving a tractor, cop cars and a police officer hitching a ride on a borrowed snowmobile was like an episode out of the television comedy show Corner Gas. “I’m from Saskatchewan, and it sort of was,” said Blackfalds RCMP cpl. Barry Larocque. “This is the first time we’ve had a tractor chase we were actively pursuing with a private snowmobile.” RCMP received a call about a break and enter east of Red Deer about 3:30 p.m. April 2, in which items were stolen from a rural residence, including firearms. About an hour and a half later, police received a second call that someone was driving a John Deere 6400 tractor with front-end loader out of a farmyard. Three RCMP members happened to be in the area and started the slow speed pursuit of the tractor. “It was slow speed the whole way, smashing into fences and stands of trees,” said Larocque. The tractor driver tried to stay in the fields in an attempt to elude police officers in their cars on the road, he added. One of the police officers flagged down a passing snowmobile and “was graciously offered a ride on his snow machine to track the stolen implement.”
This tractor was damaged after it rolled at the end of a slow speed chase with RCMP. | RCMP PHOTO Larocque said the driver of the tractor would pop out on the road and drive back into another field, hoping to get away. At about 6:45 p.m., the driver tried to drive the tractor up a hill, but it stalled. When he got it started and tried to back it down the hill, he lost control and the tractor rolled for one complete revolution. “The subject in it was not hurt at all,” said Larocque. In the tractor were the firearms stolen from the first break and enter. “He gave up to us and admitted to everything.” Jesse Cecka, 25, has been charged with break, enter and theft, theft over $5,000 for the tractor, breach of existing court documents and multiple counts of mischief. He made his first court appearance April 3.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
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B.C. AGRICULTURAL LAND RESERVE | ZONE CHANGES
Green groups oppose ALR changes Value-added ventures | Changes would allow some B.C. farm landowners to use ALR property for farm-related activities BY DAVID TRIFUNOV FREELANCE WRITER
KELOWNA, B.C. — Every acre of British Columbia farmland is worth protecting, say environmentalists angry about proposed changes to the province’s land reserve. The B.C. government recently announced that it plans to change the agricultural land reserve by dividing the province’s agricultural areas into two zones The prime producing areas on Vancouver Island, the Lower Mainland and Okanagan Valley would see little change, but landowners in the rest of the province would be able to open up their ALR property to value-added farm activities such as food processing. The B.C. Food Systems Network said the changes threaten food security for future generations.
“We already know that we will have to look north for food production as growing seasons change due to the effects of climate change, such as the present drought in California,” network representative Abra Brynne said. “Almost half of the ALR lands are in the north, with 72 percent of B.C.’s remaining prime quality lands in the Peace River Valley. Future generations cannot afford to lose that food growing potential.… There is just too much at stake.” Nathalie Chambers, a Saanich farmer and member of the Farmland Protection Coalition, is so opposed to the new direction she helped organize a pro-ALR rally in Victoria ahead of the announcement. About 1,000 people arrived at the B.C. Legislature Feb. 10 to plead with the government to preserve the reserve. Chamber said farmers will
FILE PHOTO
stand up to protect the ALR. “We need a reliable supply of farmland to grow food for the future,” Chambers said. “We will oppose any legislative changes that erode the autonomy of the ALR or the Agricultural Land Commission.” The government said the ALR needs updating to help farmers get the most from their land and make the profession more attractive to young people. The B.C. Liberals said they will meet with farmers and ranchers to ensure the best way forward.
That’s not sitting well with opponents, who warn B.C. farmland could now be open to oil and gas exploration. They also said there was no public consultation ahead of the announcement. In reaction, B.C. NDP leader Adrian Dix said he plans to introduce the Local Food Act. At Fable, a Vancouver restaurant renowned for using local produce, Dix said the B.C. Liberals have no plan for the province’s agricultural industry. He pointed to Ontario’s green belt
system, which encourages local food production, and Washington state, where government procurement policies promote local agriculture. The NDP’s plan includes government purchases of locally grown food, reintroduction of the Buy BC food marketing program and creation of a legislative committee that would plan increased local food production, marketing and processing. “When it was founded, the ALR was envisioned to be a source of sustainable economic activity and a means to protect British Columbians against food scarcity,” NDP small business critic Lana Popham, who owns an organic grape orchard and vineyard on Vancouver Island, said at the April 1 announcement. “But this government has, throughout its term in office, lacked vision to realize its underlying purpose and potential.”
INTERNATIONAL TRADE | SUPPLY MANAGEMENT
Two supply management systems more efficient than one: economist Export, domestic market system | Current system has no export provisions BY JEFFREY CARTER FOR THE WESTERN PRODUCER
introducing the NEW
X7
He said the WTO ruled that Canada was dumping because the milk for export was offered at a lower price than what was produced for the domestic market. Added New Brunswick dairy farmer Reint-Jan Dykstra: “I’m happy about your statement not to abolish, but reform we do. We’ve been doing it for 40 years.” Dykstra and Wiens were far more critical of the Conference Board of Canada’s reform strategy, which calls for abolishing supply management and compensating Canadian farmers for the lost value of their quota. Charlebois said the conference board plan doesn’t acknowledge the history or economics of Canada’s dairy sector. “All countries protect their dairy sector to a degree,” he said. “If supply management were to cease in Canada, we would eventually need some sort of support for our dairy sector.”
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haps 10 to 15 years. The move would still protect dairy farmers but also make other countries more willing to accept the two-quota system. “I don’t think it’s a good idea to reduce tariffs to zero, but at the same time we need to demonstrate some commitment to free trade.” Other economists have made similar proposals for supply management reform in the past, Charlebois said. He talked about his proposal during a panel discussion at the Canadian Food Summit in Toronto in March. In the audience were several supply management supporters, including two directors with Dairy Farmers of Canada. David Wiens, who farms in Manitoba, said an earlier attempt to develop an export market for Canadian dairy products failed after New Zealand and the United States successfully challenged it at the World Trade Organization.
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Sylvain Charlebois, centre, was part of a panel discussion at the Canadian Food Summit in Toronto. | JEFFREY CARTER PHOTO
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DRESDEN, Ont. — There is middle ground in the supply management debate worth exploring, according to an economist from the University of Guelph. Sylvain Charlebois says it would be a mistake to abolish supply management for Canada’s dairy industry. However, the status quo fails to take advantage of export opportunities. “Basically, what we need is a new category of quota, whether for the domestic market or, more likely, for trade,” Charlebois said. “We tried to do that many years ago and failed, but it’s a very different world today.” Charlebois, who specializes in marketing and consumer studies at Guelph, grew up on a dairy farm near Farnham, Que. He envisions two parallel quota systems operating at the same time. One would operate through the provinces and serve the domestic market, while the other would be introduced at the federal level and target export markets and possibly specialty niche markets in Canada. He said the federal system would likely interest the owners of larger dairy operations because lower farmgate prices would be involved. Charlebois also proposes changing the way farmgate prices are set. Instead of using the average cost of production across all farms, the formula would be based on the top 25 percent. He said this would encourage less efficient operators to make improvements or leave the business and result in a modest increase in Canada’s average herd size. Charlebois said he would also reduce Canadian tariffs on dairy imports over a lengthy period, per-
X7.440 X7.450 X7.460 X7.660 X7.770 X7.680
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS PEST MANAGEMENT | SCOUTING
Insect inspectors hope to be less intrusive in Alta. Pest monitoring | Growers who grant access will receive information about field history BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU
Scott Meers shows how to inspect a field for insects during a canola plot field demonstration last August. | FILE PHOTO
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Strangers in the field is an almost sure way to arouse farmers’ radar.
Who are they and what are they doing there? These are legitimate questions, and ones that the Alberta insect surveillance team understands. Sensitivity to that issue is one reason why the pest monitoring network is moving away from random field surveys and instead developing a list of farmers who are willing to have their fields checked for pests. Scott Meers, an insect management specialist with Alberta Agriculture, said all members of the team are appointed as pest inspectors and thus have the legal right to go into fields unannounced to do insect surveys. The team conducts 4,200 field visits a year while compiling surveys of seven insect pests. Getting permission for each field entry is impractical. “But it is people’s property and it’s always been kind of a source of discomfort, and now and then we run into a person who is very upset with us,” said Meers. “Not often, but now and then. So we want to take that out of the equation.” A database of willing landowners will also provide access to field history, which is useful in tracking pest populations and the reasons for their rise and fall. Meers said it will also reduce the possibility of false negatives. “From a pure scientific standpoint, we should stay random, but this is about management information and we’d much rather, if an insect is in an area, we find it, and then people know that they need to be watching for it in their management.” Participating farmers will be informed of the findings, usually by email, if their field is surveyed, Meers added. Crops sur veyed include peas, canola, wheat and alfalfa. Fa b a b e a n f i e l d s w i l l a l s o b e checked this year. The seven insects surveyed are cabbage seedpod weevil, pea leaf weevil, diamondback moth, bertha armyworm, wheat midge, wheat stem sawfly and grasshoppers. Team members follow strict biosecurity protocols, said Meers. “We go into the field with sterilized boots or plastic booties, and if we use any equipment there, it is sterilized between fields,” he said. “We’re very aware of biosecurity. We’re very careful with it. And we never, never drive into a field. We always walk.” Meers said the program will register all Alberta farmers who contact it, though it won’t necessarily mean their fields will be surveyed every year. For more information, email bugs,r. us@gov.ab.ca, scott.meers@gov. ab.ca or shelley.barkley@gov.ab.ca.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
FARMLIVING
19
MAKING MUSIC PAY Country singer Tim Hus knows a professional musician’s life means long days on the road. | Page 23
FARM LIVING EDITOR: KAREN MORRISON | Ph: 306-665-3585 F: 306-934-2401 | E-MAIL: KAREN.MORRISON@PRODUCER.COM
AG INDUSTRY | UNITY
Respect among all ag sectors wins the day BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
AG INDUSTRY | PUBLIC RELATIONS
Build trust with urban consumers Be proactive | Don’t let anti-farmer campaigns take over, warns PR consultant BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
How can the ever-shrinking population of farmers connect with urban consumers to get a fair hearing on the many controversial issues that are being thrown at agriculture? “There’s only two percent of us and 98 percent non-farming consumers, so we’re a little outnumbered,” said Minnedosa, Man., farmer Neil Galbraith. At a day-long workshop organized by the Manitoba Canola Growers Association, he and farmers, dieticians, agriculture industry professionals and foodies were led through a series of questions, exercises and scenarios designed to help farmers and others bridge the divide with the urban masses. Workshop leader Michele PaynK n o p e r, a l e a d i n g A m e r i c a n
defender of the public image of farmers, told Galbraith not to get intimidated by the low number of farmers. “You have an opportunity to make an impact,” she said. But she warned farmers that they don’t have much time to start getting out and meeting the public. In the United States, attacks on mainstream farming from GM labelling to animal rights campaigns have reached levels of extreme caricaturing of farmers that has soured the view of many in the public. She sees Canada about three to five years behind the U.S. in this evolution, so “it allows you to be much more proactive,” she said. Payn-Knoper and co-leader Cami Ryan urged farmers to get active on Twitter, YouTube and social media to let people see what real farmers are like. Payn-Knoper said anti-farmer campaigns are much less successful with members of the public if they already know some farmers and have those images in their minds before negative ones are cast at them. “It’s about changing the reference
point at the front end, so that when the crap comes out (in sensationalist campaigns), people at least go ‘you know what, farmers are good people.’ ” said Payn-Knoper. “If we can get that question mark to come on in people’s heads and say, ‘I remember talking to (a farmer they know through social media) and I don’t quite buy that (image presented in a negative campaign).’ ” Former federal agriculture minister Charlie Mayer, who took part in the workshop, said farmers should fight back against falsehoods spread by activists. “We really have to challenge everybody every time they say something that disagrees with the facts,” said Mayer. But Payn-Knoper said arguing with people is seldom effective and that trust has to be built first. “I would encourage you perhaps to have a conversation rather than challenge people . . . We will lose if we continue to play defence and not (reach out) and if we constantly challenge,” said Payn-Knoper. She also encouraged farmers to move away from the notion of edu-
cating people who are critical of what they do. People have the right to their opinions, but are probably open to modifying them if farmers open a window on themselves and build a connection. “You earn the right to share facts with people, to educate them, once you’ve been able to connect with them on a real relationship level,” said Payn-Knoper. Farmers shouldn’t think communication or relationship building is a secondary thing they can get to if they have the time or interest. “It’s not about (public relations) fluff. It’s about business,” she said. “I know you’d rather be taking care of your land, equipment and animals. I get it. I know that public relations is not the most comfortable thing for you and I also know that you’re stubborn, modest and independent. “We have the character traits in our business that are not inherent to speaking up. (But) this is a best business practice you have to (take seriously.) Because you’re either going to protect your right to farm as you best see fit or it’s going to go away.”
There’s a lot of bad blood between organic and conventional farmers, but leading farm image defenders say keeping that feud going just hurts all of agriculture. “As soon as we take one part of agriculture down, we all go down,” said Cami Ryan during a Winnipeg workshop helping farmers, dieticians, agriculture industry people and foodies on how to connect with the public. Ryan and American Michele Payn-Knoper encouraged conventional farmers not to badmouth organic farmers. “I know what you’re going to say: ‘They throw us under the bus. They do this, they do that.’ It doesn’t mean we have to play tit-for-tat, folks,” she said. “The reality is that it take a wide variety of farms to be able to feed all the types of people there are and to ensure their needs for different kinds of foods.” The problem with farmer-versusfarmer squabbles is that it creates divisions that anti-farming groups can exploit. “The activists know that they can target us and we’re very good at pointing fingers and trying to defend our own sector in the business,” said Payn-Knoper. “Is it a challenge for us to work together? Yes, it sure is.” But she said there are so few farmers in a society that is more than 97 percent non-farmer that the challenge is to defend and promote positive views of agriculture, not disparage other kinds. However people choose to farm or consume is for them to decide. “It’s a choice for your family and I don’t think it’s fair for any of us to judge folks on the choice they make for their family,” said Payn-Knoper. “I would encourage you to look at how we can work together.”
Visit us online at www.producer.com to see a video about this story.
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FARM LIVING
4-H day Alberta youth with clipboards outnumbered livestock in the University of Alberta Multi Species Judging Competition during 4-H Day at the Northlands Farm and Ranch Show in Edmonton March 29. | Dan Riedlhuber photos
ABOVE: An alpaca stands erect as members take stock of its merits. RIGHT: A group of girls from Elk Island register.
TOP: Jacob Wilson of Whitecourt takes notes while judging blonde heifers. ABOVE: Elora Rigney of Clyde shows her colours as she evaluates an animal. LEFT: A 4-H member tries to identify silage samples.
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FARM LIVING
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
21
ON THE FARM | RETIREMENT VENTURE
Growers talk turkey about daylily passion 300 varieties and growing | Retired turkey producers consider ways to expand business BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
BALMORAL, Man. — As the sun set on Emmy Byle’s yard, a soft light illuminated the oak trees, two bird feeders and a metre of snow surrounding the house. It was a tranquil setting for late March in Manitoba, but the twilight scene outside Emmy’s front window was a complete contrast to the vivid yellow, pink, orange and green images on her computer screen. She scrolled through dozens of dazzling flower photos, taken last summer 150 metres south of her home, while explaining why she enjoys growing daylilies. “It’s relaxing out there (in the field). We are in our own little world,” she said. “We like to see things grow. That’s why we’re grain farmers, or farmers period.” Sitting at the kitchen table of their cottage-like home, with a fireplace on the opposite side of the room, Emmy and her husband, David, talked about how they are turning Emmy’s passion for daylilies into a business. Daylily farms operate in Ontario and British Columbia, but the Byes are in the early stages of running what is likely the first daylily farm in Manitoba. “We’re always (buying) out of province for different varieties. There’s nobody in Manitoba that farms them,” David said. Added Emmy: “Why go out of province for it if we can grow it?” The Byles, who have three adult children, April, Amanda and Joel, used to run a turkey farm on land near their new home, which is 50 kilometres north of Winnipeg. Closing in on 60 and concerned about the future of supply management in Canada, Emmy and David decided to sell their turkey operation several years ago. “A lot of our retirement was in the value of our quota. There are always challenges against our (supply management) system. What if we wake up one day and our quota has no value?” David said. “We saw an opportunity to get out while the going was good.” The Byles continued growing grain and oilseeds on 500 acres because idleness wasn’t an option. They wanted to keep busy in semi-retirement, so they began exploring the concept of growing and selling perennials. Emmy used to run a flower shop in nearby Stonewall and has always enjoyed gardening, especially growing daylilies. She has amassed a collection of more than 300 daylily varieties by
buying from fellow enthusiasts and growers in Ontario and B.C. As testament to her infatuation, the daylilies were not abandoned when the Byles moved several kilometres from their previous farm to their new house. “We had our whole garden filled up in the other yard…. When we sold the farm, well, we’re not leaving all those lilies behind,” Emmy said. “We dug them all up and moved them with us.” The daylily garden grew larger every year, and the Byles eventually realized that their hobby could become a business. The Byles travelled to Ontario for a family reunion in 2011 and stopped at several daylily farms to learn about the trade. They retuned to Manitoba with more knowledge and a few more varieties for their collection. “We learned a lot and we ended up with our suitcases full of daylilies,” David said. “We probably brought 50 home.” Added Emmy: “This is hobby gone crazy.” Their hobby officially became a business last summer when they started selling daylilies grown on a one-acre field at the farm. Only 30 minutes from Winnipeg, the farm is conveniently located for urban residents who want to beautify their property with perennials. “Bedding plants only live for one year, so you’re shelling out a pile of money every year,” David said. “Once you establish them (daylilies), you don’t have to buy anymore.” The Byles recognize that it may be difficult to compete directly against bedding plants because daylilies aren’t ready to sell until July. Most urban gardeners want to plant flowers in late May or early June, so they’ll need customers who prefer perennials. “Ideally want we want… is to have people come out (to the farm) at blossom time,” David said. “The show out there is unbelievable.” They are also considering selling daylilies through their website, www. greenridgefarm.ca, to variety collectors and gardeners across Canada. “We weren’t sure we wanted to get into that, but last year we had a lot of requests to see if we do ship,” said David. Fifty varieties are listed on the website. The Byles said their business plans remain in the “infancy” stage because they haven’t nailed down a marketing strategy. As well, they aren’t sure if they want to dedicate their entire summer to growing, weeding, splitting, replanting and selling daylilies.
Greenridge Farm owners Emmy and David Byle are planning a marketing strategy to sell their daylily bulbs to prairie gardeners. | ED WHITE PHOTOS Daylilies are often called the perfect perennial because:
Son Joel runs a turkey breeding farm in the area, and Emmy and David frequently help out, which takes up a number of hours each week. So, between 500 acres of cropland, three adult children, four grandsons, working on their son’s turkey farm and selling daylilies, the Byles will have to postpone full-fledged retirement for a while. That’s OK with Emmy, who believes in staying busy. “If you slow down, you die.”
• They are able to survive, with minimal care, in a wide range of climates. • They adapt well to a variety of soil and light conditions. • Different varieties bloom from late spring until autumn. • The American Hemerocallis Society has a database of more than 55,000 registered daylily cultivars. Source: American Hemerocallis Society
4-H Alberta Celebrates Volunteer Week
April 6-12
Since 1917, 4-H Alberta volunteers have been helping members to achieve excellence and to develop leadership, communication, technical, and life skills. Today, over 2,100 volunteers contribute their time, skills, and expertise toward enhancing 4-H Alberta.
Thank you 4-H Alberta volunteers for devoting countless hours, meaningful contributions, and commitment to mentoring youth in Alberta! During Volunteer Week acknowledge and thank your 4-H leader, current or past, for all that they do for their club and community. Let them know how they have positively impacted your life – he or she will never forget your words of appreciation!
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www.4h.ab.ca
volunteer or discover 4-H today
Courtesy of:
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FARM LIVING
SPRING | CLEAN HOUSE, CLEANSE BODY
SEPARATION | CUSTODY
Give your surroundings and diet a makeover
Joint custody can work
TEAM RESOURCES
JODIE MIROSOVSKY, BSHEc
dementia and diabetes by protecting cells. The brain likes an unrefined diet full of nutrient dense food that provides antioxidants and the right balance of proteins and natural sugars. Fruits and vegetables with dark skins provide high amounts of naturally occurring antioxidants and fibre. Greens such as spinach, lettuce, kale, asparagus, broccoli, peppers, green beans and tomatoes are great choices. Berries, oranges, apples, red grapes and cherries are also good brain food. Add raw, unsalted nuts to your diet. A handful of almonds, pecans and walnuts are sources of vitamin E, protein and fibre. Consume healthy fats that include fish (also a protein source), ground flaxseed, avocados and olive oil. Choose whole grains and get a boost of protein with some Greek yogurt. Source: www.webmd.com.
SUSTAINING SMOOTHIE FLORENCE
T
he return of spring means a change from steaming comfort food that kept us warm all winter to lighter meals with a main course that includes fresh greens, vegetables and fruits. It is also a time to de-clutter and check out all the corners of the house. This year we are renovating the kitchen so the contents of the cabinets had to be packed up. It helped me determine what to keep. One nostalgic piece that graces our kitchen and will find a place after the renovations is an African violet dubbed Florence for the home’s former owner. It has never stopped blooming since 2007.
SPRING CLEAN THE DIET Eating well helps your brain and heart function smoothly and reduces the risk of diseases such as cancer,
2 tbsp. 2 tbsp. 1/2 c. 1/2
rice protein powder 30 mL ground flax seed 30 mL frozen berries 125 mL banana one handful of spinach 1 tbsp. olive oil 15 mL 1 c. unsweetened 250 mL vanilla almond milk a squeeze of orange juice, optional
Blend ingredients together until the desired consistency. Add the dry ingredients last for easier mixing. Makes one large serving. Source: www.doctoroz.com.
QUESADILLAS Try this quick skillet dish that uses leftover roast chicken or beef. Serve with soup or veggies and dip. 4 large whole grain flour tortillas 4 c. cooked chicken, diced 1 L 1/8 tsp. seasoning salt 0.5 mL
SPEAKING OF LIFE
JACKLIN ANDREWS, BA, MSW
Q:
Fluffy white frosting covers this easy-to-make chocolate cake. | JODIE MIROSOVSKY PHOTOS
1/2 tsp. chili powder 2 mL dash of cayenne pepper 1 c. chopped onions 250 mL 1 c. chopped peppers 250 mL 1 c. chopped spinach 250 mL 2 c. shredded cheese 500 mL of your choice 2 c. medium salsa 500 mL sour cream Season the chicken with seasoning salt, cayenne pepper and chili powder. Spread one cup (250 mL) of the chicken on half of each tortilla. Add onions, peppers, spinach and cheese over the chicken. Fold the tortilla in half and place in a large heated skillet, then flatten. Cook over medium heat for approximately five minutes on each side until lightly browned and cheese is melted. Gently flip about halfway through the cooking. Cut into three wedges and serve with salsa and sour cream on the side for dipping. You can add any chopped vegetables you desire to this entree or substitute in leftover meat.
EASTER DESSERT
that is quick, simple and elegant. 1 c. 1 c. 1/3 c. 3/4 tsp. 3/4 tsp. 1/4 tsp. 1 1/2 c. 1/4 c. 1/2 c.
flour sugar cocoa baking powder baking soda salt egg milk oil boiling water
250 mL 250 mL 75 mL 3 mL 3 mL 1 mL 125 mL 60 mL 125 mL
Preheat oven to 350 F (180 C). Grease and prepare a nine-inch round cake pan. Mix together dry ingredients and add wet ingredients. Mix well. Spread into baking pan. Bake 35 to 40 minutes or until a toothpick comes out clean. Cool and place on a serving plate, decorate. Double if you want to have two cakes to stack. If you prefer cupcakes, prepare muffin tins, pour into batter and bake at 350 F (180 C) for approximately 15 to 20 minutes. Makes 12 to 15 cupcakes. Sprinkle batter with dark chocolate chips before baking if desired. Source: Adapted from Prairie Pooches and Friends.
This is a delectable chocolate cake
FLUFFY WHITE FROSTING
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1 c. 1 1 tsp. 1/4 tsp.
white sugar egg white vanilla cream of tartar
250 mL 5 mL 1 mL
In a mixing bowl, combine the ingredients. Add 1/2 c. (125 mL) of boiling water and beat the contents until firm and fluffy. Tint the frosting if desired or decorate with fruit.
RUBBER BAND EASTER EGGS
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Place assorted rubber bands around hard-cooked eggs before dipping in cups of colour. Let the eggs dry completely before removing the bands. Dip each end in a different colour for a two tone effect. Source: www.kraftrecipes.com/ recipes. Jodie Mirosovsky is a home economist from Rosetown, Sask., and a member of Team Resources. Contact: team@producer.com.
My husband and I separated three months ago. We have two children, five and seven years old. My husband wants to have joint custody of the children with equal time between our two houses: one week with him and one week with me. I am not sure that all of that back and forth is good for the kids, but I have neither the time nor the money to get involved in a huge custody battle. Do we have other options?
A:
You have all kinds of options, as do your children. The truth is that children from divorced homes have adjusted to a wide variety of custodial agreements. Many children struggle with the initial shock of finding out that Mom and Dad are separating. However, they draw from that well of childhood resilience and adjust to their new families. Some of the arrangements parents make for their children might be awkward, moving the kids around from house to house or even from community to community, but they can work if Mom and Dad buy into the arrangements. The problem for most children is not the custody agreement but the degree of animosity between their parents. They might have a tough time successfully adjusting to the divorce if Mom and Dad do not get along and make their mutual antagonism an issue for the children. You don’t mention what led to your divorce, but that is your problem, not your children’s. Marital separation is often bathed in hurt and anger. Those are powerful feelings, and if they hang around to any great extent, the chances are pretty good that they will spill over to the well-being of the children. Children can become so concerned about what is happening to Mom and Dad that they are unable to look after themselves, make friends or keep up with their school work. Their developmental tasks are frustrated, leaving them with their own reservoirs of hurt and disappointments. Hard as it may be, your task is to come to terms with your feelings about your separation without involving the children in the emotional aftermath. Talk to a counsellor, keep in touch with your good friends, try to enjoy your time at work and make your home a palace of love and devotion. If you do that, and if your husband does the same at his house, the two of you might be able to endorse a custody agreement that will serve the best interests of the children while respecting your relationships with them.
Jacklin Andrews is a family counsellor from Saskatchewan. Contact: jandrews@ producer.com.
FARM LIVING
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
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Tim Hus says he enjoys writing songs about places and topics he is familiar with, like saskatoon berry picking and living in a logging camp. | MARK WEBSTER PHOTO The Rocky Mountain Duo is travelling across the Prairies to promote its sixth album. | HELMUT HUS PHOTO COUNTRY SINGER | REGIONAL LYRICS
Singer relates to audience with familiar topics, events Unique fan base | In Saskatchewan, potash miners want to hear Marietta Miner and in British Columbia, fans want to hear his fishing songs BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU
Jumping in his touring van and heading out on one more road trip doesn’t seem like drudgery to Canadian cowboy singer Tim Hus. Instead, Hus said he feels privileged to tour the country singing songs about Canada. “To me, the two aren’t separable. I never had any images of getting into music without travelling. I don’t think you can be a sailor and not go to sea and be a truck driver and not drive,” he said the day before driving to Saskatchewan with Rocky Mountain Duo, for a series of concerts to promote his sixth album. “I feel myself quite privileged that way. I feel like I get to see the whole country and I am quite in touch with it at the ground level that most people don’t get to.” Hus said he tries to play in every province and territory at least once a year. He has built his career for more than 10 years by playing in small towns, slowly building his fan base and finding material for his songs. “I try and play all the places no one else plays. I found that worked very well for me,” said Hus, who grew up in Nelson, B.C., but now calls Calgary home. “When you come to a concert in a small town, you’re kind of a big deal.” Hus has developed songs from his years of touring that resonate with each region. He calls them “regional hits.” In Saskatchewan, he gets requests for his saskatoon berry picking tale, Talkin’ Saskatoon Blues, or Marietta Miner, about potash mining in the province.
“The ones that always resonate most with the audiences are the ones that they can relate to,” he said. “The ones who grew up on the Prairies are very familiar with picking saskatoon berries. Everyone has got a saskatoon berry picking story of their own. That one seems to really connect with people.” It’s the same response when he plays his potash mining song in Saskatchewan. “The potash guys are lined up and waiting for that song,” he said. “As soon as I start it up, everyone sings along and stands up. It goes really great. That’s a big deal in Saskatchewan. A lot of them do that and can relate. I wouldn’t get the same reaction for that song in British Columbia at all.” Hus just returned from playing a concert in Snow Lake, near Flin Flon, Man., where he played a song about hard rock mining in the area. People lined up after the concert to buy the CD with that song on it. In British Columbia, he gets requests for his salmon fishing songs. “The rest of the music industry is interested in scoring hits. For me, I have more regional hits. I got these different songs that are hits in different parts of Canada.” Hus has always liked the storytelling songs of songwriters like Woody Guthrie, Tom T. Hall and Kris Kristofferson, but they always seemed to be set in Texas or Tennessee rather than in southern B.C., where he grew up. It wasn’t until he heard Stompin’ Tom Connors sing about Canada that he realized it was possible to write about songs from places he knew about. “I thought, ‘this is awesome’, mainly
because he had these songs about places that I had been to and I was familiar with.” Hus started work in forestry and leaving school, and his first song was about life in a logging camp. “I find it quite bizarre that writing songs about Canada can be a niche. What else am I supposed to write about?” His songs caught the attention of Connors, who phoned Hus on the bar phone in Manitoba to invite him to be his opening act and part of the band. “That was incredibly exciting for me. It was a dream come true,” said Hus, who toured with Connors for two years and was a pallbearer at his funeral last year. “Even though my career was up and going and I was playing across Canada on my own, he did open a lot of doors. He would draw such big audiences across the country.” Hus wears a leather coat trimmed in wolf fur on the cover of his latest album, Western Star. He said it’s a trucking song, but he also wanted to capture its double meaning of being a western singing star. The original idea was to dress in sparkly rhinestone suits for the cover photo. “I looked like some country star from Nashville,” he said. “It was all a little sparkly. I looked like I was from Nashville or Las Vegas.” He said he was wondering what a travelling Canadian troubadour would wear when he remembered the jacket made by a Manitoba trapper. “It’s a bit of a show piece. It’s an enormously heavy coat. It kind of reflected a bit of the Hudson Bay and history of Canada.”
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FARM LIVING SOUTHWESTERN SASKATCHEWAN | SCENERY
Eastend Coulee Country exotic mix of scenery TALES FROM THE ROAD
ARLENE & ROBIN KARPAN
ABOVE: The Frenchman River winds its way toward the Cypress Hills. | ARLENE AND ROBIN KARPAN PHOTOS BELOW CENTRE: Middle Bench Road between Eastend and Ravenscrag offers scenic views.
W
hen it comes to scenic drives on the Prairies, the Eastend area in southwestern Saskatchewan is at the top of our list.
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While dinosaurs are the town’s main claim to fame, with the T. Rex Discovery Centre telling the story of many important fossil finds, what we notice first is Eastend’s picturesque setting, nestled in a valley beside the Frenchman River. As attractive as the scenery is here, it’s only a taste of the panoramas that unfold along nearby roads. Our favourite drive is between Eastend and Ravenscrag. Head west of Eastend on grid road 614, and then after about two kilometres, turn left onto Ravenscrag Road. Most of the route follows the Frenchman River, which meanders across the broad valley. It’s one spectacular view after another with dry eroded hills tinged with colour flanking the fertile green valley. Most striking are exposed deposits of brilliant white mud, a kaolinized sandstone prized for use in ceramics because it remains bright white even after firing. Ravenscrag Road ends at a T-intersection. Turn north and cross the river, then turn right on the first road heading east. This is Middle Bench Road, taking you back to Eastend along a higher route into the hills, through mostly open grasslands with sweeping views. After about 11 km, take the minor road to the south that leads to Jones Peak, the highest point of land on the river valley rim. It is named after Harold Saunders “Corky” Jones, a local amateur palaeontologist who discovered many significant fossils in the area. The setting is outstanding, giving a bird’s-eye view over the expansive valley along Ravenscrag road. Middle Bench Road ends at grid road 614, just north of Eastend. It’s worth heading north on 614, also known as Brady Coulee Road, for 25 km or so following the twists and turns along Conglomerate Creek Valley. Open pasturelands are broken by spruce groves nestled in coulees, ranch yards sit in picture-postcard settings and a sign points out the Continental Divide, where waterways to the north flow toward Hudson Bay and those to the south flow to the Gulf of Mexico. Another nice loop drive runs east of Eastend. Take Highway 13 toward Shaunavon, then turn north on grid road 633 to Pine Cree Regional Park. This is one of our favourite spots to camp in the south. Billing itself as “Saskatchewan’s only true natural environment regional park,” it boasts shady campsites by a babbling brook (stocked with brook trout), nature trails into
FARM LIVING
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
ABOVE: Water is crystal clear in Swift Current Creek. LEFT: Rock formations loom at Jones Peak in the Eastend area of the Cypress Hills. LEFT BELOW: A round-leaved orchid is in full bloom at Pine Cree Regional Park.
R CROP SELECT YOU
the hills and wildflowers galore. A unique feature is the reconstructed Hermit’s Cave, where a reclusive hermit lived in the 1960s. Back on 633, head north of the park for about three km, and then turn west. This is Baker Coulee Road, winding through hilly pastureland for about five km, and then ending at a T-intersection on Chimney Coulee Road. Turn south and follow the rollercoaster route to the historic site of Chimney Coulee, named for stone chimneys left standing from an early Metis settlement. This idyllic spot on a sheltered hillside had a tumultuous history. Isaac Cowie established a Hudson’s Bay Company post here in 1871 and traded several hundred grizzly bear and elk hides, before abandoning the post because of problems with whisky traders and wars between the Assiniboine and Blackfoot. Metis wintered in the coulee and later, the North West Mounted Police set up a post. Part of their job was to keep tabs on Chief Sitting Bull’s Sioux, who sought refuge in Canada after the Battle of Little Bighorn in Montana. From Chimney Coulee, the road winds south for another six kilometres to Eastend. Arlene and Robin Karpan are well-travelled writers based in Saskatoon. Contact: travel@producer.com.
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NEWS
APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
RECYCLING | ALLOWABLE PRODUCTS
RAIL SERVICE TARGETS | CN
User levy pays for new antifreeze product recycling CN wants feds BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
Used antifreeze products are now included in the list of recyclable materials in Saskatchewan. Environment minister Ken Cheveldayoff poured the first container of used antifreeze into a drum at Crown Shred and Rec ycling in Regina recently to kick off the newest initiative from the Saskatchewan Association for Resource Recovery Corp. Antifreeze and plastic antifreeze and diesel exhaust fluid containers are among the products accepted for recycling at 35 EcoCentres managed by SARRC.
Farmers, small business operators and do-it-yourselfers with small volumes can drop off their products at nearly 200 collection points. Small volume users generate 15 to 20 percent of used oil and antifreeze materials in the province. Registered collectors pick up used oil and antifreeze products from large industrial, commercial and institutional users, which generate the other 80 to 85 percent. SARRC pays the collectors a return incentive to pick up the products. SARRC already accepts used oil, oil filters and plastic oil containers up to 50 litres in size. Cheveldayoff said used antifreeze is toxic, and dumping it out can cause
serious water quality problems as well as harm people, pets and wildlife. “It’s estimated that over two million litres of used antifreeze are generated each year in Saskatchewan,” he said in a news release. Antifreeze can be reprocessed into new antifreeze. The containers are processed into various products, such as industrial posts, railroad crossings and new containers. SARRC’s 180 members added an environmental handling charge to the materials April 1. This includes 14 cents per litre on both concentrate and pre-mix antifreeze and 10 cents per litre capacity on antifreeze and diesel exhaust fluid
containers up to 50 litres in size. The charge is a user-pay levy and the sole source of funding for the recycling program. SARRC estimates that Saskatchewan businesses and residents generate 25 million litres of used oil a year, along with 2.5 million oil filters and one million kilograms of containers. Annual recycling rates for used oil and filters are 73 percent and 82 percent, respectively. One study showed that Saskatchewan farmers reuse 80 percent of their 20 litre oil pails. Those turned in for recycling are often refilled. More information is available at www.usedoilrecyclingsk.com.
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to impose rules on grain companies Railway says a lack of co-ordination is to blame for inadequate service BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Canadian National Railway fired back at government and grain companies March 31, suggesting that all partners in the supply chain, and not just railways, must be held accountable for their performance. CN officials said in a news release that the federal government has imposed minimum weekly volume targets on railway companies but has yet to regulate grain elevator companies to ensure that more grain is moved through the most efficient rail corridors. “CN can only meet its commitment if all other key players in the supply chain are equally held to account for their performance,” said president Claude Mongeau. “One of the biggest root causes of the challenge we face is a lack of coordination across the supply chain and growing pains from new grain marketing strategies following the change in role of the Canadian Wheat Board,” he said. “The faster we can ramp up tonnage, the quicker we will be able to mitigate the effects of the grain backlog for all Canadian farmers.” CN’s news release is perhaps the company’s strongest response to date to federally imposed grain targets that were imposed in early March. The company also sharpened the rhetoric aimed at grain shippers, suggesting elevator companies should stop complaining to government about inadequate rail service and step up their performance to help move a giant crop to market. In particular, CN took issue with the Western Grain Elevator Association (WGEA) for suggesting that railways want to move too many car loads of grain to the West Coast and Thunder Bay. “The WGEA has complained all winter about having too many vessels waiting to be loaded on the West Coast,” the CN news release said. “Having wrongly singled out railways and unrealistically called for a near-doubling of rail car capacity since last fall, it is now time for grain elevators companies to step up to the capacity they claim to have, and do so in the corridors that will benefit Canadian farmers the most.” The company says it continues to make progress in reaching a government imposed target requiring it to move 500,000 tonnes of western Canadian grain per week. CN said the railway spotted more than 5,100 hopper cars to country grain elevators in the week ending March 30. “Unfounded railway bashing by grain stakeholders and the government’s ill-advised legislation to unfairly punish the rail industry are unfortunately about to set Canada’s grain handling system backward,” Mongeau said.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
27
NEONICOTINOID | UNTREATED CORN SEED
Ontario growers fail to snap up untreated seed Free of neonicotinoids | Demand from corn growers was lower than expected but some soybean producers placed orders BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
Early indications and sales figures suggest that Ontario growers will plant a minimal amount of insecticide-free corn seed this spring. Grain Farmers of Ontario and other organizations asked seed companies last year to provide more corn seed free of neonicotinoids, a class of insecticides blamed for bee deaths in the province. Chair Henry Van Ankum said the companies have fulfilled their promise, but grower response has been measured. “I think the majority of retailers responded quite well and farmers did have some choice,” said Van Ankum. “My understanding is there was a little more interest in ordering untreated seed, but there wasn’t huge (demand).” Van Ankum and others sent a letter to the Canadian Seed Trade Association last summer, requesting more options for growers when it comes to neonicotinoid seed treatments on corn. Health Canada’s Pest Management Regulatory Agency said last September that the use of neonicotinoid treated corn and soybean seed was not sustainable because insecticideladen dust from planting equipment was killing bees. Stephen Denys, past-president of the Canadian Seed Trade Association and vice-president of sales and marketing for Pride Seeds, said the industry responded to demands for increased availability of untreated seed, but growers didn’t order vast quantities of neonic-free seed. “The uptake on corn has been minimal,” he said. “I think the grower awareness was certainly there that they could order. I think what it speaks to is (that) growers are seeing the benefit.” Denys said Pride Seeds offered untreated seed on its premium corn hybrids, which gave growers an option on preferred varieties. Casey Dillon, Hyland Seeds’ central regional sales manager for Ontario and Michigan, said growers expressed interest in untreated seed but orders were nominal. “All the dealers and customers are aware of the situation that we’ve made untreated available,” he said. “The demand for it has not been overwhelming, by any means. There are some (orders), but it’s still a very small percentage of the whole total sales.” Dan Davidson, president of the Ontario Beekeepers Association and a corn grower from Watford, Ont., said producers in his part of the province are interested in untreated corn seed “A friend of mine sells seed, and he’s had pretty good uptake on farmers ordering the untreated seed.” Davidson, who has lobbied for a ban on neonicotinoids in Ontario, booked untreated seed for his farm last fall but hasn’t received his order yet. He had to pay full price for his seed, even though it came without a neonic seed treatment. “I’m sure the uptake would be better if there was a cost associated with
that insecticide. It would make farmers think a little bit more about making that decision.” Denys said some companies did charge the same price for untreated and treated seed, but others offered a deduction. “We had a price discount,” he said. “But to be honest with you, if we do the math, in terms of the volume involved with untreated, it probably cost us money.” Bookings of untreated corn seed may have been lower than expected, but Denys said producers did order
STEPHEN DENYS CANADIAN SEED TRADE ASSOCIATION
soybeans without neonics. “I’d say there’s a bit more uptake on the soybeans side, depending on the area.” Still, soybean producers in certain regions, such as eastern Ontario,
likely ordered more seed with a neonicotinoid seed treatment because aphid pressure was intense last year. “In those pockets, if you had the seed treatment on, a lot of producers didn’t have to spray,” Denys said. “Those that didn’t have an insecticide seed treatment did have to spray.” Some growers and crop insect specialists remain skeptical about the yield benefits associated with insecticidal seed treatments, which has prompted Ontario’s agriculture ministry to conduct strip trials this summer.
“This year I would say is a year of trial,” Davidson said. “Farmers haven’t had a chance to do trials to see what the actual yield gain is on their own land.” Van Ankum said seed treatments work, but they’re not highly effective every year in every location. “We know there are situations where the neonic seed treatment does pay huge dividends, as far as protecting the seedling,” he said. “We also know there are probably some field situations where it’s not as important.”
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were incluGeG in the provincial program. $ll are recycleG anG reuseG. It is cost effective, saves resources anG protects our quality of life anG environment. 7hroughout the province there are nearly 00 collection points that accept some or all of these materials anG 5 purpose-builG (co&entres in maMor communities accepting all materials.
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28
APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS HORSE TRAINING | TRICKS
Owner, horse develop bond as they master new tricks Builds confidence, flexibility | Playing dead, retrieving objects or giving smiles and kisses shows you can teach an old horse new tricks BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU
Caylyn Walker uses cues to get her horse, Riley, to do the Spanish walk during a trick demonstration at the Farm and Ranch Show in Edmonton.
EDMONTON — Caylyn Walker and Amanda Preston do the rural equivalent of farmyard party tricks. Their horses can bow, pick up a bucket in their teeth, play soccer, lie down, play dead and sit on a hay bale. Unlike real magicians who don’t share their secrets, Preston and Walker are willing to share the secrets of their horse tricks. “What we can do is what any horse owner can do,” Preston said after a demonstration of their Horseplay and Harmony trick horse training at the Farm and Ranch Show in Edmonton March 27-29. Walker and Preston have full-time
non-horse jobs and spend weekends riding their horses or offering trick horse training clinics. “We’re both amateur riders,” said Walker. Preston started teaching tricks to her horse, Riley, to keep his mind active after he was injured in 2005 and forced to stay in his horse stall for a year to recover. She started with an easy one: teaching Riley to smile. He recovered, and the duo went on to compete in the national dressage championship in 2012. She credits trick training for preventing him from becoming sour in the stall. Walker and Preston’s horses will now hug, smile, give kisses, nod yes or no, pick up a dish, touch a target
with their noses, bow, lie down, rear on command, play dead, sit on a hay bale, play soccer, count, Spanish walk, wave and stand on a pedestal. Teaching horses new tricks is more than just a game. Stretching and kneeling promotes flexibility, improves ground control, builds confidence, provides a bond between horse and rider and helps calm nervous horses. “It gets them trying and motivated to do something new,” said Preston. It is easier to start teaching tricks to young horses, but older horses are also able to learn tricks. They recommended that horse owners start with simple tricks such as a smile or a wave before advancing to standing on a pedestal. Walker said rewarding desired behaviour with food is the easiest way to start teaching tricks. “It takes a lot of repetition,” said Walker. Horses will soon be able to do 10 tricks in a row before receiving their reward of food. Trying a variety of tricks also keeps the horse from becoming soured on the trick. “The worst thing you can do is keep repeating the trick until they’re bored,” said Preston. Not all horses will do every trick, such as lying down, but all horses will do some tricks, said Walker. Teaching horses to lie down is a submissive posture for horses and teaches the horse that the rider is in charge. Walker said a lot of women who can no longer ride and want to still be involved with horses take their courses.
WHO’S THE MOST FAMOUS TRICKSTER OF ALL?
Riley gives a big smile after his performance. |
MARY MACARTHUR PHOTOS
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NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
29
DISEASE | JURISDICTION
Rabies reportable to CFIA; provinces to handle sampling Province will followup if sample tests positive BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
Low lignin alfalfa would allow forage growers to delay harvest, but GM opponents say the longer alfalfa stands in bloom, the more chance there is that bees and other pollinators will spread GM pollen. | FILE PHOTO ALFALFA | GENETICALLY MODIFIED
Forage firm tries to calm fears over GM low lignin alfalfa
The provinces are taking over responsibility for rabies programming from the Canadian Food Inspection Agency. The changes were announced in the 2012 federal budget and implemented April 1. Rabies remains a federally reportable disease, meaning animal owners, veterinarians and laboratories still have to report suspected cases to the CFIA. However, the provinces are looking after the collection and submission of rabies samples and response to suspected cases. For example, Saskatchewan has budgeted $500,000 for a new rabies response program.
Under the program, veterinarians will collect samples from suspect animals and submit them for rabies testing. The province will handle any response or follow-up required because of a positive test. The number of cases in Saskatchewan has dropped during the past few years from 34 in 2011 to 24 in 2012 to 13 last year. The 2013 cases included two cats, five skunks and six bats. In Manitoba, 21 skunks, two horses, two dogs, one cat, a fox and a raccoon tested positive last year for a total of 28. That compares to 25 in 2012 and 21 in 2011. Alberta saw four cases last year: three bats and one dog. There were two cases in 2012 and none in 2011.
Traits can be contained | Reduced lignin alfalfa manipulates an internal gene BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU
BROOKS, Alta. — Forage Genetics International plans to introduce genetically modified low lignin alfalfa in late 2015 or early 2016, says the company’s director of alfalfa seed production. Jose Arias told the Alfalfa Seed Commission of Alberta April 1 that the low lignin trait will be stacked with the Roundup Ready trait already commercialized in the United States and approved for commercial release in Canada. Roundup Ready alfalfa has been controversial since its commercial release because of worries about inadvertent spread of the gene to non-GM varieties. FGI, which has exclusive rights to commercialize Roundup Ready alfalfa in Canada, has delayed its introduction here for at least this year. “The preliminary market poll shows that the stacked (variety) is going to be a bigger market than the individual product of reduced lignin,” Arias said in an interview after his speech to growers. Low lignin alfalfa would allow forage growers to delay harvest until 40 to 50 percent bloom without loss of forage quality. It would increase yields of a forage that is a valuable livestock feed, particularly for dairy cows. Arias said low lignin alfalfa would allow the forage to compete with corn as a dairy feed, with the added advantage of having a more palatable nutrient package. Those opposed to GM alfalfa say prolonged blooming before harvest will increase the opportunity for gene spread by pollination. The longer alfalfa stands in bloom, the more chance bees and other pollinators will visit the blossoms and spread GM pollen, they argue. “With it being stacked, if that is true, we’re going to have the opportunity for cross contamination,” said Kurt Shmon, president of Imperial Seed Ltd. in Winnipeg. “It’s much easier for it to cross pollinate with our feral alfalfa or any
other alfalfa that’s in bloom.” Shmon said GM alfalfa cannot be prevented from spreading, which was documented in the U.S. Pacific Northwest when the Roundup Ready trait was found in wild alfalfa. “You can’t control the gene. Try to put toothpaste back into a tube. It doesn’t work. We’ve already seen it with canola,” said Shmon. However, Arias said GM alfalfa traits can be contained. “We’ve been working with Roundup Ready alfalfa in the States since 2005 and we have developed a very nice coexistence package within all the communities in the U.S.,” he said. Shmon said Brooks area growers are getting more contract opportunities from American seed companies because Canadian seed is GM free and U.S. companies can’t meet cus-
tomer demand for GM-free seed. European demand for Alberta alfalfa seed is also rising, he said. Arias said there is considerable interest in Roundup Ready alfalfa, particularly in Eastern Canada where seed production is not an issue. Roundup Ready alfalfa made up 53 percent of FGI’s market for seed last year, an increase from 35 percent in 2012. He said resistance to low lignin as a modification might be tempered by its method of development. “The difference between reduced lignin and Roundup Ready is that reduced lignin is not a foreign gene,” he said. “It’s a manipulation internally, from the insides of the plant, so we’re not taking a gene and putting it in. We’re just manipulating the switchboard in alfalfa.”
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
ANGUS | INDUSTRY LEADER
Life revolves around Angus for devoted breeder Still judging cattle | Breeder enjoys meeting others in the business BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
Some of Bud McBride’s dreams are coming true after 75 years of involvement with black cattle. “In our dispersal catalogue, I wrote a line saying, ‘I can hardly wait to see the pastures turn black,’ and have they ever,” he said in an interview during the recent Calgary Bull Sale, where he judged the Angus show. That was in 1996, when he and his wife, Barbara, decided to slow down by dispersing the Riverbend Angus herd at Benalto, Alta. They have never left the cattle business. McBride was born in 1928, and his Alberta roots go deep. His greatgrandfather, Alexander McBride, was mayor of Calgary in 1896 and owned a hardware store. There were four sons, including McBride’s father, Jack, who was born in a small house where the Telus office tower now stands in downtown Calgary. One of the sons was a heavy drinker and somehow ended up with a section of land west of Red Deer. “He didn’t know he had it until the tax notice came,” McBride said.
Bud McBride was a judge at the recent Calgary Bull Sale. He is delighted to see how Angus cattle have grown in popularity. | FILE PHOTO
I liked cattle, and I didn’t want anything to get in my way of learning where the good ones were. BUD MCBRIDE ANGUS BREEDER
Jack left school and took over the land, which was covered with heavy bush and trees on good black river
bottom soil. He cleared it using a Rumely tractor and later a 1927 John Deere pulling a 22 inch breaking plow. The place was named Riverbend Farm, and Bud was born in what amounted to a granary with a lean-to. Jack spied some Angus cattle while showing a group of Holsteins at the fair in Benalto, Alta., in 1932, and decided he wanted them. “It is kind of a miracle how we got into them because in those days they sure weren’t looking at Angus cattle,”
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McBride said. “They were as unwanted as anything you ever saw.” Jack registered the first cattle in 1936 and slowly built the foundation cow families called Blacklass, Blackcap, Ellen Erica, Blackbird and Barbara. McBride started showing cattle when he was 10 and placed last his first time out. Three years later he had the champion steer at the Calgary Spring Stock Show. He entered a judging competition sponsored by the University of Alberta in 1945 because he wanted to learn what made a good breeding animal. He won that competition over his good friend, Orin Hart of Claresholm, Alta. “I had gotten an American judging book with lots of reasons, and that really helped me,” he said. “I beat Orin only because I had reasons.” McBride would eventually judge cattle at 4-H events and large open shows in every province as well as the United Kingdom. In an effort to expose producers to good cattle, the Alberta government would load the winners from the summer fairs onto 14 boxcars and send them to the Royal Winter Fair in Toronto in late fall. Many Americans also showed in Toronto, and McBride began learning from them about grooming and preparing cattle for presentation. “I liked cattle, and I didn’t want anything to get in my way of learning where the good ones were,” he said. He was a hard worker and eventually joined the crew that looked after the J.C. Penney cattle, which took him to shows in Chicago, Fort Worth, Lexington, Kansas City, Kentucky and California. He didn’t care much for washing cattle, but appreciated the results. “My job was to send these show cattle to the ring. That was my contract,” he said. “I loved dressing them.” He would be part of the fitting and showing crew for numerous national championships, including Penney’s Homeplace Farms Best-10Head four years in a row in the mid1950s. While working for this crew, McBride was asked to fit a woolly looking black steer for Janice Hullinger, a 15-year-old girl from Manly, Iowa. Named Shorty, it won the grand championship in Chicago. Hullinger was paid more than $16,600 for the steer and was invited to appear on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1954. The steer was loaded into a crate, and McBride accompanied it on a turboprop plane to New York for the TV appearance. He stayed in a suite at the Waldorf Astoria. “Just think — from a granary on the farm to the Waldorf Astoria.” McBride married Barbara in January 1959. She grew up 15 kilometres from his family farm, but they never met until they were adults. She had finished agriculture college at Vermilion, Alta., and wanted to farm, even though she was raised in the city. “I always wanted to farm and I just figured I needed to go up north and homestead because I’ll never get there from the city,” she said. They were offered a job managing a ranch in northern California. Their honeymoon was showing cattle in
DID YOU KNOW? James Cash Penney, who also started the department store chain, raised Guernsey cattle as well as mules and horses at his Homeplace Farm and the Penney and James Farm in Missouri. The farming operation eventually concentrated on Aberdeen-Angus cattle. A home raised bull, Eileenmere 487, was considered one of the most successful sires of championship cattle in the United States. Another bull brought a record $87,000 during the final dispersal sale of the Penney & James farm in 1955. The million-dollar auction, which was the largest in Angus history at the time, brought buyers from every U.S. state, Canada and Scotland.
Phoenix before heading to the new job. A year later, they returned to Alberta to work at Riverbend Farm with McBride’s parents. A pivotal change was their decision to buy the grand champion bull from the All American bull sale in Denver, Colorado. The bull, named Ankonian of Marwood 1626, or Model, changed their lives. “We brought him home and he changed the Angus industry in Alberta,” McBride said. “The power was there and he put us on the road. We won the Calgary Bull Sale twice with sons and the group of five.” He eventually convinced his dubious parents of the need to buy a bigger bull. He paid $2,500 for a long bodied bull named Camilla Chance 37T, which rode home in a one ton truck. The bull was eventually renamed Colossal. “We didn’t realize at the time the gold mine we had in that bull,” he said. McBride’s parents retired in 1967, and the Riverbend herd of 400 cows was dispersed. “That sale was the second highest grossing livestock sale in North America that year, only with a $550 average, but sales were averaging $200,” he said. They started again and rebuilt reputation cattle that have been exported around the world, including a shipment to the Dominican Republic for Hays Farm International. McBride was a member of the boards of the Central Alberta Angus Association, Alberta Angus Association and Canadian Angus Association. He was on the national board when it was agreed after two years of controversy to accept Red Angus into the herd book. He is part of the Alberta Angus Hall of Fame. He and Barbara have two children, John and Susan, who both attended university in the United States. John sold drilling bits for the oil business and took over the Riverbend operation as the fourth generation of McBrides. Susan received a rodeo scholarship in Wyoming. She married and now lives in Big Timber, Montana, with her husband and children. The McBrides have since retired to Sylvan Lake, Alta., but take an active interest in the farm. He is also still ready and willing to keep judging cattle shows. “To meet the breeders and the cattle, I really love it. I love those Angus cattle,” he said.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
31
LIVESTOCK | WELFARE DEBATE
Animal welfare issue debated incorrectly: vet Fifteen arguments to stop making | Producers urged to start owning their problems rather than making excuses BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU
EDMONTON — Livestock producers should get rid of their stock answers when dealing with animal welfare problems, says a veterinarian specializing in dealing with animal welfare issues. Dr. Tim Blackwell said livestock producers are professionals and should own their problems rather than make excuses. “Animal welfare is about doing the right thing. If you are a professional, you own your own problem,” Blackwell told the Alberta Farm Animal Care conference. Blackwell listed 15 phrases that are wrong and should be banned from a farmers’ list of stock phrases when talking about animal rights, animal welfare or how they raise their livestock. Consumers shouldn’t tell farmers how to raise their livestock “That is like telling someone they shouldn’t vote for who the MLA or prime minister should be because you don’t know anything about governing a province,” Blackwell said. He said everyone gets a say in how livestock is raised. Henry Ford knew that the most efficient way to build inexpensive automobiles was have them one colour and one design. It was the consumer who changed Ford’s mind about how cars were built. We can’t feed the world without highly restricted housing for livestock “It’s not true and it’s not believable,” Blackwell said. He said countries don’t ship bacon and eggs when sending food aid around the world. Instead, they send non-perishable food such as rice, corn, wheat, beans and cooking oil. People can live fine without livestock products. They do not need intensive agriculture in livestock to feed the world. “Everybody wants good nutrition, everyone wants to eat livestock products, but don’t kid yourself (that) you can’t feed the world without livestock products,” he said.
percent of non-agricultural people believe animals should have rights, he said. “We have to take back that terminology. Animals do have a right to food, water, shelter and medical care.” Animal rightists are all extremists “I am an animal rightist. I am not an extremist. Animal rightists come in all forms,” Blackwell said. He said most consumers believe animals should not suffer unnecessarily. “I don’t disagree with that.” Animal welfare groups will never be satisfied, so there is no use working with these people
Tim Blackwell says producers don’t do themselves any favours in the animal welfare debate. | Blackwell said it was the same logic that was used during the industrial revolution while reformers tried to improve working conditions in factories or lobby for shorter workdays for children. He said factor y ow ners complained that the new laws were unreasonable, but they were implemented and workplaces evolved for the better. I support animal welfare as long as it is science based “I am tired of hearing the sciencebased approach,” Blackwell said. Science-based approaches don’t always provide the answers, he added. It is not easy to figure out the answers, and farmers shouldn’t rely only on science to make their decisions. Animal rights groups focus on nonrepresentative, extreme cases of abuse that are not the norm in our industry “Well, of course they do,” said Blackwell. The media also doesn’t write stories about all the planes that land safely. People talk about things when they go wrong. “When things go wrong, professionals own the problems,” he said. “When we are faced with problems in our industry, why don’t we don’t face up to them? It looks bad on industry.”
Animals don’t have rights because they can’t comprehend right
There is nothing illegal in what we are doing
Blackwell said everyone is born with rights, including animals. A small child has rights and so do animals. “I like the sound of ‘a baby has rights.’ I like the sound of someone on life support has rights,’ ” he said. “We give rights especially to people who are powerless and vulnerable, and that includes animals. We give the animals rights in Alberta to food, water, shelter and medical care. Every province in Canada, animals have those rights.”
“Just because the law says you can do it doesn’t mean the public will be happy with it,” Blackwell said.
I don’t believe in animal rights. I believe in animal welfare
Swine production keeps improving so welfare must be improving
Animals around the world have had rights for more than 200 years, and 95
He said this logic means that things must be better for a child in Bangla-
Urban residents think livestock should be treated like pets or people Blackwell said urban residents believe pets and people shouldn’t suffer unnecessarily because they can’t defend themselves well. “We should guard against unnecessary suffering.”
FILE PHOTO
desh who is able to increase production from 50 T-shirts to 75 T-shirts,. Increased production doesn’t mean things are better for the animal. Sows were put into farrowing crates in the 1960s to increase litter death loss and increased production, but it doesn’t mean it was better for the sows. “Now there are better ways.” These are industry standards “It drives me crazy,” he said. “If you’re castrating pigs without anesthesia and urbanites think that’s wrong and you say, ‘that’s industry standards,’ the right answer is, “it hurts and we’re trying to fix it.” We just have to educate consumers
JUST GOT BETTER
Consumers don’t like the sound of sows being raised in crates, and they’re not wrong, Blackwell said. Smithfield Foods, the largest hog producer in North America, raises 40 percent of its sows out of crates without problems. “ How are we going to tell people we need gestation crates if Smithfield doesn’t need gestation creates?” Biosecurity signs are necessary to maintain healthy farms “These signs drive me nuts,” he said. “Big stop signs, no entry, don’t come in here: all that does is tell people there must be something horrible going on on the other side of the signs. I like signs that say, ‘we’re trying to raise healthy animals. Please talk to the owner before you come in.’ ” The Humane Society of the United States has been so successful because it has so much money Humane society organizations have money because consumers believe they are looking after the welfare of animals. “You’re the people who protect animals,” he told the farmers at the conference. “How did they get a reputation for protecting animals? They get all this money because people think they’re taking care of the animals. You have to reestablish that you take care of the animals.”
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32
APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
HORSES | MEDICAL TRACKING
Bill seeks medical history on horses for slaughter Not likely to pass | Bill would prohibit horse slaughter unless animal is accompanied by lifetime medical records BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
NDP MP Alex Atamanenko says there probably isn’t enough support to pass his private member’s bill to require a complete lifetime medical record for horses slaughtered in Canada. The bill is unlikely to become law because Atamanenko’s colleague, NDP agriculture critic Malcolm Allen, opposes the proposed legislation. Allen said the bill is too rigid and would effectively shut down Canada’s horse slaughter industry.
“I find myself in a strange position, as the critic for agriculture … having to disagree with my good friend,” Allen said in the House of Commons at the end of March. Allen said the bill bans all slaughter of horses, unless the animal is raised solely for human consumption and has a full, documented medical history. That’s unrealistic because only a tiny fraction of horses, perhaps none, would satisfy the requirements, he said. “The end result of this bill would be to end horse slaughter,” Allen noted. “It would not be an unintended con-
sequence, it would be the intended consequence.” Atamanenko said the Liberals support Bill C-571, but Conservatives and NDP members do not. “My party will be divided on this,” Atamanenko said in an interview. “I suspect most of the Conservatives will probably oppose it.” Atamanenko, who has introduced a number of bills to curtail Canada’s horse slaughter industry, said he’s concerned about the health risks associated with horse meat because horses slaughtered in Canada are potentially contaminated with phar-
SPRING OIL
SALE
maceutical drugs. Atamanenko spoke on behalf of Bill C-571 March 31 during its second reading. It would prohibit the slaughter of horses unless they were raised for meat and there is a complete lifetime record of all medical treatments that were administered. Atamanenko said that’s a reasonable precaution because sport and recreation horses are treated with anti-inflammatory medications such phenylbutazone, commonly known as bute, along with wormers and steroids. “Bill C-571 seeks to recognize that
horses are ordinarily kept as domestic animals for recreational and sporting purposes, not to produce meat for human consumption, and may contain substances that are prohibited in food animals,” Atamanenko said in the House. More than 70,000 horses were slaughtered at Canadian plants last year. Imported animals must come with an affidavit stating the horse’s history of medical treatments and be free of certain drugs for the previous six months. Atamanenko said verification of the affidavit is inadequate. “There are no official controls to verify the authenticity or reliability of the affidavit,” he said. “The USDA assumes no responsibility regarding the origin of the animals, the controls in American institutions or the authenticity of the affidavit.” The lack of oversight and regulation is an unacceptable risk, he said. “Is it possible to guarantee a safe horse meat product if it is produced from horses that were not raised or regulated within an agricultural industry and were never intended to enter the human food chain.” Pierre Lemieux, parliamentary secretary to agriculture minister Gerry Ritz, said the Canadian Food Inspection Agency has strict protocols for bute, and any “horse with bute is not processed for human consumption.” Earl Dreeshen, a Conservative MP for Red Deer, said the CFIA requires all slaughter horses to have an equine information document, which identifies the animal and provides a sixmonth medical history. “The six-month period well exceeds the recommended withdrawal period for a number of veterinary drugs,” he said. “The overwhelming majority of tests reveal freedom from drug residues. Compliance rates are very high. They are over 98 percent.” Allen agreed that the CFIA deals with bute residues in a serious manner and that rules are in place to crack down on horse dealers who attempt to circumvent the rules. “There is always a one-off, such as a horse being purchased only 24 hours or two or three days earlier, when the owner has attested to a six-month certificate,” Allen said. “When those folks are found out, their licences have to be removed…. There are things in place to make sure that actually happens.” Atamanenko said insufficient support means the bill will likely die. “But we’ll see, we’ll see what happens. It also depends on the amount of people (who) contact various MPs … and let them know if they’re concerned.” MPs will debate Bill C-571 again in a few weeks. A vote will determine whether it proceeds to committee.
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NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
33
BIG
Dreams Brisk temperatures didn’t cool sales during Ritchie Bros. heavy equipment auction near Saskatoon March 25. Relatively new to the auction was the sale of 21 parcels of lease farmland over 49 quarters. Bidding averaged $90 an acre per year over three years. | William DeKay photos
ABOVE: Curtis VanMeer of Korpan Tractor in Saskatoon gives the signal to start ’er up. RIGHT: Kelly Day and Brent Ulmer of Melville, Sask., think about bidding on a Case 7120 combine.
LEFT: Potential buyers have plenty of tires to kick before the auction. ABOVE: Tom Beal of Prince Albert, Sask., sits on a John Deere 741 tractor to check emails.
34
APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
ADVERTISING FEATURE
Kugler Comes to Western Canada In May of 2012, canola and corn growers in Western Canada using 84.5 bushels/acre, and won him the 2013 Proving Ground Challenge. Pioneer® brand products were encouraged to join other farmers in “Everywhere I used Kugler I could see a significant difference for the North America and participate in the ‘Proving Ground Yield Challenge.’ good,” he says. “I wished I’d used it on all my fields, and definitely plan Birch Hills farmer Florian Hagmann decided to enter. to do that this year.” “Judges came out,” Hagmann says, “they weighed the grain and A neighbour who also tried Kugler fertilizers had similar results and determined that my canola crop yield was 54.5 bushels/acre.” That was saw a six-to-one return on his input investment. enough to make him a Challenge winner. Given those kinds of results, Hagmann and Kinistino farmer Warren “It was a very good yield for that year,” Hagmann says, “but not the Hanson were more than willing to become Western Canadian distribuhighest in the province, so I set myself a personal challenge to increase tors of Kugler fertilizers. They already have a team of dealers in place in my yield the following year.” Saskatchewan and are seeing higher sales volumes than they expected. The 2012 win included a trip for two to the Commodity Classic in The potential, they say, is tremendous. Kissimmee, Florida. While there, Hagmann compared notes with other “Switching to Kugler did not increase our cost per acre, but it did winning growers including the producer with the highest corn yield in mean a little more in terms of management,” Hagmann says. “Kugler )HUWLOL]HUV ,QF all of the United States. He was interested to learn that the farmer used emphasizes the 4Rs: the Right Fertilizer Source at the Right Rate at the Kugler products on his fields. Right Time in the Right Place.” Kugler management is based on research which reveals that only 10 to 12 percent of dry phosThe Kugler Company is a long-established, family-owned American agricultural business that phorus fertilizers are taken up by plants in the first year. It also shows that farmers should fertilize was started in 1924 and specializes in liquid specialty fertilizers. Kugler had a booth at the Commodity Classic and Hagmann stopped in. During conversations, according to soil test recommendations, employ ‘starter solutions’ or ‘pop-up’ fertilizers, and finish Kugler expressed an interest in expanding their company beyond the U.S., and shortly afterward, with foliar applications. The benefit of foliar application is that it spreads from tip to root within a few hours. As much as 95 percent of the nutrients sprayed on the leaves is used immediately by made the corporate decision to distribute Kugler product in Western Canada. the plant, whereas the roots take up no more than 10 percent of the same quantity of dry fertilizer In 2013, Hagmann applied Kugler’s signature XRN-Technology fertilizers to his field: KQ-XRN, placed in the soil. a nitrogen formulation with 72% nitrogen slow-released for up to six weeks in the soil and 35 “Every farmer wants to increase their yield and make their operation more profitable,” Hagmann days on the leaves, and KS-2075, a slow-release fertilizer with nitrogen, potassium and sulfur. says. “We believe Kugler gives a good return for your investment.” “There was no problem getting them into the ground,” he says. “I didn’t need any specialized “We’re not looking to change the world. We just want to help farmers become more efficient and equipment. I applied it with ordinary seeding equipment and a ground sprayer.” increase their production. We believe this is the future of fertilizer.” Hagmann had no idea how or if the Kugler product would impact his canola yield, but he For a complete Kugler product line, visit KuglerCompany.com. See a list of Western Canadian Kugler dealers below. couldn’t dispute the results. The field on which he used the Kugler products yielded a whopping
NOW AVAILABLE IN CANADA E KQ-XRN 28% N solution (72% is slow release) that stays on the plant and lasts for weeks E Foliar products spread your fertility input risks over the growing season E Up to 20 times more efficient than ground applied E Tank mixable with herbicides and fungicides to feed your crop in a one pass application E Non-corrosive to equipment; won’t gum sprayer filters E Adheres to plants; won’t burn crops; revitalizes damaged crops E Kugler phosphate starters are 85% plant useable the first year unlike dry which is only 12-20% useable re we c a / s E K52075 will also give a late season sulphur boost allon increase g 4 t A yield in Canola a w a s r 40% els per e v o of bush 7 7 to acre!
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
35
HORSES | PREPURCHASE EXAM
Get the skinny before you own with pre-buy exam Exam starts at $400 | Horse examiner determines soundness and serviceability BY WILLIAM DEKAY SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Buying a horse is a lot like buying a used car, says a senior clinician at the University of Saskatchewan’s Western College of Veterinary Medicine in Saskatoon. “The one thing in the horse world they always talk about is buyer beware,” said Sue Ashburner of the college’s equine field service. “When people are buying horses without a prepurchase (exam), they have to take the seller’s word totally,” she said. “Once you buy that horse, you own it.” Investing in a prepurchase exam may save the buyer time, money and heartache. However, like used vehicles, there are no guarantees, and problems may surface down the road. As the equine industry grows in Saskatchewan, so does the number of prepurchase exams. “It’s a growing practice to have prepurchase exams. There’s a lot of higher end horses out there now,” said Ashburner. Ashburner said she works for the buyers who pay for the exam, whether they are high-end jumpers that sell for $100,000, trained ranch horses in the $4,000-$10,000 range or a beginner’s first horse in the $1,000 to $1,500 range. Basic exams start at $400 per horse and take about half a day. She said extra services such as X-rays and other specialized tests increase costs into the thousands of dollars, but it’s all relative to the horse’s market value and purpose. “The bulk of them we do in this practice are $30,000 to $40,000 animals,” she said. “In general, on the high-end horses they want a whole series of X-rays of hocks and stifles and front feet and fetlocks. You could easily take the price up.” Ashburner said suitability, serviceability and soundness are the three S’s of pre-purchase. Determining suitability is up to the buyer and needs to be done before the exam. Potential buyers should compare the horse to the rider to see if they’re a good match.
Results of a prepurchase exam belong to the buyer and can be potentially contentious if a problem is found with a seller’s horse, says a veterinarian. | FILE PHOTO She recommends that beginning horse owners talk to experienced people about horse-rider suitability. “Even take it for a period of time if the seller will let them and try it and see if the horse suits them before they bring it to me.” Ashburner said it’s her job to determine the horse’s serviceability and soundness. “I look at how the horse is today and try to look at his physical,” she said. “Then I want to look for any shortcomings, any abnormalities, any blemishes or conformation that may affect him.” She said she never uses the word soundness during the exam. “There’s no such thing as a sound horse because soundness implies there’s nothing wrong with the horse now. It may show up at a later date.” Ashburner said she puts significant effort into communicating with the potential buyer, verbally during the physical exam and after with a four page report, including a summary. “In the end, after I’ve gone through the horse and detailed everything and put it through flexion tests and
stuff, it’s up to them to make the decision,” she said. “I don’t pass or fail the horse. I will tell them if I have real concerns about the horse.” The evaluation format starts with a distance exam, followed by a standing physical exam with emphasis on the feet. Hoof testing involves looking for heal pain. Hock issues are common. “Any horse that’s worked any degree will have hock issues because like our ankle, it’s really intricate,.” A moving exam involves lunging the horse in both directions and watching it at the different gates while keeping an eye out for possible lameness during up and down transitions. Flexion tests, including the controversial fetlock flexion, are performed to look for possible arthritis. Ashburner said a thorough prepurchase exam will go a long way to determine the real cost for the horse, which may include medications, additional therapies and ongoing corrective work. “In general, the higher end the
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horse is going to be, like a high-end jumper, the more serious the shortcomings or problems we find in the horse.” Ashburner said she likes the seller to be present for the exam, as long as they don’t interfere. She said some horse sellers can intimidate buyers, especially a new horse person. “Sometimes they’ll haul it two to three hours in and basically they’re saying to the person, ‘I’ve gone to all this work to bring it in and your vet is saying it’s sore in the front end and it’s not. I’ve been riding it for three years and it’s not,’ ” said Ashburner. Information collected during the exam, including X-rays, belong to the buyer, who may or may not disclose to the seller. “Sometimes the next morning I’ll have an absolutely irate person come into the clinic wanting to know what the heck I found wrong with their horse. I can’t tell them,” she said. However, most buyers do share the information with sellers, even though they sometimes pay $1,000 for the report. “There’s a lot of stressful things and
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there’s always grey areas,” she said. Prepurchase exams are a potentially contentious area of veterinary medicine, which many veterinarians avoid because it’s fraught with emotion, miscommunication and litigation. “If you look at the U.S., the area of second highest litigation in equine practice is prepurchase exams,” she said. “It was often communication , a vet that could see something but they weren’t really sure of it and didn’t disclose it well enough to a client, or they thought they did and maybe didn’t put it in writing.” Many veterinarians, particularly small town vets, refer their clients to somebody who works more with horses or to a teaching centre where there is a lot of back-up resources and specialization. Ashburner said the work is seasonal and is beginning to ramp up this time of year. Show season will soon be here and people are thinking of changing horses or upgrading. “We’re quiet in the winter and come summertime we’re crazy busy. And summertime starts about now.”
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
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Zachary Young, 3, of La Riviere, Man., dumps wheat from a model truck into a miniature grain auger at the Royal Manitoba Winter Fair. | ROBERT ARNASON PHOTO
ROYAL MANITOBA WINTER FAIR | HARVEST AND TRANSPORTATION DEMONSTRATION
Model grain handling system big hit among young and old Working model | Grain moves from combine to granary to elevator to train BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
With more than a dozen kids in line, it was about a 20-minute wait to play with remote controlled trucks and trains at the Royal Manitoba Winter Fair. Twenty minutes is an eternity for a four-year-old boy and probably two eternities for his mother. However, most moms endured the queue because the trucks and trains were definitely worth the wait. Brian and Shirley Harvey, retired farmers from Manitoba’s Swan River Valley, brought and assembled a working model of Canada’s grain harvest and transport system to the Winter Fair, a Manitoba tradition held during spring break. The miniature system included a one-quarter scale threshing machine, an operational 1.5 metre grain elevator, mini-augers and grain storage bins, a model train and three remote controlled trucks: a dump truck and two semi-trailers. Electrical motors powered all the components in the system. Children could choose between operating the trucks or the train. If they chose the truck, they used a remote control to drive the dump truck to the threshing machine and collected a load of grain. With the help of an adult volunteer, they piloted the truck to a miniature auger, dumped the grain and watched as the auger propelled the wheat into a clear plastic grain bin, about the size of an ice cream pail. From there, another auger moved the grain into a semi-trailer. Another child then used a remote control to
CONSTRUCTION OF A MODEL ELEVATOR TOOK
2,100 hours
steer the semi to the model grain elevator, where the wheat was unloaded. Visitors could then watch the grain flow through the elevator, thanks to an exposed wall on the side of the model. The grain was then loaded onto the model train, to be transported to destinations unknown. Just like the kids who got to play with the system, volunteer Bob Hunter was amazed by the intricacy of the model. “You (can) take the grain out of there,” he said, pointing at the plastic grain bins. “And put it in the trucks and then put it in the elevator. That’s quite amazing…. They (kids) just love it. I don’t know much about it, but I enjoy it (too).” Brian Harvey built the model from scratch with help from his brother, daughter and a neighbour. “It’s all parts you have to build yourself. There’s nothing you can buy that fits models like this,” said Harvey, who retired from farming eight years ago. He created the complex model for the Swan River Valley Agricultural Society a decade ago. The society had several animal displays but lacked an
exhibit to illustrate grain farming. Harvey decided a static model was too boring, so he fabricated a model with functioning parts. “I feel it’s a lot more interesting for kids if it’s interactive,” he said as five kids and adult volunteers played with the model behind him. “They can actually do all the things. They can drive the trucks and drive the train.” Harvey, who used to build snow making machines and lifts for the ski industry, said building the mechanical model was challenging, particularly the threshing machine. “When you scale something down that actually has to do a task, it probably would’ve been easier to do a full-scale one,” he said. “ You have to scale everything down, but the wheat you’re putting through isn’t scaled down.” Harvey has seen a number of miniature threshing machines but a working model elevator is rare. “Very few (people) have built elevators,” he said. Construction required 2,100 hours of labour. Harvey’s model may be a big hit with kids and adults, but it is displayed only a few days a year. He sets it up each summer for the Northwest Roundup and Exhibition, a rodeo in Swan River, Man., but it hasn’t appeared at the Royal Manitoba Winter Fair since 2007. The rest of the year, the model is stored in Harvey’s machine shop. “We’ve had calls from all over the place, as far away as Halifax,” he said. “But we don’t take it to very many places because it’s a lot of work.” With files from Dillion Arnason.
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
LIVESTOCK | RESEARCH PROJECT
Report highlights beneficial livestock systems Locally appropriate strategies | Americas-based research sites on the horizon as project expands globally BY MARGARET EVANS FREELANCE WRITER
LINDELL BEACH, B.C. — A recent study by researchers in Britain and Australia outlines eight strategies to help livestock producers cut costs and boost food quality and quantity. The strategies include feeding animals less human-required food, raising regionally appropriate animals, maintaining animal health, using smart supplements, consuming quality rather than quantity, raising livestock according to local cultures,
tracking costs weighted to benefits and following best practices. “A large proportion of the Earth’s land surface is permanent pasture,” said Mark Eisler, a professor of global farm animal health at the University of Bristol’s School of Veterinary Sciences in Britain and lead author of the study. “High fibre crop residues are not usually pelleted. In terms of meat yield, we are advocating consumption of less meat of higher quality, such as grass-fed (livestock), in developed nations.”
The study, called Steps to Sustainable Livestock, was published last month in the journal Nature. It said 70 percent of grains used by developed nations are fed to livestock with 40 percent going to ruminants, mostly cattle. However, these animals thrive on pasture and can eat hay, silage and high fibre crop residues unpalatable to humans. They can graze marginal areas, such as mountain slopes and wetlands, and their unique digestive systems can break down these foods into valuable calories
and quality protein. This shift toward greater grazing management allows more agricultural land for production of human food. As well, raising indigenous livestock makes practical and environmental sense. Native ruminants not only have immune systems resistant to local pathogens but are adapted to climatic conditions and can cope with localized weather extremes. “Farmers in Asia and Africa already use native breeds but are often encouraged to shift to exotic breeds
because of their potential for higher yields,” said Eisler. “But this potential is often not achieved in developing world situations (because of their) poor resistance to heat stress, infectious diseases and parasites.” The report also said that maintaining animal health is the most effective way to increase production. “In low- and middle-income nations, 13 livestock related zoonoses (diseases that can infect humans and animals) cause 2.4 billion cases of human illness and 2.2 million deaths each year,” it said. Animal and human diseases are often viewed in isolation, but protective husbandry such as cleanliness, quarantines as required and vaccines help mitigate the spread of disease. High density production farming puts more animals at r isk and requires the use of costly antibacterial medications, which in turn lead to antibiotic resistance. The report recommended reduced crowding to protect against whole herd infection. Smart use of supplements encourages microbes in the rumen and promotes better nutrition. “Supplements are often locally available and farmers are willing to use them if their benefits can be demonstrated by example,” said Eisler. A water fern cultivated in local ponds in India provides extra protein for cattle and goats, which are fed protein-deficient elephant grass. During Australia’s dry fall, sheep nibble on a deep-rooted perennial tar-brush, which combats gastrointestinal nematodes and acidosis, a pathological condition associated with the accumulation of acid in blood and body tissues. An enzyme in red clover increases a cow’s ability to use dietary protein. Dairy cows that graze on clover have been shown to produce more milk. As well, properly managed rotational grazing can encourage the growth of a wider range of plants, foster a healthy ecosystem and improve carbon capture by plants and soil. The report said that one cow produces up to 70 kilograms of manure per day, providing enough annual fertilizer for 2 1/2 acres of wheat. That is equivalent to 128 kilograms of synthetic nitrogen derived from the use of fossil fuels. The research team has established three farm “platforms” to explore best practices of farming from a global perspective. Two focus on naturally adapted livestock and native plants: one at the University of Western Australia Future Farm in Pingelly, which has a Mediterranean climate and where water conservation is crucial, and the other at the Thiruvazhamkunnu Livestock Research Station in Kerala, India, which has humid, tropical conditions and grazing is limited. The third platform is at the Rothamsted Research North Wyke Farm in Devon, Great Britain, where cattle and sheep graze on three hydrologically isolated 55 acre farmlets to compare nutrient cycling and productivity under different pasture management strategies. Eisler said researchers are working on establishing testing platforms in the Americas and China.
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LIVESTOCK | LAND PURCHASE
Grazing co-op buys historic Alberta ranch Conservation easement planned | Purchase of ranch expands Waldron Grazing Co-operative operations to 65,000 acres BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU
It will take a few days and a few good horses to ride all the way across southern Alberta’s Waldron Ranch, now that it has expanded to 65,000 acres. In an $11.25 million deal that was expected to be finalized April 7, the Waldron Grazing Co-operative bought 14,000 acres of deeded and leased property, plus rights to graze forest reserve land. Last owned by ranchers Bill and Cody Bateman of Cochrane, Alta., the property north of Lundbreck, Alta., was previously owned by the famed King brothers, Maurice and Harrold, who were original members of the grazing co-op when it was formed in the early 1960s. “It’s beautiful. It’s perfect. It sits right into the corner of our ranch and fills out that whole valley. It’s a perfect fit for us,” said grazing co-op chair Tim Nelson, whose father was also an original co-op member. The purchase was made possible through last year’s deal with the Nature Conservancy of Canada, which put $15 million into the coop’s coffers, issued a tax receipt for another $18.5 million and placed the 30,535 acre stretch of native grassland between the Rockies and the Porcupine Hills into a permanent conservation easement. The money had tax implications for the co-op’s 72 members. Some wanted to get their money out and others saw potential to buy the Bateman property, which was already surrounded on three sides by the Waldron. “I always wanted to buy more land with it,” said Nelson. “The whole idea of the Waldron Grazing Co-op is to graze cattle. The more land we can have, the more
Waldron Ranch manager Michael Roberts says the new ranch has been kept in excellent condition. | FILE PHOTOS cattle we can have. That’s always been my idea.” However, Nelson said he understood some members’ desire to take the money, so the co-op created a new share system that allowed some to cash out and others to allocate their shares to the latest land purchase. Nelson said a plan is in place for a conservation easement on the new land acquisition, also with the Nature Conservancy. Larry Simpson of the nature conservancy confirmed the group’s interest in another easement, although when contacted April 3, the Waldron’s purchase was still unofficial. “If the Waldron is successful in completing acquisition of the King ranch, we look forward to bringing
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forward a recommendation to the board for its approval,” Simpson said. Michael Roberts, manager of Waldron Ranch, said the newly acquired property has been kept in excellent shape by the Batemans and will increase the ranch’s overall carrying capacity. “It’s always been grazing land, and it’s really been well looked after by the Batemans, and it was looked after by the Kings,” he said. Nelson also praised the previous owners’ land stewardship and care for fences, corrals and grass. Nature Conservancy involvement would preclude further development of the property, as it has already for the bulk of the Waldron Ranch. The ranch is one of the few major
expanses of native prairie remaining in Alberta. Bisected by Highway 22, it has seen traffic increase through its heart every year. “Eventually development would have put enough pressure on this that … there would have been houses all along here just like there is everywhere else,” said Roberts. “But now that won’t happen.” That is likely what the late Harrold and Maurice King would have wanted, added Roberts. Nelson agreed. “I would suspect that that’s what they wanted. They were ranchers. That was their whole being,” he said. The Kings are part of regional lore, renowned for shrewd business management despite their lack of formal
education. That contrasted sharply with their frugal lifestyle and hillbilly-like living quarters and appearance, which included binder twine suspenders and lack of a bathtub. The brothers died in the mid-1990s, and their heirs sold the property to ranchers who maintained it for grazing. Care for the grassland lives on, as does the desire for fair dealing. “Even the people who wanted their money out were supportive of buying the ranch,” said Nelson. “Of course, there’s always a dispute over the cost.” This week’s deal involved 4,200 acres of deeded land, 500 of lease land and 9,000 acres of forestry grazing rights amounting to 2,019 animal unit months.
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
GRAIN TRANSPORTATION | PORT OF CHURCHILL
Churchill export plans depend on rail cars Port relies on CN for cars | OmniTrax worries that government-mandated targets may discourage CN from sending cars north BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
NIPAWIN, Sask. — The Port of Churchill is hoping to export more than 700,000 tonnes of prairie grain this year. However, achieving that goal will hinge on Canadian National Railway’s ability to deliver a steady supply of grain cars to the port’s rail head at The Pas, Man. OmniTrax Canada president Merv Tweed said the Port of Churchill is in line to have a near-record shipping
season this year, but the availability of grain cars will be an ongoing concern. “We’re going to try to push as much grain as we possibly can through Churchill,” Tweed said during an April 2 presentation to the Hudson Bay Route Association (HBRA). “We can do more grain if we have more cars. The challenge is that CN has a lot of pressure being put on it by government to ship east and west.” Tweed said his company hopes CN will commit to delivering 8,000 cars of grain to The Pas this year. From there, the Hudson Bay Railway
(HBR), also owned by OmniTrax, would finish the haul to Churchill. Tweed acknowledged that minimum weekly grain targets imposed by Ottawa have put CN in a tough spot. Meeting the government-imposed targets could affect CN’s ability to deliver cars to HBR train yards at The Pas. “We rely on CN to actually spot cars at The Pas for us, and that’s probably the biggest challenge this year,” Tweed said. “With the government’s new bill suggesting that rail companies CN and CP (Canadian Pacific Railway)
have to meet a certain target, we have a challenge now of making sure that they supply us with the rail cars that we need to push the product north.” In the meantime, OmniTrax is exploring other ways to increase its annual grain handlings. The company is setting up a grain transload facility at The Pas, hoping grain will be trucked from northwestern Manitoba and northeastern Saskatchewan directly to the HBR railhead, reducing dependence on CN trains. Recent provisions in Bill C-30, the
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Fair Rail for Grain Farmers Act, also expand railway interswitching distances to 160 kilometres from 30 km. If those measures are implemented, HBR and OmniTrax could potentially extend their reach as far south as Hudson Bay, Sask., not far from the province’s northeastern grain growing regions. Tweed said OmniTrax will also explore the possibility of setting up a temporary grain loading facility at Hudson Bay, which would allow it to source more grain directly from farmers in northeastern Saskatchewan. The company is also in the final stages of establishing two new grain transloading facilities along the Carleton Trail Railway (CTR) in northcentral Saskatchewan. Tweed declined to say where the CTR loading sites would be located but said he hoped they would be in place later this year. The company has also requested that the federal government supply 250 hopper cars that HBR could use exclusively to haul grain between The Pas and Churchill. A similar request has been submitted to the Saskatchewan Grain Car Corp., seeking 100 or more hopper cars. Tweed said OmniTrax is optimistic that an agreement can be reached with CN, ensuring that a steady flow of grain cars will be delivered through the northern route. Despite all of the challenges, the port sees its grain business growing this year. Much of the grain shipped through Churchill has traditionally been oldcrop grain carried over from the previous crop year. There will be no shortage of old crop grain this year. By some estimates, carryout stocks could be as high as 20 to 25 million tonnes. HBRA president Sinclair Harrison said that bodes well for the port’s grain export program. “Churchill navigation opens up around the end of July,” he said. “Some years when July rolls around, there’s not much grain left. This year is going to be a much different situation … so the potential for a record year for Churchill this coming year is going to be very positive.” Speakers at the HBRA’s annual convention in Nipawin said operational changes at Churchill, combined with a reliable supply of grain cars, could conceivably push the port’s grain exports above a million tonnes per year. Jan Andersen, a captain with the Danish shipping company Norden Tankers and Bulkers, said additional shifts and ensuring that grain vessels are loaded 24 hours a day could increase annual load-outs by nearly 40 percent. “It’s simply hours of work,” said Andersen. “It’s got nothing to do with technology or anything like that .… It’s just a matter of running the port 24 hours a day.” The HBRA continues to push for a Coast Guard presence at Churchill and improved access to vessels with ice-breaking capabilities. Andersen said extending Churchill’s shipping season by two weeks could increase annual grain exports by as much as 250,000 tonnes.
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
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SHORT LINE | NORTH-CENTRAL SASKATCHEWAN
Sask. short-line group hopes to own track by September Northern Lights organizer says it hopes to run 400 rail cars per year to start BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
NIPAWIN, Sask. — Saskatchewan could soon have another short-line railway company, this one operating in north-central Saskatchewan. Northern Lights Rail is in the final stages of acquiring 56 kilometres of Canadian National Railway track, stretching from Melfort, Sask., to Birch Hills. Northern Lights organizer Wayne Bacon said the short-line group is hoping to take ownership of the line later this year. The railway’s board of directors was expected to approve a short line’s business plan April 4. With the board’s endorsement, the plan would be sent to the province for approval. Government approval is required before financing arrangements can be finalized. If all goes as planned, Northern Lights hopes to take ownership of the line by mid-September. Plans are in place to establish grain loading sites at Kinistino, Birch Hills and Beatty, Sask. The short line, Saskatchewan’s 14th, hopes to move a minimum 400 hopper cars of grain per year, although organizers hope that number will increase over time. “What we envision is to start off small ‌ and likely move forward from there to make sure that we’re going to be able to handle the grain that we think we’ll (need to) handle,â€? Bacon said. “To start, I think we’re putting a figure down of somewhere around 400 cars a year ‌ but we think we can hit 800 cars quite easily, especially the way things are going this year.â€? Funding to acquire the track and perform necessary upgrades will come through a combination of shareholder investments and debt financing. Individual shares are being sold for $5,000 each. As of early April, the share offering had raised roughly $800,000. “We wanted to raise about $800,000 and that’s basically where we’re at right now ‌ but I think there’s probably another 20 or 25 producers out there that have shown interest, especially the way things have happened (with rail service) over the last little while,â€? said Bacon, a farmer from the Kinistino area. “I think we’ll probably be getting close to the $1 million mark by the time this is all over.â€? It remains to be seen where most of the short line’s grain will be shipped. Northern Lights will connect with the Carlton Trail Railway at Birch Hills, Sask. CTR’s track runs west to Prince Albert, Sask., and then south to Warman, Sask, just outside of Saskatoon. However, upgrades would be required on the CTR line where it crosses the South Saskatchewan River, roughly 20 kilometres west of Birch Hills. Northern Lights traffic could also connect with CN’s St. Brieux line which runs between Melfort and Humboldt, Sask.
At Humboldt, the St. Brieux line connects with CN’s Prairie North line, which runs east and west between Edmonton and Portage la Prairie, Man. Initially, CN had identified a second section of line in the Melfort area for discontinuance. That section spanned roughly 85 kilometres from Crooked River, Sask., near Tisdale, to Hudson Bay, Sask. Northern Lights organizers had
hoped to acquire that portion of track as well, but CN had a change of heart and has since taken that portion of track off the market. CN spokesperson John Braley said CN has identified potential new shippers in the area and has decided to retain ownership. “There is activity up there,â€? Braley said last week. “I have to be very ‌ careful what I say because of confidentiality agreements‌.â€?
Organizers of Northern Lights Rail hope to acquire 56 kilometres of track owned by Canadian National Railway. Short-line organizers plan to build three new grain loading facilities, one along this section of track near Beatty, Sask. | BRIAN CROSS PHOTO
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RECOGNITION | VETERINARY MEDICINE
FREEDOM OF INFORMATION | CROP INSURANCE
Former CFIA president gets honourary degree
Information access denied on basis farming is business
BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
Dr. Brian Evans is the first recipient of an honourary degree in veterinary medicine from the University of Calgary. Evans is the retired executive vicepresident of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and was the country’s chief veterinary officer for 15 years. He graduated from the University of Guelph with a bachelor of science in agriculture in 1974 and a doctor of veterinary medicine in 1978.
He specialized in reproductive herd health and embryo transfer while in private practice, and joined the federal government to develop domestic and international standards and certification programs in support of the safe international movement of animal embryos and germplasm. While at the CFIA, he was also Canada’s delegate to the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) for 13 years. He was elected secretary general for the OIE regional commission for the Americas and to four consecutive three-year terms as the representative of the member coun-
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Farmer’s request for tenant’s seeded acres turned down BRIAN EVANS FORMER CHIEF VETERINARY OFFICER
BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
tries of the Americas Region on the OIE’s executive council. Most recently, he was appointed the international body’s deputy director general responsible for animal health, veterinary public health and international standards. He was also a member of the advisory councils of the Western College of Veterinary Medicine in Saskatoon, the Ontario Veterinary College in Guelph and the Atlantic Veterinary College in Charlottetown. He was also a member of the steering committee that founded the faculty of veterinary medicine at the U of C. He has received numerous national and international awards, including the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association’s President’s Award, the Queen’s Gold and Diamond Jubilee medals and two public service excellence awards. In 2013, Evans was recognized by the Association of Professional Executives for outstanding work and his community service contributions and was conferred with an honorary degree of laws by the University of Guelph. He is married to Laurianne and has four children.
Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corp. can continue to withhold certain information from a landowner, according to a new report issued by the province’s acting information and privacy commissioner. Diane Aldridge said her findings are based on legal reasons and evidence presented after a complaint was brought forward three years ago. The report notes that an applicant submitted an access to information request to SCIC in March 2011, asking for records about the number of cultivated and seeded acres claimed by a tenant. The corporation withheld the records, citing sections of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIP) and the Protection of Privacy Act. Aldridge found that one section of FOIP applied to the case and recommended that SCIC continue to withhold the information in question. “We found it does not constitute personal information of anybody, but it did constitute business information,� she said. The initial request was for information the operator on the applicant’s
land had supplied from 2001-10. In a letter received by the commissioner’s office last July 2013, the applicant stated: “The seeded acreage (name of tenant) had paid me for in some years was a lot less than the cultivated acreage, whereas the moisture condition did not warrant the difference. I am not interested to find out the insured dollar value or the payout value. I am just interested to find out the seeded acreage claimed so I can compare it to what I was paid for.� The commissioner examined more than 100 pages of documents from SCIC containing information such as seeded acreage and eventually found that section 19(1)(b) of the act applied. Under that section, she determined that the tenant in this case is a third party for the purposes of FOIP, that the third party supplied financial information to SCIC and that the information was supplied in confidence. Aldridge said an important distinction in the case is that the information being withheld is business related rather than personal. An Alberta privacy ruling in 2010 also said information about farming is business rather than personal.
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BAG YOURSELF A DEAL Sure, you can save money this fall by bagging grain. But you can save even more money by purchasing your new system this spring. Your Loftness dealer is offering reduced pricing through May 31, 2014 on GrainLogix grain bag loaders, optional truck augers and unloaders. Find your local dealer at loftness.com or simply call Adair Sales & Marketing in Swift Current, Saskatchewan, at 306-773-0996.
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NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
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A TWIGGY PERCH
ENVIRONMENT | CLIMATE CHANGE
Latest UN report heightens threat from global warming Effects felt everywhere | Swift action urged to counter carbon emissions YOKOHAMA, Japan (Reuters) — Global warming poses a growing threat to the health, economic prospects and food and water sources of billions of people, top scientists say in a new report. The latest report from the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on ClimateChangesaidtheeffectsofwarming are being felt everywhere, fuelling potential food shortages and natural disasters and raising the risk of wars. It urged swift action to counter the effects of carbon emissions. “The world, in many cases, is illprepared for risks from a changing climate,” the IPCC said March 31 after the final text of the report was finalized. More warming will increase the chance of harsh, widespread effects that could be surprising or irreversible, it added. The report projects that global warming may cut world economic output by .2 to two percent a year if mean temperatures rise by 2 C, although many countries say the estimates are too low. “Over the coming decades, climate change will have mostly negative impacts,” said Michel Jarraud, secretary-general of the World Meteorological Organization. He said cities, ecosystems and water supply will be among the areas at risk. “The poor and vulnerable will be most affected.” The WMO and the UN’s Environment Programme set up the IPCC in 1988. The report emphasizes the risks and portrays cuts to greenhouse gas emissions as an insurance policy for the planet. “Climate change is really a challenge of managing risks,” said Christopher Field, co-chair of the IPCC group that prepared the report. The risks range from death to disrupted livelihoods in low-lying coastal zones and small islands as a result of storm surges, coastal flooding and rising sea levels. The report said immediate action is needed, which follows a warning that humans are probably responsible for global warming thought to cause droughts, colder weather and rising sea levels. “Unless we act dramatically and quickly, science tells us our climate and our way of life are literally in jeopardy,” U.S. secretary of state John Kerry said. “Denial of the science is malpractice.” Still, many governments have pleaded for greater scientific certainty before making billion dollar investments in initiatives from flood barriers to renewable energies. “There are those who say we can’t afford to act, but waiting is truly unaffordable,” Kerry said. “The costs of inaction are catastrophic.” The report said global warming will worsen health threats, damage crop yields and bring floods. It could also deepen poverty and worsen economic shocks at the heart of conflict. The report is the second in a fourpart IPCC series meant to guide governments that have promised to
agree to a pact in 2015 to slow climate change. The first, in September, raised the probability that most global warming is man-made to at least 95 percent from a 90 percent estimate made in 2007. The panel’s credibility faces scrutiny after one of its reports, in 2007, exaggerated the melt of Himalayan glaciers, but reviews said the error did not undermine key findings.
Climate scientists say they are more certain than ever that mankind is the main culprit behind global warming and warned that the impact of greenhouse gas emissions would linger for centuries. The report pulls together the work of hundreds of scientists, but skeptics have been emboldened by the fact that temperatures have risen more slowly recently, despite rising emissions.
This Northern Shrike was recently eyeing the smaller birds at a feeder on a farm near Belmont, Man. | LILLIAN DEEDMAN PHOTO
REBATES! Brandt is celebrating $1billion in annual revenue and we’re thanking our customers by offering special rebates throughout the year. Visit thanksabillion.ca for details.
TRACK STAR. With 27 locations across Canada, nobody understands your growing business needs better than Brandt. We’ve been providing top quality equipment and service to Western Canada for over 80 years – like the John Deere D-Series Compact Track Loader. Available in four sizes – 319D, 323D, 329D, and 333D, its durability and power in all types of conditions make the D-Series Compact Track Loader a real all-weather track star. And every machine we sell is backed by Brandt’s all-star line-up of customer support experts. That’s Powerful Value. Delivered.
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
AG NOTES SASK. FARM AWARDED ANIMAL WELFARE CERTIFICATION Triple H Beef of Dysart, Sask., has been certified as Animal Welfare Approved Grassfed. The ranch, owned by Leonard Pigott, joins three other ranches in Alberta given the certification. The distinction and the AWA Grassfed logo guarantees that food products marked as grass fed come from animals that are raised on pasture or range and fed a 100 percent grass and forage diet their entire lives. The logo informs consumers that animals were raised with high animal welfare standards. Pigott manages 300 head of cattle on more than 2,200 acres. The animals never receive grain, supplements or added hormones.
Triple H Beef’s name refers to “healthy bodies, holistic living and healing the land.� Pigott said his goal is to improve the water and mineral cycle on his land. For more information, visit www. triple-h-beef.com. AGRICULTURAL MISSION TO VISIT DENMARK
machinery and energy. Registration is limited to 25 people. The deadline is May 16. The estimated total cost is $2,500, which includes the flight, hotel, access to Agromek, opening party, local site visits and most meals. For more information, visit canada. um.dk/en/the-trade-council/news/.
The Alida facility focuses on recycling and recovering materials from drilling mud, waste water and solids that have been contaminated by spills during oilfield waste treatment and processing. NEW 4-H ONTARIO PRESIDENT APPOINTED
NEWALTA FACILITY WINS SAFETY AWARD Canadians wanting to learn more about Danish agriculture or network with companies in Denmark can join a partially subsidized business mission Nov. 24-28. The Royal Danish Consulate General in Toronto is organizing the mission to the Agromek show. Participants will be able to learn about Danish best practices and innovation with livestock equipment, crop management, agricultural
Newalta has presented its facility in Alida, Sask., with a vice-president’s award for health, safety and environmental excellence for the second year in a row. Newalta works with Canadian oil and gas industry as an environmental services provider to minimize waste, enhance recycling and recover valuable products.
Kim McCaw was recently appointed president of the Ontario 4-H Council for a two-year term. She replaces John den Haan. McCaw was a 4-H member in dairy and beef clubs for nine years. She also participated in judging and was a youth leader in Hastings County. She has often volunteered with the organization, and was a Halton County beef leader in 2012. She has also mentored at the 4-H Canada Global 4-H Youth Ag
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EGG PRODUCERS DONATE TO FOOD BANK Egg Farmers of Ontario is celebrating its 50th anniversary by donating eggs to Ontario food banks. The voluntary program will donate at least $250,000 worth of eggs to the Ontario Association of Food Banks during the first year. It will provide 12,000 dozen eggs per month. Ontario egg graders are supporting the program by donating all of the egg grading and packaging costs. Burnbrae Farms and Gray Ridge Egg Farms are supporting the program. The program is expected to help more than 370,000 people, including 131,000 children, who access food banks in Ontario. B.C. ANIMAL HEALTH LAB RECEIVES ACCREDITATION
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Summit, served as association representative for Halton and has been a director on the Ontario 4-H Council board. She has also held leading roles with the Canadian Young Speakers For Agriculture, the Canadian Agriculture Communicators of Tomorrow, the OAC Alumni Association, Advanced Agricultural Leadership Program Class 14, Toastmasters and the Junior Farmers Association of Ontario. New directors were also elected, including those filling some executive positions.
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British Columbiaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s animal health lab in Abbotsford has received five year accreditation from the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians for its diagnostic testing. The lab, which handles 5,000 submissions per year, is one of three labs in Canada accredited by the AAVLD. It diagnoses, monitors and assists in controlling and preventing animal diseases, including BSE, avian influenza, West Nile Virus and porcine epidemic diarrhea. The lab provides a wide range of testing to the livestock and veterinary industries, including pathology, bacteriology, serology, molecular diagnostics and virology in animals, poultry and fish.
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Back Yard Horse seminars (Adele Buettner, FACS, 306-249-3227, facs. sk.ca): April 10: Days Inn, Estevan April 17: Days Inn, Lloydminster April 24: Executive Royal Hotel, Regina May 1: Community Hall, Porcupine Plain May 8: Equine Performance Centre, U of S, Saskatoon June 4-8: Canadian Angus Association meeting and conference, Moose Jaw, Sask. (Sask. Angus Association, 306-757-6133, office@ saskatchewanangus.com, www. saskatchewanangus.com) June 19-20: UCVM Beef Cattle Conference, Deerfoot Inn and Casino, Calgary (403-210-7309, beef@ ucalgary.ca, www.vet.ucalgary.ca/ beef) June 24: Western Beef Development Centre field day, Termuende Research Ranch, Lanigan, Sask. (Brenda, 306682-3139, www.wbdc.sk.ca) For more coming events, see the Community Calendar, section 0300, in the Western Producer Classifieds.
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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
EarlyDeadlines for APRIL 24th Issue
LINER ADS at 8 PM WEDNESDAY TH CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS at NOON APRIL 16TH
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
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
CLOSED GOOD FRIDAY APRIL
1.800.667.7770
producer.com advertising@producer.com
18TH
46 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
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, $36,000 OBO. Colonsay, SK. 306-280-3231, 306-255-2611. LYCOMING 0-290-D, 135 HP, 1100 SMOH, FWF c/w mount and exhaust, exc. cond. Lethbridge, AB., 403-327-4582, 403-308-0062. 1978 PIPER TURBO ARROW, TT3385, 45 hrs STOH, KX-155 Nav/ComHSI Slaved, Auto Pilot, KLN GPS, digital EGT/OAT, open to offers. 306-236-4802, Meadow Lake, SK. email: itsmelka@yahoo.ca
1964 CESSNA 172E, 2112TT, 566 SMOH, Nav/Com, Mode C, new Cleveland wheels, brake/tires, exc. cond, hangared, $49,000. Jake 306-929-2115, Candle Lake, SK. LYCOMING 0-320, 150/160 HP, excellent condition, 2200 hours. 403-327-4582, 403-308-0062, Lethbridge, AB. HIGH PERFORMANCE: 1971 Piper Cherokee 140D. Located at Saskatoon, SK. Airport. Must be flown! Call 306-382-9024. 1959 CESSNA 180, good 2870 floats, wheel gear, Com, May C of A, 5550 TTAF, 0-470R 730 hrs., 210 since reman., Prop 155, new interior and glass, $87,000. 204-330-1758 at Winnipeg, MB.
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 certified; BEAVER, 1959, converted from US military L-20A Model, 8184 AFTT, eng. 274 hrs. TSO, OH by Covington aircraft eng. 2007; PIPER Navajo, 8859 AFTT, Cleveland wheels and brakes, cargo door, Kannad ELT. 403-637-2250, Water Valley, AB.
PA12 ALASKAN MODS, wheels, skis, floats, GPS, Icom, Mode C, $89,900. Phone: 306-596-6731, Regina, SK.
1986 BUSHMASTER ULTRALIGHT, 912 Rotax engine, 600 TT. Wings have been refabricated w/rib stitching and special gap seal gussets installed. Fuel tanks are in wings. Call 306-297-8846, Shaunavon, SK. LINK TRAINER FLIGHT simulator, model# AN-T-18, c/w recorder desk, taking offers. Call 306-423-6236, Hoey, SK. WANTED: CESSNA 172 or 182 (or equivalent). Must be in excellent condition. Send detailed info. and/or photos of plane to rododow@sasktel.net or call Rodney at 306-536-3301, Regina, SK. 1977 PIPER LANCE, TTSN 3933, SMOH 531, hangared, excellent condition. Call 780-871-4743, Lloydminster, AB.
WANTED: 170B CESSNA. Preferably 1000 hrs. SMOH/SPOH, 320 or 360 Lycoming, upgraded gear/tires, 7/10 or better interior/exterior. 780-349-3355, Westlock, AB.
WIRELESS DRIVEWAY ALARMS
Save 10% until Apr. 30/14
1975 M20F MOONEY, 2121 TT, 314 eng. hrs., 200 HP, full electronics, Garmin GPS, one owner. 306-873-5573, Tisdale, SK.
3,000 ft. maximum range wireless driveway alarm. 4 zone monitoring, 4 doorbell tones.
KITFOX IV ULTRALIGHT, C-FU00, SubaruEA81, fuel inject, elec ignition, radio, intercom, ELT, in-flight adjustable prop, VG’s, strobes, air speed, vertical speed, turn and bank, folding wings, shedded, w/wo trailer, $30,000 OBO. 306-423-6236, Hoey, SK.
P.O. Box 882, Coalhurst, AB T0L 0V0 Ph/Fax: 403-381-4817 Email: wirada@telusplanet.net
MF 88 GAS tractor w/FEL, $4500; Ford 8N tractor, $300; Blade, plow and cultivator for 3 PTH, $250 for all; MH 6’ power mower, $100; NH bar type side delivery rake, ARMSTRONG 40 YEAR Antique Dispersal, $250; 10 bale stooker for small square Easter Saturday, April 19, 9:30 AM, bales, $100; Coleman oil burner heater, Fort Qu’Appelle, Saskatchewan. Canada’s $100. Call 780-842-4068, Wainwright, AB. finest lamps, many rare clocks, superb china, figurines, antique furniture. All sells completely unreserved. View the many pictures at www.shaverauction.com Phone 306-332-5382. PL 1-914399. ANTIQUE SALE April 25-26, D-Company Armouries, 9005 101 St., Grande Prairie, AB. Great selection of furniture, jewellery, coins, stamps, toys and dolls, fine china and glass, vintage stove restoration, rustic and country collectibles and more. Show hours: Friday April 25, 10:00 AM to 8:00 PM, Saturday April 26, 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM. Admission $3. Call 780-987-2071. BODNARUS AUCTIONEERING. LONG Time Collector Antiques & Collectible Auction Sale, April 13, 2014 @ 9:00 AM, Delisle Town Hall, Delisle, SK. Advertising; Collectibles; Pottery; Lamps & lights; Armmy; Glassware; Artwork; Equipment & tools; Tins & Boxes; Hardware & Leather; Clothing; Calendars; Kitchenware; Toys & Games; Furniture; Paper Related; Cameras; Clocks; Radios; Numerous Miscellaneous items. Call 1-877-494-2437 or 306-277-9505 or check our website: www.bodnarusauctioneering.com PL #318200.
JD 4020 HI CROP, side console, restored, vg cond., new Firestone tires, synchro, shedded. 306-859-7788, Beechy, SK. 1954 MINNEAPOLIS MOLINE model U special, SN #01214449, running, partially restored. 403-823-9465, Drumheller, AB.
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. JD TRACTORS: Pre 1950, models BR, as well as AR and BR with lights and starter. Reconditioned to excellent running order. 780-939-5780, Sturgeon County, AB. WANTED: BATTERY BOX COVERS for 1952 JD styled AR; grill for 1948 JD D; MH 21A combine, running or restorable cond. 306-567-4682, 306-567-7967, Davidson, SK., gary.allan@sasktel.net 1949 JOHN DEERE model R, serial #1362 2- VA CASE, both in running cond., need always stored inside, all original. Call some repairs, 1 sandblasted, 1 painted, 780-349-2798 after 8PM, Westlock, AB. $1500 ea. 204-537-2486, Wawanesa, MB. MASSEY 44 TRACTOR with mounted HD COCKSHUTT 30, runs good, good tires, post pounder, asking $2500. Phone $1200. 306-542-3526, Kamsack, SK. 306-642-3189, Assiniboia, SK.
ADRIAN’S MAGNETO SERVICE Guaranteed repairs on mags and ignitors. Repairs. Parts. Sales. 204-326-6497. Box 21232, Steinbach, MB. R5G 1S5.
COLLECTOR CAR AUCTION, May 10, 2014, Prairieland Park Convention Centre, Saskatoon, SK. Now accepting consignments. Don’t delay consign today! David 306-631-7207, Office 306-693-4411. PL #329773. The Collector Car Group Inc. www.thecollectorcargroup.com WANTED: 1941-1946 Chevy and GMC COE trucks and/or parts. Interested in other makes. 250-478-2035, Victoria, BC. JIM’S CLASSIC CORNER. Buy classic and antique autos, running or not, but must be rolling. Call 204-997-4636, Winnipeg, MB.
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ACROSS 1. Film starring Ethan Hawke and Selena Gomez 8. The ___ Couple 12. She played Draper’s secretary on Mad Men 14. Initials of the actress who played Isabel in Meet the Fockers 15. Film starring Tina Fey and Paul Rudd 16. Blame It ___ (2 words) 17. A “Kettle” played by Marjorie Main 18. Initials of an actress who was in Air Hostess 19. Journey to the Center of the ___ 21. Poison ___ 22. The ___ Kid 25. The Girl Who Kicked the ___ Nest 26. Canadian actress Kirshner 28. She starred in Cowboys & Aliens 29. Macken who played Achivir in Centurion 31. ___ Left Foot 32. Blair and Diamond 33. She starred in Honey 34. ___ Nights 35. Nahan who was the boxing commentator in all of the Rocky films 37. ___ Always Sunny in Philadelphia 38. Invasion of the Body ___ 41. She played Gillian Gray on Judging Amy 43. ___ of Two Cities (2 words) 44. Actress Sheedy 45. He stars on The Americans 46. ___ Close Range 47. Garcia and Griffith 48. Kapoor of India 49. One of Steve Martin’s wives 50. The ___ Adventures of Old Christine 51. Actors’ initials who starred in Airplane! 52. Ryan who was in Intermission with Colin Farrell 53. Film starring Tom Welling and Maggie Grace (with The)
54. She played Thicke’s daughter on Growing Pains DOWN 1. Film Sandra Bullock and George Clooney are astronauts in 2. Teen role for Debbie Reynolds 3. Shawkat of Arrested Development 4. Horror director Craven 5. He played Buddy on The Dick Van Dyke Show 6. House, M.D. producer 7. Warren Beatty’s wife 9. Gremlins director 10. ___ County 11. The ___ Wife 13. ___ Ordinary Family 16. Pineapple Express cinematographer 20. ___ Power 22. She starred in Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark 23. Actors’ initials who was on Silk Stalkings 24. Actress Elise 25. Silent ___ 27. Cash who played Janet in The Wolf of Wall Street 28. She played Renee Walker on 24 30. Arcand of Heartland 32. ___ 3 34. ___ & Run 35. Film starring Brad Pitt and Jason Statham 36. She played Adrian Monk’s stepdaughter on Monk 38. The People Under the ___ 39. He played Mickey Bunce in Drop Dead Fred 40. A Shock to the ___ 42. MacLachlan of Desperate Housewives 47. 2012 film which was nominated for seven Academy Awards 48. Furry sitcom alien
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
CLASSIFIED ADS 47
1972 OLDS CUTLASS Supreme convertible, WANTED: WALL CLOCK called Standard 350 Rocket, 4 barrel, bucket seats, console Time, made by Arthur Pequegnat clock shift, $17,900. 306-963-7604, Imperial, SK company in Canada. Need not be running, but in good shape. Will pay finders fee! 1925 MODEL T SEDAN, 2 door, running, 780-349-2798 after 8PM, Westlock, AB. some restoration, engine #C18295. 306-842-5647, Weyburn, SK.
NELSONâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S AUCTION SERVICE 22nd Annual Spring Auction, Saturday, April 19, 2014, 9 AM. Nelsonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Auction Centre, Meacham, SK. 1999 Genie 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Manlift, grain bins, tractors: 2006 Case/IH, 1981 3688 IHC; 1953 JD â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;ARâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; tractor. Farm equip: JD 6601 PT combine; JD 800 SP swather, 1995 JD 375 round baler; manure spreader; field sprayer; Rock-O-Matic rockpicker; IHC 620 drill seeder. Cultivators: 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; and 50â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Morris Challenger II w/harrows; 45â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 5600 Case/IH w/harrows, 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; CCIL w/harrows, 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122; IHC; Bergen 8 bale wagon, 357 Sakundiak auger; MCD welding roller mill; NH 7â&#x20AC;&#x2122; cycle mower. Trailers: 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; flatdeck 5th wheel; 1999 Bergen 18â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 5th wheel stock trailer. Vehicles: 2008 GMC Acadia SUV; 2007 Ford XLT FX4 quad cab; 2007 Buick Terraza CXL mini van; 2006 Avalanche; 2004 Chev Ventura van; 2002 Chev Suburban; 2002 Pontiac Grand Prix GTP4 sedan; 2000 Chrysler Intrepid; 1990 F150; 1983 Dodge Ram D150; 1975 Chev Custom 1T; Yard equipment: wood chipper, utility trailer, lawn tractors. Shop equipment: Workbench; Tool cabinet with tools; Pressure pumps, digital floor scale, H/D tire changer, pressure washer, power tools and equipment. Recreation: 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Sunfire deep V boat, commercial canvas buildings/tents, HD Bi-Parting wrought iron gate. Much more. Consign now, to take advantage of our advertising. For more information visit our website at: www.nelsonsauction.com or Call: 306- 944-4320.
1951 FORD F3 3/4 ton truck, trans., no m o t o r, n o r e s t o r at i o n , $ 1 5 0 0 O B O. 780-842-4068, Wainwright, AB. O L D M O T O R C Y C L E S O R PA R T S WANTED, any condition, size or make. 1979 or older. Will pickup, pay cash. Call Wes 403-936-5572 anytime, all enquiries answered. Calgary, AB. WANTED: FORD OR Mercury 1/2 ton 1948-52 w/orig. flathead V8, solid body. Email photo/info to: mcpick6@gmail.com
1982 Chev C70
Safetied all new 10-20 tires , 366 eng, 5+2 trans, 16ft box with roll tarp , 80,000 km. Sells April 17 at Vic Giesbrecht farm auction Oakville, MB. See our web site: www.billklassen.com
Owner: 204.871.0706
S w a p M eet â&#x20AC;&#x201C; M a y 2-3, W es tern er Pa rk , Red Deer 8 TH ANNUAL W ILLYS W EEKEND SHOW & TELL In c onjunc tion w ith the M ounta in V iew Pis tons
S a tu rd a y, Ju n e 21 Regis tra tio n 9 :00 S ho w 10:00 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 3:00 Old s , AB Co n ta ctJu d y (403) 932-2675
WANTED: TRACTOR MANUALS, sales brochures, tractor catalogs. 306-373-8012, Saskatoon, SK. ANTIQUE SHOW. WESTERN Canadaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s longest running collectorsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; show: antiques, collectibles, and pop culture. 39th Annual Wild Rose Antique Collectors Show and Sale. Sellers from across Canada. Special collectorsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; displays. Antique evaluations by Canadian Antiques Roadshow appraiser Gale Pirie, $12/item. Good Fri., April 18, 9AM - 5PM, Sat., April 19, 9AM - 4PM. Edmonton Expo Centre. 780-437-9722, www.wildroseantiquecollectors.ca WANT TO BUY a couple crisp $1000 dollar bills. Bank gives $1000 bucks. I will pay you $1050. Kim 403-860-1445, Calgary AB
CONSIGNMENT MACHINERY, Vehicles, Tools at Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, SK, Saturday, April 19, 10:00 AM. Currently accepting consignments and expecting a full yard by sale day. Check www.johnstoneauction.ca for updated list and pics or call 306-693-4715. PL 914447. PBR FARM AND INDUSTRIAL SALE, last Saturday of each month. Ideal for farmers, contractors, suppliers and dealers. Consign now. Next sale April 26, 9:00 AM. PBR, 105- 71st St. West, Saskatoon, SK., www.pbrauctions.com 306-931-7666.
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ANNUAL SPRING EQUIPM ENT AUCTION TUES D AY AP R IL 15 TH @ 9 AM Hw y #3 Ea s t , Tis d a le , S K .
NOTE: Th e Auctio n C e n tre w ill b e o pe n S a turd a y April 12th a n d S un d a y April 13th fo r C o n s ign m e n to f Equipm e n t. Expecting 4000 B uyers
CANADAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S LARGEST and Finest Antique and Modern Gun Show, Calgary, AB, BMO Centre, Stampede Park, 1410 Olympic Way SE, April 18 and 19, Friday: 9:30-5 PM, Saturday: 9:30- 4 PM. Admission $10; 2 day pass, $15. Kids under 12Free. Call 403-771-8348. Buy - Sell Trade. www.calgarygunshow.com
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ER S N O B UY M I P R EM U
Call Today For Advertising Benefits Office Toll Free 1-866-873-5488 Don Luthi, cell 306-921-8952 Bruce Schapansky, cell 306-873-7319 Toll Free Anytime 1-866-873-5488 Â PH: 306-873-5488 TISDALE, SASK.
WANTED: CAST IRON seats, any shape. Have some for sale or trade. 306-697-3206, Grenfell, SK.
PL #912715
www.schapansky.com
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
Lyle, Leonard & Evelyn Herter Golden Prairie, SK | April 15, 2014 ¡ 10 am
2003 JOHN DEERE 9120
2013 JOHN DEERE S660
2005 JOHN DEERE 4895 25 FT
2000 JOHN DEERE 7210
2000 GMC C8500
AUCTION LOCATION: From GOLDEN PRAIRIE, SK, go 9.6 km (6 miles) West, then 6.4 km (4 miles) North, then 1.6 km (1 mile) West, and 0.8 km (0.5 mile) North. GPS: 50.2883, -109.79 A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2003 John Deere 9120 4WD ¡ 2000 John Deere 7210 MFWD ¡ 1996 John Deere 5300 2WD ¡ 2013 John Deere S660 Combine ¡ 2005 John Deere 4895 25 Ft Swather ¡ 1998 Case IH 8230 30 Ft Swather ¡ 2000 GMC C8500 T/A Grain Truck ¡ John Deere 953 10 Ft Bale Wagon ¡ 1990 John Deere 9450 30 Ft Hoe Seed Drill ¡ Morris 80-11 Seed-Rite 11 Ft Hoe Seed Drill ¡ 1999 Morris Magnum III 50 Ft Cultivator ¡
John Deere 610 27 Ft Cultivator ¡ 1995 Degelman RP6000 Rock Picker ¡ 1995 Flexi-Coil S65 90 Ft Field Sprayer ¡ John Deere 709 7 Ft Mower ¡ Brandt 1060 10 In. x 60 Ft Mechanical Swing Grain Auger ¡ 2012 Brandt 5200EX Grain Vac ¡ John Deere LA145 Riding Lawn Mower ¡ John Deere AMT600 3 Wheel T/A ATV ¡ Kawasaki 400 4x4 Quad ¡ Sazuki RV90 Dirt Bike ¡ Water & Fuel Tanks ¡ Welding Equipment ...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
Lyle Herter: 306.669.4305 (h), 403.502.4572 (c) Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Jon Schultz: 306.291.6697 800.491.4494
RO B B IE & M ARJ RO B ERTSO N AUCTIO N SAL E SATUR D AY APR IL 1 9/1 4 @ 1 0 :0 0 AM ZE AL AN D IA, SK Live IN TERN ET Bidding (Rosetow n Area) Tractors & A ttachm ents, Trucks, H orse W agons & H orse Related, Yard Related, Shop & Tools, H ousehold, Antiques and N um erous M iscellaneous Item s.
b o d n a r u sa u ctio n eer in g .co m O ffice:30 6-975 -90 5 4 (30 6)227-95 0 5 1 -877-494-BID S(2437) PL #318200 SK PL #324317 A B
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NELSONâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S AUCTION SERVICE, Saturday, April 26th, 2014, 10:00 AM. Harvey and Marilyn Jackson Farm Dispersal, Lac Vert, SK. A complete dispersal of farm equipment and shop tools/equipment. Visit our website: wwwnelsonsauction.com or call 306-944-4320, Meacham, SK.
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SK PL # 914507 â&#x20AC;˘ AB PL # 180827
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
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Spring Equipment Auction Monday, April 21, 2014 9:00 am at Kramerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Big Bid Barn Directions: Kramerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Big Bid Barn located 3 miles East of North Battleford on Hwy #16 Auction Coordinators: Brendan Kramer, Kim Kramer or Michael Higgs 1-800-529-9958 COMPLETE DISPERAL FOR MAURICE VANY OF BATTLEFORD, SK Seller Contact: Kevin Vany, 306-441-3804 Tractors: 1985 Steiger Panther CM-360, 7117 hrs showin; Combines & Accessories: 2004 John Deere 9760 STS, 1496 thr/2300eng hrs showing; 1997 John Deere 9500, 943 thr/1483 eng hrs showing; 2003 MacDon 972 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header; 1996 MacDon 960 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header; Swathers: 2004 Westward 9250 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; sp swather, 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, 710 hdr/ 933 eng hrs showing; Seeding & Tillage: Pattison DB-70 70â&#x20AC;&#x2122; dribble bar; John Deere 230 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122; tandem disc; Grain Handling: Industrial: Caterpillar D8H crawler dozer; Heavy Trucks: 1994 Kenworth T600 highway tractor; 1985 International S1900 single axle grain truck, 466 diesel; Trailers: 2001 Load Line 32â&#x20AC;&#x2122; end dump grain trailer; grain pup trailer, 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x8â&#x20AC;&#x2122; steel box.
COMPLETE FARM DISPERAL FOR LITTLEBIRD FARMS LTD. ERNIE & ELEANOR VOEGELI OF RUDDELL,SK Seller Contacts: Ernie & Eleanor Voegeli, 306-389-2018 Tractors: 2008 John Deere 9230 4wd, 24 spd, 1400 hrs showing; 1992 John Deere 4560 2wd, Quad rg trans, 6006 hrs showing; 1982 John Deere 4240 2wd & JD 148 FEL, Powershift, 5680 hrs showing; Combines: 2007 John Deere 9860 STS, Bullet Rotor, 1200 thr/1662 eng hrs showing; Swathers: 2013 John Deere W150 swather & JD 435D header, 71 hrs showing; Seeding & Tillage: Flexi-coil 5000 51â&#x20AC;&#x2122; air drill & Flexi-coil 2340 tbt air cart; Flexi-coil System 95 60â&#x20AC;&#x2122; harrow packer bar; Spraying: 2008 Brandt SB 4000 90â&#x20AC;&#x2122; suspended boom sprayer; Trailer: 1994 Doepker 31â&#x20AC;&#x2122; tandem axle grain trailer. Partial listing only.
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OVER 50 UPCOMING AUCTIONS April 19-23, 2014 APRIL 19th s !- s ,)6% ).4%2.%4 ")$$).' !4 ! (/7!2$ ).'2)$ 35)4/2 s ",!#+)% !" ()'( 2)6%2 !2%!
Directions: 6U ZV\[O ZPKL VM [V^U VM )SHJRPL NV ^LZ[ VMM VM /^` [^V TPSLZ VU (]L LHZ[ [V :[ LHZ[ [OLU TPSL UVY[O `HYK VU ^LZ[ ZPKL VM YVHK Seller Contacts: 1VYKPL :\P[VY Auction Coordinator: )Y`HU :VTLY]PSSL 1999 Case IH 9370 4wd, 2165 hrs; 1991 Case 2096 2wd w/ 794 Allied FEL; International 684 2wd w/ FEL; 2009 Case IH 8010 AFS, 596 thr/794 eng hrs; 2009 Honey Bee 36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header; 2004 Case IH WD1203 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122;; International 4000 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122;; 1999 Case IH Concord 4710-4R 5 Plex 47â&#x20AC;&#x2122; air drill & 1999 Case 2300 TBH air cart; International 5645 45â&#x20AC;&#x2122; chisel; Degelman 7000 70â&#x20AC;&#x2122; heavy harrow; 2005 Buhler Farm King 1370 auger; other augers; 2004 Case IH SPX 4260 90â&#x20AC;&#x2122; s/p sprayer, 1685 hrs showing; 4 - Case IH 520/85R38 tires w/ rims; New Holland 358 mix mill; Linden post pounder; 1996 Chevrolet Top Kick tandem grain truck, diesel, 6 spd Allison, 121944 kms; 1981 Chevrolet C70 tandem grain truck, 427, 101203 kms.; 1979 Ford Louisville grain truck. 429-4V, 127200 kms.; 2010 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 LTZ 4wd crewcab short box truck, Duramax diesel, 40,647 kms and more. Partial listing only.
APRIL 22nd s !- s ,)6% ).4%2.%4 ")$$).' +/,%./3+9 &!2-3 ,4$ !.$9 +/,%./3+9 %34!4% -)#(%,,% +/,%./3+9 s 7),+)% 3+
Directions: -YVT >PSRPL NV RT ZV\[OLHZ[ VU /^` [V [OL 3LPWaPN NYPK
;OL NV TPSLZ RT ZV\[O [V :[ 1VZLWO JVYULY [OLU NV TPSLZ >LZ[ @HYK VU ZV\[O ZPKL 7SLHZL JHSS [OL ILSV^ JVU[HJ[Z [V HYYHUNL ]PL^PUNZ Seller Contacts: +H]L 2VILSZR` Auction Coordinators: 2PT 2YHTLY 1994 Ford 9280 4wd, 6325 hrs showing,; John Deere 4440 2wd, 6786 hrs showing; John Deere 4320 2wd & JD 148 FEL; Leon 9â&#x20AC;&#x2122; dozer blade; John Deere 4020 2wd & JD 148 FEL; John Deere AR antique; 1996 New Holland TR98, 2252 thr/2981 eng hrs showing; 1996 Honey Bee SP30 header; 1998 New Holland 973 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; ďŹ&#x201A;ex header; 1996 Case IH 8820 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 2171 hrs showing; Prairie Star 4600 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; p/t; 1998 Bourgault 5710 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; air drill; 2002 Bourgault 5350 air tank; Grain augers & bins; 2000 Case IH Patriot SPX4260, 1307 hrs showing (Meter changed - unit actually has approx 2100 hrs); 2003 Freightliner tandem grain truck; 1988 GMC 7000 grain truck; 2000 GMC 1500 4wd ext cab; 2000 Mallard 24.5â&#x20AC;&#x2122; holiday trailer and more. Partial listing only.
$35 $ $ 0 $57+85 '$/( )('258. . 9(*5(9,//( 3+
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APRIL 23rd s !- s ,)6% ).4%2.%4 ")$$).' $!229, 34%7!24 s -//3% *!7 3+ &).$,!4%2 !2%!
MORE ITEMS ADDED DAILY See website for updates! Tractors, Harvesting Equip, Seeding & Tillage, Haying & Livestock, Grain Handling, Trucks, Trailers, ATVâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, RVâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S, New & Used Shop Equipment & more.
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Directions: -YVT 4VVZL 1H^ NV TPSLZ 5VY[O VU /^` [V 5VY[O ZPKL VM )\MMHSV 7V\UK 3HRL [V .YPK [OLU TPSLZ ,HZ[ -YVT *OHTILY SHPU NV TPSLZ :V\[O [V .YPK [OLU TPSLZ ,HZ[ Seller Contacts: +HYY`S :[L^HY[ Auction Coordinator: )YLUKHU 2YHTLY 1990 John Deere 8560 4wd, 7390 hours showing; John Deere 4440 2wd, 8673 hours showing; John Deere 2130 2wd tractor, JD 146 FEL; 1997 Massey Ferguson 8570, 2845 hours showing; 1994 Massey Ferguson 8570, 3232 hours showing; 2008 Massey Ferguson 9220 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 761 hours showing; Morris Maxim 34â&#x20AC;&#x2122; air drill & Morris 7300 tank; John Deere 230 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; tandem disc; Ford 240 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122; tandem disc; Grain augers & bins; 2003 Spra-Coupe 4640 80â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 1125 hours showing; 2004 Peterbilt 379 tandem grain truck w/ CAT C15, 2011 CIM box; 1985 Chevrolet 70 grain truck; 2007 Trailtech 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122; carhauler and more. Partial listing only.
SEE SEE MORE MORE PHOTOS PHOTOS AND AND INFORMATION INFORMATION AT AT
Call toll free: 1-800-529-9958 SK Provincial Licence #914618 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; AB Provincial Licence #206959
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
6th Annual Spring Machinery Auction April 26th 9am
Over 2 Million Dollars of Equipment 2010 JD 9630 4wd, shows 1536 hrs, 2009 JD 9630 4wd Shows 1968 hrsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 2010 NH P2070 Air Drill 60 ft 10â&#x20AC;? Spc w/430 bu Tank, 10 â&#x20AC;&#x153; auger, 5710 Bourgault Airseeders, 1820 JD Airseeders, SM7000 Degelman HH, 7610 JD MFWD Tractor w/ldr, , 2-135 White, Case MXM155 w/loader/grapple, 2 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 2011 Case 2303 Swathers w/36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; HB Hdr, Renn Grain Bagger, 2 - HoneyBee 36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Hdrs, Brandt Auger 10x35 w/mover, Telvator Conveyor, Steiger 325 4wd, MX125 w/ldr, Westward P/T swather 30 ft, 1989 Western Star Tanker wet kit, Styled 530 JD, IHC Tandem Grain truck and much more
Burgis Beach Lot #808, 50X115
INDUSTRIAL
2003 Volvo ec290blc Trackhoe, Cat & Case Trackhoes, 2005 JCD Backhoe CX4, 720 Champion Grader, 2013 Car Haulers, , 1997 JCB Backhoe 215, Kubota Mini KX121-3, Hitachi Midi,Freightliner Semi, Dump Trailer, Semi Vans, HUGE selection of buckets. Much More on Sale Day. Partial List only.
CLASSIFIED ADS 49
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Yorkton Auction Centre 306-782-5999 Lic 325025
hodginsauctioneers.com
FARM LIVESTOCK EQUIP/Rec. Auction for Lloyd and Ann Rodgers, Gravelbourg, SK. Sat., April 19th at 10:00 AM. Partial Listing: NH 8970 MFWD; Morris Magnum CP731, 39â&#x20AC;&#x2122; cult.; Seed treating equipment; 3 PTH equip; Boats; 2007 Jayco trailer; Guns; Sporting equip; Democrat buggy w/single harness; Shop equip. and much m o r e . F o r m o r e i n fo . c a l l L l oy d at 306-648-8300. Packet Bushell Auction Service, Don 306-642-0068, visit our website: packetbushellauction.com DL#328388.
UPCOMING AUCTIONS
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SK PL # 914507 â&#x20AC;˘ AB PL # 180827
www.yorktonauctioncentre.com For info on this Auction or any other, Call 306-782-5999 Live Internet Bidding, Pre Register on our homepage today.
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SUPREME AUCTION SERVICES will be conducting a Farm Auction for Ken Mead, Grenfell, SK., 10:00 AM, Saturday, April 12. Location: 10 miles south of Jct. Hwy. #1 and #47 on #47. On offer: Case 2090; Allis 7060; Deutz 70-06; Deutz 100-06; MF Super 95 for parts; 1979 GMC 6000 grain truck; 2007 Chev Uplander; 1967 Mercury 1 ton; IHC 4000 SP swather, gas, w/24.5â&#x20AC;&#x2122; PU reel; JD 7721 PTO combine; JD 6601 PTO combine; various shop tools and misc. More info www.supremeauctions.ca or call Brad Stenberg 306-551-9411. PL#314604
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Directions: -YVT [OL Q\UJ[PVUZ VM /^` IL[^LLU 6\[SVVR HUK 2LUHZ[VU [HRL /^` ZV\[O RT [OLU H[ [OL :[YVUNĂ&#x201E;LSK NYPK PU[LYZLJ[PVU NV TPSL ^LZ[ HUK TPSL UVY[O 69 -YVT :[YVUNĂ&#x201E;LSK NV TPSLZ ^LZ[ HUK TPSLZ UVY[O Seller Contacts: )LYUPL 1\K` 5PZRH J Auction Coordinator: 2PT 2YHTLY 2003 Buhler Versatile 2360 4wd, 1691 hrs showing; 2003 Buhler Versatile 2145 Genesis MFWD, 1868 hrs showing; 1995 Ford 8670 MFWD & Ezee-On 2130 FEL, 5758 hrs showing; 1988 John Deere 2555 MFWD & JD 245 FEL, 8672 hrs showing; 2003 New Holland CX840, 1582thr/1817eng hours showing; 1999 Prairie Star 4930 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; s/p, MacDon 972 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 1750 hrs showing; 2000 Bourgault 5710 Series II 54â&#x20AC;&#x2122; air drill & Bourgault 5300 air tank; Flexicoil System 82 80â&#x20AC;&#x2122; harrow draw bar; International 490 32â&#x20AC;&#x2122; tandem disc; Grain augers; 2004 New Holland SF115 sprayer, 90â&#x20AC;&#x2122; booms; 2003 New Holland BR780 round baler; Highline 7000 HD bale processor; Hi-Qual handling system; 1999 International Eagle 9200 tandem grain truck, CAT C12 diesel; 1975 Chevy C65 Scottsdale grain truck; Irrigation Equipment and more. Partial listing only.
Download the free app today Up-to-date news, weather, classiďŹ eds and more.
SEE SEE MORE MORE PHOTOS PHOTOS AND AND INFORMATION INFORMATION AT AT
Call toll free: 1-800-529-9958 SK Provincial Licence #914618 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; AB Provincial Licence #206959
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
Gardner Brothers
Pennell Farms Ltd.
in conjunction with Pennell Farms Ltd. Kamsack, SK | April 17, 2014 ¡ 10 am
1979 GMC BRIGADIER
2004 John Deere 630R 30 Ft Rigid Header ¡ 2003 Freightliner FL80 Crew Cab T/A Grain Truck ¡ 1979 GMC Brigadier T/A Grain Truck ¡ 1998 GMC 3500 Crew Cab Dually 4x4 Pickup ¡ Custombuilt 4 Wheel Wagon ...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
All items to sell in conjunction with the Pennell Farms Ltd. auction on April 17, 2014 2004 JOHN DEERE 9520, 2011 JOHN DEERE 9430 & 2009 JOHN DEERE 9530 Rod Gardner: 306.542.7644, rvgardner@sasktel.net Ted Gardner: 306.542.7604, tedgardner@sasktel.net Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Dan Steen: 306.361.6154 800.491.4494
2â&#x20AC;&#x201D; 2013 JOHN DEERE S670
2013 JOHN DEERE 4830 100 FT
2008 JOHN DEERE 4895 30 FT
2â&#x20AC;&#x201D; BOURGAULT 8810 50 FT & 2â&#x20AC;&#x201D; BOURGAULT 6550ST
2005 INTERNATIONAL 9200I & 1997 MACK
1998 GMC 3500
AUCTION LOCATION: From KAMSACK, SK, go 4.8 km (3 miles) East on Hwy 5, then 8.8 km (5.5 miles) North on Bearstream Road. GPS: 51.6477, -101.842 A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2008 John Deere 9870STS Combine ¡ 2008 John Deere 9770STS Combine ¡ 2005 John Deere 9760STS Combine ¡ 2009 John Deere 635D 35 Ft Draper Header ¡ 2008 John Deere 930D 30 Ft Draper Header ¡
2004 JOHN DEERE 9520, 2011 JOHN DEERE 9430 & 2009 JOHN DEERE 9530 2008 JOHN DEERE 930D 30 FT
2008 JOHN DEERE 9770STS
2003 FREIGHTLINER FL80
Kamsack, SK | April 17, 2014 ¡ 10 am
AUCTION LOCATION: From KAMSACK, SK, go 4.8 km (3 miles) East on Hwy 5, then 8.8 km (5.5 miles) North on Bearstream Road. GPS: 51.6477, -101.842 A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2011 John Deere 9430 4WD ¡ 2009 John Deere 9530 4WD ¡ 2004 John Deere 9520 4WD ¡ 2005 New Holland TV145 Bi-Directional ¡ 2007 John Deere 7330 MFWD ¡ (2) 2013 John Deere S670 Combines ¡ 2008 John Deere 4895 30 Ft Swather ¡ 2005 International 9200I Sleeper T/A Truck Tractor ¡ 1997 Mack E7-427 Sleeper T/A Truck Tractor ¡ 1982 Mack RS600 T/A Grain Truck ¡ (2) 2010 Doepker 36 Ft T/A Grain Trailer ¡ 1977 Cat 930 Wheel Loader ¡ 1978 Case
580C Loader Backhoe ¡ Cat 70 Pull Scraper ¡ 2004 Bourgault 8810 50 Ft Air Seeder ¡ 2002 Bourgault 8810 50 Ft Air Seeder ¡ 2010 Bourgault 6550ST Tow-Behind Air Tank ¡ 2009 Bourgault 6550ST Tow-Behind Air Tank ¡ 2013 John Deere 4830 100 Ft High Clearance Sprayer ¡ 2006 Brent 880 Grain Cart ¡ 2008 Mainero 2230 9 Ft Grain Bagger ¡ 2004 Brandt 5000EX Grain Vac ¡ 2009 John Deere Gator XU2 620i ATV ¡ 2007 Suzuki King Quad 450 Quad ¡ Qty of GPS Equipment, Tools, Parts ...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com Kim Pennell: 306.542.3097 (h), 306.542.7493 (c) Wilf Pennell: 306.542.7328 Jason Pennell: 306.542.7726 Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Dan Steen: 306.361.6154 800.491.4494
50 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
2S AUCTIONEERS will be conducting a Realignment Sale for Neil Paulgaard and Guest Consignors, 10:00 AM, Saturday, April 26. Location: 2 miles W of Jct. #47 S Hwy. and #1 Hwy, Grenfell, SK, 3 miles S, 1/4 mile W; or 3 miles S of the Summerberry Cemetery, 1/4 mile W. On offer: 1977 JD 4430; 1986 JD 4850; 1987 JD 4250; 835 Versatile 4WD; 1982 IHC S1700, SA, MV 404, gas, 5&2 trans, steel B&H, roll tarp; 1992 Ford Louisville truck, 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; steel B&H, TA, 6V 53 Detroit, Allison auto trans; 1995 Volvo semi, 525 HP Detroit, 18 spd; Southland 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122; stock trailer; 2000 MacDon 2950; 2003 MacDon 972 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; draper header; MacDon 872 header adaptor, fits JD 9600; Bale King Vortec bale shredder; Bergen 10x90 auger; 2002 Farm King 13x70 auger; 1986 JD 530 rd. baler; Gehl 170 mixmill w/scale; Schulte 9600 3 PTH snowblower; TBH Conterra 824A grader blade; 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Assie landroller; 95â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Flexi-Coil System 62 sprayer; 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Degelman dozer blade; Mill drill machine; Lincoln mig welder; Phoenix 50â&#x20AC;&#x2122; rotary harrow; Frontier quick attach bale spear; 1250 gal. Enduraplas fert. tank; 2- Twister hopper 2750 bu; Westeel 2750 bu. on M&K hopper; 4- Sakundiak 10,900 bu. hoppers; 3- 21,000 gal. liq. feed supp. tanks. w w w. 2 s a u c t i o n e e r s . c a C a l l B r a d at 306-551-9411. PL#331982.
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LIVE AUCTION @ HODGINS AUCTION CENTRE
1-0)7 7398, Â&#x203A; 1-0) ;)78 3* 1)0*368 7/ MACK AUCTION CO. presents a Farm Equipment Auction for Gordon and Edith Kolish, 306-722-3610 or 306-737-0610, Saturday, April 19, 2014 at 10:00 AM. Live internet bidding at www.bidspotter.com Directions from East side of Creelman, Sask. go 18 miles North to dead end and 1/4 mile West. Watch for signs! Case 9370 4WD tractor with 5120 hours, IH 1086 2WD tractor with 6000 hours, 2013 MF Hesston WR9725 SP swather with 75 hours and 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; PU reel, Case/IH 2188 Axial Flow SP combine with 2230 rotor hours, 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Case/IH 1020 straight cut header, straight cut header trailer, Koenders poly swath roller, 49â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Morris Maxim air drill double shoot w/Morris 7300 air cart, 53â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Friggstad 420 cult. w/tine harrows, JD 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; offset disc, 32â&#x20AC;&#x2122; IH 4700 Vibratiller cult. Degelman ground drive rockpicker, Crown ground drive rockpicker, 100â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Bourgault 1450 field sprayer, 1250 gallon poly water tank, 1000 gallon steel water tank, 2001 Volvo tandem axle highway tractor with sleeper, 1996 Doepker tri-axle grain truck w/3 compartments and air ride, 1977 GMC 6500 grain truck with 74,500 kms, Brandt 10-60 swing auger, Sakundiak 7-41 auger w/Briggs engine, 3- Westeel 2500 bu. bins on wood floor, 2- Westeel 1600 bu. bins on wood floors, plus shop tools and a whole bunch more! For sale bill and photos visit www.mackauctioncompany.com Join us on Facebook and Twitter. 306-421-2928 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962
ONLINE AUCTION
4 LO CATIO N S : REG IN A, S AS KATO O N , M O O S O M IN , CALG ARY 2006 Ca s e IH 4410 H/C S p ra yer; Richiger R10 Gra in Ba gger; 2012 Do d ge Ra m 3500 L o n gho rn ; 2010 F o rd Ra n ger; 2008 Y u ko n ; 2010 H&H 6x12â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Ca rgo T ra iler; 1989 F ru eha u f T ria xle Deck T ra iler; F o rd 450 Dies el Cu b e Va n ; 105â&#x20AC;? L o a d er Bu cket; S ea Ca n s ; E n co n a ir Pla n t Gro w th Cha m b er. OTHER: Xtrem e S eries L E D L ight Ba rs ; 10 Uva lu x 2008 T u rb o T a n n in g Bed s . UP C OM IN G EVEN TS : 32 S to ra ge S hed s ; Co m p lete S ta ge S o u n d & L ightin g E q u ip m en t; Co m p res s ed Na tu ra l Ga s F illin g S ta tio n ; F irea rm s ; Clo s e Ou t â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Blo s s o m s & Bu d s â&#x20AC;&#x2122; F lo ra l S ho p ; M a tu re S p ru ce T rees ; S p rin g In to S u m m er Recrea tio n E q & M UCH M ORE !
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hodginsauctioneers.com
hodginsauctioneers.com
SK PL # 914507 â&#x20AC;˘ AB PL # 180827
33rd Annual W heat Country M achinery & Equipm ent Auction
Tues Apr 15th â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 9:30 am Selling Tractors,H arvestEquip, Seeding & Tillage Equipm ent, Livestock,H aying & Sileage Equipm ent,Trucks,Recreational Equip,Trees,Fence Posts & C orralPanels â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Plus M uch M uch M ore
M CD O UG ALL AUCTIO N EERS LTD .
1-800-26 3-4193
C heck our w ebsite
C ON S IG N M EN TS W ELC OM E! Book m a rk : w w w.M c D ou g a llBa y.c om V iew W eb s ite fo r Term s & Co n d itio n s L is t s u b ject to a d d itio n s & d eletio n s :
w w w .m cinenly.com 403- 485-2440 Frank M cInenly Auctions â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Vulcan,Alta
P.O. Bo x 308 1 Regin a , S K . S 4P 3G7 Dea ler L ic #319 9 16
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
Circle R Farms Ltd. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Hugh & Lorraine Richelhoff
Major, SK | April 16, 2011 ¡ 10 am
Floyd & Edythe Werth â&#x20AC;&#x201C; North Star Acres Ltd. Grenfell, SK | April 16, 2014 ¡ 10am
2008 CASE IH 385
2005 CASE IH STX425
2011 CASE IH 8120
2009 JOHN DEERE 4730 100 FT
2010 JOHN DEERE 9870STS
2012 JOHN DEERE A400 36 FT
2008 JOHN DEERE 1830 56 FT w/ 2011 1910
1999 JOHN DEERE 4700 90 FT
2007 PRAIRIE STAR 4940 30 FT
1996 MACK CH613
2012 UNVERFERTH 8250
2006 NEW HOLLAND L170
2008 SEED HAWK 41.5 FT & NEW HOLLAND P1050
AUCTION LOCATION: From MAJOR, SK, go 6.4 km (4 miles) East on Hwy 51, then go 1.6 km (1 mile) South. GPS: 51.865, -109.5305
AUCTION LOCATION: From GRENFELL, SK, go 15 km (9.3 miles) North on Hwy 47, then 4.8 km (3 miles) West, then 0.4 km (0.25 mile) South. GPS: 50.53963, -102.9905
A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2005 Case IH STX425 4WD ¡ 1983 International 5488 2WD ¡ 1983 International 5288 2WD ¡ 2011 Case IH 8120 Combine ¡ 2012 MacDon D60 35 Ft Draper Header ¡ 2012 John Deere A400 36 Ft Swather ¡ Case IH 8240 40 Ft Swather ¡ 2005 International 9200I Sleeper T/A Truck Tractor ¡ 2007 Chevrolet 3500 Silverado Crew Cab 4x4 Flatbed ¡ 2011 Wilson 37 Ft T/A Grain Trailer ¡ 2004 Precision 18
A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2008 Case IH 385 4WD ¡ 1983 John Deere 8450 4WD ¡ 1981 Case 2290 2W 1981 Case 1290 2WD ¡ 2010 John Deere 9870STS ¡ 2010 John Deere 635D 35 Ft Draper ¡ 2007 Prairie Star 4940 30 Ft ¡ 2006 New Holland L170 Skid Steer ¡ Caterpillar 70 13 Cy Hydraulic Pull Scraper ¡ 1996 Mack CH613 T/A Grain Truck ¡ 1981 Chevrolet C70 S/A Grain Truck ¡ 1995 GMC 1500 Extended Cab 4x4 ¡ 2008
Ft T/A Equipment Trailer ¡ Yale FUG20 4000 Lb Forklift ¡ 2008 John Deere 1830 56 Ft Air Drill ¡ Degelman 3013 30 Ft Cultivator ¡ Degelman 570S Rock Picker ¡ 2009 John Deere 4730 100 Ft Sprayer ¡ 2012 Farm King 1370 13 In. x 70 Ft Mechanical Swing Grain Auger ¡ Rem 2100 Grain Vac ¡ John Deere GS3 2630 GPS Display ¡ John Deere StarFire 3000 GPS Receiver ¡ (2) John Deere ATU 200 Steering Kit ...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
Seed Hawk 41.5 Ft Air Drill ¡ 2009 New Holland P1050 385Âą Bushel Tow-Behind Air Tank ¡ 2002 Degelman 7000 50 Ft Heavy Harrows ¡ 2008 Degelman Signature 7200 Hydraulic Rock Picker ¡ 1999 John Deere 4700 90 Ft High Clearance Sprayer ¡ Flexi-Coil 1000 Gallon T/A Nurse Tank ¡ WestďŹ eld MK100-61 10 In. x 61 Ft Mechanical Swing Grain Auger ¡ 2012 Unverferth 8250 875Âą Bushel Grain Cart ...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
Hugh Richelhoff: 306.834.7550, hrichelhoff@hotmail.com
Floyd Werth: 306.697.3130 (h), 306.697.7675 (c), floydwerth@sasktel.net
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Jon Schultz: 306.291.6697 800.491.4494
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Kevin Ortt: 306.451.7388 800.491.4494
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
CLASSIFIED ADS 51
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
Denvig Farms Inc.
R & L Napady Farms Ltd.
Edgeley, SK | April 17, 2014 · 11am
1996 NEW HOLLAND 9282
2006 JOHN DEERE 9660STS
Wroxton, SK | April 19, 2014 · 10 am
1987 GMC GENERAL
2004 CASE IH 8010 & 2007 CASE IH 7010
2011 CASE IH 485
2008 CASE IH 3320 100 FT
AUCTION LOCATION: From EDGELEY, SK, go 4.2 km ( 2.6 miles) West from the Hwy 10 turnoff, then turn right and go 10.5 km ( 6.5 miles) North, Yard on west side. GPS: 50.7019444, -104.0391667
AUCTION LOCATION: From YORKTON, SK, go 40 km (25 miles) East on Hwy 10 to Jct 8, then 9.6 km (6 miles) North, then 1.2 km (0.75 miles) West.
A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 1996 New Holland 9282 4WD · 2006 John Deere 9660STS · MacDon 973 30 Ft Draper · 1987 GMCGeneral T/A Grain Truck · 1982 Ford 700 S/A Grain Truck
A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2011 Case IH 485 4WD · 1993 Ford Designation 6 976 4WD · 2007 Case IH 7010 Combine · 2004 Case IH 8010 Combine · 2006 Hesston 9240 30 Ft Swather · 2006 Westward 9352I 30 Ft Swather · 2001
· 1997 Doepker 36 Ft T/A Grain Trailer · 1995 Massey Ferguson 200 26 Ft Swather · 2000 Seed Hawk 40 Ft Air Drill · 1999 Flexi-Coil 67XLT 88 Ft Field Sprayer · Qty of Bins ...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
Mack Vision T/A Grain Truck · 2009 Timpte 45 Ft Tri/A Grain Trailer · 1978 Caterpillar D7G Crawler Tractor · 2004 Bourgault 5710 54 Ft Air Drill · 2008 Case IH 3320 100 Ft High Clearance Sprayer · Yamaha Electric Golf Cart · Pumps & Tanks ...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com Randy & Linda Napady: 306.742.4254 (h), 306.621.1372 (c)
Dennis Kinvig: 306.332.7214 Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Darren Clarke: 306.529.5399 800.491.4494
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Dan Steen: 306.361.6154 800.491.4494
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
Hanowski Farms Inc. – Larry & Marian Hanowski
Barrie & Melanie Peeke
Melville, SK | April 15, 2014 · 10am
2004 VERSATILE 2375
2008 JOHN DEERE T670
2007 JOHN DEERE 4895 30 FT
Semans, SK | April 21, 2014 · 10 am
2010 NEW HOLLAND 9040
2008 CASE IH SPX3185 90 FT
2009 NEW HOLLAND CX8090
AUCTION LOCATION: From MELVILLE, SK, at the Jct of Hwy 10 & 47 go 9.6 km (6 miles) South on Hwy 47, then 3.2 km (2 miles) East. Yard on South side. GPS: 50.8351, -102.7613
AUCTION LOCATION: From SEMANS, SK, go 9.6 km (6 miles) South on Grid 641, then 5.5 km (3.4 miles) East. Yard on North side. OR From RAYMORE, SK, at the Jct of Hwy 15 & Hwy 6 go 9 km (6 miles) South, then 7.6 km (4.75 miles) West. Yard on North side.
A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2004 Versatile 2375 4WD · 1975 Case 970 2WD · 2008 John Deere T670 Combine · 1991 John Deere 9600 Combine · 2009 MacDon D50 30 Ft Draper Header · 2007 John Deere 4895 30 Ft Swather · 2004 International
A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2010 New Holland 9040 4WD · 2002 Versatile Buhler 2360 4WD · 2009 New Holland T6070 MFWD · 2009 New Holland CX8090 ·2010 Honey Bee 940 30 Ft Draper · 2009 New Holland 8040 30 Ft Swather
9200I T/A Grain Truck · Bourgault 8810 52 Ft Air Seeder · Ezee-On 3550 35 Ft Air Seeder · 2012 Kello-Bilt 225 16 Ft Offset Disc · Degelman S580 Rock Picker · (2) Goebel 8RP15-37-18 3290± Bushel 15 Ft x 5 Ring Hopper Bins...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
· 1995 Kenworth T600 T/A Truck Tractor · 2005 Lode King 36 Ft T/A Grain Trailer · 1997 Morris Maxim 49 Ft Air Drill · 2008 Case IH SPX3185 90 Ft High Clearance Sprayer · 1998 Morris Concept 2000 44 Ft Air Seeder · Qty of Bins...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
Larry Hanowski: 306.728.9033, hanowskifarms@sasktel.net
Barrie or Melanie Peeke: 306.524.2700 (h), 306.746.7337 (c), bandmpeeke@aski.ca
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Dan Steen: 306.361.6154 800.491.4494
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Dan Steen: 306.361.6154 800.491.4494
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
Bill & Mary Reimer
Glen Evenson Farms Ltd. Frontier, SK | April 14, 2014 · 10am
Plumas, MB | April 15, 2014 · 10am
1989 FORD VERSATILE 846 & EZEE-ON 7550 37 FT
1979 CAT 950
2005 NEW HOLLAND TJ325 & 2004 NEW HOLLAND SD440 45 FT
2000 NEW HOLLAND TR99
AUCTION LOCATION: From PLUMAS, MB, go 12.9 km (8 miles) West on Grid #265. South side. GPS: 50.36376, -99.43128
AUCTION LOCATION: From FRONTIER, SK, go 16.1 km (10 miles) North. GPS: 49.3476667, -108.5611056
A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 1989 Ford Versatile 846 4WD · Versatile 750 Series 2 4WD · 1983 Case 2294 2WD · 1998 Massey Ferguson 220 25 Ft Swather ·2003 Kenworth T800 Sleeper T/A Truck Tractor · 1980 Chevrolet Custom Deluxe 30 S/A
A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2005 New Holland TJ325 4WD · 2005 New Holland TG210 MFWD · 1979 Massey Ferguson 255 2WD · 2000 New Holland TR99 Combine · 2001 New Holland 94C 36 Ft Draper Header · 1984 Massey Ferguson 2233 50 Ft Swather · 1981 International 4000 24 Ft Swather · 1980 Ford
Grain Truck · 2009 B&D Trailers 22 Ft T/A End Dump Trailer · 1988 Ford L8000 T/A Mixer Trucks · 1979 Cat 950 Wheel Loader · 4x4 Crane · Concrete Plant · Bartell 48 In. Ride On Concreter Power Trowel · Ezee-On 7550 37 Ft Air Drill...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
F350 Dually Service Truck · 1996 Ford Louisville T/A Grain Truck · 2004 New Holland SD440 45 Ft Air Drill · International 14 Ft Seed Drill · 1995 Flexi-Coil 820 47 Ft Cultivator · 2007 New Holland SF216 100 Ft Field Sprayer · 1978 Spra-Coupe 103 50 Ft Sprayer · 1987 Beeline 40 Ft S/A Chemical Applicator ...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
Bill Reimer: 204.386.2001 (h), 204.476.6392 (c) Jake Reimer: 204.476.6692
Glen Evenson: 306.296.7709; glenevenson@gmail.com
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Travis Sack: 306.280.0829 800.491.4494
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Darren Clarke: 306.529.5399 800.491.4494
52 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
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hodginsauctioneers.com
LIVE AUCTION CLOSE OUT BUD S & BLO S S O M S FLO W ER S HO P
M ONDAY APRIL 21 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 6 :3 0PM
EM ERALD PARK W AREHOUS E To In clud e : W a lk-In Co o ler; Pick M a kin g M a chin e; Nu m ero u s F lo ra l Bu ckets ; Ped es ta ls /d is p la ys ; Wood Dis p la y S helvin g; Ca s ket S a d d les ; L ge Qty o f Co n ta in ers /Va s es - u n iq u e s tyles & s izes ; Ba s kets ; S ign s ; Gift & Arra n gem en t Ca rd s ; Va s t Qty o f Ca n d les & Xm a s S to ck; Des ign er Dis hes ; Pa in tin gs p lu s Co m p lete s electio n o fflo ra l to o ls & a cces s o ries . S ee Ou r W eb s ite Fo r M o re In fo rm a tio n .
P.O. Bo x 308 1 Regin a , S K . S 4P 3G7 Dea ler L ic #319 9 16
PREMIUM SPRING FARM/ CONSIGNMENT SALES UNRESERVED RETIREMENT FARM AUCTION for HAWARDEN FARMS Ltd BILL and LUCY ELLIOTT
Basswood, MB
UNRESERVED RETIREMENT FARM AUCTION for JIM and GARY SHOPLAND
Wednesday, April 16, 2014 Brandon, MB
Saturday, April 19, 2014
2008 CASE IH FHX300
AUCTION LOCATION: From VERMILLION, AB, go 24 km (15 miles) North on Hwy 41, then 9.6 km (6 miles) East on Twp Rd 532, then 2 km (1.2 miles) South on RR 55. East side of road. GPS: 53.553592, -110.717729 A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2007 John Deere 9630 4WD ¡ 2008 New Holland T7040 MFWD ¡ 2000 New Holland TR99 ¡ 2000 New Holland TR96 ¡ New Holland 973 30 Ft Flex Header ¡ 2011 Massey Ferguson 9435 30 Ft Swather ¡ 1979
Kenworth W900 T/A Grain Truck ¡ Flexi-Coil 5000 39.5 Ft Air Seeder ¡ Wil-Rich 32 Ft Deep Tillage Cultivator ¡ New Holland 278 Square Baler ¡ 2008 Case IH FHX300 Forage Harvester Livestock Equipment ¡ Large Quantity of Shop Tools...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
Killarney, MB Premium pieces added this week: 2008 100â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 1074 SS Rogator Sprayer, Auto Farm Full Auto Steer, Invisio Pro Raven Controls, Auto Boom Shut off, 1000 SS Tank, Air bubble Jet Nozzles (5 way) Air Ride (Narrow Rubber 320-90/50 Sell with) -*2012 Westward M155 Dual Direction DSL Swather w/ 35â&#x20AC;&#x2122; D60 Header, single Knife drive, P/U Reel, Header Transport, 600/65/28 Front Rubber, 16.5/16.1 Rear Rubber. Complete list at www.fraserauction.com UNRESERVED RETIREMENT FARM AUCTION for VARCOE FARMS Ltd JAMIE BYROM
Monday, April 21, 2014 Rapid City, MB
UNRESERVED RETIREMENT FARM AUCTION for DANCING HILL FARMS Ltd DOUG and GLORIA BILY
George Convey: 780.853.7767 Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Cody Rude: 780.722.9777 800.491.4494
Tuesday, April 22, 2014 Russell, MB
UNRESERVED RETIREMENT FARM SALE for RICHARDSON BROTHERS FARMS
Wednesday, April 23, 2014 Miniota, MB
UNRESERVED RETIREMENT FARM SALE for EHR FARMS Ltd
Thursday, April 24, 2014
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
Glenella, MB
Tri-Field Farms Ltd. Teulon, MB | April 14, 2014 ¡ 10am
UNRESERVED AUCTION for THE ESTATE of RJ BOB RICHARDS
Friday, April 25, 2014 Killarney, MB
UNRESERVED FARM AUCTION for LORRAINE PAYETTE and THE ESTATE OF HUBERT PAYETTE
Monday, April 28, 2014 Swan Lake, MB
QUARTER SECTION WITH BEAUTIFUL HOME AND SHOP plus LOTS OF OUT BUILDINGS
Thursday, May 1, 2014 2004 & 2005 JOHN DEERE 9860STS
2006 SEEDMASTER 60 FT & 1998 FLEXI-COIL 3450
AUCTION LOCATION: From TEULON, MB, go 14.5 km (10 miles) East on Hwy 17 to Hwy 8, then 0.4 km (0.25 miles) South, #9389. GPS: 50.38402, -97.04417 A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2002 John Deere 9520T TrackTractor ¡ 1996 Case IH 9370 4WD ¡ 2005 New Holland TM130 MFWD ¡ 2005 John Deere 9860STS Combine ¡ 2004 John Deere 9860STS Combine ¡ 2004 Westward 9352I 25 Ft Swather
¡ 2005 Bobcat S130 Skid Steer ¡ 2007 International 9200I T/A ¡ 2000Chevrolet 1500 Silverado Pickup ¡ 2006 Timpte 34 Ft T/A ¡ 2006 Seedmaster 60 Ft Air Drill ¡ Rogator 854 90 Ft High Clearance Sprayer ¡ J&M 750 750¹ Bushel Grain Cart...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com Randy Penner: 204.886.2173 (h), 204.785.0432 (c), penn@mymts.net Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Travis Sack: 306.280.0829 800.491.4494
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hodginsauctioneers.com
R OY FAR M S OF YOUNGS TOW N, ALTA
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
2011 MASSEY FERGUSON 9435 30 FT
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6th ANNUAL KILLARNEY and DISTRICT EQUIPMENT CONSIGNMENT SALE
2007 JOHN DEERE 9630
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Pipestone MB
Clandonald, AB | April 21, 2014 ¡ 10 am
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UNRESERVED RETIREMENT FARM AUCTION for DAVIS KNOWLING FARMS Ltd
George & Sharon Convey â&#x20AC;&#x201D; GSC Ent Ltd.
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Monday, April 14, 2014
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
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Douglas, MB
UNRESERVED RETIREMENT AUCTION for ROY LEITCH LIVESTOCK Ltd
Saturday, May 3, 2014 Clanwilliam, MB
Not responsible for errors in description. Subject to additions and or deletions. Property owners and Fraser Auction Service not responsible for any accidents. GST & PST where applicable. TERMS: Cash or cheque. NOTE: cheques of $50,000 or more must be accompanied by bank letter of credit. Sales conducted by
FRASER AUCTION SERVICE 1-800-483-5856 www.fraserauction.com
W EDNES DAY, AP R IL 2 3 AT 10:00AM
S ale located 11m iles S ou th of You ngs tow n on the 884 C on ta ct:G en e - H om e 40 3- 779 - 2 35 1 G en e - C ell 40 3- 85 4- 0 415 D u a n e - H om e 40 3- 779 - 2 368 D u a n e - C ell 40 3- 85 4- 1163 TR AC TO R S : 2003 M TX200 M cC orm ick FW A , c/ w Q u ick ie 990 FEL, 3p t hitch, 1996 9695 A g co A llis FW A , 1987 3505 M F FW A , c/ w 256 loa d er & 3p t. H itch, 1990 390 M F FW A , 3p thitch, 1971 165 M F, 3p thitch, 1986 685 C a s eIH , c/ w Ez-on 80 FEL, ca b, 3p t hitch H AR V ES TIN G : 1996 8570 M F S P com bin e, 30ftM F9230 s tra ig htcu thea d er, 24ftM F9024 hea d er, 2006 30ftM F9420 S P s w a ther, 5200 s lid in g ta ble, 2008 RB564 Ca s e rou n d ba ler, 1033 New Holla n d ba le w a g on TR UCKS : 2004 Chev S ilvera d o 3500 4x4 Du ra m a x d ies el, a u tom a tic, c/ w 10.5ft Cou rtn ey Berg Hyd ra d eck , 1981 Ford 800 Lou is ville, 18ftw ood box. 1968 Fa rg o 500, 15ft w ood box, 1981 Chev cu s tom d elu xe 30, 10ft fla td eck ,1999 F150 4X4 Plu s s evera l 4X4 1/ 2 ton s . M ACHIN ER Y : 30ftFrig g s ta d a irs eed er, m ou n ted p a ck ers , 12in ch s p a cin g s . 1330 FlexiCoil tow betw een ta n k , hyd fa n , s hed d ed , s ells s ep a ra te. 30ftFrig g s ta d d eep tilla g e cu ltiva tor, (g rey) c/ w tin e ha rrow s . 41ft FlexiCoil 800 cu ltiva tor, c/ w tin e ha rrow s . 546 Rock om a tic rota ry rock p ick er, p to d rive. TR AILER S : 2003 24ftTra iltech Tria xle g oos n eck fla t bed tra iler. 1995 18ft Rea l In d u s tries , g oos en eck , TA S tock tra iler LIV ES TO CK EQ UIPM EN T: 256 Ha ybu s ter 3p t hitch ba le p roces s or, Da vis feed m ixer. Porta ble S ola r w a ter s ys tem , 352 M ix M ill. C+J Jon es hyd p os t p ou n d er, tra iler typ e BIN S & AUG ER R V : 2001 Hon d a Form a n ES 4x4 A TV. 1999 TRX250X 2w d q u a d . 1986 Hon d a Fou rtra x 250.
THE S W AN FAM ILY OF S M ILEY, S K.
THUR S DAY, AP R IL 2 4 AT 10:00AM
S ale located 1 m ile North of S m iley on Hw y 307,1 m ile W es t, and 1 1/ 2 m iles North C on ta ct:B rya n 30 6- 463- 812 7 TR AC TO R S : 1987 9110 C a s eIH 4w d , 12 s p eed p ow ers hift, 3 s ets hyd , Big 1000 p to, 1982 4490 C a s e 4w d , 1976 1070 C a s e, p ow ers hiftc/ w 70 s eries FEL HAR V ES TIN G : 1993 C a s eIH 1688 S P com bin e, a u g er exten s ion , fold in g hop p er exten s ion , Belt Pick u p , 30ft 1020 Ca s eIH flex hea d er, c/ w p ick u p reels a n d A W S a ir reel 30ft 1010 C a s eIH hea d er, ba t reels . 30ft 730 C a s eIH p to s w a therM ACHIN ER Y : 32ftBou rg a u ltA irS eed er, FH528-32 cu ltiva tor, c/ w 2155 ta n k , ca rbid e k n ives , c/ w both p a ck ers a n d ha rrow s 1994 216 M elroe S p ra -Cou p e 60ft, 35ftCa s eIH 5600 cu ltiva tor, 100ftFlexi-Coil m od el 67 s p ra yer, 70ft Bra n d t Q u ick Fold s p ra yer, 14ft Hu tchm a s ter d ou ble d is c TR UCKS : 2004 Chev Z71 4x4 exten d a ca b, s hortbox, 1972 IHC 1600 loa d s ta r, 15fts teel box. 1977 Ford F350 11fts teel box, 1976 Ford F-150 4x4 AUG ER : 2009 10x71 W hea thea rt S w in g a w a y A u g er, c/ w electric s w in g lift a n d m over (rem ote con trol) TR AILER S : 1989 20ft A rm co Fla t d eck G oos en eck tra iler, TA , 1987 24ftCita tion 5th W heel tra vel tra iler.
EVAN AND DIANNE LUBIANES KY OF CACTUS LAKE, S K.
S ATUR DAY, AP R IL 2 6 AT 10:00AM
S ale located 8 m iles S ou th of Cactu s Lake on hw y 317, then 1/ 2 m ile Eas tand 1 m ile North. C on ta ct:P erry a fter 5 pm 30 6- 834- 72 9 9
TR ACTO R S : 1998 New Holla n d Vers a tile 9682 4w d , 1966 hou rs 1986 Ca s eIH 4894, 1985 2750 JD, c/ w 146 loa d er. 1977 JD 2130, c/ w 146 FEL 3p t. 1976 JD 2130, c/ w 146 FEL. 1976 1570 Ca s e, 1976 1270 Ca s e, 1972 Ca s e 970, c/ w Ezee-O n FEL, 1965 930 C a s e 1953 VA C a s e H AR V ES TIN G : 1991 9400 JD S p com bin e, 912 hea d er JD belt p ick u p , 1982 JD 7721 p to com bin e, 1996 M F200 26ftS P s w a ther, s lid in g ta ble, 30ftCa s eIH 730 p to s w a ther. 16ftNew Holla n d 116 ha ybin e, 1999 New Holla n d 688 rou n d ba ler, M ACHIN ER Y : 40ft Bou rg a u lt A ir S eed er, 8800 cu ltiva tor, c/ w 3225 ta n k , 56ft Bou rg a u lt 9400 Cu ltiva tor, 60ft Flexi-Coil S ys tem 92 ha rrow p a ck er ba r, P20 p a ck ers tin e ha rrow s .TM 20 Rock om a tic 20ft rock ra k e p to d rive, 2001 90ft 1500 Q u ick fold Bra n d t s p ra yer, L-106 Ha ybu s ter Rock -eze, ra k e a n d tu m ble rock p ick er. 12ft Kellou g h Bros brea k in g d is c, n otched bla d es TR UCKS : 1981 Chev 70, 15ftS teel box. 1990 Peterbilt379 TA ba le tru ck , 425HP 3126 CA T, 18 s p eed , 24.5 tires , c/ w 11 ba le s elf u n loa d in g s hop bu ilt ba le d eck . 1999 Chev 1500 Exten d a Ca b 4x4, 3rd d oor, s hortbox BO BCAT: 975 Bobca t, c/ w 7ftd ig g in g bu ck et. TR AILER S : 24ftTria xle tiltd eck fla tbed tra iler, 1992 12ft W y-Lee s tock Tra iler Y AR D: Leon M 850 8 1/ 2 ya rd s cra p er, 3650 Deg elm a n 12ftbox s cra p er, Plu s la rg e s election ofs hop .
S a le m a na ged a nd cond ucted b y P ATTON AUCTIONS M a jor, S a s k., 306- 8 38 - 435 6 or vis itus on line: w w w.a uctions a les .ca or vis itour w eb s ite: w w w.p a ttona uctions .ca S K Lic . #914527 AB Lic . #190527
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
FARM MACHINERY AUCTION Conducted by Johnstone Auction Mart for Dale Ehlie, Disley, SK., Tuesday, April 22, 2014, 10:30 AM. Directions: West of Lumsden on Hwy. #11 to the Disley Turnoff, then 1 mile south across the tracks, then 1 mile west, then 3 miles south, then 2 miles west, then 1 mile south, west side of road. Direction from South: Go N. on Stony Beach grid at Belle Plaine, watch for signs. 1995 CIH 7220 tractor, MFWD, 18 spd. trans., triple hyds. and return line for air seeder; Case 1070 tractor, 5500 hrs.; Case 830 Comfort King tractor, DuAll FEL, new rear tires; MH 44 tractor, rebuilt starter, rebuilt alternator; 1978 GMC Sierra 6000 grain truck, 9.00x20 tires, 8’x16’x40” smooth wall B&H, roll tarp, 32,600 kms; 1974 GMC 6000, 4x2 trans., AC, wood floor, roll tarp, 9.00x20 tires, 36,000 miles; 1957 GMC 2 ton, 4 spd., wood B&H; 1997 Chev 1500 4x4 truck, auto, straight cab, longbox, 226,000 kms; 1952 Ford F3 3/4 ton truck, V8 engine is seized; 2- 1620 bu. Westeel Rosco 4 ring steel bins on hoppers; 4- 1900 bu. Westeel Rosco 5 ring bins on hoppers; 3- 2200 bu. Chief Westland 5 ring bins on hoppers; 38 ton fert. bin and 30 ton fert. bin; Sakundiak HD 7-1400 auger w/Kohler 20 HP ES engine; Sakundiak HD 7”x37’ auger w/20 HP Honda eng; Westeel bin lids and bin sheets; endgate drill fill; hyd. drive bin sweep; Wisconsin Model AENL auger motor; Labtronics grain tester; Bourgault 8800 24’ air seeder, individual packer wheels, 2130 hyd. drive air tank, single chute; 1987 JD 7720 Titan II combine, chopper, air foil chaffer, hydro. drive, JD 212 header, reverser, 3471 hrs; 1981 JD 7720 turbo combine, chopper, chaff spreader, JD 212 header, reverser, ext. auger, posi-torque drive, 4500 hrs; Flexi-Coil System 50 62’ field sprayer, foam marker, PTO pump (1000 PTO, rebuilt last yr.), 5 and 10 gal. SS nozzles; Versatile 10 20’ PTO swather, PU and batt reels; MF 35 24’ PTO swather, crop lifters; Koenders 8’ swath roller; MF 360 18’ discer; Rite-Way 68’ harrow bar, tine harrows; CCIL 203 24’ cult. w/MTD; Cockshutt 12’ cult. w/spikes; Int. 12’ cult., no shovels; 30’ harrow bar, diamond harrows; straw chopper for JD 6601 combine; Hurricane chaff spreader for JD 7721; Willcar 10’ land leveler; Schulte 8’ front mount snowblower; Bush Hog 15’ gyro mower; 1000 gal. Westeel water tank on skids; Clipper 27 grain cleaner w/all extra screens; MF 2000 riding mower; MTD Lawn Flight riding mower; Coates 705 tire changer; Craftsman 10” contractor table saw; Contractor mitre saw; Lincoln arc welder; 6.5 HP upright air compressor; 15+ traps; Hyd. drive log splitter; Chain type cattle oiler; Shaver front mount post pounder; 8’ hog self-feeder; Bale elevator on wheels; Telephone poles; PTO drive wire winder; NH 271 sq. baler; PTO drive cordwood saw; Slip tank w/elec. pump; Fuel tanks and stands; AC refilling equipment w/gauges; Quantity of collector bottles, jugs, etc.; Antique parachute; Meat grinder; Acme counter scale; Beam scale; Economy brass wash board; Cream cans; Clawfoot tub; Stationary engine; JD one way; 1950’s and 1960’s Popular Mechanics and Popular Science books, equipment manuals and repair books for some machinery not in the auction; Antique car parts; Metal tractor seats. Neighbour Consignment: 1978 NH Super 1049 SP bale wagon, 2987 hrs. For specific info. phone Dale 306-731-7165. Pictures and details www.johnstoneauction.ca PL #91447.
SHORT NOTICE!!! Online ONLY Bankruptcy Auction of Solar Outpost Inc. Saskatoon, SK. As instructed by MNP, Grasswood Auctions will sell the following partial List: 2008 – F-450 cab and chassis, 2008 F-350 Crew Cab, 2007 Ford Service Truck, 2010 Nissan Titan, 2006 Hino 4 ton deck truck w/picker, Enclosed Cargo trailer, tandem axle dual wheeled flat deck trailer, Ditchwitch Trencher, pipe threaders, 100’s of power tools, new solar panels, electrical switch gear, rolls of electrical cable, wind turbine towers, new Geothermal furnaces, steel, aluminum, new water heaters, tanks, compressors, plus much more. Pincipals vehicles-2010 Mercedes C300 4 matic, 2007 BMW X5.
GrasswoodAuctions.com For Details SALE STARTS CLOSING AT 10AM APRIL 13TH *Watch for Upcoming Sale for Shore Gold Inc. Including Complete Processing & Crushing Plant.
GRASSWOOD AUCTIONS PL#914915, Saskatoon
Ph: (306) 955- 4044 w w w.gra ssw o o d a u ctio n s.co m
CLASSIFIED ADS 53
W hite w ood Live s toc k S a le s Consignment Sale
Thu rs d a y M a y 1 a t 11 a m
At W hitew o o d Livesto ck S a les Highw a y 1 W es t, W hitew o o d , S K .
Open to c ons ignm ents of:
MACK AUCTION COMPANY presents a Farm Equip. Auction for Wilfred and Joan Messer 306-461-5145, Monday, April 14, 2014, 10:00 AM. Directions from Macoun, Sask. 4 miles South. Watch for Signs! Live internet bidding at Bidspotter.com JD 8450 4WD tractor, Case 2290 2WD tractor w/duals, Case 1494 2WD tractor with Case 66L FEL and 3 PTH, 24’ Seed Hawk air drill w/onboard Magnum 257 air tank, 32’ Case field cultivator with Degelman harrows, 29’ IH 55 DT cultivator, Malcam 24’ DT cult., Melroe 5 bottom plow, Co-op G100 discers, diamond harrow packer drawbar, MF 860 SP combine with 2750 hours, MF 9024 straight cut header, MF 9030 straight cut header, 30’ JD 590 PT swather, Buhler Farm King steel drum roller, 90’ Flexi-Coil field sprayer, Degelman PTO rockpicker, 100 gallon slip tank with electric pump, 1250 gallon poly water tank, Trimble EZGuide 500 GPS, 1977 Dodge 600 3 ton grain truck, 1977 Dodge 600 3 ton grain truck, 1984 GMC Sierra 1500 pickup, 4Twister 2300 bushel hopper bottom grain bins, Twister 4000 bu. hopper bottom bin, 2- Behlen 2950 bu. grain bins on cement, 2- Westeel 3300 bu. grain bins on cement, Westeel 2750 bushel grain bin on cement, Westeel 1650 bu. grain bin on wood floor, OPI Stormax grain temp monitor and cables, Motomco 919 moisture tester, Sakundiak 7-45 auger with Kohler engine, Sakundiak 7-51 auger w/Onan eng., hyd. binsweep, Honda 250 Big Red, Deines zero turn mower, Craftsman snowblower, JD lawn mower, Shur Lift pressure washer, 3 PTH flail mower, 3 PTH cult., 3 PTH disc, 3 PTH Allied snowblower, complete line of shop tools and much more!! Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. Join us on Facebook and Twitter. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL 311962.
MACK AUCTION CO. presents a Farm and Livestock Equipment Auction for Dave and Doreen MacCuish 306-486-4911 on Tuesday, April 15, 2014, 10:00 AM. Directions from Frobisher, Sask. 3 miles South. Watch for signs! Live internet bidding at www.bidspotter.com Ford Versatile 876 4WD tractor w/5195 hrs, NH TM135 FWA tractor and FEL w/2455 hrs, Versatile 836 4WD tractor w/professional rebuilt engine and PTO, MF 2745 2WD tractor w/3609 hours, MF 35 2WD tractor w/3 PTH, JD 9500 SP combine and JD 214 PU header w/2472 sep. hours, 30’ JD 930R straight cut header, 32’ Seed Hawk 32-12 air drill w/onboard 110 bu. seed tank and 1450 gal. onboard liquid fertilizer tank, 35’ Bourgault 8810 air seeder with JD 787 air cart, Willmar Eagle 8200 SP 90’ high clearance sprayer and AutoSteer Trimble AutoMapping w/2500 hrs, JD 567 round baler w/netwrap and silage kit, Premier 2900 SP Cummins turbo swather with 30’ MacDon 960 draper header, 16’ MacDon 922 hay header with steel crimper, Golden Bell straight cut header trailer, Gleaner N-6 SP combine w/2238 hrs, 30’ Gleaner straight cut header, Jiffy Bale processor, Morris 14 bale Hay Hiker trailer, Degelman Strawmaster 7000 heavy harrows with Valmar 4400, Farm King roller mill, Morris 43’ cult. with Valmar 240, Morris Magnum CP-731 cultivator, Big G 24’ tandem disc, Valmar 240 granular applicator, Chem Handler I, 12V Chemical transfer pump and meter, 1988 IH S1900 tandem axle grain truck, 1976 Ford F600 grain truck, 1975 Western Star tandem water truck, 2003 Wilkinson 14’ bumper pull stock trailer, 3- Goebel 3500 bushel hopper bins, 2- Goebel 4200 bushel hopper bins, 10,000 bu. steel grain ring, Westfield MK 13-71 swing auger, Walinga 510 grain vac, Brandt 7-45 auger with Kohler engine, Farm King 8-51 PTO auger, Pattison 8300 gal. liquid tank, 2Hold-On 4500 gallon liquid tank, Hold-On 1500 gal. liquid tank, approx. 3000 gallons of liquid fertilizer, Schulte 9600 3 PTH snowblower, Leon 36-14 6-way dozer blade with Versatile 876 mounts, Harley high dump rockpicker, 20’ Harley rock windrower, C&J trailer post pounder, 4- YKS 20.5-25 wheel loader tires, JD HPX Gator ATV w/hydraulic dump and 380 hrs, Arctic Cat 3000 snow machine, snow machine sleigh, Generac SVP 5000 generator, Eagle horizontal air compressor, Easy Clean steam washer, electric diesel fired washer, floating slough pumps, 2” gas water pumps, Degelman single acting hydraulic tine angle kit 7000 heavy harrow, plus much more! For sale bill and photos visit www.mackauctioncompany.com Join us on Facebook and Twitter. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962
FARM EQUIPM ENT; CATTLE HANDLING EQUIPM ENT; VEHICLES; TRAILERS; RV’S; ATVS; GOLF CARTS; ETC.
Plea s e ca ll ea rly to co n s ign s o w e m a y ha ve s u fficien ttim e to a d vertis e.
C a ll 306-7 35 -2822 to b o o k. As they b eco m e a va ila b le, p ictu res a n d a co m p lete lis tin g w ill b e a t w w w .w hite w o o d live s to c k.c o m u n d er “ F o r S a le” ta b – u p d a ted d a ily.
Hors e & Ta c k S a le S a tu rd a y, M a y 31 Ta ck 10 AM . Ho rses 1 PM .
MACK AUCTION CO. presents a Farm and Livestock Equipment Auction for Ross and Ron Moncrief 306-489-4913 or 306-489-4813, Wednesday, April 16, 2014, Alameda, Sask. Directions from Alameda 5 miles West and 3/4 miles North at 10:00 AM. Watch for signs! Live internet bidding at www.bidspotter.com JD 8570 4WD tractor w/4490 hours, JD 6300L FWA tractor w/JD 640 FEL and open cab, JD 9500 SP combine w/JD 914 PU header and 2500 sep. hours, JD 930R straight cut header, Trailtech straight cut header trailer, 25’ Premier 1900 PT swather, Koenders poly swath roller, Labtronics moisture tester, 1987 IH 466 diesel single axle S1900 grain truck, 1980 Chev C-60 3 ton grain truck, 1965 Dodge 500 grain truck, NH BR780 round baler, NH 116 haybine, NH 1033 PT square bale wagon, Jiffy bale processor, NH 357 mixmill, NH 791 manure spreader, NH side delivery rake, MF 124 square baler, Real Industries tandem axle gooseneck stock trailer, Peerless PTO roller mill, Horst 18 bale hay trailer, Pearson squeeze chute, Lewis cattle oilers, Dust Actor mineral feeders, metal clad calf shelter, quantity of corral panels and gates, windbreak panels, barbwire and electric fencing supplies, round bale feeders, vet and misc. cattle supplies, 14” and 15” Western saddles, 35’ Morris 8900 air seeder and Morris 6130 air cart, 35’ Morris CP 732 cult. with anhydrous kit, 37’ Morris CP 731 cult., 36’ Morris rodweeder, 56’ Morris tine harrows, 15’ Cockshutt cult., 14’ Oliver tandem disc, Farm King 10-70 swing auger, Sakundiak 7-40 auger with Kohler engine and Wheatheart binsweep, EZ Guide GPS, Schulte front mount snowblower, Easy Load 2 compartment tote tank, 25’ Brandt 3 PTH sprayer, Bush Hog 3 PTH mower, Wilkomi PTO grass weeder, ATV yard sprayer, Polaris 300 Explorer quad, 1971 Yamaha 650 motorcycle, Arctic Cat 340 snow machine, MF 832 lawn tractor, Yard Machine, rototiller, Honda 2” and 3” water pumps, 1000 gallon fuel tank and stand, slip tanks and pumps, complete line of shop tools plus much more!! Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. Join us on Facebook and Twitter. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL 311962.
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. 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. 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. 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 TRUCK BONEYARD INC. Specializing in obsolete parts, all makes. Trucks bought for wrecking. 306-771-2295, Balgonie, SK.
2010 LODE-KING PRESTIGE Super B grain trailers. Asking $45,000. 306-468-7977, 306-468-2712, Canwood, SK. 2005 LODE-KING OPEN end Super B, red, 11.4x25 rubber like new, air ride, nice shape, fresh safety, $45,000. Millhouse Farms Inc., 306-398-4079, Cut Knife, SK. NEW WILSON SUPER B in stock, tridem, one 2 hopper, two 3 hoppers, also tandem; 2008 Lode-King alum. open end Super B, alum. rims, air ride; 1995 Castleton tridem, air ride; 17’ A-train pup, very clean, certified. Ph 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. www.rbisk.ca DL #905231. 2003 CASTLETON 3675F 36’ grain trailer. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 2003 DOEPKER SPECIAL 36’ grain trailer, alum. slopes, open ends, air ride, 11Rx22.5, one owner, $30,000; 1995 FLD112 Freightliner, Cummins M11, 400 HP, Integral sleeper, 12/40 rears, 411 ratio, 10 spd., 11Rx22.5, 210” WB, 2nd owner, records since 1997, shedded, $17,500. Both units excellent shape, new safety, can split. 306-549-4701, Hafford, SK.
2012 LODE-KING ALUM. tridem grain trailer, Michelin tires, air ride, low mileage, vg, $55,000. 780-975-0051, Legal, AB. STOP SENSOR - The award winning Stop Sensor is now available in Canada! Call Osiris Ag at 306-514-3427. osirisag.com Saskatoon, SK.
SIDE-ROLL TARPS AND SYSTEMS
“Canadian Made”CALL FOR PRICING Michel’s Industries and Shur-Lok (Replacement Tarps and Parts).
REPAIR SERVICE TO ALL INDUSTRIAL FABRIC PRODUCTS
10
SPRING SPECIAL UP TO SEE WEBSITE FOR MORE DETAILS
%
OFF
www.cantarp.com
SANDBLASLTING AND PAINTING. We do welding, patching, repairs, rewiring of trucks, trailers, heavy equipment, etc. We use epoxy primers and polyurethane topc o at s . C o m p e t i t i ve r at e s . A g r i m e x 306-432-4444, Dysart, SK. 2009 TIMPTE SUPER B lead trailer. Call 1-800-667-2074. PL #915407. 1996 LODE-KING SUPER B grain trailers closed end, exc., spring ride, 24.5 tires at 50%, tarps vg, round fenders, very little rust, paint vg, farm used, lower mileage, $34,000. Lloyd Sproule, 403-627-2764 or 403-627-7363, Pincher Creek, AB. 1993 DOEPKER TRIDEM grain trailer. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
NORMS SANDBLASTING & PAINT, 40 years body and paint experience. We do metal and fiberglass repairs and integral to daycab conversions. Sandblasting and paint to trailers, trucks and heavy equip. Endura primers and topcoats. A one stop shop. Norm 306-272-4407, Foam Lake SK. 1974 TRAILMOBILE END dump grain trailer. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
CANADIAN TARPAULIN MANUFACTURERS LTD.
Email: sales@cantarp.com 1-888-CAN-TARP (226-8277)
(306) 933-2343 | Fax: (306) 931-1003
2007 NEVILLE 41’ grain trailer, T/A. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1996 DOEPKER TRI-AXLE grain trailer with 3 compartments and air ride. Kolish Farm Equipment Auction, Saturday, April 19, 2014, Creelman, Sask. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 2012 GRAV HAUL 2 hopper tridem, 48’ air ride, 24.5” steel wheels. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK.
306-363-2131
TWO 2006 MERRITT quad cattle/hog trailers, $60,000/ea; 2011 Merritt cattle hog, $72,000. 403-625-4658, Claresholm, AB.
IHC 6 CYLINDER ENGINE with 3 speed manual transmission, complete drop-in. Call 306-423-6236, Hoey, SK. SASKATOON TRUCK PARTS CENTRE Ltd. North Corman Industrial Park. New and used parts available for 3 ton highway tractors including custom built tandem converters and wet kits. All truck makes/models bought and sold. Shop service available. Specializing in repair and custom rebuilding for transmissions and differentials. Now offering driveshaft repair and assembly from passenger vehicles to heavy trucks. For more info call 306-668-5675 or 1-877-362-9465. www.saskatoontruckparts.ca DL #914394
SALES & RENTALS WE SELL AND RENT
Hi Boys, Low Boys, Drop Decks, Storage Vans, Reefer Vans and Freight Vans & More. 7 KM West of RED DEER from Junction of HWY. 2 & 32nd St.
403-347-7721
TRAILERS- ADVANTAGE AUTO AND Trailer. Livestock, horse and living quarter, flatdeck, goosenecks, tilts, dumps, cargos, utilities, Ski-Doo and ATV, dry van and sea containers. Call today over 250 in stock, 204-729-8989 in Brandon, MB. on the Trans Canada Hwy. www.aats.ca STAINLESS STEEL TANKER, 6000 gal. TA, center load/unload, 1990 Polar, excellent, $22,500. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. 2007 DOEPKER 53’ tri-axle highboy, pullout lights and rear strobes, $29,000. 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB. 1980 40 TON Willock lowboy, 9’ wide, SCHOOL BUSES: 1986 to 2002, 20 to 66 2013 LODE-KING LOWBED tri-axle good shape, safetied, asking $20,000 OBO. pass., $1600 and up. Phoenix Auto, Lucky 10x53’, tri-drive neck, like new, $84,000. Call: 306-692-6307, Moose Jaw, SK. Millhouse Farms Inc., 306-398-4079, Cut Lake, SK., 1-877-585-2300. DL #320074. Knife, SK. 1997 DOPEKER SUPER B grain trailers, closed ends, 24.5 tires, spring ride, $22,000; 1997 Doepker TA, 28’ spring ride, $16,000. 306-424-2690, Montmartre, SK.
WWW.BERGENINDUSTRIES.COM
WRECKING: 2003 MACK, Eaton diffs., air ride, 11.00x22.5, alum. budds, enclosed alum. headache rack, alum. moose bar, 18 spd. trans; 15 spd. and 9 spd. 1986 Mack diffs., camel back; Moose bar for Kenworth T800. 306-960-3000, St. Louis, SK. 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. 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 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. WRECKING SEMI-TRUCKS, lots of parts. Call Yellowhead Traders. 306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK.
LACOMBE TRAILER
2010 TIMPTE SUPER B grain trailers, high capacity 84” walls, 22.5 alum. wheels, very good tarps and rubber, air ride, 366,544 kms on wheel hub, safetied, $75,000. 204-746-5575, Morris, MB. 2012 DOEPKER SUPER B grain bulkers, premium shape, Michelin tires, $78,000 OBO. 306-874-7696, Quill Lake, SK. REMOTE CONTROL TRAILER CHUTE openers can save you time, energy and keep you safe this seeding season. FM remote controls provide maximum range 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: www.brehonag.com Saskatoon, SK. 2010 WILSON SUPER B, white, lift axles, elec. tarp, tires/ brakes- 70%, 8/10 cond, $69,900 firm. 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com SANDBLAST AND PAINT your grain trailers, boxes, flatdecks and more. We use industrial undercoat and paint. Can zinc coat for added rust protection. Quality workmanship guaranteed. Prairie Sandblasting and Painting, 306-744-7930, Saltcoats, SK.
NEW NEVILLE TRI-AXLES tandems and pups available for spring. Call now to book your April builds and lock in your exchange rates for spring savings. Call Dwight at Corner Equip., 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. 2 0 0 9 L O D E - K I N G S u p e r - B , walls, slopes, tarps good shape, complete brake job, new rubber, lift axles, certified, $67,000. 780-552-3428, Valleyview, AB.
GRASSLAND TRAILERS OFFERING a full line of trailers by Titan, W-W and Circle-d. Steel and aluminum livestock trailers, 10’ to 32’; Steel 20’ gooseneck livestock trailers starting at $10,000. Leasing available. Call Glen at: 306-640-8034, or email: g m 9 3 @ s a s k t e l . n e t Assiniboia, SK. Where quality and value are our priority. 2003 WILKINSON 14’ bumper pull stock trailer. Dave MacCuish Farm Equipment Auction, Tuesday, April 15, 2014, Frobisher, Sask. area. For sale bill and photos visit www.mackauctioncompany.com Mack Auction Co. 306-421-2928, 306-487-7815. PL #311962.
2014 BISON TRAIL Express 3H 10’ LQ, AC, 6’ slide out, collapsible rear tach, 6 cu. ft. fridge, #4102, $44,000. Shop online 24/7 at: allandale.com or call: 1-866-346-3148.
2014 FEATHERLITE 8127-7024 stock trailer, Stk. #132816, $19,995. Shop online 24/7 at: allandale.com or 1-866-346-3148
NEW 2014 GERMANIC R20-3500 end dump, 36’x102”, tri-axle, air ride, Michel’s flip tarp, 11R22.5 tires, new Manitoba s a f e t y , $ 5 6 , 0 0 0 . C a n d e l i v e r. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. ROYAL ENCLOSED REFRIGERATED T/A van trailer. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 2000 ARNE’S TRIDEM end dump, tarp, alum. budds, certified. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. www.rbisk.ca DL #905231. NEW NEVILLE BUILT 53’ tridem drop deck trailer with beavertails, $40,500. Call 780-373-2161, Bawlf, AB. STEPDECK: 1998 48’ tandem axle trailer, $16,900 ea. 306-280-4677, Saskatoon, SK. DL #318566. 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, will split; Tandem and S/A converter with drop hitch; 53’-28’ van trailers; B-train salvage trailers; High clearance sprayer trailer w/tanks and chem handlers. Call 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. www.rbisk.ca DL #905231. 2011 DOEPKER RGN machinery trailer, 53’ tri-axle, c/w alum. pullouts, rear strobes, and pullout lights, side winches, alum rims $53,000. 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB. NEW NEVILLE BUILT 45’ tandem drop deck trailer with beavertails, $33,500. Call 780-373-2161, Bawlf, AB. 2010 ARNE’S TRIAXLE cross dump gravel trailer, to be sold at Hodgin’s Auction, April 17th. 204-365-7358, Strathclair, MB. 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. 2006 MUVALL MACHINERY trailer, 53’ triaxle, hyd. beavertail and winch, alum. pullouts to 15’, pullout lights and rear strobes, $45,000. 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB. 8’x23’ CARGO TRAILER, rear ramp, side door, double floor and walls, roof AC, 50 amp service, new cond. View at 511 - 3rd St., Davidson, SK. 403-318-7589 (AB. cell) 2012 BEHNKE 53’ trailer, tri-axle spring ride, 13’ upper, 35’ lower, 5’ beavertail, sprayer cradles and ramps, 2- 2600 gal. black poly tanks, 3” pump and chem handler. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. 45 FLATDECKS, 6 lowbeds, 7 gravel trailers. Check pictures and prices at www.trailerguy.ca or call 306-222-2413, Aberdeen/Saskatoon, 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 FLEETNECK 2012, 40’ trailer, grey metallic, tool box, rear overwidth light, low profile, hyd. dovetail, HD pintle ring, sway control. 780-205-2810 306-383-3599 Quill Lake SK 2012 CANCADE GRAVEL trailer. See full ad under Gravel Trucks or call 306-383-3599 or 780-205-2810 cell. Quill Lake, SK. 2005 DOEPKER 53’ tri-axle drop deck, hardly used farm hay hauler, $25,000. 306-492-4751, Dundurn, SK. 24’ GOOSENECK tridem 21,000 lbs, $7890; Bumper pull tandem lowboy: 18’, 14,000 lbs., $3975; 16’, 10,000 lbs., $3090; 16’, 7000 lbs., $2650. Factory direct. 888-792-6283. www.monarchtrailers.com 2013 BWS AIR detach machinery trailer, 10’ wide with alum. pullouts, lift axle, $80,000. 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB. 2007 ARNE’S END DUMP gravel trailer, safetied til Oct. 2014, good 24.5 rubber, steel inner/alum. outers, fair condition, needs paint, asking $30,000. Shellbrook, SK. Call 306-747-3292 or 780-713-5967.
CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com PRECISION TRAILERS: Gooseneck and bumper hitch. You’ve seen the rest, now WAYNE’S TRAILER REPAIR. Specializing o w n t h e b e s t . H o f f a r t S e r v i c e s , in aluminum livestock trailer repair. Blaine Lake, SK, 306-497-2767. SGI accredited. 306-957-2033, www.precisiontrailer.com
54 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
BEHNKE DROP DECK semi style and pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, tandem and tridems. Contact SK: 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336.
M ED IUM D UTY TRUCK S
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
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
2006 GMC 3500 4x4 dsl., auto., 8’ box, ext. cab, 233,000 kms- 80% hwy., grill guard, newer tires, batteries and air bags, A/T/C, PL, very clean, well maintained, asking $20,900. 306-681-8933, Moose Jaw, SK. 2006 DODGE RAM 2500 SLT, 5.7L Hemi, loaded, 4x4, $13,995 PST paid; Also 2 dsl 5.9L. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 2005 FORD F-150 LAREDO, crew cab, 4X4, short box, lockable metal box cover, 5.4L V8 $7000 OBO. 306-859-4925, Beechy, SK. 2005 CHEVY DURAMAX ext. cab, 4x4, auto., 280,000 kms., well maintained, cloth, bed liner, 5th wheel, asking $9500. Call 306-861-6934, Yellow Grass, SK. 1988 F150 1/2 ton; 1991 Ford E150, 10 pass van; 1988 F250 ext. cab; 1976 F250 ext. cab. All new engines. 306-262-6230.
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
1997 FORD RANGER XLT, 4x4, 4L, 181,000 kms, A/T/C, asking $7000. 306-435-3352, Moosomin, SK.
2004 FORD F350, dually, service deck, air compressor w/extra storage, 1200 litre CO tank w/pump, 5th wheel hitch, field ready, gd cond. 306-693-3011, Moose Jaw, SK.
2013 GMC SIERRA 3500 SLT, 1 ton, leather, dsl, 4 to choose from starting $49,995. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca
2005 JEEP TJ SPORT, 112,000 kms, 6 cyl., 6 spd., green, 2 tops. Asking $11,500. 306-647-2588, 306-521-0803 Theodore SK 2006 FORD F350, 4x4, V-10, ext. cab truck, 132,000 miles, PW, PDL, PS, AC, front end all reconditioned, asking $8900. 306-250-9664, Saskatoon, SK. 2008 DODGE 3500 SRW SLT quad cab, 144,000 kms, leather; 2008 Dodge 5500 SLT quad cab, HD AISIN 6 spd auto, 195,000 kms. $21,500/each; 2001 Dodge 3500 DRW quad cab, Cummins 6 spd. standard, 254,000 kms, premium, $11,500. Calgary, AB. 403-938-3888. 2010 F350 4X4, King Ranch black crewcab, diesel, single wheel, shortbox, loaded, HD alum. bumper, headache rack, 142,000 kms., factory warranty, $38,900 OBO. 403-845-2488, Rocky Mountain House, AB.
2013 GMC SIERRA 3500 SLE, 6.0L, gas, dually, loaded, 23,000 kms., Save $$$. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca
CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com
WWW.TITANTRUCKSALES.COM to view information or call 204-685-2222 to check out our inventory of quality used highway tractors! CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com
2013 CHEV SILVERADO 3500 LTZ, dually, fully loaded, 15,000 kms., dvd, Must see! Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca
2012 FORD F350 KING RANCH dually longbox, 4x4, 6 spd. auto, 6.7 dsl. w/64,000 miles- 90% highway, equipped w/tool and fuel tank, trailer towing pkg., mint cond., asking $52,500. Moosomin, SK., 306-435-2024, 306-735-7055. 2012 FORD F150 XTR, loaded, Eco Boost, 60,000 kms., for $28,995. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 2012 DODGE RAM 3500 MegaCab Laramie, 3 to choose from starting at $46,995. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 2011 GMC SIERRA SLT, 4x4 Duramax, crew cab, fully loaded, excellent condition, $34,900. 204-324-6298, Altona, MB.
2009 GM C C8500 Can cad e Alu m in u m Bo x,Ele ctric Ro llTo p,Pin tle Hitch,W hite , 38,029km . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $89 ,9 9 5 2008 FR EIGHTL INER CO L U M BIA De tro it60 Se ve s (51 5H.P.)Eato n 1 3 Spd . Ultra Shift1 2,000 #F/A, 4 0,000 #R/A,Lo ad e d ,81 ⁄2’x60” x65” Ultra-Ce lIICIM Bo x,Ho is t,Ele ctric Tarp, Re m o te En d g ate & Ho is t,W hite W ith Te alG re e n Bo x, 81 4 ,278km . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7 9 ,9 9 5 1 -M O R E -2008 FR EIGHTL INER CO L U M BIA 4 70H.P. Au to Shift, W hite W ith M aro o n Bo x,Lo ad e d Sam e 4 05,1 84 km . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $82,9 9 5 2006 GM C C8500 31 26 CatDie s e l, 300 H.P.,Allis o n Au to ,Ro llTarp,Re m o te En d G ate & Ho is t,M aro o n Bo x,W hite 4 9,899km . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (2 IN STO CK )$7 4 ,9 9 5 2005 V O LV O TAND EM w ith G rain Bo xe s Arrivin g s o o n . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $56 ,9 9 5 1 979 INTER NATIO NAL 4 04 En g in e , 5& 2 Tran s m is s io n ,1 5’ Ste e lBo x, Ro llTarp,Bro w n ,1 05,237km . . . . . . . $1 0,9 9 5 1 971 INTER NATIO NAL L O AD STAR 1 600 304 V 8 G as ,5& 2 Tran s m is s io n , 8’x1 5’x4 1 ’ W o o d Bo x,O ran g e /W hite , 39,577 M ile s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8,9 9 5
M ED IUM D UTY TRUCK S 201 3 CHEV 3500 EX P R ESS V AN 1 5 Pas s e n g e r,W hite ,20,800km . . . . $29 ,9 9 5 201 3 CAD IL L AC SR X AW D ’S 3.6L V 6,Lo ad e d ,N avig atio n ,Su n ro o f, Le athe r,3 in s to ck,Black,G ray 26,61 5km . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . sta rting a t$4 4 ,9 9 5 201 3 GM C YU K O N X L 4 X 4 5.3L V 8, Lo ad e d ,8-Pas s ,Su n ro o f,Eb o n y Le athe r, Black,22,081 km . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $51 ,9 9 5 201 3 CHEV SU BU R BAN 4 x4 ,5.3L V 8, Lo ad e d ,Su n ro o f,8-Pas s ,Eb o n y Le athe r, W hite ,22,732km . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $51 ,9 9 5
2013 BLACK RAM, reg. cab, 2 WD, SWB, 4.7 V8, keyless, PW, PDL, power mirrors, A/T/C, 20” chrome wheels, box rails, 5000 kms, as new, full warranty, sharp truck, $21,700. 306-384-2428, Saskatoon, SK. 2012 GMC SIERRA 1500 SLT, fully loaded, l e at h e r, s u n r o o f, N av, 4 5 , 0 0 0 k m s . , Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca
201 4 K ENW O R TH T370 TAND EM 350 H.P. Paccar(cu m m in s )Die s e l,Allis o n Au to ,Lo ad e d ,8.5’x20’x65” CIM Ultrace l Bo x,Ho is t,Ele ctric Tarp, Re m o te Ho is tan d En d g ate ,Re d M SRP $1 62,374 . . . . . SAL E PRICE $1 3 9 ,9 9 5 1 -M O RE W HITE IN STO CK
1996 IH 9200, tandem, 370 HP Cummins, 10 speed, 20’ BH&T, new tires, new paint, alum. wheels, rear controls, AC, $41,500; 2000 Freightliner FL120, 370 HP Cummins, 10 spd., 20’ BH&T, rear controls, A/T/C, alum. wheels, new paint, $48,500; 2005 Freightliner FL120, 500 HP C15 Cat, 18 spd., AutoShift, alum. wheels, A/T/C, 20’ BH&T, rear controls, excellent tires, 14 front axle, 46,000 rear axle, 4-way locking diff, $58,500; 2006 Mack CH613, 400 HP Mack, 13 spd., alum. wheels, A/T/C, 20’ BH&T, rear controls, real nice, $59,000; 2007 Freightliner FL120, 450HP Mercedes, 10 spd, AutoShift, alum. wheels, A/T/C, 20’ BH&T, new paint, very nice truck, $67,500. Coming Soon: 1996 Kenworth 600, 375 HP Cummins, 10 spd., tractor w/40’ tandem grain trailer, real nice shape, $38,500; Midland 24’ tandem pup trailer, totally rebuilt, new paint, good tires, $18,500; Grainmaster 20’ tandem pup trailer, totally rebuilt, new paint, good tires, $18,500. Trades accepted on all units, all units Sask. safetied. 306-276-7518 cell; 306-767-2616 res., at Arborfield, SK. DL #906768.
WESTERN STAR w/400 HP Detroit and Allison auto., Regina, SK., $39,900; 2002 Sterling 9500 w/280 HP diesel Allison auto, nice truck 185,000 miles, Regina, SK., $39,900; 2002 IHC 2574 w/15’ B&H, 49,000 miles, ex County government truck 530 IHC engine w/Allison auto, very clean, $34,900; 2002 Sterling 8500, 330 HP w/10 spd., 185,000 miles, looks new, Florida truck, in transit, $33,900. Also have two 24’ flat decks w/sliding winches for K&L Equipment and Auto. 2007 AND 2010 KENWORTH T800 trucks, $3400/ea. Ladimer at: 306-795-7779, Ituna, AUTOSHIFT, 10 spd., new B&H, ISX Cum- Phone mins, very clean. Also trucks available with SK., or Chris at: 306-537-2027, Regina, SK. no box. 2010 trucks have Cat engine. Call 204-673-2382, Melita, MB. DL #4525.
2007 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA UltraShift, 20’ Cancade box w/Michel’s roll tarp, 450 HP w/10 spd. Eaton UltraShift trans., 745,000 kms., aluminum 22.5 wheels and tires, new paint, $72,500. Call David 306-887-2094, DL# 327784, Kinistino, SK. 2007 T800 KW, elec. tarp, 13 spd. UltraShift, Cat C15, new 20’ BH&T; DAYCAB: tandem 2005 9200 IH ISM and ISX Cum2 0 0 1 S T E R L I N G G R A I N T RU C K S / N mins, 10 spd.; 1976 GMC 6500, 366, 5&2, 2FWYHMCB51AH32942, Cummins ISM 16’ wood box. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, 330 HP, Eaton Fuller 10 spd., Airliner air SK. www.rbisk.ca DL #905231. ride susp., new 20’ Berg box, front hoist, 2008 GMC 8500, Isuzu dsl, Allison 6 spd. tarp, $45,900. 780-679-7680 Ferintosh, AB auto trans., 20’ Western Ind. box, Nordic 2004 IHC 8600 ISM Cummins, 400 HP, 10 hoist, Michel’s elec. tarp, remote endgate spd; 2005 Volvo 365 HP, 10 spd. Both have and hoist, A/T/C, alum. rims, 12R22.5 new CIM 20’x65” BH&T, safetied, $49,500. front, 11R22.5 rear Michlens air susp., 306-256-3569, 306-230-4393, Cudworth, shedded, no rust, 20,000 kms, $95,000; SK. DL #917908. 2-1986 GMC 7000, 366 engines, 5&2, steel boxes, Nordic hoists, roll tarps, 2005 379 PETERBILT Tri-drive w/2010 24’ 80,000/ 50,000 kms, no rust, shedded, Courtney Berg box, hyd. silage endgate, good condition, $17,000 each. David Klein bolt-in box divider, hyd. side auger kit, 306-957-4312, 306-695-7794, Odessa, SK. Brehon remote endgate and hoist, 550 Cat, 18 spd., 660,000 kms., exc. cond. Call 403-391-6021, Red Deer, AB. 2005 FREIGHTLINER, 300 HP Cat, 10 spd., new 20’ B&H, elec. tarp, $59,900; 1970 GMC 2 ton, B&H, $3800; 1995 Ford E350, diesel, new auto. retired ambulance, $6500. Call Pro Ag Sales 306-441-2030 anytime, North Battleford, SK. 2006 CHEV TANDEM DIESEL, Allison auto, 300 HP, new 20’ box, $54,900. 2008 PETERBILT 386 grain truck, S/N Phone 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. 1XPHDU9X58D762113, Cat C-13, Eaton 2006 IHC 9200I 13 spd. UltraShift, Fuller 13 spd., AutoShift, new 20’ Can657,000 kms.; 2006 IHC 9200I 12 spd. cade box, hoist and roll tarp, 1,019,582 Meritor auto., 1.1m kms.; 2006 Macks 10 kms, $66,000. 780-679-7680 Ferintosh, AB spd Eaton AutoShifts. All with new 20x65” grain boxes and fresh SK safeties. Saskatoon, SK. 306-270-6399, DL# 316542, www.78truxsales.com
Regin a , S K 1-8 00-6 6 7-046 6 S a s k a to o n , S K 1-8 8 8 -242-79 8 8
W ATRO US M AINLINE M O TO R PRO DUCTS LTD. H IG H W
AY
#2 EA ST – W
ATRO US,SK
306-946-3336
w w w .w atrousm ainline.com 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
2011 GMC SIERRA 2500 Denali, diesel, fully loaded, sunroof, 73,000 kms., 48,995 Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca
Hwy. 3, Seven Persons, AB (Medicine Hat, AB)
2011 FORD F250 XLT, 4x4 Super Duty, ext. cab, A/T/C, trailer tow pkg., 127,000 kms, $21,900. 306-377-4571 after 6 Fiske, SK
rawlyn@automatictruck.com
PH. 403-977-1624
www.automatictruck.com 2011 FORD F-250 XLT only 44,000 kms., 6.7L powerstroke, 4x4, crew cab, leather, 1976 DODGE 3 ton, 64,500 miles, good A/T/C, $47,900. 204-641-5725 Arborg MB condition, shedded, 15’ Grainmaster box w/steel floor. 306-893-8008 Maidstone SK 2011 F-350 LARIAT, white, 6.2L gas, automatic, Super Duty longbox, 31,000 kms., 1977 GMC 6500 grain truck with 74,500 g r e a t s h a p e , $ 2 9 , 5 0 0 O B O . C a l l kms. Kolish Farm Equip. Auction, Saturday, 403-548-0525, Medicine Hat, AB. April 19, 2014, Creelman, Sask. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale 2011 CHEV SILVERADO 3500 LTZ, dually, b i l l a n d p h o t o s . 3 0 6 - 4 2 1 - 2 9 2 8 o r diesel, 116,800 kms, asking $39,500. 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 306-652-7972, Saskatoon, SK. DL #316384. www.magicpaintandbody.com 1980 F600, STEEL box and tarp, always stored inside, very good cond., $15,000. 2 0 1 0 TOYOTA T U N D R A L I M I T E D , 306-358-4212, 306-753-7935, Denzil, SK. 103,000 kms, 5 yr. 200,000 kms full war1980 IH 1710, 404 eng., 5&2 trans, 16x8 ranty, $32,000. 306-963-7693 Imperial SK strong B&H, Midland tarp, new 1020 rub2010 FORD F150 XLT Supercrew, 4WD, ber on back, 1020 fronts 90%, 46,838 kms, silver, boxliner, box cover, 96,788 kms, $9000 OBO. 306-358-4620, Denzil, SK. beautiful shape, safetied, SN# 1FTFW1EV7A00840. Asking $21,900, open to offers. 1987 FORD F700 REDUCED: 16x8.5’ Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy. 12 North, B&H, vg 370 gas engine, vg radial tires, 5 Steinbach, MB. Call: Gary 204-326-7000. spd., $7900. Phoenix Auto, Lucky Lake, SK. 1-877-585-2300. DL #320074. reimerfarmequipment.com 2008 FORD F450 Lariat, dually, 6.4L, fully 1987 FREIGHTLINER TANDEM, 800,000 loaded, leather, sunroof, now only $30,995 kms, 350 HP Cummins, 9 spd., 20’ BH&,. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. newer tires, good paint, clutch replaced, bottom end on engine redone, first DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca $36,000. 780-208-1940, Two Hills, AB. 2007 GMC DURAMAX 2500 dsl., 3/4 ton, 210,000 kms, 2” body lift, chrome pkg., air 1988 IH S1900 tandem axle grain truck. Dave MacCuish Farm Equipment Auction, bags, $25,000. 306-563-7125, Canora, SK. Tuesday, April 15, 2014, Frobisher, Sask. 2006 FORD F350 Lariat, 4x4, 6.0L, dsl., 6 area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com spd. std, crewcab, shortbox, good towing/ for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 mpg,163,000 kms 306-843-2934 Wilkie SK
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 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 . 2009 V o lvo 78 0, 77” Ra is ed Ro o f s leep er, D16 535 h.p ., I-S hift tra n s m is s io n , 12&40’s , 841,000 km ’s , F in a n ce rep o , AS K ING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $45,000 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 . 2007 V o lvo 430, D12 435 h.p ., 13 s p d 12&40’s , F u ll lo ckin g w heel d ifferen tia ls , 597,000 km ’s , PRE -DPF AS K ING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $39 ,9 00 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 .
DL#907173
1987 IH 466 diesel single axle S1900 grain truck, 1980 Chev C-60 3 ton grain truck, 1965 Dodge 500 grain truck. Moncrief Farm and Livestock Equipment Auction, Wednesday, April 16, 2014, Alameda, Sask. area. For sale bill and photos visit www.mackauctioncompany.com Mack Auction Co. 306-421-2928, 306-487-7815. PL #311962. 1990 FREIGHTLINER FL112 grain truck. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1992 KENWORTH T600 grain truck. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1997 MACK CH 613, 350 Mack, 9 spd, 20’ CIM B&H, remote opener, Michel’s tarp, B&H 5 yrs old. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. 1997 MACK, tandem axle, 350 Mack, 10 speed Eaton, box had new paint in 2010, remote opener, great rubber, 378,235 kms, $47,500. 306-488-2182, Holdfast, SK. 2001 FREIGHTLINER FL112 grain truck. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 2004 FREIGHTLINER M2 tandem, Cat dsl., Allison auto, new 20’ CIM box pkg, w/ tarp, safetied, no rust California truck, only $59,500. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon SK
2013 VOLVO D13 tandem truck, 425 HP, 13L Volvo diesel motor, I shift (AutoShift), 12 speed trans, 8-1/2x20’ steel box, 64” sides, electric roll tarp, approx. 4800 kms. Truck will be sold on April 17th at Finell Farm Auction. For more info and pics go to www.switzerauction.com or 306-625-7277 2006 IHC 9200i; Cummins 370 HP, 10 Ponteix, SK. spd., 14 front, 40 rears, 22.5 new recaps with steel rims, auto greaser with new ATTENTION FARMERS: 35 tandems in Cancade 20’x64” grain box, 856,000 kms, stock. New Cancade. Automatic and stannew MB safety, very clean, $63,000; 2006 dard. Also highway tractors available. YelFREIGHTLINER CLASSIC, Detroit 14L lowhead Sales, 306-783-2899, Yorkton, SK 500 HP, 18 spd. Eaton Fuller autoshift with clutch, 13 fronts, 40 rears, 22.5 alum. AUTOMATIC AUTOMATIC 2010 IH Prorims, c/w new Cancade 20’x64” grain box star premium, Cummins, new 20’ B&H, roll with remote hoist and gate, pintle plate, tarp $72,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. 1,162,400 kms, new MB safety, very clean, $72,500; 2007 FREIGHTLINER COLUM- AUTOSHIFT TRUCKS AVAILABLE: Boxed BIA, Mercedes 12.8 L, 450 HP, 13 spd. Ea- tandems and tractor units. Contact David ton Fuller Ultrashift (full auto), 12 fronts, 306-887-2094, 306-864-7055, Kinistino, 40 rears, 22.5 alum. rims, auto greaser, SK. DL #327784. www.davidstrucks.com c/w new Cancade 20’x64” box, w/remote hoist and gate, 1,068,900 kms, new MB CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used safety, very clean, $70,000. 204-728-3821, highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at Brandon, MB. www.titantrucksales.com 2007 LOW KM Kenworth with 22’ heavy duty B&H, automatic , $89,000 firm. COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL MFG. for 306-730-8375, Melville, SK. grain box pkgs., decks, gravel boxes, HD grain and silage boxes, pup 2008 FL COLUMBIA, new 20’ BH&T, 60 combination frame alterations, custom paint, Series Detroit, 13 spd., full lockups, hitch, trailers, complete service. Visit our plant at Hum800,000 kms, new AB. safety, always AB. boldt, SK or call 306-682-2505 for prices. truck, $66,800. 780-977-4907, Edmonton
QUALITY DOES NOT COST, IT PAYS.
INTERNATIONAL 1610 CARGO Star grain truck. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
1995 FLD112 FREIGHTLINER, Cummins M11, 400 HP, Integral sleeper, 12/40 rears, 411 ratio, 10 spd., 11Rx22.5, 210” WB, 2nd owner, records since 1997, shedded, $17,500; 2003 Doepker Special 36’ grain trailer, alum. slopes, open ends, air ride, 11Rx22.5, one owner, $30,000. Both units excellent shape, new safety, can split. 306-549-4701, Hafford, SK. 1995 PETERBILT 377 w/Detroit 60 Series engine. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
REMOTE CONTROL ENDGATE AND hoist systems can save you time, energy and keep you safe this seeding season. Give Brehon Agrisystems a call at 3 0 6 - 9 3 3 - 2 6 5 5 o r v i s i t u s o n l i n e at www.brehonag.com Saskatoon, SK.
2006 WESTERN STAR 4900F, tandem w/tag, 16’ BH&T, 450 HP, 8 LL trans., AB Safety, $64,000. 780-977-4907, Edmonton
NEU-STAR.COM
1990 MACK SUPERLINER DAYCAB, 400 Mack engine, LWB, new 12x22.5 tires, $9500. Call 306-960-3000, St. Louis, SK. 1994 IHC 9400, N14 motor, good tires, power divider broken, $5000 OBO. 20’x8’6” steel flatdeck, very good condition, $2800. 306-677-7303, Hodgeville, SK.
NEW NEVILLE BUILT 45’ tridem grain trailer, $45,000. Call 780-373-2161, Bawlf, AB.
1999 FREIGHTLINER 112SD for rebuild or parts, 104,000 kms, $15,000; $5000 extra for alum. B&H, $19,000 pkg. Calgary, AB. 403-938-3888.
1470 Willson Place / Winnipeg, Manitoba / R3T 3N9 Phone 204-478-STAR (7827) / Fax 204-478-1100 / Email: info@neu-star.com
1990 FREIGHTLINER FLD120, 235” WB, newer 425 Cat, 15 spd., 3.90, 40 rears, safetied Oct. 2013, truck completely gone through front to back, new 24.5 tires, 60” 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 403-504-9740, Medicine Hat, AB.
2012 CANCADE GRAVEL trailer. Quick drop kit selector valve and hosing, 2 spd landing gear, mid mount hoist stabilizer, 3/8” superslide, turn buckles for HASMAT gate, electric mesh gravel guard tarp. Quill Lake, SK. Cell 780-205-2810 or 306-383-3599.
1995 PETERBUILT 377, 430 HP Detroit 60, 13 spd., Jakes, 997,300 kms., near new drives, 24&40, fresh safety. Nice clean West Coast truck, $22,900. Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 1998 FREIGHTLINER FL112 tandem truck w/tridem pup, 10 spd. Eaton AutoShift, 400 HP Cummins, 4 way lockers, truck and trailer are 20’ DEL box and hoist, 80% tires, c/w Michel’s 10” cross augers for truck and pup, will feed a 13” auger full. 240,000 kms, one owner, always shedded, with V tank that fits truck or pup with shoot and different end gate for hauling 3 products, $74,900. Quenton at: 306-354-7585, or email him at: quentonquark@gmail.com
206 AND 207 IHC 9200 w/new 16’ Can- 2- 2005 IH 9100 tractors, 550 Cat, 13 cade gravel boxes and tarps. Yellowhead speed, 4-way locks, $30,000 each. Call Sales, 306-783-2899, Yorkton, SK. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
2- 2007, 2005, T800 Kenworths, 500 Cat, 18 spd., 46 diffs, 4-way locks w/Roobar bumpers; 2001, 2003, 2005 daycab T800’s, heavy specs.; 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; 2008 IH 9900, 550 ISX Cummins, 18 spd., 46 diffs, 4-way locks, 900,000 kms; 2003 Freightliner Classic, Cat, 18 spd, new rubber; 1999 9300 IH, dual stacks, dual breathers, 60 Detroit, 13 spd. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. www.rbisk.ca DL #905231. 2000 IHC 9200, C12 Cat, 430 HP, 10 spd. AutoShift w/clutch petal, 3-way locks, 51” flattop sleeper, 60% rubber, new rear brakes, cold AC, new AB safety, $15,000. Email pics avail. 403-638-3934, Sundre AB 2001 VOLVO TANDEM axle highway tractor with sleeper and 8 speed. Kolish Farm Equipment Auction, Saturday, April 19, 2014, Creelman, Sask. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962
2003 STERLING LT 9500 winch truck, C15 Cat, 550 HP, 454,190 kms, rears 46,000 lbs., fronts 14,000 lbs., ratio 4.1, Tulsa HD winch, eng. air shut off, Aspar eng. heater, single turbo, 3-way lockers, vg cond., $85,000. 204-526-0321, Cypress River, MB 2004 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 2004 KENWORTH T800, 475 Cat, 18 spd., 46,000 rears, lockers, $37,900. 306-280-4677, Saskatoon, SK. DL 318566. 2006 MACK CHN613. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 2006 T800-B, DAYCAB, 475 ISX, 12/40’s, white, 730,000 kms, new brakes and drive, moose bumpers, side mount aluminum tool box. Asking $45,000. 306-468-7977, 306-468-2712, Canwood, SK.
ALLISON AUTO TRUCKS in stock/or in transit. All trucks have 12,000 and 40,000 axles unless noted: 2007 Sterling 9500 LWB, will take 20/21’ box, C&C, 400 HP Mercedes w/Allison auto, approx. 220,000 miles, in transit, $43,500; 2004 M2 Freightliner 300 HP Cat w/Allison auto, C&C, LWB, new motor one year ago, $25,000 WO, 50/50 one year engine warranty, 221,000 miles, Regina, SK. $46,900; 2004 IHC 4400, C&C 466 w/Allison auto 228,000 miles, above average condition, Ituna, SK., $39,900; 2004 FL80 Freightliner, C&C, 280 HP w/Allison auto, LWB, in transit, $34,900; 2004 Western Star gravel truck w/400HP Detroit and Allison auto, Regina, SK., $39,900; 2003 IHC 8100, C&C, will take 20’ box, 370 HP Cummins w/Allison auto, 380,000 miles, Ituna, SK., $29,900: 2003 IHC 8100 tractor unit w/5th wheel trailer hitch, 370 HP Cummins w/Allison auto., short WB, recent engine, Ituna, SK., $29,900; 2002 Sterling 9500 gravel truck w/280HP dsl. w/Allison auto, nice truck 185,000 miles, Regina, SK., $39,900; 2001 IHC 2574 gravel truck w/15’ B&H, 49,000 miles, ex County government tuck 530 IHC engine w/Allison auto, very clean, $34,900; 2001 IHC 4900 466 w/Allison auto, 180,000 miles, 18’ BH&T, nice truck, Ituna, SK., $44,900; 2001 IHC 4900, C&C, LWB, 466 engine w/Allison auto, 108,000 miles, in transit, $24,900; 2000 GMC C8500, 3126 Cat w/Allison auto, 240,000 miles, presently has 24’ van body, very clean cond., Regina, SK. C&C, price $22,900. Trucks with standard transmissions: 1999 IHC 4400 w/530 IHC engine and straight 7 spd., LWB, 24’ deck, above average cond., Ituna, SK., price for C&C, $19,900 or w/deck, $22,900; 2002 Sterling 8500 gravel truck, 330 HP w/10 spd., 185,000 miles, looks new, Florida truck, in transit, $33,900; Also have two 24’ flat decks w/sliding winches for $3400/ea. K&L Equipment and Auto. Phone Ladimer at: 306-795-7779, Ituna, SK., or Chris at: 306-537-2027, Regina, SK.
CORRECTION - Maxim Truck and Trailer April 3rd ad in The Western Producer 2009 International 9200i 6x4 - should be $82,000 not $60,000 - tandem axle grain truck, Cummins ISM engine, Eaton Fuller auto shift transmission (10 speed), ABS brakes, 412,000 km, 12,000 lbs. front axle capacity, 40,000 lbs. rear axle capacity, 3-way rear lockup, A/C, getting a white 2007 FREIGHTLINER FLD 120 SD, 515 Cancade 20’ grain box. Call Maxim Truck & Detroit, 18 spd., Super 40 rears w/locks, Trailer toll free 1-888-986-2946 or check fresh SK. safety, $32,000. 306-547-7680, our website: www.Maximinc.Com/parts or 306-325-2021, Okla, SK. DL #304675. FOR SALE AND work ready: Six 2005-2006 2007 KENWORTH EXTENDED cab, C15, 18 Kenworth T-800’s, 435 CAT, 15 spd., spd., 24.5 tires, 520,000 kms., new trans, 40,000 rears, inter-axle locks, 500,000 46,000 rears, 4-way locks, c/w 5” Berkeley 700,000 kms, asking $50,000 - $60,000 pump (optional), $65,000. 306-342-4687, per truck OBO; Seven 2006 Kenworth Glaslyn, SK. T-800’s, C13 CAT. Six are equipped with 2007 KENWORTH T300 daycab, tandem no clutch automatics and 1 is equipped axle, C&C, 260 Cummins, 9 spd. trans., 40 with a clutch automatic. Inter-axle only, rears on air ride, 90% rubber on alum. 300,000 - 600,000 kms, asking $50,000 wheels, 235,000 kms, long WB, new AB. $60,000 per truck OBO; Five 2010 Kensafety, $36,500. Email pics available. worth T-800’s, Cummins 500 HP, 18 spd., 46,000 rears, 3rd axle on tractor, head403-638-3934 ask for Jeff, Sundre, AB. ache rack, wet kit and moose bumper, ask2007 WESTERN STAR, 244” WB, 515 De- ing $110,000 OBO. If interested, please troit, 13 spd., 72” bunk, loaded, 40 rears, call Russ at 204-619-3252, Lundar, MB. 12 fronts, 3-way locks, Espar engine and HOT DEALS!! Check out Larry Kalmakoff bunk heater. 306-238-2140, Goodsoil, SK. albums on Facebook, or mervsauto.com or 2007 WESTERN STAR, daycab, 550 Cat, 18 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. spd., 720,000 kms, 46 rears, wet kit. Call SANDBLASTING AND PAINTING of heavy 780-990-8412, Edmonton, AB. trucks, trailers and equipment. Please call 2009 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA day- for details. Can-Am Truck Export Ltd., cab, DD 15 505 HP, 18 spd., 46 rears, 1-800-938-3323, Delisle, SK. 3-way locks, fresh Sask. safety, $45,000. 306-547-7680, or 306-325-2021 Okla, SK. STRONG B-TRAIN PULLER. 2007 FL DL #304675. Classic, small bunk, Detroit 515 HP, 18 2009 KW T-800, 600,000 kms, 72” aero- spd., full lockups, 14/46 axles, rubber cab, wet kit, 525 ISX, 46k rears, full load, 80%, $37,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. $90,000. 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB. 2009 PETERBILT 386, stk#779461, 485 HP ISX, 12/40, 18 trans., 244 WB, 70UU sleeper. peterbilt.cervusequipment.com DL#328722, Saskatoon, SK. 306-657-2937 2009 VOLVO 18 spd., 3-way lock, cab and eng. heaters, Moose catcher, chain rack c/w chain and straps, 46 rears, safetied April 2nd 2014, 1,047,000 kms., excellent condition, ready to work. 306-230-8402, Saskatoon, SK. 2009 WESTERN STAR 4900 SA, white, 205” WB, stand-up bunk, DDT 530HP, 18 spd., 46 rears, 12 front, Airliner susp., wet kit, new rubber, 610,000 kms., fresh safety, $65,000. Phone 306-747-3292 or 780-713-5967, Shellbrook, SK. 2009 WESTERN STAR 4900SA, #AF8680, 515 HP S60, 12/46, 18 trans, 235 WB, 42F slpr. DL#328722, 306-657-2937, Saskatoon, SK. peterbilt.cervusequipment.com 2009 WESTERN STAR, ONE OWNER, in service April 2010, Mercedes 450 HP, no DEF, 650,000 kms, orig. warranty left on engine, 34” sleeper, roo bar, 210” WB, 46 rears, 4:10 ratio, 18 spd., new Webasto, new back drives Nov./13, new clutch March/13, hyd. rigging with T&E 4” pump, safety, 85% highway miles. Please call 780-753-0086, Provost, AB. 2011 PETERBILT 386, stk#115463, 525 HP ISX, 13.2/SS40, 18 trans, 212WB, 48UU slpr. 306-657-2937 DL#328722 Saskatoon SK. peterbilt.cervusequipment.com 2011 PETERBILT 387, stk#119526, 485 HP ISX15, 12/40, 18B trans, 230WB, 70UU sleeper. peterbilt.cervusequipment.com DL#328722. Saskatoon, SK. 306-657-2937 2012 KENWORTH 900L, ISX, 18 spd., Super 40, 72” Aerodyne, sunroof, bunk beds, 11Rx22.5, loaded, dual Webasto, 500,000 kms., $115,000 OBO. Call 306-796-4479, Central Butte, SK. 2013 PETERBILT 367, Stk#194940, 550 HP ISX15, 20/T69-170, 18B trans, 268 WB, 48UU slpr. 306-657-2937 DL#328722 Saskatoon peterbilt.cervusequipment.com 3- 2010 PETERBILT, low kms, approx. 300,000 kms, good cond., never worked in w i n t e r m o n t h s , $ 8 0 , 0 0 0 e a c h fi r m . 306-543-4641, 306-536-3542, Regina, SK. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com
CLASSIFIED ADS 55
HONEY RANCH! Turnkey honey operation comes fully equipped with everything required for beekeeping and 2 residences. Sellers willing to train. Val Marie, SK. 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 1-866-345-3414. 1988 FORD 350 Dually XLT, ext. cab, 2 WD, 7.3 dsl., 5 spd. std., c/w welding deck and Lincoln Ranger welder, 190,000 USED BEAVER MID length blocks banded kms, vg, $9000. 306-747-2862, Holbein SK w/backing or unbanded. 403-362-7885, 1995 FORD L9000, N14, 13 spd., self Scandia, AB, or brian.slenders@gmail.com loading Cancade 17 bale deck, $50,000. 780-812-9249, Bonnyville, AB. 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 CONTINUOUS METAL ROOFING, no exposed screws to leak or metal overlaps. Western Star Bale Truck Ideal for lower slope roofs, rinks, churches, pig barns, commercial, arch rib build· 2005 Western Star, 460 HP ing and residential roofing; also available Mercedes, Allison auto, 4 way lockers, in Snap Lock. 306-435-8008, Wapella, SK.
air ride suspension
403-977-1624 or 306-740-7771 Located at Medicine Hat, AB
TILLEY AND DISTRICT Fire Assoc. is accepting bids on the following pumper truck: 1970 GMC/King Seagrave with Hale 650 GPM front mount pump and 800 gal. tank. Details and pictures can be seen at www.fabianseedfarms.com Bid date closing is April 30, 2014. Highest or any bid not necessarily accepted.
VAN TRUCK, hyd. tailgate, side door, 24’, 2006 Freightliner FLM2, diesel, 6 spd., $24,500. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. 1977 CHEV 6500 S/A water truck. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1981 INTERNATIONAL DIESEL single axle livestock truck w/aluminum body, 400,000 kms, $5000. 780-305-3547 Neerlandia, AB.
FOR LEASE OR Sale: Provincially licensed meat shop/commercial kitchen. Email harmonysway@iwantwireless.ca for info., or call 780-957-2115, Crooked Creek, AB.
Invest in a Junior Canadian Oil Company
GOLD PLACER CLAIMS, 100+ acres, 2 kms south of Dawson City, Yukon. Mouth of Bonanza and Klondike. Majority virgin, 2 test holes 60’ at 3.5 g and 4.5 g. Drilled on high level bench, white channel gravel. Email: dalight1@gmail.com
• Class A Voting Founders Shares @ .10 cents with an interest in a Royalty Income Pool
SMALL MANUFACTURING SHOP and residence. 40 yrs of operation with established product line. Owner retiring. Turnkey operation. 306-445-5562, Delmas, SK.
www.briskenergy.com
Current Project Bakken Saskatchewan
1-403-291-0005 Accredited Investors Only
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Small Manitoba community cafe in the middle of oilfield activity available for rent. Fully equipped and furnished building available including commercial kitchen. Delight the community and surrounding with your creative culinary talent. Building available April 1, 2014. Email if interested or questions to: mpenner@rfnow.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 STEEL BUILDINGS WITH concrete founda- WANTING TO PURCHASE hotel in SK. or regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779. tions. Comparable to wood pole shed pric- AB. doing $300,000 plus. 306-221-2208. ing. E-mail: scott@nforcecrane.com Phone 403-988-5639, Calgary, AB. LOOKING FOR A PARTNER or serious investors for a 127 acre subdivision along 2 WANTED: USED COVER-ALL building, kms of shoreline on a lake that is situated 40-50’ wide, 60-100’ long, AB/SK. Can take near the geographical center of Sask. For down. Call: 780-984-7860, Leduc, AB. more info: etldevelopments@gmail.com or phone 306-426-2220.
KITCHEN FOR LEASE, Morrin Hotel (AB). Great opportunity for the right person. Full kitchen supplied. Accommodations negotiable. Call Blaine at 403-436-0239.
2005 PETERBILT TANDEM C13 Cat engine Auto UltraShift trans., fuel and lube, 4 comp., 1200 L motor oil, hyd. oil, antifreeze, diesel fuel, deaf tanks, waste oil filter comp., 2x2800 litre fuel tanks, PTO drive, air compressor, air operated system previously registered in SK., tax paid in SK. exc. cond., $79,000. 204-743-2324.
TURN-KEY BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY: Be your own boss, full line of corral cleaning equipment and customers. Proven with 25 yrs of business. 306-453-2212, Carlyle, SK.
ATS CUSTOMS, seven year established auto repair and truck accessory shop, tire sales, vehicle sales and consignment inventory. Comes with building, property, equipment, inventory, boxliner spray franchise, and 20 year customer base. OSB Mill has reopened. Future economics look excellent. Business can be had w/wo 4 bdrm family home. Selling due to health issues. Turnkey business, priced right, and for sale before the upswing. For inquiries call 780-926-6124, High Level, AB.
UNRESERVED ONLINE AUCTION CITY O F REG IN A
CO M P RES S ED N ATURAL G AS S TATIO N BIDS CL OS E
WHEATLAND FINANCIAL SERVICES offering Ag Financial Consulting and debt brokering services. Phone 306-794-4490, Yorkton, SK. www.wheatlandfinancial.ca
UNRESERVED ONLINE AUCTION, City of Regina, CNG Plant natural gas compressor. Bids close Monday, April 21, Noon. See our website www.McDougallBay.com for more info. 1-800-263-4193, PO Box 3081, Regina, SK. S4P 3G7. DL #319916.
NEED A LOAN? Own farmland? Bank says no? If yes to above three, call 1-866-405-1228, Calgary, AB. FARM/CORPORATE PROJECTS. Call A.L. Management Group for all your borrowing C U S TO M S WAT H I N G / B A L I N G . JD and lease requirements. 306-790-2020, W150 swather and large square baler. Regina, SK. Contact Adam at 403-501-4252, Gem, AB. DEBTS, BILLS AND charge accounts too high? Need to resolve prior to spring? Call us to develop a professional mediation plan, resolution plan or restructuring plan. LOOKING FOR 500 HD heifers, cows, cow/calf pairs to custom graze, winter and Call toll free 1-888-577-2020. calve out. Pick up your calves in fall. Call Ryan at: 306-317-2761, Neilburg, SK.
M ONDAY, APRIL 21 - NOON
S ee Ou r W eb s ite Fo r M o re In fo rm a tio n .
w w w.M c D ou g a llBa y.c om 1-800-26 3-4193 P.O. Bo x 308 1 Regin a , S K . S 4P 3G7 Dea ler L ic #319 9 16 SIDELINE BUSINESS FOR sale, approximately $1000, open to co-ed farmers, farm use and dollarwise. Make this a priority. Write for details: Box 5003, c/o The 2002 KENWORTH T300, 8.3 Cummins, Western Producer, Saskatoon, SK S7K 2C4 w/3 compartment seed tender, $45,000. Call 204-243-2453, High Bluff, MB. 1993 IH BULK fuel truck, 18,600 litre caH ave you ever w anted to be your ow n boss? pacity, 5 compartments, N14, 18 spd., $28,000. 306-861-7294, Weyburn, SK. H ave controlof your ow n destiny?
WANTED: TANDEM MANURE truck(s), full 1997 FORD F250 Supercab, 4x4, 7.3 diesel, hyds., must be in vg cond, 350+HP. Wain5 spd, A/T/C, service truck, w/wo equip- wright, AB., 780-842-2909, 780-842-7812. ment, $7,000. 306-861-1680, Griffin, SK. 1977 FORD LN900, good running cond., tag axle tandem, air brakes, had 20’ grain 2008 SUBARU FORESTER, auto, premier, box, $6500. 306-460-8666, Netherhill, SK. AWD, leather, 43,000 kms, grey, $18,995. 2007 WESTERN STAR w/2010 Bunning Call 1-888-240-2415 or visit our website: vertical spreader, exc. cond., $82,000. Will www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. separate. 306-621-4965, Theodore, SK. 2010 SUBARU FORESTER, manual, tour1998 KENWORTH T-800, stainless steel ing, auto, sunroof, cloth, 65,000 kms, paving box, 30” live belt, $33,000. $22,995. 1-888-240-2415 visit our website www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. 2011 SUBARU OUTBACK, Limited, auto, 22,000 kms, silver, $29,995. Call for info 1-888-240-2415, or visit our website www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 2012 SUBARU TRIBECA, auto, premier, 45,000 kms, grey, $32,995. Call for info. 1-888-240-2415, or visit our website www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 2012 SUBARU TRIBECA, auto, premier, AWD, Nav., DVD, 68,000 kms, $22,995. Call 1-888-240-2415, or visit our website: 1993 FORD F700 370 V8 gas, 5&2 spd., www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. power steering, c/w service body, lots of cabinets and deck space, 135,000 org. kms., very clean, asking $12,500. Call Dave at 780-470-0330, Devon, AB. 1994 GMC 3500 HD truck, 11,625 kms., CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used excellent condition, asking $18,500. Call highway tractors. For more details call 306-642-3189, Assiniboia, SK. 204-685-2222 or view information at 1998 FORD F800 18’ van truck, w/Cumwww.titantrucksales.com mins dsl, Allison auto., 81,000 miles, no rust California truck, available as van, flatdeck or grainbox, $16,500. 306-946-8522, Watrous, SK. 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 2007 GMC SERVICE truck, 4x4, crewcab, California truck, no rust, 118,000 miles, gas, 6 spd., auto, dual rear wheels, crane, only $24,500. 306-946-8522 Saskatoon SK 242,000 kms, Sask. inspection just done, CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used $17,900 plus taxes. Phoenix Auto, Lucky highway tractors. For more details call Lake, SK., 1-877-585-2300. DL #320074. 204-685-2222 or view information at FUEL TANKER 4 comp., 13,000 litre top www.titantrucksales.com loading, meets MC306 specs, dual equipment, 5 yr. PVIK April 2013, 8.3 Cummins, S/A, 300,000 kms, safetied March 2013, open to offers. Mel Maynes 204-534-2515, 204-534-0104, Boissevain, MB.
Raise your fam ily in a sm aller com m unity? The S hop Ea s y / S uperV a lu ba nner is looking for ha rd w orking, s elf-m otiva ted individua ls w ho ha ve entrepreneuria l fla ir a nd w a nt to inves t in a nd run a S hop Ea s y or S uperva lu s tore in W es tern Ca na da . W ith ov er 60 stores a cross the W estern Ca na da ou r concept ha s rem a ined the sa m e, prov iding grea t serv ice a nd exceptiona l qu a lity a t com petitiv e prices. The stores described ru n sm a ller conv entiona l grocery stores w ith a n a v era ge size of 10,000 sq ft – a grea t fit for m a ny sm a llercom m u nities ora s a niche loca tion in a n u rba n a rea . As a fra nchisee, you w ill ha v e a ccess to a com petitiv e bu siness opportu nity throu gh the Lobla w m ercha ndising a nd m a rketing progra m s, lev era ging PC a nd no na m e produ cts. In a ddition, you w ill be su pported by a n innov a tiv e a nd responsiv e opera tions a nd m ercha ndising netw ork w ho w ill a ssistyou to grow you rbu siness. KEY RES PO N S IBIL ITIES • A m inim u m of 3-5 yea rs grocery reta il a nd m a na gem ent experience. • Strong “entrepreneu ria l” fla irw ith a n em pha sis on grow ing the bu siness. • Sophistica ted a nd high lev el bu siness sense w ith a n em pha sis on long term pla nning forincrea sed bu siness grow th. • Com m u nity focu sed indiv idu a l w ith the a bility to bu ild a nd cu ltiv a te long la sting rela tionships. • Strong m ercha ndising a nd m a rketing know ledge w ith the a bility to execu te progra m s to driv e sa les. • People focu sed m a na gerw ith a n em pha sis on dev elopm enta nd coa ching forhigh perform a nce. • Dem onstra ted proficiency w ith the follow ing: -Costof G oods a na lysis a nd inv entory control. -Ca tegory rev iew s a nd Pla nogra m s execu tion. -Ca sh office opera tions (inclu ding bu tnotlim ited to ca sh la ne opera tions, ca sh reconcilia tion, a ccou nts receiv a ble/pa ya ble). -Strong fina ncia l ba ckgrou nd; a ble to u ndersta nd a nd interpret the P& L a nd bu dgeta ppropria tely. -Dem onstra ted proficiency w ith M icrosoftO ffice. Ifthis sou nds like you a nd you w ou ld like m ore inform a tion plea se conta ct u s toda y! Interes ted Ca ndida tes : Plea s e S end Res u m es or inform a tion inqu iries to
Chris .la voie@lobla w .ca
CUSTOM PLANTING: Corn, sunflowers and soybeans. In Saskatchewan and Manitoba. Call 306-527-2228.
FEITSMA SERVICES IS booking 2014 alfalfa, cereal and corn silage acres. Serving all of Sask. Jason 306-381-7689, Hague, SK.
OFFERING CUSTOM SPRAYING SERVICES: G P S, s e c t i o n a l c o n t r o l , e t c . R at e s $5.50/acre. Liquid fertilizer and insecticide application also available. Call Riley at 780-872-9670, 306-246-4454, Richard, SK.
LOWDERMILK TRANSPORT IS providing one call service for all Equipment/Hay hauling. Very experienced, multiple trucks serving AB., SK., and MAN. 780-872-0107, 306-252-1001, Kenaston, SK. CUSTOM BALE HAULING. Will haul large squares or round. Phone 306-567-7199, Kenaston, 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 306-567-7100, Imperial, SK.
CUSTOM HAULING OF all types of equipment, and custom grain hauling in Sask. and Manitoba Call Dave 306-621-7168 or 306-782-1756, Yorkton, SK.
EQUIPMENT HAULING. Serving western Canada and northwest USA. Call Harvey at: 1-877-824-3010, or cell 403-795-1872. Vandenberg Hay Farms Ltd., Nobleford AB. Email: logistics@vandenberghay.ca CUSTOM BALE HAULING, self-loading and unloading 17 bale truck. Radisson, SK. 306-827-2269 or 306-827-7835.
56 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
RANCH OIL CONTRACTING LTD. is in the grain hauling business. Truck and Super B, looking for work in NW SK and NE HD 7W ALLIS Chalmers Cat and misc. AB. Call 306-238-4800, Goodsoil, SK. parts for sale. 204-835-2345, ask for Merv. McCreary, MB. MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, stumps, caraganas, etc. 12 years of enviro friendly mulching. Call today! 306-933-2950. Visit: www.maverickconstruction.ca CUSTOM FENCING, WILL travel. Call for bookings. 306-221-8806, Asquith, SK.
2006 JD TRACKHOE 200 CLC, 4525 hrs, quick attach digging and cleanup bucket, hyd. thumb, Espar block heater, $95,000. HYDRAULIC SCRAPERS, Cat, Allis Chalm- 306-563-7125, Canora, SK. ers, Letourneau, 6 yards to 35 yards, also direct mount scrapers; scraper tires; direct ROAD GRADERS CONVERTED to pull mount motor graders from $14,950. Call behind large 4 WD tractors, 14’ and 16’ blade widths available. CWK Enterprises, 204-822-3797, Morden, MB. 306-682-3367, 306-231-8358, Humboldt, HYDRAULIC SCRAPERS: LEVER 60, 70, SK., www.cwenterprises.ca 80, and 435, 4 to 20 yd. available, rebuilt for years of trouble-free service. Lever 2003 D7R SERIES II w/SU blade, angle b l a d e a n d r i p p e r, $ 1 9 9 , 0 0 0 . P h o n e Holdings Inc., 306-682-3332, Muenster SK 306-845-3407, Turtleford, SK. 2006 CASE 621D wheel loader, 4498 hrs, CAH, ride control, 3rd valve, 20.5-25 tires- 1998 VOLVO TANDEM tandem crane truck 90%, WBM hydraulic QA, c/w 2.75 cu. yd. w/Terex 25 ton crane, 135,000 kms., bucket and pallet forks, $89,900. Jordan $57,000. Call 250-547-8993, Lumby, BC. anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 3’ TRAYLOR CONE crusher for sale, SKIDSTEER ATTACHMENTS: rock buckets, w/1036 Pioneer jaw crusher on tri-axle dirt buckets, grapples and more top chassis, w/30” in and out conveyors. Hodquality. Also have truck decks in stock. g i n s A u c t i o n S a l e , A p r i l 1 7 t h , Quality Welding and Sales 306-731-3009 1-800-667-2075. hodginsauctioneers.com or 306-731-8195, Craven, SK. WANTED: CAT TRACTOR SCRAPER 619 EQUIPMENT RENTALS: dozers, compac- o r 6 2 1 F. P l e a s e c a l l e v e n i n g s tors, loaders, excavators, etc. Conquest 204-859-2724, Rossburn, MB. Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. 1994 HITACHI EX270LC-5 excavator and 3-way valve, $35,000. Also, SAND DRYING PLANT, 7 cu. yd insulated w/thumb Macks w/wet kits, 1984 to 1996. feed hopper; 5’ dia.x24’ drum dryer/ 4 to five 204-376-5194, 204-641-0008, Arborg, MB. 12 million BTU burner on natural gas; Two 20”x32’ conveyors; One 5’x14’ - 2-1/2 deck COMPACTORS: 84” and 66” pad foot and screening plant; 1982 DROTT 50E track smooth drum. For sale or rental. Conquest excavator. All equipment operating and in Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. good cond. 306-945-2270, Waldheim, SK. WANTED: OLDER JAW CRUSHER, approx. 12x24, nothing fancy, may consider roll crusher. Wanted for farm use on small gravel pit. 306-862-8518, Choiceland, SK. CLIFF’S USED CRAWLER PARTS. Some o l d e r C at s , I H a n d A l l i s C h a l m e r s . 780-755-2295, Edgerton, AB.
KOMATSU SKIDSTEER SX1026, 85 HP, 2 speed, 2000 hrs., Superflow. Excellent condition. Call Mark Taylor 204-529-2059 or 204-245-0536, Mather, MB.
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#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 ~
2012 CAT MODEL 272D XHP skidsteer, 2 spd. high flow hyd., cab, AC, heater, new 7 8 ” b u c ke t , 3 7 0 h o u r s , $ 5 5 , 0 0 0 . 204-864-2391, 204-981-3636, Cartier, MB.
DODGE CUMMINS 5.9 diesels: 1994 12 valve, 2005, 2006, 2007. Cummins 6.7 diesels: 2008, 2012. Need low kms, 2000 to 2002 24 valve. 403-938-3888, Calgary, AB. POLE BARNS, WOODSTEEL packages, chicken, and dairy barns, grain bins 3406B, N14, SERIES 60, running engines hog, hoppers. Construction and concrete and parts. Call Yellowhead Traders, and crews available. Mel or Scott, MR Steel 306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK. Construction, 306-978-0315, Hague, SK. EXCAVATOR: 2007 DEERE 270D LC, 5300 hours, 188 HP, CAH, $132,500. Conquest Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK.
DIAMOND CANVAS SHELTERS, sizes ranging from 15’ wide to 120’ wide, any length. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. FARM AND INDUSTRIAL ELECTRICAL www.starlinesales.com motor sales, service and parts. Also sale of, and repairs to, all makes and sizes of AFAB INDUSTRIES POST frame buildings. pumps and phase converters, etc. Tisdale For the customer that prefers quality. M o t o r R e w i n d i n g 1 9 8 4 L t d . , 3 0 6 - 1-888-816-AFAB (2322), Rocanville, SK. 873-2881, fax 306-873-4788, 1005A- 111 HORSE SHELTERS for sale. We build them Ave., Tisdale, SK. www.tismtrrewind.com in every size you want. Starting at $1000 for 8x16. 403-593-1976, Fort MacLeod, AB FUTURE STEEL BUILDING, 110’x40’x21’H at peak, valued at $85,000, asking $55,000. Delivery negotiated. Minnedosa, MB., John at 204-867-2436, 204-868-1212
CONTERRA GRADER for skidsteers and tractors. Excellent for road maintenance, floating and levelling. 518S-SS, $2499. Conterra manufactures over 150 attachments. Call 1-877-947-2882, view online at www.conterraindustries.com CAT 60, 70, 80 and 463’s available. Also Allis Chalmers direct mount scrapers. 16’-20’ pull dozers. 306-338-7114 Clair, SK 2006 CAT 320 EXCAVATOR, QA, cleanout bucket, 10,000 hrs., nice, $65,000. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. 2000 HITACHI 750 hyd. excavator, c/w 3 buckets, very good cond. 780-983-0936, Pacesetter Equipment, Westlock, AB.
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Fo r A llY o ur Fa rm , C o m m ercia l& Industria lN eeds
FAR M BUILD IN G S : • Dim e n s io n a l Fra m e • Po s tBu ild in gs • En gin e e re d S te e l Bu ild in gs C o lo re d ro o f m e ta l, co lo red w a lls a n d trim s (o u ts id e co rn ers , b a s e fla s h, ea ve fla s h, ga b le fla s h, J cha n n el, d rip fla s h), S teel In s . W a lk In Do o r a n d L o cks et. 40x60 - 18’ tre a te d po s tb ld g. c/w 16x16 - R16 s teel in s u la ted o verhea d d o o r.............................$19,05 1.14 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.
ATTACHMENTS: skidsteer, pallet forks, buckets, augers, hay spears. Conquest Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK.
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 $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
P RICED TO CLEAR!!!
$ $ $ $ $ $ 7 5 TR UC KLOAD S $ $ 29 G AUG E FULL H AR D 100,000 P S I $ $ H I G H TEN S I LE R OOFI N G & S I D I N G $ $ 16 C OLOUR S TO C H OOS E FR OM $ $ 2 $ B-G r. Colou red . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70¢ ft $ $ M u lti Colou rM illen d s . . . . . 49¢ ft2 $ $ $ BEAT THE P RICE $ $ IN C R E A S E S $ $ AS K ABO UT O UR BLO W O UT $ $ CO LO RS AT $0.6 5 S Q . FT. $ $ CALL N O W $ $ $ $ F o u illa rd S teel $ $ S u p p lies L td . $ $ S t. La za re, M a n . $ $ 1- 8 00- 5 10- 3303 $ $ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
1 S TEEL BUILD IN G S
FOR SPRING! 1-866-974-7678
Quality
S TR AIGHT W ALL 40’ X 60’ X 16’ Rig id fra m e bu ild in g a va ila ble for s m a ll reta il ou tlets to la rg e in d u s tria l fa cilities . This s ize for on ly $29,418.
ALP INE 32 ’ X 5 0’ X 18 ’ In clu d es fra m ed op en in g for 14x14 overhea d & 4’x7’, s ervice d oor, excellen t s hop or s tora g e bu ild in g , com es w ith fou n d a tion d ra w in g s & m a n u a ls , d elivered to m os ta rea s . O n ly $15,500.
CALL TO D AY AN D AVO ID STEEL PRICE IN CREASES!
FARM BUILDINGS
COUNTS
1978 D6D CAT, 9177 hrs., manual, 36” tracks, canopy, Hyster winch, valves and injectors have been checked and set. Will be sold in Kramer Auction, April 14th, 2014 at Keg Farms Ltd., Outlook, SK. For more information call Dan 306-867-8249.
2006 L110 E Volvo wheel loader, 8700 hours, ride control, 23.5R25 tires at 60% 210 HP hyd. Q/C, AC, c/w 4 yd. bucket, vg condition, $105,000. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.
ENGINES: 353, 453, 471, 8.2L Detroit, 4BT Cummins, 6CT8.3, 3208 Cat and 3306 Cat. Call Western Diesel, 1-800-667-1164.
ROME PLOW AND KELLO DISC blades and bearings; 24” to 36” notched disc blades. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. www.kelloughs.com
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.
HYD. EXCAVATOR, link belts, Model 210, LANDMASTER PRODUCTION DOZERS: w/cab guard, hyd. thumb. 780-983-0936, PD-16’, $36,000; PD-18’, $37,500. Sask. Pacesetter Equipment, Westlock, AB. Neil, 306-231-8300, neilfl@yourlink.ca Alta. - Gord, 780-913-7353, email WANTED: 790 DLC JD trackhoe with hyd. gordbasnett@telusplanet.net thumb, condition not important if priced accordingly. 204-773-3044, Russell, MB. 3 ROME R67H pull scrapers; 3 Rome R89H pull scrapers. Please call Russ for more inEmail: bryer610@gmail.com fo. 204-619-3252, Lundar, MB. HYDRAULIC PULL SCRAPERS 10 to 25 yds., exc. cond.; Loader and scraper tires, 2014 ROME RALSE-16 finishing ejector custom conversions available. Looking for scraper, 14 yd. cap., 17’ 4” wide, 15,074 lb, Cat cable scrapers. Quick Drain Sales Ltd., hyd. tilt, $63,056. Call 204-256-2098, Tre306-231-7318, 306-682-4520 Muenster SK herne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com
TRI STAR FARM SERVICES: Area Diesel, various diesel modules. Please call for price. Info: Agriculture diesel solutions. HP increase, increased fuel economy, quick install/removal. 30 day satisfaction guarantee. 306-586-1603, Regina, SK. 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.
“Today’s Quality Built For Tomorrow”
• The HEAVIEST metal • The STRONGEST posts • SUPERIOR craftsmenship Choose Prairie Post Frame
EXPERIENCED POST FRAME BUILDERS REQUIRED 1-855 (773-3648)
www.prairiepostframe.ca BEHLEN STEEL BUILDINGS, quonsets, convex and rigid frame straight walls, grain tanks, metal cladding, farm - commercial. Construction and concrete crews. Guaranteed workmanship. Call your Saskatoon and northwest Behlen Distributor, Janzen Steel Buildings, 306-242-7767, Osler, SK.
FOR ALL YOUR STRUCTURAL STEEL, 290 CUMMINS, 350 Detroit, 671 Detroit, roofing and siding needs, big or small. Call Fouillard Steel Supplies, St. Lazare, MB. Series 60 cores. 306-539-4642, Regina, SK 1-800-510-3303. Remember nobody sells DIESEL ENGINES, OVERHAUL kits and roofing and siding cheaper!! Nobody. parts for most makes. Cat, CIH, Cummins, Detroit, Mack. M&M Equipment Ltd., Parts HIP ROOF BARN to be moved, 44’x50’, 27’ and Service phone: 306-543-8377, fax: high, all metal clad, red walls, galvanized 306-543-2111, Regina, SK. roof, $3000. 306-831-8808, Rosetown, SK.
1980 D6D CAT dozer, 3126 hrs, new hyd. pump, 2-way blade, winch, powershift, excellent $42,000. 306-821-2566 Watson, SK
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BOOK NOW WHEN
2003 CASE 1650K-XLT EROPS, heat, AC, ANTIQUE CATERPILLAR COLLECTION, pro-heat, multi-shank ripper, hydro trans, (1932 and up) 35 machines, running, parts D6 size, exc. cond., 2800 hrs., $95,000. books and toys. 204-748-1567, Virden MB Prince Albert, SK., Rick 306-981-3475. JD 772D GRADER, 2005, AWD, 8700 hrs., 2014 ROME RP-180CS scraper, 18 yard $125,000. New ripper fits Cat 140M, capacity, 12’ cut, 300” long 167” wide, $11,000. Call 403-291-1010, Calgary, AB. 19,250 lbs., $90,746. 204-256-2098, TreJD 9630 scraper model, 1767 hrs., large herne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com single tires, bought in 2008, ejector scrapCAT 950 WHEEL LOADER, cab heater, aux. er pulled by Caterpillar in 2008, 22 cu. yd. hyds., QA bucket, pallet forks, 20.5x25 used very little, front rides on tractor, tires, gd cond. 306-621-0425, Yorkton, SK. large tires and brakes on scraper. Ph 403-747-2370 evenings, Alix, AB. 1998 D6R LGP CAT, 16,000 hrs., CAH, 3 shank ripper, single tilt, 30” pads, undercarriage 90%, vg cond., $76,000. can email pictures. Call 780-349-9810, Thorhild, AB. MUELLER SS milk tank, 800 gal., vg shape, $2000; 200’ SS 2” milk line, $500; New barn cleaner parts for Berg 600, $500; Delayal vacuum pump, VP77, 5 HP, exc. cond., $1200. 403-559-6214, Didsbury, AB
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W E H AVE A B UILDING T O S UIT A LM O S T A NY NEED! CA LL US W IT H YO URS !
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2004 JD 950-C LGP, 4697 hours, straight twin tilt blade, 95% UC, 26” pads, exc. working condition, 3 shank HD ripper, job ready, CAH, full warranty, $166,000. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.
D5H CAT, cab, winch, 6-way dozer; 2004 H2 Hummer. 306-236-8023, Goodsoil, SK.
LOOKING FOR GRAVEL to buy, lease or partner over, preferably in the West Central region SK and AB. Free testing. Will pay top $$$. Fred Boisvert 306-948-6977 Biggar, SK.
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
2006 HITACHI ZX270, LC-3, hydraulic excavator, c/w hyd. thumb, multi function aux. hyds. 587-991-6605, Edmonton, AB.
CAT D7R LGP, low hrs., vg cond., angle dozer, twin tilt and ripper. 780-983-0936, Pacesetter Equipment, Westlock, AB. D6C 10K DOZER, twin tilt blade, 2 winches, EXPLOSIVES CONTRACTOR: Beaver brush rake incl., good running cond., dams, rocks, stumps. Reasonable rates. $26,000. 780-898-1195, Evansburg, AB. Federally licensed magazine and insured. CAT D8K ANGLE dozer, guarding, sweeps, Northwest Demolition, Radisson, SK., ripper, vg running cond. 780-983-0936, phone 306-827-2269 or 306-827-7835. Pacesetter Equipment, Westlock, AB. BRUSH MULCHING. The fast, effective EXCELLENT SELECTION Used skidsteers, way to clear land. Four season service, track loaders, forklifts, zoom booms, mini competitive rates, 375 HP unit, also avail. excavators. Visit www.glenmor.cc for detrackhoe w/thumb, multiple bucket at- tails, specs and prices. Glenmor, phone tachments. Bury rock and brush piles and 306-764-2325, Prince Albert, SK. fence line clearing. Bork Contracting, www.borysiukcontracting.ca Prince Albert, ATTACHMENTS PARTS COMPONENTS for construction equipment. Attachments SK., 306-960-3804. for dozers, excavators and wheel loaders. NEUFELD ENT. CORRAL CLEANING, Used, Re-built, Surplus, and New equippayloader, Bobcat with rubber tracks and ment parts and major components. Call v e r t i c a l b e a t e r s p r e a d e r s . P h o n e Western Heavy Equipment 306-981-3475, 306-220-5013, 306-467-5013, Hague, SK. Prince Albert, SK. BRUSH MULCHING, clearing shelterbelts GOOD USED SET of rails w/22” pads and scrub land and fence lines. Call Jonah at sprockets for FD 14 E, or C Fiat Ac dozer 306-232-4244, Rosthern, SK. tractor, $3800. 204-743-2324, Cypress CUSTOM SEEDING/ BALING/ SWATHING. River, MB. Also parting 567 baler; Some hay for sale. 3’ TY TRAYLOR cone crusher for sale, Call Alan: 306-463-8423, Marengo, SK. on tandem axle chassis, w/24” in and out REGULATION DUGOUTS: 120x60x14’ conveyors. Hodgins Auctions, April 17th, $2000; 160x60x14’ $2950; 180x60x14’ 1-800-667-2075, hodginsauctioneers.com $3450; 200x60x14’ $3950. 306-222-8054, D7G PARTS FOR SALE: Angle blade with Saskatoon, SK. twin tilts and complete push frame; Lift cylinders; Ripper and front sweeps. 306-745-7168, Esterhazy, SK.
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. HARCO RHINO 12’, 3 PTH blade, dual gauge wheels w/hyd., skid shoes, Q/A end plates, $6000. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK.
W O O D CO UN TRY
FARM BUILDINGS
Westrum Lumber
www.westrumlumber.com
1-888-663-9663 R o ulea u,S K
Hague, SK | (306) 225-2288
www.zaksbuilding.com
3UH (QJLQHHUHG /DPLQDWHG 3RVWV
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
CLASSIFIED ADS 57
BROCK (BUTLER) GRAIN BIN PARTS and accessories available at Rosler Construction. 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK. SPECIAL PRICING ON all remaining inventory! 10,400 bu. Twister hopper bins. See your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626.
4- TWISTER 2300 bu. hopper bottom grain bins, Twister 4000 bu. hopper bottom bin, 2- Behlen 2950 bu. grain bins on cement, 2- Westeel 3300 bu. grain bins on cement, Westeel 2750 bu. grain bin on cement, Westeel 1650 bu. grain bin on wood floor. Wilfred Messer Farm Equipment Auction, Monday, April 14, 2014, Macoun, Sask. CHIEF WESTLAND AND CARADON BIN area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com extensions, sheets, stiffeners, etc. Now for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or available. Call Bill, 780-986-5548, Leduc, 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 AB. www.starlinesales.com
Grain Bin Direct Factory To Farm Grain Storage Galvanized • Flat Floor • Hopper Bins Smooth Walls • Fertilizer • Grain • Feed Aeration • Rockets • Fans • Heaters Temp Cables
Canadian Built Insurance Certified Bin Anchors
PH:306-445-5562 www.evertightanchors.ca POLY HOPPER BINS, 100 bu., $900; 150 bu. $1250. 306-258-4422, Vonda, SK. Call for nearest dealer. www.buffervalley.com NUMEROUS HOPPERS and some flat bottoms. Hoppers from 1500 to 5000 bu., most w/air, some w/fans, some fertilizer. Flat bottoms from 2500 bu. to 6000 bu., some w/air and fans. Priced to sell. Phone Barry 306-946-7805, Young, SK.
Authorized Dealer
RROLLER ENN M ILL
12 WESTEEL M&K hopper bottom bins. Nine 2200 bu., $4800, 2200 bu. aeration fan, 220V, $5300; two 1850 bu., $4600. Located near Spalding, SK. 306-322-7661. BOOKING NOW! Flat and hopper bin moving, Tim’s Custom 204-362-7103, Morden, MB. binmovers@hotmail.com LIFETIME LID OPENERS. We are a stocking dealer for Boundary Trail Lifetime Lid Openers, 18” to 39”. Rosler Construction 2000 Inc., 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK.
- 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
Phone: 306-373-4919 grainbindirect.com
BOOKING SPECIALS ON large diameter bin erection, concrete and damage repair. Call Quadra Development Corp, toll free 1-800-249-2708, Rocanville, SK.
AIM H O P P ER C O N ES & S TEEL F L O O R S
CAN ADIAN BUIL T FOR CAN ADIAN CON DITION S
REN N M ill Cen ter In c.
RR#4 L a co m b e, AB T 4L 2N4 CAL L THE FACTORY FOR YOUR L OCAL DEAL ER
(403) 78 4-3518
w w w .ren n m ill.co m
Ph. 306-373-2236 Cell 306-221-9630 w w w .b on din d.com e m a il joe @ b on din d.com
C a lltollfree
for m ore deta ils
$2,750.00 Hopper Cone for 19 ft Westeel Rosco up to 4000 bu. • Manhole • 12 legs • 37 degree slope • Double 6x4x188w skid base
REMOTE LID OPENERS For Most Sizes of Bin Starting at $129.00
Ca ll BOND Toda y
1-877-850-7575
• Manhole • 7 legs • 37 degree slope • Single 8x4x188w skid base
$10,575.00
• Aera tion • C en ter u n loa d s ys tem s • S tir s ys tem s Ins ta lla tio n & Fina ncing Ava ila ble!
Hopper Cone for 14 ft Westeel Rosco up to 2000 bu.
Other sizes of new bins also available.
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 .
SUK UP G RAIN BIN S w ith the fo llo w ing o ptio ns :
BINS & CONES
• Ladders • Remote lid opener • Safety-fil Indicator • 12 leg hopper • 37 degree slope • Manhole • Double 6x4x.188w skid base
$5,605.00
We make hopper cones for all makes & sizes of bins.
Prices do not include setup or freight. Prices subject to change. Quantities are Limited.
STEALTH BIN PRODUCTS- Goebel bins, Westeel bins, 14’ hoppers. Early booking specials. 587-280-0239, Vegreville, AB. www.stealthbins.ca 3- GOEBEL 3500 bu. hopper bins, 2- Goebel 4200 bu. hopper bins and 10,000 bu. steel grain ring. Dave MacCuish Farm Equip. Auction, Tuesday, April 15, 2014, Frobisher, Sask. area. Mack Auction Co. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. PL #311962.
M & K WELDING 1-877-752-3004
NEED TO REPLACE YOUR ROTTEN BIN FLOORS??
SDL HO PPER C O NES
NOW!
THE “FORCE” HOPPER JT L isa lla bou tin n ova tive id ea s. • Replace your old floors and add up to 1500 bushels capacity to your existing bins. • No more fighting with your old doors. Our patented user-friendly JTL door system is guaranteed to make you smile everytime you use it!
SDL STEEL BIN FLO O RS
10 gauge sheet - 8” sidew all,bolt on 1 or 2 piece construction 12’-33’ Tru ck ing Av a ila b le 14’Floor......$1 ,4 6 5 21’Floor......$2,6 9 5 15’Floor......$1 ,580 22’Floor......$2,850 15’-10 Floor.$1 ,7 00 24’Floor......$3,4 6 5 18’Floor......$2,1 80 25 1⁄2 ’Floor....$3,6 6 5 19’Floor......$2,36 5
Re p la ce your old rotte n floors a n d a dd b ig b us h e ls w ith our “Le ga cy” re p la ce m e n t • The o n ly a era tio n ho pper floors OR th row a w a y your s h ove l a n d system tha t o ffers the skid a s a n re p la ce th e old floor w ith our a w a rd w in n in g in tegra l pa rt o f the a era tio n system “Force ” h op p e r. tha t pro vid es even d istrib u tio n o f a ir CALL TODAY TO CONFIRM YOUR thro u gho u tthe en tire b in .
ORDER FOR DELIVERY THIS SEASON.
s a les @ jtlin d u s tries .ca w w w .jtlin d u s tries .ca
N E IL BU RG, S AS K ATCH E W AN
DARMANI - Building Better Bins D A R M A N I B I N S
O PT IO NAL SKID BASE AND AERAT IO N
N EILBUR G , S K • 1-306-823-4888 ALBER TA • 1-7 80-87 2-4943 M AN ITOBA • 1-204-37 1-5 400
V is it o u r w eb s ite w w w .jtlin dus trie s .ca
DARMANI - Building Better Bins
SD L H OP P E R CONE 306-324-4441 M ARG O ,SASK.
DARMANI - Building Better Bins
DARMANI BIN SPECIALS FACTORY DIRECT PRICING 1-866-665-6677
4,300- 40,000 Bushel Packages Hoppers, Steel Floor, Cement ---- WE DO IT ALL Grain bins
Hopper bins
Temp monitoring
Big bins
Steel Bin Floors
Aeration fans
Tie down Anchors
MANUFACTURE---FINANCE---DELIVERY---SET UP
DARMANI - Building Better Bins
DARMANI - Building Better Bins
D A R M A N I B I N S
DARMANI - Building Better Bins
2012: TORMASTER NH3 4000 gal., on 30” SHIPPING CONTAINERS FOR SALE. 20’ tracks, exc. cond.; Blackbird NH3 applito 53’, delivery, rental, storage available. cation kit. 780-206-1234, Barrhead, AB. Accessories (shelving, dividers, etc), modifications, etc. For inventory and prices call Containers & Chains, 780-910-3542 St. Albert, AB. email: dick@rjpsales.com
USED
STORAGE TRAILERS
40 – 45’
quantity avail. We make hopper bottoms and steel floors for all makes of bins. Try our U-Weld kits. Call 306-367-2408 or 3 0 6 - 3 6 7 - 4 3 0 6 , M i d d l e L a ke , S K . www.middlelakesteel.com Ask about our bin rental program.
14’7 Leg M/Duty ............................$2,300 14’Hopper 8 leg H/Duty .................$2,4 50 15’Hopper 8 leg S/Duty ..................$2,6 00 15’-10” Hopper 8 Leg M/Duty .........$2,7 00 15’-10” Hopper 10 leg H/Duty .........$2,9 9 0 18’Hopper 12 leg M/Duty ...............$4 ,300 19’Hopper 12 leg M/Duty ...............$4 ,6 00 21’& 24’Hopper Cones...................$P.O .R. All Hop p er C ones Inclu d e M a nhole, Slid e G a te on Nylon Rollers
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. TRI STAR FARM SERVICES: 2013 CrustBuster field loader, fertilizer, 24”, SS frame, 13 HP Honda, $21,900. 306-586-1603, Regina, SK.
HORNOI LEASING NEW and used 20’ and 4 0 ’ s e a c a n s fo r s a l e o r r e n t . C a l l 306-757-2828, Regina, SK.
W E H A VE TH E SPECIALS: 5000 bu. Superior SO LU TIO N ! SPRING bin combos, $11,200; 8000 bushel Superior combos, $17,500. Limited
Order Your “FLOOR or “HOPPER” REPLACEMENT
CONVEY-ALL TUBE CONVEYOR: 6”x61’, w/wind guards, new 8” belt w/only 170 hrs. Up to 1000 bu./hr., asking $4500. 306-864-3696 or caygrain@sasktel.net
CONVEY-ALL CONVEYOR BELT: 8”’x14’, approx. capacity 300bu/hr., asking $1500. Call 306-864-3696, caygrain@sasktel.net
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. TWISTER 6,000 BUSHEL bin. Call WEATHERPROOF STEEL STORAGE contain1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. ers 8x40’, secure, lockable, instant onsite storage. Rent/sale. 1-866-676-6686. Download the free app today. 20’ TO 53’ CONTAINERS. New, used and modified. Available Winnipeg, MB; Regina and Saskatoon, SK. www.g-airservices.ca 306-933-0436.
Em a il: s a les @ m kw eld ing.ca | Melfort, Sask | w w w.m kw eld ing.ca
E AG R I- TR ADIO N IN N OVAT AW AR D W IN N ER 20 12
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.
SALE!!
Saskatoon, SK
WELDING
New 18-05 Meridian Hopper Bin (Approx. 5000 bu.)
Ne w Us e d & M o d ifie d S e a C o n ta in e rs fro m
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.
GR AIN BIN S FOR
45 TM DRIVE-UNDER outload bin; 240 TM bulk storage hopper bin; 55’ bucket WESTEEL, GOEBEL, grain and fertilizer dry elevator. 306-945-2270, Waldheim, SK. bins. Grain Bin Direct, 306-373-4919. TWO GRAIN VAULT 5,500 bushel. Call WESTEEL ROSCO 5 and 6 ring. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
M&K
In dus tria l D ire ct In corp ora te d
3,900
$ $
306-757-2828 BEAVER CONTAINER SYSTEMS, new and used sea containers, all sizes. 306-220-1278, Saskatoon and Regina, SK. 20’ AND 40’ SHIPPING CONTAINERS, large SK. inventory. Ph. 1-800-843-3984, 306-781-2600. ONLINE AUCTION: 32- storage sheds, 8’x12’ size, 2”x4” construction, shingle roof, 4’x6’ barn doors. Mounted on 4”x4” treated timbers. 1-800-263-4193, www.mcdougallauction.com Box 3081, Regina, SK, S4P 3G7. DL#319916. CONTAINERS FOR SALE OR RENT: All sizes available. Also tilt deck services. Call 306-861-1102, Radville, SK. 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
NEW HYDEF CARTS: One 3250 TBT and one Hydef 3750 TBT left for spring availability. Can be configured w/John Blue or hydraulic 3” fill, fill pump lights, 800 or 900 rubber. Starting at $32,500. Corner Equip., 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. FERTILIZER SPREADERS: 4- 8 ton. Large selection. 204-857-8403, Portage la Prairie, MB. www.zettlerfarmequipment.com LOOKING FOR A floater or tender? Call me first. 34 years experience. Loral parts, new and used. Call 403-650-7967, Calgary, AB.
FARMERS CHOICE BEST HOPPER
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.
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.
1.306.642.3460
www.thehopper.ca
Custom NH3 Solutions • Heaviest in the Industry • Complete twin 2000 Gal units ready for seeding • Wagons for existing tanks.
Box 46 • Beatty, SK S0J 0C0
DWAYNE ENTERPRISES Ph: 306-752-4445 Fax: 306-752-5574 www.dwayneenterprises.ca
58 CLASSIFIED ADS
SCS RAVEN 440 autorate controller, c/w Raven flow control valve and flow meter, Banjo 3-way shut-off valve and pressure spike valve. 60’ of Raven cabling. All you need for liquid variable rate fertilizing, $2000. Phone 306-452-7799, Redvers, SK. DICKEY JOHN NH3 complete system 76’ of MRB’s, 4 manifolds used 2 yrs., $4,000; Cooler and 3 manifolds, $2500. 306-398-7635, 306-398-2626 Cut Knife SK PATTISON WAGON 850 gal., 16.5Lx16.1SL tires, double piston pump, 3-way electric valve, shedded, $2000. Call 306-576-2288, Wishart, SK. FOR ALL YOUR
FERTILIZER
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
M AGNETIC CAM ERA PACKAGE
• Po s itio n gra in a u ger o r co n veyo r in to b in rem o tely; N EW b y yo u rs elf. PRODUCT • Po w erfu l m a gn ets to a d here to gra in & co m b in e a u gers , co n veyo rs , etc. • Ca m era is w a terpro o f & co lo r w ith a u d io . S ee w eb s ite fo r m o re d eta ils o r Ca ll
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
CALL US FOR PARTS ON ALL
SPREADER/TENDER MAKES AND MODELS
304SS Construction
21,995 00 Delivered
$
Limited Supply
MOBILITY 8 TON SPREADER All 409SS Construction
25,550 00 Delivered
$
Limited Supply
1 800 667 8800
www.nuvisionfhs.com 2000 GAL. WESTEEL NH3 tank on DuoLift trailer, 1995, 1996, and 1997. Last 5 yr. safety August, 2010. Purchased new, $16,500 each. 306-421-1110, Torquay, SK. BANDIT (POLYWEST) 1700 liquid fertilizer cart, ground driven twin piston John Blue Pump, 2” Briggs and Straton fill pump. Also Low rate Alpine pump available. $14,000. 306-577-8045, Carlyle, SK. 2009 WESTEEL NH3 tank, 4 tonne, 2000 gallon, off-set axles, rice lug tires, new inspection, always shedded, $21,750. 306-843-7488, Wilkie, SK. TWIN 1400 GAL. NH3 tanks, T4150 Wadena trailer, 2 yrs. old, large rice tires, exc. s h a p e , r e c e n t s a f e t y, $ 2 3 , 0 0 0 . 306-753-2500, Macklin, SK. 1000 GALLON NH3 tank and wagon w/38’ Morris Magnum cult., Atom Jet knives, 17” centers, $4500 OBO. 780-806-3439 or 780-842-4088, Wainwright, AB.
‘11 Demco 1050 Grain Cart, 900/60R32 Good year tires, 1000 PTO, Shur-Lock roll tarp, 18” auger, excellent condition! $34,800. Trades welcome. Financing & Leasing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
TRI STAR FARM SERVICES: 2013 CrustBuster 1325 grain cart, 20” auger tarp, 520-38/duals, $77,500. 2013 CrustBuster, 330 bu. seed tender, G.N. 12” belt/8” tube, 5 HP Honda scale, remote control, $33,500. 2013 CrustBuster, Pro Box Tote, bump pull, 2 box, 8” belt/6” tube, remote control, $13,999. 306-586-1603 Regina SK
EQUIPMENT NEEDS ADAMS SPREADER & TENDER
ADAMS 6 TON SPREADER
TIM’S REPAIR has REM grain vacs for sale: 2500’s, 2700’s, new and used and 3700’s. 306-784-2407 or 306-772-1004, Herbert, SK.
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 2011 BRANDT 13x90 hyd. swing auger, used gravity wagons, 250-750 bu. Used 11,900 bushels/hour, double auger chute, grain carts, 450-1050 bu. 1-866-938-8537. $24,000. Located Kamsack, SK. Can deliv- www.zettlerfarmequipment.com er. Call anytime 204-743-2324. NEW HOPPER WAGONS! 400 bu. with S A K U N D I A K A U G E R S I N S TO C K : tarp, $8,900; 600 bu., $14,500. See your swings, truck loading, Hawes Agro SP n e a r e s t F l a m a n s t o r e o r c a l l movers. Contact Hoffart Services Inc. 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com Odessa, SK, 306-957-2033. 2010 WHEATHEART SA1061 10”x61’ grain auger. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. INDENT SHELLS FOR 32 indent, assorted WESTFIELD 7”x26’ AUGER, 12 HP Kohler sizes, $400 OBO. Phone 306-648-8005, motor with drag auger, $1000. Call: Gravelbourg, SK. 306-749-2482, Hagen, SK. DUAL STAGE ROTARY SCREENERS and REMOTE CONTROL SWING AUGER Kwik Kleen 5-7 tube. Call 204-857-8403, movers, trailer chute openers, endgate Portage la Prairie, MB. or visit on-line: and hoist systems, wireless full bin alarms, www.zettlerfarmequipment.com digital wireless tractorCam, the Simpler HUTCH- FANNING CLEANER, Gjesdal FiveSampler portable combine. All shipped di- in-One 15 bu./hr., wheat and flax screens, rectly to you. Safety, convenience, re- $2000; Hart Uniflow Model 2256, 4 indent liability. Phone Brehon Agrisystems at rollers, $4,000. 306-257-3607, Allan, SK. 306-933-2655, visit www.brehonag.com Saskatoon, SK. SEED CLEANING EQUIPMENT, elevators and small hopper bottom bins for sale. 204-523-7464, Killarney, MB.
GRAINMAXX HIGH CAPACITY AUGERS 8 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM
NEW SEE VIDEO ON WEBSITE
6000 SERIES
TELESCOPIC
SWING AUGER
1 800 667 8800
www.grainmaxx.com
CUSTOM COLOR SORTING chickpeas to mustard. Cert organic and conventional. 306-741-3177, Swift Current, SK. SORTEX-Z CLASS 1V color sorter, single module w/2 monochromatic cameras, very low hrs., in new cond., c/w IngersollRand rotary compressor, 10 HP, w/cooler and dryer. Call 204-724-6673, Souris, MB. FORSBERG VACUUM GRAVITY table, model 250V w/Forsberg industrial fan model 23HA. Both refurbished and ready to work. Call 204-724-6673, Souris, MB.
JD 1650 59’ DT c/w Valmar, harrows, auto NH3, Valmar twin 1200 gal. tanks, 265 PSI, trailer with track erasers. 2003 WESTFIELD J 10x36 grain auger, 25 HP Kohler motor, exc. cond., $5200. 306-237-4582, Perdue, SK. 204-227-8599, 204-227-0639, Dugald, MB. SUKUP GRAIN DRYERS: 1 or 3 phase, liq1988 SAKUNDIAK 7x52, 10 HP elec., good uid propane or nat. gas, canola screens. cond., $2000; 1995 Brandt 7x45, 20.5 HP Early order discount pricing now in effect. Robin, vg cond., $3500; 1998 Sakundiak For info call: 204-998-9915, Altamont, MB. 8x52, 27 HP Kohler w/Wheatheart mover, very good cond., $7500. 306-682-3043, 306-682-3555, Lake Lenore, SK. GRAIN LEGS, distributors, conSAKUNDIAK 7x45 WHE ATHE ART kit, SELLING and truck scales. Also other elevasweep and magnetic clutch, $7000 OBO. veyors tors parts. 403-634-8540, Grassy Lake, AB. 306-834-8100, Major, SK. 2010 CASE 4520 AutoSteer, 1100 hrs., 70’ booms, $223,000; 2007 Case 4520, 3 bin, 70’ booms, 3300 hrs., $179,000; 2006 Case 4510, AutoSteer, FlexAir 70’ booms, 7400 hrs., $102,000; 2005 Case 4520 w/70’ flex air, 4000 hrs., $129,000; 2005 Case 4010 w/3020 G4 New Leader bed, $74,000; 2009 International GVM, 1000 hrs., 4WD, auto. $127,000; 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; 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/20 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, 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
RANCHERS WELDING liquid fertilizer trailer, Model 1000, S/N #NH320053. 26,500 lb. capacity. Dave 306-344-2433, Paradise Hill SK 4smechanical@hotmail.ca 3 FERTILIZER TANKS: 32,500 gal., 25,000. gal and 12,500 gal., 2” and 3” SS valves. Call 306-961-1170, Domremy, SK. 2004 BOURGAULT LFC2000, w/John Blue double piston pump, 2” Honda fill and agitation pump, shedded, excellent condition, $15,500. 306-217-0314, Bredenbury, SK. FERTILIZER STORAGE TANKS- 8300 Imp. gallon tanks available. See your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626 or visit www.flaman.com TWIN 1000 GALLON NH3 tanks, Wadena s t e e l t r a i l e r, r e a r f i l l , $ 1 9 , 5 0 0 . 306-873-7349, Tisdale, SK.
2011 FARM KING 1385, 13”x85’ grain au- BUCKET ELEVATORS. 100 bu./hr. - 10,000 bu./hr. Great for feeding/unloading grain ger. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. dryers, cleaning facilities or turning your 2009 FARM KING 16 x 104 #HS3152A, bin yard into a complete handling system. $ 1 9 , 9 0 0 . c a s h . 1 - 8 8 8 - 4 6 2 - 3 8 1 6 , o r Flaman Grain Cleaning, 1-888-435-2626. www.flamangraincleaning.com www.farmworld.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. 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 $13,500. Call 306-648-3321, Gravelbourg, SK. 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. 2009 SAKUNDIAK HD10- 1600 B/D grain auger, $8,500. Raymore NewHolland www.raymorenewholland.com or call 306-746-2911 WANTED: OLD RED or yellow PTO, 10” 60’ Bergen auger, not swing away, in fair shape, useable. Phone 306-252-2810, 306-567-7281, Kenaston, SK.
KEEP YOUR GRAIN SAFE. Temperature and moisture cables from OPI systems. Call the bin experts at Flaman 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com
2012 CASE WD1903 36’, SP, used only on canola, shedded, 400 hrs., 190 HP, double knife, deluxe cab, swath roller, U2 PU, 2 spd. hydro, rear suspension, $120,000 OBO. Neil 403-928-7740, Richmound, SK. CONEYAIR GRAIN VACS, parts, accessories. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. 1996 PRAIRIE STAR 25’ 4930 swather, 2 speed transmission, good condition. Call www.starlinesales.com 780-674-7944, Neerlandia, AB. GRAIN VACS: Brandt 4000, $7000; Brandt 4500, $7500; Weigh wagon w/digital scale, $3500. 1-866-938-8537. 2009 REM 2700 grain vac. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
BALE SPEAR ATTACHMENTS for all loaders and skidsteers, excellent pricing. Call now 1-866-443-7444. 2005 NH BR780 round baler, will take old- M150 2010 35’ D50 single knife, PU reel, e r b a l e r o n p a r t i a l t r a d e . C a l l factory transport, rotoshears, new knife and canvas in 2013, 788 header hrs., just 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. canola in 2013, $99,000 OBO. Delivery BALE SPEARS, high quality imported available. 780-204-0391 or 780-786-2867, from Italy, 27” and 49”, free shipping, ex- Mayerthorpe, AB. c e l l e n t p r i c i n g . C a l l n o w t o l l f r e e 2004 WESTWARD 93521 w/WS30. Call 1-866-443-7444, Stonewall, MB. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1989 NH 1079 SP bale wagon, Ford dsl. eng., $35,000; Hesston 4590 small square 2012 PREMIER M105 2- 30’ MacDon D50 h e a d e r. C a l l 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 6 7 - 2 0 7 5 . P L baler, $8,500. 306-232-7784, Rosthern, SK #915407. JD 568 ROUND baler w/net wrap; JD 347 2013 MF HESSTON WR9725 SP swather square baler; New Holland 1033 bale wag- with 75 hours and 30’ PU reel. Kolish Farm on; New Holland 154 HT 16 wheel rake. Equipment Auction, Saturday, April 19, Call 306-389-2431, Maymont, SK. 2014, Creelman, Sask. area. Visit JD 567 round baler w/netwrap and silage www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale kit. Dave MacCuish Farm Equip. Auction, b i l l a n d p h o t o s . 3 0 6 - 4 2 1 - 2 9 2 8 o r Tuesday, April 15, 2014, Frobisher, Sask. 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com 2011 MACDON M150 35’ D60D 160 for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or eng. hrs, 103 cutting hrs, dual direction, 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 booster spring kit, hyd. center link, dual NH 1063 PT square bale wagon, exc. knife drive, split reel, transport pkg, poly cond., always shedded. 780-986-4605, skids, hyd. freeform mounted roller, RotoShears. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. 780-498-6859, Leduc County, AB. 2004 NEW IDEA 6x5 soft core round baler, 2005 MF 9220 30’, 1030 hours, exc. shape, w/PU reverser, $5000. 204-525-4521, $57,500. 306-734-2762, 306-567-7895, Craik, SK. www.waltersequipment.com Minitonas MB 2012 JD R450 windrower, loaded, ATU, harness, brackets, 335 engine hrs., 220 hrs. on headers; WS25 Honeybee w/flex2012 MACDON R85 disc bine, 16’ header, fingers, rotoshears, spare drapers and c u t o n ly 3 0 0 a c r e s , l i ke n ew. C a l l parts; JD 995 16’ discbine w/Trilobe 306-389-2431, Maymont, SK. crimper. 780-524-2143, Valleyview, AB. FITS JD R450, 2005 HoneyBee draper 1995 MACDON PREMIER 2900 swather, header, 25’, vg condition. Stony Plain, AB., 2426 hrs., 30’ 960 header, double swath, gage wheels, PU reels, vg cond., $29,500 call 780-203-9593 or 780-963-0641. OBO. Call 306-743-7622, Langenburg, SK. RITEWAY LANDROLLER F3 and F5 series in stock. Be ready for seeding. See your near- MASSEY 200 SP, 30’, very well maintained, est Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. field ready, $26,000. 306-764-7920, 306-961-4682 leave msg Prince Albert, SK. www.flaman.com USED SCHULTE 15’ mowers and flex arms 2008 JOHN DEERE 4895 SP swather. Call c o m i n g s o o n . C a l l F l a m a n 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1-888-435-2626. VERSATILE 4400 20’ SP swather w/Ford 6 JD 956 DISCBINE flail conditioner, well cyl. eng. Call 1-800-667-2075 PL #915407 maintained, stored inside, $17,500 OBO. 2004 WESTWARD 9250, 25’ 972 header 403-308-4200, Mossleigh, AB. c/w Vern’s Equalizer, 890 cutting hrs., 2004 MACDON 16’ 922 auger hay header, $55,000. 306-536-3392, Edenwold, SK. double knife drive, steel rollers, $16,000. 4750 VERSATILE swather, UII PU reel, 306-536-3392, Edenwold, SK. s h e d d e d , 2 1 1 2 h o u r s , $ 8 5 0 0 O B O. WANTED: 18’ HAY CONDITIONER, used 204-734-8093, Swan River, MB. o r n ew, t o fi t 2 0 0 6 9 2 6 0 H e s s t o n . MASSEY FERGUSON 775 24’ SP swather 204-773-6890, Inglis, MB. w/6 cylinder engine. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. WANTED: FLAIL TYPE 9’-11’ discbine. Call 780-785-2405, the corrected number, PREMIER 2900 SP Cummins turbo swather Sangudo, AB. with 30’ MacDon 960 draper header. Dave Farm Equip. Auction, Tuesday, 16’ MACDON 922 hay header with steel MacCuish 15, 2014, Frobisher, Sask. area. Visit crimper. Dave MacCuish Farm Equipment April www.mackauctioncompany.com sale Auction, Tuesday, April 15, 2014, Frobish- b i l l a n d p h o t o s . 3 0 6 - 4 2 1 - 2 9for 28 or e r, S K . a r e a . M a c k A u c t i o n C o . 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale 2 0 0 4 M AC D O N 2 9 5 2 1 s w at h e r. C a l l bill and photos. PL #311962. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
NH BR780 round baler, NH 116 haybine, NH 1033 PT square bale wagon. Moncrief Farm and Livestock Equipment Auction, Wednesday, April 16, 2014, Alameda, SK. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 MOLE HILL LEVELER, 24’, fully hydraulic, like new, folds up to 8’. 204-564-2540, Shellmouth, MB. JD 568 BALER, silage special, Harvest-Teck hay preservative applicator, auto-rate, moisture readout, all new chains last season; MacDon 16’ 922 auger header, attached 722 crimper, tall crop dividers, double knife, new knives, guards, holddowns, knife heads and crimper belts; Tube-Line bale wrappers (2) Model TL5500 automatic, w/lights, remote steer and stop, tarp covers. All equipment in exc. cond., Call for more details. Dan Van Deynze, Holland, MB. 204-526-2746 home, 204-526-5257 cell. MORRIS 14 BALE Hay Hiker trailer. Dave MacCuish Farm Equip. Auction, Tuesday, April 15, 2014, Frobisher, Sask. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962
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. 2001 CIH 2388, 2061 sep. hrs., Y&M, hopper topper, always shedded, second set of concaves. 204-746-8971, Lowe Farm, MB. 2005 CASE 2388, 1400 engine hrs., 1100 r o t o r h r s . , $ 1 2 5 , 0 0 0 . C a l l S t e ve at 780-674-8080, Cherhill, AB. 1997 CIH 2188 w/Rake-Up pickup, 3499 sep. hrs., AFX rotor kit, big top hopper ext., long unloading auger, air foil chaffer. Service check done Nov. 2011, not used in 2013. Consignment sale, asking $33,500. Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy. 12 North, Steinbach, MB. reimerfarmequipment.com Gary Reimer, 204-326-7000. 2013 CASE 9230, 150 hrs, lux. cab, 620 duals, 750 rears, HD lateral tilt, small tube rotor, hyd. hopper cover, high cap. folding unload auger, point spout, Magna fine cut chopper, HID, air comp, AutoSteer and mapping. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. CASE/IH 2188 AXIAL flow SP combine with 2230 rotor hours. Kolish Farm Equipment Auction, Saturday, April 19, 2014, Creelman, Sask. area. For sale bill and photos www.mackauctioncompany.com 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815, Mack Auction Co. PL 311962. 2006 2388, 1014 rotor hrs, 2015 with Swathmaster PU, too many new parts and extras to list. Call 403-599-3945, Milo, AB. 2010 CASE 7120 with Swathmaster PU, 462 sep. hours. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 2012 CASE 8230, 783 eng./631 rotor hrs., luxury cab, duals, c/w 40’ MacDon FD 70, $295,000. 306-967-2534, Eatonia, SK.
2008 NH CR9060 w/Swathmaster PU, 1,130 sep. hours. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. FOUR - NEW HOLLAND CR9070 combines. Prices start at $155,000. 1-888-442-3816, or www.farmworld.ca
LEVELLING SHOVELS
DESIGNED FOR LEVELING MOUNDS IN HAY FIELDS… BOLTS TO YOUR CULTIVATOR SHANKS LIKE REGULAR SHOVELS… EASILY INSTALLED AND WORK GREAT!
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
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6*+0- &+(('4'06 ] 6*+0- '((+%+'06 ] 6*+0- 6*' $#.' 5/#46 5;56'/ 2009 LOFTNESS EXTRACTOR, does 9’ or 1 0 ’ b a g s , $ 2 8 , 0 0 0 . C a l l fo r d e t a i l s 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. 2010 RICHIGER EA350 10’ grain bag extractor, in good shape, $29,000. George 306-441-9299, Paynton, SK. ONLINE AUCTION: Richiger R10 grain bagger, Machine #116, 12’2” wide. www.mcdougallauction.com Box 3081, Regina, SK, S4P 3G7. 1-800-263-4193. DL#319916. 2009 AKRON E9250 grain bagger. Call 1-800-67-2075. PL #915407. STARTING AT $599 9’ and 10’ grain bag sale. See your nearest Flaman location or call 1-888-435-2626.
TWO HYDRAULIC DRILL fills in good condition, $875/each. Phone 306-642-3189, 1997 DEGELMAN 800 Shuttlekart grain cart. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. Assiniboia, SK.
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.
BALE CART
] Fast and easy gathering ] Virtually no maintenance ] Built to outlast a new baler 5:1
BALE RACKS
] Safe secure bale transport ] Easy to install and remove ] Available in kit form
THE GRAPPLES
] 90 degree bale rotation ] Mushroom stack 2 high ] No net wrap damage
One Person can Gather, Load and Stack 2,500 Bales in 55 hours!
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DEALERS WELCOME
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
2008 NH CR9070, twin rotor w/2011 15’ 790CP PU, IntelliView II monitor, Y&M, long auger, MAV chopper, HHC, on-board compressor, MegaWide 900 singles, mapping, 1183 sep. hrs., $178,000. 306-647-2344, Theodore, SK.
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2-2001 TR99 Combines w/ Swathmaster or Rakeup • $50,000 workorder, 1757 sep hrs.$59,800 • 2000 sep hrs., good condition .... $39,800 Financing available. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 2006 CR960, 1730 hrs., 76C 15’ PU header, 200 hrs. on triple check including rub bars, concaves, etc., 900 front tires, 600 rears, long unloading auger, HID lights, AutoSteer ready, shedded, well maintained $85,000. 306-648-3511, 306-648-7695, 306-380-7769, Gravelbourg, SK.
GLEANER R-62 SP with Cummins diesel engine. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407
‘97 JD CTS Combine F/C chop, chaff sprdr, pickup inc. $39,800. Trades welcome. Financing & Leasing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
2001 9650 WALKER w/PU, Y&M ContourMaster, 2800 sep. hrs., completely rebuilt, $69,000; 1994 9400 w/PU, 2700 sep. hrs., $24,900. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. 1981 7720 2800 hours., reverser, Redekop chopper, good cond., $11,000; 1979 8820, 5000 hrs., $9000. Will take grain on trade. 306-693-9847, Moose Jaw, SK. 2010 JD 9870, 20.8x42 duals, contour, Prodrive, 670 sep. hrs, clean, shedded, $220,000. 204-371-9928, Steinbach, MB.
CLASSIFIED ADS 59
JD 9500 SP combine and JD 214 PU head- 1976 CCIL 960 pull type combine, always er with 2472 sep. hours. Dave MacCuish shedded, good condition, $2000 OBO. Farm Equip. Auction, Tuesday, April 15, 204-523-8872, Killarney, MB. 2014, Frobisher, SK. area. For sale bill and photos www.mackauctioncompany.com 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815, Mack Auction Co. PL #311962. 1995 JD 9600, Greenlighted 200 hrs. ago, always shedded, excellent condition, 2009 HONEYBEE SP36’ header, 2388 $67,000. 306-764-7920 or 306-961-4682 adapter, fore/aft, PU reel, pea auger, newleave message, Prince Albert, SK. er knife and drapers, lifters, under 7000 2004 JD 9860, w/914 PU, Y&M, hopper acres. Call 403-599-3945, Milo, AB. ext. 1891 sep./2666 eng. hrs., Greenlight- 1996 MACDON 960 header, 36’, gauge ed Oct. 2013. 204-648-4649, Dauphin, MB. wheels, batt reel, MacDon trans., always 2010 JD 9770 STS, 774 sep. hrs., c/w shedded, asking $11,500; Also MacDon 2012 JD 615P PUB header w/only 100 hrs. arms to make fit on JD 2360 swather. on header, Contour-Master high torque 204-662-4418, Antler, SK. variable spd. feeder house, high cap. lift FITS JD R450, 2005 HoneyBee draper cyl., 22’ high capacity unload auger, wide header, 25’, vg condition. Stony Plain, AB., spread fine cut chopper, 800/70R38, small call 780-203-9593 or 780-963-0641. and large grain concaves, always shedded, exc. cond., $235,000. Call Jordan anytime RECONDITIONED rigid and flex, most makes and sizes; also header transports. 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. Ed Lorenz, 306-344-4811, Paradise Hill, 2006 JD 9760 STS, 1800/2300 hrs., SK. www.straightcutheaders.com Greenlighted yearly, new injectors, concave, feeder house, Y&M, vg cond., SP30 HONEYBEE DRAPER header, new k n i fe , a l w ay s s h e d d e d , e x c . c o n d . , $145,000. 306-230-2736, Assiniboia, SK. $25,000. Call 780-678-6054, Daysland, AB. 1996 JD 9600, yield monitor, JD 914 PU, hopper extensions, tires 70%, 3200 thresh- WE STOCK MOST SIZES and makes of i n g h o u r s , s h e d d e d , $ 3 3 , 9 0 0 O B O. flex platforms, some pickup platforms, and rigid platforms. We also have adaptors in 204-328-7158, Rivers, MB. stock to fit a JD platform onto CIH, NH or 2008 JD 9870 STS SP, c/w JD 615P PU Agco-MF combines. In stock JD 920, 925, 930, 630, 635 flex, JD 843, 893 corn header. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407 heads, JD 653 all crop, NH 973 w/wo air JD 9500 SP combine with JD 914 PU reel, NH 94 C draper 25’, CIH 1020, 2020 header and 2500 separator hrs. Moncrief flex, 1010 rigid, MF 9750 flex, Cat Lexion Farm and Livestock Equipment Auction, and Agco avail. Call Gary 204-326-7000. Wednesday, April 16, 2014, Alameda, SK. Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy. 12 North, area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com Steinbach, MB. reimerfarmequipment.com for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 2009 MACDON FD70, $60,000. and 2008 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 MACDON FD70, $55,000. Both 40’, all op2010 JD 9770 STS, w/1615 PU header, tions, 60/70 JD hook-up, shedded, vg 20.8x42 duals, large rear tires, $275,000. cond. Call 306-648-2418, Gravelbourg, SK. Call A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment Ltd., TRI STAR FARM SERVICES: 2014 Capel306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. lo corn header, 8 row and 12 row chop2011 JD 9770, 20.8x42 duals, contour, ping. Spring Special. 306-586-1603, RegiRWA, 320 sep. hrs, clean, shedded, na, SK. $250,000. 204-371-9928, Steinbach, MB. 2006 HONEYBEE DRAPER 25’ header, pea a u g e r, a s k i n g $ 2 8 , 0 0 0 . C a l l S t e v e 780-674-8080, Cherhill, AB. 2004 MF 9790, FieldStar, 1250/1700 hrs., 30’ CASE/IH 1020 straight cut header. c/w MF 4000 PU and Swathmaster, MF 30’ Kolish Farm Equipment Auction, Saturday, 5 0 0 0 r i g i d h e a d e r, $ 1 2 0 , 0 0 0 O B O. April 19, 2014, Creelman, Sask. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale 306-874-7110, Naicam, SK. bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or TWO 1983 MF 850 combines, low hours, 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 excellent condition, field ready. Offers. 2 0 1 0 C A S E 2 1 4 2 h e a d e r. C a l l 306-694-0013, Moose Jaw, SK. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. MF 8460 COMBINE 1990, RWA, PU header, MF 9750 FLEX 30’ PU reel, poly skids, field 30’ flex header, chopper, 2500 hrs. Call ready, off MF 8570 consignment, located 204-380-4591, Niverville, MB. in Cabri, SK. $12,900. Reimer Farm EquipMF 550, Perkins dsl., hydrostatic with MF ment, Hwy. 12 North, Steinbach, MB. Gary, PU header, Melroe 378 PU, 9120 straight 204-326-7000. reimerfarmequipment.com cut flex header, $5,000. 306-858-2529, 2008 NEW HOLLAND 94C header. Call 306-867-9899, Lucky Lake, SK. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
TWO 2012 JD 630F headers for sale, well maintained, asking $35,000 each OBO. 780-934-6384, Fort Saskatchewan, AB. 2002 CASE/IH 1020 30’ flex header, auto header height, hyd. fore/aft, PU reel; 1986 Case/IH 1010 25’ straight header, batt r e e l ; 4 w h e e l 3 0 ’ f l e x h e a d t r a i l e r. 204-746-8971, Lowe Farm, MB.
RS
HEADE
• 40’ 9250 Dynaflex w/ hyd. tilt, fore & aft, electric reel, overall 10/10 condition! $65,800.00 w/ warranty! • 40’ MD D60 Swather head w/ transport, split reel 9/10, guards 9/10, new knife, w/ warranty. $36,800 + $13,000 for CA20 adapter with upgraded linkage kit. • 30’ Cat F530 Flex head w/ HCC pickup reel, removable air system, full finger auger, excellent condition, $16,800.00. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com
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Swift Current, SK
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• 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
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. 1996 MACK E7 semi tractor, 427 eng., with PTO and hyd. kit, 5th wheel, mechanics special, only $4500. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, 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.
Harvest Salvage Co. Ltd. 1-866-729-9876 5150 Richmond Ave. East Brandon, MB
www.harvestsalvage.ca New Used & Re-man parts
THE REAL USED FARM PARTS SUPERSTORE O ver2700 Un its forS a lva g e Tra ctors Com b in e s Sw a th e rs Dis ce rs Ba le rs
W a trou s , S a s k . Ca llJo e, Len o rDa rw in 306- 946- 2 2 2 2 Fa x 306- 946- 2 444
Tractors Combines Swathers TRIPLE B WRECKING, wrecking tractors, combines, cults., drills, swathers, mixmills. etc. We buy equipment. 306-246-4260, 306-441-0655, Richard, SK. DEUTZ TRACTOR SALVAGE: Used parts for Deutz and Agco. Uncle Abe’s Tractor, 519-338-5769, fax 338-3963, Harriston ON GOODS USED TRACTOR parts (always buying tractors) David or Curtis, Roblin, MB., 204-564-2528, 1-877-564-8734.
Ope n M o n .thru Fri., 8 a .m .-5 p.m . w w w .w a tro u s s a lva ge.co m Em a il: s a lv@ s a s kte l.n e t LOOKING FOR PICKUP HEADERS? ‘14 MD 16’ PW7 $26,800 ‘09 CIH 2016 ................$17,800 ‘09 CIH 2016...$19,800 ‘01 JD Precision .......... $6,680 ‘92 JD 914.........$7,280 ‘03 Swathmaster PU.$10,950 1-800-667-4515, or check us out at www.combineworld.com
NEW CENTRE CANVASS for Honeybee h e a d e r, y e a r 2 0 0 0 - 2 0 0 5 , $ 4 0 0 . 780-674-7944, Barrhead, AB.
MEDICINE HAT TRACTOR Salvage Inc. Specializing in new, used, and rebuilt agricultural and construction parts. Buying ag and construction equipment for dismantling. Call today 1-877-527-7278, www.mhtractor.ca Medicine Hat, AB.
GRATTON COULEE
AGRI PARTS LTD. TRANS. AND DIFF. PARTS for approx. 1969-71 JD 4020 diesel. Trans. is synchro range. 403-845-5193 Rocky Mtn House AB
IRMA, AB.
1-888-327-6767 www.gcparts.com
Huge Inventory Of Used, New & Rebuilt Combine & Tractor Parts. Tested And Ready To Ship. We Purchase Late Model Equipment For Parts.
Combine World 1-800-667-4515, www. combineworld.com; 20 minutes E. of Saskatoon, SK on Highway #16. Used Ag & Industrial equipment, new, used & rebuilt parts, & premium quality tires at unbeatable prices! 1 yr. warranty on all parts. Canada’s largest inventory of late model combines & swathers. Exceptional service. G.S. TRACTOR SALVAGE, JD tractors only. 306-497-3535, Blaine Lake, SK. WILSON CATTLELINER PARTS, gates, ramps, doors, etc. Wayne’s Trailer Repair, 306-497-2767, Blaine Lake, SK.
S EXS M ITH US ED FARM P ARTS LTD . S EX S M ITH , ALTA. w w w .u sed fa rm pa rts.co m Em ail: fa rm pa rt@ telu spla n et.n et
YOUR ONE STOP FOR NEW , USED & REBUILT AG PARTS. Dis m a n tlin g a ll m a jor m a ke s a n d m ode ls of tra ctors , com b in e s , s w a th e rs , b a le rs a n d fora ge h a rve s te rs . Plu s M u ch M o re!
1-8 00-340-119 2
Bu yin g Fa rm Equ ipm en t Fo rD ism a n tlin g 1995 GMC 6500, engine shot, 6 spd., new tires, good cab and hood, $3000. LOEFFELHOLZ TRACTOR AND COMBINE 306-946-8522, Saskatoon SK Salvage, Cudworth, SK., 306-256-7107. We sell new, used and remanufactured parts for most farm tractors and combines. W RECKIN G TRACTO RS , S W ATHERS , BALERS , CO M BIN ES
(306) 547-2125 PREECEVILLE SALVAGE
gallantsales.com Large inventory of new and used potato equip. Dealer for Tristeel Mfg. wash line equip. Dealer for Logan PREECEVILLE, SASKATCHEWAN Equipment. Call Dave 204-254-8126, MB. STEIGER TRACTOR PARTS for sale. Very SALVAGE TRACTORS, VOLVO 810 and 650LK 1994 GRIMME single row potato affordable new and used parts available, 650. Ford 7600, 5000, 3600, 6000, S Ma- harvester, $10,000; Also have additional made in Canada and USA. 1-800-982-1769 jor. David Brown, 1690, 1410, 1210, 885. potato equipment, washer, Kerian sizer, 6row Lockwood planter. 306-717-0025, OsInternational 674, 784, 885. 306-228-3011 ALLISON TRANSMISSIONS Service, www.britishtractor.com Unity, SK. ler, SK. sjjguenther@sasktel.net Sales and Parts. Exchange or custom rebuilds available. Competitive warranty. SMITH’S TRACTOR WRECKING. Huge KINZE 2600, 12x23 row planter, good 15” Spectrum Industrial Automatics Ltd., inventory new and used tractor parts. b e a n p l a n t e r, a s k i n g $ 2 1 , 5 0 0 O B O. 204-437-4641, Steinbach, MB. 1-888-676-4847. Blackfalds, AB. 1-877-321-7732.
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FORK TYPE ROCKPICKER, $600. 306-488-2103, 306-527-1389 Holdfast, SK DEGELMAN R570, ground drive, rock curtain, 3 BAT, very low acres, $4500 OBO; Degelman rock hook attachment for dozer, $450 OBO. 306-747-2514, Shellbrook 2009 DEGELMAN 7200 rockpicker. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. ROCK-O-MATIC 546 rockpicker, PTO, very good condition, new tires, $2500. 306-463-7802, Eatonia, SK. N E W D E G E L M A N 7 2 0 0 r o c k p i c ke r, $27,500. RJ Sales & Service Ltd., Wadena, SK., 306-338-2541, www.rjsales.ca Email rj.sales@sasktel.net
2006 ROTARY MODEL SM14N001. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. SNAP-ON MODEL ACT Y3O electric leak detector. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. PRO VISION MODEL BK5500 Snap-On visual inspection device. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. OTC MODEL 6520 ball joint super jet. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. COATS MODEL 700 tire balancer. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. AAMCO MODEL 3850 brake lathe. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. ROBIN AIR COOLTEC Model 34788. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. SUNMICRO II PERFORMANCE analyzer. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1999 ROTARY MODEL AR122-1104. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. ROBIN AIR MODEL 16910. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. DEVILBISS MODEL 445. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. SPECIALTY TOOLS, LARGE selection for automotive mechanic shop. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
1994 BRANDT QUICK-FOLD Sprayer, wind 1994 BRANDT QUICKFOLD 96’, foam cones, foam marker, $3000. Lucky Lake, marker, wind cones, double nozzle bodies, SK. 306-858-2529 or 306-867-9899. $3500. 306-488-2103, 306-527-1389, Holdfast, SK. NH S1070 PT sprayer, 1350 Imp gal., 100’ AutoHeight, shedded, low acres, 1 owner, FLEXI-COIL 67XL, 120’, windscreens, dual vg shape, asking $37,500. Call Darrell at nozzles, autorate, disc markers, premium, $14,750. 306-460-8666, Netherhill, SK. 403-664-2268 or 403-664-0248, Oyen, AB. 2007 NH SF216, 100’ suspended boom, 2002 FLEXI-COIL XL67, 90’ wheel boom, 1350 Imp. gallon, Raven AutoBoom, wind- 1200 gal. tank, induction tank, clean water screens, foam marker, rinse tank, triple tank, dual nozzles, fence line nozzles, hyd. nozzles, one owner, nice condition, asking pump, foam marker, wind screens, exc. cond. $15,000. 306-728-3337, Melville, SK $29,500. Call 306-725-4286, Bulyea, SK. 1994 FLEXI-COIL 65, 80’, hyd. pump, 800 BOURGAULT CENTURION III, 80’, 800 g a l . t a n k , i n g o o d c o n d i t i o n . gal., hydraulic pump, new tires, $6000. 306-748-2446, Neudorf, SK. 306-448-4412, Manor, SK. 2010 NEW HOLLAND 100’ S1070 sus- 2009 CIH SRX 160, 1400 Imp. gal. tank, pended boom sprayer, c/w Raven Auto- 84’, hyd. unfold, dual nozzle, rate controlBoom, triple nozzle bodies, 4 sets of tips, ler, 100 gal. rinse tank. Very nice cond., 1350 Imp. gal., rinse tank, chem. inductor, $25,000. 306-369-2765, Bruno, SK. 20” spacing, joystick and IntelliView moni- 1998 FLEXI-COIL 67XL, 130’ sprayers, 2 tor, exc. cond., wintered inside, $35,000 units, $12,000 and $15,000. Ph for details OBO. Call 306-642-5806, Assiniboia, SK. at 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. FLEXI-COIL 65, 100’, hydraulic or PTO 2009 NH S1070, 100’, autorate, wind curdriven, autorate, 2-sets nozzles, wind tains, 1300 gal. tank, disc markers, wheels screens, 800 gal. tank, mix tank, c/w extra on boom, 4 years of use, $30,000 OBO. parts, $4000 OBO. Call 306-662-9093 or 306-893-8008, Maidstone, SK. 306-558-7017, Fox Valley, SK. 2003 BRANDT QF2500 100’, 1250 imp. gal, 60’ JET STREAM sprayer, blue and grey, AutoRate, rinse, triple bodies, AI tips, end twin line (38 kms/hr.), chem handler, nozzle, windcones, chem fill, hyd. pump, shedded, well maintained, field ready, half boom shut-off, boom filters, low acres $14,900 OBO. 306-640-7650, Courval, SK. $13,500. 403-575-2401, Veteran, AB. 1998 FLEXI-COIL 67XLT, 120’, 800/400 gal. twin tanks, twin booms, 2 hyd. pumps, wind curtains, autorate, chem tank, foam markers disc markers, end nozzles, c/w new Flex Control II monitor, exc. cond., $11,000. Lumsden, SK. 306-591-2760. 2007 FLEXI-COIL 100’, susp. boom, 1600 gal., windscreens, 18.4 duals, AutoHeight, 7 section, mint. 306-692-4047 Moose Jaw 2006 NH SF115 PT High Clearance sprayer. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
BRANDT AUTOFOLD SPRAYER 123’, 1500 gal. tank, autorate, independent control end nozzles, remote boom controls for checking nozzles, Bubblejet nozzles, new boom tires, $5200; w/2590 Case tractor, 5900 hrs., equipped with sprayer controls and GPS, Autofarm Ontrack updated 2013, $31,000 pkg. 306-463-7802, Eatonia, SK. INDUSTRIAL 10’ V-PLOW, made to mount BOURGAULT MODEL 1450, 100’ booms, on 4WD blade mount or payloader, $5800. autorate, disc markers, $9500. Phone: 403-872-2940, Ponoka, AB. Call 306-961-1170, Domremy, SK. 1012 SCHULTE SDX-960 3 PTH. Call 2008 NH SF216 PT sprayer, 100’, 1600 US gallon tank, dual nozzles, autorate. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 306-741-6319, Waldeck, SK. 2007 CASE SRX 160, JD rate controller, sectional control, AutoBoom, $30,000. Call YOUNG’S EQUIPMENT INC. For all your 780-678-6054, Daysland, AB. silage equipment needs call Ron toll free 306-565-2405, Regina, SK. 1997 FLEXI-COIL 67XLT, wheel boom, 114’, windscreens, autofold, double booms, new tires, autorate, foam marker, $10,000. 306-648-2418, Gravelbourg, SK. BUILDING MOVING EQUIPMENT: 2- 47’ long 12”x12” I beams, 5/8” thick; 2- dol- 1993 FLEXI-COIL 65 100’ high profile ley’s, single axle, dual 920 rubber; 12’x7” wheeled, 800 gal. windscreens w/endcaps, long bunk; 2- timbers, 30’ long, 8” thick, chem tank, dual nozzles, foam markers, no jacks, $4500 OBO for everything. Call clean water tank, adj. axles, lug tires, 2 seasons on pump, 1 season on solonoids, 306-459-7816, Moose Jaw, SK. $5000. 403-878-6985 cell, Richmound, SK. 2012 FLEXI-COIL 68XL suspended boom sprayer, 134’, 1350 Imp. gal. tank, 480/80R38 tires, AutoHeight, autorate, $45,000. 306-488-2182, Holdfast, SK.
90’ Willmar 8100 800 gallon sprayer, stainless steel tank, 4200hrs, triple nozzle, GPS...$49,800. Trades welcome. Financing & Leasing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
BRANDT QF 1500, 90’, 800 gal., hyd. pump, autofold, wind cones, foam marker, chem handler, end nozzle, field ready, s h e d d e d , $ 7 5 0 0 . C a l l D av i d K l e i n 306-957-4312, 306-695-7794, Odessa, SK. 100’ AG SHIELD sprayer, 1200 gal. tank, 100 gal. wash out tank, $15,000 OBO. 204-851-5520, Cromer, MB. BRANDT SB4000, 90’, 1600 gal., Norac HT with accumulators, shedded, $19,000 OBO. 306-725-7820, Strasbourg, SK.
2011 CASE 4420 120’ boom, 940 hours, Viper Pro, 5 and 15 gal. nozzles, 650 floaters, 380 in crop tires, field ready, 1000 hr. service done, air lift dividers, HID lights, AccuBoom, AutoHeight control, AIM command, luxury cab, full AutoSteer, shedded in mint condition, $260,000. Strathmore, AB., call 403-901-5390. 2000 JD 4700, 90’ booms, Norac UC-5 boom height controller, 2600 GPS with integrated AutoSteer, Swath Control Pro, two sets of tires, crop dividers, 2550 hrs., $100,000. 306-728-8121, Melville, SK. 2012 NEW HOLLAND SP.365F #N21752A. 642 hrs., 120’ boom, 10 section control kit, $269,000. cash. 1-888-442-6084, or www.farmworld.ca 1998 WILLMAR 785 Special Edition, 5.9L Cummins eng., 600 gal. SS tank, 90’ booms, Trimble AutoSteer crop dividers, 2 sets of tires, 3600 hrs., $47,500. Will take grain on trade. 306-874-7474, Naicam, SK. 2011 NH SP.365F, $258,000. Watrous NewHolland, 306-946-3301, Watrous, SK., or www.watrousnewholland.com 2003 JD 4710, 90’ booms, triple nozzles, 800 gal. poly, Outback AutoSteer, 4WD with rear duals, diff. locks, vg cond. 780-872-2832, Paradise Hill, SK. 2000 WILMAR 8100 Eagle, 90’, 800 gal. SS tank, GPS AutoSteer, air ride suspension, 2 sets tires, 3340 hrs., $55,000. Call 306-233-7756, Cudworth, SK.
2012 NH SP.240F XP, 1200 gal., 100 ft., $269,000. Raymore NewHolland, phone 306-746-2911, Raymore, SK. or website: www.raymorenewholland.com 1993 PATRIOT XL, 90’, 750 gal. tank, 3-way nozzles, Dickey John monitoring, $45,000. 780-523-2394, High Prairie, AB. 1997 WILLMAR 785 AirTrac, 80’ Spray-Air boom and wet boom, 600 gal. SS tank, 5.9L Cummins, 4 Tridekon dividers, Midtech autorate, 4 new tires, 1885 hrs. Call 780-986-0678, 780-906-4240, Leduc, AB.
WILLMAR EAGLE 8200 SP 90’ high clearance sprayer and AutoSteer Trimble AutoMapping with 2500 hours. Dave MacCuish Farm Equip. Auction, Tuesday, April 15, 2 0 1 4 , F r o b i s h e r, S a s k . a r e a . V i s i t www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962
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 2007 APACHE AS1010, $129,000. Yorkton control, 2 set wheels, always shedded, exc. NewHolland, 306-783-8511, Yorkton, SK., cond., $82,000 OBO. Can deliver. Pictures or www.yorktonnewholland.com avail. 306-497-3126, 306-497-7511, Blaine 2005 PREDATOR 2010, 103’ conventional Lake, SK. lakeridgefarms@sasktel.net and AirBoom, 1000 gal tank, 3-way nozzle 1998 PATRIOT 150, 90’ boom, 750 tank, bodies, AutoBoom shut-off, GPS EZ-Steer autorate, AutoHeight, 2 sets of tires, 4700 500, crop dividers, 2 sets tires, 1800 hrs, hrs., $34,000. 403-872-2940, Ponoka, AB. $110,000. 780-307-5023, Neerlandia, AB. 2001 CASE/IH SPX4260, 1200 gal. SS 2008 JD 4730 SPRAYER, 3372 engine tank, 90’ boom, active suspension, Trimble hrs, 1310 spraying hrs., 800 gal. tank, 100’ GPS w/AutoSteer, mapping, AutoBoom boom, 5-way nozzle bodies, fence row height, float tires- 60%, brand new narrow nozzles, foam marker, 2600 display, tires, exc. cond., $9500. Phone Jordan w/swath control and SF1 activation, Boom anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. Trac Pro 5 sensor system, hyd. tread adjustment, AutoSteer, c/w 2 sets tires, 320/90R46 and 520/85R38, completely serviced and ready for spring. $158,000 O B O. F o r m o r e i n fo c o n t a c t K i m at BOOK NOW! 53’ Behnke sprayer trailer for delivery before spring spraying. See your 306-255-7601, Viscount, SK. nearest Flaman location or call ONLINE AUCTION: 2006 Case/IH 4410 1-888-435-2626. high clearance sprayer, Aim command. www.mcdougallauction.com Box 3081, TRIDEKON CROP DIVIDER parts, some Regina, SK, S4P 3G7. 1-800-263-4193. damage, 2 good cones from JD mounts, offers; Right-hand boom break away for DL#319916. Patriot, $100; Main suspension spring for 2003 5710, 29.5’, 4.5” packers, knock-on 1994 Patriot, $100. Ph 780-674-7944, Bourgault knives, MRB, 18” set up for liquid, 16,000 acres use, starting price Barrhead, AB. $30,000. 306-398-7446, Baldwinton, SK. 2013 ROGATOR RG 900 100’, 120 hours, SET OF 23.1X26 flotation tires and rims, in loaded, factory warranty. Asking $249,000. good condition, for JD 4700 sprayer, MORRIS MAXIM II, 2002, 34’, 10” space, liquid kit, w/7180 TBT cart, $42,000. RJ Almost anything on trade. Toll Free $4250. 306-276-2442, Nipawin, SK. Sales & Service, 306-338-2541, Wadena, 1-877-862-2387 or 1-877-862-2413, 2012 BEHNKE STEPDECK sprayer trailer, SK. www.rjsales.ca rj.sales@sasktel.net 306-862-7524, 306-862-7761, Nipawin, SK 53’, tridem, air ride, beavertails, like new, 2002 FLEXI-COIL 3450 TBT cart, mechani2013 APACHE 1080, 100’, EnvisioPro, Au- asking $43,000. 306-747-7685 Parkside SK cal drive, DS, 10” auger, shedded, asking toBoom height/rate, 150 hrs., $200,000 $30,000 w/wo 1995 Flexi-Coil 5000, 45’, OBO. 306-796-4536, Central Butte, SK. 9” spacing, DS, Atom Jet, asking $15,000. 2005 CIH 4410, 3300 hrs., 90’ booms, 380 W i l l s e l l a s a u n i t o r s e p a r a t e l y. skinny’s, 650 floaters, Outback GPS map306-377-2111, Herschel, SK. ping and AutoSteer, sec. boom control, MORRIS MAXIM 34’, 12” spacing, double 4600 Raven monitor, SS tank, $130,000 s h o o t , c / w 7 1 8 0 t ow b e h i n d t a n k . OBO. 306-281-2275, Prud’Homme, SK. 403-308-3374, Pangman, SK. 2010 CASE/IH 4420, 120’ booms, luxury FLEXI-COIL 5000 39’ air drill, 7.5” spacing, cab, loaded, excellent condition, 900 hrs., liquid kit with AtomJet side band, 1610 offers. 306-252-2301, Kenaston, SK. TBT cart, field ready, $25,000 OBO. WANTED: 4 flotation rims and tires to fit 780-307-3392, Westlock, AB. 1995 Model #854 Rogator sprayer, must 2009 JD 1870 Conserva Pak, 40’, c/w 430 be vg. 306-764-8198 eves, Henribourg, SK. TBH cart and primary blockage monitor, vg TWO 3630 SPRA-COUPE, one has 60’, one condition. Ph. 780-635-4080, Glendon, AB. with 74’ boom, $22,000 to $33,000. 2010 65’ BOURGAULT 3310 paralink, 12” 204-937-3933, Robin, MB. spacing, mid row shank banding, DS, rear 1998 ROGATOR 854, 4103 hrs., 2 sets of hitch, $157,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equiptires, $12,000 spent on wheel motors last ment Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. yr., professionally serviced yearly, Trimble 2012 61’ MORRIS Contour II air drill, DS, AutoSteer, sec. boom control, $75,000 side band openers, 8370 450 bu. TBH air OBO. 306-259-4990, 306-946-6424, Young tank, Topcon Eagle monitor, exc. cond., 1998 WILLMAR 8400 Eagle, 3968 hrs., $200,000. 306-328-4883, 306-338-7886, 120’ boom, 1200 gal. SS tank, 2 sets tires, Wadena, SK. Outback GPS ready, air ride, triple nozzles, 2004 JOHN DEERE 1820 61’ air drill. Call $50,000 OBO. 306-821-7500, Marshall, SK. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 2006 ROGATOR 1274 C, 100’, 3470 hrs., 2009 JD 1830, 48’, 12” rubber packers, 1300 gallon, loaded, reduced to $132,000. double shoot, paired row, 1910 430 bu. 306-641-7759 306-647-2459 Theodore, SK tank, excellent shape, $78,000 OBO. 2009 CASE 3150, 90’, 750 tank, 1480 hrs,. 306-831-7863, Rosetown, SK. two sets of tires, Sec. control, EZ-Guide 1994 FLEXI-COIL 800 triplex, 45’, factory 500/ EZ-Steer. 306-239-2071, Osler, SK. mounted V packers, 9” spacing, 3/4” open2001 JOHN DEERE 4710, 90’, 2300 hrs., ers, mud scrappers, 8 secondary blockage, shedded, AutoSteer, Outback guidance 2320 TBT, new auger flighting and hopper, and Norac, $118,000. Call 306-377-2132, good shape, $23,900 OBO. 306-831-7468 306-831-8007, Herschel, SK. elliott6@sasktel.net Dinsmore, SK. 2008 JD 4830, 1258 hrs., $149,500; 2011 JD 4930, 1350 hrs., $199,500. Call 204-822-3797, Morden, MB.
2007 APACHE 1210, 1990 hrs., 60/90 booms, Raven 440 monitor w/AutoBoom height, Capistan sharp shooter (AIM command), Outback e-drive, 5 section AutoMate, 2 sets rears, $120,000. Kenaston, SK. Call 306-252-2767 or 306-221-8968. 2008 IHC 3320, 1269 hrs., new tires, 1000 gal. tank, 100’ boom, AIM Command, AutoBoom, AutoHeight, AutoSteer, shedded. 306-488-4517, 306-529-0887, Dilke, SK. 2011 JD 4830, 1000 gal. SS tank plus booms, 100’, GPS 2600 plus SF 3000, loaded, 2 sets tires, powertrain warranty until 2015, shedded, Greenlighted, 800 hrs, mint, $260,000 OBO. 306-536-7892 or r.andrew@sasktel.net Regina, SK. 2010 JD 4830, 877 hrs., 100’ booms, 1,000 gallon SS tank, loaded with all options, 2 2007 FIELDHAWK #N21778A. 100’ boom, sets of tires, full GPS, shedded, $200,000. 1200 product tank, almost 50% off! 306-280-4699, Prud’Homme, SK. $79,000. cash! 1-888-442-3816, or www.farmworld.ca 2013 4430, 120’, 164 hrs., 1200 gallon, AIM, 710’s and 320’s, spray remote, 5 sen- 2006 APACHE AS710 high clearance spraysor AutoBoom, AccuBoom, wide fenders, er, 1100 hrs., 750 gal. tank, 90’ boom, 3” front fill, Pro 700, Tridekon crop divid- SmarTrax guidance, Smartsteer, $115,000 OBO. Call 306-631-1747, Moose Jaw, SK. ers. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. 2006 JD 4720 high clearance sprayer, WILLMAR 785, 6 cyl. Cummins, 3 spd. hy2248 hrs., 320/90R46 tires, fenders, dro, SS crop dividers, 600 gal. SS tank, 20.8R38 FS floaters, 2600 display, JD ITC rinse tank, 90’ booms, 5-way nozzle bodies reciever, SF1 Activation, sectioanl control, w/nozzles, 3 sets tires, Trimble AutoSteer, hyd. tread adjust, radar, $159,500 OBO. 3050 hrs. 204-648-4649, Dauphin, MB. 306-540-9339, 306-586-3293 Raymore SK 2009 JD 4730, 1468 hrs., 800 gal. tank, 2001 CASE/IH PATRIOT SPX 2130, 100’ boom, fence row nozzles, 5-way noz2800 hrs., 80’, 650 gal. tank, Outback Au- zle bodies, GreenStar, 2600 monitor, AutotoSteer, Tridekon dividers, field ready, Steer, sectional control, AutoHeight, large $50,000. 306-386-2443, 306-441-2483, in-line filter, 2 sets tires, $177,500. North Battleford, SK. Pics available on req. 306-795-2708, Hubbard, SK. 2007 APACHE 1010, 1275 hrs, 103’, Raven Envisio Pro, w/hyd. SmarTrax, Phoenix 200 receiver, Raven AccuBoom and AutoBoom, sharp shooter nozzle control, 5 nozzle body, 2 sets tires, shedded, well maintained $156,000. 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK., or email: info@LLseeds.ca for photos 2011 CASE SPX 3330, 100’ boom, 1000 gal SS tank, AutoBoom height, AutoBoom shut-off, fence row nozzles, Aim command, 2 sets of tires, crop dividers, Raven 2010 MILLER G40 Capstan sharp shoot- Viper Pro, AutoSteer, less than 500 hrs., er, nozzle control, 1200 gal. poly tank, 90’ exc. cond. 403-391-6021, Red Deer, AB. booms, 850 hrs, 300 HP, Envizio Pro, SmartTrac, AccuBoom, AutoBoom, Boom 1999 APACHE 790, 2600 hrs., all new tires, air blow out, Tridekon crop savers air lift, new solution pump, new hydraulic pump, $169,000 OBO. Can deliver, pics available. EZ-Steer GPS, always shedded, excellent condition, $67,000. Call 306-642-5632 or Call 780-632-9899, Ranfurly, AB. 306-536-9811 cell, Assiniboia, SK. SET OF 4 GOODYEAR floaters, 620/70R 46 tires and rims for JD 4930, used for ap- 2006 1274C ROGATOR, w/6 spd trans., 1200 gal SS tank, 200 gal. winch tank, prox. 300 hrs. 204-673-2382, Melita, MB. foam markers, 3-way nozzle bodies, chem. SPRAYTEST REMOTE BOOM CONTROL inductor, hyd. tread adjust, 1788 hrs., L/R row nozzles, SF1 JD AutoSteer, 4000 RaUse wireless remote to turn on individual ven controller, 90’ booms, 2 sets of tires boom sections for nozzle checks. 80%, never had fertilizer. Recent $10,000 Easy install with plug and play harness to work order. Always shedded, mint cond. fit your sprayer. Order your SprayTest today. $149,500. 204-379-2371, 204-745-7191, St. Claude, MB. Ph: 306-859-1200 2004 NH SF110 high clearance sprayer w/Norac height control. Dinsmore, SK. spraytest@sasktel.net 306-846-2175 or email: cab@sasktel.net
Are you driving over your money? Built heavy to last
Field proven for over 15 years
1-866-292-6115 www.tridekon.ca
BEHNKE DROP DECK semi style and pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, 2013 BOURGAULT 3320 76’ XTC w/7950 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 : cart. 4.5” V-style packer, DS air kit for mid 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336. row shanks, liquid kit for side band w/1” knife, full blockage seed and fert. ISO adapter, X30 monitor, 12” auger and bag lift. 306-746-7638 for info., Raymore, SK. JD 1820 36’, 10” spacing, DS, 4” packers, Stealth openers, c/w 4” spreader boots, JD 787 TBH 230 bu. tank with 3rd tank, $45,000. 780-679-7795, Camrose, AB. 1997 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 33’, 7.2” spacing, recapped packers, Atom Jet DS openers, 1720 TBT cart, extra rollers, $26,500, 701-982-3572, Fortuna, North Dakota
TRIDEKON CROP SAVER, crop dividers. Reduce trampling losses by 80% to 90%. Call Great West Agro, 306-398-8000, Cut Knife, SK. SET OF TWO 20.8x38 sprayer tires, on 10 whole rims, 150 hrs. of use on NH sprayer, $5500. 306-483-7941, Oxbow, SK.
’97 AG Shield P/T sprayer, 1,250 gallon tank, 100’ suspended boom. $7,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
GET READY FOR SPRAYING. Flaman has chem handlers, water pumps, chem 2004 CASE 4260, 1200 gal. SS tank, pumps, tanks, hose, fittings, filters. See 2003 AGCO 4640 Spra-Coupe with 1,900 3300 hrs, $90,000. 204-236-4684, Birch y o u r n e a r e s t F l a m a n s t o r e o r c a l l 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com hrs. Call 1-800-667-2085 PL #915407. River, MB.
www.spraytest.com
2002 JD 1890, 36’ w/1910 TBT air cart, SS discs, seeds boots and gauge wheel rubber recently replaced, newer air hoses, $50,000 OBO. 780-694-2756, Wanham, AB EZEE-ON 36’ FH cultivator, 8” space, mtd. packers, w/4000 TBT cart, 240 bu. and liquid cart, $28,000. RJ Sales & Service Ltd., 306-338-2541, Wadena, SK www.rjsales.ca 2004 BOURGAULT 5710 34’, 5200 tank, shedded, new openers in 2013, excellent condition, $65,000. 306-940-6206, 306-960-1746, Prince Albert, SK. 2008 SEEDMASTER 80’, 12” spacing, w/ double air shoot plus liquid kit, w/2011 Bourgault 6550, 4 tank metering, upgraded Zynx mon., $205,000 OBO. Will separate cart and drill. Located near Regina, SK. Trent 306-540-5275, Tyler 306-533-8834. CONCORD 4010 c/w 3000 tank, Dickey John NH3, Dutch sideband openers, one p a s s s e e d i n g , f i e l d r e a d y, o f fe r s . 306-873-5788, Tisdale, SK. 2004 BOURGAULT 5710 and 5350 cart, 40’, 9.8” spacing, dry MRB, dual shoot, dual fan, 3.5” steel packers, $72,000. Call 403-872-2940, Ponoka, AB.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
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SPRING CLEANING CLEARANCE ON SELECT USED CULTIVATORS, TANKS, DRILLS, TRACTORS, COMBINES & SWATHERS Farm World is spring cleaning to make room for our huge selection of used equipment.
50%
REDUCED BY
2012 NH T9.560 #PN29992A. 837 HRS.
$
252,000
2001 JOHN DEERE 1900 #B2167IB. 2 TANK, 300 BU.
$
CASH
$
1992 HESSTON 8100 #W21192B. 25’ PU REEL, PSA, GAUGE WHEELS, NEW KNIFE.
27,900
$
12,900
2012 MORRIS 8370
#HR3189A. TBH TANK, TOPCON EAGLE MONITOR.
$
CASH
CASH
79,000
2003 MORRIS 8370 DRILL & 7300 TBH TANK #B21706D. 49’, 10” SPACING, LIQUID KIT.
$
CASH
48,000
REDUCED BY
11,000!
$
6000!
OFF!
1998 MORRIS MAXIM & 6300 TBH CART #HR2983A. 60’ DRLL, REAR TOW HITCH.
$
39,000 CASH
CASH
2011 BOURGAULT 3310PHD AIR DRILL & 6550 CART
2012 NH T9.670 #HN3227A. 418 HRS, 670 DIFF LOCK, MEGA FLOW HYD.
#PB2965A. 65’ LEADING, DBL SHOOT.
299,000 $280,000
$
CASH
CASH
MORE SPRING CLEANING CLEARANCE SPECIALS AVAILABLE!
2012 NH SP.365F
#N21752A. 642 HRS, 120’ BOOM, 10 SECTION CONTROL KIT.
$
269,000 CASH
1996 MACDON 4930
#HN2525A. TURBO 2 SPEED, COMES WITH MD 960 HEADER, PICK UP REEL.
$
29,900
2005 NH HW325
#HN2771A.W/36’ HB HEADER, CAB & REAR AXLE SUSP., PICKUP REEL, FORE/AFT SINGLE REEL
$
CASH
69,000
2009 NH CR9080
#HN2912A. 918 HRS, AIR, LEATHER, DELUXE NH CHOPPER, SM MONITOR, YIELD & MOISTURE, UNDER SHIELD LIGHTS
CASH
$
212,000 CASH
2009 FARM KING 16X104 #HS3152A.
$
19,900 CASH
2010 MILLER CONDOR G40
#PN3063A. 100’ BOOM, 5 SECTIONS, 1000 GAL. TANK, DUALS, CROP DIVIDER.
$
175,000 CASH
4 – NEW HOLLAND CR9070 COMBINES $ PRICES START AT .................................... 2 – MAC DON SWATHERS $ PRICES START AT ........................................ ATTACHMENTS FOR CULTIVATORS, TANKS, DISCBINES AND SWATHERS NOW .......................... REDUCED BY MORE THAN HONEY BEE COMBINE HEADERS $ STARTING AT .............................................. NEW HOLLAND ROUND BALERS $ STARTING AT ..............................................
155,000 19,000 40% 14,900 14,000
MORE CLEARANCE PRICED EQUIPMENT AVAILABLE AT FARM WORLD!
ALL NEW HOLLAND PRESSURE WASHERS NOW ON SALE! Farm World is an Authorized Service and Warranty Centre for all New Holland Power Products — hassle-free. 3500 PSI HOT WATER PRESSURE WASHER WAS $4,699
2700 PSI HOT WATER PRESSURE WASHER WAS $3,599 NOW ON SALE!
2,999
OFF
WAS $499 NOW ON SALE!
NOW ON SALE!
OVER
20%
$
2700 PSI GAS PRESSURE WASHER
$
3100 PSI GAS PRESSURE WASHER WAS $454 NOW ON SALE!
$
3,750
4000 PSI GAS PRESSURE WASHER WAS $930 NOW ON SALE!
$
399
$
399
799
FARM WORLD IS ALSO CLEARING OUT NEW HOLLAND GENERATORS & WATER PUMPS
PRECISION FARM EQUIPMENT NOW ON SALE! We are prepared to clean out our shelves to give you the best deal on GPS systems. Trimble Ez-Guide 250/ Ez-Steer Bundle OVER
30% OFF
WAS $6,250 NOW ON SALE!
$
4,350
Trimble FM750
20% OFF
WAS $3,450 NOW ON SALE!
$
2,750
20% OFF
Hwy. #3, Kinistino Hwy. #5, Humboldt 306-864-3667 306-682-9920 David H ............. 306-921-7896 Jim ................... 306-864-8003 Kelly.................. 306-961-4742
Sprayer Dept., Kinistino David J. ............ 306-864-7603
Paul .................. 306-231-8031 Perry ................. 306-231-3772
Trimble Ez-Steer
WAS $4,250 NOW ON SALE!
20% OFF
$
3,350
Hwy. #2 South, Prince Albert 306-922-2525 Brent................. 306-232-7810 Aaron ................ 306-960-7429
Trimble Ez-Pilot
WAS $4,600 NOW ON SALE!
$
3,650
Visit
www.farmworld.ca for our full inventory
61
62
APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEVER. . .
haul or purchase those heavy bags of water softening salt or expensive bottled water again!
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• Makes water softeners and iron filters obsolete • Bottled water quality throughout the entire house • Eliminates hard water stains, iron stains, smell, bad taste • Eliminates potentially harmful chlorine • Extends lifespan of hot water heaters and plumbing fixtures • Eliminates hard water stains on bathtubs and showers • Cleaner and brighter laundry, dishes, glassware and cutlery • Saves up to 70% on soap • Softer skin and hair • Thousands of system installed across Canada • Eliminates rust, smell, bad taste, odor
Winnipeg, MB Ph: 204-943-4668
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For your FREE water consultation and system inspection, contact us today... Call Toll Free Anywhere in Canada
1-800-664-2561
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GUARANTEED TO WORK OR YOU DON’T PAY
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No Payment Up To 1 Year OAC
SUBARU SUBARU SELLATHON SELLATHON
OUR BIGGEST EVER PRICE REDUCTION IN SUBARU OF SASKATOON HISTORY! O
DEM
2013 BRZ RWD
FULLY LOADED, NAV LEATHER SEATS AND MUCH MORE, 6,000 KMS DV1SS NOW JUST ADD TAX
SILVER/BLACK INT.
WAS $32,800
$
28,400
NO HAGGLE SAVINGS OF $4,000
NEW
2013 OUTBACK
NEW
V6 WITH NAV, FULLY LOADED
2.5 SPORT HATCHBACK WITH SUNROOF
WHITE/BLACK INT.
D2LN6 NOW JUST ADD TAX
WAS $41,719
$
37,719
NO HAGGLE SAVINGS OF $4,000
2013 IMPREZA
DEEP CHEERY PEARL /OFF BLACK INTERIOR
DG2SP
NOW JUST ADD TAX
WAS $29,464
$
26,464
NO HAGGLE SAVINGS OF $3,000
2008 FORESTER ..............MILEAGE: 108K GOLD WAS $18,995 2013 IMPREZA - MANUAL.. MILEAGE: 13K BLUE WAS $23,995 2013 IMPREZA - AUTO ........ MILEAGE: 93K RED WAS $28,995 2012 IMPREZA - AUTO, SP, AWD, Cloth, PP, HS ..............................................MILEAGE: 4K WHITE WAS $26,995 2007 IMPREZA - AUTO, SE, AWD, Cloth, PP ............................................. MILEAGE: 83K GREY WAS $17,995 2007 IMPREZA - AUTO, BASE, AWD, Cloth, PP ................................................ MILEAGE 43K RED WAS $15,995 2008 IMPREZA - AUTO, SPORT, AWD, Cloth, PP, HS .............................................MILEAGE:60K WHITE WAS $20,995 2009 LEGACY - AUTO ..........MILEAGE: 78K WHITE WAS 23,995 2005 LEGACY - AUTO .....MILEAGE: 116K SILVER WAS $10,995 2010 LEGACY - AUTO ....... MILEAGE: 48K WHITE WAS $26,995 2002 OUTBACK - AUTO ................................. MILEAGE 127K BLUE 2011 OUTBACK - AUTO, LTD ........................................... MILEAGE: 22K SILVER WAS $33,995 2007 OUTBACK - AUTO ... MILEAGE 117K SILVER WAS $19,995 2007 OUTBACK - AUTO .... MILEAGE: 62K GREEN WAS $21,995 2010 OUTBACK - AUTO, SP, AWD, Auto, Cloth, HS, PP, SR ............................................MILEAGE 29K WHITE WAS $30,995 2011 OUTBACK - AUTO, SP, AWD, Auto, Cloth, HS, PP, SR ............................................. MILEAGE: 31K GREY WAS $30,995
NOW $15,995 NOW $20,995 NOW $26,995 NOW $24,995 NOW $13,995 NOW $13,995 NOW $16,995 NOW $16,995 NOW $9,995 NOW $22,995 NOW $7,495 NOW $29,995 NOW $14,995 NOW $17,495 NOW $26,495 NOW $28,995
NEW
3 AVAILABLE
2013 OUTBACK
V6 WITH EYESIGHT AND NAV FULLY LOADED
ICE SILVER METALLIC/OFF BLK INT, 2 WHT/BLK INT.
DD2AE6
NOW JUST ADD TAX
WAS $43,419
$
39,419
NO HAGGLE SAVINGS OF $4,000
NEW
WRX SEDAN
LD S$O 30,919
DY1W2
www.subaruofsaskatoon.com
SUBARU OF SASKATOON 471 CIRCLE PLACE • 306-665-6898 OR 1-877-373-2662
CRYSTAL BLACK/OFF BLACK INT.
WAS $35,919
NOW JUST ADD TAX
NO HAGGLE SAVINGS OF $5,000
NEW
Open 24 Hours @
3 AVAILABLE
2013 OUTBACK
2.5 CONVENIENCE PKG. HEATED SEATS AND MORE GREEN/TAN INT, BLUE/BLK INT, GREY/BLK INT
DD2CP
NOW JUST ADD TAX
WAS $33,219
$
29,219
NO HAGGLE SAVINGS OF $4,000
2011 OUTBACK - AUTO, 3.6R ............................................. MILEAGE: 26K GREY WAS $34,995 2010 OUTBACK - AUTO, 2.6R, AWD, Cloth, PP ............................................. MILEAGE: 58K GREY WAS $30,995 2008 OUTBACK - AUTO, CP, AWD, Cloth, PP, HS ........................................... MILEAGE: 75K WHITE WAS $23,995 2008 OUTBACK - AUTO, XT, AWD, Leather, SR, HS, PP, Nav, DVD ............................................. MILEAGE: 35K GREY WAS $19,995 2008 OUTBACK - AUTO, AWD, Cloth, HS, PP ...................................... MILEAGE: 118K BROWN WAS $19,995 2007 OUTBACK - AUTO, AWD, Cloth, PP ........................................... MILEAGE: 75K SILVER WAS $19,995 2013 STI - MANUAL............ MILEAGE: 36K BLACK WAS $40,995 2011 STI - MANUAL............ MILEAGE: 31K WHITE WAS $38,995 2007 TRIBECA - AUTO ....MILEAGE: 160K SILVER WAS $20,995 2012 TRIBECA - AUTO, PREMIER .............................................. MILEAGE:45K GREY WAS $35,995 2008 TRIBECA - AUTO, PREMIER, AWD, Leather, SR, HE, PP, Nav, DVD ............................................. MILEAGE: 68K GREY WAS $29,995 2008 WRX - AUTO ............. MILEAGE: 97K WHITE WAS $23,995 2008 WRX - MANUAL, AWD, Cloth, PP ...............................................MILEAGE 85K BLUE WAS $23,995
ELITE AUTOMOTIVE GROUP INC. O/A
Open 24 Hours @
2013 WRX
NOW $30,995 NOW $28,995 NOW $22,495 NOW $16,995 NOW $16,995 NOW NOW NOW NOW
$17,995 $39,995 $32,995 $18,995
NOW $32,995 NOW $22,995 NOW $19,995 NOW $20,995
www.bramerauto.com
BRAMER AUTOMOTIVE GROUP CORNER OF SARGENT & KING EDWARD • CALL 204-474-1011 • TOLL FREE 1-877-474-1011
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
3.5 packer, Dutch openers side band, single shoot w/liq. kit TBH, dual shoot air pack
W/tow behind 8370XL air drill, 443 bu, 5.5 semi pneum. tires, paired row boots, 3rd tank, double shoot, dual fan.
2011 MORRIS CONTOUR 61’ 12”
$
2002 FLEXI-COIL 5000 51’ 9”
$
210,000
19,900 796 hrs, 365hp, 1600 SS tank, 120’ boom 5 sec, Trimble FMX Guidance
392 hrs., 335 sep. hrs., 620/70R42 R1W duals, 75mm lift cyl., fan bottom shield Y&M, Intellivew III, del. straw chop.
2011 NH CR9070
$
2011 NH SP365F
$
275,000
258,000
1142, chaff blower, 76C-16’ pu, 9.0L, 6 cyl, 360 HP, cast drum, 24’ auger.
1200 hrs, 1000 poly tank, 90’ boom, angle drive, 20.8 floats, Outback Guidance
2008 NH CX8080
$
2007 APACHE AS1010
$
195,000
129,000
D60 DK double knife, hyd tilt, F/A, split reel, hyd deck shift, sl spd.
322E/256S hours, 520/85R42 duals, diff lock, cast, Y&M spreaders, Intelliview IV, 790CP-15ft pickup
2008 MACDON M150 - 35’
$
2013 NH CX8090
$
115,000 431 hrs, 190HP, cold start, single arm, double knife drive, hyd. tilt, hyd. F/A, Prairie Special Kit
369,000 Auto wrap twine, 1000 PTO, 31 x 31.50-15 8 ply tires, hyd pickup
©2014 CNH Industrial America LLC. All rights reserved. New Holland is a trademark registered in the United States and many other countries, owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates. NHC04149227REG
2011 NH H8060
$
2005 NH BR780
2008 NH CX8080
215,000 352 hrs, 275HP, 1200 Poly Tank, 100’ boom 10 sec, Raven Guidance, Ultraglide, AccuBoom
2012 NH SP.240FXP
$
$
128,000 1381E/950S hrs, duals, cast, HID lights, cover, 16’, 76C
$
275,000 2515 hrs., 35’ draper header, diesel, pu reel.
1997 MASSEY FERGUSON 220 - 25’
$
63
33,000
SEEDING
2013 MR 8650XL ...........................$159,500 2013 MR 8650XL ...........................$159,500 2011 MR CONTOUR 61’-12” C/W TOW BEHIND 8370XL ..........................$210,000 2009 NH P2070 70’ X 12”..............$112,000 2009 NH P1060 TBT.........................$53,000 2007 NH SD550 70’ X 12” ...............$74,000 2003 BO 8810 40’-10” ....................$20,000 2002 FC 5000-51’-9” ......................$19,900 2002 MR MAXIM II ...........................$55,000 2000 MR MAXIM 49’-10” C/W 6300 $23,000 1999 FC 2340 TBH ...........................$24,000 1998 MR MAXIM 55’-10”.................$15,000 1996 BO 4350 TBH ..........................$23,000
ROUND BALERS
2011 NH BR7090 .............................$21,000 2008 NH BR7090 .............................$17,500 2007 CIH RBX563 ............................$21,000 2007 CIH RBX563 .............................. $7,600 2005 NH BR780 ................................. $6,500 2005 NH BR780 ................................. $6,500 2005 NH BR780 ................................. $6,500 2003 NH BR780 ................................. $4,500 1985 MR CP745 MAGNUM II ............$17,900 CIH 8465A .......................................... $7,500
COMBINES
2013 NH CX8090 ...........................$369,000 2011 NH CR9070 ...........................$275,000 2009 NH CX8070 ...........................$195,000 2009 NH CX8090 ...........................$229,000 2008 NH CX8080 ...........................$195,000
1407 hrs., 30’ UII pickup reel.
1213 hrs., 30’, air spring susp., steel fingers UII, single knife drive
2005 NH HW305 - 30’
2007 NH HW325 - 30’
$
$
66,000
65,000
2008 NH CX8080 ...........................$215,000 2007 NH CR9070 ...........................$199,000 2006 NH CX840 .............................$114,000 2004 JD 9760STS ..........................$119,900 1998 NH TR98..................................$50,000 1998 NH TR98..................................$27,900 1997 MF 8570 .................................$35,000 1997 NH TR98..................................$26,000 1997 NH TR98..................................$15,500 1994 NH TX66 ..................................$23,500 1986 CIH 1660 ................................... $8,900 MF 8780 ..........................................$54,000
COMBINE HEADS
1999 HY 994-30’ R65/R75/MF.........$20,000 1998 JD 930F ..................................$12,000 1998 NH 971-30’ ............................... $7,000 1998 NH 994-30’ TX ........................$19,000 1998 NH 994-30’ TR/TX ...................$19,000 1995 NH 971-30’ ............................... $6,000 1987 CIH 1010-25 ............................. $5,500 HY S P25 ............................................ $9,500
MOWER CONDITIONERS
2011 NH H7460 ...............................$28,000 2006 CIH DCX161 ............................$19,800 2006 NH 1475..................................$19,900 2002 NH 1475 C/W 2316 .................$13,900
SPRAYERS
2012 APACHE AS1020 1000 GAL 100’ ............................................$217,000 2012 NH SP.240F XP 1200 GAL 100’ ............................................$275,000 2012 NH SP.240F XP 1200 GAL 100’ ............................................$245,000 2012 NH SP.240F XP 1200 GAL 100’ ............................................$269,000 2011 NH SP.365F 1600 GAL 120’ ..$258,000 2007 APACHE AS1010 1000 GAL 90’ ..............................................$129,000 2001 FC 67 XL .................................$20,000 1998 ROGATOR 854 .........................$79,000
TRACTORS
2012 NH TV6070 ............................$115,000
6,500
2012 NH TV6070 ............................$115,000 2011 NH T9.505HD ........................$265,000 2009 NH TV6070 ..............................$92,900 2008 NH T1520 ................................$16,400 2000 NH 8970..................................$57,700 1986 ST PUMA 1000........................$27,000
70’, 12” 550 lb trips, 84 degree edge on shanks, 4” rubber packers, dbl shoot, steel carbide side bands, high floatation tires
SWATHERS
2013 NH H8040-36’.......................$137,000 2011 NH H8060-36’.......................$128,000 2008 MB M150 D60 DK 35’ ...........$115,000 2007 CIH WDX1202-36’ ...................$69,900 2007 CIH WDX1202-36’ ...................$85,000 2007 NH HW325-30’........................$65,000 2005 NH HW305-30’........................$66,000 2000 AH 8450 C/W 8050-30’ & 8020-18’.......................................$48,900 1997 MF 220-30’ .............................$27,000 1997 MF 220-25’ .............................$33,000 1993 CIH 8820 .................................$15,000
MISCELLANEOUS
ATV 2009 CK 3100S ........................... $9,250 DISK OFFSET 2008 EZ 1225.............$21,000 EXCAVATOR 1994 HYUNDAI 200 LC .$42,000 MOWER/ZERO TURN 2007 CK RZT54 . $2,200 GRAIN AUGER 2010 FK SWING AWAY 16X104 .........................................$23,000 GRAIN AUGER 2012 SK HD10-53 .....$10,900 GRAIN AUGER 2009 SK HD10-1600 B/D.................................................. $8,500 GRAIN AUGER 2009 SK HD10-1600 ... $8,500 HARROW PACKER BO HPH-60 ..........$11,500
2007 NH SD550 70’ 12”
$
74,000 575 hrs, 55GPM pump, 5 remotes, 6 HID lights, 800/70R38 Firestone duals, Intellisteer, 372 receiver, low pressure return, luxury cab, weights
2011 NH T9.505
$
265,000 70’, 12” NH side band opener, tire in tire packages, high floatation tires, double
2009 NH P2070 70’ 12”
$
112,000
12”, side band, 5.5” packer, blockage, c/w 8650, 800 duals, vrx20 display
217 hrs., 100’, 1000 gal. poly, Viper Pro, SmarTrax, AccuBoom, Ultraglide Boom, hgt, angle drive, 520 floaters, like new.
NEW 2013 MORRIS C2 61-12
$
346,000
2012 APACHE AS1020
$
217,000
Highway #2 South
Highway #6 North
Highway #10 East
Ph: 306-946-3301
Ph: 306-746-2911
Ph: 306-783-8511
Fax: 306-946-2613 watrousnewholland.com
Fax: 306-746-2919 raymorenewholland.com
Fax: 306-782-5595 yorktonnewholland.com
www.agdealer.com/raymorenh
64
APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Titan Truck Sales Box 299 MacGregor, MB R0H 0R0
204-685-2222 2005 PETERBILT 379
2006 PETERBILT 379L
475 HP Cat C15, 18 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 3:55 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 1,540,617 km.
49,000
$ 2005 IH 9900I
475 Cat C15, 13 sp, 12/40, 3:55 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 22.5” alloy wheels, 2,013,769 km.
30,000
$
45,000
$
2010 IH LONESTAR
39,000
550 HP Cummins ISX, 18 sp, 12 front super 40 rear, 3-way diff. locks, 410 gears, 22.5” alloy wheels, 244” WB, 63” midrise bunk, 739,252 km.
2007 PETERBILT 379 LEGACY
600 hp Cummins ISX, 18 sp Autoshift, 14000 front 40000 rear, 4x4 diff. locks, 3:73 gears, 226” WB, wet kit, 775,777 km.
2006 PETERBILT 379L
550 HP ISX Cummins, 18 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 70” bunk, 3:70 gears, 3x4 diff. locks, 827,165 km.
550 HP Cat C15, 18sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 3:36 gears, 3x4 locks, 70” bunk, 1,193,240 km.
69,000
49,000
$
2009 PETERBILT 388
19,000
$
2010 PETERBILT 388
65,000
$
70,000
$
$
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 Cat C15, 18 sp, 3:55 gears, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 1,373,064 km.
67,000
$
2005 IH 9900I
470 Cat C13, 13 sp, 12/40, 3:36 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 22.5” alloy wheels, 1,548,131 km.
29,000
$
475 Cat C15, 13 sp, 12/40, 3:55 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 22.5” alloy wheels, 1,735,345 km.
2010 PETERBILT 388
2007 PETERBILT 379
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.
2006 PETERBILT 379
www.titantrucksales.com
$ 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
$
$
READY TO MOVE HOMES Delivering homes ON TIME to happy customers in Sask., Alta., and Man. for over 25 years
INVENTOR BLOWOUT Y ! All
Spec Ho mes On Sale Now!
w Book Noery Of For Delivome in Your H
2014
Pictures and pricing at
WWW.WARMANHOMES.CA
Toll-Free 1-866-933-9595
SASKATCHEWAN
NEW HOME WARRANTY
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
FLEXIBLE. DURABLE. ACCURATE. New Holland P2000 series air hoe drills and P1000 series air carts combine SMART innovation and simplicity to deliver reliable, precise seeding performance. And we give you the flexibility to create a system that matches the way you seed: P2000 SERIES AIR DRILL LINE-UP WITH WORKING WIDTHS FROM 27 TO 70 FEET P2050 AND P2060 FEATURE PAIRED ROW OR SIDE BANDING ALONG WITH A VARIETY MODULAR STEALTH™ OPENER OPTIONS VARIETY OF RUBBER, PNEUMATIC, FOAM FILLED OR STEEL PRESS WHEEL OPTIONS P2070 MODEL FEATURES TRUE PARALLEL-LINK ROW UNIT PROVIDES PRECISE SEED PLACEMENT FOR SUPERIOR CROP EMERGENCE
©2014 CNH America LLC. New Holland is a registered trademark of CNH America LLC.
PROTECT MORE ACRES PER HOUR. Guardian™ sprayers from New Holland allow you to take full control of your spraying schedule. With the industry’s highest horsepower, largest tank size, smoothest suspension, highest ground clearance and tightest turning radius, Guardian sprayers quickly protect more of your acres per hour. Now that’s SMART! FOUR FRONT BOOM MODELS FROM 240 TO 365 HP TWO REAR BOOM MODELS – 240 AND 275 HP NEW LARGER CAB FOR EVEN GREATER COMFORT INTELLIVIEW IV™ TOUCHSCREEN DISPLAY OPTION NOW AVAILABLE FOR GUIDANCE, MAPPING AND AUTO BOOM SECTION CONTROL/HEIGHT CONTROL BOOM WIDTHS UP TO 120 FEET AND TANK SIZES UP TO 1,600 GALLONS
©2014 CNH America LLC. New Holland is a registered trademark of CNH America LLC.
www.moodysequipment.com
65
66
APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
‘12 SEED HAWK 65’ 6510 & 600 TBT
JUST IN... NEW TRADES
OUR INNOVATION
’04 SEED HAWK 4210 w/ Bourgault 5350 TBH Cart
105,000
$
’01 FLEXI-COIL 2340 TBT CART
ELIMINATE OVERLAPS t SAVE ON INPUT COSTS t GET BETTER YIELDS
30.5 Duals on Cart, Double Shoot.
YOUR PROFIT
259,000
$
COMING
’01 FLEXI-COIL 3450 TBT Mech Drive
TRACTORS
‘10 BOURGAULT 65’ 3310 & ‘12 6550 TBH Dickey John NH3 MRB, 3” Openers, Dual Castors, Variable Rate, Deluxe Auger, Bag Lift, Dual Fans, 650 Duals.
Clearout Price ‘10 BOURGAULT 65’ 3310 & FC 4350 TB
$
259,000
‘11 BOURGAULT 65’ 3310 & ‘12 6550 TBH
39,000
$
‘09 JD 56’ 1830
‘12 NH T9.450.....................................$235,000 ‘09 NH 9060 .......................................$235,000 ‘08 CIH 435 Quad ...............................$229,000 ‘07 CIH 430 Quad ...............................$225,000 ‘05 CIH STX450...................................$167,400 ‘85 Steiger KR1225 ..............................$31,500
FLEXI-COIL 39’ 5000 /W 2320 TBT CART
31,500
$
DEMO SPECIAL ’11 CASE IH 60’ PH800 DRILL
SPRAYERS ‘12 CIH 4430, 120’, 1200 gal, loaded .$305,000 ‘12 CIH 3230, 100’, 800 gal ................$236,000 ‘12 CIH 4430, 120’, 1200 gal, 330 Hrs $325,000 ‘12 Apache AS1020, 100’, 1000 gal ...$199,500 ‘11 CIH 3230, 100’, 800 gal, HID ........$183,200 ‘10 CIH 4420, 120’, 1200 gal ..............$296,300 ‘09 Apache AS1010, 100’ ...................$152,900 ‘08 Apache AS 1010, 100’ ..................$149,500 ‘07 CIH 4420, 90’, 1200 gal ................$202,700
/w ’09 CIH 3430VR Tow Behind
W/JD 1910 430 bu. tow behind.
$
170,500
$
144,000
‘08 SEED HAWK 55’ 5510
‘04 SEEDMASTER 6012
10” spacing, c/w Seed Hawk 400 tow behind cart.
66’, 10” spacing, double shoot, w/ Bourgault 6350 TBT
COMBINES
Front Dual Castors, 3” Openers, FlexiCoil 4350 Variable Rate, 10” Auger, Dual Fans.
Capstan Nject NH3 MRB, 3” Openers, Dual Castors, Variable Rate, Deluxe Auger, Bag Lift, Dual Fans, 650 Duals.
189,500
$
$
299,000
‘12 NH CR7090, only 233 sep. hrs. ....$220,500 ‘11 CIH 9120, Swathmaster PU ..........$280,600 ‘11 CIH 8120, Swathmaster PU ..........$260,300 ‘11 CIH 7088s, Swathmaster PU .................. From $198,000 ‘10 CIH 9120, Swathmaster PU ..........$261,700 CIH 8010s c/w Swathmaster PU From $99,300 ‘04 CIH 2388, Swathmaster PU ............$98,600 ‘99 MF 8780, Swathmaster PU ............$64,500
157,900
$
$
168,500
www.mokerthompson.com
Prince Albert: 306-763-6454 | Melfort: 306-752-2273
GREENLIGHT TRUCK & AUTO 2013 GMC SIERRA 3500 SLE
6.0L GAS DUALLY LOADED 23KM SAVE $$$
$42,995
2012 FORD F150 XTR
Y FULLED LOAD
LOADED ECO BOOST 60KM
$28,995
2010 DODGE RAM 1500 SPORT TO
2 OSE CHOO FR M
LOADED WITH SUNROOF 78KM PST PD, HEMI
STARTING frrom
2013 CHEV SILVERADO 3500 LTZ DUALLY
MUSET SE
FULLY LOADED HEATED COOLED SEATS ONLY 15KM LEATHER SUNROOF DVD NAV
2008 FORD F450 LARIAT DUALLY
6.4L FULLY LOADED LEATHER SUNROOF DVD NAV
NOW ONLY
BLA ACK BEAUTY Y 2012 DODGE RAM 3500 MEGA CAB LARAMIE 3 TOSE O CHOO FR M
STARTING AT
ALSO HAVE SLT LEATHER SUNROOF DVD NAV
$46,995
2009 FORD F250 KING RANCH DIESEL
PST PD, LEATHER SUNROOF NAVIGATION
Y FULLED D A LO
$26,995 $27,995
$30,995
2012 GMC SIERRA 1500 SLT
Y FULLED D A LO
HEATED COOLED SEATS LEATHER SUNROOF NAV
2013 GMC SIERRA 3500 SLT
4 TOSE O CHOO FR M
1 TON LEATHER DIESEL 40KM WITH SUNROOF
STARTING AT ST
$49,995
2011 GMC SIERRA 2500 DENALI
PST PD DIESEL FULLY LOADED 73KM LEATHER SUNROOF DVD HEATED COOLED SEATS
45km! $48,995
2006 DODGE RAM 2500 SLT
E2 HAVE S O S L S A IE L D L 9 5.
$13,995
HUGE INDOOR SHOW ROOM
5.7L HEMI LOADED 4X4 PST PD 190KM
2007 GMC SIERRA 1500 HD SLT
ED LOAD
6.0L GAS WITH LEATHER 140KM PST PD 4X4
$19,995
www.GreenlightAuto.ca
Call FINANCE HOTLINE 306-934-1455 2715 FAITHFULL AVE., SASKATOON, SK.
DL#311430
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
Highway 5 East, Wadena, SK
Sales and Service
306-338-2541
(1991 Ltd.)
AIRDRILLS
Morris Contour II - 71’, (2013) w/8650 TBT cart, demo .............................................................$305,000 Morris Contour II - 61’, (2012) w/8370 TBT ....$235,000 Morris Contour II - ‘51’, (2012), double shoot ......... Call Morris Contour I - 71’, (2010) double shoot, w/8370 TBT ...................................................$205,000 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 TBH 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 Flexi-Coil 7500, 60’ air drill .............................. $24,000 Flexi-Coil 5000, 57’, 9.8” sp, DS, w/3450 tank . $59,000 Harmon 4480, 44’ AD, DS w/3100 air cart........ $28,000
MISCELLANEOUS
Book your drill for spring. Trades accepted Dual Knife System ensures precise fertilizer and seed placement, maximum agronomic performance.
AUGERS
Crop-safe fertilizer location. Ultimate uptake efficiency.
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 NEW
625129 McCormick MTX 110 Tractor, 4850 hrs, w/loader
$59,000
647741 John Deere 1820 - 52’ Air Dill, 10” Sp., SS, 3” Rubber Pkrs, w/JD 1910 340 bus. VR rate $70,000
643782
Kello Built 225 - 16’ Disc Offset, 26” Blades $29,000
NEW SALFORD RTS VERTICAL TILLAGE
HEAVY HARROWS 90’ Riteway New 78’ Riteway New 50’ Morris New 82’ Degelman New
70’ Degelman New 68’ Riteway New 90’ Elmers New 70’ Elmers New
www.rjsales.ca rjsales@sasktel.net rj.sales@sasktel.net
Ezee-On 36’ FH cultivator, 8” sp, mtd pkrs, w/4000 TBT cart (240 bu) & liquid cart ........... $28,000 JD 1820 - 52’, 10” sp, SS, 3” Rbr, w/JD 1910 340 bus VR tank .............................................. $70,000 NEW Degelman 7200 rock picker ...........................CALL NEW Degelman 82’ heavy harrow ..........................CALL NEW Degelman 70’ heavy harrow ..........................CALL NEW Riteway 68’ heavy harrow, hyd tine ......... $43,500 Riteway 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 Bourgault 8810, 40’, w/3225 tank.................... $40,000 Bourgault 8810, 52’, liquid kit, Atom Jet openers, w/4350 tank ................................................... $60,000 Bourgault 8810, 52’, liquid, pkrs, Atom Jet........ $32,500
643783 McCormick MTX150 Tractor, w/2895 Loader & Grapple Reg. $148,000 CASH SPECIAL $129,500
• 50 FT RTS SHD 1-2100 (NEW) CALL • 41 FT RTS SHD 1-2100 (NEW) CALL • 41 FT RTS HD DEMO .......... $88,000 • 29 FT 5100 DEMO ..................CALL • 50 FT RTS (USED) ............... $88,000 • 41 FT RTS (USED) ................ $69,500 • 30 FT RTS (USED) .....................CALL
NEW
NEW
643799 SeedMaster CT-SXX 8012 305 Air Drill 80’, 12” Sp., 300 BUS On Board Tank
643804 SeedMaster CT-SXX 7012 305 Air Drill 70’, 12” Sp., 300 BUS On Board Tank
$280,000
$260,000
NEW
NEW
643802
643800
SeedMaster CT-TXB 7012 Air Drill 70’, 12” Sp., Double Shoot $Call
SeedMaster CT-TXB 6012 Air Drill, 60’, 12” Sp., Double Shoot, Air Kit $Call
67
643803
SeedMaster CT-TXB 8012 Air Drill 80’, 12” Sp. $210,000
NEW
643801
SeedMaster TXB 5012 Air Drill, 50’, 12” Sp., Double Shoot, Air Kit $Call
68
APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Step into the productivity of a new Guardian™ front boom sprayer from New Holland and you won’t turn back. With the boom in front, you have a complete unobstructed view of every nozzle. This outstanding visibility means you can run the boom closer to the ground to control drift. Spray is delivered into the crop before the first tires go over it, eliminating the potential for dust to neutralize the spray. Start achieving a new level of spraying freedom and productivity. THE HIGHEST HORSEPOWER AVAILABLE – UP TO 365 HP THE LARGEST TANK SIZES – UP TO 1,600 GALLONS THE HIGHEST CROP CLEARANCE – SIX FEET THE TIGHTEST TURNING – 15-FOOT TURNING RADIUS THE SMOOTHEST SUSPENSION – 20 INCHES OF TRAVEL
NEVER LOOK BACK! ©2012 CNH America LC. New Holland is a registered trademark of CNH America LLC.
S/A Payment
16,774
$
69
+ GST
2014 NEW HOLLAND SP.240R
2013 NEW HOLLAND LM5020
2013 NEW HOLLAND T9.505
2013 NEW HOLLAND SP.240F
#N22356. 100’ with 1000 gal. tank, full GPS, 380/90R46 tires, 240HP Cummins with Allison automatic transmission.
#N22225. 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
#N22057. Powershift, 800s, diff lock, 57 gpm pump, HID lights, full Omnistar Intellisteer, demo use 187 hrs
#HN3176. 100’ with 1000 gallon SS tank, full GPS, 380/90R46 tires, 275 HP, 4WD, available 120’ boom.
S/A Payment
7,662 + GST
$
MSRP $274,435
345,000
$
MSRP $88,867
$
89,000 CASH
#HN3227A. 450 HRS., 670 HP 4WD, DIFF. LOCK, 6 HYD. OUTLETS, HIGH CAP DRAWBAR, LUX CAB, MEGA FLOW HYD., MONITOR DISPLAY
$
1996 NEW HOLLAND 9882 #N22056A. 5900 HRS., 425HP, 4WD, TIRES 710/70R38 INNER & DUALS, PERF. MONITOR, 12 SPD.
275,000
$
219,000
2011 CASE PATRIOT 3330
2011 STRAWMASTER TXB6012 AIR DRILL & BOURGAULT 6350 CART
#HN3174A. 500 HRS., 1000 GAL SS TANK, 100’ WIDE, TIRES: 380/90R46, 650/65R38
#S22393A. 60’, 12” SPACING, 12.5LX15 BACK TIRES, DUAL 12.5LX15 FRONT TIRES, HYD. LIFT KIT, 16,287 ACRES.
147,000
$
CASH
87,500 CASH
$
2013 NEW HOLLAND T9.670 #HN3383A. 740 HRS., 600 HP, 4WD TRACK, MONITOR DISPLAY, GUIDANCE $ CASH NAV CONTROL, .......................... 2008 NEW HOLLAND T9050 #HC3143A. 2224 HRS., 485 HP, 4WD, JD AUTOSTEER, MEGAFLOW HYDS., TIRES 800/70R38 $ DUALS ..................................................... 2003 NEW HOLLAND TJ450 #N22303B, 4984 HRS., 450 HP, 55 GPM FLOW, DELUXE CAB, $ POWERSHIFT ........................................... 2012 NEW HOLLAND T9.505 #PN3031A, 488 HRS., 450 HP, 4WD, GUID NAV CONTROL, DIFF. LOCK FRONT $ CASH AND REAR..................................
2008 MILLER A-40
1998 ROGATOR 854 #NN21884D. 120’ BOOM W/1000 GAL. TANK, FULL GPS, 2 SETS OF TIRES, AUTOBOOM HEIGHT CONTROL.
174,000
$
205,500
$
205,500
MSRP $353,562
2010 BOURGAULT 3320 DRILL & 2004 6550 TANK #B22479A. 66’, 12” SPACING, 4 TANK METERING, DUALS, RTH, 2 HIGH SPEED $ FANS ....................................................... 1999 BOURGAULT 5710 #B21677D. 54’, 9.8” SPACING, 3” CARBIDE, MRBS, UPDATED WIDE PIVOT, $ CASH 330 TRIPS........................................ 2001 5440 BOURGAULT #PB3090A & PB3082B. CTM, DOUBLE FAN, RTH W/2-10 47’ 5710 W/ MRBS, 3” RUBBER, RAVEN NH3 KIT, $ 1” CARBIDES, 8,000 ACRES .....................
50,000
SEEDING & TILLAGE 2007 STRAWMASTER TXB DRILL #S22390A. 50’, 12” BOURGAULT $ AIR KIT, SMART HITCH, NH3 TIPS ...................
96,000
REDUCED
79,000 CASH
2005 JOHN DEERE 4920
2008 NEW HOLLAND T9050
2012 MORRIS 8370
#N22107B. 120’ W/1200 GALLON TANK, 2 SETS OF TIRES PLUS DUALS, DEERE GPS, FENCE ROW NOZZLES, GREENSTAR AUTO TRAC
#HC3144A. 2224 HRS., 485 HP, 4WD, TIRES: 800/70R38 DUALS, DIFF. LOCK FRONT AND REAR, MEGA FLOW HYDS, TOW CABLE, JD AUTO STEER
#HR3189A. VR TBH TANK, TOPCON EAGLE MONITOR, 3RD TANK, SINGLE 17 FAN, TOW BEHIND, FIELD HITCH
$
282,000
205,500
$
REDUCED
19,500 CASH
258,000
27,500
SPRAYERS
2001 SPRA-COUPE 4640 #S22283A. 80’ W/400 GAL. TANK, RAVEN LIGHT BAR, 2 SETS OF REAR TIRES, ROOF WORK LIGHT KIT, TOW BAR, 5 SECTION VALVES, FENCE ROW $ NOZZLES. ...................................................... 1999 BRANDT QF2000 #PN3066C. 1500 GAL, 90’ BOOM, WINDSCREENS, SINGLE NOZZLE BODIES, WIND CONES, $ FOAM MARKER ..............................................
$
20,26361 + GST
MSRP $380,965
135,500 154,000 NEW 2014 BOURGAULT CARTS & DRILLS 243,000 STILL AVAILABLE!
10,000
#N21753B. 100’ BOOM W/1000 GAL. TANK, FULL GPS, 380/90R46 TIRES W/EXTRA FLOAT TIRES, 240 HP CUMMINS W/ALLISON AUTOMATIC TRANS.
17,479 + GST
S/A Payment
$
$
TRACTORS
395,000
2012 NEW HOLLAND T9.670
S/A Payment
$
2 - 7700 AIR CARTS 3 - 6550 AIR CARTS 4 - 3320 DRILLS
2008 NEW HOLLAND T9060
1996 BOURGAULT 5710
#HC3143A. 2672 HRS., 4WD, 485 HP, TIRES 8000/70R38 DUALS, DIFF. LOCK - FRONT AND REAR, TOW CABLE, JD AUTO STEER
#B21968B. 54’, SERIES 20 MRBS, RAVEN NH3 KIT, 3/4 CHROME TIPS, 3 RUBBER PACKERS
$
*plus core
13,300
$
$
209,000
$
#HN3382A. 877 HRS., 4WD, 800R38 DUAL TIRES, 55 GPM HYD. FLOW, LIGHTS 6HD, 6 HYD. OUTLETS, ACTIVE SEAT, OPEN TO HP/ XP, AUTOGUIDANCE, 262 WAAS RECEIVER.
2007 SEEDMASTER TXB #PS3155A. DUAL SHOOT, BG AIR KITS, REAR HITCH, FULL AGTRON BLOCKAGE MONITOR
46,500
$
1995 NEW HOLLAND 9030 #PN3262A. 7950 HRS., 105 HP, 4WD, GRAPPLE FORK, 7414 LOADER, 16.9X28 TIRES, CAB END 3PTH, 3/4 COUPLERS
$
395,000
116,000 CASH
2012 NEW HOLLAND T9.670
ACT NOW, THESE WON’T LAST!
DIESEL EXHAUST FLUID SPECIAL! Buy One $575 Buy Four or More $525
328,000
$
304,000 CASH
2011 BOURGAULT 3310PHD DRILL & 6550 CART #PB3088A. DOUBLE SHOOT, MRB IIS, REAR DUALS, DOUBLE WALKING CASTERS, REAR DROP HITCH
$
50,000 CASH
CASH
2013 MORRIS 8650 CART &C2 AIR DRILL #HR3095. TBH CART, 61’, 650 BU., DUAL TIRES, HYD. EXT KIT, 5 FRAME, QUAD/NH3 HITCH
1995 BOURGAULT 3195 #HR3113B. TRAILING, MECH DRIVE, SINGLE FAN, REAR TOW HITCH
Hwy. #3, Kinistino Hwy. #5, Humboldt 306-864-3667 306-682-9920 David H ............. 306-921-7896 Jim ................... 306-864-8003 Kelly.................. 306-961-4742
Sprayer Dept., Kinistino David J. ............ 306-864-7603
Paul .................. 306-231-8031 Perry ................. 306-231-3772
2009 MORRIS DRILL & 2012 8370 CART
2013 NEW HOLLAND T9.670
#B21999B. 61’, 12” SPACING, DS PR ROW, MORRIS OPENER, TOW BETWEEN TANK, 3 TANKS
#HN3383A. 600 HP, 4WD TRACKS, MEGA Q FLOW, MONITOR DISPLAY, GUIDANCE NAV CONTROL.
Hwy. #2 South, Prince Albert 306-922-2525 Brent................. 306-232-7810 Aaron ................ 306-960-7429
1995 FLEXI-COIL 5000 #PB2966B. C/W FL SC380 TANK, MIDROW, SINGLE SHOOT, 3” RUB PACK, VARIABLE RATE
Visit
www.farmworld.ca for our full inventory
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
2005 BOURGAULT 5710, 47’, 9.8” spacing, 3/4” carbide openers, 3-1/2” steel packers, MRB’s, double shoot, double castor wheels, w/2003 Bourgault 5350 air cart, dual fans, 3-tank metering, light pkg., exc. cond. 780-872-2832, Paradise Hill, SK. 2004 BOURGAULT 5710, 54’, 10” spacing, Series II MRB, rubber packers, double shoot, Atom Jet openers, $45,000. 306-539-2363, Regina, SK. 2005 BOURGAULT 5710 Series II 54’ air drill. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 54’ BOURGAULT 5710 w/4300 tank, double shoot, field ready. Located near Gravelbourg, SK., 403-527-8499. 2 FLEXI-COIL 3450 tanks, double fan, 10” auger, 1 w/rear hyd. winch and mechanical rate, the other has var. rate, $29,500 each OBO. 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. NH SC230, TBH cart, w/3rd tank, variable rate, double shoot, dual fans, $26,700 OBO. 780-614-0787, St. Vincent, AB 2008 CASE/IH 51’ APX400, ADX 3380 tank, double Atom Jet, $135,000 OBO. 306-796-4536, Central Butte, SK.
2003 MORRIS MAXIM 11 40’, 7180 tank, 10” spacing, single shoot, 4” steel press wheels w/mud scrapers, tandem gauge wheels, shank type anhydrous MRB’s, NH3 kit, semi hopper, 12,000 acres, premium, straight, no welds, $48,500. Nipawin, SK. Toll free 1-877-862-2413, 306-862-7761, or 1-877-862-2387, cell 306-862-7524. 2006 39’ FLEXI-COIL 5000 HD w/3850 TBT cart, 10” spacing, steel packers, knife edge openers, variable rate, excellent shape! $79,900. Call Jordan anytime, 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. BOURGAULT 5710 AIR drill, 54’, 9.8” spacing, w/5350 TBT cart, single shoot, rebuilt midrow banders, set up for liquid or NH3 fert. Randy 406-765-7163 Plentywood, MT
1996 CONCORD 5612, 3400 TBH tank, with 3rd tank, single shoot, stealth openers, disc levelers, $25,000. 306-297-6394, Shaunavon, SK. 1998 CONSERVA PAK 52’ 5112 air drill, Flexi-Coil 2320 TBT air cart. Asking $45,000. 780-523-2394, High Prairie, AB. WANTED: 10” AUGER for 1910 430 John Deere air cart. 403-577-2395, Consort, AB. 2002 BOURGAULT 5710 drill w/mid-row banders, 54’, 9.8’’ spacing, 3’’ rubber packers, $45,000. 780-678-6054, Daysland, AB.
2003 MORRIS MAX II air drill, double shoot carbide paired row, 10” spacing, 4” rubber packers c/w 8336, 3 compartment air cart, well maintained, seeds very accurately, easy pulling and exc. germination, $65,000 OBO. 306-821-7500, Marshall, SK. 24’ SEED HAWK air drill with onboard Magnum 257 air tank. Wilfred Messer Farm Equip. Auction, Monday, April 14, 2014, Macoun, Sask. area. For sale bill and photos visit www.mackauctioncompany.com 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815, Mack Auction Co. PL 311962. 1998 MORRIS MAXIM 49’, 10” spacing, 1 year old 3” openers, 4” V-packers, SS, NH3 kit on Coulters, Edge-On shanks, $25,000 OBO. 306-768-7740, Carrot River, SK. 1996 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 33’, SS, 3” rubber, n o c a r t , $ 1 9 , 9 0 0 . G r a n d v i e w, M B . 306-563-8482 or 306-782-2586. FLEXI-COIL 5000, 39’, 2320 TBH, 9” spacing, SS, w/some spare openers, $30,000 OBO. 306-796-7441, Central Butte, SK.
2013 MORRIS 8650 air cart and 61’, C2 air drill, (demo unit) #HR3095. Duals, tow behind, reduced, $282,000. cash. 1-888-442-3816, or www.farmworld.ca 54’ BOURGAULT 5710, double shoot, anhydrous kit, mid-row banders, 3/4” carbide tip knives, 3” rubber packers, new mid-row discs and knives last season, exc. shape, field ready. Can be sold w/wo Bourgault 6450 air tank. 306-726-4616, Southey, SK. 1997 FLEXI-COIL 5000 51’, TBT, single shoot, 9” spacing, steel packers w/2320 tank, fine/ coarse rollers, asking $42,000. 306-573-4602, 306-858-7295, Birsay, SK.
MORRIS MAXIM II, 55’, 10” space, 7300 TBT, 3rd tank, NH3 Coulters, $79,900. RJ Sales & Service, 306-338-2541, Wadena, SK. www.rjsales.ca rj.sales@sasktel.net HARMON 4480, 44’ AD, double shoot w/3100 air cart, $28,000. Call RJ Sales & Service Ltd., 306-338-2541, Wadena, SK www.rjsales.ca Email rj.sales@sasktel.net 1996 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 57’, 2320 TBH tank, single shoot, 7.2” spacing, carbide tips, newer hoses, rubber packer wheels, $38,000. 403-666-2157, 403-548-8812, Etzikom, AB. 1996 BOURGAULT 4300 air tank, 3 com60’ PILLAR LASER disc hoe openers on partments, 3 monitoring system, 491 2009 CIH ADX 700 frame, 430 bu. TBT, monitor 2 years old, always shedded, variable rate, DS, seed cart, $175,000. $29,000. 306-398-7505, Cut Knife, SK. 306-672-7616, 306-672-3711 Gull Lake SK BOURGAULT 64’ 5710, MRB’s and 6350 Bourgault air cart with in-cab controls. More info. call 306-277-4503, Gronlid, SK. 45’ FLEXI-COIL 5000, 7.2” spacing, c/w 2320 TBT cart, $29,900. Cam-Don Motors Ltd, 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. FLEXI-COIL 7500 air drill 60’, $24,000. Call RJ Sales & Service Ltd., Wadena, SK., 306-338-2541. www.agdealer.com Email: rj.sales@sasktel.net CASE 8500 45’ air drill, 7” space, Haukaas markers, marker master recaps, carbide gen tips, mtd. 7” loading auger, $12,000 OBO. 306-648-8005, Gravelbourg, SK. BG 40’ 8800 w/3195, $29,900; FC 51’ 5000 w/2320, $43,500; FC 45’ 5000 w/3450, $79,900; BG 64’ 5710, MRB’s, $79,900; BG 2195H, $7500; BG 3225H, $12,900; Morris Maxim 34’ w/7180, $23,900; JD 1820 41’ w/787, $38,900; Gang packers, $5900; BG 8800 52’ w/air kit, $39,900. Hergott Farm Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK. 2010 EZEE-ON 7550, 33’, DS, 10”, 315 bu. cart, shedded, $55,000 OBO. Near US border. Call 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586. 2001 HARMON 4480, 44’, 9.6” spacing, DS, Eagle Beak split openers, new tires on main frame, 3-3/4” steel packers, 1997 Harmon 3100 TBT air cart, upgraded 27” fan, 7” auger, new bearings in meter box, monitors: bin level, shaft, fan and acres, good cond $21,000 403-784-3431 Clive AB
NEW 2014 FLEXI-COIL 4350 air carts, 1 TBH, 2 TBT’s. All double shoot and available for spring. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd. 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 2007 72’ SEEDMASTER, 12” spacing, semi-pneumatic tires on shank w/Bourgault 6700 ST cart, dual wheels, conveyor, $230,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equip. Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. 1996 FLEXI-COIL 5000 w/2000 2320 tank, 39’, 9” spacing, DS, 3.5” steel packers, Atom Jet openers, $35,000 OBO. Call 306-575-8312, Wawota, SK. HARMON AIR DRILL, 52’, 12” spacing, SS metering boxes, double shoot, NH3 kit, updated fan, new auger and manifolds, openers used one season, trailer type grain hopper, $20,000 OBO. Ryley, AB. Phone 780-663-3929 or 780-603-1747. 1998 MORRIS MAXIM and 6330 TBH cart #HR2983A, 60’ drill, rear tow hitch, reduced by $11,000! $39,000. cash 1-888-442-6084, or www.farmworld.ca 1998 FLEXI-COIL 3450 variable rate cart, m a n i fo l d s r e p l a c e d , d o u b l e s h o o t , $21,000. 306-743-2770, Langenburg, SK. 2000 7550 EZEE-ON 33’, double shoot, 10” spacing, w/liquid kit c/w Ezee-On 2250, 250 bu. tank, hyd. fan, rubber packers, $30,000. 306-861-9234, Weyburn, SK. 39’ FLEXI-COIL 5000, 7.8” space, DS, var. rate, drill completely rebuilt, 3450 TBH, field ready. Kirriemuir, AB., 780-753-0353.
2000 FLEXI-COIL 7500 air drill, 60’, 10” spacing, double shoot, no tank or openers, approx. 20,000 acres, good condition, $14,900. Almost anything on trade. Toll free 1-877-862-2387, 1-877-862-2413, 306-862-7524, 306-862-7761, Nipawin, SK 2002 BOURGAULT 5710, 47’, 9” spacing, MRB’s, 3/4” speed locks, steel 3-1/2” packers, Raven NH3 rate control kit, 2002 JD 1900 TBT 270 bu. cart, $79,995. 2001 BOURGAULT 5440, #s PB3090A and 780-808-3453, Lloydminster, AB. PB3082B, 47’ 5710 w/MRBs, 3” rubber, RaCASE/IH 3580 TBH tank, 2013, dual ven NH3 kit, 1” carbides, $135,500. shoot, Deluxe auger c/w remote, 3 tank 1-888-442-6084, or www.farmworld.ca variable rate, Ultrasonic bin level sensors, air velocity meter, rear folding ladder, 3 32’ SEED HAWK 32-12 air drill w/onboard coarse rollers, one extra fine roller, 110 bu. seed tank and 1450 gal. onboard 800/65R32 front tires, 650/75R32 rear liquid fertilizer tank. Dave MacCuish Farm Equipment Auction, Tuesday, April 15, duals. Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. 2 0 1 4 , F r o b i s h e r, S a s k . a r e a . V i s i t 2340 FLEXI-COIL TBT TANK, var. rate, www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale shedded, very nice, $21,000. Call Steve b i l l a n d p h o t o s . 3 0 6 - 4 2 1 - 2 9 2 8 o r 780-206-0049, 780-674-3029 Barrhead AB 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 MORRIS MAXIM 49’ AD, 10” spacing, 2003 SD 440 NH 39’, double shoot, 9.5” packers, $24,900. Call RJ Sales & Service spacing, Dutch low draft side band. 2002 L t d . , W a d e n a , S K . , 3 0 6 - 3 3 8 - 2 5 4 1 . Flexi-Coil 2340, variable rate, DS TBT, www.rjsales.ca rj.sales@sasktel.net $55,000. 306-257-3607, Allan, SK. 1998 BOURGAULT 5710 41’, 10” spacing, FLEXICOIL 5000 45’ air drill, single shoot, DS, MRBs, rubber packer wheels, knock-on 9” spacing, 3 1/2” steel packers, $20,000. openers, very good condition, no air cart, Call 306-948-2737, Biggar, SK. $25,000. 780-753-6398, Provost, AB. 1997 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 39’, 3” rubber packers, 550 lb. trips, 9” spacing, 3” stealth openers, liquid kit, markers, TBT 1720 tank. 306-960-5144, Meath Park, SK. 2006 CASE CONCORD ATX 3310, 10” space with ADX 2230 tank, C-shank, Bourgault knock-ons, carbide tips, low acres, exc. condition, always shedded, $60,000. 204-467-2787, Argyle, MB.
CLASSIFIED ADS 69
B O U R G AU LT 4 7 ’ 5 7 1 0 , 9 ” s p a c i n g , semi pneumatic packers, single shoot, low acres. 6350 cart, variable adjust, 3 compartment, dual fan, tank only done 3000 acres. 306-834-7109, Dodsland, SK. BOURGAULT 5710 air drill, 42’, 7” spacing, single shoot, 2155 cart, drill in great shape, $30,000; JD 230, 20’ disc, $8,000. 306-458-2566, 306-458-7772, Midale, SK. 39-12 CONSERV-A-PAK, double shoot, plus anhydrous, 39’, 12” spacing, vg cond., $15,000. 306-445-9897 or 306-441-6882, North Battleford, SK.
2006 MORRIS 40’ horizontal fold, no till disc air drill, markers, w/7240 TBT tank, low acres, $67,000 OBO. Will take grain on trade. 306-693-9847, Moose Jaw, SK. 2000 MORRIS MAXIM 34’ air drill, 7180 TBT, double shoot with liquid kit, low acres. 306-267-4963, Big Beaver, SK. 2009 BOURGAULT 55’ Paralink drill, c/w MRB’s, excellent condition. 306-666-2153 or 306-662-7471, Fox Valley, SK. FLEXI-COIL 5000, 57’, 9” w/3.5” rubber press, 2320 aircart, granule tank, DS, good cond, $45,900. 204-324-4277, Altona, MB. 2004 FLEXI-COIL 5000 39’, TBT 2340 variable rate cart, single shoot w/liquid side band 1700 gal. bandit TBH, very low acres, mint condition, $63,500 OBO. Phone 306-867-3398, Outlook, SK.
2008 SEEDMASTER TOOLBAR, 64’, 12” spacing, c/w Flexi-Coil 3450 var. rate cart, brand new fert. knives. Reduced $135,000. 306-421-1086, 306-634-9330, Macoun, SK 2010 SEEDMASTER 4710, DS, dry/liquid, brand new fert. knives, active wing brace and hitch lift, $82,000; Flexi-Coil 3450 cart 2009 JD 1830, 60’, 10” rubber packers, 1910 430 tank, excellent shape, $89,000 available. 306-743-2770, Langenburg, SK. OBO. 306-831-7863, Rosetown, SK. FLEXI-COIL 5000, 45’, 9” spacing, 3.5” steel packers, DS, Stealth openers, drill only, $17,500 OBO. Call 306-452-3759 or 306-452-7209, Redvers, SK. 2010 JD 1830 air hoe drill, 3 sec., 41’, 10” 2003 BOURGAULT 5710, 64’, 9.8” space, spacing c/w 2010 JD 1910 air commodity 3.5” packer wheels, 1” vertical knives, 2001 cart, 430 bu. TBT, 3 tanks c/w 12” convey5440 tank, 3-tank metering, Rice tires, or w/telescoping downspout; 10” row $80,000. 306-398-7449, 306-441-0452, spacing, double shoot, GEN-T2W paired Cut Knife, SK. row openers, steel packers and floatation 2003 BOURGAULT 5710, 52’, 7” spacing, tires. Always stored inside, like new. Seeddual casters, 3/4” knives, 3.5” rubber ed 8530 acres. No monitor. $129,000. Call packers, 330 lb. trips, always shedded. Bill: 403-634-4670, Coaldale, AB. Phone: 204-648-4028, Grandview, MB. 3010 CONCORD and Model 2000 engine 49’ MORRIS MAXIM air drill and Morris d r i v e t a n k , $ 1 2 , 5 0 0 O B O . C a l l 7300 air cart with 12” spacing, double 403-872-2940, Ponoka, AB. shoot, paired row, 2 compartment TBH air 2006 MORRIS MAXIM II 55’, 10” spacing, tank. Kolish Farm Equipment Auction on 8370 TBH, single shoot, 3.5” packers, new Saturday, April 19, 2014, Creelman, SK. carbide openers 2013. Will consider some area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com grain on trade. 306-448-4819, Manor, SK. for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 2011 BOURGAULT 3310PHD air drill and 33’ EZEE-ON 7550, 10” spacing, liquid kit, 6550 cart #PB2965A, 65’ leading DS, 3175 TBH air tank. Call 306-763-7627, $299,000. cash. 1-888-462-3816, or www.farmworld.ca Wilkie, SK. 2013 NH P2070 60’ air drill c/w P1060 2008 JD 1830 air hoe drill, 40’, 10” TBH 430 bu. air cart, 4” pneumatic pack- space, double shoot, Primary blockage ers, 12” spacing, DS, load auger, $164,000. c/w 2004 JD 1910 TBH tank 350 bushel capacity, all seed run blockage. Only Call Nathan at 306-737-8286, Regina, SK. 24,000 acres! $89,900. Ph. Jordan anytime 2006 JD 1895 drill w/430 bu. 1910 cart, 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. new discs and boots last season. ConvenNEW JOHN DEERE CONSERVA Pak single or, $95,000. 306-227-4503, Saskatoon, SK. row openers, carbide tips. Set of 56 for 2005 33’ NH SD440, 3” low draft Dutch $4,088. Ph Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, openers, 9” spacing, 550 lb. trip, 4.5” steel Pincher Creek, AB. packers w/SC 230 DS, var. rate cart, seeded 7,000 acres, mint condition. A steal at 2013 BOURGAULT 6550 air tank, with 4 meters and Topcon monitor, $119,000. $58,500. 306-883-2568, Spiritwood, SK. 306-948-6548, Biggar, SK. 1999 FLEXI-COIL 2340 TBH cart w/3rd tank, var. rate, semi hopper, $24,000 OBO. FLEXI-COIL 2340 TBT, variable rate, shedded, excellent condition, $19,500. 306-587-2764, 306-587-7729, Cabri, SK. 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. 2004 47’ 5710, w/5350 TBH, SS, 9.8” spacing, 4.5” steel, new tires, mint cond. PULLING AIR DRILLS, towed farm equip. and light duty low bedding in MB. and SK., $70,000 OBO. 306-834-8100, Major, SK. (licensed and insured). Bruce at Brown 2002 BOURGAULT 5710, 34’, 5200 tank, Ent., 204-857-8224, Portage la Prairie, MB. 9.8” spacing, MRB, SS, NH3, low acres, 1996 BOURGAULT 5710, 52’, 7” spacing, $55,000. 306-699-7557, Qu’Appelle SK. 3.5” packers. Packers and hoses recently replaced, good condition. 204-648-7085, Grandview, MB. 55’ MORRIS MAXIM, 10” spacing, blockage 1994 FLEXI-COIL 5000 57’, single shoot; monitor, Atom Jet openers, 7300 TBT 1995 Flexi-Coil 5000 45’, DS. Both w/2320 tank, exc. cond. Will take grain on trade. carts and field ready, $25,000 each OBO. 306-459-2642, 306-459-7705, Ogema, SK. 306-291-9395, 306-283-4747 Langham SK 2004 56’ CONSERVA PAK, independent 1997 SEED HAWK 32’, 10.5” spacing, onopeners, 440 tank, great condition, board seed, liquid kit, excellent shape. Phone 306-675-4932, Kelliher, SK. $95,000 OBO. 306-625-7939, Kincaid, SK. 57’ FLEXI-COIL, 9” spacing, 3” rubber 1995 MORRIS MAXIM, 34’, dual shoot, 10” packers, 1” Bourgault carbide openers, JD spacing, dutch openers, 3.5” steel packers, 1910 TBT air cart with variable rate, c/w 7130 TBH tank, $25,000. Kipling, SK. 306-736-7773. $45,000. 204-638-7416, Dauphin, MB. 2001 JD 1920, 41’, 12” spacing, 4” steel 2008 BOURGAULT 3310 #B22177B. 55’, packers, DS, new openers, new fertilizer 9.8” spacing, 11” openings, 6-ply round meter box, 2001 JD 1900 270 cart. Will p n e u m a t i c p a c k e r s , $ 1 3 0 , 0 0 0 . take grain trade. 306-831-7782, Harris, SK. 1-888-462-3816, or www.farmworld.ca MORRIS MAXIM air drill 34’, 10” spacing, 1996 FLEXI-COIL 5000, double shoot, 45’, 2” and 3” knock-on spoons, Morris 7180 9” spacing, recapped packer wheels, Atom t a n k , e n g i n e d r i v e n f a n , $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 . Jet openers, c/w 2320 cart, $35,000 OBO. 306-962-3939, 306-962-4434, Eston, SK. 306-932-4730, Biggar, SK. 40’ JD 737 DRILL, c/w individual shank 2004 BOURGAULT 5440 TBH tank, dual or gang packers, JD 787 230 bu. air cart, fans, $50,000. Call 306-252-2767 or plumbed for liquid nitrogen and Alpine 306-221-8968, Kenaston, SK. phosphate w/1400 gal Bandit caddy, Atom Jet boots, nice unit and condition, RETIRED FARMER: 40’ CONCORD, c/w $40,000. 306-531-8575, 306-771-2819, 5250 Bourgault cart and lots of extras. Johnny 306-693-2615, Moose Jaw, SK. Edenwold, SK. wc.farm@hotmail.com 2009 SEED HAWK 5510, dual shoot system FLEXI-COIL 5000, 57’, 9.8” spacing, DS, with liquid kit. New fert. and seed knives w/3450 tank, $59,000. RJ Sales & Service spring of 2013. Excellent cond. Offers. L t d . , 3 0 6 - 3 3 8 - 2 5 4 1 , W a d e n a , S K . www.rjsales.ca Email rj.sales@sasktel.net 306-728-2291, 306-728-9150, Melville, SK FLEXI-COIL 5000, 39’, 1720 TBH tank, DS, 9” spacing, new hoses, carbide paired rows, well maintained, $25,000. 306-796-7656, 306-395-2587, Chaplin, SK. 2011 BOURGAULT 3310 and 6550, 65’, 10” spacing, X20, MRBs, 3/4” openers, 4.5” V-packer, 5.4” semi-pneumatic, blockage monitors, dbl. walking castor wheel pkg., 4 tank meter, duals, deluxe 10” auger, DS, bag lift, rear hitch, maplink VR, NH3 interface for Raven, 306-287-8487, Watson, SK 2009 84’ SEED HAWK, 800 bu. tank, fully sectional control, 10” fill auger, 12” spacing. With sectional control you will pay for this unit with 8% input savings. Asking $245,000. 306-435-8008, 306-435-9008, Wapella, SK. 2011 BOURGAULT 6550, X20, loaded, 900 tires, $110,000 OBO. Call 306-563-8482 or 306-782-2586, Calgary, AB. 34’ MORRIS MAXIM, 12” space, 7180 TBH, DS, Dutch side band openers, all pins and bushings have been changed, low acres. 306-454-2725, 306-861-9816, Ceylon, SK. 1995 MORRIS MAXIM 34’, SS, 10” spacing, 4” steel packers, 6240 tank w/3rd tank, $28,000. Call 306-629-3772, Morse, SK.
1997 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 39’, 9” with 4” rubber packers, 550 lb. trips, new Dutch points last year, c/w 1997, 1720 TBT and 2320 TBH carts, $60,000 OBO. Willing to separate. 306-424-2694 or 306-424-7778 Montmartre, SK. 1998 MORRIS MAXIM 34’, 10” spacing, 3.5” steel packers, 240 bu. DS TBH tank, paired row boots, $28,000. 306-255-2752, Colonsay, SK. 1999 BOURGAULT 5710 #B21677D. 54’, 51’ FLEXI-COIL 5000, 9” spacing, double 9.8” spacing, 3” carbide, MRBs, updated shoot, 3” rubber, 3450 TBH cart, double wide pivot, 330 trips, $27,500. cash. fan, 10” auger, mechanical or variable rate, 1-888-442-3816, or www.farmworld.ca $45,000 OBO. 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. 2003 MORRIS MAXIM II #B21706D, 49’, 2007 JD 1830 AIR DRILL, 41’, 3.5” rub10” spacing, liquid kit, reduced by $6,000. ber packers, plus JD 787-230 bu. tank, one $ 4 8 , 0 0 0 . c a s h . 1 - 8 8 8 - 4 4 2 - 3 8 1 6 , o r owner (retiring), mint cond., heavy land, www.farmworld.ca Rouleau, SK. area, very low acres. BlockWANTED: 5-1/2” RUBBER packers for age monitors all runs, 10” spacing, 4” Flexi-Coil 5000, 9” spacing. Will trade spread boots, Haukaas markers. $51,500. 306-526-6100. 4-1/2” steel. 403-793-1705, Brooks, AB. 1995 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 27’ w/1370 cart, 1997 CONCORD 3612, 2300 TBH, DS 7.2”, very good condition, $25,000 OBO. w/NH3 paired row Anderson openers, coulters, Haukaas side arm markers, SS 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Weekes, SK canola rollers, blockage monitors, always 2006 SEED HAWK, 51’, 9” spacing, big rub- shedded, excellent shape, $25,000. ber, with frame for NH3 tanks, c/w 2008 780-818-1028, Edmonton, AB. Flexi-Coil 3850 TBT, always shedded, 3 compartments, 4 meter rollers, low acres, 1999 FLEXI-COIL 5000, PB2608B, 57’, 12’ $147,500. Photos available 780-608-5697, spaced w/midrow shanks, 4” openers/ packers, Dickie-John, NH3, $35,000. cash. 780-372-2356, Bashaw, AB. 1-888-442-6084, or www.farmworld.ca 54’, 2001 BOURGAULT 5710, Series 2, 1994 FLEXI-COIL 5000 air drill, w/1720 MRBs, Series I, NH3, 9.8” spacing, 3.5” TBT tank, 39’, 9” spacing, setup w/liquid steel packers. Will consider grain on trade. kit, Atom Jet openers w/side band, w/wo Phone: 306-291-9395, Langham, SK. Bandit 1500 liquid wagon, $45,000 OBO. 2005 JD 1895, 43’ air drill, 340 bu., 780-645-2575, St. Paul, AB. 1910 tank w/8” auger, 1 yr. on new discs, 1994 JD 787 230 bu. seed and fertilizer rebuilt, excellent condition, $110,000. tank, exc. cond., $12,500. 306-648-2847 306-963-7641, Imperial, SK. after 7:00 PM, Gravelbourg, SK. 1994 BOURGAULT 4710 air disc drill 40’, $ 1 2 , 5 0 0 O B O. To m p k i n s , S K . , c a l l 306-622-2240, 306-413-0038. 2000 JD 1900, TBT, air tank, 270 bu., 8 run 65-10 SEEDMASTER with dual liquid single shoot, new SS meter housings, exc. and dry manifolds, active wing brace, cond. $25,000. 306-621-0774, Yorkton, SK Smart hitch, Agtron blockage monitor, JD 1900 air cart TBH dual shoot, asking 2003 BOURGAULT 5200 AIR TANK, sin$130,000. 306-742-5912, 306-742-4772, gle shoot, single fan, 2 tank manual adj. Churchbridge, SK. trans. hyd. calibration control, 277 monitor, 18.4x26 rears, 21.5L-16.1 fronts, 1000 MORRIS MAXIM II, 49’, 10” spacing, DS, acres/yr., no rust, exc. cond., $27,500. w/7300 TBH with 3rd tank, $64,000. RJ 306-560-3333, Wishart, SK. Sales & Service, 36-338-2541, Wadena, 1998 BOURGAULT 4350, single shoot, one SK. www.rjsales.ca rj.sales@sasktel.net owner, $23,000 OBO. 306-563-8482, 2003 CONSERVA PAK 39’, 12” spacing, 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. rubber on-row packers, DS, 1 owner, c/w JD TBT 787 air tank, 230 bu. plus 3rd tank, 2003 CONSERVA-PAK 39’, 12” spacing, $51,000 OBO. Call Korvin 306-772-0330 or rubber on-row packers, dual shoot, 1 ownLawrence 403-823-6016, McMahon, SK. er, c/w JD TBT air tank, 230 bu, plus 3rd tank, $51,000. Lawrence 403-823-6016 or 1998 MORRIS MAXIM 7180 TBT, 29’, Korvin 306-772-0330, Swift Current, SK. 7-1/2” spacings, steel packers, tank is 1993 MORRIS 33’ air seeder, 8.5” centers, double shoot. 306-395-2791, Chaplin, SK. 6130 tank, c/w packing wheels and har2010 MORRIS CONTOUR, 71’, 12” paired rows, good shape. Asking $14,000. Call row, 4.5” rubber packer w/roto scraper, 306-642-0267, Assiniboia, SK. 650 bu. tank, w/triples, conveyor and top c o n m o n i t o r , $ 2 0 5 , 0 0 0 O B O . 36’ BOURGAULT 8800 air seeder w/3225 tank, 8” spacing, granular kit, harrows, exc. 306-831-7863, Rosetown, SK. shape. 204-859-0075, Rossburn, MB. 1996 MORRIS MAXIM II 49’ air drill, DS, 240 bu. tank, carbide tips, good cond. 2002 MR MAXIM II, $55,000. Watrous NewHolland, 306-946-3301, Watrous, SK., $25,000. 306-626-3525, Pennant, SK. 1990 MORRIS MAXIM 39’, 7.5” spacing, or www.watrousnewholland.com 6180 TBH, near new opener, c/w 800 gal. 6130 MORRIS TBH cart, motor driven fan, TBT and 1200 gal TBH liquid carts. Will original owner, shedded, $4000 OBO. separate. Phone Cam-Don Motors Ltd, 306-728-1232, Melville, SK. 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 40’ DUTCH TOOL BAR, single shoot with 2009 AMITY TWIN disc drill 40’, (same as Barton openers; 32’ Concord 3212, double an ATCO sunflower), 6” and 9” spacing, s h o o t w i t h k n i ve s o r s we e p s . C a l l MRB’s, AgTron all-run monitor, $50,000; 306-243-4216, Outlook, SK. Also 2004 Bourgault 5440 TBH tank, dual 32’ BOURGAULT 8800 air seeder, 8” spacfans, $50,000. Call 306-252-2767 or ing, K-Hart packers, 2155 air tank. 306-221-8968, Kenaston, SK. 306-658-4556, Landis, SK. 2008 JD 1830 AIR DRILL, 61’, 10” spac- 2011 MORRIS CONTOUR 61’-12” c/w TBH ing, 3.5” steel packers, rock deflectors, JD 8370XL, $210,000. Yorkton NewHolland 1910 air cart, 3 tank, 430 bu. TBH, var. www.yorktongnewholland.com or phone rate, conveyor, 2 tank cameras, dual 306-783-8511 shoot, $150,000. Hanlon Ag Centre, 403-329-8686, toll free 1-800-461-5356 JD 655 28’ air seeder, in good working condition, $3,000. Phone 780-390-0075, Lethbridge, AB. Pics at www.hanlonag.com Viking, AB. 2008 BOURGAULT 3310, Paralink, 65’, 9.8” spacing, 4.8” packers, 3” tips, MRB’s, 1 9 8 9 B O U R G AU LT A I R S E E D E R 3 6 ’ , dry and NH3, always shedded, very nice. w/2155 seed tank, 1200 gal. liquid TBH. 306-228-2900 or 306-228-7877, Unity, SK. Call 204-648-7085, Grandview, MB. MOON HEAVY HAUL pulling air drills/ air 2000 MR MAXIM 49 ft. - 10 in., c/w 6300, seeders, packer bars, Alberta and Sask. 30 $23,000. www.raymorenewholland.com years experience. Call Bob Davidson, Raymore NewHolland, call 306-746-2911, Drumheller, AB. 403-823-0746. Raymore, SK. EZEE-ON 2210 TANK, 5 run, $8,000. 2007 BOURGAULT 6450, double shoot, 306-795-7238, Ituna, SK. $75,000 OBO. Trades? Call 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Yorkton, SK. 1998 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 3450 Mech cart, 45’, single shoot, 9” space, 3.5” steel pack- 32’ EZEE-ON AIR SEEDER, c/w 2-175 tank, ers, $50,000. 306-642-7650, Limerick, SK. $20,000. 306-257-3693, Elstow, SK.
JD Air Drill 2003, 61’ drill with 1900-350 bushel air cart..$42,800. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com
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2001 JOHN DEERE 1900 #B2167IB. 2 tank, 300 bushel, $27,900. 1-888-442-6084, or www.farmworld.ca BOURGAULT 8800 36’, air kit and chem. applicator, 2115 tank, 8” spacing, Knockon 3/4” carbides or 11” shovels w/QC packers or harrows, good cond., $12,500 306-252-2810, 306-567-7281 Kenaston SK FLEXI-COIL 420 CULTIVATOR, 40’, 9” spacing, c/w 1610 tank, mounted gang packers. 306-749-2649, Birch Hills, SK. 1990 JD 777 air cart, 160 bu., new hyd. fan, splitter boots and hoses, $2500. Call: 306-749-2482, Hagen, SK. 1995 CASE 33’ chisel plow, new shovels, Morris tank, newer clutch, very good shape. Keith 306-746-4614, Raymore, SK. 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. 35’ MORRIS 8900 air seeder and Morris 6130 air cart. Moncrief Farm and Livestock Equipment Auction, Wednesday, April 16, 2014, Alameda, Sask. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962
FLEXI-COIL SYSTEM 85 heavy harrow, 37 BARTON II disc openers, fit on Flexi1998, 50’, 1998, good tines and tires, Coil 6000 drill, good shape 18” discs. $20,900. Located near Spalding, SK., call 306-377-4649, Herschel, SK. 306-322-7661. JD HOE DRILL 30’, rubber packers, factory HARROW TINES for all makes of harrows: transport, field ready, shedded, $3000. mounted, standard draw bars and heavy Call 780-632-4927, Vegreville, AB. harrows, ex. 9/16x26” straight (Degelman, Brandt, Bourgault, Flexi-Coil, Riteway) WANTED TO TRADE: JD 750 15’ w/mid 100+ $20.50 ea; 5/8x27” 100+ $34.95 row fertilizer banner for JD 1590 or 750, ea; 3/8x15” bent (Riteway, Morris, Her- pref. 20’ would consider 15’. Phone Peter man) 100+ $8.60 ea. Fouillard Implement 306-222-7021, 306-225-4437, Hague, SK. Ltd., St. Lazare, MB., 204-683-2221. SEED FUNNEL FITS 8.5x20’ box. Contact 2009 DEGELMAN 82’ harrows with Valmar, Barry 306-243-4960, Dinsmore, SK. 5/8” tine, 26” length, new hoses, great CASE/IH 42’ HOE drills, 3x14’ c/w Eagle shape, $48,000. 306-533-4891, Gray, SK. Beaks. 306-283-4745, Langham, SK. NEW EXCEL 50’ land roller, 42” drum, JD 665 41’ air seeder w/NH3 harrows, $35,000. 204-822-3797, Morden, MB. packer bar, rodweeder; HAYBUSTER 1206 2003 BRANT 70’ heavy harrow, 5/8” hy- 36’ no-till disc drill c/w Doepker movers, draulic tine, $26,900. Call 306-429-2704, weight boxes. 306-237-4582, Perdue, SK. Glenavon, SK. 5440 PLUS BOURGAULT tank, high output 3-tank metering, 491 monitor, single 55’ LAURIER HARROW packer bar, P20 fan, loading auger, 900/60R32 rear packers, $3500 OBO. Call 306-297-7624 or shoot, tires, 540/65-R24 fronts. 306-287-7442, 306-297-3317, Shaunavon, SK. Leroy, SK. FLEXI-COIL HARROW PACKER with P30 FLEXI-COIL 1600 AIR cart with four 12 run packers, 60’, in very good condition. manifolds and cultivator hitch, above aver306-287-3563 evenings, Watson, SK. age condition for it’s age, $4000. Call WANTED: 35’ WING-UP packer bar. Call 306-577-8045, Carlyle, SK. Steve 780-206-0049 or 780-674-3029, WANTED: JD 9350 drill in excellent cond. Barrhead, AB. Call 306-236-4195, Rapid View, SK. 70’ DELMAR 5500M mid harrow, very good GREAT PLAINS 40’ disc drill, 6” spacing, condition, $10,000. 204-937-3933, Robin, new discs, factory transport, $10,000. MB. 403-952-1030, Bow Island, AB. BLANCHARD LIFT-UP PACKER bar, 18’, ex- 2004 BOURGAULT 5350 TBH tank, centendable to 30’. Useable either size, $800. ter tank metering, DS, 2 fans, rear tow 306-629-3772, Morse, SK. hitch, exc shape, only ever used organical2008 DEGELMAN 82’, $33,000; 2003 Bour- ly $50,000. 306-264-3721, Mankota, SK. gault 60’, $23,000 OBO. 306-563-8482, Yorkton, SK.
2009 NH P1060 TBH, $63,000. Yorkton NewHolland 306-783-8511, or view www.yorktonnewholland.com 1998 52’ 8810, 8” spacing, 3/4” knock-on knives, harrows, c/w 3225 tank, SS, $41,500. 306-256-3510, Cudworth, SK. 1990 FLEXI-COIL 800 35’ air seeder with Bourgault 2155 tank, 12” spacing, single shoot, 14” shovels, Splitter boots, liquid fert. kit, harrows, $19,500. Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. FLEXI-COIL 820 CULT., 40’, 9” spacing, 1720 tank, 320 third tank, mounted 4 bar harrows. 306-749-2649, Birch Hills, SK. 25’ BOURGAULT 8810, 2155 tank, single shoot, 10” spacing, quick detach harrows. Bought new in 1999, exc. cond., tank stored inside during winter months. $26,000 OBO. 403-572-3667, Carbon, AB.
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M. DEVLOO MFG LTD.
204.825.7655 WWW.ROTOMUDSCRAPERS.COM
1981 BOURGAULT VIBRA master cultivator, tine harrows, 8” spacing, knock-ons, 24’ CCIL DISCER, c/w 2- 12’ units, green $5000. Call: 306-749-2482, Hagen, SK. piggy back w/packers; also 56’ Morris tine 2009 SUNFLOWER 1544, 45’ tandem harrow bar. 306-538-4605, Kennedy, SK. disc, 24” blades, hyd. self-leveling, 4 gauge wheels, gang wrench. Call 306-287-8487, 2014 ROME TRCW-16, 12’ 6” wide, 16 36” disks, 960 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 20” Watson, SK. spacing, $59,624. Call 204-256-2098, TreMORRIS 743 CULTIVATOR 45’, good herne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com shape, asking $7500. Call 306-297-3865, 2014 ROME TACW-20, 14’ wide, 20 32” Shaunavon, SK. disks, 552 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 17 BOURGAULT 36-40 COMMANDER Series 3/4” spacing, $42,467. 204-256-2098, Tre42’ cultivator. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL herne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com #915407. 2014 ROME 185-994 35’, 6” wide, 94 24” 2011 SALFORD RTS, 31’, vertical tillage, disks, 185 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 9” e x t r a w e i g h t p a c k a g e , $ 5 5 , 0 0 0 . spacing, $66,488. Call 204-256-2098, Treherne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com 306-457-7128, Stoughton, SK. 44’ FLEXI-COIL 820 cultivator, heavy trip, 36’ ANHYDROUS CULTIVATOR, new excellent, $16,500. 204-662-4432 or tips, new breakaway coupler, asking 204-264-0693, Sinclair, MB. $3500. 306-441-7776, Meota, SK. JD 1050 61.5’ field cultivator, 8” spacing, GENUINE ROME PLOW parts from Cana12” shovels, new set of shovels included, da’s only authorized dealer. Call Hird M o r r i s m o u n t e d h a r r o w s , $ 1 5 , 0 0 0 . Equipment 204-256-2098, Treherne, MB. 306-476-2715, Fife Lake, SK. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com BOURGAULT 9200 cult. 50’ w/Bourgault PACKER WHEELS to fit ConservaPak or JD 1870 air drills. Includes rubber cap, MTH. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. plastic sidewall hubs, bearings and dust E Z E E - O N 1 4 ’ TA N D E M d i s c . C a l l caps. Phone 306-452-7799, Redvers, SK. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. JD 9350 hoe drill, 20’, good cond., $1,000. BOURGAULT 8800 48’ field cultivator, 8” JD 1610 chisel plow, 27’, good cond., spacing, knock-on sweeps, rear hitch, $1500. 306-287-4083, Spalding, SK. $22,500. Call 204-825-8121, Morden, MB. 2014 ROME 185-966 25’, 2” wide, 66 24” CCIL G1000 45’ discers, 3- 15’ piggy back, disks, 185 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 9” excellent condition, $3000. 306-962-4545, spacing, $52,760. Call 204-256-2098, TreKindersley, SK. herne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com BOURGAULT 9200 CULTIVATOR 42’. Call 2014 ROME TAW-24, 11’ 6” wide, 24 28” 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. disks, 346 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 12” CCIL 204 DEEP TILLAGE cultivator, 42’, spacing, $33,403. Call 204-256-2098, Trewith tines, $2250; CCIL 203 DEEP TILL- herne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com AGE cultivator, 30’ with tines, $1100. 306-463-7802, Eatonia, SK. WISHEK HE AVY DUTY 26’ disc . Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915207. CALL TODAY 48’ LEON RODWEEDER, w/harrows, $850; 35’ Morris cultivator, w/harrows, $1300. FOR YOUR 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. CAP N EED S KELLO 210 14’ single offset disc. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
PACKER W H EEL
DEGELMLAN ONEPASS 21’ for sale, like new. Till the soil early to warm and surface dry, reclaim unused areas of land, speed up germ. and destroy trash. 18,000 lbs. of quality. Call 306-678-2141, Hazlet, SK.
WINTER DISCOUNTS on new and used rollers, all sizes. Machinery Dave, Bow Island, AB., 403-545-6340, 403-580-6889. 2011 BOURGAULT 6000 90’ mid harrow, like new, large tire option, hydraulic fold. 403-391-6021, Red Deer, AB.
THREE 10’ JD disc drills, good shape, never used fertilizer, back-on mover and hitch avail. 780-349-2798 after 8, Westlock, AB. JD 750 NO till drills, two 15’ on 10” spacing, single comp. box, disc markers can be 2010 RITE-WAY 7150 heavy harrows, purchased w/wo mid-row banding liquid 55’, automatic adjustable tines, done 1,000 fert. setup. Easly pulled by 150 HP tractor. acres, $28,500. 306-734-2728, Craik, SK. For pics or info. 306-331-5669, Lebret, SK. 2012 70’ BOURGAULT 6000 mid harrows, BOURGAULT 3225 TANK, 3rd tank, good done 1500 acres, as new, $29,000. Call condition, $14,000. Call Murray Faubert for details 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. 306-463-9691, Marengo, SK. DEGELMAN 70’ HEAVY harrows, w/3255 80 DUTCH LOW DRAFT 4-1/2” openers, Valmar, new 5/8”x26 tines and back tires, some used only 2 years, $80 each. hyd. tine adjust option, $35,000 OBO. 780-674-7944, Barrhead, AB. 306-759-2733, Eyebrow, SK. BOURGAULT 3225 SEED tank, in good con2005 RITE-WAY 4255 land roller, 55’, 5 dition, w/3rd tank. Phone 780-349-2798 sections, $38,000 OBO. 306-796-4536, after 8PM, Westlock, AB. Central Butte, SK. 48 SIDE BAND Atom Jet openers, $75 2006 BOURGAULT 6000, 70’, mid-harrow, each. 48 shank mount Valley packers, $50 gd cond., $24,500 OBO. 306-747-2514, each. 306-257-3693, Elstow, SK. Shellbrook, SK. 30’ JD 9350 HOE DRILL and 30’ JD 9350 FLEXI-COIL SYSTEM 75 packer bar, P30, double disc drill, $2500/ea. OBO. Call 4 2 ’ t o 5 4 ’ , g o o d c o n d i t i o n , $ 6 4 0 0 . 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. 403-308-4200, Mossleigh, AB. MASSEY MODEL 360 discers, 33’, piggyINLAND HARROW PACKER bar, 58’, 1.5” back hitch $2500; 42’ of IH hoe drills, coil packers, $3500. Call 306-753-2620 or 314’s, factory trans., $2500. 306-648-2807 306-753-7974 (cell). Macklin, SK. or 306-648-8001, Gravelbourg, SK. 80’ FINE TOOTH (1” centres) harrow, done 16 BARTON 2 disc openers, double shoot approx. 1000 acres, $18,000. Photos off of Flexi-Coil 6000. Asking $160/ea. Ph. ava i l a b l e . 3 0 6 - 7 1 7 - 0 0 2 5 , O s l e r, S K . 780-349-9522, Westlock, AB. sjjguenther@sasktel.net 1720 FLEXI-COIL CART, TBH, in very good 50’ LAURIER HARROW packer bar P30 condition, $10,500. 306-731-3595 or packers, $3000. 306-842-7120, Weyburn, 306-731-7657 cell, Lumsden, SK. SK. FLEXI-COIL 1720 TBH seed cart with WANTED: FLEXI-COIL or BOURGAULT- monitor, cables, blockage, hoses, auger, SUMMERS 45’ hydraulic P30 coil packer. $5000. 306-642-4077, Assiniboia, SK. Call 204-324-4277, Altona, MB. 2009 BERGEN 6000 50’ heavy harrow, low acres, very good condition, $20,000 OBO. Phone 306-252-2767 or 306-221-8968, Kenaston, SK. 2008 MANDAKO LANDROLLER 40’, exc. condition, $30,000. Call 306-744-2332, Saltcoats, SK.
2007 SEED HAWK 60’-10” c/w 3380 tow between, $159,000. Phone Watrous N ew H o l l a n d 3 0 6 - 9 4 6 - 3 3 0 1 , o r v i ew www.watrousnewholland.com BOURGAULT 5250 AIR seeder, 3 Series II meters, 491 monitor, hyd. calibration, cab meter controls, shedded, no fertilizer, $35,000. 306-398-2923, Cut Knife, SK. 1999 BOURGAULT 8810, 50’, 10” spacing, poly packers, liquid side band openers, w/JD 787 TBT cart, vg cond., $52,500. 306-675-4458, 306-675-4566, Leross, SK. BOURGAULT 8800 air seeder, 40’, 820 monitor, with 3195 air tank, Speed-Locs, packers, 8” spacing, QA harrows/shovels, good tires, $31,800. Located near Spalding, SK., 306-322-7661. 40’ BOURGAULT 8810, 9.8” spacing, NH3 Raven autorate, midrow banders, 3/4” Carbide openers, sidearm markers, polly packers; 3225 Bourgault air tank, $42,500 OBO. 306-383-7340, Quill Lake, SK. 2004 JD 1820, 61’, double shoot, 10” spacing, 3”x21” rubber packers, full run monitor, 1910 tank 430 bu., 42” duals, dual casters, 8” auger, $80,000. 218-686-9189, Pense, SK. CONCORD PARTS, SEALS, manifold pipes, control box, fan, bin level indicator, cables and feed rolls. Two 40’ 3/4” hyd. hoses. 306-873-5426, Tisdale, SK. BOURGAULT 40’ FH 536-40 air seeder w/2195 cart, auger, good cond., $12,500. 306-358-4342, Denzil, SK. ATOM JET HYDRAULIC air seeder system, big pump, not used in last 4 years, fits 835 Vers., $5,000. 306-476-2715, Fife Lake, SK FLEXI-COIL 70’ #82 5 bar tine harrows, 2008 BOURGAULT AHD, 3710-47 with $7500; Unverferth 500 bu. hopper wagon, 6650 ST cart, variable rate control, $6500. Call 306-960-3000, St. Louis, SK. $130,000. 403-358-8933, Craigmyle, AB. WANTED: 80’ FLEXI-COIL 95 harrow www.nelsontruckandtractor.com packers. Must have P30 packers and good JOHN DEERE 1650 cultivator, 42’ w/Bar- harrows. Phone 780-349-2798 after 8PM. ton openers, 9” spacing, all-run monitor, 2003 DEGELMAN 7000 heavy harrow. Call John Deere 787 cart, 240. bu., $20,000. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 306-834-8058, Kerrobert, SK. 2014 RITE-WAY 8100 heavy harrows, 68’. 2010 CIH 3380 TBT, $62,000. Watrous Last one! Cam-Don Motors, 306-237-4212, N ew H o l l a n d 3 0 6 - 9 4 6 - 3 3 0 1 , o r v i ew Perdue, SK. www.watrousnewholland.com DEGELMAN STRAWMASTER heavy harBOURGAULT 8800, 40’, 3195 cart, harrows 70’ excellent condition. 780-872-2832, and packers, $26,000 OBO. 306-563-8482 rows, Paradise Hill, SK. or 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. DEGELMAN STRAWMASTER 7000 heavy 2002 FC 5000 51 ft. - 9 in., $19,900. York- harrows with Valmar 4400. Dave MacCuish ton NewHolland, 306-783-8511, Yorkton, Farm Equip. Auction, Tuesday, April 15, SK., or www.yorktonnewholland.com 2 0 1 4 , F r o b i s h e r, S a s k . a r e a . V i s i t 2009 NH P2070 70’x12”, $112,000. Call www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale Raymore NewHolland 306-746-2911 or b i l l a n d p h o t o s . 3 0 6 - 4 2 1 - 2 9 2 8 o r 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 www.raymorenewholland.com 2013 MORRIS 8650XL, $159,500. Call NEW RITEWAY 55’ heavy harrows, hyd. Raymore NewHolland 306-746-2911, or tine, $35,500. RJ Sales & Service Ltd., 306-338-2541. www.rjsales.ca Email www.raymorenewholland.com rj.sales@sasktel.net Wadena, SK. JOHN DEERE 27’ 610 with 777 cart, hydraulic drive and auger, extra roller. BLANCHARD 50’ HARROW Packer, heavy packers, $2500. 306-255-2752, Colonsay, 306-771-2765, Balgonie, SK. SK. 2003 BO 8810 40 ft. - 10 in., $20,000. Raymore NewHolland, 306-746-2911, Ray- 50’ FLEXI-COIL SYSTEM 95 packer bar, P30 packers. 306-658-4556, Landis, SK. more, SK or www.raymorenewholland.com 2005 BOURGAULT 6550, double shoot. WELD-ON HARROW TEETH, 50 rockwell Trades? 306-563-8482 or 306-782-2586, hardness, 3/8”-5/8” dia., $3 for 9/16”. G.B. Mfg. Ltd., 306-273-4235, Yorkton, SK. Yorkton, SK.
2009 RITE-WAY 8190 heavy harrow 90’ 9/16x28” teeth, carbide tips, hydraulic tine angle, exc. condition, asking $26,600 US. Call Larry at 701-228-3812, Bottineau, ND.
START EARLY THIS SPRING WITH DEVLOO ROTO MUD SCRAPERS
PATENT PENDING
RETIRING: 1991 CASE/IH 9240, 235 HP, 4500 hrs, 18.4x38x4, 2 yr old EzSteer 500, field ready. Pics avail. $45,000. Riverhurst, SK, 778-549-5124, delrobertson@shaw.ca 35’ BOURGAULT 8810 air seeder with JD 787 air cart. Dave MacCuish Farm Equip. Auction on Tuesday, April 15, 2014, Frobisher, Sask. area. Mack Auction Co. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. PL311962.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
2013 CASE 1240, 30/15 spacing, 16 row, bulk fill, 1300 acres, liquid kit, $128,000; 1996 Bourgault 9400, 52’ deep tiller, 12”, $50,000. 204-534-7651, Boissevain, MB.
2013 MANDAKO TWISTER vertical tillage, hyd. angle, high flotation tires, rolling baskets, 20” blades, done only 3500 acres, paid $106,000 last spring, asking $85,000. 306-823-3703 anytime, Marsden, SK. FRIGGSTAD 48’ CULTIVATOR with new harrows in very good condition. Call 306-287-3563 evenings, Watson, SK.
WISHEK DISCS AVAILABLE from Flaman. From 14’-38’. 30” blades. See your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com 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. 2013 WISHEK 842NT 26’ DISC, 30” www.kelloughs.com 1-888-500-2646. blades, used only 10 hrs, $83,000 nego- M O R R I S C P 7 4 3 4 7 ’ c u l t i vat o r. C a l l tiable. Call 306-584-3731, Moose Jaw, SK. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 36’ WIL-RICH VIBRASHANK cultivator with h a r r ow s , i n g o o d c o n d i t i o n . P h o n e 306-210-8901, Reward, SK.
TWO 50’ CULTIVATORS, excellent cond., 1998 820 Flexi-Coils. Call for price. 306-741-2204, Admiral, SK.
KELLO-BILT DISC PARTS: Blades and bearings. Parts to fit most makes and models. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. www.kelloughs.com 1990 BOURGAULT FH546-52 cultivator. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. MORRIS L-249 CHALLENGER II 49’ cult. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 2006 EZEE-ON 4490, 24” double disc, like new, $32,000. Contact 306-476-2501, Rockglen, SK. MORRIS 743 CULTIVATOR, 45’, mounted harrows, HoneyBee deadrod, mounted Valmar, $7500 complete or will separate. Gravelbourg, SK 306-648-2807, 306-648-8001 IH 41’ CULTIVATOR,with Valmar, $2,000. 306-257-3607, Allan, SK. 24’ IHC 6200 double disc drill w/factory transport, shedded, $2000. 306-753-2620 or 306-753-7974, (cell), Macklin, SK.
2011 EZEE-ON 8700 LTF, 42’, heavy disc, in good shape, asking $75,000. 306-457-7128, Stoughton, SK. LEON MODEL 9400-5 cultivator, 56’, Serial #028805, asking $20,000. 306-267-4455, Big Beaver, SK. JD 20’ OFFSET DISC and a 53’ Friggstad 420 cultivator with tine harrows. Kolish Farm Equip. Auction, Saturday, April 19, 2014, Creelman, Sask. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 CCIL CULTIVATOR MODEL 807, 31’ with harrows, good cond., asking $3000. Call WISHEK DISCS: 2009 models #842, 14’ 306-739-2979, Wawota, SK. 22’ and 30’, some with harrows; Summers Diamond Discs: 2011 models, 38’ with harrows. All good condition, field ready. Lautt’s Rental, 701-324-2289, Harvey, ND.
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JD 9350 disc drill 60’, grass seed attachment, rock guards, rubber packers, hyd. track erasers, hyd. markers, Apollo transport, hyd. hitch stow. Exc. cond., $15,000 OBO. NE Saskatoon, SK. 403-861-1671. JD 1610 DT cultivator, 41’ with mounted Degelman harrows, $7,000. 306-424-2690, Montmartre, SK. FARM KING FIELD DISCS AVAILABLE at Flaman. 1225 offsets and the 6650 tandem models in stock. All c/w 7 year bearing warranty. Choose from sizes 15’ - 40’. See your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. MORRIS 41’ 8900 cultivator, 9” spacing, harrows, Pattison liquid fert. kit, tow hitch, $16,000. 306-645-4223, Rocanville, SK.
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DISCS: JD 15’ $5000; 22’ $9500; 30’, $10,500; IH 490 25’ $7500; Bush Hog 21’ $7000, 25’ $7500; Versatile 36’ $25,000. Harrows: Phoenix 42’ $9500; Summers 70’ $12,000; JD #7000 planter 8R30 $5500; #7100 3PTH 8R30, $4000. Call 204-857-8403, Portage la Prairie, MB. 2010 SALFORD 570RTS vertical tillage, 24’, harrows, rolling baskets w/1200 lb weight kit, like new cond., $28,500. Carrot River, SK. 306-768-2151 or 306-768-7399. 2014 ROME TRCW-20, 16’ wide, 20 36” disks, 1032 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 20” spacing, $79,072. 204-256-2098, Treherne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com BOURGAULT 5710, 3-1/2” steel packers, 70, good cond.; Also 8 new 3” rubber packer caps, open to offers. 403-746-3627, Eckville, AB.
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NEW 48 BOURGAULT 3310 packer tires; New 60 Bourgault carbide, 3/4” knock-on knives. 306-645-4223, Rocanville, SK. 2014 ROME TACW-16, 11’ wide, 16 32” disks, 636 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 17 3/4” spacing, $38,806. 204-256-2098, Treherne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com WANTED: HARROWS FOR Concord 3310 to fit between shanks and packers; Also wanted 3rd tank for 1720 Flexi-Coil air cart. Ph 204-461-0820, Winnipeg, MB.
2008 CHALLENGER 965B, 4WD, 585 HP, C18 engine, approx. 4000 hrs., new inside duals, asking $235,000. 780-621-7833, Drayton Valley, AB. 2007 CHALLENGER MT865B, 525 HP, Cat C18, 3953 hrs, exc. cond., HD tracks 80%, PTO, big pump, 6 SCVs, RTK GPS and more $199,000.780-206-1234 Barrhead AB
TRI STAR FARM SERVICES: 2013 DeutzFahr TTV430 demo, MFWD 3 PTH, PTO front and back, 135 HP, Stohl loader, 50 kms variable spd., $134,000. 2013 DeutzFahr AgroFarm 430, MFWD, 3 PTH, PTO front and back, 24 spd., 109 HP, $72,000. 2013 Deutz-Fahr Agrotron X720, MFWD, 260 HP, 710/38 duals, PTO, 3 PTH, 24 spd., $220,000. 306-586-1603, Regina, SK. 7020 ALLIS CHALMERS, powershift trans., good rubber, $6,000. 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. 1980 DEUTZ DX90, 2 WD, vg condition, 80% rubber, $7500 OBO. 1950 Cockshutt, 4 cyl. Detroit engine, 23.4x30 rear tires, fair condition, $5500. 306-409-3002, 306-662-3268, Maple Creek, SK. DEUTZ 13006, 9200 hrs., always shedded, good cond., needs new rear tires 23.1-34, $4000 OBO. 204-523-8872, Killarney, MB.
1999 CASE 9390, 450 HP, 5800 hrs, S3 Outback AutoSteer, high cap. pump, 4 remotes, triples, excellent, $99,000. 306-243-4242, 306-652-6765 Macrorie, SK 2009 PUMA 210, w/LX770 FEL, 851 hrs, no 3 PTH, 18 spd. powershift w/LHR, 4 valves, dual PTO, 180 PTO HP, cab susp., Trimble EZ-Steer, Michelin radials. Call 403-599-3945, Milo, AB. CASE 9370 4WD tractor with 5120 hours. Kolish Farm Equipment Auction, Saturday April 19, 2014, Creelman, Sask. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 QUAD TRAC AND PTO, 2006 STX500 HD, very nice, 36” tacks, 2900 hrs, $209,000. Located Yorkton. 306-948-7223, Biggar SK
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
1993 CIH 9280, 5900 hrs, triples, AutoSteer, shedded, exc. condition, $78,000. 306-459-2642, 306-459-7705, Ogema, SK. NH BOOMER 3045 w/FEL, $30,900; CIH Magnum 210, 3PTH, $139,000; CIH Magnum 235, low hrs, $165,000; 2004 NH TJ500, PS, $175,000; 2007 CIH 430 Quad, guidance, $212,500; 1995 NH 9680, 42” duals, $69,900; 2004 NH TJ375, P.S., $135,000; 2009 CIH 435 QUAD, PTO, $253,500; 2006 CIH 530 Quad, 5VH, $235,000; 1992 JD 8760, 42” duals, $59,900; 2009 CIH 435, PTO, $227,500. Call Hergott Farm Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK.
1992 CASE/IH 7120 MAGNUM, 7147 hrs., orig. owner, 20.8x38 singles, 3 hyd., 18 spd. powershift, excellent condition. 306-291-9395, 306-283-4747 Langham SK CASE/IH STEIGER built, 4 WD/Quads; Plus other makes and models. Call the Tractor Man! Trades welcome. We deliver. Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. 2006 STX 480, Firestone 800 duals, annual Uptime, shedded, $165,000 OBO. 306-563-6355, 306-563-7610, Canora, SK. CASE/IH: 7120 MFWD w/loader, 7500 2004 CASE STX500, Michelin 800’s, PTO, hrs., duals, $48,500; 7120 MFWD, 8500 luxury cab, 16 spd. powershift, high cap. hrs., duals, new tires, 3 PTH, $49,000; p u m p , 5 6 0 0 h o u r s , $ 1 6 0 , 0 0 0 . 7130 MFWD, 5500 hrs., duals, $45,000. All 403-647-7391, Foremost, AB. in vg cond. 204-937-7411, Grandview, MB. 1984 5088, 5400 hrs, immaculate cond., CASE/IH STX 375, 4WD, 2002, with shedded, all gauges and lights work, ask- 3470 hrs, in very nice shape, powershift, ing $16,000. 306-771-2926, White City, SK 710/42 tires, 4 remotes, 2 returns, perfor1966 CASE 730 tractor, 8 spd., runs good, mance monitor, rear weights, 435 HP chip, tires good, $3000. Call: 306-749-2482, $140,000 with Trimble RTX capable AutoS t e e r, o r $ 1 2 5 , 0 0 0 w i t h o u t . P h o n e Hagen, SK. 306-647-2344, Theodore, SK. 1975 100 HYDRO., AC, new 4 rib front, nice 20.8x38 rears, Leon 707 FEL, $11,300 1983 CASE 4690, 4WD, 7049 hrs, runs good needs rubber $8500 OBO; 1983 4490 OBO. Pictures. 306-692-2693, Findlater, SK 4WD, 4000 hrs, newer inside rubber, new 1997 CASE/IH 9370, 4 WD, 2723 hrs., 24 batteries, $18,500 OBO. 306-648-2807, spd., trans., 4 hyd. remotes, return line for 306-648-8001, Gravelbourg, SK. air drill, 30.5x32 duals- 40%, c/w Trimble 2002 STX 375, 3430 hrs., 55 gal. per minAutoSteer, good cond. Asking $90,000. ute pump, 24 spd. synchro, rubber- 80%, 5 403-308-3512 cell, Kindersley, SK. spool hyd., no PTO. Was through Young’s 1993 CASE/IH 9280, 4 WD, std. trans., shop last spring, exc. tractor, $125,000. $58,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment 306-640-8003 cell, Willow Bunch, SK. Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. 1994 CASE 9280, 8200 hrs., new tires, 2005 CASE/IH 425STX, powershift, radar, excellent condition, one owner, $45,000. AutoSteer, 710 tires, 1750 hrs., $185,000 306-946-3863, 306-946-7737 Watrous SK OBO. 306-796-4536, Central Butte, SK. 2008 CASE/IH 535 QUADTRACK, 535 2013 550 QUAD, 435 hrs, loaded, PTO HP, front and rear diff lock, 57 GPM hyd. 36” tracks, clear caps, 113 GPM hyd., 6 pump, 5 remotes, luxury cab, 3 PTH, 36” R e m , H I D, t o w c a b l e , Au t o S t e e r. tracks, HID light package, radar, 2890 hrs., $237,000. Hanlon Ag Centre, 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. 403-329-8686, toll free 1-800-461-5356 CASE 730, with Case front end loader, fair Lethbridge, AB. condition, $4500 OBO. 306-367-4803, Middle Lake, SK. 1998 CASE/IH 9350 4 WD tractor, 3315 hrs, std. trans, exc. cond., $78,000 w/GPS, 1986 ST PUMA1000, $27,000. Raymore NewHolland, 306-746-2911, Raymore, SK $68,000 wo/GPS. 780-348-5749, Clyde AB or www.raymorenewholland.com 1999 CASE/IH, FWA, approx. 7500 hrs, 1982 CM STEIGER 1325, 3406 Cat eng., excellent rubber, extensive work done to 8000 hrs., powershift, 24.5x32 duals- 30%, the unit. Large ALO loader w/grapple. $23,000. 306-743-2770, Langenburg, SK. Looks and works excellent. Fully serviced and ready to work. $59,000 OBO. Call 1986 STEIGER MODEL KS325, PTA, Chris 306-628-7840, Eatonia, SK. Cummins engine, 20.8x38 duals, 6164 2000 CASE 9350, 4 WD, 3400 hrs, power- hrs., $39,500. 306-834-7579, Major SK. shift, tires- 70%, asking $85,000. Call Steve 780-674-8080, Cherhill, AB. CASE 2290 2WD tractor w/duals and Case CHALLENGER 55, 6500 hrs, 3 PTH, Trimble 1494 2WD tractor w/Case 66L FEL and 3 750 AutoSteer w/Subscription, 4 hyds., PTH. Wilfred Messer Farm Equip. Auction, very good cond., $65,000. 204-937-7411, Monday, April 14, 2014, Macoun, Sask. Grandview, MB. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com 1997 CAT 75D, 36” tracks- 70%, 4 SCV’s, for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 4395 hrs., $59,000. Call 204-825-8121, 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 Morden, MB. 1993 STEIGER 9270, 3400 original hrs., new rubber, standard, Case Up-time, mint shape. Call 306-744-8113, Saltcoats, SK. 1993 JD 8570, 6332 hrs., 24 spd., 20.8x38, 1998 CIH 9380, 3750 hrs., 20.8x42 radial 3 SCV, hyd. return, diff. lock, recent bottires, 12 spd. std. trans., 4 remotes, GPS tom end and other repairs, fresh Greenequipped, very nice condition, $102,500. light, very good condition, stored inside, 306-369-2765, Bruno, SK. $50,000. 306-648-2912, Gravelbourg, SK. 1990 CASE/IH 9180, 7900 hrs., 12 spd. JD 8570, 4000 hrs, triple hyds., AutoSteer, powershift, vg cond., $41,000 OBO. Killar- shedded. 306-634-6305, Benson, SK. ney, MB. 204-523-7469 or 204-534-8115. 2006 9420, 4 WD, 18 spd., powershift, 4 90 SERIES QUADTRAC, 360 HP, 7900 hrs., hyds., AutoSteer ready, PTO, 16’ Degelman Tr i m b l e Au t o S t e e r, a s k i n g $ 7 5 , 0 0 0 . 6-way blade. Will sell separate. Kamsack, 204-638-7416, Dauphin, MB. SK., 306-542-7808, robfar@sasktel.net 7220 CASE MFWD, 2665 hours, new inside 1997 JD 9200, 24 spd., shedded, 5000 hrs, duals, shedded, very good shape, $72,000. $90,000. 306-460-7767, Eatonia, SK. Call 306-538-2153 Kennedy, SK. 2003 JD 9320, 4900 hrs., 24 spd., 1990 CIH 9170, 6560 hrs., engine over- 710/70R42 duals, AutoTrac, diff. lock, hauled at 5500 hrs., powershift, 300 hrs. $125,000. 306-736-7715, Glenavon, SK. on 24.5x32 duals, vg cond., $49,000. With 14’ Degelman 4-way blade, $60,000. MITCH’S TRACTOR SALES LTD. JD 2555 MFWD, CAH, 3 PTH, w/245 loader; JD 306-675-4566, Leross, SK. 2950 MFWD, CAH, 3 PTH, w/260 loader; 2011 PUMA 170, MFWD, 770 loader, lux. JD 4250 MFWD, 15 spd; JD 4450, MFWD, cab, powershift, 540/1000 PTO, 710/70 quad; JD 6420, MFWD, 3 PTH, 24 spd., 38 rear, 600/65 28 front, fenders, 3 PTH, 4 w/LHR, loader; JD 6430 MFWD, 3 PTH, 20 remotes, 32 GPM, elec. joystick, eng. block spd., w/LHR, premium, w/673 loader, and trans. heater, HID lights, rear wheel grapple, 5800 hrs; JD 7320, MFWD, 3 PTH, weights, 102” bucket and Q/C pallet forks. 24 spd. w/LHR, w/741 FEL, grapple, 5016, hrs; JD 7410, MFWD, 3 PTH, powerquad, 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. w/LHR, w/740 FEL, grapple. All tractors SMOOTHER RIDE WITH CAB AIR RIDE can be sold with new or used loaders. kit, for Case/IH QuadTrac tractors. Call 204-750-2459, mitchstractorsales.com St. Milt: 306-229-1693, Hepburn, SK. Claude, MB. 756 IHC, exc. cond., new: rubber, clutch JD 8870, 20.8x42 duals 50%, 24 spd., diff. and PTO, German dsl., exc. chore tractor, lock, high hrs., recent inframe, $37,000. $7500. Call 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. 306-743-2770, Langenburg, SK. 2005 MXU 125 MFD, 5600 hrs., L156 load- JD 7800 FWA, 740 FEL, grapple, joystick, er, bucket and grapple, 3 PTH, $62,000. 19 spd., clamp-on duals, 3 PTH, 8360 hrs., 306-594-7224, Pelly, SK. $67,000. 306-468-7743, Canwood, SK. CASE 4494 4 WD tractor with PTO. Please 1982 JD 4640, 11,000 hrs., duals, 3 call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. hyds., large 1000 PTO, $12,000. Lucky Lake, SK. 306-858-2529, 306-867-9899. LIZARD CREEK REPAIR and Tractor. We buy 90 and 94 Series Case, 2 WD, FWA JD 7130 MFWD, 3 PTH, moon roof, double tractors for parts and rebuilding. Also have drs, power quad, 900 hrs, Classic 740 FEL, 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 . shedded like new! $92,000. 403-308-4200, 306-726-7455. Located at Southey, SK. 306-784-7841, Herbert, SK. 1986 CASE/IH 4894, 7100 hrs., asking 2013 JD 6125R, 336 hrs., 24 spd., MFWD $25,000. 306-287-4243 or 306-287-7573, w/trip link susp., H340 loader 540/1000 PTO, 3 SCV, premium cab, $107,000. Watson, SK. 402-719-9017, Fremont, NE. 2008 CASE STEIGER 435, 4 WD, Auto Steer, duals, 1010 hours, $210,000. 1995 JOHN DEERE 8910 tractor. Call 403-358-8933, Craigmyle, AB. View 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. www.nelsontruckandtractor.com 1968 JD 4020, with 146A FEL, excellent 1 9 9 5 7 2 2 0 M AG N U M , MFWD, new rubber, cab, heat, radio, good shape, 16.9x28 on front, 18.4x42 on rear, just $9500. 306-563-7125, Canora, SK. 6000 hrs., always shedded. 204-858-2754, 1983 JOHN DEERE 8450, no PTO, good Hartney, MB. shape. Call 306-463-7627, Wilkie, SK. 2001 STX 325, 5200 hrs., 0 hrs on 20.8x42 JD 8450 4WD tractor. Wilfred Messer duals, 4 elec. remotes, 55 GPM hyds., low Farm Equip. Auction, Monday, April 14, pressure return line, tow cable, FM 750 2 0 1 4 , M a c o u n , S a s k . a r e a . V i s i t GPS Trimble w/EzeeSteer, works great on www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale hyd. grain cart, $124,500. 306-795-7493, b i l l a n d p h o t o s . 3 0 6 - 4 2 1 - 2 9 2 8 o r 306-795-7747, 306-795-7208, Leross, SK. 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 STX 375 CASE/IH w/6900 Degelman 1984 JD 8650, 8700 hrs., 4 hyds., 20.8x38 blade, 5000 hours, excellent shape. duals, diff. lock, $25,000 OBO. Call 780-753-0353, Kirriemuir, AB. 306-575-8312, Wawota, SK. 1983 CASE 2590, 6624 hrs., 12 spd., PTO, JD 8760, 4900 hrs., 20.8x38 dual radials 220 HP, good condition, $16,000 OBO. duals, diff. lock, decellerator, shedded, exc. cond. Call 306-728-3498, Melville, SK. 306-539-6655, Kelliher, SK.
CLASSIFIED ADS 71
JD 4640 and 4650; 1998 Ford 9682, 400 HP, low hrs. Loaders in stock. Will trade for JD tractors needing work. Austin, MB. 204-871-5170. 4640, TRIPLE HYDS., 20.8 factory duals, c/w weights, front weights, quad shift, 8800 hrs, engine and trans work done, $24,000. 306-493-7890, Milden, SK. 2003 JD 7520, MFWD, 3 PTH, IVT trans., w/741 loader and grapple, 6025 hrs., $83,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. 1996 JD 7400, MFWD, power quad trans., 3 PTH, new rubber 20.8x38, 16.9x28, 8200 hrs., w/JD 740 loader, clean unit, $40,000. 780-674-5516, 780-305-7152 Barrhead AB 2009 JD 9630 4WD, high flow hyds., 1749 hrs., deluxe cab, full weight package, diff. lock, 800x70x38 duals, HID lights, leather, heated seat, electric mirrors, 5 SCVs, AutoSteer ready, stored inside, field ready, S/N: RW9630P011179, $240,000; Also, 2002 JD 9520 4WD w/PTO, 5100 hrs., 18 spd., PS transmission, Michelin 800x70R38 duals, diff. lock, HID lights, deluxe cab, full weight package, 4 SCVs, stored inside, Greenstar ready, field ready, $135,000. Call Quenton 306-354-7585, Mossbank, SK quentonquark@gmail.com 1990 JD 8560 w/PTO, 9300 hrs., 18.4 tires in fair cond., $30,000 OBO. Kenaston, SK. Call 306-252-2767 or 306-221-8968. 2000 JD 9100, 4 WD, 1761 hrs., 20.8x38 rubber, 4 hyds., no PTO, 90,000 OBO. 306-699-7557, Qu’Appelle, SK. 2009 JOHN DEERE 9520 tractor. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1989 JD 8760, 8500 eng. hrs., 2000 hrs. on new eng., radar, diff. locks, 24 spd., 4 SCV’s, 20.8x38 Michelin duals, GPS ready, $55,000. 204-851-5520, Cromer, MB. 2009 JD 9430 4WD, powershift, 2200 hrs., 710/70R42’s, PTO, 5 remotes, motor seal drain, AutoTrac ready, $174,500 US. Call 320-848-2496 or 320-894-6560, Fairfax, MN. www.ms-diversified.com
9400 JD, always shedded, orig. owner, 5051 hrs, 710 metric tires- 2 new, rest good, 12 spd., HID lights, JD universal AutoSteer 200, wheel weights, tow cable, $ 1 0 2 , 5 0 0 O B O. C a l l fo r m o r e i n fo 306-263-4944, Limerick, SK. HYDRAULIC FLOW CONTROL for JD tractors, a must for air seeding systems, $79.95 + S&H. 306-577-8344, Arcola, SK. 1978 JD 4040, 9400 hrs. Leon loader, 3 PTH, good cond., new AC, cab int. and seat, $24,000. 306-861-1680, Griffin, SK. 1990 JD 4555 tractor. Dinsmore, SK. For more info. call Cliff 306-846-2175 or email: cab@sasktel.net JD 3203 w/300 QA loader, 250 hrs., $19,000 OBO; 1980 8640, 4427 hrs. on 50 Series motor, trans., U-joints and axles done, PTO, good 20.8 rubber, $29,000; JD 6430 Premium w/loader, 1450 hrs., $75,000 OBO. 306-338-2710, Hendon, SK. JD 8760, 4 WD, 24 spd. trans., 4 new 20.8-38 tires, new hyd. pump, 3 remotes, plus power beyond, 7807 hrs., shedded. 204-648-4649, Dauphin, MB.
9630T JD, premium cab and lighting package, 530 HP, 3500 hrs, great shape, always shedded, $204,000 OBO. Ron 204-941-0045, Rosser, MB. JD 4020, c/w cab, low hours, new tires, exceptional mechanical condition, $13,500 OBO. 403-823-1894, Drumheller, AB. 8630 JD, PTO, 3 hyds., 20.8x34 duals, AM/FM, AC, 8577 hrs, looks/runs good, $18,000. 306-743-5565, Langenburg, SK. 1995 JD 8570, 6784 hrs., rebuilt PTO, 24 spd., hyd. return line, used for grain cart, $55,000. 306-488-2182, Holdfast, SK. 1998 JD 9400, 24 spd., newer 710x38s, 5303 hrs, $99,000. 306-948-7223, Biggar, 1984 JD 4240, approx. 5000 hrs., new rad. and hyd. couplers, 1 owner, 20.8x38 SK. tires, excellent shape, always shedded. 2 0 0 8 J D 9 5 3 0 , 4 W D, 2368 hours, 306-287-3563 evenings, Watson, SK. 800/70Rx38 Firestone duals, GreenStar ready, instructional seat, very good cond., warranty until 2015, $210,000. Kindersley, SK., call 306-463-3023, 306-463-8774. JD 8450 4WD c/w 4 SCV’s, PTO, 18.4x34 tires, diff lock, 8885 hrs, Serial No. RW8450H001323, $25,000. 204-568-4668 Beulah, MB. 1976 JD 8430, 5700 hrs, new head and fuel pump, 20.8x34 duals, 80% in, 50% out, $21,500. 306-961-1170 Domremy, SK
2013 JD 6140R, 640 hrs., 20 spd., MFWD w/trip link susp., H360 loader 540/1000 PTO, 3 SCV, premium cab, $125,000. 402-719-9017, Fremont, NE. 2010 JD 9630T, 36” tracks, AutoTrac ready, Clear View caps, 18 spd., PS., 3400 hrs., $214,900. 204-324-4277, Altona, MB. PRICE REDUCED: 1994 JD 8960, c/w 14’ 2-way Degleman blade, 20.8R42 tires like 1998 JD 9400, 4 WD, 12 spd., 4 hyds., new, 10,200 hrs., good shape, $50,000. 710x38 radial Pirelli tires 75%, recent workorder, always shedded, 7000 hrs, very 780-361-7674, Wetaskiwin, AB. nice cond., 204-745-7445, Carman, MB. 2012 JD 9410R, 1300 hrs., 18 spd., powershift with efficiency manager, 710x70R42 2012 JD 9460R, 4WD, powershift, 590 tires, PTO, warranty. 306-752-1948 or hrs., 800/70R38’s, premium cab, leather 306-921-6693, Melfort, SK. trim, HID lights, weight package, extended warranty, $229,500 US. Fairfax, MN., 1984 JD 8850, 1000 PTO, 375 HP, 20.8/42 Phone 320-848-8496 or 320-894-6560, Goodyear radials- 70%, 5452 hrs., 4 hyd., www.ms-diversified.com aux. return line, JD AutoSteer wiring harness and mounted bracket, exc. cond., 1985 4850, MFWD, 20.8x38 duals- 80%, fronts 18.4x26- 50%, approx. 11,000 hrs., $40,000. 306-338-8078, Quill Lake, SK. S 2 Au t o S t e e r, m e c h a n i c a l ly s o u n d . 1984 JOHN DEERE 8450, 9900 hrs., PTO, 306-892-4313, 306-441-2691, Meota, SK. good shape, good tires, asking $23,000. 1995 JD 8970, 400 HP, 5673 hrs., 4 hyd. Call 306-548-4798, Danbury, SK. remotes, 24 spd., Outback AutoSteer, 20.8x42 triples, good cond., $89,700. Call Ken at 204-781-8664, Rosser, MB. 2006 JD 9320, 4500 hrs, 710R38 duals, 24 spd., deluxe cab, 4 hyd., Integrated AutoSteer $140,000. 306-726-7514 Southey SK 1994 JD 8870, 7815 hrs., new 20.8x46 Trelleborg radials, 24 spd. powershift, 16’ Degleman manual angle blade, Greenlighted 2 yrs ago. 306-621-5136, Yorkton, SK. 2004 JD 9420, 4527 hrs. 1 owner, well CLE AN JD 4960 MFWD tractor, new equipped, Buddy seat, Active operator seat 20.8x42 rear rubber, transmission rebuilt, extra light pkg., 18 spd. PS, 71070R/42 $61,000. Call 306-276-2442, Nipawin, SK. tires, inside weight package all around, 4 2005 JD 4920, 2567 hrs., 120’ booms, hyd. outlets w/return line excellent shape. 20” spacing, 1200 gal SS, AutoTrac, foam306-457-2935 after 6 PM, Stoughton, SK. er, $130,000. 402-719-9017, Fremont, NE. 2005 JD 7520 Premier, 1500 hrs., IBT JD 4440, 8500 hrs., 3 hyds., 18.4x38 rears trans., LH shifter, 741 JD FEL, rubber- 80% 80%, new fronts, well maintained, $25,000 exc. condition, $98,000 OBO. Pictures OBO. 306-768-7125, Carrot River, SK. available. 306-646-7743, Fairlight, SK. 2000 9200 JD 4WD, 9600 hrs, new JD JD 7020, 1971, good tractor, originally drop-in engine, $28,000 work order, f r o m M a n i t o b a , $ 1 4 , 0 0 0 O B O . 20-8-42 radial duals 40% tread, good con519-323-2980 leave msg., Harriston, ON. dition, other work orders available. Call for 1996 JD 8770, 12 spd., 20.8X38 at 40%, details. $76,000 OBO. Can deliver. Pur6387 hrs., 4 SCV’s, return line, 2nd owner, chased newer tractor. Neil 306-231-8300, good condition, $65,000. 306-548-4344, Humboldt, SK. Sturgis, SK. RETIRING: 1982 JD 4640 tractor, very cond. 306-638-4550, 306-630-7609, 2004 JD 7320 IVT trans., MFWD, 3 PTH, good JD 741 loader, 8400 hrs., $64,900 OBO. Findlater, SK. Call Gary 204-326-7000. Reimer Farm 2 0 0 9 J D 9 5 3 0 , 4 W D, 1 2 5 0 h r s . , Equipment, Hwy. 12 North, Steinbach, MB. 800/70R38DLS, 18 spd., AutoTrac, Activereimerfarmequipment.com Seat $195,900. 402-719-9017 Fremont NE 1995 JD 8570, 38” radials good rubber, STEVE’S TRACTOR REBUILDER looking 6000 hrs., good shape, 24 speed, $52,000. for JD tractors to rebuild, Series 20s, 30s, Call 306-476-2501, Rockglen, SK. 40s or 50s, or for parts. Will pay top dollar. selling JD parts. 204-466-2927, 1976 JD 4430 quad, 3 hyds., 85% rubber, Now 204-871-5170, Austin, MB. excellent. Call 306-744-8113, Yorkton, SK. JD 8570 4WD tractor with 4490 hours, JD LOOKING FOR: JD 30, 40, 50 Series trac- 6300L FWA tractor with JD 640 FEL and tor in good cond. with mechanical issues. open cab. Moncrief Farm and Livestock Call 306-621-7170, Yorkton, SK. Equipment Auction, Wednesday, April 16, 1986 JOHN DEERE 4450 tractor. Call 2 0 1 4 , A l a m e d a , S a s k . a r e a . V i s i t www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 2011 JD 9330, JD AutoSteer, 16’ Degle- 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 man blade, 500 hrs., $250,000. Herschel, 1992 JD 8560, 4 WD, 24 spd., 3300 orig. SK. Call 306-277-2132 or 306-831-8007. hrs., 20.8R38 duals, 3 hydraulics, diff. lock, 2012 JD 8360R, 947 hrs., IVT, MFWD $58,000. 204-326-1447, Mitchell, MB. w/ILS, 50 KPH trans., 480/80R50 duals, front duals, 5 SCV, warranty, $248,000. JD TRACK MACHINES 402-719-9017, Fremont, NE. 2010 JD 5075E utility tractor. HG tires, block heater, calcium in rear tires, 3 PTH, includes JD 553 loader, 85” bucket, ext. 5 yr. warranty, 470 hrs., always shedded, exc. cond., asking $42,000; Also available w/tractor, 6’ Kodiak mower, Sovema rototiller, bale spear, pallet fork, snow push blade, bucket w/grapple. 403-559-6214, Didsbury, AB. 1986 JD 2950 MFWD, 3 PTH, 7100 hrs., good rubber, c/w 260 loader joystick, sharp; 1982 JD 4640, quad, 3 PTH, rub- • 2008 JD 9430T 425HP, 36” tracks, b e r - 5 0 % , 7 9 0 0 h r s . , e x c e l l e n t . 3PTH, Autotrac ready, deluxe cab, 6290 306-744-8113, Saltcoats, SK. hrs ...$178,800 $0 pymt until Nov/14. 1975 JOHN DEERE 4630, excellent engine, 4.87% lease ($18,796 pymt) needs 1 set of rear tires. Call Barry • 2011 JD 9630T 530HP, 36” tracks, 306-243-4960, Dinsmore, SK. Autotrac ready, deluxe cab, 932 JD 4630 TRACTOR, complete with Ezee-On hrs...$248,800 $0 pymt until Nov/14. loader and bucket, hours? $16,500 OBO. 5.46% lease ($26,625 pymt) 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 780-726-2323, Malaig, AB. 1992 JD 4560 2 WD, 3 hyd. outlets, duals 1982 JOHN DEERE 8850, 8483 hrs., 4500 hrs., 15 spd. powershift. One owner, 24.5R32 tires, engine replaced at 6485 hrs. Call 306-267-4455, Big Beaver, SK. retired. 306-436-4667, Milestone, SK.
2013 T9.560, 280 hrs., 800 metric tire, deluxe cab, 6 hyds., tow cable, weights, $330,000; 2013 T9.390, 270 hrs., 480x50” row crop tires, PTO, 4 hyds., powershift, tow cable, cloth seat, $280,000; 2012 T7.185 MFWD, loader, grapple, 460 rears, 420 fronts- 70% tread, weights, CVT trans., 3 hy d s . , 5 4 0 / 1 0 0 0 P TO, 1 2 2 0 h r s . , $100,000. 204-534-7651, Boissevain, MB. 2012 NH TV6070, $115,000. Raymore N ew H o l l a n d 3 0 6 - 7 4 6 - 2 9 1 1 o r v i ew www.raymorenewholland.com 2003 NEW HOLLAND TJ425 tractor. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 2006 TJ380, 1521 hrs., shedded, no PTO, 4 remotes, 710 metrics, $169,000 OBO. 306-488-4205, 306-533-1957, Dilke, SK. 1995 8970, MFWD powershift, rubber 85%, 7000 hours, excellent. Call 306-744-8113, Saltcoats, SK. 2007 NH TJ430, 1700 hrs., PS, 900 duals, leather, elec. mirrors, HID lights, mint cond. 780-872-2832, Paradise Hill, SK. 2008 NH T9050 #HC3143A, 2224 hrs., 485 HP, 4WD, JD AutoSteer, megaflow hyds., tires 800/70R38 duals, $205,500. 1-888-442-3816, or www.farmworld.ca
‘09 NH T7040 tractor w/ 2,600 hrs, 180hp, FWA, 3PTH, PTO & F.E.L w/ 2012 JD 9560 RT, 1215 hrs., PTO, warrangrapple. Sold w/ warranty! $99,800. ty. Sold by auction Tuesday April 15th in Financing available. Trades welcome. Tisdale, SK. Check website for full details: 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com www.schapansky.com Bruce Schapansky Auctioneers 306-873-5488, PL# 912715. 2009 NH 9040, 3850 hrs., PTO. w/wo low use Degelman blade, $175,000 OBO. Swift Current, SK. 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586.
2012 JD 6140R, only 31 hrs., loader ready, many options, loaded tractor, $128,500. 204-794-4878, 204-981-3636, Cartier, MB. JD 4455, 3266 hrs., MFWD, 3 PTH, $63,500; 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 4450, 8035 hrs., powershift, MFWD, 3 PTH, eng. rebuilt, $39,000. New 740 loaders avail. Call 306-231-3993, Humboldt, SK. www.versluistrading.com 2006 JD 9520, 5000 hrs, 800x38 rubber, AutoSteer ready, exc. shape, $135,000 OBO. 306-831-7863, Rosetown, SK. JOHN DEERE 9300 2001, 2940 hrs., 24 speed, diff. lock, 710x38 tires, $100,000. Broadview, SK. 306-696-7285. 1977 JD 4430, 9000 hrs., c/w Allied 975 loader, joy stick, QA bucket w/grapple, $28,000. 306-784-3285, Herbert, SK.
2 0 0 8 NH T1520, $16,400. Raymore NewHolland, 306-746-2911, Raymore, SK., or www.raymorenewholland.com 1995 FORD/NH 9480, 300 HP, 14L Cummins, 20.8x42 duals (front 4 are new), 4 hyd. remotes, AutoSteer, recently through shop, $59,500. 204-748-8303, Elkhorn, MB 2012 NEW HOLLAND T9.560 #PN29992A. 747 hrs., cash, $252,000 1-888-442-6084, or www.farmworld.ca 1998 NH 9682, 4190 hrs., 425 HP, 12 spd. std, recent $10,000 maintenance WO, exc. cond, $89,000. 306-642-7650, Limerick SK 2002 NEW HOLLAND TJ375 tractor. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 2003 NEW HOLLAND TJ450 #N22303B, 4984 hrs., 450 HP, 55 GPM, deluxe cab, powershift, $154,000. 1-888-442-6084, or www.farmworld.ca 2010 NEW HOLLAND T8020 tractor. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1994 NH 9680, 4WD, 5800 hrs., new 20.8x42 duals, 82 series hyd. update, Outback AutoSteer plumbing, $72,000 OBO. Exc. cond. 306-549-7989, Hafford, SK. 2000 NH 8970, $57,700. Yorkton Newholland, 306-783-8511, Yorkton, SK., or www.yorktonnewholland.com 2013 NEW HOLLAND T9.670 #HN3383A. 740 hrs., 600 HP, 4WD track, monitor display, $395,000 cash. 1-888-462-3816, or www.farmworld.ca 2009 T9060 HD 535, 3450 hrs., powershift, high cap pump, deluxe cab, 710 rubber, $159,000. 780-206-1234, Barrhead AB 2011 NH T9.505HD, $269,000. Yorkton NewHolland 306-783-8511 or view www.yorktonnewholland.com
1985 JD 8650, quad range, 3 hyd, rebuilt eng., diff. lock, AM/FM, AC, shedded, tires 85%, $29,900. 204-761-5145, Rivers, MB. 2000 8110 MFWD, 6000 hrs., 4 SCV’s, PS, 20.8x42 duals, 840 SL loader w/grapple, clean, $82,000. 204-825-8121, Morden MB JD 7710, 7210, 7410, all MFWD and low hours, can be equipped with loaders. JD 3415 telehandler low hours. 204-522-6333, Melita, MB. JD 4760 MFWD, powershift, PTO, 4 new tires, weights, 10,600 hrs., good shape, $54,000. 306-695-2000, Indian Head, SK. 1991 FORD 946 Designation 6, 5765 hrs., 20.8x38 tires, 342 HP, vg cond., $55,000 OBO. 780-592-3985, Innisfree, AB. 2008 KUBOTA M108, $47,000. Raymore N ew H o l l a n d 3 0 6 - 7 4 6 - 2 9 1 1 , o r v i ew www.raymorenewholland.com
MF 8450 2008, 180 HP, FWA, Dyna-VT trans, 50 kms/hr, susp. front axle, cab susp., 480R/46 duals, 4100 hrs., asking $89,000. Call 204-248-2359 or cell 204-723-0359, Notre Dame, MB.
‘93 Ford 9880 Tractor, 400HP, MASSEY 202 INDUSTRIAL TRACTOR, Cummins 14.0L 6 cyl Turbo, synchro with FEL, new tires, $4500. 306-463-7802, transmission, 12 fwd 4 rev, dual kit with 8 new radials...$59,800.00. Eatonia, SK. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. 2013 MF 4610 FWA, rental return, 84 HP www.combineworld.com PTO, self-levelling loader, cab, AC, hyd. shuttle, joystick, 3PTH, 110 hrs. Warranty. TW 30, DUAL power, 20.8 duals, large 2.9% for 72 months OAC. Cam-Don Motors PTO, 8990 hrs, 3 hyds, good paint and cond., $18,000. 306-493-7890, Milden, SK. Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 1994 FORD/NH 9280, 8800 hrs., high output hyd., exc. cond., $35,500 OBO or trade for wheat. Call 306-243-4811, Outlook, SK. 2012 NEW HOLLAND T9.670 #HN3227A. 418 hrs., 670 diff. lock, mega-flow hyd., 1998 FORD/NH 9682, 710 rubber, 12 $280,000. cash. 1-888-462-3816, or speed, low hours, excellent condition. For info call 306-277-4503, Gronlid, SK. www.farmworld.ca 2002 TJ375, 3800 hrs., 20.8x42 Michelin’s FORD NH 1998, 9682, 20.8x42 tires, 4700 w/Outback AutoSteer, mint condition, hrs., excellent tractor, $85,000. Battleford, SK. Dave 306-445-7573, 306-481-4740. $116,000 OBO. 306-834-8100, Major, SK. 2012 NEW HOLLAND T9.670, #HN3227A, 418 hours, 670 diff. lock, 6 hyd. outlets, high cap draw bar, reduced, $295,000. 1-888-442-6084, or www.farmworld.ca 2012 NH T9.505 #PN3031A, 488 hrs., 450 HP, 4WD, guidance navigation control, diff. lock front/rear, $243,000. cash. 1-888-462-3816, or www.farmworld.ca NH TM135 FWA tractor and FEL with 2455 hours. Dave MacCuish Farm Equipment Auction, Tuesday, April 15, 2014, Frobishe r, S a s k . a r e a . M a c k Au c t i o n C o . 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. PL #311962.
VERSATILE 950, RECENTLY updated and painted, hydraulic kit, $28,000. Call: 403-872-2940, Ponoka, AB. 1981 VERSATILE 835, 7100 hrs., asking $20,000. 306-287-4243 or 306-287-7573, Watson, SK. 1985 VERSATILE 936, 4 WD, std. trans., 24.5x32, 6037 hrs., new seat, had bearing roll, asking $42,000. 306-573-4602, 306-858-7295, Birsay, SK. VERSATILE 875 TRACTOR w/5 hydraulics. Please call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
72 CLASSIFIED ADS
1990 VERSATILE 876, 6270 hrs., Outback AutoSteering. Recent main and rod bearings, clutch, turbo, injectors and alternator, $40,000. 306-397-2293, Edam, SK. FORD VERSATILE 876 4WD tractor with 5195 hrs; Versatile 836 w/rebuilt engine, newer rubber and PTO. Dave MacCuish Farm Equip. Auction, Tuesday, April 15, 2014, Frobisher, SK. area. For sale bill and photos www.mackauctioncompany.com M a c k Au c t i o n C o . 3 0 6 - 4 2 1 - 2 9 2 8 , 306-487-7815. PL #311962. NEW VERSATILE 575, pre-emission engine, powershift, PTO, 110 GPM, 20.8x46 triples, full weights. Cam-Don Motors Ltd. 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 835 TRACTOR, 1979, exc. rubber and mechanical condition, plumbed for air seeder, asking $25,000. 306-747-7685 Parkside SK 895 VERSATILE, heavy planataries, 3800 original hrs., ultra premium, $43,000 OBO. 403-823-1894, Drumheller, AB.
1988 936 VERSATILE, 855 Cummins, std. trans., 4 remotes, return line, 20.8x38 duals, air, clean, well maintained tractor, $39,000. Cheap horsepower. Call for pics. 403-928-4353, Golden Prairie, SK. 2003 BUHLER VERS. 2335, std. trans, 3867 hrs., 710 duals, weights, new Outback GPS. Asking $98,900. 306-475-2541, or cell 306-690-1910, Spring Valley, SK.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
2 0 1 1 C AT E R P I L L A R W H E E L L OA D E R IT-38-H, low hr. machine, EROPS, AC, ride control, Q/C, 20.5R25 tires c/w 3.5 yd. bucket, exc. cond., $155,000. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. FOR SALE AND work ready!! 2006 Komatsu D85PX-15EO; 1981 CAT D9L; 2005 JD 700J LGP; 2005 JD 850J; Two 1987 Dresser TD25G’s; 1995 TD25G; 1987 and 1989 TD20G’s; 1978 TD20E; 2000 TD15E; and 1989 TD15E. All equipped with blades. Some have rippers and some have winches. If interested, please call Russ for more info. at 204-619-3252, Lundar, MB.
FORD 5000 DSL. w/FEL; JD 2420 dsl. swather, 25’ and 16’ hay header; Steel quonset in crate, 52’x35’x18’; Vac sewer 1800 gal. tank and pump. 306-236-8023, Goodsoil, SK.
ODESSA ROCKPICKER SALES: New Degelman equipment, land rollers, Strawmaster, rockpickers, rock rakes, dozer blades. Phone 306-957-4403, cell 306-536-5097, Odessa, SK. ESTATE SALE: WHITE 5542 combine w/straw walker, $1,000; MF 1105 tractor, dual tires, $12,000; Ford 8N tractor, $1500; Bronco 16’ tandem stock trailer, 1981 875 VERSATILE, 5860 hrs., 4 re- $3,000. Call 250-428-7869, Canyon, BC. motes, shedded, 20.8x38” duals, good FARM EQUIPMENT: 1983 JD 7721 comcond., $19,500. Phone: 306-937-2555, bine w/JD 912 PU; 2000 MacDon Premier 306-658-2059, 780-808-3506, Cando, SK. swather w/finger reel; Morris Magnum II VERSATILE 700, w/LEON dozer, 2600 cultivator; JD discers; International 310 original hrs., $22,500 OBO. 403-585-1910, discers; Rite-Way harrow packer drawbar; Airdrie, AB. 1982 GMC 6000 V8 3 ton truck w/Strong Box; 1965 IH 2 ton truck w/wooden box. 2006 VERSATILE 435, 3200 hrs., 800 Dinsmore, SK. For more info call Cliff rubber, Outback e-drive, Outback S2 and 306-846-2175 or email: cab@sasktel.net 360, $40,000 W/O in 2013 on the 12 spd. auto. trans., $150,000 OBO. 306-252-2767 BUY NOW: Xtreme Series LED light bars or 306-221-8968, Kenaston, SK. for all your farming needs. Box 3081, Regi1985 VERSATILE 856, 5300 hrs, excellent n a , S K , S 4 P 3 G 7 . 1 - 8 0 0 - 2 6 3 - 4 1 9 3 , shape, std. trans, 8 new radials. Call www.mcdougallauction.com DL319916 306-228-3523 for pictures, Unity, SK. SUNFLOWER HARVEST SYSTEMS. Call 1982 VERSATILE 835, PTO, good rubber, for literature. 1-800-735-5848. Lucke Mfg., 1 0 , 0 0 0 h r s . , r u n s g r e a t , $ 1 8 , 9 0 0 . www.luckemanufacturing.com 306-542-3526, Kamsack, SK. 40 ANDERSEN double shoot openers for 1990 FORD VERSATILE 276, 5,320 hrs. Concord Edge-On shank; Flexi-Coil 67 PT 120’ sprayer, 1200 gal tank, 3-way nozzles, Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. excellent; 3 Flexi-Coil heavy coil packers; IHC #100 press drill, shedded. 306-367-4770, Middle Lake, SK. 1975 BIG BUD HN320, 3 hyds., 23.1x30 EZEE-ON 1225 OFFSET disc, $8900; Morris rubber, needs 855 Cummins short block, 60’ harrow drawbar, dual axle, w/harrows, $18,000. 306-654-4905, Prud’homme, SK. $3900; CASE/IH 5600 37’ chisel plow with BIG BUD 360/30 powershift, new paint, harrows, $4200; 1993 Ford F-350 dually, 5 cab upholstery and 8 new tires. Call spd., 7.3L dsl., w/service deck, side compartments, $4900; 1994 Freightliner FL-80 403-504-0468, Medicine Hat, AB. tandem, 9 spd., 8.3L Cummins, 11R24.5, 20’ CIM ultracel with tarp, $37,900. Downsized farm. Ph 306-231-8832, Viscount, SK VERSATILE 435 2009, 710-42 duals, 12 spd. manual, HD axle, deluxe cab, HID lighting, 1720 hrs., Outback guidance, asking $185,000. Call 204-248-2359 or cell 204-723-0359, Notre Dame, MB. 1985 VERSATILE 856, 4 WD, 8,450 hrs. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
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; 2008 STX 430 4 WD, new tires, $160,000; Two 2005 IH 9900i, C-15 Cat, 13 spd., 4-way locks, 72” sleepers, $30,000 ea.; 2003 Advance Super B grain trailer, $28,000; 1995 front trailer off a Super B $5,000; 2011 Farm King 13x85 aug e r, hy d . s w i n g , hy d . l i f t o n s w i n g $18,000; Farm King 10x70, $6,000; IH 3320 sprayer, $200,000; 2010 Salford 41’, as new, $70,000; Tor-Master 70’ heavy harrows, new tines, $16,000; 2013 Geringhoff 8x30” corn chopping header w/row stompers, $80,000; 2-105 White tractor rebuilt eng., $7,000; Hutchmaster tandem, $8,000; 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., $1,500; Band sprayer 16x30, $1,500; 2004 Chev 2500 4x4 dr. w/8’ deck, new tires, new safety, $6500; 1998 Kenworth T-800 N14 Cummins, 18 spd., 4-way locks, SS paving box, 30” live belt, $33,000; 2006 Cat 320 excavator, 10,000 hrs. w/QA cleaning bucket, nice, $60,000; Reynolds 18 yd. push off scraper, $30,000. Will sell as package or separate. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. QUIT FARMING: 2008 NH VR7090 baler, wide tires, wide PU, approx. 6000 bales, stored inside, exc. shape, low acres, $22,000; 2004 NH 1475 16’ haybine, low acres, exc. cond, $16,500; AgShield 2000 conditioner, good cond., new bottom crimper, $4500; Kuen SR112 12-whl rake, like new cond., $5000; Schulte XH1500 Series III 15’ mower, $20,000; Versatile #10 24’ PT swather, $1500; Morris 725 29’ HD cult., mtd. harrows, $3000; 4 crowfoot packers, 15’ (5’, 4’, 2-3’); 2 10’ Melroe 204 disc drills, grass and fert. boxes, packer wheels have been recapped; 3 PTH wheel rake, w/3 wheels. 306-842-3532, cell: 306-861-1827, Weyburn, SK. 1999 FREIGHTLINER F70 Series, new 16’ B&H, $28,500; Bourgault 28’ 8800 air seeder w/2115 tank, $18,500; Flexi-Coil harrow packer, grey, 50’, $2750; Rock-OMatic stonepicker, $1,000; Other misc. machinery. 306-376-4706, Meacham, SK.
STEIGER TIGER TRACTOR wanted, must be in very good condition. Also wanted: power steering for 1971 IHC 1800 truck. Call 306-478-2456, Mankota, SK. WANTED: NH BALE WAGON 1037, 1033, 1036, 1032; JD 7810 tractor, MFWD, FEL, 3 PTH. 403-394-4401, Lethbridge, AB.
RETIRING. TAKING OFFERS on small line of good equipment. Bourgault 24’ air seeder, IH 3 ton truck, NH TR85 combine, Flexi-Coil 60’ autofold harrow packer bar, swathers, Brandt quick fold 80’ sprayer, water tanks, 360 MF discers w/covers, plus more. 306-882-2358, Rosetown, SK.
There’s So Much Potential... You Just Need The Right Tools! LAND LEVELERS
ROCK BUCKETS & GRAPPLES
TREE SHEARS 2005 JOHN DEERE loader, Model 110TBL, 4x4, heated cab, $22,500. 204-981-3636, or 204-864-2391, Cartier, MB. 1996 CASE 621B wheel loader, 10,516 hrs, brand new factory engine 500 hours ago, cab w/heat, 3rd valve, Q/A bucket and pallet forks, Michelin 20.5R25 tires 60%, $49,000. Nice machine! Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB.
35 TO 40’ vibrashank cultivator, 6” spacing, IH or JD, should have walking beam axles. Call: 780-984-7860, Leduc, AB. WANTED: 4855 ROUND baler. Must be in excellent condition. Call: 306-338-7403, Wadena, SK. WANTED: NEW OR used Bourgault 5810, 62’ or 72’, 9.8” spacing and MRBs. Phone 306-291-9395, Langham, SK.
ONE TIME FENCING, sucker rod fence posts (solid steel), and steel corners. www.onetimefencing.ca 1-877-542-4979. CROWN SHRED IS taking orders for plastic fence posts, 6’ and 7’ available. E-mail Jack at: csrregina@sasktel.net for more info. or phone 306-543-1766, Regina, 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. 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. WILL DO TEARDOWNS, barb-wire, corrals, r a i l s , b i g ga m e . W i l l t r ave l . P h o n e RETIRING: 1980 VERSATILE 555, great 306-344-7067, Onion Lake, SK. shape, good rubber, 5600hrs., $15,000; JD 6600 dsl. combine, 22’ header, 3200 hrs., MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. $5000; JD 6600 gas combine, 12’ PU, 1600 Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: hrs., $2500; NH 847 baler, $500; 32’ IHC www.maverickconstruction.ca 310 discers, $1500; JD 25’ PT swather, CUSTOM FENCING AND corral building, no $900; IHC 18’ PT swather, new cutter bar, j o b t o o b i g o r t o o s m a l l . C a l l PU reel, $800. Call 306-640-6363, Assini- 306-699-7450, Qu’Appelle, SK. boia, SK. email: aabjj@sasktel.net DURABLE, HEAVY DUTY straps w/end loops in stock at Flaman starting at $49. Sizes from 20’-50’, capacity up to 200,000 lbs. See your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com
WANTED: OLD RED or yellow PTO, 10” 60’ Bergen auger, not swing away, in fair WANTED: FLEXI-COIL 320 3rd tank to fit shape, useable. Phone 306-252-2810, 2 3 2 0 / 1 7 2 0 c a r t . 3 0 6 - 5 6 3 - 8 4 8 2 , 306-567-7281, Kenaston, SK. 306-782-2586, Yorkton, SK. 2009 DEGELMAN 46/57 14’ dozer blade. WANTED: USED, BURNT, old or ugly tracCall 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. tors. Newer models too! Smith’s Tractor Wrecking, 1-888-676-4847. FERTILIZER SPREADERS: 4- 8 ton. Large selection. 204-857-8403, Portage la Prai- LOOKING FOR 2390 or 2590 Case 2WD tractor with duals in good condition. Call rie, MB. www.zettlerfarmequipment.com 306-210-8901, Reward, SK. GRAIN AND FERT sliptank, fits 20’ box, rear unload augers, $2500. St. Lazare, MB. WANTED: 50’-60’ JD 1650 cultivator, Adrian 204-683-2267, cell: 204-773-6397 Phone/text: 306-291-9395, Langham, SK. 2003 MCCORMICK MTX125, MFWD, CAHR, 3560 hrs, 3 PTH, loader, 4 new radial tires, $60,000. 250-938-0974, Armstrong, BC. GRATTON COULEE AGRI PARTS LTD. Your #1 place to purchase late model combine and tractor parts. Used, new and rebuilt. www.gcparts.com Toll free 888-327-6767.
WANTED: MF #36 DISCERS, all sizes, prompt pick-up. Phone 306-259-4923, 306-946-9669, 306-946-7923, Young, SK. WANTED: 2355 LOADER for 5288 Int. tractor, working condition. 306-367-4803, Middle Lake, SK. WANTED: FLEXI-COIL 320 3rd tank to fit 2320/1720. Will pay finders fee. Call 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Rama, SK.
ROCK RAKES
Built to Last!
Fabrication S. Houle Inc.,
Bernie 1-306-241-7354 or Toll Free 888-404-4380 www.shoule.com New Vision Agro 306-225-2226
2001 HYSTER H100 XM, 9450 lb. lift, 185” height reach, 48” forks, new Vortex eng., exc. cond, enclosed cab w/doors, propane, $19,000 OBO. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.
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 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.
WHOLE IRRIGATION SYSTEM: 35-40 4” pipes and risers, in-take pipes, in-take screen, pump and trailer, 2 Big Guns, $6000 OBO. 306-558-7017, Fox Valley, SK. 75 HP ELECTRIC Motor and Berkeley pump (700 gal/minute), $2000. Lucky Lake, SK. 306-858-2529, 306-867-9899. 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.
JD 110 LAWN tractor w/mower and dozer blade; JD 316 w/mower and tiller. Both in running cond. 780-390-0075, Viking, AB.
AFFORDABLE WINDBREAK/Shelterbelt solutions. Prairie hardy varieties. www.acreagelogic.com 204-750-0507, Carman, MB.
1-888-92 0-1507
SELLING: 4’ bare rooted Assiniboine or Prairie Sky poplar, exc. for wind breaks, limited quantities. 306-695-2056, Indian Head, SK. uk.greenhouses@sasktel.net
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. Now taking spring bookings. Details phone DIESEL GENSET SALES AND SERVICE, 403-586-8733 or check out our website at 12 to 300 KW, lots of units in stock, used www.didsburysprucefarms.com and new, Perkins, John Deere, Deutz. We also build custom gensets. We currently have special pricing on new John Deere Wholesale Nursery Specials units. Call for pricing 204-792-7471.
Order before Mid April!!!
OUTBACK RTK BASE station and 2 rovers, $6900 OBO. 306-834-8100, Major, SK. F I R E W O O D : C u t a n d s p l i t , d e l i ve r y available. 306-862-7831, 306-862-3086, Nipawin, SK. BLOCKED SEASONED JACK Pine firewood and wood chips for sale. Lehner Wood Pre- WWW.NOUTILITYBILLS.COM - Indoor servers Ltd., 306-763-4232, Prince Albert, coal, grain, multi-fuel, gas, oil, pellet and propane fired boilers, fireplaces, furnaces SK. Will deliver. Self-unloading trailer. and stoves. Outdoor EPA and conventional BIRCH FIREWOOD, sold in bags of ap- wood boilers, coal / multi-fuel boilers. prox. 1/2 cord, split and seasoned, $200; Chimney, heat exchangers, parts, piping, Pine also available in same quantity, $120. pumps, etc. Athabasca, AB, 780-628-4835. 306-763-1943, Prince Albert, SK. BLOCKED AND SPLIT seasoned Spruce firewood. Call V&R Sawing, 306-232-5488, Rosthern, SK. TROPHY ZONE TANNERY, State of the art facility. Hair on tanning for both taxidermy and domestic hides. Quality work w i t h f a s t t u r n a r o u n d . C a l l a ny t i m e KEET’S FISH FARM has Rainbow Trout 403-653-1565 or cell: 406-450-6300, fingerlings for spring stocking. Gill nets Cardston, AB. Email: bunnage@shaw.ca available. 306-260-0288, Saskatoon, SK. www.keetsfishfarm.com BEV’S FISH & SEAFOOD LTD., buy direct, fresh fish: Pickerel, Northern Pike, ROD’S WELDING: 2” and 2-3/8” pipe in Whitefish and Lake Trout. Seafood also 24’ and 30’ lengths. 2” is $0.85/ft, 2-3/8” available. Phone toll free 1-877-434-7477, is $1.05/ft. 403-746-5455, Red Deer, AB. 306-763-8277, Prince Albert, SK. CLEAR SPRINGS TROUT FARM Rainbow Trout, 4”, 6” and 8” for spring stocking. 204-937-4403, 204-937-8087, Roblin, MB. LOW HOUR LOCKWOOD pivot, c/w power plant and pump, approx. 1600’, $30,000 work order $22,000 firm. 306-867-8249, Outlook, SK. 2002 SELLICK SD 80 4WD 8000 lb. forklift, asking $28,000; 2006 JCB 940 4WD 8000 lb. forklift, asking $35,000. 306-744-2403, Saltcoats, SK. ask for Charles or email: charles@penntruss.com
Farms, oilfields and construction sites: when your job site floods, you need Watermaster Floating Pump – capable to a 30-foot lift. It’s portable, lightweight, self-priming and so efficient you can move 42,000 gallons per hour. And get back to work.
G & S SALES LTD. Box 40, Dilke, Sask. S0G 1C0 1-800-267-0006
WESTERN IRRIGATION - Large supply of new and used irrigation equipment. Cadman travelling gun dealer. Used PTO pump and used large volume dsl. pumping unit w/gated pipe. 306-867-9461, Outlook, SK.
CANADA’S EQUIPMENT LEASING EXPERTS
Outstanding in all fields
Phone (306) 488-4334
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 1/4 MILE WHEEL-LINE, 1/2 mile main line, 40 HP electric Cornel pump, $10,000. 306-642-4077, Assiniboia, SK.
www.watermasterpumps.com
TRI STAR FARM SERVICES: O’Connell Farm drainage plows, pull type 4-5 pipe, 6-8 pipe, $24,500. 306-586-1603 Regina IRRIGATION EQUIPMENT or move water? 6”-10” pipe, 4 cyl. motor and pump on cart, $4500. 403-308-1400, Taber, AB.
Plugs $3.65ea/min 200qty ~ 12”-18” tall - Poplars: Okanese, Sundancer, Prairie Sky, Northwest - Acute Willow 1 gallon $7.50each/min 200qty - Poplars (3-5’ whips) Okanese, Sundancer, Prairie Sky, Northwest. - Acute Willow ~2’ tall, multi branched - Haskap - Spruce, Scots Pine ~ 1’ Tall 2 gallon $16.50ea/Min 100 qty - Swedish Columnar Aspen ~ 4’ tall - Siberian Larch ~18”-24” tall
Call 306-978-3333 Saskatoon, Sk. We ship anywhere!
BISON WANTED - Canadian Prairie Bison is looking to contract grain finished bison for growing markets. Roger Provencher at 306-468-2316. roger@cdnbison.com WANTED TO PURCHASE cull bison bulls and cows for slaughter. Oak Ridge Meats 204-835-2365 204-476-0147 McCreary MB WANTED: CALVES AND Yearlings. Call Ryan 306-646-4974 or cell: 306-646-7743 Fairlight, SK. TOP QUALITY, SEMEN tested, 2 and 3 yr. old Plains breeding bulls, MFL Ranches 403-747-2500, Alix, AB. 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.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
CLASSIFIED ADS 73
2013 CALVES WANTED. Will buy other bison. Phone Kevin at 306-429-2029, Glenavon, SK.
www.redangus.ca
SASKOTA NATURAL is looking for finished bison and cull cows. COD, paying market prices. “Producers working with Producers.” 306-231-9110, Quill Lake, SK.
• April 17 - Mackenzie Red Angus Bull Sale ...................Dawson Creek, BC • April 19 - WRAZ Red Angus , CORNERSTONE “More Bang for your Buck” Bull Sale..............Whitewood, SK • April 26 - Clear River Red Angus, No Fools Bull Sale............Cleardale, AB
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TH E TOTAL
P R OG R AM
19th An n u a l Bu ll S a l e
YOUR PICK: 2011 bred heifers. One to 150 head. Contact Bruce 403-651-7972, Youngstown, AB.
M O N D AY, AP RIL 14th, 2014 AT THE FARM
Llo yd m in s te r - 1 P M
ALBERTA BISON RANCH now selling 2012 Pure Plains breeding bulls. Also selling 2012 Prospect breeding heifers. Call Neil at 780-284-0347 Mayerthorpe, AB. Email: albertabisonranch@gmail.com Pictures at website: albertabison.ca
W ith G ue s tC o n s ign o rs : Expre s s R a n ch e s & Elld e m C a ttle C o .
To p Qua lity Bulls o n Offe r: 5 0 Bla ck An gus Thes e b u lls w ill b e s em en tes ted a n d rea d y to go .
Canadian Red Angus Promotion Society 4-H and Youth Check Out Our $2000 Bursary Program - Applications Online
QUIET TOP QUALITY 2 yr. old and yearling Purebred bulls. Spruce Acres, Foam Lake, SK, 306-272-3997, 306-272-7841. Fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n o r a ca ta lo g 2 YEAR OLD RED ANGUS BULLS. Easy calving, high performance and structurally Ca ll: Jon Fox sound. Semen tested and guaranteed. De3 06 -8 25-9 702 or 78 0-8 08 -6 8 6 0 livery available and can keep until spring. w w w .jus ta m e re ra n ch e s .com Prices $3500 and up. Bulls are ranch raised and come from a working cowherd. Call BLACK AND RED ANGUS BULLS on Rock Creek Ranching, Jordan Newhouse moderate growing ration, performance 306-276-2025, White Fox, SK. info avail. Adrian or Brian Edwards, ValleyHOWE RED ANGUS yearlings and 2 yr. hills Angus, Glaslyn, SK., 306-342-4407. old bulls for sale. Semen tested and guaranteed. Call Mike at 306-631-8779, 306-691-5011, Moose Jaw, SK.
ELK VALLEY RANCHES, buying all ages of feeder bison. Call Frank 780-846-2980, Kitscoty, AB. or elkvalley@xplornet.com
Ple a s e ca ll or s top b y th e fa rm a t Lloydm in s te r.
33 FIVE YEAR old bison cows for sale. 306-423-5979, St. Louis, SK. NILSSON BROS. INC. buying finished bison on the rail at Lacombe, AB for Apr. delivery and beyond. Fair, competitive and assured payment. Richard Bintner 306-873-3184. 25 MATURE OPEN bison cows for sale, $25,000. 306-441-5209, Meota, SK. WANTED: MATURE BISON bulls. Butch Smith, 403-843-3092 or 403-783-0356, Rimbey, AB. PREMIUM BREEDING STOCK, $1500 to $2000 per head. Dr. Marshall Patterson, 306-475-2232, Moose Jaw, SK.
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
Bred cow program ! Feeder Program !
Toll Free 1-8 66-8 48 -6669 No Res triction s ; Pu rcha s e a n d m a rk etin g - You rchoice
w w w.foothills lives tock.ca
Roc k y M ou n ta in Hou s e , AB
CANDIAC CHOICE BULL SALE, April 13, 2:00 PM at Candiac, SK. Featuring 23 Simmental yearling and 2 yr. old bulls plus 11 Black and Red Angus bulls. All bulls tested and guaranteed. Contact Stoney Creek Simmental 306-424-7627, Double K Acres Simmental 306-537-2198, Crazy K’s Angus 306-861-1702, or Candiac Auction Mart REG. YEARLING BULLS, sired by Game 306-424-2967. Day, Imprint, Thunder, and sons of Sinclair Entrepreneur and Bandolier 12U. Jeffrey Isaac, 306-768-8388, Carrot River, SK. BULLS FOR SALE. AI sired, calving ease and growth. Will feed and deliver. Pictures and info at www.donarofarms.com Call 3 0 6 - 9 2 1 - 7 1 7 5 or 3 0 6 - 7 5 2 - 3 8 0 8 mspratt@sasktel.net Melfort, SK. ALL-BREEDS OPEN REPLACEMENT BLACK ANGUS BULLS, yearling and 2 Heifers, plus pairs, breds, Sat., April 12th, year olds. Semen tested and ready to go 1:00 PM, Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose by mid-April. Mike Chase, Waveny Angus Jaw, SK. Some heifers booked with pics Farm 780-853-3384 or 780-853-2275 at more expected: www.johnstoneauction.ca Vermilion, AB. PL #914447. BLACK ANGUS PUREBRED BULL, 4 year old. Quiet animal. Will do the job! LAST CHANCE ALL-BREEDS BULL 306-488-2103, Holdafst, SK. SALE, Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, SK., May 27, 2014 at 12:00 PM. Ac- HR HAHN CATTLE Co., Black and Red Ancepting entries until April 21 for all breeds gus bulls for sale by private treaty. of registered yearlings and 2 yr. olds. Entry www.hahnangus.com for pictures and form online at www.johnstoneauction.ca more info. Bob Hahn 780-991-1355, Ryan Weiss 587-991-9526, Sherwood Park, AB. or call 306-693-4715. PL #914447.
Swift Current, Sask.
P A IR D IS P ER S A L
100 Re d An gus Sim m e n ta l Cros s Cow s . -E xcellen therd . S u s a n ’s heifer ca lves ha ve a lw a ys co m m a n d ed p rem iu m s . Her s teer ca lves in Oct. a vera ge 630 lb s .
P A IR D IS P ER S A L
Th urs da y Jun e 12th Fors yth Ra n ch , He rb e rt, SK.
200 Bla ck, Bla ck W h ite Fa ce Cow s . -T he co m m ercia l herd fro m o n e o fCa n a d a ’s Pu reb red Bu ll S u p p liers - Gen etics Plu s
L E E CROW L E Y - M ANAGE R (306) 7 41-5 7 01 DON PE ACOCK - AUCT IONE E R (306) 662-8288 Canada’s Source For Quality Bred Cattle
FOR FURTHER INFORM ATION: 3 06 -773 -3 174
PUREBRED BLACK ANGUS long yearling bulls, replacement heifers, AI service. Meadow Ridge Enterprises, 306-373-9140 or 306-270-6628, Saskatoon, SK. SWAN HILLS RANCH 2 yr. old Angus and Simm/Angus cross, select at the ranch, $3500/bull. Delivery and volume credits available. 204-734-0210, Swan River, MB. REGISTERED BLACK ANGUS 2 year old virgin bulls. Complete performance and ultrasound data available. Will hold and deliver before June 15. Contact GBS Angus Farm 306-763-9539, Prince Albert, SK. 6 REG. PB BLACK Angus bulls, ranging in ages from 2 to 4 yrs. old, bulls were orginally purchase from Short Grass Bull Sale. Bloodlines are such as: Advantage, Sandy Bar Dutch, Sandy Bar Ambush, Valley Blossom Ideal. For prices call Harry Dalke, 204-822-3643, 204-362-4101, Morden, MB
HYBRED VIGOR, YOUR OWN F1 replacements and docility to name a few are the benefits of cross breeding with a Shorthorn bull. 2 year old holdovers avail., white, reds and roans. Huberdale Farms 306-336-2684, 306-331-0097, Lipton, SK.
140 Re d & Bla ck Cow s w ith Ta n & Silve r Ca lve s a t s ide . 6 Ch a r. He rd Bulls s e ll a s w e ll. Co w herd fea tu res AI Gen etics . Herd b u lls a re o u ts ta n d in g- ea rly ca lves , m ightb e b es tq u a lity ca lves yo u ’ve ever s een , s ell a s p a irs .
Th urs da y M a y 29 th Sus a n How a rd, Ea s te n d, SK.
HONEST HARD WORKING Bulls That’ll Get ‘er Done. 8th Annual Blue Collar Bull Sale. Saturday April 12, 1:00 PM at Heartland Livestock, Yorkton, SK. On offer: 65+ purebred Black Angus bulls and yearling heifers. Call Scott Burkell at 306-783-7986 Troy Frick at 306-728-3515 or Jordan Sies at 306-728-1299.
BLACK ANGUS yearling bulls for sale. Calving ease, maternal lines, semen testSELECT GROUP, REGISTERED open re- ed. Gord Roger 306-771-2305, Balgonie, placement heifers, EPD’s available. SK., e-mail valleylodge@sasktel.net Phone 204-725-3597, Brandon, MB. RED AND BLACK 2 yr. old and yearling Angus bulls for sale. Canadian bloodlines. Will keep until June 1st. Angus Acres, call Dwight 780-336-6435, Kinsella, AB.
Th urs da y M a y 1s t Holla n d Fa m ily, Avon le a , Sa s k. (T a n d C La n d & Ca ttle Co.)
P A IR D IS P ER S A L
VIDEOS: www.dkfredangus.ca Select now. Get later. Superior quality. For sale DKF Red and Black Angus bulls at: DKF Ranch, anytime, Gladmar, SK. Agent for: Solar and Wind Water Systems and Allen Leigh Calving Cameras. Dwayne or Scott Fettes, 306-969-4506. 2 YEAR OLD bulls, calving ease and top g r ow t h fi g u r e s . P h o n e R o b G a r n e r, 306-946-7946, Simpson, SK. SOUTH VIEW RANCH has Red and Black Angus coming 2 yr. old bulls. Shane at: 306-869-8074, 306-454-2688, Ceylon, SK. MCTAVISH RED ANGUS yearlings for sale. Quiet. Semen tested. Delivered . Will keep until June 1st. Jared 306-435-4925 or 306-435-9842, Moosomin, SK.
QUIET TOP QUALITY 2 yr. old and yearling Purebred bulls. Spruce Acres, Foam Lake, SK, 306-272-3997, 306-272-7841.
YOUR CHOICE BLACK ANGUS BULL SALE: Friday, April 18, 2014, 1:00 PM at Cowtown Livestock, Maple Creek, SK. Watch and bid online www.agrimart.ca Offering: 60 yearling bulls from the Delorme’s 50 year old breeding program. 10- two yr. olds from guest Bear Creek Angus. Contact Don Delorme/South Shadow for further info or sale catalogue, 306-299-4494, dcdelorme@sasktel.net or view catalogue, videos and data at our ranch website: www.DelormeRanch.ca JUSTAMERE 19TH ANNUAL BULL Sale, Monday, April 14, 2014, 1:00 PM at the farm in Lloydminster, SK. On offer 50 Black Angus bulls. All semen tested, ready to go Jon 780-808-6860, office 306-825-9702. BLACK ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, semen tested, guaranteed breeders. Delivery available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com 2 YEAR OLD Black Angus bulls, low birth weight, good performance, good selection Rob Garner, 306-946-7946, Simpson, SK. HIGH QUALITY 2 year old purebred Black Angus bulls for sale. Call David or Pat 306-963-2639, 306-963-7739 Imperial, SK
90 YEARLING AND 2 year old Red Angus bulls. Guaranteed semen tested and delivered in spring. Bob Jensen 306-967-2770, Leader, SK. REGISTERED YEARLING RED Angus Bulls, calving ease, semen tested. Little de Ranch, 306-845-2406, Turtleford, SK. EXCELLENT QUALITY PB yearling and 2 yr. old Red Angus bulls. Will keep until April 15th. Semen test and deliver. Will sell w/wo all risk insurance. Dudragne Red Angus 306-625-3787, 306-625-3730, Ponteix RED ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, semen tested, guaranteed breeders. Delivery available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com 5 TWO YEAR OLD Reg. bulls for sale. Born April and May. Birthweight 78 to 85 lbs. Murray 306-867-7206 or 306-856-4603. Decorah Red Angus, Dinsmore, SK. YEO’S RED ANGUS yearling bulls for sale, semen tested. Garry and Dianne Yeo, 306-873-5662, Tisdale, SK. YEARLING AND TWO year old bulls. Semen tested. Will deliver. Guy Sampson, Davison, SK. 306-567-4207, 306-561-7665
GOOD 2 YEAR old POLLED HEREFORD BULLS. LV Farms Ltd. 306-458-2566, 306-458-7170, 306-458-7772, Midale, SK. BBJ POLLED HEREFORDS. Good selection of quality 2 yr. old bulls as well as 2 proven 3 yr. olds. Deposit holds until turn out. Will deliver. Contact Brian Longworth 306-656-4542, 306-831-9856, Harris, SK. 2 YEAR OLD and yearling registered Polled Hereford bulls, semen tested. Harold or Tim Strauch, 306-677-2580, Shamrock, SK
2 YR. OLD CHAROLAIS bulls, all polled, COULEE CREST HEREFORDS bulls for very easy calving bloodlines. Semen test- sale by private treaty. Yearlings and 2 yr. ed, delivery avail 306-874-5496 Naicam SK olds, excellent quality, dehorned and WHITECAP CHAROLAIS yearlings and 2 polled, moderate birthweights suitable for year old bulls for sale. Semen tested and heifers. Call Randy Radau 403-227-2259, guaranteed. Call Mike 306-631-8779, 403-588-6160. For online catalo gue www.couleecrest.ca Bowden, AB. 306-691-5011, Moose Jaw, SK. RED FACTOR CHAROLAIS bulls, 2 year olds and yearlings, red, tan and white. Call Wheatheart Charolais, Rosetown, SK. SASK MILK QUOTA for sale: 200 kgs. 306-882-6444, 306-831-9369. total. Below board price. Cows available. REGISTERED POLLED YEARLING bulls, Phone: 306-873-7428, Tisdale, SK. performance and semen tested. Guaran- FRESH AND SPRINGING heifers for sale. teed breeders. Will keep until May. Cows and quota needed. We buy all class$2200-2500. Charrow Charolais, Marshall, es of slaughter cattle-beef and dairy. R&F SK. 306-387-8011 or 780-872-1966. Livestock Inc. Bryce Fisher, Warman, SK. Phone 306-239-2298, cell 306-221-2620. POLLED 2 YEAR old and yearling Charolais bulls, some Red Factor. Kings Polled Charolais, 306-435-7116, 306-645-4383 or 306-645-2955, Rocanville, SK. JERSEY COW FOR SALE, 2nd calver, just YEARLING AND 2 year old Charolais bulls. fresh. 403-443-5682, Three Hills, AB. Creedence Charolais Ranch, Ervin Zayak, 780-741-3868, 780-853-0708, Derwent AB TWO YR. OLD and yearling bulls, polled, horned, white and red factor. Semen tested, delivered and guaranteed. Prairie Gold Charolais, 306-882-4081, Rosetown, SK. REG. CHAROLAIS heifer calves, yearlings, and virgin 2 yr. old bulls, reds and whites. Richard Smith 780-846-2643, Kitscoty, AB.
14 HIGH QUALITY black yearling bulls for sale by private treaty at Norseman Farms. All bulls are semen tested and ready to go to work. Bulls sired by the Grand Champion and Reserve Grand Champion bulls at the 2011 Agribition. All animals have been vaccinated and fed for optimum breeding condition. Ph Kirby 306-375-7731, Kyle, SK 2 YEAR OLD Black Angus bulls, Prime Papa and Freightliner breeding. 2 Red bulls. 306-445-8425, North Battleford, SK. PB BLACK ANGUS yearling bulls. Spring View Ranch 306-861-5035, 306-447-4803 Beaubier, SK 20 QUALITY YEARLING BULLS. Sired by King of Mountain, Glennie Blackcap, Prime Cut. Semen tested and delivered. Glennie Bros. Angus, 403-862-7578, Carnduff, SK. PUREBRED BLACK ANGUS 2 yr. old bulls, semen tested, quiet and easy to handle. 780-744-2180, Kitscoty, AB. MIDNITE OIL CATTLE CO. has on offer semen tested yearling and 2 year old bulls. 306-734-2850, 306-734-7675, Craik, SK. F O R AG E B A S E D Black Angus bulls. www.nerbasbrosangus.com 204-564-2540 or 204-773-6800, Shellmouth, MB. SELLING: BLACK ANGUS bulls. Wayside Angus, Henry and Bernie Jungwirth, 306-256-3607, Cudworth, SK.
CLINE CATTLE COMPANY has for sale PB Charolais yearling and 2 yr. old bulls. Quiet, hairy and easy calving. Will be semen tested and guaranteed. Drop in any time to have a look. 204-537-2367 or Brad’s cell 204-523-0062, Belmont, MB. 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
CORNERSTONE CHAROLAIS and Red Angus Bull Sale, April 19th, 1:30 PM, Whitewood, SK. Auction Market. Offering 24 Charolais and 32 Red Angus yearling bulls. Semen tested, guaranteed with free board and delivery available. Plus 27 Red A n g u s h e i fe r s . C a l l K e l l y B r i m n e r 306-577-7698, Phil Birnie 306-577-7440, or view catalogue: www.bylivestock.com NORHEIM RANCHING HAS yearling and 2 yr old bulls for sale. Semen tested, guaranteed, performance bulls. Lots of hair, nuts and guts. Lee 306-227-4503, Saskatoon SK
CREEK’S EDGE LAND and Cattle Purebred Charolais Bulls for sale off farm. Thick, hairy, good feet and quiet. Call Stephen 306-279-2033, cell 306-279-7709, Visit: www.creeksedgecharolais.ca to view PUREBRED RED ANGUS deep thick pictures of all our bulls, Yellow Creek, SK. BULLS, excellent quality, quiet. Have bulls TWO 2 YEAR old and 2 yearling purebred for cows and heifers, starting at $2500. C h a r o l a i s b u l l s . C h a r h e a d R a n c h , Semen tested and delivery avail. Photos 306-695-2073, Indian Head, SK. online at www.jbardeefarms.com J Bar Dee Farms 306-867-7586, Outlook, SK. 30 YEARLING AND 3 two year old Red Angus bulls. Semen tested. Will keep un- 40 OLDER COWS bred Angus/Shorthorn; til breeding season. Performance info. and 30 2nd/3rd calvers bred Dexter; 25 heifers bred Dexter; Dexter bull and heifer calves. video’s available at: www.kenrayranch.com Redvers, SK. Call Ray 306-452-3876 or 403-845-5763, Rocky Mountain House, AB. Sheldon 306-452-7545. OVER 20 YEARS of raising and selling sound quality Registered yearling bulls. Natural and AI sires. Calving ease, solid KNUDSON FARMS GELBVIEH: Polled red or feet, thick hair coats. Vet inspected, se- black bulls. Guaranteed. Kept until needed. men tested, guaranteed breeders. B-elle Call James 306-322-4682, Archerwill, SK. Red Angus, Glen and Evelyn Bloom, POLLED YEARLING and 2 year old bulls for 306-845-2557, Turtleford, SK. Email: sale. Call Selin’s Gelbvieh, Stockholm, SK., evandglen@littleloon.ca 306-793-4568. 2 YEAR OLD and yearling bulls, many PUREBRED GELBVIEH BULLS, 2 yr. olds from AI sired from Fully Loaded, Goldbar and yearlings. We specialize in both heifer King and Sakic. Fit, easy keeping, quiet bulls for light birth and the large herd bulls disposition, vet inspected. Free 100 km for cows. W L Farms 403-854-2474 or delivery. 306-773-6633, Swift Current, SK. www.whiskeycreekranches.com Hanna, AB MAPLE RIDGE ACRES have yearling WINDERS GELBVIEH, Camrose, AB. are purebred Red Angus bulls for sale. AI sires selling by private treaty reg. PB 2 yr. old Sakic and Honky Tonk. Les Saunders, and yearling Gelbvieh bulls and replace306-997-4507, Borden, SK. m e n t h e i fe r s . g w i n d e r @ s y b a n . n e t 30 YEARLING AND 2 year old Red Angus 780-672-9950. Bulls, semen tested and delivered in spring, thick, hairy, good footed bulls, by Hitch Master, Golden Deed and Headliner. Elmer Wiebe 306-381-3691 or eves. PUREBRED HEREFORD BULL, halter broke, semen tested, and quiet. 780-744-2180, 306-225-5720, Hague, SK. Kitscoty, AB. REG. RED ANGUS yearling bulls, $1500. Also 2 yr. olds. Lorne Wyss 306-839-7766, REG. POLLED HEREFORD bull, 4 yrs. old, semen tested, good temperament. 306-839-2038, 306-839-4706, Pierceland. 306-255-2863 eves, Colonsay, SK.
QUALITY 2 YEAR old and yearling bulls for sale. Also open and bred females. Merv Springer, Leslie, SK. 306-272-0144 2 YR. OLD POLLED black and brown Limo bulls. Hand fed, thick hair. Under $3,000. Call Regan 306-827-2110, Radisson, SK. POLLED LIMOUSIN BULLS: Red or black. Guaranteed and delivered. Call Leach farms 306-338-2805 or 306-338-2745, Wadena, SK. GOOD SELECTION OF stout red and black bulls w/good dispositions and calving ease. Qually-T Limousin, Rose Valley, SK., 306-322-4755 or 306-322-7554. POLLED 2 YEAR old black and red Limousin bulls. Call Rob Garner, 306-946-7946, Simpson, SK. STOUT YEARLING LIMOUSIN BULLS, polled, horned, red, black. Quiet bulls with great performance. Short Grass Limousin, 306-773-7196, Swift Current, SK. TOP QUALITY BULLS: Red and black; Yearlings and 2 year olds; One coming 3 year old. Light birthweight bull used on heifers. Call 306-459-2788, Ogema, SK.
BIG ISLAND LOWLINES Premier Breeder. Selling custom designed packages. Name your price and we will put a package together for you. Fullblood/percentage Lowline, embryos, semen. Black/Red carrier. Darrell 780-486-7553, Edmonton, AB.
BULLS FOR SALE. Calving ease, growth and docility. Will feed and deliver. Info and pictures at www.donarofarms.com Call 306-921-7175 or 306-752-3808 mspratt@sasktel.net Melfort, SK. YEARLING MAINE CROSS bulls; 1 black polled; 1 red and white horned. For information contact Ken Clark 306-736-8322 or cell 306-736-7742. Kipling, SK. Check out pictures on facebook at: Clark Club Calves THE BEST SELECTION Of The Real MaineAnjou Bulls, FB sired. Easy calving. Longtime breeder, Gary Graham, Marsden, SK. Ph. 306-823-3432, grahamgs@sasktel.net Visit us at: www.manitoumaineanjou.ca QUALITY YEARLING PB black, polled bulls, semen tested. Catalogue and videos at: www.albertamaine-anjou.com or Dennis Shannon at 403-227-2008, Innisfail, AB.
BUY A BULL that is proven feed efficient and passes the trait to his calves. Fullblood, purebred, RFI tested. Best of 100 animals on test, yearlings, 2 year olds. Call John at 306-374-0763, Saskatoon, SK. Email: magpiemaines@yourlink.ca ‘THE CHOSEN ONES’ Private Treaty Bull Sale. Including embryos, semen and POLLED BULLS 3 , 4, and 5 year olds. yearling MaineTainer, Maine Anjou and Angus bulls. Catalogue and videos on the POLLED YEARLING BLONDE bulls for sale, Sold cows. 403-772-2191, 403-820-8028, website: www.dunritestockandstables.com Estevan, SK area. Phone 306-634-2174 or Morrin, AB. Phone: 403-748-4030, Bentley, AB. cell: 306-421-6987. BLACK AND RED POLLED: 2 year old and yearling bulls. Naturally thick, moderate BW’s, exc. performance, semen tested and guaranteed. 204-534-8222, Killarny, MB. REG. CHAROLAIS BULLS 2 year olds and yearlings. Polled, calving ease, growthy, quiet. Semen test and deliver. Qualman Charolais, 306-492-4634, Dundurn, SK. SELLING: REGISTERED RED Poll open C O R N E R S TO N E R E D A N G U S a n d heifers. Ph. 780-892-3447, Wabamun, AB. Charolais Bull Sale, April 19th, 1:30 PM, RED POLL BULLS; Registered yearlings; Whitewood, SK. Auction Market. Offering 32 Red Angus and 24 Charolais yearling SQUARE D BULLS for sale: over 60 to easy calving; naturally polled calves. Phone: 780-892-3447, Wabamun, AB. choose from, spring and fall yearlings and bulls. Semen tested, guaranteed with free board and delivery available. Plus 27 Red two year-olds, performance and semen A n g u s h e i fe r s . C a l l K e l l y B r i m n e r tested, halter broke and quiet, kept until 306-577-7698, Phil Birnie 306-577-7440, June 1. Delivered. 306-538-4556, Langbank, SK. View videos and pictures at: PEDIGREE POLLED SALERS. Bulls, yearor view catalogue: www.bylivestock.com lings, 2 year olds and females. Priced reawww.square-dpolledherefords.com PUREBRED 2 and 3 year old proven sires, sonably, superior genetics, highest perforcalving ease with good growth. Reason for HOLMES POLLED HEREFORDS: Two mance CDN herd. See SLS stock on s e l l i n g : s o l d p a s t u r e . D o n R a i l t o n , year olds and yearlings for sale. Quiet easy www.salerscanada.com B mann free calving bulls. Jay Holmes 306-524-2762 or herd. Bulls semen tested and guaranteed. 306-727-4927, Sintaluta, SK. 306-746-7170 cell, Semans, SK. Can arrange delivery. Ken 204-762-5512, MARTENS CHAROLAIS has yearling and 2 year old bulls. Dateline Sons for calving GOOD SOLID 2 YR. old bulls; Also 2 herd- sweetlandsalers@xplornet.ca ease, Specialist Sons for consistent thick- sires. Easy calvers. Polled Herefords since REG. PB RED or Black Salers bulls and re1950. Erwin 306-232-4712, Rosthern, SK. ness. 204-534-8370, Boissevain, MB. placement heifers. Elderberry Farm Salers, MCTAVISH CHAROLAIS YEARLINGS for 16 OPEN REPLACEMENT dehorned Here- 306-747-3302, Parkside, SK. sale. Quiet. Semen tested. Delivered. Will ford heifers. 306-743-5105, Langenburg, TOP QUALITY POLLED Salers bulls, moderkeep until June 1st. Jared 306-435-4925 SK., www.vcherefordfarm.com ate birthweight. Hauser Cattle Company, or 306-435-9842, Moosomin, SK. 2- PROVEN PUREBRED Hereford bulls, 1 306-748-2417, Neudorf, SK. CHAROLAIS BULLS AND Red Angus bulls herdsire and 1 heifer bull. Reason for sell- PB RED, TAN and black yearling bulls, easy calving, quiet, $2400 to $3000. Scattered for sale. Call 780-582-2254, Forestburg, ing, sold cows. 306-669-4822, Richmound. Spruce Salers, 780-768-2284 Hairy Hill, AB AB. PROVEN HERD BULLS: One 5 yr. old and POLLED YEARLING CHAROLAIS bulls. Will one 4 yr. old.; Also 2 year old fall born and POLLED POLLED POLLED- Salers bulls semen test and deliver. Layne and Paula yearling bulls. Imperial, SK. 306-963-2414 for sale. Call Spruce Grove Salers, Yorkton, Evans, Kenaston, SK. 306-252-2246. 306-963-7880 www.crittendenbros.com SK, 306-782-9554 or 306-621-1060.
74 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
2-1/2 YEAR OLD registered Speckle bull, e a s y c a l v e r. C a l l 3 0 6 - 8 7 7 - 2 0 1 4 , 306-745-7505, Dubuc, SK. STRICT 2 YEAR old bull program. Sound, efficient, hard working cattle. Real World POLLED SALER BULLS and 20 polled genetics. 306-647-2704, 306-647-2140, Saler heifers. Delivery available. Harbrad Theodore, SK www.legacyspecklepark.com Saler Farms, 306-459-7612, Ogema, SK.
WESTERN HORSE SALES UNLIMITED, May 2nd and 3rd, Saskatoon, SK. 150 head sell. Entries taken until sale date. For more info www.westernhorsesales.com or call 306-459-7802. ROCKING W SPRING Horse and Tack sale CANCELLED. See you in the fall. Phone 204-325-7237
TOP GUN HORSE Sales, April 19 and 20, YEARLING PUREBRED REGISTERED bull, 2014, at Ag Event Center, Ponoka, AB. Huge selection of broke horses including: low birth weight, easy calving. Call OPTIMIZE HYBRID VIGOR in your comRanch, Roping, Barrel, Kids, and Trail horsmercial herd with a yearling Beefblend 306-225-4546, Hague, SK. es. To consign now or info 403-783-0246, bull. Darrell or Heide Kolla 306-256-3606, visit: www.topgunhorsesales.com Cudworth, SK. 2014 WILD ROSE DRAFT HORSE SALE, CALLING CONSIGNORS: CTLA Texas May 2nd and 3rd at Olds, AB. Draft horses, Longhorn Production Sale (all classes), tack, harness, collars and horse drawn SHORTHORN BULLS, YEARLINGS and 2 CTLA AGM and Heifer Jackpot, May 31, equipment are welcomed consignments. year olds. Red and roans. Contact 6S 2014, Silver Sage, Brooks, AB. For info Call Barb Stephenson 403-933-5765, 8 AM phone: 1-866-304-4664 or 403-378-4664 to 8 PM, or visit www.wrdha.com Farms, Stony Plain, AB. 780-963-4578. E-mail us: office@ctlalonghorns.com or WEST COUNTRY SHORTHORN BULL Visit us on-line at: www.ctlalonghorns.com HORSE AND TACK Sale, Heartland Livestock, Prince Albert, SK. Friday, April Sale, Saturday, April 12, 2014, 1:00 PM at www.gwacountry.com 11th. Tack at 5:30 PM, horses to follow. the Morison Farm, 40 kms West of Innisfail, AB. Watch for signs. Offering 30 year- REGISTERED LONGHORNS BULLS and fe- Please book tack and horses in advance males for sale. Phone Allemand Ranches, with Brennin at 306-981-2430. ling Shorthorn bulls, and 20 yearling S h o r t h o r n h e i fe r s . F o r m o r e i n fo . Shaunavon, SK., Daryl 306-296-4712, cell 306-297-8481, Bob 306-297-3298. www.shorthorn.ca call Ken 403-728-3825. SHORTHORN YEARLING BULLS, red, FRESH CORRIENTE YEARLINGS, ready to CHAMPION VERSATILE SIRE, Eye Take white, roans, polled, THF, tie broke, semen rope this spring, $700. 306-492-4751, Time, bred in Oklahoma. 3 times Chamtested, DNAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d; Package of Shorthorn and Dundurn, SK. pion AB. race sire. Barrel, race and steer commercial Shorthorn yearling heifers for roping sire. Sire of nearly $500,000 in sale. Matlock Shorthorns 306-825-2674, earnings. Prospects and top quality run780-522-9350, Lloydminster, SK. WELSH BLACK- The Brood Cow Advantage. ning mares for sale. Ph. 306-493-3011, Check www.canadianwelshblackcattle.com Vanscoy, SK. www.fastridinghorses.com Canadian Welsh Black Soc. 403-442-4372. BLUE ROAN STALLION, Blue Valentine WELSH BLACK 17 polled yearling bulls, a breeding top and bottom. Sires good few 2 year old bulls, yearling heifers, black minded, easy to train. Foals mostly roans and red. Call Scott Farms, 403-854-2135, and blacks. 306-206-1457, Kennedy, SK. Hanna, AB.
OPEN REPLACEMENT HEIFERS: 25 Red Angus/ Simmental cross, 15 purebred red Angus. Full herd health program, no SELLING YEARLING BULLS. We have the brands. Triple H Red Angus 306-723-4832, carcass and red color in our Shorthorns to 306-726-7671, Cupar, SK. use on Red and Black cows. Call Bender Shorthorns 306-748-2876, Neudorf, SK. SHORTHORNS FOR ALL the right reasons. Check out why and who at website www.saskshorthorns.com Secretary 306-577-4664, Carlyle, SK.
REGISTERED BULL FOR sale, born April 29th 2012, red in color. Double D Simmentals, 204-265-3349, Beausejour, MB. 2 YEARLING FULLBLOOD bulls, dark red w/goggles, good hair coat, moderate BW, $3000. Call 306-255-7827, Colonsay, SK. 2 SIMMENTAL YEARLING BULLS, 1 red, 1 black; Also 15 open registered replacement heifers. Red, black and traditional. 306-931-2730, 306-222-1937, Dalmeny SK YEARLING AND 2 YEAR OLD Red Factor Simmental bulls off of top AI sires. Will guarantee breeders. Deposit will hold until May 1st. Green Spruce Simmental, Duck Lake, SK., 306-467-7912, 306-467-4975. RED, BLACK AND Full blood Simmental bulls, yearlings and two year olds. Sinclairâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Flying S Ranch Simmentals. Call: 306-845-4440, Spruce Lake, SK. BROOKâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S SIMMENTALS 2014 Polled Policy Private Treaty Bull Sale: Yearling polled full blood bulls, first come first served. Semen tested, fully guaranteed. Delivery available. Catalogue available online: brookssimmental.wix.com/polledfullblood Call Konrad 306-845-9434 (cell) or 306-845-2834 (home), Turtleford, SK. 2 YEAR OLD and yearling Red and Black Simmental bulls, moderate birthweights, good temperaments. All bulls sold by private treaty. Call Bill or Virginia Peters 306-237-9506, Perdue, SK. YEARLING BULLS FOR SALE: Reds, Traditionals and Simmental/Red Angus cross. McVicar Stock Farms, Colonsay, SK. 306-255-2799 or 306-255-7551. TWO YEAR OLD purebred Registered Simm bulls, solid red, semen tested, AI sired. 306-270-2893, Clavet, SK. RED AND BLACK yearling bulls. Semen tested, delivery available. Also, one 3 yr. old Red herd sire and five replacement heifers. 306-544-2651, Hanley, SK.
2 RED SOUTH DEVON yearling bulls. 403-566-2467, dmrranching@gmail.com Duchess, AB.
TRIM BOSS: The Power Hoof Trimmer. Take the work out of hoof trimming. Trim wall, sole and flare on saddle horses, drafts and minis. Call 780-898-3752, Buck Creek, AB. www.trimboss.ca
RAMSAY PONY RIDES have for sale wellbroke kids ponies and saddle horses. All broke horses sold with a written guaranH. S. KNILL TRANSPORT, est. 1933, spe- tee. Also new and used saddles and tack. cializing in purebred livestock trans- Call 306-386-2490, Cochin, SK. portation. Providing weekly pick up and delivery service across Canada and the USA. Gooseneck service avail. in Ontario, Quebec and USA. US and Canada customs bonded carrier. Call 877-442-3106, fax JUNIOR STEER RIDING SCHOOL, Fort. 519-442-1122, email hsknill@pppoe.ca or Quâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Appelle, SK, April 26th and 27th, Beginwww.hsknilltransport.com 155 King Ed- ner to Advanced. Tuition $230. $100 deward St., Paris, Ontario, N3L 0A1. posit by April 18. Contact Dale Claypool, 306-775-2709, cell 306-529-9391 or Shylo SUPER BRED HEIFERS Claypool, 306-695-3600, Regina, SK. shylo_c@yahoo.ca 120 One Iron Black Angus Heifers. Bu lls o u t Ju ly 1 0th pu lle d Au g 20th Bre d Bla ck An gu s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1950.00 150 Black Angus Heifers.Bu lls o u t Ju n e 1 5th pu lle d Au g 1 5th. Bre d Bla ck An gu s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1900.00 30 Solid Yellow Heifers. Bu lls o u t Ju n e 1 5th pu lle d Au g 1 0th. Bre d Re d An gu s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1900.00 All he ife rs in the fa ll Alve rin P o u r O n , S co u r Gu a rd a n d M U -S E H e ife rs will we igh 1 050 to 1 200 lb s Excellent condition totalherd health For pictures go to w w w.prim roselivestock.com Ca ll S teve a t 40 3 -3 8 1-3 70 0 o r Cell a t 40 3 -3 8 2 -9 9 9 8 DO YOU NEED F1 REPLACEMENTS? Be the master of your own domain. Use a Shorthorn bull to get them from your own cows. Huberdale Farms 306-336-2684, 306-331-0097, Lipton, SK. YEARLING AND 2 YR. old Charolais bulls, 3 and 4 yr. old Red Angus bulls. Sim and Sons Charolais. 306-831-7332, Rosetown. YOUNG COW/CALF PAIRS and heifers with calves for sale. Call: 306-773-1049, Swift Current, SK. 10 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 calving April 1st, $18,000 pkg. Call 780-205-6433, Dewberry, AB.
SIMMENTAL BULLS: BLACK and Black Simm. Angus, registered and guaranteed. 3 0 6 - 6 6 2 - 5 0 0 6 , G o l d e n P r a i r i e , S K . BLACK ANGUS, 2nd time calvers, bred www.hertersimmentals.com back to Black, calving March and April. Also Black Angus fall calvers, 2nd time calves bred back to Black. 204-745-7917, St. Claude, MB. HOLSTEIN STEER C ALVES, 550 lbs., $1.10/lb. 204-657-2431, Fork River, MB.
SAMPSON MCGREGOR STOCK Farm, Iron River, AB has 2 black 3 yr. old herdsires, 3 black 2 yr. old and 1 red 2 yr old South Devon bulls. Easy calving 90 lb. BW bulls. For further info. contact Ralph or Betty at 780-826-7077 or sms@xplornet.com
WWW.ELLIOTTCUTTINGHORSES.COM 35 plus years of training, showing, sales, clinics, lessons. Clifford and Sandra Elliott, Paynton, SK. Phone 306-895-2107.
30 BRED COWS, Angus and Angus cross, bred to PB Red Angus bulls, for May 1 calving. $1400/pick, $1350 take all. 306-560-3258, Wynyard, SK. CALVING EASE BULLS, solid black, 50% Angus/ 50% Longhorn yearling bulls. Calving ease without losing market value. Call 306-634-4330, Estevan, SK.
SAGEBRUSH TRAIL RIDES. Writing-OnStone. Register: June 27th. Ride: June 28, 29th, 30th and July 1. Earl Westergreen 403-529-7597, Les Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Hara 403-867-2360. www.sagebrushtrailrides.com
BOBSLED 6x10â&#x20AC;&#x2122; with hay racks, $200; 7x12â&#x20AC;&#x2122; wagon, hay racks, rubber tires, $250. 780-842-4068, Wainwright, AB. THE LIVERY STABLE, for harness sales and repairs. Call 306-283-4580, 306-262-4580, Hwy #16 Borden Bridge, SK. ALL LEATHER SINGLE breast collar, harness for miniature, pony, and light horse. 204-483-2222, Carroll, MB.
SHEEP AND GOAT Sale, Friday April 11th at 10:30 AM. Heartland Livestock, Prince Albert, SK. For more information or to consign call Brennin at 306-981-2430. SHEEP AND GOAT Sale, Saturday, May 10, 1:00 PM at Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, SK. Accepting all classes of sheep and goats. Sheep ID tags and prebooking mandatory. Call 306-693-4715 www.johnstoneauction.ca PL #914447.
115 HEAD SHEEP FLOCK, bred to lamb June 15th: 40 Purebred Rideaus; 50 Rambouillet/Polypay cross; 25 yearling Rideau cross ewe lambs; 4 registered Rideau rams; Also 4 year old guardian dog and a 9 week old puppy. Asking $41,500 for entire flock. Will consider selling Rideaus, Rambouillet/Polypal as separate flocks. Must be moved no later than May 15th. Call 204-529-2159 evenings, Cartwright, MB.
80 COMMERCIAL EWES (Suffolk, Hampshire and cross breeds w/lambs); 18 NCC ewes and 3 and 4 yr. olds w/lambs; 6 NNC yearling replacement lambs; Registered NNC rams, 2 and 4 yr. olds plus 6 non-reg. yearlings; 12 Dorset ewes w/lambs and 7 replacement yearlings; 7 year old Dorset ram. Prices $150 to $450 depending on age and number of lambs. Rams, $500 ea., yearlings, $300 ea. Deal for whole stock include 2 Pyrenees/Akbash guardian dogs. WANTED: CULL COWS for slaughter. For 306-967-2202, 306-460-4721, Eatonia, SK. bookings call Kelly at Drake Meat ProcesHERD DISPERSAL. 2nd to 5th lambers, 30 sors, 306-363-2117, ext. 111, Drake, SK. straight bred Rideau ewes bred Rideau; 65 Rideau/Char cross ewes bred Rideau; 45 Rideau/Char/Rideau ewes bred Suffix and Canadian $250/ea. 340 lambs due May 06, 306-228-3065, 306-228-9895, Unity, SK.
HILLBILLY HAVEN, SOUTH Devon Bulls, NASDA registry. Henny and Dawn Bruins, SASKATOON ALL BREED Horse & Tack Phone 780-724-4242, Elk Point, AB. Sale, May 27. Tack 11:00 AM, Horses to follow. Open to broke horses (halter or riding). Sale conducted at OK Corral, MarSK. To consign call Frederick, NEVER BEFORE OFFERED: Yearling and tensville, two yr old bulls from the original breeders, 306-227-9505 bodnarusauctioneering.com Speckle Park to Speckle Park since 1974. HORSE SALE, JOHNSTONE Auction Mart, Semen and DNA tests on request. Some Moose Jaw, SK. Thurs., May 1, 2014. Tack embryoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s and semen available. Battleford, sell: 2:00 PM; Horses sell: 4:00 PM. All SK. Call 306-937-3120. View online at: classes of horses accepted. 306-693-4715. www.speckleparkoriginal.com www.johnstoneauction.ca 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 80 EWES SUFFOLK DORSET cross, ready to lamb, 4 PB rams, 13 yearling ewes, 1 guard dog. Plus quantity of sheep equipment. Selling due to health. 306-634-4920, Estevan, SK.
SHEEP DEVELOPMENT BOARD offers extension, marketing services and a full line of sheep and goat supplies. 306-933-5200, Saskatoon, SK.
BUYING WILD BOAR pigs/swine for 20 years, all sizes. 1-877-226-1395. Highest $$$. www.canadianheritagemeats.com
BUYING: PIGS/SWINE, raised outside, all sizes. Highest $$$. 1-877-226-1395. www.canadianheritagemeats.com
WANTED: MARKET HOGS and offgrade pigs for slaughter. Quick payment. Weekly delivery. 403-783-1787, Ponoka, AB.
PHEASANTS AND WILD TURKEYS. Jumbo, Chinese and White pheasants. Merriam and Eastern wild turkeys. Chukar Partridge. We also sell gamebird netting. Dirt Willy Gamebird Farm & Hatchery, 780-983-4112, www.dirtwilly.com Ardrossan, AB.
GREGâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S WELDING: Freestanding 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 5 bar panels, all 2-7/8â&#x20AC;? drillstem construction, $430. 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x5.5â&#x20AC;&#x2122; high panels, 2-7/8â&#x20AC;? pipe with 5- 1â&#x20AC;? sucker rods, $300. 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x6â&#x20AC;&#x2122; high panels, 2-7/8â&#x20AC;? pipe with 6- 1â&#x20AC;? rods, $350. 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 2 or 3 bar windbreak panels c/w lumber. Gates and double hinges available on all panels. Belting troughs for grain or silage. Delivery available. Call for more info 306-768-8555, Carrot River, SK. JIFFY BALE PROCESSOR, NH 357 mixmill, NH 791 manure spreader, NH side delivery rake, MF 124 square baler, Real Industries tandem axle gooseneck stock trailer, Peerless PTO roller mill, Horst 18 bale hay trailer, Pearson squeeze chute, Lewis cattle oilers, Dust Actor mineral feeders, metal clad calf shelter, quantity of corral panels and gates, windbreak panels, barbwire and electric fencing supplies, round bale feeders, vet and misc. cattle supplies. Moncrief Farm and Livestock Equipment Auction, Wednesday, April 16, 2014, Alameda, SK. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 OAT ROLLER w/1/2 HP elec . motor, $1000; 100 gal. protein tank, $500; Calftipping table, $600. Lucky Lake, SK. 306-858-2529 or 306-867-9899.
STEEL VIEW MFG: 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; portable wind breaks, HD self-standing panels, silage/ hay bunks, feeder panels. Quality portable p a n e l s at a f fo r d a b l e p r i c e s . S h a n e 306-493-2300, Delisle, SK. FRIGGSTAD 10x28â&#x20AC;&#x2122; tilt and winch off flatdeck wagon, $3500. Call 306-257-3607, Allan, SK. KNIGHT MODEL 3700 silage wagon PIGEONS, White Racing Homers, $25/ea. w/working scales, $6000 OBO. Haybuster or two for $40. Will trade for livestock. 1 0 0 0 t u b g r i n d e r, $ 6 5 0 0 O B O . 403-770-1640, Cochrane, AB. 306-837-2050, Loon Lake, SK. POULTRY AND EXOTIC Animal Sale, Ki- 2007 HIGHLINE 8000 bale processor, netic Park, Swift Current, SK. Saturday, right hand discharge, big tires, exc. cond. April 12, 2014, 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM. Ad- Call 780-916-2333, Spruce Grove, AB. mission: $2.00, 10 & under: free. For more FROSTFREE NOSEPUMPS: Energy free information call 306-773-2944. solution to livestock watering. No power required to heat or pump. Prevents contamination. Grants avail. 1-866-843-6744. BOBWHITE QUAIL ADULTS, chicks and www.frostfreenosepumps.com eggs. Also Chukar chicks available. PORTABLE PANELS 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; freestanding 3780-603-7966, Vegreville, AB. bar windbreak frames, 5-bar, 4-bar panels EXOTIC BIRD AND ANIMAL AUCTION, w/wo double hinge gates and more. On Sunday, April 27, 2014, Weyburn Livestock farm welding. Oxbow, SK., 306-485-8559, Exchange, Weyburn, SK, 11:00 AM. To 306-483-2199 and leave a message. consign call Charlotte 306-861-6305. For OUT WITH info. call Ken 306-861-3456. 4th ANNUAL CENTRAL SK. POULTRY THE OLD... and Small Animal Sale, Watrous Arena, Sat., April 26th, 11:00 AM. Buy, sell or trade poultry, small animals, crafts, baking. For info or to reserve a spot call 306-836-4609 or text: 306-917-7446. EXOTIC BIRD AND SMALL ANIMAL Sale at Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, SK. Sunday, May 4th, 11:00 AM. Accepting Peafowl, guineas, bantams, ducks, geese, pigeons, birds, llamas, alpacas, hamsters, IN WITH rabbits, ferrets, miniature horses, donkeys, THE NEW! etc. All small animals must be boxed and in yard by 10:00 AM. 306-693-4715 www.johnstoneauction.ca PL #914447. SEE WHAT ELSE IS NEW AT B E R G â&#x20AC;&#x2122; S H AT C H E RY 2 0 1 4 . C a l l LAKELANDNEW.COM 204-773-2562, www.bergshatchery.com Cornish, waterfowl, brown or white egg 1-866-443-7444 layers, turkeys, guinea fowl, specialties, BALE CHOPPER PROCESSOR, excellent ready to lay and more. Russell, MB. shape, $6800. 306-730-8375, Melville, SK. CARFIO HATCHERY. Pheasant, Wild turkey Guinea; Partridge; Bobwhite; Wide variety CATTELAC HYD. SQUEEZE for sale, live of ducks and geese; Ross, Bantam and hyd. floor, pressure relief valve, drop down Heritage chicks. carfio@videotron.ca lower sides, dual controls, $5500 OBO. Call: Jeff 403-323-0298, Stettler, AB. www.carfio.com Call 1-877-441-0368. FREESTANDING WINDBREAK PANELS, up to 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; (2-3/8â&#x20AC;? oilfield pipe); Square bale feeders, any size; Can build other things. FOR HEALTH REASONS, selling mobile Elkhorn, MB. 204-851-6423, leave msg. poultry processing unit. For all species of poultry. Includes Cryovac bagging system NORHEIM RANCHING HAS a full line of and inventory. 250-546-6884, Armstrong, handling equipment at discount prices. Freestanding panels, tubs, chutes, feeders, BC. Email: deerfoorfarm@hotmail.com self-unloading hay trailers, net wrap and more. 306-227-4503, Saskatoon, SK.
ELK HERD DISPERSAL: 31 head, herd status certified, $30,000. Call 306-230-8402, Saskatoon, SK. WANTED: ELK and DEER shed antlers. 306-227-1337, Martensville, SK. NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for over 15 years, is looking for Elk. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If you have them, we want them.â&#x20AC;? Make your final call with Northfork for pricing! Guaranteed prompt payment! 514-643-4447, Winnipeg, MB. ATTENTION ELK PRODUCERS: AWAPCO is a proven leader in elk meat sales. If you have elk to supply to market, give AWAPCO a call today. Non-members welcome info@wapitiriver.com or 780-980-7589.
USED JIFFY SLIDE-IN round bale handler, in good condition. Phone 403-627-2601, Pincher Creek, AB. SUPREME 900 TWIN screw mix wagon, new wheel bearings and seals, all new tires and rims, 4 point scale, adjustable dog leg conveyor, rubber extension on top, all new knives, $29,000 OBO. Phone 780-524-9322, Valleyview, AB.
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GOERTZEN 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122; gooseneck cattle trailer; Real Industries cattle squeeze w/palpate self-catching gate, both sides open; Dr. Frankâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s calf puller, with chain and hooks; Calf de-horner; Wire cutter; Truck cap, fits 8â&#x20AC;&#x2122; box. Call 306-492-4642, Clavet, SK. WANTED: BISON OR Cattle self feeders. Must be in good condition. 780-777-2326, Athabasca, AB. FREESTANDING PANELS: 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; windbreak panels; 6-bar 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122; and 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; panels; 10â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; and 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; feed troughs; Bale shredder bunks; Silage bunks; Feeder panels; HD bale feeders; All metal 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122; and 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122; calf shelters. Will custom build. 306-424-2094, Kendal, SK. MASSEY FERGUSON 110 manure spreader, $1900 OBO. Call 306-478-2680, 306-625-7287, Mankota, SK. BIOTHANE TEAM HARNESS, fits 15 to 17 HH, near new, $600 OBO. Creston, BC. 250-428-3376 mohr.horses@gmail.com
SVEN ROLLER MILLS. Built for over 40 years. PTO/elec. drive, 40 to 1000 bu./hr. Example: 300 bu./hr. unit costs $1/hr. to run. Rolls peas and all grains. We regroove and repair all makes of mills. Call Apollo Machine 306-242-9884, 1-877-255-0187. PAYSEN LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT INC. www.apollomachineandproducts.com 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 GREGâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S WELDING: ALL metal calf shelneck extender. Ph. 306-796-4508, email: ters 8 in stock, 11.5x21â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, $2200 each. ple@sasktel.net Web: www.paysen.com Phone 306-768-8555, Carrot River, SK.
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GOAT SUPPLIES CATALOGUE free upon request. ceeder1@telus.net Cee-Der Sheep Products, 403-327-2242, Lethbridge, AB. BOER GOATS: 10 purebred does, 4 purebred doelings, 6 percentage doelings. Have papers. 519-280-6595, Fullarton, ON.
YAK HERD DISPERSAL: Bulls, cows, calves, and yearlings for sale or trade. Call 403-442-2277, Huxley, AB.
CALF CRADDLE, $450; Heavy Duty cattle squeeze, $1250. Phone 780-842-4068, Wainwright, AB. SOLD CATTLE: HIGHLINE 7000 HD bale shredder with grain tank; New Holland 358 mix mill, always shedded: Tuff cattle handling system. 306-389-2431, Maymont, SK 2005 SUPREME MIXER WAGON, 900T, dual discharge, floatation tires, $27,500. Contact 780-674-8105, 780-674-6096, 780-584-2422, Barrhead, AB.
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
ARROW FARMQUIP LIVESTOCK handling solutions: Portable windbreaks. Custom built panels and gates. 1-866-354-7655, www.shadowranch.ca Mossbank, SK.
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BORDER COLLIE PUPS out of good work- SHUSWAP COUNTRY ESTATES. Manuf. ing parents. Contact 306-553-2213, Swift homes start at $69,900. Retire with us...on Current, SK. time...on budget. 250-835-2366, Salmon Arm BC. www.shuswapcountryestates.com REGISTERED BORDER COLLIE pups, Sire Scottish import, son of 2010 International Champion, top working stock. 780-941-3843, New Sarepta, AB.
SPRING SALE ON NOW! Canadian built by M o d u l i n e . 1 5 2 0 s q . f t . , Te m o r a , $99,900; 1216 sq. ft., Oasis/Villa, $79,900. Call Stan, 306-496-7538, 1-888-699-9280. www.affordablehomesales.ca Yorkton.
KUVASZ/PYRENEES PUPS, farm raised, born Sept./Oct., 7 males and 5 females. WARMAN HOMES CUSTOM built commerCall 403-502-9470, Medicine Hat, AB. cial buildings, to your plan or ours. Call 1-866-933-9595 or www.warmanhomes.ca PYRENEES/ AKBASH PUPS, born Feb 14th, in sheep pen. Working parents. Would be suitable for yard dogs $200; One 9 month old sister, bonded working w/sheep, $400. CEDAR LOG HOMES AND CABINS, sid306-845-2404, Livelong, SK. ings, paneling, decking. Fir and Hemlock PB AUSTRALIAN SHEPHERD PUPS due flooring, timbers, special orders. Rouck April 7th, from working parents, tails will Bros., Lumby, BC. www.rouckbros.com 1-800-960-3388. be docked. 780-853-2783, Vermilion, AB.
RTM SHOW HOME. 1594 sq. ft., high feature front with upper windows, vinyl shake and stone, high LR vault, gas fireplace with exterior chase, rear overhang for verandah, custom cabinetry and lighting, 5’ ensuite shower, luxury vinyl plank and tile flooring, $185,000. 306-493-3089, Swanson Builders, Saskatoon, SK. area, www.swansonbuilders.ca MARVIN HOMES, BUILDING RTM’S since 1976: 1320 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, $75,000 and a 1520 sq.ft, 3 bdrm., $90,000. Call Marvin Homes 204-326-1493 or 204-355-8484, Steinbach, MB. www.marvinhomes.ca
MASTER STONE MASONRY. Custom fireplaces and stone masonry. Specialize in fieldstone and restorations. Willing to travel for work in rural areas. WETT Cert. Inspections. Ph 306-280-1845, Saskatoon, PYRENEES/AKBASH PUPS, 9 months old, LOTS, CABINS AND lake homes on Pelican SK. Email: adam_kent@live.com working and living w/sheep, working par- Lake, Ninette, MB. Fay McEachern, Sales, RollingRiverRealty.com ph 204-724-4456. ents, $200. 403-504-3344 Medicine Hat AB COYOTE OR WOLF problems on your LAC DES ISLES- 2 acre lake lot $125,000; farm? Sarplaninac puppies. Strong guard- 5 acres, $295,000. Adjacent Meadow Lake ing qualities, good work ethics, amazing Park. 306-373-4808. loiselh@msn.com livestock guardians, exc. personal protection dogs. Ph 204-638-8854, Dauphin, MB.
Tour our homes on site.
LASER CONSTRUCTION
306-370-3870 or 1696 sq.ft. info@laserconstruction.ca Show Home www.laserconstruction.ca for Sale
WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to go! Mt. Blanchard, 1296 sq. ft. was $191,285. Sale price $175,000. Call 1-866-933-9595, www.warmanhomes.ca
KELLN SOLAR FLOAT Pumps: efficient, economical and easy to use. Lumsden, SK. www.kellnsolar.com 1-888-731-8882. LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT: Feed alley panels, super size bale feeders, steel frame calf shelters, freestanding panels. Planning CERT. ORGANIC RED CLOVER seed, aps 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 . prox. 15,000 lbs. Custom blend of Cert. Algonquin alfalfa, w/Carlton smooth brome 306-485-8559, 306-483-2199, Oxbow, SK. grass and common Timothy, 70/20/10 split, 3500 lbs. Call Tim 306-542-4353, 306-542-8280, Veregin, SK. USED MOTOROLA VHF 2-way radios, 1 year warranty, small, fully refurUSED PALLET RACKING: Frames, Redibished, $250. Also new Vertex radios, Rak, 36”x12’, $70/ea; Beams, Redi-Rak, WANTED CERTIFIED ORGANIC BEEF. Antennas and radio repairs. Future 4”x9’, $25/ea; Frames, Speed-Rak, 39”x25’, $50/ea; Beams, Speed-Rak, 4-6”x116” Peter Lundgard, Nature’s Way Farm, Communications 306-949-3000, Re780-338-2934, Grimshaw, AB. gina, SK. www.futurecommications.ca long, $20/ea.; Frames, Inter-Lake, 42”x16’, www.farmradios.ca Ask for Glenn. $60; And cantilever racking. K&K Mfg. Inc. Phone 204-895-7698, fax 204-474-1477 Winnipeg, MB.
HOUSE FOR SALE by tender, to be moved. 1988 cedar log house, approx. 885 sq. ft., 26’X34’, stucco, open floor plan, large loft, 2 bdrm, 2 bath, all appliances, carport, and decks, several new windows, natural gas hot water heat, on demand domestic hot water heater, natural gas fire place and much more. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Tender to include a 5 % certified cheque. Tender to close April 30, 2014. For more info or to book a viewing call Larry at: 306-648-2973, or Steven at: 306-648-2912, Gravelbourg, SK.
CUSTOM READY TO MOVE HOMES
CUSTOM LOG HOME, 20 min. to Saskatoon, SK. on pavement. 1-1/2 storey, 3 bdrms, 2 baths, cathedral ceilings in living and master, hardwood and tile flooring, massive oak timber staircase to 2nd, full basement, large corner lot on edge of town. Sask. MLS® 488765. Realtor is part owner. email: dkalynowski@gmail.com cell# 306-222-6796, David Kalynowski, Century 21 Fusion.
WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to go! Mt. Vanier, 1680 sq. ft. was $222,083. Sale price $215,363. Call 1-866-933-9595 or go to www.warmanhomes.ca
SPECTACULAR VIEW! Lake Of The Prairies, MB. 62 acres, 1500’ of lakeshore. 5500 sq. ft. house, 4+ bdrms., 4 baths. Private well and sewer, 400 amp power. Abundance of wildlife, fishing, snowmobiling, skiing, nature trails. Ideal setting for a lodge, retreat, B&B, multi-family vacation spot or private dwelling, The possibilities are endless!! Call Jackie 306-744-2399 or email for pics/info. jdhines@xplornet.com TIME SHARE FOR SALE. Grand Canadian Resort, Canmore, AB. One week floating may be used between Jan. and Apr. and/or mid Oct. to mid Dec. Great for skiers! Contact Gail at 403-556-6184.
WINDOWS! WINDOWS!
A COMPLETE FULL LINE OF WINDOWS!!! HONEY BEE FARM, Grand Forks, BC. 3 bdrm. house, large cert. honey house, 2.6 acres, 500 hive equipment, trucks, school bus route. One complete sale. Best offer by July 31, 2014. Flower Power Apairies, 250-442-2933, mdmclennan@gmail.com
WANTED: DEER and ELK shed antlers. 306-227-1337, Martensville, SK.
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 ORGANIC CROP/ LIVESTOCK Inspector Training. Alberta Organic Producers Association and International Organic Inspectors Association is co-sponsoring Organic Inspector Training for crop/ livestock in Lamont, AB., June 16th-27th. Hotel accommodations or campground available. Excellent job opportunity. For details call 780-939-5808 or visit: www.IOIA.net ORGANIC PRODUCERS ASSOCIATION of Manitoba Cooperative (OPAM) Nonprofit, members owned organic certification body. Certifying producers, processors and brokers in Western Canada since 1988, Miniota, MB. Contact 204-567-3745 info@opam-mb.com
Organic certification by a trusted leader! • Strong member network • Non-profit organization • International offices • Committed staff ORGANIC CROP IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION CANADA HEAD OFFICE: Box 3429, 517 Main Street, Humboldt, SK., S0K 2A0; Ph: (306) 682-3126 Contact us: canada@ocia.org
2010 WOODLAND PARK, park model on 2 deeded creekside RV lots. Beautifully landscaped. Includes stainless steel appliances, fireplace and more. For photos contact grutchfield@msn.com or 250-445-6760, LOOKING FOR A SLIM white female, that Greenwood, BC. likes living in the country, willing to relocate between ages of 58-68, loves outdoors, hunting, fishing, camping, some travel, dancing, playing cards. I’m a retired farmer. Reply with recent photo to: Box 2101, c/o The Western Producer, Saskatoon, SK S7K 2C4
Take Home Windows Feature! Low E Argon No Charge Sealed Picture Window ............From $39.95 Horizontal Gliders......................From $69.95 Vertical Gliders........................From $115.00 Casement Windows ................From $199.99 Basement Awning Windows ...From $144.79
RENOS IN 2002 include new windows, styrofoam insulation and vinyl siding, new shingles in 2004, gas furnace is 10 yrs old. $17,000 OBO. 306-230-8792 Saskatoon SK
INSULATED STEEL DOORS In the Jamb With Brickmold 2/8 and 3/0 4”and 6” Jamb From
149
$
99
Storm Doors ..........................From $159.99 “Out swing” Insulated Doors From $219.99 Special Size Door Units 30” & 34” ..............................From $229.99 Fibreglass Insulated Doors “Maintenance Free” ...............From $289.99 Patio Door Units .....................From $499.99 Garden Door Units ..................From $789.99
WHITE MALE, looking for female companion, 50+, NS. Interests, camping, fishing, farm background. Send photo and ph. number to: Box 2100, c/o The Western YOUR VACATION HOME AWAITS on Producer, Saskatoon, SK S7K 2C4 Shuswap Lake, BC. Brand new, gorgeous TRUCK LOAD SPECIAL!! townhomes, short walk to wharf/downSINGLE WHITE MALE 68 yrs., widower, town. Lake view, hardwood, heated tile CERTAINTEED INSULATION own Co., NS, SD. Hobbies all outdoors, rec floors, 9’ ceiling, heat pump, $339,000 CLASS A 1ST GRADE PRODUCT boating, quadding, motorcycling. Wants to incl. GST. www.edelweissproperties.com R20-15 $ BAG meet lady 55-70 yrs. for lasting relation- or phone Roger 403-350-8089. ship. Reply to: Box 5002, c/o The Western CLASS “A” #1 PRODUCT 14x46 MODULINE HOME. 55 Plus Park, Producer, Saskatoon, SK., S7K 2C4. valley and mountain views in the beautiful • Popular Profile • Good Colors! EAST CENTRAL SASK. GWM, rancher, 55, Shuswap, BC. Maintenance free landscaplooking for that special guy. I love the ru- ing. Only $48,900. Call 250-835-2366 • 1st Grade Sq. Ft. 7 • Matching ral life and all it has to offer, the great out- email: sce@airspeedwireless.ca Accessories Available!!! COLORS doors, active lifestyle and being fit. I am tired of being the single one on the holiBurron Lumber days and at events. So if this interests you 306-652-0343, Saskatoon, SK drop me a line. Box 5004, c/o The Western Producer, Saskatoon, SK. S7K 2C4. WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to go! Mt. Robson, 1443 sq. ft. was $161,715. Sale price $155,943. Call 1-866-933-9595, www.warmanhomes.ca
18.99
VINYL SIDING
60¢
MEDALLION HOMES 1-800-249-3969 Immediate delivery: New 16’ and 20’ modular homes; Also used 14’ and 16’ homes. Now available: Lake homes. RANCH FOR LEASE: Hay fields and range Medallion Homes, 306-764-2121, Prince fo r 1 0 0 h e a d , l o t s o f w at e r. P h o n e Albert, SK. 250-295-6477, Tulameen, BC. THINKING OF A new home for spring? WANTED: 200 - 300 head cow/calf ranch Think Craig’s Home Sales. We have one in SK or BC. Can start with partial purchase 2013 left in our yard at a discount price. and work with someone wanting to retire. Come on down. Call Marg toll free at No agents please. Box 2103, c/o The 1-855-380-2266, Lethbridge, AB. Western Producer, Saskatoon, SK S7K 2C4
Your Home. Built Your Way.
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SINGLE? SPRING IS the perfect time to find love! Meet the Matchmaker! In-person interviews April 22 to 25th in Regina and Saskatoon. 19 years successful matchmaking. Call to book your appointment: Camelot Introductions 204-888-1529, AFFORDABLE LAKEFRONT SHUSWAP view www.camelotintroductions.com LAKE. Own your own piece of paradise. Modular home right on lake, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, new deck w/retractable awning, carport, boat dock. Sorrento, BC. $239,000. Call Roger 403-350-8089.
WARMAN HOMES. LOTS for sale in Langham, SK. or Warman Legends or Southlands. www.warmanhomes.ca to view or call 1-866-933-9595. HOUSE TO BE MOVED. Older 2 storey with 2 additions. Could be moved separately. 306-229-0469, Plenty, SK. HOUSE FOR SALE near Hague. To be moved. 985 sq. ft., asking $15,500 firm. Needs to go. 519-983-2484, Osler, SK.
RTM
BUILDING SUPPLIES & CONTRACTING
ORGANIC ALFALFA, SWEET Clover, Red Clover, Oxley Cicer Milk Vetch. Grasses. Free delivery. 306-863-2900, email us at: ivanaudrey@sasktel.net Birch Rose Acres Ltd., Star City, SK.
HOMES & COTTAGES HOMES & COTTAGES
BUNGALOWS
2014 PRODUCTION CONTRACTS for organic hard red wheat, hard white wheat, malt barley, brown flax. Call Growers International, 306-652-4529, Saskatoon, SK. CERTIFIED ORGANIC HAY, brome, fescue, alfalfa mix, 3’x3’x8’ square bales. Call for details 306-335-2280, Lemberg, SK.
starting at
WANTED: BUYING ORGANIC GRAINS. FOB farm or delivered, Loreburn, SK. Call F.W. Cobs Company ph. 1-888-531-4888. BEST COOKING PULSES accepting samples of organic and conventional green/yellow peas for 2013/2014 crop year. Matt 306-586-7111, Rowatt, SK
QUARTER SECTION, 25 acres hay, 1 mile West of Duck Mountain Provincial Park, Madge Lake, SK. Power, telephone, 28’x56’ quonset, town water, natural gas nearby. Call 306-649-2664, Kamsack, SK.
See our Showroom for the best selection & savings in Sask.
CEY WORKING SHEPHERDS, GSD pups, CKC Registered, microchipped, vaccinated, ready May 18th. 306-843-3132, Wilkie, SK. ceyworkingshepherds.com
CANMA NEW ORGANIC hemp seed variety, REG. GERMAN SHEPHERD, male, 6 months $2/lb., large seed, exc. weed competition, black and tan, all shots, working bloodhigh returns. 306-747-2725, Shellbrook SK lines. 306-236-4678, Meadow Lake, SK.
starting at
$
21( 2) $ .,1' -867 /,.( <28
90*
$ /sq. ft.
100*
/sq. ft.
Hague, SK. | (306) 225-2288
www.zaksbuilding.com
*Applicable taxes, moving, foundation, and on site hookups are NOT included
View 80+ floorplans at: www.jaywest.ca Or call us at 1-866-848-4004 JayWest is a proud independent distributor of Viceroy Homes.
R E A D Y TO M O VE H O M E S
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
BEAUTIFUL NE B.C. RANCH. 3679.25 deeded acres of which 1476.45 is hay fields. Also included two townships of grazing leases. This property is situated in a valley that is from 1-1/2 to 3 miles wide and runs for 20 miles, bordering the Halfway River for 3 miles and 20 miles along the Cypress Creek. Good wells and fresh water springs. Buildings include renovated 2000 sq. ft. home, 3 baths, 4 bdrms., 2 car garage, hip roof shop, 3 open face sheds, all steel working corrals and arena. Also an additional log cabin. Excellent hunting and fishing. Comes with gas revenue. Potential gravel sales. redstonehunts@yahoo.ca FARM/RANCH FOR SALE: 3302 acre farm 403-975-8862 or 250-261-9962. with 2600 cultivated acres and remaining acres in pasture land. Located on the banks of the Peace River, AB. For more information contact 780-864-1976. 600 COW RANCH: 6870 acres on the Spirit and Peace Rivers. Ranch has excel- ID#1100222- VAUXHALL: 313.44 acres lent grass and working facilities, renovated of land with 290.81 Acres BRID Water 4 bedroom ranch house, 3 bunk houses, 2 Rights. Includes all irrigation equipment. yard sites each with a set of working pens SE quarter, Zimmatic 2000 low pressure and corrals. Well priced at $6250 per cow. pivot with drop tubes. NE quarter, valley Greg Cripps, Re/Max Central AB. Phone 1986 low pressure pivot with drop tubes. 403-391-2648, e-mail: gcripps@remax.net Approx. 25 lbs. pressure on pivot point 10” visit: www.canadiancattleranches.com underground mainline. ID#1100204Picture Butte: 2 pivot irrigated quarters 159 ACRES FARMLAND, four miles East of with nice yard, 2 older homes, 2 heated Tofield, AB, along Hwy. 14, good #2 soil, shops, 2 new huge multi-purpose buildings NW-15-50-18-W4, 145 acres cultivated. hay storage, calf barn. Home quarter can Call 780-662-2061 or 780-999-6399. b e s o l d s e p a r a t e l y. 3 1 1 a c r e s . LOOKING FOR DRY LAND or irrigation ID#100160- Hanna: Nice section of land land to lease and grow forages. Will also close to town with a tidy yardsite and consider buying your pure Timothy or pure many outbuildings. Beautiful 1800 sq. ft. alfalfa fields standing. Prefer north of Vul- home with a fully finished basement and can, south of Olds, AB. but open to all sce- many extras. #1951- Coaldale: Equesn a r i o s o r d i s c u s s i o n s . B a r r A g L t d trian Center, approx. 26 acres, 14 acres irrigation, 2 homes, horse barn with box 403-507-8660, bschmitt@barr-ag.com stalls (14), indoor and outdoor riding areBISON WORKING RANCH, Valleyview, na, 39 paddocks with shelters, storage faAB area. 4 quarters in hay and pasture, cilities, silos, landscaped, city water. half fenced with 5’ paige-wire and steel #2067- Legal: Modern Broiler Breeder posts, balance cattle fenced. 2880 sq. ft. 3 farm just North of Edmonton w/60 acres. bedroom, 1.5 bath home on new full base- 3 newer barns, and 18,131 units annualment, 2 water wells, new gas furnace and ized quota. Nice home and yard. Excellent appliances. 150 head bison optional. location on Hwy #2. #2013- Fort Macleod: Irrigated hay and crop farm, 320 Phone 780-523-9676. acres west of Lethbridge. Many buildings WATER PROBLEMS? ELIMINATE rust, with hay storage, 2 shops, 2200 sq. ft. smell, bad taste, hardness, color, sodium home, feedlot, cattle pens and dairy barn. 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 www.farmrealestate.com Real Estate 1-800-664-2561, www.thewaterclinic.com Centre, 1-866-345-3414. RARE FIND!! 640 acres all in one block for sale in High Prairie, AB. 1520 sq. ft., 4 bdrm, 2 bath home. Set up for cattle/horses with auto waterers, fenced and cross fenced. 100x200 outdoor riding arena. Two dead end roads, very private and peaceful. $520,000 priced for quick sale! 780-523-7895, 780-523-3636. LARGE GRAIN AND cattle property, Exclusive listing; Also a beautiful recreational quarter, borders Clearwater River, West of Red Deer, AB.; 5 quarters of good producing land, north of Newbrook, borders Hwy. #63, one with small lake, could be for recreation or country residential. Other cattle properties available. Don Jarrett, Realty Executives Leading, 780-991-1180, Spruce Grove, AB. URGENTLY WANTED FARMLAND to buy or rent in the County of Vulcan, competitive rates offered. Call: 403-312-0678. 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 LAND FOR SALE: 1600 acre lease, 960 acre deeded, mostly grass, lots of water, new fence, building site with newer home, S of Cereal, AB.; 1669 acres of farmland, building site with shop, quonset and modular home, oil and gas revenue, renters in place, N of Cereal, AB.; 800 acres of farmland, building site with heated shop, S of Chinook, AB. Call Big Sky Real Estate Ltd. 1-866-850-4444, Hanna, AB. 298 ACRES CULT. farmland 2.5 miles east of Tofield, AB. on 626. Good #2 soil, no bush, no stones, very flat, annual surface lease revenue $3200. MLS MH0026833 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 GREAT BEND #405- 312 acres pasture w/208 in tame pasture, balance could easily be broken. 4-wire fence w/treated post and 3 cross fences, power, well and 25’ deep dugout. Set of corrals, 2 miles W of Radisson on Hwy. #16, then 2 miles N. MLS® 486829. Get your pasture while this is available. Motivated Seller. For more info. on these properties or to view, call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the Battlefords, North Battleford, SK., 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512. 480 ACRES NEAR White Fox, SK., lush pasture, fenced, lots of water, good house. Email: hoofandhalter@outlook.com
ID#1100191- RUSH LAKE: approx. 309.73 acres irrigated land. Valley pivots, natural gas pumping unit, 3 phase power. Located 11 miles east of Swift Current and 5 miles south of Hwy. #1 right along the Highfield Reservoir. ID#485737- Regina 798 acres of very productive farm land. 100 acres summerfallow, 270 acres tame hay, 148 acres tame pasture, 280 acres native pasture. Energy efficient home and outstanding water quality. 66 kms south of R e g i n a , 5 k m s o f f t h e # 6 H w y. ID#479810- Maple Creek: 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 telephone in place, good water. MLS®. www.farmrealestate.com Real Estate Centre, 1-866-345-3414.
FARM FOR SALE: Avonlea, SK. 640 acres in one block, 488 acres of cultivated land, 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 Jaschinsky farm. Close to Dunnett Dame Provincial Park and Long Creek Golf Course. Offer to include all land and buildings, bids accepted. Include name, address and phone number. Possession date April 16th, 2014. For info contact L.S. ESTATE OF RUSSELL OZEMBLOSKI Schikowsky, Lethbridge AB. 403-327-5631. Auction, Wednesday, April 30, 2014, LAND AUCTION, PANGMAN, SK. April 9:30 AM. 1 south on #310, 6 west on 14, 10:30AM at the Pangman Community St Joseph’s Grid, 3 south, 1/2 east of Centre. One quarter NE 18-08-21-W2. Ituna SK. Online bidding 1:00 PM. Land assessed at $56,200, has 125 culti- Land: RM of Tullymet 216: NW-28-24-12vated acres. Topography is gently sloping W2, seeded acres 100; assess. 84,100, taxand stone quantity is slight. The land is to es $760.75; SE-28-24-12-W2, seeded be sold by public auction subject to the acres 125; assess. 83,200, taxes $744.51; seller’s approval of the final bid. Contact SE-21-24-12-W2, seeded acres 130, asKevin 306-842-1516, Lackey Auctioneers sess. 85,800, taxes $767.79; NE-20-24-12PL#914582. Detailed info available at: W2, seeded acres 130; assess. 61,200, taxwww.Century21.ca/HomeTown es $547.65. LSD 5&6: 21-24-12-W2, 80 acres (40 seeded), assess. $3500, taxes DWEIN TRASK REALTY INC. RM of Rudy $313.20. Approx. seeded acres in 2013. #284, all of Sec-36-30-06-W3, West of Visit www.ukrainetzauction.com for Hanley, SK. Approx. 590 acres cult., C.I. pics and complete listing. PL #915851. soil, Class L and M, FMV 255,000. Level and stone-free with renter available, LAND AUCTION: SW-19-52-23 W3rd, RM $749,900. Call Dwein today 306-221-1035. of Frenchman Butte near Paradise Hill, SK. FVA 73,600. Currently in grass and RM LEASK: PRICE REDUCED- 1094 2013 coulee through land and popular acres of remarkable pasture of which fenced, hunting Close to oilfield. For details approx. 500-600 acres are seeded to tame visit/callarea. www.kramerauction.com Kramer hay. Balance is natural and bush pasture, Auctions Ltd 1-800-529-9958. PL#914618 with some harvestable spruce. The water supply is a dugout and small lake 30’ deep, RM 241 CALDER, CATTLE OPERATION fenced with 4 wires and treated post, plus by owner. Nine quarters deeded in grass 7 cross fences. MLS® 473297. Possible and hay. Full cattle facilities, calving barn, adjoining 4 quarters of pasture for rent. shelters, Morand handling system, etc. Ready for spring possession. To view call Will handle 200 plus cows. 3 bdrm. 1-1/2 Lloyd at Re/Max of the Battlefords, storey house, exc. water, $1,100,000. Near 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512, North Wroxton SK. 306-786-2121, 306-621-8551 Battleford, SK. WWW.SASKLANDFORSALE.COM: RM of Great Bend #405. Part of SE-05-41-08W3, 142.76 +/- acres MLS®490272, $199,900. Full quarter assessment was 97,200. Renters available. As per seller’s instructions, all offers will be presented on April 12, 2014 at 1 PM. Highest or any offer not necessarily accepted. For offer instructions and property details please contact Ed Bobiash, RE/MAX Saskatoon, 306-280-2400 before April 12, 2014. RM OF NORTON: 2.5 quarters, level, no stones, FMV $139,200, 359 cult. acres, SAMA reports $265,000. Call Del Rue, Royal LePage, 306-242-8221, Saskatoon, SK. RM BENSON #35: For rent or crop share 80 acres hayland, brome/alfalfa mix for baling. For info. call 306-931-6660.
CASH RENT: 6 quarters grainland in FOR RENT: RM 256, 1/2 section, SE- and RM Carmicheal. 3 Quarters hayland in SW-05-25-12-W3, pasture and hay. Could be broken and seeded. 306-231-5611, RM Touchwood #248: Jas 604-356-9500. between Beechy and Dinsmore, SK. RM OF WEYBURN cropland: NE-15-8-15, SW-11-11-15, NW-03-09-15. Offers con- RM 166, PIVOT IRRIGATION, one quarsidered until April 14. Call 306-842-6704, ter, 3 phase, power, in hay, south of Rush Lake, SK. 306-778-7494. Weyburn, SK. pentagoners@gmail.com R M B I G R I V E R # 5 5 5 , S - 1 / 2 - FOR RENT: RM 74, 1/2 section, pasture 15-56-08-W3rd, 320 acres. This prime and hay, SW- and SE-15-07-06-W3, seedpiece of land bordering the provincial for- ed to grass in 2011, new fence, 2 dugouts. est near Cowan Lake includes: 4 man- C o u l d b e b r o k e n a n d s e e d e d . made dugouts, $50,000. worth of timber, 306-231-5611, south of Woodrow, SK. approx. 50 acre hay flat, power along RM CANWOOD selling 106 acres of excelproperty. This land is suitable for a cabin, lent, well drained cultivated land on the big game hunting or a cattle operation. SW 20-50-6-W3. Assessment $82,000, G Asking $250,000. Owner may consider fi- class soil, asking $130,000. 306 441-2075. nancing. Inquiries can call 306-628-7840 or email theaker@sasktel.net Eatonia, SK. RM HOODOO #401, land for sale by owner. NE-27-42-25-W2. Taking offers. More info. ph 306-233-4728, Wakaw, SK.
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w w w .kin d e rs le yre a le s ta te .co m QUARTER FOR RENT: SW-07-53-23-W2, RM Paddockwood #520. Presently in alfalfa. Call 306-764-4340, Prince Albert, SK. 20 MINUTES REGINA! GRAINLAND FOR RENT w/wo cattle and registered QH’s. Details call 306-552-9274, Qu’Appelle, SK. F A R M L A N D F O R R E N T. P h o n e 306-253-4580, Aberdeen, SK. QUARTER SW-34-35-32-W1, 16 miles NE of Norquay, SK. 115 acres cultivated, 45 a c r e s fo r e s t / c r e e k , a s s e s s . 5 9 , 9 0 0 . 306-781-4988, 306-537-3772 cell.
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RM MILDEN, grainland: NE-14-28-11-W3 assess. 82,800, asking $290,000; SW-25-27-11-W3, assess. 79,100, asking FARM FOR SALE: Quarter section of $275,000. 403-901-9156, Dinsmore, SK #2 topsoil farmland, no buildings. Calmar, RM 139: 6720 acre ranch, good set of AB. area. For inquiries call 780-987-2249. buildings. Call 306-773-7379, John Cave, QUARTER SECTION TITLED land, sheltered Edge Realty Ltd. www.farmsask.com yard w/mobile, shop, good corral set up, water well, nat. gas, electricity, 2 dugouts, RM OF GLEN BAIN # 105: 480 acres grain $25,000 of timber, 1539 acres leased graz- land with quonset and bins. John Cave, ing land w/$3000 oil revenue, asking E d g e R e a l t y L t d . 3 0 6 - 7 7 3 - 7 3 7 9 . $439,000. 780-568-4192, Grande Prairie. www.farmsask.com
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CYIN Clinton/Bleibler Ranch Airport - Perfect Home This exceptional large acreage trophy property with a panoramic view offers a luxury home with custom additions and an amazing opportunity. Fly into your own back yard and park your plane in a private hangar. Perfect for horse lovers, too, with hundreds of miles of outstanding riding on your doorstep, as well as 130 acres of irrigated hay fields.
Coordinates: N51°15.98’ / W121°41.05’ • Elevation: 3,695 feet MSL Magnetic Variation from 2014 is 17° East • Time Zone is UTC-8(7) Runway: 4,430’ x 90’ with 50’ width paved • Surface: Asphalt • GNSS LNAV Approach Two bedrooms, 3 baths (1 half bath and 2 en suite) • 2,734 sq. ft. • Partial basement Attached garage, detached hangar, barns, workshop and sheds MLS #120651 • $3,877,000 Cdn.
2615 Big Bar Road, Big Bar Lake, Clinton, BC, V0K 1K0 • www.cyin.ca
For more details, contact Goetz Kopf, 250-819-9922 • sales@goetzkopf.ca Century 21 Desert Hills Realty, 867 Victoria Street, Kamloops, BC, V2C 2B7
7HG &DZNZHOO
“An Expert in the Field”
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
RM 126: Approx 640 acres pasture, full set of buildings. John Cave. Edge Realty Ltd. 306-773-7379, www.farmsask.com QUARTER SECTION GRAINLAND in RM of Colonsay. Call 306-255-2065, St. Denis, SK. or email paurolfarms@hotmail.com
L OOK IN G F OR L AN D
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F AR M L AND F OR R E NT
TIM HAMMOND REALTY. Prime cattle prices, prime livestock operation! Johnston Farm located by Grenfell (RM 155). 1829 acres cultivated and 635 acres hay as per SAMA, corral system, 34x60 barn and excellent water supply. Yard including 1356 sq. ft. home (1945), 4 bdrms, 2 baths. Asking $3,495,000. MLS 478193. Call Guy Shepherd 306-434-8857, http://Johnston.FarmsofCanada.com FOR RENT: RM 214, SW-05-22-04-W2, 140 acres cultivated, at Waldron. 306-231-5611, east of Melville, SK. RM OF CHURCHBRIDGE #211: 6 quarters certified organic mixed farm. Newly renovated 1800 sq. ft. bungalow. Call 306-743-2805, Langenburg, SK.
FOR D ETAILS OF LAN D AVAILABLE FOR R EN T P LEAS E VIS IT:
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HUNTERS PARADISE: 159.17 acres, 35 mins. to Saskatoon. Mostly virgin prairie w/lots of bush and water. Lots of elk, moose, white tail deer and waterfowl, surrounded by 3 quarters of wildlife land. Good for quading, snowmobiling. East of RM SPIRITWOOD 496 and RM Meeting hwy. #5, $129,900. Del Rue, Royal LePage Lake 466. This amazing 2988 acre ranch Saskatoon, SK. 306-242-8221. does have approx. 650 acres of cult. tame pasture. Balance is natural and bush pas- RM 45: APPROX. 4160 acre ranch. 2 yard ture, mainly fenced w/4 wire, 2 sets of sites. Full set of buildings. 306-773-7379, corrals, power, well. Good supply of pas- John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Curture water. Also an amazing big game rent, SK. www.farmsask.com hunting area. For info. on this EXCL listing 188, call Lloyd Ledinski. I am in need of WWW.SASKLANDFORSALE.COM: RM of grainland in most of my trading areas. Fish Creek #402. Complete farm or quarRe/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800 ters can be purchased individually, consistor 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK. ing of 719+/- acres of grain/ grazing hayRM 442 MANITOU LAKE SE-03-46-26-W3 land, includes farmsite featuring a 1985 145 cultivated acres, adjacent oil wells, bi-level 1532 sq. ft. home, 51’x100’ Behlen q u o n s e t , b a r n a n d c o r r a l s . Pa r t o f $240,000. 306-821-7541, Neilburg, SK. N W- 0 3 - 4 2 - 2 8 - W 2 , 3 0 + / - a c r e s , MLS®490116, $299,900 or all of NW-03-42-28-W2 MLS®490123 $399,900, NE 03-42-28 W2 MLS® 490127 $94,900; SW-10-42-28-W2 MLS®490129 $119,900, NE-04-42-28-W2 MLS®490136 $172,900, W1/2 of SE-03-42-28-W2 MLS®490140 $89,900. As per seller’s instructions, all offers will be presented April 26, 2014 at 11:00 AM. Highest or any offer not necessarily accepted. For offer instructions and property details please contact Ed Bobiash, GOT OIL? Free property evaluation for Re/Max Saskatoon, 306-280-2400 before mineral rights owners. You will need your April 26, 2014. land co-ordinates available. 24 hour turn RM OF FRONTIER #19: 4 Section mixed around. Call 403-291-0005, Toll Free farm with yard site. John Cave, Edge Real1-877-784-9696, www.briskenergy.com ty. 306-773-7379. www.farmsask.com SK. Licensed Operator. RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure RM OF WOOD RIVER #74: 800 acres of membrane system; 2000 gal./day. No grain and hay land with service buildings. more bottled water.The Water Clinic, J o h n C a v e , E d g e R e a l t y L t d . 306-773-7379, www.farmsask.com www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. DWEIN TRASK REALTY INC. RM of Fish 6 QUARTERS DEEDED to lease, all native Creek, NE-26-41-01-W3 FMV assessment grass, new 4 wire fence, 5 new dugouts, 1 71,900, 110 acres cultivated. Very good well, corrals, $375,000. 306-640-6363, Asstone-free land, under 40 minutes to siniboia East area. email aabjj@sasktel.net Saskatoon, SK., $164,900. Call Dwein for info package 306-221-1035. CASH RENT: 440 acres grassland in the Debden, SK. area. 8’ game fence. Can be TIM HAMMOND REALTY. Cattle prices grazed or sprayed out and cropped. are hot! Here’s a great ranch package to flyelk@hotmail.ca Call 306-961-1150. take advantage of them! Byma Farm, 3.5 miles south of Grenfell, SK. RM 155, 12 JUST LISTED: 2-1/2 miles NW of Debden quarters, can be purchased in 3 separate on No. 55, 1-1/2 miles east. This quarter packages or as a complete unit. Excellent offers approx. 150 acres of tame hay, balset of outbuildings, corrals, modern re- ance yard 40 acres, fenced off for pasture. modeled bungalow. F, G, H land. MLS 1967, 1064 sq. ft. 2 bdrm home w/partial#483959, 483953 and 483955. Phone Guy ly finished basement. What a location to Shepperd for details, 306-434-8857. raise a family and have a little ranch to http://byma.TimHammond.ca help supplement your income at the same 1/2 SECTION FOR Sale NE Sask., approx time, close to the lakes, good hunting and 320 acres. 110 acres broken to pasture, fishing. Call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the spring/creek running all year. Apply to: Battlefords, 306-446-8800, 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK. Box 53, Pelly, SK. S0A 2Z0. 306-595-4609.
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 - Strasbourg/W atrous/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 - R osetow n/O utlook /D avidson
(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
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
FARM LAND FO R SALE W ANTED H IG H W AY #1 6 F R O N TAG E In v itin g Ten d ers
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 6 1â &#x201E;4â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s S o u th...............................75 1â &#x201E;4â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s S o u th Ea s t.......................40 1â &#x201E;4â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s S o u th W es t......................6 5 1â &#x201E;4â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s N o rth..................................6 1â &#x201E;4â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s N o rth W es t.......................12 1â &#x201E;4â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Ea s t..................................51 1â &#x201E;4â&#x20AC;&#x2122;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 RM 342, COLONSAY, SK. 815 acres, located a few minutes South of Hwy. #16 East. 30 minutes from Saskatoon. Six adjoining parcels, approx. 600 acres seeded, rest in hay and pasture. Old gravel pit with unlimited water. $1200/acre. For more details call Keith, 306-257-4191. NEVER...HAUL OR purchase those heavy bags of water softening salt or expensive bottle water again! The Water Clinic, www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. RM OF SPIRITWOOD, 5 quarters deeded land, mainly bush pasture, possible 12.5 quarters of Crown lease land, all adjoining. Lots of openings, ideal water, 3 springs and small lake area. Has had over 800 acres timber cut in last 2 winters, excellent pasture. Mainly all fenced. Great big game hunting in area. MLSÂŽ 468532. For more info call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800, 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK. GRAVEL LAND IN 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. MLSÂŽ 470122. Call Wally Lorenz, Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800, North Battleford, SK. www.remaxbattlefords.com MINERAL RIGHTS. We will purchase and or lease your mineral rights. 1-877-269-9990. cndfree@telusplanet.net FARM LOCATED IN the center of 600 cult. acres, yard fully serviced w/brand new 2013 1700 sq. ft. house, 75,000 bu. grain storage (90% has aeration), 30x30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; heated shop, 120x48â&#x20AC;&#x2122; steel clad machine shed and other modern storage sheds. Quill Lake, SK. Possibility of 3 additional quarters of land. Contact 306-287-7928. RM 49: APPROX. 640 acres irrigation and dry land with buildings. 306-773-7379, John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd, Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com â&#x20AC;&#x153;PIVOT IRRIGATIONâ&#x20AC;?: APPROX. 218 acres of grain land. Phone 306-773-7379, John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com
D ue D a te: April 22, 2014 a t2:00 pm
63 Acres C om m ercia l P otentia l Borden, S K â&#x20AC;˘ P t. N E 26-39-09-W 3 Fo rDeta ils C o nta ct
TO M N EUFELD
ka tneufeld@ s a s ktel.net
306-260-7838 M LS $110,000 C old w ell Ba nk er Rescom Rea lty
M OT I VAT E D S E L L E R S : R M L E A S K #464, Ranch Property, 4499 acres all connected except one quarter. Approx. 3164 acres cultivated tame hay pasture mix. 3 and 4 wire fences with treated posts. 36x51 straight wall shop, with att. 20x36 ranchhand quarters, heated with infloor nat. gas. Power, sewer, well and lots of in pasture water. Ample bush shelter. Property is mainly stone free. MLSÂŽ 468365. For viewing call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800, 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK.
SP E CIAL IZIN G IN F AR M L AN D LAN D FO R S ALE
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THIN KIN G O F S ELLIN G? Ha rry Sh eppa rd 306-530-8035 (cell) 306-352-1866 (Office) em ail h a rry@ sh eppa rdrea lty.ca
RM 342, COLONSAY, SK. 1100 acres. Located only a few miles North of Hwy 16 East NW- and SW-19-35-27-W2, Section 17-35-27-W2, NW-5-35-27-W2. All within close proximity. All land details available on request. Call Joanne at 306-255-7602.
CLASSIFIED ADS 77
WATER problems? Multi-Pure membrane system. Never purchase or haul water or softener salt ever again! The Water Clinic, 1-800-664-2561, www.thewaterclinic.com RM FISHER, CROP LAND NE-15-22-1W, 4 miles east of Poplarfield, MB. 120 acres of crop land currently in forage, remaining 40 a c r e s o f m e a d ow / b u s h . C a l l J a s o n 204-664-5400. Serious inquiries only. MANITOBA FARMLAND: FOR sale 2000 acres, 1977 cultivated in RM of Stanley and Pembina, good productive land, Manitoba crop insurance C & D, option to lease 39 ACRES, 25 acres flood irrigation, 1 mile back to vendor. Contact Melvin Toews at West of Maple Creek, SK on Hwy. #271. Golden Plains Realty Ltd., 204-745-3677. Ranch style home, 12 yrs. old. Landscaped FARMS HOMES AND ACREAGES for yard, well treed. 34â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x112â&#x20AC;&#x2122; metal clad sale in the beautiful and productive Swan shop/storage, lined and insulated, corrals, River Valley and surrounding areas. More 2 metal clad cattle sheds, 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; metal info. check out: www.mckay2000.com or clad building, 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x28â&#x20AC;&#x2122; metal clad hip roof call Darin at McKay Real Estate and Auc- barn. Call 306-662-5048. tion Co., 204-734-8757, Swan River, MB. 8.9 ACRES, 1-1/2 storey Character home, LOOKING FOR YOUNG couple with family foundation good, stone veranda, 45x50â&#x20AC;&#x2122; to purchase 1/2 section mixed farm, west- shop w/20x14â&#x20AC;&#x2122; door, well treed, well gravern Manitoba. Also another 600 acres eled, no high water issues, Craigmyle, AB. lease available. Good buildings and good area. Beautiful setting in the rolling Handwater. Close to town and major city. Call hills, 10 minutes to Hanna, 40 from Drumheller, $179,900. For photos and info 204-761-0860 eves. for more details. 403-358-8933, nelsontruckandtractor.com RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure membrane system; 2000 gal./day. No BEST OF GREENWATER LAKE, SK. one of a more water softeners. The Water Clinic, kind 10 acre titled lots. One with 1400 sq. ft. cabin, well, septic and power. Others to www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. build on. For more info call 306-278-3310. MIXED CATTLE/GRAIN farm. RM Birtle and Miniota. 7 quarters farmland, older 5 bdrm. home, machine shed, 2 large cattle shelters, calving barn, well water supply, 10,000 bu. grain storage, pasture for 150 cow/calf pairs, $897,000. Contact Realtor 204-725-0555 at Brandon, MB. Listed by century21westman.com ARGOâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S: 2011 8 wheel, tracks, winch, TREHERNE, MB, 300 acres river flat land canopy, 569 kms, $17,500; 2009 8 wheel, with 8 tower pivot and buried pipeline. winch, 600 kms, $9500. 306-563-8765. Portage la Prairie, two parcels, one 148 acres and one 310 acres, both Almasippi 2013 KUBOTA RTV 1100, cab, AC, Series soil. Christianson Soils Ltd., Broker, heater, radio, always shedded, 1 owner, $19,500. 306-469-2235, Big River, SK. 204-239-6086. MANITOBA - RED RIVER Valley: 153 acre soybean, cash crop farmland located on paved road NW quarter-3-3-6-WPM, 2.5 19â&#x20AC;&#x2122; LUND FISHERMAN BOAT V6, tanmiles west of Morden on hwy. 3. Invest dem trailer included, all possible options, now in agriculture. Contact Melvin Toews new cond., low hrs., $29,500 OBO. Brayden at Golden Plains Realty Ltd., 204-745-3677 306-854-4610, Elbow, SK.
PASTURE FOR SALE, RM of Beaver River, 30 quarters, 1 deeded and 29 leased. Call 306-228-9017 evenings, Unity, SK. PASTURELAND FOR RENT, supervised and unsupervised. May 15- Oct. 15. Located near Grenfell, SK. 10,000 acres native grass, all fenced. For application and further info. call 306-697-2773, ext. 249. MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: www.maverickconstruction.ca FOR RENT: ONE section tame supervised pasture, good fence, water and corrals near Parkerview, SK. Call 780-753-0353. SUPERVISED PASTURES for small or large herds, 2014 grazing season. References available. 306-937-3503, Cando, SK. WANTED SUPERVISED PASTURE for up to 150 cow/calf pairs. Prefer SW SK, but consider others. 306-672-3695, Gull Lake, SK. FOR RENT: SECTION of pastureland south of Portage la Prairie, MB. New fence, cross fenced, 4 dugouts, excellent corral system, good for far away owners. Call 204-436-2571, 204-857-2561.
CERT. AC METCALFE and CDC Meredith barley, excellent germ. and disease. 306-741-0475, Pambrun, SK.
2 R ow AOG M a ltContra cts Now Ava ila b le M a lt B a rley/ Feed G ra in s / P u ls es best price/best delivery/best payment
2014 FOUR WINDS 26A Ford V10, queen Licen s ed & bon d ed island bed, generator, party plan, #1 sell1- 800- 2 58- 7434 ro ger@ seed - ex.co m ing motorhome. Stk #6952, $76,000. Call 1-866-346-3148 or shop online 24/7 at: CERTIFIED CDC McGWIRE hulless barallandale.com ley. Call Carlson Seed 306-592-4449 or 306-592-2029, Buchanan, SK. CERTIFIED AND REG. Metcalfe, Copeland, Newdale, Meredith barley. Frederick Seeds, 306-287-3977, Watson, SK. FDN., REG., CERT., CDC Austenson, CDC Cowboy, CDC Copeland, AC Ranger. Ph. Ardell Seeds, Vanscoy, SK. 306-668-4415.
2014 TUSCANY 44MT, Class A diesel pusher, 44â&#x20AC;&#x2122;.11â&#x20AC;? long, 450 HP ISL Cummins turbo diesel engine, 3 slide-outs, full high gloss porcelain throughout. Stk #8214. $294,000. Call 1-866-346-3148 or shop online 24/7 at: allandale.com
S ALE
CERTIFIED CDC AUSTENSON. Tilley, AB. PARTS FOR VINTAGE snowmobiles, 1990 403-633-9999. www.fabianseedfarms.com and older. Call Don at 780-755-2258, WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Cert. CDC Wainwright, AB. doncole@telus.net Meredith, CDC Copeland, AC Metcalfe, 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK. SIX BOATS, 12-18â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 10-175 HP. Five are fiberglass; One is 17â&#x20AC;&#x2122; aluminum; One is a ski CERT. #1 COPELAND BARLEY. Discounts boat. 306-262-6230, Saskatoon, SK. available on large or early orders. Blaine Lake, SK. 306-290-7816, 306-497-2800. 2006 PRINCECRAFT 165 Pro Series boat w/trailer, live well, Hummingbird 575 fish CDC CERT. AUSTENSON feed; Cert. Cowfinder, elec . anchor, 2004 Johnsons boy feed; Conion feed; Cert. AC Metcalfe, 4-stroke 50 HP motor, asking $12,500 ARE YOU RETIRING? We live on a unique 2 row malting; Reg., Cert Bentley, 2 row farm w/a spare 3 bdrm. home, rent negoOBO. 306-843-3198, Wilkie, SK. tiable. Come live the good life in BCâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Koo- malting. Visit our website for more info www.fedorukseeds.com or call Fedoruk tenayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s. Mike 250-227-6807, Crawford Bay. Seeds at: 306-542-4235, Kamsack, SK. CREEKSIDE 2010, 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122; holiday trailer, 1 slideout, sleeps 6, no bunks, AC, in good condition. 780-744-2180, Kitscoty, AB. WOOD-MIZER PORTABLE SAWMILLS, models, options and accessories. H O L I D AY T R A I L E R S F O R R E N T, eight $80-$110/day. Well equipped clean trail- 1-877-866-0667. www.woodmizer.ca ers. Ph Don 780-755-2258, Wainwright, AB SAWMILLS from only $4897 - Make Money and Save Money with your own 1992 25.5â&#x20AC;&#x2122; RUSTLER fifth wheel, AC, bandmill. Cut lumber any dimension. In bunkbeds, NS, flipped axles for use w/tall- stock, ready to ship. Free info. and DVD: er trucks, $5500. 306-948-2774 Biggar, SK www.NorwoodSawmills.com/168 or call 2008 KEYSTONE EVEREST 35â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 5th wheel, 1-800-566-6899 ext. 168. 2 slides, exc. cond., lots of extras. Call for 48â&#x20AC;? COUTTS LEFTHAND sawmill, PTO, in pics 306-693-5073, Drinkwater, SK. good working order, stored inside,. Phone CEDAR CREEK 5TH wheel trailer, new in 780-349-2798 after 8PM, Westlock, AB. 2011, 3 slides, full body paint, loaded. Call Barry 306-243-4960, Dinsmore, SK.
CERTIFIED METCALFE and Meredith. Call Greenshields Seeds Ltd., 306-524-2155 or 306-524-4339, Semans, SK.
N E W ! P O RTA B L E T R U C K S C A L E S , $19,900. Save time and money by weighing on the farm. Accurately weigh inputs and avoid overweight fines. See your nearest Flaman location or 1-888-435-2626 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 HOWE 30 TONNE 10â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x34â&#x20AC;&#x2122; scale, $7,500 OBO. Call 306-648-8005, Gravelbourg, SK.
CERTIFIED CDC AUSTENSON high yielding fe e d . E n n i s S e e d s , G l e n av o n , S K . , 306-429-2793.
PASTURE FOR RENT: RM of Elmsthorpe #100, 7 Parcels: 1) N-1/2-29-11-24-W2; 2) SE29-11-24-W2 and NE20-11-24-W2; 3) SE20-11-24-W2; 4) NW-19-11-24-W2; 5) NE-27-11-24-W2; 6) SE-1-12-24-W2; 7) SE-30-11-24-W2. Bids are accepted for any or all of the parcels until April 23, 2014. Highest or any bid not necessarily accepted. Send bids to Todd Holland, Box 372, Avonlea, SK. S0H 0C0. 306-868-2103. FOR RENT: UNSUPERVISED pastureland 8 sections, Lucky Man First Nation in RM of Mayfair. Contact Jack Pool 306-549-4931 or Shirley Gamble 306-374-2828.
V a l M a rie, S K . - N orthea s t 1,900 cultiva ted a cres . Reg in a - W AN TE D : 2,000-5,000 a cres crop la nd w ithin 30 m inutes of Regina . Alb erta /S K . -Â W AN TE D : 5,000 -15,000 a cres cropla nd .
P L EAS E C AL L M AR C EL L EBL AN C AT ( 403 ) 3 50-6868 F O R IN F O R M ATIO N O N AN Y O F TH E 4 P R O P ER TIES L IS TED .
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CERT. SEED: Meredith, CDC Copeland, CDC Austenson, CDC Cowboy, Ponoka. Selte Farms 780-853-2484, Vermilion, AB. CERTIFIED TRADITION BARLEY SEED for sale. Call Mulligan Farms 204-799-7417, 204-612-1734, Rosser, MB. CERTIFIED AC METCALFE, Bentley, CDC Merideth high germ, low fusarium gram., available at Seed Source, 306-323-4402, Archerwill, SK.
CERTIFIED CDC MEREDITH, Newdale, AC Metcalfe, CDC Copeland, Legacy, CDC McGwire, CDC Cowboy, CDC Austenson. Va n B u rc k S e e d s , S t a r C i t y, S K ., 306-863-4377.
672..( 6(('6 3(',*5((' 6((' 6$/(6 Â&#x2021; 0HWFDOIH %DUOH\ Â&#x2021; 0HUHGLWK %DUOH\ Â&#x2021; 6DGDVK :KHDW
LAKESIDE SEEDS: Cert. #1 Kindersley, CDC Meredith and AC Metcalfe barley, high germ. 306-554-2078, Wynyard, SK. REG. AND CERT. CDC Meridith; Cert. AC Metcalfe; Cert. Copeland. All high germ., a n d # 1 . C a l l A n d r e w, C a l d e r, S K . 306-742-4682. CERTIFIED #1 CELEBRATION and CDC Copeland. Call Hetland Seeds at Naicam, SK. 306-874-5694. www.hetlandseeds.com
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. G ood hom e, s hop, 110,000 s teel bins bus hel ca pa city. $3,250,000. LUXURY HOME ON 9 acres, 45 min NW of Regina, SK. Geo-thermal heating/cooling, dream kitchen, 4 bdrm, den, 4 bath, indoor pool, 3200 sq. ft. of cedar decking. Large barn and corral. Laurel Getz, Re/Max Joyce Tourney Realty, MLS #482351, 306-591-5610, Email: lgetz@sasktel.net RM 137. APPROX. 40 acres w/2 houses, quonset, adjoins City of Swift Current on Hwy #4 South. 306-773-7379, John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com
CERTIFIED KINDERSLEY, MEREDITH, Metcalf. Pratchler Seeds, 306-682-3317 or 306-231-5145, Muenster, SK.
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F O UR G R EAT S AS K ATC H EW AN P R O P ER TIES
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.
CERT. #1 AC Metcalfe, CDC Meredith, CDC PolarStar. Wiens Seed Farm, call Brennan 306-377-2002, Herschel, SK. CERTIFIED CDC MEREDITH, CDC Copeland and AC Metcalf. Northland Seeds Inc. 306-324-4315, Margo, SK.
CERT. COPELAND, 99% germ., 0% smut, 2003 HARLEY DAVIDSON Ultra Classic, 100% pure to variety; Cert. Meredith, 97% premium bike, loaded, Champion reverser, germ., 0% smut, 100% pure to variety. Call $12,500 OBO. 306-247-4808, Unity, SK. Sandercock Seed Farms, 306-334-2958, Balcarres, SK. ONLINE AUCTION: Inder Side Car, Universal fit. 1-800-263-4193. View at CERTIFIED CDC AUSTENSON. Call Palmier www.mcdougallbay.com DL #319916. Seed Farms, Lafleche, SK. 306-472-7824. Box 3081, Regina, SK, S4P 3G7. FOUNDATION, REGISTERED and/or Certi2008 HARLEY DAVIDSON Ultra Classic, fied: CDC Copeland; AC Metcalfe, CDC lots of extras, low kms, black, very nice, Meredith, CDC Kindersley, Legacy. Bers$19,500. 306-963-7693, Imperial, SK. cheid Bros Seeds, Lake Lenore, SK. 306-368-2602.
2005 MONACO CAYMAN 34PDD, 35â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 5.9 Cummins, 300 HP, 21,500 miles, auto, LOOKING FOR RANCH/PASTURE in Sask. satellite, air over hyd. brakes, 5.5 KW FOR SALE: 5 quarters of land or 6 quarters to lease or rent for 250 cows. Call Onan dsl. gen.- 148 hrs, exc. cond., 2 slides, $85,000. More photos on our webw/house and yard, near Canora, SK. 400 403-548-4643. site www.can-amtruck.com Can-Am Truck cultivated acres. All fenced. 306-563-5710 Export Ltd 1-800-938-3323. DL #910420. LAND FOR SALE by Owner in the RM of V i s c o u n t , 3 2 0 a c r e s . C a l l fo r i n fo HORSE ACREAGE: Approx. 155 cultivated 306-944-4572, Viscount, SK. acres, 1750 sq. ft. 4 bdrm., 3 bath bungalow, hardwood floors, cedar ceilings, new FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS attached garage. Two barns, box stalls, We also specialize in: Crop insurance ap- outdoor riding arena, paddocks, fenced, peals; Chemical drift; Residual herbicide; well treed, good spring fed well water. Custom operator issues; Equipment mal- Two miles from Cupar, SK. $599,000. More function. Qualified Agrologist on staff. Call info. please call 306-570-4001. Back-Track Investigations for assistance 5 ACRES for sale, partially treed, located regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779. on Hwy. 312, 20 min. East of Rosthern, SK. Call 250-597-3994, bueckert21@shaw.ca 2007 MONACO CAMELOT, 42â&#x20AC;&#x2122; PDQ RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure Cummins ISL, 400 HP turbo/Allison 6 spd. membrane system; 2000 gal./day. No auto, 4 slides, completely loaded, tile, more water softeners. The Water Clinic, hardwood, stainless washer/dryer, satelwww.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. lite. Like new, used very little. New cost $328,279 US, asking $155,000 CDN OBO. Will trade for grain, bred cows or farmland in SE SK. Call 701-756-6954, L a m p m a n W es t - 4,800 excellent cultiva ted a cres for s a le, plus $75,000 a nnua l Carnduff, SK. s urfa ce lea s e.
FO R
REG., CERT. CDC Merdeith, CDC Copeland, AC Metcalfe. Call Ken and Larry Trowell, 306-744-2687, Saltcoats, SK.
CERTIFIED #1 CDC Meredith, malt barley variety, highest yield, volume and cash discounts. 306-227-7867, Aberdeen, SK. 2014 MIRAMAR 34.1, 1.5 bath, 20,000 lb. chassis, generator, loaded, stk. #0847, $117,000. Call 1-866-346-3148 or shop CERT. METCALFE BARLEY. For more info. online 24/7 at: allandale.com call for best price 306-522-1668, Etter Seed & Processing, Regina, SK. 1996 NEWMAR MOUNTAINEER, 38â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, tag axle, 460 eng., large slide, generator. Well WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Certified CDC maintained, road ready, or luxury guest Austenson highest yielding feed barley. house. 306-441-0398, Battleford, SK. 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK.
78 CLASSIFIED ADS
CERTIFIED AC MEREDITH, AC Metcalfe, CDC Copeland malt barley. Conlon, Sundre feed barley. Order early for max discounts. Visa/MC. www.llseeds.ca 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK. CERTIFIED CDC COPELAND barley. Call Carlson Seed 306-592-4449 or 306-592-2029, Buchanan, SK. BARLEY GROWERS CDC Meridith, Cert., 99% germ., 99% vigor, 0% F.G. Top yielding malt variety, or feed. Volume discounts. Gregoire Seed Farms Ltd., 306-445-5516 or 306-441-7851, North Battleford, SK. gregfarms@sasktel.net REG., CERT. CDC MEREDITH, AC Metcalfe, 99% germ. 0% fus. Terre Bonne Seed Farm 306-921-8594, 306-752-4810, Melfort, SK. CERTIFIED #1 AC Newdale (2R), Legacy (6R). Call Fenton Seed Farm Ltd., Tisdale, SK., 306-873-5438. CERTIFIED NEWDALE, CDC Meredith, CDC Copeland. High germination with no disease. Call Wilfing Farms Ltd. 306-236-7797 or 306-236-6811, email rjwilfing@sasktel.net Meadow Lake, SK.
CORN SEED THUNDER SEED has grazing and silage corn varieties for SK. TH2146, TH8781, TH3378, TH3382, TH4574RR for grain (2075 CHU). 0% financing available. Contact Thunder Seeds, Saltcoats, SK. at 1-888-274-9243 or 306-744-2332 for local retails. www.thunderseed.ca
FDN., CERT. AC STRONGFIELD durum. Sean Miller, Avonlea, SK., 306-868-7822. 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 REG. AND CERT. Transcend, AAC Raymore (sawfly resistant), Kyle. Palmier Seed Farms 306-472-7824, Lafleche, SK. FOUNDATION, REGISTERED, CERTIFIED, AC Transcend Durum. Ace Crop Care Ltd., 306-831-8963, Rosetown, SK. CERT. EUROSTAR and CDC Verona Durum, 0% fusarium. Call Shawn 306-741-0475, Pambrun, SK. Email: foc@sasktel.net CERTIFIED #1 STRONGFIELD durum. RoLo Farms, Regina, SK., 306-543-5052. FOUNDATION, REGISTERED, CERTIFIED Transcend Durum. Call Craswell Seeds, Strasbourg, SK., 306-725-3236. CERT. #1 CDC Verona, 94%, 0 fusarium. Cert. #1 AC Eurostar, 97%, 0 fusarium. Reisner Seed Farm 306-263-2139, Limerick, SK., breisner@sasktel.net CERTIFIED #1 AC STRONGFIELD. Wiens Seed Farm, call Brennan at 306-377-2002, Herschel, SK. CERT. STRONGFIELD, AAC Current, CDC Verona durum. Order early for max discounts. Visa/MC. www.llseeds.ca 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK. CERTIFIED, REGISTERED, FOUNDATION AC Strongfield and AC Raymore (solid stem) Call 403-867-2338, Foremost, AB.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
SORGARD SEEDS. Low disease, high germ: Leggett, Souris, Baler oats. Volume discounts. Visa/MC/FCC Credit available. Call 306-896-2236, Churchbridge, SK. FDN, REG. AND CERTIFIED #1 CDC Orrin, Leggett. Fenton Seed Farm Ltd., Tisdale, SK., 306-873-5438. CERTIFIED CDC DANCER, Triactor, Souris high germ, available at Seed Source, 306-323-4402, Archerwill, SK. CERTIFIED CDC SO-1 Super Oats and AC Morgan Oats. High germination with no disease level. Call Wilfing Farms Ltd. 306-236-7797 or 306-236-6811, email rjwilfing@sasktel.net Meadow Lake, SK. SOURIS, SUMMIT, SEABISCUIT. Visit our website www.fedorukseeds.com for more info or call Fedoruk Seeds at Kamsack, SK. 306-542-4235. WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Cert. AC Morgan, Souris, Triactor, milling oats; CDC Baler forage oats 306-752-4060 Melfort SK FDN., REG., CERT. AC Morgan, AC Lu, Murphy oats, high germ, 0 fusarium. Haralie Seed Farm, 780-662-2617, Tofield, AB. C D C B OY E R , CERT., early maturity, straight cut, 99% germ., 98% vigor. Delisle 306-493-2534, seedbarn@hotmail.com CERTIFIED SEABISCUIT. Greenshields Seeds, Semans, SK. Call: 306-524-2155 or 306-524-4339. CERTIFIED SOURIS AND Triactor. Northland Seeds Inc. 306-324-4315, Margo, SK.
CERTIFIED PRONGHORN, TYNDAL, Taza. Fall varieties: Luoma, Metzger, Bobcat. Call 4 0 3 - 6 5 5 - 2 4 6 4 , G r a s s y L a ke , A B . www.cornsbrothers.com REGISTERED, CERTIFIED SUNRAY Triticale. Phone: 403-633-9999, Tilley, AB. www.fabianseedfarms.com
CERTIFIED #1 PASTEUR general purpose wheat. Volume and cash discounts. Call Jeff 306-227-7867, Aberdeen, SK. CERTIFIED #1 CDC Utmost, Shaw and Vesper. CWRS midge tolerant varieties. Volume and cash discount. Call Jeff at Sopatyk Seed Farms 306-227-7867, email: jeffsopatyk@me.com Aberdeen, SK. CERTIFIED SHAW VB, Lillian. Pratchler Seeds, 306-682-3317 or 306-231-5145, Muenster, SK. AC UNITY VB, certified, 99% germ., 96% vigor, 0% Gram./ fusarium. Delisle, SK., 306-493-2534, seedbarn@hotmail.com AC ANDREW CERTIFIED #1, 98% germ. Excellent quality! Nakonechny Seeds, Ruthilda, SK., call 306-932-4409. FDN. AND CERT. AC Vesper VB. Phone Ken and Larry Trowell, 306-744-2687, Saltcoats, SK.
CERTIFIED VESPER/ WASCADA midge resistant, Stettler, Carberry. Greenshields Seeds Ltd., Semans, SK., 306-524-2155 or 306-524-4339. 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. FDN. REG., CERT. Stride new white milling o at s . C a l l Ke n a n d L a r r y Tr o we l l , FOUNDATION AND/OR CERTIFIED CDC Utmost VB and Lillian Wheat. Call Craswell 306-744-2687, Saltcoats, SK. Seeds, Strasbourg, SK., 306-725-3236. CERTIFIED #1 TRIACTOR. Call Hetland Seeds at Naicam, SK., 306-874-5694. M&M SEEDS LTD. has Certified #1 AC Goodeve VB, CDC Utmost VB and AC Shaw www.hetlandseeds.com VB. Cash and volume discounts. FOUNDATION, CERTIFIED Leggett, Souris. 306-258-2219, St. Denis, SK. Ardell Seeds, Vanscoy, SK. 306-668-4415. AC ANDREW SOFT white wheat. Most NEW AC STRIDE: Foundation, Registered, popular variety, 0% Fusarium Gram. Certified, white milling oat. Big Dog Seeds 306-843-2934, Wilkie, SK. www.herle.ca Inc., 306-483-2963, Oxbow, SK. CERT. #1: AC Unity VB, 97%; AC Infinity, CERT. AND REG. Souris, Leggett, Orrin. 99%; CDC Utmost VB, 94%, AC Lillian, Frederick Seeds, 306-287-3977, Watson, 97%. 0 fusarium. Reisner Seed Farm, SK. 306-263-2139, breisner@sasktel.net CERTIFIED SEED: AC Morgan oats, 95% Limerick, SK. germ, Fusarium not detected. Call Selte CERTIFIED AC LILLIAN, sawfly resistant. Farms 780-853-2484, Vermilion, AB. Call 403-867-2338, Foremost, AB. FDN., REG., CERT. AC Morgan. Terre CERTIFIED SHAW, 98% germ. Hansen B o n n e S e e d F a r m 3 0 6 - 9 2 1 - 8 5 9 4 , Seeds, Yellow Grass, SK., 306-465-2525 or 306-752-4810, Melfort, SK. 306-861-5679. Email jsh2@sasktel.net CERTIFIED CDC ORRIN. Berscheid Bros. CERTIFIED STETTLER HRSW. Tilley, AB. Seeds, 306-368-2602, Lake Lenore, SK. 403-633-9999. www.fabianseedfarms.com
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SOURIS OATS
CERTIFIED CDC UTMOST VB, AC Shaw VB, Harvest, Alvena CWRS and AC Enchant VB, AC Crystal, AC Foremost CPSR and AC Sadash CWSW wheat. Call Wilfing Farms Ltd. 306-236-7797 or 306-236-6811, email rjwilfing@sasktel.net Meadow Lake, SK.
CERT. CDC UTMOST VB, Unity/Waskada VB, Lillian, Waskada; Fdn. Goodeve. Call Pa l m i e r S e e d F a r m s , L a f l e c h e , S K . 306-472-7824. CERT. SHAW VB #1, discounts; Cert. Vesper, #1. Call Andrew, 306-742-4682, CaldCDC UTMOST VB Midge HRS wheat. er, SK. Early, high yield, 0% Fusarium Gram. LAKESIDE SEEDS: Cert. #1 AC Vesper, 306-843-2934, Wilkie, SK. www.herle.ca Muchmore HRS wheat for sale, high germ., low disease. 306-554-2078, Wynyard, SK. CHIN RIDGE SEEDS, Taber, AB AC CONQUER VB (new) midge tolerant Certified Seed: AC® Muchmore, CPS. High yields, 0% Fusarium Gram. Wilkie, SK. 306-843-2934, www.herle.ca AC® Carberry, CDC Go, & ® AC Lillian HRSW; Pasteur GPW, CERTIFIED #1 CARDALE, AC Shaw VB ® AC Strongfield & Transcend and AC Unity VB. Exc. germ, low disease. Durum. Certified barley, peas and Yauck Seed Farm 306-484-4555 Govan, SK lentils also available. CERTIFIED #1 AC Carberry, AC Sadash, 1-800-563-7333 or chinridge.com CDC Utmost VB, AC Vesper VB and AC, VB. Call Hetland Seeds at Naicam, AC VESPER VB FDN., Reg., Cert. #1. Shaw High yield. Excellent quality! Nakonechny SK. 306-874-5694. www.hetlandseeds.com Seeds, Ruthilda, SK., 306-932-4409. CERT. #1 SHAW/AC Domain VB, midge tolerant high yielding HRS. RoLo Farms SORGARD SEEDS. Low disease, high Regina, SK., 306-543-5052. germ: Carberry, Glenn, Cardale. Volume discounts. Visa/MC/FCC Credit available. CERTIFIED AND REGISTERED Utmost VB, Harvest, Andrew, Conquer VB. Frederick Call 306-896-2236, Churchbridge, SK. LABRECQUE SEED FARM has Certified AC Seeds, 306-287-3977, Watson, SK. Shaw wheat. Call Roger 306-222-5757, REG., CERT. AC Shaw VB, AC Vesper VB, Saskatoon, SK. CDC Osler, Splendor. Terre Bonne Seeds 306-921-8594, 306-752-4810, Melfort, SK. WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Cert HRS. CDC Utmost VB, Carberry, Shaw VB, Harvest. CERT. MIDGE TOLERANT: Vesper VB or Fieldstar VB. Carlson Seed 306-592-4449 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK. or 306-592-2029, Buchanan, SK. FDN., REG., CERT. CDC Utmost VB, AC Shaw VB, AC Vesper VB, AC Carberry, Car- CERTIFIED SHAW-AC DOMAIN MTW, dale, Conquer VB (CPS red). Ardell Seeds, AC Unity-Waskada MTW, AC Andrew Vanscoy, SK., 306-668-4415. high yielding wheat. Order early for max discounts. Visa/MC. www.llseeds.ca CERTIFIED GP PASTEUR, high yielding, 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK. and AC Shaw. G&R Seeds, 306-239-2071, FOUNDATION, REGISTERED and/or CertiOsler, SK. fied: AC Vesper VB, AC Unity VB; CDC UtCERTIFIED HRS AC Vesper VB, AC Shaw most VB, Berscheid Bros Seeds, Lake LeVB, AC Goodeve VB, CDC Utmost VB, CPSR nore, SK. 306-368-2602. Conquer VB, high germ, low fusarium g r a m . A v a i l a b l e a t S e e d S o u r c e , CERTIFIED #1 AC Vesper VB, AC Shaw VB. Wiens Seed Farm 306-377-2002, 306-323-4402, Archerwill, SK. Herschel, SK. CERTIFIED PASTEUR, 94% germination, 0% Graminearum. Bailey Brothers Seeds FDN, REG. AND CERTIFIED #1 Vesper VB, Goodeve VB, CDC Utmost VB. Fenton Seed 306-935-4702, Milden, SK. Farm Ltd., Tisdale, SK., 306-873-5438. CERTIFIED UNITY WASKADA and Carberry wheat, exc. germ. and disease. Pambrun, FOUNDATION, REGISTERED, CERTIFIED, AC Muchmore, AC Shaw VB. Ace Crop SK., 306-741-0475. Email foc@sasktel.net Care Ltd., 306-831-8963, Rosetown, SK. AC CARBERRY REGISTERED certified #1, 96% germination. Superior agronomy CERTIFIED PASTEUR GP wheat seed for package. Ready for pickup! Nakonechny sale. Call 306-744-7722, Bredenbury, SK. Seeds, Ruthilda, SK., call 306-932-4409. CERTIFIED AC SADASH SWSW. Tilley, AB. SORGARD SEEDS. Midge tolerant varie- 403-633-9999. www.fabianseedfarms.com ties available: AC Vesper, CDC Utmost and AC Conquer. 306-896-2236, Churchbridge. REG, CERT CDC Utmost VB; Cert. AC Vesper VB; Cert. Conquer VB; Cert AC Carberry; Cert. Cardale; Cert. Glenn. Visit our website www.fedorukseeds.com for more TOP QUALITY CERTIFIED alfalfa and grass i n f o . o r c a l l F e d o r u k S e e d s a t : seed. Call Gary or Janice Waterhouse 306-542-4235, Kamsack, SK. 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK. CERT. CDC UTMOST, Carberry, Cardale, AC CERTIFIED ALGONQUIN ALFALFA seed. Splendor, Pasteur, AC Enchant. Van Burck Call Maurice Wildeman, 306-365-4395, Seeds, Star City, SK., 306-863-4377. 306-365-7802, Lanigan, SK. CERTIFIED AC SHAW VB, midge resistant; Certified AC Carberry. Ennis Seeds, 306-429-2793, Glenavon, SK. CERTIFIED AC VESPER VB, 98% germ, 97% vigor, good pricing. Sandercock Seeds Ltd., 306-334-2958, Balcarres, SK. WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Cert. SWW Sadash, GP Pasteur and CPS Crystal, Enchant VB. 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK. REGISTERED CDC GO Hard Red Spring wheat. 306-296-2104 or 306-296-7434, Frontier, SK. CERT. #1 UNITY VB, Shaw VB, Carberry, Waskada and AC Barrie. Lepp Seeds Ltd. 306-254-4243, Hepburn, SK. CERTIFIED PASTEUR GP WHEAT for sale. 98% Germ, 97% Vigor, no Fusarium. Huge yielder, great fit for ethanol market with some potential for U.S. market. The neighbours’ heads will turn when they see this beautiful standing crop in your fields. Great risk management crop for your farm. Simpson Seeds 306-693-9402, Moose Jaw
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John M .Sm ith .....................PilotM ound,M B A rdellSeeds Ltd..............................Vanscoy Big D og Seeds Inc .............................O xbow Bodnaryk Fam ily Farm s.......................Rhein C lancy Seeds.............................C arrotRiver C learview A cres...........................Virden,M B Fedoruk Seeds...............................Kam sack Fredorick Farm s.................................W atson KerberSeeds...................................Rosthern D enis Lueke ...................................Hum boldt M cD ougallA cres.......................M oose Jaw M oroz A gra .............................................Pelly N orthland Seeds................................M argo Seed Source ..................................A rcherw ill Sorgard Seeds........................C hurchbridge Sw an Valley Seeds................Sw an River,M B Tarw in Seeds......................................M elfort W hispering Pine Farm s...................Sintaluta
Accepted b y All M illers!
CARDALE W HEAT
204-825-2000 306-668-4415 306-483-2963 306-273-4263 306-768-3566 204-748-2666 306-542-4235 306-287-3977 306-232-4474 306-682-5170 306-693-3649 306-595-4622 306-324-4315 306-323-4402 306-896-2240 204-734-2526 306-752-4060 306-727-2222
N on GM O Prem ium s Paid Farm Pick Up Available Contact:
s teves @ p a c ific c o a s tc a n o la .c o m S teve S ta rr 50 9 -3 49 -8 46 2 W arden, W A FDN. AND CERT. CANOLA seeds. Fall prices still available: Fusion (synthetic hybrid); Rugby, highest yielding O.P.; All Brett Young varieties, incl. Clubroot resistant. Haralie Seeds, 780-662-2617, Tofield, AB.
CERTIFIED AND REGISTERED yellow pea variety CDC Meadow and CDC Saffron. Volume and cash discounts. Call Jeff at Sopatyk Seed Farms, 306-227-7867, Aberdeen, SK. jeffsopatyk@me.com FDN, REG, CERT, CDC Hornet, CDC Patrick (green), CDC Limerick (green). Ace Crop Care Ltd. 306-831-8963, Rosetown, SK.
FOUNDATION, REGISTERED, CERTIFIED CDC Redcliff and CDC Maxim CL. Craswell Seeds, Strasbourg, SK., 306-725-3236.
M ore W h eat… Less Sh atter
W orkin g H ard… To earn you r tru st!
W ANTED:
CANOLA SEED
CERT. CDC MAXIM CL, CDC Impower CL Clearfield lentils. Order early for max 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 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK. CERTIFIED IMAX RED lentils, high germ., 0% disease. For info. phone 306-522-1668, Etter Seed & Processing, Regina, SK CERTIFIED CDC DAZIL., CDC Impower, Ace Crop Care Ltd., 306-831-8963, Rosetown, SK.
CERTIFIED FOREMOST CONVENTIONAL, Rugby Round-up Ready, Canterra canola AC EARLYSTAR NEW YELLOW PEA. varieties. Greenshields Seeds Ltd., Se- High germination. Contact 306-843-2934, mans, SK. 306-524-2155 or 306-524-4339. Wilkie, SK. www.herle.ca CERTIFIED CDC MEADOW, and 40-10, CDC Leroy silage peas. Va n B u rc k CDC SORREL, CERT. #1, 95% germ., 0% Seeds, Star City, SK., 306-863-4377. pasmo. Delisle, SK., 306-493-2534, WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Certified CDC seedbarn@hotmail.com Meadow yellow peas. Call 306-752-4060, CDC SORREL, Reg. Cert., reconstituted. Melfort, SK. Large seed. Good lodging resistance. Now NEW CERTIFIED CDC Saffron, high germ. booking! Nakonechny Seeds, Ruthilda, and vigor. Volume discounts. Fast Seed SK., 306-932-4409. Farm, 306-463-3626, Kindersley, SK. FLAX GROWERS CDC Sorrel, Reg., Cert., CERTIFIED #1 CDC Meadow Pea, high reconstituted, large seed, vg yielder, ready germ., low disease. Yauck Seed Farm, to move. Gregoire Seed Farms Ltd., 306-484-4555, Govan, SK. 306-445-5516 or 306-441-7851, North NEW! CDC SAFFRON, FDN, Registered, Battleford, SK. gregfarms@sasktel.net Certified. High yield. Good stander. Now CERTIFIED TAURUS. Van Burck Seeds, booking! Nakonechny Seeds, Ruthilda, Star City, SK., 306-863-4377. SK., call 306-932-4409. LABRECQUE SEED FARM has Certified CDC Meadows yellow peas. Call Roger 306-222-5757, Saskatoon, SK. CERT. SORREL RECONSTITUTED, high germ. For best pricing, call Etter Seed & CERTIFIED CDC MEADOW, CDC Bronco and Agassiz yellow peas. RoLo Farms, Processing at 306-522-1668, Regina, SK. 306-543-5052, Regina, SK. REG. AND CERT. CDC Sorrel flax, reconstityuted, #1. Call Andrew 306-742-4682, CERT. #1 CDC Meadow, 98%, 0 disease; Cert. #1 Golden, 99%, 0 disease. Reisner Calder, SK. Seed Farm 306-263-2139, Limerick, SK., REG. BRAVO, Fdn. Sanctuary. Palmier Seed breisner@sasktel.net Farms 306-472-7824, Lafleche, SK. SORGARD SEEDS. Low disease, high REGISTERED, CERTIFIED CDC Glas flax g e r m : M e a d ow s . Vo l u m e d i s c o u n t s . (reconstituted). 403-633-9999, Tilley, AB. V i s a / M C / F C C C r e d i t ava i l a b l e . C a l l 306-896-2236, Churchbridge, SK. www.fabianseedfarms.com BUYING BROWN FLAX farm pickup. Call CERTIFIED CDC MEADOW yellow peas. 1-877-752-4115, Naber Specialty Grains Call Palmier Seed Farms, Lafleche, SK. 306-472-7824. Ltd. Email: nsgl@sasktel.net CERT. AC MEADOW peas, 97% germ., 93% vigor, good quality. Call Sandercock Seed Farms, 306-334-2958, Balcarres, SK. REGISTERED AND CERTIFIED #1 CDC Meadow. Fenton Seed Farm Ltd., Tisdale, S OY B E A N S F O R S A S K . T H 2 9 0 0 2 , SK., 306-873-5438. TH33003R2Y and TH32004R2Y. Grown in FOUNDATION, REGISTERED and/or Cert. GO T GR A S S SK. 0% financing available. Call Thunder CDC Meadow and CDC Saffron peas. Ph. Save up to $100 per 50 lb bag of Seeds, Saltcoats, SK., 1-888-274-9243 or Berscheid Bros Seeds, Lake Lenore, SK. forage seed with the Saskatchewan 306-744-2332 for a retailer near you. First 306-368-2602. Forage Incentive Program. in the field. www.thunderseed.ca CERT. CDC MEADOW. Order early for Save Money, Call Today: CERTIFIED CDC PINTIUM pinto; Certified max discounts. Visa/MC www.llseeds.ca CDC Jet (black); Certified CDC Super Jet 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK. 1-866-252-DUCK (3825) (black). Martens Charolais and Seed LAKESIDE SEEDS has Cert. #1 CDC 204-534-8370, Boissevain, MB. Meadow yellow peas for sale. Excellent quality. Ph 306-554-2078, Wynyard, SK. CERTIFIED #1 TREASURE. Call Hetland CDC ORION kabuli chickpea, registered. Seeds at Naicam, SK., 306-874-5694. www.hetlandseeds.com Sean Miller, Avonlea, SK., 306-868-7822. SEED SPECIAL: CERTIFIED CDC Leader CDC SAFFRON, CDC Treasure, CDC chickpeas, 0 disease. 306-694-2981, Meadow yellow pea seed. High germination and low disease. Call Wilfing Farms Moose Jaw, SK. Ltd. 306-236-7797, 306-236-6811, email CERTIFIED RUGBY RR, Conventional Ea- CERT. #1 CDC Alma, 95%; CDC Leader, rjwilfing@sasktel.net Meadow Lake, SK. gle, AC Excel. Pratchler Seeds, Muenster, CDC Orion. breisner@sasktel.net Reisner CERTIFIED MEADOW. Call Greenshields Seed Farm 306-263-2139, Limerick, SK. SK. Call 306-682-3317 or 306-231-5145. Seeds Ltd., 306-524-2155, 306-524-4339, Semans, SK. M&M SEEDS LTD. has Cert. #1 CDC CERT. #1 CDC Greenland, CDC Imvincible. Treasure and Meadow. Cash and volume RoLo Farms, 306-543-5052, Regina, SK discounts. 306-258-2219, St. Denis, SK.
√ Top Yields √ High Protein √ LeastFusarium √ Less Straw
Ea rlier, H ea v ier, S horter.
HYBRID AND OPEN-POLLINATED Canola CERTIFIED #1 CDC Peridot, CDC Lemay varieties at great prices. Cert. #1 Synergy FR and GR lentils; CDC Redbow Red lentil. (Polish). Call Fenton Seeds, Tisdale, SK., Yauck Seed Farm, 306-484-4555 Govan SK 306-873-5438. CERTIFIED CDC DAZIL, CDC Maxim, CDC Impower, CDC Greenland lentils. Pambrun SK., 306-741-0475, foc@sasktel.net
John M Sm ith .................................204-825-2000 A rdellSeeds Ltd .............................306-978-4441 Bergstrom Farm s Ltd ......................306-573-4625 Big D og Seeds Inc .........................306-483-2963 Bodnaryk Fam ily Farm s.................306-273-4263 C row Lake Farm Ltd .......................306-842-6216 D anielson Seeds Inc ......................306-594-2173 Fedoruk Farm Inc ...........................306-542-4235 Fenton Seed Farm ..........................306-873-3234 Frederick Seeds.............................306-287-3977 Lorne C rosson ................................306-435-7148 M cC arthy Seed Farm ....................306-224-4848 M cD ougallA cres Ltd .....................306-693-3649 M oroz A gra ....................................306-595-4622 O ne O ak Farm ...............................306-682-5170 Seed Source Inc ............................306-323-4402 Sorgard Seeds...............................306-896-2236 Stoll’s Seed Barn Ltd ......................306-493-2534 Sw an Valley Seed ...........................204-734-2526 TebbutSeeds Ltd ...........................306-862-9730 TrentZw ingli...................................306-752-4224 Van Burck Seeds............................306-863-4377 W hispering Pine Farm ....................306-727-2222 W ylie Farm s Ltd ..............................306-948-2855 Yauck Seed Farm ...........................306-484-4643
PilotM ound Vanscoy Birsay O xbow Rhein G riffin N orquay Kam sack Tisdale W atson Rocanville C orning M oose Jaw Pelly Hum boldt A rcherw ill C hurchbridge D elisle Sw an River N ipaw in M elfort StarC ity Sintaluta Biggar G ovan
“ W orking Ha rd T o Ea rn YourT rust”
CERTIFIED GREENLAND, CDC Improve, CDC Impower. Call Palmier Seed Farms, Lafleche, SK. 306-472-7824. CERTIFIED CANTATE, highest yielding variety. Hansen Seeds, Yellow Grass, SK., 306-465-2525, 306-861-5679. CDC BASTIA (NEW), CDC Togo, Itchless varieties. Phone 306-843-2934, WilWANTED kie, SK. www.herle.ca CERTIFIED, REGISTERED, FDN. CDC Togo. Call Northland Seeds Inc., 306-324-4315, Margo, SK.
GrainEx International Ltd.
LENTILS, CANARY AND CHICK PEAS.
Call GrainEx International Ltd. for current pricing at 306-885-2288, Sedley SK. Visit us on our website at: www.grainex.net CERT. #1 CDC Impala (Red) CL lentil. Call Fenton Seed Farm Ltd., Tisdale, SK. 306-873-5438. CERTIFIED CDC DAZIL, CDC Imax, CDC Impower. Hansen Seeds, Yellow Grass, SK., 306-465-2525, 306-861-5679. CERT. CDC IMPOWER CL large green; New CDC Scarlet reds. High germ. Fast Seed Farm, 306-463-3626, Kindersley, SK.
BUYING CANARY SEED, farm pickup. Call 1-877-752-4115, Naber Specialty Grains Ltd. Email: nsgl@sasktel.net CDC BASTIA, Certified. Excellent quality! Limited supply! Nakonechny Seeds, Ruthilda, SK., 306-932-4409.
Schluter & Maack NOW BUYING BROWN & YELLOW MUSTARD All grades of Green Peas Laird & Richlea Lentils Yellow Peas
1-306-771-4987
CERTIFIED #1 CDC Impower, CDC Greenland. Wiens Seed Farm, Brennan, C E RT I F I E D ANDANTE YELLOW. Call: 306-377-2002, Herschel, SK. Greenshields Seeds Ltd., Semans, SK. 306-524-2155 or 306-524-4339. CERT. #1: CDC Imigreen CL, 97%; CDC Impower CL, 96%; CDC Imax CL, 96%. BESCO GRAIN LTD. Buyer of all varieties 0 disease. Reisner Seed Farm, Limerick, of mustard. Call for competitive pricing. Call 204-736-3570, Brunkild, MB. SK., 306-263-2139, breisner@sasktel.net
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
Located in Dafoe, SK.
Buyers of All Special Crops Including
Brown, Yellow, Oriental Mustard, Peas, Lentils, Canary & Flax Seed.
GOOD SUPPLY OF most Alfalfas, Clovers and Grasses. Will blend hay and pasture blends to suit your needs. Call Hetland Seeds at Naicam, SK., 306-874-5694. www.hetlandseeds.com
L O O K I N G F O R A L L t y p e s o f fe e d grains, paying top dollar. Booking new crop. Prompt movement. 1-855-752-0116. www.cactuscommodity.com PASKAL CATTLE FEEDLOT Company in ORGANIC SAINFOIN SEED, called â&#x20AC;&#x153;Healthy Lethbridge area, looking for feed barley. Hayâ&#x20AC;? in Europe (sainfoin.eu). An ancient, Call Roxanne at 1-800-710-8803. non-bloating, nutritious, low input, perennial forage loved by all animals. Better fla- WANTED: FEED/ OFF-GRADE Pulses and vored meat and dairy. Call 306-739-2900, tough, heated green oilseeds and also Wawota, SK. jhusband@primegrains.com cereals. Prairie Wide Grain, Saskatoon, SK., 306-230-8101, 306-716-2297. or primegrains.com/prime-sainfoin.htm
CERISE RED PROSO COMMON MILLET. Book early to avoid disappointment. 93%+ germ., 0% Fusarium Graminearum, makes great cattle feed, swath grazed, silage, dry â&#x20AC;˘ Licensed & Bonded â&#x20AC;˘ Quick payment and silage bales, drought tolerant, very high in protein and energy. Delivered in 50 For Mustard and Dafoe Deliveries lb. bags at nearest points in SK. and AB. Call Toll free 1-877-550-3555 Call Reynald at Millet King Seed of Canada Inc., St. Claude, MB., 204-526-2719 or For Peas, Flax and Lentils Call 204-379-2987, leave msg. Cell and text (306) 541-4838 or (306) 491-9982 204-794-8550, all calls returned. Over 2000 satisfied producers and our 11th year MUSTARD SEED: We carry a full line of in business. www.milletkingseeds.com high quality cert. mustard seed. Bare, or email: reynald@milletking.com 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. SMOOTH BROME, MEADOW Brome, Crested Wheat grass, Timothy, Saline tolerant grasses, fescues, Cicer Milk vetch, sainfoin, lawn grasses, Alfalfa: tap/creeper, YB Sweet clover, Red Clover, pasture/hay blends. Free blending and delivery! Ph. CERT. CANMA NEW HEMP variety, large 306-863-2900, email us today for a price seed, excellent weed control, high returns, list! Birch Rose Acres Ltd., Star City, SK. $2 per lb. organic and conventional. ivanaudrey@sasktel.net 306-747-2725, Shellbrook, SK. COMMON #1 Smooth Brome, Meadow Brome, Timothy, Crested wheat, Yellow clover, Cicer Milkvetch, Alfalfa. Also have Certified seed. Grower Direct. Blending and delivery available. Competitive prices. Call Siklenka Seeds, 306-342-4290 or 306-342-7688, Glaslyn, SK. CLEANED HIGH BULK greenfeed OATS, 16,000 bu., 98% germ., $5.00/bu. Phone: 780-872-3611, Lloydminster, SK. FLAX, food grade, low yeast and COMMON #1 CLEANED heavy milling seed GOLDEN oil content 36%+, 96% germ. 99.9% oats, germ. 99%, vigor 98%, fusarium mold, g r a m i n e a r u m 0 % . L e p p S e e d s L t d . , pure, $22/bu. 306-730-8375, Melville, SK. 306-254-4243, Hepburn, SK. GOOD HE AVY S E E D O AT S for sale. 306-937-2880 or 306-441-5010, Battleford, SK. HIGH YIELDING GENERAL purpose wheat for sale. Call 306-793-4450 or 306-745-8425, Stockholm, SK. COMMON CANARY SEED, 96% germ., bulk cleaned. Call Darroll Wallin 306-324-2141 or 306-272-7151, Margo, SK.
CLASSIFIED ADS 79
XPELLER PRESSING. Lethbridge crusher. Looking for heated canola and flax. Also looking for a limited amount of #1 Canola. Prompt payment. Call, text or email Darcy for pricing and movement. 403-894-4394 xpellerpressing@gmail.com
MILLING OATS, good weight, good germination, no wild oats. Call 306-867-7716, SPRING SPECIAL: BROWN and Golden flax seed, high germination. Outlook, SK. 306-694-2981, Moose Jaw, SK. COMMON SEED OATS, 98% germ., 44 lbs./bu. Grown from certified seed. Large FLAX SEED for sale, 4,000 bushels. Phone 306-682-2489, 306-231-8212, Humboldt, volume. $4.50/bu. 306-753-2500, Macklin. SK. C O M M O N Y E L L O W M U S TA R D S E E D, cleaned, bagged, purity tested, germ. 97%, very clean. Yorkton, SK. 306-273-4235.
NOW B UYIN G O ATS!
2007 MONACO CAMELOT, 42â&#x20AC;&#x2122; PDQ Cummins ISL, 400 HP turbo/Allison 6 spd. auto., 4 slides, completely loaded, tile, hardwood, stainless washer/dryer, satellite. Like new, used very little. New cost $328,279 US, asking $155,000 CDN OBO. Will trade for grain, bred cows or farmland in SE SK. Call 701-756-6954, Carnduff, SK.
YB SWEET CLOVER, Red Clover, Alsike clover, Alfalfa (tap/creeper), various grasses. (Organic/conventional), Pasture blends. Free shipping. Ph. 306-863-2900, Star City, SK. ivanaudrey@sasktel.net TOP QUALITY ALFALFA, variety of grasses and custom blends, farmer to farmer. Gary Waterhouse 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK. COMMON #1 GRASSES, alfalfas, clovers, etc. Cert. seed of numerous species including hybrid brome grass. Excellent purity. Reasonable prices. Periodic delivery to many Sask. locations. Richard Walcer 306-752-3983 anytime, Melfort, SK.
COMMON MARROWFAT PEA seed for sale, excellent quality. Call Lakeside Seeds, 306-554-2078, Wynyard, SK.
PEARMAN GRAIN LTD.
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â&#x20AC;˘ GREEN â&#x20AC;˘ HEATED â&#x20AC;˘ SPRING THRASHED
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â&#x20AC;˘ WHEAT â&#x20AC;˘ PEAS
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WESTCAN FEED & GRAIN
1-877-250-5252
BUYING YELLOW AND GREEN PEAS, all grades, farm pickup. Naber Specialty Grains Ltd., 1-877-752-4115, Melfort, SK. LESS FUSARIUM MORE BOTTOM LINE. Email: nsgl@sasktel.net Farmer directed varieties. Wheat suitable RED LENTIL SEED, 2 varieties, high for ethanol production, livestock feed. germ. and vigor, 0% disease. Call Byron Western Feed Grain Development Co-op Ltd., 1-877-250-1552. www.wfgd.ca Blackwell, 306-846-7222, Dinsmore, SK. WANTED: FEED WHEAT and feed peas. Competitive prices and prompt payment. Call Dan at 306-947-2097, Hepburn, SK. RED PROSO MILLET seed, good germ., 50 lb. bags or totes, 50¢/lb. Primrose Seed FEED BARLEY FOR SALE: 50 lb. dry. Call C l e a n i n g I n c . , 3 0 6 - 4 2 9 - 2 7 1 4 , Peter 306-768-3550, Carrot River, SK. 306-736-7863, Glenavon, SK. WANTED: FEED GRAIN, barley, wheat, COMMON CANARYSEED for sale, good peas, green or damaged canola. Phone germination, 24¢/lb. Call 306-793-4450 or Gary 306-823-4493, Neilburg, SK. 306-745-8425, Stockholm, SK. LACKAWANNA PRODUCTS CORP. BuyCANARYSEED, COMMON CLEANED. Wiens ers and sellers of all types of feed grain Seed Farm, call Brennan, 306-377-2002, and grain by-products. Call 306-862-2723, Nipawin, SK. Herschel, SK.
MILLET SEED: German Golden Foxtail; Red Proso; Crown Proso. All cleaned and bagged. Excellent producers in swath graze, silage or bale. Mini bulk and delivery available. Greg Tanner, 306-457-2816, Stoughton, SK.
Priced at your b in.
Com petitive Ra tes
SweetGrass
â&#x20AC;˘ HEATED SEED SPECIAL: EARLY maturing yellow peas, high germ. and 0 disease. 306-694-2981, Moose Jaw, SK. NEW SMALL SEEDED, Zero-Tannin Faba Bean. 306-694-2981, Moose Jaw, SK.
AL L GRAD ES
TOP PRICES PAID FOR FEED BARLEY, WHEAT, OATS, RYE, TRITICALE, PEAS, LENTILS, HEATED OIL SEEDS
DAIRY AND FEEDER HAY for sale, 3x4 s q u a r e b a l e s . Te s t s a v a i l a b l e . 403-633-8835, Brooks, AB. APPROX. 800, 3x3x8 square wheat straw bales and 160- 3x3x8 oat straw, $10 each. 306-744-2762, 306-744-7779 Saltcoats SK HAY BALES, 400 large square, 3x4, 1000 lb., $40/ea. Located NE Saskatoon, SK. 306-230-5605. 1500 LB. BROME/ALFALFA hay bales, $55 a bale at Weyburn, SK. Ph. 306-842-7082 or 306-861-7092. ROUND BALE PICKING and hauling, small or large loads. Travel anywhere. Also hay for sale. 306-382-0785, Vanscoy, SK.
FLOATER TIRES FOR JD and Case sprayers: 650/65R38 or 710/70R38. For JD sprayers: 710/70R42 or 900/50R42. 306-697-2856, Grenfell, SK.
NEW ¡ 11R22.5 ......................................... $299 ¡ 11R24.5 ......................................... $359 ¡ 20.8-38 12 ply ............................... $765 ¡ 16.9-30 12 ply ............................... $495 ¡ 18.4-38 12 ply ............................... $655 ¡ 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
LIQUID HUMIC ACID. Add Humika or PlantXL to existing fertility program to 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. Improve your soils health. Increase your GOOD USED TRUCK TIRES: 700/8.25/ crops yield. Ph. 519-749-5488, Bright, ON. 900/1000/1100x20s; 11R22.5/11R24.5; Email: mosburgerfarms@hotmail.com 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. WANTED: LARGE YELLOW peas and Triti- CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used cale. Call Norbert at Saskcan Parent highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at 204-737-3002, St. Joseph, MB. www.titantrucksales.com SCRAPER AND LOADER TIRES available. All sizes. Quick Drain Sales, Muenster, SK. FUEL TANKS: 3000 gal. tank on steel skids Ph: 306-682-4520, 306-231-7318. w/electric pump, $2500; 1000 gal. tank on stand, $875; 300 gal. tank on steel skids $525; Or all three tanks for $3500. Phone 306-642-3189, Assiniboia, SK. 10X36 METAL LATHE, 110 volt, with all acPOLY TANKS: 15 to 10,000 gal.; Bladder cessories, asking $2500. For pics call tanks from 220 to 88,000 gal; Water and 306-893-2289, Maidstone, SK. liquid fertilizer; Fuel tanks, single and double wall; Truck and storage, gas or diesel. OTC INJECTOR TESTER, Model 4200B, new condition, $1500; Kent Moore HD enWilke Sales, 306-586-5711, Regina, SK. gine counter bore tool, good cond., $500. 204-648-7136, Ashville, MB. TARPCO, SHUR-LOK, MICHELâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;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.
SOLID CORE ROUND alfalfa, alfalfa grass, green feed, grass and straw. Delivered. Call 306-237-4582, Perdue, SK.
OLDER MECHANICAL SHEAR, still under power, cuts up to 1/8â&#x20AC;?x8â&#x20AC;&#x2122; steel. Info. call 204-937-4403, Roblin, MB. GOT FROZEN PIPES? We can help. www.arcticblaster.com Call 403-638-3934, Sundre, AB. SAWS, PLANERS, GRINDERS, air nailers, press drill, 13â&#x20AC;? DeWalt wood planer, carpenter tools and scaffolding. 511- 3rd St., Davidson, SK., 403-318-7589 (AB. cell).
NEW 75 TON LARSON air/hydraulic shop 2013 ALFALFA, conventional and organ- ATTENTION: Farmers, ranchers, land- press, $3000. Call 306-375-2271, Kyle, SK. ic, 1500 lb. bales, net wrapped, hard core, scapers, public works. NCC provides a high Visit our website at: www.kylewelding.com JD baler. 306-370-8897, Tessier, SK. grade calcium chloride product which ofSTANDING HAY FOR sale, Weyburn, SK fers the best in dust control, de-icing area. 145 acres. Call 306-842-7082 or and kill fluid needs. Call today for a free quote or for more info. Calvin Wheeler, 306-861-7092. calvinw2@shaw.ca or 403-901-5510. OAT STRAW. Our 15th year selling bales. Large hard-core, very clean, large quantity, Irela n d & S co tla n d ~ June 2014 Cert. organic, $20. Volume discount. Loading included, exc. access. Junction Hwy 20 Hu n ga ry/Ro m a n ia ~ June 2014 SET OF TWO 20.8x38 sprayer tires, on 10 and 41. Tarnopol, SK. Call 306-279-4325. M id -W es t US A ~ O ctober 2014 whole rims, 150 hrs. of use on NH sprayer, APPROX. 400 ROUND hay bales, 1300 lbs., $5500. 306-483-7941, Oxbow, SK. Au s tra lia /N ew Zea la n d ~ Jan 2015 exc. horse hay, no rain, $70/bale in yard. Can deliver. 306-466-2261, Leask, SK. K en ya /Ta n za n ia ~ Feb 2015 LS DUA GOOD QUALITY hay for sale, round bales, S o u th Africa /Za m b ia ~ Feb 2015 alfalfa mix, no rain, 1000 lbs. plus. Call S o u th Am erica ~ Feb 2015 306-466-4428, Leask, SK.
RURAL & CULTURAL TOURS
BIG SQUARE BALES, alfalfa/grass mix, $75/tonne. 780-621-7833, Rockglen, SK.
Portion oftours m a y b e Ta x Ded uc tib le.
90 ORGANIC FLAX straw bales for sale. 306-858-2529, 306-867-9899, Lucky Lake, SK.
1- 800- 661- 432 6 w w w .selectho lid a ys.co m
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. SMALL SQUARE HAY bales, horse quality, grass or second cut alfalfa. Call 306-492-4751, Dundurn, SK. CUSTOM BALE HAULING. Will haul large squares or round. Phone 306-567-7199, Kenaston, SK. WANTED: ALFALFA/GRASS, large round bales and feed barley. We are interested in all quantities of hay and feed grain delivered to the ranch. Call 306-734-9001, Brownlee, SK. WANTED: STANDING HAY to cut and bale in surrounding area. 306-944-4572, Viscount, SK.
NUVISION COMMODITIES is currently CERTIFIED ORGANIC HAY, brome, fespurchasing feed barley, wheat, peas and cue, alfalfa mix, 3â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x3â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x8â&#x20AC;&#x2122; square bales. Call for details 306-335-2280, Lemberg, SK. milling oats. 204-758-3401, St. Jean, MB.
Se le ct Holida ys
¡ JD Factory 94-9600/CTS ........... $9,850 ¡ JD Factory STS........................ $11,850 ¡ JD STS BLOWOUT .................. $7,995 ¡ CIH AFX w/new tires .............. $18,800 ¡ CIH 80/88 w/new tires ........... $12,845 ¡ NH CR/CX w/new tires ........... $18,800 ¡ Clamp on kit w/tires ................. $5,250 ¡ 11R22.5 16-ply............................ $299 ¡ 11R24.5 16-ply............................ $359 Trade in your singles! 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
WATER PUMPS REPAIRED. Get them ready before you need them!!! Repairs to all lawnmowers, garden tractors, chainsaws, weedeaters. Fast, guaranteed service. Contact: Regan at IFIX4U, small engine and power tool repair service in Regina, SK. 306-539-0276 www.ifix4u.ca FOUR 20.8X34 tires; Two 23.1x34 tires. 1â&#x20AC;?, 2â&#x20AC;?, 3â&#x20AC;? and 4â&#x20AC;? water pumps from B&E, Like new. Phone: 306-299-4950, Consul, Honda, and Robin/Subaru in stock with SK. hose and fittings. See your nearest Flaman FOUR 850/55/42 TRELLEBORG tractor store or call 1-888-435-2626. twin 414 tires, $800 each. 306-295-3833, 6â&#x20AC;? WATERMASTER PUMPS for pumping Eastend, SK. out dugouts and sloughs, c/w 400â&#x20AC;&#x2122; of lay FOUR 380X46 TIRES with rims, 95%, off a flat hose. Pumps 42,000 gal./hr. See your Rogator 1184, tires wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t fit new sprayer, n e a r e s t F l a m a n s t o r e o r c a l l 1-888-435-2626 www.flaman.com $8500. 403-652-0757, High River, AB.
Ace Buying Group A Division of AgLine International
WANTED HEATED CANOLA. No broker involved. Sell direct to crushing plant. Also limited amount of #1 canola. Cash on delivery or pickup. 306-228-7306 or 306-228-1502, Unity, SK. NORTH EAST PRAIRIE GRAIN, brokerage and consulting. Get more for your grain. Call Devon at 306-873-3551 or email: neprairiegrain@gmail.com for free, no obligation price quote! TRADE AND EXPORT Canada buying all grades of conventional and organic grains. Fast payment and pick up 1-877-339-1959 GRAIN MARKETING HEADQUARTERS. Buyers of all grains. On farm pricing. Quick payment assured. Call Cory 306-842-2406, Double Z Ag Sales, Weyburn, SK. WHY NOT KEEP MARKETING SIMPLE? You are selling feed grains. We are buying feed grains. Fast payment, with prompt pickup, true price discovery. Call Gerald Snip, Jim Beusekom, Allen Pirness, David Lea, or Vera Buziak at Market Place Commodities Ltd., Lethbridge, AB. Email: info@marketplacecommodities.com or phone: 1-866-512-1711.
Wapaw Bay Humates Maximize Yield & Profits with Buy your
Humic Acids.
Humic Acids for spring now!
Wapaw Bay Resources Inc. Box 250, Zenon Park, Saskatchewan, S0E 1W0
Tel: 306-652-5140 or 306-767-2296 Email: leonardhudon@Yahoo.ca Phone or email for your Product Guide
Dealer Inquires Welcome Healthy Soil, Healthy Plants, Healthy Profitsâ&#x201E;˘
FARM â&#x20AC;˘ TRUCK â&#x20AC;˘ OTR TIRES
9.5L15 8PLY ....................... BKT $89.95 RIB IMPLEMENT .......Firestone $139.90 11L15 ................................. BKT $99.95 RIB IMPLEMENT .......Firestone $137.71 12.5L15 10PLY .................. BKT $139.95 RIB IMPLEMENT .......Firestone $192.95 1000-16 8PLY 4 RIB.......................... BKT $159.95 1100-16 8PLY 4 RIB.......................... BKT $209.95 11L15 12PLY HIWAY SPECIAL ................ BKT $185.95 18.4-38 .............................. BKT $690.00 8PLY R-1....................Firestone $869.00 20.8-38 .............................. BKT $995.00 8PLY R-1....................Firestone $1,299.00 600/65R28 ......................... BKT $1,489.00 157A8 R-1 .................Firestone $2,295.95
600/70R30 152A8 R-1 .......................... BKT $1,439.95 650/65R38 166A8 RW1........................ BKT $2,085.99 520/85R38 ......................... BKT $1,465.95 155A8 R-1 710/70R38-178A8 ............ BKT $2,711.60 30.5L32 BKT FORESTRY 16PLY FS216 TL ................................... $3,700.00 28L26 BKT FORESTRY 14G FS216 TL ................................... $2,295.95 35.5LB32 FIR FORESTRY 24C TL LS2 ................................ $6,995.00 30.5L32 FS FORESTRY 26C TL LS2 ................................ $4,995.00 28L26 FIR FORESTRY 16H TL LS2 ................................ $3,199.00
EXCELLENT PRICING ON OTHER SIZES - CALL TODAY! All Tires Subject to Availability
TRUCK TIRES 11R24.5,14 PLY, HWY DRIVE, LM516 ...................$295.00
11R24.5, 16 PLY, HWY, DRIVE DEEP, LLD37 ..........$295.00
1-855-865-9550
CALL TODAY!
103-3240 Idylwyld Dr. N, Saskatoon, SK
80 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure membrane system; 2000 gal./day. Eliminates: Tannin (color). The Water Clinic, www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. 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.
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Concrete related work. Cribbing, placing and finishing of concrete. Foreman and Laborers required. Fax resume to: 306-482-3472, phone 306-483-7338, Carnduff, SK.
NEW SRS CRISAFULLI PTO water pumps. Available in 8”, 12”, 16” and 24”, PTO, elec. or eng. driven available. These pumps can move up to 18,000 GPM. We have 16” PTO 15,000 GPM in stock, ready to deliver. For info. call your SK dealer, T.J. Markusson Agro Ltd., Foam Lake, SK. 306-272-4545, 306-272-7225. www.crisafullipumps.com
EXPERIENCED TRACKHOE OPERATOR. Accepting applicants for a well established Company in Southern Sask. 1A license would be an asset. Competitive wages, overtime, benefit plan. Drug and Alcohol policy in place. Dave 306-642-7676 or fax resume to 306-642-5928, Assiniboia, SK.
LIVE-IN CAREGIVER REQUIRED for physically handicapped 38 yr. old male with muscular dystrophy in parents home close to Edmonton, AB. Household duties, personal care. Private bedroom, satellite TV. Monthly salary plus free room and board. S e c u r i t y c l e a r a n c e a n d r e fe r e n c e s . PTO AUGER WATER PUMPS, 6000 gal. per 780-929-9316 or 780-493-1874, email: minute. Simple, tough, NO Prime. Handles dhenschell@hotmail.com mud, ice, plants, other debris. Call Jan 204-868-5334, Newdale, MB. BAU-MAN MODEL 2-412, 12”, PTO, used only once, $10,000 with extras. FLAT ROCK FARMS custom swathing is looking to hire for full-time seasonal and 306-768-3442 evenings, Carrot River, SK. permanent positions. Applicants will be expected to be healthy, pass a drug test, have a valid passport and the ability to cross into the US. Have a clean criminal check as well as a clean driver’s abstract. WATER problems? Canada’s Largest rural Farm knowledge and a CDL/1A an asset, water purification company. No more wa- but training is available. This is a travel ter softeners or bottles. The Water Clinic, and work opportunity w/housing, meals and medical insurance provided. Visit: 1-800-664-2561, www.thewaterclinic.com www.goswath.com for more details and to WAT E R T R E AT M E N T for the whole apply on-line, or fax resume 306-776-2517 house to commercial units, hot tubs and pools. Over 50 years experience. No salt, M C I N T Y R E R A N C H I N G C O . LT D. chemicals or chlorine. 99% pure, 100% sat- www.mcintyreranch.com, located thirty isfaction or your money back. Also offering miles south of Lethbridge, AB., seeks to fill WWQ ionizers and portable ultra-sonic a full-time position ASAP. An experienced flow meters. Contact Bob 403-620-4038, ranch hand who must be capable at: riding, roping, fencing, feeding, bedding, Prairies Water, High River, AB. calving and general animal husbandry. Must provide own horses. This cow/longNEVER...HAUL OR purchase those heavy yearling cattle operation is performance bags of water softening salt or expensive oriented in the areas of livestock, employbottle water again! The Water Clinic, ees and management. Emphasis is placed www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. on teamwork and communication. On location housing which can accommodate a WATER Problems? Eliminate total dis- small family, is provided. A benefit packsolved solids, E.Coli and Coliform bacteria, age is offered including a group RRSP and p l u s m a ny m o r e ! T h e Wat e r C l i n i c , a company pension program. If you bewww.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. lieve yourself to be qualified to contribute and are interested in working with a company that takes great pride in what it does, resumes can be faxed to: 403-329-9403, or mailed to: Box 700, Lethbridge, AB. T1J 3Z6. or email: R3@mcintyreranch.com
MITCHELL DRILLING
Saskatoon, SK Ph: 306-242-4944 ZZZ 0LWFKHOO'ULOOLQJ FD
LARGE YEARLING OPERATION looking for full-time working Foreman. Aggressive wages. Duties include: Herd health, rotational grazing, operation and maintenance of modern equipment, calving, and management of staff. Additional attributes: 1A, welding, seeding experience. Beautifully renovated family home on-site. Call Scott, 306-536-2157, Indian Head, SK.
STAUBER DRILLING INC. Water well drilling and servicing, Geotechnical, Environmental, Geothermal. Professional service since 1959. Call the experts at 1-800-919-9211 info@stauberdrilling.com
EXPERIENCED Equipment row crop operator required on edible bean farm. Seasonal part-time starting May 15 to Oct. 15. Mechanical knowledge and Class 1A a must. Call: 306-353-4415, Riverhurst, SK. Email: terryandjoe@sasktel.net
KORNUM WELL DRILLING, farm, cottage and acreage wells, test holes, well rehabilitation, witching. PVC/SS construction, expert workmanship and fair pricing. 50% government grant now available. Indian Head, SK., 306-541-7210 or 306-695-2061
TWO FULL-TIME PERMANENT Foreman positions on a large modern grain farm. JD equip. $3600/mos. and housing included. Seeking long term family oriented people. Troy Adams Farms Ltd., 306-421-2711, Estevan, SK., adamsfarms@sasktel.net GRAIN FARM SEEKING full-time help for: Operation and maintenance of farm equipment and vehicles; Assist in seeding, spraying, harvesting, building and yard maintenance as required. Must have valid driver’s license and ability to work extended hours during busy times. Class 1A a benefit. Competitive wages based on experience. Housing may be available. Starting immediately. Competitve wages. Apply with resume including references to lbouvier@xplornet.com or 306-648-7553.
SEMI-RETIRED PERSON(S) REQUIRED to work on small farm, SE of Calgary, AB. 65 TON JOHNSON crane block, $2500 as Experience with cattle, horses and machinery necessary. Accommodations supplied. is. Call 204-243-2453, High Bluff, MB. 403-236-7703, Rockyview, AB. WANTED: FARM LABOURERS able to run farm equipment on cattle/grain farm. 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 306-469-7741, Big River, SK.
L arge ran ch at Han n a, AB lookin g for
CALV IN G HELP
M u s tbe w illin g to op era te eq u ip m en tforfeed in g a n d bed d in g . Pos ition ca n be s ea s on a l orfu ll-tim e. W illin g to tra in rig ht ca n d id a te. F ax resu m e to 403- 854- 3885 w ith 3 w ork related referen ces. Call L ee 403- 888- 6713.
FA R M H E L P E R WA N T E D on mixed grain/ cattle operation near Birsay, SK. Duties include: feeding, haying, harvesting helping w/cattle and calving. General farm operation and machinery maintenance. Must have valid drivers license. Wages negotiable. Fax resume to 306-573-2014, or call Brian at 306-858-7907. GENERAL FARM WORKER, April 15th, 2014-December 31, 2014. Vision Farms Corp, Weyburn, SK. Seasonal: Plant; Cultivate; Harvest crops; Service machinery and make in-field repairs. Valid driver’s license, clean driving record, 3 months exp. required. Non-smoker, $18/hr, 40hrs/wk. Contact Lana Schneider, 306-842-3525.
KLATT HARVESTING has positions open for combine, truck and cart operators for the 2014 Harvest run. Call 406-788-8160 or website: klattfarms.synthasite.com. Fax resumes to 403-867-2751, Foremost, AB. or email: klattfarms@hotmail.com LOOKING FOR FARM help? Looking for farm work? Agemploy.com can help with both. We are the top Ag Employ site for farm employment. Serving Western Canada, MB, SK, AB, BC. Phone 403-732-4295 or e-mail: agemploy@gmail.com GRESCHUK FARMS, 50 kms east of Saskatoon, SK. on Yellowhead Hwy. is seeking experienced Farm Equipment Operator. Must have farm exp. with large modern equipment, be mechanically inclined, selfmotivated and willing to work longer hours when required. Must have a valid driver’s license with clean abstract, 1A an asset, be able to work independently or in a team environment. Housing available. Starting immediately. Competitive wages depending upon level of experience. Contact: greschukfarms@gmail.com or fax 306-257-3271.
WANTED: HELP FOR cattle and grain operation starting May 1st, 2014. Monthly or hourly wage. Seeking self-motivated person, potential for year round work. 306-795-2710, Goodeve, SK. PERMANENT OR SEASONAL Ranch Hand position on SW Alberta Foothills Ranching Operation. Must have experience w/cattle, horses and some machinery. Housing supplied. Top wages. Burke Creek Ranch Ltd., Claresholm, AB., Ph. 403-625-2234, fax FULL-TIME SEASONAL FARM Labourer 403-625-3583, rick.burton@xplornet.ca needed for grain farm in Elbow/Davidson, area. Must have valid Class 1A license, FULL-TIME GENERAL FARM worker needed SK. farm experience, mechanically inon large irrigated farm near Brooks, AB. previous clined. Housing avail. Wages negotiable. Duties include operation and maintenance Phone/fax resume to 306-854-4700 or of modern equipment, cattle feeding and email: melkim@live.ca care, pollination. Mechanical abilities are an asset. Clean Class 5 license required, KIDD FARMS, MACKLIN, SK. is looking for Class 1 preferred. We can train someone a general farm worker. Duties include: opwith a good work ethic and a willingness erating and maintaining large farm mato learn. Brand new home in Scandia, AB. chinery and livestock equipment, feed and provided. Please fax or email resume to: care of livestock (cattle). Wage $3000 to 403-362-7885 brian.slenders@gmail.com $3500/month depending on experience. 40 hrs./week, may vary during seeding LONG TERM, FULL-TIME hired hand re- and harvest. No formal education required, quired on mixed cow/calf and grain family farm background an asset, drivers license. farm. Salary negotiable, accommodations Apply: Box 213, Macklin, SK., S0L 2C0 fax and utilities provided. Mayerthorpe, AB. 306-753-3325 or kiddfarms@hotmail.com 780-786-2903 or reing@telusplanet.net 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: FEED LO T lowe.tyson@gmail.com Must have some training or experience, Nanton, AB. P ERS O N N EL
REQ UIRED
Rid ers , Pro ces s o rs , Equ ipm en t Crew , Feed Crew Opera tio n n ea r Acm e, AB. W illin g to tra in a lthou g h a Ba ck g rou n d in BeefCa ttle is con s id ered a n a s s et. Com p etitive W a g es & Ben efits . A d va n cem en t op p ortu n ities . S u b m itresu m e w ith w ork referen ces to resu m es@ highw ay21grou p .com F ax 403 546- 3709
FULL-TIME EMPLOYMENT on grain and cow/calf operation in South central SK. Housing avail. 306-436-7703 Milestone SK FARM/ RANCH, NW of Cochrane, AB. seeking full-time help. Applicants must have farm and ranch experience, valid driver’s license. Must be able to work independently as well as in a team setting. If interested please call 403-762-5454. LARGE SE SASK. grain farm hiring all positions, $18-$35/hour. Housing available. duaneforrester@sasktel.net Torquay, SK. or call 306-634-4758, 306-421-1110. PART-TIME HELP FOR seeding through harvest, $20-$25/hour. Experience preferred. RV accommodations available. Call 306-969-4701 evenings, Minton, SK.
FULL-TIME RANCH HELP wanted. Experience with livestock and machinery required. Non-smoker with clean drivers abstract, Class 1 license preferred. Housing supplied. Fax resume with references to: FULL-TIME HELP WANTED for farming and 403-548-2287. Ph: 403-548-6684, Redcliff, cattle operation. Must be mechanically in- AB. walkersu7texaslonghorns@gmail.com clined and good with cattle. Housing provided, salary negotiable. Alexis Creek area, BC. 250-392-2911, ask for Roberta. E-mail resumes: roberta.payne@caribooca.com FARM WORKER WANTED! Full-time, must PERMANENT POSITION on large mixed live in or around Shaunavon/Gull Lake. farm. Starting wage $16/hr. Individual Seed drill, grain truck, tractor and combine should have good work ethic, positive atti- experience is a must; A1 license is benefitude, mechanical skills and be able to work cial. Competitive wages and bonuses are well with others. Duties include: working based on experience. Start date is ASAP. cattle, operating and maintaining farm Josée Kiss: 306-618-9555, Shaunavon, SK. equipment, minimum 3 yrs. experience. Furnished housing w/utilities available for FULL-TIME FARM HELP/LABOURER $500/month, non smoker preferred. Kin- for large grain/seed farm 5 miles NW of caid, SK. Fax: 306-264-3752, or phone: Regina, SK. Farm experience required and must be mechanically inclined. Duties: 306-264-7742. Maintenance of seed cleaning plant, equipREQUIRED FARM HAND to work on poultry ment and machinery, field and yard work, operation. Knowledge of general farm du- general farm duties. Class 1A an asset. ties is an asset. On the job training. Farm Wages start at $15-$22/hr., depending on located in Hepburn, SK. Fax resumes to: experience. Benefits and housing available. 306-947-4770 or call Dan 306-947-2097. Fax resume to RoLo Farms: 306-543-4861 SANDS DRAG HOSE is looking for workers or phone 306-543-5052 to work in the rural Sask area to operate RANCH HAND WANTED for cow/calf opfarm tractors and pumping equipment. eration. Housing supplied. References and Meals and lodging supplied. Drivers li- driver’s abstract required. Consort, AB., cence a must. Fax, email, or mail resume 403-577-0011, u2dryad4@hotmail.com Attention: Mervin Fremont. RR5, Site 28, Box 32, Prince Albert, SK. S6V 5R3, Fax: WANTED VERY motivated and experienced 306-763-4747, Phone 306-763-1943, person to assist in seeding a Mongolian farm operation. Must be familiar with Email: sandslms@sasktel.net new Bourgault seeders and comfortable teaching use of that equipment. GPS knowledge necessary. All travel expenses paid. April 25 to May 25. An exIM M EDIATE POSITIONS FOR perience of a lifetime! Phone Samuel at GRAIN FARM Miner Creek Farms Ltd., 306-873-9868.
EM PLOYEES
Op e ra tion n e a r Acm e , AB.
CLAS S 1 D RIV ERS & EQ UIP M EN T O P ERATO RS
* S EEDIN G, S PRAYIN G, GRAIN /BAL E HAUL , HARV ES T/FAL L OPERATION S * Fu ll tim e orS ea s on a l, Excellen tW a g es a n d Ben efits . A d va n cem en top p ortu n ities . S u b m itresu m e w ith referen ces to Resu m es@ highw ay21grou p .com orF ax 403 546- 3709
SEASONAL FARM LABORER required. Must have some farm experience mechanical/ welding ability or Class 1A license an asset. Preference given to applicants experienced in both. May 1 to October 31. $15-$25/hr. 101008187 SK Ltd., Corey Fehr, 306-338-7561 or fax: 306-338-3733, Wadena, SK. cfehr9860@hotmail.com TWO FULL-TIME PERMANENT Foreman positions on 10,000 acre grain farm in Lampman, SK. Must be willing to work long hours during seeding, spraying and harvesting seasons. Successful applicant should have: Driver’s license; Farm mana g e m e n t e d u c at i o n i n c l u d i n g b a s i c Agronomy and Farm Apprenticeship training; Experience operating modern JD equipment with 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., S0C 1N0.
LARGE MIXED FARM in Provost, AB. requires a full-time employee. Large equipment and cattle experience an asset. $18 to $24/hr. Scheduled days off, housing avail. Phone or fax resume: 780-753-6597, email: danlynn@telus.net FULL-TIME FARM LABOURER HELP. Applicants should have previous farm experience and mechanical ability. Duties incl. operation of machinery, including tractors, truck driving and other farm equipment, as well as general farm laborer duties. $12-$18/hr. depending on experience. Contact Wade Feland at 701-263-1300, Antler, North Dakota. HELP WANTED ON mid sized grain farm, 1 hour NE of Calgary. Applicants should have previous experience operating and maintaining all farm equipment. Class 1 and knowledge of GPS and AutoSteer are an asset. This is a full-time spring thru fall, part-time winter job although housing year round is available. Competitive wages depending on experience. Email resume with references: chosenacresfarms@gmail.com or fax 403-546-2555. Call 403-333-8182 for more info, Acme, AB. 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.
FULL-TIME SEASONAL RANCH position avail. NE of Regina, SK. Looking after grass yearlings, fencing and horses. Housing avail. Bring your own horse and dog. May be able to run a few of your own cattle in right situation. 306-531-8720, Lipton, SK.
FULL-TIME MECHANIC WANTED on large cow/calf operation 45 min. SW of Williams Lake, BC. This position requires maintenance and repairs on forage and other ag. equipment and trucks. The candidate should be familiar with all systems related to diesel and gas engines and troubleshoot equipment for proper repairs and maintenance. The position also requires some welding and keeping a parts inventory organized. Must be able to work as part of a team. Housing available. Five day work week, above average compensation w/full benefits pkg. Please email resumes t o p b r a i g @ d o u g l a s l a ke . c o m o r f a x 250-350-3336. No phone calls please. EXP. FARM EQUIPMENT Operator and Farm Hand for grain farm, $28/hr. while operating seeding equip. and $21/hr. for farm work. Beautiful 3 bdm home included. Class 1 licence will aide in securing permanent employment. Only experienced operators! email: nofear@cciwireless.ca, call: 403-820-0323 or Fax: 403-787-2496. HICKORY CORNER FARM is a growing 4th generation mixed family farm looking for a full-time Assistant Ranch Manager at Dunkirk, SK. This position requires a hard working individual who will be involved in co-management of all ranching practices from calving and feeding to pasture management, riding and operating, feeding and haying equipment. Class 1A would be an asset but not required. For job description contact Tyler at 306-630-9185 or email hickorycornerfarms@sasktel.net LOOKING FOR HELP on 4000 acre grain farm. Must have Class 1A license and be able to work independently. Other assets include: Mechanical ability, experience operating/servicing modern equipment and spraying. Top wages for top individual. Fort Qu’Appelle, SK. 306-596-5744.
MAINTENANCE/MECHANICAL PERSON required for large Alberta farm fulltime maintenance and equipment operator, must be a mechanic or have welding and mechanical experience. Should be able to qualify for Class 1 or Class 3 license. Duties include: Maintenance of farm machinery and trucks; General farm and barn equipment maintenance; Operating equipment in seeding, spraying and harvest seasons (extra hrs. at these times). Competitive wages and benefits. Perkins Farms, Wainwright, AB. Email resume to: perkinsfarms@xplornet.com or fax to: 780-842-5750. Call 780-842-3642 or 780-842-9690.
FARM MANAGER REQUIRED for family owned 2000 acre organic grain farm. Must be enthusiastic and willing to live on-site (lodging included). Require 5-10 yrs. exp., and skilled in operating farm machinery. Organic experience an asset. Email resume to: mzizek@gmail.com Hudsons Hope, BC. COM BINE OPERATORS – AUSTRALIA – W e ha ve po s itio n s a va ila b le in o u r 2014/2015 ha rves t crew . Op era tin g 4- S S eries Jo hn Deere co m b in es , 40’ hea d ers , Au to S teer a n d yield m a p p in g, a n d 2- 25 to n gra in ca rts . T ra velin g ea s tern s ta tes o fAu s tra lia s ta rtin g ea rly Octo b er. M u s tha ve exp erien ce. K n o w led ge o fGPS a n a s s et. Ba rcla y Ag S ervices Pty L td , c onta c tM ic k c ell:+ 6 1-428 -532-26 6 E m a il: m rb a rcla y@ b igpo n d .co m W eb s ite: w w w .b a rcla ya gs ervices .co m .a u AJL FARMS is seeking full-time permanent feedlot worker for general feedlot maintenance and checking cattle. Basic computer skills required. Fax 780-723-6245, or email resume to: cristo@ajlfarms.com
HELPER WANTED ON mixed farm. Steady job for right person. Room and board avail. 403-631-2373, 403-994-0581, Olds, AB. TWO PERMANENT FULL-TIME rancher/farmer wanted for beef and hay ranch, Merritt, BC. 1) Calving, range riding, hay and silage crops, machinery. 2) Management of irrigation system and 2 seasonal employees, machinery, hay and silage crops. Great career opportunity for young motivated person interested in farming and ranching. Accommodation and benefits offered. Fax resume to 250-378-4956, or e-mail: info@ranchland.ca
MUNICIPAL HAIL is currently looking for retired or semi-retired individuals to become Crop Hail Adjusters. This seasonal job (July-September inclusive) has all expenses paid, competitive salary, mileage allowance and a pension plan. Log on to municipalhail.ca and click on Careers. FULL-TIME FARM HELP/ MECHANIC Join our team! dtiefenbach@smhi.ca or wanted for trucking business and grain 306-569-1852 ext #170. farm. Wages based on experience. Must have ability to operate and maintain large 8 CONSTRUCTION LABOURERS needed. equipment and work independently. Class Full-time, seasonal, starting April 15th, 1A license preferred. Housing available. $17 - $22 per hour depending on experiFax/email resume with 3 references to: ence. Work across Alberta and British Co306-256-7054, flotnm@baudoux.ca or call lumbia. Some experience as a labourer in the construction industry is an asset. Must 306-256-7170, Cudworth, SK. physically fit and willing to travel and LARGE MIXED FARM near Chauvin, AB. be out of town while working. Drug and w/newer equipment, looking for full-time live Alcohol testing is a requirement. Apply farm workers. Must have proof of valid with resume to: Dynamic Asphalt Services, driver’s license. Housing is available. Email Suite 369, B102, 5212 48th St. Red Deer, resume: schopferfarms@gmail.com or call AB. T4N 7C3 or fax: 1-888-317-2680 or 780-842-8330 for more info. email: asphaltserviceshr@gmail.com GENERAL FARM WORKER for a mixed farm operation in the Calgary, AB area. Seeding, haying and harvesting experience necessary, Class 3A license a definite asset. Wages depend on experience. Please email resume to: harmeson@platinum.ca or fax: 403-279-6957 or ph 403-680-4318. RANCH HELP WANTED with cattle and ma- WORK AND LIVE on a farm in Europe, Britchinery experience. Calving, feeding, fenc- ain, Australia or New Zealand! Dairy, crop, ing, and haying. 403-308-4200, Mossleigh, beef, sheep placements available. AgriVenture invites young adult (18-30) applicants AB. or email gordmarsh@gmail.com for 4-12 month agricultural programs. MODERN 4800 ACRE grain and beef farm, 1-888-598-4415, www.agriventure.com must be willing to work long hours during the calving, seeding, spring and harvesting seasons. Applicants should have post-secondary in ag mechanics or related field, Class 1A license or willing to take training to get same; experience with large, broad Is a pro gre s s ive , e xpa n d in g acres, mostly Case/IH equipment. Exp. in a gric u ltu ra l s a lva ge pa rts working with and supervising other workers, additional skills include job task planc o m pa n y s pe c ia lizin g in la te ning and organizing. Lead hand execution, problem solving and decision making. 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 . Functional, oral and written communication skills. Major duties include: develop W e a re looking for and implement repair, maintenance, and replacement schedules for farm equipment in consultation with owners; develop work schedules; establish procedures for grain, oilseed, forage crops and cow/calf operation; help train workers; co-ordinate and supervise work of general farm work(4 va ca n cies ) ers; supervise harvest operations and livestock breeding programs; perform general Per m a n en t , fu ll tim e p o s itio n s -44 hrs farm duties. Type of equipment: swather, p er w eek. S a la ry $19.25 to $20.00/hr. combine, sprayer, air seeder, tractors 50 to 500 HP, trucks including semis and hay Va lid d rivers licen s e. tools. $15 to $18/hr depending on experiPr evio u s exp erien ce a n a s s et. ence (wage to be revisited in 3 months). 306-672-3636, Gull Lake, SK. email reTo a pply fo r a po s itio n w ith u s , sumes to: bnrudolph@yourlink.ca plea s e e-m a il res u m e to : FULL-TIME FARM HELP wanted for m a rc@ gcpa rts .co m o r s en d general labor on large, mixed farm. Housfa x to 78 0-754-2333 ing available. For more information call Atten tio n : Alvin W a n n echk o 780-745-2540, Paradise Valley, AB.
GRATTON COUL EE AGRIPARTS L TD.
M E CH ANICAL AS S E M BL E R S
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014
HUNTING GUIDES WANTED for Stone Mountain Safaris, located at lot 2031, PO Box #7870, Toad River, BC. V0C 2X0, in the northern Rocky mountains. Experienced hunting guides needed for the 2014 season. Work from mid-July to November 1, 2014. Duties include: finding, stalking and hunting big game; living outdoors, wilderness experience, general back country work, team work, relating with international clientele, good communication skills, horse packing and riding skills, first aid training, and skinning and caping skills. Wage is between $175/day and $200/day, minimum 2 yrs. experience is required, plus knowledge and application of the BC Wildlife Act Hunter CORE program or equivalent. Guides require a BC Assistant Guide’s License. We welcome applications from everyone irrespective of gender and ethnic group but, as members of ethnic minority groups such as aboriginals, youth and new immigrants are currently underrepresented at this level of post, we would encourage applications from members of these groups. Selection will be based on merit alone. To reply to this ad please contact Leif Olsen at: 250-232-5469. 3 TRUSS ASSEMBLY Supervisors needed. Full-time, year-round work, $17-$20/hr. depending on experience. Employment benefits after 3 months. Some experience as a truss assembly worker with training to become a Supervisor. Apply by email to: charles@penntruss.com or fax to: 1-888-432-1891 or by mail/in person to: Penn Truss Manufacturing Inc., Box 418, Saltcoats, SK. S0A 3R0.
PARTS PERSO N REQ UIRED W ellEsta blished M u ltilin e Agricu ltu ra lDea lership in Ea st Cen tra lAlberta IsLo o kin g Fo rAn Ho n est,Aggressive & Am bitio u s
PARTS PERSO N .
Agricu ltu ra lBa ckgro u n d a n d Co m pu terExperien ce W o u ld Be An Asset. Fu ll-Tim e Po sitio n , $15 to $20 per ho u r.Ben efits,(a fter6 m o n th perio d ).
Plea se Fo rw a rd Resu m es to M a rc a t G ra tto n Co u lee Agri Pa rts Ltd ., B o x 4 1,Irm a ,AB T0B 2H 0 o r S en d Fa x to 780-75 4 -2333.
CLASSIFIED ADS 81
HIRING FULL-TIME POWER Washer. Must have clear Class 5A driver’s abstract. Williams Mobile Power Wash 306-242-4579, email resume to: wmpw@shaw.ca fax OPERATOR WANTED for 2014 spray season 10 mos. plus employment opportunity. 306-934-2843, Saskatoon, SK. 2014 equipment. Call Stephen at Longview MOWER/ UTILITY OPERATOR RM OF Applicators, 306-867-3696, Outlook, SK. PITTVILLE #169. The Municipality invites BUSY ROOFING COMPANY requires laapplications from qualified individuals for bourers for work in Edmonton, AB. and the position of full time seasonal mower/ area. Free room and board. Hutterites utility operator. Grader Operator experi- welcome. Call Ron 780-220-5437, Jordan ence would be an asset. Must be able to 780-934-2932. take direction from RM council and work well with others. Must be safety conscious, mechanically inclined, able to work unsupervised and possess a Power Mobile Equipment Certificate or be willing to obtain the same. Must possess and maintain a minimum class 5 driver’s license. AppliFEED YARD cations close at 4:000 PM May 6, 2014. We thank all applicants for their interest, howM AN AG ER ever only those selected for an interview will be contacted. E-mail, mail or fax reProg res s ive, fa m ily sumes with qualifications, references and orien ta ted feed lotreq u ires a salary expectations to: RM of Pittville Ya rd M a n a ger. #169, Box 150, Hazlet, SK S0N 1E0. Fax 306-678-2132, e-mail: rm169@sasktel.net This p os ition is res p on s ible fora ll a s p ects ofa m od ern GOOSE HAVEN OUTFITTERS, Meadow feed ya rd op era tion Lake, SK., is hiring Waterfowl Guides for in clu d in g bu tn otres tricted Sept./Oct. Experience required. Must be to the p la n n in g / overs eein g proficient in calling ducks and geese. ofd a y to d a y a ctivities , Food/lodging included. $18/hr. plus tips. org a n izin g & execu tin g Contact goosehavencanada@yahoo.com s p ecia l p rojects , tra in in g PO Box 182, Meadow Lake, SK. S9X 1Y2. 306-236-3527 or 207-725-2938. a n d m a n a g in g tea m s ofp eop le. LABOURER WANTED, $12-$16/hr. Exp. in M u s tha ve excellen t forklift and powerjack handling. Sun Councom m u n ica tion s k ills , try Farms, 306-283-9225, Langham, SK. p roblem s olvin g a bilities , a ble to w ork w ell w ith BOLEN LEWIS TROPHY Guiding Co. is others & lea d w ith looking for an experienced Hunting Guide p os itive m otiva tion . for fall of 2014, starting mid August. We are looking for an experienced individual Kn ow led g e ofbeefca ttle & to guide backpack mountain goat hunts in n u trition a n a s s et. the Coast Mountains SE of Terrace BC. ApCom p rehen s ive ben efit plicants will be responsible for hunter safety, navigation, trophy judging, trophy p a ck a g e. and meat care as well as food preparation. P lease su b m itresu m e A valid Driver’s license and PAL are rew ith w ork referen ces an d quired. Wages are very competitive and will range from $225-$300 per day ded river’s ab stractto pending on experience. We welcome all resu m es@ highw ay21grou p .com applications irrespective of gender, age or orfax 403- 546- 3709 ethnic group. Selections will be based on merit alone. Contact Spike, 250-833-2278, Box 863, Terrace, BC., V8G 4R1. HELP WANTED: CALGARY Stockyards. Fulltime salary position with accommodations Must have cattle and agriculture experience. Call Bryan Danard 403-934-1644.
G EN ERAL M AN AG ER
R eporting to the B oard ofD irectors, the G eneralM anager w illbe responsible for providing direction and leadership to the staffat Farm er D irect C o-op Ltd. in R egina, SK.The G eneralM anager w illhave H R responsibilities and be instrum entalin coaching & m entoring staffin the im plem entation ofFD C strategic plan.W illneed to be a strong leader w ith excellent com m unication skills.A strong understanding of co-operative principles and agriculture is essential. D uties and responsibilities include, but are not lim ited to: • M anaging the overallbusiness ofthe C o-op. • Provide daily direction to the staffofthe C o-op. • O versee the purchasing, processing and transportation ofoilseed, grains and pulses. • M aintain generaloversight and insure accuracy ofrecords including A /R , A /P, Inventory, etc. • A nnualbudgeting & strategic planning. • D evelop and m anage grain contracting & sales projections. • Provide m anagem ent & coaching to staffand generalhum an resource m anagem ent. • C om m unicating w ith m em bers and prom oting the C o-op w ithin the industry Q ualifications: • Expert know ledge ofthe grain purchasing industry. • M inim um 5 years’experience in m anaging an agriculturalbased business • U nderstanding ofO rganic agriculture. • A degree or diplom a in A griculture or B usiness is an asset. • Experience w orking w ith a board ofdirectors. Please subm it a cover letter and résum é by M ay 1st, 2014. O nly candidates of interest w illbe contacted.
Farm er D irect C o-op P.O .B ox 99 Eastend, Saskatchew an S0N 0T0 Fax 1-306-542-3365 farm erdirectboard@ gm ail.com
W ANTED IM M EDIATELY
Lloydminster, AB Requires Service Rig Derrick Hands @ $30-$34/hr – 40 hrs/wk and Service Rig Floor Hands @ $24-$28/hr – 40 hrs/wk, for work in the Lloydminster area.
Please fax resume to 780-871-6908 or email: meredith_royalwell@telus.net
D ATA EN TRY/ ACCO UN TIN G P O S ITIO N M id -s ized vertica lly in teg ra ted A g ricu ltu ra l Com p a n y in S ou th Cen tra l A lberta req u ires a
Da ta en try/a cco u n tin g clerk . A p p lica n tm u s tha ve g ood com m u n ica tion a n d org a n iza tion a l s k ills . You m u s tbe p roficien tw ith a ll M icros oftO ffice a p p lica tion a n d be d eta il orien ta ted . Fu ll ben efits , op p ortu n ity fora d va n cem en t& in cen tive bon u s es . Q u a lified a p p lica n ts a re in vited to a p p ly w ith referen ces & certifica tes . W e tha n k a ll a p p lica n ts for theirin teres thow everon ly thos e s elected w ill be con ta cted . resu m es@ highw ay21grou p .com orF ax 403 546- 3709
Provost/Wainwright area
CREW TRUCK LABORERS RECLAMATION LABORERS Must have valid driver’s license and oilfield tickets. GRAVEL CRUSHER PERSONNEL GRAVEL TRUCK DRIVERS Must have a valid Class One license. EXPERIENCED LOADER OPERATOR Fax resumes to 780-753-8104 or email baritoilfield@xplornet.com No phone calls please. Only successful applicants will be contacted.
10 INDUSTRIAL MAINTENANCE painters needed for full-time year-round work in Blackfalds and various locations in Alberta. $17-$21/hr. plus disability, dental and extended medical insurance benefits after 3 mos. probation. Minimum 3 years experience with spray painting and sandblasting. Duties include: painting, coating, sandblasting, sanding and hydro-blasting. Apply at: Hall Industrial Contracting, Burbank Industrial Park, Site 9, Box 147, Blackfalds, AB. T0M 0J0. Fax: 403-885-8886, wayne@hallindustrialcontracting.com
HEAVY DUTY MECHANIC/Shop Foreman, experienced in hyds., 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- 8th Street, Nisku, AB. T9E 7Z1
LONG HAUL SEMI DRIVERS and Owner Operators required to haul RVs and general freight. Owner Operators paid 85% of invoiced amount with open invoice policy. Signing bonus currently being offered to Owner Operators. Drivers paid .40¢/running mile and pick/drop/border. Benefits, Co. fuel cards, subsidized insurance. Must have ability to cross border. Saskatoon, SK 1-800-867-6233. www.roadexservices.com CLASS 1A TRUCK DRIVERS wanted for hauling crude oil in Southern SK. Must have fluid hauling experience working 5 days on/ 5 days off schedule (flexible), competitive wages, full-time position. Fax resume, driver’s abstract and current safety tickets to: 306-245-3337, Weyburn, SK. FAVEL TRANSPORT is recruiting Drivers for our livestock fleet. Our drivers have the opportunity to make up to 58¢ per mile. Drivers must be able to go to the USA. For inquiries call 1-877-533-2835 ext. 3.
WANTED: DRIVERS/OWNER Operators LIPSETT CARTAGE LTD. is now looking for grain and fertilizer hauling, based in to hire owner operators. This well estab- Kenaston, SK. Phone Leon at TLC Trucking lished Canadian flatdeck company strives 306-252-2004 or 306-567-8377. to make owner operators successful in this competitive business. Owner Operators will be pulling well maintained company equipment. Pay is buy percentage with a quarterly bonus program. We are a family oriented company that knows the importance of home time, by staying Canada only we can make this happen. $1000 signing bonus after 3 mos. employment. Phone 306-525-5227 or 1-888-547-7388, Regina, SK. to arrange an interview today. FAVEL TRANSPORT is looking for Owner Operators to haul livestock. Available lanes are MB and SK to Northern USA. MB and SK to Ontario with freight convert trailer. Owner Operator package is $2.70/loaded mile and $1.45/empty mile. For inquiries call 1-877-533-2835 ext. 3. CLASS 1 DRIVER WANTED: Offering both local and long distance work, driver should be able to cross US border and have loader exp. No Sunday work. Contact Harvey at: 403-795-1872, Nobleford, AB. Fax or email resume and abstract to: 403824-3040, logistics@vandenberghay.ca
P ra irie Coa s t Eq u ip m e n t 15102 – 101 S t. G ra n d e P ra irie , AB.
S ERV ICE TECHN ICIAN S Are yo u lo o kin g to jo in a d yn a m ic co m p a n y w here yo u a re va lu ed a n d a p p recia ted ? Pra irieCo a s t Equ ipm en t is the pla ce fo r yo u !! W e a re s eekin g exp erien ced a n d kn o w led gea b le licen s ed a g techn icia n s to p erfo rm b a s ic d ia gn o s tics , s ervice rep a irs a n d m a in ten a n ce o n a gricu ltu ra l a n d tu rf eq u ip m en t. Ag T icket o r Hea vy Du ty T icket w ith a g exp erien ce req u ired w ith 1+ yea rs o fexp erien ce p erfo rm in g s ervice rep a irs . W e o ffer: T ea m en viro n m en t In cen tive Pro gra m s E m p lo yee Dis co u n ts Co m p etitive Co m p en s a tio n E xten s ive Ben efitPa cka ge M o re F a m ily T im e W e in vite yo u to co m e a n d exp erien ce the PCE lifes tyle w here o u r em p lo yees a re o u r grea tes ta s s et! Qu o te referen ce n o . S T PCPF P33114 | S en d yo u r res u m e b y: 1. E-m a il: fjo hn s to n e@ pcequ ip.ca | 2. Fa x: 6 04-557-709 4 | 3. Ha n d d eliver
TIRED OF WINTER? Come to BC! We are looking for trained AG Mechanics at each of our locations: Kamloops, BC – the Tournament Capital Armstrong, BC – Gem of the North Okanagan
**WANTED….HD AG MECHANICS** Tractor & Equip Ltd Kamloops, BC 1-888-851-3101 Email: gordg@nobletractor.com
Armstrong, BC 1-800-661-3141 Email: gordnoble@telus.net
Western Sales, a John Deere dealership with locations in Biggar, Central Butte, Davidson, Elrose, Outlook and Rosetown is looking for a Sales Representative to work closely with the Salesperson at their Biggar location. The successful candidate will report to the VP of Sales. The Sales Representative’s primary responsibilities will be selling new and used Agriculture farm equipment within their given territory. You will work one on one with customers to build productive, long term business relationships, identify opportunities to help them succeed and manage the account to the benefit of the customer. As you will be supporting the existing sales team you will be assisting in attending client visits, closing deals as well as answering any technical queries. You will be involved in Sales, marketing and community relations activities such as grower meetings, supplier meetings, community events, field tours and other promotional activities. Desired Requirements: - Knowledge in an Agriculture service business environment. - Excellent interpersonal, communication and leadership skills - Selling skills - Strong problem solving, decision making and organizational skills. Compensation: - Based on commission and base pay - Excellent benefits and matched pension Forward resumes to careers@westernsales.ca or fax to 1-306-882-3389. Only qualified applicants will be contacted.
TWO TILESETTERS NEEDED full-time. Year round work in Saskatoon and various locations in Saskatchewan, $19-22/hr., depending on experience. Mininum 3 yrs exp. setting stone, marble and other tiles in commercial and residential projects. Must be able to provide clean, drug and alcohol test and police certificate. Apply with resume to Martin Floors, 1421 Avenue G North, Saskatoon, SK. S7L 2A8 or email: martinvajda73@gmail.com
W e a re hiring exp erienced
HEAV Y D UTY M ECHAN ICS in FortM cM urra y, Alb erta
D ivis io n a l Ove rvie w : Ba s e d a t BFI’s M ild re d La ke M a in te n a n c e Fa c ility n o rth o f Fo rt M c M u rra y, the fo llo w in g c o m pe n s a tio n /w o rkin g c o n d itio n s w ill a pply: • As p er IUOE L o ca l 955 Co llective Ba rga in in g Agreem en t; $43.72 p er ho u r regu la r ra te a n d $64.43 p er ho u r o vertim e. • S hifts ched u le is 10 d a ys o n a n d 10 d a ys o ffa t12 ho u rs p er d a y. OT is p a id a fter 8 ho u rs w o rked . • Bo o ta n d T o o l a llo w a n ce o f$1.07 p er ho u r. • Ca m p p ro vid ed w ith tra n s p o rta tio n p ro vid ed to a n d fro m ca m p to s ite. Jo b Type : F u ll T im e Regu la r Lo ca tio n : M ild red L a ke, S yn cru d e, F o rtM cM u rra y D e s criptio n : BF I’s fleetco n s is ts o fb o th M in in g a n d Co n s tru ctio n E q u ip m en ta lo n g w ith a va s t light tru ck fleet. Hea vy eq u ip m en t in clu d es : D6 to D11 d o zers , 740 to 793 ro ck/ha u l tru cks , Jo hn Deere/Hita chi exca va to rs 330 to 2500’s , 16M to 24M gra d ers a lo n g w ith va rio u s o ther s u p p o rteq u ip m en t. Ed uca tio n / Expe rie n ce : • In terp ro vin cia l Red S ea l Hea vy E q u ip m en t T echn icia n w ith a t lea s t 5 yea rs exp erien ce • 4th yea r a p p ren tices m a y b e co n s id ered • 3-5 yea rs exp erien ce req u ired • M u s t ha ve Co n s tru ctio n S a fety T ra in in g S ys tem (CS T S ) a n d Oil S a n d s S a fety As s o cia tio n (OS S A) certifica tio n a s w ell a s a cu rren td river’s a b s tra ct.
Fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n o n e m plo ym e n to ppo rtun itie s vis itw w w .b fico n s tructo rs .co m o r s ub m ityo ur re s um e b y e m a il to : tn a ch tiga l@ b fico n s tructo rs .co m . Or b y Fa x to : 7 80-485 -27 04 Atte n tio n : Ta m a ra N a ch tiga l
Pea ce R egio n,A B B rett Yo u ng is a priva tely o w ned a nd tru sted seed distribu tio n, sa les a nd m a rketing co m pa ny w ith interna tio na l rea ch a nd stro ng lo ca l ro o ts since 1934. O u r go a l is to deliver va lu e to o u r cu sto m ers thro u gh w o rld cla ss service a nd differentia ted pro du cts.W e a re cu rrently seeking a dyna m ic a nd experienced individu a l to jo in o u r Seed P ro du ctio n Tea m to su ppo rt o u r co ntinu ed gro w th.
S eed Pro du ctio n S pecia lis t W e a re seeking a rela tio nship-o riented sa les pro fessio na l w ith a pa ssio n fo r a gro no m y.Yo u w ill w o rk w ith the P ro du ctio n Tea m to seek o u t a nd secu re seed pro du ctio n a cres fo r Fo ra ge a nd Tu rf seed to a chieve co m pa ny pro du ctio n ta rgets a nd then w o rk w ith these co ntra ct gro w ers o n pro du ctio n a gro no m ics to help ensu re yields a nd seed qu a lity a re m a xim ized. This po sitio n a lso inclu des a seed pu rcha sing fu nctio n in the P ea ce R egio n tha t w o rks clo sely w ith the P ro du ctio n Tea m to bu ild rela tio nships,pro cu re a cres a nd co o rdina te the schedu ling o f deliveries a s per pro du ctio n requ irem ents. Thu s,su ccess in this po sitio n w illbe a chieved thro u gh a ba la nce o f sa les a nd a gro no m y. Yo u w ill w o rk independently w ithin yo u r territo ry fro m the R ycro ft fa cility/ yo u r ho m e-ba sed o ffice,bu tw illa lso w o rk clo sely w ith H ea d O ffice a nd the rest o f the Seed P ro du ctio n Tea m to a chieve territo ry a nd co rpo ra te go a ls. Yo u w ill a lso w o rk w ith R egio na lA cco u nt M a na gers in o u r Seed a nd C ro p Inpu ts (R eta il) divisio n tha to pera te in yo u r territo ry to help identify po tentia l co ntra ctgro w ers. The su ccessfu l ca ndida te w ill have a pro ven a bility to pla n a nd m a na ge his/ her tim e effectively a nd have stro ng co m m u nica tio n skills bo th interna lly a nd externa lly to pro m o te,su ppo rt a nd gro w o u r Seed P ro du ctio n divisio n.B rett Yo u ng pro vides sa les a nd pro du ct tra ining,ho w ever,edu ca tio n,tra ining a nd experience in sa les a nd/o r a gro no m y is a definite a sset a nd a B a chelo r o f Science in A gricu ltu re is preferred. B rettYo u ng Seeds su ppo rts pro fessio na l gro w th a nd develo pm ent a nd o ffers a n a ttra ctive co m pensa tio n pa cka ge inclu ding sa la ry, co m pa ny vehicle a nd a n o u tsta nding a nd co m prehensive benefits pa cka ge.B rettYo u ng Seeds is a n E qu a lO ppo rtu nity em plo yer. Interested a pplica nts a re invited to a pply a nd su bm it a letter o f interesta nd a resu m e to :
H u m a n R es o u rces ,B rett Y o u ng S eeds B o x 99,S t.N o rbert Po s ta l S ta tio n,W innipeg,M B .R 3V 1L 5 Fa x: 204-478-8370 | E m a il: H u m a n.R es o u rces @ brettyo u ng.ca
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
Royal day The Royal Manitoba Winter Fair in Brandon was held for the 107th year March 31- April 5 in Brandon. | Sandy Black Photos RIGHT, CLOCKWISE: Grace Neufeld of Our Little Barnyard Petting Zoo tries to control a baby lamb so children can pet it at the CIBC Imperial Experience. Catrin Davies of Clanwilliam, Man., receives comments from cattle judge Curtis Reid of Hepburn, Sask., at the conclusion of the senior showmanship class of the Klondike Farm Youth Showmanship Cattle show. Ken Lodge of Baldur, Man., combs the thick heavy coat on one of the Belgian horses he drives in the ceremonies held each evening. Always entertaining, the pig scrambles at the fair bring laughter to the crowd.
at the winter fair
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
83
WORLD IN BRIEF MARKETS
Analysts see Russian grains continuing LAUSANNE, Switzerland (Reuters) — Some of the world’s biggest oil and grains traders see little risk of any disruption to supplies from Russia, despite the worst East-West crisis since the Cold War. The annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea region was unlikely to lead western powers to target Russian energy exports or to prompt retaliatory supply cuts from Moscow, trading house executives and co-owners told the FT Commodities Summit. “Some of us are old enough to remember the end of the Cold War days,” said Ian Taylor, head of the world’s largest independent oil trader, Vitol. “In the energy space, gas and oil have tended to continue to flow because it is in the interest of both sides that they continue to do so.” Oil prices have been supported by the crisis after the United States and the European Union imposed sanctions on some Russian government officials and businesspeople loyal to president Vladimir Putin. Swithun Still, director of Solaris Commodities, a Russia and Ukraine-focused grains trader, said he did not expect grains exports from the region to be hit even if the West decided to slap sanctions on energy exports. “The oil market brings in a week the same revenue (to Russia) that the grains market brings in a year, so if they are going to target anyone it’s going to be oil and gas and a couple of banks, it’s not going to be the grains sector,” he said. He said that although it was not business as usual in grain ports such as Sevastopol in Crimea, flows of grains continued. MARKETS
Russia targets Aussie beef MOSCOW, Russia (Reuters) — Russia is restricting imports of Aus-
tralian beef due to the presence of the stimulant Trenbolone, the state veterinary and phytosanitary service has said. Limits on chilled beef from Australia were imposed March 31, while frozen beef imports were to be restricted starting April 7, VPSS spokesperson Alexei Alekseenko said. “Basically this will mean restrictions on all (beef) imports (from Australia),” Alekseenko said, adding that Russia would accept supplies which were already on their way. Australia is the world’s third-largest beef exporter after the United States and Brazil. LAND VALUES
FILE PHOTO
Iowa farmland prices fall CHICAGO, Ill. (Reuters) — Farmland values in Iowa, the top U.S. corn and soybean state, fell 5.4 percent over the past six months, under pressure from lower grain prices, according to a benchmark survey of realtors. Still, the market remains underpinned by strong demand from wealthy farmers and non-farming investors, said the Iowa Realtors Land Institute survey, which is based on information from local farm real estate brokers, lenders and others with knowledge of land prices. “The report overall was encouraging because we knew the price of corn had fallen off 35 percent since this time last year,” said Kyle Hansen, past-president of the institute and broker with Hertz Real Estate in Iowa. The average selling price of farm-
land across Iowa in March was $8,286 an acre, compared with $8,758 six months before. Prices were down 4.6 percent from $8,690 a year earlier.
GLOBAL PRICES
WEATHER
Snow pack suggests drought will continue SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) — Snow atop California’s Sierra Nevada mountains, key indicators of available water, remained precariously low despite recent storms. The snow pack, which feeds streams and reservoirs throughout the state, has just a third of the amount of water it normally contains this time of year, said Mark Cowin, director of the state Department of Water Resources. “We’re already seeing farmland fallowed and cities scrambling for water supplies,” Corwin said. Recent rain has not brought enough water to alleviate three of the driest years on record, he said. FINANCE
Monsanto earnings up Reuters — Monsanto, the world’s largest seed company, reported higher-than-expected quarterly earnings as its corn and soybean businesses expanded globally. The company, which specializes in genetically modified crops, said the profit margin in corn, its top revenue producer, increased 2.5 points in the second quarter ended on Feb. 28. The corn business was on track to post record volume for the fiscal year, despite lower plantings expected in the United States this spring. Growing market opportunities in Eastern Europe and advancements in Latin America are helping the company’s corn business. And despite year-to-year fluctuations in output and demand, Monsanto said it sees demand for corn worldwide surging with population and income growth over the next several years.
FILE PHOTO
UN reports food price increase ROME, Italy (Reuters) — Global food prices rose to the highest level in almost a year in March, led by unfavourable weather affecting crops and geopolitical tensions in the Black Sea region, said the United Nations food agency. The Food and Agriculture Organization’s price index, which measures monthly price changes for a basket of cereals, oilseeds, dairy, meat and sugar, averaged 212.8 points in March, up 4.8 points or 2.3 percent from February. The reading was the highest since May 2013. FAO’s cereal price index saw the second month of significant increases, rising 5.2 percent to its highest value since August 2013 over unfavourable weather in the south-central United States and Brazil, and uncertainty over grain shipments from Ukraine. PRODUCTION
Brazil pests afflict soybean crop SAO PAULO, Brazil (Reuters) — Caterpillars and fungus, as well as drought, hurt Brazil’s current soybean crop and higher costs to control them will limit planting of new fields next season, the director of agricultural analysis firm Agroconsult has said. Brazil will likely produce 86.9 million tonnes of soybeans in the
season that is drawing to a close, still a record crop but well below the firm’s initial forecasts for more than 90 million tonnes, Agroconsult’s director Andre Pessoa said. Starting in September, area planted with soybeans will likely expand by 2.47 million acres, down from 6.18 million new acres of soybean area sowed this season, he said. Brazil is the world’s top soybean exporter and its crop size has approached that of the top-producing United States the last two years. But farmers have been battling a new type of caterpillar, helicoverpa armigera, that likely arrived from Asia, sending pesticide costs skyrocketing and challenging Brazil’s farmers. FERTILIZER
ZIMTU CAPITAL PHOTO
Potash subsidy cut MUMBAI, India (Reuters) — India has cut potash subsidies by nearly a fifth to $160 per tonne for the year in an effort to contain a ballooning fiscal deficit. A smaller subsidy would keep retail potash prices elevated despite a drop in overseas prices, dashing hopes for a recovery in demand in one of the world’s top importers of the fertilizer. Global miners have been banking on Indian imports to help counter a slump in prices. India relies on overseas supplies to meet its entire potash demand. It has accounted for about one-tenth of global shipments over the past five years, but its share has been slipping as local prices rise due to subsidy cuts and a weaker rupee.
NEW SPITFIRE CONTAINS FLORASULAM A component of PrePass and Frontline XC
Take aim and fire on enemy weeds such as, Dandelion*, Wild Buckwheat, Stinkweed, Cleavers and Volunteer Canola* that threaten your yield and quality. Spitfire – Your new flexible ally in the battle of broadleaves, in spring wheat (including durum), barley and oats. Use in pre-seed burndown, chem-fallow, post harvest or in crop with proven tank mix options for effective weed resistance management. * Read label for most effective battle plan.
Always read and follow label directions. Spitfire is a trademark of Cheminova Canada Inc. Frontline and PrePass are registered trademarks of The Dow Chemical Company.
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
PRODUCTION
BOUNCING BOOM LOFT GETS LEVELLED Uneven crop and open ground leave spray booms unwieldy. Norac Hybrid fixes that problem. | Page 87
PR ODUC TI O N E D I TO R: M IC HAEL RAINE | P h : 306- 665- 3592 F: 306-934-2401 | E-MAIL: M IC H AEL.RAIN E@PRODUC ER.C OM
RIGHT: The pneumatically actuated probe can pull up to 2,500 cores per hour. BELOW: After collecting the cores, the soil travels via auger to the bagging machine in the tractor cab. | AGROBOTICS PHOTOS
AGRONOMY | SOIL SAMPLES
Try this with a truck-mounted soil probe Automated soil probe can grid sample a section per day BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU
The Arkansas-built AutoProbe typically bags one section of soil samples in a normal working day. On a really good day, AutoProbe samples two sections. But these are not random samplings with a core here and a core there. The AutoProbe pulls up to 40 cores per sample for each 2.5 acre grid square, at a depth of six inches. It then mixes the soil and bags it. “Guys have no trouble knocking off 500 to 700 acres in a regular day, without any help from us,” said Jeff Burton, head of AgRobotics. “We’ve got guys doing 1,200 plus acres in one day. The AutoProbe machine is capable of pulling 2,500 cores per hour.” Until now, Burton has leased the AutoProbe to large agronomy service companies and supervised its use. However, this year he will start selling
Precise repetition is one of the main benefits of an automated mechanical soil sampler. The probe pulls a core from the exact same depth at the same angle. the machines to farmers and agronomy services firms, regardless of their size. The AutoProbe is a three-point mount tracked machine that pulls cores on the go. The stainless steel probe punches the earth once per revolution of the 17-foot long rubber track. This is the company’s bread and butter machine. Its secondary unit is the Rapid-
MPOWERing
farmers to transform agribusiness.
Probe, a lower-cost gator-mounted machine that stops for each core. It pulls two cores at each of three stops, totalling six cores for every 2.5 acre grid square. “We’ve found there’s really no need for us to babysit the machines or the operators. The machines are reliable and it takes us only a half a day to train a new operator,” Burton said.
MPOW MP O ER® He erbbicciddees:s:
“Right now, we’re concentrating on the AutoProbe. It simplifies our business if we just sell the units outright. “That allows us to focus on merging information from our machines into the whole fertility management revolution that’s taken place in the past six years. “We’re talking about a seamless flow from AutoProbe through to prescription maps and variable rate application that includes every factor, even variety selection. That’s where we’re headed with this whole thing.” Burton said pending manure management legislation in states with dense urban centres, such as California and on the East Coast, will increase the need for watershed and soil information in areas with intensive livestock operations. The demand is currently for cores at the six inch depth, but he thinks the demand will increase for 12 inch soil samples once manure management legislation is passed. This may increase market demand for the slower RapidProbe, which is capable of pulling plugs from a depth of 12 inches because it stops for each core. Sticky mud has been a problem for the AutoProbe since it first went into the field six years ago.
Saame me aactctivvee aas:s:
“There are more kinds of clay than you can imagine,” he said. “Our biggest challenge all along has been getting the soil core out of the cylinder in soils that we call sticky soils. “We relied on a vibration system, but it just didn’t always get the core to release. So we’ve redesigned the probe tracking system. We call it the extreme knockout. As the probe comes across the top of the machine, it gets slammed down violently. Nothing stays in the cylinder.” Burton said 18 AutoProbes are currently in the field, all assigned to leading agronomy consultant firms such as Crop Production Services. Together, they have sampled more than 600,000 acres. That may not seem like a lot, but many of those acres have been sampled on numerous occasions, with cores taken at the same spots. The AutoProbe will sell for $49,000 to $59,000 US, depending on the level of data capture required by the customer. Burton said he hasn’t sold units to Canada yet, but a couple of agronomy services are interested. For more information, contact Burton at 501-551-7999 or visit www. agrobotics.com.
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PRODUCTION
On this 97.5 acre field, the AutoProbe took 42 minutes to pull 1,520 cores and bag them into 38 individual samples, with each sample comprising 40 cores. The red line shows the continuous path of the AutoProbe, which pulled a plug once every 17 feet from one side of the grid to the other. The orange circles show the conventional method of sampling only in the middle of a grid square.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
MORE IS BETTER The more core samples taken from a field, the more accurate the test results are. This chart compares confidence levels of soil sample results using 40 cores vs. four to six cores per 2.5 acres: Number of core subsamples needed for accurate soil analysis, by nutrient type:
40 cores
Confidence level 90% +/-15%
phosphorus
potassium
25
34
7
80% +/-15%
18
21
5
70% +/-15%
10
14
3
nitrogen
phosphorus
potassium
90% +/-25%
10
12
3
80% +/-25%
6
8
2
70% +/-25%
4
5
2
Confidence level
4-6 cores
nitrogen
85
It pays to listen to your AIR SEEDER.
Source: AgRobotics | MICHELLE HOULDEN GRAPHIC
AGRONOMY | SOIL SAMPLES
Stricter soil sampling needed to satisfy U.S. regulations Recommendations have been converted into regulations governing soil and water stewardship BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU
Farmers and consultants have no choice but to get serious with their soil sampling programs when university soil test recommendations turn into government regulations. That is what has transpired in Iowa, prompting Frank Moore to invest nearly $50,000 in a new AutoProbe this winter. Moore farms a couple of thousand acres in northern Iowa and runs a private agricultural consulting business, which does contract consulting for state natural resources departments in Iowa and southern Minnesota. The focus of his AutoProbe efforts will be assessing the effectiveness of manure management plans in areas with intensive livestock operations. “DNR (Department of Natural Resources) has started paying closer attention to fields where manure is applied here in Iowa,” said Moore. The change has fostered a greater need for high efficiency mechanized soil sampling, he added. “The regulations are 10 years old and really do need to be updated, but both sides are afraid to re-open the books,” he said. “Farmers are afraid a review will result in tighter controls. Environmental groups are afraid a review will result in relaxed controls.” Moore said the standoff was broken to some extent when Iowa environmentalists sued the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for not enforcing its own federal Clean Water Act, thus forcing it to crack the whip on the state natural resources department. The state government had no choice but to crack the whip on farmers and their manure management practices. Farmers applying manure are now required to better document what’s in their soil, particularly phosphorus and potassium. Moore said it’s not possible to complete the Iowa Phosphorous Index document without valid soil tests. Six inches is considered to be deep enough because all yield responses to soil testing are based on a six inch sample analyzed by Iowa State Uni-
The Wireless Blockage and Flow Monitor uses acoustic sensors to monitor every opener and features a versatile in-cab iPad display. Unlike optical and ele c tr ome chanic al monitors, our wireless system is simple and reliable. For the past six years, AutoProbe has only been available on a lease or contract basis to leading ag consulting firms such as Crop Production Services. However, this winter the machine is available for sale to farmers and independent ag consultants. | AGROBOTICS PHOTO versity. The university also says a farmer must have 15 to 20 cores for each single sample. As well, one sample cannot represent more than 10 acres. Moore said few people comply with those criteria. Some people pull only eight to 10 cores per sample, while others pull as few as three cores per sample. “You need 25 to 35 cores per sample to be statistically significant for phosphorus ... So clearly, a lot of samples do not meet the criteria,” he said. “That’s where this AutoProbe machine enters the picture. Our AutoProbe pulls 20 to 40 cores per sample. And instead of having one
sample represent 10 acres, one sample from the AutoProbe represents 2.5 acres. So it exceeds the requirement by far.” Another problem inherent in conventional soil sampling methodology is the tendency to gather samples from the central area rather than spread them out, whether the operator is pulling cores on a grid system or a topographical zone system. AutoProbe makes a straight line across a zone or grid square, pulling a new core every 17 feet, regardless of artificial boundary lines. As a result, cores are never clustered in a bunch.
Cores for a single sample that are taken in close proximity don’t give a true picture of soil conditions at other spots in that zone or grid square. Taken to the extreme, Moore said he can detect soil changes down to the 10 sq. foot level, if that’s what his client wants. Moore will charge $10 to $15 per acre this year, depending on the depth of detail that the farmer requires. Everything is automatically GPS geo-referenced and layered over existing maps, so there is no charge for that service. Basic lab costs are also included. For further information, visit www. soilinvestigativeservices.com.
Visit IntelligentAg.com or call (306) 202-7157 to find a dealer near you.
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PRODUCTION
APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
TECHNOLOGY | DATA MANAGEMENT
New app manages farm information wirelessly Cloud storage | FarmDock helps keep everyone informed and the information flowing
The smartphone interface provides all the same detail that the internet page interface has, but shows it in a mobile-friendly format. | WP ILLUSTRATION
BY MICHAEL RAINE SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Blue Bronna Painting Ltd. 403 443 5718
bluebronna@gmail.com
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Scott Andrew was a computer savvy young farmer, but he wondered why was he still spending hours piecing together the bits and bytes of information produced on his farm. “It was three or four years ago and I started recording information on my smartphone,” said Andrew, who farms near Darlingford, Man. “It was better than a notebook, but I still needed to take written information from everyone else and in some cases from me too.” He decided he needed to find a partner to create a portable tool that would take advantage of smartphone technology. The result was FarmDock, an application for Apple and Android phones with an online desktop feature to act as the home base for farm activity information. Andrew initially wanted to use his phone to record and organize farm data but found he was limited to using a calendar application to create notes about his daily activities. As for his other family members working on the farm, they were still recording their jobs and inventory changes on notebooks and pads of paper. This meant Andrew spent a lot of time collating and entering the information into a separate program to track farm inventories and work. He also needed to make multiple phone calls during the day when work assignments were changed. “In the growing season, things change pretty fast. There is a lot of activity and keeping track of everything, and everyone can get pretty frustrated,” he said. “Stuff gets skipped and forgotten. Inventory gets depleted and even grain can be misplaced.” Andrew approached Winnipeg agricultural publisher Farm Business Communications with his ideas about creating an application for the internet and smartphones. “They had some ideas about how they could build the software and store the data on the cloud,” he said. “It took a couple of years to get it they way we wanted it, but this spring it’s available.” FarmDock allows producers to create a virtual farm, with land, staff, machinery and bins. It also inputs inventories and assigns farm work. Assignments can be made from the
internet dashboard or iPhone or Android device, including Android and internet capable tablets. Changes to the farm are instantly visible for everyone who has access to the farm’s secure FarmDock website. For example, a field job can be created for spraying that includes inventory from the chemical room, the labour that is assigned and the email address of the person doing the work. It can also account for fuel used by the sprayer and tender. The system can’t import data from existing spreadsheets, but it does allow producers to accumulate information over time. A sprayer or tractor can be added to the machinery list as they are used for the first time. After that, they will be available on an ongoing basis from a drop down menu. The same applies to all areas of the software. Workers can be added, hours recorded and job progress logged and eventually marked as completed. Notes and photographs can be added to jobs and field locations, making weed and insect identification more easily accomplished. Photographs can also be added of machinery breakdowns if parts need to be identified and of crop conditions if advice is needed. Machinery hours can be logged and fuel use recorded. Notes about machinery service times can be placed in an individual machine’s notation section so that oil changes and lubrication schedules are followed and can be checked off for others to see. The instant wireless communication allows everyone to be “on the same page.” Future updates of the original version of the program are free. New versions with expanded features are planned for the future, and Farm Media, which includes Farm Business Communications and The Western Producer, is soliciting input from users for improvements to the FarmDock website. The price for future versions has yet to be determined. The product will be available from all divisions of FarmMedia in the future. Farmers can sign up for free access at www.FarmDock.com, with downloads of the applications available on the Apple App Store and Google’s www.play.google.com/ store.
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Individual fields are logged and become part of the pull-down menus. Notes and photographs can be added. Images can show staff what the field entrance might look like, to ensure the right field is being accessed, or can provide shots of insect or weed concerns. Notes might include instructions about hazards like sloughs or problem areas such as weed patches.
PRODUCTION
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
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SPRAYING | NEW TECHNOLOGY
BOOM HEIGHT REIMAGINED
Stop boom bouncing, banging and breaking New hybrid boom height control | System manages discrepancies between soil surface and crop top while keeping boom on an even keel BY RON LYSENG
Sonar sensors Sonar boom height sensors detect the distance and presence of crop. Crop height Crop varies in height and sometimes there is none present. Averaging height The system looks at both crop and soil and takes an average to set boom height.
WINNIPEG BUREAU
BRANDON — Sophisticated sonar boom height controls are great with a uniform top crop surface. However, an undulating surface will have those booms bouncing, banging and even breaking. The problem is that these systems take a sonar reading from a high spot in the crop, then a low spot, then a high spot again, followed perhaps by a bare spot. The system is built to respond to these differing heights, so that’s exactly what it does. If there’s a high spot, the boom goes up. If there’s a low spot, the boom drops down. If there’s another high spot, the booms tries to get back up to what it thinks is the new correct height. Meanwhile, the boom is taking a beating, as is the operator. And the boom is often three metres behind in its quest to apply product at the correct nozzle height over the target. The end result is a second rate spray job and possibly equipment damage. Norac, the first North American company to use ultrasonic height control 40 years ago, has a new sonic boom control system that eliminates the constant boom battering. The hybrid mode on UC5 and UC4.5 takes multiple ultrasonic readings with sensors mounted on the spray boom. Readings are taken from the top of the crop, mid-height plants and bare soil. The readings are averaged to give the hybrid controller a virtual top of crop picture. The best possible boom height is extrapolated from those figures. Subtle adjustments still continue on a second-by-second basis, as they did before hybrid mode was introduced, but the changes are now more gradual, according to Norac representative Craig Lester.
Source: NORAC | WP GRAPHIC
CRAIG LESTER NORAC
“Here’s how it works. You’re travelling across the field spraying at 24 inches and you suddenly come to a washout or lodged crop. Happens all the time,” said Lester. “Your conventional ultrasonic system is looking for crop, but it’s disappeared. It takes control of the boom and the boom drops in an instant, before you can catch it. Well, the system is doing exactly what it’s supposed to. “The problem gets worse when you’re back into standing crop because now the boom is way below the top of the crop and doesn’t know it. It can’t take a reading or lift itself up. So now you’re ploughing crop down and possibly bending the boom.” Lester said an experienced operator who’s paying attention can usually catch it and lift the boom before it gets caught in the crop, but the faster the sprayer is travelling, the harder it is to make that save. “When you have the UC5 or UC4.5 in Hybrid Mode, it’s designed to make that save for you. When the sensor loses the crop reading, it automatically stops the boom from suddenly dropping.” Hybrid Mode is available on all current Norac boom height control systems and can be retrofitted to older systems. The list price ranges from $6,900 to $15,000. For more information, contact Lester at 800-667-3921 or visit www. norac.ca.
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PRODUCTION BRIEFS NEW INSECTICIDE
YELLOW NUTSEDGE CONTROL
MISSISSAUGA, Ont. — DuPont’s Coragen insecticide has been approved for control of grasshoppers, armyworms and cutworms on cereal crops in Canada. The new registration also includes a label expansion for use of Coragen on the rest of Crop Group 1 — root and tuber vegetables, and an update for use on grasses, forages, fodder and the hay group. Coragen contains Rynaxypyr (Group 28). It provides broad-spectrum control of many key insect pests, from the hatching stage to adult stages of development. Dupont says Coragen is also easy on applicators, bees and other beneficials.
WINNIPEG — Permit has recently been approved for use in controlling nutsedge, as well as more than 40 broadleaf weeds in both dry beans and corn. Gowan Agro Canada general manager Garth Render said Permit has been used in the United States for yellow and purple nutsedge and for broadleaf weed control. The Group 2 herbicide contains the active ingredient halosulfuron (present as methyl ester). Gowan Agro Canada expected to begin sales of Permit immediately in all provinces except Ontario. Sales will begin in Ontario once the classification has been published.
Vanee Farm Centre Lethbridge, AB ................................... 403-327-1100 Linden Agri-Centre Ltd. Linden, AB ......................................... 403-546-3814 Moody’s Equipment Olds, Lloydminster, Calgary, High River, AB ...................... 403-556-3939 Bill’s Farm Supplies Stettler, AB ......................................... 403-742-8327 Tri-Ag Implements Wainwright, Consort, St. Paul, AB ..... 780-842-4408 Rollins Machinery Ltd. Chilliwack, BC .................................... 604-792-1301 Grassland Equipment Ltd. Williams Lake, Vanderhoof, BC.......... 250-392-4024
Markusson New Holland of Regina Emerald Park, SK ............................... 306-781-2828 Lazar Equipment Ltd. Meadow Lake, SK.............................. 306-236-5222 Novlan Brothers Sales Ltd. Paradise Hill, SK ................................ 306-344-4448 E. Bourassa & Sons Radville, Pangman, Assiniboia, Weyburn, Estevan, SK ....................... 877-474-2450 John Bob Farm Equipment Tisdale, Outlook, SK .......................... 306-873-4588 Moody’s Equipment Unity, Saskatoon, Kindersley, Perdue, SK ...................... 306-228-2686
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APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
LIVESTOCK L IV EST O C K E D I TO R : B A R B G LEN | P h : 403- 942- 2214 F: 403-942-2405 | E-MAIL: BARB.GLEN @PRODUC ER.C OM | TWITTER: @BA R B GLE N
LIVESTOCK BRIEFS
ANIMAL PEDIGREE ACT | OPPOSITION TO REPEAL
BARN FIRE
Breeders irked by plan to revoke pedigree act
OlySky loses barn, hogs in fire The cause of a fire that destroyed a pig barn west of Lanigan, Sask., March 31 may never be known for certain, but an electrical problem is the prime suspect, said Dave Needham of Emergency Management and Fire Safety in Saskatoon. OlySky owned the barn where approximately 3,500 young pigs died, mainly from smoke inhalation. Humboldt-Lanigan RCMP and the Lanigan Fire Department arrived shortly after 6 p.m. March 31. Smoke was coming out of the eaves of the barn and fire soon followed. Needham said the fire started in the southeast corner of the metal clad barn, built about 1995, where there’s an electrically operated ventilation fan and an automated feeding system. “If any one of them seized up, that certainly could have caused the fire and that’s really the only credible sources of ignition in that corner where the fire started,” he said.
Livestock breeders say government sanctioned credentials give them market credibility BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
A federal government proposal to repeal the Animal Pedigree Act has received two thumbs down from animal breeders. Producers discussed the 105-yearold act during the Canadian Livestock Records Corporation annual meeting in Calgary April 5. A near unanimous vote opposed revoking the act, which was last amended in 1988. The livestock records corporation administers the pedigree act and could also be in jeopardy if the act was revoked. The private, not for profit organization handles the registration of purebred animals from 50 species, including bison, beef cattle, hogs, sheep, goats, foxes, donkeys, mules and dogs. About 100,000 animals were registered last year. The corporation also maintains records for purebred animals that aren’t handled by an incorporated association. As well, it handles embryo certificates and changes of ownership for registered animals and embryos, charging a fee for every transaction. Agriculture Canada provided few details for the change, but John Ross, director of the department’s animal industry division, said the government’s overall approach is to cut costs and get out of the business of doing business. “There is a philosophy that perhaps the government of Canada is involved in too many things,” he said. The government is reviewing various acts and is trying to decide if it should still oversee the administration of livestock pedigrees. He said the act may be too restrictive for modern times and technology. Ross also said it is not a good use of government time to review annual reports, bylaw changes and finan-
ANIMAL HEALTH
Anaplasmosis now notifiable disease Livestock producers say changes to the Animal Pedigree Act will cost them market credibility. | cial statements of every association. Money spent administering the Animal Pedigree Act takes away funds from other projects such as animal health, welfare and biotechnology, he added. “Finding staff is not the problem,” he said. “Finding the budget to pay them is.” Ross said the act costs $200,000 per year to administer. David Bailey of Genome Alberta and a registered Percheron breeder said the money is well spent because the purebred livestock sector generates $250 million in imports and exports. “For $200,000, we have a system that is working beautifully,” he said. Those at the meeting argued they need a government sanctioned pedigree to give their organizations credibility in domestic and international markets.
Government certification pedigrees are proven records of bloodlines and give buyers assurances of an animal’s family tree. Sheep breeder and exporter Peggy Newman defended the status quo. “We are the envy of the whole world for our pedigrees. If it is not broken, don’t fix it,” she said. Breed association representatives said government certified pedigrees are one way to manage genetic improvement, although Ross said others have managed without an act to govern their activities. Hog and poultry breeders and groups such as Beefbooster have successfully kept records and made improvements without an umbrella type act. Others said small associations would either not be able to continue or divide into small, less credible
FILE PHOTO
splinter groups without an act. Many of the smaller organizations are volunteer run and aren’t able to keep records and performance information in the same way that a livestock record corporation does. The breed associations are incorporated under the act, but Ross said they could register under other legislation or follow voluntary rules if the act was changed. Ross said his department wants to meet with groups before a decision is made, even though he agreed there is considerable opposition from breeders to getting rid of the act. The government is expected to meet with dairy associations later this month, and Ross promised further meetings could be held. “We are at the point of harvesting ideas, not telling you what we think,” said Ross.
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Anaplasmosis, which affects cattle, sheep, goats and wild ruminants, is now an immediately notifiable disease as designated by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency instead of a reportable disease. The CFIA announced its plan to change the designation in February 2013. It became official April 1. The change means the CFIA will no longer respond to anaplasmosis cases or conduct surveillance to verify Canada’s status regarding the disease. The change in status is welcomed by the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association, which has been asking for it for years. CCA general manager Rob McNabb has said anaplasmosis is more of a production limiting disease than one that affects trade or poses a major threat to herd health. In its explanation for the change, the CFIA said anaplasmosis is well established in the United States, so it is unlikely Canada can eradicate it within its own borders. The disease is caused by a microorganism most commonly spread by ticks and biting flies. It attacks red blood cells. Anaplasmosis presents no risk to human health or food safety.
LIVESTOCK
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
89
PORCINE EPIDEMIC DIARRHEA | RESEARCH
U.S. pork sector makes PED research a priority Results expected in months | Researchers focus on how virus is shed, sow immunity and how much resistance is required BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
OMAHA, Neb. — The U.S. pork industry has accelerated research into porcine epidemic diarrhea to get answers about a disease that has killed millions of young pigs in less than a year. Research projects that might have taken years are now expected to produce results within months, said Lisa Becton of the National Pork Board. “This is a new virus in the United States and we had absolutely no information about its pathogenicity and survivability,” she told a special session of the National Institute for Animal Agriculture meeting held in Omaha April 1-4. Twenty-eight states have reported cases with Vermont the most recent. About 4,700 cases have been diagnosed, although it is not known how many individual farms or pigs were affected, said Becton. The disease was found in Canada in January, and researchers in the United States are working with Genome Alberta to learn more about its genetics and susceptibility. About $500,000 is available for the work. More than $1 million was spent last year on eight projects to study the basics of the disease, which was probably circulating in April before it was confirmed as PED in May. “If you don’t know very much about the virus, it makes it nearly impossible to figure out how to go to the next step of containment, management and elimination,” Becton said. Researchers are focusing on how the virus is shed, how it affects sow immunity and what level of resistance is needed for protection. They also need to know how long immunity might last. Other research is evaluating disinfectants to deactivate the virus. Feed contamination was discussed late last year when some suspected the disease might have been transmitted in dried blood plasma used in pig starter. No trials showed infectivity in dry feed at that time, but the research has continued. A feed consortium meeting held in Iowa March 19 discussed immediate needs for feed research, collaboration and support for the industry. Manufacturers are willing to conduct risk assessments at all steps within the feed processing and deliver y chain to develop best manufacturing and management practices to prevent feed contamination. Risk assessments should also include the potential role of birds, rodents and other potential sources, such as clothing or other inanimate objects. Money has gone toward producer communications and information for people attending sales and shows. Becton said the pork board did not want to cancel hog shows this summer, seeing the events as good ways to expose the public to pigs and gain support for junior programs. Guidelines on areas of risk have
been published for exhibitors. About $150,000 has been spent to develop better diagnostic tests. The Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory at Iowa State University received its first sample of a questionable disease April 14, 2013. Butch Baker of the university said it took time to figure out what it was, but it was confirmed as PED by the beginning of May. The lab also found the delta corona virus, which causes similar symptoms. Researchers know that different
strains of the PED viruses are circulating in the U.S., but they don’t know if the two strains arrived at the same time or evolved once they landed here. “We just don’t know how pathogenic this virus is and whether there are co-viruses” he said. It is speculated that the virus originated in China or Southeast Asia, said Paul Sundberg, a veterinarian and vice-president of science and technology for the National Pork Board. Transmission and biosecurity are
focal points for task forces set up to combat the disease. Committees are made up of packers, producers, veterinarians and government. A survey of packing plants, which started last July to track traffic going in and out of facilities in the Midwest, showed the virus can likely be transmitted within a facility. Spontaneous outbreaks on unrelated farms present another unknown. “What we continually hear from the field is unexplained outbreaks,” he said.
“They just don’t seem to make any sense.” A rapid response team was formed to investigate outbreaks of PED and deltacorona viruses at different sites to determine why this infection happened. Humans, vehicles and feed pellets were considered moderate risks, while transmission in the air, water, artificial insemination and veterinary supplies and bedding seemed to be low or negligible risk. Regular research updates are posted at www.pork.org/PED.
Beef 2014: International Livestock Conference This year’s conference will focus on the opportunities of marketing the whole carcass. With the trends that are taking shape today, there are many opportunities for the future. Hear an update on the local and global economies and the market opportunities that exist for the entire carcass both here in Canada and around the world.
Register at www.ilccalgary.com
ILC Beef 2014: Wednesday July 09, 2014 Deerfoot Inn & Casino, 1000, 11500-35 Street SE, Calgary, Alberta
Cattle photo courtesy of Canada Beef Inc.
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LIVESTOCK
APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
HEALTH APPROACH | TRANSMISSION
Team approach examines human, animal health link, safety ANIMAL HEALTH
JAMIE ROTHENBURGER, DVM
O
ne Health is the name of a movement that is sweeping the health professions. It is founded on the idea that the health of animals, humans and their environment are intricately linked and endeavors to take an ecosystem approach.
One Health focuses on infectious diseases, particularly the zoonotic ones that are transmitted from animals to people. This team approach to complex problems brings together professionals with diverse backgrounds that would otherwise be unable to solve these issues alone. One Health collaborators can include veterinarians, physicians, environmental scientists and public health professionals. The concept of One Health is not a new one. In the 1800s, Dr. William Osler, a Canadian physician, championed the notion that human and animal health were related. More recently, the film Contagion featured a dra-
matic portrayal of a deadly, new fictional disease that spread from pigs to people and eventually caused significant harm around the world. The emergence of West Nile Virus in North America is an excellent example of One Health in action. Dead birds and sick people triggered awareness that something strange was happening when the virus first arrived in New York in 1999. Now that the virus is endemic, wild birds typically tend to die during the summer before outbreaks in people. Meteorologists and mosquito experts can predict which summers will have the greatest number of mosquitoes capable of transmitting the virus. Public health officials can then trig-
Information sharing among veterinarians, physicians and environmental scientists can help predict and prevent epidemics. | FILE PHOTO ger interventions and public awareness campaigns by taking into account weather, mosquito populations and wild bird mortality in concert
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with the number of people getting sick. Horse owners can also benefit from this information, namely through mosquito control and vaccination of their herds. A man was recently hospitalized in Saskatoon with an illness that resembled the deadly Ebola virus, although tests later ruled out this disease. The emergence of Ebola in Africa can be evaluated through a One Health perspective. Certain fruit bats in central Africa carry the virus without ill effects, but people, primates and domestic pigs can become infected if they come in contact with these carrier bats. Land use changes, agriculture and a growing human population are thought to be some of the environmental factors behind this emergence. Ebola virus is scary for several reasons: • No treatment or vaccine is available. • Nearly 90 percent of people who become infected die. • Even though the virus normally lives in fruit bats, it can be spread between people once it jumps into the human population. Rapid global travel makes it is possible for infected people to spread the virus around the world before they are sick. One Health also tackles antibiotic resistance. Many countries have adopted national programs to monitor antibiotic resistant bacteria in people, food and animals. The results from these research programs aim to inform antibiotic use policies in humans and animals as well as mitigate the risks associated with emergence and spread of resistant bacteria. One Health also includes comparative medicine. Animals are often used as human models of disease. For example, large breed dogs develop bone and brain cancers, which are strikingly similar to human cancers. This offers opportunities to better understand cancer development and treatment. One Health also addresses the human-animal bond. There is a growing body of scientific evidence that supports the notion that animals are good for people. In particular, research has shown that interactions with animals can lower blood pressure and increase exercise. Infectious diseases will continue to emerge as the world population increases and climate change progresses. A One Health approach to these complex problems not only makes sense but also offers our best hope to predict and respond to these disease threats. Dr. Jamie Rothenburger is a veterinary pathology resident at the Western College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Saskatchewan. Twitter: @DrJamieR_Vet
LIVESTOCK
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
91
ANIMAL WELFARE | CRITICISM
Consumer confidence requires more than facts Educating customers | Surveys show Canadian consumers are concerned but uninformed about animal welfare issues BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU
EDMONTON — Science has solved a lot of problems and answered a lot of questions, but it doesn’t have all the answers, says an animal welfare specialist. “Science can tell you what you can do, but not necessarily what you should do,” Dr. Michael von Massow of the University of Guelph told the recent Alberta Farm Animal Care conference. “You can’t beat consumers over the head with science. Don’t depend on science.” Farmers believe they treat their animals humanely and use the latest science-based information and research to make their decisions, but they need to base their animal welfare decisions on more than science, said von Massow. “Consumers say it’s not just about science. Science can tell us what we should do, but it is not the only thing. It can’t influence the consumer. We have to be willing to listen to the consumer,” he said. “Speak to people in a way that matters to them. If science doesn’t matter to them, quit hitting them on the head.” Agriculture surveys have found that animal welfare is in the conscience of Canadians, but consumers don’t
You can’t beat consumers over the head with science. Don’t depend on science. MICHAEL VON MASSOW UNIVERSITY OF GUELPH
know where to turn if they have questions. Instead of going to livestock groups for answers, they are most likely to turn to animal welfare groups. “You have got to get to a spot where they are asking us for the answers,” von Massow said. He said surveys show consumers are aware of animal welfare but not sure what is happening on the farm. More than half of the people surveyed believed government should take a strong role in ensuring animal welfare. “People feel pretty good about what we are doing, but there is not really an understanding of what we do,” he said. Von Massow also said consumers indicate they would like stickers on packages assuring them the animal is raised humanely. While he doesn’t believe retailers want packages with dozens of tiny assurance stickers, it does mean consumers want reassurance.
Animal welfare specialist Michael von Massow says consumers concerned about livestock production are more likely to seek information from animal welfare groups than farm organizations. |
MARY
MACARTHUR PHOTO
“Consumers generally think farmers are doing a good job and trust the industry.” He said livestock producers wonder if consumers would be willing to pay more for food they know is guaranteed to be raised in a healthy, happy environment, but the reality is no one knows. Consumers have indicated in surveys that price, freshness, taste and
safety are their top food priorities. Animal welfare is listed as a secondary priority. When asked, consumers don’t know if it’s better for chickens to be free run or free range, have enhanced cages or scratch boxes. They don’t know if pork should be free run or in farrowing crates. “Just under half (of ) consumers surveyed think they have a lot of
knowledge of how animals are raised, but in reality they don’t really,” he said. Less than one-third knew a cow had to have a calf before it produced milk. Sixty-five percent said gestation stalls would improve the welfare of pigs and 86 percent said more space would improve the welfare of pigs. Von Massow said both findings indicate that consumers have little idea how livestock is raised. When asked, 36 percent of consumers said antibiotics increase animal welfare and 40 percent said antibiotics decrease animal welfare. Twentytwo percent believed castration increases animal welfare and 36 percent said castration decreases animal welfare. He said it’s easy for farmers to look at the survey results and shake their heads, but they need to keep trying to communicate with consumers about the good job they are doing looking after animals. He said the food business is going to be an exciting place, but producers can’t put their heads in the sand and believe that consumers will trust them. They have a good story to tell that can convince people to feel good about agriculture, he added. “There is an increasing awareness and concern about animal welfare, but there is a significant knowledge gap. That’s good, but it’s risky.”
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92
APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
AGFINANCE
CDN. BOND RATE:
CDN. DOLLAR:
1.729%
$0.9109
1.90%
0.920
1.80%
0.910
1.70%
0.900
1.60%
0.890 0.880
1.50% 3/3
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
3/3
4/7
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
Bank of Canada 5-yr rate
4/7
April 7
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
BUSINESS GROWTH | VENTURE CAPITAL INVESTMENT
AG STOCKS MARCH 30-APRIL 4
Securing capital enables growth
Canadian job creation in March topped expectations and the unemployment rate dropped to 6.9 percent. The U.S. unemployment rate was steady at 6.7 percent. For the week, the TSX composite rose 0.9 percent, the Dow rose 0.6 percent the S&P 500 gained 0.4 percent and the Nasdaq fell 0.7 percent.
Financing multimillion dollar venture | Sunworks Farms partners with venture capital investor
GRAIN TRADERS NAME
BY MARY MACARTHUR
EXCH
ADM NY Alliance Grain TSX Bunge Ltd. NY ConAgra Foods NY
CAMROSE BUREAU
There never seems to be enough money at Sunworks Farms to really grow. Getting bigger seems to take more and more cash just to keep the wheels turning, said Ron Hamilton, owner of the organic farm near Armena, Alta. “When you have rapid growth, there is a constant pull for every dollar ever made and ever made in the future to go back into the company,” he said. “We can sell products and can grow the products, but it requires more capital to grow more and sell more.… Once you use your equity up in your land, it’s hard to grow. Financing is always difficult. If you have equity in land or money in the bank, it’s easy to grow.” Hamilton and his wife, Sheila, needed a different way to finance the business when they decided to build a multimillion-dollar humane poultry slaughter facility on the farm. They turned to the agriculture investment firm Avrio Capital for help. The Calgary-based venture capital firm, which specializes in investing in agricultural and food businesses, became shareholders in Sunworks Farms last year. Hamilton said working with Avro’s team of financial experts improved their business acumen. “Our business became much more professional.” Working with venture capital investors does come at a cost, including giving up some control of the business. “It isn’t for the faint of heart for the venture capital company or the person it’s investing in,” said Hamilton, who hopes to be operating the facility by fall. “There are risks on both sides.” Jim Taylor, a partner in Avrio Capital, said the investment community in keenly interested in investing in good agricultural and food companies. “Investors like industries and com-
Cdn. exchanges in $Cdn. U.S. exchanges in $U.S.
CLOSE LAST WK 43.05 17.78 78.20 30.98
43.21 18.15 78.98 30.69
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 0.846 0.125 21.51 2.27 21.01 11.30
0.846 0.12 22.62 2.3 20.25 11.63
FOOD PROCESSORS NAME
EXCH
Hormel Foods Maple Leaf Premium Brands Tyson Foods
NY TSX TSX NY
CLOSE LAST WK 47.83 17.65 20.60 41.22
48.4 17.13 21.03 43.15
FARM EQUIPMENT MFG. 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
CLOSE LAST WK 46.51 55.51 6.30 102.17 11.32 91.83 9.24
46.61 54.07 6.41 99.39 11.27 88.75 9.55
FARM INPUT SUPPLIERS NAME
Ron and Sheila Hamilton, operators of Sunworks Farm in Armena, Alta., say acquiring venture capital investors to finance a multimillion-dollar poultry slaughter plant on their farm has improved their business practices. | MARY MACARTHUR PHOTO
panies that can solve really big problems,” said Taylor. One of the biggest challenges he sees is the demand for more food grown on the same land base. Like Sunworks, Avrio Capital is looking to raise money to make more investments. The company is hoping to raise $125 million for its fourth venture capital fund. The previous three offerings raised $75 to $100 million, all for investments in agriculture and food. One of its earliest investments was in Wolf Trax, a micronutrient fertil-
izer coating company from Winnipeg. It was recently sold to Compass Minerals for $85 million. Other investments have included Manitoba Harvest, a hemp processing company, and Farmers Edge, an agriculture technology and agronomy company. Taylor said raising money isn’t easy, but it helps when the company has a good story and good investment opportunities. Avrio Capital has invested in more than 50 companies in the past 12 years. Money sources include Alberta Investment Management Co., Export
Development Canada, Farm Credit Canada, private family funds and the partners’ personal investment. Taylor said it also approaches companies that it has previously invested in, as well as companies that are interested in investing in agriculture and food. “To make investments we need money so we don’t miss opportunities.” Taylor said Avrio is particularly interested in companies that can deal with the problem of metabolic syndrome, which concerns foodcaused diseases such as diabetes.
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 103.46 109.77 134.49 48.69 67.34 5.60 114.28 49.17 37.82 75.07
106.41 110.49 136.5 48.2 66.62 5.21 112.32 49.17 39.31 75.79
TRANSPORTATION NAME
EXCH
CN Rail CPR
TSX TSX
CLOSE LAST WK 61.42 166.74
61.43 163.66
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.
OAT PROCESSING | COMMERCIAL PRODUCTION
POS Bio-Sciences moves into commercial production Bio Processing Centre purchase | POS will focus on commercial production for the food, nutraceutical, bioproduct and biofuel industries BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
POS Bio-Sciences has taken another big step in its transition from a pilot processing facility to a commercialscale custom processor.
POS has bought the Bio Processing Centre, which was owned by Saskatchewan Opportunities Corp., a provincial crown corporation. President Dale Kelly said the government was having a tough time making a viable business of the plant,
originally built by Canamino to fractionate oats to make health and grooming products. “They ran it basically as a place that clients could go with a recipe and then they could execute that recipe for them,” he said.
POS has the scientists and engineers to help clients improve on their recipes and the shipping and receiving capabilities to better facilitate small-scale commercial production of products. The 12,000 sq. foot facility will add
to POS’s existing capacity at its 54,000 sq. foot plant. The company is not buying the building but is acquiring the staff, equipment and client list. POS has been increasingly focusing CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
»
AGFINANCE » CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE on commercial production for the food, nutraceuticals, bioproduct and biofuel industries. It changed its name from POS Pilot Plant Corp. in 2009 to reflect the change in direction. The company was originally established to assist with product development, but POS has increasingly been using its pilot plant for commercial production rather than just understanding the economics and quality attributes of products. Kelly said POS has been reaching out to clients over the past two years to offer more custom production services to help bridge the gap between product development and commercial production. “It allows the companies to buy some time to earn some revenue until they can set up their own facility,” he said. “Sometimes on price we can’t be terribly competitive on large volumes, but if it’s a small volume and quite a valuable coproduct, then we can easily do some interim custom production.” The new processing centre, which has four times the production capacity of the pilot plant, will provide economies of scale for commercial production. Rick Green, vice-president of technology with the company, said
J&M Manufacturing of Ohio and Bitstrata Systems of Saskatoon have struck a deal to use the latter’s grain cart weighing and data management system. J&M designs and makes grain carts and harvest equipment and has more than 700 dealers in its network. J&M’s iFarm will use Bitstrata’s new Agrimatics cloud-based data management system, which collects, stores and wirelessly sends weigh scale data from the grain cart directly to a smartphone or tablet, turning it into a full-feature,
93
CROP SELECTION | INTUITION NOT ALWAYS BEST WAY
Gross margin analysis helps producers enhance farm profitability MANAGING THE FARM POS Bio-Sciences takes a big step toward commercial custom production. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO POS extracts and purifies ingredients from agricultural feedstocks for a variety of uses. The company works with oils, proteins, beta-glucans and other ingredients to create high-value products. The resulting powders, oils or tinctures leave the plant in drums and pails. POS recently installed a shortpath distillation system, which allows it to fractionate oil into components. It is the first of its kind in Canada. For instance, the company is able to split oil into a high omega 3 concentrate for the nutraceuticals industry and a stable frying oil for
the food sector. The remaining saturated fraction can be used as a texture modifier for a product such as margarine. POS was previously able to fractionate oil only on a lab scale, but the new equipment can process up to 150 kilograms of oil per hour, which means it can be used for product development or custom processing. POS works with 75 research and development clients on 150 projects per year. The client list expands to 200 per year when the company adds analytical clients who use its laboratory services to help identify the chemical compounds of food samples.
display and data management system.
of the Glencore purchase of Viterra in 2012. Last year, Viterra announced it would spend more than $20 million to upgrade its grain terminals at White Star, Humboldt, Waldron and Ituna, all in Saskatchewan. Also in Saskatchewan, it recently completed similar expansions at Gull Lake and Fairlight. In Alberta, Viterra is spending more than $34 million through an expansion and upgrade to its facility in Grassy Lake, as well as building a high throughput terminal in Grimshaw. In January, it bought Lethbridge Inland Terminal.
FINANCE NOTES CART DEAL STRUCK
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
VITERRA TO BUILD ELEVATOR IN KINDERSLEY Viterra plans to build a new elevator at Kindersley in west-central Saskatchewan. The new concrete facility will have a storage capacity of 34,000 tonnes and a 108 railcar spot. The cost is expected to exceed $30 million. A date for the start of construction was not announced. Viterra had an elevator at Kindersley but sold it to Richardson as part of the 19 elevator deal that was part
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DEAN KLIPPENSTINE, C.A.
S
uccessful farmers recognize that gross margin analysis is critical for good crop selection. The gross margin is determined by deducting the direct variable input costs of growing a crop from the gross income of selling the crop. Knowing the gross margin of each crop helps farmers choose the most profitable combination to grow. The only costs included in this category are those that can be measured and allocated on a crop-by-crop basis. A farmer should know with some accuracy the seed and chemical costs of a pea crop compared to a flax crop. However, when asked about the cost of fuel or machinery repairs on a wheat compared to a canola, the farmer would have to use an arbitrary method of allocating the farm’s total cost by acre, number of passes or as a percentage of gross revenue. The few studies done involving measurement of these items have shown that differences between crops are generally too small to materially affect crop selection. However, other variables will affect the results. Environmental issues will also influence crop selection, such as disease pressure, chemical rotations and regional factors such as
frost free days, average rainfall and heat units. Producers who strive for a higher gross margin consistently achieve a better result than those who budget at a lower potential. Simply put, 80 percent of a large number is higher than 80 percent of a small number. This may seem obvious, but over the past 20 years I have watched farmers who use gross margin analysis to select crops regularly outperform those who use intuition or who follow past practice. Maximizing gross margin is not as simple as typing yields on a spreadsheet, but there is minimal opportunity for long-term success without planning for short-term profitability. A simple rule to follow is that “less is more.” Generally, the fewer crops selected, the higher the profitability. Gross margin analysis can identify the top four highest profit crops. It follows that farmers who grow more than those are choosing to lower their profits. As well, more crops make it more difficult to manage production logistics during the growing season. As we all know in the agriculture industry, timing is everything. It is easy to fall into a rut of using intuition when picking what we think are the highest gross margin crops. However, it will pay dividends if you force yourself to go through the exercise of calculating it on paper. As the adage goes, “what gets measured gets done.” Dean Klippenstine is director of primary producer services for MNP in Regina. Reach him at dean.klippenstine@mnp.ca.
94
MARKETS
APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
CATTLE & SHEEP
GRAINS Slaughter Cattle ($/cwt)
Steers 600-700 lb. (average $/cwt)
Grade A
Alberta
Live Mar. 28-Apr. 3
Previous Mar. 21-27
Year ago
Rail Mar. 28-Apr. 3
Previous Mar. 21-27
142.00-146.00 123.42-153.96 n/a n/a
145.25-146.00 140.32-160.85 n/a n/a
112.89 113.17 n/a n/a
245.00 252.00-256.00 n/a n/a
244.00 248.00-253.00 n/a n/a
142.00-148.50 130.29-155.67 n/a n/a
145.25 129.32-157.04 n/a n/a
113.34 114.30 n/a n/a
245.00 251.00-255.00 n/a n/a
243.75 247.00-252.00 n/a n/a
$195
Steers Alta. Ont. Sask. Man. Heifers Alta. Ont. Sask. Man.
$190
*Live f.o.b. feedlot, rail f.o.b. plant.
$220 $210 $200 $190 $180 3/3
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
Saskatchewan $200
$185 $180 3/3
Feeder Cattle ($/cwt) 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
Manitoba $200 $195 $190 $185 $180 3/3
Canfax
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
Heifers 500-600 lb. (average $/cwt) Alberta $210
Steers 900-1000 800-900 700-800 600-700 500-600 400-500 Heifers 800-900 700-800 600-700 500-600 400-500 300-400
Cattle Slaughter
Sask.
Man.
Alta.
B.C.
144-161 159-177 175-196 187-213 199-226 204-235
138-165 155-176 175-195 183-215 195-230 200-237
151-164 162-178 181-197 196-215 205-229 210-233
138-158 153-175 160-190 188-209 201-225 210-229
145-161 152-175 173-191 183-202 188-211 189-210
140-158 159-175 172-195 180-206 185-221 176-218
148-165 160-178 173-192 184-200 190-209 190-215
140-161 154-176 161-189 170-199 180-199 no sales Canfax
$200 $190
Average Carcass Weight
$180 $170 3/3
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
Mar. 29/14 Mar. 30/13 844 873 808 825 708 674 995 922
Canfax
Steers Heifers Cows Bulls
Saskatchewan $210 $200 $190
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
Manitoba $210 $200 $190 $180 $170 3/3
YTD 13 888 826 675 918
U.S. Cash cattle ($US/cwt)
$180 $170 3/3
YTD 14 854 797 672 889
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
Slaughter cattle (35-65% choice) National Kansas Nebraska Nebraska (dressed) Feeders No. 1 (800-900 lb) South Dakota Billings Dodge City
Heifers 149.13 147.96 150.48 240.19
Steers 160-187.75 n/a 162-173
Trend +2/+5 n/a firm/+6 USDA
Basis Cattle / Beef Trade
Cash Futures Alta-Neb Sask-Neb Ont-Neb-
-20.27 n/a -21.96
-14.52 n/a -16.85
Canadian Beef Production million lb. YTD % change Fed 450.7 +6 Non-fed 83.9 -3 Total beef 534.6 +4
Exports % from 2013 191,263 (1) +2.8 109,859 (1) +48.2 31,331 (3) +7.0 44,006 (3) +15.8 Imports % from 2013 n/a (2) n/a 5,742 (2) -7.8 32,690 (4) -25.6 45,603 (4) -19.9
Sltr. cattle to U.S. (head) Feeder C&C to U.S. (head) Total beef to U.S. (tonnes) Total beef, all nations (tonnes) Sltr. cattle from U.S. (head) Feeder C&C from U.S. (head) Total beef from U.S. (tonnes) Total beef, all nations (tonnes)
(1) to Mar. 22/14 (2) to Feb. 28/14 (3) to Feb. 28/14 (4) to Mar. 29/14
Canfax
Agriculture Canada
Fed. inspections only Canada U.S. To date 2014 666,380 7,365,069 To date 2013 619,835 7,728,039 % Change 14/13 +7.5 -4.7
Close Apr. 4 Live Cattle Apr 143.05 Jun 134.80 Aug 132.28 Oct 136.90 Dec 138.85 Feeder Cattle Apr 177.70 May 178.53 Aug 180.23 Sep 180.18 Oct 180.13
Close Trend Mar. 28 146.50 138.35 135.08 139.33 140.40
-3.45 -3.55 -2.80 -2.43 -1.55
126.03 121.50 122.25 126.70 128.05
178.35 179.50 181.03 180.55 180.35
-0.65 -0.97 -0.80 -0.37 -0.22
142.58 144.30 151.20 152.70 154.00
Index 100 Hog Price Trends ($/ckg) Alberta $300 $270 $240 $210 $180 3/3
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
Apr 27-May 10 May 11-May 24 May 25-Jun 07 Jun 08-Jun 21 Jun 22-Jul 05 Jul 06-Jul 19 Jul 20-Aug 02 Aug 03-Aug 16 Aug 17-Aug 30 Aug 31-Sep 13
Canfax
Sheep ($/lb.) & Goats ($/head) Mar. 28 Base rail (index 100) 2.78 Range 0.09-0.19 Feeder lambs 1.40-1.45 Sheep (live) 0.40
Sltr. hogs to/fm U.S. (head) Total pork to/fm U.S. (tonnes) Total pork, all nations (tonnes)
$270 $240 $210 $180 3/3
(1) to Mar. 22/14 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
(2) to Feb. 28/14
Previous 2.78 0.13-0.18 1.40-1.45 0.40
Mar. 31 1.80-2.57 2.00-2.63 1.70-2.01 1.75-1.86 1.35-1.85 1.30-1.70 0.75-0.85 0.85-0.95 60-105
New lambs 65-80 lb 80-95 lb > 95 lb > 110 lb Feeder lambs Sheep Rams Kids
Ontario Stockyards Inc.
$240 $210 $180 $150 3/3
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
Apr May Jun Jul
Close Apr. 4 123.15 120.50 120.55 117.55
Close Mar. 28 125.58 125.20 129.58 126.20
n/a n/a n/a n/a
Wool lambs >80 lb Wool lambs <80 lb Hair lambs Fed sheep
Canada 5,005,254 5,098,854 -1.8
-2.43 -4.70 -9.03 -8.65
Year ago 80.03 86.90 89.70 89.55
To date 2014 To date 2013 % change 14/13
Agriculture Canada
256.50 259.44
Man. Que.
243.00 263.84 *incl. wt. premiums
$250
$240 3/3
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
Milling Wheat (May) $260 $240
$180 3/3
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
Import n/a 56,941 (3) 58,986 (3)
% from 2013 n/a +10.7 +7.7 Agriculture Canada
Close Apr. 4 117.15 101.15 89.10 86.50
Laird lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Laird lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Richlea lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Eston lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Eston lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Sm. Red lentils, No. 2 (¢/lb) Sm. Red lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Peas, green No. 1 ($/bu) Peas, green 10% bleach ($/bu) Peas, med. yellow No. 1 ($/bu) Peas, sm. yellow No. 2 ($/bu) Maple peas ($/bu) Feed peas ($/bu) Mustard, yellow, No. 1 (¢/lb) Mustard, brown, No. 1 (¢/lb) Mustard, Oriental, No. 1 (¢/lb) Canaryseed (¢/lb) Desi chickpeas (¢/lb) Kabuli, 8mm, No. 1 (¢/lb) Kabuli, 7mm, No. 1 (¢/lb) B-90 ckpeas, No. 1 (¢/lb)
Cash Prices
Apr. 7 18.50-20.50 14.00-15.50 17.50-18.50 15.75-16.75 12.80-13.50 20.75-23.00 14.50-15.00 12.80-13.00 11.80-12.00 5.75-6.50 5.75-6.25 7.80-8.25 4.25-4.35 35.75-36.00 32.30-34.00 24.70-26.00 19.00-20.50 17.10-18.00 16.00-20.00 11.00-18.00 11.00-20.00
Avg. Mar. 31 19.38 19.38 14.75 14.75 18.20 18.70 16.28 16.28 13.33 13.33 22.04 22.04 14.88 14.88 12.96 12.96 11.96 11.96 6.19 6.19 6.18 6.18 8.10 8.07 4.28 4.28 35.88 35.88 33.58 33.58 25.57 25.57 20.21 20.00 17.70 19.67 16.00 16.00 11.00 11.00 14.00 14.00
Cash Prices
Canola (cash - May)
Apr. 2 Mar. 26 Year Ago No. 3 Oats Saskatoon ($/tonne) 145.25 128.60 221.71 Snflwr NuSun Enderlin ND (¢/lb) 20.85 20.40 22.20
$430 $420
U.S. Grain Cash Prices ($US/bu.)
$400 $390 2/28
3/7
3/14 3/21 3/28
4/4
$-10
$-40 $-50 2/28
3/7
3/14 3/21 3/28
4/4
Feed Wheat (Lethbridge) $200 $190 $180 $170 $160 2/28
3/7
3/14 3/21 3/28
4/4
$540 $510 $480 $450 $420 2/28
3/7
3/14 3/21 3/28
4/4
Barley (cash - May) $210 $200
Basis: $64
$180 $170 2/28
3/7
3/14 3/21 3/28
4/4
Canola and barley are basis par region. Feed wheat basis Lethbridge. Basis is best bid.
Corn (May) $540 $520 $500 $480 $460 3/3
Trend -8.83 -2.70 -1.75 -0.50
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
$1500 $1470 $1440 $1410
Year ago 89.68 81.35 78.30 80.70
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
Oats (May) $520 $480
Grain Futures Apr. 7 Mar. 31 Trend Wpg ICE Canola ($/tonne) May 461.00 451.30 +9.70 Jul 470.80 461.00 +9.80 Nov 485.70 476.50 +9.20 Jan 493.10 483.80 +9.30 Wpg ICE Milling Wheat ($/tonne) May 217.00 222.00 -5.00 Jul 215.00 220.00 -5.00 Oct 218.00 222.00 -4.00 Wpg ICE Durum Wheat ($/tonne) May 250.00 250.00 0.00 Jul 250.00 250.00 0.00 Wpg ICE Barley ($/tonne) May 130.50 130.50 0.00 Jul 128.50 128.50 0.00 Chicago Wheat ($US/bu.) May 6.7625 6.9725 -0.2100 Jul 6.8350 7.0150 -0.1800 Sep 6.9275 7.0875 -0.1600 Dec 7.0625 7.1800 -0.1175 Chicago Oats ($US/bu.) May 4.1900 3.9900 +0.2000 Jul 3.6250 3.5550 +0.0700 Dec 3.4050 3.4300 -0.0250 Chicago Soybeans ($US/bu.) May 14.6425 14.6400 +0.0025 Jul 14.4825 14.2950 +0.1875 Sep 12.5700 12.4800 +0.0900 Nov 12.0825 11.8725 +0.2100 Chicago Soy Oil (¢US/lb.) May 41.43 40.42 +1.01 Jul 41.65 40.63 +1.02 Aug 41.53 40.50 +1.03 Chicago Soy Meal ($US/short ton) May 474.3 479.3 -5.0 Jul 464.7 463.6 +1.1 Aug 436.1 436.6 -0.5 Chicago Corn ($US/bu.) May 4.9925 5.0200 -0.0275 Jul 5.0525 5.0675 -0.0150 Sep 5.0550 5.0200 +0.0350 Dec 5.0550 4.9825 +0.0725 Minneapolis Wheat ($US/bu.) May 7.2225 7.4275 -0.2050 Jul 7.2550 7.4075 -0.1525 Sep 7.3200 7.4550 -0.1350 Dec 7.4250 7.5325 -0.1075 Kansas City Wheat ($US/bu.) May 7.3950 7.6400 -0.2450 Jul 7.4600 7.6525 -0.1925 Dec 7.6475 7.8025 -0.1550
Year ago 618.20 604.50 556.30 556.20 292.00 294.00 294.00 310.80 313.80 243.50 244.00 7.1250 7.1750 7.2525 7.3800 3.6375 3.5600 3.4700 13.7800 13.5800 12.7050 12.3225 49.52 49.76 49.77 393.3 393.0 382.0 6.3350 6.1950 5.5125 5.3200 7.9975 7.9750 7.9700 8.0650 7.4500 7.5200 7.7875
$440
Canadian Exports & Crush
$400 $360 3/3
Close Mar. 28 125.98 103.85 90.85 87.00
Apr. 4 6.49 5.89 6.80 4.56 3.12
USDA
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
Canola (basis - May)
$1380 3/3
% from 2013 -11.4 -5.0 -2.8
EXCHANGE RATE: APRIL 7 $1 Cdn. = $0.9109 U.S. $1 U.S. = $1.0978 Cdn.
$255
Soybeans (May)
Index 100 hogs $/ckg
Aug Oct Dec Feb
$260
Chicago Nearby Futures ($US/100 bu.)
Fed. inspections only U.S. 27,363,444 28,008,420 -2.3
(3) to Mar. 29/14
Trend
Durum (May)
$190
Apr. 7
Chicago Hogs Lean ($US/cwt)
$270
4/7
Flax (elevator bid- S’toon) 2.30-2.50 2.10-2.40 1.95-2.21 2.00-2.11 1.60-2.03 1.30-1.75 0.77-0.90 0.85-1.00 60-105
4/7
Manitoba
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
SunGold Meats
To Mar. 29
Export 171,178 (1) 55,080 (2) 184,511 (2)
$300
$120 3/3
$-30
This wk Last wk Yr. ago 262-264 262-264 n/a
Hogs / Pork Trade
Saskatchewan
$125
$-20
Hog Slaughter
Alta. Sask.
$130
$410
Est. Beef Wholesale ($/cwt)
Fixed contract $/ckg Maple Leaf Thunder Sig 3 Creek Pork Apr. 4 Apr. 4 229.11-229.62 230.89-234.03 232.64-237.18 232.48-237.29 232.14-233.65 232.78-234.25 235.17-236.68 236.35-237.88 235.28-239.20 229.91-234.12 229.21-232.25 226.18-226.58 227.70-228.91 230.53-230.90 227.39-228.91 222.02-228.52 213.75-221.63 199.59-220.23 199.60-205.67 187.92-193.18
$135
$200
Year ago
HOGS (Hams Marketing)
$140
$220
Chicago Futures ($US/cwt)
Sask. Sheep Dev. Bd.
Due to wide reporting and collection methods, it is misleading to compare hog prices between provinces.
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.
Barley (May)
$245
To Mar. 29
Montreal
Steers 148.68 148.00 150.40 239.75
Pulse and Special Crops
ICE Futures Canada
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
Minneapolis Nearby Futures ($US/100bu.) Spring Wheat (May) $800 $760 $720 $680 $640 3/3
3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
To (1,000 MT) Mar. 30 Wheat 236.5 Durum 63.7 Oats 18.4 Barley 14.3 Flax 0.5 Canola 185.1 Peas 22.1 Lentils 0.0 (1,000 MT) Apr. 2 Canola crush 141.9
To Mar. 23 143.5 51.5 23.6 27.1 3.2 177.9 65.9 5.9 Mar. 26 140.9
Total Last to date year 9942.8 8929.6 2819.5 2906.2 653.6 759.8 753.5 1092.2 232.0 194.1 5103.9 5310.8 1208.9 1356.2 195.8 n/a to date Last year 4590.5 4766.2
WEATHER
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 10, 2014
Kiana Ehmann, 9, tries to catch a kid goat at the family farm near Holdfast, Sask. Jacob and Michelle Ehmann operate a 350 head goat herd with 197 kids so far. The working ranch has been family owned since 1900 and is also home to JE Guest Ranch. | MICKEY WATKINS PHOTO
KIDS ’N PLAY |
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
Vancouver 14 / 6
Churchill - 2 / - 11
Normal
Below normal
Winnipeg 14 / 0
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
April 10 - 16 (in mm)
Above normal
Prince George 11.1
Vancouver 20.0
Churchill 3.7 Edmonton 8.1 Saskatoon Calgary 6.3 9.3 Regina 5.1
Much below normal
1-800-667-7770 1-800-667-7776 (306) 665-3515 (306) 653-8750
HOURS: Mon.& Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Tues., Wed., Thurs. 8:30 a.m. – 8 p.m. e-mail: advertising@producer.com Advertising director: KELLY BERG Classified sales mgr: SHAUNA BRAND
PRECIPITATION FORECAST
Much above normal
April 10 - 16 (in °C)
Edmonton 14 / 2 Saskatoon Calgary 14 / 1 14 / 0 Regina 14 / 1
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 7.4
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)
Subscriptions: 1-800-667-6929 In Saskatoon: (306) 665-3522 Fax: (306) 244-9445 Subs. supervisor: GWEN THOMPSON e-mail: subscriptions@producer.com
EDITORIAL Newsroom toll-free: 1-800-667-6978 Fax: (306) 934-2401 News editor: TERRY FRIES e-mail: newsroom@producer.com 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.
Publications Mail Agreement No. 40069240
™
ALBERTA Temperature last week High Low
Assiniboia Broadview Eastend Estevan Kindersley Maple Creek Meadow Lake Melfort Nipawin North Battleford Prince Albert Regina Rockglen Saskatoon Swift Current Val Marie Yorkton Wynyard
14.0 6.4 12.3 12.9 10.3 14.2 4.4 1.8 3.3 8.7 4.0 7.7 13.4 10.0 13.4 15.7 5.7 4.5
Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %
-15.3 -22.6 -13.8 -14.4 -20.9 -13.8 -27.9 -23.4 -26.7 -20.0 -25.4 -17.7 -13.2 -21.1 -18.7 -11.8 -23.1 -22.9
0.7 4.9 0.2 4.2 2.2 2.4 0.5 0.0 0.2 2.0 2.6 0.6 0.6 0.0 0.8 0.6 2.6 1.6
0.5 4.9 0.2 4.2 1.8 2.4 0.5 0.0 0.2 1.9 2.6 0.6 0.6 0.0 0.8 0.6 2.6 1.4
19 114 5 102 47 73 16 0 6 61 68 19 21 0 22 27 68 44
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
Printed with inks containing canola oil
Member, Canadian Farm Press Association
LAST WEEK’S WEATHER SUMMARY ENDING APRIL 6 SASKATCHEWAN
$4.25 plus taxes
SUBSCRIPTION RATES Within Canada: One year: $86.24 + applicable taxes Two years: $160.41 + applicable taxes Sask., Alta., Ontario & B.C. add 5% GST. Manitoba add 5% GST & 8% PST. Nova Scotia add 15% HST. United States $186.85 US/year All other countries $372.52 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 13 / 0
95
14.0 11.0 9.6 7.7 7.7 7.9 8.6 13.0 10.0 15.0 12.6 9.9 10.7 8.2 9.2 10.3
-13.5 -14.7 -21.2 -17.1 -21.5 -20.9 -28.7 -9.0 -17.1 -11.2 -7.7 -19.9 -9.2 -19.9 -12.6 -13.8
Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %
0.6 1.0 3.2 3.3 0.5 1.2 1.6 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.0 0.6 1.4 2.9 2.1 0.5
0.0 0.6 3.2 3.3 0.4 1.2 1.6 0.3 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.6 0.7 1.5 1.2 0.5
0 14 73 100 8 32 73 6 7 0 0 18 7 38 19 12
Temperature last week High Low
Brandon Dauphin Gimli Melita Morden Portage La Prairie Swan River Winnipeg
6.8 7.1 6.3 10.9 11.9 7.2 6.0 6.3
Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %
-20.5 -21.5 -24.3 -14.9 -14.3 -17.8 -24.0 -19.9
3.8 2.8 2.8 3.2 4.5 2.0 0.2 2.9
3.8 2.8 2.8 3.2 4.3 2.0 0.2 2.9
103 65 67 82 66 36 6 53
-3.3 -19.7 -3.0 -4.5 -14.2
0.4 1.2 0.7 0.0 11.6
0.4 1.2 0.5 0.0 11.6
7 36 15 0 200
BRITISH COLUMBIA Cranbrook Fort St. John Kamloops Kelowna Prince George
12.3 8.7 16.4 15.5 7.4
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
The forecast calls for extended periods of rewards. Save up to $2/acre with Headline fungicide. With the Build and Protect Reward you can build more than just yield potential. Eligible growers can save up to $2/acre on the purchase of Headline fungicide and other BASF fungicides. Full terms and conditions at agsolutions.ca/headline ®
Always read and follow label directions. AgSolutions, and HEADLINE are registered trade-marks of BASF Corporation; and AgCelence is a registered trade-mark of BASF SE, all used with permission by BASF Canada Inc. HEADLINE should be used in a preventative disease control program. © 2014 BASF Canada Inc.
96
APRIL 10, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
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