THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
VOL. 92 | NO. 41 | $4.25
Extract science A new process can remove phosphorus from waste water. | P. 82
Boar ban? Conservation group wants wild boars to be annihilated | P. 39
SERVING WESTERN CANADIAN FARM FAMILIES SINCE 1923
|
WWW.PRODUCER.COM
TRAILS IN THE SUNSET
A farmer harvests a field near a lone grain elevator south of High River, Alta. SEE OUR 2014 HARVEST PHOTO FEATURE STARTING ON PAGE 26. |
MIKE STURK PHOTO
GRAIN MARKETING | BUYOUT
FNA reveals plans to buy control of CWB Farmers to regain stake in sector | Newly built Genesis Grain & Fertilizer could use CWB assets SASKATOON NEWSROOM
A Saskatoon-based organization is hoping prairie farmers will open their wallets and throw their support behind a plan to acquire a controlling share in CWB. Representatives from Farmers of North America used town hall meetings last week to share details of how they plan to acquire a controlling share in CWB. FNA chief operating officer Barrie Mann told about 20 producers attending an Oct. 3 meeting in Davidson, Sask., that his organization has established a new company, Genesis Grain & Fertilizer, that will buy and sell grain and give farmers a muchneeded ownership stake in Western
TIRED OF EXCESS GRAIN HANDLING MARGINS DISGUISED AS “BASIS”?
Canada’s highly profitable grain handling sector. Genesis will also distribute fertilizer produced at a manufacturing plant that FNA is planning to build at Belle Plaine, Sask. Construction of the fertilizer plant is also being financed by farmer investments, but it would operate as a stand-alone company. Genesis will be involved in fertilizer distribution, grain origination and at some sites, farm input sales. For the purpose of grain origination, CWB’s existing assets would be an ideal fit for Genesis. In essence, farmers who invest in Genesis would be buying into a multi-facetted company with a grain handling component that is tied to the acquisition of CWB assets.
Farmer ownership is a key element of the Genesis proposal. To get the new venture off the ground, FNA plans to sell shares to qualified farmers for $1,000 per unit. Investors must be farmers and would be required to meet pre-established investment criteria. Shares will be sold in blocks of 10, meaning a minimum investment of $10,000. Mann said FNA is hoping to raise as much as $380 million through the offering. Ideally, $20 million will be in place by mid-October, although Mann said that target date could be moved back if necessary. FNA has organized 90 meetings in farming communities across the West.
The meetings, which continue this week and next, are aimed at sharing information about Genesis and gauging investor interest. Producers who attend the meetings are asked to submit non-binding expressions of interest, giving promoters an idea of how much money they might be willing to invest. A full list of meeting dates and locations is available on FNA’s website at www.FNA.ca. I n D av i d s o n , m u c h o f F NA’s pitch was focused on the value of CWB assets, the merits of farmer ownership and the steps that might be involved in acquiring a controlling share in the former wheat board. SEE FNA BIDS ON CWB, PAGE 2
»
Joke’s over. Grab some of that “basis” back for yourself. Call or go online to learn how you can join hundreds of farmers who are already participating in a uniquely farmer majority-owned fertilizer distribution and grain handling business.*
FNA.CA/GRAIN 1-877-362-3276
* Participation is limited to accredited investors or those that are otherwise exempt. You do not need to be an FNA Member to participate.
u|xhHEEJBy00001pzYv%:, OCTOBER 9, 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
BY BRIAN CROSS
2
NEWS
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
REGULAR FEATURES
INSIDE THIS WEEK
Ag Stock Prices Classifieds Events, Mailbox Livestock Report Market Charts Opinion Open Forum On The Farm Weather
92 47 46 9 94 10 12 23 95
COLUMNS Editorial Notebook Hursh on Ag Market Watch Perspectives on Management Animal Health TEAM Living Tips
Cleaning up the church: Five northeastern Alberta churches get a fresh makeover. See page 19. | MARY MACARTHUR PHOTO
NEWS Much of FNA’s pitch at the Davidson meeting focused on the value of CWB assets, the merits of farmer ownership and the steps involved in acquiring a controlling share in the former wheat board. | FILE PHOTO
»
GRAIN MARKETING | FROM PAGE ONE
FNA bids on CWB However, Mann acknowledged that there are many unanswered questions surrounding C WB’s finances. FNA does not know how much grain CWB handled in 2013-14, nor does it know how CWB is financing current efforts to develop a prairiewide grain handling network. Mann said FNA’s team of experts has valued CWB’s assets at $200 to $300 million, but in an interview after the meeting, he said CWB has not disclosed its finances to FNA. “Our numbers are strictly based on public documents (that are) out there and knowing what transactions have occurred and from public files,” he said. The value of CWB’s assets is a topic of increasing interest. The company’s assets include Mission Terminal at Thunder Bay, Ont., Prairie West Terminal at Plenty, Sask., Great Sandhills Terminal at Leader, Sask., a corporate office building in downtown Winnipeg, a fleet of hopper cars, two laker-sized ships that will soon be hauling cargo on the Great Lakes and other smaller grain handling and railway assets across the country. The company has also announced four new elevator construction projects in Western Canada, the latest near Glenlea, Man. The construction of four new elevators is expected to cost $50 to $100
» WINTER WHEAT: Harvest
million, although CWB officials have declined to share details on costs. There are also lingering unanswered questions about the ownership of the CWB assets that would be involved in any deal to sell or privatize CWB. Ownership of the former assets, including the money in a contingency fund worth more than $125 million, is at the centre of an ongoing legal battle between the federal government and a group that represents aggrieved farmers. Claimants in that case argue that assets in CWB’s contingency fund were generated through the sale of farmers’ grain and therefore should be returned to producers. It is widely assumed that money contained in the former contingency fund was leveraged and now serves as the primary source of investment capital behind CWB’s current efforts to build a western Canadian grainhandling network. Legal battles aside, CWB has been offering farmers $5 worth of CWB equity for each tonne of grain they commit to CWB’s various marketing programs. Mann gave no indication of how much CWB equity has already been handed back to farmers through the farmer equity plan. Since Aug. 1, 2012, CWB has not publicly shared details of its annual sales programs.
» »
delays have taken a big bite out of this year’s expected winter wheat acreage. 5 GRAIN FACILITY: A company building a grain facility in southeastern Saskatchewan looks for investors. 14 MUSICAL HENS: Researchers think hens are happier when listening to classical music in their nesting boxes. 16 DEER DOWN: Severe winters have cut deer populations, forcing changes to hunting seasons. 18
» SHELTER BELTS: A researcher » » »
is studying shelter belts to better understand trees on the Prairies. 36 WILD BOAR: A conservation group in Saskatchewan wants the government to do more about feral wild boar. 39 PUSHING SPUDS: Potato consumption is down, but growers are confident the trend is reversing. 42 THISTLE CONTROL: Grazing can control Canada thistle, as long as cattle can be convinced to eat it. 45
MARKETS 6 have implications for Canadian farmers. 6
» SELLING OATS: Farmers with 3CW oats may
8
FARM LIVING 19 22
styrofoam protect plants in winter.
» ON THE FARM: A Saskatchewan family
raises miniature bulls for young riders. 23
PRODUCTION 82
» EXTRACTING NUTRIENTS: A process cleans
82
waste water and creates fertilizer. Gleaner and Massey combines.
84
» STOP PED: Human transport remains the
focus in controlling the spread of PED. 86
» FANCY BEEF: Canada Beef is a partner in a
87
1+1=3
» LAND VALUES: Farmland prices are levelling off in Saskatchewan.
92
» TRADE ADVICE: Saskatchewan should be able to triple exports to Asia by 2020.
Newsroom inquiries: 306-665-3544 Newsroom fax: 306-934-2401 Shaun Jessome, Publisher Ph: 306-665-9625 shaun.jessome@producer.com Brian MacLeod, Editor Ph: 306-665-3537 brian.macleod@producer.com
Terry Fries, News Editor Ph: 306-665-3538 newsroom@producer.com
Barbara Duckworth, Calgary Ph: 403-291-2990 barbara.duckworth@producer.com Mary MacArthur, Camrose Ph: 780-672-8589 mary.macarthur@producer.com Barb Glen, Lethbridge Ph: 403-942-2214 barb.glen@producer.com
Ed White, Winnipeg Ph: 204-943-6294 ed.white@producer.com Ron Lyseng, Winnipeg Ph: 204-654-1889 ron.lyseng@producer.com
AGFINANCE 92
In a story titled “Alberta flood plan sacrifices few for greater good” on page 18 of the Oct. 2 issue, Shirley Pickering, chair of the Highwood Management Plan Public Advisory Committee, was misidentified as Alice Pickering of the Upper Little Bow Basin Water Users Association.
Advertising Ph: 800-667-7770
Karen Briere, Regina Ph: 306-359-0841 karen.briere@producer.com
LIVESTOCK 86
luxury vacation venture.
Correction
Subscriptions Ph: 800-667-6929
Paul Yanko, Website Ph: 306-665-3591 paul.yanko@producer.com
» IN THE COUNTRY GARDEN: Mulch and
» COMBINE UPGRADE: Agco updates its
CONTACTS
Michael Raine, Managing Editor Ph: 306-665-3592 michael.raine@producer.com
» WEATHER IN INDIA: Indian weather may not want to be in a hurry to sell them.
93
Robert Arnason, Brandon Ph: 204-726-9463 robert.arnason@producer.com
I-Series + SwitchBlade = 3 Machines in 1 TRUE VERTICAL TILLAGE
MULTIPLE APPLICATIONS APPL
I-SERIES (I-1100, I-1200, 1200, I-2100, I-4100) tools give you superior erior surface tillage and residue management in spring or fall.
SwitchBla SwitchBlade chBlade hydraulic shank attachments convert vertical tillage to fertilizer applicator or coulter chisel ver in seconds. It’s like three machines on one frame.
I-SERIES – Equipped for Deep Placement Dry Fertilizer Application
www.salfordmachine.com I Ontario, Canada I 1-866-442-1293
11 11 15 93 89 20
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
3
FIELD CROPS | FARM SURVEYS
New model may replace crop surveys by phone Stats Canada may switch to a mathematical model BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
TEAMWORK |
Andrew Hough runs the combine while his father, Duncan Hough, waits for another load of soybeans on their farm near Napanee, Ont. | DUANE MCCARTNEY PHOTO
ANIMAL HEALTH | HOGS
Fifth PED case found in Manitoba Investigators search for source | Biosecurity lapses can have deadly consequences for barns BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
Manitoba has confirmed its fifth case of porcine epidemic diarrhea, this one in southeastern Manitoba beyond the five-kilometre buffer zone of the last two farms with positive diagnoses. Investigators are trying to determine the source of the disease at each of the three new sites. “The producers that are affected are really doing nothing much worse as far as biosecurity goes from what we see everywhere else in the industry,” Mark Fynn, an animal care specialist with Manitoba Pork Council, said during a conference call Oct. 3. Tight biosecurity measures have become critical to controlling the disease. Awareness is growing about the devastating effects of the virus, but not all farms and service providers are following the guidelines. Mil-
lions of pigs have died in the United States in more than 30 hog producing states. Canada has had 70 positive cases in Prince Edward Island, Quebec, Ontario and Manitoba. “In our disease investigations, we are starting to identify some serious lapses in biosecurity,” Fynn said. “Almost everyone we have talked to had at least one or two minor lapses of biosecurity on their site.” He said producers have the responsibility to protect their farms. “Trust me, you don’t want to get the disease,” he said. “The emotional toll is huge on the affected producers. If you are looking at a sow site, you are killing piglets for four weeks. It is really tough on the staff and workers.” The virus more commonly strikes in cooler weather, so increases were anticipated during this fall and winter. “As winter comes along and the presence of more PED virus in the
environment in Manitoba, we have to continue to be very diligent, especially with our transport biosecurity,” Fynn said. Clinical signs of PED include diarrhea, fever, vomiting and newborn deaths. Alberta swine veterinarian Egan Brockhoff of Red Deer said it is almost certain death for piglets, but mature animals have also been stricken. “In adult pigs, this disease is very subtle,” he said. “A lot of time is going by before people are identifying it.” Often, hogs have been moved off the farm and new ones brought in by the time the disease is diagnosed in sows and late finishers, which increases the risk of spread. “We really need to be paying close attention to any loose stools in your grow-finishing and mature breeding herd population,” he said. Alberta has collected nearly 4,500 samples, and all were negative.
Swabs were taken at farms and high risk areas, such as transfer sites, assembly yards and truck washes. Zoetis just received a conditional licence for a two dose, killed vaccine for sows in the U.S. The treatment is similar to an earlier registered vaccine and is labelled only for control in endemic herds. It will not prevent infection but can help control the disease and stop a complete disaster. Other preventive measures include avoiding feed containing dried blood plasma, which has not been definitively cleared as a cause in spreading of the disease. “Grossly contaminated feedstuffs can serve as a vehicle for PED infection in pigs,” said veterinarian Frank Marshall. Feed treatments are also under scrutiny. FOR MORE ON PED, SEE OUR LIVESTOCK SECTION BEGINNING ON PAGE 86.
70 cases
OF PORCINE EPIDEMIC DIARRHEA HAVE BEEN CONFIRMED IN CANADA
Statistics Canada might not be calling 9,300 Canadian farmers next September to find out the size of their crops. T h e f e d e ra l a g e n c y h o p e s t o replace its annual fall phone survey with a mathematical model that estimates production of principal field crops. “The goal is to make the decision in December whether we use this approach for next year,” said Frederic Bedard, geomatics analyst with Statistics Canada. The decision will be based on how closely the mathematical model reflects the numbers contained in the survey. “I was pretty pleased this year,” said Bedard. “We’re still crunching numbers but we’ve done a few crops and so far I’m happy.” The results will be forwarded later this fall to senior Statistics Canada managers, who will make the decision after consulting with a committee comprising officials from Agriculture Canada, the provinces and industry. The model produces the estimates using historical crop survey yields, weather data from climate stations and data compiled from low resolution satellite images of vegetative growth. However, it isn’t foolproof. “Last year wasn’t as successful because of the record yields,” said Bedard. It is hard to estimate production for a once-in-a-lifetime event with a model that uses historical yields, he said. “We were something like 15 percent below, which is not that good. We’re more aiming for maybe five to 10 percent maximum deviation.” Canada’s railways complained they were blindsided by the size of last year’s harvest and were unable to marshal the proper resources to handle the crop, so there may be some skepticism about a model that tends to underestimate big production years. However, Bedard said the September production report isn’t the only estimate of the year. The July survey will remain intact, as will the one conducted in November. The November survey is considered the most accurate estimate because it has the highest sample size and is conducted after harvest is complete. “The industry will still have time to react,” said Bedard. The big benefit of replacing the September survey with the mathematical model is there will be no need to bother 9,300 farmers during a busy time of the year. There will also be considerable cost savings because there is a lot of work gathering, compiling and analyzing survey responses.
4
NEWS
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
CROPS | MARKETING
FUEL IN THE FIELD
Canadians wary of U.S. farm plans BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Canadian farm groups are wary about two new safety net programs made available to growers in the United States. The U.S. Department of Agriculture recently unveiled the Agricultural Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price Loss Coverage (PLC) programs, which are the business risk management cornerstones of the 2014 farm bill. Farmers have until early spring of next year to select which program will work best for their operation until the end of the 2018 crop year. The PLC program covers growers when the price of a covered commodity is less than a reference price. The ARC program covers growers when the revenue of a covered commodity is less than an ARC benchmark. Blair Rutter, executive director of the Western Canadian Wheat Growers Association, said both programs have the potential to be market distorting because they are price-based. “It seems a bit of a throwback. I thought we had moved beyond these types of price support programs,” he said. “I would say these new programs are very much a concern, especially given the low market prices that we’re seeing.” Scott Ross, director of business risk management and farm policy with the Canadian Federation of Agriculture, shares Rutter’s fears about the programs’ market-distorting nature. “Certainly the potential is there, there’s no question,” he said. “They’ve moved from something that was delinked from production to a set of programs that is intimately related to where prices are moving.” It remains to be seen if the new programs will trigger more farm safety net dollars than the old direct payment regime. It will depend on what happens to crop prices and in the case of the ARC program, prices and yields. Examples of some of the reference prices for the PLC program are $5.50 per bushel for wheat and $10.08 per bu. for canola. Today’s market prices are close to those subsidized floor prices. Rutter is particularly concerned about the impact on small market crops. The PLC reference price for lentils is 20 cents per pound and for small calibre chickpeas it is 19 cents per pound. “If market prices were well above the support prices, it wouldn’t have any bearing, but that’s not the case,” he said. “Prices have gone down and they look like they’ll stay down for a while.” The ARC program uses an Olympic average of national farm prices from 2009-13. Rutter worries that the average includes three years of pretty high prices, making it easier for growers to trigger payments at today’s values. “That can lead to distortions in terms of cropping patterns and also leads to greater production than might otherwise be the case because if farmers are shielded from the true market price, they put on more fertilizer than they might otherwise,” he said.
Richard Walter, behind the wheel of the truck, and Gerald Stahl, on the combine, refuel a lineup of Cayley Hutterite Colony combines in a wheat field east of Cayley, Alta. | MIKE STURK PHOTO
TRADE | REGULATIONS
EU pledges smoother approvals for GM Canada-Europe trade deal | European Union has been slow in approving GM products in the past BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
The European Union has given Canada a written commitment to expedite the approval of genetically modified crops. The promise is contained in the text of the recently concluded CanadaEurope Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA). It states that both parties agree to promote efficient science-based approval processes for GM traits, with the key word being “efficient.” “I think this is vitally important,” said Jim Everson, vice-president of government relations with the Canola Council of Canada. The council was pleased tariffs on canola oil will be eliminated upon implementation of the agreement, which is expected in early 2016. However, equally important is what is being done to remove a significant non-tariff trade barrier, which is the lengthy and unpredictable approval process for GM traits. “Unless there is serious commitment to addressing this issue around biotechnology approvals, then the agreement is not going to be that helpful,” said Everson. It takes on average four years for a GM trait to receive import approval
in Europe, which is roughly twice as long as other comparable jurisdictions, according to EuropaBio, which promotes biotechnology in Europe. Everson said the cumbersome approval process delays Canadian growers’ access to new traits because the industry has to respect the import requirements of important trade partners such as the EU. A biotechnology working group will be established under CETA to improve approval times and develop low level presence policies. Monsanto Canada welcomed the development. In 2013, the company pulled all of its pending approval requests to grow GM crops in the EU. “Possibly a new working group will help the existing process and provide the opportunity for future import approvals,” Monsanto spokesperson Trish Jordan said in an email. Everson expects the working group will include officials from Agriculture Canada, the Canadian Fo o d I n s p e c t i o n A g e n c y , t h e Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development and their European counterparts. It will not tamper with the EU’s existing approval process. “It doesn’t entail any change to the
process or any reduction in the standards that get applied by the Europeans in the approval of GM traits,” he said. The European Food Safety Authority will still complete environmental, human and animal health safety assessments, which is the sciencebased evaluation portion of the approval process. The working group will focus on streamlining the political aspect of the approval process, which can take six months to years. Commodity groups have pushed for years for similar changes but have little to show for it. Everson believes CETA brings a new level of commitment to the issue. The National Farmers Union does not share his optimism. “CETA changes nothing regarding Europe’s commitment to avoiding food made from genetically modified crops,” said Ann Slater, the NFU’s vice-president of policy. “It’s fine to put something in a trade agreement and say we’ll talk about it,” said Slater. “It’s still a whole other thing to have a population change their mind as to what they will purchase and eat.” Slater said if anything, the trade agreement will bolster the resolve of Europe’s anti-GM forces.
CETA IN NUMBERS • In 2013, Canada was the European Union’s 12th most important trading partner, accounting for 1.7 percent of the EU’s total external trade. • In the same year, the EU was Canada’s second most important trading partner, after the U.S., with around 9.8 percent of Canada’s total external trade. • The value of bilateral trade in goods between the EU and Canada was C$830 billion in 2013. Machinery, transport equipment and chemicals dominate the EU’s exports of goods to Canada, and form an important part of the EU’s imports of goods from Canada. • The value of bilateral trade in services between Canada and the EU amounted to $38 billion in 2012. • Most commonly traded services between Canada and the EU include those in the transportation, travel, insurance and communication fields. • In 2011, European investors held investments worth $365 billion in Canada, while Canadian direct investment stocks in the EU amounted to about $200 billion. CETA negotations started in 2009. Source : European Commission
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
5
AGRONOMY | SEEDING
Long harvest keeps winter wheat out of fields 1.13 million acres forecast | CWB analyst Bruce Burnett cuts winter wheat forecast by almost 900,000 acres BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Winter wheat seeding prospects for 2014-15 have taken a big hit. “We were thinking it was going to be record breaking, given the amount of unplanted acreage that we had this year in the prime winter wheat growing area,” said Bruce Burnett, the CWB’s weather and crops specialist. Two months ago he was forecasting two million acres would be planted on the Prairies this fall, which would have shattered the previous record of 1.5 million acres set in 2008. His revised estimate calls for a crop no bigger than last year’s 1.13 million acres. Two factors are conspiring against winter wheat: the quality problems of the 2013-14 crop and excessive harvesting delays. Winter wheat in the main growing areas of eastern Saskatchewan and Manitoba is a disaster with high levels of fusarium and sprouting, low falling numbers and poor protein levels, said Burnett. He estimates more than half of this year’s crop will either be feed wheat or “toxic waste,” his term for sample grade wheat. Most of what remains will make the No. 2 grade, which is unusual given winter wheat has more relaxed grading standards than spring wheat. There is usually a much higher proportion of No. 1 grade. Rain in late August and early September caused extensive quality damage. “It was in a very critical stage right when we received those heavy, heavy rains that hit the bulk of the winter wheat area,” said Burnett. “It’s just a matter of timing. The timing this year was just extremely unfortunate for the winter wheat crop.” If spring planting had been on time, the winter wheat would have been fine and the spring wheat would have suffered, he said. Late harvest has also restricted winter wheat acreage. Farmers are too busy taking off summer crops to think about planting winter crops. “In a har vest that has been as
Bruce Burnett of CWB believes a larger-than-normal share of the 2014 winter wheat crop will be downgraded to feed, the result of late summer rains. Delayed harvest operations this fall have also cut into his projections for the 2015 crop. | FILE PHOTO severely delayed as this one, it makes it extremely difficult,” said Burnett. Ken Gross, a Manitoba agronomist with the Western Winter Wheat Initiative, said some acres were seeded in the southwest corner of his province. “Outside of that, I’ll tell you it’s been a tough go almost everywhere else,” he said. It was too wet to seed during the first two weeks of September and when the weather finally turned warm, farmers were more concerned about harvesting than seeding.
He believes Manitoba acreage will be well below the 400,000 acres planted last fall. “I wouldn’t be surprised if we’re down to a quarter of a million, to tell you the truth. I’ve got some key guys that have been growing it every year, and they just couldn’t get it into the ground,” said Gross. Paul Thoroughgood, a Saskatchewan agronomist with the Western Winter Wheat Initiative, said there was a lot of promise this fall. “I know from speaking to seed growers that seed sales were very brisk, demand was really high,” he said.
“I suspect a lot of that was targeted towards unseeded acreage, and that is going to be a real challenge.” Thoroughgood said it’s a shame growers had trouble planting the crop because seeding conditions were ideal. “My own winter wheat has just jumped out of the ground because the ground was warm and moist and away it went,” he said. Thoroughgood said it is unfortunate crop insurance guidelines persuaded growers to avoid seeding in mid to late August because crops
planted in that time frame would have fared well. He doesn’t think fusarium was a big problem in Saskatchewan. “That is pretty much a Manitoba thing that probably got overblown,” said Thoroughgood. “It was a big deal in Manitoba, but the growers I’ve talked to, in Saskatchewan anyway, myself included, fusarium levels were low, really low.” He looks forward to Statistics Canada’s first acreage estimate in early December, noting that sometimes growers are full of surprises.
SPECIALTY CROPS | HARVEST
Mustard yields expected to decline as season progresses First yield reports positive | Mustard buyer expects average Canadian yields to fall below last year’s total BY DAN YATES SASKATOON NEWSROOM
A mustard buyer in southern Alberta says he expects the effects of a wet and cool year will be evident when the final harvest numbers are tallied, which could give prices a boost. However, the earliest harvested fields are showing signs of another successful season. “Those samples are just starting to come in. For the samples that have arrived, the yields are really quite good,” said Walter Dyck with Olds Products in Lethbridge. The company, which contracts
acres in Alberta, Saskatchewan and some northern U.S. states, is beginning to receive harvest samples from its growers. Dyck said last week that his first samples are in the 1,000 pounds per acre range. Saskatchewan Agriculture projected yields of 1,044 lb. per acre in late September. “There’s still, I think, more to the story to be told,” said Dyck. “I would say for that average, that projection, that to me is definitely on the high side.” Statistics Canada’s most recent forecast is for higher yields this year
from 465,000 acres, most of which are in Saskatchewan. Acreage is up 100,000 acres from last year. Canadian farmers averaged yields of 947 lb. per acre during last year’s record growing season, although Saskatchewan Agriculture data showed that many growers saw yields exceed 1,200 lb. per acre. Mustard officials said in July that most of the crop had escaped the worst of the weather and flooding issues that had already started to dampen production estimates on the Prairies. However, Dyck said more weather woes across most regions and the appearance of frost will affect later
seeded and harvested mustard fields. Baine Fritzler, vice-chair of the Saskatchewan Mustard Development Commission, said in an email that most mustard acres in his area near Govan, Sask., were hailed out. He’s also heard of poor quality and lost acres in Manitoba because of flooding. “The drop in the yield below last year, I think, was something that I saw as coming down the pipeline,” said Dyck. Saskatchewan’s most recent provincial crop report pegged the mustard harvest at 81 percent complete Sept. 29. “That last 20 percent, boy, there’s
probably some significant issues with green (seed),” said Dyck. He said the samples he’s seen are cleaner than last year, showing signs of effective herbicide use. He said growers with contracts are protected from a decline in spot prices for mustard, which are down from the 38 to 39 cents per lb. for yellow and 33 to 34 cents per lb. for brown in this season’s contracts. “As we see more samples come in and I think more the yields come down a little bit off the projections by StatsCan or (Saskatchewan Agriculture), I think … maybe we’ll see those prices go up a little bit again,” he said.
6
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
www.secan.com
MARKETS
Oct. 13 - 20
Order Soybeans Support 4-H
MARK ET 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 | TWITTER: @ D AR CE MCMILLAN
India’s monsoon arrived late this year, delaying planting of summer crops such as rice. Rain accumulations were below normal, particularly in states that are big producers of winter pulses, leaving little moisture reserves. | REUTERS PHOTO PRODUCTION OUTLOOK | INDIAN WEATHER
India’s winter crop outlook not rosy Monsoon rains disappointing | Potentially good for Canadian pulse exporters DRY CONDITIONS IN INDIA’S RABI PULSE GROWING REGIONS Accumulated rainfall, June 1 to Sept. 30, 2014:
CHINA
K PA
IS
TA
N NEP
New Delhi UTT AR
PRA
West Uttar Pradesh: 769.4 mm 56% below normal
AL
East Uttar Pradesh: 897.6 mm 42% below normal
DES
H
MADHYA PRADESH BURMA West Madhya Pradesh: 876.1 mm 12% below normal
INDIA
ARABIAN SEA
East Madyha Pradesh: 1051.2 mm 29% below normal INDIAN OCEAN Normal rain (+19% to -19%)
Deficient rain (-20% to -59%)
Percentage of India’s total rabi production grown, ’08/’09 to ’10/’11: Madhya Pradesh Chickpeas Lentils Dried peas
39% 25% 17%
Uttar Pradesh
7% 46% 61%
Source: India Meteorological Department / Staff research | MICHELLE HOULDEN GRAPHIC
BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM
India’s winter pulse crop could be in trouble even before it is planted. Soil moisture conditions are far from ideal in key pulse crop states because of a disappointing summer monsoon. The Indian government estimates the kharif (summer) pulse harvest will be six million tonnes, 14 percent less than last year’s output and 26 percent less than the government’s target. Harvest for the summer crop and seeding for the winter crop happens during the same stretch, in the October through December period. Pulses that Canadian farmers produce are grown during India’s winter, or rabi season. Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh are two of the most important states for rabi pulse production. They accounted for 46 percent of India’s chickpeas, 71 percent of its lentils and 78 percent of its peas in the three-year period between 200809 and 2010-11, according to Indian government statistics. Monsoon rain between June 1 and Sept. 30 was dismal in those two states, according to India’s Meteorological Department. Rains were 12 percent deficit in west Madhya Pradesh, 29 below normal in the east, 42 percent deficit in east Uttar Pradesh and 56 below average in the west of that state. It doesn’t bode well for the coming rabi crop, which is heavily reliant on soil reserves and reservoirs left over
from the monsoon rains, said G. Chandrashekhar, associate editor of the Hindu Business Line. “Prospects currently look precarious as the southwest monsoon started to withdraw earlier in September. This has left limited subsoil moisture,” he said in an email. “Unless there is sufficient precipitation in November-December, rabi planting may suffer, yields will vary and harvest will be short of the target of 12.5 million tonnes.” India is coming off two huge chickpea crops of 9.9 million tonnes in 2014 and 8.8 million tonnes in 2013. It pushed prices in India below the minimum support price of $550 per tonne for an extended period. Chandrashekhar said the low prices could discourage growers from planting chickpeas. Prices perked up recently, but it may be too late. “All-in-all, India’s shortage is likely to widen in 2014-15 and will have to be met through additional imports,” he said. The country already has commitments in place to import one million tonnes of pulses, mainly yellow peas and lentils from Canada and other pulses from Myanmar and Africa. Jon Driedger, an analyst with FarmLink Marketing Solutions, said pulses are already the bright light in agriculture markets, with top quality lentil prices “going through the roof” and lots of support for yellow peas. The dry conditions in key rabi states could further bolster prices this winter. “It’s for sure going to be a bit of a
concern. Maybe it’s going to help provide some support for pulse prices going forward,” he said. In the meantime, Canada’s crop is shrinking. Statistics Canada pegged the lentil crop at 1.76 million tonnes in its September estimate, down nine percent from its July estimate. The pea crop is pegged at 3.5 million tonnes, which is close to where it was in the July estimate. Driedger said the lentil story is about quality rather than quantity. Little of this year’s crop will grade No. 2 or better. Greg Kostal, president of Kostal Ag Consulting, agreed that users’ ability to adapt to Canada’s poor quality crop is the key issue in pulse markets this year. “I’m optimistic because we’ve dealt with this in 2010, and importers and the trade have experience with wrinkles,” he said. Buyers don’t have a lot of other import options when it comes to red lentils because Turkey and India both had short crops. Kostal said it’s a good sign that India recently extended its duty exemption on imported peas, beans and lentils until March 31. The exemption was set to expire Sept. 30. It shows that the government is nervous about domestic supplies. However, Kostal believes it is too early to be downgrading India’s rabi crop production prospects. “All you need there is a few timely rains to keep things going. More importantly is what happens December through February.”
MARKETS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
7
PRODUCTION OUTLOOK | SUPPLY AND DEMAND ESTIMATES
Crop market searching for seasonal bottom Production data | No big surprises seen in Statistics Canada report
SEPTEMBER PRODUCTION ESTIMATE OF PRINCIPAL FIELD CROPS
BY ED WHITE
Statistics Canada’s September crop production report made modest adjustments from its July numbers but generally the market was not surprised. Production of major crops is down from 2013 but there are more pulse and special crops.
WINNIPEG BUREAU
All eyes are on the Oct. 10 U.S. Department of Agriculture report to see if it ends the string of bearish news that has brought crop markets low. If the World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates report doesn’t worsen the bearish situation, the mood could become more positive and mark the end of harvest pressure. Early signs of bouncing off the bottom might have been seen in recent days, with a number of crops rallying sharply off multiyear lows. “I think we need to see Friday’s actual corn and wheat production estimates, and see how the market reacts, before we can safely say corn and wheat have put a low in,” said Mike Krueger of the Money Farm in Fargo, North Dakota. “I think the (soy)bean market … maybe has one more leg down, depending on what the government tells us.” Austin Damiani of Frontier Futures in Minneapolis thinks the market lows for grain are already in, but no big rally is likely. “We’ve been telling customers that for wheat, we’ve seen a harvest low,” said Damiani Oct. 6. “There hasn’t been anything, any change to supply and demand fundamentals, that are bullish. It’s simply that we’ve traded the negative balance sheet. It was an argument for covering the short positions. It’s not really an argument for going long and saying wheat has to go higher.” U.S. markets are lumbering under the weight of big corn and soybean crops and ample supplies of wheat and have sold off greatly since spring. Corn and soybean crops have appeared to grow bigger as the year progresses. However, Krueger said most of the negative story is already priced into the markets, so the USDA might have to find surprisingly good yields, beyond the record yields already expected, to justify a further reduction. Krueger said soybeans have the greatest downside potential because of soybean meal fundamentals, but he thinks canola and sunflowers could gain in relative strength because of the improvement in world vegetable oil dynamics. “That should give the high oil crops an edge; it just might not be much of
Watch for our video markets update every weekend @ producer.com.
ATTENTION MALTING BARLEY GROWERS Premium for 2 row and 6 row Malting Barley @ bin and loaded railcar. Several buyers. Licenced/bonded companies.
Call Rod or Mark @ 1-800-979-9895 www.bettergrainprices.com
An abundance of soybeans in the U.S. has pushed down prices. | FILE PHOTO an edge,” said Krueger. Statistics Canada’s newest production estimate didn’t faze markets when it was released Oct. 3. Canola production at 14.1 million tonnes was slightly less than the average of analyst expectations, but many expect Statistics Canada’s number would rise in the final report. That has been the pattern for a few years. “They are almost notorious for underestimating in the October report and walking it higher in December,” said analyst Jon Driedger of FarmLink Marketing. “The number’s simply too low.” FarmLink estimates 15 million tonnes of final canola production. The Statistics Canada wheat numbers didn’t surprise markets either, but Brian Voth of Agri-Trend Marketing said that’s because the raw volume of the crop isn’t the most important factor. “One thing that report doesn’t say is the quality side of it. That’s a bigger issue than anything this year,” said Voth. Bear sentiment has been so strong in recent weeks that otherwise bullish stories have not played much of a role in the markets, Damiani said. Australian wheat production estimates are being reduced now, and much of the U.S. hard red winter wheat area appears to be back in drought conditions. Neither situation has sparked mar-
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
ket-moving worries. “That’s because it’s a bear market,” said Damiani. “We talked a lot about it when we were in a bull market this spring. In a bear market, everything conforms to the overall narrative.”
All wheat Spring wheat Durum Winter wheat Canola Corn for grain Barley Soybeans Dry peas Oats Lentils Flax Total dry beans Chickpeas Mustard seed Canaryseed Sunflower seed
2013 final
September 2014 (est.)
% change Sept. 2013-14
37,529,600 27,238,700 6,504,500 3,786,400 17,965,800 14,193,800 10,237,100 5,358,900 3,960,800 3,905,600 2,172,800 723,900 205,900 169,400 154,500 131,000 51,900
27,481,300 19,936,700 4,755,900 2,788,700 14,079,900 11,396,900 7,119,600 5,960,800 3,508,300 2,685,800 1,755,600 921,600 287,600 133,200 178,700 138,800 74,800
-26.8 -26.8 -26.9 -26.3 -21.6 -19.7 -30.5 11.2 -11.4 -31.2 -19.2 27.3 39.7 -21.4 15.7 6.0 44.1
Source: Statistics Canada | WP GRAPHIC
8
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
MARKETS
PRICE BOOM AND BUST | SUPPLY AND DEMAND
Will crops follow commodity market? HEDGE ROW
ED WHITE
Can the crop market rally independently of a commodity market that’s in the doldrums?
H
ere’s an uncomfor table question: how much of those 2006-13 profits came from inadequate crop supplies and booming demand and how much from lofty oil, copper and other commodity prices? The answer to that question hasn’t really mattered to growers for the past few years. It was just an academic concern. However, it’s now a more pressing question because crop prices are down, as are almost all commodity prices. If overall commodity prices stay down, how high can crop prices rise based only on their own sup-
ply and demand? This has become a serious issue because many analysts believe the era of high commodity prices is past. I did a Google search on the subject of “the long-term commodity bull market” and got a flood of results. Many heavyweight analytical firms back the “bull market is dead” idea and have done so for a couple of years. As Ruchir Sharma of Morgan Stanley wrote in a commentary in May 2013: “Certainly, the world is no longer terrified of running out of important commodities.” A year later, the bull market doesn’t seem to have any more life. A stunning similarity leaps off the charts as I look at 25-year corn, soybean, canola, copper and crude oil futures prices. There are differences in the slope and scale of individual peaks but extremely loud echoes. For instance, spring wheat, canola, corn and soybeans peaked in 2008 and 2012, but wheat and canola peaked higher in 2008 than 2012, while corn and soybeans peaked higher in 2012. So what does the loss of underlying commodity market strength, if that in fact remains the case, mean for the low, median and high prices of the crop market for the next
Like an old friend.
Avadex® and Fortress® pre-emergent herbicides have had your back for over 5 decades with early season weed control and alternative modes of action. The Results? Reduced resistance pressure on Group 1 and 2 herbicides, and minimized early season competition from wild oats.
Dependable. Trustworthy. Order your Avadex and Fortress today. Manitoba Cory Bourdeaud’hui 204-390-2340
Eastern Saskatchewan Javan Davis 306-590-8600
Western Sask Jim Vancha 306-951-7008
Southern Alberta Valerie Wilton 403-892-3058
Fortress
®
Avadex® and Fortress® are registered trademarks of Gowan Company. Always read and follow label directions. 475-1 08.14
few years? As always, the markets aren’t making it easy for us to figure it out. Students of the long-term commodity bull market, which began around 2000, will recall that crop prices took a few years to catch up with rising commodities such as copper and oil. Agricultural commodities initially seemed to have missed the boat. Then prices took off in 2007-08, rising to unbelievable levels. Anyone remember the futures price peak of $24 per bushel spring wheat? That was a year of damaged global production and projections for bottom-of-the-barrel ending stocks, which could be said to be the cause of the super-high prices. However, it was also the year when oil futures prices hit record highs of more than $140 per barrel and copper hit an all-time high that lasted four years, until it peaked higher in 2012. That rally coincided with the other great peak in crop prices, when the Midwest drought demolished yields and sent prices soaring again. How do you disentangle the crop market peaks in 2008 and 2012 from the accompanying commodity complex peaks of those years? How do you know what crop prices would have been in 2008 and 2012 if oil, copper and other commodities had been low? This matters because if indeed the overall commodity bull market is dead, as so many analysts say, then farmers will need crop prices to rally independently of general, years-long commodity strength to get better long-term profitability. Like many debates, this one has minimalists, maximalists and ones who think the question is a misunderstanding. Minimalists say the behaviour of other commodity markets is almost irrelevant because ending stocks are 95 percent responsible for crop price moves. Maximalists say overall commodity strength provides most of the underlying crop values, with weather and other supply-affecting elements providing only marginal changes in relative commodity-tocommodity values. The ones who think the question is a misunderstanding argue that the commodity boom was caused by demand surging, falling and then surging again. Every commodity roughly rose and fell together because people everywhere were demanding more of everything. There’s lots of fodder here for agricultural economists to work on for decades, but farmers get to do their own research. They’ll do that by simply living through the coming years and seeing what happens. And that’s not an academic situation. Follow Ed White on Twitter @ edwhitemarkets
What’s your take? Join us at www.producer.com or follow us on social media.
Growers are advised to sell feed quality oats before the harvest picture is clear and a glut pushes prices even lower. | FILE PHOTO OAT PRICES | KEEP OR SELL?
Oat buyers scout for quality crop Growers should learn what millers need BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
Deciding what to do with 3CW oats is a tough call for farmers and marketers, who aren’t sure how prices will evolve this year. “A No. 3? That’s anyone’s guess,” said Jared Seitz, director of the Agfinity online prairie grain brokerage. Grain marketers say the most obvious approach to marketing this season is to sell and move moist, lowquality crops as soon as possible and hang on tightly to high quality crops. It’s because the Prairies are overflowing with damp, damaged crops that are likely to degrade in storage, while top-quality crops are hard to find. However, it is uncertain what to do with oats that are neither good nor bad. Marketers say farmers need to understand that the oats grading 3CW can, because of subtle differences, either go into the strong milling market or the low value feed market. Analysts see both upside and downside for 3CW oats, depending on these differences. It depends on how the market develops once the harvest glut is past and more is known about supplies. Randy Strychar of Ag Commodity Research said farmers need to understand what matters in the milling market. Stained and discoloured oats are OK for milling, but sprouted oats aren’t. There’s no reason to hang onto anything sprouted. “It’s the groat that’s the issue,” said Strychar. Added Seitz: “Anything under 40 pounds, there are no benefits to storing it. Might as well get it out there before everyone else.” However, year end oat stocks will likely be a razor thin 500,000 tonnes. Many millers and grain companies will be aggressively looking for 3CW oats for the milling market, making stained grain a non issue this year. “Anything that’s 40 pounds or better, and it’s decent-looking and fairly clean, there will be buyers for that,” said Seitz. Buyers are already looking for acceptable oat crops, even if they can’t take delivery now.
“Farmers don’t have to do too much. The buyers are coming to them,” he said. “Quite a few are on the road right now, heading all the way up to La Crete, Alta.” Strychar said anything that’s not sprouted has a good chance of being categorized as milling quality, at least by later in the winter when stocks are disappearing. “Anything you can dry down, anything that’s not overly sprouted.… If you have a 3CW that’s stained? On the whole it’s a good oat,” said Strychar. “It’ll find a market down the road.” Seitz said the oats feed discount will probably grow with time, especially because oats have recently been relatively stronger than corn and other feed crops. Being on the wrong side of the border will be a problem. “My concern is that the (feed) price could trend down and the (milling) price trend higher,” said Seitz. That’s what Brian Voth of AgriTrend Marketing is telling his clients: the spread will get worse for feedquality oats. “Move low quality grain early, just in case the discounts widen out later on, once harvest is done and once quality is known overall,” said Voth. Sampling and assessing oats quickly is key this year, with a huge spread at stake. Strychar said farmers will almost certainly be rewarded for holding high quality oats, but that’s an academic concern at the moment because grain companies and millers aren’t taking new crop anyway. That will change once the grain companies and railways clear the remainder of the 2013-14 crop and find markets for the 2014-15 crop and its varied quality. “Grain companies are going to be scrambling for elevations come spring,” said Strychar. “The railways are going to be looking for business down the road.” However, until then, farmers need to move feed oats by whatever means possible, many marketers say. Seitz said local feed users will likely offer the best price because freight isn’t a big cost.
MARKETS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
9
CANFAX REPORT FED CATTLE STRONG The cash trade shrivelled up as sellers opted for attractive contracts. The few cattle offered on the cash market were priced well above packer bids, and a trade standoff developed. Chicago live cattle futures posted new record highs and the loonie weakened, which meant feedlot asking prices were well supported. However, packers have negative processing margins, making them unwilling to bid higher. A few live sales were reported Sept. 1 with prices $4-$6 per hundredweight higher than the previous week. However, total trade volumes were too light to establish a reliable weekly price trend. The Alberta fed cattle show list lacks the critical cash volume necessary to sustain current cash prices. Uncertain retail demand and negative processing margins will encourage disciplined packer bids and further limit cash trade. The cash-to-futures basis was not fully established but was -$16 to -$20, which should start to attract U.S.
last year while Choice ribs are up only 10 percent.
FEEDERS SOAR
Chicago live and feeder cattle futures posted records. | buyer interest. Weekly western Canadian fed slaughter to Sept. 27 fell six percent to 34,551 head. Weekly fed exports to Sept. 20 fell 32 percent to 4,903 head. A marked increase in feeder and non-fed traffic heading south pressured the limited number of trucks available for hauling. Market-ready fed supply is expected to tighten by mid-fourth quarter. Packers are trying to manage this by extending the pick-up time for the cattle they own.
COWS STRONGER Western Canadian cow slaughter
FILE PHOTO
rose to a strong 6,145 head last week. Slaughter has been 450 to 1,000 head below the 2013 pace over the past three weeks. D1, D2 cows ranged $116-$135 to average $124.70, which was up about $1 over the previous week. D3s ranged $102-$118 to average $111.25. Butcher cow prices are $40-$45 higher than the same week last year, but they are trading at a $4-$6 discount to U.S. utility prices. The North American lean trim market has been counter-seasonal. To give an idea where the beef complex is maximizing value, U.S. 90 percent trim prices are 50 percent higher than what they were
Live and feeder futures posted new record highs, supporting cash and forward delivered prices. Calf prices have broken away from historical trends. In 80 percent of the years from 1990 to 2009, 650 lb. steer average prices declined from September to October. However, in three of the past four years, monthly steer prices have strengthened in that period. The average increase was 3.2 percent in the three years when prices rose. The increase will likely be even more this year. Supply is so tight that the few preconditioned calves on the cash market are fetching little premium over fresh-weaned calves. However, load lots of pre-conditioned calves for late fall delivery are seeing premiums of about $5 per cwt. Weekly feeder exports to Sept. 20 rose 37 percent to 12,581 head. The weaker Canadian dollar will continue to boost export demand.
BEEF PRICE STEADIES U.S. boxed beef prices were mixed w i t h C h o i c e d ow n 6 6 c e nt s at US$238.45 per cwt. Oct. 2 and Select up $1.99 at $227.33. Weekly Canadian cutout to Sept. 20 saw AAA steady at C$262.68 and AA down $3.53 at $249.57. Beef production is up two percent in Canada this year and down 6.1 percent in the United States. The AAA/Choice spread has averaged -$15.47 in the first three quarters, significantly wider than last year’s -$4.57. Canadian beef production is expected to tighten in the fourth quarter, reflecting the lower cattle feedlot placement in the summer. This cattle market information is selected from the weekly report from Canfax, a division of the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association. More market information, analysis and statistics are available by becoming a Canfax subscriber by calling 403275-5110 or at www.canfax.ca.
WP LIVESTOCK REPORT HOGS STEADY Steady demand and good packer margins resulted in steady U.S. cash hog prices last week. Chicago futures edged lower, reflecting the slightly bearish U.S. Department of Agriculture hogs and pigs report from Sept. 26. Iowa-southern Minnesota hogs delivered were US$81-$82 per hundredweight Oct. 3, steady with Sept. 26. On a carcass basis, U.S. hogs averaged $105.74 Oct. 3, which was little
changed from $105.42 Sept. 25. The U.S. pork cutout rose to $123.75 Oct. 3, up from $118.63 Sept. 26. The estimated U.S. weekly slaughter for the week to Oct. 4 was 2.09 million, down slightly from 2.095 million the previous week. Slaughter was 2.219 million last year at the same time.
weight range were C$4.10 per pound hot hanging weight with sales to a high of $4.55. Grade A heifers sold for $3.95 with sales to a high of $4.35. Animals outside the desirable buyer specifications may be discounted.
BISON STEADY
Beaver Hill Auction in Tofield, Alta., reported 1,492 sheep and 416 goats sold Sept. 29. Wool lambs lighter than 54 lb.
The Canadian Bison Association said Grade A bulls in the desirable
LAMBS STEADY
were $162-$188 per cwt., 55-69 lb. were $171-$210, 70-85 lb. were $180-$213, 86-105 lb. were $170$200 and 106 lb. and heavier were $171-$179. Wool rams were $65-$135 per cwt. Cull ewes were $60-$115. Hair lambs lighter than 54 lb. were $149-$170 per cwt., 55-69 lb. were $161-$180, 70-85 lb. were $175-$190, 86-105 lb. were $160-$168 and 106 lb. and heavier were $162-$175. Hair rams were $59-$147 per cwt. Cull ewes were $60-$179.
Feeder kids lighter than 60 lb. were $150-$190. Good kid goats lighter than 70 lb. were $190-$230. Those heavier than 70 lb. were $190-$240 per cwt. Nannies were $72.50-$185 per cwt. Billies were $115-$230. Ontario Stockyards Inc. reported that 3,751 sheep and lambs and 180 goats traded Sept. 29. All classes of lambs sold steady. Heavy kid goats sold at a premium. All others were steady. Good lean sheep sold steady while heavy types sold under pressure.
10
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
WPEDITORIAL
Editor: Brian MacLeod Phone: 306-665-3537 | Fax: 306-934-2401 E-Mail: brian.macleod@producer.com
CWB | PRIVATIZATION GOALS
OPINION CRAIG’S VIEW
Time for CWB to outline goals of privatized marketing system
I
t would be good to know what the federal government and the managers of CWB see as the mission of a privatized CWB. Is it simply to have a sustainable business plan and operate in the Canadian grain marketing sector, or should it bring a new business attitude to stand out from the competition? The Canadian grain marketing sector needs a new dose of competition to deliver on the promise contained in the Marketing Freedom for Grain Farmers Act. Eliminating the Canadian Wheat Board monopoly was to cause grain prices to “respond better to market demand, giving farmers the opportunity to achieve the premium prices they deserve,” according to a government backgrounder on the legislation. But for more than a year the Canadian market has offered nothing close to premium prices. The rail transportation problem last year caused grain companies to post extra-wide basis levels, dropping Canadian prices well below world levels. The wide basis discouraged delivering into a clogged system but also generated a profit windfall for grain companies. The rail crisis is now over, but prairie grain prices still lag. American grain elevators offer shockingly high premiums for durum over prices at elevators in Canada. The marketing freedom act allows farmers to access the U.S. market directly, and some have been able to take advantage of that freedom. Indeed, the United States, with its higher prices, is increasingly an important market for western Canadian farmers. Seventeen percent of Canadian wheat exports went to the U.S. last crop year, up from 10 percent in 2011-12. A good portion of that business was farmers selling directly to American buyers. However, the volume was not enough to arbitrage the two markets, as market freedom proponents anticipated. Independent analysts can’t identify a reason for Western Canada’s lagging prices today
except for lack of competition and grain companies padding their profits. The government expected that its marketing freedom act would spark investment and innovation, which would lead to a more competitive Canadian grain market. There is some investment, in country terminals and port facilities, but not the level of competition that would cause most farmers to call the marketing freedom law a full success. The government has staked its reputation on addressing competition shortfalls in another sector of the Canadian economy — wireless service — but has failed to encourage a new player to enter the mobile service market. In the grain sector, through the CWB, the government already has a tool to shake up the status quo. However, agriculture minister Gerry Ritz is mum on his vision of a privatized CWB, preferring to wait for CWB management to present a plan. CWB has said only that it wants to be a company with some farmer equity operating a network of grain handing facilities. The Farmers of North America campaign to buy CWB creates the impression of an urgent need to act lest an opportunity be lost. It is hard to evaluate the FNA proposal as long the CWB’s own plans are so amorphous. Granted, the CWB’s plan is a work in progress and it can’t be expected to conduct commercial negotiations in public. As well, it would be best for the federal government to avoid meddling and remain at arm’s length. However, a broad mission statement about CWB’s goals, its reason for existing, preferably identifying it with service to customers, building its own success through enhancing farmer profits, would provide welcome illumination.
PED | STRESS
Brian MacLeod, Bruce Dyck, Terry Fries, Barb Glen and D’Arce McMillan collaborate in the writing of Western Producer editorials.
Trust me, you don’t want to get the disease (porcine epidemic diarrhea). The emotional toll is huge on the affected producers. If you are looking at a sow site you are killing piglets for four weeks. It is really tough on the staff and workers. MARK FYNN, MANITOBA PORK COUNCIL
PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND | LABOUR CRUNCH
P.E.I.’s shortage of young workers bound to worsen as more retire CAPITAL LETTERS
KELSEY JOHNSON
C
HARLOTTETOWN — Drive the red clay roads of rural Prince Edward Island and one cannot help but notice a reoccurring trend. Everyone you meet in these small communities is in their 50s, at least. Many are in their 60s, 70s and 80s, their wrinkled hands roughened by years of hard work. Islanders are aging. It’s a characteristic that’s hard to miss in this quaint collection of villages featuring whitewashed houses surrounded by dusty red fields filled with acres of lush soybean, corn and potato crops. In the past several years the average age of an islander has jumped to 43.1. That’s including the young families,
most of whom live in and around Charlottetown, which means the median age in rural communities is even higher. The rapidly aging population is proving to be both a political and economic challenge. For government it means more strains on provincial resources such as health care and other social services. Economically, it’s meant a huge labour crunch, an issue that has dominated headlines for years thanks to federal cuts to Employment Insurance and recent changes to the Temporary Foreign Worker Program. Agriculture is P.E.I.’s largest industry, contributing $500 million in farmgate sales annually. However, finding people to work in the fields, processing plants and other parts of the supply chain isn’t easy, despite an 11 percent unemployment rate. “Labour is our biggest issue,” John Jamieson, executive director of the P.E.I. Federation of Agriculture, tells a bus full of farm writers as it zips through the countryside. He said workers are in short supply
for everything from extra hands at harvest time to those needed to work in the processing plants and crop storage facilities year round. Finding extra workers, or even essential labour, is a mounting challenge for farmers and other stakeholders across the country. P.E.I.’s aging population and the fact most of the work on the island is seasonal only adds to the problem. Like much of the Maritimes, most of the province’s young people are heading west, drawn to the lucrative wages of the Alberta oilsands. Jamieson said the lack of young people means older residents are left trying to pick up the slack, often doing jobs that would have been done by younger folks in years past. For example, he tells me, as we stand in the middle of local cheese shop surrounded by mountains of golden gouda, that last week he got a call about cows that had escaped from their pasture. Everyone chasing them was older than 60. Then there’s the fact that most work in P.E.I. — be it in tourism, fisheries or agriculture — is seasonal. The short-
age of full-time jobs was heightened recently with the news that McCain’s will close its potato processing plant in Borden at the end of this month with a loss of 121 jobs. Residents tell me that folks are constantly looking for work. In recent years, residents had depended on Employment Insurance or the Temporary Foreign Workers Program to fill the voids. However, recent changes by the federal government have made it more difficult to rely on these programs. Some employees on the island are grateful for the changes to EI because it forces people to look for work on the island year round, which is an attitude shift some admit has been difficult for some folks to accept. However, most say the EI changes make it hard to retain the same people year after year. Others say islanders are finding it more difficult to fill the number of weeks they need to qualify for EI, leaving many with no income at all. As for the Temporar y Foreign Worker Program, the federal government has promised that the Seasonal
Agriculture Worker Program will not be affected. However, fish farms and packing plants that depend on the program for staff are clearly worried. The staff of at least one operation on the island is made up of 52 percent foreign workers, many of whom, a resident tells me, eventually stay as permanent residents. Many more have staff lists where 20 to 25 percent of their labour force are temporary foreign workers. This reliance is repeatedly linked to the nature of the work. Much of it is labour intensive, with lots of heavy lifting. With fewer young people on the island, it is next to impossible to find able-bodied folks willing to do the work, which in a potato packing plant often starts around $11 an hour. However, increasing those wages isn’t always possible as company margins shrink thanks to soaring freight and other operational costs. And with more workers taking their retirement, islanders say the labour crunch is only going to get worse. Kelsey Johnson is a reporter with iPolitics, www.ipolitics.ca.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
11
& OPEN FORUM LAND DEVELOPMENT | SITE C OPPOSITION
GRAIN SYSTEM | INVESTMENT
Peace farmers fight to stop dam project
Are farmers ready for farmer-owned?
BY EMMA GILCHRIST
R
enee Ardill’s grandparents arrived in the Peace River Valley in 1920 with nothing more than a milk cow, saddle horse and team and wagon. They chose a piece of land on the banks of the Peace River, built a cabin, hunted moose and grew what they could. “They built everything from the ground up,” Ardill said. “Imagine being able to pick your piece of land and make what you wanted out of it.” The Ardill family has been here ever since, running a cattle ranch on the banks of the Peace. However, their days could be numbered if BC Hydro’s Site C hydroelectric dam gets the go-ahead this fall from the provincial and federal governments. The panel tasked with reviewing the project found BC Hydro failed to prove that the energy from Site C would be needed within the time frame set out in the proposal. The panel’s report, released in May, also found that there are cost-effective alternatives to building a new dam, but the province has failed to adequately investigate options such as geothermal. If built, the dam will flood 107 kilometres of the Peace River and its tributaries. It will affect 32,000 acres of agricultural land, including flooding 9,400 acres of farmland in the Agricultural Land Reserve. The flooding would put the Ardill’s ranch underwater. Thirty-three other farm operations would also be affected by the project, according to the panel’s report. “This is the best piece of land in the world. My grandpa picked a good spot, ad I’m damned if I’m going give
British Columbia farmers on this stretch of the Peace River oppose the government’s Site C hydroelectric project. | FILE PHOTO it up,” Ardill said. However, the joint review panel’s report found that loss of agricultural land would not be significant in the context of British Columbia and western Canadian agricultural production, while acknowledging “this loss would be highly significant to the farmers who would bear the loss, and that financial compensation would not make up for the loss of a highly valued place and way of life.” Eveline Wolterson, a soil scientist who gave expert testimony during the review process, said the panel missed the point in its analysis by looking at the current use of land, which is largely forage production, instead of land’s potential. “The reality is that the reason that land is in forage production is because most of it is owned by BC Hydro or it’s in the flood reserve, which means that at any time BC Hydro could expropriate those lands,” Wolterson said. “That has discounted the value of that land, as well as discounted the
amount of money landowners are willing to invest in a piece of property.” The productivity of the agricultural land in the Peace River Valley is unique not only in the region but in B.C. and Western Canada, Wolterson added. The David Suzuki Foundation recently released a report looking at the economic benefits of keeping the Peace River region’s remaining farmland and nature intact beyond the market value of agriculture in the region. The Peace Dividend report found that the ecosystem services, such as providing clean air, clean water, carbon storage and habitat for wildlife, that the Peace River Watershed provides are worth an estimated $7.9 to $8.6 billion a year. Ken and Arlene Boon, owners of Bear Flats Farm and log home builders, know the value of the valley all too well. They regularly see mule deer, moose, elk, wolves and black and grizzly bears on their land. The Boons host the annual Paddle for the Peace on their farm, where
they can grow crops as varied as corn and cantaloupes because of the valley’s unique microclimate. If the dam is built, they will lose their best farmland and their home. In their submission to the panel, the Boons wrote: “As we write this submission, we feel like a prisoner trying to save his life by writing a statement that will hopefully save him from the death penalty.” The 1,100-megawatt Site C dam has been on the books for 30 years and was turned down by the B.C. Utilities Commission in the 1980s. This time around, the B.C. government has exempted the project from a utilities’ commission review, despite calls from local politicians and the joint review panel for the independent regulator to review the project. Esther and Poul Pedersen’s 160 acre property is above where the Site C dam would be built and is within the zone that could slough into the reservoir. Located just five minutes outside of Fort St. John, it’s the perfect place to raise horses and give riding lessons. “It’s really hard to replace,” Esther said. “We feel that the valley is precious.” BC Hydro has proposed a $20 million agricultural compensation program to support projects in the region, in addition to farm mitigation plans for directly affected agricultural operations. However, as Esther looks out over the Peace River Valley, she, like so many others, said what her family has is irreplaceable. Emma Gilchrist is deputy editor of DeSmog Canada, an online source dedicated to environmental and social issues. — Troy Media
FINANCING | UNIQUE OPTIONS
Investment financing sparks imaginative thinking HURSH ON AG
KEVIN HURSH
H
ere’s an interesting idea for obtaining medium-term financing for farm expan-
sion. One of the tour stops during the recent Canadian Farm Writers’ Federation conference in Prince Edward Island was at Glasgow Glen Farm, an artisanal cheese business. To raise capital for his business, chef and cookbook author Jeff McCourt has sold cheese futures. For $1,000, investors receive $1,500 worth of cheese over five years. This comes in two shipments per year, each weighing six kilograms. The cheese is shipped across Canada and into the United States to about
50 investors, who receive a 50 percent return on their money, which is a lot better than a GIC. Naturally, these are cheese lovers, so most of them also want the satisfaction of helping out a new specialty cheese business. There is always a risk that the business won’t succeed and they won’t receive their cheese repayment, but if you can afford artisan cheese, you can probably afford to risk $1,000. For Glasgow Glen Farm, it may seem like an expensive source of financing with loans available at such low rates. However, there’s a limit to how much a new business can borrow. Plus, the $1,500 worth of cheese has a built-in profit margin, so the actual cost should be considerably less. McCourt said another benefit is that many of the investors find that they want more than 12 kilograms of cheese per year and buy extra. Plus, after the cheese futures deal has expired, they’ll probably remain loyal customers. Might this approach be viable for
other types of farm businesses? Input Capital Corp. of Regina has been offering a similar deal to canola producers for the last couple years. The specific terms are rather involved and may vary from one producer to the next or at least one year to the next. However, the premise of the deal is money up front for a set amount of canola going to Input Capital Corp. in subsequent years. A key requirement is professional agronomic advice for the farm operation. For most producers, regular loans are probably a lower-cost source of financing than this canola streaming deal. However, this deal may be attractive for producers who are rapidly expanding and need money for input costs. It’s interesting to note that with cheese futures, McCourt has established the terms. With the canola streaming deal, Input Capital Corp. makes the rules. An individual farmer would probably have little success in getting money up front for the offer of future
grain deliveries. Wide price swings would make it difficult to come up with a reasonable formula, even if you could find an interested buyer. But it could work in the livestock and forage sector. For example, hay futures might work if the payback from a set investment could be a certain tonnage of hay in future years. This might also work with replacement heifers or bred heifers, and there might not need to be any money involved. For example, producers looking to expand could take possession of 50 bred heifers with the promise to return 75 bred heifers of similar quality and genetics over the next five years. In this way, an established beef producer could give a helping hand to a young operator. The motivation would go beyond pure business considerations. Debt financing is typically the first option that comes to mind. With a bit of creativity, other options are possible. Kevin Hursh is an agricultural journalist, consultant and farmer. He can be reached by e-mail at kevin@hursh.ca.
EDITORIAL NOTEBOOK
MICHAEL RAINE, MANAGING EDITOR
Taking charge also means taking risks
I
t is all starting to sound like history repeating itself as prairie farmers examine their options to buy the CWB and build fertilizer plants. In the news recently have been stories of farmer meetings, options to join in collective efforts to market and buy commodities, and questions about the future of grain handling and transportation and what priority the public gives to a grain production system with few competing interests. I’m not suggesting that Canada got its co-ops and pooling wrong in the first place. Farmers likely should be interested and invested in their logistics and price discovery systems. Grain pooling, whether through the prairie pools, United Grain Growers or the Canadian Wheat Board, was a way to ensure that farmers were able to access a greater proportion of the margin between cost of production and world price. And the co-ops offered bulk buying-production and price discovery. The reality was that grain margins were often slim, which made it easy to point fingers or imagine that farmers in the United States or Ontario were being paid more for their crops. This year it appears they are. It was often suggested that better, larger or more efficiently located farmers must always have been penalized when it came to pooling, despite the obvious advantages that pooling’s economies of scale were delivering for them. Some things are more apparent than real. When margins were especially tight, in the 13 years leading up to 2008, it was easy to point fingers at the government-run CWB. That helped make it a target for some politicians, like the publicly held railways before them. The fact was that the grain companies, including the wheat pools, were making a small but predictable profit on handling and larger margins on non-board crops, fertilizer and other inputs. It reduced a lot of the risk for grain companies. Now, those corporations have all the risk and with it any profits they can squeeze from the margins. Prairie farmers have a long history of working together to improve their economic fortunes and can see where their bread is buttered. The question is, do they want butter and the risks that come with it?
12
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
OPEN FORUM LETTERS POLICY:
CONSERVATIVE BURGLARY
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.
Re: (Agriculture minister) Mr. Gerry Ritz’ letter to the editor, “Looking forward,” July 31, where he thumps his chest and promotes the open market benefits he claims are there. He claims the majority of farmers are looking ahead and not stuck in the past. However, we remember the past before the Canadian Wheat Board, when the grain companies paid as little as they could get away with and many grain handlers making fortunes from farmers’ efforts and sweat. We see the same thing happening again with no shame shown by the multinational grain brokers.
Mr. Ritz claims the Conservative government had a mandate to eliminate the Canadian Wheat Board with the 2011 election. However, the farming population on the Prairies is only three percent. To the other 97 percent, the Canadian Wheat Board wasn’t even on the table. If they had listened to the farmer vote taken earlier, they would have to admit it was 67 percent in favour of retaining the CWB. The Canadian government stole the assets of western farmers and is continuing to steal more. Every time a farmer sells wheat to the Ritz Board and buys a $5 share per tonne, he is making a donation to the federal government. We know that when the Ritz Board gets sold to the private trade the farmer shares will have no voice
and will go the same way as the original wheat pool shares went when Sask Pool went private. He claims we get paid faster through the open market. True, but we are getting only a percentage of what we received from the CWB because they gave everything back less operating expenses, and that took a year to play out. However, after the first year the farmers were getting paid for a year’s production every year. Open marketing is transferring a big part of the Prairies’ economy to multinationals that are international. The wealth isn’t staying on the Prairies. The Conservative government is made up of non-farmers, Gerry Ritz excepted, who is an ex-ostrich farmer, that have no stake in farming and
Kubota Muscle Series
0% Financing
For 60 Months OAC* *Limited time offer. See your dealer for details.
have made a big mistake in eliminating orderly marketing. The new Ritz CWB stands for Conservative Wealth Burglary. Bernie von Tettenborn, Round Hill, Alta.
ADDRESS VOTER APATHY To the Editor: The first thing people managing elections need to do is change the way they think from “what ought to be” to “what is.” We are currently in the middle of the greatest societal upheaval since the invention of the printing press. Social media use is driving that, and people love it. Young and middle age people e x p e c t t h i n g s t o hap p e n r ig ht now. Many older people, too. They want instant information at their fingertips, instant communications, fast forwarding, fast food, phoneahead take out, remote controls, quick cash, high-speed lanes, GPS and microwaved meals. They want to immediately know what their choices are and if they vote, they want to vote immediately. That’s reality. Saying something like, “it’s your responsibility to vote,” when that implies an out-of-touch time-consuming bothersome process, just doesn’t cut it. Saying “voting is quick and easy,” will certainly help. Maybe we need drive-through polls? Dennis Hall, Saskatoon, Sask.
SHORT-TERM THINKING To the Editor:
Kubota packs k power and d performance f iinto t every M S Series i ttractor t we b build. ild There are over 40 models in the M Series line-up ranging from the 50 Hp economy-priced MX Series to the all new, premium featured MGX Powershift Series topping out at 135 Hp. One of the 150 Kubota dealers in Canada would be happy to recommend an M Series to partner with you to meet your needs and fit your pocket book. There is an M Series for you! kubota.ca
W. C. Fields’ line, “never give a sucker an even break, or smarten up a chump” has never been better executed than by the Conservative government and their farmer-disenfranchisement policies. Their first move upon election in 2006 was to tear up the farmer-rail car agreement. This agreement would have given farmers a place at the grain transportation table, and while it wouldn’t have solved all the marketing problems from last year, it would have at least given farmers a look behind the curtain. This move was followed by taking away the community pasture network that farmers have relied on for decades, destroying the PFRA (Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration) and the tree nursery, vaporizing the support that farmers had through the margin based Agristability program and weakening the Canadian Grain Commission. In parallel was the defunding and destruction of the grain varietal development and research capacity, and this at a time when the world’s population has never been higher and the climate has increasing variability. Decimation of the Canadian Wheat Board was next: farmers were disenfranchised and not allowed to vote on the matter according to the existing law, taxpayers were billed an unnecessary $349 million in 2011 and the $16 billion world leading exporter was reduced from a business to a political maneuver with a few hundred million in assets.
OPINION
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
13
Predictably, the destruction of orderly marketing through the real CWB cost farmers $4 billion in lost income for the 2013 crop, money that ended up in grain company pockets, lost sales and demurrage charges, and the government now refuses to publish any financial reports for the Ritz-run CWB since 2012. With financial cover-ups and fasttracking the give-away of farmerpaid CWB assets, it looks like the government is trying to bury a dead skunk as fast as they can. An agriculture minister from Ontario or B.C. could not have accomplished this much destruction. No, the minister had to be a short-term thinker from the Prairies where Conservative votes could be taken for granted. Somewhere, W. C. Fields is feeling warm and fuzzy all over again.
HARVEST DONE, BUT THE WORK CONTINUES
Stewart Wells, Swift Current, Sask.
A farmer recently worked up a field east of Beaverlodge, Alta., on a beautiful autumn morning. Many producers have finished combining their crops, but there are still crops standing or swathed in areas throughout the Peace River district. | RANDY VANDERVEEN PHOTO
THANKSGIVING | PRIORITIES
Taking time to give thanks SPIRITUAL VIGNETTES
JOYCE SASSE
With plenty of options to control volunteer canola, it’s easier than ever to include Genuity® Roundup Ready® canola and Genuity® Roundup Ready 2 Yield® soybeans in your rotation.
Joyce Sasse writes for the Canadian Rural Church Network at www.canadian ruralchurch.net.
Visit genuitytraits.ca to find out more.
T
he story is told of a spider who got too close to the edge of a haystack. It fell off and landed on a protruding bale. There it started making a modest web, in which it caught a fly. “Wonderful. I’ll expand my project,” he thought. The more flies he caught, the harder he worked to expand his work. The web got larger and larger. One day he noticed a strand of silk that seemed totally out of place, but when he broke the strand, the web, spider and all, crashed to the ground, killing our poor friend. It’s one of those stories that has simple truths for all of us. We admire his creativity, his hard work and the pride he took in his work, but things got out of hand. The web provided his food, but his appetite became voracious. More. Always more. What are our obsessions? Can we catch ourselves before we reach too far? The Thanksgiving season may be one of those time-out occasions when we step back from the regular routine and re-think what we are about. People of old gathered to celebrate their harvest and give thanks for their blessings. The next day, having taken the pause, possibly they were a little more mindful of what they were about and how their experiences could be life-giving. Scripture (Colossians 3) says: “You are a people of God…. Clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience. Be tolerant with one another and forgive one another.… The peace Christ gives is to guide you in all the decisions you make…. Give thanks to God.”
YOU CAN ROTATE
Always follow grain marketing and all other stewardship practices and pesticide label directions. Details of these requirements can be found in the Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers printed in this publication. ©2014 Monsanto Canada Inc.
14
NEWS
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
LOGISTICS | NORTHGATE, SASK.
$70M needed for Sask. transportation project Investors sought | Toronto-based Ceres Global Ag Corp. has already set up a temporary grain handling facility BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
A Toronto company that plans to build a $90 million transportation and logistics hub at Northgate, Sask., near the U.S. border is looking for investors’ help to pay for the project. Ceres Global Ag Corp. announced Sept. 29 that it intends to raise $70 million through a rights offering. It is open to investors who already hold shares in the company and, according to Ceres, is backstopped by a pair of investors that will ensure
the $70 million offer is fully subscribed. Ceres officials said the financing plan, which still requires regulatory approval, will offer Ceres shares at $5.98 per unit, a 15 percent discount on the Sept. 26 closing price of $7.04 per share. In addition, an existing bridge loan valued at US$20 million will be replaced with a new five-year senior secured loan valued at $30 million. Together, the rights offering and the loan will allow the company to proceed with construction of the transportation
hub, which will include grain handling facilities, oils transloading infrastructure and a 120 car train loop. “These financing proposals are critical milestones for Ceres as it ramps up the construction and development of Northgate,” Ceres president Patrick Bracken said in a news release. “They will provide the needed capital for the construction of the remaining rail infrastructure as well as the temporary and permanent grain transload facilities at Northgate.” Ceres announced plans to build the
Northgate facility early last year. It initially said it would build the facility in partnership with U.S. grain company Scoular, which owns grain handling facilities and has commodity sales programs worth more than $6 billion per year. However, Ceres announced early this year that it had terminated its partnership agreement with Scoular and would build the facility on its own, in consultation with Ceres’ subsidiary company Riverland Ag Corp. Riverland owns and operates 10 grain storage and handling facilities
in Minnesota, New York, Wisconsin and Ontario, and has total storage capacity of 51 million bushels. Ceres board chair Doug Speers said the company has already completed the rail loop at Northgate and has connected it with a spur line owned by the Burlington Northern Santa Fe railway. The BNSF connection provides a direct rail link to American markets. BNSF operates in 28 American states and has a 50,000 kilometre rail network with access to Pacific and Gulf of Mexico port facilities. Ceres has also set up a temporary grain handling facility at Northgate. The temporary facility, which consists of two 2,000 bu. steel storage bins, will begin taking grain deliveries later this month, Speers said. Northgate’s first shipments of Canadian grain will likely be moved to the U.S. in late October, he added. The temporary facility will allow the company to transport grain while a permanent grain elevator is built. The permanent facility, which is a high-throughput concrete facility, will cost $42 million to build and should be operational in 2016, Speers said. Contracts for construction of that facility are already in place and groundwork has begun. “The board of Ceres has approved construction of a $42 million grain elevator that will allow us to load shuttle trains of 110 or 120 cars,” Speers said. “Obviously, that’s going to take a while to build … so in the meantime, we started a number of months ago to build a temporary grain loading facility and … that facility will be ready to load grain by mid-October.” Speers said a general manager has been hired to oversee operation at the temporary facility. Offers to buy grain should be in place shortly. He said Ceres has an agreement with BNSF to supply up to 72 rail cars per week once the grain program at Northgate hits full stride.
WHO IS CERES GLOBAL AG?
FCC Credit Line Cash flow when you need it Need short-term credit? Waiting for a sale to go through? When it comes to bridging the cash flow gap, it’s nice to know you have pre-approved financing that you can use anywhere. 1-888-332-3301 | fcc.ca/CreditLine
• Ceres is a Toronto-based agriculture and logistics company with two main units: grain storage, handling and merchandising unit, with 100 percent ownership of Riverland Ag Corp.; and a commodity logistics unit, with 25 percent interest in Stewart Southern Railway Inc. and its development of the Northgate Commodity Logistics Hub. • Riverland is a collection of 10 grain storage and handling assets in Minnesota, New York, Wisconsin and Ontario having combined storage capacity of about 51 million bushels. • The Stewart Southern Railway Inc. is a 130 km long short-line railway that operates in southeastern Saskatchewan. The Northgate Commodity Logistics Hub is a $90 million grain, oil and oilfield supplies transloading site. • Ceres estimates the Northgate hub could earn $22.3 million in revenue from grain, $47.8 million from oil and Natural Gas Liquids, $4.3 million form supplies such as concrete and frac sand and $4.8 million in rail car tolls. Source: Ceres Global Ag Corp.
MARKETS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
15
CROPS | MARKETING
Strong U.S. dollar, buyer complacency weigh on grain prices MARKET WATCH
D’ARCE McMILLAN
Importers are waiting for the American dollar to drop
A
s much as 100 millimetres of rain in the southern U.S. Midwest this week are delaying harvest and providing the
f i r s t s i g n i f i c a nt ma rk e t l i f t i n months. If the weather continues wet — and the U.S. weather service predicts more moisture than normal in October in the Midwest — it might shake complacent buyers from their expectation that prices will continue to fall. We’ve noted before on these pages that the strong U.S. dollar is, along with the expectation of a record large crop, keeping downward pressure on U.S. grain prices. An expensive dollar encourages buyers to avoid the United States and turn to suppliers that have weak currencies. The positive U.S. monthly jobs report Oct. 3, which dropped the
unemployment rate .2 of a percentage point to 5.9 percent, which is the lowest level in six years, gave more support to the U.S. dollar. The U.S. Federal Reserve closely watches employment metrics as it times its transition from a stimulus policy to a more neutral stance. A continuing drop in unemployment supports the idea that the Fed will increase interest rates next year to prevent the economy from overheating. Meanwhile, central banks in Europe and Japan are moving toward stimulus to spark life in their moribund economies. The prospect of better interest returns in the U.S. attracts capital to the
American buck and lifts its value. We’ve seen the Canadian dollar fall below US 90 cents, and it will likely stay there well into next year. The weakness of the loonie against the U.S. buck is good news for Canadian livestock producers. Cattle and hog prices are at or near record highs already, and the strong U.S. buck makes Canadian livestock seem cheap for American buyers. Sales made in U.S. currency net more loonies in Canadian producers’ pockets. But on the grain side, the weak loonie isn’t fully offsetting the damage the strong U.S. currency has on grain prices. Canola has been falling almost in
lock step with soybeans and soy oil, even as the loonie weakened. Strong demand is needed to really get grain prices off these lows. Importers have not been aggressive because of the strong American dollar and because there was no point buying when the price would likely be cheaper the following week. There is no sign that the U.S. buck will ease off, but this week’s price bump from the harvest delay might shake buyers from their complacency. Let’s hope that triggers larger exports. Follow D’Arce McMillan on Twitter @darcemcmillan.
MEAT | FOOD SAFETY
Most consumers willing to accept irradiated food, says advocate
A SCIENTIFIC BREAKTHROUGH IN EVERY SEED When it comes to trait technology, you’re looking for leadership and innovation. Hyland™ Seeds is powered by Dow AgroSciences outstanding research and development. Balance that with exemplary customer service and you have a combination of performance and profitability that is pure genius.
Four products have waited 15 years for approval BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
Irradiated food should be a matter of consumer choice, says an advocate for the technology. Ruth Brinston has spent her career studying and promoting the benefits of radiation processing for food and sterilizing medical supplies. As president of Biovive Consulting, which specializes in irradiation technology, she believes using a controlled amount of energy called ionizing radiation to kill food pathogens could have huge benefits to society. It is a well established process that could kill all the E. coli 0157:H7 found in ground beef, but she understands some people will not accept it. “There is a core group of 10 or 12 percent that will never, ever accept irradiated food,” she told a Canadian Meat Council symposium on food safety held in Toronto Oct. 2-3. “Food has an emotional attachment for people,” she said. Irradiation is a cold process and does not make food radioactive. Research shows it does not alter food appearance, taste or texture. Groups such as the meat council and the Canadian Cattlemen’s Assoc i a t i o n h av e l o b b i e d t o g e t i t approved with discussions going back to 1998. The most recent round of submissions for approval went to Health Canada in the spring of 2013. The department said it was reviewing scientific information, and its website said it had completed reviewing four products. Mangoes, poultry, shrimp and ground beef were being considered, but no approval is forthcoming. “At this point we are not certain, and it may be that the timeline for approval, which already exceeds 15 years, will be further extended,” said Mark Klassen of the CC A in an email.
Farming Forward. hylandseeds.com
®™Trademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow 09/14-37905-1 WP
16
NEWS
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
EGG PRODUCTION RESEARCH | IMPACT OF MUSIC
Mellow music puts hens in the mood for laying Happy Egg Co. creates CD | Research shows that hens prefer to lay eggs in nests where classical music is playing BY ROBYN TOCKER SASKATOON NEWSROOM
A study conducted by researchers at the University of Bristol found that hens seem to prefer classical music when laying eggs. The study was commissioned on a whim, says Alex Sheehan from Happy Egg Co., just to see if there were any positive benefits. “We wanted to see if it would help them feel more comfortable or produce more eggs.” Isabelle Pettersson from the University of Bristol said the impact
music has on farm animals has been noted, but not specifically about hens and their musical tastes. “We decided to investigate this further and find out whether music has a positive impact on hens, whether they have a preference for certain types of music, and also how it affects their laying habits.” Classical, pop and rock were selected for the nest boxes, while the fourth had no music so researchers could see the hens’ behaviour and compare the reactions. The music was played at varying periods during the day. Researchers
visited the farm weekly over an eightweek period to collect data and ensure the investigation was running smoothly. The hens did not lay more eggs overall, but they made more frequent visits to nest boxes where classical music was playing . Results revealed six percent more eggs laid in those boxes compared to the nest boxes playing songs by One Direction. “Hens are sensitive to noise,” said Sheehan. “I don’t want to bash the artists, I like some of them, but classical music is just more soothing. It’s not as disruptive or loud.”
Added Pettersson: “We are keen to research in more detail about whether this finding continues to be seen over time and what exactly the hens were doing in these prolonged visits in the nest boxes playing music.” The results prompted Happy Egg Co. to make a CD just for hens. Top of the Flocks was composed by British composer Jack Ketch and has three tracks. The CD is available on SoundCloud to download, but it will mainly be used by Happy Egg Co. “We don’t think there are many egg producers that are doing this or are interested in using it, but we’ve put it
out there for anyone who is interested in hearing it.” Pettersson said the study wasn’t beneficial only for Happy Egg Co. or the hens. “The study has given us a good opportunity to study deeper around the behavioural patterns of hens in the presence of music. We are interested to distinguish what it is about classical music hens like and whether this result is similar across a variety of flocks.” To download the album, visit //bit. ly/1CPuh72 Tweet @RobynTocker and @westernproducer with music you would play for your hens.
SPRING FLOODS | HAYLAND
www.reinke.com
Pasture hasn’t recovered from Man. flooding BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU
EXPECT DURABILITY WHEN SUPERIOR ENGINEERING MEETS HIGH-STRENGTH STEEL . Yes, our pivots look a little different, but when you use high-strength steel that is 50% stronger, uncommon engineering solutions can be used that bring a lot of benefi t to your operation. In the end every Reinke pivot will not only span your field, it will stretch far into the future.
For more information, call or visit your friendly Reinke dealer, call toll-free at 866-365-7381 or visit Reinke.com.
Diane Riding was planning to check her hayland on the weekend, but just couldn’t bring herself to do it. “You get a little discouraged when you get out and look,” said Riding, a rancher who owns and rents land beside Lake Francis, which is attached to Lake Manitoba. “I kept telling myself that the weather might get nice again and we might get out there, but I think we’re done for the year.” As Riding spoke, 70 km-h winds whipped the lakes’ surface, causing surges that flooded land along the shoreline while taking water away from others. The lake is still at flood level after huge amounts were transferred into it via the Portage Diversion from the Assiniboine River. Massive amounts of water shift from one side to the other when sustained high winds hit the lake, exacerbating the situation for already flood-weary farmers. That’s what Riding has faced since 2011, when the diversion caused the first big flooding of the lake. The quarter section of pasture she owned on the lake as well a rented quarter were flooded and saturated that year and produced no hay. The crown land would normally have produced 200 to 250 bales. Production was OK on her owned pasture the following year, but the crown land yielded only 17 bales. Yields increased to 34 last year, and her neighbours joked that production might increase to 100 bales this year. Everything looked good until the diversion started pumping water into Lake Manitoba after the late Juneearly July rainstorm. Water levels rose and delayed and killed the vegetative growth on the pastures. “Now there’s nothing,” said Riding. Farther north along the shoreline, Siglunes farmer Arnthor Jonasson is luckier. The high winds are forcing the water south, away from his flooded pasture and hayland. However, it’s too late for grass to start growing on his wrecked land. “We’re done for the year,” he said.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
FAR LEFT: The iHunter app provides a satellite view of the wildlife management zones, this one showing those between Prince Albert and Saskatoon.
MOBILE APP | INFORMATION SHARING
Handy app keeps hunters in the know OUTDOOR PURSUITS
KIM QUINTIN
IHunter app maps your position and provides valuable information
management zone borders were, as well as share my updated location with my emergency contacts. The added layer of communication and security helped put everyone’s minds at ease. IHunter sells online for $5.99. One must choose the province for which you wish to purchase the app. For more information, visit www. ihunterapp.com.
LEFT: This page provides information on which whitetailed deer seasons are open or closed for wildlife management zone 52 as of Sept. 30.
Kim Quintin is a Saskatoon outdoor enthusiast and knife maker. He can be reached for column content suggestions at kim.quintin@producer.com.
T
he world continues to move onto smartphones, and the i Hu n t e r a p p i s o n e s u c h advancement that has impressed me. The app, which is available for Android, Apple and BlackBerry cellphones, is an excellent tool that helps a hunter understand wildlife management zones and hunting seasons and navigate and manage waypoints. IHunter updates its data annually from official government sources from British Columbia to New Brunswick. New provinces and states also seem to be in development. The app provides updated borders for wildlife zones and their individual hunting seasons. Hunters can easily plan their next trip with a few taps of their smartphone screen. IHunter can also be used in the field to help navigate, as long as the mobile device can obtain a GPS signal. It provides overhead mapping of your position, creates and manages waypoints and emails or texts your exact location to your contacts. Creating waypoints in the app is an excellent way to track camp and vehicle locations, game sign, bait and trail cameras and successful kills. The ability to share your location with your emergency contacts at any time is a good security measure in case of a problem in the field. The sunrise-sunset calculator is a useful feature because some hunting periods are regulated by when the sun will rise or set. Knowing to the minute when you can legally hunt maximizes your time in the field. Hunters who prefer to keep their secrets to themselves will be happy to know that iHunter does not share information without your permission. A marked waypoint remains private to your mobile device unless you decide share it. A GPS is not a replacement for a good compass and map, but it is a good tool to bring into the wilderness. A GPS enhanced by the iHunter app is even better. I tested the app during my whitetailed deer hunt last year and was impressed. It was easy to see where I was and where the local wildlife
The Next Generation. Soybean technology that changes everything. More beans per pod, more bushels per acre. 4HAT S WHAT YOU CAN EXPECT FROM 'ENUITY® Roundup Ready 2 Yield® SOYBEANS THE NEXT generation of the trait technology you trust for safe, simple, dependable weed control. 'ENUITY® Roundup Ready 2 Yield® soybeans are the natural choice for growers who want game-changing technology that will be the FOUNDATION FOR FUTURE 'ENUITY® innovations, such as dicamba-tolerant soybeans. Manitoba Pulse Field Grower Assoc. 2012 field trials: Genuity® Roundup Ready 2 Yield® soybean varieties outperform all Original Roundup Ready® varieties*
%
9.5
GENRR2Y OR1
yield advantage
103.8
Why Certified Seed makes sense: Certified seed means better quality seed, new marketing opportunities, and access to new varieties that are bred for success. It’s one of your farm’s best management tools.
Certified seed means†: s 6ARIETAL PURITY s 'UARANTEED QUALITY ASSURANCE s 4ODAY S MOST ADVANCED TRAITS s #LEAN SEED WITH MINIMAL WEED SEEDS and other matter s !SSURANCE TO GRAIN BUYERS THAT YOU RE delivering what you say
94.3
50
100
GENRR2Y = Genuity® Roundup Ready 2 Yield® OR1 = Original Roundup Ready Soybean * Source: Manitoba Pulse Grower Association 2012 field trials † http://www.seedgrowers.ca/pdfs/top_10.pdf
What’s your take? Join us at www.producer.com or follow us on social media.
17
Monsanto Company is a member of Excellence Through Stewardship® (ETS). Monsanto products are commercialized in accordance with ETS Product Launch Stewardship Guidance, and in compliance with Monsanto’s Policy for Commercialization of Biotechnology-Derived Plant Products in Commodity Crops. This product has been approved for import into key export markets with functioning regulatory systems. Any crop or material produced from this product can only be exported to, or used, processed or sold in countries where all necessary regulatory approvals have been granted. It is a violation of national and international law to move material containing biotech traits across boundaries into nations where import is not permitted. Growers should talk to their grain handler or product purchaser to confirm their buying position for this product. Excellence Through Stewardship® is a registered trademark of Excellence Through Stewardship. ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Roundup Ready® crops contain genes that confer tolerance to glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup® brand agricultural herbicides. Roundup® brand agricultural herbicides will kill crops that are not tolerant to glyphosate. Genuity and Design®, Genuity®, Roundup Ready 2 Yield®, Roundup Ready® and Roundup® are trademarks of Monsanto Technology LLC, Monsanto Canada, Inc. licensee. ©2014 Monsanto Canada Inc.
18
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
HUNTING SEASON | ACROSS THE PRAIRIES
Fewer hunting licences, shorter season as deer populations decline Weather, disease take toll | Chronic wasting disease reduced deer numbers in some areas of Alberta BY ROBYN TOCKER SASKATOON NEWSROOM
White-tailed and mule deer populations are declining across much of the Prairies. An estimated 49 percent decrease in white-tailed deer numbers in Sask-
atchewan has prompted the government to change the length of the hunting season, while mule deer numbers have dropped to 22,000 from 43,000 in 2001. Several severe winters in the province have been blamed for the dwindling numbers.
Hunting season dates vary between prairie provinces, depending on the area, type of deer and weapon being used. | FILE PHOTO Alberta’s deer populations remain normal, but the numbers vary by region. White-tailed deer populations remain lower north and east of Edmonton because of bad winters. As a result, the number of licenses in that area is different than in other zones. Chronic wasting disease has also affected deer populations in Alberta, particularly in parts of eastern Alberta, such as Cold Lake and Drumheller. Hunters in those regions are asked to submit deer heads to Alberta Fish and Wildlife for testing. Manitoba has also seen a whitetailed deer decrease because of harsh winters. Exact numbers aren’t known, but the estimate is around 100,000. An aerial survey will be conducted this winter to determine the exact status. The population decreases will affect this year’s hunting season. In Saskatchewan, the season dates, harvest structure, quotas and bag limits have been changed. Hunters may kill white-tailed deer of either sex, but the seasons for archery, crossbow, muzzleloader, shotgun and rifle hunting in the farmland zones have been shortened. Seasons in the provincial forest and forest fringe areas remain unchanged. Open seasons for antlerless whitetailed deer will be offered in the city zones of Saskatoon and Prince Albert for Saskatchewan residents. Mule deer quotas have been reduced. Regular archery hunting seasons continue in those zones with an either-sex quota greater than 50 licenses, but the season will be short-
ened to align it with the white-tailed deer archery season. Antlerless mule deer quotas have also been lowered. Zones with quotas of 50 or fewer will now have a bag limit of one antlerless deer to allow the opportunity for more hunters while maintaining a similar harvest. Zones with a quota of more than 50 will remain at a bag limit of two. Hunters who are selected for a zone with a bag limit of two will be able to buy both a first antlerless mule deer license and a second antlerless deer license for $19.62. Alberta’s hunting seasons remain similar to past seasons except for closures in the area north and east of Edmonton. The big changes this year are mainly focused around elk. There are draws for antlered and antlerless mule and white-tailed deer. There are also special draws for bow hunters, which are an increasing presence in Alberta. Approximately 11,470 special licenses are available for antlered mule deer and 16,968 for antlerless. Antlerless white-tailed deer have around 5,197 licenses available and 360 for antlered. In Manitoba, hunters can buy one only general deer license. The bag limit is one antlered deer. A resident may buy only one license, which is valid during the archery, muzzleloader, shotgun and rifle seasons. Second and third deer licenses are available in certain areas. After the license is used for its one deer, the hunter can go hunting again only in a two-person hunting party.
MULE DEER OR WHITE-TAILED? • A mule deer’s rump has a very large patch of white, partly covered by a thin, white tail with a black tip. • White-tailed deer have a narrow white patch on the rump. They alert others of danger by raising their tails so their thick, dark tail acts as a warning flag. The limit had previously been for parties of four, but this is no longer considered possible because of the population drop. Hunting season dates for all three provinces vary depending on the zone, type of deer and weapon. In Saskatchewan, the first official date was Sept. 1 for both white-tailed and mule deer. White-tailed hunting season ends Dec. 2 and mule deer can be hunted until Dec. 7. Alberta’s start date was Sept. 17 and goes until late November with a few seasons going until Dec. 20. The earliest start date for Manitoba was Aug. 25 for white-tailed deer. The final date for hunting is Dec. 21. A second deer season lasts only until Dec. 1 and is only available in some areas where the government is trying to reduce deer numbers. A third deer season is only for three zones with the bag limit being one antlerless deer. It ends Dec. 21 and is mainly being done in areas where the government is trying to increase the moose population. For more information, visit each province’s fish and wildlife websites.
CLIMATE CHANGE | GREENHOUSE GAS
California drought linked to greenhouse gases When you recycle used oil, filters and antifreeze you keep our water, my water safe. Used antifreeze is toxic and just one litre of used oil can contaminate one million litres of water. And when you recycle their containers, plus DEF containers, you keep tonnes of unwanted waste out of our backyards and landfills. So I thank you, my wife and two thousand kids thank you, as does Mother Nature.
usedoilrecyclingsk.com Saskatchewan Association for Resource Recovery Corp.
SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (Reuters) — California’s catastrophic drought has most likely been made worse by man-made climate change, according to a report released by Stanford University. However, scientists are still hesitant to fully blame the lack of rain on climate change. The research, published in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society as part of a collection of reports on extreme weather events last year, is one of the most comprehensive studies linking climate change and California’s ongoing drought, which has caused billions of dollars in economic damage. The report found that high-pressure ridges like the one that stubbornly parked itself over the Pacific Ocean for the past two winters and blocked storms from hitting California, are much more likely to form in
the presence of man-made greenhouse gases. The ridge, dubbed the Ridiculously Resilient Ridge by researchers, or “Triple R,” parched the state during the past two rainy seasons. “You can visualize it as a fairly large boulder in a small stream,” said Daniel Swain, a lead author on the report, which said the phenomenon has caused storms to bypass not only California but also Oregon and Washington, pushing rain as far north as the Arctic Circle. Using climate model simulations, researchers found “Triple-R” events are three times more likely to occur today than in preindustrial climates. Scientists also determined that severe droughts could become more frequent as long as high levels of greenhouse gases remain. “California is more likely to see these episodes in the near term,” said
environmental scientist Noah Diffenbaugh, who led the study. Despite the findings, Thomas Peterson, principal scientist at National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Climactic Data Center and one of the report’s editors, said it is still hard to definitively link rainfall to climate change. “There is so much variability in rainfall,” Peterson said. “Finding a signal and attributing how much of the signal is climate change is difficult.” Marty Hoerling, a NOAA research meteorologist, said atmospheric pressure has increased everywhere because of global warming, so systems need to be studied in that context. “It’s not the pressure, per se, that determines which way the storms will move,” he said. “But it’s the difference of how the pressure changes from one location relative to another.”
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
FARMLIVING
19
BENEFITS OF SMALL BULLS A Saskatchewan family believes their small rodeo bulls give younger riders the confidence they need to stay in the sport. | Page 23
FARM LIVING EDITOR: KAREN MORRISON | Ph: 306-665-3585 F: 306-934-2401 | E-MAIL: KAREN.MORRISON@PRODUCER.COM
UKRAINIAN CHURCHES | ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
Parishioners don paint for heavenly results Dedicated volunteers | The 75-year-old Ukrainian church in Vilna, Alta., was one of three in the area given a facelift BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU
VILNA, Alta. — The Vilna Ukrainian Catholic Church is getting a fresh coat of paint for its 75th birthday. The 19 parishioners, with only five living near this Alberta village, have pooled their money and are seeking donations to help pay the $17,000 painting bill that they hope will keep the church from falling into disrepair. Parishioner Alec Barabash, 73, said the anniversary of the church was a good excuse to paint the faded exterior. “The 75th is coming up so we figured we better do something about it,” said Barabash. Several years ago, the parishioners hired a contractor to re-side the church. The contractor tacked wide boards over the narrow cedar siding. The wide boards disqualified the church from being designated as a heritage building and access to grants to help pay for the repairs. Unknown to the parishioners, the boards were only primed and quickly began to weather. By the time the parishioners noticed, the contractor had disappeared. Painter Toby Neuendorf of Wetaskiwin, Alta., said the siding is in remarkable shape for never having been painted. The boards must be scraped, repaired, primed and painted, including the metal domed roof, a common architectural feature of Ukrainian churches. “With only five parishioners, keeping up the church is a whole financial burden,” said Neuendorf. Built in 1939, the church was originally the Vilna Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church and later became the Vilna Ukrainian Catholic Church. It’s one of three active and two closed churches in Vilna, population 290. Barabash said there are five services held each year at the church. There hasn’t been a wedding for some time, but there is the occasional baptism, he said. A service to mark the anniversary will be held in the church Oct. 25 with a service at 10 a.m. and a banquet at nearby Stry Catholic Hall. Neuendorf has spent several weeks in the area painting the Vilna church, the Ukrainian Catholic Church and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in nearby Spedden, Alta.
“These parishioners must be so dedicated,” said Neuendorf. Fred Matwychuk of Spedden said they are also trying to fix up their church. Some windows and trim have not been painted since it was built. The original church was built in 1941
and burned in 1958, likely from candles burning in the church. Construction of the existing church began in 1958 and was completed in 1962. “We’re sprucing it up so it looks a little better,” said Matwychuk. Services are held about 10 times a year, he said.
TOP: Dedicated volunteers recently painted the Ukrainian Catholic Church in Spedden, Alta. FAR LEFT: : Toby Neuendorf of Wetaskiwin, Alta., reaches his roller out of the lift to paint the dome. LEFT: Alec Barabash, of Vilna, Alta., paints the steps on the Vilna Ukrainian Catholic Church for 75th anniversary celebrations scheduled for Oct. 25. ABOVE: Jacqueline Wachell of Penticton, B.C., scrapes paint from the Vilna church. | MARY MACARTHUR PHOTOS
20
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FARM LIVING
THANKSGIVING MENU | SEASONAL PRODUCE
Simple dishes allow family time TEAM RESOURCES
JODIE MIROSOVSKY, BSHEc
I
t is time to pack away the flip flops and bring out the long sleeves. The crisp air and early vibrant sunsets followed by bright starlit nights are all signs of the seasonal transition. I love the sweet smell of freshly fall-
en poplar leaves. It’s strangely invigorating and makes me excited to take my daily stroll. We forget how magical and carefree this time of year can be. Just when you think that the yard cleanup is done — lawnmower put away and leaves are all piled — and the kids of all ages stop whatever they’re doing to jump in or at least throw some leaves in the air. This pile provides the most inexpensive autumn entertainment. It’s the power of play with no wi-fi required. It is also the season of thanksgiving, a time for relaxed visits with family and friends, which include reminiscence, laughter and of course warm
,-* *! ! +, 7KH IXWXUH RI \RXU EXVLQHVV GHVHUYHV D SURIHVVLRQDO ΖV \RXU DGYLVRU D 3URIHVVLRQDO $JURORJLVW 3$J " %\ 6DVNDWFKHZDQ ODZ RQO\ D 3$J FDQ SUDFWLFH DJURORJ\
7DZQD 6HDUOH 3$J (QYLURQPHQWDO 6FLHQWLVW $0(& (QYLURQPHQW ΖQIUDVWUXFWXUH 7DZQD LV D SURIHVVLRQDO DJURORJLVW DQG HQYLURQPHQWDO VFLHQWLVW ZRUNLQJ LQ WKH HQHUJ\ PLQLQJ DQG LQGXVWULDO VHFWRUV DFURVV 6DVNDWFKHZDQ DQG $OEHUWD Ȋ:RUNLQJ DW $0(& DV D SURIHVVLRQDO DJURORJLVW 3$J KDV DOORZHG PH WR ZRUN LQ VXFK GLYHUVH DUHDV DV SODQW ULSDULDQ DQG VRLO DVVHVVPHQWV PLJUDWRU\ ELUG VXUYH\V ȴVK VDOYDJHV DQG PDMRU HDUWKZRUNV VXFK DV JUDYHO SLW UHFODPDWLRQ ȋ 7DZQD ZDV ERUQ LQ :LQQLSHJ DQG UDLVHG LQ $OEHUWD DQG WKH 1RUWKZHVW 7HUULWRULHV 6KH LV D JUDGXDWH IURP WKH )DFXOW\ RI $JULFXOWXUH /LIH DQG (QYLURQPHQWDO 6FLHQFHV DW WKH 8QLYHUVLW\ RI $OEHUWD ZKHUH EHFRPLQJ D SURIHVVLRQDO DJURORJLVW ZDV DOZD\V KLJKO\ HQFRXUDJHG E\ WKH SURIHVVRUV
:DUUHQ .DHGLQJ 3$J :DJRQ :KHHO 6HHG &RUS &KXUFKEULGJH 6.
:DUUHQ KDV ZRUNHG LQ WKH DJULFXOWXUH VHFWRU IRU QHDUO\ \HDUV LQ ERWK LQGXVWU\ DQG DV RZQHU RSHUDWRU RI D ODUJH SHGLJUHHG VHHG EXVLQHVV +H KDV EHHQ LQYROYHG LQ PDQ\ ORFDO DQG SURYLQFLDO RUJDQL]DWLRQV SURYLGLQJ OHDGHUVKLS LQ SROLF\ DQG JRYHUQDQFH Č&#x160;$V D IDUPHU DQG SHGLJUHHG VHHG JURZHU EHLQJ UHJLVWHUHG DV D SURIHVVLRQDO DJURORJLVW 3$J KDV EHHQ LPSRUWDQW DV LW GHPRQVWUDWHV SURIHVVLRQDOLVP DQG LQWHJULW\ WR WKH JHQHUDO SXEOLF Č&#x2039; Î&#x2013;Q :DUUHQ DQG KLV ZLIH &DUOD ZHUH WKH FR ZLQQHUV RI &DQDGDČ&#x2021;V 2XWVWDQGLQJ <RXQJ )DUPHUV 6LQFH UHWLULQJ IURP WKH SHGLJUHHG VHHG EXVLQHVV :DUUHQ KDV WDNHQ WKH UROH RI ([HFXWLYH 'LUHFWRU RI WKH 6DVNDWFKHZDQ )DUP 6WHZDUGVKLS $VVRFLDWLRQ
ZZZ VLD VN FD Č´QG D PHPEHU $JURORJLVWV _ 4XDOLČ´HG &RPPLWWHG WR (WKLFV 5HJXODWHG 3URIHVVLRQDO
6XSSRUWHG E\
nutritious comfort foods that use seasonal fruits and vegetables. The menu can be roasted in the oven all at once to simplify meal preparation.
MAPLE ROASTED CHICKEN This is a flavourful recipe. You could also use the sauce to glaze a whole chicken or turkey for roasting. 1/2 c. 1 can 6 1/2 tsp.
maple syrup 125 mL cranberry sauce, 398 mL chicken breasts salt 2 mL dash of pepper to taste
Preheat oven to 350 F(180 C). Combine syrup and cranberry sauce in a small bowl and set aside. Place chicken breasts into nine X 13 inch (22 X 33 cm) oiled baking dish. Season with salt and pepper. Pour sauce over chicken. Cover and bake for 50 to 60 minutes. Serves four to six. Source: www.tasteofhome.com.
PAN ROASTED AUTUMN VEGETABLES 4 medium potatoes, peeled and thinly sliced 4 parsnips, sliced 4 carrots, sliced 1 medium onion, sliced 1 c. chopped peppers 250 mL in red, yellow or orange, sliced 4 tbsp. olive or vegetable 60 mL oil salt, pepper and seasoning salt to taste Place potatoes, carrots, parsnips and onion in a 15 x 10 baking dish. Drizzle the oil over the vegetables, mix thoroughly and cover. Roast in the oven for one hour at 350 F (180 C) or until potatoes are tender. Top with chopped dill or parsley if desired. Serves six. Note: Use your favourite vinaigrette salad dressing, such as Italian or Greek, to coat the vegetables in place of the oil if desired.
VEGETABLE ROTINI SALAD 1/2 pkg. rotini pasta, 450 g cooked, drained and cooled 1 c. feta cheese 250 mL 1 c. halved or whole 250 mL cherry tomatoes, depending on the size 1 c. peeled and 250 mL chopped cucumbers 1/2 c.-3/4 c. Greek 125 mL-175 mL vinaigrette dressing 1/4 c. finely chopped 60 mL red onions Combine ingredients in a large sealable bowl and refrigerate for at least one hour or until chilled. Makes eight 1 cup (250 mL) servings. Can be made ahead of time. Source: Adapted from Kraft Canada.
ORANGE GLAZED BANANA CAKE This recipe is great for breakfast or coffee break. It is delectable enough to be served as a dessert with fresh fruit. The orange glaze gives the traditional banana cake a refreshing twist.
ZZZ SURGXFHU FRP
3 1 1/2 c. 1 tsp. 2
mashed bananas sugar vanilla eggs
375 mL 5 mL
Treat guests this Thanksgiving to banana cake or zucchini cookies shown with fruit, seeds and nuts. | JODIE MIROSOVSKY PHOTO 1/2 c. oil 125 mL 1/4 c. plus 1 tbsp. buttermilk 75 mL 1 tsp. baking soda 5 mL 1 tsp. baking powder 5 mL 1/4 tsp. salt 1 mL 1 3/4 c. flour 425 mL 2 tbsp. hemp seed or 30 mL, chia seed or a combination of both for a nutty flavour, optional Preheat oven to 350 F (180 C) and grease and flour the baking pan. Combine bananas, sugar, vanilla, eggs, oil and buttermilk in a large mixing bowl. Add the dry ingredients and mix well until the batter is quite smooth. Pour into a bundt pan and bake for 50 to 60 minutes or until a toothpick comes out clean. Cool remove from the pan. The addition of seeds are a source of omega 3, protein and fibre. They are available at health food stores and grocery stores. Glaze: Combine one cup (250 mL) of icing sugar with enough orange juice to make a pourable glaze. Spoon over the cake.
FRUIT COCKTAIL CRUMBLE This is a reborn recipe that was from my grandmotherâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s recipe for apple crumble. This year while switching to a new refrigerator we decided to make a dessert from the variety of produce in the fruit drawer. The blend of so many flavours was a hit, and each time you make the dessert it will be a unique taste. This nutritious dessert is packed with antioxidant berries and fibre rich tree fruits. 6 c. sliced seasonal 1.5 L fruit of your choice (we enjoyed a combination of concord grapes, purple plums, rhubarb, peaches, crab apples and blueberries 1 c. sugar 250 mL 1 tbsp. flour 15 mL sprinkle of cinnamon squeeze of lemon or orange juice Prepare fruit and arrange in a nine X 13 inch (22 X 33 cm) baking pan or similar sized casserole dish. Sprinkle cinnamon over top and a squeeze of fresh lemon or orange juice. Preheat oven to 325 F (160 C) Topping Combine 1/ 2 c. (125 mL) each of brown sugar, oats, flour and softened butter until crumbly. Spread over fruit mixture and gently press down to pack. Bake for approximately 45 minutes and serve warm with ice or whipped cream.
SPICED ZUCCHINI COOKIES Try these moist and spicy cookies that use up abundant zucchini. 1/2 c. butter or 125 mL margarine, softened 1 c. sugar 250 mL 1 egg 1 c. zucchini, finely 250 mL grated 2 c. flour 500 mL 1 tsp. baking soda 5 mL 1/2 tsp. salt 2 mL 1 tsp. ground cinnamon 5 mL 1/2 tsp. ground cloves 2 mL 1 c. raisins 250 mL Cream together the margarine and sugar in a medium bowl until smooth. Beat in the egg and then stir in the zucchini. Combine the flour, baking soda, salt and cinnamon and stir into the zucchini mixture. Mix in raisins. Cover dough and chill for at least one hour or overnight. Preheat oven to 375 F (190 C). Grease cookie sheets. Drop dough by teaspoonfuls onto the prepared cookie sheet. Bake for eight to 10 minutes until slightly golden. Cool and remove to wire racks to cool completely. Frost with a sugar glaze or cream cheese icing if desired. You can also add a couple of tablespoons of seeds or ground nuts to this batter to make a small change for added nutrition. Source: www.allrecipes.com. Jodie Mirosovsky is a home economist from Rosetown, Sask., and a member of Team Resources. Contact: team@producer.com.
Saved & savoured
Have any of your favourite recipes come from the pages of The Western Producer? Email team@producer.com or mail us at TEAM Resources, Box 2500, Saskatoon, Sask., S7K 2C4 to tell us your best-loved WP recipe and if possible, the date the recipe was published. We will make a draw from all entries we receive by Dec. 1 and award a gift to one lucky winner.
FARM LIVING PRE-DIABETES | TREATMENT
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
PERFECTIONIST | ATTITUDE
Borderline Perfectionism based on illusion, excellence on reality A: SPEAKING OF LIFE diabetes HEALTH CLINIC JACKLIN ANDREWS, BA, MSW
CLARE ROWSON, MD
Q:
What is borderline diabetes? Should I be concerned? I am slightly overweight for my height, but most people would not consider me fat. The doctor says I do not need to take pills or insulin as long as I watch my diet and lose some weight. I walk the dog every day, but I do have high blood pressure controlled with pills and diabetes does run in my family. I am 55 years old and female.
Q:
My mother was a perfectionist, my grandmother was a perfectionist and I am a perfectionist. We seem to have some kind of genetic code running through our family. Are we and our offspring stuck here or can we do something about it to change the cycle powering its way through our entire family?
A:
Clare Rowson is a retired medical doctor in Belleville, Ont. Contact: health@producer.com.
Perfectionism is not generally recognized as an inherited trait. It is a learned phenomenon. If it runs in the women in the family, it means they are terrific teachers. Unfortunately, they are teaching the wrong things. What could be inherited is a propensity toward anxiety. All of us have our moments of anxiety, but some people seem to live in anxiety. They are so worried about what might happen in the future they are unable to appreciate whatever is going on in the present. Some people choose to resolve anxiety by trying to make the world perfect, removing any chance for surprises or the unexpected. That is impossible. We survive by struggling
through catastrophes, not by eliminating them. If members of your family are driven toward perfectionism because of anxiety, it should be tackled head on. Talk to your physician about appropriate medication and referrals to a mental health counsellor. That may help resolve the cycle in which your family appears to be caught. Before you get too concerned, be sure that it is perfectionism you are dealing with. Some people strive for excellence. Others struggle for perfectionism. They are not the same. People who are reaching for excellence have clear goals. Their goals might be high but they are at least concrete. People in search of perfectionism
do not have the same clarity guiding them. Perfection is an illusion. We are imperfect beings living in an imperfect world. To suggest that you are struggling to build a perfect world is to suggest that you do not have realistic or reasonable goals. If indeed you are a perfectionist, one suggestion is to write out some realistic, clearly defined goals for yourself. You might want to include your mom and grandmother in this exercise and to make some real steps forward in removing perfectionism from your family.
Jacklin Andrews is a family counsellor from Saskatchewan. Contact: jandrews@ producer.com.
CHANGE THE WAY YOU LOOK FOR HIGHER YIELDS. With up to 60% of your yield dependent on soil fertility, invest wisely in your farm’s productivity. Trust the leader in balanced crop nutrition. With over a decade of results, MicroEssentials® by The Mosaic Company, is proven to increase yield compared to traditional fertilizer.
©20 ©20 014 14 The e Mosaic Comp o any. All rig ghts re reser ser erved ved ed d. Micr icroEs oEsssen e ttia als iss a regi egiste gisste te ered re ed tr e trade rade d mar arrk of The ark he Mo Mos M o aic aiic Co Comp mpa p ny. y MES-0 ME ES S-0 073 733 7 3
Borderline diabetes or prediabetes, as it is known in the medical world, is almost always a precursor to the development of Type 2 diabetes. It is defined by higher than normal blood sugar levels, but not quite high enough to be considered full-blown diabetes. Your fasting blood sugar test results are probably between 6.1 to 6.9 mmol/L, your oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) result is between 7.8 to 11.0 mmol/L two hours after the beginning of the test or your hemoglobin A1c is six to 6.4 percent. Most cases of pre-diabetes are a result of obesity, a condition becoming increasingly common in Canada and the U.S. Recent estimates indicate that as many as one in three British people may have this problem. In your case, heredity may be the main factor, compounded by being slightly overweight for your height. Hypertension is also a risk factor. Are you taking cholesterol lowering medications? Higher dosages of drugs such as Lipitor or Crestor can increase a person’s risk of diabetes. You are diagnosed as having fullblown diabetes if your fasting blood sugar levels are higher than seven mmol/L on two consecutive occasions and if you also have symptoms of the disease. You may also have a random,not fasting, blood glucose level of more than 11 mmol/L twice in a row. The common symptoms of diabetes are unexplained weight loss, being thirsty all the time, urinating frequently and being prone to infections affecting skin or bladder infections. You may also have blurred vision. Despite these signs and symptoms, many people are unaware that they may have diabetes and it is only discovered on a routine checkup. Treatment of pre-diabetes aims to prevent it from becoming Type 2 diabetes while lowering your risk of an associated heart attack and stroke. It involves eating healthy foods, losing five to 10 percent of your current weight and exercising regularly. Keep a food diary so that you are aware of exactly how much you are eating and drinking. For most people, cutting out 500 calories a day will lead to a weight loss of one pound each week.
21
GET YOUR HEAD IN THE DIRT AT MICROESSENTIALS.COM
22
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FARM LIVING
FALL CLEANUP | WATERING, MAINTENANCE
Mulch, styrofoam protect plants from winter kill, disease IN THE COUNTRY GARDEN
ALBERT PARSONS
O
ctober is here so itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s time to put the garden to bed for the long winter ahead. Besides last minute watering, weeding and cleanup and storing tools and accessories, attention must be given to adequately protect plants so that they come through the winter well. It is a good idea to protect both hardy plants and more tender specimens. Although many gardeners clean off their perennial borders and cut back hardy roses in the fall, if you have experienced a lot of winter kill in the past, you might consider postponing this task until spring. The old foliage will add protection to the plant roots and catch snow to ensure good snow cover. The old stems will also trap leaves as they blow about in the fall, adding more protection. Some gardeners mulch their perennial borders with six centimetres of dead leaves each fall. Just before freeze-up, water perennials, trees and shrubs well. Plants will survive the winter better if their
root balls are moist instead of dry. This is particularly important for evergreens, which continue to transpire moisture all winter and need a good supply of moisture at their roots. Try to add mulches after you water, not before, because wet mulch has far less insulating value than dry mulch. Mulches often can be kept dry by applying them late enough in the fall that precipitation falls as snow rather than rain. Early snow, however, often melts on a sunny autumn day and soaks the mulch. Mulches such as dry leaves and peat moss can be kept dry by covering them with a waterproof cover such as plastic or Styrofoam. When applying the cover, ensure that there is some air circulation by leaving a gap around the bottom to let air in but keep rain out. Tea roses, hydrangeas and other tender plants can be covered with mulch and then Styrofoam cones. They offer insulating value and keep the mulch inside them dry. Before applying mulch, many gardeners pour dry soil over the plants. Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t make the mistake of simply raking surrounding soil up onto the plants as this will decrease the soil cover over the plantsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; roots and lessen their chance of survival. If you have evergreen shrubs with a southern exposure or planted against a wall that reflects a lot of sunlight, consider erecting burlap barriers to block the rays of the sun.
Compost is spread and the vegetable garden is ready for tilling. The top growth on the perennial bed will be left until spring. Oriental lilies will be covered with soil and leaves closer to freeze-up. | ALBERT PARSON PHOTOS The burlap should be fastened securely to sturdy stakes and not touch the foliage. Make sure the barriers are high enough to protect the tops of the shrubs from the sunâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s rays. Keep them in place until after the snow has melted and the soil has thawed. To protect my Oriental lilies, which are planted in a square patch to facilitate easy protection, I put on
about 15 centimetres of dry soil (I use compost) and then I cover that with about 40 cm of dry leaves. Over this, I place a piece of heavy plastic tied down around the edge to allow some air to get under it to prevent moisture buildup. Last year, I streamlined the process by putting the leaves inside a large plastic mattress bag and placing the bag on top of the compost.
I guessed enough air could get under the bag to prevent moisture buildup. You too will devise methods of protecting your plants that are both simple and effective, but be sure to do this job before freeze-up and before the snow comes to stay. Albert Parsons has a diploma in horticulture from the University of Guelph and maintains a flourishing garden at Minnedosa, Man. Contact: countrygarden@producer.com.
7KH 3URFHVV LV 6LPSOH ,I \RX VHOO ORFDO IRRG
*R WR ZZZ VDVNIRRGĂ&#x20AC; QG FRP DQG FUHDWH D SURĂ&#x20AC; OH E\ KLWWLQJ ÂśVLJQ XS¡ DW WKH WRS RI WKH VFUHHQ $IWHU \RX KDYH VHW XS D SURĂ&#x20AC; OH \RX FDQ SRVW DOO RI \RXU SURGXFWV DQG SLFWXUHV RI WKH SURGXFWV WKDW \RX KDYH IRU VDOH XVLQJ LQGLYLGXDO DGV
,I \RX DUH ORRNLQJ IRU ORFDO IRRG
*R WR ZZZ VDVNIRRGĂ&#x20AC; QG FRP DQG EURZVH WKH PDQ\ FDWHJRULHV DQG OLVWLQJV RI ORFDOO\ SURGXFHG IRRG 7KLV UHVRXUFH DOORZV DFFHVV WR PDQ\ TXDOLW\ HYHU\GD\ IRRGV DQG VSHFLDOW\ SURGXFWV DOO LQ RQH SODFH
6DVNDWFKHZDQ IDUPHUV JURZ JUHDW SURGXFWV DQG ZH EHOLHYH HYHU\RQH VKRXOG NQRZ LW
7KDQNV WR
FARM LIVING
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
23
Mickey Ireland of Stormy Acres Ranch near Swanson, Sask., says it is important to match a rider’s experience with the quality of bull so the rider doesn’t get discouraged. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTOS Mickey,left, Cassidy, Brody and Shelley watch as a miniature bull is trained using a bucking dummy attached to its back.
ON FARM | MINIATURES
Farm’s small bulls give new riders stepping stone Confidence builder | Inexperienced bull riders gain skills on miniature bulls before moving up to bigger animals BY WILLIAM DEKAY SASKATOON NEWSROOM
SWANSON, Sask. — Going small has been a going concern for Mickey and Shelley Ireland. For more than eight years, the husband and wife team have contracted their miniature bucking bulls at rodeo events throughout Western Canada. Their goal is to help fill what they see as a growing void at amateur rodeos: smaller bulls for young bull riders build their skills and confidence. The Irelands say too often many junior riders’ only choice has been the much heavier, more powerful bred-to-buck rank bulls. “It’s getting on the stock to suit the rider, not just running whatever’s in the chute underneath him and lets hope this kid makes out good,” said Shelley. At the Stormy Acre Ranch Mini Cattle Co. near Swanson, they carefully breed miniature bucking stock that now number 125 animals. They also have a herd of miniature commercial cattle along with regular commercial cattle and bucking stock. As well, Mickey operates his own commercial truck hauling business and Shelley drives school bus in Delisle. Their children are Levi, 25, Lindsey, 22, Santana, 21, Shayanne, 20, Cassidy, 6 and Brody, 4. The couple’s main concern is trying to match the rider’s level of experience to the quality of bull so that young riders want to continue to perform another day, even after being bucked off. “If they don’t learn from the start to ride properly on the smaller stuff that is the weaker calibre, then we’re Xing all these kids out. Your bull riders are going to diminish immensely,” said Shelley. Added Mickey: “You don’t want to take it out of these guys (bull riders), and this is what’s happening. There’s no control at that end. They’re (contractors) throwing them on what they shouldn’t be getting on.”
Mickey said there’s a growing awareness in the industry about the lack of up-and-coming riders to take on the high quality bulls. Like other sports, advancing as a bull rider to tougher stock needs to be gradual. “The stock is providing the stepping stone to the next level,” he said. Mickey should know, having spent many years riding bulls in the United States and Canada with the Professional Rodeo Cowboy Association. He said there were many years when he competed in more than 100 rodeos a year before retiring at 40. “I wanted to go until I was 50, that was my goal. Didn’t quite make it. Part of it was the body. I was tired of being sore. I went 25 years of being sore,” he said. The Irelands met at rodeos in Alberta and Saskatchewan as teenagers. Mickey rode steers while Shelley barrel raced. Her grandfather, Richard Smith, entertained for many years as a rodeo clown, while her father, Corey Smith of High Five Rodeo, managed stock. “She was the contractor’s daughter,” Mickey said. “Rodeos back then used to be a family thing. We rode every weekend.” Added Shelley: “That’s all we’ve ever known.” Mickey saw his first miniature bull at a PBR rodeo in Billings, Montana, in 2003 “When I saw that, I thought that was just the coolest thing. There were about half a dozen kids that came out and got on these things during intermission. The crowd loved it,” he said. “The original thought in my mind was: ‘man, if I could have had these when I was young.’ ” Building skills and self-confidence for the next generation of bull riders comes with its own rewards. The Irelands were recently contracted by Cliff Willick for a Kakeyow Cowboys Rodeo Association event in Martensville, Sask. They took 24 miniature bulls. “We had one fellow this weekend. He got bucked off twice and he come to me afterwards and said, ‘even though I got bucked off, that was the
best feeling in the world because I was getting on stuff that I know I should be able to ride,’ ” said Shelley. “Another parent came up to me. Their son actually rides CCA (Cana-
dian Cowboy Association). He has been getting thrown off. He hasn’t made the (eight second) whistle and they came up to me and gave me a big hug and said, ‘thank you, that was his
confidence builder.’ That’s the satisfaction of it for us. It’s not about the money. It’s seeing the positive feedback that you get from those kids and those parents.”
FCC Drive Away Hunger In Saskatchewan, more than 24,000 people use a food bank every month. Help reduce hunger in your community. Bring a food or cash donation to your local FCC office by October 17, or watch for us in your community. October 15: Saskatoon October 16: Warman, Osler, Hague, Rosthern Want to help fill empty plates in your community? Call 1-855-427-6207 or visit FCCDriveAwayHunger.ca.
@FCCagriculture #DriveAwayHunger
Western Producer is a proud partner of FCC Drive Away Hunger
24
NEWS
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
CROP REPORT ALL CONDITIONS AS OF OCT. 3. VISIT WWW.PRODUCER.COM REGULARLY FOR UPDATED CROP REPORTS
MANITOBA SOUTHWEST Above normal temperatures during the week allowed most cereal crops to reach dry levels. The cereal harvest is 50 to 60 percent complete. Quality to date is generally good. There are some reports of mildew and sprouting issues. Yields continue to be at or above long-term averages. Some canola yields report 15 to 20 bushels per acre. Overall, cereal and canola harvest
is estimated to be 45 to 50 percent complete. Earlier frost resulted in leaf burn and leaf drop in soybeans. Most is at full maturity with 90 to 95 percent brown pod development. Corn is showing the effects of frost as leaves are drying. Sunflowers are maturing. Most of the second cut of alfalfa is harvested. NORTHWEST Favourable weather let producers make good harvest progress. A few
Imported by Manulift EMI: The only trusted reference in telehandler technology
showers resulted in wet field conditions in localized areas. Approximately 95 percent of the wheat crop is mature. Wheat harvest is averaging 65 percent complete. Good wheat yields and average quality are reported. Roughly 80 percent of the canola crop is swathed and 30 to 35 percent is combined. Canola yields are 20 to 30 bu. per acre. Quality is good. Soybean and flax areas are still waiting a couple more weeks for harvest to begin. Field pea crops are completely harvested with average yields and good quality reported. Hay harvest is on hold. Green feed was harvested and most cattle are still on pastures. CENTRAL Excellent harvest progress was made, thanks to warmer temperatures. Most of the region saw five to 10 millimeters of rain. Harvest is 70 to 80 percent complete. Most cereals are harvested and are dry. Cereal grain quality has declined. Yields are above average. Canola is swathed or left standing for straight-cutting. Yields are 40 to 45 bu. per acre. Most of the canola is harvested with good yield and quality reported. Average soybean yields are in the mid to high 30 bu. per acre. Edible bean harvest continues. Desiccation of sunflowers has started. Potato yields and quality are good.
PANORAMIC 55.9 CS HD
PANORAMIC 28.8 PLUS
MULTIFARMER 30.6 CLASSIC2
:
2XU H[SHUWLVH \RXU SURĂ&#x20AC;WV Increase your productivity by up to 40% %HVW IXHO HIĂ&#x20AC;FLHQF\ RI WKH LQGXVWU\ Capacity: up to 26,000 lb and 165 hp
MERLO: UNDISPUTED WORLDWIDE LEADER IN TELEHANDLERS QUEBEC Manulift Quebec City, 418-651-5441 Montreal, 450-652-5550 Les Ă&#x2030;quipements R.M. Nadeau Sherbrooke, 819-846-6828 Les Entreprises Antonio Laporte & Fils Inc. Notre-Dame-des-Prairies, 450-756-1779 Centre Kubota des Laurentides Mirabel, 450-434-0000 NEW BRUNSWICK Valley Sales & Service Ltd. St-AndrĂŠ, 506-473-3439 ONTARIO Manulift Toronto, 905-315-8881
Corbeil Equipment Ltd. Curran, 1-855-8227771 Delta Power Equipment Essex, 519-776-7374 Exeter, 519-235-2121 Forest, 519-786-5335 Seaforth, 519-527-0120 Watford, 519-849-2744 Stoltz Sales and Service Listowel, 519-291-2151 Mildmay, 519-367-2672 Elmira, 519-669-1561 GJâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Farm Equipment Inc. Burgessville, 519-424-9374 Anderson Equipment Sales Belleville, 613-969-6246 Picton, 613-476-6597
Earth Power Tractors & Equipment Meaford, 519-538-1660 Owen Sound, 519-376-5880 Stayner, 705-428-3132 MANITOBA Bobcat of Central Manitoba Ltd. Steinbach, 204-326-4907 Winnipeg, 204-633-1058 SASKATCHEWAN E. Bourassa & Sons Assiniboia, 306-642-3826 Estevan, 306-634-9444 Pangman, 306-442-2033 Radville, 306-869-2277 Weyburn, 306-842-6626 Meadow Power & Equipment Ltd. Meadow Lake, 306-236-4455
ALBERTA Manulift Calgary, 403-936-8668 Nieboer Farm Supplies Nobleford, 403-824-3404 Edmonton Kubota Edmonton, 780-443-3800 Kubota Country Fairview, 780-835-5515 Tingleyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Harvest Center Lloydminster, 780-875-8010 Vegreville, 780-632-3246 BRITISH COLUMBIA Meinen Brothers Agri Services Agassiz, 604-796-3820
Grain corn yields are expected to be average to below average. Second and third cut hay is still being harvested. Quality has been affected by the rainy weather. EASTERN The unseasonably warm weather allowed producers to make good harvest progress. Eight to 15 mm of rain halted progress. Most spring cereals are finished. Spring wheat yields are 60 to 80 bu. per acre and canola is 30 to 50 bu. per acre. Early soybean yields are reported in the 25 to 35 bu. per acre range. Corn is progressing with black layer forming. Sunflowers are in the R7 stage with the back of the head starting to yellow. Earlier seeded winter wheat ranges from emergence to the first leaf stage. Seventy-five percent of producers are done baling second cut grass hay. Cattle are grazing on hay fields. Availability of water is rated at 100 percent adequate. INTERLAKE Warmer weather led to heavy morning dew, fog and overcast skies that slowed down drying time. Three to 13 mm of rain also slowed harvest. Harvest progress is 45 to 50 percent complete. Spring cereals and oilseeds continue to be harvested.
Downgrading in wheat continues as crops remain in the fields. Soybean harvest has begun. Sunflower harvest has also started, but most fields continue to dry down. Alfalfa seed acres continue to be desiccated with some fields being harvested. Canola harvest continues with moisture levels averaging 10 to 12 percent. Limited acres of winter wheat were seeded. Pastures are still holding out. Some second cut alfalfa is being harvested. Ample water is available for livestock.
SASKATCHEWAN Great harvest progress has been made this last week with 68 percent of the crop combined. Twenty-two percent is swathed or ready to be straight-cut. Rainfall this week ranged from trace amounts to 20 mm. Topsoil moisture conditions on cropland are rated as 78 percent adequate across the province. Hayland and pasture topsoil moisture is 85 percent adequate. Strong winds caused some damage. Quality continues to be a concern because of higher than normal levels of fusarium head blight, moisture, frost and disease. SOUTH Harvest continues with good progress. Sixty to 80 percent of the crop is now in the bin.
NEWS An additional 13 to 23 percent is swathed or ready to be straight-cut. The five-year average is around 80 percent. Many producers in the area will need another two to three weeks of good weather to complete harvest. Rainfall over the weekend halted harvest progress for many producers. Heavy dew in the morning and evening didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t help. The Carnduff area reported 20 mm of rain this past week with the Moosomin area reporting the greatest amount of rainfall since April 1 (895 mm). Topsoil moisture conditions for cropland are 59 to 87 percent adequate. Hayland and pasture moisture is rated at 82 to 93 percent adequate. Quality remains a concern because of higher than normal levels of disease in durum and pulse crops. Higher than normal levels of fusarium head blight are also a problem. High grasshopper numbers have been reported.
have been combined. The field pea harvest is virtually finished with almost 100 percent in the bin. Harvest is most advanced in the south and Peace regions with more than 80 percent harvested. The central region has only 58 percent done. Soil moisture ratings have improved. Surface soil moisture ratings are 74 percent good or excellent. Subsoil moisture ratings increased to 68 percent. Hay and pastures continue to perform well. Roughly 64 percent of pastures and 44 percent of tame hay are rated in good or excellent condition. SOUTH Harvest has progressed to about 84 percent combined. Rain delayed producers on the weekend. Sugar beet harvest is scheduled to
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
start Oct. 1. Surface soil moisture ratings improved to 69 percent good or excellent condition. Sub-soil moisture ratings also improved to 71 percent good or excellent. Roughly 75 percent of pastures and 58 percent of tame hay are rated good or excellent. CENTRAL Despite frequent showers, producers made good progress on their harvest. Roughly 58 percent is combined. A period of dry weather on the west side of the region is needed. Only 35 percent is harvested. Surface soil moisture ratings have improved to 73 percent good or excellent. Sub soil moisture ratings improved to 77 percent good or excellent condition. Ninety percent of pastures and 86
percent of tame hay are rated good or excellent. NORTHEAST Harvest was halted this past weekend by 25 to 35 mm of rain. Producers still managed to combine 71 percent of the harvest. Surface soil moisture ratings improved to 82 percent good or excellent. Sub-soil moisture ratings improved to 79 percent. Pastures rate 93 percent good or excellent condition and 47 percent of tame hay is rated good or excellent. NORTHWEST Harvest was delayed by wet weather. The amount varied from showers to 35 mm of rain this past weekend. Roughly 62 percent of the harvest is combined. Surface soil moisture ratings improved to 75 good or excellent conditions. Sub-soil moisture rat-
ings are unchanged from 40 percent good or excellent. One hundred percent of pastures rated fair and 80 percent of tame hay rated fair or good. PEACE RIVER Producers had to shut down harvest in the south and central areas because of 25 to 50 mm of rain. About 83 percent of the region is combined. Harvest is nearly complete in the north portion with 90 to 95 percent combined. Roughly 80 to 85 percent is completed in the central portion and 70 percent of harvest is complete in the south. Surface soil moisture ratings improved to 50 percent good or excellent. Sub-soil moisture ratings also improved to 46 percent good or excellent. Pastures rated 85 percent fair or good and 80 percent of tame hay rated the same.
CENTRAL Significant progress was made this past week. Fifty-three to 72 percent of the crops are in the bin. Roughly 24 percent is swathed or ready to be straight-cut. Progress is close to the five-year average of roughly 70 percent. Most producers need at least another week or two of warm, dry weather to finish harvest. Trace amounts of rain occurred. The Esterhazy area received the most with four mm. The Foam Lake area has received 730 mm of rain since April 1, the greatest amount for the region. Topsoil conditions on cropland are rated at 75 to 83 percent adequate. Hayland and pasture moisture is 84 percent adequate. Reports of higher than normal levels of fusarium head blight have been made. Moisture, frost, and disease have also damaged crops. Strong winds blew canola swaths around and lodged standing crops.
IT HAS ALL THE POTENTIAL IN THE WORLD,
NORTH Tremendous harvest progress was made with 67 to 77 percent of the crop now in the bin. An additional 19 to 24 percent is swathed or ready to be straight-cut. Progress has exceeded the 68 percent five-year average. Some producers will need at least another week or more of dry weather to complete harvest. Little rain was reported. The Rapid View area received the greatest amount with three mm. The North Battleford area has received 521 mm since April 1. Topsoil conditions on cropland are rated 84 percent adequate. Hayland and pasture topsoil moisture is rated at 72 to 80 percent adequate. High fusarium head blight levels are being reported in some areas. Moisture, frost and disease have also caused problems. Some canola crops have high green count. There have been several reports of combine fires because of dry field conditions. Cattle have been moved home early in some areas because of lack of pasture growth.
BUT IT'S WHAT YOU PUT INTO IT THAT COUNTS With everything you have invested in your business, we want to make sure only the best goes into it. Richardson Pioneer offers quality when it comes to seed selection, crop planning and agronomic support. Contact your local Richardson Pioneer Ag Business Centre to book your seed today and continue building into the future of your farm.
Book your 2015 seed with
RICHARDSON PIONEER
ALBERTA Producers made good progress this past week despite the wet weather later in the week. Harvest is roughly 72 percent complete. About 76 percent of the spring wheat, 68 percent of barley, 68 percent of canola and 58 percent of oats
25
www.richardson.ca PIONEERÂŽ FOR THE SALE AND DISTRIBUTION OF SEED IS A REGISTERED TRADE-MARK OF PIONEER HI-BRED INTERNATIONAL, INC. AND IS USED UNDER LICENSE BY THE UNAFFILIATED COMPANY RICHARDSON PIONEER LIMITED.
26
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FROM SEED TO SWATH:
1
2
3 1. Jason Honecker of Three Hills, Alta., makes the last round seeding Hazlet fall rye on pea stubble. Seed grower Sarah Weigum said they often grow fall rye for export to S. Korea, but this variety will likely be sold locally. | MARY MACARTHUR PHOTO 2. Sherry Schaeffer and her son, Arland, harvest vegetables at the University of Saskatchewan horticulture club plots in Saskatoon Sept. 22. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO
3. A caterpillar crawls over freshly-combined red lentils near Saskatoon. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO 4. Combined wheat is unloaded in a field near Hepburn, Sask., Sept. 25. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO 5. Mike Carr combines his field of canola west of Perdue, Sask. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO
4 6. Greg Monteith combines barley late into the evening Sept. 6 near High River, Alta. Area grain farmers were all racing to harvest their crops before snow comes to southern Alberta. | MIKE STURK PHOTO 7. Kale Sissons, an agriculture business assistant at the Richardson terminal at Dundonald, near Westbourne, Man., pours out a sample of canola to measure the moisture
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
27
THE 2014 HARVEST PHOTO FEATURE
6 7
8
9
5 content. Sissons and his co-workers will test hundreds of samples, checking for moisture, dockage and other variables. | ROBERT ARNASON PHOTO 8. Yellow peas are combined in Roblin, Man. | TRACY MOHR PHOTO 9. Dick Bacon unloads the hopper of harvested wheat in Gary Dixonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 1949 Massey Harris combine into the grain
10 box on the back of a 1949 REO Speed Wagon, owned and operated by Gerald Logan near Grande Prairie, Aug. 25. Meanwhile, a John Deere combine operated by one of the members of the Bear Lake Growing Project works quickly in the background. The wheat will be sold and money donated to the Canadian Foodgrains Bank, which will receive matching funds from the federal government to be used for relief efforts. Volunteer farmers donated their time and
equipment to seed and harvest the crop that was planted on donated land. | RANDY VANDERVEEN PHOTO 10. Research technicians MacKenzie Holland and Jordan Richard harvest and sort flax for the flax breeding program at Kernan Research Farm in Saskatoon Sept. 22. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO
28
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FROM SEED TO SWATH:
13
12 11. A farmer swaths wheat late into the evening at the Callahan farm east of High River, Alta., Sept. 6. | MIKE STURK PHOTO
12. Jason Honecker of Three Hills, Alta., uses an air blower to blow fertilizer and seed from the manifolds after seeding fall rye before the seed drill is put away until next spring. | MARY MACARTHUR PHOTO
13. Tyler Dunsbergen of Picture Butte, Alta., climbed an irrigation pivot to get a good shot of combines lined up to begin a Canadian Foodgrains Bank harvest project Aug. 28 on a quarter section north of Picture Butte. | BARB GLEN PHOTO 14. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not a new hairdo. This horse managed to catch some sticky burdock seeds when it was grazing in a pasture near Ayelsbury, Sask. | MICKEY WATKINS PHOTO
14 15. Harvest in Germany started slowly in damp and cool conditions after an cool summer. The barley was destined for cattle feed near Marktoberdorf on the edge of the German Alps. Yields for this farmer were a disappointing 85 bushels per acre. | MICHAEL RAINE PHOTO
29
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
THE 2014 HARVEST PHOTO FEATURE
11
16
17
15 16. Every handful of seed in thousands of fields in Western Canada contains a wide range of crop quality, from diseasedestroyed seed to good quality. | ED WHITE PHOTO
17. A sample of 2014 peas from Saskatchewan are assessed by the Canadian Grain Commission. | ED WHITE PHOTO
18
19 18. Oats are swathed near Hepburn, Sask., Sept. 25. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO
19. Wheat ripens in the sun near Camrose. | PHOTO
JESSE WATKINS
30
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FROM SEED TO SWATH:
20
21 20. Combines run at sunset before the crop gets too tough in a field near White Fox. | TARYN RIEMER PHOTO
21. Joe Walter, left, and Gerry Stahl check wheat from a crop affected by the heavy snow of three weeks ago east of Cayley, Alta., Sept. 23. | MIKE STURK PHOTO
22 22. Ken Murray, chief executive officer of Eastern View Farm, moves the freshly cut oat silage into place for winter storage. The farm is located near Wainwright, Alta. | KAREN MORRISON PHOTO
HAVE YOU ENTERED OUR #HARVEST14 READER PHOTO CONTEST? GET THE DETAILS ON PAGE 89
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
31
THE 2014 HARVEST PHOTO FEATURE 23. Gurtaj Sandhu, a blueberry farmer in Abbotsford, B.C., and a director with B.C. Young Farmers, inspects his family’s blueberry crop. | KAREN MORRISON PHOTO
24
24. Sunflowers may wind up as the most profitable crop in Manitoba this year. Early in 2014, crop production advisers predicted that confectionary sunflowers would return $98 per acre in western Manitoba. | ROBERT ARNASON PHOTO
25
23
26
25. Potato berries containing true potato seeds resemble small green tomatoes on the top of the potato plant. | KAREN BRIERE PHOTO
26. One of 20 combines harvests a swath of feed barley near Picture Butte, Alta., Aug. 28 for a Canadian Foodgrains Bank growing project. The barley and straw were pre-sold, bringing in $99,000. Per acre sponsorships were expected to raise additional money, which will be used to help people in other nations who don’t have enough to eat. | BARB GLEN PHOTO
SWATHERS IS GREAT. WE TURN THE SEAT AT EVERY OPPORTUNITY AND FEEL IT SAVES US A LOT OF TIME.” Andy Neufeld, Margaret, MB
See more at MacDon.com/testimonials
Trademarks of products are the marks of their respective manufacturers and/or distributors.
" THE DUAL DIRECTION FEATURE ON MACDON
32
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
WEST AFRICA | DISEASE THREAT
Hunger threat wreaks havoc on farming, shadows ebola FREETOWN/DAKAR (Reuters) — The threat of hunger is tracking ebola across affected West African nations as the disease kills farmers and their families, drives workers from the fields and creates food shortages. In the worst-hit countries of Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, ebola is ravaging their food-producing regions, preventing planting and harvesting and disrupting supply routes and markets. “Hunger will kill us where ebola failed,” said Pa Sorie, a rice and cassava farmer in Port Loko in northern Sierra Leone. A father of six with four grandchildren, he said he has already lost three close relatives to ebola. The United Nations’ World Food Programme and Food and Agriculture Organization say border and market closures, quarantines and movement restrictions and widespread fear of ebola have led to food scarcity, panic buying and price increases, especially in Sierra Leone and Liberia. The hemorrhagic fever has killed 3,338 people since it was first reported in the forest region of Guinea in March. It crossed into Liberia and Sierra Leone and has triggered smaller outbreaks and cases in Nigeria, Senegal and even the United States, prompting the World Health Organization to declare an international public health emergency Aug. 8. Foreign governments are sending troops and medics to Africa in an attempt to contain the epidemic, while relief agencies scramble to ward off the humanitarian crisis threatening hundreds of thousands along with the health disaster. “The country will starve,” warned Mary Hawa John-Sao, vice-president of Sierra Leone’s National Farmers’ Federation and an award-winning grower. Her own fields were lying unattended and spoiling in the quarantined Kailahun district, which along with neighbouring Kenema in the east and Port Loko and Bombali in the north are the country’s traditional food-growing areas. John-Sao said 75 percent of those killed by ebola in Kailahun and Kenema were farmers and hunger was imminent. The World Food Programme is trying to provide food to one million people in the three worst-affected countries. As of Sept. 14, it had distributed 3,300 tonnes of food to more than 180,000 people in the three nations in a race against hunger. Sierra Leone agriculture minister Sam Sesay said entire farming communities in some parts of his country had been wiped out by ebola, with farms abandoned and crops left rotting. His Liberian counterpart, Florence Chenoweth, described a similar situation in rural Lofa county. UN officials have heeded the warning, saying governments must focus not just on containing ebola but also on the social and developmental damage the disease is inflicting on some of the world’s poorest states, still recovering from civil wars. “The fertile fields of Lofa county, once Liberia’s breadbasket, are now fallow. In that county alone, nearly 170 farmers and their family members have died from ebola,” WHO director general Margaret Chan told
the UN Security Council last month. Ironically, the measures taken by the Sierra Leone and Liberian governments to try to halt the spread of ebola, which is passed on by contact with the bodily fluids of infected persons, have worsened the disruption to farming. Both countries placed military-
enforced quarantines on their worstaffected rural areas, restricting movement in and out. Five of Sierra Leone’s 14 districts were quarantined as of early October and the government last month shut down the entire country for three days, restricting all movements in a bid to staunch the relentless pace of
ebola infection. Ahmed Nanoh, head of Sierra Leone’s agribusiness chamber, urged the government to loosen the quarantines because they prevented farmers from reaching outlying fields to till and harvest staple crops of rice, cassava, corn and millet. “Farmers who used to cultivate 10
BayerCropScience.ca/InVigor or 1 888-283-6847 or contact your Bayer CropScience representative. Always read and follow label directions. InVigor® is a registered trademark of the Bayer Group. Bayer CropScience is a member of CropLife Canada.
hectares (25 acres) can no longer cultivate even two hectares due to the impact of ebola,” Nanoh said. About 65 percent of Sierra Leone’s six million people depend on agriculture, which represents about 40 percent of the national economy, so the ebola emergency and its impact on farming are already dragging
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
33
GM TESTING | JAPAN, S. KOREA
a in West Africa down overall economic growth. The finance ministry said an entire planting season could be lost. Growth this year is expected to slow to eight percent from more than 11 percent forecast earlier in the year, and inflation is expected to climb to 10 percent by the year-end from 7.5 percent as food prices continue to
Quarantines keep farmers from fields | In some areas entire communities have been wiped out and crops are left in fields to rot
climb because of shortages. Liberia could experience an even worse decline, with the International Monetary Fund forecasting a fall in GDP to 2.1 percent from six percent projected earlier. The ebola impact is wrecking rural farming areas in Liberia and Sierra Leone, which are still recuperating
from the civil wars of the 1990s that also drove farmers from the fields and devastated rural communities. Liberian commerce minister Axel Addy said the government was negotiating with importers to try to ensure the country had three months’ supply of rice. Six million tonnes of rice are con-
sumed annually, but importers were also complaining of rising costs because insurance premiums on vessels bringing cargo to Liberian ports had increased due to fears of ebola. And for many, the food aid may not arrive in time to stave off shortages that are growing by the day.
O-66-09/14-10238268-E
Wheat group hopes USDA report calms GM concerns (Reuters) — Japan and South Korea continue to test the U.S. wheat they buy to make sure it is not contaminated with an experimental version developed by Monsanto, says U.S. Wheat Associates. However, it said the countries could soon stop the practice. The two countries, which are among the top buyers of U.S. wheat, have been sampling and testing all the U.S. wheat they have bought since last year, when news broke that a farmer in Oregon had found Monsanto’s unapproved genetically modified wheat growing in his field, according to U.S. Wheat Associates, which markets American wheat to international buyers. All of their test results on more than five million tonnes of wheat have been negative, it said. The testing requirements are a competitive disadvantage for U.S. wheat, said president Alan Tracy, but both countries now should be able to stop the testing after recent assurances from the U.S. Department of Agriculture that the Oregon event was isolated and no GM wheat had made its way into commercial supplies. “We’re hopeful that they’ll be able to suspend the testing. It is not something they really want to keep doing indefinitely,” Tracy said. “They approach things cautiously. They felt they had no choice until this report (from USDA) was out.” U.S. Wheat Associates will meet representatives from Japan, Taiwan and South Korea later this month, he said. According to U.S. export sales data, Japan bought three million tonnes of U.S. wheat in the 2013-14 marketing year, which ended May 31, making it the fourth-largest buyer of U.S. wheat for that period after Brazil, China and Mexico. Japan has bought 1.4 million tonnes so far this year. The sampling and testing is done in the United States before the wheat is shipped, Tracy said. South Korea bought 1.3 million tonnes during the last marketing year, making it the seventh largest buyer. It has bought 749,000 tonnes this year. There is no commercially approved GM wheat, but Monsanto’s herbicide-tolerant Roundup Ready wheat was near commercialization a decade ago before the company shelved the project amid fears that export sales would be hurt. The fact that experimental wheat was found growing uncontrolled in Oregon last year led to fears the GM wheat might be in commercial supplies. The unapproved wheat was also found this summer in Montana, growing in a research plot where field trials of the GM wheat were conducted from 2000-03. The USDA said it was investigating the Montana situation, but like Oregon, there are no indications the unapproved wheat entered commercial supplies. Tracy said Asian markets remain very cautious about GM grain. “It’s not up to us to tell them what to do,” he added.
34
NEWS
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
FOOD PROCESSING | BEAN EXPORTS
Ontario leads in food-grade bean exports Premiums for quality | Ontario companies are targeting the growing South Asian market BY JEFFREY CARTER FOR THE WESTERN PRODUCER
DRESDEN, Ont. — Food-grade, non-genetically modified soybeans have propelled the Hensall District Co-operative into the No. 1 export position. “We are the biggest exporter of food-grade beans (soybeans and edible beans) in North America and in food-grade soybeans. There’s no one in the states that does more than us,” said Jason McNaughton, the coop’s identity preservation soybean marketing manager. “I don’t think there’s one single big factor behind this, but we are really
focused on food grade. We’ve focused on our growers to be food producers, and our processing quality is the best.
We have a good reputation in the enduser market.” Other Ontario players in the trade
also have the necessary emphasis on quality, including what may be the province’s No. 2 player, Sevita Inter-
JUMP IN BEFORE IT’S TOO LATE
Time is running out to jump into CWB’s Annual Pool and Futures Choice Annual Pool. Sign-up to the Annual Pool and Futures Choice Annual Pool is available until October 31, 2014, or until fully subscribed. · Switch your grade for free until pool sign-up deadlines · Manage your basis risk · Rest easy with our Act of God clause And, for every tonne delivered against 2014-15 pool contracts, you will be eligible for an equity stake in a privatized CWB. CWB has already closed some pools early due to high demand.
LEARN MORE AT WWW.CWB.CA/JUMPIN
national Corp., and Jackson Seed Services in Dresden. They and a handful of smaller companies compete for growers. This year, those growers are enjoying premiums of $2 to $5 per bushel. Frank Backx at Hensall and Dennis Jackson at Jackson Seeds said foodgrade, non-GM varieties tend to yield as well as their glyphosate-tolerant cousins, despite claims to the contrary. The notable exceptions are varieties with the highest protein levels, which fetch the highest premium to make up for any yield lag. “The Roundup Ready gene does not make soybeans yield more. That’s fictitious,” Backx said. Growers can expect to take a hit on their premiums next year, perhaps by 25 to 50 cents in Backx’s estimation. As Chicago Board of Trade prices soften, so do premiums. “Growers want to get so much money per acre,” Backx said. “If beans are $15 a bu., they’re happy to grow Roundup Ready. It’s easy. But if beans are $9, many of them need that extra premium to make ends meet,” he said. Demand for food-grade exports from Ontario and Quebec is expected to increase as the price of commodity beans drops. McNaughton said the increased demand is from South Asian countries outside of Japan, including Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Hong Kong. McNaughton said the market in Japan for non-GM, food-grade beans is slowly softening as the Japanese adopt western eating habits. Still, Japan remains the world’s premium market for food-grade soybeans. Ontario and Quebec hold the biggest share of that market. There’s also enormous export potential for food-grade soybeans in China. In the past, most Canadian foodgrade soybeans reached China through Hong Kong, McNaughton said. However, Hensall now ships direct to a buyer in mainland China through a special arrangement that deals with any containers that may contain GMOs. McNaughton said China has an official zero-tolerance policy for GM soybeans. All soybeans grown in the country are said to be GM free, though he doubts the claim. Non-GM beans represented 20
LEFT: Thirty-six years ago there was only a field of soybeans at the Jackson Seed Services location in Dresden, Ont. The Jackson family recently added their third processing line. | JACKSON SEEDS PHOTO
ABOVE: Dennis Jackson said Jackson Seeds Services began as a one-man operation and today includes three processing plants. The newest conditioning plant is devoted solely to certified seed beans. | JEFFREY CARTER PHOTOS RIGHT: Adam Johnston loads bags of food-grade beans into a container at Jackson Seed Services. They are destined for Asian markets. percent of Ontario’s 2.5 million acre crop last year. Most of those went to the food-grade market. This year, a record three million acres are expected to be harvested in the province. Prices were strong earlier this year and adverse planting conditions led Ontario farmers to switch to soybeans from corn. Average yields are expected. Hensall Co-op is headquartered in Hensall, a hamlet in Ontario’s Huron County. Edible beans are shipped to the co-op from Ontario, Manitoba, Michigan, Minnesota and North Dakota. Most of its non-GM, foodgrade soybeans are grown in Ontario. Jackson Seed Services is a familyoperated business founded in 1978. It specializes in food-grade and seed soybeans. Jackson said the business began as a one-man operation and today includes three processing plants, the latest going online this fall. “There was nothing here but a field of soybeans when I started,” he said. Sevita International was formed in January 2012 when four companies merged: Hendrick Seeds, Hendrick Agriworks, PRO Seeds Marketing and Agworks Inc. The company has facilities in Inkerman, Ont., and Woodstock, Ont. The major Quebec players in the food-grade trade are Bunged Du Quebec, La Co-op Fédérée and Ceresco.
What’s your take? Join us at www.producer.com or follow us on social media.
*Canola yield data summarized from Proving Ground™ trials across Western Canada from the last 4 years (2010-2013). Yield data averaged from DuPont Pioneer Proving Ground™ competitor canola trials as of June 18, 2014. Product responses are variable and subject to any number of environmental, disease and pest pressures. Individual results may vary. Multi-year and multi-location data is a better predictor of future performance. Refer to www.pioneer.com/yield or contact a Pioneer Hi-Bred sales representative for the latest and complete listing of results, traits and scores for each Pioneer® brand product. Roundup Ready® is a registered trademark used under license from Monsanto Company. Pioneer® brand products are provided subject to the terms and conditions of purchase which are part of the labeling and purchase documents. The DuPont Oval Logo is a registered trademark of DuPont. ®,™,SM Trademarks and service marks licensed to Pioneer Hi-Bred Limited. © 2014, PHL.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
Clubroot can cause up to 80% yield loss in infected fields.
Average yield
From key competitor canola trials performed over the last 4 years.*
Pioneer ®brand canola with the Pioneer Protector ® clubroot resistance trait.
Our experts are grown locally
DuPont Pioneer performs over 1500 Proving Ground trials across Western Canada.
pioneer.com/clubroot
TM
PREVENT INFESTATION
PRACTICE ROTATION
PROTECT FIELD
Ask your local Pioneer Hi-Bred sales representative about the Proving GroundTM trials in your area.
35
36
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
TREE RESEARCH | AGRONOMY
Trees provide inside story What grows where? | Researchers study old shelter belts in Saskatchewan
LEFT: Professor Colin Laroque spends a lot of time on the road studying shelter belts across Saskatchewan. ABOVE: Laroque’s lab holds microscopes and tree samples ready to analyze. He hopes this information will help determine what trees are most suitable for local conditions. | ROBYN TOCKER PHOTOS
BY ROBYN TOCKER SASKATOON NEWSROOM
A Saskatchewan researcher hopes shelter belts can help determine the future of trees on the Prairies. Professor Colin Laroque from the University of Saskatchewan’s soil sciences department has been part of the Agricultural Greenhouse Gas project for the past four years. He and his team of undergraduate students have explored farms across Saskatchewan, looking at shelter belts that were planted by the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration. “My aspect is looking at shelter belt trees planted since the early 1900s,” said Laroque. “We look into the past and say we’ve planted all these trees in various areas in Saskatchewan. Which ones are growing well, which aren’t, and why? We can project into the future climate scenarios, which ones are going to grow better.” Laroque, who has set up the first on-campus tree ring lab at the U of S, has been interested in trees since his undergraduate days when his class explored melting glaciers. “I got really interested in the glaciers and melting water that came to the trees. I wondered how the environment changed because of that.” Ever since, Laroque has centered his career on analyzing trees. His recent work with shelter belts has raised the issue of economic benefits but also the aesthetic pleasure. “There are lots of studies that show how shelter belts break wind, stop snow, bring and trap moisture and stop a lot of surface erosion. It’s not easy to put a dollar figure onto these things.” Trees sequester carbon and are seen as an important way to reduce carbon emissions. Laroque’s team comprises not only tree analysts but also researchers who count and measure every shelter belt in Saskatchewan from space. “There are different types and kinds of trees, and each tree or shrub will sequester carbon differently,” he said. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE »
BEST TREES FOR THE PRAIRIES Choose native species that are long-lived, low-maintenance and disease-resistant. Some suggestions include dogwood, blue spruce, douglas fir and pine.
WELCOME TO
NEW OPPORTUNITY,
FLEXIBILITY, PROFITABILITY.
NEWS
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE
“Some are growing better or will grow better in the future. We’re trying to gather all this information and give it back to the farm owners by
next spring.” Laroque said it’s not easy determining why farmers are getting rid of their shelter belts. He said older farmers are often the ones who see the benefits because they have lived through events in which shelter belts were useful. However, he also acknowledged that shelter belts can cause trouble for farmers. “Often they get in the way of equipment when they have to turn, especially in a field, or the trees get carried away and require too much maintenance.” Often it’s the trees near homes or in farmyards that stick around, which is because of their aesthetic value. “They almost end up being like their children. When we ask how much they are worth, farmers say, ‘everything.’ It’s really difficult to put an economic value on them. Sometimes that aesthetic value is just worth everything.”
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
37
The light and dark bands of wood in this microscopic view of a standard tree ring show researchers the patterns of growth. One light band, early wood, and one dark band, late wood, indicate one season of growth.
TREE RESEARCH | GROWTH TM
Make it Nexera and make more, NOW in more ways than one.
• Get healthier premiums, profits, demand for Omega-9 oils • Healthier agronomics, profit to your potential either way • New for 2015, the Nexera canola Flexibility Agreement TM • Grow Nexera WITH OR WITHOUT a contract
Alta. oilsands making trees sick: expert Researchers tested trees east of the oil project BY ROBYN TOCKER SASKATOON NEWSROOM
A Saskatchewan researcher says Alberta is affecting the development of prairie trees. Colin Laroque, a professor in the University of Saskatchewan’s soil sciences department, said Saskatchewan’s trees are seeing higher levels of reduced growth because of oilsands production in Fort McMurray, Alta. “With most of the trees here, we don’t think of the oilsands, but the westerly winds blow all the material over towards and into Saskatchewan.” Laroque and his team tested trees on the Clearwater River Dene Nation in northern Saskatchewan. “We floated down Clearwater River and sampled trees on our way,” said Laroque. The trees weren’t doing well, he added. Laroque looked into production records of the oilsands and discovered that emissions would increase and blow into Saskatchewan every time production rose. There was little change in the trees before the oilsands were developed, he added. Laroque said he was surprised that his team could measure the “slow sickness rising in Saskatchewan trees.” He said the effect on trees could be fixed, but it would mean implementing cleaner production methods and reducing emissions. “The ability to actually do something is very difficult,” he said. “You’re dealing with two different industries, two different governments, the federal government, and policies that might lean one way or another.”
A TREE NOT TO PLANT ® TM
Trademark of The Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) or an affiliated company of Dow. 0914-38747-01r WP
While studies have identified several tree species ideal for carbon storage, one that should be avoided is willow. It stores little carbon and emits harmful volatile organic compounds.
38
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
ANOTHER HARVEST DELAY
THEFT | PREVENTION
Property ID program aims to make thieves wary Identification numbers act as lost-and found system BY ROBYN TOCKER SASKATOON NEWSROOM
After the first snowfall melted, some southern Alberta farmers woke up to more of the white stuff Oct. 2 near Cayley, Alta. |
MIKE STURK PHOTO
A World of Knowledge in Every Bag…
Delivering Performance in Every Field Elite’s focus on early maturity has created varieties of soybeans that are uniquely adapted to Western Canadian conditions. The Elite® EUDQG RI VR\EHDQV Rƪ HUV FXWWLQJ HGJH SURGXFWV DQG WHFKQRORJ\ ZLWK LQGXVWU\ OHDGLQJ expertise. We select Genuity® Roundup Ready 2 Yield® varieties that are early maturing, widely adapted and high yielding. Our priority is helping you grow.
AKRAS R2 2375 CHU
PEKKO R2 2325 CHU
SAMPSA R2 2425 CHU
Visit brettyoung.ca 1-800-665-5015 Elite is a registered trademark of La Coop fédérée. Genuity® and Roundup Ready 2 Yield® are registered trademarks and used under license from Monsanto Company. Always follow grain marketing and all other stewardship practices and pesticide label directions. Details of these requirements can be found in the Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers printed in this publication. BrettYoung is a trademark of BrettYoung Seeds Limited. 3823 09/14
Pat Cowman believes that identification can play a key role in reducing farm equipment theft. Cowman’s Property Identification Program, which is part of Operation Hands Off, stores specific ID numbers for a variety of items, including agriculture equipment, on an online directory. “What we do that’s different than other groups is we have a database that is available to a limited extension of the public,” he said. However, it doesn’t give the public limitless access to information about who owns what. “You have to have a specific number,” Cowman said. Police have more access to the information so that they can return stolen items, he said. People who find an item with an identification number can use the database as a lost and found system. “The warning decals on the items have a return-if-found option,” Cowman said. “Use your cell phone with an app to take a picture of the bar code and send a message to the owner to return the item.” Cowman and his team act as coordinators to return items to their owners. The program is available to farmers and business owners in Canada. Cowman said the program is effective when used properly. However, he said it is difficult to say exactly how effective because the RCMP doesn’t keep annual statistics on farm equipment theft. “The police tend to operate independently from private businesses,” he said. SecurTek, a security monitoring company in Saskatchewan, reports that farm equipment theft has increased 25 percent based on industry statistics. Vandalism is part of this statistic. Cowman, who is also president of MicroDot DNA, said thousands of customers in Saskatchewan use the firm’s farm product programs. He works with a variety of companies, which send spreadsheets of their products to him. He then enters the products into a database with their manufacturer’s identification numbers. “A big component of this program is a combination of doing the registration and getting warning signs up,” he said. “That has the biggest impact to reduce theft.” Awareness also plays a significant role. “Most people don’t want to take a chance if there’s a potential risk of getting caught.” Cowman said this type of program can pay off. “We have done projects with police departments across the country, and we have seen a 70 to 80 percent reduction of theft.”
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
39
BOARS | ERADICATION
Conservation group wants boar annihilated Eradication plan sought | The animals destroy pastures, eat crops and can injure livestock BY DAN YATES SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Saskatchewan conservationists are the latest group to put the wild boar in their crosshairs. The destructive animal made the agenda at a Nature Saskatchewan meeting for the first time in Regina in September. “The nature of their character is the rooting behaviour. One particular place that they can be really bad is in wetlands, so they’re rooting out the cattails to eat the tubers,” said Jordan Ignatiuk, executive director of Nature Saskatchewan. “So they can devastate a wetland in pretty short order if suddenly you get a group of 12, 15, 20 pigs in there.” Nature Saskatchewan has 900 members, mostly individual naturalists and bird watchers. Wild boars are a frequent topic of discussion in agricultural circles, where they’re noted for both their destruction and evasiveness — quickly consuming crops, destroying pastures and spooking livestock. In the United States, the invasive animals, which multiply quickly, are linked to more than a $1 billion in damages every year with millions spent to control them. Some areas of the province, most notably near Moose Mountain Provincial Park, already have a long history of damage. Officials can’t put a number to the population in Saskatchewan, but a survey published earlier this year found wild boars have been spotted in 70 percent of the province’s rural municipalities, with researcher Ryan Brook of the University of Saskatchewan warning about the looming threat of population growth and calling for a co-ordinate eradication effort. Wild boars were first introduced to the province as livestock in the 1990s, and animals that run loose from farms can complicate local control efforts. At Nature Saskatchewan’s meeting, a resolution was put forward to call for a ban on wild boar game farms. However, Ignatiuk said the language changed by the time the motion came to a vote. “It talked about banning them completely and then phasing them out and compensating over two years,” he said. “Like (somebody) said, there will be no appetite for government to do that. If we start asking for too much, we’re going to get nothing.” The motion was eventually split into two separate resolutions: one calling for tighter regulation and monitoring of wild boar farms and one calling for an eradication plan with co-operation from the province, municipal governments and conser-
ALBERTA PAYS A
$50 BOUNTY FOR A PAIR OF BOAR’S EARS vation organizations. A similar motion to ban wild boar farming was raised at Alberta’s Agricultural Service Board a few years ago. “It was defeated because farmers didn’t want to tell farmers what to do,” said Art Preachuk, an agricultural fieldman in Red Deer County. Since being declared a pest in Alberta in 2008, Alberta officials have introduced tighter restrictions on wild boar fencing systems — to be in place by 2018 — and a bounty on animals in the wild. That bounty, which provides $50 for a pair of wild boar ears, has seen hundreds of animals killed and has been extended through 2017. “The bounty is there, but a lot of the feedback from that might be that it’s just scattering them around and making them go nocturnal, right?” said Preachuk. “There’s ways of hunting them that are more effective, but it needs to have a plan behind it — just not randomly going out and scattering them around the countryside.” Preachuk said wild boars haven’t been a problem in his area since 2008, following a successful eradication effort. However, the animals remain a concern in the province, with Lac Ste. Anne County frequently cited as a hotspot. “With that short experience, we realized how devastating they can be … and that’s why we’ve been advocating to get rid of them all before they end up three million strong like they are in Texas,” said Preachuk. He said he’s aware of farmer-led efforts to co-ordinate and control problematic populations. “But there’s no master plan. It’s a provincial thing. They should have a provincial plan,” said Preachuk. Similar efforts led by farmers and rural leaders exist in Saskatchewan, where funds are available through a wild boar program operated by the Saskatchewan Association of Rural Municipalities. Ignatiuk said Nature Saskatchewan members discussed working with other organizations who may be making similar resolutions. “Then it’s not just sort of one group that’s lobbying on them or advocating on them or if there’s more than one it makes more sense for the government to listen.”
Conservation groups say provinces should have a master plan to find ways to eradicate feral wild boars. | FILE PHOTO
Open House
Energy East Pipeline
AB QC
SK
Hardisty
MB ON
PE
Cacouna NB
Saint John Moosomin
NS
New Pipeline Construction
Terminals
Existing Pipeline Conversion
Questions? Let’s talk. At TransCanada, we’re in the planning stages of a project to transport oil from Western to Eastern Canada. This project will generate significant economic benefits. If you have questions about Energy East, come to the open house nearest you and meet with key experts from TransCanada’s Energy East team. Wednesday, October 15 Burstall Community Hall 951 Railway Ave. Burstall, Sask. Hours: 4 – 8 p.m.
Thursday, October 16 Cabri Community Legion Hall 103 1st St. South Cabri, Sask. Hours: 4 – 8 p.m.
Tuesday, October 21 Legion Community Hall 738 Lalonde St. Whitewood, Sask. Hours: 4 – 8 p.m.
Wednesday, October 22 Royal Canadian Legion #59 268 High Street West Moose Jaw, Sask. Hours: 4 – 8 p.m.
Thursday, October 23 White City Community Centre – Hall C 12 Ramm Ave. East White City, Sask. Hours: 4 – 8 p.m.
Tuesday, October 28 Hamiota Community Centre 50 – 4th Street Hamiota, Man. Hours: 4 – 8 p.m.
Wednesday, October 29 Royal Canadian Legion #65 275 Duke Ave. East Portage La Prairie, Man. Hours: 4 – 8 p.m.
Thursday, October 30 Seine River Banquet Centre A-80 Arena Road Ste. Anne, Man. Hours: 4 – 8 p.m.
EnergyEastPipeline.com TransCanada is a Canadian company with over 60 years of experience building pipelines and power infrastructure safely and reliably.
40
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS RESEARCH | NATURAL FERTILIZER
Arsenic levels high in guano: researcher Heavy metals in natural fertilizer shouldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t exceed guidelines, says scientist BY ROBYN TOCKER SASKATOON NEWSROOM
HARVEST IN THE BAG |
Warm, dry weather in September allowed some farmers who have fields within the city limits of Spruce Grove, Alta., to finish harvesting. | RANDY VANDERVEEN PHOTO
Coming soon!
:KDW¡V QH[W LQ ZHHG FRQWURO WHFKQRORJ\"
An advanced glyphosate and dicamba herbicide-tolerant crop system built on the high-yielding GenuityÂŽ Roundup Ready 2 YieldÂŽ soybean trait.
ĂŚ ,PSURYHG RYHUDOO ZHHG FRQWURO LQFOXGLQJ UHVLVWDQW ZHHGV ĂŚ 5HVLGXDO FRQWURO XS WR GD\V ĂŚ $SSOLFDWLRQ Ä&#x2021; H[LELOLW\ EHIRUH DW DQG DIWHU SODQWLQJ ĂŚ +LJKHU \LHOG SRWHQWLDO
MORE OPTIONS. MAXIMUM POTENTIAL. ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Commercialization is dependent on multiple factors, including successful conclusion of the regulatory process in key export markets, and the registration of new soybean varieties in Canada. The information presented herein is provided for educational purposes only, and is not and shall not be construed as an offer to sell until all necessary regulatory obligations are met. Genuity and DesignŽ, GenuityŽ, Roundup Ready 2 YieldŽ and Roundup Ready Ž are registered trademarks of Monsanto Techmology LLC, Monsanto Canada, Inc. licensee. Š 2014 Monsanto Canada Inc.
GENUITYTRAITS.CA
Researchers at the University of Saskatchewan have discovered high levels of arsenic in minerals that are commonly used as natural fertilizers. Professor Yuanming Pan of the universityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s geological sciences department said working with synthetic compounds led to the discovery that struvite and newberyite sequestered significant amounts of arsenic 3+ and 5+. Arensic 3+ is especially prominent in newberyite and is the more toxic of the two arsenic types. Pan said natural struvite and newberyite are major compounds of guano, which is used as a fertilizer. â&#x20AC;&#x153;When we decided to look at the natural guano deposits, it turns out they contain quite high arsenic levels and various other heavy metals.â&#x20AC;? Byproducts from the waste-water treatment process that are used as fertilizer also contain struvite. Jeff Schoenau of the U of Sâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s soil sciences department said struvite from waste water isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t much different from some of the phosphorus bearing materials found in soil. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Even some of the rock phosphate sources used in manufacturers of common fertilizers contain trace amounts of some metals.â&#x20AC;? Schoenau said itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s important to know whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s in natural fertilizers and ensure they donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t exceed the natural guidelines. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m a strong believer that nutrients in the environment, if you can capture and recycle them, you can solve and help prevent a lot of problems down the road,â&#x20AC;? he said. Saskatoonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s water treatment plant has the first struvite recovery plan in Canada. Anthony Boone of Ostara said the technology it has developed recovers polluting nutrients, phosphorus and nitrogen and transforms them into a slow release, eco-friendly fertilizer. The British Columbia company has six plants in North America, but the one in Saskatoon produces fertilizer with arsenic levels below detectable limits. At less than .2 milligrams per kilogram, â&#x20AC;&#x153;this is up to 1,000 times below acceptable limit as established by food and agricultural authorities,â&#x20AC;? Boone said.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
41
THE ALL-NEW 2015
SILVERADO HD STRONG JUST GOT STRONGER FINANCE FROM
• BEST-IN-CLASS 19,600 LB. CONVENTIONAL TOWING† • BEST-IN-CLASS 7,374 LB. PAYLOAD
0.99%
††
• BEST PICKUP WARRANTY COVERAGE IN CANADA - 160,000 KM. 60,000KM MORE THAN F-150 AND RAM+ • OUTSTANDING 23,200 LB. FIFTH-WHEEL TOWING++ • AVAILABLE DURAMAX® ENGINE AND ALLISON® TRANSMISSION OFFERING 397 HP AND 765 LB.-FT. TORQUE WITH OVER 160 BILLION KMS OF REAL-WORLD EXPERIENCE • NEW INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR DESIGN WITH COMFORT AND REFINEMENT
FOR
36
MONTHS*
PLUS
$4,000
CASH CREDITS**
3500HD CREW CAB LTZ MODEL SHOWN
OUR MOST CAPABLE SILVERADO HD EVER.
2
YEARS/40,000 KM COMPLIMENTARY OIL CHANGES^
5
YEARS/160,000 KM POWERTRAIN WARRANTY ^^
5
YEARS/160,000 KM ROADSIDE ASSISTANCE ^^
CHEVROLET.CA
ON NOW AT YOUR PRAIRIE CHEVROLET DEALERS. Chevrolet.ca 1-800-GM-DRIVE. Chevrolet is a brand of General Motors of Canada. Offers apply to the purchase and finance of a 2015 Chevrolet Silverado HD. Freight and PDI included. License, insurance, registration, administration fees, PPSA and taxes not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Offers apply to qualified retail customers in Prairie Chevrolet Dealer Marketing Association area only. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers, and are subject to change without notice. Dealer order and trade may be required. * 0.99% purchase financing offered on approved credit by RBC Royal Bank/TD Auto Financing/Scotiabank for 36 months on new or demonstrator 2015 Silverado 2500/3500HD Gas & Diesel models. Example: $10,000 at 0.99% APR, the monthly payment is $282 for 36 months. Cost of borrowing is $153, total obligation is $10,153. ** $4,000 is a manufacturer to dealer delivery credit (tax exclusive) eligible on cash purchase, lease and finance offers for 2015 Silverado 2500/3500HD Gas & Diesel models, and is applicable to retail customers only. Offers end October 31, 2014. † Requires 3500HD Crew Cab Dual Rear Wheel 4WD with available Duramax 6.6L Turbo Diesel V8 engine. Maximum trailer weight ratings are calculated assuming a base vehicle, except for any option(s) necessary to achieve the rating, plus driver. The weight of the other optional equipment, passengers and cargo will reduce the maximum trailer weight your vehicle can tow. See your Chevrolet dealer for additional details. †† Requires Regular Cab Long Box 4x2 with Vortec 6.0L V8 engine. Maximum payload capacity includes weight of driver, passengers, optional equipment and cargo. + Whichever comes first. See dealer/manufacturer for details. Based on Wardsauto.com 2013 Large Pickup segment and last available information at the time of posting. ++ Requires 3500 Regular Cab Long Box 4x4 with Duramax 6.6L V8 turbo diesel engine. ^ Whichever comes first. Limit of four ACDelco Lube-Oil-Filter services in total. Fluid top-offs, Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF) refill, inspections, tire rotations, wheel alignments and balancing, etc., are not covered. Additional conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ^^ Whichever comes first. See dealer for details.
42
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
POTATO SECTOR | CONSUMPTION
Industry seeks to counter potato’s negative reputation BY REBECA KUROPATWA FREELANCE WRITER
Potato consumption is falling in Canada, but it’s not clear if it’s because consumers no longer see the vegetable as a healthy option. “There’s no question,” said Keystone Potato Growers Association manager Dan Sawatzky. “We’ve had an acreage cut, volume cut, here in Manitoba ... but I think we’re turning that corner.” Potato acreage has fluctuated in
Manitoba over the past eight years. “We lose some volume one year and generally get it back one or two years down the road,” he said. “We’re down slightly from where we were in the last seven or eight years.” The last two years have been particularly challenging, Sawatzky said. “The peak was in 2003. I expect we’ll see some volume return next year.” The high dollar has been hurting the industry over the past eight years,
but that is changing. “Over the last year, we’re now down to about a 92-cent dollar … so that’s in our favour.” The 2008 recession was particularly hard on potato consumption. “I think eating out, certainly the traffic into fast food restaurants, slowed down during that time,” said Sawatzky. However, the trend is beginning to rebound, he added. “Potatoes were targeted with that whole obsession with obesity and
It has good carbs, so, pound for pound it’s one of your healthier vegetables ... and, it’s also healthy for your wallet. TERENCE M. HOCHSTEIN POTATO GROWERS OF ALBERTA
that kind of thing,” said Sawatzky. “Some of the oils that were being used — the trans fat and that kind of
It’s the Prairies’ best kept secret.
If you’ve ever searched for the secret to consistent and reliable yields, you probably already know the answer is Proven® Seed. Year over year, growers choose Proven Seed because we spend so much time researching, developing and testing our seed varieties across western Canada to ensure it’s the best choice for local growers. Learn more at ProvenSeed.ca or ask your CPS retailer. Proven® Seed is a registered trademark of Crop Production Services (Canada) Inc. CPS CROP PRODUCTION SERVICES and Design is a registered trademark of Crop Production Services, Inc. 09/14-39031-1 WP
thing — a lot of that (consumer perceptions) takes time to change. It takes education to change people’s views. Healthy oil was introduced 10 years ago. Fries are being cooked in canola oil, so some of those concerns have been addressed. It takes a while just to get that message out. The health benefits of potatoes are beginning to get out there, too.” Potatoes have more potassium than bananas or broccoli and are high in dietary fibre and vitamin C. The Alliance for Potato Research & Education (APRE) website at www. apre.org includes information about the nutritional value of potatoes. The industry supports the site as a way to educate the nutritional community with science-based information about the benefits of potatoes. Terence M. Hochstein, executive director of Potato Growers of Alberta, said North American consumers are buying less french fries. “Here, in Alberta, we’re somewhat different from Manitoba and Eastern Canada,” said Hochstein. “So far, we’ve lost some acres over the last few years, but we’re not nearly as impacted as eastern provinces are. We’ve been able to maintain our acres, as far as our processed potatoes, and are pretty much at status quo. For whatever reason, Alberta did not have a decline. In fact, our acres went up a little this year.” Hochstein said potato chip and fry acres in Alberta break down as follows: • 2009: 37,665 • 2010: 35,408 • 2011: 40,785 • 2012: 43,304 • 2013: 39,932 • 2014: 40,604 “So, we’ve been very consistent over the last six years,” he said. “There is some variation from year to year, but I wouldn’t attribute this to a decrease in the consumption of fries. Fries have been on a declining trend over the last number of years, but through the work of APRE, I think we’ve slowed that drastic decline, and now it’s looking positive.” Hochstein said it’s unfair to target potatoes as unhealthy, particular french fries. “It’s a consumer choice, health issue or whatever,” he said. “It’s always been viewed as an unhealthy vegetable ... but on the contrary, it’s very healthy. It has good carbs, so, pound for pound it’s one of your healthier vegetables ... and, it’s also healthy for your wallet.” Hochstein said 82 percent of the frozen products made in Canada are sold in the United States. Addressing potato education in the U.S. will have the greatest possible impact on western Canadian potato growers.
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
43
FREE TRADE | RESTRICTIONS
GM TECHNOLOGY | CONSUMER DISAPPROVAL
EU food safety nominee talks tough on U.S. food imports
China launches media campaign to back GM crops
BRUSSELS (Reuters) — The European Union’s nominee for health chief has pledged to oppose the import of some U.S. food, which Washington hopes to be able to sell to Europe under a planned trade deal. In comments at his confirmation hearing in the European Parliament that will delight EU heavyweights France and Germany, Vytenis Andriukaitis singled out chemically treated meat and genetically modified crops, which he said posed a “philosophical problem” that threatened Europe’s biodiversity. The United States, now in negotiations with the EU on a free trade pact that would create a joint market of 800 million people, wants the 28-nation bloc to take a more science-based approach to GM crops and hormonetreated meat. “I cannot make any compromises on this issue, whether it is hormones in meat or chlorine baths for poultry,” Andriukaitis told EU lawmakers in the hearing on his nomination to be head of health and food safety policy in the next European Commission. The Lithuanian nominee urged caution when EU lawmakers from across the political spectrum repeatedly asked where he stood on GM crops, which are widely grown in the Americas and Asia. “Cultivation of GMOs is a huge problem from a philosophical point of view,” said Andriukaitis, a doctor by training. “If we want to interfere with biodiversity, we have to be very vigilant and cautious.” There is strong opposition in a number of EU member states, including France and Germany, to GM food, growth hormones in cattle and chicken that is disinfected with chemicals. Andriukaitis’s stance signals further tension in the talks to clinch the trade deal, which proponents say must also break down farm trade barriers to deliver the greatest benefits. An accord would allow the EU to sell more of its luxury cars, trains and chemicals in the United States, an attractive prospect for an economy whose slow recovery from the euro zone debt crisis is faltering. Selling the benefits of a deal, which could generate $100 billion a year in economic growth for both the EU and the U.S., has also been complicated by concerns about U.S. companies becoming too powerful. The EU’s designated trade commissioner, Cecilia Malmstrom of Sweden, told EU lawmakers that provisions for investor arbitration — the investor-state dispute settlement — could be dropped from the free trade deal. Andriukaitis also promised to review the EU’s GM approval process in the first six months of his mandate. The EU decided in May to make approval of GM crops easier but to allow some countries to ban them. In the case of GM crops, the EU has cleared 50 of 450 commercial strains for import. The EU imports 30 million tonnes a year of GM grain for its cattle, pigs and poultry, but EU retaile r s ha rd l y s t o c k a n y G M f o o d because of stiff consumer resistance.
Consumer education | The government sees GM technology as safe but consumer opposition has halted introduction BEIJING, China (Reuters) — The Chinese government has kicked off a media campaign in support of genetically modified crops as it battles a wave of negative publicity over a technology it hopes will play a major role in boosting its food security. The agriculture ministry recently announced it would try to educate the public about genetic modification via television, newspapers and the internet. It hopes to stifle anti-GMO sentiment that has gathered momentum in the wake of incidents such as reports that GM rice had been illegally sold at a supermarket in the
centre of the country. Beijing has been a long-time proponent of GMOs, which it sees as safe and as potentially key in helping feed the world’s largest population. However, critics have alleged the technology could pose health risks, and while China allows imports of some GM crops, it hasn’t yet permitted domestic cultivation. China has imported millions of tonnes of GM soybeans a year for the past decade to feed the world’s largest pig herd and produce 40 percent of the county’s vegetable oil needs. China consumes one-third of the world’s soybeans and snaps up 65
percent of all imports. “(We will create) a social atmosphere which is beneficial for the healthy development of the genetically modified industry,” the agriculture ministry said in a statement. Several negative reports this year on specific GM food has slowed progress toward domestic cultivation and may have played a role in curbing imports of some crops. The discovery of an unapproved strain of GM corn in U.S. shipments to China wreaked havoc in the grain market, with Cargill estimating losses of more than $90 million. The discoveries also triggered lawsuits
against Syngenta, which developed the corn variety. The country has also suspended the import approval process for a GM soybean variety, citing “low public acceptance” of GM food, according to officials familiar with the issue. China has spent hundreds of millions of dollars developing its own GM crops and approved two pestresistant varieties of rice and a GM corn for commercialization in 2009. However, wary of strong opposition to GM technology, it never proceeded to cultivation. The safety certificates on the products expired this summer.
2014
DEMO A NEW MASSEY FERGUSON COMBINE OR WINDROWER, AND WE’LL DEMONSTRATE OUR APPRECIATION WITH * We’ll bring our 130 years of harvesting innovation and knowledge right to your front door. We’ll put you in the driver’s seat of one of our newest combines or windrowers, showing you how to harvest with greater capacity and more efficiency than ever before. You’ll also get $200 worth of AGCO parts as a little thank-you gift. Visit masseyferguson.us/fielddemo to qualify and schedule an on-site demo.
for GREATER CAPACITY and EFFICIENCY ............ 9500 SERIES
masseyferguson.us/fielddemo
WR9800 SERIES
*Only demos requested through masseyferguson.us/fielddemo are eligible for program incentive. Massey Ferguson is a worldwide brand of AGCO. ©2014 AGCO Corporation, 4205 River Green Pkwy, Duluth, GA 30096. Programs subject to change without notice. Based on dealer participation. MF14N019VA
44
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
LEARN MORE ABOUT HOW JORDAN FARMS SMART AT NHSMART.COM/JORDANK Š2014 CNH Industrial America LLC. All rights reserved. New Holland is a trademark registered in the United States and many other countries, owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates. NHK04148906L
NEWS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
45
ARE YOU
NEW HOLLAND Canada thistle has an aggressive underground root system that chokes out desirable plants in pastures. | FILE PHOTO NOXIOUS WEED | THISTLE MANAGEMENT
Canada thistle a prickly issue
SMART?
PROVE IT.
Specialist says integrated approach using mowing, grazing and herbicides is required BY REBECA KUROPATWA FREELANCE WRITER
Grazing can be an effective way to control Canada thistle, even though beef cattle prefer not to eat the weed. Sarah Sommerfeld, a regional forage specialist in Outlook, Sask., says livestock will eat it under intensive rotational grazing conditions that reduce animal selectivity. Animals will also trample the weeds and make them less competitive, which provides the opportunity for other forages to re-grow and potentially become more vigorous. Cattle prefer to graze on grasses and legumes, while sheep like to graze shrubs, woody species and brows. Goats enjoy the brows species and woody plants over grass. “When you have thistles, you can use sheep and goats to graze those more mature plants,” said Sommerfeld. “They will leave that more desirable forage behind, which you could then come back and utilize with beef cattle. So, a farm with sheep, goats and cattle would probably benefit from having many different species of herbivores grazing the same pasture.” Producers don’t need to own all types of livestock. “There are opportunities for producers who’ll bring the sheep or goats to your land or to an area for a period of time to graze or browse those specific types of plants,” she said. “They come in for a short period of time. Then the shepherd and his/her herd will move onto a different area to do more grazing. So, for multispecies grazing, you certainly don’t need to own all those species.” Mowing can effectively prevent seed set, but only if repeated several times in each growing season over a number of years. This consistently weakens the top of the plant and does not provide adequate recovery time. Grazing can replace mowing when pastures are unsuitable for mowing
because of limited access, topography, or terrain that is unsuitable for such equipment. “Over time, if you continue to utilize the intensive grazing approach, the thistle population will decline and the desirable forage yield will increase.” Mowing or grazing can severely weaken the plant, but it is still possible for plants to send up new shoots and re-grow from their root system. Sommerfeld advised also using control mechanisms to target the root system. Herbicide is one way to do that. “You can either use a broadcaster or blanket application over a large area, or you can do more selective applications through spot spraying or weed wipers.” Broad leaf herbicides are registered for use, but it is important to use products that provide long-term residual control. “Herbicides registered for use on pastures and range can be very expensive to use, but they provide excellent soil residual activity,” said Sommerfeld. “Those active ingredients are effective in killing the plant. You want that herbicide activity to stay in the soil for two or three growing seasons, not just being effective in the year of application.” She said an integrated approach, in which herbicides are used along with intensive rotational grazing or multispecies grazing, gives the best chance of success in controlling Canada thistle. A small patch of Canada thistle can be baled separately, but a larger area requires a different approach. “What happens is you’re cutting those weeds off and putting them in a bale ... and if you’re moving those bales to other sites, you’re transporting those weeds from one area to another, spreading that weed invasion around, proliferating the problem even more.”Less and less desir-
MANAGING CANADA THISTLE IN PASTURES Canada thistle has probably been around since the time of the European settlers, says Sarah Sommerfeld, regional forage specialist in Outlook, Sask. • Formally known as cirsium arvense, it is an aggressive creeping-rooted perennial weed with irregular lobe shaped leaves with spines on the leaf margins.
Visit your New Holland Dealer by November 30 to take advantage of great offers on tractors and equipment during Value Bonanza.
• It can be found in hay fields and pastures across the Prairies. • Saskatchewan’s Weed Control Act lists Canada thistle as a noxious weed, which requires landowners and occupants to eradicate, control, or prevent the weed’s spread. • It is important to control Canada thistle because it can dramatically decrease the forage yield of desirable species in pastures as the weed population increases and becomes more dense and robust. • Canada thistle dies down to the ground in winter, but it is still problematic because of its competitiveness. The plant can be cut off, but it spreads aggressively through a creeping root system.
able forage yield will be available if this weed invasion area continues to grow. “In a hay situation, the thistle would decrease the amount of hay harvested off the field, resulting in fewer bales sold and fewer dollars per acre earned,” said Sommerfeld. “So, it may not affect the overall price the hay sells for, but if you’re selling fewer bales, you’re earning fewer dollars. As a hay seller, you shouldn’t be looking to transport that hay to other areas. Producers are good stewards of the land. They don’t want to be moving these invasive weeds from one area to another.”
nhvaluebonanza.com
©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.
46
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS AG NOTES
RIDING THE RANGE
HOCKEY RINK RECEIVES DONATION The community hockey rink in LeRoy, Sask., will make a comeback thanks to BHP Billiton. The company will contribute $1 million over for years to rebuild the rink, which was destroyed by a fire in May 2013. Chris Ryder, vice-president of corporate affairs for BHP Billiton Potash, said the company was glad to support the rebuilding because it also housed much of the community’s hockey history. FEED GRAIN RESEARCH RECEIVES FUNDING
Horseback riders cross a field as the sun goes down over the Rockies near High River, Alta. |
Take your yield
Through THROUGH the roof. THE ROOF TAKE YOUR YIELD
If you’re ready to take your soybean yield higher, ask for the 2—Genuity® Roundup Ready 2 Yield® soybeans. They have built-in yield potential to outperform original Roundup Ready® Soybeans, with farmers seeing more 3, 4 and 5 bean pods. So be sure your soybeans have the trait technology that’s advancing the yield of soybean growers across Canada. And get ready to yield more than ever.
MIKE STURK PHOTO
Farmer-led research to find new feed wheat varieties will receive $400,000 in federal funding. The four-year project will develop
new wheat varieties that have characteristics such as high yield, flood tolerance, fusarium resistance and tolerance for Manitoba soil with high salinity. Traditional plant breeding techniques will be used, which means the varieties wouldn’t be considered genetically modified and could be used in all livestock operations. Research will be led by the Western Feed Grain Development Co-op, which will contribute $1.8 million to the project. FOOD SAFETY PROGRAM ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS Applications for the Growing Assurance-Food Safety On-Farm program will be accepted until Nov. 21. The program will help hog producers further enhance animal welfare on their farms. All hog producers registered through Canadian Quality Assurance are eligible, said Mark Fynn, an animal care specialist with Manitoba Pork. Farmers are allowed to buy equipment under the program’s animal welfare category that will provide a quick and humane death to sick animals. They will also be able to access funding to be trained by a veterinarian on their farms about how to properly use the equipment. Farmers will also be able to receive multi-gas detectors to better manage air quality in the barns. For more information, visit the Manitoba Pork or Manitoba Agriculture websites. FCC CONTRIBUTES $1 MILLION The Farm Credit Canada AgriSpirit Fund is providing $1 million to 78 community groups to support capital projects that will help improve residents’ lives Recipients receive $5,000 to $25,000 for community improvement projects such as recreation and community centres, libraries and emergency services training facilities. To be eligible, projects must be based in communities with populations less than 150,000. Selected groups must complete their projects by Dec. 31, 2016. NEWFOUNDLAND GARDEN SHOW RECEIVES FUNDING Newfoundland and Labrador’s annual Agrifoods and Garden Show will receive $150,000 in funding from the Growing Forward 2. The funding will help increase awareness of the diversity of the province’s agriculture and agrifood industry and its economic contribution. The show is organized by the Newfoundland and Labrador Federation of Agriculture in Torbay. It is the largest agriculture event in the province.
COMING EVENTS
Genuity® Because every bean matters. Visit your seed®rep or GENUITYTRAITS.CA Genuity Because every bean matters. Visit your seed rep or GENUITYTRAITS.CA
ALWAYS FOLLOW IRM, GRAIN MARKETING AND ALL OTHER STEWARDSHIP AND PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Details of these requirements can be found in the Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers printed in this publication. ©2014 Monsanto Company Inc.
ALWAYS FOLLOW IRM, GRAIN MARKETING AND ALL OTHER STEWARDSHIP AND PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Details of these requirements can be found in the Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers printed in this publication. ©2014 Monsanto Canada Inc.
Nov. 7-8: Farming for the Future — Organic Connections 2014, Conexus Arts Centre, Regina (Marion McBride, info@organicconnections.ca, www. organicconnections.ca/) Nov. 18-19: Canfax Cattle Market Forum, Deerfoot Inn and Casino, 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 | OCTOBER 9, 2014
CLASSIFIEDS
47
Move it! in print and online next day.
4 EASY WAYS TO BOOK YOUR AD 1 Online at www.producer.com 2 By phone: In Saskatoon 665-3515 Toll Free 1-800-667-7770 (anywhere in North America)
8:30am – 4:30 pm CST, Mon & Fri 8:30am – 8:00 pm CST Tues, Wed, Thurs. 3 Fax 306-653-8750 4 Email us at: advertising@producer.com
DEADLINES • Liner ads – Thursday previous to publication, 8:00pm CST • Display ads – Thursday previous to publication, Noon CST
LINER AD RATES
producer.com
C L A S S I F I E D S A L E S | P : 8 0 0 . 6 6 7.7 7 7 0 F : 3 0 6 . 6 5 3 . 8 75 0 | E M A I L : A D V E R T I S I N G @ P R O D U C E R . C O M
$5.85/Printed Line (3 line minimum) NON-REFUNDABLE $3.00/pd week online charge ADDITIONAL FEATURES Bolding = .75/word/wk Full Color Photo = $39.00/wk Black & White Photo = $25.00/wk Attention Getter = $15.00/wk Ask about our Priority Placement LINER FREQUENCY DISCOUNTS Start after 3 weeks Example: 4 weeks for the price of 3, (8 for 6) (12 for 9) (52 for 39) etc. (Does not apply to bolding)
LINER COMMUNITY CALENDAR RATES 2 For 1 Book an ad to run and the identical ad will appear in a second edition free of charge. (Maximum 4 ads)
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY AD RATES $118.80/column inch/week Talk with your sales rep about our Volume Discounts
CONDITIONS • The Western Producer reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement submitted to it for publication. • The Western Producer, while assuming no responsibility for advertisements appearing in its columns, endeavors to restrict advertising to wholly reliable firms or individuals. • Buyers are advised to request shipment C.O.D. when purchasing from an unknown advertiser, thus minimizing the chances of fraud and eliminating the necessity of refund if the goods have already been sold. • Ads may be cancelled or changed at any time in accordance with the deadlines. Ads ordered on the term rates, which are cancelled or changed lose their special term rates. • The Western Producer accepts no responsibility for errors in advertisements after one insertion. • While every effort is made to forward replies to the box numbers to the advertiser as soon as possible, we accept no liability in respect of loss or damage alleged to arise through either failure or delay in forwarding such replies, however caused. • Advertisers using only a post office box number or street address must submit their name to this office before such an advertisement is accepted for this publication. Their name will be kept confidential and will not appear in any advertisement unless requested. • Box holders names are not given out. • NON-REFUNDABLE
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
Moveit! New online feature for more exposure. Put your ad at the top of mind with producers by taking advantage of our Highlighted ad placement. For only $5.00 per week your ad appears on the web page in highlighted in eye catching blue. Place your ad today by going online or calling a Classified Sales Associate today!
1-800-667-7770 | classifieds.producer.com | * When you book 4 weeks for the price of three and pay for the three week Featured Ad, you are not charged the $5.00 in the fourth (free) week.
48 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
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. 1969 CESSNA 172 Skyhawk, 1500 TT, new annual, hangared, 9/10. 306-682-3344, Humboldt, SK. PIPER PAWNEE PA25-180, low time on motor, 50 hrs. on new cylinders, flies great, $45,000. 204-381-4110, Altona, MB. 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. 1946 STINSON 108-1, $60,000. Beautiful 4 seater, flight ready, great condition, IO360 Lycoming eng., 2 SMOH, complete rebuild in 2007, new constant spd. propeller- Harzal, 2 radios and sets of earphones, King transponder, new brakes and alternat o r. L o c at e d at C o o k i n g L a ke , A B . , 780-454-7517, albertaprincess@live.ca AIRCRAFT IN SASKATOON, SK: BC-12D 1946, floats and wheels, needs lots of work. John: elanjohn@gmail.com 1978 CESSNA AGTRUCK, 4300 TT, 290 SFNE, IO550, everything new, FWF, lots of mods, Satloc Bantam, exc. cond. Annual with sale, $150,000. Call 403-934-4880, Strathmore, AB.
1945 FARMALL A tractor, wide tracks, look a n d r u n s g o o d , a s k i n g $ 3 5 0 0 O B O. 780-481-0807, Edmonton, AB.
1946 FLEET 80 CANUCK, 11423 TTAF, C90-14F, 580 SMOH, Sensenich 60 TTSN, Cleveland brakes, recent w/s and skylights K97A com, KT76A XPDR Mode C, SPA400 I/C, Scott 8” TW, hangared, annual 05/14, $45,000 OBO. 250-372-0277, Kamloops BC
2- JD AR tractors, in running order, $1000 ea; 1959 Case 510B, FEL and attachments, good, $5,000. 780-390-0075, Viking, AB. 1949 8N FORD tractor, 4 spd. trans, 3 PTH, w/good tires, $2500. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equip. Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK.
Available at:
Battleford Co-op Farm Supply
83 YR OLD SENIOR selling 1960 Cessna 150 with Stol Kit, 1003 SMOH, 4298 TTSN, Edo-Aire NavCom, Sigtronics intercom, artificial horizon, directional gyro, cyl. head temp gauge, shoulder harness, GPS, very clean, recent annual, priced to sell $19,800 OBO. Don 780-726-3545 res., 780-645-4414 work, St. Paul, AB.
North Battleford, SK
(306) 445-9457
ANTIQUE SALE, Oct. 24-25, D-Company Armories, 9005 101 St., Grande Prairie, AB. Great selection of furniture, jewellery, coins, stamps, toys and dolls, fine glass and china, vintage stove restoration, rustic and country collectibles and more. Show hours Fri. Oct. 24th 10:00AM-8:00PM, Sat. 1967 CESSNA 150G single engine prop, TT Oct. 25th 10:00AM-5:00PM. Admission $4. 2100, SMOH 180, with 150 HP, Horton For bookings or info. call 780-987-2071. STOL, tail dragger wheel skis, LR fuel, 406 ELT auto STC fuel, new Arctic covers, excel- UNRESERVED ANTIQUE AUCTIONSlent condition, no snags, recent annual, Monday, Oct. 13 and Saturday, Nov. 1, great performer, $56,500. 867-332-8393, Fort Qu’Appelle, Saskatchewan. Western 867-393-4890, Whitehorse, YT. Canada’s only quality all lot numbered auctions. View the many pictures soon at macpherson@northwestel.net w w w. s h a v e r a u c t i o n . c o m P h o n e 306-332-5382. PL #1-914399.
www.dseriescanola.ca
THANKSGIVING CELEBRATION Antique Auction, Monday, October 13th, 10:30 AM, Donoghs Antique Warehouse, south of Brandon, MB. Features: beautiful oak and 1/4 cut oak antique furniture; chinas; matching lead glass 4 stackers; S-roll top; oak bdrm suite; hall seat; set 6 paw feet dining chairs; round dining centre ped. table; plus more. Feature Items: AMI Jute Box with mahogany case; 1920’s 5 cent slot machine; Model 313 candy store brass cash register; Grandfather’s clock; telephones; gramophones; signs; glassware and lamps; toys; plus much more. For info call 204-727-1088. For pictures and updated listing: www.mrankinauctions.com and www.rosstaylorauction.com Murray Rankin Auctions 204-534-7401. PL313936. Ross Taylor Auction Service.
ADRIAN’S MAGNETO SERVICE Guaranteed repairs on mags and ignitors. Repairs. Parts. Sales. 204-326-6497. Box 21232, NEW TRACTOR PARTS. Specializing in Steinbach, MB. R5G 1S5. engine rebuild kits and thousands of other parts. Savings! Service manuals and decals. Also Steiner Parts Dealer. Our 40th year! www.diamondfarmtractorparts.com 1967 FORD LTD 4 door hardtop, showing 15,450 miles, nice shape; 1949 to 1951 Call 1-800-481-1353. Mercurys and Monarchs; 1970 to 1973 1 RUMLEY OIL PULL tractor, model W, Dusters, some 4 spd; Lots of other 1950 to 20-30 HP; and 1 JD 730 standard gas trac- 1960 Fords, Chryslers and some Chevs. Call 306-859-4913, Beechy, SK. tor. Call 204-867-3324, Minnedosa, MB. 1944 JD “B”, new grill, good tin, needs paint, $2500; 1949 MH Pony, hydraulics, older restoration, nice, $3200 OBO. Both tractors run good and completely orig.; JD Model D parts. 306-536-8988, Regina, SK. WINTER PROJECTS: IH W4, IH WD6, IH H, JD AR, JD R, JD RC 70 dsl., JD 730 RC dsl., 1929 JD D, Oliver 77 RC, MH 44 RC dsl., MH 55 dsl., Fordson Major, Caterpillar RD4. 204-745-7445, Carman, MB.
DIAMOND RIO tandem, V8 Cummins diesel, Allison auto., 1400 miles, $9000 OBO. 306-267-4552, Coronach, SK. JIM’S CLASSIC CORNER a selling service for classic and antique automobiles and trucks. Call 204-997-4636, Winnipeg, MB. TWO 1928 SUPER SIX ESSEX CARS, one running; 1989 Olds 88 Delta, 85,000 kms. Ph. 306-767-2277, Zenon Park, SK.
1947 REO 2 ton truck, in good running cond., all original w/new battery and front WANTED: EARLY 1950’s Massey Harris 90 tires, $5000. 780-879-2248, Alliance, AB. JD M, ALLIS Chalmers B, Int. Cub A, B, C combine, restored. Call 218-689-0659, and H tractors. Pony, MH, new rubber, Middle River, Minnesota painted, always shedded; Two 6600 JD combines, good condition, run well, 1952 JD 40, $3500; 1952 AR, new rubber, INSIDE WORKING OF A Player piano, $ 2 0 , 0 0 0 t a ke s a l l o r w i l l s e p a r at e . $4500. Both tractors fully restored and run (1912), plus 30 rolls, all in good condiwell. Call 306-778-1610, Waldeck, SK. 306-698-2265, Wolseley, SK. tion. Call 780-698-3955, Rochester, AB.
CLASSIFIED AD SUBMISSION FORM Complete name, address and phone number need not appear in your ad, although we must have this information for our files. NAME ________________________________________________________________________ DAYTIME PHONE# ___________________________ CELL# _________________________ EVENING PHONE# __________________________________ ADDRESS ________________________________________________
SMALL ADS, BIG RESULTS This is where farmers buy and sell Canada’s largest agricultural classifieds.
Call our team to place your ad
TOWN _________________________________________ PROVINCE _____________
1-800-667-7770
POSTAL CODE ____________________________________________ EMAIL ADDRESS _________________________________________
Entertainment Crossword by Walter D. Feener
PLEASE PRINT YOUR AD BELOW exactly as you want it to appear in the paper, including your phone number or The Western Producer box number. When using a phone or fax number within your ad copy, town and province are required (toll free numbers and WP Box numbers excepted). When using an email and/or website address within your ad copy, an alternative way for readers to contact you is required (ie: phone, fax or mailing address). Ads in the Personal column must be placed under a Western Producer box number or email address. There is a $45.00 charge for a box number ($95.00 International). A signature is required here for all Personal ads._________________________________________________
AD STARTS HERE:
a) Please circle the words you would like in bold print or b) ❑ entire ad.
$5.85/printed line (3 line minimum) + $3.00/week online
________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ Last Weeks Answers
_______________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ Town (required) ________________________________________________________ Province (required) _____________________________________________________ CLASSIFICATION NAME & NUMBER: ______________________________________ # OF WEEKS ________
Please start my ad in the ________________ issue
ALL PACKAGES ARE NON REFUNDABLE PLEASE SEE FRONT PAGE OF CLASSIFIED SECTION FOR FREQUENCY DISCOUNTS, FEATURE PRICING AND OTHER CLASSIFIED INFORMATION
When we receive your order a classified representative will contact you to confirm your order, price and payment options. Are you a:
❑ Subscriber ❑ Non-subscriber but a farmer ❑ Non-subscriber and not a farmer ❑ Yes ❑ No ❑ Not Sure
Have you advertised with us before?
❑ ❑ ❑ ❑ ❑
Yes, I want a Western Producer box number. (Add $45.00 for handling replies) Yes, I want a photo. Full Colour photo $39.00/wk + line count. Black & White Photo $25.00/week + line count Yes, I want words in my ad bolded. (Add an additional .75¢ per word per week) Yes, I want to bold the entire ad. (Add .75¢ per word per week) Email/Weblink, Yes, I want to link my classified ad to my website or my email address (your website or email address must be in ad)
Mail to: The Western Producer Advertising Department, Box 2500, Saskatoon, Sask. S7K 2C4 Ph. 1-800-667-7770
Fax 306-653-8750
ACROSS He played Craig Gilner in It’s Kind of a Funny Story Baruchel or Silverheels Klemperer of Hogan’s Heroes He starred in Anatomy of a Murder She played Olivia on Street Legal Silent film actress Bennett from Australia Dangerous ___ The Seven Year ___ The ___ Diary He played Declan on Revenge April’s husband and shoeshiner at Pawnee City Hall ___ of Fire 2004 Brad Pitt film 1999 film that was nominated for seven Academy Awards (with The) 30. Old TV series set in Coral Key Park 32. Psycho star 33. ___, God! 34. She plays Red Riding hood/Ruby on Once Upon a Time 36. Serious who starred in Young Einstein 38. Andress from Switzerland 39. She played Honey in Honey 40. Jackie ___ 41. Hemsley of The Jeffersons 42. Film starring Russell Crowe and Jennifer Connelly 45. Felix’s roommate 47. Belle director 48. The Passion of the ___ 1. 6. 8. 11. 13. 14. 15. 19. 21. 22. 23. 25. 27. 28.
DOWN He plays Walter on Scorpion Ed Wood Oscar winner He wrote and directed Capricorn One Holden’s Sunset Boulevard co-star Actress Garr Jethro’s uncle Film starring Jeff Daniels and John Goodman Film Cuba Gooding, Jr. played a mentally challenged student in 10. Forrest Gump’s beloved 12. She played Tim Allen’s daughter in The Shaggy Dog (2 words) 16. He starred in 3 Idiots 17. She starred in Calendar Girls 18. Mayberry boy 20. Film starring Tom Arnold and Rhea Perlman 24. Touched by an Angel actor 26. Men in Black writer (2 words) 27. Initials of the actor who played Graham Chase on My So-Called Life 28. Film starring Tim Matheson and Meg Tilly 29. Some horror films 30. Film starring James Franco 31. Producer of Frasier Crane’s radio show 35. Initials of the actress who plays Cindi in Miss March 37. Simone of New Girl 40. Initials of the actor who played Petrocelli on Petrocelli 43. Executive director on 77 Sunset Strip 44. ___ Girl Friday 46. ___ and Company 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 9.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
CLASSIFIED ADS 49
WANTED: THE COOEY Model 84 shotgun manufactured by the H.W. Cooey Machine & Arms Co., looking for 28 gauge single shot in good shape. 780-446-6009 eves, Ft. Saskatchewan, AB.
AN TIQUE &
CO LLECTABLE SALE
O c t. 20th â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 26 th
M ARK ET M ALL
2325 Preston Ave.S. SASK ATO O N FARM TOY/ COLLECTORS, Reginaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Annual Show/Sale. Featuring: Farm toys, parts, antique; Dinky toys; Nascars; model trains; crafts; semi trucks/automobiles, in all scales. Plus crafts/collectibles on 2nd floor. Saturday October 11th, 10-5, Sunday, October 12th, 10-4. Held at St. Basil Parish Centre, 1717 Toronto St., off Sask. Drive between Winnipeg and Broad Street. WANTED: TRACTOR MANUALS, sales brochures, tractor catalogs. 306-373-8012, Saskatoon, SK.
FARM AND ACREAGE Equipment Auction for Kyle Astrope and Yolanda Schappert, Sunday October 12, 11:00 AM, 1 mile west, Edenwold, SK. On offer: 1976 IH 766; MF 298 w/690 FEL, 3 PTH; Bobcat 743 diesel; JD 14' tandem disc; JD 12' discer; 60' harrow bar; NH 1000 bale wagon; NH 7' sickle mower; JD 205 5' mower; JD 336 square baler; OMC 595 round baler; tractor tires, 20.8x38; 8' dozer blade; 1985 Chevrolet 1/2 ton; 1959 Chev Apache stepside shortbox, mostly restored; 1985 GMC 2 ton service truck; Chev 3/4 ton truck (parts); 2000 Ford Focus, requires repair; car trailer 20' w/ramps; Craftsman riding lawn mower; JD Gator 2 WD. Many more items. Brad 306-551-9411, Darren 306-660-8070, www.2sauctioneers.ca PL# 331982. PROPERTY AND HOUSEHOLD AUCTION, Leo and Margaret Martin, #8- 2nd Avenue, Otthon, SK, Sunday, October 19th, 2014, at 10:00 AM. Featuring: 848 sq. ft., 2 bdrm bungalow, 1991 23â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Dutchmen trailer, 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122; boat/trailer 50 HP motor, plus household and garage items. Karlaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Auction House, 306-782-0787, www.ukrainetzauction.com Yorkton, SK. AUCTION SALE, Saturday, October 18 at Buchanan, SK. JD A tractor, S/N 272694. More info view www.peszkosauction.com or cal 306-593-2254, 306-593-7079. PROPERTY AND HOUSEHOLD AUCTION for Bill and Brenda Cameron, Sat., Oct. 18, 2014 at 10:00 AM, Yorkton, SK. Featuring: 20 acre hobby farm, wire fence, sheltered, Melville water, pump out for septic, dugout, oil furnace, 10 min. to city of Yorkton. 1102 sq. ft., 1-1/2 storey farm house with single att. garage. 5 acres is standing hay with pasture, corrals, 8 stall barn with loft, workshop, 2 storage buildings and chicken coop. Acreage Equip: 1975 Belarus 250 dsl. tractor. 11 yr. old pony, 10 HH, broke. Plus household and garage items. Karlaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Auction House, www.ukrainetzauction.com 306-782-0787, Yorkton, SK. PL #310056.
OCTOBER 16th s !- s ,)6% ).4%2.%4 ")$$).' 7!2$2/0 %.4%202)3%3 ,4$ ,%3 7!2$2/0 2/3%4/7. 3+
Directions: 6U /^` MYVT 9VZL[V^U NV HWWYV_ RT TP 5VY[O VY MYVT )PNNHY NV HWWYV_ RT TP :V\[O [OLU TPSLZ RT ,HZ[ HUK TPSLZ RT 5VY[O [V `HYK Seller Contact: 3LZ >HYKYVW JLSS Auction Coordinator: 2PT 2YHTLY 2\IV[H 4 4->+ 2\IV[H -,3 OV\YZ ZOV^PUN" 1VOU +LLYL ^K W Z [YHUZ OV\YZ ZOV^PUN" 1VOU +LLYL ^K W Z [YHUZ OV\YZ ZOV^PUN" 1VOU +LLYL ^K" 1VOU +LLYL ^K 1+ -,3" >LZ[^HYK Âť W [" *HZL 0/ Âť W [" -SL_PJVPS :`Z[LT Âť OHYYV^ WHJRLY IHY" *HZL 0/ Âť JOPZLS WSV^" 4HZZL` Âť WYLZZ KYPSS" :HR\UKPHR /+ H\NLY >OLH[OLHY[ TV]LY" 5L^ /VSSHUK / 4V^ 4H_ Âť KPZJIPUL" 5L^ 0KLH IHSLY" 5L^ /VSSHUK ZX\HYL IHSLY" :LSLJ[PVU VM SP]LZ[VJR MLLKPUN OHUKSPUN LX\PWTLU[" 0U[LYUH[PVUHS 3VHKZ[HY NYHPU [Y\JR TPSLZ ZOV^PUN" -VYK - ?3; [VU _ [Y\JR RT ZOV^PUN" -VYK ;H\Y\Z RTZ ZOV^PUN" >` 3LL Âť NVVZLULJR Z[VJR [YHPSLY" Âť NVVZLULJR Ă&#x2026;H[KLJR [YHPSLY" -HYT 2PUN YV[HY` J\[[LY" 1VOU +LLYL KLJR TV^LY" @HTHOH 9OPUV ,-0 RT ZOV^PUN" 6[OLY 4PZJ ,X\PW" (U[PX\LZ *VSSLJ[HISLZ 7HY[PHS SPZ[PUN VUS`
OCTOBER 17th s !- s ,)6% ).4%2.%4 ")$$).' ,9.%, &!2-3 ).# ,9,% .%,,)% ,/9 -!23$%. 3+ Directions: -YVT 4HYZKLU NV RT ,HZ[ VU /^` HUK RT :V\[O VU WH]LTLU[ `HYK VU >LZ[ ZPKL Seller Contact: 3`SL 3V` Auction Coordinator: 2PT 2YHTLY
*HZL 0/ 4->+ OYZ ZOV^PUN" *HZL 0/ OYZ ZOV^PUN" *HZL 0/ Âť OLHKLY" 7YHPYPL :[HY Âť Z W *\TTPUZ KPLZLS OLHKLY [YHJ[VY OV\YZ ZOV^PUN" 0U[LYUH[PVUHS Âť Z W" )V\YNH\S[ -/ Âť HPY ZLLKLY )V\YNH\S[ HPY JHY[" :JOHMLY Âť [HUKLT KPZJ" -SL_PJVPS :`Z[LT Âť OHYYV^ WHJRLY IHY" :LSLJ[PVU VM H\NLYZ" .VVK ZLSLJ[PVU VM NYHPU IPUZ" 0U[LYUH[PVUHS ZPUNSL H_SL NYHPU [Y\JR = [YHUZ RT ZOV^PUN" 6[OLY 4PZJ ,X\PW 7HY[PHS SPZ[PUN VUS`
Saskatoon, SK
AUCTION: 85 Antique engines (farm, oilfield, grain elevators), many running. Related parts; Magnetos; Magnet chargers; Pump jacks; Grind stones; 9N Ford tractor. Sat. Oct. 18, 2014, 10:00AM, Innisfree, AB. S t ew a r t Au c t i o n s , 1 - 8 0 0 - 2 6 9 - 8 5 8 0 ; www.stewartauctions.com PBR FARM AND INDUSTRIAL SALE, last Saturday of each month. Ideal for farmers, contractors, suppliers and dealers. Consign now. Next sale October 25, 9:00 AM. PBR, 105- 71st St. West, Saskatoon, SK., www.pbrauctions.com 306-931-7666.
Unreserved Public Auction
October 16 | 8 am
OCTOBER 18th s !- s ,)6% ).4%2.%4 ")$$).' !2,%% &!2-3 ,4$ (5"%24 ",!)3 ,!52%.4 ",!)3 4(% %34!4% /& ,%/.!2$ ",!)3 $%,-!3 3+
Directions: -YVT +LSTHZ VU /^` NV TPSLZ >LZ[ 5VY[O ZPKL VM /^` Seller Contact: /\ILY[ )SHPZ Auction Coordinator: )YLUKHU 2YHTLY
#319916
24/7 ON L IN E B ID D IN G & B U Y N OW
Refer to W eb site forTerm s & Cond itions In clu d in g: 2012 Bo b ca t E 26 E xca va to r; 2008 Ca d illa c; 2008 GM C S ierra ; 2008 S ilvera d o ; 2007 GM C S ierra ; JD Reel M o w ers ; AT CO Office S kid S ha ck; M u ltip le W eld ers ; Un res erved Ha rd w o o d F lo o rin g; Un u s ed L u m b er; 40+ F irea rm s ; New a n d Un u s ed Res ta u ra n t E q . Ca lga ry: Equ ipm en t S a le 2015 S o u thla n d 18â&#x20AC;&#x2122; T /A Ba ll Hitch Deck T ra iler; S to ra ge Co n ta in ers ; T ra cto r/T ru cks ; Cra n e T ru ck; Atco T ra iler; 2012 Gla s tro n Bo a t/ T ra iler. Plu s T o o l S a le; E lectro n ics ; Ren o M a teria ls . BC: 2003 RG200NH Ro a d Gra d er; 2006 K u b o ta R520S 4x4 W heel L o a d er; K u b o ta B1600 M F W D All BeltCo n veyo r.
*HZL 0/ ^K OYZ ZOV^PUN" :[LPNLY )LHYJH[ :; ^K OYZ ZOV^PUN" 4HZZL` -LYN\ZVU 4->+ ^ )\OSLY (SSPLK -,3 OYZ ZOV^PUN" *HZL ^K OYZ ZOV^PUN" 4HZZL` -LYN\ZVU :\WLY ^K 3LVU -,3" 4HZZL` -LYN\ZVU Z W ^ 4- W \ OLHKLY 4(= JOVWWLY 6\[IHJR H\[V Z[LLY -PLSK :[HY 00 [OY LUN OYZ ZOV^PUN" 4HJ +VU Âť Ă&#x2026;L_ OLHKLY" 7YHPYPL :[HY 4HJ+VU Âť YPNPK OLHKLY OYZ ZOV^PUN" 4VYYPZ 4H_PT Âť HPY ZLLKLY ^ 4VYYPZ [V^ ILOPUK [HUR" 9P[L^H` Âť OLH]` OHYYV^Z" 4VYYPZ Âť J\S[P]H[VY" .YLLU +YVW )HUK^HNVU " 4HULYV NYHPU IHNNLY" )YHUK[ ,? NYHPU ]HJ" ZLSLJ[PVU VM NYHPU H\NLYZ" 4LSYVL :WYH *V\WL ^K Âť KPLZLS 6\[IHJR :;: H\[V Z[LLY 6\[IHJR (\[V 4H[L OYZ ZOV^PUN" 7L[LYIPS[ OPNO^H` [YHJ[VY *(; ZWK" -VYK ZPUNSL H_SL NYHPU [Y\JR *(;" -VYK - *\Z[VT *HI Ă&#x2026;H[KLJR" +VLWRLY :\WLY ) NYHPU [YHPSLYZ" ([JV Âť [YPWSL H_SL KLJRV]LY [YHPSLY" .YHZZOVWWLY aLYV [\YU TV^LY" 6[OLY 4PZJ ,X\PW 7HY[PHS SPZ[PUN VUS`
SEE SEE MORE MORE PHOTOS PHOTOS AND AND INFORMATION INFORMATION AT AT
M CD O UG ALL AUCTIO N EERS LTD .
Call toll free: 1-800-529-9958
w w w.M c D ou g a llBa y.c om Â
SK Provincial Licence #914618 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; AB Provincial Licence #206959
1-800-26 3-4193
2013 & 2009 Challenger MT865C & 2007 MT865B
2013 John Deere 4940
2 of 4â&#x20AC;&#x201D; 2013 SunďŹ&#x201A;ower 1550 50 FT
Saskatoon, SK
Just North of Saskatoon on Hwy 12 Phone 306.933.9333
1250+ Items in this auction 23â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Agriculture tractors 28â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Equipment trailers 60â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Pickups/cars/SUVs 23â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Recreational vehicles 91â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Mobile structures ...AND MUCH MORE!
UP C OM IN G EVEN TS L IV E: Retirem en t S a le F o r â&#x20AC;&#x153; Hen ryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s S ervice S ho p â&#x20AC;? , Oct. 10 - K en n ed y, S k; W eekly Au ctio n , T u es d a y 6p m - E m era ld Pa rk & M o re! ON L IN E: S o u they Ice Crea m S to re - Oct. 9; In d u s t. E q u ip . & S ho p T o o ls - Oct. 21 w /co m p lete lin e o f m eta l fa b rica tio n eq . p la s m a cu ttin g ta b le, b ra kes , ro llin g eq .; UN RES ERV ED In d u s tria l E q u ip m en t S a le Oct. 22 & M o re! Rea l Es ta te/L a n d : 1/4 S ectio n - Na tu ra l Ha b ita t-Bru n o .; Din s m o re Acrea ge; L a ke View Ho m e & Co n ten ts Ro u n d L a ke; L a n d , L o ca tio n W a ka w .
2013 John Deere 9460R
rbauction.com | 800.491.4494 Auction Company License #309645
2006 John Deere 9660WTS
1927 Ford Model A
2003 Hummer H2
2013 Forest River Sierra 36.5 Ft
50 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
OCTOBER 20th s !- s ,)6% ).4%2.%4 ")$$).' 7!22%. ,/22!).% !$!-3/. 3(%,,"2//+ 3+
Directions: -YVT :OLSSIYVVR H[ [OL Q\UJ[PVU VM /^` ,ZZV NV RT LHZ[ VU [OL /^` HUK [OLU [HRL NYPK RT TPSLZ UVY[O @HYK VU LHZ[ ZPKL Seller Contacts: >HYYLU 3VYYHPUL (KHTZVU Auction Coordinator: 2PT 2YHTLY 1VOU +LLYL ^K OYZ ZOV^PUN" =LYZH[PSL ^K W[V OYZ ZOV^PUN" =LYZH[PSL ^K IP KPYLJ[PVUHS =LYZH[PSL -,3" <UP]LYZHS +; 4->+ <UP]LYZHS -,3 OYZ ZOV^PUN" 4HZZL` /HY YPZ HU[PX\L" 4HZZL` /HYYPZ HU[PX\L" 1VOU +LLYL :;: 1+ 7 W \ [OY LUN OYZ ZOV^PUN" 1VOU +LLYL + Âť OLHKLY" *HZL 0/ ZW *0/ Âť W \ [OY LUN OYZ ZOV^PUN" *HZL 0/ Âť YPNPK OLHKLY" *HZL 0/ Âť ZW OYZ ZOV^PUN" >LZ[^HYK Âť W[" 4VYYPZ 4H_PT 00 Âť HPY KYPSS 4VYYPZ HPY [HUR" )V\YNH\S[ Âť HPY ZLLKLY )V\YNH\S[ [HUR" -SL_PJVPS :`Z[LT Âť OHYYV^ WHJRLY IHY" (S[LLU Âť [HUKLT KPZJ" -YLL -VYT /+ [VUUL MLY[PSPaLY [HUR" :LSLJ[PVU VM H\NLYZ" -SL_PJVPS ?3 Âť W[" 5L^ /VSSHUK :- W[ Z\ZWLUKLK IVVT Âť" 1VOU +LLYL (\[V;YHJ Z[LLYPUN RP[Z" 1VOU +LLYL :[HY -PYL YLJPL]LY" 1VOU +LLYL KPZWSH`" 5L^ /VSSHUK [ H THU\YL ZWYLHKLY" 0U[LYUH[PVUHS - [HUKLT NYHPU [Y\JR KPLZLS ZWK -\SSLY <S[YHJLS Âť Z[LLS IV_" 0U[LYUH[PVUHS ZPUNSL H_SL NYHPU [Y\JR = [YHUZ RT ZOV^PUN" -VYK NYHPU [Y\JR" +VKNL 9HT 3HYHTPL JYL^ JHI ^K K\HSS` 3 *\TTPUZ KPLZLS ZWK THU\HS RT ZOV^PUN" 3VHK 4H_ Âť Âť [ H NVVZLULJR Ă&#x2026;H[KLJR [YHPSLY [HU KLT K\HSS`" 1VOU +LLYL 3 YPKPUN TV^LY" 2H^HZHRP )H`V\ MV\Y ^OLLSLY (;=" +LS[H *YHM[ ?3; Ă&#x201E;IYLNSHZZ IVH[" 7HY[PHS SPZ[PUN VUS`
OCTOBER 21st s !- s ,)6% ).4%2.%4 ")$$).' -!8 #()3!. %34!4% "!,$7).4/. 3+
Directions: -YVT [OL ^LZ[ )HSK^PU[VU [\YUVÉ&#x2C6; HSVUN /PNO^H` NV RT TPSLZ ^LZ[ VU OPNO^H` [OLU [HRL NYPK RT TPSLZ ^LZ[ HUK RT TPSLZ ZV\[O ;OL )HSK^PU[VU [\YUVÉ&#x2C6; HSVUN /^` PZ HWWYV_ RT LHZ[ VM 5LPSI\YN VY RT ^LZ[ VM *\[ 2UPML :2 Seller Contact: 9VK *OPZHU Auction Coordinators: 2PT 2YHTLY )YLUKHU 2YHTLY =LYZ[H[PSL ^K OYZ ZOV^PUN" =LYZH[PSL ^K" =LYZH[PSL )P +PYLJ[PVUHS ^K [YHJ[VY -,3 OYZ ZOV^PUN" *HZL ^K OYZ ZOV^PUN" *HZL ^K OYZ ZOV^PUN" *HZL ^K OYZ ZOV^PUN" 0U[LYUH[PVUHS -HYTHSS / HU[PX\L" 0U[LYUH[PVUHS KPLZLS HU[PX\L" 0U[LYUH[PVUHS > :[HUKHYK HU[PX\L" *VTIPULZ! 5L^ /VSSHUK Z W" *HZL 0/ W [ Âť" *HZL 0/ WYLZZ KYPSSZ ÂťZ Âť " 4VYYPZ 4HNU\T *7 J\S[P]H[VY HUK TVYL" .YHPU /HUKSPUN" :WYH`PUN" 5L^ 0KLH THU\YL ZWYLHKLYZ" 5L^ /VSSHUK YV\UK IHSLY" 5L^ /VSSHUK ZX\HYL IHSLY" 5L^ /VSSHUK TP_TPSS" >OLH[OLHY[ WVZ[ OVSL H\NLY" -VYK - *\Z[VT *HI NYHPU [Y\JR RT ZOV^PUN" -VYK *\Z[VT *HI JHIV]LY Z H NYHPU [Y\JR" -VYK - ?3; ^K [Y\JR YLN JHI ^ 7V^LY:[YVRL 3 KPLZLS RTZ ZOV^PUN" 9HPUIV^ Âť JHY OH\SLY Ă&#x2026;H[KLJR" )LYNLU Âť [ H Z[VJR [YHPSLY" 3H^U .HYKLU! (;=ÂťZ" :OVW ;VVSZ 4PZJ" 4VIPSL /VTL 7HY[PHS SPZ[PUN VUS`
MORE AND MORE FARMERS are choosing Mack Auction Co. to conduct their farm equipment auctions!! Book your 2015 auction today! Call 306-634-9512 today! www.mackauctioncompany.com PL311962
NELSONâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S AUCTION SERVICE Annual Fall Auction, Sat., October 18, 2014, 9 AM at Nelsonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Auction Centre, Meacham, SK. 1970 JD 830 tractor w/FEL; 1984 730 Case/IH PT swather; 1990 JD 2360 SP swather; 1991 1660 Case/IH combine; Case/IH straight cut header; Hopper bin bottoms; Ezee-On post driver; Elk handling equip.; Bunk feeders, bale forks, cattle squeeze. Vehicles: 2008 Ford F250 Superduty single cab; 2006 Jeep Liberty Sport; 2002 Ford Explorer; 1999 Cadillac DeVille; 1984 Chev â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Mud truckâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;. Commercial buildings, yard and shop equipment, firearms, household and much more. For more info. visit website: www.nelsonsauction.com or call 306-376-4545. PL #911669.
7+856 2&7 $ 0 %,// $5067521* 758&.,1* /7' 7+25+,/' $% 3+
/2&$7,21 )URP 7KRUKLOG RQ +Z\ PLOHV : WR 5 5 PLOHV 6RXWK 7KRUKLOG LV PLOHV 1 RI (GPRQWRQ 9(5< %5,() /,67,1* Ć&#x2022; &DW ' & /*3 6WDQGDUG ZLQFK Ć&#x201D;&DW ' +;5 +LJK 'ULYH Ć&#x201D; &DW ' + $¡V 3 6KLIWV V Q $ Ć&#x201D; )LQOH\ +L :D\ +\GUDVFUHHQĆ&#x201D; $UGFR [ ¡V UHEXLOW Ć&#x201D; *DOLRQ .20$768 *UDGHUĆ&#x201D; 9ROYR /RDGHUĆ&#x201D; *DOLRQ .20$768 *UDGHU F Z Âś PROGERDUG Ć&#x201D; %2%&$7 GLHVHO KUV Ć&#x201D; -' GLHVHO 75$&725 KUV F Z -' /RDGHU Ć&#x201D; MRLQWV RI 3LSH Ć&#x2022; 7RUR Âľ [ 5HHO 0RZHUĆ&#x201D; (QURVVL ZKHHO 9 5DNH $V 1HZ Ć&#x201D; &DWWOH (TXLS Ć&#x201D; )XHO 7UDLOHUV Ć&#x201D; ROGHU +LJKER\V Ć&#x201D; /DUJH 4XDQWLW\ RI &DW $WWDFKPHQWVĆ&#x201D; 3LFN XS 7UXFNV +XJH $PRXQW RI 6FUDS ,URQ 0RUH ,17(51(7 %,'',1* 21 0$,1 ,7(06 67$576 $7 1221 6+$53 ELGOLYH SURGDQLXNDXFWLRQV FRP
E D P R O D A N I U K A UCTIONS /,&(16( 21/,1( ZZZ SURGDQLXNDXFWLRQV FRP
N OTE: OC TOBER IS TH E M ON TH FAR M ER S AR E LOOKIN G TO BUY EQUIP M EN T FOR TH EIR FALL & S P R IN G S EAS ON .
CONS IGN NOW !
#319 9 16
U N R ES ER VED ON L IN E AU CTION - IN D U S TR IAL CON S TR U CTION , R EP OS S ES S ED EQU IP M EN T & P R IVATE CON S IGN ER S BID S CLO S E IN EM ERALD P ARK
W ED N ES D AY, O CTO BER 22 -N O O N
Re g in a (306 ) 757-1755 O R 1-800-26 3-4193 PROUDL Y S ERV IN G W ES T ERN C AN ADA! S ub jec tto Ad d itions & Deletions.VisitOurW eb site forTerm s,Cond itions & Deta ils.
!5#4)/. 30
OCTOBER
+2'*,16 $8&7,21 &(175(
/RFDWLRQ 0LOHV 6RXWK RI WKH -FW RI +Z\V 0HOIRUW 6. 7KHQ 0LOH :HVW
&216,*1 12: 72 285 1(;7 /,9( $8&7,21
$FFHSWLQJ FRQVLJQPHQWV RI IDUP &RQVWUXFWLRQ (TXLSPHQW &DUV 7UXFNV 59Ĺ?V
LQIR#KRGJLQVDXFWLRQHHUV FRP
Call toll free: 1-800-529-9958 SK PL # 914507 â&#x20AC;˘ AB PL # 180827
PL #314037
Inc.
Toll Free 1 -86 6 -87 3-54 88 or 306 -87 3-54 88 Fa x 306 -87 3-54 9 2 Box 21 9 9 ,T isd a le,SK S0E 1 T 0 Em a il: b ru ce@ sa sk tel.net
N EXT SALE S ATUR DAY, 9:00 AM NOVEM BER 1, 2 014 G R EAT PLAIN S AUCTIO N EER S 5 M i. E. o f R egin a o n Hw y. #1 in G rea tPla in s In d u stria lPa rk TELEPHO N E (306) 52 5- 9516 w w w .grea tpla in sa u ctio n eers.ca w w w .glo b a la u ctio n gu id e.co m S ALES 1stS ATUR DAY O F EV ER Y M O N TH P.L. #91452 9
3+
&217$&7 86 72'$< 72 /,67 <285 (48,30(17
SK Provincial Licence #914618 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; AB Provincial Licence #206959
Taking Consignments of Farm Equipment, Construction, Heavy Trucks, Cars, Trucks, RVâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, ATVâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s & More.
UNRESERVED
A UCTION
w w w.M c D ou g a llBa y.c om
SEE MORE PHOTOS AND INFORMATION AT
Hw y #3 Ea s t, Tis d a le , S K .
www.schapansky.com 100% Family Owned And Operated
YO U D O N O T W AN T TO M IS S THIS O N E!!
14 Quarters of Farmland
Â
Â
E xca va to rs , S kid s teers , W heel L o a d ers , S em i T ra cto rs , Gra vel T ru cks , S em i & Gra vel T ra ilers , Pa ckers , Atco & Ha rd S ha ck T ra ilers , L ight Du ty T ru cks & T ra ilers , Ga to rs , Ba ckho e, Cra w ler, Directio n a l Drill, Cra n e T ru ck, T a n k T ru ck, S cra p er, Zo o m Bo o m , Other E q u ip m en t& M o re!
Directions: -YVT [OL LHZ[ ZPKL VM -VYNHU NV RT ZV\[O Seller Contacts: *\Y[PZ *HUK`JL -VYTV Auction Coordinator: 4PJOHLS /PNNZ Real Estate: X\HY[LYZ VM MHYTSHUK ZP[\H[LK PU [OL RM of Monet 257, RM of Montrose 315; HUK RM of Lacadena 228. SEE REAL ESTATE WEBSITE FOR COMPLETE DETAILS. 2\IV[H 4 ? 4->+ [YHJ[VY ^ 2\IV[H 4 -,3 OYZ ZOV^PUN" 2\IV[H 4 ? 4->+ [YHJ[VY ^ 2\IV[H 4 -,3 OYZ ZOV^PUN" *HZL ^K OYZ ZOV^PUN" 4HZZL` -LYN\ZVU ^K OYZ" 1VOU +LLYL ;\YIV HWWYV_ OYZ ZOV^PUN" 1VOU +LLYL Z W ^PUKYV^LY ^ 1+ ( Âť OH`OLHKLY KPLZLS OYZ ZOV^PUN" 0U[LYUH[PVUHS Z W Âť" 0U[LYUH[PVUHS Z W ^ Âť OH`OLHKLY" (JJ\WSHU[ Âť HPY KYPSS ^ -SL_PJVPS JHY[" )V\YNH\S[ Âť HPY KYPSS ^ )V\YNH\S[ HPY [HUR" )V\YNH\S[ Âť WHJRLY IHY" .YHPU /HUKSPUN :[VYHNL" 4LSYVL :WYH *V\WL Z W Âť" /H`I\Z[LY / [\I NYPUKLY VU H (4 .LULYHS HYT` [Y\JR" 1VOU +LLYL YV\UK IHSLY" /H`I\Z[LY IHSL WYVJLZZVY" 4VYHUK SP]LZ[VJR OHUKSPUN MHJPSP[`" (ZZÂť[ SP]LZ[VJR Z\WWS`" 1VOU +LLYL )/ _ YVHK NYHKLY" (4 .LULYHS 4 _ )YPKNL ;Y\JR" :PJHYK :UV^THZ[LY ^K Âť ZUV^ISV^LY" -HYNV ZPUNSL H_SL [VU NYH]LS [Y\JR" -VYK - ZPUNSL H_SL NYHPU [Y\JR" +VKNL 9HT 3HYHTPL ^K +9> 8\HK *HI SVUNIV_ [Y\JR SP[LY *\TTPUZ ZWK [YHUZ RT ZOV^PUN" +VKNL 9HT :3; 3HYHTPL ^K +9> 8\HK *HI SVUNIV_ [Y\JR SP[LY *\TTPUZ ZWK [YHUZ RT ZOV^PUN" )S\L /PSSZ Âť [YPWSL H_SL Z[VJR [YHPSLYZ" Âť [YPWSL H_SL N U Ă&#x2026;H[KLJR [YHPSLY" 71 Âť [HUKLT K\HSS` KLJRV]LY [YHPSLY" 2\IV[H ) 4->+ [YHJ[VY" ;HZR 4HZ[LY ;YVQHU L 4->+ [YHJ[VY ^ ;HZR 4HZ[LY 3+ * -,3 OW KPLZLS OYZ ZOV^PUN" Âť :OPWWPUN JVU[HPULYZ 7HY[PHS SPZ[PUN VUS`
TUES . OC T. 21S T @ 8 AM
Â
UNRESERVED ESTATE AUCTION, Sat., Oct. 18, 9:30 AM. From St. Paul on Hwy 881, 5 miles North to Twp. Rd. 590 and 1/4 mile East. Shirley 780-645-2629. Ford NH 9030 bi-directional, 10,962 hrs., c/w 7414 FEL and grapple; NH BR7090 rd. baler, purchased new in 2014; Wheatheart H.H. post pounder; Tara 14â&#x20AC;&#x2122; H. disc; Complete line-up of saw sharpening equip; Approx. 300, 16â&#x20AC;? potted Black Spruce trees. View online prodaniukauctions.com
FEATURIN G A V ARIETY OFâ&#x20AC;Ś
OCTOBER 22nd s !- s ,)6% ).4%2.%4 ")$$).' #524)3 !.$ #!.$9#% &/2-/ &/2'!. 3+ %,2/3% !2%!
A U CTIO N
AN N UAL FALL
KRGJLQVDXFWLRQHHUV FRP
TRUCK PARTS: 1/2 to 3 ton. We ship anywhere. Phoenix Auto, 1-877-585-2300, Lucky Lake, SK. WRECKING SEMI-TRUCKS, lots of parts. Call Yellowhead Traders. 306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK. TRUCK BONEYARD INC. Specializing in obsolete parts, all makes. Trucks bought for wrecking. 306-771-2295, Balgonie, SK. WRECKING LATE MODEL TRUCKS: 1/2 tons, 3/4 tons, 1 tons, 4x4â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, vans, SUVâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s. Also large selection of Cummins diesel motors, Chevs and Fords as well. Jasper Auto Parts, Edmonton 1-800-294-4784, or Calgary 1-800-294-0687. We ship anywhere. We have everything, almost.
SOUTHSIDE AUTO WRECKERS located in Weyburn, SK. 306-842-2641. Used car parts, light truck to semi-truck parts. We buy scrap iron and non-ferrous metals. 1996 F250 for parts, 7.3 dsl. eng., mech. sound, lots of newer parts, $5000. Consider parting out. 204-724-6197, Souris, MB. 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 2006 F350, 6 litre, 4 WD, auto., fully loaded, engine needs 3 injectors. Rosetown, SK. Call 306-882-3371 or 306-831-7194. 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. WRECKING VOLVO TRUCKS: Misc. axles and parts. Also tandem trailer suspension axles. 306-539-4642, Regina, SK. VS TRUCK WORKS Inc. Parting out GM 1/2 and 1 ton trucks. Call 403-972-3879, Alsask, SK. www.vstruckworks.com 30 TON TELESCOPIC TRUCK HOIST w/mount, 30 gal oil tank, pump and driveline, $2500. 780-879-2248, Alliance, AB. WANTED: AUTO TRANS. for Int. Travelall, running or rebuildable. Call 250-635-7655, Terrace, BC. PARTING OUT: 1998 FREIGHTLINER FL70, 5.9 Cummins, 6 spd. trans., rear end, cab parts, hood good, 1100x22.5 tires at 80%, tires mounted on budd rims. 306-882-3371, Rosetown, SK. ONE OF SASKâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s largest inventory of used heavy truck parts. 3 ton tandem diesel motors and transmissions and differentials for all makes! Can-Am Truck Export Ltd., 1-800-938-3323.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
CLASSIFIED ADS 51
WRECKING 1980 6x6 IHC Paystar 5000, 2010 DOEPKER 3 hopper tri-axle grain 466 engine, Allison auto., exc. cond. trailer, $41,980; 2014 Wilson 2 hopper tri306-267-4552, Coronach, SK. axle grain trailer, $51,980. Golden West Trailer, call 1-877-999-7402.
Andres
Trailer Sales And Rentals
WANTED TO BUY: 2000 or newer, 30 or 36 passenger school bus. Phone 780-656-6141, Smoky Lake, AB.
Andres specializes in the sales, service and rental of agricultural and commercial trailers.
2004 CHRYSLER CROSSFIRE, rear wheel drive, 6 speed manual, 3.2L, V6, $12,900. Stk #V008203. D&D Vehicle Sales, Camrose, AB. 780-672-4400. www.ddsales.com LAST ONE BLOW OUT! Air seeder package, 2007 LINCOLN MKZ, 117,000 kms, 3.5L V6, Shurco tarp and lift kit, fully loaded, heated/cooled leather seats, sunroof, $49,500. Corner Equipment, Carroll, MB., keyless entry, power everything, 4 door, call 204-483-2774. charcoal grey, excellent condition, $10,000 OBO. Call 306-554-7067 or 306-328-2160, Elfros, SK. Email: clint256@hotmail.com
W IL S O N G O O S EN EC K S & C ATTL E L IN ER S 1975 FRUEHAUF STRAIGHT cattleliner, new rear door with side door, tires 75%, 11x24.5, $15,000. Call 250-499-6372, Keremeos, BC. dclifton@nethop.net
Available at:
CMI Ag Ltd.
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
Naicam, SK
(306) 872-2777 TWO SETS 2013 Prestige Lode-King Super B’s, fresh safeties, exc. cond., no lift axles, air ride, on-board weigh scales, alum. wheels, flat alum. fenders, $75,000 OBO. Call 1-866-236-4028, Calgary, AB. 2006 CANCADE TRI-AXLE 45’, 3 middle hoppers, new safety, new paint, remote auto chute openers, roll tarp, $37,000 OBO. Call 306-868-7616, Avonlea, SK. 2014 WILSON 45’ tridem grain trailer, $53,980; 2012 Wilson 45’, 2 hopper tridem grain trailer, $49,900. Golden West Trailer, call 1-877-999-7402. 1980 TRAIL KING 24x8 dual tandem, pintle hitch, $7980; 2005 Load King 9x53’ hyd. detach, $36,900. Call Golden West Trailer, 1-877-999-7402. USED SHURCO ELEC. gates, 3 hopper, $ 2 5 0 0 . G o l d e n We s t Tr a i l e r, c a l l 1-877-999-7402. 2011 WILSON HOPPER 42Lx96Wx72H, new tarp, drums and brakes, air ride, aluminum wheels, $27,000; 2008 Wilson Hopper, 30Lx102Wx84H, new tarp, air ride, AG hoppers, aluminum wheels, $25,000. 204-736-4854, Sanford, MB. NEW NEVILLE 2015 tandem and tri-axles, cheapest in western Canada. Used 1995 Timpte tandem, alum., high sides, air ride, $12,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. 2011 TIMPTE TRI-AXLE aluminum, air ride, rear axle lift, 2 hopper, low kms, $39,000. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. DOEPKER TRI-AXLE WITH side chute delivery system. Special pricing available, GB18320 many options. 306-665-4734, Saskatoon, SK., www.frontlinett.com EISSES GRAIN TRAILER Rental & Sales. Super B grain trailers for rent by the day, week or month. Contact 403-782-3333 or Henry at 403-350-8777, Lacombe, AB.
NORMS SANDBLASTING & PAINT, 40 years body and paint experience. We do metal and fiberglass repairs and integral to daycab conversions. Sandblasting and paint to trailers, trucks and heavy equip. Endura primers and topcoats. A one stop shop. Norm 306-272-4407, Foam Lake SK. LODE-KING 36’ farmer owned grain trailer, good tarp, very nice condition. Call 306-654-7772, Saskatoon, SK.
2014 FEATHERLITE 8271-8040, 40’ stock trailer. Stk#EC132053. Blow out price! $39,900. Shop 24/7 allandale.com Call 1-866-346-3148. 990 FUEL SERVICE trailer, fully loaded with DEF and fully CND Certified, $24,900. cash. Corner Equipment, 204-483-2774, ALL TRAILERS COST LESS IN Davidson Carroll, MB. 1-800-213-8008 www.fasttoysforboys.com 1997 CASTLETON TRIDEM Lead 2 hopper, two trailers that we have just redone for TOPGUN TRAILER SALES “For those who resale. 1997 Castleton tridem lead. It has demand the best.” PRECISION AND new tarp system, new complete air hosing, AGASSIZ TRAILERS (flatdecks, end tanks, slacks and brake pots, new electrical dumps, enclosed cargo). 1-855-255-0199, system and 4 new tires. The trailer was Moose Jaw, SK. www.topguntrailersales.ca blasted and painted inside and out and all 2014 UTILITY 3000R tandem reefer van. steel repair was done by Castleton. Castle- Call for price. Call Golden West Trailer, ton also did the air and electrical work. 1-877-999-7402. Also for sale 2004 4070 Castleton open end tandem that has been completely refurbished by Castleton except brake shoes and drums. Lead $33,000 OBO and tandem $32,000 OBO. 306-217-7801, Saltcoats, SK. vmorales@castletontrailers.com NEW WILSON SUPER B in stock, 3 tridem 2 hoppers, also 2 tandems; 2010 LodeKing alum. open end Super B, alum. rims, air ride; 2004 Doepker Super B, air ride; 1997 Castleton Super B lead, totally refurbished; 1996 Castleton tridem, exc. cond. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL#905231. www.rbisk.ca 2014 B&B, STEP deck trailer, tandem, air DOEPKER TANDEM AXLE, GB18706, 36’ ride, with two 3250 gal. tanks 3" chem open end, low clearance wall height, 1700 handler and hose, $40,500. 403-350-0336, cubic foot capacity. 306-665-4734, Saska- Red Deer, AB. toon, SK. or visit: www.frontlinett.com
NEWEST AUTHORIZED TIMPTE dealer. Check out our new and used inventory: www.bpsonsgrain.com 204-822-9906 2009 LODE-KING SUPER B, fresh safety, 90-95% tires, lift axles, vg cond., $60,000 OBO. Serious inquiries only. North Battleford, SK. 306-481-5030, 306-446-0024. 2015 BERG GT345 grain trailer, $49,500; 2015 Berg GP20 grain pup, $28,600; 2015 Berg GP30 quad grain wagon, $48,500. Ask about our rentals! See our full line up at www.kandkent.cal 1-888-405-8457.
SANDBLAST AND PAINT your grain trail2013 WILSON SUPER B, C Spec grain ers, boxes, flatdecks and more. We use intrailer, $89,980 discounted price! Golden dustrial undercoat and paint. Can zinc coat West Trailer, call 1-877-999-7402. for added rust protection. Quality workmanship guaranteed. Prairie Sandblasting and Painting, 306-744-7930, Saltcoats, SK. MIDLAND 20’ END dump grain/silage trailer, tandem, spring ride, silage sides and g r a i n / s i l a g e e n d gat e s , $ 6 5 0 0 O B O. 780-449-6004 days, Edmonton, AB. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com 2007 DOEPKER SUPER B, good tarp, 20 new tires. Phone: 403-321-0719, Delia, AB.
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 HAIL SALE at: Desert Sales discounts on package! Check website: www.kandkent.ca horse, stock and cargo trailers. We have: Wilson, Sundowner, Maverick, Southland, Details call 1-888-405-8457, Swanson, SK. Continental Cargo and Alcom on sale. Call us at: 888-641-4508 for more information and pricing. Bassano, AB. GRASSLAND TRAILERS, providing a full line of quality trailers and truck decks from W-W, Titan and Circle-D. Compare quality and appreciate value. Glen 306-640-8034, Assiniboia, SK. gm93@sasktel.net 2010 REAL LIVESTOCK TRAILER, tri-axle, e l e c t r i c / h y d r a u l i c b r a ke s , $ 9 0 0 0 . 306-424-7682, Kendal, SK. 2013 MERRITT 20' aluminum GN stock trailer, 2-7000 lb. torsion ride axles, centre divider gate, never used, $20,000. Call Len Rempel 306-741-6358, Swift Current, SK., email: lenrempel@sasktel.net
45’ WILSON CATTLELINER, low mileage, good condition. Phone: 306-476-2500, Rockglen, SK.
www.dseriescanola.ca
TR A N S C R A F T F L AT D EC K S & D R O P D EC K S AVA IL A B L E
Fina ncing Is Av a ila b le!C a ll Us Tod a y! 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.
Callfor a quote - We w illm atch com petitor pricing spec for spec. Lethb rid g e,AB 1 -888-834 -859 2 Led u c,AB 1 -888-9 55-36 36 Visit o ur w e bsite a t:
www.andrestrailer.com
LACOMBE TRAILER 2000 KAYLN RGN double drop, 48’ w/28’ well, tandem, 255/70R tires, flip out Riggers, $15,900. Bryans Farm & Industrial Supply. 1-888-871-8660 or 519-837-0710. BEHNKE DROP DECK semi style and pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, tandem and tridems. Contact SK: 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336.
SALES & RENTALS WE SELL AND RENT
C a ll fo rAva ila b ility a n d P ricin g Fin a n ce R e po ’s Acce ptin g Offe rs
2004 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE Trail Edition, 4x4, MB. safetied, good condition. Deloraine, MB. Ph. 204-747-2768. 2005 FORD F550, diesel, reg. cab, 6 spd. manual, c/w Hiab #35 picker, 9’ deck, fifth wheel hitch, trailer brakes, 240,000 kms, $23,000. 306-441-1408, Meota, SK. 2007 DODGE DUALLY 3500 Laramie, 4x4, 5.9 Cummins, 6 spd., new clutch and ball joints, tires- 70%, 5th wheel hitch, 315,000 kms, $20,000 OBO. Kelvington, SK., 306-327-7745. 2012 FORD F250 XLT diesel, 4x4, 6.7L 74,000 kms, PST paid, $39,995. Call Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. 4X4’S IN STOCK. We take trades. Best financial rates! Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com NEW 2014 RAM 2500 Cummins dsl., crew, L a r a m i e , $ 5 9 , 9 9 9 . B u y fo r 0 d o w n $338/bi-weekly. Call 1-800-667-4414, Wynyard. www.thoens.com DL #909250. RETIRED: 2005 FORD 350 XLT SuperDuty, powerstroke V8, 4x4, diesel, automatic, 4 dr., loaded, low kms, white. 306-752-3820, 306-921-9920, Melfort, SK. TOP PRICES REDUCED: 2007 GMC 2500, reg cab, Duramax diesel, 9’ tool body, 260,000 miles, $6900; 1999 Dodge 3500 Dually, ext. cab, 4x4, 5.9 Cummins auto, $6900. K&L Equipment, Ituna, SK., 306-795-7779, 306-537-2027 DL #910885 Email: ladimer@sasktel.net YOUR CHOICE 2012 or 2013 Ram Laramie Hemi, crew, 4x4, $36,975. DL# 909250. 1-800-667-4414, www.thoens.com
Hi Boys, Low Boys, Drop Decks, Storage Vans, Reefer Vans and Freight Vans & More. 7 KM West of RED DEER from Junction of HWY. 2 & 32nd St.
403-347-7721
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.TITANTRUCKSALES.COM to view www.hausers.ca information or call 204-685-2222 to check 2009 MIDLAND end dump, tri-axle, fresh out our inventory of quality used highway S K . s a fe t y, n ew p a i n t , g o o d s h ap e , tractors! $34,000. 306-744-7930, Saltcoats, SK. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used LOWBOY 9-1/2’ WIDE beavertail w/flip highway tractors. For more details call ramp, certified; 2- tandem axle Trailtech 204-685-2222 or view information at 2009 MIDLAND 2 axle end dump 28’ gravel goosenecks w/beavertail and flip ramps; www.titantrucksales.com trailer, excellent cond. Ash felt over hang, 2- 20’ tandem pintle hitch flatdecks. 2015 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 2500 HD 11R24.5 tires on steel rims, new MB safe- 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL#905231. LT, 4x4, 6.6L, V-6, OnStar, Stk #V100306, ty. Can deliver. $34,900. 204-743-2324, www.rbisk.ca $64,900. D&D Vehicle Sales Camrose, AB. Cypress River, MB. 780-672-4400. www.ddsales.com 2002 LODE-KING 53' tri-axle stepdeck, all 2015 CADILLAC ESCALADE ESV luxury, steel, good rubber, fresh safety, $17,000. OnStar, sunroof, leather, Stk #V217132, Call 306-536-8820, Francis, SK. $105,900. D&D Vehicle Sales Camrose, AB. 780-672-4400. www.ddsales.com 24’ GOOSENECK tridem 21,000 lbs, $7890; Bumper pull tandem lowboy: 18’, 14,000 2014 SILVERADO Z71 LTZ, 54,000 kms, lbs., $3975; 16’, 10,000 lbs., $3090; 16’, leather heated and AC seats, sunroof, eve1997 ADVANCE TANKER, 34,000L tri-axle, 7000 lbs., $2650. Factory direct. ry option but NAV. Immaculate condition, a i r r i d e , n ew S K . s a fe t y, $ 1 9 , 5 0 0 . used as car, $56,000 replacement. Priced 888-792-6283. www.monarchtrailers.com 306-272-4437, Foam Lake, SK. to sell at $42,900 plus GST. Dwein Trask GREAT SELECTION OF 2015 Doepker 306-221-1035, Saskatoon, SK. Impact’s, Hardox 450 tub style design, 53’ AND 48’ tridem and tandem stepdecks, 7400 kgs tare weight. Various options. w/wo sprayer cradles; Two 48’ tandem 10’ 2014 DODGE RAM 3500 SLT, Dually 6.7L, wide, beavertail, flip ramps, air ride, low 306-665-4734, Saskatoon, SK. 4x4, dsl., loaded, only 13,000 kms. Save kms; 53’, 48’, 28’ tridem and tandem highGreenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, TRAILERS, TRAILERS. Low beds, hi-boys, boys, all steel and combos. SUPER B $$$. flatdecks, drop decks, vans, grain, gravel HIGHBOYS, will split; Tandem and S/A SK. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. trailers, detachable. 306-563-8765, Canora converter with drop hitch; B-train alum. 2014 DODGE RAM 1500 SLT, Black BeauHemi 4x4, 36,000 kms, loaded, $35,995 USED 10” WIRELESS steel augers for a tankers, certified; 53’-28’ van trailers; B- ty, Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. 2008 Timpte tandem, $2500. Golden West train salvage trailers; High clearance Greenlight sprayer trailer with tanks and chem han- www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. Trailer, call 1-877-999-7402. dlers. Call 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. 2012 DODGE RAM 2500 Laramie, dsl, CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used www.rbisk.ca DL #905231. 6.7L, 4x4, loaded, only 23,000 kms. PST highway tractors. For more details call Pd. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, 204-685-2222 or view information at 36’ DORSEY ALUMINUM end dump, tri-ax- SK. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. le, tarp, load gauges. Hauls silage, grain, www.titantrucksales.com distillers mash. 306-642-8111 Rockglen SK 2011 GMC SIERRA 2500 SLE, loaded, 6.0L PRECISION TRAILERS: Gooseneck and ext cab, 4x4, PST PD, 95,000 kms, $26,995 bumper hitch. You’ve seen the rest, now WWW.TRAILERGUY.CA 80 MISC. semi Greenlight Truck & Auto Saskatoon, SK. own the best. Hoffart Services, Odessa, SK. trailers. Check web for pics and prices. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. 306-957-2033 www.precisiontrailer.com 306-222-2413, Aberdeen/Saskatoon, SK. 2011 GMC SIERRA 2500 LTZ diesel, fully loaded, sunroof, DVD, leather. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 2011 FORD F350 Lariat, diesel, 6.7L, 4x4. TRUCK & TRAILER SALES 2 to choose from starting from $39,995. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. www.GreenlightAuto.ca DL #311430. 2010 DODGE RAM, 1500 SLT, 4x4, 5.7L, Hemi, PST PD, $19,995. Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. www.GreenlightAuto.ca 2008 CHEVROLET 1500 extended cab, 4x4, fully equipped, clean, no rust, 126,000 miles, premium cond., $10,500. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. 2007 FORD F150 Lariat 4x4, loaded, 5.4L, D ecks G oos e n e c k Tra ile rs 90,347 kms, red with black interior, Stk #SK-U0460, $26,495. 1-877-373-2662, 2014 F ellin g 30’ Pin tle Hitch, Air Ra m p s , 2015 E BY Ru ffNeck 26’x8’ F in a l www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 30 T o n Drive Pa cka ge, F u ll S id e Ra m p 2007 FORD F150, extra cab, 5.4L, auto, 2013 F ellin g T iltDeck, 25 T o n , 9’ W id e 2015 E BY M a verick 30’x6’11” t o p p e r, 3 2 5 , 0 0 0 k m s , $ 2 8 0 0 . 2014 F ellin g 53’ T ria xle F la td eck 403-680-0752, Calgary, AB. Ro llin g Ga te, Alu m W heels 2014 F ellin g 48’x102” 55 T o n , Deta cha b le, 2006 GMC SLE Z71, 4x4, quad cab short2015 E BY W ra n gler 22’x7’6” Ro llin g Ou tRiggers & F lip Neck, Prep F o r box, 5.3L, auto, centre console, 415,000 Ga te, Alu m W heels kms still runs, $3500. 403-680-0752, CalBo o s terAxle gary, AB. 2015 F ellin g XF -100-3 53’x10’ 2015 F eelin g 53’x10’ Dro p Deck 2005 FORD F150, extra cab, longbox, 2 Deta cha b le, Alu m in u m Pu ll-o u ts , 50 T o n W /b ea verta il & Air Ra m p s W D, 2 7 5 , 0 0 0 k m s , 5 . 4 L , $ 2 5 0 0 . 403-680-0752, Calgary, AB. Live s toc k 2003 F150, reg. cab, 2 WD, 346,000 kms, T a kin g Ord ers just passed safety, new brakes, steering etc, $2000. 403-680-0752, Calgary, AB. D. L#909069 Regina - 1-800-667-0466 | Keefe HallCell- 306-535-2420
w w w .sa sk v olv o.com
2003 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 1500 LS, regular cab 4x4, 8' box, A/T/C, power door locks, windows and mirrors, heated back window, 5.3L auto 167,000 km, very good cond. $5500. 306-843-8511, Wilkie, SK.
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
Hwy. 3, Seven Persons, AB (Medicine Hat, AB)
PH. 403-977-1624
rawlyn@automatictruck.com
www.automatictruck.com 1976 GM 6500 grain truck, 366 V8, 16’ BH&T, ready to go, only $4950. Call for details, 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. 1977 FORD 9000 tandem, 20’ steel box, Nordic hoist, Cummins 855, 10 spd., 13” front tires, silage endgate, $17,500 OBO. 780-449-6004 days, Edmonton, AB. 1988 GMC C70, 366 5&2, new 22.5 tubeless radial tires, Western Ind. box, with Nordic hoist, excellent cond., $15,000. 306-259-2004, Watrous, SK. 1995 INT. 9400, 20’ B&H, new tires, 18 spd., silage endgate, N14 Cummins. Willingdon, AB. 780-367-2483, 780-208-1125 1996 IH 9200, tandem, 370 HP Cummins, 10 speed, 20’ BH&T, new tires, new paint, alum. wheels, rear controls, AC, $41,500; 2000 Freightliner FL120, 370 HP Cummins, 10 spd., 20’ BH&T, rear controls, A/T/C, alum. wheels, new paint, $48,500; 2006 Mack CH613, 400 HP Mack, 13 spd., alum. wheels, A/T/C, 20’ BH&T, rear controls, real nice, $59,000; 2007 Freightliner FL120, 450 HP Mercedes, 10 spd., AutoShift, alum. wheels, A/T/C, 20’ BH&T, new paint, very nice truck, $67,500. Coming Soon: 1996 Kenworth 600, 375 HP Cummins, 10 spd., tractor w/40’ tandem grain trailer, real nice shape, $38,500; Midland 24’ tandem pup trailer, totally rebuilt, new paint, good tires, $18,500; Grainmaster 20’ tandem pup trailer, totally rebuilt, new paint, good tires, $18,500. Trades accepted on all units, all units Sask. safetied. 306-276-7518 cell; 306-767-2616 res., at Arborfield, SK. DL #906768. 1996 KENWORTH grain truck w/new 20’ Courtney Berg box, w/silage endgate, N14 Cummins engine, excellent, asking $47,000. Call 780-305-6931, Barrhead, AB.
2005 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA, white, 450 HP Mercedes, Meritor 12 spd. auto, A/T/C, 20’ Loadline BH&T 2 yrs. old, Brehon remote hoist and tailgate, excellent 11R22.5 tires, new starter and new Cat batteries, $61,500. Call Terry Gates, 306-862-7929, Nipawin, SK. 2003 DODGE RAM 1500, regular cab, 8’ AUTOMATICS: NEW 20’ B&H’s. 2010 IH box, 6 cyl auto., very good condition, only ProStar, $69,000; 2006 Mack Vision, $52,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. $4500. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK.
52 CLASSIFIED ADS
1999 FREIGHTLINER w/20’ B&H, new tarp, 470 HP Series 60 Detroit, 13 spd. trans., air ride, SK safety, very good, $45,000. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK.
2003 FREIGHTLINER CENTURY, 425 HP 60 Series Detroit eng., 3-pedal, 10 spd. AutoShift, 20’x68” Loadline box w/electric tarp, new rear 22.5 tires, 917,000 kms. 306-452-7799, Storthoaks, SK.
2006 FREIGHTLINER CLASSIC, 515 HP Detroit dsl., Eaton 18 spd., AutoShift w/clutch, 4-Way locks, new 20’ Berg’s grain body, remote chute/hoist, pintle ready. More trucks available. Call Henry at 204-324-7593, Morden, MB. 2006 PETERBILT, 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.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
2013 IH 5900I, 42” bunk, 13L, 46 diff., 4-way lock, 18 spd., 370,000 kms, engine warranty; 2009 9900i International; 2001, 2003, 2005 daycab T800’s, heavy specs.; 378 and 379 Pete, four 2006s, Cat, 18 spd., 46 diff, 4-way locks, all w/Roobar bumpers; 2006 W900 KW daycab, Cat, 18 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; BERG’S GRAIN BODIES: When value and 1996 CH Mack 427, 18 spd. 306-356-4550, durability matter. Ph. Berg’s Prep and Paint Dodsland, SK. DL#905231. www.rbisk.ca for details 204-325-5677, Winkler, MB. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com www.titantrucksales.com HODGINS HEAVY TRUCK CENTRE: COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL MFG. for 2010 IH Lonestar, Cummins 500 HP, 18 grain box pkgs., decks, gravel boxes, HD spd., 4-way lockers, $59,500; 2010 Kencombination grain and silage boxes, pup worth T800, Cummins 485 HP, 18 spd., trailers, frame alterations, custom paint, $66,500; 2007 Peterbilt 378, Cat 475 HP, complete service. Visit our plant at Hum- 18 spd., 46 rears, 4-way lockers, $56,500; 2006 Peterbilt 379L, Cummins 475 HP, 13 boldt, SK or call 306-682-2505 for prices. spd., $45,500; 2005 IH 9400, CAT 475 HP, SILAGE BOX 2007 IHC Cummins, 10 spd. 18 spd., 46 rears, wet kit, $39,500. Call us std., new Cancade BH&T. In stock approx. a t : 3 0 6 - 5 6 7 - 7 2 6 2 , D a v i d s o n , S K . 20 tandems auto. and standard. Yellow- www.hodginshtc.com DL #312974 head Sales, 306-783-2899, Yorkton, SK. K&K ENTERPRISES! 306-493-2506, Swanson, SK. Come see what’s new: 2012 Kenworth W900L, $118,000; 2011 Pete 2005 STERLING A9513, tandem, C13 Cat, 389 flat top, $88,000; 2007 FLD120 w/20’ new 15’ B&H, roll tarp, hitch, $46,000; Van grain box, $59,900; 2009 Pete 386, 2006 FLM2 SA, dsl., 6 spd., 26’ power tail $45,000; 2005 Western Star daycab, gate, $24,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. $45,000. 2009 Western Star daycab, $65,000. 2007 IHC 9900i $35,500. See our full line up at www.kandkent.ca 1986 MACK R600, 350 engine, 12 speed trans., wet kit, $9,500. Phone 306-960-3000, St. Louis, SK. 1986 VOLVO 430, 6 Series Detroit, wet kit, 1997 tandem Castleton grain trailer, $25,000 OBO. Alida, SK., 306-443-2389, 306-485-7843. 1996 FREIGHTLINER FLD112, sleeper, M11, 11R22.5, 10 spd., 410, 1240, new drums and shoes, new safety, exc. clean REPOSSESSED: 2013 CASTLETON tri-axle cond, $15,500. 306-549-4701, Hafford, SK. Cross Clam gravel trailer and 2006 Freigh1996 FREIGHTLINER TANDEM, 60 Se- tliner FLD120. Units will be sold as a pkg. ries Detroit, 10 spd., air ride, runs good, or separate. For further info please contact only $8500. Call for details, 306-946-8522, 306-242-2508, Saskwest Bailiff’s, Saskatoon, SK. Saskatoon, SK. 2 INSULATED ALUM B-train asphalt SANDBLASTING AND PAINTING of heavy trailers, can haul 36.5 kgs, no leaks, trucks, trailers and equipment. Please call 40,000L, $15,000 OBO; 1 insulated alum. for details. Can-Am Truck Export Ltd., A-train tanker, can haul 35,000 kgs., has 1-800-938-3323, Delisle, SK. heat coils, no leaks, 40,000 L, $15,000 OBO.; 1 uninsulated alum. fuel B-train, WANTED: HIGHWAY TRACTOR. Willing to 45,000L, no leaks, $20,000 OBO. Will take take over payments, have down payment. Call 306-382-0785, Vanscoy, SK. cash or cattle. Langham, SK 306-283-4775
2007 FREIGHTLINER M2, Allison 57,365 kms, Cat C7, air ride, A/T/C, equipped from new w/CBI 20’ box, silage tailgate, 2004 KENWORTH W900, ISX 475, 13 remote controls, Michel’s Load Lock, spd, ratio 3:90. SK. safetied. 306-270-6399 $79,000. 403-938-3888, Calgary, AB. Saskatoon, SK. www.78truxsales.com 2006 KENWORTH W900, Cat C-15, 475 HP, 1850 FT lbs., Steer axle Eaton 12021, 12,000 lbs., front diff Eaton Dana spicer. Call Golden West Trailer, 1-877-999-7402. 2007 FREIGHTLINER CLASSIC XL, Detroit Series 60, 06R0922654, HP 470/515, Torque 1650 lbs, Eaton RTL016913A. Call Golden West Trailer, 1-877-999-7402. 2007 FREIGHTLINER CST120, T/A power unit, auto, sleeper. 306-291-4043, Sas2007 IHC 9200, Cummins 330 HP, 10 spd., katoon, SK. 495 kms, fresh Sask safety, new 20’ CIM 2007 IHC 9200, ISX 475, 18 spd., full BH&T, nice clean, $69,900. Cam-Don Mo- lockers, SK. safetied. 306-270-6399, Sastors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK katoon, SK. www.78truxsales.com 2007 Mack CXN613, Mack 385 HP, 10 spd. 2007 INTERNATIONAL 9900i, Eagle PackEaton Ultrashift, $62,500; 2006 IH 9400, age, 244” WB, 18 speed, 500 ISX CumCummins 450 HP, 10 spd. Eaton UltraShift, m i n s . C a l l G o l d e n W e s t Tr a i l e r, $64,500; 2007 IH 8600, CAT 430 HP, 10 1-877-999-7402. spd., $54,500. All c/w 20’ Cancade grain 2007 KENWORTH T800, 565 Cummins, 18 box, air controls, windows, SK. certified. spd., 46 rears, 4-way locks, new steer Call us at: 306-567-7262, Davidson, SK. tires and new recaps, 62” sleeper, 977,700 www.hodginshtc.com DL #312974 kms, Beacons headache rack, new AB. 2007 PETERBILT 386 and 2006 Freigh- safety, $66,000. 403-638-3934, Sundre AB tliners w/Eaton autoshifts, new grain box- 2008 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA tandem es. SK. safeties. 306-270-6399, Saskatoon, tractor with bunk, Detroit 60, 455 HP, 18 SK. www.78truxsales.com speed, 46R, fresh safety, 950,000 kms, $29,000. 403-680-0752, Calgary, AB. 6 TANDEM GRAIN TRUCKS, auto. and std., $40,000 and up; 20 POWER UNITS, 2008 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA tandem bunks, daycabs, auto. and std., $20,000. tractor w/bunk, Detroit 60, 455 HP, Ultrashift auto trans, fresh safety, 516,000 kms and up. Call 306-563-6651, Canora, SK. $38,000. 403-680-0752, Calgary, AB. ALLISION AUTOMATICS: 2004 IHC 7400 2015 FREIGHTLINER 122SD Detroit 505 DT530, w/new 20’ silage box, fresh eng., HP DD15, 18 spd, 46 axles w/lockers, $74,900; 2001 IHC 4900 DT466, 18’ B&H, $140,000 plus tax. DL#907095. Saskatoon $44,900; 2001 IHC 4900, DT 466, long SK., 306-665-4734, www.frontlinett.com WB, C&C, low miles, $19,900. K&L Equipment, Ituna, SK. 306-795-7779, BAILIFF AUCTION for sale by bid. Repos306-537-2027, email ladimer@sasktel.net sessed 2006 Freightliner FLD120 Classic, 550 Cat twin turbo, 18 spd., double full DL #910885. lockers, 12/40, 3.58 gears, odometer AUTOSHIFT TRUCKS AVAILABLE: Boxed reads 1,067,290 kms, brand new rubber. tandems and tractor units. Contact David Email saskwestfinancial@sasktel.net or for 306-887-2094, 306-864-7055, Kinistino, f i n a n c i n g H o r i z o n L e a s i n g a t 306-934-4445, Saskatoon, SK. SK. DL #327784. www.davidstrucks.com
QUALITY DOES NOT COST, IT PAYS.
CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used 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 $69,900. plus GST. Call Gord at 306-463-4598, Kindersley, SK. gscaz@sasktel.net 5- KNUCKLE BOOM trucks with Hiab cranes, models 171 to 215; PALFINGER crane, $24,000; T800 Kenworth, 22’ rollback deck; T300 Kenworth, 14’ gravel box, single axle. Call Bud at 306-256-3301, 306-221-2166, Cudworth, SK.
1998 FREIGHTLINER FL112, N14 Cummins, 10 spd, a/r, 12 & 40, 20’ SWS deck, fresh Sask safety, $22,900. Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. TWO IH 4300s, single axle, IH motor, Allison automatic, AC, one w/deck, one w/16’ BH&T. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL#905231. 2- IH 4300s, single axle, IH motor, Allison automatic, AC, one w/deck, one w/16’ BH&T. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL #905231. 2005 STERLING, 267,000 kms, 300 HP dsl., 10 spd. trans, new clutch, single axle, air bag rear susp., air brakes and seat, AC, PL, PW, Century tilt deck, new 12,000 lb. winch, rear lift, cert. July, $36,000. Owner retiring! 306-381-5151, Saskatoon, SK.
1982 JEEP CJ, inline straight 6, 4 speed, from Arizona, $9000 OBO. 403-863-9979, Vulcan, AB. 2008 SUBARU TRIBECA Ltd. Premier, 3.6L 67,626 kms, Stk. #SK-U0898 $29,995. For more info. call 1-877-373-2662 or view at www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 2010 CADILLAC ESCALADE, AWD 6.2L V8, OnStar, sunroof, $37,900. Stk#V154022A, $105,900. D&D Vehicle Sales Camrose, AB. 780-672-4400. www.ddsales.com
SUV’S IN STOCK. Trades. Best financial rates. Biggest selection! Call Greenlight Truck & Auto, Saskatoon, SK. DL #311430. BURTON CONCRETE: PROVINCE-WIDE mobile concrete trucks. We set up on site, www.GreenlightAuto.ca pour all sizes of shops or bin pads. Spring booking discounts. Waylyn 306-441-4006 or 306-370-4545, Blaine Lake, SK. 1993 FREIGHTLINER FL80, single axle, C&C, 8.3 Cummins diesel, 5 spd. Allison auto, air ride, AC, needs TLC, runs very ROUGH SPRUCE: 2x8 16’ $12.99; 2x10 12’ good, $9500. 306-946-8522 Saskatoon, SK $11.99; 2x10 16’ $15.99. Other sizes 1995 IHC 4700 w/22’ vanbody and diesel available. 306-933-4950, Warman Home reefer, 425,000 kms, DT466, 6+ trans, Centre, www.warmanhomecentre.com $7000. 403-680-0752, Calgary, AB. ROUGH SPRUCE: 1x6 8’ $2.15; 2x6 16’ 1998 FORD F800 single axle with 27’ van, $8.80; 2x8 12’ $9.50. Other sizes available. 7.0L gas engine, auto trans, 200,000 kms, Warman Home Centre, 306-933-4950, www.warmanhomecentre.com $5800. 403-680-0752, Calgary, AB. 1998 FREIGHTLINER FL70 single axle, Cat 3126, 8LL trans, air, extra cab/bunk, PTO, engine heater, 485,000 kms, $8000. CONTINUOUS METAL ROOFING, no ex403-680-0752, Calgary, AB. posed screws to leak or metal overlaps. for lower slope roofs, rinks, church1999 CAT LOADER IT28G, 2-3/4 yard, A1; Ideal pig barns, commercial, arch rib build1800 gal. sewer vac-tank and pump. Call es, ing and residential roofing; also available 306-236-8023, Goodsoil, SK. in Snap Lock. 306-435-8008, Wapella, SK. 1999 GMC C8500 w/22’ vanbody and dsl. METAL ROOFING: ALL miscellaneous cut reefer, 188,000 kms, 3126 Cat, 6 speed, offs at 20% off! 1-800-667-4990, Warman $9000. 403-680-0752, Calgary, AB. Home, www.warmanhomecentre.com
CANEXEL SIDING ON clearance! All instock, mist grey and almond siding, $4.99/pc . 1-800-667-4990, Warman Home, www.warmanhomecentre.com CONCRETE BLOCKS, 5’ long, 30” high, 30” wide. Interlocking, weigh 4000 lbs., good for grain storage, buildings, walls, etc. $100/block. Load any day. 306-630-3538, Bethune, SK. 2000 FREIGHTLINER FL80 with 24’ flatdeck, 300 HP diesel 9 spd., safetied, vg cond., no rust, $19,500. Call for details, 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. 2001 DODGE 3500 4 WD, dually, 340,000 kms., $13,900; 1972 GMC 2 ton, B&H, $3500; 1995 FORD E350 van, dsl. V8 auto, 200,000 kms., $6500. Pro Ag Sales, 306-441-2030, North Battleford, SK.
ID#481220- VAL MARIE, SK: Turnkey honey operation comes fully equipped with everything required for beekeeping and 2 residences. Sellers willing to train. Terrific location with access to 10,000 acres of alfalfa along the Frenchman River. Licensed for 1000 hives. One of two Honey Producers in Sask. certified organic by Pro-Cert. Real Estate Centre, 2014 SUBARU OUTBACK, low finance 1-866-345-3414 or view website rates from 0.5% or $3000 cash discount, www.farmrealestate.com starting from $28,495. 1-877-373-2662 www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077.
NEU-STAR.COM
2014 SUBARU XV Crosstek, $1000 cash discount, starting at $24,995 (MSRP). For 2014 LEAF CUTTER bees for sale. Contact more info. call 1-877-373-2662 or view at for price and availability. 306-812-9609, Nipawin, SK. www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077.
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.
Available at:
GDT Ag Services Ltd. Outlook, SK
(306) 867-2091 www.dseriescanola.ca
PORTABLE AIR COMPRESSORS, Sullair STEEL BUILDING DEALS: Big and small. 185 with 4 cylinder JD engine, on trailer Complete turnkey pricing. 50% cheaper 2675 hours, $4950. 1-800-667-4515. completed project. Factory Direct to site. www.combineworld.com End of year inventory clearance, Source 18X. Call 800-964-8335, www.gosteel.com
2002 FREIGHTLINER UTILIMASTER step van, 18’ behind seats, 5.9L Cummins, Alli- STILL IN THE BOX Cover-All type buildson auto, 107,000 kms, needs minor body ings, easy assembly. 20’x30’, $3450 each; also 30’x40’, $5900 ea. K&L Equipment, work, $5800. 403-680-0752, Calgary, AB. Ituna, SK. Call Ladimer 306-795-7779. 2015 FREIGHTLINER M2-106 Cummins ISL 350 HP, Allison auto, 14700 FA and 40 RA w/lockers PW/PL air ride, 46 susp. 306-665-4734, Saskatoon, SK. DL#907095 CAN-AM TRUCK EXPORT LTD., Delisle, SK, 1-800-938-3323. 2004 W900 KW, 475 Cat, 18 fronts, 46 rears, $52,000; 2006 Pete 379L, 475 Cat, 18 fronts, Super 40 rears, $60,000; 2003 Pete 379, C15, 18 fronts, 46 rears, 4-way locks, $45,000; 1987 KW900, 350, 13 fronts, 40 rears, 20’ deck and Hiab 260 crane, $28,000; 1990 Volvo gravel unit, L10-330-10-40 w/14’ gravel box, only 3700 hrs., Dept of Highway unit, only $12,000; 1975 Cat 950 loader, $26,000; 2001 FL80, 3126 Cat Allison auto, w/new 15’ gravel unit, $42,000; 2011 Cancade 3SAR400 end dump, tridem gravel trailer, air ride, elec. tarp, $45,000; 31 ACRES, AUTO repair/wrecking/ body, 3 2 0 0 6 F r e i g h t l i n e r, d a y c a b , M B E large shops. Home + 2 rentals. Barn, hay 460/10/40, new safety, very clean truck, shed, fenced. MLS 10080476. Armstrong, $22,000; 1974 Kenworth water truck, 555 BC., 250-803-1259 www.heatherpaulsen.ca Cummins, auto, tandem, 3000 gal. alum. tank, $15,000; Tandem dolly converter, MOBILE GRAIN CLEANER, 250 bu./hr., $ 5 , 5 0 0 ; 1 9 8 6 J L G 8 0 H X b o o m l i f t , bench air screen, triple indent, self con$19,000; 1990 IHC 4700, DT 466, Allison tained, lots of screens, office, $145,000. auto, w/45’ manlift, Ex-Sask. Power, For details call 306-644-4603, Loreburn SK $16,000; 1998 IHC 4700, DT 466, auto, DO YOU HAVE an empty barn and want w/20’ deck, $16,500; 1995 FL80 TA gravel to raise ducks? 4$/dozen fertilized duck truck, 5.9 Cummins, Allison auto, 13’ box, eggs. Call 780-450-6103, Edmonton, AB. 500,000 kms, $25,000; 2005 GMC W4500 diesel, auto, cube van w/power lift gate, U-BAKE PIZZA AND Sub Shop, seats 16, inhyd. brakes, $12,000; Two sander units, cludes all equip., $30,000. Owner selling $2000-$3000; Gensets available. Financing at Brandon, MB. Phone/text 306-725-7711 available, OAC. www.can-amtruck.com POWER SPORTS DEALERSHIP FOR DL#910420. SALE, located on the busy Calgary Edmoncorridor. In business 32 years. FranCHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used ton dealer. Owner retiring. For more highway tractors. For more details call chised 204-685-2222 or view information at info contact: henhouse@telusplanet.net www.titantrucksales.com PARADISE HILL FARM SUPPLY thriving 40 year old business in the heart of cattle country. Ideally situated near the Junction of Hwy. 3 and 21, Owners retiring. 2003 FORD E350 extended reefer van, $2,600,000. Video tour at www.mgtv.ca 7 . 3 L , d i e s e l , 3 0 5 , 0 0 0 k m s , $ 4 0 0 0 . MLS® 52063. Call Vern McClelland, 306-821-0611, RE/MAX, Lloydminster, AB. 403-680-0752, Calgary, AB. 2004 FORD E350 extended van with reefer, MEAT SHOP FOR SALE: 16x55. Hanging 6 . 0 L d i e s e l , 2 4 5 , 0 0 0 k m s , $ 4 5 0 0 . capacity for 40 hogs, 15 beef. 8x14 sharp freeze, 10x12 compressor room, 16x14 403-680-0752, Calgary, AB. killing room, two 10x60 coolers, 16x16 2006 FREIGHTLINER M2 106 cargo van, cutting room. Easily moved. Phone Gary 26’ with tail lift, air brakes; 2005 ISUZU Barrett 306-267-4967, Big Beaver, SK. 16’ cargo van with tail lift, priced to sell. LOOKING FOR A Profitable Business? Please call: 306-291-4043, Saskatoon, SK. Berg’s Hatchery in Russell, MB. hatches 2010 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN, 160,000 and distributes close to a million chicks a kms, fleet vehicle, non-smoking, $7000. year. In business since 1953. Incl. land, buildings and equipment. Karen Goraluk, 403-680-0752, Calgary, AB. Salesperson, 204-773-6797, north-star.ca 2011 DODGE JOURNEY R/T, AWD, seats 7, NorthStar Insurance & Real Estate. loaded, 71,000 kms, $18,500. WELL ESTABLISHED FRANCHISED retail 306-652-7972, Saskatoon, SK DL #316384 tire store located east central AB. in thriving centre. High volume. Owner retiring. For information call 780-842-8443.
2011 JEEP GRAND Cherokee Overland, 4WD, 5 spd auto, sunroof, $30,900. Stk #V640901. D&D Vehicle Sales Camrose, AB. 780-672-4400. www.ddsales.com 2014 JEEP CHEROKEE North Latitude, 4x4, $29,500, PST paid. 0 down and $169/biweekly. 1-800-667-4414, www.thoens.com DL# 909250, Wynyard, SK.
1470 Willson Place / Winnipeg, Manitoba / R3T 3N9 Phone 204-478-STAR (7827) / Fax 204-478-1100 / Email: info@neu-star.com
FARM/CORPORATE PROJECTS. Call A.L. Management Group for all your borrowing and lease requirements. 306-790-2020, Regina, SK.
JUST ARRIVED! 2014 Forester, 46 MPG, starting from $25,995 (MSRP). For more info call 1-877-373-2662 or view at www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077.
FARMERS NEED FINANCIAL HELP? Go to: www.bobstocks.ca or call 306-757-1997. 245- 1055 Park Street, Regina, SK.
NEED A LOAN? Own farmland? Bank says no? If yes to above three, call 1-866-405-1228, Calgary, AB.
CUSTOM COMBINING in SE SK. CIH 7120’s and 8120. Tracks available. PU, draper, flex and corn header. Call or text Dean at 306-736-3454, Windthorst, SK CUSTOM HARVESTING, SWATHING and COMBINING, 36’ HoneyBee. Cereal and Specialty crops. Call Murray at: 306-631-1411, 306-759-2535, Tugaske, SK CUSTOM HARVESTER LOOKING for work in Alberta, Deere rotary, straight cut and P U h e a d s . Tr u c k i n g a v a i l a b l e . 780-603-7640, Bruce, AB. 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. CUSTOM COMBINING in southern Sask. B o o k i n g a c r e s n o w. C a l l S t a n 306-309-0080, Pangman, SK. LOOKING FOR CUSTOM COMBINING acres. John Deere rotary and conventional combines. Darcy 403-741-8886 at Veteran, east central, AB. Email: dt6590@telus.net CUSTOM HARVESTER looking for acres to harvest. 4- new JD S670 combines, 1100 bu. grain cart, and Peterbilt semis. Headers for all crops. Will travel anywhere. 306-421-9270 leave msg., Bromhead, SK.
HERAUF’S CUSTOM SILAGING. Taking bookings for grass, cereals, corn. Claas chopper, hauling, swathing, packing, 12’ bagger. Josh 306-529-1959, Regina, 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. LONG LAKE TRUCKING custom hay hauling, 2 units. 306-567-7100, Imperial, 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 SELF-LOADING/ UNLOADING ROUND BALE TRUCK. Maximum capacity 34 bales. Custom hauling anywhere in AB. or SK. Call Bernd, Bales on Wheels, Tofield, AB., 403-795-7997 or 780-922-4743. CUSTOM BALE HAULING, self-loading and unloading 17 bale truck. Radisson, SK. 306-827-2269 or 306-827-7835. CAN LOAD AND haul bales anywhere with three plus, truck trains and two loaders as required. 27 years in the business. Call Vern at: 204-729-7297, Brandon, MB.
DEBTS, BILLS AND charge accounts too high? Need to resolve prior to spring? Call us to develop a professional mediation plan, resolution plan or restructuring plan. CUSTOM FENCING, WILL travel. Call for bookings. 306-221-8806, Asquith, SK. Call toll free 1-888-577-2020.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
WESTERN LAND CLEARING Ltd, specializing in pasture, cropland and fence line brushing; Root raking and land contouring. Over 30 yrs experience. Services throughout BC, AB, SK and MB. Competitive rates. 780-387-1000, Sherwood Park, AB.
CUSTOM SWATHING. MAGILL FARM & FIELD SERVICES is now booking swathing acres for the 2014 cropping season. Late model MacDon swathers. Call Ivor 403-894-5400, Lethbridge, AB. CUSTOM BALING/ SWATHING/ SEEDING, Contour, double shoot; also parting 567 baler. Alan at 306-463-8423, Marengo, SK. NEUFELD ENT. CORRAL CLEANING, payloader, Bobcat with rubber tracks and vertical beater spreaders. Phone 306-220-5013, 306-467-5013, Hague, SK. BRUSH MULCHING. The fast, effective way to clear land. Four season service, competitive rates, 275 HP unit, also avail. trackhoe w/thumb, multiple bucket attachments. Bury rock and brush piles and fence line clearing. Borysiuk Contracting Inc., www.bcisk.ca Prince Albert, SK., 306-960-3804. DO YOU NEED grains cleaned or dried for a better grade? We do pulses, cereals and oilseeds. Servicing Ituna, SK. and surrounding area. Call FilFarms 306-795-2871
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 MB. Call 204-667-2867, fax 204-667-2932. HIGH LIFTS of all types. 80’ mobile high lift; 52’ scissor lift; 100’ ladder truck; Several lifts from 15’ to 30’; Forklifts from 1 to 10 ton; Linkbelt LS98 w/60’ boom; Several fire trucks and foam truck; Post pounders; 1500’ of chain link fencing and posts; 5000’ 1/2 cable at .50¢/ft; 100’s of misc. items and attachments; Large stock of power units, 3 KW to 193 KW; Older construction equipment; Over 50 sets of pallet forks. 12 water pumps, gas and diesel; 6 air compressors. Central Canada’s largest wreckers. Cambrian Equipment Sales Ltd, call 204-667-2867, fax 204-667-2932, Winnipeg, MB.
ROME PLOW AND KELLO DISC blades and bearings; 24” to 36” notched disc blades. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. www.kelloughs.com CAT HYDRAULIC PULL SCRAPERS: 463, 435, 80 and 70, all very good cond. new conversion. Also new and used scraper tires. Can deliver. 204-793-0098, Stony Mountain, MB. MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, stumps, caraganas, etc. 12 years of enviro friendly GENIE S60 MANLIFT, new hose track, mulching. Call today! 306-933-2950. Visit: good running cond., $17,000. Call Del for www.maverickconstruction.ca info. and pics 403-638-3934, Sundre, AB. REGULATION DUGOUTS: 120x60x14’ $2000; 160x60x14’ $2950; 180x60x14’ $3450; 200x60x14’ $3950. Gov’t grants available. 306-222-8054, Saskatoon, SK.
CLASSIFIED ADS 53
FOR ALL YOUR STRUCTURAL STEEL, roofing and siding needs, big or small. Call Fouillard Steel Supplies, St. Lazare, MB. 1-800-510-3303. Remember nobody sells roofing and siding cheaper!! Nobody.
ROAD GRADERS CONVERTED to pull behind large 4 WD tractors, 14’ and 16’ blade widths available. CWK Enterprises, 306-682-3367, 306-231-8358, Humboldt, SK., www.cwenterprises.ca HYDRAULIC SCRAPERS, Cat, Allis Chalmers, Letourneau, 6 yd.- 35 yds, also direct mount scrapers; Scraper tires; Direct mount motor graders from $14,950; S/A Jeep, $10,500; 5 yard 175B Michigan loader, $14,500. 204-822-3797, Morden, MB.
1998 JD 850C dozer, 6-Way blade, hydro., variable spd, forward/reverse, new cutting edges, 400 hrs. on rails and sprockets, recent trans. re sealed, vg, working 30” pads, bush ready, $78,500. Can Deliver. Call 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.
1990 FIAT ALLIS FD14, low hour machine. ex-forest fire machine, c/w hyd. winch, straight tilt blade, like new undercarriage, 24” pads, root rake included. $48,000. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.
LARGE STOCK OF LOADERS at low low prices. Cat 966C hi-lift; Cat 950, new motor; Dresser 530; Mich-Clark-Volvo L320 9 yard; FIA 840; Clark 45B; FIA 345B; Hough 65; (5) others in need of repair work; (7) 2 WD loaders with 3 PTH. Track Loaders: Cat 955H; Cat 977 20A Series; Cat 931; Cat 941; FIA FL9. About to part out (20) 4 WD and track loaders. Over 1400 new and used const. tires. New parts. Big discounts. Over 500 new and used buckets and attachments. Over 500 new and used hyd. cylinders; 2 yards, over 50 acres. Older construction equipment. Central Canada’s largest wreckers. Cambrian Equipment Sales Ltd., phone 204-667-2867, fax 204-667-2932, Winnipeg, MB.
SKIDSTEERS: Bobcat S150, S175, S250; TRACK LOADERS: Cat 247B, 297C; 299C, Bobcat T320; LOADERS: 2006 Cat 928 GE; 2005 Cat 930G; EXCAVATORS: 2000 Cat, M318 wheeled; 2007 Cat 320 DL, low hrs. Owner motivated, call for price. Can finance, 306-291-4043, Saskatoon, SK.
CONTERRA GRADER for skidsteers and tractors. Excellent for road maintenance, floating and levelling. 518S-SS, $2499. Conterra manufactures over 150 attachments. Call 1-877-947-2882, view online at www.conterraindustries.com 2001 D6RXW 6-Way dozer, cab, air, diff. steer, fair UC with new rollers, 10,000 hrs., $85,000. Call 403-244-7813, Calgary, AB. 2008 GENIE GTH-844 telehandler with 8000 lbs. 44’ reach, good tires and forks, $ 5 6 , 5 0 0 . Tr a d e s we l c o m e . 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 2004 NEW HOLLAND grader RG200B, rip- 1981 D7G CAT, c/w ripper, enclosed cab, per and dozer, new motor; 2003 Hitachi heat. Bush ready. 200 hrs. rebuilt trans. ZX200LC. 306-236-8023, Goodsoil, SK. and final drives. Torque, 500 hrs on rebuilt motor, 26” HD pads, 95% remaining on UC. RECLAMATION CONTRACTORS: Bigham Twin tilt angle blade. Cat in exc. cond., job 3 and 4 leg mechanical trip 3 pt. hitch ready, c/w warranty. Can deliver. $86,000. Paratills in stock; parts for Bigham and Tye 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. Paratills. Call Kellough’s: 1-888-500-2646. CAT D6D TRACK dozer, S/N #4X08123, 1982, dbl. tilt angle blade, 20” Grousers, canopy, winch, $32,000. Ph 204-795-9192, Plum Coulee, MB.
LANDMASTER PRODUCTION DOZERS: Buy now before the price increases as only a few remaining. PD-18’ $37,500. MB., SK., and AB. Call Neil 306-231-8300 or Gord 780-913-7353, www.landmaster.ca YELLOW ROSE CONSTRUCTION has a complete gravel crushing spread for sale. 2442 Elruss Jaw plant, 3’ Taylor crusher, plus a complete extra 3’ Taylor crusher and a warehouse of parts, Eccentric bushings, gears, shafts, other bushings, etc.; Elruss hopper feeder screening plant, 5x18’ screening double decker, Genset tower van, 3406 Cat, lots of electrical power, shop van w/lots of extra plant parts, tools, welder, ready to go. By the piece or complete; Ingersoll Rand L120, portable light and power pull behind, purchased in 2008, used very little. Bill McGinnis 306-567-7619, 306-734-2232, Craik, SK. 2010 KOMATSU PC220 LC-8 hyd. excavat o r, h y d . t h u m b , 6 3 6 0 h r s . C a l l 587-991-6605, Edmonton, AB. 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.
Rental Purchase Available
HYUNDAI LOADERS FOR SALE OR RENT Variety Of Sizes 3- 6 cu.yd.
TD Sales & Rentals Inc.
1-780-486-0138 1-800-661-4634 Http://www.twindeer.com EQUIPMENT RENTALS: Dozers, compactors, loaders, excavators, etc. Conquest Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. EXTREME DUTY BRUSHCUTTER (made in 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, fits most skidsteers, $4995. Agrimex, 306-432-4444, Dysart, SK
EQUIPMENT FOR SALE: 10"x24" Cedar Rapids Jaw on trailer, $5000; 5''x16' Eljay triple deck screen deck, $10,000; 18"x36" Hewitt Robins Jaw, $7000; 18'x30" Hewitt Robins vibratory feeder w/hopper, $7000; 2 sand screws, one on stand one on wheels, $10,000 each; 16" PTO water pump, $6000; Complete dry batch concrete plant, $50,000. 780-209-3973, Wainwright, AB.
WANTED: SMALL WHEEL Loader. 1 yard to 1 1/4 yard bucket, any make or model. Call 306-382-0785, Vanscoy, SK. EXCELLENT SELECTION Used skidsteers, track loaders, forklifts, zoom booms, mini excavators. Visit www.glenmor.cc for details, specs and prices. Glenmor, phone 306-764-2325, Prince Albert, SK. KOMATSU PC200 LC 3, 40” bucket, 60” wrist bucket, clean, well maintained, $38,000. 204-345-2202, Lac Du Bonnet MB EX200LC HITACHI w/quick attach, bucket, aux. hyd. and thumb; D6C Cat and D7E; Barber Green trencher. Call 204-352-4306, Glenella, MB.
LINKBELT LS98 with fairlead and bucket; Linkbelt 315 pile hammer; Koehring model 304 yd. and bridge crane; Pettibone Allterrain 40’ crane; Galion 4x4 20 ton crane, 2- Pettibone 20 ton and 40 ton mobile cranes; Hiab model 140, used only 1 year; Several other lifts and attachments; JLG 80’ manlift and others; Backhoes and attachments; JD 690C excavator, only $9500; Case 1085B with Wrist-O-Twist, $14,900; Bobcat 331 excavator, $13,900; New Bobcat backhoe attachment model 811, $7900. Many other backhoe attachments in stock. 2 locations over 50 acres, too much to list! Cambrian Equipment Sales, Winnipeg, MB. Ph. 204-667-2867, fax 204-667-2932.
1-800-665-0470 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. DIESEL ENGINES, OVERHAUL kits and parts for most makes. Cat, CIH, Cummins, Detroit, Mack. M&M Equipment Ltd., Parts and Service phone: 306-543-8377, fax: 306-543-2111, Regina, SK.
2009 D6T LGP Cat bulldozer 16’10” dozer DETROIT 671 DIESEL eng. with rad blade, winch, 5000 hrs., very mint, came out of road grader, ran very well, $2000. 780-879-2248, Alliance, AB. $185,000. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. 3406B, N14, SERIES 60, running engines and parts. Call Yellowhea d Traders, 306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK. 2003 CASE 1650K-XLT EROPS, heat, AC, pro-heat, multi-shank ripper, hydro trans, D6 size, exc. cond., 2800 hrs., $105,000. Prince Albert, SK., Rick 306-981-3475.
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! $44,900. Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. HYDRAULIC SCRAPERS: LEVER 60, 70, 80, and 435, 4 to 20 yd. available, rebuilt for years of trouble-free service. Lever Holdings Inc., 306-682-3332, Muenster SK ATTACHMENTS PARTS COMPONENTS for construction equipment. Attachments for dozers, excavators and wheel loaders. Used, Re-built, Surplus, and New equipment parts and major components. Call Western Heavy Equipment 306-981-3475, Prince Albert, SK. 2 0 0 7 8 2 4 J w h e e l l o a d e r, $ 9 5 , 0 0 0 . 780-983-0936, Westlock, AB. TEREX TS-14B, MODEL 17 UOT, turbo front 471 engine, good rubber, good blade, $35,000; IHC 600 Gallion grader, 50% rubber, V6 Detroit, PS, good yard grader, $20,500. Aldersyde, AB. 403-601-2280 or 403-804-4506.
w w w .go o do n.co m
Fo r A llY o ur Fa rm , C o m m ercia l& Industria lN eeds
HYD. EXCAVATORS: 2008 Komatsu PC308, Zero turn, QA, clean up bucket, 13’ stick, AC, plumbed for GPS plus aux. hyd. line for thumb, $65,000; JD 270LC, w/hyd. thumb, QA, 12’ stick, $50,000. 204-871-0925, McGregor, MB.
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.
DIAMOND CANVAS SHELTERS, sizes ranging from 15’ wide to 120’ wide, any length. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.starlinesales.com W O O D POST BUILDINGS: 40x56x16 $16,125; 48x80x16 $24,865. Warman Home Centre, call 1-800-667-4990 www.warmanhomecentre.com PRICE REDUCED still in the box Cover-All type buildings, easy assembly. 20’x30’, $2900 ea; 30’x40’, $4250 ea. Call Ladimer 306-795-7779, K&L Equipment, Ituna SK
WHEN
Quality COUNTS
• The HEAVIEST metal • The STRONGEST posts • SUPERIOR craftsmenship
FARM BUILDINGS
Choose Prairie Post Frame
EXPERIENCED POST FRAME BUILDERS REQUIRED
Westrum Lumber
www.westrumlumber.com
1-888-663-9663 R o ulea u,S K
PARTS/ ATTACHMENTS- used, surplus and new. Caterpillar and others. Hard to find parts. Worldwide locating system. 2007 CASE 621 E wheel loader, cab/air, no Mackie Equipment Ltd. 306-352-3070, Requick attach, 3 yard bucket, 172 HP, tires gina, SK. or www.mackieltd.com 20.5-25, joystick loader control, APR 3800 hrs., ride control, $89,000. 204-743-2324, 1978 CAT 631D motor scraper, 6180 hrs, 31 yard capacity, 8 spd. PS, 37.25-35 tires. Cypress River, MB. Nice shape! $34,900. Call Jordan anytime MANLIFT JLG T350 SP, tow behind, 40’ 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. reach, Honda engine, excellent condition, USED PARTS FOR TS-14 Terex motor $18,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. scraper. Other parts available. Phone: 1993 CAT 416B backhoe, ext-a-hoe, cab, 4 306-752-3968, Melfort, SK. WD 5003 hrs., $32,800. Trades welcome. 1979 SUNTRAC MODEL D514 portable 1-800-667-4515 www.combineworld.com screener, 5x14, 3 deck, 2 side and 1 rear TRENCHERS, PLOWS AND BACKHOES. discharge conveyors, hopper w/feeder Vermeer Navigator directional drill, Model hyd. Grizzly, 3 cyl. Deutz air cooled dsl., D7x11 w/Kubota dsl.; Ditch Witch 7020, recent total rebuild, $49,000; 2006 Cat blade, backhoe and cable plow; Ditch D6R LGP Series 3, EROPS with air, heat, Witch 5110, cable plow and front blade; canopy with sweeps over cab, bush Ditch Witch R65 backhoe, blade and equipped, H.A. dozer, twin tilt, 36” grous- IntegrityPostStructures.com trencher; Ditch Witch R40 trencher, blade, ers, 2850 orig. hrs., 90% U/C, excellent 4 cyl. dsl; Case-Davis maxi sneaker, rubber showroom condition, $185,000. Email AFAB INDUSTRIES POST frame buildings. tires, ride on rear plow; Davis T78 on steel rjharrisequipment@gmail.com Phone: For the customer that prefers quality. 1-888-816-AFAB (2322), Rocanville, SK. tracks, rear trencher. Also unit on a trailer; 204-642-9959 or 204-470-5493, Gimli, MB Vermeer walk behind Model V1350; (3) 2004 CAT 953 crawler loader, 4-in-1 buckDitch Witch walk behind Model 1230H. t , i n g o o d c o n d i t i o n , $ 3 0 , 0 0 0 . Cambrian Equipment Sales Ltd., Winnipeg, e780-983-0936, Westlock, AB. MB., ph 204-667-2867, fax 204-667-2932.
BOOK NOW
FOR FALL! 1-866-974-7678
SCRAPER FOR sale, minimum of 375 LETOURNEAU LS 13 yd. hyd scraper, an CAT to pull. 204-371-2339, Kleefeld, MB. ex-Army unit, very clean, matching tires, HP blaine.penner@gmail.com $32,000. 204-326-3109, Steinbach, MB. Skidsteer: pallet forks, FOR SALE: D8N’s, D7R’s, D7H LGP, D6H ATTACHMENTS: augers, hay spears. Conquest LGP, D6R’s, 6-ways. Assortment of track- buckets, Equipment, 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. hoes, 240’s to 330 Volvo and Hitachi. 780-723-0672, 780-723-5672, Edson, AB. SKIDSTEER ATTACHMENTS: rock buckets, dirt buckets, grapples and more top CAT D7 17A, cable angle blade, seat start, quality. Also have truck decks in stock. good powertrain, needs track chains. Quality Welding and Sales 306-731-3009 204-534-6727, Boissevain, MB. or 306-731-8195, Craven, SK. D50 KOMATSU CRAWLER, bush canopy, 1995 CASE 621B wheel loader, 11,500 hrs, c/w ripper, dozer blade, root rake, mint, light farm use last 10 yrs, tires- 85%, new $22,500. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. cutting blade, exc. cond., $48,000. Wawa2007 SKYTRAK 10054, 10,000 lbs., 54’ nesa, MB., 204-824-2018, 204-761-6709. reach w/heated cab, stabilizer bars, pivoting forks, $59,800. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com HYDRAULIC PULL SCRAPERS 10 to 25 GREAT PRICES ON new, used and remanuyds., exc. cond.; Loader and scraper tires, factured engines, parts and accessories for custom conversions available. Looking for diesel pickups. Large inventory, engines Cat cable scrapers. Quick Drain Sales Ltd., can be shipped or installed. Give us a call or check: www.thickettenginerebuilding.ca 306-231-7318, 306-682-4520 Muenster SK Thickett Engine Rebuilding. 204-532-2187, 1998 SKYTRAK 6036 telehandler w/6000 Russell, MB. lbs., 36’ reach, in good mech/cosmetic condition, $25,800. Trades welcome. 290 CUMMINS, 350 Detroit, 671 Detroit, Series 60 cores. 306-539-4642, Regina, SK 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
S to ny Pla in O ffice 780-975-3748 A irdrie O ffice 403-470-4570 M B S a les 204-534-2468 S a sk. S a les 306-737-8788 V erm ilio n O ffice 780-581-5822
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. ARM RIVERPOLE BUILDINGS, 40’x60’ to 80’x300’, Sask. only. Call 306-731-2066, Lumsden, SK., metalarc@live.ca POLE BARNS, WOODSTEEL packages, hog, chicken, and dairy barns. Construction and concrete crews available. Mel or Scott, MR Steel Construction, 306-978-0315, Hague, SK.
54 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
SDL HO PPER C O NES 12’-19’ HO PPER CO NES
STEEL BIN FLOORS RTM-HOPPER BINS
$2,250
starting at
FARM BUILDINGS
“Today’s Quality Built For Tomorrow” Hague, SK
(306) 225-2288 www.zaksbuilding.com
3UH (QJLQHHUHG /DPLQDWHG 3RVWV $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
P RICED TO CLEAR!!!
$ $ $ $ $ $ 7 5 TR UC KLOAD S $ $ 29 G AUG E FULL H AR D 100,000 P S I $ $ H I G H TEN S I LE R OOFI N G & S I D I N G $ $ 16 C OLOUR S TO C H OOS E FR OM $ $ $ B-G r. Colou red . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70¢ ft2 $ $ M u lti Colou rM illen d s . . . . . 49¢ ft2 $ $ $ BEAT THE P RICE $ $ IN C R E A S E S $ $ AS K ABO UT O UR BLO W O UT $ $ CO LO RS AT $0.6 5 S Q . FT. $ $ CALL N O W $ $ $ $ F o u illa rd S teel $ $ S u p p lies L td . $ $ S t. La za re, M a n . $ $ 1- 8 00- 5 10- 3303 $ $ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
PORTABLE GRAIN RINGS made of steel. New 20 gauge wide-corr steel sheets 48”H. Sizes from 3650 bu., $2072 to 83,000 bu., $11,447 including hardware. All sizes in stock. All rings 4’H. Best quality available. Canadian made quality silver cone shaped tarps avail. for all sizes. All tarps in stock. Complete packages include freight to any major point in Western Canada. Overnight delivery to most major points in Western Canada. Willwood Industries toll free 1-866-781-9560, fax 306-781-0108. For all pricing, details, pictures visit our website: www.willwood.ca CUSTOM GRAIN BIN MOVING, all types up to 22’ diameter. 10% spring discount. Accurate estimates. Sheldon’s Hauling, 306-961-9699, Prince Albert, SK. 2- WESTEEL ROSCO, 3350 bu., on cement; 1- 2750 Westeel Rosco, on wooden floor; $1/bu. OBO. 306-648-7766, Gravelbourg, SK. GRAIN BINS: 3500 bu. Meridian/Behlen bin/hopper combo, 10 leg hopper and skid, roof and side ladder, safety fill, constructed, $10,395 FOB at Regina, SK. Leasing available. Peterson Construction, 306-789-2444.
STEEL BIN FLOORS
All Hop p er C ones Inclu d e M a nhole, Slid e G a te on Nylon Rollers
O PT IO NAL SKID BASE AND AERAT IO N
SDL STEEL BIN FLO O RS
starting at
$1,300
CALL FOR IN STOCK SPECIALS
4300 bushel ….$7295
CENTRAL ALBERTA Innisfail, AB.
Call 306-831-5060
SAVE $2000
$13,246 *limited qty
306-298-2092
SAVE $3000 from Coop
Grain Bin Direct
POLY HOPPER BINS, 100 bu., $925; 150 bu. $1290. 306-258-4422, Vonda, SK. Call for nearest dealer. www.buffervalley.com
Galvanized • Flat Floor • Hopper Bins Smooth Walls • Fertilizer • Grain • Feed Aeration • Rockets • Fans • Heaters Temp Cables Authorized Dealer
grainbindirect.com
• • • •
Hopper Cones Meridian Grain Bins Steel Floors W/R and Butler Sheets • Evertight Anchors • Remote Bin Lids
M&K WELDING
BINS & CONES
403-357-7850
M elfort, S a s k.
aberlynn@xplornet.com
1-877-752-3004
Em a il: s a les @ m kw eld ing.ca W eb s ite: m kw eld ing.ca
DID YOU EXPERIENCE crop damage from using Priority, PrePass or Express Pro. If so, call Back-Track Investigations 1-866-882-4779 regarding compensation. CHIEF WESTLAND AND CARADON BIN extensions, sheets, stiffeners, etc. Now available. Call Bill, 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.starlinesales.com 1450 STEEL BIN, as new, cement floor. Call 403-936-5416, Langdon, AB.
TEMPORARY GRAIN BINS, selected 3/8” fir plywood with all holes drilled. Wood sizes from 1750 bu., $431 to 11,700 bu., $852 including hardware. All sizes in stock. All rings 4’ high. Best quality avail. Canadian made quality silver cone shaped tarps available for all sizes. All tarps in stock. Complete packages include freight to any major point in Western Canada. Overnight delivery to most major points in Western Canada. Willwood Industries toll free 1-866-781-9560, fax 306-781-0108. For pricing, details, pics: www.willwood.ca
BROCK (BUTLER) GRAIN BIN PARTS and accessories available at Rosler Construction. 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK. BIN MOVING, all sizes up to 19’ diameter, w/wo floors; Also move liquid fert. tanks. 306-629-3324, 306-741-9059, Morse, SK. GM 4000 AND GM 5300 Meridian bins on sale now at Flaman. See your nearest Fla- WESTEEL, GOEBEL, grain and fertilizer bins. Grain Bin Direct, 306-373-4919. man location or call 1-888-435-2626.
BOOKING NOW! Flat and hopper bin moving. Tim’s Custom 204-362-7103, Morden, MB. binmover50@gmail.com FOR ALL YOUR grain storage, hopper cone and steel floor requirements contact: Kevin’s Custom Ag in Nipawin, SK. Toll free: 1-888-304-2837.
STORAGE TRAILERS
40 – 45’
3,900
$ $
306-757-2828
Download the free app today.
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.
1998 HYUNDAI CONTAINER chassis trailers. 48’, 53’ Hi Cube, tri axle, sliding axles, R11x22.5 tires, spring suspension, all steel wheels, hub odometers with all readings under 200,000 kms, 5100 kg tare wt. or 3 for $17,700. 204-385-2012 BELTING FOR SALE: 42-56” high, 3/8” $6500/ea thick, temporary grain storage. Makes or 204-856-3396, Gladstone, MB. round ring. Ph Ken Wadelle 403-346-7178 SHIPPING CONTAINERS FOR SALE. 20’or 403-392-7754, Red Deere, AB. 53’, delivery/ rental/ storage available. For inventory and prices call: 306-262-2899, Saskatoon, SK. www.thecontainerguy.ca LIFETIME LID OPENERS. We are a stocking dealer for Boundary Trail Lifetime Lid Openers, 18” to 39”. Rosler Construction 2000 Inc., 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK.
STEEL BIN FLOORS CALL FOR IN STOCK SPECIALS PEACE COUNTRY Girouxville, AB.
780-837-4037 dboisvert@serbernet.com
CONTAINERS FOR SALE or rent: All siz39’X4’ FAIRFORD RING, also three 30’x4’ es avail. Also must sell! Five 40’ open top g r a i n r i n g s . C a l l : R o l a n d S a kow s k i , containers. 306-861-1102, Radville, SK. 306-256-7088, Cudworth, SK. 20’ AND 40’ SHIPPING CONTAINERS, CONCRETE BLOCKS, 5’ long, 30” high, 30” large SK. inventory. Ph. 1-800-843-3984, wide. Interlocking, weigh 4000 lbs., good 306-781-2600. for grain storage, buildings, walls, etc. 20’ AND 40’ SEA CONTAINERS, for sale $100/block. Load any day. 306-630-3538, in Calgary, AB. Phone 403-226-1722, Bethune, SK. 1-866-517-8335. www.magnatesteel.com
HARVEST SPECIALS
USED
Saskatoon, SK
Phone: 306-373-4919
M ARG O ,SASK.
Set up in Wadena, SK.
Set up in Hepburn, SK.
Factory To Farm Grain Storage
306-324-4441
GRAIN BINS ON STEEL FLOOR
SOUTH SASKATCHEWAN Cadillac, SK.
ON HOPPER with SKID and AIR
Call 306-831-5060
SD L H OP P E R CONE
NEW FLAT BOTTOM
1805 Unstiffened GRAIN BINS
palaschakfarms@sasktel.net
10 gauge sheet - 8” sidew all,bolt on 1 or 2 piece construction 12’-33’ Tru ck ing Av a ila b le
12’-33’ STEEL BIN FLO O RS
CALL FOR IN STOCK SPECIALS
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. 20’ TO 53’ CONTAINERS. New, used and modified. Available Winnipeg, MB; Regina and Saskatoon, SK. www.g-airservices.ca 306-933-0436. 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
#00, :063 #*/4 '-0034 '03 ĄĄĄ Lease rates as low as 1.9%.
Bins available will be our “Force” and “Legacy” smooth wall as well as Corrugated bins on our award winning “Force Hopper” and “Legacy” floors. Available sizes from 5,000 bushel to 12,000 bushel hopper bins.
Neilburg, Saskatchewan
sales@jtlindustries.ca www.jtlindustries.ca
Head Office: Alberta: Manitoba:
1-306-823-4888 1-780-872-4943 1-204-573-3204
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
FOR ALL YOUR
FERTILIZER
EQUIPMENT NEEDS ADAMS SPREADER & TENDER CALL US FOR PARTS ON ALL
SPREADER/TENDER MAKES AND MODELS
BEAVER CONTAINER SYSTEMS, new and used sea containers, all sizes. 306-220-1278, Saskatoon and Regina, SK.
ADAMS 6 TON SPREADER 304SS Construction
21,995 00 Delivered
$
Limited Supply
1 800 667 8800
In dus tria l D ire ct In corp ora te d
www.nuvisionfhs.com
CLASSIFIED ADS 55
NEW WHEATHEART X Series augers. 13” swing augers in 74’, 84’, 94’. See your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. SAKUNDIAK GRAIN AUGERS available with self-propelled mover kits and bin sweeps. Contact Kevin’s Custom Ag in Nipawin, SK. Toll free 1-888-304-2837. WHEATHEART X SERIES 13x94 auger. Demo unit in good condition. Man winch, 540 PTO, $20,900. See the Saskatoon Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. NEW “R” SERIES Wheatheart Augers: with engine, mover and electric clutch. R-8x41, cash price $12,250; R-8x51, cash $12,750; R-10x41, cash $13,500. Call 306-648-3321, Gravelbourg, SK.
CUSTOM COLOR SORTING chickpeas to mustard. Cert. organic and conventional. 306-741-3177, Swift Current, SK. 2012 DEMCO 1350, duals, scale, tarp, full load, like new condition, end of season DUAL STAGE ROTARY SCREENERS and blow out price, $50,000. Call Corner Kwik Kleen 5-7 tube. Call 204-857-8403, Portage la Prairie, MB. or visit online: Equipment, 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. www.zettlerfarmequipment.com
BUHLER 1385 SWING auger, 13”x85’, hydraulic winch, overall good serviceable aug e r, $ 8 9 8 0 . Tr a d e s We l c o m e . C a l l 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com TWO - 2012 AG Chem 8400’s, 365 HP, CVT trans., 1600/1100 hrs, Viper Pro, SmarTrax, Airmax Precision 2 system (2 bin), 2 year or 3000 hour warranty, $223,000 and $237,000. 406-466-5356, Choteau, MT.
G re a t, S e c u re s to ra ge fo r a ll yo u r c he m ic a l, s e e d , fu e l, to o ls a n d a ll o fyo u r va lu a b le s . M o d ify yo u r s to ra ge u n itto m e e t yo u r n e e d s w ith e xtra d o o rs , w in d o w s , po w e r, c u s to m pa in t, in s u la tio n ,e tc .
Ca ll BOND Toda y
Ph. 306-373-2236 Cell 306-221-9630 w w w .b on din d.com e m a il joe @ b on din d.com
WANTED: USED KEHO 2 HP and 3 HP aeration fans. Contact Ken Catherwood, 306-454-2782, 306-861-7550, Ceylon, SK. FLAMAN FANS, 3 HP, 18”, $800. or $950. with half round floor system. Call 306-648-7500, Saskatoon, SK.
FERTILIZER TENDER AND Trailer, Wilmar 16 ton Loadrunner tender and Custom built trailer. Tender is well used but functions. Trailer is in exc. cond. Tires and brakes 85% or better. Heavy axles and brakes were new when built. Pintle hitch, air brakes, exc. cond., $5850. 250-417-9159, Cranbrook, BC., dlamb@intref.ca 5000 US GALLON tank, 10 year limited warranty. Sale $2900. Call 306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228. While supplies last! www.hold-onindustries.com LOOKING FOR A floater or tender? Call me first. 34 years experience. Loral parts, new and used. Call 403-650-7967, Calgary, AB.
KEHO/ GRAIN GUARD/ OPI STORMAX. For sales and service east central SK. and MB., call Gerald Shymko, Calder, SK., 306-742-4445 or toll free 1-888-674-5346.
HOPPER AERATION FANS AND HEATERS
2005 INTERNATIONAL LORAL Easy Rider 6400 w/70' AirMax 1000, 3390 hrs., 13 L Cat eng., 6 spd. Alison, Raven SCS monitor, very good condition, $105,000. 306-539-4949, 306-535-2997, Pense, SK. 12,000 IMP. GAL. John Wood Co. liquid KEHO, STILL THE FINEST. Clews Storage fertilizer storage tank, painted 2 years ago, Management/ K. Ltd., 1-800-665-5346. 3” port, 11.5’ diameter, 20’H, $5500. Call 306-868-7616, Avonlea, SK.
AA-GGI.COM
BATCO CONVEYORS, new and used, grain augers and SP kits. Delivery and 2013 FARM KING 16x84 auger, $26,900. leasing available. 1-866-746-2666. Call 1-888-708-3739, www.glenmor.cc WANTED: OLDER TRANSFER conveyor, glenmor@sasktel.net any condition. 780-662-2617, Tofield, AB. MERIDIAN GRAIN AUGERS: SP kits and BUILD YOUR OWN conveyors, 6”, 7”, 8” clutches, Kohler, Vanguard engines, gas and 10” end units available; Transfer con- and diesel. Call Brian ‘The Auger Guy’ veyors and bag conveyors or will custom 204-724-6197, Souris, MB. build. Call for prices. Master Industries WESTFIELD 13x91 PLUS swing auger, low Inc. www.masterindustries.ca Phone profile hopper, used 2 seasons, $15,000. 1-866-567-3101, Loreburn, SK. 403-647-7391, Foremost, AB.
3600 US GALLON tank, 10 year limited warranty. Sale $1800. Call 306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228. While supplies last! www.hold-onindustries.com
S A K U N D I A K A U G E R S I N S TO C K : swings, truck loading, Hawes Agro SP movers. Contact Hoffart Services Inc., Odessa, SK, 306-957-2033. FOR AUGERS, GRAIN storage, discs, carts, and more visit www.flaman.com. Whether you want new, used or a rental, we have what you are looking for! Flaman Agricult u r e - Wh e r e F a r m i n g S t a r t s . C a l l NEW EZ-TRAIL, 300 bu. wagon, $5750 1-888-435-2626. plus tarp; 400 bu. wagon, $7500 plus tarp; X13-74 WHEATHEART HI-CAPACITY 500 bu. wagon, $10,500 incl. tarp. Corner swing auger w/reverser, hyd. swing lift, Equipment, 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. elec. remote swing, regular $26,500, cash $22,500; Used 2012 SLMD 12-79 Sakundi- 2008 BOURGAULT 1100, roll tarp, scales ak w/reverser and Brehon mover $16,500 c/w printer, 2 cameras. Call 780-361-7641 or 780-361-6879, Wetaskiwin, AB. cash. 306-648-3321, Gravelbourg, SK.
Biggar, SK 306-948-2544 1-800-455-3529
E-Kay Round About 8” x 59’ For Sale 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 Moves back & forth, $142,500; 2009 Case 4520, 2860 hrs, $163,000; 2006 Case 4510, AutoSteer, sideways & in a circle. FlexAir 70’ booms, 7400 hrs., $102,000; - Ideal for Grain Drying. 2005 Case 4520 w/70’ flex air, 4000 hrs., $129,000; 2005 Case 4010 w/3020 G4 Has Automatic Shut Off New Leader bed, $74,000; 2009 InternaControl System on Belts, tional GVM, 1000 hrs., 4 W D, auto. $127,000; 2- 2004 Loral AirMax 1000’s, 70’ Power Steering, booms, immaculate, $93,000; 2004 AgChem Rogator, w/air bed, $66,000; 2008 and 3 Light Kit Adams Semi tender, self contained, $39,500; 1992 Wrangler loader, $15,500. WWW.E-KAY.COM 406-466-5356, Choteau, MT. For more equipment and photos view website: FARM KING 16x104 grain auger, 1 year www.fertilizerequipment.net old, fully loaded, like new, $30,000. 306-441-1684, Cut Knife, SK. 11,000 US GALLON tank, 10 year limited warranty. Sale $6200. Call 306-253-4343 2010 BRANDT, 13” x 90’XL, Brehon remote, or 1-800-383-2228. While supplies last! hopper mover, reverser, lights. Call 306-567-7262, Davidson, SK. www.hold-onindustries.com
Available at:
Precision Ag Services Inc. Carnduff, SK
(306) 482-4343 www.dseriescanola.ca
75’ NORDIC GRAIN elevator leg, 20 HP, 3 phase, 600 volt, ready to transport, 2013 GT GRAIN dryer, 800 bu., canola screens, PTO drive, propane, $39,000 OBO. $20,000. 306-335-2280, Lemberg, SK. 306-452-7743, Parkman, SK. 32SG INDENT SEED CLEANER, $10,000 OBO. Ph Ed, Innisfree Seed Cleaning Plant VERTEC 6 TIER grain dryer, propane, good for all crops, new burner, ready to work, 780-592-3875, Innisfree AB $10,000. 204-532-2349, Foxwarren, MB. MOBILE GRAIN CLEANER, 250 bu./hr., bench air screen, triple indent, self con- NEW SUPERB GRAIN dryers and Moridge tained, lots of screens, office, $145,000. parts. Call Grant Service at Foam Lake, SK. 306-272-4195. Winter pricing already avail For details call 306-644-4603, Loreburn SK 2 KEHO 5 HP aeration fans, with 4 arch cross duct systems, very good condition. $4000. 306-861-1705, Tyvan, SK. 1985 MORIDGE GRAIN dryer with agitator, ADD A BURNER to a Fan and turn it into a s u i t a b l e f o r c a n o l a . P h i l S a n d e n , Dryer! Call Rick now at 204-269-7616, 306-734-2879, 306-734-7768, Craik, SK. Wall Grain Handling, Winnipeg, MB.
www.grainmaxx.com
MORIDGE 8770 PTO batch dryer, propane, $5000; VERTEC 6600 continuous, SELLING GRAIN LEGS, distributors, conupgraded burner and vaporizer, propane, and truck scales. Also other eleva2006 UNVERFERTH 9250, green, tarp, loading auger, $22,000. Viking, AB., veyors tors parts. 403-634-8540, Grassy Lake, AB. s c a l e , o n e o w n e r, 1 0 0 0 b u s h e l . 780-777-5227. 306-563-8482, Yorkton, SK. BEHLEN CONTINUOUS DRYER, Model 850, 3 phase hydro, two 1750 RPM fans, 2010 WALINGA SUPER chrome vac, Model $10,000. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. #7614, used very little, asking $22,500. 1998 IBEC 1610 TURBO grain dryer, 5 tier, Phone: 306-596-0262, Rouleau, SK. 3 phase, roof option, V6 Chev motor, natural gas. Call 780-679-7795, Camrose, AB. 218-745-4516 Four locations in NW NEW SUKUP GRAIN dryers, 1 or 3 phase, Minnesota, USA LP or NG, canola screens. In stock and ready for immediate delivery. Also some used dryers on hand. www.vzgrain.com Call 204-998-9915, Altamont, MB. • N ew & Us ed Gra in V a cs
BRANDT 10-60 SWING-AWAY, PTO, 2 0 0 4 , ve r y g o o d , $ 4 5 0 0 O B O. C a l l 306-831-2245, 306-831-2002, Darcy, SK.
COMPLETE FAN HOUSING KIT for Vertec o r I b e c g r a i n d r y e r. W i l l d e l i v e r. 306-931-7796, Dalmeny, SK.
GRAINMAXX HIGH CAPACITY AUGERS 8 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM
NEW SEE VIDEO ON WEBSITE
6000 SERIES
TELESCOPIC
SWING AUGER
1 800 667 8800
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.
KEHO/ GRAIN GUARD Aeration Sales and Service. R.J. Electric, Avonlea, SK. Call 306-868-2199 or cell: 306-868-7738.
BALZER 1550 GRAIN CART, tandem axle, scales, steerable axle, exc cond, $69,000, #6561V. Bryans Farm & Industrial Supply, Call 1-888-871-8660 or 519-837-0710.
DUAL SCREEN ROTARY grain cleaners, great for pulse crops, best selection in Western Canada. Phone 306-259-4923 or 306-946-7923, Young, SK.
SAKUNDIAK 10x65 SWING, mechanical drive, hopper overhauled, has seen fertilizer, $2800. Call 780-221-3980, Leduc, AB. NEW MERIDIAN AUGERS arriving daily. Used: 2008 Sakundiak 12”x85’, $16,000; 2011 Sakundiak SLMD 12”x72’, $14,900; Brandt 10”x60’ swing-away, $6500; HD 10-2000 swing-away, 10”x60’, $7500; HD8-1600, c/w Hawes 2WMV and sweep, $9500. Also Convey-All dealer. Leasing avail. Ph. Dale, Mainway Farm Equipment, 306-567-3285 or 306-567-7299, Davidson, SK. View www.mainwayfarmequipment.ca
Ne w Us e d & M o d ifie d S e a C o n ta in e rs fro m
2007 Brent 1594, 1500 bushel grain cart w/ electric roll tarp & scales, $49,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
WANTED: OLDER 8’ to 9’ grain bag unl o a d e r, p o s s i b l y R i c h i g e r 1 8 0 . 780-662-2617, Tofield, AB. FLAMAN 1610 PRO grain extractor. Unload bags easily and economically. See your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com
CURT’S GRAIN VAC SERVICES
See our website for 7 used grain carts available from $13,500 - $47,500! Also 8 new grain carts In stock! Models 1082, 1196 and 1396 www.evergreenimplement.com
TOX-O-WIK 370 GRAIN dryer, 500 gallon propane tank, hose and trailer. Humboldt, SK., call 306-682-5602, 306-231-5431.
• Blo w er & Airlo ck Repa ir • Pa rts & S ervices Fo r AL L M a k es & M o d els
P h :306 - 734- 2228
Cra ik, SK. PALMIER SWATH FLUFFER, very good condition, always shedded. Ready to go to NEW, NEVER USED 2011 Buhler 6640, work. First $5000 takes it! Call Don at Ostergard’s Seed Farm Ltd., Drumheller, AB. $19,900. Phone toll free 1-877-862-2387, 1-877-862-2413, Nipawin, SK. 2007 BRENT 1594, 1500 bushel grain cart 403-823-0405, ostseeds@hotmail.com with electric roll tarp and scales, $49,800. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com
2014 LOFTNESS-GL-10 grain bag unloader, only used on 9 bags, all updates done, hydraulic spout, LED light kit, new $41,500, asking $38,000. 780-763-3865 Mannville, AB. RENN 1214 UNLOADER grain extractor, DEMCO 1350, duals, tarp, scale, like new good cond., $20,000. Can email pics. Call cond., $54,500. Can deliver. Call Corner Equipment 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. 780-349-9810, Westlock, AB. 2014 LOFTNESS GBL-10, 10’ grain bag- GRAIN CARTS. Large selection of used ger, loaded, new. 306-533-4891, Gray, SK. grain carts: 450 1100 bu. Bourgault 1100, $17,500; UFT 660, hyd., $16,000; A&L 2009 LOFTNESS EXTRACTOR, does 9’ or 700, $16,000. 20 others. 1-866-938-8537 1 0 ’ b a g s , $ 2 8 , 0 0 0 . C a l l fo r d e t a i l s www.zettlerfarmequipment.com 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. GRAVITY WAGONS: New 400 bu, $7,400; 600 bu., $12,000; 750 bu., $17,750. Large selection of used gravity wagons, 250-750 JUST IN!! 2012 J&M 1150, PTO, scale, bu. Used grain carts, 450 to 1110 bushel. Michel’s tarp, $53,500. Call Hergott Farm View www.zettlerfarmequipment.com Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK. 1-866-938-8537, Portage la Prairie, MB.
56 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
JD 350A side delivery rake, NH #65 square baler, Vermeer baler #605C, Case 7’ #10 power mower, Versatile swather 400 15’. 780-846-2706, Kitscoty, AB. USED SCHULTE MOWERS- XH1500 3 units from $16,900 to $19,900. Call Flaman at 1-888-435-2626.
460 CAT LEXION, 67” cyl., 290 HP, sidehill leveling, straw walkers, fine cut chopper, $65,500. 780-208-1125, 780-208-1125, Willingdon, AB.
PALMIER SWATH FLUFFER, very good condition, always shedded. Ready to go to work. First $5000 takes it! Call Don at Ostergard’s Seed Farm Ltd., Drumheller, AB. 403-823-0405, ostseeds@hotmail.com 2008 NEW HOLLAND HW365 windrower USED SCHULTE 5026 mower, 26’ cutter, with NH 2358 18' disc mower conditioner, great shape, $29,900. See the Saskatoon 685 hrs., cab w/AC, Merger attachment Flaman store, or call 1-888-435-2626. mounted, very good condition, FOB St. Marys, ON., $79,000. 519-276-0943, sales@glnh.ca www.glnh.ca
2001 CAT 460, 2000 hrs., 290 HP, rock trap, elec. sieve, chopper, Cebis monitor, $47,500. Also available CAT P13 and flex header F30. 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK.
CONEYAIR GRAIN VACS, parts, accessories. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.starlinesales.com
2000 JOHN DEERE 566 baler, very good, shedded, 8800 bales, $11,500. 306-243-4307, Macrorie, SK. 2004 IH RBX562 baler with bale kick, 5’x6’ bale, $9,800. Call 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com BALE SPEAR ATTACHMENTS for all loaders and skidsteers, excellent pricing. Call now 1-866-443-7444. BALE SPEARS, high quality imported from Italy, 27” and 49”, free shipping, excellent pricing. Call now toll free 1-866-443-7444, Stonewall, MB. HESSTON 4900 BALERS, accumulators, monitors. 3 to choose from. Will part out. 519-524-0549, Lucknow, ON. MORRIS 1400 HAY HIKER for sale, holds 14 bales, $18,000. Call: 306-457-7400, Stoughton, SK. JD 535 ROUND baler, 1000 PTO, S/N #E00535X923375, average cond., $5,000 OBO. 780-449-6004 days, Edmonton, AB. LUNDELL HAY CUBER, stationary, belt driven, $6500 or trade for motorcycle. 306-267-4552, Coronach, SK. 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
2014 MORRIS HAY hiker, 14 bale. Lease for $556 monthly or $3280 semi OAC. One left. Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212 Perdue, SK. 2003 JD 557 ROUND BALER, like new, used very little, shedded, $14,500. Call Dave at 306-424-7511, Montmartre, SK.
1987 TR96, c/w NH 971 header, Melroe 388 PU w/new belts, S-Cube rotors, new feeder chain, new concaves and rub bars, elec. stone trap, reverser, turbo 3208 Cat 1993 CASE 1680, 3184 hrs., PU and 25’ engine, 2720 hrs., shedded, $25,000 OBO. 2011 MACDON R85, 16’ disc mower condi- rigid straight cut headers, chopper, AFX 780-672-6212, 780-679-6396, Camrose AB tioner header, $10,470 warranty upgrade rotor and all mods, shedded. Phone 2004 NH CR970, #PN2766B, $101,000. work order, excellent, $24,900. Nipawin, 306-697-7210, Grenfell, SK. Contact 306-682-9920, Humboldt, SK. or SK., 1-877-862-2387, 1-877-862-2413. www.farmworld.ca NH 2355 DISCBINE HEADER, 2008, 1985 NH TR96, #N21067D, 2944 hrs., 15.5’, exc. cond., was used on NH 8060 $7000. 306-922-2525, Prince Albert, SK. swather, sold cows, $23,500. Call or text CASE/IH COMBINES and other makes or www.farmworld.ca 204-378-0020, 204-378-0030, Arborg, MB. and models. 5 years interest free on most units. Call the combine superstore. Trades 2011 NH CR9090, HN3376A, 620/70R42 welcome, delivery can be arranged. Call duals. Was $335,000. Now $299,000. cash price. Call 306-682-9920, Humboldt, SK. Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. CASE/IH 5000, 25’, SP, MacDon PU reel, or www.farmworld.ca field ready, good condition, $7500. 1995 CASE/IH 2188, 3800 sep. hrs, rock trap, accelerator, chaff spreader, rebuilt 2011 NH CR9090, #HN3374A, 720 hrs., 306-563-6651, Canora, SK. drive and driven clutches, always shedded, $299,000. cash price. Call 306-922-2525, 8820 CASE/IH, 30’, 2600 hrs, exc. cond., exc. cond., $33,000 OBO. 306-231-6172, Prince Albert, SK. or www.farmworld.ca new knife, guard and tires, field ready, 306-367-2181, Humboldt, SK. 1995 NH TR97, rake-up PU, Redekop chop$19,500. Call 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. 1995 CASE 2188, one owner, 4503 eng., per, 3510/2820 hrs., field ready, $24,000. CASE/IH 725 PT, hydro drive, HD PU reel, 3801 threshing hrs., AFX rotor, PU header, Call 780-870-8253, Dewberry, AB. canola cutter, new canvases, new drive return monitor, ext. auger, grain tank ext. pulleys, new knife, field ready, $2500. high cap. unloader, extra fuel tank, pea kit, 403-652-0879, Nanton, AB. 2 sets concaves, good shape, no guards, $26,000. 306-882-3371, Rosetown, SK. 1998 WESTWARD 30’ SP, pickup reels, 2000 hours, $35,000. 204-773-6145, 2008 CASE/IH 8010, 4 WD, approx. 870 204-532-2349, Foxwarren, MB. sep., hrs., 30’ flex draper header, main 2004 WESTWARD 9250, 25’, 1100 eng. tires 45” wide, will drive as far as a track hrs, 900 swathing hrs, S/N 159226, c/w machine in mud, $200,000. 204-871-0925, swath roller, asking $50,000. Herschel, SK MacGregor, MB. 306-377-2132, 306-831-8007. 2008 MF 9220 WINDROWER, 30’, 860 2008 CX 8080 NH, 1367 threshing hrs., engine hours, 30’ PU reel, $57,000. Call Y&M monitor, tow hitch, auto header lift, 204-825-8121, Morden, MB. all new oil filter, total service job done, field ready, choose from 2, $129,000. Can 1992 CASE/IH 8820, 25’, double knife deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. drive, shifting table, UII PU reel, drive tires replaced, good cond., $19,500 OBO. PRICE REDUCED: 2003 NH CX840, 1630 306-854-2167, 306-567-7103, Elbow, SK. hrs., 800 front tires, rock trap, auto reel spd., AutoHeight, elec. sieve adj, excellent 2004 MACDON 9250, 30’ header, PU reels, condition, asking $80,000. 306-293-2936, new knife and guards last year, $50,000. 306-298-7808, Orkney, SK. 306-524-4960, Semans, SK.
LARGE SQUARE BALE hyd. grab, 5’x7’, 2010 CASE/IH 1903, 30’, 728 hrs., Rotow/wo Manitou zoom-boom attachment, Shears, $95,000; 2008 CIH 1903, 25’, 723 hrs., Roto-Shears, $90,000. Both shedded fits FEL. 204-729-7297, Brandon, MB. and 9/10 . 403-823-9976, Drumheller, AB 2009 JD 568 netwrap baler, fully loaded, MACDON 3020 PT, 30’ w/PU reel, shedmint cond., approx. 6500 bales, shedded, ded, excellent condition. 306-728-7707, $29,900. 306-752-3577, St. Brieux. SK. Melville, SK. HESSTON 4910, big square, 2004, c/w ac- 1994 MF 210 PT, 30’, UII PU reel, in-cab cumulator, excellent condition, $55,000. controls, exc. cond., $2995 OBO. Jordan 780-853-4013, Vermilion, AB. anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB 1994 MACDON 1900 WINDROWER, 25’, PU reel, 2485 hours, $21,000. Call 204-825-8121, Morden, MB. 1989 JD 590, 30’ PT swather, autofold, batt reels, good cond., $2250 OBO. Call 306-745-8880, Langenburg, SK. 200 MASSEY SP 26’, diesel, UII PU reel, MacDon gauge wheels, double swath. Call 306-762-2125, Vibank, SK. www.fuchs.ca 3’x4’x8’ BIG SQUARE baler clearance: 2012 NH BB9080, hyd roller chute, tandem auto steer, color monitor, camera, auto-lube and more, now only $89,900 OBO. 2013 NH 340’s, hyd. baler chute, tandem auto steer, auto lube and more, now only $ 1 2 9 , 9 0 0 O B O. ( l ow r at e fi n a n c i n g available OAC) Markusson New Holland of Regina Ltd., Regina, SK. 1-800-819-2583 or 306-781-2828, www.markusson.com
2001 NH TR99, new tires front and rear, Rake-Up PU, sacrifice price, negotiable. Retired from farming. Bob 306-883-7817, Spiritwood, SK. 2008 CAT LEXION 580R w/ SP 36' Honey- 1992 NH TR96, 2240 hrs., Ford motor, all Bee draper, (w/transport), 1000 sep hrs., new tires, field ready, $16,000 or trade for bred cows. 306-863-4177, Star City, SK. Y&M, duals 204-851-1267, Virden, MB.
BALE KING 3100 VORTEX bale process o r, R H S d i s c h a r g e , $ 9 8 7 5 . C a l l : 306-424-7511, Montmartre, SK. ROTARY MOWERS: JD 15’, $6000; 20’, $11,000; Woods 15’, $6000; JD 7’, $3000; Woods 10’, $3500; Brower 5 gang reel, $1500; NH 9’, $2200. 1-866-938-8537, Portage la Prairie, MB.
2000 CASE/IH 2388, SP 2650 rotor, 3750 engine, AFS Y&M/Map, AFX specialty rotor, field tracker, 2015 pickup, shedded, good condition, $55,000. 403-901-7273, Gleichen, AB. p-hoff@hotmail.com
1998 NH TX66, low hrs, mint cond., Strawmaster PU, 24’ NH straight cut header, $25,000 OBO. 306-277-4503, Gronlid, SK.
2006 NH CR970, #HN3133A, $139,000. cash price. 306-922-2525, Prince Albert, 1996 2188, c/w PU and 30’ auger header, SK. or www.farmworld.ca 2800 sep. hrs, 3287 eng. hrs, excellent 2001 NH TX66, #PN2892B, 3194 hrs., cond., always shedded, $65,000 OBO. $40,600. cash price. Call 306-922-2525, 780-888-2245, 780-888-1217, Hardisty AB Prince Albert, SK. or www.farmworld.ca NOW IS THE TIME to check the hydro 2005 NH CR970, #PN21798B, 1647 hrs. pump drive hub and spline input shaft. We Was $132,500. Now $119,000. cash. Call have lubricated splined drive hubs for all 3 0 6 - 8 6 4 - 3 6 6 7 , K i n i s t i n o , S K . o r models 1440 through 2388. Exchange, re- www.farmworld.ca man and tested hydro’s in stock. Hydrotec Hydraulics, 1-800-667-7712, Regina, SK. 1990 TR86 NH, 2150 hrs, shedded, new concaves last year, 13’ 971 PU. Also 20’ www.hydratec.ca 9 7 3 f l e x h e a d e r. 3 0 6 - 7 6 4 - 8 1 4 5 , 1680 CASE/IH 1987, rebuilt engine, hy- 306-961-1444, Prince Albert, SK. dro, swash pump, reverser, big top, chopp e r, a i r f o i l , l o n g a u g e r, $ 1 2 , 5 0 0 . 2011 NH CR9080, #PN3014B, 566 hrs., 4 4 0 s e p . h r s . Wa s $ 4 6 3 , 0 0 0 . N o w 306-744-7930, Saltcoats, SK. $299,000. cash. 306-682-9920, Humboldt, SK. or www.farmworld.ca 2010 NH CR9080, #PN3112, 848 hrs., 540/65R30 rear duals. Was $291,500. Now $219,000. cash price. 306-922-2525, Prince Albert, SK. or www.farmworld.ca 2005 NH CR970, #HN2643C, 1805 hrs., $139,000. 306-682-9920, Humboldt, SK. or www.farmworld.ca
1998 JD 9610, very nice, JD 914 PU, long auger, chopper, chaff spreader, twin cyl., field ready. 306-654-7772, Saskatoon, SK.
USED NEW HOLLAND CX Super Conventionals; 2011 CX8080, 900’s, cast cyl, leather, fridge, HID’s, 14’ Swathmaster, 631 SH, $249,900; Two 2012 CX 8080’s, 900’s, cast cyl., leather, fridge, HID’s, 15’ 790 CP, 454/479 SH, $279,900; 2005 CX840, 900’s, chopper and chaff blowers, 14’ Swathmaster, 1220 sep hrs., $109,000. 30 months interest free OAC or additional discounts available. All combines have been reconditioned, c/w powertrain warranty. Markusson New Holland of Regina Ltd., Regina, SK. 1-800-819-2583 or 306-781-2828, www.markusson.com
GLEANER R7, 1986, 270 HP Allis engine, duals, Rake-Up pickup, 30’ 330 straight cut header, in good condition, $18,000. Call 306-278-3152, Porcupine Plain, SK. 1995 R62, approx 3000 eng hrs, Deutz eng Edco PU and 30’ HoneyBee headers, field ready, $55,000. 306-724-4461, Debden SK 1992 GLEANER R62, 2131 hrs., great condition, field ready, new PU belts, $34,000. Call 306-441-7453, Mayfair, SK.
www.haukaas.com
1997 JD 9600, 2606 sep., 3454 eng. hrs., new rub-bars/feeder chain, hopper topper, chaff spreader, exc. cond. 306-283-4747, 306-291-9395, Langham, SK. 2010 JD 9770 STS, w/1615 PU header, 20.8x42 duals, large rear tires, $260,000. Call A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment Ltd., 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. 2007 JD 9760, 1000 sep. hrs., 615 PU, hopper topper, singles, Y&M, Greenlight each year, shedded, first $185,000. 780-208-4808, Two Hills, AB. 2001 JD 9650 Walker, 2225 sep. hrs., 914 header, Stock #55091, $101,000. Call Foam Lake, SK. at 306-272-3345, or www.maplefarm.com 1981 JD 7720, hydro SP, chopper, PU header, chaff spreader, 30.5x32 tires (used one year). Shedded, asking $12,000. 306-748-2847, 306-748-2849, Neudorf, SK THEY DON’T WANT US to get our hands on cores to remanufacture for 9500, 9600 and CTS hydro drives, but we’ve got them! We offer for John Deere from 6600 through current CTS combines, all remanufactured hydro’s. All in stock. All parts. Hydratec Hydraulics, Regina, SK. 1-800-667-7712, www.hydratec.ca
1991 JD 9500, 4146 sep. hrs., JD 224 20’ header, Stock #55100, $35,300. Call Preeceville, SK. at 306-547-2007, or www.maplefarm.com 2012 JD S680, 4WD, 450 hrs., 615 PU, duals, Contour-Master, $329,000; 2005 JD 9660 WTS, 627 hrs., 914 PU, JD chaff spreader, $129,000; 1996 JD 9600, 914 PU, factory chaff spreader, original owner, $48,000. All stored inside. 204-851-0745, Elkhorn, MB. 2002 JD 9650, 2253 threshing hrs, good 1991 9600, 5600 eng., 4100 sep., 914 PU, condition, always shedded, field ready, fine cut chopper, new tires, 3 major re$76,900. Les 306-946-7045, Young, SK. builds, $34,500. 306-549-2408 Hafford SK 2- 2009 JD 9870 STS, fully loaded, low 1998 JD 9610 w/914 header, Stock # hours, $240,000 each; 2- JD 936 draper 54564, $67,106. Call Russell, MB. at headers, $25,000 each. 204-461-0328, 204-773-2149 or www.maplefarm.com 204-461-0344, Warren, MB. TWO 2011 JD 9870’s, fully loaded, 650 2007 JD 9860STS PREMIUM, 615 PU, straddle duals, 450 sep. hrs, 550 engine, 1450 threshing hrs, 520/85R42 duals, Au- combines are like new cond. One owner toSteer, fine cut chopper, 3’ unload auger machines, bought new, only used in Canaext., Michel’s hopper cover, HID lights, da. Located in Southern MB; 1 set of API large wire concave, filler plates, annual high idler combine tracks, only used G r e e n l i g h t , $ 1 8 3 , 0 0 0 . Te r r y G at e s , one season, exc. cond; 2013 JD 640FD 306-862-7929, Nipawin, SK. flex draper, less than 2000 acres, exc. cond; JD 2009 635D, exc. cond; 2005 JD 936D, w/PU reel, exc. cond; JD 9650 STS, loaded, 2000 sep. hrs., 2600 engine, just through shop, field ready, straddle duals, exc. cond. 218-779-1710. JD 8820, 5735 eng hrs., rebuilt motor, 214 PU, hopper topper, chaff spreader, excellent condition. Call 306-283-4747 or 306-291-9395, Langham, SK. 1997 JD CTS, 2308 separator hours, good condition, 914 pickup included, ready to go! $34,800. www.combineworld.com 1-800-667-4515. WANTED: GLEANER R72. Must have low hours and prefer to come with straight cut header. Okay if repairs are needed. 306-493-7717, 306-493-7727, Perdue, SK. LONGER LASTING GLEANER accelerator rollers, 3 to 5 times longer than OEM. Phone 306-759-2572, Eyebrow, SK.
Available at:
Emerge Ag Solutions Inc. Eston, SK
2007 NH CR9070, #HN2912B, 1404 hrs, $178,500. cash price. Call 306-682-9920, 2009 CASE/IH 8120, two combines to Humboldt, SK. or www.farmworld.ca choose from, auto-guidance ready, front 1995 NH TR97, Genesis eng, Mav straw tires, 1041 sep. hours. Both c/w 2016 and chopper, c/w 30’ 1999 Honeybee header, Swathmaster PU, field ready, major oil $42,000. 306-535-7292, Cupar, SK. changes and all filters changed, $164,000. Deliver within 800 miles. 204-743-2324, 2008 NH CR9070, #HN3179B, 1368 hrs., 2004 JD 9860, 1763 sep. hrs., big duals, Cypress River, MB. $175,000. 306-922-2525, Prince Albert, totally rebuilt 200 sep. hrs. ago. Reason SK. or www.farmworld.ca for selling: rented land out. 306-493-8101, 2 0 1 3 NH CR9090, 60 month lease, 306-493-7605, Delisle, SK. $150,000. Buy-out. OAC MSRP $550,000. 2004 JD 9660 STS, guidance ready, ser1997 CASE/IH 2188, c/w PU header, 30’ S/A Pmt $27,950. Contact 306-864-3667, vice lights, 914 hdr., 1872 sep. hrs., Stk # straight cut header w/PU reel and trans- Kinistino, SK. or www.farmworld.ca 46255, $140,500. Call Moosomin, SK. at port, major workorder just completed, 306-435-3301 or www.maplefarm.com field ready. 306-236-7491 Meadow Lake 2008 JOHN DEERE 9870, 1150 threshing CASE/IH 2188, Super 8 Victory pickup, hrs, duals, long auger, AutoSteer ready, PU, AFX rotor, heavy duty rotor cone, hopper powercast tailboard, Greenlighted w/new topper, Redekop chopper, extensive work feeder chain and elevators in last 100 hrs, done 4 yrs. ago, well maintained, always shedded, 40' FD70 also available, exc cond, shedded; Case/IH 1010 rigid header, 20’, $227,000. 306-843-8160, Wilkie, SK. PU reel, new knife drive installed last year. Kenneth Appleby, 780-914-0783, Tofield. 2000 JD 9650, 914 PU, duals, $65,000; 2004 JD 635F, 35’, fore/aft, PU reel, 3- 2006 CASE/IH 8010’s, Swathmaster $12,000. 306-524-4960, Semans, SK. PU’s, long augers, 900 tires, rock trap, choppers, 1500 hrs, completely recondi1998 JD 9610 combine, 2360 engine tioned, $100,000 each. 403-647-7391, hours, $80,000 OBO. 204-764-2544 days, Foremost, AB. 1989 NH TA 78 PT, (same as Versatile 2000) 204-764-2035 eves/wkends, Hamiota, MB. w/header reverser; Also Claas Dominator 2000 CASE/IH 2388, 280 HP, 3500 hrs, 2010 9770, 1300/980 hrs., all options, ASX rotor, AHH, chopper, rock trap, long 112 w/rice tires, good condition. Each exc. cond., 615 PU, w/wo headers, GPS, auger, grain loss monitor, 1015 PU, $3900 OBO. 204-371-7839, Niverville, MB. $175,000. 403-934-4880, Strathmore, AB. $39,500. Call 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. 2 0 1 0 N H C R 9 0 7 0 , # N 2 2 0 5 8 A . Wa s 2004 JD 9760, 1200 sep. hrs., Precision 1998 CASE/IH 2388, Rake-Up PU, AHH $239,000. Now $209,000. 306-864-3667, PU, hopper topper, singles, Y&M, Greenlighted each year, shedded, first $140,000. control, fore/aft, Kirby straw/chaff Kinistino, SK. or www.farmworld.ca 780-208-4808, Two Hills, AB. spreader, custom cutter pkg., shedded, good condition, Redlighted yearly, 3328 1996 JD 9600, 2060/2540 hrs., Sunnyeng. hrs., 2366 rotor hrs., $60,000 OBO. brook concaves/ cylinder, Contour-Master, 306-228-3532, 306-228-7664, Unity, SK. 2008 NH CR9070, 790 CP, 15’ PU, MAV chopper, Greenlighted 2012, not used this 2002 CASE/IH 2388, c/w 2015 PU header, chopper, 1184 sep. hrs., HHC, long auger, year, shedded, $54,000. Ph 306-372-4778 2614 eng., 1882 rotor, 9/10, field ready, deluxe cab, lateral tilt, GPS, hopper ext., or 306-430-1475, Major, SK. Michelin 900 singles, compressor, Intelli$80,000. 403-823-9976, Drumheller, AB. view II monitor, shedded, new feeder 1996 JD CTS, 3146 sep. hrs., shedded, 1993 CASE 1666, 2738 hours, all new chain/concaves, $160,000. 306-647-2344, 914 header, duals, 4WD, Big Top, excellent bushings on cleaning shoe, good cond., 306-621-2437, Theodore, SK. cond., fresh Greenlight, $55,000. Call $25,000. 306-463-7412, Brock, SK. 306-542-7674, Kamsack, SK. 2004 NH CR960, #PN2493B, 330 hrs., 2000 CIH 2388, 2459 rotor hrs., Y&M, 9 5 0 s e p . h r s . Wa s $ 1 3 7 , 0 0 0 . N o w 1983 JOHN DEERE 8820, with pickup rake-up PU, 25’ straight cut w/PU reels, $109,000. cash. 306-682-9920, Humboldt, h e a d e r a n d c h o p p e r, $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 . C a l l 306-960-3000, St. Louis, SK. $65,000 OBO. 204-638-9286, Dauphin, MB SK. or www.farmworld.ca
(306) 962-4132
BALESMART SYSTEMS
2008 JD 9770, 916 threshing hours, SwathMaster PU, Greenlighted, hopper cover, big singles, $197,000. Foxwarren, MB., call 204-773-6145, 204-532-2349. 2000 JD 9750 STS 3872/2660 hours, Redekop chopper, 914 pickup included, field r e a d y, $ 7 9 , 8 0 0 . 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 6 7 - 4 5 1 5 , www.combineworld.com
1982 JD 8820 turbo combine, 4114 hrs, chopper/chaff spreader, c/w JD 212 PU header, 14’ unload auger, excellent shape! $19,900 OBO. Call Jordan anytime at 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 2001 JD 9750, one owner, 3500/4500 hrs., Greenlight, new fine cut chopper in 2012, HHC, 914 PU w/newer belts, small wire and round bar concaves, shedded, reduced $67,500; HoneyBee 30’ draper available. 306-540-9339, Raymore, SK.
www.dseriescanola.ca
There LV a better way...
Superior Bale Management
THE GRAPPLES
BALE RACKS
BALE CART
• 90 degree bale rotation • Mushroom stack 3 high • No net wrap damage
• Safe secure bale transport • Easy to install and remove • Available in kit form
• Fast and easy gathering • Virtually no maintenance • Built to pick, 200,000+ bales
~ Phone: 306-355-2718 ~ www.haukaas.com
1989 JOHN DEERE 9600, 3200 sep. hrs., 4200 eng. hrs, JD model 230 windrow header with 10' Victory PU, exc. cond., $27,000. 306-631-1374, Moose Jaw, SK. 2000 JD 9650 STS, 1800 thresh., 914 PU, Precision update kit, always shedded, mint condition; Also available 25’ JD 925 rigid header c/w transport, shedded. Grandview MB. Call 204-638-1893 or 204-572-4692 2- 1987 JD 7721 Titan II combines, plus 1 parts combine, less feeder housing and PU. Dave 306-638-4550, 403-887-2441, 928-503-5344, Findlater, SK. 1997 JD 9600, 2950 threshing hrs, 914 PU, fine cut chopper, chaff spreaders, shedded, good condition, $42,500 OBO. Can be seen in operation. 30’ MacDon straight cut header available if combine sells. Fisher Farms 204-622-8800 or email Rod at rod@fisherseeds.com Dauphin, MB. 2003 JD 9650 STS, w/914 header, Stock #54674, $97,127. Call Moosomin, SK. at 306-435-3301 or www.maplefarm.com 1997 JD CTS, 3050 sep. hrs., good cond., $21,000 OBO, c/w 914 PU header and hopper topper. Also 1995 JD 930 flex head, good cond., $7500 OBO. Landis, SK. 306-658-4307, cell 306-951-7077. TWO 1987 JD 8820’s, Titan II, w/PU headers, choppers and in excellent running cond. Call 306-937-2857, Battleford, SK.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
2013 JOHN DEERE S690, SP, 198 thresher hrs., 270 eng. hrs., fully equipped. GPS included. Balance of extended warranty. exc. cond., $435,000 OBO. 306-536-5475, Regina, SK. dstrauch@accesscomm.ca
2013 JD 690S, loaded, ATI tracks, 250 sep. hrs. also, 2007 JD 9860 STS Special, one owner, 1600 sep. hrs, large dual fronts and large rear tires, 615 PU head, ext. auger, 2007 model has most 70 series extras. 204-673-2382, Melita, MB. 1993 9600, w/914, good tires and well equipp e d, 4200 sep. hr s., $20,000. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK.
2012 LEXION 670, 542 eng. hrs., 362 sep hrs. and 2008 Lexion 590R, 1384 eng. hrs., 1015 sep. hrs. Foster’s Agri-World, Beaverlodge, AB. Call Jason at 780-518-8876. 2012 LEXION 670, 660 eng. hrs., 525 sep. hrs. and 2008 Lexion 590R, 1037 sep. hrs. Foster’s Agri-World, Beaverlodge, AB. Call Clint at 780-380-6089. REDUCED TO CLEAR!! 2006 NH CR970, $114,900; 2009 CIH 8120, $205,000; (2) 2012 CIH 9230 from $299,000; 1998 CIH 2388, $49,900; 2007 NH CR9070, $134,000; 2007 CIH 7010, $169,000; 2003 CIH 2388, $79,900; 2008 CIH 8010, $179,000; 2011 CIH 9120, $275,000; 2012 CIH 9120, $285,000; 2009 CIH 9120, $232,000. Call Hergott Farm Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK.
CLASSIFIED ADS 57
2009 HONEYBEE SP36 header, pea auger, single knife drive, UII reel, JD STS adapter, storage transport, fore/aft, $48,000. Call Terry Gates, 306-862-7929, Nipawin, SK. JD 914, choice of 2, 2001 or 2003, $12,900. Also like new Westward 9600, 9610 or 50 series, $7500. 1993 JD 30’ 930R w/batt reel, $2900. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK.
M e d icine Ha t Tra ctor Sa lva ge Inc. Specia lizing In N ew, Used & Reb uiltAgricultura l And C onstruction Pa rts Call Today
2011 MACDON FD70, 35’, slow speed transport, spare knife, JD 60, 70, S series adaptor, $60,000. 780-603-7640 Bruce, AB
1-877-527-7278
2012 JOHN DEERE 635D header with pea auger, low acres, $52,500. 306-695-7180, COMBINE TRACK KIT, Tidue Camoplast, Indian Head, SK. fits all combines, arm mount kit stabilizer 1998 NEW HOLLAND 994 30’ draper head- for JD, 36” wide, 105” long, 1.72 meter er, $15,000 OBO; 2005 94C NH 30’ draper, footprint. 204-745-8484, Roland, MB. $27,000 OBO. Both have UII PU reels, fore/aft, TR, TX adapters. 204-632-4390, USED KIRBY CHAFF SPREADER, right hand drive, $650. Phil Sanden, 306-734-2879, 204-797-4821, Winnipeg, MB. 306-734-7768, Craik, SK. HEADER TRANSPORTS: BERGEN 3600 HT, $ 3 9 5 0 ; E l m e r s H T $ 1 9 5 0 . C a l l STUB AXLE AND dual kits available for JD 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com MF and CIH combines; 10 hole, 13” bolt JD 930 HEADER, batt reel and transport, circle. Call 306-697-2856, Grenfell, SK. n ew g e a r b o x a n d k n i fe , e x c . c o n d . HEADSIGHT HEADER HEIGHT control 306-645-4223, Rocanville, SK. system, like new, fits NH CR combine, JD 925 FLEX HEADER with PU reel. Also $1500 OBO. 306-648-7766 Gravelbourg SK new 30’ header transport for above. Call 306-937-2857, Battleford, SK.
HONEYBEE/NH 94C 40’ header, Case/NH adapter, dual PU reel, dual drive, very little use, shedded, transport pkg., $39,900 OBO. Call 780-385-6449, Lougheed, AB. ADAPTER FOR SHELBOURNE stripper for Caes/IH 2388 combine. Call 403-308-2297, Lethbridge, AB. CASE/IH MACDON 6220 30’ flex draper header, $48,000. Phone 204-871-0925, 2004 NEW HOLLAND 94C, #HW3359A, MacGregor, MB. $29,900. cash price. Call 306-682-9920, 2009 CLAAS/LEXION F540 flex header, Humboldt, SK. or www.farmworld.ca like new condition. Call: 218-779-1710, 1993 JD 930R auger header w/transport Minnesota. trailer, 30’, batt reels, new wobble box, $8000 OBO. 306-745-8880, Langenburg SK
S EXS M ITH US ED FARM P ARTS LTD .
(306) 547- 2 12 5 PR EECEV ILLE S ALV AG E
Em ail: fa rm pa rt@ telu spla n et.n et
PR EECEV ILLE, S AS KATCHEW AN
S EX S M ITH , ALTA. w w w .u sed fa rm pa rts.co m
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 .
1-8 00-340-119 2 Bu yin g Fa rm Equ ipm en t Fo rD ism a n tlin g
Eg. DEG EL M AN MacDon CA20 Adapters & Kits Fits D50, D60, FD70 & 2142, 2152, 2162 headers -Trades Wanted! -Complete Adapter $14,800-16,800 -Conversion Kits: -JD/CNH $2,650 -Cat $3,980 1-800-667-4515 www.combineworld.com
1983 MASSEY FERGUSON 850, SP 3053 eng. hrs., grey cab, std. trans., 388 Melroe, 354 turbo, chopper, always shedded, good parts unit, $2800 OBO. 204-242-4411, 204-242-2038, Manitou, MB.
2009 MACDON 2162 40’ flex header, Case/NH adapter with pea auger, dual sickle drive, all options, fore and aft, tilt, $59,900. Call 306-596-6701, Regina, SK. FLEX HEADS: JD 924, $6000; JD 925, 2005 MF 9790, 975 hrs., just out of shop, $6500; Case/IH #1020, 25’ $6000, 30’ new concaves, rub bars etc., 0% OAC, $8000; #1015 PU, $3500; #1010, 25’ Cam-Don Motors 306-237-4212 Perdue SK $4000, 30’ $4500; Weigh wagons, $2500 up. 1-866-938-8537, Portage la Prairie, MB 1996 NEW HOLLAND 971, #N21873G, $4500 cash price. Call 306-682-9920, Humboldt, SK. or www.farmworld.ca AGCO 25’ DRAPER, PU reel with Gleaner adapter, recently rebuilt, $12,800; 2000 AgCo 30’ draper, PU reel, new knife motor and gearbox, Gleaner adapter, transport, $18,000. 780-498-1950, Morinville, AB.
2010 LEXION 590R, 1092 eng. hrs., 741 sep hrs. and 2012 Lexion 670, 750 eng. hrs., 550 sep. hrs. Foster’s Agri-World, Beaverlodge, AB. Call Clint 780-380-6089.
W a trou s , S a s k . Ca llJo e, Len o rDa rw in 306- 946- 2 2 2 2 Fa x 306- 946- 2 444
W RECKIN G TRACTO RS , S W ATHERS , BALERS , CO M BIN ES
H a rrow Tines
2011 MACDON D60 #PW3259A, $68,000. Only 2 in stock! Call 306-922-2525, Prince Albert, SK. or www.farmworld.ca RECONDITIONED rigid and flex, most makes and sizes; also header transports. MF 550, Perkins diesel hydro. w/MF PU Ed Lorenz, 306-344-4811, Paradise Hill, SK. www.straightcutheaders.com header, Melroe 378 PU, 9120 straight cut flex header w/PU reel, $6,000 OBO. Lucky Lake, SK., 306-858-7345, 306-867-9899.
2007 LEXION 575R, and 2009 Lexion 580R, 1100 eng. hrs., 880 sep. hrs. Foster’s Agri-World, Beaverlodge, AB. Call Sean today at 780-518-3829.
WATROUS SALVAGE Ope n M o n .thru Fri., 8 a .m .-5 p.m . w w w .w a tro u s s a lva ge.co m Em a il: s a lv@ s a s kte l.n e t
Cul tiva tor Shovel s
9/16 x 26”
42’ FLEX DRAPERS, fits NH CR/CX and CIH AFX 2- 2010’s and 2- 2011’s, 42’, DK, UII PU reel, pea auger, hyd tilt and fore/aft, poly, gauge wheels, transport, auto-header height and more, just reduced! Starting at only $45,900/ea. All headers are one owner from stone free land, well maintained and shedded. Financing available OAC. Markusson New Holland of Regina Ltd., Regina, SK. 1-800-819-2583 or 306-781-2828, www.markusson.com MF STRAIGHT HEADER 20' with batt reel, $600 OBO. 204-242-4411, 204-242-2038, Manitou, MB.
20.49
$
1- 800- 667- 9871 R egin a 1- 800- 667- 3095 S a ska to o n 1- 800- 387- 2 768 M a n ito b a 1- 800- 2 2 2 - 6594 Ed m o n to n
w w w.fyfep a rts .com
FYFE P ARTS “ Fo r AllY o u r Fa rm Pa rts”
2000 36’ 1042 CASE/IH draper header, PU reel, transport, Case adapter, $28,000; 2002 36’ 972 MacDon draper header, PU reel, transport, Case adapter, $28,000; 1999 36’ 962 MacDon draper header, PU reel, transport, Case adapter, $25,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equip. Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK.
AGRI PARTS LTD. IRMA, AB.
JD 444 CORN HEADER, 1990, 12 row, 20” row spacing, poly dividers, exc. cond., will fit on NH combine, $15,500. Ph or text 204-378-0020, 204-378-0030, Arborg, MB. 30’ AND 25’ HoneyBee headers, with PU reel, Pea auger, lifters, w/JD adapters. Call 306-937-2857, Battleford, SK. 2- 2008 CASE/IH 2020 35’ flex headers, new knives, excellent condition, your choice, $19,000; Header carrier also available. Can deliver. Ken 204-857-2585, Portage LaPrairie, MB. 2006 C ASE/IH 2015, 14’ PU header w/Swathmaster PU, good condition, $10,000. Call 306-293-2192, Climax, SK.
1-888-327-6767 www.gcparts.com
Call 1-888-920-1507
1993 IH 1010 25’ w/good auger, floor a n d k n i fe , b a t t r e e l p o o r, $ 4 9 5 0 . www.combineworld.com 1-800-667-4515. 2008 MD FD70/IH 2162 40’ flex draper w/CNH adapter, pea auger, $49,800. Tr a d e s w e l c o m e . 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 6 7 - 4 5 1 5 . www.combineworld.com NEW 2013 HONEYBEE SP36, $71,900. Only 3 in stock! 306-864-3667, Kinistino, SK. or www.farmworld.ca 1987 IH 1010 30’, batt reel, good augers, f l o o r g o o d , b a t t s p o o r, $ 2 9 8 0 . 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com MACDON CA20 adapters D50, D60, FD70, 2142, 2152, 2162 headers. $14,800$16,800, kits avail. $900-$3,000 exchange. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com CASE 1010 30’ header with trailer, $5000. 306-463-7412, Brock, SK. 2008 JOHN DEERE 630F, 70 series hookups, all options, field ready, $18,000. Call 403-934-4880, Strathmore, AB.
STEIGER TRACTOR PARTS for sale. Very affordable new and used parts available, made in Canada and USA. 1-800-982-1769 2009 MACDON/CASE 2152 header, 40’ wide, low speed transport, vg working cond., $49,000. Can deliver. Contact 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.
AGRICULTURAL PARTS STO RE
NOW SELLING
H ydra ulic Pa rts & D oin g H ydra ulic R e p a ir
Ca ll NODGE Firs t
SWATHMASTER PICKUPS: 2005 14’ $6500; 1999 14’ $7980; 1995 14’ $1950. www.combineworld.com 1-800-667-4515. IH PICKUP HEADS: 2001-2015 w/good auger and floor, $ 695 0; 1997 1015 w / g o o d f l o o r a n d a u g e r, $ 3 9 5 0 . 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com RAKE-UP PICKUPS: 2008 16’ overall 8.5/10, $6950; 2007 14’, in excellent condition, $7980. www.combineworld.com 1-800-667-4515.
gallantsales.com Large inventory of new and used potato equip. Dealer for Tristeel Mfg. wash line equip. Dealer for Logan Combine World 1-800-667-4515, www. Equipment. Call Dave 204-254-8126, MB. combineworld.com; 20 minutes east of Saskatoon, SK on Highway #16. Used Ag & LOCKWOOD 4500 POTATO harvester, like Industrial equipment, new, used & rebuilt new, just like out of the box, shedded. parts, & premium quality tires at unbeatable Done only 600 acres. Fully belted feather prices! 1 yr. warranty on all parts. Canada’s edge chain, hyd. primary bed shaker, elec. largest inventory of late model combines & hyd. controls, side elevator hold-down swathers. Exceptional service. conveyor, 3 spd. trans, star table plus easy DEUTZ TRACTOR SALVAGE: Used parts roll table, vine chopper, trash conveyor, for Deutz and Agco. Uncle Abe’s Tractor, 11.25x24 12-ply tires. Fully retractable boom for transport, exc. visibility from 519-338-5769, fax 338-3963, Harriston ON tractor cab, depth indicator, double disc coulters, free rolling PVC shield, built-in main drive lines, full width secondary, vine override. 204-482-5177, Selkirk, MB.
GRATTON COULEE
MF 8680 CONVENTIONAL combine, new Sunnybrook cyl., new concave, Redekop chopper, chaff spreader, stored inside. Call Mike 403-380-9746, Lethbridge, AB. Email: jarokosky@hotmail.com
1987 MASSEY 850, 1150 hrs., 9001 Melroe PU header, $8000; 1985 MF 850, Victory PU, $7000; Also many new parts avail; 9024 and 2381 (22’) headers avail. Harlalie Seed Farm, 780-662-2617, Tofield, AB.
Tra ctors Com b in e s Sw a th e rs Dis ce rs Ba le rs
Plu s M u ch M o re!
1986 MASSDEY FERGUSON 860, 2500 hrs., 6 cyl., innercooled std. trans., shedded, c/w 9030 header w/carrier, Victory PU, auger ext., recent bars and concaves. CAT LEXION HEADERS: 2002 42’ SP42 306-463-7020, Flaxcombe, SK. Honeybee draper header, Cat adapter, pea PU reel, transport, $32,000; 2002 2009 MF 9790, duals, chopper, 1690 auger, F30 Cat flex header, Cat adapter, PU thresh hrs, just out of shop, 0% OAC. Cam- 30’ reel, 4 wheel transport trailer, $20,000; 30’ Don Motors, 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. Cat G30 with Sunflower pans and drum, 1987 MASSEY FERGUSON 8590, SP 3700 $5000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equip. Ltd. eng. hrs, field ready, Victory Super 8, 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. numerous recent repairs and upkeep, 2009 MD D60 45’, JD STS hook-up, DKD, threshing elements all good, concaves knife 9/10, guards 6/10, no skids, auger good, chopper, header reverser, tires all like l o o k s g o o d , t r a n s p o r t , $ 2 9 , 8 0 0 . new. Really nice older combine in great 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com overall shape, $22,000 OBO. 306-641-2526 MF 9024 c/w UII PU reel; MF 2381 (22’). Calder, SK. sobkow18@hotmail.com Call Harlalie Seed Farm, 780-662-2617, MF 9790 2008, 670 hrs. Phone for special Tofield, AB. pricing and financing. 780-853-4013, VerMACDON 960, 36’ straight cut header, milion, AB. PU reel, New Holland adapter, $8500. Call MF 9795 2009, 911 hrs., duals, Mav chop- 306-563-6651, Canora, SK. per. Phone for special pricing and financ1997 MACDON 960, #PW2723D, $19,000. ing. 780-853-4013, Vermilion, AB. cash price. 306-922-2525, Prince Albert, MF 9895 2010, 565 hrs., Mav chopper, SK. or www.farmworld.ca Phone for special pricing and financing. 2006 630R, SINGLE, PT, HHS, shedded, vg 780-853-4013, Vermilion, AB. cond., $20,000 with trailer. Warren, MB. 1980 MASSEY FERGUSON 760 w/chopper, Grant 204-771-9267 or Paul 204-461-0337 9024 header w/new UII PU reels, offers. 2010 HONEYBEE 36’ header, pea auger, Call 306-937-2857, Battleford, SK. single knife, CR adapter, shedded, very TWO 2013 CHALLENGER 560C combines, good cond., $45,000. Call 306-658-4579, 306-843-7046, Wilkie, SK. same as MF 9560. Call 306-231-3993, Humboldt, SK. www.versluistrading.com 3- 2015 CIH PU head Swathmaster PU, 1997 MF 8680, 2140 sep. hrs., many new shedded, field ready, $19,000 ea; 6 Rigid parts, $45,000; Agco draper header, 30’, 1010 heads, PU reels, fore/aft, header exc. cond., $12,500. Call 306-463-3132, transports, shedded, 9/10, $15,000 to $21,500. 403-823-9976, Drumheller, AB. 306-460-7837, Kindersley, SK.
2002 MF 8780 XP combine w/15’ Precision PU header and 1996 30’ HoneyBee straight cut header w/new knife, 2400 sep. hrs., 3300 eng. hrs., extra lights, Redekop straw and chaff choppers, $75,000. Have list of r e p a i r s a n d w o r ko r d e r s . C a l l P h i l 306-734-2879, 306-734-7768, Craik, SK.
M edicine Ha t, AB .
O ver2700 Un its forS a lva g e
B uying Ag & Construction Equipm ent For D ism antling
Disc Bl a des
1981 7720, 2800 hrs., reverser, Redekop chopper, 212 PU and 230 straight cut headers, $10,900; 1979 8820, 5000 hrs., $8500; Strawstorm for JD 8820 for parts. Will take grain on trade. 306-693-9847, Moose Jaw, SK. 2004 JD 9660 Walker, 1500 threshing hrs, 914 header, GreenStar Y&M, shedded, $118,000. 306-463-9744, Dodsland, SK.
www.mhtractor.ca
THE REAL USED FARM PARTS SUPERSTORE
Swift Current, SK
• Pic ku p Be lts & Te e th • Ele va to r C ha in s & S pro c ke ts • Fe e d e r C ha in s & S pro c ke ts • C o m b in e pa rts • C a n va s • Tra c to r Pa rts w w w .n od gem fg.c om
• S e e d Bo o ts & Tips • Air S e e d e r Ho s e • Pa c ke rW he e l C a ps • Nic ho ls S ho ve ls • Ha rro w Tin e s • Ba le r Be lts • Ha yin g & Ha rve s t Pa rts & S u pplie s
1-800-667-7421 1999 SWATHMASTER 14’ pickup only, 8 belt, very good condition, $8950. Call ALLISON TRANSMISSIONS Service, 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com Sales and Parts. Exchange or custom rebuilds available. Competitive warranty. NEW SWATHMASTER 14’ pickups, 8 belt, Spectrum Industrial Automatics Ltd., hyd. windguard, ultra float suspension, Blackfalds, AB. 1-877-321-7732. plastic fingers, $13,838. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 1994 JOHN DEERE 914 PU header, c/w 6 belt John Deere PU, good condition, SMITH’S TRACTOR WRECKING. Huge $3900 OBO. Call 306-629-3701, Morse, SK. inventory new and used tractor parts. 2001 SWATHMASTER 14’ pickup only 1-888-676-4847. w/new front belts and hydraulic wind WRECKING COMBINES: IHC 1482, 1460, guard, $9950. www.combineworld.com 915, 914, 715, 503, 403; JD 7721 7701, 1-800-667-4515. 7700, 6601, 6600, 106, 105, 95, 630; MF 860, 850, 851, 760, 751, 750, 510, S92; NH TR70, 95, 1400, 995; White 8900, 8800, 8700, 8650, 8600, 7800, 7600; CFE COMBINE HOPPERCOVERS: all extensions. 5542; Gleaner C, F, L, M; CCIL 9600, 960, 204-436-2335, www.hoppercovers.com 951;Vers 2000. 306-876-4607 Goodeve SK Elm Creek, MB. SELLING USED COMBINE parts off MF JD 630F SINGLE point hook up, full finger 860’s and older; JD 7720’s and older; IHC auger, pickup reel, fore/aft, $13,900. Call 1480; L2 Gleaner; etc. J M Salvage, 204-526-7374, Holland, MB. 204-773-2536, Russell, MB.
Huge Inventory Of Used, New & Rebuilt Combine & Tractor Parts. Tested And Ready To Ship. We Purchase Late Model Equipment For Parts.
Call 1-888-920-1507
TRIPLE B WRECKING, wrecking tractors, combines, cults., drills, swathers, mixmills. etc. We buy equipment. 306-246-4260, 306-441-0655, Richard, SK. GOODS USED TRACTOR parts (always buying tractors). David or Curtis, Roblin, 1995 SCHULTE 9600 8’ snowblower, 540 MB., 204-564-2528, 1-877-564-8734. P TO, $ 5 9 5 0 . C a l l 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 6 7 - 4 5 1 5 , CAT LEXION SALVAGE parts only, off www.combineworld.com 480/485R combines. Call for availability 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 8-BELT RAKE-UP PU, Kirby chaff spreader. For parts: IH 1480, 3- 1482’s and 21’ CCIL 550 swather. 306-747-3517, Parkside, SK. LOEFFELHOLZ TRACTOR AND COMBINE Salvage, Cudworth, SK., 306-256-7107. We sell new, used and remanufactured parts for most farm tractors and combines.
Harvest Salvage Co. Ltd. 1-866-729-9876 5150 Richmond Ave. East Brandon, MB
www.harvestsalvage.ca New Used & Re-man parts
2009 SCHULTE SDX110 snowblower, TV 145 Tractor SOLD. Still for sale 2009 Schulte SDX110" snowblower configured for TV145 306-736-7707, Langbank, SK. judywooff@gmail.com
Tractors Combines Swathers 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. AGRA PARTS PLUS, parting older tractors, tillage, seeding, haying, along w/other Ag equipment. 3 miles NW of Battleford, SK. off #16 Hwy. Ph: 306-445-6769. NEW TOP SIEVES for MF 860, also complete feeder chain housing. J M Salvage, 204-773-2536, Russell, MB.
YOUNG’S EQUIPMENT INC. For all your silage equipment needs call Ron toll free 306-565-2405, Regina, 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. 2305 FORAGE HARVESTER, 3600 chopper hrs, auto sharpen shear bar, lube, new knives, 4 WD, w/6 row Kemper header and PU header, $44,000; Or w/4 row 30" header and PU, $37,500. 204-385-3646, Austin, MB
58 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
2001 ROGATOR 854, 90’, 2081 hrs., new tires, 800 gal. tank; Also 4 floatation tires, Trimble GPS and nozzles. Willingdon, AB., call 780-367-2483 or 780-208-1125.
2012 NEW HOLLAND FR9050 SP Forage Harvester, only 685 cutter head hrs., 500 HP, many options, $285,000. Call for details. FOB St. Marys, ON. 519-276-0943, St. Marys, ON. sales@glnh.ca www.glnh.ca
TERRAGATOR 1903, 90’, 3500 hrs., high clearance, 2000 gal. SS tank, chemical mix tank, Raven SCS 750 w/rate controller, foam marker, 3” pump, very good tires, $35,000. 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. 2009 CIH 4420, 1750 hrs, Aim Command, 120’ boom, 1200 gal. tank, Trimble guid- 2014 NEW HOLLAND Guardian SP.275 front boom sprayer, Only 200 hrs., 120' 10 ance. 306-693-2479, Moose Jaw, SK. section boom, 5-way nozzles at 20" spac2004 JD 4710, 800 gal. capacity, 3200 ing, 2 wheel steer, deluxe cab, 380-105R50 hrs., crop dividers, traction control, fen- tires, chassis pan, Hi cap pump, fence line ders, 90’ booms, poly tank, 650 Michelin spray kit, boom blow -out system, boom floats, foam marker, AutoSteer, section wet line drain, 3" quick fill, stainless chem control, GS2 monitor, $116,000 OBO. fill hopper, Ultraglide with Raven-Intelliview - Ready to work. FOB Mitchell, ON. 306-842-3525, 306-536-5754 Weyburn SK $329,000. 519-276-0447, Mitchell, ON. 2007 APACHE AS1210 90’ high clearance, sales@glnh.ca, www.glnh.ca mech. drive, GPS, AutoSteer, 1999 hrs., 2 sets tires, $89,900. Call 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 2006 JD 4920, 120’, 1200 gal., 20”, Auto- BEHNKE DROP DECK semi style and Trac ready, 5 section boom, Hi-flow, SS pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, tank and plumbing, no display/monitor, t a n d e m a n d t r i d e m s . C o n t a c t S K : $99,500. Call 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336. TRIDEKON CROP SAVER, crop dividers. Reduce trampling losses by 80% to 90%. Call Great West Agro, 306-398-8000, Cut Knife, SK.
NH FORAGE HARVESTER FX58, 355 PU, KP, RI450 corn head, 2109 chopper hrs., all updates, excellent condition, field r e a dy, $ 9 5 , 0 0 0 O B O. C a n s e p a r at e . 403-634-4026, Lethbridge, AB.
NH FLEXI-COIL SF 216, 134’, 1600 gal. tank, 30.5x32 tires, AutoBoom, 3-way nozzles, shedded, exc. shape, $37,500. Call Eric 306-272-7038, Foam Lake, SK.
MOON HEAVY HAUL pulling air drills/ air seeders, packer bars, Alberta and Sask. 30 years experience. Call Bob Davidson, Drumheller, AB. 403-823-0746. 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.
NEW GUARDIANS IN STOCK. One 2014 SP333.F and two 2014 SP365.F, all c/w 1600G, 120’. Last year of the Tier 3’s/no def; Demo 2013 NH SP365.F, 375 HP, 1600 gal SS, 120’, Capstan pinpoint nozzles, Intelli-view, luxury cab, 380/90R46 and 650/65R38 tires, fully loaded, 173 hrs., full warranty plus 5 yr. powertrain warranty included, now only $399,900. Markusson New Holland of Regina Ltd., Regina, SK. Phone: 1-800-819-2583 or 306-781-2828, www.markusson.com
2009 JOHN DEERE 4830, 275 HP, 2400 hrs., warranty - 2500 hrs., fully loaded, deluxe cab, express tips, LED/HID lighting, 380s/ 600s tires, 2 Tridekon crop dvs, rear planetaries done at 2300 hrs., new boom pkg. 2300 hrs., $215,000. OBO. 780-787-3326, Vermilion, AB. jdbodurka@hotmail.com 2001 JD 4710 high clearance, 90’, 2300 hrs., 800 gal. tank, AutoSteer, boom track, $100,000. 306-377-2132, Herschel, SK. YOUR HIGH CLEARANCE hydro hose assembly center. We have superior extreme pressure products. End user and dealer requests handled promptly. Call Hydratec Hydraulics, Regina, SK. 1-800-667-7712, www.hydratec.ca
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 Summer savings! Lease a new 70’ P2070 drill and P1060 cart for as low as $20,750 s/a OAC. Markusson New Holland of Regina Ltd., 1-800-819-2583 or 306-781-2828. www.markusson.com
2013 CASE/IH 3230 sprayer, 100’ AIM, 800 gal. SS, active susp. surveyor cab, HID lights, 467 hrs. Norac AutoBoom, Outback rate control and guidance w/E-turns and ConnX E-Kay dividers, spray test remote control, 2 sets tires, wide fenders, front 2007 JOHN DEERE 4930, 120', 5-way fill, shedded, $255,000. 306-233-7254, nozzles, 380/50 tires, 3165 hrs, $99,000. Cudworth, SK. 306-944-4946, Watrous, 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. 2000 FLEXI-COIL 2340 air cart, 230 bushel in very good condition, $16,800. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 1997 BOURGAULT 5710/3225 air drill and cart, 40’ w/2” steel packers, 9” space, mid- HEAVY HARROWS IN stock for fall delivrow banders, NH3 kit, nice cond., $36,900. ery. Morris & Rite-Way. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 2011 EZEE-ON 8700, 40' offset disks, vg cond. Westwood Land & Cattle Ltd. Call Ken 2007 72’ SEEDMASTER, 12” spacing, at 306-435-7405 or Kevin at 306-435-7313, semi-pneumatic tires on shank w/BourMoosomin, SK. gault 6700 ST cart, dual wheels, conveyor, 42’ INTERNATIONAL 7200 hoe drills, new $210,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equip. Ltd. shovels, factory transport. 306-463-7020, ROME DISC 12’, new bearings and 36” notched blades, $24,000 OBO. Call: 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. Flaxcombe, SK. 306-267-4552, Coronach, SK. 1997 FLEXI-COIL 5000 57’ w/mid row 2012 JD 1895 43’ no-till drill, 10” spac- 2012 20’ SALFORD 5100 disc, 3 bar haring, all-run blockage monitors, equipped NH3, 3.5” rubber packers, blockage monirolling baskets, only done 600 acres, tor, good condition, tanks available. for dry fert., shedded, exc. cond. Wanham, rows, exc. cond. 204-673-2406, 204-522-0018, AB., call 780-694-2014, 780-865-0761. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com Waskada, MB. 2010 65’ BOURGAULT 3310 paralink, 12” NEW 47’ SUMMERS incomparable diaspacing, mid row shank banding, DS, rear mond disc for $50,000 less than some hitch, $157,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equip- 2013 LEMKEN HELIODOR 33’, low acres, competitors 40’ (high speed want to be) ment Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. exc. cond., $88,000 OBO. Can deliver. Call disc. Hauser Machinery, 1-888-939-4444, 204-572-5186, Grandview, MB. Melville, SK. JD 1900/ 1910 air carts, 350/ 340/ 270 bu good cond, $29,800/$34,800/$16,800. FARM KING DISCS, 15’-35’ widths. 600 BOURGAULT VM 46-50, with NH3, Dickey Tr a d e s w e l c o m e . 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 6 7 - 4 5 1 5 , lbs./ft. 7 year warranty on heavy duty John meter and monitor, 3/4” knock-on bearings. See your nearest Flaman store or carbide tips, $24,500. Call 306-287-4119, www.combineworld.com call 1-888-435-2626. 306-231-7054, Englefeld, SK. 27’ WHITE DISC, field ready, good for CASE D0T-B 30’ TANDEM DISC, field leveling ruts, $10,500. Call 306-287-4119, ready, $10,000 OBO. 306-567-7305, 306-231-7054, Englefeld, SK. 306-567-3076, Davidson, SK. CIH 5600 CHISEL PLOW 50’, Morris 4 DOEPKER V-DITCHER, c/w hyd. cylinder bar mtd harrows, walking beams on main reconditioned, very good condition, asking frame and main wings, 5-plex folding, HD $4500. Don 306-548-5440, Danbury, SK. Bourgault knock-on button clips field ready SALFORD RTS SERIES high speed residue $20,000. 306-435-9612, Moosomin, SK. management discs. Call about our financNEW VERSATILE SD550, 15’ offset disc, ing! 1-888-708-3739, www.glenmor.cc 600 lbs/ft., 26”x3/8” notched blades. glenmor@sasktel.net Lease and finance plans available. Call HIGH SPEED DISCS now available at FlaCam-Don Motors 306-237-4212 Perdue SK m 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 2008 22’ WISHEK DISC 862 tandem. Gate durability, the specialized design of the Kharrows w/carbide tips, front blades 26.5”, Line SpeedTiller is in a class of its own for rear blades 26”. The disc is in nice condi- superior soil and residue management. 20’ tion, serviced, field ready, $39,000. Lautts 28’ and 30’ models available. See your Rental, 701-324-2289, Harvey, N.D. nearest Flaman store or 1-888-435-2626. 27’ SUNFLOWER TANDEM disc, 22” blades, KELLO-BILT SERIES 210, 14’ breaking disk, 2013 HORSCH ANDERSON Panther good condition, $11,000. 306-989-4221, 21” to 22” notched blades, good condition, $7900. Call 306-827-2180, Radisson, SK. 460, equipped with "Razor" openers, Christopher Lake, SK. double shoot, disc levelers, dual blockage monitors, ISO electronics, 500 bu. tank with dual fans. Approximately 6000 acres, $260,000. 403-312-0776, Blackie, AB. WANTED: 5-1/2” RUBBER packers for Flexi-Coil 5000, 9” spacing. Will trade 4-1/2” steel. 403-793-1705, Brooks, AB.
Request a LEMKEN compact disc demonstration in your field today! Find your local dealer at www.LEMKEN.ca
BOURGAULT 8800 40' air seeder or deep tillage cultivator, 8" spacing, double chute Atom Jet openers, 3225 seed cart, $25,000 OBO. 306-482-7610, Carievale, SK.
1999 BRANDT 50’ heavy harrow, hyd. angle, $17,900. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 80’ FLEXI-COIL SYSTEM 82 mid-range harrow, c/w spring assist, premium cond., $8000. Call 306-682-3876, Humboldt, SK.
$53,995 US Dollars
Landoll 2210-15. 15 shank low acre nice shape. Excellent condition.
EXCELLENT USED DRILLS: 1- 2011 Bourgault 3310 Paralink w/6700 tank, 1- 2012 Bourgault 3320 Paralink w/6700 tank, 22013 Bourgault 3710 disc drills w/7950 tanks. Call or text Stephan, 306-774-6826, Swift Current, SK. or email: stephanolivier31@gmail.com
US Dollars
$26,500
2009 New Holland BB9060 9600 Bales Applicator.
$127,500
$17,995
US Dollars
US Dollars
2009 MORRIS MAXIM II, 50’, 10” spacing, 8370XL 3 compartment tank, very good condition, $97,900. Trades welcome. HUGE SELECTION OF heavy and mid har1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com rows, Bourgault, Gates, Delmar, Bergen. 70’ Bergens, new tines, $12,500; 70’ Del2009 JD 1895 43’ disc drill w/2009 JD mar 5500 mid harrow, $15,000; 82’ Del1910 430 bu. cart, duals all round, nice mar heavy new tines, hyd., $19,500; 82’ cond., $140,000. Can deliver to US border. Bourgault 2001, $23,500 and more. Corner 306-476-7248, Fife Lake, SK. Equipment 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB.
Brillion Soil Commander II front and rear discs, 5-4” shovels, 4 parabolic shanks. Used on 600 acres. Excellent condition.
2010 Massey Ferguson 7497 with Loader 700 Hours CVT Transmission.
WE’RE READY TO SERVE YOU AT OUR NEW LOCATION! 780 CAROLINA STREET • SAUK CITY, WI • 608-643-3321 • WWW.MCFARLANES.NET DELBERT 22110 • BRAD 22310 • MONDAY-FRIDAY: 7-7 • SATURDAY: 7-4 • SUNDAY: 9-2
CALL NOW FOR FALL DELIVERY KELLY DISC CHAIN HARROW NEW DEALER HITEC GRAIN BAGS A Concept so simple
Available in Sizes from 9’ x 100’ to 10’ x 500’.
the JOKER
you won’t believe it!
A Tool so rugged and reliable that you wonder why all
machines aren’t built this way! Shallow tillage
like you’ve never seen before. Learn Why at
www.kellyharrows.com
High - Speed Versatile Tillage The Joker tillage system is versatile and able to handle any type of crop residue in wet, dry, rocky, or extremely saturated soils. No other tillage system gives you the speed, durability, moisture conservation and finishing capabilities that the Joker does. No matter what cropping conditions are dealt, you will never be outmatched with a Joker in your hand. Visit www.horsch.com
HORSCH
Farming with Passion Distributed by:
Email: admin@grainbagscanada.com
Call Your Local Dealer or Grain Bags Canada at 306-682-5888
www.grainbagscanada.com
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
1-800-667-4515 www.combineworld.com
SASKATOON REGINA
20 min. E of Saskatoon on Hwy. 16
AG DEALS
Text Us! 306-229-9507 Email: coleman@combineworld.com Numerous pictures available on our website www.combineworld.com A
2007 APACHE AS1210
227 hours, 30’, double swath, like NEW ..................
90’ high clearance, mechanical drive, GPS & Auto Steer, 1999 hours, 2 sets of tires ..........
84,800
$
89,900
2009 Morris Maxim II, 50’, 10” spacing, TBT, $ liquid fertilizer....................... 2007 IH ADX3380,Variable $ rate, TBT, very clean ...........
97,900 39,800
/HR
2003 IH 1020
1997 JD CTS
30’ flex w/ air reel, PUR, new guards & wobblebox, field ready! ...............
914 pickup included, 2308 separator hours, good condition..................
$
12,900
34,800
CTS II COMING SOON!
95 T$
REN
REN
2011 JD 9330
1999 JD 9100
2006 NH TJ380
powershift, diff lock, 5 hyds, front/rear weights, 620/70R42 duals ..
4WD, 260 HP, 24 speed, Greenstar ready, 6450 hours ................
380 HP, 4WD, 4 hyd. outlets, 7121 hours.. .........
2008 IH MAGNUM 335
2007 BRENT 1594
2008 MD FD70
USED SWATHMASTERS
MFWD, 330 HP, 4100 hours, PTO, 3 point hitch, duals front & back .........
1500 bushel grain cart w/ electric roll tarp & scales ..................
/IH 2162 40’ flex draper w/ CNH adapter, pea auger. ...............
$ 2001 w/ new rear belts .......... $ 2005 14’, windguard .............. $ 1993 7 belt, good condition ....
174,900
$
/HR
85 T$
$
TRADES WELCOME
S! ART C IR
2012 CHALLENGER WR9740
$
59
$
77,800
TELEHANDLERS 2007 Skytrak 10054, 10,000lbs 54’ reach w/ $ heated cab, pivoting forks ... 2008 Genie GTH-844, 8,000lbs 44’ reach in good mech/ $ cosmetic condition...............
59,800
$
119,800
54,800
2005 NH CR970 42” factory duals, GPS, 1724 thresh hours, Swathmaster pickup incl., Rent $150/ thresh hour ..............
$
89,900
/HR
10 T$1
REN
$
119,900
$
49,800
$
49,800
NEW 14’ SWATHMASTER
9,950 6,500 4,800
8 belt, hydraulic windguard, ultra-float .................
$
13,838
TRADES WANTED
COMBINES
Quality Machines At Reasonable Prices
LEXION 575 (2007) 1810 Eng/1253 Sep Hrs
CASE 1680 (1990) 2906 ENG HRS, 1015 PU JOHN DEERE 9650 (2006) 2400 HRS, 914 PU LEXION 460 (2000) 3036 ENG/2418 SEP HRS LEXION 485 (1999) 1720 SEP HRS LEXION 580R (2009) 1100 ENG/880 SEP HRS LEXION 580R (2005) 1715 SEP HRS LEXION 590R (2008) 1384 ENG/1015 SEP HRS LEXION 590R (2008) 2939 ENG/1949 SEP HRS LEXION 590R (2009) 1424 ENG/1038 SEP HRS LEXION 590R (2008) 1037 SEP HRS LEXION 570 (2010) 1200 ENG/850 SEP HRS LEXION 670 (2013) 400 ENG/290 SEP HRS LEXION 670 (2012) 750 ENG/550 SEP HRS LEXION 670 (2011) 1425 ENG/975 SEP HRS NEW HOLLAND CX880 (2006) 2500 ENG/1700 SEP HRS
HEADERS
LEXION 670 (2012) 542 Eng/362 Sep Hrs
Lexion 590R (2010) 1092 Eng/741 Sep HRS
www.fostersagriworld.com
Box 629, Beaverlodge, AB
HONEYBEE SP36+ (2006) 36’, INTEGRATED TRANSPORT MACDON 962(2001) 30’ HEADER W/LEXION ADAPTER MACDON 974 (2004) 36’ DRAPER HEADER MACDON D60 (2008) 35’ SLOW SPEED TRANSPORT MACDON D60 (2012) 35’ INTEGRATED TRANSPORT, JD ADAPTER (2) MACDON D50 (2008) 35’ INTEGRATED TRANSPORTS, JD ADAPTER MACDON D50 (2013) 30’ SLOW SPEED TRANSPORT, SPARE KNIFE LEXION G30 (1999) 30’ AUGER HEADER, ELECTRIC REEL-SPEED (2) LEXION G530 (2009) 30’ TRANSPORT NEW HOLLAND 94C (2006) STRAIGHT CUT HEADER
TRACTORS
LEXION 670 (2012) 660 Eng/525 Sep Hrs
1-888-354-3620
NEW HOLLAND TG215 (2007) 2200 HRS, REAR DUALS, POWERSHIFT VERSATILE 535 (2012) 800 TRELLEBORGS, CRUISER GPS VERSATILE 485 (2012) 800 TRELLEBORG, DUALS GPS, POWERSHIFT CASE 485 (2008) 3650 HRS, TRIPLES, PTO
Call (780) 354-3622 • Jason (780) 518-8876 Sean (780) 518-3829 • Clint (780) 380-6989
60
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
COMBINE & HEADER SALES EVENT!
Farm World has REDUCED PRICES on New & Pre-Owned Headers & Combines. Warranty available on some units.
0
%
SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE
FOR 3O MONTHS!
2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9070
2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9090Z
2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9090Z
2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9070
WAS $315,000 — NOW!
WAS $335,000 — NOW!
WAS $335,000 — NOW!
WAS $296,000 — NOW!
#PN3202A.
$
#HN3373A.
269,000
$
#HN3375A.
299,000
$
#N22197B.
299,000
$
239,000
2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9070Z
2007 NEW HOLLAND CR9070
2005 NEW HOLLAND CR970
1985 NEW HOLLAND TR96
WAS $335,000 — NOW!
WAS $177,500 — NOW!
WAS $156,000 — NOW!
WAS $9,000 — NOW!
#HN3376A. 1,805 HRS.
$
# PN2623A. 1,367 HRS.
299,000
2011 New Holland CR9080 #PN3197A. WAS $320,750
2011 New Holland CR9080 #PN3198A. WAS $315,300
$
$ $
2010 New Holland CR9080 #PN3112A. WAS $291,500
289,000
$
2010 New Holland CR9070 #N22058A. $ WAS $239,000
289,000 219,000
209,000
159,500 WAS $188,000
2008 New Holland CR9070 #HN3180B. WAS $195,000
2008 New Holland CR9070 #PN3018D. WAS $229,000
2007 New Holland CR9070 #HN2912B. 1404 HRS. RETAIL
ONLY 3 IN STOCK!
#HW3384A. WAS $69,000
2011 MacDon D60 ONLY 2 IN STOCK!
#PW3259A. WAS $75,500
$
$
62,000 68,000
$
175,000 175,000
$
$
7,000
2006 New Holland CR970
2004 New Holland 94C #HW3359A. WAS $34,500
1997 MacDon 960 #PW2723D. WAS $22,900
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
$
#HN3133A. WAS $160,000
2004 New Holland CR970 2001 NEW HOLLAND TX66 PN2892B. 3194 HRS RETAIL
139,000
$
#PN2766B. RETAIL
101,000
$
40,600
178,500 2010 HONEY BEE SP40 #PH2545
ONLY 1 LEFT!
PRICES STARTING AT
71,900 $
139,000
169,000
$
# N21067D. 2,942 HRS.
2010 HONEY BEE SP36 ONLY 2 LEFT IN STOCK!
NOW
2012 Honey Bee SP36
$
2009 New Holland CR9070 #N20343B. $
NEW 2013 HONEY BEE SP36 ONLY 3 IN STOCK!
$
#HN2643C.
NOW
54,000 $
29,900
$
$ 1996 New Holland 971 #N21873G. WAS $4,900
50,000 $
4,500
19,000 Hwy. #5, Humboldt
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 | OCTOBER 9, 2014
61
GREENLIGHT TRUCK & AUTO 2014 DODGE RAM 2500 SLT
2014 DODGE RAM 1500 BIG HORN BLACK BEAUTY
LOADED 4X4 DIESEL 30KM
LIKE NEW
SAVE THOUSANDS
2012 FORD F250 XLT DIESEL LOADED
4X4 6.7L PST PD 74KM
$39,995
HEMI 4X4 36KM LOADED
NOW
2012 DODGE RAM 2500 LARAMIE DIESEL MUST SEE
EVERY OPTION 6.7L 4X4 PST PD ONLY 23KM LEATHER SUNROOF NAV
$35,995 NEW TRADE
2011 GMC SIERRA 2500 LTZ FULLY LOADED
DIESEL PST PD SUNROOF DVD LEATHER
GREAT SELECTION OF DIESELS
2007 GMC SIERRA 1500 SLT FULLY LOADED
5.3L 4X4 PST PD 179KM LEATHER WAS $18,995
NOW
$16,995
HUGE INDOOR SHOW ROOM
2 To Choose From
2011 FORD F350 LARIAT DIESEL
2014 DODGE RAM 3500 SLT DUALLY
SUNROOF
6.7L 4X4 PST PD LEATHER, NAV 125KM
LOADED
6.7L 4X4 DIESEL 13KM
2007 GMC SIERRA 1500 SLE LOADED 4X4 5.3L 147KM PST PD
Starting from
$39,995
SAVE $$$
$17,995
2010 DODGE RAM 1500 SLT
2008 CHEV SILVERADO 2500 LT
2011 GMC SIERRA 2500 SLE
HEMI
LOADED
LOADED
4X4 5.7L PST PD
$19,995
4X4 DIESEL PST PD
SPECIAL
$22,995
6.0L EXT CAB 4X4 PST PD 95KM
$26,995
www.GreenlightAuto.ca
Call FINANCE HOTLINE 306-934-1455 2715 FAITHFULL AVE., SASKATOON, SK.
DL#311430
READY TO MOVE HOMES Delivering homes ON TIME to happy customers in Sask., Alta., and Man. for over 25 years w Book Nory Of e For Deliv me in Your Ho
015
2014 or 2
INVENTOR BLOWOUT Y ! All
Spec Ho On Sale mes Now! Endin g Soon
Pictures and pricing at
WWW.WARMANHOMES.CA Toll-Free 1-866-933-9595
SASKATCHEWAN
NEW HOME WARRANTY
62
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
Titan Truck Sales 2012 IH PROSTAR
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.
$
2007 WESTERN STAR 4900SA
515 HP Detriot, 18 sp, 12000 front super 40 rear, 4x4 diff. locks, 209” WB, 48” bunk, 979,831 km.
$
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.
$
65,000
40,000
2010 PETERBILT 386
475 HP Maxxforce, 18 sp, 14,600 front 46,000 rear, 4x4 diff. locks, 3:73 gears, 22.5” alloy wheels, 212” WB, warranty till Sept. 2016, 423,408 km.
$
45,000
2006 MACK CXN613
460 HP, 18sp, 12/46, 390 gears, 22.5” alloy wheels, 214” WB, 48” flat bunk, 3x4 diff. locks, 1094967 km.
$
45,000
2007 WESTERN STAR 4900FA
29,000
2006 IH 9900I
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.
$
www.titantrucksales.com
485 HP Cummins ISX, 13 sp, 14.6 front super 40 rear, 391 gears, 232” WB, 22.5” alloy wheels, 63” bunk, 828602 km.
$
55,000
2010 PETERBILT 386
485 HP Cummins ISX, 13 sp, 14.6 front super 40 rear, 4:10 gears, 244” WB, 22.5” alloy wheels, 63” bunk, 775,694 km.
$
$
34,000
55,000
475 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.
$
260 HP Cummins L10, Allison automatic, 6x6 drive, 18,000 front 40,000 rear, 4:30 gears, 30,000 lbs winch, wet kit, 2,300 liter water tank, safetied, 50,085 km.
$
21,000
1992 AUTOCAR ACL66
2009 PETERBILT 388
530 HP Cummins ISX, 18 sp, 12/40, 22.5” alloy wheels, 244” WB, 3:70 gears, 1,320,557 km.
49,000
1993 AUTOCAR ACL66
49,000
260 HP Cummins L10, Allison automatic, 6x6 drive, 18,000 front 40,000 rear, 4:30 gears, 30,000 lbs winch, wet kit, 2,300 liter water tank, safetied.
$
17,000
2007 WESTERN STAR 4900FA
450 HP Mercedes MBE4000, 10 sp Eaton Autoshift, 12/40, 22.5”alloy wheels, New 20’ Cancade grain box, remote shute and hoist, 1,287,500 km.
$
65,000
Come see us at The 2014 Agri-Trade Equipment Expo November 5th to 8th Westerner Park – Red Deer, AB Outdoor booths #43, 44, 54, 55 NEW WILSON GOOSENECK, FOREMAN & GROUNDLOAD LIVESTOCK TRAILERS On Order & Special Order Available Various Options Available
PRE-OWNED EQUIPMENT 2007 International 9900i $
39,900
2012 Wilson 45’ 2 Hopper $
53,980
NEW WILSON DECKS AVAILABLE
2014 Timpte
Various Options Available
White Tandem $
39,980
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
Financing Available, Competitive Rates O.A.C.
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
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
63
MAPLE FARM EQUIPMENT
IS YOUR HARVEST HEADQUARTERS
AMAZING WINDROWERS WINDROWERS 2004 CASE IH WDX1101 w/30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#51377 ............... $63,900 2007 CASE IH WDX1202 w/36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; ST36 header, Stk #52911..... $73,800 1998 JD 4890 5105 hrs, guage wheels, 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; HB hdr, MD p/u reels Stk#52514 .............................................................................. $41,200 2010 JD A400 w/36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; WS36 header, Stk#52933.....................$121,600 2012 JD D450 w/35â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 635D header, Stk#54523. ....................$137,800 2013 JD R450 w/HB WS36 36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#52082. ..............$164,800 2013 JD W150 w/440D 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#52061. ...................$172,000 1995 MacDon 960 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; draper, p/u reels Stk#55101 ............... $11,800 1997 MacDon 2920 w/25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 960 header, Stk#54726................ $29,512 2002 MacDon 2940 w/30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 962 header, Stk#54548................ $63,606 2000 MacDon 2950 Premier w/30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 972 header, Stk#52873. $55,000 1999 MacDon 4930 w/30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 972 header, Stk#47139................ $44,300 2006 MacDon 9250 1540 hrs, guage wheels, 963 hdr Stk#51069 .............................................................................. $69,500 2003 MacDon 9352 w/30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; 972 header, Stk#54921................ $67,100 2009 MacDon M100 w/30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; D50 header, Stk#54979. ...........$115,200 2010 MacDon M150 w/35â&#x20AC;&#x2122; D50 header, Stk#54560. ...........$127,312 2013 MacDon M155 w/40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; D65 header, Stk#51449. ...........$166,000 2006 MF 9220 w/36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#47010................................. $58,300 2011 NH H8040 w/36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#54890. ...........................$108,912
HEADERS 2012 Case 2142 35â&#x20AC;&#x2122; draper header, Stk#52025. ..................... $67,100 1999 HB SP30 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; draper hdr Stk#54885 ................................ $26500
BALCARRES, SK 306-334-2492
FOAM LAKE, SK 306-272-3345
2011 HB 30GB 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#52077..................................... $58,900 2013 HB 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#54959............................................... $79,000 1999 HB SP30 30â&#x20AC;&#x2122; draper header, Stk#54885. ........................ $22,500 2010 HB SP36 36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#54576..................................... $65,300 2010 HB WS36 36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#46296.................................... $41,200 2003 JD 925R 25 ft Rigid Stk#55033..........................................$7,700 2010 JD 635D 35â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#52530. .................................... $64,752 2009 JD 635D 35â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#51073. .................................... $61,960 2004 JD 635F 35â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#49774...................................... $23,500 2013 JD 635FD 35â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#51003. ................................$100,000 2010 JD 640D 40â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#47173. .................................... $76,500 2005 MacDon 963 36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#54434.............................. $44,806 2004 MacDon 963 36â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#54433.............................. $41,206 2011 MacDon FD70 35â&#x20AC;&#x2122; header, Stk#51293. .......................... $80,000
COMBINES 2008 Case 7010 w/2016 PU header, Stk#54755...................$179,800 2013 Case 9230 w/3016 PLF, Stk#52032..............................$407,700 1991 JD 9500 4146 sep hrs, JD224 20 ft hdr, Stk#55100 ...... $35,300 1998 JD 9610 w/914 header, Stk#54564. ............................... $67,106 2001 JD 9650 Walker 2225 sep hrs, 914 hdr, Stk#55091 ...$101,000 2003 JD 9650STS w/914 header, Stk#54674. ........................ $97,127 2004 JD 9660 STS Guidance ready, service lights, 914 hdr, 1872 sep hrs, Stk#46255 .....................................................$140,500 2005 JD 9660STS w/914 header, Stk#52963. ......................$151,700 2011 JD 9670STS w/615P header, Stk#50804. ....................$277,200
TO
CLEAR OUT
2002 JD 9750STS no platform, Stk#54518. ..........................$114,700 2007 JD 9760STS w/PW7 header, Stk#53201. .....................$188,206 2008 JD 9770STS w/615P header, Stk#47261. ....................$233,000 2008 JD 9770STS w/615P header, Stk#50857. ....................$204,000 2010 JD 9770STS 850 sep hrs, 615 hdr, Stk#55177 ...........$244,600 2010 JD 9770STS w/615P header, Stk#51336. ....................$256,000 2010 JD 9770STS w/615P header, Stk#54862 .....................$233,700 2004 JD 9860STS w/MAC PW7 header, Stk#45875..............$160,000 2007 JD 9860STS w/615 header, Stk#50092. ......................$223,600 2010 NH CX8080, 700 sep hrs, 2wd, Stk#55025 ..................$224,200 2013 NH CR8090 w/790CP header, Stk#54818.....................$331,618 2010 NH CR9070 w/76C header, Stk#54955.........................$260,100 2010 NH CR9070 w/76C header, Stk#54957.........................$260,100 2012 JD S680 w/615P header, Stk#47676. ...........................$407,100 2012 JD S680 w/615P header, Stk#50565. ...........................$422,900 2012 JD S680 w/615P PLF, Stk#51870. ................................$375,000 2012 JD S690 w/615P header, Stk#48814. ...........................$375,000 2013 JD S690 w/615P header, Stk#52563. ...........................$429,400 2012 JD S690 w/615P PLF, Stk#53036. ................................$413,000 2012 JD S690 w/615P header, Stk#54419. ...........................$391,412 2009 JD T670 w/615P header, Stk#51839. ...........................$244,600
PREECEVILLE, SK WYNYARD, SK YORKTON, SK 306-547-2007 306-554-2536 306-783-9459 WWW.MAPLEFARM.COM
MOOSOMIN, SK 306-435-3301
RUSSELL, MB 204-773-2149
/LTXLG )HUWLOL]HU 6WRUDJH 6DOH 8 6 *DO 6WDQGDUG RSWLRQV Â&#x2021; <HDU OWG ZDUUDQW\ Â&#x2021; +HDY\ GXW\ ULEEHG WDQN Â&#x2021; /LIWLQJ OXJV Â&#x2021; 2QH µ %DQMR EROW RQ EXON KHDG ZLWK VLSKRQ WXEH Â&#x2021; &RORU RSWLRQV %ODFN ZKLWH RU EOXH
5HJ
6$/(
8 6 *DO
8 6 *DO
6WDQGDUG RSWLRQV Â&#x2021; <HDU OWG ZDUUDQW\ Â&#x2021; +HDY\ GXW\ ULEEHG WDQN Â&#x2021; 7ZR µ %DQMR EROW RQ EXON KHDG ZLWK VLSKRQ WXEH )LOO GLVFKDUJH DQG UHFLUFXODWLRQ
Â&#x2021; /LIWLQJ OXJV Â&#x2021; &RORU RSWLRQV EODFN ZKLWH RU EOXH
5HJ
6$/(
6WDQGDUG RSWLRQV Â&#x2021; <HDU OWG ZDUUDQW\ Â&#x2021; +HDY\ GXW\ ULEEHG WDQN Â&#x2021; 7ZR µ %DQMR EROW RQ EXONKHDG ZLWK VLSKRQ WXEH )LOO GLVFKDUJH DQG UHFLUFXODWLRQ
Â&#x2021; 0XVKURRP YHQW Â&#x2021; µ OLG Â&#x2021; /LIWLQJ OXJV Â&#x2021; &RORU RSWLRQV %ODFN RU ZKLWH
5HJ
6$/(
LEASING AVAILABLE
306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228 www.hold-onindustries.com
HOLD-ON INDUSTRIES IS A PROUDLY OWNED AND OPERATED CANADIAN COMPANY THAT MANUFACTURES ALL THEIR PRODUCTS IN SASKATCHEWAN.
64
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
2010 Cascadia DD15, 505 hp 13 speed 1.1M km. one owner unit, very clean.
NEW 2015 Coronado SD 122
NEW 2015 M2-106 Grain Truck
2015 Freightliner 122SD
2015 Freightliner M2-106
DD15, 505 hp, 18 speed, Day cab with 46 rear ends.
Cummins ISL 330 hp, 6 speed auto shift transmission, 20 ft box, electric tarp.
Detroit 505hp DD15, 18 speed, 46 axles with lockers, Fridge, 70” XT sleeper.
Cummins ISL 350 hp, Allison Auto, 14700 fa and 40RA with lockers PW/PL air ride 46 suspension c/w 15 foot Midland gravel.
$
Doepker Tri Axle Grain Trailer with Side Chute Delivery System SPECIAL PRICING AVAILABLE GB18320 - Options include 11R24.5 aluminum look alike rims, load lights inside the hoppers and mounted on the landing gear.
2015 Doepker Tri Axle Grain Trailer SPECIAL PRICING AVAILABLE GB18315 - 45’ open end options include custom paint, 24.5 outside aluminum rims, ½ round aluminum fenders.
140,000 plus taxes
FARM SPECIAL
Doepker Impact
Doepker Tandem Axle Grain Trailer
Great selection of 2015 Doepker Impact’s Hardox 450 tub style design
GB18706 - 36’ open end with a low clearance wall height and a 1700 cubic foot capacity.
Tare weight of 7400kg, Available in a variety of option packages.
Phone: (306) 242-4911 Toll Free: (888) 411-9875 www.frontlinett.com
2015 Doepker Triple Hopper Grain Trailer GB18310 - Triple hopper Doepker includes all functional options with aluminum rims. Also available with lift axle or the Doepker side chute delivery system.
Truck Sales John McLeod Vince Kelly
Trailer Sales Chris Wiens
310 Marquis Drive | Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
2004 Chev Trailblazer 4x4 4.2L V6, Remote Start, Cloth Seats, Sunroof, 5 Speed Automatic, Bucket Seats, White, 147,159 km
Loaded! Heated Leather Power Seat, Remote Start, Tonneau Cover! AM/FM Stereo 90,347 km
CALL
$10,995
2008 Subaru Outback
2.5L h-4 Cylinder, Automatic, AWD, AC, CC, CD, Power Group, Brown, 117,801 km
$34,995
2007 Ford F-150 Lariat 4x4
$26,495
2010 Chev Silverado 1500 LS Extended Cab, 4.8L V8, 4 Speed Automatic, Blue, 47.713 km
4.0L V6, 4x4, King Cab, 5 Speed Automatic, Black, 40,892 km
2011 Subaru Outback 3.6L H-4 Cylinder, Wagon, AC, Heated Power Seats, Power Group, Loaded, 26,310 km
2011 Nissan Frontier Pro-4X
Chrome and Leather! BC Unit! AM/FM Stereo, A/C, Alloy Wheels, Sunroof, 56,707 km
$25,995
4x4, 6.8L V10, Crew Cab, Automatic, White
CALL 2006 Dodge Charger
$10,995 2008 Subaru Tribeca Limited Premier
AWD, Leather, DVD Player, Navigation, Heated Seat, 67,626 km
CALL 2010 Subaru Outback
2.5L V6, Telescopic Steering, Automatic, Silver, 119,932 km
$19,995
2007 Ford F-150 Lariat 4x4
2007 Ford F250m Lariat
3.6L, AWD, Wagon, Power Group, Sunroof, Heated Seats, Dark Grey 58,235 km
$30,995
2013 Ford Escape SE I-4, Turbo 4WD, Heated Seats, Block Heater 12,042 km
$29,995
$32,995
ELITE AUTOMOTIVE GROUP INC. O/A
SUBARU OF SASKATOON 471 CIRCLE PLACE • 665-6898 OR 1-877-373-2662 MORE VEHICLES AT WWW.SUBARUOFSASKATOON.COM
*MSRP does not include Freight, PDI,Taxes & Fees *See dealer for details
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 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)
65
66
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
0%
PLUS FINANCING FOR CASH OR * BACK 72 MONTHS
This year’s Value Bonanza gives you MORE SMART WAYS TO SAVE on select New Holland hay and forage equipment. It starts with BONANZA BUCKS – it’s like bonus cash just for buying – and continues with 0% FINANCING FOR 72 MONTHS. That’s SIX YEARS without finance charges. Or choose CASH BACK in lieu of financing on these models:
• Roll-Belt™ Round Balers • Large Square Balers • Small Square Balers • Speedrower® Self-Propelled Windrowers • Haybine® Mower-Conditioners • Discbine® Disc Mower-Conditioners • MegaCutter™ Mounted Triple Mower-Conditioners
BONANZA BUCKS *For commercial use only. Customer participation subject to credit qualification and approval by CNH Industrial Capital America LLC or CNH Industrial Capital Canada Ltd. See your participating New Holland dealer for details and eligibility requirements. Down payment may be required. Offer good through November 30, 2014. Not all customers or applicants may qualify for this rate or term. CNH Industrial Capital America LLC or CNH Industrial Capital Canada Ltd. standard terms and conditions will apply. This transaction will be unconditionally interest free. Example - 0.00% per annum for a total contract term of 72 months: Based on a retail contract date of September 15, 2014 with a suggested retail price on a new BR7050 Round Baler of C$27,005.00, customer provides down payment of C$5,405.00 and finances the balance of C$21,600.00 at 0.00% per annum for 72 months. There will be 72 equal monthly installment payments of C$300.00 each. The total amount payable will be C$27,005.00, which includes finance charges of C$0.00. Taxes, freight, setup, delivery, additional options or attachments not included in suggested retail price. Offer subject to change or cancellation without notice. © 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. CNH Industrial Capital is a trademark 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
Act fast! See us before this offer ends on November 30, 2014.
EXPECT MORE FROM FARM WORLD YOUR FARMING PARTNER!
550,000
FARM WORLD COMBINE CASH DEAL CLEARANCE! ! 2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9080
2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9080
2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9090
2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9090Z
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
HN3374A. 720 HRS, TIRES DIS 620/70R42, AUTO GUIDANCE NAV II, AXLE EXTENSIONS, AXLE DIFF LOCK, GPS 262 ANTENNA, LIGHTING HID, INTELLICRUISE, INTELLISTEER READY, HP/XP OPENED, FULL AUTO GUIDANCE, OPTISPREAD PKG, W/ 790CP HEADER 15’’.
HN3376A. AUTO GUIDANCE NAVIL W/GPS, STRAW CHOPPER DELUXE, 620/70R42 DUALS, LIGHTING HID, AUGER LONG UNLOADING, YIELD & MOIST MONITOR W/GPS, DUAL RUB BARS, CHOPPER BELT UPDATED TO TRIPLE BELT. WAS $335,000
NOW
$
299,000 CASH
NOW
$
299,000 CASH
NOW
$
299,000 CASH
NOW
$
299,000 CASH
2009 NEW HOLLAND CR9070
2009 NEW HOLLAND CR9080
2008 NEW HOLLAND CR970
2008 NEW HOLLAND CR9070
N20343B. 1647 HRS, 900 FRONT TIRES, 600 REAR TIRES, CRARY BIG TOP, LONG AUGER, DELUXE NH CHOPPER, Y&M, 76’ RAKEUP 2007.
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
HN2643C. 1382 HRS, 900/60R32 DRIVE TIRES 600/65R28 REAR, BEACON LIGHTS, MAV CHOPPER, TRAILING RUB BARS, GRAIN TANK COVER, LONG UNLOADING AUGER.
HN3179B. 1368 HRS, 20.8R42 DUALS REDEKOPP CHOPPER, 2ND RUBBAR SET, MICHEL TARP, AXLE EXTENSIONS, GRAIN TANK COVER, HID LIGHTING, AUGER LONG UNLOADING, C/W 76C 16’ PU HEAD.
NOW
$
169,000 CASH
NOW
$
205,000
2006 NEW HOLLAND CR970 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 NOW
$
148,000
NOW
$
139,000 CASH
2005 NEW HOLLAND CR970 N21798B. 1647 HRS, 900 FR TIRES,600 REAR TIRES, CRARY BIG TOP, LONG AUGER, LUX NH CHOPPER, Y&M, 76’ RAKEUP. WAS $132,500 NOW
$
119,000
NOW
$
175,000 CASH
2004 NEW HOLLAND CR960
2004 NEW HOLLAND CR960
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
PN2872D. 2532 HRS, 1956 SEP HRS, 76C 14’ RAKE UP HEADER, 900 TIRES, YIELD/ MOISTURE, PSP CHOPPER. WAS $129,500
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
NOW
$
109,000
NOW
$
92,000
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
2010 NEW HOLLAND CR9080 PN3112. 848 HRS, 520/85R 42 FRONT, 540/65R30 REAR DUALS, AM/FM/WB RADIO, LARGE COLOR TOUCH MONITOR, ENGINE BLOCK HEATERY, RECENT NEW FEEDER CHAIN. WAS $291,500
$
NOW
219,000
2006 NEW HOLLAND CR970 HN3133A. 2181 HRS, LIGHT BEACON, DELUXE CAB, AXLE DIFF LOCK, LONG AUGER ULOADING, Y & M MONITOR, 76C 14’ PU HEADER, MAV CHOPPER. WAS $160,000 NOW
$
139,000 CASH
1985 NEW HOLLAND TR96 N21067D. 2944 HRS, W/ 971 NH VICTORY HEADER.
NOW
7,000
$
CASH
Visit
www.farmworld.ca for our full inventory
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
67
CALL NOW FOR FALL DELIVERY! Professional Farming by
Shape your own land with the PULLDOZER
/(0.(1
AVAILABLE TO 18’ AND 24’ LENGTHS
Glenmor salutes the Pulldozer from Bridgeview Manufacturing Pulldozer land shaper 1810, 2410 and 2410XL Are you looking for a better way to groom your land, ditch, maybe grade, level or simply move dirt? If so, you might be thinking of 3 or 4 different options, from dozers to scrapers, graders to V ditchers. You really only have to look at one: the Pulldozer land shaper by Bridgeview Manufacturing. The Pulldozer land shaper is all this and more wrapped up in one complete, efficient, and virtually indestructible package. Call Glenmor today, or visit MANUFACTURING INC. www.bridgeviewmanufacturing.com
BRIDGEVIEW
For more information contact Glenmor
www.glenmor.cc 1-888-708-3739
CALL US!!
CASE-IH $ 1010/1020 .............
1,595 $ 4000/5000 ............. 1,595
IN STOCK CIH 1640-2588 unloading auger elbow............................ $880 CIH 80/88 series unloading auger extn ..... $895 CIH 1640-2388 front rotor bearing holder . $395 CIH 1680-2388 header lift cylinder ........... $625 CIH heavy-duty rear steering axle centre tube ......................................... $1,690
JOHN DEERE $ 200/900 New .........
1,095 $ 200/900 HD ............ 1,595
NEW JD PARTS
IN STOCK JD 9600/10, 9650/10 straw walker ........ $1,100 JD 9400-9600/CTS/CTSII cleaning fan drive pulley & half-pulley .... $245 JD 9000 series RHS feederhouse shield ... $395 JD 9600 front walker crank ...................... $580 JD 9600 upper feeder shaft ...................... $895 JD 9600/10, 9650/60 sieve frame .......... $1,473 JD front concave plate .............................. $425
NEW TIRE DEALS
FACTORY DIRECT – NO MIDDLEMEN 11R22.5 16ply ................. $299 11.2x24 8ply .................... $199 16.9x24 8ply ................... $549 16.9x26 10ply ................. $685 23.1x26 R3 12ply ............ $990
Old Hwy No. 2 South Prince Albert, SK S6V 5T2
1-888-708-3739 glenmor@sasktel.net
20 min. E of Saskatoon on Hwy. 16
NEW WOBBLE BOXES — USED & REBUILT ALSO AVAILABLE
NEW CIH PARTS
Through the expansion of maize cultivation in the past few years in particular, the plough has regained its importance as a primary cultivator. The reduction of plant diseases, mechanical pest control due to increasing chemical resistance, and the fight against new pests, are among the most important tasks facing a plough today. Recent research has shown that loosening and aerating the root zone, with a plough, can improve the formation of rape roots, for example, thus laying the foundation for high and guaranteed yields. Call Glenmor today, or visit www.lemken.com/en/
1-800-667-4515 www.combineworld.com
AGGRESSIVE PRICING, TRADES WANTED
1,495 $ (New-Style)............. 1,995
Glenmor presents /HPNHQ
GLEN MOR
DUAL KITS — ALL MAKES & MODELS
MACDON $ (Old-Style) ..............
LEMKEN HELIODOR & RUBIN 12
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 REDEKOP CHOPPERS
NEW STRAW CHOPPERS
CIH 88 series ....................................... $9,630 CR 920-960/9040/9060 ....................... $9,270 MF 8570-8780XP ................................. $9,270 TR 95-99 .............................................. $9,170 JD 50/60 series MAV rotor upgrade ..... $4,650
JD STS 70 Series.................................. $5,145 CIH 40/60 chopper w/drive .................. $4,080 CIH 80/88 series w/drive ...................... $4,310 JD 9600/10/50/60 ............................... $3,845 USED CHOPPERS ALSO AVAILABLE
IN STOCK
SAVE UP TO 50%
LOTS OF NEW & USED PARTS 1 YEAR WARRANTY WHAT DO CUSTOMERS SAY ABOUT
CombineWorld ? ‘Combine World is very organized with knowledgeable, courteous and efficient staff. Nice to deal with, thanks!!’ Herbert Deroche, MB
PICKUP REELS USED IN STOCK
NEW IN STOCK
HCC $ $
USED KITS
NEW $ Crary dual disk ................................... USED — MANY AVAILABLE $ Cat Factory dual disk ......................... $ NH Factory dual disk ..........................
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
2,975 3,480 1,950 $ IH Kirby single disk ................................. 695
1(: 6$/9$*(
$ $ Cat 3208 ....................................... $ Ford 7.8L .......................................
Cummins 8.3L ...............................
NEW UNLOADING AUGER EXTENSIONS $ Fits JD, CIH................... 895 LONG UNLOADING AUGER TUBES $ JD 9500/9650/STS 50 1,175 $ CIH 1660-2388 ............... 772
36’ HCC SP36 ..........................................$3,980 36’ HHC Agco ..........................................$5,980 36’ MD 974 .............................................$6,980 42’ UII 88C .............................................. $7,800 40’ MD FD70 ...........................................$8,480
CHAFF SPREADERS
9770 STS, CTS, 2388, 9600, TR97, 8570, Cat 590
$ JD 7.6L............ $ JD 466, 6 cyl. ..
UII
5,795........... $6,830 $ 30’............................ 6,795............ 7,900 $ $ 36’............................ 7,900........... 8,900 25’............................
USED ENGINES 5,980 4,900
OPEN SATURDAYS 8 A.M.-2 P.M. SUNDAYS 8 A.M.-12 P.M.
3,450 3,900 6,900
MF 8780XP, MAV chopper, reel speed, 2969 hrs. Many good parts!
Cat TH62 Telehandler, Lexion 480/485
)25 &203/(7( 3$576 &$// 86
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..
FINAL DRIVES READY TO GO! JD 9400-9600/CTS/CTSII Rebuilt ................ $4,750 Used LHS/RHS ....$3,250 STS Used LHS/RHS ....$4,950 Rebuilt ................ $6,750
CRARY HOPPER EXTENSIONS $ CIH 80/88 series ............ 1,795 JD 9000 series, CTS ...... $1,795 NH TR 95-99 ................. $1,795
68 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
NEW GATES COULTER harrows 40’ to 60’, 4 bar harrows, 20” blades, basket options available. Valmar options. Pricing starting at $ 5 5 , 0 0 0 . C a l l C o r n e r E q u i p m e n t 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. NEW 2012 11S30 Thurston Blue Jet folding sub tiller, 21’ wide, S/N #015068, 11 shanks, asking $42,000. Discounted to sell. Call Don 306-548-5440, Danbury, SK. 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. Contact Hauser Machinery, Melville, SK. 1-888-939-4444.
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 sizes. Call: Machinery Dave, 403-545-2580 Bow Island, AB. www.summersmfg.com LEMKEN HELIDOR AND Rubin high speed plows, aerate and cultivate seed beds. Call about our financing! 1-888-708-3739, www.glenmor.cc glenmor@sasktel.net DEGELMAN PRO-TILL Cultivator, warms and dries cold soils. Call about our financing! 1-888-708-3739, www.glenmor.cc glenmor@sasktel.net COMPLETE SHANK ASSEMBLIES: JD 1610, $135; JD 610, black, $180; JD 1600, $90; Morris 7-series, $135. Call anytime, 306-946-7923, Young, SK.
2007 CHALLENGER MT865B, 525 HP, Cat C18, 3953 hrs., exc. cond., HD tracks- 80%, PTO, big pump, 6 SCVs, GPS ready, $179,000. 780-206-1234, Barrhead, AB.
WISHEK DISCS. Heavy duty breaking discs DX160 DEUTZ TRACTOR, 160 HP, duals, 10’-38’ widths. 1000 lbs./ft. For sale or 1000 PTO, runs good. 306-395-2668 or rent. See your nearest Flaman store or call 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. 1-888-435-2626. 8030 AC TRACTOR, with good rubber, FEL, powershift trans., $10,000 OBO. Call 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK.
1993 9270, PS, recent Michelin tires 90%, one owner, shedded, $68,000. Englefeld, SK. 306-287-4119, 306-231-7054. 2007 CASE/IH 2588, 2015 PU header, $155,000. 2006 Case/IH 2388, 2015 PU header, $135,000; 2004 Case/IH 2388, 2015 PU header, $120,000. Combines have been Redlighted, field ready. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment Ltd. 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. 1977 CASE 1570, 180 HP, 20.8x38 duals, 6875 hrs., exc cond, $14,900 OBO. Spiritwood, SK. 306-883-2468 or 780-891-7334.
2008 IH Magnum 335 MFWD, 330HP, 4100 hours, PTO, 3 point hitch, duals front & back, rent $110/hour. $119,900. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. Financing available. www.combineworld.com
PTO ASSEMBLY FOR any Caterpillar, Challenger tractor flat track: 65, 75, 85, or 95, asking $19,500 with $1000 rebate after assembly; Engine Stump Pan for flat track CAT Challenger, c/w mounting bracket and hardware, $500. Call Peder Lodoen 780-996-7364, St. Albert, AB. or email: plodoen@shaw.ca
1961 CASE/IH 930, 2 WD, 3000 hrs. One owner, shedded. Hand clutch and diesel. Have orig. owner's manual, vg cond, $3500. Ron 403-581-1346, Medicine Hat, AB
KELLO-BILT DISC PARTS: Blades and bearings. Parts to fit most makes and models. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. www.kelloughs.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.
2012 CIH 500HD, powershift, front and rear diff. locks, 5 hyd. outlets, Pro 700 display, AccuGuide, 372 receiver, 800/70R duals, 696 hrs, like new. Factory warranty until May 2015. Asking $269,000. Almost anything on trade. Phone 1-877-862-2387, CASE/IH 3900, 30’, double disc, nice 1-877-862-2413, Nipawin, SK. s h a p e , $ 2 7 , 0 0 0 . A s s i n i b o i a , S K . LIZARD CREEK REPAIR and Tractor. We 306-642-3225, 306-640-7149. buy 90 and 94 Series Case, 2 WD, FWA tractors for parts and rebuilding. Also have JD 250 CULTIVATOR, 30’ w/harrows, good 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 . shape. Ph. 306-283-4747, Langham, SK. 306-784-7841, Herbert, SK.
A GR OW PLOW
EXCESS WATER PROBLEMS?? COMPACTION PROBLEMS?? DEEP TILLAGE EQUIPMENT 7 SHANK/H.D. SPRING 9 SHANK/RIGID 9 SHANK/HYD. W/COULTERS 9 SHANK/HYD. W/COULTERS 9 SHANK/WET KIT 13 SHANK/HYD 15 SHANK/HYD 15 SHANK/HYD 17 SHANK/HYD 17 SHANK/HYD 17 SHANK/HYD 19 SHANK/HYD
Demo New Demo Aged Used Used New Aged New New Aged New
REG. PRICE
SALE PRICE
$10,626.00 SO L D $10,043.00 $17,792.00 $17,792.00 $19,300.00 SO L D $42,000.00 $48,000.00 SO L D $47,683.00 $50,369.00 $50,369.00 $48,400.00 SO L D $59,688.00
$3,750.00 $6,500.00 $9,250.00 $12,500.00 $14,500.00 $33,000.00 $39,200.00 $37,800.00 $43,500.00 $43,500.00 $41,000.00 $47,500.00
R .A.W EST IN TER N ATION AL IN C. 285 SER V ICE R OAD V U L CAN ,AB 403- 485- 19 9 8 TF: 1- 888- 9 72- 9 378
2011 JD 9330 WD, powershift, 375 HP, 620/70R42 duals, summer ‘14 Green Light, 2662 hours, rent $110/hour. $174,900. Trades welcome.Financing available.1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
2009 JD 7430 Premium w/3F 741, 1182 hrs, 20 spd PowerQuad w/LHR (26 mph), loader suspension, sliding glass roof hatch, GreenStar ready, 3 pairs of 450 lb rear weights, 3 remotes, cold weather package, Trelleborg’s w/98% tread left, 520/85R42 rears, 420/85R30 fronts $136,000 CAD, $124,000 USD. Call AgriQuip Ontario, Stratford, ON. 1-888-388-1925. JD 4450, 4255, 4440, 2130; parting out JD tractors. Will trade for JD tractors needing work. Also, FELs available. Austin, MB. 204-871-5170.
2590, NEW FRONT tires, duals, runs excellent except powershift, $3500. 1996 JD 7800, 4 WD, 3 PTH, 6000 hrs, 403-741-6968, 403-340-9280, Stettler, AB excellent condition. Call for pricing. CASE/IH STEIGER built, 4 WD/Quads; 780-983-0936, Westlock, AB. Plus other makes and models. Call the Tractor Man! Trades welcome. We deliver. 1991 8960, 24 spd., good triples, 7300 hrs., $50,000. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. SUMO 9 LEG ripper, 1000 acres or less of Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. usage, hyd. auto reset, very clean. Corner CASE/IH 9240, 235 HP, powershift, 5688 1997 JOHN DEERE 9400, 4 WD, 4250 hrs., Equipment 204-483-2774, Carroll, MB. hrs, PTO and crab steering, clean and vg 425 HP, 710/70/38 tires, excellent condition, $105,000. Farm sold. View website. cond. 306-228-3094, 306-228-8503, Unity. JOHN DEERE MODEL 1650 chisel plow, 519-389-2612, Port Elgin, ON., 5 3 ’ , g o o d c o n d . , $ 2 9 , 0 0 0 O B O . WRECKING FOR PARTS: 1370 Case, vg www.highviewfarm.ca eng.; 1570 Case, c/w Firestone 20.8x38 all 780-398-2422, Thorhild, AB. traction 8-ply, like new on Case rims; 2290 RETIRED: 1998 7810 JD, 2 WD, 720 FEL, always shedded, quad trans., 6250 hrs. Case, vg eng. 1-877-564-8734, Roblin, MB. 306-752-3820, 306-921-9920, Melfort, SK. 2004 STX500, 800 Michelins, diff locks, PTO, weights, powershift, HID lights, $150,000. 403-647-7391, Foremost, AB.
2007 BOURGAULT 9400 50' chisel plow, 12" spacing, 500 lb. trip, 3 bar harrows, NH3 applicator, rear hitch, $59,900. 306-527-3523, Indian Head, SK.
WANTED: FRONT DIFFERENTIAL for 1972 800 Versatile. 306-839-4422, Pierceland, SK. BI-DIRECTIONAL HYDROSTATS IN STOCK for all models. Exchange, reman, rebuild. Call Hydratec Hydraulics, Regina, SK. 1-800-667-7712, www.hydratec.ca 1981 VERSATILE 835, excellent shape, new tires, 7300 hrs, $21,500. 306-549-2408, Hafford, SK.
2010 JD 8295R, 2055 hrs, Tier 3 engine, 16/4 PowerShift, ActiveSeat, HID Xenon lighting, 4 remotes, big hyd pump (60 GPM), HD dual capable front axle, rear axle weights, new Michelin’s - 480/80R50 rear, 420/85R34 fronts. Front duals available. $176,000 CAD, 161,000 USD AgriQuip Ontario, Stratford, ON. 1-888-388-1925. JOHN DEERE 4430, very good, approx. 8000 hrs. Call 306-731-7657, Lumsden, SK 1997 JD 7600 FWA, w/JD 740 loader and grapple fork, all new radial rubber, no hrs. since JD Greenlight, 5800 hrs, exc. tractor, $68,000. 403-504-9607, Medicine Hat, AB. JD 4450, 6500 hrs, MFWD; JD 4255, 7900 hrs, MFWD; JD 4055, 7000 hrs, MFWD; JD 7610, 7356 hrs, MFWD, 3 PTH, $57,500; JD 7800, 6500 hrs, MFWD, 3 P T H , f r o n t 3 P T H w / P TO, $ 6 5 , 0 0 0 . 306-231-3993, www.versluistrading.com Humboldt, SK. 2012 JD 9460R, 455 hrs., 800/70R38’s w/duals, leather trim, 1000 PTO, Hi-Flow hydraulics w/5 remotes, HID lights, weight pkg, $229,500 US. 320-848-2496 or 320-894-6560, www.ms-diversified.com JD 2130, approx. 4500 hrs., w/Cancade loader, complete engine overhaul 200 hrs. ago, vg cond., excellent acreage tractor. 306-327-8703 306-327-7603 St. Brieux SK JD 7810, MFD, c/w 740 loader, 7500 h r s . , q u a d w i t h l e f t - h a n d r e ve r s e r. 780-990-8412, Edmonton, AB. JD 4650 MFWD, 12,000 hrs., powershift, 280 loader w/grapple, new rear tires, $40,000. Mike 306-469-7741, Big River, SK JD 3020, powershift, no loader use, no 3 PTH, used only for swathing, exc. paint and tires, always shedded, $9000. Wawanesa, MB. 204-824-2018 or 204-761-6709. 1994 8570, only 3700 hrs, 24 spd., very g o o d l ow h o u r e d t r a c t o r, $ 5 9 , 0 0 0 . 306-948-7223, Biggar, 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. 1997 9400, 4 WD, very good tires, exc. cond., always shedded, 7000 hrs, $95,000 OBO. 204-745-7445, Carman, MB.
2001 JD 7410, MFWD, 3 PTH, PowrQuad, LHR, E-range, JD 740 loader, grapple fork and joystick, very clean. 780-674-5516, 780-305-7152, Barrhead, AB. 1982 JOHN DEERE 8450, 7200 hrs., (400 1980 JOHN DEERE 4840, 9250 hrs, Powerhrs on eng), 20.8x34 duals, new PTO, very shift, 20.8x38 factory duals. 306-631-4196 good, $27,900. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., Chaplin, SK. 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 1996 JD 8870, 4300 hrs., 24 spd. trans., JD 8440, PTO, 18.4x38 duals, rebuilt always shedded, excellent condition, eng. and more, exc. for grain cart, $18,500 $77,000 OBO. 306-843-7314, Wilkie, SK. OBO. 403-585-1910, Airdrie, AB. JD 8970, 440 HP, powershift, PTO, 20.8 1996 JD 8970, new tires, 5700 hrs, 4 triples, new eng., 3 hyds., great grain cart hyds., diff lock, plumbed for air seeder, tractor.Can deliver 780-603-7640 Bruce AB shedded, $75,000. 306-453-2958, Carlyle. 2002 JD 9520, 7000 plus hrs, 650/85-38 JOHN DEERE 4020, premium condition, Michelins, PTO, JD integrated Auto-Trak, mechanically and in appearance. Call clean, good cart tractor, $117,500 Garri403-823-1894, Drumheller, AB. son, North Dakota, 701-897-0099. 1983 JD 4050, 110 HP, 7600 orig. hrs., 1994 JD 8570, 5800 hrs., well maintained, quad shift, 540 and 1000 PTO, triple hyd., stored inside, radial tires, triple remotes, c/w 265 JD loader, vg cond., $30,000. Can no winter use. GPS and AutoSteer included email pics. 780-349-9810, Westlock, AB. fo r a d d i t i o n a l c o s t . $ 5 3 , 0 0 0 O B O. JOHN DEERE 4320, excellent condition, 306-666-2051, Fox Valley, SK. dual PTO, never had FEL. 403-585-1910, 1993 JD 8570, 6335 hrs., 24 spd., 20.8x38, Carbon, AB. fresh $10,244 Greenlight, diff. lock, stored 2009 9530, $180,000, 800 metrics, shed- inside, excellent condition, $60,000. ded, 2000 hrs., full load, 5 remotes, big 306-648-7654, Gravelbourg, SK. hyd. pump. 403-578-3308, Coronation, AB. 1982 JD 4240, 9000 hrs, new: paint, deSTEVE’S TRACTOR REBUILDER looking cals and upholstery, tires 75%, with 148 for JD tractors to rebuild, Series 20s, 30s, loader, bale and pallet forks, very good 40s or 50s, or for parts. Will pay top dollar. cond., $25,000. 306-795-2800, Ituna, SK. Now selling JD parts. 204-466-2927, 204-871-5170, Austin, MB. G.S. TRACTOR SALVAGE, JD tractors 4450, 2 WD, powershift trans, duals, only. Call 306-497-3535, Blaine Lake, SK. 10,000 hrs, Ezee-On 2100 loader, asking LOOKING FOR JD 30, 40, 50 Series trac$27,500. 780-836-0701, Shellbrook, SK. tors in good cond. with mechanical issues. 2010 JD 6140D MFWD, only 345 hrs, 673 Call 306-621-7170, Yorkton, SK. loader, weights, shuttle shift, warranty till 07/2015, $79,500. 306-231-8966 or 306-231-8300, stuckelfarms@sasktel.net 1974 MF 1085, 3 PTH, power steering, Humboldt, SK. 540 PTO, multi-power, nice tires, runs very JD 9630, 2700 hours, hydraulic drawbar, nice, 6900 hrs, $5950. 1-800-667-4515, very good condition, one owner, shedded. www.combineworld.com 204-822-3797, Morden, MB. 2011 MF 2680 FWA, cab, A/C, heat, FEL, JD 4430 w/EZEE-ON loader, quad shift, pallet fork, 84 HP PTO shuttle, 600 hrs., 20.8x38 singles, only 6515 hrs., exc. cond. $49,900. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., Contact: 306-283-4747, 306-220-0429, 306-237-4212, Perdue,. SK. 306-291-9395, Langham, SK. 1997 JD 9400, 8300 hrs., 300 hrs. since Greenlight, triples, wheel weights, PTO, asking $95,000. 306-233-5212, Wakaw, SK 2011 JD 7430 MFWD Premium, 1600 hrs., IVT trans., 3PTH, power heated mirrors, front axle and cab susp., 741 loader and grapple, extended Powertrain and emission warranty until March 2016, $134,000. Call 403-664-0717, Cereal, AB. MITCH’S TRACTOR SALES LTD. For sale Polaris RZR 800 sizds by side, low miles mint; JD 2355, MFWD, 3 PTH, OS w/loader; JD 2550 2 WD, 3 PTH, w/loader; JD 2750, 2 WD, OS, 3 PTH, hi-lo shift w/146 FEL; JD 2955, MFWD, 3 PTH, CAH, w/265 FEL; JD 4230, quad shift; JD 4240, quad shift, 3 PTH; JD 4250, MFWD, 15 spd.; JD 4250, MFWD, 15 spd.; JD 4255, MFWD, 15 spd., 3 PTH, JD 4440 (2) quad shifts, 3 PTH; JD 6420 MFWD, 3 PTH, 24 spd., w/LHR, loader; JD 8650, 4 WD, PTO, quad. All tractors can be sold with new or used loaders. Call 204-750-2459, St. Claude, MB. mitchstractorsales.com 1989 JD 4555, FWA, 165 HP, 12,000 hrs., triple hyd., 1000 PTO, new powershift a year ago, exc. rubber, vg cond., $34,000 OBO. Can email pics. Call 780-349-9810, Westlock, AB.
2007 NEW HOLLAND TG215, 2200 hrs., rear duals, powershift. 2008 Case 485, 3650 hrs., triples. Foster’s Agri-World, Beaverlodge, AB. Call Sean 780-518-3829. 1995 NEW HOLLAND 8970, MFWD powershift, rubber- 85%, 7000 hours, excellent. Call 306-744-8113, Saltcoats, SK. 2006 NH TJ380, 380 HP, 4WD, 7121 hrs, 5 hydraulics, front weights, $119,800. Fin a n c i n g ava i l a b l e . Tr a d e s we l c o m e . 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com 2009 NH TV6070, bi-directional, 3 PTH, and PTO on both ends, fully loaded, short loader, extra large bucket w/grapple, 1670 hrs., vg cond., $88,800. 306-662-3366, 306-662-8746, Maple Creek, SK.
2006 NH TJ380, 380 HP, 4 WD, 5 hyds, 16 speed powershift, rent $95/ hour. $119,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com
1999 JD 9100 4WD, 260 HP, 24 speed, Greenstar ready, 6450 hours, rent $85/hour. $77,800. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. Financing available. www.combineworld.com
NEW VERSATILE TRACTOR PARTS: #51416 clutch pressure plate assembly for Series I, II and III PTO equipped tractors - $2995; #48320 PTO gear box housing - $995; Axle tube for Series I, II, III tractors #21370 - $795, #35972 - $995; #17920 rad (core measures 30”wx31”h) fits 800, 850 and 900 Series I - $995; #56688 hyd. pump for 800, 850, 835, 855, 875 and 895 single pump tractors - $795; #27072/#41714 double hyd. oil cooler for most tractors - $795; #48084 hyd. charge pump for 150/160 bi-directional $795. Fouillard Implement Ltd., St. Lazare, MB., 204-683-2221.
GRATTON COULEE AGRI PARTS LTD. Your #1 place to purchase late model combine and tractor parts. Used, new and rebuilt. www.gcparts.com Toll free 888-327-6767.
NEW 2014 LS 4 WD, 97 HP, Iveco diesel, self-leveling loader, 3500 lb. lift, CAHR, 3 spd. PTO, 3 PTH, power shuttle with hi/lo, 5 yr. warranty, $56,000. The Tractor Company, 306-239-2262, Osler, SK.
2007 CAT D6N LGP dozer, 6-way blade, AC, heat, 5950 hrs, reduced to $139,500. Conquest Equip. 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK 1985 STEIGER BEARCAT 225, 3306 Cat, 20 spd Spicer trans, 4 hyd. outlets, 18.4x38 duals 75%, good runner, $13,900. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com JD 148 and/or 58 LOADER, fits 10, 20, 3 0 , 4 0 , a n d 5 0 S e r i e s , $ 3 9 0 0 O B O. 403-823-1894, Morrin, AB. JD 840 LOADER c/w grapple, mounts off 7000 Series, exc cond. Call 780-990-8412, Cherhill, AB. CRAWLER DOZERS: CAT D8H, high horse with V-blade; Cat D7 with hyd. dozer and rake; Cat D4C-40A with dozer; Cat D6-9U with dozer; Cat D6B with front and rear blades; 4- Cat D2 crawlers. Large stock of new and used parts. Discount prices. Many other units arriving daily. Central Canada’s largest wreckers of Industrial equipment. Cambrian Equipment Sales, 204-667-2867, fax: 204-667-2932, Winnipeg, MB. BRIDGEVIEW MANUFACTURING Pull dozer. Available in 18’ and 24’ lengths. Call about our financing! 1-888-708-3739, www.glenmor.cc glenmor@sasktel.net
QUIT FARMING: 2008 CIH 8010 combine 4 WD, only 870 sep. hours, 6220 30’ flex draper, will drive as far as a track machine in mud, $200,000; 2008 TX 430, 4 WD, new 680x42 tires, $150,000; 2013 Geringhoff 8x30” corn chopping header w/row stompers, $80,000; 2-105 White tractor, rebuilt engine, $7000; 32’ Ezee-On tandem disc, spring loaded cushing gang, done very little, $25,000; Roadrunner header haul, $8000; IH 4240 tractor with 15’ mower, $12,000; Westco 16x30 cult., $1500; Band sprayer, 16x30, $1500. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. WESTFIELD END DUMP drill fill, $200; Farm-King binsweep, long hose, $125; Pair of 18.4x38 clamp-on duals, $150; 1971 IHC 1510 truck, good B&H, $500. Call 306-672-3646, Gull Lake, SK.
1997 FORD/NH 9882, 4 WD, 23.1x32 tires, 5000 hrs., very good shape, $95,000. FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS We also specialize in: Crop insurance ap306-648-7766, Gravelbourg, SK. peals; Spray drift; Residual herbicide; Cus2007 FORD TM140, FWA, 3PTH, steering tom operator issues; Equip. malfunction. wheel, blue, 285 hrs., 140 HP, dual PTO Call Back-Track Investigations for assis$62,500. Call 306-786-6510, Yorkton, SK. tance and compensation 1-866-882-4779.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
SUNFLOWER HARVEST SYSTEMS. Call for literature. 1-800-735-5848. Lucke Mfg., www.luckemanufacturing.com RETIRING: 2- 30’ John Deere 590 autofold swathers; 30’ Premier autofold swather; Two 28’ MF #35 swathers; NH 1033 auto bale wagon; Walinga grain vac with all updates. Phone 306-638-4550, Findlater, SK. RW 1200 ROCK rake, like new, used less than 30 hours, $2500. 306-372-4509, Luseland, SK.
CLASSIFIED ADS 69
TELEHANDLERS: 2004 JLG G6-42A; 2005 Cat TH330B; 2005 Cat TH460B; BOOM LIFTS: 2000 JLG 800AJ; 2003 JLG 400S. Owner motivated, call for price. Can finance, 306-291-4043, Saskatoon, SK.
Available at:
GENERATOR, ONAN/WAUKASHA, ONAN genset powered by a 6 cyl. Waukasha engine. Gasoline powered convertible to nat. gas, 112 KW single phase or 170 KW, 3 phase, 642 hours, good condition, $10,000. 306-231-7164, 306-231-9501, St. Benedict, SK., Rudy.mary@sasktel.net
Duperow Co-op Duperow, SK 2012 USED 30’ SCHULTE mower, nice condition. Call machinery Dave 403-545-2580, Bow Island, AB. ODESSA ROCKPICKER SALES: New Degelman equipment, land rollers, Strawmaster, rockpickers, protill, dozer blades. 306-957-4403, 306-536-5097, Odessa, SK.
(306) 948-2706
1-888-92 0-1507
WANTED: 2 WD 60-100 HP tractor with FEL, grapple fork, no cab, good shape, prefer JD. 306-734-2970, Chamberlain, SK. WANTED: MF #36 and #360 Discers, all sizes, any condition. Also parts discers. Prompt pickup. Call anytime at 306-946-7923, 306-946-9669, Young, SK. WANTED: 2390 OR 2590 Case or 94 Series tractor with duals in good condition. WILL DO TEARDOWNS, barb-wire, corrals, r a i l s , b i g ga m e . W i l l t r ave l . P h o n e 306-210-8901, Reward, SK. 306-344-7067, Onion Lake, SK. WANTED: USED, BURNT, old or ugly tractors. Newer models too! Smith’s Tractor Wrecking, 1-888-676-4847.
WANTED: SPINDLE AND HUB to fit 1970’s IH 1600 series truck. Call 306-287-3506, HAVE CANOLA? NEED Capital? We buy Watson, SK. Canola. We pay you before delivery. Canola for cash before delivery. Need Capital? www.inputcapital.com 844-715-7355.
F I R E W O O D : C u t a n d s p l i t , d e l i ve r y available. 306-862-7831, 306-862-3086, Nipawin, SK. BLOCKED SEASONED JACK Pine firewood and wood chips for sale. Lehner Wood Preservers Ltd., 306-763-4232, Prince Albert, SK. Will deliver. Self-unloading trailer.
300 G R E E N P R E S S U R E T R E AT E D , sharpened posts, 8’x5-6”, never used, in bundles of 100, $8.50/post. Will sell individually. Call 204-346-4050, Kleefeld, MB. PRESSURE TREATED FENCE posts; Second cut slabs; Lumber; Rails. Delivered price. BLOCKED AND SPLIT seasoned Spruce firewood. Call V&R Sawing, 306-232-5488, 306-764-3035, Prince Albert, SK. Rosthern, SK. SPEEDRITE, PATRIOT ELECTRIC FENCERS and accessories. 306-725-4820, Bulyea, SK., www.lambacres.ca MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: BEV’S FISH & SEAFOOD LTD., buy diwww.maverickconstruction.ca rect, fresh fish: Pickerel, Northern Pike, Whitefish and Lake Trout. Seafood also FENCE CABLE very good used 5/16” and available. Phone toll free 1-877-434-7477, 3/8”. Very smooth and suitable for horses, 306-763-8277, Prince Albert, SK. cows, buffalo, etc. Economic way to build low maintenance long life fence. Safe for animals and humans. Calgary, AB., call 403-237-8575. GUARANTEED PRESSURE TREATED fence posts, lumber slabs and rails. Call Lehner Wo o d P r e s e r ve r s L t d . , a s k fo r R o n HAY RACK LOG trailers for sale. Call Gord 306-763-4232, Prince Albert, SK. 306-221-0464, Saskatoon, SK.
NEED HEAT IN YOUR Ideal for Heating: GARAGE OR • Garages • Wood Shops SHOP? • Farm Shops • Cattle Barns For all your Heating & Plumbing
HANG ON
403-342-1155
Show Specials Nov. 5, 6, 7, 8
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. 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. USED GENERATORS, various voltages, 20 KW to 2000 KW diesels, with various hours, backup power for farm, grain drying, applications or just plain peace of mind. Mike 780-868-4941.
O N E S TO P
USED DRILL STEMS, 4”, 5” and 6”, .50¢/ft.; Sucker rods, $3/joint. Jim 306-332-7861 leave message, Fort Qu’Appelle, SK. QUALITY USED TUBING: Casing and rods. Various sizes and lengths. Will deliver. Call for pricing, Viking Surplus 306-634-6612, Estevan, SK. 125 JOINTS OF 2 and 7/8” oil field tubing. Call 306-768-8555, Carrot River, SK.
Agri-Trade
CLEARVIEW 125 Clearwill Ave INDUSTRIAL PARK RED DEER COUNTY, AB T4E 0A1
www ww w.mc w.mc w. mcmu mull mu llen ll ens en s.ca s.ca s.
PRODOZERS
Built to last.
ROCKDIGGERS MODEL RD3600 & RD4400
Largest rockdiggers on the market.
Langenburg, SK.
'HOLYHU\ OHDVLQJ RSWLRQV DYDLODEOH &DOO IRU VSHFV GHWDLOV Phone
306-743-5022 or 306-743-7313
Email: roadsideironworks@xplornet.ca
NEBRASKA BISON BUYING ALL CLASSES Bison calves, yearlings, adult bulls, cows, pairs. All export requirements processed by Nebraska Bison. Contact Randy Miller, 402-430-7058, Nebraska, NE. or e-mail: RandyMiller@Miller95Enterprises.com BISON WANTED - Canadian Prairie Bison is looking to contract grain finished bison for growing markets. Roger Provencher at 306-468-2316. roger@cdnbison.com BISON/ ELK HANDLING SYSTEM, L shaped, 9 boxes with corner escape, 2 load-outs with slides, Lenius hydraulic squeeze for bison/elk/cattle, Honda hyd. powerpack, new price $29,000, selling $14,000. Buyer responsible for removal. 306-831-2245, 306-831-2002, Darcy, SK. NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for over 15 years, is looking for finished Bison, grain or grass fed. “If you have them, we want them.” Make your final call with Northfork for pricing! Guaranteed prompt payment! 514-643-4447, Winnipeg, MB. BUYING: CALVES, YEARLINGS and culls. Phone 306-747-3181, Shellbrook, SK. WANTED TO PURCHASE cull bison bulls and cows for slaughter. Oak Ridge Meats 204-835-2365 204-476-0147 McCreary MB LOOKING FOR ALL class of bison from yearling to cow/calf pairs and big bulls. Phone Kevin 306-429-2029, Glenavon, SK. NILSSON BROS. INC: Wanted 200 young (2-4 years) bred bison cows, for Nov./Dec. 2014. Richard Bintner, Tisdale, SK., 306-873-3184, cell 780-349-9717. Email rbintner@nbinc.com
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. ELK VALLEY RANCHES, buying all ages Chimney, heat exchangers, parts, piping, of feeder bison. Call Frank 780-846-2980, Kitscoty, AB. or elkvalley@xplornet.com pumps, etc. Athabasca, AB, 780-628-4835. POWDER RIVER BISON squeeze with crash gate, $4500. 306-839-4472, Pierceland, SK 200 BRED COWS, breeding bulls and heifTROPHY ZONE TANNERY, State of the ers. Call 306-375-7645, Kyle, SK. art facility. Hair on tanning for both taxidermy and domestic hides. Quality work w i t h f a s t t u r n a r o u n d . C a l l a ny t i m e 403-653-1565 or cell: 406-450-6300, Cardston, AB. Email: bunnage@shaw.ca
McMullens Refrigeration & Heating Ltd.
MODEL 14/6 & 16/6
SPRUCE FOR SALE! Beautiful locally grown trees. Plan ahead and renew your shelterbelt or landscape a new yardsite, get the year round protection you need. We sell on farm near Didsbury, AB. or deliver anywhere in western Canada. Now taking fall bookings. Details phone 403-586-8733 or check out our website at www.didsburysprucefarms.com
www.dseriescanola.ca GAME FENCE: Deer/Elk, 20.9.6, 96”x330’. Descriptions: 20 horizontal wires with vertical stays 6” apart. Line wires, 12.5 gauge high tensile, class 3 galvanized (min 0.85oz/sq.ft). Stay wires, 12.5 gauge medium tensile, class 3 galvanized (min 0.85oz/sq.ft.). Knots, 13 gauge low tensile. Fixed knot (min 0.85 oz/sq.ft). Sale price $199.99/roll. Limited quantity! Call 306-645-2152, Moosomin, SK.
ONE TIME FENCING, sucker rod fence posts (solid steel), and steel corners. www.onetimefencing.ca 1-877-542-4979. LARGE QUANTITY OF fence posts, rolls of high tensile wire, insulators, plastic feed troughs, etc. 306-873-5788, Tisdale, SK. SOLIDLOCK AND TREE ISLAND game wire and all accessories for installation. Heights from 26” to 120”. Ideal for elk, deer, bison, sheep, swine, cattle, etc. Tom Jensen ph/fax 306-426-2305, Smeaton, SK.
CRITTENDEN BROS. Polled Herefords mature female sale, Saturday Oct. 25, 12:30 PM, on the farm, 2.5 miles west of the Pioneer Seed Plant, Imperial, SK. Selling all females aged 3 to 10 with calves at side; Also the top of the 2014 bull calf crop. Wintering and terms available on bull calves. Several packages of commercial females selling in pens of 3. All females pregnancy checked. For catalogue or more info call Howard 306-963-7870; T PRODUCTION SALE: 40 to 50 Bred females, Bar C Cattle Co. 306-220-5006 (Chris) or $2,000. Contact for more information. 306-221-2711 (Ted). View catalogue on306-921-6792, 306-921-6762, Pleasant- line: www.buyagro.com Watch and bid live dale, SK. Email: ccr1@sasktel.net at: www. Liveauctions.tv PL#116061.
1/4” TREAD PLATE or checker plate, various sizes, $4/sq. ft. 306-538-4685, 306-736-7146, Kennedy, SK. USED OILFIELD PIPE for sale, in Alberta and Saskatchewan. All sizes available. Excellent for fencing, corrals, etc. Call 780-918-8100 for details. 2-3/8” DUAL LINE tubing, has cement and plastic lining $15. Truck load quantities only. 306-842-1242, Weyburn, SK. DRILL STEM PIPE: I have 2 7/8, 2 3/8 pipe. Also have 3/4, 7/8 sucker rod. Call for more info 306-621-0487, Melville, SK.
IRRIGATION TURBINE WATER pumps, 6”-8”, 4 cyl. dsl., 600-1000 gal./min., very efficient. 403-878-6302, Grassy Lake, AB. WESTERN IRRIGATION - Large supply of new and used irrigation equipment. Cadman travelling gun dealer. Used pivot. We buy and sell used irrigation equipment. Call 306-867-9461, Outlook, SK. MOVE WATER? 6” to 10” alum. pipe, dsl. and prop./NG pump units. Taber, AB. Dennis: 403-308-1400. dfpickerell@shaw.ca PHIL’S IRRIGATION SALES: Reinke pivots, lateral and minigators, pump and used mainline travelers and pivots. 22 years experience. 306-858-7351, Lucky Lake, SK. www.philsirrigation.ca
CATTLE FIN AN CIN G BC, ALBER TA, S AS K. “ Fa rm e rs He lping Fa rm e rs ”
FOOTHILLS
LIV ESTO C K C O - O P
2ND ANNUAL HARVEST CLASSIC Black Angus Sale: Featuring purebred heifer calves, bred heifers, bred cows and club calves. 7:00 PM, Friday, October 24th at Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, SK. Contact Glen Gabel at 306-536-1927. www.sasklivestock.com
Plan to attend Blair-Athol Haroldson’s and Friends Sale, Sunday, October 19, 1:00 pm at the Blair Athol farm 4 miles W, 3 miles N of Arcola, SK. 75 Polled Herefords sell, featuring bred females and heifer calves. For a catalogue or more info contact Duncan Lees 306-455-2619; Jeff Lees 306-577-1375; Chad Wilson 306-739-2643 or T Bar C Cattle Co. Ltd. at 306-220-5006. View the catalogue online at www.BuyAgro.com PL #116061.
HERD DISPERSAL: 27 Red Angus pairs, April/May calves, mainly 2nd and 3rd cal- “TAKE THE NEXT STEP” Sale, presented vers, exposed to Reg. Red Angus bull, by C & T Cattle Co., Twin View Polled $3250/pair. 306-861-4592, Eyebrow, SK. Herefords; Phantom Creek Livestock, McCoy Cattle Co., & KLR Polled Herefords. RED ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, se- Saturday Oct. 18, 5:00 PM. Right Cross men tested, guaranteed breeders. Delivery Ranch Sale Barn, Kisbey, SK. Offering a seavailable. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, lect group of Polled Hereford females and Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com open show heifers. For catalogues or info Chris 306-455-2605; Doug 306-773-7136; Chad 306-436-2086; Ernie 204-365-7426; Randy 306-299-4511. or T Bar C Cattle Co. Ltd. 306-220-5006, PL #116061. View the 16 RED ANGUS HEIFERS bred to start catalogue online at www.BuyAgro.com calving April 22nd, Arm River Red Angus 306-567-4702, Davidson, SK. ANL POLLED HEREFORDS and Guests Production Sale, Saturday, October 18, HERD DISPERSAL: 175 Red Angus/ 1:00 PM at Steelman, SK. Guest consigSimmental 25 black/BWF, 20 bred heifers. nors: Glenlees Farm and Brooks Farms. OfExposed June 9 to black and red, Simmen- fering an exciting group of bred females tal and Angus purebred bulls. Will be preg and heifer calves. For a catalogue or more checked. Available Nov 15. Call for more info contact Karl Lischka 306-487-2670 or info. 306-538-4435, 306-421-8538, Lang- T Bar C Cattle Co. Ltd. 306-220-5006. bank, SK. Worleyhansonranch@gmail.com PL#116061. View the catalogue online at www.BuyAgro.com Watch and bid online at www.cattleinmotion.com COMPLETE DISPERSAL: Bar B Charolais, 120 Reg Charolais cows to start calving Mar. 15, 2015. One iron herd we have been developing for 32 years. Herdsires are Landmark Lanza and Merit Round-Up. 250-785-5325, Cecil Lake, BC.
HIGHLAND WEANLING HEIFERS: 4 purebred (registration pending), 1 commercial, 3 Hereford cross. 250-692-9420, Southbank, BC, info@naturalgrownbeef.com www.naturalgrownbeef.com
FRESH AND SPRINGING heifers for sale. Cows and quota needed. We buy all classes of slaughter cattle-beef and dairy. R&F Livestock Inc. Bryce Fisher, Warman, SK. Phone 306-239-2298, cell 306-221-2620. PRAIRIE COVE’S EXCELLENCE ONLINE CHAROLAIS SALE. Top end bred heifers, show heifers, donor prospects, club calves and Charolais semen and embryos. Oct. 28th to 30th, 2014. Bid online with Cattle In Motion. www.cattleinmotion.com www.prairiecovecharolais.com
BIG ISLAND LOWLINES Premier Breeder. Selling custom designed packages. Name your price and we will put a package together for you. Fullblood/percentage Lowline, embryos, semen. Black/Red carrier. POLLED 2 YEAR old and yearling Charolais Darrell 780-486-7553, Edmonton, AB. bulls, some Red Factor. Kings Polled Charolais, 306-435-7116, 306-645-4383 or 306-645-2955, Rocanville, SK. THE “ALL STAR CLASSIC” Shorthorn Sale sponsored by the Alberta Shorthorn Association, Saturday, Oct. 18 1:00 PM, Ag Facility, Lacombe, AB. Selling HERD DISPERSAL, DEXTER: 30 pairs, May/ Lacombe prospects, bred yearling heifers, June calvers. Great small acreage cattle or herdsire calendar year heifer calves, planned emniche market beef sales, trouble free good bryo matings and one pregnant recipient. mothers. 33 yearlings, steers and heifers, Lunch served at 11:00 AM. For further ingrass fed only. 780-385-5570, Viking, AB. fo. contact Kirk Seaborn 403-322-0142 or Don Savage Auctions 403-948-3520. Catalogue online www.donsavageauctions.com
4’S COMPANY 34th Annual Purebred Shorthorn Sale, Sunday, December 7, 2014 at 1:00 PM, Camrose, AB, Exhibition Grounds. Canada’s longest running private sale. Quality heifer calves, bred heifers, Toll Free 1-8 66-8 48 -6669 herdsire prospects and commercial bred No Res triction s ; Pu rcha s e a n d heifers. View catalo gue online at www.canadianshorthorn.com or phone m a rk etin g - You rchoice w w w.foothills lives tock.ca SASKATOON GELBVIEH BULL And Female 780-763-2209 for a mailing. Pre-register Sale: Sat. March 21, 2015, Saskatoon, SK. for online bidding at: dlms.ca Roc k y M ou n ta in Hou s e , AB To request a catalogue call 306-865-2929, FRONTLINE FEMALE SALE: November 1st, www.gelbviehworld.com 2014, 1:00PM at Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, SK. Featuring: 60 select regisSPECKLE PARK FEEDER and Bred Female tered Black and Red Angus females; Fancy Sale, October 18th, 2014. VJV Auction, Poheifer calves; Bred heifers; And proven noka, AB. To consign or for sale informacows. For more info contact Shane at tion contact Mitch Hettler, 403-302-0681. 306-741-7485. Check it out on-line at: Visit: www.canadianspecklepark.ca www.castlerockmarketing.com ONTARIO SPECKLE PARK SALE, Oct. 18th, Herd Builder Sale, Dave Carson Auctions, 12:30 PM, Listowel, ON. Featuring 35+ lots of quality Speckle Park cattle BLACK ANGUS HEIFERS for sale sired by from 6 fine breeders. Registered and comNetworth and Density. AI’d to Final Anmercial bulls, heifers, cows and pairs. Also swer. Call 306-736-8698, Peebles, SK. features Angus and Angus/Simm females SELLING: BLACK ANGUS bulls. Wayside bred Speckle Park. For further details call Angus, Henry and Bernie Jungwirth, Jordon 519-760-0892 or see sale cata306-256-3607, Cudworth, SK. logue at www.herdbuilder.ca The Canadian 22 BRED BLACK Angus/ Angus cross cows, SQUARE D HEREFORDS PRODUCTION SALE beef breed! Selling bred replacement heifers, cow calf 9 bred heifers, bred Black Angus. Call pairs, top herd sire prospects. Also a group Dwight Worley 306-736-2996, Kipling, SK. of heifers bred Hereford at the farm. Oct B OR N TO S TA ND OUT! BLACK ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, se- 20, 2014, 1:00 PM. square.d@sasktel.net men tested, guaranteed breeders. Delivery 306-538-4556, 306-736-7921, Langbank, Farm fair International available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, SK. square-dpolledherefords.com Edm onton,AB Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com S ho w a t4:00 p.m . No ve m b e r 5th, 2014 12 PUREBRED BLACK Angus cows, bred to HEREFORD HARVEST PRODUCTION Agribition,Regina,SK Crowfoot 0102 ($42,000). Jan calving. Ole Sale, October 17, 2:00 PM Lone Pine NATIONAL SHOW & SALE Farms, Kelly 780-689-7822, Athabasca, AB. Cattle Services, Vibank, SK. Featuring a t9:00 a .m . & Na tio n a l S a le a t4:3 0 p.m PUREBRED BLACK ANGUS long yearling Country Lane Farm herd dispersal. OfferNo ve m b e r 26th, 2014 bulls, replacement heifers, AI service. ing an outstanding selection of heifer S a le c a ta lo gu e a tw w w .b u ya gro .co m Meadow Ridge Enterprises, 306-373-9140 calves, bred females, herd sire prospects and embryos. For a catalogue or info conor 306-270-6628, Saskatoon, SK. THE CANADIAN SPECKLE tact Rob O’Connor 306-762-4543 or T Bar PARK ASSOCIATION 45 BLACK AND BBF HEIFERS bred to C Cattle Co. 306-220-5006. View the catacalving ease Black Angus bulls, exposed logue online at www.buyagro.com Watch Offic e a t403 -946-463 5 June 25 to Aug. 15. Kevin McCutcheon and bid live at www.liveaucitons.tv w w w.ca na d ia ns p ecklep a rk.ca 306-668-4200, Saskatoon, SK. (PL#116061)
Bred cow program ! Feeder Program !
GALLOWAY FEMALE SALE: November 17th-22nd, on-line at: www.liveauctions.tv Contact Russel Horvey 403-749-2780, or e-mail: horvey@telusplanet.net
70 CLASSIFIED ADS
PLAN TO ATTEND the 4th Annual Western Elite Speckle Park Sale, Sun., October 26, 1:00 PM at Notta Ranch, Neilburg, SK. Featuring purebred heifer calves and bred females. Also Speckle Park influence prospect females and steers. For catalogues or more info. contact Jason Goodfellow at 306-893-4620 or John Herbert at 306-893-4096 or T Bar C Cattle Co. Ltd. at 306-220-5006, PL #116061. View catalogue online at: www.buyagro.com Watch and bid online at: www.liveauctions.tv
REG. TEXAS LONGHORN pairs, bred 2 year old heifers and open yearlings. Also a good supply of yearling bulls. Quiet low stress managed cattle. Ph. Dean at Panorama Ranch, 403-391-6043, Stauffer, AB. TEXAS LONGHORN PRODUCTION Consignment And Ranch Horse Fall Select Sale, Saturday, Nov. 15, 2014, 1:00 PM, Crossroads Centre, Oyen, AB. All classes of Longhorns: Registered, commercial and crossbreds. Also ranch broke horses 3 yrs. old and older. For entry forms or more info. contact Ron Walker, Redcliff, AB. home 403-548-6684, cell 403-528-0200, walkersu7texaslonghorns@gmail.com
WELSH BLACK- The Brood Cow Advantage. Check www.canadianwelshblackcattle.com Canadian Welsh Black Soc. 403-442-4372.
BRED COWS WANTED on cash lease to own/purchase. Box 2002, c/o The Western Producer, Saskatoon, SK, S7K 2C4. THREE YOUNG PUREBRED Hereford cows, bred to Black Angus, can be viewed south of P.A. 306-492-3035, eves, Shield, SK.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
FULL BLOOD DORPER rams, full blood and percentage ewes and ewe lambs. Call 24' PANELS AND WINDBREAKS made out of HORSE SALE: Johnstone Auction Mart, 306-454-2759, Ceylon, SK. 2-3/8 or 2-7/8 pipe. Can custom build to Moose Jaw, SK. Thurs, Nov. 6, 2014. Tack your request. Will do special items such as sells at 2 PM; Horses sell at 4 PM. All bale feeders, bunk feeders, etc. Please classes of horses accepted. 306-693-4715 APPROX. 30 COMMERCIAL ewes for sale, email jchof@platinum.ca or call www.johnstoneauction.ca PL#914447. mostly 2 year olds, good maternal lines. 403-704-3828, Rimbey, AB. Call 250-357-2263, Salmo, BC. 80 EWES, 4 year old,s mostly Canadian Ar9 YEAR OLD Leopard Appaloosa Stallion, cott/Klun Forest cross, asking $225. Call 14.3 HH, black spotted, full mane and tail, Rick 306-845-2404, Livelong, SK. NOW quiet, easy to be around, $1200 OBO. BOOKING SELLING FLOCK DUE to illness approx. 300 306-238-4509, Goodsoil, SK. SALES ewes, Rideau Arcott and Romanoff crosses, 2 to 4 yrs. old. Asking $140 each. Call e5showcase.com 306-723-4803, Cupar, SK. WANTED: BELGIAN OR Percheron horses. PB DORSET AND Hampshire yearling and All ages. Call Clint 204-564-2279, or ram lambs and ewe lambs. Heeroma’s Oct. 5 - Ockerman Prospect Calf Sale 204-773-6226 (cell), Inglis, MB. 306-823-4526 evenings, Neilburg, SK.
Online Livestock Sales
SUNGOLD SPECIALTY MEATS. We want your lambs. Have you got finished (fat) BLACK MAMMOTH yearling stud, $750. lambs or feeder lambs for sale? Call Mammoth bred jennies, $1000. 2014 Dwayne at: 403-894-4388 or Cathy at: jacks and jennies, $500. 204-434-6132, 1-800-363-6602 for terms and pricing. www.sungoldmeats.com Steinbach, MB.
CRITTENDEN BROS. Polled Herefords mature female sale, Saturday Oct. 25, 12:30 PM, on the farm, 2.5 miles west of the Pioneer Seed Plant, Imperial, SK. Selling all females aged 3 to 10 with calves at side; Also the top of the 2014 bull calf crop. Wintering and terms available on bull calves. Several packages of commercial females selling in pens of 3. All females pregnancy checked. For catalogue or more info call Howard 306-963-7870; T Bar C Cattle Co.306-220-5006 (Chris) or 306-221-2711 (Ted). View the catalogue online at: www.buyagro.com Watch and bid live: www. Liveauctions.tv PL#116061 14 BLACK ANGUS COWS, 2nd, 3rd calvers, bred Red Angus, April calving. 403-741-6968, 403-340-9280, Stettler, AB
H. S. KNILL TRANSPORT, est. 1933, specializing in purebred livestock transportation. Providing weekly pick up and delivery service across Canada and the USA. Gooseneck service available in Ontario, Quebec and USA. US and Canada customs bonded carrier. Call 877-442-3106, fax 519-442-1122, hsknill@pppoe.ca or www.hsknilltransport.com 155 King Edward St., Paris, Ontario, N3L 3E3. 10 SHORTHORN CROSS SIMMENTAL heifers, bred Shorthorn at 4’s Company Sale, Sunday, December 7th, 1:00 PM, Camrose Agriplex. Catalogues phone 780-763-2209 or view online at: canadianshorthorn.com WANTED: QUALIFIED PERSON to winter and pasture 200 to 400 cows for 3 to 5 yrs. Serious inquiries only. Contact Bernie 403-382-9578, Lethbridge, AB. WILL CUSTOM WINTER large groups of herd bulls, cows (bred and or feeder), and calves. Call L7 Feeders, Chad Ross, 306-421-6346, Estevan, SK. CONCRETE BLOCKS, 5’ long, 30” high, 30” wide. Interlocking, weigh 4000 lbs., good for grain storage, buildings, walls, etc. $100/block. Load any day. 306-630-3538, Bethune, SK. 45 BLACK AND BBF HEIFERS bred to calving ease Black Angus bulls, exposed June 25 to Aug. 15. Kevin McCutcheon 306-668-4200, Saskatoon, SK. 70 COWS NEED to be wintered or possibility of calf share. Call 306-460-6430, Mayfair, SK.
Saskatoon, SK
(306) 665-6620 FIVE STAR FUTURITY Sale Yearling and Colt Sale, October 4, 2014 at 5:00 PM. Come see our consignment of 30 quality head of QH from MB/SK. Keystone Center, Brandon, MB. Purchases through this sale NOW PURCHASING AT Roy Leitch Liveare enrolled in the Five Star Futurity stock Co. Ltd. fat lambs, cull ewes/goats. Program which entitles them to come back 204-727-5021, 204-729-7791,Brandon, MB to barrel race in their futurity year for a chance at $5000. 204-886-7274, Brandon, MB. fivestarfuturity@gmail.com www.fivestarfuturity.com
www.dseriescanola.ca
SASK. SHEEP DEV. BOARD sole distributor of sheep ID tags in Sask., offers programs, marketing services and sheep/ ICR RANCHES is opening 10 spots for goat supplies. 306-933-5200, Saskatoon, training. If you want a solid foundation for SK. www.sksheep.com your colt or filly, then here it is. With 40+ years experience inside and out of the round pen, you can rest assure of a solid start on your colt. If you need one brought up through the ranks from the beginning, or you are just looking for a tune-up on an existing mount, then give us a call to get BUYING: PIGS/SWINE, raised outside, all in on a spot. Get in when while the spots sizes. Highest $$$. 1-877-226-1395. last, they will go quick. Located in Veteran, www.canadianheritagemeats.com AB. Call 403-740-6139, 403-575-0074. WWW.ELLIOTTCUTTINGHORSES.COM 35 plus years of training, showing, sales, clinics, lessons. Clifford and Sandra Elliott, Paynton, SK. Phone 306-895-2107. EXOTIC BIRD & SMALL ANIMAL SALE TRIM BOSS: The Power Hoof Trimmer. at Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, Take the work out of hoof trimming. Trim Sun., Oct. 26, 11 AM. Accepting peafowl, wall, sole and flare on saddle horses, guineas, bantams, ducks, geese, pigeons, drafts and minis. Call 780-898-3752, Buck birds, llamas, alpacas, hamsters, rabbits, Creek, AB. www.trimboss.ca ferrets, miniature horses, donkeys, etc. All small animals must be boxed and in yard before 10 AM. www.johnstoneauction.ca PL#914447, 306-693-4715. CHINESE RING-NECKED PHEASANTS, males, hunting, releasing, food consumption. Call 306-465-0001, Yellow Grass, SK.
E&L HARNESS SHOP. Custom built harness’ and harness parts. Nylon, Bio and Leather. For show and/or work. Shipping available. Write for a free catalogue to: 84512 Lucknow Line, RR#1 Dungannon, ON., N0M 1R0.
WANTED: CULL COWS and bulls for slaughter. For bookings call Kelly at Drake Meat Processors, 306-363-2117, ext. 111, Drake, SK. WANTED: BRED COWS. Would trade 1992 NH TR96, 2240 hrs., Ford motor, all new tires, field ready, $16,000. 306-863-4177, Star City, SK.
SHEEP AND GOAT SALE, Sat., Oct. 18, 1:00 PM, Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw. Accepting all classes of sheep and goats. Sheep ID tags and pre-booking mandatory. www.johnstoneauction.ca or call: 306-693-4715, PL#914447.
WINTER WATERING: FREEZE proof, motion eye, 24”/36” drain back bowl. Call toll free 1-888-731-8882, Lumsden, SK. Or visit: www.kellnsolar.com GREG’S WELDING: Freestanding 30’ 5 bar panels, all 2-7/8” drill stem construction, $440; 24’x5.5’ high panels, 2-7/8” pipe with 5- 1” sucker rods, $310; 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. FROSTFREE NOSEPUMPS: Energy free solution to livestock watering. No power required to heat or pump. Prevents contamination. Grants avail. 1-866-843-6744. www.frostfreenosepumps.com
WANT THE ORGANIC ADVANTAGE? Contact an organic Agrologist at Pro-Cert for info on organic farming: prospects, transition, barriers, benefits, certification and marketing. To contact one of our Agrologists call 306-382-1299, Saskatoon, SK. or wallace.hamm@pro-cert.org
WANTED: BUYING ORGANIC GRAINS. FOB farm or delivered, Loreburn, SK. Call F.W. Cobs Company, 1-888-531-4888. WANTED: ORGANIC, HEATED or FEED QUALITY FLAX, feed peas, soy beans, lentils, also milling and feed oats. Call: 204-379-2451, St. Claude, MB.
MORAND INDUSTRIES
S&S Delivery Service Ltd.
1800'S STYLE CONCORD Stagecoach. Ready to use! $8500 OBO. 403-605-8815, Longview, AB. waynescoach@gmail.com NEWLY BUILT HORSE drawn 12 passenger wagon, $3000; 1 set of new chrome mounted team harness, fits 1400-2000 lbs., $2000. 780-363-2216, Chipman, AB. THE LIVERY STABLE, for harness sales and repairs. Call 306-283-4580, 306-262-4580, Hwy #16 Borden Bridge, SK.
WANTED: THE COOEY Model 84 shotgun manufactured by the H.W. Cooey Machine & Arms Co., looking for 28 gauge single shot in good shape. 780-446-6009 eves, Ft. Saskatchewan, AB.
BEST COOKING PULSES accepting samples of organic and conventional pulses for 2014/2015 crop year. Matt 306-586-7111, Rowatt, SK. Builders of Quality Livestock Equipment, Made with Your Safety in Mind!
Available at:
40 YOUNG BRED COWS calving end of February, bred Red Angus, Angus base cows, $1800. Will keep until November 1. 306-728-1582, Melville, SK. HERD DISPERSAL: 130 cows, blacks and reds, mostly Angus cross, medium frame. Start calving April 1, $2350. 204-773-3838 Russell, MB. sdunn@wificountry.ca
Ph# 780-808-4064 clayton@e5showcase.com
CORRAL PANELS, WIND BREAKS, 30’ freestanding 5-bar panels - $435, 30’ freestanding 3-bar windbreak panels - $700, without lumber - $435. All come with chain to tie together and removable foot for easy transport. Delivery available. Call: 306-883-9952, Leoville, SK.
8 AQHA HORSES all from Zan Parr Bar; one 7 year old AQHA sorrel stud pasture breeder; also 7 broodmares, all young breeding ages. The Stallion is a grandson of Zan Parr Bar and the mares are all granddaughters of Zan Parr Bar, $2500 each or take the whole package for $15,000. A real ranchers herd to carry on these champion bloodlines. Exceptional roping and cow horses. You won't be disappointed. Downsizing and staying with some running Quarter Horses. Call 306-753-9110, 306-358-4803, Cactus Lake, SK. Or email: cjshorses@sasktel.net www.northernhorse.com (Soulman Hudson Wood).
PROSPECT STEER AND Heifer Bid Off Sale. 23 steers and 12 heifers sired by Man Among Boys, I-67, Amen and Walkie Talkie. Bids close Oct 18th, 8 PM (MST). Cattle will be avail for viewing Oct. 17-18 at Kipling SK. Check out Clark Club Calves Facebook Page for updates. Ken 306-736-7742, Kipling, SK. ryanclark@sasktel.net 30 BLACK AND RED Angus heifers for sale, bred Black Angus, $2500/each OBO. 306-281-8224, 306-493-2783, Delisle, SK. 3 0 C O W / C A L F PA I R S, yo u r c h o i c e $3000/pair or $2850/pair for all. Spiritwood, SK. 306-883-2468 or 780-891-7334. 500 RED AND BLACK ANGUS bred cows, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th calvers, available October 1st. 306-773-1049, Swift Current, SK.
For more info Contact Clayton Elliott
WANTED: 32 VOLT old style wind charger system. 306-747-2862, Holbein, SK., email paullriver@sasktel.net
AQUA THERM A pasture proven trough. Winter water problems? Solved! No electricity required. 3 sizes - 100, 200 and 525 ga l l o n . Ke l l n S o l a r, L u m s d e n , S K . 1-888-731-8882, www.kellnsolar.com
1-800-582-4037 www.morandindustries.com LOOKING FOR LOVE? Single? Meet the Matchmaker! In-person interviews October 20th to 24th in Regina and Saskatoon. 20 years successful matchmaking. Camelot Introductions, 204-888-1529 www.camelotintroductions.com
STEEL VIEW MFG. Self-standing panels, windbreaks, silage/hay bunks, feeder panels, sucker rod fence posts. Custom orders. Call Shane 306-493-2300, Delisle, SK. www.steelviewmfg.com
Call David Flundra for information on
Energy Free Livestock Watering Systems. Maple Creek, SK.
306.662.2449 403.502.4776 www.cattlecreekranch.ca 2011 NDE #2654 vertical MIX WAGON. Asking $55,000. Ph. Mike 306-469-7741, Big River, SK. CATTLE SCALES: 3’x8’ w/sliding doors, transport wheels, $3200, or $2800 w/o wheels; 8’x10’ group scale, $5200. Non certified. 204-871-1175, MacGregor, MB.
WANTED: CERTIFIED ORGANIC beef. Call Peter Lundgard, Nature’s Way Farm at 780-338-2934, Grimshaw, AB.
COUNTRY INTRODUCTIONS - Introducing you to down to earth people like yourself. Personal interviews. 1-877-247-4399.
JAYLOR TMR VERTICAL feed mixer, 875 cu. ft., used for only 3 yrs. Asking $29,000. Call 403-783-2947, Ponoka, AB. BELTING FOR SALE: 42-56” wide, 3/8” thick. Call Ken Wadelle 403-346-7178 or 403-392-7754, Red Deere, AB. 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. 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 2000 BALE PRO 7000, elec. curtain, used very little, always shedded, good cond., $4500. 306-367-4613, Pilger, SK.
1000-5800 GALLON LIVESTOCK trough WANTED: USED NIFTY feed dispenser. systems available. Call 306-253-4343 or 780-365-2175, Andrew, AB. 1-800-383-2228. While supplies last! www.hold-onindustries.com
EZE-FEEDER: Quality built grain feeders w/auger for range or bulk feeding. From 15 - 95 bu. Optional scales, 3 PTH frames, etc. 1-877-695-2532, www.ezefeeder.ca WWW.FUCHS.CA - For all your Agriculture and Livestock equip. needs. Stocking grain BROWN PULLETS, READY to lay, brown egg and silage bags. 306-762-2125, Vibank, SK BUY DIRECT: RIOMAX mineral tubs and layers. Available end of October, $9. Riogrande loose mineral. Low cost, with 306-435-3530, Moosomin, SK. PAYSEN LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT INC. consumption guarantee. Chelated mineral, We manufacture an extensive line of cattle cam@hutchfarms.ca handling and feeding equipment including 6 digestion tools, free delivery (3 ton minisqueeze chutes, adj. width alleys, crowd- mum). No dealers: buy direct! Rio Nutriing tubs, calf tip tables, maternity pens, tion, call 306-662-3559 ask for Daryl gates and panels, bale feeders, Bison or Jenny, Maple Creek, SK. Email: web: HART POULTRY FEEDING EQUIPMENT, equipment, Texas gates, steel water tlc@rionutrition.net drive units, motors, corner wheels, chain, troughs, rodeo equipment and garbage in- www.rionutrition.net winches, cables, SS scrapers, etc. Call cinerators. Distributors for El-Toro electric 204-346-4050, Kleefeld, MB. 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 ORDER NOW FOR fall delivery. Grain 30’ c/w skids, made of conveyor ATTENTION ELK PRODUCERS in AB. troughs, and pipe, $750/ea. 306-538-4685, and SK: Call AWAPCO today to market belting your elk. Not sure if you are eligible to 306-736-7146, Kennedy, SK. ship? Give us a call. We will help with the PORTABLE PANELS 30’ freestanding 3paperwork. Non-members welcome! For bar windbreak frames, 5-bar, 4-bar panels info 780-980-7589, info@wapitiriver.com w/wo double hinge gates and more. On BEST PRICES IN Central Canada for farm welding. Oxbow, SK., 306-485-8559 your slaughter elk. Up to $3.75/lb. for full STEEL FENCING & LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT. loads of well conditioned elk. Call Ian Freestanding panels, windbreaks, continu204-625-2498 or 204-867-0085. ous fencing, gates and panels. Portable and NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for stationary chutes, loading chutes, alleyover 15 years, is looking for Elk. “If you ways, tubs, portable handling systems and have them, we want them.” Make your fi- more. SK. dealer for RedRhino self-unloadnal call with Northfork for pricing! Guaran- ing hay trailers and HayMonster feeders. teed prompt payment! 514-643-4447, Call 306-227-4503, Saskatoon, SK., www.norheimranching.com Winnipeg, MB. 2003 BALE KING 3100 hay processor, right hand delivery, large tires, $8000 BUCKS FOR SALE. Commercial Kalahari OBO. Call 204-346-4050, Kleefeld, MB. and/or Boer cross bucks, $250-$300. Call NEW CONCEPT ROLLER mixmill, very good Marlis 306-872-4442, Naicam, SK. cond. Brian McCarthy, 306-435-3590 or 306-435-7527 (cell), Moosomin, SK. 2- LEON 425 manure spreaders for the price of one new one, good cond., $32,000 OBO for both. 306-432-4803, Lipton, SK.
HEARTLAND LIVESTOCK Prince Albert. Special pre-sorted Sheep and Goat Sale, PEARSON BISON SQUEEZE, like new, 30’ PORTABLE WINDBREAKS, asking Friday, Oct. 10 and Friday Nov. 7, 11 AM. $4000 OBO; Hi-Hog cattle or bison tub, $750; Also 30’ silage feed troughs, $650 $4500 OBO. Call 403-747-2500, Alix, AB. ea. Call Mike 306-469-7741, Big River, SK. For info. call Brennin at 306-981-2430.
SHAHAYLA SHILOH SHEPHERDS, gentle, intelligent, healthy, striving for better hips and health, ISSR Registered, $1550. 250-727-3595, Victoria, BC. anita@farmerbranko.com www.shahaylashilohs.com
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
CLASSIFIED ADS 71
FA LL B LO W O UT!!
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPS, ready to go. Phone Ed 306-272-3848, leave message if not in. Foam Lake, SK.
2013 – CJ3006 SR I Ho m e
HANGAR AT CORMAN Air Park. Storage hangar is 50'x60'. Utilities to the property line. On concrete slab, plumbed with infloor heat. For sale by owner, $150,000 WORKING KELPIE PUPS, born June 19. OBO. 306-539-8159, Saskatoon, SK. Vet checked, dewormed, first shots, work- andreak@sasktel.net ing parents. 306-334-2335, Balcarres, SK. FOR LEASE 22,000 sq. ft building- welding, 3 KUVASZ/PYRENEES PUPS, farm raised, sandblasting, mechanical, graveled yard. born April, 2014. 403-502-9470, Medicine Six miles from Port of Entry, Scobey, MT. Phone 306-267-4552. Hat, AB. MELVILLE, SK. INVESTMENT Opportunity. Historic building downtown. Approx., 13,250 sq.ft. on 2 levels. 5 suites upstairs, main level has 4 major tenants. Contact Brenda McLash at Realty Executives, PB AUSTRALIAN SHEPHERD PUPS, Moose Jaw, 306-630-5700. MLS# 508510. from working parents, tails will be docked. GRAVEL LAND IN RM REFORD #379: 780-853-2783, Vermilion, AB. 327 acres, 80 acres tested to have gravel, PYRENEES PUPS RAISED with sheep, born the remaining acres have not been tested August 26th, parents excellent guard dogs. with a possibility of having gravel. Included is a 2300 sq. ft. bungalow with a double Call 306-929-2205, Earl Grey, SK. attached garage and outbuildings. MLS® 486089. Call Wally Lorenz, Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800, North Battleford, SK. www.remaxbattlefords.com GREAT PYRENEES/AKBASH CROSS pups, born August 28, currently living with feeder lambs, both working parents, $200. Call Rick 306-845-2404, Livelong, SK.
USED MOTOROLA VHF 2-way radios, 1 year warranty, small, fully refurbished, $250. Also new Vertex radios, Antennas and radio repairs. Ph Glenn, Future Communications, Regina, SK. 306-949-3000. www.farmradios.ca
RV LOTS, FULLY SERVICED, Kootenay Lake, Nelson, BC, starting at $65,000. Visit www.balfourresort.com 1-877-352-9172.
WORKING FARM IN Paradise, 10 acres, ALR, duplex, set up for livestock, excellent water, on main highway, $599,000, dogma@bcsupernet.com 250-752-1703, Parksville, BC
OSOYOOS CONDO: 1,207 sq ft, $199,900. Agent/broker MLS 147216, 250-485-8081, www.osoyoosrealestatehomes.com BC GOLD LEASE, Cassiar. Historic, rugged, exciting canyon. Retiring. For sale or trade. Phone 306-267-4552.
3 Bedroom s,2 Baths $20,000.00 in Options!
BUNKHOUSE FOR SALE. 2 bdrm, 1 bath, kitchen and living room combined, built in 2013, new cabinets, pine finished walls. Call for price. 306-741-2204, Admiral, SK.
$ 1 24,9 0 0 .0 0 + G ST Don’t M iss Out!! CallToday!! 1-877-341-442 2 Red D eer
w w w .d yn a m icm od u la r.ca
MASTER STONE MASONRY. Custom fireplaces and stone masonry. Specialize in fieldstone and restorations. Willing to travel for work in rural areas. WETT Cert. Inspections. Ph 306-280-1845, Saskatoon, SK. Email: adam_kent@live.com RESTAURANT FOR SALE, 2872 sq. ft. fully licensed restaurant offering a full menu, Steak Pit, and seating for 54 people. Sale includes: Land, building, equipment and business. Second floor suite, 3 bedroom. Ideal for owner's use or rental revenue. For sale by: owner, $399,999. 306-929-4999, Candle Lake, SK. macjacs3@gmail.com
Introducing Western Canada’s newest Modular Housing dealership! We offer floor plans in all sizes from single section to multi-section. Several show homes available for immediate delivery! Our knowledgeable & reliable staff are ready to make your dream home. Call us today! 1.855.358.0808 112 - 39015 Hwy 2A Red Deer, AB www.westerncanadianmodular.com
1980 SHELTER MOBILE, 980 sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 14x70, to be moved from North of Prince Albert, SK. 6" walls, asphalt shingles, WARMAN HOMES CUSTOM built commernew windows, 100 amp. Fridge, stove, cial buildings, to your plan or ours. Call washer, dryer included, $30,000 OBO. Call 1-866-933-9595 or www.warmanhomes.ca N E W R T M H O M E : H o u s e # 1 3 3 o n 306-960-7052, Kigriffin77@gmail.com www.swansonbuilders.ca $185,000. Swanson Builders, near Saskatoon, SK. Contact 306-493-7027 or 306-493-3089. CABIN FOR SALE at Besnard Lake, SK, $169,000. For more info and pictures call TO BE MOVED: 660 sq. ft., 1 bdrm, 1 306-497-3307, Blaine Lake, SK. bath, new metal roof, new oak cupboards. Ideal cottage or starter home. 70 miles CEDAR LOG HOMES AND CABINS, sid- West of Swift Current, SK. 306-558-7133. ings, paneling, decking. Fir and Hemlock flooring, timbers, special orders. Rouck Bros., Lumby, BC. www.rouckbros.com LIKE AN ITALIAN VILLA AS PRIVATE HOME OR B&B. Great lakefront property, 1-800-960-3388. 130’ of water front at Metinoda Jackfish Lake, SK. .44 acre lot, 3366 sq. ft., fully developed walk-out, vaulted ceilings. Open floor plan, garden doors to sunroom. Large WARMAN HOMES LOTS for sale in Lang- master w/walk-in closet, 4 pc. ensuite and ham, SK. or Warman Legends or South- deck access. Lower level has 3 bdrms., full lands. www.warmanhomes.ca to view or bath. Double attached garage. Great yard, call 1-866-933-9595. $789,000. MLS #8503833. Call Wayne ROADHAVEN PROPERTY: 400 sq. ft. Apache Junction, 1 bdrm., 1 bath, property with WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to Hoffman to view, 306-441-1411. fully furnished park model (400 sq. ft.), go! Mt. Vanier, 1680 sq. ft. was $222,083. 8'x12' shed. Club Car electric golf cart with Sale price $215,363. Call 1-866-933-9595 2 yr. old batteries. Many extras! Ready to or go to www.warmanhomes.ca move in! For sale by owner! 780-837-0121, WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to BEST CANADIAN HOME built by Moduline. Falher, AB. go! Mt. Blanchard, 1296 sq. ft. was B e s t p r i c e s ! 1 5 2 0 s q . f t . Te m o r a , $191,285. Sale price $175,000. Call $99,900; 1200 sq ft Oasis/Villa, $79,900; MESA ARIZONA: 1997 Cavco park model 960 sq. ft. Tuscan, $69,900. Call Stan at w/Arizona room, carport, great cond. Rent 1-866-933-9595, www.warmanhomes.ca Ner-Ken 306-496-7538, Yorkton, SK. paid to April/2015. Very reasonable rent. WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to www.affordablehomesales.ca for Your Nice, clean 55+ park. $27,500 OBO USA. g o ! M t . R o b s o n , 1 4 4 3 s q . f t . w a s Affordable Home Sales. Call for info. 250-426-5118. $161,715. Sale price $155,943. Call 1-866-933-9595, www.warmanhomes.ca MEDALLION HOMES 1-800-249-3969 TIMESHARE VACATION for sale, Las Vegas TO BE MOVED at Macoun, SK., 3 bdrm Immediate delivery: New 16’ and 20’ 2 bedroom with full kitchen. Selling due to bungalow, 46x28’, with double garage, modular homes; Also used 14’ and 16’ health. 306-453-2958, Carlyle, SK. new roof, furnace, AC. Easy to move, on homes. Now available: Lake homes. cinder block basement, $25,000. Call Medallion Homes, 306-764-2121, Prince Albert, SK. 306-634-9957 or 250-258-9914.
BUILDING W ITH CO NFIDENCE!! M O N T A N A II
OSOYOOS, BC, SINGLE family spectacular 4 yr. old custom bungalow crowns 18.77 ac of premium, sub-dividable land overlooking Canada's warmest lake. 2424 sq. ft., 4 bdrm/2 bth home features premium craftsmanship and fixtures and includes jacuzzi ensuite, Miele appl. pkg., outdoor kitchen w/wood-burning pizza oven and built-in charcoal grill, choice furnishings, excellent water well (6.5 gpm), single garage. Just 4 km from town limits, property is bordered by miles of native ranch land. A wine, food, golf and nature-lover's paradise, and a rare and precious investment opportunity. For sale by owner, $1,150,000. 780-909-1282, Edmonton, AB.
• Up g r a d ed W in d o w s • Skylig hts • Gla s s B ea d B a cks p la s h • Sta in les s Steel Ap p lia n ces & M u ch M o r e!! In clu d es : D eliver y (w ithin 1 5 0 km ) In s u la ted Skir tin g 1 yr Fr ee Ho m eo w n er s In s u r a n ce.
• 1,455 sq. ft.• M ain floor laundry • Triple pane w indow s • Optionalfront veranda
W e Ca n Cu stom Bu ild To You r N eeds!
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
PARK MODEL FOR SALE: Yuma, AZ. Well maintained, furnished unit. Prime location, backing outside fence. Easy care landscape, large new wooden shed holds golf cart. Newer washer/dryer, central air and heat. Ph 780-998-2820, valmohr@aol.com PRIME HUNTING AREA. 1/2 section is surrounded by wildlife habitat, open during hunting season, good timber, bordered by secondary Hwy 685. Call 780-494-3649, 780-835-8063, Fairview, AB.
1.) DELUXE 6000 ACRE FARM: Grain and cattle. very good, productive area. Lots of water, very well developed yardsite, 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 Jarrett, Realty Executives Leading, 780-991-1180, Spruce Grove, AB. IVAN BRANDT, Maxwell Real Estate. Buy with Knowledge, Sell with Confidence. SPLIT PURCHASE AVAILABLE over 2 to All your Farm Needs 403-350-9603. 3 years on two sections, all cultivated grainland, Westlock, AB. area, 246,000 bushel aerated steel storage, 2 heated shops, machinery shed and more. Located FARMLAND FOR SALE, RM Last Mounon first class, well groomed yardsite. Call tain Valley #250, SW-1/4-34-25-23-W2M. Floyd, Realty Executives Polaris, Edmon- Send written offers to: Dean Kelln, Box ton, AB. 780-450-6300, cell 780-446-5237. 113, Duval, SK., S0G 1G0. Sale of the above mentioned land does not include 3.5 QUARTERS, TOMAHAWK, AB. area; 6 the 2014 crop. Bids close on Oct. 18, 2014. quarters grazing, Highvale, AB; plus Highest or any bid not necessarily accept14,000 acres. Cattle, bison and elk opera- ed. Call 306-725-7609, 306-725-3115. tions, fenced and cross fenced, Wabumun L a k e , w e s t o f E d m o n t o n , A B . RM SNIPE LAKE #259/258, Elrose, SK., 6 quarters, granaries, 668 cult., total acres 780-915-1735, roperrealtyltd@aol.com 941, 3 oilwells. Rental income from pasWATER PROBLEMS? ELIMINATE rust, ture and crop share year to year (tenant smell, bad taste, hardness, color, sodium has right of first refusal). MLS #512347. 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 Call Brenda McLash at Realty Executives MJ, 306-630-5700. 1-800-664-2561, www.thewaterclinic.com LARGE SW ALBERTA ranch, 10,000+ WANTED MINERAL RIGHTS producing acres, exc. improvements, lots of water, potash or petroleum mineral rights. chinook climate, good production area, 306-244-6721, 306-220-5409, Saskatoon. $6,250,000. 403-308-4200, Mossleigh, AB. LAND FOR SALE: Two quarters in the RM of Torch River #488. NE-18-53-15-W2, 9 QUARTERS OF crop and pasture land. NW-18-53-15-W2. Approx. 232 acres un1/2 mile South of Hardisty, Alberta Oiltank der cultivation. Closing date: Jan. 9, 2015. Farm, $9 million. 780-888-7152. For more info call 306-343-1091 or 306-230-0037. Please submit offers to WEST OF RED DEER/Innisfail, 382 acres of robert.lucas@usask.ca Highest or any ofbeautiful black dirt, $13,500 oil revenue, fer not necessarily accepted. asking $1.7 million. 587-679-6694. LAND FOR SALE in RM of Grass Lake #381, COUNTY VERMILION RIVER: 1593 sq. ft. 640 acres, 4 quarters: NW-12-37-23-W3; bungalow with 32x48’ shop on 148 acres, SW-12-37-23-W3; NE-23-37-23 W3; SE-23south of Kitscoty, AB. 5 bdrms., 3 bath- 37-23-W3. Good farmland, all seeded to rooms, 9’ ICF basement, oil revenue grain or grass. 403-536-8919 for info. $1,025,000. Video tour at www.mgtv.ca Tenders to be in by Oct. 10/14. Highest or MLS® 51426. Call Vern McClelland, any bid not necessarily accepted. Email jim.schultz@platinum.ca or mail to: Jim 306-821-0611, RE/MAX Lloydminster, AB. Schultz, Site 1, Box 17, RR 1, Millarville, AB. ID#1100232 LETHBRIDGE: Poultry farm T0L 1K0. with 36.13 acres of land. 2 barns with a total of 23,000 sq ft., and 2300 Units of RM BRATT’S LAKE #129, Half section Broiler Quota. Two shops, 2500 sq. ft. ex- prime Regina heavy clay located approx. ecutive home, garage, and mobile home. 1 4 m i l e s S o u t h o f R e g i n a , ID#2013 Fort Macleod: Irrigated hay E-1/2-22-14-20-W2. Asking $2500/acre. and crop farm, 320 acres west of Leth- Call Keith Bartlett 306-535-5707, Sutton bridge. Many buildings with hay storage, 2 Group Results Realty, Regina. shops, 2200 sq. ft. home, feedlot, cattle LAND FOR SALE: 3 quarters grainland in pens and dairy barn. ID#100161 Oyen: RM #276, Foam Lake, SK. SW-7-29-10 960 acres less than 10 minutes South of W2; SW-6-29-10 W2; SE-26-30-10 W2. Oyen. Yardsite is a subdivision of 8.3 acres Call for details 306-272-7038. and incl. house, garage, wood working shop and steel quonset. Property can be MINERAL RIGHTS. We will purchase and purchased as a unit or 8.3 acre yardsite o r l e a s e y o u r m i n e r a l r i g h t s . separately. ID#1100282 Rolling Hills: 1-877-269-9990. cndfree@telusplanet.net Crop farm, 5 quarters deeded and 3 quarters grazing lease! Great opportunity to 2,560 ACRES GOOD farmland, mostly in own a nice block of land including 634 one block w/nice yardsite, house, shop, acres of EID water rights, home, garage, sheds and 110,000 plus bushel bins on air shop, quonset, and irrigation equipment. and mostly hoppered. RM #101, 65 miles Approx. 1220 acres. ID#1100292 Leth- SW of Regina, or 40 miles SE of Moose bridge: Very nice property located just Jaw, 306-475-2521, Spring Valley, SK. outside Lethbridge city limits, 60 acres RM BAYNE #371, 9 quarters, house, quonwith 49 acres SMRID water rights, mature sets, granaries. Well treed yard along trees and landscaping. 3000 sq. ft. country pavement. With/without full line of newer home totally remodeled, garage and shop, machinery. Ph. 306-369-2861, Bruno, SK. second home is a mobile home with an addition. MLS®. Real Estate Centre , 160 ACRES ORGANIC land, 100 acres w w w. f a r m re a l e s t a t e . c o m o r c a l l cleared, house, outbuildings, $149,000. 306-547-3123, Preeceville, SK. 1-866-345-3414.
L A N E
R E A L TY
We Are Pleased To Announce The Following Recent Sales
SOLD ! STRASBOURG 158 acres - owned by Sophie Ann Sedgwick CUPAR 159 acres - owned by Tricia, Andrew & Robert Stewart REGINA 281 acres - owned by Estate of E.R. Mickleborough C/O Chris Mickleborough WALDRON 637 acres - owned by Sandra & Kelly Bilan DYSART 638 acres - owned by Donna Stein KIPLING 1,265 acres - owned by Debbie & Dwight Worley LACADENA 11,152 acres - owned by Lauren & Rick Silvester
116 REGIS TERED S A LES S O FA R IN 2014! TO IN C LU D E YO U R P R O P ER TY FO R S H O W IN G S
C A L L U S TO D A Y!
VA N CO U VER IS L A N D F A R M
Sa s ka tch e w a n ’s Fa rm & Ra n ch Sp e cia lis ts ™ W ITH OVER 3 0 YEARS IN THE BUSINESS!
Re tire in s tyle to the ce n tra l Is la n d n e a r N a n a im o . 35 Acre vie w pro pe rty with 2 ho m e s plu s a n e ighb o u r to fa rm the la n d fo r yo u ifyo u cho o s e . Che ck w w w.realtor.ca with M LS #37 9054. $1,275,000 D a vid H a ywa rd a t Co a s t Re a lty.co m 1-8 0 0 -779 -49 6 6
3 06 -56 9 -3 3 8 0
“N ow representing purchasers from across Canada, and overseas!”
To view full color fea ture s heets for a ll of our C U R R EN T L IS TIN G S a nd virtua l tours of s elected properties ,vis it our w ebs ite a t:
w w w.la nerea lty.com
One of the few places we can’t sell you. Yet. Find an agent in Western Canada.
remaxcommercial.ca Each office is independently owned and operated.
72 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
RM OF REDBERRY 435. What a property with an amazing 2600 sq. ft. home with a large loft area. Solar power. 457 acres w/205 acres farm organic, balance 242 acres natural bush and pasture. Home has in-floor heat provided from an outdoor wood heater w/propane for backup and wood burning cook stove. To the south of the home you overlook approx. a 300 acre lake. Double detached 24x38’ garage w/fully self-contained suite plus a shop work area. Quonset 48x51’ w/16’ walls, full in-floor heated cement floor. The home is all wood built with alot of hardwood, hickory cupboards and all cedar lined closets. Very well planned, sheltered yard and garden area. A well is the water supply, sewage is septic pump out. Just over an hour from Saskatoon, Prince Albert and North Battleford. Surrounded with good big game and bird hunting and several fishing lakes nearby. MLS ®511919. To view call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800, 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK.
FULL SECTION (MILESTONE), 640 acres near Regina. Sec 21-10-18-W2nd, $898,000 OBO. tussaholdings@hotmail.com LAKEFRONT ON TOBIN LAKE, 152 acres over 1300’ of lake frontage. Includes 72 acres of woods and 80 acres of good farmland. $650,000, will consider taking quality farmland on trade. Call 306-862-2833. LANGHAM FARMLAND Dwein Trask Realty Inc. Presentation of Offers will occur Thurs., Oct. 30, 2014. 12-1/2 quarters of productive farmland with Professional gravel studies completed on 5 quarters. Detailed packages avail. through Listing B r o ke r a g e . C h e c k d e t a i l s o n M L S ® 511910. For more info. call Dwein Trask 306-221-1035, Saskatoon, SK. R M O F L E A S K N O. 4 6 4 . W H AT A PROPERTY! 1334 acres all adjoining with 1148 acres cultivated, balance bush and slough. Medium rolling, stone free land. Fenced with treated and steel posts, 3 and 4 wires plus cross fences. Power, phone, two wells, pasture water. Main road access and 2 miles off Hwy #40. A farmer or ranchers dream. I think you need to act quickly on this one! MLS®510409. Call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the Battlefords, North Battleford, SK. 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512. Also desperately needing a ranch with buildings for 1000 cow/calf operation.
WWW.SASKLANDFORSALE.COM: RM of Three Lakes #400, SW 35-40-24-W2, 157.85 acres of hay/pasture with perimeter game fence and cross fenced. 1 mile CATTLE OPERATION, GREAT location, 13.5 west of Lucien Lake, SK. MLS® 512471, quarters. Yard works for cow/calf or feed- $199,900. As per seller’s instructions, all ers. Located 15 min from Yorkton, SK. Call offers will be presented on October 17, for details. 306-783-6368 2014 at 11:00 AM. Highest or any offer not necessarily accepted. For offer instructions and more property details please contact Ed Bobiash, RE/MAX Saskatoon, 306-280-2400, before October 17, 2014. RM OF ELDON: 1720 sq. ft. 1-3/4 storey house on 160 acres north of Maidstone,, SK. 5 bdrms, 2 bathrooms, 2 large shops, $750,000. Video tour at www.mgtv.ca MLS® 52034. Call Vern McClelland, 306-821-0611, RE/MAX Lloydminster, AB.
W A N TED
SP E CIAL IZIN G IN F AR M L AN D
Ca sh rent or bu y ha lf section of excellent fa rm la nd loca ted nea r Sa ska toon for the 2015 crop yea r. N eed a ccess to the la nd im m edia tely follow ing 2014 ha rv est. M u stbe w ithin 2 km s of a pa v ed highw a y. W illing to pa y top prices.
LAN D FO R S ALE
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
37 q u a rters n ea r K a yville 20 q u a rters n ea r E m p res s , AB 13.75 q u a rters n ea rT heo d o re 7 q u a rters n ea rAs s in ib o ia 7 q u a rters n ea r E d geley 7.75 q u a rters n ea r M iles toS nO e L D 4 q u a rters n ea r Co rn in g 5 q u a rters n ea r K ip lin g 5 q u a rters n ea r L u s ela n d 3 q u a rters n ea r F o a m L a ke 2 p a rtq u a rter n ea rW illo w Bu n ch 31 q u a rters n ea r Ro ckglen p lu s 21 cro w n lea s e QT RS 23 & 2 p t. q u a rters n ea r M a n ko ta p lu s 205 a cres Cro w n L ea s e 14 q u a rters n ea r Glen tw o rth 2 q u a rters n ea r Pa n gm a n SO L D 9 q u a rters n ea r Itu n a 12 & 1 p a rtq tr n ea rW illo w Bu n ch 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 6.5 q u a rters n ea r Glen a vo n 3 q u a rters n ea r Ogem a 7 q u a rters n ea rW eyb u rn 4 q u a rters n ea rW illo w Bu n ch 2 q u a rters n ea r Co rn in g SO L D 12 q u a rters n ea r M in to n
Plea se ca ll 306-550-4
ID#1100311 DINSMORE, FOR LEASE! 150 acres of land at $75/acre on the outskirts of Dinsmore (SW Saskatoon). Owner would prefer 5 year but may consider other lease options. The owner is licensed to sell real estate in the province of Alberta. MLS®. ID#1100312 Dinsmore: Approx. 14 acres with old yardsite, located on the outskirts of Dinsmore. This parcel is subject to subdivision approval from the RM of Milden #286 and subdivision completion. Seller is licensed to sell real estate in Alberta. ID#1100257 Osler: Modern Dairy farm near Saskatoon with 145 acres. 90 cow free stall barn with state of the art auto identifying double 10 milk parlor and an att. calf-heifer barn. 154.79 kg daily milk quota. 1614 sq. ft. home, and an insulated workshop. ID#1100237 Dinsmore: Quarter section of farmland located close to Dinsmore, in the RM Milden #286. Soil is sandy clay loam with #2 and #3 soil. ID#1100283 Carmichael: 70.5 acres of pasture of which much would be arable. Water not far below the surface, accessible by sand point well. ID#1100191 Rush Lake: Approx. 309.73 acres irrigated land. Valley pivots, natural gas, pumping unit, 3 phase power. Located 11 miles east of Swift Current and 5 miles south of Hwy #1 right along the Highfield Reservoir. www.farmrealestate.com Real Estate Centre, 1-866-345-3414.
Visit
w w w.s hep p a rd rea lty.ca
to view all ou rcu rren tlistin gs.
THIN KIN G O F S ELLIN G? Ha rry Sh eppa rd 306-530-8035 (Cell) 306-352-1866 (Office) em ail h a rry@ sh eppa rdrea lty.ca
RM OF SPIRITWOOD: What a property! 1532 sq. ft. family home on 319 acres of mainly heavy bush. Home heated w/hot water heat from wood outdoor heater, as well as hot water electric heat. Hickory cabinets, partially developed basement, attach dbl. garage, vaulted ceiling and 9’ walls. Exc. big game and good hunting and fishing nearby. Early possession available. MLS ®512549. To view call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800, 306-441-0512, North Battleford, SK.
Ha m m ond Rea lty - A cres ofExpertis e
KEV IN JA R R ET T
RM 371, 160 acres, renovated house w/dbl. att. garage, 40x60 heated shop, 4- 4000 bu. bins, $590,000. 306-469-1010, Bruno, SK.
L OOK IN G F OR L AN D w /A ggrega 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
S ellin g Fa rm s & Ra n ches fo r o ver 10 yea rs thro u gho u t S a s k a tchew a n , w ith m a n y n ew lis tin gs . To view listing brochures please visit:
S u tton G rou p - R esu lts R ealty R egin a, S K .
LAND FOR SALE BY TENDER: Farmland located in RM of Arm River, SK. described as: NW and NE-14-27-29-W2nd, approx. 320 acres. Located 1/2 mile off paved grid Power up to south boundary for full Cell306.441.415 2 | Fax 306.47 7 .1268 #653. Very little wasteland. Bare land with Em ail Ke vin .Ja rre tt@ H a m m o n d R e a lty.ca mile. a large dugout/borough pit. Please submit tenders in writing, with a certified cheque for 5% of the tendered offer to: Dellene Church Law Office Inc., Box 724, 200 Garfield St., Davidson, SK. S0G 1A0. Tenders ACCEPTING OFFERS: RM of 337, W-1/2 will be accepted until 4PM, Oct. 31, 2014. -29-35-13-W2. 230 cult. acres, includes 30 Highest or any tender not necessarily aca c r e s o f t a m e h ay, t wo s t e e l b i n s . cepted. For further information contact 306-338-2710, leave mgs, Hendon, SK. 306-567-5554 or dsclaw@sasktel.net
w w w .h a m m o n d re a lty.ca C A LL M E T O D A Y!
GOT OIL?
960 ACRES, 20 min NE of Regina on highway. Complete infrastructure for grain, livestock or mixed. May consider separate purchase of home quarter. Brian Tiefenbach 306-536-3269, 306-525-3344 at Colliers International, 2505 11th Ave., Suite 200, Regina, SK. www.collierscanada.com
Free property evaluation for mineral rights owners. Top royalties paid on suitable drilling locations.
6 AND 7 quarters of land for sale. 1 hr SE of Saskatoon, SK. Seller will rent back at 5% return. For more info ph 306-221-2208
Have your land co-ordinates available.
GRAIN LAND TO RENT, 25 mile radius of Rouleau, SK. Call 306-776-2600 or email: kraussacres@sasktel.net
Call 403-291-0005 Toll Free 1-877-784-9696 www.briskenergy.com Licensed Operator
Leading by Experience
:$17('
NEED A TAX BREAK? Hudson Bay, SK. Leaf Lake area: 3 adjoining quarters, prime hunting, marketable timber and peat. NE, NW, SE-06-46-01-W2. Call 250-427-6036. SOLD! DWEIN TRASK Realty Inc., 7 quarters prime farmland in RM of Perdue #346. 869 cult. acres w/total FMV assessment of 517100. Call Dwein 306-221-1035
SASKATCHEWAN FARMLAND
7HG &DZNZHOO
Ted Cawkwell
Agriculture Specialist
BLUE CHIP REALTY
1-306-327-7661 www.tedcawkwell.com
RM of GULL LAKE #139: 160 acres with beautiful cedar log home, service buildings, oil leases. John Cave, Edge Realty, 306-773-7379. www.farmsask.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.
LUSELAN D AR EA... 100 Qua rte rs Gra in la n d for Sa le .
ESTATE O F ETH EL FO R D SW 26-12-26 W 3M
Located in R.M .ofM aple Creek No.111 on Highw ay 21 8 m iles North ofM aple Creek O lder residence: 3 bedroom s, 1 bath, pow er, natural gas, w ell & septic system , high efficiency furnace, AC, sunroom and deck,outbuildings - 40’x 50’ m etal Q uonset and 30’ x 32’ barn included.2200 bu W esteelgranary not included. 2 gas w ells $3,815/yr. Cultivated acres: 33 total acres: 159. 20 14 ag land assessm ent $30,300.00.Fenced pasture 2.5 m iles. Allproperty sold as is. Contact Gary Ford 306-662-3330/ 306-662-7502 or Sharon Ritchie 204-785-3202 for further inform ation and inspection The follow ing conditions apply to the sale: 1. Alltenders together w ith a cheque for 5.0% ofthe am ounttendered m ustbe subm itted to the undersigned on or before 4:00 pm , O ctober 17,2014. 2. Highestor any tender w illnot necessarily be accepted. 3. Bidders m ustrely on their ow n research ofthe property w hich is sold as is and any bidder desiring a new er inspection m ay arrange for said inspection w ith Gary Ford or Sharon Ritchie. 4. Cheques ofunsuccessfulbidders w illbe returned. 5. HighestBidders w illnotbe called together to finally dispose ofthe land. 6. Bidders w illbe expected to conclude transaction w ithin 30 days ofnotification ofacceptance of tender. 7. Sale conditionalupon approvalof Public Guardian and Trustee’s O ffice. 8. Bids m ustbe unconditional. 9. Surface lease fees w illnotbe adjusted to date ofpossession. Purchaser shallreceive 100% of paym ents due after closing.
M acBean Tessem Barristers and Solicitors Box 550 Sw ift Current,SK S9H 3W 4 ATTENTIO N: Jakob D.W iebe Telephone: (306) 773-9343
RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure membrane system; 2000 gal./day. No more bottled water.The Water Clinic, FARMLAND FOR SALE BY TENDER: RM www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. of Prairiedale #321. Section 27-32-25-W3, FARMLAND FOR SALE by tender: 258 acres, W1/2-22-32-25-W3, SE-35-32-25-W3, RM Snipe Lake #259, SE-29-25-20-W3RD, W1/2-11-33-25-W3. Land can be sold all plus/minus 103 acres; and SW-29-25-20- or in part. Located in Major/Smiley, SK. W3RD, plus/minus 155 acres. Tenders must area. Tenders to be submitted in writing be received on or before Oct. 30th, 2014. on or before Nov. 1, 2014. Highest or any Highest or any tender not necessarily tender not necessarily accepted. Submit accepted. Submit written tenders: Roydelle tenders: Don Spichko, Box 766, Kerrobert, Farm, c/o 209-101 Franko Drive, Yorkton, SK. S0L 1R0. Call 306-834-7877 or email for more info. at dspichko@gmail.com SK. S3N 3V4. roydellefarm@gmail.com REAL ESTATE: This property will be offered by timed Online Internet Auction running from October 22nd-29th. 11 parcels in the RM of Monet 257 including a subdivided yardsite complete with a remodeled home and recent insulated shop; 1 parcel includes 2 quarters in the RM of Montrose 315. The purchaser may have the opportunity to apply to lease or purchase 2 more quarters from the crown; 2 parcels in the RM of Lacadena 228 featuring pasture and cultivated land. Please see terms and conditions on the Real Estate Website. See real estate website for complete details: www.kramerauction.com or call 1-800-529-9958. PL#914618.
VAL MARIE RANCH: 3360 acres with full set of buildings. Can run 250 pairs and put up your own feed. Very good ranch! Call John Cave, Edge Realty, 306-773-7379, www.farmsask.com
C a ll Jim o r S h e rry to d a y
3 06 -46 3 -6 6 6 7
o r e m a il fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n
re m a xkin de rs le y@ s a s kte l.n e t ®G
ro up W e s tR e a lty Kin d e rs le y, S K
w w w .kin d e rs le yre a le s ta te .co m
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
FARM LAND FOR SALE BY TENDER in the Rural Municipality of North Norfolk, SW-1/4-22-12-10-WPM, Exc Ely 704 feet of WLY 1879 feet of SLY 715 feet. Tenders must be for the entirety of the land described above, and all buildings attached thereto. Sealed Tenders to Purchase the land will be received by: Greenberg & Greenberg, Box 157, Portage la Prairie, MB, R1N 3B2 until 4:30 PM, December 2, 2014. Terms of Tender are as follows: 1. Each Tender shall be in writing and in a sealed envelope, plainly marked as to its contents and shall be submitted, with a certified cheque payable to Greenberg & Greenberg, In Trust, in an amount equal to 10% of the tender price. 2. If the Tender is accepted, the certified cheque shall become a non-refundable deposit. If the Tenderer fails to complete the purchase of the property the Seller shall retain the deposit as liquidated damages. On December 3, 2014 unsuccessful Tenderers will have their certified cheque returned to them by regular mail. 3. The balance of the purchase price shall be paid by cash, certified cheque, or lawyer’s trust cheque and trust conditions on February 2, 2015 (the Closing Date). 4. Vacant possession will be provided on Closing Date. 5. The Buyers will pay the 2015 taxes. 6. The Vendors will pay all the property taxes and penalties relating to taxes accruing to Dec. 31, 2014. 7. The Tenderer will pay the applicable Goods and Services Tax or provide an acceptable undertaking to self-assess. 8. Time is to be of the essence in submission of tender and closing of sale. 9. Highest or any tender will not necessarily be accepted. 10. The Purchasers rely entirely on their own knowledge and inspection of the property independent of any representations made by or on behalf of the owners. For further particulars and inspection contact: John A. Jones, Greenberg & Greenberg, Box 157, Portage la Prairie, MB, R1N 3B2. Ph. 204-857-6878. 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.
Regan Martens
306-5 84 -364 0 in fo @ m a xcro p.ca
Farmland Specialist
CALL
PU RCH ASIN G FARM LAN D w w w .m a xcro p.ca
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.
FEEDLOT AND RANCH OPERATION, 3000 head capacity, 6 deeded quarters, 8064 acres leased, house, shop, 60,000 bu. grain storage, equipment, 1400 Angus cows, $2,100,000. Neil Fraser, Rolling River Realty 204-573-5137, Ste Rose du Lac, MB., http://neilfraser.point2agent.com/
Forw ard bids and inquires to:
Q u ick Closu re – N o Com m ission
“An Expert in the Field”
A solid understanding of Saskatchewan agricultural business built from years of farming and Ag. Industry involvement. Strong work ethic and exceptional customer service. Database of qualified buyers-both investors and local buyers. Multi-time award winner. Currently the #11 RE/MAX Commercial Realtor Worldwide.
890
LAN D FO R SALE BY TEN D ER
Former Carlea Dehy Site - 3 phase, NG, 60x100 shop, 20 car rail spur on site, 1.4 M bu flat storage ............. $1,199,000 RM Torch River - 641 ac Titled, 544 Cult ...................................... $499,000 RM Bjorkdale - 292 ac Titled with 1668 sq ft Home .........................$349,900 RM Bjorkdale - 158 ac Titled with 1064 sq ft Home .........................$299,900 RM Torch River - 159 ac Titled ideal Hunting Location! ...........$109,000
306-852-7998
TISDALE AGENCIES
Regan.Martens@century21.ca www.TC21.ca
Saskatchewan’s Ag Real Estate Professionals. Dave Molberg
Grant Anderson
Kevin Jarrett
Tim Hammond
(306) 948-4478
(306) 831-9214
(306) 441-4152
(306) 948-5052
Rosetown
North Battleford
Broker
Biggar
Acres of Expertise.
HammondRealty.ca
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
CLASSIFIED ADS 73
PASTURE SPACE FOR 300 pair, available 2011 ARGO, 750 EFI Avenger, 8 wheel for 2015 season. Could be split into 100 with tracks, roll bar, winch, 600 kms, and 200 head groups. Located in SW MB. $16,900. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. Ken 204-568-4651, Miniota, MB.
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 $550,000. Cliff Martens, Delta Real Estate, 204-346-4117, Steinbach, MB.
RM OF CHESTERFIELD, 7.95 acres with 1060 sq.ft. bungalow, 30x50 quonset, double heated garage, barn, nat. gas., asking $329,000. Contact Brad Edgerton at Edge Realty, 306-463-7357, www.edgerealty.ca
10 ACRES, power, well, well sheltered, 1-1/2 miles off highway near Rosthern, SK. Call for info 306-933-3359.
RUSSELL, MB: 1/2 section of farmland, 230 arable acres, Class B Soil. Two dwellings, one is a 1912 restored Eaton’s farm house which is very active B&B for past 10 years. Various outbuildings. Farm equipment is incl. Karen Goraluk, Salesperson, 204-773-6797, north-star.ca NorthStar Insurance & Real Estate.
2014 WINDSPORT 32A, Class A gas, 6.8L Triton V10, rear queen slide out, sleeps 7, 2 slides, pantry, rear mega storage. Stk#4255. Wow! $98,800. Shop 24/7 at allandale.com 1-866-346-3148. 2012 COUGAR 318SAB Polar Plus 5th wheel, 34.5’, 3 slides, all extras, like new, extended warranty, $35,000. Gladstone, MB., 204-385-2764.
2003 BEAVER MONTEREY, 38’, 2 slides, 350 Cummins, 41,200 miles, Aqua hot heating, always shedded, NS and NP, GOLF CART SHEDS, 6.5x8.5x.6.5’ high, $7,5000 OBO. 780-853-7911 Vermilion, AB vent system, lockable heavy duty doors. Contact 306-253-4343 or 1-800-383-2228 www.hold-onindustries.com
(306) 336-2260 www.dseriescanola.ca RECREATION LAND bordering the beautiful Duck Mountain Provincial Park. SE-7-31-22W, 161 acres and South 1/2 of SW-7-31-22W, 80.5 acres. RM Ethelbert, secluded treed property. Wildlife often seen on property. 170 acres bush, poplar/ spruce, and 70 acres cult. For more info call Darin McKay at 204-734-8757, view website www.mckay2000.com McKay Real Estate & Auction Co., Swan River, MB.
PASTURE LAND FOR Rent: 18 sections on Sweetgrass reserve. Approx. 30 kms. West of the Battlefords off Hwy 40. For more info call Juliette Fineday at 306-937-3611 or Chief Lori Whitecalf at 306-937-2990.
during those long winter months. Great Winter Rates are offered for short or long term. Rentals $900.00/mth & up. 1 and 2 bdrm Suites available. Within walking distance to town. Indoor Pool, Hot tub, Fitness Room, Aquatic classes and Social Events. Free WIFI & Local Calling!
GrainEx International Ltd. WANTED
LENTILS, CANARY AND CHICK PEAS.
info@coastosoyoosresort.com CHOOSE THE OSOYOOS HOTEL LINK FOR MORE PICS!
www.coasthotels.com
Call GrainEx International Ltd. for current pricing at 306-885-2288, Sedley SK. Visit us on our website at: www.grainex.net
250.495.6525 Osoyoos, BC 39 ACRES, 25 acres flood irrigation, 1 mile West of Maple Creek, SK on Hwy. #271. Ranch style home, 12 yrs. old. Landscaped yard, well treed. 34’x112’ metal clad shop/storage, lined and insulated, corrals, 2 metal clad cattle sheds, 24’x30’ metal clad building, 20’x28’ metal clad hip roof barn. Call 306-662-5048. 2005 MONACO CAYMAN 34PDD, 35’, 5.9 KRYDOR FARM/ ACREAGE. 160 acres Cummins, 300 HP, 21,500 miles, auto, pasture, hay, 70 cult. Exc. horse set up, 6 satellite, air over hyd. brakes, 5.5 KW paddocks, boxstall barn, nice 1300 sq. ft. Onan dsl. gen.- 148 hrs, exc. cond., 2 bungalow, garage, outbuildings, MLS slides, $75,000. More photos on our web®508493, $375,000. Don Dyck, Re/Max site www.can-amtruck.com Can-Am Truck Export Ltd 1-800-938-3323. DL #910420. North Country, 306-221-1684, Warman SK
2014 CHALLENGER 37GT, used 4 times! Full size fridge, dual sink bath! Queen bed, drop down bunk, 3 slides, power awning, 3 TVs! Stk#8327. Priced to move $124,900. Shop 24/7 allandale.com 1-866-346-3148.
2015 TUSCANY 45AT, 450 HP Cummins dsl., 15000 lb. tow, King bed, 1.5 baths, washer/dryer, 3 slides, loaded! MSRP $394,471, our price $299,900. Stk#1583. Shop 24/7 allandale.com 1-866-346-3148.
2014 SIESTA SPRINTER 24ST, MercedesBenz, 188 HP BlueTec turbo dsl., queen & 2 twins, SS sink/fridge, keyless entry, Reg. APARTMENTS FOR RENT, Langham, SK. $120,000, now $99,900. Stk#1775. Shop One bedrooms. Quiet, close to schools. 24/7 at allandale.com or 1-866-346-3148. Contact Maria 306-371-1488.
Available at:
Lipton, SK
STAY IN Canada’s Desert
2006 MONTANA 3400RL, 4 slides w/rollup awnings, solar panel, queen, loaded; 2007 GMC Duramax ext. cab, Sierra 2500 SLT, loaded, 237,000 kms, roll-on lock box cover. 403-854-0583, Medicine Hat, AB.
10 ACRES. 2000 sq. ft. 2 storey modular home, 11 yrs. old, located 15 mins west of Moose Jaw, SK. All set up for horses, 7 horse box stalls in barn, corrals, elec. high tensile fence, round pen, quonset and 5 outbuildings, $400,000. Ph 306-631-3307.
Blair’s Fertilizer Ltd.
D
Welcome 612:
%, 5
A P E A C E O F PA R A D I S E I N L A K E COUNTRY, 80 acre parcel north of Saskatoon, SK. East half of SW-2-49-9-W3, RM #496, two miles to Big Shell Lake, mostly treed, near power. Can be subdivided, $350,000. 306-427-2024, 306-883-8082 DYCK ENTERPRISES LTD. For Sale by or 306-883-8089. owner. 11,500 acre mixed farm and ranch located 50 miles from Ste Rose du Lac, WINGARD FERRY - 8.5 acres overlooking 7000 acres cleared, 8960 acres fenced, North SK River (part of SW-12-46-4-W3), 3000 acres cropland, 4000 acres hay and on good road with services adjacent, pasture. 65,000 bu grain storage, 2 mod- $27,500 OBO; Also adjacent 110 acre plus ern homes, 1 shop, 1 cattle shelter, 28 pen possible 80 acre (1 mile) riverfront lease. feedlot, 3 wells, 40 dugouts. Call Gordon, Phone: 306-382-9024. 204-656-5000, Waterhen, MB. Email: dyckenterprises@hotmail.com
DAIRY FARM IN Central Manitoba, part of dairy country. 160 acres (105 workable), approx. 1900 sq. ft. house, recently renovated. Freestall 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.
TOP QUALITY CERTIFIED alfalfa and grass seed. Call Gary or Janice Waterhouse 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK.
'6
EXCELLENT CATTLE RANCH, along Lake Manitoba, (Toutes Aides), 4563 acres in one block, consisting of 1315 acres deeded, 3248 acres Crown Lease, supports up to 400 cow/calf pair, all fenced, modern 3+1 bdrm house plus 1997 mobile home, 80’x60’ pole shed with workshop 40’x28’, 42’x28’ ins. barn, corrals, shelters, etc. w w w. c e n t u r y 2 1 m a c m i l l a n . c o m 204-638-7947, Dauphin, MB.
ACREAGE FOR SALE BY TENDER, Reston, MB. century21westman.com Sales Agent Dallas Watt. Part of SE-21-7-27, Title #2448102, 20.07 acres. Located along Pipestone Creek with 2200 sq. ft. renovated character home, 3+ bdrms, sunroom and deck. Incl. 40’x40’ steel shed, gazebo, plus lush lawns and trees. Take a boat ride up the creek and enjoy beautiful scenery, wildlife and nature. For tender details please see www.century21.ca/dallas.watt or contact Dallas Watt 204-748-7251, 2015 MIRAMAR FORD 6.8L, V10 362 HP, email dalwatt@rfnow.com Class A gas, queen, sleeps 8, 2 slides, kitchen! Mega storage, Bluetooth RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure fabulous system! Skt#1533, $117,900. Shop membrane system; 2000 gal./day. No radio 24/7 allandale.com 1-866-346-3148. more water softeners. The Water Clinic, www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561. 2005 FLEETWOOD, 3 slides, loaded, diesel RM OF GREAT BEND No. 405 - What a pusher, Cat 330 PHP, 39’, fully serviced. property! 124 acres located approx. 1.5 306-779-1204, denis@beauchesneco.com miles West of Borden, SK., right beside Hwy. 16, 1366 sq. ft. 2 bdrm. home with 2005 37’ WINNEBEGO MOTORHOME, Vorfamily room and nat. gas fireplace, partial tec motor 8.1, propane and elec. heat, air basement w/extra bedroom and shower. front and back, 2 TV’s, 3 slides, washer and Metal clad shop 36x48x16’ door. Very well dryer, built-in vacuum. 306-577-2506, sheltered yard, good cattle corrals and Kenosee Lake, SK. shelter, 2 water bowls and more! For more information or to view call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the Battlefords, 306-446-8800 2008 40’ DAMON Tuscany 4072, includes or 306-441-0512. MLS® 514111. all extras available. 4 slides, 360 turbo 120 ACRE (3 legal 40 acre titles). 10 min- Cummins, 77,000 kms, $135,000. Call Bill utes NW of Regina, SK. Shop, services and Russell 306-242-7188, Clavet, SK. road in. Hold, build, develop 306-731-2311
ROSETOWN, SK. DWEIN Trask Realty Inc. 2080 acres quality pastureland, 14 miles north of Rosetown, just off #4 highway. All quarters touching with good 4 wire fence, 5 dugouts and very good steel catch corrals. Lots of grass and ready for the FOR SALE BY OWNER. Excellent $ value 2015 season. Call Dwein: 306-221-1035. for new farmer or farm relocate. No zoning DWEIN TRASK REALTY INC. RM of Perdue in effect. Any type of farm allowed. Taxes SE-26-35-12-W3 pasture c/w spring and $500/yr. 617 acres, approx. 144 workable, some bush, $74,900. 2 south and 2 west of plus more to clear, clay soil. All new buildPerdue. Quarter next could be available as ings, garage#1 50x32 heated, garage#2 16x32, implement shed 48x24, barn well. Call Dwein at 306-221-1035. 50x28, boiler shed 16x16, new 1984 sq. ft. SALE BY TENDER: Block of 6 quarters, pas- bungalow w/3 bdrms, 2 baths, AC, extras, ture/recreation land. W-1/2-19-49-15-W2 $997,000. $18,000 solar income 2013. and 24-49-16-W2. Fenced, three dugouts, 705-338-1074, Smooth Rock Falls, ON. one bored well, handling facilities, close to Codette Lake. Prefer to sell as unit, but will consider other offers. Tenders close Oct. 31, 2014. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. 306-862-3640, Merle and Iris Lokken, Codette, SK.
WANTED
PREMIUM QUALITY YELLOW PEAS
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.
AGT FOODS Saskcan Parent
WOOD-MIZER PORTABLE SAWMILLS, eight models, options and accessories. 1-877-866-0667. www.woodmizer.ca
Tel: 204-737-3002 Cel: 204-324-4058 Buying from all Prairie Farms
ELIAS SCALES MFG., several different ways to weigh bales and livestock; Platform scales for industrial use as well, nonelectric, no balances or cables (no weigh like it). Shipping arranged. 306-445-2111, North Battleford, SK. www.eliasscales.com N E W ! P O RTA B L E T R U C K S C A L E S , $19,900. Save time and money by weighing on the farm. Accurately weigh inputs and avoid overweight fines. See your nearest Flaman location or 1-888-435-2626.
WANTED: LOW GRADE Mustard, upgrade low grade mustard, custom color sorting. 306-638-2282, Chamberlain, SK. BESCO GRAIN LTD. Buyer of all varieties of mustard. Call for competitive pricing. Call 204-736-3570, Brunkild, MB.
Schluter & Maack ALW AY S BUY IN G :
LIKE TO TRY CITY LIFE? Two bedroom furnished condo for rent Jan. to Mar. Reasonable rate. Non-smokers. 204-899-0365, Winnipeg, MB. marjcmoore@gmail.com
YELLOW & BROWN MUSTARD All grades including SAMPLE Grade.
ALS O BUY IN G : Green Lentils - Lairds & Richleas Green Peas - Up to 25% Bleach Yellow Peas - 2OB Red lentils - All Grades
FOR RENT: PARK Model on East wall of 5 star Sun Vista RV Park, Yuma, AZ. Desert and mountain view. Modern decor. Reverse Osmosis, private deck, HD tv with Canadian dish and US cable. Available Oct 1 - Dec. 31, 2014. $1100/month or 3 months for $3000. Call 306-554-7976.
1-306-771-4987
PANORAMA, BC Private chalet, sleeps 12 bring family and friends for skiing or golfing. 780-853-0653, eva@kenilworth.ca GRAND CAYMEN ISLAND, Morritts Turtuga Club, 1 bdrm. March 8th to 15th, 2015, sleeps 4. Call Rob 306-630-9838. YUMA, ARIZONA: 38’ fifth wheel for rent. Includes utilities plus Arizona room on 2 acres of land across from Yuma Lakes RV Park. Available Nov. and Dec., 2014. Rent $750/month. Ph. 306-867-9199 or email conrad.nadeau@sasktel.net Outlook, SK.
Download the free app today Up-to-date news, weather, classifieds and more.
TOP QUALITY ALFALFA, variety of grasses and custom blends, farmer to farmer. Gary Waterhouse 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK.
2 R ow AOG M a ltContra cts Now Ava ila b le M a lt B a rley/ Feed G ra in s / P u ls es best price/best delivery/best payment
Licen s ed & bon d ed 1- 800- 2 58- 7434 ro ger@ seed - ex.co m
CERTIFIED MOATS, 97% germ, 92% vigor, no fusarium. Call Myles at Fox Family Farm 306-648-8337, Gravelbourg, SK. REG. AND CERT. CDC Moats, CDC Buteo, XPELLER PRESSING Looking for SoyRed Winter Wheat. Call 306-472-7824, beans, as well as Heated Canola and Flax. Prompt payment as well as prompt on Palmier Seed Farms, Lafleche, SK. farm pickup! Call, text or email Darcy for CERT. MOATS WINTER WHEAT. Mercer your quote xpellerpressing@gmail.com Seeds Ltd. 403-308-2297, Lethbridge, AB. 403-894-4394.
MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. 2013 KUBOTA RTV 1100, CAHR, approx. Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: 200 hrs., always shedded, one owner, www.maverickconstruction.ca $16,500. 306-469-2235, Big River, SK.
Saskatchewan’s Ag Real Estate Professionals. Morley Forsyth
Alex Morrow
Guy Shepherd
Wade Berlinic
(306) 741-2393
(306) 434-8780
(306) 434-8857
(306) 641-4667
Swift Current
Fort Qu’Appelle
Moosomin
Yorkton
HammondRealty.ca
Acres of Expertise.
74 CLASSIFIED ADS
M illiga n B iofu e ls W AN TS YOU R CAN OL A
W e a re b uyin g a ll gra de s of ca n ola . #1, 2, a n d 3 a s w e ll a s h e a te d, gre e n , tough . Top p rice s , fre igh t op tion s , de live ry con tra cts , p rom p t p a ym e n t. Bon de d a n d in s ure d.
1-866-388-6284
w w w .m illiga n biofu e ls .c om
LET U S M A N A G E Y O U R C A N O LA
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
WE BUY DAMAGED GRAIN 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 TOP PRICES PAID FOR FEED BARLEY, WHEAT, OATS, RYE, TRITICALE, PEAS, LENTILS, HEATED OIL SEEDS Priced at your b in.
PEARMAN GRAIN LTD. Saskatoon
306-374-1968 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.
500+ACRES GREEN FEED Barley Standing For Sale, to be cut and baled, in Sedley SK. Price negotiable. For more information phone 306-536-8563, 306-536-8563, hollerdb@gmail.com
LACKAWANNA PRODUCTS CORP. BuyNORTH EAST PRAIRIE GRAIN, broker- ers and sellers of all types of feed grain age and consulting. Get more for your and grain by-products. Call 306-862-2723, grain. Devon at: 306-873-3551 for no obli- Nipawin, SK. gation price quote! neprairiegrain.com 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.
L O O K IN G FO R A L L TYP ES O F GRA IN S P a yin g top d olla r. Bookin g n ew crop.
1 -85 5 -75 2-0 1 1 6
w w w .ca ctu sco m m o d ity.co m
WANTED: FEED GRAIN, barley, wheat, peas, green or damaged canola. Phone Gary 306-823-4493, Neilburg, SK. 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 403-317-1365.
NOW B UYIN G O ATS! P AUL M O W ER 4 03 - 3 04 - 1 4 9 6
%8<,1* )((' *5$,1
M USGRAVE ENTERPRISES Ph : 204.8 3 5.2527 Fa x: 204.8 3 5.2712
AL L GRAD ES Com petitive Ra tes P ro m pt P a ym en t
EAGLE COM M ODITIES
O F F ICE
S OARIN G TO N EW HEIGHTS
4 03 - 54 6 - 006 0
Bu yers o f co n ven tio n a l a n d o rga n ic gra d es o f len tils , pea s , m u s ta rd , w hea t, b a rley, o a ts , rye, ca n o la , fla x, etc.
L IN D EN ,AL BER TA
CAN AD A WANTED FEED BARLEY- Buffalo Plains Cattle Company is looking to purchase barley. For pricing and delivery dates, call Kristen 306-631-8769, Bethune, SK.
HEATED CANOLA WANTED â&#x20AC;˘ GREEN â&#x20AC;˘ HEATED â&#x20AC;˘ SPRING THRASHED
LIGHT/TOUGH FEEDGRAINS â&#x20AC;˘ OATS â&#x20AC;˘ BARLEY
â&#x20AC;˘ WHEAT â&#x20AC;˘ PEAS
DAMAGED FLAX/PEAS â&#x20AC;˘ HEATED
*5$,1
BUYIN G HEATED OATS
â&#x20AC;˘ DISEASED
GREEN CANOLA â&#x20AC;˘ FROZEN â&#x20AC;˘ HAILED â&#x20AC;&#x153;ON FARM PICKUPâ&#x20AC;?
:H DUH D IXOO VHUYLFH IHHG JUDLQ LQJUHGLHQW VXSSOLHU LQFOXGLQJ PHUFKDQGLVLQJ GLVWULEXWLRQ DGPLQLVWUDWLRQ
WESTCAN FEED & GRAIN
&*& OLFHQVHG DQG ERQGHG
Westcanfeedandgrain.com
www.jglgrain.com 877-907-1517 e:info@jglgrain.com 720 Duchess St - Saskatoon, SK 306-374-1517
TRADE AND EXPORT Canada buying all grades of conventional and organic grains. Fast payment and pick up 1-877-339-1959 WANTED: OFF-GRADE PULSES, oilseeds and cereals. All organic cereals and specialty crops. Prairie Wide Grain, Saskatoon, SK., 306-230-8101, 306-716-2297.
1-877-250-5252
C a ll for your on fa rm b id . As h le y La za r 403-894-4110 M ike D yck 403-929-407 0 D o ug Jo rd a n 306-5 5 4-87 15 Tyle r Bro d e rs o n 403-382-8827 Ea gle To ll Fre e n um b e r 1-888-328-9191
Le th b ridge , AB.
2014 ALFALFA 5x6 hard core round bales, 1st, 2nd and 3rd cut, net wrapped, no rain, 1500-1700 lbs./bale, feed tests available, 18.5% protein, 13.3% moisture. Will load. 306-725-4828, 306-725-4814, Bulyea, SK. CUSTOM BALE HAULING, self-loading and unloading 17 bale truck. Radisson, SK. 306-827-2269 or 306-827-7835. MIX HAY ROUND bales, approx. 1000 lbs., $45 each. Call 306-488-4408, Holdfast, SK. LONG LAKE TRUCKING custom hay haul2012 LIKE NEW Weststeel fuel vault, ing, 2 units. 306-567-7100, Imperial, SK. 49,365 liters fuel tank cert. Double wall, APPROX. 500 OAT straw, 500 wheat straw, on a sliding skid, c/w pump, meter, hose. net wrapped, 568 JD baled last fall, 3 Tank was filled about 4 times, has not miles west of Spalding, SK. $15/bale. Call: been used the last 2 years. Pump is single 306-715-5375 or 306-267-7278. ph 120V, $47,000. 204-743-2324 Cypress River, MB.
~ RANCHERS ~
500-1000 Acres of Stockpiled/ W indrow ed G rass/ Alfalfa 1000 Tons of R ound and Square Baled H ay Shop available for Equipm ent and TravelTrailer for R anch H and W hy haulthe hayâ&#x20AC;Ś ? Also possible sum m er grazing available as w ellâ&#x20AC;Ś alltam e acres and w ellw atered.
3 0 6 -46 1-42 2 8 /3 0 6 -48 3 -510 6 Es teva n R egio n
QUALITY HAY. 550 round bales includes: 310 Alfalfa-Timothy, 170 Timothy, 70 2nd cut Alfalfa. Net wrapped 1500 to 1700 lb bales. Quantity discount. Call Ethelbert, MB. 204-742-3672 or 403-861-4832.
NUVISION COMMODITIES is currently purchasing feed barley, wheat, peas and 2013 HAY BALES: 21 small bales tied in a 3x4x7 bundle, 1250 lbs. each, shedded, milling oats. 204-758-3401, St. Jean, MB. $60 per bundle. Can load. Call Don 306-548-5440, Danbury, SK.
M AGNUM TANKS â&#x20AC;˘ ISO 9001 :2008 Appro ved â&#x20AC;˘ Tra n spo rt Ca n a d a Appro ved â&#x20AC;˘ Chec k W eb site Fo r D eta ils
MAGNUM FEEDERS & TEXAS GATES
O N SA LE NO W W HILE STO CK LA STS
PRO DU CTS TH AT LA ST Available at Magnum Fabricating & our dealers
w w w .m a g n u m fa brica tin g .com
M AGN UM F ABR ICATIN G LTD . M a ple Creek, SK P h: 306-662-2198
LARGE SQUARE DURUM/STRAW bales, 1000+ lbs., $25/bale. Delivery POLY TANKS: 15 to 10,000 gal.; Bladder HAY WANTED: Looking for all types of 3x4, tanks from 220 to 88,000 gal; Water and hay, any form of bale. Southern or Central available. 306-631-8854, Moose Jaw, SK. liquid fertilizer; Fuel tanks, single and douAB. and Western SK. Call 403-795-1347. 100 ROUND BALES of hay, no rain, good ble wall; Truck and storage, gas or diesel. Wilke Sales, 306-586-5711, Regina, SK. quality, fit for sheep and horses. Call 200 ROUND ALFALFA round bales, 1000 306-466-4428, Leask, SK. lbs., $45 each. 306-468-2771, Debden, SK. SOLID CORE ROUND alfalfa, alfalfa grass, HAY FOR SALE: Large square or large greenfeed, grass and straw. Delivered. Call rounds, over 1000 tons available. Call: 403-618-7141, Irricana, AB. 306-237-4582, Perdue, SK. TEMPORARY GRAIN BIN replacement 2014 ROUND ALFALFA hay bales, first cut, HAY FOR SALE: Can deliver. Belle Plain tarps for all sizes from 22â&#x20AC;&#x2122; diameter to 105â&#x20AC;&#x2122; twine wrapped, 90- 1500 lb. bales, no rain, Colony, Belle Plain, SK, ask for Paul dia. Best quality available Canadian made quality silver cone shaped tarps available 80- 1200 lb. bales. Located at Midale, SK. 306-501-9204. for all sizes. All sizes in stock. Shipped Phone 780-753-0346. HAY FOR SALE, approx. 550 brome/alfalfa overnight to most major points in Western round bales. Baled with a 567 JD baler, Canada. For all pricing, details, and pics twine wrapped, approx. 1400 lbs., asking visit our website at www.willwood.ca or $45/bale. Near Bienfait, SK., 306-421-7413 phone Willwood Industries toll free 1-866-781-9560, fax 306-781-0108. BUYING HAY, STRAW AND BARLEY Red Coat Cattle Feeders Inc. Hazenmore, TARPCO, SHUR-LOK, MICHELâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S sales, SK 306-264-3844, email: rccf@yourlink.ca service, installations, repairs. Canadian 500 OAT GREENFEED/YELLOWFEED bales, 3200 GALLON WATER tank, tandem carri- company. We carry aeration socks. We n e t w r a p p e d , n o r a i n , 4 ¢ p e r l b . , er, 6000 gal. alum tanker salvage tandem, now carry electric chute openers for grain 780-205-6006, Mervin, SK. $11,000. 306-267-4552, Coronach, SK. trailer hoppers. 1-866-663-0000.
Moveit!
Whether youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re at home, in the field or on the go, our new self-serve online classified ad service lets you do business whenever itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s most convenient for you. As always, youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re backed up 100% by our Classified Sales Associates with the product knowledge, marketing strategies and access to qualified buyers to help you get the results you want. Your classified word ads will appear online within one business day *. Use it today and move it tomorrow.
wherever you are, whenever you want.
* 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 | classifieds.producer.com |
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
LARGE CAPACITY TARPS to cover grain piles of varied sizes. Cover long grain piles with 53’W, 90’W, or 109’W piles of any length. 253,000 bu. pile covered for $11,666. All sizes in stock. Best quality available Canadian made quality silver tarps avail. for all sizes. Shipped overnight to most major points in Western Canada. For all pricing, details, and pictures visit: www.willwood.ca or Willwood Industries call toll free 1-866-781-9560, fax 306-781-0108. SHUR-LOK TRUCK TARPS and replacement tarps for all makes of trucks. Alan, 306-723-4967, 306-726-7808, Cupar, SK.
NEW · 11R22.5 16 ply .............................. $299 · 14.9x24 12 ply ............................... $486 · 16.9x28 12 ply ............................... $558 · 20.8x38 12 ply ............................... $795 · 23.1x30 12 ply ............................ $1,495 · 24.5x32 14 ply ............................ $1,495 · 30.5x32 16 ply ............................ $1,995 Factory direct. More sizes available, new and used. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com
CLASSIFIED ADS 75
EXPERIENCED BEEKEEPER/ LABOURER needed to work on alfalfa seed and leafcuttter bee farm in Arborfield, SK. area, Dec 15th to May 15th. Wage starting $11.35 per hour. Please email resume to wrigleyfarms@hotmail.com Only successful applicants will be contacted.
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.
BEEKEEPER HELPERS SEASONAL April to Oct, 2015. Must have no bee sting allergies, valid driver’s license and physically fit. Ph/fax Neil 306-967-2841, Eatonia, SK. Please email resume and references to: janeil@sasktel.net
Available at:
Available at:
Prairie Co-op Ltd. Lipton, SK
(306) 336-2333 www.dseriescanola.ca
LOW LOW PRICES! Over 1400 new and used tires, mostly construction sizes, some very large sizes, many tires with rims. Cambrian Equipment Sales, Winnipeg, MB. Ph. 204-667-2867, fax 204-667-2932. FLOATER TIRES FOR JD and Case sprayers: 650/65R38 or 710/70R38. For JD sprayers: 710/70R42 or 900/50R42. 306-697-2856, Grenfell, SK. 4 SUPER SINGLES, 445x22.5 w/chrome wheels, 60% tread, $1500 for the set. 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. TWO NEW REAR TIRES, to fit New Holland TX36 or TX66, $800 ea. 306-253-4454, Aberdeen, SK. SCRAPER AND LOADER TIRES available. All sizes. Quick Drain Sales, Muenster, SK. Ph: 306-682-4520, 306-231-7318. CHECK OUT OUR inventory of quality used highway tractors. For more details call 204-685-2222 or view information at www.titantrucksales.com
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
RURAL & CULTURAL TOURS Au s tra lia /N ew Zea la n d ~ Jan 2015 S o u th Am erica ~ Jan 2015 K en ya /Ta n za n ia ~ Jan 2015 Co s ta Rica ~ Feb 2015 S o u th Africa /Za m b ia ~ Feb 2015 In d ia ~ Feb 2015 Ja pa n ~ M ay 2015 Irela n d /S co tla n d ~ June 2015 S ca n d in a via ~ June 2015 Portion oftours m a y b e Ta x Ded uc tib le.
Se le ct Holida ys
1- 800- 661- 432 6 w w w .selectho lid a ys.co m
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.
Courses begin November 17, 2014. For information on these and other Continuing Education courses please visit our website at www.lakelandcollege.ca or call Sharon at 1 800 661 6490.
(306) 743-2677 www.dseriescanola.ca
STAUBER DRILLING INC. Water well drilling and servicing, Geotechnical, Environmental, Geothermal. Professional service since 1959. Call the experts at 1-800-919-9211 info@stauberdrilling.com HYD. PIPE SPINNER for oil/ water pipe. Steel or plastic pipe, from 2-1/4” to 10”. Call Jake: 403-878-6302, Grassy Lake, AB. KORNUM WELL DRILLING, farm, cottage and acreage wells, test holes, well rehabilitation, witching. PVC/SS construction, expert workmanship and fair pricing. 50% government grant now available. Indian Head, SK., 306-541-7210 or 306-695-2061
Ace Buying Group A Division of AgLine International
FARM • TRUCK • OTR TIRES
FIRESTONE AND BKT AG AND INDUSTRIAL TIRE YEAR END BLOW OUT SAVE HUNDREDS ON SELECT SIZES PRICING IN EFFECT UNTIL OCT 30 2014
18.4/34 FIRESTONE SATII 8PLY TUBELESS $860.00 ...............NOW $748.00 19.5L24 FIRESTONE ALL TRACTION UTILITY 10PLY $900.00..NOW$695.00 710/70R42 BKT AMAX RT765 176A8 $3500.00 ..................NOW $2,886.00 12.5/80-18 FIRESTONE SUPER TRACTION LOADER I-3 12PLT TL $532.57 ..................................................................NOW $335.52
GRAIN FARM MANAGER/OPERATOR (NOC 8251) Permanent position on a grain farm. Must be able to operate farm machinery and equipment. Must have agricultural education to learn crop production and marketing. Must have Class 1A drivers license or be able to obtain one. Beginning wages are $21.21/hour. Probationary period to determine experience, attitude and ability. 15 minute drive from Moose Jaw, SK. Own vehicle. Contact D&J Seed Services Inc. (Julie or Dennis) at 306-693-2506, or email agrarian@sasktel.net
HARVEST HELP NEEDED: Semi driver (no highway), grain cart and/or swather AUSTRALIAN HARVEST STAFF Needed operator. Accommodation and meals proOperators wanted for Australian grain har- vided, $20/hour, East of Saskatoon, Allan, vest from Oct to Dec 2014. Must be able to SK area. Call Mike 306-229-5432. work long hours and be proficient in driving late model tractors, chaser bins/grain carts. Be qualified in driving new model Case header/combines. Accommodation and evening meal will be provided. A working holiday visa will be required. Also a international licence (valid in Australia) would be an advantage. You will be working on a family run farm. These positions would suit, fit 19 to 30 years. All enquiries to Eastgrove Farming Pty Ltd-Harvest staff tribal@westnet.com
A COMPANY ON THE MOVE
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.
· JD Factory 94-9600/CTS ........... $9,850 · JD STS BLOWOUT ... $11,850 $7,995 · CIH AFX w/new tires .............. $18,800 · 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
Integrated Crop Management s Winter Feeding and Grazing s Nutrient Management s Extension Program Planning
RURAL water, farms, acreages. Multi-pure membrane system; 2000 gal./day. Eliminates: Tannin (color). The Water Clinic, www.thewaterclinic.com 1-800-664-2561.
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
LS
s
Langenburg, SK
AG-VENTURE TOURS, TO Bolivia, Peru, Argentina, Chile, Nepal, Romania Hungary. Partially tax deductible. 519-633-2390, Union, ON. rwthomas@start.ca www.rwthomastours.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.
DUA
2QOLQH $J 0DQDJHPHQW &RXUVHV
Sharpe’s Soil Services Ltd.
POULTRY MANAGER: Farm located near Wynyard, SK. requires a day to day farm manager/labourer. Housing is available. Fax resume 306-382-0451. Ph Wally 306-384-7723.
This is a remarkable time for global agriculture and for Richardson. Our industry is undergoing unprecedented change with increasing world demand, and our company is experiencing transformational growth. Richardson International is Canada’s largest, privately owned agribusiness and is recognized as a global leader in agriculture and food processing.
Repair & Maintenance Crews The Repair & Maintenance team is growing at Richardson Pioneer. We are currently looking for skilled mechanically inclined individuals to join our crews across Western Canada. Repair and Maintenance crew members ensure repair and maintenance activities are conducted in the most effective, efficient and safe manner possible. Specific responsibilities include the repair and maintenance of high throughput grain handling and crop input facilities, identifying and prioritizing projects requiring attention, utilizing both in-house and contract maintenance resources, trouble shooting problems and working with locations to meet their repair and maintenance needs. The ideal candidate will be mechanically inclined with relevant maintenance experience; have strong communication, interpersonal and organizational skills; be detail-oriented with demonstrated accuracy; and possess excellent customer service skills. Knowledge of a Data Maintenance Based systems and/or an agricultural background would be considered an asset. Both leadership and crew positions are available. Richardson International provides an excellent compensation package consisting of competitive salary, pension, a flexible benefits plan and training and career development opportunities. Interested candidates should apply online by visiting www.richardson.ca to upload their cover letter and résumé before October 17, 2014.
EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN And Field Operator, Grace Hill Farms Ltd. invites you to come join our team on our 10,000 acre family-owned certified organic grain farm and seed cleaning operation located in SW Sask. We currently have an opening for an Equipment/Maintenance Technician and Field Operator. Grace Hill c/w a well equipped shop and service truck. Journey person status an asset, equivalent experience will be considered - thrive on fast pace and daily challenge of keeping farm machinery running during peak seasons, obey safety guidelines, maintain parts inventory, clean and organize shop, 1A license preferred but not required, participate in field operations as required, work well with other team members building and maintaining positive working relationships. We offer competitive salary based on experience, bonus program, modern housing close to farming operation. 306-264-3721, Mankota, SK.
FULL-TIME RANCH HELP wanted. Experience with livestock and machinery required. Non-smoker with clean driver’s abstract, Class 1 license preferred. Housing supplied. Fax resume with references to: 403-548-2287. Ph: 403-548-6684, Redcliff, AB. walkersu7texaslonghorns@gmail.com FULL-TIME FARM WORKER needed for grain farm in northern AB. Applicant should have Grade 12 and driver’s license. Class 1 an asset. Must be able to work some weekends, some long hrs. and operate various farm equipment. Must speak English. Wages $20-$25/hr. depending on experience. Fax resume: Enders Farms Ltd. 780-836-2199.
CLASS 1 TRUCK DRIVERS WANTED Douglas Lake Cattle Company is seeking full time Class 1 truck drivers based out of Douglas Lake, BC. Job requires hauling for silage operations, cattle hauling, low bedding, etc. Short haul trips only, home every night, family housing available, full benefits package, competitive wage, regular time off. Please email resumes to: info@douglaslake.com or fax 250-350-3336. No phone calls please.
FULL-TIME CATTLE CHECKING Positions. Buffalo Plains Cattle Co. has pen checking positions available for our expanding feedlot w/new facilities. Job also includes pasture work in the summer. Owned horses and tack preferred. No green horses allowed. Competitive salary 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 306-638-3150, or for more info. ph Kristen HELP WANTED ON grain farm 1/2 hour NW of Brandon, MB. Mainly operate combine, at 306-631-8769, Bethune, SK. sprayer and tractor w/seed drill. Applicants HERD MANAGER REQUIRED for large should have previous experience operating Purebred Angus operation. Experience and maintaining farm equipment. Class 1 with livestock necessary. Housing sup- and knowledge of GPS and AutoSteer are plied. Ideal for couple. Second position assets. Experience w/mechanical work and available for spouse. Kelly, 780-689-7822, repairs also an asset. Competitive wages depending on experience, 40 hours a week. Ole Farms Ltd., Athabasca, AB. 204-761-5797. AARTS ACRES, 2500 sow barn near Solsgirth, MB is seeking experienced Breeding ICR RANCHES IS opening a training posiand Farrowing Technicians. The successful tion. Room and board is available. Wages applicant must possess necessary skills, an negotiable depending upon experience. aptitude for the care and handling of ani- Must have basic knowledge in the round mals, good communication skills and pen and arena. If you want good solid ability to work as part of a highly produc- horses to work with and a good training tive team. Fax resume to: 204-842-3273. e n v i r o n m e n t , p l e a s e p h o n e or call 204-842-3231 for application form. 403-740-6139, 403-575-0074, Veteran, AB
How to Contact Us.
Clip & Save
Classifieds Office Hours: MONDAY to FRIDAY 8:30AM - 4:30PM Phone Line Hours: TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY until 8PM
1.800.667.7770 | Email: advertising@producer.com
Subscriptions Office Hours: MONDAY to FRIDAY 8:30AM - 4:30PM
1.800.667.6929 | Email: subscriptions@producer.com
Newsroom Office Hours: MONDAY to FRIDAY 8:30AM - 4:30PM
1.800.667.6978 | Email: newsroom@producer.com
OVER 95 DIFFERENT SIZES TO CHOOSE FROM LIMITED QUANTITIES!!! COMPUTERIZE WATER JET CUTTING AVAILABLE The most precise cut every time
1-855-865-9550
CALL TODAY!
103-3240 Idylwyld Dr. N, Saskatoon, SK
Richardson values diversity in the workplace. Women, aboriginal people, visible minorities and persons with disabilities are encouraged to apply and self-identify.
Submit your ad online anytime at
www.producer.com
76 CLASSIFIED ADS
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
SEEKING A FULL-TIME year round employee on grain farm operation in the Neepawa, MB area. The successful applicant must have good organizational skills, be self-motivated and a team player. Applicant must have experience in welding for shop maintenance and a mechanical background. Must have valid Class 5 license. Class 1 license would also be an asset. Salary depending on experience. If interested please email resume to deborad@hotmail.ca or fax to 204-966-3885. We can also be reached at 204-476-0601. LARGE GRAIN FARM requires additional employees. Experience operating JD combines, grain cart, tractor/trailer units and general farm work an asset. Class 1A/AZ license and mechanical experience are assets. Hourly wage $18-$25/hr. depending on experience. Accommodations available. Starting date immediately. References required. Fax resume to: 306-354-7758 or E-mail to: quarkfarms@yahoo.com or phone Dan or Quenton at: 306-354-7672, Mossbank, SK. www.quarkfarms.net AUSTRALIAN FARMING OPERATION/ Opportunity. A large broad acre cropping property in southern high rainfall area of Australia requires 2 employees for harvest. From end October/November to late January/February to operate modern machinery in the hay/grain production division and custom operations. Heavy vehicle licence an asset but not necessary. Visit: youtube.com/watch?v=uF5D6hwrpcM to take a look at a video of our operations. Email enquiries with resume and references to: gregbell353@bigpond.com.
CARETAKER WANTED on ranch, with horse experience. Beautiful setting, 15 minutes west of Cochrane, AB. Private, furnished suite, includes utilities and satellite TV, farm work and handyman work available. References required. Available immediately, long term position. Horse welcome. 403-609-1200.
PARTS PERSO N REQ UIRED PUREBED RANCH HAND required. We are a purebred cattle ranch expanding in the Grande Prairie area. Looking for a experience hand familiar with winter calving and cattle management to join our team, 780-512-3641, www.bar4acattleco.com PERMANENT PART-TIME or full-time dairy farm worker needed at Craiglea Holsteins Ltd. Duties include milking cows and general farm duties, $16 - $18/hour. Email to: craigleaholsteins@gmail.com SW-25-22-22. Bulyea, SK. WANTED: FARM LABOURERS able to run farm equipment (combines, balers etc.) and Class 1 drivers, for harvest. Call Mike 306-469-7741, Big River, SK. FULL-TIME PERMANENT POSITION on southern Sask. mixed farm. Looking for enthusiastic hard-working person to assist with farm and ranch duties. Cattle and mechanical experience and 1A license are assets. Fax resume to 306-395-2500 or call: 306-631-3694.
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.
FULL-TIME FARM LABOURER HELP. Applicants should have previous farm experience and mechanical ability. Duties incl. operation of machinery, including tractors, truck driving and other farm equipment, as well as general farm laborer duties. $12-$18/hr. depending on experience. Contact Wade Feland at 701-263-1300, Antler, North Dakota.
PARTS TECHNICIAN WANTED. Trochu Motors is seeking a customer oriented and responsible individual to join our parts team. Prior experience in the industry would be an asset but not a must. Applicants must have organizational skills, basic computer skills and the ability to multi-task in a fast-paced environment. We are looking forward to add to our growing dealership. Please apply in person at 102 Eckenfelder St., Trochu, Alberta. Fax 403-442-3829 or email: wmtn@inbox.com FULL-TIME BEEKEEPER TECHNICIAN. Experience an asset. Must have no bee sting allergies, physically fit for heavy lifting and valid driver’s license. Email resume and references to: janeil@sasktel.net Ph/fax Neil 306-967-2841, Eatonia, SK. CLASS 1&3 DRIVERS. Top wages, benefits, bonus. Min. 2 yrs exp. Oilfield exp. an asset. Pressure, semivac flushby. 780-545-7647.
HEARTLAND LIVESTOCK, Moose Jaw Yard Staff required. Penning and sorting cattle. Feeding and strawing of pens, yard main- ENVIRONMENTAL FARM PLAN Director. The tenance. Lots of opportunity for overtime. EFP Director provides leadership and coorFax 306-692-7996 or jdoughertyahls.ca dination for the ongoing development and delivery of EFP services to Alberta producers in partnership with other industry stakeholders. See our website for more info. SEEKING A FULL-TIME year round employwww.areca.ab.ca or 780-416-6046. ee on grain/cattle operation in the Neepawa, MB area. The successful applicant Is a pro gre s s ive , e xpa n d in g must have good organizational skills, be self motivated and a team player. Must a gric u ltu ra l s a lva ge pa rts have valid Class 5 license. We are seeking DAVY CROCKETTS OILFIELD SERVICES c o m pa n y s pe c ia lizin g in la te a person with machinery operating skills Ltd. is immediately seeking trainee Power and cattle experience. Salary depending on m o d e l tra c to r a n d c o m b in e pa rts Tong Operators. Experienced power tong experience. If interested please email rea n d lo c a t e d a t Irm a , Alb e rt a . operators will be given preference. Must sume to deborad@hotmail.ca or fax to be willing to reside in Valleyview/ Grande 204-966-3885. We can also be reached at W e a r e looking f or Prairie, AB and surrounding area. Must 204-476-0601. have clean drivers license w/abstract and H2S. Please email resume with 3 referencPOSITION AVAILABLE, Cypress Hills, SK. es to: dcos@telus.net or ph 780-957-3101 area. Background yearling grasser operation and cow/calf. Modern facilities and equipment. Good working environment. Class 1 preferred. Wages negotiable de(4 va ca n cies ) pending on experience. Call 306-295-7473 Per m a n en t , fu ll tim e p o s itio n s -44 hrs PERMANENT PART-TIME or full-time dairy p er w eek. S a la ry $19.25 to $20.00/hr. herdsperson needed at Craiglea Holsteins Ltd. Duties include milking cows and herd Va lid d rivers licen s e. health, min. 2 year college degree and 2 Previo u s exp erien ce a n a s s et. yrs. experience required. $16.50 - $19/hr. Email to: craigleaholsteins@gmail.com To a pply fo r a po s itio n w ith u s , SW-25-22-22, Bulyea, SK.
GRATTON COUL EE AGRIPARTS L TD.
M E CH ANICAL AS S E M BL E R S
FARM HAND WANTED. Experience with horses an asset. Willing to train. Call 780-603-0390, Mundare, AB. or email dimmock_13@hotmail.com
SEED CLEANING PLANT - Melville, SK. Manager/Operators needed. Prior seed cleaning experience/farm background an asset. Contact colin@quinoa.com ph. 306-933-9525, fax 306-933-9527
HIRING ON THE A7 Ranche, Nanton, AB. A large intensive grazing operation west of Nanton seeks employee with grazing skills and ability to handle livestock. 403-646-5592, www.a7ranche.com
plea s e e-m a il res u m e to : m a rc@ gcpa rts .co m o r s en d fa x to 78 0-754-2333 Atten tio n : Alvin W a n n echk o
PRIME MOVER/ MULCHER/ CLASS 1 Ace Vegetation is hiring Mulcher, Hydro-ax and Posi-track Operators. Class 1 license an asset. For details call 780-955-8980. RANCH HAND REQUIRED for large South- Send resume to: Ace, 2001 8th St., Nisku, ern Alberta cattle ranch. Must be experi- AB. T9E 7Z1. Fax: 780-955-9426. Email: enced w/moving cattle on horseback and acemail@acevegetation.com able to work w/others. Requires own tack and horses. Job entails feeding cattle in WEYBURN LIVESTOCK EXCHANGE in winter; Haying in summer; And riding hors- Weyburn, SK. need yard staff, mainly es to move cattle. Resume and references penners. Should be able to operate a req'd. Email: milkrivercattle@rossranch.ca quad, or ride a horse, or work on foot in or call 403-344-2205, 403-344-4333. penning alleys. Male or female, in fact, females are some our most astute employees. There will be lots of opportunity to overtime. Full-time and part-time people. BEEKEEPER’S HELPERS (6), for the 2015 A p p ly t o W L E w i t h r e s u m e . P h o n e MATURE HOMEMAKER to live-in, needed season May to Oct, $12-$15/hr depending on experience. Contact Ron Althouse, to work in 5 client carehome, North Battle- 306-842-4574. Fax 306-842-3610, or email sdeg@weyburnlivestock.com ford, SK. Phone for details 306-445-0144. 306-278-2747, Porcupine Plain, SK. HERDSMAN NEEDED in southern Sask. Knowledge of cattle feeding/breeding/ showing and record keeping an asset but willing to train self starter. Duties also incl. checking, moving, and treating cattle, some fencing and equipment operation. Must be honest, hardworking and adapatable, and able to work with others. Seeking a commitment to long term persuits. Salary and housing dependent on experience and bonuses based on performance. Fax resume to: 306-395-2500 or call 306-631-3694.
Subscriptions Sales Contractor Western Producer Publications invites applications for a Commission Sales Contractor to sell subscriptions for The Western Producer in Alberta and B.C. We are looking for someone willing to travel and attend agricultural trade shows throughout Alberta and B.C. mainly during the months of Nov., Jan., Feb. and March. This position provides an attractive income based on these seasonal hours. The successful applicant must be self confident and self motivated. If you possess strong oral, written and technical skills, own your own vehicle and a valid driver’s licence, then we encourage you to submit your application no later than Friday, October 10, 2014 to: Jack Phipps Marketing Director The Western Producer P.O. Box 2500, 2310 Millar Ave. Saskatoon, SK S7K 2C4 E-mail: jack.phipps@producer.com Fax: (306) 665-3587 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.
ofEd m on ton , Alb erta is cu rren tly lookin g for
* R o u ghn ecks *Derrick Ha n d s * Drillers * S ho p Perso n n el F orthe w in terseason an d p ossib le lon g term em p loym en t. T rackhoe, Backhoe, Class 3 L icen se an asset. W illin g to T rain . P lease fax resu m e to:
780 - 9 62 - 685 2 orem a il to: cnernb erg@p recis ecros s ings .com
FIELD EM PLOYEES AKITA Drilling Ltd. is a prem ier oil a nd ga s w ell drilling contra ctor w ith opera tions throu ghou tCa na da . The com pa ny striv es to be the indu stry lea der in m a tters of em ployee expertise, sa fety, equ ipm entqu a lity a nd drilling perform a nce. D u e to indu stry a ctivity A kita D rilling is looking for field em ployees for its drilling opera tions. The positions of D riller, D errick H a nd, M otor H a nd a nd Floor H a nd a re a v a ila ble. The su ccessfu l ca ndida tes shou ld possess the a pplica ble tra ining for theirposition inclu ding a pprenticeship. M inim u m ticketrequ irem ents H2S Aliv e a nd FirstAid. Akita Drilling Ltd offers a com petitiv e com pensa tion a nd benefits stru ctu re inclu ding a com pa ny pension pla n. Plea se forw a rd you rresu m e a nd references in confidence to: A KITA D rilling L td. Fa x (780)955-6726 O r e-m a il: hu m a n.resou rces@ a kita -drilling.com W e w ish to thank allapplicants for their interest, how ever only those being considered w illbe contacted A llem ployees are required to pass a pre-em ploym ent D rug and A lcoholTest.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2014
HELP W A N TED Im m edia te positions a va ila ble: *Certified Jou rneym en or A pprentice P icker/Crane Tru ck O perators *W inch Tru ck/Tractor D rivers *Sw am pers/L aborers *L oader O perator Send resum e to:
Box 1080 Provost, AB T0B 3S0 F a x: 780-753-6142 or bryce.olson @ w ith erslp.com Pre-em ploym ent drug screen in effect. W ithers is an EqualO pportunity Em ployer.
Provost/Wainwright area LOOKING FOR: CREW TRUCK FOREMAN CREW TRUCK LABORERS RECLAMATION LABORERS GRAVEL CRUSHER PERSONNEL GRAVEL TRUCK DRIVERS Fax resume to 780-753-8104 or email baritoilfield@xplornet.com No phone calls please. Only successful applicants will be contacted. *Must have valid driver’s license, copy of all safety tickets and driver’s abstract.*
CLASSIFIED ADS 77
HUB INTERNATIONAL IS GROWING!! As Manitoba’s largest insurance brokerage we are dedicated to providing the right insurance solutions for our clients through international strength and local services. We are currently looking for a Commercial Account Executive for the Winnipeg region. Factors For Success: Driven to achieve sales results; Demonstrated ability to build strong client relationships and maintain lasting relationships; Excellent negotiation skills; Highly effective communication skills; Strong commitment to personal growth and development is essential. Position Responsibilities include: Develop new business relationships and insurance solutions for clients. Educate current clients of the organization’s insurance products; Discussing and explaining coverage to clients; Accounts receivable follow-up; Answer customer inquiries. If the idea of a new career has crossed your mind and you’re ready for a new challenge submit your resume to: www.hubinternational.com Contact 204-988-4800.
HD TRUCK MECHANIC required for trucking co. in Lloydminster, AB WALL GRAIN HANDLING is busy and is small area. License an asset, but not necessary. needing a Sales person in Alberta. Call John 780-846-0002 or fax 780-846-0005, Rick now at 204-269-7616, Winnipeg, MB. actiontowinglloyd@hotmail.com AUTO BODY PAINTER. Experienced painter required for busy Saskatoon, SK. auto body shop. Call 306-374-2001, fax 306-652-0648
Crew Leaders / W elders / M echanicalInstaller
Crop Science Sales Consultants Manitoba (1), Saskatchewan (1), Alberta (1) Are you passionate about crop science? Are you passionate about a career in sales?
EMF Nutrition is seeking Energetic, Customer Service Oriented, and Professional CROP SCIENCE SALES CONSULTANTS for our Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta Territories. Main Job Tasks and Responsibilities • Seek and develop new opportunities through the marketing of Crop Science products. • Work closely with producers providing information that will assist them in increasing the profitability of their businesses. • Provide technical support, trial set up and data collection. • Develop research portfolio and establish ongoing field based research to demonstrate the contribution of Alltech Crop Science (ASC). • General maintenance of field trials, sampling, data collections and analysis portfolio. • Build, promote, and maintain positive customer relations. Qualifications • Diploma or degree in agricultural business, agronomy, plant science, commerce, business administration, or related education and/or experience. • Sales, marketing, merchandising or retail experience. • Previous experience in crop production. Knowledge, Skills and Abilities • Strong verbal & written communication skills. • Strong computer skills in MS Office. • Ability to manage existing customers’ relationships, and proactively develop new customer relationships. • Enthusiastic and self-motivated. • Strong organizational and planning skills. Travel is required; therefore a valid driver’s license and vehicle is required.
H iTech Installations Ltd.is looking for energetic w orkers for installation w ork in agricultural bulk m aterialhandling field. G eneralm echanicalexperience a necessity,w ith experience in w elding,fabricating,fram ing, concrete. W e are located in StA ndrew s,M B w ith m ostofour w ork in W estern C anada (SK & A B). H ard w orker,w ho is w illing to learn new skills,self-thinking individualw ith solid com m on sense and judgm ent.M ustbe w illing to travel,a hard w orker, and w illing to learn new skills. C apable ofm aking your ow n decisions,have problem solving skills and notafraid ofheights. W elding/M illw rightexperience w ould be an asset.M inim um C lass 5 Drivers required w ith w illingness to upgrade to C lass 3 or 1. W e offer a great benefit package.
JOIN US NOW !!! WANTED HYDROVAC OPERATORS and swampers - offering excellent hourly wages, excellent benefit package available, willing to train, safety tickets H2S, First Aid and Ground Disturbance required, operators must possess at least class 3A driver's RED SEAL HEAVY Duty Mechanic. JMB license, living accommodation available. Crushing Systems ULC is currently hiring an Email: extremeexcavating@hotmail.com or Inter-provincial or Red Seal Certified heavy fax resume only 306-483-2082, Oxbow, SK. equipment truck and transport technician with extensive off road experience. Elec- WANTED: CLASS 1 or Class 3 Truck Driver tronic engine and diagnostic experience for grain farm. Will pay up to $30/hr. Acand a CVIP inspection license is required. commodation incl. Hutterites welcome. Candidates must be technologically profi- 403-575-0069, Coronation, AB. cient with laptop diagnostic experience and well rounded mechanical service experience in their respective field. Maintenance and repair on highway and oilfield trucks/ trailers and heavy equipment required. This position is a rotational position with every other weekend off, and over time is also required. Service truck is available or you can supply your own. We offer extremely competitive wages, camp accommodations in our yard, extensive benefit program and EXPERIENCED CLASS 1 WINCH truck opera friendly and cooperative work environ- ators, located in Kindersley, SK. WHMIS, ment. Sub Contractors welcome to apply! TDG, First Aid, H2S required. Competitive Resumes can be sent via fax to wages! Phone 780-842-2222, website: 780-826-6280 or email hr@jmbcrush.com http://rykerhauling.com 780-826-1774 ext. 3, 780-573-0988, Bonnyville, AB, www.jmbcrush.com
Class 1 Super B & Tri-axle Truck Drivers
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 DRIVER wanted to haul livestock full-time in SK and AB. Experience preferred or could train if you have knowledge of working with livestock. Based out of Saskatoon. Two references and driver's abstract required. Hafford, SK. 306-317-0118. 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.
URS IS HIRING
We are an EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER. Flint has an industry-leading SAFETY PROGRAM Our employees receive a comprehensive BENEFITS PACKAGE and we offer an EMPLOYEE RETENTION PROGRAM Driver TRAINING and SAFETY training available.
We are now hiring in Brooks, Jenner & Drumheller If you are interested in the above position, please submit your resume and driver’s abstract: URS Fluid Haul Services Attn: Larry Nowaczyk In person: 10 Industrial Road, Brooks AB Fax: (403) 362-8345 or email: Cathy.Slaney@URS.com
IS LOOKIN G FOR
EXPERIEN CED
O W N ER O PERATORS
W e a re ta kin g a pplica tio n s fo r this u pco m in g win te r ro a d s e a s o n . W o rk is a lre a d y co m m e n cin g.
30
EXPERIEN CED
O W N ER O PERATORS
W e ha ve s e cu re d a pro je ct to m o ve a la rge n u m b e r o flo a d s fro m Ed m o n to n to Ye llo wkn ife co m m e n cin g in N o ve m b e r 201 4.
JOIN US THIS W INTER ROAD SEASON!! G RIM SHAW TRUCKIN G IS LOOKIN G FOR
EXPERIEN CED
S UB CON TRACTOR FLEETS W ITH OR W ITHOUT TRAILERS
T he s e a s o n ha s a lre a d y b e gu n with lo a d s m o vin g fro m Ed m o n to n AB a n d Ye llo wkn ife N T a n d we n e e d tru cks N O W !! Grim shaw offers com petitive rates, safety bonuses and capped insurance. In te re s te d a n d qu a lifie d a pplica n ts s ho u ld fo rwa rd re s u m e s a lo n g with cu rre n t d rive r’s a b s tra ct to : B ra zy L ira za n - H um a n R es o urc es F a x: 78 0 -452 -50 2 3 E-m a il: h r@ gtlp .c a P h o n e: 78 0 -414-2 8 3 5 o r s ee us a t 11510 -151 S treet N W Ed m o n to n , AB . CLASS 1 DRIVERS required immediately for log haul in Alberta, accommodations provided, $30.00 cycle time hr. Please fax or email resume and current abstract to: Church Creek Livestock Ltd, Athabasca, AB woodccll@mcsnet.ca or fax 780-675-9206
Gibson Energy ULC is a progressive, growth oriented, North American midstream oil & gas company. Opportunities to become an independent Owner Operator with a wellestablished Liquid Bulk Transport Carrier in South Eastern Saskatchewan are currently available.
Send resum e by e-m ailto: E-M A IL: sm ichaud@ hitechinstallations.ca SKY AG SERVICES LTD, Lafleche, SK. needs 3 Commercial Pilots for the 2015 summer season, May - Sept. 15. Applicant requires a min. 2000 hrs. Turbine Time and/or 1500 hrs. Air Tractor Turbine Time and a min. of 300 hrs. Forestry Protection. Position offers top pay package to the dedicated individual, commission base position with base salary at 60/hr/40 hr/wk. Applicant must have a clean flight record. Send resume outlining all aerial applicat i o n e x p e r i e n c e a n d r e fe r e n c e s , i f available, to skyag2@hotmail.com We will only accept resumes or questions by email. Please do not apply unless all criteria can be met. Sky Ag Services Ltd., Box 336, Lafleche, SK. S0H 2K0.
G RIM SHAW TRUCKIN G
Available at:
Turtleford & District Co-op Ltd. Turtleford, SK
(306) 845-2222 www.dseriescanola.ca
OWNERS OPERATORS Qualifications required: • Valid Class 1 license • Clean driver’s abstract • Should have minimum 5 years driving experience • Fluid hauling experience is an asset • Current H2S and First Aid certificates • Winter driving experience • Ability to obtain a Fast Card if required • Must participate in our Random Drug and Alcohol testing program Gibson Energy ULC offers a competitive compensation package. Interested candidates are invited to apply by Email: driveforgibsons@gibsons.com, Fax: 780-392-6722, Ph: 306-486-2044
Apply by: October 17th, 2014 Email: hr@emf-nutrition.com Mail: 715 Marion Street, Winnipeg, MB, R2J 0K6 Fax: (204) 233-7245
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
78
NEWS
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
BIOTECHNOLOGY AGREEMENT | ROYALTIES
Brazil soy exporters to police Monsanto GM seed Companies compensated | Grain merchants want to be paid for collecting royalties on patent protected technology SAO PAULO, Brazil (Reuters) — At least one soybean exporter in Brazil has agreed with Monsanto to collect royalties, in exchange for a fee, from farmers who planted the company’s genetically modified crops. The landmark deal, already finalized by a firm that declined to be identified, highlights an increasingly complex relationship between global grain merchants and biotech firms. Other bigger merchants such as ADM and Bunge will finalize agreements soon, industry sources said, which resolves a months-long dis-
pute that had threatened to disrupt as much as a quarter of all soy shipments from the world’s second-largest grower. The trading firms are wary of serving as biotechnology police in Brazil, a role they have not had to play in the United States because biotech company’s patents are protected by laws that do not allow farmers to reuse seeds year after year. In Brazil, where GM seeds have been legal only since 2005, reusing seeds is more common and it is easier for farmers to skip out on Mon-
santo’s fees after buying the seeds the first season. Soy-crushing group Abiove, which represents global firms such as ADM, Bunge, Cargill and Louis Dreyfus, spent months negotiating to ensure companies are compensated for collecting and monitoring payments on Monsanto’s new Intacta RR2 Pro strain of GM soybeans. “Now the question is for Monsanto and each company to work out payments,” said Ricardo Tomczyk, president of the soy farmer lobby Aprosoja in Brazil’s top-growing state Mato
Grosso, after meeting with Abiove representatives. Some merchants have been collecting royalties on Monsanto’s first generation Roundup Ready soybeans in Brazil for as long as a decade, but the arrangement was a source of deep frustration because it required merchants to accept legal liability for their shipments without any compensation from Monsanto. The industry has been determined to avoid a similar arrangement with Intacta. The variety includes a gene
As a farmer, you have a lot of decisions to make. The DEKALB® brand team is here to empower you with expert advice, agronomic insight and local data. With every important decision you face on your farm, we’re behind you. And we’re ready to help you turn great seed potential into actual in-field performance. DEKALB canola... Empowering Your Performance.
Talk to your DEKALB dealer today, or visit DEKALB.ca ALWAYS FOLLOW GRAIN MARKETING AND ALL OTHER STEWARDSHIP AND PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Details of these requirements can be found in the Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers printed in this publication ©2014 Monsanto Canada, Inc.
®
CARGILL ESTIMATES IT SUFFERED LOSSES OF MORE THAN
$90 million ON GM SHIPMENTS TO CHINA to ward off pests, which was first planted in South America last year. The local firm that has already accepted the compensation said it did so reluctantly. “We assume the risk of not receiving royalties from producers,” said a manager at the firm. “They (Monsanto) offered comp e n s a t i o n f o r t h e c o m p a n y ,” although she declined to say what that was. Concerns remain that Monsanto might force firms to halt soybean shipments without proof of royalty payments on cargos containing the strain. Brazil is Monsanto’s second-largest market, making up about a tenth of its $15 billion in net sales last year. Monsanto has blamed a downturn in royalty payments on its Roundup Ready products for a drop in net sales of soybean seeds last year. The spat bubbled under the surface until an Abiove statement in July said the association had failed to reach an agreement after six months of negotiations, potentially stalling soy sales in Brazil. An Abiove representative confirmed Monsanto is negotiating with individual companies. Monsanto said in an e-mail that negotiations with Abiove companies “are ongoing and progressing.” Tensions are growing between the merchants who dominate the world’s grain trade, buying from farmers and shipping to importers, and the makers of GM crops, whose products have become deeply embedded in the global supply chain. Brazil’s Intacta saga is part of a broad trade, copyright, environment and food safety debate about genetic modification in agriculture that is far from resolved. Intacta was not planted in Brazil until after China approved it last year. China buys the vast majority of Brazilian soybeans. However, farmers are worried that the trading dispute could limit buyers. “If this hadn’t been resolved, the companies affiliated with Abiove were unlikely to trade Intacta soy,” said Tomczyk. Early this year, China rejected 1.25 million tonnes of U.S. corn and byproducts containing Syngenta’s GM strain MIR-162, which China has not yet approved. Cargill last month sued Syngenta for marketing the seeds in the United States, even though it lacked Beijing’s approval. Cargill estimated it suffered losses of more than $90 million. Brazil’s foreign ministry said the same MIR-162 corn, which has been sold in small amounts in the country since 2012, is preventing the sale of more Brazilian corn to China after the two countries signed a bilateral agreement earlier this year.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
A N O T H E R I N C R E D I B L E G I V E A W AY F R O M T H E W E S T E R N P R O D U C E R
WIN AN AUTOCOPTER
™
VALUED AT MORE THAN $35,000 plus an all-expense paid trip to North Carolina for a three-day training course! www.producer.com/contest
You’ve read about it in the Western Producer and now you have a chance to WIN and fly one home! One lucky farmer will win an AutoCopter™ SuperScout, an incredible precision agricultural tool that provides: real-time field data in the field, GeoTiff NDVI images for farm management programs, variable rate prescription maps, 12.1 megapixel geo-referenced images and MORE! The Western Producer knows this is a seriously valuable resource for farmers who take their jobs seriously. To enter and find out more about the AutoCopter™ SuperScout Contest, visit us online at www.producer. com/contest. Or visit us at a trade show over the next year to see this prize and find out why we’re Canada’s best source for agricultural information. Winner will receive a three day all expense paid trip to North Carolina, USA to learn how to fly and operate the AutoCopter™. Travel provided by LeisureTravel2000.ca. For more information about the AutoCopter™, visit autocopter.net.
1-800-667-6929 www.producer.com
Visit us online at www.producer.com/contest to see the winner of our last amazing contest being presented with his brand new Gator™.
OHLVXUH WUDYHO LQF
powerful partnerships
79
80
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
NEWS
PHOTO BOOK | RURAL CANADA
Photographs reveal stories of the past Pioneers recall early days of farming and agriculture BY DAN YATES SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Dion Manastyrski says he’s fascinated by the things that used to be on the Prairies but actually never left. The west coast photographer with an interest in abandoned spaces spent the past decade building a portfolio of images of farmhouses and long forgotten equipment. The aging buildings and rusty antiques are common sites from prairie roadways, and Manastyrski is no stranger to them. His visits hearken back to his days growing up on a small farm near Rose Valley, Sask. “I remember when I was seven years old, we would get on our bikes and we would disappear for the whole day, exploring all over the place,” said Manastyrski, whose grandparents came to Saskatchewan as homesteaders. “We would go to some of these old places. Even back then, I just thought it was fascinating.” Manastyrski, who now lives in Victoria, left the province following high school, but said he retained a connection to the Prairies. Over the years, he’d return to his family farm and observe how farming was changing and rural communities evolving from a time when small family farms covered the landscape. “I saw enough to know how rich that whole rural life was and still is,” he said. “It’s just changed a lot.” Beginning in 2003, he began making trips back to Western Canada with
Dion Manastyrski hopes to selfpublish his photo book through crowd funding. his camera, taking drives through Saskatchewan and Manitoba and snapping shots of the ramshackle, often decrepit and sometimes hidden structures that remain from some of Saskatchewan’s earliest settlers. “I enjoy the subject matter. I find a lot of people do as well. I don’t know exactly why,” he said. “I think there’s mystery in it and there’s a nostalgia to it.” Manastyrski’s earliest trips were made with a photo book in mind, but the idea eventually began to expand. He interviewed 70 rural residents, mostly senior citizens and retired farmers, about their lifestyle and aspirations growing up: farming before modern machinery, attending one room schools and adapting to new technology. He also asked them how they felt about changes in rural Canada. Manastyrski hopes the book he is working on will blend his photos, archival images and the words of his interviewees. “It’s really intended to be the beautiful story that it is. What happened in
Dion Manastyrski says photographs of weathered structures from early life on the Prairies hold mystery and nostalgia. He has captured them in his yet to be published book, Prairie Sunset: A story of change. | DION MANASTYRSKI PHOTOS
the last 100 years on the Prairies was incredible,” he said. “You had people coming in from all over the world with huge hopes and dreams to start new lives. They had an opportunity to have something you could never have back in their home countries: their own
land and a farm.” Manastyrski is raising money to self-publish his hardcover photo book, Prairie Sunset : A Story of Change, on the crowd-funding website Indiegogo. “Who were these people? What were their lives like and why did they
leave everything behind,” says Manastyrski in a video on his website. Customers who pledge to Manastyrski’s campaign are buying a copy of the book before it’s published. “Most of the work here is trying to get people to believe in crowdfunding,” he said.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
Get it before itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s gone. The best names in seed wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t last long. Book now! CargillÂŽ VÉ&#x2C6;LrZ ZV T\JO TVrL [OaU Q\Z[ graiU
VU \Z MVr \UIiaZLK aK]iJL >LÂťll OLlW `V\
Âś ^L Jarr` all [OL ILZ[ UaTLZ iU JaUVla
ZVr[ [OrV\gO [OL Ka[a aUK JaU rLJVTTLUK
JVrU aUK ZV`ILaUZ [VV >OLU `V\ÂťrL
[OL ILZ[ ]ariL[iLZ MVr `V\r Ă&#x201E;LlKZ
ZOVWWiUg MVr ZLLK [OiZ Mall KrVW I` `V\r ULarLZ[ Cargill lVJa[iVU aUK IVVR `V\r Ma]V\ri[L ]ariL[iLZ ILMVrL [OL` KiZaWWLar
7l\Z ^OLU `V\ W\rJOaZL `V\r JaUVla ZLLK aUK JrVW WrV[LJ[iVU WrVK\J[Z MrVT \Z `V\ JaU LarU a ;VW <W WrLTi\T VU LligiIlL
5V^ iZ [OL WLrMLJ[ [iTL [V [alR ^i[O a Cargill
aJrLZ ;OiZ WrVgraT W\[Z \W [V 4; iU
L_WLr[ aIV\[ [OL JOallLUgLZ VM aUK
graiU WrLTi\TZ IaJR iU `V\r WVJRL[ ^OLU
`V\r gValZ MVr @V\ JaU al^a`Z JV\U[
`V\ KLli]Lr `V\r WrVK\J[iVU [V Cargill
-oY loJal oÉ&#x2C6;eYs and ad]iJe ]isit `o\Y loJal *aYgill loJation JontaJt `o\Y :ales 9eWYesentati]e Jall oY ]isit *aYgill(g.Ja.
Ž The Cargill logo is a registered trade-mark of Cargill, Incorporated, used under license. Š 2014, Cargill Limited. All Rights Reserved.
81
82
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
PRODUCTION
AGCO COMBINES SUM OF CHANGES Gleaner and Massey combines have seen multiple improvements in recent years. | Page 84
PR ODUC TI O N E D I TO R: M IC HAEL RAINE | P h : 306- 665- 3592 F: 306-934-2401 | E-MAIL: M IC H AEL.RAIN E@PRODUC ER.C OM
CRYSTAL GREEN FROM OSTARA PEARL
MANURE | NUTRIENT RECOVERY
The Ostara Pearl system is designed to inject waste water from municipal and agricultural sources and clean that water to the extent that it can return directly to the public waterways. Pearl removes 80 percent of the phosphorus and 25 percent of the nitrogen from liquid manure or municipal waste and converts it into Crystal Green fertilizer prills with a chemical expression of 5.28.0+10. Ostara just opened its seventh facility, with the newest one already operating at Portage La Prairie. More than half the waste water comes from the food processing industry.
Extracted nutrients form new fertilizer
Ostara
treated effluent
Waste-water management | Ostara’s patented Pearl process could help address phosphorus concerns in Lake Winnipeg BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU
magnesium
nutrient-rich influent
Source: Ostara | WP GRAPHIC
crystal green fertilizer
Isolating and transporting phosphorus and nitrogen has always been the Holy Grail for scientists trying to develop better manure management technologies. If those two elements could be economically extracted and exported beyond the point of origin, pollution from manure could be nearly eliminated and commercial grade fertilizer could be sold at a profit far past the farmgate. There was no problem incorporating manure into adjacent fields when
A bulk bagger packages Crystal Green, the enhanced efficiency fertilizer produced by the Ostara system. | BOVARNICK PHOTO
ROB
PHILLIP ABRARY OSTARA PRESIDENT
livestock were raised on small farms scattered around the countryside. However, an economic ring formed around each farm as the livestock sector intensified and animal numbers became concentrated in specialized facilities. Hauling manure beyond that strict radius was economically prohibitive, regardless of what animals the manure came from or what form it was in. The weight and volume of manure, in combination with its nutrient value, usually limits livestock producers to a transportation radius of less than three kilometres. However, a Vancouver company says it can break out of that restrictive ring with a new process that removes 85 percent of phosphorus and 25 percent of nitrogen from waste water. The nutrients are converted into 5.28.0+10% prills and sold in one-ton tote bags. Ostara’s patented Pearl process uses a naturally occurring chemical reaction to convert nutrients into hard fertilizer pellets called Crystal Green. The company has five operational Crystal Green facilities in the United States and one in Europe. Its first Canadian plant recently went into operation processing waste water at Portage la Prairie, Man. More than half the 15 million litres of waste water that are treated daily at this site originates from local food processors such as Simplot and McCain. It contains high levels of phosphorus and nitrogen. Portage is studying the Ostara Pearl system as one option for treating its nutrient-laden waste water. The pilot program is significant because waste water from the facility runs into the massive Lake Winnipeg watershed, which has been in the spotlight for the past two decades because high phosphorus levels are damaging aquatic systems. The Crystal Green system has the potential to recover 100 tonnes of phosphorus a year, according to
Ostara president Phillip Abrary. “It provides a proven and affordable means of helping cities become better stewards of their environment through sound nutrient management practices,” he said Abrary said Portage is also evaluating technology to remove ammonia from its waste-water streams, marking the first time the Pearl process has been deployed in conjunction with an ammonia removal process. Veolia uses its ANITA Mox technology to remove more than 80 percent of the ammonia in wastewater treatment plants. The system combines an aerobic and an anoxic process into one reactor with both conventional nitrite producing bacteria and a specific Anammox biomass. The Ostara Pearl system has been applied only to municipal waste treatment plants, but Abrary said the same technology works just as well with livestock manure. “As long as an organic waste or manure can be pre-processed into a liquid form, our system can remove over 80 percent phosphorus and 25 percent of the nitrogen,” said Abrary. “Physically, the way you do that is simply put the manure into a biodigester to capture the bio-gas. There’s nothing new about that, and there are numerous ways to turn biogas into energy. “What’s left in the bio-digester is liquid containing phosphorus because it does not evaporate. It remains in the liquid until we run it through our Pearl system. That’s why our technology is a good complement to any operation using a biodigester. It creates one more source of income.” Abrary said the more a livestock operation expands, the more sense it makes to install the Pearl. Larger operations have a bigger concentration of manure so their distribution radius becomes even more restrictive, whether they move manure by tanker or drag hose. It becomes even more important to deal with phosphorus transportation when the economic ring of one livestock producer overlaps that of another. He said the Pearl process relies on natural chemical reactions that take place when magnesium is added to waste organic liquid. Phosphorus molecules and some nitrogen molecules attach themselves to the magnesium. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE »
PRODUCTION CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE
These tiny particles continue to grow, layer by layer, as long as the liquid circulates or new waste water is added. The process is best compared to the creation of a pearl inside an oyster. Chemists call the compound “struvite,” and it’s the worst enemy of engineers who manage waste-water treatment plants. There, the mineral struvite forms a concrete-like crust on pumps, valves, pipes and other components in the plants. It’s the cause of high maintenance costs in many plants. “Researchers at UBC (University of British Columbia) were looking for a way to dissolve or eliminate this struvite,” he said. They came up with the idea of using magnesium to draw the phosphorus out of the liquid. That was really the main purpose of their research.” Abrary said the fluid bed is the key to Ostara’s adaptation of UBC’s technology. It is a large vertical funnel-shaped cylindrical tank, really more like three cylinders stacked on top of one another with the smallest at the bottom and the biggest at the top. Waste water is pumped in and circulated, along with a measured amount of magnesium. The presence of magnesium forces the phosphorus and ammonia to crystallize into small pellets that float to the top chamber where the water is calmer. The prills remain suspended in the liquid as long as they remain small and light weight. Eventually they become heavy enough to sink to the bottom of the fluid bed, from where t h e y a re c o l l e c t e d , d r i e d a n d bagged. “When you cut a prill open, you can actually see the layers or the growth rings like you’d see in a tree. What we have at this point is an extremely pure crystallized product,” he said. “A granule ranges in size from one
millimetre to 3.5 mm and is 99.9 percent pure. We control the exact size by manipulating the fluid bed. The product is not water soluble, so you can apply it to water-logged soil and it will not start to release. “Crystal Green is plant-activated when organic acids given off by the crop roots contact the granules. It only releases when a root system needs the nutrients. That means lower application rates and much less risk of loss from leaching and runoff.” Abrary said phosphorus bonding to magnesium gives Crystal Green that extra 10 percent on the chemical expression. The product is a highly stable, hard crystal that’s dust-free and easy to ship, he added. “One thing we’ve seen is that Crystal Green is very consistent, regardless of what waste-water source we run through the system,” he said. “It always comes out precisely as 5.28.0+10%.” Ostara sells the fertilizer in one ton bags, by the truckload, mainly to vegetable and turf customers. The price is two to three times higher than conventional phosphorus products, but Abrary said the number is deceiving because it’s totally plant available. It’s never tied up in the soil, so farmers apply fewer units. “We know the turf and vegetable people see the economic benefit. Our next step is to test Crystal Green in broad acre crops like corn, winter wheat and barley. So right now, we have field trials taking place with those kinds of crops.” Prairie farmers have joked about putting down 100 pounds per acre of phosphorus when they’re 30 years old but not living long enough to see it taken up by their crops. “Instead, he has to keep applying more phosphorus every year if he expects to grow a crop. Not so with Crystal Green. You put down 100 lb. and it’s taken up by your crop.” For more information, contact Phillip Abrary at 604-506-2855 or visit www.crystalgreen.com.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
One of Ostara’s Pearl systems is installed at the City of Saskatoon’s waste-water treatment plant. |
83
DAVID
STOBBE PHOTO
FERTILIZER | NUTRIENTS
Trials testing efficacy of new fertilizer Crystal Green | Company testing phosphorus prills in canola, spring wheat, corn and soybean crops BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU
Like any technological innovation, Crystal Green does not enter the market as the lowest cost option. However, like so many agricultural innovations, the higher efficiency might justify the higher cost. In the case of Ostara Crystal Green, field trials are essential in demonstrating that the economic benefit of the company’s pearlized phosphorus prills merits a price tag two or three times higher than conventional fertilizer products. Ostara is conducting 100 trials in alfalfa, canola, winter wheat, spring barley, corn, potatoes and vegetable crops, says Ostara chief agronomist Dan Froechlich. “We’re testing to make sure it works in an on-farm context with some of the main broad acre crops,” he said. “Next year we’ll be doing more canola, spring wheat, corn and soybeans.” He said side-by-side on-farm trials
are the best way to show whether a product is economically beneficial. For example, Crystal Green might not be viable in a year when corn prices are down and phosphate is cheap. In other years, it might be the only logical choice. “So far, we’ve proven (a return on investment) of 3:1 and 4:1 and even higher, but let’s face it, even if the farmer sees a yield increase and an economic benefit, it still has to get past his banker,” he said. “The banker controls a lot of what a farmer gets to do. He has to be shown that Crystal Green limits the risk of the investment disappearing down a hole.” Froechlich said farmers and bankers need to examine what happens to the fertilizer they apply. If it’s gone forever, it was probably a bad investment. However, if the unused fertilizer remains stable and in place for the next crop, then maybe it was a good idea. “I’m originally from a farm in
The banker controls a lot of what a farmer gets to do. He has to be shown that Crystal Green limits the risk of the investment disappearing down a hole. DAN FROECHLICH OSTARA CHIEF AGRONOMIST
northern Iowa. We used to joke that by the time we finished applying fertilizer on a 160 acre field, the phosphorus was already all tied up in the soil,” he said. “That’s what Crystal Green prevents. It only releases phosphorus when organic acids from the plant call for it. When the plant stops growing, it stops giving off organic acids so Crystal Green stops releasing phosphorus. “If you put Crystal Green down in a corn field on 30 inch centres, it’s not likely the roots will access it down the row centres in the first year. The organic acids will not have reached the prills to trigger a phos-
phorus release. That means all the Crystal Green down the middle between the rows is still there the following year.” A lot of vegetable crops and irrigated crops are grown on sandy soils. Froechlich said Ostara’s experience in sandy soil shows that the product does not wash down below the root zone. “On the Canadian Prairies, where calcium can be an issue, a lot of phosphorus normally get tied up right away. Crystal Green helps in two ways,” he said. “First, as we said, phosphorus is only released when it’s called for by the roots. It’s not freely available for
the calcium to get it. Second, our slow release magnesium helps improve the calcium-magnesium ratio that causes problems in some of your higher pH soils. “We’ve also found reducing the overall P2O5 rate by 25 percent gives us higher yields. If the recommendation calls for 100 pounds of P2O5 for a 250 bushel corn crop, we drop that to 75 lb. total P2O5.” In that situation, he said the company would typically use 70 lb. Crystal Green along with 108 lb. MAP to obtain the required 75 lb. phosphorus. Froechlich said Ostara always put a small amount of conventional water soluble phosphorus in the blend with Crystal Green to give the plants an immediate boost. The plants will not exude the required organic acids to trigger a phosphorus release unless they are established with a healthy root system. The conventional phosphorus provides that kick start.
84
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
PRODUCTION
MACHINERY | COMBINES
Agco upgrades Gleaner, Massey harvesters Lighter weight, increased capacity | Gradual changes in the components and design result in new combines, over time BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU
Rather than going back to the drawing board every few years, Agco believes in the gradual evolution of its combines, focusing each new enhancement on the weakest link in the chain. This year, the company used the Farm Progress Show in Boone, Iowa, and Big Iron in Fargo, North Dakota, to introduce major upgrades to its Gleaner and Massey combines. Engine selection is one example of Agco’s gradual approach. As of last January, every Agco product is now powered by an Agco engine. The only exception is the compact tractor line. Agco bought the Finnish engine company Sisu in 1994, which was recently renamed Agco Power. Sisu engines immediately began powering Agco implements, and the full line of Agco-built implements now has Agco Power. All 2015 model year combines are Tier 4 compliant, with diesel exhaust fluid, selective catalytic reduction and dual turbochargers with external-cooling ECR. The engines do not use diesel particulate filters. The Class 6 combines in the Gleaner and Massey lineup are powered by the 8.4 litre, six-cylinder engine rated at 322 horsepower with maximum 398 h.p. boost. The Class 7 machines have the 9.8 litre, seven-cylinder engine rated at 375 h.p. and 451 h.p. maximum boost. The Class 8 Massey also has the 9.8 litre, seven-cylinder engine, but the rating is 460 h.p. with maximum 490 h.p. boost. The Class 8 Gleaner is a lighter weight combine and has a straight through gearbox, which means the same 9.8 litre engine only has 430 h.p. with maximum 471 h.p. boost. All Gleaner and Massey combines can be equipped ready for Ag Leader as a factory option, which allows for yield monitoring with a live yield map. The option includes an elevator mount unit, yield sensor, moisture sensor, speed module and harness. Farmers need only add the Ag Leader display of their choice.
TOP: The Gleaner S88 is 16,000 lb. lighter than its nearest Class 8 competitor, needing less rubber and horsepower to do the same job. LEFT: After grain leaves the transverse rotor accelerator rolls push it to the grain pan faster than gravity and use the whole cleaning area. ABOVE: A rotating spout stops grain loss when parking the auger. | AGCO PHOTOS
GLEANER S8 SUPER SERIES The 32,000 pound transverse rotary Gleaner S8 is still at the bottom of the class when it comes to weight. “Gleaner is the lightest combine platform in the world,” says Agco combine specialist Kevin Bien. “The S88 is nearly eight tons lighter than competitive Class 8 combines. We save weight because the natural flow rotor design requires fewer components.” Bien said the straight-through gearbox gives Gleaner an automatic energy advantage over combines with a 90 degree gearbox because the 90 degree change in power direction is inherently inefficient. “There are greater parasitic losses with any 90 degree gearbox than with a straight-through gearbox. That goes without saying. The more power you tr y pulling through that 90
degree gearbox, because of the engine location, the more power you lose. “The 90 degree gearbox is also more difficult to service. If I’ve got a New Holland CR and I have to service the gearboxes that drive the twin rotors, I have to get inside the cleaning shoe. Now that’s a major job. “Whereas, if I’ve got a Gleaner with a straight-through shaft, the power requirement is less, the combine weighs less and I’m servicing it from the outside.” Concave filler plates are now available to boost threshing performance in wheat and other small grains. New
separator blanking is available, with three blanks for maximum performance in grass seed, sunflowers and specialty crops. A perforated elevator door makes harvesting soybeans and edible beans in sandy conditions a much cleaner operation. The clean grain elevator drive is six percent faster and handles more than 5,000 bushels per hour of dry corn. The S8 has increased capacity for farmers wanting to get out early and harvest high-moisture crops. A perforated cascade pan for the cleaning shoe provides a 12.8 percent increase in pneumatic cleaning area to pro-
vide cleaner grain in the tank and lower losses in the field. “This area used to be solid, so grain would come up the rotor,” Bien said. “If I was threshing high moisture grain, it would stick for quite a while before it fell down to chaffer and the sieve. “Now that we have a perforated pan, the high moisture grain falls down to the cross auger very easily. Also, the show used to be 7,729 sq. inches. Now it 8,721 sq. inches. “It’s a huge improvement in capacity. If I had been running 4,000 bu. per hour high moisture corn before, now I can run 4,400 bu. per hour.”
For farmers interested in conservation tillage, the straw spreader motor was moved two inches to the rear for better straw and residue discharge. Other changes are designed to reduce spreader curtain and paddle wear by 50 percent. The new Gleaners get a highercapacity rear-wheel assist steering control unit, with a larger cylinder to help in fully loaded conditions. The combines keep their unitized, welded main frame, which provides a low centre of gravity and true centerline design for better handling in adverse field conditions.
PRODUCTION
MASSEY 9505 SERIES Bien said the Massey 9505 axial weighs 39,000 to 40,000 lb. and is simple design compared to many other combines. The 9505 couples the Trident processor with a new variable-speed hydraulic-drive fan that’s adjustable from 100 to 1,350 r.p.m. Extending the r.p.m. fan-speed range eliminates the need to switch pulleys for different crops. Massey also added perforated panels at the bottom of the shoe for soybeans, edible beans and other harvest conditions in which sand and dirt get into the combine. “The bottom of the shoe has the capability to run these perforated panels down below the auger trough to take out the fines,” he said. “They give the cleaning shoe area a chance to clean out when you’re cutting low and bringing dirt into the combine.” Agco said the panels allow better control of material distribution on the shoe to improve rotor and shoe performance and improve material distribution in the separation and threshing areas. There’s more to bumping up the power on a combine than simply turning the screw on the software. C o m p o n e n t s m u s t b e s t ro n g enough to survive and take full advantage of the new-found power when running those large headers in tough conditions. The new 9505 provides 28 percent more power to the variable-speed header drive, which has been upgraded to take the extra torque. Massey uses the same V-Cool system, which places the radiator, hydraulic-cooling heat exchangers a n d air-to-a ir int ercoo l e r i n a V-shape below a variable-speed, hydraulically driven fan, which draws only as much power from the engine as needed. It still includes the purge reverse cycle to clear off chaff and other debris. Bien said a new grain-saver option on the unloader auger is designed to prevent grain from falling to the ground when the auger is shut off while it’s full of grain. “We have a grain car t type of unloader tube that swings out. Normally, when you shut off the auger to swing it back in, you tend to lose some grain at the end of the tube. “Now we have a power driven rotating spout at the end. It rotates to the top side and lets you swing the tube back in with the spout pointing to the inside so you don’t lose clean grain. It rotates whether the unloading auger is engaged or disengaged.” The cab has a new layout, new steering column and enhanced ergonomic control placement. Agco said the changes provide the operator with
better visibility. For more information, visit www. masseyferguson.us or www.GleanerCombines.com.
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
85
LEFT: A larger, touchscreen monitor will be available next year on the Massey 9505 series. | AGCO PHOTOS ABOVE: The Canadian flag version of the 95 series will making the rounds at farm shows and field demonstrations.
BETTER START. BETTER HARVEST. Bright golden yellow as far as the eye can see. Now that’s the mark of a truly successful canola crop. But when you plant with seeds treated with DuPont™ Lumiderm™ insecticide seed treatment, you’ll see the benefits of flea beetle and cutworm protection long before the first hints of yellow begin to grace your fields. That’s because Lumiderm™ helps get your crop off to a better start. And a better start means a better harvest.
Ask your seed retailer or local representative to include Lumiderm™ on your 2015 canola seed order and realize a better start. Visit lumiderm.dupont.ca.
DuPont Lumiderm ™
™
DuPont™ Lumiderm™ is a DuPont™ Lumigen™ seed sense product. As with all crop protection products, read and follow label instructions carefully. The DuPont Oval Logo, DuPont™, The miracles of science™, Lumiderm™ and Lumigen™ are registered trademarks or trademarks of E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company. E. I. du Pont Canada Company is a licensee. Member of CropLife Canada. © Copyright 2014 E. I. du Pont Canada Company. All rights reserved.
insecticide seed treatment
86
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
LIVESTOCK
WHEN SHEEP AND BISON COLLIDE A disease carried by sheep can have fatal effects on bison, but research is limited on how to prevent bison from contracting malignant catarrhal fever. | Page 88
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
HOGS | ANIMAL HEALTH
Transportation points key to PED control Porcine epidemic diarrhea | While Canada has successfully managed the virus so far, fall brings increased risk of infection BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
TORONTO — The porcine epidemic diarrhea virus can travel on its own in the air for 15 kilometres, but human transport is the more likely carrier. Manure application companies and trucks that deliver feed and haul hogs to market can carry the potentially fatal disease from farm to farm. “Transportation is a high risk for us,” said Ontario veterinarian Cathy Templeton. She has 1,250 sows on her farm and has seen cases first hand in her practice. Ontario has had 63 positive sites, and the disease has been contained this summer. Manitoba has reported three new cases within the last two weeks. “We have so far managed to largely keep it out. We are more at risk this fall,” she told a Canadian Meat Coun-
cil food safety symposium in Toronto Oct. 2. A keener focus on PED in the last 12 months has also brought a reduction in salmonella and PRRS because veterinarians are testing more and people are carefully following biosecurity measures. Diligent sanitation is the key, starting with correct truck washing. In Europe, truck washing is mandatory before vehicles leave abattoirs. Canada may have to follow that protocol. “We may need to consider that as trade opens between our country and the EU,” Templeton said. Ontario does not have enough truck washing facilities, she added. Many Ontario transport companies operate truck wash systems, but they are not close to slaughter plants. Templeton said that even if more stations were built, they would not be ready for this PED season. She also said she has noticed that
rules and regulations are being interpreted and enforced differently across the country. The bottom line is that truckers need to know how to wash a vehicle and trailer properly. Two people need two hours to wash a truck and trailer. A proper wash takes 6,000 litres of hot water and cleans trucks front to back to remove all organic material. Disinfectant must be applied to a clean surface, and the vehicles must dry properly. Vehicles need to be inspected by people other than wash bay staff. Swabbing may be done to see what is left after cleaning. Mark Fynn of Manitoba Pork said the process needs to be repeated if the truck still has visible signs of manure. “We can’t take a half-assed approach to washing these trailers,” he said in a conference call Oct. 3. Farmers also need to get stricter
about who enters their property. Service providers such as feed deliveries, meter readers, semen deliveries, garbage collectors and dead animal pickup should call before coming and should tell the farmer where they have been. They should stay out if it is not necessary to enter the yard. Fynn suggested setting up a collection point at the end of the driveway. Those coming on the farm must wear disposable boots so they do not bring in infection or take it elsewhere. Manure poses a major threat, and many farms use custom applicators to remove it. However, more producers are providing their own liquid manure agitators, pumps and hoses which stay on the farm, said John Carney, executive director of the Manitoba Livestock Manure Management Initiative. A recent survey found companies have changed their practices because of the seriousness of PED by
WALKING THE COWS
providing more education for employees and more communication with farmers and stepping up biosecurity practices. “We are seeing a lot more time and consideration going into planning the route that the manure applicator, equipment and staff are going to follow before coming to the site,” Carney said. That plan includes finding an alternate farmgate. Most farms have only one entrance, which makes it difficult to avoid other farm traffic such as employee vehicles, hog trucks, feed deliveries and service people all using the same driveway. Carney said farms need separate entrances to the lagoon and a clearly marked line of separation where they may not pass in the farmyard. Farmers could consider marking this with yellow tape or pylons so that operators can see where they may not go.
HOGS | PED
Officials testing how long virus can survive BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
Craig Cameron of Millet, Alta., leads his herd of Maine-Anjou down the road to their next pasture. |
MIRIAM CAMERON PHOTO
Manitoba Pork wants to know how long the porcine epidemic diarrhea virus can survive adverse conditions. It is working with the Manitoba Livestock Manure Initiative and the provincial agriculture ministry to collect manure samples and assess how long the virus can survive in a lagoon and if it is capable of infecting pigs. About 600 sites have participated, but smaller farms have not become as involved, said Mark Fynn of Manitoba Pork. Most of the testing involves lagoon tests to gauge the presence of the virus. Manure samples are collected at different depths from 12 locations where the virus was discovered in May. Manure temperature, ambient air temperature and pH levels are measured to see if they affect the virus. Virus has been found but the researchers do not know if it is still capable of causing disease. Farmers are also being encouraged to collect swabs from their pigs and send them for testing. This could potentially cover all pigs in the province. Clinical signs for mature pigs are subtle and could be easily missed. A broad survey of this type could look for a wider range of stock in the province.
LIVESTOCK
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
87
BEEF, WINE | PROMOTION CAMPAIGN
Eat, drink and everyone’s merry Profitable partnership | Canada Beef Inc. pairs up with Jackson Wines BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
Diners at Karisma Resorts enjoy fine wine and quality Canadian beef, a partnership formed to develop brand loyalty. | FILE PHOTO
BEEF GRADING | U.S. REVISIONS
U.S. plans revisions to beef grading system The computerized system can better measure marbling and yield on today’s bigger cattle carcasses BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU
TORONTO — Significant changes in the beef industry have prompted the United States to consider revising its grading system, but Canada is not following suit. “Often there are suggestions for different improvements. Currently there is nothing proposed,” said Dave Solverson, president of the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association. “Our grading system is more specific than the U.S. system.” Canada is monitoring the U.S. proposals because both countries want similar systems, said Graeme Hedley, chair of the Canada Beef Grading Agency. “We are harmonized on marbling and we are in the process of harmonizing on yield,” he said. “It doesn’t have a lot of bearing on consumers, but it affects how producers get paid.” The changes will take modern cattle types into account, but sweeping changes are unlikely, he said. Canada offers a private service that is federally regulated through the Canadian Food Inspection Agency. “We deliver according to the regulations and the CFIA employs a national grades officer,” Hedley said.
Canada’s grading regulations are embedded in the new food safety act. Some regulatory changes will be published for comment later this year with implementation the middle of next year. The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced Aug. 14 it was seeking public comment on revisions that would include a review of beef instrument grading. The computerized system measures qualities such as fat depth and deposition. It can also more accurately determine marbling and yield when a carcass appears to be borderline. The U.S. standards were developed nearly 100 years ago and were last changed in 1997. Cattle have grown larger and their physical makeup has changed since the last review. Carcasses were 500 to 600 pounds when the yield grade standard was developed 50 years ago but have since grown to 800 to 900 lb. The U.S. grades are Prime, Choice, Select and Standard and are based on quality and yield grades. The quality grades refer to marbling and maturity while yield determines the percentage of a carcass that should yield boneless, closely trimmed retail cuts.
TORONTO — A glass of wine served with a savoury steak at a high class resort has turned into a winning partnership. Karisma Resorts, Air Canada Vacations, Jackson Family Wines and Canada Beef have worked together for the last year to create special vacation experiences. Karisma Resorts, which owns allinclusive properties in Mexico, Latin America and Europe, works with the other companies to offer week long culinary experiences to guests. They can sample fine wines, eat Canadian beef, learn from chefs and become more sophisticated epicureans. Canada Beef Inc. considers this alliance as a huge coup, especially when the California based winery came on board. The publicity generated was worth its weight in gold. “The exposure with Jackson is huge,” said Chuck McLean, pastchair of Canada Beef. There was no problem getting Canadian beef into Mexico, where restrictions continue because of BSE. “Having enough supply was the problem. We actually ran out in the middle of it all,” McLean told the Canada Beef forum held in Toronto Sept. 18.
The partners hope to build brand loyalty among customers so they will continue to stay at the resorts and buy beef and wine. “It is all about marketing and getting the word out there,” said Jereon Hanlo, food and beverage vice-president for Karisma, which entertains 350,000 guests a year at 21 properties. Jackson Wines considered it a fresh opportunity to promote its portfolio of 500 wines. “Our basis is luxury and quality. It is the No. 1 attribute that our company believes in,” said Gayle Bartscherer, vice-president of international marketing. “You want to impress the heck out of them so they will keep coming back.” The Jackson company was persuaded to join partly because Canada Beef and Karisma Resorts shared a similar philosophy about promoting quality. “You want a company that is relatable to your industry but not in your industry. Both partners have to get something out of it,” she said. The culinary package pairs different cabernets with a variety of beef products, as well as locally grown food to round out the week long event. Canada Beef is also working with other companies to further build the brand. Reinhart Food Service, the fourth
largest food distribution chain in the United States, has added Canadian beef to its product line using the brand name Eagle Ridge. Reinhart has 31 food distribution outlets east of the Mississippi River, and in 2013 the company exceeded $6.5 billion in sales with plans to expand. It is owned by Chicago based Reyes Holdings, one of the largest privately held food and beverage distributors in the U.S. with annual sales of $23 billion. Reinhart distributes food to restaurants, health-care institutions, schools, universities and the military, said John Dvorak, corporate manager of meat marketing. “We service the full spectrum of food service,” he said. The company was attracted to Canadian beef because it promotes a high quality and humane treatment of livestock and honest business dealings. It also educates chefs and other meat buyers because food knowledge is often lost when distribution becomes such a major industry. Those preparing the food do not know where it comes from or how to prepare it properly. The company is working with Canada Beef to introduce marketing information and training in the hopes that meat buyers will develop brand loyalty.
88
LIVESTOCK
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
MCF | AWARENESS
Deadly bison virus lacks research: veterinarian Lambs considered main source | Studies show the virus can be transmitted from sheep feedlots up to 10 kilometres away BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
A Saskatchewan veterinarian says itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s time industry and government took a closer look at a disease carried by sheep that is fatal in bison. Laboratory tests have confirmed that malignant catarrhal fever has claimed at least 19 animals in the RJ Game Farm herd near Fairlight, Sask., in the last few years. Co-owner Robert Johnson suspects MCF in at least 20 more suspicious deaths. Dr. Clarke Hill, the veterinarian for both the bison herd and a neighbouring sheep flock, disputes the cited literature that suggests only three or four cases of MCF are found a year in Saskatchewan. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve had more than that last month off RJ Game Farms,â&#x20AC;? he said. MCF is a herpes virus carried by sheep and shed through respiratory secretions. Sheep carry the virus for life but are unaffected. Six- to eightmonth-old lambs are thought to be the main source of MCF because they shed large amounts of the virus. The problem at the bison farm began several years ago and is compounded by personality conflicts of the people involved. However, Hill said both the bison
Sheep and lambs can carry MCF without showing effects, but the disease can be transmitted to bison with deadly results. | and sheep industries have to address it. A recently released video produced to educate producers says there are
only a handful of cases each year, and Hill said that might make producers think they donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t really have to worry. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I think itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a bigger problem than
what Saskatchewan livestock and some of these producers think there is,â&#x20AC;? he said, referring to the provincial agriculture ministryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s livestock branch. Research on MCF is not extensive, and no one really knows how far apart the two species should be to keep the bison safe. The sheep near RJ Game Farm are two to three kilometres away. Johnson and his father-in-law, Ryan Clark, have unsuccessfully tried to force the provincial Agricultural Operations Review Board to hear his concerns. In 2011, then agriculture minister Bob Bjornerud appointed a task force to examine the issue. It recommended the province establish a notifiable disease list, conduct research into how far apart bison and sheep should be and undertake an education and awareness program. The ministry said last week it continues to consult on the notifiable disease list. In 2012, it announced $300,000 in research funding over three years and said $50,000 per year goes to the Western College of Veterinary Medicineâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s disease investigation unit. It also provided money for education and awareness as well as the video. Hill said he finds himself between a rock and a hard place because while at times Johnson and Clark might have exaggerated the problem to get their point across, the deaths really are occurring. The more post mortems he does, and the more lab samples taken, the more positives show up. He said he takes precautions and carefully documents when he has been on the sheep farm so that the bison producers are aware. However, he really doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know whether that matters. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have a whole lot of solutions for them because the disease itself is not that well known,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Moving the sheep far away would definitely decrease the chance of the problem, but how far nobody knows.â&#x20AC;?
FILE PHOTO
Moving the sheep far away would definitely decrease the chance of the problem, but how far nobody knows. DR. CLARKE HILL VETERINARIAN
Research has shown that MCF can be transmitted about 10 km in feedlot situations where the sheep would shed the disease at higher rates. However, Hill said the sheep farm at Fairlight is a 200-lamb operation. He said veterinarians and others assumed that two to three km would be far enough when the sheep were first placed in the area, but bison still died. Hill said it is known that animals under stress can cause and contract MCF. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Number one, bison is a wild animal, so when are they not stressed?â&#x20AC;? he said. Sheep are stressed when lambing, at weaning and if they havenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t been sheared or sheared properly. RJ Game Farm is a fairly intensive bison operation, which could also be a factor. Hill said the number of cases has recently gone up, but he doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know if the cause was the heat, the moisture or nothing different at all. He said some bison and sheep producers have been known to happily co-exist fairly close by, but the sheep may not be carriers or the stocking rates of both species might be the deciding factor. In any event, he said the industries and government canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t push MCF aside. The government has said it canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t tell people they canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t farm their land, but Hill said something has to be done if what one farmer does costs a neigbour. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a multifaceted issue here,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If I knew the cause (of losses) and that it could be prevented, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d want something done about it.â&#x20AC;?
LIVESTOCK
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
89
ANIMAL WELFARE | PUBLIC IMAGE
Would your farm portray a positive image on YouTube? ANIMAL HEALTH
JOHN CAMPBELL, DVM, DVSC
If it is not something you want others seeing, it shouldn’t be happening
A
n animal rights group recently released a video taken with a hidden camera on a dairy farm in New Mexico. The images from Mercy for Animals showed workers beating cows with chains, using electric prods on the genitals of cattle and dragging cattle that couldn’t walk behind a tractor. The images were shown on every television news show that night and authorities quickly closed the farm, stopped milk shipments and moved the cows to other farms. The actions of the employees on this dairy farm could not be condoned by any reasonable person. These were actions of outright animal cruelty and cannot be justified for any reason. I believe these cases are not widespread, but they do occur and they paint a terrible picture of the livestock industry for the public. As a livestock industry, we need to be proactive in preventing these problems from occurring. This does not mean we shouldn’t allow cameras on our farms. On the contrary, we should be comfortable having anything that happens on our farm, ranch or feedlot recorded on
video. This means making animal welfare a priority with everyone on the farm, including all of our employees. I know that many of the larger feedlots in Western Canada already have animal welfare protocols in place and work with their veterinarians to train staff in appropriate animal welfare practices. We have an updated code of practice for beef and dairy cattle that can serve as a great starting point for having these conversations with employees and helping veterinarians and producers design animal welfare protocols. Non-ambulatory or downer cows are among the most common problems seen on these animal abuse videos. Occasionally, animals that are injured or unable to rise need to be dealt with in a humane manner. They need to be in a well-bedded environment and have feed and water within reach. It is extremely difficult to move these animals in a humane fashion. Never drag them, but if they need to be moved, use a sled or sling or roll them gently into the large bucket of a front-end loader. Downer animals should also be provided shelter or protection from weather. They should be assessed by a veterinarian and a decision made on the prognosis of that animal. Humane euthanasia may be necessary and should be carried out in a timely manner. The most common cause of downer animals are when lame, thin or sick animals are sent to market for slaughter. In some cases, these animals arrive at an auction market, are sold and may spend another week wait-
Trait Stewardship Responsibilities Notice to Farmers ®
Monsanto Company is a member of Excellence Through Stewardship (ETS). Monsanto products are commercialized in accordance with ETS Product Launch Stewardship Guidance, and in compliance with Monsanto’s Policy for Commercialization of Biotechnology-Derived Plant Products in Commodity Crops. Commercialized products have been approved for import into key export markets with functioning regulatory systems. Any crop or material produced from this product can only be exported to, or used, processed or sold in countries where all necessary regulatory approvals have been granted. It is a violation of national and international law to move material containing biotech traits across boundaries into nations where import is not permitted. Growers should talk to their grain handler or product purchaser to confirm their buying position for this product. Excellence Through Stewardship® is a registered trademark of Excellence Through Stewardship. ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Roundup Ready® crops contain genes that confer tolerance to glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup® brand agricultural herbicides. Roundup® brand agricultural herbicides will kill crops that are not tolerant to glyphosate. Acceleron® seed treatment technology for canola contains the active ingredients difenoconazole, metalaxyl (M and S isomers), fludioxonil, and thiamethoxam. Acceleron® seed treatment technology for soybeans (fungicides only) is a combination of three separate individually registered products, which together contain the active ingredients fluxapyroxad, pyraclostrobin and metalaxyl. Acceleron® seed treatment technology for soybeans (fungicides and insecticide) is a combination of four separate individually registered products, which together contain the active ingredients fluxapyroxad, pyraclostrobin, metalaxyl and imidacloprid. Acceleron® seed treatment technology for corn (fungicides only) is a combination of three separate individually-registered products, which together contain the active ingredients metalaxyl, trifloxystrobin and ipconazole. Acceleron® seed treatment technology for corn (fungicides and insecticide) is a combination of four separate individually-registered products, which together contain the active ingredients metalaxyl, trifloxystrobin, ipconazole, and clothianidin. Acceleron® seed treatment technology for corn with Poncho®/VoTivo™ (fungicides, insecticide and nematicide) is a combination of five separate individually-registered products, which together contain the active ingredients metalaxyl, trifloxystrobin, ipconazole, clothianidin and Bacillus firmus strain I-5821. Acceleron®, Acceleron and Design®, DEKALB and Design®, DEKALB®, Genuity and Design®, Genuity®, RIB Complete and Design®, RIB Complete®, Roundup Ready 2 Technology and Design®, Roundup Ready 2 Yield®, Roundup Ready®, Roundup Transorb®, Roundup WeatherMAX®, Roundup®, SmartStax and Design®, SmartStax®, Transorb®, VT Double PRO® and VT Triple PRO® are trademarks of Monsanto Technology LLC. Used under license. LibertyLink® and the Water Droplet Design are trademarks of Bayer. Used under license. Herculex® is a registered trademark of Dow AgroSciences LLC. Used under license. Poncho® and Votivo™ are trademarks of Bayer. Used under license. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Livestock producers are being encouraged to use social media to tell consumers about their farm and how their food is produced, such as this humourous website. ing for a load to be assembled before they are loaded again and sent to slaughter. Dr. Karen Schwartzkopf-Genswein of Agriculture Canada’s Lethbridge research centre showed in the October 2012 edition of the Journal of Animal Science that Canadian market cows are 13 times as likely to become downers or die in transit than fat cattle. Extremely thin cows are also at a
major risk of becoming downers, especially during transport. Maintain body condition on your cows with good nutrition and management. Body condition score your cows regularly, divide the herd into management groups based on age or body condition score and test your feed quality so that you can design an appropriate ration for each group. Cattle should be culled before they
become too thin to travel humanely. We need to continually work together to demonstrate that most producers truly care about the animals in their care. In a world where nothing can be hidden, we’d better have nothing to hide. John Campbell is head of Large Animal Clinical Sciences at the University of Saskatchewan’s Western College of Veterinary Medicine.
#HARVEST14 This entry was submitted by @jadeballek!
SNAP, SEND & WIN! Our #harvest14 contest has already received hundreds of submissions and thousands of views, but there is still time to enter. Send us your best harvest shots and you could win a Bad Monkey folding modified tanto knife by Southern Grind.To enter, email your images to readerphotos@ producer.com, tweet them to @westernproducer with the hashtag #harvest14 or post them to our WP Facebook wall. You can also check out the current entries in our gallery at bit.ly/1BAaaHE. Good luck!
1-800-667-6929 | www.producer.com |
90
NEWS
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
GRAIN HANDLING | MANITOBA FACILITY
GRAIN GRADING | DISPUTES
CWB to begin construction on 34,000 tonne elevator in Manitoba CGC reminds BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
CWB is building another new elevator, this one at Ste Adolphe, Man., about 30 kilometres south of Winnipeg. The elevator will be a 34,000 tonne facility located a kilometre off Highway 75. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Red River Valley includes some of the most fertile, high-producing lands on the Prairies,â&#x20AC;? said CWB president Ian White. â&#x20AC;&#x153;CWB is looking forward to putting down roots in the community with another modern, efficient and easily accessible elevator. We are excited to bring our world-class customer service and international brand to the
area, while at the same time providing more choice to farmers.â&#x20AC;? CWB has amassed an impressive collection of grain handling assets over the past year. Facilities now under the CWB banner include: â&#x20AC;˘ Mission Terminal at Thunder Bay and its associated assets, purchased from Upper Lakes Group Inc. for an undisclosed amount â&#x20AC;˘ Prairie West Terminal and its associated assets, purchased for $43 million â&#x20AC;˘ Great Sandhills Terminal and its associated assets, purchased for $17.6 million â&#x20AC;˘ elevators under construction at Colonsay, Sask., Bloom, Man., and Pasqua, Sask.
THE FACILITY WILL LOAD UP TO
160,000 TONNES PER HOUR The facility at Ste. Adolphe is the fourth construction project that CWB has announced in the past year. It is scheduled to open in early 2016. The geotechnical survey has been completed, and construction is scheduled to begin in mid-October. The facility will feature a 134-car loop track and will have a loading rate of up to 1,600 tonnes per hour. The elevator will have access to
Canadian National Railway and BNSF Railway, providing CWB with rail access to its Thunder Bay terminal as well as to western ports and U.S. and Mexican destinations. â&#x20AC;&#x153;As we continue to build a strong and integrated position in the grain handling supply chain, we create a stronger value proposition for farmers that choose CWB as their marketing partner, a partnership that includes an opportunity for an ongoing farmer ownership stake in CWB through our Farmer Equity Plan,â&#x20AC;? said White in a news release. By law, the CWB must submit a commercialization plan to the federal agriculture minister by July 31, 2016. If the plan is approved, it must be executed by July 31, 2017.
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!
26
2
9
16
23
30
27
3
10
17
24
28
4
11
18 1 8
25
29
5
12
19
26
30
6
13
20
27
31
1
7
8
14
15
21
22
28
29
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 Canadaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;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
farmers of grading review service BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM
The Canadian Grain Commission is reminding farmers that disputes over grain grades offered at the elevator can be settled quickly and inexpensively through the Subject to Inspectorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Grade and Dockage service. This yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s late harvest, combined with variable weather conditions across much of the West, means grades for most crop types are all over the map. Disputes over grade are usually more common in years when crop quality is variable, says the commissionâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Daryl Beswitherick. Farmers who disagree with the grades they receive at the elevator can ask the commission to review them. The commissionâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s grade rulings are binding and are usually returned in a few days. The service costs around $50. â&#x20AC;&#x153;If producers go to deliver a load of grain into a primary elevator â&#x20AC;Ś and they disagree with the grade, dockage, protein or moisture on that sample, they can request that the primary elevator send a sample to the Canadian Grain Commission for an official grade or an official ruling,â&#x20AC;? Beswitherick said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The only thing is that they (the producer and the elevator agent) have to agree on is that the sample they take is representative of that load.â&#x20AC;? Producers should have their loads sampled before they unload to ensure the sample is accurate. Growers should also ensure that the elevator examines every sample and offers a grade before the load is dumped. If time permits, growers should consider sending samples to a third party lab before they make deliveries. Waiting until the last minute for grain to be graded can be frustrating. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This time of year, somehow, they (the elevators) always seem to grade hard,â&#x20AC;? said Earl Kovach, a grain grower at Kipling, Sask. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s almost expected that way.â&#x20AC;? Beswitherick said samples sent by courier to a CGC service centre normally arrive the following day. Commission inspectors will normally issue their rulings on grade, dockage, moisture and protein content within a couple of days. CGCâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s official ruling is returned to the elevator and the producer.
Download the free app today. For more information:
1-888-232-3262
WWW.FMC-GAC.COM
info@fmc-gac.com
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
Address the Elephant in the Field.
Take charge of your resistance concerns by making Liberty速 herbicide a regular part of your canola rotation. As the only Group 10 in canola, Liberty combines powerful weed control with effective resistance management to protect the future of your farm. To learn more visit: BayerCropScience.ca/Liberty
BayerCropScience.ca or 1 888-283-6847 or contact your Bayer CropScience representative. Always read and follow label directions. Liberty速 is a registered trademark of the Bayer Group. Bayer CropScience is a member of CropLife Canada.
O-67-08/14-10238264-E
91
92
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
AGFINANCE
CDN. BOND RATE:
CDN. DOLLAR:
1.589%
$0.8915
1.80%
0.930
1.70%
0.920
1.60%
0.910
1.50%
0.900
1.40% 8/29
9/8
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
0.890 8/29
9/8
Bank of Canada 5-yr rate
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Oct. 6
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 SEPT. 29 - OCT. 3 A positive U.S. jobs report boosted Canadian and American indexes at the end of the period. For the week, the TSX declined 1.6 percent, the Dow was down 0.6 percent and the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 both fell 0.8 percent. Cdn. exchanges in $Cdn. U.S. exchanges in $U.S.
GRAIN TRADERS NAME
EXCH
ADM NY AGT Food TSX Bunge Ltd. NY ConAgra Foods NY
CLOSE LAST WK 51.11 27.84 83.60 33.33
50.87 27.82 84.51 33.24
PRAIRIE PORTFOLIO NAME
EXCH
Ceapro Inc. TSXV Cervus Equip. TSX Input Capital TSX Ridley Canada TSX Rocky Mtn D’ship TSX Hormel Foods NY
CLOSE LAST WK 0.245 19.00 2.18 24.19 10.64 51.80
0.24 18.99 2.25 24.00 10.35 50.21
FOOD PROCESSORS NAME
EXCH
Maple Leaf TSX Premium Brands TSX Tyson Foods NY
CLOSE LAST WK 19.14 24.15 41.70
18.84 24.29 37.74
FARM EQUIPMENT MFG. NAME
Land sales have slowed in Saskatchewan, but farmland in Alberta is still a hot commodity and prices continue to rise. | FILE PHOTO FARMLAND | PRICES
Cheaper grain hurts land demand Saskatchewan first affected | Alberta and Ontario prices remain strong and are expected to rise BY DAN YATES SASKATOON NEWSROOM
Despite the explosion in farmland values in recent years, Saskatchewan remains home to some of the cheapest prices in Western Canada. It’s also the first province to feel the effects of softening commodity markets and tighter bottom lines on Prairie farms this year, according to a new report published by a real estate company operating in Canada. “The sellers know that the prices aren’t crawling up like they were for the last couple of years,” said Wally Lorenz of Remax in the Battlefords, Sask. Remax published the farmland price report, which surveys 20 Canadian communities, Sept. 30. Prices generally rose across the country, but gains were smaller than in recent years. “Now (prices) are starting to level off and even starting to come back down a little as well. You don’t have as many buyers and you definitely don’t have as many sellers as we had a year ago,” said Lorenz. Saskatchewan led all provinces in Farm Credit Canada’s most recent report on farmland values, rising 28.5 percent last year. Total farm debt has also climbed in recent years, with Statistics Canada reporting the number at $78 billion across Canada in 2013, up $5 billion from the previous year.
In Lorenz’s region, what the report calls northwest and central west Saskatchewan, the market has shifted this year. According to the report, prices have risen just $150 per acre in northwestern Saskatchewan with the number of sales declining and fewer owners looking to sell. Lorenz said the market was pushed up by optimistic producers and outof-province investors when commodity prices were high. The advent of $9 per bushel canola or less has seen interest wane. “Commodity prices (are) coming down, and if there is more land that comes onto the market, it’s going to be pretty limiting as to how many buyers can be out there,” he said. “ You’re seeing buyers buying smaller parcels, not the big parcels of land, too. They’re not capable of
doing that anymore. They’re adding on two, three quarters of land onto their … operation, not two or three sections that was happening there for two or three years.” Farmland prices were cheapest in east-central Saskatchewan, where some pastures listed at $950 per acre and farmland at $1,150 to $1,350 per acre. The report pegs Alberta and a few locations in Ontario as the only regions of the country where farmland prices are expected to grow significantly over the next year. Stable prices or moderate growth are forecast everywhere else. “It didn’t (affect sales in our area). We are having a problem here with a shortage of land for sale, not a shortage of buyers,” said Allan Fox, an agent in Lethbridge whose region has seen similar dynamics over the
FARMLAND PRICES FOR WESTERN CANADIAN REGIONS IN REMAX’S 2014 FARM REPORT Region Central Alberta Southern Alberta North/west-central Sask. East-central Sask Southwestern Man. Source: Remax
Price per acre 2013 3,400-6,500 800-8,500 1,500-2,000 850-2,500 1,350-1,600
2014 4,500-7,500 1,000-10,000 1,800-2,200 950-2,550 1,500-2,000
past several years. In southern Alberta, land prices vary from $1,000 to $10,000 per acre, according to the report, up from $800 to $8,500 the previous year. Premium prices are paid for irrigated and tile drained land, but the greatest demand is for dry land. Prices were not that high in central Alberta but still higher than what’s seen elsewhere on the Prairies. The report links the demand to expanding farms and interest from buyers looking for recreational land. “If I get a quarter (section), I can sell it. If I get a half, I can sell it. If I can get bigger acres, I can sell it,” said Fox. “Right now, the price of grain is starting to fall, so therefore you’d think that’d slow things down, but it hasn’t.” A rebounding cattle sector has also seen renewed interest in grassland, with prices spanning $1,000 to $1,500 per acre. Lorenz said falling commodity prices could squeeze farmers’ bottom lines and force some of them to sell land to free up some cash. “Right now, anybody that’s moving ahead and doing buying, they’re very astute managers that have got their operation in order,” he said. “They know, day to day, where they’re at with their business.… You’ve got to run it like a real hardcore business.”
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 44.61 46.44 5.51 97.39 7.79 82.16 10.86
43.94 46.06 5.55 100.38 7.94 82.83 11.05
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 94.48 88.45 136.56 50.62 70.64 10.85 109.81 42.61 36.73 60.82
101.28 93.50 140.54 53.57 72.50 10.77 113.07 45.51 39.16 64.06
TRANSPORTATION NAME
EXCH
CN Rail CPR
TSX TSX
CLOSE LAST WK 79.16 241.67
79.74 225.93
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.
Agrium falls short (Reuters) — Canadian fertilizer producer Agrium Inc. expects thirdquarter earnings from continuing operations of 45 cents to 55 cents per share, falling short of Wall Street expectations of 68 cents. Two of Agrium’s major production facilities are offline, but the company said stronger results from nitrogen sales would offset the impact. The Vanscoy, Sask., potash mine has halted production, so the company can tie in an expansion project. Agrium’s Redwater, Alta., nitrogen plant is down for replacement of a major piece of equipment.
AGFINANCE
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
93
SASKATCHEWAN TRADE | ASIA
Sask. eager to boost Asian trade, investment Less reliant on U.S. | The government wants to promote value-added agriculture and open doors to partnerships BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU
Saskatchewan should triple its exports to Asia by 2020, says a report presented to premier Brad Wall Sept. 30. The eight-member SaskatchewanAsia Advisory Council released 45 recommendations as part of its mandate to advise the province on how best to meet trade expansion goals. In 2013, Saskatchewan exported a record $6.6 billion of products to Asia. However, the council said there is still a lot of untapped potential in the region.
Agricultural products are a significant part of the current trade. One recommendation is to increase the value-added sector at home to position Saskatchewan as a leader in food security and innovation and attract more investment from Asia. The council said the Saskatchewan Food Industry Development Centre and similar facilities should be enhanced to increase value-added capacity. It said the government should “fully understand” the impact of its current municipal tax rates, fees, levies and regulatory burdens on competitiveness and aim to be the best at attracting investment.
Council co-chair Grant Kook said Asian companies open up trade opportunities when they invest in Saskatchewan. “ The best way to interact and increase trade for small and medium sized businesses in Saskatchewan, which we know has to become less dependent on the United States in terms of broadening our export sales, is about the doors that they’d open in terms of moving commodities,” Kook said at a news conference. “And the quickest way to do that is to have them invest in your company because then they have extreme alignment and motivation to find those buyers of our products in Asian
BRAD WALL SASKATCHEWAN PREMIER
countries, which we know is growing exponentially.” Wall noted companies such as Agrocorp International of Singapore, which built a plant in Moose Jaw after a trade trip by Saskatchewan officials. He said he has asked the agriculture minister and officials to be on the lookout for similar opportunities.
“We want to improve our presence sort of upstream on the value-added part of agriculture,” Wall said. It isn’t good enough to ask others to come and invest, he added. They need specific details about opportunities. The council also recommended identifying and developing project proposals for at least 10 major investment opportunities, increasing Asian awareness in Saskatchewan schools and better promoting immigrant populations and their contributions. The premier said the government will issue a more formal response to the recommendations within four months.
WEATHERING THE STORM | TAKING STEPS TO COPE WHEN TIMES GET TOUGH
Managing through difficult times requires goals and vision PERSPECTIVES ON MANAGEMENT
TERRY BETKER
W
e had an excellent discussion recently in a class I’m teaching at the University of Manitoba when I asked students what could be done to help manage through difficult situations. Good times are generally not a problem, not because problems don’t exist then but because good times tend to mask the underlying issues. Problems and challenges arise when things become difficult. Management experts say that working toward a defined future helps work through difficult situations. The power of having a common goal or shared vision cannot be overstated. I’ve witnessed families successfully manage through extremely difficult situations because they had a common understanding of what they were working toward. In the absence of having a common understanding, human nature causes people to work toward what they individually think the purpose is or the outcomes should be. It is not effective for more than one person to work toward what they think the future should be. In the worst-case scenario it can be destructive to the business and personal relationships. The problems associated with individual agendas are compounded when dealing with difficult situations. Stress, anger, conflict, confrontation generally rise to the surface. There can be no guarantees of success or exact recipes for working through difficult situations, but it clearly helps to have everybody on the same page. There are three complementary and effective things that can be done to get people on the same page.
SET GOALS
specific actions to work toward.
This is one of the simplest and yet most effective things that can be done to get people working together. The goals need to be written down to make them more valid. They need to be discussed and shared with others in the family and in the business. By knowing what people hope to achieve, and when, you know better where to concentrate efforts. Each individual should set specific goals for themselves, the family and the farm business. Goals can have different timelines for achievement: current (one year), short term (five years) and longer term (10 years). There are no right or wrong goals. Goals should be reviewed annually.
USE GOALS AND VISION WHEN MAKING DECISIONS Goals and vision are worth defining because it involves discussing them within the family and referring to
them as the business is managed. It includes setting specific actions that are designed to accomplish goals and work toward the vision. Having articulated goals and vision is beneficial in all circumstances, not just when times are tough. However, a common understand-
ing that comes from having established goals and a vision can clearly be helpful when facing challenging situations. Terry Betker is a farm management consultant based in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He can be reached at 204.782.8200 or terry. betker@backswath.com.
THE FARMER’S ALMANAC IS PREDICTING A HARSH, COLD & WET
WINTER...IT’S TIME FOR A SUBARU NO OTHER 4X4 or AWD CAN MATCH US ALL NEW 2015 OUTBACK & LEGACY
ESTABLISH A VISION A vision should state what the business owners and family want the farm to be like in the future. It provides meaning to the people in the business and in the work that they are doing. There are technical and practical approaches to writing vision statements. Technically, a vision statement should include three aspects, ideally in one or two short paragraphs: • a comment about the values that are the basis for the business • an envisioned future describing what the business will be like if it achieves its goals • an understanding of how the business serves its stakeholders, which could be family and community Practically, a vision statement can simply be: • where people see the farm and family in the future (usually five years) • how big will the farm be • what will be going on in the farm business • who will be involved • major accomplishments I think most families find writing a technically correct vision statement to be an abstract exercise. I find the practical approach is the most straightforward vision for families to define and is the easiest to develop
MSRP FROM
MSRP FROM
³ $27,995*
³ $23,495*
THE MOST DEPENDABLE VEHICLES AND HIGHEST RETAINED VALUE IN THE MARKET COME FIND OUT WHY OVER 95% OF OUR VEHICLES SOLD IN THE PAST 10 YEARS ARE STILL ON THE ROAD.
2014 SUBARU XV CROSSTREK
THE GAME CHANGING
COMPACT CROSSOVER! • Full Off-Roading Capabilities with Symmetrical AWD • 1,500 LB Towing Capacity - Generous Ground Clearance • Class Leading Fuel Efficiency 6.0L/100KM • Sporty Handling
MSRP FROM
³ 24,995* $
46 mpg 2014 IIHS
FORESTER CHOSEN #1 BY CONSUMER REPORTS
PLUS TOP SAFETY AWARD
THE SUBARU FORESTER IS RANKED AS THE TOP-SCORING SMALL SUV BY CONSUMER REPORTS. THE NEWLY DESIGNED FORESTER EARNED A REMARKABLE 88 POINTS OUT OF A POSSIBLE 100, THIS SCORE IS11 POINTS HIGHER THAN HONDA CRV, 13 POINTS HIGHER THAN TOYOTA RAV4 AND 14 POINTS HIGHER THAN MAZDA CX5.
THE SUBARU FORESTER, THE LOGICAL CHOICE!
ALL NEW FORESTER
MSRP FROM
25,995*
$
ELITE AUTOMOTIVE GROUP INC. O/A
SUBARU OF SASKATOON 471 CIRCLE PLACE • 665-6898 OR 1-877-373-2662 MORE VEHICLES AT WWW.SUBARUOFSASKATOON.COM
94
MARKETS
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
CATTLE & SHEEP Steers 600-700 lb. (average $/cwt) Alberta $260 $250 $240 9/8
Slaughter Cattle ($/cwt) Grade A
Live Sept. 26-Oct. 2
Steers Alta. Ont.
$270
$230 8/29
GRAINS
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Previous Sept. 19-25
n/a 144.85-168.75
Heifers Alta. Ont.
Year ago
161.75-163.00 148.93-172.85
Rail Sept. 26-Oct. 2
n/a 121.36
n/a 271.00-273.00
269.50-271.75 271.00-275.00
n/a 146.77-163.35
n/a 144.55-161.97
n/a 117.69
n/a 270.00-272.00
n/a 270.00-274.00 Canfax
Saskatchewan Feeder Cattle ($/cwt)
$260
Man.
Alta.
B.C.
$240 9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Manitoba $270 $260 $250 $240 9/8
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
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
no sales 222-249 237-257 250-284 272-309 294-340
200-224 215-246 230-257 240-285 275-302 285-335
215-229 230-243 243-260 251-274 273-298 313-338
209-221 220-244 232-259 241-267 272-294 298-336
203-220 218-236 229-248 242-274 267-310 299-337
198-224 214-236 225-245 235-270 258-310 270-340
215-229 220-236 231-250 248-272 281-311 315-341
Fed. inspections only Canada U.S. To date 2014 2,020,391 22,481,182 To date 2013 1,932,414 24,012,166 % Change 14/13 + 4.6 -6.4
Canfax
$270 $260
Canfax
$250 $240 9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Steers Heifers Cows Bulls
Sept. 27/14 Sept. 28/13 889 885 796 823 697 681 947 904
Saskatchewan $250 $240 $230 9/8
YTD 14 851 788 683 921
YTD 13 874 817 677 897
U.S. Cash cattle ($US/cwt)
$260
$220 8/29
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Manitoba $255 $250 $245
Slaughter cattle (35-65% choice) National Kansas Nebraska Nebraska (dressed)
Steers 161.39 161.32 160.50 251.91
Heifers 161.36 161.49 160.18 252.00
Feeders No. 1 (800-900 lb) Steers South Dakota 221.50-243.50 Billings 216-242.50 Dodge City 218-232
Trend steady/+5 +8/+10 +2/+3 USDA
n/a
n/a
9/8
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Canadian Beef Production million lb. YTD % change Fed 1426.3 +3 Non-fed 203.6 -4 Total beef 1630.0 +2 Canfax
EXCHANGE RATE: OCT. 6 $1 Cdn. = $0.8915 U.S. $1 U.S. = $1.1217 Cdn.
Cattle / Beef Trade Exports % from 2014 521,064 (1) -0.5 277,996 (1) + 37.8 126,629 (3) +11.3 180,174 (3) +12.7 Imports % from 2014 n/a (2) n/a 25,655 (2) -12.7 104,051 (4) -22.1 152,459 (4) -11.4
Sltr. cattle to U.S. (head) Feeder C&C to U.S. (head) Total beef to U.S. (tonnes) Total beef, all nations (tonnes) Sltr. cattle from U.S. (head) Feeder C&C from U.S. (head) Total beef from U.S. (tonnes) Total beef, all nations (tonnes)
Close Oct. 3 Live Cattle Oct 162.40 Dec 165.88 Feb 165.55 Apr 164.30 Jun 153.00 Feeder Cattle Oct 240.88 Nov 240.98 Jan 234.73 Mar 233.08 Apr 233.05
(1) to Sept. 20/14 (2) to July 31/14 (3) to July 31/14 (4) to Sept. 27/14 Agriculture Canada
Close Trend Sept. 26
Year ago
158.45 162.10 162.00 162.25 152.80
+3.95 +3.78 +3.55 +2.05 +0.20
128.05 132.43 134.30 135.45 130.00
233.10 231.60 226.18 224.50 224.10
+7.78 +9.38 +8.55 +8.58 +8.95
164.45 165.95 165.95 164.95 165.35
Est. Beef Wholesale ($/cwt) This wk Last wk Yr. ago n/a 292-294 224-225
Montreal
$240 $235 8/29
Canfax
Sheep ($/lb.) & Goats ($/head) Sept. 26 Base rail (index 100) 3.35 Range 0.00-0.20 Feeder lambs 1.70-1.80 Sheep (live) 0.50
Sept. 19 3.35 0.07-0.22 1.50-1.70 0.50 SunGold Meats
Sept. 29 1.95-2.43 2.10-2.40 2.10-2.39 2.05-2.35 1.60-2.21 1.30-2.00 0.90-1.10 0.95-1.05 65-140
New lambs 65-80 lb 80-95 lb > 95 lb > 110 lb Feeder lambs Sheep Rams Kids
Sept. 22 2.05-2.45 2.20-2.45 2.10-2.35 2.05-2.32 2.05-2.20 1.60-2.05 0.95-1.12 0.95-1.05 65-130
Ontario Stockyards Inc.
Wool lambs, new crop >80 lb Wool lambs, new crop <80 lb Hair lambs Fed sheep
Oct. 9 1.65-1.80 1.90 1.65 0.40-0.50
Sask. Sheep Dev. Bd.
HOGS Due to wide reporting and collection methods, it is misleading to compare hog prices between provinces.
Index 100 Hog Price Trends ($/ckg) Alberta $240 $220 $200 $180 $160 8/29
9/8
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Fixed contract $/ckg (Hams Marketing) Oct 26-Nov 08 Nov 09-Nov 22 Nov 23-Dec 06 Dec 07-Dec 20 Dec 21-Jan 03 Jan 04-Jan 17 Jan 18-Jan 31 Feb 01-Feb 14 Feb 15-Feb 28 Mar 01-Mar 14
Maple Leaf Thunder Sig 3 Creek Pork Oct. 3 Oct. 3 181.62-183.17 178.67-181.49 174.90-179.55 176.30-177.51 176.97-182.65 178.46-182.79 180.58-182.65 176.94-181.14 170.88-176.45 167.47-170.37 174.51-175.02 170.74-171.67 176.58-176.58 174.87-175.95 178.13-178.13 176.90-179.42 172.48-177.10 172.23-174.42 174.03-176.10 173.40-173.88
$220 $200 9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
(1) to Sept. 20/14
(2) to July 31/14
$300 $270 $240 8/29
9/8
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Milling Wheat (Oct.) $200 $190 $180 8/29
9/8
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Canola (cash - Nov.) $440 $420
Index 100 hogs $/ckg 221.30 221.92
Man. Que.
*incl. wt. premiums
$360 8/28
9/12 9/19 9/26 10/3
Canola (basis - Nov.) $0 $-5 $-10
$-20 8/28
9/5
9/12 9/19 9/26 10/3
Feed Wheat (Lethbridge) $190 $180 $170 $160 $150 8/28
9/5
9/12 9/19 9/26 10/3
Flax (elevator bid- S’toon) $520 $500 $480 $460 $440 8/28
9/5
9/12 9/19 9/26 10/3
Barley (cash - Dec.) $175 $170
Basis: $49
$165 $160 $155 8/28
9/5
9/12 9/19 9/26 10/3
Chicago Nearby Futures ($US/100 bu.)
Corn (Dec.) $400
$360
9/8
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Soybeans (Nov.) $1040
$920
% from 2014 n/a -17.9 -16.6 Agriculture Canada
$880 8/29
9/8
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Oats (Dec.) $370 $360
$225.0 $210.0 $195.0 9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Oct Dec Feb Apr
Close Sept. 26 106.53 94.48 89.50 90.00
Trend -0.93 -1.45 +1.15 +1.30
Year ago 91.85 87.63 89.85 90.33
Close Oct. 3 91.20 94.30 92.55 89.70
May Jun Jul Aug
Close Sept. 26 90.50 93.53 91.10 88.75
Trend +0.70 +0.77 +1.45 +0.95
Year ago 93.05 95.25 93.15 91.20
$330 8/29
ELEVATOR SHIPMENTS
Sept. 21 316.7 421.3 180.9
YTD 2426.8 3811.4 1042.0
No. 1 DNS (14%) Montana elevator No. 1 DNS (13%) Montana elevator No. 1 Durum (13%) Montana elevator No. 1 Malt Barley Montana elevator No. 2 Feed Barley Montana elevator
Grain Futures Oct. 6 Sept. 29 Trend Wpg ICE Canola ($/tonne) Nov 413.30 398.00 +15.30 Jan 419.60 405.40 +14.20 Mar 426.50 412.60 +13.90 May 432.30 420.00 +12.30 Wpg ICE Milling Wheat ($/tonne) Oct 206.00 190.00 +16.00 Dec 211.00 194.00 +17.00 Mar 220.00 203.00 +17.00 Wpg ICE Durum Wheat ($/tonne) Oct 320.00 303.20 +16.80 Dec 326.50 309.70 +16.80 Wpg ICE Barley ($/tonne) Oct 114.50 125.00 -10.50 Dec 116.50 127.00 -10.50 Chicago Wheat ($US/bu.) Dec 4.9150 4.8125 +0.1025 Mar 5.0350 4.9400 +0.0950 May 5.1225 5.0275 +0.0950 Jul 5.2075 5.0850 +0.1225 Chicago Oats ($US/bu.) Dec 3.5050 3.3400 +0.1650 Mar 3.3350 3.2075 +0.1275 May 3.2575 3.1525 +0.1050 Chicago Soybeans ($US/bu.) Nov 9.4225 9.2350 +0.1875 Jan 9.5050 9.3225 +0.1825 Mar 9.5825 9.4050 +0.1775 May 9.6450 9.4875 +0.1575 Chicago Soy Oil (¢US/lb.) Oct 33.32 32.79 +0.53 Dec 33.45 32.95 +0.50 Jan 33.70 33.22 +0.48 Chicago Soy Meal ($US/short ton) Oct 320.3 308.1 +12.2 Dec 308.9 303.9 +5.0 Jan 306.8 301.7 +5.1 Chicago Corn ($US/bu.) Dec 3.3250 3.2575 +0.0675 Mar 3.4525 3.3850 +0.0675 May 3.5375 3.4700 +0.0675 Jul 3.6175 3.5400 +0.0775 Minneapolis Wheat ($US/bu.) Dec 5.5175 5.3925 +0.1250 Mar 5.6675 5.5375 +0.1300 May 5.7700 5.6500 +0.1200 Jul 5.8775 5.7625 +0.1150 Kansas City Wheat ($US/bu.) Dec 5.7550 5.6650 +0.0900 Mar 5.7550 5.7025 +0.0525 May 5.7850 5.7250 +0.0600
Year ago 478.60 487.80 494.90 500.90 237.00 240.00 246.00 243.00 247.00 148.50 151.50 6.9475 7.0450 7.0975 7.0100 3.1750 3.0575 3.0475 12.9650 12.9700 12.8425 12.6425 39.65 39.90 40.22 433.7 420.7 417.0 4.4925 4.6175 4.6975 4.7700 7.5025 7.5950 7.6350 7.6600 7.5650 7.5600 7.5575
Canadian Exports & Crush 9/8
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Minneapolis Nearby Futures ($US/100bu.) Spring Wheat (Dec.) $680
(000 tonnes) Sept. 28 Alta. 289.6 Sask. 365.7 Man. 109.5
Oct. 3 5.54 3.94 14.00 5.76 no bid
USDA
$350 $340
Close Oct. 3 105.60 93.03 90.65 91.30
Oct. 1 Sept. 24 Year Ago No. 3 Oats Saskatoon ($/tonne) 157.58 149.02 162.08 Snflwr NuSun Enderlin ND (¢/lb) 17.30 17.30 18.65
$-15
$960
Import n/a 129,840 (3) 139,067 (3)
Avg. Sept. 29 34.13 34.13 22.89 22.46 26.50 26.50 30.16 29.50 20.10 20.10 28.18 28.18 23.83 23.83 8.06 8.06 6.96 6.96 6.23 6.23 6.22 6.22 7.87 7.87 4.03 4.03 31.47 31.47 28.65 28.65 30.63 30.63 23.68 23.79 15.73 15.73 16.00 16.00 11.75 11.75 14.44 14.44
U.S. Grain Cash Prices ($US/bu.) 9/5
$1000
% from 2014 -4.9 +0.9 -2.1
Oct. 6 33.00-36.75 20.00-25.00 25.50-28.00 27.00-31.00 19.00-22.50 27.25-29.00 23.00-25.00 7.80-8.50 6.80-7.00 6.15-6.25 6.15-6.25 7.60-8.00 4.00-4.10 30.40-32.00 27.60-29.00 29.50-31.00 23.00-24.00 15.20-16.00 15.00-19.00 10.00-17.00 10.00-19.00
Cash Prices
$380
$320 8/29
219.00 222.52
Laird lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Laird lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Richlea lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Eston lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Eston lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Sm. Red lentils, No. 2 (¢/lb) Sm. Red lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Peas, green No. 1 ($/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)
$400
$340
Alta. Sask.
Source: STAT Publishing, which solicits bids from Maviga N.A., Legumex Walker, CGF Brokerage, Parrish & Heimbecker, Simpson Seeds and Alliance Grain Traders. Prices paid for dressed product at plant.
Cash Prices
$380
Agriculture Canada
Chicago Hogs Lean ($US/cwt)
$240.0
9/8
Fed. inspections only U.S. 77,707,510 81,573,885 -4.7
(3) to Sept. 27/14
Manitoba
$180 8/29
Canada 14,556,030 14,786,056 -1.6
To date 2014 To date 2013 % change 14/13
Export 589,234 (1) 205,937 (2) 669,004 (2)
Sltr. hogs to/fm U.S. (head) Total pork to/fm U.S. (tonnes) Total pork, all nations (tonnes)
$240
To Sept. 27
Hogs / Pork Trade
$260
9/8
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
Canola and barley are basis par region. Feed wheat basis Lethbridge. Basis is best bid.
Hog Slaughter
Saskatchewan
$180 8/29
9/8
$210
Average Carcass Weight
9/8
$110 8/29
$220
Chicago Futures ($US/cwt)
210-227 214-237 225-246 237-272 265-291 290-366
Alberta
$230 8/29
$115
$330
To Sept. 27
Pulse and Special Crops
$125
$360
Cattle Slaughter
Sask.
$250
$230 8/29
$130
Durum (Oct.)
$270
9/8
Barley (Oct.) $120
*Live f.o.b. feedlot, rail f.o.b. plant.
$230 8/29
ICE Futures Canada
Previous Sept. 19-25
Year Ago 1707.5 2815.3 1210.6
$640 $600 $560 $520 8/29
9/8
9/15 9/22 9/29 10/6
To (1,000 MT) Sept. 28 Wheat 333.9 Durum 37.7 Oats 40.0 Barley 2.8 Flax 1.4 Canola 128.4 Peas 129.4 Lentils 42.3 (1,000 MT) Oct. 1 Canola crush 153.0
To Sept. 21 262.2 60.4 18.7 34.6 2.1 120.2 42.0 9.2 Sept. 24 134.7
Total Last to date year 3231.1 2692.9 834.3 674.2 180.8 153.3 120.8 24.5 24.2 24.3 1195.4 768.3 833.6 535.8 57.9 65.3 To date Last year 1190.3 943.8
WEATHER
HOW DOES IT LOOK? |
THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | OCTOBER 9, 2014
Nolan, left, and Derek Ylioja, right, take a break from combining to check a sample with their father, Howard, on the family farm near Birsay, Sask. | JOLINE YLIOJA PHOTO
PUBLISHER: SHAUN JESSOME EDITOR: BRIAN MACLEOD MANAGING EDITOR: MICHAEL RAINE Box 2500, 2310 Millar Ave. Saskatoon, Sask. S7K 2C4. Tel: (306) 665-3500
ADVERTISING
TEMP. MAP
Prince George 9 /-1
Vancouver 13 / 6
PRECIPITATION FORECAST
Much above normal
Oct. 9 - 15 (in °C)
Normal
Edmonton 10 / - 1 Saskatoon Calgary 10 / - 3 12 / - 2 Regina Winnipeg 11 / - 3 10 / - 1
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
Oct. 9 - 15 (in mm)
Above normal
Churchill 0/-5
1-800-667-7770 1-800-667-7776 (306) 665-3515 (306) 653-8750
HOURS: Mon.& Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Tues., Wed., Thurs. 8:30 a.m. – 8 p.m. e-mail: advertising@producer.com Advertising director: KELLY BERG Classified sales mgr: SHAUNA BRAND
PRECIP. MAP
Prince George 15.2
Vancouver 28.6
Churchill 7.8 Edmonton 4.7 Saskatoon Calgary 3.0 2.5 Regina 3.2
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 3.5
We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Periodical Fund of the Department of Canadian Heritage. Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to Subscriptions, Box 2500, Saskatoon, Sask. S7K 2C4
The numbers on the above maps are average temperature and precipitation figures for the forecast week, based on historical data from 1971-2000. Maps provided by WeatherTec Services: www.weathertec.mb.ca n/a = not available; tr = trace; 1 inch = 25.4 millimetres (mm)
Assiniboia Broadview Eastend Estevan Kindersley Maple Creek Meadow Lake Melfort Nipawin North Battleford Prince Albert Regina Rockglen Saskatoon Swift Current Val Marie Yorkton Wynyard
Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %
19.5 12.8 18.9 13.2 18.2 19.1 17.5 15.0 15.0 17.6 14.9 15.0 15.5 16.8 16.9 21.4 12.8 13.5
11.7 5.5 1.0 23.4 5.3 1.8 11.0 17.6 19.0 2.9 4.3 17.2 2.0 5.2 0.6 0.4 8.2 31.5
-4.8 -5.0 -6.9 -4.6 -6.2 -7.2 -4.8 -4.5 -5.2 -5.1 -4.7 -5.3 -5.0 -4.2 -6.8 -6.4 -4.2 -5.5
387.4 475.1 312.1 435.8 395.4 307.0 362.6 369.2 359.6 402.9 474.6 475.3 445.0 353.8 349.6 464.9 575.0 470.8
139 146 113 139 158 117 120 123 112 142 151 164 167 127 129 192 171 152
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
Member, Canadian Farm Press Association
ALBERTA Temperature last week High Low
$4.25 plus taxes
EDITORIAL
™
Publications Mail Agreement No. 40069240
LAST WEEK’S WEATHER SUMMARY ENDING OCT. 5 SASKATCHEWAN
Subscriptions: 1-800-667-6929 In Saskatoon: (306) 665-3522 Fax: (306) 244-9445 Subs. supervisor: GWEN THOMPSON e-mail: subscriptions@producer.com
SUBSCRIPTION RATES Within Canada: One year: $86.24 + applicable taxes Two years: $160.41 + applicable taxes Sask., Alta., Ontario & B.C. add 5% GST. Manitoba add 5% GST & 8% PST. Nova Scotia add 15% HST. United States $186.85 US/year All other countries $372.52 Cdn/year
President, Glacier Media Agricultural Information Group: BOB WILLCOX Contact: bwillcox@farmmedia.com Phone: (204) 944-5751
Classified ads: Display ads: In Saskatoon: Fax:
SUBSCRIPTIONS
Per copy retail
The Western Producer is published at Saskatoon, Sask., by Western Producer Publications, owned by Glacier Media, Inc. Printed in Canada.
TEMPERATURE FORECAST
95
20.9 20.2 17.7 18.5 19.8 20.0 17.3 23.0 18.1 20.8 21.5 18.6 20.2 19.3 21.0 19.2
-7.9 -4.5 -4.3 -9.4 -11.0 -2.5 -4.7 -6.9 -7.2 -5.7 -6.6 -5.3 -8.3 -7.0 -3.9 -9.1
Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %
0.2 4.7 3.1 5.2 1.3 4.8 20.3 11.9 9.7 2.1 6.3 6.5 29.1 2.8 6.5 1.4
248.4 293.8 405.5 314.8 240.6 218.4 244.6 412.9 371.1 351.9 294.1 182.1 386.7 447.0 495.0 311.1
103 87 131 114 69 73 94 152 123 149 102 66 108 116 151 104
Temperature last week High Low
Brandon Dauphin Gimli Melita Morden Portage La Prairie Swan River Winnipeg
15.5 15.2 17.7 16.0 18.9 18.4 18.8 18.2
Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %
-3.0 -2.2 0.2 -3.1 0.3 0.9 -3.1 -2.2
14.2 14.7 17.7 10.4 5.3 5.1 13.0 5.4
587.7 587.2 485.7 510.2 355.7 380.3 416.2 406.3
173 170 132 166 96 106 114 107
-4.5 -2.5 3.8 1.1 -4.6
2.6 6.9 4.4 2.9 23.5
247.3 184.1 186.7 188.8 210.3
103 62 108 92 67
BRITISH COLUMBIA Cranbrook Fort St. John Kamloops Kelowna Prince George
18.6 18.9 19.1 19.5 19.4
All data provided by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s National Agroclimate Information Service: www.agr.gc.ca/drought. Data has undergone only preliminary quality checking. Maps provided by WeatherTec Services Inc.: www.weathertec.mb.ca
96
OCTOBER 9, 2014 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER
! w e N
Platinum Pro Model Shown
;V Ä UK HU H\[OVYPaLK 4LYPKPHU KLHSLY ULHY `V\ visit www.meridianmfg.com/locator.
© 2014 Meridian Manufacturing Inc. Registered Trademarks Used Under License.
www.meridianmfg.com