THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
VOL. 92 | NO. 16 | $4.25
Antibiotic limits Health Canada tightens rules for antibiotic use in livestock | P. 104
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SPECIAL REPORT | RESEARCH
Crop research lacks vision, patience, say scientists Project-oriented research will eventually hurt farmers BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
It’s a story that’s been told hundreds if not thousands of times at farm meetings in Western Canada. Two determined and creative plant breeders, Baldur Stefansson and Keith Downey, transformed an insignificant oilseed crop into a juggernaut that now contributes $20 billion annually to the nation’s economy and employs 250,000 Canadians. The canola story is a fantastic tale and certainly worth retelling. However, the basic research behind canola is now four decades old. At some point, farmers, industry employees and agricultural scientists may tire of the tale and ask the obvious question: what’s next?
Using a Black Angus cross as his chalkboard, Kirk Stierwalt outlines the calf’s shoulders, back and hip. Using N for short hair and L for long hair, he points out the areas that need to be clipped or left alone. He said it’s a lot like connecting the dots. Stierwalt, an expert cattle fitter, judged a youth competition at the recent Saskatchewan Beef Expo at Praireland Park in Saskatoon. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO
Triple throughput capability | Pacific Terminal project in response to increasing export demands
Viterra is spending more than $100 million to upgrade the Pacific Terminal at the Port of Vancouver. The company announced April 10 that it will perform “operational improvements and upgrades” that will nearly triple the terminal’s throughput capabilities. Viterra president Kyle Jeworski said the most significant element of the upgrade will be the installation of a new ship loading system, which will allow the terminal to load ships more quickly and efficiently and increase throughput capacity to more than six million tonnes per year. “When you’ve got a new ship loading system, (it allows) increased
speeds, more efficient loading of vessels and the ability to load larger vessels,” Jeworski said. “This will more than double us, actually almost triple the capacity of that facility on an annualized basis.” Jeworski described the Pacific Terminal project as a significant, longterm investment in a strategically important asset. He said the terminal expansion should not be viewed as a response to supply chain constraints that have hindered the movement of prairie grain to international markets during the past few months. “We are not at capacity at that (terminal) today, so this isn’t a reaction to the immediate concerns,” Jeworski said. “This is an identification of a long-
term trend of increasing demands on the West Coast and of Viterra looking at how we can make an investment to match those long-term trends with export capabilities.” The terminal upgrade will not include an expansion of existing storage capacity, he added. “At this point, we don’t see the need to change the physical storage,” Jeworski said. “The facility is approximately 140,000 metric tonnes of storage capacity so we believe that’s ample capacity.… With enhanced receiving of rail car capabilities and increased shipping, the storage as it sits today is quite significant actually.” Pacific Terminal is one of three grain terminals that Viterra owns on the West Coast.
The company also has a 75 percent share in Vancouver’s Cascadia Terminal and is a part-owner of Prince Rupert Grain at Prince Rupert, B.C. In addition, Viterra owns a pair of terminals at Thunder Bay, Ont., and one at Montreal. The Pacific Terminal upgrade is the second major terminal upgrade announced at the Port of Vancouver in the past two years. Last year, Richardson International received approval to go ahead with a $120 million expansion at its export facility in North Vancouver. The Richardson expansion will build 28 concrete storage silos and add 80,000 tonnes of new storage capacity to the facility. SEE PORT FACILITY, PAGE 3
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APRIL 17, 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
Port upgrade to cost $100 million SASKATOON NEWSROOM
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VITERRA | PORT FACILITY UPGRADE
BY BRIAN CROSS
SEE CROP RESEARCH, PAGE 2
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NEWS
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Crop research lacks vision Will Canada ever develop another canola or deliver a discovery that revolutionizes global agriculture? Wilf Keller, president and chief executive officer of Ag-West Bio, which helps move agricultural research to market, is doubtful. Considering the current state of Canadian agricultural science, he thinks the canola story will not be duplicated. “It’s unlikely,” said Keller, who was an Agriculture Canada research scientist for 17 years and president of Genome Prairie from 2008-12. He said Canada could deliver another transformative discovery, but the existing system doesn’t support revolutionary science. “The canola story was a 20 to 25 year work plan. There was a vision to achieve that and the patience to achieve that,” he said. “We are much more project oriented now. There’s shorter-term funding available for projects, as opposed to longer-term funding for what I would call programs or strategies.” Agriculture Canada scientists who spoke off the record said Keller’s assessment is correct. Most research is funded for three years with no guarantee of renewal when the project ends. As well, almost all research requires an industry partner, and scientific goals sink to the lowest priority when too many players are at the table. It’s nearly impossible under those conditions to deliver groundbreaking science. Allen Good, a University of Alberta plant scientist, agreed that funding bodies, government and companies are fixated on “incremental” research. “If you want to ask, ‘can we create another canola,’ the answer is if we keep funding things the way we do, clearly not,” said Good, who studies nitrogen use efficiency in plants and biological nitrogen fixation. Funders who are obsessed with the now have no sense of visionary, groundbreaking science, Good added. “(If) you talk to some senior guy in Genome Canada … he says, ‘I read about that (research) in the Globe and Mail, it’s got to be a good idea to fund,’ ” he said. “Well, if you read about it in the Globe and Mail, it’s probably only 15 to 20 years old.” Good said nitrogen fixing cereal crops are a good example of risk-taking agricultural research.
REGULAR FEATURES
INSIDE THIS WEEK
SPECIAL REPORT | FROM PAGE ONE
Ag Stock Prices Classifieds Events, Mailbox Livestock Report Market Charts Opinion Open Forum On The Farm Weather
108 51 40 9 110 10 12 20 111
COLUMNS We are much more project oriented now. There’s shorterterm funding available for projects, as opposed to longerterm funding for what I would call programs or strategies.
Art of pysanka: Students learn about the Ukrainian tradition of painting Easter eggs. See page 19. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO
NEWS
» STORED GRAIN: Producers
WILF KELLER AG-WEST BIO
» Plant scientists at the John Innes Centre in England, along w ith researchers in Spain, the Netherlands and a few other countries, are attempting to understand the nitrogen fixing properties of legumes and transfer the characteristic into cereal crops. In other words, these scientists are trying to reduce the $100 billion that farmers spend annually on synthetic nitrogen fertilizers. Transforming corn into a legume is exceptionally complex and challenging, but it represents the type of science that Canadian institutions could fund but don’t, Good said. “I was just asked this, this morning, by one of the senior people in our research office, ‘why isn’t this (nitrogen fixing cereals) being funded by the province and within Canada?’ ” he said in mid-March. “I said it’s too visionary and it’s too long term…. We fund short-term, pedestrian science. That’s the way we work.” Keller said cutting funding to fundamental science may not have immediate consequences, but it will eventually bite. “This is about discovery … that will have impact on the productivity and quality of agricultural products in 2040 or 2050,” he said. “These things take time and I am increasingly concerned that the cupboard is going to be fairly bare by then because we haven’t invested in those long-term discoveries.”
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need to take special care with the large amount of grain stored on farms. 5 HOG WORKERS: Manitoba hog producers want help fixing a labour shortage in their industry. 16 BEING UNIQUE: Successful food processing companies are the ones that pursue uniqueness. 25 SPECIAL REPORT: Is a move to applied research and away from basic research hurting agriculture’s future? 26
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project hopes to grow a painkiller ingredient in southern Alberta. 30 ARBITRATION PROPOSAL: Farmers are skeptical about a proposal for arbitrating grain delivery disputes. 34 PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE: The ag industry says the precautionary principle can stifle research progress. 38 WEED MANAGEMENT: Rural municipalities struggle to manage marijuana facilities planned for their regions. 43
» LAND PRICES: Soaring farmland prices are
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about to cool.
» ARGENTINE CROP: Argentina is expected to
grow huge corn and soybean crops this year. 9
FARM LIVING 19
» ON THE FARM: This young Saskatchewan
20
producer jumps into cattle politics.
» DEMENTIA CARE: Large numbers of seniors
in rural areas complicate dementia care. 21
PRODUCTION 98
» PROFIT FORECAST: Manitoba’s crop profit
forecast is now based on actual yields. 98
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GATE OPENER: A remote truck gate opener promotes safety and convenience. 102
LIVESTOCK 104
» ANTIBIOTIC USE: Canada is phasing out antibiotic use for growth promotion.
104
» BETTER CALVING: Better body condition can help producers improve reproduction.
107
AGFINANCE 108
A photo caption on page 21 of the April 10 issue should have stated that Emmy and David Byle of Balmoral, Man., are selling daylilies, not bulbs. The perennial flowers are sold as bare root plants.
» FARM LABOUR: Producers often complain
IF THERE’S A MORE ADVANCED PULSE FUNGICIDE OUT THERE, ONLY THE GOVERNMENT KNOWS ABOUT IT. Learn more at agsolutions.ca/priaxords Always read and follow label directions. AgSolutions is a registered trade-mark of BASF Corporation; and AgCelence, and PRIAXOR are registered trade-marks of BASF SE, all used with permission by BASF Canada Inc. PRIAXOR DS should be used in a preventative disease control program. © 2014 BASF Canada Inc.
11 11 8 109 106 22
CONTACTS
» POPPY CROP: A poppy
MARKETS 6
SEE THE SPECIAL REPORT, PAGES 26-27.
Correction
Editorial Notebook Hursh on Ag Market Watch Perspectives on Management Animal Health TEAM Living Tips
about labour shortages in their businesses, but a statistician says it’s more of a mismatch than a true shortage. 108
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NEWS HOGS | PED
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
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RANGE ROVER
Veterinarians eager to trace source of sick pigs BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
Sick-looking pigs at a site in western Manitoba spurred the discovery of the province’s second case of porcine epidemic diarrhea virus, says chief veterinary officer Glen Duizer. “We found sick pigs at the hightraffic site,” he said. Duizer would not say if pigs from that site had gone to other locations, what the nature of the site was or if pigs from other provinces were affected. “We’re still following up. We still have some trace back … to do.” Duizer said other governments’ veterinary authorities will make the information public if farms from other provinces are implicated. Saskatchewan chief veterinary officer Betty Althouse said Saskatchewan pigs have been identified at the facility, but few details are known. “We do know that there were cull animals from Saskatchewan (that) had been delivered there, but we don’t know what specific herds,” said Althouse. Authorities suspect that the sick pigs were infected at that site rather than being infected on a farm. A news release from Duizer’s office said the high-traffic facility is cooperating with authorities and ensuring it does not transmit the disease elsewhere. The operator of the facility noticed the ill-looking animals and reported them to Duizer’s office. A high traffic facility could be an assembly yard, an abattoir, a truck wash station or other facility through which livestock trailers pass. Manitoba recognized its first PED infection on a farm in southeastern Manitoba in February, and since then two high traffic facilities have produced positive environmental samples. Duizer’s office does not believe those three situations are connected to the new case. A province-wide surveillance program is checking all significant nonfarm pig facilities for PED. “We’re not surprised (with the new finding),” said one industry source. The disease is widespread in U.S. states directly south of Manitoba, with much pig truck flow between the areas, so its appearance has been expected. Authorities are shy about releasing specific details about PED sites so that farmers and others will remain willing participants in reporting outbreaks and suspicions and allowing sampling and testing. Althouse said the new Manitoba case, this time where many pigs pass through, should remind farmers to stay committed to controlling their risks and watching closely for infection. “In general, anyone that’s delivering to a commingling site, where other hogs from other sites are, should really consider the site contaminated with PED and take the appropriate biosecurity measures,” said Althouse. FOR ANOTHER PED STORY, SEE PAGE 96.
A cowboy checks on cows and calves on a ridge top near Boneyard Coulee west of Stavely, Alta. |
MIKE STURK PHOTO
CWB | FACILITY CONSTRUCTION
Work begins on CWB’s second elevator Colonsay, Sask. | President says its network of facilities will provide farmers with more choice BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
CWB is building another highthroughput concrete elevator, this one at Colonsay, Sask., 65 kilometres east of Saskatoon. The new elevator will have 42,000 tonnes of storage capacity, including 17,000 tonnes of concrete storage and nearly 25,000 of adjoining steel storage. It will also feature a car-loading rate of up to 1,600 tonnes per hour with a 134-car loop track. The elevator is the second new facility construction to be announced by CWB in the past three
IAN WHITE CWB PRESIDENT
weeks. In late March, the company announced a similar project at Bloom, Man., near Portage la Prairie. “I’m excited to be able to announce the construction of our second elevator in Colonsay so fast on the heels of
our Bloom elevator announcement,” said CWB president Ian White. “We see significant opportunity in the Colonsay area for a fast and efficient grain-handling facility that will provide the customer service that farmers have come to expect from CWB.” Construction on the Colonsay facility has already begun two km southeast of the town, adjacent to tracks owned by Canadian Pacific Railway. The construction project is expected to be complete in time to receive grain from next year’s harvest. CWB’s network of prairie grain handling assets now includes elevators in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, the
Mission Terminal in Thunder Bay, Ont., and Les Élévateurs des TroisRivières, a transfer elevator in Quebec. The CWB acquired Mission Terminal last year. Mission is based in Winnipeg but its assets include the Thunder Bay terminal, a primary elevator at Alexander, Man., and equity in producer car loading sites in Manitoba and Saskatchewan. Mission Terminal also has equity in five short-line railway companies: Great Western, Great Sandhills and Long Creek in Saskatchewan and Boundary Trails and Lake Line in Manitoba.
PORT FACILITY UPGRADES | FROM PAGE ONE
Vancouver port facility upgrades scheduled for completion in 2016 Jeworski said the upgrades at Pacific Terminal will enhance Viterra’s position on the West Coast and allow it to deliver more Canadian grain to international customers. The terminal will be capable of loading “post Panamax ” ships when the upgrades are complete in 2016. This size of ship is currently too large to squeeze through the Panama Canal, but a $5.25 billion expansion of the locks and canals in Panama will allow larger ships to use the important shipping route. Jeworski said the new loading system at Pacific Terminal will allow post Panamax ships to be loaded more quickly. “We believe that this will be the single fastest loading system in the Port of Vancouver,” he said. “Our goal is to create the most efficient port terminal in Canada with unprecedented capability for processing a diverse range of commodities.” Pacific Terminal, which is located
A new ship loading system at Viterra’s Pacific Terminal in Vancouver will allow it to load ships more quickly and efficiently and increase throughput capacity to more than six million tonnes per year. | FILE PHOTO on Burrard Inlet, processes and ships a wide variety of agricultural commodities, including peas, canola, flax, lentils, soybeans and corn. “Demand for trade to and from
Canada is increasing, and it is essential that Port Metro Vancouver, and terminals within the port, respond with sustainable and well-managed growth,” said port president Robin
Silvester. “Viterra’s operational upgrades are an excellent example of increasing capacity and efficiency within their existing footprint.”
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
SUGAR BEETS | PRODUCTION
Sugar processor cuts contracted beet acres Lantic Sugar | Alberta growers question reasons given for reduction to 22,000 acres BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU
Lantic Sugar, which operates a sugar beet factory in Taber, Alta., reduced contracted acres in Alberta last week to 22,000 acres, down from 24,000 last year and 30,000 in 2012. Growers greeted the reduction with dismay. It is late in the season to sign contracts for other high-value crop commodities, and Alberta Sugar Beet Growers executive director Gerald Third said growers find Lantic’s reasons for reduction hard to accept. Doug Emek, general manager of Lantic’s Taber operations, said in an April 7 letter to beet growers that the decrease was due to recent loss of 24,000 tonnes in sales to a major bottler. As well, he said a U.S. sugar industry anti-dumping claim made against Mexico, if successful, would stop Mexican imports of sugar to the United States and flood the Mexican market. “This in turn will eliminate any possibility of sales in 2014 or 2015 (and perhaps longer) of Taber sugar to Mexico,” Emek said in the letter. Lantic has shipped up to 15,000 tonnes of sugar annually to Mexico in recent years. Third said Lantic’s one-year contract with the bottler expired so sales losses this year should have been anticipated. However, his real angst relates to the explanation about Mexico. He said Canada’s two sugar processors, Lantic and Redpath, sell sugar to Mexico as a back door method of marketing to the United States. Tariff rate quotas prevent sales by the more direct route. “To me, it’s just preposterous. We
Lantic Sugar has reduced contracted acreage for sugar beets this year. | have tariff protection for Canadians, to protect Canadian agriculture and we have these two companies that are just exploiting the hell out of this thing,” he said. “And they’re so brazen that they’re dumping sugar into Mexico and then they’re reducing the Canadian volume to the detriment of Canadian growers, Canadian consumers. And they’re justifying it. To me it seems hypocritical.” Emek said acreage reductions are not unusual. “It’s no different than any other commodity,” he said.
FILE PHOTO
“Most other crops, the acreage fluctuates from year to year. I’m not quite sure why there is such interest in sugar beets like this because it happens with other crops as well.” He said changing events affected the timing of the announcement for reduced acres. “Some of the factors only came to light recently,” he said. “It’s not our preferred way of announcing a change in acreage, but we also can’t ignore the realities of our marketplace.” Emek also said last year’s large crop and the resulting carryover were
additional factors in the acreage adjustment. However, Third said he doesn’t think the surplus explanations are valid. “I said to them, ‘how can you have a surplus? You import 1.2 million metric tonnes of sugar and we produce 85,000 tonnes. You should be able to absorb 100 percent of that into the Canadian landscape and it never affects you.’ Why should Canada be reliant on a third world country to dump sugar into, as a sales strategy? To me, it’s just unconscionable.” Third said sugar produced in
southern Alberta makes up eight percent of total Canadian volume. Processors import partially refined sugar from other countries, then process it further and label it as domestic product. That prevents them from maximizing domestic sugar production. “They’re not even producing this sugar for sale in Canada,” he said. “They’re sacrificing Canadian sugar so that they can import foreign sourced sugar, and if they can’t sell Canada’s sugar off shore, then they don’t want it. To me, it’s absolutely wrong.”
PLANT BREEDING | ROYALTIES
Farm leaders fear UPOV 91 adoption will affect seed industry Breeders’ rights | Keystone Agricultural Producers official expresses concern about farmer control of germplasm BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, Man. — Farmers concerned about changes to the Plant Breeders’ Rights Act should be worried about more than just royalties, says a Manitoba farm leader. Bill Uruski, chair of Manitoba Turkey Producers and a former NDP MLA, said farmers need to understand how Canada’s adoption of UPOV 91, an international convention on plant breeders’ rights, could affect the broader seed industry. Uruski told a Keystone Agricultural Producers meeting in Portage la Prairie April 11 that farmers shouldn’t obsess about plant breeder royalties and how UPOV 91 will alter royalties on seed. He said the bigger issue is control over research and germplasm. “Who is this legislation setting up to have control?” Uruski said. “How many seed companies will be able to still market seed, if in fact the germplasm is controlled by relatively few hands…. If they (companies)
control the germplasm, then they control the entire seed industry. It won’t matter whether a small company develops some new seed variety because if (companies) control the marketing, how do you get it into their system?” The federal government announced in December its intention to adopt UPOV 91 as part of an omnibus bill known as the Agricultural Growth Act. UPOV 91 alters how seed companies collect royalties on their technology. Under the changes, farmers will be allowed to save seed, but companies can collect the plant breeders’ royalty when a farmer sells a crop grown with the seed. Farmers now pay up front for the intellectual property. Rob Brunel, chair of KAP’s grain and oilseeds committee, agreed that UPOV 91 is bigger than royalties. “As a producer … we don’t want to lose public control of that germplasm,” he said. “Not that we have control, but who owns that and how do we maintain some control?”
The committee has consulted with industry experts to understand the implications of UPOV 91. Most cereal growers don’t want to move to a canola type system, where private companies hold all the cards, Brunel said. “I don’t want to pick on the canola model, but everybody refers back to the canola model: the control of the seed to the end point,” he said. “If a certain company owns the seed and is doing the end marketing, (then) they control exactly what they’re willing to buy…. That’s the game changer…. This is the variety you’re going to grow and I’m going to buy it from you because that’s all I’m going to buy. There’s no bargaining power.” KAP doesn’t have an official position on UPOV 91, but KAP president Doug Chorney said the impending legislation is a mixed bag, including both risks and opportunities for Canadian growers. “(There is) potential here for farmer ownership of varieties,” he said. “(It) does give the opportunity for
farmers to benefit as well.” Chorney said Bill C-18, the Agricultural Growth Act, contains myriad amendments to the Seeds Act, Fertilizer Act, the Plant Protection Act and a long list of other legislation. “It’s very difficult to understand all of these changes because … it truly is an omnibus agricultural bill,” he said. KAP’s grain and oilseeds committee has been studying UPOV 91 and other aspects of the Act. “I think we have a much better understanding (now) of what UPOV 91 means than we did before.” Chorney said KAP plans to speak on Bill C-18 when it reaches the committee stage in Ottawa. Don Dewar, a producer from Dauphin and chair of the Manitoba Wheat and Barley Growers Association, said farmers shouldn’t obsess about the bill and the impending legislation because the “devil is in the details.” Farm groups will have an opportunity to shape Canada’s version of UPOV 91 when the regulations are written, he said.
“We’re probably at least three years away from implementation of the regulations,” he said. “That’s where we have to be vigilant and make sure we get the regulations that are good for us and not just good for the other side of the industry.” Chuck Fossay of Starbuck agreed, saying it will be nearly impossible to change Bill C-18. Brunel said farmers may be able to influence the regulations but should also lobby for appropriate changes to the bill. “I think we need to start expressing our concerns … right from the start,” he said. “I hope there are opportunities (later) to keep steering that ship in a direction that benefits producers as well as industry.” Brunel said farm groups need to get on the same page and present a unified front on UPOV 91. Otherwise, the message will be lost in all the noise. “The fate of this will hinge on whether we can band together as producers and find some good in this change.”
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
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GRAIN STORAGE | MOISTURE LEVELS
Spoilage alert: start probing bins and bags Moisture causes downgrades | Warming temperatures will cause moisture to accumulate, agronomists warn BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Farmers should be extra vigilant monitoring their stored grain this year, say experts. A bumper harvest and disappointing winter shipping program is resulting in farmers carrying over far more grain than usual this spring. Some of the crops in temporary storage may need immediate attention. D i g v i r Jaya s, f o r m e r Ca na d a Research Chair in stored grain ecosystems and vice-president of research at the University of Manitoba, said growers should attempt to move grain out of bags, Quonsets and piles and into aerated bins before May. However, the urgency depends on what state the crop was in when put into temporary storage. His three-year study on canola stored in bags shows the crop can last in plastic without deteriorating for 10 months or until the end of August if it was put away at eight percent moisture content. As the moisture content rises, so does the storage risk. Canola with 10 percent moisture content, which is still considered dry by industry standards, loses one full grade if kept in bags for 10 months. Farmers need to take quick action if they are storing canola with 12 percent moisture content in bags. It will be fine if moved to a bin before ground thaw, but product kept in bags for one month after thaw loses one grade. “If (growers) wait until the summer to unload a bag with 12 percent moisture canola, then basically it became feed grade,” said Jayas. He expects similar results for wheat. The equivalent wheat moisture content under the three scenarios would be 13 percent, 14.5 percent and 16.5 percent, respectively. Keystone Agricultural Producers president Doug Chorney thinks farmers would be wise to heed the warnings about grain stored in bags. “I know of many producers who have told me this winter they were surprised to find crusted bin tops in their good steel bins that have aeration and everything, so I can’t imagine what it would be like inside a bag,” he said. There are also precautions for grain stored in bins. Angela Brackenreed, agronomy specialist with the Canola Council of
Producers without aerated bins should consider unloading grain and turning it manually, says an agronomist. | FILE PHOTO
TOTAL MAJOR FIELD CROPS ON FARMS AS OF DEC. 31
68,764 tonnes
STATISTICS CANADA
Canada, said the goal is to maintain equilibrium between the temperature of the stored grain and the outside air. Problems occur when grain
inside the bin is 10 C cooler than the outside air. “You get those localized spots in the bin where moisture starts to accu-
mulate. Once that starts to happen, you can get rapid spoilage throughout the bin quite quickly,” she said. Moisture typically collects in the
bottom central core of the bin. Growers should frequently probe that area and others to check for moisture and grain temperature. “Get into as many spots of the bin as you can to check the temperature because it can be very different from one spot to another,” said Brackenreed. A 10 C difference between the composite sample and the ambient temperature means it is time to turn on the aeration fans. “If you don’t have aeration, you really want to consider unloading that bin and turning it manually,” she said. Jayas said moister grain should be dried first. It can be naturally airdried when temperatures are higher than 15 C and relative humidity is lower than 65 percent, which can happen on some days in late April. Cold grain should be turned or aerated to raise the grain temperature to between 5 and 10 C to prevent moisture migration, which leads to spoilage. Aeration can be delayed if the outside temperature warms slowly, but the fans should be turned on if there is a rapid change. Jayas advised against mixing last year’s harvest with grain from previous years unless farmers are absolutely certain the older grain has no insect infestation or spoilage. It’s best to avoid mixing if possible. Oilseeds are particularly susceptible to spoilage. The higher the oil content, the more prone it is to spoilage, although Jayas said there isn’t a statistically significant increase in spoilage until oil content reaches levels of 48 to 50 percent. Last year’s canola crop had a mean oil content of 44.8 percent for the top grade, which is close to the record of 45.2 percent set in 2011. Bruce Burnett, CWB weather and crop specialist, said wheat growers need to be extra watchful this year because some of the crop was harvested under high moisture conditions. “With the drop in prices that we’ve seen here, you can’t afford to lose some of this grain that you produced last year,” he said. Burnett worries farmers will soon be preoccupied with planting the new crop rather than looking after the old one. “Check it and check it frequently, even if it slows you down a little bit for some of the other operations that are going to be going on,” he said.
B.C. AG MINISTER | APPOINTMENT
Letnick returns as B.C. ag minister during Pimm’s recovery BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU
British Columbia has a new, old agriculture minister. Norm Letnick, MLA for KelownaLake Country was re-sworn in as the province’s agriculture minister April 11. Letnick will replace agriculture
minister Pat Pimm, MLA for Peace River North. The government announced this winter that Pimm is battling colon cancer. Letnick was first appointed B.C.’s agriculture minister in 2012, a position he held until Pimm’s appointment in June 2013. “The protection of farmland and
support for farming families is a priority for this government and Norm brings a wealth of experience as a former minister of agriculture,” said B.C. premier Christy Clark in a news release. “I want to thank Pat Pimm for leading an ambitious agenda to strengthen and grow B.C.’s agriculture industry. Right now, he needs to focus on
his family, his health and recovery,” she wrote. In a statement, Pimm said: “I continue to receive treatment and want to thank everyone for their wishes of recovery and support. At this time, I’m placing my focus on my health and full recovery to return to work and appreciate the privacy I need to do that.”
NORM LETNICK NEW B.C. AG MINISTER
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REAL ESTATE | FARM
Grain prices send land values soaring Average value up 22.1 percent | Economist expects slowdown in 2014 BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Farmland values appreciated more last year than they have in any year since Farm Credit Canada began tracking them in 1985. However, they’re about to cool. The average value of Canadian farmland increased 22.1 percent last year, up from 19.5 percent in 2012, according to the FCC’s annual report on farm properties. “Most of the increase was driven by strong commodity prices,” FCC chief economist J.P. Gervais said in a video accompanying the 2013 report. Most of the increase occurred during the first half of the year before crop prices began to falter. A surge in cattle prices and a record harvest in the second half of the year helped maintain optimism in the farm sector. However, the outlook is for a cooling off in farmland values because of lower crop prices, large carryout, rising input costs and high rental rates for land. That combination will reduce farm profits and the prices that farmers are willing to pay for land. “We do really expect a slowdown in farmland values in 2014 and beyond,” said Gervais. The “beyond” part comes from long-term outlooks prepared by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Agriculture Canada. Average crop prices over the next 10 years are expected to be lower than they have been in the 2005-13 period, although they will be higher than they were in the 1990-2005 period. Interest rates are the other main driver for farmland values. Gervais expects short-term rates to remain low for the next 12 to 18 months, which will provide a “soft landing”
Low interest rates should provide a soft landing as land inflation slows. | for farmland values. He expects the national average to mimic what has happened in British Columbia, where farmland values have been fairly stable every year for the past five years. Saskatchewan experienced the biggest increase in 2013 with farmland values soaring 28.5 percent, up from a 19.7 percent increase in 2012. Manitoba finished second with a 25.6 percent increase. Farmland in Alberta appreciated by 12.9 percent. Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan vice-president Arlynn Kurtz said the FCC numbers appear to be accurate based on what he has seen in his area near Esterhazy. He thinks the numbers are worrisome for the future of agriculture. “It’s going to make it very difficult for young producers to get into the business,” said Kurtz, who recently
retired from farming. “It’s also going to make it very hard for smaller farms to be able to justify purchasing anything more than maybe a quarter.” Kurtz is old enough to remember the 1970s and 1980s, and the current situation is somewhat reminiscent of what became dark days for Canadian agriculture. Commodity prices in the 1970s were higher, on an inflation adjusted basis, than they have been in recent years, which drove farmland values to astonishing levels. The difference was that interest rates became skyhigh in the 1980s, eclipsing 20 percent per year. And then crop prices tanked. Farmers were destitute and FCC, the banks and credit unions ended up owning a pile of farmland. “Heaven forbid if we ever see double digit interest rates. That is just going to kill the economy and kill
FILE PHOTO
FARMLAND VALUES
PROVINCIAL COMPARISON
The average value of Canadian farmland increased 22.1 percent in 2013, the highest national increase since Farm Credit Canada began reporting on farmland values in 1985. The last decrease occurred in 1992 when farmland values dropped by 2.1 percent.
Saskatchewan topped the list with a 28.5 percent appreciation in farmland values in 2013. Strong grain and oilseed prices early in the year and a surge in cattle prices in the second half were largely responsible for the big increase.
Annual percentage change in farmland values: 2009 6.6 2010 5.2
Annual percentage change in farmland values: Alta. 12.9 B.C. 3.0
2011 14.8 2012 19.5 2013 22.1 Source: Farm Credit Canada | WP GRAPHIC
Source: Farm Credit Canada | WP GRAPHIC
agriculture again,” said Kurtz. It scares him to hear that long-term interest rates are already on the rise and short-term rates could follow in a year or two.
His advice to young farmers is to become extremely good managers and hire crackerjack financial advisers to help them navigate what could be stormy seas ahead.
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7
UKRAINE | CROP EXPECTATIONS
Ukraine’s crops look good despite turmoil More barley expected | Country tour reveals good prospects for wheat crop, but corn outlook still cloudy BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Neil Townsend was feeling uneasy about Ukraine’s 2014 crop prospects until he took a rain-soaked four-day crop tour of the country. “I think the production is coming. It looks good,” the director of CWB Market Research said in a phone interview from Kiev earlier this week. “This was a tremendous four days of rain with a large swath of coverage. All of the key growing areas were getting a good soaking, which they needed.” Townsend made the comments the same day that Agritel dramatically cut its grain production forecast for the country due to economic turmoil and dry conditions. Agritel is forecasting a 17.6 percent reduction in corn output and a 16.5 percent decline in wheat compared to last year. Townsend said that forecast must have been made before the recent rain. “Don’t believe the story that the grain is not going to be there.” Townsend anticipates wheat yields will be up 10 to 15 percent compared to last year and rapeseed yields will be up 20 percent. There will also be plenty of moisture for the corn crop, which hasn’t been seeded yet, he added. Wheat acreage may be down five
Recent rain made the political turmoil in Ukraine, with eastern regions declaring independence, more bleak, but it helped crops. | REUTERS PHOTO percent, but improved yields will result in a crop equal to or greater than last year’s 22.3 million tonne harvest. “Nothing looked like Kansas. Nothing looked that dry. It was really good,” he said. The extensive crop tour, which covered 80 percent of Ukraine’s production area, helped clarify what had been a confusing couple of days lead-
ing up to the tour. Townsend was in Kiev to attend the Black Sea Grain 2014 conference where he heard conflicting reports about the coming crop. The night before the event, he had dinner with a woman who manages an agriculture holding company that farms 1.24 million acres of leased land in Ukraine. “This is a company that last year
produced 750,000 tonnes of corn themselves,” he said. “This is the big time.” She told Townsend farmers will seed a lot fewer acres to corn in Ukraine. Her company intends to reduce its plantings by 30 percent compared to last year. Ukraine’s crumbling economy and rapidly devaluing currency means farmers don’t have the financing required to grow a high input crop such as corn. She told Townsend that her farming colleagues in Ukraine say summerfallow and barley will be their two biggest crops this year. Her acreage forecast was at odds with what he heard at the conference in the following two days. There was no hint of any acreage contraction in Ukraine. “Everything was full steam ahead. Every acre was getting planted,” said Townsend. Speakers were calling for a little more soybeans and a bit less corn but nothing drastic. They said topsoil moisture was good and deep subsoil moisture was adequate. In between the moisture was a little deficient. Speakers thought yields wouldn’t be as high as last year but should be around trend levels. However, that was before the four-day rain event. Townsend saw evidence during his crop tour to support the theory for
less corn and more barley. However, he thinks corn plantings may be down 10 to 15 percent rather than 30 percent. Plenty of fields were still being prepared for corn. The big question is whether farmers will be able to apply the inputs that corn needs. Spring barley acreage was definitely on the rise. Farmers like barley because it is an inexpensive crop to grow. They are able to plant farm saved seed rather than buying expensive seed from input providers like they have to do with corn and soybeans. There also appeared to be a surge in sunflower and soybean acreage at the expense of corn. Townsend also concluded that the political and economic turmoil in Ukraine isn’t about to go away. “This country is a total mess, and I’ve totally lost faith in it,” he said. “It is a failed state.” That means it will continue to be a source of uncertainty for grain markets.
Some Things Don’t Have To Be Complicated
WEATHER | MIDDLE EAST
Drought overseas could boost durum exports BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Drought in the Middle East could bring durum markets out of the doldrums brought on by a glut of Canadian production. “That could be one of those wild cards for durum that bears watching,” said Jim Peterson, marketing director for the North Dakota Wheat Commission. “It would be an important market factor.” Jason Nicholls, senior meteorologist with AccuWeather, said large portions of Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Israel and Jordan are suffering from extreme drought. Much of the grain growing region of Turkey has experienced 40 to 70 percent of normal rainfall since Dec. 1. It has been less than 50 percent for Syria, Israel and Lebanon. Syria and Turkey are not significant durum importers, but they are big producers, harvesting a total of 4.5 million tonnes last year, or 12 percent of world production. Nicholls said there is little doubt yields will be reduced in the Middle East. Harvest begins in early May. As well, Turkey recently had a severe cold snap that caused winterkill. “It was enough to impact the crop that was already stressed,” said Nicholls. Peterson said a production short-
fall in the Middle East could create enough additional demand to partially offset surplus global production caused by last year’s Canadian crop that was two million tonnes, or 43 percent, larger than the previous five-year average. Durum is not a heavily traded crop, with world trade amounting to 6.8 million tonnes per year. As a result, an unexpected 680,000 tonne surge in demand from the Middle East could have a substantial influence on prices. Peterson said May and June is the time of year when there can be price action. Crops are coming off in the Middle East and North Africa, quality problems can surface with the European crop and there can be planting issues in North America. The U.S. Department of Agriculture expects U.S. growers to plant 1.8 million acres of durum, up 22 percent from last year. Peterson said the big increase is simply a rebound from last year’s disappointing spring, when it was too wet to plant the crop in northwestern North Dakota, where 40 to 50 percent of the U.S. durum crop is seeded. “We were dealt a pretty harsh hand by Mother Nature last spring, and (the rain) happened to fall right into our main durum growing areas,” he said. Plantings will still be 11 percent below the five-year average.
There isn’t a strong incentive to grow durum. Milling quality product is fetching a 20 cent per bu. premium over spring wheat, but most growers believe there is a $1 per bu. risk discount for growing durum because of inferior yields. Agriculture Canada sees a six percent decrease in Canadian plantings to 4.67 million acres, which is in line with what Peterson expects. He believes the anticipated 2.3 million tonnes of carryout from Canada’s 2013-14 crop will keep durum markets from rallying unless there are harvesting problems overseas or planting problems in North America. However, the market seems to indicate the carryout might not be as big as Agriculture Canada is forecasting. “We really haven’t seen our durum prices break that hard. They’ve stayed pretty steady all winter,” said Peterson. “I think that’s a sign that there is maybe a little more tightness in the market than what the numbers show.” He is not extremely bullish or overly bearish on durum. “It seems to be in a fairly good balance now.” Peterson wonders about the quality of the Canadian carryout. He expects growers probably moved the better material first because of the $2.50 to $3 per bu. premium for quality durum versus damaged product. U.S. mills have used a lot of good
quality Canadian and U.S. durum, and pasta sales have been strong in that market. As a result, exporters may have to find a home for poorer quality product in places like Iran and South Korea.
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS GRAIN | OUTLOOK
Frost nips U.S. wheat crop and boosts prices MARKET WATCH
D’ARCE McMILLAN
B
Trade in the futures and options markets is policed by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. |
REUTERS
PHOTO
MARKETING | FUTURES AND DERIVATIVES
U.S. ag committees get say on derivatives commission Commodity Futures Trading Commission | American regulator’s authority must be renewed for another five-year term BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
American futures and derivatives markets will likely have an improved Commodity Futures Trading Commission to answer to, say U.S. agriculture congressional leaders. However, it’s hard to tell how long that will take because both the House of Representatives’ and the Senate’s agriculture committees are developing their own legislation to “reauthorize” the crucial body. The House committee’s proposed legislation was unveiled and put forward April 9, but it has yet to be determined when it will be debated. The Senate does not yet have a proposal. “We want to look at consumer protections, end user protections, ways we could address issues of (crises with brokers like) MF Global and Peregrine (Financial Group), and so on,” Senate agriculture committee chair Debbie Stabenow said during an April 8 news conference with North American Agricultural Journalists. Frank Lucas, the House agriculture committee chair, said he hoped having support of influential members of both political parties would help his committee’s CFTC re-authorization proposals pass through the House without too much trouble. However, he said the committee wants improved protection for market users and to “correct some of the most egregious mistakes in (the) Dodd-Frank (post-2008 financial crisis legislation).” The House and Senate can develop and pass bills on the same issues, but those pieces of legislation then have to be fit together before a final version is approved. Lucas, an Oklahoma Republican, and Stabenow, a Michigan Democrat, acknowledged that it might be
FRANK LUCAS U.S. AGRICULTURE COMMITTEE CHAIR
tough reauthorizing the CFTC this year because an election is looming. “The farther we get into the year, an election year, we’ll have to see if we can do that,” said Stabenow. The CFTC is the police officer of the U.S. derivatives world, tasked with protecting market participants from fraud and other abuses. Intense attention has focused on the CFTC since the 2008 financial meltdown because derivatives were generally viewed to be key elements of the calamity. The commission approves commissioners for five-year terms and recently has been operating without three of five permanent positions, although the Senate is now moving for ward three nominees in the approval process. The legislation enabling the commission’s operations is valid for five year terms, causing these re-authorization situations. However, it has been given extensions a number of times since its 1974 inception. The CFTC answers to the agriculture committees because publicly regulated derivatives markets were once dominated by agricultural commodities. Other commodities and market factors such as interest rates now make up the vast bulk of derivatives market volume. It gives agriculture-focused politicians a chance to push the interests
of farmers higher in the sight of regulators than they would otherwise likely be. The agriculture focus was also a factor in vetting the three nominees for CFTC commissioner, all of whom were pressed on their agricultural knowledge and commitment to understanding how farmers rely upon futures markets. “We, I think, all expressed a real desire to make sure they understand agriculture and agricultural end users,” said Stabenow.
elow freezing temperatures across a wide swath of the southern U.S. Plains early this week endangered the hard red winter wheat crop. According to the Kansas State University extension department, winter wheat that has started to joint can be hurt when temperatures fall below -4 C for at least two hours, and it was expected to be that cold. The damage can be moderate to severe, but the true extent will take a few weeks to reveal itself. As this column was written April 14, Kansas City wheat futures rose but were not up the daily limit. They closed the day up more than 2.5 percent. The amount in the jointing stage as of April 14 was 31 percent, close to last year’s 33 percent but behind the long-term average of 47 percent. Frost hit the region last year at the same time. Last year Kansas wheat on average yielded 38 bushels an acre due to the frost and dry weather, down from the previous five-year average of 40.8 bushels. The overall U.S. winter wheat crop condition deteriorated a little again last week. As of April 13, before the freeze hit, the national rating for the winter crop, which includes hard and soft types, saw the poor-to-very poor rating increase to 32 percent from 29 percent the previous week. Fair fell to 34 percent from 36 and the good-to-excellent portion fell to 34 percent from 35.
Texas and Oklahoma remained in the worst shape with 63 percent of the Texas crop in poor to very poor condition, up from 61 percent the previous week. Oklahoma’s poor to very poor rating was 54 percent, up from 48 percent. Kansas poor to very poor rating was 30 percent, up from 27 percent. The worry about the frost in the U.S. Plains and new worries about escalating tensions in Ukraine lifted wheat prices early this week, but overall wheat had been pulling back from its late winter-early spring rally. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s monthly supply and demand report last week increased the forecast for year-end global wheat stocks to 186.68 million tonnes, up 2.9 million tonnes from the previous month, mostly because China is consuming less feed wheat. Global year-end stocks would be up about 10 million tonnes from the end of 2012-13, which will weigh on wheat values. Weather events elsewhere affecting the coming 2014-15 global wheat crop were mixed. Concern is rising about a large dry area extending from Germany into France, but Ukraine received rain in recent days, helping to alleviate concerns about dry soil there. The situation in Australia, where farmers will soon begin seeding wheat, improved a little over the past week. South Australia received good rain this month, as have parts of New South Wales and Victoria, all in the southeastern part of Australia. However, other parts of the southeast remain dry and agricultural parts of Western Australia are very dry. P ro s p e c t s f o r a n E l Ni n o a re increasing. El Ninos tend to deliver dry weather to eastern Australia and in some cases increase the amount of rain in the U.S. Midwest.
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9
ARGENTINA | PRODUCTION OUTLOOK
WP LIVESTOCK REPORT
South American crop could pressure oilseeds
HOGS DOWN
Crops better than expected | Analyst says improved Argentine crop could offset smaller Brazilian crop BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Argentina’s corn and soybean crops will likely be bigger than the market is anticipating, says an analyst who recently toured the country. This could eventually put downward pressure on oilseed prices, including canola. Bruce Burnett, CWB weather and crop specialist, said there has been a lingering market concern about the crop because it was hot and dry during seeding in December and the first half of January. “Our conclusions were that it really didn’t impact the crops that significantly,” he said. Burnett toured more than 100 soybean fields in portions of Buenos Aires, Cordoba and Santa Fé, the country’s three largest corn and soybean producing provinces. What he discovered is that many farmers held back on planting until rain arrived in January, and conditions have been ideal since then. Those late-seeded crops have excellent yield potential. Also, the third of the crop planted early in October and November isn’t as bad off as many analysts thought. It has average or slightly above average yield potential. The U.S. Department of Agriculture is forecasting 54 million tonnes of soybean production, but Burnett
A better than expected crop in Argentina won’t put immediate pressure on prices due to the tight North American supply. | REUTERS PHOTO said it could easily be one to two million tonnes more if the weather cooperates. Corn yields are also likely to be higher than the USDA is forecasting, but acreage could be lower because it appears that the dry conditions caused growers to seed more soybeans and less corn. “Just visually, there was a lot of bean fields in a lot of areas and there’s no corn fields around,” said Burnett. He said the lack of corn was very noticeable compared to last year’s crop tour.
That could mean an even bigger soybean crop is coming, which could eventually put downward pressure on soybean and canola markets but probably not until the new crop year. Argentina’s larger-than-expected soybean crop will likely offset the recent reduction in Brazil’s crop. The USDA shaved Brazil’s soybean crop by a million tonnes in its April supply and demand report, which follows a 1.5 million tonne cut in the March report. “There will still be big supplies
down there that need to be marketed over the next six months or so,” said Burnett. The impact of the huge looming South American harvest will be muted by the current tightness in North American supply, but that could change by summer with a big anticipated U.S. crop in the ground and still plentiful supplies of South American soybeans. It doesn’t help that Argentina has rampant inflation and currency devaluation, which is reducing grower willingness to sell a crop that is already starting to be harvested. “With the inflation rate and the depreciation of the peso, they are metering the grain out,” said Burnett. Export statistics show the country is off to a slow start despite higherthan-usual carryout from the previous year. It means there could be a big pile of soybeans left by the start of the new crop year. Demand is also starting to dry up at today’s prices. Chinese importers recently defaulted on 500,000 tonnes of U.S. and Brazilian soybean shipments. On the bright side, the currency devaluation meant Burnett’s plush hotel room in downtown Buenos Aires cost exactly half as much as the room he stayed at in Kindersley, Sask., a couple of weeks earlier. “And let me tell you, there was no comparison,” he said with a laugh.
U.S. cash hog prices fell hard as packers cut back slaughter to match the reduced number of marketready hogs. Also, packers had met most of the Easter ham demand and were preparing for a week shortened by the Good Friday holiday. Pork prices rolled back from recent record highs. Iowa-southern Minnesota area hogs delivered to plants were $89 US per cwt. April 11, down about $6 from the previous Friday. The U.S. pork cutout fell to $124.76 per cwt., down about $6. The U.S. estimated weekly slaughter to April 12 was 2.02 million, down from 2.03 million the previous week and down from 2.08 million last year.
BISON STEADY TO STRONGER 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 $3.90. Cull cow and bull prices averaged $2. Quality 2013 bull calves averaged $2.50 per lb. live weight and heifers averaged $2.20 per lb. Animals outside the desirable buyer specifications may be discounted.
ELK AND VENISON Alberta Wapiti Producers Co-op members’ price is $3.24 per pound, basis hot hanging carcass weight for males and females in good body condition, aged 18 months and older delivered to Fort McLeod, Alta.
LAMBS STRONGER
CANFAX REPORT FED CATTLE STEADY TO LOWER Cash to futures basis levels were the strongest of the year, encouraging feedlots to market cattle. A few Canadian fed cattle traded south on a negotiated cash basis with prices at a slight premium. However, most of the trade was Canadian because some producers were concerned about grading discounts in the United States. Weighted average steers were $145.24, almost steady, while heifers were $144.88, down $1.81. Dressed trade was $2-$5 lower at $242.50 in Alberta. Most of the show list comprised yearlings, but a few calves were offered. More calves will arrive at the end of the month. More heifers are entering the slaughter mix. Western Canadian heifer slaughter has been 26 percent larger than the steer kill over the past three weeks. Weekly fed exports to March 29 totaled 11,890 head. Feedlots have done a good job
keeping front end inventor ies current. There appears to be a slight lag before calves arrive in large numbers. The market should be able to hold above $140 at least until the end of the month.
SLAUGHTER COWS MOSTLY STEADY D1, D2 cows ranged $97-$112 per hundredweight to average $104.50, down 92 cents. D3 cows ranged $85$98 to average $92, up 25 cents. Rail bids were steady at $200-$205. Butcher bull were 106.15, down $2.21 Non-fed slaughter to April 5 fell 14 percent to 5,090 head. Weekly exports to March 29 fell two percent to 7,533 head. Warm weather following Easter should encourage grilling and enhance hamburger demand.
FEEDERS POST RECORDS Alberta feeder prices hit new record
MPOWERing
farmers to transform agribusiness.
highs. Average feeder steer prices were more than $2 per cwt. higher, and heifers were more than $1.25 higher. Alberta feeder steers had a $4 premium over Saskatchewan and Manitoba markets. Keen buyer interest from Eastern Canada and the U.S. fueled competition. A few calves weighing less than 400 pounds were steady to higher, and 400-600 lb. feeders rose 40 cents-$1. Grass type 600-800 lb. steers surged $3.25, while comparable heifers rose $1-$1.50. Steers heavier than 800 lb. were mixed on varied quality while heifers rose $1.75-$3. Most feeders less than 700 lb. traded $60 per cwt. higher than the same week last year. Alberta auction volume rose six percent to 30,740 head. There is an increase in forward pricing of calves and feeders for deferred delivery. Weekly feeder exports to March 29 fell one percent to 17,004 head.
MPPOW O ER® He eerb rbbicciddees:s:
The aggressive interest from outside Western Canada has sustained price momentum. Supplies should seasonally tighten, supporting prices.
BEEF FALLS U.S. boxed beef prices fell last week with Choice down $6.95 at $225 US per cwt. and Select down $7.11 at $214.30. Weekly volumes were up 13 percent at 879 loads. Retail features on grilling cuts saw a noticeable increase, which should be positive for prices. Weekly Canadian cutouts to April 5 saw AAA stabilize at $237.96 Cdn per cwt. and AA fall $3.04 to $236.48. 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.
Same active as:
Beaver Hill Auction in Tofield, Alta., reported 691 sheep and 48 goats sold April 7. Wool lambs lighter than 70 lb. were $142-$210 per cwt., 70-85 lb. were $152-$180, 86-105 lb. were $143$168 and 106 lb. and heavier were $140-$153. Wool rams were $46-$80 per cwt. Cull ewes were $41-$89 and bred ewes were $90-$200 per head. Hair lambs lighter than 70 lb. were $122-$164 per cwt., 70-85 lb. were $125-$172, 86-105 lb. were $138$149 and 106 lb. and heavier were $130-$140. Hair rams were $42-$60 per cwt. Cull ewes were $34-$70 and ewelamb families were $150-$200 per unit. Good kid goats lighter than 50 lb. were $200-$235. Those heavier than 50 lb. were $200-$250 per cwt. Nannies were $105-$127.50 per cwt. Billies were $112-$190. Ontario Stockyards Inc. reported that 3,277 sheep and lambs and 222 goats traded April 7. All lambs traded actively at higher prices. Good lean sheep sold steady. Thicker and thinner types sold under pressure.
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
WPEDITORIAL
OPINION
Editor: Joanne Paulson Phone: 306-665-3537 | Fax: 306-934-2401 E-Mail: joanne.paulson@producer.com
ANIMAL PEDIGREE ACT | LIVESTOCK RECORDS
CRAIG’S VIEW
Pedigree registration valuable to purebred livestock sector
F
ew government programs or services can claim to draw such high praise as the Animal Pedigree Act and the organization that administers it — the Canadian Livestock Records Corp. The act, which was brought in 105 years ago and last amended in 1988, consistently impresses the people whom it was designed to serve. That point is even more striking when one considers the diverse membership that makes up the corporation. Organizations as different as the Canadian Goat Society and the Peruvian Horse Association of Australasia, for example, along with member organizations representing bison, cattle, dogs, donkeys, foxes, goats, horses, llamas, alpacas, sheep and hogs, have all seen enough value in the act to come together under its umbrella. So it’s perplexing when the Conservative government says it might do away with the pedigree act, casting the future for the CLRC into doubt. In 2013, the CLRC registered, identified or recorded 101,235 animals on behalf of 49 member associations and six contracted associations, and performed work for its General Stud and Herd Book and its Canadian Identification Project for non-purebred animals. The value of the act, according to its members, lies in the credibility it brings in attracting international buyers for livestock genetics. The government stamp tells foreign buyers the system can be trusted, they say. Larger livestock organizations, such as those representing Angus and Hereford breeders, have been able to build that kind of credibility without government over time, but it requires an economy of scale: enough members to ensure enough funds to maintain top level marketing and quality breeding programs. As well, an organization such as the CLRC acting as an overarching group offers the kind of stability and dependability that a more disparate collection of livestock bodies operating
alone could not. In some countries, two or more organizations have sprung up to represent a single breed, which adds confusion for buyers and for those charged with maintaining breeding standards because every organization might not adhere to the same rules. Smaller organizations face other hurdles as well. They are often volunteer operated and would find it difficult to keep records to the same standards as a dedicated livestock records organization. Even if several groups were able to form a new umbrella organization and combine their efforts, it would still lack the government stamp of approval that many international and domestic buyers prefer. The government’s reasons for wanting to change the existing structure remain vague. Leading the charge is Agriculture Canada’s John Ross, director of the department’s animal industry division. “There is a philosophy that perhaps the government of Canada is involved in too many things,” he said recently. But change should be based on need, not philosophy. Perhaps there are some cost recovery methods that a review could explore. Ensuring good value for taxpayer money must be a priority for any good government. However, this proposal appears to have little to do with money. Administering the act costs about $200,000 per year. The purebred livestock sector generates an estimated $250 million per year in imports and exports, according to Genome Alberta. Some of that is raised by livestock associations that manage their own records outside of the pedigree act. However, even if the organizations working under the act represent just one-tenth of that, the mathematical argument to keeping the pedigree act and the CLRC is undeniable.
FARM LABOUR | PRODUCTIVITY
Bruce Dyck, Terry Fries, Barb Glen, D’Arce McMillan and Joanne Paulson collaborate in the writing of Western Producer editorials.
I believe people are sincere when they say (there is a shortage of farm labour), but every acre got planted last year and every cow got milked and most apples and most strawberries got picked … so somehow it happens, and if there’s a real labour shortage some of this would be left on the field. RAY BOLLMAN ADJUNCT PROFESSOR, UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEWAN
RAIL SERVICE BILL | AMENDMENTS SOUGHT
Rail shippers willing to try, try again to get rail service bill fixed CAPITAL LETTERS
KELSEY JOHNSON
A
coalition of Canadian rail shippers sent a letter to the federal transport committee in February 2013, demanding immediate changes to the then pending Fair Rail Freight Services Act (Bill C-52). If left unchanged, they said, the railroads could render the bill’s provisions ineffective in court. The group put forward six amendments, nicknamed in Ottawa circles as the “big six.” Among the suggestions, the shippers wanted a clearer definition of service, mandatory service level agreements and reciprocal penalties. These changes, the group insisted,
would “minimize uncertainty, give more explicit guidance to arbitrators and limit the opportunity for railways to mount legal challenges designed to frustrate the intent of Parliament, delay decisions and lead shippers, both large and small, into expensive legal battles.” The majority Conservative government eventually rejected all six amendments. A year and two months later, in light of a massive grain backlog across the Prairies, not much has changed. Shippers and the railways are still griping, blaming everyone but themselves for the unprecedented backlog well into its seventh month. No service level agreements have been negotiated or signed. The “big six” are all back on the table. And, while the bill number (Bill C-30) and the committee studying it (agriculture) may have changed, MPs are still struggling to find a solution to longstanding service problems. Some stakeholders have hailed
their latest attempt, the Fair Rail for Grain Farmers act, as a step in the right direction. Most though, including industry, farmers and academia, still say the bill doesn’t go far enough. Critics of Bill C-30 argue that it lacks teeth. Missing again, they said during eight hours of emergency agriculture committee meetings last month, is a precise definition of service. Nor does the bill make service level agreements mandatory, complete with reciprocal penalties, something industry has been demanding for years. MPs were told again the legislation must be amended. In what’s become standard practice in Ottawa, the Conservatives voted down every opposition amendment. A Conservative change would alter the bill slightly. The new section orders the railways to pay “any expenses” incurred by any person because of poor service. Critics have been quick to point out a flaw. The bill still lacks a clear defi-
nition of “service” or “expenses.” The Conservatives have said that those definitions, along with better guidelines for federal arbitrators negotiating service level agreements, will come via regulations. However, the regulations are still being drafted. When and what those regulations will look like remains to be seen. Whether they will prevent the railways from playing games is also to be determined. The pending Fair Rail for Grain Farmers Act sunsets after two years. With tensions between the railways and shippers at an all time high, there’s plenty of time for the railways to stall, particularly because any penalty levied by the Canadian Transportation Agency (CTA) is eligible to be challenged in court under the Canada Transportation Act. With the railways being framed as “failing the country,” Canadian National Railway president Claude Mongeau recently told the Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce the railway is considering its options.
He said one shipper is seeking federal arbitration for a service level agreement, and CN is planning its presentation to the CTA. Mongeau said the railway will also seek federal regulations for grain companies, which have managed to avoid blame even though they’re making promises to farmers and customers the railways simply can’t keep. One thing is for sure. Rail service for bulk goods, like grain, is an issue that is not going away any time soon. Federal transport minister Lisa Raitt has said the promised rail service review, originally set for June 2015, will start this summer. If the “big six” fail to be included in the Fair Rail for Grain Farmers Act this spring, shippers are guaranteed to trot out the changes for the third time this summer during the government’s rail review. One can only wonder what the Conservatives will say then. Kelsey Johnson is a reporter with iPolitics, wwe.ipolitics.ca.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
11
& OPEN FORUM CEREAL RESEARCH CENTRE | PUBLICLY FUNDED BREEDING
LEGACY | NORMAN BORLAUG
Push to private plant breeding shameful
Crop scientist deserves hero treatment
BY GLENN TAIT
A
griculture Canada is closing its Cereal Research Centre this month, marking the end of nearly a century of public plant breeding in Winnipeg. It is another sorry landmark on the Stephen Harper government’s systematic path of destruction through Canada’s public agriculture institutions. Publicly funded plant breeding at the CRC, along with other Agriculture Canada research stations and several Canadian universities, has produced most of Canada’s cereal crop varieties, which are the foundation for our multibillion-dollar grain industry. Industry Canada says that approximately 50 percent of wheat and oat acreage in Canada is seeded to varieties developed at the CRC, which represent a farm gate value of close to $2.5 billion. The federal government is not only closing the CRC but is winding down all public funding for spring wheat plant breeding to make way for private sector investment. Agriculture Canada will allow scientists to continue work already in progress but will not support new breeding nor allow the current work to proceed to the final stage of producing varieties farmers can buy. The CRC’s top-notch spring wheat team has been broken up, and only a handful of Agriculture Canada wheat breeders remain at the Brandon, Swift Current, Sask., and Lethbridge research stations. Agriculture Canada director general Stephen Morgan Jones laid out the federal government’s vision at a Canadian Seed Trade Association
The closing of cereal research centres and funding for spring wheat breeding is creating a seed oligopoly, says the author. | FILE PHOTO meeting last year: the department would “vacate” variety finishing; germplasm developed by the department’s scientists would be sold to private companies; intellectual property rights rules would be redrawn to benefit private breeders and variety registration rules would be revisited. Yet public plant breeding gives a high return on investment. Studies by University of Saskatchewan agricultural economist Richard Gray show that every dollar invested in cereals breeding returns at least $20, and often more. When the federal government invests $30 million a year in wheat breeding, it creates at least $600 million in value, which is distributed among farmers in the form of better crops and provides income to pay wages, taxes, and check offs for additional research. However, most of these high re-
turns go to shareholders when private companies invest, with most of them being wealthy non-Canadians. Gene patents, hybridization and contracts help the sellers of genetically modified canola, soy and corn hold onto most if not all of the returns by forcing farmers to buy expensive new seed each year. Gray’s research shows high returns to investment in plant breeding, but it also documents that private seed companies reinvest only a small portion of returns into new research. Research has also shown that private breeding is less economically efficient: $25 million in annual public investment in wheat produces can generate the same yield increases produced by $80 million in private money in canola breeding. It’s uncertain whether the federal government has decided to bring in UPOV 91 through Bill C-18 in spite of
or because of this disparity in how returns to plant breeding are distributed. However, no matter the reason, it will guarantee Bayer, Syngenta, Monsanto and Dow a massive new revenue stream. By defunding and vacating public spring wheat breeding, the federal government is handing these companies an incredibly lucrative new source of profits. This new funding policy and the UPOV ’91 plant breeders regime that underpins it will not only lose Canadian grain farmers the future varieties that the CRC would have developed, but it will pay higher seed prices and increased royalties, whether on the purchase of new seed or as end point royalties on crops harvested from farm-saved seed. If changes to variety registration rules proposed last May are adopted, companies will be able to deregister older varieties that no longer provide them with royalties. This will force farmers to choose among fewer and more expensive varieties. When the Dominion Rust Research Laboratory, the CRC’s predecessor, was established in 1925, prairie farmers were fighting for a fair share against the oligopolies of the banks, railways and grain companies, and we eventually built the Canadian Wheat Board to act in the farmers’ interest. Today, in the shadow of the economic disaster that the Conservativegovernment unleashed by tearing down the CWB, it is now adding insult to injury by creating a new seed oligopoly. Glenn Tait is a National Farmers Union board member. He grows grain and raises cattle on his family farm near Meota, Sask.
LONG-RANGE PLANNING | SAVING TIME, MONEY
Remember when planning wasn’t so vital? HURSH ON AG
KEVIN HURSH
R
emember the good old days when you could pick up your fertilizer in the spring just before you needed it? Sure, it might cost a bit more, but it was always available. Since last fall, urea prices are up by more than $250 a tonne, and it’s difficult to find supplies that aren’t already committed. If you bought last fall, on-farm storage for granular fertilizer has paid for itself in just one year. The nitrogen bill has gone up around $20 an acre on a crop like canola, but the cost from reduced yields could be even higher if you’re forced to cut back on application
rates. Phosphate has also increased in price and is difficult to source. Even paying for your fertilizer in advance isn’t guaranteeing the supply. You could be scrambling to get your full allocation if it’s not stored on the farm because suppliers are being forced to trim back their commitments. Last minute opportunities to rent additional land could be thwarted by the lack of available fertilizer. Remember when it was relatively easy to turn off-board grain into cash? You might have to wait for contract calls to move wheat, but you could sell canola almost anytime. That has also changed. Procrastination on grain marketing last fall was costly. Not only did prices drop, but delivery opportunities were increasingly delayed. A record number of producers are relying on the cash advance program because they’re still holding a big percentage of their grain. Overall, most producers have strong balance sheets, but cash flow will be an issue for some as seeding expenses roll in. A good marketing
plan and cash flow management have been extremely valuable. In a world that boasts just-in-time logistics, producers increasingly need to plan for grain that doesn’t leave on time and inputs that rise in price and still aren’t available when needed. The self-sufficient bunker mentality has other applications as well. To guard against diesel fuel shortages, some producers are upgrading and increasing their on-farm fuel storage. There have been diesel supply disruptions because of refinery issues in recent years, but thankfully such a problem hasn’t yet occurred in the midst of seeding or harvest. It’s convenient for some of us to operate from slip tanks filled up at local card lock stations, but on-farm bulk storage tanks could be a big advantage in the event of diesel shortages in a busy season. Recent years have also seen spot shortages of important crop protection products. Sometimes this is an issue at the manufacturing plant, but other times product demand has
simply been underestimated. Increasingly, producers are making sure they have their products well in advance. They at least check with suppliers regularly to make sure shortages aren’t developing. Timely equipment repair has also become a concern. New equipment that’s on warranty provides peace of mind. For those of us running older equipment, any repairs requiring a trained mechanic could mean significant downtime. Repair capacity is strained to the limit during the busy seasons. Securing replacement parts can also be fraught with delays. In this modern digital age, consumers seemingly have access to everything at any time. But not in agriculture. The supply chains and services are often unreliable, both outgoing and incoming, and it seems to be growing worse. Planning ahead to anticipate system failures and bottlenecks has become a key to good management. Kevin Hursh is an agricultural journalist, consultant and farmer. He can be reached by e-mail at kevin@hursh.ca.
EDITORIAL NOTEBOOK
ED WHITE, REPORTER
Improving crop yields another way to save lives
M
embers of North American Agricultural Journalists are a hard-boiled bunch, always most at ease putting U.S. political leaders and agency heads on the spot. However, I saw a softer side of this group of no-nonsense reporters and editors last week in Washington, D.C., as they paid homage to a man about whom no amount of professional journalistic skepticism can reduce from the status of hero. For most of one morning we were scheduled to meet with the chairs of the Senate and House of Representatives agriculture committees and some of their members, but first we took a long detour within the Capitol building to see the statue of Norman Borlaug in the National Statuary Hall, which was unveiled March 25. Journalists are trained not to get sentimental about important people they have to write about, but most of us posed in front of the statue to have our images combined with his one last time. Borlaug died in 2009, but his legacy will live on longer than any of us. He is called the Father of the Green Revolution and the Man Who Saved A Billion Lives because of his research, which from the 1950s-onward radically improved crop yields in poor, hunger-afflicted regions such as India. I met and interviewed Borlaug. So have most members of the NAAJ. That would normally make us leery of seeming too close to the man, a threat to our objectivity, but Borlaug was a man who passed the test of journalistic skepticism and emerged untarnished. For those of us who cover agriculture for a living, it was nice to see a crop scientist treated as a U.S. hero, every bit as important as American revolutionary Samuel Adams or president Dwight D. Eisenhower. We as agricultural journalists believe agriculture is as important as any other heroic endeavour, and it is nice to know that anyone who visits National Statuary Hall will see a seven-foot tall bronze testament to that truth.
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
OPEN FORUM LETTERS POLICY:
OIL OVER AG
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.
Prime minister Stephen Harper and some of his colleagues often state that Canada’s economy is their first concern. However, people are rightfully entitled to wonder which sector of the economy gets most of their support. Is it the oil industry or agriculture? Federal and provincial governments must certainly be aware of the bumper crop harvested on the Prairies. Grain bins of prairie producers and grain terminals are filled to capacity. That grain needs to be loaded onto
rail line grain cars and moved to ports where ships are waiting to be loaded. The producers can then move grain from their farms and get paid for it. There is a high cost for ships waiting in port. It is called demurrage. That cost will be deducted from the grain that the farmer sells. Many producers need money now to meet the costs of putting in the crop this spring. Obviously, federal and provincial governments must consider that oil is the most important to the economy. It seems that no concern has been shown that thousands of oil tankers are moving on the rail lines, but very few grain cars are moving grain to export position.
Grain producers and their organizations were beginning to express alarm that grain was not being moved. An opposition member in the House of Commons suggested that the minister of agriculture was “asleep at the switch.” Not so. Ignoring grain movement, simply followed Harper’s dutiful, ritzy minister of agriculture in eliminating the CWB and the democratically elected producers who were on the executive of the C WB. This leaves producers at the mercy of the global grain traders and the oil industry. It is well known that the number of farm families living on the land is steadily decreasing. Our present government possibly reasons that losing
READY TO KICK SOME GRASS?
the vote of prairie farm families is no big deal. But there is a federal election on the calendar for 2015. Canadian voters may well believe that giving preferential treatment to the oil industry is not being fair to prairie producers. Leo Kurtenbach, Saskatoon, Sask.
PAYING THE RANSOM To the Editor: Everyone seems to have missed the whole point of this exercise. The railways and their CEOs are all about the need to improve the return to shareholders. That is the only point. The Conservatives believe it is all about the money all of the time. Once the railways reach the $550 million cap, set by the Conservative government as a sop to farmers for gutting the C WB, the railways stopped shipping wheat, shed locomotives, grain cars and employees — for CP (Canadian Pacific Railway), 400, 11,000 and 4,500, respectively — thus saving millions of dollars that got passed through to shareholders through a CP share buy-back and CEOs. CN (Canadian National Railway) increased CEO compensation 45 percent. Now the Conservative government has to look like they are doing something to keep the farmer voters in line, but they have to drag their heels until the new corporate year starts and the cap resets. The Conservative government minions first ignore, then bluster, then threaten and finally voilá, legislation with penalties is set to take effect April 2014, six months after the backlog began. The Conservative government is going to strike a committee to convince farmers if only they will remove the cap their wheat will get to market, they will just have to pay more to get it there — the free market system, don’t you know. But how much more? Would the farmers be willing to pay a $1 to $2 billion ransom of the $4 billion they are currently losing in the “free market” to get their grain off their farms? How much would they be willing to pay? Hmmm. The railways’ shareholders and CEOs are waiting with hopeful anticipation for the exercise to play itself out. Dianne McCollum, Dunnville, Ont.
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Joyce Sasse, in her column Spiritual Vignettes (WP March 20), makes reference to a book written by a certain Philip Jenkins. The quote reads, “Relating with the ecosphere is at the heart of the Gospel.” Then follows John 3:16: “For God so loved the (ecosphere) world that He gave His only begotten Son.” The interpretation of this Bible text is completely erroneous. First of all, Christ did not die to save the planet (ecosphere), but to save His people from their sins, death and hell.
OPINION In the text quoted, the word “world” refers to the people living in the world, and in a narrower sense, His chosen people out of the world. A few more examples where the word “world” means mankind: • Christ quotes in John 15:18,”If the world hate you, ye know it hated me.” • Read further, John 17:9, where Christ says, “I pray not for the world, but for them,” and in John 17:14, “and the world has hated them.” It is obvious that the ecosphere, the inert planet, cannot hate Christ, His disciples or His people and that Jesus does not pray for the planet and therefore did not die for the ecosphere. It is sad to see that there are people who believe such explanations and are led astray by them. Further, I would like to commend the WP that space is provided in their
publication for the Spiritual Vignettes. However, a closer look should be given at times for the accuracy of the content contributed or referred to by Joyce Sasse. Peter Rozendaal, Barnwell, Alta.
FRUSTRATED LEASEHOLDER To the Editor: I know that not all landowners have oil and gas wells on their property, but those of us that do basically have a winning lottery ticket each year. But not all is well. Three years ago, we got a letter from the company that operates the gas wells on our property stating that they will no longer pay surface lease, easement payments or any other payments. This was due to the Sask-
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
atchewan government requiring a larger performance bond that the gas company could not, or would not, provide. So, the government shut in (turned off ) the production of the gas field. No production, no income, no surface lease payments. The government has taken no responsibility for the situation, and as a leaseholder, I feel very frustrated. Ron Tumbach, Leader, Sask.
COSTLY POLITICAL HUBRIS To the Editor: On March 26, the University of Saskatchewan’s Department of Bioresource Policy, Business and Economics hosted a conference dealing with grain handling and transporta-
tion in Western Canada. It brought together some of the best minds in the field, from both Canada and the United States, to examine the current grain transportation mess, which is expected to cost prairie farmers as much as $4 billion in lost revenues this year. One of the conference goals was to come up with solutions to the complex problems facing the industry. The key recommendations included more port terminal capacity, rail system upgrades, aggregate planning and logistics and better data collection at all levels. These proposed solutions would require well-crafted policies and significant investment from both the private and public sectors. The conference was well attended by all the stakeholders in the supply chain, with farmers making up at least half the audience. One group was conspicuously
absence: provincial and federal politicians. Invitations had been extended to agriculture and transportation ministers at both levels but they were nowhere to be seen. The only political figure in attendance was the Saskatchewan NDP agriculture critic. O n e w o u l d e x p e c t t hat w e l l thought-out solutions to a problem that threatens Canada’s reputation as a reliable grain supplier would be of interest to our governments — apparently not. Both levels of government have a history of passing legislation based on a “get her done” approach rather than well-researched policy because “they know best.” We can’t afford such political hubris and should no longer tolerate it. Blair McCann, Saskatoon, Sask.
YOUTH | STRONG COMMUNITIES
Strong roots, great shoots SPIRITUAL VIGNETTES
JOYCE SASSE
“T
his place doesn’t have work for our young people!” It’s a common complaint in most rural communities, but we need to look at the other side of the coin. I ask the grumblers what they are doing to encourage their youth to take pride in their rural roots? Certainly the availability of jobs is important. However, it is more important to give these kids strong rural roots and encourage them to get out into the world to try their wings, enlarge their experience and gain confidence in themselves through following their dreams. Do this and many of these young people will choose to return to smaller communities, either to work or retire. They will also bring with them a wealth of knowledge and experience. Families, neighbours, teachers, church members and politicalminded folks should be mindful of how their words and actions can instill life-giving values in these young lives. They need to know people care about them and want to encourage them and make them feel they belong. Those who love the land, care about the ecology and understand the rhythms of nature need to be intentional about sharing their understandings. Grandparents, teachers and trusted mentors can communicate how important it is to build strong relationships, act responsibly and care for others. Our “village values” are an important commodity that the world needs. With these village values, our youth can go anywhere and be the best that we have to share. They can lead us into new tomorrows. Joyce Sasse writes for the Canadian Rural Church Network at www.canadian ruralchurch.net.
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NEWS
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
GRAIN | TRANSPORTATION
Proponents of northern route make progress Gateway Keewatin Corridor | Road improvements would give farmers in northeastern Sask. access to Port of Churchill BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
NIPAWIN, Sask. — Farmers and business owners in northeastern Saskatchewan and northwestern Manitoba continue to push for an allseason, dust-free, primary weight highway between Nipawin and The Pas, Man. Members of the Gateway Keewatin Corridor committee say grain farmers and other businesses in the region are missing out on significant economic opportunities because
existing roads that link the two communities are rough, narrow and unable to accommodate heavy truck traffic for much of the year. Heavy trucks can use the roads during the winter but not when seasonal weight restrictions are in place. Advocates of the Gateway Keewatin Corridor say the roads, if upgraded, would serve as a key trade route to The Pas, where Hudson Bay Railway has track that leads to the Port of Churchill in northern Manitoba.
What we’ve got to do is get it moved fairly fast from the farmgate to tidewaters. CHRIS HUDYMA COMMITTEE MEMBER
During a recent presentation at the Hudson Bay Route Association’s annual meeting in Nipawin, members of the Gateway Keewatin Corri-
dor committee said road upgrades would spur economic activity in the area, create jobs and increase the amount of rail traffic that moves through the Churchill. An upgraded highway would not only move more local products such as grain and wood but also provide an important link to other areas in northern Saskatchewan, northern Alberta and British Columbia. “Really what we’re talking about is project economics,” said committee member Chris Hudyma. Grain farmers in northeastern Sas-
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katchewan would be among the first to benefit. An upgraded trucking route would allow farmers from northeastern Saskatchewan to haul grain directly to the HBR railhead at The Pas. OmniTrax Canada, which owns the Port of Churchill and the HBR, has told the committee it would like to move a million tonnes of grain through the Port of Churchill each year. “I think we can do it,” Hudyma said. “We can do it through road and we can do it through rail. What we’ve got to do is get it moved fairly fast from the farmgate to tidewaters.” Members of the Gateway Keewatin Corridor committee have been lobbying for several years for provincial funding to perform the necessary upgrades. The current route between Nipawin and The Pas covers 210 kilometres on three provincial highways. Highway 283 in Manitoba covers 40 kilometres from The Pas to the Saskatchewan border, while Highways 9 and 55 on the Saskatchewan side cover the remaining 170 km. Len Gluska, president of the Gateway Keewatin Corridor group, said weight limitations are a key concern for truckers who use the route. Heavy trucks from northeastern Saskatchewan are forced to travel an extra 700 km to The Pas when summer weight restrictions come into effect on Highways 55 and 9. “We’re talking about the economic benefits of upgrading this highway, but right now what exists in our economy is an economic deficit, created by a lack of roads,” said Gluska. “That demonstrates the importance of it.” The committee received positive news from the Manitoba government April 4 when it unveiled a fiveyear, $55 million highway improvement package, including significant upgrades to Highway 283 between The Pas and the Saskatchewan border and Highway 10 south of The Pas toward Swan River, Man. Expected improvements to Highway 283 will accommodate heavy t r u c k t ra f f i c 1 2 m o nt h s a y e a r between The Pas and the Saskatchewan border. However, significant improvements will still be required on the Saskatchewan side. The Gateway Keewatin group estimates that the necessary upgrades in Saskatchewan will cost $70 million. “Approximately $70 million on the Saskatchewan side completes this … whole northern corridor,” said Nipawin town councillor Mike Botterill. “We heard … from the minister from Manitoba that there was a commitment on the Manitoba side…. I guess what we’re trying to do now … is make sure we get the Saskatchewan commitment to finish the Saskatchewan side to complete this corridor.” Highway 55 is part of an interprovincial road system known as the Northern Woods and Water Route, which begins in Winnipeg and eventually connects with the McKenzie Highway in northern Alberta near Grimshaw.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
15
POTATOES | CONTRACTING AGREEMENTS
Potato acres likely to drop as contract talks continue Manitoba still without agreement | Companies aiming to lower prices BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, Man. — Manitoba potato growers and processors haven’t reached an agreement on price, but both sides know fewer potatoes will be grown in the province this year. Keystone Potato Growers Association manager Dan Sawatzky said processors have completely cut ties with several growers, and overall volume will be down. “We don’t have our volumes in place. We know there will be another decrease in volume so (there’s) a lot of concern in the potato industry,” Sawatzky said at a Keystone Agricultural Producers meeting in Portage la Prairie April 11. Manitoba farmers grow processing potatoes for a Simplot french fry plant in Portage, McCain Foods’ plants in Carberry and Portage and a Cavendish Farms plant in Jamestown, North Dakota. “Simplot has given the volumes … so has Cavendish,” Sawatzky said. “McCain’s is the one we’re waiting for.” Sawatzky said Cavendish, Simplot and McCain have severed contracts with a number of Manitoba farmers. “With Cavendish, there were five growers affected with complete cuts,” he said. “McCain’s … the best I could say is probably half a dozen farms were affected completely. Simplot has also cut a couple growers, with 100 percent volume (reductions).” Simplot is cutting potato volumes by 10 percent in Manitoba relative to 2013. McCain’s has committed to a temporary volume agreement, promising to contract at least 65 percent of the volume from last year. “We were able to (get) them to commit to a minimal level of 65 percent of last year,” Sawatzky said. “We expect they’ll be quite a bit higher than that.” Cavendish has cut its Manitoba volume by 50 percent. Sawatzky said the contract with the company is small compared to McCain and Simplot. “(It) represents less than five percent of our total contracts. Fifty percent of a contract sounds high, and it is. We take it seriously.” McCain and other companies have said their customers expect lower prices for french fries and other processed potatoes, which is putting pressure on Canadian growers because yields in Washington state can reach 600 to 700 hundred weight per acre, double the yields in Manitoba. “We are trying to ensure that our growers understand the urgent need to narrow the gap between the price of raw potatoes in parts of the U.S. and prices in Canada,” a McCain spokesperson said last year. “We’ve already seen volume reductions in Canada as our customers demand product from some of our less costly centres. So if we don’t deal with the price gap, we are going to continue to lose Canadian volume to the lower cost region.” The volume cuts will reduce Manitoba potato acreage from the 70,000 acres grown last year.
The price per pound will also decline because potato growers in other regions of North America have agreed to price cuts, including Idaho and Washington. “It’s anywhere from 3.5 to four, or 2.5 percent, all downward,” said Kevin MacIsaac, general manager of United Potato Growers of Canada. Prince Edward Island growers settled their contract with Cavendish
Farms last week, agreeing to a 3.3 percent price cut for new crop and surplus potatoes from last year. “It’s (been) a really difficult year for negotiating. We say that every year, but this year there’s been a lot of pressure, right from the get go, to move price downwards in all areas,” MacIsaac said. “It came out as a blanket statement (from processors) across the country.”
Processors have severed contracts with several Manitoba growers this year as they reduce volumes in the province. | FILE PHOTO
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
OUT WITH THE OLD
LABOUR | HOG SECTOR
Farmers want help getting help Workers wanted | Manitoba Pork Council asks Ottawa for support BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
A metal scrap yard south of Brandon depicts a range of discarded farm machinery and other industrial equipment. | JEANNETTE GREAVES PHOTO
Farmers are asking the Manitoba Pork Council and the federal government to help fix a labour shortage in the province’s bustling hog business. They want the government and the pork council to do whatever they can to find workers within Canada or bring them in from overseas. “If we could just bring the waiting time (for receiving approval for foreign hog barn workers) down from months to weeks, it’d be good for
the industry,” said hog farmer Cal Penner during the council’s annual meeting April 9. “I think maybe the pork council could be a bit more proactive when it comes to maybe forming a pool of foreign workers who could be available for producers.” Manitoba’s hog belt in central and eastern Manitoba is part of the economically booming Mennonite heartland and a core part of the boom. However, the boom also brings labour problems as the growing towns of Steinbach, Winkler and
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Altona increase their demand for workers. The success of the HyLife company has had a similar impact in French areas such as La Broquerie, providing lots of job opportunities in an area with few idle people. Miles Beaudin of the pork council analyzed the labour pool in core hog production areas and found verification of what farmers have been saying: few unemployed people live in these areas and few are willing to take on demanding jobs in the country. For instance, only 148 of La Broquerie’s 2,600 workforce were unemployed in 2012. Only 20 of 880 were unemployed in Ste. Anne’s and only 250 of 6,600 in the Rural Municipality of Hanover. Those numbers create an unemployment rate of three percent, which economists consider to be near zero in real terms. It’s not easy persuading the ones that aren’t working to take a job in a hog barn outside of town. “These hog farms are biosecure, so they are not close to town. They’re out in the country so it makes it that much more difficult to attract labour,” said Beaudin in an interview. “That’s why we’re somewhat dependent on immigration processes currently and in the future to meet our needs.” Penner introduced a motion to the meeting calling on the pork council to lobby the federal government for quicker approvals for temporary foreign workers. It passed easily. “We find that the process is extremely long,” said Penner. “Eight months to a year is a long time to be short-staffed. It’s really debilitating for not only the owner and operator of the barn (but also for) the workers that are still on staff.” FOR ANOTHER STORY ON FARM LABOUR, SEE PAGE 108.
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FEDERAL FUNDING | MACHINERY
Implement testing facility gets funding SASKATOON NEWSROOM
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A facility in Humboldt, Sask., where machinery makers test new equipment is receiving a multimilliondollar makeover. Officials announced $2.5 million in federal funding for Western Canada Testing last week. The facility conducts independent assessments for agricultural and heavy equipment manufacturers. The funding is expected to help cover new equipment costs. Upgrades will include testing labs for precision farming, spray technology and extreme temperatures.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
17
TESTING THE WATERS
ROTATION RESEARCH | WEED
U.S. study shows stacked rotations reduces weeds Stacked rotations using different weeds, rotations could slow resistance and reduce insect problems BY DAN YATES SASKATOON NEWSROOM
An alternative crop rotation may provide farmers with a new way to fight weeds. In a study published in Weed Science, Katriona Shea calls it “weedweed competition.” She said stacked crop rotations, such as corn-corn-soybean-soybean-wheat-wheat, could suppress weeds without increasing inputs. “The idea is basically do what you already do, but in a different order rather than trying to do more of it,” said Shea, a professor at Pennsylvania State University. The promise of stacked rotations, in which crops are grown consecutively, typically two years at a time, followed by a longer-than-normal break, has been mentioned in farm journals and at meetings but has received little research funding. Shea used a numerical model to conduct simulations, testing different rotations against different groups of weed species. She said the results, while encouraging, are not based on empirical field evidence and don’t consider potential problems such as disease. Shea’s simulation found that the stacked corn-soybean-wheat rotation decreased weed seeds by 15 percent. Similar trends were observed in other rotations where weeds grew during the same season. The study acknowledged that the decrease isn’t huge but suggested it could contribute to an integrated weed management program. Shea noted it’s potential in organic systems. “They think about the weed hurting the crop, but they don’t think about the idea that they might actually interfere with each other and that potentially it’s possible to use that,” she said. American researcher Dwayne Beck suggested in a publication from the Dakota Lakes Research Farm in South Dakota that stacked crop rotations could slow the development of resistant weeds and insects by promoting diversity through long breaks. “From a diversity standpoint, it is better to have a mixture of intervals,” Beck wrote. “To provide maximum protection against pests with short cycles, one of the intervals must be sufficiently long to allow populations of certain diseases or weeds to
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drop to low levels.” He said stacked rotations may keep pest populations diverse — what he called “confused” — and allow for a mixture of short and long residual herbicides. However, he said the subject has not been thoroughly tested and may not work with all rotations. Shea said it’s a topic worthy of further study. “If we model it, it shows an impact and that’s really promising,” she said. “If we’d modelled it and it didn’t show anything, we’d just say, ‘don’t risk it,’ but this suggests it’s worth doing more.”
Road signs to Blackie, Alta., are reflected on water in a ditch as a female common goldeneye paddles along. Ducks are finally back in the area after a long winter away. | MIKE STURK PHOTO
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
FARMLIVING
19
TAKING CARE TO THE COUNTRY Experts examine how to improve services and support for those dealing with dementia in rural and remote areas. | Page 21
FARM LIVING EDITOR: KAREN MORRISON | Ph: 306-665-3585 F: 306-934-2401 | E-MAIL: KAREN.MORRISON@PRODUCER.COM
Celebrating Easter
Grade 5 students from Dr. John G. Egnatoff School in Saskatoon got first-hand lessons in pysanka making. They took part in the ancient Ukrainian tradition at the Ukrainian Museum of Canada in Saskatoon, March 27. Pysanka comes from the words “to write.” For thousands of years, people have written symbols on eggs during Easter. The eggs represent new life. | William DeKay photos Using a candle flame, pure beeswax is melted using a kistka, the traditional writing tool. The beeswax turns black from the flame’s soot, which is then applied to the raw egg using a steady hand to draw lines and shapes. The eggs are dipped into different colours of water from the lightest to the darkest dye. Melted wax is applied to cover each layer of colour. Finally, holding the egg next to the flame, the heat from it melts the wax off. As soon as the wax begins to look shiny it is wiped off. That’s when the magic happens and the design shows through. LEFT: Khrystyna Hudyma hands out raw eggs to eager students.
RIGHT: Katelyn Wozny and Khrystyna Hudyma of the Ukrainian Museum of Canada helped the students during the various stages of pysanka.
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FARM LIVING
ON THE FARM | INDUSTRY AWARENESS
East-central Sask. farm focuses on growth Political participation requires time, family support BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
WILLOWBROOK, Sask. — Levi Hull always knew he’d come back to the farm. What he didn’t know was that he’d take his passion for the cattle industry into the political arena — at least not so early. At 25, Hull has completed just more than a year of at least a two-year term as a director of the Saskatchewan Cattlemen’s Association. He represents District 5, which includes a large chunk of east-central Saskatchewan. He said the hardest part has been learning and keeping straight the many acronyms that the industry likes to use. He also has to be away to attend meetings and events, but he has a great support system. He operates the business with his mother and father, Debbie and Terry, who handle the 1,000 head when he’s gone. His girlfriend, Megan Magee, is a registered veterinary technologist at Animal Health Centre of Melville and regularly helps out at the farm. Hull’s parents said they support their son’s decision to get involved. He is the third generation on the land west of Yorkton. His two brothers, Leighton and Layne, are less
involved in the operation. He has a diploma in agricultural production from Olds College as well as a bachelor of applied science in agribusiness. “I came back to the farm in 2011, and that fall I got some lease-to-own cows,� Hull said. He added to the herd occasionally and last fall bought two quarters of land and more cows. He now owns 300 on his own. The area around Willowbrook is largely grain land, and the family uses pasture, including community grazing near Melville and Theodore, both about 30 kilometres away but in opposite directions. “We seed 1,200 acres of grain land, but everything gets turned back into a cow,� he said. Hull has grown corn for the last four years. Some becomes silage and some is grazed. He is a big fan of corn grazing, as are the fat cows that recently munched their way through a stand. In February, 165 cows had access to a couple of acres at a time. “We aim for 250 cows days an acre. Last year we fed 350 deer, too.� A recent major project was the reconstruction of the farm’s feedlot after extensive flooding in 2011. “In 2012 we built the feedlot up, sloped the pens and built alleys,� Hull
Levi Hull, left, operates a mixed farm with help from his parents, Debbie and Terry. | said. “We traditionally feed our own calves so it was a benefit to us to do the work.� The feedlot was lifted three metres, gravel and clay trucked in and everything cleaned up. Hull continues to work on feed bunks and other projects, but his work on the SCA board can sometimes limit him. “I don’t think people realize the work that each rep puts in,� he said. For example, he sat on the research and communication committees during his first year, as well as the
THE FIGHT FOR FAIR FARMLAND POLICY ISN’T SEXY ...SO WHO’LL BE YOUR SUPERSTAR?
committee that examined the transition of the former federal pastures. He also tries to stay in touch with the producers he represents. “I do hear from a few people. The community pasture issue was big,� he said. One of his goals has been to make sure producers understand what their industry association is doing for them. He has invited producers who request check-off refunds to his district meeting. “A few actually said, ‘this is the first time I’ve ever heard this,’ � he said of his efforts to reach out. It’s also important to him to keep on top of changes in the industry and to educate himself. “If you’re just at home calving cows, doing the same things, you get caught in a rut,� he said. Change is not unheard of on the Hull farm. “We were more grain than cattle even 20 years ago,� he said. However, the land was transitioned to hay and pasture and the cow herd expanded. He uses Angus cross cows, black Maine Anjou bulls on brocklefaced cows and horned Hereford bulls on solid red and black cows. “A Red Baldie or a Black Baldie with black Maine is the best cross.� They have also moved calving time from February and March to later in spring.
KAREN BRIERE PHOTO
“Now everything calves the second week in May. We avoid snowstorms and we calve on grass in different groups,� he said. The family also had to decide whether to go big or get out. His parents wanted him to get out in the world, get his education and perhaps then come back. “But the opportunity was starting to narrow,� Hull said. “It was either get in or get out so we went from 600 cows to 1,000. We used to feed 500 to 1,000 calves and we’ve doubled that.� Corn grazing helps keep the workload manageable. The Hulls have swath grazed, but a year with heavy snow put an end to that. Bush provides adequate shelter for cows on corn in this part of the province, but the Hulls water their animals rather than relying on snow. “We just find they do better,� he said. The feedlot’s capacity is 1,500 and will be expanding again this summer. Hull will be up for re-election later this fall. He thinks he will stick with it, but of course voters will have their say and he will discuss workload with his parents. “I think producers want to be engaged. They want to know what’s going on,� he said. “It’s really opened my eyes. But you can’t do it without good help at home.�
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FARM LIVING
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
21
RURAL EDUCATION | ADJUSTMENTS
School divisions tackle challenges Share ideas, form partnerships | Experts discuss ways to save schools, help teachers BY DIANE ROGERS FREELANCE WRITER
Many seniors in Saskatchewan choose to remain in rural communities where some health-care services may not be available. | FILE PHOTO DEMENTIA SUMMIT | RURAL ISSUES
Meeting rural needs for dementia care Unique challenges | Rural residents have less access to health services for diagnosis, treatment and support BY MELANIE EPP FREELANCE WRITER
One in six women older than 65 will develop Alzheimer’s disease compared to one in 11 men, reports a recent study from the Alzheimer’s Association in the U.S. The number is higher in Canada. Joanne Bracken of the Alzheimer’s Society in Saskatchewan said Canadian women are twice as likely than men to develop the disease. They account for 72 percent of the 747,000 Canadians living with the disease today, she said. On top of that, women are twice as likely than men to be the primary caregiver. Age is the biggest factor in developing dementia, although it can occur in people as young as 40. Risk doubles every five years after 65. Bracken said seniors in Saskatchewan are over-represented in rural areas. “In most parts of Canada, as people age, they move to large urban centres. That’s not what’s happening here,” she said. Seniors made up 15 percent of the population of cities in 2007 but 22 percent of towns and villages. “So we know that people are choosing to stay in their rural communities, and that makes dementia care a little more complex.” Bracken works closely with Dr. Debra Morgan, who specializes in research on dementia issues in rural and remote areas. Morgan collaborates with researchers internationally and holds an annual dementia summit, which brings together people who deal with
dementia, including family, caregivers and health-care professionals. Morgan is the leading force behind Saskatchewan’s Rural and Remote Memory Clinic, which helps people living in areas 100 kilometres outside of Regina and Saskatoon. “The clinic does a lot of work using TeleHealth, which helps overcome some of the major barriers that people have in getting a diagnosis in rural Saskatchewan,” said Bracken. She cited the barrier of travelling to appointments in addition to people’s lack of awareness of disease, the warning signs and how to get a diagnosis. Morgan said the challenges of meeting the needs of individuals with dementia and their families in rural areas are the result of small populations spread over large geographic areas. “(Those people) have less access to needed health and social services, including diagnosis, treatment, and caregiver support,” she said. “Health-care providers need specialized knowledge and skills to provide care using current best practice guidelines, but it is difficult for rural health care providers to access dementia training and specialist support due to distance.” Morgan heads a research project that may eventually create primary health-care models for dementia in Saskatchewan. Morgan, who isn’t aware of dementia-specific programs similar to the Rural and Remote Memory Clinic in other provinces, said more advanced research is being conducted in Ontario and Quebec.
RECOGNIZING THE SIGNS OF DEMENTIA Memory loss is not the only symptom of dementia. Here are 10 signs: • memory loss that affects dayto-day abilities and difficulty retaining new information • difficulty performing tasks such as getting dressed or preparing meals • impaired judgment, such as wearing light clothing on a cold day or not recognizing that a medical issue requires attention • changes in mood and behaviour or severe mood swings
• misplacing objects, which includes putting things in strange places • changes in personality, such as feeling paranoid or threatened • disorientation with time and space, which includes getting lost in familiar places or not knowing what time or day it is • problems with language, including forgetting or even substituting words that don’t work
Source: Alzheimer Society of Canada, www.alzheimer.ca.
The rise of the internet and its technology means the teacher is no longer the expert in the classroom. Dawn Wallin of the University of Manitoba said it has become a “messy situation.” One of three speakers featured on a panel at the 19th National Congress on Rural Education in Canada, she said increasing numbers of aboriginal and immigrant families in rural areas mean the classroom is becoming more diverse, requiring teachers to be more knowledgeable for specialized needs. Fewer farming families and urban migration are also reducing the number of rural students. The rural school is resembling its past, with the rise of multiple grades in one room. Further challenges come from increased poverty in rural Canada. In addition, there are currently 30,000 children in foster care, many of whom are in rural areas. Albert Trask, assistant deputy minister of education for the Yukon, said a decrease in student numbers leads to school consolidation. In his home province of Newfoundland and Labrador 45 years ago, there were 169,000 students in
DAWN WALLIN UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA
1,200 schools with 300 school districts with boards. Today there are 69,000 students in 200 schools with only two school districts. He asked if consolidation is a response by provincial governments to the failure of school boards to respond to the decline and if local school boards are irrelevant. He said interest wanes among parents who have to drive farther to attend school board meetings or teacher interviews. “I think the disappearance of school boards and divisions is the undemocratization of public education,” Trask said. Wallin agreed and urged teachers and trustees to be open to doing things differently. She said rural people must “use our civic voices more to be politically strategic for our rural schools.” Paul Bennett thinks his Alberta school division might have one
answer. The superintendent of the Peace River district promotes partnerships. There are relationships with the local agricultural societies and municipal councils to build gymnasiums and other public places. As classrooms sit empty, there have been more daycares renting the space. One Rotary club bought a vacant bingo hall and started a career development centre to train students for jobs. Anglican women make money for their church by providing food for meetings held in former classrooms that are rented out. Connections have also been made to the RCMP, social services, mental health agencies and native friendship centres to help students. In Grimshaw, Alta., a town of 2,500 people, a new school was built that is attached to the local sports and recreation complex. Bennett said rural education representatives must share best practices with each other and school divisions should help fund teachers’ professional development and keep them motivated. All sides are realizing it takes a village to raise a child, he said. “I see more tired faces this year but I believe there is more hope,” said Bennett.
Farm Smart. Farm Safe. Keep your family safe on the farm. We all have many reasons to avoid injuries and accidents.
saskatchewan.ca/farmsafety | www.worksafe.ca
22
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
EASTER | ALLERGIES
Adapt Easter holiday favourites to meet diet restrictions TEAM RESOURCES
BETTY ANN DEOBALD, BSHEc
A
little adapting to the menu offers food that everyone can enjoy when family or visitors have food restrictions. Ham and scalloped potatoes are often traditional Easter foods. For those avoiding milk, the cheesy potato bake may be a good alternative to the scalloped potatoes. I’m lactose intolerant, but can enjoy cheese. For those who can’t eat cheese, omitting it from the sauce and just sprinkling a little on top of the potatoes may be an option. Use vegetable broth rather than chicken broth for a vegetarian version.
ORANGE MUSTARD GLAZED HAM The orange and mustard glaze makes a tasty addition to the ham. 1.7 kg. precooked Black Forest or honey ham 1/2 c. frozen orange 125 mL juice concentrate, slightly thawed
1/4 c. water 1 tbsp. honey, melted 15 mL 1 tbsp. prepared mustard 15 mL or 2 tbsp. grainy 30 mL honey Dijon mustard Mix the concentrated orange juice, honey and mustard. Place ham in slow cooker on high, spoon the orange juice mixture over the ham and put on the lid. Cook on high for three hours or low for five to six hours. Heat to 140 F (60 C) internal temperature. Spoon the glaze over meat twice and add a little more juice if necessary. Slice and serve. Serve remaining sauce over the meat. This recipe can also be baked in the oven. Cut a diagonal pattern just through the surface of the ham on one side to create a decorative pattern. Place cut side down in a roaster, pour orange mustard glaze over ham and cover with foil. Bake at 350 F (180 C) for 30 minutes, turn ham over, spoon sauce over the meat and cover with foil. Bake an additional 30 to 50 minutes until internal temperature is 140 F (60 C). Remove from oven, allow to stand 10 minutes covered and then slice. Garnish plate with parsley or kale leaves.
CRISP LEMON SNAP PEA SALAD This is an excellent vegetarian salad because the quinoa provides a complete protein. Serves six.
LEFT: A quinoa and snap pea salad can be served as a vegetarian entree or as a side salad. ABOVE: Quinoa chocolate cupcakes are gluten free and vegetarian diet friendly. | BETTY ANN DEOBALD PHOTOS 2 c. water 500 mL 1 c. quinoa 250 mL 2 c. sweet snap peas, 500 mL cut diagonally into thirds 1 1/2 c. button mushrooms 375 mL cut into quarters or eighths 1/2 c. red or yellow 125 mL pepper, cut into 1/2 inch (1 cm) square chunks 1/3 c. thinly sliced 75 mL red onion, cut into 1-inch (2.5 cm) lengths (optional) 1 tbsp. fresh dill, chopped 15 mL 1/3 c. white balsamic vinegar
1/4 c. 1 tsp. 1 tbsp. 1 tsp.
75 mL (the red balsamic vinegar can be used but it gives the white quinoa a brown colour) olive, flaxseed 60 mL or canola oil lemon zest 5 mL lemon juice 15 mL pure maple syrup 5 mL
Combine the water and quinoa in a medium saucepan and bring to a boil. Reduce to a simmer, cover and cook for 15 minutes. Fluff with a fork and set aside to cool completely. Combine the peas, mushrooms, pepper, onion (optional) and dill in a medium bowl. Whisk together the vinegar, oil, lemon zest, lemon juice and maple syrup. Pour over the cooled quinoa in the saucepan and stir until evenly mixed. Add to the vegetable mixture, toss and serve. This salad is even better the next day after the dressing has completely soaked into the mushrooms. The recipe is adapted from Quinoa Revolution by Patricia Green and Carolyn Hemming.
CHEESY POTATO BAKE This is my daughter-in-law Leanne’s recipe and is a family favourite.
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2 1/2 tbsp. butter 37 mL 1/4 c. flour 60 mL 2 1/3 c. chicken or 575 mL vegetable broth 2 c. marble cheese, 500 mL grated 5 - 10 potatoes, depending on potato size, peeled & thinly sliced (optional is to scrub the potatoes well and leave the peels on) 1 small onion, thinly sliced or onion powder to taste salt and pepper to taste chili powder to taste Preheat oven to 350 F (180 C). Grease nine by 13 (22 x 33 cm) glass baking dish. Melt butter in saucepan over medium heat, add flour and cook, stirring constantly for two minutes or until bubbly. Add broth and stir until sauce comes to a boil. Add 1 1/2 cups (375 mL) cheese. Stir until combined and cheese is melted. Arrange one-third of potatoes, overlapping slightly, to cover base of baking dish. Sprinkle with salt, pepper, chili powder and onion powder or sliced onions. Spoon one-third of cheese sauce over potatoes. Repeat with another layer of
potatoes, seasoning, onions and sauce two more times. Sprinkle top with remaining cheese. Cover with foil and bake for 1 1/2 hours. Uncover and bake for an additional 20 minutes. Potatoes should be tender and top should be golden brown.
MOIST CHOCOLATE CAKE This is a delicious gluten-free or vegetarian diet dessert option that everyone will enjoy. 2/3 c. white or golden 175 mL quinoa 1 1/2 c. water 325 mL 1/3 c. milk 75 mL 4 large eggs 1 tsp. pure vanilla extract 5 mL 3/4 c butter, melted 175 mL and cooled 1 1/2 c. white sugar 375 mL 1 c. unsweetened 250 mL cocoa powder 1 1/2 tsp. baking powder 7.5 mL 1/2 tsp. baking soda 2 mL 1/2 tsp. salt 2 mL Bring the quinoa and water to a boil in a medium saucepan. Cover, reduce to a simmer and cook 10 minutes. Turn off the heat and leave on the burner for another 10 minutes. Fluff with a fork and cool. Preheat oven to 350 F (180 C) Lightly grease two eight-inch (20 cm) round or square cake pans. Line the bottom with parchment paper or place papers in muffin tins for 24 cupcakes. Combine the milk, eggs and vanilla in a blender or food processor. Add two cups (500 mL) of cooked quinoa and butter and blend until smooth, scraping the sides of container as needed. Whisk together the sugar, cocoa, baking powder, baking soda and salt in a medium bowl. Add the eggs and quinoa mixture and mix well. Divide between the two pans or the muffin cups and spread batter evenly. Bake on the center oven rack for 40 to 45 minutes for the cakes or 20 to 25 minutes for the cupcakes or until a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean. Remove from the oven and cool completely in the pan before serving. Dust with icing sugar or frosting or top with fresh fruit or yogurt. Store in a sealed container in the refrigerator for up to one week or freeze for up to one month. The recipe is adapted from Quinoa The Everyday Superfood 365 by Patricia Green and Carolyn Hemming. Betty Ann Deobald is a home economist from Rosetown, Sask., and a member of Team Resources. Contact: team@producer.com.
FARM LIVING
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
23
NON-CONTRACT ACTIONS | PERSONAL, PROPERTY
RESEARCH | COCOA
What is a tort; what types are there?
Old-fashioned hot cocoa good for the colon
A PRAIRIE PRACTICE
GAIL WARTMAN, B.A., J.D.
T
he word tort sounds like a dessert, but is a legal term that means a private or civil wrong or injury. It comes from the Latin torquere, meaning to twist. Generally, a tort is a wrong that is not related to a contract. The main components include: • that a duty of care is owed in a situation • that the duty was breached (that not sufficient care was taken) • that damage resulted to someone as a direct result of that breach of duty of care An example of a tort would be a personal injury action where somebody is injured by falling in a store. In making such a claim, lawyers acting for the injured person need to establish that the owner of the store owed a duty of care to their client. As a customer in the store planning to buy something from the owner, the client can expect a certain level of safety. If there are dangers such as a big hole in the floor, for example, where a reasonably careful person might think somebody could get hurt, then compensation may be available for a client hurt by falling into that hole. The example is a personal tort, an injury to the person or the reputation or feelings of an individual. Defamation, libel and slander form a personal tort where something said or written is untrue and is proven to have damaged the reputation of the person being talked about. Deliberate injury to a person such as assault or sexual assault is another form of personal tort. Often the wrongdoer will face consequences both by being charged criminally and also by being sued for the tort by the victim to get compensation for the injury. There can also be property torts, where somebody has caused damage to your house, livestock or other possessions. An example of this would be where somebody deliberately, or by reason of not being careful enough, shot one of your animals or burned down one of your buildings. Here, a lawsuit could help recover the cost of replacing the property you have lost by somebody else’s wrongful act. Involved in many tort actions is negligence, which means the omission (failure) to do something a reasonable person would do or doing something that a reasonable person would not do. So in the cases cited, where the harm caused was not deliberate but resulted from somebody not being careful enough, people looking for compensation will say in court documents that the person who hurt them was negligent.
Not surprisingly, the word tortious means wrongful, or in the nature of a tort. One of my personal favourites is tort-feasor for the wrongdoer who committed the tort. We studied torts in first year law school, and a favourite term of endearment for a classmate was to call them a dirty tort-feasor. It has a certain ring to it. This article is presented for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The views expressed are solely those of the author and should not be attributed to McDougall Gauley LLP. Contact: gwartman@ producer.com.
BY ROSALIE I. TENNISON FREELANCE WRITER
Does your Easter egg hunt include dark chocolate eggs and bunnies? Science has suggested that eating cocoa powder found in dark chocolate will make for a healthier heart. New research has proven the theory, but the benefit really comes from pure cocoa powder and not processed chocolate. Instead of a dark chocolate bunny, a package of cocoa powder would be a healthier choice. The lead researcher in a recent study of the health benefits of dark chocolate said processed chocolate also includes substantial amounts of fat and sugar.
“It’s a component in cocoa powder that actually does the work,” said Dr. John Finley of Louisiana State University. “Cocoa powder contains fibre, which is good for the colon.” The dark chocolate fibre is fermented in the colon, producing antiin-flammatory compounds that lessen the inflammation of cardiovascular tissue reducing the longterm risk of stroke, Finley said. Cocoa powder also contains antioxidant or polyphenolic compounds, which are heart healthy. Finley said combining the fibre in cocoa with prebiotics will improve overall health and “help convert polyphenol compounds in the stomach into anti-inflammatory compounds.”
Researchers examined how three types of cocoa powder broke down in the human gastrointestinal tract. The results, reported at a recent meeting of the American Chemical Society, showed that fermentation in the colon “may be responsible for some of the benefits of cocoa products.” “I like to sprinkle cocoa powder over my oatmeal and then top it with fruit,” Finley said. “It’s like eating dessert for breakfast.” He also said the benefits will be present in hot chocolate made the old fashioned way with baking cocoa rather than sugar-laden commercial hot chocolate mixes. “We can get good things growing in our colon with the help of cocoa powder,” said Finley.
April 30 is the deadline to participate and submit your 2014 AgriStability program fees. *A penalty is applied if program fees are not paid by the initial deadline.
For more information regarding AgriStability’s risk management options and to learn what is new for 2014, contact a local Crop Insurance office or call the AgriStability Call Centre. Producers wanting to participate in AgriStability for the first time, or re-join after one or more years of being out of the Program, must request a ‘New Participant Package’ from SCIC by April 30, 2014.
AGRISTABILITY CALL CENTRE 1.866.270.8450
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NEWS
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
AUTOMATIC, SEMIAUTOMATIC | MISCONCEPTIONS
Getting the terms right: semiautomatic vs. automatic rifles OUTDOOR PURSUITS
KIM QUINTIN
A
n excerpt from the Encyclopedia Britannica website defines the term assault rifle as a “military firearm that is chambered for ammunition of reduced size or propellant charge and that has the capacity to switch between semiautomatic and fully automatic fire.” The latter part of the assault rifle definition, “the capacity to switch between semiautomatic and fully automatic fire,” is significant. A semiautomatic firearm will shoot a single bullet when someone depresses the trigger. Semiautomatic rifles take many shapes, including the traditional hunting rifle that responsible outdoorsmen have been using since 1885. An automatic firearm, on the other hand, will rapidly shoot bullets until it runs out of ammunition or the trigger is released. Automatic rifles take on many shapes but are primary designed for war and have been around since 1887. Automatic firearms are prohibited in Canada and are expensive and highly regulated in the United States. Some modern semiautomatic firearms appear similar to full automatic versions, much like many sports cars have similar appearances. What is under the hood, however, determines their real performance. Although two sports cars may appear similar on the surface, the engineering inside one car can greatly outperform the other. Unlike upgrading sports cars, however, it is often difficult to modify legalized semiautomatic firearms to automatic. Many of these firearms may appear the same on the surface to the casual observer, but experts are usually involved in determining which are legally appropriate for civilian circulation after studying their internal engineering. If you see a military stylized rifle in the hands of a civilian, rest assured it is likely to be a semiautomatic and not truly an “assault rifle.” Unfortunately, some members of the media seem to ignore or are unaware of these facts when reporting news relating to firearms. Frequently we find non-automatic rifles and shotguns described as assault weapons. It would seem that if journalists were to be credible news sources, they must report clearly and concisely on the facts of a story. It is equally important to think critically about what is presented by the media. If a story gains your attention, you should diligently consider it before drawing substantial conclusions. It could be misleading to accept things at face value. Firearms are serious subjects. They
deserve respect when discussing and handling them. Treating them without logical sober thought is dangerous both for the individual and society. This responsibility should extend to the news media. Firearms are also incredibly useful tools. Like the individual pieces of gear in a handyman’s toolbox, each firearm has a different specialization. There are firearms that aid in national security, some that help put food on the table, others that protect farms and remote homes from predators and others that are used in sports competition.
Each kind of firearm has an appropriate time and place to be used, much like a hammer is used for one task while a handsaw is used for another. We need to be concise if we are to treat firearms with the respect they deserve. Kim Quintin is a Saskatoon outdoor enthusiast and knife maker. He can be reached for column content suggestions at kim.quintin@producer.com.
A semiautomatic firearm shoots a single bullet when the trigger is pulled. An automatic firearm shoots bullets rapidly until the trigger is released and is illegal in Canada. | FILE PHOTO
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FOOD PROCESSING | INNOVATION
Food processors seek to be unique, superior Innovative thinking | Manufacturers look for ways to be more environmentally friendly, nutritious or satisfy niche markets BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
Ripped jeans, a nose ring and a bad attitude were once popular strategies for teenagers looking to stand out from the crowd. However, it turns out that pursuing uniqueness has value beyond high school doors. It’s also essential for success in the food-processing sector, a new report has concluded. The Canadian Agri-Food Policy Institute released a report in early
April that identified key traits of successful food companies. CAPI contracted university professors in Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta and British Columbia to analyze the business model and strategies of 13 Canadian food processors. The analysts evaluated large publicly traded companies such as Maple Leaf Foods and smaller privately held businesses, such as InfraReady of Saskatoon, which supplies ingredients, mostly grain, to food manufacturers.
CAPI president David McInnes said product differentiation has been a cornerstone of business strategies for many years. The report highlighted the value of incorporating uniqueness and differentiation into every facet of a company. “What struck us when we examined these case studies is these firms are innovating at a broad variety of activities,” McInnes said. He said the report looked at a limited number of companies, which means some successful food manu-
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facturers were not mentioned. Business innovation is often defined as developing a novel product and creative management strategies or determining how to improve a manufacturing line.
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McInnes said that’s true, but successful food processors take it a step further. “It was that multiplicity of differentiation, at so many levels, for us that seemed like the essence of innovation,” McInnes said. “How to create something unique, better or more efficient, at every single level in which the company operates… going right back to the relationship with growers.” In the case of InfraReady, its differentiation is spelled out on the company’s website. It promises to “provide measurably superior quality, innovative and nutritious food ingredients that have recognizable consumer benefit” and offer those products in an open and transparent manner. President Mark Pickard said his company produces more than 250 ingredients, including cereal and pulse flour, soup mixes, processed beans and lentils, flaked cereal grain and whole grain baking products. The company processes grain with infrared technology that gelatinizes the starches found in grain and pulses. The process reduces cooking times, increases water absorption, enhances shelf life and produces a softer grain texture compared to raw, unprocessed grain. InfraReady supplies ingredients to Nestle, Dare and Gerber, as well as to smaller manufacturers that focus on high-value niche markets. McInnes said the commitment to differentiation must go beyond a tagline in a television commercial. “(There should be) a depth and breadth to the processes and the mechanics and management and the culture, to deliver on it,” he said. “There’s a difference between an advertising slogan or logo, versus a deep seated commitment to deliver on what the customer wants. It’s that depth that requires innovative thinking, essentially differentiation, right back to the soil.” McInnes said more food processors are defining their uniqueness by what happens on the farm. Bonduelle North America, a processor of canned and frozen vegetable, such as the Arctic Gardens brand, has three plants in Ontario and four in Quebec. The company encourages its growers to adhere to “socially responsible agriculture,” such as reducing pesticide use and the planting of cover crops like vetch and clover to enrich the soil. The agronomic expectations are a key part of the company’s mission to deliver healthier vegetables to consumers. These kinds of corporate expectations could alter the relationship between agricultural suppliers and buyers because consumers increasingly want to know how food is grown, the CAPI report noted. “Producers’ and processors’ economic prospects are becoming more closely tied than just a supply relationship,” it said. “Sharing information and managing consumer expectations is increasingly important to ensure that the desirable attributes and quality of those ingredients … meets the evolving needs of the marketplace.”
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
SPECIAL REPORT
Fading vision? Will Canadian researchers ever again revolutionize agriculture as they did by developing canola? The Western Producer’s Robert Arnason poses that question in this special report. Agriculture research today is mostly a collaboration of public, corporate and industry resources focused on practical, incremental advances. Some argue that narrow funding horizons and changing priorities rule out big thinking. Others say the long journey to innovation is achieved through many steps. Next week, read about an example of visionary ag research: nitrogen fixing cereals.
F
orty-five years ago, Keith Downey heard about a new machine that could accurately detect the amount of oil in a kernel of corn. At the time, the Agriculture Canada plant scientist was attempting to enhance the oil profile of rapeseed through selective breeding. He thought the machine would be useful because he needed a rapid and reliable test to assess the oil properties of rapeseed. Downey wrote a letter to the director general of Agriculture Canada’s research branch, requesting funding for the equipment. In a matter of weeks, the director a u t h o r i z e d t h e p u rc h a s e a n d Downey had a $35,000 machine for his rapeseed project at the Saskatoon research station. “Which would be a few hundred thousand now,” he said. “And it worked like a charm.” Downey, who went on to help develop canola, said the story illustrates how drastically different things once were for agricultural scientists. “If we came up with a good idea, you were able to sell it at the top.” Downey said there was a fundamental shift within Agriculture Canada in the 1990s, which according to him now obstructs innovation and groundbreaking science. He said Agriculture Canada scientists with novel ideas now have to convince a multitude of players to back the proposal, including federal administrators, non-government organizations and in particular, crop science companies. “The client for Agriculture Canada (used to be) the producer. Today the
client is the multinationals and the industry,” Downey said. “That changed in the 1990s. That was a major tactical error. The support (for) agriculture research should come from the ground up. That change tended to say, do this research from the top down. That’s a killer.” Wilf Keller, president of Ag-West Bio, which promotes the bio-science economy, said the existing funding model discourages pioneering science that led to breakthroughs such as canola. Following severe federal budget cuts to agriculture research in the 1990s, Agriculture Canada bureaucrats devised new funding rules that would force government scientists to partner with crop science companies and other organizations on projects. With industry money on the line, researchers were pushed towards practical, achievable projects. Keller said the strategic shift to applied research and away from fundamental science has come with a cost. “No one goes in on their own (anymore). Many, many programs are 50-50 funding, or consortiums,” Keller said. “In order to develop a work plan for a consortium, you’re going to have to satisfy all those consortium members…. (So) you take the lowest level of risk…. You end up with the lowest common denominator.” Downey said it’s difficult to advance research when funders support Project A and then abandon it for Project X three years later. “You can even see it in the much larger picture, where NRC (National Research Council) is right out of canola,” said Downey.
“The people working their butts off in the canola area and had things coming forward, all of a sudden they’re told, ‘drop it and pick this other (research) up….’ If you want to shift emphasis, that’s OK. But you don’t do it from one year to the next 100 percent.” Downey said there are a few encouraging signs within Canadian agricultural research. Carinata could potentially become a significant crop on the Prairies, and the growth of pulses has been a tremendous success. Still, the philosophical shift toward applied agricultural research will curtail Canada’ ability to deliver blockbuster innovations, he said. “We’re rapidly losing out, in my opinion,” he said. “Our ability to fund serendipity research and basic research that would develop into something that is really groundbreaking and outstanding has really got to a really low level.” The government announced cuts to Agriculture Canada research programs in 2012 and 2013 that included: • shutting down the Cereal Research Centre in Winnipeg • consolidating beef research in Western Canada and cancelling beef programs in Manitoba and British Columbia • consolidating dairy research at Lennoxville, Que., and closing the dairy program at Agassiz, B.C. • closing a number of smaller field stations In its 2013-2014 report on plans and priorities, Agriculture Canada said it spent $358.2 million on science, innovation and adoption in the 201213 budget year. The department
Veteran scientists like Keith Downey say there’s too much emphasis on short-term, industry-led incremental research and not enough focus on long-term, visionary science. Researchers say there must be a shift back towards basic research or Canada’s “discovery cupboard” will be bare in 20 to 25 years and agriculture will suffer. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO
SPECIAL REPORT
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
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RESEARCH | PRIORITIES
Short-range projects part of long-term objectives: AgCanada Ordinary research can lead to revolutionary results
A
RESEARCH RESOURCES Agriculture Canada spending on science, innovation and adoption (in $ millions): 2012-13 $358.2 2013-14* $325.8 2014-15* $272.5 2015-16* $272.5 Number of employees in science and innovation:** 2013-14 1,488 2014-15
1,391
2015-16
1,394
* planned spending ** full-time equivalent positions Source: Agriculture Canada
estimated that would drop to $325.8 million in 2013-14 and $272.5 million in 2014-15. The cuts were part of a 2012 government mandate to reduce all Agriculture Canada spending by 10 percent, or about $310 million. The federal government introduced Growing Forward 2 last year, a five-year agricultural polic y focused on innovation, competitiveness and markets. The comb i n e d f i nan c i al c o mmi tme nt, backed by federal and provincial governments, is $3 billion. Stephen Morgan Jones, a former Agriculture Canada director general for science and technology on the Prairies, said scientists often grumble about insufficient funding, but the financial reality isn’t that grave. “If you look at the Growing Forward numbers … if you look at the investment by government … I think a lot of people would say there is a large amount of money going into agricultural research and development,” said Morgan Jones. “I don’t think there’s a real shortage of money…. Some people would shoot me for saying that, but I think researchers today are better funded than they were 20 years ago…. When I graduated and started as a scientist, if you had two technicians you felt you couldn’t be doing any better. Now we see scientists with multiple postdoctoral fellows (on their teams).” Mo r ga n Jo n e s s a i d t h e re a re enough talented scientists within Agriculture Canada, the universities and private industry to develop another revolutionary crop such as canola. Still, he remains concerned about research priorities. There should be a balance between long-term, fundamental science and applied research, he added, but the scale is now tilted to short-term objectives. “It’s really only government that can look at the longer-term picture and look at the five to 15 year horizon,” he said.
“We do need to be very careful about the longer-term, high risk work.” Reno Pontarollo, president of Genome Prairie, a non-profit organization that funds research in genomics and biosciences, agreed a model that funds scientists for a few years is restrictive. Scientists must dedicate an immense amount of time to writing funding proposals, and it’s difficult to retain qualified help when contracts last only two or three years. “If you’ve got a good technician … you want to keep him around,” Pontarollo said. “If you don’t have a long-term stable funding system, it makes that difficult.” Downey agreed, saying it’s nearly impossible for today’s scientists to have a long-term vision. “Now you are tied to that three or five year (project) and hope you get something in the next three or five, but it’s cut so fine that you don’t have any time or resources to look to the future. That’s the main problem.” Genome Canada, which oversees Genome Prairie and other regional bodies, is supporting higher risk science by developing a program to fund “disruptive” research, Pontarollo said. “Genome Canada will be launching that program this year…. These are proof of concept type stuff that a single lab research can go for.” Pontarollo said funders should lengthen the time frames of agricultural research projects. For instance, funders don’t need to control every aspect of the research if a plant breeder wants to study wheat with a starch profile more suitable for people with gluten-intolerance. “Whether (the scientist) is doing front end genetics, downstream breeding, working on developing a market analysis … he could use that money to do that … but he doesn’t have to (provide) detailed, painstaking descriptions of how he would do each experiment,” Pontarollo said. “I personally would like to see more of a system where a researcher puts in more of a five to 10 year plan to work in a general area.” Pontarollo also said agriculture and food is dramatically underfunded compared to a sector such as medicine. Government and industry need to realize that healthy food is preventive medicine, he said. “I think agriculture research, in general, should be funded at a level equal to or higher than health (research),” Pontarollo said. “Everybody has to have a good quality of food available to them to be healthy…. A good, safe and reliable food supply can help us deal with many of the health issues we have now.”
gricultural scientists may work on projects for short periods, but it’s unfair to conclude that Canada is neglecting visionary and revolutionary science, says an Agriculture Canada manager. Critics of the nation’s agricultural research system say there’s too much applied research and not enough support for basic research, in which scientists seek answers to fundamental questions. Gilles Saindon, the department’s associate assistant deputy minister for the science and technology branch, said short-range projects are part of larger objectives. “It’s hard to recognize when you are doing the research that you are into an area that is likely to become transformative.” For example, Saindon said Keith Downey and Baldur Stefansson were focused on daily tasks rather than developing a 20 million acre crop when they conducted their rapeseed research. “(When they) worked on canola in the ’50s and ’60s, they didn’t wake in the morning and go, ‘OK, that is transformational (science),’ ” he said. “They couldn’t really see the potential. It evolved into something very transformational.” Saindon said zero tillage is another example. The scientists who led the initial studies didn’t know they were exploring blockbuster research that would drastically alter farming practices in Saskatchewan. “In April 2014, it’s hard to know that you are part of that big game changer,” Saindon said, adding researchers working within a science cluster may be progressing toward something big. Three-year projects allow scientists to review and reconfigure their research programs, Saindon said. “Yes, it would be good to secure my funding for 10 years and I don’t have to ask again, but in this world, you need to review your progress, direction … more often than every 10 years,” he said. “It gives them a chance to have a bunch of go or no go opportunities every three or four years…. It gives us that nimbleness, that flexibility to adjust our direction … periodically.” Saindon said Canadian agriculture has evolved over the last 30 years. In the past, government and universities conducted most agricultural research. “I would say the good ol’ days were appropriate for those days,” said Saindon, adding industry is now an active player in research.
“The good current days are good for our days, which is a multi-faceted, type of approach…. We have to worry about market demand, we have to work in terms of regulatory context.” Genome Canada chair Lorne Hepworth said the organization has and does support groundbreaking science. The organization backed the International Bovine Genome Sequencing Project, which Hepworth called a fundamental science that has benefited dairy farmers. “The dairy industry called that … the biggest industry advancement since frozen semen,” he said. “The return on that to the industry is something in the order of $180 million (annually).” Genome Canada is also funding the Triticum Advancement Through Genomics project, Canada’s contribution to the International Wheat Genome Sequencing Consortium. “I think it’s to Canada’s credit that (we’re) involved in this project in a very significant way,” Hepworth said. Stephen Morgan Jones, a former Agriculture Canada director general for science and technology on the Prairies, said the Canadian Wheat Alliance is an excellent example of a long-term and potentially groundbreaking project. Agriculture Canada, the University of Saskatchewan, the Saskatchewan g ov e r n m e nt a n d t h e Nat i o na l Research Council are investing nearly $100 million into the wheat alliance to advance the development of Canada’s wheat crops. As for complaints that corporations have too much influence over research priorities, Saindon said Agriculture Canada collaborates and consults w ith industr y, which includes producer groups. “We do work a fair amount with industry. It is core and central to a lot of our activities,” said Saindon, who defined industry as corporations, producer organizations and commodity groups. “Together they form the sector, so to speak, with which we interact…. So is industry the client? Yes, but it includes both sides. So producer organizations are (representing) individual farmers.” Saindon said industry influence doesn’t dilute research goals. In January, the Canola Council of Canada set a target of 52 bushels per acre for yields in Western Canada by 2025. He said that sort of industry direction is healthy for agr iculture because it will ultimately improve the resilience and sustainability of the sector.
No one goes in on their own (anymore). Many, many programs are 50-50 funding, or consortiums. In order to develop a work plan for a consortium, you’re going to have to satisfy all those consortium members…. (So) you take the lowest level of risk…. You end up with the lowest common denominator. WILF KELLER AG-WEST BIO
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
POWERFUL JOB
FARM FINANCING | COMMODITY CONTRACT
Financing option provides capital in exchange for canola Give and get | The financing model provides farmers with capital in return for a set amount of canola at a fixed price BY DAN YATES SASKATOON NEWSROOM
A Saskatchewan firm that offers an untraditional form of farm finance says its list of contracted canola growers has grown faster than expected. Launched in 2012, the company has already loaned $32 million to farmers in Saskatchewan and Alberta. Input Capital has borrowed a financing model from the mining industry to offer farmers capital upfront in return for the right to buy a set number of tonnes of canola crop at a fixed price. Agreements usually last six years. The company, which also claims a percentage of increased canola sales, calls it “agricultural commodity streaming.” Its public offering in October raised $41 million to be used on contracts with growers. “We’re ahead of our plan in terms of that deployment, and our pipeline of potential deals is bigger than it’s ever been,” said executive vicepresident Brad Farquhar, who acknowledged the transportation
backlog as a factor. The company completed seven agreements with growers in March worth $7.1 million, including the first in Alberta. It now has 18 canola agreements with 17 farmers. Farquhar said the average deal size is $1 to $2 million, and the company intends to have 30 contracts in place by the end of the year. “I know that a few of the deals that we’ve done are with farmers that originally had contemplated selling a half section to finance this year’s inputs, so they didn’t have to sell their crop at a wide basis and low prices,” he said. Farquhar said the company first attracted interest from growers recovering from bad years in 2010 and 2011, but it has also had interest from farmers expanding their operations or new farmers with smaller balance sheets. Farmers who sign a contract agree to run an agronomic program with an agrologist to achieve maximum yields. “It’s growing. It’s still very new and different. This is unlike any-
thing a farmer has seen before,” said Farquhar. “In essence, we act as a financial partner and most farmers haven’t had a financial partner.” The company also runs its own sales program, reporting at the end of March that it had sold one-third of the 18,297 tonnes of canola it was to receive from growers from last year. It lists its average cash cost per tonne at $78.95. The company is owed 23,758 tonnes this year and will receive almost 24,000 tonnes of canola every year through 2018 under current agreements. “We’re well behind our canola sales compared to where we wanted to be,” said Farquhar. “The good news is we had delivery contracts for that, so the price is established. We haven’t taken the price hit that farmers that didn’t have contracts have taken.” Agricultural investor Assiniboia Capital, which launched Input Capital, sold its assets, including 115,000 acres of Saskatchewan farmland, to the Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board in December.
Workers from RS Line Contr. Co., a powerline construction company, erect an AltaLink transmission tower about 10 kilometres east of Nanton, Alta. It’s part of a 110 km line that will stretch across farmland from Fort Macleod to High River. | MIKE STURK PHOTO
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29
CLIMATE STUDY | CARBON DIOXIDE
Nations skeptical about carbon dioxide removal from air Technology used could have ‘adverse side-effects’ growth of algae, hoping that the tiny carbon-rich plants would fall to the seabed when they die. Delegates at a recent meeting in Berlin to review the report also said that Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, objected to a line in the report pointing out that fossil fuels were the overwhelming cause of rising emissions in the past decade.
AMPHIBIOUS VEHICLES ONLY |
Rural residents across the Prairies could soon see flooding like this near Wembley, Alta., as spring finally arrives and the melt begins. Clogged and frozen culverts are often the culprit when ditches overflow, and damage to roads can add up fast for rural municipalities. | RANDY VANDERVEENPHOTO
Always read and follow label directions. FMC and Authority are trademarks and Investing in farming’s future is a service mark of FMC Corporation. ©2014 FMC Corporation. All rights reserved. F101-032481 1/14 Kochia image by Howard F. Schwartz, Colorado State University, Bugwood.org
OSLO, Norway (Reuters) — Many nations want a draft United Nations report to tone down prospects for sucking greenhouse gases from the air to help fix global warming, reckoning the technologies are risky. The study, which is focused on solutions to climate change, is meant to guide almost 200 governments in preparing a UN pact due by the end of 2015 to curb rising emissions and h e l p l i m i t h e at w av e s, f l o o d s, droughts and rising seas. According to documents seen by Reuters, China, the European Union, Japan and Russia were among nations saying the report should do more to stress uncertainties about technologies that it says could be used to extract carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and bury it below ground to limit warming. “(Carbon dioxide removal) technologies are currently not available and would be associated with high risks and adverse side-effects,” the German government said in a comment on the draft by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Added Russia: “There are no CDR technologies by now.” The technologies would go far beyond the traditional focus on cutting emissions from burning coal, oil or natural gas. Several nations were especially skeptical about the report’s mention of stripping greenhouse gases from electricity-generating facilities burning biomass to bury them underground as a way to extract carbon from nature. Plants soak up carbon as they grow and release it when they rot or burn. Chemicals can extract carbon from the exhaust fumes from burning crop waste or from fermentation of corn to make ethanol. Archer Daniels Midland Co. has a facility in Illinois to inject 333,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide a year into the ground from a factory producing ethanol from corn. Husky Energy in Canada produces carbon dioxide from ethanol for injection into oil wells. Many nations said the draft should do more to mention drawbacks of bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), such as the amount of land needed to grow biomass crops and the risk that it would compete with food production. Internal IPCC documents show that China said BECCS “bears great uncertainties.” Japan said that “considerations of trade-offs with water, land and biodiversity are crucial to avoid adverse effects” with CDR technologies. A sub-chapter of the report said BECCS has the theoretical potential to extract up to 10 billion tonnes a year of carbon dioxide from nature, which is equivalent to China’s carbon emissions. However, it would cost $60 to $250 a tonne. Other methods for extracting greenhouse gases from the atmosphere include planting trees or fertilizing the oceans to promote the
www.fmccrop.ca
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NEWS
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
POPPIES, PLANTING AND PAIN RELIEF • Thebaine, an alkaloid derived from papaver somniferum poppies, can be converted into oxycodone, buprenorphine and other drugs used primarily as painkillers. • Thebaine is a Schedule 1 substance under Canada’s Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. • Canada is the only G7 country that does not cultivate or process poppies.
• Such drugs comprise 10 percent of all prescriptions issued in Canada. • Thebaine comes from the pods of the plant rather than the seeds. • Poppy straw has more value than poppy seed. • Poppy seeds are about one-tenth the size of canola seed. • Poppies take two to three weeks to emerge after planting.
• Thebaine-expressing poppies are legally grown in Tasmania, Australia, the United Kingdom and Spain. • Canadians are prescribed $500 to $600 million worth of poppyderived drugs a year.
Thebaine poppies do not have the narcotic properties of opium poppies and are processed into pain relievers. | LINDSAY JOYE/FLICKR.COM PHOTO
Source: API Labs, staff research
POPPIES | CANADIAN PRODUCTION
Company studies economic feasibility of thebaine poppy Pharmaceutical opportunities | Alberta firm seeks federal support in tapping the potential of poppies as a lucrative crop for Canadian farmers BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU
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Poppies are not as red as the tape entangling government approvals to grow them in southern Alberta. Glen Metzler, managing director of API Labs in Lethbridge, has been working for eight years to obtain approval for large scale poppy production in southern Alberta. The process now involves nine government departments from health and agriculture to pest management and western diversification. He will draw closer to his goal this year if a request to plant 200 acres of poppies is approved. API wants to grow thebaineexpressing poppies, which are close relatives of the more famous — or infamous — opium poppies from which heroin is derived. Thebaine, an alkaloid, can be processed into opiate pain relievers, which are a $500 to $600 million market in Canada and a multibilliondollar market in the United States. Canada imports all of its thebainebased drug ingredients from other countries, but Metzler believes Canada could supply its own needs and manufacture them in its own plant. “That’s what we’re involved in today, is instead of these products being grown in France and Australia and the U.K. and Spain, we propose to the federal government that we should be growing them here,” said Metzler. “Our farmers should be the ones that are benefiting from this. Our kids should be the ones that have those jobs, and then we should become self-sufficient in the medications that we need as a country.” Metzler said thebaine poppy growers in Australia earned $3,480 per acre last year. API grew four acres of thebaine poppies last year in southern Alberta,
Our farmers should be the ones that are benefiting from this. Our kids should be the ones that have those jobs, and then we should become self-sufficient in the medications that we need as a country. GLEN METZLER API LABS
the first company in Canadian history to obtain a licence to grow them outdoors for scientific purposes, according to Metzler. A crop of 200 acres, some under irrigation and some on dry land in six sites within a 200 kilometre radius of Lethbridge, would allow company researchers to explore agronomics and crop handling using standard farm equipment. “We’re trying to get some more information just on the area as a whole and how altitude, for example, or different varying growing conditions, will affect the crop.” Metzler said thebaine doesn’t have narcotic properties. Anyone who eats them would get sick rather than high. However, poppies are a controlled substance, so API doesn’t publicize the location of its plots. “At this point we haven’t been disclosing that information. Not that there’s really an issue per se. If there’s people touring the sites, we will open up our research farm to the agriculture sector and offer tours at certain times,” he said. “As we get further on, obviously we want to become more engaged with the agriculture sector so that the farmers have a chance to see this crop in the field, and when we offer CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
31
POPPIES | AGRONOMY
Trials examine agronomics of poppy production Alberta test plots | API Labs plans to look at irrigated and non-irrigated land, row spacing and weed control for thebaine poppies BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU
It turns out poppies grow well in southern Alberta, at least according to early results from API test plots in the Lethbridge area. Glen Metzler, managing director of API Labs, told a recent Alberta Institute of Agrologists meeting that the region’s climate and long hours of summer sunshine are just what poppies prefer. The company is trying to obtain approval for commercial production
» CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE
of thebaine poppies from which to manufacture analgesic drugs. It intends to plant 200 acres of poppies this year and 20 quarters in the year after if it receives the go-ahead from government departments. The ultimate goal is to plant 25,000 to 50,000 acres and supply domestic and export markets. This year’s acreage request is designed to help researchers learn more about the agronomics of poppies using conventional, southern Alberta production methods. It appears that poppies should fol-
Tests show poppies grown in Alberta produce double the alkaloids of industry standards low a cereal crop. Poppy seeds are about one-tenth the size of canola, so they might best be seeded along with a bulking agent, such as cornmeal, at less than one pound of seed per acre and at no more than half an inch deep. Metzler said experience in other
countries shows poppies can be grown under irrigation or on dry land acres. The crop seems to require slightly less water than canola. However, trials planned this year will experiment with both irrigated and non-irrigated land to gauge optimum conditions and learn more about acceptable row spacing, plant density and weed control. The poppies that API Labs have grown under scientific research approval have shown good response to the prairie climate, Metzler said. “This actually seems to be one of
INNOVATIVE SOLUTIONS FOR THISTLE CONTROL
GLEN METZLER API LABS
contracts in the future, they’re more familiar with it.” Cheryl Dyck, chief executive officer of Economic Development Lethbridge, recently told a chamber of commerce meeting that the thebaine project is “the single most dramatic economic opportunity I have seen come across my desk.” She said poppies could yield three to five times the average farmgate return per acre of grain and oilseed crops. “Besides agriculture, it could be an opportunity for Canada to develop a pharmaceutical industry,” said Dyck. If API receives approval for 200 acres this year, the crop would provide the foundation seed for the 2015 crop, which it hopes will be larger still, at 3,200 acres. However, that would depend on receiving government approvals. The big money down the road would lie in manufacturing and marketing drugs, but API anticipates that its first returns will come from the sale of poppy seed for food use. The thebaine is harvested from the pods and straw in the top several centimetres of the poppy plant. Metzler estimated that 25,000 acres of poppies could meet Canada’s domestic needs for thebaine-based analgesics. “We think there’s a lot of potential for export, just because the demand for the product is quite large on an international scale,” he said. “If you were to capitalize on even 20 percent of the U.S. market, that would be another 50,000 acres of production.” API has a board of directors with considerable experience in agriculture and marketing, as well as law enforcement. Its recently appointed chair is former federal health minister Jake Epp. Metzler said he is hopeful that the red tape surrounding the project will soon be untangled and replaced by the red of thebaine poppies. “We’ve tried very hard to do everything the right way since day one and I think the people in Ottawa appreciate that, but we’re in a position now that for this industry to go forward, we do need some intervention from government.”
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the best places in the world to grow poppies,” he said. “We’re seeing double the industry standards in the amount of alkaloids that the poppies are producing here.” He said southern Alberta weather conditions result in pod counts of five to 12 per plant compared to two or three pods per plant typically seen in Australia and the United Kingdom. The region’s frequent wind also limits development of downy mildew, a problem in other countries where three to five fungicide applications are needed to control it.
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Apache’s Plus II provides maximum efficiency and power. Apache’s highest horsepower. At a staggering 275hp, Plus II is for growers who want the highest horsepower available. You don’t need to overcompensate with a clunky, heavy hydrostatic sprayer to get maximum efficiency with maximum power. The Plus II Package from Apache Sprayers provides the perfect combination of power, traction, and efficiency, along with the simplicity of a mechanical drive transmission.
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Lighter weight, more power. The Plus II option is available on the Apache AS1020 and AS1220, with a commanding 275 horsepower. The lighter weight of the Apache Sprayer makes it easier to power through extreme conditions. Crops benefit from less compaction. Power-to-the-Ground. With the added power of the Power-to-the-Ground™ technology in the Plus II, steep grades are no match for the Apache selfpropelled sprayer. Most hydrostat machines deliver only about 70% of the engine’s horsepower to the ground. With Apache, a full 98% of the engine’s horsepower is delivered to the ground. Engine torque can be multiplied up to 200% through our torque-converted mechanical drive. ™
Stability. To eliminate the “bounce back effect” in those sharp turns, the Apache is outfitted with nine nitrogen accumulators. These work to keep the booms stable when a diaphragm inside the accumulator absorbs the motion. Smooth ride. The constant jarring of a rough field vanishes with the Apache’s patented suspension system. The rear suspension system is equipped with automatic leveling adjusts, providing the same excellent ride whether the tank is full of product or completely empty. The Apache’s patented suspension system acts as a giant shock absorber. The Plus II is a winning combination of efficiency and power. Boom options. The added length of the 120' or 132' Pommier Boom option is popular with our Plus II customers.
“Overall I’m very satisfied with the Apache. It’s very economical for fuel. We did a lot of research before buying it. Our son went online and designed it. My brother owns a Versatile and we like our sprayer better. This is the first self-propelled sprayer we’ve bought. A lot of neighbors in the area have John Deere and RoGaters and they are all fuel burners and always stuck.” -Gerald Steffen, High Level, Alberta, Canada
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
INVASIVE WEED | BIOMASS
Research looks to put invasive weed to work Possible feedstock | The wetland reed could be eradicated by harvesting it for methane production BY JEFFREY CARTER FOR THE WESTERN PRODUCER
RIDGETOWN, Ont. – Researchers at the University of Guelph’s Ridgetown Campus hope to put an invasive weed to good use. Environmental engineer Brandon Gilroyed and masters’ candidate Kurtis Baute are working with phragmites australis, a wetland reed species native to parts of Europe and Asia. It is now found throughout the Great Lakes region, often in such abundance that indigenous species are choked out. “Wherever you have something that grows that well, heaven or hell, it may be that there’s some potential in it,” Gilroyed said. Gilroyed and Baute are focused on the plant’s possible use as a feedstock for methane production. It would be harvested green, mixed with other material such as manure, and put through an anaerobic digestion process. “This is exploratory right now. We’re working at the beaker stage,” Gilroyed said. Phragmites could also be used as a source of dry biomass for combustion. A Manitoba company has expressed interest in using it as a feedstock for pyrolysis to make biooil and bio-char.
between those for switchgrass and miscanthus, two purpose-grown biomass crops produced in Canada. “I’ve been looking at harvesting it in July versus October and also looking to harvest in July and October to see if it will re-grow,” Baute said. Gilroyed said phragmites is also efficient at pulling nutrients from water, which is an environmental plus from a plant that’s usually viewed as a problem.
Phragmites, also known as European common reed, has colonized much of the Highway 401 corridor in Ontario. | JEFFREY CARTER PHOTOS
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Baute said there’s currently more interest among researchers in North America in finding ways to eradicate the species. In some cases it’s been removed using a combination of rolling, burning and herbicides, but the species is a tough customer. “My personal view is that we will probably never completely eradicate it from Ontario,” Baute said. In Eastern Europe, specialized tracked equipment is used to harvest the plant for thatched roof construction and, to a small extent, as a source of biomass. It thrives in wetlands, including areas of shallow, brackish water. “That’s one reason why you see it along the roads. We suspect there’s salt from the roads in the ditches,” Baute said. Baute and a couple of summer students harvested small patches of phragmites in three locations, including the Walpole Island First Nation, located within the delta at the mouth of the St. Clair River. There are 2,600 acres of phragmites on the First Nation, where it’s viewed as an ecosystem threat. Baute said eradication isn’t likely, but it may be possible to manage the species with a regular harvest and derive a benefit at the same time. Data collected last year shows phragmites will produce a yield
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
SURROGATE MOM
NEWS FAIR RAIL FOR GRAIN FARMERS ACT | CGC TO RULE
Farmers not sold on proposal for grain delivery dispute arbitration BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
It’s calving time at the Cayley Hutterite Colony south of High River, Alta. Darious Stahl feeds one of the twin calves that needed to be bottle fed. | MIKE STURK PHOTO
Proposed legislation that gives the Canadian Grain Commission authority to arbitrate grain delivery disputes between farmers and grain companies is being viewed with skepticism by grain growers. Bill C-30, the Fair Rail for Grain Farmers Act, would give the grain commission the authority to rule on disputes involving farmers who are contracted to deliver grain during a specified time frame and grain com-
panies that are unable to take delivery. Contracted grain deliveries were deferred by several months this winter because elevators were filled to capacity and railways were moving less grain than expected. Bill C-30 was approved by the House of Commons standing committee on agriculture. However, many producers say provisions in Bill C-30 that give the grain commission the authority to arbitrate disputes between farmers and grain companies will be of little or no consequence.
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In many areas, grain growers have access to only a handful of elevator companies. To seek arbitration in a dispute with a grain company would be a costly move in more ways than one, said grain growers attending a recent rail transportation meeting in Nipawin, Sask. Picking a fight with a local grain buyer rarely works out in the grower’s favour, they added. Growers who seek arbitration could find themselves on the outside looking in the next time they have grain to sell. Jim Smolik, assistant chief commissioner with the grain commission, acknowledged that arbitrating disputes between growers and elevator companies is a sensitive issue, especially when grain companies have little control over how much grain is moving by rail. Smolik said the commission is hoping that grain companies and farmers will be able to settle disputes stemming from plugged elevators and slow grain movements. “We’re hoping that there’s good commercial arrangements out there so we don’t have to get involved in the middle of this,” he said. Regulations that support Bill C-30 have yet to be determined, but it is widely expected that the grain commission will become involved in arbitrating disputes only if producers or grain companies request arbitration. It is hoped that in most cases grain companies and farmers will negotiate contracts, honour the terms of those contracts and work together to settle delivery related disputes. “If you have a contract for November (delivery) and you know that your elevator can’t actually take any grain because its 99 percent full … it will be up to you then if you want to bring it to the grain commission for a (resolution),” Smolik said. “We just want to make sure that we’re only involved when there’s actually a request for us to become involved.” Smolik said the enforcement of delivery contracts between farmers and grain companies will be closely tied to grain companies’ ability to negotiate service level agreements with railway companies. If grain companies cannot negotiate service level agreements with railways and enforce the terms of service level agreements, then their inclination to honour the terms of delivery contracts with grain growers could be affected. For this reason, much focus will be centred on grain companies’ ability to negotiate service level agreements with meaningful and enforceable monetary penalties, which would be levied against railway companies who fail to provide the level of rail service that was promised. Either way, farmers in Nipawin said they are a small cog in a big wheel. Because of that, their ability to enforce contracts and receive compensation for lost delivery opportunities will be compromised. “Did you ever have a disagreement with an elevator man?” said one grower. “Because the next time you come (to sell grain), you’re mud.”
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
WILDLIFE | MANAGEMENT
TRUCKING | NEW RULES
Ravens, wolves under new rules
New regulations allow Sask. truckers to haul more
Predation problems | Farmers in problem areas no longer need permits
BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
Changes to Saskatchewan trucking regulations will allow heavier and longer loads on the province’s roads, says the highways minister. New regulations that took effect April 1 will reduce operating costs and red tape, said Don McMorris. For example, the rules allow tridem drive trucks, or trucks with three reardrive axles, to tow pony trailers. They also increase the weight for tridem drive B-trains on secondary weight highways. Saskatchewan Association of Rural Municipalities president David Marit said the regulations will affect mainly service trucks in the rural oil sector.
Marit said the number of tri-drives has increased, and SARM delegates passed a resolution a few years ago calling for heavier truck-trailer combinations on highways to move product more efficiently. “You cut down on the number of trucks by increasing the weight.� McMorris said RMs thought this was the best way to control traffic in the absence of being able to set different speed limits for different classes of vehicles. Marit said slowing heavy trucks to 60 km-hr from the regular 80 km-h limit would decrease damage, but that practice isn’t allowed. He also said tri-drive grain trucks aren’t in widespread use yet, but super B-trains weren’t at one point either.
Rules relaxing the maximum trucking weight and length are designed to reduce the number of trucks on highways. | FILE PHOTO
BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
Regulator y amendments will change how farmers and landowners can deal with problem ravens and wolves in Saskatchewan. The amendments mean landowners would no longer need a permit to deal with ravens. Currently, they need permits to kill the birds, which might be damaging grain bags or harming or killing newborn livestock. Farmers have been complaining about the increasing numbers of the birds, and resolutions at Saskatchewan Association of Rural Municipalities conventions have requested that something be done. Wolves will be designated as a big game species in certain areas, allowing hunters to target them in places where livestock predation is a problem. Environment minister Ken Cheveldayoff said the area around Weekes, in wildlife management Zone 49, has been identified for a wolf hunt pilot project, based on high numbers of livestock losses and documentation by Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corp., which administers the big game damage compensation program. “The ministry will focus on areas where we know we have problems, and we will continue to explore other opportunities as more information becomes available,� Cheveldayoff said. The amendment doesn’t create a general wolf hunting season, and a hunt would happen only where traditional control by trapping hasn’t worked, according to the ministry. The Saskatchewan Wildlife Federation supports the amendments. “We recognize that effective wildlife management requires sciencebased, active management on both game and predator species to provide additional licensed opportunities for hunters to harvest animals whose numbers are creating serious wildlife and livestock issues,� executive director Darrell Crabbe said in a news release. Trappers will still be able to trap wolves; the predators will have dual designation as big game and fur bearer, similar to black bears. Hunters who take a wolf using a big game license will also be able to sell the pelt. Other proposed amendments will relax the dress regulations for hunters to allow hunting vests, allow allday use of all-terrain vehicles instead of afternoons only and allow Canadian resident white-tailed deer hunters to use an outfitter.
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
LEARN MORE ABOUT HOW JORDAN FARMS SMART AT NHSMART.COM/JORDANK Š2014 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. NHK04148906L
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
ALBERTA BEEF INDUSTRY CONFERENCE | ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
Efficiency, improvements key to agriculture, beef production Experts look at ways to reduce industry’s environmental footprint BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
RED DEER — Sustainable intensification may be the only way to feed the world, says a scientist with Agriculture Canada. “If we are going to feed the people of the world, intensification is the only way we are going to do it,” Tim McAllister told the Alberta Beef Industry Conference held in Red Deer Feb. 19-21. Under this concept, production is increased on the current land base using the current supply of water. McAllister said countries such as Brazil already understand the importance of this idea. Brazil has shifted from being a food importer to a major exporter. Its beef exports increased 10-fold in 10 years, and crop production increased by 365 percent. McAllister said Brazil managed this increased production partly because it understands the importance of sustainable intensification. A cover crop of corn is underseeded with grass, and cattle graze what’s left after harvest. Beef production is often targeted as unsustainable and a major contributor to air and water pollution. Canada is involved in an international partnership called Livestock Environmental Assessment and Performance, which was formed in 2012 to assess the industry’s environmental performance as well as its social and economic viability. The partnership is European influenced and many members do not understand how efficient cattle production has become on the vast grasslands of North America, said McAllister. Beef production has become considerably more efficient in North America, where fewer animals are needed to produce the same amount of beef as 30 years ago. They require less water on less land and release less methane. “The greenhouse gas emission issue is more related to burning of fossil fuels. It is not due to cattle,” said McAllister. Five to 10 percent of Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions come from cattle production. Scientists have studied beef production’s environmental impacts, and new research initiatives are planned to further assess emissions, nutrient excretions, carbon balance, water quality and spread of pathogens. “The role of agriculture and beef production on the environment has gained a lot of media time, positive and negative depending on the day of the week,” said Emma McGeough of the University of Manitoba’s animal sciences department. “Beef offers so many other advantages aside from carbon footprints,
so that is why we have to look at the bigger picture,” she said. A 2005 report from the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization, Livestock’s Long Shadow, said meat and milk production account for 50 percent of agricultural emissions, so efforts are needed to reduce the industry’s carbon footprint. Total greenhouse gas emissions are calculated by looking at the release of carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide and methane from manure and digestive fermentation based on a per kilogram of beef. Some assessments look at the entire beef cycle from pasture to consumption. Activity on the farm is considered the greatest producer of greenhouse gases. Methane, nitrous oxide, and carbon dioxide are emitted from feed use, manure, fuel, pesticides, fertilizers and transportation. Beef emissions are higher than pork, chicken, eggs and milk because cattle live longer. It takes three years from the time a female is born until a calf is produced. A 2010 life cycle assessment by scientists at Agriculture Canada’s Lethbridge Research Centre estimated that cow-calf herds produce more emissions than feedlots because feedlots are more efficient. As a result, efforts to reduce emissions should start at the cow-calf level.
EMMA MCGEOUGH U OF M SCIENTIST
“There are improvements that we can make,” McGeough said. “Sometimes they look quite small, but it doesn’t mean a cumulative effect can’t make a difference.” Backgrounding cattle could receive more dried distillers grain or oilseeds because higher fat diets tend to promote lower methane emissions. Grass-fed cattle leave a greater carbon footprint, but the benefits of pastureland outweigh some negative aspects. “There are areas where crops cannot or should not be grown,” she said. Trees, woody plants and permanent grasslands are known for their ability to store carbon underground that can be converted into energy for plant growth. However, changes in soil carbon take place over decades rather than a season. Twenty-five percent of carbon has been lost in Canada since the 1900s because of extensive tillage. Potentially large amounts of carbon can be
BEEF SUSTAINABILITY • The Canadian Cattlemen’s Association has established a charitable foundation to support environmental sustainability of the Canadian beef industry through public seminars and other education programs. • It will also encourage stewardship practices and conservation actions that preserve the environment, biodiversity and wildlife habitat on agricultural landscapes. • Youth outreach programs will support beef industry sustainability through research and awareness. The foundation will also provide scholarships, bursaries, awards and other forms of financial assistance to students. sequestered with permanent grass cover or including forage in a rotation. Rangelands also need to be grazed to reduce dominant weeds from taking over. Managed grazing can stimulate plant growth, accelerate nutrient cycling and provide wildlife habitat. Animals leave behind manure as they graze, which makes good and bad contributions to the environment. Manure application can enhance biomass and microbial activities and add carbon to the soil. However, it also leaches nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium into the environment. Therefore, the amount of protein in feed should be watched because a beef animal uses only 10 to 20 percent of the nitrogen that is present in feed. The excess is released as urine and manure. “Protein is an expensive ingredient to supplement in diets, and if they are not using it, they are losing it,” she said. Ammonia from urine, manure and fertilizer is a major air pollutant. Ammonia is released into the atmosphere when animals defecate: 119 grams per day on average from feedlots. Biofilters or bioscrubbers can be used, but these devices are more appropriate in poultry barns. Life cycle studies include livestock’s impact on water, so protection of riparian areas is critical. These green zones areas occupy about five percent of the Prairies. Well-kept riparian areas maintain banks, reduce water velocity and sediment buildup, recharge aquifers and reduce soil erosion. McGeough said livestock production is a major consumer of water, but all food has an embedded water cost. It can take 1,760 to 15,500 liters to produce a kilogram of beef, depending on what is included in the calculation.
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NEWS
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
RESEARCH | RISK ASSESSMENT
Overcautiousness can stifle research: scientists Precautionary principle | Researchers say too much regulatory oversight can result in paralysis and a lack of decisions BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
OMAHA, Neb. — Progress is stifled when regulators are too cautious during risk assessments of new technology that has the potential to boost crop yields or create healthier animals, said an American business person. “We as an industry must have access to innovative ideas, innovative methods, innovative technologies, and if we in fact are going to feed nine billion people by the middle of this century,
then you have to understand the proponents of the precautionary principle are doing everything they can to act as if it is 1914 instead of 2014,” Mark Walton of Recombinetics, a Minnesota based animal genetics company, told the National Institute of Animal Agriculture convention held in Omaha, April 1-4. However, he said few want to enter the regulatory maze of government approval in North America and Europe when the burden of proof becomes too heavy with no payoff in site. “Go out and talk to people about
paying for livestock biotechnology. Investors aren’t very interested in doing it. Industry hasn’t been very excited about looking at it because of their fears about the blow back that comes,” he said. “That has been driven by the precautionary principle.” Walton argued that too many people become involved in these kinds of reviews, and paralysis sets in and no decisions are made when everyone’s opinion receives equal weight. “Open and informed discussions are necessary, but when the review
falls outside the knowledge realm of many people, opening the door to full democratic discussion becomes a popularity contest,” he said. “We cannot literally ever prove that something is 100 percent safe.” He said too much caution creates non-tariff trade barriers. Stan Bruntz of the U.S. Department of Agriculture said the World Trade Organization sets out the basic rules for food safety as well as animal and plant health requirements. Member countries have the right to ask for higher standards, but they
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need to base their requirements on scientific and relevant information. However, the reality is that policy is formed because of emotion and politics, he added. Dermot Hayes of Iowa State University said the precautionary principle could stall a free trade deal between the United States and the EU. “The precautionary principle is a deal breaker, and I think it is going to break the deal,” he said. A ban on genetically modified crops and growth hormones for livestock in the EU restricts farmer productivity, he added. Hayes said the U.S. has experienced incredible yield increases in corn and soybeans while European production is relatively flat. The EU grows 100 million acres of feed grains and oilseeds, he added, which means a five percent yield improvement would allow the region to grow more crops rather than importing from Brazil. Europe also rejects growth enhancers even though American pigs fed ractopamine produce larger carcasses with more lean meat. Hayes said an additional one million tonnes of pork would be available if the 251 million pigs slaughtered annually in Europe had the same carcass size as in the United States. Walton said other products have been rejected that would be of considerable benefit to farmers in the developing world. For example, farmers in the Philippines have gone to court to allow field testing of B.t. eggplant, a genetically modified variety that produces its own pesticide against a boring insect. Forty percent of the crop can be spoiled because of insect damage. He said farmers are forced to use more insecticides, which are probably more damaging to the environment. Convincing the public about the overall benefits of biotechnology has not been that successful, said David Edwards, head of the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO). “Our job is convincing others these things are beneficial and can be utilized in the public realm after being checked for safety,” he said. “We have great stories that are not being heard because we are not believed.” For example, China has invested $12 billion in biotech research and produced a small number of mastitis resistant dairy cows. The USDA had a similar project, but it has been shelved. The University of Guelph’s Enviropig seemed like a good idea, but inaction in the regulatory process saw the project frozen. The Enviropig made phytase in its saliva to reduce its phosphorus emissions. Edwards said projects to create influenza resistant chickens and pigs are also in the works, but many are at a crossroads because of unpredictability in the regulatory system. “These things have really stalled innovation in areas where we could be feeding people,” he said. BIO has produced information websites at www.bio.org/articles/ genetically-engineered-animalsfrequently-asked-questions and www.gmoanswers.com.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
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TRANSPORTATION | SHORT-LINE WOES
Car shortage frustrates Sask. short-line railways Record year had been expected | One company says it could ship 1,000 cars a year if they were available BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Short-line railways in northeastern Saskatchewan had steady demand for their services this winter, but a shortage of grain cars took a huge toll on their business. Thunder Rail, based at Arborfield, Sask., expected a record year for grain shipments, said company official Francis Rodier, but car spotting by big railway companies was hit and miss. “This year was set up to be one of our biggest years for shipping,” Rodier said during a recent appearance at the Hudson Bay Route Association’s annual meeting. “In the past, we’ve had really good luck … but this year … the biggest problem we’ve had was availability of cars.” Thunder Rail operates 32 kilometres of track between Arborfield and Crooked River, near Tisdale. The short line ships about 375 cars of grain in a normal year, but this year could have moved more than 800 cars if they had been available. “We managed to get our 375 cars, but we have a shortfall of nearly 450 cars right now,” Rodier said April 3. “That’s been a huge issue for us. We’ve lost some sales over that.”
Oat deliveries from northeastern Saskatchewan were badly affected. Oats grown in the northeast are normally shipped to mills in the United States. This year, major American buyers cut off bids for Saskatchewan oats because deliveries were unreliable. A lack of cars has also caused cash flow issues in the area, not only for farmers but for businesses that depend on consistent movement of their products by rail. Not far away, Torch River Rail faced a similar problem.
“To date this year, we’ve shipped 340 cars,” said Torch River chair Ron Shymanski. “Most of that is oats … but we’re also 400 cars behind.” Torch River runs on 45 km of track between Choiceland and Nipawin. Shymanski said two of the biggest companies that source grain from the area cut off their bids in January. Shymanski said more hopper cars could allow Torch River to ship 1,000 cars of grain per year, which is five times what was proposed in the short line’s original business plan.
On April 7, Ottawa’s standing committee on agriculture rejected a proposed amendment to Bill C-30 that was intended to ensure better service for short-line railway companies. The bill, also known as the Fair Rail for Grain Farmers Act, will instead focus on improving rail service by encouraging shippers to negotiate service contracts with Canada’s major railway companies. The contracts are expected to include commercial fines that penalize major railways for failing to provide the level of service that
they promise. Merv Tweed, president of OmniTrax Canada, said he is confident his company will be able to negotiate an acceptable level of service with Canadian National Railway. OmniTrax, which owns the Hudson Bay Railway (HBR) in northern Manitoba and Carlton Trail Railway in north-central Saskatchewan, depends on CN to deliver cars to HBR’s railhead in The Pas, Man. Tweed hopes CN will spot 8,000 grain cars for OmniTrax to use this year.
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The Western Canadian Dairy Expo in Saskatoon has been cancelled for the first time in its 31-year history. Organizers say a declining number of registered animals is to blame for scrubbing the indoor event, scheduled for April 10-11. Brenda Sapergia, livestock manager at Prairieland Park, said other Canadian shows are also in decline. “Technology has got to the point now where people don’t have to bring their animals to town to advertise their good lines. It’s all happening on the farm and through the technology on their websites,” she said. “It costs a lot of money to take those animals down the road.” Dairy Expo was originally run as a pork and dairy show, but pork eventually went by the wayside. Dairy went solo in 2011. Sapergia said 50 is the minimum number of dairy animals required to run the show, but this year registration was in the low 40s. She said the dairy expo committee has a year to try and bring entries up past 50. “It depends entirely on the exhibitors completely and totally. If they come to town, we put the show on, simple as that.”
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
GETTING THE GRAIN OUT
NEWS AG NOTES COMMITTEE TO BALANCE ENVIRONMENT AND ECONOMY
A committee of community, First Nations, industry, labour and the environmental sector is exploring ways to balance economic growth with environmental protections. The British Columbia group plans to work with the provincial government on environmental policy to balance resource development and environment protection. The B.C. environment minister will set the topics for discussion in collaboration with committee members. BEST MANAGED FIRM NAMED
With all the snow in the farmyard it is impossible to get a semi near the grain bins. Moving it twice using smaller loads was the solution on the Greaves farm near Miami, Man. | JEANNETTE GREAVES PHOTO
PrairieCoast Equipment has won a 2013 Canada’s Best Managed Com-
panies award sponsored by Deloitte, CIBC, the National Post, Queen’s School of Business and MacKay CEO Forums. PULSES REDUCE CHOLESTEROL
New research shows that eating pulses for at least three weeks reduces LDL cholesterol levels, which can lower the risk of heart attack and stroke. Canadian and U.S. universities and hospitals recently undertook a review and analysis of 26 published feeding trials to find out the amount of pulses needed to promote specific heart disease related outcomes, including LDL-cholesterol. The study found an average pulse consumption of 130 grams per day (one serving) lowered LDL cholesterol levels by five percent, which translates to a five to six percent
reduction in heart attacks or strokes. The research coincides with a study last year by Pulse Canada, which was specific to beans and lowering cholesterol. It too found a beneficial effect on total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol levels with a minimum effective amount of 130 grams of beans per day. BEEF INDUSTRY PARTNERSHIP
New Holland is working with the Canadian Simmental Association to strengthen the beef industry. Most of the support provides young leaders with opportunities to receive business experience necessary to sustain the cattle industry. New Holland will be the title sponsor of the 2014 Young Canadian Simmental Association National Classic. The program focuses on education, teamwork and hands-on experience for young beef producers up to age 25. FARMERS MARK ON EARTH DAY
The FarmOn Foundation is working with the Future Farmers Network in Australia and the Farming Forum from the United Kingdom to promote #FarmVoices on Earth Day April 22. The #FarmVoices Movement was launched last year so that more than 2,000 farmers from 23 countries could use Facebook, Instagram and/ or Twitter tell their stories and create a dialogue about the reality of farming around the world. For more information, visit www. farmon.com/farmvoices. BARLEY COUNCIL HIRES NEW EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR The Barley Council of Canada has appointed Brett Campbell executive director. Campbell has more than 15 years of senior management experience, including knowledge in the pharmaceutical, agri-marketing and food processing industries. He also brings a range of work experience in the beef and cattle industry: product management at Cargill Foods, senior international management at XL Foods, executive vice-president for the Canadian Beef Breeds Council and vice-chair and technical chair with the Canadian Beef Export Federation. His education includes an MBA from the University of Phoenix and a bachelor of arts degree from the University of Calgary.
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Back Yard Horse seminars (Adele Buettner, FACS, 306-249-3227, facs. sk.ca): April 24: Executive Royal Hotel, Regina May 1: Community Hall, Porcupine Plain May 8: Equine Performance Centre, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon April 20-26: National Soil Conservation Week (Soil Conservation Council of Canada, 306-972-7293, info@soilcc. ca, www.soilcc.ca) June 4-8: Canadian Angus Association meeting and conference, Moose Jaw, Sask. (Sask. Angus Association, 306-757-6133, office@ saskatchewanangus.com, www. saskatchewanangus.com) For more coming events, see the Community Calendar, section 0300, in the Western Producer Classifieds.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
RESEARCH | SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
SCHOLARSHIP | IN MEMORY
Glow-in-the-dark trees may light cities
Agribition gets historic donation SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Luminous seeds | Researchers are trying to improve the glow of the arabidopsis plant BY REBECA KUROPATWA FREELANCE WRITER
The movie Avatar, with its Pandora forests of glow-in-the-dark trees, may not be that far-fetched. Glowing Plant, a synthetic biology start-up company in San Francisco, has created a bioluminescent flora glowing plant for the home. Chief executive officer Anthony Evans said glowing trees will take a while to produce, but consumers can already pre-order seeds of a glow-in-the-dark arabidopsis, a small flowering plant of the mustard family. “Glowing plants have been known in the scientific community for a long time,” said Evans. “We just thought it was time to make them available to the general public. “The main goal is to raise awareness of synthetic biology and demonstrate what’s possible with today’s technology,” he said. “We want to inspire more people to explore DIYbio (the do-it-yourself biotechnology movement) and create their own creatures.” The startup’s research is funded through Kickstarter, a crowd-funding website. The goal of the original campaign last year was to ship luminous arabi-
dopsis seeds to customers in April. However, that has been delayed until September because of the success of the fundraising campaign, which raised seven times more money than expected. The funding surplus allowed the company to afford more work to improve the product so that it will shine brighter. “We asked our backers a few months ago whether they wanted us to ship on time or to use the rest of the funds to improve the luminosity,” said Evans. “The overwhelming advice was to improve. It’s been exciting, probably the most exciting event of my professional career so far.” Evans said the original idea was derived from the University of Cambridge 2010 iGem project. “That is where the idea of creating a bioluminescent plant came from: the biohackers synthetically crossbred arabidopsis and marine bioluminescent bacteria vVibrio fischeri.” However, it wasn’t easy to insert V. fischeri’s DNA into the plant and have it work properly. The genes needed to be modified so that they would operate properly in the plant. Three scientists did the research, while Evans handled the nonresearch aspects of the project and a
We want to inspire more people to explore DIYbio (the do-it-yourself biotechnology movement) and create their own creatures. ANTHONY EVANS GLOWING PLANT CEO
high level adviser from Israel offered assistance. They began by assembling the genes virtually, using software called Genetic Compiler, which was designed by the Israeli adviser. It allows scientists to assemble DNA for new life forms on their computers. As well, an open source software called Golden Braid made it possib l e t o c o m b i n e s m a l l e r D NA sequences into longer ones. They then sent the gene specifications to specialized companies that deal with DNA assembling, which built the physical DNA. Agrobacterium tumefaciens, a pathogenic bacteria that in nature inserts its own genes into plants’ cells to cause a tumorous growth, was then used to import the assembled genes into the arabidopsis plant.
The team used a neutralized version to deliver the synthesized DNA into the host plant. After inserting the genes into the leaves, they began assessing how well the plant adjusted and how much light it produced. The extra funds allowed them to experiment with an array of slightly varied DNA sequences to achieve the best glow. T h e y n ow p l a n t o t e s t 1 , 5 0 0 sequences, which is what has delayed the seed release. The U.S. Department of Agriculture considers agrobacteria a pest, which means no products produced with it are allowed outside research labs. Instead, the team will use a “gene gun” to insert the best DNA sequence by barraging the plant with tiny nano-particles. Once the bombarded arabidopsis blooms, it should produce seeds that will retain the new genes. The team is now testing the secondgeneration arabidopsis’s glowing aptitude. The release of the seeds online is expected to be the biggest release of a genetically modified plant into the world environment. Evans and his team will then continue “making the plants brighter and working on bigger plants.”
Canadian Western Agribition has received the largest individual donation in its history. Lilie R. Farley has donated $50,000 for an annual scholarship in honour of her late husband, William M Farley. The William M. Farley Memorial Scholarship will give qualifying students up to $1,500 toward their post secondary and graduate education. “We are sincerely moved by Lilie’s generosity and support,” said Reed Andrew, president of CWA, in a news release. “The Farley family has always been wonderful supporters of Agribition. We are truly honoured.” Farley was involved in the CWA for years, including as a board member and committee chair. He helped develop, launch and nurture the CWA’s Grain Show in 1980. He continued to guide its growth, including forage and pedigreed seed competitions. He was recognized with the Chris Sutter Award in 1994 for his contribution to the development and sustainability of the Grain Show. “My husband devoted his life to farming and had a strong belief in contributing to the agriculture industry,” said Lilie R. Farley in the release. “I am happy to be able to give such a gift to Agribition in honour of Bill.” To learn more about applying for the scholarship, go to www.agribition.com.
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
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MEDICAL MARIJUANA | BYLAWS
Rural municipalities want say on marijuana facility locations Industrial zones preferred | RMs are considering land use bylaws to restrict areas where Health Canada approved facilities can be located BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU
Rural municipalities have little say about whether medical marijuana facilities can be located in their area, but some municipalities hope to regain control by changing their bylaws. Suzanne Oel, a councillor with the Municipal District of Foothills in Alberta, said the MD is reviewing its land use bylaws to ensure marijuana production facilities are in industrial corridors near Highway 2. “We can’t not allow them,” said Oel. It’s a similar situation to what exists with cellphone towers, where little can be done to oppose them once Industry Canada approves the location. In the case of medical marijuana facilities, it is Health Canada’s approval that is difficult to overturn. However, Oel said that if her municipality can’t reject them, amended land use bylaws may be able to put them in appropriate locations. “We’re limited to signing a form, really,” she said. “We just want to have a say for residents that industrial zones are the best locations. We’re not rejecting it.” The MD will hold public meetings over the next month to find preferred locations for the facilities in the 36,000 sq. kilometre municipality. Oel said keeping large-scale medical marijuana production facilities in isolated industrial areas will limit the need for extra policing and strains on volunteer firefighters. “If done professionally, I don’t see why it couldn’t fit into the county.” Health Canada announced last year that it would contract commercial growers to supply medical marijuana to the country’s 40,000 licensed users and is now reviewing more than 230 applications. It’s estimated that marijuana could generate $1.3 billion in sales in the next 10 years. Under previous rules, smaller home-based operations supplied
medical marijuana to licensed users. Oel said those facilities were scattered across the municipality in houses and backyards with no one knowing who was licensed or not. “You didn’t know where they were. It was quite a mixed up situation,” she said. “If this helps straighten things out, that will be good. We would like to see this work better.” Neil Wilson, reeve of the MD of Willow Creek, said it should be up to municipalities to approve locations for medical marijuana production facilities. Willow Creek has been informed of three facilities that want to build in
the region. One has been approved and two others are still under review. “We have no idea if these people are going ahead with the process,” said Wilson. “We’re being kept out of the loop.” The MD put forward a resolution at the recent Alberta Association of Municipal Districts and Counties convention calling for municipalities to have final say on facility placement. It was defeated. “I don’t think the people in the room understood the gravity of the situation,” said Wilson.“When it starts affecting neighbours negatively, they will pay attention.”
Wilson said the council can tax the property but not control the activity, even if taxpayers don’t want the facility. The municipality’s adage has become, “it’s coming to a school near you,” said Wilson. However, not everyone opposes the facilities. R o c k y Vi e w C o u nt y re c e nt l y approved changes to its land use bylaw to clarify acceptable locations for commercial marijuana growing operations. The new bylaw removes marijuana as a “crop” under the county’s horticulture and agriculture rules and classifies it as a commercial opera-
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CLIMATE REPORT | PREDICTIONS
Climate change worries India NEW DELHI, India (Reuters) — India’s high vulnerability and exposure to climate change will slow its economic growth, affect health and development, make poverty reduction more difficult and erode food security, says a new report. The latest report from the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) stresses the risks of global warming urges governments to adopt policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The report predicts a rise in global temperatures of .3 to 4.8 C and a rise of up to 82 centimetres in sea levels by the late 21st century because of melting ice and expansion of water as it warms, which will threaten coastal cities from Shanghai to San Francisco. Experts say India is likely to be hit hard by global warming and many of its 1.2 billion people live in areas vulnerable to hazards such as floods, cyclones and droughts.
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tion that is limited to commercially zoned areas. The residents of Milden, Sask., wanted Canadian Cannabis Solutions to set up shop in their community’s shuttered school. Residents packed a meeting hall this winter to learn more about the marijuana facility’s potential economic benefits. Village administrator Heather Maxemniuk said the project idea was short lived because the company didn’t feel the school was a suitable location. “They’re not coming here now. They’re looking elsewhere,” she said.
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
WATER CONTAMINATION | FENCING PROJECT
AGRIUM | FINANCIAL RESULTS
Conservation district, First Nations collaborate to protect creek BY REBECA KUROPATWA FREELANCE WRITER
A First Nation in southern Manitoba has received assistance from a local conservation district to help solve a potential water contamination problem stemming from its livestock operation. The Assiniboine Hills Conservation District (AHCD) worked with the Swan Lake First Nation to make improvements to a reserve pasture near Carberry. John Rigaux, land manager for the First Nation, said the band has raised bison since the 1970s. It also has feeder cattle and 20 elk. The Epinette Creek flows through the reserve, and the Assiniboine Delta Aquifer supplies water to communities such as Carberry and Glenboro, as well as to farmers for irrigation. The bison previously had access to the creek, “but we didn’t want the bison going into the creek and polluting it,” said Rigaux. He said the conservation district helped secure provincial funding. “We put up about two kilometres of fencing, dug a 20 foot well, have the pumps operated by solar panels. Unfortunately, we didn’t get all the fencing done before the winter, so the system needs to be completed this spring.” Rigaux said the intention is to keep the bison out of the creek, provide more pasture area and improve pasture rotation. “The chief and council were very excited about it, as the First Nations realize we must form partnerships to better survive,” said Rigaux. “This partnership with the conservation district was the first time in Manitoba that a conservation district provided financial assistance to a First Nations people. So, we sort of broke new ground.” The AHCD provided most of the funding and expertise, while the Swan Lake First Nation provided the manpower as well as materials, equipment and in-kind contributions. “We’d approached the conservation district several times in the past and, actually, the policy they work under doesn’t include First Nations,” said Rigaux. “The province is looking to change the policy so they can include First Nations in their programs. We’re really pleased to have been able to accomplish our goal, and it also helped the conservation district accomplish what they wanted.” The project has also received support from Manitoba Conservation and Water Stewardship. The First Nations also belongs to a watershed management board, which manages the watersheds to prevent pollution. Swan Lake First Nations is now working with the Pembina Valley Conservation District, local game and fish officials and the province to improve the quality of Swan Lake, which may include control structures to raise the lake levels. The Pembina River flows through the lake, and water levels are good in the spring. However, the water tends to drain
We’re trying to reach out and involve all the stakeholders so everybody knows what’s going on and to get their concerns and know what they’d like to see happen. JOHN RIGAUX, SWAN LAKE FIRST NATION
out, leaving a shallow lake that doesn’t support fish. “We’re trying to increase or maintain water levels so it will be better for angling,” said Rigaux.
“We’re trying to reach out and involve all the stakeholders so everybody knows what’s going on and to get their concerns and know what they’d like to see happen.”
Rail backlog hurts Agrium earnings ( R e u t e r s ) —A g r i u m In c . h a s warned that a big backlog of grain shipments on Canada’s railways and a late start to spring planting will hit its first quarter earnings hard. The fertilizer company estimated per share earnings for the quarter ended March 31 at just above break even, well below the average analyst estimate of 53 cents a share, according to Thomson Reuters news agency. Agrium earned $141 million, or 94 cents a share, in the year-before quarter. The Calgary company had said in January that rail shipment challenges were weighing on potash sales volumes. A tough winter and a record-breaking Canadian harvest have overwhelmed the country’s two major
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railways, creating a backlog of grain shipments that may not clear until next year. Agrium also said its nitrogen facility in Carseland, Alta., experienced a failure in its auxiliary boiler March 22, resulting in an unplanned shutdown. The boiler is expected to be fixed by the second half of May. The shutdown is likely to cut the availability of urea by 100,000 tonnes and that of ammonia by 20,000 tonnes in the second quarter. In February, Agrium reported a 72 percent decline in fourth-quarter profit as grain prices dropped from a year earlier, taking fertilizer prices down with them. Agrium is scheduled to announce its first quarter results May 6.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
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TRADE | ECONOMIC PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT
Japan, Australia trade deal reduces tariffs U.S. feeling pressure to follow suit | The pact ends an Australian duty on cars and cuts Japanese tariffs on Australian beef TOKYO, Japan (Reuters) — Japan and Australia clinched a basic trade deal April 7 to cut import tariffs. At the same time, U.S. and Japanese officials have stepped up efforts to reach a parallel agreement that would re-energize stalled talks on a broader regional pact. The agreement between Japan and Australia comes as the United States and Japan push for their own twoway trade deal — a key component of a broader U.S.-led Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) pact — before a visit
this month by U.S. president Barack Obama. Australian prime Minister Tony Abbott and Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe confirmed a basic agreement on the deal at talks in Tokyo and agreed to work toward signing it as soon as possible, the two sides said in a statement. “The Japan-Australia EPA (economic partnership agreement) is an extremely important framework that promotes bilateral trade and investments,” Abe later told a news confer-
ence with Abbott. “This basic agreement has historical significance for getting the two countries closer together.” The bilateral deal, which is expected to be finalized when Abe travels to Australia in July, features cuts to Japanese tariffs on Australian beef, including a halving of the levy on frozen beef to 19.5 percent with deep cuts in the first year. It also ends an Australian duty on cars. A deal with Australia that lets Japan keep reduced tariffs on politically
sensitive agricultural products such as beef gives Japan ammunition against U.S. demands to scrap tariffs in the TPP deal, which aims to remove import levies, experts said. Such a deal means “Australia gets preferential treatment over the U.S., and America will be under pressure to strike a TPP deal short-term that puts it on a level playing field with Australia,” said Aurelia George Mulgan, a professor of Japanese politics at the University of New South Wales.
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Australia had a lower hurdle on tariffs for Japanese cars after Australia’s three remaining car makers — Toyota Motor Corp., General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. — d e c i d e d t o q u i t Au s t r a l i a n domestic production by 2017 because of high costs and a strong Australian currency. Washington and Tokyo are each urging the other to be more flexible on the sticking points of access to Japan’s farm and car markets and U.S. tariffs on imported cars and trucks. The TPP is a centrepiece of Obama’s push to expand the U.S. presence in Asia. The talks have entered their fifth year. The Japanese and U.S. economies dominate the grouping, which encompasses one-third of global imports and exports. “What is going on is a game of chicken,” Mulgan said. The U.S. and Japan “want an agreement, but they are not prepared to pay a high price. Japan knows that America wants it on board because TPP without Japan is not worth all that much. Japan is playing hardball.” The U.S. wants Japan to open its rice, beef and pork, dairy and sugar sectors, which Abe has vowed to defend. Japan wants a timetable on U.S. promises to drop 2.5 percent tariffs on imports of passenger cars and 25 percent on light trucks. Advocates say the TPP could accelerate global economic growth, boost U.S. exports and level the playing field between emerging and rich nations. The talks, which include Canada, missed a deadline for an agreement by the end of last year. Abe and Abbott also stressed close security ties as Japan seeks tighter relations with regional partners to cope with a rising China. They agreed to start talks on co-operation in defence technology and equipment, following Japan’s recent overhaul of a decades-old ban on arms exports. “The relationship between Australia and Japan is about much more than economics and trade and growing wealthy together,” Abbott said at the news conference. “It’s about respect, it’s about values and that’s why this is such a very strong partnership.” In a symbolic gesture, Abbott became the first foreign leader to attend a special session of Japan’s National Security Council, set up last year to co-ordinate policies. “I think this fact that we are having this session with you signifies the fact that there is a strong bond of trust between Japan and Australia,” Abe told Abbott at the beginning of the session.
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NEWS
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
HEMP PROCESSING | BIOMASS PLAN
Hemp processing plan turns straw into briquettes Manitoba location found cost effective with growers in close proximity BY DAN YATES SASKATOON NEWSROOM
A proposal from a Regina entrepreneur adds to the growing list of plans to process hemp in Western Canada for industrial purposes. After two years of research and development, Thomas Chevalier said he hopes to set up a plant by the end of this year in Gilbert Plains, Man., producing biomass briquettes from hemp straw. His business, IMBH, is currently a finalist in the Saskatchewan Business Challenge, a program for startup businesses. “What I did is I drove around all of Canada. I went to industry events. I went to conferences, and that’s kind of how I got my feet wet,” he said. “I saw what was in the market and I saw what was missing.” Chevalier also plans to produce a hemp product targeting bioplastics. Once operating, Chevalier said he intends to process 3,000 to 5,000 tonnes of hemp straw per year, which would come from 1,400 to 1,500 acres of the crop bought from nearby growers. He said growers will receive $90 to
$100 per tonne for the straw. “Right now they’re burning it. You can’t feed hemp straw to your cattle. They’re basically stuck with the straw,” he said. “You need to get it off the ground. What we’re doing is getting farmers to swath and bale it. You store it on your farm, we’ll pick it up on a monthly basis and we’ll pay you for that.” Farmers planted 67,000 acres of hemp in Canada last year. Most of it was grown for seed under contracts with two major hemp seed companies in Manitoba that make food products. Hemp exports from Canada are already worth tens of millions of dollars. Several other industrial fibre projects have been announced in Western Canada. Plains Industrial Hemp Processing has set up shop in Manitoba, while Stemia and Cylab International have announced plans to operate facilities in Alberta. Chevalier said he is interested in eventually working with growers in Saskatchewan, but processing is more cost effective in areas where growers are consolidated.
“There are more hemp growers in a closer proximity (in Manitoba),” he said. “The seed varieties are a little more adapted to their conditions and environment. When we took the straw samples, we found more consistency with theirs than out here (in Saskatchewan). I think it’s because out here there’s a lot of clay, unless you go up north. That’s where you’ll find the best hemp straw, in my opinion.” Hemp produced for seed comes from shorter varieties, but cultivars exist to produce taller plants intended for fibre processing. “We’re not asking growers to change what they’re doing now,” he said. “All we’re doing is buying the straw that’s left over from seed production.” The federal health department regulates hemp production in Canada, which has drawn criticism from industry officials. Growers must be licensed by the federal regulator to buy certified seed. “As long as Health Canada regulates the hemp industry, I don’t think we’re going to see the big boom we’re hoping to see,” Chevalier said.
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Yellow toadflax has a creeping rhizome root system that crowds out other plants and continues to multiply. | FILE PHOTO NOXIOUS WEEDS | BIOCONTROL
Weevils tackle toadflax, save farmer money Environmentally friendly way to eliminate problem BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
Randy Archibald was skeptical that 50 weevils could make a dent in the yellow toadflax that was taking over parts of his Alberta ranch. The yellow-headed noxious weed was growing profusely along four kilometres of steep riverbank land that was nearly impossible to reach with a sprayer. Camrose County arrived each year with side boom trucks to spray the hard to reach locations and sent him the bill. Scientist Alec McClay from the Alberta Research Council released the weevils in June 1996, and since then the weeds have nearly disappeared from Archibald’s property along the Battle River and his farmyard at Rosalind. “I am just amazed at the difference. It is damned hard to find a toadflax plant on my farm,” Archibald said. It took time for the tiny insects to multiply, but size did not matter when it came to tackling a big problem. “They seemed to have done a good job, and the toadflax population was very low,” McClay said. Early inspections did not show much progress, and McClay moved onto other projects. However, he returned to Archibald’s farm in 2012 and 2013 to find amazing results. “There were really high densities of weevils on the toadflax,” he said. Researchers counted as many as 70 weevils lined up like boxcars on a single plant. Archibald speculates toadflax arrived at his cow-calf operation with grass seed. “To me it is a huge saving,” he said. The county no longer sends him a bill and there is more grazing land. It is also environmentally friendly, even if it takes time for the weevils to establish themselves and make a real dent in the problem. Besides spraying, Archibald sometimes pulled weeds by hand and
threw them away in a plastic trash bag. Now the insects do the work. “It is something that, as farming progresses, could control a lot of our noxious weeds,” he said. Archibald would also like to see similar controls introduced for crazyweed, also known as locoweed, which releases toxins that can harm or kill cattle, horses and sheep. Yellow and Dalmatian toadflax are invasive species in Canada, and many provinces list them as noxious weeds that must be controlled. The stem mining weevil, formally known as mecinus janthinus, preys specifically on yellow toadflax. It lays its eggs in the stem, and the larvae tunnel inside. Dalmation toadflax is attacked by a closely related weevil called mecinus janthinformis, which has been effectively used in British Columba. Scientists originally assumed the two insects were the same species, but DNA studies have shown them to be different. It’s thought that earlier release programs failed because the wrong insects were released. Toadflax is a wildflower in Europe, and natural enemies keep it under control. Yellow toadflax has been in Canada for about 100 years and was probably imported as an ornamental. It has bright yellow flowers that resemble snapdragons. It has a creeping rhizome root system and is able to form large colonies and crowd out other plants. McClay now has his own company, McClay Ecoscience in Sherwood Park, Alta., and is working with the Alberta Invasive Species Council to find biocontrol agents for common tansy, oxeye daisy and scentless chamomile. Rhinusa pilosa can also be used to control yellow toadflax. It is being reared at the Agriculture Canada research Centre at Lethbridge and is waiting for government approval for field release.
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
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ORGANICS | YEAR IN REVIEW
Sask. organic producers share trials and tribulations BY SHIRLEY BYERS FREELANCE WRITER
Last year wasn’t an outstanding one in organic agriculture, three farmers said recently as they looked back at 2013 and speculated on what might happen in 2014. “Ideal growing conditions in the spring were what caused 2013 to be an average year (financially),” said Ken Lefebvre , who farms 1,500 acres with his wife, Helena, near Carrot River. Last year they grew wheat, oats, barley, alsike clover, and timothy . He said those ideal conditions spiked weed growth to the point that in July he had to plow under 200 of the 250 acres he had seeded to wheat. Kim Tomlin, who grew hemp, oilseed radish, alfalfa, fababeans, peas, buckwheat and red clover last year on his 1,000 acres near Gronlid, said too much moisture coupled with a cool summer hurt his annual crops, while his red clover and alfalfa did a bit better. “It was a mix of poor crops and not average crops,” he said. Hélène Tremblay-Boyko, who grew wheat and flax last year on the 1,400 acre farm she operates with husband Al Boyko near Canora, said the area was coming off a string of wet years, but weeds are always an issue on organic farms. “It’s always disheartening when the mustard is blooming and your field suddenly turns yellow,” she said. “But if you just sort of avert your eyes for about a week, then the wheat takes over. We grow Pembina, a variety of wheat that has a wider leaf, so it sort of canopies over the weeds.” Tremblay-Boyko also raises organic beef, which she said has been difficult to market recently. “(However), two years ago we made a connection with a buyer who finishes for an organic processor in Ontario. We’re very happy with that connection.” They’ve also joined a marketing group. Customers place their orders online and pick them up once a month in Regina. The group is hoping to expand into Saskatoon. Tomlin belongs to Farmer Direct Co-op in Regina and sells most of his crops there. The fair trade co-operative is farmer owned and 100 percent organic, which he said provides a better return for members. “I usually get it cleaned and then it’s picked up on the farm.” He also sells alfalfa and red clover into the sprouting market. The Lefebvres market mostly into the United States with a small percentage of their grains and seeds going to the Japanese market. They deal mostly with Canadian and American brokers and grain traders. “A lot of the forage seeds, our timothy for example, seems to germinate well,” Lefebvres said. “A lot are down below 70 percent, but ours tested 93 or 94 percent.” The release of genetically modified alfalfa has been delayed in Canada for at least this year, but organic farmers are still concerned. “If GM alfalfa was found in my clover, it would automatically be rejected as an organic sale,” Lefebvre said. Tremblay-Boyko said she and her husband are on the lookout for a legume to replace alfalfa in their rotation. They’re considering sainfoin
and wondering about cicer milkvetch. Last year was the first summer that the Boykos had health issues with their cattle, which drink from sloughs in their pastures. It started with a couple of cases of foot rot, which they addressed by pumping water to troughs in each paddock. The drier, dustier weather of August and September resulted in several cases of pink eye, which they treated with homeopathic remedies administered in the herd’s drinking water. They also began supplementing with kelp, which is high in iodine and seems to protect against pink eye. Meanwhile, the homeopathic remedies of rhustox, argentrum, apismel
and euphrasia, which were administered in the herd’s water, appeared to prevent the spread of the infection by reducing discharge from the animals’ eyes. They hired a botanist after a couple of calves were born with crooked calf syndrome, and the problem was identified as chokecherry bushes in their pasture. Chokecherry is one of several plants, including lupine, which contain an alkaloid that if ingested by a cow during early pregnancy will sedate the fetus. If the developing fetus does not move as much as it normally does, tendons become shortened and joints tend to become fixed, said Tremblay-Boyko.
However, some surprises were happy ones. “I guess the biggest surprise would be that prices were fairly decent,” said Tomlin. “There’s no problem marketing anything.” As well, demand for organic products is strong. “In the last three or four years, a lot of organic producers have either moved out of organic or retired,” he said. “I think buyers are kind of concerned right now that there are not enough growers.” All three farmers plan to make changes this year. For Lefebvre, it will be switching from an air seeder to an air drill.
“With an air seeder you’re kind of broadcasting the seed and not packing and actually planting,” he said. He feels this method of seeding will help his crops compete with weeds. Tomlin plans to stick with his usual rotation but will try to clean some of his own product on the farm. He said clean seed is more attractive to buyers, and there’s always a market for the weed seeds. Trembley-Boyko doesn’t think they will grow flax again. “We had an adventure trying to combine it,” she said. “It wouldn’t ripen up, it wouldn’t freeze and time was going on. The straw would wrap in the combine and it would start smoking.”
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
GOATS | MILK PRODUCTION
Ontario demand drives dairy goat expansion Top North American producer | Goat milk is not under supply management so herd expansion is not restricted BY JEFFREY CARTER FOR THE WESTERN PRODUCER
SARNIA, Ont. — Ontario is a hotbed for North America’s dairy goat industry, and it is getting bigger. “We’ve taken on another 15 members over the past year,” said Coby Tenvoorde, general manager of the Ontario Dairy Goat Co-operative. “Demand is growing so fast it’s been hard to keep up.” The co-op, which has 110 members, sold more than 20 million litres of milk last year. The average farmgate price was close to 90 cents per litre, which is similar to what’s paid for cow milk. “We paid out dividends to members that added up to almost two cents per litre,” said Tenvoorde, who raises goats with her husband. She expects membership to grow to 120 by the end of the year Ma n y m e m b e r s a re o f Du t c h extraction, and there is also a large contingent of Amish and Mennonites. The co-op acts as a broker, delivering milk to Woolwich Dairy and smaller processors. Woolwich, with its facilities in Orangeville, Ont., Quebec and Wisconsin, is described on the company’s website as North America’s “largest and leading goat cheese producer.” Tenvoorde said the other major goat milk broker is Hewitt’s Dairy at Hagersville, Ont., which also processes goat milk. Bruce Vandenberg of Mariposa Dairy at Lindsay, Ont., said his company and Woolwich both distribute goat milk products across Canada and into the United States. “In 1990, Ontario produced about two million litres of goat milk and last year produced 35 million,” he said. “Don’t be surprised if we’re at 50 million litres in the next couple years. That would be a 40 percent increase.” Vandenberg said Ontario likely produces more goat milk than any other jurisdiction in North America. Iowa and Quebec are also major players. Ontario’s emergence in the industry can be linked to differences in how milk production is supported in Canada and the United States, he said. “The reason Ontario is as big as it is (in milking goats) is because if you want to increase milking cows in Ontario, you can’t do it (easily) and so
people are getting into goats.” C ow m i l k p ro d u c t i o n c a n b e increased in the United States at the whim of producers, but in Canada it is restricted through supply management Goat milk isn’t under supply management, but the co-op manages supply by limiting membership and the production shares that existing members can by. Tenvoorde said there’s been little need to limit production because milk demand, prices and producer numbers have all increased since the co-op was formed in 2002. Martien Kusters of Sarnia, Ont., has taken advantage of the increased demand by getting into the business in 2008 with his parents. “That was a big thing for us, starting small and starting simple and learning along the way,” the 24-year-old said. Kusters has kept dwarf goats for as long as he can remember. He started his commercial operation by renovating an old barn, buying 70 female kids and building a milking parlour large enough to handle future expansions, which came in 2010 and 2013. The family now milks close to 300 does, and Kusters, who manages the operation and does most of the work, plans to expand to as many as 500 does within the next five years. Caprine arthritic encephalitis (CAE) has been a challenge. Kusters feeds his kids colostrum from cows rather than goats as a way to keep young females free of the disease, a least until they start milking. Tenvoorde said there are a couple of CAE-free herds in Ontario. The Kusters’ herd comprises primarily Saanen bloodlines, and some Alpine is also in the mix. The does average three litres per day, and the herd reaches peak production at around 4.5 litres in May. The family produces enough milk to fill its 4,000-litre bulk tank for twice-a-week pickups. Pricing is based on solids. Kusters tracks the productivity of his does on a monthly basis as a way to cull does and identify breeding stock. Vandenberg said that’s the type of approach all producers should pursue. He said milk production varies widely in Ontario, with some well below the Kusters’ average and some much better. It’s difficult for producers who are in expansion mode to
ONTARIO GOAT MILK PRODUCTION (LITRES)
1990
2013
2 million 35 million
improve their milking genetics, but it becomes much easier once they reach their target herd size of perhaps 400 to 600 does.
The province needs to catch up with European productivity, which averages four litres, he added. “I would say our goats are like
where our Holstein cows were in the 1960s and 1970s.” Productivity on the Kusters’ farm is reaching its peak. Goat breeding
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49
GRASSHOPPERS | BIOLOGICAL CONTROL
Fungus kills grasshoppers Slower than chemicals | Biological controls are less harmful to beneficial organisms BY DAN YATES SASKATOON NEWSROOM
ABOVE: Martien Kusters is taking advantage of Ontario’s strong demand for goat milk products. He plans to expand his herd to 400 or 500 milking does within the next five years. LEFT: The Kusters family’s 24-milker parlour holds 48 goats at a time. Due to the seasonality of goats, kids tend to be born around the same time of year, from February to April. | JEFFREY CARTER PHOTOS begins in late August and continuing into the fall. Kids are born from February to April. Kusters runs his own bucks for
breeding. Young females, called doelings, are bred at about eight months of age and milked for about a year. Older does tend to milk longer.
A fungus-laden powder developed at the University of Lethbridge is a proven grasshopper killer and a potential tool for combatting the pest. However, while researcher Dan Johnson is looking for a commercial partner to help bring the new biological control to growers, he said it won’t replace the conventional insecticides that growers use — nor should it. “That’s not really going to happen, and I don’t even think that’s a very good idea. I think we need an integrated approach,” said Johnson, who led the initiative studying the fungus metarhizium anisopliae. “But lately the integrated approach
has just been different kinds of chemicals, and that list is getting smaller.” Biological controls are less efficacious than chemical applications, but they can also be less harmful to beneficial organisms while reducing crop residue and resistance pressure. Johnson said this fungus could be an option in cases where a grower may not need rapid or instant control. “Whenever I talk about it, the very first thing I say upfront is this is not as fast and not as perfect a killer as some chemicals. So if that’s what you need, then this is not for you,” said Johnson. “But if you get a situation, and often people do, in which you’d like to suppress the grasshoppers and if it’s done in two weeks or one day doesn’t matter, then this is a possibility.” Different strains of metarhizium anisopliae are found naturally around the world, usually on the bodies of insects, said Johnson. Spores germinate once they come into contact with a grasshopper, pierce the insect’s skin and grow into its body. The fungus has been isolated and developed into commercial products for locust and grasshopper control in other countries, including Australia. Johnson’s work builds off a strain found in a soil sample in southern Alberta. “It’s often thought, rightly or wrongly, that if you have an indigenous organism, it’s less likely to have some invasive species or risky features attached to it,” he said. Johnson used funding from several sources, including Pulse Canada, to
replicate the fungus and begin field tests in lentils, grass and mixed pastures in Saskatchewan and Alberta in 2008. He found that 20 grams per acre of the fungus to be the most effective solution when applied with water and a wetting agent. Lentil field plots in his Saskatchewan trial saw an 83 percent reduction in grasshoppers. Johnson said results more regularly show a 70 percent reduction. Infected insects will succumb to the fungus in three to five days under ideal conditions, although Johnson said most of the damage is likely to be done within a 10-day period, hopefully bringing the population down below economic thresholds. “It’s hard to find a non-chemical method, particularly a biological microbial method, that really works. Many of them have promise … but many of them really don’t do the job,” said Johnson. “This is the first one we’ve had that really is killing pretty good and pretty fast. We’re pretty happy with that. But nonetheless, it’s slow and less effective compared to chemicals, so it’s a different way of managing. People would have to get used to that.” Johnson has found the fungus doesn’t harm most non-target species, including parasitoid wasps. Metarhizium anisopliae is also bee friendly and has been used for mite control in hives. Johnson plans to survey growers and industry members about interest in the fungus. “If growers don’t want it, then we won’t go any further,” he said.
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SPCA seizes almost 900 sheep in ‘largest seizure ever done’ BY WILLIAM DEKAY SASKATOON NEWSROOM
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The Saskatchewan SPCA has seized almost 900 sheep and four dogs from a farm in the southern part of the province. “This is definitely the largest seizure that we have ever done,” said Kaley Pugh, manager of animal protection services at the Saskatchewan SPCA. “I think our previous (record) was about 300 head of cattle a couple of different times.” The animals were removed from a farm in the Rural Municipality of Key West, near Kayville, Sask., April 1. The SPCA received a complaint about the farm Feb. 3. Bengough RCMP helped with the investigation. The RCMP said Jian Min Liu of Moose Jaw has been charged with one count each for causing unnecessary suffering to sheep, failure to provide adequate food and shelter for sheep and willfully causing sheep to be in distress. Liu is scheduled to appear in provincial court in Assiniboia, Sask., June 12. Pugh credits the Saskatchewan Sheep Development Board for pro-
viding the SPCA with local contacts that helped remove, transport and house the animals nearby. It will also help with lambing and shearing before the animals are sold. “We’ve had excellent help and some very good caretakers to help us out with these animals,” Pugh said. The four guard dogs had to be separated from the herd but were placed in appropriate homes where they could remain working. Pugh said cause of death could have been an assortment of issues relating to nutrition, cold weather and lack of care during lambing. Lack of adequate shelter for lambing ewes was one the main concerns for the SPCA, said Pugh. The sheep are a Rideau Arcott purebred breed that requires more attention to nutrition and lambing management. Pugh said this past winter broke another record for the SPCA. It has four investigation officers for the province, which involves constant prioritization of cases. “We had 735 new cases for the year (April 1-March 31),” she said. “It’s the highest number of new cases that we’ve opened in our history. Our previous record was 730 cases.”
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
51
BLOGS > ED WHITE ON MARKETS Ed writes about market events, analyst predictions and the inexplicable. F indit at producer.com.
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Tributes/Memoriams ..................... 0100 Announcements .............................0200 COMMUNITY CALENDAR British Columbia ..........................0310 Alberta ........................................ 0320 Saskatchewan ............................ 0330 Manitoba ..................................... 0340 Airplanes ........................................0400 Alarms & Security Systems ...........0500 ANTIQUES Antique Auctions .........................0701 Antique Equipment..................... 0703 Antique Vehicles ......................... 0705 Antique Miscellaneous ................0710 Arenas ............................................0800 Auction Sales .................................0900 Auction Schools .............................0950 AUTO & TRANSPORT Auto Service & Repairs............... 1050 Auto & Truck Parts .......................1100 Buses........................................... 1300 Cars ............................................. 1400 Trailers Grain Trailers .............................1505 Livestock Trailers....................... 1510 Misc. Trailers...............................1515 Trucks Newest to Oldest ....................... 1595 Four Wheel Drive .......................1670 Grain Trucks ............................... 1675 Gravel Trucks ............................. 1676 Semi Trucks.................................. 1677 Specialized Trucks .................... 1680 Sport Utilities ............................ 1682 Various .......................................1685 Vans..............................................1700 Vehicles Wanted .......................... 1705 BEEKEEPING Honey Bees ..................................2010 Cutter Bees ................................. 2020 Bee Equipment & Supplies .....................................2025 Belting ............................................ 2200 Bio Diesel & Equipment................. 2300 Books & Magazines ........................ 2400 BUILDING & RENOVATIONS Concrete Repair & Coatings .......................................2504 Doors & Windows ........................2505 Electrical & Plumbing .................. 2510 Lumber .........................................2520 Roofing.........................................2550 Supplies .......................................2570 Buildings .........................................2601 Building Movers ..............................2602 Business Opportunities ................. 2800 BUSINESS SERVICES Commodity/Future Brokers ........ 2900 Consulting ....................................2901 Financial & Legal .........................2902 Insurance & Investments ....................2903 Butcher’s Supplies .........................3000 Chemicals........................................3150 Clothing: Drygoods & Workwear ................. 3170 Collectibles .................................... 3200 Compressors .................................. 3300 Computers...................................... 3400 CONTRACTING Custom Baling..............................3510 Custom Combining ......................3520 Custom Feeding ........................... 3525 Custom Seeding ........................... 3527 Custom Silage ..............................3530 Custom Spraying ........................ 3540 Custom Trucking ..........................3550 Custom Tub Grinding ................... 3555 Custom Work............................... 3560 Construction Equipment................3600 Dairy Equipment .............................3685 Diesel Engines................................ 3700 Educational .................................... 3800 Electrical Motors.............................3825 Electrical Equipment ......................3828 Engines........................................... 3850 Farm Buildings ...............................4000 Bins ............................................. 4003 Storage/Containers .................... 4005 FARM MACHINERY Aeration .......................................4103 Conveyors ................................... 4106 Equipment Monitors ................... 4109
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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
This is where you’ll findit! “The Quarantine: can be extremely effective for pigs, sheep – and humans” “Expose yourself, embrace science – and tell people why you the farmer do what you do”
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
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
LIVING WITH MENTAL ILLNESS Conference for Families and Friends, May 9/’14, 8:30 to 3:45, Travelodge Hotel, Saskatoon, SK. Key note speaker: Tracey Carr PhD. To r e g i s t e r c o n t a c t J e n n i fe r o r L i z at 306-655-0472. $40/person, family rates available. For more info visit our website 1986 BUSHMASTER ULTRALIGHT, 912 livingwithmentalillnesconference.ca 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. LYCOMING 0-320, 150/160 HP, excel- 1975 M20F MOONEY, 2121 TT, 314 eng. lent condition, 2200 hours. 403-327-4582, hrs., 200 HP, full electronics, Garmin GPS, one owner. 306-873-5573, Tisdale, SK. 403-308-0062, Lethbridge, AB. CESSNA 180, good 2870 floats, 1978 PIPER TURBO ARROW, TT3385, 1959 gear, Com, May C of A, 5550 TTAF, 45 hrs STOH, KX-155 Nav/ComHSI Slaved, wheel 0-470R 730 hrs., 210 since reman., Prop Auto Pilot, KLN GPS, digital EGT/OAT, 155, new interior and glass, $87,000. open to offers. 306-236-4802, Meadow 204-330-1758 at Winnipeg, MB. Lake, SK. email: itsmelka@yahoo.ca PA12 ALASKAN MODS, wheels, skis, floats, KITFOX IV ULTRALIGHT, C-FU00, Subaru- GPS, Icom, Mode C, $89,900. Phone: EA81, fuel inject, elec ignition, radio, inter- 306-596-6731, Regina, SK. com, ELT, in-flight adjustable prop, VG’s, strobes, air speed, vertical speed, turn and CESSNA 414, 9046 AFTT, engines Ram bank, folding wings, shedded, w/wo trail- Series VI, 1048/482 TSO, 1057/471 TSO, er, $30,000 OBO. 306-423-6236, Hoey, SK. S-Tec autopilot; PIPER Aztec C, 4280 AFTT, engines 1245/409 hrs. TSO, props LYCOMING 0-290-D, 135 HP, 1100 269/269 TSO, new paint and int. 2007; 3 SMOH, FWF c/w mount and exhaust, exc. TRAVEL AIRs, 1964, 1966 and 1968, forcond. Lethbridge, AB., 403-327-4582, mer flight school aircraft, IFR certified; 403-308-0062. BEAVER, 1959, converted from US miliL-20A Model, 8184 AFTT, eng. 274 1977 PIPER LANCE, TTSN 3933, SMOH tary TSO, OH by Covington aircraft eng. 531, hangared, excellent condition. Call hrs. 2007; PIPER Navajo, 8859 AFTT, Cleve780-871-4743, Lloydminster, AB. land wheels and brakes, cargo door, Kan1964 CESSNA 172E, 2112TT, 566 SMOH, nad ELT. 403-637-2250, Water Valley, AB. Nav/Com, Mode C, new Cleveland wheels, HIGH PERFORMANCE: 1971 Piper Cherobrake/tires, exc. cond, hangared, $49,000. kee 140D. Located at Saskatoon, SK. AirJake 306-929-2115, Candle Lake, SK. port. Must be flown! Call 306-382-9024.
JO H N & B ERT’S AN TIQ UE & CO L L ECTIB L E AUCTIO N SAL E
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. 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.
WIRELESS DRIVEWAY ALARMS
Save 10% until Apr. 30/14
1962 COMANCHE 250, good aircraft, don’t fly enough, $59,900 OBO. Trades? Phone 250-426-5118 or 250-421-1484, Cranbrook, BC.
3,000 ft. maximum range wireless driveway alarm. 4 zone monitoring, 4 doorbell tones. P.O. Box 882, Coalhurst, AB T0L 0V0 Ph/Fax: 403-381-4817 Email: wirada@telusplanet.net
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. LINK TRAINER FLIGHT simulator, model# AN-T-18, c/w recorder desk, taking 400 - 1948 CANADA 5¢ pieces, $220 for all. Call 204-889-4073, Winnipeg, MB. offers. Call 306-423-6236, Hoey, SK. 1953 CESSNA 180, 4033TT, 0-470-K engine, 932 SMO, 190 on prop, tight EDO, 2870 floats, Mode C transponder, extended baggage, Horton Stol kit, Fly-lite 3000 hyd. wheel skis, Cleveland brakes, Tanis engine pre-heat kit. Call 306-468-2771, Debden, SK.
SATURD AY AP RIL 26, 201 4 9:00AM
Corm a n In d u stria l Live P a rk,N orth of Internet Sa ska toon on H w y #1 1 Bidding @ to P ion eer Eleva tor 1:00 P M Featuring: 1929 M odelA Roadster - 5 Spd Lakester, G as Pum ps, Advertising Signs, O ilCans, Advertising Clocks, Lam ps & Lanterns, Car Bodies (M odel A ’s, M odel T’s, 1929, 1930, 1932 Ford), G uns (1903-1926 W inchesters A ssorted M odels) and N um erous M iscellaneous Item s.
1954 MINNEAPOLIS MOLINE model U special, SN #01214449, running, partially restored. 403-823-9465, Drumheller, AB. ALLIS CHALMERS WC, Serial #151570, runs good, looks nice. $3000. Call: 306-424-2723, Montmartre, SK. FOR SALE: JD 720 dsl., B, A, AR and D; 1010 CAT; Case VAC, Case Ind. D; IHC W30; Fordson; Ellis Chalmers B; JD 55 combine. 204-546-2661, Grand View, MB. 1730 MM MODEL B cross motor tractor, in running condition. Call 306-742-4687, Calder, SK. YOUR SOURCE for new replacement tractor parts, from rings to major overhaul kits from Steiners (Canada’s 1st Steiner dealer) A and I, Central East, Rosewood, etc. Decal sets, manuals, books, videos, calendars, 1/2” pipe and 7/8” spark plug at 3.95/ea. Haugholm Books, 40372 Mill Road, Brucefield, ON. N0M 1J0. Phone: 519-522-0248 or fax: 519-522-0138.
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 ARMSTRONG 40 YEAR Antique Dispersal, Easter Saturday, April 19, 9:30 AM, Fort Qu’Appelle, Saskatchewan. Canada’s 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.
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.
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ACROSS 1. He played Walter Skinner on The X-Files 4. Family name in Rain Man 10. Crimson ___ 11. ___ Story 12. She plays Debbie on The Middle 15. ___ Eleven 17. ___ Man 18. Waiting to ___ 19. Carbonell of Bates Motel 20. Dobrev of The Vampire Diaries 23. He starred in Strangers on a Train 25. Unlawful ___ 28. She played Sarah Gold on Entourage 29. Where the ___ Is 30. Actress Lupino 32. Actress Vardalos 33. The Mummy director 35. Jennifer Jason ___ 36. The ___ Birds 37. LaRue of CSI: Miami 38. ___ Streets 40. He wrote the screenplay for The Switch 43. 2013 computer-animated film (with The) 44. She plays Claire on Six Feet Under 47. ___ Luck Chuck 48. Film starring Jessica Alba (with The) 49. Frasier hired her to take care of his father 50. The ___ Squad
DOWN 1. Film with the tagline “They’re here” 2. Dune director 3. The Constant ___ 4. Film Robin Williams played a robot in (2 words) 5. Skyfall theme song singer 6. Flashdance star 7. ___ Complicated 8. ___ Rome with Love 9. Daly of Cagney & Lacey 10. Johnson who starred in Bride of the Monster 13. Actress Wiest 14. HBO series Laura Dern and Diane Ladd starred in 16. Forces of ___ 21. He played Tino in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy 22. Perry of Friends 24. Film starring Dennis Quaid and Billy Bob Thornton (with The) 26. Grand Hotel producer 27. Remember the Titans director 31. She played Brenda on Beverly Hills, 90210 34. Film starring Michael Keaton and Teri Garr 39. The Thin Man dog 41. Initials of the actor who starred in Elizabethtown 42. Here Comes the ___ 45. He was on Barney Miller 46. Byrnes of 77 Sunset Strip
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
ADRIANâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S MAGNETO SERVICE Guaranteed repairs on mags and ignitors. Repairs. Parts. Sales. 204-326-6497. Box 21232, Steinbach, MB. R5G 1S5.
1953 MASSEY 44 gas, good running condition, always shedded, needs rear tires, $2000. Call 204-489-7879, Winnipeg, MB. E-mail: ahein@mts.net
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
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.
CLASSIFIED ADS 53
1972 OLDS CUTLASS Supreme convertible, 350 Rocket, 4 barrel, bucket seats, console shift, $17,900. 306-963-7604, Imperial, SK
ORIG. GLASS CYL. for visible gas pump, mint cond., $950. Ph Ron 780-603-3117, 8 AM - 6 PM, Mon.- Friday, Vegreville, 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.
WANT TO BUY a couple crisp $1000 dollar bills. Bank gives $1000 bucks. I will pay you $1050. Kim 403-860-1445, Calgary AB
S w a p M eet â&#x20AC;&#x201C; M a y 2-3, W es tern er Pa rk , Red Deer
COLLECTOR CAR AUCTION, May 10, 2014, Prairieland Park Convention Centre, 8 TH ANNUAL W ILLYS W EEKEND Saskatoon, SK. Now accepting consignSHOW & TELL ments. Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t delay consign today! David In c onjunc tion w ith the M ounta in V iew Pis tons MF 88 GAS tractor w/FEL, $4500; Ford 8N JD 4020 HI CROP, side console, re- 306-631-7207, Office 306-693-4411. PL S a tu rd a y, Ju n e 21 Regis tra tio n 9 :00 tractor, $300; Blade, plow and cultivator stored, vg cond., new Firestone tires, syn- #329773. The Collector Car Group Inc. www.thecollectorcargroup.com for 3 PTH, $250 for all; MH 6â&#x20AC;&#x2122; power mow- chro, shedded. 306-859-7788, Beechy, SK. S ho w 10:00 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 3:00 Old s , AB er, $100; NH bar type side delivery rake, Co n ta ctJu d y (403) 932-2675 $250; 10 bale stooker for small square STATIONARY ENGINES: Witt Jr. 6 HP, 1925 MODEL T SEDAN, 2 door, running, bales, $100; Coleman oil burner heater, Delaval Dairy 4-1/2 HP; Manitoba 7 HP; some restoration, engine #C18295. 1951 FORD F3 3/4 ton truck, trans., no 306-842-5647, Weyburn, SK. Domestic side shaft 2 HP; Int. L, rare, $100. Call 780-842-4068, Wainwright, AB. m o t o r, n o r e s t o r at i o n , $ 1 5 0 0 O B O. 1-1/2 HP. 306-545-2567, Regina, SK. MASSEY 44 TRACTOR with mounted HD ANTIQUE CATERPILLAR COLLECTION, 1939 FORD 9N, new rear tires, runs good, WANTED: 1941-1946 Chevy and GMC 780-842-4068, Wainwright, AB. post pounder, asking $2500. Phone (1932 and up) 35 machines, running, parts $2200; Also intact dump rake in working COE trucks and/or parts. Interested in 306-642-3189, Assiniboia, SK. other makes. 250-478-2035, Victoria, BC. books and toys. 204-748-1567, Virden MB order, $500. 306-365-4667, Guernsey, SK. RUSTON HORNSBY STATIONARY w/air tank and rad. $2500; JD 830, running, $7250; JD 820, running, $6950; JD 730 elec. start, $5750; Oliver OC-3 Crawler, w / l o a d e r, $ 4 5 0 0 ; J D 4 2 0 C r aw l e r, w/blade, $4500. Various Minneapolis Moline, MH and JD tractors. For pics see www.hlehmann.ca Call: 204-746-2016, 204-746-5345, Morris, MB
1949 JOHN DEERE model R, serial #1362 always stored inside, all original. Call 780-349-2798 after 8PM, Westlock, AB.
Edmonton, AB â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Selling for Ivan Janssen Nisku, AB | April 23 - 25 ¡ 8 am
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LARGE QTY OF RESTORED ANTIQUE TRACTORS
FOR COMPLETE DETAILSâ&#x20AC;&#x201C; Ivan Janssen: 780.991.7535 ¡ 1959 John Deere 830D ¡ 1946 John Deere BO Lindeman, s/n 336233 ¡ 1958 John Deere 330S, s/n 330043 ¡ 1930 John Deere D, s/n 100340 ¡ John Deere LA ...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
Phone 780.955.2486
SK PL # 914507 â&#x20AC;˘ AB PL # 180827
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
Barrie & Melanie Peeke Semans, SK | April 21, 2014 ¡ 10am
2008 CASE IH SPX3185 90 FT
2010 NEW HOLLAND 9040
2009 NEW HOLLAND T6070
2009 NEW HOLLAND CX8090
2006 INTERNATIONAL 4300
1995 KENWORTH T600 & 2005 LODE KING 36 FT
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. 1987 Ford F700 S/A Grain Truck ¡ 2005 Lode King 36 Ft T/A Grain Trailer ¡ 28 Ft Equipment Trailer ¡ 1997 Morris Maxim 49 Ft Air Drill ¡ 2009 Degelman 7000 70 Ft Heavy Harrows ¡ 2008 Case IH SPX3185 90 Ft High Clearance Sprayer ¡ 1998 Morris Concept 2000 44 Ft Air Seeder ¡ Qty of Bins ¡ Grain Handling Equipment ¡ GPS Equipment...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Dan Steen: 306.361.6154 800.491.4494
24
!-
1500 Sparrow Drive, Nisku, AB
Barrie or Melanie Peeke: 306.524.2700 (h), 306.746.7337 (c), bandmpeeke@aski.ca
APRIL
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Edmonton, AB | April 23 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 25 | 8 am
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 ¡ Bergen 3600HT Header Transport ¡ 2009 New Holland 8040 30 Ft Swather ¡ 1995 Kenworth T600 T/A Truck Tractor ¡ 2006 International 4300 S/A Grain Truck ¡
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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ITEMS INCLUDE: 1959 John Deere 430S, s/n 145200 ¡ 1959 John Deere 430 LGP ¡ 1959 John Deere 430H, s/n 148437 ¡ 1960 John Deere 530, s/n 437878 ¡ 1959 John Deere 530, s/n 5306028
WANTED: WALL CLOCK called Standard Time, made by Arthur Pequegnat clock company in Canada. Need not be running, but in good shape. Will pay finders fee! 780-349-2798 after 8PM, Westlock, AB.
JIMâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S CLASSIC CORNER. Buy classic and WANTED: CAST IRON seats, any shape. antique autos, running or not, but must be H a v e s o m e f o r s a l e o r t r a d e . rolling. Call 204-997-4636, Winnipeg, MB. 306-697-3206, Grenfell, SK.
UNRESERVED PUBLIC AUCTION
LARGE QTY OF RESTORED ANTIQUE TRACTORS
WANTED: TRACTOR MANUALS, sales brochures, tractor catalogs. 306-373-8012, Saskatoon, SK.
hodginsauctioneers.com
54 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
A U CTIO
LAS T C H AN C E
OVER 50 UPCOMING AUCTIONS April 25-28, 2014 !02), 4( s !- s ,)6% ).4%2.%4 ")$$).' 7!9.% #!2/, +./#+ s (!.,%9 3+
Directions: -YVT [OL PU[LYZLJ[PVU H[ /HUSL` NV TPSL ZV\[O VU O^`
[HRL NYPK TPSLZ ^LZ[ Q\Z[ V]LY IYPKNL NV ZV\[O PU[V `HYK Seller Contacts: >H`UL *HYVS 2UVJR J Auction Coordinator: 4PJOHLS /PNNZ 2-John Deere 8430 4wdâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s; John Deere 4430 2wd; John Deere 4230 2wd tractor;: 1995 New Holland TR97, 1770 thr/2425 eng hrs showing; New Holland 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header; Hesston 6450 21â&#x20AC;&#x2122; s/p; Westward 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; p/t; Bourgault FH536-42 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; air seeder; Bourgault 2115 cart; Morris Rangler II 60â&#x20AC;&#x2122; harrow/packer; other tillage equip; Walinga 510 Deluxe grain vac; Selection of grain bins & grain augers; Computor Spray 60â&#x20AC;&#x2122;; New Holland 320 sq baler; New Holland 316 sq baler; New Holland Stackliner 1034; John Deere 540 manure spreader; New Holland 144 swath inverter; New Holland 351 mix mill; New Holland 1049 bale picker; New Holland 680 manure spreader; 1979 GMC 6000 grain truck, 57,000 km; 1974 GMC 6000 grain truck; 1967 Chevrolet 60 grain truck; 1978 Ford F350 2wd DRW; Brewster 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; g/n trailer; WW 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122; stock trailer and more. Partial listing only â&#x20AC;&#x201C; See full list and pictures on the internet at www. kramerauction.com, or call 306-445-5000 for more information.
IN TER N ET B ID D IN G
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TUES D AY M AY 6TH @ 9 AM Hw y #3 Ea s t, Tis d a le , S K
S EED IN G EQUIP M EN T; S P R AYER S ; TILLAG E; TR AC TOR S ; H EAVY EQUIP M EN T; R Vâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S & M OR E. LAS T C H AN C E TO S ELL EQUIP M EN T BEFOR E S EED IN G 3
CONSIGN NOW !!!
Toll Free Anytime 1-866-873-5488 PH: 306-873-5488 TISDALE, SASK.
PL #912715
www.schapansky.com
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APRIL 26th s !- s ,)6% ).4%2.%4 ")$$).' *%229 -!8).% 30%.#% s 2/3%4/7. 3+
Directions: -YVT 9VZL[V^U NV TPSLZ >LZ[ VU /PNO^H` HUK [OLU [\YU 5VY[O H[ 9PKWH[O YVHK ZOVW VU UVY[O ZPKL 7SLHZL JHSS [OL ILSV^ JVU[HJ[Z [V HYYHUNL ]PL^PUNZ Seller Contacts: 1LYY` :WLUJL J Auction Coordinators: 2PT 2YHTLY 2005 Case IH STX375 4wd, 1418 hours showing; 2005 Case IH MXU135 MFWD, 3pth, dual pto, 1940 hours showing; John Deere 2130 2wd & FEL; IH McCormick W6 antique; 1997 Case IH 2188, 2564 thr/3025 eng hours showing; 2005 Case IH 2015 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122; p/u header; 1997 Honey Bee SP30 header; Bourgault 5710 Series II 63â&#x20AC;&#x2122; air drill; 2010 Bourgault 6450 tow behind air cart; Bourgault FA536-40 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; airseeder & Bourgault 2155 II air cart; Blanchard Hydra-Lift 50â&#x20AC;&#x2122; harrow packer bar; grain augers and grain bins; Flexicoil 65 XLT 120â&#x20AC;&#x2122; p/t ďŹ eld sprayer; 1992 International 8100 tandem grain truck, 466 diesel, Eaton Fuller 10 spd trans, Cancade Monobody 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; box; 1975 International Cargostar 1710B cabover grain truck; 1976 Ford 600 Custom Cab grain truck; 1969 Ford 100 single axle grain truck; 1976 Ford F250 truck; 1969 Ford 250 truck,; 1940 International truck; Shop built t/a gooseneck ďŹ&#x201A;atdeck Buhler Allied 3 pth 96â&#x20AC;? snowblower; John Deere 509 rough cut mower; Canadian Carriage Co. Ltd. high wheel carriage; McLaughlin Undercut buggy; Covered wagon; Santa Claus sleigh; Granby sleigh; antique buggy; antique horse hand stick; qty of tack and harness and more.
To be held in conjunction with the Jerry & Maxine Spence Auction: Loncher Farm Ltd.- Lonnie & Cheryl Walker
Seller Contacts: 3VUUPL *OLY`S >HSRLY J 1998 New Holland 9682 4wd, 4600 hrs showing; 1991 Case 1680 s/p & IH 810 p/u header, 3262 hrs showing,; Case IH 1020 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; ďŹ&#x201A;ex header,; 2001 MacDon 972 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; draper header; NH 1090 21â&#x20AC;&#x2122; sp; Case 730 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; pto; 1998 Bourgault 5710 42â&#x20AC;&#x2122; air drill & Bourgault 3225 tbh air cart,; Blanchard 50â&#x20AC;&#x2122; harrow packer bar; 2009 Buhler 8â&#x20AC;?x51â&#x20AC;&#x2122; auger w/ mover; 2007 Buhler 10â&#x20AC;?x60â&#x20AC;&#x2122; auger,; 2009 Wheatheart 10â&#x20AC;? hydraulic transfer auger; 1998 Walker 44 100â&#x20AC;&#x2122; high clearance sprayer, Cummins 200hp, 4361 hours showing; Bourgault Centurion III 100â&#x20AC;&#x2122;; Poly West 30 Litre Chem; John Deere GS2 display screen,; John Deere original brown box display,; 2-John Deere StarďŹ re ITC receiver,; 2-John Deere Universal AutoTrac steering wheel & wiring,; 1973 Chev 6000 Series grain truck, 350 V8, 4 spd w/ elec shift, 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122; steel box,; Wylee 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122; stock trailer ; Gooseneck ďŹ&#x201A;at deck trailer and more. Partial listing only â&#x20AC;&#x201C; See full list and pictures on the internet at www.kramerauction.com, or call 306-4455000 for more information.
-'
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AUCTION FARM
Al & Margaret Osicki
Rock on Farms Ltd. â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Melville, Sk Wednesday April 23rd @ 11:00 am
Owners phone (306) 728-3383 or cell (306) 728-8628
Directions: From Melville - 6 miles (10 kms) northeast on Hwy #10 to Brewer Road, then 5miles (8 kms) east, then 1/2 mile south, or from Yorkton - 20 kms south on Hwy #9 to Brewer Road, then 6 miles (10 kms) west, then 1/2 mile south.
UNRESERVED AUCTION: Terarosa Antiques, furniture, advertising, tins, gas pump, Harley Davidson motorcycle, collectibles and more, 10:00 AM, Saturday, April 19th. www.scribnernet.com or 780-842-5666, Location: Marsden, SK.
UPCOMING AUCTIONS APRIL 28th s !- s ,)6% ).4%2.%4 ")$$).' ,),,)!. 0%4%23/. 4(% %34!4% /& ,/2.% 4/.9 0%4%23/. s .%),"52' 3+
Directions: -YVT 5LPSI\YN NV RT LHZ[ VU /^` [V /^` [OLU RT UVY[O [V 3PSS`KHSL 9VHK TPSLZ ^LZ[ HUK TPSL ZV\[O PU[V `HYK Seller Contacts: 3PSSPHU 7L[LYZVU Auction Coordinator: 4PJOHLS /PNNZ 1987 John Deere 4650 2wd, 6220 hrs showing; 1977 John Deere 4230 2wd, 10,075 hrs showing; 1962 John Deere 4010 2wd w/ JD 148 FEL, 8008 hrs showing;Ford 8N 2wd antique; Leon 10â&#x20AC;&#x2122; dozer blade; Allied 9â&#x20AC;&#x2122; dozer blade; 1973 John Deere 4020 2wd w/ JD 148 FEL, Consigned by Jason Goodfellow (780) 872-8788; 1982 John Deere 7721 p/t; Massey Ferguson 22â&#x20AC;&#x2122; straight cut headerIH 210 s/p swather; Morris CP-725 29â&#x20AC;&#x2122; cultivator; Alteen 9â&#x20AC;&#x2122; tandem disc; International 6200 28â&#x20AC;&#x2122;(2x14) hoe dril; Bourgault 8800 32â&#x20AC;&#x2122; air drill w/ EzeeOn 125 air cart, Consigned by Jason Goodfellow (780) 872-8788, other tillage equip; Selection of grain augers and bins; Versatile 65â&#x20AC;&#x2122; tandem axle sprayer; John Deere 410 round baler; New Idea 486 round baler, Consigned by Glenn Goodfellow (306) 823-4560; Assâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t livestock items; 1969 GMC 950 grain truck,; 1980 GMC 6000 grain truck, V8; Wylee 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122; stock trailer; Buhler Farm King Y650R ďŹ nishing mower; John Deere SX 95 riding mower, 12.5 hp,; John Deere 509 rough cut mower; Honda Big Red 3 wheel ATV, frt/rr racks and more. Partial listing only â&#x20AC;&#x201C; See full list and pictures on the internet at www.kramerauction.com, or call 306-445-5000 for more information.
100% Family Owned And Operated
PL912715 PL #912715
INC.
APRIL 29th s !- s ,)6% ).4%2.%4 ")$$).' 0%2+).3 !' -!2+%4).' ).# "2)!. 3(!2/. 0%2+).3 s 6!.3#/9 3+ 3!3+!4//. !2%!
Directions: -YVT :HZRH[VVU NV RT ^LZ[ VU />@ [V 9N 9K :HZRH[VVU 3P]LZ[VJR :HSLZ [OLU RT ZV\[O [V ;^UZOW 9K HUK RT ^LZ[ `HYK VU UVY[O ZPKL 7SLHZL JHSS [OL ILSV^ JVU[HJ[Z [V HYYHUNL ]PL^PUNZ Seller Contact: )YPHU 7LYRPUZ Auction Coordinators: 2PT 2YHTLY 2000 John Deere 7810 MFWD, 5413 hrs showing; John Deere 740 Front End Loader; 2.5 yard FEL bucket; 1997 John Deere 9600 sp & JD 914 p/u, 1870 thr/2544 eng hrs showing; 1995 John Deere 930 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header & transport; 2000 Morris Maxim II 29â&#x20AC;&#x2122; air drill & Morris 7180 tbh cart; Rite-Way Jumbo 8000B 55â&#x20AC;&#x2122; heavy harrow; Morris Magnum II CP-731 31â&#x20AC;&#x2122; cultivator; 2007 Brandt Grain Deck 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; conveyor; Grain augers & Good selection of hopper bins; 2005 Hagedorn 2412 manure spreader; Good selection of livestrock handling & feeding equip.; 2008 Volvo L60F wheel loader, 4604 hrs showing, Original Owner; 1995 Caterpillar 320L hyd. excavator, 36â&#x20AC;? bucket, 72â&#x20AC;? Weldco cleanup bucket, grapple; 1995 Freightliner; 1979 International gravel truck,; 1976 International gravel truck; 2011 Timpte 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; grain trailer; McCoy Renn 42â&#x20AC;&#x2122; ďŹ&#x201A;at deck trailer; 2008 Cherokee 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122; stock trailer; Wylee gooseneck stock trailer; 1992 Dutchman 26FL holiday camper. Partial listing only.
12:30PM
w w w. s c h a p a n s k y. c o m
SK Provincial Licence #914618 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; AB Provincial Licence #206959
MEYERS AUCTION 10:00 AM, Saturday, April 26, Arden, MB. Collector signs, antiques and collectibles. Advertising display stands: Oil and grease pails; tin and die cast toys, Cigarette paper tins; Push bars; Cast iron toys, much, much more. Meyers Auctions and Appraisals. Call: Bradley Meyers, Auctioneer, 204-368-2333 or 204-476-6262. meyersauctions.com
hodginsauctioneers.com
Check website for complete listing.
Call toll free: 1-800-529-9958
NELSONâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S AUCTION SERVICE Sat., April 26th, 2014 at 10 AM. Harvey and Marilyn Jackson Farm Dispersal, Lac Vert, SK. Directions from Lac Vert: 1.5 miles N, 5 miles E or off Hwy. #6: 6.5 miles E on Anderson Rd. Tractors: 1982 Deutz DX160 FWA, 1980 Deutz DX110. Combines: 1983 N5 Gleaner, 1982 N7 Gleaner Allis-Chalmers; Cultivators: 28.5â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Bourgault 6200, 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122; IHC Vibra Chisel, 60â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Flexi-Coil harrow draw bar, 28â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Morris Challenger; Other: 1982 24.5â&#x20AC;&#x2122; IHC 5000 SP swather, 210 Spra-Coupe, 7â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Schulte snowblower, 840 Brandt grain auger, 6.6â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Blanchard swath roller, Degelman stonepicker, hoppers. Grain trucks: 1990 IHC 4700, 1974 GMC 5000. Shop and yard tools and equipment, much more. Call 306-944-4320 or visit our website: www.nelsonsauction.com
SK PL # 914507 â&#x20AC;˘ AB PL # 180827
TRACTORS 1994 Case IH 9230 â&#x20AC;˘ MF 1085 COMBINES 1998 JD 9510 â&#x20AC;˘ IH 1480 HEADER 810, 24 ft. AIRSEEDER Morris 9000 34 ft. w/ 6180 Tank SWATHER 1985 JD 2360, 30 ft. SPRAYER Flexicoil 95 ft. BALER MF 1560 GRAIN TRUCK 1974 Dodge 500 GRAIN TRAILER 1996 Cancade 36 ft. HWY TRUCK 2000 Freightliner FLD120 Day Cab â&#x20AC;˘ 1995 Freightliner (needs engine work) BINS Westor 2800 BU â&#x20AC;˘ 2 - Westeel 2750 & 3300 BU â&#x20AC;˘ 2 - Metal Industries 1500 BU LIGHT TRUCK 2001 Ford F-150 4x4 CAMPER 1995 Conquest 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 5th wheel â&#x20AC;˘ Quantity of augers â&#x20AC;˘ Harrowbar â&#x20AC;˘ INTERNE Cultivators â&#x20AC;˘ Other farm equipment BIDDING T â&#x20AC;˘ Quantity of Misc. @
SEE SEE MORE MORE PHOTOS PHOTOS AND AND INFORMATION INFORMATION AT AT
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 JX1100U, 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 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 info call 306-944-4320 or visit our website at: www.nelsonsauction.com
Toll Free Toll Free 1-866-873-5488 1-866-873-5488 or 306-873-5488 or 306-873-5488 After Hours: Res. 306-873-5410 Fax 306-873-5492 Fax 306-873-5492 Box Tisdale,SKSKS0E S0E1T0 1T0 Box 2199, 2199, Tisdale, Email: Email:bruce@sasktel.net bruce@sasktel.net
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 17, 2014
CLASSIFIED ADS 55
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
Viceroy, SK | April 21, 2014 · 10am
Crestwynd, SK | April 22, 2014 · 10 am
Gerald & Ellen Schmidt
1983 STEIGER COUGAR PTA280
Panko Ranch Ltd.
1982 CASE 4490
1982 GLEANER N6
2000 CASE IH MX170
2008 CHEVROLET 3500HD LTZ 4 DOOR 4X4 DUALLY & 2011 S&S DURALINE 24 FT
2004 JOHN DEERE 317
AUCTION LOCATION: From ASSINIBOIA, SK, go 48 kms (28 mile) South East on Hwy 13, then 9 kms (5.5 miles) North. Yard on West side. GPS: 49.600211, -105.372244
AUCTION LOCATION: From MOOSE JAW, SK, go 39 km (25 miles) South West on Hwy 363 to the “Crestwynd 19” sign, turn left onto gravel, then go 3.22 km (2 miles) South, then 1.6 km (1 mile) East, then 3.22 km (2 miles) South. GPS: 51.5136, -101.8891
A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 1983 Steiger Cougar PTA280 4WD · 1982 Case 4490 4WD · 1958 Massey Harris 555 2WD · 1993 Case IH 8230 30 Ft Swather · 1986 International S2554 T/A Grain Truck · 1995 Ezee-On 3500 39 Ft Air Drill · Morris
A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2000 Case IH MX170 MFWD · International 1086 2WD · Massey Ferguson 10 24 Ft Swather · Fargo 500 S/A Flatbed Truck · 2008 Chevrolet 3500HD LTZ 4 Door 4x4 Dually Pickup · 2011 S&S Duraline 24
CP750 50 Ft Cultivator · 1995 Brandt Quick Fold 90 Ft Field Sprayer · Friesen 72± Tonne Epoxy Lined Hopper Bin · Behlen 2500± Bushel Hopper Bin · (2) Behlen 1100± Bushel Seed Hopper Bin · (2) Butler 3400± Bushel 18 Ft X 5 Ring Grain Bin ...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
Ft T/A 5th Wheel Trailer · 2004 John Deere 317 Skid Steer Loader · Massey Ferguson 360 30 Ft Discer Seeder · John Deere 370 S/A Manure Spreader · 2002 MacDon 5020 16 Ft Mower Conditioner · Yamaha Rhino 450cc 4x4 ATV...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
Gerald Schmidt: 306.472.3121 ge.schmidt@xplornet.ca
Gayland Panko: 306.693.5842 (h), 306.630.7911 (c), gaylandpanko@hotmail.com
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Darren Clarke: 306.529.5399 800.491.4494
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Darren Clarke: 306.529.5399 800.491.4494
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
St. Gregor, SK | April 25, 2014 · 10 am
Birch Hills, SK | April 26, 2014 · 11 am
Larry & Betty Strand
Rauert Farms Inc.
1993 CASE IH 9270
2004 NEW HOLLAND CR970
2000 MORRIS MAXIM 49 FT w/ 1999 7300
2– 1998 GLEANER R72
2009 MASSEY FERGUSON 9430 30 FT
1992 FORD VERSATILE 976
AUCTION LOCATION: From HUMBOLDT, SK, go 19.3 km (12 miles) East on Hwy 5, then go 8 km (5 miles) South on Hwy 667, West side. GPS: 52.1073, -104.8499
AUCTION LOCATION: From BIRCH HILLS, SK, go 9.6 km (6miles) East on Hwy 3, then 9.6 km (6 miles) North. Yard on West side. GPS: 53.0736111, -105.2713889
A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 1993 Case IH 9270 4WD · 1985 Case IH 4494 4WD · 2004 New Holland CR970 · 1995 Premier 2900 30 Ft Swather · 1989 International 8300 T/A Truck Tractor · Doepker 34 Ft T/A Grain Trailer · Garwood 10N 7 CY
A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 1992 Ford Versatile 976 Designation 6 4WD · Versatile 875 Series III 4WD · 1989 John Deere 4555 2WD · (2) 1998 Gleaner R72 Combines · 2002 John Deere 965 Combine · 2009 Massey Ferguson 9430 30 Ft Swather
Hydraulic Pull Scraper · 2000 Morris Maxim 49 Ft Air Drill · 2005 Brandt QF1500 100 Ft Field Sprayer · Large Qty of Hopper Bins · 2010 Wheartheart BH1041 10 In. x 41 Ft Grain Auger · Agricultural Equipment · Qty of Tanks...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com Andrew Rauert: 306.231.5771, arauert@gmail.com, arauert@pami.ca
Larry Strand: 306.749.2797 (h), 306.749.7575
DA Y
1
WEDNESDAY APRIL 23RD 2014 9:00 A.M. SHARP OVER 1000 LOTS OF INDUSTRIAL • COMMERCIAL SHOP TOOLS & EQUIPMENT
MAJOR PUBLIC VEHICLE AUCTION
2
1
PUBLIC UNRESERVED AUCTION
PRELIMINARY ADVANCE NOTICE
Y DA
Y DA
PRELIMINARY ADVANCE NOTICE
2
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Luke Fritshaw: 306.260.2189 800.491.4494
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Dan Steen: 306.361.6154 800.491.4494
DA Y
· 1992 Flexi-Coil 5000 45 Ft Air Drill · 2013 Farm King 6650 29 Ft Tandem Disc · 2012 Bourgault 6000 70 Ft Mid Harrows · 2005 Spra-Coupe 7650 96 Ft High Clearance Sprayer · (2) Westeel 60± Tonne 14 Ft x 3 Ring Epoxy Hopper Bins ...AND MUCH MORE!
SATURDAY APRIL 26TH 2014 9:00 A.M. SHARP APPROXIMATELY 1000 UNITS • PARTIAL ADVANCE LISTINGS
FOR A FREE FULL COLOUR 12 PAGE BROCHURE CALL TOLL FREE 1.877.257.SOLD (7653)
FOR A FREE FULL COLOUR 12 PAGE BROCHURE CALL TOLL FREE 1.877.257.SOLD (7653)
Live Interactive Auction Webcasts!
www.osmanauction.com
NS DATIO THE MMO ACCO ABLE AT ERATON AVAILOINTS SH OUTH L P AL NS FOURDMONTO TIONS C IT E RVA 1 OR VIS M E S E R O 3 FOR -465-79 POINTS.C 780 .FOUR WWW
Interactive osmanauction.com Live Auction Webcasts!
OSMAN AUCTION INC. LIQUIDATION DIVISION
6330 - 75 STREET EDMONTON ALBERTA
PHONE 780.777.7771 FAX 780.469.5081
1.877.257.SOLD (7653)
FO INFO R DETA RMA ILED WWW OUR WE TION VIS NEW .OSMAN BSITE A IT LIST AUC T SO P INGS AD TION.CO M LEAS DED BAC E CHE DAILY K OF C TEN K
NS DATIO THE MMO ACCO ABLE AT ERATON AVAILOINTS SH OUTH L P AL NS FOURDMONTO TIONS C IT E RVA 1 OR VIS M E S E R 3 O FOR -465-79 POINTS.C 780 .FOUR WWW
AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRIAL LIQUIDATIONS
OSMAN AUCTION INC. AUTOMOTIVE DIVISION 6330 - 75 STREET EDMONTON ALBERTA
PHONE 780.777.7771 FAX 780.469.5081
1.877.257.SOLD (7653)
FO INFO R DETA RMA ILED WWW OUR WE TION VIS NEW .OSMAN BSITE A IT LIST AUC T SO P INGS AD TION.CO M LEAS DED BAC E CHE DAILY K OF C TEN K
56 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
15th ANNUAL SPRING CONSIGNMENT Sale on Sunday, April 27, 10:00 AM at Redvers, SK. Tractors: 1980 Versatile 835; 4020 JD w/148 loader. Air Seeders: 36’ Bourgault w/2155 tank; 7180 Morris 35’, double shoot; 4000 IHC swather w/PU reels. Rockpickers: Schulte; Degelman, ground drive 4 batt. Vehicles: 2001 Chev Venture van; Various trucks including 1975 F-600 Ford; 2001 20’ Wilkenson gooseneck stock trailer; 16’ Prowler camper; 1979 14’ Anchor boat w/70 HP Evenrude and new s e at s . Key “ M ” Au c t i o n S e r v i c e s 306-452-3815 www.keymauctions.com Wauchope, SK. PL #324451.
N EXT SALE S ATUR DAY, 9:00 AM M AY 3, 2 014 G R EAT PLAIN S AUCTIO N EER S 5 M i. E. o f R egin a o n Hw y. #1 in G rea tPla in s In d u stria lPa rk TELEPHO N E (306) 52 5- 9516 w w w .grea tpla in sa u ctio n eers.ca w w w .glo b a la u ctio n gu id e.co m S ALES 1stS ATUR DAY O F EV ER Y M O N TH P.L. #91452 9
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
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
Cynosure Land & Cattle Co. Ltd. Denis & Carolee Beaulieu – Coronach, SK | April 23, 2014 · 10am
1985 JOHN DEERE 4450
2001 NEW HOLLAND SF550 100 FT
2005 DODGE DURANGO 4x4
AUCTION LOCATION: From CORONACH, SK, go 20.5 kms (12.8 miles) East on Hwy 18, then 5.5 kms (3.4 miles) South OR from the Junction of Hwy 18 & 34, go 8 kms (5 miles) West, then 5.5 kms (3.4 miles) South. A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 1985 International 6388 4WD · 1985 John Deere 4450 MFWD · 1979 International 1724 S/A Grain Truck · 2005 Dodge Durango 4x4 · 2006 Chevrolet 3500 4x4 Dually · 2005 Merritt 20 Ft T/A Aluminum Stock Trailer · 2012
Elite 28 Ft T/A Dually Trailer · Graham G3 Seed Treater · CCIL 28 Ft Deep Tillage Cultivator · 2001 New Holland SF550 100 Ft High Clearance Sprayer · 2003 Brandt 1070 10 In. x 70 Ft Mechanical Swing Grain Auger ...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com Denis Beaulieu: 306.267.2164 Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Darren Clarke: 306.529.5399 800.491.4494
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 9:00 AM, Eisner Auction Centre, 2 miles east, Swan River, MB. Manitoba’s largest 44th Annual Spring Equipment Consignment Sale. Tractors, trucks, harvest and haying equip., farm and sporting, cars, cement ornaments, tools and misc. 100’s of items, 1000’s of buyers. Versatile 876 and 875; IHC 3288 4x4; 3- NH round balers: 780A, 780, 688; Bourgault 40’ 5710 air drill, 3225 tank; JD 8820; 2005 GMC 2500; Starcraft 10’ camper loaded; 1989 Prowler 25’ camper; 2155 Bourgault air tank; 6800 Highline Bale Pro, immaculate; 2- Matador 7900 hay inverters; 1995 Freightliner, safetied; new 2430 12’ offset disc; vehicles; quads; riding mowers; all kinds farm equip; boats; new car haulers; new storage buildings; new tool cabinets, tire changers; and water pumps. You name it we’ll have it! Consign your equipment to this popular sale. www.eisnerauctions.com for daily updates. Call Lawrence Eisner Auctions 204-525-2225, Minitonas, MB. 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, 20’ steel B&H, TA, 6V 53 Detroit, Allison auto trans; 1995 Volvo semi, 525 HP Detroit, 18 spd; Southland 16’ stock trailer; 2000 MacDon 2950; 2003 MacDon 972 25’ 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; 40’ Assie landroller; 95’ Flexi-Coil System 62 sprayer; 14’ Degelman dozer blade; Mill drill machine; Lincoln mig welder; Phoenix 50’ 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.
et Intern 1pm g n i Bidd
ERNIE & ELSIE PAULSON Tuesday, April 29th @ 10:00am
ROSE VALLEY, SK
OWNER’S PHONE - 306-322-2219 Directions: From Rose Valley ½ mi South on 35 (West side of Hwy) TRACTORS*1990 Ford Versatile 946*1991 Ford Versatile 876, Inframe on engine done approx 300 hrs ago*JD 4440* c/w Ezee on FEL w/bucket *1979 Case 970*COMBINES*1997 Case IH 2188 2685 sep hrs, 25% Down on sale day balance due on our before Aug 1st 2014*1993 Case IH 1688, 4150hrs 25% Down on sale day balance due on our before Aug 1st 2014* 1982 IH 1480 *COMBINE HEADERS*Case IH 1010 30ft rigid, batt reel, c/w transport *1997 Case IH 1010 25ft rigid c/w factory Case/ IH transport *MacDon 960 21ft, double swath header, UII pu reel, fits premier swather *SWATHERS*1997 Premier 2930 Turbo, 30ft, MacDon PU reel *1988 Case IH 725 25ft PT*AIR DRILLS*Concord 4010-4R, 40ft, 10” spacing, anhydrous kit, Flexicoil stealth openers NH3, Hooked to a JF 787 pull behind tank*Concord 4010 40ft, single chute, 10” spacing, hooked onto 2 Concord 1502 tanks*HIGH CLEARANCE SPRAYER*2003 Apache Plus 1090, 90ft, 1000 us gal tank c/w New Trimble auto steer, 2748hrs *ROUND BALER*Case IH 8465*GRAIN TRUCKS*1975 Ford F-750,T/A,391 eng.,5+2 trans., Midland 20ft box *1974 Ford F700, Midland 14ft box & hoist *GRAIN TRAILERS*2005 Load King Prestige 36ft, T/A, air ride hub meter reads 73,986*Load King 40ft*TRAILER*1990 DoepkerT/A flatdeck (made from a B-Train) ( 2 - 1250 gal water tanks,chem.handler,chemical pump and banjo water tank sells separate) *GRAIN DRYER*Super Bee Model BS300G, dual fire*ROTARY GRAIN CLEANER*Neco Model 51A elec load/unload auger mounted on 2 wheel trailer *CULTIVATOR*JD 610 41ft DT, TWA*HEAVY HARROW BAR*Riteway Jumbo 8000, 55ft, hyd adj tines*HARROW BAR*Riteway RH468, 50ft tine harrow bar *HARRROW PACKER BAR*Riteway 50ft *TANDEM DISK*Case E30-360 30ft *V-DITCHER*DynaFab, hyd depth *ROCK PICKER*1981 Leon 3000 hyd drive*AUGERS*Brandt 1060, 10x60*Sakundiak HD8x1800 (60fT)*Sakundiak HD8x1600 52ft, c/w Hawes agro SP mover *Brandt 10x50 *Sakundiak HD7-37ft*LIGHT TRUCK*1991 GMC ½ ton, 4x4 *AIR COMPRESSOR*Compair 100hp D eng drive (twin screw) 250 CFM *BOAT & MOTOR*1988 Lund/Pike 16, 16ft aluminum boat, Merc 60hp eng*ATV*Polaris Magnum 500 4x4*MISCELLANEOUS*large qty of farm & shop Misc
w w w. s c h a p a n s k y. c o m 100% Family Owned And Operated
INC.
PL #912715 PL#912715
Austie Farms Ltd.
Wroxton, SK | April 19, 2014 · 10 am
Rhein, SK | April 22, 2014 · 10 am
2011 CASE IH 485
2012 JOHN DEERE S690
2011 JOHN DEERE 9430
2008 CASE IH 3320 100 FT
1978 CATERPILLAR D7G
2006 HESSTON 9240 30 FT
1993 FORD DESIGNATION 6 976
2001 MACK VISION
2009 TIMPTE 45 FT
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 OR From KAMSACK, SK, go 30.6 km (19 miles) South on Hwy 8, then 1.2 km (0.75 miles) West. A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2011 Case IH 485 4WD · 1993 Ford Designation 6 976 4WD · 1979 John Deere 4440 2WD · 1968 John Deere 4020 2WD · 2007 Case IH 7010 Combine · 2004 Case IH 8010 Combine · 2006 Hesston 9240 30 Ft Swather · 2006 Westward 9352I 30 Ft Swather · 2003 Westward 3020 30 Ft Swather · 1993 Freightliner FL150 T/A Truck Tractor · 2001 Mack Vision T/A Grain Truck · 2009 Timpte 45 Ft Tri/A Grain
Toll 1-866-873-5488 TollFree Free 1-866-873-5488 oror306-873-5488 306-873-5488 After Hours: Res. 306-873-5410 Fax 306-873-5492 Fax 306-873-5492 Box 2199,Tisdale, SK S0E 1T0 Box 2199, Tisdale, SK S0E 1T0 Email:bruce@sasktel.net bruce@sasktel.net Email:
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
R & L Napady Farms Ltd.
2004 CASE IH 8010 & 2007 CASE IH 7010
AUCTION FARM
Trailer · 1978 Caterpillar D7G Crawler Tractor · 2004 Bourgault 5710 54 Ft Air Drill · 2004 Bourgault 5440 Tow-Behind Air Tank · 2008 Case IH 3320 100 Ft High Clearance Sprayer · Bourgault Centurion III 100 Ft Field Sprayer · Westfield 130-71 13 In. x 71 Ft Mechanical Swing Grain Auger · Grain Chief 450 Bushel Grain Dryer · Yamaha Electric Golf Cart · John Deere 9 Ft Hydraulic Dozer · (4) 650/65R38 Tires & Rims ...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com
2006 CASE IH SPX3310 90 FT
2009 JOHN DEERE 4895 36 FT
2008 SEED HAWK 6510 65 FT & 1998 BOURGAULT 4350
AUCTION LOCATION: From YORKTON, SK, go 16 km (10 miles) North to Grid 309, then 16 km (10 miles) East, then 0.8 km (0.5 miles) South, West side. GPS: 51.3475139, -102.1939889 A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 2011 John Deere 9430 4WD · 1983 John Deere 8850 4WD · 1983 John Deere 8850 4WD · 1986 John Deere 8450 4WD · 1981 John Deere 4440 2WD · Case 1270 2WD · 2012 John Deere S690 Combine · 2010 John Deere 635D 35 Ft Draper · 2009 John Deere 4895 36 Ft Swather · 1994 Case IH 8240 35 Ft · 2007 Freightliner Columbia Sleeper T/A Truck Tractor · 1990 White GMC Volvo 6M Sleeper T/A Truck Tractor · 1981 Chevrolet C70 S/A Grain Trailer · 1997 Lode King
28 Ft Super B Grain Trailer · 1990 Lode King 28 Ft Super B Grain Trailer · 2008 Seed Hawk 6510 65 Ft Air Drill · 1996 Bourgault 8800 58.5 Ft Air Seeder · 2008 Bourgault 6550ST Tow-Behind Air Tank · 2006 Case IH SPX3310 90 Ft High Clearance Sprayer · Valley System 80 Ft Field Sprayer · 2009 Wheatheart SA1391 13 In. x 91 Ft Mechanical Swing Grain Auger · John Deere 400 60 In. Garden Tractor · Arctic Cat 700 4x4 Quad · 2001 Palomino 25 Ft T/A Travel Trailer · Qty of GPS Equipment ...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)
Bernie Austie: 306.641.4350, bjaustie@hotmail.com
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Dan Steen: 306.361.6154 800.491.4494
Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager – Dan Steen: 306.361.6154 800.491.4494
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
CLASSIFIED ADS 57
TUES DAY , APR IL 2 9, 2 014 8:00 a .m . 932 0 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 52 S treetS .E., CALG AR Y S ellin g on b ehalfofS ervice Alb erta, F ortisAlb erta, AltaL in k, City of M ed icin e H at, C ity of Aird rie, T ow n of C ochran e & other con sign ors. S u rp lu s Eq u ip m en tF rom O m ega T ran sp ortS ervices. Pa rtia l Listin g: HY D. EXCAV ATO R S : (2) 2013 Deere 250G LCâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ; 2012 Deere 290G LC; 2008 Ca t345CL; 2006 Deere 270D LC; 2006 Deere 330C; 2003 Deere 200 LC; 2003 Hita chi ZX330 LC; 2001 Ca t 320CL; Deere 270 LC; (2) Hita chi EX700â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ; Hita chi EX60; Bobca t 331. M O TO R G R ADER S : 2007 Volvo G 990; 2005 Ca t 160H VHP; (3) 2004 Ca t 160H VHPâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ; 2004 Ca t14H; Cha m p ion 750A . M O TO R S CR APER S : (4) Ca t631Dâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ; (3) Terex TS 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s . W HEEL LO ADER S : (3) 2011 Deere 544Kâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ; 2006 Deere 444J; 2006 Deere 624J; 2002 Ca t980G S eries II. CR AW LER DO ZER S : Ca tD9L; (2) Kom a ts u D65EX-12; M its u bis hi BD2G . AS PHALT: Ced a r Ra p id s C R416R Pa ver. LO AD ER BAC KH O ES : C a s e 480F; Deere 410C . S KIDS TEER S : 2009 Bobca t S 250; 2008 Bobca t 463; 2006 Bobca t S 175; 2004 Ca t246; Bobca t873; Ca s e 70XT. CO M PACTIO N : 2000 Ca t815F; (2) Pu ll Typ e S heep s footPa ck ers . UTILITY & M AIN TEN AN CE: (2) 2009 A rg o A ven g er 750 8x8 A TVâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ; Elg in S treet S w eep er. EM ER G EN CY : Volvo Em erg en cy Res p on s e Res cu e Un it. G R AV EL TR UCKS : 2004 M a ck G ra n ite CCV713; (2) 2001 IHC 4900 T/ A â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ; IHC 9300 T/ A ; M a ck RD688S T/ A . TR AILER S : Kn ig htT/ A G ra vel Pu p ; (3) W a ba s h 48â&#x20AC;&#x2122; T/ A Deck s ; O ffice Tra ilers ; (2) T/ A Du a lly TiltDeck s ; Va n Tra ilers ; New Un u s ed Utility Tra ilers , En clos ed Tra ilers . R ECR EATIO N : (12) Clu b Ca rPreced en t48 VoltElectric G olfCa rs ; W es tw in d s 5th W heel; A TVâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s . Cra n e & S ervice Tru ck s , S tora g e Con ta in ers , Etc. For a com p rehen s ive brochu re p lea s e ca ll Ca n a d ia n Pu b lic Au ctio n Ltd . 403- 2 69- 6600 o r 800- 786- 0857. Ho m e Pa ge a tw w w.ca n a d ia n pu b lica u ctio n .co m G .S .T. a p p lies . A 10% ha n d lin g fee a p p lies to ea ch lots ellin g for$5,000.00 or les s , a 2.5% ha n d in g fee a p p lies to ea ch lot s ellin g g rea ter tha n $5,000.00 w ith a ca p of $1,000.00 p er lot. Live In tern et Bid d in g w w w .ca n a d ia n pu b lica u ctio n .co m a ll in tern et p u rcha s es a re s u bject to a n in tern et bu yerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s fee & a d ep os it m a y be req u ired d ep en d in g on you r p u rcha s e his tory. Au ctio n Licen se #2 002 78, AM V IC Licen se #2 002 79.
AUCTION
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ELDON AND DENISE SEBASTIAN Auction, Sunday, April 27, 2014, 10:00 AM. 15 miles south, 8 east, 4 south of Raymore or 13 south, 1/2 west, 4 south of Quinton, SK. Contact: 306-835-2557. Online bidding 1:00 PM. Tractors: JD 4555, 2WD, diesel, front weights, 20.8x38 duals, 8000 hrs, powershift, 4 hyds, complete engine at 6200 hrs, real nice; 1971 JD 4020, cab, powershift, complete hyd. system, rear end at 6000 hrs, showing 8900 hrs with JD 148 loader, real nice; JD 60 gas, hyd, exc. tin and paint, shedded, w/wo mandrill. Seeding: IH 27â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Vibrachisel air seeder, knives, packers, air package w/#1400 Blanchard tank (w/wo extra Blanchard tank); Morris 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Seed-Rite; JD LLA 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122; press drills. Harvest: 1982 JD 7720 turbo SP combine, 3000 hrs, chopper, 3 roller PU, $8000 Greenlight, real nice; JD 224, 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122; straight cut header; JD 7701 PTO combine, good belts; JD 6601 PTO combine, parts. Trucks: 1982 Ford grain truck, 370 V8, 5x2, 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122; BH&T, box extensions, nice; 1972 GMC 5500: 427 V8, 4x2, 12â&#x20AC;&#x2122; steel BH&T; 1966 IHC 3 ton, rebuilt trans (not running). Antique Equip: 1929 JD D tractor on steel, painted, shedded, running, real nice; JD binder, working; JD #4 horse mower; 2 furrow plow; horse rake; horse cart. Plus tillage, swathers, sprayers, harrows, augers, misc. equip., lawn and recreation. Household items to follow. Note: Excellent farm sale of excellent small shedded JD equip. which looks well above average. Open to consignments. Pictures and complete listing: www.ukrainetzauction.com PL 915851.
FARM
ROD & LINDA HARROWER
Friday, April 25th @ 10:00am
Inte Biddrnet 1pming
CARROT RIVER, SK
Directions: From Carrot River 2mi (8km) North on #23 (East Side of Hwy) OR from Nipawin 18mi (28.8km) to Hwy #23 then ž mi South
Ownerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Phone - 306-768-2844 TRACTORS*1997 NH 9482 w/ 3628hrs*1982 Versatile 935 less than 4000 hrs *COMBINE* 2003 NH CR970 1649 sep hrs* (25% Down, Balance Due on or before Aug 14/2014)*AIR DRILL*Flexi-Coil 1720 air cart hooked onto Flexi-Coil 5000, 39 ½ ft, 9â&#x20AC;?spacings*SWATHER*1992 MF 200, 26ft, double swath*GRAIN TRUCKS*2003 Freightliner Century Class S\T full tandem, Cat C-12 Eng.,(380hp) 10spd auto trans(Smartshift), UltraCell 20ft Unibody box *1997 Freightliner FL80, full tandem, 3126 Cat eng., 9spd Fuller trans., UltraCell 20ft Unibody box *TANDEM DISK*A.C. Model 2500, 27ft*ANHYDROUS CULTIVATOR*1981 Morris Challenger II L-249, 49ft, Anhydrous kit *SPRAY COUPE*Melroe Model 2640 Spray coupe, 60ft 2809hrs*AUGER*Brandt 1060, 10x60ft, swing away*Brandt 745*V-DITCHER*Kirchner fully hyd, very little use since new*ANTIQUE TRACTOR*JD 730 Diesel*GENERATOR*R.A. Lister power plant, Diesel, 230/115 bolts, single phase, 8 K.W*GRAIN DRYER*Glenmore GT 580, canola screen *OTHER FARM EQUIPMENT*Shopbuilt tandem axle trailer *1000 gal poly water tank*Leon Model A60 fork type rock picker*Utility trailer w/tilt bed*MISCELLANEOUS*Large qty of farm & shop misc
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HAROLD AND ROSE YESKE AUCTION, Saturday , April 26, 2014, 11:00 AM, 6 miles south of Langenburg on grid road (west side of town), Langenburg, SK. Contact: 306-743-5117. Tractors: 1978 Case 970, powershift, hyd., air, good tires, (motor powershift has been redone), 7400 hours, real nice; MF 2705, diesel, cab, air, factory duals, powershift, 3 PTH, front weights, 16.9x38 rubber, 80 hours on rebuilt powershift, recent hyd. system, and recent motor 6200 hours, nice; MH 33, hyd, good tires. Combine: MF 550 Western Special combine, grey cab, pickup, chopper, 2100 engine hours, shedded, new clutch, rebuilt transmission, new concave, looks good. Truck: 1976 GMC 6000, 350 V8, 5x2, Grainmaster 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122; BH&T; 1970 Ford 3/4 ton, 360 4 spd w/hoist. Plus haying and cattle equipment, seeding, tillage, misc. equipment, antiques, shop, and household. Note: Harold and Rose sold the farm. Machinery shedded and used on small acreage. Tractors look good. Visit www.ukrainetzauction.com for pics and complete listing. PL #915851. ESTATE OF RUSSELL OZEMBLOSKI Auction, Wednesday, April 30, 2014, 9:30 AM. 1 south on #310, 6 west on St Josephâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Grid, 3 south, 1/2 east of Ituna SK. Online bidding 1:00 PM. Land: RM of Tullymet 216: NW-28-24-12W2, seeded acres 100; assess. 84,100, taxes $760.75; SE-28-24-12-W2, seeded acres 125; assess. 83,200, taxes $744.51; SE-21-24-12-W2, seeded acres 130, assess. 85,800, taxes $767.79; NE-20-24-12W2, seeded acres 130; assess. 61,200, taxes $547.65. LSD 5&6: 21-24-12-W2, 80 acres (40 seeded); assess. $3500, taxes $313.20. Approx. seeded acres in 2013. Tractors: MF 1505 4WD, cab, air, duals, 3208 Cat engine, 5800 hrs; White 2-155 Fieldboss, cab, air, duals, 6300 hrs, looks good; JD 4020, cab, hyd, new rear rubber, showing 4686 hrs; Deutz 7006, cab, FEL, 7600 hrs; JD 3020 w/JD 148 loader; Case 730 diesel, dual range; JD R diesel; JD Styled AR w/FEL; Deutz D8005. Seeding: JD 655 28â&#x20AC;&#x2122; air seeder, air package, harrows, mounted tank; Morris CP 619 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; cultivator w/4030 superseeder tank; IHC 620 28â&#x20AC;&#x2122; press drills and transport. Grain Trucks: 1967 Dodge, 4 spd, 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122; box, steel B&H, 51,000 miles; IHC 1600 Loadstar, 15â&#x20AC;&#x2122; steel B&H, V8, 2 spd., 64,000 miles. Trucks: 2006 Chev 1/2 ton, V6 auto, 86,000 kms, nice. Cat (Excavating): JD 350 diesel std shift crawler w/ loader; Kingcut 6â&#x20AC;&#x2122; rotary mower; 3-4 yard Fieldmaster scraper. Plus tillage, cattle equipment, swathers, augers, bins, combines, shop, yard and recreation, antiques. Note: Being an estate generation farm, there are hundreds of items. This is a partial listing. Land will be sold immediately after farm machinery. Refer to the website for â&#x20AC;&#x153;Terms and Conditionsâ&#x20AC;?. Visit www.ukrainetzauction.com for pics and complete listing. PL #915851.
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Toll 1-866-873-5488 TollFree Free 1-866-873-5488 oror306-873-5488 306-873-5488 After Hours: Res. 306-873-5410 Fax 306-873-5492 Fax 306-873-5492 Box 2199,Tisdale, SK S0E 1T0 Box 2199, Tisdale, SK S0E 1T0 Email:bruce@sasktel.net bruce@sasktel.net Email:
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58 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
GARTONâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S AUCTION SERVICE will be conducting a Vintage Tractor and Equip. Auction for Dave and Angie Sawkey at Saltcoats, SK on April 26, 2014, 10:30 AM. From the Yellowhead Hwy (#16) at Saltcoats, SK (Jct 725) 6 miles E on 725, 1 N, 1 E. Auction will include: 1967 Cat D7E dozer, vg cond; 2- TD9 International crawler/dozers; Approx. 30 vintage tractors incl. JD AR, MH, Fordson, MM, Case, McCormick, IH, Farmall, Oliver, AC; Vintage snowmobiles and automobiles. Almost all tractors and snowmobiles are in running order. For more info please call 306-744-2208. For complete details and photos visit www.gartonsauction.com or call 204-648-4541.
W hite w ood Live s toc k S a le s Consignment Sale
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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:
FARM EQUIPM ENT; CATTLE HANDLING EQUIPM ENT; VEHICLES; TRAILERS; RVâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S; ATVS; GOLF CARTS; ETC. Â
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C a ll 306-7 35 -2822 to b o o k.
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ONE OF SASKâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;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.
WRECKING VOLVO TRUCKS: Misc. axles SOUTHSIDE AUTO WRECKERS located and parts. Also tandem trailer suspension Weyburn, SK., 306-842-2641. Used car axles. 306-539-4642, Regina, SK. 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, 4x4â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, vans, SUVâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s. Also large selection of Cummins diesel motors, Chevs and Fords as well. Phone SCHOOL BUSES: 1986 to 2002, 20 to 66 Edmonton- 1-800-294-4784, or Calgary- pass., $1600 and up. Phoenix Auto, Lucky 1-800-294-0687. We ship anywhere. We Lake, SK., 1-877-585-2300. DL #320074. have everything, almost. 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 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.
TRUCK BONEYARD INC. Specializing in VS TRUCK WORKS Inc. Parting out GM obsolete parts, all makes. Trucks bought 1/2 and 1 ton trucks. Call 403-972-3879, Gordon or Joanne, Alsask, SK. for wrecking. 306-771-2295, Balgonie, SK. www.vstruckworks.com
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IHC 6 CYLINDER ENGINE with 3 speed manual transmission, complete drop-in. Call 306-423-6236, Hoey, SK. WRECKING SEMI-TRUCKS, lots of parts. Call Yellowhead Traders. 306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK. 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. SLEEPERS AND DAYCABS. New and used. Huge inventory across Western Canada at www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. 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. H E AV Y D U T Y PA R T S o n s p e c i a l at www.Maximinc.Com/parts or call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. C H E C K O U T O U R p a r t s s p e c i a l s at www.Maximinc.Com/parts or call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. WRECKING TRUCKS: All makes all models. Need parts? Call 306-821-0260 or email: junkman.2010@hotmail.com Wrecking Dodge, Chev, GMC, Ford and others. Lots of 4x4 stuff, 1/2 ton - 3 ton, buses etc. and some cars. We ship by bus, mail, Loomis, Purolator. Lloydminster, SK.
UNRESERVED PUBLIC FARM AUCTION
Ross Kadlec
Bladworth, SK | April 23, 2014 ¡ 11 am
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. 1997 DOPEKER SUPER B grain trailers, closed ends, 24.5 tires, spring ride, $22,000; 1997 Doepker TA, 28â&#x20AC;&#x2122; spring ride, $16,000. 306-424-2690, Montmartre, SK. 1996 LODE-KING SUPER B grain trailers closed end, exc., spring ride, 24.5 tires at 2004 CADILLAC DEVILLE, 195,000 kms, 50%, tarps vg, round fenders, very little grey, fully loaded, really nice shape, asking rust, paint vg, farm used, lower mileage, $34,000. Lloyd Sproule, 403-627-2764 or $8500. 780-764-2678, Mundare, AB. 403-627-7363, Pincher Creek, AB. 2013 CHRYSLER 200S, loaded, leather, was $36,470. Clearout price $26,698 or $179 bi-weekly. Call 1-800-667-4755, www.dodgecityauto.com DL# 911673. 2013 DODGE DART, up to 59 MPG! Dare to compare. Clearout price $16,988 or $49 bi-weekly. Stk# N1699. 1-800-667-4755, www.dodgecityauto.com DL# 911673. 2014 CHRYSLER 200LX, great value, was $21,790. Clearout Priced at $18,690 or NEW NEVILLE TRI-AXLES tandems and $107 bi-weekly. Call 1-800-667-4755, pups available for spring. Call now to book your April builds and lock in your exchange www.dodgecityauto.com DL# 911673. rates for spring savings. Call Dwight at Corner Equip., 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. 1993 DOEPKER TRIDEM grain trailer. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. NEW WILSON SUPER B in stock, tridem, 2003 CASTLETON 3675F 36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; grain trailer. one 2 hopper, two 3 hoppers, also tandem; 2008 Lode-King alum. open end Super B, Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. alum. rims, air ride; 1995 Castleton tri2003 DOEPKER SPECIAL 36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; grain trailer, dem, air ride; 17â&#x20AC;&#x2122; A-train pup, very clean, a l u m . s l o p e s , o p e n e n d s , a i r r i d e , certified. Ph 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. 11Rx22.5, one owner, $30,000; 1995 www.rbisk.ca DL #905231. FLD112 Freightliner, Cummins M11, 400 HP, Integral sleeper, 12/40 rears, 411 ratio, 10 spd., 11Rx22.5, 210â&#x20AC;? WB, 2nd owner, records since 1997, shedded, $17,500. NORMS SANDBLASTING & PAINT, 40 Both units excellent shape, new safety, can years body and paint experience. We do split. 306-549-4701, Hafford, SK. metal and fiberglass repairs and integral to 2005 LODE-KING OPEN end Super B, daycab conversions. Sandblasting and red, 11.4x25 rubber like new, air ride, nice paint to trailers, trucks and heavy equip. shape, fresh safety, $45,000. Millhouse Endura primers and topcoats. A one stop shop. Norm 306-272-4407, Foam Lake SK. Farms Inc., 306-398-4079, Cut Knife, SK. 2 0 0 9 L O D E - K I N G S u p e r - B , walls, SANDBLAST AND PAINT your grain trailslopes, tarps good shape, complete brake ers, boxes, flatdecks and more. We use injob, new rubber, lift axles, certified, dustrial undercoat and paint. Can zinc coat for added rust protection. Quality work$67,000. 780-552-3428, Valleyview, AB. manship guaranteed. Prairie Sandblasting 2011 LODEKING TANDEM, $32,980; 2010 and Painting, 306-744-7930, Saltcoats, SK. Wilson 2 hopper tandem, $37,000. Golden West Trailer. Call 1-877-999-7402, Moose 2004 DOEPKER OPEN end Super B grain trailers. Call: 403-823-0587, Carbon, AB. Jaw, SK. 2 0 0 6 D O E P K E R 3 h o p p e r t r i - a x l e , 1974 TRAILMOBILE END dump grain trail$36,980; 2013 Merritt 2 hopper tandem, er. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. $ 3 8 , 9 8 0 . G o l d e n We s t Tr a i l e r. C a l l REMOTE CONTROL TRAILER CHUTE 1-877-999-7402, Moose Jaw, SK. openers can save you time, energy and 2013 DOEPKER OPEN end Super B grain keep you safe this seeding season. FM retrailers, aluminum rims, lift axles. Call: mote controls provide maximum range and instant response while high torque 403-823-0587, Carbon, AB. drives operate the toughest of chutes. 2008 WILSON LEAD and 2010 Wilson Pull, Easy installation. Kramble Industries, Super Bs, $68,900. Golden West Trailer. call 306-933-2655, or visit us online at: www.kramble.net Saskatoon, SK. Call 1-877-999-7402, Moose Jaw, SK. NEW 2014 TANDEM or tri-axle, spring or air ride, steel or alum. Cheapest in western Canada. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com 2012 GRAV HAUL 2 hopper tridem, 48â&#x20AC;&#x2122; air ride, 24.5â&#x20AC;? steel wheels. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. 2013 LODE-KING LOWBED tri-axle 10x53â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, tri-drive neck, like new, $84,000. Millhouse Farms Inc., 306-398-4079, Cut Knife, SK. ALL ALUMINUM TANDEMS, tridems and Super B Timpte grain trailers. Call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946 or see www.Maximinc.Com 2007 NEVILLE 41â&#x20AC;&#x2122; grain trailer, T/A. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 2010 WILSON SUPER B, white, lift axles, elec. tarp, tires/ brakes- 70%, 8/10 cond, $69,900 firm. 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. 2012 LODE-KING ALUM. tridem grain trailer, Michelin tires, air ride, low mileage, vg, $55,000. 780-975-0051, Legal, AB.
2004 CASE IH WDX901 30 FT
2008 CASE IH 2588
306-363-2131
WWW.BERGENINDUSTRIES.COM
2014 BISON TRAIL Express 3H 10â&#x20AC;&#x2122; LQ, AC, 6â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 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.
ALL TRAILERS COST LESS IN Davidson 1-800-213-8008 www.fasttoysforboys.com 2012 BEHNKE 53â&#x20AC;&#x2122; trailer, tri-axle spring ride, 13â&#x20AC;&#x2122; upper, 35â&#x20AC;&#x2122; lower, 5â&#x20AC;&#x2122; beavertail, sprayer cradles and ramps, 2- 2600 gal. black poly tanks, 3â&#x20AC;? pump and chem handler. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. 2- 2011 WILSON TANDEM, $39,900. each. Golden West Trailer. Call 1-877-999-7402, Moose Jaw, SK. 2007 ARNEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;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. 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122; GOOSENECK tridem 21,000 lbs, $7890; Bumper pull tandem lowboy: 18â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 14,000 lbs., $3975; 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 10,000 lbs., $3090; 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 7000 lbs., $2650. Factory direct. 888-792-6283. www.monarchtrailers.com TRAILTECH SPRAYER TRAILER, pintle h i t c h , d u a l t a n d e m r u b b e r, $ 3 9 0 0 . 306-834-7625 Kerrobert, SK. STAINLESS STEEL TANKER, 6000 gal. TA, center load/unload, 1990 Polar, excellent, $22,500. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. NEW NEVILLE BUILT 45â&#x20AC;&#x2122; tandem drop deck trailer with beavertails, $33,500. Call 780-373-2161, Bawlf, AB. C H E C K OUT OUR parts specials at: www.Maximinc.Com/parts or call Maxim Truck & Trailer toll free 1-888-986-2946. 2012 CANCADE GRAVEL trailer. See full ad under Gravel Trucks or call 306-383-3599 or 780-205-2810 cell. Quill Lake, SK.
FLEETNECK 2012, 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; trailer, grey metallic, tool box, rear overwidth light, low profile, hyd. dovetail, HD pintle ring, sway control. 2010 TIMPTE SUPER B grain trailers, high 780-205-2810 306-383-3599 Quill Lake SK capacity 84â&#x20AC;? walls, 22.5 alum. wheels, very 2011 DOEPKER RGN machinery trailer, 53â&#x20AC;&#x2122; good tarps and rubber, air ride, 366,544 tri-axle, c/w alum. pullouts, rear strobes, kms on wheel hub, safetied, $75,000. and pullout lights, side winches, alum rims 204-746-5575, Morris, MB. $53,000. 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB. 2009 TIMPTE SUPER B lead trailer. Call 1980 40 TON Willock lowboy, 9â&#x20AC;&#x2122; wide, 1-800-667-2074. PL #915407. good shape, safetied, $17,000 OBO. Phone 2012 DOEPKER SUPER B grain bulkers, 306-692-6307, Moose Jaw, SK. premium shape, Michelin tires, $78,000 1994 DOEPKER FLATDECK for hay, safetied OBO. 306-874-7696, Quill Lake, SK. til May, 2014, $11,000; 2006 Circle M 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; tandem dually flatdeck with beavertails, $7,000; 2011 Wheatheart post pounder, TWO 2006 MERRITT quad cattle/hog trail- used very little, $11,000. 780-349-5869, ers, $60,000/ea; 2011 Merritt cattle hog, Westlock, AB. dwight.reimer@yahoo.ca $72,000. 403-625-4658, Claresholm, AB. 2007 DOEPKER 53â&#x20AC;&#x2122; tri-axle highboy, pull2008 TRAVEALONG 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, tandem, bumper out lights and rear strobes, $29,000. hitch, less than 8000 kms, like new, $7000 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB. Sold cattle. 306-620-7317, Yorkton, SK. 45 FLATDECKS, 6 lowbeds, 7 gravel trailers. Check pictures and prices at www.trailerguy.ca or call 306-222-2413, Aberdeen/Saskatoon, SK. 9â&#x20AC;&#x2122; WIDE TANDEM lowbed, beavertail, $26,000; Tri-axle detach 50 ton, $38,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK.
S o u the rn In d u s tria l is the pro u d s u pplie r a n d s e rvic e s ho p fo r Ne ville Bu ilttra ile rs .
2004 CASE IH SPX3200 90 FT
1989 JOHN DEERE 8760_A01-7
QTY OF HOPPER BINS
AUCTION LOCATION: From BLADWORTH, SK, go 2.4 km (1.5 miles ) North on Hwy 11, then 7.2 km (4.5 miles) East OR From KENASTON, SK, go 16.1 km (10 miles) South on Hwy 11, then 7.2 km (4.5 miles) East. GPS: 51.38, -106.0629 A PARTIAL EQUIPMENT LIST INCLUDES: 1989 John Deere 8760 4WD ¡ 1981 Case 4890 4WD ¡ 1980 Case 2290 2WD ¡ 1980 Case 2290 2WD ¡ 2008 Case IH 2588 Combine ¡ 1998 Case IH 1020 30 Ft Flex Header ¡ 1992 Case IH 1010 30 Ft Rigid Header ¡ 2004 Case IH WDX901 30 Ft Swather ¡ Case IH 736 36 Ft Swather ¡ 1985 Ford 9000 T/A Grain Truck ¡ 1981 Chevrolet Silverado Flatbed Truck ¡ GMC Sierra Classic Crew Cab 4x4 Pickup Truck ¡
Chevrolet 80 School Bus ¡ 1996 Bourgault 8800 48 Ft Air Seeder ¡ International 45 Ft Hoe Seed Drill ¡ Don Hinz 45 Ft Drill Transport ¡ Cockshutt 249 25 Ft Cultivator ¡ Riteway RHP458 60 Ft Harrow Packer ¡ Degelman R570S Rock Picker ¡ 2004 Case IH SPX3200 90 Ft High Clearance Sprayer ¡ Large Quantity of Hopper Bins ¡ Grain Augers & Fans ¡ (2) Westeel 1000 Gallon Fuel Tanks ¡ Shop Supplies ¡ Tools ...AND MUCH MORE!
For up-to-date equipment listings, please check our website: rbauction.com Ross Kadlec: 306.567.5483 (h), 306.567.7355 (c), ross.kadlec@sasktel.net Ritchie Bros. Territory Manager â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Dan Steen: 306.361.6154 800.491.4494
CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com
T ra ilers In S toc k:
â&#x20AC;˘ 3 8.5â&#x20AC;&#x2122; ta n d e m o n a ir, 78â&#x20AC;? high s id e , s id e c hu te s , lo a d e d .........................$$38,95 0 â&#x20AC;˘ 45â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Tri-Axle , 78â&#x20AC;? high s id e s , 2 ho ppe r, a ir rid e ....................$$48,5 00 NEW TRAILERS ARRIVING DAILY! CALL FOR QUOTES.
Call Today for your Equipment Trailer Needs.
36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; S pring Rid e, S id e C hutes , 70â&#x20AC;? High S id es ......................$$32,000
306 -8 42-2422
w w w .s outh e rn in dus tria l.ca
Hw y. Jc t. 13 & 3 9 | W e yb urn , SK
2014 FEATHERLITE 8127-7024 stock trail- NEW 2014 GERMANIC R20-3500 end er, Stk. #132816, $19,995. Shop online dump, 36â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x102â&#x20AC;?, tri-axle, air ride, Michelâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s flip tarp, 11R22.5 tires, new Manitoba 24/7 at: allandale.com or 1-866-346-3148 s a f e t y , $ 5 6 , 0 0 0 . C a n d e l i v e r. WWW.DESERTSALES.CA Trailers/Bins 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. Westeel hopper bottom bins. Serving AB, BC and SK. Wilson, Norbert, gooseneck, COMPONENTS FOR TRAILERS. Shipping stock and ground loads. Horse / stock, daily across the prairies. Free freight. See cargo / flatdeck, dump, oilfield, all in â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Book 2013â&#x20AC;? page 195. DL Parts For Trailers, 1-877-529-2239, www.dlparts.ca stock. 1-888-641-4508, Bassano, AB. GRASSLAND TRAILERS OFFERING a full ALL ALUMINUM TANDEMS, tridems and line of trailers by Titan, W-W and Circle-d. Super B Timpte grain trailers. Call Maxim Steel and aluminum livestock trailers, 10â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946 or see to 32â&#x20AC;&#x2122;; Steel 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; gooseneck livestock trail- www.Maximinc.Com ers starting at $10,000. Leasing available. TRAILERS- ADVANTAGE AUTO AND Call Glen at: 306-640-8034, or email: Trailer. Livestock, horse and living quarg m 9 3 @ s a s k t e l . n e t Assiniboia, SK. ter, flatdeck, goosenecks, tilts, dumps, Where quality and value are our priority. cargos, utilities, Ski-Doo and ATV, dry van 2000 WILSON TRI-AXLE livestock trailer, and sea containers. Call today over 250 in $ 2 9 , 5 0 0 . G o l d e n We s t Tr a i l e r. C a l l stock, 204-729-8989 in Brandon, MB. on the Trans Canada Hwy. www.aats.ca 1-877-999-7402, Moose Jaw, SK.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
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
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
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 HOT DEALS!! Check out Larry Kalmakoff albums on Facebook, or mervsauto.com or 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. 2013 TECUMSEH TRIDEM end dump, $49,980; 2012 Tecumseh tridem end dump, $45,980. Golden West Trailer. Call 1-877-999-7402, Moose Jaw, SK. STEPDECK: 1998 48’ tandem axle trailer, $16,900 ea. 306-280-4677, Saskatoon, SK. DL #318566. 2000 ARNE’S TRIDEM end dump, tarp, alum. budds, certified. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. www.rbisk.ca DL #905231. 2013 WILSON BEAVER tail, tri-axle, 53’, sliding winches and tie plates, $44,500. Golden West Trailer. Call 1-877-999-7402, Moose Jaw, SK. WAYNE’S TRAILER REPAIR. Specializing in aluminum livestock trailer repair. Blaine Lake, SK, 306-497-2767. SGI accredited. NEW NEVILLE BUILT 53’ tridem drop deck trailer with beavertails, $40,500. Call 780-373-2161, Bawlf, AB. 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. 2013 BWS AIR detach machinery trailer, 10’ wide with alum. pullouts, lift axle, $80,000. 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB.
LACOMBE TRAILER SALES & RENTALS WE SELL AND RENT
Hi Boys, Low Boys, Drop Decks, Storage Vans, Reefer Vans and Freight Vans & More. 7 KM West of RED DEER from Junction of HWY. 2 & 32nd St.
403-347-7721
DECKS, DRY VANS, reefers and storage trailers at: www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. ROYAL ENCLOSED REFRIGERATED T/A van trailer. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
CLASSIFIED ADS 59
BEHNKE DROP DECK semi style and 2011 GMC SIERRA SLT, 4x4 Duramax, pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, crew cab, fully loaded, excellent condition, 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 : $34,900. 204-324-6298, Altona, MB. 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336. 2011 GMC CANYON SLE, ext cab, 2.9L, 185 GOOD TRAILERS, REASONABLY priced. HP, OD trans., black, box cover, 14,000 Tandem axle, gooseneck, 8-1/2x24’, Bea- kms, $17,500. 306-483-2393, Oxbow, SK. vertail and ramps, 14,000 GVW, $6900; or triple axle, $7900. All trailers custom built 2011 FORD F250 XLT, loaded 6.7l diesel, from 2000 to 20,000 lbs., DOT approved. 4X4, was $31,995, now $29,995. GreenCall Dumonceau Trailers, 306-796-2006, light Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca Central Butte, SK. FORD F-250 XLT only 44,000 kms., 53’ AND 48’ tridem and tandem stepdecks, 2011 powerstroke, 4x4, crew cab, leather, w/wo sprayer cradles; Two 48’ tandem 10’ 6.7L A/T/C, $47,900. 204-641-5725 Arborg MB wide, beavertail, flip ramps, air ride, low kms; 1991 Trail King machinery trailer, 2011 FORD F-150 XLT, crew cab, 4x4, hyd. tail; 53’, 48’, 28’ tridem and tandem 3.5L V6, loaded, blue, 76,511 kms., highboys, all steel and combos. SUPER B $25,995. 1-800-667-0490, DL #907173. HIGHBOYS, will split; Tandem and S/A www.watrousmainline.com converter with drop hitch; 53’-28’ van trailers; B-train salvage trailers; High clearance 2011 DODGE RAM 1500 Sport, leather, sprayer trailer w/tanks and chem han- sunroof, navigation, only 60 kms, $34,995. dlers. Call 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca www.rbisk.ca DL #905231. 2011 CHEVY 1/2 ton crew cab, 4x4, 5.3L V8, loaded, leather, white, 71,149 kms., $29,995. 1-800-667-0490, DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com WWW.TITANTRUCKSALES.COM to view information or call 204-685-2222 to check out our inventory of quality used highway tractors!
2011 CHEVY 1/2 ton, crew cab, 4x4, LTZ, 5.3L V8, loaded, leather, red, 52,341 kms., $31,995. 1-800-667-0490, DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com
2011 CHEVY 1/2 ton, crew cab, 4x4, LTZ, 5.3L V8, loaded, leather, white, 71,149 kms., $29,995. Call 1-800-667-0490, DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com 2011 CHEV SILVERADO 3500 LTZ, dually, diesel, 116,800 kms, asking $39,500. 2014 RAM 2500 HD, crew cab, 4x4, was 3 0 6 - 6 5 2 - 7 9 7 2 , S a s k a t o o n , S K . D L $49,790, Clearout price $39,493 or $225 #316384. www.magicpaintandbody.com bi-weekly. Stk# P9001. 1-800-667-4755, www.dodgecityauto.com DL# 911673. 2011 CHEV 1/2 ton, crew cab, LTZ, 5.3L loaded, cloth, red, 52,341 kms., 2 0 1 4 R A M 1 5 0 0 r e g u l a r c a b , Wa s V8, 1-800-667-0490, DL #907173. $28,790, Clearout price $19,998 or $114 $37,995. bi-weekly. Stk# P9605. 1-800-667-4755, www.watrousmainline.com www.dodgecityauto.com DL# 911673. 2011 CHEV 1/2 ton, crew cab, 4x4, 5.3L V8, loaded, cloth, silver, 87,523 kms., 2013 RAM HD Longhorn, crew cab, 4x4, $26,995. 1-800-667-0490, DL #907173. loaded, Clearout price $67,498 or #397 www.watrousmainline.com bi-weekly. stk# N9405. 1-800-667-4755, www.dodgecityauto.com DL# 911673. 2 0 1 0 TOYOTA T U N D R A L I M I T E D , 103,000 kms, 5 yr. 200,000 kms full war2013 GMC SIERRA 3500 SLT, 1 ton, leath- ranty, $32,000. 306-963-7693 Imperial SK er, dsl, 4 to choose from starting $49,995. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. 2010 GMC SIERRA 1500 Denali, fully loaded, 3 to choose from, 6.2l, $20,995. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. 2013 GMC SIERRA 1/2 ton, crew cab, DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 4x4, 5.3L V8, loaded, leather, white, 80,443 kms., $32,995. 1-800-667-0490. 2010 FORD F150 XLT Supercrew, 4WD, silver, boxliner, box cover, 96,788 kms, DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com beautiful shape, safetied, SN# 1FTFW1E2013 GMC 1/2 ton extended cab, 4x4, V7A00840. Asking $21,900, open to offers. 5.3L V8, loaded, leather, grey, 76,967 Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy. 12 North, kms., $29,995. 1-800-667-0490. DL Steinbach, MB. Call: Gary 204-326-7000. #907173. www.watrousmainline.com reimerfarmequipment.com 2013 CHEV SILVERADO 3500 LTZ, dually, 2009 FORD F350 XLT, loaded, 125 kms., fully loaded, 15,000 kms., dvd, Must see! 6.8l gas. Was $27,995. now $24,995. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 2013 CHEVROLET 1/2 ton, extended cab, 2009 FORD F150, ext. cab, 2 WD, red, un4x4, Nevada, 5.3L V8, cloth, silver, 18,248 der 50,000 kms, orig. tires, warranty, tax kms., $28,995. Call 1-800-667-0490. DL paid. Selling due to health. 306-790-7846 #907173. www.watrousmainline.com after 5 PM or leave message, Regina, SK. 2013 BLACK RAM, reg. cab, 2 WD, SWB, 2007 GMC SIERRA 1500 Denali, leather, 4.7 V8, keyless, PW, PDL, power mirrors, sunroof, PST paid, black beauty, $24,995. A/T/C, 20” chrome wheels, 5000 kms, as Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. new, full warranty, sharp truck. Reduced! DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca $19,900. 306-384-2428, Saskatoon, SK. 2007 FORD SPORT Trax Ltd., white/tan 2012 GMC SIERRA SLE crew cab, 4x4, leather, all options except navigation, 5.3L V8, loaded, heated seats, leather, sil- 97,000 kms, set up to be towed, Blue Ox ver, 31,505 kms, $29,995. 1-800-667-0490 base plate, neutral tranny switch, remote start, good rubber, nice shape, $17,500. DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com Ph. 306-221-7890, wescon@sasktel.net 2012 GMC 1/2 ton crew cab, 4x4, Denali, Saskatoon, SK. 6.2L V8, loaded, sunroof, leather, black, 36,208 kms., $44,995. 1-800-667-0490. 2007 CHEV SILVERADO 1500 LTZ, loaded, DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com 5.3l, 4x4, leather, sunroof, DVD, $15,995. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. 2012 GMC 1/2 ton, crew cab, SLT, 5.3L DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca V8, loaded, leather, white, 123,165 kms., $29,995. 1-800-667-0490, DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com
2012 GMC 1/2 ton, crew cab, 4x4 Nevada, 4.8L V8, A/T/C, cloth, silver, 64,916 kms., $22,995. 1-800-667-0490, DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com
2012 FORD F350 KING RANCH dually longbox, 4x4, 6 spd. auto, 6.7 dsl. PRECISION TRAILERS: Gooseneck and w/64,000 miles- 90% highway, equipped bumper hitch. You’ve seen the rest, now w/tool and fuel tank, trailer towing pkg., 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 , mint cond., asking $49,900. Moosomin, 2006 GMC 3500 4x4 dsl., auto., 8’ box, ext. cab, 233,000 kms- 80% hwy., grill guard, SK., 306-435-2024, 306-735-7055. 306-957-2033, www.precisiontrailer.com newer tires, batteries and air bags, A/T/C, 2002 DOEPKER CONVERTER, always kept 2012 CHEV 1/2 ton, crew cab, 4x4 LTZ, PL, very clean, well maintained, asking in shed w/low kms., air gauge for each ax- 5.3L V8, loaded, sunroof, leather, brown, $20,900. 306-681-8933, Moose Jaw, SK. le. Call for price. Golden West Trailer. Call 29,886 kms., $36,995. 1-800-667-0490. 2006 FORD F350 Lariat, 4x4, 6.0L, dsl., 6 DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com 1-877-999-7402, Moose Jaw, SK. spd. std, crewcab, shortbox, good towing/ mpg,163,000 kms 306-843-2934 Wilkie SK 2006 FORD F150 LARIAT, 5.4l, PST paid, fully loaded, leather, $9,995. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 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.
TRUCK & TRAILER SALES
2004 FORD F-350 XLT, 4x4, crew cab, long box, 6.0L dsl., with all major updates. New windshield, front brakes and alternator. Very clean unit. Pics available, $9900. 306-484-4437, Govan, SK.
D ecks 2013 E BY All Alu m in u m 20’ Deck Un d er 2014 F ellin g 53’ T ria xle Dro p Decks 2014 F ellin g 30’ Pin tle Hitch Deck, 30 T o n 2014 F ellin g T iltDeck w /a ir Ra m p s , 25 T o n 2013 F ellin g T iltDeck, 25 T o n 2014 F ellin g 48’x102’ 55 T o n T ri-a xle Deta cha b le w / O u triggers 2014 F ellin g 53’ T ria xle F la td ecks 2015 F ellin g 10’ w id e d eta cha b le w / Alu m in u m p u ll o u ts - Co m in g S p rin g
Live s toc k 2015 E BY 53’ Gro u n d L o a d T a n d em - Co m in g S p rin g
G oos e n e c k Tra ile rs 2013 E BY M a verick 20’ 2014 E BY W ra n gler 22’ 2014 E BY M a verick 30’ S la tS id e Go o s en ecks w ith T a n d em 7K a xles
Regina - 1-800-667-0466 | Keefe HallCell- 306-535-2420
w w w .sa sk v olv o.com
2002 FORD F250 XL, rare, 7.3l, diesel, 4x4, ext. cab, long box, PST pd, $6,995. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca
D.L#909069
C a ll fo rAva ila b ility a n d P ricin g Fin a n ce R e po ’s Acce ptin g Offe rs
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. 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 CHEV 2500 HD Silverado LS, 4x4 Xcab, short box, auto., 6.0L gas, new tires, 197,000 kms. $7500 OBO. 306-244-3753, 306-281-5865, Saskatoon, SK.
2006 FORD F350, 4x4, V-10, ext. cab truck, 132,000 miles, PW, PDL, PS, AC, front end all reconditioned, asking $7900. 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.
1998 KW T800 grain truck, Cat C12, 10 spd., air ride, new C.I.M. Ultracel II box pkg., California, no rust, safetied, $5500. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. 20’ COURTENAY BERG Silage box, also used for grain, hyd. end gate, white, roll tarp, $20,000. 780-878-4518, Czar, AB.
2001 FREIGHTLINER FL80. Warner Industries, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. www.warnerindustries.com DL #913604. 2001 IHC 4900, 466 Allison automatic, 18’ BH&T, 130,000 miles, $44,900; 2003 IHC 8100, C&C, 370 HP Cummins, 6 spd. Allison automatic, will fit 18’ to 20’ box, $29,900. K&L Equipment, Regina/Ituna, 2013 RAM 2500, HD Outdoorsman, crew SK. 306-795-7779, 306-537-2027, email cab, 4x4. Clearout price $53,998 or $308 ladimer@sasktel.net DL #910885. bi-weekly. Stk# N9048. 1-800-667-4755, 2004 FREIGHTLINER M2 tandem, Cat www.dodgecityauto.com DL# 911673. dsl., Allison auto, new 20’ CIM box pkg, w/ 2014 RAM 1500, quad cab, 4x4, standard tarp, safetied, no rust California truck, only hemi, Clearout price $27,390 or $157 bi- $59,500. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon SK weekly. Stk# P7044. 1-800-667-4755, 2004 IHC 8600 ISM Cummins, 400 HP, 10 www.dodgecityauto.com DL# 911673. spd; 2005 Volvo 365 HP, 10 spd. Both have CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used new CIM 20’x65” BH&T, safetied, $49,500 highway tractors. For more details call each. Call 306-256-3569, 306-230-4393, 204-685-2222 or view information at Cudworth, SK. DL #917908. www.titantrucksales.com 2005 379 PETERBILT Tri-drive w/2010 24’ NEW INTERNATIONAL TERRASTAR 3 ton Courtney Berg box, hyd. silage endgate, 4x4 at www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim bolt-in box divider, hyd. side auger kit, Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. Brehon remote endgate and hoist, 550 Cat, 18 spd., 660,000 kms., exc. cond. Call 403-391-6021, Red Deer, AB.
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
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. 2005 INTERNATIONAL, $75,900. Warner Ind, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. www.warnerindustries.com DL #913604. 2006 CHEV TANDEM DIESEL, Allison auto, 300 HP, new 20’ box, $54,900. Phone 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. 2006 FREIGHTLINER CLASSIC, Detroit 14L 500 HP, 18 spd. Eaton Fuller autoshift with clutch, 13 fronts, 40 rears, 22.5 alum. rims, c/w new Cancade 20’x64” grain box with remote hoist and gate, pintle plate, 1,162,400 kms, new MB safety, very clean, $72,500. 204-728-3821, Brandon, MB. 2006 IHC 9200I 13 spd. UltraShift, 657,000 kms.; 2006 IHC 9200I 12 spd. Meritor auto., 1.1m kms.; 2006 Macks 10 spd Eaton AutoShifts. All with new 20x65” grain boxes and fresh SK safeties. Saskatoon, SK. 306-270-6399, DL# 316542, www.78truxsales.com
Hwy. 3, Seven Persons, AB (Medicine Hat, AB)
PH. 403-977-1624 rawlyn@automatictruck.com
www.automatictruck.com 1974 IHC 1600 3 ton grain truck, all new rubber, 46,000 original miles, shedded. 306-378-2341, 306-378-7305, Elrose, SK. 1976 DODGE 3 ton, 64,500 miles, good condition, shedded, 15’ Grainmaster box w/steel floor. 306-893-8008 Maidstone SK 1979 CHEV C70, 366 gas, 5&2 trans., good radial tires, roll tarp, 112,000 kms, stored i n s i d e , $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 . C a l l To m C o l l i n s 306-478-2940, 306-640-7081, McCord, SK 1980 IH 1710, 404 eng., 5&2 trans, 16x8 strong B&H, Midland tarp, new 1020 rubber on back, 1020 fronts 90%, 46,838 kms, $9000 OBO. 306-358-4620, Denzil, SK. 1987 FORD F700 REDUCED: 16x8.5’ B&H, vg 370 gas engine, vg radial tires, 5 spd., $7900. Phoenix Auto, Lucky Lake, SK. 1-877-585-2300. DL #320074. 1987 FREIGHTLINER TANDEM, 800,000 kms, 350 HP Cummins, 9 spd., 20’ BH&,. newer tires, good paint, clutch replaced, bottom end on engine redone, first $36,000. 780-208-1940, Two Hills, AB. 1990 FREIGHTLINER FL112 grain truck. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1992 KENWORTH T600 grain truck. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1994 GMC 3500 HD truck, 11,625 kms., excellent condition, asking $17,500. Call 306-642-3189, Assiniboia, SK. 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. 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.
2006 IHC 9200i; Cummins 370 HP, 10 spd., 14 front, 40 rears, 22.5 new recaps with steel rims, auto greaser with new Cancade 20’x64” grain box, 856,000 kms, new MB safety, very clean, $63,000. 204-728-3821, Brandon, MB.
2007 T800 KW, elec. tarp, 13 spd. UltraShift, Cat C15, new 20’ BH&T; DAYCAB: tandem 2005 9200 IH ISM and ISX Cummins, 10 spd.; 1976 GMC 6500, 366, 5&2, 16’ wood box. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. www.rbisk.ca DL #905231. 2008 GMC 8500, Isuzu dsl, Allison 6 spd. auto trans., 20’ Western Ind. box, Nordic hoist, Michel’s elec. tarp, remote endgate and hoist, A/T/C, alum. rims, 12R22.5 front, 11R22.5 rear Michlens air susp., shedded, no rust, 20,000 kms, $95,000; 2-1986 GMC 7000, 366 engines, 5&2, steel boxes, Nordic hoists, roll tarps, 80,000/ 50,000 kms, no rust, shedded, good condition, $17,000 each. David Klein 306-957-4312, 306-695-7794, Odessa, SK. ATTENTION FARMERS: 35 tandems in stock. New Cancade. Automatic and standard. Also highway tractors available. Yellowhead Sales, 306-783-2899, Yorkton, SK AUTOMATIC AUTOMATIC 2010 IH Prostar premium, Cummins, new 20’ B&H, roll tarp $72,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. AUTOSHIFT TRUCKS AVAILABLE: Boxed tandems and tractor units. Contact David 306-887-2094, 306-864-7055, Kinistino, SK. DL #327784. www.davidstrucks.com CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL MFG. for grain box pkgs., decks, gravel boxes, HD combination grain and silage boxes, pup trailers, frame alterations, custom paint, complete service. Visit our plant at Humboldt, SK or call 306-682-2505 for prices. FORD F350 GRAIN truck, 1974 F350 “Custom” w/360 gas engine, duals and steel B&H. Great farm truck! $2900. 1-800-667-4515 www.combineworld.com INTERNATIONAL 1610 CARGO Star grain truck. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. NEW NEVILLE BUILT 45’ tridem grain trailer, $45,000. Call 780-373-2161, Bawlf, AB. REMOTE CONTROL ENDGATE AND hoist systems can save you time, energy and keep you safe this seeding season. Give K r a m b l e I n d u s t r i e s 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.kramble.net Saskatoon, SK. WATER TRUCK: 1981 GMC 6000, B&H, roll tarp, excellent tires, vg cond., w/1750 gal. low profile tank, pump and hoses, $6500. 306-233-7305, Cudworth, SK.
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. 2005 STERLING TANDEM dump truck new BH&T, hitch, C13 Cat, $44,000; 2007 IH single axle dump, auto., hyd. brakes, $35,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. 2006 WESTERN STAR 4900F, tandem w/tag, 16’ BH&T, 450 HP, 8 LL trans., AB Safety, $64,000. 780-977-4907, Edmonton 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. 206 AND 207 IHC 9200 w/new 16’ Cancade gravel boxes and tarps. Yellowhead Sales, 306-783-2899, Yorkton, SK. TANDEM AXLE GRAVEL trucks in inventory. New and used, large inventory across Western Canada at www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & Trailer 1-888-986-2946
2007 AND 2010 KENWORTH T800 trucks, AUTOSHIFT, 10 spd., new B&H, ISX Cummins, very clean. Also trucks available with no box. 2010 trucks have Cat engine. Call 204-673-2382, Melita, MB. DL #4525. 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. 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.
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. 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. 1998 FREIGHTLINER FL112 tandem truck w/tridem pup, 10 spd. Eaton AutoShift, 2007 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA, Mer- 400 HP Cummins, 4 way lockers, truck and cedes 12.8 L, 450 HP, 13 spd. Eaton Fuller trailer are 20’ DEL box and hoist, 80% tires, Ultrashift (full auto), 12 fronts, 40 rears, c/w Michel’s 10” cross augers for truck 22.5 alum. rims, auto greaser, c/w new and pup, will feed a 13” auger full. 240,000 Cancade 20’x64” box, w/remote hoist and kms, one owner, always shedded, with V gate, 1,068,900 kms, new MB safety, very tank that fits truck or pup with shoot and clean, $70,000. 204-728-3821, Brandon, different end gate for hauling 3 products, $74,900. Quenton at: 306-354-7585, or MB. email him at: quentonquark@gmail.com 2007 LOW KM Kenworth with 22’ heavy duty B&H, automatic , $89,000 firm. 2- 2005 IH 9100 tractors, 550 Cat, 13 306-730-8375, Melville, SK. speed, 4-way locks, $30,000 each. Call 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. 2008 FL COLUMBIA, new 20’ BH&T, 60 Series Detroit, 13 spd., full lockups, hitch, 2004 FREIGHTLINER CLASSIC, only 800,000 kms, new AB. safety, always AB. 789,000 kms, heavy spec. 403-823-0985, Carbon, AB. truck, $66,800. 780-977-4907, Edmonton
60 CLASSIFIED ADS
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.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
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 FOR SALE AND work ready: Six 2005-2006 Kenworth T-800’s, 435 CAT, 15 spd., 40,000 rears, inter-axle locks, 500,000 700,000 kms, asking $50,000 - $60,000 per truck OBO; Seven 2006 Kenworth T-800’s, C13 CAT. Six are equipped with no clutch automatics and 1 is equipped with a clutch automatic. Inter-axle only, 300,000 - 600,000 kms, asking $50,000 $60,000 per truck OBO; Five 2010 Kenworth T-800’s, Cummins 500 HP, 18 spd., 46,000 rears, 3rd axle on tractor, headache rack, wet kit and moose bumper, asking $110,000 OBO. If interested, please call Russ at 204-619-3252, Lundar, MB.
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
2014 JEEP CHEROKEE sport, 9 spd auto, new design Clearout price $24,690 or $137 bi-weekly. #P4037. 1-800-667-4755 www.dodgecityauto.com DL# 911673. 2014 JEEP PATRIOT, North Edition, 4x4, heated seats, remote start. Clearout price $26,497. Stk#P2014. 1-800-667-4755 www.dodgecityauto.com DL# 911673. 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.
2000 FREIGHTLINER FL80 with 24’ flat24’ FLATDECK off 2006, steel deck, with deck, 300 HP diesel 9 spd., safetied, vg sliding winches, $3950. K&L Equipment, cond., no rust, $19,500. Call for details, Regina, SK. DL #910885, 306-795-7779, 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. 306-537-2027, email ladimer@sasktel.net 2005 IH 4300, 24’ van truck, Allison auto., 466 eng., 3000 lb. lift gate, premium California truck, no rust, 118,000 miles, only $24,500. 306-946-8522 Saskatoon SK 2007 GMC SIERRA 1500 HD SLT, loaded, 6.0L gas, w/leather, 140 kms., PST pd., 4x4. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca
2004 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 2004 KENWORTH T800, 475 Cat, 18 spd., 46,000 rears, lockers, $37,900. LARGE BAILIFF ONLINE AUCTION, Saska306-280-4677, Saskatoon, SK. DL 318566. toon, SK. 2- 2012 Hino 258 van bodies; 2006 MACK CHN613. Call 1-800-667-2075. 2012 Ford E450 van body; 2004 Int. van body. Email us your bid with complete PL #915407. name, address and phone number to: saskwestfinacial@sasktel.net No deposit required, no buyers fee. It is the responsibility of the bidder to check if any warranties are applicable and valid. 306-242-2508.
1993 FORD F700 370 V8 gas, 5&2 spd., 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. 1998 KENWORTH T-800, stainless steel paving box, 30” live belt, $33,000. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. 2007 WESTERN STAR w/2010 Bunning vertical spreader, exc. cond., $82,000. Will separate. 306-621-4965, Theodore, SK.
2006 PETERBILT 379 w/new rebuilt C-13 Cat engine, 13 spd. trans., 3.71 ratio, 60 gal. wet kit, 70” Unibilt sleeper, 11R-22.5. good for gravel trailer. Job ready, new MB. safety, truck in exc. cond., $52,000. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. 2007 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA. Warner Ind., Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. RETIRED: 2009 CASCADIA DD15, 505 HP, www.warnerindustries.com DL #913604. 13 spd. 3.42 Webasto Motor, Espar bunk heater, 495,000 miles, loaded, PL, PW, 2007 FREIGHTLINER FLD 120 SD, 515 mirrors, heated seats, new tires, like new Detroit, 18 spd., Super 40 rears w/locks, inside, shedded, new safety. Lift axle confresh SK. safety, $32,000. 306-547-7680, sistently grosses $365,000/year hauling or 306-325-2021, Okla, SK. DL #304675. cattle into the US. Clients still available. 2007 KENWORTH T300 daycab, tandem Call 306-842-3894 or 306-861-7022. axle, C&C, 260 Cummins, 9 spd. trans., 40 SANDBLASTING AND PAINTING of heavy rears on air ride, 90% rubber on alum. trucks, trailers and equipment. Please call wheels, 235,000 kms, long WB, new AB. for details. Can-Am Truck Export Ltd., safety, $36,500. Email pics available. 1-800-938-3323, Delisle, SK. 403-638-3934 ask for Jeff, Sundre, AB. SLEEPERS AND DAYCABS. New and used. 2007 WESTERN STAR, 244” WB, 515 De- Huge inventory across Western Canada at troit, 13 spd., 72” bunk, loaded, 40 rears, www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & 12 fronts, 3-way locks, Espar engine and Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. bunk heater. 306-238-2140, Goodsoil, SK. STRONG B-TRAIN PULLER. 2007 FL 2007 WESTERN STAR, daycab, 550 Cat, 18 Classic, small bunk, Detroit 515 HP, 18 spd., 720,000 kms, 46 rears, wet kit. Call spd., full lockups, 14/46 axles, rubber 80%, $37,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. 780-990-8412, Edmonton, AB. 2008 FREIGHTLINER CLASSIC. Warner Ind., Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. www.warnerindustries.com DL #913604. 2009 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA daycab, DD 15 505 HP, 18 spd., 46 rears, 3-way locks, fresh Sask. safety, $45,000. 306-547-7680, or 306-325-2021 Okla, SK. DL #304675.
1998 FORD F800 18’ van truck, w/Cummins dsl, Allison auto., 81,000 miles, no rust California truck, available as van, flatdeck or grainbox, $16,500. 306-946-8522, Watrous, SK.
CAN-AM TRUCK EXPORT LTD., Delisle, SK, 1-800-938-3323. 1998 IHC 4700, DT 466, auto, w/20’ deck, $16,500; 1995 FL80 TA gravel truck, 5.9 Cummins, Allison auto, 13’ box, 500,000 kms, $25,000; 2011 KW T800 daycab, ISX Cummins, 18 spd., 46 r e a r s w / 4 - w ay l o c k , 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 k m s , $85,000- will take 20’ grain box or 100 BBL tank; 1992 Ford LN7000, 7.8 dsl., 6 spd., C&C will take 15-16’ box, new safety, $10,000; 2007 Freightliner Classic, 60 DT, 18 and 40’s, 24” sleeper, wet kit, new 22.5 tires, $46,000; 1995 KW T800, 475 Cat, 18 and 46’s, pintle hitch, $38,000; Cat V110 forklift, propane, good cond., 11,000 lbs., $10,000; 2005 GMC W4500 diesel, auto, cube van w/power lift gate, hyd. brakes, $14,000; 1988 Fruehauf, spring susp., highboy curtain, $7,500; Gravel boxes 13’, 14’, 15’, $2,500-$4,500; Two sander units, $2000-$3000; Gensets available. Financing available, OAC. www.can-amtruck.com DL #910420.
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2005 MACK MA6885, tandem axle, Putzmeister 36x180 concrete pump truck. 350 HP, engine brake, Maxitorque trans, 10 spd., Camelback susp., alum. wheels, 36 meter 4 section, articulated boom, remote controls, hyd. outriggers. 204-937-7194, 204-937-8073, Roblin, MB.
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 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 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. LOOKING FOR A PARTNER or serious investors for a 127 acre subdivision along 2 kms of shoreline on a lake that is situated near the geographical center of Sask. For more info: etldevelopments@gmail.com or phone 306-426-2220. 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. EARN $10,000 TO $20,000 in 3 months. The corn maize near Pilot Butte, SK. is for sale. Includes 140 acres of hay land. Call 1-877-806-8482.
CONTINUOUS METAL ROOFING, no exposed screws to leak or metal overlaps. Ideal for lower slope roofs, rinks, churches, pig barns, commercial, arch rib building and residential roofing; also available in Snap Lock. 306-435-8008, Wapella, SK.
STEEL BUILDING BARGAINS. Allocated discounts. We do deals, 30x40, 50x60, 100x100 and more. Total construction and blueprints available. Ph. 1-800-964-8335, www.gosteelbuildings.com Source #18X
2002 KENWORTH T300, 8.3 Cummins, w/3 compartment seed tender, $45,000. Call 204-243-2453, High Bluff, MB.
NEED A LOAN? Own farmland? Bank says no? If yes to above three, call 1-866-405-1228, Calgary, 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. Call toll free 1-888-577-2020.
FARM/CORPORATE PROJECTS. Call A.L. STEEL BUILDINGS with concrete founda- Management Group for all your borrowing tions. Comparable to wood pole shed pric- and lease requirements. 306-790-2020, ing. Email: scott@nforcecrane.com or Regina, SK. phone: 403-988-5639, Calgary, AB.
SMALL MANUFACTURING SHOP and residence. 40 yrs of operation with established product line. Owner retiring. Turnkey operation. 306-445-5562, Delmas, SK.
1989 GMC 5000, 6 cyl. diesel, hyd. brakes, CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used 5 spd., only 38,000 kms., 15’ deck, wet kit, highway tractors. For more details call fresh safety, $14,900. Cam-Don Motors 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com VAN TRUCK, hyd. tailgate, side door, 24’, Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 2006 Freightliner FLM2, diesel, 6 spd., $24,500. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. FUEL TANKER 4 comp., 13,000 litre top 1997 FORD F250 Supercab, 4x4, 7.3 diesel, loading, meets MC306 specs, dual equip5 spd, A/T/C, service truck, w/wo equip- ment, 5 yr. PVIK April 2013, 8.3 Cummins, 2007 CHEVY UPLANDER EXT, 3.9L, V6, S/A, 300,000 kms, safetied March 2013, loaded, 7 pass., goldmist, 139,870 kms., ment, $7,000. 306-861-1680, Griffin, SK. open to offers. Mel Maynes 204-534-2515, $9995. Call 1-800-667-0490. DL #907173. 1977 CHEV 6500 S/A water truck. Call 204-534-0104, Boissevain, MB. www.watrousmainline.com 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
2009 IH PROSTAR. $24,900. Warner Ind., Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. highway tractors. For more details call www.warnerindustries.com DL #913604. 204-685-2222 or view information at 2009 KW T-800, 600,000 kms, 72” aero- www.titantrucksales.com cab, wet kit, 525 ISX, 46k rears, full load, 1977 FORD LN900, good running cond., $90,000. 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB. tag axle tandem, air brakes, had 20’ grain box, $6500. 306-460-8666, Netherhill, SK. 2009 PETERBUILT 386. Warner Industries, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. www.warnerindustries.com DL #913604. 2008 F-350 REG. cab, 5.4L auto, 2WD, only 150,000 kms., complete w/utility 2009 WESTERN STAR 4900 SA, white, body, new tires, fresh safety, ready for 205” WB, stand-up bunk, DDT 530HP, 18 work $13,900. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., spd., 46 rears, 12 front, Airliner susp., wet 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. kit, new rubber, 610,000 kms., fresh safety, $65,000. Phone 306-747-3292 or 780-713-5967, Shellbrook, SK. Western Star Bale Truck GMC SERVICE truck, 4x4, crewcab, 2009 WESTERN STAR, ONE OWNER, in 2007 gas, 6 spd., auto, dual rear wheels, crane, · 2005 Western Star, 460 HP service April 2010, Mercedes 450 HP, no 242,000 kms, Sask. inspection just done, Mercedes, Allison auto, 4 way lockers, DEF, 650,000 kms, orig. warranty left on $17,900 plus taxes. Phoenix Auto, Lucky engine, 34” sleeper, roo bar, 210” WB, 46 Lake, SK., 1-877-585-2300. DL #320074. air ride suspension rears, 4:10 ratio, 18 spd., new Webasto, new back drives Nov./13, new clutch WANTED: TANDEM MANURE truck(s), full 403-977-1624 March/13, hyd. rigging with T&E 4” pump, hyds., must be in vg cond, 350+HP. Wainor 306-740-7771 safety, 85% highway miles. Please call wright, AB., 780-842-2909, 780-842-7812. 780-753-0086, Provost, AB. Located at Medicine Hat, AB 1981 INTERNATIONAL DIESEL single axle 2010 FREIGHTLINER CASCADIA. Warner livestock truck w/aluminum body, 400,000 Ind, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Cur- kms, $5000. 780-305-3547 Neerlandia, AB. rent 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. TILLEY AND DISTRICT Fire Assoc. is ac2004 H2 HUMMER, gas, yellow, low milewww.warnerindustries.com DL #913604. cepting bids on the following pumper age. 306-236-8023, Goodsoil, SK. 2011 VOLVO DT13, I-shift, mid-rise, push truck: 1970 GMC/King Seagrave with Hale axle, 750,000 kms., $69,980. Golden West 650 GPM front mount pump and 800 gal. 2008 SUBARU FORESTER, auto, premier, Trailer. Call 1-877-999-7402, Moose Jaw, tank. Details and pictures can be seen at AWD, leather, 43,000 kms, grey, $18,995. www.fabianseedfarms.com Bid date clos- Call 1-888-240-2415 or visit our website: SK. ing is April 30, 2014. Highest or any bid www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 2012 KENWORTH 900L, ISX, 18 spd., Su- not necessarily accepted. 2010 SUBARU FORESTER, manual, tourper 40, 72” Aerodyne, sunroof, bunk beds, 11Rx22.5, loaded, dual Webasto, 500,000 2001 INTERNATIONAL 4700, 4 spd. Alli- ing, auto, sunroof, cloth, 65,000 kms, son auto., DT466, 24’ flatdeck w/electric $22,995. 1-888-240-2415 visit our website kms., $115,000 OBO. Call 306-796-4479, lift gate, 45,000 miles, exc. cond., asking www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. Central Butte, SK. $19,600. Call Wes or Paul 306-256-3500 2011 SUBARU OUTBACK, Limited, auto, 2014 FREIGHTLINER 114SD. Warner Ind, or 306-230-9901, Cudworth, SK. Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current SPECIALTY TRUCKS AVAILABLE: Fire/ 22,000 kms, silver, $29,995. Call for info 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. emergency trucks, garbage, bucket, deck 1-888-240-2415, or visit our website www.warnerindustries.com DL #913604. and dump trucks. See us at our new loca- www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 2015 DOEPKER IMPACTS. Warner Indus- tion on Cory Rd., Saskatoon, SK. Summer 2012 SUBARU TRIBECA, auto, premier, 45,000 kms, grey, $32,995. Call for info. tries, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Cur- of 2013. 306-668-2020. DL #90871 rent 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. S/A IH 4300, IH motor, Allison automatic, 1-888-240-2415, or visit our website www.warnerindustries.com DL #913604. AC, one w/deck, the other w/BH&T. www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. 2012 SUBARU TRIBECA, auto, premier, 2015 DOEPKER TRIDEMS Warner Industries, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Cur- 1990 CHEV 2500, 4x4, 5.7L engine, auto., AWD, Nav., DVD, 68,000 kms, $22,995. rent 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. good tires, service body. Best offer! Bailey Call 1-888-240-2415, or visit our website: Brothers Seeds, 306-935-4702, Milden, SK. www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. www.warnerindustries.com DL #913604.
WINDOWS! WINDOWS!
A COMPLETE FULL LINE OF WINDOWS!!!
2008 CHEV UPLANDER LT2 EXT, 3.9L, V8, loaded, DVD, cloth, white, 98,733 kms., $12,995. 1-800-667-0490. DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com 2008 PONTIAC MONTANA SV6 EXT, 7 pass., 3.9L, V6, loaded, DVD, Maroon, 144,396 kms., $10,995. 1-800-667-0490. DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com 2012 CHEV ORLANDO 2LT, 2.4L, 4 cyl., loaded, 7 passenger, cloth, red, 21,452 kms., $17,995. Call 1-800-667-0490. DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com 2012 CHEV ORLANDO LTZ, 2.4L, loaded, sunroof, heated leather, white, 29,012 kms., $22,995. Call 1-800-667-0490. DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com 2013 DODGE CARAVAN SE, 3.6L V6, 7 pass., loaded, cloth, black, 39,852 kms., $69,995. 1-800-667-0490. DL #907173. www.watrousmainline.com
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. WANTED: UP TO 40 wintered 2-storey hives. John 306-652-7708, 306-221-4569, Saskatoon SK.
WANTING TO PURCHASE hotel in SK. or AB. doing $300,000 plus. 306-221-2208. FOR LEASE OR Sale: Provincially licensed meat shop/commercial kitchen. Email WANT TO EARN 4% to 5% on your investharmonysway@iwantwireless.ca for info., ments? Call and leave a message including or call 780-957-2115, Crooked Creek, AB. your phone number at: 306-275-4623.
H ave you ever w anted to be your ow n boss? H ave controlof your ow n destiny? 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!
BURTON CONCRETE: PROVINCE-WIDE mobile concrete trucks. We set up on site, pour all sizes of shops or bin pads. Spring booking discounts. Waylyn 306-441-4006 or 306-370-4545, Blaine Lake, SK.
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
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, stumps, caraganas, etc. 12 years of enviro friendly mulching. Call today! 306-933-2950. Visit: www.maverickconstruction.ca REGULATION DUGOUTS: 120x60x14’ $2000; 160x60x14’ $2950; 180x60x14’ $3450; 200x60x14’ $3950. 306-222-8054, Saskatoon, SK.
100% Tax Deductible Flow Through Shares .10 cents shares with an interest in a Royalty Income Pool
Invest in Canadian Oil Exploration Current Project Bakken Saskatchewan
www.briskenergy.com
1-403-291-0005 Accredited Investors Only
FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS We also specialize in: Crop insurance appeals; Chemical drift; Residual herbicide; Custom operator issues; Equipment malfunction. Qualified Agrologist on staff. Call Back-Track Investigations for assistance regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779.
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. 185 CFM JOY portable air compressor, JD 4 cyl. diesel, 1101 hrs, runs well, $4950. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com
C U S TO M S WAT H I N G / B A L I N G . JD W150 swather and large square baler. Contact Adam at 403-501-4252, Gem, AB.
LOOKING FOR 500 HD heifers, cows, cow/calf pairs to custom graze, winter and calve out. Pick up your calves in fall. Call Ryan at: 306-317-2761, Neilburg, SK.
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.
BRUSH MULCHING. The fast, effective way to clear land. Four season service, competitive rates, 375 HP unit, also avail. trackhoe w/thumb, multiple bucket attachments. Bury rock and brush piles and fence line clearing. Bork Contracting, www.borysiukcontracting.ca Prince Albert, SK., 306-960-3804. BRUSH MULCHING, clearing shelterbelts scrub land and fence lines. Call Jonah at 306-232-4244, Rosthern, SK. NEUFELD ENT. CORRAL CLEANING, payloader, Bobcat with rubber tracks and vertical beater spreaders. Phone 306-220-5013, 306-467-5013, Hague, SK.
CLASSIFIED ADS 61
ATTACHMENTS PARTS COMPONENTS for construction equipment. Attachments for dozers, excavators and wheel loaders. Used, Re-built, Surplus, and New equipment parts and major components. Call Western Heavy Equipment 306-981-3475, Prince Albert, SK. KOMATSU SKIDSTEER SX1026, 85 HP, 2 speed, 2000 hrs., Superflow. Excellent condition. Call Mark Taylor 204-529-2059 or 204-245-0536, Mather, MB.
EQUIPMENT RENTALS: dozers, compactors, loaders, excavators, etc. Conquest Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK.
HD 7W ALLIS Chalmers Cat and misc. parts for sale. 204-835-2345, ask for Merv. McCreary, MB. 224 CAT HOE on rubber, same size as 225 Cat, very tight, new rubber, new engine, etc., 10,000 orig. hrs. Cell 306-421-9911, Estevan, SK. CAT 60, 70, 80 and 463’s available. Also Allis Chalmers direct mount scrapers. 16’-20’ pull dozers. 306-338-7114 Clair, SK 1994 HITACHI EX270LC-5 excavator w/thumb and 3-way valve, $35,000. Also, five Macks w/wet kits, 1984 to 1996. 204-376-5194, 204-641-0008, Arborg, MB.
WANTED: 790 DLC JD trackhoe with hyd. thumb, condition not important if priced accordingly. 204-773-3044, Russell, MB. LANDMASTER PRODUCTION DOZERS: PD-16’, $36,000; PD-18’, $37,500. Sask. Email: bryer610@gmail.com Neil, 306-231-8300, neilfl@yourlink.ca ATTACHMENTS: skidsteer, pallet forks, Alta. - Gord, 780-913-7353, email buckets, augers, hay spears. Conquest gordbasnett@telusplanet.net Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. 3’ TY TRAYLOR cone crusher for sale, 2000 HITACHI 750 hyd. excavator, c/w 3 on tandem axle chassis, w/24” in and out buckets, very good cond. 780-983-0936, conveyors. Hodgins Auctions, April 17th, Pacesetter Equipment, Westlock, AB. 1-800-667-2075, hodginsauctioneers.com 2006 HITACHI ZX270, LC-3, hydraulic excavator, c/w hyd. thumb, multi function aux. hyds. 587-991-6605, Edmonton, AB.
3 ROME R67H pull scrapers; 3 Rome R89H HYDRAULIC PULL SCRAPERS 10 to 25 pull scrapers. Please call Russ for more inyds., exc. cond.; Loader and scraper tires, fo. 204-619-3252, Lundar, MB. custom conversions available. Looking for Cat cable scrapers. Quick Drain Sales Ltd., D6C 10K DOZER, twin tilt blade, 2 winches, brush rake incl., good running cond., 306-231-7318, 306-682-4520 Muenster SK $26,000. 780-898-1195, Evansburg, AB. 1998 D6R LGP CAT, 16,000 hrs., CAH, 3 shank ripper, single tilt, 30” pads, under- CAT HYDRAULIC PULL SCRAPERS: carriage 90%, vg cond., $76,000. can email 463, 435, 80 and 70, all very good cond. new conversion. Also new and used scrappictures. Call 780-349-9810, Thorhild, AB. er tires. Can deliver. 204-793-0098, Stony EXCELLENT SELECTION Used skidsteers, Mountain, MB. track loaders, forklifts, zoom booms, mini excavators. Visit www.glenmor.cc for de- WANTED: OLDER JAW CRUSHER, aptails, specs and prices. Glenmor, phone prox. 12x24, nothing fancy, may consider 306-764-2325, Prince Albert, SK. roll crusher. Wanted for farm use on small gravel pit. 306-862-8518, Choiceland, SK. 3’ TRAYLOR CONE crusher for sale, w/1036 Pioneer jaw crusher on tri-axle HYDRAULIC SCRAPERS, Cat, Allis Chalmchassis, w/30” in and out conveyors. Hod- ers, Letourneau, 6 yards to 35 yards, also g i n s A u c t i o n S a l e , A p r i l 1 7 t h , direct mount scrapers; scraper tires; direct 1-800-667-2075. hodginsauctioneers.com mount motor graders from $14,950. Call HYDRAULIC SCRAPERS: LEVER 60, 70, 204-822-3797, Morden, MB. 80, and 435, 4 to 20 yd. available, rebuilt D7G PARTS FOR SALE: Angle blade with for years of trouble-free service. Lever twin tilts and complete push frame; Lift Holdings Inc., 306-682-3332, Muenster SK cylinders; Ripper and front sweeps. COMPACTORS: 84” and 66” pad foot and 306-745-7168, Esterhazy, SK. smooth drum. For sale or rental. Conquest JD 772D GRADER, 2005, AWD, 8700 hrs., Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. $125,000. New ripper fits Cat 140M, WANTED: CAT TRACTOR SCRAPER 619 $11,000. Call 403-291-1010, Calgary, AB. o r 6 2 1 F. P l e a s e c a l l e v e n i n g s HARCO RHINO 12’, 3 PTH blade, dual 204-859-2724, Rossburn, MB. gauge wheels w/hyd., skid shoes, Q/A end 2003 D7R SERIES II w/SU blade, angle plates, $6000. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. 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 CHAMPION GRADER model 720, snow 306-845-3407, Turtleford, SK. wing, in good operating cond, ready to go, 2012 CAT MODEL 272D XHP skidsteer, 2 $21,000. Call 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. spd. high flow hyd., cab, AC, heater, new 7 8 ” b u c ke t , 3 7 0 h o u r s , $ 4 9 , 9 0 0 . 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 . 204-864-2391, 204-981-3636, Cartier, MB. 780-755-2295, Edgerton, AB. SKIDSTEER ATTACHMENTS: rock buckets, dirt buckets, grapples and more top D6C 10K SERIES Cat crawler w/dozer, quality. Also have truck decks in stock. $26,000; D65E Komatsu w/angle dozer Quality Welding and Sales 306-731-3009 and w/twin tilt cyls., 50 hrs. since $10,000 w/o, $47,000. 306-698-2619 Wolesely, SK or 306-731-8195, Craven, SK.
EXPLOSIVES CONTRACTOR: Beaver dams, rocks, stumps. Reasonable rates. Federally licensed magazine and insured. Northwest Demolition, Radisson, SK., phone 306-827-2269 or 306-827-7835. CUSTOM BALING/ SWATHING/ SEEDING, Contour, double shoot; also parting 567 baler. Alan at 306-463-8423, Marengo, SK.
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
Rental Purchase Available
HYUNDAI LOADERS FOR SALE OR RENT Variety Of Sizes 3- 6 cu.yd.
TD Sales & Rentals Inc.
1-780-486-0138 1-800-661-4634 Http://www.twindeer.com 2006 JD 240D LC, CAH, Weldco Beales Q/A, hyd. thumb, dig bucket, 66” clean-up bucket and V-bucket, 3600 hrs, exc. cond. ROME PLOW AND KELLO DISC blades and bearings; 24” to 36” notched disc $145,000. 306-981-3475 Prince Albert, SK. blades. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. USED 1997 SAMSUNG SL180-2, A-7013, www.kelloughs.com $39,900. Astro Car & Truck Sales Ltd., www.astro-sales.com 780-567-4202, Clairmont, AB. 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.
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.
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
ENGINES: 353, 453, 471, 8.2L Detroit, 4BT Cummins, 6CT8.3, 3208 Cat and 3306 Cat. Call Western Diesel, 1-800-667-1164.
GREAT PRICES ON new, used and remanufactured engines, parts and accessories for diesel pickups. Large inventory, engines can be shipped or installed. Give us a call or check: www.thickettenginerebuilding.ca Thickett Engine Rebuilding. 204-532-2187, LAPLANTE 14G Cable Scraper. Selling by Russell, MB. Unreserved Auction, Saturday, May 3, Redwater, AB. Terry 780-554-0375. TRI STAR FARM SERVICES: Area Diesel, From Redwater 1 mile East and 2.5 miles various diesel modules. Please call for N o r t h o n R R 2 1 4 . F u l l l i s t i n g a t price. Info: Agriculture diesel solutions. HP increase, increased fuel economy, quick www.prodaniukauctions.com install/removal. 30 day satisfaction guarantee. 306-586-1603, Regina, SK. EXCAVATOR: 2007 DEERE 270D LC, 5300 hours, 188 HP, CAH, $132,500. Conquest Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. CAT D7R LGP, low hrs., vg cond., angle dozer, twin tilt and ripper. 780-983-0936, Pacesetter Equipment, Westlock, AB.
ROAD GRADERS CONVERTED to pull behind large 4 WD tractors, 14’ and 16’ blade widths available. CWK Enterprises, 306-682-3367, 306-231-8358, Humboldt, HOT DEALS!! Check out Larry Kalmakoff 1998 VOLVO TANDEM tandem crane truck SK., www.cwenterprises.ca w/Terex 25 ton crane, 135,000 kms., albums on Facebook, or mervsauto.com or 2006 CASE 621D wheel loader, 4498 hrs, $57,000. Call 250-547-8993, Lumby, BC. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. CAH, ride control, 3rd valve, 20.5-25 tires90%, WBM hydraulic QA, c/w 2.75 cu. yd. CASE CX 36B rubber track trackhoe, bucket and pallet forks, $89,900. Jordan 127 orig. hours. Selling by Unreserved QUALITY UNDERCARRIAGE anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. Auction, Saturday, May 3, Redwater, & REPAIR PARTS FOR USE ON From Redwater 1 mile East and 2.5 CAT 320 EXCAVATOR, QA, clean- AB. North on RR 214. View full listing EQUIPMENT MANUFACTURED BY: 2006 out bucket, 10,000 hrs., nice, $65,000. miles www.prodaniukauctions.com 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB.
Cat, Case, Deere, Hitachi, Kobelco, Komatsu, Volvo and other fine manufacturers
SEALED & LUBRICATED DOZER/LOADER CHAINS
CUSTOM BALE HAULING, self-loading and unloading 17 bale truck. Radisson, SK. 306-827-2269 or 306-827-7835.
2003 CASE 1650K-XLT EROPS, heat, AC, pro-heat, multi-shank ripper, hydro trans, D6 size, exc. cond., 2800 hrs., $95,000. Prince Albert, SK., Rick 306-981-3475.
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.
1991 LIFT-RITE Model #LK10, stock #L-6470, 7700 hrs. Asking price $35,900. 1-780-567-4202, www.astro-sales.com Clairmont, AB.
Excavator links are lubricated using “Extreme Pressure Synthetic Grease” and fitted with the latest style Polyurethane Seal Groups tomaximize lubrican retention and insure long life.
RANCH OIL CONTRACTING LTD. is in the grain hauling business. Truck and Super B, looking for work in NW SK and NE AB. Call 306-238-4800, Goodsoil, SK. 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.
GOOD USED SET of rails w/22” pads and sprockets for FD 14 E, or C Fiat Ac dozer tractor, $3800. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.
JD 9630 scraper model, 1767 hrs., large single tires, bought in 2008, ejector scraper pulled by Caterpillar in 2008, 22 cu. yd. used very little, front rides on tractor, 2007 DOEPKER 10’x53’ tridem lowboy, HYD. EXCAVATOR, link belts, Model 210, large tires and brakes on scraper. Ph centre and live roll. Selling by Unrew/cab guard, hyd. thumb. 780-983-0936, 403-747-2370 evenings, Alix, AB. served Auction on Saturday, May 3, Pacesetter Equipment, Westlock, AB. 1982 DROTT 50E track excavator, 5500 Redwater, AB. From Redwater 1 mile East and 2.5 miles North on RR 214. Full total machine hours, operating and in CAT D8K ANGLE dozer, guarding, sweeps, listing www.prodaniukauctions.com ripper, vg running cond. 780-983-0936, good cond. 306-945-2270, Waldheim, SK. Pacesetter Equipment, Westlock, AB.
SEALED & GREASED EXCAVATOR CHAINS
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
CAT 60 HYDRAULIC scraper, good condition; Richardson 14’ grader, pull type. 780-679-7795, Camrose, AB.
Lubricated Dozer Chains are sealed with Polyurethane Seals and Metal rings to extend operating life and to eliminate the possibility of dry joints between “west turns”.
FORGED LINKS
ITR Links are forged from Boron Steel, quenched, tempered, and induction hardened using the latest automated link hardening equipment to ensure excellent wear resistance under even the most severe working conditions.
PINS & BUSHINGS
Pins and bushings are critical to track chain wear life and are manufactured and dimensionally matched to ensure a perfect fit and sealing and joint integrity. Outside Surface Hardness is > Rockwell C58 to a depth of > 4mm with a core hardness of > Rockwell C34.
CHAIN ASSEMBLY
Lubricated Chains are assembled on fully automated chain assembly lines. Seal installation, Plug introduction and Oil fill quantities are 100% computer controlled and every joint is individually pressure tested to eliminate the possibility of leakage during working conditions. Min / Max interference fit tolerances between the Pins, Bushings and Links are maintained automatically by min/max press force specifications. This process minimizes link breakage and
pin/bushing drifting.
780-413-1740
(Phone) 1-877-413-1774 (Toll Free) • info@terrateam.ca • www.terrateam.ca 9004B Yellowhead Trail, Edmonton NEW MANAGEMENT SINCE 2012
UN RES ERV ED P UBLIC AUCTIO N TUES DAY , APR IL 2 9, 2 014 8:00 a .m . 932 0 – 52 S treetS .E., CALG AR Y S ellin g on b ehalfofS ervice Alb erta, F ortisAlb erta, AltaL in k, City of M ed icin e H at, C ity of Aird rie, T ow n of C ochran e & other con sign ors. S u rp lu s Eq u ip m en tF rom O m ega T ran sp ortS ervices. Pa rtia l Listin g: HY D. EXCAV ATO R S : (2) 2013 Deere 250G LC’s ; 2012 Deere 290G LC; 2008 Ca t345CL; 2006 Deere 270D LC; 2006 Deere 330C; 2003 Deere 200 LC; 2003 Hita chi ZX330 LC; 2001 Ca t 320CL; Deere 270 LC; (2) Hita chi EX700’s ; Hita chi EX60; Bobca t 331. M O TO R G R ADER S : 2007 Volvo G 990; 2005 Ca t 160H VHP; (3) 2004 Ca t 160H VHP’s ; 2004 Ca t14H; Cha m p ion 750A . M O TO R S CR APER S : (4) Ca t631D’s ; (3) Terex TS 14’s . W HEEL LO ADER S : (3) 2011 Deere 544K’s ; 2006 Deere 444J; 2006 Deere 624J; 2002 Ca t980G S eries II. CR AW LER DO ZER S : Ca tD9L; (2) Kom a ts u D65EX-12; M its u bis hi BD2G . AS PHALT: Ced a r Ra p id s C R416R Pa ver. LO AD ER BAC KH O ES : C a s e 480F; Deere 410C . S KIDS TEER S : 2009 Bobca t S 250; 2008 Bobca t 463; 2006 Bobca t S 175; 2004 Ca t246; Bobca t873; Ca s e 70XT. CO M PACTIO N : 2000 Ca t815F; (2) Pu ll Typ e S heep s footPa ck ers . UTILITY & M AIN TEN AN CE: (2) 2009 A rg o A ven g er 750 8x8 A TV’s ; Elg in S treet S w eep er. EM ER G EN CY : Volvo Em erg en cy Res p on s e Res cu e Un it. G R AV EL TR UCKS : 2004 M a ck G ra n ite CCV713; (2) 2001 IHC 4900 T/ A ’s ; IHC 9300 T/ A ; M a ck RD688S T/ A . TR AILER S : Kn ig htT/ A G ra vel Pu p ; (3) W a ba s h 48’ T/ A Deck s ; O ffice Tra ilers ; (2) T/ A Du a lly TiltDeck s ; Va n Tra ilers ; New Un u s ed Utility Tra ilers , En clos ed Tra ilers . R ECR EATIO N : (12) Clu b Ca rPreced en t48 VoltElectric G olfCa rs ; W es tw in d s 5th W heel; A TV’s . Cra n e & S ervice Tru ck s , S tora g e Con ta in ers , Etc. For a com p rehen s ive brochu re p lea s e ca ll Ca n a d ia n Pu b lic Au ctio n Ltd . 403- 2 69- 6600 o r 800- 786- 0857. Ho m e Pa ge a tw w w.ca n a d ia n pu b lica u ctio n .co m G .S .T. a p p lies . A 10% ha n d lin g fee a p p lies to ea ch lots ellin g for$5,000.00 or les s , a 2.5% ha n d in g fee a p p lies to ea ch lot s ellin g g rea ter tha n $5,000.00 w ith a ca p of $1,000.00 p er lot. Live In tern et Bid d in g w w w .ca n a d ia n pu b lica u ctio n .co m a ll in tern et p u rcha s es a re s u bject to a n in tern et bu yer’s fee & a d ep os it m a y be req u ired d ep en d in g on you r p u rcha s e his tory. Au ctio n Licen se #2 002 78, AM V IC Licen se #2 002 79.
3406B, N14, SERIES 60, running engines and parts. Call Yellowhead Traders, 306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK. 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. 290 CUMMINS, 350 Detroit, 671 Detroit, Series 60 cores. 306-539-4642, Regina, SK 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.
FARM AND INDUSTRIAL ELECTRICAL motor sales, service and parts. Also sale of, and repairs to, all makes and sizes of pumps and phase converters, etc. Tisdale Motor Rewinding 1984 Ltd., 306873-2881, fax 306-873-4788, 1005A- 111 Ave., Tisdale, SK. www.tismtrrewind.com
HIP ROOF BARN to be moved, 44’x50’, 27’ high, all metal clad, red walls, galvanized roof, $3000. 306-831-8808, Rosetown, SK. 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
62 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
P RICED TO CLEAR!!!
w w w .go o do n.co m
Fo r A llY o ur Fa rm , C o m m ercia l& Industria lN eeds
1-800-665-0470 S to ny Pla in O ffice 780-975-3748 A irdrie O ffice 403-470-4570 M B S a les 204-534-2468 S a sk. S a les 306-737-8788 V erm ilio n O ffice 780-581-5822
$ $ $ $ $ $ 7 5 TR UC KLOAD S $ $ 29 G AUG E FULL H AR D 100,000 P S I $ $ H IG H TEN S ILE R OOFIN G & S ID IN G $ $ 16 C OLOUR S TO C H OOS E FR OM $ $ 2 $ B-G r. Colou red . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70¢ ft $ 2 $ M u lti Colou rM illen d s . . . . . 49¢ ft $ $ $ BEAT THE P RICE $ $ IN C R E A S E S $ $ AS K ABO UT O UR BLO W O UT $ $ CO LO RS AT $0.6 5 S Q . FT. $ $ CALL N O W $ $ $ $ F o u illa rd S teel $ $ S u p p lies L td . $ $ S t. La za re, M a n . $ $ 18 005 103303 $ $ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
EA R L Y
R OR D E
ZIP P ERLO CK
WHEN
Quality COUNTS
Buildin g Com p a n y (2005) In c.
O rde r N O W f or 2014 Cons tru c tion • The HEAVIEST metal • The STRONGEST posts • SUPERIOR craftsmenship Choose Prairie Post Frame
EXPERIENCED POST FRAME BUILDERS REQUIRED
Au tho rized In d ep en d en tBu ild er Pre Engineered Structural SteelBuildings
1-888-6 92-5515
1-855 (773-3648)
D errick - Cell
306 -6 31-8550
www.prairiepostframe.ca
w w w .z ip p e rloc k .c om
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
14’ Hopper cone $2,190 18’ Hopper cone $3,725 19’ Hopper cone $3,845 21’ Hopper cone $6,440 24’ Hopper cone $8,900 Optional skid bases and aeration available.
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• H igh P ro file • B ig O verh ea d Do o rs • Eq uip m en t • Gra in • F ertilizer • P o ta to es • S h o p s
SD L HO PPER C O NES
Hopper Cones starting at
New 18-05 Meridian Hopper Bin (approx. 5000 bu.). Ladders, Remote lid opener, Safety-fill indicator, 12 leg hopper, 37 degree slope, Manhole, Double 6x4x.188w skid base
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
$10,575. Other sizes of new bins also available.
Remote Lid Openers starting at $129.00
SD L H OP P E R CONE 306-324-4441
Prices do not include setup or freight. Prices subject to change. Quantities are Limited.
M ARG O ,SASK.
BBB BIN CONSTRUCTION- Erections, extensions and repairs in SK. Fully insured. The 2014 season is filling up fast. Call 306-716-3122, Eston, SK. 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. WESTEEL ROSCO 5 and 6 ring. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
M&K Welding Melfort, Sask
1-887-752-3004
EACH DOOR IS CUSTOM MEASURED, BUILT, DELIVERED AND
PROFESSIONALLY INSTALLED. THE POWERHOUSE OF THE DOOR INDUSTRY
Medicine Hat, AB Lethbridge, AB 3755 - 18th Ave. North 1065 - 30 St. S.W. (403) 526-0925 (403) 320-5400 1-877-414-4043 1-800-325-4445 Calgary, AB 101, 4800 - 104th St., S.E. (403) 279-3355 1-877-642-2923
Northern Alberta Southern Alberta Saskatchewan Manitoba
1-866-497-5338 1-855-532-4475 1-306-355-2718 1-855-542-5117
Email: sales@mkwelding.ca www.mkwelding.ca
BOOK NOW
GRAIN HAN D LIN G & STORAGE
FOR SPRING! 1-866-974-7678
POLE BARNS, WOODSTEEL packages, hog, chicken, and dairy barns, grain bins and hoppers. Construction and concrete crews available. Mel or Scott, MR Steel Construction, 306-978-0315, Hague, SK. AFAB INDUSTRIES POST frame buildings. For the customer that prefers quality. WANTED: USED COVER-ALL building, 40-50’ wide, 60-100’ long, AB/SK. Can take 1-888-816-AFAB (2322), Rocanville, SK. down. Call: 780-984-7860, Leduc, AB.
FARM BUILDINGS
BOOKING SPECIALS ON large diameter bin erection, concrete and damage repair. Call Quadra Development Corp, toll free 1-800-249-2708, Rocanville, SK.
• HUTCHIN SON Grain Pum ps/ Loop Chain Conveyors • Galvanized Bucket Elevators • Galvanized Drag Chain Conveyors • RailLoad-Out System s • Pulse Crop Handling Equipm ent • SUKUP Bins & Aeration
• GRAIN GUARD Bins & Aeration
1-800-561-5625
Hague, SK | (306) 225-2288
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. POLY HOPPER BINS, 100 bu., $925; 150 bu. $1290. 306-258-4422, Vonda, SK. Call for nearest dealer. www.buffervalley.com
Saskatoon, SK
Phone: 306-373-4919
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“Today’s Quality Built For Tomorrow”
Galvanized • Flat Floor • Hopper Bins Smooth Walls • Fertilizer • Grain • Feed Aeration • Rockets • Fans • Heaters Temp Cables
IntegrityPostStructures.com
www.powerliftdoors.com
BEHLEN STEEL BUILDINGS, quonsets, convex and rigid frame straight walls, grain tanks, metal cladding, farm - comwww.mwdconstruction.com mercial. Construction and concrete crews. DIAMOND CANVAS SHELTERS, sizes Guaranteed workmanship. Call your Saskaranging from 15’ wide to 120’ wide, any toon and northwest Behlen Distributor, length. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. Janzen Steel Buildings, 306-242-7767, Osler, SK. www.starlinesales.com
Grain Bin Direct Factory To Farm Grain Storage
Authorized Dealer
O PT IO NAL SKID BASE AND AERAT IO N
Download the free app today.
SPRING SPECIALS: 5000 bu. Superior bin combos, $11,200; 8000 bushel Superior combos, $17,500. Limited 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. SPECIAL PRICING ON all remaining inventory! 10,400 bu. Twister hopper bins. See your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. CHIEF WESTLAND AND CARADON BIN extensions, sheets, stiffeners, etc. Now available. Call Bill, 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.starlinesales.com TWO GRAIN VAULT 5,500 bushel. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
NEED TO REPLACE YOUR ROTTEN BIN FLOORS??
W E H A VE TH E SO LU TIO N !
www.zaksbuilding.com
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Order Your “FLOOR or “HOPPER” REPLACEMENT
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!
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
OSLER, SASK.
PH: (306) 242-7767 FAX: (306) 242-7895 CHECK US OUT AT www.janzensteelbuildings.com
FOR ALL YOUR 2014 GRAIN & FERTILIZER STORAGE NEEDS
“BOOK EARLY TO GUARANTEE BEST SELECTION” “Up TO 7 YEAR Lease Terms” STANDARD FEATURES INCLUDE: UNSTIFFENED SIDEWALL PANELS WALL & ROOF LADDERS SAFETY RING & SAFETY FILL 18” RACK & PINION GATE MANWAY IN CONE
“ALL JSB CONES ARE SANDBLASTED PRIOR TO PAINTING” 3513 Bu. & 4135 Bu. 4920 Bu. & 5999 Bu. Hopper Bin Combo’s Hopper Bin Combo’s 16’ DIAMETER BIN
18’ DIAMETER BIN
H. Duty 8 leg cone c/w 18” port Painted cone inside & out DBL 4”x6” skid - Setup included Air Screen & 3hp/5hp Fan (Extra)
H. Duty 10 leg cone c/w 24” port Painted cone inside & out DBL 4”x6” skid - Setup included Air Screen & 5hp Fan (Extra)
3513 Bu. $10,430. + delivery 4920 Bu. $13,345. + delivery 4135 Bu. $11,325. + delivery 5999 Bu. $14,910. + delivery
NOW!
E AG R I- TR ADIO N IN N OVAT D AR AW W IN N ER 20 12
WESTFIELD MKX 13x94LP, #1920792, low profile hopper, reverser kit, hyd. lift, electric power swing, $25,000. Ron 780-361-6169, Wetaskiwin Co-op, AB. BROCK (BUTLER) GRAIN BIN PARTS and accessories available at Rosler Construction. 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK. N E W W E S T F I E L D M K 1 3 x 7 1 R P, #1919844, reverse kit and power swing, $16,500. Call Ron at 780-361-6169, Wetaskiwin Co-op Association Ltd., AB. FOR ALL YOUR grain storage, hopper STEALTH BIN PRODUCTS- Goebel bins, cone and steel floor requirements contact: Westeel bins, 14’ hoppers. Early booking Kevin’s Custom Ag in Nipawin, SK. Toll specials. 587-280-0239, Vegreville, AB. free: 1-888-304-2837. www.stealthbins.ca WESTEEL, GOEBEL, grain and fertilizer bins. Grain Bin Direct, 306-373-4919.
grainbindirect.com
7082 Bu. Hopper Bin Combo’s 19.5’ DIAMETER BIN
9702 bu. Hopper Bin Combo’s 22’ DIAMETER BIN
H. Duty 12 leg cone c/w 24” port Painted cone inside & out Double 4”x8” skid Setup included (Saskatoon Area) Air Screen & 7hp Fan (Extra)
H. Duty 14 leg cone c/w 24” port Painted cone inside & out Setup included (Saskatoon Area) Triple 4”x6” skid (Extra) Air Screen & 10hp Fan (Extra)
$19,455. + gst/delivery
$21,855. + gst/delivery
Authorized Dealer
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
READY TO SHIP!! CREWS AVAILABLE!!
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
U S E D W E S T F I E L D M K 1 0 x 6 1 R P, #1928761, regular profile hopper, $4100. Call Ron at 780-361-6169, Wetaskiwin Co-op Association Ltd., AB. BOOKING NOW! Flat and hopper bin moving, Timâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Custom 204-362-7103, Morden, MB. binmovers@hotmail.com
CLASSIFIED ADS 63
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. 2009 WESTEEL NH3 tank, 4 tonne, 2000 gallon, offset axles, Rice lug tires, new inspection, always shedded, $21,750. 306-843-7488, Wilkie, SK.
SCS RAVEN 440 autorate controller, c/w Raven flow control valve and flow meter, Banjo 3-way shut-off valve and pressure spike valve. 60â&#x20AC;&#x2122; of Raven cabling. All you need for liquid variable rate fertilizing, $2000. Phone 306-452-7799, Redvers, 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
BEAVER CONTAINER SYSTEMS, new and used sea containers, all sizes. 306-220-1278, Saskatoon and Regina, SK.
TWISTER 6,000 BUSHEL bin. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
WEATHERPROOF STEEL STORAGE containers 8x40â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, secure, lockable, instant onsite storage. Rent/sale. 1-866-676-6686. 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; AND 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; SEA CONTAINERS, for sale in Calgary, AB. Phone 403-226-1722, 1-866-517-8335. www.magnatesteel.com 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; AND 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; SHIPPING CONTAINERS, large SK. inventory. Ph. 1-800-843-3984, 306-781-2600.
EXTREEEME TRANSPORT
â&#x20AC;&#x153;PIC K A C A N â&#x20AC;&#x201C; A N Y C A N â&#x20AC;?
S P EC IALIZIN G IN H AN D LIN G LOAD ED C ON TAIN ER S
NEW HYDEF CARTS: One 3250 TBT and one Hydef 3750 TBT left for spring availability. Can be configured w/John Blue or hydraulic 3â&#x20AC;? fill, fill pump lights, 800 or 900 rubber. Starting at $32,500. Corner Equip., 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. FERTILIZER TANKS, 10 year limited warranty, 5000 US gallons on sale. Call 306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228. While HORNOI LEASING NEW and used 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; and supplies last. www.hold-onindustries.com 4 0 â&#x20AC;&#x2122; s e a c a n s fo r s a l e o r r e n t . C a l l BANDIT (POLYWEST) 1700 liquid fertilizer cart, ground driven twin piston John Blue 306-757-2828, Regina, SK. Pump, 2â&#x20AC;? Briggs and Straton fill pump. Also Low rate Alpine pump available. $14,000. 306-577-8045, Carlyle, SK. 2012: TORMASTER NH3 4000 gal., on 30â&#x20AC;? tracks, exc. cond.; Blackbird NH3 application kit. 780-206-1234, Barrhead, AB. KEHO, STILL THE FINEST. Clews Storage DICKEY JOHN NH3 complete system 76â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Management/ K. Ltd., 1-800-665-5346. of MRBâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, 4 manifolds used 2 yrs., $4,000; Cooler and 3 manifolds, $2500. KEHO/ GRAIN GUARD Aeration Sales 306-398-7635, 306-398-2626 Cut Knife SK and Service. R.J. Electric, Avonlea, SK. Call 1000 GALLON NH3 tank and wagon w/38â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 306-868-2199 or cell: 306-868-7738. Morris Magnum cult., Atom Jet knives, 17â&#x20AC;? KEHO/ GRAIN GUARD/ OPI STORMAX. centers, $4500 OBO. 780-806-3439 or For sales and service east central SK. and 780-842-4088, Wainwright, AB. MB., call Gerald Shymko, Calder, SK., 2000 GAL. WESTEEL NH3 tank on Duo306-742-4445 or toll free 1-888-674-5346. Lift trailer, 1995, 1996, and 1997. Last 5 yr. safety August, 2010. Purchased new, $16,500 each. 306-421-1110, Torquay, SK. TRI STAR FARM SERVICES: 2013 CrustFOR ALL YOUR Buster field loader, fertilizer, 24â&#x20AC;?, SS frame, 13 HP Honda, $21,900. 306-586-1603, Regina, SK. EQUIPMENT NEEDS BATCO CONVEYORS, new and used, ADAMS SPREADER & TENDER grain augers and SP kits. Delivery and CALL US FOR PARTS ON ALL leasing available. 1-866-746-2666.
FERTILIZER
BUILD YOUR OWN conveyors, 6â&#x20AC;?, 7â&#x20AC;?, 8â&#x20AC;? and 10â&#x20AC;? 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. MINIC BELT CONVEYOR, 30â&#x20AC;?x24â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, used in grain only, c/w stand and 3 HP 3 phase motor, exc. cond., $7000. 204-745-8909, Carmen, MB. BATCO 1545LP CONVEYOR, 2 only w/mover and engine complete. Delivery available. 306-648-3321, Gravelbourg, SK.
SPREADER/TENDER MAKES AND MODELS
MERIDIAN GRAIN AUGERS: SP kits and clutches, Kohler, Vanguard engines, gas and diesel. Call Brian â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;The Auger Guyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 204-724-6197, Souris, MB.
ADAMS 6 TON SPREADER 304SS Construction
21,995 00 Delivered
$
Limited Supply
MOBILITY 8 TON SPREADER
:RUOGĂ&#x17D;V %HVW +RSSHU
Limited Supply
C ON TAIN ER S ALES AN D R EN TALS
www.nuvisionfhs.com
JD 1650 59â&#x20AC;&#x2122; DT c/w Valmar, harrows, auto NH3, Valmar twin 1200 gal. tanks, KEN SEBASTIAN 265 PSI, trailer with track erasers. EX TR EEEM E TR AN S P OR T C OR P OR ATION 306-237-4582, Perdue, SK. P O Bo x 147 La m pm a n S K S 0C 1N 0 FERTILIZER SPREADERS: 4- 8 ton. Large 306-421-7 7 5 0 selection. 204-857-8403, Portage la PraiEm a il: m a ilto :b ye s e b @ h o tm a il.co m CONVEY-ALL TUBE CONVEYOR: 6â&#x20AC;?x61â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, rie, MB. www.zettlerfarmequipment.com 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; TO 53â&#x20AC;&#x2122; CONTAINERS. New, used and w/wind guards, new 8â&#x20AC;? belt w/only 170 3 FERTILIZER TANKS: 32,500 gal., 25,000. modified. Available Winnipeg, MB; Regina hrs. Up to 1000 bu./hr., asking $4500. gal and 12,500 gal., 2â&#x20AC;? and 3â&#x20AC;? SS valves. Call 306-961-1170, Domremy, SK. and Saskatoon, SK. www.g-airservices.ca 306-864-3696 or caygrain@sasktel.net 306-933-0436.
DARMANI - Building Better Bins D A R M A N I B I N S
FARMERS CHOICE BEST HOPPER
GRAINMAXX NEW
SEE VIDEO ON WEBSITE
6000
TELESCOPIC
SWING AUGER
1 800 667 8800
www.grainmaxx.com WANTED: OLD RED or yellow PTO, 10â&#x20AC;? 60â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Bergen auger, not swing away, in fair shape, useable. Phone 306-252-2810, 306-567-7281, Kenaston, SK. WESTFIELD 7â&#x20AC;?x26â&#x20AC;&#x2122; AUGER, 12 HP Kohler motor with drag auger, $1000. Call: 306-749-2482, Hagen, SK.
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â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;11 Demco 1050 Grain Cart, 900/60R32 tires, 1000 PTO, roll tarp, 18â&#x20AC;? auger, excellent condition! $34,800. Trades welcome. Financing & Leasing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
NEW â&#x20AC;&#x153;Râ&#x20AC;? SERIES Wheatheart Augers: with engine, mover and electric clutch. R-8x41, cash price $12,250; R-8x51, cash 1997 DEGELMAN 800 Shuttlekart grain $12,750; R-10x41, cash $13,500. Call cart. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 306-648-3321, Gravelbourg, SK. REMOTE CONTROL SWING AUGER movers, trailer chute openers, endgate and hoist systems, wireless full bin alarms, digital wireless tractorCam, the Simpler Sampler portable combine. All shipped directly to you. Safety, convenience, reliability. Phone Kramble Industries at: 306-933-2655 or visit: www.kramble.net Saskatoon, SK.
MOBILE COLOR SORTER BUSINESS. Satake 5 chute color sorter- (only 40 hrs.) mounted in 5 ton Freightliner truck, c/w Genset and air compressor. Selling due to health. 403-652-5643, High River, AB. CARTER DISC SEPARATOR w/hopper and stand for wheat, oats, barley, flax. Also rotary screener. 306-283-4747, Langham, SK
2011 FARM KING 1385, 13â&#x20AC;?x85â&#x20AC;&#x2122; grain au- SEED CLEANING EQUIPMENT, elevators ger. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. and small hopper bottom bins for sale. 204-523-7464, Killarney, MB.
FULL-BIN SUPER SENSOR Never Clim b A B in A ga in
Equip yo ur a uge r to s e n s e w h e n th e b in is full. 2 ye a r w a rra n ty. Ca ll Brow n le e s Truckin g In c. Un ity, SK
HUTCH- FANNING CLEANER, Gjesdal Fivein-One 15 bu./hr., wheat and flax screens, $2000; Hart Uniflow Model 2256, 4 indent rollers, $4,000. 306-257-3607, Allan, SK. CUSTOM COLOR SORTING chickpeas to mustard. Cert organic and conventional. 306-741-3177, Swift Current, SK. FORSBERG VACUUM GRAVITY table, model 250V w/Forsberg industrial fan model 23HA. Both refurbished and ready to work. Call 204-724-6673, Souris, MB.
TWO HYDRAULIC DRILL fills in good con- DUAL STAGE ROTARY SCREENERS and dition, $825/each. Phone 306-642-3189, Kwik Kleen 5-7 tube. Call 204-857-8403, Portage la Prairie, MB. or visit on-line: Assiniboia, SK. www.zettlerfarmequipment.com 2 DRAG AUGERS to fit 2010 Timpte grain trailer, gas powered hydraulics. Call KAMAS WESTRUP UB1000 air screen, 6No. 3 Carter indents, LMC Marc 500 306-278-2664, Weeks, SK. gravity, various cyclones, fans and bucket SAKUNDIAK 7x45 WHE ATHE ART kit, elevators. Email: Cal@vandaeleseeds.com sweep and magnetic clutch, $7000 OBO. Phone 204-665-2384, Medora, MB. 306-834-8100, Major, SK. INDENT SHELLS FOR 32 indent, assorted sizes, $400 OBO. Phone 306-648-8005, Gravelbourg, SK. SEED CLEANING EQUIPMENT for sale: 3 air/screens; 4 drum indent; disc/indent and others price reduced items. Radisson, SK. Call Darryl 306-827-7446 or e-mail Hart: haidnhart@yahoo.ca
SORTEX-Z CLASS 1V color sorter, single module w/2 monochromatic cameras, very low hrs., in new cond., c/w Ingersoll2011 BRANDT 13x90 hyd. swing auger, Rand rotary compressor, 10 HP, w/cooler bushels/hour, double auger chute, and dryer. Call 204-724-6673, Souris, MB. AUGERS: NEW and USED: Wheatheart, 11,900 Located Kamsack, SK. Can delivWestfield, Westeel, Sakundiak augers; Au- $19,500. ger SP kits; Batco conveyors; Wheatheart er. Call anytime 204-743-2324. post pounders. Good prices, leasing SAKUNDIAK GRAIN AUGERS available SUKUP GRAIN DRYERS: 1 or 3 phase, liqavailable. Call 1-866-746-2666. with self-propelled mover kits and bin uid propane or nat. gas, canola screens. 2010 WHEATHEART SA1061 10â&#x20AC;?x61â&#x20AC;&#x2122; grain sweeps. Contact Kevinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Custom Ag in Ni- Early order discount pricing now in effect. For info call: 204-998-9915, Altamont, MB. auger. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. pawin, SK. Toll free 1-888-304-2837.
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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.
Custom NH3 Solutions
1.306.642.3460
www.thehopper.ca DARMANI - Building Better Bins
DARMANI - Building Better Bins
GRAIN STORAGE SPECIALS 1-866-665-6677
FLAT MOUNT HOPPER MOUNT CEMENT MOUNT 4,000- 40,000 bushels pkgs
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2003 WESTFIELD J 10x36 grain auger, 25 HP Kohler motor, exc. cond., $5200. TRI STAR FARM SERVICES: 2013 CrustBuster 1325 grain cart, 20â&#x20AC;? auger tarp, 204-227-8599, 204-227-0639, Dugald, MB. 520-38/duals, $77,500. 2013 CrustBuster, 330 bu. seed tender, G.N. 12â&#x20AC;? belt/8â&#x20AC;? tube, 5 HP Honda scale, remote control, $33,500. 2013 CrustBuster, Pro Box Tote, bump pull, 2 box, 8â&#x20AC;? belt/6â&#x20AC;? tube, remote HIGH CAPACITY AUGERS control, $13,999. 306-586-1603 Regina SK 8 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM NEW HOPPER WAGONS! 400 bu. with tarp, $8,900; 600 bu., $14,500. See your nearest Flaman store or call SERIES 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com
w w w .fullb in s upe rs e n s o r.co m
1 800 667 8800
All s ize s a s w e ll a s cus to m b uiltco n ta in e rs . Lo a d a n d un lo a d fro m o th e r trucks o r ra il ca rs . Plea s e ca ll fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n
2009 LOFTNESS EXTRACTOR, does 9â&#x20AC;&#x2122; or 1 0 â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 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. STARTING AT $599 9â&#x20AC;&#x2122; and 10â&#x20AC;&#x2122; grain bag sale. See your nearest Flaman location or call 1-888-435-2626.
S A K U N D I A K A U G E R S I N S TO C K : 2010 RICHIGER EA350 10â&#x20AC;&#x2122; grain bag exswings, truck loading, Hawes Agro SP tractor, in good shape, $25,000. George movers. Contact Hoffart Services Inc. 306-441-9299, Paynton, SK. Odessa, SK, 306-957-2033. 2009 AKRON E9250 grain bagger. Call 2009 FARM KING 16x104 #HS3152A, 1-800-67-2075. PL #915407. $19,900 cash. Call: 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca
306-228-297 1 o r 1-87 7 -228-5 5 98
All 409SS Construction
25,550 00 Delivered
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G ra in , furn iture , ve h icle s , co n s tructio n & b uild in g s upplie s e tc.
SHIPPING CONTAINERS FOR SALE. 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122;53â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, delivery/ rental/ storage available. For inventory and prices call: 306-262-2899, Saskatoon, SK. www.thecontainerguy.ca BOND INDUSTRIAL SEA CONTAINERS. The best storage you can buy. New/used and modified sea containers for sale. Secure, portable, weather and rodent proof. Guaranteed 8â&#x20AC;&#x2122; to 53â&#x20AC;&#x2122; available. Ask a rep. about our modifications. Bond Industrial 306-373-2236, joe@bondind.com or visit our website at www.bondind.com SHIPPING CONTAINERS FOR SALE. 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; to 53â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, delivery, rental, storage available. Accessories (shelving, dividers, etc), modifications, etc. For inventory and prices call Containers & Chains, 780-910-3542 St. Albert, AB. email: dick@rjpsales.com CONTAINERS FOR SALE OR RENT: All sizes available. Also tilt deck services. Call 306-861-1102, Radville, SK.
2010 CASE 4520 AutoSteer, 1100 hrs., 70â&#x20AC;&#x2122; booms, $223,000; 2007 Case 4520, 3 bin, 70â&#x20AC;&#x2122; booms, 3300 hrs., $179,000; 2006 Case 4510, AutoSteer, FlexAir 70â&#x20AC;&#x2122; booms, 7400 hrs., $102,000; 2005 Case 4520 w/70â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 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 â&#x20AC;&#x2122; b o o m s , i m m a c u l at e , $93,000; 2002 Case 4260 w/1100 gal. tank, 80â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 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, 70â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 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. Northwestâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s largest used selection of fertilizer equipment. 406-466-5356, Choteau, MT. For more equipment and photos view website www.fertilizerequipment.net 2004 BOURGAULT LFC2000, w/John Blue double piston pump, 2â&#x20AC;? Honda fill and agitation pump, shedded, excellent condition, $15,500. 306-217-0314, Bredenbury, SK. LOOKING FOR A floater or tender? Call me first. 34 years experience. Loral parts, new and used. Call 403-650-7967, Calgary, AB.
NEW SAKUNDIAK AUGERS in Stock: Used: Brandt 10â&#x20AC;?x60â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 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
DARMANI - Building Better Bins
D A R M A N I B I N S
DARMANI - Building Better Bins
â&#x20AC;˘ Heaviest in the Industry â&#x20AC;˘ Complete twin 2000 Gal units ready for seeding â&#x20AC;˘ Wagons for existing tanks.
Box 46 â&#x20AC;˘ Beatty, SK S0J 0C0
DWAYNE ENTERPRISES Ph: 306-752-4445 Fax: 306-752-5574 www.dwayneenterprises.ca
64 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
BUCKET ELEVATORS. 100 bu./hr. - 10,000 bu./hr. Great for feeding/unloading grain dryers, cleaning facilities or turning your bin yard into a complete handling system. Flaman Grain Cleaning, 306-986-9303. www.flamangraincleaning.com
2006 HESSTON 956A round baler, twine and netwrap, in-chamber moisture tester, kicker arm, clean, always shedded, makes great bales, very high capacity, one owner, $16,500. 306-893-2879, Maidstone, SK.
2012 CASE WD1903 36â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 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.
1989 NH 1079 SP bale wagon, Ford dsl. MASSEY FERGUSON 775 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122; SP swather SELLING GRAIN LEGS, distributors, con- eng., $35,000; Hesston 4590 small square w/6 cylinder engine. Call 1-800-667-2075. veyors and truck scales. Also other eleva- baler, $8,500. 306-232-7784, Rosthern, SK PL #915407. tors parts. 403-634-8540, Grassy Lake, AB. 2004 WESTWARD 93521 w/WS30. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. RITEWAY LANDROLLER F3 and F5 series in 1995 MACDON PREMIER 2900 swather, KEEP YOUR GRAIN SAFE. Temperature stock. Be ready for seeding. See your near- 2426 hrs., 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 960 header, double swath, and moisture cables from OPI systems. est Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. gage wheels, PU reels, vg cond., $29,500 C a l l t h e b i n e x p e r t s a t F l a m a n www.flaman.com OBO. Call 306-743-7622, Langenburg, SK. 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com 2008 18â&#x20AC;&#x2122; MACDON haybine 1-3/8â&#x20AC;?x1000 MASSEY 200 SP, 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, very well maintained, Wireless Grain Monitoring FROM YOUR RPM PTO, done approx. 1000 acres, shedfield ready, $26,000. 306-764-7920, PHONE! New product at Flaman. Ask about ded, $25,000. 306-842-5202, Midale, SK. 306-961-4682 leave msg Prince Albert, SK. Bin Sense. See your nearest Flaman store GOT MOLE HILLS? Level mole hills and or call 1-888-435-2626. 2006 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; MACDON, 2952i Model, 1730 hrs, animal mounds with Ag Shieldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s exclusive $60,000 OBO. Call 306-386-4711 eves., Landroller leveling blades. Renovate hay Cochin, SK. fields, pasture and cropland. Levelling CONEYAIR GRAIN VACS, parts, accesso- blade option on Ag Shield Landrollers from 2012 PREMIER M105 2- 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; MacDon D50 ries. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. 1 1 . 5 t o 5 2 â&#x20AC;&#x2122; . O r d e r y o u r s t o d a y ! h e a d e r. C a l l 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 6 7 - 2 0 7 5 . P L 1-844-227-1831. www.agshield.com #915407. www.starlinesales.com 2 0 0 9 R E M 2 7 0 0 g r a i n v a c . C a l l FITS JD R450, 2005 HoneyBee draper 2008 JD 4895, 760 eng. hrs, 574 header header, 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, vg condition. Stony Plain, AB., hrs, HoneyBee 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, PU reel, swath roller, 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. call 780-203-9593 or 780-963-0641. $75,000. 403-485-0262, Vulcan, AB. GRAIN VACS: Brandt 4000, $7000; Brandt 4500, $7500; Weigh wagon w/digital 2012 JD R450 windrower, loaded, ATU, 2 0 0 4 M AC D O N 2 9 5 2 1 s w at h e r. C a l l harness, brackets, 335 eng. hrs., 220 hrs. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. scale, $3500. 1-866-938-8537. on headers; JD 995 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122; discbine w/TriTIMâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S REPAIR has REM grain vacs for lobe crimper. 780-524-2143 Valleyview AB sale: 2500â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, 2700â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, new and used and 3700â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s. 306-784-2407 or 306-772-1004, Herbert, SK.
BALE SPEAR ATTACHMENTS for all loaders and skidsteers, excellent pricing. Call now 1-866-443-7444. 2004 NEW IDEA 6x5 soft core round baler, w/PU reverser, $5000. 204-525-4521, www.waltersequipment.com Minitonas MB
UNIVERSAL HAYBINE REVERSER A flip of a switch from your tractor seat saves time, money and ensures operator safety. Kits available for most makes and models. Only $1550/kit. www.qvbenterprises.com Esterhazy, SK. Call: Duane 306-745-3801 NH 1063 PT square bale wagon, exc. or Ken 306-745-3720. cond., always shedded. 780-986-4605, USED SCHULTE 15â&#x20AC;&#x2122; mowers and flex arms 780-498-6859, Leduc County, AB. coming soon. Call Flaman BALE SPEARS, high quality imported 1-888-435-2626. from Italy, 27â&#x20AC;? and 49â&#x20AC;?, free shipping, exc 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 DRY HAY FASTER! With Ag Shieldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ReCon 400 3PP, replace your rake pass, cut 1-866-443-7444, Stonewall, MB. drying time in half, combine up to two 18â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 2005 NH BR780 round baler, will take old- windrows, move swaths onto dry ground. 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 Order yours today! 1-844-227-1831. 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. www.agshield.com
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TWIN HESSTON HYD. side delivery rakes, #3831 and #3830, exc. cond., $7900 for both OBO. Westward 912 Jiffy 12 wheel Vr a ke , e x c e l l e n t s h ap e , $ 8 2 5 0 O B O. 780-798-2280, Plamondon, AB.
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2010 JD 9870, 20.8x42 duals, contour, Prodrive, 670 sep. hrs, clean, shedded, $220,000. 204-371-9928, Steinbach, MB.
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1995 JD 9600, Greenlighted 200 hrs. ago, always shedded, excellent condition, $67,000. 306-764-7920 or 306-961-4682 leave message, Prince Albert, SK. 1994 JD 9600, 914 PU, 3500 threshing hrs, shedded, Redekop chopper, new hammers, feeder chain, fore/aft, field ready, $40,000. 306-736-7715, Glen Avon, SK.
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. 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 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; MacDon FD 70, $295,000. 306-967-2534, Eatonia, SK. 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.
2-2001 TR99 Combines w/ Swathmaster or Rakeup â&#x20AC;˘ $50,000 workorder, 1757 sep hrs.$59,800 â&#x20AC;˘ 2000 sep hrs., good condition .... $39,800 Financing available. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 2006 CR960, 1730 hrs., 76C 15â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 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. 2008 NH CR9060 w/Swathmaster PU, 1,130 sep. hours. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
2001 CIH 2388, 2061 sep. hrs., Y&M, hop- GLEANER R-62 SP with Cummins diesel per topper, always shedded, second set of engine. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407 concaves. 204-746-8971, Lowe Farm, MB. 1996 CASE 2188, 2300 sep hrs., Redekopp chopper, good cond, shedded, asking $37,900 OBO. Cudworth, SK. Call Paul or Wes 306-256-3500 or 306-230-9901. 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 M150 2010 35â&#x20AC;&#x2122; D50 single knife, PU reel, Gary Reimer, 204-326-7000. factory transport, rotoshears, new knife 2013 CASE 9230, 150 hrs, lux. cab, 620 and canvas in 2013, 788 header hrs., just duals, 750 rears, HD lateral tilt, small tube canola in 2013, $99,000 OBO. Delivery rotor, hyd. hopper cover, high cap. folding â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;97 JD CTS Combine F/C chop, chaff available. 780-204-0391 or 780-786-2867, unload auger, point spout, Magna fine cut sprdr, nice & clean combine, pickup inc. $39,800. Trades welcome. Financing Mayerthorpe, AB. chopper, HID, air comp, AutoSteer and & Leasing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 4750 VERSATILE swather, UII PU reel, mapping. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. s h e d d e d , 2 1 1 2 h o u r s , $ 8 5 0 0 O B O. 2011 JD 9770, 20.8x42 duals, contour, 204-734-8093, Swan River, MB. RWA, 320 sep. hrs, clean, shedded, 2005 MF 9220 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 1030 hours, exc. shape, $250,000. 204-371-9928, Steinbach, MB. $57,500. 306-734-2762, 306-567-7895, Craik, SK. 2006 JD 9760 STS, 1800/2300 hrs., Greenlighted yearly, new injectors, conVERSATILE 4400 20â&#x20AC;&#x2122; SP swather w/Ford 6 cave, feeder house, Y&M, vg cond., cyl. eng. Call 1-800-667-2075 PL #915407 $145,000. 306-230-2736, Assiniboia, SK. 2008 JOHN DEERE 4895 SP swather. Call SELLING TWO- 2002 JD 9750 STS, 2180 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. sep. hrs., clean, vg cond., shedded, Mav chopper, Swathmaster PU, upgraded ac2011 MACDON M150 35â&#x20AC;&#x2122; D60D 160 celerator. 306-398-7713, Cut Knife, SK. eng. hrs, 103 cutting hrs, dual direction, booster spring kit, hyd. center link, dual JD 6620 DIESEL, 3150 hrs., wide axle, knife drive, split reel, transport pkg, poly good rubber, chopper, vg condition, $8500 skids, hyd. freeform mounted roller, Roto- New Salvage OBO. 403-381-4817, Lethbridge, AB. area. ¡ â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;06 Cat Lexion 590R, under 1000 hrs Shears. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. ¡ â&#x20AC;&#x2122;11 JD 9770 STS, less than 600 hrs, 2008 JD 9870 STS SP, c/w JD 615P PU awesome parts incl. complete dual kit header. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407 $16,900 www.combineworld.com 1-800-667-4515 2004 JD 9860, w/914 PU, Y&M, hopper MOLE HILL LEVELER, 24â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, fully hydraulic, ext. 1891 sep./2666 eng. hrs., Greenlightlike new, folds up to 8â&#x20AC;&#x2122;. 204-564-2540, 2007 LEXION 580R Cat, 1799 engine hrs., ed Oct. 2013. 204-648-4649, Dauphin, MB. Shellmouth, MB. clean, vg cond, shedded, Swathmaster PU. 2010 JD 9770 STS, 774 sep. hrs., c/w JD 568 BALER, silage special, Harvest-Teck Call 306-398-7713, Cut Knife, SK. 2012 JD 615P PUB header w/only 100 hrs. hay preservative applicator, auto-rate, on header, Contour-Master high torque moisture readout, all new chains last seavariable spd. feeder house, high cap. lift son; MacDon 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 922 auger header, atcyl., 22â&#x20AC;&#x2122; high capacity unload auger, wide tached 722 crimper, tall crop dividers, 2008 NH CR9070, twin rotor w/2011 15â&#x20AC;&#x2122; spread fine cut chopper, 800/70R38, small 790CP PU, IntelliView II monitor, Y&M, double knife, new knives, guards, holdand large grain concaves, always shedded, downs, knife heads and crimper belts; long auger, MAV chopper, HHC, on-board exc. cond., $235,000. Call Jordan anytime Tube-Line bale wrappers (2) Model TL5500 compressor, MegaWide 900 singles, map- 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. automatic, w/lights, remote steer and p i n g , 1 1 8 3 s e p . h r s . , $ 1 7 8 , 0 0 0 . stop, tarp covers. All equipment in exc. 306-647-2344, Theodore, SK. 1996 JD 9600, yield monitor, JD 914 PU, cond., Call for more details. Dan Van FOUR - NEW HOLLAND CR9070 combines. hopper extensions, tires 70%, 3200 threshDeynze, Holland, MB. 204-526-2746 home, Prices start at $155,000. 1-888-442-3816, i n g h o u r s , s h e d d e d , $ 3 3 , 9 0 0 O B O. 204-526-5257 cell. 204-328-7158, Rivers, MB. or www.farmworld.ca
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.
MF 550, Perkins dsl., hydrostatic with MF PU header, Melroe 378 PU, 9120 straight cut flex header, $5,000. 306-858-2529, 306-867-9899, Lucky Lake, SK. 2004 MF 9790, FieldStar, 1250/1700 hrs., c/w MF 4000 PU and Swathmaster, MF 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 5 0 0 0 r i g i d h e a d e r, $ 1 2 0 , 0 0 0 O B O. 306-874-7110, Naicam, SK.
2008 NEW HOLLAND 94C header. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 2006 HONEYBEE DRAPER 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 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. 2007 NEW HOLLAND 94C, 36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, CR/CX adaptor, Call: 403-823-0587, Carbon, AB. 2009 MACDON FD70, $60,000. and 2008 MACDON FD70, $55,000. Both 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, all options, 60/70 JD hook-up, shedded, vg cond. Call 306-648-2418, Gravelbourg, SK. JD 635 HYDRAFLEX w/PU reel, $23,500. Can deliver. Call Brian 204-856-6119 or 204-685-2896, MacGregor, MB. TRI STAR FARM SERVICES: 2014 Capello corn header, 8 row and 12 row chopping. Spring Special. 306-586-1603, Regina, SK. RECONDITIONED rigid and flex, most makes and sizes; also header transports. Ed Lorenz, 306-344-4811, Paradise Hill, SK. www.straightcutheaders.com WE STOCK MOST SIZES and makes of flex platforms, some pickup platforms, and rigid platforms. We also have adaptors in stock to fit a JD platform onto CIH, NH or Agco-MF combines. In stock JD 920, 925, 930, 630, 635 flex, JD 843, 893 corn heads, JD 653 all crop, NH 973 w/wo air reel, NH 94 C draper 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, CIH 1020, 2020 flex, 1010 rigid, MF 9750 flex, Cat Lexion and Agco avail. Call Gary 204-326-7000. Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy. 12 North, Steinbach, MB. reimerfarmequipment.com 2002 CASE/IH 1020 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; flex header, auto header height, hyd. fore/aft, PU reel; 1986 Case/IH 1010 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; straight header, batt r e e l ; 4 w h e e l 3 0 â&#x20AC;&#x2122; f l e x h e a d t r a i l e r. 204-746-8971, Lowe Farm, MB. SPEED UP YOUR CANOLA AND PEA HARVEST! With an Ag Shield cross auger kit. Turnkey kits for less. Add to your combine or swather draper header, prevent feeding issues and increase productivity by 50% on average. Built to match header models; Agco, Case, HoneyBee, JD, MacDon, MF and NH. Order yours today! 1-844-227-1831. www.agshield.com
LEVELLING SHOVELS
DESIGNED FOR LEVELING MOUNDS IN HAY FIELDSâ&#x20AC;Ś BOLTS TO YOUR CULTIVATOR SHANKS LIKE REGULAR SHOVELSâ&#x20AC;Ś EASILY INSTALLED AND WORK GREAT!
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2010 JD 9770 STS, w/1615 PU header, 20.8x42 duals, large rear tires, $275,000. Call A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment Ltd., 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK.
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2009 HONEYBEE SP36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, 2388 adapter, fore/aft, PU reel, pea auger, newer knife and drapers, lifters, under 7000 acres. Call 403-599-3945, Milo, AB. 2 0 1 0 C A S E 2 1 4 2 h e a d e r. C a l l 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. MF 9750 FLEX 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; PU reel, poly skids, field ready, off MF 8570 consignment, located in Cabri, SK. $12,900. Reimer Farm Equipment, Hwy. 12 North, Steinbach, MB. Gary, 204-326-7000. reimerfarmequipment.com FITS JD R450, 2005 HoneyBee draper header, 25â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, vg condition. Stony Plain, AB., call 780-203-9593 or 780-963-0641. HONEYBEE SP30, 2003 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, transport, new knife, guards, skid shoes, pickup reel teeth and bushings, $19,800. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com
RS
HEADE BALE CART
] Fast and easy gathering ] Virtually no maintenance ] Built to outlast a new baler 5:1
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THE GRAPPLES
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One Person can Gather, Load and Stack 2,500 Bales in 55 hours!
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â&#x20AC;˘ 2013 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 9250 Dynaflex w/ hyd. tilt, fore & aft, electric reel, overall 10/10 condition! $65,800.00 w/ warranty! â&#x20AC;˘ 2010 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 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. â&#x20AC;˘ 2007 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Cat F530 Flex head w/ HCC pickup reel, AWS air system, full finger auger, excellent condition, $16,800.00. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
CLASSIFIED ADS 65
ALLISON TRANSMISSIONS Service, Sales and Parts. Exchange or custom rebuilds available. Competitive warranty. Spectrum Industrial Automatics Ltd., Blackfalds, AB. 1-877-321-7732. TRANS. AND DIFF. PARTS for approx. 1969-71 JD 4020 diesel. Trans. is synchro range. 403-845-5193 Rocky Mtn House AB
2009 DEGELMAN 7200 rockpicker. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
GRATTON COULEE
PRO VISION MODEL BK5500 Snap-On visual inspection device. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
AGRI PARTS LTD. IRMA, AB.
LOOKING FOR PICKUP HEADERS? â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;14 MD 16â&#x20AC;&#x2122; PW7 $26,800 â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;09 CIH 2016 ................$17,800 â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;09 CIH 2016...$19,800 â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;01 JD Precision .......... $6,680 â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;92 JD 914.........$7,280 â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;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.
LOEFFELHOLZ TRACTOR AND COMBINE Salvage, Cudworth, SK., 306-256-7107. We sell new, used and remanufactured parts for most farm tractors and combines.
Call 1-888-920-1507
PUMPS, PRESSURE WASHERS, Honda/Koshin pumps, 1-1/2â&#x20AC;? to 4â&#x20AC;?, Landa pressure washers, steam washers, parts washers. M&M Equip. Ltd. Parts and Service, Regina, SK., 306-543-8377, fax 306-543-2111. STEIGER TRACTOR PARTS for sale. Very affordable new and used parts available, made in Canada and USA. 1-800-982-1769
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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. Canadaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s largest inventory of late model combines & swathers. Exceptional service.
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1999 ROTARY MODEL AR122-1104. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
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Huge Inventory Of Used, New & Rebuilt Combine & Tractor Parts. Tested And Ready To Ship. We Purchase Late Model Equipment For Parts.
ROBIN AIR MODEL 16910. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. SUNMICRO II PERFORMANCE analyzer. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. SNAP-ON MODEL ACT Y3O electric leak detector. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
Call 1-888-920-1507
DEVILBISS MODEL 445. 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
Call
ROBIN AIR COOLTEC Model 34788. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. AAMCO MODEL 3850 brake lathe. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. SPECIALTY TOOLS, LARGE selection for automotive mechanic shop. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
COATS MODEL 700 tire balancer. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. ROCK-O-MATIC 546 rockpicker, PTO, very good condition, new tires, $2500. 2006 ROTARY MODEL SM14N001. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. SALVAGE TRACTORS, VOLVO 810 and 306-463-7802, Eatonia, SK. G.S. TRACTOR SALVAGE, JD tractors 650. Ford 7600, 5000, 3600, 6000, S Ma- DEGELMAN R570 ground drive rock curjor. David Brown, 1690, 1410, 1210, 885. only. 306-497-3535, Blaine Lake, SK. tain, 3 batt, very low acres, $4250 OBO; International 674, 784, 885. 306-228-3011 Degelman rock hook attachment for dozer, WILSON CATTLELINER PARTS, gates, www.britishtractor.com Unity, SK. $450 OBO. 306-747-2514, Shellbrook, SK. ramps, doors, etc. Wayneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Trailer Repair, 1996 MACK E7 semi tractor, 427 eng., 306-497-2767, Blaine Lake, SK. with PTO and hyd. kit, 5th wheel, mechan- F O R K T Y P E R O C K P I C K E R , $ 6 0 0 . INDUSTRIAL 10â&#x20AC;&#x2122; V-PLOW, made to mount on 4WD blade mount or payloader, $5800. ics special, only $4500. 306-946-8522, 306-488-2103, 306-527-1389 Holdfast, SK Call 306-961-1170, Domremy, SK. Saskatoon, SK. RITE-WAY JUMBO STONEPICKER, hyd. 1012 SCHULTE SDX-960 3 PTH. Call drive, high lift, tandem axle. 306-592-4449 1995 GMC 6500, engine shot, 6 spd., 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. new tires, good cab and hood, $3000. or 306-592-2029, Buchanan, SK. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon SK S EX S M ITH , ALTA.
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Harvest Salvage Co. Ltd.
YOUR ONE STOP FOR NEW , USED & REBUILT AG PARTS.
5150 Richmond Ave. East Brandon, MB
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 .
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B uying Ag & Construction Equipm ent For D ism antling TRIPLE B WRECKING, wrecking tractors, combines, cults., drills, swathers, mixmills. etc. We buy equipment. 306-246-4260, 306-441-0655, Richard, SK. GOODS USED TRACTOR parts (always buying tractors) David or Curtis, Roblin, MB., 204-564-2528, 1-877-564-8734.
Move it! in print and online next day.
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. DEUTZ TRACTOR SALVAGE: Used parts for Deutz and Agco. Uncle Abeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Tractor, 519-338-5769, fax 338-3963, Harriston ON 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. SMITHâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S TRACTOR WRECKING. Huge inventory new and used tractor parts. 1-888-676-4847.
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KINZE 2600, 12x23 row planter, good 15â&#x20AC;? 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.
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CLASSIFIEDS.PRODUCER.COM
OTC MODEL 6520 ball joint super jet. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
1-800-667-7770
gallantsales.com Large inventory of new and used potato equip. Dealer for Tristeel Mfg. wash line equip. Dealer for Logan Equipment. Call Dave 204-254-8126, MB.
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66 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
NH FR9080 FORAGE harvester, 900 hrs., 2007 CASE SRX 160, JD rate controller, c/w 8 row corn head, 15’ pickup head. sectional control, AutoBoom, $27,000. Call 403-394-4401, Lethbridge, AB. 780-678-6054, Daysland, AB. YOUNG’S EQUIPMENT INC. For all your 1998 FLEXI-COIL 67XLT, 120’, 800/400 silage equipment needs call Ron toll free gal. twin tanks, twin booms, 2 hyd. pumps, wind curtains, autorate, chem tank, foam 306-565-2405, Regina, SK. markers disc markers, end nozzles, c/w new Flex Control II monitor, exc. cond., $11,000. Lumsden, SK. 306-591-2760. 1990 BG CENTURY II, 100’, 850 gal., c/w mixing tank, rinsing wand, disc and foam markers, hyd. pump, wind cones, $2500. 2002 FLEXI-COIL XL67, 90’, suspended 306-725-4534, 306-725-7633, Duval, SK. boom, 1250 gal. tank, autorate, hydraulic 1997 FLEXI-COIL 67XLT, wheel boom, pump. 306-677-7550, Hodgeville, SK. 114’, windscreens, autofold, double 2005 FLEXI-COIL 67XL, 100’, susp. boom booms, new tires, autorate, foam marker, sprayer, 1250 gal. tank, induction tank, $10,000. 306-648-2418, Gravelbourg, SK. Trimble GPS, mint, shedded. Retiring. NH S1070 PT sprayer, 1350 Imp gal., 100’ 306-734-7453, 306-734-5119, Craik, SK. AutoHeight, shedded, low acres, 1 owner, 2002 FLEXI-COIL XL110, 110’, 1200 gal. vg shape, asking $37,500. Call Darrell at tank, autorate, wind screens, great shape. 403-664-2268 or 403-664-0248, Oyen, AB. $12,500. 306-753-7005, Unity, SK. FLEXI-COIL 65, 100’, hydraulic or PTO BRANDT QF 1500, 90’, 800 gal., hyd. driven, autorate, 2-sets nozzles, wind pump, autofold, wind cones, foam marker, screens, 800 gal. tank, mix tank, c/w extra chem handler, end nozzle, field ready, parts, $4000 OBO. Call 306-662-9093 or s h e d d e d , $ 7 5 0 0 . C a l l D av i d K l e i n 306-558-7017, Fox Valley, SK. 306-957-4312, 306-695-7794, Odessa, SK. 2002 FLEXI-COIL XL67, 90’ wheel boom, FLEXI-COIL 67XL, 120’, windscreens, dual 1200 gal. tank, induction tank, clean water nozzles, autorate, disc markers, premium, tank, dual nozzles, fence line nozzles, hyd. $14,750. 306-460-8666, Netherhill, SK. pump, foam marker, wind screens, exc. cond. $15,000. 306-728-3337, Melville, SK 2006 SPRAY-AIR 3690 TS, 100’, 1250 gal. tank, $24,000. Novlan Bros. Sales, Para- 85’ BOOM SPRAY, Raven autorate, pull dise Hill, SK. Ph: 306-344-4448, toll free with 5th wheel or tractor, $6000. Outlook, 1-877-344-4433, www.novlanbros.com SK. 306-867-7659. 60’ JET STREAM sprayer, blue and grey, twin line (38 kms/hr.), chem handler, shedded, well maintained, field ready, $13,500. 403-575-2401, Veteran, AB. BRANDT SB4000, 90’, 1600 gal., Norac HT with accumulators, shedded, $19,000 OBO. BRANDT AUTOFOLD SPRAYER 123’, 306-725-7820, Strasbourg, SK. 1500 gal. tank, autorate, independent con- 2007 FLEXI-COIL 100’, susp. boom, 1600 trol end nozzles, remote boom controls for gal., windscreens, 18.4 duals, AutoHeight, checking nozzles, Bubblejet nozzles, new 7 section, mint. 306-692-4047 Moose Jaw 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. 2011 CASE 4420 120’ boom, 940 hours, 1994 BRANDT QUICK-FOLD Sprayer, wind Viper Pro, 5 and 15 gal. nozzles, 650 floatcones, foam marker, $3000. Lucky Lake, ers, 380 in crop tires, field ready, 1000 hr. SK. 306-858-2529 or 306-867-9899. service done, air lift dividers, HID lights, AutoHeight control, AIM com100’ AG SHIELD sprayer, 1200 gal. tank, AccuBoom, luxury cab, full AutoSteer, shedded 100 gal. wash out tank, $15,000 OBO. mand, in mint condition, $260,000. Strathmore, 204-851-5520, Cromer, MB. AB., call 403-901-5390. 2009 NH S1070, 100’, autorate, wind curtains, 1300 gal. tank, disc markers, wheels on boom, 4 years of use, $30,000 OBO. 306-893-8008, Maidstone, SK. 2005 JD 4720 High Clearance, 1971 hrs., 2006 NH SF115 PT High Clearance spray- deluxe cab with Buddy seat, 800 gal. SS tank, chem handler, 90’ boom, 420/80R46 er. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. tires, fenders, new JD rims w/520/85R38 2001 FLEXI-COIL 67XLT, 90’ wheel tires, Raven height control, 2600 Display, boom, flex control. Dual: hyd. pumps, sectional control, remote nozzle checker, tanks 800/400, booms, single/double noz- new tips, hyd. tread adjust, radar, field zle. Rinse tank, wind screens, chem han- ready, premium condition, $159,000 OBO. dler, foam marker, always shedded, vg 306-625-3607, Ponteix, SK. cond, $13,500. 306-753-7576, Macklin, SK 2011 CASE SPX 3330, 100’ boom, 1000 gal 2003 BRANDT QF2500 100’, 1250 imp. gal, SS tank, AutoBoom height, AutoBoom AutoRate, rinse, triple bodies, AI tips, end shut-off, fence row nozzles, Aim comnozzle, windcones, chem fill, hyd. pump, mand, 2 sets of tires, crop dividers, Raven half boom shut-off, boom filters, low acres Viper Pro, AutoSteer, less than 500 hrs., exc. cond. 403-391-6021, Red Deer, AB. $14,900 OBO. 306-640-7650, Courval, SK. 1993 FLEXI-COIL 65 100’ high profile wheeled, 800 gal. windscreens w/endcaps, chem tank, dual nozzles, foam markers, clean water tank, adj. axles, lug tires, 2 seasons on pump, 1 season on solonoids, $5000. 403-878-6985 cell, Richmound, SK.
1994 BRANDT QUICKFOLD 96’, foam marker, wind cones, double nozzle bodies, $3500. 306-488-2103, 306-527-1389, Holdfast, SK. AG SHIELD 120’ shielded sprayer, 1000 gal tank, GFS ground following system, rate controller, 3 way rollover bodies, used 3 seasons, $30,900 OBO. 1-844-227-1831. www.agshield.com
2001 CASE/IH PATRIOT SPX 2130, 2800 hrs., 80’, 650 gal. tank, Outback AutoSteer, Tridekon dividers, field ready, $50,000. 306-386-2443, 306-441-2483, North Battleford, SK. Pics available on req. 1993 PATRIOT XL, 90’, 750 gal. tank, 3-way nozzles, Dickey John monitoring, $45,000. 780-523-2394, High Prairie, AB.
2001 ROGATOR 854 High Clearance, BOURGAULT CENTURION III, 80’, 800 3790 hrs., 100’, 800 gal. SS tank, foam gal., hydraulic pump, new tires, $6000. markers, Raven Invisio Pro monitor, AutoSteer, AutoBoom Height w/gauge wheels 306-748-2446, Neudorf, SK. and Sonar boom Height, 5 sec. AccuBoom BOURGAULT MODEL 1450, 100’ booms, control, 2 set wheels, always shedded, exc. autorate, disc markers, $9500. Phone: cond., $82,000 OBO. Can deliver. Pictures 403-872-2940, Ponoka, AB. avail. 306-497-3126, 306-497-7511, Blaine 1998 FLEXI-COIL 67XL, 130’ sprayers, 2 Lake, SK. lakeridgefarms@sasktel.net units, $12,000 and $15,000. Ph for details 2012 ROGATOR 1300, 100’ boom, GPS at 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. loaded, $375,000. 306-934-1546, Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com 2010 CASE/IH 4420, 120’ booms, luxury cab, loaded, excellent condition, 900 hrs., offers. 306-252-2301, Kenaston, SK.
FOR PARTS or WANTING PLANETARY GEAR for 1997 Willmar Eagle 8200, 800 gal. SS tank, 3264 hrs., 215 HP Cummins, 90’ booms, $20,000. Stewart Valley, SK., 306-778-6686 or 306-741-5369.
1994 TYLER PATRIOT XL, 3498 hrs, 4WD, 75’ boom, 750 gal. tank, hyd. axle ext., Raven controller, Outback hyd. AutoSteer, mapping, AutoBoom section control. Very nice shape! $49,500. Call Jordan 2003 WILLMAR EAGLE 8500, exc., anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. cond., 2700 hrs, Outback S and 360 w/AutoSteer hyd. block, Tridekon crop divider mounts, always shedded, well maintained, 380/90R46 and 650/65R42 tires, $79,500 OBO. 306-862-6504, Choiceland, SK.
WILLMAR 7200, 1997, 4000+ hrs., 90’, 750 gal., triple nozzles, autorate, $40,000 2008 JD 4730 SPRAYER, 3372 engine OBO. Phone 306-527-0747, Lajord, SK., or hrs, 1310 spraying hrs., 800 gal. tank, 100’ email: schaeffer_n_21@hotmail.com boom, 5-way nozzle bodies, fence row nozzles, foam marker, 2600 display, 1998 WILLMAR 8400 Eagle, 3968 hrs., w/swath control and SF1 activation, Boom 120’ boom, 1200 gal. SS tank, 2 sets tires, Trac Pro 5 sensor system, hyd. tread adOutback GPS ready, air ride, triple nozzles, justment, AutoSteer, c/w 2 sets tires, $50,000 OBO. 306-821-7500, Marshall, SK. 320/90R46 and 520/85R38, completely 2001 JD 4710, 90’, 2300 hrs., AutoSteer, serviced and ready for spring. $158,000 Outback guidance and Norac, shedded, O B O. F o r m o r e i n fo c o n t a c t K i m at $118,000. 306-377-2132, 306-831-8007, 306-255-7601, Viscount, SK. Herschel, SK. 2012 NEW HOLLAND SP.365F #N21752A. 2004 NH SF110 high clearance sprayer 642 hrs, 120’ boom, 10 section control kit, w/Norac height control. Dinsmore, SK. $269,000 cash. Call: 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca 306-846-2175 or email: cab@sasktel.net 2009 CASE 3150, 90’, 750 tank, 1480 hrs,. 2001 CASE/IH SPX4260, 1200 gal. SS two sets of tires, Sec. control, EZ-Guide tank, 90’ boom, active suspension, Trimble GPS w/AutoSteer, mapping, AutoBoom 500/ EZ-Steer. 306-239-2071, Osler, SK. height, float tires- 60%, brand new narrow 2009 JD 4730, 1468 hrs., 800 gal. tank, tires, exc. cond., $9500. Phone Jordan 100’ boom, fence row nozzles, 5-way noz- anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. zle bodies, GreenStar, 2600 monitor, AutoSteer, sectional control, AutoHeight, large 2010 JD 4830, 877 hrs., 100’ booms, 1,000 in-line filter, 2 sets tires, $177,500. gallon SS tank, loaded with all options, 2 sets of tires, full GPS, shedded, $200,000. 306-795-2708, Hubbard, SK. 306-280-4699, Prud’Homme, SK. 2008 JD 4830, 1258 hrs., $149,500; 2011 JD 4930, 1350 hrs., $199,500. Call WILLMAR 785, 6 cyl. Cummins, 3 spd. hydro, SS crop dividers, 600 gal. SS tank, 204-822-3797, Morden, MB. rinse tank, 90’ booms, 5-way nozzle bodies 2013 4430, 120’, 164 hrs., 1200 gallon, w/nozzles, 3 sets tires, Trimble AutoSteer, AIM, 710’s and 320’s, spray remote, 5 sen- 3050 hrs. 204-648-4649, Dauphin, MB. sor AutoBoom, AccuBoom, wide fenders, 3” front fill, Pro 700, Tridekon crop divid- SPRAYTEST REMOTE BOOM CONTROL ers. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. Use wireless remote to turn on individual boom sections for nozzle checks. 2005 PREDATOR 2010, 103’ conventional Easy install with plug and play harness to and AirBoom, 1000 gal tank, 3-way nozzle bodies, AutoBoom shut-off, GPS EZ-Steer fit your sprayer. Order your SprayTest today. 500, crop dividers, 2 sets tires, 1800 hrs, $110,000. 780-307-5023, Neerlandia, AB. Ph: 306-859-1200 2003 AGCO 4640 Spra-Coupe with 1,900 spraytest@sasktel.net hrs. Call 1-800-667-2085 PL #915407.
GET READY FOR SPRAYING. Flaman has chem handlers, water pumps, chem pumps, tanks, hose, fittings, filters. See your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com
2009 CASE/IH 3185 high clearance sprayer, 90’ boom, 2 sets tires, 3 sets nozzles, AIM Command, 1452 hrs, 6 section shutoff, $128,000. 306-536-6075, Regina, SK.
BEHNKE DROP DECK semi style and pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, tandem and tridems. Contact SK: 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336. BOOK NOW! 53’ Behnke sprayer trailer for delivery before spring spraying. See your nearest Flaman location or call 1-888-435-2626.
2003 JD 4710, 90’ booms, triple nozzles, 800 gal. poly, Outback AutoSteer, 4WD SET OF TWO 20.8x38 sprayer tires, on 10 with rear duals, diff. locks, vg cond. whole rims, 150 hrs. of use on NH sprayer, 780-872-2832, Paradise Hill, SK. $5500. 306-483-7941, Oxbow, SK.
• Yield Monitor • Automatic Drop Height Control • Automatic Digging Depth Control • For Potato and other Root Crop and Vegetable Harvesters
www.spraytest.com
2012 ROGATOR RG1100, 100’ boom, GPS, ViperPro, $315,000. 306-934-1546, Saska- 1999 JD 4700, 3103 eng. hrs., 90’ booms, toon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift Current, 750 gallon tank, EZ-Guide 500 mapping, SK. www.fulllineag.com foam marker, 2 sets of tires. $20,000 2007 FIELDHAWK #N21778A. 100’ boom, spent on Greenlight and new hydro pump, 1200 product tank, almost 50% off! no spraying hrs. since Greenlight, $83,000. $79,000 cash! Call: 1-888-442-3816 or 306-452-3233, Antler, SK. www.farmworld.ca 2007 APACHE 1210, 1990 hrs., 60/90’ 2007 APACHE 1010, 1275 hrs, 103’, Raven booms, Raven 440 monito, AutoBoom Envisio Pro, w/hyd. SmarTrax, Phoenix height, Capistan sharp shooter (AIM com200 receiver, Raven AccuBoom and Auto- mand), Outback E-drive, 5 section AutoBoom, sharp shooter nozzle control, 5 noz- Mate, 2 sets rears, $120,000. Kenaston, zle body, 2 sets tires, shedded, well main- SK., call 306-252-2767 or 306-221-8968. tained $156,000. 306-530-8433, Lumsden, 1998 FLEXI-COIL S62, 80’, 800 gal. NovSK., or email: info@LLseeds.ca for photos lan Bros Sales, 306-344-4448, Paradise 2004 CASE 4260, 1200 gal. SS tank, Hill, SK. Toll free 1-877-344-4433, fax: 3300 hrs, $90,000. 204-236-4684, Birch 306-344-4892, web: www.novlanbros.com River, MB. 1998 PATRIOT 150, 90’ boom, 750 tank, autorate, AutoHeight, 2 sets of tires, 4700 hrs., $34,000. 403-872-2940, Ponoka, AB. 2006 APACHE AS1210 SP, 1200 gal. SS tank, Cummins 5.9 dsl., Raven AutoBoom and monitor, Outback S3 guidance system, AutoSteer, 102’ boom, fence-line nozzles, triple nozzle bodies, 1626 engine hrs., $128,900. 780-658-2125, Vegreville, AB. 2006 APACHE AS710 high clearance sprayer, 1100 hrs., 750 gal. tank, 90’ boom, SmarTrax guidance, Smartsteer, $115,000 OBO. Call 306-631-1747, Moose Jaw, SK. 2005 CIH 4410, 3300 hrs., 90’ booms, 380 skinny’s, 650 floaters, Outback GPS mapping and AutoSteer, sec. boom control, 4600 Raven monitor, SS tank, $125,000 OBO. 306-281-2275, Prud’Homme, SK. 2006 1274C ROGATOR, w/6 spd trans., 1200 gal SS tank, 200 gal. winch tank, foam markers, 3-way nozzle bodies, chem. inductor, hyd. tread adjust, 1788 hrs., L/R row nozzles, SF1 JD AutoSteer, 4000 Raven controller, 90’ booms, 2 sets of tires 80%, never had fertilizer. Recent $10,000 work order. Always shedded, mint cond. $149,500. 204-379-2371, 204-745-7191, St. Claude, MB.
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 100’ BOOM TIPS for Rogator SP sprayer, 780-986-0678, 780-906-4240, Leduc, AB. new condition. Can be used to convert 90’ 2013 ROGATOR RG1300, 410 hrs., 132’ 1999 90’ Willmar 8100 800-gallon to 100’ machine. 306-767-2675, Zenon recirculating aluminum boom, Raven Viper high clearance 4WD, hydro & wheel Park, SK. Pro, AutoHeight, SmarTrax, 7 section auto motors good. Trades welcome. Financing 1998 WILLMAR 785 Special Edition, 5.9L boom shutoff, crop dividers, 800/65 R38 & Leasing available. 1-800-667-4515. Cummins engine, 600 gal. SS tank, 90’ and 380/90 R46 tires, c/w 2 year warranty www.combineworld.com booms, 2 sets of tires, $42,000 OBO. Take $348,000. E-mail: ellisseeds@mts.net or call 204-824-2290, Wawanesa, MB. 1994 FLEXI-COIL 65, 80’, hyd. pump, 800 grain on trade. 306-874-7474, Naicam, SK. g a l . t a n k , i n g o o d c o n d i t i o n . SET OF 4 GOODYEAR floaters, 620/70R 46 2012 ROGATOR RG1300, 120’ factory 306-448-4412, Manor, SK. tires and rims for JD 4930, used for ap- boom, ViperPro, $365,000. 306-934-1546, Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift FLEXI-COIL 67, 100’, 850 Imp. gal. tank, prox. 300 hrs. 204-673-2382, Melita, MB. L&R fence row nozzles, Richway foam 2008 IHC 3320, 1269 hrs., new tires, 1000 Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com marker, chem induction tank, new hyd. gal. tank, 100’ boom, AIM Command, Au- 2012 ROGATOR RG1300, 120’ factory pump, combo jet tips, vg cond., $8500. toBoom, AutoHeight, AutoSteer, shedded. boom, ViperPro, $329,000. 306-934-1546, Call, text or email Tyrall 306-287-7290, 306-488-4517, 306-529-0887, Dilke, SK. Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift tyrallf@sasktel.net Quill Lake, SK. Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com 2005 MILLER 2275HT, 1950 hrs., 100’, 100 2012 FLEXI-COIL 68XL suspended boom gal, $169,000. Novlan Bros. Sales, Paradise sprayer, 134’, 1350 Imp. gal. tank, Hill, SK. Phone: 306-344-4448, toll free 480/80R38 tires, AutoHeight, autorate, 1-877-344-4433, www.novlanbros.com $45,000. 306-488-2182, Holdfast, SK. 2013 TERRAGATOR TG8400, $357,500. 2010 NEW HOLLAND 100’ S1070 sus- 3 0 6 - 9 3 4 - 1 5 4 6 , S a s k a t o o n , S K . o r pended boom sprayer, c/w Raven Auto- 3 0 6 - 7 7 3 - 7 2 8 1 , S w i f t C u r r e n t , S K . Boom, triple nozzle bodies, 4 sets of tips, www.fulllineag.com 1350 Imp. gal., rinse tank, chem. inductor, 20” spacing, joystick and IntelliView monitor, exc. cond., wintered inside, $35,000 OBO. Call 306-642-5806, Assiniboia, SK. 2013 ROGATOR RG 900 100’, 120 hours, 2010 MILLER G40 Capstan sharp shoot2005 BRANDT QF1500, 100’, 800 gal. loaded, factory warranty. Asking $249,000. er, nozzle control, 1200 gal. poly tank, 90’ poly, hyd. pump, autofold, wind cones, 3 Almost anything on trade. Toll Free booms, 850 hrs, 300 HP, Envizio Pro, n o z z l e b o d i e s , c h e m h a n d l e r, e x c . 1-877-862-2387 or 1-877-862-2413, SmartTrac, AccuBoom, AutoBoom, Boom 306-862-7524, 306-862-7761, Nipawin, SK $12,500. Allan 306-228-2000, Unity, SK. air blow out, Tridekon crop savers air lift, $169,000 OBO. Can deliver, pictures 2002 FLEXI-COIL 67XL, 1500 US gal., 1998 ROGATOR 854, 4103 hrs., 2 sets of available. Call 780-632-9899, Ranfurly, AB. triple nozzle, 100’, wind screens, tank tires, $12,000 spent on wheel motors last wash nozzles, Spray Test control, Raven yr., professionally serviced yearly, Trimble 2006 ROGATOR 1274 C, 100’, 3470 hrs., rate controller, Rinex AutoBoom shutoff. AutoSteer, sec. boom control, $75,000 1300 gallon, loaded, reduced to $132,000. OBO. 306-259-4990, 306-946-6424, Young 306-641-7759 306-647-2459 Theodore, SK 306-429-2793, Glenavon, SK. TWO 3630 SPRA-COUPE, one has 60’, one with 74’ boom, $22,000 to $33,000. 204-937-3933, Robin, MB.
2003 1064 ROGATOR, 1080 gal. SS tank, 110’ booms w/fence nozzle, 2 sets tires, Raven GPS w/AccuBoom, 3797 hrs, shedd e d , $ 1 1 0 , 0 0 0 O B O. 2 0 4 - 6 4 8 - 7 0 2 7 , 204-638-2592, Gilbert Plains, MB. 2008 APACHE AS1010 100’ high clearance sprayer, AccuBoom, AutoBoom, GPS plus AutoSteer, two sets of tires, 972 hrs., $121,000. 306-737-8286, Rouleau, SK.
Automatic digging depth control
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.
Automatic height control for the unloading conveyor
On-Board Weighing system to monitor Yield
Visit greentronics.com To find dealer locations, contacts, and other details. Email: info@greentronics.com Call: 519-669-4698 Dealer enquiries welcome.
2013 APACHE 1080, 100’, EnvisioPro, AutoBoom height/rate, 150 hrs., $200,000 OBO. 306-796-4536, Central Butte, SK.
SP R IN G CLEAR AN CE - SAVE O N ALL 49 30 & 49 40 U SED JO H N D EER E SP R AYER S P ow erGa rd W a rra nty up to 2016 on m ost units.
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
RETIRED FARMER: 40’ CONCORD, c/w 5250 Bourgault cart and lots of extras. Johnny 306-693-2615, Moose Jaw, SK. 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. 1999 FLEXI-COIL 2340 TBH cart w/3rd tank, var. rate, semi hopper, $24,000 OBO. 306-587-2764, 306-587-7729, Cabri, SK. 2013 CASE ATX700 70’ with steel 3580 dualed air cart, 10” spacing, 3.5” paired row, Concord packing system, $297,000 w/openers, $284,000 w/o. 204-721-2251, Brandon, MB. ajgranger24@gmail.com 2002 FLEXI-COIL 3450 air tank, double shoot TBH, 10” auger, 8-run, $25,000 OBO. 780-688-3488, 780-679-8302 Daysland AB 2004 BOURGAULT 5710, 54’, 10” spacing, Series II MRB, rubber packers, double shoot, Atom Jet openers, $45,000. 306-539-2363, Regina, SK. 1995 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 33’, 9” spacing, single shoot, w/John Deere 777 cart, $28,000. 306-243-4307, Macrorie, SK. 39’ FLEXI-COIL 5000, 7.8” space, DS, var. rate, drill completely rebuilt, 3450 TBH, S P R A Y E R R I M S a n d t i r e s n e w ! field ready. Kirriemuir, AB., 780-753-0353. 320/90R50 Goodyear DT800 radials on JD 41’ BOURGAULT 5710 air drill, 7” spachigh clearance rims, $8900 per set of 4. ing, 4250 tank, $29,500. 306-859-4820, 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com Beechy, SK. 2008 JD 1830 AIR DRILL, 61’, 10” spacing, 3.5” steel packers, rock deflectors, JD 1910 air cart, 3 tank, 430 bu. TBH, var. rate, conveyor, 2 tank cameras, dual shoot, $150,000. Hanlon Ag Centre, 403-329-8686, toll free 1-800-461-5356 Lethbridge, AB. Pics at www.hanlonag.com 1999 BOURGAULT 5710 #B21677D. 54’, 9.8” spacing, 3” carbide, MRBs, updated wide pivot, 330 trips, $27,500 cash. 1-888-442-3816, or www.farmworld.ca 1996 CONCORD 5612, 3400 TBH tank, with 3rd tank, single shoot, Stealth openers, disc levelers, $25,000. 306-297-6394, Shaunavon, SK. BOURGAULT 5710 AIR drill, 54’, 9.8” spacw/5350 TBT cart, single shoot, rebuilt ’97 AG Shield P/T sprayer, ing, midrow banders, set up for liquid or NH3 1,250 gallon tank, 100’ fert. Randy 406-765-7163 Plentywood, MT
Are you driving over your money? Built heavy to last
Field proven for over 15 years
1-866-292-6115 www.tridekon.ca
suspended boom. $7,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
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 SET OF 23.1X26 flotation tires and rims, in good condition, for JD 4700 sprayer, 2340 FLEXI-COIL TBT TANK, var. rate, shedded, very nice, $21,000. Call Steve $4250. 306-276-2442, Nipawin, SK. 780-206-0049, 780-674-3029 Barrhead AB TRIDEKON CROP SAVER, crop dividers. Reduce trampling losses by 80% to 90%. Call Great West Agro, 306-398-8000, Cut Knife, SK. TRIDEKON CROP DIVIDER parts, some damage, 2 good cones from JD mounts, offers; Right-hand boom break away for Patriot, $100; Main suspension spring for 1994 Patriot, $100. Ph 780-674-7944, Barrhead, AB.
1993 SEED HAWK, 38’ dual shoot, 12” spacing, 1000 gal. mounted liquid tank, 85 bu. mounted seed tank, rebuilt liquid fert. pump, $25,000 OBO. Call 306-747-9128 or kendanger@hotmail.com Shellbrook, SK. 2003 5710, 29.5’, 4.5” packers, knock-on Bourgault knives, MRB, 18” set up for liquid, 16,000 acres use, starting price $30,000. 306-398-7446, Baldwinton, SK. 2003 JD 1820 air drill, 52.5’, c/w 2003 1910 340 bu. 3-tank, single shoot, 10” spacing, 4” steel press, all-run blockage monitor. To be sold at Kelvington Auction Services, May 3rd. Phone 306-327-7422. www.kelvingtonauctionservices.com 2004 JOHN DEERE 1820 61’ air drill. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
CLASSIFIED ADS 67
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. 1995 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 27’ w/1370 cart, 7.2”, very good condition, $25,000 OBO. 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Weekes, SK 65-10 SEEDMASTER with dual liquid and dry manifolds, active wing brace, Smart hitch, Agtron blockage monitor, JD 1900 air cart TBH dual shoot, asking $116,000. 306-742-5912, 306-742-4772, Churchbridge, SK. 2008 BOURGAULT 3310 #B22177B. 55’, 9.8” spacing, 11” openings, 6-ply round p n e u m at i c p a c ke r s , $ 1 3 0 , 0 0 0 . C a l l : 1-888-462-3816, or www.farmworld.ca 1994 FLEXI-COIL 800 triplex, 45’, factory mounted V packers, 9” spacing, 3/4” openers, mud scrappers, 8 secondary blockage, 2320 TBT, new auger flighting and hopper, good shape, $23,900 OBO. 306-831-7468 elliott6@sasktel.net Dinsmore, SK. 2006 NH SD440 50’, 10” paired row, 430 bu., variable rate tank, double shoot, blockage monitor, steel press wheels, $90,000. 780-210-0280, Andrew, AB. 2011 BOURGAULT 3310PHD air drill and 6550 cart #PB2965A, 65’ leading DS, $299,000 cash. Call: 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca 2004 BOURGAULT 5440 TBH tank, dual fans, $50,000. Call 306-252-2767 or 306-221-8968, Kenaston, SK. 2012 61’ MORRIS Contour II air drill, DS, side band openers, 8370 450 bu. TBH air tank, Topcon Eagle monitor, exc. cond., $200,000. 306-328-4883, 306-338-7886, Wadena, SK. 2011 MORRIS CONTOUR 61’, DS, 12” spacing, $260,000. 306-934-1546, Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com NEW TIRES, PREMIUM quality, low cost, i n s t o c k . w w w. c o m b i n e w o r l d . c o m 1-800-667-4515. 1994 BOURGAULT 4710 air disc drill 40’, $ 1 1 , 0 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 7550 EZEE-ON 33’, double shoot, 10” 3010 CONCORD and Model 2000 engine spacing, w/liquid kit c/w Ezee-On 2250, d r i v e t a n k , $ 1 2 , 5 0 0 O B O . C a l l 250 bu. tank, hyd. fan, rubber packers, 403-872-2940, Ponoka, AB. $30,000. 306-861-9234, Weyburn, SK. 2004 MORRIS MAX II, 60’, 70” spacing, 2007 72’ SEEDMASTER, 12” spacing, SS, 8370 TBT, $105,000. 306-934-1546, semi-pneumatic tires on shank w/Bour- Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift gault 6700 ST cart, dual wheels, conveyor, Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com $230,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equip. Ltd. FLEXI-COIL 5000, 39’, 2320 TBH, 9” spac306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. ing, SS, w/some spare openers, $30,000 1996 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 33’, SS, 3” rubber, OBO. 306-796-7441, Central Butte, SK. n o c a r t , $ 1 9 , 9 0 0 . G r a n d v i e w, M B . 1995 MORRIS MAXIM 34’, SS, 10” spacing, 306-563-8482 or 306-782-2586. 4” steel packers, 6240 tank w/3rd tank, 2008 BOURGAULT 3310, Paralink, 65’, $28,000. Call 306-629-3772, Morse, SK. 9.8” spacing, 4.8” packers, 3” tips, MRB’s, dry and NH3, always shedded, very nice. HARMON AIR DRILL, 52’, 12” spacing, SS metering boxes, double shoot, NH3 kit, Call 204-648-7085, Grandview, MB. updated fan, new auger and manifolds, JD 1650 CULTIVATOR, 42’ with Barton openers used one season, trailer type openers, 9” spacing, all-run monitor, JD grain hopper, $20,000 OBO. Ryley, AB. 787 cart, 240 bu., $20,000. 306-834-8058, Phone 780-663-3929 or 780-603-1747. 306-834-8557, Kerrobert, SK. MORRIS MAXIM 34’, 12” spacing, double 2006 39’ FLEXI-COIL 5000 HD w/3850 s h o o t , c / w 7 1 8 0 t ow b e h i n d t a n k . TBT cart, 10” spacing, steel packers, knife 403-308-3374, Pangman, SK. edge openers, variable rate, excellent shape! $79,900. Call Jordan anytime, 2003 MORRIS MAX II, 49’, 7.5” spacing, 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. SS, 7240 TBH, $59,000. 306-934-1546, 2001 JD 1920, 41’, 12” spacing, 4” steel Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift packers, DS, new openers, new fertilizer Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com meter box, 2001 JD 1900 270 cart. Will 2013 BOURGAULT 6550 air tank, with 4 take grain trade. 306-831-7782, Harris, SK. meters and Topcon monitor, $119,000. MORRIS MAXIM air drill 34’, 10” spacing, 306-948-6548, Biggar, SK. 2” and 3” knock-on spoons, Morris 7180 1996 MORRIS MAXIM II 49’ air drill, DS, t a n k , e n g i n e d r i v e n f a n , $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 . 240 bu. tank, carbide tips, good cond. 306-962-3939, 306-962-4434, Eston, SK. $25,000. 306-626-3525, Pennant, SK. 2003 BOURGAULT 5710, 52’, 7” spacing, 2004 BOURGAULT 5710 and 5350 cart, 40’, dual casters, 3/4” knives, 3.5” rubber 9.8” spacing, dry MRB, dual shoot, dual packers, 330 lb. trips, always shedded. fan, 3.5” steel packers, $72,000. Call Phone: 204-648-4028, Grandview, MB. 403-872-2940, Ponoka, AB. 1999 FLEXI-COIL 5000, PB2608B, 57’, 12’ 2003 SD 440 NH 39’, double shoot, 9.5” spaced w/midrow shanks, 4” openers/ spacing, Dutch low draft side band. 2002 packers, Dickie-John, NH3, $35,000 cash. Flexi-Coil 2340, variable rate, DS TBT, 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca $55,000. 306-257-3607, Allan, SK. 1994 FLEXI-COIL 5000 air drill, w/1720 TBT tank, 39’, 9” spacing, setup w/liquid 2004 56’ CONSERVA PAK, independent kit, Atom Jet openers w/side band, w/wo openers, 440 tank, great condition, Bandit 1500 liquid wagon, $45,000 OBO. $95,000 OBO. 306-625-7939, Kincaid, SK. 780-645-2575, St. Paul, AB. FLEXI-COIL 2340 TBT, variable rate, shed1997 FLEXI-COIL 5000 57’, 2320 tank, d e d , e x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n , $ 1 9 , 5 0 0 . $39,000. Novlan Bros. Sales, Paradise Hill, 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. SK. Ph: 306-344-4448, toll free 1-877-344-4433, www.novlanbros.com
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. 1996 BOURGAULT 5710, 52’, 7” spacing, 3.5” packers. Packers and hoses recently replaced, good condition. 204-648-7085, Grandview, MB. 2009 AMITY TWIN disc drill 40’, (same as an ATCO sunflower), 6” and 9” spacing, MRB’s, Agtron all-run monitor, $50,000; Also 2004 BOURGAULT 5440 TBH tank, dual fans, $50,000. Call 306-252-2767 or 306-221-8968, Kenaston, SK. 1996 FLEXI-COIL 5000 w/2000 2320 tank, 1994 FLEXI-COIL 5000 57’, single shoot; 39’, 9” spacing, DS, 3.5” steel packers, 1995 Flexi-Coil 5000 45’, DS. Both w/2320 Atom Jet openers, $35,000 OBO. Call carts and field ready, $25,000 each OBO. 306-575-8312, Wawota, SK. 306-459-2642, 306-459-7705, Ogema, SK. 2009 JD 1830, 48’, 12” rubber packers, 2013 NH P2070 60’ air drill c/w P1060 double shoot, paired row, 1910 430 bu. TBH 430 bu. air cart, 4” pneumatic pack- tank, excellent shape, $78,000 OBO. ers, 12” spacing, DS, load auger, $164,000. 306-831-7863, Rosetown, SK. Call Nathan at 306-737-8286, Regina, 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. 2006 MORRIS MAXIM II 55’, 10” spacing, 8370 TBH, single shoot, 3.5” packers, new carbide openers 2013. Will consider some grain on trade. 306-448-4819, Manor, SK. MOON HEAVY HAUL pulling air drills/ air seeders, packer bars, Alberta and Sask. 30 years experience. Call Bob Davidson, Drumheller, AB. 403-823-0746.
1998 MORRIS MAXIM 49’, 10” spacing, 1 NEW 2014 FLEXI-COIL 4350 air carts, 1 year old 3” openers, 4” V-packers, SS, NH3 TBH, 2 TBT’s. All double shoot and kit on Coulters, Edge-On shanks, $25,000 available for spring. Call Cam-Don Motors OBO. 306-768-7740, Carrot River, SK. Ltd. 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 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.
60’ PILLAR LASER disc hoe openers on 2009 CIH ADX 700 frame, 430 bu. TBT, variable rate, DS, seed cart, $175,000. 306-672-7616, 306-672-3711 Gull Lake SK 1998 CONSERVA PAK 52’ 5112 air drill, Flexi-Coil 2320 TBT air cart. Asking $45,000. 780-523-2394, High Prairie, AB. 2005 CASE 3380VR (same as Flexi-Coil 380 bu.), TBT, washed, shedded, no corrosion, four rollers, mint condition, $45,000. 403-734-3800, Cluny, AB. 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 2010 JD 1830 air hoe drill, 3 sec., 41’, 10” acres. 306-834-7109, Dodsland, SK. spacing c/w 2010 JD 1910 air commodity cart, 430 bu. TBT, 3 tanks c/w 12” conveyor w/telescoping downspout; 10” row spacing, double shoot, GEN-T2W paired row openers, steel packers and floatation 55’ MORRIS MAXIM, 10” spacing, blockage tires. Always stored inside, like new. Seed- monitor, Atom Jet openers, 7300 TBT ed 8530 acres. No monitor. $129,000. Call tank, exc. cond. Will take grain on trade. 306-291-9395, 306-283-4747 Langham SK Bill: 403-634-4670, Coaldale, AB. 33’ NH SD440, 3” low draft Dutch 2010 NH P2060 60’, 9.9” spacing, double 2005 9” spacing, 550 lb. trip, 4.5” steel shoot, 4” steel packers, P1060 430 bu openers, packers 230 DS, var. rate cart, seedtank, var. rate, double fan, 10” loading au- ed 7,000w/SC acres, mint condition. A steal at ger, $125,000. 403-224-2498, Bowden, AB $58,500. 306-883-2568, Spiritwood, SK. 2010 EZEE-ON 7550, 33’, DS, 10”, 315 bu. cart, shedded, $49,000 OBO. Near US bor- 1998 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 3450 Mech cart, 45’, single shoot, 9” space, 3.5” steel packder. Call 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586. ers, $50,000. 306-642-7650, Limerick, SK. 2008 SEEDMASTER TOOLBAR, 64’, 12” spacing, c/w Flexi-Coil 3450 var. rate cart, 2009 BOURGAULT 55’ Paralink drill, c/w brand new fert. knives. Reduced $135,000. MRB’s, excellent condition. 306-666-2153 or 306-662-7471, Fox Valley, SK. 306-421-1086, 306-634-9330, Macoun, SK 1990 MORRIS MAXIM 39’, 7.5” spacing, 2003 MORRIS MAXIM II #B21706D, 49’, 6180 TBH, near new opener, c/w 800 gal. 10” spacing, liquid kit, reduced by $6000, TBT and 1200 gal TBH liquid carts. Will $48,000 cash. Call: 1-888-442-3816, or separate. Phone Cam-Don Motors Ltd, www.farmworld.ca 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 1997 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 39’, 9” with 4” rubpackers, 550 lb. trips, new Dutch 2005 FLEXI-COIL 3850, TBT, mech. ber last year, c/w 1997, 1720 TBT and drive, lights, 10” auger, dual fan, 6 run sin- points 2320 TBH carts, $55,000 OBO. Willing to gle shoot, changeable, 4 rollers, shedded, separate. 306-424-2694 or 306-424-7778 $42,500 OBO. 306-334-2958, Balcarres, SK Montmartre, SK. 2002 JD 1890, 36’ w/1910 TBT air cart, SS discs, seeds boots and gauge wheel 2012 FLEXI-COIL 4350 TBT air cart rubber recently replaced, newer air hoses, variable rate, dual fan, DS, w/wo 2008 39’ Flexi-Coil HD drill, DS, 9” space, 3.5” steel $50,000 OBO. 780-694-2756, Wanham, AB packers; 2003 2340 air cart, mech. drive, 2010 MORRIS CONTOUR, 61’ double dual fans, DS. Tanks stored inside. Moose shoot, 12” paired row, 5.5” semi-pneumat- Jaw, SK, ph 306-692-6797, 306-631-6297. ic packers, TBH, $93,000, like new, only 1998 MORRIS MAXIM 34’, 10” spacing, 4000 acres. 403-861-1671, Saskatoon, SK. 3.5” steel packers, 240 bu. DS TBH tank, 2005 BOURGAULT 5710 Series II 54’ air paired row boots, $28,000. 306-255-2752, Colonsay, SK. drill. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
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.
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. 780-808-3453, Lloydminster, AB. 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.
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. 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. USED SET OF AtomJet paired row openers, with liquid tube. Taking offers. Domremy, SK. 306-423-5339 leave msg. 1998 MORRIS MAXIM and 6330 TBH cart #HR2983A, 60’ drill, rear tow hitch, reduced by $11,000, $39,000 cash. Call: 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca 2006 SEED HAWK, 51’, 9” spacing, big rubber, with frame for NH3 tanks, c/w 2008 Flexi-Coil 3850 TBT, always shedded, 3 compartments, 4 meter rollers, low acres, $147,500. Photos available 780-608-5697, 780-372-2356, Bashaw, AB. NEW JOHN DEERE CONSERVA Pak single row openers, carbide tips. Set of 56 for $4,088. Ph Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 1995 MORRIS MAXIM, 34’, dual shoot, 10” spacing, dutch openers, 3.5” steel packers, c/w 7130 TBH tank, $25,000. Kipling, SK. 306-736-7773. TWO 2001 51’ FLEXI-COIL 5000, 9” space, DS, 3” rubber, 3450 TBH carts, double fan, 10” auger, mechanical or var rate, $42,000 ea. OBO. 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK.
2013 MORRIS 8650 air cart and 61’, C2 air drill, (demo unit) #HR3095. Duals, TBH. 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 PULLING AIR DRILLS, towed farm equip. tip knives, 3” rubber packers, new mid-row and light duty low bedding in MB. and SK., discs and knives last season, exc. shape, (licensed and insured). Bruce at Brown field ready. Can be sold w/wo Bourgault Ent., 204-857-8224, Portage la Prairie, MB. 6450 air tank. 306-726-4616, Southey, SK. BARTON 1 NO TILL DISC DRILL, 41’ on 2008 CASE/IH 51’ APX400, ADX 3380 Ezee-On cult, $6000; 2320 TBT tank, exc. tank, double Atom Jet, $135,000 OBO. rust-free, $12,000. Will separate. Outlook, 306-796-4536, Central Butte, SK. SK. 306-867-7659. 2010 SEEDMASTER 4710, DS, dry/liquid, 2009 SEED HAWK 5510, dual shoot system brand new fert. knives, active wing brace with liquid kit. New fert. and seed knives and hitch lift, $82,000; Flexi-Coil 3450 cart spring of 2013. Excellent cond. Offers. 306-728-2291, 306-728-9150, Melville, SK available. 306-743-2770, Langenburg, SK. 1998 MORRIS MAXIM 7180 TBT, 29’, 7-1/2” spacings, steel packers, tank is double shoot. 306-395-2791, Chaplin, SK. 36’ JD 730, 270 bu., 1900 TBT, $28,500; 44’ JD 730, 230 bu., 787 TBT, $15,900; 57’ Flexi-Coil 5000, no cart, $10,000; JD 787 TBT carts, $9000 - $11,500; 1900 TBT $23,500. Can deliver. Brian 204-856-6119 or 204-685-2896, MacGregor, MB. NH SC230, TBH cart, w/3rd tank, variable rate, double shoot, dual fans, $26,700 OBO. 780-614-0787, St. Vincent, AB 1997 SEED HAWK 32’, 10.5” spacing, onboard seed, liquid kit, excellent shape. Phone 306-675-4932, Kelliher, SK. 2007 FLEXI-COIL 5000 HD, 40’, double shoot, 4” rubber, drill only, very low acres, $42,000 OBO. Call 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Yorkton, 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.
2001 EZEE-ON 7550, 64’ double shoot, 10” spacing, 5” steel packers w/rock deflectors/mud scrapers, 4000 TBH 350 bu. 3 compartment tank, variable rate, hyd. fan, 10” auger, blockage monitors, in-tank cameras, $57,000, exc. cond. Located at Saskatoon, SK. 403-861-1671. BG 40’ 8800 w/3195, $29,900; FC 51’ 5000 w/2320, $39,900; FC 45’ 5000 w/3450, $79,900; BG 64’ 5710, MRB’s, $69,900; BG 2195H, $6900; BG 3225H, $12,900; Morris Maxim 34’ w/7180, $23,900; JD 1820 41’ w/787, $36,900; Gang packers, $5900; BG 8800 52’ w/air kit, $38,900. Hergott Farm Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK. 2003 EZEE-ON 7550, 56’, 8” spacing, TBH, 4350, $75,000. 306-934-1546, Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com 2004 MORRIS MAXIM II, 39’, 10” spacing, Dutch openers, double shoot, $20,000. No tank avail. 306-460-7284, Kindersley, SK. 2003 CONSERVA PAK 39’, 12” spacing, rubber on-row packers, DS, 1 owner, c/w JD TBT 787 air tank, 230 bu. plus 3rd tank, $51,000 OBO. Call Korvin 306-772-0330 or Lawrence 403-823-6016, McMahon, 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. FLEXI-COIL 5000, 57’, 9” w/3.5” rubber press, 2320 aircart, granule tank, DS, good cond, $45,900. 204-324-4277, Altona, MB. 1994 JD 787 230 bu. seed and fertilizer tank, exc. cond., $12,500. 306-648-2847 after 7:00 PM, Gravelbourg, SK. 2012 BOURGAULT 3710-50 double shoot openers, $168,000. www.novlanbros.com Novlan Bros Sales, 306-344-4448, Paradise Hill, SK. Toll free 1-877-344-4433. 2010 NH P2070, independent opener, 70’, 10” spacing, DS, 2013 updates, Dutch and Bourgault openers. Can deliver. Priced to sell. Rob 306-222-6035, Saskatoon, SK. 2001 BOURGAULT 5440, #s PB3090A and PB3082B, 47’ 5710 w/MRBs, 3” rubber, Raven NH3 kit, 1” carbides, $135,500. 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca 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, w/2320 tank, 7.2” spacing. Shane Jarokosky 403-330-0968, WANTED: 5-1/2” RUBBER packers for Lethbridge, AB. jarokosky@hotmail.com Flexi-Coil 5000, 9” spacing. Will trade 34’ MORRIS MAXIM, 12” space, 7180 TBH, 4-1/2” steel. 403-793-1705, Brooks, AB. DS, Dutch side band openers, all pins and CASE/IH 3580 TBH tank, 2013, dual bushings have been changed, low acres. shoot, Deluxe auger c/w remote, 3 tank 306-454-2725, 306-861-9816, Ceylon, SK. variable rate, Ultrasonic bin level sensors, air velocity meter, rear folding ladder, 3 2006 MORRIS 40’ horizontal fold, no till coarse rollers, one extra fine roller, disc air drill, markers, w/7240 TBT tank, 800/65R32 front tires, 650/75R32 rear low acres, $67,000 OBO. Will take grain on trade. 306-693-9847, Moose Jaw, SK. duals. Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. 2004 47’ 5710, w/5350 TBH, SS, 9.8” 1998 FLEXI-COIL 3450 variable rate cart, spacing, 4.5” steel, new tires, mint cond. 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. $70,000 OBO. 306-834-8100, Major, SK.
34” Morris Never Pin 2003, disc drill/no till w/ mid row banders, 19” discs, 7.5” spacing, shows very little use...$19,900. Trades welcome. Financing & Leasing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
2013 BOURGAULT 3320 76’ XTC w/7950 cart. 4.5” V-style packer, DS air kit for mid 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. 45’ FLEXI-COIL 5000, 7.2” spacing, c/w 2320 TBT cart, $29,900. Cam-Don Motors Ltd, 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK.
2 FLEXI-COIL 3450 tanks, double fan, 10” auger, 1 w/rear hyd. winch and mechanical rate, the other has var. rate, $28,500 each OBO. 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK.
2010 Morris Contour 71’, SS, 12” spacing, 8370XL TBH, $269,000. 306-934-1546, Saskatoon, SK. or 306-773-7281, Swift Current, SK. www.fulllineag.com 1998 CONSERVA PAK 56’/SC380 2006, $59,000. Novlan Bros Sales, Paradise Hill, SK. Call: 306-344-4448, toll free: 1-877-344-4433, www.novlanbros.com 2009 JD 1830, 60’, 10” rubber packers, 1910 430 tank, excellent shape, $89,000 OBO. 306-831-7863, Rosetown, SK. 2003 BOURGAULT 5710, 64’, 9.8” space, 3.5” packer wheels, 1” vertical knives, 2001 5440 tank, 3-tank metering, Rice tires, $80,000. 306-398-7449, 306-441-0452, Cut Knife, SK.
JD Air Drill 2003, 61’ drill with 1900350 bushel air cart..$46,800. Field ready! JD 1820 36’, 10” spacing, DS, 4” packers, 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com Stealth openers, c/w 4” spreader boots, JD 787 TBH 230 bu. tank with 3rd tank, 1997 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 33’, 7.2” spacing, $45,000. 780-679-7795, Camrose, AB. recapped packers, Atom Jet DS openers, 1720 TBT cart, extra rollers, $26,500, 701-982-3572, Fortuna, North Dakota 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 FLEXI-COIL 3450 TBT cart, mechanical drive, DS, 10” auger, shedded, asking $30,000 w/wo 1995 Flexi-Coil 5000, 45’, 9” spacing, DS, Atom Jet, asking $15,000. 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. 306-377-2111, Herschel, SK.
33’ EZEE-ON 7550, 10” spacing, liquid kit, 3175 TBH air tank. Call 306-763-7627, Wilkie, SK. 2006 JD 1895 drill w/430 bu. 1910 cart, new discs and boots last season. Convenor, $95,000. 306-227-4503, Saskatoon, SK. 1996 BOURGAULT 4300 air tank, 3 compartments, 3 monitoring system, 491 monitor 2 years old, always shedded, $29,000. 306-398-7505, Cut Knife, SK.
2010 MORRIS CONTOUR, 71’, 12” paired row, 4.5” rubber packer w/roto scraper, FLEXICOIL 5000 45’ air drill, single shoot, 650 bu. tank, w/triples, conveyor and top 9” spacing, 3 1/2” steel packers, $20,000. c o n m o n i t o r , $ 2 0 5 , 0 0 0 O B O . Call 306-948-2737, Biggar, SK. 306-831-7863, Rosetown, SK. 2010 65’ BOURGAULT 3310 paralink, 12” 2008 JD 1830 air hoe drill, 40’, 10” spacing, mid row shank banding, DS, rear space, double shoot, Primary blockage WANTED: 10” AUGER for 1910 430 John hitch, $157,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equip- c/w 2004 JD 1910 TBH tank 350 bushel ment Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. capacity, all seed run blockage. Only Deere air cart. 403-577-2395, Consort, AB. 24,000 acres! $89,900. Ph. Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 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. 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.
68 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
REINVENTING THE WHEEL
patent pending
Reduce Plugging with Open-Rim Gauge Wheels by Ridgeland Manufacturing Sales & Distribution by:
thunderstrucksales.com 855.752.5525 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.
1997 BG 8810 40’ SS, 330 trips, 10” spacing, new 3/4” knives, quick change KHart packers or bar harrows, AgTron blockage monitors; 1998 BG 4350L tank, 3 metering tanks, single fan, 491 control monitor. Asking $40,000 for both. Duval, SK. Call 306-725-4534 or 306-725-7633. BOURGAULT 40’ FH 536-40 air seeder with 2195 cart, auger, good condition, $11,000. 306-358-4342, Denzil, SK. FLEXI-COIL 820 CULT., 40’, 9” spacing, 1720 tank, 320 third tank, mounted 4 bar harrows. 306-749-2649, Birch Hills, SK. 40’ BOURGAULT 8800, c/w 3225 tank, 277 monitor, 4-bar harrows, speed-locs, granular kit, $20,000. 306-594-7676 Norquay SK 36’ BOURGAULT 8800 air seeder w/3225 tank, 8” spacing, granular kit, harrows, exc. shape. 204-859-0075, Rossburn, MB. BOURGAULT PACKERS FOR 8800, 40’, 8” spacing, $1500; fan c/w hyd. motor and hoses, $2000; 2- 60 run air kits for Bourgault air seeder, $1500. each; 3-195 Bourgault air seeder, 3 tanks, rear hitch, $3500. and 30 Series II MRBs, $150. each. Phone 306-279-7751, Yellow Creek, SK. 2001 JOHN DEERE 1900 #B2167IB. Two tank, 300 bushel, $27,900. Call: 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca 2008 SEED HAWK 60-12 TBT JD 1910, TBT 270 BUH, 2000 gal. TBH liquid, no quick pin, $185,000. 1-800-667-9761, www.redheadequipment.ca Saskatoon, SK 2010 BOURGAULT 3310, 55’, 12” spacing, 4.8” pneumatic packer, S25 MRB’s, c/w 6550 tank, $285,000. 1-866-659-5866, www.redheadequipment.ca Estevan, SK. MORRIS MAGNUM II, 35’, 12” spacing, DS, 130 bu. tank, motor or hyd., harrows, $11,500. 306-682-2585, Humboldt, SK. 32’ EZEE-ON AIR SEEDER, c/w 2-175 tank, $20,000. 306-257-3693, Elstow, SK. 32’ BOURGAULT 8800 air seeder, 8” spacing, K-Hart packers, 2155 air tank. 306-658-4556, Landis, SK. 1 9 8 9 B O U R G AU LT A I R S E E D E R 3 6 ’ , w/2155 seed tank, 1200 gal. liquid TBH. 306-228-2900 or 306-228-7877, Unity, SK. FLEXI-COIL 420 CULTIVATOR, 40’, 9” spacing, c/w 1610 tank, mounted gang packers. 306-749-2649, Birch Hills, SK. 2003 BOURGAULT 5710, 54’, 9.8” spacing, single shoot, 3.5” steel packers, 5350 tank, DS, $107,500. Ph 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca
1993 MORRIS 33’ air seeder, 8.5” centers, 6130 tank, c/w packing wheels and harrows, good shape. Asking $14,000. Call 306-642-0267, Assiniboia, 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. 2002 BOURGAULT 5250 TBH air tank, 3 tank metering, single fan, $25,000. 306-782-7347, Yorkton, SK.
1996 BOURGAULT 8800, 40’, 8” spacing, 3/4” carbide tip openers, granular kit, poly packers and harrows, packer bar hitch, new metering augers on 3225 cart, $30,000. 403-664-0154 or 403-664-0297, Oyen, AB. 2003 BOURGAULT 5200 AIR TANK, single shoot, single fan, 2 tank manual adj. trans. hyd. calibration control, 277 monitor, 18.4x26 rears, 21.5L-16.1 fronts, 1000 acres/yr., no rust, exc. cond., $27,500. 306-560-3333, Wishart, 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 1990 JD 777 air cart, 160 bu., new hyd. fan, splitter boots and hoses, $2500. Call: 306-749-2482, Hagen, SK.
BOURGAULT 8800 48’ w/front spreader, harrows and poly packers, 4250 dual shoot air cart, asking $32,000. 306-742-5912, 306-742-4772, Churchbridge, SK. 2005 BOURGAULT 6550, double shoot. Trades? 306-563-8482 or 306-782-2586, Yorkton, SK. 1990 FLEXI-COIL 800 35’ air seeder with 2004 BOURGAULT 5710, 63’, 12” spacing, Bourgault 2155 tank, 12” spacing, single 491 monitor, mid row banders, 3/4” open- shoot, 14” shovels, Splitter boots, liquid er, steel packers $99,500. 1-800-667-9761 fert. kit, harrows, $19,500. Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. www.redheadequipment.ca Saskatoon, SK 2011 BOURGAULT 3310, 75’, 12” spacing, BOURGAULT 3195 air tank, new load audouble shoot, 6550 tank, X20 Maplink, ger, single shoot, Asking $6500 OBO. MRB 25, $298,000. 1-800-219-8867, Swift 780-210-0100, Heinsburg, AB. Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca TWO 40’ JD 665 air seeders: one w/mtd. FLEXI-COIL 2320 TBH air cart, 3 rollers, no harrows, 16” shovels, $6500; one late corrosion, blockage, very clean, shedded model, knives and shank mtd. pkrs, $9500. 306-773-0706, 306-375-7669, Kyle, SK. $17,000. 306-782-9507 Willowbrook. 2005 JD 1820, 61’, double shoot, 10” BOURGAULT 5250 AIR seeder, 3 Series II spacing, 320 tank with singles, $79,000. meters, 491 monitor, hyd. calibration, cab Swift Current, SK., 1-800-219-8867. meter controls, shedded, no fertilizer, $35,000. 306-398-2923, Cut Knife, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca FLEXI-COIL 2340 AIR tank, TBT, double 40’ BOURGAULT 8810, 9.8” spacing, NH3 shoot, variable rate, very good shape. Raven autorate, midrow banders, 3/4” Carbide openers, sidearm markers, polly 306-738-4716, Riceton, SK. packers; 3225 Bourgault air tank, $42,500 43’ MORRIS 8900 air seeder with a Morris OBO. 306-383-7340, Quill Lake, SK. 6180 tank, single shoot. 780-657-2049, Two Hills, AB. BOURGAULT 8800 36’, air kit and chem. applicator, 2115 tank, 8” spacing, Knock1999 BOURGAULT 5710, 54’, 12” spacing, on 3/4” carbides or 11” shovels w/QC 4350 cart, MRB’s, 3.5 steel packers, packers or harrows, good cond., $12,500 $85,000. www.redheadequipment.ca or 306-252-2810, 306-567-7281 Kenaston SK 1-866-659-5866, Estevan, SK. 1999 BOURGAULT 8810, 50’, 10” spacing, 40’ DUTCH TOOL BAR, single shoot with poly packers, liquid side band openers, Barton openers; 32’ Concord 3212, double w/JD 787 TBT cart, vg cond., $49,000. 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 306-243-4216, Outlook, SK. 306-675-4458, 306-675-4566, Leross, SK. 2008 JD 1820, 61’, 12” spacing, double 1998 BOURGAULT 4350, single shoot, one shoot, Atom Jet side band openers, JD owner, $23,000 OBO. 306-563-8482, 1910 cart, $129,900. 1-866-659-5866, 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca Estevan, SK. 1997 BOURGAULT 8810, 40’, 8” spacing, inline poly packers, tine harrows, c/w HARROW TINES for all makes of harrows: Bourgault 3164 TBH air tank, 40’ Bourgault mounted, standard draw bars and heavy Flexi-Coil type packer unit, $30,000. harrows, ex. 9/16x26” straight (Degelman, 306-357-4620, Wiseton, SK. Brandt, Bourgault, Flexi-Coil, Riteway) 2007 BOURGAULT 6450, double shoot, 100+ $20.50 ea; 5/8x27” 100+ $34.95 $75,000 OBO. Trades? Call 306-563-8482, ea; 3/8x15” bent (Riteway, Morris, Herman) 100+ $8.60 ea. Fouillard Implement 306-782-2586, Yorkton, SK. Ltd., St. Lazare, MB., 204-683-2221. JOHN DEERE 27’ 610 with 777 cart, hydraulic drive and auger, extra roller. 70’ DEGELMAN STRAWMASTER heavy harrows, excellent condition. 780-872-2832, 306-771-2765, Balgonie, SK. Paradise Hill, SK. 2009 JD 1870, 56’, 12” spacing, full blockage, single castors, 1910 TBH cart, con- 2012 70’ BOURGAULT 6000 mid harrows, v e y o r, $ 1 9 9 , 9 0 0 . 1 - 8 6 6 - 6 5 9 - 5 8 6 6 , done 1500 acres, as new, $29,000. Call for details 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca Estevan, SK. 2008 BOURGAULT 571, 59’, MRB’s new FLEXI-COIL HARROW PACKER with P30 tips, 12” spacing, c/w 6450 tank, singles, 3 packers, 60’, in very good condition. tank metering, $179,000. 1-800-219-8867 306-287-3563 evenings, Watson, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca Swift Current BOURGAULT Convert-A-Bar HPH 60 harrow packer bar, 60’, heavy packers, $6500 OBO. 306-743-7980, 306-743-5071, Langenberg, SK. 1996 MORRIS AIR TANK, engine drive, MORRIS 70’ PACKER harrow bar, good 130 bu., shedded, asking $4900. Phone condition. Phone: 780-877-2339 or 306-372-7999, Luseland, SK. 780-877-2326, Edberg, AB. BOURGAULT FH536-40, 40’, floating hitch, 8” spacing, knock-on sweeps, 3/4” 2003 BOURGAULT 7200, 60’, hyd. angle, knives, quick attach 4-bar harrows, gran. $23,000 OBO. 306-563-8482, Yorkton, SK. kit, with 2195 3-tank dual fan air cart, ROLL WITH THE BEST! Ag Shield Land$19,500 OBO. Langenber g, SK. Call: roller line single, 3 or 5 section units. Sizes 306-743-7980 or 306-743-5071. from 11.5 to 70’. Exclusive manufacturer BOURGAULT 8800, 40’, 3195 cart, harrows of leveling blade and power fold option. and packers, $26,000 OBO. 306-563-8482 Standard hyd folding wheels, floating hitch and diagonal arm field latch system. Innoor 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. vative “Pasture Doctor” model; level, seed 6130 MORRIS TBH cart, motor driven fan, and roll in one pass. In stock models, original owner, shedded, $4000 OBO. r e a dy t o s h i p . O r d e r y o u r s t o d ay ! 306-728-1232, Melville, SK. 1-844-227-1831. www.agshield.com 2010 CIH ATX700, 60’, 10” spacing, FLEXI-COIL SYSTEM 75 packer bar, P30, ADX3430 tank, double shoot, sideband 4 2 ’ t o 5 4 ’ , g o o d c o n d i t i o n , $ 6 4 0 0 . $188,000. www.redheadequipment.ca or 403-308-4200, Mossleigh, AB. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. BLANCHARD 50’ HARROW Packer, heavy 2004 JD 1820, 61’, double shoot, 10” spac- packers, $2500. 306-255-2752, Colonsay, ing, 3”x21” rubber packers, full run moni- SK. tor, 1910 tank 430 bu., 42” duals, dual casters, 8” auger, $80,000. 218-686-9189, 50’ FLEXI-COIL SYSTEM 95 packer bar, P30 packers. 306-658-4556, Landis, SK. Pense, SK.
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FLEXI-COIL 70’ #82 5 bar tine harrows, $7500; Unverferth 500 bu. hopper wagon, $6500. Call 306-960-3000, St. Louis, SK.
START EARLY THIS SPRING WITH DEVLOO ROTO MUD SCRAPERS “COMPLETELY REDESIGNED AND IMPROVED”
WINTER DISCOUNTS on new and used rollers, all sizes. Machinery Dave, Bow Island, AB., 403-545-6340, 403-580-6889. WELD-ON HARROW TEETH, 50 rockwell hardness, 3/8”-5/8” dia., $3 for 9/16”. G.B. Mfg. Ltd., 306-273-4235, Yorkton, SK. 2003 DEGELMAN 7000 heavy harrow. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 55’ LAURIER HARROW packer bar, P20 packers, $3500 OBO. Call 306-297-7624 or 306-297-3317, Shaunavon, SK. RITE-WAY 60’ with P20 packers, excellent condition, $7500. 306-382-1200, Saskatoon, 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. FLEXI-COIL SYSTEM 92 60’ harrow packer bar, tine harrows, P20 coil packers, $5,000 OBO. 306-357-4620, Wiseton, SK. DEGELMAN 70’ HEAVY harrows, w/3255 Valmar, new 5/8”x26 tines and back tires, hyd. tine adjust option, $35,000 OBO. 306-759-2733, Eyebrow, SK. 2005 RITE-WAY 4255 land roller, 55’, 5 sections, $38,000 OBO. 306-796-4536, Central Butte, SK. 2011 BOURGAULT 6000 90’ mid harrow, like new, large tire option, hydraulic fold. 403-391-6021, Red Deer, AB. 2008 MANDAKO LANDROLLER 40’, exc. condition, $30,000. Call 306-744-2332, Saltcoats, SK. 70’ DELMAR 5500M mid harrow, very good condition, $10,000. 204-937-3933, Robin, MB. INLAND HARROW PACKER bar, 58’, 1.5” coil packers, $3500. Call 306-753-2620 or 306-753-7974 (cell). Macklin, SK. 2009 DEGELMAN 82’ harrows with Valmar, 5/8” tine, 26” length, new hoses, great shape. Phone 306-533-4891, Gray, SK. BLANCHARD LIFT-UP PACKER bar, 18’, extended to 30’. Useable either size, $800. 306-629-3772, Morse, SK.
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. 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. 1990 BOURGAULT FH546-52 cultivator. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 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 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. FRIGGSTAD 48’ CULTIVATOR with new harrows in very good condition. Call 306-287-3563 evenings, Watson, SK. BOURGAULT 36-40 COMMANDER Series 42’ cultivator. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
PATENT PENDING
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 2004 BOURGAULT 5710 34’, 5200 tank, shedded, new openers in 2013, excellent condition, $65,000. 306-940-6206, 306-960-1746, Prince Albert, SK.
M. DEVLOO MFG LTD.
204.825.7655 WWW.ROTOMUDSCRAPERS.COM
WISHEK DISCS AVAILABLE from Fla30’ JD 9350 HOE DRILL and 30’ JD 9350 man. From 14’-38’. 30” blades. See your double disc drill, $2500/ea. OBO. Call 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 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. LEON MODEL 9400-5 cultivator, 57’, Serial BOURGAULT 3225 SEED tank, in good con- #028805, asking $20,000. 306-267-4455, dition, w/3rd tank. Phone 780-349-2798 Big Beaver, SK. after 8PM, Westlock, AB. 33’ INTERNATIONAL 5600 positive depth GREAT PLAINS 40’ disc drill, 6” spacing, control cultivator, good condition. Phone: new discs, factory transport, $10,000. 306-338-2085, Kuroki, SK. 403-952-1030, Bow Island, AB. MORRIS L-249 CHALLENGER II 49’ cult. MASSEY MODEL 360 discers, 33’, piggy- Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. back hitch $2500; 42’ of IH hoe drills, 3 PT HITCH DISCS like new, heavy duty 314’s, factory trans., $2500. 306-648-2807 plow discs, 4- 26” disc, excellent condition, or 306-648-8001, Gravelbourg, SK. very little use, $1850. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com WANTED TO TRADE: JD 750 15’ w/mid row fertilizer banner for JD 1590 or 750, E Z E E - O N 1 4 ’ TA N D E M d i s c . C a l l pref. 20’ would consider 15’. Phone Peter 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 306-222-7021, 306-225-4437, Hague, SK. JD 1050 61.5’ field cultivator, 8” spacing, 12” shovels, new set of shovels included, WANTED: JD 9350 drill in excellent cond. 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 . Call 306-236-4195, Rapid View, SK. 306-476-2715, Fife Lake, SK. USED BOURGAULT B18 regular output SALFORD RTS SERIES high speed residue a i r d r i l l f a n , $ 1 5 0 0 O B O . C a l l : management discs. Place your deposit 306-689-2265, Abbey, SK. now to ensure spring delivery!!! For info call 306-764-2325, 1-888-708-3739. 28’ MELROE DISC drill with transport for alfalfa, canola or grass. 306-283-4747, 2009 SUNFLOWER 1544, 45’ tandem disc, 24” blades, hyd. self-leveling, 4 gauge Langham, SK. wheels, gang wrench. Call 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. MORRIS MAGNUM 39’ cultivator, with 1620 mounted Valmar, $2500. Call: 306-424-2723, Montmartre, SK.
2- FLEXI-COIL SYSTEM 75 wing-up 60’ coil packers, heavy coils P30, spring pressure, very good condition, $16,000. Call Lloyd Sproule 403-627-7363, 403-627-2764, Pincher Creek, AB. WANTED: FLEXI-COIL or BOURGAULTSUMMERS 45’ hydraulic P30 coil packer. Call 204-324-4277, Altona, MB. 2014 RITE-WAY 8100 heavy harrows, 68’. Last one! Cam-Don Motors, 306-237-4212, 37 BARTON II disc openers, fit on FlexiPerdue, SK. Coil 6000 drill, good shape 18” discs. WANTED: 80’ FLEXI-COIL 95 harrow 306-377-4649, Herschel, SK. packers. Must have P30 packers and good CASE/IH 42’ HOE drills, 3x14’ c/w Eagle harrows. Phone 780-349-2798 after 8PM. Beaks. 306-283-4745, Langham, SK. DEGELMAN 50’ STRAWMASTER 7000 heavy tine harrows. 780-657-2049, Two JD 750 NO till drills, two 15’ on 10” spacHills, AB. ing, single comp. box, disc markers can be purchased w/wo MRB liquid fert. setup. 2005 RITE-WAY 8100, 55’ heavy har- Easily pulled by 150 HP tractor, $22,000. rows, hyd. tine, exc. cond., low acres, For pics or info. 306-331-5669, Lebret, SK. $29,000. Retiring. 306-734-7453, 306-734-5119, Craik, SK. THREE 10’ JD disc drills, good shape, nevWANTED: 35’ WING-UP packer bar. Call er used fertilizer, back-on mover and hitch Steve 780-206-0049 or 780-674-3029, avail. 780-349-2798 after 8, Westlock, AB. Barrhead, AB. 48 SIDE BAND Atom Jet openers, $75 2006 BOURGAULT 6000, 70’, mid-harrow, each. 48 shank mount Valley packers, $50 g o o d c o n d i t i o n , $ 2 3 , 5 0 0 O B O . each. 306-257-3693, Elstow, SK. 306-747-2514, Shellbrook, SK. 2009 BERGEN 6000 50’ heavy harrow, low acres, vg cond., $20,000 OBO. Kenaston, SK., 306-252-2767 or 306-221-8968. NEW EXCEL 50’ land roller, 42” drum, $35,000. 204-822-3797, Morden, MB. COMING TO Vic Giesbrecht farm auction, Sat., April 19, 11 AM, 1.5 mile south of Fortier exit on road 20, new 50’ Excel landroller, 42” drum. Jack 204-822-3797, Winkler, MB. www.billklassen.com
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. MORRIS 41’ 8900 cultivator, 9” spacing, harrows, Pattison liquid fert. kit, tow hitch, $16,000. 306-645-4223, Rocanville, SK. CCIL CULTIVATOR MODEL 807, 31’ with harrows, good cond., asking $3000. Call 306-739-2979, Wawota, SK. BOURGAULT 8800 48’ field cultivator, 8” spacing, knock-on sweeps, rear hitch, $22,500. Call 204-825-8121, Morden, MB. BOURGAULT 9200 cult. 50’ w/Bourgault MTH. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
THIS GUY JUST picked up
44MT of perfectly treated wheat in 38 minutes!
MORRIS 50’ HEAVY harrow with 2055 Valmar, tines- 90%. Phone 306-592-4449 or 306-592-2029, Buchanan, SK.
24’ OF MELROE disc drills. 306-859-4505, Beechy, SK. SEED FUNNEL FITS 8.5x20’ box. Contact Barry 306-243-4960, Dinsmore, SK. 16 BARTON 2 disc openers, double shoot off of Flexi-Coil 6000. Asking $160/ea. Ph. 780-349-9522, Westlock, AB. 5440 PLUS BOURGAULT tank, high output fan, 3-tank metering, 491 monitor, single shoot, loading auger, 900/60R32 rear tires, 540/65-R24 fronts. 306-287-7442, Leroy, SK. FLEXI-COIL 1600 AIR cart with four 12 run manifolds and cultivator hitch, above average condition for it’s age, $4000. Call 306-577-8045, Carlyle, SK. CASE/IH 900 cyclo planter, 12 row, 30”, TBH, rear fold, liquid kit, $8000. 500 US gal. liquid caddy, $1500. 204-791-4573, 204-268-5629, Hazelridge, MB. 80 DUTCH LOW DRAFT 4-1/2” openers, some used only 2 years, $80 each. 780-674-7944, Barrhead, AB. JD 665 41’ air seeder w/NH3 harrows, packer bar, rodweeder; HAYBUSTER 1206 36’ no-till disc drill c/w Doepker movers, weight boxes. 306-237-4582, Perdue, SK. 2004 BOURGAULT 5350 TBH tank, center tank metering, DS, 2 fans, rear tow hitch, exc shape, only ever used organically $50,000. 306-264-3721, Mankota, SK.
Search “G40 Seed Treater”
on
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www.seedtreating.com Brian Ellis Phone: 403-556-2846 Fax: 403-556-6604 gseed@telusplanet.net
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
48’ LEON RODWEEDER, w/harrows, $850; 35’ Morris cultivator, w/harrows, $1300. LEMKEN HELIDOR & RUBIN 12 high spd. 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. plows, aerate and cultivate seed beds!! KELLO-BILT DISC PARTS: Blades and Place your deposit now to ensure spring bearings. Parts to fit most makes and delivery!!! 306-764-2325, 1-888-708-3739. models. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. BOURGAULT 5710, 3-1/2” steel packers, www.kelloughs.com 70, good cond.; Also 8 new 3” rubber packCCIL 204 DEEP TILLAGE cultivator, 42’, er caps, open to offers. 403-746-3627, with tines, $2250; CCIL 203 DEEP TILL- Eckville, AB. AGE cultivator, 30’ with tines, $1100. 306-463-7802, Eatonia, SK. 2011 SALFORD RTS, 31’, vertical tillage, extra weight package, $55,000. 306-457-7128, Stoughton, SK. MORRIS CHALLENGER II, 37’ cultivator 2007 CHALLENGER MT865B, 525 HP, Cat plus harrows, 8” spacing c/w Valmar 1620 C18, 3953 hrs, exc. cond., HD tracks 80%, a p p l i c a t o r, l o w a c r e s , e x c . c o n d . PTO, big pump, 6 SCVs, RTK GPS and 306-867-9771, 306-860-7501, Outlook, SK more $189,000.780-206-1234 Barrhead AB 2006 EZEE-ON 4490, 24” double disc, like 2008 CHALLENGER 965B, 4WD, 585 HP, new, $32,000. Contact 306-476-2501, C18 engine, approx. 4000 hrs., new inside Rockglen, SK. duals, asking $235,000. 780-621-7833, Drayton Valley, AB. WISHEK HE AVY DUTY 26’ disc . Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915207. 1997 AGCOSTAR 8360, 360 HP, 2925 hrs., 20.8x42 duals, N14 Cummins, 100 hrs. on 2013 WISHEK 842NT 26’ DISC, 30” new hyd. (131 litre/min.) pump, 5 reblades, used only 10 hrs, $83,000 nego- motes, Trimble AutoSteer, $75,900. tiable. Call 306-584-3731, Moose Jaw, SK. 306-948-2810, Biggar, 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.
NEW 15’ VERSATILE 550 off-set disc, 26”x3/8” notched F&R, 10” spacing, heavy bearing option, 600 lbs./ft., 1.9% OAC. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd. 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. IH 41’ CULTIVATOR,with Valmar, $2,000. 306-257-3607, Allan, 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. KELLO-BILT 8’ to 20’ offset discs w/24” to 36” notched blades; Kello-Bilt 24’ to 38’ tandem wing discs w/26” and 28” notched blades and oil bath bearings. Red Deer, AB. www.kelloughs.com 1-888-500-2646. WISHEK DISCS: 2009 models #842, 14’ 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. JD 1610 DT cultivator, 41’ with mounted Degelman harrows, $7,000. 306-424-2690, Montmartre, SK. KELLO 210 14’ single offset disc. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1981 BOURGAULT VIBRA master cultivator, tine harrows, 8” spacing, knock-ons, $5000. Call: 306-749-2482, Hagen, SK. MORRIS 743 CULTIVATOR, 45’, mounted harrows, HoneyBee deadrod, mounted Valmar, $7500 complete or will separate. Gravelbourg, SK 306-648-2807, 306-648-8001 2011 EZEE-ON 8700 LTF, 42’, heavy disc, in good shape, asking $75,000. 306-457-7128, Stoughton, SK. 24’ IHC 6200 double disc drill w/factory transport, shedded, $2000. 306-753-2620 or 306-753-7974, (cell), Macklin, SK. BOURGAULT 9200 CULTIVATOR 42’. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 41’ JD 1610 CULTIVATOR, 4 bar Degleman mounted harrows, new teeth and new 2x16” spikes, heavy hitch for NH3 tank, c/w mounted NH3 kit. Call 403-883-2545 or 403-742-9460, Donalda, AB. 41’ CCIL DT cultivator; 31’ IHC deep tillage cult., No. 55; 37-1/2’ IHC vibrashank cult. No. 45. 780-657-2049, Two Hills, AB.
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 3 PTH 8R30, $4000. Call 204-857-8403, Portage la Prairie, MB. 2011 SALFORD 570 RTS30, 30’ RTS, $58,000. Novlan Bros Sales, Paradise Hill, SK. 306-344-4448, www.novlanbros.com Toll free 1-877-344-4433. NEW 48 BOURGAULT 3310 packer tires; New 60 Bourgault carbide, 3/4” knock-on knives. 306-645-4223, Rocanville, SK. 33’ JD ANHYDROUS CULTIVATOR, good condition, $3,000. Call Bob 306-883-7817, Spiritwood, SK. 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. JD 9350 hoe drill, 20’, good cond., $1,000. JD 1610 chisel plow, 27’, good cond., $1500. 306-287-4083, Spalding, SK. 24’ CCIL DISCER, c/w 2- 12’ units, green piggy back w/packers; also 56’ Morris tine harrow bar. 306-538-4605, Kennedy, SK. D E G E L M A N P RO - T I L L C U LT I VATO R warms and dries cold soils. Place your deposit now to ensure spring delivery!!!! For info call 306-764-2325, 1-888-708-3739. 36’ ANHYDROUS CULTIVATOR, new tips, new breakaway coupler, asking $3500. 306-441-7776, Meota, SK. WANTED XTRA FINE 6 run seed metering roller for a Flexi-Coil 3450 air cart. Call Jeff at 306-831-9969, Milden, SK. PACKER WHEELS to fit ConservaPak or JD 1870 air drills. Includes rubber cap, plastic sidewall hubs, bearings and dust caps. Phone 306-452-7799, Redvers, SK.
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.
1993 WHITE 6125, 18 spd. powershift, 5.9 Cummins engine, 4800 hours. Mann Farm Equip. Call Ken: 306-843-2375, Wilkie, SK.
CLASSIFIED ADS 69
1976 INT. 966, 4 like new tires, good trac- 2005 MXU 125 MFD, 5600 hrs., L156 loadt o r, b u t n e e d s s o m e T L C , $ 5 , 0 0 0 . er, bucket and grapple, 3 PTH, $62,000. 403-331-0026 leave msg., Lethbridge, AB. 306-594-7224, Pelly, SK. 2013 CIH STX400 PS, 520 triples, PTO, diff lock, 4 hyds., Omnistar receiver, Pro 700, $309,000 www.redheadequipment.ca or 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK CASE/IH: 7120 MFWD w/loader, 7500 hrs., duals, $48,500; 7120 MFWD, 8500 hrs., duals, new tires, 3 PTH, $49,000; 7130 MFWD, 5500 hrs., duals, $45,000. All in vg cond. 204-937-7411, Grandview, MB.
STX 375 CASE/IH w/6900 Degelman blade, 5000 hours, excellent shape. CASE 730 TRACTOR with Case FEL, fair 780-753-0353, Kirriemuir, AB. condition, $4500 OBO. Call 306-367-4803, Middle Lake, SK. 2006 STX 480, Firestone 800 duals, annual U p t i m e , s h e d d e d , $ 1 5 5 , 0 0 0 O B O . 1982 CM STEIGER 1325, 3406 Cat eng., 8000 hrs., powershift, 24.5x32 duals- 30%, 306-563-6355, 306-563-7610, Canora, SK. $23,000. 306-743-2770, Langenburg, SK. 1992 9260, 4 WD, quad steering, 12 spd. powershift, 18x4x38 duals, good rubber, 1986 STEIGER MODEL KS325, PTA, new motor 2013, invoices available, shed- Cummins engine, 20.8x38 duals, 6164 d e d , o n e ow n e r, $ 7 9 , 0 0 0 . R e t i r i n g . hrs., $39,500. 306-834-7579, Major SK. 306-734-7453, 306-734-5119, Craik, SK. 756 IHC, exc. cond., new: rubber, clutch and PTO, German dsl., exc. chore tractor, CHALLENGER 55, 6500 hrs, 3 PTH, Trimble $7500. Call 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. 750 AutoSteer w/Subscription, 4 hyds., 1999 CASE 9390, 450 HP, 5800 hrs., S3 very good cond., $65,000. 204-937-7411, Outback AutoSteer, high capacity pump, 4 Grandview, MB. remotes, triples, excellent, $99,000 OBO. 1997 CAT 75D, 36” tracks- 70%, 4 SCV’s, 306-243-4242, 306-652-6765, Macrorie SK 4395 hrs., $59,000. Call 204-825-8121, 2006 IH STX 430Q, 3995 hrs., quad tracs, Morden, MB. PTO 1000, $198,000. Novlan Bros Sales, Paradise Hill, SK. Call: 306-344-4448 or 1-877-344-4433, www.novlanbros.com 1976 JD 8430, 5700 hrs, new head and QUAD TRAC AND PTO, 2006 STX500 HD, fuel pump, 20.8x34 duals, 80% in, 50% very nice, 36” tacks, 2900 hrs, $209,000. out, $21,500. 306-961-1170 Domremy, SK Located Yorkton. 306-948-7223, Biggar SK 1986 JD 2950 MFWD, 3 PTH, 7100 hrs., 1990 CIH 9170, 6560 hrs., engine over- good rubber, c/w 260 loader joystick, hauled at 5500 hrs., powershift, 300 hrs. sharp; 1982 JD 4640, quad, 3 PTH, rubon 24.5x32 duals, vg cond., $49,000. With b e r - 5 0 % , 7 9 0 0 h r s . , e x c e l l e n t . 14’ Degelman 4-way blade, $60,000. 306-744-8113, Saltcoats, SK. 306-675-4566, Leross, SK. JD 8450 4WD c/w 4 SCV’s, PTO, 18.4x34 2002 STX 375, 3430 hrs., 55 gal. per min- tires, diff lock, 8885 hrs, Serial No. ute pump, 24 spd. synchro, rubber- 80%, 5 RW8450H001323, $25,000. 204-568-4668 spool hyd., no PTO. Was through Young’s Beulah, MB. shop last spring, exc. tractor, $119,000. 1975 JOHN DEERE 4630, excellent engine, 306-640-8003 cell, Willow Bunch, SK. 1 set of rear tires. Call Barry 1966 CASE 730 tractor, 8 spd., runs good, needs tires good, $3000. Call: 306-749-2482, 306-243-4960, Dinsmore, SK. Hagen, SK. IHC 706, $3500; IHC 706 w/loader, $4250; IHC WD6 w/loader, $2250; IHC 560, $2250; Case 800 w/add-on 3 PTH, $2750; Case 1200 4WD, good rubber, $4950. For pics see www.hlehmann.ca Call 204-746-2016, 204-746-5345, Morris, MB
2013 CIH MX340 luxury cab, PTO, 3 PTH, 5 remotes, high capacity pump, 117 hrs., $279,000. www.redheadequipment.ca or 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. 1999 CASE/IH 9380, powershift, triples, 3 9 5 0 h o u r s , m i n t , $ 1 1 5 , 0 0 0 O B O. 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Yorkton, SK 2012 CIH STX550 36” tracks, luxury cab, RETIRING: 1991 CASE/IH 9240, 235 HP, PTO, diff. lock, hi-cap pump, 4 hyd., Pro 4500 hrs, 18.4x38x4, 2 yr old EzSteer 500, 700, HID lights $409,500. Swift Current, field ready. Pics avail. $45,000. Riverhurst, SK. 1-800-219-8867. SK, 778-549-5124, delrobertson@shaw.ca CASE/IH STEIGER built, 4 WD/Quads; 2011 PUMA 170, MFWD, 770 loader, lux. Plus other makes and models. Call the cab, powershift, 540/1000 PTO, 710/70 Tractor Man! Trades welcome. We deliver. 38 rear, 600/65 28 front, fenders, 3 PTH, 4 Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. remotes, 32 GPM, elec. joystick, eng. block 2005 CASE/IH 425STX, powershift, radar, and trans. heater, HID lights, rear wheel AutoSteer, 710 tires, 1750 hrs., $185,000 weights, 102” bucket and Q/C pallet forks. OBO. 306-796-4536, Central Butte, SK. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. 2010 CIH MAGNUM 215 w/LX780 loader, 1983 CASE 4690, 4WD, 7049 hrs, runs luxury cab, PTO, hitch ready, 262 WAAS good needs rubber $8500 OBO; 1983 4490 receiver, $185,000. 1-800-667-9761, 4WD, 4000 hrs, newer inside rubber, new www.redheadequipment.ca Saskatoon, SK. batteries, $18,500 OBO. 306-648-2807, 2009 PUMA 210, w/LX770 FEL, 851 hrs, 306-648-8001, Gravelbourg, SK. no 3 PTH, 18 spd. powershift w/LHR, 4 1997 CASE/IH 9370, 4 WD, 2723 hrs., 24 valves, dual PTO, 180 PTO HP, cab susp., spd., trans., 4 hyd. remotes, return line for Trimble EZ-Steer, Michelin radials. Call air drill, 30.5x32 duals- 40%, c/w Trimble 403-599-3945, Milo, AB. AutoSteer, good cond. Asking $90,000. 2008 CASE/IH 535 QUADTRACK, 535 403-308-3512 cell, Kindersley, SK. HP, front and rear diff lock, 57 GPM hyd. 2009 CIH MAGNUM 180, 3 remotes, L780 pump, 5 remotes, luxury cab, 3 PTH, 36” loader, S2 Outback AutoSteer, 3 PTH, tracks, HID light package, radar, 2890 hrs., $155,000. www.redheadequipment.ca or $ 2 3 7 , 0 0 0 . H a n l o n A g C e n t r e , 1-800-667-9761, Saskatoon, SK. 403-329-8686, toll free 1-800-461-5356 NH BOOMER 3045 w/FEL, $30,900; CIH Lethbridge, AB. Magnum 235, low hrs., $165,000; 2004 NH CASE/IH STX 375, 4WD, 2002, with TJ500, PS, $175,000; 1995 NH 9680, 42” 3470 hrs, in very nice shape, powershift, duals, $67,500; 2004 NH TJ375, PS, 710/42 tires, 4 remotes, 2 returns, perfor$135,000; 2009 CIH 435 Quad, PTO, mance monitor, rear weights, 435 HP chip, $253,500; 2006 CIH 530 Quad, 5VH, $140,000 with Trimble RTX capable Auto$235,000; 1992 JD 8760, 42” duals, S t e e r, o r $ 1 2 5 , 0 0 0 w i t h o u t . P h o n e $59,900; 2009 CIH 435, PTO, $227,500; 306-647-2344, Theodore, SK. CIH 7120, $35,000; 1998 NH 9682, $85,900. Call Hergott Farm Equipment 1993 STEIGER 9270, 3400 original hrs., new rubber, standard, Case Up-time, mint 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK. shape. Call 306-744-8113, Saltcoats, SK. 1984 5088, 5400 hrs, immaculate cond., shedded, all gauges and lights work, asking $16,000. 306-771-2926, White City, SK 2012 CIH PUMA 145 MFD, 540/1000 PTO, 3 hyds., L765 loader, 95” bucket/grapple, 350 hrs., $147,000. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca 2001 STX 325, 5200 hrs., 0 hrs on 20.8x42 duals, 4 elec. remotes, 55 GPM hyds., low pressure return line, tow cable, FM 750 GPS Trimble w/EzeeSteer, works great on hyd. grain cart, $124,500. 306-795-7493, 306-795-7747, 306-795-7208, Leross, SK. 2013 550 QUAD, 435 hrs, loaded, PTO 36” tracks, clear caps, 113 GPM hyd., 6 R e m , H I D, t o w c a b l e , Au t o S t e e r. 306-287-8487, Watson, SK. 2012 CIH STX450 PS, 800 duals, hi-cap pump, diff lock, 4 hyds, full auto-guidance, WAAS, $309,000. 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. www.redheadequipment.ca 1993 CASE/IH 9280, 4 WD, std. trans., $58,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. 7220 CASE MFWD, 2665 hours, new inside duals, shedded, very good shape, $72,000. Call 306-538-2153 Kennedy, SK. CASE 2594, 3600 hrs., 24 spd.; IHC 684 c/w FEL, 3 PTH, 2400 hrs. 403-394-4401, Lethbridge, AB. 1997 CASE/IH 9350, 8000 hrs., new inside tires, standard transmission, $49,000. 306-782-7347, Yorkton, SK. 1994 CASE 9280, 8200 hrs., new tires, excellent condition, one owner, $45,000. 306-946-3863, 306-946-7737 Watrous SK CASE 4494 4 WD tractor with PTO. Please call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1993 CIH 9280, 5900 hrs, triples, AutoSteer, shedded, exc. condition, $78,000. 306-459-2642, 306-459-7705, Ogema, SK.
2011 CIH STX450, full auto-guidance, 800 duals, front weight frame, 111 hrs., $299,500. www.redheadequipment.ca or 1-800-219-8867, Swift Current, SK. 2000 CASE 9350, 4 WD, 3400 hrs, powershift, tires- 70%, asking $85,000. Call Steve 780-674-8080, Cherhill, AB.
9630T JD, premium cab and lighting package, 530 HP, 3500 hrs, great shape, always shedded, $204,000 OBO. Ron 204-941-0045, Rosser, MB. 2006 JD 7220, MFWD, 741 JD loader, 24 spd., 3030 hrs., shedded. 306-867-9771, or cell 306-860-7501, Outlook, SK. 2004 JD 6120 L w/640 FEL, 3,850 hrs., 16 spd. w/power reverser, low profile, open cab, 540 PTO, MFWD, 3 PTH, single owner, always in heated shed, $30,000. Edmonton area, 780-983-8711. JD 8760, 4900 hrs., 20.8x38 dual radials duals, diff. lock, decellerator, shedded, exc. cond. Call 306-728-3498, Melville, SK. JD 9420 w/16’ 7900 Degelman blade, 3700 hrs., exc. cond. $205,000; JD 6420 w/640 loader, 7600 hrs., exc. cond., $55,000; JD 936D, 36’ draper header, very low acres, $40,000; J&M 875 bu. grain cart w/scale, $30,000. 204-461-0328, or 204-461-0344, Warren, MB. 2003 JD 9320, 4900 hrs., 24 spd., 710/70R42 duals, AutoTrac, diff. lock, $125,000. 306-736-7715, Glenavon, SK. JD 4640, 7400 hours, big radials, excellent mechanical condition, $21,500. Located at Castor, AB. call 780-993-2181.
1996 JD 8770, 12 spd., 20.8X38 at 40%, 6387 hrs., 4 SCV’s, return line, 2nd owner, good condition, $65,000. 306-548-4344, Sturgis, SK. 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. 1992 JD 8560, 4 WD, 24 spd., 3300 orig. hrs., 20.8R38 duals, 3 hydraulics, diff. lock, 2004 JD 9420, 4527 hrs. 1 owner, well $58,000. 204-326-1447, Mitchell, MB. equipped, Buddy seat, Active operator seat extra light pkg., 18 spd. PS, 71070R/42 PRICE REDUCED: 1994 JD 8960, c/w 14’ tires, inside weight package all around, 4 2-way Degleman blade, 20.8R42 tires like hyd. outlets w/return line excellent shape. new, 10,200 hrs., good shape, $50,000. 780-361-7674, Wetaskiwin, AB. 306-457-2935 after 6 PM, Stoughton, SK. JD 8760, 4 WD, 24 spd. trans., 4 new 2013 JD 6140R, 640 hrs., 20 spd., MFWD 20.8-38 tires, new hyd. pump, 3 remotes, w/trip link susp., H360 loader 540/1000 plus power beyond, 7807 hrs., shedded. PTO, 3 SCV, premium cab, $125,000. 204-648-4649, Dauphin, MB. 402-719-9017, Fremont, NE. 1998 JD 9400, 24 spd., newer 710x38s, 1995 JD 8570, 6784 hrs., rebuilt PTO, 24 5303 hrs, $99,000. 306-948-7223, Biggar, spd., hyd. return line, used for grain cart, SK. $55,000. 306-488-2182, Holdfast, SK. 2012 JD 9460R, 4WD, powershift, 590 2006 JD 9520, 5000 hrs, 800x38 rubber, hrs., 800/70R38’s, premium cab, leather AutoSteer ready, exc. shape, $135,000 trim, HID lights, weight package, extended OBO. 306-831-7863, Rosetown, SK. warranty, $229,500 US. Fairfax, MN., 2009 JD 9630 4WD, high flow hyds., 1749 Phone 320-848-8496 or 320-894-6560, hrs., deluxe cab, full weight package, diff. www.ms-diversified.com lock, 800x70x38 duals, HID lights, leather, 1993 JD 8570, 6332 hrs., 24 spd., 20.8x38, heated seat, electric mirrors, 5 SCVs, Au- 3 SCV, hyd. return, diff. lock, recent bottoSteer ready, stored inside, field ready, tom end and other repairs, fresh GreenS/N: RW9630P011179, $240,000; Also, light, very good condition, stored inside, 2002 JD 9520 4WD w/PTO, 5100 hrs., 18 $50,000. 306-648-2912, Gravelbourg, SK. spd., PS transmission, Michelin 800x70R38 duals, diff. lock, HID lights, deluxe cab, full 2004 JD 7320 IVT trans., MFWD, 3 PTH, weight package, 4 SCVs, stored inside, JD 741 loader, 8400 hrs., $64,900 OBO. Greenstar ready, field ready, $135,000. Call Gary 204-326-7000. Reimer Farm Call Quenton 306-354-7585, Mossbank, SK Equipment, Hwy. 12 North, Steinbach, MB. reimerfarmequipment.com quentonquark@gmail.com 1990 JD 4555 tractor. Dinsmore, SK. For 2010 JD 5075E utility tractor. HG tires, more info. call Cliff 306-846-2175 or block heater, calcium in rear tires, 3 PTH, includes JD 553 loader, 85” bucket, ext. 5 email: cab@sasktel.net yr. warranty, 470 hrs., always shedded, 1984 JD 4250, original owner, 7938 hrs., exc. cond., asking $42,000; Also available PS, immaculate condition, 20.8/38 rears, w/tractor, 6’ Kodiak mower, Sovema roto$41,000 OBO. 306-596-1467, Craven, SK. tiller, bale spear, pallet fork, snow push 2005 JD 4920, 2567 hrs., 120’ booms, blade, bucket w/grapple. 403-559-6214, 20” spacing, 1200 gal SS, AutoTrac, foam- Didsbury, AB. er, $130,000. 402-719-9017, Fremont, NE. 1997 JD 9200, 24 spd., shedded, 5000 hrs, 1994 JD 8870, 7815 hrs., new 20.8x46 $90,000. 306-460-7767, Eatonia, SK. Trelleborg radials, 24 spd. powershift, 16’ 1992 JD 4560 2 WD, 3 hyd. outlets, duals Degleman manual angle blade, Greenlight- 4500 hrs., 15 spd. powershift. One owner, ed 2 yrs ago. 306-621-5136, Yorkton, SK. retired. 306-436-4667, Milestone, SK. 1995 JD 8570, 38” radials good rubber, 1984 JD 4240, approx. 5000 hrs., new 6000 hrs., good shape, 24 speed, $52,000. rad. and hyd. couplers, 1 owner, 20.8x38 Call 306-476-2501, Rockglen, SK. tires, excellent shape, always shedded. 2000 9200 JD 4WD, 9600 hrs, new JD 306-287-3563 evenings, Watson, SK. drop-in engine, $28,000 work order, 1985 JD 8650, quad range, 3 hyd, rebuilt 20-8-42 radial duals 40% tread, good con- eng., diff. lock, AM/FM, AC, shedded, tires dition, other work orders available. Call for 85%, $29,900. 204-761-5145, Rivers, MB. details. $76,000 OBO. Can deliver. Purchased newer tractor. Neil 306-231-8300, JOHN DEERE 4230, 8 spd. engine, powershift and fuel pump all rebuilt to 50 series. Humboldt, SK. Approx. 12,000 hrs., good tires, air, radio, 2012 JD 9410R, 1300 hrs., 18 spd., power- PTO 2 spd. 306-270-0023, Allan, SK. shift with efficiency manager, 710x70R42 tires, PTO, warranty. 306-752-1948 or JD 4630 TRACTOR, complete with Ezee-On loader and bucket, hours? $16,500 OBO. 306-921-6693, Melfort, SK. 780-726-2323, Malaig, AB. 1985 4850, MFWD, 20.8x38 duals- 80%, fronts 18.4x26- 50%, approx. 11,000 hrs., 1984 JD 8850, 1000 PTO, 375 HP, 20.8/42 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 . Goodyear radials- 70%, 5452 hrs., 4 hyd., aux. return line, JD AutoSteer wiring har306-892-4313, 306-441-2691, Meota, SK. ness and mounted bracket, exc. cond., 2000 8110 MFWD, 6000 hrs., 4 SCV’s, PS, $40,000. 306-338-8078, Quill Lake, SK. 20.8x42 duals, 840 SL loader w/grapple, 1997 JD 9300, 6300 hrs., AutoSteer, 24 clean, $82,000. 204-825-8121, Morden MB spd., PTO, diff. lock, field office, 20.8x42 1995 JD 8970, 400 HP, 5673 hrs., 4 hyd. low tread, $90,000 OBO. 306-383-2867, remotes, 24 spd., Outback AutoSteer, 306-383-7080, Quill Lake, SK. 20.8x42 triples, good cond., $89,700. Call 1989 JD 8760, 12 spd., 3 hydraulics, 7950 Ken at 204-781-8664, Rosser, MB. hours, $45,000 OBO. 306-368-2403, Lake 2012 JD 8360R, 947 hrs., IVT, MFWD Lenore, SK. w/ILS, 50 KPH trans., 480/80R50 duals, JD 7800 FWA, 740 FEL, grapple, joystick, front duals, 5 SCV, warranty, $248,000. 19 spd., clamp-on duals, 3 PTH, 8360 hrs., 402-719-9017, Fremont, NE. $65,000. Will take livestock as partial payment. 306-468-7743, Canwood, SK.
JD TRACK MACHINES
1995 JD 8970, 400 HP quad range, 8000 hours, 38” radials, $62,000. Call 306-524-4960, Semans, 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. 1984 JD 8650, 8700 hrs., 4 hyds., 20.8x38 duals, diff. lock, $25,000 OBO. Call 306-575-8312, Wawota, SK. 1983 JOHN DEERE 8450, no PTO, good shape. Call 306-463-7627, Wilkie, SK.
• 2011 JD 9630T 530HP, 36” tracks, Autotrac ready, deluxe cab, 932 hrs...$248,800 $0 pymt until Nov/14. 5.46% lease ($26,625 bi-annual pymt) • 2008 JD 9430T 425HP, 36” tracks, 3PTH, Autotrac ready, deluxe cab, 6290 hrs ...$178,800 $0 pymt until Nov/14. 4.87% lease ($18,796 bi-annual pymt) 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com
1989 JD 8760, 8500 eng. hrs., 2000 hrs. on new eng., radar, diff. locks, 24 spd., 4 SCVs, 20.8x38 Michelin duals, GPS ready, $55,000. 204-851-5520, Cromer, MB. LOOKING FOR: JD 30, 40, 50 Series tractor in good cond. with mechanical issues. 1996 JD 8770, exc. cond. in and out, new Call 306-621-7170, Yorkton, SK. CASE STEIGER 335, 18 spd., 1809 hrs. 20.8R42, $64,000. 1967 JD 4020, syncro JD 4020, c/w cab, low hours, new tires, Selling by Unreserved Auction, Sat., range, new tires and engine rebuild, never exceptional mechanical condition, $13,500 May 3, Redwater, AB. 780-446-9555. loader or dozer, $11,000. Pics available. OBO. 403-823-1894, Drumheller, AB. From Redwater 1 mile East and 2.5 miles 403-886-4285, Penhold, AB. North on RR 214. View full listing 2010 JD 9630T, 36” tracks, AutoTrac 2010 JOHN DEERE Model# 326 , Stock# www.prodaniukauctions.com ready, Clear View caps, 18 spd., PS., 3400 L-6540, 439 hrs., sale price, $43,900. Call 1-780-567-4202, www.astro-sales.com hrs., $214,900. 204-324-4277, Altona, MB. Clairmont, AB. 7700 JD MFWD, approx. 5600 hrs., 740 FEL, grapple, joystick, power quad trans., MITCH’S TRACTOR SALES LTD. JD 2555 1992 CASE/IH 7120 MAGNUM, 7147 clamp-on duals, rubber- 80%, good cond., MFWD, CAH, 3 PTH, w/245 loader; JD hrs., orig. owner, 20.8x38 singles, 3 hyd., $ 5 0 , 0 0 0 . 5 8 7 - 7 9 4 - 4 6 6 6 e x t . 1 1 2 , 2950 MFWD, CAH, 3 PTH, w/260 loader; 18 spd. powershift, excellent condition. 403-854-4555, Hanna, AB. JD 4250 MFWD, 15 spd; JD 4450, MFWD, 306-291-9395, 306-283-4747 Langham SK quad; JD 6420, MFWD, 3 PTH, 24 spd., RETIRING: 1982 JD 4640 tractor, very w/LHR, loader; JD 6430 MFWD, 3 PTH, 20 1983 CASE 2590, 6624 hrs., 12 spd., PTO, good cond. 306-638-4550, 306-630-7609, spd., w/LHR, premium, w/673 loader, 220 HP, good condition, $16,000 OBO. Findlater, SK. grapple, 5800 hrs; JD 7320, MFWD, 3 PTH, 306-539-6655, Kelliher, SK. 1993 JD 8960 4 WD, 6300 hrs, shedded, 24 spd. w/LHR, w/741 FEL, grapple, 5016, 1 9 9 5 7 2 2 0 M AG N U M , MFWD, new field ready. Phone Roger 306-222-5757, hrs; JD 7410, MFWD, 3 PTH, powerquad, w/LHR, w/740 FEL, grapple. All tractors 16.9x28 on front, 18.4x42 on rear, just Saskatoon, SK. can be sold with new or used loaders. 6000 hrs., always shedded. 204-858-2754, 1977 JD 4430, 9000 hrs., c/w Allied 975 204-750-2459, mitchstractorsales.com St. Hartney, MB. loader, joy stick, QA bucket w/grapple, Claude, MB. SMOOTHER RIDE WITH CAB AIR RIDE $28,000. 306-784-3285, Herbert, SK. kit, for Case/IH QuadTrac tractors. Call HYDRAULIC FLOW CONTROL for JD 4640, TRIPLE HYDS., 20.8 factory duals, tractors, a must for air seeding systems, Milt: 306-229-1693, Hepburn, SK. c/w weights, front weights, quad shift, $79.95 + S&H. 306-577-8344, Arcola, SK. 1999 CASE/IH, FWA, approx. 7500 hrs, 8800 hrs, engine and trans work done, 2009 JD 9430 4WD, powershift, 2200 hrs., excellent rubber, extensive work done to $24,000. 306-493-7890, Milden, SK. 710/70R42’s, PTO, 5 remotes, motor seal the unit. Large ALO loader w/grapple. Looks and works excellent. Fully serviced 2 0 0 9 J D 9 5 3 0 , 4 W D, 1 2 5 0 h r s . , drain, AutoTrac ready, $174,500 US. Call and ready to work. $59,000 OBO. Call 800/70R38DLS, 18 spd., AutoTrac, Active- 320-848-2496 or 320-894-6560, Fairfax, MN. www.ms-diversified.com Chris 306-628-7840, Eatonia, SK. Seat $195,900. 402-719-9017 Fremont NE
2011 JD 9330, JD AutoSteer, 16’ Degleman blade, 500 hrs., $250,000. Herschel, SK. Call 306-277-2132 or 306-831-8007. JD 8570, 4000 hrs, triple hyds., AutoSteer, shedded. 306-634-6305, Benson, SK. 2006 9420, 4 WD, 18 spd., powershift, 4 hyds., AutoSteer ready, PTO, 16’ Degelman 6-way blade. Will sell separate. Kamsack, SK., 306-542-7808, robfar@sasktel.net 1984 JOHN DEERE 8450, 9900 hrs., PTO, good shape, good tires, asking $23,000. Call 306-548-4798, Danbury, SK. 2013 JD 6125R, 336 hrs., 24 spd., MFWD w/trip link susp., H340 loader 540/1000 PTO, 3 SCV, premium cab, $107,000. 402-719-9017, Fremont, NE. 1986 JOHN DEERE 4450 tractor. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. STEVE’S TRACTOR REBUILDER looking for JD tractors to rebuild, Series 20s, 30s, 40s or 50s, or for parts. Will pay top dollar. Now selling JD parts. 204-466-2927, 204-871-5170, Austin, MB. 2005 JD 7520 Premier, 1500 hrs., IBT trans., LH shifter, 741 JD FEL, rubber- 80% exc. condition, $98,000 OBO. Pictures available. 306-646-7743, Fairlight, SK. 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 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. 1976 JD 4430 quad, 3 hyds., 85% rubber, excellent. Call 306-744-8113, Yorkton, SK. 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 9620 4WD, powershift, 500 HP, new triple Michelin radials 20.8-42, full weight pkg, 4238 hrs, diff locks, integrated AutoSteer, $160,000. 306-372-4500, Denzil, SK
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
1.888.986.2946 2009 FREIGHTLINER CASCADIA Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Detroit Diesel engine (475 HP), Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (13 speed), Air brakes, 838000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, 4-Way rear lockup, A/C. Brandon, MB. Stock #7038-09A
$
$
82,500
Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISM engine, Eaton Fuller Auto Shift transmission (10 speed), ABS brakes, 412000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, 3-Way rear lockup, A/C, Getting a White Cncade 20 foot grain box. Saskatoon, SK. Stock #V492718
$
49,900
Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISM engine (310 HP), Eaton Fuller transmission (10 speed), Air brakes, 370000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, Diff Lock rear lockup, A/C, getting new grain box. Regina, SK. Stock #0047-05A
$
69,900
2007 PETERBILT 386 Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISX engine (450 HP), Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (13 speed), Air brakes, 1147000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, Diff Lock rear lockup, A/C. Brandon, MB. Stock #8216-07A
$
69,900
2007 GREAT DANE FLATDECK
$
2009 INTERNATIONAL 8600 4X2 Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISM engine (320 HP), Eaton Fuller Ultra Shift transmission (10 speed), Air brakes, 804000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, Diff Lock rear lockup, A/C. Brandon, MB. Stock #V291181
$
79,900
2009 INTERNATIONAL PROSTAR Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISX engine, Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (13 speed), Air brakes, 825000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, 4-Way rear lockup, A/C, power tailgate, New 20 foot Silage Box. Regina, SK. Stock #V492713
$
77,500
82,000
Deck, Flatdeck, Air Ride suspension, Tandem axle, Steel rims, 1.31” Apitong floor, 36 king pin, Winches: 21 Fixed low-profile undermount 3 bar, Width: 102in, Length: 48ft. Edmonton, AB. Stock # 7H705957U
10,500
$
77,900
2009 INTERNATIONAL 9200I 6X4
$
$
2005 INTERNATIONAL 7600 6X4
Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Paccar PX8 engine (330 HP), Eaton Fuller transmission (10 speed), Air brakes, 14000 lbs front axle capacity, 46000 lbs rear axle capacity, 3-Way rear lockup, A/C. Regina, SK. Stock #5149-08A
2001 LODE KING FLATDECK
2008 INTERNATIONAL 4300 4X2 Single Axle Grain Truck, International DT466 engine (225 HP), Allison (Auto) transmission (5 speed), Air brakes, 253000 km, 10000 lbs front axle capacity, 17500 lbs rear axle capacity, Diff Lock rear lockup, A/C, perfect body for roofing company. Regina, SK. Stock #1177-08A
82,500
2008 KENWORTH T300
Deck, Flatdeck, Air Ride suspension, Tandem axle, Steel rims, Wood floor, Width: 102in, Length: 48ft. Regina, SK. Stock #1A034842U
2008 KENWORTH T300 Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins engine (300 HP), Allison (Auto) transmission (5 speed), Air brakes, 397890 km, 14000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, Diff Lock rear lockup, A/C, Getting a matching color 20 foot grain box. Saskatoon, SK. Stock #5699-08A
17,900
2012 TOWMASTER T-70RG Deck, Air Ride suspension, Tandem axle, Aluminum rims, Wood floor, Width: 102in, Length: 33ft. Edmonton, AB. Stock #CL161801U
$
29,900
1993 TRAILMOBILE STORAGE VAN Storage, Spring Ride suspension, Single axle, Steel rims, Wood floor, Width: 102in, Length: 28ft. Winnipeg, MB. Stock #P9011975U
$
3,900
Start your career with us in our brand new state-of-the-art shop at 501 Middleton Ave., Brandon, MB
OPENING JUNE 2014!!
RECRUITING
TRANSPORT TRUCK & TRAILER TECHNICIANS
Maxim Truck & Trailer is a Canada-wide company in business for 30 years. We provide job stability with 15 locations and over 500 employees and are Canada’s only full-service truck and trailer dealer with a national presence.
THE OPPORTUNITY:
Diagnoses and completes repairs and/or services on heavy-duty trucks/buses and transportation equipment to ensure customer satisfaction and profits for Maxim while working as a member of a team.
HOURS:
Monday to Friday 7:00 am to 3:30pm Monday to Friday 3:30 pm to 12:00 Midnight Thursday to Sunday 7:30 am to 6:00 pm
WHAT WE OFFER:
A ‘Tool and Boot’ Allowance of 100% reimbursement to a maximum of $400.00 per calendar year. Maxim will pay for 100% of eligible course and book expenses to a maximum of $1,000 per level for Apprenticeship Training. Wage offered: $27.20 to $36.00 per hour. Competitive compensation packages, group benefits including health (drug card), dental, vision & company matching RRSP plan, career development training, job referral bonuses, modern facilities & equipment, a great group of people to work with, and more!
m! a e T Apply to: r u Truck & Trailer n O MaximOnline i o at: J
www.maximinc.com/jobs
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 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
1995 BOURGAULT 3225
$
CASH
CASH
2012 NH T9.670
#B22013A. SINGLE SHOOT, 2 TANK, REAR TOW HITCH, LOAD/ UNLOAD AUGER, SOFT LUG TIRES.
#HN3227A. 418 HRS, 670 DIFF LOCK, MEGA FLOW HYD.
11,500
280,000
$
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!
20% OFF
$
2,750
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
71
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
MANUFACTURER’S WARRANTY
150+ POINT INSPECTION
BUYBACK CARS, TRUCKS & SPORT UTILITY 2013 CADILLAC ESCALADE ESV AWD 6.2L V8, Loaded, Nav, DVD, Sunroof, Leather, Grey, 30,396 km ..................................................................................................................................... $69,995 2013 GMC YUKON XL 4X4 SLT 5.3L V8, Loaded, 8-Pass, Sunroof, Ebony Leather, Black, 22,081 km ..................................................................................................................................... $51,995 2013 CHEV SUBURBAN 4x4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Sunroof, 8-Pass, Ebony Leather, White, 22,732 km .. $49,995 2013 CADILLAC SRX 3.6L V6, Loaded, Navigation, DVD, Sunroof, Leather, Silver, 5,879 km$47,995 2013 CADILLAC SRX AWD 3.6L V6, Loaded, Navigation, Sunroof, Leather, 3 in Stock, Black, Gray, 26,615 km..................................................................................................... Starting at $41,995 2013 CHEV TRAVERSE 2LT AWD 3.6L V6, 7-Pass, Loaded, Sunroof, Leather, White, 20,465 km ..... $41,995 2013 CHEV 3500 EXPRESS VAN 15 Pass, White, 20,800 km ......................................... $29,995 2013 CHEV CRUZE LT 4 Cyl, Loaded, Ebony Cloth, Blue, 49,000 km, 2 in Stock, 29,600 kms ........... $16,995 2013 CHEV IMPALA LT 3.6L V6, Loaded, White with Ebony Cloth, 51,200 km................... $16,995
USED SPORT UTILITIES, S-TRUCKS & SUBURBANS 2013 CADILLAC SRX PREMIUM 3.6L V6, Loaded, Nav, Sunroof, 20”Wheels, Leather Black, 23,294 km ..................................................................................................................................... $47,995 2012 CHEV TAHOE 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Sunroof, DVD, Leather, Black, 23,374 km ......... $47,995 2012 CHEV AVALANCHE ULTIMATE GFX, 5.3L Loaded, HTD & Cooled Seats, Sunroof, Leather, Black, 27,840 km............................................................................................................... $42,995 2012 BUICK ENCLAVE AWD CXL 3.6L V6, 7-Pass, Heated/Cooled Seats, 2 Sunroofs, DVD, “Hit the Road” Package, Ebony Leather, Black, 53,672 km ............................................................... $39,995 2012 GMC ACADIA SLT AWD Loaded, 7-Pass, DVD, Heated Leather, Diamond White, 69,925 km.... $36,995 2012 GMC ACADIA SLE 2 AWD 3.6L V6, Loaded, Brown, 56,519 km.............................. $31,995 2012 CHEV EQUINOX LT AWD 2.4L 4Cyl, Loaded, Sunroof, Leather, Mocha, 54,132 km... $27,995 2012 GMC ACADIA SLE AWD Heated Cloth, 7-Pass, Charcoal, 80,266 km ...................... $27,995 2012 CHEV EQUINOX LT AWD 2.4L 4 Cyl, Loaded, Sunroof, Leather, Mocha, 54,132 km.. $24,995 2011 GMC YUKON SLT 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Sunroof, Leather, White, 81,674 km........... $36,995 2010 CHEV AVALANCHE LTZ 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Cashmere Leather, Diamond White, 84,031 km ..................................................................................................................................... $34,995 2011 BUICK ENCLAVE CSL AWD 3.6L, 7-Pass, Loaded, Dual Sunroof, Leather, Grey, 41,784 km .... $34,995 2011 GMC ACADIA SLE FWD 3.6L V6, 8-Pass, Loaded, Cloth, Silver, 18,642 km ............. $26,995 2010 MERCEDES BENZ ML350 3.0L V6, White, 96,011 km ........................................... $37,995 2010 GMC YUKON SLT 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Sunroof, Heated Leather, Grey, 145,908 km$28,995 2010 GMC YUKON SLE 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Cloth, White, 103,548 km ......................... $26,995
2010 CHEV TRAVERSE 1LT AWD 3.6L V6, Auto, 7-Pass, Loaded, White, 68,541 km........ $25,995 2010 CHEV AVALANCHE LT 4WD 5.3L V8, Loaded, Sunroof, Leather, Black, 141,436 km $24,995 2010 CHEV EQUINOX LTZ AWD 3.0L V6, Loaded, Sunroof, Leather, White, 97,766 km ..... $22,995 2010 HYUNDAI VERA CRUZ GLS AWD 3.8L V6, Auto, 7-Pass, Loaded, Sunroof, Leather, White, 104,134 km....................................................................................................................... $20,995 2010 CHEV TRAVERSE AWD LS 3.6L V6, 7-Pass, Loaded, CD, Dark Cherry Metallic, 146,112 km .. $17,995 2010 GMC CANYON SLE EXT CAB 4X4 3.7L 5-Cyl, Loaded, Silver, 113,600 km............. $18,995 2009 GMC YUKON SLE 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Ebony Cloth, Blue, 150,993 km................. $19,995 2009 CHEV AVALANCHE LT 4X4 Loaded, White, 124,000 km ......................................... $20,995 2009 DODGE NITRO SLT Loaded, Cloth, Silver, 108,070 km .............................................$14,995 2008 GMC ACADIA AWD SLT2 3.6L 6 Cyl, Loaded, Sunroof, DVD, Leather, Red, 126,490 km ......... $23,995 2008 CHEV AVALANCHE 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Maroon, 126,857 km.................... $20,995 2008 PONTIAC TORRENT GT AWD 3.4L V6, Loaded, Sunroof, Cloth, White, 109,581 km . $14,995 2008 FORD RANGER EXT CAB 4X4 XLT 4.0L V6, Loaded, Ebony Cloth, Grey, 112,581 km ............ $13,995 2008 FORD RANGER XLT EXT CAB 2WD W/Tonneau Cover, Black, 104,338 km............. $13,995 2008 FORD ESCAPE XLT 4X4 V6, Power Windows & Locks, Green, 156,360 km ............. $12,995 2008 DODGE CALIBER SXT Standard Trans., 1.8L, Loaded, Cloth, Blue, 89,067 km ......... $10,995 2008 GMC ENVOY SLE 4X4 4.2L 6-Cyl, Loaded, DK Grey, 151,100 km ........................... $12,995 2007 GMC CANYON EXT CAB 4X4 3.5L V6, Loaded, Grey Cloth, Black, 117,868 km....... $15,995 2007 BUICK RAINER CXL AWD 4.2L 6-Cyl, Loaded, 5 Pass, Leather, Gold, 137,853 km.. $10,995 2006 BMW X3 AWD 3.0L 6 Cyl, Auto, Black, 83,242 km .................................................. $16,995 2006 CHEV EQUINOX LT AWD 3.4L V6, Auto, Loaded, Cloth, Silver, 147,784 km ................ $9,995 2005 NISSAN X-TRAIL SE Loaded, Heated Seats, Sunroof, Gold, 120,678 km ................... $8,995
USED EXT. CABS & CREW CABS 2013 GMC SIERRA ½ TON CREW CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Leather, White, 80,443 km ............. $32,995 2013 GMC 1/2 TON EXT CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Leather, Grey, 76,967 km ............... $29,995 2012 GMC 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 DENALI 6.2L, Loaded, Sunroof, Leather, Black, 36,208 km .. $44,995 2013 CHEV 1/2 TON EXT CAB 4X4 NEVADA 5.3L V8, Cloth, Silver, 18,248 km.............. $28,995 2012 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 LTZ 5.3L V8, Loaded, Sunroof, Power Pedals, Leather, Brown, 29,886 km ............................................................................................................. $36,995 2012 GMC SIERRA SLE CREW CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Heated Seats, Leather, Silver, 31,505 km .....................................................................................................................................$29,995 2012 GMC 1/2 TON CREW/CAB SLT 5.3L V8, Loaded, Leather, White, 123,165 km ....... .$29,995 2011 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW/CAB 4X4 LTZ 5.3LV8, Loaded, Cloth, Red, 52,341 km ........ $31,995 2012 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW/CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Silver, 87,523 km ............ $26,995
/64, *,5;9,
24 HOUR ROADSIDE ASSISTANCE
2012 GMC 1/2 TON CREW/CAB 4X4 NEVADA 4.8L V8, A-C-T, Cloth Silver, 64,916 km . $22,995 2011 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW/CAB 4X4 LTZ 5.3L V8, Loaded, Leather, Red, 52,341 km ....$31,995 2011 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW/CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Leather, White, 71,149 km ........ $29,995 2011 FORD F150 XLT CREW CAB4X4 3.5L V6, Loaded, Blue, 76,511 km ...................... $25,995 2011 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X45.3L V8, Loaded, Leather, White, 71,149 km.......... $29,995 2011 CHEV 1/2 TON SHORTBOX CREW CAB 4X4 LT 5.3L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Silver, 67,900 km ... $26,995 2011 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 6.2L, Loaded, Cloth, White, 78,792 km................. $26,995 2011 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 6.2L Loaded, Cloth, White, 78,792 km ................. $26,995 2011 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 LT 5.3L Loaded, Cloth, White, 62,437 km............. $25,995 2011 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Cloth, White, 86,327 km ............ $25,995 2011 GMC 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 4.8L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Charcoal, 77,011 km ........ $22,995 2011 GMC 1/2 TON EXT CAB 2WD 4.8L, Loaded, Chrome Pkg, Cloth, Silver, 34,130 km $18,995 2010 CHEV SILVERADO LTZ CREW CAB 4X4 Loaded, DVD, Sunroof, White, 138,100 km$23,995 2010 GMC 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 SLT 5.3L V8, Loaded, Leather, White, 105,504 km $23,995 2010 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 LT 5.3L, Loaded, Cloth, Black, 128,035 km .......... $23,995 2010 GMC 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, 2’Lift, All Terrain Pkg, Silver, 139,574 km . $19,995 2009 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Leather, Silver, 128,446 km ....... $18,995 2009 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 LT 5.3L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Silver, 151,000 km...... $17,995 2008 GMC 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 SHORT BOX Denali, 6.2L V8, Loaded, Sunroof, Leather, Black, 102,841 km............................................................................................................. $27,995 2008 GMC 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4SLE 5.3L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Grey, 132,507 km ...... $20,995 2008 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Blue, 130,165 km............ $20,995 2008 GMC 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 SLE 5.3L V8, Loaded, Silver, 132,519 km.............. $20,995 2007 FORD F150 CREW CAB 4X4 XLT XTR Pkg, 5.4L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Tan, 116,777 km ........... $18,995 2007 FORD F150 SUPER CREW 4X4 Loaded, Grey, 103,686 km ................................... $17,995 2007 FORD F150 SUPER CREW 5.4L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Grey, 103,686 km .................... $17,995 2007 FORD F150 EXT CAB 4X4 XLT 5.4L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Blue, 155,418 km ............. $13,995 2007 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Grey, 92,255 km.............. $20,995 2006 GMC 1/2 TON EXT CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Cloth, White, 137,340 Km .............. $15,995
USED 1/2 TONS 2011 GMC 1 TON CREW CAB 4X4 D/Max Dually, Loaded, Cloth, Grey, 96,357 km........... $41,995
USED 3/4 TONS & 4X4S 2012 CHEV 3/4 TON CREW 4X4 6.0L V8, Loaded, Cloth, White, 43,111 km .................... $31,995 2010 GMC 3/4 TON CREW CAB 4X4 SLT 6.6L D/Max, Loaded, Leather, Grey, 81,985 km$39,995
LOW RATE FINANCING CALL FO
FOR DETAILS!
Email: contactus@watrousmainline.com Website: www.watrousmainline.com
WARMAN
30 DAY/2500 KM NO-HASSLE EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE
DL#907173
SERVING SASKATOON & AREA FOR OVER 25 YEARS
w w w. w a r m a n h o m e c e n t re . c o m
GREAT PRICES, EVEN BETTER SERVICE
Size 16 ft. Walls
Materials (Coloured Walls)
Material & Labour
Size 16 ft. Walls
Materials (Coloured Walls)
Material & Labour
32x48x16
$12,680
$20,130
32x48x16
$12,750
$20,700
40x56x16
$17,215
$25,840
40x56x16
$16,485
$25,610
40x64x16
$18,140
$27,995
40x64x16
$18,290
$28,645
48x80x16
$24,865
$39,650
48x80x16
$23,900
$39,185
48x96x16
$27,760
$45,500
48x96x16
$26,600
$44,840
60x120x16
$45,275
$73,715
60x120x16
$41,200
$70,140
OVER 300 PRE-OWNED VEHICLES TO CHOOSE FROM!
MON-SAT 8:30AM - 6PM THURSDAY 8:30AM-9PM
READY TO MOVE HOMES Delivering homes ON TIME to happy customers in Sask., Alta., and Man. for over 25 years w Book Noery Of For Delivome in Your H
2014
INVENTOR BLOWOUT Y ! All
Spec Ho m On Sale es Now!
PACKAGES INCLUDE: •29 Gauge #1 Colored Metal Walls and Galvalume Roof •1 Large Sliding Door •1 Steel Walk-In Door OPTIONS: •Other Sizes and Wall Heights Available •Windows •Overhead Door
3¼ x 6 Doweled .......................$3.70 3¼ x 7 Doweled .......................$4.97 4¼ x 6 Doweled .......................$5.30 South Railway Street West, Warman, Sask.
Phone 306-933-4950 Toll Free: 1-800-667-4990
4¼ x 7 Doweled .......................$6.40 1x6 - 8’ Spruce Rough Cut........$2.00 Barb Wire 12-1/2 gauge Canadian ....$87.99
Pictures and pricing at
WWW.WARMANHOMES.CA Toll-Free 1-866-933-9595
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
WATROUS MAINLINE MOTORS 0% for 84 mos. on H.D. Pickups!
SALE!
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PURCHASE A NEW OR PRE-OWNED VEHICLE OVER $5,000 AND WIN A HOLIDAY TRAILER, SUPPLIED BY SUCCESS RV!
2014 CHEV & GMC 1500 CREW CABS & DOUBLE CABS 2014 CHEV SILVERADO 1500 LTZ PLUS PKG. 4WD DOUBLE CAB 6.2 V8, Loaded, White with Cocoa Dune Leather. MSRP $56,660 ............ Sale Price $49,995 1 MORE 2014 GMC SLT PREFERRED PKG. 1500 DOUBLE CAB 4WD 6.2L V8, Loaded, Black with Black Leather MSRP $57,590........................................................... Sale Price $50,995 2014 GMC SIERRA 4WD D/CAB ALL TERRAIN 5.3L V8, Loaded, White w/ Ebony Leather 2 in Stock Starting at Stock #E1209 MSRP $52,465........................................................... Sale Price $46,995 2014 GMC SIERRA DENALI 1500 4WD S/BOX 6.2L V8, Loaded, Sunroof, Diamond White, 2 in Stock MSRP $67,015................... Sale Price $59,995 3-2014 GMC SIERRA 1500 4WD SLT CREW CAB S/BOX GFX PKG, 5.3L V8, Loaded, 20” Alum Wheels, 3 Black,1 White Diamond, Starting at MSRP $57,410........................................................... Sale Price $51,995 80-2014 1500 CREW CAB Starting at stock #E1108. ..................$32,995 20-2014 -CREW GMC DOUBLE CABS Starting ...........................$34,995
USED SPORT UTILITIES & S-TRUCKS 2007 HONDA RIDGELINE EX-L 3.5L, Loaded, Leather, White, 226,185 km ................................................................................................$14,995 2006 GMC YUKON AWD 5.3L V8, 4-Door 4x4, Loaded, Sunroof, Leather, Pewter, 162,272 km ......................................................................$17,995 2005 TOYOTA RAV4 4-Cyl, 5-Speed, Loaded, Heated Seats, Leather, Royal Blue, 220,763 km............................................................................ $9,995 2005 CHEV AVALANCHE LS 4X4 5.3L, Loaded, Blue, 194,920 km .................................................................................................. $9,995
2004 GMC YUKON XLS LT 1/2 TON 5.3L V8, Loaded, DVD, Leather, White, 249,296 km ..................................................................................$10,995 2004 GMC YUKON XL SLT 4 DR 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Heated Seats, Leather, Red, 226,742 km ................................................................ $8,995 2002 CHEV SUBURBAN 4WD 5.3L V8, Loaded, 7-Pass, Sunroof, Leather, White, 273,138 km .......................................................................... $7,995 2001 GMC JIMMY 4X4 2-DR V6, Loaded, Cloth, Black, 204,713 km .................................................................................................. $4,995
2014 CHEV & GMC DIESEL CREW CAB 4X4S — 35 IN STOCK
6-2014 CHEV & GMC BIG DOOLEY CREW CAB 4X4S 3-2014 CHEV & GMC 3500 H.D. (1TON) L.W.B. CREW CAB 4X4S 25-2014 CHEV GMC 2500 H.D. (3/4 TON) S/BOX CREW CAB 4X4S Some with GFX Pkgs, GFX Ultimate Pkg, Denali Pkg. 0% For 84 mos. on H.D. Pickups BLOWOUT PRICES..................................................Call Dealer!
MEDIUM DUTY TRUCKS 2014 KENWORTH T370 TANDEM 350 H.P. Paccar (Cummins) Diesel, Allison Auto, Loaded, 8.5’x20’x65” CIM Ultracel Box, Hoist, Electric Tarp, Remote Hoist and Endgate, Red, MSRP $162,374 ......SALE PRICE $139,995 51 MORE WHITE IN STOCK 2009 GMC C8500 Cancade Aluminum Box, Electric Roll Top, Pintle Hitch, White, 38,029 km .......$89,995
2008 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA Detroit 60 Seves (515 H.P.) Eaton 13 Spd. UltraShift 12,000# F/A, 40,000# R/A, Loaded, 8½’x60”x65” Ultra-CelII CIM Box, Hoist, Electric Tarp, Remote Endgate & Hoist, White With Teal Green Box, 814,278 km ...........................................................................$79,995 1 MORE 2008 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA 470 H.P. Auto Shift, White With Maroon Box, Loaded Same, 405,184 km.........................................$82,995 2006 GMC C8500 3126 Cat Diesel, 300 H.P., Allison Auto, Roll Tarp, Remote End Gate & Hoist, Maroon Box, White 49,899 km.........(2 IN STOCK) $74,995 2005 VOLVO TANDEM with Grain Boxes arriving soon ...................$56,995 1979 INTERNATIONAL 404 Engine, 5&2 Transmission, 15’ Steel Box, Roll Tarp, Brown, 105,237 km...............................................................$10,995 1971 INTERNATIONAL LOADSTAR 1600 304 V8 Gas, 5&2 Transmission, 8’x15’x41’ Wood Box, Orange/White, 39,577 Miles ........................... $8,995
60 IN STOCK – USED EXT. CABS & CREW CABS 2010 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 4.8L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Blue, 165,164 km ..................................................................................$17,995 2009 CHEV 1/2 TON EXT CAB 4X4 5300, Loaded, Cloth, 189,983 km ................................................................................................$15,995 2007 CHEV SILVERADO LTZ CREW CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Heated Seats, Leather, DK Blue, 254,303 km ..............................................$12,995 2007 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 LT “CLASSIC” 5.3L, Loaded, DVD, Sunroof, Leather, Red, 179,340 km.................................................$12,995 2007 CHEV SILVERADO CREW CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Blue, 392,121 km ..................................................................................................$8,995 2006 FORD F150 CREW CAB 5-Pass. 5.4L V8, Leather, White, 194,185 km ................................................................................................$12,995 2006 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Red, 216,100 km ..................................................................................$10,995 2005 GMC 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 HD 6.0L, Loaded, Cloth, White, 158,844 km ..................................................................................$15,995
2005 CHEV 1/2 TON CREW CAB 4X4 5.3L V8, Loaded, Cloth, Grey, 201,182 km ..................................................................................$11,995 2004 FORD F150 XLT SUPER CAB 4X4 Loaded, Grey Cloth, Silver, 177,069 km .................................................................................... $9,995 2004 CHEV 1/2 TON EXT C 4X4 5.3L, Auto, Loaded, Cloth, Beige, 194,652 km ................................................................................................$11,995 2004 GMC 1/2 TON EXT C 4X4 SLE 5.3L, Loaded, Cloth, White, 201,888 km .................................................................................................. $9,995
USED 3/4 TONS & 4X4S 2011 CHEV 3/4 TON CREW CAB 4X4 6.6L D/Max, V8, Loaded, Cloth, Taupe, 218,011 km .......................................................................$26,995 2011 CHEV 3/4 TON CREW CAB 4X4 LT 6.6L D/Max, V8, Loaded, Cloth, Taupe, 218,011 km .......................................................................$26,995 2010 DODGE 3/4 TON CREW CAB 4X4 RAM SLT 6.7L Cummins, Loaded, Cloth, Pewter ,226,011 km ............................................................$29,995 2009 GMC 3/4 TON CREW CAB 4X4 D/MAX HD SLE S/Box, Loaded, Cloth, White,166,677 km ...............................................................$28,995 2008 CHEV 3/4 TON CREW CAB 4X4 LT 6.6L D/Max, Loaded, Black, 173,084 km ..................................................................................$26,995 2005 CHEV LS 3/4 TON EXT 4X4 DURAMAX Diesel, Loaded, Blue With Ebony Cloth, 241,141 km ...............................................................$15,995 2004 CHEV 3/4 TON CREW CAB 4X4 LT 6.6L V8, D/Max, A-C-T, 228,416 km ................................................................................................$14,995
USED 1 TONS 2006 CHEV 1 TON CREW CAB 4X4 6.6L D/MAX Diesel, Single Rear Wheel, 8’ Box, Long Wheel Base, Loaded, Cloth, White, 260,106 km ...........$18,995 2003 CHEV 1 TON EXT CAB 4X4 8.1L Gas Dually, Loaded, 9’ Flat Deck, Vinyl Floor, 228,126 km .................................................................$12,995
STATE-OF-THE-ART COLLISION CENTRE
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WATROUS, SASK. DL#907173
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email: contactus@watrousmainline.com Website: 222.watrousmainline.com
NEW WILSON GOOSENECK, FOREMAN & GROUNDLOAD LIVESTOCK TRAILERS On Order & Special Order Available Various Options Available
NEW WILSON DECKS AVAILABLE Various Options Available
NEW MUVALL EQUIPMENT TRAILER HYDRAULIC BEAVER TAILS & HYDRAULIC OR MANUAL DETACH TRAILERS Available in 8 ½’ or 10’ Wide On Order – Custom Spec Available
WESTERN CANADA'S ONLY FULL LINE MUV-ALL DEALER NEW WILSON SUPER B, TANDEM & TRIDEM GRAIN 2 & 3 HOPPERS AVAILABLE
CANADA’S ONLY
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Moose Jaw, 877-999-7402
Saskatoon, 866-278-2636
Moose Jaw, 877-999-7402
Brian Griffin, Harvey Van De Sype, John Carle
Bob Fleischhacker | Cell: 306-231-5939
Michael Dueck | 888-395-7667
www.goldenwesttrailer.com
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
COMBINES
SPRAYERS 2013 CIH 4430 (SA) 120ft, luxury cab, viper pro, HID lighting, fenders,
AFS accuguide ready......................................................................SOLD 2012 CIH 4430 (SC) 600hrs, 120ft, aim command, autoboom, lux cab, PRO700...$310,000 2011 CIH 4420 (LL) 120ft, deluxe cab, viper pro, aim command, HID lighting, accumboom, fenders................................................................................$299,000 2010 CIH 4420 (SC) 1000hrs, 80 duals, pro 600, autoboom..........$290,000 2012 CIH FL4520 (SC) HID lighting, rear fenders, mud flaps, 810 tank, 1660 hrs...$285,000 2011CIH4420(LL)120ft,HIDlighting,aimcommand,autoboom,3”fill,650’s&320’s...$279,000 2009 CIH 4420 (SC) 120ft, full guidance, 650 floaters, aim, luxury cab..$260,000 2011 JD 4830 (ES) 100ft, 2 sets tires, 4 crop divider brackets, steering...$250,000 2009 CIH 4420 (SC) 100ft, viper smarttrax, 2 sets tires, aim command, autoboom, 1600 hrs..........................................................................$239,500 2005 CIH 4410 (SC) 90ft, aim command, active suspension, autoboom, 650 floaters...$173,900 2010Apache1010(SC)90ft,1000gal,auto-guidance,380tires,raven,envisiopro,562hrs...$169,000 2006 CIH 4410 (LL) 100ft, aim foam, 4600 raven, auto steer, 252 antenna, 3 sensor height...$165,000 2005CIH4410(SC)90ft,1200gal,aimcommand,smarttraxx,accuboom,viperpro,3200hrs...$159,000 2006Terrogator9203(SA)airmaxbox,Viper,70ftboom,smarttrax/autosteer,3wheeler....SOLD 2001 CIH SPX3185 (ES) 90ft, 750 gal, foamer, 2 sets tires................$143,000 2000 CIH 4260 (SA) 90ft, new boom tips, no aim command, S3 outback steering, floaters...$69,000 2007 NH SF216 (LL) pull type,100ft, 1600 gal tank, chem eductor.....17,500 2001 Flexicoil S67XL (SC) pull type, 90ft, 1250 gal tank, auto rate, suspended boom....................................................................$15,900 1988 Flexicoil S65XL (SC) pull type, 1200gal, 100ft, auto-rate, 3-way nozzle body...$4,500
SEEDERS 2013 Seedhawk 84-12 (SA) 800 TBH tank, agtron blockage, viper pro, canola bag lift................................................................................$400,000 2011 Bourgault 3310 (SC) 75ft, 10” spacing, no MRB’s, c/w 6700 tank, duals, 4 tank metering, 591 monitor..............................................SOLD 2011 Bourgault 3310 (SC) 75ft, 12” spacing, double shoot, 6550 tank, X20 map link, MRB 25....................................................................$298,000 2011 Bourgault 3310 (SC) SE, 68ft, 12” spacing, MRB, blockage, 6550 tank, 4 tank metering, X20 w/camera......................$289,000 2010 Bourgault 3310 (ES) 55ft, 12” spacing, 4.8” pneumatic packer, S25 MRB’s, c/w 6550 tank.............................................................SOLD 2013 JD 1890 (SC) disc drill, 60ft, 430 bushel tank, blockage, duals, conveyor, ISO compatible...............................................................$239,000 2009 JD 1870 (ES) 56ft, 12” spacing, full blockage, single castors, 1910 TBH cart, conveyor..........................................................................$199,900 2009 Seedhawk 50-12 (SA) MR440 tank, dbl shoot, 10” spacing, morris monitor, shedded..............................................................$189,000 2010 CIH PH800 (LL) 70ft, 800 TBH cart, single shoot, high flotation tire, dual fan, new dutch paired row.............$189,000 2010 CIH ATX700 (SC) 60ft, 10” spacing, ADX3430 tank, dbl shoot, side band...$188,000 2006 Seedhawk 64-12 (ES) CIH 4350 tank TBT, mechanical cart, 30.5 rubber...SOLD 2003 Bourgault 5710 (SC) 54ft, 9.8” spacing, single shoot, 3½” steel packers, 5350 tank, dbl shoot........................................................$107,500 2000 Bourgault 5710 (SA) 54ft, dickey john NH3 kit, steel packers, 3 tank metering, overhauled MRB................................................................$79,000 2005 JD 1820 (SC) 61ft, dbl shoot, 10” spacing, 320 tank w/singles....$79,000 2004 Morris Maxium II (SA) 49ft, 10” spacing, single shoot, 7240 TBT tank...$55,000 1998 Bourgault 5710 (SC) 54ft, 9.8” spacing, dbl shoot, 2002 - 5250 cart, 3 tank metering, cab rate adju..............................................................................$49,500 2004 NH SD440 (SC) 39ft, 10” spacing, 4.5” steel packers, ss drill, ds tank, SC2300 tank..............................................................................SOLD 1999 Flexicoil 5000 (SA) 39ft, 1720 tank, steel packers, NH3 kit, atom jet single openers................................................................$41,000 1997 Morris 7240 (SC) 36ft, single shoot, 10” spacing, full blockage, 7240 tank, 2 tank metering..............................................................$39,000 1996 Morris Maxm 7300 (SC) 50ft, 10” spacing, s/s steel packers, 300 bushel cart, atom jet openers...........................................................$29,500
HEADERS
2013 CIH 9230 (SA) heavy lift, lat tilt, c/w 3016 header, magna cut fine chopper, HID lighting......................................................................$360,000 2013 CIH 8230 (ES) autoguide Nav II controller, lat tilt, luxury cab, magna fine chopper, c/w 3016..................................................................$358,000 2012 CIH 8230 (ES) accuguide Nav II controller, HID lights, 262 omnistar reciever, 450 rotor hrs.....................................................................SOLD 2012 CIH 9120 (SC) luxury cab, autoguidance, 620 duals, HID lighting, lat tilt, 348 rotor hrs...................................................................$325,500 2011 CIH 9120 (SA) lat tilt, powerplus cvt feeder, c/w, 3016 pu header, 719 rotor hrs...$300,000 2012 CIH 8120 (SC) duals, lat tilt, small tube rotor, full auto guidance, trailer hitch....$299,000 2013 CIH 7130 (SC) lat tilt, ext wear rotor, stnd chopper, pro 700, 800 tires, trailer hitch...$285,500 2010 CIH 8120 (SA) lat tilt, HD planet w/diff lock, HID lighting, Y&M, c/w 2016 PU header...$257,000 2009 CIH 9120 (SA) 900 tires, c/w 2016 pu header, lat tilt, 1004 rotor hrs...$249,900 2009 JD 9770 (SA) duals, crary hopper topper, autoguide, c/w 615 pu hdr, 1049 rotor hrs................................................................................$225,000 2010 CIH 8120 (SC) 520 duals, lat tilt, fine cut chopper, auto-guidance, c/w 2016 pu hdr, 1136 rot..........................................$229,500 2009 CIH 8120 (SC) duals, lat tilt, HID lights, autoguidance, 1241 rotor hrs...$215,900 2008 CIH 8010 (SA) deluxe cab, 900 tires, c/w 2016 pu header, fine cut chopper...$210,000 2008 JD 9770 STS (SC) singles, auto guidance, c/w pu header, long auger, 850 rotor hrs...$198,500 2012 CIH 7120 (SA) 900 singles, stnd rotor, michaels topper, c/w 2016 header, 1190 rotor hrs.................................................................$195,000 2009 CIH 7088 (SA) 800 singles, lat tilt, AFX rotor, c/w 2016 header, chopper...$189,900 2010CIH7088(SC)800singles,lattilt,AFXrotor,stndchopper,Y&M,830rotorhrs...$189,000 2007 CIH 7010 (SC) 1550 rotor hrs, 800 singles, chopper, lat tilt, AFX rotor...$187,000 2007 CIH 8010 (LL) 900 tires, c/w 2016 pu header, fine cut chopper, hopper topper, lat tilt.......................................................................$179,000 2005 CIH 8010 (LL) new feeder floor, top sieve, 1500 eng hrs, 1200 rotor hrs...SOLD 2005 CIH 8010 (ES) stnd chopper, AHHC, hopper topper, duals, no lat tilt, c/w 2016 pu header.........................................................................$130,000 2009 CIH 7088 (SC) 800 singles, AFX rotor, chopper, pro 600 monitor, 1500 rotor hrs...................................................................$129,200 2004 JD 9660 (SA) jobber duals, michels topper, y&m, new feeder chain, c/w 914 pu hdr.................................................................................$120,000 2004 JD 9760 (ES) singles, 615P pu header, 2415 rotor hrs...$109,700 2005 CIH 2388 (SC) chopper, AFX rotor, Y&M, c/w 2015 pu header, 2300 rotor hrs...$89,500 2003CIH2388(SC)outbackGPS,nomonitor,chopper,c/w1015header,1750rotorhrs...$89,000 2003 CIH 2388 (ES) specialty chopper, curved batt spreaders, c/w 2015 pu header.........................................................................$87,900 2000 CIH 2388 (SC) hopper topper, outback steering, c/w 1015 pu, 2069 hrs, 1543 rotor.............................................................................................$78,500 1998 CIH 2388 (SC) chopper specialty rotor, c/w 1015 swathmaster, y&m, 2500 rotor hrs.....................................................................................$64,500 1997 CIH 2188 (LL) c/w 1015 pu header, topper, chopper, excellor kit...$62,900 1995 CIH 2188 (SC) topper, specialty rotor, new accelerator, chopper, newer tires, 2976 rotor hrs.................................................................................$39,500 1995 NH TR97 (SA) combine, c/w pu header..........................................$20,000
SWATHERS 2013 CIH WD1903 (SA) c/w DH362 header, upgraded cab, cab suspension...$170,000 2013 MacDon M155 (SC) c/w 35ft D65 header, pu reel, hyd F&A, forked castors, 4760 acres........................................................................................$156,000 2013 CIH WD1903 (ES) c/w DH362, upgraded cab, cab suspension, hyd freeform swath roller.....................................................................................$149,000 2011 MacDon M155 (SA) c/w D60 40ft header, roto shears..............$140,000 2010 CIH WD2303 (SC) c/w DHX362 header, upgrade cab, cab suspension..$135,900 2012 CIH WD1903 (SA) c/w DH362, cab suspension only, chaff wiper kit, cold start pkg, 315 hrs..........................................................$125,000 1995 Westward 9000 Turbo (ES) c/w MacDon 960 header, 36FT, 2439 eng hrs...$35,000 1996Premier4930(SC)c/w972header,24ft,pureel,newknife,canvas&guard...$29,500 2008 CIH HDX182 Conditioner (SC) 18ft, steel rollers..................$26,900 2006 MacDon S30 (SC) 30ft, pick up reel...................................$17,000
Saskatoon 888-788-8007
Swift Current 888-576-5561
2012 CIH 2162 (SC) 40ft, dbl knife, pu reel, upper cross auger, AFX adapter....$75,900 2010 CIH 2142 (ES) 35ft, 5 batt reel, AFX adapter, transport, upper cross auger....$75,000 2010 MacDon FD70 (SA) 35ft, JD adapter, pea auger, transport, poly c-bar...$75,000 2010 CIH 2152 (SA) 45ft, dbl knife, 5 batt reel, AHHC, transport...$67,000 2010 CIH 2162 (SC) 30ft, pu reel, 2388 adapter, cross auger.......$62,900 2012 CIH 2152 (SC) 40ft, single knife, AHHC, AFX adapter, transport...$62,900 2012 CIH 3020 (SC) 35ft...........................................................................................$48,900 2012 CIH 3020 (SC) 30ft, dbl knife, AFX adapter, AWS air reel............$48,500 2011 CIH 2020 (SC) 35ft, AWS air reel, hyd F&A..................................$47,500 2006 CIH 2042 (SA) 36ft split reel, 8120 adapter, new canvas, knives, & guards.$45,000 NH 94C (SC) 36ft, AFX adapter, cross auger, transport.......................................SOLD
2010 CIH 2020 (SC) 35ft, AWS air reel, 6 batt pu reel.............................$44,500 2009 CIH 2020 (SC) 35ft, pu reel, F&A, auto header...........................$39,000 2005 HoneyBee SP36 (SC) 36ft, upper cross auger............................$37,900 2007 CIH 2062 (SC) 35ft, upper cross auger, AFX adapter, shedded...$37,500 2003 MacDon 972 (LL) 36ft, pu reel, AFX adapter, transport...$29,000 2009 CIH 2020 (SA) 35ft, trailer, pu reel......................................$25,000 1998 HoneyBee SP36 (SC) 36ft, pu reel, transport, cross auger, 2388 adapter..$22,900 2001 HoneyBee SP30 (SC) 30ft, pu reel, transport, 2388 adapter...$22,000 1995 HoneyBee SP30 (SC) 30ft, pu reel, transport, 2388 adapter.................$19,500 1997 Macdon 960 (LL) 36FT, p/u, pea auger, 2388 adapter.........$17,900 1997 Macdon 960 (SA) 36FT, p/u, pea auger, 2388 adapter.........$17,900 2006 Macdon S30 Header (SC) 30ft swather pick up reels.......$17,000 2001 CIH 2015 (SA) 14ft rake up header.........................................$13,000 1994 CIH 1020 (SC) 25ft, p/u reel, F&A...........................................$9,500 1994 CIH 1015 (SC) IH pu.............................................................$6,500
TRACTORS
2WD Tractors
2013 CIH MX340 (SC) luxury cab, PTO, 3 point hitch, 5 remotes, hi-cap pump, 117 hrs..............................................................................$279,000 2012 CIH MX340 (ES) luxury cab, hi flow HTD system, PTO, weights, 14ft blade.......................................................$239,000 2012 CIH Magnum 180 (SC) luxury cab, PTO, 3 point hitch, hi-cap pump, joystick, L785 loader......................................................SOLD 2012 CIH Magnum 180 (SC) deluxe cab, 540/1000 PTO, 3 point hitch, duals, hyds, L785 loader...............................$184,500 2012 CIH Puma 160 (SA) powershift, 3 point hitch, PTO, 3 mechanical remotes, L765 loader w/grapple...$129,000 2009 CIH Puma 140 (SC) MFD, loader & grapple, 4 remotes, front fenders, 98” bar axle, 4000 hrs.......................................................$85,500 2012 CIH Farmall 50B (SC) HST transmission, rear remote, 170 hrs...$25,900
4WD Tractors 2013 CIH STX600 (SA) 36” tracks, luxury cab, PTO, 6 electric remotes, 372 receiver, 846 hrs..................................................................$450,000 2012 CIH STX550 (SC) 36” tracks, luxury cab, PTO, diff lock, hi-cap pump, 4 hyd, Pro 700, HID lights..................................$409,500 2013 CIH STX500 (SA) 36” tracks, PTO, hi-cap pump, 6 electric remotes, 372 WAAS receiver, GPS ready...........................SOLD
2011 CIH STX535 (SA) 36” tracks, PTO, luxury cab, 5 hyd, Nav II, 262 receiver, 1800 hrs, Pro 700...$360,000 2013 CIH STX400 (SC) powershift, 520 triples, PTO, diff lock, 4 hyds, omnistar receiver, pro 700.................................$309,000 2011 CIH STX500 (LL) 800 duals, leather seat, HID lighting, 6 remotes, guidance HP/XP..............................................................$279,000 2011 NH T9050 (SA) 800 rubber, full autosteer, powershift, weights...$250,000 2010 NH T9060 (LL) 800 duals, HID lighting, suitcase weights, wheel weights, GPS, luxury cab............................................................$250,000 1997 NH 9682 (SC) 20.8/42 duals, tow cable, 4 hyd remotes, weight pkg, ezsteer guidance, 8373 hrs............................................................................$69,000 1993 JD 8770 (SC) newer 710 duals, EZ steer, 12 speed transmission, 8745 hrs..$59,500
Lloydminster 888-492-8542
w w w . r e d h e a d e q u i p m e n t . c a
Estevan 888-365-2681
75
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
Dodge
THE BIG STORE ON 8TH STREET WE WON’T BE UNDERSOLD
City Auto
2013 RAM HD CREW CAB
2014 RAM 1500 REGULAR
LONGHORN 4X4
Stock #N9405
NO CHARGE CUMMIN DIESEL LOADED
CLEAROUT PRICE
Was $83,160 $68,998 Less $1500 Loyalty Bonus++
2014 RAM 2500 HD
$114 Bi-Weekly**
$39,493*
$225 Bi-Weekly**
SPECIAL EDITION LEATHER LOADED
HEATED SEATS & STEERING WHEEL
SAVE $16,162
Was $68,945 Stock #N9048 CLEAROUT PRICE $55,498 Less $1,500 Loyalty Bonus++ $308 Bi-Weekly**
$53,998*
2014 GRAND CARAVAN CANADA VALUE PKG.
$16,998*
$179 Bi-Weekly**
$49 Weekly**
Was $38,435 $30,690 Less $2,500 Stock #P6656 No Charge DVD++
CLEAROUT PRICE
$28,190*
$20,690*
$119 Bi-Weekly**
2014 RAM PROMASTER
2014 JEEP WRANGLER SPORT
CARGO VAN
Stock #P9803
CLEAROUT PRICE
STARTING AT
3.6 V6 283 HP
$18,690*
$33,998*
CHEROKEE 4X4
V6 285 HP
2014 JEEP PATRIOT NORTH EDITION 4X4
HEATED SEATS, REMOTE START
HEATED SEATS, REMOTE START
Stock #P6082
NEW DESIGN
Stock #P4037
$40,280*
$24,690*
Kevin Strunk
Gary Polishak
Sales Consultant
Bill Elliott
Sales Consultant
Lianne Rae
Finance Manager
Was $31,355
CLEAROUT PRICE Stock #3021
$229 Bi-Weekly**
$137 Bi-Weekly**
General Manager
Stock #P2014
CLEAROUT PRICE
CLEAROUT PRICE
Keith Monette
Sales Consultant
Mike Zogheib
Sales Consultant
Wayne Harron
Sales Consultant
Mark Walcer
Fleet & Lease Manager
Dave Larkins
Sales Consultant
CLEAROUT PRICE
$27,497*
$157 Bi-Weekly**
Wayne Fast
Sales Consultant
Phil Holmes à Court Sales Consultant
WWW.DODGECITYAUTO.COM
Marla Robb
Sales Consultant
the
8th St. E.
D City odge Auto
$151 Bi-Weekly**
Danny Rhode
Finance Manager
Yellowhead HWY
Financing Special, 3.49% Full Term Financing up to 96 months on 2014 models O.A.C. See dealer for details.
Preston Ave S.
WE WON’T BE UNDERSOLD
$26,497*
Was $30,550
N C H R Y S L E R
$20,690*
$124 Bi-Weekly**
2014 JEEP COMPASS SPORT NORTH EDITION 4X4
2014 JEEP GRAND
CLEAROUT PRICE
Stock #P5013
LEASE OPTIONS**
$107 Bi-Weekly**
SPORT
$20,690*
$154 Bi-Weekly**
COMMERCIAL FLEET
Was $21,790
2014 JEEP CHEROKEE
CLEAROUT PRICE
Stock #P6313
$26,698*
$161 Bi-Weekly**
2014 CHRYSLER 200 LX
$119 Bi-Weekly**
9 Speed Auto
CLEAROUT PRICE
Was $36,480
Stock #P1414
CLEAROUT PRICE
UPGRADE TO AN R/T AWD
Stock #P6655
GREAT VALUE
Was $29,790
$157 Bi-Weekly**
FAMILY VALUE PKG.
LEATHER, LOADED
ULTIMATE FAMILY PACKAGE
$27,390*
2014 DODGE JOURNEY
2014 GRAND CARAVAN 30TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION
CARAVAN
CLEAROUT PRICE
Was $40,115 $28,890 Less $1,500 Loyalty Bonus++
$30,998*
Was $36,470
2014 DODGE GRAND
Stock #P6517
STANDARD HEMI ENGINE
CLEAROUT PRICE
CLEAROUT PRICE
NO CHARGE DVD
NO CHARGE DIESEL
QUAD CAB SXT 4X4
Stock #N1435
Stock #P7044
UP TO 59 MPG
2013 RAM 2500 HD OUTDOORSMAN CREW CAB 4X4
2014 DODGE RAM 1500
2013 CHRYSLER 200 S
WE DARE YOU TO COMPARE
CLEAROUT PRICE
$19,998*
$397 Bi-Weekly**
Stock #N1699
Stock #P9001
CLEAROUT PRICE
Was $28,790
$67,498*
2013 DODGE DART
CREW CAB 4X4
Was $49,790 $40,993 Less $1,500 Loyalty Bonus++
CAB
Stock #P9605
Dave Dash
Sales Consultant
ORE BIG ST
on 8th Street
Tim Kurtenbach Fleet Sales
Stan Reddekopp Sales Consultant
Darin Schultz
Sales Consultant
2200 8th Street East Saskatoon SK Corner of 8th & Preston
1-800-667-4755 306-374-2120 DEALER LICENSE NUMBER 911673
+ Lease Payment Based over 60 months. Bi-weekly payments are plus taxes and fees. All discounts & rebates applied. *All prices & payments are plus taxes & fees. Selling price reflects all discounts rebates. Bonus Cash or n/c options used in all prices advertised. ***See Dodge City for details. Plus applicable taxes & fees due at signing. Vehicles not exactly as illustrated. Some exceptions should apply. **Payments bi-weekly with $0 Down plus taxes and fees. 3.99% Full Term Financing up to 96 months. +++ Payments weekly with 0 down plus taxes and fees 96 month financing. All prices include Freight & PDI. See Dealer for Details. Some conditions apply. ++See Dealer for Details.
76
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
(204) 256-2098 Winnipeg, MB hirdequipment@live.ca www.hirdequipment.com
2014 ROME 185-966
2014 ROME AG-12 Box Scraper
2014 ROME 185-994
25’ 2” Wide, 66 Disks, 185LB Weight/ Disk, 12,210LB, 24” Disks, Hyd Trans, 9” Spacing, Oil Bath Bearings, Bearing wear Plates, 1 5/8” Axles $
35’ 6” Wide, 94 Disks, 185LB Weight/ Disk, 17,390LB, 24” Disks, Hyd Trans, 9” Spacing, Oil Bath Bearings, Bearing Wear Plates, 1 5/8” Axles $
66,488
52,760
2014 ROME TACW-16
2014 ROME TAW-24
11’ Wide, 16 Disks, 636LB Weight/Disk, 9,792LB, 32” Disks, Hyd Trans, 17 3/4” Spacing, 2 1/8” Axles $
11’ 6” Wide, 24 Disks, 346LB Weight/ Disk, 8,313LB, 28” Disks, Hyd Trans, 12” Spacing, 2 1/8” Axles $
33,403
36,806
12’ Wide, 1750lb, Laser/GPS Ready, Hyd Tilt, Adjustable Hitch, Replaceable Cutting Edges $
6,800
2014 ROME TRWC-16
12’ 6” Wide, 16 Disks, 960LB Weight/ Disk, 15,357LB, 36” Disks, Hyd Trans, 20” Spacing, 2 1/2” Axles $
59,624
2014 ROME RALSE-16 Finishing Ejector Scraper
14 Yard Capacity, 17’ 4” Wide, 15,074LB, 4 - 13.5x16.1 Size Tires, 16’ Width of Cut, Laser/GPS Ready, Hyd Tilt $
63,056
2014 ROME TRCW-20
16’ Wide, 20 Disks, 1032LB Weight/Disk, 21,859LB, 36” Disks, Hyd Trans, 20” Spacing, 2 1/2” Axles $
79,072
2014 ROME RP-180CS Scraper
18yd Capacity, 12’ Cut, 300” Long, 167” Wide, 4 - 20.5X25 Tires, 19,250LB, GPS/Laser Ready $
90,746
2014 ROME TACW-20
14’ Wide, 20 Disks, 552LB Weight/Disk, 10,659LB, 32” Disks, Hyd Trans, 17 3/4” Spacing, 2 1/8” Axle $
42,467
Call Hird Equipment for Genuine Rome Parts Needs
:$51(5 ,1'8675,(6 TRUCKS & TRAILERS — NEW & USED
9LVLW XV RQOLQH IRU RXU IXOO LQYHQWRU\ ZZZ ZDUQHULQGXVWULHV FD
SPRING PRICE REDUCTIONS
DL #913604
2015 DOEPKER SUPER B TRAINS
2015 DOEPKER TRIDEMS
2015 DOEPKER GRAIN TANDEMS
CALL FOR DETAILS
CALL FOR DETAILS
CALL FOR DETAILS
CALL FOR DETAILS
2015 DOEPKER IMPACTS
2001 FREIGHTLINER FL80
2009 PETERBILT 386
2007 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA
2014 FREIGHTLINER 114SD
#124020
SPECIAL PRICE
#124314
CALL FOR DETAILS
CALL FOR DETAILS
2008 FREIGHTLINER CLASSIC
2005 INTERNATIONAL
#121686
WAS $59,999
$54,900
2010 FREIGHTLINER CASCADIA
#123526
$87,000 2009 INTERNATIONAL PROSTAR
SPECIAL PRICE
#121447
WAS $64,599 REGINA, SK 330 4th Ave. E. 306-359-1930 800-667-1930
$49,900 MOOSE JAW, SK Jct. Hwy #2 & N. Service Road 306-693-7253 877-302-0253
#123207
$75,900 SWIFT CURRENT, SK 2524 S Service Road West 306-773-3030 888-773-2744
#123913
WAS $69,999
$64,900
#121859
WAS $32,900
$24,900
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
306•934•1546 - Saskatoon, SK 306•773•7281 - Swift Current, SK
77
Lease Now All New 945C with Peak HP of 475hp for $17,000 semi annual OAC
The Challenger® MT900C Series When you need to cover vast acreage in short order, only the world’s most powerful 4WD tractor will do. The MT900C Series comes armed with up to 585 hp for all the earth-rotating torque needed to pull the most massive implements, while delivering unrivaled power to the ground. To see for yourself, schedule a demo with your local dealer or visit challenger-ag.us.
Challenger® is a worldwide brand of AGCO Corporation. © 2013 AGCO Corporation. AGCO is a registered trademark of AGCO. Challenger is a registered trademark of Caterpillar Inc. and used under license by AGCO. All rights reserved. AGCO, 4205 River Green Parkway, Duluth, GA 30096. CH13C004DS
PRE-OWNED EQUIPMENT SPRAYERS ‘13 TerraGator TG8400.....................................................................$357,500 ‘12 RoGator 1300, 1300 gal, 100’ boom, GPS loaded, 2 sets of tires, sharp shooter, 446 hrs ..................................................................$375,000 ‘12 RoGator RG1300, 1300 gal., 120’ factory boom, Viper Pro, SmartTrax, AutoBoom, AccuBoom, two sets of tires, 978 hrs ..........................$329,000 ‘12 RoGator RG1300, 1300 gal., 120’ factory boom, Viper Pro, SmartTrax, AutoBoom, AccuBoom, two sets of tires, 974 hrs .........................$329,000 ‘12 RoGator RG1300, 1300 gal., 120’ factory boom, Viper Pro, SmartTrax, AutoBoom, AccuBoom, two sets of tires, 425 hrs .........................$365,000 ‘12 RoGator RG1100, 1100 gal, 100’ boom, GPS, fully loaded, Viper Pro, 2 sets of tires, 750 hrs ..................................................................$315,000 ‘12 RoGator RG1100, 1100 gal, 100’ boom, Viper Pro, SmartTrax, AutoBoom, AccuBoom, two sets of tires, 1292 hrs ........................$315,000 ‘12 RoGator RG900, 900 gal, 100’ boom, Viper Pro, SmartTrax, AutoBoom AccuBoom, two sets of tires, 450 hrs ............................................$285,000 ‘12 RG900, 100’ boom, 900 gal, 450 hrs, Viper Pro, SmarTrax, AccuBoom, AutoBoom, 2 sets of tires ............................................$285,000 ‘09 RoGator 1286C, 1200 gal tank, 100’ boom, GPS, loaded, 2 sets of tires ..............................................................................$285,000 ‘09 RoGator 1084, 1000 gal, 100’ boom, Viper Pro, Smart Trax, auto boom, AccuBoom, two sets of tires, 1532 hrs ..........................................$225,000 ‘08 RoGator 1074SS, 1000 gal, 100’ boom, 2650 hrs, Viper Pro, SmarTrax, AccuBoom, AutoBoom, two sets of tires ........................................$187,000 ‘08 RoGator 874 SS, 800 gal, 90’ boom, S3, eDrive, automatic, AutoBoom, 2 sets of tires, 990 hrs ................................................$185,000 ‘05 RoGator 1064, 1000 gal, 100’ boom, S3 outback c/w eDrive, automatic, 1450 hrs, 2 sets of tires, foam marker ..........................................$165,000 ‘05 RoGator 1074, 90’ boom, 1000 gal, eDrive, S3, Automate, AutoBoom, 2 sets of tires, 2500 hrs ..............................................$145,000 ‘05 RoGator 1074, 100’ boom, 1000 gal, eDrive, Automatic, Outback GPS, Auto Boom, 3100 hrs, 2 sets of Tires ............................................$145,000 ‘04 RoGator 864, 800 gal, SS tank, 100’ 1300 boom, 2800 hrs, S3 maping, eDrivex, Automate, Sec. Control, AutoBoom, 3 sets of tires ...............................................................................$155,000 ‘03 RoGator 1064, 120’ boom, 1000 gal, front reload, Invisio Pro, SmarTrax, 2 sets of tires, 3649 hrs ...............................................$155,000 ‘97 Willmar 7200, 750 gal, 90’ boom, 3 way nozzles, 500 Trimble auto steer and section control, rear duals, 3000 hrs, auto................................$60,000
AIR DRILLS ‘11 Morris Contour 61’, DS, 12” sp, 5.5 packers, c/w 8370XL tow between, 3 tank air cart ...............................................................................$260,000
‘04 Morris Max II, 60’, 70” spacing, single shoot, 3 1/2” sp, c/w 8370 tow between cart ................................................................................$105,000 ‘03 Morris Max II, 49’, 7.5” sp, single shoot, edge on shank, dutch openers, 3.5” packers c/w 7240 tow behind tank .........................................$59,000 ‘10 Morris Contour 71’, SS, 12” sp, 5.5” packers c/w 8370XL tow behind w/third tank VRT, NH3 kit, side band openers ................................$269,000 ‘03 Ezee-On 7550, 56’, two behind, 8” sp, 3.5” steel packers, c/w 4350 tank ................................................................................$75,000
SWATHERS
‘10 Agco 5100 draper, 36’, absolutely mint ........................................$45,000 ‘05 Honey Bee SP30 c/w pea auger, PU reel, fi ts Gleaner ..................$39,000 ‘03 Honey Bee SP30 draper, 30’, fits MF8570 or MF8780 ..................$35,500 ‘96 MacDon 960, 36’ draper fits R-65................................................$24,500 MF 8200, 30’ w/UII PU header, 1 of 3 .................................................$28,000
USED COMBINES ‘11 MF 9895, 139 hrs, chopper/spreader pu header ........................$385,000
‘12 MF 9740, c/w 30’ DSA, UII PU reel, hdr & auto steer, 1 of 2 .......$138,000 ‘98 MF 220, c/w 26’ Draper DS, UII PU reel, MF 220 16’ hay header, Fits MF 220, 220 Series II and 220XL..............................................$35,000 ‘12 MF WR9740 c/w 30’ headers UII pick up reel, DSA, low hrs, 1 of 2 ...........................................................................................$140,000 ‘13 MF WR9740 c/w 36’ UII PU reel, header, 323 hrs .......................$145,900
TRACTORS
‘10 MF 9895, chopper/spreader pu header ......................................$289,000 ‘09 MF 9895 c/w PU header, chopper, spreader, 555 hrs ..................$299,000 ‘11 MF 9795, 360 hrs, c/w 4200 PU header, chopper/ spreader, duals ............................................................................................$267,000 ‘10 MF 9795, 775 hrs, c/w 4200 PU header, chopper/spreader, 900 rubber, powerfold hopper .........................................................................$255,000 06 MF 9790, 726 hrs, chopper/spreader ..........................................$195,000
‘08 Agco LT95, c/w FL45 front end loader, joystick grapple, FWA, 95hp ......................................................................................$69,000 ‘07 MF 1540, FWA, hydro, 40hp, 3pth c/w loader ...............................$24,900 ‘07 MF 1533, 33hp, hydro, 3pth, front end loader, 375 hrs .................$23,900 ‘92 MF 3690 FWA, 170hp ..................................................................$37,000
4WD TRACTORS
IN STOCK NOW!!!!
‘05 MF 9690, 1582 hrs, c/w 4220 PU header, chopper/ spreader .......................................................................................$134,000 ‘03 MF 9690, 2000 hrs, c/w 4000 PU header, chopper/ spreader .......................................................................................$100,000 ‘01 MF 8780 XP, chopper/spreader, 1280 hrs .....................................$99,000 ‘97 MF 8780, chopper/spreader pu header ........................................$65,000
‘09 Versatile 435, 420 hrs, 800 metric duals, 6 rear remotes, std. shift, AutoSteer .....................................................................................$193,000 ‘09 Versatile 435, 1825 hrs, 800 metric duals, AutoSteer .................$190,000 ‘08 Versatile 435, 2523 hrs, 710R42 duals, AutoSteer ......................$185,000 ‘08 Challenger MT855, extreme tracks, PTO,powershift, 2400 hrs ...$255,000 ‘07 Versatile 435, 2120 hrs, 900 metric duals, AutoSteer .................$180,000 ‘04 Case STX500, 3640 hrs, 800 metric duals, powershift, 4 hyd remotes ..................................................................................... CALL ‘04 Case STX500, 3640 hrs, 800 metric, powershift, deluxe cab ....................................................................................$185,000 ‘91 Case IH 9260, 7214 hrs, 20.8x38 duals, PTO, 12 spd powershift ......................................................................................$49,000
‘08 Gleaner R75, 1077 hrs, pu header..............................................$225,000
HEADERS
MISCELLANEOUS
‘09 MF 7200, straight cut header, 35’ ................................................$29,000 2 -‘07 MF 8200 flex header, 35’ (1 of 2) .............................................$33,000 MF 220 16’ hay header, fits MF 220, 220 Series II, 220 XL .................$17,500 ‘11 Dyna-Flex 36’ Flex, c/w pea auger ...............................................$69,000
Snow Dozer Blade Horst ......................................................................... CALL
‘06 Gleaner R65, 1546 hrs, pu header..............................................$149,000 ‘06 Gleaner R65, pu header .............................................................$149,000 ‘05 Gleaner R65, 1058 hrs, pu header..............................................$115,000 ‘05 Gleaner R65, 1748 hrs, pu header..............................................$115,000 ‘03 Gleaner R75 c/w 1800 sp pu header chopper, spreader .......................................................................................$145,000 ‘98 Gleaner R62.................................................................................$89,000 ‘11 A86 Gleaner‘04 Challenger 670, 750 hrs, chopper/spreader c/w PU header ..........................................................................................$129,000
More info on used with pictures at www.fulllineag.com OR email rick.r@fulllineag.com
)XOO /LQH $J FA R M E Q U I P M E N T S U P E R S T O R E
306•934•1546 - Saskatoon, SK 306•773•7281 - Swift Current, SK Dealers for:
SASKATOON SALES: Chris Purcell Dave Ruzesky Doug Putland SWIFT CURRENT SALES: Ross Guenther Tim Berg Murray Weston
78
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
1-800-667-4515 www.combineworld.com
SASKATOON REGINA
20 min. E of Saskatoon on Hwy. 16
Text Us! 306-229-9507 Email: coleman@combineworld.com
AG DEALS
Numerous pictures available on our website www.combineworld.com
‘11 JD 9630T
$
‘08 JD 9430T
‘93 FORD 9880 4WD
530hp, 36” tracks, JD warranty inspection, only 932 hours, great shape. $0 pmt until Nov/14. 5.46% lease ($26,625 pmt) ...
400hp, 8 new radials, 7,886 hrs, sold w/ warranty..............
248,800
TRADES WELCOME
$
59,800
425hp, 36” tracks, 3PTH, JD Green Light, 6,290hrs. $0 pmt until Nov/14. 4.87% lease ($18,796 pmt) .....
$
178,800
PREMIUM QUALITY • FACTORY DIRECT • MORE SIZES AVAILABLE • WE MOUNT! ‘09 T7040 TRACTOR
DUAL KITS
‘03 JD AIR DRILL & CART
180hp, FWA w/ 3PTH, PTO, & FEL w/ grapple, 2,600 hrs, excellent condition sold w/ warranty!.............
61’ drill with 1900 350 bushel air cart.. .............................
‘11 DEMCO 1050 GRAIN CART
‘99 WILLMAR 8100 SP SPRAYER
1000 PTO, Shur-lock roll tarp, 18” auger, pintle hitch, excellent condition..........................
90’ high clearance sprayer, 4,200 hrs, triple nozzle, GPS, 800 gallon stainless steel tank ........................
$
$
99,800
34,800
$
$
46,800
49,800
299 11R24.5 16 ply ............................... 359 $ 11.2 x 24 8 ply ................................ 199 $ 12.4 x 24 8 ply ............................... 266 $ 16.9 x 24 8 ply.. ............................. 549 $ 16.9 x 26 10 ply ............................. 685 $ 23.1 x 26 R3 12 ply........ $1,154 995 $ 16.9 x 28 12 ply ............................. 558 $ 16.9 x 30 12 ply ................. $595 495 11R22.5 16 ply ...............................
$ $
645 1,495 $ 18.4 x 38 12 ply ................. $783 645 $ 20.8 x 38 12 ply ................. $866 765 $ 24.5x32 14 ply ............$1,749 1,495 $ 30.5x32 16 ply ........... $2,195 1,995 $ 900/60R32 20 ply...................... 2,995 $ 18.4 x 42 16 ply ......................... 1,397 $ 520/85R42 162A8 Radial ........... 1,790 18.4 x 34 12 ply .................. $770 $ 23.1x30 12 ply .........................
$
MORE NEW SIZES COMING IN · USED TIRES & RIMS AVAILABLE
7,995 5,250 9,850 12,845 $
JD STS kit w/o tires ........ $11,995 Clamp-on duals w/ $ used 20.8 x 38 tires ...................... JD 9400-9600/10/CTS/CTS II $ kit w/o tires ................................... CIH 80/88 series dual kit w/ $ new 20.8x38 tires ..... $13,900 TRADE YOUR SINGLES FOR DUALS!
GREENLIGHT TRUCK & AUTO 2013 CHEV SILVERADO 3500 LTZ DUALLY
EE MUST S
FULLY LOADED HEATED COOLED SEATS ONLY 15KM LEATHER SUNROOF DVD NAV
2011 DODGE RAM 1500 SPORT
SUNROOF & HEMI FULL LEATHER NAVIGATION HEATED\COOLED SEATS 4X4 PST PD 0NLY 60KM
34,995
$
2010 GMC SIERRA 1500 DENALI
FULLY LOADED 40KM WITH SUNROOF 6.2L
3 TO CHOOSE STARTING AT
20,995
$
2013 GMC SIERRA 3500 SLT
1 TON LEATHER DIESEL 40KM WITH SUNROOF
4 TO CHOOSE STARTING AT
49,995
$
2007 CHEV SILVERADO 1500 LTZ
5.3L 4X4 PST PD LEATHER SUNROOF DVD
FULLY LOADED
15,995
$
2006 FORD F150 LARIAT
5.4L PST PD FULLY LOADED LEATHER
9,995
$
HUGE INDOOR SHOW ROOM
2012 DODGE RAM 3500 MEGA CAB LARAMIE
3 TO CHOOSE STARTING AT
46,995
$
ALSO HAVE SLT LEATHER SUNROOF DVD NAV
2009 FORD F350 XLT
LOADED WITH HEATED SEATS 125KM 6.8L GAS PST PD 4X4
WAS $27,995 NOW
24,995
$
2007 GMC SIERRA 1500 HD SLT
6.0L GAS WITH LEATHER 140KM PST PD 4X4
LOADED
19,995
$
2011 FORD F250 XLT
LOADED 6.7L DIESEL 4X4
CHECK OUT ALL OF OUR INVENTORY ON
WAS $31,995 NOW
29,995
$
www.GreenlightAuto.ca
Call FINANCE HOTLINE 306-934-1455 2715 FAITHFULL AVE., SASKATOON, SK.
DL#311430
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
79
:,17(5 ($5/< %22.,1* ',6&28176 67,// $9$,/$%/( 3ODFH \RXU GHSRVLW QRZ WR HQVXUH VSULQJ GHOLYHU\ IRU DOO RI WKHVH PRGHOV &DOO *OHQPRU IRU GHWDLOV
Degelman Simplicity
Experience
SALFORD
WET OR DRY. WORK IN THE MOST CHALLENGING CONDITIONS
RTS SERIES
Glenmor welcomes Salford
Glenmor offers you Degelman Degelman designers are passionate about getting it right. Farm tools with the least amount of moving parts will simply last longer. Degelman is renowned for building overbuilt and under complicated equipment. Less is always more. A Pro-Till® cultivator has the unique ability to cultivate and warm the soil during cold wet conditions when all other forms of tillage plug and fail. In the midst of a long wet spring, getting seed in the ground to allow adequate time for the growing season is critical. Heavy cold soils need to be black and warm for ideal germination conditions. In as little as one day and after one pass, frigid heavy residue soil is cut, turned, mixed, reactivated, warmed, topically dried and ready for planting/seeding. Pro-Till® in the spring can mean the difference between success and failure. Call Glenmor today, or visit www.degelman.com
Glenmor proudly welcomes Salford Farm Machinery as their newest line of farm equipment. The Salford RTS series are high speed residue management tools that take on cool wet soils in spring to help accelerate soil warming and improve seed to soil contact. The RTS helps to alleviate compaction, and independently mounted coulters have almost no residue limitations. Salford also offers a full line of tillage tools and precision air seeding equipment. Experience the Salford Difference. Call Glenmor today, or visit www.salfordmachine.com Ontario, Canada • Osceola, Iowa • 1-866-442-1293
Shape your own land with the PULLDOZER
Professional Farming by
/(0.(1
AVAILABLE TO 18’ AND 24’ LENGTHS
LEMKEN HELIODOR & RUBIN 12
Glenmor salutes the Pulldozer from Bridgeview Manufacturing
Glenmor presents /HPNHQ
Pulldozer land shaper 1810, 2410 and 2410XL Are you looking for a better way to groom your land, ditch, maybe grade, level or simply move dirt? If so, you might be thinking of 3 or 4 different options, from dozers to scrapers, graders to V ditchers. You really only have to look at one: the Pulldozer land shaper by Bridgeview Manufacturing. The Pulldozer land shaper is all this and more wrapped up in one complete, efficient, and virtually indestructible package. Call Glenmor today, or visit MANUFACTURING INC. www.bridgeviewmanufacturing.com
BRIDGEVIEW
For more information contact Glenmor
www.glenmor.cc 1-888-708-3739
Through the expansion of maize cultivation in the past few years in particular, the plough has regained its importance as a primary cultivator. The reduction of plant diseases, mechanical pest control due to increasing chemical resistance, and the fight against new pests, are among the most important tasks facing a plough today. Recent research has shown that loosening and aerating the root zone, with a plough, can improve the formation of rape roots, for example, thus laying the foundation for high and guaranteed yields. Call Glenmor today, or visit www.lemken.com/en/
GLEN MOR
Old Hwy No. 2 South Prince Albert, SK S6V 5T2
1-888-708-3739 glenmor@sasktel.net
80
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Titan Truck Sales Box 299 MacGregor, MB R0H 0R0
2006 PETERBILT 379
204-685-2222
39,000
2010 PETERBILT 388
2005 IH 9900I
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
19,000
$
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
475 HP Cummins ISX, 13 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 244” WB, 3:73 gears, 72” midrise bunk, 1,409,137 km.
45,000
$
70,000
$
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.
$
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.
45,000
$
65,000
$
475 HP Cat C15, 18 sp, 3:55 gears, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 1,373,064 km.
2010 PETERBILT 388
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.
30,000
49,000
$
2007 PETERBILT 379 LEGACY
475 Cat C15, 13 sp, 12/40, 3:55 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 22.5” alloy wheels, 1,932,091 km.
$
475 Cat C15, 13 sp, 12/40, 3:55 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 22.5” alloy wheels, 2,013,769 km.
475 HP Cat C15, 18 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 3:55 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 1,540,617 km.
2006 PETERBILT 379
475 Cat C15, 13 sp, 12/40, 3:55 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 22.5” alloy wheels, 1,735,345 km.
2005 PETERBILT 379
2006 PETERBILT 379L
www.titantrucksales.com
$
2006 PETERBILT 379
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.
475 Cat C15, 13 sp, 12/40, 3:55 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 22.5” alloy wheels, 1,627,431 km.
49,000
39,000
$
$
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
D $OL S 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 17, 2014
JUST IN!!
JUST IN... NEW TRADES
OUR INNOVATION
2008 SEEDHAWK 5010 & ’04 NH 380 TOW BETWEEN
81
’04 SEED HAWK 4210 w/ Bourgault 5350 TBH Cart
50’, 10” Spacing, Quick Pin, Dual Front Castors, Double Shoot,Var. Rate, Dual Fan
105,000
$ ELIMINATE OVERLAPS t SAVE ON INPUT COSTS t GET BETTER YIELDS
’01 FLEXI-COIL 3450 TBT
YOUR PROFIT
160,000
$
Mech Drive
39,000
$
BOURGAULT BLOWOUT!!! GOOD CLEAN TRADES!!
TRACTORS
‘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 ’97 CIH 9380, 710/70 Duals .................$89,000 ’97 CIH 9370, 20.8R42 Duals ...............$79,000
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 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 ’11 Rogator 1194, 120’.......................$229,000 ‘10 CIH 4420, 120’, 1200 gal ..............$279,900 ‘08 Apache AS 1010, 100’ ..................$149,500 ‘07 CIH 4420, 90’, 1200 gal ................$202,700
2011 65’ 3310 & 2012 6550 TBH
10” Spacing, MRB, Double Shoot, High Flotation, 591 Monitor, Deluxe Auger, Bag Lift, Dual Fans, 650 Dual
REDUCED! $279,000
2010 65’ 3310 & 2012 6550 TBH
10” Spacing, MRB, Double Shoot, High Flotation,591 Monitor, Deluxe Auger, Bag Lift, Dual Fans, 650 Duals.
REDUCED! $259,000
2010 65’ 3310 & 2005 FLEXI-COIL 4350 TBT 10” Spacing, VR, Dual Fan, Double Shoot
REDUCED! $175,000
w/ ’09 CIH 3430VR Tow Behind
170,500
$
W/JD 1910 430 bu. tow behind.
$
144,000
‘08 SEED HAWK 55’ 5510
‘04 SEEDMASTER 6012
10” spacing, c/w Seed Hawk 400 tow behind cart.
60’, 10” spacing, double shoot, w/ Bourgault 6350 TBT
COMBINES
‘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
$
$
150,000
www.mokerthompson.com
Prince Albert: 306-763-6454 | Melfort: 306-752-2273
0 1US0G8 allon
0 1US5G6 allon
SALE
800
1050 PRICE $
Regular Price
$
Available in black, white or blue
Regular Price
$
0 2US0G0 allon
1785 PRICE
Available in black, white or blue
2US5G0all0on Available in black, white or blue
Optional baffle system and galvanized straps
1300
SALE $
1900
SALE 2650 PRICE $
Regular Price
$
Available in black, white or blue
Optional baffle system and galvanized straps
3US4G0all0on Regular Price
$
3100
2350
SALE $ PRICE
Available in black, white or blue
Comes standard with straps and baffle system
Regular Price
$
6000
Huge selection of banjo fittings at competitive pricing.
306.253.4343 or 1.800.383.2228 Sale ends May 30, 2014 or while supply last
4995
SALE $ PRICE
www.hold-onindustries.com
82
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
It Makes Sense to Rent f lamanrentals.com » » » » » » » » »
Heavy Discs Heavy Harrows Manure Spreaders Rotary Mowers Rock Pickers Rock Rakes Pro Grain Baggers Extractors Land Rollers
» » » » » » » » »
Landscrapers Water Pumps Grass Seeders Hay Floats Grain Vacs Post Pounders Hay Rakes Bale Cart Tree Spades
Specialized Tillage Conveyors Trailers . . . Plus much more
» » »
Please call ahead to FRQ¿UP ZKDW HTXLSPHQW is available at your local rental dealer.
Flaman Rentals is your local rental dealer. With over 100 independent dealers across the prairies we have what you need where you need it. Our equipment is new, well maintained and requires no capital outlay for equipment you only need occasionally. Renting with Flaman makes sense.
High Speed Disc NEW
Heavy Discs
Harrows
Rock Pickers
Enclosed Trailers
Flat Deck Trailers
Dump Trailers
Post Pounders
Grain Vacs
Land Rollers
Rotary Mowers
Construction equip. & tools are available at some locations, please call ahead to confirm.
Visit flamanrentals.com to find your nearest dealer.
Flaman rental franchise opportunities are available for more information call Parrish Kondra (SK, MB) 1-888-435-2626 Ken Barlott (AB) 1-800-352-6264
CORPORATE STORES
Edmonton S. Lethbridge
Medicine Hat Saskatoon
Prince Albert Southey
Yorkton*
Moosomin*
Swan River*
1-800-352-6264 1-888-883-8081 1-855-535-2636 1-888-435-2626 1-888-352-6267 1-888-235-2626 1-888-296-2626 1-855-780-2626 1-855-331-2626 (NISKU)
* Corporate stores that carry construction equipment & tools
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
83
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
TRACTORS 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 .................................................
395,000
2012 NEW HOLLAND T9.670
#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
205,500
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..............................
154,000
243,000
2011 CASE PATRIOT 3330
#HN3174A. 500 HRS., 1000 GAL SS TANK, 100’ WIDE, TIRES: 380/90R46, 650/65R38
147,000
$
CASH
2011 STRAWMASTER TXB6012 AIR DRILL & BOURGAULT 6350 CART #S22393A. 60’, 12” SPACING, 12.5LX15 BACK TIRES, DUAL 12.5LX15 FRONT TIRES, HYD. LIFT KIT, 16,287 ACRES.
87,500 CASH
$
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 .........................................
2008 MILLER A-40
174,000
$
2005 JOHN DEERE 4920 #N22107B. 120’ W/1200 GALLON TANK, 2 SETS OF TIRES PLUS DUALS, DEERE GPS, FENCE ROW NOZZLES, GREENSTAR AUTO TRAC
1998 ROGATOR 854
#NN21884D. 120’ BOOM W/1000 GAL. TANK, FULL GPS, 2 SETS OF TIRES, AUTOBOOM HEIGHT CONTROL.
$
205,500
2008 NEW HOLLAND T9050
#HC3144A. 2224 HRS., 485 HP, 4WD, TIRES: 800/70R38 DUALS, DIFF. LOCK FRONT AND REAR, MEGA FLOW HYDS, TOW CABLE, JD AUTO STEER
17,479 + GST
SEEDING & TILLAGE 2007 STRAWMASTER TXB DRILL #S22390A. 50’, 12” BOURGAULT $ AIR KIT, SMART HITCH, NH3 TIPS ..............
96,000
$
REDUCED
79,000 CASH 2012 MORRIS 8370
#HR3189A. VR TBH TANK, TOPCON EAGLE MONITOR, 3RD TANK, SINGLE 17 FAN, TOW BEHIND, FIELD HITCH
$
282,000
S/A Payment
20,26361 + GST
$
MSRP $380,965
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 .................................................
$
205,500
$
258,000
27,500
135,500
NEW 2014 BOURGAULT CARTS & DRILLS STILL AVAILABLE! 2 - 7700 AIR CARTS 3 2 - 6550 AIR CARTS 4 2 - 3320 DRILLS
50,000 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.
S/A Payment
$
DIESEL EXHAUST FLUID SPECIAL! Buy One $575 Buy Four or More $525 *plus core
13,300
$
$
209,000
2008 NEW HOLLAND T9060
#HC3143A. 2672 HRS., 4WD, 485 HP, TIRES 8000/70R38 DUALS, DIFF. LOCK - FRONT AND REAR, TOW CABLE, JD AUTO STEER
$
1996 BOURGAULT 5710 #B21968B. 54’, SERIES 20 MRBS, RAVEN NH3 KIT, 3/4 CHROME TIPS, 3 RUBBER PACKERS
328,000
$
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 #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.
REDUCED
19,500 CASH
$
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 #B21999B. 61’, 12” SPACING, DS PR ROW, MORRIS OPENER, TOW BETWEEN TANK, 3 TANKS
2013 NEW HOLLAND T9.670
#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
o r t s A
84
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
1991 FOREMOST 4X4
780-567-4202 Visit our Website: www.astro-sales.com
ALES LTD. S K C U R T & R CA
2007 GMC C5500
OVER 400 UNITS TO
3($&(
2008 REITNOUER
2008 TIFFIN ALLEGRO Motorhome 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 4 slides only 20,000 miles
ONLY 50,000 KM
2006 GENIE GT-2666
2003 GULF STREAM ATRIUM 8410
Truss boom, 500 hrs
330 HP engine and sits on a Freightliner chassis, 41â&#x20AC;&#x2122; motorhome, triple slides, Corian countertops, tile floors. Very clean unit. Stock#L-6636A
â&#x20AC;˘HEAVY EQUIPMENT
2002 ASPEN TRAILER
Step deck tandem axle trailer. Stock #L-6605
2012 JOHN DEERE
Single Drop Tridem Lowboy. Stock # L-6604
2004 FREIGHTLINER FL60
Diesel, crewcab, 4x4, 209,609 km, silver with leather $23,900 Stock #C-2740
W/ Amco Veba picker & deck stock #L-6688
CHOOSE FROM &28175<Âś6 CARSâ&#x20AC;˘TRUCKSâ&#x20AC;˘RVSâ&#x20AC;˘TRAILERS LARGEST USED DEALER!
2006 DODGE LARAMIE 3500
2008 BOBCAT T320
Diesel HP Mercedes diesel engine, FL60. Stock# L-6727
Track Skidsteer Stock # L-7045
RUM 2002 DENER SCRE
2005 GMC C5500
44 Km Wheel Loader 1800 hrs.
2009 FORD F450
2001 JOHN DEERE 330LC
2006 CHRYSLER 300C
2008 KOUNTRY STAR 3912
2008 INTERNATIONAL FLAT DECK TRUCK
c/w 36â&#x20AC;? Digging Bucket & 72â&#x20AC;? Churchblade. Stock #L-5838
Diesel pusher 4 slides only 20,000 miles
Stock# L-7032, 6.4L Engine, Diesel , Crew Cab , Auto, 2WD Harley Davidson Edition
8.1L Engine, only 112,000 KM, custom RV deck,
5.7L, Leather interior, 150 KM #L-7059
1998 SAMSUNG SL180 LOADER 4X4
2011 DODGE RAM 5500
Stock# L-982
Stock# L-7047, 6.7 L Engine , Diesel , Automatic , 4WD Maxilift Cobra 5500 Picker
ONLY 39,000 KM
Gravel Crusher Stock# L-5197A
2009 NH T9060 2012 VERSATILE 2006 SPRAY-AIR 2003 FLEXI-COIL 2008 BOURGAULT 1998 500 3690TS S67XL 5710 CONSERVAPAK
249,000
$
285,000
$
4WD TRACTORS
2008 NH T9040 ........................................... $194,000 2009 NH T9060 2100 GPS 710/742 ............. $249,000 2002 NH TJ450 8900 HRS DUALS ............... $138,000 2006 CASE IH STX430Q 3995 HRS, QUAD TRACS PTO 1000 ............. $198,000 2009 CASE IH STX535Q 2850 HRS, 36â&#x20AC;? QUAD TRACS ....................... $278,000 1995 CASE IH 9280 6755 HRS ...................... $69,500 2012 VERSATILE 500 390 HRS.................... $275,000 2012 VERSATILE 500 925 HRS.................... $285,000
SEEDING/TILLAGE
2011 3710-60 10â&#x20AC;?....................................... $159,000 2009 BOURGAULT 3310 65â&#x20AC;&#x2122; MRB................ $188,000 2001 FLEXI-COIL 3450.................................. $39,500 2013 BOURGAULT 3710 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; DBL SHOOT OPENERS ........................... $189,000
24,000
$
27,000
$
2012 BOURGAULT 3710-50 DBL SHOOT OPENERS ................................. $168,000 1997 FLEXI-COIL 5000 57â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 2320 TANK ......... $39,000 2001 BOURGAULT 5440 440 BU. ................... $48,000 2008 BOURGAULT 5710 64â&#x20AC;&#x2122;,10â&#x20AC;?, MRB, 5â&#x20AC;?... $108,000 1998 BOURGAULT 5710 54â&#x20AC;&#x2122; MRB.................. $59,900 1997 BOURGAULT 5710 54â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 9.8â&#x20AC;?, DS, MRB ........................................ $48,000 2005 BOURGAULT 6000 ................................ $33,000 2010 BOURGAULT L6450 .............................. $99,000 2012 BOURGAULT L6450 ............................ $119,000 2011 BOURGAULT 6550 4 METRES ............. $108,000 1996 FLEXI-COIL 5000/2320 57â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 12â&#x20AC;?, DS ... $45,000 2003 FLEXI-COIL 5000/3450 57â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 9â&#x20AC;? ............ $89,000 2000 FLEXI-COIL 6000 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 10â&#x20AC;? 2011 FLEXI-COIL 6550 TRAILING, DUALS.... $108,000 2005 NH SD440 45â&#x20AC;&#x2122; DS 380 TANK ............... $119,000 1998 CONSERVAPAK 56â&#x20AC;&#x2122;/SC380 2006 ......... $59,000 1997 DEGELMAN 7000 70â&#x20AC;&#x2122; ........................... $23,000
agsales@novlanbros.com
www.novlanbros.com
108,000
$
59,000
$
1998 BOURGAULT 7200-72 72â&#x20AC;&#x2122; .................... $19,500 2011 SALFORD 570RTS30 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; RTS .............. $58,000
SPRAYERS
2006 SPRAY-AIR 3690TS 100â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 1250 GAL. .... $24,000 1987 FLEXI-COIL S62 82â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 800 GAL ................. $6,500 2000 MILLER HT200 100â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 1000 GAL, 2438 HRS .......................... $115,000 2008 MILLER A40 HIGH CLEARANCE, 100â&#x20AC;&#x2122; .............................. $128,000 2003 FLEXI-COIL S67XL ............................... $27,000 2005 MILLER 2275HT 1950 HRS, 100â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 1000 GAL. ......................... $169,000 2008 NH SF115 1998 FLEXI-COIL S62, 80â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 800 GAL. 2011 NH SP240F 542 HRS, 100â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, 1260 GAL. ........................... $268,000 2012 ROGATOR 1396 700 HRS 1300 GAL., 120â&#x20AC;&#x2122; ........................... $298,000
129/$1 %526 6$/(6 306.344.4448 Paradise Hill, SK 1.877.344.4433
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
CLASSIFIED ADS 85
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.
1985 VERSATILE 856, 4 WD, 8,450 hrs. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
EZEE-ON 1225 OFFSET disc, $8900; Morris 60’ harrow drawbar, dual axle, w/harrows, $3900; CASE/IH 5600 37’ chisel plow with harrows, $4200; 1993 Ford F-350 dually, 5 spd., 7.3L dsl., w/service deck, side compartments, $4900; 1994 Freightliner FL-80 tandem, 9 spd., 8.3L Cummins, 11R24.5, 20’ CIM ultracel with tarp, $37,900. Downsized farm. Ph 306-231-8832, Viscount, SK
2 0 0 8 J D 9 5 3 0 , 4 W D, 2368 hours, 800/70Rx38 Firestone duals, GreenStar ready, instructional seat, very good cond., warranty until 2015, $210,000. Kindersley, SK., 306-463-3023 or 306-463-8774. 2009 JOHN DEERE 9520 tractor. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. JOHN DEERE 4440, low hours, front weights, 3 hyds., 20.8x38 factory duals, good cond. 204-937-4874, Roblin, MB. 2010 JD 9430, 36” tracks, Xenon lights, 5 remotes, hyd. swinging hitch, PTO, full guidance, $265,000. 1-866-659-5866, www.redheadequipment.ca Estevan, SK. 8630 JD, PTO, 3 hyds., 20.8x34 duals, AM/FM, AC, 8577 hrs, looks/runs good, $18,000. 306-743-5565, Langenburg, SK.
Rental Purchase Available ‘09 NH T7040 tractor w/ 2,600 hrs, 180hp, FWA, 3PTH, PTO & F.E.L w/ grapple. Comes w/ warranty! $99,800. Financing available. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
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 2004 JOHN DEERE, Model# 710 G. Stock 2009 NH 9040, 3850 hrs., PTO. w/wo low # L-6731. Asking $84,900. Clairmont, AB. use Degelman blade, $175,000 OBO. Swift Current, SK. 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586. 780-567-4202, www.astro-sales.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. 1995 JOHN DEERE 8910 tractor. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 1998 JD 9400, 4 WD, 12 spd., 4 hyds., 710x38 radial Pirelli tires 75%, recent workorder, always shedded, 7000 hrs, very nice cond., 204-745-7445, Carman, MB. 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 JD 4230, CAB, air, $12,250; JD 4430, cab, air, $11,250; JD 3130, cab, add on 3 PTH, $9500; JD 1010 3 PTH loader, $4950; AC 190 XT, big rubber, $3750. For pics see www.hlehmann.ca Call: 204-746-2016, 204-746-5345, Morris, MB.
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 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.
NEW VERSATILE 575, pre-emission enHYUNDAI LOADERS gine, powershift, PTO, 110 GPM, 20.8x46 triples, full weights. 1.9% OAC Buy or FOR SALE OR RENT Lease. Looking for good trades. Cam-Don Variety Of Sizes 3- 6 cu.yd. Motors Ltd. 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. TD Sales & Rentals Inc. 1985 VERSATILE 936, 4 WD, std. trans., 1-780-486-0138 24.5x32, 6037 hrs., new seat, had bearing 1-800-661-4634 roll, asking $42,000. 306-573-4602, Http://www.twindeer.com 306-858-7295, Birsay, SK. 1985 VERSATILE 856, 5300 hrs, excellent shape, std. trans, 8 new radials. Call 1996 CASE 621B wheel loader, 10,516 hrs, brand new factory engine 500 hours ago, 306-228-3523 for pictures, Unity, SK. cab w/heat, 3rd valve, Q/A bucket and 2006 VERSATILE 435, 3200 hrs., 800 pallet forks, Michelin 20.5R25 tires 60%, rubber, Outback E-drive, Outback S2 and $49,000. Nice machine! Call Jordan any360, $40,000 work order in 2013 on the 12 time 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. spd. auto. trans., $140,000 OBO. Kenaston, 1993 JD 244E, 4554 hrs, cab w/heat, 3rd SK., call 306-252-2767 or 306-221-8968. valve, hyd Q/A bucket w/teeth and Q/A VERSATILE 875 TRACTOR w/5 hydraulics. hyd. angle snow blade, 17.5/65-20 tires. Please call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. Very nice shape! $36,900. Call Jordan anyVERSATILE 950, RECENTLY updated and time 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. painted, hydraulic kit, $28,000. Call: 403-872-2940, Ponoka, AB.
2009 NH T9060 2100 GPS 710/742 $249,000. Novlan Bros. Sales, Paradise Hill, SK. Ph: 306-344-4448, toll free GRATTON COULEE AGRI PARTS LTD. Your 1-877-344-4433, www.novlanbros.com #1 place to purchase late model combine and tractor parts. Used, new and rebuilt. 1997 NH 9682, 5000 hrs. on tractor, www.gcparts.com Toll free 888-327-6767. w/150 hrs. on complete drop-in Cummins engine, worked done at Robertson Equip. MF 2675, like new tires; MF 1505, $2500; work order available on request, tires- fair, MF 255, 3 PTH; Versatile 800 Series II, c/w Outback AutoSteer, $72,000. Moose $8500. 403-394-4401, Lethbridge, AB. Jaw, SK., 306-692-6797, 306-631-6297. 1998 NH 9682, 4190 hrs., 425 HP, 12 spd. std, recent $10,000 maintenance WO, exc. JOHN DEERE 9300 2001, 2940 hrs., 24 cond, $89,000. 306-642-7650, Limerick SK speed, diff. lock, 710x38 tires, $100,000. 2003 NEW HOLLAND TJ425 tractor. Call Broadview, SK. 306-696-7285. 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.
2012 JD 6140R, only 31 hrs., loader ready, many options, loaded tractor, $128,500. 204-794-4878, 204-981-3636, Cartier, MB.
MASSEY 202 INDUSTRIAL TRACTOR, with FEL, new tires, $4500. 306-463-7802, Eatonia, SK. 2013 MF 4610 FWA, rental return, 84 HP PTO, self-levelling loader, cab, AC, hyd. shuttle, joystick, 3PTH, 110 hrs. Warranty. 2.9% for 72 months OAC. Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 1989 MASSEY FERGUSON 3090, FWA, 3 PTH, w/795 Allied loader, 95 HP, 5674 orig. hrs., payment in cash or wheat. Call 306-597-4405, Togo, SK.
2012 NEW HOLLAND T9.670 #HN3227A. 418 hrs., 670 diff. lock, mega-flow hyd., $280,000 cash. Call: 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca 2007 NH TJ430, 1700 hrs., PS, 900 duals, leather, elec. mirrors, HID lights, mint cond. 780-872-2832, Paradise Hill, SK.
1995 FORD/NH 9480, 300 HP, 14L Cum- 2003 MCCORMICK MTX125, MFWD, CAHR, mins, 20.8x42 duals (front 4 are new), 4 3560 hrs, 3 PTH, loader, 4 new radial tires, hyd. remotes, AutoSteer, recently through $60,000. 250-938-0974, Armstrong, BC. shop, $59,500. 204-748-8303, Elkhorn, MB 1975 BIG BUD HN320, 3 hyds., 23.1x30 rubber, needs 855 Cummins short block, $18,000. 306-654-4905, Prud’homme, SK. 1998 FORD/NH 9682, 710 rubber, 12 speed, low hours, excellent condition. For info call 306-277-4503, Gronlid, SK. 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.
RETIRING: 1980 VERSATILE 555, great shape, good rubber, 5600hrs., $15,000; JD 6600 dsl. combine, 22’ header, 3200 hrs., $5000; JD 6600 gas combine, 12’ PU, 1600 hrs., $2500; NH 847 baler, $500; 32’ IHC 310 discers, $1500; JD 25’ PT swather, $900; IHC 18’ PT swather, new cutter bar, PU reel, $800. Call 306-640-6363, Assiniboia, SK. email: aabjj@sasktel.net
North Country Customs • Heavy Duty Division Fassi Knuckleboom Dealer
Service of 1 ton and bigger vehicles & machinery.
HEAVY DUTY TECHNICIANS 814 – 50th Street East Saskatoon SK
Phone: 306-979-6637
E-mail: info@northcountrycustoms.ca Website: www.northcountrycustoms.ca FERTILIZER SPREADERS: 4- 8 ton. Large selection. 204-857-8403, Portage la Prairie, MB. www.zettlerfarmequipment.com 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, $3,000. Call 250-428-7869, Canyon, BC.
‘93 Ford 9880 Tractor, 400HP, Cummins 14.0L 6 cyl Turbo, synchro transmission, 12 fwd 4 rev, with 8 new radials...$59,800.00. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
ODESSA ROCKPICKER SALES: New Degelman equipment, land rollers, Strawmaster, rockpickers, rock rakes, dozer blades. Phone 306-957-4403, cell 306-536-5097, Odessa, SK.
1989 FORD 876, 5100 hrs., rubber - 40%, always shedded, very good condition. Call 306-338-2085, Kuroki, SK.
2009 DEGELMAN 46/57 14’ dozer blade. Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407.
40 ANDERSEN double shoot openers for Concord Edge-On shank; Flexi-Coil 67 PT 120’ sprayer, 1200 gal tank, 3-way nozzles, excellent; 3 Flexi-Coil heavy coil packers; IHC #100 press drill, shedded. 306-367-4770, Middle Lake, SK. GRAIN AND FERT sliptank, fits 20’ box, rear unload augers, $2500. St. Lazare, MB. Adrian 204-683-2267, cell: 204-773-6397 BUY NOW: Xtreme Series LED light bars for all your farming needs. Box 3081, Regina, SK, S4P 3G7. 1-800-263-4193, www.mcdougallauction.com DL319916 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. 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.
B.F. MECHANICAL LTD. Authorized Dealer of Sunnybrook Welding Box Concaves for rotorary and axial flow combines. Elias Reliabelt grain belt augers, highest capacity grain belt augers. The most innovative technology for your farming needs. Call Brady at 306-741-7968. DURABLE, HEAVY DUTY tow 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 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. 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.
VERSATILE BI-DIRECTIONAL TRACTOR WANTED: NEW OR used Bourgault 5810, 150, for parts, with loader. 250-428-6453, 62’ or 72’, 9.8” spacing and MRBs. Phone Wynndel, BC. 306-291-9395, Langham, SK. QUIT FARMING: LARGE older equipment. WANTED: 2355 LOADER for 5288 Int. Viewing/selling by appointment, call: tractor, working condition. 306-367-4803, 306-292-1595; Hesston 52’ single disc; 40’ Middle Lake, SK. IHC 600 Series DD press drill w/factory transport. 4 WD tractors: IH 4568; Allis 7550 and 8550; JD 6600 combine; 2004 Ford 450 dsl. w/12’ service body w/pipe deck; Ford 600 grain truck w/B&H; 15’ HD 35 TO 40’ vibrashank cultivator, 6” spacing, rotary mower; 3- 2700 bu. Westeel grain IH or JD, should have walking beam axles. bins, no floors; Cert. Leggett seed oats, Call: 780-984-7860, Leduc, AB. 600 bu. Much more! sikoraj@sasktel.net to receive Email with full listing and terms. WANTED: VALCON POLY PACKERS, FARM EQUIPMENT: 1983 JD 7721 com- 2”x16”. Call 306-449-2279, Storthoaks, SK. bine w/JD 912 PU; 2000 MacDon Premier WANTED: FLEXI-COIL 320 3rd tank to fit swather w/finger reel; Morris Magnum II 2320/1720. Will pay finders fee. Call cultivator; JD discers; International 310 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. discers; Rite-Way harrow packer drawbar; 1982 GMC 6000 V8 3 ton truck w/Strong WANTED: USED, BURNT, old or ugly tracBox; 1965 IH 2 ton truck w/wooden box. tors. Newer models too! Smith’s Tractor Dinsmore, SK. For more info call Cliff Wrecking, 1-888-676-4847. 306-846-2175 or email: cab@sasktel.net WANTED .101 (CLOVER) bottom sieve for QUIT FARMING: 2008 CIH 8010 combine Gleaner L2 long body. Call 306-421-2106, 4 WD, 30’ flex draper, $200,000; 2011 Wawota, SK. Massey 9260 36’ swather, big cab w/swath roller, $65,000; 2008 STX 430 4 WD, new WANTED: Older and newer tractors, in tires, $160,000; 1995 front trailer off a Su- running condition or for parts. Goods Used per B $5,000; 2011 Farm King 13x85 au- Tractor Parts, 1-877-564-8734. g 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; 2013 WANTED: MF #36 DISCERS, all sizes, Geringhoff 8x30” corn chopping header prompt pick-up. Phone 306-259-4923, w/row stompers, $80,000; 2-105 White 306-946-9669, 306-946-7923, Young, SK. tractor rebuilt eng., $7,000; Hutchmaster tandem, $8,000; Roadrunner header haul, WANTED: 3”X22” RUBBER press tires for $8,000; MacDon 30’ draper header, Flexi-Coil 5000; JD #68 auger feed cart; $20,000; Tandem trailer w/duals to haul Gehl 120 or NH 357 mixmill w/o power sprayer, $5,000; IH 4240 tractor w/15’ bale feeder. 306-744-8191, Saltcoats, SK. mower, $12,000; Westco 16x30 cult., $1,500; Band sprayer 16x30, $1,500; 2004 WANTED: FLEXI-COIL 320 3rd tank to fit Chev 2500 4x4 dr. w/8’ deck, new tires, 2 3 2 0 / 1 7 2 0 c a r t . 3 0 6 - 5 6 3 - 8 4 8 2 , new safety, $6000; 1998 Kenworth T-800 306-782-2586, Yorkton, SK. N14 Cummins, 18 spd., 4-way locks, SS paving box, 30” live belt, $33,000; 2006 LOOKING FOR 2390 or 2590 Case 2WD Cat 320 excavator, 10,000 hrs. w/QA tractor with duals in good condition. Call cleaning bucket, nice, $60,000. MacGre- 306-210-8901, Reward, SK. gor, MB. 204-871-0925.
WANTED: OLD RED or yellow PTO, 10” 60’ Bergen auger, not swing away, in fair SUNFLOWER HARVEST SYSTEMS. Call shape, useable. Phone 306-252-2810, for literature. 1-800-735-5848. Lucke Mfg., 306-567-7281, Kenaston, SK. www.luckemanufacturing.com CROWN SHRED IS taking orders for plastic 1991 FORD 946 Designation 6, 5765 hrs., 2005 JOHN DEERE loader, Model 110TBL, fence posts, 6’ and 7’ available. E-mail Jack 20.8x38 tires, 342 HP, vg cond., $55,000 4x4, heated cab, $22,500. 204-981-3636, at: csrregina@sasktel.net for more info. or OBO. 780-592-3985, Innisfree, AB. phone 306-543-1766, Regina, SK. or 204-864-2391, Cartier, MB. 2008 NH T9050 #HC3143A, 2224 hrs., 485 HP, 4WD, JD AutoSteer, megaflow 1994 FORD/NH 9280, 8800 hrs., high out- INT. TD18A CRAWLER, $12,000; IHC 560 CUSTOM FENCING AND corral building, no put hyd., exc. cond., $35,500 OBO or trade hyds., tires 800/70R38 duals, $205,500. tractor, good rubber, $3500. Both good job too big or too small. Call for wheat. Call 306-243-4811, Outlook, SK. 1-888-442-3816 or www.farmworld.ca condition. 306-675-5709, Kelliher, SK. 306-699-7450, Qu’Appelle, SK. 1994 NH 9680, 4WD, 5800 hrs., new MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. 20.8x42 duals, 82 series hyd. update, OutCall today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: back AutoSteer plumbing, $72,000 OBO. 1981 875 VERSATILE, 5860 hrs., 4 reLAND LEVELERS www.maverickconstruction.ca Exc. cond. 306-549-7989, Hafford, SK. motes, shedded, 20.8x38” duals, good cond., $19,500. Phone: 306-937-2555, CUSTOM FENCING, WILL travel. Call for 2009 T9060 HD 535, 3450 hrs., powerbookings. 306-221-8806, Asquith, SK. shift, high cap pump, deluxe cab, 710 rub- 306-658-2059, 780-808-3506, Cando, SK. ber, $159,000. 780-206-1234, Barrhead AB 1981 VERSATILE 895, 310 HP, big tires, WILL DO TEARDOWNS, barb-wire, corrals, 2002 TJ375, 3800 hrs., 20.8x42 Michelin’s 5629 hrs. showing, asking $32,000. r a i l s , b i g ga m e . W i l l t r ave l . P h o n e ROCK BUCKETS w/Outback AutoSteer, mint condition, 306-724-2260. Victoire, SK. 306-344-7067, Onion Lake, SK. $116,000 OBO. 306-834-8100, Major, SK. & GRAPPLES 2012 VERSATILE 500, 390 hrs., $275,000. 2 0 1 1 C AT E R P I L L A R W H E E L L OA D E R GUARANTEED PRESSURE TREATED fence 2002 NEW HOLLAND TJ375 tractor. Call Novlan Bros Sales, Paradise Hill, SK. posts, lumber slabs and rails. Call Lehner 306-344-4448, toll free: 1-877-344-4433, IT-38-H, low hr. machine, EROPS, AC, ride 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. control, Q/C, 20.5R25 tires c/w 3.5 yd. Wo o d P r e s e r ve r s L t d . , a s k fo r R o n Fax: 306-344-4892, www.novlanbros.com bucket, exc. cond., $155,000. Can deliver. 306-763-4232, Prince Albert, SK. 1995 NH 9482, 20.8x42 tires, 4 remotes, 50 GPM, 4040 hrs, $64,900. Shaunavon, VERSATILE 700, w/LEON dozer, 2600 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. original hrs., $22,500 OBO. 403-585-1910, SOLIDLOCK AND TREE ISLAND game wire SK., 306-297-3276, 306-297-8414. BRIDGEVIEW MANUFACTURING PULLAirdrie, AB. and all accessories for installation. Heights DOZER in 18’ and 24’ lengths. Place your 2013 NEW HOLLAND T9.670 #HN3383A. from 26” to 120”. Ideal for elk, deer, bison, TREE SHEARS 740 hrs., 600 HP, 4WD track, monitor dis- 895 VERSATILE, heavy planataries, 3800 deposit now to ensure spring delivery!!!! ROCK RAKES sheep, swine, cattle, etc. Tom Jensen play, $395,000 cash. Call: 1-888-462-3816 original hrs., ultra premium, $43,000 OBO. 306-764-2325, 1-888-708-3739. ph/fax 306-426-2305, Smeaton, SK. 403-823-1894, Drumheller, AB. or www.farmworld.ca 2011 DEGLEMAN 7900 18’ dozer with MASSEY 44 TRACTOR with mounted HD 1990 FORD VERSATILE 276, 5,320 hrs. mounts for 9030 series John Deere, c/w 1995 8970, MFWD powershift, rubber 85%, post pounder, asking $2500. Phone Parker hyd. QuickConnect option, low use, 7000 hours, excellent. Call 306-744-8113, Call 1-800-667-2075. PL #915407. 306-642-3189, Assiniboia, SK. shedded. 204-649-2276, Pierson, MB. Saltcoats, SK. Fabrication S. Houle Inc., 2003 BUHLER VERS. 2335, std. trans, 3867 hrs., 710 duals, weights, new Outback LEON 9’ DOZER, off of 4230 John Deere for ONE TIME FENCING, sucker rod fence Bernie 1-306-241-7354 or Toll Free 888-404-4380 2012 NEW HOLLAND T9.560 #PN29992A. posts (solid steel), and steel corners. 747 hrs., $252,000 cash. 1-888-442-6084 GPS. Asking $98,900. 306-475-2541, or sale, good condition, new hyd. cylinder. www.shoule.com New Vision Agro 306-225-2226 cell 306-690-1910, Spring Valley, SK. Call 306-338-2085, Kuroki, SK. www.onetimefencing.ca 1-877-542-4979. or www.farmworld.ca TW 30, DUAL power, 20.8 duals, large PTO, 8990 hrs, 3 hyds, good paint and cond., $18,000. 306-493-7890, Milden, SK.
There’s So Much Potential... You Just Need The Right Tools!
Built to Last!
Outstanding in all fields 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 Phone (306) 488-4334
1-800-267-0006
www.watermasterpumps.com
86 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
WWW.NOUTILITYBILLS.COM - Indoor coal, grain, multi-fuel, gas, oil, pellet and propane fired boilers, fireplaces, furnaces and stoves. Outdoor EPA and conventional wood boilers, coal / multi-fuel boilers. Chimney, heat exchangers, parts, piping, pumps, etc. Athabasca, AB, 780-628-4835.
CANADA’S EQUIPMENT LEASING EXPERTS
BLOCKED SEASONED JACK Pine firewood and wood chips for sale. Lehner Wood Preservers Ltd., 306-763-4232, Prince Albert, SK. Will deliver. Self-unloading trailer. 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. BIRCH FIREWOOD, sold in bags of approx. 1/2 cord, split and seasoned, $200; Pine also available in same quantity, $120. 306-763-1943, Prince Albert, SK. BLOCKED 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 403-653-1565 or cell: 406-450-6300, Cardston, AB. Email: bunnage@shaw.ca
HEAVY DUTY BURNING INCINERATORS On ly 10 Un its Le ft
Complete with: • • • • • • •
Chimney 2 Doors 6 Vents Wire Mesh Rack Open Bottom Loading Hooks 1600 lbs each
Will Last a KEET’S FISH FARM has Rainbow Trout $ each Lifetime fingerlings for spring stocking. Gill nets available. 306-260-0288, Saskatoon, SK. www.keetsfishfarm.com Pick up in Saskatoon, SK Call: (306) 955-3091 BEV’S FISH & SEAFOOD LTD., buy direct, fresh fish: Pickerel, Northern Pike, or email: awpipe@sasktel.net Whitefish and Lake Trout. Seafood also available. Phone toll free 1-877-434-7477, ROD’S WELDING: 2” and 2-3/8” pipe in 24’ and 30’ lengths. 2” is $0.85/ft, 2-3/8” 306-763-8277, Prince Albert, SK. is $1.05/ft. 403-746-5455, Red Deer, AB. CLEAR SPRINGS TROUT FARM Rainbow Trout, 4”, 6” and 8” for spring stocking. 204-937-4403, 204-937-8087, Roblin, MB.
1300
25 MATURE OPEN bison cows for sale, $25,000. 306-441-5209, Meota, SK. 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. ELK VALLEY RANCHES, buying all ages of feeder bison. Call Frank 780-846-2980, Kitscoty, AB. or elkvalley@xplornet.com WANT TO BUY 2013 bison calves. Prompt payment as soon as pick up, or delivery. Mike Muhr: 306-536-9817, Francis, SK. Email: mikemuhr@sasktel.net 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. SASKOTA NATURAL is looking for finished bison and cull cows. COD, paying market prices. “Producers working with Producers.” 306-231-9110, Quill Lake, SK. WANTED: MATURE BISON bulls. Butch Smith, 403-843-3092 or 403-783-0356, Rimbey, AB. 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 PREMIUM BREEDING STOCK, $1500 to $2000 per head. Dr. Marshall Patterson, 306-475-2232, Moose Jaw, SK. 33 FIVE YEAR old bison cows for sale. 306-423-5979, St. Louis, SK. 2013 CALVES WANTED. Will buy other bison. Phone Kevin at 306-429-2029, Glenavon, SK. WANTED TO PURCHASE cull bison bulls and cows for slaughter. Oak Ridge Meats 204-835-2365 204-476-0147 McCreary MB
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 IRRIGATION EQUIPMENT or move wa- payment! 514-643-4447, Winnipeg, MB. ter? 6”-10” pipe, 4 cyl. motor and pump on cart, $4500. 403-308-1400, Taber, AB. 75 HP ELECTRIC Motor and Berkeley pump 2004 JCB 520 Loadall, 2600 hrs, 4400 lbs. (700 gal/minute), $2000. Lucky Lake, SK. lift capacity, max. lift 16.4’, $38,995. 306-858-2529, 306-867-9899. w w w. g l e n m o r. c c 3 0 6 - 7 6 4 - 2 3 2 5 , WESTERN IRRIGATION - Large supply of LAST CHANCE ALL-BREEDS BULL 1-888-708-3739, glenmor@sasktel.net new and used irrigation equipment. CadJohnstone Auction Mart, Moose 2002 SELLICK SD 80 4WD 8000 lb. forklift, man travelling gun dealer. Used PTO pump SALE, SK., May 27, 2014 at 12:00 PM. Acasking $28,000; 2006 JCB 940 4WD 8000 and used large volume dsl. pumping unit Jaw, cepting entries until April 21 for all breeds lb. forklift, asking $35,000. 306-744-2403, w/gated pipe. 306-867-9461, Outlook, SK. of registered yearlings and 2 yr. olds. Entry Saltcoats, SK. ask for Charles or email: form online at www.johnstoneauction.ca LOW HOUR LOCKWOOD pivot, c/w power charles@penntruss.com plant and pump, approx. 1600’, $30,000 or call 306-693-4715. PL #914447. LULL TELEHANDLER 2000, 644D34, 34’ work order $22,000 firm. 306-867-8249, reach, 6000 lbs. lift capacity, 4600 hrs, Outlook, SK. foam filled tires, well maintained, $29,800. WHOLE IRRIGATION SYSTEM: 35-40 4” 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com pipes and risers, in-take pipes, in-take Swift Current, Sask. screen, pump and trailer, 2 Big Guns, $6000 OBO. 306-558-7017, Fox Valley, SK. RAIN MAKER IRRIGATION Zimmatic by Lindsay pivots/Greenfield mini pivots, KLine towable irrigation, spare parts/accessories, new and used equipment. 33 years in business. www.rainmaker-irrigation.com Call 306-867-9606, Outlook, SK. TRI STAR FARM SERVICES: O’Connell Farm drainage plows, pull type 4-5 pipe, 6-8 pipe, $24,500. 306-586-1603 Regina 2001 HYSTER H100 XM, 9450 lb. lift, 185” height reach, 48” forks, new Vortex eng., exc. cond, enclosed cab w/doors, propane, $17,000 OBO. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.
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.
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
2002 DRUM SCREENER Stock # L-5197. DIESEL GENSET SALES AND SERVICE, Asking price, $119,000. 780-567-4202, 12 to 300 KW, lots of units in stock, used Clairmont, AB. www.astro-sales.com and new, Perkins, John Deere, Deutz. We also build custom gensets. We currently have special pricing on new John Deere units. Call for pricing 204-792-7471. INGERSOLL RAND GENSET, portable, 1994, 50 KW, 3.9T Cummins dsl., 86 HP w/control panel, 12V, 120/480V, 3 phase, AFFORDABLE WINDBREAK/Shelterbelt solutions. Prairie hardy varieties. $6950. 1-800-667-4515, Combine World. www.acreagelogic.com 204-750-0507, Carman, MB.
P A IR D IS P ER S A L
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.)
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 .
P A IR D IS P ER S A L
Th urs da y M a y 29 th Sus a n How a rd, Ea s te n d, SK.
REG. YEARLING BULLS, sired by Game Day, Imprint, Thunder, and sons of Sinclair Entrepreneur and Bandolier 12U. Jeffrey Isaac, 306-768-8388, Carrot River, SK. BLACK ANGUS BULLS, yearling and 2 year olds. Semen tested and ready to go by mid-April. Mike Chase, Waveny Angus Farm 780-853-3384 or 780-853-2275 at Vermilion, AB. PUREBRED BLACK ANGUS 2 yr. old bulls, semen tested, quiet and easy to handle. 780-744-2180, Kitscoty, AB. 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. MIDNITE OIL CATTLE CO. has on offer semen tested yearling and 2 year old bulls. 306-734-2850, 306-734-7675, Craik, SK. 2 YEAR OLD Black Angus bulls, low birth weight, good performance, good selection Rob Garner, 306-946-7946, Simpson, SK. QUIET TOP QUALITY 2 yr. old and yearling Purebred bulls. Spruce Acres, Foam Lake, SK, 306-272-3997, 306-272-7841. PB BLACK ANGUS yearling bulls. Spring View Ranch 306-861-5035, 306-447-4803 Beaubier, SK SELLING: BLACK ANGUS bulls. Wayside Angus, Henry and Bernie Jungwirth, 306-256-3607, Cudworth, SK.
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 FOR FURTHER INFORM ATION: 3 06 -773 -3 174
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 SPRUCE FOR SALE! Beautiful locally the 2011 Agribition. All animals have been grown trees. Plan ahead and renew your vaccinated and fed for optimum breeding shelterbelt or landscape a new yardsite, condition. Ph Kirby 306-375-7731, Kyle, SK get the year round protection you need. PUREBRED BLACK ANGUS long yearling We sell on farm near Didsbury, AB. or de- bulls, replacement heifers, AI service. liver anywhere in western Canada. Now Meadow Ridge Enterprises, 306-373-9140 taking spring bookings. Details phone or 306-270-6628, Saskatoon, SK. 403-586-8733 or check out our website at www.didsburysprucefarms.com BLACK ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, semen tested, guaranteed breeders. Delivery FAST GROWING BARE root Hybrid Poplar available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, and Willow varieties. Call Al 306-764-2704 Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com Prince Albert, SK. BLACK ANGUS PUREBRED BULL, 4 year old. Quiet animal. Will do the job! 306-488-2103, Holdafst, SK. PUREBRED BULLS, 2 year olds, very quiet, semen tested, ready to go. Please call Brent Lensen, Van Len Angus, Vanscoy, SK. 306-220-4531 or 306-242-7547. BISON WANTED - Canadian Prairie Bison YEARLING BLACK ANGUS bull. Light birth is looking to contract grain finished bison weight, AI sire, Thunder; dam, Bennett ToOUTBACK RTK BASE station and 2 rovers, for growing markets. Roger Provencher at tal. Call Ross at: 306-567-4709, or Scott $6900 OBO. 306-834-8100, Major, SK. at: 306-561-7737, Davidson, SK. 306-468-2316. roger@cdnbison.com
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
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
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.
MARTENS CHAROLAIS has yearling and YEARLING AND TWO year old bulls. Se- 2 year old bulls. Dateline Sons for calving men tested. Will deliver. Guy Sampson, ease, Specialist Sons for consistent thickDavison, SK. 306-567-4207, 306-561-7665 ness. 204-534-8370, Boissevain, MB. MAPLE RIDGE ACRES have yearling MCTAVISH CHAROLAIS YEARLINGS for purebred Red Angus bulls for sale. AI sires sale. Quiet. Semen tested. Delivered. Will Sakic and Honky Tonk. Les Saunders, keep until June 1. Ph. Jared 306-435-4925 or 306-435-9842, Moosomin, SK. 306-997-4507, Borden, SK. MCTAVISH RED ANGUS yearlings for sale. RED FACTOR CHAROLAIS bulls, 2 year Quiet. Semen tested. Delivered. Will keep olds and yearlings, red, tan and white. Call until June 1st. Phone Jared 306-435-4925 Wheatheart Charolais, Rosetown, SK. 306-882-6444, 306-831-9369. or 306-435-9842, Moosomin, SK. SOUTH VIEW RANCH has Red and Black WHITECAP CHAROLAIS yearlings and 2 Angus coming 2 yr. old bulls. Shane at: year old bulls for sale. Semen tested and guaranteed. Call Mike 306-631-8779, 306-869-8074, 306-454-2688, Ceylon, SK. 306-691-5011, Moose Jaw, SK. PUREBRED RED ANGUS deep thick BULLS, excellent quality, quiet. Have bulls PUREBRED 2 and 3 year old proven sires, for cows and heifers, starting at $2500. calving ease with good growth. Reason for Semen tested and delivery avail. Photos 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 , online at www.jbardeefarms.com J Bar 306-727-4927, Sintaluta, SK. Dee Farms 306-867-7586, Outlook, SK. MUTRIE FARMS has 1 mature bull, 2 year 2 YEAR OLD bulls, calving ease and top olds and yearling bulls, red and whites. Seg r ow t h fi g u r e s . P h o n e R o b G a r n e r, men tested. 306-429-2711, Glenavon, SK. 306-946-7946, Simpson, SK. CLINE CATTLE COMPANY has for sale YEARLING UNREGISTERED PUREBRED PB Charolais yearling and 2 yr. old bulls. Red Angus bulls for sale. Low to moderate Quiet, hairy and easy calving. Will be sebirth weights, very quiet, semen tested men tested and guaranteed. Drop in any and we will deliver. Call 780-386-2127 or time to have a look. 204-537-2367 or Brad’s cell 204-523-0062, Belmont, MB. 780-385-0406, Alberta. REG. CHAROLAIS BULLS 2 year olds and REG. RED ANGUS yearling bulls, $1500. yearlings. Polled, calving ease, growthy, Also 2 yr. olds. Lorne Wyss 306-839-7766, quiet. Semen test and deliver. Qualman 306-839-2038, 306-839-4706, Pierceland. Charolais, 306-492-4634, Dundurn, SK. 2 YEAR OLD and yearling bulls, many CREEK’S EDGE LAND and Cattle Purebred from AI sired from Fully Loaded, Goldbar Charolais Bulls for sale off farm. Thick, King and Sakic. Fit, easy keeping, quiet hairy, good feet and quiet. Call Stephen disposition, vet inspected. Free 100 km 306-279-2033, cell 306-279-7709, Visit: delivery. 306-773-6633, Swift Current, SK. www.creeksedgecharolais.ca to view YEO’S RED ANGUS yearling bulls for sale, pictures of all our bulls, Yellow Creek, SK. semen tested. Garry and Dianne Yeo, REG. CHAROLAIS BULLS, 2 year olds and 306-873-5662, Tisdale, SK. yearlings, polled and horned, some red, 30 YEARLING AND 3 two year old Red quiet, hand fed. 40 plus bulls available at Angus bulls. Semen tested. Will keep un- the ranch. Call Wilf, Cougar Hill Ranch, til breeding season. Performance info. and 306-728-2800, 306-730-8722, Melville, SK video’s available at: www.kenrayranch.com YEARLING AND 2 year old Charolais bulls. Redvers, SK. Call Ray 306-452-3876 or Creedence Charolais Ranch, Ervin Zayak, Sheldon 306-452-7545. 780-741-3868, 780-853-0708, Derwent AB 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 REG. CHAROLAIS heifer calves, yearlings, and virgin 2 yr. old bulls, reds and whites. Richard Smith 780-846-2643, Kitscoty, AB.
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. 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. HIGH QUALITY 2 year old purebred Black Angus bulls for sale. Call David or Pat VIDEOS: www.dkfredangus.ca Select now. Get later. Superior quality. For sale 306-963-2639, 306-963-7739 Imperial, SK DKF Red and Black Angus bulls at: DKF SELECT GROUP, REGISTERED open re- Ranch, anytime, Gladmar, SK. Agent for: placement heifers, EPD’s available. Solar and Wind Water Systems and Allen Phone 204-725-3597, Brandon, MB. Leigh Calving Cameras. Dwayne or Scott 2 YEAR OLD Black Angus bulls, Prime Papa Fettes, 306-969-4506. and Freightliner breeding. 2 Red bulls. 5 TWO YEAR OLD Reg. bulls for sale. Born 306-445-8425, North Battleford, SK. April and May. Birthweight 78 to 85 lbs. HR HAHN CATTLE Co., Black and Red An- Murray 306-867-7206 or 306-856-4603. gus bulls for sale by private treaty. Decorah Red Angus, Dinsmore, SK. www.hahnangus.com for pictures and REGISTERED YEARLING BULLS. Easy more info. Bob Hahn 780-991-1355, Ryan calving, solid feet, thick hair coats. Vet inWeiss 587-991-9526, Sherwood Park, AB. spected, semen tested, guaranteed breedREGISTERED BLACK ANGUS 2 year old ers. www.belleredangus.com Glen and virgin bulls. Complete performance and ul- Evelyn Bloom, 306-845-2557, Turtleford, trasound data available. Will hold and de- SK. Email: evandglen@littleloon.ca liver before June 15. Contact GBS Angus 30 YEARLING AND 2 year old Red Angus Farm 306-763-9539, Prince Albert, SK. 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. 306-225-5720, Hague, SK.
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 .
Canada’s Source For Quality Bred Cattle
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BLACK AND RED ANGUS BULLS on moderate growing ration, performance info avail. Adrian or Brian Edwards, Valleyhills Angus, Glaslyn, SK., 306-342-4407. TWO YR. BLACK ANGUS bulls. Easy calving, BW 70-85 lbs., semen tested, can deliver, $3500/ea. Sharpley Angus. David at: 403-325-1245, Strathmore, AB. 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. 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
40 OLDER COWS bred Angus/Shorthorn; 30 2nd/3rd calvers bred Dexter; 25 heifers bred Dexter; Dexter bull and heifer calves. 403-845-5763, Rocky Mountain House, AB.
KNUDSON FARMS GELBVIEH: Polled red or black bulls. Guaranteed. Kept until needed. Call James 306-322-4682, Archerwill, SK. PUREBRED GELBVIEH BULLS, 2 yr. olds and yearlings. We specialize in both heifer bulls for light birth and the large herd bulls for cows. W L Farms 403-854-2474 or www.whiskeycreekranches.com Hanna, AB POLLED YEARLING and 2 year old bulls for sale. Call Selin’s Gelbvieh, Stockholm, SK., 306-793-4568. WINDERS GELBVIEH, Camrose, AB. are selling by private treaty registered PB 2 year old and yearling Gelbvieh bulls and replacement heifers. gwinder@syban.net 780-672-9950.
RED ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, semen tested, guaranteed breeders. Delivery available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, PROVEN HERD BULLS: One 5 yr. old and one 4 yr. old.; Also 2 year old fall born and Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com yearling bulls. Imperial, SK. 306-963-2414 2 YEAR OLD RED ANGUS BULLS. Easy 306-963-7880 www.crittendenbros.com calving, high performance and structurally sound. Semen tested and guaranteed. De- COULEE CREST HEREFORDS bulls for livery available and can keep until spring. sale by private treaty. Yearlings and 2 yr. Prices $3500 and up. Bulls are ranch raised olds, excellent quality, dehorned and and come from a working cowherd. Call polled, moderate birthweights suitable for Rock Creek Ranching, Jordan Newhouse heifers. Call Randy Radau 403-227-2259, 403-588-6160. For online catalo gue 306-276-2025, White Fox, SK. www.couleecrest.ca Bowden, AB. 2 YEAR OLD and yearling registered Polled Hereford bulls, semen tested. Harold or POLLED YEARLING BLONDE bulls for sale, Tim Strauch, 306-677-2580, Shamrock, SK Estevan, SK area. Phone 306-634-2174 or HOLMES POLLED HEREFORDS: Two cell: 306-421-6987. year olds and yearlings for sale. Quiet easy calving bulls. Jay Holmes 306-524-2762 or 306-746-7170 cell, Semans, SK. C O R N E R S TO N E R E D A N G U S a n d GOOD SOLID 2 YR. old bulls; Also 2 herdCharolais Bull Sale, April 19th, 1:30 PM, sires. Easy calvers. Polled Herefords since Whitewood, SK. Auction Market. Offering 1950. Erwin 306-232-4712, Rosthern, SK. 32 Red Angus and 24 Charolais yearling bulls. Semen tested, guaranteed with free 16 OPEN REPLACEMENT dehorned Hereboard and delivery available. Plus 27 Red ford heifers. 306-743-5105, Langenburg, 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 SK., www.vcherefordfarm.com 306-577-7698, Phil Birnie 306-577-7440, PUREBRED HEREFORD BULL, halter broke, or view catalogue: www.bylivestock.com semen tested, and quiet. 780-744-2180, VALLEYS END RANCH CHAROLAIS bulls Kitscoty, AB. for sale. Good hair, quiet dispositions, easy calving bloodlines. Semen tested and ready to work. Call Mark at 306-796-4651 or Nigel 306-796-4351, Central Butte, SK.
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. BLACK ANGUS yearling bulls for sale. Calving ease, maternal lines, semen tested. Gord Roger 306-771-2305, Balgonie, SK., e-mail valleylodge@sasktel.net F O R AG E B A S E D Black Angus bulls. www.nerbasbrosangus.com 204-564-2540 CHAROLAIS BULLS AND Red Angus bulls for sale. Call 780-582-2254, Forestburg, or 204-773-6800, Shellmouth, MB. AB. 90 YEARLING AND 2 year old Red Angus bulls. Guaranteed semen tested and delivered in spring. Bob Jensen 306-967-2770, Leader, SK. REGISTERED RED ANGUS bulls. Calving ease, semen tested. Little de Ranch, 306-845-2406, Turtleford, SK. HOWE RED ANGUS yearlings and 2 yr. old bulls for sale. Semen tested and guaranteed. Call Mike at 306-631-8779, 306-691-5011, Moose Jaw, SK. QUIET TOP QUALITY 2 yr. old and yearling Purebred bulls. Spruce Acres, Foam Lake, SK, 306-272-3997, 306-272-7841.
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. SQUARE D BULLS for sale: over 60 to CORNERSTONE CHAROLAIS and Red choose from, spring and fall yearlings and Angus Bull Sale, April 19th, 1:30 PM, two year-olds, performance and semen Whitewood, SK. Auction Market. Offering tested, halter broke and quiet, kept until 24 Charolais and 32 Red Angus yearling June 1. Delivered. 306-538-4556, Langbulls. Semen tested, guaranteed with free bank, SK. View videos and pictures at: board and delivery available. Plus 27 Red www.square-dpolledherefords.com 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 2- PROVEN PUREBRED Hereford bulls, 1 306-577-7698, Phil Birnie 306-577-7440, herdsire and 1 heifer bull. Reason for sellor view catalogue: www.bylivestock.com ing, sold cows. 306-669-4822, Richmound. POLLED YEARLING CHAROLAIS bulls. Will POLLED BULLS 3 , 4, and 5 year olds. semen test and deliver. Layne and Paula Sold cows. 403-772-2191, 403-820-8028, Evans, Kenaston, SK. 306-252-2246. Morrin, AB.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
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.
ALBERTA TEXAS LONGHORN Association CHAMPION VERSATILE SIRE, Eye Take 780-387-4874, Leduc, AB. For more info. Time, bred in Oklahoma. 3 times Chamwww.albertatexaslonghorn.com pion AB. race sire. Barrel, race and steer roping sire. Sire of nearly $500,000 in CALLING CONSIGNORS: CTLA Texas earnings. Prospects and top quality runLonghorn Production Sale (all classes), ning mares for sale. Ph. 306-493-3011, CTLA AGM and Heifer Jackpot, May 31, Vanscoy, SK. www.fastridinghorses.com 2014, Silver Sage, Brooks, AB. For info phone: 1-866-304-4664 or 403-378-4664 13 YEAR OLD QH/Thoroughbred gelding, E-mail us: office@ctlalonghorns.com or 15+ HH, well broke, quiet. Used in rodeo Visit us on-line at: www.ctlalonghorns.com poles, barrels, roping, trail rides, community pastures. 204-568-4560, Birtle, MB. www.gwacountry.com
REG. POLLED HEREFORD bull, 4 yrs. old, semen tested, good temperament. 306-255-2863 eves, Colonsay, SK. GOOD 2 YEAR old POLLED HEREFORD BULLS. LV Farms Ltd. 306-458-2566, 306-458-7170, 306-458-7772, Midale, SK.
FRESH AND SPRINGING heifers for sale. Cows and quota needed. We buy all classes of slaughter cattle-beef and dairy. R&F Livestock Inc. Bryce Fisher, Warman, SK. Phone 306-239-2298, cell 306-221-2620.
SELLING YEARLING BULLS. We have the carcass and red color in our Shorthorns to 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.
SASK MILK QUOTA for sale: 200 kgs. total. Below board price. Cows available. SHORTHORN YEARLING BULLS, red, white, roans, polled, THF, tie broke, semen Phone: 306-873-7428, Tisdale, SK. tested, DNA’d; Package of Shorthorn and commercial Shorthorn yearling heifers for sale. Matlock Shorthorns 306-825-2674, JERSEY COW FOR SALE, 2nd calver, just 780-522-9350, Lloydminster, SK. fresh. 403-443-5682, Three Hills, AB. SHORTHORN BULLS, YEARLINGS and 2 year olds. Red and roans. Contact 6S Farms, Stony Plain, AB. 780-963-4578. QUALITY 2 YEAR old bulls for sale, semen 2 YR. OLD and yearling bulls for sale, red, tested and delivered. Call Merv Springer, white and roans. Also open replacement females. Richard Moellenbeck, Englefeld, 306-272-0144, Leslie, SK. SK., call 306-287-3420 or 306-287-7904. 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. LAKEVIEW SIMMENTALS has Polled Full Fleckvieh bullls for sale; also FleckSTOUT YEARLING LIMOUSIN BULLS, vieh/Red Angus bulls. Curtis Mattson at: polled, horned, red, black. Quiet bulls with 306-944-4220, Meacham, SK. great performance. Short Grass Limousin, 306-773-7196, Swift Current, SK. 2 SIMMENTAL YEARLING BULLS, 1 red, 1 black; Also 15 open registered replacePOLLED 2 YEAR old black and red Limou- ment heifers. Red, black and traditional. sin bulls. Call Rob Garner, 306-946-7946, 306-931-2730, 306-222-1937, Dalmeny SK Simpson, SK. YEARLING BULLS FOR SALE: Reds, TraTOP QUALITY BULLS: Red and black; ditionals and Simmental/Red Angus cross. Yearlings and 2 year olds; One coming 3 McVicar Stock Farms, Colonsay, SK. year old. Light birthweight bull used on 306-255-2799 or 306-255-7551. heifers. Call 306-459-2788, Ogema, SK. REGISTERED BULL FOR sale, born April 2 YR. OLD POLLED black and brown Limo 29th 2012, red in color. Double D Simmenbulls. Hand fed, thick hair. Under $3,000. tals, 204-265-3349, Beausejour, MB. Call Regan 306-827-2110, Radisson, SK. RED AND BLACK yearling bulls. Semen tested, delivery available. Also, one 3 yr. old Red herd sire and five replacement BIG ISLAND LOWLINES Premier Breeder. heifers. 306-544-2651, Hanley, SK. Selling custom designed packages. Name YEARLING AND 2 YEAR OLD Red Factor your price and we will put a package to- Simmental bulls off of top AI sires. Will gether for you. Fullblood/percentage Low- guarantee breeders. Deposit will hold until line, embryos, semen. Black/Red carrier. May 1st. Green Spruce Simmental, Duck Darrell 780-486-7553, Edmonton, AB. Lake, SK., 306-467-4975 or 306-467-7912. 2 YEAR OLD and yearling Red and Black Simmental bulls, moderate birthweights, BUY A BULL that is proven feed efficient good temperaments. All bulls sold by priand passes the trait to his calves. Full- vate treaty. Call Bill or Virginia Peters blood, purebred, RFI tested. Best of 100 306-237-9506, Perdue, SK. animals on test, yearlings, 2 year olds. 2 YEARLING FULLBLOOD bulls, dark red Call John at 306-374-0763, Saskatoon, SK. w/goggles, good hair coat, moderate BW, Email: magpiemaines@yourlink.ca $3000. Call 306-255-7827, Colonsay, SK. THE BEST SELECTION Of The Real Maine- BROOK’S SIMMENTALS 2014 Polled Policy Anjou Bulls, FB sired. Easy calving. Long- Private Treaty Bull Sale: Yearling polled time breeder, Gary Graham, Marsden, SK. full blood bulls, first come first served. SePh. 306-823-3432, grahamgs@sasktel.net men tested, fully guaranteed. Delivery Visit us at: www.manitoumaineanjou.ca available. Catalogue available online: BLACK AND RED POLLED: 2 yr. old and brookssimmental.wix.com/polledfullblood yearling bulls. Naturally thick, moderate Call Konrad 306-845-9434 (cell) or BW’s, exc. performance, semen tested and 306-845-2834 (home), Turtleford, SK. guaranteed. 204-534-8222, Killarney, MB. RED, BLACK AND Full blood Simmental YEARLING MAINE CROSS bulls; 1 black bulls, yearlings and two year olds. Sinpolled; 1 red and white horned. For infor- clair’s Flying S Ranch Simmentals. Call: mation contact Ken Clark 306-736-8322 or 306-845-4440, Spruce Lake, SK. cell 306-736-7742. Kipling, SK. Check out SIMMENTAL BULLS: BLACK and Black pictures on facebook at: Clark Club Calves Simm. Angus, registered and guaranteed. QUALITY YEARLING PB black, polled bulls, 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 . semen tested. Catalogue and videos at: www.hertersimmentals.com www.albertamaine-anjou.com or Dennis Shannon at 403-227-2008, Innisfail, 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.
CLASSIFIED ADS 87
WELSH BLACK- The Brood Cow Advantage. TRIM BOSS: The Power Hoof Trimmer. Check www.canadianwelshblackcattle.com Take the work out of hoof trimming. Trim Canadian Welsh Black Soc. 403-442-4372. wall, sole and flare on saddle horses, and minis. Call 780-898-3752, Buck WELSH BLACK 17 polled yearling bulls, a drafts few 2 year old bulls, yearling heifers, black Creek, AB. www.trimboss.ca and red. Call Scott Farms, 403-854-2135, PAIR OF 6 yr old, Belgian Mules, 1 Molly, 1 Hanna, AB. John, broke to drive, $4500; 1 Pair Suffolk Punch cross mares, well broke to drive, 8 and 10 yrs. old, bred to foal in May, $5000. 780-363-2216, Chipman, AB. 125 BRED COWS, Complete Dispersal. 1/2 blood Simmental/Angus cross, bred WWW.ELLIOTTCUTTINGHORSES.COM to 1/2 blood Simmental/Angus bulls. One 35 plus years of training, showing, sales, iron cows. Closed herd for years. 3-8 yrs. clinics, lessons. Clifford and Sandra Elliott, old. Culling already done. Calving started. Paynton, SK. Phone 306-895-2107. Reputation herd. Charles Cattle Co. 306-457-2935 eves, Stoughton, SK. 60- QUALITY ONE IRON Black Angus and Angus/Simmental cross, open replacement heifers, some reds, full health pro- JUNIOR STEER RIDING SCHOOL, Fort. Qu’Appelle, SK, April 26th and 27th, Begingram. 306-948-2810, Biggar, SK. ner to Advanced. Tuition $230. $100 deYEARLING AND 2 YR. old Charolais bulls, 3 posit by April 18. Contact Dale Claypool, and 4 yr. old Red Angus bulls. Sim and 306-775-2709, cell 306-529-9391 or Shylo Sons Charolais. 306-831-7332, Rosetown. Claypool, 306-695-3600, Regina, SK. COMPLETE HERD DISPERSAL, 165 An- shylo_c@yahoo.ca gus cows, mostly black and BBF, approx. SAGEBRUSH TRAIL RIDES. Writing-On20 are red and RBF, bred to Gary Jones Stone. Register: June 27th. Ride: June 28, bulls from July 4, 2013. All preg checked 29th, 30th and July 1. Earl Westergreen and Ivermectin on Dec. 2, 2013. Call Bob 403-529-7597, Les O’Hara 403-867-2360. Blacklock 306-221-8943, Saskatoon, SK. www.sagebrushtrailrides.com 30 BRED COWS, Angus and Angus cross, bred to PB Red Angus bulls, for May 1 calving. $1400/pick, $1350 take all. NEW BUGGY, WAGON, sleigh, cutterwood 306-560-3258, Wynyard, SK. and metal parts. Wooden wheel manufacCALVING EASE BULLS, solid black, 50% ture and restoration. Wolfe Wagons, SasAngus/ 50% Longhorn yearling bulls. Calv- katoon, SK. Phone 306-933-4763 after 6 ing ease without losing market value. PM weekdays. Email rwolfe@sasktel.net Call 306-634-4330, Estevan, SK. BOBSLED 6x10’ with hay racks, $200; HOLSTEIN STEER C ALVES, 550 lbs., 7x12’ wagon, hay racks, rubber tires, $250. $1.10/lb. 204-657-2431, Fork River, MB. 780-842-4068, Wainwright, AB. RED ANGUS CROSS cows, bred Charolais THE LIVERY STABLE, for harness sales and or Simmental. Call 306-386-4711 eves., repairs. Call 306-283-4580, 306-262-4580, Cochin, SK. Hwy #16 Borden Bridge, SK. 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. BLACK ANGUS, 2nd time calvers, bred SHEEP AND GOAT Sale, Saturday, May back to Black, calving March and April. 10, 1:00 PM at Johnstone Auction Mart, Also Black Angus fall calvers, 2nd time Moose Jaw, SK. Accepting all classes of calves bred back to Black. 204-745-7917, sheep and goats. Sheep ID tags and prebooking mandatory. Call 306-693-4715 St. Claude, MB. www.johnstoneauction.ca PL #914447.
SUPER BRED HEIFERS 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 2 RED SOUTH DEVON yearling bulls. 403-566-2467, dmrranching@gmail.com YOUNG COW/CALF PAIRS and heifers with Duchess, AB. calves for sale. Call: 306-773-1049, Swift HILLBILLY HAVEN, SOUTH Devon Bulls, Current, SK. NASDA registry. Henny and Dawn Bruins, Phone 780-724-4242, Elk Point, AB. WANTED: CULL COWS for slaughter. For bookings call Kelly at Drake Meat Processors, 306-363-2117, ext. 111, Drake, SK.
RED POLL BULLS; Registered yearlings; easy calving; naturally polled calves. Phone: 780-892-3447, Wabamun, AB. SELLING: REGISTERED RED Poll open heifers. Ph. 780-892-3447, Wabamun, AB.
TOP QUALITY POLLED Salers bulls, moderate birthweight. Hauser Cattle Company, SAMPSON MCGREGOR STOCK Farm, Iron 306-748-2417, Neudorf, SK. River, AB. has 2 black 3 yr. old herdsires, 3 REG. PB RED or Black Salers bulls and re- black 2 yr. olds and 1 red 2 yr. old South placement heifers. Elderberry Farm Salers, Devon bulls. Easy calving 90 lb. BW bulls. For further info. contact Ralph or Betty at 306-747-3302, Parkside, SK. 780-826-7077 or sms@xplornet.com POLLED SALER BULLS and 20 polled Saler heifers. Delivery available. Harbrad Saler Farms, 306-459-7612, Ogema, SK. ONE AND TWO yr. old Salers bulls for cows 2-1/2 YEAR OLD registered Speckle bull, or heifers, quiet, guaranteed and tested e a s y c a l v e r. C a l l 3 0 6 - 8 7 7 - 2 0 1 4 , delivery available. Heifers also for sale. 306-745-7505, Dubuc, SK. 780-924-2464 or 780-982-2472, Alberta NEVER BEFORE OFFERED: Yearling and Beach, AB. two yr old bulls from the original breeders, PEDIGREE POLLED SALERS. Bulls, year- Speckle Park to Speckle Park since 1974. lings, 2 year olds and females. Priced rea- Semen and DNA tests on request. Some sonably, superior genetics, highest perfor- embryos and semen available. Battleford, mance CDN herd. See SLS stock on SK. Call 306-937-3120. View online at: www.salerscanada.com B mann free www.speckleparkoriginal.com herd. Bulls semen tested and guaranteed. Can arrange delivery. Ken 204-762-5512, sweetlandsalers@xplornet.ca YEARLING PUREBRED REGISTERED bull, PB RED, TAN and black yearling bulls, easy low birth weight, easy calving. Call calving, quiet, $2400 to $3000. Scattered 306-225-4546, Hague, SK. Spruce Salers, 780-768-2284 Hairy Hill, AB
2014 WILD ROSE DRAFT HORSE SALE, May 2nd and 3rd at Olds, AB. Draft horses, tack, harness, collars and horse drawn equipment are welcomed consignments. Call Barb Stephenson 403-933-5765, 8 AM to 8 PM, or visit www.wrdha.com SASKATOON ALL BREED Horse & Tack Sale, May 27. Tack 11:00 AM, Horses to follow. Open to broke horses (halter or riding). Sale conducted at OK Corral, Martensville, SK. To consign call Frederick, 306-227-9505 bodnarusauctioneering.com HORSE SALE, JOHNSTONE Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, SK. Thurs., May 1, 2014. Tack sell: 2:00 PM; Horses sell: 4:00 PM. All classes of horses accepted. 306-693-4715. www.johnstoneauction.ca PL #914447. 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
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. 306-967-2202, 306-460-4721, Eatonia, SK. HERD DISPERSAL. 2nd to 5th lambers, 30 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. 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. FLOCK DISPERSAL of 60 Suffolk and Dorset ewes and ewe lambs. Exposed to PB rams, to start lambing June 6th, 2014. Call 403-644-3720, Standard, AB. 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
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
POLLED POLLED POLLED- Salers bulls MAMMOTH DONKEYS, $500 each. Yearling for sale. Call Spruce Grove Salers, Yorkton, BIG, GROWTHY YEARLING and two year Jacks and Jennys. Call 204-434-6132, BUYING: PIGS/SWINE, raised outside, all sizes. Highest $$$. 1-877-226-1395. SK, 306-782-9554 or 306-621-1060. old Longhorn bulls. Large bases, flat horn, Steinbach, MB. www.canadianheritagemeats.com $1000 and $1500/ea. Buck Lake, AB. Cliff at 780-388-3324, suncreek@xplornet.com OPTIMIZE HYBRID VIGOR in your commercial herd with a yearling Beefblend bull. Darrell or Heide Kolla 306-256-3606, Cudworth, SK.
REGISTERED LONGHORNS BULLS and females for sale. Phone Allemand Ranches, Shaunavon, SK., Daryl 306-296-4712, cell 306-297-8481, Bob 306-297-3298.
BLUE ROAN STALLION, Blue Valentine breeding top and bottom. Sires good WANTED: MARKET HOGS and offgrade minded, easy to train. Foals mostly roans pigs for slaughter. Quick payment. Weekly delivery. 403-783-1787, Ponoka, AB. and blacks. 306-206-1457, Kennedy, SK.
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.
MORAND INDUSTRIES Builders of Quality Livestock Equipment, Made with Your Safety in Mind!
LIVE PIGEONS WANTED. Will pick up or 1-800-582-4037 meet for delivery, will pay cash. Please call www.morandindustries.com 403-581-6610, Medicine Hat, AB. FOR SALE: 10 young 2013 Homing Pi- CALF CRADDLE, $450; Heavy Duty cattle geons. 306-563-6016, Canora, SK. squeeze, $1250. Phone 780-842-4068, PIGEONS, White Racing Homers, $25/ea. Wainwright, AB. or two for $40. Will trade for livestock. WANTED: BISON OR Cattle self feeders. 403-770-1640, Cochrane, AB. Must be in good condition. 780-777-2326, Athabasca, AB. GOERTZEN 16’ gooseneck cattle trailer; BOBWHITE QUAIL ADULTS, chicks and Real Industries cattle squeeze w/palpate eggs. Also Chukar chicks available. self-catching gate, both sides open; Dr. Frank’s calf puller, with chain and hooks; 780-603-7966, Vegreville, AB. Calf de-horner; Wire cutter; Truck cap, fits CARFIO HATCHERY. Pheasant, Wild turkey 8’ box. Call 306-492-4642, Clavet, SK. Guinea; Partridge; Bobwhite; Wide variety of ducks and geese; Ross, Bantam and GREG’S WELDING: Freestanding 30’ 5 bar Heritage chicks. carfio@videotron.ca panels, all 2-7/8” drillstem construction, $430. 24’x5.5’ high panels, 2-7/8” pipe www.carfio.com Call 1-877-441-0368. with 5- 1” sucker rods, $300. 24’x6’ high B E R G ’ S H A T C H E R Y 2 0 1 4 . C a l l panels, 2-7/8” pipe with 6- 1” rods, $350. 204-773-2562, www.bergshatchery.com 30’ 2 or 3 bar windbreak panels c/w lumCornish, waterfowl, brown or white egg ber. Gates and double hinges available on layers, turkeys, guinea fowl, specialties, all panels. Belting troughs for grain or siready to lay and more. Russell, MB. lage. Delivery available. Call for more info 306-768-8555, Carrot River, SK. 4th ANNUAL CENTRAL SK. POULTRY and Small Animal Sale, Watrous Arena, SUPREME 900 TWIN screw mix wagon, Sat., April 26th, 11:00 AM. Buy, sell or new wheel bearings and seals, all new trade poultry, small animals, crafts, bak- tires and rims, 4 point scale, adjustable ing. For info or to reserve a spot call dog leg conveyor, rubber extension on top, all new knives, $29,000 OBO. Phone 306-836-4609 or text: 306-917-7446. 780-524-9322, Valleyview, AB. EXOTIC BIRD AND ANIMAL AUCTION, Sunday, April 27, 2014, Weyburn Livestock Exchange, Weyburn, SK, 11:00 AM. To consign call Charlotte 306-861-6305. For info. call Ken 306-861-3456. 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, rabbits, ferrets, miniature horses, donkeys, etc. All small animals must be boxed and in yard by 10:00 AM. 306-693-4715 www.johnstoneauction.ca PL #914447.
FOR HEALTH REASONS, selling mobile poultry processing unit. For all species of poultry. Includes Cryovac bagging system and inventory. 250-546-6884, Armstrong, BC. Email: deerfoorfarm@hotmail.com
BALE CHOPPER PROCESSOR, excellent shape, $6800. 306-730-8375, Melville, SK. ELK HERD DISPERSAL: 31 head, herd stat- BIOTHANE TEAM HARNESS, fits 15 to 17 us certified, $30,000. Call 306-230-8402, HH, near new, $600 OBO. Creston, BC. Saskatoon, SK. 250-428-3376 mohr.horses@gmail.com NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for FROSTFREE NOSEPUMPS: Energy free over 15 years, is looking for Elk. “If you solution to livestock watering. No power have them, we want them.” Make your fi- required to heat or pump. Prevents connal call with Northfork for pricing! Guaran- tamination. Grants avail. 1-866-843-6744. teed prompt payment! 514-643-4447, www.frostfreenosepumps.com Winnipeg, MB. SVEN ROLLER MILLS. Built for over 40 ATTENTION ELK PRODUCERS: AWAPCO years. PTO/elec. drive, 40 to 1000 bu./hr. is a proven leader in elk meat sales. If you Example: 300 bu./hr. unit costs $1/hr. to have elk to supply to market, give AWAP- run. Rolls peas and all grains. We regroove CO a call today. Non-members welcome and repair all makes of mills. Call Apollo info@wapitiriver.com or 780-980-7589. Machine 306-242-9884, 1-877-255-0187. www.apollomachineandproducts.com FREESTANDING PANELS: 30’ windbreak GOAT SUPPLIES CATALOGUE free upon re- panels; 6-bar 24’ and 30’ panels; 10’, 20’ quest. ceeder1@telus.net Cee-Der Sheep and 30’ feed troughs; Bale shredder bunks; Silage bunks; Feeder panels; HD bale feedProducts, 403-327-2242, Lethbridge, AB. ers; All metal 16’ and 24’ calf shelters. Will custom build. 306-424-2094, Kendal, SK. ARROW LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT: Portable USED RABBIT EQUIPMENT: 300 holes, windbreaks, custom panels. Mossbank, SK. stands, trays, feeders, waterers, nest box- 1-866-354-7655, www.shadowranch.ca es, etc. 306-764-2704, Prince Albert, SK. 2007 HIGHLINE 8000 bale processor, right hand discharge, big tires, exc. cond. Call 780-916-2333, Spruce Grove, AB. YAK HERD DISPERSAL: Bulls, cows, calves, ATTENTION SHEEP PRODUCERS: Metal and yearlings for sale or trade. Call self-feeders, hold 1200 cu. ft. of feed. New $12,000. Asking $7500. 403-331-0026 403-442-2277, Huxley, AB. leave message, Lethbridge, AB. STEEL VIEW MFG: 30’ portable wind breaks, HD self-standing panels, silage/ hay bunks, feeder panels. Quality portable p a n e l s at a f fo r d a b l e p r i c e s . S h a n e 306-493-2300, Delisle, SK. FREESTANDING WINDBREAK PANELS, up to 30’ (2-3/8” oilfield pipe); Square bale feeders, any size; Can build other things. Elkhorn, MB. 204-851-6423, leave msg. FRIGGSTAD 10x28’ tilt and winch off flatdeck wagon, $3500. Call 306-257-3607, Allan, SK. PAYSEN LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT INC. We manufacture an extensive line of cattle handling and feeding equipment including squeeze chutes, adj. width alleys, crowding tubs, calf tip tables, maternity pens, gates and panels, bale feeders, Bison equipment, Texas gates, steel water troughs, rodeo equipment and garbage incinerators. Distributors for El-Toro electric branders and twine cutters. Our squeeze chutes and headgates are now avail. with a neck extender. Ph. 306-796-4508, email: ple@sasktel.net Web: www.paysen.com CATTELAC HYD. SQUEEZE for sale, live hyd. floor, pressure relief valve, drop down lower sides, dual controls, $5500 OBO. Call: Jeff 403-323-0298, Stettler, AB. CORRAL PANELS. 24” free standing panels without gate, available in stock, volume pricing applies! $395. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 5800 GAL. LIVESTOCK trough systems, FDA/Food grade approved polyethylene. 306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228. While supplies last. www.hold-onindustries.com
Magnum Texas Gates
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www.magnumfabricating.com
MAGNUM FABRICATING LTD. Maple Creek, SK Ph: 306-662-2198
OUT WITH THE OLD...
IN WITH THE NEW! SEE WHAT ELSE IS NEW AT
LAKELANDNEW.COM 1-866-443-7444
88 CLASSIFIED ADS
PORTABLE PANELS 30’ freestanding 3bar windbreak frames, 5-bar, 4-bar panels w/wo double hinge gates and more. On farm welding. Oxbow, SK., 306-485-8559, 306-483-2199 and leave a message. MASSEY FERGUSON 110 manure spreader, $1900 OBO. Call 306-478-2680, 306-625-7287, Mankota, SK.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
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KELLN SOLAR FLOAT Pumps: efficient, economical and easy to use. Lumsden, SK. www.kellnsolar.com 1-888-731-8882.
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PYRENEES/ AKBASH PUPS, born Feb 14th, in sheep pen. Working parents. Great yard dogs $200. 306-845-2404, Livelong, SK. KUVASZ/PYRENEES PUPS, farm raised, born Sept./Oct., 7 males and 5 females. Call 403-502-9470, Medicine Hat, AB. PB AUSTRALIAN SHEPHERD PUPS due April 7th, from working parents, tails will be docked. 780-853-2783, Vermilion, AB. 3 PYRENEES PUPS, 8 wks, 2 males, 1 female, first shots, great with livestock, $500 OBO. 780-892-2815, Lake Isle, AB. PYRENEES/AKBASH PUPS, 9 months old, working and living w/sheep, working parents, $200. 403-504-3344 Medicine Hat AB
PINE VIEW REALTY Ltd. Lake front home: 2300 sq. ft., 4 bdrms, 2 baths, new appliances incl., full basement, 2 car garage, landscaped, $560,000. MLS 1403280. 1-888-760-2300, www.pineviewrealty.com The Pas, MB.
COYOTE OR WOLF problems on your farm? Sarplaninac puppies. Strong guarding qualities, good work ethics, amazing livestock guardians, exc. personal protection dogs. Ph 204-638-8854, Dauphin, MB.
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USED MOTOROLA VHF 2-way radios, 1 year warranty, small, fully refurbished, $250. Also new Vertex radios, USED JIFFY SLIDE-IN round bale handler, Antennas and radio repairs. Future in good condition. Phone 403-627-2601, 40 ORGANIC red and white Holstein steers Communications 306-949-3000, RePincher Creek, AB. and bull calves, 500 lbs. and less. Phone gina, SK. www.futurecommications.ca NORHEIM RANCHING HAS a full line of 204-326-9270, Steinbach, MB. www.farmradios.ca Ask for Glenn. handling equipment at discount prices. Freestanding panels, tubs, chutes, feeders, WANTED CERTIFIED ORGANIC BEEF. self-unloading hay trailers, net wrap and Peter Lundgard, Nature’s Way Farm, 780-338-2934, Grimshaw, AB. more. 306-227-4503, Saskatoon, SK. 2005 SUPREME MIXER WAGON, 900T, dual discharge, floatation tires, $27,500. Contact 780-674-8105, 780-674-6096, 780-584-2422, Barrhead, AB.
LOOKING FOR A SLIM white female, that 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
• 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 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 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
WHITE MALE, looking for female companion, 50+, NS. Interests, camping, fishing, farm background. Send photo and ph. AFFORDABLE LAKEFRONT SHUSWAP number to: Box 2100, c/o The Western LAKE. Own your own piece of paradise. Producer, Saskatoon, SK S7K 2C4 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. COUNTRY ESTATES. Manuf. SINGLE? SPRING IS the perfect time to SHUSWAP start at $69,900. Retire with us...on find love! Meet the Matchmaker! In-person homes time...on budget. 250-835-2366, Salmon interviews April 22 to 25th in Regina and Arm BC. www.shuswapcountryestates.com Saskatoon. 19 years successful matchmaking. Call to book your appointment: Camelot Introductions 204-888-1529, view www.camelotintroductions.com
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. LOG HOMES, builders of quality handcrafted log and timber frame homes. Call Jeff at 306-493-2448, Saskatoon, SK. www.backcountryloghomes.ca
HOUSE TO BE MOVED. Older 2 storey with 2 additions. Could be moved separately. 306-229-0469, Plenty, SK.
LASER CONSTRUCTION
HOUSE FOR SALE near Hague. To be moved. 985 sq. ft., asking $15,500 firm. Needs to go. 519-983-2484, Osler, SK.
BEST COOKING PULSES accepting samples REG. GERMAN SHEPHERD, male, 6 months of organic and conventional green/yellow black and tan, all shots, working bloodpeas for 2013/2014 crop year. Matt lines. 306-236-4678, Meadow Lake, SK. 306-586-7111, Rowatt, SK WANTED: BUYING ORGANIC GRAINS. FOB farm or delivered, Loreburn, SK. Call F.W. Cobs Company ph. 1-888-531-4888. CERT. ORGANIC RED CLOVER seed, approx. 15,000 lbs. Custom blend of Cert. Algonquin alfalfa, w/Carlton smooth brome grass and common Timothy, 70/20/10 split, 3500 lbs. Call Tim 306-542-4353, 306-542-8280, Veregin, SK.
REGISTERED BORDER COLLIE pups, Sire Scottish import, son of 2010 International Champion, top working stock. 780-941-3843, New Sarepta, AB. BORDER COLLIE PUPS out of good working parents. Contact 306-553-2213, Swift Current, SK.
306-370-3870 or 1696 sq.ft. info@laserconstruction.ca Show Home www.laserconstruction.ca for Sale
WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to g o ! M t . R o b s o n , 1 4 4 3 s q . f t . w a s SPECTACULAR VIEW! Lake Of The Prair$161,715. Sale price $155,943. Call ies, MB. 62 acres, 1500’ of lakeshore. 5500 sq. ft. house, 4+ bdrms., 4 baths. Private 1-866-933-9595, www.warmanhomes.ca well and sewer, 400 amp power. AbunWARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to dance of wildlife, fishing, snowmobiling, go! Mt. Vanier, 1680 sq. ft. was $222,083. skiing, nature trails. Ideal setting for a Sale price $215,363. Call 1-866-933-9595 lodge, retreat, B&B, multi-family vacation spot or private dwelling, The possibilities or go to www.warmanhomes.ca are endless!! Call Jackie 306-744-2399 or email for pics/info. jdhines@xplornet.com TIME SHARE FOR SALE. Grand Canadian Canmore, AB. One week floating MEDALLION HOMES 1-800-249-3969 Resort, be used between Jan. and Apr. Immediate delivery: New 16’ and 20’ may and/or mid Oct. to mid Dec. Great for modular homes; Also used 14’ and 16’ skiers! Contact Gail at 403-556-6184. homes. Now available: Lake homes. Medallion Homes, 306-764-2121, Prince Albert, SK.
LIQ UID A TIN G …
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Great 3 & 4 bedroom plans.
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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. SPORTSMENS PARADISE: Modern two bedroom cabin on 83 acres, minutes from Turtle Lake and Brightsand Lake, SK. Video tour available at mgtv.ca MLS #49698. For more info contact: Lisa Allan, Re/Max Lloydminster, 780-808-7187.
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. RANCH FOR SALE, Merritt, BC. River propwww.affordablehomesales.ca Yorkton. erty, 230 acres hay land, 40 acres cleared, 320 grazing land, 40 cleared for produce. Water rights and irrigation equipment 400 head range permit, 120,000 acre range. MARVIN HOMES, BUILDING RTM’S since Active gravel pit, timber to harvest, natu1976: 1320 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, $75,000 and a ral beef business. 2 homes, 3 bdrms ea. 1520 sq.ft, 3 bdrm., $90,000. Call Marvin Quonset and many outbuildings for calving Homes 204-326-1493 or 204-355-8484, or horse boarding. Potential for mixed farm/cattle, vegetable and hay. Owner’s Steinbach, MB. www.marvinhomes.ca retiring. $4,200,000. Call 250-378-2152. RTM SHOW HOME. 1594 sq. ft., high RANCH FOR LEASE: Hay fields and range feature front with upper windows, vinyl fo r 1 0 0 h e a d , l o t s o f w at e r. P h o n e shake and stone, high LR vault, gas fire- 250-295-6477, Tulameen, BC. place with exterior chase, rear overhang for verandah, custom cabinetry and light- WANTED: 200 - 300 head cow/calf ranch ing, 5’ ensuite shower, luxury vinyl plank in SK or BC. Can start with partial purchase and tile flooring, $185,000. 306-493-3089, and work with someone wanting to retire. Swanson Builders, Saskatoon, SK. area, No agents please. Box 2103, c/o The Western Producer, Saskatoon, SK S7K 2C4 www.swansonbuilders.ca
BUILDING W ITH CO NFIDENCE!!!
WARMAN HOMES. LOTS for sale in Langham, SK. or Warman Legends or Southlands. www.warmanhomes.ca to view or call 1-866-933-9595. • E N G IN E E R E D F L O O R S Y S T E M • JE T T E D T U B S • T R IP L E P A N E , L O W E A R G O N W IN D O W S • T IL E , C A R P E T & L A M IN A T E • O P T IO N A L V E R A N D A
Platinum Service Award As k us a b o ut B UIL DER TR EN D BUILDER TREND GIVES YOU A BETTER HOM E BUILDING EX PERIENCE
TO LL FR EE:
J&H H OM ES ... W ES TER N C AN AD A’S M OS T TR US TED R TM H OM E BUILD ER S IN C E 1969
(306)652-5322 2505 Ave. C. N orth, Saskatoon
1-877-6 6 5-6 6 6 0
Ca llUs To d a y O rV isitw w w .jhho m es.co m 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, SK. Email: adam_kent@live.com
“Bu ildin g you r hom e to su it you r n eeds!”
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. 2014 PRODUCTION CONTRACTS for organic hard red wheat, hard white wheat, malt barley, brown flax. Call Growers International, 306-652-4529, Saskatoon, SK. CANMA NEW ORGANIC hemp seed variety, $2/lb., large seed, exc. weed competition, high returns. 306-747-2725, Shellbrook SK CEY WORKING SHEPHERDS, GSD pups, CERTIFIED ORGANIC HAY, brome, fes- CKC Registered, microchipped, vaccinated, cue, alfalfa mix, 3’x3’x8’ square bales. Call ready May 18th. 306-843-3132, Wilkie, SK. ceyworkingshepherds.com for details 306-335-2280, Lemberg, SK.
Tour our homes on site.
2 STOREY 2 bedroom house, 1234 sq. ft., $21,000. Can send pictures. Reply to email budmin@hotmail.com
WARMAN HOMES CUSTOM built commercial buildings, to your plan or ours. Call 1-866-933-9595 or www.warmanhomes.ca GOPHERS BE GONE! We go for gophers in AB and SK. 3 mature hunters willing to travel and control your gopher problems for free. Contact: Peter 780-622-7968, CEDAR LOG HOMES AND CABINS, sidEmail: 378Blackwood@telus.net ings, paneling, decking. Fir and Hemlock flooring, timbers, special orders. Rouck Bros., Lumby, BC. www.rouckbros.com 1-800-960-3388. LAC DES ISLES- 2 acre lake lot $125,000; 5 acres, $295,000. Adjacent Meadow Lake Park. 306-373-4808. loiselh@msn.com ONE ACRE SERVICED lot with trees at Emma and Candle Lake, SK. Will consider trades. Please call Steve at 306-961-7407. LOTS, CABINS AND lake homes on Pelican Lake, Ninette, MB. Fay McEachern, Sales, RollingRiverRealty.com ph 204-724-4456.
CUSTOM READY TO MOVE HOMES
w w w .d yn a m icm od u la r.ca
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, Greenwood, BC. 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 RENOS IN 2002 include new windows, styby July 31, 2014. Flower Power Apairies, rofoam insulation and vinyl siding, new 250-442-2933, mdmclennan@gmail.com shingles in 2004, gas furnace is 10 yrs old. $17,000 OBO. 306-230-8792 Saskatoon SK
PURE MAPLE SYRUP for sale. Available in all grades, retail or wholesale quantities. More info ph 519-338-5439, Harriston, ON 1982 CASE 2290 tractor; 650 NH round baler; 5020 MacDon mower/conditioner; JD 6 wheel rake; JD manure spreader; Blanchard 60’ tine harrows; JD 30’ disc drill and carrier; CASE 27’ cultivator; IH 14’ cultivator and misc . cattle equipment. 306-492-4741, Dundurn, SK.
Organic certification by a trusted leader!
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. Blanchard, 1296 sq. ft. was $191,285. Sale price $175,000. Call 1-866-933-9595, www.warmanhomes.ca
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
320 ACRE RANCH near Cranbrook, contains three titles, two residences and a mobile home pad. 200 acres seeded to alfalfa/grass and irrigated by four pivots. Included with the ranch is a Crown lease permitting 82 cow/calf pairs for roughly 5 months (May to October). 250-426-3377 during office hours or rbuddenh@shaw.ca 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 403-975-8862 or 250-261-9962. 240 ACRE RANCH on the Kootenay River in the Rocky Mountain Trench. Half is pasture, other half timber. Abounds with game, two species of deer, elk, bear, ducks, geese and wild turkeys. Great fishing in the spring before run off and in Sept., Oct. and early Nov. Species include Cutthroat, Dollyvarden, Burbot, Whitefish and spawning Kokanee in September, October. Improvements include a rather ancient two-storey house, three hay barns, corrals and a loafing barn. Ranch is just off the main Hwy. about 20 miles north of Cranbrook, BC. 250-426-3377 during office hours, or rbuddenh@shaw.ca
600 COW RANCH: 6870 acres on the Spirit and Peace Rivers. Ranch has excellent grass and working facilities, renovated 4 bedroom ranch house, 3 bunk houses, 2 yard sites each with a set of working pens and corrals. Well priced at $6250 per cow. Greg Cripps, Re/Max Central AB. Phone 403-391-2648, e-mail: gcripps@remax.net visit: www.canadiancattleranches.com LOOKING FOR DRY LAND or irrigation land to lease and grow forages. Will also consider buying your pure Timothy or pure alfalfa fields standing. Prefer north of Vulcan, south of Olds, AB. but open to all scenarios or discussions. Barr Ag Ltd 403-507-8660, bschmitt@barr-ag.com 3800 + 14,000 ACRES: Cattle, bison and elk operations, fenced and cross fenced, Wabumun Lake, west of Edmonton, AB. 780-915-1735, roperrealtyltd@aol.com 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. 5 QUARTERS OF FARMLAND, fenced, South of Sunset House, AB. Contact 780-524-2578. 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. URGENTLY WANTED FARMLAND to buy or rent in the County of Vulcan, competitive rates offered. Call: 403-312-0678.
FO R
S ALE
FARM/RANCH FOR SALE: 3302 acre farm 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. 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. #753 FORT MACLEOD: Irrigation farm in the scenic Belly River valley, 320 acres, 2 pivots, 2 homes. Modern goat dairy operation, milking parlor with capacity for 1500 goats. Also facilities for 1746 head calf raising operation or 107 cow dairy. ID#100120 Tilley: Almost 1/2 section of irrigated land (290.8 acres). Total surface revenue is $15,500. This is a share sale, buyer must be purchasing corporation, clear title. ID#1100230 Tilley: Irrigated 1/4 section with Zimmatic pivot (20 years old)/ underground mainline, surface revenue $9800 annually. Approx. 6 miles south west of Tilley. More land nearby for sale. #1710 Chin: Modern 350 sow farrow to finish operation, isolated from other hog operations. new hog finishing barn, new feed mill, permit to expand to 500 sows. 1762 sq. ft. home and a shop. Livestock included, loose housing sows, electronic feed system. #1975 Rainer: 160 acres irrigated with older pivot, large shop, surface revenue, mature yard, lots of trees, currently used as a ranch with seed grass, great soil for row crop, corn, hay or canola, older 1500 sq. ft. home. Contact Real Estate Centre, 1-866-345-3414, www.farmrealestate.com GRAZING LEASE FOR sale: 3 sections SW of Oyen, AB. 3 and 4 wire fences, good water, excellent native grass. 403-664-0227, E-mail: stnlogan@yahoo.ca 159 ACRES FARMLAND, four miles East of Tofield, AB, along Hwy. 14, good #2 soil, NW-15-50-18-W4, 145 acres cultivated. Call 780-662-2061, or 780-999-6399. QUARTER SECTION TITLED land, sheltered yard w/mobile, shop, good corral set up, water well, nat. gas, electricity, 2 dugouts, $25,000 of timber, 1539 acres leased grazing land w/$3000 oil revenue, asking $439,000. 780-568-4192, Grande Prairie.
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. MLS® 470122. Call Wally Lorenz, Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800, North Battleford, SK. www.remaxbattlefords.com DWEIN TRASK REALTY INC. RM of Fish Creek, NE-26-41-01-W3 FMV assessment 71,900, 110 acres cultivated. Very good stone-free land, under 40 minutes to Saskatoon, SK., $164,900. Call Dwein for info package 306-221-1035. FOR RENT: RM 256, 1/2 section, SE- and SW-05-25-12-W3, pasture and hay. Could be broken and seeded. 306-231-5611, between Beechy and Dinsmore, SK.
F O UR G R EAT S AS K ATC H EW AN P R O P ER TIES
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 s urfa ce lea s e. 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. 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.
CLASSIFIED ADS 89
WWW.SASKLANDFORSALE.COM: RM of Fish Creek #402. Complete farm or quarters can be purchased individually, consisting of 719+/- acres of grain/ grazing hayland, includes farmsite featuring a 1985 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 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, Re/Max Saskatoon, 306-280-2400 before April 26, 2014. RM 241 CALDER, CATTLE OPERATION by owner. Nine quarters deeded in grass and hay. Full cattle facilities, calving barn, shelters, Morand handling system, etc. Will handle 200 plus cows. 3 bdrm. 1-1/2 storey house, exc. water, $1,100,000. Near Wroxton SK. 306-786-2121, 306-621-8551 RM BENSON #35: For rent or crop share 80 acres hayland, brome/alfalfa mix for baling. For info. call 306-931-6660. DWEIN TRASK REALTY INC. RM of T h r e e L a ke s , 3 2 5 a c r e s i n s e c t i o n 32-40-42-W2. Over 200 acres cultivated, good 2400 sq. ft. home c/w double attached garage, workshop, barn and 9000 bushel hopper’d grain storage. Check out MLS# 491740. Call Dwein 306-221-1035. 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. ESTATE OF RUSSELL OZEMBLOSKI Auction, Wednesday, April 30, 2014, 9:30 AM. 1 south on #310, 6 west on St Joseph’s Grid, 3 south, 1/2 east of Ituna SK. Online bidding 1:00 PM. Land: RM of Tullymet 216: NW-28-24-12W2, seeded acres 100; assess. 84,100, taxes $760.75; SE-28-24-12-W2, seeded acres 125; assess. 83,200, taxes $744.51; SE-21-24-12-W2, seeded acres 130, assess. 85,800, taxes $767.79; NE-20-24-12W2, seeded acres 130; assess. 61,200, taxes $547.65. LSD 5&6: 21-24-12-W2, 80 acres (40 seeded), assess. $3500, taxes $313.20. Approx. seeded acres in 2013. Visit www.ukrainetzauction.com for pics and complete listing. PL #915851. RM of LEASK #464, 373 acres, approx. 250 cultivated, balance pasture w/fair to good fences and possible lease of adjoining 620 acres of Crown land. Will handle 80-100 cow/calf pairs, excellent water supply and good big game hunting. MLS ®493566; Also, this 582 acres, excellent pasture in a single block w/50% tame pasture mix and 50% natural pasture, 5 dug outs, 2 springs, fairly good fences, 10 acres large spruce, stone free, power, quite a little paradise. 1 hr from Saskatoon. MLS®493039. For viewing of these two cattle operations, call Lloyd Ledinski, ReMax of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800, or 306-441-0512.
Tim H a m m o n d R ea lty
K evin Ja r r ett
Selling Farm s & R anches for over 10 years throughout Saskatchew an, w ith over 30 current listings. To view listing brochures please visit: w w w .tim ham m ond.ca Cell306.441.4152 Cell306.537.8086 Fax 306.477.1268 Em ailkevinjarrett@sasktel.net
Reg in a - W AN TE D : 2,000-5,000 a cres crop la nd w ithin 30 m inutes of Regina .
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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Te n d e rs w ill b e a cce pte d u p u n til m id n ig htof April 30/ 1 4. 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 The hig he st b id w ill n ot n e ce ssa rily connected except one quarter. Approx. b e a cce pte d . 3164 acres cultivated tame hay pasture Tend ers to be sent to: mix. 3 and 4 wire fences with treated Sa ska tchew a n W ild life posts. 36x51 straight wall shop, with att. 20x36 ranchhand quarters, heated with inFed er a tion , 9 La n ca ster R d ., floor nat. gas. Power, sewer, well and lots M oose Ja w , SK S6J 1 M 8 or em a il of in pasture water. Ample bush shelter. to: d n ew b er r y.sw f@ sa sktel.n et Property is mainly stone free. MLS® 468365. For viewing call Lloyd Ledinski, TIM HAMMOND REALTY. Prime cattle Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800, prices, prime livestock operation! 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK. Johnston Farm located by Grenfell (RM QUARTER SW-34-35-32-W1, 16 miles NE 155). 1829 acres cultivated and 635 acres of Norquay, SK. 115 acres cultivated, 45 hay as per SAMA, corral system, 34x60 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 . barn and excellent water supply. Yard including 1356 sq. ft. home (1945), 4 bdrms, 306-781-4988, 306-537-3772 cell. 2 baths. Asking $3,495,000. MLS 478193. MINERAL RIGHTS. We will purchase and C a l l G u y S h e p h e r d 3 0 6 - 4 3 4 - 8 8 5 7 , o r l e a s e y o u r m i n e r a l r i g h t s . http://Johnston.FarmsofCanada.com 1-877-269-9990. cndfree@telusplanet.net 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®. ID#1100191 Rush Lake: approx. 309.73 acres irrigated land. Valley pivots, FOR D ETAILS OF LAN D AVAILABLE natural gas pumping unit, 3 phase power. Located 11 miles east of Swift Current and FOR R EN T P LEAS E VIS IT: 5 miles south of Hwy. #1 right along the w w w .s h e ppa rd re a lty.ca Highfield Reservoir. ID#485737 Regina: 798 acres of very productive farm land. Co n ta ct: 100 acres summerfallow, 270 acres tame H a rry S h e ppa rd hay, 148 acres tame pasture, 280 acres S utto n G ro up - R e s ults R e a lty native pasture. Energy efficient home and R e gin a , S K outstanding water quality. 66 kms south of Regina, 5 kms off #6 Hwy. Real Estate E-M a il: s a s kla n d 4re n t@ gm a il.co m Pho n e: 306-352-1866 F a x: 306-352-1816 C e n t re , w w w. f a r m re a l e s t a t e . c o m 1-866-345-3414.
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 hwy. #5, $129,900. Del Rue, Royal LePage Saskatoon, SK. 306-242-8221. FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS We also specialize in: Crop insurance appeals; Chemical drift; Residual herbicide; Custom operator issues; Equipment malfunction. Qualified Agrologist on staff. Call Back-Track Investigations for assistance regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779. 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), 30x30’ heated shop, 120x48’ steel clad machine shed and other modern storage sheds. Quill Lake, SK. Possibility of 3 additional quarters of land. Contact 306-287-7928. RM 442 MANITOU LAKE SE-03-46-26-W3 145 cultivated acres, adjacent oil wells, $240,000. 306-821-7541, Neilburg, SK. RM OF FRONTIER #19: 4 Section mixed RM OF WEYBURN cropland: NE-15-8-15, farm with yard site. John Cave, Edge Realw /Aggrega te Potentia l SW-11-11-15, NW-03-09-15. Offers con- ty. 306-773-7379. www.farmsask.com In Sa ska tchew a n sidered until April 14. Call 306-842-6704, JUST LISTED: 2-1/2 miles NW of Debden Weyburn, SK. pentagoners@gmail.com on No. 55, 1-1/2 miles east. This quarter Ca ll PO TZU S LTD. RM 49: APPROX. 640 acres irrigation and offers approx. 150 acres of tame hay, balPhone: 306-782-74 23 dry land with buildings. 306-773-7379, ance yard 40 acres, fenced off for pasture. John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd, Swift Current, 1967, 1064 sq. ft. 2 bdrm home w/partialFa x: 306-786-6909 ly finished basement. What a location to SK. www.farmsask.com raise a family and have a little ranch to Em a il: info@ potzu s.com 148 ACRES, 8 miles from Tobin Lake re- help supplement your income at the same sort. 93 acres cultivated, 35 acres in grass time, close to the lakes, good hunting and FOR RENT: RM 214, SW-05-22-04-W2, 140 alfalfa, 20 acres bush, several perfect fishing. Call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the b u i l d i n g s i t e s , $ 1 1 0 , 0 0 0 . C a l l Battlefords, 306-446-8800, 306-441-0512, a c r e s c u l t i v a t e d , a t W a l d r o n . 306-231-5611, east of Melville, SK. 306-862-2833, Nipawin, SK. North Battleford, SK.
Ted Cawkwell
“An Expert in the Field”
The Sa ska tchew a n W ild life Fed er a tion is n ow a cceptin g lea se ten d er s on the follow in g la n d s throu g hou t the provin ce: Ha y L ea ses: 3-yea r lea ses (201 4-201 6) • SW 34-29 -7 W 2 35 a cre s R M 275 • SE 21 -27-9 W 2 40 a cre s R M 245 • SW 22-27-9 W 2 25 a cre s R M 245 • N E 5-47-1 2 W 2 20 a cre s R M 456 • SE 4-1 2-5 W 3 50 a cre s R M 1 04 • SE 4-1 2-5 W 3 70 a cre s R M 1 04 • SE 3-28-8 W 2 30 a cre s R M 275 G ra zing L ea ses: July 1 -Sep t 1 /1 4 • SW & N ½ 1 9 -47-1 2 W 3 40 a cre s R M 46 6 • N E 22-1 2-5 W 3 1 6 0 a cre s R M 1 04 • SE 28-1 2-5 W 3 1 6 0 a cre s R M 1 04
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$149,000 OFF GRID, self-sufficient, house, garage, 3 outbuildings, fenced yard, 160 acres, RM 335. 306-547-3123, Preeceville SK.
Q u ick Clo su re – N o Co m m issio n
SASKATCHEWAN FARMLAND
Ca ll306-5 84 -364 0 in fo @ m a xcro p.ca FARM LAN D FOR REN T IN RM o f Livin g sto n 3 3 1 an d 221 RM 221:N E-31-22-23-W 2,SW -31-22-23-W 2,SW -32-22-23-W 2. RM 331:SW -19-35-31-W 1,SE-19-35-31-W 1,N W -19-35-31-W 1,
Ted Cawkwell
Agriculture Specialist
P L EAS E C AL L M AR C EL L EBL AN C AT ( 403 ) 3 50-6868
3 q u a rters fa rm la n d s in RM 317 fors a le
TIM HAMMOND REALTY. Cattle prices P lea s e ca ll are hot! Here’s a great ranch package to take advantage of them! Byma Farm, 3.5 306- 5 01- 9368 or miles south of Grenfell, SK. RM 155, 12 em a il:ka thleen.y@rem yy.com quarters, can be purchased in 3 separate packages or as a complete unit. Excellent QUARTER FOR RENT: SW-07-53-23-W2, set of outbuildings, corrals, modern re- RM Paddockwood #520. Presently in alfalmodeled bungalow. F, G, H land. MLS fa. Call 306-764-4340, Prince Albert, SK. #483959, 483953 and 483955. Phone Guy Shepperd for details, 306-434-8857. http://byma.TimHammond.ca
V a l M a rie, S K . - N orthea s t 1,900 cultiva ted a cres .
Alb erta /S K . - W AN TE D : 5,000 -15,000 a cres cropla nd .
RM OF WOOD RIVER #74: 800 acres of RM 126: Approx 640 acres pasture, full set grain and hay land with service buildings. of buildings. John Cave. Edge Realty Ltd. 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 306-773-7379, www.farmsask.com FOR RENT: RM 74, 1/2 section, pasture F A R M L A N D F O R R E N T. P h o n e and hay, SW- and SE-15-07-06-W3, seeded to grass in 2011, new fence, 2 dugouts. 306-253-4580, Aberdeen, SK. Could be broken and seeded. 306-231-5611, south of Woodrow, SK.
BLUE CHIP REALTY
1-306-327-5148 www.tedcawkwell.com
SW -18-35-31-W 1,SW -16 -35-31-W 1,N W -36 -34 -32-W 1, SW -11-35-31-W 1,N W -2-35-31-W 1,N E-2-35-31-W 1, SE-22-35-30-W 1,SW -22-35-30-W 1.
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One of the few places we can’t sell you. Yet. Find an agent in Western Canada.
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90 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
RM CANWOOD selling 106 acres of excellent, well drained cultivated land on the SW 20-50-6-W3. Assessment $82,000, G class soil, asking $130,000. 306 441-2075.
FARM LAND W ANTED
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
RM LEASK: PRICE REDUCED- 1094 acres of remarkable pasture of which approx. 500-600 acres are seeded to tame hay. Balance is natural and bush pasture, with some harvestable spruce. The water supply is a dugout and small lake 30’ deep, fenced with 4 wires and treated post, plus 7 cross fences. MLS® 473297. Possible adjoining 4 quarters of pasture for rent. Ready for spring possession. To view call Lloyd at Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK. RM BIG RIVER #555, S-1/215-56-08-W3rd, 320 acres. This prime piece of land bordering the provincial forest near Cowan Lake includes: 4 manmade dugouts, $50,000. worth of timber, approx. 50 acre hay flat, power along property. This land is suitable for a cabin, big game hunting or a cattle operation. Asking $250,000. Owner may consider financing. Inquiries can call 306-628-7840 or email theaker@sasktel.net Eatonia, SK. 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. QUARTER SECTION GRAINLAND in RM of Colonsay. Call 306-255-2065, St. Denis, SK. or email paurolfarms@hotmail.com
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
La n d to b e s o ld is in 2 b lo cks : 1) W 1⁄2 35-30-29-W 2 (2 quarters) 2 ) E 1⁄2 36-30-29-W 2 and W 1⁄2 31-30-28-W 2 (4 quarters) 3 ) RM ofM cCraney (#282) Co n s e rva tio n Ea s e m e n t is to b e pu t o n a ll s e e d e d a n d n a tu ra l a re a s , re qu ire m e n t o fs a le . W ritte n T e n d e rs clo s e o n April 30 a t 1 2:00 n o o n . H ighe s t o r a n y te n d e r will n o t n e ce s s a rily b e a cce pte d . M a il yo u r s e a le d T e n d e r to : John Trevor Ducks Unlim ited Canada Unit 300 – 3530 M illar Ave, Saskatoon SK. S7P 0B6 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. 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 306-944-4572, Viscount, SK.
FO R SALE H IG H W AY #1 6 F R O N TAG E In v itin g Ten d ers 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 • P t. N E 26-39-09-W 3 Fo rDeta ils C o nta ct
SUM M ARY OF SOLD PROPERTIES
Cen tra l...........................206 1⁄4’s S o u th...............................75 1⁄4’s S o u th Ea s t.......................40 1⁄4’s S o u th W es t......................6 5 1⁄4’s N o rth..................................6 1⁄4’s N o rth W es t.......................12 1⁄4’s Ea s t..................................51 1⁄4’s
LA N D FOR SA LE BY TEN DER
TO M N EUFELD
ka tneufeld@ s a s ktel.net
306-260-7838 M LS $110,000 GOT OIL? Free property evaluation for mineral rights owners. You will need your C old w ell Ba nk er Rescom Rea lty land co-ordinates available. 24 hour turn 20 MINUTES REGINA! GRAINLAND FOR around. Call 403-291-0005, Toll Free RENT w/wo cattle and registered QH’s. 1-877-784-9696, www.briskenergy.com Details call 306-552-9274, Qu’Appelle, SK. SK. Licensed Operator. “PIVOT IRRIGATION”: APPROX. 218 acres CASH RENT: 440 acres grass land in of grain land. Phone 306-773-7379, John Debden, SK. area. 8’ game fence. Can be Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Current, SK. grazed or sprayed out and cropped. www.farmsask.com flyelk@hotmail.ca Call 306-961-1150. RM SPIRITWOOD 496 and RM Meeting RM OF SPIRITWOOD, 5 quarters deeded Lake 466. This amazing 2988 acre ranch land, mainly bush pasture, possible 12.5 does have approx. 650 acres of cult. tame quarters of Crown lease land, all adjoining. pasture. Balance is natural and bush pasLots of openings, ideal water, 3 springs ture, mainly fenced w/4 wire, 2 sets of and small lake area. Has had over 800 corrals, power, well. Good supply of pasacres timber cut in last 2 winters, excellent ture water. Also an amazing big game pasture. Mainly all fenced. Great big game hunting area. For info. on this EXCL listing hunting in area. MLS® 468532. For more 188, call Lloyd Ledinski. I am in need of info call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the Bat- grainland in most of my trading areas. tlefords, 306-446-8800, 306-441-0512, Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800 North Battleford, SK. or 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK. DWEIN TRASK REALTY INC. RM of Rudy F O R R E N T: R M # 4 8 6 , 2 q u a r t e r s , #284, all of Sec-36-30-06-W3, West of NW-4-52-12-W2 and NW-9-52-12-W2. BeHanley, SK. Approx. 590 acres cult., C.I. tween Carrot River and Tobin Lake, SK. soil, Class L and M, FMV 255,000. Level Good fence. Can be pasture or hayland. and stone-free with renter available, Was seeded to grass recently. Can also be broke and seeded. Call 306-231-5611. $749,900. Call Dwein today 306-221-1035.
LAND FOR SALE BY TENDER PROCESS. Legal Land Description: SE-8-43-7-W2, RM of Porcupine No. 395. Land Base Summary 159.71 Total Acres. Terms and Conditions of the Tender are as follows: 1.) Although the above acreage allocation is obtained from ISC and is the Seller’s best estimate, the Buyer should rely upon their own personal inspection and assessment of acreage for the parcel. Land is sold in ‘as is’ condition. 2.) Any conditions of the of- FOR SALE in the RM of Cody #271: One to fer must be clearly stated. 3.) The highest, six quarters of grainland in the Togo, SK. or any, offer will not necessarily be accept- area. Class E soil. Call 306-597-4405. ed. 4.) The land is rented for the 2014 crop L AN D F O R S AL E year. The successful bidder will be entitled to the rent for the 2014 crop year. 5.) The R .M . M O UN T H O P E #27 9 1 27 8 AC R ES current tenant has a Right of First Refusal Inviting Tenders to be in C oldw ell on the land, and will be given the opportuBanker,Saskatoon,SK.office on or nity to match the successful bid. 6.) Buyer before A pril24,2014.2pm C ST. must provide a certified cheque payable to Brian Kraft for a 10.0% deposit of the price Ca n be s old com plete or individua l pa rcels . being offered. 7.) Seller will be responsible Hom e 1/ 4 (S E 19-29-20-W 2) 1976 for the property taxes on the property to hous e, hea ted s hop, s teel quons et, Dec. 31, 2013. 8.) Seller will provide a reg40,000 bus hel gra in s tora ge. isterable transfer authorization to the successful bidder. The Buyer will be responN E 19-29-20-W 2 S W 12-29-20-W 2 s i b l e fo r a l l c o s t s a s s o c i at e d w i t h S E 12-29-20-W 2 S E 34-29-20-W 2 registering said transfer authorization. 9.) N W 26-29-20-W 2 N W 2-30-20-W 2 Tenders will be accepted until 12 noon on N E 2-30-20-W 2 P T N E 2-30-20-W 2 May 9, 2014. All offers received are to be left open until 5:00 PM, May 9, 2014. All Fo rDeta ils C o nta ct offers received will be addressed and reTO M N EUFELD sponded to (i.e. accepted, rejected, or countered). 10.) Tenders are to be sent to: ka tneufeld@ s a s ktel.net Brian Kraft, Box 1677, Esterhazy, SK., S0A 306-260-7838 M LS $1,149,000 0X0, or bakraft53@hotmail.com
C old w ell Ba nk er Rescom Rea lty
RM 166, PIVOT IRRIGATION, one quarter, 3 phase, power, in hay, south of Rush RM 342, COLONSAY, SK. 1100 acres. Lake, SK. 306-778-7494. Located only a few miles North of Hwy 16 6 QUARTERS DEEDED to lease, all native East NW- and SW-19-35-27-W2, Section grass, new 4 wire fence, 5 new dugouts, 1 17-35-27-W2, NW-5-35-27-W2. All within well, corrals, $375,000. 306-640-6363, Asclose proximity. All land details available siniboia East area. email aabjj@sasktel.net on request. Call Joanne at 306-255-7602. RM 45: APPROX. 4160 acre ranch. 2 yard RM 139: 6720 acre ranch, good set of sites. Full set of buildings. 306-773-7379, buildings. Call 306-773-7379, John Cave, John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift CurEdge Realty Ltd. www.farmsask.com rent, SK. www.farmsask.com
L AN E R EALT Y A f tersuccessf ully prom otin g Sa ska tchew a n f a rm a n d ra n ch propertiesf orover30 yea rsa cross Ca n a d a a n d oversea s, w e ha ve m a n y q ua lif ied b uyers lookin g to reloca te to Sa ska tchew a n . To inc lud e your propert y f or Spring Show ing s
CA LL US TO DA Y!
L A N E R E A LT Y
Saskatchewan’s Farm & Ranch Specialists™ 18 5 REGISTERED SALES IN 2013
SP E CIAL IZIN G IN F AR M L AN D LAN D FO R S ALE
• 31 q u a rters n ea r Ro ckglen p lu s 22 cro w n lea s e QT RS • 35 q u a rters n ea rW illo w BuS n ch OL D • 14 q u a rters n ea r Glen tw o rth • 10 q u a rters n ea r Co n s u l SO L D • 8 q u a rters n ea r K illd eer • 7 q u a rters n ea r Regin a • 7 q u a rters n ea r Pen za n ceSO L D • 6 q u a rters n ea rW eyb u rn • 5 q u a rters n ea r K ip lin g • 5 q u a rters n ea r K erro b ertSO L D • 3 q u a rters n ea r Pa n gm a n • 10 q u a rters n ea r Itu n a • Acrea ge n ea r L a m p m a n SO L D • 13 q u a rters n ea rW illo w Bu n ch • 6.5 Qu a rters n ea r Cha m b erla in • 9 Qu a rters n ea r Gra velb o u rg • 4 q u a rters n ea r Cha m b erlaS in O L D • 2 Qu a rters n ea rW eyb u rn • 13 Qu a rters n ea rT heo d o re • 7 Qu a rters n ea r Pa rry SO L D • 9 Qu a rters n ea r Ogem a
Visit
w w w.s hep p a rd rea lty.ca to view all ou rcu rren tlistin gs. S u tton G rou p - R esu lts R ealty R egin a, S K .
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 OF GLEN BAIN # 105: 480 acres grain land with quonset and bins. John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd. 306-773-7379. www.farmsask.com RM HOODOO #401, land for sale by owner. NE-27-42-25-W2. Taking offers. More info. ph 306-233-4728, Wakaw, SK.
P HO N E: 306 -56 9-3380
W ITH O VE R 30 YE A R S IN TH E BUSIN E SS To view fu ll colorfea tu re s heets fora ll ofou rCURRENT LIS TING S a n d virtu a l tou rs ofs elected p rop erties , vis itou rw ebs ite a t:
www.lanerealty.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.
MIXED CATTLE/GRAIN FARM. RM Birtle and Miniota, MB. 7 quarters farmland, older 5 bedroom home, machine shed, 2 large cattle shelters, calving barn, well water supply, 10,000 bu. grain storage, pasture ARGO’S: 2011 8 wheel, tracks, winch, for 150 cow/calf pairs, $897,000. Contact canopy, 569 kms, $17,500; 2009 8 wheel, Maurice Torr, 204-725-0555, view on-line: winch, 600 kms, $9500. 306-563-8765. century21westman.com 2013 KUBOTA RTV 1100, cab, AC, TREHERNE, MB, 300 acres river flat land heater, radio, always shedded, 1 ownwith 8 tower pivot and buried pipeline. er, $19,500. 306-469-2235, Big River, SK. Portage la Prairie, two parcels, one 148 acres and one 310 acres, both Almasippi Series soil. Christianson Soils Ltd., Broker, 204-239-6086. 19’ LUND FISHERMAN BOAT V6, tanMANITOBA FARMLAND: FOR sale 2000 dem trailer included, all possible options, acres, 1977 cultivated in RM of Stanley new cond., low hrs., $29,500 OBO. Brayden and Pembina, good productive land, Mani- 306-854-4610, Elbow, SK. toba crop insurance C & D, option to lease 2006 PRINCECRAFT 165 Pro Series boat back to vendor. Contact Melvin Toews at w/trailer, live well, Hummingbird 575 fish Golden Plains Realty Ltd., 204-745-3677. finder, elec . anchor, 2004 Johnsons MANITOBA - RED RIVER Valley: 153 acre 4-stroke 50 HP motor, asking $12,500 soybean, cash crop farmland located on OBO. 306-843-3198, Wilkie, SK. paved road NW quarter-3-3-6-WPM, 2.5 miles west of Morden on hwy. 3. Invest now in agriculture. Contact Melvin Toews 2008 KEYSTONE EVEREST 35’ 5th wheel, at Golden Plains Realty Ltd., 204-745-3677 2 slides, exc. cond., lots of extras. Call for FARMS, HOMES AND ACREAGES for pics 306-693-5073, Drinkwater, SK. sale in the beautiful and productive Swan River Valley and surrounding areas. More 2004 TT278 TRAVELAIRE 27’, bumper info. check out: www.mckay2000.com or tow, hardwall, 1 slide, AC, power vents, call Darin at McKay Real Estate and Auc- sleeps 8, bunks, double bed, fridge, stove, microwave, awning, good cond., $15,000. tion Co., 204-734-8757, Swan River, MB. 780-336-3262, 780-385-0378, Viking, AB. LOOKING FOR YOUNG couple with family to purchase 1/2 section mixed farm, west- 1992 25.5’ RUSTLER fifth wheel, AC, ern Manitoba. Also another 600 acres bunkbeds, NS, flipped axles for use w/talllease available. Good buildings and good er trucks, $5500. 306-948-2774 Biggar, SK water. Close to town and major city. Call WANTED: Nice clean camper van, low 204-761-0860 eves. for more details. mileage or 8’ pop-up camper or camperette for back of 1/2 ton. Ph 306-790-7846 after 5 PM or leave message, Regina, SK. PASTURE FOR SALE, RM of Beaver River, 2011 CEDAR CREEK 36RE fifth wheel, exc. 30 quarters, 1 deeded and 29 leased. Call condition, always shedded, ext. warranty 306-228-9017 evenings, Unity, SK. to 2017. Upgraded interior! $49,900 OBO. Dinsmore SK 306-243-4801 306-867-3314 PASTURELAND FOR RENT, supervised and unsupervised. May 15- Oct. 15. Locat- CEDAR CREEK 5TH wheel trailer, new in ed near Grenfell, SK. 10,000 acres native 2011, 3 slides, full body paint, loaded. Call grass, all fenced. For application and fur- Barry 306-243-4960, Dinsmore, SK. ther info. call 306-697-2773, ext. 249. CREEKSIDE 2010, 24’ holiday trailer, 1 WANTED SUPERVISED PASTURE for up to slideout, sleeps 6, no bunks, AC, in good 150 cow/calf pairs. Prefer SW SK, but con- condition. 780-744-2180, Kitscoty, AB. sider others. 306-672-3695, Gull Lake, SK. TRUCK CAMPER, 3-way lights, gas F/S and MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. furnace, 2 full sized beds, water hookup Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: w/sink, insulated, has secure stand, never www.maverickconstruction.ca leaked, $900. 306-859-4925, Beechy FOR RENT: SECTION of pastureland south of Portage la Prairie, MB. New fence, cross fenced, 4 dugouts, excellent corral system, g o o d f o r f a r a w a y o w n e r s . C a l l 1996 NEWMAR MOUNTAINEER, 38’, tag axle, 460 eng., large slide, generator. Well 204-436-2571, 204-857-2561. maintained, road ready, or luxury guest SUPERVISED PASTURES for small or house. 306-441-0398, Battleford, SK. large herds, 2014 grazing season. References available. 306-937-3503, Cando, SK. 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. FOR RENT: ONE section tame supervised pasture, good fence, water and corrals near Parkerview, SK. Call 780-753-0353. 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. WILL TAKE 200 PAIRS OF CATTLE. Lots of water, corrals, barn, loading chute, 4 w i r e fe n c e , n o t u s e d l a s t 2 y e a r s . 306-937-7771, 306-480-4590, Battleford, SK. or lionelpeyachew@hotmail.com
2003 HARLEY DAVIDSON Ultra Classic, premium bike, loaded, Champion reverser, $11,5300 OBO. 306-247-4808, Unity, SK. 2008 HARLEY DAVIDSON Ultra Classic, lots of extras, low kms, black, very nice, $19,500. 306-963-7693, Imperial, SK.
PARTS FOR VINTAGE snowmobiles, 1990 and older. Call Don at 780-755-2258, Wainwright, AB. doncole@telus.net TOY BOX II large ice fishing shacks, 80”Hx97”L. While supplies last!!! Call 306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228. www.hold-onindustries.com
ARE YOU RETIRING? We live on a unique farm w/a spare 3 bdrm. home, rent negotiable. Come live the good life in BC’s Kootenay’s. Mike 250-227-6807, Crawford Bay.
SAWMILLS from only $4897 - Make Money and Save Money with your own bandmill. Cut lumber any dimension. In stock, ready to ship. Free info. and DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/168 or call 1-800-566-6899 ext. 168. WOOD-MIZER PORTABLE SAWMILLS, eight models, options and accessories. 1-877-866-0667. www.woodmizer.ca CHAINSAW SAWMILL, 50’ bed, mounted on a B-train, $6000 OBO. Call for details 306-221-6299, Saskatoon, SK. 48” COUTTS LEFTHAND sawmill, PTO, in good working order, stored inside,. Phone 780-349-2798 after 8PM, Westlock, AB.
HOWE 30 TONNE 10’x34’ scale, $7,500 OBO. Call 306-648-8005, Gravelbourg, SK. ELIAS SCALES MFG., several different ways to weigh bales and livestock; Platform scales for industrial use as well, nonelectric, no balances or cables (no weigh like it). Shipping arranged. 306-445-2111, North Battleford, SK. www.eliasscales.com 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
2014 FOUR WINDS 26A Ford V10, queen island bed, generator, party plan, #1 selling motorhome. Stk #6952, $76,000. Call 1-866-346-3148 or shop online 24/7 at: allandale.com
LOOKING FOR RANCH/PASTURE in Sask. to lease or rent for 250 cows. Call 2014 TUSCANY 44MT, Class A diesel push403-548-4643. er, 44’.11” 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 5 ACRES for sale, partially treed, located online 24/7 at: allandale.com on Hwy. 312, 20 min. East of Rosthern, SK. Call 250-597-3994, bueckert21@shaw.ca BEST OF GREENWATER LAKE, SK. one of a kind 10 acre titled lots. One with 1400 sq. ft. cabin, well, septic and power. Others to build on. For more info call 306-278-3310. 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 #1 CDC Meredith, malt barley variety, highest yield, volume and cash discounts. 306-227-7867, Aberdeen, SK.
CERT. METCALFE BARLEY. For more info. call for best price 306-522-1668, Etter Seed & Processing, Regina, 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., 2005 MONACO CAYMAN 34PDD, 35’, 5.9 306-445-5516 or 306-441-7851, North Cummins, 300 HP, 21,500 miles, auto, Battleford, SK. gregfarms@sasktel.net satellite, air over hyd. brakes, 5.5 KW Onan dsl. gen.- 148 hrs, exc. cond., 2 slides, $85,000. More photos on our website www.can-amtruck.com Can-Am Truck Export Ltd 1-800-938-3323. DL #910420.
SUNDRE
High Yielding Grain or Forage #1 Six Row Barley in Canada
DUTCH STAR 2000 diesel pusher, very nice For the nearest grower visit: shape, Spartan chassis, 330 Cummins, soLUXURY HOME ON 9 acres, 45 min NW of lar, Gen set, new flooring, satellite, Regina, SK. Geo-thermal heating/cooling, $48,000. 780-753-6584, Hayter, AB. 403-556-2609 dream kitchen, 4 bdrm, den, 4 bath, indoor pool, 3200 sq. ft. of cedar decking. Large CERTIFIED #1 CELEBRATION and CDC barn and corral. Laurel Getz, Re/Max Copeland. Call Hetland Seeds at Naicam, Joyce Tourney Realty, MLS #482351, SK. 306-874-5694. www.hetlandseeds.com 306-591-5610, Email: lgetz@sasktel.net FDN., REG., CERT., CDC Austenson, CDC 8.9 ACRES, 1-1/2 storey Character home, Cowboy, CDC Copeland, AC Ranger. Ph. foundation good, stone veranda, 45x50’ Ardell Seeds, Vanscoy, SK. 306-668-4415. shop w/20x14’ door, well treed, well gravCERTIFIED AND REG. Metcalfe, Copeland, eled, no high water issues, Craigmyle, AB. Newdale, Meredith barley. Frederick area. Beautiful setting in the rolling Handhills, 10 minutes to Hanna, 40 from Drum- 2014 MIRAMAR 34.1, 1.5 bath, 20,000 lb. Seeds, 306-287-3977, Watson, SK. heller, $179,900. For photos and info chassis, generator, loaded, stk. #0847, CERT. SEED: Meredith, CDC Copeland, 403-358-8933, nelsontruckandtractor.com $117,000. Call 1-866-346-3148 or shop CDC Austenson, CDC Cowboy, Ponoka. Selte Farms 780-853-2484, Vermilion, AB. HORSE ACREAGE: Approx. 155 cultivated online 24/7 at: allandale.com acres, 1750 sq. ft. 4 bdrm., 3 bath bungaCERT. AC METCALFE and CDC Meredith low, hardwood floors, cedar ceilings, new barley, excellent germ. and disease. attached garage. Two barns, box stalls, 306-741-0475, Pambrun, SK. outdoor riding arena, paddocks, fenced, ONLINE AUCTION: Inder Side Car, Uniwell treed, good spring fed well water. versal fit. 1-800-263-4193. View at CERTIFIED COPELAND, 99% germination. Two miles from Cupar, SK. $599,000. More www.mcdougallbay.com DL #319916. Discount for larger orders. Call Ross 306-946-7446, 306-259-4982, Young, SK. info. please call 306-570-4001. Box 3081, Regina, SK, S4P 3G7.
mastinseeds.com
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
CERT. #1 COPELAND BARLEY. Discounts FOUNDATION, REGISTERED, CERTIFIED available on large or early orders. Blaine Transcend Durum. Call Craswell Seeds, Lake, SK. 306-290-7816, 306-497-2800. Strasbourg, SK., 306-725-3236. CERTIFIED CDC COPELAND barley. Call REG. AND CERT. Transcend, AAC Raymore C a r l s o n S e e d 3 0 6 - 5 9 2 - 4 4 4 9 o r (sawfly resistant), Kyle. Palmier Seed Farms 306-472-7824, Lafleche, SK. 306-592-2029, Buchanan, SK. CERTIFIED AC METCALFE, Bentley, CDC CERT. #1 CDC Verona, 94%, 0 fusarium. Merideth high germ, low fusarium gram., Cert. #1 AC Eurostar, 97%, 0 fusarium. available at Seed Source, 306-323-4402, Reisner Seed Farm 306-263-2139, LimeArcherwill, SK. rick, SK., breisner@sasktel.net WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Cert. CDC FDN., CERT. AC STRONGFIELD durum. Meredith, CDC Copeland, AC Metcalfe, Sean Miller, Avonlea, SK., 306-868-7822. 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK. CERTIFIED, REGISTERED, FOUNDATION CERTIFIED CDC AUSTENSON. Tilley, AB. AC Strongfield and AC Raymore (solid stem) Call 403-867-2338, Foremost, AB. 403-633-9999. www.fabianseedfarms.com CERTIFIED CDC AUSTENSON. Call Palmier Seed Farms, Lafleche, SK. 306-472-7824. CERTIFIED METCALFE and Meredith. Call Greenshields Seeds Ltd., 306-524-2155 or 306-524-4339, Semans, SK. CERTIFIED TRADITION BARLEY SEED for sale. Call Mulligan Farms 204-799-7417, 204-612-1734, Rosser, MB. CERTIFIED CDC McGWIRE hulless barley. Call Carlson Seed 306-592-4449 or 306-592-2029, Buchanan, SK. CERT. COPELAND, 99% germ., 0% smut, 100% pure to variety; Cert. Meredith, 97% germ., 0% smut, 100% pure to variety. Call Sandercock Seed Farms, 306-334-2958, Balcarres, SK. CERTIFIED KINDERSLEY, MEREDITH, Metcalf. Pratchler Seeds, 306-682-3317 or 306-231-5145, Muenster, SK. CERTIFIED #1 AC Newdale (2R), Legacy (6R). Call Fenton Seed Farm Ltd., Tisdale, SK., 306-873-5438. LAKESIDE SEEDS: Cert. #1 Kindersley, CDC Meredith and AC Metcalfe barley, high germ. 306-554-2078, Wynyard, SK. REG., CERT. CDC MEREDITH, AC Metcalfe, 99% germ. 0% fus. Terre Bonne Seed Farm 306-921-8594, 306-752-4810, Melfort, SK. 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. WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Certified CDC Austenson highest yielding feed barley. 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK. CDC CERT. AUSTENSON feed; Cert. Cowboy feed; Conion feed; Cert. AC Metcalfe, 2 row malting; Reg., Cert Bentley, 2 row malting. Visit our website for more info www.fedorukseeds.com or call Fedoruk Seeds at: 306-542-4235, Kamsack, SK. FOUNDATION, REGISTERED and/or Certified: CDC Copeland; AC Metcalfe, CDC Meredith, CDC Kindersley, Legacy. Berscheid Bros Seeds, Lake Lenore, SK. 306-368-2602. CERTIFIED CDC AUSTENSON high yielding feed barley. Ennis Seeds, Glenavon, SK., 306-429-2793.
BUSBY
New High Yielder Large Heavy Kernels For the nearest grower visit:
mastinseeds.com 403-556-2609
672..( 6(('6 3(',*5((' 6((' 6$/(6 Â&#x2021; 0HWFDOIH %DUOH\ Â&#x2021; 0HUHGLWK %DUOH\ Â&#x2021; 6DGDVK :KHDW 3+ Â&#x2021; Â&#x2021; )$; Â&#x2021; Â&#x2021; ( PDLO VVF#\RXUOLQN FD :DWURXV 6. 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.
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SORGARD SEEDS. Low disease, high germ: Carberry, Glenn, Cardale. Volume discounts. Visa/MC/FCC Credit available. Call 306-896-2236, Churchbridge, SK. CHIN RIDGE SEEDS, Taber, AB
AC MUSTANG High Yielding Grain or Forage
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 neighboursâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 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 FOUNDATION, REGISTERED, CERTIFIED, AC Muchmore, AC Shaw VB. Ace Crop Care Ltd., 306-831-8963, Rosetown, SK.
AC JUNIPER High Yield, Early, Stands Well
CERTIFIED SHAW-AC DOMAIN MTW, AC Unity-Waskada MTW, AC Andrew high yielding wheat. Order early for max discounts. Visa/MC. www.llseeds.ca 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK. WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Cert. SWW Sadash, GP Pasteur and CPS Crystal, Enchant VB. 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK. REG., CERT. AC Shaw VB, AC Vesper VB, CDC Osler, Splendor. Terre Bonne Seeds 306-921-8594, 306-752-4810, Melfort, SK.
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REG., CERT. CDC Merdeith, CDC Copeland, AC Metcalfe. Call Ken and Larry Trowell, 306-744-2687, Saltcoats, SK.
SOURIS OATS
NEW
POLISH CANOLAS EARLY, HIGH YIELDING SYNTHETIC HYBRIDS $ 16 to $18/acre seed cost No Contract Required mastinseeds.com 403-556-2609
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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
CERTIFIED #1 STRONGFIELD durum. RoLo Farms, Regina, SK., 306-543-5052. 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
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REGISTERED, CERTIFIED CDC Glas flax (reconstituted). 403-633-9999, Tilley, AB. www.fabianseedfarms.com BUYING BROWN FLAX farm pickup. Call 1-877-752-4115, Naber Specialty Grains Ltd. Email: nsgl@sasktel.net
CARDALE W HEAT
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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
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S OY B E A N S F O R S A S K . T H 2 9 0 0 2 , TH33003R2Y and TH32004R2Y. Grown in SK. 0% financing available. Call Thunder Seeds, Saltcoats, SK., 1-888-274-9243 or 306-744-2332 for a retailer near you. First in the field. www.thunderseed.ca CERTIFIED CDC PINTIUM pinto; Certified CDC Jet (black); Certified CDC Super Jet (black). Martens Charolais and Seed 204-534-8370, Boissevain, MB.
GrainEx International Ltd. WANTED
LENTILS, CANARY AND CHICK PEAS. Call GrainEx International Ltd. for current pricing at 306-885-2288, Sedley SK. Visit us on our website at: www.grainex.net CERTIFIED #1 CDC Impower, CDC Greenland. Wiens Seed Farm, Brennan, 306-377-2002, Herschel, SK. CERTIFIED GREENLAND, CDC Improve, CDC Impower. Call Palmier Seed Farms, Lafleche, SK. 306-472-7824. CERTIFIED CDC DAZIL., CDC Impower, Ace Crop Care Ltd., 306-831-8963, Rosetown, SK. CERT. #1 CDC Impala (Red) CL lentil. Call Fenton Seed Farm Ltd., Tisdale, SK. 306-873-5438.
CDC SORREL, Reg. Cert., reconstituted. Large seed. Good lodging resistance. Now booking! Nakonechny Seeds, Ruthilda, CERTIFIED CDC DAZIL, CDC Imax, CDC SK., 306-932-4409. Impower. Hansen Seeds, Yellow Grass, SK., 306-465-2525, 306-861-5679.
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W orkin g H ardâ&#x20AC;Ś To earn you r tru st! 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
REG. BRAVO, Fdn. Sanctuary. Palmier Seed Farms 306-472-7824, Lafleche, SK.
â&#x2C6;&#x161; Top Yields â&#x2C6;&#x161; High Protein â&#x2C6;&#x161; LeastFusarium â&#x2C6;&#x161; Less Straw
Ea rlier, H ea v ier, S horter.
CERT. SORREL RECONSTITUTED, high germ. For best pricing, call Etter Seed & Processing at 306-522-1668, Regina, SK.
SEED SPECIAL: CERTIFIED CDC Leader chickpeas, 0 disease. 306-694-2981, Moose Jaw, SK. TOP QUALITY CERTIFIED alfalfa and grass CERT. #1 CDC Alma, 95%; CDC Leader, seed. Call Gary or Janice Waterhouse CDC Orion. breisner@sasktel.net Reisner Seed Farm 306-263-2139, Limerick, SK. 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK. CDC ORION kabuli chickpea, registered. CERT. ALFALFA AND GRASSES. Free Sean Miller, Avonlea, SK., 306-868-7822. delivery. Dyck Forages & Grasses Ltd., Elie, MB, 1-888-204-1000. www.dyckseeds.com CERTIFIED ALGONQUIN ALFALFA seed. Call Maurice Wildeman, 306-365-4395, CERTIFIED CDC DAZIL, CDC Maxim, CDC Impower, CDC Greenland lentils. Pambrun 306-365-7802, Lanigan, SK. SK., 306-741-0475, foc@sasktel.net CERT. #1 CDC Greenland, CDC Imvincible. RoLo Farms, 306-543-5052, Regina, SK FOUNDATION, REGISTERED, CERTIFIED CDC Redcliff and CDC Maxim CL. Craswell CERTIFIED RUGBY RR, Conventional Ea- Seeds, Strasbourg, SK., 306-725-3236. gle, AC Excel. Pratchler Seeds, Muenster, CERTIFIED #1 CDC Peridot, CDC Lemay SK. Call 306-682-3317 or 306-231-5145. FR and GR lentils; CDC Redbow Red lentil. FDN. AND CERT. CANOLA seeds. Fall prices Yauck Seed Farm, 306-484-4555 Govan SK still available: Fusion (synthetic hybrid); CERT. #1: CDC Imigreen CL, 97%; CDC Rugby, highest yielding O.P.; All Brett Impower CL, 96%; CDC Imax CL, 96%. Young varieties, incl. Clubroot resistant. 0 disease. Reisner Seed Farm, Limerick, Haralie Seeds, 780-662-2617, Tofield, AB. SK., 306-263-2139, breisner@sasktel.net HYBRID AND OPEN-POLLINATED Canola CERT. CDC MAXIM CL, CDC Impower varieties at great prices. Cert. #1 Synergy CL Clearfield lentils. Order early for max (Polish). Call Fenton Seeds, Tisdale, SK., 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 306-873-5438. 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK. CERTIFIED FOREMOST CONVENTIONAL, CERTIFIED IMAX RED lentils, high germ., Rugby Round-up Ready, Canterra canola 0% disease. For info. phone 306-522-1668, varieties. Greenshields Seeds Ltd., Se- Etter Seed & Processing, Regina, SK mans, SK. 306-524-2155 or 306-524-4339.
mastinseeds.com
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CDC SORREL, CERT. #1, 95% germ., 0% pasmo. Delisle, SK., 306-493-2534, seedbarn@hotmail.com
CERTIFIED STETTLER HRSW. Tilley, AB. 403-633-9999. www.fabianseedfarms.com
mastinseeds.com
Licen s ed & bon d ed 1- 800- 2 58- 7434 ro ger@ seed - ex.co m
ENTERPRISE, BULK, CERTIFIED #1, good germ. Bergstrom Seeds, Birsay, SK. Call Randy 306-573-4625. FOUNDATION, REGISTERED, CERTIFIED, AC Transcend Durum. Ace Crop Care Ltd., 306-831-8963, Rosetown, SK.
CERTIFIED CDC ORRIN. Berscheid Bros. Seeds, 306-368-2602, Lake Lenore, SK. 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 , 306-744-2687, Saltcoats, SK. CERTIFIED CDC DANCER, Triactor, Souris high germ, available at Seed Source, 306-323-4402, Archerwill, SK.
Certified Seed: ACÂŽ Muchmore, ACÂŽ Carberry, CDC Go, & ACÂŽ Lillian HRSW; Pasteur GPW, ACÂŽ Strongfield & Transcend Durum. Certified barley, peas and CERTIFIED PRONGHORN, TYNDAL, Taza. lentils also available. Fall varieties: Luoma, Metzger, Bobcat. Call 1-800-563-7333 or chinridge.com 4 0 3 - 6 5 5 - 2 4 6 4 , G r a s s y L a ke , A B . www.cornsbrothers.com CERTIFIED AC SHAW VB, midge resistant; Certified AC Carberry,fusarium resistant. Ennis Seeds, 306-429-2793, Glenavon, SK. CERTIFIED #1 AC STRONGFIELD. Wiens Seed Farm, call Brennan at 306-377-2002, CERTIFIED #1 PASTEUR general pur- M&M SEEDS LTD. has Certified #1 AC Herschel, SK. pose wheat. Volume and cash discounts. Goodeve VB, CDC Utmost VB and AC Shaw VB. Cash and volume discounts. CERT. STRONGFIELD, AAC Current, Call Jeff 306-227-7867, Aberdeen, SK. CDC Verona durum. Order early for max CERTIFIED #1 CDC Utmost, Shaw and 306-258-2219, St. Denis, SK. discounts. Visa/MC. www.llseeds.ca Vesper. CWRS midge tolerant varieties. CERTIFIED GP PASTEUR, high yielding, 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK. Volume and cash discount. Call Jeff at and AC Shaw. G&R Seeds, 306-239-2071, CERT. EUROSTAR and CDC Verona Durum, Sopatyk Seed Farms 306-227-7867, email: Osler, SK. 0% fusarium. Call Shawn 306-741-0475, jeffsopatyk@me.com Aberdeen, SK. CERT. CARBERRY, 0% Fusarium, 99% Pambrun, SK. Email: foc@sasktel.net CERTIFIED #1 CARDALE, AC Shaw VB germ. Printz Family Seeds, 306-648-3511 and AC Unity VB. Exc. germ, low disease. o r 3 0 6 - 3 8 0 - 7 7 6 9 , G r ave l b o u r g , S K . printz_kurt@hotmail.com Yauck Seed Farm 306-484-4555 Govan, SK FOUNDATION, CERTIFIED Leggett, Souris. AC ANDREW CERTIFIED #1, 98% germ. AC CARBERRY REGISTERED certified #1, Ardell Seeds, Vanscoy, SK. 306-668-4415. Excellent quality! Nakonechny Seeds, 96% germination. Superior agronomy package. Ready for pickup! Nakonechny SOURIS, SUMMIT, SEABISCUIT. Visit our Ruthilda, SK., call 306-932-4409. Seeds, Ruthilda, SK., call 306-932-4409. website www.fedorukseeds.com for more CERT. MIDGE TOLERANT: Vesper VB or info or call Fedoruk Seeds at Kamsack, Fieldstar VB. Carlson Seed 306-592-4449 CERTIFIED CDC UTMOST VB, AC Shaw VB, Harvest, Alvena CWRS and AC Enchant VB, SK. 306-542-4235. or 306-592-2029, Buchanan, SK. AC Crystal, AC Foremost CPSR and AC SaWWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Cert. AC Mor- AC CONQUER VB (new) midge tolerant dash CWSW wheat. Call Wilfing Farms Ltd. gan, Souris, Triactor, milling oats; CDC CPS. High yields, 0% Fusarium Gram. Wil- 306-236-7797 or 306-236-6811, email Baler forage oats 306-752-4060 Melfort SK kie, SK. 306-843-2934, www.herle.ca rjwilfing@sasktel.net Meadow Lake, SK. FDN., REG., CERT. AC Morgan, AC Lu, REGISTERED CDC GO Hard Red Spring CERTIFIED UNITY WASKADA and Carberry wheat. 306-296-2104 or 306-296-7434, Murphy oats, high germ, 0 fusarium. Harawheat, exc. germ. and disease. Pambrun, Frontier, SK. lie Seed Farm, 780-662-2617, Tofield, AB. SK., 306-741-0475. Email foc@sasktel.net CERTIFIED SEED: AC Morgan oats, 95% CERTIFIED VESPER/ WASCADA midge re- VESPER/ WASKADA, CARDALE spring germ, Fusarium not detected. Call Selte sistant, Stettler, Carberry. Greenshields wheat. Bulk, cert., good germ. Bergstrom Farms 780-853-2484, Vermilion, AB. Seeds Ltd., Semans, SK., 306-524-2155 or Seeds. Randy 306-573-4625, Birsay, SK FDN., REG., CERT. AC Morgan, 99% germ., 306-524-4339. CERTIFIED SHAW VB, Lillian. Pratchler 0% fusarium. Terre Bonne Seed Farm CERTIFIED SHAW, 98% germ. Hansen Seeds, 306-682-3317 or 306-231-5145, 306-921-8594, 306-752-4810, Melfort, SK. Seeds, Yellow Grass, SK., 306-465-2525 or Muenster, SK. SORGARD SEEDS. Low disease, high 306-861-5679. Email jsh2@sasktel.net AC ANDREW SOFT white wheat. Most germ: Leggett, Souris, Baler oats. Volume REG, CERT CDC Utmost VB; Cert. AC Ves- popular variety, 0% Fusarium Gram. per VB; Cert. Conquer VB; Cert AC Carberdiscounts. Visa/MC/FCC Credit available. 306-843-2934, Wilkie, SK. www.herle.ca ry; Cert. Cardale; Cert. Glenn. Visit our Call 306-896-2236, Churchbridge, SK. CERTIFIED PASTEUR, 94% germination, website www.fedorukseeds.com for more CERTIFIED #1 TRIACTOR. Call Hetland i n f o . o r c a l l F e d o r u k S e e d s a t : 0% Graminearum. Bailey Brothers Seeds Seeds at Naicam, SK., 306-874-5694. 306-542-4235, Kamsack, SK. 306-935-4702, Milden, SK. www.hetlandseeds.com CERTIFIED AND REGISTERED Utmost VB, FOUNDATION AND/OR CERTIFIED CDC Harvest, Andrew, Conquer VB. Frederick Utmost VB and Lillian Wheat. Call Craswell Seeds, Strasbourg, SK., 306-725-3236. Seeds, 306-287-3977, Watson, SK. CERTIFIED #1 AC Carberry, AC Sadash, CERTIFIED PASTEUR GP wheat seed for CDC Utmost VB, AC Vesper VB and AC, sale. Call 306-744-7722, Bredenbury, SK. Shaw VB. Call Hetland Seeds at Naicam, WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Cert HRS. CDC For the nearest grower visit: SK. 306-874-5694. www.hetlandseeds.com Utmost VB, Carberry, Shaw VB, Harvest. FOUNDATION, REGISTERED and/or Certi- 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK. fied: AC Vesper VB, AC Unity VB; CDC Ut- CERTIFIED AC VESPER VB, 98% germ, 403-556-2609 most VB, Berscheid Bros Seeds, Lake Le- 97% vigor, good pricing. Sandercock Seeds Ltd., 306-334-2958, Balcarres, SK. CERTIFIED CDC SO-1 Super Oats and nore, SK. 306-368-2602. AC Morgan Oats. High germination with FDN., REG., CERT. CDC Utmost VB, AC CERT. CDC UTMOST VB, Unity/Waskada no disease level. Call Wilfing Farms Ltd. Shaw VB, AC Vesper VB, AC Carberry, Car- VB, Lillian, Waskada; Fdn. Goodeve. Call 306-236-7797 or 306-236-6811, email dale, Conquer VB (CPS red). Ardell Seeds, 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 . rjwilfing@sasktel.net Meadow Lake, SK. Vanscoy, SK., 306-668-4415. 306-472-7824. SORGARD SEEDS. Midge tolerant varie- CERTIFIED #1 AC Vesper VB, AC Shaw ties available: AC Vesper, CDC Utmost and VB. Wiens Seed Farm 306-377-2002, AC Conquer. 306-896-2236, Churchbridge. Herschel, SK. FDN, REG. AND CERTIFIED #1 Vesper VB, CERT. #1: AC Unity VB, 97%; AC Infinity, Goodeve VB, CDC Utmost VB. Fenton Seed 99%; CDC Utmost VB, 94%, AC Lillian, For the nearest grower visit: Farm Ltd., Tisdale, SK., 306-873-5438. 97%. 0 fusarium. Reisner Seed Farm, AC VESPER VB FDN., Reg., Cert. #1. 306-263-2139, breisner@sasktel.net High yield. Excellent quality! Nakonechny Limerick, SK. Seeds, Ruthilda, SK., 306-932-4409. CERT. #1 SHAW/AC Domain VB, midge 403-556-2609 high yielding HRS. RoLo Farms CERTIFIED SEABISCUIT. Greenshields CERTIFIED #1 UNITY, Waskada, Lillian. tolerant Regina, SK., 306-543-5052. S h ew c h u k S e e d s , B l a i n e L a ke , S K . Seeds, Semans, SK. Call: 306-524-2155 or 306-290-7816, or 306-497-2800. 306-524-4339. CERTIFIED HRS AC Vesper VB, AC Shaw FDN, REG. AND CERTIFIED #1 CDC Orrin, CDC UTMOST VB Midge HRS wheat. VB, AC Goodeve VB, CDC Utmost VB, CPSR Leggett. Fenton Seed Farm Ltd., Tisdale, Early, high yield, 0% Fusarium Gram. Conquer VB, high germ, low fusarium g r a m . Ava i l a b l e at S e e d S o u r c e , SK., 306-873-5438. 306-843-2934, Wilkie, SK. www.herle.ca 306-323-4402, Archerwill, SK. CERTIFIED SOURIS AND Triactor. North- AC UNITY VB, certified, 99% germ., 96% land Seeds Inc. 306-324-4315, Margo, SK. vigor, 0% Gram./fusarium. Delisle, SK., LAKESIDE SEEDS: Cert. #1 AC Vesper, Muchmore HRS wheat for sale, high germ., CERT. AND REG. Souris, Leggett, Orrin. 306-493-2534, seedbarn@hotmail.com low disease. 306-554-2078, Wynyard, SK. Frederick Seeds, 306-287-3977, Watson, FDN. AND CERT. AC Vesper VB. Phone CERTIFIED AC SADASH SWSW. Tilley, AB. Ken and Larry Trowell, 306-744-2687, SK. 403-633-9999. www.fabianseedfarms.com Saltcoats, SK. NEW AC STRIDE: Foundation, Registered, Certified, white milling oat. Big Dog Seeds CERT. #1 UNITY VB, Shaw VB, Carberry, Waskada and AC Barrie. Lepp Seeds Ltd. Inc., 306-483-2963, Oxbow, SK. 306-254-4243, Hepburn, SK. C D C B OY E R , CERT., early maturity, straight cut, 99% germ., 98% vigor. Delisle CERTIFIED AC LILLIAN, sawfly resistant. Call 403-867-2338, Foremost, AB. 306-493-2534, seedbarn@hotmail.com
best price/best delivery/best payment
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.
CLASSIFIED ADS 91
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 Stollâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;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
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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 CERT. #1 CDC Meadow, 98%, 0 disease; Cert. #1 Golden, 99%, 0 disease. Reisner Seed Farm 306-263-2139, Limerick, SK., breisner@sasktel.net FOUNDATION, REGISTERED and/or Cert. CDC Meadow and CDC Saffron peas. Ph. Berscheid Bros Seeds, Lake Lenore, SK. 306-368-2602. NEW! CDC SAFFRON, FDN, Registered, Certified. High yield. Good stander. Now booking! Nakonechny Seeds, Ruthilda, SK., call 306-932-4409. CDC SAFFRON, CDC Treasure, CDC Meadow yellow pea seed. High germination and low disease. Call Wilfing Farms Ltd. 306-236-7797, 306-236-6811, email rjwilfing@sasktel.net Meadow Lake, SK. FDN, REG, CERT, CDC Hornet, CDC Patrick (green), CDC Limerick (green). Ace Crop Care Ltd. 306-831-8963, Rosetown, SK. REGISTERED AND CERTIFIED #1 CDC Meadow. Fenton Seed Farm Ltd., Tisdale, SK., 306-873-5438. CERT. CDC MEADOW. Order early for max discounts. Visa/MC www.llseeds.ca 306-530-8433, Lumsden, SK. LAKESIDE SEEDS has Cert. #1 CDC Meadow yellow peas for sale. Excellent quality. Ph 306-554-2078, Wynyard, SK. CERT. AC MEADOW peas, 97% germ., 93% vigor, good quality. Call Sandercock Seed Farms, 306-334-2958, Balcarres, SK. CERTIFIED #1 TREASURE. Call Hetland Seeds at Naicam, SK., 306-874-5694. www.hetlandseeds.com
92 CLASSIFIED ADS
SORGARD SEEDS. Low disease, high g e r m : M e a d ow s . Vo l u m e d i s c o u n t s . 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. CERTIFIED CDC MEADOW yellow peas. Call Palmier Seed Farms, Lafleche, SK. 306-472-7824. CERTIFIED MEADOW. Call Greenshields Seeds Ltd., 306-524-2155, 306-524-4339, Semans, SK. WWW.TRAWINSEEDS.CA Certified CDC Meadow yellow peas. Call 306-752-4060, Melfort, SK. CERTIFIED CDC MEADOW, CDC Bronco and Agassiz yellow peas. RoLo Farms, 306-543-5052, Regina, SK. AC EARLYSTAR NEW YELLOW PEA. High germination. Contact 306-843-2934, Wilkie, SK. www.herle.ca CERTIFIED #1 CDC Meadow Pea, high germ., low disease. Yauck Seed Farm, 306-484-4555, Govan, SK. M&M SEEDS LTD. has Cert. #1 CDC Treasure and Meadow. Cash and volume discounts. 306-258-2219, St. Denis, SK.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
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. CERISE RED PROSO COMMON MILLET. Book early to avoid disappointment. 93%+ germ., 0% Fusarium Graminearum, makes great cattle feed, swath grazed, silage, dry and silage bales, drought tolerant, very high in protein and energy. Delivered in 50 lb. bags at nearest points in SK. and AB. Call Reynald at Millet King Seed of Canada Inc., St. Claude, MB., 204-526-2719 or 204-379-2987, leave msg. Cell and text 204-794-8550, all calls returned. Over 2000 satisfied producers and our 11th year in business. www.milletkingseeds.com or email: reynald@milletking.com ALFALFAS/ CLOVERS/ GRASSES, hay blends and pasture blends. Custom blends no charge. Free delivery. Dyck Forages & Grasses Ltd., Elie, MB, 1-888-204-1000. Visit us at www.dyckseeds.com
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. CERTIFIED CANTATE, highest yielding 306-863-2900, email us today for a price variety. Hansen Seeds, Yellow Grass, SK., list! Birch Rose Acres Ltd., Star City, SK. 306-465-2525, 306-861-5679. ivanaudrey@sasktel.net BUYING CANARY SEED, farm pickup. HAY BLENDS AND PASTURE BLENDS, Call 1-877-752-4115, Naber Specialty no charge custom blends. Dyck Forages & Grains Ltd. Email: nsgl@sasktel.net Grasses Ltd., Elie, MB. Free delivery. CDC BASTIA (NEW), CDC Togo, Itch- 1-888-204-1000, www.dyckseeds.com less varieties. Phone 306-843-2934, Wil- COMMON MILLET SEED, #1, cleaned kie, SK. www.herle.ca and bagged, $15/bag. Gibsons, CERTIFIED, REGISTERED, FDN. CDC Togo. 306-435-3421, Moosomin, SK. Call Northland Seeds Inc., 306-324-4315, COMMON #1 Smooth Brome, Meadow Margo, SK. Brome, Timothy, Crested wheat, Yellow CDC BASTIA, Certified. Excellent quality! clover, Cicer Milkvetch, Alfalfa. Also have Limited supply! Nakonechny Seeds, Ru- Certified seed. Grower Direct. Blending and delivery available. Competitive prices. thilda, SK., 306-932-4409. Call Siklenka Seeds, 306-342-4290 or 306-342-7688, Glaslyn, SK.
Green and/or heated Canola/Flax, Wheat, Barley, Oats, Peas, etc. BOW VALLEY TRADING LTD.
1-877-641-2798
GOLDEN FLAX, food grade, low yeast and mold, oil content 36%+, 96% germ. 99.9% pure, $22/bu. 306-730-8375, Melville, SK. SPRING SPECIAL: BROWN and Golden flax seed, high germination. 306-694-2981, Moose Jaw, SK. FLAX SEED for sale, 4,000 bushels. Phone 306-682-2489, 306-231-8212, Humboldt, SK. C E RT I F I E D ANDANTE YELLOW. Call: Greenshields Seeds Ltd., Semans, 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%, 306-524-2155 or 306-524-4339. very clean. Yorkton, SK. 306-273-4235. BESCO GRAIN LTD. Buyer of all varieties of mustard. Call for competitive pricing. Call 204-736-3570, Brunkild, MB. MUSTARD SEED: We carry a full line of XPELLER PRESSING. Lethbridge crusher. high quality cert. mustard seed. Bare, Looking for heated canola and flax. Also treated, large or small bags. Can arrange looking for a limited amount of #1 Canola. delivery anywhere. Great pricing!! (Looking Prompt payment. Call, text or email Darcy for low grade mustard). Call Ackerman Ag for pricing and movement. 403-894-4394 Services 306-638-2282, Chamberlain, SK. xpellerpressing@gmail.com
NOW BUYING BROWN & YELLOW MUSTARD All grades of Green Peas Laird & Richlea Lentils Yellow Peas
1-306-771-4987
COMMON MARROWFAT PEA seed for CERT. CANMA NEW HEMP variety, large sale, excellent quality. Call Lakeside Seeds, seed, excellent weed control, high returns, 306-554-2078, Wynyard, SK. $2 per lb. organic and conventional. SEED GREEN PEAS, 99% germination. St. 306-747-2725, Shellbrook, SK. Walburg, SK. Wayne 306-248-3868 cell or 306-248-7720. NEW SMALL SEEDED, Zero-Tannin Faba Bean. 306-694-2981, Moose Jaw, SK. BUYING YELLOW AND GREEN PEAS, all grades, farm pickup. Naber Specialty Grains Ltd., 1-877-752-4115, Melfort, SK. CLEANED HIGH BULK greenfeed OATS, Email: nsgl@sasktel.net 16,000 bu., 98% germ., $5.00/bu. Phone: SEED SPECIAL: EARLY maturing yellow 780-872-3611, Lloydminster, SK. peas, high germ. and 0 disease. GOOD HE AVY S E E D O AT S for sale. 306-694-2981, Moose Jaw, SK. 306-937-2880 or 306-441-5010, Battleford, SK. COMMON SEED OATS, 98% germ., 44 lbs./bu. Grown from certified seed. Large CANARYSEED, COMMON CLEANED. Wiens Seed Farm, call Brennan, 306-377-2002, volume. $4.50/bu. 306-753-2500, Macklin. Herschel, SK. MILLING OATS, good weight, good germination, no wild oats. Call 306-867-7716, COMMON CANARYSEED for sale, good germination, 24¢/lb. Call 306-793-4450 or Outlook, SK. 306-745-8425, Stockholm, SK. COMMON #1 CLEANED heavy milling seed oats, germ. 99%, vigor 98%, fusarium COMMON CANARY SEED, 96% germ., bulk g r a m i n e a r u m 0 % . L e p p S e e d s L t d . , cleaned. Call Darroll Wallin 306-324-2141 or 306-272-7151, Margo, SK. 306-254-4243, Hepburn, SK. HIGH YIELDING GENERAL purpose wheat RED PROSO MILLET seed, good germ., 50 f o r s a l e . C a l l 3 0 6 - 7 9 3 - 4 4 5 0 o r lb. bags or totes, 50¢/lb. Primrose Seed Cleaning Inc., 306-429-2714, 306-745-8425, Stockholm, SK. 306-736-7863, Glenavon, SK.
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SweetGrass CONTRACTING Linden, AB
Priced at your b in.
PEARMAN GRAIN LTD. 306-374-1968
2013 ALFALFA, conventional and organic, 1500 lb. bales, net wrapped, hard core, JD baler. 306-370-8897, Tessier, SK. STANDING HAY FOR sale, Weyburn, SK area. 145 acres. Call 306-842-7082 or 306-861-7092. SOLID CORE ROUND alfalfa, alfalfa grass, green feed, grass and straw. Delivered. Call 306-237-4582, Perdue, SK. GOOD QUALITY hay for sale, round bales, alfalfa mix, no rain, 1000 lbs. plus. Call 306-466-4428, Leask, 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. 90 ORGANIC FLAX straw bales for sale. 306-858-2529, 306-867-9899, Lucky Lake, SK. APPROX. 400 ROUND hay bales, 1300 lbs., exc. horse hay, no rain, $70/bale in yard. Can deliver. 306-466-2261, Leask, SK.
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.
FOUR 850/55/42 TRELLEBORG tractor twin 414 tires, $800 each. 306-295-3833, Eastend, SK.
SCRAPER AND LOADER TIRES available. All sizes. Quick Drain Sales, Muenster, SK. Ph: 306-682-4520, 306-231-7318. SET OF TWO 20.8x38 sprayer tires, on 10 whole rims, 150 hrs. of use on NH sprayer, CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used $5500. 306-483-7941, Oxbow, SK. highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com FOUR 380X46 TIRES with rims, 95%, off a Rogator 1184, tires wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t fit new sprayer, OTC INJECTOR TESTER, Model 4200B, new condition, $1500; Kent Moore HD en$8500. 403-652-0757, High River, AB. gine counter bore tool, good cond., $500. FLOATER TIRES FOR JD and Case spray- 204-648-7136, Ashville, MB. ers: 650/65R38 or 710/70R38. For JD sprayers: 710/70R42 or 900/50R42. SAW SHARPENING EQUIPMENT: Foley filers for sale and grinders. 306-692-4452, 306-697-2856, Grenfell, SK. 306-631-1337, Moose Jaw, SK. GOOD USED TRUCK TIRES: 700/8.25/ 10X36 METAL LATHE, 110 volt, with all ac900/1000/1100x20s; 11R22.5/11R24.5; cessories, asking $2500. For pics call 9R17.5, matched sets available. Pricing 306-893-2289, Maidstone, SK. from $90. K&L Equipment and Auto. Phone Ladimer at: 306-795-7779, Ituna, ENGINE REBUILD EQUIP. Cam bearing inSK., or Chris at: 306-537-2027, Regina, SK. staller, engine stands, press, crane, bearing puller, angle grinders, die grinder, steel bench, 5 HP compressor, AC/DC welder. Many more shop items, all VG cond. Many blocks and heads, cranks, etc. 306-873-4229 eves, Crooked River, SK. OLDER MECHANICAL SHEAR, still under power, cuts up to 1/8â&#x20AC;?x8â&#x20AC;&#x2122; steel. Info. call 204-937-4403, Roblin, MB. NEW ¡ 11R22.5 Steering & Drive .............. $299 ¡ 11R24.5 Steering & Drive .............. $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
RURAL & CULTURAL TOURS Irela n d & S co tla n d ~ June 2014 Hu n ga ry/Ro m a n ia ~ June 2014 M id -W es t US A ~ O ctober 2014 Au s tra lia /N ew Zea la n d ~ Jan 2015 K en ya /Ta n za n ia ~ Feb 2015 S o u th Africa /Za m b ia ~ Feb 2015 S o u th Am erica ~ Feb 2015
CERTIFIED ORGANIC HAY, brome, fesALS cue, alfalfa mix, 3â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x3â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x8â&#x20AC;&#x2122; square bales. Call DU Portion oftours m a y b e Ta x Ded uc tib le. for details 306-335-2280, Lemberg, SK. L IN D EN ,AL BER TA Se le ct Holida ys CAN AD A 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 1- 800- 661- 432 6 306-567-7100, Imperial, SK. w w w .selectho lid a ys.co m BIG SQUARE BALES, alfalfa/grass mix, $75/tonne. 780-621-7833, Rockglen, SK. 1500 LB. BROME/ALFALFA hay bales, $55 a bale at Weyburn, SK. Ph. 306-842-7082 ¡ JD Factory 94-9600/CTS ........... $9,850 WHY NOT KEEP MARKETING SIMPLE? or 306-861-7092. ¡ JD Factory STS........................ $11,850 BAU-MAN MODEL 2-412, 12â&#x20AC;?, PTO, You are selling feed grains. We are ¡ JD STS BLOWOUT .................. $7,995 used only once, $10,000 with extras. buying feed grains. Fast payment, with ¡ CIH AFX w/new tires .............. $18,800 306-768-3442 evenings, Carrot River, SK. prompt pickup, true price discovery. Call ¡ CIH 80/88 w/new tires ........... $12,845 1â&#x20AC;?, 2â&#x20AC;?, 3â&#x20AC;? and 4â&#x20AC;? water pumps from B&E, Gerald Snip, Jim Beusekom, Allen Pirness, ¡ NH CR/CX w/new tires ........... $18,800 Honda, and Robin/Subaru in stock with ¡ Clamp on kit w/tires ................. $5,250 David Lea, or Vera Buziak at Market Place ¡ 11R22.5 16-ply............................ $299 hose and fittings. See your nearest Flaman Commodities Ltd., Lethbridge, AB. Email: ¡ 11R24.5 16-ply............................ $359 store or call 1-888-435-2626. info@marketplacecommodities.com or WANTED: STANDING HAY to cut and bale 1-800-667-4515. Trade in your singles! phone: 1-866-512-1711. in surrounding area. 306-944-4572, Vis6â&#x20AC;? WATERMASTER PUMPS for pumping www.combineworld.com count, SK. out dugouts and sloughs, c/w 400â&#x20AC;&#x2122; of lay HAY BALES, 400 large square, 3x4, 1000 2- NEW TITAN 710/70R/42 tractor tires, flat hose. Pumps 42,000 gal./hr. See your lb., $40/ea. Located NE Saskatoon, SK. l o a d r at e 1 2 , 3 0 0 l b s . , $ 3 0 0 0 e a c h . n e a r e s t F l a m a n s t o r e o r c a l l 306-922-8155, Prince Albert, SK. 1-888-435-2626 www.flaman.com NUVISION COMMODITIES is currently 306-230-5605. purchasing feed barley, wheat, peas and OAT STRAW. Our 15th year selling bales. milling oats. 204-758-3401, St. Jean, MB. Large hard-core, very clean, large quantity, PASKAL CATTLE FEEDLOT Company in Cert. organic, $20. Volume discount. LoadLethbridge area, looking for feed barley. ing included, exc. access. Junction Hwy 20 and 41. Tarnopol, SK. Call 306-279-4325. A Division of AgLine International Call Roxanne at 1-800-710-8803. DAIRY AND FEEDER HAY for sale, 3x4 WANTED: OFF-GRADE PULSES, oilseeds s q u a r e b a l e s . Te s t s a v a i l a b l e . and cereals. All organic cereals and spe- 403-633-8835, Brooks, AB. 9.5L15 8PLY ....................... BKT $89.95 600/70R30 cialty crops. Prairie Wide Grain, Saskatoon, RIB IMPLEMENT .......Firestone $139.90 152A8 R-1 .......................... BKT $1,439.95 SK., 306-230-8101, 306-716-2297. 11L15 ................................. BKT $99.95 650/65R38 RIB IMPLEMENT .......Firestone $137.71 166A8 RW1........................ BKT $2,085.99 LACKAWANNA PRODUCTS CORP. Buy12.5L15 10PLY .................. BKT $139.95 520/85R38 ......................... BKT $1,465.95 ers and sellers of all types of feed grain LIQUID HUMIC ACID. Add Humika or RIB IMPLEMENT .......Firestone $192.95 155A8 R-1 and grain by-products. Call 306-862-2723, PlantXL to existing fertility program to Nipawin, SK. 1000-16 710/70R38-178A8 ............ BKT $2,711.60 protect your liquid phosphorus (ie. Al8PLY 4 RIB.......................... BKT $159.95 pine/10-34-0) or nitrogen fertilizer invest30.5L32 BKT FORESTRY 16PLY ment from tie-up and allow your fertilizer 1100-16 to work more efficiently. Promote the 8PLY 4 RIB.......................... BKT $209.95 FS216 TL ................................... $3,700.00 28L26 BKT FORESTRY 14G growth of larger healthier root systems. 11L15 12PLY Improve your soils health. Increase your HIWAY SPECIAL ................ BKT $185.95 FS216 TL ................................... $2,295.95 crops yield. Ph. 519-749-5488, Bright, ON. 18.4-38 .............................. BKT $690.00 35.5LB32 FIR FORESTRY Email: mosburgerfarms@hotmail.com 8PLY R-1....................Firestone $869.00 24C TL LS2 ................................ $6,995.00 20.8-38 .............................. BKT $995.00 30.5L32 FS FORESTRY â&#x20AC;˘ GREEN â&#x20AC;˘ HEATED 8PLY R-1....................Firestone $1,299.00 26C TL LS2 ................................ $4,995.00 600/65R28 ......................... BKT $1,489.00 28L26 FIR FORESTRY â&#x20AC;˘ SPRING THRASHED 157A8 R-1 .................Firestone $2,295.95 16H TL LS2 ................................ $3,199.00 WANTED: LARGE YELLOW peas and Triticale. Call Norbert at Saskcan Parent EXCELLENT PRICING ON OTHER SIZES - CALL TODAY! All Tires Subject to Availability 204-737-3002, St. Joseph, MB.
P AUL M O W ER
D AV E K O EH N
4 03 - 54 6 - 006 0
Ace Buying Group FARM â&#x20AC;˘ TRUCK â&#x20AC;˘ OTR TIRES
HEATED CANOLA WANTED LIGHT/TOUGH FEEDGRAINS â&#x20AC;˘ OATS â&#x20AC;˘ BARLEY
â&#x20AC;˘ WHEAT â&#x20AC;˘ PEAS
DAMAGED FLAX/PEAS â&#x20AC;˘ HEATED
â&#x20AC;˘ DISEASED
GREEN CANOLA 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. 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 LESS FUSARIUM MORE BOTTOM LINE. Farmer directed varieties. Wheat suitable for ethanol production, livestock feed. Western Feed Grain Development Co-op Ltd., 1-877-250-1552. www.wfgd.ca WANTED: FEED GRAIN, barley, wheat, peas, green or damaged canola. Phone Gary 306-823-4493, Neilburg, SK. GRAIN MARKETING HEADQUARTERS. Buyers of all grains. On farm pricing. Quick payment assured. Call Cory 306-842-2406, Double Z Ag Sales, Weyburn, SK.
TOP PRICES PAID FOR FEED BARLEY, WHEAT, OATS, RYE, TRITICALE, PEAS, LENTILS, HEATED OIL SEEDS
Saskatoon
4 03 - 3 04 - 1 4 9 6
Schluter & Maack
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. CHEMICAL FREE RED Clover seed. Excellent germination, selling in 100 lb. bags, $1.25/lb. 306-236-1937, Meadow Lake, SK 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 ORGANIC SAINFOIN SEED, called â&#x20AC;&#x153;Healthy Hayâ&#x20AC;? in Europe (sainfoin.eu). An ancient, non-bloating, nutritious, low input, perennial forage loved by all animals. Better flavored meat and dairy. Call 306-739-2900, Wawota, SK. jhusband@primegrains.com or primegrains.com/prime-sainfoin.htm
WE BUY DAMAGED GRAIN
â&#x20AC;˘ FROZEN â&#x20AC;˘ HAILED â&#x20AC;&#x153;ON FARM PICKUPâ&#x20AC;?
WESTCAN FEED & GRAIN
1-877-250-5252 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!
BUYIN G HEATED OATS M USGRAVE ENTERPRISES Ph : 204.8 3 5.2527 Fa x: 204.8 3 5.2712
TRUCK TIRES
11R24.5,14 PLY, HWY DRIVE, LM516 ...................$295.00 ONE ACRE SERVICED lot w/trees at Emma and Candle Lake. Swap for farm machinery or cult. acres. Call Steve 306-961-7407.
11R24.5, 16 PLY, HWY, DRIVE DEEP, LLD37 ..........$295.00
1-855-865-9550
CALL TODAY!
103-3240 Idylwyld Dr. N, Saskatoon, SK
ARE LOW SPOTS SLOWING YOU DOWN? 2007 6-WHEEL 6100 gal. Houle liquid manure tank, exc. cond. Call 204-825-7111, Baldur, MB. POLY TANKS: 15 to 10,000 gal.; Bladder tanks from 220 to 88,000 gal; Water and liquid fertilizer; Fuel tanks, single and double wall; Truck and storage, gas or diesel. Wilke Sales, 306-586-5711, Regina, SK. 4600L DOUBLE WALL fuel tank, fully loaded, turnkey tank, $6295. Call John Mah 780-361-6185. Wetaskiwin Co-op Association Ltd., AB. jmah@wetaskiwincoop.com STORAGE TANK. 39,000L steel tank used for water storage, approx. 20,000 lbs, 34â&#x20AC;&#x2122; long x 7â&#x20AC;&#x2122; wide, $4750. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com TURTLE TANKS, 225-480 US gallons ava i l a b l e , s t a r t i n g at $ 2 3 0 . C a l l 306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228. While supplies last. www.hold-onindustries.com 4600L DOUBLE WALL fuel tank, utility tank (tank only), $2995. Call John Mah 780-361-6185, Wetaskiwin Co-op Association Ltd, AB. jmah@wetaskiwincoop.com LOW PROFILE LIQUID fert. comp. tanks 100-2500 US gal., $175-$2250. While supplies last. 306-253-4343, 1-800-383-2228, www.hold-onindustries.com
We can solve the problem with
THE WATER CANNON
The Cannon will blast water over 4 acres in a 190 degree arc to dry out low spots fast and efficiently. Saving you time, fuel & wear and tear on your equipment.
THE WATER CANNON UNITS WILL DISTRIBUTE 1000 U.S. GALLONS PER MINUTE NOW INTRODUCING THE
DOUBLE A FERTILIZER WAGON
With sizes ranging from 1750 to 5250 US gallons! CUSTOM OPTIONS ARE AVAILABLE.
ORDER NOW FOR SPRING DELIVERY!
DOUBLE A TRAILERS & CONTRACTING
780-657-0008 website: www.doubleatrailers.ca email: doubleaa@telusplanet.net
LEASING OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE!
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
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.
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.
MATURE RELIABLE WOMAN will care for PTO AUGER WATER PUMPS, 6000 gal. per your house, pets, children, seniors and minute. Simple, tough, NO Prime. Handles other related duties. Ph. 403-878-6313, mud, ice, plants, other debris. Call Jan Medicine Hat, AB. 204-868-5334, Newdale, MB. 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 . or 780-493-1874, email: WAT E R T R E AT M E N T for the whole 780-929-9316 house to commercial units, hot tubs and dhenschell@hotmail.com pools. Over 50 years experience. No salt, chemicals or chlorine. 99% pure, 100% satisfaction or your money back. Also offering WWQ ionizers and portable ultra-sonic M C I N T Y R E R A N C H I N G C O . LT D. flow meters. Contact Bob 403-620-4038, www.mcintyreranch.com, located thirty Prairies Water, High River, AB. miles south of Lethbridge, AB., seeks to fill a full-time position ASAP. An experienced ranch hand who must be capable at: riding, roping, fencing, feeding, bedding, calving and general animal husbandry. Must provide own horses. This cow/longyearling cattle operation is performance oriented in the areas of livestock, employSTAUBER DRILLING INC. Water well ees and management. Emphasis is placed drilling and servicing, Geotechnical, Envi- on teamwork and communication. On loronmental, Geothermal. Professional ser- cation housing which can accommodate a vice since 1959. Call the experts at small family, is provided. A benefit pack1-800-919-9211 info@stauberdrilling.com age is offered including a group RRSP and a company pension program. If you believe yourself to be qualified to contribute and are interested in working with a comKORNUM WELL DRILLING, farm, cottage pany that takes great pride in what it does, and acreage wells, test holes, well rehabili- resumes can be faxed to: 403-329-9403, tation, witching. PVC/SS construction, ex- or mailed to: Box 700, Lethbridge, AB. T1J pert workmanship and fair pricing. 50% 3Z6. or email: R3@mcintyreranch.com government grant now available. Indian LARGE YEARLING OPERATION looking for Head, SK., 306-541-7210 or 306-695-2061 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. LONG TERM, FULL-TIME hired hand required on mixed cow/calf and grain family farm. Salary negotiable, accommodations and utilities provided. Mayerthorpe, AB. 780-786-2903 or reing@telusplanet.net 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 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. 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 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: 403-548-2287. Ph: 403-548-6684, Redcliff, AB. walkersu7texaslonghorns@gmail.com WORK AND LIVE on a farm in Europe, Britain, Australia or New Zealand! Dairy, crop, beef, sheep placements available. AgriVenture invites young adult (18-30) applicants for 4-12 month agricultural programs. 1-888-598-4415, www.agriventure.com
CLASSIFIED ADS 93
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.
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 HELPER WANTED ON mixed farm. Steady job for right person. Room and board avail. 403-631-2373, 403-994-0581, Olds, AB. RANCH HAND WANTED for cow/calf operation. Housing supplied. References and driver’s abstract required. Consort, AB., 403-577-0011, u2dryad4@hotmail.com
FULL-TIME FARM HELP/LABOURER for large grain/seed farm 5 miles NW of Regina, SK. Farm experience required and must be mechanically inclined. Duties: Maintenance of seed cleaning plant, equipment and machinery, field and yard work, general farm duties. Class 1A an asset. Wages start at $15-$22/hr., depending on experience. Benefits and housing available. FARM MACHINERY OPERATOR openings, Fax resume to RoLo Farms: 306-543-4861 Arrowkay Farms, Inc., Fillmore, SK. Grain/ or phone 306-543-5052 Oil seed farm, full-time workers to operate tractors, sprayers, air seeders and carts, combines, grain carts, semi tractors/hopper trailers, augers. $16 to $18/hr. Meals and housing provided. Scheduled days off. Valid A-1 driver’s license, farm equipment operation experience/mechanically inclined/computer competent/speak and write English. Reply to: 406-268-1028, 306-722-7644 or hbenson@jmgrain.com 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 PRODUCTION MANAGER A M BE RFIE L D FA RM S ( a d ryla n d croppin g fa rm ) is hirin g a P rod uc tion M a n a ger. Y ou ’ll m a n a g e the fa rm ’s prod u ction process, in clu d in g crop m on itorin g from pre-seed to post-ha rv est, fertiliza tion , seed selection , a n d foreca stin g crop prod u ction . Y ou ha v e a m in im u m 3 yea rs fa rm m a n a g em en tor eq u iv a len tex perien ce. Apply by em ailto hr@ ppghr.com or online atw w w .ppghr.com Stew artValley,SK . 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.
IM M EDIATE POSITIONS FOR
GRAIN FARM 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
FARM POSITION South central AB. Grain, cattle and light farm construction. Excellent learning opportunity for young entry level candidate, more experienced candidate also considered. Hourly wages. Some accommodations avail. Ph. 403-677-2261, LARGE SE SASK. grain farm hiring all posi403-934-7761 or fax 403-677-2262. tions, $18-$35/hour. Housing available. FULL-TIME FARM LABOURER HELP. duaneforrester@sasktel.net Torquay, SK. Applicants should have previous farm ex- or call 306-634-4758, 306-421-1110. perience and mechanical ability. Duties incl. operation of machinery, including FULL-TIME HELP WANTED for farming and tractors, truck driving and other farm cattle operation. Must be mechanically inequipment, as well as general farm laborer clined and good with cattle. Housing produties. $12-$18/hr. depending on experi- vided, salary negotiable. Alexis Creek area, e n c e . C o n t a c t W a d e F e l a n d a t BC. 250-392-2911, ask for Roberta. E-mail resumes: roberta.payne@caribooca.com 701-263-1300, Antler, North Dakota.
MODERN 4800 ACRE grain and beef farm, 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 acres, mostly Case/IH equipment. Exp. in working with and supervising other workers, additional skills include job task planning and organizing. Lead hand execution, problem solving and decision making. Functional, oral and written communication skills. Major duties include: develop 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 workers; supervise harvest operations and livestock breeding programs; perform general farm duties. Type of equipment: swather, combine, sprayer, air seeder, tractors 50 to 500 HP, trucks including semis and hay tools. $15 to $18/hr depending on experience (wage to be revisited in 3 months). 306-672-3636, Gull Lake, SK. email resumes to: bnrudolph@yourlink.ca 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.
GREENLEAF SEEDS LTD., Tisdale, SK. Grain farm and seed plant, now hiring fulltime permanent and seasonal Farm Equipment Operators. Operation, maintenance, upkeep of all farm machinery, trucking and general farm labour. Require valid driver’s license with 1A or ability to obtain. Wage range $16-$22/hr. plus benefits based on skills and experience. Email resume to kr.acres@sasktel.net or fax 306-873-2438 or call 306-873-4261.
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
LOWE RANCHES LOOKING for someone to aid in the care and maintenance of livestock. Responsible for feeding, cutting hay, calving, etc . $12.50/hr. Email: lowe.tyson@gmail.com Must have some training or experience, Nanton, AB.
T&M CUSTOM AG LTD. is now hiring Truck and Combine Operators for the 2014 harvest season. Willing to travel from Kansas to Sask., starting May 1 until Dec. 1. Must be able to enter USA and pass drug test, preference given to applicants with Class 1A and/or farm experience. Room and board supplied. For an experience of a lifetime please call 306-873-2861, Tisdale, SK., Fax: 306-873-2438 or email resume with reference to kr.acres@sasktel.net
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 FULL-TIME FARM HELP/ MECHANIC wanted for trucking business and grain LOOKING FOR HELP on 4000 acre grain farm. Wages based on experience. Must farm. Must have Class 1A license and be have ability to operate and maintain large able to work independently. Other assets equipment and work independently. Class include: Mechanical ability, experience op- 1A license preferred. Housing available. erating/servicing modern equipment and Fax/email resume with 3 references to: spraying. Top wages for top individual. 306-256-7054, flotnm@baudoux.ca or call Fort Qu’Appelle, SK. 306-596-5744. 306-256-7170, Cudworth, SK. LARGE GRAIN FARM requires additional LARGE MIXED FARM near Chauvin, AB. employees. Experience in operating 2 WD w/newer equipment, looking for full-time tractors, tandem trucks, air drills, high farm workers. Must have proof of valid clearance sprayers, JD combines, grain driver’s license. Housing is available. Email cart or general farm work an asset. Class resume: schopferfarms@gmail.com or call 1A/AZ license and mechanical experience 780-842-8330 for more info. are assets. Hourly wage $18-$27/hr. de- 3 FARM WORKERS required. Equipment pending on experience. Excellent accom- operating, maintenance, yard and building m o d at i o n s ava i l a b l e . S t a r t i n g d at e maintenance, cleaning, etc. The positions April/14. References required. Email us at: will be general farm worker(s) from May 1 quarkfarms@yahoo.com or fax resume to: to Oct. 31. Wages $18/hr. at Manning AB. 306-354-7758 or phone Dan or Quenton A valid drivers license is required and be a t : 3 0 6 - 3 5 4 - 7 6 7 2 , M o s s b a n k , S K . able to learn farm work. Send resumes to: www.quarkfarms.net Dechant Farms Ltd., Box 636, Manning, AB. AARTS ACRES, 2500 sow barn near Sols- T0H 2M0. Fax: 780-836-7701. girth, MB is seeking experienced Breeding FULL-TIME FARM HELP wanted for and Farrowing Technicians. The successful general labor on large, mixed farm. Housapplicant must possess necessary skills, an ing available. For more information call aptitude for the care and handling of ani- 780-745-2540, Paradise Valley, AB. mals, good communication skills and ability to work as part of a highly produc- RANCH HELP WANTED with cattle and mative team. Fax resume to: 204-842-3273. chinery experience. Calving, feeding, fencor call 204-842-3231 for application form. ing, and haying. 403-308-4200, Mossleigh, AB. or email gordmarsh@gmail.com KLATT HARVESTING has positions open for combine, truck and cart operators for WANTED: FARM LABOURERS able to the 2014 Harvest run. Call 406-788-8160 run farm equipment on cattle/grain farm. or website: klattfarms.synthasite.com. Fax 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 resumes to 403-867-2751, Foremost, AB. 306-469-7741, Big River, SK. or email: klattfarms@hotmail.com EXP. FARM EQUIPMENT Operator and GENERAL FARM WORKER for a mixed Farm Hand for grain farm, $28/hr. while farm operation in the Calgary, AB area. operating seeding equip. and $21/hr. for Seeding, haying and harvesting experience farm work. Beautiful 3 bdm home includnecessary, Class 3A license a definite as- ed. Class 1 licence will aide in securing set. Wages depend on experience. Please permanent employment. Only experienced email resume to: harmeson@platinum.ca operators! email: nofear@cciwireless.ca, call: 403-820-0323 or Fax: 403-787-2496. or fax: 403-279-6957 or ph 403-680-4318. 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., FEED LO T and skilled in operating farm machinery. Organic experience an asset. Email resume P ERS O N N EL to: mzizek@gmail.com Hudsons Hope, BC. REQ UIRED PERMANENT OR SEASONAL Ranch Hand Rid ers , Pro ces s o rs , position on SW Alberta Foothills Ranching Operation. Must have experience w/cattle, Equ ipm en t Crew , horses and some machinery. Housing supFeed Crew plied. Top wages. Burke Creek Ranch Ltd., Claresholm, AB., Ph. 403-625-2234, fax Opera tio n n ea r Acm e, AB. 403-625-3583, rick.burton@xplornet.ca W illin g to tra in a lthou g h a FULL-TIME GENERAL FARM worker needed Ba ck g rou n d in BeefCa ttle on large irrigated farm near Brooks, AB. is con s id ered a n a s s et. Duties include operation and maintenance of modern equipment, cattle feeding and Com p etitive W a g es & care, pollination. Mechanical abilities are Ben efits . an asset. Clean Class 5 license required, A d va n cem en t Class 1 preferred. We can train someone op p ortu n ities . with a good work ethic and a willingness to learn. Brand new home in Scandia, AB. S u b m itresu m e w ith w ork provided. Please fax or email resume to: referen ces to 403-362-7885 brian.slenders@gmail.com resu m es@ highw ay21grou p .com PART-TIME HELP FOR seeding through F ax 403 546- 3709 harvest, $20-$25/hour. Experience preferred. RV accommodations available. Call 306-969-4701 evenings, Minton, SK.
SANDS DRAG HOSE is looking for workers to work in the rural Sask area to operate farm tractors and pumping equipment. Meals and lodging supplied. Drivers licence a must. Fax, email, or mail resume Attention: Mervin Fremont. RR5, Site 28, Box 32, Prince Albert, SK. S6V 5R3, Fax: 306-763-4747, Phone 306-763-1943, Email: sandslms@sasktel.net 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. 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 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 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. EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY near Mossbank, SK. for reliable self-motivated person interested in large grain farm operation. Applicant should be experienced in mechanics, operating large farm machinery and able to take on farm tasks independently. Class 1A an asset. Great wages available. Phone Mike 306-354-7822 or email: nagelm44@hotmail.com
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. SEASONAL FARM HELP with: seeding, harvesting, yard and service work. No Sunday work, wages negotiable. Martensville, SK. Call Ed: 306-931-2826, or 306-290-4920. 3- TILE SETTERS NEEDED. Full-time year round work in Saskatoon and Dundurn, SK. $19.00 - $22.00 per hour depending on experience. Minimum 3 years experience setting stone, marble and other tiles in residential projects. Basic English level required. Knowledge of Mandarin is an asset. Must be able to provide clean drug and alcohol test results and police certificate. Apply with resume to: Fullview International Group Inc., 1249 8th Street E., Saskatoon, SK., S7H 0S5, or fax: 1-888-748-0845, or forward it by email to: info@fullviewgroup.ca HELP WANTED: CALGARY Stockyards. Fulltime salary position with accommodations Must have cattle and agriculture experience. Call Bryan Danard 403-934-1644. BUSY ROOFING COMPANY requires labourers for work in Edmonton, AB. and area. Free room and board. Hutterites welcome. Call Ron 780-220-5437, Jordan 780-934-2932.
OPERATOR WANTED for 2014 spray season 10 mos. plus employment opportunity. 2014 equipment. Call Stephen at Longview Applicators, 306-867-3696, Outlook, SK.
94 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
BOLEN LEWIS TROPHY Guiding Co. is looking for an experienced Hunting Guide for fall of 2014, starting mid August. We are looking for an experienced individual to guide backpack mountain goat hunts in the Coast Mountains SE of Terrace BC. Applicants will be responsible for hunter safety, navigation, trophy judging, trophy and meat care as well as food preparation. A valid Driver’s license and PAL are required. Wages are very competitive and will range from $225-$300 per day depending on experience. We welcome all applications irrespective of gender, age or ethnic group. Selections will be based on merit alone. Contact Spike, 250-833-2278, Box 863, Terrace, BC., V8G 4R1. 10 CONSTRUCTION LABOURERS needed. Full-Time, seasonal, May 1st to Dec. 15th 2014, various locations across Saskatchewan, $17.00 - 22.00/hour depending on experience. Some experience as a labourer in the construction industry is an asset. Must be physically fit and willing to travel and live out of town while working. Drug and Alcohol testing is mandatory upon hire and as requested. Apply to: Concrete Image Ltd, 1049 Winnipeg St, Regina, SK., S4R 1J3. Or to: 2924 Miners Ave. Bay I Saskatoon, SK, S7K 4Z7, fax 306-546-5435 or e-mail to: hr.concreteimage@live.ca MOWER/ UTILITY OPERATOR RM OF PITTVILLE #169. The Municipality invites applications from qualified individuals for the position of full time seasonal mower/ utility operator. Grader Operator experience would be an asset. Must be able to 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. Applications close at 4:000 PM May 6, 2014. We thank all applicants for their interest, however only those selected for an interview will be contacted. E-mail, mail or fax resumes with qualifications, references and salary expectations to: RM of Pittville #169, Box 150, Hazlet, SK S0N 1E0. Fax 306-678-2132, e-mail: rm169@sasktel.net 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.
GRATTON COUL EE AGRIPARTS L TD. Is a pro gre s s ive , e xpa n d in g a gric u ltu ra l s a lva ge pa rts c o m pa n y s pe c ia lizin g in la te m o d e l tra c to r a n d c o m b in e pa rts a n d lo c a te d a tIrm a , Alb e rta . W e a re looking for
M E CH ANICAL AS S E M BL E R S
8 CONSTRUCTION LABOURERS needed. Full-time, seasonal, starting April 15th, $17 - $22 per hour depending on experience. Work across Alberta and British Columbia. Some experience as a labourer in the construction industry is an asset. Must be physically fit and willing to travel and live out of town while working. Drug and Alcohol testing is a requirement. Apply with resume to: Dynamic Asphalt Services, Suite 369, B102, 5212 48th St. Red Deer, AB. T4N 7C3 or fax: 1-888-317-2680 or email: asphaltserviceshr@gmail.com
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. Join our team! dtiefenbach@smhi.ca or 306-569-1852 ext #170. LABOURER WANTED, $12-$16/hr. Exp. in forklift and powerjack handling. Sun Country Farms, 306-283-9225, Langham, SK. 3- ROOFERS REQUIRED. Full-time seasonal work in Saskatoon and Dundurn, SK. $17.00 - $22.00 per hour depending on experience. Minimum 3 years experience with installing, repairing and replacing residential pitched roofs. Must be able to work from April to November, on roofs up to 50 ‘ and able to carry repeatedly 50 pounds. Basic English level required. Knowledge of Mandarin is an asset. Must be able to provide clean drug and alcohol test results. Apply with resume to Fullview International Group Inc., 1249 8th Street East, Saskatoon, SK., S7H 0S5, by fax: 1-888-748-0845, or forward it by email to: info@fullviewgroup.ca
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
W ANTED IM M EDIATELY 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.
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
3- CONCRETE FINISHERS NEEDED. Fulltime seasonal work in Saskatoon and Dundurn, SK. $18.00 - $24.00 per hour depending on experience. Minimum 3 years experience with forming and placing concrete for sidewalks, curbs, driveways, retaining walls, basements, walkouts, patios and more. Basic English level required. Knowledge of Mandarin is an asset. Must be able to provide clean drug and alcohol test results and police certificate. Apply with resume to: Fullview International Group Inc., 1249 8th Street East, Saskatoon, SK., S7H 0S5, by fax 888-748-0845, or email: info@fullviewgroup.ca
(4 va ca n cies ) Perm a n en t, fu ll tim e p o s itio n s -44 hrs p er w eek. S a la ry $19.25 to $20.00/hr. Va lid d rivers licen s e. Previo u s exp erien ce a n a s s et. To a pply fo r a po s itio n w ith u s , plea s e e-m a il res u m e to : m a rc@ gcpa rts .co m o r s en d fa x to 78 0-754-2333 Atten tio n : Alvin W a n n echk o
We are currently looking to fill the following positions:
QC Level 1 and 2 Heavy Duty Mechanic Lead Hand Picker/Winch Truck Operator Journeyman Welder (Local) Site Energy Services Ltd. offers competitive salary packages, benefits, and an incredible work environment with career advancement opportunities. If you are interested in applying for this opportunity, please visit our website www.siteenergy.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
Cargill Grains and Oilseeds Division is holding a Career Fair at the Best Western Plus Camrose Resort Casino, Camrose
Thursday, April 24, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Working at Cargill is an opportunity to thrive – a place to develop your career to the fullest while engaging in meaningful work that makes a positive impact around the globe.
OIL & GAS OPPORTUNITY
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
Career Fair
FEED YARD M AN AG ER Prog res s ive, fa m ily orien ta ted feed lotreq u ires a Ya rd M a n a ger. This p os ition is res p on s ible fora ll a s p ects ofa m od ern feed ya rd op era tion in clu d in g bu tn otres tricted to the p la n n in g / overs eein g ofd a y to d a y a ctivities , org a n izin g & execu tin g s p ecia l p rojects , tra in in g a n d m a n a g in g tea m s ofp eop le. M u s tha ve excellen t com m u n ica tion s k ills , p roblem s olvin g a bilities , a ble to w ork w ell w ith others & lea d w ith p os itive m otiva tion . Kn ow led g e ofbeefca ttle & n u trition a n a s s et. Com p rehen s ive ben efit p a ck a g e. P lease su b m itresu m e w ith w ork referen ces an d d river’s ab stractto resu m es@ highw ay21grou p .com orfax 403- 546- 3709
PURCHASING OFFICER NEEDED. Full-time year round work in Saskatoon, Dundurn, SK. and travel to China. $23.00 - $26.00 per hour depending on experience. Minimum 3 years experience with a combination of preparing tenders, reviewing quotations, negotiating purchasing contracts and purchasing local and international materials. Relevant post-secondary education will be an asset. Intermediate English communication and writing is required. Knowledge of Mandarin is also required. Apply w/resume to: Fullview International Group Inc, 1249 8th Street E., Saskatoon, SK, S7H 0S5, by fax to: 1-888-748-0845, or by email to: info@fullviewgroup.ca
Come and discover the available positions in the new Canola Crush Plant in Camrose, as well as other job opportunitites in existing Cargill facilities. Job opportunities range from process operators, elevator operators, loadout operators, supervisors, maintenance/millwrights, power engineers, canola buyers, sales and much more. Come and meet the new facility leadership and see what Cargill has to offer!
www.cargill.com/careers
Friday, April 25, 2 p.m. to 8 p.m.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
4 CARPENTERS NEEDED. Full-time year round, $18-23 per hour depending on experience. Minimum 4 years direct experience with constructing, fitting, repairing and installing structures made of wood per drawings. Must be able to provide clean drug and alcohol test results and police certificate. Apply with resume to: Fullview International Group Inc., 1249 8th St. East, Saskatoon, SK., S7H 0S5 by fax 1-888-748-0845 or info@fullviewgroup.ca
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
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
CLASSIFIED ADS 95
LIPSETT CARTAGE LTD. is now looking to hire owner operators. This well established Canadian flatdeck company strives 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. 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 WANTED: DRIVERS/OWNER Operators for grain and fertilizer hauling, based in Kenaston, SK. Phone Leon at TLC Trucking 306-252-2004 or 306-567-8377.
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 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. 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. 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 CLASS 1A DRIVER, hauling grain and fertilizer in SK. and AB. Requirements: Minimum 21 years of age with two years driving experience. Contact 1-888-304-4888 or email: dee.guytrucking@sasktel.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.
C a na da C orp. S a ska toon is looking for
C L AS S 1 A DRI VER Ba sed ou tof Sa ska toon a nd hom e ev ery night. M ov ing produ cta rou nd the ya rd w ith occa siona l fa rm ya rd pick-u ps. Loa ding a nd u nloa ding of incom ing a nd ou tgoing gra ins; opera ting conv eyors, tra ctors, a u gers, etc. G enera l m a intena nce of equ ipm ent(tra ctors, a u gers, conv eyors, etc.). Phone: 306-933-4644 or fa x resu m e: 306-933-4647
ASSISTANT FARM MANAGER/ Right Hand Man Position- young, motivated person looking for new opportunity in grain farming out West (MB, SK, AB, BC). International farming exp., AG Bachelor degree, honest, hard working, straight up person. Looking for right farm to grow with/start joint venture. Please sent details to: go4more_farm@gmx.com
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.
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
MANITOBA PORK COUNCIL | PED CONTROL
PORK COUNCIL | HOUSING
Farmer offers advice on keeping barns free of disease
Canada’s open housing push sparks worry in U.S.
Porcine epidemic diarrhea | Producer limits visitors to farm, requires truckers to stay in vehicle
Hog code of practice | Activists will force U.S. to follow suit, says academic
BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
Focusing on the little things can help producers keep free of porcine epidemic diarrhea, even if they are surrounded by the virus. Iowa hog farmer Bill Tentinger, who operates in the most heavily hogpopulated area of the United States, is 800 metres away from an infected farm but has been disease-free since the outbreak began. “It’s those little things,” Tentinger told the Manitoba Pork Council’s annual meeting April 9. Tentinger said he tightly controls access to his farm, restricts movement within the farm and always thinks about tiny factors of risk that could lead to major problems such as those being felt across the U.S. hog herd and now in Canada. For instance, the approved disinfectant available to U.S. farmers is 99 percent effective, which means there is always a one percent chance of PED getting through, regardless of cleaning. “I’ve always got those things on my mind and I’m always just trying to take care of the little things,” he said. PED is sending shivers through Manitoba’s massive hog industry.
It has spread for a year through the U.S. herd just south of the border, to where millions of Manitoba weanlings are regularly shipped. Two facilities have now been confirmed as infected. The first was identified in February on a farm and the second, announced April 10, is a “high-traffic site” in western Manitoba, according to Manitoba’s chief veterinary officer. The office said the new infection likely occurred from “environmental contamination present on that site and not on their farm of origin.” Tentinger, who is surrounded by infected farms and has lost his two Midwestern weanling suppliers because they became infected, said he attributes his success to tight biosecurity, including: • not allowing truckers to get out of feed trucks • locking all doors on the farm except for the main access door to the barns “I’ve eliminated as much traffic as I can,” said Tentinger. “I’ve discouraged neighbours, friends, everybody from coming over and even visiting my shop.” Tentinger urged Manitoba hog farmers to notice tiny elements of disease risk, as he did when he saw
BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG PHOTO
Iowa hog producer Bill Tentinger, centre, detailed what biosecurity steps he has taken to keep his farm free of PED. | ED WHITE PHOTO his worker’s wallet protruding from a pocket and at risk of falling to the floor. “Where did he lay that wallet? Maybe he laid that wallet on the counter at the local (convenience store) or something,” said Tentinger. “It’s (often-ignored risk factors like) your cellphone. It’s all of that.” Tentinger said he doesn’t have maximum biosecurity. The farm doesn’t shower in and shower out and he buys feed from a commercial mill rather than making it himself. However, he controls everything he can, which seems to be working. Being a small producer with only one worker helps control possible disease contact points, he said. “It gives me a little advantage.” Tentinger said PED isn’t the most financially costly disease. A friend of his who calculated the loss from his own outbreak said a previous PRRS outbreak cost 80 percent more than the PED outbreak. However, the human toll of PED is
much worse. Outbreaks force farms to euthanize large numbers of sick piglets, which can devastate workers and farmers. “The herds that broke, the biggest thing that I hear from them is how hard it is on the staff,” said Tentinger. Two farms near him were infected around Christmas time, and even on Christmas morning piglets had to be euthanized. “That’s probably the worst thing that those workers will ever experience is having to do that,” said Tentinger. “It is just so disheartening to the help.… Think about the people who have to deal with this ugly process.”
JANEEN SALAK-JOHNSON
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Canada’s hog industry has made it harder for U.S. producers who still hope to maintain the right to use gestation crates, says an American hog health scientist and sow stall supporter. “This has become a real issue because the activists will use that stuff against them,” Janeen Salak-Johnson said about Canada’s new hog code of practice. “And they will. They will come and say, ‘well, the Canadians did it so why can’t you guys do it?’ ”
HOG SCIENTIST
Salak-Johnson, a stress physiology specialist with the University of Illinois’ animal sciences department, said large sections of the U.S. hog industry still believe gestation crates are the most humane system and feel the move into open housing is premature and unjustified. She said she shares many of those concerns because she does not believe open housing systems are well-enough researched to guarantee better humane standards. Some could actually damage sow wellbeing. Salak-Johnson offered a vociferous defence of gestation stalls during a speech at the Manitoba Pork Council annual meeting and denounced the efforts of activists to demonize hog farmers and the pork industry. She also challenged the notion that “the train has left the station” on the gestation stall issue and questioned whether the U.S. restaurant and grocery chains that have committed to offering crate-free pork will actually be able to do so. However, she is also researching open housing systems and how they affect overall sow health and wellbeing so that producers can make informed choices when considering whether to switch. It’s why she is worried about how Canada’s embrace of phasing out gestation crates will affect the U.S. industry. Activists will try to divide and conquer by pointing to Canada as going in a supposedly better direction and therefore putting even more pressure on U.S. farmers to adopt the same approach. Having two different situations right now does not take pressure off the industry, she said. “We’ve got to become unified.”
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
97
TRADE | BARRIERS
U.S. opposes EU place-based food labels Geographical indications | The issue is proving to be a significant hurdle in U.S.-EU trade negotiations BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Canada’s successful free trade agreement with the European Union is giving both the EU and the United States optimism that their bilateral talks could succeed. However, a bunch of cheese names could derail it all. “GIs are not fantasy names,” Giulio Menato, agriculture counsellor at the EU’s embassy in Washington, told the North American Agricultural Journalists annual meeting April 6. Menato was referring to geographical indications, which are place-specific names for products, such as roquefort cheese or many French wines. Hundreds of European food products use place-based names that require them to be produced only in specific areas, and the EU is insisting that they be protected in any free trade deal with the U.S. The EU says those names are an honest description of a real product, and products from other regions should not be allowed to use the same name. However, American agricultural groups are pushing back against the EU demands, claiming European food and drink makers are using GIs as non-tariff trade barriers. Shawna Morris, the U.S. National Milk Producers Association’s vicepresident for trade, said the U.S. industr y has no problem w ith legitimate name protection but believes European industries are exploiting the idea to harass and hobble competitors of legitimately similar products. “We’re concerned about there being a creep from the GI applications over time as they seek to include a broader range of terms in the scope of protection that they have in place,” said Morris. As well, U.S. dairy farmers and dairy product producers suspect EU producers could use GIs to pressure other countries to not accept U.S. products that have the same names as European ones. For instance, Morris said there are reports that one foreign country has said it does not want to accept provolone cheese from the U.S. because it would breach the terms of its trade deal with the EU. Menato said the EU is not trying to protect common names such as cheddar, gouda, prosciutto or provolone. “These are all terms that are generic,” he said. However, terms like parmesan, gorgonzola and feta are more placespecific. The GI issue isn’t the only sticking point in the EU-U.S. free trade talks, but it is presently the most hotly debated in the U.S. Twenty-five senators recently demanded that the U.S. administration not agree to any deal that challenges U.S. producers’ rights to name identical products the same as those in Europe. There is already protection in U.S. trademark law for geographically
based names. Canada has agreed to expand GI protection in its proposed deal with the EU but received domestic market protection for Canadian-made products with names such as parmesan cheese and Black Forest ham. The details of the Canada-EU deal have not been fully negotiated yet, so firm lists of common and GI-restricted names are not yet known. Dave Salmonsen of the American Farm Bureau Federation’s Washington office said U.S. farmers hope
a U.S.-EU deal can succeed because many trade impediments have bedeviled cross-Atlantic trade for years, including scraps over approval of genetically modified crops, bans on hormone-affected beef and the use of ractopamine in pigs. The clashes have occurred even though European scientific and food s a f e t y a u t h o r i t i e s h av e o f t e n approved American methods and products. “We do OK with the science,” said Salmonsen, but inter-country EU
politics prevents many resolutions from being reached. Some disputes go back to the 1990s. “There are a lot of old issues here that this is an opportunity to address,” said Salmonsen. Menato said in an interview that Canada’s success in reaching a free trade agreement in principle boded well for the EU-U.S. situation, as contentious as it now seems. “It clearly set a precedent for further negotiations saying that there is a solution for everything,” said Menato.
“It might take a while, there were a number of complications that perhaps have postponed the conclusion of the agreement (with Canada), but we were able to find solutions for all the sectors.” Salmonsen said in an interview that the U.S. looks at the Canada-E.U. deal as evidence that the EU might be serious about making a deal and not just talking. “We were pleased to see that the EU was willing to negotiate and willing to come to closure on some of these issues,” said Salmonsen.
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98
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FILE PHOTO
PRODUCTION PR ODUCTI 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
AGRONOMY | CROP SELECTION
Producers look to wring out a profit in 2014 Cost of production factors are unpredictable, but a recent spread sheet tries to pin them down BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU
There have been significant shufflings and a few surprises since Manitoba Agriculture brought out the first draft of its 2014 cost of production spread sheet in January. The final version, which was just released, is more accurate than the first draft but does not paint a pretty picture for producers, says spread sheet engineer Roy Arnott. The spread sheet previously used crop yield numbers based on insured values to rank the top 19 crops commonly grown in Manitoba. Those yield numbers are now based on actual 10 year average yields. The yield numbers are stable, but input costs and commodity prices can be jumpy. The spread sheet is available on Manitoba Agriculture’s website. “We’ve designed the software so a farmer can change the numbers we’ve provided and plug in the numbers he feels are correct for his farm,” said Arnott. Soybeans: The most significant change since January was the big jump that soybeans made from the bottom to the top of the ranking. The obvious reasons are that new varieties better suited to Manitoba and better agronomic practices have increased the average yield. “A big factor right now is that soybeans are an excellent risk management crop,” said Arnott. “When we consider the cost of fertilizer, soybeans look a lot better because they don’t need much (fertilizer.) In times of rising input costs and lower commodity pricing, low
input crops rise to the top of the priority list. Low input crops like soybeans and winter wheat help manage your risk. With less investment, you stand a better chance of making a profit. It’s that simple.” Corn: Corn has also benefited from improved varieties and better agronomic practices, but it remains in 19th position at the bottom of the heap in eastern Manitoba and 15th in the west. “High input costs always equal high risk and lower odds for profit,” Arnott said. “Corn requires a load of fertilizer, plus you have to factor in specialized planting and harvest equipment. In most years, you’ll need a dryer and that means buying expensive propane.” Corn is factored in at 96 bushels per acre now that the cost of production software uses actual averages. However, with prices hovering around $4 a bu., it gives growers a $400 per acre gross revenue. “But your input costs all in are about $475 per acre,” he said. “You’ve got that expensive seed, high fixed costs and drying costs in excess of 50 cents a bu. That’s why corn is at the bottom of the heap.” Winter wheat: Arnott said winter wheat has been at the top of the list for the past decade because it always turns a profit with a minimum of risk. “Winter wheat hangs in there at or near the top, and always does it without a lot of fanfare. The profitability has been so solid. It’s a lot tougher, a lot more robust, than we previously thought,” he said. “I think farmers need to take a closer look at putting it (winter wheat) into their rotations. It spreads out their workload in the spring and
2014 COST OF PRODUCTION – MANITOBA AGRICULTURE FOOD AND RURAL INITIATIVES Roundup soybeans
winter wheat
sunflower seeds
fall rye
Nexera canola
field peas
1
2
3
4
5
6
Operating costs Fixed costs Labour Gross costs
191.00 105.00 30.00 326.00
191.00 108.00 30.00 329.00
262.00 122.00 36.00 420.00
143.00 108.00 30.00 281.00
248.00 105.00 30.00 383.00
155.00 106.00 36.00 297.00
Crop price Yield Gross revenue
10.50 33 346.50
5.75 58 333.50
0.29 1,454 421.66
5.84 44 256.96
11.00 32 352.00
6.67 40 266.80
Operating margin Gross margin
155.50 20.50
142.50 4.50
159.66 1.66
113.96 -24.04
104.00 -31.00
111.80 -30.20
Break even yield on operating Break even price on operating
18.19 5.79
33.22 3.29
903.45 0.18
24.49 3.25
22.55 7.75
23.24 3.88
Break even yield on all costs Break even price on all costs
31.05 9.88
57.22 5.67
1,448.28 0.29
48.12 6.39
34.82 11.97
44.53 7.43
Profitability Ranking
Operating costs include all crop inputs, machinery operating, crop insurance, land taxes, drying and interest on operating costs. Fixed costs include land, machinery capital and depreciation and storage. Prices are estimated farmgate averages for 2014/15 crop year.
Want to see more? Visit us at www.producer.com/section/ crops for a customizable spreadsheet.
New soybean varieties with increased yields give soybeans the top spot in profitability rankings. | FILE PHOTO at harvest. Plus it lets a guy farm more acres with the same equipment. And from an agronomic point of view, Manitoba farmers need more crops in their rotations. Winter wheat is one way to extend those rotations.” Wheat and canola: Arnott said wheat and canola are the bread and butter crops in Manitoba, which is not necessarily a good thing. “These two are finally under significant pressure from some of the other crops,” he said. “Canola, especially, is feeling the
pressure. It’s an expensive crop to grow and that means it’s a riskier crop to grow. The canola budget says that with average yields and average pricing, it’s going to be a challenge this year to cover fixed costs, operating costs, labour and your living expenses.” Arnott said it should send the message that other crops deserve a look. The profitability of oats is on par with wheat, or even higher in some cases, and there were good contracts last fall for rye. More producers are putting flax into their rotations, and
soybeans are no longer the mystery crop it was a few years ago. “Ma nito ba is o n th e v er ge o f becoming a six-crop province, and that’s a good thing,” Arnott said. “Disease issues (are) showing up in our major crops. We all know it’s because of tight rotations.” He said a more diversified rotation gives grow ers a longer spread between canola crop years and wheat crop years. A better crop mix not only breaks disease cycles but also solves many insect and herbicide resistance problems. “If producers could go from one oilseed crop to three oilseed crops, and from a two year rotation to a four year or six year rotation, the risk reduction would be tremendous,” he said. “The cost of production would also drop if we addressed some of our problems with rotations. If you eliminated one pesticide application in a canola crop, you’d save $20 to $30 per acre. With a 30 bu. yield, that’s like picking up a buck a bushel on your price. A buck a bushel on canola can make the difference between profit and no profit on a lot of farms this year.”
PRODUCTION
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
AGRONOMY | WINTER WHEAT
Winter wheat trumps all other crops again Grower enthusiasm for new crops hasn’t quenched winter wheat support “Winter wheat was the most profitable crop in southwestern Manitoba by a wide margin in 2013 and also 2012. According to Manitoba Agriculture, winter wheat had a net return of $46.45 per acre, based on an estimated average yield of 57.5 bushels at a price of $6.20 per bu.” Winter wheat had an operating expense ratio of 49 percent, which was by far the lowest of all crops. In contrast, the operating expense ratio was 83.5 percent for soybeans and 127.9 percent for corn. The trend was much the same in Saskatchewan, where winter wheat was the most profitable crop in the black soil zone, according to data released by the provincial agriculture ministry. Winter wheat was the No. 1 money maker when the ministry released
BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU
BRANDON — The expansion of corn and soybeans acres across the Prairies has received a lot of media attention in recent years, but the hype but not might be wellfounded. “There’s been a lot of interest in those two crops here in western Manitoba and into Saskatchewan, but you have to look at the profitability picture,” said Ken Gross, an agronomist with Ducks Unlimited in Brandon. “Looking at the data, it shows soybeans ranking 14th in terms of profitability last year. Corn was ranked 19th in profitability. Corn is dead last of all the main crops grown in this corner of the province,” he said.
the first draft of its 2014 Crop Planning Guide, but canola bumped it to No. 2 when the final version was published in mid-February. All cost factors remained the same, but the projected market price dropped to $4.39 from $5.50 per bu. Gross said growers’ enthusiasm for corn should be tempered by a cold water splash of reality. He urges farmers to do an honest budget that includes all fixed costs and operating costs before making the commitment. “If profitability is your main criteria in deciding what to grow, you can’t ignore winter wheat. It’s too late for this year of course, but it is the right time now to start planning your winter wheat crop for August seeding.” For more information, contact Gross at 701-729-3507.
One of the reasons for winter wheat’s top spot on the profitability pile is the fact that by this week, farmers will have wheat plants that are ready to take off, like this plant. | KEN GROSS PHOTO
oats
flax
sunflower oil
Invigor canola
canaryseed
spring & durum wheat
malting barley
hemp oilseed
corn
lentils
feed Barley
buckwheat
navy beans
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
167.00 112.00 30.00 309.00
161.00 103.00 36.00 300.00
229.00 122.00 36.00 387.00
253.00 105.00 30.00 388.00
162.00 104.00 30.00 296.00
193.00 106.00 30.00 329.00
180.00 109.00 30.00 319.00
256.00 103.00 30.00 389.00
306.00 125.00 45.00 476.00
155.00 103.00 30.00 288.00
180.00 109.00 30.00 319.00
150.00 103.00 30.00 283.00
285.00 115.00 30.00 430.00
3.00 90 270.00
11.75 22 258.50
0.23 1,485 341.55
10.00 34 340.00
0.20 1,193 238.60
6.15 44 270.60
3.67 64 234.88
0.64 472 302.08
4.00 94 376.00
0.20 1,010 202.00
3.37 64 215.68
12.52 14 175.28
0.33 765 252.45
103.00 -39.00
97.50 -41.50
112.55 -45.45
87.00 -48.00
76.60 -57.40
77.60 -58.40
54.88 -84.12
46.08 -86.92
70.00 -100.00
47.00 -86.00
35.68 -103.32
25.28 -107.72
-32.55 -177.55
55.67 1.86
13.70 7.32
995.65 0.15
25.30 7.44
810.00 0.14
31.38 4.39
49.05 2.81
400.00 0.54
76.50 3.26
775.00 0.15
53.41 2.81
11.98 10.71
863.64 0.37
103.00 3.43
25.53 13.64
1,682.61 0.26
38.80 11.41
1,480.00 0.25
53.50 7.48
86.92 4.98
607.81 0.82
119.00 5.06
1,440.00 0.29
94.66 4.98
22.60 20.21
1,303.03 0.56
For more information, contact Roy Arnott at roy.arnott@gov.mb.ca or visit www.gov.mb.ca/agriculture and click on Business and Economics. | WP GRAPHIC
Spraying herbicide on Genuity® Roundupp Ready® canola,, above recommended rates or outside thee application window,
can cost you 3 bushels per acre or more in yield.
ALWAYS FOLLOW GRAIN MARKETING AND ALL OTHER STEWARDSHIP AND PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Details of these requirements can be found in the Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers printed in this publication. Monsanto and Vine Design® is a registered trademark of Monsanto Technology LLC, Monsanto Canada Inc. licensee. ©2013 Monsanto Canada Inc.
100
PRODUCTION
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
CLIMATE CHANGE | HOW AGRICULTURE CAN COPE
Organic farming excellent way to mitigate climate change ORGANIC MATTERS
BRENDA FRICK
T
he Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has released an update on the impacts of climate change. The storm is upon us. We can no longer speculate that maybe weather will get weird. Weird is here. Powerful weather events have increased. Polar ice is in decline. Wildfires are increasing. Global average temperature is rising. What does this have to do with agriculture? Much of the talk about reducing the effects of climate change focuses on energy use. In agriculture, the single largest energy use is in the production of fertilizer, and the vast majority of that goes to produce nitrogen fertilizer. Is there another way? Of course. Nitrogen is abundant in the air and can be captured biologically using legume green manures. Organic agriculture, which depends on green manure nitrogen, uses 50 percent less energy than agriculture based on chemical fertilizers. It also produces less because of those green manure years, but it remains more energy efficient. The nitrogen rich waste produced by animal agriculture becomes a pollution liability when livestock are mass-produced but can be part of the solution at lower densities. Small, mixed farms seem to be a
Green manure crops like clover can help conserve energy by substituting for synthetic fertilizers commonly used in traditional production methods. | USDA/FLICKR.COM PHOTO model of sustainability. Pesticide production is another significant use of energy. Again, there is another way. Organic producers have a diverse tool kit of techniques to prevent, avoid and manage weeds, insects and diseases without resorting to these chemicals.
Neil Harker at Agriculture Canada in Lacombe, Alta., has done excellent work on stacking cultural techniques, such as increasing seeding rate and growing crops in diverse rotations, as well as mechanical weed management techniques. He has found that these multiple techniques can successfully reduce weed
Blue Bronna Painting Ltd. 403 443 5718
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Over 30 years in Western Canada: • Agricultural Buildings • Commercial & Industrial Painting • Sandblasting (mobile units) • Grain Elevator Restoration • Roof and Siding Installation • Historical Site Restoration • Anhydrous Ammonia Tanks • Fertilizer Bin Coatings • Pressure Washing • Concrete Work and Construction
Call: Glenn Brown 403-443-5718 “The company with the reach.”
pressures to a minimum. Disease and insect pressures are greatest when crop diversity is low. Sound rotations can significantly reduce insect and disease levels and provide more stability in uncertain markets. Does this mean that organics is the answer to reducing agriculture’s ecological footprint? It certainly has promise with biologically based fertility, strong and diverse weed and pest management techniques and an insistence on rotations. Realistically, however, I’d have to say that we aren’t there yet. More emphasis is needed on reduced tillage and livestock incorporation. Organic farmers do not substitute herbicides for tillage. Tillage remains an important part of weed control, seed bed preparation and green manure incorporation. There is ample evidence that tillage can damage soil structure, but Diane Knight of the University of Saskatchewan has found that soil on organic farms is more resistant to these negative effects. Perhaps this is related to the greater dependence on green manures to feed soil biology and to the higher levels of polysaccharides that soil microbes exude, which help to aggregate soil particles. Still, reducing tillage in organic systems is important. A number of researchers, such as Steve Shirtliffe at the U of S, hope to build on the Rodale No-till Organics System developed in Pennsylvania. Rodale’s system uses crimper-rollers to establish weed suppressing mulch, into which the crop is seeded. The system relies on a longer season than we have, but Shirtliffe is finding ways to use the crimper-roller to reduce the amount of tillage in green manure termination. Martin Entz of the University of Manitoba has found that terminating green manures with livestock
rather than tillage can be effective and provide income as well as nitrogen benefits. Manure can be a valuable source of fertility, and grazing crop land offers the benefit of capturing the nitrogenrich urine as well as the solids, which allows livestock to “add value” to weeds, chaff and insects. A variety of livestock can provide a variety of specific functions. The social-lifestyle aspect is perhaps the biggest source of resistance to incorporating livestock into grain farms. Animals require daily care and don’t fit in well with busy schedules and holidays. It’s harder to find a livestock sitter than a pet sitter. However, if we want more viable farms, perhaps this is another item we need to consider. How do we establish the needed supports to make livestock management viable as a small-scale enterprise? The IPCC has amply documented the fact that climate change is upon us. How can we be part of the solution rather than part of the problem? Organic agriculture offers suggestions: biological nitrogen fixation, use of rotations, stacking cultural and mechanical weed management techniques and incorporating livestock. This is a start. However, to be truly sustainable, we also need more research on organic agronomy so that organic yields can continue to improve and organic management options can continue to increase and be fine-tuned. Pe rha p s w e a l s o n e e d s o c i a l research to support desirable lifestyle options for today’s livestock producers so more people will embrace the small-scale mixed farming model. Brenda Frick, Ph.D., P.Ag. is an extension agrologist and researcher in organic agriculture. She welcomes your comments at 306-260-0663 or email organic@usask.ca.
PRODUCTION
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
101
INPUT MANAGEMENT | PROTECTING YIELDS
Pest and disease control products can help protect yields PRECISELY AGRONOMY
YIELD’S FACTORS Some farm practices create yield, others protect what has been created. Selection of seed and plant nutrition are choices. In a rain-fed situation, water and sunlight build yield, but can’t be controlled very well. Controlling pests, protecting plants and the harvested crop are the other side of the yield coin.
THOM WEIR
Yield building factors:
Yield protecting factors:
L
» Plant nutrition » Water & water management » Sunlight » Hybrid / variety selection
» Grain storage » Harvest management » Disease control » Insect control » Weed control » Crop establishment
ast column we discussed inputs that build yield: varieties, cultivars and nutrients. This column deals with inputs that protect yield. A later herbicide application may result in optimum weed control, but earlier applications will achieve maximum yields. Previous research has found that canola in which herbicides were applied three weeks after crop emergence yielded more than 25 percent less than plots with early herbicide application. Spraying early will almost always be better than delaying applications. Research has also shown that a properly timed, reduced rate of herbicide on a vigorous cultivar or hybrid that is seeded at a higher plant population may be as successful as a full rate of herbicide applied to a less vigorous, lower populated crop. Farmers should also consider the balance between controlling a weed and the economic control of a weed. Many acres are treated with a wild oat herbicide in which a positive economic return is not achieved. Research that assumed $14 per acre for a wild oat herbicide and $7 per bu. prices on a 50 bu. wheat crop found that it takes a wild oat population of four wild oats per sq. metre to break even and six wild oats per sq. metre to give a $2 return for $1 invested. I have walked fields in which twothirds of it were below the economic threshold. However, the difficulty is to spray the areas where the populations are high. Maximum return may be achieved by using high target seeding rates, seeding into conditions that will result in rapid emergence and spraying early to remove weeds. This should be accompanied by a good pre-seeding weed control package. A reduced herbicide rate may still be effective in controlling weeds if the crop gets a good start and the leaf stages are beyond the weeds. Controlling diseases with fungicides has increased exponentially over the last decade. This increase has resulted in new products as well as new ways to use
Source: Thom Weir | WP GRAPHIC
them, including some that may not produce economic returns. Many growers have told me that they mix a reduced rate of fungicide with their herbicides and apply them at the herbicide stage (three to five leaf stage). An extensive review of research on using a half rate of fungicides at herbicide staging has found that the practice rarely shows a yield increase, let alone an economic return. The exception is when a cereal crop is grown on its own stubble. The use of foliar fungicides should be restricted to two situations: • when cereal leaf disease symptoms are observed in the crop (cereal leaf diseases) • when conditions are present that indicates a disease such as fusarium head blight Scouting is the only effective way to find cereal leaf disease symptoms in the field. Before scouting, it is important to know what symptoms to look for and the stage at which the symptoms must be scouted. The threshold of disease presence must also be decided. Fungicide should be applied only if scouting discovers the presence of a disease at levels at or above thresholds set by industry research. Don’t spray just because your neighbour is spraying. However, it’s not as simple with diseases such as fusarium in cereals or sclerotinia stem rot in canola or beans. There are no symptoms with these diseases until it is too late, which means we must rely on disease forecasts based on weather to predict their presence. We must also rely on personal experience. A fungicide application is warranted if weather models are high for these diseases, if neighbours have had problems with these diseases and if the crop is in the proper stage. Scouting is also important when
Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers Monsanto Company is a member of Excellence Through Stewardship® (ETS). Monsanto products are commercialized in accordance with ETS Product Launch Stewardship Guidance, and in compliance with Monsanto’s Policy for Commercialization of Biotechnology-Derived Plant Products in Commodity Crops. This product has been approved for import into key export markets with functioning regulatory systems. Any crop or material produced from this product can only be exported to, or used, processed or sold in countries where all necessary regulatory approvals have been granted. It is a violation of national and international law to move material containing biotech traits across boundaries into nations where import is not permitted. Growers should talk to their grain handler or product purchaser to confirm their buying position for this product. Excellence Through Stewardship® is a registered trademark of Excellence Through Stewardship. ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Roundup Ready® crops contain genes that confer tolerance to glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup® brand agricultural herbicides. Roundup® brand agricultural herbicides will kill crops that are not tolerant to glyphosate. Genuity and Design®, Genuity®, Monsanto and Vine Design®, Roundup Ready® and Roundup® are trademarks of Monsanto Technology LLC, Monsanto Canada, Inc. licensee.
deciding when to apply insecticides: • know what the insect or its damage looks like • scout at the proper stage for the disease • consult economic thresholds When considering seed treatments, remember that they usually contain a fungicide to control soil or seed borne diseases. Most products are wide spectrum and control the major diseases. However, consult the label to ensure that the treatment controls the targeted disease. Seed treatments can also control insects. Insecticides are contained in all canola seed treatments but are an “add in” for cereals and pulses. These products are expensive so eco-
Timing of a fungicide application is one example of how input management can protect yield. | FILE PHOTO nomic thresholds must be considered. Some products promote their growth enhancement properties. I have seen the visual response from these products, but farmers should
test the economic benefit on their own farms by using replicated strips. Thom Weir is an agronomist with Farmer’s Edge. He can be reached by emailing thom. weir@farmersedge.ca.
2014
*5$,1
&+$//(1*( HOCKEY
;6<95(4,5;
Division 4 Champs All Commodity Trading defeated Canterra Seeds 3-2
Sxet eyeyaoru! ne
Division 5 Champs MacDon 3 defeated their co-workers MacDon 1 by a score of 5-1
Division 1 Champs - Paterson Grain/ KPIC Energy Services repeat their Division win defeating Toromont Ag 5-0
The 16th Annual Agricultural Grain Challenge Industry Grain Challenge Charity Hockey Tournament grew to new heights this year. Winners were re-crowned in the Competitive Division 1 with Paterson Grain/KPIC Energy Services holding on to their repeat performance and re-crowned in the Recreation Division 3 was John Deere Enns Bros. New winners in Rec Division 2 were BDO and in Casual Division 4 were All Commodity Trading and in the Casual Division 5 were new comers MacDon 3 team. Congratulations to all the 41 Company sponsored teams this year for their dedication and team support. This was a record breaking year for net proceeds to the Children’s Wish Foundation (CWF), Manitoba/Nunavut and Saskatchewan chapters. This year net proceeds reaches $26,504.75, which puts our net proceeds over the past 7 years at just over $110,000 to these chapters of the Children’s Wish Foundation.
past fall, of a trip to Disney World. Thomas then dropped the puck at center ice for the Official puck drop to kick off this year’s event
The Grain Challenge Committee would like to Thank the following people or companies for their contributions this year: Ryan from PMA Canada, Darren from Labatt, Jacque Levesque and his staffers at the Dakota Arena and Ed Constant from the Southdale Community Arena and Jeff Taweel from Tim Horton’s and Gord Sando from Pembina Source 4 Sports and Rob Kirton from Carberry International and Clinton Whiteway from Kitichi Island Outposts and Rick & Cindy Gaudet from Fare Connect Manitoba Travel and a special Thank You to all the 85 plus volunteers for their work especially Mr. Bob Valcourt who keeps all our players refreshed after the games.
The 17th Annual Grain Challenge is already in the planning stages and if you’re Ag related This year’s Grain Challenge Ambassador company would like to be ionvolved in team was 13 year old Thomas Williston. He and his participation or as a sponsor email us at dad Jeff, gave a speech about Thomas’s illness grainchallenge@shaw.ca and the next years date and his wish that their family was granted this is set at Thursday March 19th-21st, 2015.
See us online
www.grainchallenge.ca
Division 2 Champs from BDO defeated WiBand Communications 6-1
Division 3 Champs John Deere Enns Bros. defeated Richardson 3-1
Official puck drop with 13yr old Thomas 2014 Grain Challenge Ambassador.
Donation cheque of $26,504.75 from the Grain Committee Neil Haeusler Organizer and Maria Toscana – CWF Director Manitoba/Nunavut Chapter and Tal McGonigal Co-Organizer.
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
PRODUCTION EQUIPMENT | GRAIN HANDLING
Remote truck, hopper gate openers convenient, versatile ProTrap kits are available for single, double, triple, quad and B-train hoppers BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU
Shaun Gelsinger says the Shurco ProTrap opener for hopper bottoms is available with an optional five-channel remote, allowing the driver to use one device to control all grain moving functions. | RON LYSENG PHOTO
IT’S YOUR INSTINCTS THAT MATTER Do what your crop needs. We pay you for that. 306-693-0255 I agrisksolutions.ca
Safety and convenience are two of the biggest factors prompting grain growers to install remote control gates on trucks and hopper trailers. Wireless remotes let the operator stand back out of the dust, said Shaun Gelsinger, a farmer and owner of Lakeshore Manufacturing in Hold-
fast, Sask., who sells the Shurco ProTrap opener for tandem trailers, a totally wireless 12-volt opener for hopper doors. “What I like about it is that we can control a lot of different functions from a single remote unit,” said Gelsinger. “ You control hopper doors of course, because that’s what it was originally built for.” The remote regulates the volume of grain flowing through the hopper chutes. The same remote can also control equipment such as electric roll tarps and lighting kits. It has a Smart2 remote, which allows the operator to look at the LCD monitor and know the position of the gate in real time. Gelsinger said ProTrap is a double side kit, so it works on both sides of a trailer. There are no exposed switches on the remote, so an operator can safely put it in his pocket without worrying he might inadvertently trigger an accident. The system is as simple as pressing the open button to open the gate and pressing the button again to close the gate when the dump is complete. The important factor is that the operator can easily regulate the flow so there’s no log jam downstream. Shurco says the housing and gears are 100 percent metal to cope with the hard shocks when gates open and close. There are no plastic components. The planetary gear reduction reduces the load on the 12 volt electric drive motor, while a circuit breaker protects the 12 volt battery and motor. The motor delivers 250 foot pounds of torque. “We had already designed a 12 volt gate opener similar to the ProTrap, but it had to sell for $3,500 for us to have any profit margin,” said Gelsinger. “Then we looked at the Shurco ProTrap. We realized we could do better importing them from the States. We sell a typical ProTrap unit for a tandem trailer for $2,900.” Shurco has ProTrap kits for single, double, triple, quad and B-train hoppers. Gelsinger also manufactures and sells his own line of remote control truck chute openers called ChuteMax, which are designed specifically for rear truck chutes. Gelsinger’s Truck Chute Opener includes a 12 volt actuator, remote FM transmitters, a remote FM receiver and a rear switch for manual operation. The standard kit runs a chute with 660 pounds of force, while the heavy duty option puts out 1,200 pounds of force. For more information, contact Gelsinger at 306-539-3418.
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NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
103
DAIRY | PRODUCTION
High dairy cow death losses cause for concern Culling cattle | Dairy experts say an emphasis on genetics has resulted in poor management and high death rates BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
RED DEER â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Too many dairy cows are dying on farms, veterinarians said at the Western Dairy Seminar held in Red Deer earlier this spring. Disease has not been controlled as well as it should be because more emphasis has been placed on milk production. Genetic tests are emerging to breed a stronger cow, but results are some way off. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We have not really paid a lot of attention to generating animals or building a dairy cow that is more disease resistant,â&#x20AC;? said Dave Kelton of the Ontario Veterinary College at Guelph University, where he holds the Dairy Farmers of Canada cattle health research chair. The national organization is launching a study next year to survey management practices, production rates and disease prevalence. An online survey opened March 1 to see what kinds of information producers want included in the main study. The survey can be found at fluidsurveys.com/s/DFC_PLC_Needs_ Assessment. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s common that farmers donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know why a cow died, and necropsies are seldom conducted. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It is tragic that people havenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t paid attention to this,â&#x20AC;? said Franklyn Garry of Colorado State University. U.S. data shows that on-farm death losses were 3.8 percent in 1996 and 5.7 percent by 2007. A Cornell University study found that some herds have death rates as high as 17 percent and others are as low as three percent. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This is not a genetics problem, this is a management problem,â&#x20AC;? he said. Cows may succumb to disease or accidents or they are put down because of lameness or calving injuries. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Something was wrong with most of these cows for a relatively long
A Cornell University study found dairy herd death rates as high as 17 percent. | time before they died,â&#x20AC;? he said. A U.S. Department of Agriculture study in 2007 found that 20 percent died as a result of lameness or injury, 16.5 percent had mastitis, 15.2 percent had calving problems and 15 percent died of unknown causes. No one is sure what normal death losses should be. By comparison, beef death losses are around one percent and feedlots, often considered a high risk environment, lose about 1.5 percent of their cattle. Dairy deaths are consistently six to 10 percent, Garry said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Death losses reveal significant health and welfare issues. This is a really big issue. It is manageable and we can do a lot better,â&#x20AC;? he said. The United Kingdom is also studying cull and death rates. A national study looked at more
than 840 herds and found the overall culling rate was 22 percent with a wide variation in reasons for losses. Farmers tend to think high culling rates and deaths are normal, said Dick Sibley of the West Ridge
FILE PHOTO
Veterinary Practice in Devon, England. In the U.K., BSE rules state any animal that died or had to be killed on the farm at 24 months of age or older must be tested.
TRANSPORTATION Producers should be cautious about selling thin, weak, lame or sick cows that are unfit for transport. Some auction markets will refuse to accept cows that are unlikely to sell, and some sales yards and packing plants will bill producers who deliver cattle that are condemned. â&#x20AC;˘ Do not load or transport animals that are lame, downers, have broken legs, or those that cannot rise, stand and walk under their own power. â&#x20AC;˘ Do not load or transport excessively thin cows with a body condition score of one because of hardware disease, lumpjaw, malnutrition, old age, disease or any other cause. Cows with a body condition score of two out of five can be transported short distances if they are segregated. â&#x20AC;˘ Do not transport animals with an obvious growth on the eyeball or eyelid. Advanced cases of cancer eye in which the animal is blind or the eye has been obscured are not fit for human consumption and will be condemned at the packing plant. â&#x20AC;˘ Do not ship animals with an obviously displaced vagina, uterus or rectum. â&#x20AC;˘ Lactating cows that have not been
dried off should not be hauled, except for short distances, direct to slaughter. â&#x20AC;˘ Do not transport cows to sale if they are heavily pregnant or may calve within a few weeks. â&#x20AC;˘ Except on the advice of a veterinarian, do not transport sick or injured animals until they have been treated and recovered. Old, weak and thin cows will need to be segregated from the rest of the herd while they recover. Euthanize the animal on the farm if it is not expected to recover. A reportable disease such as rabies, BSE or tuberculosis must be reported to the CFIA immediately if it is suspected. These animals must not be transported. â&#x20AC;˘ Animals not fit for transport should be euthanized and properly disposed of on the farm or through a dead stock removal service. Cows may be salvageable through emergency slaughter if they are free of drug, vaccine and chemical residues, do not have a fever above 39 C, have a body condition score of two out of five or higher and are able to walk under their own power.
Source: Beef Cattle Research Council
Farmers must give the government reasons for the death. Of the 107,000 beef and dairy cows submitted for tests in 2006, 40 percent listed the cause of death as unknown. Johneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s disease was listed as the highest infectious disease to cause death, but a large number died of calving problems, lameness or injuries. A common management problem on British dairy farms is cows going down because they fell on a slippery, wet surface and their legs splayed out. Some herds never have this happen while others reported that as many as six percent left the farm because they did the splits. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Having six or seven cows out of 100 doing the splits every year is pretty dodgy,â&#x20AC;? Sibley said. There are also cows that face high risk situations. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The highest risk cows are those that just had a baby,â&#x20AC;? Garry said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We have heifers calving day in and day out, sometimes spending six to 10 to 12 hours trying to push out an over-sized fetus.â&#x20AC;? Some care and analgesia would help in the first few days, but they are often turned out into the herd before they are ready.
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APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
LIVESTOCK
ONE, TWO, THREE, FOUR, WHAT IS THE CONDITION SCORE? Ensuring cows have adequate body condition is key to pregnancy rates and maintaining a short calving season, say veterinary experts. See the body condition score chart. | Page 107
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
ANTIBIOTICS | RESTRICTING USE
Health Canada tightens antibiotic use Antibiotics for treatment, not prevention | Medically beneficial antibiotics can only be used under advice of a veterinarian BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH & BARB GLEN CALGARY, LETHBRIDGE BUREAUS
Health Canada plans to phase out the use of antibiotics for growth promotion in livestock. In a notice issued April 10, the federal department said the move is designed to minimize development of antimicrobial resistance. In collaboration with the Canadian Animal Health Institute (CAHI), Health Canada said it will implement two key measures: • removal of growth promotion and/ or production claims on medically important antimicrobial drugs used in food animal production • development of options to strengthen veterinary oversight of antimicrobial use in food animals The transition is expected to take three years, and will align Canada with similar moves in the United States. Jean Szkotnicki, head of CAHI, which represents manufacturers of pharmaceuticals, feed additives and vaccines, said most pharmaceutical companies are international, so a North American approach is needed. There is also major red meat trade between Canada and the U.S. and changes may help alleviate consumer concerns about antimicrobial resistance or drug residues in food. Successful implementation of this policy means medically important antibiotics will be used only in food animals under the direction of a veterinarian when there is a specific disease challenge. That meshes with a report issued last fall by Dr. David Butler-Jones, Canada’s chief public health officer. In it, he said antibiotics should only be used in animals to treat infection rather than guard against disease or promote growth. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration made similar moves in December 2013. Guidance calls for the prudent use of antibiotics in animal agriculture and a gradual phasing out of growth promoting drugs in feed and water over the next three years. The policy is voluntary but it will have wide ranging implications, said one American veterinarian at the National Institute of Animal Agriculture April held in Omaha April 1-4. “There are going to be limitations on labelled usage,” said James McKean, an extension veterinarian from Iowa State University. “We are going to see more prescriptions on traditional over-the-counter medications and on feed and water medications. There are going to be
Health Canada has announced plans to limit the use of antibiotics for growth promotion purposes in livestock. Within three years’ time, use will be limited to specific health issues and provided under direction of a veterinarian. Healthy but curious calves like this one will not be given antibiotics as an eventual chaser to scrap pieces of drywall. However, this calf quickly rejected this material as potential fodder. | MIKE STURK PHOT0
JEAN SZKOTNICKI CANADIAN ANIMAL HEALTH INSTITUTE
more restrictions on extra label use.” Preventive use will be limited and there must be evidence that the drug is effective and its use consistent with accepted veterinary practices. It must be linked to a specific agent. “You have to have a bug to go with the drug,” he said. “A number of diseases we deal with do not have a bug that is on the label claim.” Szkotnicki said co-ordination between the two countries will be key to implementation of the new policy. “The animal health community
needs to have an information session to talk about the rules and responsibilities that the different players around the field have with regard to the use of the prudent use of antimicrobials and how we are going to address those responsibilities,” she said. The proposal could affect 140 products, although ionophores are not included. “We may lose a couple of products because some of them only have growth promotion claims,” said Szkotnicki. “I expect many of the products are being used at the therapeutic levels so it will remain to be seen.” The Beef Cattle Research Council has published research suggesting elimination of antimicrobial use in beef production will have negative health consequences for cattle and no obvious benefit for human health. Further, it said eliminating antimi-
crobial growth promotants would substantially reduce the overall use but would not reduce development of resistance to the drugs commonly used in human medicine. S ome commodity groups are already addressing the issue, however. “Elements of responsible use has always been in our food safety program, but the antibiotic use strategy got going in 2010,” said Steve Leech, national program manager of Chicken Farmers of Canada. The Canadian poultry industry, which includes broilers, eggs, hatching eggs, turkeys, poultry veterinarians and CAHI developed a plan to control, monitor and reduce the use of antibiotics. It created a five point strategy to define drug use, review management practices, ensure prudent use, educate stakeholders on antibiotic use and resistance and fund more research in alternative products.
The broiler sector also started a producer survey on antimicrobial use. It updated the broiler on-farm food safety assurance program this year, which includes on-farm audits and a statement on antibiotic use that that goes to the processor. A consumer oriented website about antibiotic use has also been developed and ongoing talks are held with health professionals about chicken production and antibiotic use, said Leech. Chicken Farmers of Canada is also funding research into alternative care, which include better biosecurity, changed management from the hatchery to the processor, vaccine use and feed additives such as probiotics or essential oils. “There are a number of products on the market that have proven to be efficacious,” Leech said. What it comes down to is trying them and finding the product that works on individual farms, he added.
LIVESTOCK
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THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
GOATS | PRODUCTION
Producers told to probe goat deaths Kids are vulnerable | Deaths among newly born goat kids are high, says veterinarian BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
Goat kid death rates are higher than they should be, says Dr. Chris Clark, a large animal science professor at the Western College of Veterinary Medicine. Producers should try to find out why. Clarke told the Saskatchewan Goat Breeders Association annual meeting in Regina that producers should consider two possibilities: the kid was born dead or it was born alive and then died. Just because a producer never saw the kid alive doesn’t mean it never was, Clark said. “The reality is not that many animals are born dead,” he said. However, a producer’s records might show a high number in that category. Clark said it’s important to know what really happened, and producers can perform simple post mortem procedures to find out. “Open the chest, take a piece of lung and drop it in water,” he said. If it floats, the animal had taken a breath and there was an opportunity to keep it alive. Clark said recognizing why animals die is an important part of a
producer’s management plan. For example, some kids are born in the amniotic sac and drown. In that case, the solution is to have someone on hand to get the animal out. Another test is to check for a broken rib to determine if another goat laid or stepped on the newborn and caused its death. “So, did the lungs float? Is there evidence of trauma? Is there milk in the stomach?” Clark said. Some kids will starve to death because they didn’t get enough milk right away. “You’ve got to be kind of brutal to yourself,” he told producers. Kids that are born dead earlier than expected could be a result of an infection causing late-term abortion. Clark said these types of abortions are a significant issue in Western Canada and a concern because some of the infectious agents are transmissible to humans. One can cause miscarriages in pregnant women. He said the deck is stacked against goat kids that are born alive. They are tiny, sopping wet, have no fat and immediately begin to run out of energy. “These things are basically born with the empty light flashing on the gas tank,” Clark said.
GOATS | PRODUCTION
Supplementing colostrum can help make up for shortfall from mother BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
A colostrum bank is a good idea for goat producers who want to make sure they have enough on hand for their herds. Dr. Chris Clark of the Western College of Veterinary Medicine said a mother’s colostrum is obviously the best choice for a kid, but some won’t be able to supply what their kids need. “Does and ewes are often dumbfounded by the number of babies they produce,” Clark told the Saskatchewan Goat Breeders Association. As well, the colostrum produced by doelings is not as good as that produced by mature does. Clark said getting as much colostrum as possible into a kid within six hours of birth gives it a much better chance at survival. Most recommend that a kid be fed 10 percent of its bodyweight in small amounts. The next best choice if a mother’s colostrum isn’t enough or available is colostrum from a doe from the same farm, followed by a doe from another farm but of the same species and the third choice is a commercial replacement. The colostrum from dairy goats is less concentrated than that of meat goats, Clark said.
One way to establish a colostrum bank is to take some from a mature doe that produces only one kid. “She can donate half to the bank,” Clark said. A doe whose kids die can donate all its colostrum. He said small food containers are ideal to freeze small amounts suitable for newborn kids. The colostrum and its antibodies remain good for two years when kept frozen, he said. The defrosting method is important: float the container in a bowl of warm water and defrost it gently to preserve its qualities. He said good quality freeze-dried colostrum replacements such as Headstart work well even though they are made from bovine colostrum. Clark also advised producers to learn how to use a stomach tube to get the colostrum into kids quickly. This is safe as long as the kid is alert, he said. “It takes about 30 seconds and a bottle takes about 30 minutes.” Clark said data from cattle studies suggests one in four calves doesn’t get enough colostrum. For goats, that can mean the difference between life and death. “Pick up that kid at least twice in 12 hours,” he said. “You can’t rely on nature to look after the issue for you.”
Goat kids test their butting abilities on the Ehmann farm, also known as the J.E. Guest Ranch near Holdfast, Sask. | MICKEY WATKINS PHOTO Exposure, hypothermia and starvation are collectively the number one cause of death. Getting nutrition into a kid should be a priority, which ideally occurs within six hours. A good doe can handle this, but sometimes producers have to intervene. “Colostrum early in life is pretty much the answer to everything,” Clark said. One of the producer’s key jobs as a manager is to make sure the colostrum, either from the mother, another doe preferably from the same farm or a commercial replacement, is in the kid within six hours and certainly
not more than 12 hours after birth. “Pick them up and look at their belly,” Clark said. “A belly wider than the ribs is what you want to see before they are six hours old.” Check constantly, and administer colostrum if in doubt, making sure to pay attention to the timing window. “Giving colostrum to them after 12 hours is not going to get antibodies into them,” he said. Kids are born with fully functioning immune systems, but they’re coming from a sterile environment into one full of bacteria. Clark said the immune system
needs seven to 10 days to learn what it needs to learn and is often overwhelmed. Cattle studies have shown that calves that receive less colostrum weigh less at six months of age. Dairy heifers that didn’t get enough colostrum produced less milk in their first lactation. “You want to load the dice in your favour,” Clark said. Neonatal death rates in United Kingdom goat herds average 10 to 15 percent but can be as high as 25 percent. Clark said the goal should be five percent loss.
SPRING SAVINGS ON FALL STORAGE GBU10
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HOG RESEARCH | FEED EFFICIENCY
Probiotics good for pigs: trial Aids digestion | Pigs on a high fibre diet benefitted from the bacterial supplement PROBIOTICS VS. PREBIOTICS:
BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU
It’s difficult to watch TV without encountering yogurt commercials, usually featuring smiling women and their happy, dancing bellies. Yogurt makers promote probiotics as the key to human digestive health, and animal scientists now claim that the bacteria could also radically improve hogs’ ability to digest certain feed. U.S Department of Agriculture scientists in Iowa have discovered that probiotics boost fibre fermentation rates and reduce manure production by 20 percent when fed to hogs that eat high-fibre feed such as dried distillers grain. Cherie Ziemer, a USDA microbiologist in Ames, Iowa, conducted an experiment in which she fed pigs either a typical diet or a high fibre diet containing soybean hulls and corn DDGs. She also fed them one of three probiotic additives. Pigs that received one of the bacterial supplements produced 20 percent less manure, gained more weight and improved their blood cholesterol levels. The USDA has applied for a patent on the successful probiotic, which Ziemer said could reduce manure
DENISE BEAULIEU PRAIRIE SWINE CENTRE
volumes, boost pig performance and hopefully increase producer profits. A spokesperson for the Iowa Pork Produces Association wasn’t familiar with Ziemer’s research and said that if Iowa farmers are feeding probiotics to their hogs, he hasn’t heard about it. Denise Beaulieu, a nutrition research scientist at the Prairie Swine Centre in Saskatoon, said Canadian researchers are looking at probiotics, but she hadn’t heard about the Iowa study. “The idea of probiotics is, you are consuming beneficial micro-organisms and trying to colonize your gut,” she said. “When you eat yogurt with an active culture, you’re eating a probiotic.” Beaulieu said it makes sense to use a probiotic in combination with DDGs because pigs may not have the necessary gut enzymes to digest the material.
Probiotics are food containing healthy bacteria that stimulate digestion. They are found in fermented dairy products such as yogurt and kefir. Prebiotics are carbohydrates that provide food for healthy bacteria already in the gut. Prebiotics are found in whole grain, garlic, honey, bananas, onions and artichokes. Source: The Mayo Clinic
“These (DDGs) might be very high in fibre, so the probiotics could assist with the breakdown (of the feed).” The probiotics could also increase the amount of beneficial bacteria within a pig’s gut, allowing the healthy micro-organisms to outcompete the harmful bacteria. Beaulieu said the challenge of probiotics is how to feed them to pigs. “One of the big areas of research is how to get probiotics into an animal efficiently,” she said. “For example, you might have these bugs encased in something, so it looks just like dried feed.” Ziemer said the bacteria from her experiment could be fed as a liquid supplement or possibly freeze-dried and mixed with feed.
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Skunks are among wildlife that can carry rabies. |
FILE PHOTO
DISEASE | RABIES
Vaccines keep rabies at bay ANIMAL HEALTH
ROY LEWIS, DVM
W
e don’t hear much about rabies, but it’s scary when we do. The disease can be passed to humans with no curative treatment once clinical signs develop. It is virtually always fatal to mammals. Only vaccination and strong surveillance programs have kept rabies at a low incidence in Canada. Bats, skunks, raccoons and red and arctic foxes are the biggest reservoirs for the disease in this country. It varies across the country, but Alberta has the most reported diagnosis in bats followed by skunks and cats. The arctic fox can be the source in northern Canada and Ontario has diagnosed cases in foxes and raccoons. The federal government downloaded the responsibilities for rabies to the provinces as of April 1, even though it is still a reportable disease for veterinarians. This came suddenly out of a budgetary issue in 2012 w ith no consultation w ith our national veterinary group or other affected parties. It is called passing the buck. Three other diseases were either dropped or downloaded, including anthrax, which is costly to deal with and is considered endemic in Western Canada. However, rabies could be considered the most serious zoonotic disease and could put anyone involved in veterinary medicine and agriculture at severe risk if they come in contact with a rabid animal. I don’t like the federal government downloading responsibility to the provinces through a budgetary change, but it might be a good thing over the long term. The provinces will handle potential cases while the federal government lab will still do the testing. The general public, including farmers, will not see much difference with this change because it will hopefully be a seamless transition. Veterinary clinics and medical health officers will still be involved. Everyone needs to be on the lookout for animals exhibiting abnormal behaviour, including aggression and varying forms of paralysis, including an inability to swallow and salivate. Other signs can include incessant bellowing in cattle. Animals will die within 10 days if
clinical signs develop. Veterinary clinics may be involved, especially in isolated areas. Clinical signs should be reported to them. Rabies is rare and many other diseases can mimic it. For example, cows with wooden tongue or choke will salivate excessively. The two conditions are treatable and yet at first glance could indicate rabies. Just because we haven’t diagnosed rabies in a while doesn’t mean it isn’t around. A client once found a bat alive in daylight hours on his lawn acting peculiar and unable to fly. It was submitted and tested positive for rabies. Bats are the main reservoir in many areas, which means it is always advisable to vaccinate dogs and cats. Horses and cattle are often vaccinated in high-risk areas or if they are going to high-risk areas. The World Health Organization divides rabies exposure into three levels. Feeding, touching or licking from a rabid animal on intact skin is not considered exposure to rabies, while the second and third categories range from minor scratches to full depth bites and licks on broken skin. These are considered a potential exposure to rabies that should prompt medical care and the guidance of a public health officer. We are lucky in Canada because good surveillance and vaccinating most pets has kept the incidence of rabies low. Alberta has the famous rat patrol, which on top of keeping rats out of the province does the same for skunks in the southeast, where the rabies incidence is higher. Saskatchewan has had cases of rabies in cattle and horses, especially in the south. Authorities in that province are in the midst of organizing rabies programs. Watch for guidance from the office of the provincial veterinarian. Each province may implement it slightly differently, but the overall result should be the same as medical officers, veterinary clinics and provincial governments work together. A salivating animal or one that is acting abnormally should be checked by a veterinarian. They will know what to do if rabies is suspected. Human exposure through a bite or scratch from an animal should prompt medical attention and a call to Health Link at 800 408-5465. Watch the news for further developments. As a side note, birds, amphibians and reptiles can’t get rabies and rodents only rarely. Roy Lewis works as a technical services veterinarian part time with Merck Animal Health in Alberta.
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107
BEEF | REPRODUCTION
Monitor body condition to improve reproduction Breeding efficiency | Veterinarian recommends producers assess animal fat and feed accordingly before breeding
THIN
Reproduction is the most important productivity measurement affecting profitability in a cow herd. “Cow costs are important,” said John Campbell of the Western College of Veterinary Medicine. “We can’t ignore that, but we probably can’t sacrifice reproduction too much when we reduce cow costs. If we don’t have a calf at the end of the day, we have nothing to sell.” Campbell said during a webinar sponsored by the Beef Cattle Research Council that it’s important to keep calving seasons short to produce uniform calves that gain well and make more money. Rebreeding cows and heifers 80 to 100 days after calving results in reproductive momentum, in which cows produce calves at the same time every year. He said a 95 percent pregnancy rate is achievable. A cow’s gestation length is about 282 days, so it needs to conceive again within 83 days of calving if it is to have a calf every year. Suckled beef cows do not start their estrus cycles for 50 to 60 days after calving. First-calf heifers take longer at 80 to 100 days, and dairy cows are sooner because the calves do not suckle. There is also a 60 to 70 percent likelihood that a calf will be born from a single mating from a healthy, fertile female and bull. “That is the best we can expect from ever ything working normally,” Campbell said. As a result, cows have three chances to become pregnant in a 60 day breeding season. Many embryos are lost at Day 14, which means cows still have time to cycle again and become pregnant within the correct time period. Cows that deliver within the first 30 days of the calving period the following year have another 50 days to get ready for breeding again so that they stay within the 365 day period. Calves born early in the calving period have more time to gain weight and grow to a uniform size before marketing. Campbell recommended writing down when calves are born. Most producers do not know when the cows conceived unless artificial
insemination was used. BEEF COW BODY CONDITIONING SCORES “The only accessible reproductive event we have in a beef cow is when Body condition scoring is an easy and practical method of assessing the nutritional status of cows. Cows are assigned she calves, but we know if she calves a numerical value from one (thin) to five (fat), based on the amount of body fat. The U.S. uses a nine-point system. on this date, she got bred approxi(1) Canada = (1) U.S Emaciated, starving and weak; the entire body is extremely thin, and all skeletal mately 282 days before that,” he said. structures are prominently visible. No muscle tissue is evident and no external “Cows tend to calve in the same part fat is present. All the skeletal structures are visible and very sharp to the touch. of the calving season each year.… To The hair coat appears to be very dull. Survival during stress is doubtful. maintain that pattern we have to (1.5) Canada = (2) U.S Very thin, somewhat emaciated; The vertebrae along the top line are prominent. make sure that that interval between The hooks and tail head are visually less prominent. There is no fat around the calving and cycling does not get hip bone and pin bone and tail head. extended.” Producers often blame the bulls (2) Canada = (3) U.S Thin. The vertebrae along the top line are prominent. Muscle tissue is evident, but not when cows fail to become pregnant. abundant. Individual vertebrae can be felt, but are not as sharp. The short ribs can However, the cows may have been be identified individually when touched, but they feel sharp rather than very sharp. too thin or they had bovine viral diarIndividual ribs can be identified visually. There is some tissue cover around the hook rhea, parasites or some other proband tail head. lem that could have been prevented (2.5) Canada = (4) U.S Individual ribs noticeable but overall fat cover is lacking; increased musculature with vaccination. through shoulders and hindquarters; hips and short ribs feel slightly round Another explanation is they did not versus sharp. go into heat. Cows should be regularly condition (3) Canada = (5) U.S Increased fat cover over ribs, and ribcage is only slightly visible. Muscle tissue scored to assess how much fat they is nearing the maximum. Generally only the 12 and 13 ribs are individually are carrying. distinguishable. There are obvious fat deposits behind the front shoulder. Campbell said most producers just Areas on each side of the tail head are fairly well filled but not rounded. look at them when they do chores, (3.5) Canada = (6) U.S Back, ribs, and tail head slightly rounded and feel spongy when palpated. but it is better to lay hands on them to check the amount of body fat they are (4) Canada = (7) U.S Moderately fat. The bone structure is no longer noticeable. The skeletal structure carrying. Skinny cows need more is difficult to identify. Individual short ribs cannot be felt even with firm pressure. and better feed before calving. Folds of fat are beginning to develop over the ribs and thurl area of the animal. “Nutrition is a major category on Fat cover around the tail head is evident on both sides as slight “rounds” that both sides of this equation and has a are soft to the touch. major role in affecting herd fertility.” Cows with a body condition score (4.5) Canada = (8) U.S Fat. There is a very fleshy, squared appearance due to excess fat over back, tail head, and hindquarters. Individual short ribs cannot be felt even with firm pressure. Mobility of 2.5 at the beginning of the breeding may begin to be restricted. season are far more likely to become pregnant. (5) Canada = (9) U.S. Very fat or obese. The animal has a “blocky” appearance. The bone structure is Thin cows have difficulty rebreednot noticeable. The back bone has a flat appearance and cannot be felt even with ing or may abort, while fat cows are pressure. Folds of fat are apparent over the ribs, thurl and thighs. The hip bones prone to calving problems and excesand tail head to pin area on both sides are completely buried in fat. The animal’s sive feed costs. mobility is impaired by the large amounts of fat. A study by Cheryl Waldner at the Source: Alberta Agriculture | WP GRAPHIC University of Saskatchewan found that pregnancy checking is the best time to condition score cows, partly because they are already in the chute and easy to handle. “Body condition scores at pregnancy testing time was most strongly associated with pregnancy status. It is the easiest time to measure them,” Campbell said. He also suggested sorting cows into management groups for winter feeding and watching their body condition so that some do not fall behind. NS WITH Producers should consider feed tests to make sure their cows are receiving proper nutrition and mineral supplements. Heifer management is also critical. They may get pregnant the first time, PSC spreaders set the standard for durability but many fail to conceive the second and versatility. Get consistent, even spreading PSC ProSpread time. of a broad range of solid and dry, flowable Invest in Quality!
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Keeping the calving season short is a good way to produce uniform calves that gain well and make more money. | FILE PHOTO
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AGFINANCE
CDN. BOND RATE: 1.6497%
CDN. DOLLAR: $0.9124
Canadian dollar
1.90%
0.920
1.80%
0.910
1.70%
0.900
1.60%
0.890
1.50% 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
4/14
0.880 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
Bank of Canada 5-yr rate
4/7
4/14
April 14
A G F IN ANC E E D I TO R : D ’ A RC E M C M ILLAN | P h : 306- 665- 3519 F: 306-934-2401 | E-MAIL: DARC E.M C M ILLAN @PRODUC ER.C OM | TWITTE R: @ D AR CE MCMILLAN
AG STOCKS APRIL 7-11
LABOUR | STATISTICS
Traders worried that stocks, especially in high technology and biotechnology sectors, might be overvalued. Also the direction of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s stimulus policy is uncertain. For the week, the TSX fell 0.94 percent, the S&P 500 fell 2.6 percent and the Nasdaq lost 3.1 percent.
The farm labour mismatch
Cdn. exchanges in $Cdn. U.S. exchanges in $U.S.
GRAIN TRADERS NAME
EXCH
ADM NY Alliance Grain TSX Bunge Ltd. NY ConAgra Foods NY
Ag employment trends downward | Farmers have a tough time finding skilled workers
CLOSE LAST WK 44.41 17.45 78.25 30.50
43.05 17.78 78.20 30.98
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 0.404 0.13 22.15 2.25 20.87 10.66
0.846 0.125 21.51 2.27 21.01 11.30
FOOD PROCESSORS NAME
EXCH
Hormel Foods Maple Leaf Premium Brands Tyson Foods
NY TSX TSX NY
CLOSE LAST WK 46.97 17.10 20.93 41.67
47.83 17.65 20.60 41.22
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 45.98 54.38 6.25 101.45 10.96 92.01 9.65
46.51 55.51 6.30 102.17 11.32 91.83 9.24
FARM INPUT SUPPLIERS NAME
EXCH
Agrium TSX BASF OTC Bayer Ag OTC Dow Chemical NY Dupont NY BioSyent Inc. TSXV Monsanto NY Mosaic NY PotashCorp TSX Syngenta ADR
CLOSE LAST WK 100.62 107.38 128.39 46.95 66.09 5.72 110.90 47.20 36.63 75.28
103.46 109.77 134.49 48.69 67.34 5.60 114.28 49.17 37.82 75.07
Just under one-third of all non-family farm workers are employed by greenhouses or nurseries. | BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU
TRANSPORTATION NAME
EXCH
CN Rail CPR
TSX TSX
CLOSE LAST WK 60.02 158.00
61.42 166.74
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.
Farmers say there is a shortage of farm labourers. Economists say it’s less a labour shortage than a matter of distribution and demand. Agricultural human resources people say farmers and economists are both right and plan to figure out how those views fit together. The Canadian Agricultural Human Resources Council (CAHRC) has launched a three-year, federally funded project to look at labour supply and update information on farm labour demand. “If you speak with farmers, they will tell you generally across the country
and also across commodities that they cannot find people to work on their farms for the work that needs to be done and that the traditional sources of labour, which may have been from their family and also neighbours … there are fewer family members and fewer neighbours out there,” said CAHRC project manager Debra Hauer. Ray Bollman, an adjunct professor at the University of Saskatchewan and the project’s senior research adviser, said simple demographics indicate fewer people are entering the workforce than leaving it, and agricultural employment is trending downward. “I think you’ll find lots of people saying there’s a lack of skilled labour
FILE PHOTO
and I think in some pockets there is a lack of skilled labour,” said Bollman. “But overall I think it’s more of a mismatch than a shortage.” He said wages would be spiking if agricultural labour was in dire shortage, but statistics indicate that is not the case. Nor has productivity suffered from lack of workers, at least in a readily measurable way. “I believe people are sincere when they say (there is a shortage of farm labour), but every acre got planted last year and every cow got milked and most apples and most strawberries got picked … so somehow it happens, and if there’s a real labour shortage some of this would be left on the field.”
Don Connick, who farms near Gull Lake, Sask., said Bollman’s view is true to a point, but farm productivity lost to lack of manpower is a tricky calculation. “It’s probably not only difficult but impossible to measure that, because timeliness of an operation can make a difference in dollars and cents, but again, there’s no sort of guideline to measure that by. If you finish seeding an hour before it rains, that’s worth a lot of money.” Connick said he often hears farmers complain about difficulty finding workers, but he doesn’t know of any who quit the business because of it. He said this is partly because of retired farmers’ willingness to hire on during seeding and harvest. Their experience and skills make them ideal temporary employees, and the skill set necessary for many farm operations is not easily found among casual labourers or temporary foreign workers. Farmers have responded to a trend toward fewer and larger operations by scaling up their equipment to reduce labour needs and save time. Instead of two combines, a farmer might choose to buy one big combine. “I think that that’s almost come to the end as well. I think there’s a limit as to how big machinery can get, (and) how much we can afford,” said Connick. “And if you’re going to farm huge acreages, then you need to be mechanized, but you also need some really skilled labour to run those units.” Wages are the other problem for farmers. Many say they can’t afford to pay high rates. Humphrey Banack, an Alberta farmer and vice-president of the Canadian Federation of Agriculture, said he has to pay workers $26 per hour plus benefits to keep them on the farm. “Minimum wage isn’t a discussion in Alberta,” he said. “We’re competing with the oil patch.” Connick puts Saskatchewan figures at $20 or more per hour for farm CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
»
AGRICULTURAL LABOUR: FEWER PEOPLE, HIGHER WAGES Total agricultural employment in Canada is trending steadily downward, in part due to greater farm efficiencies and use of technology. Farmers across the country report difficulty finding skilled workers for their often-seasonal needs. Competitive wages are also an issue. In 2013, 315,000 people were employed in agriculture and most hired workers were found on farms with annual sales of $1 million or more.
Canadian farm worker wages, by sector, 2011 ($millions):
Wages paid to non-family workers by farm type & gross farm revenue size, 2006 ($millions): dairy
190
beef
182
hog
220
poultry & egg
183
0.8
grain & oilseed
190
0.6
fruit & vegetables
432
greenhouse / nursery
695
others
219
1.4
greenhouse & nursery oilseed & grain dairy cattle & milk hogs & pigs poultry & eggs fruit & tree nuts other veg. & melons cattle (incl. feedlots) potatoes other crops other animals
Source: Ray Bollman | MICHELLE HOULDEN GRAPHIC
Total employment on Canadian farms (millions), 1945-2012: total employment self-employed paid workers
1.2 1.0
0.4 0.2
total farms 0 0
$500M
$1B
’50
’60
’70
’80 ’90
’00
’10
<$50,000
$50,000$99,000
42
50 $100,000$149,000
57 $150,000$249,000
122
283
$250,000$499,000
343 $500,000$999,000
1,413
2,310
>$1 million
AGFINANCE employees if employers have any hope of retaining them. However, Bollman’s figures indicate Canadian agricultural workers make $12 to $15 per hour, on average. That includes seasonal and foreign workers for such things as greenhouse work and fruit picking. His figures also show the seasonality of agricultural work. About 70,000 workers enter and exit the agricultural labour force every year in Canada, and an additional 24,000 come from outside Canada through various foreign worker programs. Bollman said a greater focus on employee retention and more efficient hiring methods to get workers with the needed skills could help ease the pressure. That requires expertise in human resources, which is the focus of the CAHRC. However, a clear picture of agricultural labour is needed before more concentrated work is undertaken, said Hauer. “We’ve been hearing across the country and across commodities that there is a shortage,” said Hauer. “This project is going to try to get to the bottom of what that looks like, both from an economist and a producer point of view.”
QUICK FACTS Here are some highlights from agricultural economist Ray Bollman’s recent presentation to the Canadian Agriculture Human Resources Council: • Total agriculture employment in 2013 was 315,000. • Women represent 30 percent of total agricultural employment. • Fewer than one-third of farmers hire labour. More than half of non-family workers are employed on farms with sales of $1 million or more. • Forty percent of paid workers are family members. • Thirty percent of non-family workers were employed in the greenhouse and nursery sector. • The average farm wage bill for grain and oilseed workers rose 7.3 percent per year from 2006-12.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
109
FAMILY FARMS | MANAGEMENT
Separating family, business priorities creates challenges PERSPECTIVES ON MANAGEMENT
WHAT IS YOUR BUSINESS STYLE? Category
family-first model
business-first model
Membership
There is a place for all family members.
If you are qualified to do the job, you can join.
Compensation
Family members are paid more (or less) than the going rate for the job — sometimes based on need.
Pay is determined by responsibilities and performance.
Leadership
Leadership is bestowed. Title/position is bestowed by birthright.
Leadership is earned. Company officers control day to day operations.
Resources
Business resources are used for family perks.
Strategic resources are used for business purposes.
Training
Outside experience may be less valuable than years of service in the family business.
Outside experience is more important than years of service in the family business.
TERRY BETKER
W
hen I ask farm families to list what they value most, “family” usually makes it into the top three positions, if not the top. However, mixing family and business can be tricky. It can be a strength and a weakness. It is a strength because the support of family can help individuals and the business through difficult and stressful times. With the resources it brings, family can also help capitalize on opportunities. Family farms have changed, not so much with family but with the business. There’s generally more complexity in farm businesses: how ownership is structured, who the owners are and how the business is managed. It’s the latter point that needs the most attention. This is tricky stuff because there is no one correct way of doing it, and family members often have differing opinions. It helps to be able to separate business from emotion, but this can be challenging, depending on the issue. Personal, family and business goals are important, as is a common interest or vision that defines what the farm and family are working toward. It’s also the rallying point when challenges arise. It is just as important to set financial targets that represent what you aim to achieve or represent minimum threshold tolerances.
Being able to distil an issue down to numbers helps separate business from emotion in the decisionmaking process. Family can be described as a system with a primary purpose of nurturing and developing selfesteem and sharing common values. Each family operates with its own style, role relationships, rules and ways of dealing with stress and expressing emotions. In contrast, a business system’s primary purpose is to use resources to make a profit. Combining a family with a business blurs the lines that distinguish one system from the other. The exercise included with this column promotes discussion among family members about the
family-business orientation. There are no right or wrong answers. The family-first/business-first exercise is a scale with each end represented by the statements in the accompanying chart. It lists the characteristics of a family system versus a business system within several categories: • membership — who belongs? • income (compensation) — what are members paid? • leadership or promotion — how are members chosen to be leaders or promoted? • basis of operation — what underlying value drives operations? • training — how do members decide what training they need? Have everyone who is actively involved in the business complete the exercise by placing an X in the
appropriate box beside the statement with which they most identify. Then get together to discuss the results. The complexity of a family farm has advanced to where cousins and nephews or nieces are involved. There are more and different relationships to manage. Perpetuating the Family Business by John L. Ward is a good book that discusses family business. It’s not about farm businesses, but the application can be easily made. The students I teach read this book in one of their assignments, and it gets great reviews. Terry Betker is a farm management consultant based in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He can be reached at 204.782.8200 or terry.betker@backswath.com.
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.
110
MARKETS
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
CATTLE & SHEEP Steers 600-700 lb. (average $/cwt) Alberta
GRAINS Slaughter Cattle ($/cwt)
Grade A
Live Apr. 4-10
Previous Mar. 28-Apr. 3
Year ago
Rail Apr. 4-10
Previous Mar. 28-Apr. 3
146.00-148.00 140.71-161.56 n/a n/a
142.00-146.00 123.42-153.96 n/a n/a
112.70 110.21 n/a n/a
242.50 254.00-257.00 n/a n/a
245.00 252.00-256.00 n/a n/a
147.25 118.19-151.20 n/a n/a
142.00-148.50 130.29-155.67 n/a n/a
112.17 112.98 n/a n/a
236.75-243.00 253.00-256.00 n/a n/a
245.00 251.00-255.00 n/a n/a
$210
Steers Alta. Ont. Sask. Man. Heifers Alta. Ont. Sask. Man.
$200
*Live f.o.b. feedlot, rail f.o.b. plant.
$210 $205 $200 $195 $190 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
4/14
Saskatchewan $220
$190 $180 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
Feeder Cattle ($/cwt) 4/7
4/14
Manitoba $205 $200 $195 $190 $185 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
Canfax
4/7
4/14
Heifers 500-600 lb. (average $/cwt) Alberta $200
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.
140-163 160-174 176-200 195-215 203-228 210-239
145-165 155-178 175-200 190-215 195-227 207-240
150-161 163-179 184-200 197-216 205-228 211-230
no sales 155-175 165-194 170-211 199-224 205-230
150-166 155-179 171-199 180-208 190-216 187-220
145-164 155-176 174-197 180-209 188-220 184-230
150-167 161-179 175-194 185-205 188-212 190-216
143-165 146-174 158-189 174-194 173-196 165-200 Canfax
$195 $190
Average Carcass Weight
$185 $180 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
4/14
Apr. 5/14 856 799 672 916
Canfax
Steers Heifers Cows Bulls
Saskatchewan $195 $190 $185
Apr. 6/13 895 828 665 972
YTD 14 854 798 672 890
YTD 13 888 826 675 924
U.S. Cash cattle ($US/cwt)
$180 $175 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
4/14
Manitoba $210 $200 $190 $180 $170 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
4/14
Slaughter cattle (35-65% choice) National Kansas Nebraska Nebraska (dressed)
Heifers 148.65 147.03 150.55 240.00
Feeders No. 1 (800-900 lb) Steers South Dakota 164.50-185.75 Billings n/a Dodge City 166-171
Trend steady/+3 n/a steady USDA
Basis Cattle / Beef Trade
Cash Futures Alta-Neb Sask-Neb Ont-Neb-
n/a n/a n/a
-11.24 n/a -5.92
Canadian Beef Production million lb. YTD % change Fed 487.1 +5 Non-fed 88.6 -3 Total beef 575.7 +3
Exports % from 2013 210,686 (1) +2.1 126,863 (1) +55.5 31,331 (3) +7.0 44,006 (3) +15.8 Imports % from 2013 n/a (2) n/a 5,742 (2) -7.8 34,835 (4) -25.2 50,433 (4) -16.4
Sltr. cattle to U.S. (head) Feeder C&C to U.S. (head) Total beef to U.S. (tonnes) Total beef, all nations (tonnes) Sltr. cattle from U.S. (head) Feeder C&C from U.S. (head) Total beef from U.S. (tonnes) Total beef, all nations (tonnes)
(1) to Mar. 29/14 (2) to Feb. 28/14 (3) to Feb. 28/14 (4) to Apr. 5/14
Canfax
Agriculture Canada
Fed. inspections only Canada U.S. To date 2014 717,173 7,950,851 To date 2013 673,254 8,324,772 % Change 14/13 +6.5 -4.5
Close Apr. 11 Live Cattle Apr 144.85 Jun 135.78 Aug 133.78 Oct 138.23 Dec 140.18 Feeder Cattle Apr 179.50 May 180.08 Aug 182.48 Sep 182.30 Oct 181.73
Close Trend Apr. 4 143.05 134.80 132.28 136.90 138.85
+1.80 +0.98 +1.50 +1.33 +1.33
125.85 120.75 121.40 125.10 126.73
177.70 178.53 180.23 180.18 180.13
+1.80 +1.55 +2.25 +2.12 +1.60
137.93 140.93 147.80 149.90 151.08
Index 100 Hog Price Trends ($/ckg) Alberta $260 $240 $220 $200 $180 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
4/14
May 04-May 17 May 18-May 31 Jun 01-Jun 14 Jun 15-Jun 28 Jun 29-Jul 12 Jul 13-Jul 26 Jul 27-Aug 09 Aug 10-Aug 23 Aug 24-Sep 06 Sep 07-Sep 20
Export 185,717 (1) 55,080 (2) 184,511 (2)
$280
Sltr. hogs to/fm U.S. (head) Total pork to/fm U.S. (tonnes) Total pork, all nations (tonnes)
$260 $240 $220 $200 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
(1) to Mar. 29/14 4/7
(2) to Feb. 28/14
Canfax
Sheep ($/lb.) & Goats ($/head) Apr. 4 Base rail (index 100) 2.78 Range 0.13-0.17 Feeder lambs 1.40-1.45 Sheep (live) 0.40
Previous 2.78 0.09-0.19 1.40-1.45 0.40
Apr. 7 2.07-3.00 1.93-2.70 1.85-2.05 1.85-2.03 1.60-1.80 1.30-1.70 0.75-0.95 0.80-0.90 60-105
New lambs 65-80 lb 80-95 lb > 95 lb > 110 lb Feeder lambs Sheep Rams Kids
$240 $220 $200 $180 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
4/14
Apr May Jun Jul
Close Apr. 11 124.93 120.60 121.23 117.55
Close Apr. 4 123.15 120.50 120.55 117.55
Ontario Stockyards Inc.
+1.78 +0.10 +0.68 0.00
Year ago 82.23 87.38 89.90 89.90
n/a n/a n/a n/a
Wool lambs >80 lb Wool lambs <80 lb Hair lambs Fed sheep
To Apr. 5 Canada 5,389,623 5,467,292 -1.4
To date 2014 To date 2013 % change 14/13
Fed. inspections only U.S. 29,391,514 30,105,080 -2.4
$255 $250
$240 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
Milling Wheat (May) $240 $230
$200 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
4/14
248.10 246.95
Man. Que.
238.00 261.58 *incl. wt. premiums
Import n/a 46,117 (3) 48,416 (3)
% from 2013 n/a -16.3 -17.3 Agriculture Canada
Close Apr. 11 116.60 99.40 89.45 86.55
Apr. 14 18.50-20.50 14.00-15.50 17.50-18.50 15.75-16.75 12.80-13.50 21.25-23.00 14.50-15.00 12.80-13.00 11.80-12.00 6.25-6.75 6.25-6.75 7.80-8.25 4.25-4.35 35.75-36.00 32.30-34.00 24.70-26.00 19.00-20.50 17.10-18.00 16.00-20.00 11.00-18.00 11.00-20.00
Avg. Apr. 7 19.38 19.38 14.75 14.75 18.20 18.20 16.28 16.28 13.33 13.33 22.25 22.04 14.88 14.88 12.96 12.96 11.96 11.96 6.63 6.19 6.68 6.18 8.10 8.10 4.28 4.28 35.88 35.88 33.58 33.58 25.57 25.57 20.21 20.21 17.70 17.70 16.00 16.00 11.00 11.00 14.00 14.00
Cash Prices
Canola (cash - May)
Apr. 9 Apr. 2 Year Ago No. 3 Oats Saskatoon ($/tonne) 142.56 145.25 222.55 Snflwr NuSun Enderlin ND (¢/lb) 21.20 20.85 22.50
$460 $440
U.S. Grain Cash Prices ($US/bu.)
$400 $380 3/7
3/14 3/21 3/28
4/4
4/11
$-10
$-40 $-50 3/7
3/14 3/21 3/28
4/4
4/11
Feed Wheat (Lethbridge) $210 $200 $190 $180 $170 3/7
3/14 3/21 3/28
4/4
4/11
$540 $510 $480 $450 $420 3/7
3/14 3/21 3/28
4/4
4/11
Barley (cash - May) $210 $200
Basis: $54
$180 $170 3/7
3/14 3/21 3/28
4/4
4/11
Canola and barley are basis par region. Feed wheat basis Lethbridge. Basis is best bid.
Corn (May) $510 $500 $490 $480 $470 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
Trend -0.55 -1.75 +0.35 +0.05
4/7
4/14
$1520 $1480 $1440 $1400
Year ago 89.98 80.95 78.35 81.00
4/7
4/14
Oats (May) $510 $480
Grain Futures Apr. 14 Apr. 7 Trend Wpg ICE Canola ($/tonne) May 464.00 461.00 +3.00 Jul 473.00 470.80 +2.20 Nov 487.30 485.70 +1.60 Jan 494.20 493.10 +1.10 Wpg ICE Milling Wheat ($/tonne) May 217.00 217.00 0.00 Jul 215.00 215.00 0.00 Oct 218.00 218.00 0.00 Wpg ICE Durum Wheat ($/tonne) May 250.00 250.00 0.00 Jul 250.00 250.00 0.00 Wpg ICE Barley ($/tonne) May 138.50 130.50 +8.00 Jul 136.50 128.50 +8.00 Chicago Wheat ($US/bu.) May 6.7875 6.7625 +0.0250 Jul 6.8675 6.8350 +0.0325 Sep 6.9625 6.9275 +0.0350 Dec 7.0900 7.0625 +0.0275 Chicago Oats ($US/bu.) May 4.0350 4.1900 -0.1550 Jul 3.5750 3.6250 -0.0500 Dec 3.3225 3.4050 -0.0825 Chicago Soybeans ($US/bu.) May 14.7625 14.6425 +0.1200 Jul 14.6350 14.4825 +0.1525 Sep 12.7700 12.5700 +0.2000 Nov 12.2000 12.0825 +0.1175 Chicago Soy Oil (¢US/lb.) May 42.26 41.43 +0.83 Jul 42.46 41.65 +0.81 Aug 42.29 41.53 +0.76 Chicago Soy Meal ($US/short ton) May 479.1 474.3 +4.8 Jul 468.6 464.7 +3.9 Aug 442.4 436.1 +6.3 Chicago Corn ($US/bu.) May 5.0300 4.9925 +0.0375 Jul 5.0925 5.0525 +0.0400 Sep 5.0675 5.0550 +0.0125 Dec 5.0350 5.0550 -0.0200 Minneapolis Wheat ($US/bu.) May 7.1725 7.2225 -0.0500 Jul 7.2575 7.2550 +0.0025 Sep 7.3175 7.3200 -0.0025 Dec 7.4325 7.4250 +0.0075 Kansas City Wheat ($US/bu.) May 7.4200 7.3950 +0.0250 Jul 7.4825 7.4600 +0.0225 Dec 7.6500 7.6475 +0.0025
Year ago 619.60 605.20 553.60 552.80 292.00 294.00 294.00 310.80 313.80 243.50 244.00 6.9375 6.9925 7.0575 7.1950 3.6850 3.6150 3.5650 13.9500 13.5600 12.4850 12.0675 48.18 48.36 48.37 393.3 389.5 376.1 6.4675 6.2800 5.5675 5.3225 7.9800 7.8900 7.8600 7.9450 7.3250 7.3900 7.6800
$450
Canadian Exports & Crush
$420 $390 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
Close Apr. 4 117.15 101.15 89.10 86.50
Apr. 11 6.37 5.77 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)
$1360 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
% from 2013 -11.5 -5.0 -2.8
Laird lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Laird lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Richlea lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Eston lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Eston lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Sm. Red lentils, No. 2 (¢/lb) Sm. Red lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Peas, green No. 1 ($/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
Soybeans (May)
Index 100 hogs $/ckg
EXCHANGE RATE: APRIL 14 $1 Cdn. = $0.9124 U.S. $1 U.S. = $1.0960 Cdn.
4/14
$260
Chicago Nearby Futures ($US/100 bu.)
Agriculture Canada
Aug Oct Dec Feb
4/7
Durum (May)
$190
Apr. 14
(3) to Apr. 5/14
Trend
4/14
Flax (elevator bid- S’toon) 1.80-2.57 2.00-2.63 1.70-2.01 1.75-1.86 1.35-1.85 1.30-1.70 0.75-0.85 0.85-0.95 60-105
Chicago Hogs Lean ($US/cwt)
$260
4/7
SunGold Meats
4/14
Manitoba
$125 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
$-30
This wk Last wk Yr. ago n/a 262-264 n/a
Hogs / Pork Trade
Saskatchewan
$130
$-20
Hog Slaughter
Alta. Sask.
$135
$420
Est. Beef Wholesale ($/cwt)
Fixed contract $/ckg Maple Leaf Thunder Sig 3 Creek Pork Apr. 11 Apr. 11 231.05-234.07 234.05-237.30 233.57-238.60 232.50-234.21 235.08-236.59 235.67-237.76 238.10-240.62 234.62-239.29 232.74-235.77 227.09-230.41 228.21-229.72 226.68-230.27 228.65-228.65 228.25-230.63 221.39-227.14 219.98-221.77 200.86-208.94 188.41-194.81 192.29-194.81 183.16-185.85
$140
$210
Year ago
HOGS (Hams Marketing)
$145
$220
Chicago Futures ($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)
$245
To Apr. 5
Montreal
Steers 148.08 147.10 150.79 239.85
Pulse and Special Crops
ICE Futures Canada
4/7
4/14
Minneapolis Nearby Futures ($US/100bu.) Spring Wheat (May) $780 $750 $720 $690 $660 3/10 3/17 3/24 3/31
4/7
4/14
To (1,000 MT) Apr. 6 Wheat 184.3 Durum 90.6 Oats 16.8 Barley 82.1 Flax 0.5 Canola 172.4 Peas 0.9 Lentils 0.3 (1,000 MT) Apr. 9 Canola crush 139.9
To Mar. 30 236.5 63.7 18.4 14.3 0.5 185.1 22.1 0.0 Apr. 2 141.9
Total Last to date year 10149.7 9178.1 2910.1 2972.4 674.5 786.6 852.3 1108.0 232.5 195.1 5279.2 5452.2 1231.8 1356.7 196.1 n/a to date Last year 4730.4 4910.3
WEATHER
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | APRIL 17, 2014
A western meadowlark sings its familiar song on a fence post southwest of High River, Alta. | MIKE STURK PHOTO
SIGN OF SPRING |
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 15 / 7
Churchill 0/-9
Normal
Below normal
Winnipeg 15 / 1
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 17 - 23 (in mm)
Above normal
Prince George 8.7
Vancouver 19.1
Much below normal
Churchill 5.8 Edmonton 6.2 Saskatoon Calgary 6.3 5.1 Regina 6.8
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 17 - 23 (in °C)
Edmonton 15 / 3 Saskatoon Calgary 15 / 1 14 / 0 Regina 15 / 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 9.0
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
™
Assiniboia Broadview Eastend Estevan Kindersley Maple Creek Meadow Lake Melfort Nipawin North Battleford Prince Albert Regina Rockglen Saskatoon Swift Current Val Marie Yorkton Wynyard
ALBERTA Temperature last week High Low
Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %
20.5 11.9 19.4 19.7 18.2 22.2 14.0 6.6 7.6 17.2 11.8 15.6 18.7 18.5 20.0 21.9 9.1 12.8
5.5 6.1 0.0 1.9 2.5 5.1 4.4 5.5 7.5 2.3 13.8 6.2 1.1 1.0 2.1 1.7 5.8 2.5
-10.7 -8.9 -13.4 -7.0 -9.3 -9.9 -9.6 -13.8 -12.3 -12.0 -16.0 -8.7 -10.8 -10.9 -10.0 -13.9 -12.8 -10.3
6.0 11.0 0.2 6.1 4.3 7.5 4.9 5.5 7.7 4.4 16.4 6.8 1.7 1.0 2.9 2.3 8.4 3.9
78 116 2 69 48 97 61 60 84 54 162 94 22 11 38 37 86 56
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 13 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 15 / 1
111
22.5 19.7 18.2 16.8 11.2 11.2 12.0 21.6 18.6 22.7 20.6 12.2 18.0 12.1 17.6 18.8
-10.9 -7.5 -9.7 -8.4 -6.9 -8.6 -14.5 -9.5 -8.3 -9.1 -11.7 -9.8 -12.3 -8.7 -8.1 -7.9
Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %
2.3 2.7 7.9 0.4 0.6 4.9 2.3 8.5 1.4 2.7 4.0 8.9 11.6 1.2 10.9 0.2
2.3 3.3 11.1 3.7 1.3 6.1 3.3 8.7 1.7 2.7 4.0 9.5 11.6 2.7 12.1 0.3
29 37 106 47 14 80 59 79 19 34 30 117 64 33 103 3
Temperature last week High Low
Brandon Dauphin Gimli Melita Morden Portage La Prairie Swan River Winnipeg
9.3 12.0 7.9 15.3 19.3 14.4 10.0 10.4
Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %
-9.9 -11.6 -12.7 -7.4 -8.1 -8.4 -14.8 -8.6
5.2 2.8 5.9 6.6 6.3 7.0 3.9 5.4
9.0 5.6 8.7 9.7 10.6 9.0 4.1 8.3
95 64 99 99 88 81 42 76
-4.9 -10.4 -0.9 -3.9 -6.6
2.4 12.6 0.5 0.8 9.5
3.2 13.8 1.0 0.8 21.1
27 186 16 8 152
BRITISH COLUMBIA Cranbrook Fort St. John Kamloops Kelowna Prince George
20.2 12.1 20.6 20.4 12.5
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.
112
APRIL 17, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Want to be in control of when and how you spray? The cab-forward / rear-engine configuration of Case IH Patriot® sprayers minimizes rutting and soil compaction and allows you to get in the field sooner. And our exclusive AIM Command® spray system technology option allows application rate and spray pressure to remain constant, regardless of sprayer speed or field conditions. To learn more see your Case IH dealer or visit us online at caseih.com/patriot-sprayer.
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©2014 CNH Industrial America LLC. All rights reserved. Case IH 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. www.caseih.com