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THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

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A farmer sprays a canola field west of Nanton, Alta., in mid-July. While crops are looking good in some parts of the Prairies, other areas are not faring well because of a late spring and excessive moisture. Temperatures near 30 C in southern Alberta over the past two weeks have not favoured canola, which thrives at cooler temperatures. | MIKE STURK PHOTO CROP OUTLOOK | PRAIRIE SURVEY

While east suffers, crops in west reasonable Manitoba suffering most | Canola and pulses are faring well in the west and timely heat could increase wheat protein SASKATOON NEWSROOM

Crop losses in waterlogged western Manitoba and eastern Saskatchewan will be partially offset by better results in other parts of the Prairies, say analysts. Canola crops are shaping up nicely in western Saskatchewan, said Clint Jurke, the Canola Council of Canada’s agronomy specialist for the region. “If we keep getting some timely rainfalls, we actually could be in a very similar situation to where we were last year,” he said. Jurke drove from Lloydminster to

Swift Current and back last week and was encouraged by what he saw looking out the window. There was hail damage and lingering stand establishment issues in some fields, but for the most part the crops looked good. “You know what? The crops don’t look too bad,” he said. “Hopefully the west will balance out some of the losses in the east.” Canola crops in western Saskatchewan are now only about two days behind normal development after a late start to spring seeding. Jurke’s focus is canola, but from what he has heard from colleagues and observed himself, other crops

are faring as well if not better. “The pulses are looking fantastic, as a rule, particularly through the westcentral areas of Saskatchewan, and cereals as well look pretty good.” Others do not share that vision. Larry Weber of Weber Commodities says the province’s pulse crops are under siege from diseases like root rot. He estimates Saskatchewan may lose 20 to 40 percent of its peas and lentils. Errol Anderson, author of the ProMarket Wire newsletter, said two weeks of hot weather during flowering has trimmed yields in Alberta. “We had enough heat here that we

won’t have a bumper crop in Alberta. We’re going to have a good, solid, average crop,” he said. According to the Alberta government’s crop report, 77 percent of the crop was in good to excellent condition as of July 15. Anderson thinks it has tailed off since then. “That very hot weather just sort of took the top off the crop,” he said. However, the July heat should result in a high protein wheat crop, which may help offset some of the yield losses. SEE EAST SUFFERS, PAGE 2

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SASKATCHEWAN-MANITOBA FLOODS | FEDERAL SUPPORT

Existing programs won’t work: flooded farmers BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU

The president of Keystone Agricultural Producers says he’s disappointed the federal government isn’t going to bail out flooded Manitoba farmers. Doug Chorney said comments from agriculture minister Gerry Ritz

at the close of a meeting with his provincial counterparts in Winnipeg last week left him with little hope that money is coming through AgriRecovery or other programs. Ritz told reporters July 18 that farmers are well served by existing programs. He said changes made since the 2011 flood have improved crop insurance coverage.

“So it’s much more bankable and predictable and stable than waiting for an ad hoc payment under something like AgriRecovery,” he said. Chorney said that wasn’t what he wanted to hear. He has estimated farmers in his province will lose $1 billion because of the flood, and he noted the situation for some Saskatchewan farmers is also dire.

He said multiple years of flooding have made existing programs less effective. “If the insurance program starts to break down because of all the years of difficulty, those programs aren’t working, and I’m hearing that loud and clear,” he said. SEE EXISTING PROGRAMS, PAGE 3

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u|xhHEEJBy00001pzYv.:! JULY 24, 2014 Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to: Box 2500, Stn. Main, 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

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JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

East suffers, west good An average crop in Alberta combined with significant yield reductions and lost acres in western Manitoba and eastern Saskatchewan will likely result in a total prairie crop that falls well short of original expectations, said Anderson. Futures prices are falling because of expectations for big U.S. corn and soybean crops, but the smaller crop in Western Canada should lead to improved basis levels. “These canola basis levels will be firm and potentially get firmer right through the spring of 2015,” he said. The same goes for wheat. Anderson said at this stage the best thing for growers who failed to lock in prices last winter is to do nothing. “A lot of them have done nothing up until now and finally the strategy is working,” he said with a laugh. Harry Brook, a crop specialist with Alberta Agriculture, said conditions are variable in his province. “It’s your typical mixed bag for the summer. It’s certainly not as good as last year,” he said. Brook believes it is shaping up to be an average crop province-wide with considerable variability by region. Crops in southern Alberta look fantastic because of excellent moisture in a region that is usually dry. Central Alberta is hit and miss. Two weeks of hot weather was too much

HARRY BROOK ALBERTA AGRICULTURE CROP SPECIALIST

COLUMNS

for some canola crops in the region. “That was enough to tip it over. That’s where you’re getting the flower blasting and pod abortion,” said Brook. The biggest dryness concerns are in the province’s Peace region. “Crops in the far north, they’re toasted. I don’t know how much of a crop they’re going to have,” he said. Crops in the southern Peace region are better but still suffering. The Peace region accounts for 13 percent of the province’s seeded acreage for cereal and oilseed crops. A lot of canola is grown in the area. Brook hopes central and northern Alberta receive timely rain in August and that temperatures do not soar above 30 C for a prolonged period. The heat has pushed crop development to the point where it is no longer a concern after a delayed start. “The crop is pretty much in the right zone at the right time,” said Brook. “It caught up quite a bit.”

Editorial Notebook Hursh on Ag Market Watch Managing the Farm Animal Health TEAM Living Tips

Wheat leads pedigreed seed acreage jump of 100,000 acres SASKATOON NEWSROOM

Pedigreed seed acreage in Canada surpassed 1.3 million acres last year, the highest level in more than a decade. Statistics collected by the Canadian Seed Growers Association showed total acreage at nearly 1.31 million acres, up more than 100,000 acres from the previous year. Wheat saw the biggest gains : almost 438,000 acres compared to 387,000 in 2012. It was by far the most widely grown pedigreed crop last year, followed by soybeans at 299,000 acres, barley at 135,000 acres and hybrid canola at 79,000 acres. CSGA executive director Dale Adolphe said acreage estimates for this year are down slightly at 1.15 million acres, partly because of higher inspection costs associated with the privatization of inspection services. “We think that some seed growers

Ag Stock Prices Classifieds Events, Mailbox Livestock Report Market Charts Opinion Open Forum On The Farm Weather

Crops in the far north, they’re toasted. I don’t know how much of a crop they’re going to have.

PEDIGREED SEED | ACREAGE ESTIMATES

BY BRIAN CROSS

REGULAR FEATURES

INSIDE THIS WEEK

CROP OUTLOOK | FROM PAGE ONE

will maybe not put acres in for inspection,” Adolphe told CSGA members in Regina last week. “Instead of paying 75 cents (per acre) for inspections, they might be paying $3 or $4.” As usual, prairie growers were the largest producers of pedigreed seed, accounting for nearly one million acres of last year’s total. Membership in the CSGA also rose slightly last year to 3,565 members, up from 3,539 the previous year. Pedigreed flax acreage increased significantly in 2013, jumping to nearly 25,000 acres from less than 17,000 acres in 2012. The flax industry is beginning to see the results of an industry-wide effort to eliminate all traces of the genetically modified flax variety Triffid from stocks of commercial and pedigreed flax seed. A few years ago, annual pedigreed flax acreage in Canada was approximately 33,000 acres. However, it was nearly cut in half following the discovery of Triffid.

Brightening up summer: The Minnedosa Horticultural Society holds its peony and summer flower show. See page 23. | KAREN MORRISON PHOTO

NEWS

» RYE YIELDS: Researchers » »

want to know if anything else can be done to boost yields when growing rye. 5 CLIMATE CHANGE: Ambitious climate change policies could help improve the global economy. 13 FLOODING ANGER: Farmers remain angry about 2011 flooding on Lake Manitoba, which they call deliberate. 14

» WHEAT GENOME: Researchers » »

unveil a genetic blueprint of wheat that will likely pay research dividends. 17 POTATO RESEARCH: A research chair at the University of Lethbridge will boost potato research. 18 MAMMOTH DONKEYS: This Manitoba couple prefers their donkeys a bit on the big side. 59

MARKETS 6

» SPACE SHOTS: The effects of prairie

6

flooding show up on satellite images.

» BEEF NICHE: U.S. Hispanics are becoming

important customers for Canadian beef. 9

FARM LIVING 19

» TWIN BUSINESSES: These brothers don’t let their blindness get in the way.

19

» ON THE FARM: A B.C. farm family goes big with a niche poultry market.

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PRODUCTION 60

» DIVERSITY: Maintaining natural areas can benefit crop farming.

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» LOOK-ALIKE WEEDS: Proper identification is vital when keeping out new weeds.

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LIVESTOCK 64

» STEER WIN: An Alberta teen won big at the Calgary Stampede’s Steer Classic.

64

» EAR WARNING: Ear tag sensors can be an

early warning system for cattle disease. 67

AGFINANCE 68

» GLOBAL ECONOMY: Hiccups remain, but

the global economy has generally started to recover from the recent recession. This is good news for Canadian exports. 68

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FREE IS GOOD

HEMP | MARKETS

Hemp market smoking with U.S. rule changes Kroeger Foods and Costco are among new American customers ACREAGE EXPECTED TO TOP

BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU

MOOSE JAW, Sask. — At least one Canadian company sees nothing but good times ahead as the United States loosens its rules regarding hemp production. Clarence Shwaluk, director of farm operations at Manitoba Harvest Hemp Foods, said demand is so strong that Canadian producers shouldn’t be worried about losing markets. “Right now they’re just at the research stages,” he said of the most recent U.S. farm bill, which allows hemp to be grown for academic research. “I expect them to go very, very quickly from research into full-scale production.” He said Costco has just taken its first container from Manitoba Harvest’s Winnipeg plant, and large American retailer Kroeger Foods has agreed to sell hemp products. “We know in the U.S. we’re just scratching the surface,” Shwaluk told the Farming For Profit conference. He said there was a lot of excitement among farmers about this “new” crop in 1998, but it was a rocky start. Overproduction led to price crashes at least twice, and producers grew reluctant to take another chance. However, he said processors now use contracts to ensure a steady supply and reliable market. Canadian producers grew 66,000 acres of hemp in 2013.

90,000 “This year my prediction is that we’ll hit 90,000 to 100,000 acres,” Shwaluk said. Most of that is grown on the Prairies. “A crop like this, because of its background, is not without its administrative burden,” he said. Growers require police background checks and must supply GPS co-ordinates for their fields. There might be mandatory THC testing on the crop, depending on the variety. Cannabis sativa contains two main chemicals: THC and CBD. THC is found in marijuana, and it takes one percent of the chemical for users to get high, said Brandon McFadden, assistant professor at the University of Florida. CBD, the chemical in hemp, counterbalances the high of THC and is leading to increasing medical use in people with seizures. “Technically, to be classified as hemp most people say it would require a level of THC of 0.3 percent or less,” McFadden said. “At that level, from what I understand, you would die of smoke inhalation before you ever felt high.” Shwaluk said marijuana and hemp

look different in the field, and growers shouldn’t worry that someone might try to hide marijuana in their hemp crop. “The biology says it won’t work,” he said. The plants would cross-pollinate, the hemp would “win” and the THC content would be gone. Hemp growers must use certified seed, which costs $2.50 per pound. The seeding rate is 25 to 30 lb. per acre, and the price for conventional hemp is 81 to 84 cents per lb. “Ou r c o nv e nt i o na l g row e r s, depending on the yield, will get in the neighbourhood of $650 per acre of gross revenue,” Shwaluk said. “Organic, the price per pound is quite a bit higher and they can average on a good yield about $725 an acre.” He said there is significant demand for organic hemp. Hemp is similar to canola in terms of inputs. Shwaluk said harvest, storage and cleaning are critical. Most conventional equipment can handle the crop, but growers will need grain dryers. Potential growers should talk to a processor before starting production. Manitoba Harvest is building a new processing facility at Gilbert Plains, and Shwaluk met recently with a company from the United Kingdom that wants to establish a fibre operation in Alberta. He said fibre processing would complement the food business and add a secondary revenue stream.

MANITOBA FLOODS | FROM PAGE 1

Existing programs won’t work: farmers

It’s no accident they made these changes so they can avoid ad hoc programming, but it does also say in the rules that any extraordinary event that has a big regional impact. We are meeting those tests. DOUG CHORNEY, KEYSTONE AGRICULTURAL PRODUCERS

AgriRecovery is intended to pay for extraordinary costs that producers face because of a natural disaster. However, it is considered a framework rather than a core business risk management program and requires a province to ask for an assessment. A joint assessment with the federal government would then take place, followed by a decision on whether to proceed with an AgriRecovery program. Flooding in 2011 did result in a $448 million AgriRecovery program for Saskatchewan and Manitoba. Mike Lesiuk, Manitoba’s acting assistant deputy minister of agriculture policy, said the province is assessing how the existing programs are meeting immediate needs this time around.

“There were enhancements made to AgriInsurance to address impacts to unseeded land and forages since the 2011 flood,” he said in an email. “We will continue to work with industry to assess the conditions and monitor progress on crop and livestock feed needs to determine the appropriate response for recovery. At this time there is no AgriRecovery program.” Saskatchewan does not intend to trigger an assessment of its flooded acres. “There will be costs that won’t be covered from some of the worst affected,” said Saskatchewan agriculture minister Lyle Stewart. “But I think the worst of the shock will be taken up by existing programs.”

He said farmers make a “business choice” when they don’t participate in crop insurance and other risk management programs. Stewart estimated two to three million acres were affected in Saskatchewan. In Manitoba, 950,000 acres were unseeded and another 2.5 million acres were flooded. Chorney said it shouldn’t take long to assess the situation. “There’s people talking about dissolving their farm corporations and telling their families that the farm will not be able to sustain the next generation and they should start seeking employment elsewhere because there’s not going to be anything left for them,” he said.

Al Theroux swaths ditches near Coaldale, Alta., July 4. He said there isn’t as much hay in these same ditches as there was last year, likely because of a cool spring followed by heavy rain. Still, he said it is a job worth doing because the hay is free. | BARB GLEN PHOTO

“We’re way past the point of deciding if there’s a problem. I’m concerned that governments don’t appreciate that.” He said the criteria for triggering AgriRecovery has changed since 2011, and it’s not supposed to cover recurring events or insurable losses. “It’s no accident they made these changes so they can avoid ad hoc programming, but it does also say in the rules that any extraordinary event that has a big regional impact,” he said. “We are meeting those tests.” Chorney said he hopes Ritz will change his mind when Manitoba officials gather all the information and present it to him. Ritz did say the federal government is prepared to work on flood mitigation measures. Saskatchewan premier Brad Wall has said flood costs, not including payments to farmers, will top the $360 million spent in 2011. Manitoba premier Greg Selinger pegged his province’s costs at more than $200 million and still rising. Meanwhile, agriculture ministers also discussed the grain transporta-

tion backlog and the Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP) during their meeting in Winnipeg. Stewart said the railways appear to be meeting the 11,000 cars per week goal, but even so there will be a carryover at harvest of 20 to 22 million tonnes. “With a normal or slightly bigger than normal crop, we’re kind of back where we were last fall, except that we should have the legislation in place,” he said. His counterparts supported the efforts being taken to move grain, he added. The ministers agreed that proposed changes to the TFWP would hinder the food processing sector’s ability to find enough employees. They agreed to monitor the impact of changes and make sure the sector’s needs are met. “I think it’s good ammunition for minister Ritz for the cabinet table and the caucus table in Ottawa to have the endorsement of every single agriculture minister in the country to continue with the Temporary Foreign Worker Program as it exists,” Stewart said.

FOLLOW WESTERN PRODUCER REPORTERS ON THE CWB CROP TOUR JULY 28-31 AT WWW.PRODUCER.COM AND ON TWITTER @WESTERNPRODUCER #CROPTOUR14.


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JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

A survey shows many consumers are not aware that farmers are driving diverse and innovative changes in the industry. The report also said Canadian agriculture can differentiate itself in the market by offering quality, safe food. | FILE PHOTO FOOD SECTOR | CONSUMER VIEWS

Consumers have dim view of agriculture Public perceptions | Survey shows consumers are pessimistic about agriculture’s future, and think the sector is shrinking BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU

The country’s agriculture ministers had good things to say about the industry last week, but a report released this spring shows consumers aren’t as confident. Federal agriculture minister Gerry Ritz and his provincial counterparts released a statement following their meeting in Winnipeg praising federal and regional efforts to foster innovation and create opportunities in Canada’s agriculture sector, which contributed $106.9 billion to the nation’s gross domestic product last year. “We continue to work with industry to build a modern, science-based environment that will make Canada a destination of choice for R & D and value-added processing investment,” Ritz said. “By focusing on access to new grow th markets and emerging

opportunities, we will ensure that the sector continues to ser ve as an engine of economic growth for the Canadian economy.” However, a report released in March said consumers aren’t as enthusiastic or hopeful as Ritz regarding the state of Canada’s food sector. The Strategic Counsel’s report about public perceptions of farming and food production was conducted for Agriculture Canada. The market research firm collected information from focus groups and concluded that a large number of consumers feel Canada’s agriculture and food industry is not thriving. “Despite the fact that the sector continues to modernize, diversify and innovate, recent surveys of the Canadian public have underscored a number of misperceptions about the agricultural sector and a relatively pessimistic public view with respect to its future outlook,” the

report noted. “Some participants’ views … were based solely on the fact that the produce and goods they purchase in grocery stores on a regular basis seem to be increasingly made or shipped from outside of Canada. This leaves them with a sense that the sector must be shrinking.” Focus group participants were not aware of food production innovation in Canada and assumed “agriculture hadn’t changed much in the last 10 to 20 years.” The report emphasized the importance of telling the story of modern agriculture to the public and how critical food production is to Canada’s economy. However, David McInnes, president of the Canadian Agri-Food Policy Institute (CAPI), said farmers and the agriculture industry can’t just focus on pushing information to Canadians. “It’s also about the consumer pull

for Canadian food,” McInnes said. “In other words, what is going to drive consumers here and abroad to look to Canadian food … and want to purchase Canadian because they have confidence in how (Canadian) food is grown.” CAPI issued a series of reports this year examining the state of Canada’s processed food sector. The country’s trade deficit in secondary processed food hit $6.8 billion in 2013, up dramatically from a decade ago. McInnes said Canada’s agri-food industr y has an opportunity to reverse the trend if it can differentiate Canadian food from those produced by competitors. “Price is always a key factor for many consumers … but even as we’re seeing in discount stores and private label products, origin and the quality attributes around how food is produced (is) becoming mainstream very, very quickly.” North American consumers are

bombarded with a variety of catch phrases on packages and food containers at the grocery store, including gluten-free, natural and sustainably sourced. McInnes said retailers will always use such slogans to take advantage of consumer desires, but what’s important is the system that supports those claims. As an example of an opportunity, McInnes said many Asian consumers don’t trust the safety of their food or their government’s willingness to regulate the food system. Canada might be able to brand itself as a nation that produces trustworthy food, but it will require a coordinated effort to support such an identity. “Trust requires metrics, and trust requires transparency,” McInnes said. “(A) regulatory structure that helps to ensure confidence is incredibly important.”

AGRI-INNOVATION | COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATIONS

Slow approval process hurts ag sector competitiveness: report BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU

A report presented to Canada’s agriculture ministers last week says the country must step up its investment in research and development if it wants to remain competitive and innovative. The final report of the Agri-Innovator Committee recommended regulatory reform, a pro-business investment climate, public-private collaboration and the establishment of an entrepreneurial culture. “The main long-term innovation

challenge facing the Canadian agriculture and agri-food sector is chronic underinvestment in research and development,” the report said. It defined innovation as the production of value from the creation and adoption of new technologies, products, processes and business models. Federal agriculture minister Gerry Ritz said the ministers discussed just that during their meeting. “We continued to discuss the importance of innovation based on science, based on research and development,” he told reporters.

GERRY RITZ FEDERAL AGRICULTURE MINISTER

He said money allocated to the science cluster has been increased under Growing Forward 2. He also said he would be looking to the committee to continue its work.

“It was a very fulsome report,” he said. “It actually leads us to more questions and more avenues forward.” The committee was formed last fall to provide advice specifically on research and development. In the area of regulatory reform, the committee said the industry views the current system as too slow, unpredictable and expensive. “Burdensome approval processes hinder Canadian access to more efficient and effective products of innovation — e.g. crop inputs — and discourage private sector investment in

Canada,” said the report. Saskatchewan agriculture minister Lyle Stewart said he and his counterparts discussed the red tape the industry has to deal with when it comes to areas such as crop inputs. He said the standards in Canada and the United States are closely aligned. “We recommend that the approval process in one country be accepted in the other,” he said. The committee also recommended that governments adopt “fast-tomarket” mindsets so that Canada can be competitive in global markets.


NEWS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

SPECIALTY CROP | OUTLOOK

GRAINS | AGRONOMY

Sask. mustard crop escapes extreme events

Researchers keep eye on rye

Industry officials optimistic about crop conditions BY DAN YATES SASKATOON NEWSROOM

Saskatchewan producers are looking at another healthy mustard crop, say officials. Acres dedicated to the crop are up this year, and producers have been spared the worst of the weather and water that has dampened production in some parts of the Prairies. “I think we’re probably looking at a good crop,” Kevin Hursh, executive director of the Saskatchewan Mustard Development Commission, said at the organization’s field day held in Saskatoon July 17. He said producers are unlikely to see last year’s record yields, which averaged 947 pounds per acre. Walter Dyck, a mustard buyer with Olds Products Co., said it’s still too early to assess yields. “The plants are still blooming and a little bit of rain during this stretch would be incredible, given how good things have developed to this stage,” said Dyck. “One or two inches in the next one to two weeks would be really quite amazing.” Dyck said the areas of Saskatchewan that were affected by heavy rain and flooding in early July aren’t prime mustard country, although some mustard crops in North Dakota have been drowned out. Agriculture Canada has estimated seeded mustard acres at 465,000 this year, up 100,000 acres from last year. Saskatchewan will account for 80 percent of national production. “We’re going to see an increase in total acres in Canada, but at the same time it only brings us back in line with what the average has been for the last 10 years,” said Dyck. Acres peaked in the early 2000s at more than 800,000 acres and bottomed out at 330,000 acres in 2003. “We’re only really just getting to kind of an average number,” said Dyck. “Even with normal production, w e’ re n o t t a l k i n g a b o u t g re a t excesses of mustard potentially this year.” In June, Agriculture Canada projected Canadian mustard production for 2014-15 at 190,000 tonnes, up 23 percent from last year. Of that, exports are projected to remain steady at 130,000 tonnes. Agriculture Canada said increased competition from the Black Sea region is pulling down prices. It expects prices to continue to decline in the coming year. Mustard prices have fallen several cents per pound from last year, when yellow prices were in the low 40s and brown was 38 cents per lb. “The traditional mustard acres, the demand is about 125,000 tonnes. Canada has been very good at supplying that market over the years,” said Dyck. “It’s not really dependent on price so much. In Canada, whatever that price is, it seems to be able to feed that export (demand).”

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Intensive management | Officials are testing the crop’s response to greater input applications BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU

CYPRESS COUNTY, Alta. — Prairie researchers are studying r ye response to intensive crop management. The study is taking place at several Alberta locations this year and will expand into Saskatchewan and Manitoba this fall. Agriculture Canada fall rye breeder Jamie Larsen explained rye test plots July 17 during a field day organized by Cypress County and the Farming Smarter applied research group near Medicine Hat. Co-op trials here and in Lethbridge and Vauxhall, Alta., are testing the new hybrid ryes Brasetto and Guttino against several open-pollinated varieties, including Hazlet and Rifle. All varieties are subjected to conventional management and to more intensive management to gauge yield response. All plots were seeded at 200 seeds per sq. metre and given a fall herbicide treatment of 2,4-D. Plots under intensive management were seed treated with Cruiser Maxx and received a second herbicide treatment in spring, along with a fungicide. The intensively managed plots received 24 kilograms per acre of nitrogen in fall, while the conventional plots received none. In spring, the intensive plots received another 40 kg, while conventional plots received 24. Phosphate and potassium levels were determined through soil tests and applied to both types of plots as required. “One thing you’ll notice about the fall rye hybrids, they’re not your typical rye. They’re pretty uniform in general,” said Larsen. “That’s the idea behind a hybrid. They’re semi-dwarf so they’re shorter. They’re not quite as short as Rifle, but they’re definitely quite a bit

Farmers examine rye plots during a Cypress County field day July 17 organized by the county and the Farming Smarter applied research group. | BARB GLEN PHOTO shorter than Hazlet.” Larsen said funding from the Western Grains Research Foundation will allow additional plots to be seeded this fall and next fall at the three sites in Alberta as well as at Indian Head and Melfort in Saskatchewan and Brandon in Manitoba. “Then we’ll have a fairly decent data set in terms of looking at some of this stuff. It will be on small plots, but in the second year … we may try some large plots,” Larsen said. Ducks Unlimited is also conducting rye research at several farm locations, comparing the hybrid Brasetto with conventional types in 20-acre

fields and managing it like winter wheat. Larsen’s research involves open pollinated cereals, but he is familiar with early results from hybrid rye trials. “Looking at the data across Western Canada, the yields of these hybrids are actually quite impressive,” he said. “In some cases we saw yields in small plots … of 10 tonnes or more.” That is 25 to 30 percent better than traditional varieties, with a higher grain to biomass ratio. Regina-based FP Genetics, which has the registration for the hybrid

variety Brasetto, has partnered with Paterson Grain in a demonstration program to promote the variety to growers, millers and distillers. The partnership involves several field trials that will start this fall. The Cypress County site, seeded Sept. 27, saw winterkill this year, though it did recover. Similar plots in Lethbridge, seeded Oct. 5, fared better, Larsen said. However, rye is known for its resiliency. “It comes out of the ground like a rocket, so in comparison to winter wheat it gets established quite quickly.”

CROPS | MANAGEMENT

Manitoba soybeans outperforming canola under stressful conditions Excess moisture | Root systems on soybeans are better able to cope with moisture, says crop adviser BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU

Cortney Solonenko’s fields went from saturated to soaked to sopping this spring and summer as 250 millimetres of rain fell from May 1 to the middle of July. More than 100 mm of that amount fell in late June and early July on Solonenko’s farm near Stornoway in eastern Saskatchewan, pushing his canola beyond the point of no return. His soybeans, however, have weathered the storm. “We’ve still got some standing water … (but) the soybeans are greening up and they’re coming right back,” said Solonenko, who planted 1,300 acres of beans this spring, up from 300 acres last year. “(I’m) definitely impressed by the way they handled the water.” Solonenko’s canola has not coped with the excess moisture.

He said the crop is not bouncing back in low-lying spots where it steeped in water for days. “We’ve got some (soybean) fields with canola right beside it, and wherever the water was sitting the canola is dead.” Lionel Kaskiw, a Manitoba Agriculture farm production adviser in Souris, Man., said the situation is similar in western Manitoba. Approximately 150 mm of rain drenched fields throughout the southwestern corner of the province in late June, but soybeans endured the difficult conditions. “They are handling the moisture far better than most of the other crops. Their root system seem to be able to handle it better,” said Kaskiw, who added that water was still visible on some fields in the Souris area in midJuly. He said canola planted in potholes and low spots is suffering.

“A canola plant … the stress causes it to want to go to seed. What happens is you get those canola plants bolting and they’re not really big enough to bolt yet,” he said. “Some of the canola crop, it’s bolting and it’s only a foot tall right now.” Hugh Earl, associate professor of plant agriculture at the University of Guelph, said corn is similar to canola. The damage is often beyond repair when the cereal turns yellow from moisture stress. “When you see that in corn, it’s not coming back. Corn simply won’t recover from that condition.” Earl said he isn’t familiar with soybean physiology when it comes to moisture, particularly why the oilseed can cope with standing water. However, he knows that soybeans can withstand a broader range of environmental conditions than other crops. “(In Ontario), 2012 was a very dry

year and we had near record soybean yields,” he said. The story was the same in Manitoba in 2012. After two months of scorching weather in July and August, many soybean fields yielded 35 to 40 bushels per acre. Canola exposed to the same conditions yielded only 15 to 20 bu. per acre. While soybeans are coping with this summer’s excess moisture, Kaskiw said a heat wave could complicate matters for growers in western Manitoba and eastern Saskatchewan. “With all the moisture we’ve had, a lot of the plants haven’t rooted down very much. If we were to get a week of 30 degree weather, it’s going to dry that top two three inches,” he said. “Even though we have tons of moisture, we could still see stress from plants having lack of moisture because the root systems have never had to go down.”


6

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Moats

HARD RED WINTER WHEAT

M A RKE T S EDIT O R : D ’ A R C E M C M ILLAN | P h : 306- 665- 3519 F: 306- 934-2401 | E-MAIL: DARC E.M C M ILLAN @PRODUC ER.C OM | TWITTE R : @ D AR CE MCMILLAN

CROP DEVELOPMENT | VEGETATION MAPS

Satellite images paint gloomy picture Assessing crop greenness | Vegetative growth in parts of Manitoba is 30 percent below normal

CONDITIONS WORSE THAN 2011 The area in the eastern Prairies suffering from excess moisture and delayed crop growth this year is much larger than it was in 2011, the last year of significant flooding. In 2011, Manitoba’s canola yield was 16 percent below the five-year average and wheat was 13 percent below the average. The maps are based on satellite measurements of vegetation greenness and how they vary from a long-term average index. The map for this year shows normal to higher than normal conditions in Alberta and western Saskatchewan, but not as good as in 2011. Difference in normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) compared to normal Week of July 11-17, 2011

Week of July 7-13, 2014

BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU

Crops across southern Manitoba are usually fully emerged by July 15, and it’s almost impossible to see soil from the highway because the vegetation is so dense. That’s not the case this year. Many oilseed and cereal crops are patchy because of near record amounts of rain in the western half of the province. For instance, 250 millimetres of rain fell on Brandon in June. The meager crop stands are also visible from high above the Earth. Satellite imager y indicates the amount of vegetation in Manitoba and eastern Saskatchewan is much lower than normal. Gordon Reichert, senior scientific adviser with Statistics Canada’s Crop Condition Assessment Program, said a large portion of western Canadian cropland is less verdant than previous years. Reichert and other federal government scientists use satellite images to measure the amount and greenness of vegetation in Canada to assess the status of agricultural crops. A satellite map of Western Canada, which can be found by follow-

Peace River

Peace River

Edmonton

Edmonton

much higher

Saskatoon

higher

Calgary

Dauphin Maple Creek

Brandon Estevan

Calgary

Dauphin

similar

Regina Lethbridge

Saskatoon

Regina Lethbridge

lower Winnipeg

Brandon

Maple Creek

Estevan

much lower

Winnipeg

Source: Statistics Canada Crop Condition Assessment Program | MICHELLE HOULDEN GRAPHIC

ing the links at bit.ly/1mxxVbg, clearly shows that vegetative development is delayed from Winnipeg to Regina and into northeastern Saskatchewan. “It’s a sizable area. Manitoba, for the most part, is much lower than normal,” Reichert said. “I don’t remember Manitoba being that low for the entire province.” Reichert said the normalized difference vegetative index, which is the

program’s measuring stick to assess plant growth, is 30 percent lower than normal for the second week of July in parts of Manitoba. He said the size of the region with a much lower vegetative index is “disconcerting.” It extends into North Dakota and represents a sizable chunk of the northern Plains. It’s not unusual for satellite images to detect less greenery than normal

in June in Manitoba during flood years, but the crops rebound later in the summer. This year the vegetative index is well below normal in the middle of July, which means less time for cereals and oilseeds to recover. “(This) may have implications for reduced crop yield if the warm weather doesn’t come on,” he said. The satellite data isn’t all gloomy. The vegetative index is normal or

higher than normal in western Saskatchewan and Alberta. However, the July 17 Saskatchewan crop report doesn’t corroborate the satellite data. Cereal, oilseed and pulse crops in west-central Saskatchewan are rated at normal development or behind normal for the middle of July. Statistics Canada will release yield estimates, based partly on the satellite data, in August.

MARKETING | FORWARD DELIVERY CONTRACTS

Falling prices mean farmers face fewer buy-out penalties BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM

Grain growers who face reduced yields or lost acreage because of excess moisture and flooding are now contemplating the unenviable task of deciding whether to buy out of

deferred delivery contracts. In some cases, the financial penalties associated with a buy-out can be a tough pill to swallow. “It’s never good news when you can’t fulfill on a contractual agreement due to weather,” said Errol Anderson, president of Pro-Market

Communications Inc, in Calgary. “But I believe the good news from the farmer’s perspective is that with prices going down, it takes some of the stress out of the situation.” Buying out of a forward delivery contract is generally less painful when grain markets are in a downturn.

Prices for most grain and oilseed crops are lower than they were a few months ago, meaning penalties will likely be lower or non-existent. In water-logged regions of eastern Saskatchewan and western Manitoba, market analysts are still assessing crop damage and trying to determine

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how much production has been lost. Estimates vary, but it is generally assumed that one to four million acres of seeded cropland will produce substantially reduced yields or be written off entirely. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

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7

POTATOES | EXPORTS

Canadian potato exports show signs of life Market rebounding | Asian demand for fries results in increased exports of frozen potatoes BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU

After a decade of declining domestic demand, North America’s potato industry may have a reason to feel hopeful. Kevin MacIsaac, United Potato Growers of Canada general manager, said North American processors exported near record amounts of frozen potatoes to Asia this spring. “There have been some interesting things happening in the frozen market in the last two or three months,” MacIsaac said from his office in Charlottetown, P.E.I., following potato industry summer meetings held on the island in mid-July. “When you look at frozen exports from Canada in the month of May, it’s the highest since 2007,” MacIsaac said. “If you look at exports from the U.S. in the month of May, (it’s) record high exports as well.” MacIsaac said most of the frozen potatoes going to China and other Asian countries are french fries. John Toaspern, United States Potato Board chief marketing officer, said the Asian marketplace is a critical battleground for North America’s potato industry. “The five to 10 percent annual growth in imports of frozen potato products in Asia creates an extremely important and much needed oppor-

» CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE Brian Voth, vice-president and senior marketing adviser with AgriTrend Marketing, said the number of contract buyouts this year will likely be higher than normal. “With stuff being late and looking like yields aren’t going to be much more than average at best … I would say there might be some guys out there who are overcontracted,” he said. Different grain companies have different approaches to dealing with buyouts. In general, penalties are linked to the replacement value of the contracted grain. “Generally speaking … most companies are going to look at what it costs for them to replace the contract, so what’s their bid for the same time frame?” Voth said. In theory, a farmer who contracts 20,000 bushels of canola at $10 per bu. should not be penalized if the replacement cost of the contracted production has dropped to $9.50 per bu. Under that scenario, many grain companies will simply cancel the contract at no cost to the producer and buy the grain elsewhere at a lower cost. Some companies, although not many, will issue a payment to the farmer to account for the company’s lower cost of replacement. Conversely, some companies will cancel the contract but charge the farmer an administration or cancellation fee, even though the company stands to save money by buying the grain through different channels.

tunity for (North American) potato growers,” Toaspern said in an email. “However, there is strong competition from the EU and to a lesser extent (New Zealand) and China. The question is how much of this increasing demand will (North America) capture? Through higher quality products, promotional work by the USPB and the processors and competitive pricing, we should be able to capture the lion’s share, but it will take effort by all involved, including the growers.” The export statistics and Asian demand are welcome news for Canada’s potato industry because acreage has declined over the last couple of years. Statistics Canada says that producers planted 348,221 acres this year, a two percent drop from the 355,338 acres planted last year. That in turn was down 18,000 acres from 2012. “In the last two years we’ve considerably reduced our potato acreage in Canada,” MacIsaac said. Most of the acreage losses occurred in Manitoba, where growers planted 76,000 acres in 2012, 70,000 in 2013 and 63,384 acres this year. Alberta growers seeded 1.6 percent more potatoes, going from 52,483 acres in 2013 to 53,334 acres this year. Prince Edward Island acres increased 1.7 percent to 90,500 from 89,000 acres last year.

Voth’s advice to farmers is to scrutinize administration fees closely, especially if replacement costs are lower than the price outlined in the original contract. “It depends a little bit on which company you’re dealing with, but if a farmer is in a better situation than what the current price is to replace that grain and the company still wants to charge a back fee or an admin fee … don’t just roll over and take it because there’s no excuse for that,” he said. “If the cash price is lower than the contract price, you shouldn’t have to pay anything to get out of it.” Replacement costs aren’t the only factor to consider, Voth added. Basis should also be assessed, as should currency rates for grain contracted to U.S. companies. If basis levels have improved significantly since the original contract was signed, lower basis could offset a higher replacement value of the contracted grain. Farmers who are unable to deliver might also consider selling their contract position to another grower who has the required tonnage. Under the right circumstances, both the farmer selling the contract position and the producer supplying the grain could come out ahead. In rare cases, Act of God clauses may be offered by the grain company or bought by the producer. However, such clauses are rare in most deferred delivery contracts. “In most deferred contracts out there, the farmer takes on 100 percent of the production risk,” Voth said.

ANNUAL U.S. POTATO CONSUMPTION (PER CAPITA) 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010

137.7 lb. 131.9 134.6 123.7 118.3 113.9

GLOBAL POTATO PRODUCTION IN 2011 (TONS) China India Russia Ukraine USA Canada

88,350,220 42,339,400 32,681,500 24,248,000 19,361,500 4,168,180 (16th in world)

Source: U.S. National Potato Council

Canadian producers are estimated to have planted more than 348,000 acres of potatoes in 2013, down slightly from last year. | FILE PHOTO McCain Foods has warned Manitoba growers about the need to accept lower prices for process potato contracts because the company can shift production to places like the Pacific Northwest where potatoes are cheaper.

Potato growers in Washington state can generate yields of 600 to 700 hundredweight per acre, compared to average yields of 300 cwt. per acre in Manitoba. American potato acreage has increased slightly, moving from

941,900 acres last year to 955,400 this year, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Idaho growers planted 301,000 acres, up only 1,000 acres from last year. MacIsaac said Canada’s potato crop is a week to 10 days behind normal development, but overall the crop looks decent.


8

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MARKETS

HEALTH | WATER

Better sanitation may help fight malnutrition MARKET WATCH

D’ARCE McMILLAN

Focus on food security must widen to address clean water issues

A

bout the only place in the world with a major crop problem this summer is India. The prospect for bumper crops in the United States has put severe downward pressure on crop prices. Europe also expects better than average crops, and production in the Black Sea region is meeting expectations. In Canada, the eastern Prairies were hit hard by excess moisture, but that is a small slice of the global food production pie. The annual monsoon finally covered all of India last week, and the national average rainfall total for the week improved. However, it remained below the norm. It was the sixth consecutive week of well below normal rainfall. The deficit since the start of the monsoon June 1 to July 16 was 31 percent. The situation has raised expectations that agricultural production, including pulse crops, could potentially fall this year, raising opportunities for increased Canadian pulse exports. However, the rainfall deficit does not necessarily mean India will have much smaller production. Major crops such as wheat are seeded in fall and are irrigated. Most of India’s pulse crop is also seeded in the fall. The government holds large wheat stores from previous big crops and it has restricted exports to prevent the sale of grain that might be needed at home. Still, the seeding of summer crops

is well behind normal as farmers hold back until the rain arrives. Food production is a major preoccupation of Indian governments seeking to avoid the unrest that builds when people go hungry. India struggles with malnutrition, even though it has enjoyed large crops in recent years. The New York Times ran a story by reporter Gardiner Harris on July 13 that shed a new light on India’s malnutrition and where the government might want to adjust its spending priorities. Surprisingly, a child in India is much more likely to be malnourished than children in other countries that have much weaker economies, such as Zimbabwe or Somalia. The article points the finger at the dismal state of sanitation and sewage treatment in India. Half of Indians defecate outdoors, meaning people are constantly surrounded by human waste. Only three percent of people in neighbouring Bangladesh, a poorer country, defecate outdoors. Health researchers say the reason so many of India’s children are malnourished, stunted and suffering mental and physical defects is because they must divert energy and nutrients from growth to fight infections. It is estimated that half of India’s population gets its water from contaminated supplies, leading to diseased children who struggle to maintain weight even when they have enough to eat. The problem might be most acute in India, but the World Health Organization says 2.6 billion people, which is half the developing world, lack even a simple “improved” latrine, and 1.1 billion people don’t have access to clean drinking water. Recent strong crop prices have boosted investment in agricultural productivity. Perhaps it is time to now focus attention on clean water and sanitation so that children don’t suffer from malnutrition even when they are surrounded by food. Follow D’Arce McMillan on Twitter @darcemcmillan.

Canadian livestock producers are positioned to prosper in the next 10 years, according to an international forecast. | FILE PHOTO MEAT, GRAIN | OUTLOOK

Stable ag exports expected Steady demand | United Nations forecast positive for Canadian farmers BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU

A 10-year agricultural outlook suggests Canadian livestock producers will continue to see strong prices and demand while grain and oilseed producers will have to be content with gradual improvements. James Bryan, senior economist at Farm Credit Canada, said the factors driving agriculture today are expected to continue through 2023. “We have rising populations in developing countries, rising income and increasing urbanization, so that should continue to contribute to the increasing demand for meat products,” he said. “But we have to remember that it’s actually going to start to slow-down over the next 10 years as population growth rates start to slow.” Population growth rates are expected to flatten around 2050.

The report by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development predicts that North America will continue to be a dominant exporter. Bryan said that’s good for Canada, which produces far more food than it can consume. “If we didn’t export, our producers would be faced with rock bottom prices,” he said. Th e re p o r t sa id dema nd w ill remain firm for all agricultural products. “Crop prices are expected to drop for one or two more years before stabilizing at levels that remain above the pre-2008 period but significantly below recent peaks,” the report said. Bryan said prices will slowly rebound over the next eight years of the outlook period and be less volatile as tight stocks-to-use ratios ease.

Lower grain prices mean lower feed prices for livestock producers. “It is expected that both cattle and hog prices are supposed to remain fairly stable around the level of the last two or three years, which is actually a fairly positive price for them,” Bryan said. The report suggests that livestock and biofuel production will outpace crop production. Bryan said poultry is expected to displace pork as the world’s most popular meat. It is easier and cheaper to keep in the developing world than pork or beef. “Since we don’t really export chicken, we won’t be able to capture that potential benefit, but pork consumption is expected to make up 30 percent of the increase in meat consumption, so there’s still opportunity there for Canadian producers,” he said.

GRAIN | TRANSPORTATION

WE’RE BUYING

Feed Grains For Sales Call: Landmark 204-355-6223 Niverville 204-355-5308 Winkler 800-644-2814 Souris 204-355-6239 Arborg 888-596-3200

Grain shipments surging at Port of Thunder Bay after slow start BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU

The Port of Thunder Bay hopes to ship seven million tonnes of grain this year, the most in 15 years. Ice problems delayed the port opening by a month but in May more than 1.3 million tonnes were shipped, the largest one-month tally since 1998. The port continues to ship about a million tonnes of grain a month. “It’s very strong,” said Tim Heney, chief executive officer of the Port of Thunder Bay. Last year, the port shipped 5.8 million tonnes of grain. Spring and fall are normally the port’s busy seasons, but the delayed start to the shipping season, difficult

grain movement this winter and last year’s record harvest are combining to produce strong grain movement through the Ontario port this summer. The port has the largest grain storage capacity in North America, a holdover from its days as Canada’s main grain shipping port. Grain companies had moved crops to the port’s eight elevators this winter, expecting an earlier opening. The grain was loaded onto waiting vessels when the port opened at the end of April, which resulted in the record May shipment . Movement is still well short of the record set in 1983, when 18 million tonnes were shipped to places such as the former Soviet Union and North Africa. However, the former Soviet

Union became a grain exporter in the 1990s, and Thunder Bay shipments began to decline. Heney said the port is watching the conflict in Russia and Ukraine and its possible impact on grain production and exports. He said the spring’s record shipments have grain companies taking a second look at Thunder Bay. “There’s been a lot of attention to Thunder Bay because of this surge. It’s still dependent on markets,” he said. The storage facilities have helped reduce demurrage at the port, but the railroads can barely keep the grain flowing fast enough, he added. Thunder Bay won’t be used to ship to Asian markets, but it will remain a key port. Shipments through ports

along the Mississippi River slowed this year because of flooding, and railways had difficulty transporting grain to Churchill because of soft rail bed conditions. Mark Dyck, director of logistics with CWB said the company has shipped a “tremendous amount of grain” since the port opened in May Dyck estimates CWB has moved 50 percent more grain through Thunder Bay compared to the same time a year ago. “Its been very, very busy and continues to be very, very busy,” he said. “There is still lots of grain out there. We’re going full blast.” CWB’s purchase of Mission Terminal at Thunder Bay ensures the port will play a key role in the company’s plans, he said.


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9

MEAT | MARKETING

Tayloring Canadian beef cuts to niche markets nets premium Meeting cultural tastes | Different countries looking for specific cuts are willing to pay more than Canadians might pay BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

Canadians are loyal to homegrown beef, but export markets are needed to get full value from every carcass. Canada exports 45 percent of its beef, and one of the best customers is turning out to be the Hispanic market in southern California. It consists of 14 million potential consumers who are looking for specific beef cuts that can earn Canada a premium rather than being sold as a generic product. “Canadian beef should not just be a box going into the U.S. It should be dedicated to a specific market,” said Marty Carpenter, executive director of North American market development for Canada Beef Inc. Canadian beef is sold to 71 countries as a high quality product. Sales totalled $1.3 billion last year, and 70 percent of it went to the United States. Most of it was sold fresh and was destined for dozens of markets

where diverse cultures are looking for specific products. “The term niche is a funny term because some niche markets are bigger than you think,” Carpenter told the International Livestock Congress in Calgary July 9. For example, the U.S. Hispanic market extends from California to Texas. They eat three times as much beef as Canadians and have specific cuisine preferences. Most of the beef is typically sold from full service meat cases, where it is sliced thin and piled high in a package. Another niche is the halal market, which serves more than 10 million Muslims in North America. There are

IN NORTH AMERICA, THE HALAL MARKET SERVES MORE THAN

10 million MUSLIMS

probably 1.6 billion potential consumers worldwide, said Carpenter. Canada Beef also works with Asian customers. Many are not big beef eaters, but that is starting to change. With their style of cooking they are looking for products that can be sliced thin and prepared quickly. Cuts from the chuck, hips, brisket and shanks as well as blade meats and shoulder clods are often sent to alternative markets and consequently earn more money than Canadians might pay. However, it is a competitive market, in which sellers from around the world are trying attract the same customers. As a result, Canada has to offer something different. Part of the plan includes promoting the Canadian Beef Advantage as a set of verifiable standards and processes to ensure quality and safety. Canada’s clean, fresh water, mountains and wide open spaces is widely promoted with the idea that customers believe this is a good place to produce wholesome food.

Canadian producers could reap bigger rewards if exporters cater to niche markets, including the 53 million U.S. Hispanics looking for specific cuts of beef for their cuisine, says a Canada Beef Inc. official. | FILE PHOTO

CANFAX REPORT FED CATTLE RISE The summer fed market continues to outperform expectations as record highs were again set. A cool summer in the United States is preventing the usual shift to lighter meals and keeping the demand for barbecue meat strong, even with beef prices near record high. The Canfax fed steer weighted average was a record $164.10 per hundredweight, up $1.15, and heifers averaged $160.94, up 71 cents. Average fed prices were $43-$45 per cwt. higher than the same week last year. Demand was almost exclusively from Canadian buyers. The Alberta-Nebraska cash-tocash basis was a strong -$3.73, so it is not surprising exports to the U.S. have fallen off. The cash-to-futures basis closed last week at +$1.97, much stronger than the five-year average of -$8.78.

Cash supplies remain current, and there will be little pressure on prices over the next couple of weeks. Some cattle that were destined for the August fed market are instead being sold now.

percent larger than 2012. Non-fed exports to July 5 totalled 3,476 head, down 28 percent from the same week last year.

COWS SET NEW RECORD

The cash feeder market was lightly tested, with feeder steers on average rising $2.54 per cwt. and heifers down 60 cents. A large portion of the offering was non-fed cattle. Instead of chasing after the few feeders on the cash market, many terminal lots are calling upon background inventory to fill bunk space. Most yearlings offered on electronic and satellite sales over the past couple of weeks have been for forward delivery. There was good buying interest from local, eastern Canadian and American feedlots. The 850 pound steer cash-tofutures basis closed the week at

Western Canadian cow slaughter topped 6,000 head for the first time since the week of March 22. Strong prices continue to bring non-fed cattle to market. D1, D2 cows ranged $109-$124 per cwt. to average a record $116.20, up $1.20 over the week. D3 cows ranged $97-$111 to average $104.25, up $2.25. Rail grade cows ranged $210-$215, up $3. Slaughter bulls were $127.35, up $2.78 from the previous week and up $38 over the same time last year. Western Canadian cow slaughter is six percent below last year but 18

FEEDERS MIXED

-$25.12, similar to levels in 2005 and 2013. Basis normally strengthens into the summer. Alberta auction volumes totalled 9,614 head, down 17 percent from the previous week. Exports to July 5 totalled 751 head, up 23 percent from last year. Corn prices are falling on prospects for record yields and record production. That could weigh on feed barley prices.

BEEF EDGED LOWER U.S. boxed beef prices traded steady to lower with Choice down $2.36 at $249.81 US per cwt. and Select up 72 cents at $244.24. Ribs and loins were down but rounds and trims firmed. U.S. cow slaughter is running well below year-ago levels, and tight lean trim supplies are expected to support the cutout as we move into the

Cash U.S. hog prices were mostly steady, but packer processing margins turned negative. Traders believe packers will trim slaughter this week to pressure pork higher and hogs lower. Iowa-southern Minnesota hogs delivered to the plant were $97.50$98 US per hundredweight July 18, mostly steady with $97-$98 the previous week. On a carcass basis, U.S. hogs averaged $127.36 per cwt. July 18, down from $129.88 July 11. The U.S. pork cutout rose to a record $137.56 July 18, up from $135.33 July

11. U.S. estimated weekly slaughter for the week to July 19 was 1.833 million, down from 1.859 million the previous week. Slaughter was 2.012 million last year at the same time.

BISON PRICE UP The Canadian Bison Association said strong demand for finished bison increased prices over the past week. Grade A bulls in the desirable weight range reached $4.10 Cdn per pound, hot hanging weight. Grade A heifers sold at prices up to $3.95.

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.

Landmark Feeds a Nutreco company

WE ARE BUYING

WP LIVESTOCK REPORT PORK CUTOUT SETS RECORD

dog days of summer. Canadian cut-out values for the week ending July 11 are not available. Cutouts hit new highs for the week ending July 4 with AAA up $7.77 to $257.27 Cdn per cwt. and AA up $9.82 to $248.64. The Montreal wholesale price for delivery this week rose to $277-$279 per cwt.

Animals outside the desirable buyer specifications may be discounted.

SHEEP MOSTLY STEADY Beaver Hill Auction in Tofield, Alta., reported 1,013 sheep and 133 goats sold July 14. Wool lambs lighter than 54 lb. were $180-$205 per cwt., 55-69 lb. were $182-$210, 70-85 lb. were $170-$197, 86-105 lb. were $159-$183 and 106 lb. and heavier were $168-$176. Wool rams were $55-$98 per cwt. Cull ewes were $50-$87.50. Hair lambs lighter than 54 lb. were $150-$200 per cwt., 55-69 lb. were $175-$196, 70-85 lb. were $156-$182,

86-105 lb. were $150-$174 and 106 lb. and heavier were $150-$169. Hair rams were $55-$78 per cwt. Cull ewes were $56-$89 and ewelamb families were $150-$250 per unit. Feeder kids lighter than 60 lb. were $165-$225. Good kid goats lighter than 70 lb. were $225-$265. Those heavier than 70 lb. were $225-$265 per cwt. Nannies were $85-$110 per cwt. Billies were $110-$150. Ontario Stockyards Inc. reported 1,643 sheep and lambs and 52 goats traded July 14. Light lambs, well fed good sheep and goats sold at steady prices. Heavy lambs traded under pressure at barely steady money.

FEED GRAINS IN

Strathmore, AB. Medicine Hat, AB. Rosenort, MB. Otterburne, MB. Email: landmarkgrain@nutreco.ca or Phone: 866-607-3575


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WPEDITORIAL

OPINION

CONSERVATION | GOVERNMENT POLICY

CRAIG’S VIEW

Environmental policy must favour common sense, not fear

T

he beautiful and endangered sage grouse are going about their business these days in southeastern Alberta, southwestern Saskatchewan and several midwestern states, eating sagebrush and hiding within it. They are unaware that they have become the most powerful birds on the Prairies and arguably all of North America. Sage grouse are subjects of the first federal emergency protection order issued in Canada, which came into effect earlier this year. The Canadian order has sparked a firestorm with ranchers and the oil and gas industry. The few sage grouse in this country live on crown and private grazing land that stands above lucrative oil and gas deposits. The order and prohibits new development and restricts most changes to existing structures, be they fences, roads or pump jacks. Ranchers worry about grazing limits and their ability to operate, particularly as an amended protective strategy evolves. The situation has raised questions about whether the emergency order is just the first of many, and whether conservation groups, widely credited with forcing the government’s hand on sage grouse protection, have acquired too much influence. Two speakers at a meeting in Medicine Hat, Alta., last month about the issue — Elizabeth Nickson, author of Eco-Fascists: How Radical Conservationists Are Destroying Our Natural Heritage, and Bruce Vincent, a former Montana business owner and logger — say environmental groups have gone too far, halting development and causing economic and social hardship in their quests to protect certain lands, water bodies, cultural practices or species. At their core, conservation and environmental groups have admirable goals. They want to protect the environment and the planet.

The difficulty, as Vincent expresses it, is that they present issues in a simplistic “this or that” way to get support and funding. Sage grouse preservation or ranching? Free range chickens or factory farms? Organic production or genetically modified food? Oilsands development or global climate change? As an ever-larger portion of the population becomes urbanized and distanced from nature and food production, small wonder they choose the option they think will best protect the planet. Government policies are then devised to reflect the apparent wishes of this largest voting block. However, reality and common sense reside between the extremes. The choices are not simple ones, nor is the situation hopeless. Look how far agriculture has come in terms of environmental protection. Consider today’s tillage practices, chemical use and water conservation compared to 50 years ago. Things are getting better, not worse. Boiled down to its essence, Vincent’s view is that the well-intentioned initial goals of many environmental groups have devolved into one statement: stop doing that. “We need a new environmental vision, built on hope instead of fear, science instead of emotion, education instead of litigation, resolution instead of conflict, and employing rather than destroying human resources. “And the new movement is going to be led by rural people because we live too close to the ground to pretend.” Amen to that, Mr. Vincent. Ranchers support sage grouse preservation. What they can’t abide is being thought of as an enemy of the natural world, when in fact they are agriculture’s original conservationists. The government and environmental groups need to realize that. Bruce Dyck, Terry Fries, Barb Glen and D’Arce McMillan collaborate in the writing of Western Producer editorials.

CO-OPERATIVES | FOOD SECURITY

Co-operatives are particularly important to agriculture, food security and rural development. In the finance sector, co-operatives serve more than 857 million people, including tens of millions who live in poverty. BAN KI-MOON, UNITED NATIONS GENERAL SECRETARY

POLITICS | SENATE AVOIDANCE

Harper’s refusal to appoint senators threatens Parliament’s viability CAPITAL LETTERS

KELSEY JOHNSON

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or years he’s been known as the prime minister who’s made a record number of appointments to the Senate: 56 since 2006. In recent weeks, though, prime minister Stephen Harper has been chastised by politicians and political scribes alike for his refusal to fill the ballooning number of vacancies in Parliament’s upper chamber. Eleven of the 105 Senate seats are vacant, with that number expected to soar to 17 by the end of the year, thanks to pending retirements. Senators must quit the chamber when they turn 75. Do the math and right now nearly 10 percent of Senate seats are sitting empty.

The prime minister’s leeriness in appointing senators is understandable. Last year’s Senate expense scandal has tarnished the prime minister’s reputation within the party base. With an election looming, Harper has attempted to distance himself from the ongoing scandal by throwing anyone and their dogs under the bus. Even so, the prime minister hasn’t b e e n ab l e t o avo i d t h e f a c t h e appointed all three disgraced senators (Patrick Brazeau, Pamela Wallin and Mike Duffy) in the first place, a piece of ammunition the opposition has gleefully wielded. And while it may have appeared for a while that the Senate scandal had disappeared from the political radar, charges laid by the RCMP against Duffy last week have pushed the scandal back into the spotlight. Duffy now faces 31 counts of bribery, fraud and breech of trust in connection with alleged misuse of taxpayer’s funds. As for Harper, his nightmare of a year is about to start all over again. The charges have set the stage for a

high-profile court case with a witness list that could include his former chief of staff, Nigel Wright, several Conservative senators and even the prime minister himself. Harper’s refusal to appoint new senators also risks serious consequences for Parliament today. The Senate was designed to be a chamber of sober second thought, an institution where minority groups who might not be well represented in the House of Commons are given a chance to have their voices heard. Those minorities include smaller provinces such as Prince Edward Island. By the end of July, only two of the province’s four seats will be filled. Senator Catharine Callbeck is retiring and Duffy is suspended. It’s a similar story for Manitoba, where three of the province’s seats will be empty by the end of the summer. For rural Canada, the lack of representation is even more disconcerting. The recent resignation of longtime agriculture advocate JoAnne Buth, who is returning home to Winnipeg to work for the Canadian Interna-

tional Grains Institute, means there is currently no sitting senator with a detailed background in agriculture. No farmers, no former heads of agriculture groups and no former employees of the food processing industry grace the Senate floor. The vacancies aren’t only skewing provincial representation. Fewer appointments means more senators are asked to sit on multiple committees, which is a scheduling nightmare. While most senators will tell you they don’t mind the extra work, the lack of options means individuals are being named to committees they know little to nothing about. Finding replacements is also becoming harder by the day, which is concerning particularly given the degree of importance committee work holds in Parliament’s day-today function. Take the Senate’s agriculture and forestry committee, for example. In recent months, the committee has undertaken an in-depth investigation into bee health, released a two-

year report on innovation in Canada’s agriculture industry and held several emergency meetings on last winter’s grain transportation crisis. The panel has also shepherded several pieces of agriculture legislation through the chamber, with more expected in the fall. Among them is Bill C-18, which would see Canada sign onto UPOV 91. Harper’s petty avoidance of the Senate risks undermining both the Red Chamber — and Parliament’s — ability to function. Like it or not, Canadian prime ministers make appointments to the Senate, and bills cannot become law in this countr y unless the Senate approves them. By avoiding this responsibility, Harper risks being accused of standing in the way of a province’s — and by extension Canadians’ — right to be represented. A right to representation, one might add, that is protected under the Constitution. Kelsey Johnson is a reporter with iPolitics, www.ipolitics.ca.


OPINION

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

11

& OPEN FORUM CO-OPERATIVES | UNITED NATIONS FOCUS

BEEF TRADE | GLOBAL DEMAND

Co-ops major driver of global economy The United Nations’ International Day of Co-operatives is observed on the first Saturday of July each year. This year it was held July 5. UNITED NATIONS NEWS CENTRE

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s the international community focuses on climate change, sustainable development and a new anti-poverty agenda beyond 2015, United Nations officials are highlighting the role cooperative enterprises can play in economic development, social justice and environmental protection. In his message for the International Day of Co-operatives, marked this year on July 5, secretary general Ban Ki-moon said that this year’s day falls at a critical time with the UN working to reach the 2015 deadline for the Millennium Development Goals and adopt a long-range sustainable development agenda and a new climate agreement. “Co-operatives are particularly important to agriculture, food security and rural development,” Ban said. “In the finance sector, co-operatives serve more than 857 million people, including tens of millions who live in poverty.” He said they are helping communities in both developed and developing countries to generate energy, manage water supplies and provide other basic services. Ranging from small-scale to multimillion-dollar businesses across the globe, co-operatives operate in all sectors of the economy and provide 100 million jobs worldwide. That’s 20 percent more than multinational

Co-operatives, such as this catfish farm in Uganda photographed in 2008, are seen as a way to improve the lives of millions of people around the world. | FILE PHOTO enterprises, according to 2011 figures from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, the UN International Fund for Agriculture Development (IFAD) and the UN World Food Programme. In 2008, the world’s largest 300 cooperatives had an aggregate turnover of $1.1 trillion, comparable to the gross domestic product of many large economies, the UN agencies said. In Zambia, the Batoka Dairy Cooperative buys milk from local farmers. The UN’s International Fund for Agricultural Development supports this co-operative by training and funding government-run projects with the aim of improving income levels and food and nutrition security of poor rural households. “As member-owned, member-run and member-serving businesses, cooperatives can put social justice and

equity at the heart of economic progress,” Ban said, adding that they also help to ensure that the production and provision of goods and services matches the needs and aspirations of communities. Guy Ryder, director general of the UN International Labour Organization (ILO), said in his message that co-operatives reach many of the poor and excluded who are out of reach from the government, and from conventional markets for goods and services, such as smallholder farmers. There are an estimated 500 million family farms that rely primarily on family members for labour and management across the developed and developing world, according to the FAO. IFAD, in a partnership with the Malagasy Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries, is trying to

help small entrepreneurs like these through the Rural Income Promotion Programme. In many developing countries, family farms represent up to 80 percent of all farm holdings. In an effort to highlight the potential that family farmers have to eradicate hunger, preserve natural resources and promote sustainable development, the UN had named 2014 as the International Year of Family Farming. Ryder said that co-operatives are “enterprises of the future” which can complement conventional markets and government action. He called on members of the international community working on the sustainable development agenda to keep co-operatives in mind when setting out strategies and means for the new targets. According to a recent study by the ILO and the International Cooperative Alliance called Cooperatives and Sustainable Development Goals, co-operatives contribute to sustainable development and hold the potential to do much more, from creating employment and enhancing gender equality to providing clean energy and financial inclusion to ensuring food security and extending social protection. “Co-operatives are present in all sectors of the economy and adaptable to a range of contexts,” Ryder said. “They respond to the triple bottom line of sustainable development: economic development, social justice and environmental protection.” From UN News Centre, © (2014) United Nations. Reprinted with the permission of the United Nations.

PUBLIC TRUST | AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES

Maintaining our social licence with the public HURSH ON AG

KEVIN HURSH

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t’s becoming increasingly clear that just like other industries, farmers require a social licence to operate. The term was traditionally applied to mining, particularly new mines and mine expansions. Major pipeline projects are now also struggling to obtain a social licence. It isn’t enough to have all the necessary environmental and government approvals: broad acceptance from a long list of stakeholders is becoming the prerequisite. Governments sit back waiting to see if some measure of a social licence can be garnered before they come onboard. Unlike a government approval, a

social licence is difficult to measure. A 100 percent approval rating is virtually impossible, and how much weight do you give to people or agencies that are always anti-development? Agriculture is under attack over a wide spectrum of public concerns, some of which are legitimate and many that are not. We ignore the concerns at our peril because they chip away at the social licence. Surveys show that the general public holds farmers in high regard. However, support drops if you ask the public about large farms or corporate farms. The term “factory farm” is now ingrained as a negative within the public psyche. Anything big is bad. Practices necessary for animal health and welfare are often not pretty. Many can be defended, but others, such as hot iron branding, will be increasingly difficult to justify. Abuses or supposed abuses caught on video reduce farmer credibility. In the recent case of damaging video from Chilliwack Cattle Sales, the country’s largest dairy farm, the own-

ers and the industry said and did all the right things to restore public confidence. However, the negative publicity was nation-wide and extensive. Livestock producers have worked hard to update their codes of practice. Being proactive is the best defence, but it’s no guarantee. The food industry caters to consumers. While the views and arguments of producers are usually taken into account, consumers are king and what they want can dictate what the food companies decide to buy. It’s easier to maintain a social licence than it is to gain one. Most corn, soybean and canola crops are genetically modified, and that has been the norm for many years. Imagine trying to launch GM technology today. It wouldn’t fly. The social licence would be difficult, if not impossible, to obtain amidst all the fear mongering. Food miles, fair trade, sustainability indexes, non-GM, free range, gluten free, natural and organic are terms that consumers hear and use with increased regularity. Despite evi-

dence to the contrary, there’s a perception that food was more wholesome and safer 20 or 40 years ago. Many consumers don’t care or don’t care enough to dramatically change their buying habits. But the food industry, farmers included, ignores the trends at their peril. Many urban dwellers now think it’s their inherent right to raise chickens in their backyards. Meanwhile, the use of herbicides to control lawn and garden weeds has been banned in many communities. Out in the countryside, we shouldn’t dismiss these developments. They’re a barometer of public opinion and priorities. It’s tempting to just say to hell with public perception: they don’t know what they’re talking about; science is on our side; it’s our land and this is the way we do things out here. If we give in to that temptation, public trust will be lost and our social licence will be difficult to maintain. Kevin Hursh is an agricultural journalist, consultant and farmer. He can be reached by e-mail at kevin@hursh.ca.

Thank goodness the world wants our beef bits EDITORIAL NOTEBOOK

BARB GLEN, REPORTER

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uring a telephone interview with beef industry folks while they were on a trade mission in China last month, I could easily picture Rob Meijer, John Masswohl and Dave Solverson sitting around a table in Shanghai, eating bits of food from dishes on a central lazy susan. That was my experience in China during a trip two years ago. The food — some of which may have been beef and some of which may have been pork and some of which was definitely fish, as evidenced by the head, scales and fins still attached — was most often presented in small bits swimming in mysterious sauces. I wondered then how Canada’s determination to sell high-end beef and pork to China could possibly pan out. Steaks, roasts, chops and tenderloins were nowhere to be found in Shanghai, Yi-Chang, Chongqing, Chengdu, Xi’an and Beijing. There is no shortage of consumers in each of those cities, most of which had populations larger than Toronto. Though the air is thick and the streets teeming with people, the food in China is plentiful, if frequently unidentifiable. A big chunk of meat, one sign of an excellent meal in Canada, is foreign to Asian tables. Nor does it lend itself to easy handling with chopsticks. But then, I was looking at the meals as a foreigner would. Those in charge of marketing Canadian beef have considered it from a more knowledgeable angle. Many Chinese dishes require thinly sliced, savoury meat, the “small bits” I consumed on my own journey. Thus the culinary door is wide open to Canadian-sourced short ribs, chucks, butts and blades that will suit the Chinese cooking style and palate. If and when the menu becomes more westernized, this country can meet that demand, too. Masswohl related an astonishing fact during our interview: if every person in China ate one more hamburger, it would amount to more beef than Canada produces in a year. In a story on page 9, reporter Barbara Duckworth recounts market potential in the Hispanic and halal markets here in North America. We’re not talking steaks and roasts there, either. Clearly a wider perspective on meat marketing is best. The array of Asian dishes, though tasty, gave me appreciation for the cuisine. But I won’t be trading in barbecued steak or pork ribs for those saucy little bits of protein. Other markets can have those.


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JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

OPEN FORUM LETTERS POLICY:

DITCHING

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.

During my lifetime and years of farming, I have found that Mother Nature can be so benevolent. However, she can be so abusive as your July 10 issue has shown us. I am 100 percent certain that Mother Nature cannot be totally blamed for all the damage, both property and personal (health), inflicted upon our fellow residents. There are people who feel very strongly that their neighbours’ land should be a receptacle for their unwanted water. I am referring to all

the open water ditching that has been allowed without strong stoppage repercussions. What has become the net result of Mother Nature’s ravages could very rightly been big time avoided. Yes, there would have been damage from the intense rain, but there would not have been such a dramatic multifold increase in the damages. The continuation of open ditching could eventually result in such high insurance rates that no one could afford or there could be clauses that make insurance useless to purchase. Some of my farmland has been the proud receptacle for unwanted water from as far away as 20 miles. My water woes have been detri-

mental to my right to use my property for my use and not for the use of others’ unwanted water storage. Perhaps land taxation could be used such that (if ) the land is totally ditched (and) void of water, then that property should be up to five times the base quarter tax. On the other side of the equation, non-drained land would only be taxed the base rate. Also, if my land is to be used as a receptacle for others’ water then the tax rate should accordingly be cut to as little as $1 per quarter. You gain, you pay. Delwyn Jansen, Humboldt, Sask.

Got something to say? We’re listening. What did you think of this week’s issue? We welcome your letters to the editor. Send them in by email to newsroom@ producer.com or mail it to the address on the weather page.

SENIORS | MAKING A DIFFERENCE

Young and old need each other SPIRITUAL VIGNETTES

JOYCE SASSE

S To thrive, a farm also needs the right financial conditions. TD is committed to helping farmers build for the future. The Franke twins first came to us in 2001 with an ambitious plan to grow their grandparents’ farm. Though they were barely over 20, their TD Agriculture Specialist quickly recognized their potential and backed their plan. Over the years, Jolene has been there for every major financial decision affecting the farm, helping it grow to thousands of acres and over 250 head of cattle. A personalized approach to agriculture finance, like Jolene’s, is something all TD Agriculture Specialists bring. Maybe it’s time you brought one to your farm.

Visit a branch or tdcanadatrust.com/agriculture ®

The TD logo and other trade-marks are the property of The Toronto-Dominion Bank.

eniors’ facilities don’t have to be dead-end ghettos. A multi-level residence for seniors in an Atlantic seaboard city discovered a way to revitalize its paying guests, according to a recent radio story. The facility agreed to provide accommodation for two athletes as part of the Support Our Olympians program. Excitement among the seniors reached fever pitch once the newcomers were named and the rooms were designated. Women sewed curtains and men scrounged bits of furnishings to fix up the rooms. Everyone set their minds to thinking how the two young soccer players could be made to feel welcome. The athletes, who were accustomed to operating on a minimal budget, thought their new digs were palatial. As well, surrogate grandparents abounded. Details about the newest residents’ training schedules, their nutritional needs and possible treatments for training injuries became the talk of the day. Everyone found a way to become part of the unfolding story. Some got out to watch the practices. Others offered warm support when the exhausted athletes returned home. The games often took place at night, but still the bus was full when it left for the stadium. Even when the bus trip was cancelled because of weather, a faithful few made their own way to cheer for their team. Instead of having older folks fret that they are taking a step closer to the great beyond when they move into a seniors’ accommodation, it is possible to see how new relationships can be built when people feel it is possible to be a vital part of other people’s lives.

Joyce Sasse writes for the Canadian Rural Church Network at www.canadian ruralchurch.net.


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

13

& OPINION CLIMATE CHANGE | GOV’T POLICY

Climate policies could lift economy Benefits | Improving energy efficiency could boost economic output LONDON (Reuters) — Global economic output could rise by as much as an additional $2.8 trillion a year, or 2.2 percent, by 2030 if government policies improve energy efficiency, waste management and public transport, according to a World Bank report. The report, produced with philanthropic group ClimateWorks Foundation, analyzed the benefits of ambitious policies to cut emissions from transport, industrial and building sectors as well as from waste and cooking fuels in Brazil, China, India, Mexico, the United States and the European Union. It found a shift to low-carbon transport and improved energy efficiency in factories, buildings and appliances could increase global growth in gross domestic product by an extra $1.9 trillion, or 1.5 percent, a year by 2030. If financing and technology investment increased, global GDP could grow by an additional $2.8 trillion, or 2.2 percent a year by 2030, the World Bank said. Climate policies could also avert at least 94,000 premature deaths a year from pollution-related diseases by 2030, improve crop productivity and prevent around 8.5 billion tonnes of greenhouse gases being emitted — the same as taking around two billion cars off the road. For example, if China deployed 70 million low-carbon cook stoves, it could avoid around one million premature deaths from pollution and reap almost $11 billion in economic benefits, the report showed. “These interventions should seem like no-brainers to governments around the world,” World Bank Group president Jim Yong Kim told reporters on a conference call. “The report removes another false barrier, another false argument not to take action against climate change,” he added. In March, a report by a UN panel of scientists projected that the effects of global warming could cut global economic output by between 0.2 and two percent a year by damaging human health, disrupting water supplies and raising sea levels. However, many countries believe this is an underestimate because it excludes risks of catastrophic changes, such as a Greenland ice melt or the collapse of coral reefs, which could cause massive economic losses. To speed up action on climate change, United Nations’ secretary general Ban Ki-moon has invited heads of state, governments, businesses and civil society to a climate summit on Sept.23 in New York.

If governments around the world adopted certain policies designed to reduce the effects of climate change, a World Bank report suggests it could increase global economic output by $2.8 trillion per year by 2030. | U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY/FLICKR PHOTO

IF ALL YOU SEE IS A BIN... You’re You re only seeing s half the picture. When storing and managing grain, fertilizer and liquid products, look to a name you trust. Westeel supplies a full line of farm management products, all manufactured to the same industry leading standards our bins are famous for. See everything we can bring to your farm. Talk to your Westeel dealer today. 888-WESTEEL (937-8335) info@westeel.com WESTEEL.COM


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NEWS

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

MANITOBA WATER | FLOOD MITIGATION

Farmers demand water channel now, not in seven years Drainage solution sought | Ottawa says the Manitoba government’s claim that federal regulations are causing the delay are preposterous BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU

OAKLAND, Man. — It was hard not to think of the Nile, Amazon or one of the world’s other great rivers as water rushed under a bridge four kilometres south of Lake Manitoba. In mid-July, 35,000 cubic feet per second of water was flowing through the Portage Diversion, which transports water from the Assiniboine River near Portage la Prairie, Man., to Lake Manitoba. Water in the drainage channel stretched at least 500 metres from

bank to bank as excavators and other heavy equipment moved earth to stabilize the diversion and contain the powerful flow. The water was nearly at the top of the banks and would have flowed onto fields on the east and west sides of the channel if it had been only a few centimetres higher. Water did spill over the banks and flood farmland at other locations along the diversion channel. About 150 farmers, cottage owners and municipal representatives from around Lake Manitoba met July 15 at a farm adjacent to the drainage chan-

nel two km north of the bridge to express their frustrations over the massive amount of water entering the lake. Lake Manitoba rose to record heights in 2011, flooding pastures, hayland and cottage property on its shores. Landowners said at the time and still maintain that 2011 was an artificial and deliberate flood because the province diverted excess water from the Assiniboine River into Lake Manitoba to protect property east of Portage la Prairie. Lake Manitoba farmers are now

worried about a repeat of 2011, following 150 to 200 millimetres of rain in eastern Saskatchewan and western Manitoba in late June. Kam Blight, reeve of the Rural Municipality of Portage La Prairie, told the meeting that landowners around the lake are tired of being a dumping ground for western Canadian water. “Right now, Saskatchewan, I promise you this, is scurrying to get as much drainage as they possibly can done because they don’t want a repeat of the flood that just happened,” he said.

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“That means all that water (will be) coming this way. If the federal government and the province can’t step in and get something happening with Saskatchewan, then they better invest a pile of money in this area to make damn sure that everyone here is protected and can enjoy a proper livelihood…. We cannot be sitting ducks here, waiting for this to happen all over again.” In an interview following his presentation, Blight said drainage in Saskatchewan is only a piece of the story. “They’re not the only problem, by any stretch of the imagination,” he said. “But with their water coming to us so much faster and with such high volumes, we have a hard time managing our own and then all of sudden their (water) is on top of us…. All of that water funnels right to this area.” The Manitoba government has promised to build a drainage channel at the north end of Lake Manitoba to move excess water into Lake Winnipeg, and this spring the province introduced a comprehensive water management strategy. “That’s all talk, though. There’s been no action,” Blight said as other speakers at the meeting took their turn at the microphone. “Yes, there is a new flood mitigation strategy in place, but we need buy-in from people, and that’s going to take a while. And we also need buy-in from our neighbours to the west.” Steve Ashton, Manitoba’s infrastructure and transportation minister, said it could take up to seven years to build the new drainage channel at the north end of the lake. Farmers at the meeting near Portage said a seven-year timeline is unacceptable. “We need flood mitigation, flood solutions from Lake Manitoba immediately. Not seven years, not three, not two, now,” said Tom Teichroeb, a rancher from Langruth, Man., and chair of the Lake Manitoba Flood Rehabilitation Committee. Teichroeb said the province should declare a state of emergency regarding rising lake levels, which would empower the government to begin digging the Lake Manitoba-Lake Winnipeg channel immediately. During his presentation, Teichroeb read an email from Robert Sopuck, MP for Dauphin-Swan River-Marquette, to clarify the federal government’s position on the drainage channel. In the email, Sopuck said federal regulations are not responsible for the seven-year construction timeline because he helped revise the Fisheries Act, the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act and the Navigable

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15

WATER | ASSINIBOINE RIVER

Water diversion report angers Manitoba farmers BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU

Farmers around Lake Manitoba are frustrated with the provincial government, which is diverting billions of litres of water from the flooded Assiniboine River into the lake. Landowners want the province to construct a drainage channel from Lake Manitoba to Lake Winnipeg to control water levels. | ROBERT ARNASON PHOTO Water Protections Act to make the regulations less cumbersome. “The government of Manitoba has made the preposterous statement that the new outlet cannot be built for seven years due to the regulatory process, amongst other things,” Sopuck said.

“If they are referring to the federal process, that is complete nonsense…. For the (Manitoba) government to suggest this is a blatant and I would say deliberate misinterpretation of the situation.” Blight said he doesn’t know how long it takes to build a channel

between Lake Manitoba and Lake Winnipeg, but the province needs to act now. “They should start turning soil immediately,” he said. “If there’s no sense of urgency because of this event right now, I don’t know what will bring a sense of urgency.”

Manitoba forecasters said in a July 18 flood bulletin that water flows on the Assiniboine River are dropping. They also said that the amount of water diverted into Lake Manitoba will be reduced for the remainder of the summer. As well, the province said Lake Manitoba will peak at 814.8 feet above sea level in early August, a couple of feet below maximum levels during the flood of 2011. The prediction is little comfort for landowners around the lake who have been angry at the province for three years. In 2011, the province diverted billions of litres of water from the Assiniboine River into Lake Manitoba. Farmers said the deliberate flooding inundated hay, pasture and residential property around the lake and caused tens of millions of dollars in damage and lost production. Last fall, the province fueled the landowners’ anger when it released a report claiming water from the Portage Diversion contributed little or nothing to the 2011 flood of Lake Manitoba. “What the report also shows is the degree to which the operation of the Portage Diversion had very minimal impact on the lake,” Manitoba trans-

portation and infrastructure minister Steve Ashton said in October. “I think it had an impact, according to the report, of .09 feet.” The report claimed that flood water from the Assiniboine would have naturally spilled into Lake Manitoba if the Portage Diversion didn’t exist. Therefore the billions of litres of water that flowed through the diversion channel into the lake didn’t make a difference. Scott Forbes, a University of Winnipeg biologist who studies fish and fisheries, said the province’s reasoning is outlandish. “It defies common sense. Everyone knows that when the Portage Diversion was opened that Lake Manitoba (levels) in 2011 went straight up,” he said. “What the province has tried to do is to rewrite history…. The argument of whether it is a natural flood or not is really a mug’s game. What do you define as natural? Do you define natural the landscape as it was in 1750, before there were farming operations and draining land?” Forbes said it’s clear that moving water from a river for weeks and dumping it in a lake will cause lake levels to rise. “There’s no way in God’s green earth that Lake Manitoba would have risen four feet in three months without the Portage Diversion.”

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NEWS

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

CROP REPORT

FOOD SAFETY | VIOLATION

CFIA suspends Sask. slaughter plant licence Plant had problems with pest control, says agency BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has suspended the licence of a Saskatchewan beef slaughterhouse because it wasn’t meeting food safety requirements. The licence at Establishment 659, or Northern Natural Processing LP, was suspended July 10, but the CFIA news release wasn’t issued until a week later. Northern Natural is located in the former Natural Valley plant at Neudorf, Sask. The Wolseley, Sask. processing plant was not suspended. The CFIA said in an emailed response to questions that the plant can re-open once requirements are met. “The company’s licence was suspended because it failed to implement corrective measures related to two Corrective Action Requests issued in late May and early June,” the email said. The agency said the requests were

issued because food safety controls were not being implemented reliably and consistently. “Specifically, the plant was not meeting the requirements of its HACCP (hazard analysis critical control point) plan and had problems with pest control,” it said. Three Class 3, or low-risk, recalls were issued in June and July involving ingredients from Northern Natural, but the CFIA said the matters are not related to the licence suspension. The recalls included whole muscle rib eye and boneless trim, and the CFIA said the product was distributed to warehouses in Ontario and Saskatchewan. However, two related low-risk recalls from Saskatchewan-based Harvest Meats Co. and Ukrainian Co-op Association Ltd. were linked to “unsuitable ingredients” obtained from Northern Natural. CFIA said that an animal carcass had tested positive for bovine lymphosarcoma, or cancer.

ALL CONDITIONS AS OF JULY 21. VISIT WWW.PRODUCER.COM REGULARLY FOR UPDATED CROP REPORTS

SASKATCHEWAN

ALBERTA

SOUTH

SOUTH

The Moosomin area experienced a storm with high winds, hail and heavy rain, which produced 65 millimetres of precipitation and flooded many areas again. The western part of the region missed this rain and could benefit from more precipitation. Farmers are back in the field in the eastern part of the region, but those who have not recovered from the rain are not expected to produce a crop this year. Topsoil moisture is continuing to improve with about 70 percent adequate in the east and about 75 percent adequate in the west. Crops in the region range from most being behind in the southeast to most being normal in the southwest. Warm weather has helped most of the region, but blasting has damaged flowering crops such as canola. Fall rye is 75 percent good in the southeast and soybeans are 93 percent good in the southwest. Farmers are spraying for grasshoppers, wheat midge, cutworms, diamondback worms and cabbage seedpod weevils.

Hailstorms caused moderate to severe damage. Overall, the region has been warm and dry, which has left crops in top condition. Some areas are having problems with cabbage seedpod weevil and lygus bugs in their canola. Sub-surface moisture is rated 75 percent good to excellent. Haying is well underway with irrigated yields estimated at 2.4 tons per acre and dry land at 1.7. Pasture conditions are about 77 percent good to excellent with similar ratings reported for tame hay.

CENTRAL

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Haying ranges from about 20 percent cut in the east and about 30 percent cut in the west. Quality is 85 percent good to excellent in the east and 95 percent good to excellent in the west. About 10 percent of the hay in the east has been baled or put into silage while the west has about 20 percent. Hayland and pasture topsoil in the region is about 75 percent adequate. The region received rain in the past week, but most areas could benefit from more to help crops advance. Crops are behind in the west with only pulse crops rated at 60 percent normal development. All crops in the east are behind in development with spring cereals topping the chart at about 75 percent. Soybeans in the westcentral and eastern areas are almost all rated good.

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Warm weather has helped many crops in the eastern part of the region, but crop development is still behind. The west received rain last week that put topsoil at about 85 percent adequate for cropland and about 90 percent adequate for hay and pasture land. Crop development is more than 50 percent normal in the west, while in the east all but fall cereals are about 50 percent behind. Crops suffered from localized flooding, wind, insects, disease and drought-like conditions. Soybeans in the northeast are about 60 percent good and the west has winter wheat at 95 percent good. Haying is underway with about 20 percent cut in the east and about 30 percent cut in the west. Hay is rated at about 80 percent good in the east and 70 percent good in the west. Farmers in this region are haying and controlling pests.

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rated about 70 percent. The heat is beginning to affect yields, and rain would help crops advance. Root maggots have started to become a concern to farmers in some areas.

MANITOBA SOUTHWEST The region has improved in the last week with only five mm of precipitation falling. These conditions are optimal for crops in this stage of the growing season. Early and late seeded cereal crops are on track in their development. NORTHWEST

CENTRAL Growing conditions have declined because of hot, dry weather and a lack of moisture. Stettler and Lacombe counties reported hailstorms with moderate damage. Crop conditions are rated at about 70 percent good to excellent. Sub-surface soil moisture is about 55 percent good to excellent, and precipitation would be beneficial. First cut haying is 25 percent complete on irrigated land and about 40 percent on dry land. Quality is rated as 90 good to excellent for irrigated hay and about 80 percent for dry land. NORTHEAST The region saw 40 to 60 mm of precipitation this past week. It has experienced warm and dry weather along with the rain. Crops are rated about 85 percent good to excellent overall with dry peas and spring wheat topping the list at about 90 percent. Sub-surface soil moisture is at 95 percent good to excellent. Haying operations are underway with quality rated at 95 percent good to excellent. Pasture conditions are reported as about 90 percent good to excellent, with similar ratings reported for tame hay. NORTHWEST Crop conditions are about 90 percent good to excellent. Spring wheat and oats are at 90 percent. Sub-surface moisture is rated 50 percent good to excellent. Pasture conditions are reported about 90 percent good to excellent. The region has seen a long period of warm, dry weather and would benefit from more rain. However, the hot and dry conditions have greatly benefitted haying operations, which is underway. Hay quality is at 95 percent good to excellent now that about half of dry land has been harvested. PEACE The region is the most advanced in first cut dry land haying. Hay quality is rated at 75 percent good to excellent and dry land yield is estimated at 1.4 tons per acre. Pasture conditions are rated at about 60 percent good to excellent. Crops are struggling with only 50 percent rated good to excellent. Sub-surface soil moisture levels have declined about 15 percent from two weeks ago and are now

Warm weather has also helped this region in the past week, but crops range from poor to excellent over the region. Early moisture in the spring caused a lot of crop loss, yellowing and stunting. Sixty-five percent of the cereal crop is in the flowering stage and 50 percent of soybeans are in the vegetative stage. CENTRAL There were a few scattered showers but mostly hot and humid temperatures throughout the week. Most crops benefited from the break in the rain, but some areas with lighter soils are starting to need precipitation. Irrigation has begun on potatoes on light textured soils. Early seeded broadleaf crops are faring better than the late seeded ones. Late seeded canola is flowering early because of excess moisture stress. Fungicide treatments are up in certain areas because of wet and humid conditions and a heavy crop canopy. Water supplies are adequate in the region. EASTERN Rain varied from two to 13 mm, but temperatures have been warm. The warmer temperatures have allowed producers to apply pesticides on the ground. However, planes are still busy. Spring cereal and canola crops have not improved but the earlier seeded crops are doing better than the later seeded ones. Soybeans have improved with the warmer weather. There have been reports of spraying for diamondback moth larvae in canola. Haying is well under way and picking up with the help of warmer weather. Yields are reported to be normal. Pastures are in good condition. INTERLAKE Some precipitation fell last week and a storm in the south part of the region did damage. High winds and hail were the main culprits. Overall temperatures were warm. Canola has flowered and podding is occurring. Flax and soybeans are flowering. Native grasslands are still under water, which has prompted producers to question whether any production will occur in these areas. Haying is continuing in the region and averaging two to three tons per acre.


NEWS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

17

WHEAT RESEARCH | GENE MAPPING

Researchers unveil genetic blueprint for wheat Expected to guide breeding efforts | Wheat genome is 40 times larger than rice and seven times larger than corn WASHINGTON, D.C. (Reuters) — A s f a r a s a g r i c u l t u ra l g e n o m e research goes, this may be the best thing since sliced bread — wheat bread, that is. An international team of scientists have unveiled a genetic blueprint of wheat in an accomplishment that may help guide the breeding of varieties of the vitally important food crop that are more productive and more hardy. The researchers are part of the Int e r nat i o na l W h e at G e n o m e Sequencing Consortium, which was formed in 2005 by a group of wheat growers, plant scientists and breeders. They unveiled what they called a chromosome-based draft genome sequence of bread wheat, also known as common wheat. The work makes it easier to identify genes controlling agriculturally important traits such as yield, disease and pest resistance and drought tolerance, according to Frederic Choulet, a plant genomicist at the French National Institute for Agricultural Research, one of the lead researchers. “Bread wheat is a major crop. It is the most widely grown crop around the world and is a staple food for onethird of the human population. However, its genome is so complex that it has always been perceived as impossible to sequence,” Choulet said.

Wheat’s complicated genome has still not been mapped in its entirety, but a newly released chromosomebased draft genome sequence is expected to pay dividends. | FILE PHOTO “Wheat improvement is crucial to ensure food security and the development of sustainable agriculture in a context of climate change and growing population.”

The large, repetitive nature of the wheat genome has complicated efforts to decipher it. The research, published in the journal Science, encompasses nearly all

the genes of bread wheat and 60 percent of the entire genome. The researchers estimate that wheat has 124,000 genes and that its genome is 40 times larger than rice and seven

national Grains Institute (CIGI). Checkoffs under the program are collected at the point of sale at a rate of 48 cents per tonne of wheat and 56 cents per tonne of barley (.04 cents per tonne of barley sold in Alberta). The checkoff is separate from wheat and barley checkoffs collected by provincial wheat and barley commissions. — CROSS

July as a result of the late June flood. Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corp. chief executive officer Shawn Jaques said July 14 that pre-harvest claims were coming in and adjusting was underway. Pre-harvest claims are made when acres are affected by a natural cause of loss and the producer wants to put the crop to another use before harvest. “We don’t pay those claims unless it’s all acres of that insured crop,” he said. “For example, if you have 500 acres seeded and insured and you only have 50 acres that are impacted by the flood, we have to wait until the other 450, something is done with them before we determine that loss.” Farmers who want to chem fallow or turn livestock into a field can file

a pre-harvest claim and have the field inspected. However, most will have to wait until after harvest to find out if they are receiving a payment. Meanwhile, the corporation received 6,200 claims under its unseeded acreage benefit, which had to be filed by June 20. — BRIERE

times larger than corn, both of whose genomes have been deciphered. The wheat genome is also more than five times larger than the human genome, the researchers said. The new work also included a comprehensive look at the largest of wheat’s 21 chromosomes. The researchers underscored the need to develop new and better wheat varieties. “The world is facing enormous challenges with a human population projected to rise to over nine billion by 2050,” the consortium said in a statement. “Food production will need to increase by over 50 percent without expanding land use in the face of a changing climate and with dwindling availability of fertilizers, water and effective pest treatment The consortium has set a goal of finishing the full genome within three years. “We have a clear path forward for completing high quality sequences of all bread wheat chromosomes,” said Kellye Eversole, the consortium’s executive director. The consortium said it has been a challenge to secure funding for the effort, partly because investment in wheat research is generally lower than for other major crops despite its importance as a food source.

PRAIRIE BRIEFS RESEARCH

Check-off refund deadline approaching July 31 is the deadline for applying for a refund under the Western Wheat and Barley Checkoff Program. Alberta Barley, which administers the program, is reminding farmers who want their checkoff refunded to submit the paperwork before the deadline. The program provides funding for the Western Grains Research Foundation (WGRF), the Canadian Malting Barley Technical Centre (CMBTC) and the Canadian Inter-

CROP INSURANCE

June flooding sparks claim increase Saskatchewan farmers had submitted 400 crop insurance claims by mid-

WILDLIFE

Poaching charges laid in Alberta Ten people from Alberta have been charged with killing dozens of wild animals and leaving them to

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waste near Edson, said the provincial justice department. The group killed 36 animals: 26 deer, five moose, four elk and one black bear. Their carcasses were found last November. The accused will appear in Edson provincial court Aug. 5. “I want to thank everyone who helped conclude this investigation by calling in tips,” said justice minister Jonathan Denis. Derek Brown, Colton Campbell, Michaela Scott, Devan Dozorec and Tiffany Brown face 204 charges. The others face an additional 119 charges, but can’t be identified because they were younger than 18 during the alleged incidents, or are still younger than 18. — MACARTHUR


18

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

NEWS

POTATOES | RESEARCH

Western potato research boosted at Lethbridge $1 million investment | The potato industry funds a research chair position over a five-year term BY BARB GLEN LETHBRIDGE BUREAU

CHIN, Alta. — Potato research is expected to get a boost in coming years with the establishment of a research chair in potato science at the University of Lethbridge. A $1 million investment allocated over five years was announced July 11 by a consortium of partners that includes Potato Growers of Alberta, McCain Foods, ConAgra-Lamb Weston and Cavendish Farms. Alberta’s potato industry is said to

be worth more than $1 billion annually, and PGA chair John Bareman said reductions in research funding at the government level have been a concern since 2009. “Over the years, the Potato Growers of Alberta have become convinced that much expertise and research and development opportunities were being significantly decreased,” Bareman said. “Much of the knowledge and expertise were being lost through attrition.” Potato research does occur in southern Alberta, but federal potato

research is based in Prince Edward Island. “We have lost quite a bit of expertise in the industry,” PGA director Chris Perry said during a news conference held at Perry Produce, which he operates with his family. “They’ve moved a lot, federally, away from the agriculture industry and out east.” The $1 million in funding comes a few weeks after a $5 million donation to the U of L and Lethbridge College by feedlot owner and entrepreneur Cor Van Raay. That money is also earmarked for agricultural research. U of L president Mike Mahon said he has always felt the institution could do more in the agricultural field, and the two recent funding announcements “illustrate that we are very committed to helping to grow the agriculture industry here in southern Alberta through research and development.” Mahon said an official university chair is a sought-after academic appointment, and the person selected will require a blend of academic and research experience and the ability to work with the potato industry. “They’re not a dime a dozen,” he said of potential candidates, so it will

Over the years, the Potato Growers of Alberta have become convinced that much expertise and research and development opportunities were being significantly decreased.

MIKE MAHON UNIVERSITY OF LETHBRIDGE

JOHN BAREMAN POTATO GROWERS OF ALBERTA

be several months before an individual can be selected. Mahon said he welcomed the opportunities that an established chair will provide to students, who can engage with the potato industry’s growers and processors. PGA executive director Terence Hochstein said research in entomology and plant physiology is key to the potato industry’s needs. He expects the new chair to be a potato researcher as well as an academic who will initiate undergraduate and graduate student work in the field. “The intent is to add to the critical mass of potato research in Alberta and Western Canada to complement

TERENCE HOCHSTEIN POTATO GROWERS OF ALBERTA

what’s already here with regards to Agriculture Canada and ARD (provincial agriculture and resource development),” said Hochstein. “We look forward to one day when one of our children or grandchildren will have the opportunity to graduate from the U of L with an agriculture degree with a major in potato production.”

AG NOTES NEW LEADER AT SASK. TRADE ORGANIZATION Chad Fleck has been named president and chief executive officer of the Saskatchewan Trade and Export Partnership. Fleck grew up on a family farm and earned an undergraduate degree at the University of Saskatchewan’s Edwards School of Business. He later studied at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University and the Schulich School of Business at York University and holds a certificate from the MIT Sloan School of Management. He most recently served as the commercial counsellor and senior trade commissioner with the Canadian embassy in Tokyo, Japan.

ALMA GETS NEW DIRECTORS Two new directors have joined the Alberta Livestock and Meat Agency board. Leighton Kolk and David Andrews have extensive commodity risk, agribusiness management and leadership expertise. Both are involved in numerous industry-associated boards, committees and councils. Kolk, co-owner of Kolk Farms Ltd., brings experience in beef cattle feeding and grain farming. He is a board member with the Alberta Cattle Feeders Association, Alberta Beef

Producers, Immanuel Christian Schools and Gateway Livestock Exchange. Andrews runs a mixed farming and cow-calf operation. He has leadership experience as chair of the Canadian Cattlemen Market Development Council (Legacy Fund), president of the Bow City Landholders Protection Committee, and as a previous member of boards for the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association, Alberta Beef Producers and Bow River Water Quality Council. For further information, visit www. alma.alberta.ca.

2014 FORAGE INNOVATION AWARD PRESENTED The Saskatchewan Forage Council recently presented the 2014 Forage Industry Innovation Award to Bruce Coulman. The award recognizes innovation, leadership, service and stewardship in Saskatchewan’s forage industry. As a forage breeder, Coulman’s research program at the University of Saskatchewan and the Agriculture Canada research centre in Saskatoon has resulted in the development and registration of 22 forage crop cultivars. Coulman was integral in the development of hybrid bromegrass and was involved in the development of

AC Grazeland, a bloat reduced alfalfa that has provided productivity and economic benefits to livestock producers. During his time as a professor, Coulman has supervised the research of 28 graduate students and has taught courses on plant genetics, plant breeding, forage crops and industrial crops at the undergraduate and graduate levels.

SWINE IMPROVEMENT COMMITTEE SELECTED Rod de Wolde has been re-elected chair of the Canadian Centre for Swine Improvement’s board of directors for a second one-year term. De Wolde has more than 25 years of experience in the pork industry and is the owner of BMR Genetics in Millbrook, Ont. He has also served as a director and is chair of Ontario Swine Improvement’s board of directors. Other members of the executive committee include first vice-chair Wim Van Berkel (Western Swine Testing Association), second vicechair Keith Rasmuson (Western Swine Testing Association), David Duval (Centre de développement du porc du Québec) and Donald MacDonald (Atlantic Swine Centre). The Canadian pork industry created the centre to provide leadership, co-ordination and services for swine genetic improvement.

COMING EVENTS Aug. 7: Saskatchewan Pasture Tour, Yorkton/Ituna/Kelliher/Touchwood Hills area (Charlotte Ward, 306-7861608, charlotte.ward@gov.sk.ca or Saskatchewan Forage Council, 306969-2666, office@saskforage.ca)

Aug. 17: Vintage Day, Humboldt Vintage Club, Humboldt, Sask. (306-3832845, justforgloria@gmail.com) Nov. 18-19: Canfax Cattle Market Forum, Calgary (www.canfax.ca) Nov. 24-29: Canadian Western

Agribition, Evraz Place, Regina (306565-0565, info@agribition.com, www.agribition.com) For more coming events, see the Community Calendar, section 0300, in the Western Producer Classifieds.


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

FARMLIVING

19

THE BEAUTIFUL GAME Peonies were the featured attraction at a summer flower competition in Minnedosa, Man. in July. The show was held in advance of the town’s annual fair. | Page 23

FARM LIVING EDITOR: KAREN MORRISON | Ph: 306-665-3585 F: 306-934-2401 | E-MAIL: KAREN.MORRISON@PRODUCER.COM

ENTREPRENEURSHIP | HOME-BASED BUSINESS

Brothers not held back by blindness Rural enterprise | Twin brothers operate home-based computer and baking businesses in Swan River, Man. BY KAREN MORRISON SASKATOON NEWSROOM

SWAN RIVER, Man. — Wrangling computer viruses and tempting palates are no small feats for two twins from Swan River. The 29-year-old entrepreneurs are both legally blind. Christopher Yelinek repairs, sells and sets up systems at Cat ’N’ Mouse Computers, while Devon prepares an assortment of cookies on order at Devon’s Cookies. They grew up on a grain farm at nearby Minitonas, but continuing the family business was not an option for the pair, who has shared a home in town for more than a decade. Christopher brings the cellphone close to his face, demonstrating how he overcomes sight challenges by using bigger computer monitors, magnifiers and screen readers. “A lot I know what to do and I don’t need the screen,” said Christopher, who studied computer science through Athabasca University’s online program. He dropped it midway after finding it difficult to obtain accessible materials. Christopher has partial vision in one eye, while his brother is both blind and autistic. Devon does the mixing and measuring in his cookie, muffin and cake business, using scores of cookbooks and family recipes. “I liked the baking part since I was a child,” he said. His mother, Evelyn, said cookies range from pinwheel to peanut butter and have received awards at the local fair. “Someone just has to eat his cookies once and they’ll remember his cookies forever,” she said. Devon said his mother helped him set up the home-based business, getting supplies from larger warehouse stores to cut costs. His support worker helps him make the cookies. Devon, who is challenged to sit still for very long, used to also do ceramics, but cut back to only cookies. “With autism, it’s easier to focus on one thing,” Evelyn said. The disabled face many of their own challenges but also those posed by others. “You get judged before they see your abilities,” said Christopher. “I am a mechanic. I’m just a different type,” he said of his job, which in the past included developing games for the blind. “I always like to help people,” he said. His work is done over the phone, online and in person as he works through hardware failures and viruses. He updates a stable of specialized equipment and sells equip-

ment on order for customers. “It’s not worth having piles of computers on the shelf. We order what we need rather than box pushing,” he said. “Being rural, you have to do a little bit of everything.” Christopher also services his newest hobby of amateur radios. He recalled helping a student whose laptop computer crashed with her college thesis trapped inside. “Young kids don’t back up their crap,” he said. When doing startups, Christopher finds out what his customers’ needs are first and then tries to outfit them with the appropriate software. “We put on only what you need,” he said. “Most people don’t need extra junk, it only slows it down.” Devon and Christopher said many balk at the cost of repairs and find replacing computers easier. “Like a car, you might as well get new,” said Devon. Christopher runs his business from home and from a small office in the Be Seeing You Vision Centre on Main Street, where a smattering of mouse devices, monitors and other computer equipment line workspaces and shelves. Optometrist Dr. Michele Marshall

TOP: Evelyn Yelinek helps her son, Devon, with his cookie making business at Swan River, Man. Devon, who is blind and autistic, prepares cookie orders for individuals and groups. LEFT: Christopher Yelinek offers IT services and computer equipment sales at Cat ’N’ Mouse Computers in Swan River, Man. | KAREN MORRISON PHOTOS

provides him with the space rentfree, and he fixes both her office and home computers. “If a computer doesn’t work, we have him to call on,” she said. “I don’t know who else we’d use around here. He will go above and beyond to help fix things.” E v e l y n s a i d C h r i s t o p h e r ’s strengths lie in his ability to clearly articulate how to fix computer problems to customers rather than just show them. “He gives perfect instructions,” she said. Her parenting philosophy included instilling a work ethic, noting how the twins once did snow removal and wood hauling. “I believe kids have responsibilities

in a family,” said Evelyn, whose third son, Paul, 19, is a trucker in Winnipeg. “If they want extra things, they work for it.” Evelyn farms with her husband, Larry, works full time for the Manitoba government and also runs a home-based scrapbooking business called Scraps of Love. Evelyn’s adhesives, copics, dazzles, dyes and embossing folders fill a room in the twins’ home from floor to ceiling. “I’m not here to put caviar on bread, jam is OK,” she said of her modest business goals. Larry said life in town is less isolated than on the farm, and access to services and employment is better. “It gives them more opportunity

with people. Life is much richer for being in Swan River,” he said. “It’s healthy for a person to be able to do something.” All three home-based businesses use websites to market their goods and belong to the Swan River Chamber of Commerce. Heather Nielsen, chamber president, said the town’s businesses provide a wide variety of goods and services to meet local needs. She said the advantages of chamber membership is increased exposure through its telephone directory, website, placemat promotions and access to trade fairs and chamber meetings. “It’s very local based and face based,” she said.


20

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

FARM LIVING

ON THE FARM | LOCAL MARKETS

B.C. family farm goes big for niche meat market Fraser Valley Specialty Poultry | Farm connects with customers in Vancouver BY KAREN MORRISON SASKATOON NEWSROOM

YARROW, B.C. — Fifteen family members are on the payroll in a workforce of 100 at Fraser Valley Specialty Poultry. President Ken Falk rattles off the jobs of each of his relatives, from his sister Carol Dick, who serves as office manager and bookkeeper, to her husband, Paul Dick, who is vicepresident of sales, to his grand-nephew, Jordan Dick, who works in web design and marketing, and Jordan’s wife, Katie Dick, who supervises the farm’s latest enterprise, an expanded on-farm retail store near Yarrow. “We expect as much or more from them as any other employee,” Falk said, noting their wages mirror the non-family workers’ pay stubs. He and Katie Dick agree they are a farm family that works together. Dick said she doesn’t look for special treatment, but noted there’s a “homey” and supportive vibe in the family business. “It’s always been family first,” said Dick, who was raised on a kiwi farm in the Fraser Valley. “We care about the product we’re putting out. We’re in the family, so it does matter to us.” Falk’s parents, Abe and Jessie Falk, are retired and live at the main farm near Abbotsford. It is one of five sites the family oversees, comprising close to 100 acres. Falk said their farming history stretches back to his grandfather, who came from Russia and started a mixed operation in the valley and further north with raspberries, pigs and poultry. They purchased the poultry operation in 1998. Today, the family’s production focuses on specialty birds for ethnic markets in Vancouver, raising 22,000 Taiwan chickens and 15,000 ducks a week. They also produce 15,000 organic chickens and 5,000 squab a month and 20,000 geese a year. Falk said ducks are not subject to supply management. “It’s a free and open market, capitalism at its finest,” he said. However, that means they’re also at the mercy of any country dumping product into Canada. Local competition has shrunk in recent years, with only one of five competitors remaining from their early days in the business. They raise birds but also buy from other producers. “It’s a mix of ours and other contracted growers in the valley,” said Falk. The farm suffered a serious setback during the avian influenza outbreak of 2004, when the British Columbia government ordered the destruction of flocks. It took the family five years to recover. “The store came into existence because of the avian influenza,” Dick said. “We set it up to keep revenue being generated, albeit in a small form.

Ken Falk oversees the poultry business, which employs 15 family members. | KAREN MORRISON PHOTO As well to help retain key employees.” Falk said it was the family’s perseverance that got them through those dark days. “We had to sell family assets just to recover and prop up the business,” he said. “We really needed to reshape the way the business was to look to the future.” They opted to sell directly and create their own distribution networks to 300 stores and restaurants. “It’s costly and time consuming,” said Falk. “We need to do our own distribution. We need to control production.” Fraser Valley Specialty Poultry is a division of Twin Maple Group of Companies, also run by the family. It is a wholesale distributor that supplies products to retail lumber and hardware stores across Canada and the United States, offering products such as liquid storage tanks for potable water storage, brewery and wine production, farm and industrial liquid storage and in-ground septic systems. It also operates construction services for industrial, commercial and agricultural uses. The new store replaces a small retail space alongside their business offices that saw as many as 30 customers a day. Dick said it offers the company’s poultry, combined with an assortment of cheese, pork, beef and other products from the Fraser Valley. She promotes the shop through food demonstrations and community events and stresses the importance of using social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter, a website and local newspaper advertising. Falk said the store builds on their business plan to do direct selling. It also offers a connection to consumers and opportunities to show where food comes from and how it’s produced by a family operation. “You can’t keep believing that food just comes from Safeway,” he said. For the future, Falk sees opportunities for continued growth in niche markets. “We have carved out our piece of the market,” he said.

TOP: Fraser Valley Specialty Poultry near Yarrow, B.C., has 100 employees and produces, processes and sells to ethnic markets. | FRASER VALLEY SPECIALTY POULTRY PHOTOS MIDDLE, LEFT: The operation’s new on-farm retail store opened in June. Fraser Valley Specialty Poultry previously operated a store in a smaller space. ABOVE: The operation produces 20,000 geese per year, including free range Embden geese. Taiwan chicken are also processed at the facility. RIGHT: Katie Dick, left, was busy getting the new retail store ready for its opening with employee Dom Roy. The store features the company’s own poultry as well as products from other local producers. | KAREN MORRISON PHOTO


FARM LIVING

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

21

SMALL BUSINESS

HOARDING | SYMPTOMS

Hoarders require professional help SPEAKING OF LIFE

JACKLIN ANDREWS, BA, MSW

Hoarders display specific behaviour different from collectors

Q:

I am writing to you about my mom. We have so many shows on television these days about hoarding and all of the problems it causes, I cannot help but wonder if Mom is not a bona fide hoarder. The other day I confided with my father about my concerns but he rejected them straight out. He said that Mom is just a collector, that she is not a hoarder and that I do not need to worry about her. But I am concerned and I am not sure what to do about it. Do you have any suggestions?

A:

You do not want to label your mom as a hoarder unless you have the support of your mental health team confirming your suspicions. Your dad could be right. Your mom might be a collector, not a hoarder. Both hoarders and collectors tend to accumulate more than they could possibly need. The difference is that collectors are systematic. They know what they need and they organize their collections when they pick up new items. Hoarders are disorganized. They pick up almost anything for almost any reason and often do so spontaneously without thinking about what they are doing. Whatever it is that the hoarder picks up ends up in a clutter of things strewn about the house. Hoarders tend to have three characteristics. They tend to pick up more than they need. It is called excessive accumulation. The second is that hoarders have trouble getting rid of what they already have. Every piece of junk has some special meaning to hoarders and they simply cannot part with

what they have. They cannot sell, give or throw it away. The third characteristic is that they let their stuff get in the way, creating a cluttered mess in the family living spaces. If you have reason to believe that y o u r m o m i s a h o a rd e r, t r y t o encourage her to spend some time w ith your local mental health team. Be careful. Not all professionals are familiar with those treatment programs that work successfully with hoarders. Helping them takes more than medication to resolve their difficulties. The treatment program is long, intensive and a lot more complicated than what’s depicted on TV. If your mom is a hoarder, she is among the two to six percent of North Americans who share this behaviour. If she agrees to work with a mental health team, she can recover from it but it may take up to a year.

Jacklin Andrews is a family counsellor from Saskatchewan. Contact: jandrews@ producer.com.

The lemonade and cookie business was pretty slow for these cousins and entrepreneurs sitting at the end of their farm lane near Norquay, Sask., July 7. They include Alyssa Bartel, left, Ambria Penner and Wyatt Penner. | KAREN MORRISON PHOTO

ANTI-SPAM LAW | COMMERCIAL EMAILS

New rules require consumers’ consent

> Empty Pesticide Container Recycling Program

A PRAIRIE PRACTICE

GAIL WARTMAN, B.A., J.D.

M

ost people are likely aware of Canada’s new anti-spam legislation, which came into effect across the country on July 1. What is this law about and what does it do? First, let’s start with a basic definition. Spam is any electronic message such as an email or text message that is sent to you for a commercial purpose without your consent. Spam may be sent for legal purposes such as subscribing to a newsletter or illegal scams like the following. “I am a Nigerian Prince looking to transfer money into Canada, and I have selected you to make a tidy profit for helping me.” What does this law mean for businesses and individuals? Businesses in Canada are now required to obtain the consent of all individuals to whom they send electronic communications. This consent can be express or implied. An example of express consent would be checking off a box or signing up for an email for alerts and special deals from a company. This could include signing up for an online flyer so that you don’t miss a deal at the grocery store. Implied consent is where a business has an existing business relationship with the individual. For example, if you call a company for a quote on services, they have your implied consent to send it to you electronically.

Implied consent is also provided for a registered charity, political party or voluntary organization. Canadian Blood Services can email to ask you to donate if you have donated before and political parties can send out newsletters where you have donated or volunteered previously. There are also clear ways now for individuals to be removed from these lists. In typical cases, implied consent lasts for two years after a relationship starts. This could mean that two years after you purchase a product online, that retailer may be able to send you further promotional material. With both express and implied consent, the message that businesses send out must have a clear unsubscribe mechanism. This could be as simple as a clear link in an email that prevents you from receiving future emails. The businesses sending out these emails must also clearly identify themselves and their organization. If an email comes from a retailer, it has to be clear who that retailer is. In addition, the message cannot be false or misleading. If the email

advertises a promotion, it must exist. What happens when a business violates these new rules? An individual can report it to the Government of Canada’s Spam Reporting Centre online. Violators may be subject to hefty fines for breaking this new law: up to $1 million for individuals and $10 million for businesses. There is also a provision, starting in 2017, where consumers can take businesses to court for sending them spam. It may be too early to tell how these laws will actually be enforced, but time will tell. Finally, if you are a business that relies on emails to solicit clients, it is recommended you speak with a lawyer to make sure that your business complies. Brayden Gulka-Tiechko, associate lawyer in McDougall Gauley’s Moose Jaw office, helped research and draft this article. 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.

#1

Only rinsed containers can be recycled

#2

Helps keep collection sites clean

#3

Use all the chemicals you purchase

#4

Keeps collection sites safe for workers

#5

Maintain your farm’s good reputation

No excuse not to! For more information or to find a collection site near you visit cleanfarms.ca


22

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

FARM LIVING

CANNING | JELLY

Fresh take on old recipe cuts down on sugar intake TEAM RESOURCES

BETTY ANN DEOBALD, BSHEc Dear TEAM: I’m currently working on a batch of red pepper jelly and want to use considerably less sugar. When using Certo, how much can sugar be reduced before the product won’t gel? Does it help to boil it longer? — Betty Terschuur Dear B.T.: Making jams and jellies with less sugar is timely because many individuals are tr ying to reduce the amount of sugar they are eating. With all recipes using pectin, the ingredient amounts and cooking times must be carefully followed to ensure a good gel so the sugar cannot be reduced. Some older recipes using less sugar have a long cooking time but there is a loss of flavour and colour quality. Traditional pectin recipes require the sugar specified in the recipe to produce a satisfactory gel. There are specially modified pectins that are labelled as light, less sugar needed or no sugar needed. These pectin packages contain recipes that give options for the amount and type of sweetener that can be used. The pectin types and brands cannot be interchanged in the recipes and some require no sugar at all. For flavour, some sweetening is recommended for most jams and jellies. Jelly options The following recipe is a red pepper jelly made with Bernardin No Sugar Needed Fruit Pectin. It is a jelly with a full-bodied pepper flavour along with a subtle hint of sweetness.

Serve light balsamic cranberry red pepper jelly with cream cheese on crackers as a snack or use the jelly as a glaze or marinade for pork or chicken. This jelly is sweetened with a zero calorie sugar substitute. | BETTY ANN DEOBALD PHOTOS

Dried crushed peppers add more heat if desired. This jelly can be served on crackers on its own or with cream or goat cheese and can also be used as a glaze or a marinade on chicken or pork. When I made this jelly, I added a teaspoon of dried crushed pepper flakes along with the vinegar and juice for a hotter flavour. I also used Splenda, which measures the same as sugar.

LIGHT BALSAMIC CRANBERRY RED PEPPER JELLY It yields about three one cup (250 mL) jars of unsweetened jelly or four one cup (250 mL) jars of sweetened jelly. Pepper juice infusion 2 c. coarsely chopped, 500 mL red or green bell peppers

3 1/2 c. white cranberry juice 1/2 tsp. crushed red pepper flakes (optional)

875 mL 5 mL

In a blender or food processor, puree peppers with 1/2 cup (125 ml) cranberry juice. Combine pepper puree, remaining cranberry juice and red pepper flakes in a stainless steel saucepan. Bring to a full rolling boil, cover and remove from heat. Steep and cool about 30 minutes. Pour mixture into a dampened jelly bag or cheese clothlined sieve suspended over a deep container. Let drip at least one hour to collect pepper infusion. Measure four cups (1000 mL) and set aside. Jelly

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FREE Shuttle Service to and from Saskatoon sponsored by: Special Room Rates at Call or visit our website for schedule details (306) 382-0111 www.johnarcandfiddlefest.com Please bring your own lawn chair and a non-perishable food donation for the Saskatoon Food Bank

1/4 c. white balsamic 50 mL vinegar 1 pkg. Bernardin No Sugar 49 g Needed Fruit Pectin 1/2 tsp. butter or margarine 2 mL (to reduce foaming), optional 1/4 tsp. cardamom 1 mL

until dissolved. Add butter, if using. Stir frequently and bring mixture to a full rolling boil over high heat. For no added sweetener jelly, boil one minute at a full rolling boil. For lightly sweetened jelly, gradually stir in sugar or sugar substitute sweetener. Return mixture to a full rolling boil that cannot be stirred down and boil one minute. Remove from heat and add a few drops of food colouring, if desired. Quickly ladle jelly into a hot jar to within 1/4 inch (0.5 cm) of top rim (head space). Wipe jar rim to remove food residue. Centre hot sealing disc on clean jar rim. Screw band down until resistance is met, then increase to fingertip tight. Return filled jar to rack in canner. Repeat for remaining jelly. Ensure that jars are covered by at least one inch (2.5 cm) of water. Cover canner and bring water to full rolling boil before starting to count processing time. At altitudes up to 1,000 feet (305 m), process jars 10 minutes. For elevations more than 1,000 feet (305 m), add 2 1/2 minutes extra boiling time for each additional 1,000 feet (305 m). When processing time is complete, remove canner lid, wait five minutes, then remove jars without tilting and place them upright on a protected work surface. Cool upright, undisturbed 24 hours. Do not tighten screw bands again. After cooling, check jar seals. Sealed discs curve downward and do not move when pressed. Remove screw bands, wipe and dry bands and jars. Store screw bands separately or replace loosely on jars, as desired. Label and store jars in a cool, dark place. For best quality, use home canned foods within one year. Tip For jelly with a hotter punch, prepare pepper juice infusion with a slightly increased quantity of crushed pepper flakes, or substitute one or two chopped, seeded jalapeno peppers for a portion of the sweet peppers. In deciding how much to sweeten this jelly, consider that the hotter the taste the more sweetener you may need to counter the heat. If jalapeno peppers are added, you may not want to go sugar or sweetener free. Peppers are a low acid food so the vinegar is added to increase the acidity. Source: www.bernardin.ca. Betty Ann Deobald is a home economist from Rosetown, Sask., and a member of Team Resources. Contact: team@producer.com.

Optional 1 1/2 c. granulated sugar 375 mL or Splenda food colouring Place required number of clean 250 mL mason jars on a rack in a boiling water canner, cover jars with water and heat to a simmer (180 F/82 C). Set screw bands aside. Heat sealing discs in hot water (180 F/82 C). Keep jars and sealing discs hot until ready to use. Place the four cups (1,000 mL) of pepper infusion into a large, deep stainless steel saucepan, then add vinegar and cardamom. Stir in pectin

CANNING TIP Working with wands: A magnetic wand typically used to pick up sewing pins is excellent for getting both the screw band and sealing lid out of the hot water when canning.


FARM LIVING

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

23

Peonies brighten up summer show The Minnedosa, Man., Horticultural Society held its peony and summer flower show July 10. Peonies, judged by Sharon Wolstenholme with help from Sarah Shaw, were the star attraction among categories showcasing arrangements, cut flowers and potted plants. | Karen Morrison photos

HEALTH | MEDICATION

PRIMERS / STARTERS / FOLIARS

Prescription change may reduce side-effects HEALTH CLINIC

Often there are only a few patients in the waiting room, but they are all waiting just as long.

A: CLARE ROWSON, MD

Q:

I have had some severe sideeffects to the statin drug Lipitor, so bad that I ended up in hospital for two days. I have a high level of cholesterol, but have never had a heart attack. My doctor has prescribed Crestor because she says it has fewer side-effects. I have looked it up online and it seems that Crestor is in the same family as Lipitor, so I’m scared to take it.

A specialist in emergency medicine told me the main reason for long waits is that people are living longer these days, and when they do go to the emergency department, they are much sicker than they used to be even 10 years ago. The triage nurse at the check-in counter does her best to ensure urgent walk-in cases are seen first. Several patients who arrive by ambulances in stretchers are given priority because they are usually serious, complicated cases and take up most of the doctor’s time. Depending on the hospital size, there may be only one doctor on duty.

It’s been a slow start, so...

Move the

Finish Line a Little Closer Use uPtaKe IC with SuperB during mid- and late-season spray applications to supercharge your nutrient management plan, reduce the impact of stressful conditions on the developing crop and restore yield potential, quality and maturity.

New way of sealing wounds

A:

Lipitor is in the same family of statin drugs as Crestor. Both drugs have more or less the same side-effect profile. The main difference is that Crestor is more powerful, so you could get away with a lower dose than with Lipitor, which is much cheaper. You may want to ask your doctor about Questran, a powder containing fibre called psyllium that is mixed in a drink or juice. For you, that would be a safer alternative.

Q:

Why do we have to wait so long, often four or more hours, to be seen in the emergency department?

Scientists in Boston, Massachusetts, have discovered a better way of sealing the edges of wounds with Dissolvable Dendritic Thioester Hydrogel. This could be useful in situations where medical help is a long distance away. Wounds need to be closed a quickly as possible to prevent further bleeding and infection. In such situations, a temporary wound closure needs to be easy to apply and remove later if surgical intervention is needed . Clare Rowson is a retired medical doctor in Belleville, Ont. Contact: health@producer.com.

Speak to an Omex Plant Health Professional today at

866-860-9660 or visit omexcanada.com. Omex Agriculture Inc. is a market leader in the research, development and manufacturing of the most innovative line of plant nutrition products for the agriculture and horticulture sectors. Always read and follow label directions.


24

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

Stand up, be proud An open letter to Canadian ag When Greg Stewart retired as FCC President and CEO, he put his heart into this letter challenging all of us who work in agriculture to speak positively and tell the real story of ag. Reading it helps explain why FCC launched Ag More Than Ever, and why we remain so strongly committed to the cause. Agriculture matters to this country, and there’s absolutely no question in my mind that the future for Canadian agriculture is bright.

Agriculture More Than Ever is an industry cause powered by more than 300 partner organizations and 450 agvocates committed to speaking up and speaking positively for our industry.

The industry is thriving, family farms are prospering and I see incredible amounts of optimism, pride and passion across the country. And with this success comes a responsibility – an obligation to this industry to let everyone else in on the secret, which is this: even though it’s sometimes tempting to downplay your success by saying how tough farming is, you know in your hearts you’d never dream of doing anything else. Deep down, you’re intensely proud of what you do, and it’s time to quit hiding how successful this industry really is. It’s our obligation to make our voices heard about where the industry is heading because believe me, if agriculture doesn’t take control of its own destiny, somebody else will. So if you’re benefitting from ag, you have an obligation to give back by driving the outcome, rather than waiting to be told what to do by someone who doesn’t fully understand or appreciate the industry. That means standing up and telling the truth about Canadian agriculture, because right now, that’s just not happening enough. So let’s take a deep breath and say it out loud together: Agriculture is the best industry in the world. We’re honoured to be part of it. We can only hope that our children find the same fulfilment from whatever path they choose in life. We’re incredibly proud of what we do. And yes. We want the Canadian public to be proud of our success, too. Short of fulfilling my childhood dream of being a farmer, my career in agriculture has been the best ride I could have imagined. I can’t help being excited for the future of this industry. I’m forever grateful for the opportunity I have had to serve this amazing er industry and the wonderful people in it. Thank you. I wish h you all great su success. Stand up and be proud – you’ve earned it.

FCC is a proud partner of this cause.

Greg Stewart

AgMoreThanEver.ca


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

25

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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

Fertilizer Equipment.................... 4112 Grain Augers ................................ 4115 Grain Bags/Equipment ................ 4116 Grain Carts ................................... 4118 Grain Cleaners ............................. 4121 Grain Dryers ................................. 4124 Grain Elevators ............................ 4127 Grain Testers ................................4130 Grain Vacuums............................. 4133 Harvesting & Haying Baling Equipment ......................4139 Mower Conditioners .................. 4142 Swathers ....................................4145 Swather Accessories .................4148 H&H Various .............................. 4151 Combines Belarus ....................................... 4157 Case/IH ..................................... 4160 CI ................................................4163 Caterpillar Lexion ......................4166 Deutz ..........................................4169 Ford/NH ..................................... 4172 Gleaner ...................................... 4175 John Deere ................................. 4178 Massey Ferguson ....................... 4181 Python........................................4184 Versatile ..................................... 4187 White..........................................4190 Various ....................................... 4193 Combine Accessories Combine Headers ......................4199 Combine Pickups .......................4202 Misc. Accessories ......................4205 Hydraulics ................................... 4208 Parts & Accessories ..................... 4211 Salvage....................................... 4214 Potato & Row Crop Equipment ................................. 4217 Repairs .........................................4220 Rockpickers ................................. 4223 Shop Equipment .......................... 4225 Snowblowers & Snowplows.................................4226 Silage Equipment ........................4229 Special Equipment ...................... 4232 Spraying Equipment PT Sprayers ................................4238 SP Sprayers................................ 4241 Spraying Various .......................4244 Tillage & Seeding Air Drills .....................................4250 Air Seeders ................................4253 Harrows & Packers ....................4256 Seeding Various.........................4259 Tillage Equipment .....................4262 Tillage & Seeding Various.....................................4265 Tractors Agco Agco ......................................... 4274 Allis/Deutz ............................... 4277 White ...................................... 4280 Belarus .......................................4283 Case/IH ..................................... 4286 Steiger......................................4289 Caterpillar ..................................4292 John Deere .................................4295 Kubota....................................... 4298 Massey Ferguson .......................4301 New Holland ............................. 4304 Ford ..........................................4307 Versatile...................................4310 Universal.................................... 4313 Zetor...........................................4316 Various Tractors ........................4319 Loaders & Dozers ......................... 4322 Miscellaneous ..............................4325 Wanted .........................................4328 Fencing ...........................................4400 Financing/Leasing ......................... 4450 Firewood .........................................4475 Fish & Fish Farming...... ................. 4500 Food Products .................................4525 Forestry / Logging Equipment ....... 4550 Fork Lifts & Pallet Trucks ...............4600 Fruit / Fruit Processing .................. 4605 Fur Farming .....................................4675 Generators ...................................... 4725 GPS .................................................4730 Green Energy................................... 4775 Health Care .................................... 4810 Health Foods ...................................4825 Heating & Air Conditioning ........... 4850 Hides, Furs, & Leathers ................. 4880 Hobbies & Handicrafts .................. 4885

Household Items............................ 4890 Iron & Steel .................................... 4960 Irrigation Equipment ..................... 4980 LANDSCAPING Greenhouses ............................... 4985 Lawn & Garden ........................... 4988 Nursery & Gardening Supplies .................. 4990 LIVESTOCK Bison/Buffalo Auction Sales ............................5000 Bison/Buffalo............................ 5001 Cattle Auction Sales ............................ 5005 Black Angus .............................. 5010 Red Angus ..................................5015 Belgian Blue.............................. 5030 Blonde d’Aquitaine ....................5035 Brahman ................................... 5040 Brangus ......................................5042 Braunvieh ..................................5047 Brown Swiss ............................. 5049 BueLingo ....................................5052 Charolais ....................................5055 Dexter........................................ 5065 Excellerator................................5067 Galloway ................................... 5070 Gelbvieh.....................................5075 Guernsey ................................... 5080 Hereford ....................................5090 Highland ................................... 5095 Holstein......................................5100 Jersey .........................................5105 Limousin .....................................5115 Lowline ...................................... 5118 Luing .......................................... 5120 Maine-Anjou .............................. 5125 Miniature ...................................5130 Murray Grey ............................... 5135 Piedmontese ..............................5160 Pinzgauer ................................... 5165 Red Poll .......................................5175 Salers ......................................... 5185 Santa Gertrudis .........................5188 Shaver Beefblend ...................... 5195 Shorthorn.................................. 5200 Simmental..................................5205 South Devon .............................. 5210 Speckle Park .............................. 5215 Tarentaise ..................................5220 Texas Longhorn .......................... 5225 Wagyu ........................................5230 Welsh Black................................ 5235 Cattle Various ............................5240 Cattle Wanted ............................5245 Cattle Events & Seminars .................................. 5247 Horses Auction Sales .............................5305 American Saddlebred ................5310 Appaloosa .................................. 5315 Arabian ......................................5320 Belgian ....................................... 5325 Canadian .................................... 5327 Clydesdale .................................5330 Donkeys ..................................... 5335 Haflinger ....................................5345 Holsteiner .................................. 5355 Miniature ...................................5365 Morgan ....................................... 5375 Mules......................................... 5380 Norwegian Fjord ........................5385 Paint.......................................... 5390 Palomino ....................................5395 Percheron ................................. 5400 Peruvian.................................... 5405 Ponies ....................................... 5408 Quarter Horse ............................ 5415 Shetland.....................................5420 Sport Horses ..............................5424 Standardbred............................ 5430 Tennessee Walker ......................5445 Thoroughbred ........................... 5450 Welsh .........................................5455 Horses Various.......................... 5460 Horses Wanted ..........................5465 Horse Events, Seminars.................. 5467 Horse Hauling ........................... 5469 Harness & Vehicles ....................5470 Saddles ...................................... 5475 Sheep Auction Sales .............................5505 Arcott .........................................5510 Columbia....................................5520

Dorper ........................................ 5527 Dorset ........................................5530 Katahdin.....................................5550 Lincoln ....................................... 5553 Suffolk....................................... 5580 Texel Sheep ................................5582 Sheep Various........................... 5590 Sheep Wanted............................5595 Sheep Events, Seminars................... 5597 Sheep Service, Supplies ...................................5598 Swine Auction Sales ............................ 5605 Wild Boars .................................5662 Swine Various ............................5670 Swine Wanted ............................ 5675 Swine Events, Seminars ..................5677 Poultry Baby Chicks ...............................5710 Ducks & Geese ...........................5720 Turkeys.......................................5730 Birds Various ............................. 5732 Poultry Various ..........................5740 Poultry Equipment..................... 5741 Specialty Alpacas ...................................... 5753 Deer............................................ 5757 Elk ..............................................5760 Goats .......................................... 5765 Llama .........................................5770 Rabbits....................................... 5773 Ratite: Emu, Ostrich, Rhea .................... 5775 Yaks ............................................5780 Events & Seminars..................... 5781 Specialty Livestock Equipment. ................................ 5783 Livestock Various ........................5785 Livestock Equipment .................. 5790 Livestock Services & Vet Supplies ..................................... 5792 Lost and Found .............................. 5800 Miscellaneous Articles................... 5850 Misc Articles Wanted ......................5855 Musical ............................................5910 Notices ............................................5925 Oilfield Equipment..........................5935 ORGANIC Certification Services ..................5943 Food .............................................5945 Grains...........................................5947 Livestock ..................................... 5948 Personal (prepaid) ......................... 5950 Personal Various (prepaid)................ 5952 Pest Control ................................... 5960 PETS Registered ....................................5970 Non Registered ............................ 5971 Working Dogs ...............................5973 Pets & Dog Events ........................ 5975 Photography .................................. 5980 Propane ..........................................6000 Pumps ............................................ 6010 Radio, TV & Satellites ....................6040 REAL ESTATE B.C. Properties .............................6110 Commercial Buildings/Land .......................... 6115 Condos/Townhouses ...................6120 Cottages & Lots ............................ 6125 Houses & Lots ..............................6126 Mobile Homes .............................. 6127 Ready To Move ............................. 6128 Resorts .........................................6129 Recreational Property .................6130 Farms & Ranches British Columbia........................ 6131 Alberta ....................................... 6132 Saskatchewan ............................ 6133 Manitoba ....................................6134 Pastures .....................................6136 Wanted .......................................6138 Acreages ....................................6139 Miscellaneous ........................... 6140 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES All Terrain Vehicles ...................... 6161 Boats & Watercraft ...................... 6162 Campers & Trailers ......................6164 Golf Cars ......................................6165 Motor Homes ...............................6166 Motorcycles ................................. 6167 Snowmobiles ...............................6168 Refrigeration .................................. 6180

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

CANADIAN ARTIQUES ROADSHOW RETURNS TO THE PRAIRIES During our upcoming tour of Alberta, Sask. & Manitoba, the roadshow team will again be purchasing gold & silver. Any amounts from several coins to bags or boxes of coins, we buy it all and pay cash on the spot. All coins or jewelry transactions will be in the comfort and security of your home with our licensed appraiser.

To book a free in home visit simply call the toll free number below and ask for Amy

778-257-8647


26 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

1959 PIPER COMANCHE 180, TTSN 3061, SMOH 130. In 2002: new paint, fuel bladders, conduits, and windshield. New 3 TOWN OF MARSHALL Centennial Celebra- blade prop. Good condition, $57,000. tion (Inc. 1914-2014), Saturday, September 867-633-8470, Whitehorse, YT. 6th, 8:00 AM Registration. Pancake break- 1971 PIPER CHEROKEE 140D with perforfast, old fashioned tea, baseball, horse- mance upgrade. Phone: 306-382-9024, shoes, Saturday night family dance with live Saskatoon, SK. band, Sunday morning interdenominational church service. Remember to bring your AIRCRAFT IMPORTS AND PRE-PURbaseball gloves! Please reply before August CHASES including annual inspections, 11, 2014. 306-387-6340, Marshall, SK., anywhere in North America. All imports http://www.townofmarshall.ca done in-house at CJJ4 in new spacious hangar. Call/text 204-747-4787 for more info and estimates, borderair@hotmail.ca Deloraine, MB.

1976 GRUMMAN TRAVELER, only 432 hrs. TTSN, always hangared, no damage history, extensive annual just completed, $45,000. 306-536-5055, Lumsden, SK. LY C O M I N G 0 - 3 2 0 , 1 5 0 / 1 6 0 H P ; 0-290-D, 135 HP, 1100 SMOH. Lethbridge, AB. 403-327-4582, 403-308-0062.

1973 THRUSH 600, 5400 TT, C of A, Aero eng. 0TT, Ag 100-2 prop, ext. wings, Satloc GPS, flow control, spring. Bengough, SK., call 306-268-7400, 306-268-7550. LEMBERG FLY-IN BREAKFAST 21st annual, Sunday, August 10, 2014, 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM. Plane rides by Leading Edge Aviation. Pilots in command eligible for $100 draw. EAA and COPA member welcome. Air strip listed in CFS as CKJ9 and is a Regina Flying Club Member Poker Derby stop off that day. Radio 123.2 MHZ. Call 306-335-7613 or 306-335-2329 for info.

S H O W

and S

A L E

9 am - 4 pm

1970 PA39 TWIN Comanche turbo, CR, 4625 TT, King equipment, many modifications and new parts, recent paint and int. Call 306-752-4909, Melfort, SK. 1960 PA22 TRIPACER, only 75 hrs SMOH, King radio transponder, mode C light weight starter, handcrafted interior, always hangered. 204-647-7750, Laurier, MB

2014

A N TI QU E

S a t u rda y Ju ly 26

1960 CESSNA 150 w/STOL kit, 1003 SMOH, 4298 TTSN, Edo-Aire NavCom, Sigtronics intercom, artificial horizon, directional gyro, cyl. head temp gauge, shoulder harness, GPS, recent annual, $22,500 WANTED: HORITZONAL STABLIZER for OBO. Call Don at 780-726-3545 (home) or Luscome. Call 306-635-4493, evenings 780-645-4414 (work), St. Paul, AB. Smeaton, SK.

CESSNA 414, 9046 AFTT, engines Ram Series VI, 1048/482 TSO, 1057/471 TSO, S-Tec autopilot; PIPER Aztec C, 4280 AFTT, engines 1245/409 hrs. TSO, props 269/269 TSO, new paint and int. 2007; 3 TRAVEL AIRs, 1964, 1966 and 1968, former flight school aircraft, IFR certified; BEAVER, 1959, converted from US military L-20A Model, 8184 AFTT, eng. 274 hrs. TSO, OH by Covington aircraft eng. 2007; PIPER Navajo, 8859 AFTT, Cleveland wheels and brakes, cargo door, Kannad ELT. 403-637-2250, Water Valley, AB. 1947 PA12, 150 HP, 2631 TT, 827 SMOH, Edo 2000, Flylite 3000 hydraulic skis, cub gear, full flaps, ceconite 1990, Marco GPS, King KY97, encoding transponder, recent paint and fabric rejuvenation, engine tent, wing covers, other extras, $50,000. 403-478-4115, Calgary, AB. 1975 C182P, SKYLANE, 2760 TT, 1179 SMOH, new leather int., long range tanks, hangared, vg. 306-752-4909, Melfort, SK.

Springbank WESTERN HERITAGE

JOIN THE AUCTION ACTION TEAM

S u n da y Ju ly 27

10 am - 3 pm 32224A – Springbank Road Calgary, AB. (Located 1 mile South of Calaway Park off Hwy #1)

For more information contact Kirk at 403-992-3330 Donna or Guy at 403-637-2459

bluechipshow@gmail.com

BOECHLER-SCHIRA AUCTIONEERING Sa t. July 26 th

- S piritw o o d

L yle & Alin e Bella m y 10:00 a m

Re s to re d Tra c to rs , An tiqu e s , To o ls

Sun . July 27th

- La n gha m

L a rry Pa vlo ff 1:00 pm

An tiqu e , S po rtM e m o ra b ilia , Ac re a ge Au c tio n S a le Chec k outour w eb site for a d eta iled listing

w w w .b oe ch le rs ch ira a uction .com

FOR SALE: JD model 30 combine; 12’ swather; 12’ discer; Flight loader w/hopper; Horse trip hay rake; 2 furrow plow; 5’ horse drawn mower. Sell as package for $3000, or sell individually. Contact Orville 306-846-2130, Dinsmore, SK. 1948 JOHN DEERE B 25 HP Roll-O-Matic front wheels, 2 cyl gas, Super Six loader, good condition, shedded, $7200. 250-690-7408, dmerz@hwy16.com

POST DRILL made by C.W. COE, 1889; harrows, Ralister Sole Maker; grinder, John Deere pedal power sandstone; wind charger, 1938 Air Electric; 150 blow torches w/irons; 8- tractors on steel. 403-986-3280 or 306-838-0060, Smiley SK

CAT D-2, RUNNING, very nice, $7500. D-4, running, very nice, $7500. Cat D-35, gas, very nice, $7500. IHC TD-9 w/blade, $8500. IHC TD-6 w/blade, $7500. JD 420, 5 roller w/blade, $3750. Case 750 w/loader, $3500. Oliver OC-3 w/loader, $3950. 1957 Mercedes Benz dump truck, 6 cyl. ADRIAN’S MAGNETO SERVICE Guaran- diesel, good shape, $5750. 1920’s Ruby teed repairs on mags and ignitors. Repairs. truck, partial restoration, rebuilt engine, Parts. Sales. 204-326-6497. Box 21232, $2250. 204-746-2016, 204-746-5345, Steinbach, MB. R5G 1S5. Morris, MB. ALLIS CHALMERS MODEL B; Case S; Case JD B, 1941 runs great, new front tires and D; Ford 9N; IHC W4; IHC Super W6; Mas- tubes, hand start, good tin, $2000; JD BR, sey Harris 30; Massey Harris 44 Special; 1944, restored, new front tires and tubes, JD AR Styled. Most have been restored. new fenders, hand start, won People’s 306-642-3152, Assiniboia, SK. Choice Award, $3500; JD AO (Orchard), 1946, 2014 restoration, new fenders, mech. good, $4000; JD ANH, 1949, mech. excellent, single front wheel, 42” rears, Delco dist., power troll, 2 PTH arms, aux. hyd. pump, needs paint, drove it in many parades, rare collectible, $6500; JD AO (Orchard), 1946, needs restoration, runs, $1500; Ford Jubilee, 1953, runs great, needs paint, 2nd owner, $2000; MH pony, 1947, older restoration, motor redone, new bearings and seals in tranny and final drive, belt pulley, 4 new tubes and wheels, new front tires, $2000; Farmall C, 1947, plowed with it in a plow match, runs great, good gears, c/w one bottom plow and rear NEW TRACTOR PARTS. Specializing in sickle mower, $2000. All OBO. Kelowna, engine rebuild kits and thousands of other BC, 250-861-3688. Email ooper@telus.net parts. Savings! Service manuals and decals. Also Steiner Parts dealer. Our 40th FARMALL M TRACTOR, one owner, recent year! www.diamondfarmtractorparts.com rebuild and rubber, needs paint, $2500. Call 1-800-481-1353. Call 306-874-7843, Naicam, SK. MH 44 SPECIAL, belt pulley, full fenders, nice shape, shedded; Belle City 22” separator, Hart feeder, elevator, Waterloo blower, all belts, good working order, shedded, on rubber tires; PTO belt pulley for JD 4010 tractor, like new. Near Beiseker, AB. 250-428-4012. No Saturday calls please.

TRACTORS FOR SALE: JD’s 420 Hi-crop (rare), M, MTW, MTN, BW, H, Cockshutt 20. Call 403-660-8588, Calgary, AB. MASSEY HARRIS 44, $1800; Massey Harris 30, $2250. Both good cond., exc. rubber. Call 306-231-9808, Humboldt, SK.

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ACROSS 1. The Social Network director 7. Veronica Lake’s real last name 10. He played Chuck Barris in Confessions of a Dangerous Mind 12. My Fair ___ 13. Film starring Devon Sawa and Seth Green (2 words) 15. He plays Jay Pritchett on Modern Family 17. Everybody’s Fine 18. Pizzeria owner in Do the Right Thing 19. Bullitt director 20. Jennifer Jones’ real last name 23. ___ A.E. 24. He played a police chief in Once Upon a Time in America whose name was also the same as his real name 27. Barry ___ 28. Her film career began with Tunes of Glory 29. Jimmy’s girlfriend who is a stripper in The Last Boy Scout 31. Bette Davis role in 1962 (2 words) 33. Murder, She Wrote doctor 35. Benaderet of Petticoat Junction 37. Film starring Amanda Seyfried and Justin Timberlake (2 words) 39. He played Seaman Pulaski on Hennesey 41. ___ in Pink 42. Canadian actor who played The Green Hornet 43. ___ of the 50 Foot Woman 44. Get Rich or ___ Tryin’ 45. ___ Family Robinson

DOWN 1. She played Duchovny’s photographer girlfriend in Kalifornia 2. Her first starring film role was in P2 3. Main character on M*A*S*H 4. The Great Santini Oscar nominee 5. Steven Spielberg’s middle name 6. Cabin Fever actress 7. Arsenic- and ___ (2 words) 8. He played Rick on Magnum P.I. 9. He wrote the screenplay for Philadelphia 11. Kindergarten teacher on How I Met Your Mother 14. American ___ X 16. Bo and Luke’s cousin on The Dukes of Hazzard 21. Debbie’s Fame role 22. The Waltons handyman 25. She played Jessica in the American Pie films 26. Swit who played “Hot Lips” 27. Highest-paid star in Hollywood in the late 1930s 29. Canadian actress who was in 88 Minutes 30. Now You ___ Me 31. Film starring Billy Bob Thornton and Patricia Arquette (with The) 32. He played Juror #6 six in 12 Angry Men 33. Canadian actress who was in 50/50 34. Winner of back-to-back Oscars 36. Weena’s people in The Time Machine 38. Adam’s Family cousin 40. Initials of the actress who played Miss Western in Tom Jones


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

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CLASSIFIED ADS 27

WANTED: MINNEAPOLIS MOLINE horse 1982 TRANS AM, black, auto., 37,000 drawn sickle mower. Phone: 204-534-6859 miles, Recaro interior, rare dual factory Boissevain, MB. carburetors, very nice car, original paint, $8900; 1984 Chevy shortbox, Southern JD THRESHING MACHINE, 28� cylinder, truck, rust free, faded paint, on big rubber $600; Horse drawn binder, $1500; JD D with chrome wheels, super clean! $4900. tractor, restored, $2500. 403-845-6647, K & L E q u i p m e n t , I t u n a , S K . Rocky Mountain House, AB. 306-795-7779, 306-537-2027. DL #910885. Email: ladimer@sasktel.net WANTED: FENDERS FOR John Deere Model A, or parts tractor with restorable WANTED: 1940 to 1950s Chev/GMC 1/2 ton, to restore to original, exc. shape. Assiparts. Call Joey Sharp, 780-991-6292. niboia, SK. 306-642-3255, 306-640-7149. 1947 COCKSHUTT 30 tractor, good shape, rear tires- fair, was stored inside, $1200 WANTED: 3 SPEED TRANS. in good cond. OBO. 306-776-2363, 306-529-7788 eves., for 1954 Chevy pickup, first Series. 780-991-6292, Sherwood Park, AB. Rouleau, SK. DODGE ROYAL Monaco Brougham, 4 1939 OLIVER 90, c/w interchangeable rear 1976 sedan, 400 4-barrel, mech. good runs t e e l w h e e l s , s h e d d e d , r e s t o r a b l e . door ning order, int. good, body rusted, $1000; 306-865-2856, Hudson Bay, SK. 1979 Dodge Adventure SE, D150 Clubcab, AC, longbox, 360 auto., interior good, body good, not running, will start, $1000 or both for $1500. Original owner. Ron 306-369-2650, Bruno, SK. WATROUS FUN RUN Auto Show And Shine, July 26/14. Jason 306-946-3336, Watrous, SK., www.watrousfunrun.com 1951 IHC L130 1 ton truck, dual wheels, wood box, hyd. hoist, 45,000 orig. miles, $2500. 306-773-4088, Swift Current, SK. UNRESERVED 2 CYLINDER ANTIQUE 1941 INTERNATIONAL 1-1/2 ton truck, Tractor Auction, Approx. 55 John Deere K 5 s e r i e s , 2 5 0 7 m i l e s , s h e d d e d . tractors, 1925-1953 and various parts, 306-865-2856, Hudson Bay, SK. new and used. Werner Harms Collection, Olds, AB., Friday, August 22, 2014. Live a u c t i o n - ava i l a b l e o n l i n e . V i ew at www.gwacountry.com 1-866-304-4664. 1974 JD X6 snowmobile, 4200 mi., always 145 VERSATILE 4 WD tractor- running, tires shedded, was running, $500; 36’ Anderson large singles, good. Best offer or trade on rodweeder w/harrows, $800 and 6’ TBH livestock equipment. Phone 306-867-4595 snowblower, $300. All in good condition, orig. owner Ron 306-369-2650, Bruno,SK. or 306-867-8833 evenings, Outlook, SK. WANTED: 1955-56 and pre 1940-41 1950 JD AR tractor, S/N 273556, running, Canadian Wheat Board permit books. good condition, ready for work or parade. 306-286-3508, Humboldt, SK. 306-689-2243, Abbey, SK. WANTED: TRACTOR MANUALS, sales brochures, tractor catalogs. 306-373-8012, Saskatoon, SK. OLE’ DEN ANTIQUES LTD. (formally known as Prairie Treasures) is hosting the Kenaston, SK. Annual Flea Market! Sunday, Aug. 3, Mon., Aug. 4, 2014, 9 AM5 PM daily. For spaces call 306-252-2366.

1988 ROLLS ROYCE Silverspur, LWB, saloon, 60,000 kms, graphite w/beige and walnut interior, excellent condition, just serviced, $25,000 OBO. 604-987-6183, North Vancouver, BC. 1967 FORD LTD 4 door hardtop, showing 15,450 miles, nice shape; 1949 to 1951 Mercury’s and Monarch’s; 1970 to 1973 Duster’s, some 4 spd; Lots of other 1950 to 1960 Ford’s, Chrysler’s and some Chev’s. Call 306-859-4913, Beechy, SK.

PBR FARM AND INDUSTRIAL SALE, last Saturday of each month. Ideal for farmers, contractors, suppliers and dealers. Consign now. Next sale July 26, 9:00 AM. PBR, 105- 71st St. West, Saskatoon, SK., www.pbrauctions.com 306-931-7666.

CHRIS AND KEN BENJESTORF Auction, Thursday, July 31, 2014, 10:00 AM. Directions: 1-1/2 east #15 and 6-1/2 north of Fenwood or 8 south of Jedburgh corner and Hwy #52. 306-728-3125. Tractors: 2004 Steiger STX 275, 20.8x42 radial, std., 4 hyds, transmission heater, heated seats, cruise, 3200 hours, one owner, mint; 1981 Case 2090, 9500 hours, redone motor and powershift w/Allied 780 FEL, good; Allis Chalmers 6060, diesel, 3 PTH, dual hyds, PTO, nice; Oliver 1900 (screaming Jimmy), diesel, PTO, hydra power, dual hyds, extra rear cast wheel weights, 23.1x26 tires, nice. Combine: 1994 Case 1688 SP, S/N: JLO121972, cab, air, Rake-Up PU, 1015 header, 2776 eng. hours, chaff spreaders, excellent. Swathers: Premier 1900 30’ PTO, plastic teeth, Roto-Shear, PU reel, good canvas, shedded, excellent; Premier 1900 30’ PTO, Roto-Shear, PU reel, steel teeth, good canvas, shedded, excellent; MF 655 15’ SP. Air Seeder and Cultivators: Bourgault 36’ 8800 cult. w/air pkg. and granular kit, harrows, with Bourgault 2115 tank, good; Degelman #3000, 31’ heavy duty field cult., Degelman harrows, new tines, one owner, nice; IHC 20’ deep tillage and harrows; IHC 14’ deep tillage and harrows; Flexi-Coil 40’ ? air seeder and Flexi-Coil tank. Trucks: 1979 C70 4 ton grain truck, 8-1/2 x16’x54� Western Industry box, tarp, 1100 rear, 1000 front tires, 366 V8, 5x2, 71,000 miles, excellent; 1980 GMC 7000 truck, 366 V8, 5x2, 8-1/2x16’x48� box, tarp, 1000 rubber, 70,000 miles, good; 1990 Ford F150 truck, 6 cyl. standard, farm truck. Augers: Sakundiak 8x46, 22 HP engine, hyd. mover, binsweep, excellent; Brandt 8x60 PTO s w i n g a w a y ; We s t f i e l d 1 0 x 5 1 P TO swingaway; Field King 7x36 auger and motor. Vehicles, Yard and Recreation: 1990 Grand Marquis: 107,000 kms, collector series, full load, 4 dr., real nice; Farm King 7’ rotary mower, mint; Ranch King lawn sweep; 2012 Gravely 50 Zero Turn, 24 HP, riding lawnmower, mint; 2008 Polaris 300 AWD quad, 1000 miles, mint. Scraper: Leons 550 pull scraper, excellent. Sprayer: Brandt #830 60’, foam markers, wind cones, nice. Harrows: Flexi-Coil #82 60’ tine bar, new tines, and pressure springs; Morris 60’ tine harrow bar, 306-876-4420. Plus misc. equipment, shop, guns, household. Note: Chris and Ken sold the farm. Machinery is shedded and above average condition. This is one of the nicest sales in the area. Steiger tractor is mint. Online Bidding 1:00 PM. View www.ukrainetzauction.com for complete listing and pics. PL #915851.

MCSHERRY AUCTION SERVICE Ltd. Auction Sale. Former Owners of Lach Sod Farms and Rockwood Bison Ranch, Sat. July 26 at 10 AM. Stonewall, MB, #12 Patterson Drive. Auction Note: The businesses are sold, Bo selling this equipment to the highest bidder! Contact: 204-941-0754. Tractors: 2008 MF 7495, Dyna VT, MFWA, 3 PTH, 3800 hrs; MF 8120 Dyna Shift MFWA, 3 PTH w/FEL, 6319 hrs; Vers 835 4WD 3 PTH, 1000 triple hyd., 5748 hrs; Steiger Cougar 4WD; Ford 7740 MFWA 3 PTH w/Allied 694 FEL; Dietz 7120, cab, MFWA 3 PTH, 540/1000 PTO, triple hyd., showing 4467 hrs; Dietz 7110, MFWA, 3 PTH; Ford 5000 3 PTH; MF 230 3 PTH; MF 20c Ind. 3 PTH, 540, 4394 hrs; Ford 340 3 PTH; Haying and livestock: 12 Case 162 16’ discbine, used 1 season; 2011 New Direction equipment: 2804 2 bale vertical cutter mixer feeder, used one season; Delmar 1620 auto round bale wagon; Anderson bale wrapper; scraper and grain equip. 12 yd hyd scraper; Bush Hog 24’ tandem disc; Flexi-Coil 75 48’ coil packer; 70’ diamond harrows; Int. 6200 24’ press drill; JD 3200 6B plow; Rite-Way 901 46’ fertilizer injector; Westward 3000 30’ PT swather; Weed Badger hyd auto in-row weeder; Amazone Jet 1202-12 3 PTH fert. spreader; Misc equip: Schultz 10’ rotary mower; Buhler Farm King 3 PTH 60� finishing nower; 3 PTH 60� rotary mower; 3 PTH 10’ 2 blade road leveler; 12’ land roller; 3 PTH 7’ box scraper; Weidiler 3 PTH 12’ power harrows; Sittler composter; Dietz trailer; Leon 707 FEL; Case w/loader, Allied 590; 3 PTH system; Brush Bandit gas 2 cyl. Chipper skidster, forklift, R Mower Thomas T133 skidster; Two Thomas 250 skidster; 1996 Mustang 2060 skidster; Clark C500-55 forklift; Clark C-80 forklift; Clark TM15 3000 lb, hyd 6 cyl. forklift; 1989 Nissan N01 3000 lb; Hyster SS03 forklift; 6’ skidster snowblade; Ford SL 5034 all terrian forklift; Kubota F2400 4WD Mt 6’ mower, 2017 hrs; Skidsteer attachments. Call: S t u a r t M c S h e r r y, 2 0 4 - 4 6 7 - 1 8 5 8 o r 204-886-7027 www.mcsherryauction.com

N EXT SALE S ATUR DAY, 9:00 AM AUGUS T 2 , 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

37th PRE HARVEST EQUIPMENT

JULY 30, 2014 8:00 AM NORTH BATTLEFORD, SK

INTERNET BIDDING AVAILABLE

LARGE SELECTION OF EQUIPMENT ON OFFER

CHECK OUR WEBSITE FOR DETAILS

SEE SEE MORE MORE PHOTOS PHOTOS AND AND INFORMATION INFORMATION AT AT

Call toll free: 1-800-529-9958 SK Provincial Licence #914618 – AB Provincial Licence #206959


28 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

Upcom ing S um m er S a les

SAT.,AU G.9 / 14 1 0:00A.M . Fa rm Au ctio n f o r the Es ta te o f Ro b ert H u n t. Ea s t o f Sa s ka to o n o n H w y 1 6 to Blu cher Grid , 6 m .N ., 2 m .W O R o n H w y 5 to P it Ro a d , 4 m .S., 1 m .E.

1 9 9 4 W hite 6 1 7 5 FW A, 1 9 85 W hite 2 -88 tr a cto r w / FEL, 1 9 83 Ca s e 2 2 9 0 , 1 9 82 Ver s a tile 5 5 5 4W D , Oliver 880 g a s tr a cto r, 2 0 0 2 Glea n er R 6 2 co m b in e, 1 9 9 7 6 0 ’ Sp r a -Co u p e 3 6 3 0 , 3 1 ’ M o r r is a ir s eed er, 2 0 0 7 Chev Im p a la ca r w / 5 4,1 0 8 km s ., Fo r d 7 0 0 tr u ck w / g r a vel b o x, o ther eq u ip m en t, s ho p item s , ho u s eho ld & co llectib les .

M A NZ’S A UC TIONEER ING S ER VIC E D A VID S ON, S K. TIM M AN Z P L#9 1 40 3 6 w w w .m a n za u ctio n .co m 306 - 56 7- 29 9 0

Unreserved Pre-Harvest Public Auction

24/7 ON L IN E B ID D IN G & B U Y N OW

Fa rm Equipm entAuction K eith a nd S herry Line

Refer to W eb site forTerm s & Cond itions REG IN A, S AS KATO O N , M O O S O M IN , CALG ARY, S ALM O N ARM . 2008 K ZRV S p o rts m a n 37’ T o y Ha u ler Go o s e Neck Ca m p er T ra iler; 1967 Chrys ler New p o rt; 2010 F o rd F 150 S u p erca b , T ru cks , T ra ilers & Vehicles ; 2002 Po la ris Vira ge S ea Do o /New M o to r; 1995 Y a m a ha Vira go 750cc; 1987 Cha m p io n Dis co very 210 Bo a t; 2013 PJ T /A 3/4 T ilt Bo b ca t/ E q u ip T ra iler; JBL 2012S Ba ck Ho e; 1996 JD 310 G W heeled M F W D L o a d er; Ditchw itch 350 S X 2 Po s t Vib ra Plo w T ren cher; F G45 T o yo ta F o rklift; Ba n ta m 5625 Cra n e/w E ROPS , F ro n t & Ba ck Ou triggers ; 2003 Vo lvo VNL 670 S em i T ru ck/S leep er; Ra m 8’6” x45’ T /A Va n T ra iler; T ita n 2 M u lti F u el Hyd . Hea ter/ S to ker; T ho m s em T ra iler M o u n t Co n crete L in e Pu m p ; 721 Dies el Gra s s Ho p p er M o w er; 40’ M eta l S to ra ge Co n ta in er; Co m m u n ica tio n s T o w er - 196’ T a ll/L ights ; 2- Bed ro o m Bu n ga lo w fo r Rem o va l; Hip Ro o f Ba rn fo r S a lva ge/Rem o va l; 20’ high p a llet ra ckin g; p a llets o f p a vin g s to n e; Ba rley & Oa tS tra w Ba les ; Pa lleto fRa ckin g u p rights & Cro s s b ea m s ; An tiq u e F u rn itu re. UPCOM IN G EV EN TS : L ive Au ctio n , Gren fell-S a t. Ju ly 26; Va le Po ta s h Ca n a d a L td .-Ho u s es , Qu o n s ets , F u el T a n ks , Ga ra ges & S hed s ; City o f Regin a E q u ip m en t; T u rn K ey Bu s in es s - 50 S ea t L icen s ed Res ta u ra n t, M id a le & M o re!

M CD O UG ALL AUCTIO N EERS LTD .

Grande Prairie, AB

1-800-26 3-4193

w w w.M c D ou g a llBa y.c om P.O. Bo x 308 1 Regin a , S K . S 4P 3G7 Dea ler L ic #319 9 16

Wednesday, July 30 | 8 am

N a pinka , M B. S a tu rda y, Au gu st 9th, 2014 a t 11 a m D S T To be held in villa ge ofN a pinka , M B. S a le fea tu res: 2008 M cC orm ick X TX 145 w / FW A , 3 pth, 540 & 1000, 20.8 x 38 rear 16.9 x R 28 front, 32 spd.trans., 6776 hours at listing.Sells w /L165 loader, bucket and grapple (nice) 1986 JD 7721 pto com bine; C ase IH 25’pto sw ather; Sakundiak H D 741 pto auger; W estfield 8 x 46 pto auger; 2009 C ase IH 16’hydro sw ing 2007 N H FP230 silage chopper w /PU & 3 row corn header 1999 JD 566 round baler w /rebuilt PU & new belts in 2014 Luck N ow 425 m ixer w agon w /4 augers, scale & 1000 pto R ichardson 5 ton high dum p silage w agon H ay B uster B ig B ite tub grinder M odelH 1000; PJ triple axle 30’gooseneck 2 w heelfifth w heeldolly; 2006 SPC 20’gooseneck stock trailer 1974 Ford 600 3 ton grain truck; 24’oilpipe livestock chute; Selfcatch head gate Q uantity of24’steelfeed troughs; Q uantity of10’steelfeed troughs Q uantity of30’free standing pipe panels; Q uantity oftubing panels various lengths Plus a fullline offarm equipm ent, livestock supplies and m uch m ore. For inform ation callKeith or Sherry at 204-665-2450 or R oss Taylor A uction tollfree 877-617-2537 or 204-522-5356 For fulllisting and photos w w w .rosstaylorauction.com

Acrea ge Rea l Es ta te Auction Ruth A nnetts A lida , S K. M onda y, Au gu st 25th a t 5 pm C S T S a le to be held a t ya rd site 1/2 m ile w est ofA lida , S K. S a le fea tu res: 1.3 acres w /1983 m odern 4 bedroom hom e, lined and insulated shop, detached garage, sm allhip roofbarn. Im m aculate yard w ith garden, fruit trees.This acreage has tow n w ater.Located 1/2 m ile from A lida. 1991 Indy Lite 340 snow m achine 1990 Sport 440 snow m achine; C raftsm an 42”17 hp yard tractor; Push m ow er; O ak china cabinet; C edar chest W ood table & 4 chairs; M astercraft drillpress; D elta bench grinder; Table saw Plus lots ofshop & pow er tools, household furniture, appliances, dishes and m uch m ore. For fulllisting and photos w w w .rosstaylorauction.com For inform ation and view ing callR uth at 306-482-3466 R oss Taylor A uction Service tollfree 877-617-2537 or 204-522-5356

ROS S TAYL OR AUC TI ON S ERVI C E

For a no obliga tion consu lta tion plea se ca ll Ross (204)877-3834 S K L ic# 909917 w w w .rossta ylora u ction.com M B L ic# 1300

findit 2– 2013 LEXION 670

2011 CHALLENGER MT875C

Unreserved Public Auction

Saskatoon, SK Wednesday, August 6 | 8 am 2012 KENWORTH T800

2006 DOEPKER 45 FT

2011 CASE IH 9120

2012 JOHN DEERE 4940

1 OF 2— 2011 JOHN DEERE 9630T

2001 LINK-BELT 8065

2008 WESTWARD M150 30 FT, 2006 WESTWARD 9352I 30 FT & 2– 2004 PREMIER 2952I 30 FT

Grande Prairie, AB

Bid with confidence

July 30 (Wed) | 8am

▸ No minimum bids ▸ Financing available ▸ Inspect and bid on site

721076 Range Road 51 780.538.1100

530+ Items including

Sell your equipment

13– Combines 16– Headers 10– Swathers 17– Ag Tractors Grain Trucks & Trailers ...and much more!

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rbauction.com

Saskatoon, SK Just North of Saskatoon on Hwy 12

Put your equipment in the spotlight ▸ Any amount of equipment accepted ▸ Flexible, all-inclusive agreements ▸ The best print & online marketing ▸ The most bidders, on-site & online ▸ Certain sale & payment dates Call us for a free, no obligation assessment today.

rbauction.com | 800.491.4494 Auction Company License #309645

1985 CATERPILLAR D9L

1997 JCB 508-40

1976 CATERPILLAR D6C LGP

2005 CATERPILLAR 430D


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

FARM AND LIVESTOCK Equipment Auction for Russell and Carolyn Ayerst of Mortlach, SK, Tuesday, Aug. 5th at 11 AM. Directions: 4 miles west of Mortlach on #1 Hwy to the Courval grid, then 4.5 miles south and 1/2 mile west. 1985 Case/IH 4694, 20.8x34” factory duals, 1000 PTO, 5993 hrs; 1983 Int. 5088 w/Int. 2350 FEL, dual PTO, 18.4x38” factory duals, 7200 hrs; Case 2390, 20.8x38” factory duals, 6960 hrs; 1975 Chev C65 grain truck, 4x2, 9.00x20” rear tires, 22,000 miles; 1973 Chev C60 grain truck; 1976 Ford F600 grain truck, 5x2, 9.00x20”, 61,000 miles; 1992 GMC 1500 SLE ext. cab, 132,000 km; 1992 Buick Roadmaster Ltd, 4 door, 200,000 km; Chev 1/2 ton for parts; Chev 1430 1 ton w/B&H for parts; Int. L110 1/2 ton for parts; Flexi-Coil 820 28’ air seeder, MTH, side-arm markers, 9” spacing, 1330 double chute tank; 1992 Case/IH 1660 combine, Int. 1015 header w/hyd drive 14’ PU, Cummins, hydro-drive, 3050 hrs; Case/IH 730 PTO swather; Int 4000 SP swather, 19.5 header w/PU reel; Koenders swath roller; Sakundiak HD7”x45’ auger w/ES engine; Brandt 7”x30’ auger w/ES engine and hyd. drive bin sweep; W-R bin ring for 19’ diameter bin; CCIL 204 24’ cult., MTH; Morris CP731 35’ cult., MTH; Bourgault 90’ Centurion II field sprayer; Morris 2x11’ Seed-Rites, rod and MTH; Rite-Way ground drive rockpicker; Highline 28’ active harrows; 50’ HPD w/parallel bar harrows and coil packers; Machinery for parts/scrap; 100 bu. hopper feed bin; Lift of 2nd cut slabs; 2 Hi-Hog tombstone bale feeders; 2-whl trailer w/100 gal. slip tank and elec. pump; Craftsman 46” riding mower, hydro drive; Schulte 7’ frontmount snowblower; Five 12”x12”x20’ timbers; 2 heavy belts, 3’ wide and 15’ long; Yard sign with horse design, saddle. Quantity of shop tools, hardware, supplies. PL #91447. For more pictures and details see w w w. j o h n s t o n e a u c t i o n . c a o r c a l l : 306-693-4715.

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.

CLASSIFIED ADS 29

DRAKE DRY VAN 26’ w/nose cone, 4 row logistic track and 3000 lb. Axon powerlift. Was on 2012 truck, very nice condition. Asking $17,000. Photos available. Paul 204-764-0502, Decker, MB.

SANDBLAST AND PAINT your grain trailers, boxes, flatdecks and more. We use industrial undercoat and paint. Can zinc coat for added rust protection. Quality workmanship guaranteed. Prairie Sandblasting and Painting, 306-744-7930, Saltcoats, SK.

Andres specializes in the sales, service and rental of agricultural and commercial trailers.

N14 CUMMINS from 2000 Volvo, vg cond.; 3 1 2 6 C a t f r o m F L 8 0 F r e i g h t l i n e r. 306-445-5602, North Battleford, SK.

W IL S O N G O O S EN EC K S & C ATTL E L IN ER S

WRECKING VOLVO TRUCKS: Misc. axles and parts. Also tandem trailer suspension axles. 306-539-4642, Regina, SK. K&K ENTERPRISES WANTS your older grain trailers! Trade up to a new Canadian made Berg’s tridem, tandem or pup! Fully customizable with a great warranty package! Check website: www.kandkent.ca Details call 1-888-405-8457, Swanson, SK. TWO SETS OF 2013 Prestige Lode-King Super B’s, fresh safety’s, exc. condition, no lift axles, air ride, on-board weigh scales, alum. wheels, flat alum. fenders, $75,000 OBO. Call 1-866-236-4028, Calgary, AB. 2001 OLDS AURORA, heated seats, leather, sunroof, 3.5 twin overhead Chevette, 2015 NEVILLE 40’ air ride alum. tandem cam V6, well maintained, silver grey, grain trailer, remote electric tarp and traps, with many other options, $43,000. $4000. 306-442-4705, Pangman, SK. 306-789-0881, Richardson, SK. 2004 PONTIAC GRAND Am SE1 V6, AC, cruise, 122,941 kms, Stk#SK-S2355A 2006 DOEPKER 3 hopper tridem, $36,980; $7,995. 1-888-240-2415, or visit website: 2005 Doepker 3 hopper tridem, $37,980; 2010 Doepker 3 hopper tridem, $41,980. www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. Golden West Trailer, 1-877-999-7402. 2005 MERCURY LS 4 door sedan, fully loaded, silver, 151,000 kms, $5,995 OBO. DOEPKER TRIDEM 45’ grain trailer, exc. condition, 24.5 original rubber, alum. 780-387-5099, 780-966-8864, Millet, AB. slopes, c/w Michel’s 10” wireless augers, 2007 SUBARU Outback AWD, AC, CC, CD, $43,900. 403-578-3308, Coronation, AB. power seats, 78,844 kms, Stk# SK-UO982 2009 DOEPKER SUPER Bs, air rides, good $19,995. 1-888-240-2415 or visit website: shape, $59,000; 2004 Lode-King Prestige www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. Super B, $39,000; 1998 40’ Lode-King, 2008 CADILLAC CTS w/1SB 4 dr, 3.6L, V6 good shape, $18,000. All w/good rubber. sedan, 6 spd. auto, sunroof, 115,522 kms, 306-252-2227, Kenaston, SK. $18,900. D&D Vehicle Sales, Camrose, AB., 1-888-460-2983. www.ddsales.com 2008 SUBARU Outback Ltd., turbo, rebuilt, AC, leather, 55,000 kms, Stk#SK-U0901 NORMS SANDBLASTING & PAINT, 40 $19,995. 1-888-240-2415 or visit website: years body and paint experience. We do metal and fiberglass repairs and integral to www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. daycab conversions. Sandblasting and 2008 SUBARU Tribeca Ltd. AWD, DVD, paint to trailers, trucks and heavy equip. NAV, 3.6L, dark grey, 67,626 kms Stk# Endura primers and topcoats. A one stop SK-UO898, $29,995. 1-888-240-2415 or shop. Norm 306-272-4407, Foam Lake SK. www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 2006 DOEPKER SUPER B grain trailers, 2009 NISSAN VERSA S I-4, CD player, good shape, extra light package, all new 1.8L, grey, 42,935 kms, stk# SK-UO560 grain chutes, 2014 safety, asking $51,000. $10,995. 1-888-240-2415 or visit website: 306-946-7668 cell, Liberty, SK. www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. NEW WILSON SUPER B in stock, 6 tridem 2011 LINCOLN MKS. Retired, must down- 2 hoppers, also 2 tandems; 2010 and 2009 size. Fully loaded, panorama sunroof, Lode-King alum. open end Super B, alum. 37,000 kms, balance factory warranty, rims, air ride; 36’ Emerald tandem, air ride. $31,000. 306-241-9591, 306-933-3944, 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL#905231. Saskatoon, SK. www.rbisk.ca 2001 40’ LODE-KING tri-axle grain trailer, $27,000 OBO. 306-795-7618, Ituna, SK. 2006 DOEPKER 40’, spring ride with 8” Michel’s alum. augers, exc. cond., low mileage, $33,500. 306-463-7866, Flax2011 TIMPTE TRI-AXLE aluminum, air combe. Email: adwildman@hotmail.com ride, rear axle lift, 2 hopper, low kms, $39,000. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used WWW.DESERTSALES.CA Trailers/Bins highway tractors. For more details call Westeel hopper bottom bins. Serving AB, 204-685-2222 or view information at BC and SK. Wilson, Norbert, gooseneck, www.titantrucksales.com stock and ground loads. Horse / stock, TWO DOEPKER SUPER B’s open ends, cargo / flatdeck, dump, oilfield, all in 2 4 . 5 r u b b e r, 2 0 0 9 - $ 5 6 , 0 0 0 ; 2 0 0 2 - stock. 1-888-641-4508, Bassano, AB. $35,000. 306-743-7679, Langenburg, SK. GRASSLAND TRAILERS, your wholesale NEW 2015 NEVILLE TANDEM and tri-axles, supplier of W-W, Titan and Circle-D trailcheapest in western Canada. Call Larry ers and truck decks. July Special: 24’ all alum. Brightline stock trailer for $19,995. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. Leasing available. Phone: 306-640-8034, 2015 DOEPKER GRAIN Trailers. Warner Assiniboia, SK. gm93@sasktel.net Ind, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. DL #913604, www.warnerindustries.ca ALL ALUMINUM TANDEMS, tridems and Super B Timpte grain trailers. Call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946 or see www.Maximinc.Com

ONE OF SASK’s largest inventory of used heavy truck parts. 3 ton tandem diesel motors and transmissions and differentials for all makes! Can-Am Truck Export Ltd., 2006 FORD E450, 24 passenger bus, V10 1-800-938-3323. gas, 89,000 kms, Safety Bus Inspection TRUCK BONEYARD INC. Specializing in certificate, exc. cond., runs nice, $30,000. obsolete parts, all makes. Trucks bought 204-981-3636, 204-864-2391, Cartier, MB. for wrecking. 306-771-2295, Balgonie, SK. VS TRUCK WORKS Inc. Parting out GM 1/2 and 1 ton trucks. Call 403-972-3879, Gordon or Joanne, Alsask, SK. www.vstruckworks.com SASKATOON TRUCK PARTS CENTRE Ltd. North Corman Industrial Park. New and used parts available for 3 ton highway tractors including custom built tandem converters and wet kits. All truck makes/models bought and sold. Shop service available. Specializing in repair and custom rebuilding for transmissions and differentials. Now offering driveshaft repair and assembly from passenger vehicles to heavy trucks. For more info call 306-668-5675 or 1-877-362-9465. www.saskatoontruckparts.ca DL #914394 WRECKING SEMI-TRUCKS, lots of parts. Call Yellowhead Traders. 306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK. 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 LATE MODEL TRUCKS: 1/2 tons, 3/4 tons, 1 tons, 4x4’s, vans, SUV’s. Also large selection of Cummins diesel SLEEPERS AND DAYCABS. New and used. motors, Chevs and Fords as well. Jasper Huge inventory across Western Canada at Auto Parts, Edmonton 1-800-294-4784, or www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & Calgary 1-800-294-0687. We ship anyTrailer, 1-888-986-2946. where. We have everything, almost. SOUTHSIDE AUTO WRECKERS located Weyburn, SK., 306-842-2641. Used car H E AV Y D U T Y PA R T S o n s p e c i a l at parts, light truck to semi-truck parts. We www.Maximinc.Com/parts or call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. buy scrap iron and non-ferrous metals.

Andres

Trailer Sales And Rentals

1996 LOAD KING, 40' Load King, grain trailer, spring ride, all white, new grey tarp, original tires, brakes at 80%, electric remote chute openers, mostly stored inside, no rust $24,000. 306-823-3703, Marsden, SK.

2014 FEATHERLITE 8271-8040 40’ stock trailer Stk #EC132053, $46,900. Call 1-866-346-3148 or shop 24/7 online at: Allandale.com WAYNE’S TRAILER REPAIR. Specializing in aluminum livestock trailer repair. Blaine Lake, SK., 306-497-2767. SGI accredited. SANDBLASLTING AND PAINTING. We do welding, patching, repairs, rewiring of trucks, trailers, heavy equip., etc. We use epoxy primers and polyurethane topcoats. Competitive rates. Agrimex 306-432-4444, Dysart, SK.

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2012 TREM CAR 31,000 litre, tandem axle, air ride, new MB safety, 8200 gal., vg cond., good for oil/water. Could make nice sprayer trailer. 4” plumbing. $34,900. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. 2011 DOEPKER RGN machinery trailer, 53’ tri-axle, pullouts, rear strobes, pullout lights, side winches, alum. rims, $53,000 OBO. 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB. 2015 DOEPKER IMPACTS Warner Industries, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. DL #913604, www.warnerindustries.ca 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 WILSON SUPER B, A spec., $79,900; 2013 Wilson Super B C spec, $94,900; 2006 Lode-King Super B $39,980. Golden West Trailer, 1-877-999-7402.

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

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FLATDECK TRI-AXLE 48’ aluminum trailer, air ride, available w/round bale hay rack, vg unit. 780-853-2478, Vermilion, AB. SUPER B GRAVEL trailer, 87 Breadnor, clam dump, $15,000 OBO. 403-704-3509, Rimbey, AB.

2011 LODE-KING TANDEM, $32,980; 2013 Wilson 39’ tandem, $41,000; 2009 Wilson 41’ tandem, $37,980. Golden West Trailer, 1-877-999-7402. 36’ DORSEY ALUMINUM end dump, tri-axle, tarp, load gauges. Hauls silage, grain, distillers mash. 306-642-8111 Rockglen SK 2009 WILSON QUADAXLE PSDCL-402, 10’ nose decking, extra lights and roof hatches, $54,000. Call Golden West Trailer 1-877-999-7402. PRECISION TRAILERS: Gooseneck and bumper hitch. You’ve seen the rest, now own the best. Hoffart Services, Odessa, SK. 306-957-2033 www.precisiontrailer.com TRAILERS, TRAILERS. Low beds, hi-boys, flat decks, drop decks, vans, grain, gravel trailers, detachable. 306-563-8765, Canora BEHNKE DROP DECK semi style and pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, tandem and tridems. Contact SK: 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336. 2007 WESTERN STAR 4900SA, engine Series 60; 470 HP, Steer axle Meritor FF-961, 12,000 lbs., $24,980. Golden West Trailer, 1-877-999-7402. ALL ALUMINUM TANDEMS, tridems and Super B Timpte grain trailers. Call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946 or see www.Maximinc.Com TRI-HAUL SELF-UNLOADING ROUND bale movers: 8’ to 29’ lengths, 6-18 bales. Also exc. for feeding cattle in the field, 4 bales at time with a pickup. 1-800-505-9208. www.LiftOffTriHaul.com TANDEM TANKER FOR liquid fert. and water, 6000 gal., ready to go, new safety, $13,000. 306-731-7235, Earl Grey, SK. TOPGUN TRAILER SALES “For those who demand the best.” PRECISION AND AGASSIZ TRAILERS (flatdecks, end dumps, enclosed cargo). 1-855-255-0199, Moose Jaw, SK. www.topguntrailersales.ca

2012 WILSON 2 hopper tri-axle, $49,900; 2013 Wilson 2 hopper tri-axle, $50,980. Call Golden West Trailer, 1-877-999-7402. HAUSER GOOSENECK TRAILERS. Featuring 2 trailers in 1: Use as HD gooseneck trailer and/or bale transporter. Mechanical side self-unloading. LED lighting. Ramps optional. Starting at $18,560. Hauser’s Machinery, Melville, SK, Ph: 1-888-939-4444. www.hausers.ca TWO TANDEM AXLE Trailtech goosenecks w/beavertail and flip ramps; Two 20’ tan- 2000 ARNE'S, 3 axle end dump gravel traildem pintle hitch flatdecks. 306-356-4550, er. 31' box and 40' overall length. First axle Dodsland, SK. DL #905231. www.rbisk.ca lifts and slides forward for Ontario spacings. New roll tarp. Tires at 70%. Recent safety. $25,000 OBO. 807-548-1160, Kenora, ON. lukedegagne@gmail.com CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com 2013 MIDLAND SL3000 tridem, enddump, air ride, 24.5 all alum. wheels, tires 80%, brakes 95%, Michel’s tarp system, FUEL/SERVICE TRAILERS, 550 to 990 gal; sealed end gate, 3/16 hardox body, new 750 gal., 40 GPM pump, white, $14,800; safety, very nice shape, $65,000 OBO. Call 990 gal., 40 GPM pump, white, $15,900; 403-588-9497, Bashaw, AB. 990 gal., 40 GPM, Grey, 100 gal. DEF, 35’ STEP DECK semi trailer, c/w two 1250 $23,500; 990 gal., black tri-axle, 300 gal. gal. HD tanks and one 1700 gal. HD tank, DEF, Welder, Genset full load, $47,500. all plumbed for 3”, $8000 OBO. Call: Canadian Certified. Call Corner Equipment, 306-441-2499, Meota, SK. 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. 2007 TRAIL KING sliding axle drop deck triaxle, $69,000. Golden West Trailer, 1-877-999-7402. DECKS, DRY VANS, reefers and storage trailers at: www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. 53’ AND 48’ tridem and tandem stepdecks, w/wo sprayer cradles; Two 48’ tandem 10’ wide, beavertail, flip ramps, air ride, low kms; 53’, 48’, 28’ tridem and tandem highboys, all steel and combos. SUPER B 2007 HOMEMADE MANURE trailer, 36’ x 8’ HIGHBOYS, will split; Tandem and S/A box with horizontal beaters and silage converter with drop hitch; B-train alum. racks, $50,000. 403-738-4033, Lethbridge, tankers, certified; 53’-28’ van trailers; BAB. E-mail: sikkenshh@aol.com train salvage trailers; High clearance COMPONENTS FOR TRAILERS. Shipping sprayer trailer with tanks and chem handaily across the prairies. Free freight. See dlers. Call 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. “The Book 2013” page 195. DL Parts For www.rbisk.ca DL #905231. Trailers, 1-877-529-2239, www.dlparts.ca GOOD TRAILERS, REASONABLY priced. Tandem axle, gooseneck, 8-1/2x24’, Beavertail and ramps, 14,000 GVW, $6900; or triple axle, $7900. All trailers custom built from 2000 to 20,000 lbs., DOT approved. Call Dumonceau Trailers, 306-796-2006, Central Butte, SK. HAY TRAILERS: SUPERB Hi-Boys, winches, extensions, lights, hay ready, $10,000; Also, water van, 53’, 4-1200 gal. tanks, water pump, chemical mixer, full plumbing, $9500. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. 2008 MIDLAND SUPER B side dump gravel trailer, total recondition, new electric tarp, Hardox AR 450 round tub, exc. condition, job ready, new MB safety. Can deliver $89,000. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB 24’ GOOSENECK tridem 21,000 lbs, $7890; Bumper pull tandem lowboy: 18’, 14,000 WWW.TITANTRUCKSALES.COM to view lbs., $3975; 16’, 10,000 lbs., $3090; 16’, information or call 204-685-2222 to check 7 0 0 0 l b s . , $ 2 6 5 0 . F a c t o r y d i r e c t . out our inventory of quality used highway tractors! 888-792-6283. www.monarchtrailers.com WORK TRUCKS: 2008 F350, crewcab, longbox, 4x4, dsl, $16,000; 2008 F250, ext. cab, 5.4 gas, 4x4, longbox, $8500; SALES & RENTALS 2006 Dodge crewcab, 4x4, longbox, 5.9 dsl., $16,995; 2001 F350 crewcab, longWE SELL AND RENT box, 7.3 dsl, 2 WD, $6500. Call Neil 306-231-8300, Humboldt, SK DL #906884 Hi Boys, Low Boys, Drop Decks, Storage Vans, Reefer Vans WANTED: FLATDECK to fit 1998 Dodge and Freight Vans & More. 1 t o n , d u a l l y. B r i a n E d w a r d s , 7 KM West of RED DEER 306-342-4407, Glaslyn, SK. from Junction of HWY. 2 & 32nd St. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used 403-347-7721 highway tractors. For more details call 2011 MIDLAND SK3400X tridem, end- 204-685-2222 or view information at dump, tri-drive friendly, air ride, 24.5R www.titantrucksales.com aluminum wheels, new tires, brakes 85%, Michel’s electric tarp system, sealed end- B E S T S E L E C T I O N . We t a ke t r a d e s . gate, 3/16 hardox body, new safety, Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. $65,000 OBO. 403-588-9497, Bashaw, AB. 2002 DOEPKER CONVERTER, always kept 2015 GMC YUKON Denali, 4x4, 6 spd auto, in shed, low kms, air gauge for each axle. 6.2L V8, Nav System, leather, 270 kms, Call for price. Golden West Trailer, $76,900. D&D Vehicle Sales, Camrose, AB, 1-888-460-2983. www.ddsales.com 1-877-999-7402.

LACOMBE TRAILER


30 CLASSIFIED ADS

2015 CHEV Suburban LT 4 dr. SUV, 6 spd. auto, 5.3L, V-8, OnStar, sunroof, 21 kms, $75,900. D&D Vehicle Sales, Camrose, AB, 1-888-460-2983. www.ddsales.com 2015 CHEV SILVERADO 2500HD LT, 4x4, 6 spd. auto, 6.6L, V8, OnStar, 10,579 kms, $64,900. D&D Vehicle Sales, Camrose, AB., 1-888-460-2983. www.ddsales.com 2014 FORD F250 Lariat, diesel, 6.7L, loaded, PST paid, 154,000 kms, $55,995. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. 2013 RAM LARAMIE, Crew, 4x4, $39,900. Buy for 0 down, $233/bi-weekly. Wynyard, SK. 1-800-667-4414, www.thoens.com DL# 909250. 2013 FORD F150 Raptor SVT, 4 dr, Super crew 6.2L, V8, 6 spd auto, sunroof, 22,279 kms, $59,900. www.ddsales.com D&D Vehicle Sales Camrose, AB., 1-888-460-2983. 2013 DODGE RAM, Hemi 1500 Sport, 38,000 kms. Must see, fresh trade, PST pd. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. 2012 DODGE RAM 2500, 6.7L loaded, dsl, Outdoorsman. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. 2012 DODGE RAM 1500, Laramie Sport, Black Beauty, PST paid. Greenlight Truck & Auto, www.GreenlightAuto.ca Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. 2011 GMC SIERRA, single cab, 2WD, V6, auto., A/T/C, silver exterior, 31,000 kms., $14,500. 306-684-2847, Moose Jaw, SK. 2011 FORD F150 Platinum, loaded, 5.0L PTS paid starting from $34,995. Greenl i g h t Tr u c k & Au t o , S a s k at o o n , S K . www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. 2010 DODGE RAM 1500 TRX, Hemi, loaded, PST paid, 109,000 kms, $24,995 Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. 2006 DODGE 3/4 TON diesel, quad cab, last of the 5.9’s, 170,000 kms., 70 gal. aux fuel tank, rails for 5th wheel hitch, $16,000. 780-593-2159, Innisfree, AB. 2003 DODGE RAM 3500, single rear wheel, SLT quad cab, 4x4, 5.9 Cummins auto, fully loaded, very clean, rust and dent free, exc . cond., $14,800. 306-961-9982, 306-961-6499, Prince Albert, SK. 1999 FORD F150 XLT, 4x4, 255,000 kms, good condition, good farm truck, $3000. 306-893-2721, Maidstone, SK.

2000 DODGE 4x4, ext. cab, diesel, 5 spd., new clutch, $5500 OBO. 306-547-2926, Preeceville, SK. 2006 FORD 350 4x4, Dually, ext. cab, longbox, V10 auto, 204,000 kms, tow package. Call Ron 403-854-0583, Youngstown, AB. 2007 FORD F250 auto, ext. cab, 4x4, loaded, 125,000 kms, excellent shape, first $8000. 306-547-2926, Preeceville, SK. 2010 GMC SLT, crewcab, shortbox, 4x4, leather, loaded, including sunroof, black, 268,000 kms, $11,900; 2000 GMC 2500 reg. cab, Duramax diesel, 9’ tool body, 260,000 miles, $8900; 2005 GMC 2500, ext. cab, Duramax 4x4, longbox, good work truck, $8900; 1999 Dodge 3500 Dually, ext. cab, 4x4, 5.9 Cummins auto., $8900. K&L Equipment, Ituna, SK., call 306-795-7779, 306-537-2027. DL #910885. Email ladimer@sasktel.net 2012 FORD F150 XTR 5.0L, 4x4, loaded, PST paid, 21,000 kms, $31,995. Greenl i g h t Tr u c k & Au t o , S a s k at o o n , S K . www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. 2013 GMC SIERRA 2500 SLE, loaded, 6.0 L, 4x4, 17,0000 kms, loaded! New arrival. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. 2014 RAM 1500 SLT Eco-diesel, quad cab, 4x4, $39,985 or lease for $3500 down, $196/b-weekly. 1-800-667-4414, Wynyard SK. www.thoens.com DL #909250. 2014 RAM 1500 SLT, Eco diesel, 4x4, crew, sunroof, $44,950. $3500 down, lease $232/bi-weekly. 1-800-667-4414, Wynyard, SK. www.thoens.com DL #909250.

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

E S TAT E : 2 0 0 9 S I LVE R A D O c r ew c a b, 128,000 kms, GFX, $16,000 OBO. Call Ed’s Service 306-554-7726, 306-554-2824, Wynyard, SK. DL #907914.

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

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. DID YOU EXPERIENCE crop damage from using Priority or PrePass. If so, ph. BackTrack Investigations 1-866-882-4779. 2006 KW T300, 300 HP Cummins, HD 41 rear, 22’ B&H, air ride, HD 31 ton hoist, HD material floor, HD auto Allison trans, 350,000, 3 lockers, excellent tires, rear lift controls etc. , chrome package, deluxe cab with A/T/C, no rust, bud rims, large tires, easy handling, clean, quiet, HD truck that does not wonder on grids. Frame never stretched or welded. Local western truck purchased KW dealership, $89,000 OBO. 306-730-8375, Melville, SK. 2006 PETERBUILT, 475 HP, Cummins 18 spd., A/T/C, alum wheels, tanks, chrome bumper, like new tires, new paint, new 20’ BH&T, rear controls, pintle plate, excellent shape, $69,500; 1990 Kenworth, 10 spd., cruise, tilt, power windows, alum front wheels, good tires, runs and pulls good w/36’ Cancade 2 hopper grain trailer, nice shape, $35,000. Trades accepted. All units Sask. safetied. DL#906768. 306-276-7518 cell; 306-767-2616 res., Arborfield, SK. 2006, 2007 FREIGHTLINER AND IHC’S with Eaton 3 pedal AutoShifts. New CIM grain boxes and hoists. Fresh SK. safeties. Freightliner 10 spd. manual coming soon. 306-270-6399 78truxsales.com Saskatoon, SK. DL #316542.

Hwy. 3, Seven Persons, AB (Medicine Hat, AB)

PH. 403-977-1624 rawlyn@automatictruck.com

www.automatictruck.com

2005 FREIGHTLINER, 515 Detroit, 18 spd., heavy specs, full lockers, new clutch, 36” bunk, Moose bumper, low kms., rubber good, good shape. Call 306-567-7100, 306-963-7904, Imperial, SK. 2005 KENWORTH W900, C15 Cat, 550 HP, 13 spd; 2006 IHC 9200, IX Cummins, 475 HP, 18 spd lockers. Sask safeties. Saskatoon, SK. 306-270-6399, 78truxsales.com DL #316542.

SILAGE BOX 2007 IHC Cummins, 10 spd. std., new Cancade BH&T. In stock approx. 2005 PETE 379 C-15, rebuilt w/unlimit20 tandems auto. and standard. Yellow- ed mileage warranty remaining until Oct. head Sales, 306-783-2899, Yorkton, SK. 2016, 18 spd., 3-way locks, $47,500 OBO. 306-699-2442, McLean, SK. WANTED: C70 or C60 Chev or GMC grain truck in exc. shape. Call 306-642-3225, 2005 WESTERN STAR, 515 Detroit (rebuilt 306-640-7149, Assiniboia, SK. w/papers), 13 spd., 40 rears 3.73, new front tires, 75% back 8 tires, newer brakes, Sask. safetied, $52,500 OBO. Hazel Dell, SK., call 306-547-8782 or 306-547-5566. 1978 IHC S2500 gravel truck, new tires, auto. trans., fair condition, $18,000. 2006 IH 8600 C13 Cat, 10 spd., excellent condition, California truck, $35,000. 306-839-4422, Pierceland, SK. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. 1999 FLD112SD Freightliner, 104,000 orig kms for parts, 13 spd., Super 40 lockers, 2006 KENWORTH T800, Cat C-13, 3 spd., Michelin pilote and XM 22.5 (no recaps) 3-way locks, brand new trans., clutch, motor redone at 500 kms, $31,000. Golden 15’ alum. B&H. 403-938-3888, Calgary, AB. West Trailer, 1-877-999-7402. 2001 IHC 2554, DT530 Allison auto., super low miles, ex-gov’t, $30,900; 2002 Sterling 2006 KENWORTH W900, Cat C-15, 475 HP 3126 Cat, Allison auto., 185,000 miles, 1850 ft. lbs, steer axle Eaton 12021, $36,900. K&L Equipment, call Regina/ 12,000 lbs. $48,980. Golden West Trailer, Ituna, SK. 306-795-7779, 306-537-2027, 1-877-999-7402. email ladimer@sasktel.net DL #910885. 2007 FREIGHTLINER CLASSIC. Warner TANDEM AXLE GRAVEL trucks in invento- Ind, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Curry. New and used, large inventory across rent 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. Western Canada at www.Maximinc.Com or DL #913604, www.warnerindustries.ca call Maxim Truck & Trailer 1-888-986-2946 2007 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA. Warner Ind, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. 2005 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA, 450 DL #913604, www.warnerindustries.ca Mercedes, 820,000 kms, very good rubber, 2007 FREIGHTLINER CST120, 400 HP, safetied, nice truck, sacrifice asking auto, sleeper, c/w daycab conversion kit, $18,000. 204-534-8346, Brandon, MB. priced to sell. 306-291-4043 Saskatoon SK

1975 GMC 6500, B&H, roll tarp, 37,000 miles. Phone 306-862-3525, Codette, SK. 1979 CHEV C70, 366 eng., dual tanks, 2007 AND 2010 KENWORTH T800 trucks, B&H, roll tarp, 72,080 kms, $10,500 OBO. AUTOSHIFT, 10 spd., new B&H, ISX Cum306-297-7624, 306-297-3317, Shaunavon mins, very clean. Also trucks available with 1981 CHEV 6000 Series grain truck, no box. 2010 trucks have Cat engine. Call 3 9 , 0 0 0 k m s , s h e d d e d , $ 1 1 , 5 0 0 . 204-673-2382, Melita, MB. DL #4525. 306-628-4267, Liebenthal, SK. 2007 IH 9200, C13 Cat, Eaton 13 spd. Ul1982 CHEV 3 ton, 427, 5 spd., good shape. traShift, 20’ BH&T; 2005 IH 4300 S/A, Allison auto, IH diesel, new 16’ BH&T. Call 306-463-7627, Wilkie, SK. 306-356-4550, Dodsland SK. DL #905231. 1982 MACK R600 tandem grain truck, 19’ 2008 PRO-STAR 13 spd., UltraShift auto. Unibody box, 8’.5”W, 60” deep w/roll tarp, tandem grain truck, ISX 475 HP Cummins, $16,500. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. loaded w/Jakes, power windows, PDL, al1995 INT. 9400, 20’ B&H, new tires, 13 loys, etc. New 20’ NeuStar grain box, spd., silage endgate, N14 Cummins. w/Nordic scissor hoist, LED lights, work lights inside box, Michel’s roll tarp, pintle 780-367-2483, Willingdon, AB. plate, decal kit, plumbed dump valve, 1996 IH 9200, tandem, 370 HP Cummins, $64,500 or lease. Farmer Vern’s Premium 10 speed, 20’ BH&T, new tires, new paint, Trucks, Brandon, MB., 204-724-7000. alum. wheels, rear controls, AC, $41,500; 2000 Freightliner FL120, 370 HP Cummins, 2009 FREIGHTLINER M2. Warner Indus10 spd., 20’ BH&T, rear controls, A/T/C, tries, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Curalum. wheels, new paint, $48,500; 2006 rent 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. Mack CH613, 400 HP Mack, 13 spd., alum. DL #913604, www.warnerindustries.ca wheels, A/T/C, 20’ BH&T, rear controls, ALLISION AUTOMATICS: 2004 IHC 7400 real nice, $59,000; 2007 Freightliner DT530, w/new 20’ silage box, fresh eng., FL120, 450 HP Mercedes, 10 spd., Auto- $74,900; 2004 M2 Freightliner, C7 Cat, Shift, alum. wheels, A/T/C, 20’ BH&T, new new 20” B&H, $59,900; 2001 IHC 4900 paint, very nice truck, $67,500. Coming DT466, 18’ B&H, $44,900; 2000 GMC Soon: 1996 Kenworth 600, 375 HP Cum- C8500, 3126 Cat, new 20’ BH&T, $49,900; mins, 10 spd., tractor w/40’ tandem grain 2001 IHC 4900, DT 466, long WB, C&C, trailer, real nice shape, $38,500; Midland low miles, $22,900; K&L Equipment, 24’ tandem pup trailer, totally rebuilt, new Ituna, SK. 306-795-7779, 306-537-2027, paint, good tires, $18,500; Grainmaster 20’ email ladimer@sasktel.net DL #910885. tandem pup trailer, totally rebuilt, new paint, good tires, $18,500. Trades accept- AUTOMATIC 2010 IH Prostar, Cummins, ed on all units, all units Sask. safetied. auto, $69,000; 2005 Mack, auto, $49,000. 306-276-7518 cell; 306-767-2616 res., at both new 20’ B&H. 306-563-8765, Canora. Arborfield, SK. DL #906768. AUTOSHIFT TRUCKS AVAILABLE: Boxed 2001 INT. 4900, S/A, 466E eng., 6 spd., tandems and tractor units. Contact David 8.5x16’ box, remote hoist and grain open- 306-887-2094, 306-864-7055, Kinistino, er, air brakes and suspension, 245,000 SK. DL #327784. www.davidstrucks.com miles, $25,000. 780-376-2139, Strome, AB

2001 WESTERN STAR, Detroit Series 60, 975,000 kms, Super 10 trans., rear 20’ NuStar B&H, truck loaded w/pintle hitch, rear air controls and hyds., full onboard weigh scale, brand new 24.5 tires, safetied, field ready. Call 204-937-7171, Roblin, MB. 2005 INTERNATIONAL 9200i, tandem, diesel, C-13 engine, 13 spd., new Cancade 20x8.5x6.5 B&H w/remote control hoist CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used and tailgate, electric tarp, nice and clean, BERG’S GRAIN BODIES: When value and highway tractors. For more details call $63,000. 306-662-8405, Richmound, SK. durability matter. Ph. Berg’s Prep and Paint 204-685-2222 or view information at 2006 FREIGHTLINER M2, 280 HP, tan- for details 204-325-5677, Winkler, MB. www.titantrucksales.com dem, 10 spd., air ride, AC, 20’ CIM B&H, CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used NEW INTERNATIONAL TERRASTAR 3 ton Michel’s elec. tarp, exc. cond., California highway tractors. For more details call 4x4 at www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim no rust truck, $59,500. 306-946-8522, 204-685-2222 or view information at Saskatoon, SK. Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. www.titantrucksales.com

2013 V o lvo V N L 6 4T 6 30, D13 500 h.p ., I-S hiftAu to m a ted T ra n s m is s io n , 12 & 40’s , F u ll L o ckers , E xten d ed W a rra n ties , On ly 316,000 km ’s 2011 V o lvo 6 30, 61” m id ro o fs leep er, D16 515 h.p ., 18 s p d , 46,000 rea rs , F u ll lo ckers , Reb u iltT ra n s m is s io n , On ly 598,000 km s 2010 M a ck CX U6 13, M P8 485 h.p ., 18 s p d , ca b a n d en gin e hea ter, 3 w a y lo ck u p s , 608,390 km s . 2009 V o lvo 78 0, 77” Ra is ed Ro o f s leep er, D16 535 h.p ., I-S hift tra n s m is s io n , 12&40’s , 841,000 km ’s , F in a n ce rep o 2008 IHC 9 9 00i, IS X 525 h.p ., 18 s p d , 46,000 rea rs , F u ll L o ckers , M o o s e Bu m p er, 70” high ris e s leep er, 949,000 km s . 2008 IHC 9 200i, Da y ca b , IS X 435 h.p ., 13 s p d ., 12&40’s , 11R22.5 tires , 510,000 km s . 2008 M a ck CX U6 13, M P8 480 h.p ., 18 s p d ., 12,000 fro n t, 40,000 60’ M id ro o fs leep er, 804,000 km s .

2013 IH 5900I, 42” bunk, 13L, 46 diff., 4-way lock, 18 spd., 370,000 kms, engine warranty; 2005 T800 Kenworth, 500 Cat, 18 spd., 46 diffs, 4-way locks w/Roobar bumpers; 2001, 2003, 2005 daycab T800’s, heavy specs.; 378 and 379 Pete, four 2006s, 2005, 2004, 2003, Cat, 18 spd., 46 diff, 4-way locks, all w/Roobar bumpers; 2006 W900 KW daycab, Cat, 18 spd; 2007 daycab, IH 9200, ISM 370, 10 spd.; 2003 Freightliner Classic, Cat, 18 spd., new rubber; 1999 9300 IH, dual stacks, dual breathers, 60 Detroit, 13 spd; 1996 T800 Kenworth, 475 Cat, 13 spd. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL#905231. www.rbisk.ca

2013 PETERBILT 388, 13 spd., tag axle, Paccar eng., 63” double bunk with fridge, 204,700 kms, $90,000. 204-794-4879 or 204-981-3636, Cartier, MB. 2014 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA. Warner Ind, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. DL #913604, www.warnerindustries.ca BAILIFF AUCTION for sale by bid. Repossessed 2006 Freightliner FLD120 Classic, 550 Cat twin turbo, 18 spd., double full lockers, 12/40, 3.58 gears, odometer reads 1,067,290 kms, brand new rubber. Email saskwestfinancial@sasktel.net or for financing Horizon Leasing at 306-934-4445, Saskatoon, SK. BAILIFF AUCTION for sale by bid. Repossessed 2011 Peterbilt 389 flat top, Cummins 485 HP, 18 spd., full lockers, 12/40, 3.70 gears, reading 449,000 kms, Webasto engine and bunk. Unit is in Saskatoon, SK. Email saskwestfinancial@sasktel.net Leasing is available through Horizon Leasing 306-934-4445.

CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com SANDBLASTING AND PAINTING of heavy trucks, trailers and equipment. Please call 2008 PETERBILT 388, 244” WB, 63” plati- for details. Can-Am Truck Export Ltd., num leather walk-in sleeper, 870,000 kms, 1-800-938-3323, Delisle, SK. Cummins ISX485, 18 spd., 12,000 frt, 44,000 rears, 3.58 ratio, 3-way lockers, SLEEPERS AND DAYCABS. New and used. Thermo King 11-22.5 tires with less than Huge inventory across Western Canada at 20,000 kms. New turbo March/14, new www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & EGR June/14, new windshields June/14. Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. Fresh safety June 1/14. Beacons. Very good condition, in excellent mechanical shape, $62,500. Will take 2000-2005 Chev 4x4 on trade. Contact Ron, Vale Solutions 1978 LT8000 LOUISVILLE w/8 yd. hyd. d r i ve c e m e n t m i xe r, 3 2 0 8 C at . C a l l 306-695-2460, Indian Head, SK. 306-445-5602, North Battleford, SK. 2009 KW T800, 600,000 kms, 72” aerocab, wet kit, 525 ISX, 46 rears, loaded, $90,000 OBO. 780-305-3547, Neerlandia, AB. 2010 PETERBILT 386, Cummins 18 spd., 40 rears, lockers, leather int., loaded, APU, $64,500. 306-752-4909, Melfort, SK. 2011 FREIGHTLINER CASCADIA. Warner Ind, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. DL #913604, www.warnerindustries.ca 1998 FREIGHTLINER N14 Cummins, 10 spd., SWS 20’ deck, fresh safety, $21,900. Cam-Don Motors 306-237-4212 Perdue SK

Regin a , S K 1-8 00-6 6 7-046 6 S a s k a to o n , S K 1-8 8 8 -242-79 8 8 1986 MACK R600, 350 engine, 12 speed 2012 MACK, Model CHU613 set up with t r a n s . , w e t k i t , $ 9 , 5 0 0 . P h o n e 4-1/2” T&E hyd. pump and cooler for haul306-960-3000, St. Louis, SK. ing crude oil or water, 225” WB, eng. 2000 IHC 9200, C12 Cat, 430 HP, 10 spd. MP8-505C, Mack 505 HP, trans. 12 spd. I AutoShift w/clutch pedal, 3-way locks, Mack auto, 4-way lock up diff. 48” sleeper. 51” integral sleeper, 60% rubber, new rear Truck was set up and used short term in brakes, cold AC, new AB safety, $14,500. the oilfields. Only 102,000 kms. Factory warranty remaining, plus ext. warranty Email pics avail. 403-638-3934, Sundre AB pkg., $92,000 +GST. Lease agreement 2005 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA, auto- available. OAC. Will deliver anywhere in matic, 500 HP Detroit, 687,000 kms., Western Canada for very reasonable rate. 204-724-7000, Winnipeg, MB. $38,000. 306-230-1920, Allan, SK.

2002 IHC 7400 DT466 tandem, Allison auto, 79,000 miles, c/w Altec manlift and digging auger attachment, BC certified, ready for work, $70,000. 250-960-0022, Prince George, BC. 2003 FORD F350 4WD diesel truck with service body, excellent cond., $16,000 OBO. Call 306-291-4043, Saskatoon, SK.

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1999-2004 FORD 1 ton dump trucks, single wheel, dual wheel, reg cab, crew cab, gas, auto, from $8500 and up; 1982 Ford F700 water pumper, 14,000 org. kms, $7500; 1991 Topkick S/A deck/crane, 164,000 kms, $11,500; 1992 Topkick diesel, auto, deck, 130,000 kms with 7000 lb picker $15,500; 1990 IHC S/A flusher diesel, auto, rear engine flusher, $21,500; 1997 F450 4x4 fire truck, 7.3 diesel, auto, immaculate, $28,500; Heavy spec. S/A pumper diesel, auto, $22,500. Call 306-668-2020, Saskatoon, SK. DL#908171 www.northtownmotors.com

1991 IHC 4900, 466 dsl., 13 spd., 20’ deck, 120,000 kms., fresh safety, $19,900. CamDon Motors, 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. SPECIALTY TRUCKS AVAILABLE: Fire, bucket, deck trucks and equipment. See us at our new location at 101 Cory Rd., Saskatoon, SK. 306-668-2020. DL #908171. www.northtownmotors.com

2011 KENWORTH T800 winch truck, with Cummins engine, loaded, 4-way lockers, 11Rx24.5 rubber, 90% fronts 18,000 lbs., rears 46,000, Tulsa RN 60, 60,000 lbs. hyd. winch, Lennax built, $185,000. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.

2000 FREIGHTLINER FL80 with 24’ flatdeck, 300 HP diesel 9 spd., safetied, vg cond., no rust, $19,500. Call for details, 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. 2001 DODGE 4x4, dually, Cummins eng., $14,900; 1995 Retired Ambulance, diesel, $6500; 1970 2 ton GMC, V8, B&H, $3800. Pro Ag Sales, 306-441-2030 anytime, North Battleford, SK. 2005 IH 4300, 24’ van truck, Allison auto., 466 eng., 3000 lb. lift gate, premium California truck, no rust, 118,000 miles, only $24,500. 306-946-8522 Saskatoon SK 2008 FORD F750 water truck. Warner Ind, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. DL #913604, www.warnerindustries.ca 2015 FREIGHTLINER M2 4x4, Warner Ind, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. DL #913604, www.warnerindustries.ca CAN-AM TRUCK EXPORT LTD., Delisle, SK, 1-800-938-3323: 2006 Freightliner, daycab, MBE 460/10/40, new safety, very clean truck, $22,000; 2011 Cancade 35’ end dump tridem gravel trailer, air ride, elec. tarp, $48,000; 1974 Kenworth water truck, 555 Cummins, auto, tandem, 3000 gal. alum. tank, $15,000; 2001 Freightliner 80, 3126 Cat, Allison auto, 16 front, 40 rears, 100,000 kms, C&C, $35,000; Tandem dolly converter, $5,500; 2005 Freightliner Columbia, 60 Series Detroit, 18 spd., 46 rears w/4-way locks, $27,000; 1986 JLG 80HX boom lift, $19,000; 1990 IHC 4700, DT 466, Allison auto, w/45’ manlift, Ex-Sask. Power, $16,000; 2001 Western Star, C15 Cat, 18-46 rears, 3-way locks, air ride, 25’ cap-end frame. Would make perfect bale picker unit, $38,000; 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 rears w/4-way locks, 500,000 kms, $75,000; 2005 GMC W4500 diesel, auto, cube van w/power lift gate, hyd. brakes, $12,000; Two sander units, $2000-$3000; Gensets available. Financing available, OAC. www.can-amtruck.com DL#910420.

2007 IH 9900I with 16’ CIM gravel box, ISX565 Cummins, 18 spd., 4-way lockers, excellent 24.5 rubber. Call 306-256-7107, CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used Cudworth, SK. ltp@sasktel.net highway tractors. For more details call or view information at IH 4300 SINGLE AXLE, IH motor, Allison 204-685-2222 automatic, AC, with deck. 306-356-4550, www.titantrucksales.com Dodsland, SK. DL #905231. 1998 KENWORTH T-800, stainless steel paving box, 30” live belt, $33,000. 2006 FREIGHTLINER M2 106 cargo van, 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. 26’ with tail lift, $26,000; 2005 Isuzu 16’ cargo van with tail lift, $16,000. 306-291-4043, Saskatoon, SK.

2003 IHC 330 Texoma, 20’ drill depth, w/2003 JD engine, 1200 hrs., 3 spd. Allison, 3” Kelly bar, mounted on IHC DT 466, 230 HP, 6 spd., 33,400 miles, $100,000. Call 780-446-2011, Alcomdale, AB.

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.

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. 2005 PETERBILT TANDEM C13 Cat, auto UltraShift, fuel and lube, 4 comp., 1200L motor oil, hyd. oil, antifreeze, dsl. fuel, deaf tanks, waste oil filter comp., 2x2800L fuel tanks, PTO drive, air operated system, previously reg. in SK., exc. cond., $65,000. Will deliver. Consider grain in trade. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.

A P P ROX . 6 0 0 U S E D c e m e n t b l o c k s . 306-652-2601, Saskatoon, SK. 9000 NEW BRICKS, 3.5”x11.5”, 50 cents each. Call 204-855-2881, 204-851-9131, Virden, MB.

STEEL BRIDGE, 60’Lx17’W, open top, $12,000. Can deliver. 306-734-7721, Craik, SK. STEEL BUILDINGS. SPECIAL limited advertising deals. Most all sizes. Make offer or bid for best deal. Toll free 1-800-964-8335 Source 18X. Photo gallery available to 1987 IHC S2500 tandem axle bed truck, choose: www.gosteel.com 350 Cummins BC, 9 spd., 44,000 rears, hyd. winch, 12’ deck, live roll, good rubber, RARE OPPORTUNITY: For sale photograsome rust on back of cab, pintle hitch, no pher collection of approx. 50,000 Sask. 5th wheel, asking $6000 firm. Call Dave at grain elevator pictures (std. 4”x6” size) designated by location and year contained 780-470-0330, Devon, AB. in photo albums. Call 604-221-5114 or CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used 778-888-1212, Vancouver, BC. highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com 2005 FREIGHTLINER M2 106, S/A, crew cab, 300 HP Mercedes, 6 spd. Allison auto., 89,000 kms., bull bar and custom deck, custom hitching, always stored inside, current SK safety. Asking $73,000. plus GST. Gord at 306-463-4598, Kindersley, SK. gscaz@sasktel.net 2001 VACTOR 2100 on FL80 Freightliner jet rodder, 2000 hrs. Call 306-445-5602, North Battleford, SK. 1985 GMC with 17 bale Goldenview picker deck, dsl., Allison, $45,000, or deck alone $39,500. 780-975-1328, St. Michael, AB.

SUVs IN STOCK, trades, best financial rates, biggest selection. Greenlight Truck & Auto, www.GreenlightAuto.ca Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430.

1999 CAT LOADER IT28G, 2 3/4 yard, A1; 1800 gal. sewer vac-tank and pump. Call 306-236-8023, Goodsoil, SK.

CLASSIFIED ADS 31

$ O P P O R TU N ITY $ to m a rket & in sta lla n ew pro d u ct. It sea ls, co lo u rs, stren gthen s & sto ps cra cks fro m sprea d in g in co n crete. Pro tects co n crete, w o o d & m eta l a ga in st w ea ther, sa lt & petro leu m pro d u cts. A $10,000 - $25,000 in vestm en t secu res in ven to ry & w ill give a n a bo ve a vera ge retu rn o n yo u r in vestm en t. An in vestm en t en su res pro tected territo ry & ro o m fo rexpa n sio n . Co m pa n y tra in in g & m a rket su ppo rt a re pro vid ed .

Form ore in form a tion & a list of a rea sstilla va ila ble:

Cem en t Accen ts Box 21062 RPO Ga rd in er Pa rk Reg in a ,SK S4 V 1J4 Em a il:royw a g m a n @ sa sktel.n et COMPUTER BUSINESS in large northern town of 7000 includes stationary and other income generating businesses. Living quarters can be developed. On #11 Hwy in Craik, Bar and Grill, turnkey, housing available. Development Lands: 68 Acres, East of Regina on #46 near Pilot Butte, with a home, secondary serviced site adjacent town land. 140 Acres, development land, 20 mins. East of Regina on #1. Investment: Davidson, 2 heated shops exc. for trucking or heavy mechanics operation, on approx. two acres w/wo business. Brian Tiefenbach 306-536-3269, 306-525-3344 at Colliers International, 2505 11th Ave., Suite 200, Regina, SK. www.collierscanada.com

CUSTOM BALING with square baler, 3x4, taking bookings for hay and straw, SK, AB, MB. Contact Ben at Kaiserfarm@yahoo.ca or phone 306-744-7678. STANDING HAY CROPS wanted. Rental by the ton or by the acre up to $100/acre. Custom large square baling, custom swathing. Call 780-991-3616, Thorsby, AB.

JD 9760 STS, pick-up header, 36' draper header, 8 row corn header. Will travel for right job. 306-589-9175, Grenfell, SK.

HERAUF’S CUSTOM SILAGING. Taking bookings for grass, cereals, corn. Claas chopper, hauling, swathing, packing, 12’ bagger. Josh 306-529-1959, Regina, SK. KSW CUSTOM CHOPPING, JD SP chopper, live bottom trucks, 22 yrs. experience, reasonable rates. For all your alfalfa cereal and corn silage needs call Kevin 306-947-2812, 306-221-9807, Hepburn SK ERW CUSTOM SILAGE, JD chopper with trucks, packing also available. Alfalfa and cereals, serving SK. and MB. Call Eldon 306-370-0776, Hague, SK. FEITSMA SERVICES IS booking 2014 alfalfa, cereal and corn silage acres. Serving all of Sask. Jason 306-381-7689, Hague, SK.

LOWDERMILK TRANSPORT IS providing one call service for all Equipment/Hay hauling. Very experienced, multiple trucks serving AB., SK., and MB. 780-872-0107, 306-252-1001, Kenaston, SK.

SELF-LOADING/ UNLOADING ROUND BALE TRUCK. Maximum capacity 34 bales. Custom hauling anywhere in AB. or SK. Call Bernd, Bales on Wheels, Tofield, HAMMOND REALTY: FOR sale Westwind AB., 403-795-7997 or 780-922-4743. Florist and Greenhouse located in thriving Moosomin, SK. Package incl: 48x26’ main shop, with natural gas furnace, walk-in fridge and 5 greenhouses, 3 heated and attached to main shop. Inventory, supplies, tools and equipment negotiable w/offers. Owner willing to help with transition of new buyer. Lots of potential for expansion! Contact Guy Shepherd at 306-434-8857. http:// Westwind.TimHammond.ca

CAT 627B MOTOR SCRAPER, twin eng., 14-20 cu. yd. capacity, 450 HP, 8 spd., cushion hitch, AC, heat, AM/FM, 200 hrs. on rebuilt front engine, rebuilt rear diff., new bearings in rear engine, good rubber, vg cond. 204-867-7074, 204-585-5254, Sandy Lake, MB. 2001 D6R XW, 10,500 hrs., 6-way dozer, cab, air, diff. steering, good undercarriage, tight, no leaks, asking $88,000. 403-244-7813, Calgary, AB. EXCAVATORS: Bobcat 430, CAT 320, Volvo EC300, JD 27D. For rent/sale. Conquest Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. CRAWLER DOZER 58P Komatscu, c/w 6-way dozer, canopy, sweeps, very low hrs., $38,000. 780-983-0936, Westlock, AB 10’X34’ ATCO 6 person bunk house, heated, air conditioning, $10,000 OBO. 780-987-2859, Devon, AB. SAWMILL 44’ TRACK and edger, $2500; Ateco cable plow for D5 or D6, $5000; JD skidder winch, $2500; D5 set of 2 chains and 24” pads, like new, $3000; 1975 and 1976 Trailmobile B-trains, 27’ decks, steel pegs, $3000; 1982 Western Star tandem, $3000. 204-222-0285, Winnipeg, MB.

1994 HITACHI EX270LC-5 excavator with thumb, 3-way valve, $40,000; Cedar Rapids 22x36 jaw crusher w/Elrus vibratory feeder, $90,000; Boeing 100 port. asphalt plant, 130 ton/hr., all complete, $275,000. 204-376-5194, 204-641-0008, Arborg, MB. TWIN ENGINE SCRAPER TS14-F, new tires, 0 hour engine rebuild, very good condition. 780-983-0936, Westlock, AB. CAT 963 LGP track type loader, S/N #21Z05170, 1994, 92” bucket, 2.5 cu. yds, w/9 teeth, 22” double Grouser pads, cab, $25,000. 204-795-9192, Plum Coulee, MB. NEW AND USED parts for Cat and other brands. Costex Aftermarket Parts Dealer. Worldwide locating system. Mackie Equip. Ltd 306-352-3070, darren@mackieltd.com www.mackieltd.com Regina, SK.

1978 CAT 631D motor scraper, 6180 hrs, 31 yard capacity, 8 spd. PS, 37.25-35 tires. Nice shape! $58,000. Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT, EX. GOV’T Units: Rosco pavement patcher, trailer mount, 4 cyl Cummins, $8500; 84” Raygo pavement roller, $8000; Toro 3300 diesel ATV mounted line painter, $7500; Diesel trailer mount traffic control signal unit, $3250; 2006 L4630 Kubota 4WD tractor (cab), 4000 hrs., w/sweeper $18,500, w/o $16,800; Unused tri-axle equipment trailer $8150; Hyster 5000 forklift cab, side shift propane $8500; Used 16’ Atco office trailer $5500; Cat CB24D, smooth double drum 2 0 0 8 G E N I E G T H 8 4 4 Te l e h a n d l e r roller, 2000 hrs, $17,500. 306-668-2020, w/8000 lb. 44’ reach, good tires and forks, Saskatoon, SK. DL #908171. Visit our $56,500. Trades welcome. Financing avail. website: www.northtownmotors.com 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 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 2014 ROME RP-180CS scraper, 18 yard capacity, 12’ cut, 300” long 167” wide, 19,250 lbs., $90,746. 204-256-2098, Treherne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com 1992 CASE 621 wheel loader, 20.5x25 tires 90%, 3rd valve, heat and radio, 6280 hrs, gd cond. 306-621-0425, Yorkton, SK.

EQUIPMENT HAULING. Serving western Canada and northwest USA. Call Harvey at: 1-877-824-3010, or cell 403-795-1872. Vandenberg Hay Farms Ltd., Nobleford AB. Email: logistics@vandenberghay.ca LONG LAKE TRUCKING custom hay haul- 2006 L110 E Volvo wheel loader, 8850 ATTENTION RESTAURATEUR! FANTASTIC ing, 2 units. 306-567-7100, Imperial, SK. hrs., ride control, 23.5R25 tires, 210 HP, opportunity at the Coast Hotel in Medicine hyd. Q/C, AC, c/w 4 yd. bucket, third Hat, Alberta. Fully operational restaurant CUSTOM BALE HAULING, self-loading valve, vg cond., $105,000. Can deliver. Call available for lease immediately. Approxi- and unloading 17 bale truck. Radisson, SK. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. mately 6500 sq. ft. Includes: all equipment 306-827-2269 or 306-827-7835. HIGH LIFTS of all types. 80’ mobile high and furnishings currently in place. Seating lift; 52’ scissor lift; 100’ ladder truck; Sevfor 175, area can be modified for smaller eral lifts from 15’ to 30’; Forklifts from 1 to venue. Landlord may offer assistance with CUSTOM BALING/ SWATHING/ SEEDING, 10 ton; Linkbelt LS98 w/60’ boom; Several renovations. Your choice of 3 options: 1. Complete ownership and operation of a Contour, double shoot; also parting 567 fire trucks and foam truck; Post pounders; baler. Alan at 306-463-8423, Marengo, SK. 1500’ of chain link fencing and posts; Smitty’s Franchise. Location has been Pre approved by Smitty’s. Minimum invest- MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, stumps, 5000’ 1/2 cable at .50¢/ft; 100’s of misc. ment, $150,000. Operator must be ap- caraganas, etc. 12 years of enviro friendly items and attachments; Large stock of proved by Smitty’s. 2. Partnership in Smit- mulching. Call today! 306-933-2950. Visit: power units, 3 KW to 193 KW; Older construction equipment; Over 50 sets of pallet ty’s franchise. Approximate investment, www.maverickconstruction.ca forks. 12 water pumps, gas and diesel; 6 $75,000. Operator must be approved by air compressors. Central Canada’s largest CUSTOM HARVESTER looking for acres to Smitty’s. 3. Individually owned and operated venture based upon Personal plan. cut in Sask. Prefer South of Hwy 1. John wreckers. Cambrian Equipment Sales Ltd, Landlord may participate in cost of lease- Deere machines, flex headers, tractor and call 204-667-2867, fax 204-667-2932, hold improvements. Lease payment, grain cart. Professional crew and service. Winnipeg, MB. $6000. per month plus proportionate op- Call Shawn 701-425-8400, Vermilion, AB. TRENCHERS, PLOWS AND BACKHOES. eration cost. Tenant also has benefit of BRUSH MULCHING. The fast, effective Vermeer Navigator directional drill, Model supplying food service to all areas of hotel way to clear land. Four season service, D7x11 w/Kubota dsl.; Ditch Witch 7020, including banquet facilities, Bourbon St. competitive rates, 375 HP unit, also avail. blade, backhoe and cable plow; Ditch Lounge, plus Martini Bar and guest rooms trackhoe w/thumb, multiple bucket at- Witch 5110, cable plow and front blade; generating additional revenue. Interested tachments. Bury rock and brush piles and Ditch Witch R65 backhoe, blade and parties please call Ken at: 403-866-6916, fence line clearing. Bork Contracting, trencher; Ditch Witch R40 trencher, blade, or email: kenschmidt43@gmail.com www.borysiukcontracting.ca Prince Albert, 4 cyl. dsl; Case-Davis maxi sneaker, rubber tires, ride on rear plow; Davis T78 on steel SK., 306-960-3804. ONLINE AUCTION: Restaurant and Real tracks, rear trencher. Also unit on a trailer; Estate: Turn Key Business including 50 EXPLOSIVES CONTRACTOR: Beaver Vermeer walk behind Model V1350; (3) seat licensed restaurant, equipment and dams, rocks, stumps. Reasonable rates. Ditch Witch walk behind Model 1230H. building. Located in Midale, SK. Bids close Federally licensed magazine and insured. Cambrian Equipment Sales Ltd., Winnipeg, Thursday, July 31, 1 PM. 1-800-263-4193, Northwest Demolition, Radisson, SK. Call MB., ph 204-667-2867, fax 204-667-2932. View at: McDougallAuction.com Box 3081, 306-827-2269 or 306-827-7835. Regina, SK. S4P 3G7, DL#319916 ERW CUSTOM HAY CUTTING, with JD DISPOSAL BUSINESS FOR Sale in West 956 MoCo. Willing to travel. Call Eldon, Central Sask. Established company with 306-370-0776. loyal customer base. Call or email for more NEUFELD ENT. CORRAL CLEANING, info. millars@sasktel.net 306-858-7397. payloader, Bobcat with rubber tracks and vertical beater spreaders. Phone 306-220-5013, 306-467-5013, Hague, SK. REGULATION DUGOUTS: 120x60x14’ $2000; 160x60x14’ $2950; 180x60x14’ $3450; 200x60x14’ $3950. Gov’t grants available. 306-222-8054, Saskatoon, SK.

FARM/CORPORATE PROJECTS. Call A.L. Management Group for all your borrowing MineralRights.ca Your Mineral Right and lease requirements. 306-790-2020, Marketplace. Leasing, buying and selling Regina, SK. Mineral Rights 306-992-1015, Regina, SK. NEED A LOAN? Own farmland? Bank says ID#481220- HONEY OPERATION: n o ? I f y e s t o a b o v e t h r e e , c a l l Terrific location with access to 10,000 1-866-405-1228, Calgary, AB. acres of alfalfa along the Frenchman River. Licensed for 1000 hives, includes 2 residences, outbuildings and equipment. One of two Honey Producers in Saskatchewan certified organic by Pro-Cert. Sellers willing to train. Val Marie, SK. Real Estate DEBTS, BILLS AND charge accounts too C e n t re , w w w. f a r m re a l e s t a t e . c o m high? Need to resolve prior to spring? Call 1-866-345-3414. us to develop a professional mediation DO YOU HAVE an empty barn and want plan, resolution plan or restructuring plan. to raise ducks? 4$/dozen fertilized duck Call toll free 1-888-577-2020. eggs. Call 780-450-6103, Edmonton, AB. WANTED: HUNTERS INTERESTED in Outfitting Business, SE Sask. Outfitter wishes to retire. Birds (ducks, geese, upland birds) Deer; Elk; Moose; Coyotes; Hiking; And FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS We also specialize in: Crop insurance apbird watching. 306-455-2493, Arcola, SK. peals; Spray drift; Residual herbicide; CusFROZEN COOKIE DOUGH BUSINESS, tom operator issues; Equip. malfunction. equipment, recipies and client list. Asking Call Back-Track Investigations for assis$25,000. 306-536-5330, Regina, SK. tance and compensation 1-866-882-4779.

2007 Cat IT38G II, 9500 hrs, quick coupler, 3.25 yd bucket, 48” forks, 3rd valve. Call Edquip Ltd., Jerry 780-915-5426 or Bob, 780-446-9254, Spruce Grove, AB.

LANDMASTER PRODUCTION DOZERS: PD-16’, $36,000; PD-18’, $37,500. Direct factory delivery in MB., SK. and AB. Call Neil, 306-231-8300; Gord, 780-913-7353. www.landmaster.ca

2012 CAT MODEL 272D XHP skidsteer, 2 spd. high flow hyd., cab, AC, heater, new 7 8 ” b u c ke t , 3 7 0 h o u r s , $ 4 5 , 5 0 0 . 204-864-2391, 204-981-3636, Cartier, MB. 3- TEREX TS14B MOTOR SCRAPERS, 1980 to 1982, $45,000 ea. OBO; 1997 Case 9030B Excavator, $42,000 OBO. Call 306-537-6866, Regina, SK. Send email for pics to: sfventures@sasktel.net CAT 60, 70, 80 and 463’s available. Also Allis Chalmers direct mount scrapers. 16’-20’ pull dozers. 306-338-7114 Clair, SK EQUIPMENT RENTALS: Dozers, compactors, loaders, excavators, etc. Conquest Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. 2004 JD 310SG backhoe, 4 WD, extend-ahoe, $32,800. Financing available, trades welcome. Call 1-800-667-4515 or visit: www.combineworld.com

2006 CAT 320 EXCAVATOR, QA, cleanout bucket, 10,000 hrs., nice, $60,000. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. OVER 30 UNITS of compaction equipment of many types and models; 5- remote controlled vibratory packers; Large stock of power plants and power units; Several air compressors from 185 to 650 CFM; 4- post pounders, some skidsteer mount; 5stump grinders; 3- sweepers; 100’s of hyd. cyls. Cambrian Equipment Sales, Winnipeg EXTREME DUTY BRUSHCUTTER (made in MB. Call 204-667-2867, fax 204-667-2932. Canada) made with 1/4” steel, 66” cut Omni HD gearbox and parker hyd. motor. Cuts up to 4” trees. Has two 1/2”x3”x24” blades on a stump jumper, c/w hyd. hoses and flat face couplers. Standard flow operation, open rear discharge prevents under deck build up, $4995. Agrimex, 306-432-4444, Dysart, SK.

CUSTOM SWATHING, Alberta and Saskatchewan. Brand new 30’ MacDon. Call: 403-866-2775, Rolling Hills, AB. TALBOT HOT BIN SEALING, we seal bins on wood and concrete floors. Serving SK, AB and MB. 306-631-0203, Moose Jaw, SK. talbotbinsealing@gmail.com HORIZONTAL DIRECTIONAL DRILLING, Hydro-Vac and electro-fusion services. Fast. Efficient. Reasonable. Sure Shot HDD GENIE S60 MANLIFT. New hose track, Contracting Ltd. 306-933-0170, Saskatoon good running condition. Call Del for info. and pics at 403-638-3934, Sundre, AB. SK. Visit: www.sureshothdd.com 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 2010 KOMATSU PC220 LC-8 hyd. excava- Western Heavy Equipment 306-981-3475, t o r, h y d . t h u m b , 6 3 6 0 h r s . C a l l Prince Albert, SK. 587-991-6605, Edmonton, AB. 2004 JLG G6-42A telehandler w/6000 lb. LEON 8.5 cu. yd. push-off scraper, original 42’ reach, heated cab, 4059 hours, well p a i n t f a d e d , e x c . c o n d . $ 1 4 , 0 0 0 . maintained, $41,800. Trades welcome. 306-731-7235, Earl Grey, SK. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 2007 JD 270 HYDRAULIC EXCAVATOR LATE MODEL CAT, 613, elevating, scraper, c/w thumb, 2 buckets, 5800 hrs., exc. 4100 hrs., vg cond., $50,000. Phone: 306-536-5055, Lumsden, SK. cond. 780-983-0936, Westlock, AB.

MINI-EX: 2006 BOBCAT 430, 42 HP, 450 hrs, 2 spd., X-Change coupler, $29,500. Conquest Equip. 306-483-2500 Oxbow SK IH TD15B, POWERSHIFT, nice shape, motor overhauled, dozer/piling teeth, ready for bush work; 12’ Rome plow, single or rope or hyd. 306-233-5241, Wakaw, SK. WHEEL LOADER JD 544E, 3 yd., $36,000; backhoe, JCB 215, 4x4, cab, air, ext. hoe, $36,000; excavator, Hitachi 120LC, new tracks, $36,000. 306-563-8765 Canora, SK 9’ OFFSET ROME plow for sale, $6500. Call: 204-636-2448, Erickson, MB.


32 CLASSIFIED ADS

1997 DEERE 230LC excavator, 14,083 hours, 31.5” triple grousers, WBM wedge style coupler, WBM 32” digging bucket and 62” cleanup bucket with serrated edge, plumbed, mechanical thumb, New UC! $59,000. Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 1988 D8N, 18,500 frame hrs., new Cat UC, SU dozer, multi shank ripper, cab, air, $95,000. 403-244-7813, Calgary, AB. HYD. EXCAVATORS: 2008 Komatsu PC308, Zero turn, QA, clean up bucket, 13’ stick, AC, plumbed for GPS plus aux. hyd. line for thumb, $75,000; JD 270LC, w/hyd. thumb, 12’ stick, $55,000; 2001 Volvo excavaNICE CLEAN D7 Cat, vg cond., standard QA, 210, QA bucket, 13,000 hrs. nice cond., shift, pup start, angle blade with 26” pads. tor $45,000. 204-871-0925, McGregor, MB. B u s h r e a dy. Wa r r a n t y, c a n d e l i ve r, $29,000. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB CAT 621B MOTOR SCRAPER, 14-20 cu. capacity, 330 HP, 8 spd., cushion hitch, CAT D6D TRACK dozer, S/N #4X08123, yd. heat, AM/FM, good rubber, vg cond., 1982, dbl. tilt angle blade, 20” Grousers, AC, 204-867-7074, 204-585-5254, canopy, ripper, $32,000. Ph 204-795-9192, $62,000. Sandy Lake, MB. Plum Coulee, MB. FOR SALE: D8N’s, D7R’s, D7H LGP, D6H 2- 2003 DEERE 1814 PT scrapers, 18 LGP, D6R’s, 6-ways. Assortment of trackyard capacity, 14’ wide cut, 20.5R25 tires. hoes, 240’s to 330 Volvo and Hitachi. Excellent shape! $59,750 ea. Call Jordan 780-723-0672, 780-723-5672, Edson, AB. anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. FORCE 3 PTH back hoe, new units EXCELLENT SELECTION Used skidsteers, TERRA w/13”or 16” buckets. Easy track loaders, forklifts, zoom booms, mini available 3 sizes available. Starting at $6200 excavators. Visit www.glenmor.cc for de- mount. 1-800-352-6264, Flaman Sales, Nisku, AB. tails, specs and prices. Glenmor, phone 2004 NEW HOLLAND grader RG200B, rip306-764-2325, Prince Albert, SK. per and dozer, new motor; 2003 Hitachi RECLAMATION CONTRACTORS: Bigham ZX200LC. 306-236-8023, Goodsoil, SK. 3 and 4 leg mechanical trip 3 pt. hitch Paratills in stock; parts for Bigham and Tye WANTED: 2 20’ - 30’ gravel conveyors. Paratills. Call Kellough’s: 1-888-500-2646. Call Jim 306-862-8518, Choiceland, SK. 2007 HITACHI ZX240 LC-3 hyd. excavator, SKIDSTEER ATTACHMENTS: rock buckets, 4254 hrs, Q/C bucket, w/hyd. thumb, aux. dirt buckets, grapples and more top hyd., AC. 587-991-6605, Edmonton, AB. quality. Also have truck decks in stock. Quality Welding and Sales 306-731-3009 ROAD GRADERS CONVERTED to pull or 306-731-8195, Craven, SK. behind large 4 WD tractors, 14’ and 16’ blade widths available. CWK Enterprises, 2014 ROME RALSE-16 finishing ejector 306-682-3367, 306-231-8358, Humboldt, scraper, 14 yd. cap., 17’ 4” wide, 15,074 lb, SK., www.cwenterprises.ca hyd. tilt, $63,056. Call 204-256-2098, TreMANLIFT JLG T35, tow behind, 39’ reach, herne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com self-propelled, Honda engine, vg cond. USED WBM EXCAVATOR Attachments: $17,500. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. 200 Series: 60” cleanup, $3800; 66” twist, 1998 CATERPILLAR D6R, differential steer, $7200; 60” rake, $4500. 250 Series: blade, 70% undercarriage remaining, Wedge coupler, $1600; 36” dig, $3200; 42” dig, $3800; 66” cleanup, $4800; V-ditch$59,000. 306-536-5055, Lumsden, SK. ing, $4800; 72” rake, $6000. 300 Series: CAT HYDRAULIC PULL SCRAPERS: Wedge coupler, $2000; V-ditching, $5200; 463, 435, 80 and 70, all very good cond. 72” cleanup, $5500; 72” rake, $6500. Call new conversion. Also new and used scrap- R i c k at We s t e r n H e av y E q u i p m e n t , er tires. Can deliver. 204-793-0098, Stony 306-981-3475, Prince Albert, SK. Mountain, MB. LARGE STOCK OF LOADERS at low low HYDRAULIC PULL SCRAPERS 10 to 25 prices. Cat 966C hi-lift; Cat 950, new moyds., exc. cond.; Loader and scraper tires, tor; Dresser 530; Mich-Clark-Volvo L320 9 custom conversions available. Looking for yard; FIA 840; Clark 45B; FIA 345B; Hough Cat cable scrapers. Quick Drain Sales Ltd., 65; (5) others in need of repair work; (7) 2 WD loaders with 3 PTH. Track Loaders: Cat 306-231-7318, 306-682-4520 Muenster SK 955H; Cat 977 20A Series; Cat 931; Cat HYDRAULIC SCRAPERS, Cat, Allis Chalm- 941; FIA FL9. About to part out (20) 4 WD ers, Letourneau, 6 yd.- 35 yds, also direct and track loaders. Over 1400 new and mount scrapers; Scraper tires; Direct used const. tires. New parts. Big discounts. mount motor graders from $14,950; S/A Over 500 new and used buckets and atJeep, $10,500; 5 yard 175B Michigan load- tachments. Over 500 new and used hyd. er, $16,500. 204-822-3797, Morden, MB. cylinders; 2 yards, over 50 acres. Older HYUNDAI PAYLOADER HL740-7A, approx. construction equipment. Central Canada’s 1600 hrs., good cond., $105,000. Phone largest wreckers. Cambrian Equipment Sales Ltd., phone 204-667-2867, fax 306-795-2234, 306-795-7607, Ituna, SK. 204-667-2932, Winnipeg, MB. ROME PLOW AND KELLO DISC blades and bearings; 24” to 36” notched disc ATTACHMENTS: Skidsteer: pallet forks, blades. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. buckets, augers, hay spears. Conquest Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. www.kelloughs.com NEW 60” ADJUSTABLE pallet forks will LINKBELT LS98 with fairlead and bucket; fit: Cat 950F-G; Cat IT 38G; Cat IT 62G-H, Linkbelt 315 pile hammer; Koehring model 304 yd. and bridge crane; Pettibone All$4000. 204-372-6863, Fisher Branch, MB. terrain 40’ crane; Galion 4x4 20 ton crane, 1998 D6M LGP, 6-way dozer, cab, ripper, 2- Pettibone 20 ton and 40 ton mobile 1 4 , 5 0 0 h r s . , g o o d U C , r u n s g r e at , cranes; Hiab model 140, used only 1 year; $55,000. 403-244-7813, Calgary, AB. Several other lifts and attachments; JLG 1998 SKYTRAK 6036 telehandler with 80’ manlift and others; Backhoes and at6000 lb. 36’ reach, good cond., $25,800. tachments; JD 690C excavator, only Trades welcome, financing available. $9500; Case 1085B with Wrist-O-Twist, $14,900; Bobcat 331 excavator, $13,900; 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com New Bobcat backhoe attachment model 1994 JD 710D backhoe, 4 WD, heated 811, $7900. Many other backhoe attachcab, $32,800. Trades welcome, financing ments in stock. 2 locations over 50 acres, available. Call 1-800-667-4515 or visit: too much to list! Cambrian Equipment Sales, Winnipeg, MB. Ph. 204-667-2867, www.combineworld.com fax 204-667-2932.

COMPLETE ROBOTIC MILK system, 22010 Lely A3 Next milk robots, pura steam, 2- feed options, CRS control box, buffer tank, milk tank valves unit, twin filter, Atlas Copco air compressor, 100 Lely HR tags, plus neck belts, 1- cosmix concentrate feeder. Remainder of standard 2011 JD 326D, 900 hrs., cab, AC, heat, 2 warranty and full service report available. spd., new tires, warranty until Sept., very C a l l B e n 4 0 3 - 8 9 6 - 2 7 0 9 , o r H e n n i e good, $35,900. Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 403-391-9627, Lacombe, AB. 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. CLIFF’S USED CRAWLER PARTS. Some o l d e r C at s , I H a n d A l l i s C h a l m e r s . 780-755-2295, Edgerton, AB.

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

GRAIN HAN D LIN G & STORAGE

ZIP P ERLO CK

Buildin g Com p a n y (2005) In c.

O rde r N O W f or 2014 Cons tru c tion

SUMMER SPECIAL on all post or stud frame buildings. Sizes range from 32’x40’x10’ to 80’x200’x20’. Choice of sliding doors, overhead doors or bi-fold doors. Contact New-Tech Construction Ltd. at 306-220-2749, Hague, SK. STILL IN THE BOX Cover-All type buildings, easy assembly. 20’x30’, $3450 each; also 30’x40’, $5900 ea. K&L Equipment, Ituna, SK. Call Ladimer 306-795-7779.

FARM AND INDUSTRIAL ELECTRICAL motor sales, service and parts. Also sale of, and repairs to, all makes and sizes of pumps and phase converters, etc. Tisdale Motor Rewinding 1984 Ltd., 306873-2881, fax 306-873-4788, 1005A - 111 Ave., Tisdale, SK. www.tismtrrewind.com PHASE CONVERTERS, RUN 220V 3 phase motors, on single phase. Call 204-800-1859, Winnipeg, MB.

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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

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Au tho rized In d ep en d en tBu ild er Pre Engineered Structural SteelBuildings

1-888-6 92-5515 D errick - Cell

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1-800-561-5625

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WHEN

PHASE CONVERTER 50 HP, single phase to 3 phase, c/w control panel, well maintained, asking $3000, (costs $10,000 new). Call 780-818-2863, Edmonton, AB.

FOR SUMMER! 1-866-974-7678

COUNTS

DIAMOND CANVAS SHELTERS, sizes ranging from 15’ wide to 120’ wide, any length. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.starlinesales.com POLE BARNS, WOODSTEEL packages, hog, chicken, and dairy barns, grain bins and hoppers. Construction and concrete crews available. Mel or Scott, MR Steel Construction, 306-978-0315, Hague, SK.

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Choose Prairie Post Frame

P RICED TO CLEAR!!!

$ $ $ $ $ $ 7 5 TR UC KLOAD S $ $ 29 G AUG E FULL H AR D 100,000 P S I $ $ H I G H TEN S I LE R OOFI N G & S I D I N G $ $ 16 C OLOUR S TO C H OOS E FR OM $ $ 2 $ B-G r. Colou red . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70¢ ft $ $ M u lti Colou rM illen d s . . . . . 49¢ ft2 $ $ $ BEAT THE P RICE $ $ IN C R E A S E S $ $ AS K ABO UT O UR BLO W O UT $ $ CO LO RS AT $0.6 5 S Q . FT. $ $ CALL N O W $ $ $ $ F o u illa rd S teel $ $ S u p p lies L td . $ $ S t. La za re, M a n . $ $ 1- 8 00- 5 10- 3303 $ $ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

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Quality

CUSTOM GRAIN BIN MOVING, all types up to 22’ diameter. 10% spring discount. Accurate estimates. Sheldon’s Hauling, 306-961-9699, Prince Albert, SK.

EXPERIENCED POST FRAME BUILDERS REQUIRED 1-855 (773-3648)

www.prairiepostframe.ca BEHLEN STEEL BUILDINGS, quonsets, convex and rigid frame straight walls, grain tanks, metal cladding, farm - commercial. Construction and concrete crews. Guaranteed workmanship. Call your Saskatoon and northwest Behlen Distributor, Janzen Steel Buildings, 306-242-7767, Osler, SK. AFAB INDUSTRIES POST frame buildings. For the customer that prefers quality. 1-888-816-AFAB (2322), Rocanville, SK.

1 S TEEL BUILD IN G S

1- 8 77- 5 2 5 - 2 002

w w w .pio n eero n es teel.co m

W E H AVE A B UILDING T O S UIT A LM O S T A NY NEED! CA LL US W IT H YO URS !

S TR AIGHT W ALL 40’ X 60’ X 16’ Rig id fra m e bu ild in g a va ila ble for s m a ll reta il ou tlets to la rg e in d u s tria l fa cilities . This s ize for on ly $29,418.

ALP INE 32 ’ X 5 0’ X 18 ’ In clu d es fra m ed op en in g for 14x14 overhea d & 4’x7’, s ervice d oor, excellen t s hop or s tora g e bu ild in g , com es w ith fou n d a tion d ra w in g s & m a n u a ls , d elivered to m os ta rea s . O n ly $15,500.

CALL TO D AY AN D AVO ID STEEL PRICE IN CREASES!

FARM BUILDINGS

CAT D6D LGP, 29” pads, 7 roller frame, canopy, screens, 6A double tilt dozer, sweeps, Carco 60 winch, S/N #4X10278, 1985, new chains, $35,000. 204-795-9192, Plum Coulee, MB. 2001 KOMATSU PC-270-LC-6, hyd. exc, 36” QA bucket, 32” pads, CAHR, 9200 hrs., gd cond. $42,500. 306-621-0425 Yorkton ELRUS 24X42 JAW CRUSHER w/hydraulic grizzly; Cedarapids 22x36 Jaw Crusher, w/Elrus vibratory feeder. 204-376-5194 or 204-641-2408, Arborg, MB.

USED, REBUILT or NEW engines. Specializing in Cummins, have all makes, large inventory of parts, repowering is our specialty. 1-877-557-3797, Ponoka, AB. 290 CUMMINS, 350 Detroit, 671 Detroit, Series 60 cores. 306-539-4642, Regina, SK N14 CUMMINS from 2000 Volvo, vg cond.; 3 1 2 6 C a t f r o m F L 8 0 F r e i g h t l i n e r. HYDRAULIC SCRAPERS: LEVER 60, 70, 306-445-5602, North Battleford, SK. 80, and 435, 4 to 20 yd. available, rebuilt JD 4020 DIESEL engine, totally rebuilt at for years of trouble-free service. Lever JD dealer, $4000. Call 306-280-2145 or Holdings Inc., 306-682-3332, Muenster SK 306-253-4553, Aberdeen, SK REMOTE CONTROL V sweepers, Vermeers, GREAT PRICES ON new, used and remanuTampo sheepsfoot, Cord Road, Galion Roll- factured engines, parts and accessories for O-Matic, Rex 3, Ferguson packers of all diesel pickups. Large inventory, engines types: pull behind, walk behind and re- can be shipped or installed. Give us a call mote controlled. 100’s of other items in or check: www.thickettenginerebuilding.ca const. equip. over 50 acres of dismantled Thickett Engine Rebuilding. 204-532-2187, equipment for parts. New replacement Russell, MB. parts at low, low prices. Central Canada’s largest salvage yard in construction equip. 3406B, N14, SERIES 60, running engines Cambrian Equipment Sales, 204-667-2867, and parts. Call Yellowhead Traders, 306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK. fax: 204-667-2932, Winnipeg, MB.

EA R L Y

R OR D E

“Today’s Quality Built For Tomorrow”

Hague, SK | (306) 225-2288

www.zaksbuilding.com

3UH (QJLQHHUHG /DPLQDWHG 3RVWV

JTL Ha s R ecently A cq uired A d d itio na lCo rruga ted Bins Fo r Th is Upco m ing Ha rvest. W e Ha ve A Lim ited Supply So Ord er N ow To Ensure Delivery! D A O TRUCKL SALE Limited Supply

N ow Ava ila ble a t ou r Br a n d on Loca tion !

THE “FORCE” HOPPER E AG R I- TR ADIO N IN N OVAT D AR AW W IN N ER 20 12

• The o n ly a era tio n ho ppersystem tha to ffers the skid a s a n in tegra l pa rto f the a era tio n system tha tpro vid es even d istrib u tio n o f a ir thro u gho u tthe en tire b in .

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

LEGACY FLOORS

N EILBUR G , S K • 1-306-823-4888 ALBER TA • 1-7 80-87 2-4943 M AN ITOBA • 1-204-5 7 3-3204

V is it o u r w eb s ite w w w .jtlin dus trie s .ca


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

CLASSIFIED ADS 33

USED LARGE GRAIN bin hydraulic jack set. 306-759-2572, Eyebrow, SK.

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�

SDL HO PPER C O NES

STANDARD FEATURES INCLUDE: UNSTIFFENED SIDEWALL PANELS WALL & ROOF LADDERS SAFETY RING & SAFETY FILL 18� RACK & PINION GATE MANWAY IN CONE

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

“ALL JSB CONES ARE SANDBLASTED PRIOR TO PAINTING� 3513 Bu. & 4135 Bu. 4920 Bu. & 5999 Bu. Hopper Bin Combo’s Hopper Bin Combo’s

Â

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)

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

SD L H OP P E R CONE

9702 bu. Hopper Bin Combo’s

306-324-4441 M ARG O ,SASK.

19.5’ DIAMETER BIN

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

READY TO SHIP!! CREWS AVAILABLE!!

O PT IO NAL SKID BASE AND AERAT IO N

SDL STEEL BIN FLO O RS

3513 Bu. $10,430. + delivery 4920 Bu. $13,345. + delivery 4135 Bu. $11,325. + delivery 5999 Bu. $14,910. + delivery 7082 Bu. Hopper Bin Combo’s

SCAFCO GRAIN SYSTEM S IS EX PANDING New d ea ler o p p o rtu n ities a re a va ila b le to ha n d le S CAF CO s ilo s to ra ge a n d co n veyo r eq u ip m en t. Plea s e review o u r w eb s ite a t w w w .S C AFC O.co m to view o u r p ro d u ctlin e. Ifyo u a re in teres ted in this o p p o rtu n ity, yo u ca n rea ch the lo ca l s a les m a n a ger a tm a il@ S C AFC O.co m o r b y ca llin g 800-224-067 6 Regin a , S K . 3 - 3300 BU. WESTEEL bins, with ladders lid closures on concrete floors; Also 7 HP aeration fan. 306-259-4430, Young, SK.

HOPPER FLAT CEMENT MOUNT 1-866-665-6677 (Factory Direct Savings) RTM HOPPER

HARVEST SET-UP AVAILABLE

RTM FLAT

BOTTOM (Set-up)

1805 (4800 Bus.) w/AIR

1807 (5865 Bus.)

Ladders, Remote opener, 12 leg hopper, Manhole, Double 8x4� skid w/anchors (SET-UP)

Ladders, Remote opener, Easy Access door w/no tie rod braces, Steel bin floor w/anchors (SET-UP)

Delivery from Hepburn, SK

Delivery from Hepburn, SK

13,246

$

PACKAGES

HARVEST SET-UP AVAILABLE

Grain bin w/ladders, 52� remote opener AERATION UNLOAD SYSTEM AERATION FAN 3608......... $1.10/Bus. 3609......... $1.05/Bus. 5.95% Lease with NO payments for up to 6 months

2750 BU. WESTEEL ROSCO, 3300 bu. Chief Westland. Both need new floors. Asking 95¢/bu. Call 306-738-4906, Gray, SK.

14’ Hopper Cone with skid base Starting at $2,825.00

NEW TRIPLE SKID for Westeel/Rosco 1505 hopper bin, $850. 306-375-7722, Kyle, SK.

19’ Hopper Cone with skid base Starting at $4,985.00

SUMMER 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.

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

$10,775.00 Other sizes of new bins also available.

Remote Lid Openers starting at $129.00

Steel floor/concrete not included Set up and delivery (Extra)

STEALTH BIN PRODUCTS- Goebel bins, Westeel bins, 14’ hoppers. 587-280-0239, Vegreville, AB. www.stealthbins.ca

1-866-665-6677 sales@darmani.ca

GM 4000 AND GM 5300 Meridian bins on sale now at Flaman. See your nearest Flaman location or call 1-888-435-2626.

Grain Bin Direct Factory To Farm Grain Storage Galvanized • Flat Floor • Hopper Bins Smooth Walls • Fertilizer • Grain • Feed Aeration • Rockets • Fans • Heaters Temp Cables Authorized Dealer

Saskatoon, SK

Phone: 306-373-4919 grainbindirect.com

POLY HOPPER BINS, 100 bu., $925; 150 bu. $1290. 306-258-4422, Vonda, SK. Call GRAIN BIN FLOOR skirts, sloping flashing over floor, 14 to 30’ diameter; Weldon harfor nearest dealer. www.buffervalley.com row teeth, 3/8 to 5/8� rods, 50 rock hardFOR ALL YOUR grain storage, hopper ness. GB Mfg. 306-273-4235, Yorkton, SK. cone and steel floor requirements contact: Kevin’s Custom Ag in Nipawin, SK. Toll DID YOU EXPERIENCE crop damage from free: 1-888-304-2837. using Priority or PrePass. If so, ph. BackBROCK (BUTLER) GRAIN BIN PARTS Track Investigations 1-866-882-4779. and accessories available at Rosler ConBIN MOVERS. Lil Truck Hauling Ltd. Good struction. 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK. rates, call for more information. Merle or WANTED: USED BIN crane for repairing Fred 306-338-8288, 306-338-7128. 1500 - 4000 bu. flat bottom grain bins. Call 306-241-4022, Saskatoon, SK. GRAIN BINS: 3500 bu. Meridian/Behlen 6 WESTEEL ROSCO 19’ diameter bins, no bin/hopper combo, 10 leg hopper and floors. Call Art Goodrich 306-944-4840, skid, roof and side ladder, safety fill, constructed, $10,395 FOB at Regina, SK. Meacham, SK. Leasing available. Peterson Construction, WANTED: OLDER STYLE bin crane, bin 306-789-2444. moving trailer, 14’ diameter hopper cones for Westeel Rosco. 780-662-2617 Tofield. WESTEEL, GOEBEL, grain and fertilizer bins. Grain Bin Direct, 306-373-4919.

GRAIN BIN STORAGE SOLUTIONS

BINS W/AIR (Set-up)

BIG BIN

THE

Prices do not include setup or freight. Prices subject to change. Quantities are Limited.

M&K Welding Melfort, Sask

1-877-752-3004

Email: sales@mkwelding.ca 19X6 ON HOPPER, 2- 14x6 on hopper, 14x5 on hopper, 14x6 on steel tank, 14x6 www.mkwelding.ca on wood, 18x3 Butler on wood. Located at Perdue, SK. Call Art and Marilyn Bonstrom LIFETIME LID OPENERS. We are a stockat 306-934-4611, Saskatoon, SK. ing dealer for Boundary Trail Lifetime Lid SUPERIOR HOPPER BINS: 2406 -10,200. Openers, 18� to 39�. Rosler Construction bu. triple 8x4 skid, 24�x14’ grain guard 2000 Inc., 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK. aeration, $2.33/bu., $23,750; 2106 -7800 bushel triple 8x4 skid, 24�x14’ grain guard BIN MOVING, all sizes up to 19’ diameter, aeration, $2.40/bu., $18,720. Holm-Spun w/wo floors; Also move liquid fert. tanks. 306-629-3324, 306-741-9059, Morse, SK. Hoppers Ltd., Melfort, SK. 306-752-3593. BBB BIN CONSTRUCTION- Erections, CHIEF WESTLAND AND CARADON BIN extensions and repairs in SK. Fully insured. extensions, sheets, stiffeners, etc. Now The 2014 season is filling up fast. Call available. Call Bill, 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.starlinesales.com 306-716-3122, Eston, SK.

Bin Door Improvement

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6HH YLGHR DW

ZZZ KDXNDDV FRP

GTX 3230 AKRON FROM

10,375

$

LEASE FOR 5.95% with NO PAYMENTS for up to 6 months *Call for complete details LEASE UP TO 7 YEARS

FLAT BOTTOM BINS BIN PACKAGES INCLUDED Ladders, 52� Remote lid

STEEL BIN FLOOR w/anchors

NO AIR (Easy access door) 6652 Bus. - $1.57 9200 Bus. - $1.33

8060 Bus. - $1.42 10050 Bus. - $1.34

INCLUDES SWING AIR/VENTING 10628 BUS........... $1.50 12028 BUS........... $1.40 15349 BUS........... $1.33 19106 BUS........... $1.20 Steel floor included in price *set-up & delivery extra

LIFETIME STEEL BIN FLOORS 14’ Floor .... $1,042 19’ Floor .... $1,948 16’ Floor .... $1,482 21’ Floor .... $2,324 18’ Floor .... $1,861 24’ Floor .... $2,748 *includes mounting hardware

Made up to 36’

AERATION FANS 3 HP ......... $949 7 HP .......$1,699 10 HP .... $1,969 (Baldor motor) IN STOCK MODELS ONLY

DARMANI GRAIN STORAGE MANUFACTURE---FINANCE---DELIVERY---SET-UP

1-866-665-6677 sales@darmani.ca

CHABOT IMPLEMENTS Elie, MB 204-353-2392 Neepawa, MB 204-476-3333 Steinbach, MB 204-326-6417 F.V. PIERLOT & SONS Nipawin, SK 306-862-4732 GREENFIELD AGRO SERVICE Rosetown, SK 306-882-2600 KROEKER MACHINERY Winkler, MB 204-325-4311 MARKUSSON NEW HOLLAND Emerald Park, SK 1-800-819-2583 MARTODAM MOTORS Spiritwood, SK 306-883-2045 MOODY’S EQUIPMENT LTD. Saskatoon, SK 306-934-4686 Perdue, SK 306-237-4272 Unity, SK 306-228-2686 Lloydminster, SK 306-825-6141 Kindersley, SK 306-463-2335 Olds, AB 403-556-3939 High River, AB 403-652-1410 Balzac, AB 403-295-7824

NYKOLAISHEN FARM EQUIPMENT Kamsack, SK 306-542-2814 Swan River, MB 204-734-3466 NEERLANDIA CO-OP Neerlandia, AB 780-674-3020 PARKLAND FARM EQUIPMENT North Battleford, SK 306-445-2427 REDVERS AGR. & SUPPLY LTD. 306-452-3444 SCHROEDER BROS. Chamberlain, SK 306-638-6305 WHITE AG SALES & SERVICE Whitewood, SK 306-735-2300 AR-MAN EQUIPMENT Vulcan, AB 403-485-6968, 1-866-485-6968 BILL’S FARM SUPPLIES INC. Stettler, AB 403-742-8327 CAOUETTE & SONS IMPLEMENTS St. Paul, AB 780-645-4422 FOSTER’S AGRI-WORLD Beaverlodge, AB 780-354-3622, 1-888-354-3620

Email: craigyeager@grainbagscanada.com or aaronyeager@grainbagscanada.com

HI LINE FARM EQUIPMENT LTD. Wetaskiwin, AB 780-352-9244, 1-888-644-5463 ROCKY MOUNTAIN EQUIPMENT Falher, AB 780-837-4691, 1-866-837-4691 Grimshaw, AB 780-332-4691, 1-800-746-4691 KASH FARM SUPPLIES LTD. Eckville, AB 403-746-2211, 1-800-567-4394 E. BOURASSA & SONS: Assiniboia 1-877-474-2456 Estevan 1-877-474-2495 Pangman 1-877-474-2471 Radville 1-877-474-2450 Weyburn 1-877-474-2491 RAYMORE NEW HOLLAND Raymore, SK 306-746-2911 WATROUS NEW HOLLAND Watrous, SK 306-946-3301 YORKTON NEW HOLLAND Yorkton, SK 306-782-8511

Call Your Local Dealer

or Grain Bags Canada at 306-682-5888

www.grainbagscanada.com


34 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

BOOKING NOW! Flat and hopper bin moving. Tim’s Custom 204-362-7103, Morden, MB. binmover50@gmail.com

EQUIPMENT NEEDS ADAMS SPREADER & TENDER

*(5(+(Âť: .9(05 :;69(., :7,*0(30:;:

CALL US FOR PARTS ON ALL

SPREADER/TENDER MAKES AND MODELS

GRAIN BAGS

¡ Protect your valuable commodities with industry leading grain bags by Ipesa Silo. ¡ Don’t be fooled by lesser quality grain bags. ¡ 9.4 mil – 10 mil thickness. ¡ 5 layer blown film.

2003 J210-41, Kohler Pro27, new battery MERIDIAN AUGER SALE: 8x39 loaded, and fuel tank, self-propelled kit, asking 25 HP, Kohler, $13,325; 8x39 auger only, $5500. Call 204-746-4141, St.Jean, MB. $4300; 8x46 auger only, $4675; 10x39 loaded, you install, $15,000; 12x79 SLMD, RETIRING: 2007 SAKUNDIAK 10x22 swing $18,000. Call Brian “The Auger Guy�, away auger, $5500. Call 306-934-6703 204-724-6197, Souris, MB. evenings. Saskatoon, SK. 7�X50’ BRANDT, used very little, w/18 HP MERIDIAN GRAIN AUGERS. All loaded Wisconsin motor (motor not great), $2500 with movers, engines, lights, clutch and OBO. 306-460-6786, Kindersley, SK. reversing gearbox. HD8-39, cash $14,500; HD8-53, cash $16,250; TL10-39, cash 2005 BUEHLER 10x70’, mechanical drive, $ 1 5 , 9 9 5 ; H D 1 0 - 5 9 , c a s h $ 1 8 , 2 5 0 . good shape, $7500. Phone 306-252-2227, Kenaston, SK. 306-648-3321, Gravelbourg, SK.

FOR ALL YOUR

FERTILIZER

HORNOI LEASING NEW and used 20’ and 4 0 ’ s e a c a n s fo r s a l e o r r e n t . C a l l 306-757-2828, Regina, SK.

M AGNETIC CAM ERA PACKAGE

ADAMS 6 TON SPREADER 304SS Construction 00 Delivered Limited Supply

• Po s itio n gra in a u ger o r co n veyo r in to b in rem o tely; N EW b y yo u rs elf. PRODUCT • Po w erfu l m a gn ets to a d here to gra in & co m b in e a u gers , co n veyo rs , etc. • Ca m era is w a terpro o f & co lo r w ith a u d io . S ee w eb s ite fo r m o re d eta ils o r Ca ll

21,995

$

1 800 667 8800

GRAIN PILE COVERS

www.nuvisionfhs.com

Brow n le e s Truckin g In c. Un ity, S K

¡

All covers feature silver/black material to reflect heat and sunlight, vent opening allows moisture to escape, reinforced brass eyelet tie-downs every 3’ to eliminate wind whipping. Many sizes to choose from.

1-888-226-8277 CANADIAN TARPAULIN

306-228-297 1 o r 1-87 7 -228-5 5 98

20’ TO 53’ CONTAINERS. New, used and modified. Available Winnipeg, MB; Regina and Saskatoon, SK. www.g-airservices.ca 306-933-0436.

MANUFACTURERS LTD.

SEE WEBSITE FOR MORE DETAILS

www.cantarp.com

Email: sales@cantarp.com (306) 933-2343 | Fax: (306) 931-1003

THREE 340 BUSHEL Steel bins, with wood floors, $3400/ea. 306-948-2808, Rosetown, SK. KEHO/ GRAIN GUARD/ OPI STORMAX. For sales and service east central SK. and BELTING FOR SALE: 42-56� high, 3/8� MB., call Gerald Shymko, Calder, SK., thick, temporary grain storage. Makes 306-742-4445 or toll free 1-888-674-5346. round ring. Ph Ken Wadelle 403-346-7178 or 403-392-7754, Red Deere, AB. KEHO, STILL THE FINEST. Clews Storage Management/ K. Ltd., 1-800-665-5346.

Download the free app today.

KEHO/ GRAIN GUARD Aeration Sales and Service. R.J. Electric, Avonlea, SK. Call 306-868-2199 or cell: 306-868-7738.

20’ AND 40’ SEA CONTAINERS, for sale in Calgary, AB. Phone 403-226-1722, 1-866-517-8335. www.magnatesteel.com USED 20’ C CANS for sale, very good cond. Can deliver. Also 26’ moving van box. Call for info 306-381-5151, Vanscoy, SK.

HOPPER AERATION FANS AND HEATERS

AA-GGI.COM

SHIPPING CONTAINERS FOR SALE. 20’53’, delivery/ rental/ storage available. For BATCO CONVEYORS, new and used, inventory and prices call: 306-262-2899, grain augers and SP kits. Delivery and Saskatoon, SK. www.thecontainerguy.ca leasing available. 1-866-746-2666.

USED

STORAGE TRAILERS

40 – 45’

w w w .fullb in s upe rs e n s o r.co m

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

BRANDT 85’ CONVEYOR, used very little like new cond., $18,000. 306-734-7721, Craik, SK. BUILD YOUR OWN conveyors, 6�, 7�, 8� and 10� end units available; Transfer conveyors and bag conveyors or will custom build. Call for prices. Master Industries Inc. www.masterindustries.ca Phone 1-866-567-3101, Loreburn, SK.

3,900

$ $

306-757-2828

SHIPPING CONTAINERS FOR SALE. 20’ to 53’, 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 NEW HYDEF Liquid Carts, pre-sell in effect, custom builds, 1600 to 5000 gallon. Tires, 20’ AND 40’ SHIPPING CONTAINERS, tracks, up to 5000 gallon, ground drive or large SK. inventory. Ph. 1-800-843-3984, hydraulic. Raven hook ups available. Call 306-781-2600. for your own custom build. Call Corner Equipment, 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. CONTAINERS FOR SALE or rent: All sizes available. Also, tilt deck services. LOOKING FOR A floater or tender? Call me Phone: 306-861-1102, Radville, SK. first. 34 years experience. Loral parts, new and used. Call 403-650-7967, Calgary, AB. BOND INDUSTRIAL SEA CONTAINERS. The best storage you can buy. New/used 8300 GALLON LIQUID fertilizer tanks in and modified sea containers for sale. Se- stock at Flaman. Call 1-888-435-2626. cure, portable, weather and rodent proof. www.flaman.com Guaranteed 8’ to 53’ available. Ask a rep. about our modifications. Bond Industrial 2012 PATTISON 4200 dual liquid wagon, 306-373-2236, joe@bondind.com or visit twin John Blue pump, duals, shedded, like our website at www.bondind.com new. Steven, 306-731-7235, Earl Grey, SK.

2- 2007 CASE 4520’s, 3 bin, 70’ booms, 3 3 0 0 h r s . Au t o S t e e r, $ 1 5 4 , 5 0 0 a n d $142,500; 2010 Case 4520 AutoSteer, 1100 hrs., 70’ booms, $223,000; 2006 Case 4510, AutoSteer, FlexAir 70’ booms, 7400 hrs., $102,000; 2005 Case 4520 w/70’ flex air, 4000 hrs., $129,000; 2005 Case 4010 w/3020 G4 New Leader bed, $74,000; 2009 International GVM, 1000 hrs., 4WD, auto. $127,000; 2004 Loral AirM a x 1 0 0 0 , 7 0 ’ b o o m s , i m m a c u l at e , $93,000; 2002 Case 4260 sprayer w/1100 gal. tank, 80’ booms, $96,000; 2004 AgChem Rogator, w/air bed, $66,000; 2008 Adams Semi tender, self contained, $39,500; 8 ton Doyle vertical blender with scale, 40 HP, new auger, $18,500; 1992 Wrangler loader, $15,500. Northwest’s largest used selection of fertilizer equipment. 406-466-5356, Choteau, MT. For more equipment and photos view website www.fertilizerequipment.net

SAKUNDIAK HD7-1400 PTO auger, with new tires, $1900 OBO. 306-738-4905, Gray, SK. X13-74 WHEATHEART HI-CAPACITY swing auger w/reverser, hyd. swing lift, elec. remote swing, regular $26,500, cash $22,500; Used 2012 SLMD 12-79 Sakundiak w/reverser and Brehon mover $16,500 cash. 306-648-3321, Gravelbourg, SK. NEW “R� SERIES Wheatheart Augers: with engine, mover and electric clutch. R-8x41, cash price $12,250; R-8x51, cash $12,750; R-10x41, cash $13,500. Call 306-648-3321, Gravelbourg, SK.

STOP climbing bins! Alarm sounds when bin is full!

THREE IN ONE: 1. COMPLETE AUGER SPOUT with “NO SNAG SPOUTâ€? 2. FULL BIN ALARM 3. NIGHT LIGHT • Available for 10, 13 and 16 inch augers NEW • No batteries needed FOR • Enclosed Sensor 2014! ORANGE • Proven Design SPOUT since 2003 for better • Valued priced from visibility $530 to $575 at night & TWO plus shipping ALARMS • 3 days delivery to your farm If you don’t like it, send back after harvest for a refund. John & Angelika Gehrer

NEVER SPILL SPOUT Inc. 1-866-860-6086 www.neverspillspout.com

EZ-TRAIL GRAIN CART, 710 bu., tarp, used very little, $23,500. Call 306-268-4371 or 306-268-7550 cell, Bengough, SK. 2012 BRENT 782, 18� auger, 450 bu./min., shedded, $27,500. 306-230-1920, Allan, SK.

306-762-2125

Stocking Richiger grain baggers & unloaders.

EZ-TRAIL GRAIN CARTS, 860 bu., red and green tarp, lights, 800 rubber, $26,900. FLAMAN 1610 PRO grain extractor. Unload cash. Corner Equipment, 204-483-2774, bags easily and economically. See your Carroll, MB. nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com CHOOSE THE RIGHT bag for the right reasons. Flaman grain bags. Book now and insure your supply, See your nearest Flaman store or 1-888-435-2626 www.flaman.com FLAMAN 1410 PRO grain bagger. Inventory available complete with wide mouth hopper and 23’ conveyor. See your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com NEW EZ-TRAIL, 300 bu. wagons, $5750. NEW “BAG ARMOUR� grain bag cover. Pro- plus tarp; 400 bu. wagon, $7500. plus tect your grain bag from birds, weather tarp; 500 bu. wagon, $10,500. including and wildlife. Reusable with a 10 year UV tarp. Corner Equipment, 204-483-2774, warranty. See your nearest Flaman store Carroll, MB. or call 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com GBU LOFTNESS EXTRACTOR, good condi- GRAVITY WAGONS: New 400 bu, $7,400; tion, works on both 9’ and 10’ bags. Call 600 bu., $12,000; 750 bu., $17,750. Large selection of used gravity wagons, 250-750 306-398-7713 for more info. Cut Knife, SK. bu. Used grain carts, 450 to 1110 bushel. 2009 TRIDEKON grain extractor, 540 PTO, View www.zettlerfarmequipment.com 100 bu./min., exc. cond., two available, 1-866-938-8537, Portage la Prairie, MB. $15,800. Trades welcome, financing avail. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com DUAL SCREEN ROTARY grain cleaners, great for pulse crops, best selection in Western Canada. Phone 306-259-4923 or 306-946-7923, Young, SK.

MERIDIAN GRAIN AUGERS: SP kits and clutches, Kohler, Vanguard engines, gas and diesel. Call Brian ‘The Auger Guy’ 2013 GRAIN BAGGER c/w televeyor, has 204-724-6197, Souris, MB. only loaded 7 bags, basically brand new, SAKUNDIAK GRAIN AUGERS available $58,000. 306-861-7339, Bromhead, SK. with self-propelled mover kits and bin sweeps. Contact Kevin’s Custom Ag in Nipawin, SK. Toll free 1-888-304-2837. S A K U N D I A K A U G E R S I N S TO C K : 2013 J&M GRAIN cart, 1000 bu., red, 900 swings, truck loading, Hawes Agro SP tires, exc. cond., rented 1 season. Rent-tomovers. Contact Hoffart Services Inc. own program or purchase for $51,400. 1-800-352-6264, Flaman Sales, Nisku, AB. Odessa, SK, 306-957-2033. SPRAY-AIR 13x95 swing-away w/reverser and hyd. swing and winch., used 2 years, $15,900. 306-463-7866, Flaxcombe, SK. or email: adwildman@hotmail.com

NEW AND USED 700 to 1000 bushel grain carts. Call 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Yorkton, SK.

SUMMER PROMO ON GRAIN & SILAGE BAGS

NEW BATCO IN STOCK: 15x45 with mover; 10X52 SAKUNDIAK, HYD. auger mover, 20 15x85 with mover; 15x85, swing; 15x90 HP 3 phase elec. motor, $4750. Call: with mover; 15x100, swing; 20x105, swing. Our prices won’t be beat, call for 204-636-2448, Erickson, MB. pricing. Corner Equipment, 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB.

FULL BIN ALARM

2013 ELMER’S Grain Cart. Warner Industries, Moose Jaw 306-693-7253, Swift Current 306-773-3030, Regina 306-359-1930. DL #913604, www.warnerindustries.ca

DUAL STAGE ROTARY SCREENERS and Kwik Kleen 5-7 tube. Call 204-857-8403, Portage la Prairie, MB. or visit online: www.zettlerfarmequipment.com CUSTOM COLOR SORTING chickpeas to mustard. Cert organic and conventional. 306-741-3177, Swift Current, SK. SEED CLEANING EQUIPMENT, elevators and small hopper bottom bins for sale. 204-523-7464, Killarney, MB. GJESDAL GRAIN CLEANER, 50 to 75 bu/hr, w/2 hopper bins and 2 pencil augers. Phone 306-293-2809, Climax, SK.

Introducing

Agrimatics Libra

AUGERS: NEW and USED: Wheatheart, Westfield, Westeel, Sakundiak augers; Auger SP kits; Batco conveyors; Wheatheart post pounders. Good prices, leasing available. Call 1-866-746-2666.

Automatic grain cart weighing and harvest data management for your tablet or smartphone.

7X41 SAKUNDIAK AUGER, 20.5 HP Robin engine, Wheatheart mover and bin sweep, $ 2 8 0 0 O B O . C a l l D o n Tu r n b u l l a t 306-484-2041 (home) or 306-725-7256 (cell), Govan, SK.

At Triple Star, we are experts in grain cart scale installation and service. We carry scale systems for all models of grain carts and support factory warranties.

NEW WHEATHEART X Series augers. 13� swing augers in 74’, 84’, 94’. See your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626.

Call us to discuss your scale needs for your farm today!

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THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

JOHN DEERE 348 small square baler, always shedded. 204-673-2607 or 204-522-5049, Waskada, MB.

2012 REM GRAIN VAC 2700, 6000 BPH, 14’ discharge auger, pipe and clean up nozzles, sm 1000 RPM PTO, never scoop again, 155 hours, $17,000. Call 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. Will consider grain in trade. WANTED: SMALL USED Gravity table, for on -farm wheat/rye/oat cleaning in Fraser Valley, 20-150 bu/hr. Jim 604-796-0290, Agassiz, BC. jimgo@uniserve.com

JD 346 SQUARE baler, $1200; NH 1033 bale wagon, $1500. 306-642-5886, Scout Lake, SK. 2004 NH BR780, twine bale command monitor, wide hyd. PUB, wide tires, 1000 PTO, 10,303 bales, asking $13,000. 306-625-3602, Ponteix, SK. 124 MASSEY FERGUSON square baler, $1500. Phone: 306-821-6044, Lloydminster, SK. 2006 BR780 NH round baler, $8500; 852 NH round baler, $1100; 283 NH square baler, $2000 OBO; 848 NH round baler, $1200; 530 JD round baler, $2500. Call 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. NH SUPER 1049 SP Bale wagon, 1790 hrs., exc. cond., field ready, $18,000 sacrifice. 306-699-2204, Regina, SK.

CLASSIFIED ADS 35

2003 HESSTON 4910 square baler, w/AutoLube, knotter fan and bale chute, has made only 17,000 bales, $60,000 or trade 1993 4900 4x4 square baler with central lube and bale chute, 30,000 bales, $30,000 OBO. Call 204-721-2629 or 204-730-3139, Glenboro, MB. SUPER 1049 NH bale wagon, $20,000; als o , J D 3 4 8 s q u a r e b a l e r, $ 8 5 0 0 . 780-986-3649, 780-940-0549, Leduc, AB.

CASE RBX 562, shedded, extra wide PU, 2006 JD 956 MOCO discbine, used for low bales, exc. cond., field ready, $13,500. two seasons, always shedded, like new, 403-350-9088,403-347-2266, Red Deer AB $35,500. Gary Hauber, 306-233-7872, DRY YOUR HAY faster and gentler with a Cudworth, SK. 2005 Phiber SM38, 30’, twin merger/in- CASE/IH 3309 9’ discbine, gearbox rebuilt, verter. Shedded, exc. cond. Combine 2 good cond., asking $4500. 780-785-2214 rows into one, or lift two rows and drop or 780-785-2588, Sangudo, AB. two rows. Call 306-728-7707, Melville, SK.

2000 NH 678 round baler, reconditioned, always shedded. 306-666-4403, 306-661-7477 cell, Fox Valley, SK. 2006 JD 567 round baler, surface wrap and twine, variable core, hyd. wide pickup, bush bar, tractor monitor, done 1800 bales, asking $32,000. 780-955-2364, Leduc County, AB. 2003 JD 567, only 5600 bales, includes all options: netwrap, MegaWide PU, variable core, hyd. PU, c/w extra rolls and belts, vg cond., always shedded, less than half the price of new, $25,000 OBO. 780-926-6385, 780-403-1444, Marwayne, AB.

WANTED: 30’ BATT REEL to fit PT West2003 MACDON PREMIER 2940, w/18’ hay ward, MacDon, Prairie Star, etc, swather. auger header 922, 25’ grain header, PU Must be large centre tube, left hand drive. reels 960, always shedded, good cond., 403-653-2448, Cardston, AB. $60,000 OBO. 204-773-6890, Inglis, MB. 9420 MASSEY 2004, 1000 hrs., triple delivery, header tilt, PU reel, always shedded, excellent condition, $50,000. 780-763-2288, Manville, AB. 2005 MF 9220 30’, 1030 hours, exc. shape, $52,500. 306-734-2762, 306-567-7895, Craik, SK.

2003 JOHN DEERE 467 round baler, 1000 PTO, mega wide, push bar, hyd. PU, 11,052 bales, shedded, good condition, $12,900. 306-435-7223, 306-739-2984, Wawota, SK. VERTEC 6500, propane, 6 tier, metal roof, bketcheson@rfnow.com 540 PTO or elec. Take grain trailer or air drill on trade. 204-856-6907, Treherne, MB NEW SUPERB SD250 grain dryer, canola screens, two electric motors, warranty, $32,000. 780-985-3753, Calmar, AB.

NEW SUPERB GRAIN dryers and Moridge parts. Call Grant Service at Foam Lake, SK. 306-272-4195. NEW SUKUP GRAIN dryers, 1 or 3 phase, LP or NG, canola screens. In stock and ready for immediate delivery. Also some used dryers on hand. www.vzgrain.com NH ROUND baler BR780, 2004 twine only, 204-998-9915, Altamont, MB. wide PU, big tires, approx. 12,000 bales, always shedded. 306-459-2859 Ogema, SK 2010 JD 568, floatation tires, mega wide SELLING GRAIN LEGS, distributors, con- p i c k u p , Va l m a r b l o we r, l o w b a l e s . veyors and truck scales. Also other eleva- 306-287-3554, 306-287-7490, Watson, SK. tors parts. 403-634-8540, Grassy Lake, AB. JD 557 ROUND BALER, like new, used very little, shedded, $16,500. Call Dave at 306-424-7511, Montmartre, SK. 1988 NEW HOLLAND 326 small square 2010 BRANDT 5200 EX, 148 hrs., c/w dust baler, good condition, $5000 OBO. hose, 1000 PTO, exc. cond., $19,000 OBO. 306-741-9524, Swift current, SK. 780-679-7795, Camrose, AB. RETIRED: NH SMALL square baler, #276, BRANDT 4500, from estate, basically as shedded, not used for past 30 yrs., $2500. new, was never used, shedded, $16,000. 306-297-2919, Shaunavon, SK. 306-699-2442, McLean, SK. 2000 NH 688, Auto-Wrap, hyd. PU, field NEW, NEVER USED 2011 Buhler 6640, ready, low bales, vg cond, always shedded, $19,900. Phone toll free 1-877-862-2387, $14,200 OBO. 306-243-4811, Outlook, SK. 1-877-862-2413, Nipawin, SK. NH 688 ROUND baler, Bale Command, 540 PTO, $6750; NH BR780, net wrap, $6500; CONEYAIR GRAIN VACS, parts, accesso- JD 535, $4750. 204-636-2448 Erickson MB ries. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. 2008 HESSTON CHALLENGER 3x4 square www.starlinesales.com baler, cutter, $67,000; 2005 Hesston 4760 NEW DEMO, BRANDT 5200, 35 hrs. with 3x3 square baler, with accumulator, $4000 pile drive option, exc. cond., $38,000. Call 204-728-4784, Brandon, MB. $24,900. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. 2003 NH BR780, wide PU, big tires, approx bales, moisture tester, like new, CONVEYAIR 2955, 5", rebuilt airlock 2011, 5000 1000 PTO, very good condition, $5000 OBO. $18,500. 306-961-4493, Prince Albert, SK. AB. 2006 NH BR 780A baler, auto-tie, always 780-515-1104, Breton, edventureind@hotmail.com shedded, very good cond., $12,500. Call 780-592-2175, Innisfree, AB. 2008 REM 2700 grain vac., 326 hrs., good shape, 90HP required, 4000 bu/hr., full bin 2005 BR780, approx. 5000 bales, always l o a d o u t , r e d c o l o r, $ 1 4 , 0 0 0 . C a l l shedded, original owner, mint, $15,000 OBO. 306-434-0028, Spy Hill, SK. 1-800-352-6264, Flaman Sales, Nisku, AB. 2008 IH RB564 baler with bale command, WALINGA 510 GRAIN vac with self-con- twine wrap, $12,800. Financing available. tained hydraulics and dust collector, in vg Trades welcome. www.combineworld.com cond. 306-287-3563 eves, Watson, SK. 1-800-667-4515. REM 2500 HD, reconditioned, $7500; Rem JD 566 BALER, Mega tooth PU, Greenlight2 1 0 0 , $ 6 5 0 0 , r e c o n d i t i o n e d . C a l l : ed 2013, shedded, vg condition, $10,000 204-636-2448, Erickson, MB. OBO. 306-547-3419, Preeceville, SK.

NH BR780 ROUND baler, 2005, twine only, wide PU, big tires, approx. 10,000 bales, always shaded, very good condition, one owner since new, $14,500. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. 2003 JD 567 ROUND BALER, MegaWide PU, push-bar, big tires, net wrap and twine, 23,511 bales, good shape. Call 403-443-2162, Three Hills, AB. 2004 IH RBX562 baler with bale kick, 5’x6’ bale, $9800. www.combineworld.com 1-800-667-4515 2003 JD 567 round baler, Mega Tooth PU, soft core option, shedded. 306-877-2014, 306-877-4402, Dubuc, SK. 2011 JD 568 MegaWide, big tires, net and twine, 7500 bales, shedded, $30,000. 306-456-2749, 306-861-2013, Oungre, SK. NEW HOLLAND 1033 STACKLINER, good condition, $3500. 780-753-1270, Hayter, AB.

NEW MACDON R-85 disc mower conditioner, 16’. Looking for trades!! Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd. 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 8850 CASE (same as 8500 Hesston) 15’ SP discbine, good working cond., low hrs., $40,000 OBO; 1998 Hesston 8830 14’ SP haybine, 1400 hrs., new knife and stubb guards, shedded, $30,000 OBO; 2010 MF 1375 15’ discbine, has cut approx. 1000 acres, still has paint on crimping rolls, drawbar hitch, hyd. tilt, shedded, asking $30,000. 204-721-2629 or 204-730-3139, Glenboro, MB. MACDON 5000, 14’ power tongue haybine, straight, field ready, 1000 PTO. Call 1994 MORRIS HAYHIKER 1400, hauls 14 780-875-7051, Lloydminster, AB. round bales good condition, $16,000. 306-550-2938, Regina, SK. BALE SPEAR ATTACHMENTS for all loaders and skidsteers, excellent pricing. Call now 1-866-443-7444. 2004 NH BR780 round baler, 5x6, mesh wrap, less than 3000 bales, like new, shedded, $19,000. 306-748-2817, Killaly, SK. NEW HOLLAND 283 square baler, field ready, $2000. 306-460-9022, Kindersley, SK. 2000 HESSTON 855 round baler, 5x5 bales, twin hyd. tie, megawide pickup, 540 PTO, approx. 12,000 bales, good shape. field ready, $5500 OBO, can deliver. Ph. Darvin 204-642-2249, Arborg, MB. 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, $15,500. 306-893-2879, Maidstone, SK. 283 NH SQUARE baler, $2000; NH 352 round baler, $1000; NH 648 round baler, $1200; Case 8465 round baler, $2000; NH BR780 round baler, $8000. All OBO. 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK 2006 JD 567 BALER, 3000 bales made, used only 2 seasons, always shedded, like new, $33,000. Gary Hauber 306-233-7872, Cudworth, SK. NEW HOLLAND MODEL 1049, self-propelled bale wagon, exc. cond., $33,500. Call 780-446-4931, Millet, AB. BALE SPEARS, high quality imported from Italy, 27” and 49”, free shipping, excellent pricing. Call now toll free 1-866-443-7444, Stonewall, MB. NH SP 1049 bale wagon, shedded, field ready, $10,000 OBO. Phone 306-729-3271, Lumsden, SK. NH 688 ROUND baler, auto-tie, 500 bales on new belts, 1 owner, always shedded, field ready, $8500. Call 306-472-5219 or 306-648-7813, Lafleche, SK.

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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 or Ken 306-745-3720. BUSH HOG 3615 mower for parts or rebuild, $2500. Call 306-445-5602, North Battleford, SK. 2011 MACDON R85 discbine, 16’, PT, only cut 800 acres, shedded, $34,000 OBO. Call 204-522-5883, Coulter, MB.

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400 VERSATILE 15’ swather with new guards, new knife, good shape, ideal for haying. 306-734-2970, Chamberlain, SK. 30’ MF 613 PT swather, newer canvasses and belts, knife and blades very good, $1000 OBO. 306-460-6786, Kindersley, SK. WDX1202 CASE, 2006, 35’ hdr w/roto shears, PU reel, rear mount swath roller, 1600 hrs., EZ-Steer GPS, $62,000. Wilcox, SK. 306-732-4636, metzg@sasktel.net 2007 WESTWARD (MACDON) 9352C SP, Cummins 4.5 turbo diesel, 25’ 972 header and Bourgault rear mounted swath roller, only 600 engine hrs., shedded, mint; Also 1992 CIH 725 w/PU reel; 1974 CCIL 30’ SP. Ph/text 204-782-1015, Winnipeg, MB. TWO 36’ WESTWARD PT, like new, shedded; 2002 Premier MacDon 25’ dbl. swath, shedded. 403-548-8928, Richmound, SK. 1989 VERSATILE 4750, 30’, double knife, 2141 hrs., new canvases and starter, $14,500. 780-632-6372 or 780-603-5307, Vegreville, AB. 2012 CHALLENGER WR9740 swather with only 227 hrs. Trades welcome, $99,800. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 1980 JOHN DEERE 2420 swather, diesel, 21’, cab, AC, PU reel, $9000 OBO. Ogema, SK. Phone 306-495-7588. 2004 HESSTON 30' SP, new Schumacher knife and guards. 10' rear mount w/swath roller, 1500 hrs. exc. cond., $30,000. OBO 306-753-7575, Cactus Lake, SK. tjerker@live.com 1974 VERSATILE #400, HoneyBee cutting system, new canvasses, new bearings on sway bar, new traction tires, always shedded, $2500; 8’ PT swath roller, $600. 204-537-2455, Belmont, MB. IHC 4000 SWATHER, 19-1/2’, new drive tires, cab, air, good condition overall, transport avail. Blair Basset, Meacham, SK. 306-376-4402. 2005 PRAIRIE STAR 2352I, 1280 hrs., 36’ 972 double knife header, one owner, shedded, $75,000. 306-874-7843, Naicam, SK. 1981 VERSATILE 400 20’ SP swather, UII PU reel, good condition, original owner, always shedded, no cab, c/w many new parts, $1900. 306-237-4420, Kinley, SK.

2011 CHALLENGER PTS16, 16’ hydraswing, 1982 IHC 4000 SP, 24.5’, UII PU reel, done only 400 acres, excellent cond., HoneyBee knife, lots of new parts. Ph. Fox $32,000 OBO. 403-574-2222, Stettler, AB. Valley, SK., 306-666-4403, 306-661-7477. NH 2355 DISBINE HEADER, 2008, 15.5’, JD 2360 25’ SP, UII PU reel, shedded, excellent cond., was used on NH 8060 2800 hrs., exc. condition, $14,000 OBO. swather, sold cows, $23,500. Call or text 306-682-3474 306-231-8794 Humboldt SK 204-378-0020, 204-378-0030, Arborg, MB. 2002 NH 1475 16’ haybine, straight and 1998 MF 220, 25’, UII PU reel, new canclean, $11,500. Call 306-743-2770, vases (2012), new knife (2013), 1492 hrs, exc cond, field ready, $30,900. Grosse306-743-7732, Langenburg, SK. Isle, MB. 204-791-0313 or 204-981-1066. CASE 8230, 30’, PT, $2500; Premiere 1900 30’ PT, $2500; 2- Case/IH 750s, $5000 ea. all in gd cond. 306-644-4742, Loreburn, SK 2011 MACDON R85, 16’ disc mower condi- PREMIER SWATHER 2004, 2940, 30’ 972 tioner header, $10,470 warranty upgrade split reel MacDon header, 829 engine hrs, work order, excellent, $24,900. Nipawin, 609 cutting hrs, always shedded, $70,000 SK., 1-877-862-2387, 1-877-862-2413. OBO. 306-421-5217, Benson, SK. HESSTON 8100, Cummins dsl., CAHR, 16’ 2010 JD A400 30’ HoneyBee header, 55 header, new guards, knives, skid plates, eng./651 header hrs., asking $92,000; auger, triple delivery, 25’ grain header, 2011 MF 9435, 30’ MF 5200 header, 350 new canvases, UII PU reel, $28,000 OBO. hrs., asking $95,000. Call 204-248-2359, Willing to split. 306-434-0028, Spy Hill, SK or cell 204-723-0359, Notre Dame, MB. MF 128 SQUARE baler and NH 1033 bale WANTED: 4750 VERSATILE diesel, 20’ or wagon. 306-283-4747, Langham, SK., 2 2 ’ , c o m p l e t e w i t h p i c k u p r e e l . 306-291-9395 or 306-220-0429. 780-662-2617, Tofield, AB. HESSTON 8020, 16’ hay head, excellent IH 4000, 25’ MacDon PU reel, $2950. Will c o n d i t i o n , l o w a c r e s , $ 6 5 0 0 O B O. s e l l p i c k u p r e e l s e p a r a t e l y. C a l l 306-699-2442, McLean, SK. 306-738-4906, Gray, SK. 1997 NH 1431 discbine, 13’, 10 discs, CASE 1202 25’, 799 hrs., UII PU reel, 1000 rpm, good running condition, asking roto-shears on both ends, mounted swath $7900. 403-430-0160, Castor, AB. roller, dbl. knife drive, HoneyBee header, 2005 RECON 300 AgShield 7’ hay condi- $59,000. Eldon 780-376-2139, Strome, AB. tioner, $7000; 2000 JD 955 mower conditioner, hyd. tilt, swivel hitch, 4 gauge shoes, $31,000. Both shedded and like new. Call 306-748-2817, Killaly, SK. 14’ HESSTON 1014 haybine w/hydro swing arm. Good shape. 306-283-4747, Langham, SK. or 306-291-9395, 306-220-0429, FITS JD R450, 2005 HoneyBee draper header, 25’, vg condition. Stony Plain, AB., call 780-203-9593 or 780-963-0641. NEW HOLLAND 499 hydroswing haybine, 2005 CIH WDX 901, 1148 hrs, 25’ Honey field ready, asking $7500. 403-933-7582, Bee header w/UII PU reel, double knife drive, double swath, upgraded tires, preMillarville, AB. mium cond., $48,500 OBO. 306-236-6839, N H 1 4 7 5 , 1 4 ’ , p r e m i u m c o n d i t i o n , Meadow Lake, SK. $19,000 OBO. Sold livestock. 1993 CASE/IH 8820, diesel, $28,000; 403-823-1894, Drumheller, AB. 1983 MF 885, gas, $10,000. Both are SP, MACDON 5020, 14’, purchased new (2006) 30’ w/UII PU reels, DS, Keer sheers, shedcut approx. 1000 acres, shedded, exc. ded. Call 306-843-3135, Wilkie, SK. cond, $20,000. 306-782-4103, Melville, SK 22’ MF 885, gas engine, good condition. 2005 NH 1431 discbine, 1000 PTO, rock Call 306-862-3525, Codette, SK. protection pods, very good condition, 2013 MACDON W150 (green) 220/180 $19,500. 306-961-4493, Prince Albert, SK. hrs., 35’, $139,000 OBO. Can arrange deDRY HAY FASTER! With Ag Shield’s Re- livery. 306-563-8482, Douglas, MB. Con 400 3PP, replace your rake pass, cut drying time in half, combine up to two 18’ 2004 NH HW320, 30’; 1996 Versatile 4700, windrows, move swaths onto dry ground. gd cond., always shedded. 306-960-4430, Order yours today! 1-844-227-1831. 306-961-1538, Domremy, SK. www.agshield.com 1991 JD 590, 30’, PTO, good shape, no NH 116 HYDROSWING 16’ haybine, $7500. w e l d s , $ 3 5 0 0 O B O . C a l l D a v e a t Call 306-335-7875, Lemberg, SK. 306-424-7511, Montmartre, SK.

1996 WESTWARD 9200 SP swather, 25', 960 header w/PU reels, recent $7000 work order, new canvas, rubber rollers, knife, 972 wobble box, 1700 hrs. exc cond, $35,000. OBO 306-593-7101, Rama, SK. 1998 MF 220 w/PU reel, DS, new canvases, 2060 hrs., $23,500. 306-274-7604. Lestock, SK. 1995 MACDON PREMIER 2900 swather, 2426 hrs., 30’ 960 header, double swath, gauge wheels, PU reels, vg cond., $26,000 OBO. Call 306-743-7622, Langenburg, SK. MACDON 942 18’ multi crop header, good condition, asking $5500. 780-785-2214 or 780-785-2588, Sangudo, AB. 2012 CASE/IH WD1903, DH362 header, f r e e fo r m r o l l e r, J D G P S, 4 0 9 h r s . , $125,000. 306-230-1920, Allan, SK. IHC 5000 24’ swather, hydraulic drive knife, enlar ged opening, $9500. 306-445-5602, North Battleford, SK. PRAIRIE STAR 4900, triple swath, 30’ swather, $19,500. 403-704-3509, no Sunday calls please. Rimbey, AB. 1998 2920 PREMIER swather, 25’ 960 sliding table, PU reels, 2080 hrs., good tires, $39,000. 306-629-3976, Morse, SK. 1987 CI 722 SP swather 26’, double swath, UII PU reel, shedded, 1702 hours, good condition, $16,500 OBO. 306-441-3075, North Battleford, SK. CASE 8825, 25’, UII PU reel, double knife drive, 2,250 hrs., gd cond., $18,000. Phone: 306-575-8312, Wawota, SK. FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS We also specialize in: Crop insurance appeals; Spray drift; Residual herbicide; Custom operator issues; Equip. malfunction. Call Back-Track Investigations for assistance and compensation 1-866-882-4779. WANTED: 25’ SP DIESEL swather with double swath, in good shape, prefer PU reel. Call 306-666-4513, Fox Valley, SK. 2000 PRAIRIE STAR 4600 30’ PT, MacDon PU reel, Keer Shear, vg cond., $8500. 306-268-7793 306-268-2025 Bengough SK 1 9 9 7 M AC D O N S WAT H E R , 1 o w n e r, bought new in 1997, 2400 hrs., Cummins turbo eng, 960 30’ header w/PU reel, c/w swath roller, canvas 1 yr old., asking $29,500 OBO. 204-746-4069, Morris, MB. 22’ VERSATILE 4400, cab, air, PU and batt reels, side cutters, shedded; 20’ Versatile 4 0 0 , c a b, s e c o n d h e a d e r, s h e d d e d . 306-877-2014, 306-877-4402, Dubuc, SK. 25’ HESSTON 8100, Cummins dsl., CAHR, UII PU reel, new canvases, shiftable table. Also 16’ hay header. $28,000 OBO. Willing to split. 306-434-0028, Spy Hill, SK. 1990 JOHN DEERE 2360, 25' double swath, UII reel, diesel, cab, air, HoneyBee knife, shedded, 3418 hrs., very good condition, $15,500. 306-648-7654, Gravelbourg, SK.

MF 9420, 30’ 5200 header, approx. 775 hrs, c/w Outback AutoSteer, shedded, very good cond., $65,000 OBO. 780-632-7397, 780-632-9862, Vegreville, AB. CASE/IH 30’ SWATHER, 1000 PTO, 10’ steel swath roller, $3500. 306-488-2103 or 306-541-4346, Holdfast, SK. 2012 MF WR9740, 30’, fully loaded w/PU reel and free form roller, GPS, $118,000 OBO. 306-641-9851, Yorkton, SK. 1986 JOHN DEERE 2360, 25 foot double swath, gas engine, transport available, 3662 hrs., fair condition, $10,000 OBO. 306-272-7450, West Bend, SK. MASSEY 200 SP, 30’, very well maintained, field ready, $26,000. 306-764-7920, 306-961-4682 leave msg, Prince Albert, SK 1995 MASSEY 200, 30’, UII PU reel, good working order, 2240 hrs., $23,000; Two 7 . 5 ’ s w at h r o l l e r s , $ 2 5 0 e a c h . 204-712-5367, 204-746-4543, Morris, MB. 2009 CASE 1203 25', w/rotosheers, rear attached roller, EZ-Steer, shedded, 387 hrs. exc cond, $115,000 OBO. 403-820-0181, 403-321-0215, Drumheller, AB. 2009 JOHN DEERE 4895, 30’, 900 hrs., exc. condition, $72,900. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. 1996 PRAIRIE STAR 25’ 4930 swather, 2 speed trans, good condition, $40,000 OBO. 780-674-7944, Neerlandia, AB.

HUGE SELECTION OF new and used New Holland swathers available w/130-200 HP tractors and 30’, 36’ and 40’ draper headers. Check out the all new 2014 models. Completely redesigned high performance NH Speedrowers. 0%, 48 months avail OAC on most used swathers. Markusson New Holland of Regina Ltd., 1-800-819-2583 or 306-781-2828, www.markusson.com JD 590 30’ PT swather, 1000 PTO, MacDon pickup reel, shedded, $4800. 306-459-2676, Ogema, SK. 2010 CASE/IH WD 1203, 36', double knife drive, UII PU reel, deluxe cab, EZ-Steer ready, mounted Freeform roller, 780 hrs., exc. cond., $95,000 OBO. 306-460-8061 Eatonia, SK. hennest@live.ca VERSATILE 4700 w/Cummins diesel, 25’, UII PU reel, double knife drive, field ready, $8000. 306-783-8783, Yorkton, SK. HESSTON 6450 21’ SP swather, AC, 21’ UII pickup reel, good condition, only $7500. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK.


36 CLASSIFIED ADS

1992 NEW NOBLE 722, 2566 hrs, 30’ MacDon PU reel, joystick controls, EZ-Steer bracket, AC, good condition, $18,000. 306-268-2025 306-268-7793 Bengough SK 1994 WESTWARD 9000 c/w 1995 MacDon 960 25’ header, w/Roto-Shear cutters, 2195 hrs., PU reel, single knife, large tires front and rear, $27,700. 778-549-5124, Riverhurst, SK.

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

BALERS: JD 510, 1250; JD 530, $3500; JD 535, $5000. Haybines: Gehl 14’, $3900; NH 116, $3000. Hay Conditioners, $800 and up. Rakes: 14 wheel, $6500; Vermeer R23, hyd., $8500; Swath Turners: NH 144, KODIAK 10’ CUTTERS. Three point hitch $3000; NH 166, $3500; Nissan bean wind and PT units available. See your nearest rower, $5000. Call 1-866-938-8537. Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. AGLAND MACERATOR MODEL 6600 hay conditioner, very good condition, $9850. Trades welcome. Call 1-800-667-4515 or visit: www.combineworld.com

26’ CCIL PT swather, $1500; New Idea 30’ CASE/IH swather, $1600 OBO. Call 484 baler, $2500; Laurier 12 bale double 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. sided picker, $8500; 20’ MacDon PU reel, Rake-Up 8 belt PU, $3900; Gleaner 2004 MASSEY FERGUSON 9420, 30’, PU, $1800; U h e a d e r, $ 2 5 0 0 . P r o A g S a l e s , hyd. tilt, DS, 2 spd., 1059 hrs., shedded, P306-441-2030 anytime North Battleford SK $50,000. 780-808-7445, Rivercourse, AB. HONEYBEE 42’ TM 1999, 7810 mount, stored inside, good shape, $12,000. 403-575-0395, Consort, AB. 1981 IH 4000, 24.5’, Universal PU reel, opening has been widened for canola, $3500 OBO. 306-468-4063, 306-468-2621, Canwood, SK.

STANDING HAY CROPS wanted. Rental by the ton or by the acre up to $100/acre. Custom large square baling, custom swathing. Call 780-991-3616, Thorsby, AB.

ROTARY MOWERS: JD 15’, $6000; 20’, $11,000; Woods 15’, $6000; JD 7’, $3000; Woods 10’, $3500; Brower 5 gang reel, 2010 MF 9435, wide cab, 36’, 700 hrs., $1500; JD 9’ Sickle, $2200; NH 9’, $2200. shedded, vg cond., $86,000. Call Cam-Don 1-866-938-8537, Portage la Prairie, MB. Motors Ltd. 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK.

Toll Free: 1-866-842-4803 www.mrmachines.ca

HAYBINE CONDITIONING ROLLERS * Steel rollers are more durable and longer lasting. * Some styles can be set to be more aggressive or less aggressive depending on the crop needs. * Made to OEM specs or custom-designed to your requirements. * Sold in sets or as single rollers

1993 CASE/IH 1660 combine, 1830 eng. hrs., Rake-Up PU, $18,000 OBO. Call Don Turnbull at 306-484-2041 (home) or 306-725-7256 (cell), Govan, SK. DID YOU EXPERIENCE crop damage from using Priority or PrePass. If so, ph. BackTrack Investigations 1-866-882-4779. 1995 CASE 2188, one owner, 4503 eng., 3801 threshing hrs., AFX rotor, PU header, return monitor, ext. auger, high capacity unloader, extra fuel tank, 2 sets concaves, good shape, no guard, $26,000. 306-882-3371, Rosetown, SK. CASE/IH 1020, FLEX header, 22-1/2', full fingered auger, transport, $6,500 OBO. 780-226-8994, Forestburg, AB.

New Salvage · ‘06 Cat Lexion 590R, under 900 hrs · ’11 JD 9770 STS, less than 600 hrs, awesome parts incl. complete dual kit, with tires $16,900 www.combineworld.com 1-800-667-4515

2005 CASE/IH 2388, 1936/2495 hours, Rake-Up PU, chopper, hopper topper, shedded, recent repairs, exc . cond. $95,000. 306-587-2776, Cabri, SK.

1550 Hwy. 39 East, Weyburn, SK

CombineWorld

2012 MACDON M155 40' swather, rotosheers, Bourgault swath roller, split reels, double knife drive and more, 320 hrs., exc. cond., $128,000. 306-746-7638, Raymore, SK. Email: h.hagro@sasktel.net CASE/IH 8820, 18’, PU reel, Perkins diesel, only 1600 hrs. Harry Vissers Farm Equipment, 403-327-0349, 403-330-9345, 403-739-2122, 403-382-8637, Lethbridge, AB. www.harryvissersfarmequipment.com 2010 CHALLENGER SP115C, 30’, PU reel, tilt plus fore/aft, same as Hesston or MF 9435 wide cab. Call 780-679-8333, 780-608-9792, Ferintosh, AB. NEW NOBLE PT 26' 702 swather, fully hydraulic, like new condition, shedded, vg, $4,500. 204-525-4927, Minitonas, MB. gsagert@mymts.net 2013 MASSEY 9725, 30’ header, all digital readout, 72 cutting hrs., 76 eng hrs., warranty to Sept. 2015, $100,000. Creelman, SK. 306-433-0003 or 306-737-0610.

Hart Carter Distributor PICKUP R EELS • R EEL PAR TS • R EEL ADD- O N KITS • S IEV ES & CHAFFER S • CAS E IH FIELD TR ACKER S ® To lea rn m o re a b o u t Ha rtCa rter, visit: w w w .hccin co rpo ra ted .co m

1- 800- 667- 4515 w w w .co m b in ew o rld .co m O u rlocation : 20 m iles Eastof S askatoon , S K alon g Highw ay #16

USED SCHULTE MOWERS- XH1500 cutters FARM KING 10’ swath roller, with steel at the Saskatoon store. 3 units from drum, $1275. Call Dave at 306-424-7511, $16,900 to $19,900. Call Flaman at 1-888-435-2626. Montmartre, 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. THREE 2007 CIH 2588’s. 2050 eng. hrs., 1370 sep. hrs. All identical premium units w/duals, AutoSteer, field tracker, rear weights, factory toppers, choppers, extended wear chrome pkg., shedded, asking $110,000 each. Alanna Farms Ltd., 403-823-9976, Drumheller, AB. 1997 2188 AFS, 2056 rotor hrs, accelerator, yield and moisture, topper, Swathmaster, rock trap, shedded, $42,500. Call 306-855-4718 306-221-8953 Hawarden SK

2002 CASE/IH 2388, 1717 rotor hrs, 2015 pickup, hopper topper, two sets of concaves, well serviced, always shedded, $89,000. Also available 25’ header, $9000. 780-384-2109, Sedgewick, AB. 1997 CASE/IH 2188, SwathMaster PU, 4 brand new tires, specialty rotor, chopper, curved batt spreaders, rebuilt PTO clutch, 3778/3095 hrs., $29,000; Also 2008 CIH 1020 30’ header, low acres, original owner, sells separately to combine purchaser. Call 306-644-2115, Loreburn, SK.

CASE 1688, 3179 eng. hrs., 2 seasons on new AFX rotor, chaff spreader, chopper, stored inside, exc. cond., $32,000. Call 306-328-4721, Bankend, SK.

460 CAT LEXION, 67” cyl., 290 HP, sidehill leveling, straw walkers, fine cut chopper, $65,500. 780-367-2483, Willingdon, AB.

2012 CR9090, 396 threshing hrs., shedded, rock trap, 0 hrs. on NH Triple Inspection, $370,000. 780-210-3799, Myrnam AB

2009 CASE/IH 8120, two combines to choose from, auto-guidance ready, front tires, 1041 sep. hrs. Both c/w 2016 and Swathmaster PU, field ready, major oil changes and all filters changed, thrashed wheat, barley and canola only, $205,000. Deliver within 800 miles. Consider grain in trade. 204-743-2324, Cypress River MB

CASE/IH 1688, AFX rotor, chaff spreader, hopper extension, stored inside, very good condition, $28,500. OBO. 780-226-8994,Forestburg, AB. bdstrauss@live.ca

2010 CASE/IH 8120, 2016 16’ Swathmaster PU, long auger, fine cut chopper, chaff spreader, header height control, VSR, Y&M, AFS Pro 600, HID lights, 520 duals with large 28L26 rears, 646 sep. hrs., 2010 CX8080, 624 sep. hrs., 900 front, $200,000. 306-647-2344, Theodore, SK. 600 rear, always shedded, loaded. 140 hrs. on NH Triple Inspection, swathmaster PU, 1999 CASE/IH 8825, SP 1158 eng. hrs, 25 350 bu., long auger, big touch screen, ft, double swath, double knife, P/U reel, yield and moisture, no peas, deluxe cab, clean, very good condition, $32,500 OBO. mint cond. Priced for quick sale. Call Rob 306-699-7557, Qu'Appelle, SK. 306-222-6035, Saskatoon, SK. chnichol@hotmail.com 2011 NH CR9070, 953 hrs., 751 sep. hrs., 2009 CASE/IH 8120, 2016 Case/IH PU, 350 tank, 900 drives, Redekopp MAV chopper, lateral tilt, 800 threshing hrs., chopper, was $317,000 now $286,000. $179,000. Call 306-948-7299, Biggar, SK. Call 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca CASE 2388, 2005, 1150 rotor hrs. Asking 2008 9070 w/16’ PU table, duals, touch $115,000. Call: 780-674-8080, Cherhill, screen, many new parts, will split header, AB. $170,000. 306-641-9851, Yorkton, SK. 1983 CASE/IH 1480, SP 3780 eng. hrs, w/ 2009 NH CX8080, 76C PU, 945 hrs., IH 810 PU, very good condition, $18,000; loaded, mint cond. 2012 MacDon 35’ flex Also separate 1020 CIH 25' flex header, draper, 2000 acres, used only 1 season, $6500. Call 306-789-0296, Francis, SK. like new. 306-266-4222, Fir Mountain, SK. CASE 1680, PU header, always shedded, 2008 NH CR9070 combine, 790 CP 15’ new tires, very well maintained, $22,500. PU, Mav chopper, HHC, long auger, deluxe 403-347-2266,403-749-2372, Red Deer AB cab, lateral tilt, GPS, hopper extentions, Michelin 900 singles, compressor, Intelli2011 CASE/IH 8120, 569 sep. hrs., large view II monitor, dealer checked, well maitube rotor, long auger, luxury leather cab, natained, clean and shedded, 1184 sep. Pro600 display, fine cut chopper, bean h r s , $ 1 6 8 , 0 0 0 . C a l l : 3 0 6 - 6 4 7 - 2 3 4 4 , concaves, $229,000; 2020 35’ flex header 306-621-2437, Theodore, SK. available. 204-746-4779, Morris, MB. NEW HOLLAND CR9070 1225 thresh 2011 CASE/IH 7120, w/PU header, 295 2007 with 76C PU, field ready, $139,800. rotor hrs., Case/IH 35’ straight cut header, hours Financing available. Trades welcome. $265,000. 306-646-2227, Maryfield, SK. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 1993 CASE/IH 1666, c/w 1015 30’ header, NH CX840, 2001, 1078 hrs., 290 HP, cyl. approx. 3100 hrs, good condition. Call and straw walkers, fine cut straw chopper, 306-463-7412, Brock, SK. $112,500. 780-367-2483, Willingdon, AB. 2004 2388, 3376 eng. hrs., 2529 roto hrs., 2005 NH CR970, 2512 hours, 1669 sep. Howard Concave, 2015 header w/Swath- hours, 310 HP, Redekopp chopper, yield Master, AFX rotor, chopper, hopper top- moisture, 900 drives, 600 rears, $120,500. per, exc. cond., $75,000; 1993 1688, 4005 Call 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca eng. hrs., specialty rotor, 1015 header w/IH PU, 0 hrs. on total back-end rebuild, exc. cond., $22,000. Call 306-855-4904, 306-867-7397, Glenside, SK.

Now your classified word ads will go online within one business day from when you book them to run in the Producer Classifieds. Our team of Classified Sales Associates has the product knowledge, marketing strategies and access to qualified buyers that is unmatched in the industry. Place your classified ad and experience our professional service first hand.

1 9 9 4 C A S E 1 6 8 8 , 2173 eng. hrs., w/1015 header, Victory Super 8 PU, Howard concaves; Also available 30’ 1010 header w/UII PU reels, includes header trailer. Sell as package or separate. 306-228-3094 or 306-228-8503, Unity, SK. 2006 CASE 2388, 1713 sep. hrs., 2320 eng. hrs., clean unit, c/w 1015 PU header, no Y&M, no hopper topper, $69,000. Also available 2000 Case 1042 header, $15,000. Call 306-774-3144, Mankota, SK. 1994 CASE/IH 1688, AFX style rotor, Gorden rub-bars, Firestone radials, Redekop chopper, hopper ext., auto chain oiler, 3 seasons on new concaves, always shedd e d , 3 1 0 0 h r s . , $ 3 3 , 0 0 0 O B O. C a l l 204-293-4408, Sanford, MB. 1998 CASE/IH 2388, Rake-Up PU, AHH control, fore/aft, Kirby straw/chaff spreader, custom cutter pkg., shedded, good condition, Redlighted yearly, 3328 eng. hrs., 2366 rotor hrs., $65,000 OBO. 306-228-3532, 306-228-7664, Unity, SK.

Monday to Friday, ads will be posted online within one business day. Real Time online will be placed a maximum of 11 days prior to first print insertion.

1-800-667-7770

2000 CAT 470, 1654 hrs., lateral tilt, contour, electric sieves, chopper, spreader, 914 PU header, Y&M monitor, $45,000. 306-224-4770, Glenavon, SK.

1992 FORD/NH TR96, 3200 engine hrs, 2200 threshing hrs, Swathmaster PU header, Redekop chopper, brand new feeder chain, grain elevators, return elevators, always shedded, $15,000. 306-834-8058, Kerrobert, SK. 1997 NH TR98, 2530 sep. hrs., 3578 eng. hrs., 971 header, Swathmaster PU, Redekop chopper, Ag Leader Y&M, field ready, shedded, one owner, $27,000 OBO. Wainwright, AB. 780-806-3439, 780-842-4088. 2009 NH CR9070, 863 hrs., 1105 sep. hours, straw chopper deluxe, auger long unloading, 16’ PU, Michel’s tarp, $225,000. Call 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca 2011 NH CR9080, 438 hrs., 554 sep. hrs., 620/70R42 duals, 28Lx26 12 PR R1, leather operator seat, CD radio, $463,000. Call 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca 2009 NH CR9080, 826 hours, 1053 sep. hours, lighting HID, long unloading auger, concave small grain ABR, $265,000. Call 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca 2009 NEW HOLLAND CR9070, 1055 hrs., w/16’ PU included, field ready, $154,800. Financing available. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 2006 CX860 COMBINE, Swathmaster PU, 1525 hrs., very good condition, $109,500 OBO. Call 780-878-1479, Camrose, AB.

2009 NH CR9080, 558 hrs., 718 sep. hrs., 900 front tires, 600 rear tires, air, dlx. NH chopper, was $235,000 now $212,000. 2012 NH CR9090, 541 hrs., 426 sep. hrs., Call 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca 591 HSP, 2WD, standard chopper rear attach., was $374,000 now $364,000. Call 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca WELL MAINTAINED TR99, duals, hopper extension, rake-up. Call 306-592-4449, 306-592-2029, Buchanan, SK. 1994 TR97 combine, 3028 eng. hrs., c/w PU header, $15,000 OBO. 306-642-5806, Assiniboia, SK. 2001 NH TR99, new tires front and rear, Rake-Up PU, $60,000 OBO. Retired from 2011 NH CR9070 SP, only 491 threshing farming. Bob 306-883-7817, Spiritwood SK hrs., 628 eng. hrs., Deluxe cab, leather seats, Intelliview Plus II Monitors, GPS, factory AutoSteer, chaff spreader, extra long unloading auger, 520/85R duals, w/2012 NH 790 CP-15 PU, $229,900. Call Mike at 403-994-0700, Didsbury, AB.

2006 CIH AFX 8010, 2275 engine, 1650 rotor, all updates installed, 520/85R42 front duals, 600/65 R28 rears. 2016 header, 2016 Swathmaster, internal chopper, reversing hydraulic drive rotor, hopper extension, extended auger, always shedded, heavy land machine. vg cond., asking $138,000. Ph 306-781-2775, Kronau, SK.

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CLASSIFIEDS.PRODUCER.COM

2005 CATERPILLAR LEXION 560 SP, 1039 eng. hrs, 2005 Lexion 560W, 1039 sep. hrs, 3D sieve, P514 head, chopper, chaff spreader very good condition, $110,000. 306-536-8348, 306-738-4716, Riceton, SK. lmoats@sasktel.net

HUGE SELECTION OF Demo and used NH CR and CX combines: CX8080’s (3-2012’s, 2-2011’s, 1-2007) and 2003 CX860, CR9060, CR9070’s, CR9080’s CR9090’s and more. 30 months interest free OAC. Markusson New Holland of Regina Ltd., 1-800-819-2583 or 306-781-2828, www.markusson.com

2011 NH CR9080, 440 hrs., 566 sep. hrs., rotors, 620/70R42 duals, 28Lx26 rear tires, Lux cab, autosteer 262, $463,000. Call 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca 1998 TX66, 2200 sep. hrs., Rake-Up PU, hopper extension w/closing doors, auger extension, well maintained, shedded. Asking $30,000. Bengough, SK, 306-268-2025 or 306-268-7793. 1998 NH TX66, low hrs, mint cond., Strawmaster PU, 24’ NH straight cut header, $25,000 OBO. 306-277-4503, Gronlid, SK. RETIRING: 2012 NH CR9080 twin rotors combine, 240 eng. hrs., 620 metric duals, fully loaded, c/w 2012 94C 36’ straight cut HoneyBee, full width top auger, fore&aft. a n d N H 2 0 1 2 1 6 ’ P U h e a d e r. 403-318-0172, Red Deer, AB. 2008 NH CR9060, 1410 hrs. with 76C PU, w/14’ Swathmaster, field ready, $119,800. Financing available. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 1995 NH TX68, 2554 eng. hrs., 1764 thresh hrs., lots of new parts, good cond., asking $35,000. 306-358-4342, Denzil, SK. 2001 FORD/NH TR99 SP, 1600 hrs., Swathmaster PU, shedded, you wont find a cleaner one, field ready. All options, excellent condition, $59,500. 403-350-9088, 403-347-2266, Red Deer, AB.

2008 CX 8080 NH, 1367 threshing hrs., Y&M monitor, tow hitch, auto header lift, all new oil filter, total service job done, field ready, choose from 2. Can deliver. Will consider grain in trade. Call any time, 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. 2001 FORD/NH TR99 SP, 1926 eng. hrs, TR98, recent w/o, always stored inside, triple checked, ready to go, Rake-Up PU, very good cond., must be seen, $38,500. Redekop chopper, 1926 threshing hrs, exc. 403-350-9088,403-347-2266, Red Deer AB cond., $50,000. 780-871-2566 Lloydmin2006 CR960, 1730 hrs., 76C 15’ PU headster, AB. k.hastings@mcsnet.ca er, 200 hrs. on triple check incl. rub bars, 2010 NH CR9070, 440 hrs., 415 sep. hrs., concaves, 900 front tires, 600 rears, long 400 HP, 16’ SwathMaster PU, MAV chop- unloading auger, HID lights, AutoSteer per, was $317,000 now $289,000. Call ready. 306-648-3511, 306-648-7695, 306-380-7769, Gravelbourg, SK. 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca 2009 NH CR9070, 965 hours, 691 sep. 2005 CR960, 1200 hrs., $93,000; 2003 hours, SM grain sieves, std. hyd. NA CR940, 1500 hrs., $72,000; 1995 TR97, CR9070, was $205,500 now $185,000. Call work orders, field ready, $18,000; 1994 TR97, rock damage, $9500. 306-370-8010, 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca Saskatoon, SK. 2012 FORD/NH CR8090, SP 332 eng. hrs, 2004 CR970, duals, Greenlighted; 1998 Intelliview IV, Intellisteer, yield and mois- T R 9 8 ; 1 9 9 5 T R 9 7 , a l w ay s s h e d d e d . ture monitor, grain tank ext, long auger ext, 306-960-4430 306-961-1538 Domremy SK VSR, auto HHC, reverser, 372 receiver. Warranty 2015, exc. condition, $242,000 2001 NH TR99, 1600 sep. hrs, auger ext., OBO. 306-737-8286, Rouleau, SK. duals, hopper ext, $50,000; 36’ Honeybee Nathanallard_bean@hotmail.com available. 780-753-1973, Oyen, AB.


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

2006 JD 9760, many options, moisture sensor, bushel counter, clean and in very nice shape, Greenlighted in 2013, 2742 eng. hrs., 1983 sep. hrs. $109,000; Also h ave J D 6 3 5 f l e x h e a d e r ava i l a b l e . 306-662-8405, Richmound, SK. JD 7720 TITAN II, 2300 hrs., PU header, shedded, excellent condition. 306-631-8779, Moose Jaw, SK. 2009 NH CR9070 1055 hours w/ 16’ pickup included. Field ready. $154,800. Trades welcome.Financing available.1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

1985 JD 7720 Titan II, 30’ straight cut header, shedded, vg; JD 7721 for parts. 306-867-8477 306-867-8457, Outlook, SK. 1981 JD 7720 combine, JD PU, chopper, $6,000. Call 306-567-3128, Bladworth, SK.

1995 JOHN DEERE CTS II, SP 2897 eng. hrs, comes with 914 pickup, field ready $25,000. OBO. 306-753-7575, Cactus Lake, GLEANER R72, 1837 eng. hrs, shedded, PU SK. tjerker@live.com header, 24’ straight cut header, $49,000. 1993 JOHN DEERE 9500, 3408 hrs., chopCall Barry 780-632-9756, Vegreville, AB. per/chaff spreader, 914 PU header, LONGER LASTING GLEANER accelerator $28,000. Call 306-831-9337, Rosetown, SK rollers, 3 to 5 times longer than OEM. 2003 JD 9650 walker, w/914 PU, 2000 Phone 306-759-2572, Eyebrow, SK. sep. hrs., new bars and concaves, exc. one 1986 GLEANER L3 combine, approx. owner combine, $79,000. 306-948-7223, 2500 engine hours, good condition, Biggar, SK. $12,000. 306-642-5886, Scout Lake, SK. 1997 JD 9600, 2131 sep. hrs., always FOR SALE: 1989 GLEANER R60 SP, 2458 shedded, fine cut chopper, chaff spreader, low orig. hrs., premium cond., field ready, variable speed feeder house, 914 PU, preno bends. 306-764-6822, 306-960-2192 cision cylinder, AutoSteer ready (Greenstar), $59,000. 204-324-8036, Altona, MB. cell, Prince Albert, SK. 2006 JD 9760 STS, 1800/2300 hrs., Greenlighted yearly, new injectors, concave, feeder house, Y&M, very good cond., 1996 JD 9600, 2062/2572 hrs., Sunny- $145,000. 306-230-2736, Assiniboia, SK. brook cylinder and concave’s at 1300 hrs., Greenlighted in 2012, 2011, 2008, 2006, 2011 JD 9770, 1000 sep. hrs, 520x42 2004 and 2003, ContourMaster feedhouse, duals, 28Lx26 rears, 26’ high cap. unload shedded, 914 PU, $60,000; 930 Flex head- auger, Contour-Master, HD var. spd feeder er available. 306-372-4778, Major, SK. house, Y&M, GreenStar ready, $180,000. 204-362-1337, Portage la Prairie, MB. 7721 TITAN II JD combine, w/Rake-Up PU, good tires, good condition. Retired. 1987 JD 7721, TITAN II, air flow sieve, chaff spreader, always shedded, field 306-587-2730, Cabri, SK. ready, $5500; Also a 7-16 Melroe plow. 2009 JD 9770, 1100 rotor hrs., Contour- Both 1 owner. 204-526-2166, Holland, MB. Master, large single tires, 4WD, exc. cond., 1991 JD 9600, 4000 eng. hrs, 2800 sep. $162,000. 306-552-4905, Moose Jaw, SK. hrs, 2 spd. cyl., AHH adjustment, 800 hrs TWO 1993 JD 9600, fine cut choppers, on new long block motor, $34,000 in hopper ext., chaff spreaders, 914 PU, Greenlight, asking $45,000. Can take shedded, vg cond. One has duals and yield grain. Call 306-749-2482, Hagen, SK. monitor, 3000 sep. hrs. showing on each, 2000 JOHN DEERE 9750, 1700 sep., $43,000/each. 204-745-7868, Roland, MB. 2400 engine hrs., fine cut chopper, yield 1994 JOHN DEERE 9500, SP 2228/3230 and moisture monitor, good tires, 914 PU eng. hrs, shedded, c/w 912 pickup header, hdr., $90,000. 306-441-2499, Meota, SK. chaff spreader, chopper, and 930 straight 1990 JD 9600, 3000 sep hrs, shedded, cut header with trailer. Exc. cond. $48,500. Sunnybrook concaves/bars, air foil, 914 306-726-4466, 306-726-7352, Cupar, SK. PU, $30,000. 306-524-4960, Semans, SK. 1991 JOHN DEERE 9501, many new parts, 2005 JD 9660W, 2453 eng. hrs, 1798 sep no peas, good shape. Call 306-463-7627, hrs., 80065R32/42085R26, inspected by Wilkie, SK. mechanic yearly, field ready, hopper ext., 1996 JD 9600, Y&M monitor, JD 914 PU, $105,000 US. 701-263-1467 Sherwood ND hopper extensions, fine cut chopper, tires 1999 JD 9610, 2981 sep. hrs., Greenlight70%, 3200 threshing hours, shedded, ed every 2nd year for past 10 years, c/w $33,900 OBO. 204-328-7158, Rivers, MB. PU header, good tires, $60,000 OBO. 1991 JD 9400, 3352 sep. hrs., 3852 eng. 306-264-3834, Kincaid, SK. hrs., 912 PU, fine cut chopper, $25,000; 1997 JOHN DEERE 9600, big eng., 260 HP, A l s o 2 2 4 s t r a i g h t h e a d e r ava i l a b l e . 2617 sep. hrs., all options, shedded, exc. 306-946-9981, 306-946-2899 Watrous, SK cond., $55,000. 306-587-7477, Abbey, SK.

CLASSIFIED ADS 37

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. 1997 JD 9600, all new elevator chains, new feeder chain, 914 PU, asking $50,000. Call 306-441-8244 or 306-386-1268, North Battleford, SK. WANTED: JOHN DEERE 6620 combine with low hours and shedded. Call 306-472-3277, Gravelbourg, SK.

1995 and 1994 JDs, both with: duals, good tires, bin covers, 914 PU headers plus 930 straight cut w/PU reels $41,000 each OBO. 306-443-2306, leave message, Alida, SK. 1998 JD 9610 combine, 2360 engine hours; 1998 JD 925 25’ flex header. Call 204-764-2035, Hamiota, MB.

1987 JD 8820 w/214 PU, 2 spd. high inertia cylinder, long auger, chopper, chaff spreader, 6059 hrs., recent tires, $18,000. 306-429-2723, Glenavon, SK. 1997 JOHN DEERE 9600, 4415 eng. hrs., 2001 JOHN DEERE 9650, 2300 hours, 3382 sep. hrs., c/w JD 912 PU, $42,800. $ 6 7 , 0 0 0 ; J D 9 2 5 f l e x h e a d , $ 7 4 0 0 . Financing available. Trades welcome. 204-325-8019, Winkler, MB. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 2000 JOHN DEERE 9550, SP 1594/1214 1982 JD 8820 turbo combine, 4114 hrs, eng. hrs, rare, 40 sep. hrs. since GL, LA, CS, chopper/chaff spreader, c/w JD 212 PU chpr., 914 PU, 925 rigid, with PU reels and header, 14’ unload auger, excellent shape! trl., excellent condition, $100,000 OBO. $29,500. Pincher Creek, AB. Call Jordan 306-699-7557, Qu'Appelle, SK. anytime 403-627-9300. chnichol@hotmail.com 1987 JD 7721 pull type combine, field 1997 JOHN DEERE 9500 SP, 4257 eng., ready, good condition, asking $9000. 3140 sep. hrs, exc. cond., $8500 Greenlight Phone 306-228-3251, Unity, SK. 2 yrs ago, PU and straight header, $45,000 1997 JOHN DEERE CTS II, SP 1690 eng. for all or $40,000 without straight header, hrs, 914 pickup, field ready excellent condi- exc. cond. 306-699-7050, 306-699-7215, tion, $50,000. OBO 306-753-7575, Cactus Qu'Appelle, SK. bmzfarm@yourlink.ca Lake, SK. tjerker@live.com 1998 JD 9610, 2100 sep. hrs., shedded, PU JOHN DEERE 7721 Titan II PTO combine, header, mint cond. Call for details. always shedded, $4500. 306-694-5507, 306-744-8113, Saltcoats, SK. Moose Jaw, SK. JOHN DEERE 8820 combine, chaff saver, 2004 9860 STS, 2005 Precision header, $6500. 306-735-7227, Whitewood, SK. 1480 sep. hrs., 35.5x32 Rice tires, large 2005 9660 STS, 2350 engine hours, 1750 auger, fore/aft, Y&M, HHC, TouchSet, HID threshing, duals, high cap. unload auger, lighting, small wire concave, $149,900. 1500 Precision header w/Rake-Up pickup. Call Gord 306-889-2133, 306-873-7141; Howard concaves, hopper cover, shedded, Todd 306-873-1680, Mistatim, SK. Greenlighted every year, JD AutoSteer ready, $120,000 OBO. 306-843-7070, 306-658-2122, Wilkie, SK. 1994 CASE/IH 1688, Specialty rotor with axceller kit, chopper, long auger, hopper topper, Victory Super 8 PU, approx. 300 hrs. on $13,000 work order, 3200 engine hours, very good condition, $25,000. 306-228-3665, 306-228-9383, Unity, SK. 1998 JD 9610, 914 PU, fine cut chopper, chaff blower, long auger, airfoil sieve, hopper ext. and tarp, new tires, duals, Greenlighted every 2nd year, 3380 threshing hrs., always shedded, exc. cond., $60,000 WANTED: JOHN DEERE 6620 Titan II, OBO. 306-338-3647, Wadena, SK. must be in good - very good condition JD 6601 for parts, complete w/JD pickup, with all options. Call 780-336-4061. some newer parts. Call 306-842-5646, 2 JD CTS with PU headers, 1300 and 2900 Weyburn, SK. threshing hrs., Greenlighted yearly, always JD 8820 COMBINE c/w PU and 30’ shedded, excellent rubber. 306-640-8600, straight cut headers, extensive Greenlight 306-640-8437, Assiniboia, SK. service done, good condition, asking 2008 JD 9770, 916 thres. hrs., StrawMas- $20,000. 306-283-4602, Langham, SK. ter PU, Greenlighted, hopper cover, big 1991 JD 9600 w/914 PU header, 4223 singles, $197,000; Also, 2000 Honeybee sep. hrs., hopper ext. and tarp, crop catch30’ draper header, set up for JD 9770, new er, chopper and chaff spreader, Greenlight canvas, $17,500. Call 204-532-2349 or 2012, $28,000. 306-563-7703, Canora, SK. 204-773-6145, Foxwarren, MB. 1992 JD 9600, 2785 sep. hrs., w/JD 914 2010 JD 9870STS 995-775 hrs, Contour- PU, 30.5x32, fine cut chopper, shedded, Master w/5 spd. feeder house, 20.8x42s must be seen, $54,000. 780-679-7795 w/duals, 22’ auger, Ext. Wear Sep. pkg., Camrose, AB. chopper, Greenlighted, $172,500 US. 320-848-2496 or 320-894-6560, Fairfax, WANTED: 6601 JOHN DEERE PT combine. 403-363-3736, Brooks, AB. MN., www.ms-diversified.com 2002 JD 9650 STS, hopper extension, fine cut chopper, 800 metric tires, A&I threshing elements, Outback AutoSteer, ($30,000) Greenlight 250 hrs ago, 3400 sep. hrs., asking $65,000 OBO. Call 306-354-7206, Mazenod, SK. 7721 JD COMBINE good cond., $3000 OBO; 2 Redekop chaff savers, w/cyclones, $1500/ea. Phone: 204-937-2896 or 204-937-0132, Roblin, MB.

1981 7720 2800 hrs., reverser, Redekop chopper, good condition, $11,000; 1979 8820, 5000 hrs., $9000. Will take grain on trade. 306-693-9847, Moose Jaw, SK.

TWO 2013 CHALLENGER 56C combines, s a m e a s M F 9 5 6 0 . C a l l fo r d e t a i l s 306-231-3993, www.versluistrading.com Humboldt, SK. 1990 9400, 2200 engine hrs., shedded, 550 MF COMBINE, w/Sund PU, has done Kirby spreader, 914 PU header, $25,000. approx. 8000 acres. Phone 306-293-2809, Climax, SK. 306-963-7861, Imperial, SK. MASSEY FERGUSON 8570, 2486 hrs., JD 9400 SHEDDED, 914 PU header, all 1996 wathmaster pickup, $25,000. updates, fore&aft, auto header height, c/w S306-726-4326, Southey, SK. JD 930 Rigid header, Greenlighted in 2012 $40,000. 306-488-2103 or 306-541-4346, 2009 MF 9795, 649 eng. hrs., 440 thresh Holdfast, SK. hrs., Massey concave, airfoil top, electric bottom sieve, lat. tilt, electric fore&aft, PU 2009 JD 9770, 808 threshing hrs., 20.8x38 header, MAV chopper, hopper ext. and dual tires, 615 PU, field ready, very good cover, front duals 520/85R42, rears condition, $195,000 OBO. 306-845-7850, 480/80R26, adj. axle, thru MF shop winter 306-893-7226, Edam, SK. 2012, field ready. Not a RB combine. Pics 1986 JD 8820, chaff spreader, chopper, available, $185,000; Also 8200 head to fit. topper, 2 spd., new belts, long auger, 224 Gregoire Seed Farms Ltd. 306-441-7851, header, JD 22’ flex, sickle drive PU reel, 306-445-5516, North Battleford, SK. Email: gregfarms@sasktel.net $18,000 OBO. 204-635-2600, Stead, MB. 9600 JD 4x4, 36x32 tires, new feeder and elevator chains, lots of recent work, $35,000 OBO; 2004 draper 925D, 430F and 925 headers. 403-704-3509, Rimbey, AB.

2009 CHALLENGER 680B, 757 eng. hrs., 600 threshing hrs., 16' Swathmaster PU, MAV chopper, front duals 20.8xR42, shedded, $200,000. 780-961-2435, Legal, AB.

2011 MF 9895, 469 threshing hrs., MAV 2003 JD 9750, Contour-Master, c/w JD chopper, duals, 16’ Rake-Up PU, warranty, 914 PU header, 900 tires, 2280 sep. hrs., $279,000. 403-412-4456, Three Hills, AB. $87,500. 780-352-3012, Wetaskiwin, AB. MASSEY FERGUSON 8570, 2645 eng. hrs., 2006 JOHN DEERE 9660 STS, 1430 sep hrs, 12’ PU, chopper, straw spreader, Howard nice shape, $127,500. Call 306-731-2444 concaves, shedded, well maintained, or 306-596-2546, Craven, SK. Email: $27,000. Call 306-723-4317, Cupar, SK. bherman@imagewireless.ca 1988 CLAAS 108, 3200 hrs, 224 JD header 1983 JOHN DEERE 8820, with pickup w/trailer, $22,000 OBO. Mechanically exh e a d e r a n d c h o p p e r, $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 . cellent, shedded. 403-742-5795 Erskine AB 306-960-3000, St. Louis, SK. RETIRING: 2006 MF 9690, SwathMaster PU, chopper, full monitors, 1050 sep. hrs., 1996 JD 7721 TITAN II, very good cond., 300 acres since large work order, shedded, 2 speed cylinder, straw chopper, tires- excellent cond, $115,000. Saskatoon, SK. very good, new rub bars and concaves in Call 306-934-6703 evenings. last 300 hrs., JD pickup with new teeth and belts, $5500. 306-778-2348, Stewart 1997 MASSEY FERGUSON 8780, 1986 sep. hours, new feeder and elevator chains, Valley, SK., or email thisr@sasktel.net $45,000. 306-726-4326, Southey, SK. FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS We also specialize in: Crop insurance ap- TWO 1984 MF 860 with pickups; Also peals; Spray drift; Residual herbicide; Cus- available 2 straight cut headers; Massey tom operator issues; Equip. malfunction. 852 PT combine. 306-228-3036, Unity, SK. Call Back-Track Investigations for assis- 1978 MF PERKINS dsl, 800 engine hrs., tance and compensation 1-866-882-4779. everything works, A/C, radio, rake-up PU, 2004 JOHN DEERE 9860 combine, 1763 straw storm spreader, runs great, $5000. sep. hours. 306-493-8101, 306-493-7605, 306-460-6786, Kindersley, SK. Delisle, SK. 2002 MF 8780 XP, 1770 hrs., 14’ Victory PU, one owner, shedded, well maintained, 1997 JD 9600, w/914 PU, 925 flex header, $75,000. Call 306-874-7843, Naicam, SK. MacDon 30’ 973 header, fits 9600 and 60 series JD combines. Many recent parts and 2- MF 852’s, low hrs, new concave and rub repairs. Call 306-260-7352 St. Denis, SK. bars, spare parts. Phone 306-862-3525, Codette, SK. 2013 JD S670, 440 hours, Premium Cab, GS3 Colored 7” TS monitor, Contour-Mas- 1986 MASSEY 860, 901 PU, 924 PU reel, ter, 20.8x42s w/duals, chopper, $249,500. $12,000; Redekop chaff saver w/cyclone, US.; 2012 JD S670, 616 hours, Premium $1000. 306-874-5604, Naicam, SK. Cab, GS3 Colored 7” TS monitor, Contour- MF 8460, 2500 eng hrs., Sunnybrook conMaster, 20.8x42s w/duals, chopper, cave and cylinder, Melroe PU, chopper, $219,500. US. www.ms-diversified.com spreader, $18,000; 9550 25’ header w/PU 320-848-2496, 320-894-6560, Fairfax, MN. reels, $4000. 306-224-4770, Glenavon, SK. 1992 JD 9500, 3516 sep hrs., 4903 eng 1990 MASSEY FERGUSON 8450, 2138 hrs., hrs., grain tank extension, $45,000. Call very good condition, always shedded, Shane 306-333-4501, Abernethy, SK. $16,900 OBO. 204-741-0194, Hartney, MB.

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38 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

WANTED: MF 8780, low hours or Premi- HONEYBEE 30’, 1998, UII PU reel, with um 8570 combine. 780-662-2617, Tofield, steel teeth, fore/aft, cross auger transAB. port, 109 hrs. of use since new rollers, hyd. motors, canvases, etc. $15,000. Ron Young, Lumsden, SK. 306-731-7641.

2005 MF 9790, 975 hrs., just out of shop, new concaves, rub bars etc., c/w 2005 MacDon 973 36’, shedded, vg, 0% OAC, Cam-Don Motors 306-237-4212 Perdue SK

2012 NH 880CF FLEX 40’, gauge wheels, automatic HHC (flex and rigid mode), 2000 acres, shedded. 780-753-1973, Oyen, AB. 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 2006 JD 630F header, 30’, hydra flex, PU reel, fore and aft, shedded, single point hookup, full finger, stone edge, excellent, field ready. First $20,000 with trailer. 780-208-4808, Two Hills, AB.

MACDON 963 HEADERS: 36’, 2004 and 2005 models, PU reel, fore&aft, good cond., JD 50 series adapter and JD 60 series adapter, $27,000 for ‘05 and $25,000 for ‘04. Call 306-354-7206, Mazenod, SK. 2008 MACDON D60, 35’, new, never used w/auger, hyd. fore/aft, gage wheels, PU reel, CA-20 JD adapter, $68,500. Call Dave at 306-424-7511, Montmartre, SK. CASE/IH 30’ header w/batt reels, no dents in auger, good, $4900. Call 306-274-7604, Lestock, SK. MF 9700 25’ flex header with MacDon PU reels, Qwik cut knife, vg cond., with extra knife, $6500. Ph 306-723-4317, Cupar, SK. 2009 NH 94C, W21687B, 30’, UII PU reel, hydraulic fore/aft., CR/Case adapter, det. transport, $35,000. 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca 2010 MACDON FD70, 35’ flex draper, JD 7 0 S e r i e s a d a p t e r, $ 5 9 , 0 0 0 O B O . 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Regina, SK.

2004 JD 936D header, PU reel, transport, shedded, very good cond., $32,000. Scott 204-773-0520, 204-773-2308, Russell, MB. 2004 HONEYBEE 30’, transport, JD adapter, always shedded, very low acres, exc. 2013 NH CORN HEADER, 980CR, 8 row 30’, cond. 306-338-3647, Wadena, SK. new condition, $48,000 OBO. JD 635 flex header, 35’, c/w PU reel, gd. 204-793-6760, Hazelridge, MB. cond. $28,000. 780-679-7795, Camrose, FLEX HEADS: JD 924, $6000; JD 925, AB. $6500; JD 930, $6500; JD 925, air reel, 2003 MACDON 973, 36’, pea auger, trans- $8500; Case/IH #1020, 25’-$6000, port, Empire gauge wheels, poly, vg, fits 30’-$8000; #1015 PU, $3500; #1010, MF rotary low lugs, $29,900. Cam-Don 25’-$4000, 30’-$4500; Agshield 25’ Canola Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. pusher, $7000; Weigh wagons, $2500 up. JD 930 RIGID straight cut header to fit JD 1-866-938-8537, Portage la Prairie, MB 50 Series combines, 30’, UII reel, new 2007 HONEYBEE 36’, fore/aft, PU reel, knife and guards, good shape, $9500 OBO; poly skids, pea auger, double knife drive, 1 JD 925 flex header to fit JD 50 Series $37,000 OBO. 306-460-7767, Eatonia, SK. combines, 25’, good shape, $7500 OBO. HONEYBEE HEADERS: 2007, 36’, 306-441-2499, Meota, SK. CR/8010 adapter, $29,000; 2007, 30’, JD 2008 MACDON FD70, $55,000, 40’, all adapter, $27,000; 2000, 36’, w/2388 options, 60/70 JD hook-up, shedded, vg adapter, $16,000; 1999, 42’, CAT adapter, condition. 306-648-2418, Gravelbourg, SK. $14,000. Other adapters available. Call 2010 MACDON D50, 35’ fits MF rotary 306-370-8010, Saskatoon, SK. w/tall lugs, transport, vg, $49,000. Cam- 2- CASE 1020 flex headers, 30’, exc. cond., Don Motor Ltd. 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. $12,500; Case 2015 PU header w/Swathmaster, exc. cond. $9000; 4- 30’ header 1997 MACDON 960, #PW2723D, 30’, PU transport trailers, $2500 OBO/each. Call: reel, TR adapter, double swath, gauge 306-644-4742, Loreburn, SK. wheels, $19,000. 1-888-462-3816 or 2009 40’ MACDON FD70, single knife, very www.farmworld.ca well maintained, JD adapter, $62,500 OBO. 1995 NH 971, 25’, dual knife drive, new Call 306-640-7373, Assiniboia, SK. Westward PU reel hardly used new $8900, asking $7400 for unit. 780-870-8253, MACDON D-60S 35' JD hook-up, transport, 780-847-2770, Dewberry, AB. excellent condition, $39,000. 306-923-2221 Torquay, SK. 1994 MACDON 960, 36’, JD adapter, good condition, c/w transport, $15,000 OBO; 2004 JOHN DEERE 936 Draper header for 306-264-3834, Kincaid, SK. sale. Call 306-493-8101, 306-493-7605, Delisle, SK. JD 922 FLEX head, PU reel, on-wagon transport, real good, $5775. Can deliver. PARTING OUT 1998 Freightliner FL70, 5.9 Cummins, 6 spd. trans., rear end, cab 306-946-7923, 306-946-9659, Young, SK. parts, hood good, 1100x225 tires, 80% 2009 MACDON 2162, 40’ flex header, tread left on tires mounted on Budd rims. Case/NH adapter w/pea auger, dual sickle 306-882-3371, Rosetown, SK. drive, all options, fore and aft, tilt, 2003 MACDON 972 30', 88 series IH $65,000. Call 306-596-6701, Regina, SK. adapter, poly, skid plates, fore and aft, auto 2004 NH 94C, #HW3359A, UII split reel, head height, slow spd transport, vg condireel fore/aft, gauge wheels and transport, tion, $24,500. 204-761-7765, Rivers, MB. $29,900. Phone: 1-888-462-3816 or 2013 AGCO 9250 35’ with transport and www.farmworld.ca all updates done, field ready, $44,800. FiJOHN DEERE 922 flex header, c/w PU reel, n a n c i n g ava i l a b l e , t r a d e s we l c o m e . fore&aft., $7500 OBO. Call 780-352-3012, 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com Wetaskiwin, AB.

2008 MF AGCO 5100 Approx. 300 hrs. used; 36' flex header w/transport. Shedded. $27,500. 780-961-2435, Legal, AB. JD HEADER 1996 30' Rigid with batt reel, $11,000; also 1994 914 pick up header, $11,000. 306-460-9027, Flaxcombe, SK.

TWO 8200-30 COMBINE header. Fits 9700 MF series or Gleaner combines. Orbital reel plus regular reel parts, Schumacher knife drive w/extra knife, always shedded, Head Sight options, $28,000/ea. Gregoire Seed Farms Ltd. 306-441-7851, 306-445-5516, North Battleford, SK. Email: gregfarms@sasktel.net 2006 HONEY BEE SP36, #HW3362A, NH AHHC, hydraulic fore/aft, mechanical header tilt, single knife drive, $36,000. 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca 2010 35’ CIH 2020 flex header, comes with Bergen transport. Call: 306-774-3262, 2007 NH 94C, #W22120A, 30’, single Swift Current, SK. knife, single reel with steel fingers, cross auger, detachable transport, $31,000. MACDON 972 HEADER, 30' with PU Reel. 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca JD Adapter. Has done less than 400 acres since all knife sections and guards were WANTED: SHELBOURNE Stripper header replaced. $20,000. OBO. Phone for Gleaner R72 combine. Call Chris at 306-209-2939, Gray, SK. Email: 306-628-7840, Eatonia, SK. t.brunas@sasktel.net 2002 HONEYBEE 30’ straight cut header, 2000 MACDON 972 30’ harvest header, 800 acres on new knife, guards and knife JD adapter, poly skid plates, upper cross guides, fore/aft, PU reel, Case/IH adapter, auger, Elmer’s header trailer. Very good. guide wheels, shedded. 306-353-2280, Riverhurst, SK. $19,500 OBO. 204-324-7730, Emerson, MB JD 930 RIGID, batt. reel, fore/aft, Green- JOHN DEERE 930 draper header, c/w PU lighted. Call 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. reel and crop lifters, w/o single point. Call 780-352-3012, Wetaskiwin, AB. DL #905231. 1998 NH 971, #PN2689E, 30’, batt reel, was $4,000 now $3,500. 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca 2005 CASE/IH 30’ 1010 rigid header, PU reel, fore/aft, shedded, mint cond., $13,500 OBO; 2009 Bergen header trailer, $2000. Call 306-576-2242, Wynyard, SK. 2008 HONEYBEE SP36 JD adapter, double knife drive, pea auger, $35,000 OBO. Saskatoon, SK. 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586. 1998 JD 930 Rigid header, PU reels, fore&aft., good condition, $9500 OBO. 306-264-3834, Kincaid, SK. 2004 JD 635 HydraFlex , single point hook up , full auger fingers, low stone dam, 6 bat poly PU reel, poly skid, stubble lights, field ready, excellent condition, $17,800. 204-746-5735, 204-736-2849, Domain, MB. cal@pituraseeds.ca

For Over 30 Years

THE LEADER AND INNOVATOR IN

COMBINE PARTS

For a Noticeable Improvement in combine performance we manufacture Feeder Chains, Conventional Concaves, Rotary Concaves, Air Foil Chaffers, and Plastic Louvered Sieves.

HARVEST SERVICES

a Division of Ralph McKay Industries Inc.

1-800-667-2601 • www.harvestservices.ca

AGRI PARTS LTD. IRMA, AB.

1-888-327-6767 www.gcparts.com

Call 1-888-920-1507

2011 TO 2009 Case/IH 2152, 2 to choose from. w/pea auger and transporter. Field ready. CIH NH adapter 35’ wide. Made by MacDon. Can deliver. $55,000 or take all for 5 for $236,000. First come, first serve. 204-743-2324 anytime, Cypress River, MB. Consider some grain in trade. 1997 HONEY BEE SP25, #H21901A, UII PU reel, single knife, Gleaner low block ad, single knife, UII pickup reel, $12,900. 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca 36’ MACDON HEADER 794 flex, PU reel, fore/aft, good shape, Case adapter, $31,000. 306-882-3371, Rosetown, SK.

TRIPLE B WRECKING, wrecking tractors, combines, cults., drills, swathers, mixmills. etc. We buy equipment. 306-246-4260, 306-441-0655, Richard, SK. JD 2270 SP haybine, 14’ auger header w/crimper, hydro. drive, cab AC, good 219 RECONDITIONED rigid and flex, most JD engine, newer 21.5 tires, sell complete makes and sizes; also header transports. or part. 204-721-2629 or 204-730-3139, Ed Lorenz, 306-344-4811, Paradise Hill, Glenboro, MB. SK. www.straightcutheaders.com GOODS USED TRACTOR parts (always 2005 MACDON 973, 21’ draper header, buying tractors). David or Curtis, Roblin, w/transport, $29,500. Call 780-446-4931, MB., 204-564-2528, 1-877-564-8734. Millet, AB. AGRA PARTS PLUS, parting older trac2006 MACDON 973, 36’, pea auger, trans- tors, tillage, seeding, haying, along w/othport, Empire gauge wheels, fits JD rotary, er Ag equipment. 3 miles NW of Battlevg, $35,900. Cam-Don Motors Ltd, Perdue, ford, SK. off #16 Hwy. Ph: 306-445-6769. SK. 306-237-4212.

Harvest Salvage Co. Ltd. 1-866-729-9876

RDS COMBINE MONITORS yield and moisture. Moisture only for $1299. Simple, rugged and accurate. Free shipping. Call Innotag 1-800-363-8727, Wawanesa, MB. eobach@innotag.com

TWO JOHN DEERE 930 flex headers, (1990 and 1991), PU reels, fore&aft., $8000/ea. OBO. Call 306-264-3834, Kincaid, SK. JOHN DEERE 925 FLEX header, very good, c/w transport, $6500. 306-386-1268 or 306-441-8244, North Battleford, SK. 2010 NH 72C, 30’ header, SS floor, hyd. fore/aft, done less than 4000 acres, $29,000. Can deliver. Call 250-843-7359, 250-782-0220, Dawson Creek, BC. 2004 JD 630F, header height, full finger drum, PU reel, poly, stone dam, fore&aft, good cond, asking $17,000 OBO. 204-746-4141, St.Jean, MB.

GRATTON COULEE

2004 HONEYBEE 25’, with transport, UII P U r e e l , a u g e r, s h e d d e d , l i ke n ew, $26,500. 306-424-7511, Montmartre, SK.

NEW PETERSON SIEVE for TR95-99 for $1475. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515, or visit: www.combineworld.com

2013 JD 430 D draper header 30’, will fit JD W150 head, like new cond. JD MacDon dual knives and drives, DS, transport pkg., PU reel and double swath, $46,000. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. 2006 630R, SINGLE, PT, HHS, shedded, vg Will consider some grain in trade. cond, $20,000 w/trailer. Warren, MB. 1996 NH 971, #N21873G, 14’ header Grant 204-771-9267 or Paul 204-461-0337 w/Victory pickup, was $4,900 now $4,500. 2002 NH 73C Flex header, fits TX or TR, 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca good condition, asking $15,500. Call 1998 CIH 1020 25’ flex, PU reel, spare 306-358-4342, Denzil, SK. knife, home built transport, $9000; 1997 MF 9730 30’ straight cut rigid header, CIH 1010 22.5’ rigid header, PU reel, spare Hart-Carter PU reel, fits Massey rotary or knife, $7500. 780-618-1543, Berwyn, AB. White combines, good shape, $6995 OBO; 2005 MACDON 973 draper header, 30’, Also available header trailer w/springride. upper cross auger, Case/IH hookup, slow 306-831-8757, Elrose, SK. spd. transport, fore and aft, tilt, always 2006 JD 635F w/wo AWS air reel, $20,000 stored inside, $32,000. 306-464-2149 or OBO; 1998 JD 930F w/wo AWS air reel, 306-436-7752, Lang, SK. $15,000 OBO. 306-587-7477, Abbey, SK. 1995 MACDON 960 Header 25' with carrier, ready; JD adapter to fit a 9600, 9500 1997 HONEYBEE 25’ header, Case/IH field or CTS combine. $8500 OBO. 306-753-7575 adaptor, UII reel, cross auger, gauge whls, Cactus Lake, SK. tjerker@live.com transport, vg cond, $17,000 OBO. Shaunavon, SK. 306-297-3101, 306-297-7867. 2007 MACDON 973, 36’, with transport, 2004 CASE/IH 1020 30’ flex header, auger, hyd. fore/aft, 873 JD adapter, pickup reel, hyd. fore and aft, Flexifinger $42,500. 306-424-7511, Montmartre, SK crop lifters, transport trailer, good cond., 2007 NH HB3655, W22135A, 36’, CR $15,900. 306-640-7915, Assiniboia, SK. adapter, no cross auger, fore/aft reel, sin2005 JD 936D, PU reel, new knife drive, gle knife drive, $28,000. 1-888-462-3816 shedded, factory transport, vg cond., or www.farmworld.ca $30,500. 306-547-8064, Stenen, SK.

ALLISON TRANSMISSIONS Service, 1999 MF 26’ swath header, HHC PU reel, Sales and Parts. Exchange or custom re- Schumacher drive. Phone 306-747-3185, builds available. Competitive warranty. Shellbrook, SK. Spectrum Industrial Automatics Ltd., Blackfalds, AB. 1-877-321-7732.

NH 973 FLEX HEADER, 1996, 25’, good cond., $10,000; JD 444 Corn header, 1990, 12 row, 20” row spacing, poly dividers, exc. cond., will also fit on NH combines, $15,500. Call or text 204-378-0020 or 204-378-0030, Arborg, MB. 30’ HONEYBEE ADAPTER, as new, for Int. 2388 combine, $700 OBO. Call 306-939-4509, Earl Grey, SK.

NEW CRARY HOPPER extension for John Deere, International and New Holland combines for $1795. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

FITS JD R450, 2005 HoneyBee draper header, 25’, very good condition. Stony Plain, AB, 780-203-9593 or 780-963-0641. 2008 CASE/IH 1020 flex, 30’, low acres, orig. owner, c/w transport, exc. cond., $15,000. 306-644-2115, Loreburn, SK.

2010 HONEYBEE SP36, JD adapter, pea JD 930 STRAIGHT cut header 1998, PU auger, 36’, $42,000 OBO. 306-563-8482 or reels, low acres, w/factory header trans- 306-782-2586, Yorkton, SK. port, $8500 OBO. 306-421-5217, Benson SK 2002 AGCO 700, #W22133A, 25’, batt JD 914 and 914P pickup headers, 7 belt, r e e l , w a s $ 7 , 9 0 0 n o w $ 4 , 5 0 0 . $8500 and $10,500. Call 204-324-4035, 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca Altona, MB. 2008 HONEYBEE 36’ header, JD adapter, 2006 HONEYBEE, 25’ draper with pea au- pea auger, UII reel, fore/aft, shedded, ger, $25,000. Call: 780-674-8080, Cherhill, great shape, $32,000. Ph. 306-267-7551, Coronach, SK. AB. MACDON 960 HEADER, 30’, PU reel, approx. 7500 acres, w/wo bi-dir. adapter, guage wheels, 306-448-4412, Manor, SK. 2009 CASE/IH 2142, 35’, very low acres, AFX adapter, $48,000 OBO. 306-563-8482 or 306-782-2586, Rama, SK.

2010 NEW HOLLAND 94C combine header 30' CR/CX adapter, double knife, xauger and lifters. UII PU reel with fore/aft. Always shedded in off season, $46,500. 306-236-7797, 306-236-6811, Meadow Lake, SK. rjwilfing@sasktel.net

USED GRAMMER AIR-RIDE seats, start at $895, fits tractors and combines. New also available. Call 1-800-667-4515 or visit: www.combineworld.com MAURER HOPPER EXTENSION for Case 8120 or 9120 combine. Will take factory hopper extension on trade. Can deliver. 306-245-3750, Francis, SK.

5150 Richmond Ave. East Brandon, MB

www.harvestsalvage.ca New Used & Re-man parts Tractors Combines Swathers SALVAGE NEW ARRIVALS: County, Nuffield, Volvo; Ford TW20, 6600, 5000, 3000; Int. 684, 574, 885; MF 165, 35, S90; David Brown 1210, 1410, 885. Unity, SK. 306-228-3011, www.britishtractor.com DEUTZ TRACTOR SALVAGE: Used parts for Deutz and Agco. Uncle Abe’s Tractor, 519-338-5769, fax 338-3963, Harriston ON SMITH’S TRACTOR WRECKING. Huge inventory new and used tractor parts. 1-888-676-4847. G.S. TRACTOR SALVAGE, JD tractors only. 306-497-3535, Blaine Lake, SK. WILSON CATTLELINER PARTS, gates, ramps, doors, etc. Wayne’s Trailer Repair, 306-497-2767, Blaine Lake, SK.

REMOTE CONTROL CONVERSION KITS. Convert any manually operated solenoid, air or hydraulic valve to wireless remote control. www.bullfrogcontrols.com

Huge Inventory Of Used, New & Rebuilt Combine & Tractor Parts. Tested And Ready To Ship. We Purchase Late Model Equipment For Parts.

LOEFFELHOLZ TRACTOR AND COMBINE Salvage, Cudworth, SK., 306-256-7107. We sell new, used and remanufactured parts for most farm tractors and combines.

S EXS M ITH US ED FARM P ARTS LTD . S EX S M ITH , ALTA. w w w .u sed fa rm pa rts.co m Em ail: fa rm pa rt@ telu spla n et.n et

YOUR ONE STOP FOR NEW , USED & REBUILT AG PARTS. Dis m a n tlin g a ll m a jor m a ke s a n d m ode ls of tra ctors , com b in e s , s w a th e rs , b a le rs a n d fora ge h a rve s te rs . Plu s M u ch M o re!

1-8 00-340-119 2 Bu yin g Fa rm Equ ipm en t Fo rD ism a n tlin g 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.

USED 2-SPEED CYLINDER kits for John Deere combines, from $2750. Call 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 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.

STEIGER TRACTOR PARTS for sale. Very affordable new and used parts available, made in Canada and USA. 1-800-982-1769 USED TERRAIN TRACER (lateral tilt) kit for TR86-88, from $850. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com PUMPS, PRESSURE WASHERS, Honda/Koshin pumps, 1-1/2” to 4”, Landa pressure washers, steam washers, parts washers. M&M Equip. Ltd. Parts and Service, Regina, SK., 306-543-8377, fax 306-543-2111. USED COMBINE ENGINES: Various models available in stock. Call 1-800-667-4515 www.combineworld.com

Combine World 1-800-667-4515, www. combineworld.com; 20 minutes east of Saskatoon, SK on Highway #16. Used Ag & Industrial equipment, new, used & rebuilt parts, & premium quality tires at unbeatable prices! 1 yr. warranty on all parts. Canada’s largest inventory of late model combines & swathers. Exceptional service.

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THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

CLASSIFIED ADS 39

NEW HOLLAND 1905 SP Forage Harvester 2013 JD 4940, 1200 gal. SS tank, 120’, 5 c/w PU and corn header. 780-674-2440 or sensor boom-trac, powerguard to May 780-305-4106, Barrhead, AB. 2016, $353,000. Call Russell, MB., 204-773-2149, or www.maplefarm.com JF-STOLL MODEL FCT-900 silage cutter, like new condition. 780-877-2339 or 2008 ROGATOR 1286C, 1200 gal. SS tank, 780-877-2326, Edberg, AB. 120’ aluminum Pommier boom, Raven G2, $199,000 Call Moosomin, SK., 306-435-3301, or www.maplefarm.com

KELLO-BILT 8’ to 20’ offset discs w/24� to 36� notched blades; Kello-Bilt 24’ to 38’ tandem wing discs w/26� and 28� notched blades and oil bath bearings. Red Deer, AB. www.kelloughs.com 1-888-500-2646. NEW 47’ SUMMERS incomparable diamond disc for $50,000 less than some competitors 40’ (high speed want to be) disc. Hauser Machinery, 1-888-939-4444, Melville, SK.

2013 JD 4940, 1200 gal. SS tank, 120’, 5 sensor boom-trac, powerguard to May 2016, $357,000. Call 306-547-2007, Preeceville, SK., or www.maplefarm.com

2012 WISHEK 824NT, heavy trips, 30" 2010 JD 1910 air cart, 3 tank, 430 bushel, blades with very little wear, disc type, d o u b l e s h o o t , $ 6 7 , 0 0 0 O B O. P h o n e tandem, $72,500. 306-746-7638, Raymore, 204-793-6760, Hazelridge, MB. SK. Email: h.hagro@sasktel.net

1994 3630 SPRA-COUPE, 2735 hrs, 400 gal. tank, 60’, low drift nozzles, exc. cond., $18,000. Call 780-385-1546, Killam, AB.

Call 1-888-920-1507

1998 SPRA-COUPE 3640, 5 spd, 80' Pommier alum. booms, 3-way nozzles, tow hitch, front E-kay dividers, spare 16.9x24 rear floaters. Outback AutoSteer ready, $37,500. 2006 CLAAS 870 Forage harvester, 1332 OBO. 204-529-2223, 204-825-7256, Mather, engine hrs., 1048 chopper hrs., c/w 380 MB. bczbmayo@mynetset.ca HD PU, 1 owner. 306-342-4447, Glaslyn SK INTERNATIONAL 3 ton, high/low NEW HOLLAND 892 Forage Harvester, in 1975 auto. trans., w/1997 AgShield 1000 good operating condition, shedded, $1000 4WD, gal. suspended boom AutoRate sprayer, OBO. 403-279-4767, Calgary, AB. $14,000. Call 306-268-4461, Viceroy, SK. 2007 APACHE 1010, 1400 hrs., 2 sets of tires, setup for Outback AutoSteer and Automate Raven AutoBoom, $105,000. 306-726-4326, Southey, SK.

1980 RENN VERTEC sprayer, 90’, 800 gal. 2013 JD 4940, 1200 gal. SS tank, 120’, 5 sensor boom-trac, powerguard to May INDIVIDUAL BALE WRAPPER 2010 tank (very good), booms are rough, $500 2016, $349,000. Call Foam Lake, SK. McHale 991 BE, good condition, $21,000 OBO. 306-460-6786, Kindersley, SK. 306-272-3345, or www.maplefarm.com OBO. Call 780-210-0800 or 780-636-2892 FLEXI-COIL 67XL, 120’, windscreens, dual evenings, Vilna, AB. nozzles, autorate, disc markers, premium, 2007 WILLMAR EAGLE 8500, 2 sets of tires, row crop dividers, new wheel hub motor, CRAWFORD HYDUMP silage wagon, $12,500. 306-460-8666, Netherhill, SK. $3900; Case/IH 8750 forage harvester, 1997 FLEXI-COIL 67XLT, wheel boom, upgrade hydraulics on boom, 2 full sets of $11,900. Call Pro Ag Sales, 306-441-2030 114’, windscreens, autofold, double air induction nozzles capable of almost every spray. 1020 gal SS tank, AutoBoom anytime, North Battleford, SK. booms, new tires, autorate, foam marker, control, Raven GPS, Midtech flow control, JF 1350 SILAGE CUTTER, excellent con- $8000. 306-648-2418, Gravelbourg, SK. SmarTrax AutoSteer, 2900 hrs, 5.9 industridition, $20,500. Phone 403-588-0958, 100’ AG SHIELD sprayer, 1200 gal. tank, al Cummins, runs great, $102,000. Alix, AB. 100 gal. wash out tank, $15,000 OBO. 403-501-4959, Rosemary, AB. 2006 JD 7400 SP Forage Harvester, 2000 204-851-5520, Cromer, MB. hrs, KP PU head incl, (corn head extra), NH 110 90’ suspended boom sprayer, $159,500 OBO. 204-573-5734, Brandon, MB gauge wheels, windscreen, 800 gal. tank, NH FORAGE HARVESTER FX58, 355 PU, variable rate, used very little, stored inKP, RI450 corn head, 2109 chopper hrs., side, $18,000; 40’ MORRIS MAGNUM II all updates, exc. cond., field ready. Call 740 chisel plow w/harrows, used little, $18,000. Located at Cupar SK, call 403-634-4026, Lethbridge, AB. 306-545-7024, 306-723-4773. 2001 NH 240 forage harvester, very well maintained, $19,000; RICHARDTON 700 2011 NH HIGH clearance sprayer, always hydump silage wagon, $7000. Both units shedded, like new condition, very low acres, big tire pkg. option, triple nozzles, ready to work. 306-736-7239, Kipling, SK. 1350 gal. tank, 100’ booms, Raven Auto2000 CASE/IH 8750 forage harvester, Boom flotation guidance pkg., asking 2011 JD 4930 120’ sprayer w/ 1635 hours, June 2014 JD Green Light inspection so 1000 PTO, shedded, $6500. Minitonas, MB $47,000. 306-662-8405, Richmound, SK. field ready!!. $199,800. Trades welcome. waltersequipment.com Ph. 204-525-4521. SPRAY-AIR 80’, 3 point hitch, Raven 440 Financing 1-800-667-4515. available. YOUNG’S EQUIPMENT INC. For all your controller, $5500. Call 306-445-5602, www.combineworld.com silage equipment needs call Ron toll free North Battleford, SK. 1998 WILLMAR 8100 sprayer, 3444 hours, 306-565-2405, Regina, SK. FLEXI-COIL 67, 90’ susp. boom, autorate, high clearance, AWD, 90’, $42,800. Trades ve r y g o o d c o n d i t i o n , $ 1 4 , 5 0 0 O B O. w e l c o m e , f i n a n c i n g a v a i l a b l e . 306-699-2442, McLean, SK. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 2003 FLEXI-COIL 67, 90’, very clean, suspended boom, high clearance, autorate, $14,800. Trades welcome, financing avail. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 130’ FLEXI-COIL 67XL PT sprayer, triple nozzles, autorate, 1200 gal. tank, $7500. For details call 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. 2006 26’ CANCADE silage box, 60� sides plus 2’ extensions c/w silage gate, plastic liner on floor, great condition, asking $8000 Contact Ken at 306-435-7405 or Kevin at 306-435-7313 Westwood Land & Cattle Ltd. Moosomin, SK. 1265 GAL. GEHL forage harvester, $2800 OBO. 306-252-2227, Kenaston, SK. 2007 NH P240 FORAGE HARVESTER w/PU, bought in 2009, $26,000. Call A.E. Chicoine Farm Equip. Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. RICHARDTON HI-DUMPS #1200, #750, #770; JD 3970 Harvester, $8900; NH 890, $2500; IH 781, $2500; JD 7.5 Hay head, $3000. 1-866-938-8537, Manitoba. 2004 IHC 7400 tandem automatic with new 20’ silage box, $74,900. 2006 Freighliner Columbia with new 20’ silage box, 470 Detroit with 15 spd., $69,900. K&L Equipment and Auto. Phone Ladimer at: 306-795-7779, Ituna, SK. DL #910885. NEW HOLLAND 2 row corn header, fits 892 NH Harvester, shedded, like new, $1000. Call 306-748-2817, Killaly, SK. NEW HOLLAND FR9080 FORAGE harvester, 900 hrs, c/w 8 row corn head and 15’ PU header. 403-394-4401, Lethbridge, AB.

Are you driving over your money? Built heavy to last Field proven for over 15 years

1-866-292-6115 www.tridekon.ca

NEW 53’ SPRAYER trailers, 80,000 GVWR air ride, multi-use trailer w/beavertail, 13’ top deck, 40’ main deck. See your nearest TWO COMPLETE SEEDING OUTFITS. 1) Tractor: 1998 NH 9482, 3549 hrs, S/N Flaman location or call 1-888-435-2626. D107185, GPS, shedded. Seeder: 48’, 12� spacing, Acraplant openers, Agtron blockage monitors, dual Flexi-Coil markers. Air Cart: 2010 NH P1040, single shoot, course/fine/extra fine rollers. 2) Tractor: 1996 Ford/NH 9280, 3540 hrs, S/N D102993, shedded. Seeder: 42’, 12� spac2003 CONSERVA PAK 39’, 12� spacing, ing, Acraplant openers, Agtron blockage rubber on-row packers, DS, 1 owner, c/w monitors, dual Flexi-Coil markers. Air JD TBT 787 air tank, 230 bu. plus 3rd tank, C a r t : Flexi-Coil 2320, single shoot, $46,000 OBO. Call Korvin 306-772-0330 or course/fine/extra fine rollers. All items Lawrence 403-823-6016, McMahon, SK. field ready. Will separate units, special price for complete outfit. Call for info, 2012 K-HART DISC drill 42’, new style terms, pics. Eston, SK. 306-962-4332, openers, 2002 Bourgault 5350 tank. 306-962-3823. 306-460-7767, Eatonia, SK. 1989 15’ and 12’ MF 360 discers, rolled blades 3 yrs ago, seeded 320 acres yearly on rock-free land, $1000 OBO; 6� Brandt end gate drill fill, hardly used, hyd ram on joint, $400. 306-460-6786, Kindersley, SK.

A TTEN TION

2010 C/IH 4420, 120’ Aim command, Viper Pro monitor, 2 sets tires, 1500 hrs., always shedded, exc. cond. $245,000 OBO. 306-463-7866, adwildman@hotmail.com 2013 JD 4830 sprayer, 100’ booms, 1000 Flaxcombe, SK. gal. SS tank, 290 hours, $248,000 OBO. P o w e r t r a i n w a r r a n t y u n t i l 2 0 1 7 . 2008 MILLER CONDOR A40 MD1000, 100’ SP, excellent cond., ready to go! $99,800. 204-612-6531, 204-794-4878, Cartier, MB. Trades welcome, financing available. 2003 ROGATOR 1064, 1000 gal. SS tank, 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 100’, 3 ways, Raven AutoBoom height control, $120,000. Call Moosomin, SK., 306-435-3301, or www.maplefarm.com 2011 JD 4930 120’, 1635 hrs., June 2014 JD Greenlight so its field ready!! $199,800. Trades welcome, financing available. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com

Cons erva Pa k & JD 1870 ow ners

EXCELLENT SELECTION OF new NH 70’ P2070 precision drills on 10� and 12� spacing available w/P1060, 430 bu. or P1070, 580 bu. air carts. In stock, massive July savings! Very attractive lease payments available OAC. Markusson New Holland of Regina Ltd., call 1-800-819-2583 or 306-781-2828. www.markusson.com

SUM M ER CLEARANCE ON

2006 MORRIS 40’ horizontal fold, no-till disc air drill, markers, w/7240 TBT tank, low acres, $67,000 OBO. Will take grain on trade. 306-693-9847, Moose Jaw, SK.

S em i-pneum a tic Pa ckerW heels

2010 SEED HAWK 5012, 500 tank with sectional control, liquid kit, 2100 gallon tank, blockage monitors and large tires. 306-268-4371, Bengough, SK. 2008 Miller Condor A40 MD1000, 100’ SP in excellent condition, ready to go. $99,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

34’ CASE/IH 4600 cultivator with 3 row harrows in very good condition. Call 2009 DEGELMAN 82’ HARROWS with 204-425-3837, Sundown, MB. Valmar, 5/8� tine, 26� length, new hoses, WANTED: FLEXI-COIL 800 or 820 or JD great shape. Call 306-533-4891, Gray, SK. 1610 deep tillage cultivator, 12� spacing, 1997 DEGELMAN 7000, 70’ HD harrows, heavy trips, 37’ - 41’. Must be in vg cond. n i c e s h ap e , $ 2 4 , 5 0 0 . C a l l D ave at 204-556-2622, 204-748-5520, Cromer, MB 306-424-7511, Montmartre, SK. LIKE NEW BOURGAULT #6800 36’ cultiBOURGAULT 60’ HARROW BAR, Vers-A- vator with or without harrows. Phone SteBar 5400 good shape, $4000. Canwood, ven 306-338-2927, Wadena, SK. SK. Call 306-468-4063 or 306-468-2621. USED WISHEK DISCS for sale. Previously 1981 FLEXI-COIL 45’ harrow packers, dia- in our rental fleet. 12’, 14’, 22’ or 26’ startmond harrow, 15� tires, good heavy pack- ing at $27,995. See the Saskatoon Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. ers, $1500. 306-460-6786, Kindersley, SK.

2006 39’ FLEXI-COIL 5000 HD w/3850 TBT cart, 10� spacing, steel packers, knife edge openers, variable rate, excellent shape! $79,900. Call Jordan anytime, 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. MOON HEAVY HAUL pulling air drills/ air seeders, packer bars, Alberta and Sask. 30 years experience. Call Bob Davidson, Drumheller, AB. 403-823-0746. JD 1900/1910 air carts, 350/340 bushel, both in good condition, $29,800/$34,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 2010 SEED HAWK 6010, S/N #101095 w/2010 Seed Hawk 600 bu. tank, S/N #101137. Big rubber all the way around, $200,000. 306-548-5440, Danbury, SK. WANTED: 5-1/2� RUBBER packers for Flexi-Coil 5000, 9� spacing. Will trade 4-1/2� steel. 403-793-1705, Brooks, AB.

Fertilizer/Seed Openers 20% dis count Â

HUGE SELECTION OF new front boom New Holland Guardian sprayers and a good selection of used sprayers in stock. Markusson New Holland of Regina Ltd., Regina, BEHNKE DROP DECK semi style and S K . , p h o n e 1 - 8 0 0 - 8 1 9 - 2 5 8 3 o r pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, tandem and tridems. Contact SK: 306-781-2828, www.markusson.com 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336. FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS We also specialize in: Crop insurance ap- 2-JD rims and tires at 80%, good for spraypeals; Spray drift; Residual herbicide; Cus- ers, 420/80/46 Firestone R, 10 bolt, exc NEW HOLLAND FP240, good working tom operator issues; Equip. malfunction. cond, $6500. 306-744-7955, Saltcoats, SK. cond., spout extensions and walking axle. Call Back-Track Investigations for assisUSED RIMS AND TIRES 710/70R38, for Jonathan, 306-743-7099, Langenburg, SK. tance and compensation 1-866-882-4779. Case 4420, or JD 47 series; also used tires a n d n ew r i m s fo r J D 4 7 3 0 , $ 7 5 0 0 . 306-697-2856, Grenfell, SK.

2004 BOURGAULT 5710, 47’, 3.5� steel packers, series 25, NH3/Dry banders, Raven Super Cooler w/440 monitor, 4300 single shoot air tank w/rear hitch, $65,000. 204-743-2149, Cypress River, MB

WANTED: VALMAR AIR SEEDER trailer type, in excellent condition. Call: 780-723-2646, Edson, AB.

TRIDEKON CROP SAVER, crop dividers. Reduce trampling losses by 80% to 90%. Call Great West Agro, 306-398-8000, Cut 1990 FLEXI-COIL 800 35’ air seeder with Knife, SK. Bourgault 2155 tank, 12� spacing, single 2-JOHN DEERE rims and tires, Michelin shoot, 14� shovels, Splitter boots, liquid AgriRib at 75%, 420/80/46, no center fert. kit, harrows, $19,500. Call Jordan disc, $4200. 306-744-7955, Saltcoats, SK. anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB.

GET THE REAL FACTS about vertical tillage. Call for a complete info pkg. and take advantage of our 2 for 1 sale. Get a 40’ Summers vertical tillage machine, plus a 32.5’ high quality Summers field disc for the same price as the competitors (high speed want to be) disc. Call Hauser Machinery, Melville, SK. 1-888-939-4444. KELLO-BILT OFFSET DISCS. Check out our new arrivals and pricing discounts. 2012, 16’, excellent shape, and parts for Kello and Rome dics. Brewster Ag, Earl Grey, SK., 306-939-4402, 306-731-7235. HIGH SPEED DISCS now available at Flam a n . E n g i n e e r e d fo r s t r e n g t h a n d durability, the specialized design of the KLine SpeedTiller is in a class of its own for superior soil and residue management. 20’ 28’ and 30’ models available. See your nearest Flaman store or 1-888-435-2626. 2012 30’ WISHEK DISC 842. Has harrows, front blades are 28.5�, rear blades 29.5�, exc. cond., serviced, field ready, $65,000. Lautts Rental, 701-324-2289, Harvey, N.D. 2009 22’ WISHEK DISC 862 tandem. Gate harrows w/carbide tips, front blades 28�, rear blades 28�. The disc is in nice condition, serviced, field ready, $41,500. Lautts Rental, 701-324-2289, Harvey, N.D.

Â

BOURGAULT FH46-52, 48’ cult., 8� spacing, 330 trips, 4-Bar quick change harrows, $19,950. 306-782-9507, Willowbrook, SK.

IN D IA N H E A D S K .

2014 ROME TRCW-20, 16’ wide, 20 36� disks, 1032 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 20� spacing, $79,072. 204-256-2098, Treherne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com

FACTORY DIRECT PRICIN G

306-695-2460

w w w .va lesolu t ion s.ca

DISCS: WISHEK 14’, $20,000; Kewanee breaking disc, 13’ and 16’; Towner 21’; IH 490 25’, $7500; JD 15’, $5000; 22’, $9500; 30’, $10,500; Versatile 1800 36’, $25,000; 2008 22’ WISHEK DISC 862 tandem. Gate Phoenix harrows 42’ and 53’; Disc rippers: harrows w/carbide tips, front blades 26.5�, DMI 5 shank, $8900; 7 shank, $10,900. rear blades 26�. The disc is in nice condi- 1-866-938-8537, Portage la Prairie, MB. tion, serviced, field ready, $39,000. Lautts 2009 SCHULTE XH1500, Wing Walkings Rental, 701-324-2289, Harvey, N.D. axles, gauge wheels, excellent shape, WANTED: BIG HEAVY disc, 22’, Rome or $19,900. 1-800-352-6264, Flaman Sales, Wishek. Must be in perfect shape. Call Nisku, AB. 204-372-6201 or 204-308-0256. 2014 ROME TACW-20, 14’ wide, 20 32� 1978 MORRIS ROD weeder, 36’, harrows disks, 552 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 17 removed, used very little, $500; 1981 Mor- 3/4� spacing, $42,467. 204-256-2098, Treris 30’ HD cultivator w/dead rod, tine har- herne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com rows, several new shovels and hyd. rams, GENUINE ROME PLOW parts from Cana$1000. 306-460-6786, Kindersley, SK. da’s only authorized dealer. Call Hird FARM KING FIELD DISCS ON SALE. Equipment 204-256-2098, Treherne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com Call 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com

2010 6550 CART w/X20 monitor, rear tow hitch, bag lift, excellent, $95,000. Contact Trent 306-540-5275 or Tyler 306-533-8834. Located near Regina, SK. 2009 MORRIS MAXIM II 50’, 10� spacing, 8370XL 3 compartment tank, vg condition, $97,900. Trades welcome, financing avail. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com

KELLO-BILT DISC PARTS: Blades and bearings. Parts to fit most makes and models. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. www.kelloughs.com NEW 2012 MODEL 11S30 Thurston Blue Jet folding sub tiller, 21’ wide, SN 015068, 11 shanks, asking $42,000. Discounted to sell. Call Don 306-548-5440, Danbury, SK.

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40

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

1.888.986.2946 2001 DOEPKER LEAD SUPER B GRAIN

2007 GREAT DANE FLATDECK

2008 GREAT DANE REEFER VAN

2001 LODE KING FLATDECK

Grain, Air suspension, Tridem axle, Aluminum Look-A-Like In and out rims, Tarp: Rollover White, Hoppers: 22” White, Width: 102in, Length: 38ft. Brandon, MB Stock # 11013365U

Deck, Flatdeck, 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

Reefer Van, suspension, Single axle, Reefer: Carrier , Steel rims, Alum Duct Floor floor, 30 king pin, Length: 28ft. Mississauga, ON. Stock # V683105

Deck, Flatdeck, Air suspension, Tandem axle, Steel rims, Wood floor, Width: 102in, Length: 48ft. Winnipeg, MB. Stock #1A034839U

2007 INTERNATIONAL 9900I 6X4

2007 FREIGHTLINER CLASSIC XL

Tandem Axle Sleeper Tractor, Cummins ISX engine (500 HP), Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (13 speed), air brakes, 1100000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, diff Lock rear lockup, A/C, 72” hi-rise sleeper, single bunk, one owner trade. Regina, SK. Stock #6872-07A

Tandem Axle Sleeper Tractor, Detroit S60 engine, Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (13 speed), air brakes, 1268000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, 3-way rear lockup, A/C, 70” condo sleeper. Winnipeg, MB. Stock #1622-07A

2005 FREIGHTLINER CLASSIC XL

2000 VOLVO VN660

Tandem Axle Sleeper Tractor, Cat C15 engine, Eaton Fuller transmission (18 speed), 1276756 km, 46000 lbs rear axle capacity, A/C, 72” Sky-Rise sleeper, double bunk. Calgary, AB. Stock #4901-05A.

Tandem Axle Sleeper Tractor, Volvo 12.1L engine (460 HP), Eaton Fuller O/D transmission (13 speed), air brakes, 1107375 km, 12350 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, diff lock rear lockup, A/C, hi-rise sleeper, double bunk. Prince Albert, SK. Stock #0394-00R.

39,900

$

17,900

$

2007 INTERNATIONAL 9400I 6X4 Tandem Axle Sleeper Tractor, Cummins ISX engine, Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (18 speed), ABS brakes, 943000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 46000 lbs rear axle capacity, 4-Way rear lockup, A/C, 72” hi-rise sleeper, single bunk. Calgary, AB. Stock # V472526

19,900

10,500

$

56,500

$

$

42,000

$

59,000

$

2005 VOLVO VN670 Tandem Axle Sleeper Tractor, Volvo 12.1L engine (465 HP), Eaton Fuller transmission (13 speed), air brakes, 1510000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, A/C, 70” hi-rise sleeper, double bunk, exhaust replaced from turbo. Winnipeg, MB. Stock #2045-05A.

29,900

$

22,500

$

32,500

$ 1997 KENWORTH T800

2007 INTERNATIONAL 9400I6X4

2009 INTERNATIONAL PROSTAR PREMIUM

2009 INTERNATIONAL PROSTAR

Tandem Axle Sleeper Tractor, Cummins ISM engine (370 HP), Eaton Fuller auto shift transmission (13 speed), air brakes, 1663553 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, diff lock rear lockup, A/C, 60” mid-rise sleeper, single bunk. Prince Albert, SK. Stock #8898-97A.

Tandem Axle Sleeper Tractor, Cummins ISX engine, Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (18 speed), air brakes, 956000 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 46000 lbs rear axle capacity, 3-way rear lockup, A/C, 72” hi-rise sleeper, single bunk, heavy specs. Calgary, AB. Stock #V472602

Tandem Axle Sleeper Tractor, Cummins ISX engine, Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (13 speed), air brakes, 610000 km, 12350 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, 3-way rear lockup, A/C, 56” hi-rise sleeper, single bunk. Regina, SK. Stock #V492725

Tandem Axle Sleeper Tractor, Cummins ISX engine, Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (13 speed), ABS brakes, 866200 km, 12000 lbs front axle capacity, 40000 lbs rear axle capacity, 3-way rear lockup, A/C, 73” Hi-Rise sleeper, double bunk, clean owner op trade all leather interior. Brandon, MB. Stock #4914-09RA

19,500

$

49,900

$

65,000

$

59,900

$

Start your career with us in our brand new state-of-the-art shop at 501 Middleton Ave., Brandon, MB

OPENING JUNE 2014!! 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 fullservice truck and trailer dealer with a national presence.

RECRUITING

TRANSPORT TRUCK & TRAILER TECHNICIANS

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 Te Apply to: r u Truck & Trailer n O MaximOnline i o at: J

www.maximinc.com/jobs


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

OVER

RV

SUMMER

50 USED UNITS IN STOCK

41

SUPER

SIZZLER

SALE

2014 THOR

AXIS 24.1 THE NEW RUV

(RECREATIONAL UTILITY VEHICLE)

NOW ONLY

$

87,980 2014 FOREST RIVER SUITE B

2014 Winnebago Navion 24G Diesel

THE SMART CHOICE IN MOTORHOMES

2014 Thor Ace 27.1

BEST SELLING CLASS A

2014 Fuzion 331 STARTING AT 10 TOY HAULERS IN STOCK

2014 Roadtrek 210 Popular

2014 Itasca Viva

(PERFECT FOR HIRED HANDS)

59,980

THERE IS SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE! FROM $9,990 - $99,990 BEST SELLING 5TH WHEEL FOR 10 YEARS STARTING AT

$48,980

TWO INDEPENDENT SUITES $

Radisson

2014 Quailridge 38 FLA 10 PARK MODELS IN STOCK

2014 Montana High Country 293RKS $55,980

STARTING AT

$49,990

RADISSON, SK , HWY 16 | OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK | 9 AM - 8 PM | 1.877. 827.4845 | SUNRIDGERVS.CA DEALER LICENSE #319015

GREENLIGHT TRUCK & AUTO 2014 FORD F250 LARIAT

SUVs

2013 DODGE RAM 1500 SPORT

IN STOCK

$

22KM LOADED LEATHER PST PD SAVE $$$$$ 6.7L DIESEL

55,995

2013 DODGE RAM 1500 SLT

$

4X4 HEMI LOADED 18KM SAVE $$$

31,995

2012 FORD F150 XTR

LOADED 21KM PST PD 5.0L 4X4 MUSE SEE

31,995

$

4x4

PRE-OWNED PICK-UPS 2011 FORD F150 LARIAT LIMITED FULLY LOADED

LEATHER SUNROOF NAV 4X4 6.2L PST PD

37,995

$

FRESH TRADE

PST PD LOADED HEMI 38KM MUST SEE

2011 FORD F150 XLT

3.5L ECO BOOST LOADED VALUE

24,995

$

TRADES

2013 GMC SIERRA 2500 SLE

24,995

$

2010 DODGE RAM 1500 TRX

109KM LOADED HEMI PST PD

WE TAKE

LOADED 6.0L 4X4 17KM

NEW ARRIVAL

2009 CHEV SILVERADO 1500

BIGGEST SELECTION

HUGE INDOOR SHOW ROOM

LT ONLY 89KM 4X4 PST PD 5.3L

19,995

$

2012 DODGE RAM 2500 OUTDOORSMAN

6.7L LOADED DIESEL 89KM

39,995

$

2011 FORD F150 PLATINUM

5.0L PST PD FULLY LOADED SUNROOF LEATHER NAVIGATION

2 TO CHOOSE STARTING AT

34,995

$

2012 DODGE RAM 1500 LARAMIE SPORT

HEMI 4X4 PST PD LEATHER SUNROOF NAVIGATION

BLACK BEAUTY

www.GreenlightAuto.ca

Call FINANCE HOTLINE 306-934-1455 2715 FAITHFULL AVE., SASKATOON, SK.

DL#311430


42

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

NEW WILSON GOOSENECK, FOREMAN & GROUNDLOAD LIVESTOCK TRAILERS On Order & Special Order Available Various Options Available

NEW WILSON DECKS AVAILABLE

NEW MUVALL EQUIPMENT TRAILER HYDRAULIC BEAVER TAILS & HYDRAULIC OR MANUAL DETACH TRAILERS

Various Options Available

Available in 8 ½’ or 10’ Wide On Order – Custom Spec Available

WESTERN CANADA'S ONLY FULL LINE MUV-ALL DEALER

CANADA’S ONLY

NEW WILSON SUPER B, TANDEM & TRIDEM GRAIN 2 & 3 HOPPERS AVAILABLE

FULL LINE WILSON DEALER

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 DUAL KITS — ALL MAKES & MODELS

1-800-667-4515 www.combineworld.com

AGGRESSIVE PRICING, TRADES WANTED

CALL US!!

20 min. E of Saskatoon on Hwy. 16

NEW TIRE DEALS

WHAT DO CUSTOMERS SAY ABOUT

FACTORY DIRECT – NO MIDDLEMEN

11R22.5 16ply ................. $299 11.2x24 8ply .................... $199 16.9x24 8ply ................... $549 16.9x26 10ply ................. $685 23.1x26 R3 12ply ............ $995

16.9x28 12ply ................. $558 16.9x30 12ply ................. $495 18.4x34 12ply ................. $645 23.1x30 12ply .............. $1,495 20.8x38 12ply .................. $795

24.5x32 14ply .............. $1,495 30.5x32 16ply ............. $1,995 900/60R32 20ply..........$2,995 520/85R42 162A8 Radial ................. $1,790

MORE SIZES IN STOCK. RIMS ALSO AVAILABLE

NEW WOBBLE BOXES — USED & REBUILT ALSO AVAILABLE MACDON $ (Old-Style) ..............

1,495 $ (New-Style)............. 1,995 NEW UNLOADING AUGER EXTENSIONS $ Fits JD, CIH................... 895 LONG UNLOADING AUGER TUBES $ JD 9500/9650/STS 50 1,175 $ CIH 1660-2388 ............... 772

SALVAGE 06’ Cat Lexicon 590R, under 900 hours ’11 JD 9770 STS, less than 600 hours, awesome parts included, complete dual kit $ w/ tires .....

16,900

CASE-IH $ 1010/1020 .............

1,595 $ 4000/5000 ............. 1,595

JOHN DEERE $ 200/900 New ......... 200/900 HD ............

1,095 1,595

$

NEW TX VARIABLE DRIVE PULLEYS

995 $ Inner pulley P/n 439596 .... 740 Outer pulley P/n 754385...

$

ROTOR GEAR BOXES

1,250 $ TR89-99, 2 spd., RHS.. 3,750 TR70-95, 1 spd., RHS..

$

CombineWorld ? “Combine World is very well organized w/ knowledgeable, courteous, and efficient staff. Nice to deal with. Thanks!” –Hubert Deroche

SAVE UP TO 50%

LOTS OF NEW & USED PARTS 1 YEAR WARRANTY

USED PICKUP REELS

PICKUP REELS

5,795....... 6,830 6,795........ $7,900 $ $ 36’............................ 7,900....... 8,900

40’ MD FD70 ....................................... $8,480 42’ UII 88C ........................................... $7,800 36’ UII SP Series .................................. $6,980 36’ MD 974 ......................................... $6,980 36’ HCC SP36 ...................................... $3,980

NEW JD PARTS

NEW CIH PARTS

NEW IN STOCK

HCC

25’............................

$

30.............................

$

UII $

IN STOCK JD front concave plate .............................. $425 JD 9600/10, 9650/60 sieve frame .......... $1,473 JD 9600/10, 9650/10 straw walker ........ $1,100 JD 9600 upper feeder shaft ...................... $895 JD 9600 front walker crank ...................... $580 JD 9400-9600/CTS/CTSII cleaning fan drive pulley & half-pulley .................. $245 JD 9000 series RHS feederhouse shield .... $310

USED ENGINES

FINAL DRIVES READY TO GO!

JD 7.6L.................. 5,980 Ford 7.8L ............... $3,450 Cat 3208 ............................................. $3,900 Perkins 640 ......................................... $4,950 Cummins 8.3L ..................................... $6,900 Genesis 7.5L......................................... $7,500

CRARY HOPPER EXTENSIONS $

$

NEW REDEKOP CHOPPERS

JD 50/60 series MAV rotor upgrade ..... $4,650 TR 95-99 .............................................. $9,170 CIH 88 series ....................................... $9,630 CR 920-960/9040/9060 ....................... $9,270 MF 8570-8780XP ................................. $9,270

OPEN SATURDAYS 8 A.M.-2 P.M. SUNDAYS, CALL US!

JD 9400-9600/CTS/CTSII Rebuilt ................ $4,750 Used LHS ............$3,250 STS Used RHS ............$3,950 CIH 80/88 series ............ 1,795 JD 9000 series, CTS ...... $1,795 NH TR 95-99 ................. $1,795

NEW STRAWCHOPPERS IN STOCK

CIH 40/60 chopper w/drive .................. $4,080 CIH 80/88 series w/drive ...................... $4,310 JD STS 70 Series.................................. $5,145 JD 9600/10/50/60 ............................... $3,845 USED CHOPPERS ALSO AVAILABLE

IN STOCK

CIH 1640-2388 front rotor bearing holder .................................. $395 CIH 1680-2388 header lift cylinder ........... $625 CIH 1640-2588 unloading auger elbow .... $880 CIH 80/88 series unloading auger extn ..... $895 CIH heavy-duty rear steering axle centre tube ......................................... $1,690

USED CHAFF SPREADERS BLOWOUT SALE!

695

Complete units, $ while supplies last ........................... MOST MAKES AND MODELS AVAILABLE

USED KITS Cross-flow fan kit, CIH 80/88 ........................................... $1,975 2-spd Cylinder kit, JD 8820 ................. $2,250 Bubble-up auger kit, TR96-98 .............. $1,980 Reel fore & aft, TR95-99........................... $975 Terrain Tracer, TR 98-99 ......................... $850


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

43

New Holland CR Series combines handle grain more efficiently from the tip of the header until your grain is in the bin. New Holland Twin Rotors® generate 36% to 40% higher centrifugal force than any other rotary design on the market for the absolute fastest threshing and separating — now that’s SMART. Plus, you get these high-efficiency features: • On-the-go dynamic stone protection • Largest cleaning area in the industry

SMART

• Unique self-leveling cleaning shoe with Opti-fan

FROM HEADER TO BIN.

• Fast unloading

© 2014 CNH Industrial America LLC. All rights reserved. New Holland is a trademark registered in the United States and many other countries, owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates.

FARM WORLD OFFERS WARRANTY ON ALL USED COMBINES. SPECIAL FINANCING ALSO AVAILABLE

2013 New Holland CR9090

HN3136. 165 HRS, 620 front duals, 28Lx26 rear tires, mech stone protection, deluxe NH chopper, HID lights, IntelliCruise, IntelliSteer, engine compressor, long auger, yield and moisture.

S/A payment

$

27,950

60 month lease, $150,000 buy-out, OAC MSRP $

+ GST

EXPECT MORE FROM FARM WORLD YOUR FARMING PARTNER!

550,000

FARM WORLD COMBINE CASH DEAL CLEARANCE! ! 2012 NEW HOLLAND CR9090

2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9080

2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9080

2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9080

2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9090

N22195A. 541 HRS, 426 SEP HRS, 591 HSP, 2WD, 350 TANK, STANDARD CHOPPER REAR ATTACH, 30” STEERING TIRE, 520/85R42 DUALS, GPS. WAS $374,000

PN3014B. 566 HRS, 440 SEP HRS, ROTORS, 620/70R42 DUALS, 28L-26 REAR TIRES, LUX CAB,AUTOSTEER 262, LARGE SCREEN ,WIDE SPREAD CHOPPER S/N #RM21017. WAS $463,000

PN3015B. 554 HRS, 438 SEP HRS, 620/70R42 DUALS, 28L-26 12PR R1, AXLE EXTENSIONS, 30” PLATFORM EXTENSIONS, 4HB FIELD SPEED HEADER DRIVE, FEEDER HD WLF, VARIABLE SPEED TERRAIN TRACK. WAS $463,000

HN3146A. 885 HRS, 710 SEP HRS, 790CP 16’ PU HEADER, STRAW CHOPPER DELUXE NH, AXLE DIFF LOCK, 620/70R42 DUALS, 600/65R28 REAR, AUGER LONG UNLOADING, AXLE POWER REAR WHEEL DRIVE, Y&M W/GPS. WAS $285,000

HN3373A. 1068 HRS, 816 SEP HRS, TIRES DIS 620/70R42, AUTO GUIDANCE NAV II, AXLE EXT., AXLE DIFF LOCK, LIGHTING HID, INTELLICRUISE, INTELLISTEER READY, FULL AUTO GUIDANCE, W/ 790CP HEADER 15’. WAS $335,000

NOW

$

305,000 CASH

NOW

$

299,000 CASH

2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

2010 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

N22200A. 953 HRS, 751 SEP HRS, 350 TANK, 900 DRIVES, REDEKOPP MAV CHOPPER,HID LGHTG,LARGE TOUCH SCREEN, PW7 SWATHMASTER PU HEAD, LONG, UNLOADING AUGER, 900 TIRES. WAS $317,000

N22229A. 440 HRS, 415 SEP HRS, 400 HP, 16’ SWATHMASTER PU, MAV CHPR, DIFF LOCK, HID LIGHTS, DLX PSD NH CHPR, INTELLISTEER READY. WAS $317,000

NOW

$

229,000

NOW

$

229,000

2009 NEW HOLLAND CR9080

2004 NEW HOLLAND CR960

HN2912A. 718 HRS, 558 SEP HRS, 900 FRONT TIRES, 600 REAR TIRES, AIR, DLX NH CHOPPER, 16’ SWATHMASTER PU, SM MONITOR, LEATHER. WAS $235,000

PN2493B. 330 HRS, 950 SEP HRS, 76C14W HEADER, MICHEL’S TARP, STRWEL DRV 3HB/4HB, REINF STEER AXLE, STD ELEVATORS, SMALL GRAIN SIEVE, STD HYD NA+F/A+LF, ROTOR DRV DUAL H SPD, TW900/60R32 LI176 R1, SW600/65R28 LI147 R1, GOODYEAR. WAS $137,000

$

212,000

NOW

$

109,000

NOW

$

299,000 CASH

NOW

$

259,000 CASH

2009 NEW HOLLAND CR9070 PN2892A. 965 HRS, 691 SEP HRS, HD LIFT PACKAGE FF, YIELD MON PKG FF, REINF STEER AXLE, STD ELEV CR9070, STD HYD NA CR9070, 900/65R32 FRONT TIRES, 620/65 REAR TIRES. WAS $205,500 NOW

$

175,000

Hwy. #3, Kinistino 306-864-3667 David H ........... 306-921-7896 Jim .................. 306-864-8003 Kelly ................ 306-961-4742 David J. ........... 306-864-7603 SPRAYER DEPT. Mike ................ 306-921-5070 PRECISION FARMING DEPT. Brad ................ 306-864-2660

299,000 CASH 2006 NEW HOLLAND CR970

HN2991A. 1053 HRS, 826 SEP HRS, LGHTG. HID, LONG UNLOADING AUGER, NH STRAW CHOPPER DELUXE, AXLE DIFF LOCK, 14’ 76C NH PICKUP, INTELLIVIEW PLUS 2 DISPLAY, Y&M, 900/60R32 FRONT, 600/65R28 REAR. WAS $265,000

N21483B. 1888 HRS, 370HP, DEL CAB, HDR LIF, CD PLAYER, COOLANT HEATER, BEACONS, CONCAVE AWNING PLATES, SERVICE LIGHT, 540/65R30 REAR, 20.8R42 DUALS, SL FAN BOTTOM SHIELD, REDEKOP CHPPR. WAS $178,000

N21798B. 2512 HRS, 1669 SEP HRS, 310 HP, REDEKOP CHOPPER, YIELD/ MOISTURE, 900 DRIVES, 600 REARS, 14FT SWATH. WAS $132,500

$

$

2009 NEW HOLLAND CR9080

NOW

$

205,000

2005 NEW HOLLAND CR970

NOW

NOW

119,000

NOW

$

148,000

2005 JOHN DEERE 9760 STS

2004 NEW HOLLAND CR960

N22081B . 2478 HRS, 1834 SEP HRS, LIGHTS SERVICE, TOUCHSET, AUGER 22.5’ UNLOADING HIGH CAP, 615 PICKUP, Y&M, 800/70R38 SINGLES. WAS $152,000

PN2872D. 2532 HRS, 1956 SEP HRS, 76C 14’ RAKE UP HEADER, 900 TIRES, YIELD/ MOISTURE, PSP CHOPPER. WAS $129,500

NOW

$

137,000

Hwy. #5, Humboldt 306-682-9920

Hwy. #2 S., Prince Albert 306-922-2525

Perry ............... 306-231-3772 Shane .............. 306-231-5501

Brent ............... 306-232-7810 Aaron .............. 306-960-7429 Tyler ................ 306-749-7115 SPRAYER & GPS DEPT. Chris ............... 306-960-6519

NOW

$

92,000 Visit

www.farmworld.ca for our full inventory


44

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

WARMAN /64, *,5;9,

SERVING SASKATOON & AREA FOR OVER 25 YEARS

READY TO MOVE HOMES Delivering homes ON TIME to happy customers in Sask., Alta., and Man. 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

$16,125

$24,750

40x56x16

$16,485

$25,610

40x64x16

$18,140

$27,995

40x64x16

$18,290

$28,645

48x80x16

$24,865

$39,650

48x80x16

$24,500

$39,785

48x96x16

$28,900

$46,640

48x96x16

$27,900

$46,140

$73,715

60x120x16

$42,600

$71,540

60x120x16

$45,275

w Book Nory Of e For Deliv me in Your Ho

INVENTOR BLOWOUT Y ! All

15

0 2014 or 2

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

1X6 8’ SPRUCE $ ROUGH CUT .......... (In stock only)

2

15

RAILROAD $ TIES ...................... (In stock only)

South Railway Street West, Warman, Sask.

Phone 306-933-4950 Toll Free: 1-800-667-4990

99

8

4X6 12’ $ TREATED .........

00

21

(In stock only)

Pictures and pricing at

WWW.WARMANHOMES.CA Toll-Free 1-866-933-9595

HOURS:

Mon.- Fri., 7:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Sat., 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.

SASKATCHEWAN

NEW HOME WARRANTY

HOT

6XPPHU D E AL S

2004 CHEV TRAILBLAZER V6, 4X4, REMOTE START, SUNROOF

$10,995

2007 FORD F150 LARIAT 4X4, LTHR, REMOTE START, SUNROOF!

$26,495

2007 FORD F150 LARIAT 4X4, AC, CC, CD, LEATHER, PWR GRP

$25,995

2006 DODGE CHARGER

2013 FORD ESCAPE SE

2007 FORD F150 LARIAT

AC, PWR GRP, KEYLESS, TELESCOPIC WHEEL

AWD, TURBO, AC,PWR GRP, KEYLESS

4X4, AC, CC, CD, LTHR, PWR GRP

$10,995

2004 PONTIAC GRAND AM SE1 2008 SUBARU OUTBACK LTD

$32,995

$25,995

2008 SUBARU TRIBECA

2010 SUBARU OUTBACK SPORT

V6, AC, CD, CRUISE CONTROL

TURBO, REBUILT, AC, CD CHANGER, LEATHER

LTD PREMIER, AWD, DVD, NAV, HTD SEATS

AC, CC, CD, PWR HTD SEATS, PWR GROUP

2007 SUBARU OUTBACK

2009 NISSAN VERSA SI-4

2008 FORD F350 FX4

2008 SUBARU TRIBECA

AWD, AC, CC, CD, PWR SEAT, PWR GRP

CD PLAYER

$10,995

AC, CD, HTD SEATS, PWR GRP

LIMITED PREMIER, AWD, DVD, NAV, HTD SEATS

$7,995

$19,995

$19,995

$29,995

$34,995

$30,995

$29,995

CIRCLE PLACE • ELITE AUTOMOTIVE GROUP INC. O/A SUBARU OF 471 665-6898 OR 1-877-373-2662

SASKATOON WWW.SUBARUOFSASKATOON.COM *MSRP does not include Freight, PDI,Taxes & Fees *See dealer for details


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

• ACREAGES • FARMS • TOWNS • VILLAGES •

NEVER. . . haul or purchase those heavy bags of water

softening salt or expensive bottled water again!

BENEFITS: •

Makes water softeners and iron filters obsolete

• Bottled water quality throughout the entire house • Eliminates hard water stains, iron stains, smell, bad taste • Eliminates potentially harmful chlorine • Extends lifespan of hot water heaters and plumbing fixtures • Eliminates hard water stains on bathtubs and showers • Cleaner and brighter laundry, dishes, glassware and cutlery • Saves up to 70% on soap Multi-Tech Membrane System

• Softer skin and hair

Winnipeg, MB Ph: 204-943-4668

Saskatoon, SK Ph: 306-242-2561 (Head Office)

(Custom designed and engineered system for the entire home.)

Calgary, AB Ph: 403-291-3667

Edmonton, AB Ph: 780-421-0084

For your FREE water consultation and system inspection, contact us today... Call Toll Free Anywhere in Canada

1-800-664-2561

Email: sales@thewaterclinic.com Website: www.thewaterclinic.com

“Canada’s Largest Rural Water Purification Company” Serving Canadians Coast to Coast since 1983 “Let’s make one thing perfectly clear . . . WATER!”

• Winnipeg • Swan River • Weyburn • Swift Current • Prince Albert • Medicine Hat • Red Deer • Grande Prairie

Retail Division • Portage La Prairie • Dauphin • Regina • Yorkton • North Battleford • Lethbridge • Edmonton

• Brandon • Estevan • Moose Jaw • Saskatoon • Lloydminster • Calgary • Fort McMurray

Wholesale Division

• St. John’s • Montreal • Toronto • Windsor • Prince George • Victoria

• Halifax • Sault Ste. Marie • Kitchener • Kelowna • Dawson Creek

• Moncton • Ottawa • London • Kamloops • Vancouver

GUARANTEED TO WORK OR YOU DON’T PAY

No Payment Up To 1 Year OAC (inquire for more details)

45


46

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

COMBINE & HEADER SALES EVENT!

GET READY FOR HARVEST NOW! FARM WORLD HAS REDUCED NEW & PRE-OWNED HEADERS & COMBINES

ALMOST

45% OFF SELECT UNITS. ALL CASH DEALS!

2009 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

2007 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

2008 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

1985 NEW HOLLAND TR96

2003 NEW HOLLAND CR940

WAS $229,000 NOW!

WAS $177,500 NOW!

WAS $172,000 NOW!

WAS $9,000 NOW!

WAS $94,000 NOW!

# N22455A. 831 HRS.

$

# PN2623A. 1,367 HRS.

199,000

$

2012 New Holland CR9090 #N22195A. WAS $364,000

$

305,000

$ $

239,000

$

229,000

$

299,000

$

299,000 299,000

$

#PN3199A. WAS $330,000

$

299,000

#PN3202A. WAS $315,000

$

269,000

#PN3112A. WAS $291,500

$

219,000

#N22058A. WAS $239,000

$

209,000

2010 New Holland CR9070

2011 New Holland CR9080 #PN3197A. WAS $320,750

289,000

2010 New Holland CR9070

2011 New Holland CR9090Z #HN3376A. WAS $335,000

$

2010 New Holland CR9080

2011 New Holland CR9090Z #HN3375A. WAS $335,000

#PN3198A. WAS $315,300

#N22229A. WAS $289,000

$

229,000

2009 New Holland CR9070 #PN3019C. WAS $256,000 #PN3105A. WAS $285,000

212,000

2008 New Holland CR9070 # HN3179A. WAS $195,000

$

175,000

2008 New Holland CR9070 #HN3180B. WAS $195,000

$

175,000

2008 New Holland CR9070 #PN3017D. WAS $229,000

$

175,000

2008 New Holland CR9070 #PN3018D. WAS $229,000

$

175,000

2008 New Holland CR9070 #N21872C. WAS $189,000

$

175,000

2006 New Holland CR970 #HN3133A. WAS $160,000

$

139,000

2005 New Holland CR970 #HN2643C. WAS $156,000

$

139,000

2005 John Deere 9760 #N22081B. WAS $152,000

$

137,000

2003 New Holland CR960 #N21830A. WAS $109,000

$

99,000

1999 New Holland TR99 #HN2643D. WAS $72,500

$

55,000

#N20343B. WAS $188,000

$

169,000

#N21873.

ONLY 1 LEFT!

PRICES STARTING AT

WAS $13,500

NOW

44,900

#PH2545

10,500

$

2004 HONEY BEE SP36

$

50,000

#W22132A.

#W22288A.

NEW 2013 HONEY BEE SP36 ONLY 3 IN STOCK!

WAS $31,500

WAS $31,000

NOW

25,000

62,000

2011 MacDon D60 #PW3259A. WAS $75,500

$

85,000

2010 HONEY BEE SP40

2012 Honey Bee SP36

$

2007 New Holland HB3655 #W22135A. WAS $41,900

$

28,000

2006 Honey Bee SP36 $

189,000

$

1995 HONEY BEE SP25

$

ONLY 2 IN STOCK!

$

2009 New Holland CR9080

2008 HONEY BEE SP25

#HW3384A. WAS $69,000

7,000

2010 HONEY BEE SP36 ONLY 2 LEFT IN STOCK!

$

$

$

# PN2893B. 1,604 HRS.

2009 New Holland CR9070

289,000

ONLY 3 IN STOCK!

# N21067D. 2,942 HRS.

165,000

2011 New Holland CR9070

2011 New Holland CR9090Z #HN3374A. WAS $335,000

$

2011 New Holland CR9080

2011 New Holland CR9070 #N22200A. WAS $286,000

159,500

2011 New Holland CR9080

2011 New Holland CR9070 #N22197B. WAS $296,000

# PN2766A. 1,653 HRS.

68,000

#HW3362A. WAS $40,000

$

36,000

Hwy. #3, Kinistino 306-864-3667 David H ...............................306-921-7896 Jim ......................................306-864-8003 Kelly ....................................306-961-4742 David J. ...............................306-864-7603 SPRAYER DEPT. Mike ....................................306-921-5070 PRECISION FARMING DEPT. Brad ....................................306-864-2660

Visit

26,000

$

2004 New Holland 94C #HW3359A. WAS $34,500

$

29,900

2002 Agco 700 #W22133A. WAS $7,900

71,900

1997 MacDon 960 #PW2723D. WAS $22,900

$

19,000

1996 New Holland 971 $

4,500

Hwy. #5, Humboldt

#N21873G. WAS $4,900

$

4,500

Hwy. #2 S., Prince Albert

306-682-9920

306-922-2525

Perry ...................................306-231-3772 Shane ..................................306-231-5501

Brent ...................................306-232-7810 Aaron ..................................306-960-7429 Tyler ....................................306-749-7115 SPRAYER & GPS DEPT. Chris ...................................306-960-6519

www.farmworld.ca for our full inventory


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

47

MAPLE FARM EQUIPMENT

ANNUAL

HARVEST SALE 2010 JOHN DEERE 9770 STS 556 hours, 20.8R38 duals, premier cab, JD 615 header.

2012 JOHN DEERE S670

317 hours, prem. cab, 520/85R42 duals, 615 header.

$

$

285,800

385,900

COMBINES

2013 JOHN DEERE S690 372 hrs., prem. cab, HID lighting, Greenstar 3 2630 display, autotrac ready, variable stream rotor, pro-drive trans., 650/85R38, 615P hdr ........................$456,600 2013 JOHN DEERE S690 345 hrs., 615P hdr., premium cab, HID lighting, Greenstar 3 2630 display, autotrac ready, 650/85R38 duals .........................................................$456,600 2013 JOHN DEERE S690377 hrs., 615P hdr., premium cab, HID lights, Greenstar 3 2630 display, autotrac ready, variable strem rotor, 26 ft. auger, 650/85R38 duals ................$456,600 2013 JOHN DEERE S690300 hrs., guidance-ready, 650 duals, 615P hdr. ......................................................................$429,400 2013 JOHN DEERE S690 270 hrs., 615P hdr., HID lighting, touchscreen, autotrac ready with harvest monitor, 650/85R38 R1 duals .......................................................................$429,400 2013 JOHN DEERE S690 268 hrs., guidance-ready, 650 duals, 615P hdr. ......................................................................$429,400 2013 JOHN DEERE S690 849 hrs., autotrac ready, HID lighting, 650R38 duals, 2630 display, 615P hdr. ...............$424,000 2013 JOHN DEERE S690 696 hrs., duals, 615P hdr., 520/85R42 duals, GS3, HID headlights, variable stream rotor...................................................$413,000 2012 JOHN DEERE S690 650 hrs., 615P hdr., 520/85R42 duals, Greenstar3, HID lighting ...................................$413,000

BALCARRES, SK 306-334-2492

2013 CASE IH9230

350 hours, Magnacut chopper, topper, duals, autosteer

$

407,700

2012 JOHN DEERE S690 695 hrs., 615P hdr., 520/85R42 duals, Greenstar 3, HID lighting ..................................$413,000 2012 JOHN DEERE S690 548 hrs., premium cab, HID lighting, autotrac ready, GS3 touch screen,7.9M unloading auger, chopper, 650/85R38 duals ..................................................$407,700 2012 JOHN DEERE S690 507 hrs., 61`5P hdr., 650R38 duals, 2630 display,variable rotor, HID lights, premium cab $407,700 2012 JOHN DEERE S690 628 hrs., guidance-ready, HID lights, 26 ft. unloading auger, 650 duals, 615 hdr.................$403,900 2012 JOHN DEERE S690 455 hrs., 615 hdr., HID lights ......................................................$403,900 2012 JOHN DEERE S680 270 hrs., prem. cab, HID lights, autotrac ready, GS3 touch screen, pro-drive trans., 650/85R38 duals, side hill performance pkg., 615 hdr.................$422,900 2012 JOHN DEERE 2680 611 hrs., duals, autotrac complete, HID lights, 26’ unloading auger, pro-drive trans ........$396,800 2012 JOHN DEERE S680 812 hrs., duals, guidance-ready, HID lighting, prem. radio, 615 hdr., 2630 display..............$396,600 2012 JOHN DEERE S680 771 hrs., 615P hdr., prem. cab, HID lights, autotrac ready with harvest monitor, 7.9M unloading auger, 650/85R38 duals ..............................................$377,200 2012 JOHN DEERE S680 785 hrs., 615P hdr., GS3 2630, prem. cab, pro-drive trans., var. stream rotor, 7.9M unloading auger, 650/85R38 duals .........................................................$383,000

FOAM LAKE, SK 306-272-3345

2008 JOHN DEERE 9770 STS 1536 hours, 20.8R38 duals, guidance ready, JD 615 header.

2012 JOHN DEERE S680

2012 JOHN DEERE S690

409 hours, premium cab, Greenstar 3 2630 display, 520/85R42, 615P hdr.

$

239,200

1229 hours, premium cab, 650 duals, 5 speed feederhouse, 615P hdr.

$

$

407,100

2012 JOHN DEERE S680 757 hrs., prem. cab, HID lights, autotrac ready, pro-drive trans., var. stream rotor, 7.9M unloading auger, 650/85R389 duals, 615 hdr .............................$378,300 2012 JOHN DEERE S680 775 hrs., prem. cab, HID lights, GS3 2630, pro-drive trans., var. stream rotor, 650/85R38 duals, 615 hdr.$378,300 2007 JOHN DEERE 9860 STS1548 hours, Greenstar autotrac less display, HID lights, JD 615 header ......................$233,700 2007 JOHN DEERE 9860 STS 1750 hours, Macdon PW7, 20.8-42 duals, sidehill cleaning shoe package, premier cab .... $216,000 2007 JOHN DEERE 9860 STS 1820 hours, premier cab, deluxe header control, monitor and display, 20.8-42 duals, pickup header ..........................................................................$206,900 2005 JOHN DEERE 9860 STS2477 hours, Greenstar autotrac less display, duals, HID lights,premium header control, 615 header .........................................................................$210,300 2005 JOHN DEERE 9860 STS 2066 hours, chopper, high cap. unloading system, header control premium, 30.5R32, chopper .......................................................$160,000 2004 JOHN DEERE 9860 STS 2167 hours, premium header control, precision 15’ header, 20.8x42 duals ............$186,400

WINDROWERS

2012 JOHN DEERE D450 472 hrs., 640D hdr., swath roller, Xenon HID lights, roto shears ....................................$147,800

PREECEVILLE, SK WYNYARD, SK YORKTON, SK 306-547-2007 306-554-2536 306-783-9459 WWW.MAPLEFARM.COM

375,000

2011 JOHN DEERE D450 421 hrs., 640D hdr., ........$137,800 2013 JOHN DEERE D450 430 hrs., 36WS hdr., 480/80R38 tires ..........................................................$164,800 2013 JOHN DEERE W150 312 hrs., forked casters, hyd centerlink, pressure sensor kit, booster spring kit ...$172,000 2013 MACDON M155 150 hrs., 40’ DK, D65, hyd, tilt, guage wheels .........................................................................$166,000 2013 MACDON M155 381 hrs., 35’ D60, hdr, booster springs, HID lights, header tilt ...................................................$161,500

HEADERS

2013 JOHN DEERE 640D 40’, Draper, pickup reel, road transport with lights .............................................$79,500 2012 JOHN DEERE 640D 40’, Draper, pickup reel, road transport................................................................$78,900 2010 JOHN DEERE 640D 40’, Draper, poly tine pickup reel, transport system ...........................................................$76,500 2012 JOHN DEERE 640D 40’, Draper, pickup reel, cross conv. auger ..........................................................$75,500 2013 JOHN DEERE 635FD 35’, flex/Draper, ............$105,000 2013 JOHN DEERE 635D 35’, flexible, one piece spare knife, ................................................$105,800 2013 JOHN DEERE 635D 35’, poly tine pickup reel, road transport ...............................................................$63,900

MOOSOMIN, SK 306-435-3301

RUSSELL, MB 204-773-2149

:$51(5 ,1'8675,(6 TRUCKS & TRAILERS — NEW & USED

9LVLW XV RQOLQH IRU DGGLWLRQDO LQYHQWRU\ ZZZ ZDUQHULQGXVWULHV FD DL #913604

2015 FREIGHTLINER M2 4X4 SERVICE TRUCK

2015 DOEPKER GRAIN TRAILERS

#124987

2014 FREIGHTLINER CASCADIA

2015 DOEPKER IMPACTS

#124475

12’ SERVICE BODY, CRANE W/WIRELESS REMOTE

CALL FOR DETAILS

DETROIT DD15, 18 SPD, AUX. BUNK HEATER

CALL FOR DETAILS

2011 FREIGHTLINER CASCADIA

2009 FREIGHTLINER M2

2007 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA

2008 FORD F750 WATER TRUCK

#125133

#125042

#110864

CUMMINS ISX, 13 SPEED, 12&40 AXLES

CUMMINS ISC 300HP, ALLISON AUTOMATIC

DETROIT SERIES 60, 10 SPEED AUTO-SHIFT

CAT C7, 210 HP, 6 SPEED $35,000

2007 FREIGHTLINER CLASSIC

2011 FREIGHTLINER CASCADIA

AW TRU-TEST DYNAMOMETER

2013 ELMERS GRAIN CART

# 121199

MERCEDES 450HP, 18 SPEED, 12&40 AXLES REGINA, SK 330 4th Ave. E. 306-359-1930 800-667-1930

#124788

DETROIT DD13, 18 SPEED, PARKSMART SYSTEM

MOOSE JAW, SK Jct. Hwy #2 & N. Service Road 306-693-7253 877-302-0253

SWIFT CURRENT, SK 2524 S Service Road West 306-773-3030 888-773-2744

#123651

PTO TESTER 200 HP @ 540 RPM / 375 HP @ 1000 RPM.

DEMO-HAUL MASTER 2000 BUSHEL


48

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

(204) 256-2098 Winnipeg, MB hirdequipment@live.ca www.hirdequipment.com

2014 ROME 22E14.5 Ejector Scraper 14’ 6” Cut Width, 22yd Capacity Heaped, 28,940LB, 6 - 20.5x25 Tires, Laser/GPS Ready

$

2014 ROME 185-994

ROME Disk Rental

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

11’ Wide, 32” Disk, 636LB/Disk

$

134,218

2014 ROME TACW-16 11’ Wide, 16 Disks, 636LB Weight/Disk, 9,792LB, 32” Disks, Hyd Trans, 17-3/4” Spacing, 2-1/8” Axles

$

2014 ROME TAW-24

$

3,500/Month

2014 ROME TRWC-16

11’ 6” Wide, 24 Disks, 346LB Weight/Disk, 12’ 6” Wide, 16 Disks, 960LB Weight/Disk, 8,313LB, 28” Disks, Hyd Trans, 12” Spacing, 15,357LB, 36” Disks, Hyd Trans, 2-1/8” Axles 20” Spacing, 2 1/2” Axles

$

36,806

66,488

33,403

$

59,624

2014 ROME RALSE-16 Finishing Ejector Scraper 14Yd 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 RP-180HDE Tandem Kit Available, 10’ Cut Width, 18Yd Capacity Heaped, 26,000LB, 2 - 29.5x25 Tires, Laser/GPS Ready

$

117,630

2014 ROME 240-994

2014 ROME TACW-20

36’ Wide 240LB/Disk, 9” Spacing, Oil Bath Bearings, Rock Flex Gang, 22,000LB, 24” Disk, Leveling Tires

14’ Wide, 20 Disks, 552LB Weight/Disk, 10,659LB, 32” Disks, Hyd Trans, 17-3/4” Spacing, 2-1/8” Axle

$

88,870

$

42,467

Call Hird Equipment for Genuine Rome Parts Needs

Titan Truck Sales Box 299 MacGregor, MB R0H 0R0

204-685-2222 2011 PETERBILT 386

485 HP Cummins ISX, 18 sp, 12/40, 3:55 gears, 3x4 diff. locks, 236” WB, 22.5” alloy wheels, 70” bunk, APU.

$

65,000

2007 PETERBILT 379

470 Cat C13, 13 sp, 12/40, 3:36 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 22.5” alloy wheels, 1,402,518 km.

$

45,000

2007 PETERBILT 379

470 Cat C13, 13 sp, 12/40, 3:36 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 22.5” alloy wheels, 1,548,131 km.

$

43,000

2007 WESTERN STAR 4900FA

475 HP Cat C15, 18 sp, 14,600 front 40,000 rear, 3:58 gears, 3x4 diff. locks, 244” WB, 22.5” alloy wheels, 1,285,622 km.

$

49,000

2010 PETERBILT 388

500 HP ISX Cummins, 18 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 244 WB, 70” bunk, 3:70 gears, 3x4 diff. locks, 784,410 km.

$

69,000

2007 PETERBILT 379

470 Cat C13, 13 sp, 12/40, 3:36 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 22.5” alloy wheels, 1,480,572 km.

$

45,000

2007 PETERBILT 379

470 Cat C13, 10 sp, 12/40, 3:36 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 22.5” alloy wheels, 1,588,364 km.

$

40,000

www.titantrucksales.com 2010 PETERBILT 386

485 HP Cummins ISX, 13 sp, 14.6 front super 40 rear, 391 gears, 232” WB, 22.5” alloy wheels, 63” bunk, 828602 km.

$

59,000

2007 WESTERN STAR 4900SA

515 hp Detroit, 13 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 358 gears, 232 WB, 1,108,730 km.

$

33,000

2009 PETERBILT 388

450 HP Cummins ISX, 18 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 3-way diff. locks, 3:55 gears, 244” WB, 63” midrise bunk, 1,145,366 km.

$

49,000

2010 PETERBILT 386

500 HP Cummins ISX, 13 sp, 14.6 front super 40 rear, 4:10 gears, 244” WB, 22.5” alloy wheels, 63” bunk, 711,663 km.

$

59,000

2007 IH 9900I

475 HP Cummins ISX, 18 sp, 12/40, 244” WB, 3x4 diff. locks, 22.5” alloy wheels, 1,318,947 km.

$

35,000

2007 PETERBILT 379

470 Cat C13, 13 sp, 12/40, 3:36 gears, 244” WB, 70” bunk, 22.5” alloy wheels, 1,561,494 km.

$

45,000


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

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 Numerous pictures available on our website www.combineworld.com 2011 JD 4930 120’, 1635 hours, June 2014 Green Light DONE, loaded!! Field ready .........

199,800

$

2009 NH CR9070 1047 thresh hours, 16’ pickup included, yield & moisture, Intelliview monitor, field ready .........

154,800

2008 MILLER CONDOR A40

1998 WILLMAR 8100

MD1000, 100’ SP, excellent condition, ready to go ..............

90’ sprayer, 3444 hours, duals, high clearance, AWD ........................

$

99,800

42,800

$

2007 NH CR9070

2008 NH CR9060

1225 thrash hours, 76C pickup included, field ready ...................

1410 hours, 76C pickup included, field ready ....................

139,800

$

2003 FLEXI-COIL 67

$

90’, suspended boom, high clearance, auto rate ...................

$

14,800

1997 JD 9600

119,800

$

4415/3382 hours, 914 pickup included...................

$

42,800

WE WELCOME YOUR TRADES!! 2006 NH TJ380

2011 IH PUMA 195

1982 VERSATILE 1150

2012 CHALLENGER WR9740

2004 DEGELMAN SA 1800

380HP, 4WD, 7121 hours.. .........

195 HP, MFWD, 1378 hours, excellent condition..................

20.8x42 Firestone radial triples, Atom jet, 5 hyds .....................

227 hours, 30’, double swath, like NEW ..................

Side arm, 16.5x16.1 SL Goodyears, sold w/ warranty...........

$

119,800

$

2004 IH RBX562

2008 IH RB564

Hard core round baler, 1000 PTO, standard tires/pickup ..................

Bale Command, hard core, 1000 PTO, twine wrap ...............

$

9,800

89,800

$

12,800

$

48,800

$

99,800

1995 JD 8870

MACERATOR 6600

350 HP, 4WD 20.8R42 radials .......

6600 hay conditioner in very good condition! .......................

$

39,500

7,980

$

Grain extractor in excellent condition...................

1993 CAT 416B

2008 GENIE GTH-844

Bi-directional, 9600 hours, FEL bucket ..............

4WD, cab, 11,693 hours, digging bucket 26”, old but works well ...............

Cab, Extendahoe, 4WD, 5003 hours ...............

8000lbs, 44’ reach, good mech/cosmetic condition..................

32,800

$

$

32,800

2

$

31,800

54,800

$

15,950

$

S X2

LER AND

H

TELE

1996 JD 710D

8,980

2009 TRIDEKON

FINANCING & LEASING AVAILABLE! 1999 NH TV140

$

2004 JLG G6-42A $ 6000lbs, 42’ reach ........ 1998 Skytrak 6036 $ 6000lbs, 36’ reach ........

39,800 25,800

2

TS X CAR

TS X CAR

39,800

2003 NH/FC SC380 $ 380 bushel, tow behind . 2000 Flexi-Coil 2340, 230 bushel, in very $ good condition ................

16,800

2009 MORRIS MAXIM II 50’, 10” spacing, 8370XL tank, very good condition...................

$

97,900

34,800 29,800

2003 JD 1910, 340 $ bushel, new NH3 kit ...... 2002 JD 1900, 350 $ bushel, good condition...

NEW NH 76C Rake-up pickup attached, 16’ ............

NEW 14’ SWATHMASTER

$

19,800

9 belt, hydraulic windguard, ultra-float .................

$

14,838

49


50 CLASSIFIED ADS

WHY CHOOSE ROTOSHEAR

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

1963 CASE 930, cab, 6 spd., dual hyds., 540 PTO, good tires, good cond., $3000 2014 ROME TACW-16, 11’ wide, 16 32” OBO, can deliver. Darvin 204-642-2249, disks, 636 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 17 Arborg, MB. 3/4” spacing, $38,806. 204-256-2098, Treherne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com 2014 ROME 185-994 35’, 6” wide, 94 24” disks, 185 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 9” spacing, $66,488. Call 204-256-2098, Treherne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com

2012 JD 6140R MFWA, c/w JD loader and grapple fork, deluxe cab, 3 PTH, 1600 hrs., always shedded, like new, asking $75,000. 587-589-0333, Edmonton, AB.

COMPLETE SHANK ASSEMBLIES: JD 1610, $135; JD 610, black, $180; JD 1600, $90; Morris 7-series, $135. Phone anytime 306-946-7923, Young, SK.

The Ultimate Vertical

Crop Cutter

• Always a cut above the rest • Increases bushels per acre and improves sample for better grade • Reduce build-up on ends of divider board resulting in precious time lost • Reduce piles in swath (beaver huts) resulting in less greens in sample and reduces possible heating in storage bins, which in turn reduces problems during harvest • High speed cutting action enhances blade life

For Further Information Contact

ROTOR-SHEAR@

FORESTBURG WELDING & MACHINING Merlin Badry, Pres., Box 667, Forestburg, AB

Toll Free: 1-877-582-3637

780-582-3637 FAX: 780-582-3732

www.rotoshear.com 2014 ROME 185-966 25’, 2” wide, 66 24” disks, 185 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 9” spacing, $52,760. Call 204-256-2098, Treherne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com 2014 ROME TRCW-16, 12’ 6” wide, 16 36” disks, 960 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 20” spacing, $59,624. Call 204-256-2098, Treherne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com

1993 JOHN DEERE 8570, 6335 hrs. 24 spd, 20.8x38, fresh $10,244 Greenlight, diff. lock, stored inside, excellent condition. $60,000. 306-648-7654, Gravelbourg, SK.

GET THE REAL FACTS about vertical tillage, call for a complete info pkg. We have new and used Summers vertical tillage machines and Summers discs for sale. All 2012 CIH 500HD, powershift, front and sizes. Call: Machinery Dave, 403-545-2580 rear diff. locks, 5 hyd. outlets, Pro 700 disBow Island, AB. www.summersmfg.com play, AccuGuide, 372 receiver, 800/70R 696 hrs, like new. Factory warranty 2014 ROME TAW-24, 11’ 6” wide, 24 28” duals, May 2015. Asking $269,000. Almost disks, 346 lb. weight/disc, hyd. trans., 12” until on trade. Phone 1-877-862-2387, spacing, $33,403. Call 204-256-2098, Tre- anything 1-877-862-2413, Nipawin, SK. herne, MB. Visit: www.hirdequipment.com 2011 IH PUMA 195 195HP, power boost, 230 HP, MFWD, 1378 hrs., 4 hyds., AC cab, exc. cond., $89,800. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 1986 4894, 300 HP, 5764 hrs., 20.8x38 duals, 1000 PTO, new int, $40,000. Wilcox, 2007 CHALLENGER MT865B, 525 HP, Cat SK. 306-732-4636, metzg@sasktel.net C18, 3953 hrs., exc. cond., HD tracks- 80%, PTO, big pump, 6 SCVs, GPS ready, CASE/IH STEIGER built, 4 WD/Quads; Plus other makes and models. Call the $179,000. 780-206-1234, Barrhead, AB. Tractor Man! Trades welcome. We deliver. 4W-220 ALLIS CHALMERS, 5630 hrs., new Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. tires, fresh paint, rebuilt eng., $32,500. LIZARD CREEK REPAIR and Tractor. We Call 780-446-4931, Millet, AB. buy 90 and 94 Series Case, 2 WD, FWA tractors for parts and rebuilding. Also have r e b u i l t t r a c t o r s a n d p a r t s fo r s a l e . 306-784-7841, Herbert, SK. 1974 ALLIS CHALMERS 7030, power direct trans., 2 hyds., dual PTO, 3 pt. hitch, 18.4 CASE/IH 5130, 6500 orig. hrs., FWA with rubber, above average condition, $7500. 510 loader, 8’ bucket, w/grapple and joy306-228-3665, 306-228-9383, Unity, SK. stick, 4 spool hyds., 4 spd. auto trans., includes bale accumulator, exc. condition, 1983 ALLIS CHALMERS 8050, 150 HP, $ 4 3 , 0 0 0 O B O. C a l l : 4 0 3 - 5 5 6 - 2 6 4 4 , powershift, 8258 hrs., engine rebuilt at 403-556-0145, Olds, AB. 5500 hrs., many other repairs, $15,000 2008 CIH TX485, 2385 hrs., 485 HP, radial OBO. 306-397-2653, Edam, SK. 520x85x42 triples, PTO, AutoSteer, powershift, $210,000. 306-843-7744, Wilkie, SK. W6 IH TRACTOR, starts good, runs good, COCKSHUTT 1550 GAS tractor, $1600; good tin, $1300 OBO. Call 306-395-2668, Cockshutt 1650 gas tractor, $2000. Call 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. 2006 CASE/IH 430, 4 WD, full AutoSteer, 2670 hrs, 710x42 duals, exc. cond. 306-642-8111, Rockglen, SK. 1986 CASE 3394, FWA, 160 HP, 8500 hrs., CIH 8920 MAGNUM, MFWD, 3000 hrs, w/895 Allied TSL loader, grapple and joy- 18 spd. powershift, CAHR, 3 hyds., dual P TO, m i n t c o n d i t i o n , $ 7 8 , 0 0 0 O B O. stick, $30,000. 306-264-3834, Kincaid, SK. 306-699-2442, McLean, SK. CASE 2290, low hrs. on complete rebuilt engine, FEL, factory duals. 306-287-3554 or 306-287-7490, Watson, SK.

How to Contact Us.

Clip & Save

Classifieds

1990 CASE/IH 9150 4WD, 7500 hrs., 280 HP, excellent shape. Best offer! 306-291-4043, Saskatoon, SK. 1999 CASE 9390, 450 HP, 5800 hrs., S3 Outback AutoSteer, high capacity pump, 4 remotes, triples, excellent, $95,000 OBO. 306-243-4242, 306-652-6765, Macrorie SK 1957 350 INT. tractor, hyds, good rubber, reel hay rake, bale spike, 35 HP, runs good, $2750. Viking, AB. 403-606-9909, 780-336-2357.

2 NEW 5500 Durabuilt rubber tracks still on pallets, fit Challenger MT800 high track, $23,000. 780-928-2538, La Crete AB

Office Hours: MONDAY to FRIDAY 8:30AM - 4:30PM Phone Line Hours: TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY until 8PM

1.800.667.7770 | Email: advertising@producer.com

Subscriptions Office Hours: MONDAY to FRIDAY 8:30AM - 4:30PM

1.800.667.6929 | Email: subscriptions@producer.com

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. 2006 JD 8430T, 16 spd. Powershift, 250 HP, 1000 PTO, 3PTH, front weights, 3700 hrs., $119,000. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. JD 3130, cab, heat, 3 PTH, 1800 hrs, works perfect, dual hyds., dual PTO, $12,500 OBO. 306-699-2442, McLean, SK. 2010 7330 JD, MFD, 3300 hrs, 20x20 powerquad trans, 3 PTH, 20.8x38 tires, w/741 JD loader and grapple, $110,000. Call A.E. Chicoine Farm Equip. Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK.

Newsroom Office Hours: MONDAY to FRIDAY 8:30AM - 4:30PM

1.800.667.6978 | Email: newsroom@producer.com

Submit your ad online anytime at

www.producer.com

LOOKING FOR JD 30, 40, 50 Series trac- 1986 JD 4850 MFWD, powershift, 6000 tors in good cond. with mechanical issues. hrs., excellent rubber, mint condition. 306-744-8113, Saltcoats, SK. Call 306-621-7170, Yorkton, SK. 1977 JOHN DEERE 4630, 9700 hrs., good condition. Call 306-463-3678, Flaxcombe, SK.

2012 JD 6140R, only 31 hrs., loader ready, many options, loaded, $125,000 OBO. 204-794-4878, 204-981-3636, Cartier, MB. 2005 JD 7520 Premier, 1500 hrs., IBT trans., LH shifter, 741 JD FEL, rubber 80% excellent condition, $98,000 OBO. Pictures available. 306-646-7743, Fairlight, SK. 1972 JOHN DEERE 4320, 10,000 hrs., $7,000. 306-839-4422, Pierceland, SK.

JD 8970, 440 HP, powershift, PTO, 20.8 triples, new eng., 3 hyds., great grain cart tractor.Can deliver 780-603-7640 Bruce AB 2002 JD 7810, MFD, autoquad with LHR, has E-range, 3 PTH, 4900 hrs., shedded. Call 780-990-8412, Cherhill, AB. 1978 JOHN DEERE 4440, 8300 hrs., duals, powershift, very good condition. $24,000. 306-789-0296, Francis, SK. 1992 4560 JD, 160 HP, new tires, 5400 hrs., $45,000; 1994 7200 JD, MFWD, 740 loader, grapple, 3 PTH, 90 HP, 10,500 hrs., $42,000. Albert Murray, 306-243-4307, Macrorie, SK. JD 4450, 6880 hrs, 3 PTH, powershift, MFWD, $41,500; JD 4450, 6200 hrs, powershift, 2 WD, duals, new tires, $35,500; JD 8100, 4800 hrs, powershift, MFWD, 3 PTH, $76,500; JD 7800, 6100 hrs, powershift, 3 PTH, MFWD, front 3 PTH w/PTO, $65,000. 306-231-3993, Humboldt, SK. www.versluistrading.com JOHN DEERE 4020, premium condition, mechanically and in appearance. Call 403-823-1894, Drumheller, AB. WANTED: 4450 MFWD with loader and grapple. Willing to travel. 306-839-2073, Pierceland, SK. JD 8450, 4650, 4450 and 4440s; parting out JD tractors. Will trade for JD tractors needing work. Also, FELs available. Austin, MB. 204-871-5170.

2 0 1 1 C AT E R P I L L A R W H E E L L OA D E R IT-38-H, low hr. machine, EROPS, AC, ride control, Q/C, 20.5R25 tires c/w 3.5 yard bucket, excellent condition, $145,000. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. 2012 M126 XDTC, 682, hrs., FWA, M56SS JD 840 LOADER c/w grapple, mounts off loader, 125 HP, 108 PTO HP, 3 PTH, pow- 7000 Series, exc cond. Call 780-990-8412, ershift, 2 ranges- 16F/16R, fwd/reverse Cherhill, AB. shuttle, loader has 3rd function control on joystick w/self-leveling and soft ride hyds., $74,995. Call 780-386-2166, Hardisty, AB.

1995 NEW HOLLAND 8970, MFWD powershift, rubber 85%, 7000 hours, excellent. Call 306-744-8113, Saltcoats, SK. 2009 T9060, 4 WD, 535 HP, full AutoSteer, 800 duals, 1380 hrs, full weight pkg, exc. cond. 306-642-8111, Rockglen, SK. 2006 TV145 w/hay header, front end short loader, grapple forks, hyd. at both ends, 3 PTH, 2 new tires, PTO both ends, 3850 hrs, 18’ haybine HS18, vg cond., $75,000 for pair. 306-468-2669, Canwood, SK. 2006 NEW HOLLAND TJ380 380 HP, 4 WD, 1721 hrs, 5 hyds., front weights, $124,800. Trades welcome, financing avail 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 2007 TM190 NH TRACTOR w/loader and grapple, 2700 hrs, shedded, exc. shape $72,500. 403-804-5455, Moose Jaw, SK. 1999 NH 8670 Genesis, SuperSteer, 3 PTH, 4950 hrs., $57,000 OBO. 306-563-8482 or 306-782-2586, Douglas, MB.

REMOTE CONTROL CONVERSION KITS. Convert any manually operated solenoid, air or hydraulic valve to wireless remote control. www.bullfrogcontrols.com 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. 1997 45’ LODE-KING alum. combo trailer, $7500; 4000 IHC 24’ swather w/UII PU reel, $6900; 20’ UII PU reel, $2000; FlexiCoil 65 100’ sprayer, $2700; JD 8 row 22” all crop head, $4500; JD 15’ head w/sunflower pans, $1500; Grain dryer, CMS 14E continuous multi-stage, $5000; JD 7100 18-row planter, $4000; 3 PTH, 90’ sprayer, $3500. 204-325-8019, Winkler, MB.

SOLD CATTLE: JD 568 baler, mint cond.; 2090 and 2290 Case tractors; 8430 JD 4WD; 24’ Featherlite trailer; Cultivators, augers, etc. Call 306-753-8069 or 306-753-2842, Macklin, SK. NEW HOLLAND PV145, bi-directional, MF 8460 COMBINE, 2770 hrs., PU header; 3150 engine hrs., loader, PTO and hyds. on MF 200 swather, 26’, UII pickup reel. Both 2012 JD 9460R, 800 tires, 185 hrs., still both ends. 780-674-8080, Cherhill, AB. stored inside and in good shape. on warranty, new cond, $279,000; 2011 306-874-5663, Spalding, SK. JD 8310R, row crop, front duals, IVT, ILS, 380 rear duals, 1370 hrs., $249,000; 2003 RETIRED: JD 9660WTS combine; CIH JD 9420, 3800 hrs., w/16’ Degelman MX285 tractor; Westward 9350 swather blade, exc. cond., $179,000. 204-461-0328 1991 846 FORD 4 WD, Designation 6, w/MacDon 25’ triple del.; NDE feed pro4900 hrs., exc. shape all round, $40,000 or 204-461-0344, Warren, MB. cessor; JD 8200 w/840 loader; JD forage OBO. 780-736-2313 eves., Radway, AB. harvester; Bale shredders; Maternity pen; 1978 JD 8440 4WD, 12’ blade, new 20.8x18.4 singles, triple hyds., $20,000. 1991 FORD 946, 4950 hrs., tires good, Panels; Incubators, etc. 306-468-7315, Outback E-drive, shedded, asking $50,000. Canwood, SK. or rjdz494@gmail.com Call 403-502-0048, Medicine Hat, AB. 403-548-8928, Richmound, SK. 2014 FARM KING 750 7’ rough cut mower, JD 4430 w/EZEE-ON loader, quad shift, 3 PTH, never been used, $2800. Creelman, 20.8x38 singles, only 6515 hrs., exc. cond. SK. 306-433-0003 or 306-737-0610. Contact: 306-283-4747, 306-220-0429, 306-291-9395, Langham, SK. VERSATILE 835, 4975 hrs., PTO, very good 145 VERSATILE 4 WD, running; MF 860 JD 4020 with 148 loader, big rubber, shape, $28,900 OBO. Call 306-782-2586 or combine, shedded; MF 860 turbo for parts, rubber- good; IH swather w/15’ header; $11,500. 780-614-0825 or 780-645-4651 306-563-8482, Rama, SK. Versatile minimum till hoe drill 21’. Best evenings, St. Paul, AB. 1978 VERSATILE 825, in good operating offer or trade on livestock equip. Outlook, JOHN DEERE 4320, excellent condition, condition, 8200 hrs., 3 hyds., $10,000 OBO SK., 306-867-4595, 306-867-8833 eves. dual PTO, never had FEL. 403-585-1910, 403-279-4767, Calgary, AB. JD 4020 TRACTOR, 7554 hrs.; JD 105 Carbon, AB. VERSATILE 700, w/LEON dozer, 2600 combine; JD 105 combine w/straight cut original hrs., $22,500 OBO. 403-585-1910, 2012 JD 9460R, 4 WD, powershift, 590 header. All shedded. L-240 Morris Chalhrs., 800/70R38’s, premium cab, leather Airdrie, AB. lenger cultivator w/harrows; Kello-Bilt disc trim, HID lights, weight package, extended Series 166; Morris 713 Seed-Rite with warranty, $219,500 US. Fairfax, MN., 1982 VERSATILE 1150, 20.8x42 Firestone grass seeder; Deep tiller. 204-937-3384, phone 320-848-8496 or 320-894-6560. radial triples, Atom Jet, 5 hyds., 9450 hrs., Roblin, MB. Email: terri@novgroup.com $48,900. Trades welcome, financing avail. www.ms-diversified.com QUIT FARMING: 2008 CIH 8010 combine 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 1983 4240 JD 9000 hrs., new: paint, de4 WD, 30’ flex draper, $200,000; 2008 STX cals and upholstery, very good condition, 2002 VERSATILE 2360, 20.8X42 duals, 12 430, 4 WD, new 680x42 tires, $160,000; tires- 75%, with 148 loader, bale and pallet spd. manual, PTO, trimble guidance. Ask- 2011 Farm King 13x85 auger, hyd. swing, ing $112,000. Call 204-248-2359, or cell hyd. lift on swing, $18,000; 2013 Geringhforks, $28,000. 306-795-2800, Ituna, SK. 204-723-0359, Notre Dame, MB. off 8x30” corn chopping header with row JOHN DEERE 6430 premum, 1900 hours, stompers, $80,000; 2-105 White tractor, excellent shape, all options, asking rebuilt engine, $7000; 32’ Ezee-On tandem $76,500. 306-726-4525, Southey, SK. disc, spring loaded cushing gang, done JD 4650 MFWD, 1983 model, 15 spd. PS, GRATTON COULEE AGRI PARTS LTD. Your very little, $25,000; Roadrunner header 7,081 hrs., duals, nearly new front tires, #1 place to purchase late model combine haul, $8000; MacDon 30’ draper header, Greenlighted reg., exc. cond. $36,500. and tractor parts. Used, new and rebuilt. $20,000; IH 4240 tractor w/15’ mower, www.gcparts.com Toll free 888-327-6767. 306-944-4431, 306-917-7166 Plunkett, SK $12,000; Westco 16x30 cult., $1500; Band sprayer 16x30, $1500; 1998 Kenworth STEVE’S TRACTOR REBUILDER looking T-800 N14 Cummins, 18 spd., 4-way locks, for JD tractors to rebuild, Series 20s, 30s, SS Hi-way paving box, 30” live belt, 40s or 50s, or for parts. Will pay top dollar. 2006 Cat 320 excavator, 10,000 Now selling JD parts. 204-466-2927, JD 146 FEL, forks included, $3200 OBO. $33,000; hrs. with QA cleaning bucket, nice, 204-871-5170, Austin, MB. 306-962-4332, 306-962-3823, Eston, SK. $60,000. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. JD 7600, FWA, powershift, w/740 highlift WANTED: 12’ TO 14’ dozer blade to fit a 800 BU. MANURE spreader on Int. S2500 loader, 3 PTH, not been used in winter or Versatile 835 or JD 4440 tractor, prefer L10 tandem truck, vg; Hesston S431 PT around cattle, mint cond. 306-961-6499, 4-Way. Call 306-886-2051, Bjorkdale, SK. manure spreader; Bergen swather carrier; Prince Albert, SK. LATE MODEL LEON 14’ dozer, hydraulic an- 200 bu. grain tank w/trailer; 21’ grain JD 4630, 3 PTH, duals, powershift, runs gle, like new condition, half price. Fits all header, fits Hesston and CIH SP swather. well, $15,950. JD 4230, good rubber, Series II and III Versatile tractors. Call 306-424-2330, 306-536-7564, Candiac, SK showing 8650 hrs, $11,250. JD 4430, good 403-823-1894, Drumheller, AB. LAND LEVELLERS: NEW 10’, $2250; 12’, rubber, air, $11,250. JD 3130, cab, good Used scrapers: 4 yd., $3900; Ashrubber, add on 3 PTH, $8500. IHC 1086, CRAWLER DOZERS: CAT D8H, high horse $2450; 4.5 yd., $4500, Crown 6 yd., $5500; cab, good rubber, engine rebuilt, $8750. with V-blade; Cat D7 with hyd. dozer and land Midland 8 yd., $8000; V-ditcher, $1500. JD 830, running, new grill, $7250. JD 730, rake; Cat D4C-40A with dozer; Cat D6-9U 1-866-938-8537, Portage la Prairie, MB. choice of 5, some electric, some pup, with dozer; Cat D6B with front and rear $4750 ea. JD 4020, w/Allied 694 self lev- blades; 4- Cat D2 crawlers. Large stock of QUIT FARMING: BOURGAULT Series III elling, quick attach, vg 23.1 tires, $8500. new and used parts. Discount prices. Many 850 sprayer, new Bubble Jet nozzles; JD 204-746-2016, 204-746-5345, Morris, MB. other units arriving daily. Central Canada’s 590 30’ swather, new reels and knife. wreckers of Industrial equipment. 306-264-3660, Glenbain, SK. JD 4560, 2 WD, 1 owner, mint, shedded, largest Equipment Sales, 204-667-2867, 4400 hrs, CAHR, 3 hyds., 1000 PTO, 15 Cambrian WANTED: REDEKOP CHAFF wagon. Text or fax: 204-667-2932, Winnipeg, MB. spd. powershift, $52,500 OBO. call 306-858-8101, 306-858-2412, Beechy, 306-699-2442, McLean, SK. CASE #70 Front end loader for sale. SK. E-mail: walshfarm@hotmail.com DID YOU EXPERIENCE crop damage from Phone 780-945-1641, Redwater, AB. DEINES MOWER, fully reconditioned, using Priority or PrePass. If so, ph. Back- TERRA FORCE 3 PTH back hoe, new units 12008 year warranty, 1860 chain drive lawn Track Investigations 1-866-882-4779. available w/13”or 16” buckets. Easy mower, 540 hours, $6,300. 306-223-4218, 1980 JD 4440, quad range, 3 SCV’s, c/w mount. 3 sizes available. Starting at $6200 www.lairdmowers.ca/ reconditioned.html Laird, SK. Leon 707 FEL, shedded, good cond., 1-800-352-6264, Flaman Sales, Nisku, AB. $22,000 OBO. 306-629-3701, Morse, SK. JD 148 and/or 58 LOADER, fits 10, 20, SUNFLOWER HARVEST SYSTEMS. Call 1977 JD 4630, 10,400 hrs., good cond., 3 0 , 4 0 , a n d 5 0 S e r i e s , $ 3 9 0 0 O B O. for literature. 1-800-735-5848. Lucke Mfg., 403-823-1894, Morrin, AB. $16,000. Call 306-287-4083, Spalding, SK. www.luckemanufacturing.com


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

36� COAL STOKER w/new burner plate and ring, needs fan, complete spare stoker fo r s p a r e s , $ 2 8 0 0 . 2 0 4 - 8 5 5 - 2 8 8 1 , 204-851-9131, Virden, MB. ODESSA ROCKPICKER SALES: New Degelman equipment, land rollers, Strawmaster, rockpickers, protill, dozer blades. 306-957-4403, 306-536-5097, Odessa, SK. TRACTOR TOW ROPES and Tow Straps in stock at Flaman. Call 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com 1997 CUSTOM COACH 5th wheel trailer one slide, new roof and awning, 28-1/2’, 5th wheel hitch available, $10,000 OBO; 1979 Ford Ranger Supercab truck, 5 spd. trans.; Fork type rockpicker; 14’ Hesston haybine. 306-722-3579, Fillmore, SK. FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS We also specialize in: Crop insurance appeals; Spray drift; Residual herbicide; Custom operator issues; Equip. malfunction. Call Back-Track Investigations for assistance and compensation 1-866-882-4779. IHC 4366 4 WD, 180 HP, 7531 hrs., $13,500; 1978 White 2-105, 6780 hrs., 105 HP, $7500; JD 215 16’ tandem disc, dura cushion, $7500; NH 795 TA manure s p r e a d e r, $ 7 2 5 0 . 204-525-4521, www.waltersequipment.com Minitonas MB FRONT MOUNT WEIGHTS for Buhler/Versatile tractors, includes the mount bracket. 306-962-4332, 306-962-3823, Eston, SK.

WANTED: 25’ TANDEM disc, must be good condition. 306-662-3385, Golden Prairie, SK. WANTED: POWER HARROW, 10’ to 20’, in good cond; 3 PTH sprayer, 60-80’ boom, hyd. pump. 306-441-0398, Battleford, SK. WANTED: USED, BURNT, old or ugly tractors. Newer models too! Smith’s Tractor Wrecking, 1-888-676-4847. WANTED: 300-350 HP, 4WD tractor w/ duals in good condition. 306-210-8901, Reward, SK. WANTED: OLDER SP swather, with PU reel, prefer 18’ or just 14-1/2’ PU reel only. 306-342-4784, Glaslyn, SK.

NEW AND USED generators, all sizes from 5 kw to 3000 kw, gas, LPG or diesel. Phone for availability and prices. Many used in stock. 204-643-5441, Fraserwood, MB.

1-888-92 0-1507

CLASSIFIED ADS 51

2011 LEON 650 land scraper, 6.5 cubic yards, 80� cut width, 2 axles, 5500 lbs empty weight, 11� ground clearance, $19,900. 1-800-352-6264, Flaman Sales. 1996 FORD/NH 1720 acreage tractor, 456 hours, 28 HP diesel, 3 PTH, PTO, Leon F E L , s h e d d e d , ve r y c l e a n , $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 . 306-963-7861, Imperial, SK. 2010 LEON 1700, 17 cubic yard., cutting edge at 75%, excellent condition, Located in Ryley, AB, $42,900. 1-800-352-6264, Flaman Sales, Nisku, AB. KONGSKILDE 700 GRAIN VAC. been through shop, new Cyclone installed, nice shape, $6900. Call 1-800-352-6264, Flaman Sales, Nisku, AB. DIRT DAWG POST hole digger, rental unit, 9HP Honda engine, good shape, various auger sizes available. 1-800-352-6264, Flaman Sales, Nisku, AB. 2010 SCHULTE XH600 6’ mower, 50HP required, green in color, trailing hitch, $7800. Call 1-800-352-6264, Flaman Sales, Nisku, AB.

DIESEL GENSET SALES AND SERVICE, 12 to 300 KW, lots of units in stock, used 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. SPRUCE FOR SALE! Beautiful locally grown trees. Plan ahead and renew your shelterbelt or landscape a new yardsite, 2013 JOHN DEERE AutoSteer, top of the get the year round protection you need. line 2630 touch screen display, Star Fire We sell on farm near Didsbury, AB. or dereceiver, full activation, asking $12,000. liver anywhere in western Canada. Now 306-662-8405, Richmound, SK. taking spring bookings. Details phone 403-586-8733 or check out our website at www.didsburysprucefarms.com

PUREBRED BLACK ANGUS long yearling SELLING: BLACK ANGUS bulls. Wayside bulls, replacement heifers, AI service. Angus, Henry and Bernie Jungwirth, Meadow Ridge Enterprises, 306-373-9140 306-256-3607, Cudworth, SK. or 306-270-6628, Saskatoon, SK. BLACK ANGUS BULLS, 15 yearlings and some 2 year olds, priced to sell. Phone 16 MONTH OLD Registered Red Angus bulls, easy calving, quiet, semen tested, Merlin Scott 204-835-2087, McCreary, MB. guaranteed breeders. Call Little de Ranch, TWO YEAR OLD Black Angus bulls, se- 306-845-2406, Turtleford, SK. men tested, very quiet. Double Bar S AnRED OR BLACK BULLS, 2 years, semen gus, Ken/Jake 306-493-2308, Delisle, SK. tested, reasonable prices. Tom Ward 306-668-4333, Saskatoon, SK. TWO YEAR OLD and yearling Red Angus Bulls, performance and semen tested, delivery available. T Bar K Ranch, Wawota, SK. Kevin 306-577-9861 or 306-739-2944. HOWE RED ANGUS yearlings and 2 year old bulls for sale. Semen tested and guaranteed. Call Mike at 306-631-8779, 306-691-5011, Moose Jaw, SK. JOHNSTON/ FERTILE VALLEY is selling yearling Black Angus bulls. Most are sired by the best AI bulls in the industry including Consensus, Upward, Brand Name, Imprint, EXAR 263C and Mustang. Also a group of high performance sons of Willabar Ambush 50U, a straight Canadian bull with explosive growth. These are thick, easy fleshing bulls produced by over 500 low maintenance, high production cows. Many of these bulls are suitable for heifers. All bulls are semen tested with complete performance and carcass info available. Dennis or David Johnston at 306-856-4726, Conquest, SK. HIGH QUALITY 2 year old purebred Black Angus bulls for sale. Call David or Pat 306-963-2639, 306-963-7739 Imperial, SK DISPERSAL: 20 BRED cows and calves, Canadian bloodlines, granddaughters of Sunmound Elimere 35X, bred to Bardolier 606 Son. 306-877-2014, 306-877-4402, Dubuc, SK.

WHITECAP CHAROLAIS yearlings and 2 year old bulls for sale. Semen tested and guaranteed. Call Mike 306-631-8779, 306-691-5011, Moose Jaw, SK. MARTENS CHAROLAIS has one 3 yr. old, several 2 yr. old and yearling bulls. Dateline Sons for calving ease, Specialist Sons for consistent thickness. 204-534-8370, Boissevain, MB. REG. CHAROLAIS BULLS, 2 year olds and yearlings, polled and horned, some red, quiet, hand fed. Ph Wilf, Cougar Hill Ranch 306-728-2800, 306-730-8722, Melville, SK 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. 2 YEAR OLD Purebred red and white bulls, easy calving, low BW - 82 and 85 lbs. Call 306-931-8069, Saskatoon, SK.

2 YEAR OLD bulls, calving ease and top g r ow t h fi g u r e s . P h o n e R o b G a r n e r, WINDERS GELBVIEH, Camrose, AB. are selling by private treaty registered PB 2 306-946-7946, Simpson, SK. year old and yearling Gelbvieh bulls and YEARLING AND 2 year old bulls by some replacement heifers. gwinder@syban.net of the great Red Angus sires. Arm River 780-672-9950. Red Angus 306-567-4702, Davidson, SK. KNUDSON FARMS GELBVIEH: Polled red or THREE 3 YEAR OLD Red Angus bulls, black bulls. Guaranteed. Kept until needed. p r i c e d t o s e l l . Phone Merlin Scott Call James 306-322-4682, Archerwill, SK. 204-835-2087, McCreary, MB. SOUTH VIEW RANCH has Red and Black Angus yearling and 2 yr. old bulls, semen BBJ POLLED HEREFORDS. Good selection and performance tested. Ceylon, SK. Call of quality 2 yr. old bulls as well as 2 provShane 306-869-8074, Keith 306-454-2730. en 3 yr. olds. Deposit holds until turn out. Will deliver. Contact Brian Longworth MAPLE RIDGE ACRES have yearling 306-656-4542, 306-831-9856, Harris, SK. purebred Red Angus bulls for sale. AI sires Sakic and Honky Tonk. Les Saunders, COULEE CREST HEREFORDS bulls for 306-997-4507, Borden, SK. sale by private treaty. Yearlings and 2 yr. olds, excellent quality, dehorned and RED ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, se- polled, moderate birthweights suitable for men tested, guaranteed breeders. Delivery heifers. Call Randy Radau 403-227-2259, available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, 403-588-6160. For online catalo gue Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com www.couleecrest.ca Bowden, AB.

WANTED: Older and newer tractors, in running condition or for parts. Goods Used Tractor Parts, 1-877-564-8734. WANTED: MASSEY FERGUSON Model 860 V8 hydro combine, must be low hrs, exc. shape. Call 204-537-2455, Belmont, MB.

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. BISON WANTED - Canadian Prairie Bison Chimney, heat exchangers, parts, piping, is looking to contract grain finished bison pumps, etc. Athabasca, AB, 780-628-4835. for growing markets. Roger Provencher at WANTED: MF #36 and #360 Discers, 306-468-2316. roger@cdnbison.com all sizes, any condition. Also parts discers. Prompt pickup. Ph anytime 306-259-4923, SASKOTA NATURAL is looking for fin306-946-9669, 306-946-7923, Young, SK. ished bison and cull cows. COD, paying TROPHY ZONE TANNERY, State of the market prices. “Producers working with WANTED: TANDEM DISC, 24’-26’, medium art facility. Hair on tanning for both taxiduty; Also looking for 7�x51’ Sakundiak au- dermy and domestic hides. Quality work Producers.� 306-231-9110, Quill Lake, SK. ger; NH 1475 Haybine. Call 306-876-4707. 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 WANTED TO PURCHASE cull bison bulls WANTED: SEMI MOUNT mower, 6’ or 7’ 403-653-1565 or cell: 406-450-6300, and cows for slaughter. Oak Ridge Meats 204-835-2365 204-476-0147 McCreary MB cutting bar, prefer Massey or Int. in work- Cardston, AB. Email: bunnage@shaw.ca ing condition. 780-846-2687, Kitscoty, AB. WANTED: CALVES AND Yearlings. Call Ryan 306-646-4974 or cell: 306-646-7743 Fairlight, SK. RAIN MAKER IRRIGATION Zimmatic by Lindsay pivots/Greenfield mini pivots, KLOOKING FOR ALL class of bison from SPEEDRITE, PATRIOT ELECTRIC FENCERS and accessories. 306-725-4820, Bulyea, Line towable irrigation, spare parts/acces- yearling to cow/calf pairs and big bulls. sories, new and used equipment. 33 years Phone Kevin 306-429-2029, Glenavon, SK. SK., www.lambacres.ca in business. www.rainmaker-irrigation.com GUARANTEED PRESSURE TREATED fence Call 306-867-9606, Outlook, SK. NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for posts, lumber slabs and rails. Call Lehner over 15 years, is looking for finished Bison, Wo o d P r e s e r ve r s L t d . , a s k fo r R o n WESTERN IRRIGATION - Large supply of grain or grass fed. “If you have them, we new and used irrigation equipment. Cad306-763-4232, Prince Albert, SK. man travelling gun dealer. Used pivot. want them.� Make your final call with CUSTOM FENCING, WILL travel. Call for Used large diesel pumping unit. 10� and Northfork for pricing! Guaranteed prompt bookings. 306-221-8806, Asquith, SK. 12� gated pipe. We buy and sell used payment! 514-643-4447, Winnipeg, MB. ELK VALLEY RANCHES, buying all ages SOLIDLOCK AND TREE ISLAND game wire equipment. 306-867-9461, Outlook, SK. and all accessories for installation. Heights 1/2 to 3 QUARTER MILE 6� aluminum ring of feeder bison. Call Frank 780-846-2980, from 26� to 120�. Ideal for elk, deer, bison, lock irrigation pipe, good shape. Price ne- Kitscoty, AB. or elkvalley@xplornet.com sheep, swine, cattle, etc. Tom Jensen gotiable. 780-818-2863, Edmonton, AB. ph/fax 306-426-2305, Smeaton, SK. IRRIGATION EQUIPMENT or move waMULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. ter? 6�-10� pipe, 4 cyl. motor and pump Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: on cart, $4500. 403-308-1400, Taber, AB. www.maverickconstruction.ca 1 MILE 6� HOOK and latch aluminum pipe. Price negotiable. Phone 780-818-2863, BLACK ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, seEdmonton, AB. men tested, guaranteed breeders. Delivery available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, BLOCKED SEASONED JACK Pine firewood PHIL’S IRRIGATION SALES: Reinke piv- Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com and wood chips for sale. Lehner Wood Pre- ots, lateral and minigators, pump and used servers Ltd., 306-763-4232, Prince Albert, mainline travelers and pivots. 22 years ex- 2 YEAR OLD Black Angus bulls, low birth perience. 306-858-7351, Lucky Lake, SK. weight, good performance, good selection SK. Will deliver. Self-unloading trailer. www.philsirrigation.ca Rob Garner, 306-946-7946, Simpson, SK. BLOCKED AND SPLIT seasoned Spruce firewood. Call V&R Sawing, 306-232-5488, IRRIGATION TURBINE WATER pumps, REGISTERED BLACK ANGUS 2 year old 6�-8�, 4 cyl. dsl., 600-1000 gal./min., very virgin and yearling bulls. Moderate birth Rosthern, SK. efficient. 403-878-6302, Grassy Lake, AB. weights, quiet. Complete performance and 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 ultrasound data available. Contact GBS Anavailable. 306-862-7831, 306-862-3086, gus Farm 306-940-9536, Prince Albert, SK. Nipawin, SK. QUALITY YEARLING ANGUS BULLS, semen tested, light to moderate birth weight. Ken Bell 306-591-7792, Pense, SK. BLACK AND RED ANGUS BULLS on BEV’S FISH & SEAFOOD LTD., buy direct, fresh fish: Pickerel, Northern Pike, A L U M I N U M F R A M E D G R E E N H O U S E moderate growing ration, performance Whitefish and Lake Trout. Seafood also 20’x30’ incl: gas furnace, tables, electrical info avail. Adrian or Brian Edwards, Valleyavailable. Phone toll free 1-877-434-7477, box and exhaust fan. You must dismantle, hills Angus, Glaslyn, SK., 306-342-4407. $5000. Call 306-738-4905, Gray, SK. 306-763-8277, Prince Albert, SK. MIDNITE OIL CATTLE CO. has on offer semen tested yearling and 2 year old bulls. 306-734-2850, 306-734-7675, Craik, SK. 2 YR. OLD BULLS, stout and rugged for C H A M P I O N G E N E R A T O R 7 8 0 0 W 2000 KUBOTA 2860 dsl., hydro., 26 HP, your cow herd, easy calving for your heifpeak/6500 Wrunning, used once, $600. 670 hrs., snowblower, mower, bagger, ers. Contact Ernest Gibson, Everblack AnCall 306-260-4392, Saskatoon, SK. gus, Vermilion, AB., 780-853-2422. exc., $3950. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK.

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Regular cattle Sales Highwood - Mondays at 9:00am | Fort Macleod - Tuesdays at 9:00am

Southern Alberta Yearling Classic Sale Friday, August 8 - at the MD of Ranchlands (Chain Lakes) - 11am

Western Canadian

Video Calf Sale

Friday, September 5 - at Highwood - 10am

Book your calves and yearlings early!

www.livestock.ab.ca Highwood Livestock Auction PO Box 5145, High River, AB, T1V 1M3 t 1-888-652-7743 t Fax 403-652-3446 Fort Macleod Auction PO Box 1330, Fort Macleod, AB, T0L 0Z0 t 1-888-553-7715 t Fax 403-553-4264 Allan Lively 403-627-7776 Justin Keeley 403-627-6534 Darren Shaw 403-601-5165

Blaine Kellington 403-312-1279 Cody Sawley 403-652-0684 Ken Stadlwiser 403-888-5092

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Jay Nelson 403-652-0402 Danny McDougall 403-634-0604 Steve Quinton 403-653-7228

British Columbia Rep: Ryan Culligan 250-488-3108 Saskatchewan Rep: William Bierbach 306-299-2073

Brooks Area Rep: Colin Mcniven 403-793-1699 Saskatchewan Rep: Ryan Bierbach 306-532-4809

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52 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

FRESH AND SPRINGING heifers for sale. NORHEIM RANCHING HAS a full line of Cows and quota needed. We buy all classhandling equipment at discount prices. es of slaughter cattle-beef and dairy. R&F FLOCK DISPERSAL: approx. 40 Katahdin Freestanding panels, tubs, chutes, feeders, Livestock Inc. Bryce Fisher, Warman, SK. ewes w/lambs, reasonable price. Must go. self-unloading hay trailers, net wrap and Phone 306-239-2298, cell 306-221-2620. more. 306-227-4503, Saskatoon, SK. 306-577-1401, Carlyle, SK.

POLLED 2 YEAR old black and red Limousin bulls. Call Rob Garner, 306-946-7946, Simpson, SK. GOOD SELECTION OF stout red and black bulls with good dispositions and calving ease. Qually-T Limousin, Rose Valley, SK., 306-322-4755 or 306-322-7554.

MORAND INDUSTRIES

FREE STANDING Corral Panels for cattle, horses, bison and sheep. Large variety of length, height, and bar spacings. Some sample prices: 21’x6 bar, light duty, $199; 21’x5 bar, HD, $239; 21’x5 bar, med. duty, $219; 24’x6 bar, best value, $259; 21’x7 bar Bison, $299; 30’ windbreak frames, spring special $359; very heavy duty, 30’x5 bar gate panel, $450; 24’x5 bar continuous panel, $169; HD 24’x5 bar, $189. Round bale feeders, horse haysavers, sheep panels, feed troughs. Call 1-866-500-2276 www.affordablebarns.com

Builders of Quality Livestock Equipment, Made with Your Safety in Mind!

BIG ISLAND LOWLINES Premier Breeder. Selling custom designed packages. Name your price and we will put a package together for you. Fullblood/percentage Low- 1500 SUFFLOK/SUFFOLK CROSS EWE line, embryos, semen. Black/Red carrier. FLOCK DISPERSAL. Approx. 1000 spring Darrell 780-486-7553, Edmonton, AB. lambing ewes lambed out at 186% unassisted. Approx. 500 Jan./Feb. lambing ewes lambed out at 180%. These ewes being flushed now for Aug. breeding. 1-6 yrs. old, PASTURE READY REGISTERED purebred no culls. $200 gate run, $225 choice. 250 Red Salers bulls for sale. Elderberry Farm CLPC shares available. CLPC average Net Salers, 306-747-3302, Parkside, SK. price for lambs is $200 per head so far this year. Suffolk Dorsett and Texel rams available. $200. 204-280-0822, Lundar, MB. mitch@mjmillarranch.com FOR SALE OR RENT: Red, black and full- www.mjmillarranch.com blood Simmental bulls. A.I. breeding, semen tested, reasonable prices. Phone Dale 780-853-2223, Vermilion, AB. SUNGOLD SPECIALTY MEATS. We want your lambs. Have you got finished (fat) lambs or feeder lambs for sale? Call SPECKLE PARK BULLS: one proven 5 yr. Dwayne at: 403-894-4388 or Cathy at: old herdsire; one 2 yr. old, BW 78 lbs. 1-800-363-6602 for terms and pricing. Darcy Purdy 204-365-0066, Shoal Lake MB www.sungoldmeats.com PB DORSET AND Hampshire yearling and ram lambs and ewe lambs. Heeroma’s TEXAS LONGHORN BULLS available, black 306-823-4526 evenings, Neilburg, SK. or red, yearlings and two year olds. Dean, FOR RENT: 2 quarters heavy tame grass Panorama Ranch, 403-391-6043, Stauffer. pasture, unfenced. Suitable for sheep ALBERTA TEXAS LONGHORN Association grazing only. Plenty of water. More info. 780-387-4874, Leduc, AB. For more info. ph. 250-877-2563, Smithers, BC. www.albertatexaslonghorn.com REG. TEXAS LONGHORN bulls. Bred cows, open and bred heifers. Dean, Panorama Ranch 403-391-6043, Stauffer, AB. SHEEP DEVELOPMENT BOARD offers extension, marketing services and a full line of sheep and goat supplies. WELSH BLACK- The Brood Cow Advantage. 306-933-5200, Saskatoon, SK. Check www.canadianwelshblackcattle.com Canadian Welsh Black Soc. 403-442-4372.

20 TARENTAISE/ANGUS CROSS cow/calf BUYING: PIGS/SWINE, raised outside, all pairs, $2000 per pair. Call 306-225-4603, sizes. Highest $$$. 1-877-226-1395. www.canadianheritagemeats.com Hague, SK. YOUNG COW/CALF PAIRS and heifers with calves for sale. Call 306-773-1049, Swift Current, SK.

1-800-582-4037

Magnum Texas Gates 2013 LEON 425V spreader, used 1 season, exc. cond. Brian McCarthy, 306-435-3590, 306-435-7527 (cell), Moosomin SK.

www.magnumfabricating.com

MAGNUM FABRICATING LTD. Maple Creek, SK Ph: 306-662-2198

SVEN ROLLER MILLS. Built for over 40 years. PTO/elec. drive, 40 to 1000 bu./hr. Example: 300 bu./hr. unit costs $1/hr. to run. Rolls peas and all grains. We regroove and repair all makes of mills. Call Apollo Machine 306-242-9884, 1-877-255-0187. www.apollomachineandproducts.com

WANTED CERTIFIED ORGANIC beef. Peter L u n d ga r d , N at u r e ’ s Way F a r m . C a l l UNIVERSITY BOUND? Perfect 3 bdrm townhouse condo, located in prestigious 780-338-2934, Grimshaw, AB. Lakeshore Estates, Regina, SK. Walking distance to University. Reduced for quick sale. Contact: Ian Johnston, Century 21 Dome, 306-789-1222. SINGLE? SUMMER IS the perfect time to TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED condo, 55 find love! Meet the Matchmaker! In-person N a s s a u S t . N o r t h , W i n n i p e g , M B . interviews July 22 to 25th in Regina and $259,900. 204-475-8777. Saskatoon. 19 years successful matchmaking. Call to book your appointment: RETIRING. 1288 SQ. FT. townhouse, Osler, Camelot Introductions 204-888-1529, SK. 20 mins. to Saskatoon. 6 months old c/w appliances and drapes. Basement deview www.camelotintroductions.com veloped. 2 car garage. On very quiet COUNTRY INTRODUCTIONS - Introducing street. Health reasons. Available Oct. you to down-to-earth country people like 2/2014. Call 306-239-0016. yourself. 1-877-247-4399.

WWW.FUCHS.CA - For all your Agriculture and Livestock equip. needs. Stocking grain and silage bags. 306-762-2125, Vibank, SK

CEDAR LOG HOMES AND CABINS, sidings, paneling, decking. Fir and Hemlock flooring, timbers, special orders. Rouck Bros., Lumby, BC. www.rouckbros.com 1-800-960-3388. LAKEFRONT COTTAGE at Singush Lake in the Duck Mountain Provincial Park. 1104 sq. ft., 3 bdrms, 1 bthrm, sunroom, deck, boathouse w/deck. Includes furnishings. Wonderful view. Lots of spruce trees. Call 204-773-6797 Karen Goraluk, Salesperson, NorthStar Insurance & Real Estate, Roblin, MB. www.north-star.ca ONLY TWO FULLY serviced lots remain on family oriented quiet cul de sac in new subdivision at beautiful Weyakwin Lake, SK. 306-961-5515, pdepper@hotmail.com 92’ LAKEFRONT LOT on Meeting Lake, North of Battleford, SK. For more information call 780-465-4515. 87’x137’ LAKE LOT, Cowan Lake, near Big River, SK., 1 block from lake in new development, $45,000. Call 306-239-0016.

FREESTANDING PANELS: 30’ windbreak panels; 6-bar 24’ and 30’ panels; 10’, 20’ and 30’ feed troughs; Bale shredder bunks; Silage bunks; Feeder panels; HD bale feeders; All metal 16’ and 24’ calf shelters. Will custom build. 306-424-2094, Kendal, SK. FREESTANDING CORRAL PANELS, 30’, 5 bar panels, comes with chain to tie togeth- JIFFY 900 BALE Processor, excellent coner, removable foot for transport, $450. Call dition, $5500 OBO, can deliver. Darvin 204-642-2249, Arborg, MB. 306-883-9952, Leoville, SK.

U T V /15 E Z E -F E E D E R FO R Y O U R U T V H o lds 29 pa ils o f gra in

2,1953plus freight

$

C a llFo r Y o ur N ea rest D ea ler

1-877-695-2532

KELLN SOLAR FLOAT Pumps: efficient, economical and easy to use. Lumsden, SK. CKC REGISTERED DALMATIAN Puppies www.kellnsolar.com 1-888-731-8882. Please text or email for more info $1350. 306-331-7153, Fort Qu'Appelle, SK. FROSTFREE NOSEPUMPS: Energy free soozysplace@msn.com solution to livestock watering. No power required to heat or pump. Prevents con- REG. TRI-COLORED Border Collie pups, tamination. Grants avail. 1-866-843-6744. born June 21st, will have 1st shots and miwww.frostfreenosepumps.com crochipped, 7 females, 3 males, out of working parents. 306-843-7606, Wilkie, SK

WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to go! Mt. Robson, 1443 sq. ft. was $161,715. Sale price $155,943. Call 1-866-933-9595, www.warmanhomes.ca TO BE MOVED at Macoun, SK., 3 bedroom bungalow, 46x28’, with double garage, new roof, furnace and AC. Easy to move, on cinder block basement, $25,000. Call REGISTERED KELPIE DOGS available Au- 306-634-9957 or 250-258-9914. gust 19, 2014, vet checked, 1st shots, WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to $800/ea. Call 306-334-2335, Balcarres, SK go! Mt. Vanier, 1680 sq. ft. was $222,083. Sale price $215,363. Call 1-866-933-9595 or go to www.warmanhomes.ca WANTED TO BUY: Blue or Red Heeler, or Blue Heeler/German Shepard cross puppies, for farm guard dog. Grand-daughter lost hooch to freak accident and cancer. Male or female ok. Can wait til puppies are born. Will pay shipping. Call 780-349-2798

Also now available through your local Co-op Agro Center.

w w w .ezefeed er.ca GGREG’S WELDING: Freestanding 30’ 5 bar panels, all 2-7/8” drill stem construction, $430. 24’x5.5’ high panels, 2-7/8” pipe with 5- 1” sucker rods, $300. 24’x6’ high panels, 2-7/8” pipe with 6- 1” rods, $350. 30’ 2 or 3 bar windbreak panels c/w lumber. Gates and double hinges available on all panels. Belting troughs for grain or silage. Delivery available. For more info. call 306-768-8555, Carrot River, SK.

FARROW TO FINISH Hog Equipment. Converting barns to shops so everything must go. Electric grain mill, cyclones and feed lines. Ventilation fans. Continuous feed system with feeders. Scale. Galvanized dry sow crates. Hundreds of 4x3 cement blocks. Misc other equipment. 780-893-0683, Mayerthorpe, AB. PORTABLE PANELS 30’ freestanding 3- dschatz@terraprogroup.com bar windbreak frames, 5-bar, 4-bar panels w/wo double hinge gates and more. On STEEL VIEW MFG. Self-standing panels, farm welding. Oxbow, SK., 306-485-8559, windbreaks, silage/hay bunks, feeder pan306-483-2199 and leave a message. els, sucker rod fence posts. Custom orCall Shane 306-493-2300, Delisle, CATTLELAC HYDRAULIC SQUEEZE chute, ders. good cond.; 1 yr old silencer hyd. squeeze SK. www.steelviewmfg.com chute; 2002 Merritt tri-axle cattle trailer, good cond., $32,000 OBO or trade for grain trailer. 204-856-6907, Treherne, MB.

BELTING FOR SALE: 42-56” wide, 3/8” thick. Call Ken Wadelle 403-346-7178 or 403-392-7754, Red Deere, AB. NET WRAP! NET WRAP! NET WRAP! Great YAKS FOR SALE: 200+ head available, product. Great price. We will save you cows, calves, bulls and yearlings. Will sell money. Twine, silage covers, and silage as a herd or individually, will negotiate on film. 306-227-4503, Saskatoon, SK. price for entire herd or large lots. I have a lucrative market for the meat in BC and will provide that for someone who wants the business. $1,000. 250-569-7858, McBride, BC. phil@marshbros.ca

TRIM BOSS: The Power Hoof Trimmer. Take the work out of hoof trimming. Trim wall, sole and flare on saddle horses, drafts and minis. Call 780-898-3752, Buck PEARSON BISON SQUEEZE, like new, Creek, AB. www.trimboss.ca $4000. Hi-Hog cattle or bison tub, $4500. WWW.ELLIOTTCUTTINGHORSES.COM 403-747-2500, Alix, AB. 35 plus years of training, showing, sales, clinics, lessons. Clifford and Sandra Elliott, Paynton, SK. Phone 306-895-2107. 30’ SILAGE feed troughs, $650 ea.; 250 bushel Miami creep feeders, $2750 ea. THE LIVERY STABLE, for harness sales and Call Mike 306-469-7741, Big River, SK. repairs. Call 306-283-4580, 306-262-4580, 30’ PORTABLE WINDBREAKS, asking Hwy #16 Borden Bridge, SK. $750. Ph Mike 306-469-7741, Big River, SK

CERTIFIED ORGANIC HAY, brome, fescue, alfalfa mix, 3’x3’x8’ square bales. Call WARMAN HOMES CUSTOM built commerfor details 306-335-2280, Lemberg, SK. cial buildings, to your plan or ours. Call BEST COOKING PULSES accepting samples 1-866-933-9595 or www.warmanhomes.ca of organic and conventional green/yellow peas for 2013/2014 crop year. Matt ONLINE AUCTION: Restaurant and Real Estate: Turn Key Business including 50 306-586-7111, Rowatt, SK. seat licensed restaurant, equipment and WANTED: BUYING ORGANIC GRAINS. building. Located in Midale, SK. Bids close FOB farm or delivered, Loreburn, SK. Call Thursday, July 31, 1 PM. 1-800-263-4193, View at: McDougallAuction.com Box 3081, F.W. Cobs Company, 1-888-531-4888. Regina, SK. S4P 3G7, DL#319916

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

FLYING GRAIN FED common pigeons for training and gun clubs, $4/ea. Call WANTED: CULL COWS and bulls for dog slaughter. For bookings call Kelly at Drake evenings, 306-563-2020, Canora, SK. Meat Processors, 306-363-2117, ext. 111, Drake, SK.

WANTED: 400 PLUS bull elk; Also 200 point white-tail bucks. Stan 306-497-3576, SASKATOON ALL BREED Horse & Tack Blaine Lake, SK. Email: stan1@hotmail.ca Sale, August 26. Tack 11:00 AM, Horses to ATTENTION ELK PRODUCERS: AWAPCO follow. Open to broke horses (halter or rid- is a proven leader in elk meat sales. If you ing). Sale conducted at OK Corral, Mar- have elk to supply to market, give AWAPtensville, SK. To consign call Frederick, CO a call today. Non-members welcome 306-227-9505 bodnarusauctioneering.com info@wapitiriver.com or 780-980-7589. HORSE SALE, Johnstone Auction Mart, NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for Moose Jaw, Thursday, Aug. 7, 2014. Tack over 15 years, is looking for Elk. “If you sells: 2:00 PM; Horses sell: 4:00 PM. All have them, we want them.” Make your ficlasses of horses accepted. 306-693-4715, nal call with Northfork for pricing! Guaranwww.johnstoneauction.ca PL #914447. teed prompt payment! 514-643-4447, 6TH ANNUAL PRAIRIE Harvest Horse Winnipeg, MB. Sale, Sunday, August 17, 2014 at 1:00 PM, Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, SK. Featuring Quality Ranch / Pleasure / Show geldings and mares, well started younger geldings and mares, brood mares, yearlings and 2 year olds and teams. Registered and Grade. Catalogue online early August at www.johnstoneauction.ca. For more info or to be mailed a catalogue, call Scott Johnstone 306-631-0767 or Glen Gabel 306-536-1927. PL #914447. SINCLAIR’S FLYING S RANCH 7th Annual Production Sale, Aug. 9th, 2 PM at the ranch. 36 one owner AQHA and APHA horses. Broke mares and geldings, and ELK TROPHY BULL AND BREEDING 2014 foals. 306-845-4440, Spruce Lake, Stock Auction, Friday, Aug. 8, 2014, 7:00 SK. View catalogue in color: buyagro.com PM, Nisku Inn, Nisku, AB. For listings and updates go to www.gwacountry.com Gateway Auction Services 1-866-304-4664. Gordon 403-363-1729 Mark 403-357-9833 TWO GREY MINIATURE donkey jennies. DEMAND IS EXCEEDING supply. New pric204-742-3338, Garland, MB. ing for your slaughter elk up to $3.75/lb. REG. MINIATURE DONKEYS. Reg. Jack for full loads of well conditioned elk. Ian (herdsire), bred Jennets, 2 yr. and wean- 204-625-2498, 204-867-0085, Minnedosa. ling Jennets, various colors, halter broke, all very quiet. 306-781-2590, Kronau, SK.

WANTED: ORGANIC, HEATED or FEED QUALITY FLAX, feed peas, soy beans, lentils. 204-379-2451, St. Claude, MB.

www.morandindustries.com

cts Produ st a That L

PRO-CERT ORGANIC OPTION - 2014. For information on organic farming: prospects, transition, barriers, benefits, certification, and marketing contact one of our agrologists. Call 306-382-1299, Saskatoon, SK. or wallace.hamm@pro-cert.org www.pro-cert.org

SHUSWAP COUNTRY ESTATES. Manuf. homes start at $69,900. Retire with us...on time...on budget. 250-835-2366, Salmon Arm BC. www.shuswapcountryestates.com 16x46 MODULINE HOME. 55 Plus Park, valley and mountain views in the beautiful Shuswap, BC. Maintenance free landscaping. Only $48,900. Call 250-835-2366 email: sce@airspeedwireless.ca 500 ACRES, log home, 1.5 miles riverfront, near Vanderhoof, BC. Hunting and fishing paradise. All treed, some timber value, 5 kms to nearest neighbor surrounded by Crown. Reduced $525,000. 250-567-5333.

RARE OPPORTUNITY: For sale photographer collection of approx. 50,000 Sask. grain elevator pictures (std. 4”x6” size) designated by location and year contained in photo albums. Call 604-221-5114 or 778-888-1212, Vancouver, BC.

GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPS, ready to go. Phone Ed 306-272-3848, leave message if not in. Foam Lake, SK. PUREBRED BLACK LAB puppies for sale, 1st shots included, ready to go! $300 OBO. 306-541-8099, 306-537-8099, Regina, SK.

3 PURE RED BONE Coonhound pups, 1 black and tan Coonhound. 9-1/2 mos. old, trained for hunting cougar, all shots up to date. 780-672-6026, Camrose, AB. MAREMMA WORKING STOCK guardian pups, born April 26th living with sheep and goats, $450/ea. Call 604-796-8557, Agassiz, BC. No Sunday calls please. WATKINSON KELPIE PUPS, bonified proven working Kelpie bloodlines. Watkinson Cowdogs, 306-692-2573, Moose Jaw, SK. KUVASZ/PYRENEES PUPS, farm raised, born Sept./Oct., 3 males and 4 females. Call 403-502-9470, Medicine Hat, AB.

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 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 KILLARNEY, MB. 1160 sq. ft. 3+2 bdrm bungalow w/addition. New paint. Eat-in kitchen has newer oak cupboards. Electric fireplace upstairs and gas down. Finished basement w/2nd bathroom. Paved driveway, single att. garage w/screened 3 season room, 2 sheds. New hot water tank, dishwasher and garage door opener. Close to schools, golf course, park and lake, $198,500. More info call 204-523-7334.

2005 HOULE PUMP, 52’, 1000 rpm PTO, HD driveline, 8” pump with 8” directional WARMAN HOMES LOTS for sale in Langvalve and 8” aux pipe. Asking $18,500. Tim ham, SK. or Warman Legends or Southlands. www.warmanhomes.ca to view or 204-764-0532, Decker, MB. call 1-866-933-9595. LOG POST AND BEAM shell package for sale. 26’x34’ with loft 1220 sq. ft. total. Douglas fir logs. Call 306-222-6558 cell, email jeff@backcountryloghomes.ca or visit www.backcountryloghomes.ca S M A L L T W O B E D RO O M h o u s e t o b e HONEY BEE FARM, Grand Forks, BC. 3 moved, newly renovated, 520 sq. ft., Spirbdrm. house, large cert. honey house, 2.6 itwood, SK. 306-883-2208. acres, 500 hive equipment, trucks and school bus route. Call Jennifer Brock at 1926 CHARACTER HOUSE on blocks, ready McDonald Realty, 250-446-2288. Visit: to move, 1.5 storeys, 3 bdrms, Regina, SK., $10,000. Call/text 306-533-7887. townandcountry4sale.com


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

SUPER SUM M ER SA LE! A LL 2013/2014 SR I Sto ck Ho m es.

Great 3 & 4 bedroom plans.

U nbeatable P ricing in W estern Canada!

NEW HOME BY Dewald Construction 1978 Ltd., 1,140 sq. ft. Norquay, SK. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, single family, hardwood, tile, carpet, white cabinets, quartz counter tops. Finished basement w/radiant heat, attached double garage, gas forced air furnace and fireplace, main floor laundry. For sale by: owner $297,000. 403-934-2566, 403-901-5638, Norquay, SK. dewalds@wildroseinternet.ca

Com pare & Save! Ready to Deliver! 1-877-341-442 2 Red D eer

w w w .d yn a m icm od u la r.ca

CLASSIFIED ADS 53

WELL MAINTAINED 22.5 acre small farm, 5 minutes from downtown Barriere and the schools. Backed up against a natural outdoor playground, an ideal spot to raise a family. Has a good gravity irrigation system and is sub-dividable. Modern log house, barn and outbuildings all in good condition. Short country road, which is well maintained year round. Has a great view of the North Thompson River Valley, $599,000. For more information on the property call Karina Scott, Royal LePage, 250-672-5300. MLS#115541, Barriere, BC. 16 ACRE RIVERFRONT farm in the North Thompson, 3 acres in vegetables, rest in pasture, all irrigated. 4 bdrm house, shop, greenhouses, outbuildings. Great for retirement/hobby or for farming, $524,900. 250-672-5159, jerdonbrown1@gmail.com BY OWNER, WARM Christina Lake, BC. Waterfront, nice 5 bdrm home, $495,000. Call 520-820-5777 (cell) or 250-447-9000. Can e-mail pictures on request.

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BEST PRICE CANADIAN built by Moduline. 1520 sq. ft., Temora, $99,900; 1216 sq. ft., Oasis/Villa, $79,900. Call Stan, 306-496-7538, 1-888-699-9280. www.affordablehomesales.ca Yorkton. MEDALLION HOMES 1-800-249-3969 Immediate delivery: New 16’ and 20’ modular homes; Also used 14’ and 16’ homes. Now available: Lake homes. Medallion Homes, 306-764-2121, Prince Albert, SK.

GRAVEL FOR SALE: 160 acres of pasture land, situated near Hafford, SK. In RM of Redberry, backhoe tested. Call Judy at 403-843-0066 or cell: 403-877-8191. 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, other modern storage sheds. Quill Lake, SK. Possibility of 3 additional quarters. Taking offers to July 31/14. 306-287-7928

MOBILE HOME, RURAL SK. 1400 sq. ft. McLean/QuAppelle. 3 bdrm, 1 bath, single family 1978 Safeway, 14x76', two additions 53x10' and 10x16', 1400 sq. ft. in total. New hardwood throughout, newer outside doors, w/storm doors, needs some work. Metal roofing, front deck and back deck optional, front deck 4x10', back deck 14x28'. Looking to move this off my land ASAP . Serious buyers only. For sale by owner, $34,900 OBO. Phone 306-551-7870, email: schmidtys@sasktel.net MISTY VALLEY RANCH, AB, 101,600 acres, 2 allotments, lease land and deeded development land. $2,100,000. 403-845-7777 2014 FOREST RIVER Suite B; Two inde- http://www.century21.ca/raymond.borley pendent suites, $59,980. See them at Sunridge RV, Radisson, SK. 1-877-827-4845. WANTED: ABANDONED FARMSITE in Southern Alberta to rent, lease or buy. visit our website: www.sunridgervs.ca Ideal site would have hydro, water and 2014 QUAILRIDGE 38 FLA; 10 Park Mod- available space for a grass strip runway els in stock, starting at $49,900. Visit Sun- (30x1200’). I’m a mobile mechanic and ridge RV, Radisson, SK. 1-877-827-4845. welder by trade, maybe we can make a deal. Call Mike at 403-608-0721. visit our website: www.sunridgervs.ca RTM SHOW HOME. 1594 sq. ft., high feature front with upper windows, vinyl shake and stone, high living room vault, gas fireplace with exterior chase, rear overhang for verandah, custom cabinetry and lighting, 5’ ensuite shower, $185,000. 306-493-3089, Swanson Builders, Saskatoon, SK. area, www.swansonbuilders.ca

STANDING HAY CROPS wanted. Rental by the ton or by the acre up to $100/acre. Custom large square baling, custom swathing. Call 780-991-3616, Thorsby, AB.

1.) LARGE DELUXE GRAIN FARM: 4000 acres cash cropping plus cattle facilities, lots of water, central AB. 2.) Half section farm North of Newbrook with yardsite; 3.) Beautiful quarter West of Red Deer, log buildings, Clearwater River frontage, Alfred Creek, cattle pasture, 120 acres of gravel, 17’ deep, and much more. Don J a r r e t t , R e a l t y E xe cu t i ve s L e a d i n g , 160 ACRES OF forest and meadow border- 780-991-1180, Spruce Grove, AB. ing northern Provincial forest, 2 kms off Hwy. #2, all weather access. $180,000. ID#1100260 Taber: Water Rights For Call 306-764-0762, Prince Albert, SK. Sale, 8.7 acres of B.R.I.D Water Rights. Trailer Business for sale! Prime Business location spread over 20 acres. This site is only 2 miles East of Lethbridge, on the north side of Hwy 3, w/high visibility and easy access, includes a residence and various buildings. ID#2008 Coaldale: Modern 150 cow dairy farm, fully automatFARM IN CENTRAL BC, 1250 acres w/nice house, 2 barns, shops and machine sheds. ed computerized milking robots (Lely 2010) w/newer barn for 150 cows. 95 Visit: www.haneymountainranch.ca or call cows, 100 kg TPQ, 100 calves to springing 250-699-8567, Burns Lake, BC. heifers, home, city water, 159 acres. More Quota, livestock and land available. ID#2056 Picture Butte: 100 cow dairy operation, c/w support buildings, 2 homes, 160 acres of pivot irrigated land. Quota: 100 kg TPQ Optional (not included). ID#1100277 Lethbridge: 52 acres, Investment Land adjacent to Lethbridge city limits. Great holding property w/primarily agriculture use. Currently leased out for crop on an annual contract. Property comes fully serviced. ID#1100275 Lundbreck: Full 160 acres right on Hwy 22, 100 acres hay, rest is native pasture. Good dugout and fences. The SE quarter (ID#1100273) also available w/house and buildings. Great mountain views. Real Estate Centre 1-866-345-3414 www.farmrealestate.com

R E A D Y TO M O VE H O M E S

A re you plan n in g to b u ild a h om e in 2 01 4. W ood C ou n try w ill b u ild you a R T M or a cu s tom b u ilt h om e on s ite to m eet you r requ irem en ts . W ood C ou n try prid es its elf on b u ild in g top qu ality h om es w ith a h igh level of cu s tom er s atis faction s in ce its in ception in 1 980.

C all L eigh at 306 -6 9 9 -7284

M cL ean , S K .

WATER PROBLEMS? ELIMINATE rust, smell, bad taste, hardness, color, sodium o d o r. T h e W a t e r C l i n i c , t o l l f r e e 1-800-664-2561, www.thewaterclinic.com 3.5 QUARTERS, TOMAHAWK, AB. area; 6 quarters grazing, Highvale, AB; plus 14,000 acres. Cattle, bison and elk operations, fenced and cross fenced, Wabumun Lake, west of Edmonton, AB. 780-915-1735, roperrealtyltd@aol.com

Ce rtifie d Hom e Builde r

BUILDING W ITH CO NFIDENCE!!!

• 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 “Bu ildin g you r hom e to su it you r n eeds!”

2,560 ACRES OF good farmland, mostly in one block w/nice yard site, house, shop, sheds and 110,000 plus bushel bins on air 4000 ACRES IN A BLOCK, 15 miles east and mostly hoppered. RM #101, 65 miles of Davidson, SK. RM of Arm River #252. SW of Regina, or 40 miles SE of Moose Two parcels. Parcel A: 17 quarters, 93% Jaw, 306-475-2521, Spring Valley, SK. arable land, Parcel B: 9 quarters, 89% arable. Asking 3.2x the assessment. Also RM CANWOOD #494, 4 quarters, grain, avail. large older home, shop, 62,000 bu. pasture and hay, lots of water, 400 acres storage, farm equipment and 100 cow/calf cult. On school bus route. Power on 2 pairs. Great investment or turnkey. sites. House, 2 large garages, grain storage on home quarter. Fair market value. erin.kinder@yahoo.ca Call 306-561-7335. Priced to sell. 306-747-2775 Shellbrook SK FARM/ ACREAGE- 520 acres or purchase only 40 acres with yardsite, 1588 sq. FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS ft. newer res. on rural water line. Close to We also specialize in: Crop insurance apDiefenbaker Lake and Sask Landing Prov. peals; Spray drift; Residual herbicide; CusPark. RM 228 Lacadena. MLS 487145 and tom operator issues; Equip. malfunction. MLS 487054. Len Rempel 306-741-6358 Call Back-Track Investigations for assisRoyal LePage Southland Realty, Swift Cur- tance and compensation 1-866-882-4779. rent, SK. www.royallepageswiftcurrent.ca LAND FOR SALE in RM Wood Creek #281. ORGANIC LAND NEAR Kenaston, SK. 443 E-1/2-3-28-27-W2, 320 acres of pasture acres; Adjoining 37 acre acreage w/house cross fenced into three paddocks. Seeded and pasture also available. 306-242-1896. alfalfa/meadow brome, 1 paddock seeded only brome. Lots of water. Pasture rented SMILEY, SK. MIXED farm, 152 acres for for 2014 season. Phone 306-963-7656 for sale, close to town, on pavement, lots of info. Tenders to be in by Sept. 8/14 water, oil leases, house and building. more Email bhdetwiller@sasktel.net or mail to $275,000. 306-838-0060 or 403-986-3280 Bill Detwiller, Box 59, Imperial SK S0G 2J0

PRIME PLATO FARMLAND for sale. 960 acres of excellent Regina Clay 6B crop land Average assess. 115,000/quarter, surface oil well leases of $22,000/year, power in the treed farm yard, metal quonset 50’x60’, 3 steel 3400 bu. bins. Land located one mile south of Plato, SK. Sec 22-25-18-W3 and W/2 Sec 23-25-18-W3, located in the RM Snipe Lake 259. Serious inquires call Stu Wilson at 403-519-3759.

ID#1100257 OSLER: Modern Dairy farm near Saskatoon w/145 acres. 90 cow free stall barn w/state of the art auto identifying double 10 milk parlor and an attached calf-heifer barn, 154.79 kg daily milk quota, 1614 sq.ft. home, and insulated workshop. ID#1100235 PONTEIX: 2 Quarters farm land w/house, bins and storage shed, good well, 200 acres cultivated, remainder in alfalfa/grass hay. Gas well revenue $2400/annually. Cultivated acreage according to SAMA. ID#485737 Regina: 798 acres of productive farm land. 100 acres summer fallow, 270 acres tame hay, 148 acres tame pasture, 280 acres native pasture. Energy efficient home and outstanding water quality. ID#1100237 Dinsmore: Two 1/4 sections of farmland located close to Dinsmore, in RM of Milden No: 286. Soil is sandy clay loam with #2 and #3 soil. Sellers will consider selling each quarter separately. ID#1100191 Rush Lake: 309.73 acres irrigated land. Valley pivots, natural gas pumping unit, 3 phase power. Located 11 miles East of Swift Current and 5 miles south of Hwy #1 right along the Highfield Reservoir. Real E s t a t e C e n t re , 1 - 8 6 6 - 3 4 5 - 3 4 1 4 , www.farmrealestate.com

NEVER...HAUL OR purchase those heavy bags of water softening salt or expensive bottle water again! The Water Clinic, www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. L A N D F O R S A L E b y Te n d e r : NW-6-33-21-W3, RM of Winslow, SK. 160 acres w/142 acres cultivated (excluding mineral rights). Send tenders in sealed envelopes to: Joyce Radke, accompanied by a cheque for 10% of tender, payable to Joyce Radke. Deposit amount of the successful bid will be retained and all others will be returned. Purchase price to be subject to GST if applicable and the balance of purchase price to be paid on or before October 1, 2014, subject to current renter harvesting crop. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Tenders close August 1, 2014. Mail tenders to: Joyce Radke 5101 26A Street Close, Lloydminster, Alberta, T9V 2R7. Telephone 780-875-5206.

Call 403-291-0005

Ha rry Sh eppa rd 306-530-8035 (cell) 306-352-1866 (Office) em ail h a rry@ sh eppa rdrea lty.ca S u tton G rou p - R esu lts R ealty R egin a, S K . RM 165: 160 acres approx. 1 mile south of Herbert, SK. House, barn, corrals, ideal livestock operation. Fenced for sheep. MLS 495223. John Cave, Edge Realty, 306-773-7379. www.farmsask.com RM 250, Last Mountain Valley, South half of 35-27-23-W2. Send written offers to purchase to: D. Turnbull, Box 151, Govan, SK. S0G 1Z0. Sale of the above mentioned land does not include the 2014 crop. Bids for land sale close on July 31, 2014. Highest or any bid not necessarily accepted. Call Don Turnbull at 306-484-2041 (home) or 306-725-7256 (cell), Govan, SK.

L A N E R E A LT Y

Saskatchewan’s Farm & Ranch Specialists™ 18 5 REGISTERED SALES IN 2013

P HO N E: 306 -56 9-3380

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 Q u ick Closu re – N o Com m ission

306-5 84 -364 0 in fo @ m a xcro p.ca

CALL

PU RCH ASIN G FARM LAN D w w w .m a xcro p.ca sasklandhunter.com

SA SK ATCH EW A N FA RM L A N D FO R SA L E sa skla n d hu n ter.c om CUL TIV ATED L AN D

Ab e rd e e n 1 ,1 94 Acre s Cu lt. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1 ,4 9 5,000 Ab e rd e e n 300 Acre s Cu lt./ Pas tu re . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3 9 9 ,000 M cCran e y “ K e n as to n Are a” 1 ,920 Acre s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,500,000 Ab e rd e e n Lake fro n tPas tu re w ith De ve lo pm e n tPo te n tial,1 ,069 Acre s . . . . . . . . . $1 ,59 5,000

CO R M AN P AR K IN V ESTM EN T L AN D

69 Acre s clo s e to city 1 /2 m ile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1 ,500,000 Tw o 71 acre parce ls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .S . . . .O . . . .L . . .D . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,800,000/ea Fo r m o re in fo vie w o n Sa skla n d hu n ter.c om o r co n tact Ja m es H u n ter 3 06 - 7 1 6 - 07 50 - Cold w ellBa n ker R esc om R ea lty Em a il:sa skla n d hu n ter@ sa sktel.n et

Leading by Experience

THIN KIN G O F S ELLIN G?

CA LL US TO DA Y!

MINERAL RIGHTS. We will purchase and or lease your mineral rights. 1-877-269-9990. cndfree@telusplanet.net RM OF 494, 5 quarters of land adjoining, good water supply and fenced. 1/2 mile of lakefront. 306-427-2046, 306-883-7493, Shell Lake, SK.

Have your land co-ordinates available.

to view all ou rcu rren tlistin gs.

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 & in vestin Sa ska tchew a n . To inc lud e your propert y f or Sum m er Show ing s

RM SPIRITWOOD 496, a reduced price on a property with a prime location just 2-1/2 miles south of Spiritwood on #378. Over 100 acres of prime farmland, plus 30 acres of seeded pasture balance, good bush pasture, total of 237 acres, 3 bdrm. home built in 1957, 40x60’ steel quonset, and 28x60’ solid hip roof barn. Owners want action! MLS ®499736. This property could be a market gardeners dream or a sheep operation. I am in need of grainland and pastureland in most of my trading area. Call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the B at t l e fo r d s , N o r t h B at t l e fo r d , S K . , 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512.

Free property evaluation for mineral rights owners. Top royalties paid on suitable drilling locations.

Visit

w w w.s hep p a rd rea lty.ca

L AN E R EALT Y

15,000 ACRES OF farm land for lease in Green Lake, SK. Two locations. Silver Lake consists of 6532 acres, 3126 of pasture, 1516 hay, 542 water, 1348 bush, brush, yard. Central Farms consists of 9997 acres, 1903 pasture, 370 hay, 1361 water, 6345 bush, brush, yard. Land is suitable for a cattle operation, grazing or crop seeding. Includes shop, quonset, cattle facilities, corrals, handling facility, good fencing, dugouts, water wells, grain bins, power and house(s) if required. Preferred long term lease agreement, 5 yr. - 10 year. For viewing farm locations/buildings please call the office at 306-832-4414 to make arrangements. Land available for January 2015. Serious inquiries only.

RM 164/194: 4000 acres of pasture and grain land. Can be purchased in 2 parcels. John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd 306-773-7379, Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com

LAN D FO R S ALE

• 31 q u a rters n ea r Ro ckglen p lu s 21 cro w n lea s e QT RS • 27 q u a rters n ea r M a n ko ta • 14 q u a rters n ea r Glen tw o rth • 6 q u a rters n ea r Regin a • 5 q u a rters n ea r K ip lin g • 10 q u a rters n ea rAs s in ib o ia • 9 q u a rters n ea r F ife L a ke • 9 q u a rters n ea r Itu n a • 16 & 1 p a rtq tr n ea rW illo w Bu n ch • 6.5 q u a rters n ea r Cha m b erla in • 9 q u a rters n ea r Gra velb o u rg • 6 q u a rters n ea rAs s in ib o ia • 6 q u a rters n ea r Ben go u gh • 13 q u a rters n ea rT heo d o re • 2 q u a rters n ea r Pa rry • 6.5 q u a rters n ea r Glen a vo n

42 ACRES CULTIVATED overlooking valley 4 miles west of Lumsden, SK., 15 mins. NW of Regina, $187,000. Other adjacent land available, 306-536-5055.

DWEIN TRASK REALTY Inc. Delisle: 2 quarters of quality farmland c/w huge bungalow, 2 good sheds and a barn. On pavement just 1.5 miles North of town. MLS #503346; St. Benedict: 325 acres of productive land, 5.5 miles South of town. Great 2 storey home, barn, corrals, steel grain storage and workshop. Priced to sell! MLS #491740. Call Dwein 306-221-1035.

GOT OIL?

Toll Free 1-877-784-9696 www.briskenergy.com Licensed Operator

RM BUCKLAND 491, SW35-50-26-W2nd, 160 acres hay/pasture/wetland, 1 km off pavement, 1548 sq. ft. manufactured home, built 1997, 40x60 shop, nat. gas. Private and peaceful, close to northern lakes. Call eves. 7-10 PM, 306-763-1994.

SP E CIAL IZIN G IN F AR M L AN D

“Experienced Farmland Specialist” *SEL L ER S W AN TED ,I H AV E Q UAL IF IED BUYER S L O O K IN G F O R L AN D IN V AR IO US AR EAS O F SASK ATCH EW AN . CAL L F O R CO N F ID EN TIAL CO N SUL TATIO N .


54 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure membrane system; 2000 gal./day. No more bottled water.The Water Clinic, www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561.

LUSELAN D AR EA... 100 Qua rte rs Gra in la n d for Sa le .

N eighb o u rs sellin g a tthe sa m e tim e b u tn o tn ecessa rily to gether. La rge a n d sm a ll pa cka ges fo rsa le. Bu y 1 o r 2 qu a rters o r100 if yo u like. C a ll Jim o r S h e rry to d a y

3 06 -46 3 -6 6 6 7

HUDSON BAY, SK. Leaf Lake area: 3 adjoining quarters, prime hunting, marke t a b l e t i m b e r a n d p e at . N E , N W, SE-06-46-01-W2. Phone 250-427-6036. RM GREAT BEND #405- 312 acres w/approx. 208 acres of cultivated tame pasture, balance is light bluffs of bush and natural pasture, fairly good fences, including 3 cross fences, 25’ well, power, large dugout and natural slough areas, approx. 2 miles West of Radisson on Hwy. 16, then 2 miles North. A comfortable pasture for 50 cow/calf pairs. MLS ®486829. To view call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK.

o r e m a il fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n

re m a xkin de rs le y@ s a s kte l.n e t ®G

WINGARD FERRY- 110 acres overlooking North SK River (part SE-12-46-4-W3), plus possible 80 acre riverfront (1 mile) lease. Ph. 306-382-9024.

ro up W e s tR e a lty Kin d e rs le y, S K

w w w .kin d e rs le yre a le s ta te .co m

GRAIN LAND TO RENT, 25 mile radius of PRIME COMMERCIAL LAND, Smiley, SK. Rouleau, SK. Call 306-776-2600 or email: 13 acres, in oilfield, on Hwy., fenced, kraussacres@sasktel.net $49,900. 306-838-0060 or 403-986-3280. FRONTIER, SK. RANCH: 5120 acres, all adjoining, two homes, good service buildings, excellent water. John Cave, Edge Realty, Ph. 306-773-7379, Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com

L OOK IN G F OR L AN D w /Aggrega te Potentia l In Sa ska tchew a n

Ca ll PO TZU S LTD. Phone: 306-782-74 23 Fa x: 306-786-6909 Em a il: info@ potzu s.com RM OF LEASK #464, 373 acres, approx. 250 cultivated, balance pasture w/fair to good fences and possible lease of adjoining 620 acres of Crownland. 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 with 50% tame pasture mix and 50% natural pasture, 5 dugouts, 2 springs, fairly good fences, 10 acres large spruce, stone free, power. Quite a little paradise! 1 hour from Saskatoon. MLS®493039. For viewing of these two cattle operations, call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800, or 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK.

RM OF MAYFIELD #406, 346 acres of high assessed grainland with approx. 311 acres cultivated. Located and adjoining Hwy No. 16 near Ruddell, SK. What a location! MLS®503261. For viewing call Lloyd Ledinski at Re/Max, North Battleford, SK. 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512.

DAIRY FARM IN Central Manitoba, part of dairy country. 160 acres (105 workable), approx. 1900 sq ft. house, recently renovated. Free stall dairy barn, 210 stalls, 4 robotic milkers, dry cow barn, bred heifer facility, open heifer facility, calf hutches, machine shed, slurry store, $2,925,000. To be negotiated at the time of sale: Tractors, feed wagons, misc. farm equipment, milk quota up to 210 liters, cows and young stock to match quota demands, up to 160 additional acres available for rent. Contact Cliff Martens at 204-346-4117, Delta Real Estate, Steinbach, MB. WATER problems? Multi-Pure membrane system. Never purchase or haul water or softener salt ever again! The Water Clinic, 1-800-664-2561, www.thewaterclinic.com RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure membrane system; 2000 gal./day. No more water softeners. The Water Clinic, www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. BEEF RANCH IN SE Manitoba, in the heart of cattle country. Available: 4.5 quarters deeded land and 3 quarters crown land. Included are full set of outbuildings. Most corrals are steel corralling. 1500 sq.ft. home, att. double garage. Equipment and cows can be negotiated at the time of sale. Land can easily produce feed and grazing for 150 cows. This can be purchased for only $530,000. Cliff Martens, Delta Real Estate, 204-346-4117, Steinbach, MB. 960A RANCH in Moosehorn area. Excellent house, barn, hay shed, very well maintained property with endless possibilities. Henry Kuhl, Farm Specialist, Royal LePage Alliance, 204-885-5500, Winnipeg, MB.

F O R S A L E B Y O W N E R : SE quarter 05-17-30-W1st, approx. 145 to 150 acres cult. grainland, asking $250,000, but will consider other offers. 306-645-4514 ask MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. for Wendy, 306-435-6404, Rocanville, SK. Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: $149,000 OFF GRID, self-sufficient, www.maverickconstruction.ca house, garage, 3 outbuildings, fenced 110 ACRES w/4 wire fence, good for yard, 160 acres. Call 306-547-3123, 20-25 pairs; also, 600 acres, 300 grass, Preeceville, SK. 300 bush land, good for 65-75 pairs. 306-231-6439, 306-275-4623 leave a mes960 ACRES, 20 min NE of Regina on high- sage w/name and number. St. Brieux, SK. way. Complete infrastructure for grain, livestock or mixed. May consider separate FOR RENT: 2 quarters heavy tame grass purchase of home quarter. TRUAX, SK. pasture, unfenced. Suitable for sheep (RM of Elmsthorpe), half section with good grazing only. Plenty of water. More info. buildings. Farm set up for starter in live- ph. 250-877-2563, Smithers, BC. stock or great hobby farm. Brian Tiefen- NATURAL PASTURELAND for rent RM of bach 306-536-3269, 306-525-3344 at Col- Keys #303. Contact Rainy 306-594-2020, liers International, 2505 11th Ave., Suite 8:30 AM -4:30 PM, Mon.- Fri., Norquay, SK 200, Regina, SK. www.collierscanada.com ALBERTA FORESTRY LEASE: 166 AUM’s HAMMOND REALTY: Shire Farm, RM 92 (30+/- cow/calf pairs), West of Longview. Walpole, near Moosomin, SK. 1280 acres, For sale or lease. 403-899-8062 for info. featuring 610 cult. acres and 625 hay/pasture acres (300 acres could be cropped), $61,863 avg 2013 assessment. Grass carries 100 pair. Yard includes: 1180 sq ft WANTED IMMEDIATELY 15 - 40 quarters bungalow (1983), 4 bed, 2 bath, 12,850 of good grainland, Central SK. location bu. steel bin storage, exc. water and cattle preferred. Call 306-221-2208. facilities. MLS #501213. Reduced to $1,240,000. Alex Morrow 306-434-8780 http://Shire.HammondRealty.ca 12 ACRES, 4 bdrm. bungalow with double RM OF PADDOCKWOOD No. 520, 81 acres attached garage, 30 min. NE of Yorkton, with approx. 77 cultivated. East half of the SK. Barn, steel machine shed, steel bins, SE quarter -02-52-24-W2nd. This is a fairly new well. Close to Madge Lake, Lake of easy parcel of land to farm and is located The Prairies and potash mines. Beautiful adjoining the main road. I am also looking view. A must see! $289,000. MLS 495204. for grain or pastureland in the nearby area, Call Gavin Konkel, CORE Real Estate Inc., as well as a 200+ cow/calf operation with 306-641-9123. gkonkel@teamcore.ca buildings and fair fences. Call Lloyd Ledinski, RE/MAX of the Battlefords, North Battleford SK, 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512

RM 371, 160 acres, renovated house with double car garage on 160 acres, $590,000. 120 ACRES, ABERDEEN, SK., on Old 27 306-369-7503, 306-469-1010, Bruno, SK. Road, SE-21-37-03-W3rd. Close to hydro, justenterprisesltd@hotmail.ca gas, and water, $299,000. 403-293-2429.

Regan Martens Farmland Specialist • Over 13 years of Ag Sales & Management Experience. • Farm raised with an Ag Degree & P. Ag. status. • Vast Contact/Network in Ag Industry of potential Buyers & Sellers.

306-852-7998

TISDALE AGENCIES

Regan.Martens@century21.ca www.TC21.ca

REPRESENTING Buyers and Sellers

7HG &DZNZHOO ³Anin Expert the Field

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RM OF STANLEY/KELLROSS/KEY WEST/BENGOUGH/ ELMESTHORPE 7,252 Acres ..........................MLS#498734 ..$8,150,000 RM OF PORCUPINE 640 Acres (Feed Lot)....MLS#503793 ..$1,750,000 RM OF PREECEVILLE 758 Acres....................MLS#501811 ..... $700,000 RM OF KINISTINO 468 Acres ........................MLS#499416 ..... $600,000 RM OF PADDOCKWOOD 760 Acres.............MLS#488474 ..... $525,000 RM OF INSINGER 480 Acres...................MLS#489761 ..... $440,000 RM OF WILLNER 320 Acres ...................MLS#486902 ..... $389,000 RM OF BARRIER VALLEY 319 Acres ....MLS#487855 ..... $299,000 RM OF KELVINGTON 317 Acres ...........MLS#482874 ..... $180,000 RM OF BUCKLAND/ GARDEN RIVER 320 Acres .................MLS#480053 ..... $170,000 RM OF WILLNER 159 Acres .............MLS#495604 ....... $90,000 RM OF BARRIER VALLEY 146 Acres. MLS#487853 ....... $89,000 RM OF WREFORD 136 Acres ..........MLS#486980 ....... $83,000 RM OF TORCH RIVER 159 Acres ...MLS#483131 ....... $79,000

Ted Cawkwell Agriculture Specialist

BLUE CHIP REALTY

1-306-327-7661 www.tedcawkwell.com email: ted@tedcawkwell.com

RM OF CHESTERFIELD #261, 12 miles, South of Flaxcombe, 10 acres, 1452 sq. ft. bungalow, 48’x96’ heated shop w/water, 30’x60’ shed, 24’x36’ shop, 31,100 bu. steel bin grain storage, asking $610,000. Call Brad Edgerton, 306-463-7357, Edge Realty Ltd., Kindersley, SK.

2004 WINNEBAGO JOURNEY 39’, 2 slides, 330 HP Cat dsl. pusher, Freightliner chassis, air ride, air brakes, exhaust brake, Allison auto. trans., 127,000 miles, Onan propane gen., rear monitor, hyd. levelers, basement, central AC, 2 dr. fridge, washer/dryer, oak pkg., queen bed, new tires WINGARD FERRY - 8.5 acres overlooking and batteries, ready to go, $47,900 OBO. North SK River (part of SW-12-46-4-W3), Can email pics 306-441-0188 Cut Knife, SK on good road with services adjacent, 2007 FLEETWOOD DISCOVERY, 9000 $27,500 OBO; Also adjacent 110 acre plus miles, 60 hour generator, all options, possible 80 acre (1 mile) riverfront lease. stored inside, fresh safety with sale, Phone: 306-382-9024. $125,000. 306-536-5055, Lumsden, SK.

STANDING HAY CROPS wanted. Rental by the ton or by the acre up to $100/acre. Custom large square baling, custom swathing. Call 780-991-3616, Thorsby, AB.

2014 VEGAS 24.1 micro class A RUV, perfect couples coach, great coach to drive, 1985 HONDA 300 4x2, excellent condition, superior mileage, Ford V10, Stk#8840, with ramps, $2500. Call 306-298-7621, Val $78,500. Call 1-866-346-3148 or shop onMarie, SK. line 24/7 at: Allandale.com 2011 ARGO, 750 EFI Avenger, 8 wheel 2014 ROADTREK 210 Popular. See it at w/tracks, roll bar, winch, 600 kms., Sunridge RV, Radisson, SK. DL#319015 $16,900. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. Open 7 days a week. Over 50 units in stock 2013 KUBOTA RTV 1100, cab, AC, heater, 1-877-827-4845. www.sunridgervs.ca radio, always shedded, 1 owner, $17,500. 2014 ITASCA VIVA. See it at Sunridge RV, 306-469-2235, Big River, SK. Radisson, SK. DL#319015 Open 7 days a week. Over 50 units in stock. 1-877-827-4845, or www.sunridgervs.ca TAHOE 24’ PONTOON boat for parts or repairable, 150 Mariner. 306-445-5602, North Battleford, SK.

T h is win te r E sca pe to ou rm ild S ou th Ok a n a g a n clim a te .

Fu lly fu rnished tw o bedroom condo u nits in a fu llfa cility la keside hotel,w ith a w onderfu lm onthly a ctivitiesprogra m . IndoorPool,H otTu b,ca ble,hea t,pow er, secu rity,on site la u ndry,a nd 2 Resta u ra nts. Free w irelessinterneta nd hea ted u ndergrou nd pa rking a llinclu ded.

Sta rting a t $950/m onth. Forextended sta ysu ntil April2015,som e restrictionsm a y a pply.

H oliday Inn & Suites O soyoos,British Colum bia 1-877-786-7773 guestservices@ pallasgroup.net w w w .hiosoyoos.com

SAWMILLS from only $4397 - 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.

2004 FAMILY FISH pontoon 20’, 50 HP Merc., w/trailer, $12,900; 2007 Four Winns fish and ski model, 18.5’, 4.3 inboard, only 134 hrs., above average cond., $19,900; 2006 Tracker Pro 190 fishing boat, 90 HP Merc. 4-stroke, good cond. with trailer, $12,900. K&L Equipment, Ituna, SK. 306-795-7779, 306-537-2027, email ladimer@sasktel.net DL #910885.

WOOD-MIZER PORTABLE SAWMILLS, eight models, options and accessories. 1-877-866-0667. www.woodmizer.ca

1976 17’ SILVERLINE boat and trailer, 6 cyl. inboard Merc Cruiser, c/w 2 sets of new water skis, 1 person tube, 1- 3 person tube, 8 life jackets, 2 fish finders, cover, $3500 OBO. 403-793-0013, Gem, AB.

2014 TUSCANY 40RX 40’, 1.5 baths, triple slides, 450 HP, fully loaded, independent suspension, aqua hot heating, king bed, N E W ! P O RTA B L E T R U C K S C A L E S , Stk#7981, $249,000. shop online 24/7 at: $19,900. Save time and money by weighAllandale.com or call 1-866-346-3148. ing on the farm. Accurately weigh inputs and avoid overweight fines. See your nearSAILBOAT 20’ LIGHTNING, stainless keel, est Flaman location or 1-888-435-2626. 5 sails, trailer; Also, wanted: parts for 16’ Hobie Cat. Call 306-892-2058, Metoa, 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 2006 SUNSET CREEK camper, 1 slide, like it). Shipping arranged. 306-445-2111, sleeps up to 10, exc. cond. Asking $16,000 North Battleford, SK. www.eliasscales.com OBO. Call 306-260-4392, Saskatoon, SK. 2010 BIGHORN 5th wheel 3410RE, full load, 3 slides, roof solar panel, built-in 5500 Onan generator. Call 306-867-8445, 1999 DUTCH STAR, CAT eng. diesel pusher, 38’ Class A, 1 large slide, exc. cond., Outlook, SK. $37,500. 306-221-4349, Saskatoon, SK. 2012 40’ HY-LINE tri-axle 5th wheel, power stabilizers, awning, 3-slides, wash- 2014 THOR ACE, Best Selling Class A. See er/dryer, dishwasher, large fridge, pantry, i t a t S u n r i d g e RV, R a d i s s o n , S K . bathroom w/shower and skylight, queen DL#319015 Over 50 units in stock. bed, 8’ closet, 42” flat screen. Reduced 1-877-827-4845, www.sunridgervs.ca $33,000. 403-932-7327, Cochrane, AB. 1976 FMC MOTOR HOME, rear engine, as SUMMER SIZZLER RV Super Sale! at Sun- seen on Counting Cars. Call 306-445-5602, ridge RV in Radisson, SK. We’re open 7 North Battleford, SK. days a week. With over 50 units in stock. 1-877-827-4845. www.sunridgervs.ca

2014 FUZION 331; 10 Toy Haulers in stock starting at $48,980. Sunridge RV, Radisson, SK. DL#319015 Open 7 days a EAST OF DIDSBURY, AB: 10.25 acres, re- week 1-877-827-4845 www.sunridgervs.ca stored main house, second house, shop, machine shed, barn. Quiet, treed, landscaped, $709,000. Call 403-335-3359. For more info visit: ComFree.com #518693. 3 ACREAGES 15 mins. SE Moose Jaw, SK. 38 acres each, very scenic, grid road, city water connected, gas and electric onsite, approaches. Call 306-693-7357 after 5 PM. BALGONIE, SK. 158 acres, hay and pasture land, 1530 sq. ft. house, 4 bdrms., 30x30’ attached garage, 30x40’ barn, park-like 2003 BEAVER MONTEREY, 38’, 2 slides, yard. Asking $749,000. Call 306-771-4899. 350 Cummins, 41,200 miles, Aqua hot HOUSE ON 82 acres, 15 mins. Moose Jaw, heating, always shedded, NS and NP, SK. Reduced to $449,999. Features: treed $79,000 OBO. 780-853-7911, Vermilion AB yard, city water, updated electrical, new appliances. Call 306-693-7357 after 5 PM. 5 BEDROOM ON 11 Acres, Sturgis, SK. Newer home, lots of renos, hardwood, tile 1250 sq. ft., 2.5 bath, in-floor heat, good water, c/w barn/fence, $185,000. 306-547-8057, 306-322-7833, Sturgis, SK. RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure membrane system; 2000 gal./day. No more water softeners. The Water Clinic, www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. 10 ACRE ACREAGE 12 miles SE of Melfort, SK. Metal clad shop and barn, cattle sheds, corrals, outbuildings, older 1276 sq. 2005 MONACO CAYMAN 34PDD, 35’, 5.9 ft. house. 72’ well, $ 295,000. Call: Cummins, 300 HP, 21,500 miles, auto, satellite, air over hyd. brakes, 5.5 KW 306-752-3556 or 306-921-4774. Onan dsl. gen.- 148 hrs, exc. cond., 2 slides, $75,000. More photos on our website www.can-amtruck.com Can-Am Truck Export Ltd 1-800-938-3323. DL #910420.

2015 PALAZZO 35.1, hot new floor plan, triple slide, king bed, towing capacity of 10,000 lbs., Stk# 9999, $173,000. Call 1-866-346-3148 or shop on-line 24/7 at: Allandale.com 2014 THOR AXIS, 2014 RV of the Year. See it at Sunridge RV, Radisson, SK. D L # 3 1 9 0 1 5 . O p e n 7 d ay s a we e k . 1-877-827-4845, www.sunridgervs.ca 2014 WINNEBAGO NAVION 24G Diesel. See it at Sunridge RV, Radisson, SK. DL#319015. Over 50 units in stock. 1-877-827-4845, www.sunridgervs.ca

2 R ow AOG M a ltContra cts Now Ava ila b le M a lt B a rley/ Feed G ra in s / P u ls es best price/best delivery/best payment

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2015 WINDSPORT 27K, perfect couples coach, Class A gas, #1 floor plan, king bed, full wall slide, Stk#08264, $94,000. Call 1-866-346-3148 or shop on-line 24/7 at: Allandale.com

MOATS: REG., CERT; CDC Buteo: Fdn., WANTED: NEWER TUNDRA OR Skandic or reg., cert. Excellent germination and vigor. Yamaha Venture MP or Bravo. In Sask, Cleaned, available now. Big Dog Seeds Inc., 306-483-2963, Oxbow, SK. Manitoba or Alberta. Call 204-857-1764. 12 ACRES IN the Town of Unity, SK. Newly renovated 2005 sq. ft. structural brick, 7 bdrm, 3 bath home. Outside/direct entrance to basement (Could be rented as a basement suite). Mature yard, fenced pasture, workshop with three phase power, $695,000. Contact Jim 306-260-7446, email: jpankiw@yourlink.ca .66 ACRES with mobile home, NG, well, septic, power and phone, established treed yard. Located halfway between Yorkton and Melville, SK. on Hwy. #10, high dry land, $125,000 OBO. Call 306-620-7251.

2014 FOUR WINDS 35SK Super C Ford chassis, power stroke diesel, 10,000 lbs. towing capacity. Tow your horse trailer. Stk #3857, $125,000. Shop online 24/7 at SNOWBIRD HOME FOR rent for 6 months, Allandale.com or 1-866-346-3148. Oct. to April. Saskatoon, SK. 1250 sq. ft., 3 SUMMER SIZZLER RV Super Sale! at Sun- bdrm, 1.5 bath, furnished. Ideal for rural ridge RV in Radisson, SK. DL#319015. couple looking to spend the winter in We’re open 7 days a week. Over 50 units! Saskatoon. Will send pictures to serious inquiries. Phone: 306-955-0760. 1-877-827-4845, www.sunridgervs.ca

TOP QUALITY CERTIFIED alfalfa and grass seed. Call Gary or Janice Waterhouse 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK. CERT. ALFALFA AND GRASSES. Free delivery. Dyck Forages & Grasses Ltd., Elie, MB, 1-888-204-1000. www.dyckseeds.com


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

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

BUYIN G HEATED OATS M USGRAVE ENTERPRISES Ph : 204.8 3 5.2527 Fa x: 204.8 3 5.2712

EAGLE COM M ODITIES S OARIN G TO N EW HEIGHTS

Bu yers o f co n ven tio n a l a n d o rga n ic gra d es o f len tils , pea s , m u s ta rd , w hea t, b a rley, o a ts , rye, ca n o la , fla x, etc.

C a ll for your on fa rm b id . BESCO GRAIN LTD. Buyer of all varieties of mustard. Call for competitive pricing. Call 204-736-3570, Brunkild, MB.

Schluter & Maack NOW BUYING BROWN & YELLOW MUSTARD All grades of Green Peas Laird & Richlea Lentils Yellow Peas

1-306-771-4987

TOP QUALITY ALFALFA, variety of grasses and custom blends, farmer to farmer. Gary Waterhouse 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK. 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

HAY BLENDS AND PASTURE BLENDS, no charge custom blends. Dyck Forages & Grasses Ltd., Elie, MB. Free delivery. 1-888-204-1000, www.dyckseeds.com

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W e a re b uyin g a ll gra de s of ca n ola . #1, 2, a n d 3 a s w e ll a s h e a te d, gre e n , s p rin g th re s h e d. Top p rice s , fre igh t op tion s , de live ry con tra cts , p rom p t p a ym e n t. Bon de d a n d in s ure d.

1-866-388-6284

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LET U S M A N A G E Y O U R C A N O LA

XPELLER PRESSING Looking for Soybeans, as well as Heated Canola and Flax. Prompt payment as well as prompt on farm pickup! Call, text or email Darcy for your quote xpellerpressing@gmail.com 403-894-4394.

TOLL FREE

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NUVISION COMMODITIES is currently purchasing feed barley, wheat, peas and milling oats. 204-758-3401, St. Jean, MB. PASKAL CATTLE in Iron Springs area is looking for Feed Barley. Put more $$$ in your pocket and sell direct to us with no brokerage fee. Please call 403-732-5641. NORTH EAST PRAIRIE GRAIN, brokerage and consulting. Get more for your grain. Devon at: 306-873-3551 for no obligation price quote! neprairiegrain.com LACKAWANNA PRODUCTS CORP. Buyers and sellers of all types of feed grain and grain by-products. Call 306-862-2723, Nipawin, SK. WANTED: FEED GRAIN, barley, wheat, peas, green or damaged canola. Phone Gary 306-823-4493, Neilburg, SK.

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CAN AD A WHY NOT KEEP MARKETING SIMPLE? You are selling feed grains. We are buying feed grains. Fast payment, with prompt pickup, true price discovery. Call Gerald Snip, Jim Beusekom, Allen Pirness, David Lea, or Vera Buziak at Market Place Commodities Ltd., Lethbridge, AB. Email: info@marketplacecommodities.com or phone: 1-866-512-1711.

CANADA - CUBA FARM TOURS. Jan 26th to Feb 9th. All inclusive. Deductible. 8 nights 5 star, 6 nights country hotels. Varadero, Cienfuegos, Ciego De Avila, Camaguey, Santiago De Cuba, Havana. $3200/person, 2 sharing, plus air. Phone Wendy Holm P.Ag, 604-947-2893, 604-417-2434, wendy@wendyholm.com Visit website: www.wendyholm.com

• U P TO 1 000 GAL L O N Financing • ISO 9001 :2008 available. Appro ved INDIA TOUR ALL inclusive winter tours Inqu ire led by a local guide. Phone 780-903-4163, • SINGL E W AL L SQ U AR E TANK at ou r • TR ANSP O R T CANAD A AP P R O V ED dealers. Edmonton, AB., or www.ecotracks.ca Available at Magnum Fabricating & our dealers

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M AGN UM F ABR ICATIN G LTD . M a ple Creek, SK P h: 306-662-2198

RURAL & CULTURAL TOURS M id w es t US A/Bra n s o n ~ O ctober 2014

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Pa n a m a Ca n a l Cru is e ~ Decem ber 2014

TARPCO, SHUR-LOK, MICHEL’S sales, service, installations, repairs. Canadian company. We carry aeration socks. We now carry electric chute openers for grain SOLID CORE ROUND alfalfa, alfalfa grass, trailer hoppers. 1-866-663-0000. greenfeed, grass and straw. Delivered. Call 306-237-4582, Perdue, SK.

HAY WANTED: Looking for all types of hay, in any form of bale. Southern or Cen- CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used WANTED: OFF-GRADE PULSES, oilseeds tral AB and Western SK Call 403-795-1347 highway tractors. For more details call and cereals. All organic cereals and specialty crops. Prairie Wide Grain, Saskatoon, LONG LAKE TRUCKING custom hay haul- 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com SK., 306-230-8101, 306-716-2297. ing, 2 units. 306-567-7100, Imperial, SK. GOODYEAR SPECIAL SURE grip Rice tires, DAIRY AND FEEDER HAY, 3x4 square used 50 hrs., (2) 900/65R32, $4200 ea. bales for sale. Tests available. Call: 204-734-2419, 204-734-8007 Swan River, 403-633-8835, Brooks, AB. MB. cpvmountain@gmail.com 2013 HAY BALES: 5 grass blend, baled, vg FLOATER TIRES FOR JD and Case spraycond, 3x4x8 five string, 1250 lbs.; 21 small ers: 650/65R38 or 710/70R38. For JD bales tied in a 3x4x7 bundle, 1250 lbs. sprayers: 710/70R42 or 900/50R42. each. All bales shedded. Can load. Call Don 306-697-2856, Grenfell, SK. 306-548-5440, Danbury, SK. • GREEN • HEATED 650/65 R38; 480/70 R30; 380/90 R40, all STANDING HAY CROPS wanted. Rental by 85% tread or better. New 380/85 R30 tire. • SPRING THRASHED the ton or by the acre up to $100/acre. 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. Custom large square baling, custom swathing. Call 780-991-3616, Thorsby, AB. SCRAPER AND LOADER TIRES available. All sizes. Quick Drain Sales, Muenster, SK. GREEN CUT BROME round hay bales for Ph: 306-682-4520, 306-231-7318. sale. 780-926-1505, La Crete, AB. SWATHER RICE TIRES: Goodyear Spe• OATS • WHEAT CERTIFIED ORGANIC HAY, brome, fes- cial Sure Grip TD8 14.9-24, 6 available, cue, alfalfa mix, 3’x3’x8’ square bales. Call never used. $5000 OBO for all 6 or will sell • BARLEY • PEAS for details 306-335-2280, Lemberg, SK. separately. Request pictures by email at: allcoenterprise@hotmail.com or call for more info. and freight details. Call: 780-837-1313, Falher, AB.

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• DISEASED

GREEN CANOLA • FROZEN • HAILED “ON FARM PICKUPâ€?

WESTCAN FEED & GRAIN

1-877-250-5252

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Available at Magnum Fabricating & our dealers

PEARMAN GRAIN LTD. Saskatoon

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M AGN UM F ABR ICATIN G LTD . M a ple Creek, SK P h: 306-662-2198

Ace Buying Group

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A Division of AgLine International

Green and/or heated Canola/Flax, Wheat, Barley, Oats, Peas, etc. BOW V AL L EY TRADIN G L TD.

1-877-6 41-2798 WANTED FEED BARLEY- Buffalo Plains Cattle Company is looking to purchase barley. For pricing and delivery dates, call Kristen 306-631-8769, Bethune, SK.

¡ JD Factory 94-9600/CTS ........... $9,850 ¡ JD STS BLOWOUT .................. $7,995 ¡ CIH AFX w/new tires .............. $18,800 ¡ CIH 80/88 w/new tires ........... $12,845 ¡ NH CR/CX w/new tires ........... $18,800 ¡ Clamp on kit w/tires ................. $5,250 Trade in your singles! 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

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. OXYGEN GENERATOR. Nitrox 10 generaWilke Sales, 306-586-5711, Regina, SK. tor for cutting oxygen for your use and sell WANTED 3 CARBON steel vertical tanks, to others. 47 cylinder and cage included. maximum 9.6’ diameter and 17’ high, in Air is free, oxygen is valuable! Call Del for good cond. 204-248-2110 Notre Dame, MB pics at 403-638-3934, Sundre, AB.

THE HOTTEST TIRE PRICIN G OF THE YEAR AN YW H ER E

306-374-1968

WE BUY DAMAGED GRAIN

RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure membrane system; 2000 gal./day. Elimi- HYD. PIPE SPINNER for oil/ water pipe. nates: Tannin (color). The Water Clinic, Steel or plastic pipe, from 2-1/4� to 10�. www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. Call Jake: 403-878-6302, Grassy Lake, AB.

FARM • TRUCK • OTR TIRES

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TOP PRICES PAID FOR FEED BARLEY, WHEAT, OATS, RYE, TRITICALE, PEAS, LENTILS, HEATED OIL SEEDS

WATER WELL DRILLING rig Mayhew 1000, mounted on a 1968 Kenworth, exc. cond. Call 780-675-4405, Athabasca, AB.

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.

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www.jglgrain.com 877-907-1517 e:info@jglgrain.com 720 Duchess St - Saskatoon, SK 306-374-1517

NEVER...HAUL OR purchase those heavy bags of water softening salt or expensive bottle water again! The Water Clinic, www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561.

413 DODGE INDUSTRIAL pump, w/Berkely B45 1200 GPM 120 PSI water pump, w/after market cooling system, runs well, STAUBER DRILLING INC. Water well drilling and servicing, Geotechnical, Envi$3850 OBO. 780-818-2863, Edmonton, AB. ronmental, Geothermal. Professional serD E T RO I T D I E S E L 3 c y l i n d e r p u m p , vice since 1959. Call the experts at w/Monarch water NH5 M12P pump, runs 1-800-919-9211 info@stauberdrilling.com 30 USED 11-22.5 and 11-24.5 tires, 30% to well, $4200. 780-818-2863, Edmonton, AB 80% tread, $80 to $200. Call Neil 3 0 6 - 2 3 1 - 8 3 0 0 H u m b o l d t , S K . D L 1�, 2�, 3� and 4� water pumps from B&E, KORNUM WELL DRILLING, farm, cottage #906884. Honda, and Robin/Subaru in stock with and acreage wells, test holes, well rehabiliPAIR OF NEW 13.8x38 tires and tubes on LOW LOW PRICES! Over 1400 new and hose and fittings. See your nearest Flaman tation, witching. PVC/SS construction, exJD rims. Trade for used tires plus cash. used tires, mostly construction sizes, some store or call 1-888-435-2626. pert workmanship and fair pricing. 50% 306-375-7722, Kyle, SK. very large sizes, many tires with rims. BERKLEY 6� PTO PUMP, suction line and government grant now available. Indian Cambrian Equipment Sales, Winnipeg, MB. i n t a ke s c r e e n , v e r y g o o d , $ 5 0 0 0 . Head, SK., 306-541-7210 or 306-695-2061 Ph. 204-667-2867, fax 204-667-2932. 306-382-9024, Saskatoon, SK. SEVERAL 14.9-26 6-PLY tires for sale. Phone: 306-642-3152, Assiniboia, SK. ATTENTION TRAPPERS: Personal trapping instruction avail. for coyote and fox, w/snares or traps, 55 years experience, June 15th to Sept 30th. Call for details. Gilliland Lures. 204-634-2425, Pierson, MB

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WATER problems? Canada’s Largest rural water purification company. No more water softeners or bottles. The Water Clinic, 1-800-664-2561, www.thewaterclinic.com

WATER Problems? Eliminate total dissolved solids, E.Coli and Coliform bacteria, p l u s m a ny m o r e ! T h e Wat e r C l i n i c , www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561.

LIGHT/TOUGH FEEDGRAINS

DAMAGED FLAX/PEAS

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. 306-272-7225, 306-272-4545. www.crisafullipumps.com

Se le ct Holida ys

HEATED CANOLA WANTED

Priced at your b in. 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.

CLASSIFIED ADS 55

11R22.5

Tra iler $229 .00 Drive $239 .00 S teerin g $239 .00

11R24.5

 Tra iler $239 .00 Drive $249 .00 S teerin g $249 .00 Other S izes In S toc k

38 5/6 5R 22.5

$449 .00

425/6 5R 22.5

$49 9 .00

Us ed Tires Fo r S a le S in gle o r Fu ll S ets W e a re S a s k a tchew a n ’s o n ly Au tho rized Ro a d L u x Dea ler W ith o ver 12,000 Tires S o ld

ED 306-981-6213

Tre n t306-961-45 49

9.5L15 8PLY ....................... BKT $89.95 RIB IMPLEMENT .......Firestone $139.90 11L15 ........................................ RIB IMPLEMENT .......Firestone $137.71 12.5L15 10PLY .................. BKT $139.95 RIB IMPLEMENT ....................... 1000-16 8PLY 4 RIB.......................... BKT $159.95 1100-16 8PLY 4 RIB.......................... BKT $209.95 11L15 12PLY HIWAY SPECIAL ................ BKT $185.95 18.4-38 .............................. BKT $690.00 8PLY R-1.................................... 20.8-38 .............................. BKT $995.00 8PLY R-1....................Firestone $1,299.00 600/65R28 ......................... BKT $1,489.00 157A8 R-1 .................Firestone $2,295.95 600/70R30

152A8 R-1 .......................... BKT $1,439.95 520/85R38 ......................... BKT $1,465.95 155A8 R-1 23.1x26 Good Year All Weather R# 10 Ply ................................... $950.00 480x8 Packer Wheel on Hub assembly .......................... $89.95 30.5L32 BKT FORESTRY 16PLY FS216 TL ................................... $3,700.00 28L26 BKT FORESTRY 14G FS216 TL ................................... $2,295.95 35.5LB32 FIR FORESTRY 24C TL LS2 ................................ $6,995.00 30.5L32 FS FORESTRY 26C TL LS2 ................................ $4,995.00 28L26 FIR FORESTRY 16H TL LS2 ................................ $3,199.00

1-855-865-9550

CALL TODAY!

103-3240 Idylwyld Dr. N, Saskatoon, SK


56 CLASSIFIED ADS

U-DRIVE TRACTOR TRAILER Training, 25 years experience. Day, 1 and 2 week upgrading programs for Class 1A, 3A and air brakes. One on one driving instructions. 306-786-6600, Yorkton, SK.

NANNY NEEDED. First Aid and CPR required. Light housekeeping duties. Call 403-586-2404, Olds, AB.

EXCAVATOR OPERATOR NEEDED for excavating company. Applicants must have a min 5 yrs experience, and knowledge of grades. Pay depends on experience. Please email resume to: Billsexc@telusplanet.net of fax to: 780-963-4771, Stony Plain, AB. CARPENTERS AND LABOURERS needed for construction company. Will train. Accommodations provided. Call Ernest for info at 780-632-9967, Edmonton, AB. HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATORS for late model Cat equipment: motor scrapers (cushion ride), dozers, excavators, rock trucks, graders (trim operators). Camp job. Competitive wages plus room and board. Valid drivers license required. Send resume w/ work references to: Bryden Construction and Transport Co. Inc., Box 100, Arborfield, SK. S0E 0A0. Fax 306-769-8844 brydenconstruct@xplornet.ca

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

FARM HELP WANTED: Looking for a person for a mixed farming operation. Must have a valid driver’s license and be able to operate farm equipment, accommodation LARGE GRAIN AND Poultry farm, N of Edavailable. Phone: 780-812-5567 fax: monton looking for a full-time farmworker. 780-573-7620, Bonnyville, AB. Experience with large equipment, Class 1 FULL TIME LABOURER required on cattle an asset. Good wages. Send resume to ranch near Youngstown, AB. Experience Guy, 780-961-3101 or call 780-975-0051 and willingness to do all aspects of farm or email: forquith@hotmail.com Legal, AB. and ranch work. Competitive wages and housing available. Phone 403-779-2164 or FULL-TIME CATTLE CHECKING Posie-mail resume to: bignellranch@live.ca tions. Buffalo Plains Cattle Co. has pen checking positions available for our exHELPER WANTED ON mixed farm. Steady panding feedlot w/new facilities. Job also job for right person. Room and board avail. includes pasture work in the summer. 403-631-2373, 403-994-0581, Olds, AB. Owned horses and tack preferred. No green horses allowed. Competitive salary FARM LABOURER F/T on mixed farm. 4000 a n d g r o u p b e n e fi t s . F a x r e s u m e t o acre crop, 300 cow/calf pairs near Calgary. 306-638-3150, or for more info. ph Kristen Housing supplied, excellent wages. Valid at 306-631-8769, Bethune, SK. driver's license, mechanics and cow/calf exp. required. Assets: Class 1, or 3 license; welding and grain experience. Investment JIMCO FARMING INC. is now hiring comopportunity with long term employment. bine and grain cart operators as well as Email resume: lscattleco@xplornet.com or Class 3 and Class 1 truck drivers. Call Jim at: 403-575-0069, Coronation, AB. fax: 403-335-0086. LARGE MIXED FARM near Chauvin, AB. w/newer equipment, looking for full-time farm workers. Must have proof of valid driver’s license. Housing is available. Email resume: schopferfarms@gmail.com or call 780-842-8330 for more info.

FULL-TIME FARM LABOURER HELP. Applicants should have previous farm experience and mechanical ability. Duties incl. operation of machinery, including tractors, truck driving and other farm equipment, as well as general farm laborer duties. $12-$18/hr. depending on experience. Contact Wade Feland at FULL-TIME PERMANENT POSITION for 701-263-1300, Antler, North Dakota. a large modern farm in Eastend, SK. Class PERMANENT POSITION on large mixed 1A licence required. Hourly wages of farm. Wages in accordance with experi$20/hr. and up depending on experience. ence. Must have good work ethic, positive Housing on acreage available. Experience attitude, mechanical skills and work well w/farm equipment an asset. Ph. Clayton with others. Duties: working cattle, operatOsinski 306-295-7644, or email resume to ing and maintaining farm equipment, minicro@sasktel.net. Fax: 306-295-4116. mum 3 yrs. experience. Furnished housing available, non smoker preferred. Kincaid, AUSTRALIAN HARVEST STAFF Needed Fax: 306-264-3752, phone: 306-264-7742. Operators wanted for Australian grain harvest from Oct to Dec 2014. Must be able to FULL-TIME FARM WORKER needed for work long hours and be proficient in driv- grain farm in northern AB. Applicant ing late model tractors, chaser bins/grain should have Grade 12 and driver’s license. carts. Be qualified in driving new model Class 1 an asset. Must be able to work Case header/combines. Accommodation some weekends, some long hrs. and operand evening meal will be provided. A ate various farm equipment. Must speak working holiday visa will be required. Also English. Wages starting at $18/hour. Fax a international licence (valid in Australia) resume: Enders Farms Ltd. 780-836-2199. would be an advantage. You will be working on a family run farm. These positions FARM LABOURERS REQUIRED. Room would suit, fit 19 to 30 years. All enquiries and board provided. Wage depending to Eastgrove Farming Pty Ltd-Harvest staff u p o n e x p e r i e n c e . C a l l D a n n y , 780-216-0558, Edmonton, AB. tribal@westnet.com

CUSTOM HARVESTER looking for truck drivers, combine, and grain cart operators to go on custom harvesting run that begins August 1st in SK and ends in Northern AB. Operating 4 new JD S670 combines and Peterbilt semis. I may help obtain Class 1A license, year round employment hauling logs, grain or crude oil. 306-421-9270 leave msg., or fax resume to: 306-456-2835, Bromhead, SK. Email: brentkittelsonharvesting@hotmail.com GRAIN FARM WORKER, required to plant, fertilize, cultivate, spray and harvest crops and operate farm machinery and equip. Permanent, full-time. $18/hr. No specific education or training req. Basic family farm knowledge and exp. required. Apply by mail: Box 238, Wolseley, SK. S0G 5H0 AARTS ACRES, 2500 sow barn near Solsgirth, MB is seeking experienced Breeding and Farrowing Technicians. The successful applicant must possess necessary skills, an aptitude for the care and handling of animals, good communication skills and ability to work as part of a highly productive team. Fax resume to: 204-842-3273. or call 204-842-3231 for application form. HARVEST EQUIPMENT OPERATORS Wanted to operate new harvest equipment on a large grain farm 30 minutes south of Regina, SK., $30/hour, accommodations included. Opportunity for full-time permanent employment if desired. Send resume to: Lekivetzfarms@yahoo.com or fax: 306-738-4428.

CALGARY AREA FARM offers a good work environment west of town in the Elbow valley. 3 bedroom house, Full time position for independent worker with farm/mechanical experience. Duties include: general farm work with hay and grain crops, fencing, machinery and building maintenance. Apply with references to: zink2@colpittsranches.com CATTLE/GRAIN OPERATION REQUIRES permanent full-time help. Wage negotiable up to $20/hr. Must have drivers license, Class 1A and mechanically inclined an asset. Ph/fax 306-736-2277, Kipling, SK. or email judylarson@sasktel.net

HELP WANTED ON farm and ranch. Experience preferred. Wages based on experience. Room and board possible. 403-227-3691, Red Deer, AB. No texts. FOREMAN POSITION - DOG CREEK, BC Alkali Lake Ranch - A division of Douglas Lake Cattle Co. is seeking applicants for a foreman position at Dog Creek, BC. Responsibilities include haying 400 acres during summer, operating machinery, fencing, maintenance, irrigation, supervision of 1 - 2 employees, feeding approx. 500 head during winter months. Must be able to work independently and look after a home site with large shop and various outbuildings. Ideal for couple or family with potential for spouse employment. Excellent compensation with full benefits package. Please email resume to pbraig@douglaslake.com or fax to 250-350-3336. No phone calls please.

AJL FARMS LTD. in Niton Jct, AB., is hiring full-time permanent feedlot/farm workers. Multiple positions available: Pen checker, feedlot worker and feed truck driver. Wages based on experience. Fax/email resume POSITION AVAILABLE, Cypress Hills, SK. to: 780-723-6245 or kevin@ajlfarms.com area. Background yearling grasser operation and cow/calf. Modern facilities and HARVEST HELP FOR Silaging and com- equipment. Good working environment. bining in Provost, AB. area. Must have Class 1 preferred. Wages negotiable deClass 1-3 license and farm machinery ex- pending on experience. Call 306-295-7473 perience. Housing available. $18-$24/hr. E-mail: danlynn@telus.net or fax resume HELP WANTED FOR harvest on a large to: 780-753-6597. farm in East Central Alberta. Equipment experience and mechanical ability an asHARVEST SEMI DRIVER WANTED, new set. Housing provided if necessary. Please truck with Super B, 30 minutes south of e-mail: rpaulgaard@hotmail.com or call Regina, SK., $30/hr, accommodations in- 780-753-4720, Hayter, AB. cluded, opportunity for full-time permanent employment if desired, send resume WANTED: FARM LABOURERS able to to: Lekivetzfarms@yahoo.com or fax: run farm equipment on cattle/grain farm. 306-738-4428. F u l l - t i m e wo r k ava i l a b l e . C a l l M i ke 306-469-7741, Big River, SK. RANCH MANAGER/ HAND WANTED for 500 cow and 500 yearling ranch. Duties in- SEASONAL WORK AVAILABLE immediately clude all aspects of ranching and oversee- on cattle/grain farm near North Battleford, ing 1-2 employees. Experience is essential. SK. Experience with cattle and older maSend resume to North Fork Farm Ltd., chinery preferred. Must have valid drivers General Delivery, Del Bonita, AB, T0K 0S0 licence. Housing and meals available for or email jralthen@gmail.com Further in- the right person. Call 306-446-0164. quiries call 403-315-3145. Only qualified F U L L - T I M E P E R M A N E N T FA R M E R individuals will be contacted. wanted for large grain farm 30 min. South EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY IN Moss- of Regina, SK. Must have farm experience, bank, SK. To work on modern grain and 1A considered an asset. Top salaries paid. cattle farm. Knowledge of modern machin- Fax 306-738-4428 or email resume to: ery and 1A license an asset. Accommoda- Lekivetzfarms@yahoo.com tion can be arranged, wages negotiable. Position to start immediately. Contact Dawn HIRED HAND REQUIRED full-time on mixed cow/calf grain farm in Mayerthorpe, AB. 306-354-7809 Salary negotiable, accommodations and FARM LABOUR REQUIRED for mixed farm. utilities provided. Call 780-786-2903. Grade 12, drivers license, experience in driving and servicing machinery. Smoke free environment. $15/hr. Housing avail. Lyle Lumax, 204-525-2263, Swan River MB 2650 ACRE MODERN grain farm is looking for seasonal help, near Delisle, SK. Some experience with machinery is necessary. References are required. Pay is good. For more info please call 306-493-2937. FULL-TIME EMPLOYMENT on grain farm at Wilcox, SK., up to $30/hour depending on experience. Call 306-776-2496.

112,000 print and over 84,000 online Western Producer readers know us for our great content... but when it comes to classifieds you know us for our great service. in print and online next day! When it’s time to sell, turn to The Western Producer’s team of Classified Sales Associates. Our product knowledge, marketing strategies and access to qualified buyers is unmatched in this industry. Place your classified word ad with us and view it online within the next business day. Call NOW and talk to the experts at...

AUSTRALIAN HARVEST! Positions avail. from Oct.-Dec., $22-28/hour, food and accommodation included. Experienced operators with relevant working holiday visas need only apply. Register early to get a place! www.ruralenterprises.com.au

MODERN 400 COW dairy, east of Lacombe, AB. is looking to fill 2 full-time positions. Applicants must have a passion for excellence with dairy cattle and be self-motivated. Experience preferred. Wages $17$21/hr. Housing available. Fax resume to 403-784-2911. Ph 403-396-4696, Tees AB TWO FULL-TIME POSITIONS available on modern grain/cattle farm, housing supplied, close to schools, top wages for right candidate. Also looking for part-time help during harvest. Estevan, SK. 306-634-9980 e-mail: jsleblanc@sasktel.net

HORSE WRANGLER WANTED for camp in Rocky Mountains, Sept./2014. Must FULL-TIME AND SEASONAL help on large love being outdoors and horses. Contact grain farm, up to $35/hr. depending on education and experience. 306-421-1110, Kendall 780-712-1617, Grande Cache, AB. 306-634-4758, Torquay, SK. NEERLANDIA, AB. Variety of work on a family farm. Farrow-finish hog operation, COMBINE HARVEST IN AUSTRALIA. milling and hauling feed as well as crop Experience wanted, mid-October until end farming. Housing avail. Wage negotiable. of January. Good wages. Contact email: monty@hoffmanncontracting.com.au 780-674-7676, bmvandijk@xplornet.com

BUSY PRESSURE WASHING Company requires workers for Calgary and Edmonton, AB. area. Will train. Room and board provided. 780-421-9274, 780-920-7360. MANAGER/CARETAKER REQUIRED for large farm in Peace River region Alberta. Land is currently rented for grain production. Position requires: maintenance and upkeep of 3 home sites, machines and vehicles; some fencing; ongoing projects and improvements and controlling access. Advanced handyman skills required, experience with cattle would be an asset. A selfstarter with impeccable ethics and pride in their work and surroundings will be selected. On-site housing provided and salary commensurate with experience and skill. 403-232-4876, dkaye@postellenergy.com EQUIPMENT OPERATORS, Ace Vegetation is hiring Mulcher, Hydro-ax and Positrack Operators for out of town work. Class 1 license an asset. Send resume to: Ace Vegetation, 2001 8th Street, Nisku, AB. T9E 7Z1., Fax to: 780-955-9426 or Email: acemail@acevegetation.com APPRENTICE MECHANIC: Opportunity to work on hydraulics, diesel engines, prime movers, tracked vehicles, as well as spray equipment. Mostly working in shop in Nisku. Send resume to: Ace Vegetation, 2001 8th Street, Nisku, AB. T9E 7Z1. Email: acemail@acevegetation.com or fax: 780-955-9426. FULL TIME FARM Employment on grain/ cattle farm. Must have experience working with equipment and cattle. Mechanical experience an asset. Ron 403-369-0078 Crossfield, AB. Crossrock.07@hotmail.com MECHANIC WANTED, full or part-time, machinery, vehicles and small equipment. Please contact Jamie 306-352-1440, Regina, SK. or email: jamie@rent1.net MAINTENANCE SECURITY: MATURE person to live in our facility located in Stony Rapids, SK. Furnished accommodation, including satellite TV and internet. Duties include some maintenance, security and unloading of weekly freight truck. Mechanically inclined an asset. Driver's licence required. Salary and benefits negotiable. Call Morris 306-439-2157 or 306-425-9774.

GRATTON COUL EE AGRIPARTS L TD.

Is a pro gre s s ive , e xpa n d in g a gric u ltu ra l s a lva ge pa rts c o m pa n y s pe c ia lizin g in la te m o d e l tra c to r a n d c o m b in e pa rts a n d lo c a te d a tIrm a , Alb e rta . W e a re looking for

M E CH ANICAL AS S E M BL E R S

(4 va ca n cies ) Perm a n en t, fu ll tim e p o s itio n s -44 hrs p er w eek. S a la ry $19.25 to $20.00/hr. Va lid d rivers licen s e. Previo u s exp erien ce a n a s s et. To a pply fo r a po s itio n w ith u s , plea s e e-m a il res u m e to : m a rc@ gcpa rts .co m o r s en d fa x to 78 0-754-2333 Atten tio n : Alvin W a n n echk o

THREE FULL-TIME GRAIN workers. Applicant must have driver’s license and willing PART -TIME JANITOR/ MAINTENANCE to learn in operating and repairing modern NEEDED, working only a few days per week. farm machinery. Employer will train if 306-931-4787 or fax 306-934-8847. needed. Wages depending on experience. 4 CONCRETE FINISHERS needed, seasonal EQUIPMENT OPERATORS/ CLASS 1A youckacresltd@yahoo.ca Strasbourg, SK. (Mar-Nov), under 1 hour radius of CamDrivers/ GENERAL FARM LABOURER, Coutts EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY NEAR Assirose, AB. $24- $26 per hour. Minimum 3 Agro, operating a large grain-based farm located in Western Sask., is currently seek- niboia, SK. for self motivated person inter- yrs. experience with directing placement ing full-time and seasonal positions. If you ested in a grain farm. Applicant should of concrete into forms and finalizing surenjoy operating as part of an integral spray- have experience operating and maintain- faces. Must be able to provide clean drug ing and harvest team, working on the land ing modern farm equipment. Class 1A an and alcohol test results and have drivers liwith state of the art equipment, seeking asset. Housing available for correct candi- cense with clean record. Apply at Sunset long hours and industry leading wages and date. Must be honest and reliable. Wages Concrete: Lot 4, Block 1, Ervik Subdivision, benefits, please send your resume to depending on experience. Great work envi- Camrose, AB, Box 1924, T4V 0S0, or email: don@sunsetconcrete.ca fax 780-855-0004 coutts.ian@couttsagro.com or fax ronment. Call Derrek 306-642-8349. 306-463-2829. If you would like more info. regarding this job opportunity, please contact Ian Coutts at 306-460-8507. Training opportunities and accommodations are K ro eker F a rm s L im ited ha s a n o p p o rtu n ity fo r a fa rm m a n a ger available to those interested in an exciting o n their s eed p ro d u ctio n fa rm in Riverhu rs t, S a s k a tchew a n . career at Coutts Agro Ltd. Res p o n s ib ilities in clu d e: CENTRAL ALBERTA LARGE purebred and • Co o rd in a tin g a n d lea d in g s ta ff commercial cow/calf operation has an • M a in ten a n ce o fa ll eq u ip m en ta n d res o u rces opening for Operations Manager. Beneficial assets: Leadership, communication, • As s is tin g in b u d getin g a n d m a n a gin g exp en s es time management, record keeping, moti• As s is tin g in a gro n o m ic d ecis io n s vation and responsibility. Excellent loca• Co o rd in a tio n o fa ll a s p ects o fcro p p ro d u ctio n Ed Kla s s e n tion w/easy access to several amenities • Bu ild in g rela tio n s hip s w ith la n d lo rd s a n d n eighb o rs and activities. Contact: Future Farms, KROEKER FARM S F a rm exp erien ce d es ired in clu d es gen era l m a in ten a n ce, 403-227-2594, Red Deer County, AB or LIM ITED eq u ip m en to p era tio n , irriga tio n s ched u lin g, b a s ic a gro n o m y, send resume to: futureal@telusplanet.net Hu m a n Re s o u rc e s b u d getin g, a n d s u p ervis io n o fs ta ff. Pro d u ctio n , a gricu ltu re EXP. COMBINE AND Grain Cart Operators M a n a ge r a n d m a n a gem en texp erien ce a re es s en tia l. wanted. Accommodations available, wages Po ta to exp erien ce is n o tn eces s a ry. Pho n e: b a s e d o n e x p e r i e n c e . C a l l E r i c at : W e o ffer a co m p etitive s a la ry a n d a co m p rehen s ive 306-272-7038, Foam Lake, SK. (204) 325-4333 b en efits p a cka ge in clu d in g p ro fits ha rin g a n d RRS P’s . F a x: FULL-TIME, STEADY RANCH/FARM Relo ca tio n a s s is ta n ce m a y b e p ro vid ed ifn eces s a ry. (204) 325-8 6 30 Employment. Health care plan, subsidized K ro eker F a rm s is a p ro gres s ive vegeta b le fa rm tha t housing available. Scheduled time off. s p ecia lizes in ta b le p o ta to es . Pro d u ctio n a ls o in clu d es E m a il: Purebred, multi-breed operation. We cover chip p o ta to es , o n io n s , s eed p o ta to es , a n d a la rge all aspects of cattle ranching (calving, ed w in @ k ro ek ers .co m o rga n ic d ep a rtm en t. K ro eker F a rm s p ro d u ces cro p s in feeding, fencing, farming etc). Competitive wage offered. Join our crew, it is a great We thank allapplicants five lo ca tio n s in b o th Ca n a d a a n d the US A. F o r m o re in fo rm a tio n go to w w w .k ro ek erfa rm s .co m place to work. Please send your resume, for their interest. references and drivers abstract to: Hill 70 Ifyo u a re in teres ted in a cha llen gin g a n d rew a rd in g ca reer O nly those being Quantock Ranch, Lloydminster, Alberta at w ith a p ro gres s ive co m p a n y, p lea s e fo rw a rd yo u r res u m e to : interviewed willbe info@hill70quantock.com or call and Ed K la s s en . contacted. speak to Bill or Sherry at 780-875-8794. FULL-TIME FARM HELP WANTED for general labor on a large mixed farm. Housing available For more information call 780-745-2540, Paradise Valley, AB.

FARM M ANAGER

CALL US AT: 1-800-667-7770 | CLASSIFIEDS.PRODUCER.COM Monday to Friday, ads will be posted online within one business day. Real Time online will be placed a maximum of 11 days prior to first print insertion.


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

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. 16 PERMANENT FULL-TIME POSITIONS available at County Fresh Farms Greenhouses in Cypress County, AB. Job includes daily picking and pruning of vegetable plants. Work is in a greenhouse environment with some lifting required. $10.03/hr. for 40-50 hrs./wk., may vary according to crop cycles, no experience required, must have transportation. Email: countyfreshfarms@hotmail.com

9 TRUSS ASSEMBLY WORKERS wanted to work in Annaheim, SK. Full-time year round work. Hourly wage is $12-16/hour depending on experience. Some labour experience is an asset. Willing to train to assemble wood roof trusses. Company offers Disability Insurance, Dental Insurance and Extended Medical Insurance are optional after 3 month probation. Main duties: Verifies dimensions of pre-cut parts and accuracy of assembly, assembles pre-cut wooden parts to build trusses and similar structures, trims pre-cut wooden parts if required, places metal reinforcement plates over connecting joints using hand and power tools. Apply with resume to: P r a i r i e Tr u s s & F a b r i c a t i n g a t NW-15-39-20-W2, PO Box 178, Annaheim, SK. S0K 0G0 or by fax: 306-598-2060 or by email: faye_stammenlumber@yourlink.ca 2- BUILDING MAINTENANCE SUPERVISORS needed to work in the Saskatoon area. Full-time, year-round work, $26.00 to $29.00/hour, depending on experience. Minimum 3 years of experience with building maintenance. Supervisory experience is an asset. Must provide clean drug and alcohol test results and police certificate. Apply to: RCCR Holdings, attention Rick Letts, at: 1001 3rd Ave. North, Saskatoon, SK. S7K 2K5, fax: 306-664-1962 or, email: rccrholdings@gmail.com

CLASSIFIED ADS 57

Southern Alberta Sales M anager Canadian Public Auction Ltd. requires an experienced F/T Southern Alberta Sales M anager to w ork outofour C algary O ffice. A pplicants m ustbe highly m otivated. Industrialand transportation experience/know ledge required. Q ualified persons please send resum e and salary expectations to 9320 - 52nd St.SE Calgary,AB T2C 2R5 or Em ail: dw ight@canadianpublicauction.com

LABOURER WANTED, $16/hr. Exp. in fork- 6 PERMANENT FULL-TIME Positions lift and powerjack handling. Sun Country available at Rolling Acres Greenhouses in Farms, 306-283-9225, Langham, SK. Medicine Hat, AB. Job includes daily picking and pruning of vegetable plants. Work is in a greenhouse environment with some lifting required. $10.03/hr., 40-50 hrs. per week, may vary according to crop cycles. No experience required. Must have transportation. rollingacresjobs@hotmail.com BUSY ROOFING COMPANY requires labourers for work in Edmonton, AB. and area. Free room and board. Call Ron at: 780-220-5437.

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.

Provost/Wainwright area

C la ss 1 or 3 a nd O ilfie ld e xpe rie nc e w ould be a va lua ble a sse t.

CREW TRUCK LABORERS RECLAMATION LABORERS Must have valid driver’s license and oilfield tickets.

Interested ca nd id a tes m a y a pply w ith resu m e, em ploym ent references a nd copy of d rivers a bstra ct to:

He/she will be innovative, insightful and a natural leader with a demonstrated ability to lead and develop a team that is at the forefront of the agriculture media industry nationally and internationally. The role requires a strategic mind, a willingness to rely on fresh thinking and market insight to build the Brand to serve the agriculture community regardless of platform or traditional practice. THE EDITOR OF THE WESTERN PRODUCER IS A LEADER. HE/SHE WILL: • Develop and champion the Editorial vision of The Western Producer both in the near and long term with all internal and external stakeholders. •

Be an advocate of the Producer and the agriculture industry at seminars and industry events.

Understand the current and prospective readership while maintaining the relevancy of The Producer brand in their daily lives and consequently be a driving force in the growth of print and digital readership.

Be a full participant on the executive of The Producer and maintain accountability for the overall performance of the Brand.

Be a voice for the content sharing and integral position of The Producer within the Glacier FarmMedia division and Glacier Media Inc.

The successful candidate will have an outstanding track record in senior leadership roles from significant “best in class” publishing organizations. He/she will present a sense of trust and credibility – with uncompromising integrity. A university degree in Journalism or equivalent relevant post-secondary education or experience required. Also, a solid financial understanding of profit and loss responsibilities would be an asset. To apply for this position, please contact: Marty Parker, Chief Executive Officer, Waterstone Human Capital or 416.408.3199 mparker@waterstonehc.com The Western Producer is Canada’s largest weekly farm publication. We help Western Canadian farmers, ranchers, and agribusiness succeed in today’s fast-paced global agricultural marketplace with award winning content, in print and online at www.producer.com.

Jennifer Mondoux Managing Director, Waterstone Human Capital 613.482.7652 Extension 273 jmondoux@waterstonehc.com

gm a rtin@ rocksolidcom pa nies.net or FA X to 780-853-6026 PH : 780-853-6604

GRAVEL CRUSHER PERSONNEL GRAVEL TRUCK DRIVERS Must have a valid Class One license.

CON TR OLLER Established in 1966, the Red Hat Co-operative Ltd. Is the central packaging, marketing and distribution facility for 50 independently owned greenhouse operations. Red Hat’s central location in Redcliff, AB is ideal for distribution of our produce to wholesalers and grocery retailers throughout western Canada.

Also Needed EXPERIENCED LOADER OPERATOR Fax resumes to 780-753-8104 or email baritoilfield@xplornet.com No phone calls please. Only successful applicants will be contacted.

FullTim e Sales Representative

The successful candidate will be the editorial champion of The Producer with the mandate to grow the traditional print and digital audience of The Producer brand in a dramatically dynamic environment.

• COIL TUBING PERSONNEL • NITROGEN SUPERVISORS • PRESSURE TRUCK OPERATORS • PICKER OPERATORS • GENERAL LABOURERS

Please fax resume to 780-871-6908 or email: meredith_royalwell@telus.net

Editor The Western Producer is currently seeking an Editor to oversee editorial content and the editorial team. The position reports to the Publisher of the Producer.

Rock S olid opera ting a cros s W es tern Ca na da requires

Canadian Public Auction Ltd. requires an experienced F/T Sales Representative for the Edm onton & G rande Prairie area. A pplicants m ustbe highly m otivated. Industrialand transportation experience/know ledge required. Q ualified persons please send resum e and salary expectations to 9320 - 52nd St.SE Calgary,AB T2C 2R5 Fax:403-266-6754 Em ail: dw ight@canadianpublicauction.com

Th e Ca ndida te Reporting to the General Manager, this position will appeal to the professional individual seeking to gain exposure and experience in a challenging environment. The successful candidate will have a good understanding of accounting and management principles, and as the primary financial officer will oversee all aspects of the accounting and reporting functions for our 100,000 sq. foot, food grade distribution centre. A CMA/CGA/CA designation with 3-5 years of progressively responsible experience is preferred, or a suitable combination of education and related industry experience - preferably in the packaging or manufacturing sectors.

Th e Position • • • • •

Managing the Accounting and Administration team of 5 Monthly financial reporting to Board of Directors and department managers Analyzing and managing cash flow Insurance and financial institution responsibilities Overseeing and maintaining the financial ledger and accounting processes, month end journal entries, account reconciliations and internal reporting • Facilitation of the annual external audit • Internal control review and ongoing evaluation of the financial reporting system and procedures • Management of budget and forecasting for the operation

Com pensa tion Red Hat Co-operative Ltd. offers a competitive compensation package including group medical and RRSP benefits. Salary is negotiable dependent on education, knowledge and experience. Interested parties may submit their applications by forwarding your cover letter, including salary expectations, and resume as indicated.

Red Hat Co-operative Ltd. 809 Broadway Avenue E Redcliff, AB, T0J 2P0 Fax: (403) 548-7255 Email: brent.fraser@redhatco-op.com Thank you for your interest. Only those selected for an interview will be contacted.

FA RM S A LES & M A RK ETIN G REPRES EN TATIV E 2014 W inter S ea s ona l (O ctober – M a rch) AG I is cu rrently seeking five (5) Fa rm S a les & M a rketing Representa tives for A lberta & S a ska tchew a n on a term ba sis from O ctober 2014 throu gh M a rch 2015. Regiona lly ba sed a nd reporting to the Director of Ca na dia n Sa les, the su ccessfu l ca ndida tes w ill be responsible for im prov ing a w a reness of the AG I produ ct offering a nd ca pa bilities lea ding to sa les grow th. The Repres enta tives res pons ibilities include: • Presenta tion of AG I fa rm produ ctca ta log to produ cers w ith a focu s on new innov a tions, expa nding a w a reness of the brea dth of AG I’s produ ctline forthe pu rpose of determ ining cha nges to existing produ cerrequ irem ents a nd new sa les opportu nities • W ork w ith the su pportof the AG I Territory M a na gertea m a nd client netw ork • Dev eloping a nd execu ting stra tegic territory objectiv es a ligned w ith ov era ll bu siness objectiv es a nd this initia tiv e • O rga nizing indiv idu a l a nd grou p com m u nica tion sessions or a ppointm ents w ith produ cers forthe pu rpose of increa sing produ cers w illingness to recom m end AG I produ cts • Initia te correspondence a nd m eeting a rra ngem ents w ith indiv idu a ls orgrou ps • Accu ra tely record a nd reportfindings from produ cerdiscu ssions • Com m u nica ting stra tegic sa les & m a rketing opportu nities w ithin AG I’s sa les tea m a s pa rtof coordina ted territory pla n Applica nts shou ld ha v e 3 - 5 yea rs of experience in a rela ted ca pa city com plim ented by a strong u ndersta nding of the a gricu ltu ra l stora ge a nd ha ndling indu stry. The su ccessfu l ca ndida te m u st be w illing to tra v el dom estica lly a nd be a n effectiv e com m u nica tor w ith the a bility to prov ide credible cu stom er responses to enha nce the perception of ou r produ cts a nd serv ices. A positiv e a pproa ch, professiona l a ttitu de w ith exceptiona l tim e m a na gem ent skills a re requ ired. In a ddition, com pu ter skills w orking w ith M S O ffice inclu ding da ta ba se m a na gem enta nd electronic com m u nica tions a re cru cia l. W e offer a com petitiv e com pensa tion a nd benefits pa cka ge, professiona l dev elopm ent tra ining a nd opportu nities for ca reer a dv a ncem ent. O n or before Au gu st 15, 2014 qu a lified a pplica nts ca n forw a rd theirresu m e, inclu ding sa la ry expecta tions, to:

hr@ a ggrow th.com orm a il to: 198 C om m erce D rive, W innipeg, M a nitoba , R3P 0Z6


58 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

Sales Representative Grain Bags Canada is a leading supplier of grain bagging equipment, bagging plastic and tillage equipment in Canada, and is currently recruiting for a Sales Representative for our client base in western Canada. Our head office is located in Humboldt SK. Responsibilities for the Sales Representative will include; • Promote and sell our line of agricultural equipment • Build and maintain the existing customer base while growing the company base • Maintain contact with clients and ensure the customer has a high level of confidence • Provide long term business relationships and superior customer service • Travel across the assigned territory will be a main component of this role Qualifications Include; • A strong knowledge of farming operations and agricultural sales • Three plus years of sales experience • Geographical knowledge of applicable territory • Ability to build rapport and maintain relationships • Excellent verbal and written communication skills • Able to work independently, but also remain accountable to company directives • Mechanically inclined • Good organizational skills • Clean drivers abstract Grain Bags provides a competitive salary with commission incentives. Please submit resume, including cover letter by July 31, 2014 to:

FullTim e Sales Representative Canadian Public Auction Ltd. requires an experienced F/T Sales Representative for the Southern A lberta area. A pplicants m ustbe highly m otivated. Industrialand transportation experience/know ledge required. Q ualified persons please send resum e and salary expectations to 9320 - 52nd St.SE Calgary,AB T2C 2R5 Fax:403-266-6754 Em ail: dw ight@canadianpublicauction.com

Download the free app today Up-to-date news, weather, classifieds and more.

ALIGNMENT SHOP IN Yorkton SK requires experienced mechanic. Duties include R&R steering, susp. parts, wheel alignments and SGI Inspections. Call Jon at 306-783-6019. HD TRUCK MECHANIC required for small trucking co. in Lloydminster, AB area. License an asset, but not necessary. John 780-846-0002 or fax 780-846-0005, actiontowinglloyd@hotmail.com

MECHANIC WANTED, full or part-time, machinery, vehicles and small equipment. Please contact Jamie 306-352-1440, Regina, SK. or email: jamie@rent1.net LOOKING FOR EXPERIENCED winch tractor driver for oilfield hauling in Northern Alberta. Camp job. Flexible schedule. Call 780-649-3401, Red Earth Creek, AB. JIMCO FARMING INC. is now hiring Class 3 and Class 1 truck drivers for fall harvest. Call Jim at: 403-575-0069, Coronation, AB.

Grain Bags Canada Ltd.

Box 3129, Humboldt, SK S0K 2A0 E-mail: craigyeager@grainbagscanada.com Phone: 306-231-9937 Fax: 306-682-5892

3 SHEET METAL INSTALLERS needed. Fulltime year-round employment in Edmonton, AB. and area. $25.50 - 29./hour to start depending on experience, plus benefits: Extended Health Coverage, Life and Long Term Disability Insurance after 3 months probation period. Minimum 6 years experience as a sheet metal worker installing roof flashings and performing custom sheet metal work on commercial buildings. Journeyman certificate or equivalent is required. Apply with resume at: West Point Roofing Inc., 9810 - 62 Avenue NW, Edmonton, AB., T6E 0E3 or email: careers@westpointroofing.com or fax: 780-435-0436.

HIR IN G IM M EDIATELY

Ag Equipment Mechanic/Repair Person $35/ho u r+ b en efits & pen sio n pla n . Du ties in clu d e: sho p w o rk co o rd in a tio n , pa rts o rd erin g, m a chin ery o pera tio n & testin g, m a chin ery repa ir. M o d ern sho p, to o ls su pplied . 30km ea sto f S a ska to o n , S K.

Ca llCha rlie a t (306) 2 2 1- 3800 o re- m a il cha rlie@ co m b in ew o rld .co m

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.

Tru ck Driver sW a n ted ~Big g a r Tr a n s p or t~

Co m pa n y Drivers& Lea sed O pera to rs to pu llSu perB’sin bu lk gra in & fertilizerd ivisio n Co m petitive w a ges& ben efits& Sign in g Bo n u s S en d Resu m e & DriversAbstra ctto ro d p a cik@ tra n sa llg ro u p .co m o r fa x:3 06 -24 2-2077 C a ll:Ro d Pa cik 3 06 -24 9-6 85 3 3 06 -3 81-6 5 3 5

CLASS 1 AND 3 Vac/Water/Tractor Trailer Operators, 3 to 5 years driving experience in remote conditions. Knowledge of the safe operation of vacuum and/or water truck and auxiliary equipment (Pump, Agitator, TPC etc.). Safety Training: H2S, First Aid, TDG, WHMIS, PST/CSTS, Confined Space (training can be provided). Please email current resume, drivers abstract and safety certificates to: ops@movac.ca or fax to: 403-201-3684, Calgary, AB. Lac La Biche, AB. and Fort McMurray, AB.

CLASS 1A DRIVER WANTED to haul cattle, grain, and feed for Buffalo Plains Cattle Co. Experience and a good driving record required. Competitive salary and group benefits avail. Fax resume 306-638-3150 or call Kristen, 306-631-8769, Bethune, SK LOOKING FOR LEASED Operators to run flatdeck across Canada and province wide. One Lease-to-Own truck available. Regina, SK. Phone Denise at 306-757-1448 or email to: denise@shadowlines.com CLASS 1A HD Tow Truck Driver required for Lloydminster, AB. area. Permanent fulltime position. Will train. Abstract required. John 780-846-0002 or fax 780-846-0005, actiontowinglloyd@hotmail.com

is looking for

OWNER OPERATORS & COMPANY DRIVERS to Haul Livestock. Competitive Wages, Benefit Package, Signing Bonus.

Please fax Resume and Abstract to 306-242-2077 Or Email to rodpacik@transallgroup.com Or Contact Rod Pacik @ 306-249-6853

FIELD RESEARCH TECHNICIAN The Barley & Oat Breeding Program at the Crop Development Centre, Department of Plant Sciences, University of Saskatchewan, requires a Field Research Technician. There are currently 19 full-time staff employed in this diverse program which breeds malt, feed, food and forage barley varieties, as well as, milling, feed and forage oat varieties. The technician will work primarily on field plot establishment, maintenance, harvest and post-harvest data collection, but will be expected to eventually assume roles involving field plot design, crossing, pathology, grain quality and statistical analysis will also involve limited training and supervision of junior staff and graduate students in field and laboratory activities. Qualifications and Experience: Minimum post-secondary training at the diploma or degree level in agriculture or plant biology or grade 12 with a good understanding of field crop production. Relevant work experience in a small-plot field research program, including experience in the operation of field and smallplot equipment, and; knowledge of database software (eg. Agrobase) is desirable. Must be willing to work outdoors, work flexible hours during planting and harvest seasons, demonstrate good mechanical and computer skills and possess effective written and oral communication skills in the English language; must possess the physical ability to perform heavy physical labour, including lifting and carrying up to and including 25 kgs. The job involves limited travel outside the Saskatoon area. Candidates must hold a valid class 5 driver’s license. The position requires a motivated, reliable, well organized individual who is able to work independently in a multi-disciplinary, group environment. This position offers motivated individuals the opportunity to expand their leadership and technical skills. Start Date: As soon as possible and no later than October 13, 2014. Salary: Commensurate with qualifications and experience; includes competitive benefit and pension package. To apply, send applications including cover letter, resume and names and contacts of three references by August 31, 2014 to: Dr. Aaron Beattie Crop Development Centre, University of Saskatchewan 51 Campus Drive, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5A8 Email: aaron.beattie@usask.ca The University of Saskatchew an is strongly com m itted to a diverse and inclusive w orkplace that em pow ers all em ployees to reach their full potential. The university w elcom es applications from those w ho w ill contribute to the diversity of our com m unity. All qualified candidates are encouraged to apply; how ever, Canadian citizens and perm anent residents w illbe given priority.

MAY I HAVE YOUR ATTENTION, PLEASE. Make your classified ad the best it can be. Attract more attention to your ad with attention-getters! There are many ways to catch buyers’ eyes. Ask our friendly classified ad team for more information. We’ll be happy to assist you with expert advice on how to get your item sold!

Place your ad on producer.com or call us at 1-800-667-7770


NEWS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

59

DONKEYS | RAISING MAMMOTHS

Some like miniatures, some like Mammoths Mammoths were bred to be strong work mules BY SHIRLEY BYERS FREELANCE WRITER

Suzanne Paddock grew up on a donkeyless farm, which her father was not about to remedy in spite of his daughter’s keen interest in the species. However, a few years later she was engaged to marry a man who had not one but three donkeys. Ron Paddock and his brother had bought the donkeys for breaking cattle. “I used to ask him to take me to the donkeys,” she said. “He always said, ‘you’re never going to catch them,’ but one day I did. One came right up to me and I fell in love with him.” With their wedding coming up in April 2000, Suzanne suggested that she and Ron get some donkeys at their place near Baldur, Man. The answer was a quick yes. It turns out Ron had always wanted to try his hand at raising Mammoth donkeys. Mammoths, also known as American Mammoth, are the biggies of the donkey world. To be registered, a jack (male) must be at least 56 inches at the withers, while a jenny (female) must be at least 54 inches. The Mammoth is a landrace of North American donkeys, descended from various breeds imported to the United States. U.S. president George Washington is said to be one of several agricultural innovators who worked to develop the breed with the end goal of producing a strong work mule. In those days, black was considered the only suitable colour for a Mammoth donkey because black jacks bred to Percheron mares produced dark coloured mules that were easy to match as teams. Today, Mammoths are produced in a variety of colours. There were an estimated five million Mammoths worldwide in the 1920s, but today they are on the rare breeds list in North America with only 3,000 to 4,000 registered in the world. They are tall, sturdy animals with large, well-made heads. The breed is known for its long ears, which often measure 33 inches in length. It was those exceptional ears that sparked the idea for the Paddock farm’s name: Big Ears Donkey Ranch. Ron and Suzanne went on a donkey buying trip to Saskatchewan and Alberta before their wedding and came back with two unregistered jennies and a registered jack. The next spring there were babies on their farm. They advertised them in the classifieds and friends advised them to print business cards. “Why would we do that?” Suzanne wondered. “This is just for fun.” However, it wasn’t long before the phone was ringing, donkeys were selling and people were asking for registered Mammoths. It was time to expand the herd. The Paddocks bought two more registered jennies and two more the following year, but they had to go further afield to buy another registered jack. The pool of Mammoths in Canada is small, and animals are

ABOVE: Ron and Suzanne Paddock raise Mammoth Donkeys near, Baldur, Man. They are shown here with Kacy and her baby, Ethelene. | SUSAN KENTNER PHOTO

LEFT: The Paddocks promote their Mammoth donkeys at fairs. Here, at Ninette, Man., Rusty and Adeline, with Ron Paddock at the reins, take MP Larry Maguire through the Pelican Lake Ag Society’s 60th anniversary parade. | SUZANNE PADDOCK PHOTO

starting to be related to each other. In 2004, they found a frosted white spotted jack in Virginia, exactly what they were looking for. “We like the Mammoth because it’s a bigger animal,” Suzanne said. “We just feel you can do more with an animal that size. When we go to a fair, people are still astounded by the size of them. They have never seen donkeys that size. Lots call them mules.” Donkeys need shelter for all seasons and do well on a plain diet of grass and lower quality hay. Too much rich food will result in fat stored in a roll on their necks, which will flop to one side if they become too heavy. The condition is irreversible because muscle tone is lost forever. The Paddocks feed some oats to weanlings and mothers with new babies.

Donkeys are more prone to impaction caused by dehydration than horses or other livestock, which means they should be provided fresh water during cold weather. Foot care is also important. They have relatively small feet and can easily fall and injure themselves when walking or chasing a predator so regular trimming is necessary. Donkeys are prone to the same diseases and parasites as horses and need regular vaccinations and deworming. Paddock said donkeys have gotten a bad rap for being stubborn. “They’re more cautious than horses, but we find if you give them time they will overcome their fear,” she said. “They see us every day and never have they been hurt by us or chased around with a vehicle.” Most of the foals at Big Ears Donkey Ranch are born in the barn, and Ron

and Suzanne are usually there. “We want to bond with the baby too,” she said. “It’s best to let the baby see us right from the start, hear our voices and so on. One baby, now just one week old, will leave her mom to come see us when we go into the corral.” Twins are rare in equine species, and although slightly more common in donkeys than horses, they are still unusual. As a result, Ron and Suzanne were astounded when two sets of twins were born on Big Ears Donkey Ranch in the spring of 2011. Babies and mothers did well. There was a male and a female in each pair and considerable discrepancy in their sizes. The Paddocks wondered if sterility would be a problem, as it can be with twin foals, but were told not to worry about it because each baby in each

set was attached to its own placenta. The Paddocks sell and promote the breed from their website bigearsdonkeyranch.ca. They also host farm tours and are invited to fairs. Prices range from $1,500 to $2,500. Customers buy the donkeys for pets, companion animals for horses, small farm work, trail riding and breeding with mares to produce mules. About one-third are bought to be guard animals to protect cattle, sheep and goats. The herd at Big Ears Donkey Ranch numbers about 20, and Paddock is confident that even her father has become a fan. “When we imported Hollyfield Pilgrim from Leesburg, Va., U.S.A., my dad called the day before to see if he could come with us to the U.S. port of entry to meet the trucker and pick up the young donkey. I think he wanted to be the first to see Pilgrim.”


60

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

PRODUCTION

BACK TO NATURE By keeping natural areas intact instead of edge to edge cropping, farmers can encourage beneficial bugs to thrive. | Page 62

P R O DU CTI 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

The new Joker PT is designed to be a serious mud cultivator. The leaf spring rollflex packer wheels have been replaced by baskets, and large diameter flotation tires have been located within the frame. | HORSCH PHOTO AGRONOMY | TILLAGE

There’s a new Joker in the deck Mud making you cry? | This cultivation tool might make you smile if you’re heading out to saturated fields BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU

The Joker RT, with its unique steel spring packer wheels, was touted as the ultimate mud cultivation machine when it was introduced in 2009. However, Horsch has now brought out a radically different Joker model called the PT, also touted as the ultimate mud cultivation machine. Everett Boyd farms at Boissevain, Man., an area plagued by wet conditions for the past two decades.

Producers in the region have been trying numerous techniques in their battle with mud. Boyd bought a 30 foot Joker RT in the spring of 2013, thinking it might be the answer to saturated soil. He still has the RT, but this spring he also bought the new 40-foot Joker PT, which is also promoted as the answer to wet fields. “I was looking for something that would work better in the more extreme wet conditions. The RT didn’t seem to be cutting it,” said

Boyd, adding that the spring loaded packer wheels did not shed the mud the way he thought they would. “The packers were clogging. They’d fill right up with mud because the discs aren’t far enough ahead of the packers. In wet spots, the discs would spin and throw too much mud into the packers and plug them right up.” Boyd, who used both Jokers this spring, said the two machines are supposed to be designed to carry out different functions, but he’s not convinced it works that way.

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The PT is intended to help dry out the soil. “I think the PT works better than the other one for that. When they sold it to us, they told me seed bed preparation wouldn’t be as good with the PT, but it’s really not too bad. In some conditions, it’s even better than the RT finish.” However, Boyd said the PT uses all the power generated by his 500 horsepower tractor, and it could use more. As well, he found it to be finicky to operate. “My son was running it first. Then

we had an older gentleman running it. But it seems they didn’t have such good success. It’s not really totally user-friendly,” he said. “The baskets will fill with mud, just like the packers did on the RT. You have to have your head screwed on backwards to run this machine properly and get the baskets lifted to the right height. We have that lift capability with the PT that we don’t have with the RT, but if you don’t get the baskets up to the right height, it’s no better than the RT machine.”

1.800.663.4769 Phone: (204) 786-5736 Fax: (204) 783-9740 TM

...serving farmers since 1984


PRODUCTION

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

61

AGRONOMY | TILLAGE

Cultivator creators know all about mud New model made for mud | Joker PT features large diameter tires and adjustable rolling baskets BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU

BRANDON — Engineers on the Horsch Joker project say they aren’t fooling when they say their new PT really is the answer for mud cultivation. The PT was born in the Red River Valley, where thick, heavy, sticky, gooey mud is the norm. It’s an area where ideal soil conditions are seldom seen and no machine is ever happy, according to Horsch representative Tyler Billay. “The new PT Joker is for guys in really wet conditions, in the Red River Valley and other areas where extreme mud is a factor,” said Billay. The new PT is not a replacement for the older RT, he added. Horsch still makes the RT, but the PT serves a different purpose. “The plain fact is that the RT Joker was plugging up because we didn’t have enough room for mud to flow through the machine. The RT design had the discs too close together.,” he said. “On the new PT, we stretched the discs out so there’s more room between the gangs. We put a row of large diameter tires in there for extra flotation and we added rolling baskets as finishing tools.” Billay said the baskets are on hydraulics so they can be adjusted or lifted totally out of the way to avoid plugging when working in heavy mud. Gone are the rollflex leaf spring packing wheels that characterized the RT Joker. “The PT doesn’t have as much firming action as the RT, so I’d say seed bed preparation isn’t as good as the RT,” Billay said. “Rolling baskets are never as good for a firm seed bed as the rollflex packers.” He said the basket rollers may not create the best seed bed, but they can do an excellent job of incorporating crop residue, manure and fertilizer into the soil. The roller cages also do a good job of breaking up clods and levelling the soil for a final run with the RT machine. The 20-inch compact notched discs are mounted with an overall

When even the best rubber tracks won’t keep your cart on the surface, transferring horsepower from tractor to the cart tracks should keep your rig moving through the mud. Power Tracks are available on Elmer’s Nutri Master Anhydrous and liquid fertilizer caddy carts. | ELMER’S MANUFACTURING PHOTOS Oil-filled bearings are used on the Joker RT and PT models. The disc bolts to the cap to provide better protection. | HORSCH PHOTO spacing of five inches to fill in tire ruts left by machinery. The PT is intended to operate at eight to 12 m.p.h., which gives the blades an aggressive chopping action. This warms and dries the field and introduces oxygen into the soil, Billay said. It would be understandable to think that high-speed small diameter discs would spell high maintenance costs, but both Joker models feature oil-filled maintenance-free bearings with the discs bolted directly to the bearing caps to help shield the bearings from damage. The depth control console, which is located in the cab, automatically adjusts the hydraulic cylinders to keep the PT operating at the depth chosen by the operator. Constant hydraulic down pressure on the wings maintains even weight across the machine and allows the wings to follow the contours of the field. The sensors are located within the cylinders for better accuracy. “In most areas, a guy might want to buy a PT for wet years and keep his RT to get a better seed bed in more normal years, but in bad mud like the Red River Valley, a guy would probably sell his RT and just keep the PT,” Billay said. “There’s still a high demand for the original RT Joker, so making a trade or a swap or selling outright shouldn’t be a problem.”

The original Joker RT had four high-tension leaf springs that would pack wet soil and then pop back to throw off mud as soon as they rolled past the soil contact point. However, the discs were too close to the packers, causing the rollflex packers to plug with mud. | RON LYSENG PHOTO

EQUIPMENT | TRACKS

Power Tracks find their own way forward BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU

There are times when even rubber tracks can’t keep grain carts afloat and moving. Those are the times when farmers wish they could pump some of their tractor’s excess horsepower back to the cart for an extra push. It’s what Elmer’s Manufacturing is promising with its hydrostatic drive Power Tracks, which can be installed under their air carts, tender carts and grain carts. Engineers at Elmer’s in Winkler, Man., and Horsch in Germany have been working on power driven tracks for awhile. In one case, a prototype Power Track near Estevan, Sask., pulled a 1,000 bushel cart, an 80-foot drill and a JD 9560R backward out of the q u a g m i re i n w h i c h t h e y h a d become immersed. S i n c e t h e n , e n g i n e e r s f ro m Elmer’s and Horsch have worked to refine the system and get it ready for production, which should begin soon, said Mike Friesen, president and chief engineer at Elmer’s. He said Power Tracks will be available in time for next spring. “The system transfers 250 excess horsepower from the tractor back to the hydrostatically driven rubber tracks,” Friesen said. “What it amounts to is taking horsepower you can’t use from the tractor and applying it to another drive system. You’re re-distributing tractive power, same as adding more dual tires or more rubber tracks, but they’re on the cart.” F r i e s e n s a i d Pow e r Tra c k i s designed only for those urgent situations when wheel slip is an issue. It is not designed for use in normal field conditions. Once the system has extricated the rig from the mud, the operator switches Power Track back into the non-driven mode. As well, it automatically defaults into non-drive mode when ground speed exceeds eight m.p.h. The hydraulic system

The producer can engage the p.t.o on the control console to switch the Power Track from freewheeling mode to forward or reverse and then use the knob to increase or decrease power to the cart tracks. Hit the boost button if you want 100 percent power to the tracks. ensures that activation and deactivation is smooth. Friesen said Power Track can use up to 117 gallons per minute at 6,000 p.s.i., sending the 250 h.p. back to four radial piston hydraulic wheel assist motors positioned within the rear wheels of the tracks. “It’s all about pressure. It’s just like more voltage in an electrical motor. With 117 g.p.m. at 6,000 (pounds per sq. inch), we have an enormous amount of pulling power in the tracks.” Tractors don’t generate that much hydraulic power, so the engineers installed a power take-off driven Saur Danfoss axial piston pump, which is the same unit used on many combines and sprayers. The electronically regulated pump is driven through a three-way gearbox so an auger can be used with the power tracks. Each rubber track is supported by two large drive wheels at the rear, two large non-driven wheels at the front and eight bogie wheels. A pair of tracks has four driven wheels at the rear, each with its own integrated radial piston motor. Controlling the mighty mass of tractive power is the job of the electronics package. The primary controls are simply on or off and forward or backward because the system is used only when the rig is stuck. Electronic components include a wheel speed indicator, an RPM indicator, a solenoid to acti-

vate the optional auger, a forward/ neutral/reverse switch, a temperature sensor and a pressure gauge. It may seem like the cart is pushing the horse when the system is activated in the forward mode, To prevent this from happening, and to help the operator maintain control, the system automatically matches cart ground speed to the tractor’s radar speed. The system’s few controls and gauges fit into a compact console in the cab. The operator controls the amount of power applied to the tracks with a knob. If he feels the bottom sinking away, he hits the boost button and 100 percent power instantly flows to the tracks. Using the system involves: • engaging the p.t.o. • switching from freewheel to either forward or reverse • using the knob to increase or decrease power to the tracks • hitting the boost button For more information, contact Friesen at 204-324-6263 or visit www.elmersmfg.com.

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PRODUCTION

BIODIVERSITY | MANAGEMENT

Naturalized areas support beneficial insects Avoid fence to fence cropping | Helpful insects feed on other insects that damage crops BY JEFFREY CARTER FOR THE WESTERN PRODUCER

RIDGETOWN, Ont. — Farmers like to see an endless carpet of crop, but natural areas need to be part of the mix if they hope to tap into farmfriendly insects. “In order to bolster the population of these insects, it’s important to have some floral diversity,” Ben Phillips, an extension worker at Michigan State University, said during the Diagnostics Day held at the University of Guelph’s Ridgetown Campus July 9-10. “If there’s less than two percent natural area, there are not enough resources to sustain an adequate population, and if there’s more than 20 percent, it’s likely they will not bother coming into your field to help. T h e s w e e t s p o t i s s o m e w h e re between two and 20 percent.” Jim Chaput, Ontario’s minor use co-ordinator for pest control products, encouraged Ontario farmers to get back to integrated pest management. He said insects, including pollinators, can be part of the mix. Interested farmers can encourage native, non-weed perennials around field edges to attract insect predators that attack crop pests, Phillips said. Ideally, something should be flowering from early spring until well into the fall. Larger areas may be direct seeded, but many species will begin to flower in only three to five years. For smaller areas, rooted seedlings sold in pots can be used with flowers appearing in one or two years. Choose local seed sources and match species to soil type and other

ABOVE: Some beneficial insect predators, such as lady beetles, prey on adult pest insects, while others lay their eggs on pest insects where the larvae later feed. RIGHT: A soybean aphid munches on a leaf. | MARINA DEL CASTELL/FLICKR AND USDA PHOTOS site characteristics. Site preparation is crucial to control weeds. Favoured species vary depending on location. Wild strawberry is an example of an

early season choice for much of Ontario and Michigan. Phillips also cited several examples of beneficial insects, including a variety of fly species that lays its eggs on

insect pests. The pests succumb to the feeding activities of the larvae once they emerge. Other insects attack their prey as adults.

“Lady beetles and ground beetles are voracious predators,” Phillips said. “It’s like the Serengeti desert out there, but on a small scale. There are a lot of interactions happening.” Friendly insect predators use a variety of techniques. Some eat pests the way humans chow down on a piece of steak. Those with sucking mouth parts often ambush their prey, while insects such as the alligator beetle inject their prey with poison. Most beneficial insects are native to North America, but there are some notable exceptions. The Asian multi-coloured ladybeetle was introduced to counter the soybean aphid, while three weevils were introduced to attach purple loosestrife. Phillips said these “classical introductions” require much research beforehand. Sometimes the introduction can became a nuisance or a pest in itself.

POLLINATORS | SPECIFIC TASKS

Farmers must do homework when putting pollinators to work The squash bee specifically pollinates pumpkins and squash; using the all-purpose honeybee for these fields may not be useful BY JEFFREY CARTER FOR THE WESTERN PRODUCER

RIDGETOWN, Ont. — Farmers often view honeybees as all-purpose pollinators, but in some situations they’re not particularly useful. Entomologist Jim Chaput says some uninformed growers bring commercial hives to their pumpkin and squash fields, but this practice provides only a minimal benefit. The species they really need is peponapis pruinosa, the squash bee. “Their only source of food is from squash and pumpkins,” Chaput said during the Diagnostic Day held at the University of Guelph’s Ridgetown Campus July 9-10. “The female comes out in the summer. We know they are able to find pumpkin and squash fields within three kilometres. We don’t know the biology well enough to know how far they can really go.” The squash bee is the No. 1 pollinator of cucurbita species. Bumblebees are No. 2. Farmers can help by only shallow cultivating fields with squash a n d p u m p k i n s. A n o t h e r t e c h nique is to stake out known nest-

ing areas and avoid cultivation altogether. The ground-nesting bees prefer light soil with bare patches. Their nests reach 12 to 22 centimetres in depth and often feature four to five chambers, each containing a single egg. The larvae survive underground over the winter as pre-pupae and emerge as adults in July. The male adults are busiest in the early morning, looking for females and blooms. Once the flowers have closed, males can often be found sleeping inside. Don’t be afraid to check. Squash bees have no sting. Adult bees are 11 to 14 millimetres in length, larger than honeybees. They are black and have yellowish to tan hairs on most of the head and thorax. The abdomen is black with whitish bands. One survey of squash and pumpkin fields in the U.S. Midwest identified the bees in 19 out of 20 sites. Bee numbers ranged from 10 to 120 bees per 100 flowers. Chaput said native pollinators are being viewed with increasing interest, especially with the decline of the

If you’re looking to improve pollinator habitat, it’s more complex than just planting things on the farm. SUSAN CHAN FORMER ONTARIO BEE INSPECTOR

honeybee population. Susan Chan, a former Ontario bee inspector, said there are many other examples of farm-friendly native pollinators, and their activity should not be taken lightly. For example, increases of 10 to 30 percent in oilseed crop yields have been linked to strong native pollinator populations. Chan said one of the simplest things farmers can do is leave the

natural areas of their property alone. “You can also improve a hedgerow that’s already there by planting some extra native species and taking out things that are not helpful, or that hedgerow could already be perfect. Above all, don’t rip it out,” Chan said previously at the Guelph Organic Conference. Planting trees, shrubs and other flowering plants to which pollinators are attracted will help, especially if producers want something in bloom all the time. Certain crops can also be managed to benefit pollinators. For example, instead of harvesting a hay crop at 10 percent bloom, wait until 15 percent of the flowers have opened. Chan said it is a small step but can have a significant impact when combined with similar initiatives. Farmers and other landowners with a strong interest in developing their pollinator resources should tr y to encourage blooms from spring to mid-fall. Having blooms of different colours and shapes will encourager greater pollinator diversity. On her own Ontario rural property,

Chan aims at having three plant species in bloom throughout the growing season. “If you’re looking to improve pollinator habitat, it’s more complex than just planting things on the farm,” she said. There are five major bee families in many areas of temperate North America: apidae, which includes bumblebees, honeybees and many solitaire species; andrenidae, the mining bees; halictidae, the sweat bees; megachilidae, the leafcutter and mason bees; and colletidae, the cellophane bees. There is a wide array of groundnesting species. Other species nest above ground in a variety of abodes including sumac and second-year raspberry canes. Chan said raspberry growers may wish to leave old raspberry canes stacked near the new growth for the season instead of burning them. The distance that bee species fly from their nesting sites varies widely. Domesticated honeybees will travel up to three or four kilometres away, bumblebees up to one km and smaller species from 100 to 500 metres.


PRODUCTION

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63

WEEDS | MANAGEMENT

Identification is first step when keeping out new weeds Weed watch | Several new weeds are creeping up to Ontario’s border BY JEFFREY CARTER FOR THE WESTERN PRODUCER

RIDGETOWN, Ont. — Producers are encouraged to hone up on their weed identification skills, and with good reason. “If you misidentify something, you may not be able to control it, and some of the weeds are a huge problem outside of the Ontario because of herbicide resistance,â€? Dave Bilyea, a research technician at the University of Guelph’s Ridgetown Campus, told a Diagnostic Day held in Ridgetown July 9-10. “We need to recognize the weeds before they become a problem.â€? Palmer amaranth is a prime example in Ontario. It looks a lot like other pigweed species but there are physical distinctions, the most obvious being petioles that are as long as or longer than the leaves. Petiole refers to the stalk that attaches the leaf blade to the stem. “It’s a weed we don’t want to see in Ontario, but it’s not far from the border. It’s in the furthest east county of Michigan,â€? Bilyea said. “If you see these long-petioled pigweeds, you need to take action.â€? Palmer amaranth was originally known as a desert species in U.S. Southwest. It has migrated across the United States and has become a major concern because of its ability to develop herbicide resistance. That includes resistance to glyphosate, ALS inhibitors and several other herbicide types, according to the International Survey of Herbicide Resistant Weeds. All weed species relying on male and female plants for reproduction can readily develop resistance. Their offspring tend to be genetically diverse, and those that thrive are best adapted to their environment. Resistance to the chemicals develops quickly if that environment includes herbicides. Along with pigweed species, Bilyea displayed other look-alike weeds including annual sowthistle, which looks like spiny sowthistle. It has developed resistance to ALS inhibitors in Alberta and Washington state. Apple of Peru, an escaped ornamental, has become big problem next door to Ontario in Ohio. It was displayed next to its look-alike, eastern black nightshade. Bristly foxtail, which has developed atrazine resistance in Spain, was displayed next to giant green foxtail, a common weed species in southwestern Ontario. Biannual wormwood has become a concern because of the conversion of Ontario pastureland. It is similar in appearance to common ragweed and thrives once pastureland is tilled for row cropping. Other look-alikes include: • lady thumb and pale smartweed • green pigweed and water hemp • goose grass, hairy crab grass and wooly cupgrass, an invasive from Asia Hairy crabgrass has become a concern in Ontario corn fields because of its ability to thrive in low light condi-

DAVE BILYEA UNIVERSITY OF GUELPH

tions. Goosegrass is present in the province but not widespread. Wooly cupgrass is found in Quebec

but not Ontario. It’s viewed as a highly competitive problem In the U.S. Midwest. “It’s listed as a prohibitive noxious weed in Ontario. I’ll have to burn this example when I’m done,� Bilyea said. Water hemp is viewed as a potentially troublesome plant because, like Palmer amaranth, it’s highly adaptive. It’s now abundant in parts of southwestern Ontario.

U.S. Department of Agriculture plant physiologist Franck Dayan observes wild type and herbicide resistant biotypes of Palmer amaranth as Mississippi State University graduate student Daniela Ribeiro collects samples for DNA analysis at the Natural Products Utilization Research Unit in Oxford, Mississippi, in this 2011 file image. | USDA/STEPHEN AUSMUS PHOTO

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LIVESTOCK

BOTOX FOR BLACK BEAUTY Wrinkles aren’t a problem for horses, but the same botox used to treat human wrinkles has been used to treat founder in horses, says our veterinary columnist. | Page 66

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

DAIRY | YOUTH COMPETITION

Jerseys show staying power Summer Synergy | Jersey breed performing well at shows alongside Holsteins BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

OLDS, Alta. — Jerseys ruled for the second year in a row at the Alberta 4-H dairy show in Olds. Lee Morey of Rochester, Alta., won supreme dairy animal with his entry of a two-year-old bred heifer that has never lost in the show ring. His sister, Casey, won the same award last year. “I walked into it feeling pretty good because this heifer has been undefeated for the past year,” he said. “Over the past five years, Jerseys have been really competitive.” Some years it has felt as if the breed was being ignored, but the doe eyed cattle are gaining more attention and winning the big competitions as often as the Holsteins. The dairy show has been incorporated with Summer Synergy, a collaboration between the Calgary Stampede and the Olds Agriculture Society to showcase youth and livestock. The event, which was held July 7-12, included education, showing and networking for youth aged nine to 20. More than 550 animals were shown at the Olds facility this year and returned to Calgary for a final showdown of supreme champions. The event was a good way for 18-year-old Lee to show off the tal-

ents he learned on the farm and through 4-H. His parents, David and Tracy Morey, own Unique Stock Farm, Canada’s largest Jersey operation, which shows cattle across the continent and markets embryos around the world. “It has been my life for 18 years and I plan to keep it going,” he said. “I was born Jan. 10, and Jan. 11 I was in the parlour in a swing chair,” he said. He is enrolled at Lakeland College in Vermilion, Alta., where he will study animal science. The plan is to return home to work and show whenever he can. His years of experience paid off because he also won grand champion showman. “It was a surprise because it was the first time I ever beat my sister. I never focus on showmanship because my job is back in the barn getting the cattle ready,” he said. “Casey is the showman and I’m the fitter.” Summer Synergy also supports beef and sheep shows. Other winners included: • Supreme sheep: Shannon McLaughlin, Whitecourt, Alta. • Supreme commercial beef: Jed Curtis, Forestburg, Alta. • Supreme purebred beef: Maguire Blair, Drake, Sask.

Casey Morey of Rochester, Alta., waits outside the barns for her classes in the Alberta 4-H provincial dairy show to begin. Her heifer calf never left her side as she checked her phone messages. | BARBARA DUCKWORTH PHOTO

CALGARY STAMPEDE | YOUTH COMPETITION

Teen competitor continues winning ways with Steer Classic title at Calgary Stampede UFA Steer Classic | $10,000 prize gives a boost to Megan McLeod as she enters university BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

Megan McLeod could be a role model for other young women interested in the livestock business after years of achievements as a young cattle person. It has been a good run for the 18-year-old, who just finished high school in Cochrane, Alta. She recently won the $10,000 UFA Steer Classic show at the Calgary Stampede, an award her brother earned five years ago. “This is a graduation present for me,” she said. “I really wanted to go in the open show after my brother won five years ago. You always want to try and be at

least equal with your siblings at competitions.” The steer was from a Charolais cow and sired by a bull named Monopoly from the United States. Monopoly, which is known for siring winning steers throughout North America, is a composite of Angus, Chianina and Maine Anjou. The silver steer was her 4-H project, but some of her other wins came from her females. McLeod won grand champion female at 4-H on Parade in early June and was entered at Summer Synergy, the youth livestock section of the Calgar y Stampede, where she had a senior champion female and won a scholarship. The money is appreciated

Megan McLeod of Cochrane, Alta., watches the judges during the UFA Steer Classic at the Calgary Stampede July 12. | BARBARA DUCKWORTH PHOTO because she is enrolled at the University of Saskatchewan’s business faculty, where she wants to pursue

a career in marketing or public relations. She has spent her life around cattle,

working with her parents, Rod and April McLeod, as they show purebred Charolais across the country. She credits that experience as well as her years in 4-H with building the confidence she needs to sell and meet the public. A vivacious young woman with wild blond curls and a big smile, McLeod was also invited by the Stampede to be a part of a promotional video talking about agriculture and animal welfare. Cattle will remain a part of her life. “I am going to come home as much as I can to keep doing this because I love it,” she said. “It is my life.” Another 18-year-old also succeeded at the steer show. Cody Lafrentz of Bienfait, Sask., had reserve champion with a Hereford influenced steer. He won $5,000 and owns the steer with two partners.


LIVESTOCK CATTLE | IDENTIFICATION

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

65

A VIEW WITH ROOM

CCIA data must be re-entered Data glitch will affect most Sask. producers BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU

MOOSE JAW, Sask. — Saskatchewan cattle producers who entered a premises ID in the Canadian Cattle Identification Agency database will have to re-enter the information. The CCIA and the provincial government wanted to move the information through a data dump, but that wasn’t possible. “We can’t move the data,” Tom Schwartz, executive director of the agriculture ministry’s livestock branch, said during the Saskatchewan Stock Growers Association’s recent annual meeting. “Some of the premises IDs are in there two or three times. We would rather start over with the correct information.” Saskatchewan is establishing a premises ID system based on the one in Alberta. CCIA chair Mark Elford estimated that 75 percent of the province’s cattle had already been entered in the CCIA system. “However, those identifiers that are in CCIA’s database cannot be verified because all of the land registry information is held within the province,” he told the meeting. Elford said he knew producers wouldn’t be happy at having to start over, but added it’s important to have a premises ID in the case of an emergency. “It’s still not a mandatory piece in Saskatchewan, but it is an important piece,” he said. Premises ID is the second of three aspects that make up the traceability initiative. Animal identification was the first and is generally in place across Canada. Elford said eight or nine provinces are now working on premises ID, which is intended to provide a unique identifying number to a file in case of a disease outbreak. Animal movement is the third aspect, and Alberta is already recording this information. Elford said the CCIA’s goal is a seamless move to movement recording. “There has been a bit of a tradeoff as we go forward on the movement piece that if we’re finding yearlings at some point we are going to have to record those,” he said. The CCIA says movement recording w ill be only at the read-in point. Meanwhile, the industry continues to move to a single traceability database for the country after the federal government said it would no longer pay for both CCIA and Agri-Tracabilite Quebec. Canadian Agri-Traceability Services (CATS) was announced two years ago and was finally incorporated last August. It will be the database for all livestock, not just beef cattle, and will be where the Canadian Food Inspection Agency obtains information in case of a disease outbreak. “CCIA is, and will remain, the sole national administrator for beef cattle outside of Quebec. ATQ will still be the provider within Quebec,” Elford said.

Cattle graze on the leeward side of Chief Mountain just over the Alberta border in Montana in early July. Grazing as well as hay supplies appear plentiful in the region due to good spring rain, though it may not look like it if judged by this piece of rocky pasture. | BARB GLEN PHOTO

HEALTH | CONSUMER CONCERN

Resistance is a real threat, says vet Antibiotic use | Epidemiologist advises industry to adhere to and promote responsible use BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU

MOOSE JAW, Sask. — Cattle producers must educate consumers about practices on their farms, particularly when controversial topics such as antimicrobial resistance arise, says veterinarian, epidemiologist and farmer Leigh Rosengren. Speaking at last month’s Saskatchewan Stock Growers Association convention, the Midale, Sask., expert said she agreed with an A&W spokesperson at the same meeting who said it wasn’t her job to educate consumers. “It’s yours and mine,” Rosengren said. “We are the ones that are producing the commodity that we want people to eat. We are the industry who

needs the consumer to trust what we produce. It’s our responsibility to explain practices, particularly when the consumer is afraid, occasionally misinformed and worried.” Rosengren said people are frightened about antimicrobial resistance but don’t necessarily understand it. She said it is a threat to their health. “This isn’t some fear mongering. This is a true and honest and real threat,” she said. However, antibiotic resistance is not the same as antibiotic residue in meat. “There are no antibiotics in Canadian meat,” she said to applause from producers. Rosengren said residue is a chemical issue that is predictable and understandable.

However, there are antibiotic resistant bacteria in Canadian meat. Bacteria in the gut carry genes that can make them resistant to antibiotics. The bacteria contaminate meat during slaughter, and the consumer can be infected if the meat is subsequently handled or cooked improperly. “Multi-resistant bacteria are commonplace in animals and people in Canada and in most other countries,” Rosengren said. They are found in animals that have been treated and in those that haven’t. They are found in animals on organic farms where treatment hasn’t occurred for years. Rosengren said doctors are concerned because diseases that were treatable for decades aren’t so easy to

treat now. Cattle producers are concerned because products that worked on the farm don’t work anymore, and there are few new alternatives. “The rate of resistance in agriculture and in humans is on the rise,” Rosengren said. “It is an issue that truly is threatening advances in both human and veterinary medicine.” It is critical that producers carefully manage antibiotic use on their farms. “The benefit that comes from treating that animal has to outweigh the increased burden that we’re putting on resistance,” she said. “Think three times before we pick up that bottle of critically important antimicrobials.”

YOUTH CLUB | EDUCATION

4-H helped Dutch newcomers thrive after arriving in Canada BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

OLDS, Alta. — Jess Verstappen was introduced to 4-H five years ago, and if she has her way, she will never leave the movement. The 18-year-old from High Prairie, Alta., received the Premier’s Award this spr ing for all that she has achieved in such a short time. The award was presented following a selection weekend at Olds, where senior members were invited to pres-

ent their work in 4-H and sit through interviews to select the top person. “I was surprised when I won,” she said. It has been an interesting journey for Verstappen. She and her family emigrated from t h e Ne t h e r l a n d s s i x y e a r s a g o because they could not expand their farm. They settled in northern Alberta , where they raise 500 commercial ewes. It was a considerable life change for Jess and her brother, Roy. While their

parents, Louise Liebenberg and Eric Verstappen, spoke other languages, including English, the children knew only Dutch. “Our parents always spoke English to each other, but we only spoke Dutch,” she said. They were enrolled in the local school within a week of moving into the community and had to learn fast. A Dutch speaking kindergarten teacher helped as they made their way through a new education system. They also joined the Coyote Acres

4-H Club and started to make friends and learn about Canadian agriculture. Jess has had projects in small engines, market steer, ewe lamb, mature ewe, market lamb and light horse. She also became involved in rodeo as a barrel racer and is the local rodeo princess. “We don’t have rodeo in the Netherlands because of animal welfare concerns,” she said as she prepared her lambs for the Summer Synergy provincial 4-H sheep show.


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JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

EQUINE | UNUSUAL TREATMENTS

Veterinarians get weird to make horses feel good ANIMAL HEALTH

JAMIE ROTHENBURGER, DVM

O

f all our four-legged companions, we likely subject horses to more than their fair share of strange treatments. Botox Horses might not worry about

wrinkles, but they may benefit from Botox. Veterinarians give injections to treat muscle-related diseases rather than reverse the signs of aging. The bacterium, clostridium botulinum, produces a potent toxin that causes temporary muscle paralysis. It also contaminates food, which leads to botulism. Researchers have investigated the use of purified toxin as a new treatment for founder, also known as laminitis. This painful disease is difficult to treat, and most affected horses never completely recover. When horses founder, for whatever cause, the coffin bone within the hoof rotates away from the hoof wall.

Botox and shockwave therapy are among the unusual treatments used on horses. | FILE PHOTO Some believe it is the pull by the deep digital flexor tendon that causes rotation. A salvage treatment is to surgically cut this tendon, which runs along the

back of the leg, to decrease the pull and stop rotation. Botox has been proposed as an alternative to cutting the tendon by temporarily paralyzing the tendon’s associated muscle.

A study found that Botox injection in healthy horses did not cause detectable lameness or other adverse effects. Some foundered horses had positive outcomes after injections. These included a return to pleasure riding in some cases and pasture soundness in others. Unfortunately, this research did not compare the Botox horses to a group that did not receive treatment, which makes it difficult to be sure the positive outcome was not due to chance alone or a placebo effect. Researchers at Utrecht University in the Netherlands have used Botox to treat stringhalt. Affected horses spastically lift their hind legs. The cause of this disorder is unknown, and treatment options are limited. No negative effects were seen at the dosages used in the study. There was significant reduction in muscle spasm activity in two horses with stringhalt. Further research is needed to determine the best dose and which muscles to inject. Shockwave Therapy

Agricultural Excellence NOVEMBER 2014

SEEDING TRANSITION TO HARVEST CHANGE

November 19-21, 2014 Fort Garry Hotel, Spa and Conference Centre Winnipeg, Manitoba

Do you have plans for November 19-21?

You do now! Mark your calendars for the Agricultural Excellence Conference coming to Winnipeg, Manitoba!

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Agricultural Excellence Conference, :LQQLSHJ 0DQLWRED

The Agricultural Excellence Conference is a one-of-a-kind event in Canada that brings diverse industry experts and stakeholders together from across disciplines, regions and commodity sectors to share and explore beneďŹ cial farm management practices and insights with leading farm business thinkers. The 2014 conference theme, Seeding Transition to Harvest Change, highlights the importance of having the knowledge, skills and tools to seek out, assess and take advantage of opportunities to succeed within the changing global marketplace. Top notch speakers and interactive learning sessions will assist Canada’s farmers in making informed decisions and taking calculated risks. Plan to attend! Attending Attending and bringing a friend Not attending? Not an option! This Conference is a must for every farm manager, aspiring farm managers, advisors and service providers. For the preliminary agenda and registration details visit:

www.fmc-gac.com

For more information:

1-888-232-3262

WWW.FMC-GAC.COM

info@fmc-gac.com

Veterinarians use high impulse shockwaves to treat lameness in horses, including those caused by sore joints and ligaments as well as skin wounds. Shockwave therapy seems to provide pain relief in the short term, and there appears to be an effect on healing in the weeks following treatment. Some studies found that horses treated with shockwave therapy had reduced lameness compared to untreated horses, but why it works remains a mystery. Studies on horse stem cells suggest shockwave therapy increases cell proliferation, which may be one of the ways it promotes healing in lame horses. Medical maggots Medical maggots are perhaps the most disgusting of these bizarre treatments. Veterinarians use them to treat a variety of con taminated wounds, including those that they can’t treat with surgery. It seems that early medical practitioners were on to something. Maggots are like mini surgeons because they remove dead tissue while leaving the healthy bits alone. Other benefits include antibacterial properties, increased blood flow and improved healing. Honey for skin wounds Honey makes an excellent wound treatment, but not all of the sticky stuff is created equal. A recent study compared various honeys and found that some were contaminated with fungi and bacteria. They also tested each honey type a ga i n s t b a c t e r i a f ro m h o r s e s’ wounds and found that a Scottish variety was the fiercest against the bugs. Studies in people suggest the healing benefits of honey include antiinflammatory properties, improved wound healing and slowed bacterial growth. Dr. Jamie Rothenburger is a veterinary pathology resident at the Western College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Saskatchewan. Twitter: @DrJamieR_Vet


LIVESTOCK

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

67

FUNDRAISING | RAISING COMMUNITY SPIRIT

Dunking for dollars: making sudden splash for good cause COWBOY LOGIC

RYAN TAYLOR

I

’ve always tried to do my part when it comes to benevolent causes in my community and around the region. I work hard to raise money for student scholarships through our Dollars for Scholars chapter, I’ve donated a little of my time as an entertainer

to help people fight cancer at Relay For Life events, I agree to donate blood whenever I can and I always buy raffle tickets, popcorn, candy bars, fruit and most anything else kids sell to support their Future Farmers of America chapter, 4-H club, scout troop or church group. However, I’ve never been asked to be the target at a dunking booth, until last week. As the country song says, everyone’s kind of famous in a small town. I guess I was the closest thing to a local celebrity they could think of in my nearby town of Rugby, North Dakota, when the Lutheran church was recruiting victims/honorees for its dunking booth at the Pierce County Fair.

Luckily, it was a hot, muggy evening and the typically chilly water in the dunking tank had all day to moderate to a tolerably tepid temperature. I wore my good dunking hat, a wettable palm leaf straw, so the passersby would recognize me as the locally “famous” author who’d written this Cowboy Logic column for 20 years and had travelled the after dinner speaking circuit for nearly as long. “Step right up and dunk the cowboy. Help Ryan Taylor make a big splash, a real impact right here at your Pierce County Fair,” said the church leader turned carnival barker. The money was going toward the Sunday School program and the church youth, who were planning a mission trip

to serve others less fortunate. Since I got to reload my own seat after each dunking, I also got to admire the high tech handiwork and elementary engineering of the seatdropping apparatus. They had welded a Vise-Grip locking plier in place that would spring the seat loose each time the softball hit the target attached to the rod that was positioned between the handles of the Vise-Grip. Ingenious, or, well, practical. I also learned who my friends were as people wound up their throwing arm to put me into the drink. I always thought my wife kind of liked me, and we had just celebrated our 11 year anniversary. However, even she had a gleam in her eye as she handed her cash over to the

church carnie barker for the volume discount of six balls for $3. I knew I had married a softball player of some skill and renown from her days of farm ball, college and league softball team play. My wife throws “like a girl,” and by that I mean darn good, highly accurate and with gusto. She smiled with satisfaction as my head went under and my hat floated on the surface. She looked my way and said, “remember, it’s for the kids.” It was, but I think she still enjoys the sport, too. Ryan Taylor is a rancher, writer and senator in the state legislature from Towner, North Dakota.

ANIMAL HEALTH | EARLY WARNING

Ear tag sensor may help track eating habits, cattle health

Missing something? We hope not.

A reduction in eating can be an early sign of disease BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

The twitch of an ear may be enough to show that an animal is getting sick. A research project through the University of Calgary’s faculty of veterinary medicine is testing a special sensor attached to an animal’s electronic ear tag. The sensor reads how much and how often the steer eats whenever it goes to the trough, as well as how much time is spent ruminating. Cattle’s ears are constantly twitching while they eat, and the sensor also marks changes in ear motion. Ear flicks are different when cattle ruminate. “We know feeding behaviour changes before we can see clinical signs of respiratory disease,” said Barbara Wolfger of the faculty at a veterinary conference held in Calgary June 19-20. “The earlier we detect those animals the better our treatment is going to be and the lower the death losses and the lower the performance losses,” she said. The system was developed and validated for dairy cattle, so the goal of the new study was to measure it for feedlot cattle. Information from the sensors is sent to a computer, where cattle activity is calculated in one hour increments. These observations can show changes in behaviour and ear flicking. Animals were put on test at Agriculture Canada’s research centres in Lacombe, Alta., and Lethbridge, where it was observed that sick animals eat less for a shorter period of time well before they are pulled for treatment. They also ruminate less in the hours before being removed for treatment. Previous studies on feed intake found animals might go off feed up to seven days before they show clinical signs of respiratory disease. The accuracy is not perfect, but it will be adjusted and improved for beef cattle, she said.

If you aren’t receiving your Western Producer Markets Moment or Producer Daily it’s likely a result of the federal anti-spam legislation that came into effect July 1, 2014. If you signed up to receive these timely Western Producer products a while ago, we may not have legislationcompliant permission on file. As a result, we were compelled to stop sending your Producer e-newsletters. The good news is that getting your subscription renewed for Producer e-newsletters is an easy fix. To renew your Producer Daily, Markets Moment or Markets Moment Special Edition, or to receive Subscriber Exclusives or Sponsored Offers, visit www.producer.com and look in the lower left-hand corner for our newsletter sign-up. You can also email subscriptions@producer.com or call us toll-free at 1-800-667-6929 to choose from some or all of our newsletters and special offers.

Producer Daily keeps you in touch with Canada’s agricultural news and up-to-date with daily markets analysis from the best commodities team in the business. Markets Moment, once or three times daily – it’s your choice – provides a regular update to major markets and Markets Moment Special Edition is a weekly offering with specialty crops and livestock. Western Producer Subscriber Exclusives and Sponsored Offers keep you up-to-date on Producer offers, special features and contests, and give you access to select Producer partner offers that help you run your business.

1-800-667-6929 | www.producer.com | If you are already receiving Markets Moment, Markets Moment Special Edition, specialty crops and livestock and or Producer Daily after July 1, you need not renew your subscription to these cost-free products. However, you can go to our website to add more Producer newsletters to your account.


68

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

AGFINANCE

CDN. BOND RATE:

CDN. DOLLAR:

1.49%

$0.9301

1.70%

0.950

1.60%

0.940

1.50%

0.930

1.40%

0.920

1.30% 6/16 6/23 6/27

7/7

7/14 7/21

0.910 6/16 6/23 6/27

Bank of Canada 5-yr rate

7/7

7/14 7/21

July 21

A G F IN ANC E E D I TO R : D ’ A RC E M C M ILLAN | P h : 306- 665- 3519 F: 306-934-2401 | E-MAIL: DARC E.M C M ILLAN @PRODUC ER.C OM | TWITTE R: @ D AR CE MCMILLAN

AG STOCKS JULY 14-18 The TSX composite hit a record high, boosted in part by Canadian Pacific Railway. For the week, the TSX composite was up 0.9 percent, the Dow climbed 0.9 percent, the S&P 500 rose 0.5 percent and the Nasdaq gained 0.4 percent. Cdn. exchanges in $Cdn. U.S. exchanges in $U.S.

GRAIN TRADERS NAME

EXCH

ADM NY Alliance Grain TSX Bunge Ltd. NY ConAgra Foods NY

CLOSE LAST WK 48.10 21.56 73.92 30.67

47.85 21.42 73.78 30.59

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 0.394 0.20 20.99 2.36 22.45 10.95

0.394 0.17 21.76 2.30 23.18 10.82

FOOD PROCESSORS NAME

EXCH

Hormel Foods Maple Leaf Premium Brands Tyson Foods

NY TSX TSX NY

CLOSE LAST WK 48.53 20.35 20.90 39.48

48.76 20.32 21.09 39.68

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 47.64 53.10 6.35 110.17 9.52 87.63 11.00

47.55 53.52 6.40 109.96 9.40 88.53 10.78

China’s container ports are seeing good business as Beijing’s stimulus measures bear fruit. While China’s economy stabilizes, the United States is gathering momentum with falling unemployment, rising housing prices and increased vehicle sales. This is good news for Canada’s trade outlook. |

FARM INPUT SUPPLIERS NAME

EXCH

Agrium TSX BASF OTC Bayer Ag OTC Dow Chemical NY Dupont NY BioSyent Inc. TSXV Monsanto NY Mosaic NY PotashCorp TSX Syngenta ADR

CLOSE LAST WK 98.22 113.15 136.79 51.69 65.55 6.95 119.98 47.79 38.73 72.74

94.81 113.41 137.70 51.60 64.89 7.18 120.90 47.27 38.34 73.19

EXCH

CN Rail CPR

TSX TSX

ECONOMY | GLOBAL RECOVERY

Global economy recovering Some trouble spots remain | Economist says recovery bodes well for Canadian exports

TRANSPORTATION NAME

REUTERS PHOTO

CLOSE LAST WK 73.08 209.09

70.46 196.38

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.

Revenue up at CP REUTERS AND WESTERN PRODUCER STAFF

Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd.’s second-quarter was better than expected as it worked to recover from huge backlogs and an unusually harsh winter. Net income soared 48 percent to $371 million from $252 million a year earlier. Revenue climbed 12 percent to $1.68 billion. Freight revenue from Canadian grain operations rose to $252 million, up 32 percent from last year. The revenue from moving one ton of Canadian grain one mile slipped to 3.56 cents from 3.61 cents.

BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

Happy days are here again as the world economy moves into growth mode, says the chief economist for the Conference Board of Canada. There are some exceptions to the turnaround, but for a trading nation like Canada, recovery among many of its business contacts is real, particularly in Asia where average annual economic growth is six percent. “Emerging markets are now half the global economy and that is where the strongest growth is,” Glen Hodgson told the International Livestock Congress in Calgary July 9. China has captured everyone’s attention, especially after recent deals to expand Canadian beef shipments and other commodities were formalized in June. Its growth is stable at seven to eight percent with improved personal incomes and further movement toward a free market economy. “The demand for protein will be

one of the key factors in China,” Hodgson said. Japan is another destination for Canadian goods. The country’s growth is stable at 1.5 percent, but it has the highest level of gross debt in the world. The government has decided to print more money and stimulate its economy rather than borrow. It is also negotiating to enter the Trans Pacific Partnership, and Hodgson said it may be willing to set aside protection of the rice sector to get a trade deal that will help rebuild its economy. Other countries are also improving. The recent election in India may bring economic reform. The new prime minister is committed to opening markets, and Canada is pursuing a free trade agreement to gain access to more than one billion potential customers. However, it could take three to five years to formulate a deal. Brazil’s growth rates are falling. The government must consider investment in education and address income inequality.

“Brazil is a great competitor for Canada in ag products so reform is important for global growth.” Russia has been a trading partner in the past, but it is sinking into recession. The International Monetary Fund estimates the capital flight from Russia is up to $100 billion, and growth has fallen to zero. It is also losing population through emigration and lower life expectancy. “There are fundamental structural problems within Russia,” Hodgson said. He said many of the problems are political, and the blame rests with president Vladimir Putin’s policies. “Russia will be really challenged to have any economic growth, and Mr. Pu t i n s e e m s t o b e c o m p l e t e l y unaware of that through his adventurism,” he said. Canada’s recent trade deal with the European Union offers other opportunities, particularly for the beef and pork sectors. However, Hodgson said the deal is not perfect. The EU’s population of

500 million looks enticing, but there is little economic growth. Germany is the economic leader and carries the rest of the continent. However, growth in Great Britain could be more than two percent this year. “It is great we are now going to have a free trade deal with Europe,” he said. “It will be great for beef exports and you could win market share, but the overall growth of the market will not be profound.” Canada’s main trading partner remains the United States, where real growth is occurring. The unemployment rate is down, housing prices are up and vehicle sales are rebounding. Canada needs to pay attention to the U.S. trend toward energy selfreliance. Fracking and horizontal drilling have helped the U.S. increase its oil production by one million barrels a year, so it buys less from others, including Canada. It could cut its oil CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

»


AGFINANCE

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

69

FARM MANAGEMENT | PLANNING

Farm profitability analysis can help make better decisions MANAGING THE FARM

DEAN KLIPPENSTINE, C.A.

F

arm profitability analysis can help producers make decisions that will either earn more money or the same money with less work. Ultimately, there’s no point in doing the analysis if it doesn’t influence and change business behaviour.

BUDGETING Carefully select the crops you wish to grow. Don’t seed 300 acres of oats out of habit, believing you know intuitively what your gross margin will be. While planning next year’s crop, put the plan on paper and force yourself to apply the most reasonable estimates of yields and prices. Budget for the right crop nutrients and protection package to maximize gross margin. I would say the right inputs will maximize yield 95 percent of the time in Western Canada. There are no guarantees, but it’s more profitable to hit 80 percent of a high budget than 80 percent of an

» CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE import bill by half as it continues to gain self-sufficiency, so Canada must find alternative markets. The bad news story for the U.S. is a federal deficit of around half a trillion dollars. “It will never get back to balance,” he said. Canada’s outlook is modest but stable with economic growth forecast at two percent, and it should pick up next year. The growth slowed because governments are trimming spending to to get back to balanced budgets. “It is not a very sexy story,” he said. On the business side, investment is weak. “We are sitting on a mountain of cash,” Hodgson said. The conference board estimates Canadian corporations have $625 billion in cash sitting idle in bank accounts because they are afraid of the future. “We are missing the boat right now, and we may come back and be haunted by this, particularly if the dollar goes higher,” he said. “Private investment is a real lagging factor in our economy,” he said. Interest rates have remained low at one percent or less, and the loonie should hover around 93 to 94 cents US. Hodgson said trade with the U.S. is not growing because Canada is starting to diversify into other countries. “That is why free trade deals with Europe and India and Korea and maybe one day with China are good, because it adds to diversification,” he said. Canada is also edging toward full employment, but there will be considerable stress on western labour

average budget. This seems obvious, but choose the most profitable crops to grow within the restrictions set out by crop rotation and chemical residuals. It’s not always predictable which of your top four gross margin crops will be the winner from one year to the next. However, it’s possible to identify your top four crops and those which have, historically, been your bottom three. Durum versus spring wheat is a perfect example in parts of southern Saskatchewan. Durum outperforms hard red spring both in yield and price nine out of 10 years, so durum would be the logical choice.

NARROWING CROP TYPES CAN BOOST PROFITS This table shows that by focusing on fewer crops with the best returns and optimizing input and machinery spending, the producer with the “improved” plan can increase gross margins and net profit. (all in $/acre) Percentage of seeded acreage Crop

20% peas

Revenue Expense Gross Margin x % total acres

275 100 175 35

BASE 25% 35% wheat canola 247 135 112 28

Average gross margin Labour, power & machinery cost (LPM) Land / building rent, interest and property taxes Net profit

20% barley

361 160 201 70

IMPROVED 40% 40% wheat canola

20% peas

210 103 107 21

297 112 185 37

155 -105 -45 $5/acre

269 147 122 49

399 172 227 91

177 -100 -45 $32/acre

Source: Dean Klippenstine | MICHELLE HOULDEN GRAPHIC

MANAGEMENT It’s important to focus on factors within our control. We monitor factors that affect gross margin such as rainfall, temperature, and commodity prices, but these aren’t where we focus our time and effort. The same can be said about land considerations. Over the long-term, we may strategically focus on renting/ purchasing higher quality land, but over the short term it is hard to manage land costs to increase profits. We should direct most of our attention to ensuring that we have enough labour and machinery and the quality management that is needed for these resources. Ineffective management of our labour and machinery during seeding, growing and har-

markets. This can affect the entire value chain, so companies must find ways to be more productive with fewer people. Consumer debt is a significant concern. Canada stands No. 3 in the world when it comes to indebtedness. Government finance ministers have lectured Canadians for four years to do something about their debt, which has been financed with low interest rates. Credit card debt with high interest rates is another problem. Hodgson said this cannot go on forever, and some people may be hit hard when interest rates start to rise. However, he does not anticipate bankruptcies. While governments work to balance the books, local economies range from strong to stagnant. Hodgson said Alberta, British Columbia and Manitoba will have t h e s t ro n g e s t e c o n o m i e s n e x t year. Alberta is growing at a rate of 3.5 percent and is the fastest growing jurisdiction in North America. However, it needs to find a way to get its oil to market to continue the momentum. B.C., Manitoba and Nova Scotia will be at 2.2 percent growth, and Ontario will experience 1.5 percent growth. Nova Scotia and Newfoundland are relying on offshore oil to fuel their economies. New sources are needed to stay in good shape. Saskatchewan growth will be less than one percent for the coming year. Farmers harvested tremendous crops last year, but they could not get to market and this summer’s flood will take away some of the province’s growth. Crops will be lost and disaster payments will be high.

vesting will stack the cards against us. Remember that the last five to 15 percent of the crop holds all the profit. We say good-bye to some or all of our profit if we take on more acres than we can manage. As well, too many crops makes it difficult to execute production activities efficiently. This isn’t to say that managing a higher number of crops cannot be done. There’s simply a lower probability of success. Limiting the number of crops reduces the number of equipment changes that waste time at critical points of production. Labour, power, and machinery (LPM) is a difficult category to manage. The big improvement in machinery

technology provides limitless options. Technology improvements can saves time and increase yield and capacity. However, how much more money do we make using our brand new air drill when comp ared to our four year-old one? These nuances add another layer of complexity. The added value of increased capacity and/or technological improvements, such as consistent seed depth, varies from year to year, but will the profitability improvement outweigh the costs? LPM shouldn’t be micro-managed. Instead, it should be assessed with a five-year capital budget in mind while considering the following: • The LPM benchmark numbers of

your target group of peers. Don’t compare to the industry average. Our goal is to strive for the best, and currently our top group of producers are targeting LPM of around $100 per acre. • A simple rule is less is better. LPM is highly correlated with the amount and price of machinery. Two large combines cost less than three slightly less expensive combines with a similar total capacity. Trading our four-wheel drive tractors every seven years rather than every four costs less. Dean Klippenstine is director of primary producer services for MNP in Regina. Reach him at dean.klippenstine@mnp.ca.

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70

MARKETS

JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

CATTLE & SHEEP Slaughter Cattle ($/cwt)

Steers 600-700 lb. (average $/cwt)

Grade A

Alberta

Live July 11-17

Steers Alta. Ont.

$250 $240 $230 $220 $210 6/16 6/23 6/27

7/7

GRAINS

7/14 7/21

Previous July 4-10

166.25 160.48-175.48

Heifers Alta. Ont.

Year ago

164.50 160.70-177.49

Rail July 11-17

118.91 122.31

271.75-274.75 276.00-280.00

268.00-272.75 274.00-277.00

n/a 146.29-170.78

n/a 147.39-170.61

117.07 122.03

270.00-274.75 275.00-279.00

268.00-272.75 273.00-276.00 Canfax

Saskatchewan Feeder Cattle ($/cwt)

$240 $230 $220 n/a 7/7

7/14 7/21

Manitoba $250 $240 $230 $220 n/a 7/7

7/14 7/21

Heifers 500-600 lb. (average $/cwt)

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

Sask.

Man.

Alta.

B.C.

no sales 183-211 206-236 227-245 232-253 no sales

no sales 175-217 195-227 210-240 225-260 235-285

185-200 190-215 215-238 225-250 230-261 230-270

Report not available -

no sales 180-210 192-227 no sales 213-235 no sales

160-193 170-213 200-225 210-235 220-245 no sales

180-201 190-214 204-223 215-240 215-245 no sales

Fed. inspections only Canada U.S. To date 2014 1,444,372 16,153,130 To date 2013 1,366,634 17,129,388 % Change 14/13 +5.7 -5.7

$220

July 12/14 838 767 698 960

Canfax

$215 $210 7/7

7/14 7/21

Steers Heifers Cows Bulls

Saskatchewan $225 $220 $215 n/a

n/a

7/7

7/14 7/21

Manitoba $225 $220 $215

Report not available -

July13/13 842 790 690 890

YTD 14 843 788 679 916

YTD 13 872 819 675 914

Slaughter cattle (35-65% choice) National Kansas Nebraska Nebraska (dressed)

Steers 155.89 155.56 156.86 247.10

Heifers 155.79 154.93 157.73 n/a

Feeders No. 1 (800-900 lb) Steers South Dakota 204.00-208.00 Billings n/a Dodge City 206.00

Trend steady/+2 n/a steady USDA

n/a 7/7

7/14 7/21

Canadian Beef Production million lb. YTD % change Fed 1001.3 +4 Non-fed 153.5 -4 Total beef 1154.7 +3 Canfax

EXCHANGE RATE: JULY 21 $1 Cdn. = $0.9301 U.S. $1 U.S. = $1.0752 Cdn.

Cattle / Beef Trade Exports % from 2014 389,881 (1) -4.5 228,389 (1) +42.7 90,972 (3) +9.6 126,114 (3) +9.1 Imports % from 2014 n/a (2) n/a 19,416 (2) -3.0 74,445 (4) -22.0 110,312 ( 4) -10.5

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)

Close July 18 Live Cattle Aug 151.63 Oct 154.33 Dec 154.55 Feb 153.78 Apr 154.18 Feeder Cattle Aug 211.65 Sep 212.30 Oct 212.55 Nov 211.90 Jan 206.75

(1) to July 5/14 (2) to May 31/14 (3) to May 31/14 (4) to July 12/14 Agriculture Canada

Close Trend July 11

Year ago

149.13 151.65 153.00 152.85 152.85

+2.50 +2.68 +1.55 +0.93 +1.33

121.98 126.23 128.73 130.13 131.05

210.38 211.63 211.45 210.88 207.00

+1.27 +0.67 +1.10 +1.02 -0.25

152.25 155.25 157.20 158.15 158.50

Est. Beef Wholesale ($/cwt) This wk Last wk Yr. ago 277-279 n/a 218-219

Montreal

$210

Canfax

Sheep ($/lb.) & Goats ($/head) July 11 Base rail (index 100) 2.78 Range 0.18-0.21 Feeder lambs 1.40-1.60 Sheep (live) 0.40

July 4 2.78 0.15-0.22 1.40-1.60 0.40 SunGold Meats

July 14 2.00-2.37 1.95-2.21 1.81-2.10 1.60-1.97 1.20-1.75 1.30-1.90 0.85-0.95 0.80-0.90 65-110

New lambs 65-80 lb 80-95 lb > 95 lb > 110 lb Feeder lambs Sheep Rams Kids

July 7 1.97-2.45 2.02-2.20 1.85-2.05 1.95-2.00 1.20-2.00 1.30-1.90 0.85-0.95 0.80-0.90 65-110

Ontario Stockyards Inc.

Wool lambs, new crop >80 lb Wool lambs, new crop <80 lb Hair lambs, new crop Fed sheep

July 17 1.55-1.70 1.75 1.50-1.55 0.42-0.52

Sask. Sheep Dev. Bd.

HOGS Due to wide reporting and collection methods, it is misleading to compare hog prices between provinces.

Index 100 Hog Price Trends ($/ckg) Alberta $280.0 $265.0 $250.0 $235.0 7/7

7/14 7/21

Fixed contract $/ckg (Hams Marketing) Aug 10-Aug 23 Aug 24-Sep 06 Sep 07-Sep 20 Sep 21-Oct 04 Oct 05-Oct 18 Oct 19-Nov 01 Nov 02-Nov 15 Nov 16-Nov 29 Nov 30-Dec 13 Dec 14-Dec 27

Maple Leaf Thunder Sig 3 Creek Pork July 18 July 18 234.73-241.33 235.28-237.03 224.19-232.07 212.95-219.20 215.82-218.28 207.82-210.45 216.80-219.31 217.85-218.31 214.38-216.35 208.35-211.27 196.60-210.92 192.98-196.59 192.16-194.13 189.18-190.28 186.73-187.71 188.02-190.09 194.13-194.63 192.65-194.22 188.21-192.16 179.50-188.63

To July 12 Canada 10,048,666 10,243,969 -1.9

To date 2014 To date 2013 % change 14/13

Fed. inspections only U.S. 56,240,375 58,404,468 -3.7

7/7

7/14 7/21

Export 407,387 (1) 147,227 (2) 483,187 (2)

Sltr. hogs to/fm U.S. (head) Total pork to/fm U.S. (tonnes) Total pork, all nations (tonnes)

$265.0 $250.0 $235.0 7/7

7/14 7/21

(1) to July 5/14

(2) to May 31/14

$240 $230 $220 6/16 6/23 6/27

Milling Wheat (Oct.) $200 $190 $180 6/16 6/23 6/27

7/7

7/14 7/21

Index 100 hogs $/ckg 257.40 257.55

Man. Que.

$470 $460

*incl. wt. premiums

U.S. Grain Cash Prices ($US/bu.)

$430 6/13 6/20 6/26

7/4

7/11 7/18

Canola (basis - Nov.) $40 $20 $0

$-40 6/13 6/20 6/26

7/4

7/11 7/18

Feed Wheat (Lethbridge) $205 $200 $195 $190 $185 6/13 6/20 6/26

7/4

7/11 7/18

Flax (elevator bid- S’toon) $540 $535 $530 $525 $520 6/13 6/20 6/26

7/4

7/11 7/18

Barley (cash - Oct.) $205 $200

Basis: $50

$195 $190 $185 6/13 6/20 6/26

7/4

7/11 7/18

Chicago Nearby Futures ($US/100 bu.)

Corn (Sept.) $450

$390

7/7

7/14 7/21

Soybeans (Aug.) $1440

$1200

(3) to July 12/14

% from 2014 n/a -16.3 -15.7 Agriculture Canada

$1120 6/16 6/23 6/27

7/7

7/14 7/21

Oats (Sept.) $360 $350

$240 $230 $220 7/7

7/14 7/21

Aug Oct Dec Feb

Close July 18 127.08 113.55 103.60 99.28

Close July 11 128.68 113.80 104.35 98.70

Trend -1.60 -0.25 -0.75 +0.58

Year ago 96.48 84.98 82.23 84.35

Apr May Jun Jul

Close July 18 97.18 95.50 97.30 94.50

Close July 11 96.30 93.70 96.35 93.35

Trend +0.88 +1.80 +0.95 +1.15

Year ago 85.38 89.65 91.55 90.70

$320 6/16 6/23 6/27

7/7

7/14 7/21

Minneapolis Nearby Futures ($US/100bu.) Spring Wheat (Sept.) $720

ELEVATOR SHIPMENTS

(000 tonnes) Alta. Sask. Man.

July 13 282.3 480.1 149.6

July 6 271.5 423.8 146.4

YTD 13354.2 19061.6 6340.6

Grain Futures July 21 July 14 Trend Wpg ICE Canola ($/tonne) Nov 433.90 443.40 -9.50 Jan 437.20 446.80 -9.60 Mar 437.10 446.90 -9.80 May 433.10 443.50 -10.40 Wpg ICE Milling Wheat ($/tonne) Oct 186.00 191.00 -5.00 Dec 191.00 198.00 -7.00 Mar 203.00 209.00 -6.00 Wpg ICE Durum Wheat ($/tonne) Oct 250.00 250.00 0.00 Dec 256.00 256.00 0.00 Wpg ICE Barley ($/tonne) Oct 137.50 132.50 +5.00 Dec 139.50 134.50 +5.00 Chicago Wheat ($US/bu.) Sep 5.3000 5.3775 -0.0775 Dec 5.5425 5.6050 -0.0625 Mar 5.7725 5.8175 -0.0450 May 5.9250 5.9750 -0.0500 Chicago Oats ($US/bu.) Sep 3.3175 3.3400 -0.0225 Dec 3.2500 3.3250 -0.0750 Mar 3.1900 3.2650 -0.0750 Chicago Soybeans ($US/bu.) Aug 11.7575 11.9700 -0.2125 Sep 10.9150 11.0800 -0.1650 Nov 10.7150 10.8625 -0.1475 Jan 10.7975 10.9500 -0.1525 Chicago Soy Oil (¢US/lb.) Aug 36.14 36.88 -0.74 Sep 36.21 36.97 -0.76 Oct 36.17 36.98 -0.81 Chicago Soy Meal ($US/short ton) Aug 380.7 388.6 -7.9 Sep 360.1 364.4 -4.3 Oct 349.7 351.2 -1.5 Chicago Corn ($US/bu.) Sep 3.6400 3.8150 -0.1750 Dec 3.7200 3.8825 -0.1625 Mar 3.8375 3.9900 -0.1525 May 3.9225 4.0700 -0.1475 Minneapolis Wheat ($US/bu.) Sep 6.2325 6.3925 -0.1600 Dec 6.3375 6.5025 -0.1650 Mar 6.4675 6.6625 -0.1950 May 6.5500 6.7450 -0.1950 Kansas City Wheat ($US/bu.) Sep 6.2800 6.4625 -0.1825 Dec 6.3975 6.5650 -0.1675 Mar 6.4750 6.6250 -0.1500

Year ago 519.70 524.90 529.00 531.20 264.00 268.00 275.00 302.00 307.00 194.00 199.00 6.5975 6.7125 6.8250 6.8875 3.5700 3.4225 3.4775 15.2025 13.4875 12.8850 12.9250 45.41 45.40 45.30 502.4 440.4 395.5 5.4075 4.9800 5.1025 5.1825 7.4675 7.5775 7.7050 7.7825 7.0200 7.1475 7.2500

Canadian Exports & Crush

$330

$250

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

$340

Chicago Hogs Lean ($US/cwt)

Manitoba

July 18 5.92 5.44 9.00 4.20 n/a

USDA

$-20

$1280

Import n/a 91,731 (3) 97,792 (3)

July 16 July 9 Year Ago No. 3 Oats Saskatoon ($/tonne) 132.22 124.61 203.95 Snflwr NuSun Enderlin ND (¢/lb) 20.10 20.70 22.80

$440

$1360

% from 2014 -9.1 +1.5 -2.8

Avg. July 14 20.88 20.88 16.25 16.25 19.90 19.90 16.36 16.36 12.85 12.85 24.32 24.25 18.88 18.88 9.56 9.56 7.96 7.96 6.15 6.43 6.08 6.43 8.27 8.27 4.28 4.28 39.00 39.00 33.58 34.58 29.50 29.50 22.93 22.43 15.73 15.73 16.13 16.13 11.88 11.88 14.31 14.31

$450

$330 6/16 6/23 6/27

242.00 262.14

July 21 19.00-22.75 15.00-17.00 19.50-20.00 15.50-17.00 12.40-13.00 23.00-26.00 18.50-19.00 8.80-12.00 7.80-8.00 5.65-6.75 5.65-6.15 8.00-8.40 4.25-4.35 38.00-40.00 32.30-34.00 28.50-30.00 21.75-24.00 15.20-16.00 16.00-20.00 11.00-16.00 11.00-18.75

Cash Prices

Canola (cash - Nov.)

$360

Alta. Sask.

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

$420

Agriculture Canada

Hogs / Pork Trade

$280.0

$210 6/16 6/23 6/27

7/14 7/21

Canola and barley are basis par region. Feed wheat basis Lethbridge. Basis is best bid.

Hog Slaughter

Saskatchewan

$220 6/16 6/23 6/27

7/7

$210

U.S. Cash cattle ($US/cwt)

$230

$220 6/16 6/23 6/27

$120 6/16 6/23 6/27

$220

Chicago Futures ($US/cwt)

Canfax

$225

$205 6/16 6/23 6/27

$125

$250

To July 12

Average Carcass Weight

$210 6/16 6/23 6/27

$135

$260

Cattle Slaughter

Alberta

$205 6/16 6/23 6/27

$140

Durum (Oct.)

$250

$210 6/16 6/23 6/27

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 (Oct.) $130

*Live f.o.b. feedlot, rail f.o.b. plant.

$210 6/16 6/23 6/27

Pulse and Special Crops

ICE Futures Canada

Previous July 4-10

$690 $660 $630 n/a $600 6/16 6/23 6/27

7/7

7/14 7/21

To (1,000 MT) July 13 Wheat 371.8 Durum 165.4 Oats 52.5 Barley 3.7 Flax 24.5 Canola 190.6 Peas 46.5 Lentils 6.0 (1,000 MT) July 16 Canola crush 158.0

To July 6 333.1 150.4 15.7 2.5 0.6 106.1 56.1 6.0 July 9 155.1

Total Last to date year 16033.5 13213.7 4509.6 4116.8 1065.9 1007.1 1230.8 1304.4 364.6 314.7 8262.6 6908.9 1779.3 1939.3 353.8 n/a to date Last year 6635.8 6480.8


WEATHER

PASTURE VISITORS |

Puff the Magic Dragon and Ogopogo, the legendary sea monster said to live in Okanagan Lake in British Columbia, visit a herd of Red Angus near McCreary, Man. | EDWIN CROOK PHOTO

PUBLISHER: SHAUN JESSOME MANAGING EDITOR: MICHAEL RAINE Box 2500, 2310 Millar Ave. Saskatoon, Sask. S7K 2C4. Tel: (306) 665-3500 The Western Producer is published at Saskatoon, Sask., by Western Producer Publications, owned by Glacier Media, Inc. Printed in Canada.

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PRECIPITATION FORECAST

Much above normal

July 24 - 30 (in °C)

Normal

Edmonton 24 / 13 Saskatoon Calgary 26 / 12 Vancouver 24 / 10 23 / 14 Regina Winnipeg 26 / 12 26 / 13

Below normal

ADVERTISING RATES Classified liner ads: $5.85 per printed line (3 line minimum) + $3.00 per paid week online charge Classified display ads: $6.70 per agate line ROP display: $9.50 per agate line

July 24 - 30 (in mm)

Above normal

Churchill 18 / 8

Prince George 24 / 9

PRECIP. MAP

Prince George 8.9

Vancouver 6.3

Churchill 14.3 Edmonton 19.7 Saskatoon Calgary 11.8 12.1 Regina 8.6

Much below normal

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 18.0

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)

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

Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %

29.5 26.5 30.7 28.6 28.5 33.3 26.6 25.6 26.2 27.3 27.4 28.8 29.1 27.8 29.4 31.5 27.2 25.6

0.6 0.2 2.0 5.6 25.2 0.4 25.5 13.4 47.6 38.7 46.6 1.7 1.9 24.4 0.0 1.6 0.5 7.7

6.5 7.6 6.4 7.3 6.7 6.3 5.8 6.7 7.2 7.3 4.9 6.8 6.9 6.2 5.9 5.1 8.5 6.4

244.2 335.5 131.4 212.4 229.4 113.8 261.9 268.7 291.2 297.5 364.3 285.1 263.3 279.9 169.8 263.8 391.7 298.9

129 162 70 103 140 64 144 145 147 168 189 152 141 157 95 159 185 157

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 newsroom@producer.com. Include your full name, address and phone number for verification purposes. To contact a columnist, write the letter in care of this newspaper. We’ll forward it to the columnist. Coming Events/ Stock Sales/ Mailbox Please mail details, including a phone number or call (306) 665-3544. Or fax to (306) 934-2401 or email events@ producer.com If you’d like to buy a photo or order a copy of a news story that appeared in the paper, call our librarian at (306) 665-9606.

Printed with inks containing canola oil

MANITOBA Temperature last week High Low

Brooks Calgary Cold Lake Coronation Edmonton Grande Prairie High Level Lethbridge Lloydminster Medicine Hat Milk River Peace River Pincher Creek Red Deer Stavely Vegreville

Newsroom toll-free: 1-800-667-6978 Fax: (306) 934-2401 News editor: TERRY FRIES e-mail: newsroom@producer.com

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ALBERTA Temperature last week High Low

$4.25 plus taxes

EDITORIAL

LAST WEEK’S WEATHER SUMMARY ENDING JULY 20 SASKATCHEWAN

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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

ADVERTISING Classified ads: Display ads: In Saskatoon: Fax:

SUBSCRIPTIONS

Per copy retail

President, Glacier Media Agricultural Information Group: BOB WILLCOX Contact: bwillcox@farmmedia.com Phone: (204) 944-5751

TEMPERATURE FORECAST

71

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 24, 2014

32.1 31.4 27.8 32.9 28.1 34.3 32.6 31.6 27.0 34.8 33.6 32.7 31.1 28.6 29.1 28.6

7.8 9.4 9.3 6.5 6.9 6.3 6.6 8.3 8.6 10.2 8.5 6.4 7.9 8.7 9.1 8.3

Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %

6.2 4.4 19.1 16.6 26.9 22.8 21.2 0.0 27.3 2.3 0.0 5.8 0.2 39.3 6.1 22.1

167.7 184.2 285.2 173.4 151.3 140.0 135.0 290.2 245.7 169.7 171.2 111.7 241.1 281.3 332.5 225.3

106 85 148 100 69 78 90 161 133 108 88 66 99 117 154 122

Temperature last week High Low

Brandon Dauphin Gimli Melita Morden Portage La Prairie Swan River Winnipeg

28.5 28.8 28.3 28.8 31.5 29.2 27.6 30.8

Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %

8.9 9.2 7.6 10.5 8.6 9.5 9.0 6.5

0.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.3 0.0 3.4

450.8 350.4 265.5 364.2 203.3 235.3 270.9 249.0

206 164 119 178 86 104 122 107

13.1 8.3 15.6 12.3 9.8

2.3 24.0 0.6 0.3 10.9

126.8 123.0 91.6 115.1 116.8

79 70 86 87 64

BRITISH COLUMBIA Cranbrook Fort St. John Kamloops Kelowna Prince George

36.0 32.2 39.5 37.1 33.6

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

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JULY 24, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

FAST-ACTING LONG-LASTING EFFICACY UNCOMPROMISING QUALITY TM

Make ZUPREVO your on-arrival antibiotic of choice for cattle at high risk of developing BRD. Ask your veterinarian about the Breathe Easy Pledge, and how it can help you further reduce the impact of BRD on your operation.

ZUPREVOTM is a trademark of Intervet International B.V. Used under license. RESFLOR® is a registered trademark of Intervet International B.V. Used under license. Intervet Canada Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Whitehouse Station, NJ, USA, operating in Canada as Merck Animal Health. MERCK® is a registered trademark of Merck Canada Inc. in Canada. Copyright© 2014 Intervet International B.V., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Whitehouse Station, NJ, USA. All rights reserved.


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