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THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

VOL. 91 | NO. 29 | $4.25

Farewell to Emmie Former WP columnist offered advice, worked to improve rural life | P. 20

Federal cabinet shuffle

SERVING WESTERN CANADIAN FARM FAMILIES SINCE 1923

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Gerry Ritz stays on as agriculture minister | P. 2

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SEE CALGARY STAMPEDE COVERAGE ON P. 74, 75 & 81

Dark clouds point to a severe thunderstorm west of Oungre, Sask., on July 13. This system was later classified as a tornado warning for the Estevan area and points eastward. |

NOTANEE

BOURASSA PHOTO

WEATHER | STORMS

Severe storm destroys crops | Tornadoes wreak havoc across southern Saskatchewan and Manitoba BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU

Severe weather that slammed southeastern Saskatchewan and southwestern Manitoba has ended harvest hopes for some farmers. Hail losses ranged from light to 100 percent in an area from Weyburn, Sask., to Pipestone, Man., from the July 13 storms. Murray Bantle, chair of the Canadian Crop Hail Association and chief operating officer of Co-operative Hail Insurance Co., said claims had come in from areas reaching just west of Winnipeg. “We’re going to be busy guys,” he said, referring to adjusters. At least two tornadoes were confirmed in Saskatchewan. One was seen about 14 kilometres south of Minton and another near Redvers. The possibility that a tornado had struck in Pipestone, where the skating rink, community hall and hundreds of trees were damaged, had not yet been confirmed. Manitoba premier Greg Selinger

toured the community July 15 to see the damage first-hand. The reeve of the Saskatchewan Rural Municipality of Griffin, about 30 kilometres east of Weyburn, said he was positive a tornado went through a yard south of the community. Stacey Lund said crop losses in the region are significant and many will be a total loss. “No doubt about it,” he said. “You can adjust it out the truck window.” He estimated 60 to 70 percent on his crops will be complete writeoffs, with the rest at 30 to 80 percent. “Really there’s nothing untouched south of Highway 13 where we farm,” he said. His barley and wheat crops were headed and nothing remains. Canola was in full flower, and he has little hope it will recover. “These plants are sawed in half six different ways and drove into the ground. (The hail) took it from waisthigh and headed or full-flower to zero flowers and chopped up like a salad.” Hail ranging from the size of quar-

ters to the size of grapefruits was reported in the storm band. Grain bins are strewn throughout the region and several houses were damaged. Windows and their casings were smashed and farm equipment mirrors were broken. Hail punched holes in vinyl siding.

See weather online at www.producer.com or look for updates on Facebook and Twitter. Earl Duncan’s yard near Griffin, Sask., sustained the worst damage that Lund had heard about. The wind destroyed a machine shed and drove the lumber from it through the walls of the house. It also blew over pumpjacks near Manor, Sask., and drove rail cars off the siding at Carnduff, Sask. Lund said there are a lot of dead birds on the ground and he believes livestock that couldn’t get to shelter must be bruised after

being hit with such large hail for several minutes. Haying operations were already running late in the area and now cattle producers have lost their hay crops. Lund said he hopes to get his destroyed cereals baled for his cattle. He needs more than 2,000 bales to get through the winter. “We’ve got a hundred and some made, and our hay got nailed into the ground,” he said. Lund added that most farmers in his area have crop insurance or spotloss hail coverage and will at least get some money. However, the payments won’t come close to what the crop would have been worth. He said it was one of the most beautiful crops he’s ever seen. “It’s pretty demoralizing,” he said. Meanwhile, in southern Alberta farmers continue to assess damage after four hailstorms affected a region from the Blood Reserve to Bow Island earlier this month. SEE STORM DAMAGE, PAGE 2

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Dark skies spell trouble for fields


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NEWS

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

WEATHER | FROM PAGE ONE

INSIDE THIS WEEK

Storm damage Varying levels of damage were reported to all crops when hail ranging from pea to golf ball-sized ice chunks pummeled fields. Corn grower David Jensen said about 450 acres of fresh corn were affected near Taber, and most has not yet been appraised by crop adjusters. He said some corn will be ready for consumption by Aug. 1 but most fields will be delayed by a week to 10 d ay s a n d ov e ra l l y i e l d w i l l b e reduced. Potato Growers of Alberta executive director Terence Hochstein said most crops would recover, although gravity and yield will be reduced in crops over a wide area. “We’re going to need an open fall,” he said, noting hail will delay maturity and bring frost threats into the harvest equation. He estimated between 3,500 and 4,000 acres of potatoes were affected by hail, ranging from slight damage to major losses. Canola crops also sustained extensive damage,accordingtoAutumnHolmes-

REGULAR FEATURES

Saltzman of the Canola Council of Canada. Many acres in southern Alberta were not insured for hail. However, because the storms occurred at flowering, some crops will have time to flower again. Depending on severity of damage, some might even increase yield as they overcompensate for plant injury. “We’ll have to see what happens this week,” said Holmes-Saltzman. With 10 or more days of recovery time since the last severe storm, it will be easier to assess overall crop effects. Bantle added that as long as the growth point on canola plants isn’t damaged some crops will recover. And while severe storm events grab headlines, he reminded producers that it is July. Most of southern Saskatchewan was under a tornado watch July 15 with the potential for more damage. “It hails almost every day in July somewhere,” he said. — WITH FILES FROM BARB GLEN, LETHBRIDGE BUREAU

Harper deals major cabinet shuffle Eight new faces | Gerry Ritz becomes longestserving agriculture minister in three decades OTTAWA BUREAU

Gerry Ritz was reappointed federal agriculture minister July 15 after committing to running in the 2015 election. As well, trade minister Ed Fast kept his trade portfolio position. He will continue to lead the push for trade deals with the European Union, India, Japan and Pacific Rim countries. They both survived a major cabinet shuffle that prime minister Stephen Harper called a “generational change in the ministry.” However, in a shuffle that brought in new and younger MPs, the key ministers on the agriculture and trade file remained the same. “I really do think there is benefit to continuity at this time,” Grain Growers of Canada president Stephen Vandervalk said. “It is a time of significant agriculture files, and it is good to have a minister already up to speed.” The Canadian Federation of Agriculture also welcomed the continuation of Ritz as minister, a job he was given almost six years ago. “The sector has made several important advances under minister Ritz’s leadership,” said CFA president Ron Bonnett. “I would rate him as a successful minister, although we have had some differences on some policies.” Critics, including National Farmers Union president Terry Boehm and New Democratic Party agriculture critic Malcolm Allen, said the reappointment signaled only more of the same. “From the agriculture side, I don’t

Equine MRI: The Western College of Veterinary Medicine now has a standing equine MRI machine. See page 35. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO

NEWS

» CROPS LOOK GOOD: Prairie » »

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crops appear to have recovered from their late start. 5 AGROFORESTRY: Tree research will continue at Indian Head even after the tree nursery is closed. 14 FLOOD RECOVERY: Rural municipalities in southern Alberta worry they will be left out of the flood recovery. 15 FARM PLAN CUTS: Environmental farm plans could be a powerful marketing tool for producers. 26 ERGOT CONTAMINATION: A case study reveals that ergot can have devastating consequences in a feedlot. 27

» KING CORN: A surge in corn » » » »

acres is pushing out wheat in western Minnesota and eastern North Dakota. 28 CO-OP UNION: Canada’s French and English co-op organizations join forces. 30 AG HALL OF FAME: A farm communication pioneer is inducted into Manitoba’s Agricultural Hall of Fame. 32 NEMATODE FIGHTER: A wheat variety provides nematode protection in subsequent horticultural crops. 33 STAMPEDE HEALTH: Vets play a key role at the Calgary Stampede ensuring that the animals remain healthy. 74

» HIGHER YIELDS: Pea and lentil yields will

Name

portfolio

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Chris Alexander

citizenship & immigration

Candice Bergen

minister of state (social development)

Shelly Glover

Canadian heritage

Kellie Leitch

labour; status of women minister of state (democratic reform)

Michelle Rempel

minister of state (western economic diversification)

Greg Rickford

Kevin Sorenson

minister of state (science & technology; federal economic development initiative for northern Ontario) minister of state (finance)

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

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likely be bigger than first expected. 6 CHINESE CONSUMERS: China is encouraging domestic consumption, which is good news for exporters. 8

FARM LIVING 19

10 11 11 7 85 83 23

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» LOOKING BACK: Frugality forced by trag-

Barbara Duckworth, Calgary Ph: 403-291-2990 barbara.duckworth@producer.com

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Mary MacArthur, Camrose Ph: 780-672-8589 mary.macarthur@producer.com

edy has stayed with this Saskatchewan couple in their retirement. 21 ON THE FARM: Family is important for these Saskatchewan beekeepers. 22

Barb Glen, Lethbridge Ph: 403-942-2214 barb.glen@producer.com

PRODUCTION 76

» HARVESTING CORN: This invention allows »

producers to harvest corn without buying expensive equipment. 77 WATER SENSORS: Farmers are reluctant to install soil water sensors in their fields. 78

LIVESTOCK 80

» GENETICS GURU: Doug Blair retires as a

Souce: Gov’t of Canada | WP GRAPHIC

see any significant change coming in direction or approach and that is unfortunate,” said Boehm. “I guess I had hoped for better, for a new way of looking at things, a new style maybe, but that is not to be,” said Allen. With at least a two-year extension in his role as agriculture minister, Ritz will become the longest-serving agriculture minister since Eugene Whelan three decades ago.

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

Michael Raine, Managing Editor Ph: 306-665-3592 michael.raine@producer.com

MARKETS 6

NEW APPOINTEES TO CABINET:

Pierre Poilievre

84 37 25 9 86 10 12 22 87

COLUMNS

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POLITICS | CABINET SHUFFLE

BY BARRY WILSON

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

»

partner in Alberta’s award-winning Rocky Mountain Holsteins. 80 WINNING SHEEP: Selecting winners in an all-breeds sheep show can be a challenging task. 83

AGFINANCE 84

» FRUIT CLONING: A firm uses cloning to »

produce millions of identical seedlings. 84 VITERRA DEAL: Nineteen Viterra crop input centres aren’t part of a major sale to Agrium. Employees are concerned. 85

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NEWS

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» CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE He is already the longest serving Conservative agriculture minister in more than a century. Ritz said there is much left to be done in the aftermath of the end of the CWB monopoly last year: new rules on varietal registration, changes to the Canadian Grain Commission, development of wheat and barley commissions that will direct research dollars to the industry and continued work to help the livestock industry pull out of its recent troubles by finding market access. “There’s never a lack of work to be done on science based trade,” he said. Trying to battle country-of-origin labelling in the United Sates, which hurts Canadian livestock exports to the U.S., will be a priority. “This is a solution looking for a problem,” he said. “There’s much left to be done.” H o w e v e r, t h e “g e n e r a t i o n a l change” did bring new players to files that affect farmers. Southern Ontario MP and former Toronto Port Authority chair Lisa Raitt becomes the new transport minister, responsible for implementing the new rail freight rate service legislation and overseeing its 2015 review. Quebec Conservative MP Maxime Bernier, a free market advocate and supply management skeptic, becomes minister of state for agriculture responsible for dealing with the Quebec farm lobby, which supports supply management. Calgary MP Michelle Rempel, at 33

The prime minister has decided that the minister who presided over the largest meat recall in Canadian history should remain in charge of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency. MALCOLM ALLEN NDP AGRICULTURE CRITIC

Michelle Rempel, MP for Calgary Centre-North, is sworn in as minister of state for western economic diversification during a ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa July 15. Agriculture minister Gerry Ritz maintains his post following the federal cabinet shuffle. | REUTERS/CHRIS WATTIE PHOTO the youngest Conser vative MP, becomes the minister of state for western economic diversification. And longtime popular Alberta MP

I think minister Ritz has been successful in implementing government policy and being an advocate for agriculture in cabinet even though we have disagreed with him on some issues like the process for the Canadian Wheat Board. RON BONNETT CFA PRESIDENT

Kevin Sorenson made cabinet by replacing retiring southern Alberta MP Ted Menzies as minister of state for finance.

Ritz has been particularly dogged about dismantling institutions that are there for farmers. TERRY BOEHM NFU PRESIDENT

After the swearing in, Rempel told reporters her job as western diversification minister is a dream. “Western Canada is one of the key

I think he has been a successful agriculture minister. There are files he is working on that we consider important and while we certainly could have worked with a new minister, it would have taken some time to get up to speed. STEPHEN VANDERVALK GGC PRESIDENT

drivers of Canada’s economy, but what the untold story is about the western economy is that we do have diversity,” she said.

Today’s cabinet shuffle was little more than a public relations exercise and a desperate attempt by Stephen Harper to look like he’s putting a fresh face on a tired government. MEGAN LESLIE NDP DEPUTY LEADER

FARM POLICY | CABINET SHUFFLE

Ritz’s extended stay draws mixed reaction BY BARRY WILSON OTTAWA BUREAU

Most farm leaders commenting on the reappointment of Gerry Ritz as agriculture minister said that after speculation about a new minister, the news adds stability. “I think he has been a successful agriculture minister,” Grain Growers o f C a n a d a p re s i d e n t S t e p h e n Vander valk said from his For t Macleod, Alta., farm. “We look forward to working with him.” Critics saw it differently. “The prime minister has decided that the minister who presided over the largest meat recall in Canadian history should remain in charge of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency,” New Democratic Party agriculture critic Malcolm Allen said. “It

boggles my mind but there it is.” Terry Boehm, president of the National Farmers Union, said from his Saskatchewan farm that the appointment just means “more of the same” — promotion of trade deals that threaten supply management and guaranteed intellectual property rights for large companies, increased powers for agri-food giants and less power for Canadian farmers. “While the trend of the government would not change with a different minister, I guess the idea of a new minister offered some hope of a slightly less ideological approach,” said the NFU president. “Ritz has been particularly dogged about dismantling institutions that are there for farmers.” The NFU has been a strong critic of the Ritz-led campaign to end the

CWB export monopoly and to reform the Canadian Grain Commission, arguing it adds more costs to farmers while reducing services. However, farm sector leaders who welcomed the re-appointment offered a different view. Vandervalk said the re-appointment is positive. “There are files he is working on that we consider important and while we cer tainly could have worked with a new minister, it would have taken some time to get up to speed,” Canadian Federation of Agriculture president Ron Bonnett said he also welcomes the reappointment of the minister because of his knowledge of the files, commitment to supply management, trade agreements and recognition of the CFA push for a

national food strategy. “I think one of the things we would like to see is an overall strategy that would lay out the parameters of what priorities are in the industry,” said Bonnett. “I think minister Ritz has been successful in implementing government policy and being an advocate for agriculture in cabinet even though we have disagreed with him on some issues like the process for the Canadian Wheat Board.” He said the next two years could bring progress on a number of trade and domestic files important to farmers. “The sector has made several important advances under minister Ritz’s leadership, notably increased market access while continuing to protect supply management and emphasis on private-public partnerships focused on growth and innova-

tion,” Bonnett said in the official CFA reaction statement. For the NDP opposition, the Ritz re-appointment and the return of many familiar faces to cabinet was a sign that nothing will change. “Today’s cabinet shuffle was little more than a public relations exercise and a desperate attempt by Stephen Harper to look like he’s putting a fresh face on a tired government while in reality, he’s simply shuffling deck chairs on a ship that’s beset by scandal, out of control and listing far to the right,” NDP deputy leader and Halifax MP Megan Leslie said July 15. NDP agriculture critic Allen saw it the same way. “We can simply look forward to more of the same — cuts, privatizing, division,” he said. “It is unfortunate. I was hoping for something different.”


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NEWS

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

CROP PROTECTION | GENERIC CHEMICALS

Generic chemical makers want rules changed PMRA regulations too onerous, they claim | Major manufacturers say federal rules strike the proper balance BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM

Companies that make generic farm chemicals say Canadian rules are too restrictive and cost farmers millions of dollars a year. A spokesperson for a group representing some of those companies said last week that current regulations put too much financial risk on generic chemical manufacturers and offer too much protection to chemical companies that develop and register new products. As a result, a limited number of generic products are entering the Canadian marketplace after patents and other regulatory protections have expired. It means Canadian farmers have fewer lower priced generic brands to choose from and spend millions more each year on farm chemicals than they would if regulations were relaxed. “The regulations were written poorly and need to be changed because there’s only been a handful of registrations in the past few years that mean anything in the Canadian marketplace,” said Craig Rath of Rath Consulting that represents generic chemical makers Mana, NewAgCo, Cheminova, UPI and Albaugh. “Right now, we do not see the same number of generic registrations in Canada as we do in the United States.” Regulations that deal with generic chemicals in Canada were updated as recently as 2010. At that time, generic manufacturers hoped the new rules would result in more generic registrations and more competition in the Canadian farm chemical market, which is valued at $1.5 billion a year. However, Rath said the 2010 regulations have not lived up to expectations.

Bob Friesen, vice-president of government affairs with Farmers of North America, agreed. He said generic manufacturers were warning the Pest Management Regulatory Agency of potential flaws in the regulations as they were being drafted. Top on the list of concerns is the process used to determine compensation. As it stands, companies that register a generic chemical in Canada must negotiate payments to the company that originally developed the product, also known as the basic registrant. If the two sides fail to reach an agreement, the next step in the process is binding, final-offer arbitration. In many cases, the financial risks associated with losing an arbitrated settlement are too high, Friesen said. In the United States, generic companies face fewer obstacles and less financial risk, he added, which explains why U.S. farmers have access to more chemicals and lower prices. “One of the reasons why we’re (going public) … is that we’re so terribly frustrated that there hasn’t been any progress in fixing the things that don’t work,” Friesen said. “We started pointing out to the PMRA as early as two years ago that we’ve got a problem here … but we just haven’t been able to move this file in a direction that gives us and generic companies any comfort.” It is hard to estimate how the lack of generics has affected Canadian farmers, but Rath said a single generic registration of a widely used chemical could save Canadian producers tens of millions of dollars a year. Farmers of North America, which launched a Group 1 generic called

Regulations on generic farm chemicals are too onerous and cost farmers millions, say companies trying to get new products to market. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO

Mpower Aurora in May 2010, claims the product’s entry into the Canadian market reduced the price of similar non-generic products by $4 per acre and saved Canadian growers more than $60 million within the first month.

Last month, Friesen issued a letter to FNA’s 10,000 farmer members, encouraging them to get involved in a campaign urging Ottawa to amend pesticide regulations. “FNA has had countless meetings with the Pest Management Regula-

tory Agency, including with the Generic Crop Protection Group of Canada, imploring them to create an environment that facilitates the registration of generics, but to no avail,” Friesen wrote. “We need all farmers to help with a campaign to improve the process for registering generic crop protection products.” Friesen’s letter said generic pesticide companies consider Canada one of the most difficult countries in which to register a generic product. Only 15 percent of the crop protection products available in Canada are true generics, he said. In the United States, it is closer to 50 percent. “That is why certain crop protection products in the U.S. are so much cheaper,” Friesen said. “Banvel II is three times more expensive in Canada. Refine Extra is double the price in Canada. Folicur is almost six times more expensive in Canada.… Tilt is more than triple the cost in Canada, (and) Select is more than triple the cost.” Pierre Petelle, vice-president of chemistry with CropLife Canada, said the regulations are intended to strike a balance between the interests of basic registrants and generic chemical manufacturers. He said price comparisons like those cited by the FNA can be misleading because many factors affect pricing on both sides of the border. CropLife’s members include generic chemical manufacturers as well as major chemical companies that develop and register new products. The current policy is “the result of many years of back and forth and give and take for both sides,” Petelle said. “Is it perfect? No, probably not. Is it providing some results for generics and providing protection for innovators? Yes. I think it is.”

ENVIRONMENT | FLOODING AGREEMENT

LIVESTOCK | COUNTRY-OF-ORIGIN LABELLING

Land flooded over fishery concerns prompts Ottawa-Sask. water deal

COOL lawsuit launched

Federal government had ordered Saskatchewan to close culvert, which flooded land BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU

A legal challenge that Saskatchewan launched against Ottawa after flooding in 2010 has been settled. The two governments last week agreed that any future concern about how flooding will affect fish and fish habitat will be handled by discussion rather than enforcement. The Water Security Agency took action against Environment Canada after it, acting for the department of fisheries and oceans, ordered the flow of saline water from Houghton Lake into fresh-water Lenore Lake stopped to protect the fish. The province disagreed with the order but complied. A culvert under a grid road was closed, turning the road into a dam and flooding farmland that remains

We were responsible for that flooding so we wound up purchasing land that had been flooded due to holding the water back. DALE HJERTAAS WATER SECURITY AGENCY

saline. “We were responsible for that flooding so we wound up purchasing land that had been flooded due to holding the water back,” said WSA spokesperson Dale Hjertaas. The legal challenge sought damages as a result of costs incurred by the province.

The agreement reached last week includes a payment of $4 million from Environment Canada to help pay for fish habitat protection. Hjertaas said that covers part of the cost of the farmland purchases and other work such as road reconstruction. He said neither government gives up its right to issue enforcement orders, but there is a commitment under the agreement to take issues to a senior level within the agencies involved “to try to resolve a potential conflict in the broad public interest.” Meanwhile, Houghton Lake was 30 centimetres below its 2011 high level at the beginning of June when measurements were last taken. Lenore Lake was 40 cm below its high point. Houghton Lake flooded so much that it essentially took over Waldsea Lake to create one big water body in the area north of Humboldt.

BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

A lawsuit to block the implementation of the newest version of countryof-origin labelling has been filed in a U.S. court. Eight groups representing packers and livestock organizations have joined the challenge, arguing the amendment released May 23 by the U.S. Department of Agriculture is unconstitutional and should be stopped. The suit was filed July 9 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. The plaintiffs include the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association, the American Association of Meat Processors, the American Meat Institute, the Canadian Pork Council, the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, the National Pork Producers Council, the North American Meat Association and the Southwest Meat Association. The United States government first implemented COOL in 2009. Last

year, the World Trade Organization ruled it discriminated against Canadian and Mexican livestock exported to the U.S. The USDA rewrote the rule and released a new version similar to a law proposed in 2002, which requires even more tracking and labelling. All muscle cuts sold at retail must now declare the country of origin regarding three production steps: born, raised and slaughtered. “Sorting and tracking livestock and labelling meat by the various routes that livestock may take on the way to market is needlessly complex with no measurable benefits,” said Mark Dopp of the American Meat Institute, which represents packers and processors. The Canadian industry claims that hog and cattle exports have dropped by nearly half since COOL was implemented. Total estimated damages due to price declines, lost sales and added costs to the Canadian livestock sector have exceeded $1 billion per year.


NEWS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

5

SPRAYING | FUNGICIDES

Don’t spray every field: agronomists

A hay field in the Glen Leslie area, east of Grande Prairie, Alta., is raked up July 13 as gulls take advantage of insects and small rodents being stirred up in the process. | RANDY VANDERVEEN PHOTO WEATHER | CROP PROGRESS

Crop tours yield positive news Growing conditions good | Crops have caught up after slow start, frost risk no more than usual STORIES BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM

A growing season that began with seeding delays and cold weather has turned the corner. “At this stage there is probably an average to above average crop possible for large parts of Western Canada,” said Neil Townsend, director of CWB Market Research. Manitoba’s fields are looking particularly impressive, as can be seen in a photo that one of Townsend’s colleagues recently took of his soybean field south of Winnipeg. “He just had a cheap little camera but it looks like professional grade shots from Monsanto or BASF,” said Townsend. “(The beans) just looked really excellent.” CWB conducted crop tours of Manitoba and Saskatchewan last week, and the feedback was encouraging despite some trouble spots in Saskatchewan. “The good outweighs the bad by quite a bit,” said Townsend. Crops have caught up to the point that there shouldn’t be any more fall frost risk than usual. Townsend said there is a stark contrast between crops in Manitoba and those across the U.S. border, which have been saturated with rain. “If you didn’t know your directions, you would think you were standing south of North Dakota when you’re in Manitoba because

CURRENT CROP CONDITIONS Satellite images are used to create vegetation index maps, which show crop and stubble conditions compared to normal. Recent maps show lush crops across most of the Prairies. Normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), July 8-14, compared to normal:

Edmonton

Saskatoon

Calgary Lethbridge

Regina Brandon Winnipeg

much higher

higher

similar

lower

much lower

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

things look way more advanced,” he said. Harry Brook, a crop specialist with Alberta Agriculture, said crops are progressing nicely in that province. “We started with such a late spring that it’s surprising how quickly the crop has come along,” he said. A crop that was seeded two to three weeks late is at worst a week behind and in many cases on schedule because of better than average heat units. “It’s shaping up to be a really good crop,” said Brook.

“I don’t know about bumper crop, but (it’s) certainly well above average. The cereals especially look phenomenal.” Grant McLean, a cropping management specialist with Saskatchewan Agriculture, said ample sunshine has also sped up crop development in his province. “We may not be quite as far advanced as we would be in a normal year, but I think we’re playing pretty good catch-up,” he said. Two-thirds of the crop was rated at normal development as of July 1.

The furthest delayed crops are three to four days behind normal, said McLean. “With the way the crops are advancing, I think that the (frost) risks are certainly reduced,” he said. There are plenty of problem areas in the province in which fields are under water, McLean added, but in general the crops are looking “quite good.” Gordon Reichert, senior scientific adviser with Statistics Canada’s agriculture division, said satellite maps of prairie vegetation indicate lush crops. “ There has been quite a big change in the crop vegetation. It has improved considerably,” he said. Much of the prairie map is green or dark green, which means vegetative growth is higher or much higher than the previous 26 years. Townsend pointed out that the crop is six to eight weeks from being in the bin, and a lot can happen during that time to reduce yields. He said a bigger crop usually means lower protein levels, while excess moisture has led to elevated disease pressure across the Prairies. However, the crop looks surprisingly promising, given the rocky start to the year. “Certainly in larger pockets than you would have expected there’s potential for an above average yield,” Townsend said.

Growers are being wasteful with fungicide, according to two agronomists. Wet weather has created an ideal environment for diseases such as sclerotinia stem rot, but not every field needs to be treated. “There has been a phenomenal number of acres sprayed with fungicide this year, both in cereals and canola,” said Alberta Agriculture crop specialist Harry Brook. “Sometimes I’m wondering if (farmers) really truly assessed whether or not it’s needed.” He said he has spoken to growers who say their crops are dry by midday, the soil surface is dry and there are no major signs of disease in their fields, yet they’re spraying anyway. Brook said there is a “herd mentality” when it comes to fungicide application, which causes growers to forego a proper risk assessment to determine whether a fungicide application is required. “I’ve got a strong feeling that a lot of guys are not bothering to go through those steps. They’re going to spray because their neighbours are spraying,” he said. He said the size of modern farms is also contributing to the over-spraying epidemic. Farmers are no longer able to inspect each field individually because they simply have too many of them. “The mentality tends to be, ‘well, if I’ve got to spray it on one field, I’ll spray it on all the fields,’ ” he said. Elston Solberg, president of AgriTrend Agrology Ltd., agreed that fungicide applications have gotten out of hand. “Yes, the crops are big. Yes, the crops are growing like gangbusters. Yes, prices are great. But man oh man, we’re just spraying stuff right, left and centre,” he said. “Guys just sort of default and say, ‘screw it. I’m going to spray everything.’ ” CropLife Canada said proper chemical use is part of farmer land stewardship practices. “We know that growers are very careful about what pest control products they use and how they use them,” Pierre Petelle, vice-president of chemistry, said in an email. “We would remind all growers that it is imperative that they read and follow label instructions. We also remind them that they should only use these products when necessary.” Solberg said farmers won’t hesitate to spend $20 to $30 per acre on disease control when canola is selling for more than $13 per bushel and yield prospects are good like they are this year. “I understand the pressure that farmers are under,” he said. “I just don’t know why we just don’t slow down a little bit and make better decisions.” Growers have tools at their disposal to help with those decisions, such as the Canola Council of Canada’s sclerotinia stem rot checklist, which helps farmers decide when an application is necessary. Agri-Trend is trying out a new DNA testing service offered by the Quantum Genetix laboratory in Regina. Initial results from canola samples provided by Agri-Trend clients show low to moderate levels of sclerotinia infection.


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PULSES | BEANS

Rally in bean prices will be short-lived Small, failed crops driving up prices BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM

Although many parts of Saskatchewan have received excess moisture throughout the 2013 growing season, pulse crops are faring well and could produce above average yields. | D’ARCE MCMILLAN PHOTO PULSES | PERFORMANCE

Yields could top expectations Outlook good | Pulse crops are performing well despite wet conditions, says processor BY SEAN PRATT SASKATOON NEWSROOM

Pea and lentil forecasters should pull out their erasers and then pencil in bigger average yield projections, according to industry observers. “If you look at the big picture, we’re going to produce more than an average crop,” said Greg Simpson, president of Simpson Seeds Inc., one of Saskatchewan’s largest lentil processors. Half of the estimated 2.46 million acres of lentils planted in Canada this year are red lentils. “We’re going to be cranking out a pretty good red lentil crop here in a matter of six weeks,” said Simpson. The positive outlook comes despite excessively wet conditions within a 100-kilometre radius of Moose Jaw, where pulse crops are either underwater or struggling. The area is also one of the province’s prime lentil growing regions. “The wettest feet is somewhere between Regina and Moose Jaw,” said Simpson.

He estimated that 15 to 20 percent of the crops on his farm near Moose Jaw are underwater. That crop is dead, and anything surviving along the edge of the water won’t produce either. The remainder of the crop is doing well. “It’s better than average yield on the stuff that’s above the slough line,” said Simpson. Other pockets in the province are also dealing with excess moisture, but most pulse crops are faring well. Saskatchewan Agriculture estimates 82 percent of the province’s lentil crop and 87 percent of its pea crop was in good to excellent condition as of July 1. Stat Publishing editor Brian Clancey has heard reports of yellow pulse crops in some fields but thinks that the rain has done more good than harm. He will be adjusting yields higher in his supply and demand estimates because of good moisture conditions. Much of southern and northern Saskatchewan has received 115 to

150 percent of normal precipitation this growing season. Heavy rain has often been followed by periods of hot and dry weather, which has done a good job of sucking up the excess water throughout most of the province. “(Pulse crops have) recovered quite well for the most part except for the extreme low lying spots,” said Dale Risula, Saskatchewan’s special crops specialist. “The hopes are still quite high for a good year for production. It’s still looking pretty good.” A lack of air in the soil in wet spots is causing inadequate uptake of nutrients and energy, leaving the plants yellow. They are unable to fix nitrogen, and any nitrogen in the soil is subject to leaching. Risula said there is a risk that waterlogged crops will suffer heat damage during flowering because they have poor root development, which makes them susceptible to heat and drought. Flowering could be longer than usual this year, lasting into the last week of July or the first week of

August because pulse crops are indeterminate. They continue flowering as long as nutrients and water are available, which is when they are most susceptible to heat damage. Risula agreed that the prospect for poor yields from crops struggling in low-lying areas is more than offset by the expectation for above average yields in crops growing on non-saturated land. Yields could be high because of the prolonged flowering period as long as there is an open fall, he added. “If that happens, you could have an astoundingly huge bumper yield,” he said. However, that built-up potential will be lost if there’s an early frost. Not all pulse growers are pleased with the excess moisture, including the province’s chickpea growers, who are continually spraying to keep ascochyta blight fungus at bay. “The guys who have chickpeas are not having any fun,” said Simpson. “They are not having summer holidays and they’re not getting any golfing done.”

A crop wreck in Argentina and smaller crops in the United States and Canada are supporting North American bean markets. D.W. Sturt & Co., a U.S. brokerage firm, was initially forecasting a 20 percent decline in harvested acres in the United States and a 16 percent contraction in Canada for the major bean classes. However, the numbers are going to be worse than that in the U.S. because of seeding problems in North Dakota and Minnesota caused by excessive moisture. “I would say 10 percent of the acres in North Dakota did not get planted,” said Kim Vance, a commodity broker with D.W. Sturt. Growers struggled to plant the crop in the state’s Northern Valley, Fessenden and Devils Lake regions. “The big areas that didn’t get planted were the pinto and black areas,” he said. Vance thinks Minnesota and North Dakota will harvest 280,000 acres of pintos, down from the original estimate of 340,000 acres. Growers were able to seed what they intended for the other classes of beans because they were planted outside of the waterlogged areas. Vance said the crop that was planted in the U.S. is faring well. “It got off to a rocky start, but the weather the last 10 days has been very favourable,” he said July 10. “There is plenty of moisture, the heat has come on and it’s coming along great.” The U.S. Department of Agriculture says 55 percent of North Dakota’s bean crop and 64 percent of Minnesota’s crop was rated good to excellent as of early this week. However, there is considerable risk that the bean crop in both states could succumb to frost damage. “We need every day we can get in order to harvest this crop,” said Vance. “One-third of the acres in North Dakota would probably be susceptible to frost if we have an average frost date or earlier.” D.W. Sturt is forecasting 234,000 acres of Canadian beans, including 95,600 acres of navy beans, 61,400 acres of pintos and 20,500 acres of blacks. Argentina’s bean crop failure also lends strength to a variety of classes of North America beans. Camara de Legumbres de la Republica Argentina (CLERA), an umbrella group representing Argentina’s legume industry, has declared force CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

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7

GRAIN | PRICES

China affecting wheat market, but prices may still trend lower MARKET WATCH

D’ARCE McMILLAN

T

Alexandra Asmar Lopez, right, and Udaya Bhaskar say Canadian growers would have markets for lower quality wheat in Colombia and Dubai. | ED WHITE PHOTO CANADIAN INTERNATIONAL GRAINS INSTITUTE | INTERNATIONAL MARKETS

Wheat buyers want variety One-stop shopping | International buyers look for wider range of wheat types BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU

The world knocks on Western Canada’s doors to get hard red spring wheat and durum, but it would also like to get lower quality wheat. That was a shared view of buyers from Colombia and Dubai, who recently visited the Canadian International Grains Institute. “If the wheat varieties are available, that would be ideal for us,” said Udaya Bhaskar of Dubai’s giant Al Ghurair Foods. “It would minimize the logistics.” Alexandra Asmar Lopez, a commodity manager with Servicios Nutresa of Colombia, said her diversified food products company would also like to buy a wider range of cereal grains from Canada. “We would really like to have Canadian wheat to produce cookies and

crackers,” said Lopez. “We would like to have a bigger quantity to import of the soft wheat.” Canada’s fame for high protein and high quality hard red spring wheat and durum allows marketers to make sales at premium prices, which means it’s generally a trade that farmers, grain marketers and food companies are happy to transact. Major overseas buyers often want big loads of a single commodity. They mix and blend in their own facilities and don’t mind keeping lots in storage. However, Bhaskar said his company tries to maximize efficiency and reduce storage, so bringing in various types of wheat from multiple sources creates challenges. It doesn’t want to keep more than it needs in its 300,000 tonne facility, which means it requires the right mix to arrive just in time for production. It often has to buy some wheat and durum from Canada and then other wheat from elsewhere. This creates headaches because the company doesn’t always want an entire Panamax load of spring wheat and durum and must find partners who will share an ocean vessel.

Bhaskar said life would be easier if Canada could provide all the different types of wheat and durum that his company wants. “The vessel has to balance,” he said. “The quantities have to balance (to be efficient) because we don’t want to have more inventories. We want to have lower inventories.” Lopez said her company is a big fan of Canadian wheat and durum but has trouble balancing its requirements from Canada with those from elsewhere. “We have been asking for the last three or four years, every year, every crop, but you don’t have soft wheat to export,” said Lopez. “We need soft wheat.” The Prairies are unlikely to grow much soft red winter wheat unless plant breeders create radically new varieties. However, hard red winter wheat is becoming more popular on the Prairies, and many speculate the trend will intensify in the post-CWB monopoly era. Having a wider spectrum of wheat types available could further raise Canada’s reputation as a preferred source of grain for some buyers.

Clancey said Argentina isn’t a huge bean producer, but it is probably the world’s largest exporter of alubia beans, which are large calibre white beans. They are shipped to Europe and the Middle East. Prices for white beans in Egypt and China are soaring in response to Argentina’s crop failure. “Because of the high price and the shortage, demand starts to filter down to smaller calibre white beans,” he said. “The next one that will benefit will be great northern beans and then after that at the very bottom would be things like navy beans. There the benefit could be nominal.” The price rally won’t last forever because Chinese growers have had time to respond to Argentina’s crisis. They have reportedly boosted acreage devoted to white beans. Argentina also grows black beans, which are typically sold in local markets such as Brazil, which also had a poor bean harvest.

“With the shortage of black beans in Argentina, coupled with some disappointment with the crop in Brazil, they’re scouring the world for black beans,” said Clancey. U.S. bids for great northern beans have risen to 45 cents per pound from 42 cents at the start of April. Prices for black and navy beans haven’t gained much strength from Argentina’s misfortunes. Clancey said North America’s bean markets are “in a world of their own.” There is so much domestic demand for the product that exports are kind of an afterthought. However, Argentina’s situation is providing underlying strength to North American bean markets. Processors will import beans from around the world when the price is right, which keeps a cap on North American bean prices. “When you have the world market getting hot like this, then that becomes less of a moderating factor,” said Clancey.

alk of trouble in China’s winter wheat crop was confirmed recently when the country signed large wheat import deals and the U.S. Department of Agriculture changed its global wheat supply and demand picture. The USDA increased its forecast for Chinese wheat imports by five million tonnes to 8.5 million. The department also cut its estimate of how much wheat would be carried into the 2013-14 crop year. The number dropped 5.4 million tonnes to 174.5 million tonnes mostly because China has fed more wheat to livestock. The USDA slightly increased its forecast of global production. The net result of all of this was to lower global wheat stocks at the end of 2013-14 to 172.4 million tonnes, down 8.9 million from the June report. Until now, the USDA expected 2013 to be a year of rebuilding stocks, but now the thinking is there will be a slight reduction. It supports wheat prices, but of course it is not the last word on the supply and demand situation for the new crop year. As well, wheat’s price is linked to corn, and its price could weaken if the U.S. crop gets through the tasseling and silking stages without too much heat and dryness. Getting back to wheat, some analysts think China could import as much as 10 million tonnes of wheat. Domestic sources say as much as 10 percent of the crop was damaged by rain at harvest. China has bought soft red winter wheat from the U.S. as well as shipments from Australia and France. No deals for Canadian wheat have been announced.

The size of Russia’s wheat crop could also change in future USDA reports. Its forecast is now 54 million tonnes, but Russia’s government and private forecasters are putting the crop in a range of 49.5 to 51.5 million tonnes because of dry weather in some parts of the country. Wheat price support could also come from Argentina, where the government is trying to limit exports of old crop wheat to control rising domestic flour prices. It is not clear yet what attitude it will take toward the new crop now in fields. Such possibilities would support wheat prices, but on the other hand, crops are generally developing well here at home, in Australia and Europe, raising the potential of increased production estimates in those areas. The USDA lowered U.S. ending stocks of wheat for 2013-14 to 576 million bushels, down from its forecast of 659 million in the June report and below analysts’ estimates for 632 million. U.S. durum production was forecast at 58 million bu., down from 82 million in 2012-13. However, the wheat market is closely linked to corn and the USDA’s numbers for corn and soybeans were negative for prices. Weather forecasts clouded the market’s reaction to the USDA report. Traders rushed to push prices high enough to cover the risk from a forecast of hot, dry conditions for the second half of July in the western Midwest. However, the forecast changed late in the week. Although still dry, the temperatures were not as hot. If that forecast holds true, expect crop prices to once again drift lower. The new Chinese demand prevents the wheat picture from being too gloomy, but it doesn’t wipe out what appears to be an overall lower trend for crop prices. Follow D’Arce McMillan on Twitter @darcemcmillan.

» CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE majeure with respect to the country’s bean crop. It has taken the rare step of informing the International Pulses Trade and Industry Confederation (IPTIC) that producers and sellers of beans will be unable to meet their delivery commitments. “It’s the first time I’ve ever seen it,” said Stat Publishing editor Brian Clancey. CLERA said the situation is so dire that growers may not be able to harvest enough seed to plant next year’s crop. “The present season is the worst suffered by the Argentine bean origin,” said CLERA in its statement to IPTIC. “There is no available history of a drought as damaging, widespread and persistent as this one.” The provinces of Salta and Jujuy in n o r t hw e s t e r n A r g e nt i na hav e declared states of agronomic emergency. Salta accounts for 80 percent of the country’s bean production.

NORTH AMERICAN BEAN PRODUCTION, 2013 ESTIMATES Black beans 000 acres cwt. U.S. total 147.45 2,583,620 Canada total 20.5 363,000 N.A. supply -3,961,792 N.A. demand -390,000 Ending stocks* -61,792 Navy beans 000 acres cwt. U.S. total 203.50 3,560,000 Canada total 95.60 1,670,615 N.A. supply -7,284,504 N.A. demand -6,000,000 Ending stocks* -1,284,504 Pinto beans 000 acres cwt. U.S. total 535.20 9,329,600 Canada total 61.40 1,102,800 N.A. supply -12,646,530 N.A. demand -11,900,000 Ending stocks* -746,530 * Sept. 1 Source: D.W. Sturt & Company | WP GRAPHIC

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TRADE | CHINA

CANOLA | EXPORTS

Chinese slump may not slow demand Evolving marketplace | Chinese consumers could eat more imported food, say analysts

Biofuel losing supporters in European Union

BY ED WHITE

BY SEAN PRATT

WINNIPEG BUREAU

SASKATOON NEWSROOM & REUTERS

Even if Chinese growth slows or temporarily stalls, some agricultural economists doubt Chinese demand for North American crops and meat will decline. Instead, the new economic approach of the Chinese government will likely boost demand for food. “They have this flexibility of letting their currency appreciate,� said Dermot Hayes of Iowa State University. “The can continue to make their consumer better off by just giving them more buying power by letting their currency grow.� C h i n e s e p re m i e r L i Ke q i a n g recently signaled a fundamental shift in the government’s economic strategy, shifting from aggressive growth fueled by investment in productive infrastructure, such as railways, factories and dams. The new strategy mimics the “American dream� of providing a car in every driveway and a chicken in ever y pot. Li’s Chinese dream encourages consumers to spend on consumer goods rather than saving everything they can. “He wants them to have an apartment and a car and access to good food,� said Hayes. “It’s a deliberate policy. Rather than just ramming a bunch of cheap exports down the world’s throat, they’re going to let their consumers benefit from the economic growth that has been created.� That should increase demand for crops and meat from North America because those are key items of consumer interest, said Hayes and Al Mussell of the George Morris Centre. The general sense of optimism in agricultural commodity markets, despite China’s possibly slowing its growth rate, is not shared in other commodity markets that rely on the investment-led growth that the Chinese government has pushed since the 1980s. Copper and metallurgical coal are particularly vulnerable to slowing investment in heavy infrastructure

Support for first generation biofuel is waning in the European Union. The European Union’s environment committee recently voted in favour of capping traditional biofuel production at 5.5 percent of total energy consumption for transportation purposes by 2020. The European Commission had proposed a five percent cap. It represents a stark reversal from the EU’s original target to get 10 percent of transport fuel from renewable sources by 2020, primarily first generation biofuel. That target was established in 2008. The shifting tide in European biofuel policy is of concern to Canada’s canola industry, which supplies the EU’s biodiesel sector with a substantial amount of raw material. “We’re disappointed because (the vote) creates a lot of uncertainty in the investment environment, but we still see Europe as an export opportunity for Canadian canola,� said Brian Innes, manager of market access for the Canola Council of Canada. Canola sales to Europe have averaged $200 million a year over the past three years, with Canada shipping an average of 190,000 tonnes of seed and 75,000 tonnes of oil annually. The hope is those numbers will grow once Canada finalizes a free trade agreement with the EU. Innes said the proposed changes to the 2020 target do not effect the current requirements for biodiesel in the EU, but it will cap future canola sales. As well, the change in government policy creates considerable market uncertainty. European biofuel producers and their suppliers are furious at the policy U-turn. They said the proposed limit of 5.5 percent of total transport fuel use was far too low and would lead to plant closures and job losses. “Biofuels were part of the solution less than five years ago and are n o w s e e n a s a p r o b l e m ,� s a i d Nathalie Lecocq, secretary general of FEDIOL, the EU vegetable oil industry body that supplies the raw material for biodiesel. “The industry will stop investing in advanced biofuels if the EU keeps sending conflicting signals.� Studies have underlined the potential environmental damage caused by s o m e b i o f u e l , p a r t i c u l a r l y biodiesel, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the estimated $16.7 billion EU biofuel sector. Most recently, a study by the EC’s in-house research body, Joint Research Centre, confirmed the findings of earlier EU studies that biodiesel made from crops such as rapeseed does more harm to the climate than conventional diesel. Innes refuted those findings, saying canola biodiesel reduces greenhouse gases by more than 90 percent compared to conventional diesel. The canola council is working with partners in the EU’s biodiesel industry to keep tabs on what happens with the proposal. “We would follow their lead on this one, and from what we understand, there’s a long way to go in this process yet,� he said.

A customer holds a child while shopping at a supermarket in Shenyang in Liaoning province. The Chinese government is encouraging consumers to spend more. | REUTERS PHOTO and machinery in China Barclays Capital recently issued a report that said a “hard landing� of about three percent growth for part of a year is “an increasingly likely downside scenario.� That would crimp demand for many commodities, but Barclays forecast that the Chinese economy would soon right itself and be back to growth, even if only at a six to eight percent rate rather than the eight to 10 percent rate some have grown accustomed to. However, agricultural economists like Hayes and Mussell think food trade won’t be affected because growth will continue and increased

consumer consumption is the point of the new policy. Hayes said China has deliberately weakened its currency for years to suppress domestic consumption and promote export sales, but that will likely end. The Chinese government needs to stop manipulating its exchange rate and that will give consumers more buying power, something that will draw in more foreign goods and commodities. Even with only three percent overall growth, currency appreciation could make the average Chinese consumer “eight to 10 percent better off.� Li appears to want to leave markets

alone in pricing products and goods, so there should be a significant increase in imports of crops like corn and barley, which have been suppressed. Once disincentives are removed, Hayes and Mussell expect China to import more North American grain. The kind of major increases seen in China’s soybean imports could be replicated in the other grains, they said. Li wants to move 400 to 500 million people from the countryside to cities, so there’s little reason to follow policies that encourage people to stay on the land and simultaneously hit urban consumers with higher than necessary costs, the economists said.

Take Control of Your Marketing 7KH :LOG 2DWV *UDLQ 0DUNHW $GYLVRU\ SURYLGHV QHZV DQG VWDWLVWLFV WKDW DIIHFW SUDLULH PDUNHWV DQDO\VLV PDNLQJ VHQVH RI WKH PDUNHW DFWLRQ VSHFLŇ• F VWUDWHJLHV IRU PDUNHWLQJ ZKHDW GXUXP RDWV PDOW DQG IHHG EDUOH\ FDQROD Ň– D[ OHQWLOV SHDV PXV WDUG DQG FDQDU\

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CROP FORECAST | CANOLA, WHEAT

Record canola crop, large wheat crop expected in Canada WINNIPEG (Reuters) — Canada is poised to harvest a record-large canola crop and produce its most wheat in 17 years, despite challenging conditions early in the growing season, according to a Reuters poll of 15 traders and analysts. A late spring melt of heavy winter snowfall raised concerns that many

fields would go unplanted in Western Canada. Most of those fears dried up in spring, but the crop belt has been hit by severe flooding and intense hail in southern Alberta in recent weeks, along with too much rain in parts of Saskatchewan and Manitoba. The damage from those storms has been limited to small areas, analysts

said. Others said mid-summer is too early to accurately forecast the size of crops, with about a month to go before much harvesting begins. Canola production will reach the long-held industry target of 15 million tonnes in 2013-14, setting an all-time high and beating last year’s production by 13 percent, based on

the poll’s average estimate. The all-wheat harvest, including durum, is seen to be 29.7 million tonnes, up nine percent from 2012-13 and the highest since 1996’s bin buster. Traders expect Canadian farmers to produce five million tonnes of durum, 8.5 million tonnes of barley and 3.2 million tonnes of oats.

Canola and wheat crops on that scale would exceed Agriculture Canada’s recent projections, pointing to rising optimism about favourable conditions for crop development. Agriculture Canada, which bases its estimates on analysis in June, estimated canola production of 14.1 million tonnes and an all-wheat harvest of 29.4 million.

D3 cows averaged $72.80. Speculators who bought cows while the two Alberta plants were having trouble will likely put those animals on the market sooner rather than later. U.S. cow slaughter slowed in recent weeks. Export demand should not fade. The stronger prices in Canada should attract deliveries and make sellers current in their marketing. D1, D2 cows might average more than $80 per cwt. this week for the first time this year.

With supplies seasonally tight, load lots of first cut feeders are fetching premiums while cleanup pens are being discounted.

The typically strong summer burger demand and reduced production at Cargill’s plant in High River caused 50 percent trim to trade at the highest level since Feb. 3, 2012, at 87 cents per lb.

Other disappearance fell almost 50 percent to 12,658, the smallest since the cattle on feed report began in 2000. Placements in June fell 17 percent to 54,369 head. Heifers as a percentage of total placements were 44 percent compared to 39 percent last year at the same time.

CANFAX REPORT FED CATTLE STEADY Both major Alberta packers were in the cash market for the first time in three weeks. Prices were similar to where they were three weeks ago, with most cattle trading at $199-$200 per hundredweight delivered. Fed steers on a live basis averaged $118.72 per cwt. and heifers were $118.43. Packers gained market leverage as the Alberta fed cattle pipeline backed up because of problems the previous two weeks. As well, there was no competition from U.S. buyers. The Canadian dollar had weakened in the past few weeks and then rebounded late last week. In the same period, August cattle futures rose $2. This caused the basis to weaken. It was $2 stronger than the seasonal norm before the disruptions but last week it moved to -$9.36, about $1 weaker than seasonal. The show list was generally cleaned up with only light carryover. Fed cattle exports were moderate, with weekly exports to June 29 down 16 percent. Fed prices tend to weaken into summer. Exchange rates are volatile and will be a factor in pricing.

COWS STRONGER Non-fed prices rose on strong North American packer demand. D1, D2 cows rose $4.50 to average $79.67, just 12 cents shy of a new annual high.

FEEDERS UP Feeder prices for 500-600 pound steers rose in light trade. Annual price highs were set in 700900 lb. steers and heifers. Most yearlings that are being marketed are coming from backgrounding lots, but the stronger prices are attracting feeders that were on grass, which is much earlier than normal. The strong prices are also leading to the sale of heifers that were going to be kept for breeding. A price trend for British Columbia, Saskatchewan and Manitoba could not be established because many commercial auction facilities have either closed for the summer or are running bi-weekly or monthly sales. Alberta auction volumes totalled 7,458, up moderately from the previous week. Weekly feeder exports to June 29 fell 19 percent to 2,015, but that was up 65 percent from the same week last year.

BEEF LOWER CATTLE ON FEED STEADY U.S. beef cutouts traded sharply lower after the July 4 holiday in the United States. Choice cutouts fell $5.01 to close at $192.72 US per cwt. and Select fell $3.76 to close at $184.71. Canadian cut-out values for the week ending July 5 traded $3.41$3.84 Cdn per cwt. lower with AAA at $193.82 and AA at $186.21. Loins, ribs and chucks struggled while rounds held steady.

Jerrod Niemann

WP LIVESTOCK REPORT HOGS STEADY U.S. cash hog prices were mostly steady on supplies that were still seasonally tight last week. Hog prices were pressured late in the week from falling pork cutouts and weaker processing margins. Analysts said packers might reduce slaughter to shore up margins. Iowa-southern Minnesota hogs traded at $74 US per hundredweight delivered to packing plants July 12, down slightly from $74.50 July 5. Estimated pork cut-out value fell to $101.48 July 12 from $105.98 July 5. Estimated U.S. slaughter in the holiday shortened week to July 13 was 2.038 million, up from 1.79 million in the previous holiday shortened week. Last year’s total was 1.96 million.

BISON STEADY The Canadian Bison Association said Grade A bulls in the desirable weight range averaged $3.50 Cdn per pound hot hanging weight. Grade A heifers sold up to $3.45.

Animals older than 30 months and those outside the desirable buyer specifications may be discounted.

The number of cattle in Alberta and Saskatchewan feedlots July 1 was 748,137, steady with the same date a year ago but four percent lower than the five-year average. With Cargill’s High River plant closed because of the flood and JBS in Brooks dealing with computer problems, it was little surprise that marketings in June were down 20 percent at 110,907.

Neal McCoy

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.

Jess Moskaluke

Katie Mission

Alex Runions

LAMB PRICES RISE Beaver Hill Auction in Tofield, Alta., reported that 996 sheep and 233 goats sold July 8. Wool lambs lighter than 70 lb. were $116-$138 per cwt., 70-85 lb. were $106-$124, 86-105 lb. were $106$129 and 106 lb. and heavier were $89-$110. Wool rams were $20-$30 per cwt. Cull ewes were $20-$30. Hair lambs lighter than 70 lb. were $110-$126 per cwt., 70-85 lb. were $100-$124, 86-105 lb. were $85-$100 and 106 lb. and heavier were $84-$96. Hair rams were $34-$49 per cwt. Cull ewes were $25-$40. Good kid goats lighter than 50 lb. were $200-$255. Those heavier than 50 lb. were $202.50-$265 per cwt. Nannies were $65-$110 per cwt. Billies were $100-$147.50. Ontario Stockyards Inc. reported 1,381 sheep and lambs and 132 goats traded July 8. All classes of sheep and lambs sold at stronger prices.

| AUGUST 1-4, 2013 | CAMROSE, ALBERTA |

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NEWS

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

WPEDITORIAL

OPINION

Editor: Joanne Paulson Phone: 306-665-3537 | Fax: 306-934-2401 E-Mail: joanne.paulson@producer.com

PESTICIDES | URBAN USE

CRAIG’S VIEW

Urban pesticide policy should promote education

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anitoba plans to join the ranks of provinces banning the sale and use of pesticides for cosmetic purposes in yards, parks and playgrounds. It is disappointing that legislators would succumb to emotional pressure to deny citizens access to valuable pest control tools that are safe if properly used. Pesticides would still be available to farmers, golf courses and sod farms, but urban residents would be limited to using management and bio-pesticides to control weeds. Farm organizations such as Keystone Agricultural Producers have concerns about the proposed legislation. First is the potential that the ban will lead to poor weed control in urban areas and create sources of weeds that will escape into agricultural areas. More importantly, they worry that such bans cause the public to think that pesticides are highly dangerous and unneeded. The implication is that if they are too dangerous to spray on grass, they are too dangerous to spray on food. But as KAP notes, pesticides in Canada are highly regulated and the government has assessed and approved their safety for health and the environment. Pesticides are expensive and farmers use them only to protect their investment in their crops. KAP recommended that Manitoba legislators pay attention to a report by a committee of British Columbia’s legislature that was created to study a similar proposed pesticide ban. The report is thorough and thought provoking. After hearing and reading many presentations from provincial and federal officials, health and environmental groups, stakeholders and the public, the majority on the committee decided that more restrictions on pesticides were needed but there was not enough evidence to confirm the need for a ban. The committee noted conflicting scientific evidence about the health and environmental dangers of exposure to chemical pesticides. The majority concluded that the federal Pesticide Management Regulatory

Agency’s rigorous pesticide registration process is science based and effective, and there is inadequate evidence to say that pesticides used as directed are such a danger that they should be banned. However, the B.C. committee noted that homeowners and others do not always follow application recommendations. Education is needed on how to use pesticides safely as part of integrated pest management, which is the strategy of using a broad range of cultural, mechanical, biological and chemical means to control weeds along with the mindset of accepting a certain level of weeds and other pests. The committee made several recommendations to address this education gap, including one sure to be controversial among farmers: that commercial class pesticides, which are generally used in agriculture, be sold only to those with a certified application licence. More generally, domestic class pesticides used by homeowners would not be kept on store shelves. Retailers would have to employ a certified pesticide dispenser knowledgeable about integrated pest management. Buyers would need to justify to the dispenser the need to use the product. The dispenser would provide advice on the best way to control pests and weeds, as well as the correct and legal way to use the pesticide. Point of purchase advice appears a good idea. Less clear is the practicality and fairness of having a dispenser decide whether a homeowner’s pest problem is worthy of receiving a pesticide. We are not sold on the necessity of a bureaucracy of certifiers and monitors, but believe education is needed and that governments, environmental groups and retailers all have a role in providing it. We believe informed people can responsibly use chemical pesticides as part of an integrated pest management approach to safely maintain an aesthetically pleasing urban environment.

PUBLIC OPINION | GESTATION STALLS

(Any time in confinement for an animal) is something I would never dream of doing to George (his dog), and that no compassionate Canadian would ever do to any animal. RYAN GOSLING CANADIAN ACTOR

Bruce Dyck, Terry Fries, Barb Glen, D’Arce McMillan and Joanne Paulson collaborate in the writing of Western Producer editorials.

You’ve got to take the offensive here. That’s what the Humane Society of the United States and Humane Society International is trying to do here: take the offensive and control the message, presenting only one side of the story. WILL COGGIN RESEARCHER, CENTRE FOR CONSUMER FREEDOM

POLITICS | CABINET SHUFFLE

Questions about Ritz’s future were never about his service to government NATIONAL VIEW

BARRY WILSON

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he speculation about whether Gerry Ritz would be reappointed for his fourth gig as agriculture minister dating back to 2007 was never about him being out of government favour. After all, what is there not to like if Stephen Harper was assessing ministerial performance? Ritz led the successful fight to end the CWB monopoly — a long time

Harper goal, spearheaded reforms to the Canadian Grain Commission that will reduce government financial obligations, and convinced provincial governments last year to substantially reduce farm safety net obligations, saving potentially several billion dollars when farm commodity prices go south again. He also largely silenced the oftennoisy and demanding farm lobby by early-on setting out his rules — you buy into my agenda or you are outside my consultation circle. Most farm leaders meekly decided it was better to be at the consultations than to be outside the door demonstrating. That approach, plus some of the best farmgate incomes in history, has made one of the traditionally most politically troublesome and noisy

lobby groups one of the most silent and compliant. Few prime ministers or agriculture ministers in Canadian history have had such luxury of farm lobby public silence about farm sector needs and demands. Reform roots Besides, coming from Reform roots that considered protectionism and central control of farm marketing as the root of much agriculture sector evil, Ritz converted himself from an anti-protectionism Reformer with little time for supply management marketing boards to one of the most effective ministerial defenders of the system since Eugene Whelan. His performance has won universal praise from supply management

leaders. The rural support that flows from that has not gone unnoticed in the prime minister’s office and the Conservative party. So on a list of items given to him in 2007 by Harper in the mandate letter given to all ministers, Ritz surely has checked them all off and added a few accomplishments of his own. Of course, his performance and bull-in-a-China-shop style have made enemies among some farm groups and government critics. Harper likely considers that a badge of honour. So the question of whether Ritz would not keep his cabinet job in the July 15 shuffle was never about him falling out of favour with the boss. It was whether he would commit to another six years in government,

agreeing to run again in 2015. There was much speculation about whether, after 16 years in Parliament, much of his agenda accomplished and a lucrative pension waiting, he really would want to commit to political life until age 68. One of Harper’s questions as he tried to put a new face on cabinet was: are you running again in 2015? If not, step aside. Ritz said he made it clear he is committed to running again. “As long as I think I have something positive to give and the constituents of Battlefords-Lloydminster want me, I will serve at their pleasure,” he said July 15. When Harper heard those words, why would he have changed ministers? It’s been working so far.


OPINION

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

11

& OPEN FORUM GENETIC MODIFICATION | SUPPORTING ARGUMENT

WEBSITE | NEW VENTURE

GM crops help produce more with less BY STUART SMYTH

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here have recently been protests against biotechnology firms and products. Many signs people were shown waving in the protests were perplexing to say the least. Demonstrations of this nature raise the question as to what foods could be constituted as genetically modified. In Canada, it has been estimated that GM food and food ingredients are detectable in 11 percent of food consumed, and might be present (but often not detectable) in up to 75 percent of the processed food sold in stores. Examples include cheeses that contain GM enzymes and gum that uses sweeteners derived from GM corn. The use of GM ingredients in food processing is predominantly for minor additives that make up a small fraction of the total content of the food product. In terms of whole food products that we might consume, there are two GM products that could be included in our diet. GM papaya and GM sweet corn are both currently produced for human consumption. An estimated 85 percent of papaya produced in Hawaii is from GM varieties. In the early 1990s, the Hawaiian papaya industry was facing a devastating virus that was rapidly reducing production to the point of it no longer being economically feasible. Virus resistance was bred into the GM varieties, resulting in a current strong and healthy industry. In December 2011, the Japanese government approved the importation of GM papaya after a 13 year assessment process.

Only two whole-food GM products are part of the regular human diet. GM potatoes and tomatoes briefly appeared on the market but were withdrawn. | FILE PHOTO GM sweet corn is estimated to account for about 40 percent of sweet corn production in the United States, based on seed sales. Prior to GM sweet corn, the only way for producers to minimize the presence of insects in their fields was to spray insecticides, and to do this often. In the U.S., sweet corn accounts for less than one percent of total corn acres, but accounts for 40 percent of insecticide applications. Some estimates suggest that producers are able to reduce their insecticide use by 85 percent.

Two other GM whole foods have appeared on the market, but were subsequently withdrawn. GM tomatoes were produced in the U.S., but the cost of production was substantially higher than the benefits of a longer shelf life. GM potatoes that required fewer insecticides were also briefly available, until the fast food industry rejected using them due to pressures from environmental non-governmental organizations. The ironic thing was that producers had reported that prior to using GM

potatoes, heavy rains would wash the insecticides from the fields to the waterways, killing fish. With less insecticide use on the GM potatoes, fish kills noticeably declined. A logical person would see the decline in fish kills as an environmental benefit. None of the other whole foods that we consume as part of our daily diet are GM. GM varieties of canola and soybeans exist, but are not consumed as whole foods, but are rather used as ingredients in animal feed. In terms of an average human’s annual diet, the consumption of whole GM foods would account for a fraction. Food production has always been based on the premise of “producing more with less.” GM sweet corn is a good example of this as the use of insecticides is substantially decreased. The same could be said of the short life of GM potatoes. As the global population continues its surge toward nine billion, the consumption of GM foods will need to increase. Protesting the production of GM foods is a luxury afforded to affluent societies. As the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization has indicated, to meet growing demands, the production of agricultural products will need to increase by an estimated 70 percent worldwide, and by almost 100 percent in developing countries. That long-held staple of agriculture, “produce more with less” supports the increased production of GM foods. Stuart Smyth is a research scientist at the University of Saskatchewan. This article first appeared on the Ag-West Bio blog site and has been edited for length.

CROP PROTECTION | REGULATIONS

Big Brother wants to tag along on your sprayer HURSH ON AG

KEVIN HURSH

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any crop protection products are being applied illegally in this country under the definition used by the Pest Management Regulatory Agency. According to the PMRA, it’s technically illegal to use a product not registered for a specific crop, even if the only risk is your individual crop yield. I was recently audited by the PMRA, which is a division of Health Canada. Buy me a beer sometime and thank me for taking one for the team. PMRA has decided to focus on mustard growers this year, so as executive director of the Saskatchewan Mustard Development Commission, I was asked to provide a list

of mustard growers. They wanted to interview about a dozen producers. We cited privacy laws and said we couldn’t provide a grower list. If they wanted to talk with mustard growers, they’d have to find them a different way. A little while later PMRA contacted me again. “You’re a mustard grower, aren’t you? Can I come and talk to you about your production practices and what products you used this year?” I haven’t used any unregistered products on my mustard and I figured that if they interviewed me, it would be one producer off their quota. The audit request sounded optional, but in retrospect I wonder what would have happened if I had refused. The woman was professional, courteous, had an agriculture degree and a farm background. I gave her a rather blunt assessment of what I thought about some PMRA policies, but it didn’t faze her. She’d heard much stronger rebukes. “So if I told you that I had used an unregistered product, what would happen then?” I asked.

“Well, we might fine you, but that’s determined on a case by case basis,” she said. That doesn’t seem like a great incentive for producer honesty, but they also collect leaf samples for analysis. While the process has a big backlog, eventually the leaf samples will be analyzed to see if I was telling the truth about products applied. Some crop protection products could cause residue issues and mess up export markets when applied offlabel. I understand why that’s illegal. However, most off-label uses have no residue risk. They aren’t labelled because the manufacturer hasn’t invested the time and money for registration or because they may cause a yield decrease. Many producers are willing to risk a small yield penalty if they have no other weed control options. Any possible harm ends on their farm. In the eyes of the PMRA, this is still illegal. I could provide many examples of products that are commonly used off-label, but sometimes it’s better to not put things in print. Little wonder

that most producers would rather avoid a PMRA audit. The pleasant PMRA woman also asked about the safety equipment I wear when applying crop protection products. I consider most of the products I use to be no more dangerous than some of the chemicals under our kitchen sink, so I’m often using far less safety equipment than what is recommended. The woman’s eyes grew rather large as that discussion continued, but she reassured me that they probably wouldn’t fine me for my lax safety. “That’s good,” I said with thinly veiled sarcasm. In many other jurisdictions, all applicators, including farmers, are licensed and keep log books. The PMRA likes that. Makes you wonder how long it will be until Big Brother will be riding along on the sprayer, at least figuratively. Kevin Hursh is an agricultural journalist, consultant and farmer. He can be reached by e-mail at kevin@hursh.ca.

The Producer excited about going video EDITORIAL NOTEBOOK

JOANNE PAULSON, EDITOR

I

t’s show time. After occasionally incorporating video on our website over the years, we are finally at the point where you can catch some significant farm-related action at producer. com. We’re not perfect yet, but the strides we’ve made in the last two months — ever since we hired Robin Booker to help push the process along — are quite incredible. We have gone from few videos to having a whole bunch of them embedded w ith stor ies. We’re pretty excited about it, and it’s only the beginning. I’m calling the video team MPR Productions for now. That’s M for Michael Raine, managing editor; P for Paul Yanko, web editor; and R for Robin Booker, web reporter-editor, They deserve most of the credit for getting the digital tape rolling. Since we didn’t want to use crappy cameras and just fling stuff up in YouTube fashion, there was a process to putting a system in place. First, you have to buy the cameras (and the memory cards, and the tripods, and the batteries, and, and, and …). Then you have to have people who can actually use the cameras, edit the video and figure out how to get it online. For that, you need software, which also has to be installed, understood, played with and successfully applied. Thank goodness for MPR. There’s a whole new language to this thing, like ENG and B-roll and other lingo I am not entirely used to, but they seem to be. Everything I know about electronic news gathering I have learned from, well, watching TV and local television reporters. But I’m learning, although not as fast as they are at MPR. Do check out some of the footage and interviews from Canada’s Farm Progress Show. Most of the videos are in the Crops section on the Producer’s website, along with the print stories. In the not too distant future, you’ll see more video as our journalists get their cameras and post their efforts from around Western Canada and beyond. My only real contribution to this whole adventure was to remember to put the equipment in the capital budget — and to be on the team that hired Robin. Ta da! Hey, it’s not much, but that’s my limited skill set. I’ll leave the brilliance to the staff. They’ve always brought you the best farm news in print and online, and now in video, too.


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JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

OPEN FORUM LETTERS POLICY:

MUCH HIGHER LOSSES

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.

I must apologize to all the people to whom I said the loss of the Canadian Wheat Board would mean a loss of about $20 per tonne on the price of wheat. I was wrong. It seems to be more than three times that bad. This past year I have noticed the almost complete disappearance of the premium we used to get for the high protein wheat we are famous for. To be sure of the numbers, I have researched the Saskatchewan price of feed wheat (Statistics Canada) and compared it to the CWB final price for high protein No. 2 CWRS. I went back

eight years for the comparison and determined that the average price difference was about $79 per tonne. This past year the average price difference has been about $3 per tonne or approximately 79 percent of what the long-term average indicated we should be getting. I used estimates from local elevator managers for a current average. Some economists try to excuse the low prices by saying because there was so much high protein wheat across the Prairies the demand, and therefore the price, had fallen. Those economists sound embarrassed when they say this because we all know lots of high protein wheat is normal for us. In this past crop year, the protein was not even particularly

high. Every excuse I have heard for the depressed price has existed before, singly and in combination, and the effect has never been even close to this drastic. The only different circumstance leading to this change is the loss of our Canadian Wheat Board. If the CWB usually handles about 15 million tonnes of high protein wheat per year and we have missed out on about $75 per tonne, that’s well over a billion dollars out of the pockets of prairie farmers. Demand that your local Conservative MP explain how this is a good thing. Glenn Tait, Region 6 NFU director, Meota, Sask.

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SAVE VALLEY VIEW To the Editor: What an interesting Canada Day celebration. I accidentally got an insight few of us on the outside get to experience. I happened to sit near the Valley View residents and choir that performed at Crescent Park in Moose Jaw. I saw the wonderful support the members of their community gave to each other. One could see this made it easier for the staff to provide for their care, guidance and required leadership. I understand Valley View residents are going to be dispersed, put out on the street if you may. One can see this would have a similar effect on them as to what happened to children who were placed into residential schools by the federal government. If I support the dispersal policy, would I be able to sleep at night? I do not take pleasure from pulling wings off butterflies. Lorne Jackson, Riverhurst, Sask.

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The actions of the RCMP in High River, Alta., are very disturbing in a free and democratic society. Using the flooding disaster as an excuse to break into private homes and remove private property is a criminal offence. This kind of behaviour one would expect from a common criminal. What sets Canada apart from Third World dictators is the rule of law. This kind of behaviour is a breach of public trust. No one can break into your home and steal your property. No one can enter your home without a search warrant. No one can take your property without your permission. Just because the stolen property were firearms doesn’t make it right or legal. Why didn’t they take jewelry and electronics, which are more valuable? In Manitoba many First Nations community homes were abandoned over the last few years due to flooding. Did the RCMP break into these homes to rescue their firearms? I think the RCMP needs to rethink its role in a civil society. Wearing a uniform doesn’t give them licence to break the law. I always thought their job was to serve and to protect the public. A judicial inquiry needs to be called to investigate this incident in High River. Your elected official needs to hear from you on this matter. Inky Mark, former MP, Dauphin, Man.

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OPEN FORUM/NEWS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

13

SASKATCHEWAN | MARKETING

Vegetable growers hope to put more local produce in stores Prairie Fresh Food Corp. | Sixteen producers are behind an effort to promote the Home Grown Saskatchewan brand BY KAREN BRIERE REGINA BUREAU

OUTLOOK, Sask. — Sixteen Saskatchewan vegetable producers have formed Prairie Fresh Food Corp. to get their products into retail stores. The corporation was registered earlier this year after the growers met last fall with the Grocery People, the wholesale arm of Federated Cooperatives Ltd Produce marketed through the corporation will carry the Home Grown Saskatchewan brand, with the tag line Taste the Difference. Connie Achtymichuk, the Sask-

atchewan agriculture ministry’s vegetable specialist, said growers produce high quality food but have trouble marketing it beyond farmers markets. “We said we’ll grow five vegetables if you’ll buy them,” she said about the proposal that resulted in the deal. Producers can’t invest in the facilities and seed if they don’t have a market, she added. Sam Hofer of the Dinsmore Hutterite Colony, one of the shareholders in Prairie Fresh, said the colony is focusing on carrots and seeded seven to eight acres this year. He said the colony seeded each row at 60 seeds per foot and expected 80

percent germination. “The size of the carrot is determined by seed density,” he said. The carrots are growing under irrigation, which Hofer said makes them easier to harvest. They will be sold in two- and threepound bags. The colony built a processing and cold storage facility to accommodate the new venture and bought a packaging machine from Denmark. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency recently conducted a workshop at the colony on how to grade carrots. Harvest will begin Aug. 1.

Hofer said the deals made between the wholesaler and each individual producer in the corporation are confidential, but the colony should realize 65 to 80 cents per pound, packaged and delivered. Colony residents will deliver to the Grocery People’s warehouse in Saskatoon. Spring Creek Market, another shareholder and long-time farmers market vendor from the Outlook, Sask., area, has 90 acres of vegetables under irrigation but will sell only sweet corn from 14 acres through Prairie Fresh. Dan Erlandson of Spring Creek said the corn will go from the field

into refrigerated trucks and to the Grocery People’s warehouse. He said his family will continue its 30-year tradition of attending farmers markets in Saskatoon and Regina, but Prairie Fresh gives them a chance to grow more and sell to more people. “We just want it done in-season,” Erlandson said of the decision to sell right off the field and focus on corn. “That seems best for us right now. And it’s easy to grow, maintain and weed.” Growers in the Kindersley, Lumsden, Yorkton and Nipawin-Tisdale areas are concentrating on other vegetables, such as yellow and green beans.

CULTURE | AMATEUR THESPIANS

Drama class big hit at camp SPIRITUAL VIGNETTES

JOYCE SASSE

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hen the registrations came, we could hardly believe our eyes. Two young drama teachers offered their services for a week at the summer camp. We never tried this kind of program before, but the news quickly circulated. Not only did we receive all the bookings we could handle, twothirds of the teenage applicants were boys. The usual balance was many more girls than boys. We assigned campers to shack tents, introduced their leaders, talked about the daily schedule and had a swim. Soon it was time for supper and a discussion about how the week would unfold. The drama leaders suggested each camper find a partner he/she would work with through the week. Each day they would work on a different aspect for putting on a show. On the last day, they presented their dramatizations. What a week we had. Everything else about the camp program was incidental to drama workshop doings. They tried juggling, prat-falling and mime. On the second day the leaders demonstrated how a story theme could be developed. Then came costuming, makeup and staging. The theme for Bible study and vespers followed the camp theme: dramatizing biblical stories, group singing and stories from Mister God, This is Anna. Today there is much talk about culture, but it is usually considered a dollars-and-cents item. We overlook how culture speaks to and comes from within our spiritual depths. No slapstick for our thespians. In their presentations they had things to say that were meaningful to them — and they said it oh so well.

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

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JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

NEWS

HOGS | ANIMAL WELFARE

Star power adds new dimension to ongoing sow stall debate Public image | Despite a growing chorus of criticism in media, an anti-activist group says popular opinion is on farmers’ side BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU

Ryan Gosling and his dog, George, recently weighed in on the controversial issue of gestation crates. The famous Canadian actor thinks farmers shouldn’t be allowed to put sows into gestation crates for even a few weeks before being moved into open housing. Any time in confinement for an animal is “something I would never dream of doing to George and that no compassionate Canadian would ever do to any animal,” he wrote in an opinion piece printed in The Globe

and Mail July 11. Gosling has a lot of star power and the ability to move the emotions of ordinary consumers and citizens, which is something animal rights organizations have been adept at doing in the struggle over sow stalls. However, farmers and others shouldn’t assume that the fight for public opinion is over, says an aggressive anti-activist organization. Public opinion can be swayed by the way activists and celebrities represent an issue, but can be swayed the other way by aggressively fighting back, says a researcher with the Center for Consumer Freedom.

“You can’t cede ground to the activists,” said Will Coggin, who oversaw a poll that assessed Canadian consumer views on sow stalls. “You have to go out and talk to the public, to retailers, and say, ‘here’s our side of the story.’ ” Coggin said a poll conducted by the Center’s Humane Watch found that Canadian consumers who slightly disapprove of sow stalls will change their attitudes if they are told that farmers and veterinarians support stalls as a way to protect animals from bullying each other. “We decided to give consumers the info that, ‘hey, there’s another side to

the story,’ ” said Coggin. “We found that overwhelmingly Canadians do support individual sow housing.” The survey of 1,003 people found that 63 percent of Canadian consumers supported stall use after being told that both farmers and veterinarians support using stalls, with 26 percent supporting it strongly. Only seven percent of people were strongly opposed to stalls and eight percent were moderately opposed. Coggin said the results prove that the sow stall debate is not over and that public attitudes are still open.

However, farmers must present their case to the public before it adopts the animal activist viewpoint, he added. “You’ve got to take the offensive here. That’s what the Humane Society of the United States and Humane Society International is trying to do here: take the offensive and control the message, presenting only one side of the story,” said Coggin. Gosling’s opinion piece championed the call of some animal rights organizations that disagree with any stall use at all, even immediately after insemination when stalls are proven to greatly reduce miscarriages.

INDIAN HEAD | SHELTER BELTS

Research will continue after program closes BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM

WE GREW UP WITH ALBERTA AGRICULTURE. For more than 100 years, ATCO has provided critically important services to more than 300 rural communities. From humble beginnings, we’ve seen agriculture become the foundation for a growing province. Today, agriculture is a vibrant industry in our province – a backbone for the hundreds of communities served by ATCO. ATCO and its people are committed to investing and volunteering in the communities we serve to help make them vibrant places to work and live. ATCO is a founding member of Ag for Life, a program that delivers educational programming to improve rural and farm safety. Ag for Life also builds a genuine understanding and appreciation of the impact agriculture has on the lives of all Albertans. To learn more about Ag for Life, go to agricultureforlife.ca. Visit ATCO Group at www.atco.com.

06/13-21670_01

Agriculture Canada is continuing work aimed at transferring ownership of a federal tree nursery at Indian Head, Sask. However, the department’s agroforestry research will continue at Indian Head, even after the Prairie Shelterbelt Program ceases to operate Dec. 31, according to federal officials. “The Prairie Shelterbelt Program will cease operations Dec. 31, 2013,” said Agriculture Canada spokesperson Patrick Girard. “However, AAFC agroforestry re s e a rc h w i l l c o nt i nu e o n t h e grounds of the Agroforestry Development Centre.” Girard said in an email that Ottawa completed a market appraisal of the tree nursery earlier this year. It is part of a divestiture process aimed at transferring ownership of the nursery. The next steps include completing an environmental assessment, conferring with other federal department and crown corporations to determine if there is any programrelated interest and communicating with provincial and municipal authorities, he added. In Manitoba and Saskatchewan, First Nation bands with Treaty Land Entitlement rights must also be offered an opportunity to acquire federal assets. Land that has not been transferred after those processes have been completed will be offered on the open market. Girard said several parties have expressed interest in operating the nursery and distributing trees with a focus on the agricultural community. “Agriculture Canada is providing any interested parties with relevant information to develop their potential business plans,” he said. At least one group, the Western Canadian Tree Nursery Coalition, is in the process of completing a business plan to determine whether the Agroforestry Development Centre could be operated as a viable business. There is no deadline at this time for open market offers, Girard added.


NEWS FLOOD AFTERMATH | REBUILDING

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

FLOOD AFTERMATH | COMPENSATION

Alta. RMs fear being left Producers uncertain about financial help on their own to rebuild Rural municipalities can’t afford infrastructure repairs STORIES BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

Rural municipalities do not want to be forgotten as rebuilding and repairs begin across flood-ravaged southern Alberta. “Although there seemed to be some big initial contact from the government, it seems to have dropped off,” said Bob Barss, president of the Alberta Association of Municipal Districts and Counties. He said he saw considerable damage during a July 2-3 tour of the municipal districts of Big Horn, Foothills and Ranchland, the Municipality of Crowsnest Pass and Clearwater County, but no one can estimate the total losses. “There is no way rural municipalities can pay for this infrastructure repair,” he said. Barss said people realize that primary infrastructure must be repaired first, but small bridges and roads are the only routes in many rural areas. Money has been promised to urban residents to replace homes, but rural people have also suffered losses that support their livelihood. Corrals, culverts, dams and dugouts were washed away along with rural roads and bridges. “The rural municipalities that I talked to don’t know how much damage they have because they haven’t been able to go see. They can’t get into the back country,” he said. Barss thinks the community of Exshaw in the MD of Bighorn west of Calgary was hardest hit. Twenty-five percent of the houses were probably destroyed and others are in a state of disrepair. The community lost power, cell towers and land lines for two days. It also lost six bridges. The MD of Ranchland to the south lost roads and bridges. Crowsnest Pass isn’t much better, he added. A fire that swept through the municipality in 2008 left dead trees and brush. The flood has pushed the debris into ravines and blocked the flow of tributaries that are needed to drain ground water. The MD of Foothills, which surrounds High River, has a crew to repair roads and manage the cleanup, but the municipality predicts it will be weeks before all of the flood water is cleared through irrigation canals. Clearwater County says most of the flooding affected its back country and has estimated the cost to replace infrastructure at around $2 million. Barss said there is a shortage of manpower and equipment to do the work and not enough money to cover the widespread losses. The province has said it will rebuild, but municipalities are unclear how that might be done, he added “I know the municipalities do not have the financial capacity to fix those bridges. We were underfunded for bridges long before the budget cuts.” The last provincial budget cut bridge repair and replacement funding for the next three years. “The province is going to have to come up with some way to do this.” Resource companies have also lost

15

infrastructure, and Barss hopes partnerships could be formed with them to do some of the rebuilding. “There will have to be partnerships of government, industry and municipalities. Industry has to move as well.” Barss is a member of a provincial flood recovery group, and he wants to set up meetings with the appropriate groups to deliver help to rural areas. “We are all in this together. There can’t be a rural versus urban on this. Everybody has to be looked after.”

Janet Carr and her family had to watch helplessly from a hill June 20 as fast moving, dirty water from the Bow River flooded their pastures southeast of Calgary. The water was raging, cows were bawling and there was nothing they could do. The Carrs had 200 cows on pasture, and after the flood waters started to recede, they found some stranded on newly formed islands without feed and no way to leave. Others had disappeared. “We didn’t know exactly our numbers. We believe there were 16 cows drowned,” she said. They do not know how many calves may have been lost. The family called the RCMP, the

SPCA, Fish and Wildlife and Alberta Conservation, and finally got help when the Strathmore fire department came with a river boat to cut fence wires and set the cattle free. The Carrs also found other cattle that appeared to be marooned and called brand inspectors to see if they could be reunited with their owners. No one can confirm how many livestock were lost. Carr said most of the attention in the aftermath of the flood seems to be directed at restoring Canmore, Calgary and High River, but farmers are going to need financial help as well. “It is a big financial hit for us.” Agriculture minister Verlyn Olson said his department has not heard about catastrophic losses to livestock

or irrigation works. However, the province has a contract with West Coast Reduction to pick up cattle, horse and hog carcasses for rendering at no cost to producers. “There is still a lot of analysis going on and we haven’t taken hard and fast positions on a lot of this,” he said. The first question for producers with major losses will be whether they had insurance. There may also be some aid through the Agri-Recovery or Agri Stability programs. “I don’t think there is any contemplation at this point that that program will be used,” Olson said. The province has set up a website for more complete details on flood compensation at alberta.ca/RecoveryInformation.cfm.

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NEWS

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

ALFALFA | REGULATIONS

RESEARCH | NEW FUNDING

Groups continue protests against GM alfalfa in Canada

$8M in barley funding will target new varietal research Officials to focus on yields and sustainability BY BARRY WILSON OTTAWA BUREAU

Industry meetings | Anti-GM lobby, seed trade officials continue debate

The Canadian Seed Trade Association’s annual meeting was met July 15 with demands that plans for genetically modified alfalfa be shelved. Protesters in front of a Quebec City hotel where the meeting was being held said delegates would finalize a plan that would set rules for a coexistence plan that would allow GM and non-GM alfalfa to be grown without cross-contamination. The anti-GM Quebec group Vigilance OGM said co-existence is impossible, and it called on provincial governments to stop release of GM alfalfa. “The only way to stop contamination from GM alfalfa is to stop GM alfalfa,” protest leader Thibault Rehn said in a statement after the demonstration. “Consumers and farmers don’t want it. The industry must abandon its plans to release GM alfalfa.” CSTA chair Stephen Denys said the problem with the demonstration is that the meeting was not going to finalize anything. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency approved the GM alfalfa trait

“There is a clear understanding with the commercializing company (Forage Genetics International) that this is only for Eastern Canada,” said Denys. “Western Canada is more complicated because of exports and will have to be approached on its own timeline and what the commercializing companies want to do.” The CSTA executive offered to meet demonstrator leaders July 15 but say they were turned down. In a statement July 12 announcing the protest, the Canadian Biotechnology Action Network said industry talk of co-existence is a myth. “Co-existence or containment of GM alfalfa is not possible,” it said. “GM alfalfa will contaminate farmers’ fields and our food if it is released in Canada.” Denys said the evidence from the United States, where GM alfalfa has been marketed for years, suggests otherwise. Prudent management practices are required, such as creating separate growing areas and harvesting before the GM variety fully flowers. “They’ve adjusted their practices because they sell certified organic as well, and they haven’t had any issues at all.”

These dollars are exactly what the industry needs. MATT SAWYER ALBERTA BARLEY COMMISSION

to develop new low-cholesterol varieties that could make barley more of a consumer food product. However, Sawyer said in an interview that the priority for the industry will be increasing feed and malt varieties that cater to existing markets. “There is a real potential for food barley varieties for sure but at this point, I would say that market for food barley is basically non-existent,” he said. “It is an interesting market with an interesting potential but I would say it is not a big focus.” The federal investment comes from the five-year $698 million AgriInnovation program that was included in the federal-provincial Growing Forward 2 policy framework that took effect April 1. In collaboration with researchers, the program calls for the industry to direct the research to its priorities. The Alberta Barley Commission will be in charge of dispersing the funds to research projects.

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on scientific and health criteria five years ago. Corporate promoters who want to proceed with a commercial release, including CSTA member Forage Genetics International, will have to submit a variety for the normal health and efficacy approvals. “What is happening at the meeting relating to GM alfalfa is just an update,” Denys said. “There won’t be any broad discussion beyond that.” He said the CSTA formed a committee once the trait was approved to develop a plan on how GM and nonGM alfalfa could co-exist. He said the plan is now completed. “It’s now a question of the variety registration,” he said. “The commercializing companies gave us the commitment they would wait until a plan was in place so now that it is, I assume they will have a timetable in place for commercialization at some point.” He said Forage Genetics International has also committed to marketing GM alfalfa only in Eastern Canada, where most of the market is for hay and not export feed pellets, which would face resistance in traditional export markets including Japan.

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The prairie barley industry is welcoming an $8 million, five-year fede ra l i nv e s t m e nt i nt o i n d u s t r y research, concentrated largely at Alberta’s Lacombe Research Centre. The new research involving Agriculture Canada scientists, University of Saskatchewan researchers and industry direction will be aimed at making the industry more sustainable and market-responsive. “These dollars are exactly what the industry needs,” said Alberta Barley Commission chair Matt Sawyer from Acme, Alta. “We’re excited. I think this will open up real opportunities.” When he announced the funding in Lacombe July 9, agriculture minister Gerry Ritz said the money can help develop everything from new environmentally sustainable production practices to breeding new high-yield varieties or better products for consumers. T h e g ov e r n m e nt s ay s b a r l e y exports — malt and feed — were worth more than $470 million last year and total farm revenues from barley were $729 million. Sawyer called the federal funding “a game changer. With an investment like this, barley producers will reap the rewards of innovation for years to come.” Ritz said the money could be used


NEWS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

17

CROP REPORT ALL CONDITIONS AS OF JULY 12. VISIT WWW.PRODUCER.COM REGULARLY FOR UPDATED CROP REPORTS

SASKATCHEWAN Warm weather in early July has advanced crop development and haying operations, although rain, hail and cabbage seedpod weevils have damaged fields. Surveying indicates that cabbage seedpod weevil populations in the province’s canola fields are greater than last year. Most fall cereals are in the heading to dough stages, while spring cereals are in the jointed to heading stages. Pulse crops are in the vegetative to flowering stages and flax crops are at the seedling to flowering stages. Canola and mustard is in the rosette to flowering stages. SOUTH Most of southern Saskatchewan received rain in the first week of July. The Redvers area has now received more than 350 millimetres since April 1. Some crops have been damaged by local flooding, hail and wind, as well as wheat midge, flea beetles, alfalfa weevil, cutworms and grasshoppers. There is disease pressure from cereal leaf diseases, sclerotinia, fusarium head blight and ascochyta blight. Topsoil moisture in the south is adequate. Hay quality and pasture conditions across the region are rated as good. CENTRAL Topsoil moisture was rated as 16 and eight percent surplus in the east and central regions July 8. The region saw some rain in the first week of July, including more than 100 mm in the Kamsack area. Rain, along with humid conditions have made for good disease conditions. There have been localized flooding issues, as well as damage from hail and wind. There are reports of cutworm damage and cereal leaf disease, as well as powdery mildew in pea crops and sclerotinia in canola, which has required spraying. Most of the hay and pasture conditions in central Saskatchewan are rated as good. NORTH Topsoil moisture in northeastern Saskatchewan was rated as 66 percent surplus July 8 as the area received more rain, including more than 100 mm in the Star City area. The northwestern half fared better at 11 percent surplus. The wet weather has meant localized issues with flooding, as well as disease concerns. There have been reports of grasshopper damage in northwestern areas, as well as root rot yellowing crops.

MANITOBA Warm and dry weather helped advance crop development and hay and spraying operations, although there are some disease risks after recent rain.

sclerotinia and are making fungicide applications. There are reports of wheat midge in cereal crops. NORTHEAST

Spraying for sclerotinia, fusarium head blight and ascochyta blight are underway in many areas across the Prairies. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO the Wasagaming, Erickson and Neepawa areas each receiving more than 80 mm. However, rain benefited corn and soybeans, which are outperforming most other crops. Twenty-five to 30 percent of the soybean crop was in the bud stage of development July 8. Reports indicate decreased insect activity in cereal and oilseed crops. Bertha armyworm monitoring indicates low numbers in most areas. NORTHWEST A storm brought as much as 150 mm of rain to the Gilbert Plans and Winnipegosis areas at the start of the month, bringing hail and causing crop lodging. Crop development and conditions in the region vary, with the Winnipegosis, McCreary and The Pas regions lagging. Only 10 percent of acres are affected by excess moisture, but growers in some areas near The Pas have localized issues that are worse. CENTRAL Warm weather has advanced crops, although some fields remain unseeded because of moisture. Herbicide applications are complete, and growers continue to make pesticide applications. Uneven crop development is reported in some fields, with most cereal crops at the stem elongation stage. Some spring wheat fields have already been sprayed for fusarium head blight. Canola in the region ranges from rosette to bolting, and growers are spraying for sclerotinia. Monitoring has identified diamondback moths in the eastern part of the region. Bertha armyworms remain a low risk. Most pastures are rated in good to excellent condition and average hay yields are expected. EASTERN Field conditions in the region are positive, and crops are performing well. As of July 8, winter wheat was headed out, spring cereals ranged from stem elongation to head emergence, canola was 60 to 100 percent flowering, soybeans were 80 percent flowering and corn ranged from V6 to V9. Some fields have been sprayed for grasshoppers. Lygus bugs have been reported, although not at levels that have required action.

SOUTHWEST INTERLAKE Surplus moisture levels across the region have resulted in localized flooding issues and crop loss. The region saw varying amounts of rain at the start of the month, with

The region saw varying amounts of rain at the start of the month, with the Broadview-Chatfield area receiving 50 mm of rain as well as

Topsoil moisture conditions were positive at the turn of the month and canola is flowering, but the region has received less rain than other parts of the province. The region saw more warm weather last week, but storms were in the forecast at the end of the period. NORTHWEST

hail. Ponding is an issue in some spots, but warm weather has helped growing conditions. Growers have made second herbicide applications on some fields. They will also be spraying for fusarium head blight and sclerotinia. Alfalfa seed fields will also be sprayed for disease. Hay yields are down, but the quality is good.

Hail caused extensive damage in the region. Many crops will recover, although there will be some losses. Crop development elsewhere is positive, with cereal and grain crops flowering. Surveys show cabbage seedpod weevil activity in the region.

ALBERTA

CENTRAL

Crop development and conditions are generally good, despite storms that caused hail damage in some parts of the province. Bertha armyworms are appearing, but counts so far haven’t required action. Lygus bugs have been noted, but spraying hasn’t been recommended.

The region has seen excessive moisture and received hail near Airdrie earlier this month. Moisture concerns persist in some canola fields, but damage varies. Some fields are drowned out while others are performing well. Most canola fields are flowering and growers have sprayed for

SOUTH Crop development in the region has been ahead of last year, with cereal crops entering the boot stage and canola flowering in early July, despite issues with excessive moisture in some areas. Parts of the region have continued to see more rain over the first two weeks of July, with Barrhead receiving more than 40 mm and Drayton Valley more than 50 mm. PEACE RIVER Crop development was positive in early July, and the region received rain and cooler temperatures through the first two weeks of July. Grasshopper activity has been noted, and producers have sprayed.


18

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

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THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

FARMLIVING

19

FRUIT AND QUINOA CREATE UNIQUE SUMMER FLAVOURS Quinoa is a highly nutritious grain that can be combined with summer’s bounty of fresh fruit in a variety of recipes. | Page 23

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

WOMEN | REVIVAL

HEALTH | RURAL HOSPITALS

Rural women’s groups seek new recruits

Pushed to the limit System under stress | Babies suffer when rural maternity wards close, warns SRPC president

BY KAREN MORRISON BY BARRY WILSON

SASKATOON NEWSROOM

OTTAWA BUREAU

ROSSER, Man. — Combining fun with travel and education is one way the Manitoba Women’s Institute could revive its declining membership. Gisela Nolting said that was the formula for success in her native Germany, where she first became involved in the rural women’s group. She said the agriculture department plays a significant organizational role in Germany’s WI movement, which also features regular presentations by speakers, little or no fundraising and opportunities for multi-day trips. In Canada, she added, women joined in past decades because of their mothers or relatives. “Women have way more choices now,” said Nolting, a member of the WI in Grosse Isle, Man., and MWI board member who operates a 3,300 acre farm and forage seed processing plant with her husband, Heinz, and son, Robert, near Rosser, Man. One of those choices is the Red Hat Society, a group of senior women who gather for fun and socialization. “Their numbers are increasing. They do it just for fun,” said Nolting. She said WI, which is dominated by older women, needed to address declining membership several decades ago when the corresponding decline in the rural population was beginning. MWI, led by president Joan Clement, has been discussing ways to recruit new members, examining programming and engaging focus groups of non-members, she said. Nolting said a website disseminates information about the group, but other formsofmarketingwouldhelp,including assistance from Manitoba Agriculture. She said the group remains relevant, offering presentations at regular meetings, supporting charities, lobbying at MWI conventions and pitching in to help Third World causes with the Associated Country Women of the World. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

The provinces’ increasing tendency to try saving money by closing rural maternity wards hurts rural women and their babies and saves no money, says a medical organization. A recent report from the government-sponsored Canadian Institute for Health Information said more than 17 percent of rural women in Canada must travel more than two hours to find a hospital where their babies can be born and then often spend weeks there, separated from family and community. Many of the babies are born premature, possibly because of the stress, it added. For urban women, less than one percent face the same travel and separation from home, according to the report. “Babies suffer when rural hospitals close their obstetrical wards,” Society of Rural Physicians of Canada (SRPC) president and Inuvik doctor Braam de Klerk said in a July 8 statement in response to the data. “The pennies saved are foolish when you consider the risk to

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health and increased dollars of caring for those premature babies. Provincial governments should support rural women with their need for local care.” The society teamed up with a coalition of associations representing nurses, family doctors and midwives to produce a working paper published last week that called for better rural maternal services. “Rural maternity care services are under stress and many rural and remote communities across Canada have seen local maternity services diminish and close,” it said. “Rural women and families who have to travel to access maternity care experience increased levels of stress, increased personal costs and increased rates of adverse outcomes.” The problem the report identified was also flagged in a decadeold report on Canada’s healthcare system chaired by former Saskatchewan premier Roy Romanow. The Romanow report lamented the lack of investment in rural health care and proposed a multibillion-dollar investment in rural health services and facilities.

It has not happened. “Current health-care policy does

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not adequately support rural nurses, doctors and midwives to meet the needs of rural women, and new approaches are needed to support collaborative, integrated and safe care for mothers and newborns in rural Canada,” said the latest report sponsored endorsed in part by the SRPC. The report’s first recommendation is that “women who reside in rural and remote c o m mu n i t i e s i n Ca na d a should receive high-quality maternity care as close to home as possible.” Instead, conditions have worsened. “Recent years have seen the closure of rural maternity programs as part of regionalization of care and cost-cutting,” it said. “In addition to administrative pressures, lack of skilled personnel in maternity care has resulted in service decreases and program closures.”

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JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

FARM LIVING

REMEMBERING EMMIE ODDIE | HOME ECONOMIST

Readers wanted to know … Oddie found answers Practical information | Woman activist worked to educate and improve the lives of rural readers BY KAREN MORRISON SASKATOON NEWSROOM

Community service was the common thread running through Emmie Oddie’s long life on the Prairies. The former Western Producer food and lifestyles columnist, who died July 6 at the age of 97, offered homemaking advice, lobbied for home economist positions in Saskatchewan districts and fought to better the lives of rural women globally. Kathryn Groshong of Weyburn, Sask., served with Oddie at Saskatchewan Women’s Institutes and helped her create a cookbook, From Prairie Kitchens. She called Oddie a strong leader whose work for the betterment of women extended to the Federated Women’s Institutes of Canada and the Associated Country Women of the World. “She encouraged women to become more active,” Groshong said. “She listened carefully to things and made you feel like what you were doing had an importance.” Liz Delahey, former Western People editor and Farm Living editor at The Western Producer, called Oddie an institution. The column, I’d Like to Know, ran from 1949-95. “She had the ability to come to p e o p l e i n t h e i r k i t c h e n ,” s a i d Delahey. She provided farm women with practical information in the days before Google and computers, understood their reality and inability to access recipe ingredients as easily as those in the city and could relate to her readers’ rural lifestyle. Delahey said Oddie’s home economics training helped her provide trusted information on food preservation. “Emmie had very good research skills and an excellent filing system,” said Delahey. She said her columns were handwritten, often done in airports and between the many meetings she attended. She wrote a personal column that detailed her own farm and family life, she said. “That’s what endeared her to people,” Delahey said. “She was humble and when she

spoke, there was always a deep message given. It was not something off the top of her head. She had thought carefully about it.” Saskatchewan home economists honoured Oddie by creating a website, www.homefamily.net, offering much of the same kind of information she once had in her column. Rosemary Oddie, Emmie’s daughter, said she accomplished the balancing act of writing, farm and family life and community service by being a good time manager. “She didn’t necessarily know what the answers were, but she knew where to look them up,” said Rosemary of her mother’s column. She encouraged her children to use their talents and modelled her commitment to local community service through teaching Sunday school and starting a homemakers’ club. Emmie Ducie was born in 1916 and grew up on a farm at Dundurn, Sask. She married Langford Oddie, an agrologist and farmer, and raised two children, Rosemary and Will, on a farm at Milestone, Sask., and later Tregarva, Sask. Oddie had an undergraduate degree in household science and a master’s degree in home economics. She worked as a nutritionist for the Red Cross and in extension work and teaching home management classes at the University of Saskatchewan. She and her sister, Rose Jardine, a former Western Producer editor and gardening columnist, were influenced by their mother Emma Ducie, an early feminist. Oddie served as president of the SWI and the Federated Women’s Institutes of Canada, led 4-H clubs, judged country fairs and served on boards such as the Saskatchewan Arts Board and the Advisory Council for the Status of Women. The grandmother and great-grandmother also worked to provide educational information on nutrition, food preparation and home management to the under-privileged in the Regina region. She received life memberships in SWI, FWIC and the Saskatchewan Home Economics Association and was awarded the Order of Canada in 1984. Rosemary said her mother

TOP: Emmie Oddie tracks down answers to readers’ questions at her farm house at Milestone, Sask. (circa 1950). LEFT: Oddie was awarded the Order of Canada by governor general Jeanne Sauve in 1984. | ODDIE FAMILY PHOTOS

ABOVE: Music was a longtime passion that Oddie shared with others during her long life. | FILE PHOTO was gratified to be recognized for her service. Even as her age advanced and as

she required higher levels of care, she found ways to contribute by playing her piano and conducting singsongs

for the other seniors. “Her desire was to be useful,” said Rosemary.

Rural women’s group seeks new recruits » CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE

Gisela Nolting takes an active role in MWI. | KAREN MORRISON PHOTO

She will join Clement as one of 600 delegates at the ACWW triennial conference in India in September. Woodmore WI member Justina Hop, a former MWI president, said her group offers its members fun, education and community-minded projects. “There is a social connection and a voice to take concerns to a higher level,” she said of the 31-member group. Hop said the chapter invites nonmembers to its annual Christmas party and has a draw each year for a free membership, with prospective candidates’ names thrown into a hat.

Many remain with WI after the membership has expired, she said. Hop said isolation and remoteness continue to challenge many rural women. Computers help people communicate but not necessarily connect in the same way a “sisterhood” like MWI can, she added. Fisher Branch WI has 40 members, 40 percent of whom are younger than 50. Member Bernice Enstrom said fun is combined with community service. “If I can’t help, I do not want to belong,” she said, citing the three fundraising events the chapter does each year. The WI has a 30-year-old tradition of staging skits with other communi-

ty groups. The event raises about $1,000, half of which goes to the school and half to the firefighters. The women bring husbands to WI Christmas dinners and children to summertime picnics, engage local people as presenters and bring items to auction off at meetings. She said the branch encourages younger members to take over the presidency, which is currently happening, and recognizes that women with jobs and children cannot attend all meetings and activities. The group steers clear of taking sides politically to maintain harmony in the community, but Enstrom conceded WI has in the past been part of the

drive to make improvements such as reflectors on train box cars, lines on highways and improved food safety in the home. Part of the chapter’s success may come from the community’s remote location in the Interlake and its long standing in the community. “We’re 65 years old, we’re a small town, everybody knows about us,” she said.

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FARM LIVING

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

21

Ruby and Max Gamble recount their lives on the farm near Biggar, Sask. A lifetime of honing their thriftiness is serving them well during their senior years. They continue to grow a large garden, make preserves, bake, buy in bulk and mend their secondhand clothing. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO LOOKING BACK | FARM HISTORY

Family squeezes every cent out of a dollar Waste not, want not | Thrifty couple raised a family by taking off-farm jobs and growing and preserving their food BY WILLIAM DEKAY SASKATOON NEWSROOM

BIGGAR, Sask. — Ruby and Max Gamble sit next to each other on a pile of old boards in their farmyard. It’s a pleasantly warm spring evening. The planks of wood are weathered grey floorboards pulled piece by piece from an old building Max tore down years ago. Wafting through the air is the occasional huff from the bull pen. Walls of the corral are some of the same weather-beaten floorboards. The chores are done. Intermingled are the good-hearted and contagious cackles from Ruby as she recounts their life on the farm. A storyteller at heart, this evening she commands an audience of barn cats, occasionally acknowledging her presence with their purring rubs. Max seems content to listen, head down, stoic, with gnarled hands grasping a weather beaten cane, like the boards below him. Their farmyard borders Highway 14, east of Biggar. Like many farms, it has become a kind of time capsule. A worn down set of discs lies half buried, the door to a vintage grain truck sits slightly ajar and a child’s wagon rusts against a rickety fence,

We had to survive. We never wasted a thing. I grew everything I could in the garden. I canned and baked everything I could. Worked like demons, really. RUBY GAMBLE FARMER

perhaps where it was last played with years earlier. An observer travelling the highway might see the farmyard as littered with pieces of farm machinery and debris. However, there is more to the Gambles’ story than what first meets the eye. The scattered remnants are like a diary of life on a farm spanning half a century. The memories are rich. Rust never sleeps. With two quarters of land they bought from Ruby’s father a few years after they married in 1958, the Gambles were never big farmers, even in those days. They had 30 head of dairy and beef cattle, a few old tractors and a small house, in which they set to raising their children: two daughters and a son, Lorraine, Tracy and Bruce. Milking cows by hand and making and selling their cream kept them

busy and involved the entire family. With no indoor plumbing, one of the children’s daily chores was hauling water from a well half a kilometre away using their play wagon. Ruby said thriftiness was a way of life: mending clothes, splitting wood, hauling water and growing their own food. “We were self-sufficient on the farm,” she said. A major setback in 1978 forced the young family to alter their course. Brucellosis wiped out their Guernsey dairy herd and put their burgeoning milk and cream business on hold. It took several years to start over and rebuild the herd. “That was bad. It knocked us on our rear ends,” she said. Thriftiness as a way of life before the outbreak became survival afterward. Their mantra, “waste not, want not,” shapes them to this day. “We had to survive. We never wasted a thing. I grew everything I could in the garden. I canned and baked everything I could. Worked like demons, really,” Ruby said. Max and Ruby were forced to take off-farm jobs to support their young family. For the next 12 years, Ruby held a variety of jobs in Biggar: grocery store clerk, waitress, bartender and even bouncer. With her infectious chuckle, she

recalls having to restrain an unruly customer by sitting on him outside the bar until the police arrived. Max was a janitor at the local bank, post office and Co-op store. A job at the local dump allowed him to find many useful discards. A new dairy herd brought long days filled with milking cows by hand and making cream. Family chores and off-farm jobs left little time for precious sleep. “I said if I lived my life a second time I wouldn’t do them both at once,” said Ruby. Lorraine still remembers and cherishes a Christmas present her parents gave her when she was about five. She and her sister received a dressed up doll along with their orange and bag of candy. Only years later did Lorraine learn her father had rescued the dolls from the dump, its clothes cleaned and mended by their mother in time for Christmas morning. Lorraine said they were never happier. “We made the most of the land. We had to,” Ruby said. “We raised the kids on that and I don’t think they did without a lot. We made sure they had clothes to wear and their clothes were clean and everything for school.” Lorraine and her husband, Clifford, have taken over running the

small operation, which today is not much bigger than it was originally, averaging 35 head of Black and Red Angus. They too have offfarm jobs. The small herd has never been a profitable venture for them. “You want to carry on the farm tradition. It’s OK that we took a loss all those years. I did it for my parents, as crazy as that sounds,” said Lorraine. “You live in harmony. I’ve always had a great relationship with my parents…. So what if we carry a loss every year. We choose that life.” The thriftiness that Max and Ruby have spent a lifetime honing is serving them well now. They continue to grow a large garden, can, bake, buy in bulk and mend their secondhand clothing. “It’s like squeezing the dollar twice before you spend it. Everything is up in price now. We’re kind of thrifty with our stuff. We’re not going to feel too much. It’s just going to continue because it’s the way the economy is now,” said Ruby. “We’re from a big family and we knew what struggle was. We knew if you didn’t hold the potatoes, you probably wouldn’t have nothing to eat for winter. You had to work to eat.… It was a good life, but it was survival.”


22

FARM LIVING

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

AGING | RELATIONSHIPS

ON THE FARM | HONEY BEES

Self-worth improves

Honey producers proud, confident

relationship

Eager to expand | Sun River Honey owners love working with bees, enjoy marketing their product BY BRIAN CROSS

SPEAKING OF LIFE

JACKLIN ANDREWS, BA, MSW

Q:

My mom and dad worked hard over the years, through good times and bad, and over time built an impressive farm for my brother and me to manage. Lately, they have been slowing down and last year, they left the farm to the two of us and moved into town. All of us thought that was a great move, but so far we have been proven wrong. Mom and Dad are not getting along. Mom’s memory is starting to slip a bit and Dad’s impatience is getting to be unbearable. What can we do to help them recover what we saw as a good relationship when they were on the farm?

A:

You and your family have a sizable problem. The starting point is not with the relationship that you see between your mom and dad, but how they feel about themselves. My guess is that each one is struggling with self-worth. Don’t forget that while they were working extra hard over the years to build a home and develop the farm, each was also being reminded that he or she was a valuable and worthwhile person. More than likely, their self-worth was caught up in the farm and they likely have not been happy campers for a while. Until both your parents start to recover their lost self-esteem, their chances for a decent relationship are limited. Recovering self-esteem is not likely to be drawn from the success your parents had while they were building the farm. While it may be a legacy, it doesn’t help them get up in the morning, prepare their meals, clean the house, do the laundry and enjoy their friends. If anything, what your parents achieved on the farm distracts them from enjoying their new life in town. Their self-esteem will likely blossom when they start to feel good about whatever personal independence their aging has left for them. Reward that. Don’t dwell on what your mom has forgotten. Help her appreciate whatever it is she is doing to compensate for it. Don’t react to your dad’s impatience. The more impatient a person is, the more impatient he becomes. Help him relax. Your mom and dad, the grandparents to your children, are important people. It is good for grandparents to know they are appreciated but you might have to remind them. The paradox is that the more a person nurtures his self-esteem, the more he can love another person. Chances are that as each of your parents recovers self-worth, the dissension you are seeing between them will dissipate. Jacklin Andrews is a family counsellor from Saskatchewan. Contact: jandrews@ producer.com.

SASKATOON NEWSROOM

GRANDORA, Sask. — Growth and family participation have been central elements in the Comerfords’ plan to build a successful beekeeping business. When they started in 1997, Henry and Sara Comerford had two young children, 16 hives of bees and some modest equipment given to them by Sara’s friend. Today, Sun River Honey near Grandora, Sask., has 750 hives and generates enough revenue to support not only Henry and Sara, but also their son, Aaron and his wife, Mandy. T h e i r d au g ht e r, Sha n n o n , a national team fencer who is currently training to represent Canada in the 2016 Olympics, has also expressed an interest in joining the family operation when her athletic career winds down. For the Comerfords, success is not only measured in honey production, but in the strength of family ties, quality of life and satisfaction of pursuing an occupation that they love. “If Shannon comes on and it’s me and her running the operation down the road, I can see us expanding to at least 2,000 hives,” says Aaron. “We always had a plan to grow,” adds Henry, an ordained Anglican minister who still works with the Anglican Diocese of Saskatoon. “Originally, Sara and I had a target of 500 hives … and we reached that goal. But by that time, Aaron was coming into the business and 500 wasn’t enough. “His energy and drive started the next phase of expansion and that’s where we are today.” In the 1990s, an acquaintance shared his knowledge of bees with Henry. Later, Sara took a job with Tony Lalonde, an established beekeeper from Clavet, Sask. She applied her knowledge to her family’s modest operation. “At the time Tony was running 1,000 hives, we were running 16,” says Sara. “I saw everything that you could possibly see in a single year. It was a crash course in beekeeping.” That education has proven invaluable. Within three years, the Comerford operation has grown significantly, adding new hives and expanding their extraction capacity. In 2000, they constructed a large, modern facility that today serves as the base of their operations. Almost all of the family’s hives are located within a 20 kilometre radius of Henry and Sara’s home. After it is pulled and extracted, honey is transferred into bulk containers and sold on the open market, usually to honey packers or food

processing companies in Canada and the United States. The Comerfords also sell some honey from the farmgate and internet and through local retailers that have agreed to carry their product. T h e Ca n a d i a n i n d u s t r y h a s changed significantly over the past decade and Henry said there is little room for missteps. “Today, if you want to be a commercial honey producer, you have to have the drive and the interest to compete in a global market … and you have to stay on top of research and markets,” he says. “If you don’t, you’re going to lose your business.” The Comerfords take pride in their ability to manage bees well. That, combined with the lifestyle, is what’s keeping Sun River Honey growing. “Definitely, the honey is wonderful and being able to sell it and make an income off of it is great, but for me, it’s all about the bees. That’s where my love and passion is,” says Sara. “The quality of life is definitely

ABOVE: Aaron, left, Sara and Henry have 750 bee hives near Grandora, Sask. Sun River Honey sells to food processors and honey packers in Canada and the United States. LEFT: Aaron Comerford learned beekeeping from his parents. He hopes to expand further if his sister joins the operation. | BRIAN CROSS PHOTOS

important,” adds Aaron, who recently built a home just a few kilometres away from the extraction plant. “It’s a good time to be in the indus-

try. If you enjoy working with bees and can take an organized business approach to running the farm, you can definitely go places with it.”

IT TAKES MORE THAN 20,000 WORKER BEES TO GATHER

one kilogram of honey


FARM LIVING

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

23

QUINOA | SUMMER FRUIT

Quinoa brings new life to traditional fruit recipes TEAM RESOURCES

BETTY ANN DEOBALD, BSHEc

O

ne of the best things about summer is sweet, juicy fruit so refreshing to eat on a hot day. Quinoa Revolution, a new cookbook by Patricia Green and Carolyn Hemming, has great tasting recipes that combine quinoa with summer fruit. Quinoa is a nutritional super food that is versatile and convenient. It fits into any diet, whether vegan, glutenfree, weight-loss, athletic, diabetic or heart healthy and also caters to those who want to try new recipes. Quinoa is a small seed from the spinach family of plants. The seeds are a complete, low fat protein that is nutritionally equivalent to whole milk protein, both soluble and insoluble fibre, vitamins E, B2, B6, folic acid and biotin, calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, potassium, iron, copper, manganese, zinc, antioxidants and complex carbohydrates. Its mild flavour blends well with other foods, it cooks in 15 minutes and is available whole as white, red or black seeds or processed into flour, flakes or puffs.

BLUEBERRY SPROUT SMOOTHIE 1 c. fresh or frozen blueberries 1/4 c. quinoa sprouts 1/2 c. fresh spinach 1/2 c. low fat plain yogurt 1/2 c. skim milk

250 mL 50 mL 125 mL 125 mL

VANILLA CREME CREPES WITH FRESH FRUIT BREAKFAST

STEWED SUMMER FRUIT WITH CINNAMON AND LEMON

It makes 12 six-inch (15 cm) crepes and serves six.

This is an updated version of fruit soup with less sugar and the benefit of quinoa. It serves eight.

Crepes: 1/3 c. quinoa flour 75 mL 1/4 c. brown rice flour or 60 mL whole wheat flour 2 tsp. cornstarch 10 mL 2 large eggs 2 large egg whites 1 c. milk 250 mL

125 mL

Combine ingredients in a blender and puree. Serves two. • Nutritional information per serving: energy 120 calories, protein 7 g, carbohydrates 22 g, dietary fibre 2 g, fat 1 g, sugar 15 g, cholesterol 0 mg, sodium 80 mg. To sprout quinoa seeds: distilled water 1/2 c. quinoa

A blueberry quinoa sprout smoothie, above left, stewed summer fruit with cinnamon and lemon, below left, and vanilla creme quinoa crepes with fresh strawberries provide nutrition and refreshment for busy summer days. | BETTY ANN DEOBALD PHOTOS

125 mL

Quinoa is one of the fastest sprouting seeds, germinating in two to four hours. The sprouts are best when eaten small because they are crisper and stay fresh longer. Wash your hands and a glass or ceramic casserole or mason jar. Add the quinoa and enough distilled water to cover the seeds, stir with a clean spoon and soak for 40 minutes at room temperature. Drain the seeds into a fine-mesh strainer and then rinse with more distilled water. Rinse the container with distilled water and return the wet quinoa to it. Cover with the lid slightly ajar or use cheesecloth and an elastic. The seeds need air circulation to prevent mould. Place in a cool dark location or in the refrigerator. Rinse every eight to 10 hours until the quinoa has sprouted to the desired length. It will be ready to eat anytime after about eight hours. Store in the refrigerator in a glass or ceramic container with the lid slightly ajar. Use within three days. Do not soak or store in a plastic container.

Filling: 3 c. low-fat plain 750 mL thick Greek yogurt 1/3 c. pure maple syrup 75 mL or honey 1 1/2 tsp. pure vanilla extract 7 mL 3 c. sliced fresh strawberries, peaches, raspberries, blueberries, saskatoons or a mixture of fruits For the crepes, stir together the quinoa flour, rice flour and cornstarch in a medium bowl. Add the eggs, egg whites and milk. Whisk until smooth. Heat a lightly oiled six-inch (15 cm) skillet on medium-high heat. Pour two tablespoons (30 mL) of batter into the centre of the pan, tilt the pan in a circular motion to spread the batter over the bottom of the pan. Flip the crepe when the edges begin to curl, at about 30 to 45 seconds. Cook the other side for another 30 seconds, then remove from the pan. Place the hot crepe on a plate and cover with foil. Repeat with the remaining batter. Note: Four whole eggs can be used if desired. For the filling, mix together the yogurt, maple syrup and vanilla. Place a crepe on a plate and spoon 1/4 cup (60 mL) each of filling and fruit in the centre. Fold sides over. Serve garnished with additional fruit. • Nutritional information per serving using strawberries: energy 250 calories, protein 16 g, carbohydrates 36 g, dietary fibre 3 g, fat 5 g, sugar 22 g: cholesterol 70 mg, sodium 105 mg.

mpt pty y Pe P st stic i id ic de Co C nt ntai aine ai nerr Re ne R cy cycl c in cl ng Pr Prog og gra ram m > Em

3 1/3 c. water 825 mL 2/3 c. quinoa 150 mL 1 1/2 c. sliced fresh or 375 mL frozen unsweetened rhubarb 1 1/2 c. halved fresh or 375 mL frozen strawberries 1/2 c. quartered pitted 125 mL prunes 1/3 c. seedless raisins 75 mL or dried currants 1/2 lemon 3 tbsp. honey 45 mL 1 cinnamon stick 250 mL 1 c. nonfat plain thick Greek yogurt 1 tbsp. maple syrup 15 mL Remove seeds from the lemon and slice it into chunks if you want to remove it after cooking. If serving the lemon with the fruit, slice thinly. In a large saucepan, combine water, quinoa, rhubarb, strawberries, prunes, raisins, lemon, honey and cinnamon stick. Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, cover and cook, stirring occasionally, for 45 minutes or until the strawberries and rhubarb have cooked down and become part of the sauce. Remove from the heat, stir and remove the cinnamon stick and lemon pieces. Let cool slightly before serving, or chill, if desired. Stir the yogurt and maple syrup together in a small bowl. Spoon stewed fruit into individual serving dishes. Serve hot or cold topped with the maple yogurt. • Nutritional information per serving (1/8 of recipe): energy 160 calories, protein 5 g, carbohydrates 33 g, dietary fibre 3 g, fat 1 g, sugar 17 g, cholesterol 0 mg, sodium 15 mg Source for recipes: Quinoa Revolution. Betty Ann Deobald is a home economist from Rosetown, Sask., and a member of Team Resources. Contact: team@producer.com.

#4

Rinsing is essential for safe collection site handling Prop Pr o e op err rin nsi s ng of co cont ntai nt aine ai ners ne rss con ontr trrib i utes uttes to o a sa s fe e wor o k en e vi v ro onm men ent. t

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Now, take your empty fertilizer containers along for the ride!


24

FARM LIVING

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

HUMOUR | MAKING THE MOVE

EYE PROBLEMS | CAUSES

Deciding to sell house easy, leaving home difficult Dry, runny THE MORE THINGS CHANGE …

MICHAEL GILLGANNON

S

elling one’s house is so much fun. Since I’m alone now, except for Fluffy and Brownie and Wolf Blitzer, a full-fledged house and a full-fledged yard seem a bit much. I can feign an interest in gardening

but the flowers can sense false affection and I am pretty sure they are out to get me. As Galadriel said in The Lord of the Rings, “I can smell it in the air, I can taste it in the water.” Unless it’s just the chlorine. So I got an agent, a nice man who seems to work about 22 hours a day. If this guy’s iPad ever breaks down, the subsequent thunderstorm of angst will not be pretty. While his assistant took pictures, he walked around the house, noting this and that, measuring here and there, humming softly, never laughing (out loud) at the oddities a 50-year-old house can and must have, eventually coming up with a number. A number of dollars that might be extracted

from someone with an interest in taking over the place. Getting to that point took a month and about two dozen showings. Showings are for houses, viewings are for dead people. Showing a house means you’re supposed to make the bed and make sure your glow-in-thedark undies are stowed away. That grow-op that took so long to get off the ground could be a problem. During a showing, the owner is encouraged to make himself scarce. I complied although the temptation was strong to shadow a few clients and take cryptic notes. Well, eventually an offer was generated. This was supposed to make me happy but it had quite the opposite

effect. That’s because houses evoke memories. The maple tree that once could barely cast a shadow now is bigger than the house itself. The birds will not have me around to make them fat. Or the cats around to make them dead. Yin and yang. Nevertheless a home inspection was scheduled to assure the buyers that they are not moving into a death trap. This will take three hours. It’s just a little house on the prairie, not Downton Abbey. My butler, blacksmith and cooper have to share one room, for pity’s sake. Michael Gillgannon is the former news editor of The Western Producer and managing editor of Western People. Contact: humour@ producer.com

ELECTRIC COMBINE HOPPER COVERS Q ALL COMPONENTS ARE EASILY REMOVED IN MINUTES. Q BREAKDOWN OF TARP COMPONENTS FIT INSIDE OF GRAIN TANK. Q A 12DC MOTOR IS A STANDARD FEATURE ON ALL TARPAULINS. Q LIGHTWEIGHT.

John Deere

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CLARE ROWSON, MD

Q:

I have a problem with dry eyes, although sometimes they do the opposite and I get excessive tearing. What causes that and what can I do for them? I am 80 years old.

A:

Dr y eyes are common in people more than 50 years old and menopausal women, but can occur in younger individuals due to certain medical conditions. The eyes often feel itchy and sore, or they may feel gritty. Eyes are dry when there is a lack of natural tears. Tears lubricate the eye and keep the surface moist so that eye movement is enabled, and they also help protect the delicate surface from infection. Meibomian glands, small glands on the edges of your eyelids, produce the oil in tears. This is added to salty water produced by the lacrimal glands at the corner of the eyes. Working outside in windy, dry conditions may lead to dry eyes or excessive watering of the eyes. Looking at a computer monitor for long periods of time may also have the same effect due to less blinking when your eyes are concentrating on something. Lack of natural tears and dry eyes are also associated with some medical conditions such as auto-immune diseases including rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, scleroderma and Sjogren’s syndrome. Diabetes, hypothyroidism and vitamin A deficiency may also be to blame. Antihistamines, some anti-depressants and some types of blood pressure medications can cause dry eyes. Try over the counter artificial tear drops, but avoid the types that are used to reduce redness in the eyes. There are also some prescription eye drops or special contact lenses. You should visit your doctor in case you do have a treatable eyelid condition such as blepharitis. There is also a new treatment known as LipiFlo where thermal pulsation helps clear blocked oil glands. This should be performed by an eye specialist.

CELLULITE TREATMENT What do you recommend to treat cellulite?

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The dimpled fat layer under the skin, mostly occurring in women around the thighs and buttocks, is commonly called cellulite. This is not a medical condition. It is simply lumpy fat, which shows through the thinner skin found in women. The only way to eliminate it is to lose weight, with diet and exercise. Do not waste your money on cosmetic commercial creams or wraps. Liposuction can be used to surgically remove unwanted fat, but I do not recommend it because there are risks and complications.

Clare Rowson is a retired medical doctor in Belleville, Ont. Contact: health@producer.com.


NEWS AG NOTES

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

COMING EVENTS

NEW FORAGE BOARD DIRECTOR

SHEEP SCHOLARSHIP

Diane Knight from the University of Saskatchewan’s College of Agriculture and Bioresources has been elected to the Saskatchewan Forage Council’s board of directors. Re-elected to the board for new terms were Aaron Ivey, producer from Ituna, Sarah Sommerfeld with the Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture in Outlook and Alan Iwaasa with Agriculture Canada at Swift Current. Fran Walley from the University of Saskatchewan has retired after completing two years on the board. Rounding out the board of directors for 2013-14 are Bruce Coulman, University of Saskatchewan; David Kerr, Lashburn; Ryan Sommerfeld, Medstead; Trevor Plews, Ducks Unlimited Canada, Yorkton; Neil McLeod, Northstar Seeds, Rosetown; Steve Pylot, Meadow Lake; Nancy Johns, Watrous; and Kelly Williamson, Pambrun. Kevin France, provincial forage specialist with the Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture, now serves as ex officio member of the board. Re-elected as SFC president for 201314 is Aaron Ivey with Kelly Williamson serving as vice-president and Dave Kerr returning as finance chair.

The deadline for a post-secondary $500 scholarship from the Manitoba Sheep Association is July 15. The award is open to any student who is a current member of the MSA or is the student relation of a current member of the organization. Applicants must provide proof of current enrolment in a postsecondary program, two references and an essay. Applicants involved in the MSA will receive preference, but those involved in community activities are encouraged to apply. All students are eligible to apply for the scholarship consecutive years in a row. The scholarship recipient will be given at the MSA annual show in August. Go to mb@mbsheep.ca for further information.

Agribusiness at the University of Manitoba. It will open the door to a degree program for ACC students who are initially thinking about an agriculture diploma, but then decide to go further. It will also allow those planning to obtain an agri-business degree to stay in southwestern Manitoba for their first two years of their university education. Interested students should contact ACC or the U of M. This option is already available to U of M diploma grads.

July 22: Organic and Ecological Farming Research Tour, University of Manitoba Carman Research Farm, Carman, Man. (Martin, 204-474-6077, m_entz@ umanitoba.ca) July 23-24: Dairy Farmers of Canada meeting, Fairmont Royal York Hotel, Toronto (Dairy Farmers of Ont., 905821-8970, dfcregistration@milk.org, www.milk.org/dfc2013) July 25: Flax Crop Tour, Indian Head Research Farm, Indian Head, Sask. (Sask Flax, 306-664-1901, saskflax@ saskflax.com, www.saskflax.com or www.iharf.ca) July 29: Glenlea Long-Term Organic Study Research Tour, Glenlea, Man. (Martin, 204-474-6077, m_entz@ umanitoba.ca) Aug. 7: Pulse tour, AAFC Research Station, Morden, Man. (204-7456488, www.manitobapulse.ca) Aug. 9-11: Pioneer Acres Museum show

and reunion, Irricana, Alta. (403-9354357, www.pioneeracres.ab.ca) Aug. 24: Olde Tyme Harvest for Hunger, Langenburg, Sask. (Joelene KotzerMitschke, 306-743-5408, oldetymeharvestforhunger@ gmail.com, www.oldetymeharvest. com) Sept. 10-12: Canada’s Outdoor Farm Show, Canada’s Outdoor Park, Woodstock, Ont. (800-563-5441, 519822-2890, info@outdoorfarmshow. com) Oct. 4-5: Unity and district trade show, Unity, Sask. (Irene, 306-2283702) Nov. 3-10: FarmFair International, Edmonton (www.farmfair.ca) Nov. 11-16: Canadian Western Agribition, Evraz Place, Regina (306565-0565, info@agribition.com, www.agribition.com)

NEW SWINE CENTRE CHAIR A new executive committee has been elected at the Canadian Centre for Swine Improvement. Rod deWolde replaces Lyse Grenier as chair of the CCSI. DeWolde has a 120 purebred sow operation in Millbrook, Ont. The herd has been part of the National Testing System since 2002. He also chairs the Ontario Swine Improvement board of directors and sits on the research committee of Ontario Pork, of which he is also the president of the Peterborough chapter. DeWolde is a longstanding member of the junior barrow show committee for Toronto’s Royal Winter Fair and a past member of the agricultural advisory committee for MP Dean DelMastro. Other new members of the executive committee include Wim Van Berkel from the Western Swine Testing Association, Alberta; Keith Rasmuson of Gwynne Vista Farms, Alberta; Normand Martineau from CDPQ, Quebec; and Donald MacDonald of Apple Valley Farms, Prince Edward Island.

The hot news is SeCan’s cool genes for widely-adapted hard red winter wheat across the Prairies.

UNIVERSITY, COLLEGE ANNOUNCE ARRANGEMENT A new agreement between the University of Manitoba’s Faculty of Agriculture and Food Sciences in Winnipeg and Assiniboine Community College is expected to expand learning opportunities in agriculture. Under the agreement, students who complete a Diploma in Agribusiness at Assiniboine Community College (with a minimum B average) will receive two years of course credit toward a four-year Bachelor of Science in

Download the free app today.

25

NEW

NEW

Moats*

AC® Flourish Canada Western Red Winter Wheat

Canada Western Red Winter Wheat

✔ milling quality ✔ replacement for CDC Falcon ✔ 104% of CDC Falcon in

✔ ✔ ✔ ✔

eastern Prairies ✔ short, strong straw ✔ early maturity (similar to CDC Falcon)

milling quality replacement for CDC Buteo 106% of CDC Buteo early maturity (1 day earlier than CDC Buteo)

Developed by University of Saskatchewan *Plant Breeders’ Rights applied for

Developed by Agriculture & Agri-Food Canada, Lethbridge

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26

NEWS

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

POULTRY | MARKETING

SUSTAINABILITY | FUNDING

Pullet producers waiting for decision

Report finds marketing benefits in environmental farm plans

Supply management | Ruling on agency’s request expected this fall BY BARRY WILSON OTTAWA BUREAU

Canada’s 550 pullet producers are waiting for a decision from Ottawa on whether they can form the newest supply management agency. Pullet Growers of Canada, which represents farmers who raise birds for the Canadian egg-producing sector, applied to the Farm Products Council of Canada for agency status during public hearings in Ottawa and Winnipeg. Sector leaders argue that marketing power and some control over prices would make the industry more stable and profitable. PGC received support from Egg Farmers of Canada, whose members are its main customers. However, there has been resistance from some provinces and small flock owners in Ontario. “I thought the hearings went extremely well,� PCG chair Andy DeWeerd said. “There were a couple of provinces neutral, but most in favour. We are hoping for a ruling by fall.� He said the Small Flock Poultry Farmers of Canada did not make presentations to the FPCC public hearings, despite criticism of the pullet proposal. Pullet Growers of Canada, with typical flock sizes of 20,000 and

The Pullet Growers of Canada has applied for supply management market agency status. | FILE PHOTO production of 40,000 birds annually, is proposing that flocks of fewer than 100 birds be excluded from the system. Small Flock Poultry Farmers president Glenn Black from Manitoulin Island, Ont., argues that projected consumer cost increases because of a supply management system were under-estimated initially and have escalated as the process continues. DeWeerd estimated that the increased cost of pullets would add little to the cost of eggs for a family of four. He said pullet growers often have to

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sell their birds at below production costs. “It means we have to subsidize this part of our farm from other revenues or off-farm work,� he said. “We are looking for a better return for pullet growers. We are looking for a fair return.� He said a national agency would also give the sector a national voice and the ability to create risk management programs to compensate for the damage that a disease such as avian flu could cause. “At the moment, we have no safety net for that kind of occurrence,� he said. It will be up to the federal agriculture minister, in collaboration with provincial ministers, to make a final ruling if the FPCC recommends that a new agency be formed. It would be the first new national supply management agency since a system for hatching eggs was created in 1986. However, DeWeerd said even if there is a favourable decision, it will take many months to create a national structure with negotiated provincial agreements and pricing arrangements. “Quotas and other details really would be up to the provinces, so it will take some time,� he said. “A decision in our favour is far from the end of the process.�

!

Ontario programs have seen significant cuts from provincial and federal governments BY BARRY WILSON OTTAWA BUREAU

The Environmental Farm Plan program, popular with farmers but largely abandoned by governments, could be a powerful way for producers to connect with customers, says an Ontario report. “What we increasingly find is that purchasers of the product are asking different questions than they used to, questions about how the product was produced,� George Morris Centre senior research associate Al Mussell said July 5. “We think the records farmers keep when part of an EFP has potential to be part of the answer but this research needs more work.� Mussell wrote a report for the George Morris Centre that suggested farm environmental plans “could be used as a platform to identify the sustainability practices expected by the food and bio-economy industries.� The Ontario Soil and Crop Improvement Association said last week Ontario has the world’s highest farmer support of voluntary EFP programs. “For over 20 years, farmers have embraced the EFP as their guide to defining environmental sustainability,� he said in a statement reacting to the report. “It would not require a lot of tweaking to incorporate additional components to satisfy the value chain.� Ontario Federation of Agriculture president Mark Wales sees some irony in the conclusion, based on the rules of the five-year Growing Forward 2 farm policy framework that took effect April 1, agreed to by federal and provincial governments. “The challenge is that we don’t have a functional environmental farm program under Growing Forward 2,� he said. “What has existed in Ontario for the past 20 years isn’t there anymore.� He said under the first Growing Forward agreement, Ontario took money that should have been available for environmental farm plans

BUILDING YOUR GETAWAY HAS NEVER BEEN EASIER!

What has existed in Ontario for the past 20 years isn’t there anymore. MARK WALES ONTARIO FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURE

and spent it elsewhere. Instead of a $10 million annual allocation, the province cut it to less than $4 million. “The demand didn’t change and if you cut the money by one-third or more, you have over-subscription in a matter of seconds.� So in GF2, the environmental farm plan design was changed and it has become less effective in Ontario, said Wales. “I wonder if the authors of the report understand the changes and how it affects the program.� Some provinces still are delivering the program as it was originally intended, he said. “Kudos to them. Ontario with its new system is very slow to roll out.� He said new rules mean there is no peer review of EFP record keeping and no requirement to have done a workshop to apply for environmental funding. “That is a concern because in the past you had to do the workshop and you had to be peer reviewed, you had to have a plan on things you wanted to do and that’s what you could apply for project money for so it was a well understood system,� said the OFA president. “It was a good program, an effective program, 12,000 Ontario farmers took part and now we’ve changed the model. This is where the government is going so we have to support them but we also have to push them to get this thing moving.� In Ontario, 2013 workshops do not happen until August, applications will be accepted in September and decisions will be made in November for funding.

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NEWS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

27

CATTLE | FEED SAMPLES

STEWARDSHIP | BIODIVERSITY

Ergot in feed can have fatal results

Land rehabilitation helps boost grass production B.C. operation | Environmental programs help rancher put more cattle in pasture BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

Veterinarians were confronted with a disturbing sight of animals hobbling on sore feet last winter when t h e L e t h b r i d g e A n i ma l C l i n i c received a call to check on lame cattle at a local feedlot. The eventual diagnosis was high levels of ergot in the feed, but in the early days the veterinarians were not sure what was wrong, said practitioner Aaron Gibbons at the University of Calgary’s veterinary medicine conference in Calgary. The feedlot had unknowingly fed a triticale-rye screenings mix contaminated with ergot. The feed had been sampled, but a more sophisticated test at a lab in Oregon determined ergot levels were 3,500 parts per billion, when a safe amount would be 400 to 700 parts per billion. “Ergot can be a very significant problem if we are not watching for it,� Gibbons said. Producers should receive a sample from every load of feed and should not be afraid to reject it, he added. “The best scenario is not feeding it at all, but if you do have it, make sure you dilute it out.� Ergot is a fungus that grows on cereal grain, most commonly rye and triticale but it was also found in barley and durum last year because of cool, moist growing conditions. Alkaloids in the kernel causes the problem. They damage the muscle layer around large arteries, which becomes deformed, damaged and scarred. Blood vessels will constrict if there is enough exposure to the alkaloid, and over time there is permanent damage to the arteries. Blood flow is inhibited as the arteries constrict. Gangrene eventually develops in the extremities because of lack of blood flow. Ears, tails and feet slough off. The hind legs are especially affected because they are furthest from the heart. The affected feedlot had 1,500 steers placed in October. They were on full feed. One thousand heifers had been placed earlier and 3,500 background calves were also present. Some lameness appeared in the heifers in December, and the yard manager was treating foot rot that did not respond. The vets also suspected at first that the steers might have the intestinal problem acidosis, which can cause laminitis. By January, they started to see severe hind end lameness among the steers within a couple weeks of receiving the feed. Some cattle were hobbling on swollen feet and in one case, an animal was walking on a frozen stump because the hoofs were gone. “There was no pain anymore and they actually got around pretty well, but they were walking around on a stump,� Gibbons said at the June 20 conference. The situation was exacerbated by extreme cold with nighttime temperatures below -30 C. About 10 animals were euthanized in one day. Five percent of the 1,500 steers were eventually put down.

LUMBY, B.C. — Keith and Cheryl Altwasser had a lush crop of grass late last month on their 160 acres near Lumby in British Columbia’s northern Okanagan Valley. That considerable grass cover might not have been possible without long-term planning with the Environmental Farm Plan program, the Farm Riparian Interface Stewardship program and the B.C.’s agroforestry initiative. Altwasser had previously run a purebred Charolais operation but

switched to backgrounding 250 to 300 calves two years ago. He needs maximum grass production. “On a small farm we need to produce more dollars,� he said. He began working with environmental programs 15 years ago to extensively rehabilitate a creek that runs through the ranch and plant more trees to restore a degraded riparian zone. The creek was a flat, swampy bed fed by groundwater. It was excavated to create a defined channel and fenced off. Shrubs, fir, spruce and willows were planted on the newly formed banks. A dense

growth now borders the creek, which is a healthy fish stream that also provides habitat for deer, porcupine and owls, which keep the mice under control. Three watering sites were placed along the creek so cattle can walk on a graveled path to drink. No grazing is allowed in the riparian zone. Planned grazing allowed the rest of the ranch to produce a healthy stand around the trees and in the open areas. Altwasser figures he gained 15 acres of land with these improvements. He can place one cow-calf pair per acre, which means he could add 15 pairs and earn more income.

Besides healthy grasslands, the farm also has a woodlot. The entire area is green and picturesque. Local agroforestry co-ordinator George Powell said programs such as this one give ranchers a social license to operate because the public can see green fields and plenty of trees with streams running through the landscape. This shows they are taking care of the environment, he added. The trees provide additional cash. “When you have got trees, that is money in the bank,� Powell said. “How I manage my trees can be a benefit to forage and cattle production.�

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JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

SPECIAL REPORT

WHEAT VS. CORN | FADING CROP

Corn overshadows wheat in northern U.S. In Western Minnesota and eastern North Dakota corn and soybeans are taking over land once seeded to wheat and small grains. The story is similar in Manitoba’s Red River Valley. Their experience might be instructive as seed companies like Monsanto, which recently announced $100 million to develop new corn varieties for Western Canada, promote the crop beyond its traditional base. WHEAT ACRES FALL

STORIES BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU

Wheat acreage in North Dakota and Minnesota has declined as short season corn and soybean varieties became available.

B

RECKENRIDGE, Minn. — A nice field of wheat is emerging here in the rich soil and good growing conditions of western Minnesota and eastern North Dakota. But regardless of how it turns out, the farmer who seeded it doesn’t expect to make money on the crop. Across the region, farmers almost never seed wheat for the sole purpose of selling it as a grain. Its profitability lags so far behind corn and other alternatives that farmers immediately supply excuses for growing the grain. Other crops also once common in this area, such as barley, oats and flax, are rarely seen for the same reason. It’s been a brutal dethroning of King Wheat from a region once identified with the crop and an almost complete evisceration of the other small grains. It’s all due to the invasion of corn. When corn comes a-calling, the small grains go a-running. Some counties in Minnesota grow lots of wheat. Some grow almost none. What’s the difference? Sugar beets. Substantial acreages of wheat appear in the statistics wherever sugar beets are grown and disappears from county crop stats wherever few sugar beets are grown. That’s true around the town of Breckenridge, Minn., where farmers grow thousands of acres of sugar beets for the local co-operative sugar factory. Farmers such as Matt Hasbargen love growing wheat, but it’s strictly a rotation crop for him now. “If we didn’t raise sugar beets, I

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doubt we would raise wheat at all,” he said. Local farmers seed wheat in the season before seeding sugar beets

because it breaks the disease cycle. The mainstay crops in region are soybeans, corn and, if a farm is near a sugar plant, sugar beets. Those are

where the profits lie. However, corn harbours some of the same diseases that devastate sugar beets, so wheat is grown to cleanse the fields before a

money-making sugar beet crop. “We shoot to break even,” said Hasbargen, who farms 8,000 acres with a brother, his father and uncle. “That’s our goal.” It wasn’t always this way. Wheat was the Hasbargens’ No. 1 crop 20


SPECIAL REPORT years ago, accounting for 42 percent of their acreage. The farm also put 33 percent of its acreage into soybeans and 25 percent into sugar beets. Today, the farm grows 39 percent soybeans, 19 percent beets and only 13 percent wheat. They also grow 29 percent corn. Hasbargen said farmers embraced short season corn varieties that made the crop a safe option in the area as soon as they were developed. The trend isn’t likely to change. Wheat’s decline from supremacy seems unstoppable. Short season corn varieties offer farmers the chance to grow the mainstay midwestern crop, and ever-increasing yields have made it more profitable. Corn yields were 110 to 120 bushels per acre when the crop arrived in the area 20 years ago, but farmers now expect more than 160 bu. per acre. However, wheat yields have been stagnant, making the crop less competitive. Hasbargen said embracing corn hasn’t been easy for local farmers. It’s expensive to grow, much more storage is needed and there is now far more trucking to move the bulky crop. However, money talks, and wheat is quiet these days. A few kilometres north of Fargo, N.D., Tom Christensen also has to find excuses for growing wheat. “For rotation,” he said, almost apologetically. “I need straw. I still have cattle.” Corn has swept away wheat here, too, along with flax and barley. This part of the Red River Valley is hot and wet in the summer, allowing corn to yield well. Wheat still has major acreage west of here, on the higher land outside the valley, but even there corn is pushing west, displacing King Wheat. Not only does corn generally produce better returns than wheat, but growing it isn’t such a gamble. “You could plan for 50 (bu. per acre of wheat), but you might get 40, or 30, or 80,” said Christensen. “Corn is more consistent.” It doesn’t help that wheat has

become harder to market. Its price is already affected by protein content, and now buyers have started adding new specifications and penalties. “They started discounting for falling number,” said Christensen. “They picked away at the market. Wheat became unpredictable.” Corn seems to have crowded wheat out quickly when looked at with a two-decade perspective, but Christensen said the transition occurred gradually as farmers adjusted to the reality of returns and swallowed the costs of new equipment and management. “It took us a while to gear up for corn,” he said. “We didn’t have the headers. We didn’t have the trucks. We didn’t have the storage. We didn’t have a way to handle the trash until some of this vertical tillage came in.” Corn took over for most people once those technological hurdles were cleared. For Christensen, wheat is now mostly about the straw, and that’s all to do with the cattle. However, having cattle in the Red River Valley is also becoming rare and hard to justify. “I wonder why we’re still raising cattle,” said Christensen. Having a mixed farm with livestock and a range of crops was the ideal most farmers attempted to attain in the 1980s, when diversification was the buzzword. However, it now seems to lead to more challenges and lost opportunities. Christensen said he sticks with a bigger crop mix than many neighbours, especially younger far mers. He keeps the cattle b e c a u s e h e ’s c a u t i o u s a n d doesn’t like to have all his eggs in one basket. However, it’s getting harder to justify. “When you look at six or seven dollar corn, and you look at the land we tie up with cattle, you wonder why we raise cattle and wheat,” he said. Many farmers have accepted the agronomic and financial attractions of corn and have dropped or

reduced wheat acres. However, that doesn’t mean farmers don’t want to grow it. They express a desire throughout the region to get back into wheat, but only if breeders can find a way to for yields to catch up to corn’s gains. “Most people in this area still like to raise some wheat, even if they’re not a sugar beet producer,” said Hasbargen, recalling memories of intense August harvests that have now mostly disappeared. “We all grew up raising wheat. It’s a really nice crop to grow. It’s simpler than a lot of other crops. It has a lot of advantages.” He said many farmers wonder if the last 20 years have been an unusually wet spell, which has allowed corn to do well. If a dry period commences, wheat might make a big comeback. It wouldn’t need to beat corn returns, just match them. “If we could get the same return on wheat as we get on corn, I think we’d wonder why we grow corn at all,” said Hasbargen.

MATT HASBARGEN BRECKENRIDGE, MINN., FARMER

Christensen also hopes wheat comes back. He’s encouraged by the possibility of using chopped wheat straw mixed with corn syrup from a local ethanol plant to create a complete cattle feed. The crop could also regain acres if drier weather returns. “This area is perfect for wheat,” he said. Seeing what has happened in his area, Christensen asked: “So what’s happening in Canada? Are you all going to switch to corn and beans?”

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

WHEAT VS. CORN | EMOTIONAL ATTACHMENT

Farmers like corn yields but still have soft spot for wheat Pros and cons to both crops, say local growers

C

onor Smith has no trouble finding farmers in his region who love growing wheat. “It’s an emotional thing here,” he said while touring around the rich farmland of west-central Minnesota and southeastern North Dakota. “People grew up growing wheat and have a lot of fond memories.” Yet despite a local soft spot for the crop, Smith, a leadership development assistant with the North Dakota Farm Bureau, has trouble finding anyone who chooses to grow it. “People really don’t see it as a money-making choice,” he said. But even as short season corn takes over much of land once reserved for wheat, there remains a reservoir of good will toward wheat and a hope among farmers that yield improvements could once more make it a reasonable rotation choice. Corn has its problems. “It costs 40 percent more than wheat to grow, we’ve had to add trucks, and we had to build a lot of storage,” said Matt Hasbargen, who now grows wheat only to prepare fields for sugar beets the following year. “Corn has forced us into a lot of capital expenditures.” This region has been a bin seller’s dream in the past 20 years. The corn invasion has forced farmers to build enormous bins, such as the 175,000 bushel giant that sits with Hasbargen’s other half dozen bins that loom over one of his few wheat fields. Corn is also expensive and financially risky to grow, demanding higher input spending than wheat. But what farmers around this area like mostly about wheat is the timing of harvest, something that allows them to manage their farms more effectively. At one time, half a farm’s harvest would occur in August as the wheat came in. Now, with corn, soybeans and sugar beets consuming most local acreage, August is more relaxed.

“When I was a kid, I’d always complain that I could never get to We Fest,” said Hasbargen with a chuckle, referring to a big local country music festival held early every August. “Now that the wheat harvest has become a non-event, we can go.” But an easy August creates a logistical nightmare for local farmers when the other crops start maturing at the start of September. “We’ll work every day until November first, if we’re lucky. If we’re not lucky, we’ll work until Thanksgiving. If we’re still unlucky, we’ll work till Christmas,” said Hasbargen. That allows no room for down time due to machinery breakdowns and prevents farmers from preparing their land and managing their farms for the coming season. This is flat land, with little grade, so drainage is also a prime concern. When there was a major wheat harvest, most farmers would have late August to early September to ensure their ditches and drainage channels are clear. They would also have that time to prepare the wheat fields for the next year’s planting, something that now often gets shoved into spring if the fields are occupied by corn, soybeans and sugar beet crops. Today most farms in the area are set up well to grow corn, after years of upping bin space, buying bigger trucks and learning how to manage the tight harvest deadline. But if wheat ever does come back as a major part of rotations, either through yield improvements or through a dry cycle making corn less financially attractive, there won’t be many farmers looking to add grain storage. “If that ever happens, we’re going to have some bins for rent,” said Hasbargen. “We have three times as much storage as we need for wheat.”

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30

NEWS

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

WEEDS BE WARY

CO-OPERATIVES | NEW ENTITY

French, English co-ops unite for stronger political voice A national organization that speaks for the entire country will be an enormous benefit, says Canadian Co-operative Association president STORIES BY BARRY WILSON OTTAWA BUREAU

Brian Persson adds Sencor to the sprayer’s water tank, July 4. He was spraying for stink weed and yellow mustard in his fields of red lentils east of Rosetown, Sask. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTO

Canada’s co-operative political structure is undergoing its most radical change in more than a century as English and French-speaking co-op organizations join into a national organization. Prairie co-op leaders will be at the forefront of managing the transformation, including newly elected Canadian Co-operative Association president Bill Dobson, a farmer from Paradise Valley, Alta., who is also a former Wild Rose Agricultural Producers president and chair of the United Farmers of Alberta governance committee. Sandy Wallace from Manitoba and Clint MacDonald from Federated Co-operatives Ltd. in Saskatchewan are also on the CCA board that will oversee the transition. Delegates attending a recent national co-operatives meeting in Edmonton voted to launch the new organization no sooner than early next year. It has been debated as a contentious issue for years.

The Canadian Co-operative Association and the Association des Coopératives du Canada will merge to form Co-operatives and Mutuals Canada. The CCA will remain as the organization’s branch responsible for international co-op development projects. “The decision is considered historic because it brings together English and French-speaking cooperators who have been largely divided along linguistic lines since the birth of the Canadian co-operative movement in the 19th century,” the organizations said in a statement after the meeting. Dobson said the organization will not be a merger but a new entity. “I really think it will make the movement stronger because we will speak with one voice in both languages, and that will give us more political clout,” he said. The English and French co-op organizations did not always communicate well and sometimes took contradictory political positions. “There is nothing a politician likes

better than divergent voices so they don’t have to do anything or can pick and choose,” Dobson said. “I think this will make the movement stronger.” The decision follows the United Nations-declared Year of the Cooperative, which featured an international conference in Canada, creation of a special House of Commons committee on co-operative issues and a decision by the federal government to move responsibility for the sector from Agriculture Canada to Industry Canada. Dobson, a longtime UFA activist, said the recent focus on the cooperative model has made more policy makers aware of its potential for domestic and international development. “I think there is a growing awareness of this, and having a national organization that covers the entire country will be an enormous benefit,” he said. “This next year will be a transitional time for us and we will come out better.”

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Feds recognizing co-ops’ political, economic clout The Conservatives were elected in 2006 with overwhelming support from rural Canada, where co-operatives are strong, but a national co-op leader says they may not have understood the sector. Bill Dobson, president of the Canadian Co-operative Association and a former president of Alberta’s Wild Rose Agricultural Producers, said many Conservative MPs had a learning curve about the role and reality of co-ops. “In all honesty, when the Conservative party was elected as a government, they weren’t so keen on cooperatives,” said Dobson, a farmer from Paradise Valley, Alta. “They saw them as conflicting with their free enterprise values.” Dobson said co-op leaders have spent time preaching the gospel of co-operatives as key economic drivers in ridings across Canada. “It has taken time for education,” he said. “But now I think there is a broad consensus across parties that cooperatives are an important sector to support.” Last year, the House of Commons created a special committee on coops chaired by Alberta Conservative MP Blake Richards, which recommended co-op friendly policies. It also recommended that responsibility for co-op policy be moved from Agriculture Canada to Industry Canada in recognition of the fact that co-ops have moved from mainly rural and farm-connected to include urban.

BILL DOBSON CANADIAN CO-OPERATIVES ASSOCIATION

The government acted on the recommendation. It followed years of increasing marginalization of co-operative issues within Agriculture Canada. The Coops Secretariat was cut, and last year a $4 million annual Co-operative Development Initiative budget was eliminated. When challenged in the House of Commons about the cut, agriculture minister Gerry Ritz was dismissive. He said it was simply an indication that the co-operative sector is strong enough to exist without government subsidies. “With some 9,000 co-ops, 18 million members and some net worth of $350 billion or $360 billion, I think co-ops have a great foundation to continue this work on their own.” In a later interview, he said the sector was using money to fund local histories and promotional material that they could well afford to pay for themselves. Co-op leaders welcomed the move from Agriculture Canada to Industry Canada as a recognition that the movement has become a broad economic force.


NEWS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

FARMING ON THE EDGE

SWINE | GRAIN FEED

Plasma may reduce DON risk Hog health | Study shows spray dried animal plasma is beneficial in feed BY REBECA KUROPATWA FREELANCE WRITER

Researchers have discovered that feeding spray dried animal plasma to nursery pigs can mitigate the harmful effects caused by eating grain infected with fusarium. Plasma is a component of whole blood and can be purified for use as a feed ingredient. It is high in protein and is composed mainly of albumin and globulin proteins. Plasma is usually purified from hog or cattle blood and sold as a single or mixed source protein product. It increases feed intake and performance and can positively affect the morphology of the gastrointestinal tract. Deoxynivalenol, or DON, also known as vomitoxin, is a mycotoxin t h a t i s p ro d u c e d b y f u s a r i u m moulds, which are prevalent in cool, temperate regions and often on wheat and barley. Mycotoxin contamination decreases crop value because contaminated grain is often used as livestock feed. “This often leads to decreased animal performance,” says Laura Eastwood, a research assistant at the Prairie Swine Centre Inc. near Saskatoon. DON causes reduced feed intake, reduced weight gain and vomiting when fed to hogs. It can also inhibit protein synthesis, cause gastroenteritis and gastrointestinal tract lesions and affect the immune system. “Despite the problems associated with feeding DON-contaminated

grains to swine, there have been very few strategies aimed at mitigating the negative impact,” said Eastwood. “Currently, the best option is to replace contaminated grain with clean grain in whole or in part. However, in years when mycotoxins are particularly bad, this may not be viable for many producers.” Eastwood thinks she might have the answer. “Recently, we conducted a research trial using 200 nursery pigs to determine if including SDAP in DON contaminated nursery diets could mitigate the negative impacts observed,” she said. “ P i g s w e re a s s i g n e d t o t h e i r experimental diets three days postweaning: weaned at 26 plus or minus two days of age. They were fed a negative control (NC) diet, w h i c h c o nt a i n e d o n l y a c l e a n source of wheat, a positive control (PC) diet in which about half the wheat source used was contaminated with DON and the PC diet plus eight percent SDAP.” The SDAP was a direct replacement for fishmeal in the other diets, and all other ingredients were similar. Eastwood and her team measured the body weights and feed intakes of the pigs on days zero, three, 11 and 20 of the trial, and also collected intestinal samples to analyze gut morphology, such as mucosal thickness, villus height and crypt depth. No animals showed signs of vomiting or diarrhea, but there were large performance differences in animals fed the different diets. She said the average daily gain

(ADG) of pigs fed the DON-contaminated diet was significantly lower than those fed the non-contaminated grain. “Although this was more pronounced in the initial three days of the trial, it continued through to Day 20,” she said. ADG returned to the same level as that seen in pigs that weren’t fed DON when SDAP was included in the contaminated diet. The same pattern occurred for average daily feed intake. Eastwood concluded that pigs fed a DON-contaminated diet containing SDAP performed the same or slightly better than pigs that were fed noncontaminated feed. The trial found that adding eight percent SDAP into nursery diets can mitigate the negative impacts of DON. “In general, feeding grains contaminated with DON should be avoided,” Eastwood said. “But this may not always be possible during years where contamination is high. If contaminated grains are suspected, inclusion of SDAP into the diets is beneficial, and performance can be maintained.” The Prairie Swine Centre hopes to follow up this study by looking at SDAP inclusion levels and feeding duration. “The current study was a preliminar y study designed to test the hypothesis that SDAP could help mitigate negative effects, but since SDAP is expensive, we now want to see if there are similar effects with lower inclusion,” she said.

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JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

LIFE IN AG | COMMUNICATOR

Broadcast pioneer receives ag honour Hall of fame career | Vern McNair brought agricultural news and information into Manitoba homes BY ROBERT ARNASON BRANDON BUREAU

WINNIPEG — Vern McNair regularly attends the annual Manitoba Agricultural Hall of Fame induction ceremony, mostly because he likes to visit with friends who also attend. But he couldn’t believe it when he learned he would be honoured at this year’s ceremony, held July 10 in Winkler, Man. “For close to 20 years, we (he and his wife, Marjorie) have been regular attendees to the induction service,” said McNair, who worked as director of communications with Manitoba Agriculture for 30 years. “I never, ever, ever once thought of being a part of it.” Joining McNair in this year’s class of new members are Charles John Froebe of Carman, Wildred (Butch) Harder of Lowe Farm, Herbert and Helen Kletke of Teulon, John Kuhl of Winkler and 4-H Manitoba leaders from across the province. McNair, who grew up on a farm in Shoal Lake, Man., became a government ag rep in Carberry, Man., in 1951, shortly after graduating from the University of Manitoba with an agriculture degree.

“I was the greenest ag rep they ever had in Manitoba, but the farmers put up with me,” he said with a laugh. After several years in a job that he enjoyed, McNair received a surprising offer from the CBC. The public broadcaster wanted someone to report on agriculture in Manitoba and recruited McNair for the job. Leaving his job in Carberry wasn’t an easy decision, but McNair was attracted to the idea of working with a new technology. “Television in Manitoba had only started about six months before. This was an intriguing kind of area,” he said. McNair started with the CBC in June 1955 and filed agricultural reports for radio and television broadcasts. He left CBC in 1959 and accepted a position with Manitoba Agriculture. The department wanted to modernize how it communicated with farmers, particularly how it delivered extension information. “When I went there, they had the traditional leaflets and booklets (on agriculture )… and that was all,” McNair said. He initially produced radio spots to inform farmers about general agri-

Vern McNair, who was inducted into the Manitoba Agricultural Hall of Fame July 10, spent 30 years as a communications director with Manitoba Agriculture. To the right of McNair is a painting of his boyhood home, a farmhouse near Shoal Lake, Man. | ROBERT ARNASON PHOTO cultural news, as well as specific information such as raising cattle and growing barley, but quickly shifted to film and television. “Within a couple of years we were doing movie films for the department. They’re a joke now, but at the time there was a need for them,” he said. “And a few years later we had our

own programs on television.” McNair retired in 1989. Alf Chorney, who also worked at Manitoba Agriculture knew of McNair early in life. “I remember as a kid, when I happened to be at home, listening to him on the farm broadcasts on the CBC.” He nominated McNair for the Agri-

cultural Hall of Fame because he played a significant role in farmer education. “He made a great deal of difference, essentially in how farmers and rural people accumulated the kind of information they needed to modernize their farm operations,” Chorney said.

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33

RESEARCH | ROTATIONS

Wheat shows resistance to nematodes More research required | New hard red spring variety may protect subsequent crops BY MARGARET EVANS FREELANCE WRITER

LINDELL BEACH, B.C. — Rootknot nematodes are destructive root parasites that infect thousands of plant species, including horticultural and field crops. About 2,000 plant species and subspecies are at risk of infection, and the nematodes cause about five percent of global crop loss. The worm larvae infect plant roots and cause galls that drain nutrients, which kills young plants and reduces yields in mature plants. They can overwinter and infect the following season’s crop. Now researchers at the University of California, Davis, think they have found a resistant strain of wheat called Lassik that can reduce nematode numbers in the soil and also protect the following crop. Valerie Williamson of the university’s nematology department expects future research will test the wheat in larger field trials. The team hopes to raise awareness about the value of the wheat strain to see if it is as successful in normal farming practices as it has been shown to be in test plots. Williamson’s tests involved tomatoes in a rotation with the wheat. “The region of the chromosome that carries the root-knot nematode resistance came from a wild relative of wheat and also carries some resistance against other diseases such as stripe rust, leaf rust, stem rust and cereal cyst nematodes,” said Williamson, lead author of a study published in Crop Science. Williamson said using wheat as a rotational crop to tomatoes is important because both crops in the rotation have value. Plants susceptible to the root-knot nematode include squashes, melons, pumpkins, cucumbers, gourds and others in the cucurbitaceous family. The resistant wheat strain, Lassik, is a hard red spring derived from Anza. It is similar to other commonly grown wheat strains but has a slight genetic difference. It has three stripe rust resistant genes and two genes for resistance to leaf rust. It also has good levels of resistance to septoria tritici blotch and barley yellow dwarf virus. A small segment of genes from another wheat strain had been relocated into Lassik. The genetic segment had no negative effect on growth or yield but provided a booster for resistance to other pathogens. Finding that it was also nematode resistant was a bonus. To confirm their findings, the research team compared pairs of wheat strains with and without the relocated genetic segment. They then took the soil in which Lassik had been grown and used it as a soil base in which to plant tomato seedlings. Tomatoes grown in the soil in which Lassik had previously grown proved to be less damaged by rootknot nematodes. For a farmer who uses wheat as a rotation crop, choosing a commercial strain with nematode resistance would be insurance that the soil

The nematodes enter the root but few develop and produce progeny. VALERIE WILLIAMSON RESEARCHER

would not harbour as many nematodes ready to infest next season’s crop. Lassik has a prominent high grain protein and stronger gluten than Anza, giving it superior bread mak-

ing characteristics. In 2011, Lassik was the top yielding variety in a Washington State University hard spring wheat trial. Researchers do not have enough data to know if the benefit extends into several years or simply one year, and they do not yet know exactly what the resistance gene contains. “We only know it is there because the wheat is resistant. That is, the nematodes enter the root but few develop and produce progeny. This is in contrast to many commonly used varieties of wheat,” said Williamson.

Microplots found that Lassik wheat may protect crops that follow it in rotations. | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, DAVIS PHOTO

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THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

35

CLOCKWISE, FROM TOP LEFT: Jin Huang, medical imaging technologist, reviews MRI images of Nicki Six Moons’ front feet with Dr. Tawni Silver, a medical imaging specialist at the WCVM Veterinary Medical Centre in Saskatoon. Clinical intern Dr. Danyse Lewis adjusts the intravenous sedation rate as Silver checks on the 13-year-old mare owned by Christa Winsnes of Ryley, Alta. A series of high resolution MRI scans will be sent to the horse’s referring veterinarian, who will review the images and pinpoint the cause of the mare’s lameness. The horse’s front left leg is inside the scanner with the hoof coil. Before the MRI begins, Lewis and Silver make adjustments to their sedated patient while Huang verifies patient protocols in the computer. | WILLIAM DEKAY PHOTOS INNOVATION | HORSE HEALTH

Horses head to U of S for new diagnostic service Standing MRI unit | Gold standard for studying soft tissue injuries is now used to diagnose large animals at vet college BY WILLIAM DEKAY SASKATOON NEWSROOM

Western Canadian horse owners and referring veterinarians have a new option for diagnosing and developing a therapeutic plan for foot pain. A standing equine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) unit has been operating at the University of Saskatchewan’s Western College of Veterinary Medicine since last October. The only other equine MRI unit in Canada is at Ontario’s University of Guelph. Magnetic resonance imaging is the most sensitive and specific imaging

tool available in veterinary medicine. The noninvasive imaging technology differentiates between various types of soft tissues rather than just soft tissue and bone. It also allows medical imaging specialists to determine whether soft tissue is normal or if it has abnormal characteristics such as inflammatory tissue or cancer. “MRI is the gold standard of use in human and veterinarian medicine: visualizing and differentiating different soft tissues and whether they’re diseased or not,” said Dr. Tawni Silver, the only full-time radiologist for the unit. Silver mostly sees variations of soft tissue damage in high performance horses.

“That’s why the equine MRI is so vital to diagnosing lameness in horses because we can’t see down there,” she said. The new system allows Silver and her team to: • Produce high-quality clinical images of the equine foot, pastern, fetlock and carpus. • Definitively diagnose conditions in both fore and hind suspensory ligaments. • Detect soft tissue lesions in the equine foot or conditions such as navicular syndrome that involve tendons and ligaments. • Diagnose certain forms of lameness up to and including the knee

(carpus) and hock (tarsus). Unlike other MRI systems, the WCVM’s new standing MRI unit doesn’t require horses to undergo general anesthesia. A horse is only sedated to ensure minimal movement and good image quality. Besides being more cost effective, sedation also allows clinicians to avoid the small but significant risk of anesthetizing horses. Silver said it typically takes one to two hours to create images for the two front feet. “MRI is not a scouting exercise where you can look at the entire front leg,” she said. “The imaging takes a long time, so

for us to image a front foot, it’s a minimum of one half hour, and that is if the horse doesn’t move. But that never happens. They do move and we have to reposition them.” Horses are usually kept in the college’s Equine Performance Centre the night before the procedure, which gives them time to settle down and the MRI team the necessary time the following day to locate the problem area and create images. “For one foot study, it’s easily an eight hour day,” Silver said. Horse owners are encouraged not to attend the procedure. “The fewer the people that are in there the better so it’s quiet.”


36

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

HELP

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4-H Canada and Bayer CropScience believe the agricultural leaders of tomorrow can help find sustainable solutions for the world’s growing need for safe, nutritious food. That’s why we’re gathering 120 bright minds, ages 18-25, from around the world to share their perspectives at the 4-H Youth Ag-Summit in Calgary. From August 19th-25th, 2013, these delegates will be tasked with identifying actionable agriculturally sustainable solutions to feed a growing world. Let’s talk change. To find out what topics are on the table and join the growing conversation, please visit facebook.com/youthagsummit.


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

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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

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38 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

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1962 and 1959 Champion 7ECA and 7EC w/C90 82 SMOH, total restoration, radio, mode C, intercom, new tires, Cleveland brakes, Scott tailwheel, strobe, wheelpants, Can email photos. Bonnyville, AB., ph 780-826-3684, dmchamp@mcsnet.ca

ESTATE SALE: 1965 Cessna 180H, TTSN 3563.3 hrs., floats, wheels, 2 new 210 Icon radios installed 2011, prop overhauled April, 2010, prop TTSO 18.8 hrs., transponder w/Mode C, 406 ELT, Aera 500 Garmin GPS, 1 new cyl.- 2012, eng. TTSO, 1448 hrs., annual July, 2012, $90,000. Call AIRPLANE HANGAR, located at CYXE Mary Koziol 780-826-5721, Iron River, AB. Saskatoon. 1470 sq. ft. (42x35’), concrete floor, Diamond aviation bi-fold door, $90,000 plus GST. For details and pics CHALLENGER 2 99 AULA, new panel, PJ floats, Garmin 696, Comm radio, BRS call/text: 306-717-0709. chute, asking $18,000. 306-420-8707, La 1948 CESSNA 140, 235C1, 430 hrs., comp. Ronge, SK. 76/80, TSO 2002, XPDR/Mode C, HIS/DG, newer radio, strobe lights, float kit, ski kit, exterior 9/10, interior 7/10, asking $29,000 OBO. Call 780-645-6683, St. Paul, AB. or wrightrb@telusplanet.net H I G H P E R F O R M A N C E - 1971 Piper Cherokee 140D. Located at Saskatoon, SK. Airport. $27,500 OBO. Must be flown! Call 306-382-9024. 1993 SIX CHUTER SR2 power parachute for sale, new engine, like new Apco chute, 67 hours, on frame, $9450 OBO. 306-236-2442, Meadow Lake, SK.

MILITARIA AND FIREARMS SHOW AND SALE, Red Dutton Arena, 32224 Springbank Rd., Calgary, AB. July 27, 9:00 AM. to 4:00 PM., July 28, 10:00 AM. to 3:00 PM. Call 403-992-3330 for more details.

LYCOMING 0-320, 150/160 HP, excellent condition, 2200 hours. 403-327-4582, 403-308-0062, Lethbridge, AB. CESSNA 150F OM, flies well, new cylinders and panel. Covers, spare parts, asking $16,000. Ph: 306-420-8707, La Ronge, SK. WIRELESS DRIVEWAY ALARMS, calv1 9 6 5 P I P E R C H E RO K E E PA 2 8 1 8 0 C , ing/foaling barn cameras, video surveil5545.5 TT, 1872.2 ET, new tires, beautiful lance, rear view cameras for RVs, trucks, i n t e r i o r, g o o d p a i n t , $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 O B O. combines, seeders, sprayers and augers. Mounted on magnet. Free shipping. Call 780-349-2510, Westlock, AB. 403-616-6610, Calgary, AB. 1973 CESSNA AG wagon, 3500 TTAF, 200 since eng., Satloc, fresh annual done by Yorkton Air Service, Sask., $117,000. Ph Brad at 204-365-7574, Shoal Lake, MB. 1966 PA24 CHEROKEE 140, white and blue, factory design, 6400 TT, 2100 ET, Garmin radios, SL30, 296 GPS, transponder Mode C, overhauled flight instruments, new tires, much more. Exc. flying aircraft. 204-769-2210, 204-741-0054, Souris, MB. FLUIDYNE 3200 WHEEL skis, w/reservoir, pump, brackets, stub axles for 180. $10,900. Photos available, 867-875-7678, Hay River, NT.

1972 CESSNA 150L, TTSN 1400 hrs., 0-320 Lycoming 150 HP, TT 900 hrs., LR tanks, intercom push to talk, tow hook, always hangared, new C of A, updated transporder, $40,000. Family owned. Colonsay, SK, 306-255-2611, 306-280-3231. CHEROKEE PA28-180, white and maroon, TT 3135, SMOH 1158, wing tips, paint and int. exc., $58,500. 306-962-3798 Eston, SK

LYCOMING 0-290-D, 135 HP, 1100 SMOH, FWF c/w mount and exhaust, exc. cond. Lethbridge, AB., 403-327-4582, 403-308-0062.

CESSNA 182, 1968, 5000 hrs. AF, engine 1978 MOONEY 201, 2600 TTSN, no dam1/2 time, Horton stall w/cuffs, long range age, always hangared, orig. paint and int., tanks, $75,000 OBO. Call 403-350-5264, $90,000. 780-645-9400, St. Paul, AB. Red Deer, AB. 1974 GRUMMAN AA1B TR-2, 108 HP, 3421 TT, 90 SMOH, (2400 TBO) Icom 200, VOR, Narco trans., intercom, all logs, maintenance manuals, int. 7, paint 7, $21,000. Email: clharper101@gmail.com Located at: Prince Albert, SK.

1991 RANS S-10 Sakota, midwing two place aerobatic taildragger, 304 TTAF, 583 Rotax, 90 HP, 110 MPH, inverted capability, affordable aerobatics, $24,000 OBO. Call 306-625-3922, Ponteix, SK.

1973 THRUSH 600, 5400 TT, engine 0 TT, prop 15 TT, ext. wings, GPS, flow control, 29� wheels, lots more extras, $145,000. 306-268-7400 306-268-7550 Bengough SK

OVER 60 ANTIQUE TRACTORS up for auction. See our website under Regina for pictures and full details. 1-800-263-4196 www.McDougallAuction.com

KILLARNEY’S 35TH ANNUAL Harvest Antique and Collector Auction Sale, Monday, August 5th, 2013 {note date}, 9:30 AM, Killarney Shamrock Centre, MB. Features: Known for Outstanding 1/4 cut Oak and oak furniture- chinas, secretary-bookcases, buffets, hall seats, stacking bookcase, roll tops, files, dining tables and chairs, dressers and washstands, plus much more. Glassware- Cranberry glass, Epergne, etc. “Yellow Tea Rose�, green Depression, etc. Oak grandfather Arthur Pequegnat clock. Hanging lamps, signs and crocks- 1 gal. Red Wing; lovely area rug; Lone Ranger 1948 wallet; weathervanes; arrowheads; swords; collectable money; toys. Plus much more. Website for many pictures www.mrankinauctions.com Murray Rankin Auctions, 204-534-7401, Killarney, MB. Ross Taylor Auction Service 204-522-5356 www.rosstaylorauction.com Reston, MB.

MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 9:30 AM, Fort Qu’Appelle, Sask. Western Canada’s only completely unreserved quality Antique Auction, 4 estates in one huge indoor all lot numbered sale. View the many pictures 1946 JD D w/starter and lights, styled, resoon at www.shaverauction.com Phone stored, c/w antifreeze. Reasonable offers. 306-332-5382. Free camping, no buyers 306-773-8256, Swift Current, SK. fees. PL 1-914399.

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ACROSS 1. Film starring Brad Pitt (3 words) 6. Actress Bruckner 11. Lauren of Six Feet Under 13. Sitcom starring Zooey Deschanel (2 words) 15. Film starring Sean Connery and Brooke Adams 16. West who wrote and directed The House of the Devil 17. HBO comedy series starring Julia LouisDreyfus 18. Hal of Barney Miller 20. ___ Measures 22. Film starring Ursula Andress 23. Will Ferrell played one in 2003 24. ___ Brockovich 25. He starred in The Fighter 26. ___ for Marion 28. ___ Canyon 30. ___ Academy 31. Warner who played Charlie Chan 35. Margaux’s sister 37. Eddie Murphy comedy 38. Actress Williams 40. She won a Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Female Newcomer in 1960 42. Collateral ___ 43. She starred in The Collector 44. Sam of Dr. Simon Locke 45. Humanoid race in Avatar 47. ___ the Dog 48. She played the daughter in My Boss’s Daughter (2 words) 49. Jamie-___ Sigler

50. Farmiga of Bates Motel DOWN 1. Magician played by Carell 2. Navi of Numb3rs 3. She played Skylar in Good Will Hunting 4. Actress Quinn 5. Actor Efron 6. Actress Cornish 7. ___ Torino 8. ___ Mercy 9. Getty of The Golden Girls 10. Sitcom about Jerry, George, Elaine, and Kramer 12. ___ Falls 14. She made her film debut in A Face in the Crowd 19. The Wreck of the Mary ___ 21. Lana’s character on Once Upon a Time 25. 25th century action hero (2 words) 27. Christina of Married... with Children 29. 2001 Spielberg film, for short 32. Smart or Acker 33. Walker of Don’t Trust the B---- in Apartment 23 34. Best Picture of 1997 36. Actor McGregor 39. She played Miss Torso in Rear Window 41. Actor Burton 42. Black Hawk ___ 46. Paul’s cousin on Mad About You


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

1958 JD 720 field standard gas tractor, showroom restoration. Also available by separate owner 720 JD field standard gas tractor unrestored w/consecutive serial numbers. 403-271-1393, Calgary, AB. ADRIAN’S MAGNETO SERVICE Guaranteed repairs on mags and ignitors. Repairs. Parts. Sales. 204-326-6497. Box 21232, Steinbach, MB. R5G 1S5. CASE D TRACTOR, 1940, mostly restored and runs good, needs rubber, asking $2000. 306-821-7441, Lloydminster, SK.

CLASSIFIED ADS 39

1953 JD MODEL 70, Serial #7004744, vg NEW TRACTOR PARTS engine rebuilt mechanical cond., c/w rock shaft, needs kits. Also Steiner Dealer. 1000’s of parts. paint, $4000. 780-372-2491, Bashaw, AB. Savings. Service manuals and decals. Our 3 9 t h y e a r. C a l l 1 - 8 0 0 - 4 8 1 - 1 3 5 3 . 1947 9N FORDSON, eng. rebuilt, painted www.diamondfarmtractorparts.com correct grey, $3500 OBO. 403-347-9852, FORD 8N TRACTOR w/3 PTH and PTO; IH 403-877-4462, Red Deer, AB. McCormick Farmall A tractor; Minneapolis Moline 705 tractor, not running. Alvin Miller Farm Equipment Auction, Saturday, August 17, 2013, Stoughton, Sask. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962

JOHN DEERE 12A PT combine, with running motor, $1000 OBO. 204-655-3352 or 204-655-3286, Sifton, MB. IH SUPER WD6 tractor, running order, $1500. 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. 6 HP, 3 HP and 1-1/2 HP John Deere engines, all brass tag and they run other enMH 44 SPECIAL, belt pulley, full fenders, gines also, $13,000. Phone: 250-483-7700, nice shape, shedded; Belle City 22� separa- 250-710-5303, Mill Bay, BC. or Email: tor, Hart feeder, elevator, Waterloo blow- paulhagel@hotmail.com er, all belts, good working order, shedded, on rubber tires; PTO belt pulley for JD MH 555D, c/w cab and PS, runs; 555D, 4010 tractor, like new. Near Beiseker, AB. not running; MH 446, ceased; MH 101, 250-428-4012. No Saturday calls please. ceased. Offers. 306-452-3795, Redvers, SK

THRASHING BEE, Many large gas tractors and steam engines on display and running. Including 110 Case. Thrashing, sawing, lumber, plowing, large parade. Saturday and Sunday. Stationary engines on display and running, pioneer village open, many games for children, flea market. Come for a day or come spend the weekend. Primitive camping, July 19th, 20th and 21st. Divide Country Historical Society, Crosby, N o r t h D a ko t a . F o r a ny i n fo c a l l 701-965-6741. 1958 JD 820, runs good, good tin, new steering tires, good rear tires, needs paint, $2500. 1950 Case D, new steering tires, needs paint, was running when parked, $1200. Ph. 250-766-3833, Winfield, BC. 1954 JD MODEL 60, adjustable front axle, runs good, nice tin; 1948 JD Model A, adjustable front axle, engine runs, nice tin. 204-770-7797, Winnipeg, MB. COCKSHUTT TRACTORS: 3- 30’s; 40 diesel; 40 gas; Cockshutt One-way, Cockshutt disc plow. 306-729-4913, Regina Beach SK JOHN DEERE MODEL B tractor for sale. Shedded for years, offers. 306-365-4216, Lanigan, SK. or email: wbw@sasktel.net

August 8 to 11, 2013 +-'.$+,. +* !-/. * !. +),!/%/%+*. $%( -!*. -! "-!! 0*.!-1% ! ),%*# (( "+- +*! (+2 # /! "!! 2'* 3 0* !- "-!!

WANTED: 1951 MORRIS Oxford driver’s side outside door handle base. Call 250-428-0293, Canyon, BC or email cpfalk@shaw.ca WATROUS FUN RUN AUTO SHOW AND SHINE, July 27/13. Jason 306-946-3336, Watrous, SK., www.watrousfunrun.com

1975 GMC CABOVER, 350 DD, 13 spd., 40,000 rears; 1957 Dodge D700 tandem, 354 Hemi, 5&3 trans., 34,000 rears; 1971 GMC longnose tandem, 318 DD, 4x4 trans. Sterling 306-539-4642, Regina, SK. www.sterlingoldcarsandtrucks.com JIM’S CLASSIC CORNER, a selling service for classic and antique automobiles, trucks, boats. 204-997-4636, Winnipeg MB 1926 CHEV 1/2 ton truck, 4 cyl., 4 spd., running, wooden cab and wheels, $7500; 1952 Chev 1300 1/2 ton shortbox, stepside, 6 cyl., 3 spd. std., running, $3500. 780-632-6372 780-603-5307 Vegreville AB REDONE 1959 FORD Edsel, always inside, taking offers. Call 306-365-4216, Lanigan, SK. or wbw@sasktel.net COLLECTOR CAR AUCTION, July 19 and 20, 2013, Credit Union Event Plex, Evraz Place, Regina, SK. Now accepting consignments. Don’t delay consign today! David 306-693-4411, 306-631-7207, PL#329773 www.thecollectorcargroup.com WANTED: VOLKSWAGEN BUS/VAN for a project, preferably pre-1967, rust doesn’t matter. 587-223-3368, Olds, AB.

ANTIQUE AND COLLECTIBLE SALE at the Joe Phillips Arena, 32224 Springbank Road, Calgary, AB., July 27, 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM; July 28, 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM. Call 403-992-3330 for more information. ENTERPRISE WOOD COOK stove complete w/warming oven and water tank, vg cond. $450. 306-874-5642, Naicam, SK. WANTED: TRACTOR MANUALS, sales brochures, tractor catalogs. 306-373-8012, Saskatoon, SK. FOR SALE: Old maps; Sears/Eatons catalogues; Antique window; Homemade soap; Spools. 306-654-4802, Prud’Homme, SK. WANTED: OLD Anvils and pocket watches. Call 306-946-3304, Watrous, SK. PRAIRIE TREASURES ANTIQUES, Kenaston, SK. Annual Flea Market on Sunday, August 4, and Monday, August 5. For table please call 306-252-2366.

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BOB & ELEANOR PORTH

BUTCHER S HO P

BE AN AUCTIONEER. Call 507-995-7803, Mankato, MN. www.auctioneerschool.com

A U CTIO

HARV ES T/ +EQ UIP M EN T

TUES D AY AUG US T 13TH @ 8:00 AM

N

HW Y #3 EAS T, TIS DALE, S K .

FULL & P ARTIAL FARM D IS P ERS ALS * CO M BIN ES * S W ATHERS * G RAIN TRUCKS * IN D US TRIAL * HARV ES T EQ UIP M EN T & CARS * TRUCKS * RV ’S & M O RE.

IF YOU HAVE EQUIPM ENT TO SELL THIS IS THE AUCTION FOR YOU

EX PECTING 4000 + BUYERS CALL TODAY FOR ADVERTISING BENEFITS.

A U CTIO FARM

JOHN & DIANNE LEM KO

N

TUES D AY JULY 23R D @ 10AM OW N ER S P H : 306-383-2335 Â

R EG IN A, S K.

 OW N ER S P H : 306-5 45 -25 67 IN TER N ET BIDDIN G S TAR TS @ 10 A.M . (S AS KATCHEW AN TIM E) DIREC T ION S : F ro m Regin a :  No rth/W es t o n Hw y #11 T o E xit A T hen 2 m i (3.2 km s .) W es t T hen Âź M ile No rth T hen E a s tDo w n L o n g Drivew a y In to Y a rd . Â

Regina

PBR FARM AND INDUSTRIAL SALE, last Saturday of each month. Ideal for farmers, contractors, suppliers and dealers. Consign now. Next sale July 27, 9:00 AM. PBR, 105- 71st St. West, Saskatoon, SK., www.pbrauctions.com 306-931-7666.

C LAIR , S AS K. (W ES T OF W AD EN A)Â

W ED N ES D AY JULY 31, 9 A.M .

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SUPREME AUCTION SERVICES will conduct a huge consignment auction in Radville, SK. at 10:00 AM, Monday, August 5. Farm and construction equipment, vehicles and much more. 3 quarters farmland in RM of The Gap and a serviced lot in Radville. Consignments welcome. Contact Brad Stenberg 306-551-9411 or Ken McDonald 306-695-0121, Indian Head, SK. PL #314604. www.supremeauctions.ca

*CastIron Eagle *30 An tiq u e T ractors *L arge Q ty ofCastIron S eats *Q ty ofS ign s & Can s *P ed d le T ractors *Ap p rox. 250 S tation ary an d S m all En gi nes

DIREC T ION S : F r. Cla ir: 1 M i. No rth (W es tS id e o fRd ) TR ACTOR S : 79 JD 4440, O d o. Read s 5036; JD 4020 c/ w JD 148 F EL ; M F 35 S p ecial. COM BINE: M F 750. TANDEM DIS C: F ord 242, 30’. R OCKP ICKER : Rock- o- m atic 546 Hi- d u m p . BINS : 8- Bin s on W ood F loors. GR AIN TR UCK: 79 Chev C- 50 w / 41,000. M OTOR HOM E: 81 Class A, 24’. BOAT: 82 D elta 16’ w / 90 HP en g.; P lu s cu ltivators; JD 30’ p ress d rill; Harrow Bar; D ozerBlad e; G rain Vac; P lus O ther Equipm ent; Qty ofShop & Farm M isc.

Check W ebs ite ForM ore L is ting & Pics ,Click on Bidcalle rButton For Com plete L is ting of InternetBidding Item s N O TE! N EW S TAR T TIM E IS 9 AM S HAR P, IN TER N ET BIDDIN G 10 AM S HAR P

O N LIN E AUCTIO N BIDS CLOSE AUG. 12TH

L OCATION : 320 Grea t Pla in s Ro a d in Em era ld Pa rk S a s k a tchew a n . Y o u w ill b e res p o n s ib le fo r rem o va l, a n d a ll Jo u rn eym a n tra d es w ill ha ve to b e co n ta cted p rio r to rem o va l o fitem s tha ta re ha rd w ired in o r p lu m b ed in , this w ill b e yo u r co s t. V iew in g Tim es w ill b e Ju ly 20th, & Au gu s t 10th 2013 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM 2 - T ru e Cu rved Gla s s Deli S ervice Ca s es ; Digi S M 300 S ca le; 3 F reezer W ra p Dis p en s ers & S ta n d ; 10� Om ca n M ea t S licer; Op en Is a ln d Co o ler; 2 - Celco ld An gle T o p Ro llin g F reezer; Hu s s m a n Dis p la y Co o ler Un it; S ha rp E RA-420 Ca s h T ill w / S ca n n er; Is la n d Ra ckin g w ith S helves ; M ea t S ho p S ign a ge; Recip e Dis p la y; S a lo o n S tyle S w in gin g Do o r Un it; No rb ec F reezer Do o r; 146’ o f 3 1/2� T hick F reezer W a lls (o n ly); 4 F a n E va p o ra to r S ys tem (freezer) in clu d in g 3 p ha s e K eep rite Co m p res s o r; 105’ x 12’ T a n k Co o lerW a lls ; Ro llin g S ta in les s S teel T a b les ; Ra tio n a l S elfCo o kin g Cen ter M o d el # S CC62 Oven 3 p ha s e (o n ly 3 yrs . o ld ); 3 W ell S ta in les s S teel S in k; Accu Do s e S in k Co n tro l Dis p en s er; 5 - S in gle S ta in les s S teel Ha n d S in ks ; Alu m in iu m Ro llin g Ba kers Ra ck; S ta in les s S teel Do u b le S in ks ; S ta in les s S teel Qu es t W o rk T a b le w /b a cks p la s h; T em p era tu re Co n tro l Cu rta in s ; T o led o Dia l S ca le, ca p a city 500 lb s .; W a lk in Co o ler w ith d ivid er w a ll a n d No rb ec Hea ted Co o ler Do o r; 2 F a n E va p o ra to r Co o ler S ys tem in clu d in g 3 p ha s e K eep rite co m p res s o r; W a lk in F reezer, n o d ivid er w a ll in clu d ed w ith No rb ec hea ted freezer d o o r; 4 F a n E va p o ra to r Co o ler S ys tem in clu d in g 3 p ha s e K eep rite co m p res s o r; Ro llin g Ho o ks ; “ S � Ho o ks ; Ho g S p littin g Ho o ks ; Ha n d T ru ck; Ro llin g Ca rts ; T o led o Ha n gin g S ca le S ys tem ; E lectric Rem o te W in ch S ys tem w ith b a ttery; 30’ M ea t Ra il T ra ckin g; 10’ x 30’ In s u la ted Co o ler; 4 F a n E va p o ra to r co o ler s ys tem in clu d in g 3 p ha s e K eep rite co m p res s o r; S in gle Do o r Co o l er w ti h s helves ; K in gs Cho ice S m o keho u s e (a p p ro x. 4 yrs . o ld ) Reta il $32,000; 2 Ro llin g S ta in les s S teel T u b Ra cks ; 11 p la s tic m ea t tu b s ; S ta in les s S teel T a b le w ith s helf; Bra n ik Va cu u m HL VT -200 in clu d es Va cu u m Pu m p , Reta il $15,000; Pelo u ze 12� F la t S ca le; S tretch W ra p M a chin e; Brin e Pu m p 1/2 hp ; Bizerb a Au to m a tic S licer #A330 in clu d in g S ta in les s S teel co n veyo r Belt Reta il Va lu e $22,000; Ho b a rt S ta in les s S teel M ixer/Grin d er w ith 32� T hro a t; Ha n d M ea t S a w ; Bu tcher Bo y 14� T hro a t Ba n d S a w ; E lectric W in ch w / ha n d rem o te & b a ttery; S ta in les s S teel Bu tcher Blo ck; Ru b b er M a ts ; 18� x 18� 300 lb Ca p a city 12 Vo lt S ca le; E lectric S p littin g S a w ; S ta in les s S teel “ S � Ho o ks ; Ro llin g M ea t M ixer; Ho llym a tic Ha m b u rger Pa tti M a ker M a chin e in clu d in g Ho p p er; Ro llin g Id ea l S a u s a ge S tu ffer; S ta in les s S teel Jet Net; S ta in les s S teel Ba co n Ho o ks ; M ea tW ra p p i ng T a b le; S ta in les s S teel T a b le w ti h w o o d s helf; CAS L a b el S ca le /p rin ter; Ho b a rtM ea tT en d erizer; Ro llin g Va cu u m Pa ck M a chin e; 6 Ro llin g L a rge Ru b b erm a id M ea tT u b s ; K eep Rite 3 F a n E va p o ra to r Co il in clu d in g 3 p ha s e K eep Rite co m p res s o r u n it; 3 Gu m T a p e Dis p en s ers ; CE Bo x S tra p p in g M a chin e (ro llin g); 5500 lb . Pa llet Ja ck; F reezer S helvin g; 25 W o o d S o u lva cki tra ys ; 2 - Ro llin g S ta in les s S teel T u b Ra ck w ith 2 tu b s ; Alu m in iu m Do u b le Ba kers Ro llin g Ca rt; 3 Ro llin g S ta in les s S teel M eta l S helvin g Un its ; M eta l F reezer Ra ckin g; M ea t T ra ys (va rio u s s izes ); 26 Alu m in u m Ba kin g T ra ys ;Accu Do s e S in k Co n tro l Dis p en s er; Va rio u s Ca b in ets ; Co u n ters ; Office E q u ip m en t; T o w el a n d S o a p Dis p en s ers ; L ight F ixtu res ; Pro d u ct Dis p la y p ictu res ; 2 - T o ileta n d Va n ti y s ets ; In terio r Do o rs ; a n d m u ch m o re! S ho u ld yo u w is h to d is cu s s a n y a n d a ll, plea s e ca ll Allen a t 306 -541-78 38 d u rin g b u s in es s ho u rs . Y o u a re b i dd i ng o n eq u ip m en ttha tis cu rren tly b ei ng u s ed , a n d is in w o rkin g co n d i tion , b i d w ti h co n fi den ce.

For M ore Inform a tion: TOL L FREE (8

00) 2 63- 4193

w w w .M c D ou g a llAu c tion .c om LIC.#314480

A U CTIO FARM

R egina

AN TIQ UE TRACTO RS AUCTIO N S ALE S ATUR DAY JULY 2 7, 2 013 – 10:00AM

P re vie w : Frid a y, Ju ly 26 , 2013

2p m - 8 p m

D irection s: F rom Jct# 48 & Jct#1 (Easton North S ervice Road ap p rox. 3 m iles) PART IAL L IS T IN G: TR AC TOR S : Ru m ley Oil Pu ll T ra cto r (this u n it o n ly s o ld s u b ject to a p p ro va l o n high b id ); JD 720 Dies el; 2 - M in n ea p o lis -M o lin e; Ca s e DC4; M a s s ey Ha rris 22; JD “ AR� ; JD 70 Dies el, Po w er S teerin g; Ca s e VA; F a rm All “ C� ; F a rm All “ H� ; 2 - JD “ B� ; Ca s e “ S � ; JD 60; JD 50; M a s s ey Ha rris 30; In tern a tio n a l 400; JD “ AR� ; M a s s ey Ha rris 20; M cCo rm ick F a rm a ll B; M cCo rm ick F a rm a ll C; JD “ D� ; JD “ G� ; 2 - JD “ A� ; F o rd 9N; JD 40; C ATER P ILLAR S & R AIL JIG G ER : Allis Cha lm ers M ilw a u kee Ca terp illa r; Ra il T ra ck Jigger (o p era tio n a l) OTH ER EQUIP M EN T: W a terlo o T hres hin g M a chin e (o ver 100 yea rs o ld ); Ca s e T hres hin g M a chin e; Ru s to n Ho rn s b y E leva to r E n gin e 20 hp ; Bla cks m ith Dis p la y o n F lo a tT ra iler in clu d in g chip ha m m er, lin e s ha ft, a n d JD Drive E n gin e; Bo len s 18 hp Hyd ro L a w n T ra cto r w / ro ta tiller; JD 3 p thitch 2 F u rro w Plo u gh; JD 45 Co m b in e; JD 55 Co m b in e; JD 95 Co m b in e; Gra in W a go n ; JD 200A S P S w a ther; Pu ll T yp e S w a thers ; 3 - T hres hin g M a chin es ; 3 - JD S P S w a thers M IS C ELLAN EOUS : 2 - L ight Pla n t Gen era to rs ; W ell Driller w / p u m p a n d 150’ o f d rill s tem ; Jen s en Pu m p Ja ck; F a n n in g M ill; Ga s S n o w b lo w er; Po w er L a w n Ra ke; S ta tio n a ry E n gin es ; Po s tDrill; 2 - S im o n -Da y S ha ker S a m p le Clea n ers ; Plea se note this listing w ill b e sub jec tto a d d itions a nd d eletions. AUC TION EER ’S N OTE: W e a re ho n o u red to co n d u ct this a u ctio n s a le fo r Pa u l L a kem a n . Co m e o n o u t to the a u ctio n a n d p a rticip a te in the b id d in g, o r ju s t co m e a n d ha ve a co ffee w ith Pa u l. Pa u l ha s b een a n a vid co llecto r fo r yea rs a n d o ffers u p fo r p u b lic a u ctio n a grea t a s s o rtm en t o f res to red tra cto rs , thres hin g m a chin e, a n d s o o n ! T here is a ls o a few p ieces in the “ ro u gh� fo r the cu rren t co llecto r to p u t to gether a n d fin is h refu rb is hin g. Pa u l ha s s o m e very ra re p ieces , a n d I d o n ’t thin k I ha ve s een a co llectio n in n icer co n d itio n . T his is a n en tirely u n res erved a u ctio n s a le, a n d lu n ch w ill b e s o ld o n s ite!

P la n now to a ttend , a nd M ARK THE D ATE!!!!

For M ore Inform ation: TOLL FR EE (8 00) 2 63- 4193

w w w .M c D ou g a llAu c tion .c om LIC.#314480

DM YTRIW BROTHERS

N

TH UR S D AY JULY 25 TH @ 10 AM C S T P OR C UP IN E P LALIN S K.

IN TER N ET BID D IN G 12: 30 – (S AS K TIM E) O w n ers Ph W a yn e 306- 2 78- 2 359 o rcell2 78- 8085 Jim 306- 2 78- 3080  o rcell2 78- 7040 AL L EQUIPM EN T IS W EL L M AIN TAIN ED, S ERV ICED AN D W EL L L OOK ED AFTER TR ACTO R S : 91 Ver. 946, 4800 hrs, w / VG tires; 81 Ver. 875, 5000 hrs; 89 D eu tz- Allis 9190 M F W D w / 5551 hrs, 12’ d ozer sells sep arate. DO ZER BLAD E: L eon 12’, 3 w ay. C O M BIN E: 01 N H T R- 99 w / 1462 sep . hrs. H EAD ER: H on eyb ee 30’. S W ATH ER : 05 M F 9220, 30’ W / 653 hrs. AIR DR ILL: 98 JD 1820, 41’ c/ w 02 JD 1910, 270 air tan k. G R AIN TR UCKS : 99 M ack CH- 613 w / Ultra cell 20’ b ox; 79 IHC 1900’s, gas en g., Allison au to; 85 F ord 8000 w / CIM 16’ b ox. TAN DEM DIS K: 2008 Ezee- O n 6650, 32’, like n ew con d . G R AIN D R Y ER : D ry air 800 S E on p rop an e c/ w 3 rad s. HEAV Y HAR R O W BAR : Bou rg. 7200, 60’. S W ATHER TR AN S PO R T: D YN A F AB com p lete d rive on style. C U L T IVAT O R: F lexi- coil 300, 40’. S ER V IC E TR U C K: 94 F ord F - 350, 4x4 w / d eck, b oxes, slip tan ks, com p ressor, gen erator, etc. FUEL TR UCK: 89 Chev 70 w / 2000 gal. tan k. AUG ER S : Bran d t 8x50 w / self p rop el kit; W estfield 10x61; Bran d t 7x40. FIELD S PR AY ER : Bou rg 950, 90; Vogels W ick 30’. HAR R O W PACKER : F lexi- Coil 60. PR O PAN E TAN K: 1000 gal. 250 P S I. V- D itcher: O lyn ick H. D u ty; 3 p oin t hitch 20’ sp rayer; 10’ sw ath roller; W alin ga 5414 grain vac; D egelm an R- 570S rock p icker; JD 7’ 6 yard gyrom ow er; L arge q ty of shop tools & shop & farm m isc.


40 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

Huge McCormick Collector Tractor Auction THE ESTATE OF JOHN WYTHE Miniota,MB

Saturday August 3rd, 2013 at 10 am DST Featuring: 1919 Titan TV 38888; 2 Trac tractors; Plus approx. 100 other McCormick tractors ( all models). Many restored and running. Stationary engines, travel alls , trucks, caterpillars. Thousands of McCormick parts ( complete & partial engines, heads, hoods, steel wheels, tires, rims, blocks, manifolds and much more. Sale order: 2 sale rings From 10 am till 1 pm with shop tools and parts, 1 pm 1 ring only while selling major tractors and equipment Then returning to 2 rings with parts and parts equipment

McSHERRY AUCTION SERVICE LTD. Auction Sale, John Zagday, Sat., July 27 at 10 AM, Beausejour, MB. North 14 miles on Hwy #12, then east 3 miles on Hwy #317 then south 1 mile on Rd. 45, then east 3/4 mile on Rd. 85. Contact: 204-265-3280. Main items shedded! Tractors; Crawler: JD 1010; 5 roller Crawler, 4 cyl gas with 6’ dozer; JD 4020, cab, std., 540/1000 dual hyd., w/18.4x34 on duals; JD 70 dsl pup start, power steer, hyd 540 PTO; JD M hyd. hitch, 540 PTO pulley, SN#54926. Along w/equip; Farm Misc. Stuart McSherry, 204-467-1858 or 204-886-7027, www.mcsherryauction.com

WILF AND ANNE Loewen Dispersal Auction, Saturday, July 27, 2013 at 9:00 AM at Hague, SK. Directions from Hwy. #11 access at Hague: 1/4 mile east, 2 miles south, 1/2 mile east. Vehicle: 1994 Chev 1500 C/C; Tractors: 660 Int. w/cab ad FEL, 1993 230 MF, 1951 JD R; Ford N9; Yard and Acreage equipment: 2011 Poulin Pro 500 ex-riding lawn mower, rough mowers, JD snowblower. Grain Bins, Shop Tools and Misc., Antiques, Household: Piano, wood burning stove, appliances, furniture, shuffleboard, much more. Nelson’s Auction Service, Meacham, SK. Call: 306-944-4320 or visit our website: www.nelsonsauction.com

5th ANNUAL PRAIRIE HARVEST HORSE Sale, Sunday, August 25, 2012, 1:00 PM at Johnstone Auction Mart, Moose Jaw, SK. We are accepting entries for Quality Ranch/ Pleasure/ Show geldings and mares, well started younger geldings and mares, brood mares, yearlings and 2 year olds, and teams - Registered or Grade. Entries are online: www.johnstoneauction.ca and are due July 29th. For more information call Scott Johnstone (auctioneer) 306-631-0767 or Glen Gabel (consultant/ marketing) 306-536-1927.

Antique Tractors, Farm & Construction Equipment

7+ $118$/ 35( +$59(67

For full listing and photos www.rosstaylorauction.com

For information call Joyce 204-567-3598

Ross Taylor Auction Service 204-877-3834 Toll free 877-617-2537 Pl 909917

N

WED. JULY 24 @ HUDSON BAY, 9 AM SHARP!

72 285 1(;7 /,9( $8&7,21

Directions: From Hudson Bay Go 3 Miles West, 3 Miles South & ½ Mile West

7+856'$<

$8*867

W ED N ES D AY JULY 31, 9 A.M .

#

R EG IN A, S K.

+2'*,16 $8&7,21 &(175(

 OW N ER S P H : 306-5 45 -25 67 IN TER N ET BIDDIN G S TAR TS @ 10 A.M . (S AS KATCHEW AN TIM E) DIREC T ION S : F ro m Regin a :  No rth/W es t o n Hw y #11 T o E xit A T hen 2 m i (3.2 km s .) W es t T hen Ÿ M ile No rth T hen E a s tDo w n L o n g Drivew a y In to Y a rd .

Â

AS INSTRUCTED BY EXECUTRIX JOAN HOLLAND

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*CastIron Eagle *30 An tiq u e T ractors *L arge Q ty ofCastIron S eats *Q ty ofS ign s & Can s *P ed d le T ractors *Ap p rox. 250 S tation ary an d S m all En gi nes

(0$,/ ,1)2#+2'*,16$8&7,21((56 &20 &217$&7 86 72'$< 72 /,67 <285 +$59(67 (48,30(17

Check W ebs ite ForM ore L is ting & Pics ,Click on Bidcalle rButton For Com plete L is ting of InternetBidding Item s N O TE! N EW S TAR T TIM E IS 9 AM S HAR P, IN TER N ET BIDDIN G 10 AM S HAR P

hodginsauctioneers.com

APPROX IMATELY 1400 U NITS LIVE INT ERN BIDDING ET

Approx. 85 TO 100 TRACTORS! 75 RUNNING with 25 to 35 Parts Tractors To Include: FIVE +0)/ %&&3& 0OF X $BC 580 3FQBJOUFE t +0)/ %&&3& t 5XJO +0)/ %&&3& 5SBDUPST )PPLFE 5PHFUIFS 3VOOJOH t +0)/ %&&3& t +0)/ %&&3& t +0)/ %&&3& X 1XS 4UFFSJOH t +0)/ %&&3& 3 t FOURTEEN JOHN DEERE D Tractors From 1939 to 1944 t 4XBNQ #VHHZT t $POTUSVDUJPO $PNQBDUJPO &RVJQ t "OUJRVF 'BSN &RVJQ t $BST 5SVDLT t 5SBJMFST $BNQFST PLUS SO MUCH MORE!!

hodginsauctioneers.com

SK PL # 915407 AB PL # 180827

BOB & ELEANOR PORTH

&216,*1 12:

SK PL # 915407 AB PL # 180827

A U CTIO

AN TIQ UE

ON BEHALF OF

THE ESTATE OF JIM HOLLAND

THURSDAY JULY 25 • 8:00 AM KRAMER’S BIG BID BARN Live Internet Bidding NORTH BATTLEFORD, SK DIRECTIONS: Kramer’s Big Bid Barn located 3 miles East of North Battleford on Hwy #16 AUCTION COORDINATOR(s): Brendan Kramer, Kim Kramer or Michael Higgs 1-800-529-9958

SEE OUR WEBSITE FOR COMPLETE LISTING AND PHOTOS

LARGE 3 RING AUCTIO N

DISPERSAL FOR

DISPERSAL FOR

ROBERT & KAREN DAGENAIS MARCELIN, SK 306-226-4402 OR 306-497-7930 (c)

CRAIG & YVETTE HAMILTON RADISSON, SK 306-827-2269 OR 306-827-7835 (c)

ONE DAY 2 SALES

SATURDAY, JULY 27, 2013 PUBLIC AUTOMOTIVE AUCTION

2009 Chev 2500 EXCB 4x4

2010 Honda Odyssey

2007 Trails West Horse Trailer

2001 Prairie Star

1994 JD 8770

2011 JD 1830 Air Drill

NUMEROUS OTHER CONSIGNORS

2009 JD 4830

2007 Case IH 215 Magnum

2 - Unused GSI Dryers

2011 Westward M-150

2011 Sterling

2007 Doepker Tridem

2008 NH BR7090

2009 F150 Supercrew

2011 VW Jetta Trendline 2.0

CLASSIC/COLLECTOR AUCTION

1927 Ford Model T Roadster

1965 Chev Impala 2DR HT

1967 Ford Shelby

SALE 2 3 PM

13TH ANNUAL

2007 Cadillac Escalade

SALE 1 9 AM

2006 Forest River Cardinal

2007 JD 7930

VIEWING THURSDAY & FRIDAY 8:30 AM - 7:00 PM

WWW.MAAUCTIONS.COM Calgary, AB - 13090 Barlow Trail NE 1.877.811.8855

1-800-529-9958 See more photos and information at

IMPORTANT NOTICE: This listing is only a guide and in no way a guarantee of size, description or year. Please inspect all equipment to your own satisfaction. Complete terms and conditions are available at bidder registration.

SK Provincial Licence #914618 • AB Provincial Licence #206959


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

WRECKING LATE MODEL TRUCKS: 1/2 tons, 3/4 tons, 1 tons, 4x4’s, vans, SUV’s. Also large selection of Cummins diesel motors, Chevs and Fords as well. Phone Edmonton- 1-800-294-4784, or Calgary1-800-294-0687. We ship anywhere. We have everything, almost. WRECKING 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, MACK AUCTION CO. presents a Farm mail, Loomis, Purolator. Lloydminster, SK. Equipment Auction for Alvin and Marilyn H E AV Y D U T Y PA R T S o n s p e c i a l at Miller 306-457-2978. Saturday, August 17, www.Maximinc.Com/parts or call Maxim 2013 at 10 AM. Directions from Stough- Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. ton, SK. 6 miles South on Hwy. 47, 3 miles East and 1/2 mile South. Watch for signs! WRECKING 1989 FORD L9000, good front Also a farm dispersal consignment from end and cab; 1983 3 ton IHC, V8 diesel, 5 Tom and Lori Flath 306-457-7598. Live in- spd., single axle; Volvo trucks: Misc. axles ternet bidding at www.Bidspotter.com. and trans. parts; Also tandem trailer susMiller Equipment consists of Case/IH pension axles. 306-539-4642, Regina, SK. 9130 4 WD tractor, Versatile 256 bi-direc- ONE OF SASK’s largest inventory of used tional tractor with FEL and grapple fork, heavy truck parts. 3 ton tandem diesel moFord 8N tractor with 3 PTH and PTO, IH tors and transmissions and differentials for McCormick Farmall A tractor, Minneapolis all makes! Can Am Truck Export Ltd., Moline 705 tractor not running, IH 1480 1-800-938-3323. SP combine with reverser and long auger, Versatile 2800 bi-directional 28’ swather SASKATOON TRUCK PARTS CENTRE header, 36’ MacDon 960 straight cut drap- Ltd. North Corman Industrial Park. er header with IH adapter, Koenders poly New and used parts available for 3 ton swath roller, 41’ Case/IH 5600 air seeder highway tractors including custom built and Bourgault 2115 air cart plus granular tandem converters and wet kits. All truck kit, 60’ Flexi-Coil System 92 harrow pack- makes/models bought and sold. Shop serers, 70’ Flexi-Coil tine harrows, 19’ IH deep vice available. Specializing in repair and tillage cultivator, shop built 75’ SP sprayer custom rebuilding for transmissions and converted from CCIL 5542 combine, 8’ differentials. Now offering driveshaft Farm King 3 PTH snowblower, Rite-Way 2 repair and assembly from passenger batt rockpicker, shop built rock digger, vehicles to heavy trucks. For more info square water tank and trailer, saw Man- call 306-668-5675 or 1-877-362-9465. drel, hyd. log splitter, 1000 gal. fuel tank www.saskatoontruckparts.ca DL #914394 w/electric pump, slip tanks, fuel tank and stands, 100 gal. water tank, Ritchie water WRECKING SEMI-TRUCKS, lots of parts. bowl, 12x12 storage shed, quantity of Call Yellowhead Traders. 306-896-2882, fence posts, Farm King 10-50 swing auger, Churchbridge, SK. Sakundiak 7-33 auger with Honda engine, Midwest 552 grain vac, Behlin 5643 HL SLEEPERS and daycabs. New and used. propane grain dryer, 1000 gal. propane Huge inventory across Western Canada at tank, bin crane, 5 HP aeration fans and www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & tubes, 1974 Ford F-500 grain truck with Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. 28,054 miles, 1976 Chev 3/4 ton truck C H E C K OUT OUR parts specials at: with flat deck, 24’ shop built tandem axle www.Maximinc.Com/parts or call Maxim gooseneck flat deck trailer, Sanborn up- Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. right air compressor, Beach tool cabinet plus many shop tools and equipment! The VS TRUCK WORKS Inc. parting out GM following equipment is Tom and Lori 1/2- 1 ton trucks. Call Gordon or Joanne, Flath’s 306-457-7598. MF 4840 4WD trac- 403-972-3879, Alsask, SK. tor needs hyd. pump, JD 4440 2WD tractor with Outback GPS, NH TR98 SP com- TWO ACE ALUMINUM tool boxes, new, bine w/1571 rotor hours and recent work $825 each. 306-961-1170, Domremy, SK. orders, 36’ MacDon 960 draper header SOUTHSIDE AUTO WRECKERS located with NH adapter, 30’ MacDon 960 draper Weyburn, SK., 306-842-2641. Used car header, 30’ Case/IH 8230 PT swather, 41’ parts, light truck to semi-truck parts. We Harmon 4480 air drill with Harmon 1830 buy scrap iron and non-ferrous metals. air cart, 31’ Case/IH 5600 cultivator, 41’ Morris Magnum CP 731 cultivator, 32’ of IH 310 discers, Harmon PT field sprayer, Degelman 3 batt PTO rockpicker, 1964 Mercury flat deck truck with water tank SCHOOL BUSES: 1990 to 2001, 18 to 66 and pump, 4 Westeel Rosco 3300 bushel pass., $1600 and up. Phoenix Auto, Lucky g r a i n b i n s o n w o o d f l o o r s . V i s i t Lake, SK., 1-877-585-2300. DL #320074. www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. Join us on Facebook and Twitter. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL 311962.

Regina

CLASSIFIED ADS 41

2010 LODE-KING SUPER B, lift axle, current CVIP, 80% tread, approx. 300,000 kms, asking $68,000 OBO. 780-842-6773, Wainwright, AB. MUST SELL: TANDEM axle grain trailer, good shape, $10,000. 306-290-6495 or 306-654-7772, Saskatoon, SK. 2009 LODE-KING SUPER B, 11x24.5 tires, low miles. 306-921-6697, 306-752-3777, Melfort, SK.

2010 LODE-KING PRESTIGE grain trailers Super B, new AB safety, auto greaser in- 2014 DOEPKER TRIDEM grain trailer stalled since new. Super clean units. Call with lift axles, many colors and features to choose from; 2009 Doepker tridem lead Dave 780-216-1155, Falun, AB. grain bulker, steel wheels, flat fenders, 1999 DOEPKER SUPER B, air ride, good 22.5 rubber; 2014 Doepker Super B’s in condition. Call Grant 306-524-4339, stock with Minimizer fenders. Many more 306-746-7336 cell, Semans, SK. used and new trailers arriving daily. In stock, 2014 Doepker end dumps; 2014 2007 AND 2008 WILSON Super B grain Globe lowboys, 55 ton now avail. for your trailers, aluminum wheels, no recap tires. specialty heavy hauling needs. New oilfield Call 306-873-4969, Tisdale, SK. tridem scissor necks, 40 and 50 tons, 10 1997 WILSON 41’x8’ tandem, Intrax air wides in stock; 2007 to 2011 used trucks ride, good condition, $26,000. Gull Lake, in stock, various makes. Visit our website 2005 BARRETT 53’ alum. flat side ground at: www.customtruck.ca 1-800-665-6317. SK. 306-672-3711, 306-672-7616. load livestock trailer, extra height, 5 com2004 CASTLETON 24’ pup, 11R22.5 tires, 1996 CASTELTON 40’, good condition, partment, full board kit and toolbox, good MB. safetied, shedded. 204-548-2592 or cond., safetied, $40,000. 204-724-3171, air ride, aluminum rims, hauls 14.5 tons 204-638-2592, Gilbert Plains, MB. Neepawa, MB. net legally. 306-753-2707, Macklin, SK. NEVILLE BUILT tandem and tridem 2013 FEATHERLITE 8117-6724 all alum. NEW 2014 NEVILLE, 2 and 3 axle, both NEW trailers. Call Lyle at 780-373-2161, stock trailer, 24’, rumbar floor, rubber spring and air ride, cheapest in Western grain Bawlf, AB. bumper, full swing rear gate, slide by rear Canada. Call 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. door, Stk# DC125555, $15,900! Call 1-866-346-3148 or visit us online 24/7 at 2001 36’ LOADHANDLER grain trailer, www.allandale.com air ride suspension, farm use only. 306-436-7681, Milestone, SK. 1995 20’ TRAVALONG gooseneck stock trailer, stall divider, rubber mats, $6,000. NEW WILSON SUPER B’s, tridem and tan306-266-4211, Wood Mountain, SK. dem; 2012 to 2013 Lode-King all alum. Super B, like new; 2011 Doepker Super B, 16’ UNIVISION BUMPER type stock trailer, alum rims; 2009 Castleton 40’ tandem, air good tires, $1850. 306-395-2668, ride; 2008 Lode-King alum. open end Su306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. per B, alum. rims, air ride, also 2009 w/lift axles; 1998 Castleton Super B, air ride; 2006 WILSON TRI-AXLE Cattleliner, fold 1994 Castleton tridem, air ride; 1989 2013 WILSON BELT trailer, air ride, alum. up doghouse, feeder nose, alum. wheels, Lode-King tridem, springride, new paint; wheels, 42’Lx102”Wx78”H, $46,000. e x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n , $ 3 4 , 0 0 0 O B O. Tandem and S/A converter, drop hitch, 204-736-4854, www.vermilliontrucks.com 1-888-404-4972, Calgary, AB. certified; 17’ A-train pup, very clean. Sanford, MB. NEW BLUEHILLS GOOSENECK stock, 20’, Phone 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL 2013 PRESTIGE LODE-KING SUPER B grain $13,900; 18’, $11,900. Call 306-445-5562, #905231. www.rbisk.ca trailers, 11R22.5 tires, air ride, exc. cond., Delmas, SK. 2010 LODE-KING Super B grain trailer, 8 sets to choose from $85,000 each OBO. 2005 SOUTHLAND 28’ aluminum stock $68,500. Call 780-373-2161, Bawlf, AB. Call 403-236-4028, Calgary, AB. trailer w/8000 lb. tri-axles, lots of extras, exc. shape. 306-342-4456, Glaslyn, SK. 2010 WILSON TRI-AXLE cattleliner, new brakes, good tires, exc. cond., $58,000. 306-768-2790, 306-768-7726, Carrot River NEW AND USED MERRITT aluminum stock trailers. Call Darin 204-526-7407, Cypress River, MB. www.merrittgoosenecks.com DL #4143.

24/ 7 O N LIN E BID D IN G Em e ra ld Pa rk, SASK.

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Two lucky farmers and each of their guests will receive: TRUCK BONEYARD INC. Specializing in obsolete parts, all makes. Trucks bought for wrecking. 306-771-2295, Balgonie, SK. TRUCK PARTS AND ENGINES: 1/2 ton to 3 ton; Gas engines: 304, 345 IH, 370 Ford; Diesel engines: 5.9 Cummins, 6.5 GM, 3116 Cat, 6.6 Ford (inline 6), DT 360 IH; 4 and 5 spd. trans., single and 2 spd. axles and many other parts. Phoenix Auto, Lucky Lake, SK., 1-877-585-2300. G O O D U S E D T R U C K T I R E S : 8.25/ 900/1000/1100x20’s; 11R22.5/11R24.5; 9R17.5. Fresh load arriving June 1. Pricing from $90. Call Ladimer, 306-795-7779, Ituna, SK.; Chris 306-537-2027, Regina.

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Leasing Available

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. REMOTE CONTROL TRAILER CHUTE openers can save you time, energy and keep you safe this seeding season. FM remote controls provide maximum range and instant response while high torque drives operate the toughest of chutes. Easy installation. Brehon Agrisystems call 306-933-2655 or visit us online at: www.brehonag.com Saskatoon, SK. ALL ALUMINUM TANDEMS, tridems and Super B Timpte Grain Trailers. Call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946 or see: www.Maximinc.Com SANDBLAST AND PAINT your grain trailers, boxes, flatdecks and more. We use industrial undercoat and paint. Can zinc coat for added rust protection. Quality workmanship guaranteed. Prairie Sandblasting and Painting, 306-744-7930, Saltcoats, SK. 2006 LODE-KING Super B grain trailer, $38,500. Call 780-373-2161, Bawlf, AB.

BIDS CLOSE: JULY 22n d @ 12 PM NEW M cDouga ll Auction e e rs W a re h ous e ! Fea tu rin g: 2011 Chiro n ex K o m o d o Du n e Bu ggy; 2002 GM C Jim m y; 1998 Po n tia c F ireb ird ; 1998 Ca d illa c S eville S T S ; 1998 Nis s a n Qu es t XE S p o rt; 2005 Ho n d a Cru is er VT X 1800 M o to rcycle; 2010 F o rd F 150 F X4; 1992 9600 Jo hn Deere Co m b in e; Ca n va s fo r 40’ M a cd o n F D70 Co m b in e T a b le; 930 F lex Hea d er; 40’ High Cu b e S to ra ge Co n ta in er; Bo b ca t 2500 Brea ker (Req u ires Rep a ir); Bo b ca t 2500 Brea ker; M B An gle Bro o m 72” ; K u b o ta BX2537A 47” S w eep er; 1987 In tern a tio n a l S 1600 S in gle Axle Bu cket T ru ck; Ca t T 50B 5,000 lb fo rklift; Bu cket T o F it Ca t 950 W heel L o a d er; W eld co Bu cket T o F it Ca t 950 W heel L o a d er; Ca t V80D F o rklift; 1994 M a n a c 53” T a n d em Axle Dry Va n w / Hea ter Reefer; Ro u s s ey 8 x 45’ F la t Deck T ra iler; 2005 F reightlin er Co lu m b ia ; 1998 53’ Va n Bo d y S em i T ra iler; T u rn K ey Bu s in es s T en d er - M a in S t. In n , Pu b & S u b S ho p ; Un res erved On lin e T o o l S ho p Au ctio n & M u ch M o re!

Raailyer’Ssales

2006 VW JETTA TDI, auto, loaded, exc. COURTENEY BERG TRAILER WANTED, NEW 2014 NEVILLE 38’ tandem, air ride, c o n d . , 6 0 M P G , $ 9 5 0 0 . C a l l K e l l y tandem or tri-axle. Call: 403-345-4231, 78” high sides, $33,500; 45’ tri-axle, 306-363-2117 ext. 111, Drake, SK. Coaldale, AB. $43,500. 780-913-0097, Edmonton, AB. ESTATE SALE: 2004 Grand Marquis, low 1996 DOEPKER 42’ tridem, 3 hopper, 76” 2003 DOEPKER TRIDEM, three hoppers, kms. Will take cattle on trade. Langham, sides, good rubber, good cond., $25,000. Michel’s tarp, 24.5 tires, a must see. Accepting offers. 306-584-5050, Regina, SK. 306-967-2423, Eatonia, SK. SK., 306-283-4747, 306-220-0429.

“#1 Seller in Western Canada”

Wilson Ranch Hand Goose Neck

Load Trail Goose Neck, Car Haulers and Bobcats

Snow Hauler and Cargo Trailers

Ph: Don - 780-672-4596 Camrose, AB Ph: Pat 780-878-1126 Wetaskiwin, AB 780-334-0400 Ft. McMurray, AB www.raystrailersandtractors.com A-TRAIN alum. tankers ready to use for water or liquid fertilizer. 306-356-4550, Dodsland SK. DL #905231. www.rbisk.ca 2006 SATURN MOBILE home dolly, tri-axle, 9’ wide, exc. cond., new safety, 11’ deck c/w gin poles, headache rack, winch, 5th wheel, $27,000. Call 780-305-3594, Mayerthorpe, AB. 2011 KAUFMAN heavy equipment pintle trailer w/dual wheels and tandem axle, 25’, air lift ramps, fresh safety, $16,000. 306-594-7981 or 306-594-2628 after 8 PM, Norquay, SK. DROP DECK semi style and pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, tandem and tridems. Contact SK: 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336. 53’ AND 48’ tridem and tandem stepdecks; Two 48’ tandem 10’ wide, beavertail, flip ramps, air ride, low kms; 1991 Trail King machinery trailer, hyd. tail; 53’, 48’, 28’ tridem and tandem highboys, all steel and combos. SUPER B HIGHBOYS; Tandem and S/A converter with drop hitch; 53’-28’ van trailers; B-train salvage trailers; Tandem lowboy, 9’ wide, air ride; High Clearance sprayer trailer w/tanks and chem handlers. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL #905231. www.rbisk.ca 40 FLATDECK SEMI TRAILERS, hi-boys and stepdecks, $2100 to $25,000. Pics and prices at www.trailerguy.ca 306-222-2413, Aberdeen/Saskatoon, SK. 2011 MIDLAND XL3000 triple axle end dump 11R24.5 rubber, like new tarp, $45,000; Alum tank, synthetic oil, c/w wet kit, $3,000. 306-963-2911, Imperial, SK. 1996 LANGFAB quad axle flatdeck trailer, 10’ wide x 30’ long deck, 12’ ramping tail, air over hyd. tail, tandem rear axles w/tandem axle converter and pintle hitch tongue, exc. rubber, 54” deck height. Would be excellent for moving machinery behind 4 WD tractor, $12,000. Email pics available. 403-638-3934, Sundre, AB.

LACOMBE TRAILER SALES & RENTALS WE SELL AND RENT

1983 CAMPBELL COACH INC. T/A 8’ miniature horse trailer, c/w front side storage and 2 independent rear doors, roof r a c k , 2 - 1 8 0 0 l b. a x l e s , b a l l h i t c h . 780-914-2069, Spruce Grove, AB.

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

LOWBEDS, LOWBEDS: 2 and 3 axle, detachables, beavertail, single/double drops, $10,000 plus; new skidsteer trailers, 2 axle, $4500. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. PRECISION TRAILERS: Gooseneck and bumper hitch. You’ve seen the rest, now own the best. Hoffart Services, 306-957-2033, www.precisiontrailer.com 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. 24’ GOOSENECK Tridem 21000 lbs, $7890; Bumper pull tandem lowboy: 18’, 14,000 lbs., $4250; 16’, 10,000 lbs., $3090; 16’, 7000 lbs, $2650. Factory direct. 888-792-6283 www.monarchtrailers.com

2006 HUTCHINSON ALUM. TC406 crude tankers, 34,000 litres, air ride, Certified. Call 306-752-4909, Melfort, SK. 2005 ANDERSON 16’ equipment trailer w/flip-up ramps, 12,000 lb. capacity, $2900. Ladimer 306-795-7779, Ituna, SK.

MIDLAND CLAM GRAVEL trailer, 3 axle, S/P ride, near new brakes, drums, tires, alum. rims, vg cond., can deliver $29,000. Cypress River, MB. 204-743-2324.

HEAV Y D UTY

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42 CLASSIFIED ADS

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. $18,560. Call Hauser’s Machinery, Melville, SK., 1-888-939-4444. www.hausers.ca ALL ALUMINUM TANDEMS, tridems and Super B Timpte Grain Trailers. Call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946 or see: www.Maximinc.Com C H E C K OUT OUR parts specials at: www.Maximinc.Com/parts or call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. 1997 DOEPKER TANDEM machinery trailer w/hyd. tail, $32,500; Wagon style aluminum 2 axle end dump pups, need TLC, $6500/ea. Call 306-246-4632, Speers, SK. 2000 ARNE’S TRIDEM end dump, air ride, certified. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL #905231. www.rbisk.ca 2013 PRECISION 22.5 pintle flatdeck, beavertails, 2 -10,000 lb. axles, toolbox, plus extras, new cond. Call 306-648-7766, Gravelbourg, SK. TANDEM BOOSTER, steering axles, good shape, $17,500 OBO; Single axle booster, straight axle, pivot steering, $5,000 OBO. 403-704-3509, Ponoka, AB.

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

GRAIN TRAILER A-TRAIN, good cond., $15,000; grain trailer B-train, $10,000; Wilson double decker cattle trailer, $9995; tandem belly dump gravel trailer, $7500; 2- 53’ hay trailers, ready to haul, tri-axle, $10,000 ea; 35’ hay trailer, off road, farm, $5995; 32’ 8-wheel trailer, off road, farm, $5995; single converter, starting at $1495 and up; tandem off road converter, starting at $2995 and up; 2- 1000 gal. steel fuel tanks, $750 ea; 10- new style 5th wheel plates, $350 ea. 204-448-2193 eves. 2005 DODGE 3500, diesel, 6 spd.,4x4, Eddystone, MB. 217,000 kms, $21,000 OBO. More to NEW NEVILLE BUILT 53’ tridem, drop deck choose from. 306-463-8888, Dodsland, SK. with beavertail, 3 ramps, $38,500. Call www.diamonddholdings.ca DL#909463 780-373-2161, Bawlf, AB. 2007 GMC 2500 HD, ext. cab, 80,000 kms, tow pkg, blue, good rubber, nice shape, $15,500. Call 306-291-6909, Saskatoon, SK. DL #318705. 2010 CHEV 4 dr. 4x4 truck, fully loaded. 306-283-4747, 306-220-0429, Langham, 2007 DODGE RAM 2500 SLT 4x4, 5.9 dsl., SK. 274,000 kms, exc. cond., $18,000 OBO. 2012 DODGE DURANGO SXT, 7 passenger, Call 306-441-0487, Battleford, SK. loaded, $29,999. 1-800-667-4414, Wyn2008 DODGE 3500, long box, 6.7L diesel, yard, SK. www.thoens.com DL #909250. 6 speed standard 4X4, 92,000 kms. NEW INTERNATIONAL TERRASTAR 3 ton 306-741-5289, Simmie, SK. 4x4 at: www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim 2010 CHEVY SILVERADO 1500, 4x4 white, Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. l o a d e d , 8 5 , 0 0 0 k m s , $ 2 2 , 0 0 0 O B O. 306-823-4319, 306-823-7556, Neilburg SK

DECKS, dry vans, reefers, storage trailers at: www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim 2010 FORD F150 XLT, auto, 25,996 kms, Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. black, Stk# SK-U0827, $31,995. Call 1-866-980-0260. DL #914077 or www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca

Andres

Trailer Sales And Rentals

2012 FORD F150 AWD, auto, white, 8,547 kms, Stk# SK-U01191. $37,995 Call 1-866-980-0260. DL #914077 or www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca

SEVEN PERSONS ALBERTA

(Medicine Hat, Alberta)

2006 Freightliner Century

2005 INT. 9200I tandem, Cummins ISX, 13 spd., 1.1M kms., new 19’x66” Bergs grain body, $57,500. Call 204-966-3254, 204-212-0953, Birnie, MB. or email: n8brkmn@gmail.com MACK TANDEM, good condition, 20’ box, new, paint, new tarp, reg. in SK. $21,000. located in Kamsack, SK. 204-526-0321.

Detroit Power, 10 speed Autoshift Transmission, 3.73 axle ratio, Southern truck

Fina nc ing Is Ava ila ble! Ca ll Us Toda y!

WILSON GOOSENECKS & CATTLE LINERS

WILSON ALUMINUM TANDEM, TRI-AXLE & SUPER B GRAIN TRAILERS

1985 GMC 6000 dsl., B&H, rebuilt motor, runs well, shedded. Near Beiseker, AB. 250-428-4012. No Saturday calls please. 1987 FREIGHTLINER FLC 120 w/425 HP Cat, 13 spd. Road Ranger, A/R, 20’ Midland box with remote controls, Shurlock tarp, aluminum wheels, $32,000. 306-794-4521, Grayson, SK. 1987 MACK SUPERLINER, B&H, V8 Mack engine w/13 spd., heavy front axle, good rubber, $14,000 OBO. 1966 Chev 3 ton BERG’S GRAIN BODIES: When durability truck, B&H, 350 engine, runs good, $3500 and price matter, call Berg’s Prep and Paint OBO. Chris 306-628-7840, Eatonia, SK. for details at 204-325-5677, Winkler, MB. 1998 MACK CH613, 350 HP, Eaton 10 COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL MFG. for spd., 20’x8.5’ CIM box, w/cab and rear grain box pkgs., decks, gravel boxes, HD control, air ride, no leaks, runs vg, $36,000 combination grain and silage boxes, pup OBO. 306-699-2442, McLean, SK. trailers, frame alterations, custom paint, 2001 FREIGHTLINER FL112, 460 De- complete service. Visit our plant at Humtroit, 10 spd, new 20’ ultracel box, hoist, boldt, SK or call 306-682-2505 for prices. tarp, no rust, $57,500; 2001 Freightliner FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS FL112, 400 HP Cat, Eaton ultrashift We also specialize in: Crop insurance apw/clutch, new Ultracel box pkg., California peals; Chemical drift; Residual herbicide; truck, only $52,500; 2007 IH 4300, Allison Custom operator issues; Equipment malautomatic, new 16’ ultracel B&H, premium function. Qualified Agrologist on staff. Call cond., low miles, only $48,500. Call for de- Back-Track Investigations for assistance tails, 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779.

2012 GMC SIERRA SLE Duramax, 6.6 dsl., 4x4, 2500 HD, black cloth interior, 14,110 kms, $46,000 OBO. Call 204-981-3636 or 204-794-4879, Cartier, MB.

GRAVEL TRUCKS AND end dumps for sale or rent, weekly/ monthly/ seasonally, w/wo driver. K&L Equipment, Regina, SK, 306-795-7779, 306-537-2027 or email: ladimer@sasktel.net DL 910885. SINGLE AXLE AUTOMATIC dump, 14’ box, 2007 IH 4300, 466 diesel, auto, hyd. brakes, low kms. $36,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. TANDEM axle gravel trucks in inventory. New and used, large inventory across Western Canada at www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & Trailer 1-888-986-2946

2010 IH Lon e s ta r, 485 HP IS X Cu m m in s , 18 s p , 12/ 40, 22.5” a lloy w heels , 244” W B, m id -ris e bu n k , 819,866 k m , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6 5,000 2010 Ke n w orth T370, 300 HP Pa ca r PX-6, 6 s p , 10,000 fron t20,000 rea r, 3:55 g ea rs , 200” W B, d iff. lock , 202,336 k m . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $45,000 2007 P e te rb ilt 379, 565 HP Cu m m in s IS X, 13 s p , 12/ 40, 3-w a y d iff. lock s , 3:55 g ea rs , 244” W B, 70” bu n k , 1,070,660 k m , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $59,000 3-2007 P e te rb ilt387, 430 HP Ca tC13, 13 s p , 12/ 40, 3:55 g ea rs , 22.5” a lloy w heels , 238” W B, hig h-ris e bu n k , 968,391 k m , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $29,000 2007 P e te rb ilt 379, 430 HP Ca tC13, 10 s p , 12/ 40, 36” fla t-top bu n k , $37,000 2007 Fre ig htlin e r Colu m b ia , 515 HP Detriot, 18 s p , 4-w a y d iff. lock s , 4:11 g ea rs , s u p er40 rea r, 22.4” a lloy w heels , 209 W B, en g in e ha s been rebu ilt, 800,487 k m , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $42,000 2007 Fre ig htlin e r S D , 500 HP Ca tC15, 18 s p , 4-w a y d iff. lock s , 4:33 g ea rs , 12 fron t, s u p er40 rea r, 22.5” a lloy w heels , 223 W B, 48” fla t-top bu n k , 734,553 k m , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $40,000 2007 Fre ig htlin e r S D , 515 HP Detriot, 18 s p , 4-w a y d iff. lock s , 3:90 g ea rs , 12 fron ts u p er40 rea r, 22.5” a lloy w heels , 209” W B, 48” fla t-top bu n k , 1,037,000 k m , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $35,000 8-2007 IH 9400I, 435 HP IS X Cu m m in s , 13 s p , 12/ 40, 22.5” a lloy w heels , m id -ris e bu n k , 1M k m , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $25,000 3-2007 IH 9900I, 475 HP IS X Cu m m in s , 18 s p , 12/ 40, 3-w a y d iff. lock s , 22.5” a lloy w heels , 3:90 g ea rs , 244” W B, 72” m id -ris e bu n k , 900,000- 1,200,000 k m . . . . $37,000 2-2007 IH 9400I, 435 HP Cu m m in s IS X, 18 s p A u tos hift, 12 fron t46 rea r. 2006 W e s te rn S ta r 4900 d a y c a b , 450 HP M erced es , 10 s p A u tos hift3 p ed a l, 12/ 40, 22.5” a lloy w heels , m id -ris e bu n k , 1.1M k m , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $33,000 2-2006 IH 9400I, 435 HP IS X Cu m m in s , 13 s p , 12/ 40, 4:11 g ea rs , 22.5” a lloy w heels , 200” W B, 51” m id -ris e bu n k , 1.3 k m , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $25,000 d lr# 0122. P h. 204-6 85-2222, M a c G re g or M B. To vie w p ic tu re s of ou r in ve n tory vis it w w w .tita n tru c k s a le s .c om

2005 PETERBILT 378, Cat C15, 475 HP, 13 spd, 166” cab to axle w/o sleeper, for 21’ box, alum wheels, original owner, prairies truck, $37,000. 403-875-5557 Calgary, AB. 2006 IHC 7600, C12 Cat, 10 spd. auto, 403-977-1624 available as C&C for $34,500 or w/20’ box 2005 CHEV 2500HD, ext. cab, A/T/C, 2 for $54,500, new body style, low miles. Andres specializes in the sales, WD, white, welding deck w/toolboxes, 6L rawlyn@automatictruck.com K&L Equipment, 306-795-7779, Regina/ PETERBILT TANDEM AXLE grain/silage service and rental of agricultural gas, auto, 171,000 kms, $8500 OBO. Ituna, SK. DL #910885. truck, Cat 3406B, 425 HP, 18 spd., 46,000 and commercial trailers. 306-270-5951, Saskatoon, SK. rears, double diff. locks, air ride susp., al07 FREIGHTLINERs and 06 IHC 9200s Call for a quote um. wheels, 19’ ABC box, hyd. silage end 2006 FORD F350 AWD, white, 224,555 w/new CIM boxes and hoists, AutoShifts W e will m a tc h c om petitor gate, plumbed for pup, 712,796 kms, first kms, STK# SK-U01140A, $18,995. Call and UltraShifts, new SK. safties. Online at: $49,900. Bob 780-679-7680, Ferintosh, AB pric ing spec for spec 1 - 8 6 6 - 9 8 0 - 0 2 6 0 . D L # 9 1 4 0 7 7 o r 78truxsales.com 306-270-6399, Saskatoon www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca Lethbridge, AB Nisku, AB REMOTE CONTROL ENDGATE AND 1968 DODGE 2 ton w/14’ steel B&H, good 1-888-834-8592 1-888-955-3636 hoist systems can save you time, energy rear 900x20 tires, $2000. 306-395-2668, and keep you safe this seeding season. Visit our website at: 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. Give Brehon Agrisystems a call at www.andrestrailer.com 1976 FORD F700 grain truck steel B&H 1974 FORD F-500 grain truck with 28,054 3 0 6 - 9 3 3 - 2 6 5 5 o r v i s i t u s o n l i n e at U N I V I S I O N E Q U I P M E N T T R A I L E R c/w drill fill, $10,000. 306-266-4211, miles consigned by Greg Cameron to the www.brehonag.com Saskatoon, SK. w/hyd. beaver tail, winch, all new: tires, Wood Mountain, SK. Alvin Miller Farm Equip. Auction, Saturday, breaks and break drums, farm plated, does August 17, 2013. Stoughton, Sask. area. 2006 INTERNATIONAL 9400i grain truck TRUCKS WITH ALLISON TRANS: 2003 n e e d s o m e r e p a i r, $ 1 5 , 5 0 0 O B O , 1980 FORD 1/2 ton, 80,000 kms, senior Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for w/400 HP Cummins and 12 spd. auto. FL70, SA, will take 16’/18’ box, 206,000 owner, asking $1200; 1988 and 1989 sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or trans., 20x64”, Cancade Monobody grain miles, $16,900; 2003 FL70 w/tag axle, will 306-747-2514, Shellbrook, SK. Crown Victoria cars for parts. Call Irene 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 box and Michel’s roll tarp. 24.5 alum. whls take 20’ box, 186,000 miles, $21,900; TOPGUN TRAILER SALES “For those who 780-648-2228, Whitecourt, AB. and tires w/3.90 rear ratio. $64,500. 2003 FL70, SA, short WB, daycab, auto demand the best.” PRECISION AND 1975 F600 3 ton grain truck, roll away 306-887-2094, DL #327784, Kinistino, SK. hwy. tractor, 200,000 miles, $14,900, AGASSIZ TRAILERS (flatdecks, end 1986 FORD RANGER dsl., recent overhaul, tarp, good condition, $3500. Phone: www.davidstrucks.com 2001 IHC 4900, C&C, tandem, low miles, dumps, enclosed cargo). 1-855-255-0199, some rust, daily driver, $4995 OBO. Quit 306-287-4083, Spalding, SK. $24,900. K&L Equipment, Regina, SK, farming. 780-998-3184, Fort Sask., AB. Moose Jaw, SK. www.topguntrailersales.ca 306-795-7779, 306-537-2027. DL 910885. 1978 KENWORTH W900, daycab, 350 1979 FORD 9000, Detroit dsl. w/10 spd. Email: ladimer@sasktel.net 1995 FORD F250, 7.3 powerstroke dsl., Allison trans, stored inside, telescopic lift, Cummins, 13 spd., nice running good de4x4, auto, gray/white, 183,000 kms, vg, box redone 2 years ago, awesome truck, p e n d a b l e f a r m t r u c k , g o o d r u b b e r, $8000. 250-593-4606, Lone Butte, BC. $17,000. 306-960-1478, Birch Hills, SK. $14,000 OBO. 1975 Kenworth K100, cabover, 350 Cummins, 10 spd., runs 1980 GMC C70 diesel, 16’ B&H, elec. roll 1984 MACK MODEL R, 14’ gravel box, TA, good, $7000 OBO. 1984 Esler B-train grain tarp. Phone 306-698-2102, Wolseley, SK. many new parts, $6500. 306-631-2070, trailer, $9500 OBO. Chris 306-628-7840, 306-692-6307, Moose Jaw, SK. 2 0 0 1 D O D G E 3 5 0 0 , 4 x 4 , C u m m i n s , 1981 CHEV TANDEM, 427, 5&4 trans, CanEatonia, SK. 320,000 kms., $6000. Contact Duff at cade B&H, roll tarp, 43,000 kms, $24,000 1990 FORD AEROMAX, 14’ box, tarp, 1988 MACK R688 tandem w/15’ gravel OBO. 306-272-3928, Foam Lake, SK. 403-774-2839, Calgary, AB. pintle hitch, safetied; 1984 Ford LT9000, box, 350 CID, 13 spd. Fuller trans., new 2007 CHEV 2500 ext. cab, 4x4, DuraMax 1981 GMC C70 tandem, 20’ box, 45,000 2007 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA grain 3406 Cat, 13 spd. trans., 16’ Knight box, rubber, exc. cond., fresh safety, $35,000 kms, vg, $21,000 OBO. Call 306-563-8482, truck with 450 HP Mercedes and 10 spd. tarp, high lift tailgate, pintle hitch, safe- OBO. 306-594-7981 or 306-594-2628 after diesel auto, longbox, slide-out cargo bed, 2010 MIDLAND CLAM gravel trailer, 3 axautomated trans., 20’x65” CIM Ultra II tied. Other gravel trucks available soon in- 8 PM, Norquay, SK. le, A/R, new MB safety, flip back tarp, vg w/8’ toolbox, Honda air compressor, 306-782-2586, Maple Creek, SK. grain box w/Michel’s roll tarp, 22.5 alum. cluding Kenworth and Western Star. cond., 11.4x22.5 tires on alum. rims, can 232,000 kms, exc. cond., $16,900. Call 1982 IHC S1900 tandem, 466 diesel, auto, 1996 FREIGHTLINER FL120, 18 spd., deliver. Call anytime, $45,000. Cypress K&L Equipment, 306-795-7779, Regina/ 18’x63” sides, steel BH&T, $22,000 OBO. wheels and tires with a 3.70 rear ratio. 306-338-2674, Kuroki, SK. Equipped w/front air ride axle, $67,500. $11,000. 306-821-6044, Lloydminster, SK. Ituna, SK. DL #910885. River, MB. 204-743-2324. 780-608-9024, Tofield, AB. 306-887-2094, DL #327784, Kinistino, SK. 2001 CHEV C8500 tandem gravel truck, Cat diesel, Allison auto, 129,000 miles, 2003 MACK w/small bunk, 475 HP, 18 spd. www.davidstrucks.com $24,900. K&L Equipment, Regina, SK, trans., 46 rears, 1.2M kms, exc. cond., 2007 FREIGHTLINER, 20’ box, rear cont, 306-795-7779, 306-537-2027 or email: $18,900 OBO. K&L Equipment, Ituna, Visit us at Canada’s Outdoor Farm Show in the AG-BIZ PAVILLION alum. wheels, Mercedes, 450 HP, power ladimer@sasktel.net DL #910885. SK., Ladimer, 306-795-7779. DL #910885. AutoShift w/clutch, green, safetied, real good, $67,500; 2007 Freightliner, new 20’ box, rear cont. and alum. wheels, Mercedes, 450 HP, AutoShift w/clutch, exc. cond, $67,500; 2005 IH 9400 w/Cat eng, 425 HP, AutoShift w/clutch, 20’ box, rear cont.. alum. wheels, safetied, real nice, $57,500; 2005 IH 9400 w/Cummins eng. 425 HP, AutoShift, no clutch, 20’ box, rear cont., alum. wheels, safetied, $57,500; 1996 IH 9200 w/Cummins eng. 350 HP, 10 spd. std., 20’ box, rear cont., alum. Many folks think you can only lease new equipment, wheels, safetied, real good, $41,500. Coming soon: 2006 Mack w/460 HP but fact is, National Leasing will consider leasing Mack engine, AutoShift, no clutch, 20’ box, agriculture equipment that is up to 15 years in age. alum. wheels, real nice, safetied, $63,500. Trades accepted, all trucks have Jake That’s right, we even lease USED equipment. brakes, A/T/C and diff. locks. 306-276-7518 cell, or 306-767-2616 res., Ask us how it’s possible! Arborfield SK. DL #906768 2007 IH 9200 and 2004 IH 8600, Eaton Limited spots available for grain box installs for 2013 UltraShift, Cat or Cummins, new 20’ BH&T; Harvest delivery. Steel or Aluminum versions available. 1976 GMC 6500, 366, 5&2, 16’ wood box. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL 905231. www.rbisk.ca Call now 1-800-363-2639 2007 INT. 9200 tandem, 10 spd., AutoShift trans, new 20’x66” side box and tarp, Nordic hoist, 22.5 rubber, 498,000 kms, $68,000. Call 780-679-4757, Bawlf, AB. 2004 DODGE 2500, 5.9 dsl., auto, A/T/C, PW, PL, P seats, quadcab, 2 WD, longbox, trailer pkg., 222,000 kms, white, $12,500. 306-270-5951, Saskatoon, SK.

Please call about Grain Trucks arriving soon!

www.automatictruck.com

Congratulations You Learned Something New About Leasing

Pre-Harvest SPECIAL

Stiff Pole Pup

© 2012 National Leasing Group Inc. All rights reserved. National Leasing, a member of

AUTOMATIC 2005 Freightliner Columbia, new 20’ B&H, roll tarp, $55,000; 2010 Int., B&H, $70,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. AUTOSHIFT TRUCKS AVAILABLE: Boxed tandems and tractor units. Contact David 306-887-2094, 306-864-7055, Kinistino, SK. DL #327784. www.davidstrucks.com IF YOU SPRAYED LIBERTY and received crop damage call Back-Track Investigations for assistance 1-866-882-4779.

Available in tandem or tridem versions. With rear cross augers it is simple and stress free — “no backing up” to haul up to 1,150 bushels of wheat legally with a truck and pup.

"RANDON -" s #ANADA www.cancade.com


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

CLASSIFIED ADS 43

2007 T300 KENWORTH, C7 Cat, 275 HP, w/exhaust brake, 131,000 orig. kms, 9 spd. trans, 12,000 fronts, 40,000 rears, on spring susp., 11R22.5 tires, 252” WB, $37,500. Delivery available. 403-638-3934, Sundre, AB.

2011 V o lvo Da y ca b , D13, 475 h.p ., 13 s p d , 40 rea rs , F u ll lo ckers , 296,000 km 2010 V o lvo 78 0, 77” Co n d o s leep er, Cu m m in s IS X 400 h.p . tha tca n b e u p gra d ed . E xten d ed w a rra n ties o n en gin e, in jecto rs a n d tu rb o . Un d er 690,000 K M . 2009 6 70, 61” d o u b le b u n k, D13, 485 h.p ., I-S HIF T a u to m a ted tra n s m is s io n , 12 & 40’s , Ab o ve a vera ge co n d itio n , 931,000 K M . 2009 GM C 6 500, 7.8l 215 h.p ., Du ra m a x, Allis o n 6 s p d , Au to m a tic, 20’ d eck, Air/T ilt/Cru is e, PW R W in d o w s / L o cks , On ly 1000 o rigin a l K ilo m eters 2009 V o lvo Da y Ca b , D13 435 h.p ., 13 s p d ., 12 & 40’s , New tires , 499,490 K M . 2008 M a ck CX U6 13, M P8 480 h.p ., 18 s p d ., 12,000 fro n t, 40,000 60’ M id ro o fs leep er, 804,000 K M ’s . 2006 V o lvo 6 70, D12 465 h.p ., 61” Ra is ed ro o fs leep er, 12 s p d ., M erito r, 12 & 40’s . 2001 GM C C6 500 235 h.p ., ga s en gin e No E m is s io n s ,5 s p d , 16’ va n b o d y, On ly 13,000 o rigin a l K M ’s , As kin g . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $28 ,000

1995 INT. 8100 Cummins M11, 10 spd. with 17 bale Cancade self load and unload, $45,000. 780-618-7299, Grimshaw, AB. 1987 INT. S2500 w/10 bale 2008 Cancade self-load/unload bale deck, 6 cyl. Detroit dsl., air brakes, air susp., air over hydraulic 2008 PETERBILT 335, PX8 engine, 8 controls, 10 spd. trans. Asking $49,000. spd. trans., 180,000 miles, air brakes, air 780-975-3445, Stony Plain, AB. ride, deck. Also wired for elec. brakes, very good cond., $54,000 OBO. 306-421-1444, Estevan, SK. dcwanner@sasktel.net 2009 AND 2008 Int. 9400 tractor units, 18 spds, 46 rear lockers, 525 and 550 ISX Cummins, pumps for live floor trailers, $50,000 and $48,000. Call 780-679-4757, Bawlf, AB. 2009 PETERBILT 367 setback axle daycab tractor, 475 HP Cat, 668,000 kms, 12,000 hrs, 1850 torque, RTLO18918B trans, Super 40 rears, 4-way locks, 373 ratio, auto greaser, new 5th wheel, new AB. safety, clean Western truck, $61,000. Delivery available. Email pics available. Call Jeff 403-638-3934, Sundre, AB.

1997 F800, 8.3L Cummins, 5 spd., auto, air ride, 24’ deck, only 99,000 kms., X-Gov., vg cond., $19,900. Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK.

2010 PETERBILT 388, 63” bunk, factory Cummins ISX 550 HP, 18 spd., 2050 torque, 244 wheel base, 46 rear air trac suspension, 4-way lockup, 24.5 tires, new steering tires, rear tires at 70%, steering air ride suspension, Wabasto heaters, power inverter, new turbo, new clutch, platinum interior, engine DPF deleted, 920,000 kms, asking $78,500. Prince Albert, SK. 306-961-0366.

2002 WESTERN STAR, C15 Cat, 9 spd., McKee 600 spreader. Truck is solid and spreader is in good shape, $69,000. 403-304-4624, Red Deer, AB.

2006 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA, condo sleeper, Series 60 515 HP, Meritor AutoShift, 12/40, very nice shape, safetied, $27,500. 306-338-2674, Kuroki, SK.

2006 PETERBILT 379, long nose, 265” WB, 336 ratio, 70” bunk, 2-way lockup, 12,000 fronts, 40,000 rears, 13 spd., 475 Cat eng., 834,061 miles, $52,000. 204-794-4879, 204-981-3636, 204-864-2391, Cartier, MB.

1998 to 2008 Ken w orths , Peterbilts , In tern a tion a l a n d Freig hlin ers - Da y ca bs , s leep er u n its , va n tru ck s , va c u n its , g ra in boxes a n d g ra in tra ilers . A v ailable and in s tock

Ca ll Kels ey @ 306- 338 - 2 993 or 306- 338 - 72 91 Dea lers fo rCa n Am Equ ipm en t S o lu tio n s, W ilso n Ca stelto n , S to u ghto n a n d M u v- Alltra ilers.

Website: www.prairie-west.com Dealer Lic. #910736

2010 PALFINGER 15500 Knuckleboom Picker on 1995 GMC Topkick w/17’ deck, live roll, flip over 5th wheel and hitch. Picker has 300 hrs, inspected yearly. Truck has 653,000 kms, CVIP’d yearly, c/w with all chains, boomers, slings and man bas- 1/2” THICK BELTING for sale in 36” to 54” ket. Email: truddt1@xplornet.com or widths. Phone 306-768-8555, Carrot River, SK. 780-712-9376, Edson, AB. 2004 IH 4400 deck truck, dsl., positive air shut-off, air brakes, 5 spd. manual, AC, 25’ steel deck w/removable stake sides, powerlift end gate. New SK safety. Great cond., $26,000. 306-463-4427, Kindersley, SK.

2012 W900 L Kenworth truck, ISX Cummins 600 HP, only 146,000 kms, 18 spd., 46000 rears, 3.91 ratio, new 11R24.5 Bridgestone tires. Full 4-way lockers. Loaded heavy spec truck, oilfield ready. Come 1990 IHC, 500 HP Cummins, good running with a T&E oil pump, Berkley water pump, shape, certifiable, lots of work done, ask- 4” pump, $125,000. Call anytime for more ing $19,000; 2009 tandem axle Midland info. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. trailer, good shape, asking $40,000. 1995 Peterbilt 500 HP Cummins, good running shape, lots of work done, asking $26,000; FORD F350 AMBULANCE, very low miles, 2009 Cancade trailer, triple axle, good runfully equipped. Cash and charity receipt. ning shape, asking $45,000. All certifiable. 306-283-4747, 306-220-0429 Langham SK Call 306-537-5008, Pilot Butte, SK. 2012 GARDNER DENVER complete kit 2 0 0 0 M A C K TA DAY C A B , 4 5 0 H P, T5CDL9 blower, SS press/vac inlet, w/2003 TA Ranco/Anvil, 36’ end dump mounting kit, Muncie 828 PTO, 2 pce 1310 trailer, w/power tarp, good cond., $42,000 driveshaft, 4” aluminized silencer, in-cab OBO. 2000 FORD F-800, low mileage, console. Came off 2013 truck, 10 hrs. For w/drill piling rig, ready to go, $28,000. use to unload pneumatic/dry bulk trailers. 2003 STERLING TA dump truck, safetied, Call 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. excellent shape, $36,000. 1995 DECAP ATTN FARMERS/ GRAVEL HAULERS: tri-axle belly dump gravel trailer, recently 2006 Freightliner FLD120 Classic, 550 Cat safetied, $20,000. Financing available. Twin Turbo, dual exhaust, twin air breathers, 18 spd, 12/40, 3.58 gears, 36” bunk, 306-291-4043, Saskatoon, SK. 144” cab to mid axle, double full lockers, 10 brand new 22.5 tires not recaps, new SK. safety, odometer reads 067,290 kms, $44,900. Call 306-242-2508 or for financing call Gord at Horizon 306-934-4445, Saskatoon, SK.

2005 T800 KENWORTH, 475 ISX, 18 spd., 46 rears, lockers, wet kit, loaded, Certified, $43,900. Call 306-752-4909, Melfort, SK.

S UM M ER S PECIALS O N ALL US ED IN V EN TO R Y

Fin a n cin g a va ila b le

Regin a , S K 1-8 00-6 6 7-046 6 S a s k a to o n , S K 1-8 8 8 -242-79 8 8

2005 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA, daycab, 460 Detroit, 10 spd, premium cond., low miles, only $38,500; 2000 Freightliner FL80, single axle, daycab, 300 HP Cat, 9 spd., very good unit, only $19,500. Call for details, 306-946-8522, Saskatoon, SK. 2005 PETERBILT 379, C15 Cat, 18 spd. 12/40’s. 204-870-2050, Portage la Prairie, MB.

Wadena, Sask. 306-338-2993/cell: 338-7291

BURTON CONCRETE: PROVINCE-WIDE mobile concrete trucks. We set up on site, pour all sizes of shops or bin pads w/one continuous pour. Eliminates delivery charges and wait times. Phone Waylyn 306-441-4006, Blaine Lake, SK.

30’x16’/18’ BIFOLD DOOR for shop, incl. drive, $4500. Charles 306-744-2403, Saltcoats, SK or email charles@penntruss.com TWO OVERHEAD SHOP DOORS each 12’Wx14’H, metal clad, c/w tracks; Also for sale chain and hoist for a 12’ wide overhead door. 306-384-4171, Clavet, SK.

ROUGH LUMBER: 2x6, 2x8, 2x10, 1” boards, windbreak slabs, 4x4, 6x6, 8x8, 10x10, all in stock. Custom sizes on order. Log siding, cove siding, lap siding, shiplap, 1” and 2” tongue and groove. V&R Sawing, 306-232-5488, Rosthern, SK.

1990 IHC, 13 spd., all new rubber, 17 bale, Golden View deck, certified to Nov. 2013, $49,900 OBO. Phone 780-727-4257, 780-621-1148, Evansburg, AB.

DIMENSIONAL HARDWOOD lumber, 1/4 cut Oak, Elm, Black Walnut, Hickory, 1/4 cut Cherry. Inventory at 511-3rd Street, Davidson, SK. Call 403-318-7589 (AB cell).

SPECIALTY TRUCKS AVAILABLE. Fire/ emergency trucks, garbage trucks, bucket trucks, deck and dump trucks. See us at our new location on Cory Rd., Saskatoon, SK., Summer of 2013. 306-668-2020. DL #90871. 1996 INTERNATIONAL 4700, 4x2, 22’ deck, $18,000 OBO. Call Jim at Woodland 306-332-6221, Fort Qu’Appelle, SK.

45 USED, very good, hip roof truss rafters, 38’ wide. Used, very good, bone white metal roof sheets, 3’ wide 29’ long and 3’ wide 22’ long. Yellow metal wall sheets, 3’ wide 8’ long. Joseph Wipf 306-882-3112 ext. 202 eves., Rosetown, SK.

SELLING: TWO 2012 Volvo’s, one 2013 Volvo. Great condition, c/w extended warranty, 500 PHP, 13 spd., 1750 torque. Great grain haulers! $87,000 each OBO. 2002 BUICK RENDEZVOUS CX, black, 204-822-9940, Morden, MB. A/T/C, PW, PL, all new tires, 177,500 kms, SLEEPERS and daycabs. New and used. vg cond., $5000 OBO. 306-892-4313, Huge inventory across Western Canada at 306-441-2691, Meota, SK. www.Maximinc.Com or call Maxim Truck & Trailer, 1-888-986-2946. TWO 2006 T800 KW, ISX Cummins and Cat, bunk and daycab, 46 diff., 18 spd., lockers; 2005 W900 KW, daycab, Cat, 18 spd., 46 diff, Rubar bumper; 2004 and 2003 Pete 379, Cat, 18 spd., 46 diff., lockers, 2 year warranty, rebuilt trans. and diff; 2007 and 2005 IHC 9900i’s, 18 spd., 46 diff, lockers; 2003 Freightliner Classic, Cat, 2005 FORD EXCURSION, gas, 5.4, mint 18 spd., new rubber; 2003 KW W-900L, condition, only 141,000 miles, 4x4, tow Cat, recent work orders; 2- 2001 Western pkg, loaded, new MB safety, $15,500. Can Stars 4964, N14 Cummins and Cat, 13 spd; deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB. 1998 IH 9200, Cat, 15 spd., $10,500; 1996 Volvo 425, 18 spd., 3-way locks, new diff., $12,000; 1989 T600 KW, 425 Cat, 18 spd. 306-356-4550, Dodsland, SK. DL #905231 www.rbisk.ca

2005 FORD F550, 4x4, powerstroke, 5 spd. auto, 177,000 kms, hyd. hoist and dump box/flatdeck, $15,500. Stockholm, SK. 306-793-2190, 306-745-7274. 2007 FREIGHTLINER FLD120SD, 515 2005 DURAMAX GMC 1 ton Dually, C&C, Detroit, 18 spd., S40 rears, 4-way locks, 4X4 auto. 263,000 kms. $9500 OBO. 36” flat top sleeper, $33,000. 2007 306-536-9092, Regina, SK. Freightliner Columbia, 48” sleeper, 515 Detroit, 18 spd., S40 rears, 4-way locks, SPECIALIZED TRUCKS and Equipment. $32,500. 2008 Freightliner FLD120SD, Government Surplus units, sweeper, water 515 Detroit, 18 spd., S40 rears, 4-way truck, cement mixer, fire trucks, service locks, 42” flat top sleeper, $42,500. trucks, flusher truck, picker truck, brush 306-547-7680, 306-325-2021, Lintlaw, SK. chippers and digger trucks. 306-668-2020, Saskatoon, SK www.northtownmotors.com DL #304675. DL #908171. 2007 IHC 9900 tractor, 500 Cummins, 18 spd., 46 rears, 4-way locks, 51” sleeper, 2008 FORD F550, C&C, 4X4, 11’ frame new AB. safety, clean Western truck, rails, A/T/C, PL, PW, PTO wet kit, 19.5 $47,000. Delivery available. Email pics rubber, 197,000 kms. $18,500 OBO. 306-536-9092, Regina, SK. available. Jeff 403-638-3934, Sundre, AB.

CONCRETE FOUNDATIONS: We pour new and repair existing fdns. Also rent concrete forms. 306-249-1100, Saskatoon, SK.

FLOWER, CAFE, BUS STOP, busy downtown location, turnkey operation, incl. building, $130,000. Call for more info 1-888-657-2272, Preeceville, SK. TURNKEY BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY! New state of the art, 8-bay carwash for sale in thriving Saskatchewan community. Located on 3 acres with great location on highway. Great customer base! Selling due to health concerns. Serious inquiries only please! Call 306-232-4767. VERY BUSY EMBROIDERING shop. Last year sales over $500,000. All equipment, customers and suppliers included. For more info. call 780-862-8575, Tofield, AB. A METAL FABRICATING/Manufacturing business in Potash Country, Sask. Customers are mines, construction companies, the agricultural industry. Have on site experience and capabilities. Over a million gross this year, capacity to triple that. Labour force will stay on to provide a fully operating unit. Price $1.1M. Will finance up to 30% and assist in additional financing. Serious inquiries only. Will provide more details upon your disclosure of financial capability. Box 5580, c/o The Western Producer, Saskatoon, SK, S7K 2C4.

CONTINUOUS METAL ROOFING, no exposed screws to leak or metal overlaps. Ideal for lower slope roofs, rinks, churches, pig barns, commercial, arch rib building and residential roofing; also available in Snap Lock. 306-435-8008, Wapella, SK. RE-ROOFING AND SIDING Service. We do all types of buildings. Fully insured. Will DEBTS, BILLS AND charge accounts too travel. Ph 306-361-5112, Saskatoon, SK. high? Need to resolve prior to spring? Call us to develop a professional mediation plan, resolution plan or restructuring plan. Call toll free 1-888-577-2020. PRE-ENGINEERED METAL BUILDING PKG, 40x60x14’, includes doors, windows, eaves, downs. 306-948-2140, Biggar, SK. 1-1/2 STOREY WOOD structure, 24x40’, gutted, on skids, ready to move, $5,000. WANTED: FARMER OWNED grain terminal Located in north east corner within City of shares. Call 647-300-4063, Toronto, ON. Regina, SK. Call 306-949-9309. email: jimmy192@rogers.com

PRIVE BUILDING MOVERS Ltd.! Bonded, licensed for SK. and AB. Fully insured. Moving all types and sizes of buildings. Call Andy 306-625-3827, Ponteix, SK. www.privebuildingmovers.com

WWW.EHAIL.CA Crop Hail Insurance Compare lowest prices & all options. Call 888-539-2485 ehail@ehail.ca WWW.EHAIL.CA

BOOMING BUSINESS in Assiniboia, SK. 3000 sq. ft. car/truck wash with water vending. Completely upgraded, renovated. Low maintenance. Reduced $599,900 OBO. Call 306-640-8569.

NEUMILLER HARVESTING has seven 8120/7230 Case combines and is looking for a yearly stop in Canada. Contact Roger 701-653-5433, Bowdon, ND. 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. WANTED SOMEONE TO custom combine 900 acres canola. Crop is located in the Carlyle, SK. area. Approx. time of harvest is mid Sept. Call Steven at 306-448-4923 or 306-577-8605, Manor, SK.

KSW CUSTOM CHOPPING, JD SP chopper, live bottom trucks, 21 yrs. experience, reasonable rates. For all your alfalfa cereal and corn silage needs call Kevin 306-947-2812, 306-221-9807, Hepburn SK BOOKING ALFALFA, BARLEY and corn acres for 2013. Call for rates and details. CORRAL CLEANING BUSINESS. Com- 306-381-7689, Hague, SK. plete business with vertical spreaders, tractors, bobcat. Selling due to health. No tire kickers, have financing in place. Call 306-453-2212, Carlyle, SK. JDP CUSTOM SPRAYING servicing LaniT I M H A M M O N D R E A LT Y. Lucrative gan, Watrous, and surrounding areas. Give Commercial Landscaping and Tree Nursery us a call to book your fields today! Doug at business located NE of Prince Albert, SK. 306-365-2508, 306-365-8115 or Jarett at This very well established 3rd generation 306-946-2786, 306-291-1330, Lanigan, SK business presents an incredible business PESTICIDE/INSECTICIDE APPLICATION: opportunity with annual sales up to CIH 3330, 120’ high clearance, sectional $1,000,000 with a 70% gross profit mar- control, AIM, GPS, dividers, 2 sets tires, ligin. Includes: Business contracts and con- censed/insured, competitive rates. Call tacts, 51.48 acres with greenhouses, build- Mark at: 306-821-2566, Watson, SK. ings, improvements, irrigation equipment, mechanical equipment, inventory and growing supplies. Seller is willing to train. Asking $2,500,000. MLS #426273. Con- SELF-LOADING/UNLOADING round bale tact Tim Hammond, 306-948-9168, truck. Max. capacity 34 bales. Custom Tim.Hammond@sasktel.net Biggar, SK. hauling anywhere in AB. or SK. Phone www.TimHammond.ca Bernd, Bales on Wheels, Tofield, AB., FOR LEASE: Restaurant $2000/mth; Bev- 403-795-7997 or 780-922-4743. erage room $1500/mth. Utilities included RELIANT. EQUIPMENT HAULING and in both. Sundre Motor Inn, 403-638-4440, Towing. Double drop, lowbeds, bin/tank Sundre, AB. mover. Canada and USA. 306-224-2088, HUGE OPPORTUNITY! Processing and Windthorst, SK. packaging business for the health food industry. Good customer base and market share. All machinery for processing as well as liquid and dry packaging lines. Markets across Canada, also opportunities in USA and Japan. For huge expansion potential and cash flows with excellent profits. Fax: 403-362-7510, jurval@eidnet.org O3 EQUIPMENT HAULING Ltd. ProfessionDOG BOARDING KENNEL business and al transportation of equipment in Western acreage w/4 bdrm home and horse barn in Canada and NW USA. Call 403-963-2476, Prince George, BC. Excellent income, own- Lacombe, AB. www.o3hauling.com ers retiring. Call 250-964-1456. CUSTOM BALE HAULING, self-loading CHOCOLATE MAKING BUSINESS. Learn and unloading 17 bale truck. Radisson, SK. to work with Belgian chocolate. 25 years 306-827-2269 or 306-827-7835. experience in both retail and wholesale. Presently farm based. Potential for growth. C U S T O M B A L E H A U L I N G . P h o n e Training, recipes, equipment incl. Owner 306-567-7199, Kenaston, SK. retiring. Asking $35,000. 306-463-1188, gladonthego@gmail.com Kindersley, SK. GREAT INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY in a new auto dealership in the very prosperous Parkland region of north central Sask. For complete info call 306-621-4698.

NEED A LOAN? Own farmland? Bank says no? If yes to above three, call 1-866-405-1228, Calgary, AB. FARM/CORPORATE PROJECTS. Call A.L. Management Group for all your borrowing and lease requirements. 306-790-2020, Regina, SK.

2007 SUBARU Outback 2.5i Touring pkg., AWD, silver, auto, 117,254 kms , Stk# SKS2584A, $19,995. Call 1-866-980-0260 or www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca DL #914077. 2013 SUBARU XV Crosstek Touring, AWD, CVT, white, 6,084 kms, Stk# SK-2851A. Call 1-866-980-0260. DL #914077 or www.subaruofsaskatoon.ca

89 PETE 378 semi tractor, 460 Detroit, 10 spd., daycab, no rust, only $19,500; 2004 Freightliner M2, tandem, Allison auto, excellent cab and chassis or box pkg., only $39,500; 2002 IH 4300, w/24’ flatdeck, 6 spd., air cond., low mile, California 2007 PETERBILT 378, 500 HP, C15 Cat, 350 MACK POWER, 10 spd. c/w low/low, truck, only $24,500; 1999 GMC Topkick, 63” bunk, 12,000 fronts, 46,000 rears. 8 ton picker works well, 385x22.5 fronts, w/20’ flatdeck, gas, automatic, low miles, t h r e e t o c h o o s e f r o m . $ 6 0 , 0 0 0 / e a . truck needs slight repairs, $7950 OBO. $19,500. Call for details, 306-946-8522, 403-852-4452, Calgary, AB. 403-704-3509, Ponoka, AB. Saskatoon, SK.

ATTENTION COLLECTORS: Many Bradford Exchange and Franklin Mint plates mostly SMALL MANUFACTURING SHOP and resi- horses; Many thimbles and horse ornadence. 40 yrs of operation with established ments for sale. 780-753-2843, Provost, AB product line. Owner retiring. Turnkey operation. 306-445-5562, Delmas, SK.

FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS We also specialize in: Crop insurance appeals; Chemical drift; Residual herbicide; Custom operator issues; Equipment malfunction. Qualified Agrologist on staff. Call Back-Track Investigations for assistance regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779.

JETCO ENT. INC. Experienced equipment hauling. Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. Call 780-888-1122, Lougheed, AB. CUSTOM BALE HAULING have 2 trucks and t r a i l e r s , 3 4 b a l e s p e r t r a i l e r. C a l l 306-567-7100, Imperial, SK.

FENCE LINE, Brush Mulching and Clearing. Also do metal roofing. Call 306-232-4244, Rosthern, SK. TALBOT HOT BIN SEALING, we seal bins on wood and concrete floors. Serving SK, AB and MB. 306-631-0203, Moose Jaw, SK. talbotbinsealing@gmail.com FROESE CUSTOM SWATHING, M155 MacDon swathers w/30’ header attach. and GPS. Will swath grain and canola in AB and SK. 403-952-4422, Rolling Hills, AB. BLASTING OF DAMS, culverts, water ways, rocks and crushing of concrete. Call 306-961-1170, Domremy, SK. MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, stumps, caraganas, etc. 12 years of enviro friendly mulching. Call today! 306-933-2950. Visit: www.maverickconstruction.ca REGULATION DUGOUTS: 120x60x14’ $1900; 160x60x14’ $2700; 180x60x14’ $3100; 200x60x14’ $3500. Saskatoon, SK, Phone: 306-222-8054. PASTURE PIPELINE SYSTEMS. We can do complete installation of your shallow buried pipeline and water trough systems. Call Howard Ganske, Cartwright, MB, 204-529-2464, hlganske@xplornet.com BRUSH MULCHING. The fast, effective way to clear land. Four season service, competitive rates, multiple units. Borysiuk Contracting, 306-960-3804, Prince Albert, SK. www.borysiukcontracting.ca CUSTOM SWATHING. MAGILL FARM & FIELD SERVICES is now booking swathing acres for the 2013 cropping season. Late model MacDon swathers. For all your swathing needs: magillhay@yahoo.ca or call Ivor at 403-894-5400, Lethbridge, AB. NEUFELD ENT. CORRAL CLEANING, payloader, Bobcat with rubber tracks and vertical beater spreaders. Phone 306-220-5013, 306-467-5013, Hague, SK.


44 CLASSIFIED ADS

D & M CUSTOM SW ATHING LTD. W e cu t a ll t yp es of cr op s, u sin g on ly M a cD on Equ ip m en t t he b est in t he In d u st r y.

Sw a th sizesa va ila ble a re 30 Ft. a nd 60 Ft,w e a lso cu tha y w ith a 18 Ft.ha y a u gerhea der.W e’re w illing to drive long dista ncesdepending on the a m ou ntofa cresbooked. Forpricing a nd booking you r H a y orAny O therC ropsplea se ca ll D a vid @ 1 - 30 6 - 8 31 - 8 449

or em a ilu s cr essm a n _ 70 @ hot m a il.com WILL CLEAN UP scrap iron from farm, industrial, oilfield, and commercial sites. 306-463-1713 leave msg, Kindersley, SK.

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

EMPIRE W &M L ELDING

ACHINING TD

Attention Here is a packer you need to do the job “RIGHT”. www.ewam.ca sales@ewam.ca Toll Free 1-888-446-3444 North Battleford, SK.

CUSTOM SEEDING/ BALING/ SWATHING. FIRESTONE INDUSTRIAL THREAD R-4 Also parting 567 baler; Some hay for sale. tires, 125/80-18 12P TLS, $380. OK Tire, Call Alan: 306-463-8423, Marengo, SK. Idylwyld Dr N, Saskatoon, SK. Phone 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com 4T CONTRACTORS INC. Custom fencing, mulching, corral cleaning and bobcat services. Metal siding and roofs. Will do any kind of work. 306-329-4485 306-222-8197 Asquith SK. 4tcontractorsinc@sasktel.net

2004 CAT 312CL excavator, good cond., $67,000. 2005 CAT 305C excavator, premium, $38,000. 2000 CAT M318 wheel excavator, $59,000. 2006 CAT 287B track loader, very good, $32,000. 2000 C AT C S 5 3 6 C packer, 84” pad foot, $40,000. Offers. Financing available. 306-291-4043, Saskatoon, SK. MARK 2 POWERSCREEN, 4x6, 3 deck, JD 4.5L, 80 HP dsl. power plant, new hyd. motors, new feed belt, multiple screens, runs excellent, $32,000. 250-265-3758, Nakusp, BC area. CAT HYD. PULL SCRAPERS: 463, 435, 80, 70, and 60, all very good cond., new conversion. Also new and used scraper tires. Can deliver. 204-793-0098, Stony Mountain, MB. TRACK CHAINS: AC, HD5, 6, 16A, B, D; Cat D7, 17A; Int. TD9, 15. Johnson Salvage, 306-595-2262, Pelly, SK. WRT GRAVEL SCREENER 38’x26” belt screener, head- 3’x6’. Hopper 9’x7’ dsl. drive- belt roller 95%. New price $32,000. 306-746-2248, 306-746-7504 Raymore SK 2005 ASV RC100, 100 HP, 1478 hrs., 2 spd., cab w/AC, heater, hyd. Q/A, high flow and low flow aux. hyds., GP bucket w/BOE. UC is excellent, ready to work, $35,900. Call Jordan 403-627-9300 anytime, Pincher Creek, AB. EXCAVATOR HITACHI 120 LC, $38,000; Loader JD 544E, $38,000; Backhoe JCB 215E, $38,000; JD 310SG, $38,000; Skidsteer Cat 247B tracks, $24,000; Bobcat 853, $13,500. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK.

SKIDSTEER ATTACHMENTS: rock buckets, dirt buckets, grapples and more top quality. Also have truck decks in stock. Quality Welding and Sales 306-731-3009 or 306-731-8195, Craven, SK.

RANGER F67-GR GRAPPLE skidder, S/N 560HC01708, c/w Cummins dsl. eng., powershift trans., hyd. winch w/cable and c h o ke r s , 3 0 . 5 L - 3 2 t i r e s , 4 7 6 7 h r s . , $35,000. 780-914-2069, Spruce Grove, AB. JD 750C CRAWLER tractor, 6- way hyd. LETOURNEAU OPEN TOP 14 yd. scraper, dozer, bush ready, clean Cat, $41,000. like a Cat scraper, good tires, $19,000. 16 780-983-0936, Westlock, AB. yd. Woolridge scraper, new front tires, LOADERS, GRAVEL TRUCKS & EQUIP: $23,000. Call 306-338-7114, Clair, SK. 99IT24F LOADER; 2004 Case, 521D load- RECLAMATION CONTRACTORS: Bigham er; 2 Case 580SM, 4x4, extend-a-hoe, re- 3 and 4 leg mechanical trip 3 pt. hitch mote rear bucket, 4 in one 1 loader; 1998 Paratills in stock; parts for Bigham and Tye FL112 Freightliner, pal finger crane, Paratills. Call Kellough’s: 1-888-500-2646. 24,000 lb; 1998 Freightliner 112, flatdeck crane and wench; 3 -T300 Kenworth, sin- OVER 100 SKIDSTEER attachments, 15 gle axle, C&C end-decks; 2 Case, 2011 and Skidsteers: 2005 Cat 287B on tracks, CAH; 2010, 450 Series III skid-steers; 2 -2007 Bobcat 7753, on steel tracks; Bobcat 753; 14’ cube vans; 2 -T800 Kenworth, long 2- Bobcat 743; 1999 JCB 185 Series 3; NH wheel base C&C; 1996 Freightliner FL80, L-555; NH LS-170; Bobcat 2000 articulat20’ silage box, auto; 1999 Freightliner ing loader; Toro Dingo X420 walk behind FLD120, 20’ silage box; 1996 Freightliner skidsteer. The following units in need of FLD120, new 16’ gravel box; 1998 Freigh- repair: Bobcat 610, only $1800; 2- Thomas tliner FL80, auto., 15’ gravel box; 1999 skidsteers, $3300 for the pair; 1996 Gehl T300 Kenworth, single axle, 14’ gravel box; 6625, $5700. Other units being parted out. 2007 48’ combo drop-deck; 1996 Peterbilt Cambrian Equipment Sales, 204-667-2867, 377 tractor, equipped. Other service trucks fax 204-667-2932, Winnipeg, MB. and half ton trucks, gas and diesel. Con- CAT 902 WHEEL loader; CAT IT28 wheel tact Bud at 306-256-3301, 306-221-2166, loader w/forks. Both have cab heaters, QA Cudworth, SK. buckets, aux. hyds., and are in good condition. 306-621-0425, Yorkton, SK.

1988 CASE 680K Construction King backhoe loader, S/N JJ60070053, c/w 6 cyl. dsl. eng., 90 HP, shuttle shift trans., 1.5 yd. 96” loader bucket, 17” backhoe bucket, digging depth 16’6”, 7390 hrs., $18,500. 780-914-2069, Spruce Grove, AB.

‘06 GENIE Z45/25 ARTICULATING BOOMLIFT - 45’, 4x4, Deutz 3 cyl diesel, 48hp, 1,347 hrs., max. load 500 lbs, $32,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 2005 DECAP TRI-AXLE belly dump, air ride suspension, 2 hopper belly dump, close underload cross clam, 24.5 tires, trailer in good shape. Asking $33,000. Call John or Cory 306-344-2119, Paradise Hill, SK.

EXCAVATORS: For rent/sale: JD 270D, USED PARTS FOR TS-14 Terex motor Cat 320D. Long term rentals too. Conquest scraper. Other parts available. Phone: 306-752-3968, Melfort, SK. Equipment 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. 2000 CATERPILLAR 160H motor grader, PORTABLE TOILET SALES: New 5 Peaks 14’ moleboard, 12,300 hrs., X-dept. of portable toilets, assembled or unassemhwys, $81,500; 2004 JD 230 excavator, bled. 5 Peaks Distributors, Western Cana7000 hrs, 2 buckets, hyd. thumb, cab d a I n c . , w w w. 5 p e a k s d i s t r i b u t o r s . c a guard, cat walks, clean and straight, 1-877-664-5005. $67,500. Delivery available. Lumby, BC. 2000 HITACHI 270 HYDRAULIC excavator, 250-547-8993. 80% U/C, Q/A dig bucket, $39,000. SKIDSTEERS: FOR RENT/SALE: Cat 277B, 780-983-0936, Westlock, AB. 297C; JD 325, Bobcat S220, S300. Oxbow, 1995 FORD CEMENT TRUCK, 8.3 CumSK, Conquest Equipment 306-483-2500. mins power, all hyd. drive; London trailer diesel powered, all hyd. driven; HYDRAULIC SCRAPERS: LEVER 60, 70, mixer, batch plant. All in excellent condi80, and 435, 4 - 20 yd. available, rebuilt Portable t i o n , r e a dy t o wo r k . $ 5 0 , 0 0 0 O B O. for years of trouble-free service. Lever 204-768-2892, Eriksdale, MB. Holdings Inc., 306-682-3332, Muenster SK FIRESTONE INDUSTRIAL THREAD R-4 ATTACHMENTS AND PARTS. Large in- tires, 169-24 12P TLS, $700. Phone OK ventory of construction equipment attach- Tire, Idylwyld Dr N , Saskatoon, SK. ments for excavators, wheel loaders and 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com crawlers. Hyd. thumbs, compactors, hammers, digging and clean-up buckets, HYDRAULIC PULL SCRAPERS 10 to 25 quick/attaches, brush rakes, grapples, rip- yds., exc. cond.; Loader and scraper tires, pers, jib booms, brush cutter, mulchers custom conversions available. Looking for and winches. Wrecking assorted constr. Cat cable scrapers. Quick Drain Sales Ltd., equip. for salvage parts. Western Heavy 306-231-7318, 306-682-4520 Muenster SK Equipment 306-981-3475 Prince Albert SK 1985 CASE 450C Crawler, 6-way dozer, 2006 CAT SKIDSTEER 277B, 600 hrs, air, 65% U/C, $18,500. 204-525-4521, Minitoheat, hyd. attachment, dirt bucket. nas, MB. www.waltersequipment.com 780-875-7051, Lloydminster, AB. ROAD GRADERS CONVERTED to pull behind large 4 WD tractors, 14’ and 16’ blade widths available. CWK Enterprises, 306-682-3367, 306-231-8358, Humboldt, SK., www.cwenterprises.ca ATTACHMENTS: SKIDSTEER, pallet forks hay spears, augers, buckets. Conquest Equipment 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. 1975 966C CAT wheel loader, eng., pins, and bushings done 2 yrs. ago, tires- 85% $29,000 OBO. 306-768-8426, Carrot River

2 0 0 4 D E E R E 9 5 0 - C L G P, 4 3 9 7 h r s , straight twin tilt blade, new UC, 26” pads, exc. working condition, 3 shank HD ripper, job ready, CAH, full warranty 60 hours 60 day whichever comes first, $176,000. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.

MANLIFT TOW BEHIND, JLG 350, Honda engine, 500 lb. capacity, self-contained, $23,000. 306-563-8765, Canora, SK. 2008 CAT 301.8 MINI HYDRAULIC excavator, 1100 hrs., hyd. thumb, 3- buckets and hyd. blade. 780-983-0936, Westlock, AB. PARKER SCREENER, 24x48’ with 48x120’ screen deck. 306-482-5121, Carnduff, SK.

2 0 0 1 J D 7 7 0 C H m o t o r g r a d e r, S / N DW770CH579745, c/w 14’ MB, 12’ hyd. snow wing, CAH, Michelin 17.5Rx25 tires, 7,135 hrs., $65,000 OBO. 780-914-2069, Spruce Grove, AB. 1972 CAT D6C LGP, engine OH approx. 1200 hrs. ago, direct drive, undercarriage80%, Hyster winch, angle dozer, cylinders recently repacked, $25,000. 204-281-9049 Swan River, MB

REDUCED TO CLEAR (2) 15 T o n Ha n gin g S ca les (2) Po s tPo u n d ers (2) 7’ Pu ll Bro o m s Ha n gin g As p ha ltRo llers An d M a n y Others . (2) 12’’ S o il S p rea d ers (4) Pu ll T yp e S heep s fo o tPa ckers , s in gle 48x40 a n d d o u b le d ru m 60x60 a n d o thers . 5 a n d 6 fo o tPa t. L a w n Aera to rs 3’ W a lk Behin d Aera to rs Ca s e & Ditch w itch T ren chers - w a lk b ehin d a n d rid e o n S P a n d Pu ll T yp e W a b lee Pa ckers S kid s teer Ba ckho e Atta chm en ts 300 Bu ckets fro m s m a ll to b ig 48” Pa lletF o rks fro m $275 p a ir a n d u p L eerT ru ck ca p s fo r ½ a n d ¾ to n tru cks Gra s s a n d Bru s h M o w ers New E lectric F u el Pu m p s o n ly $49 ea ch Y a rd a n d Bu ild in g S w eep ers S evera l S cis s o r L ifts Over 50 Gen s ets 1 a n d 3 p ha s e 3.5 to 193 kw . (3) S tu m p Grin d ers 7’ Ditch Ba n k M o w er 500 Hyd . Cylin d ers (3) 8N F o rd T ra cto rs , fro m $1800 a n d u p (12) Ra il cu ttin g s a w s (3) 3 PH Ro to tillers F a rm T ra cto rs w /lo a d ers fro m $4000 and up M a n y typ es o ffo rklifts , electric, p ro p a n e, ga s , d ies el. (5) Air Co m p res s o rs a n d S a n d b la s tin g Po ts (2) New Cu b Ca d ets 25 & 28 HP u p to 50% S a vin gs 1700 New a n d Us ed M o s tly In d u s tria l T ires S to ra ge Va n s u p to 53 F o o t.

DIESEL ENGINES, OVERHAUL kits and parts for most makes, Cat, Case/IH, Cummins, Detroit, Mack. M&M Equipment Ltd., Parts and Service phone: 306-543-8377, fax: 306-543-2111, Regina, SK.

504 CASE ENGINE, vg running condition, low hrs. out of CIH 3394; 436 engine out of IHC 1586, vg running cond.; 90 Massey diesel engine, good running cond. 1-877-564-8734, Roblin, MB. TWO 671 DETROIT, diesel with Allison MT654CR trans., $4,000 each; JD 531 cu. inch turbo from 644B loader, will fit JD 5020 tractor, $3500. All above good running engines. 306-338-2674, Kuroki, SK.

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. 204-800-1859.

600V 3 PHASE 3 section Westinghouse motor control center, c/w 15 breaker/starter inserts, size 1 to 4, mint cond., $5500. 306-231-8115, Lake Lenore, SK.

REMANUFACTURED DIESEL ENGINES: GM 6.5L, $4750 installed; Ford/IH 7.3L, $4950 installed; New 6.5L engines, $6500; 24v 5.9L Cummins, $7500 installed; GM Duramax Ford 6.0L, $8500 installed. Other new, used, and Reman. diesel engines avail. Can ship or install. Call 204-532-2187, 8:00 AM to 5:30 PM, Mon. to Fri., Thickett Engine Rebuilding, Binscarth, MB.

BEHLEN STEEL BUILDINGS, quonsets, convex and rigid frame straight walls, grain tanks, metal cladding, farm - commercial. Construction and concrete crews. Guaranteed workmanship. Call your Saskatoon and northwest Behlen Distributor, Janzen Steel Buildings, 306-242-7767, Osler, SK. WOOD POST BUILDING packages. Incl. 29 3406B, N14, SERIES 60, running engines gauge #1 colored metal walls, Galvalume and parts. Call Yellowhead Traders, roof, starting at $12,145. 1-800-667-4990, 306-896-2882, Churchbridge, SK. www.warmanhomecentre.com

Hund red s of Other Item s On 2 Ya rd s. Low Low Pric es.

C a m b ria n Equipm e n tS a le s

Ph: 204-6 6 7-28 6 7 Fa x: 204-6 6 7-29 32

1997 D7R LGP Cat, 2500 hrs, on major overhaul, bush ready, full guarded canopy, 3 shank ripper, straight tilt blade, UC 90%, exc. working condition, CAH, full warranty 60 hours 60 day whichever comes first, $176,000 OBO. Can deliver. 204-743-2324, CONTERRA GRADER for skidsteers and Cypress River, MB. tractors. Excellent for road maintenance, floating and levelling. 518S-SS, $2499. 2001 KOMATSU 250 loader QT w/bucket, Conterra manufactures over 150 attach- $52,500., forks also available; D3 Cat ments. Call 1-877-947-2882, view online w/new UC and 6-Way blade, $16,500; at www.conterraindustries.com 1983 Arnes belly dump, $12,500. Call USED UNDERCARRIAGE, rails to fit 306-246-4632, Speers, SK. D6C/D, D6H/R, D7G/H/R, $1500 per set. NEW AND USED radial stacking conveyors, Good selection of rollers, track pads and hyd. raise and lower, self-contained diesel, rails for excavators and crawlers. Western available. 780-699-9771, Stony Plain, AB. Heavy Equip. 306-981-3475, Prince Albert. JD 772D 2005 and JD 872D 2007, AWD, REPOSSESSED CONSTRUCTION EQUIP., 8,000 hrs., X-County, $120,000 and 2011 Bomag 55/65 Plate Tamper diesel; $145,000. 403-291-1010, Calgary, AB. 2012 Frostfighter 500,000 BTU; Magnum Pro T5080 towable light tower; 2012 For- 75 MICHIGAN, 20.8x25 tires, 4-71 Detroit, est River 20’ enclosed cargo trailer. Web- runs well, needs PS pump, asking $9,900 site photos www.saskwestfinancial.com OBO. 403-704-3509, Ponoka, AB. E-mail saskwestfinancial@sasktel.net for bidding instructions. 2007 580 Case Super M Plus backhoe, 4x4, pilot controls, 4 in 1 front bucket, new rubber, exc. cond., 5000 hrs., $50,000 OBO. 306-594-7981 or 306-594-2628 after 8 PM, Norquay, SK. ROME PLOW AND KELLO DISC blades and bearings; 24” to 36” notched disc blades. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. www.kelloughs.com LOOKING FOR PARTS: Wanting boom, stick and bucket for 125-B excavator. RAMMAX REMOTE CONTROLLED and walk 204-768-2892 Ericksdale, MB. behind vibratory packers, work ready and 2001 NH WHEEL LOADER, LW130 tool excellent condition. Cambrian Equipment carrier model, 2-1/2 yard bucket, hyd. Sales, ph 204-667-2867 fax 204-667-2932, quick attach, AC, operating weight of Winnipeg, MB. 27,000 lbs, $32,000. Western Heavy CASE W14, wheel loader with grapple Equipment, 306-981-3475, Prince Albert. bucket, 5100 original hours, $18,500. 2002 DITCHWITCH RT185, 2409 hours, 780-983-0936, Westlock, AB. 13’ boom, digging depth 8-10’, 12” wide, 1969 TS14 and 1971 TS14B scrapers, self-levelling, $60,000. d5tall@sasktel.net ready for work. 306-297-2494, Shaunavon, or 306-229-8402, Saskatoon, SK. SK. 1959 D6-9U, with dozer and winch, was running. Offers. Phone 306-452-3795, CRAWLER DOZER D6C bush rake, winch, new chains, canopy, $39,000; WHEEL Redvers, SK. LOADER- WA50 Komatsu, 4x4, bucket, HYDRAULIC PULL SCRAPERS, 6 to 40 forks, boom, $28,000. Canora, SK., yards: Caterpillar, AC/LaPlante, LeTour- 306-563-8765. neau, Kokudo, etc. PT and direct mount avail., tires also avail.; PT motor grader, WRECKING: JD 644B LOADER most $14,900; 2010 53’ Stepdeck, $24,995; New parts available. 306-338-2674, Kuroki, SK. Agricart grain cart, 1050 bu., c/w tarp, CATERPILLAR 627 twin engine motor $27,500. 204-822-3797, Morden, MB. scraper, well maintained, low hr. compoHYDRAULIC EXCAVATORS: 2008 Hitachi nents, guarded for excavator, top loading, ZX350 LC-3; 1998 Cat 325BL. Edmonton, $28,650; Caterpillar 300B excavator, c/w bush guarding and thumb work ready, AB. 587-991-6605. $29,880; Caterpillar 330BL excavator, CLIFF’S USED CRAWLER PARTS. Some c/w bush guarding and thumb, component 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 . repair history av, work ready- Call; Cater780-755-2295, Edgerton, AB. p i l l a r 3 2 0 B L U excavator, c/w bush PULL GRADER CONVERTED GALLION, guarding and thumb, good condition- Call. 14’ moldboard, 17.5x25 tires, 5 hyd. func- 250-489-9502, Cranbrook, BC. t i o n , $ 1 5 , 5 0 0 O B O. 3 0 6 - 6 9 9 - 2 4 4 2 , McLean, SK. 2 0 0 3 J D 6 4 4 H w h e e l l o a d e r, n ew 23.5x25 tires, new injectors, 8600 hours, 290 CUMMINS; 350 Detroit; 671 Detroit; good tins, third valve, good overall cond., Series 60 cores. Call: 306-539-4642, Regi$75,000 OBO. Call Wes 306-682-3367, na, SK Humboldt, SK. USED, REBUILT or NEW engines. SpeEQUIPMENT RENTALS: Loaders, dozers, cializing in Cummins, have all makes, large excavators, compactors, etc. Conquest inventory of parts, repowering is our speEquipment 306-483-2500, Oxbow, SK. cialty. 1-877-557-3797, Ponoka, AB.

BUILDING SUPPLIES & CONTRACTING

FARM BUILDINGS “Today’s Quality Built For Tomorrow”

Hague, SK | (306) 225-2288

www.zaksbuilding.com

3UH (QJLQHHUHG /DPLQDWHG 3RVWV


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $ $ $ $ $ $ 7 5 TR UC KLOAD S $ $ 29 G AUG E FULL H AR D 100,000 P S I $ $ H IG H TEN S ILE R OOFIN G & S ID IN G $ $ 16 C OLOUR S TO C H OOS E FR OM $ $ 2 $ B-G r. Colou red . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70¢ ft $ 2 $ M u lti Colou rM illen d s . . . . . 49¢ ft $ $ $ BEAT THE P RICE $ $ IN C R E A S E S $ $ AS K ABO UT O UR BLO W O UT $ $ CO LO RS AT $0.6 5 S Q . FT. $ $ CALL N O W $ $ $ $ F o u illa rd S teel $ $ S u p p lies L td . $ $ S t. La za re, M a n . $ $ 18 005 103303 $ $ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

P RICED TO CLEAR!!!

G RAI N H AND LI NG & STO RAG E w w w .skyw aygrainsystem s.com HU TCHIN SO N G rain Pum ps LA M BTO N Bucket Elevators LA M BTO N Drag Conveyors (Seed Com patible Conveyors) Rail Load-O ut System s Pulse Crop Equipm ent W ESTEEL G rain Bins SU KU P A eration & Bins G rain G uard Bins and A eration

CLASSIFIED ADS 45

WHEN

Quality

Canadian Built Insurance Certified Bin Anchors

COUNTS

PH:306-445-5562 www.evertightanchors.ca

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. POLE BARNS, WOODSTEEL packages, hog, chicken, and dairy barns, grain bins and hoppers. Construction and concrete crews available. Mel or Scott, MR Steel Construction, 306-978-0315, Hague, SK.

• The HEAVIEST metal • The STRONGEST posts • SUPERIOR craftsmenship

SDL STEEL BIN FLO O RS

Choose Prairie Post Frame

1-855 (773-3648)

www.prairiepostframe.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. WESTEEL, GOEBEL, grain and fertilizer bins. Grain Bin Direct, 306-373-4919. BIN MOVING, all sizes up to 19’ diameter, with or without floors. 306-629-3324, 306-741-9059, Morse, SK.

10 gauge bottom ,8” or 12” Side Wall (1)O r (2)piece construction 12’- 28’sizes Tru ck ing Av a ila b le

2700 BU. HOPPER bin c/w Flaman 3 HP fan, 18’ diameter. Low Profile 45’ auger w i l l r e a c h . $ 2 5 0 0 . R e a dy t o m ove . 306-788-4502, Marquis, SK. SUMMER BOOKING: 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 GRAIN BIN REPAIR. Concrete and setup for large diameter bins. Quadra Development Corp 1-800-249-2708, Rocanville, SK

1 S TEEL BUILD IN G S

1- 8 77- 5 2 5 - 2 002

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

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

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

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

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

1-866-974-7678 QUOTE IntegrityPostStructures.com S I LV E R S T R E A M S H E LT E R S Super Spring Fabric Building Sale. 30x72 single black steel, $4700; 30x70 dbl. truss P/R, $6995; 38x100 dbl. truss P/R, $11,900; 42x100 dbl. truss P/R, $14,250; 12-1/2 oz. tarp, 15 yr. warranty. Trucks running w e s t w e e k l y, d e l i v e r y a v a i l a b l e . 1-877-547-4738, silverstreamshelters.com

w w w.jtlin d u s tries .ca N E IL BU RG, S AS K ATCH E W AN

GOEBEL GRAIN STORAGE

GRAIN BINS: 3500 bu. Meridian/Behlen bin/hopper combo, 10 leg hopper and skid, roof and side ladder, safety fill, constructed, limited supply for $9995 FOB at Regina, SK. Leasing available. Peterson Construction, 306-789-2444. SAKUNDIAK HOPPER BIN, 2800 bu., 4 ring, 8 leg hopper, all options, $5900. 2Chief Westland, 2800 bu., no floors, $900 ea. 306-287-7808 leave msg., Watson, SK. 2200 BU. GSI, full aeration floor with wood floor underneath, $1800; 2200 bu. Chief Westland with wood floor, $1300; 1650 bu. Chief Westland with wood floor, $1000. 306-654-7657, Prud’Homme, SK.

30 MO. PAINT WARRANTY

www.prairiesteel.com

• 4” co rru ga tio n a n d 50 k s i yield s tren gth ( 6 5 k s i ten s ile) s teel a re s till u tilized . • 10 yea r w a rra n ty o n co rru ga ted b in s

THE “FORCE” LINE AGR I- TR AD E IN N OVATION AW AR D W IN N ER 20 12

• Re pla c e yo u ro ld • Le g-s tyle b in s a n d flo o rs a n d a d d u p to re pla c e m e n t ho ppe rs w ith a n 1500 b u s he ls a e ra tio n s ys te m tha t c a pa c ity to u s e s the b a s e a n d yo u r e xis tin g b in s . le gs a s the ple n u m • No m o re fightin g to fo rc e the a irin to w ith yo u ro ld d o o rs . the ho ppe r. Ou rpa te n te d JTL • Ae ra tio n s ys te m d o o ris gu a ra n te e d c o m e s a s s ta n d a rd to m a ke yo u s m ile e qu ipm e n t fo ra ll e ve rytim e yo u “ Fo rc e ” b in s & u s e it! con es.

TRUSTED BY CUSTOMERS FOR OVER 35 YEARS

w w w .go o do n.co m

A

4,000 - 40,000 b u s he l p k g s

WOOD POST BUILDING pkgs. 29 gauge #1 colored metal walls, Galvalume roof 40x64x16, $26,750. 1-800-667-4990. Built onsite. www.warmanhomecentre.com

2,750

$

R M

N

N

I

.59 /BUS HEL

I

B

N EED BIN S FAST -SET U P YO U RSELF

I

AS K ABO UT O UR PICK UP W ITH PR E- AS S EM BLED PAR T PR O G R AM

S

DARM AN I - Bu ild in g Be tte r Bin s ---- DARM AN I - Bu ild in g Be tte r Bin s ---- DARM AN I - Bu ild in g Be tte r Bin s

2406-10386 Bushel pkg:

DEALERS

DWAYNE ENTERPRISES

• • • • • •

24” V-Trough aeration Triple 8x4” skid Ladder/Inspection hole LevAlert fill indicator 14 legs Manhole

$

23,800

Call for all other DE Hopper Bin packages from 4000-19000 bushels!

Call for Pricing on

NOTCH

LAND LEVELLERS

Box 46 • Beatty, SK S0J 0C0 Ph: 306-752-4445 Fax: 306-752-5574

www.dwayneenterprises.ca

SNOW PUSHERS

+ setup and delivery (can be arranged)

1805-4750 Bushel pkg:

• • • • • •

24” V-Trough aeration Double 8x4” skid Ladder/Inspection hole LevAlert fill indicator 12 leg Hopper Manhole

11,900

$

B I N

M AN UFACTURE --- FIN AN CE --- D ELIV ERY --- S ET UP

WANTED! DIAMOND CANVAS SHELTERS, sizes ranging from 15’ wide to 120’ wide, any length. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.starlinesales.biz AFAB INDUSTRIES POST frame buildings. For the customer that prefers quality. 1-888-816-AFAB (2322), Rocanville, SK.

A

A

1-800-665-0470

14’ Cone with 8 legs and 8x4 skid

D

Bin $ FROM

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 STRAIGHT WALL BUILDINGS, 16’ wall 32x48x16 colored walls 29 gauge, $12,340 materials. For info call 1-800-667-4990, www.warmanhomecentre.com

The o n ly c lo s e d in ho ppe r/a e ra tio n b in o n the m a rke t.

JULY S P ECIALS w w w .d a rm a n i.c a FACTORY D IRECT P R IC IN G 1-866-665 -667 7

3.73% Lease Rate for 2 Years!

Fo r A llY o ur Fa rm , C o m m ercia l& Industria lN eeds

THE LEGACY LINE

DARM AN I - Bu ild in g Be tte r Bin s ---- DARM AN I - Bu ild in g Be tte r Bin s ---- DARM AN I - Bu ild in g Be tte r Bin s

N

PRAIRIE STEEL FARMWEST AG 306-933-1141 306-789-0606

GRAINBIN DIRECT 306-373-4919

CHIEF WESTLAND AND CARADON BIN extensions, sheets, stiffeners, etc. Now available. Call Bill, 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.starlinesales.biz USED LARGE GRAIN bin hydraulic jack set. 306-759-2572, Eyebrow, SK.

F la t F lo o r Bin s up to 1,000,000 Bus he ls !

FLAT BO TTO M AN D HO P P ER BO TTO M M

5 YR STANDARD WARRANTY

DEALERS:

L EA S IN G A V A IL A B L E

M ARG O ,SASK.

LIMITED QUANTITY of flat floor Goebel grain bins, at special prices. Grain Bin Direct, 306-373-4919, Saskatoon, SK.

R

“Saskatchewan Owned Manufacturer of Grain Bins”

&DOO )RU 6SULQJ 6SHFLDOV

LO O K IN G FO R LA R G E B U S H EL S TO R A G E? Ca ll for pricing.

306-324-4441

A

CREWS AVAILABLE FOR P TU EARLY SE

1-306 -8 23-48 8 8 1-78 0-8 72-49 43 1-8 77-6 9 7-7444 1-306 -224-208 8 1-204-371-5400

JTL is n o w o ffe rin g c o rrug a te d b in s s e tup o n o ur a w a rd w in n in g “F o rc e ” ho p p e r, o ur “L e g a c y” 6 ’ hig h fla tflo o r o r o n c o n c re te p a d .

SD L H OP P E R CONE

D

GOEBEL

N eilb u rg S K S tettler AB “ The Pea ce Co u n try” W in d tho rs tS K M a n ito b a

s a les @ jtlin d u s tries .ca

Download the free app today.

FREE

SDL HO PPER C O NES

USED BINS FOR sale, on wooden floors: 3Westeel Roscoe 19-6 w/air, $1/bu; 2Westeel Roscoe 19-4, 5- Westeel 18-5, $0.65/bu; 1- 1400 and 1- 1800 bu. 60,000 BU. WESTEEL and Behlen bins for smooth wall hopper, no skids, $1.50/bu. sale. Size range 2000 to 7000 bu. some with air, to be moved, .50¢/bushel. LocatLocated near Speers, SK. Ed 403-507-1945 ed south of Climax, SK. 306-539-1972. TWO 1650 BU. wooden bins, good cond., take both $400; Six 1500 bu. hopper bins, ROSCO STEEL BINS with wood floors and $1.75/bu. Call Stephen at 306-279-2033, on skids, 800-2500 bu., $600-$1800. Located near Gray, SK. Call 306-535-2992. Yellow Creek, SK.

14’Hopper 8 leg H/Duty .................$2,250 14’Hopper 7 leg S/Duty ..................$2,1 50 15’Hopper 8 leg S/Duty ..................$2,6 00 15’-10” Hopper 10 leg H/Duty .........$2,9 50 18’Hopper 12 leg M/Duty ...............$3,9 50 19’Hopper 12 leg M/Duty ...............$4 ,250

G RAIN SYSTEM S IN C.

1-800-561-5625

FOR ALL YOUR grain storage, hopper cone and steel floor requirements contact: Kevin’s Custom Ag in Nipawin toll free: 1-888-304-2837. 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.

+ setup and delivery (can be arranged)

S


46 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

TOP QUALITY BEHLEN/ SAKUNDIAK BINS. Book now for best prices. Example: all prices include skid, ladders to ground, manhole, set-up and delivery within set radius. Behlen Hopper combos: 3500 bu. $10,450. SPECIAL 5000 bu. $13,990. We manufacture superior quality hoppers and steel floors for all makes and sizes. Know what you are investing in. Call and find out why our product quality and price well exceeds the competition. We also stock replacement lids for all makes and models of bins. Leasing available. Hoffart Services Inc., 306-957-2033, Odessa, SK.

Grain Bin Direct

POLY HOPPER BINS, 100 bu., $900; 150 bu. $1250. Call for nearest dealer. Buffer Valley Ind., 306-258-4422, Vonda, SK.

Factory To Farm Grain Storage

IN D USTR IAL STOR AGE

Galvanized • Flat Floor • Hopper Bins Smooth Walls • Fertilizer • Grain • Feed Aeration • Rockets • Fans • Heaters Temp Cables Authorized Dealer

AG / FAR M

Ne w Us e d & M o d ifie d S e a C o n ta in e rs fro m

FULL BIN ALARM

FOR ALL YOUR

FERTILIZER

STOP climbing bins!

EQUIPMENT NEEDS ADAMS SPREADER & TENDER

Alarm sounds when bin is full!

THREE IN ONE:

CALL US FOR PARTS ON ALL

1. COMPLETE AUGER SPOUT with “NO SNAG SPOUT” 2. FULL BIN ALARM 3. NIGHT LIGHT

SPREADER/TENDER MAKES AND MODELS

Saskatoon, SK

In dus tria l D ire ct In corp ora te d

Phone: 306-373-4919 grainbindirect.com

www.nuvisionindustries.ca

2- 5300 BUSHEL Westeel 19’- 8 ring, c/w BROCK (BUTLER) GRAIN BIN PARTS ladders, temp. cable, on cement, $5500 and accessories available at Rosler Coneach. 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. struction. 306-933-0033, Saskatoon, SK. 3300 BU. TWISTER bin with good wood 3- 2800 BUSHEL hopper bins/aeration, 2 HORNOI LEASING NEW and used 20’ and floor with air duct, $3400. 306-545-7927, Sakundiak, 1 Westeel. Call 306-873-7428, 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 Regina, SK. 306-757-2828, Regina, SK. Tisdale, SK.

WESTFIELD MK 13x71’, $7900; 8x51’, PTO, $1500; Convey-All 10x70’, PTO, $4900; Buhler 480 Quick Clean, $8500. Pro Ag Sales, 306-441-2030, North Battleford, SK.

53’ STEEL CONTAINERS. Also available in 20’ 40’ and 48’. 40’ standard open top containers. 306-861-1102, Radville, SK.

BRANDT 750 AUGER, PTO drive or will sell with motor, used very little. Phone: 306-861-1352, Weyburn, SK. MERIDIAN GRAIN AUGERS: SP kits and clutches, Kohler, B&S engines, gas and diesel. Call Brian ‘T h e A u g e r G u y ’ 204-724-6197, Souris, MB.

M&K

WELDING BINS & CONES

New1 8-05 Meridian Hopper Bin (Approx. 5000 bu.)

SHIPPING CONTAINERS FOR SALE. 20’53’, delivery/ rental/ storage available. For inventory and prices call: 306-262-2899, Saskatoon, SK. thecontainerguy.ca

HopperC one for 14 ft Westeel Rosco up to 2000 bu. • Manhole • 7 legs • 37 degree slope • Single 8x4x188w skid base

• Ladders • Remote lid opener • Safety-fil Indicator • 12 leg hopper • 37 degree slope • Manhole • Double 6x4x.188w skid base

$10,575.00

Other sizes of new bins also available.

$2,750.00

20’ AND 40’ SHIPPING CONTAINERS, large SK. inventory. Ph. 1-800-843-3984, 306-781-2600.

HopperC one for 19 ft Westeel Rosco up to 3300 bu.

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

• Manhole • 10 legs • 37 degree slope • Single 10x4x188w skid base

REMOTE LID OPENERS For Most Sizes of Bin Starting at $129.00

$4,900.00

We make hopper cones for all makes & sizes of bins.

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

M & K WELDING 1-877-752-3004

Em a il: s a les @ m kw eld ing.ca | Melfort, Sask | w w w.m kw eld ing.ca

JULY S P ECIALS S TEEL BIN FLOOR S AER ATION FAN S TEM P M ON ITOR IN G

SEA CAN CONTAINERS FOR SALE/ RENT. 20’-53’ containers available. Delivery, shelving, rollup and man doors, windows and custom builds available. For inventory and pricing call 780-910-3542, St. Albert, AB, Containers and Chains.

AKRON

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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 fx. 306-373-0364 w w w .b on din d.com e m a il joe @ b on din d.com

UP T O 50% fro m cem en t

SAKUNDIAK GRAIN AUGERS available with self-propelled mover kits and bin sweeps. Contact Kevin’s Custom Ag in Nipawin toll free 1-888-304-2837.

Equip yo ur a uge r to s e n s e w h e n th e b in is full. 2 ye a r w a rra n ty. Ca ll Brow n le e s Truckin g In c. Un ity, SK

GRAINMAX HIGH CAPACITY AUGERS

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

8 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM 6395 EXTEND

NEW

REPLACEMENT FLIGHTING FOR

www.nuvisionindustries.ca

Rosetown Flighting Supply

KEHO/ GRAIN GUARD/ OPI STORMAX. For sales and service east central SK. and MB., call Gerald Shymko, Calder, SK., 306-742-4445 or toll free 1-888-674-5346. KEHO, STILL THE FINEST. Clews Storage Management/ K. Ltd., 1-800-665-5346.

NEW 70’x13” BUHLER Farm King auger, remote elec. hopper mover, elec. winch, full bin sensor. 306-834-7619, Luseland, SK. NEW 2011 WHEATHEART 13x91 swing away auger, never used! Regular $24,900, Blowout price $ 21,000. 1 only! Flaman Sales in Southey or call 1-888-235-2626. WESTFIELD MK-100-61 swing away grain auger, good condition, asking $4800. 306-233-5722, Wakaw, SK.

1-866-882-2243, Rosetown, SK www.flightingsupply.com

KEHO/ GRAIN GUARD Aeration Sales and Service. R.J. Electric, Avonlea, SK. Call 306-868-2199 or cell: 306-868-7738. 5- 5 HP and 1- 3 HP aeration fans, 4- transition tubes, related aeration ducting, offers. Located Viscount, SK. 403-312-5113.

SWING AUGER

SEE VIDEO ON WEBSITE

1 800 667 8800

augers, seed cleaning plants, grain cleaners, combine bubble-up augers.

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

20 Y EAR W ARRANTY

GTX3220 Flex

1-866-860-6086 www.neverspillspout.com

Never Clim b A B in A ga in

NEW 10x51 WHEATHEART auger - c/w 38 HP motor and mover kit. Get more capacity! Call your nearest Flaman Sales store or call 1-888-435-2626.

S TEEL FLO O R S W O R K Sa ve

NEVER SPILL SPOUT Inc.

FULL-BIN SUPER SENSOR

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20’ AND 40’ SEA CONTAINERS, for sale in Calgary, AB. Phone 403-226-1722, 1-866-517-8335. www.magnatesteel.com

D ARM AN IG RAIN S TO RAG E 1-86 6 -6 6 5-6 6 77 ®

• Available for 10, 13 and 16 inch augers • No batteries needed • Enclosed Sensor • Proven Design since 2003 • Valued priced from $515 to $560 + shipping • 3 days delivery to your farm If you don’t like it, send back after harvest for a refund. John & Angelika Gehrer

1 800 667 8800

REMOTE CONTROL SWING AUGER movers, trailer chute openers, endgate and hoist systems, wireless full bin alarms, digital wireless tractorCam, the Simpler Sampler portable combine. All shipped directly to you. Doing it right, keeping you safe, by remote control. Phone Brehon Agrisystems at 306-933-2655 or visit us at www.brehonag.com Saskatoon, SK. N E W 1 3 ” W H E AT H E A RT S W I N G S X13-74, swing auger w/remote swing and hyd. swing lift and reverser, reg. $26,210, sale $22,500. 306-648-3622 Gravelbourg 2012 FARM KING 16”x104’ auger, hyd. lift, hyd. swing, very little used. Phone 204-744-2279, Altamont, MB.

Revolutionize Harvest Trucking Retracting Swing Auger

HOPPER AERATION

NEW

AA-GG.COM

BUILD YOUR OWN conveyors, 6”, 7”, 8” and 10” end units available; Transfer conveyors and bag conveyors or will custom build. Call for prices. Master Industries Inc. www.masterindustries.ca Phone 1-866-567-3101, Loreburn, SK.

UNLOAD A SUPER B IN AS LITTLE AS 11 MINUTES!

BATCO CONVEYORS, new/used, grain augers, grain vacs, SP kits. Delivery and leasing available. 1-866-746-2666. 2010 BATCO CONVEYOR 20/105, used 1 season, exc., $39,000 OBO. 306-266-4977, 306-472-7521, Glentworth, SK.

KEEPS UP TO THE LARGEST GRAIN CARTS ON THE MARKET! CHABOT IMPLEMENTS Elie, MB 204-353-2392 Neepawa, MB 204-476-3333 Steinbach, MB 204-326-6417 F.V. PIERLOT & SONS Nipawin, SK 306-862-4732 GREENFIELD AGRO SERVICE Rosetown, SK 306-882-2600 KROEKER MACHINERY Winkler, MB 204-325-4311 MARKUSSON NEW HOLLAND Emerald Park, SK 1-800-819-2583 MARTODAM MOTORS Spiritwood, SK 306-883-2045 MOODY’S EQUIPMENT LTD. Saskatoon, SK 306-934-4686 Perdue, SK 306-237-4272 Unity SK 306-228-2686 Lloydminster, SK 306-825-6141 Kindersley, SK 306-463-2335 Olds, AB 403-556-3939 High River, AB 403-652-1410 Balzac, AB 403-295-7824 NYKOLAISHEN FARM EQUIPMENT Kamsack, SK 306-542-2814 Swan River, MB 204-734-3466

Version to fit most augers. 10” through 16”

NEW 2400 BATCO belt conveyor- Get more capacity, up to 14,000 bu./hr., 23.5” belt with a 14” tube. Call your nearest Flaman Sales store or call 1-888-435-2626.

NEERLANDIA CO-OP Neerlandia, AB 780-674-3020 PARKLAND FARM EQUIPMENT North Battleford, SK 306-445-2427 REDVERS AGR. & SUPPLY LTD. 306-452-3444 ROBERTSON IMPLEMENTS (1988) LTD. Shaunavon, SK, 306-297-4131 Swift Current, SK 306-773-4948 SCHROEDER BROS. Chamberlain, SK 306-638-6305 WHITE AG SALES & SERVICE Whitewood, SK 306-735-2300 AR-MAN EQUIPMENT Vulcan, AB 403-485-6968, 1-866-485-6968 BILL’S FARM SUPPLIES INC. Stettler, AB 403-742-8327 CAOUETTE & SONS IMPLEMENTS St. Paul, AB 780-645-4422 FOSTER’S AGRI-WORLD Beaverlodge, AB 780-354-3622, 1-888-354-3620 HI LINE FARM EQUIPMENT LTD. Wetaskiwin, AB 780-352-9244, 1-888-644-5463

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

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

Call Your Local Dealer

or Grain Bags Canada at 306-682-5888

www.grainbagscanada.com

FIBERGLASS LIQUID FERTILIZER storage tanks- 30,000 US gal., 12’x36’9”. Lasts a lifetime! Won’t rust, no seams, $37,500. Flaman Sales, Saskatoon, 1-888-435-2626. 50’ RITE-WAY LIQUID coulter applicator. Call 306-771-2527, Edenwold, SK.

See video at www.xtend-auger.com

Quickly Unload B-Trains • Retract • Extend • Swing

LOOKING FOR a floater or tender? Call me first. 33 years experience. Loral parts, new and used. Call 403-650-7967, Calgary, AB.

Rodono Industries

FERTILIZER STORAGE TANKS- 8300 Imp. gal. tanks available. Contact your nearest Flaman store or call 1-888-435-2626 or visit www.flaman.com

sales@rodono.ca www.rodono.ca

JULY S P ECIALS S TEEL BIN FLOOR S AER ATION FAN S TEM P M ON ITOR IN G TEM P M ON ITOR IN G

Clive, AB T0C 0Y0 Phone: 403-784-3864

AERATION FAN S Sa ve

Up 3 HP = 5 HP = 7 HP =

T o 3 5% 995 $ 13 25 $ 16 45 $

D ARM AN IG RAIN S TO RAG E 1-86 6 -6 6 5-6 6 77 w w w.d a rm a n i.c a


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

CLASSIFIED ADS 47

1999 KILLBROS GRAIN cart, 750 bushel, CLIPPER AIR SCREEN machine, Model Suasking $16,000. 204-324-4352, Emerson, per 248DH, wood frame, includes 1 set of screens and new Pitman arms, asking MB. $9500 OBO. Please call 306-244-2285, 2006 STX280, 16 spd. powershift, Saskatoon, SK. PTO, diff. locks, 900R50 big single tires, 1 6 3 2 h r s , a s k i n g $ 1 3 0 , 0 0 0 . C a l l CARTER UNIFLOW #3 with 6.5 indent, good, $2800. NEW 8.5 indent for Uniflow 403-755-6374, 780-385-0260, Alliance, AB #3, $1000. T4A Superior indent/aspirator. GRAIN CARTS: 450-1050 bu. large inven- This is a 4 roll machine and has served me tory. JM500- $9000; Brent 620- $10,000; very well, $5000 OBO. Call Jack at JM750- $12,500; JM875- $20,000. Call 306-277-4208, cell 306-921-9570, email SAKUNDIAK AUGERS: New 2013 stock 204-857-8403, Portage la Prairie, MB. jackvalleau.vsl@gmail.com Ridgedale, SK. arriving daily! Used 12�x72’ SLM/D 14,900; 12�x78’ SLM/D 15,900; Convey-All conveyCUSTOM COLOR SORTING. All types of ors. Leasing available. Call Dale, Mainway commodities. Call Ackerman Ag Services F a r m E q u i p m e n t , D av i d s o n , S K . 306-638-2282, Chamberlain, SK. 306-567-3285, 306-567-7299, website USC SEMI AUTOMATED Calibratable Pump www.mainwayfarmequipment.ca Stand. Works with existing USC manual or SAKUNDIAK SWING AUGER SALE: auto treaters. Quickly and accurately placSLMD 10-72, cash price $12,750; SLMD es the pump at the desired chemical flow 12-72, cash price $17,500; SLMD 12-79, rate and maintains this rate throughout cash price $18,900. Used SLMD 12-72, the run of seed, asking $10,850. Please cash $12,500. 306-648-3622, Gravelbourg. call 306-244-2285, Saskatoon, SK. SAKUNDIAK AUGER SALE: With engine, ‘04 BRENT AVALANCHE GRAIN CART USED LMC CLIPPER Titan screens for sale. mover and electric clutch. HD 8x39, cash 1,100 bu., tandem walking axle, 20’ hyd. $50/each OBO. 13/64 slot, 14/64 slot, $13,800; HD 8x53, cash $15,750; HD auger, hydraulic drive avail. $34,800. 17x3/4 slot, 15/64 slot, 18/64 slot. 16 of 10x53, cash $17,900; TL 10x39, cash Trades welcome. Financing available. each size. 306-352-5200, Regina, SK. $15,250. 306-648-3622, Gravelbourg, SK. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com FOR SALE: MODEL 641 LMC grain gravity NEW “R� SERIES Wheatheart Augers: N E W 4 0 0 B U. G R AV I T Y WAG O N S , table rated for 200-250 bu./hr, c/w extra With engine, mover, and electric clutch. $7,100; 600 bu., $12,000. Large selection screen for smaller grain cleaning, $4000 R-8x41, cash price $12,250; R-8x51, cash used gravity wagons, 250-750 bu. Used OBO. For more information call Lorne at $ 1 2 , 7 5 0 ; R - 1 0 x 4 1 , c a s h $ 1 3 , 2 4 0 . grain carts, 450-1050 bu. 1-866-938-8537. The Edgerton and District Seed Cleaning 306-648-3622, Gravelbourg, SK. Co-op, 780-755-3745, Edgerton, AB. www.zettlerfarmequipment.com S A K U N D I A K A U G E R S I N S TO C K : BOURGAULT 750, Parker 624, JM 750, Un- 2 PIECE EXCHANGE scalping sieves FG swings, truck loading, Hawes Agro SP ve r fe r t h 8 0 0 0 . C a l l 3 0 6 - 5 6 3 - 8 4 8 2 , 5.5x23 mm and 2 piece exchange main movers. Contact Hoffart Services Inc. 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. sieves FG 2.20x23 mm. Two complete sets Odessa, SK, 306-957-2033. of four pieces each, 1 used, $1200, 1 new, 2011 KILLBROS 1950 1100 bu. grain cart, $1500. Cdn. funds, buyer covers shipping. 1994 7x52’ SAKUNDIAK auger, 2001 Honda 20 HP motor and Brandt tracker added scale, 900 tires, used one season, like new. Purchased from Buhler Inc for cleaning Will trade for tridem or semi truck. machine LAAA TAS 152A-2. Call Ken at in 2001. 306-738-4735, Riceton, SK. 306-921-6697, 306-752-3777, Melfort, SK. 250-546-8911, Armstrong, BC. or email 2007 PARKER 739 Cart, PTO, good condi- Ken.Smith@gambrinusmalting.com tion, $26,000. 306-644-4742, Loreburn, SK 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. MERIDIAN 12x72’ SWING auger, $17,250; Meridian 12x79’ swing auger, $18,450; Sakundiak 10x1200, 29 HP, Kawasaki, new tube and flight SP kit, $13,750. Brian ‘The Auger Guy’, 204-724-6197, Souris, MB.

BRANDT 2610 grain bag loader, $21,500; Brandt 8510 grain bag unloader, $31,500. Both exc. 403-578-3308, Coronation, AB. 2008 MAINERO 2230 GRAIN BAGGER, 9’, h o p p e r e x t e n s i o n . C a l l fo r d e t a i l s , 306-287-8062, Watson, SK.

BOOK TODAY and SAVE on your bottom line. Quality GRAIN BAGS at wholesale pricing. All sizes available! We also sell net wrap, twine, pit covers, and more! Don’t pay till we deliver it! Inventory also available in Manitoba and Sask. Call Mike at 403-634-1615, Lethbridge, AB. www.committedagsupply.com

J&M 750-16 PTO grain cart,, green, hyd. spout, 30.5L-32, tarp, cameras, original owner, good shape, asking $14,500. 204-746-4141, St. Jean Baptiste, MB. 2010 DEGELMAN, 1150 bu, unfolding pivot auger, can be lowered, 35.5x32 rubber, roll tarp, 1000 PTO, shedded, exc. cond. 306-944-4252 306-231-8523 Viscount, SK.

VERTEC 6700 with roof, nat. gas burner, elec. fan, Ibec auto moisture and meter control, wet/dry auto fill, $36,000. Call 306-961-1170, Domremy, SK.

(Limited Time Only)

NEW AND USED grain dryers. Contact Franklin Voth, Manitou, MB. 204-242-3300 or cell: 204-242-4123, www.fvoth.com

The AgFlexÂŽ grain bag is a product of AT Films, Inc. Registered to ISO 9001 standards by SAI-Global.

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CURT’S GRAIN VAC SERVICES

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MANUFACTURING INC.

GRAIN BAGGERS

NH 7090 BALER, baled 4280, extra wide PU, 1000 PTO, auto twine tie, Trelleborg tires, stored inside, extra spring kit and lace belts, $21,000 OBO. 306-948-2326, Biggar, SK. VERMEER 605J BALER, 1988, very good c o n d i t i o n , a l w ay s s h e d d e d , $ 4 5 0 0 . 204-855-3268, Oak Lake, MB.

BOOK TODAY and SAVE on your bottom line. Quality NET WRAP at wholesale pricing. All sizes available! We also sell grain bags, twine, pit covers, inoculants and more! Don’t pay till we deliver it! Inventory CASE INTERNATIONAL 8480 round baler also available in Manitoba and Sask. Call i n v e r y g o o d s h a p e , $ 1 4 , 0 0 0 . Mike at 403-634-1615, Lethbridge, AB. 780-914-2069, Spruce Grove, AB. www.committedagsupply.com 8480 SOFT CORE BALER, did only 8000 VERMEER 605M, roller upgrades done, bales, like new. Lethbridge, AB., call new belts and PU teeth, shedded, $12,500. 403-327-0349 cell or 403-330-9345. 306-743-2770, Langenburg, SK. www.harryvissersfarmequipment.com 1997 HESSTON 565T baler, good cond., WILK BALE WAGON, hauls 17 - 22 bales; $5000 OBO. Call 306-784-2777, Herbert, New Holland 357 mixmill, vg shape. Call 306-488-2103, Holdfast, SK. SK.

Euro B elting W here S olutions a re Endles s

’83 MF 124 Square Baler - Excellent cond’n, Knotlers & Weedles good, 540 PTO, little used & stored inside – rare find. $4,850. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

WANTED: JD SQUARE BALER #328, 346, 347 or 348. 306-876-4700, Goodeve, SK.

Beltin g fo r a ll a gricu ltu re a p p lica tio n s . 4603 - 91 Ave . Ed m o n to n , Alb e rta , C a n a d a T6B 2M 7 Te l (780) 451-6023 100% C a n a d ia n Ow n e d Fa x: (780) 451-4495 To ll Fre e : (866) 3 67-23 58 Em a il: e u ro b e lt@ te lu s pla n e t.n e t Ca ll 1-86 6 -FO R-BELT Rou n d Ba le r Be ltin g

2002 567 JD baler, regular pickup, bale 2010 JOHN DEERE 568 round baler, 3200 kicker, 8603 bales, always shedded, bales, $39,000, Wynyard, SK. Phone $15,000. 306-563-4867 Canora, SK. 306-554-2536 or call one of our 7 Stores near you. www.maplefarm.com NEW HOLLAND 770 ROUND BALER, 5x5 bales, vg. cond. Call 306-842-4752, 2003 567 BALER, MegaWide PU, twine Weyburn, SK. The The tie, heavy drive chains, shedded, well OLD WAY NEW WAY maintained, no dents or dings, premium 1997 HESSTON 565A baler, w/gathering {300’ bag} cond., 18,000 bales. Wawota, SK. Gordon wheels, $6800; One swath roller. Call 306-436-4526, Milestone, SK. 306-739-2763, Trevor 306-739-2924. 1-866-497-5338 JD 566 ROUND BALER, hyd. PU, bale kick- 660 NH ROUND baler with Auto-Wrap, Neerlandia, AB er, field ready, always shedded, vg cond., very good cond., field ready, $4900 OBO. Email | sales@neeralta.com Call 306-468-2600, Canwood, SK. $10,500. 306-743-2759, Langenburg, SK. www.neeralta.com NET WRAP, TWINE, silage covers, grain JD 535 BALER, bale kicker, hyd. PU, 540 CONVEYAIR 2955, 5�, blower overhauled 2 bags! Excellent pricing, fully guaranteed years ago, $6,000. Call 204-467-5638, PTO, 566 upgraders, stored inside, $7000; products. In stock now. 306-227-4503 NH 853 chain baler, auto tie, stored inRosser, MB. side, not used for 15 years, $3000. Ed- Saskatoon, SK. www.norheimranching.com monton, AB. 780-818-1028. 1989 JD #468 square baler, w/1/4 turn, hyd. tension, very good condition. 2006 NH BR780A round baler, Bale Com- greaser, mand Plus, XtraSweep hyd. PU, flotation Call 306-342-4456, Glaslyn, SK. tires, shedded, excellent condition, 8549 2003 605XL Vermeer baler, Accu-Tie, 540 bales, $15,900. 306-859-4618, Beechy, SK PTO, $9800. 306-745-3838, Spy Hill, SK.

SELLING GRAIN LEGS, distributors, conveyors and truck scales. Also other elevators parts. 403-634-8540, Grassy Lake, AB.

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2012 JOHN DEERE 568 round baler, 2500 bales, $40,000, Russell, MB. Phone 204-773-2149 or call one of our 7 Stores near you. www.maplefarm.com 327 JD SQUARE BALER, always shedded, mint condition, $4700 OBO. 306-225-4601, 306-222-5055, Hague, SK.

P h :306 - 734- 2228

FLAMAN AERATION FANS: 3 HP, 5 HP, 7 HP. Available in turbo, inline and full centrifugal. For details and pricing call 1-800-352-6264, Flaman Sales, Nisku, AB.

GSI GRAIN DRYERS. Ph. Glenmor, Prince Albert, SK., 1-888-708-3739. For all your grain drying needs! www.glenmor.cc We are the GT grain dryer parts distributor. SUPERBEE GRAIN DRYERS and Moridge dryer parts in stock. 306-272-4195, Foam Lake, SK.

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VAC-U-VATOR GRAIN VAC, very good c o n d . , a l w ay s s h e d d e d , $ 3 0 0 0 . P h . 2009 BR7090 NH baler, w/net wrap and 306-429-2785, Glenavon, SK. chemical applicator, less than 2400 bales baled. 2001 1600A JD hay conditioner, field ready, good shape. 306-861-1352, Weyburn, SK.

GRAIN HANDLER CONTINUOUS flow dryer, 600 bu. capacity, $29,900 includes stand. 204-791-9006, Starbuck, MB.

ATFILMSINC.COM 800.661.3606

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TIM’S REPAIR at Herbert, SK. has used also excellent for feeding cattle and rebuilt REM vacs for sale. Warranty in the field - 4 bales at a time offered on some units. Call 306-784-2407 with a pickup. OPI TEMPERATURE and moisture cables- or 306-772-1004. accurately monitor your grain in the bin. CONEYAIR GRAIN VACS, parts, accesso1-800-505-9208 The Integris system monitors grain from ries. Call Bill 780-986-5548, Leduc, AB. www.LiftOffTriHaul.com your computer. Pricing starts at $265/bin. www.starlinesales.biz Call Flaman in Saskatoon 1-888-435-2626 CASE/IH 8370 HAYBINE for sale, good for or www.flaman.com parts; Case 3650 baler, 1000 PTO. Phone 306-488-2103, Holdfast, SK.

“FROM ARRIVAL TO UNDER THE TRUCK OR TRAILER IN LESS THAN 2 MINUTES�

call 1-800-661-3606 for details

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Register Now!

100% FDA compliant • 100% recyclable

GRAIN VACS: REM 552 - $3500, REM 2500 HD - $9500, Brandt 4000 - $7000, Brandt 4500 - $7500, Weigh wagon w/digital scale - $3500. 1-866-938-8537.

LARGE SQUARE 4x4 CAT BALER, in new cond., 13,000 bales, w/accumulator, knotter fan and autolube. 306-457-2935 eves., Stoughton, SK.

WANTED: TOTALLY SELF-CONTAINED complete portable grain cleaning setup. Call 306-640-8600, Assiniboia, SK. DUAL STAGE ROTARY SCREENERS and Kwik Kleen 5-7 tube. Portage la Prairie, www.zettlerfarmequipment.com or call 204-857-8403.

3 USED 120’ high capacity commercial grain legs. Asking $38,000/ea; Also used dust collection system, asking $10,000. Open to offers on the whole works, want it gone ASAP!! 780-247-0101, High Level, AB

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48 CLASSIFIED ADS

1999 NH 688 round baler, auto wrap, 1000 RPM, exc. cond., $10,000. 306-576-2207 eves., Elfros, SK. NEW HOLLAND ROUND baler Model 688 $9,000. 306-867-8036 or 306-867-3747, Outlook, SK. 1999 NH 664 round baler with Bale Command, $8000. Phone 306-558-4444 or 306-558-7133 cell, Maple Creek, SK.

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

NH BR780 BALER (2003), 9250 bales, extra sweep PU, bale command, auto twine wrap, bale kicker, field ready and always shedded, $13,000. Call 306-648-7853 or 306-648-7493, Gravelbourg, SK. BALE MOVER HIGHLINE 1400, very good condition, $18,000. 780-662-4981, Tofield, AB. 48”, 51” AND 64” net wrap. 30” green or white bale wrap, pit covers and twine. Call the Silage Experts, serving the farming community since 1981. We deliver or ship to you. 1-800-663-6022, Salmon Arm, BC., www.silagrow.com NH 664 ROUND baler w/Auto-Wrap, excellent condition, $4900 OBO. 403-378-4957, Rosemary, AB.

2008 JOHN DEERE 568 round baler, 12,000 bales, $24,000, Yorkton, SK. Phone 306-783-9459 or call one of our 7 Stores near you. www.maplefarm.com JD 568 BALER, 2008, netwrap, 3442 bales, good condition, $30,000 OBO. Call Jeff at 204-773-0411, Angusville, MB. 2 NEW HOLLAND 1049 SP bale wagons, serviced, $8500 each. 306-778-2357, Waldeck, SK. NEW IDEA 4865 round baler, 5x6 bales, 2004 HESSTON 1275 16’ mower conditionhyd PU, 2300 bales, shedded, good shape. er, new knife, vg cond. $11,000 OBO. Phone 306-421-0679, Estevan, SK. 306-944-4325, 306-231-8355, Bruno, SK 2008 MF 2756 round baler, 5200 bales, 2004 NH 1475 haybine, 18’, 18HS header, $ 1 6 , 7 0 0 , F o a m L a k e , S K . P h o n e 1000 PTO, $18,000. Call 306-447-4414, 306-272-3345 or call one of our 7 Stores Beaubier, SK. near you. www.maplefarm.com MACDON R80 discbines, 2009 and 2010, 2005 JD 567 Baler, megawide pickup, as new, $22,000 each; also 1995 MACDON 1000 PTO, net wrap or twine, 14,000 910 14’ haybine c/w bi-directional adapter, $4200. Cut Knife, SK. 306-441-0452, or bales, $16,000. 306-849-4726, Sheho, SK. 306-398-7449. 2011 ANDERSEN NWX60 plastic bale wrapper, never been used. Taking offers. NH 116 HAYBINE 16’, rollers, excellent. 306-682-3581, Humboldt, SK. Call 306-342-4456, Glaslyn, SK. MF 128 SQUARE , 1/4 turn chute, wide PU, 2005 JD 4895 haybine w/895 18’ header, l o w b a l e s , s h e d d e d , g o o d s h a p e . steel crimper, 2350 eng. hrs, 1790 hrs. on machine, $55,000. Call Wayne Baron at: 306-944-4325, 306-231-8355, Bruno, SK. 306-648-2880, Palmer, SK. HESSTON 565A, recent belts, gathering wheels, shedded, field ready, $7500. HESSTON HAY HEADER, 16’ Model 81AH to fit 8820 Case/IH or 8100 Hesston 306-252-2842, Kenaston, SK. swather, $6000. 306-922-8140, Prince AlNH 1037 BALE wagon, in cab controls, bert, SK. $1500 spent on new tires and cables, gd. cond. $7200. 306-358-4342, Denzil, SK.

‘05 DEGELMAN 1220 SIDEARM, mower 2002 LBX331 med. sq. baler, 3x3x8’ bales, attachment, 1000 PTO front & rear, fits 40,000 bales on unit, exc. cond, serviced 10`-20`mowers, $6,980. Trades welcome. available. 1-800-667-4515. regularly, auto oiler, auto greaser, roller Financing chute, big 1000 PTO shaft. 204-724-4780 www.combineworld.com or 204-725-4851 for details, Brandon, MB. 1994 NH 116, $5600, Balcarres, SK. NEW 2011 JD 568, 0 bales, big tires, load- 306-334-2492 or call one of our 7 Stores ed except netwrap, $40,000. Will take near you. www.maplefarm.com trade. 780-847-3792, Marwayne, AB. 2005 JD 956 discbine, includes center pivMONITOR AND CABLE for JD 567 round ot, hydra-swing, hydra-tilt, impeller condibaler. For model with baler serial number tioner, vg cond., $23,000. 306-468-2070, w i t h l a s t 6 d i g i t s b e fo r e 3 0 0 , 0 0 0 . Canwood, SK. 306-455-2615 or 306-577-9068 Arcola, SK 2010 KVERNELAND 4040 14’ discbine, 535 JD HARD core round baler, excellent has cut less than 500 acres, $29,500. shape, stored inside; also 530 round baler 780-385-5704, Viking, AB. for parts. 306-486-4514, Oxbow, SK. NEW HOLLAND 116 haybine, new crimper, BALE SPEAR ATTACHMENTS for all excellent condition. Call 306-467-4973, loaders and skidsteers, excellent pricing. Duck Lake, SK. Call now 1-866-443-7444. 2006 NEW HOLLAND 1475/16HS, MF 228 SQ. BALER, premium condition; $ 2 2 , 0 0 0 . P h o n e : 3 0 6 - 8 6 7 - 8 0 3 6 , o r MF 124 baler, excellent. 306-283-4747, 306-867-3747, Outlook, SK. Langham, SK. 2007 FRONTIER MOWER conditioner, good cond., field ready, asking $12,500. Call 403-308-4787, Fort McLeod, AB. 2012 MACDON A30D, $37,200. Phone 306-435-3301 or call one of our 7 Stores near you. Website: www.maplefarm.com Moosomin, SK. 2011 JOHN DEERE 956, $47,800. Yorkton, SK. 306-783-9459 or call one of our 7 Stores near you. www.maplefarm.com NEED BALERS? ‘03 NH BR780, $12,400; ‘01 HESSTON 16’ hay header, Model 8100 HESSTON 856A, $9,800; Trades welcome. auger header, always shedded. Call Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. 306-457-3755, Griffin, SK. www.combineworld.com NH 2300 16’ hay header mounts on 9030 BALE SPEARS, high quality imported or TV bi-directional, $11,000; Versatile from Italy, 27” and 49”, free shipping, ex- 4400 swather with crimper, $5000. c e l l e n t p r i c i n g . C a l l n o w t o l l f r e e 306-365-3438, Guernsey, SK. 1-866-443-7444, Stonewall, MB. MF 220 SERIES II, c/w 16’ hay header, 4865 NEW IDEA, field ready, good cond., 1465 hrs., nice shape, $39,500 OBO. located at Delisle. Phone 306-374-7788, 780-763-2179, Myrnam, AB. Saskatoon, SK. NH 273 SQUARE baler, recent work, field ready, shedded, asking $1500 OBO. 306-821-7441, Lloydminster, SK. 2004 JD 567 baler, megawide PU, bale kicker, floatation tires, 9920 bales, excellent shape, $18,500. 306-287-7595, or 306-383-2802, Quill Lake, SK. JD 535 BALER, green PU, kicker, very little UNIVERSAL HAYBINE REVERSER A flip use, nice condition, $7000. 306-795-2716, of a switch from your tractor seat saves Ituna, SK. time, money and ensures operator safety. BALE MOVER, 2005 Bourgault Model 1650 Kits available for most makes and models. very good cond. $22,000. 306-867-8036 or Only $1550/kit. www.qvbenterprises.com Esterhazy, SK. Call: Duane 306-745-3801 306-867-3747, Outlook, SK. or Ken 306-745-3720. 664 NH BALER, hard core w/bale command, bale kicker, no welds, nice cond., 2011 CASE/IH RD 182, 18’ disc mower conditioner header, $15,000. Muenster, $6500 OBO. 306-946-7151, Watrous, SK. SK. 306-682-4520, 306-231-7318 cell. 2008 NH BR7090, netwrap, 8240 bales, regular PU with gathering wheels, exc. condition, $26,000 OBO. 306-236-8968, 306-236-3637, Makwa, SK. 2007 JOHN DEERE 568 round baler, Mega wide PU, floatation tires, netwrap, 1000 PTO, bale kicker, new belts and monitor. 306-831-8394, Rosetown, SK. 1992 NEW HOLLAND 575 square baler w/hyd. tension, good condition, $7200. 306-358-4342, Denzil, SK. 2012 MF (Hesston) 1375, 15’ 3” disc VERMEER 605K BALER, always shedded, NEW conditioner. Pre-season sale, 3.99% not used in 6 years, good to exc. cond. mower for 72 mos, no chg, OAC plus cash dis306-747-3182, Shellbrook, SK. counts. One available. Cam-Don Motors NEW HOLLAND 1033 bale wagon, $3000; Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 306-460-9022, Kindersley, SK. 2003 HESSTON 1275, 16’ mower condi2007 HESSTON MODEL 2656A, Autocycle, tioner, $15,000 OBO. 306-759-2651, 3200 bales, very good cond., $25,000. Brownlee, SK. 306-322-5838 leave msg., or call cell: 2009 956 JD MOCO, with Impeller condi306-322-7207, Archerwill, SK. tioner, $21,000; 21’ 885 Massey MacDon NEW IDEA 4865 SN 17657 round baler, gas swather w/HD wobble box, $3900. No clean machine, work ready, shedded, Sunday calls please. Call 204-427-2074, $9750. 250-446-2543, Rock Creek, BC. 204-324-7410, Tolstoi, MB.

2002 PREMIER 2952, 2210/1698 hrs., 36-972 header w/gage wheels, split reel, transport, shedded, vg cond., $72,000. Call 306-921-5402, St. Brieux, SK.

CASE 8312 DISC bind (cutter), c/w PTO, 12’ cut. hyd. transport wheels, $14,000 OBO. 780-914-2069, Spruce Grove, AB. NEW HONEYBEE 21’ draper belt header, 2000 MACDON 16’ HAY CONDITIONER DSA, double knife drive, UII PU reel, hyd. Model 5010. Contact 306-969-2251, drive, w/poly skid plates, fits 8000 Series NH, $35,499. 403-843-3700, Rimbey, AB. 306-969-4621, Minton, SK. alyork@rimbeyimplements.ca 2007 FRONTIER MOWER conditioner 16’, $17,500 OBO; Also, Case/IH baler, $4000 1988 CI 722 UII PU reel, double swath, $12,000 OBO. 204-868-5504 or OBO. 306-682-3095, Humboldt, SK. 204-874-2206 eves., Minnedosa, MB. or 16’ NH H7150 haybine, with HS16 header, email: neilgalb@gmail.com low acres, excellent shape, shedded, 2003 NH HW340, 30’, 1385 hrs, Roto$28,500 OBO. 306-672-3703, Gull Lake, SK Shears, roller, transport kit, UII reel, shedMACDON 5000 MOWER CONDITIONER, ded, $51,500. 306-776-2496, Wilcox, SK. 14’, 1000 PTO, straight, field ready. TWO JD 590 PT SWATHERS, both knives 780-875-7051, Lloydminster, AB. less than 2000 acres, $2500 each. Phone: 16’ MOWER CONDITIONER head fits MF 306-753-2219, Macklin, SK. 220 swather, $8900. Swather and 30’ header available. Cam-Don Motors Ltd., HESSTON SP 6400 hydro, 14’ mower conditioner, 20’ grain header, one owner, field 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. ready, shedded, c/w IHC swather carrier; Westward PT 25’ swather, very low acres. Call 306-742-4615, MacNutt, SK. 1 9 9 1 C I 7 2 2 s w a t h e r, 2 6 ’ , S e r i a l #38018-90145, same as MF 200, 2062 hrs., PU reel, hydro w/joystick control, Izuzu diesel. New: drive tires, roto shears, knife and guards, battery starter and canvasses, Schumacher knife drive, CAHR, $27,500, exc. condition. 1-877-862-2387 Cell 306-862-7524 or 1-877-862-2413 Cell NEW MACDON 16’ R85 disc mower condi- 306 862 7761, Nipawin, SK. tions in stock, ready to go. Finance or 30’ CASE 8230 PTO, UII pickup reel, woblease or huge cash discounts. Cam-Don ble box drive, like new. 403-854-0583, Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. Youngstown, AB. JUST OFF LEASE: MF 1475 (Hesston) 16’ 742 CO-OP, 110 HP, 18.4x26 tires, 30’ mower conditioner, low acres, shedded, and 42’ headers, all in good condition, vg, $25,900. Cam-Don Motors Ltd., $18,500 OBO. 204-373-2502, Emerson, MB 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 2002 PREMIER 2940, 962 header, 1032 MF 205 MOWER conditioner header for eng. hrs., 880 header hrs., large rear tires, sale, fits MF 200 or 220 swather, $5000 good cond. 306-277-4609, Ridgedale, SK. OBO. Ph: 403-934-3394, Strathmore, AB. 1980 400 VERSATILE, 20’, very good dthurston@efirehose.net shape, $2000. 780-336-6378, Irma, AB. 14’ HESSTON 1014 hydroswing haybine; MF 124 square baler; NH 1033 bale wag- 1998 JD 4890, w/2000 SP30 HoneyBee on, all in good shape. 306-283-4747, 30’ header, pea auger, wired for JD AutoSteer, 4970, engine hrs., good condition, 306-220-0429, Langham, SK. shedded, $52,500 OBO. 306-272-7418, 2009 JD 4895 windrower w/895 power re- Foam Lake, SK. verser header, bar tires, HID lights, variable spd. reel, 488 hrs., premium PREMIER 2952, 30’, 972 header, triple decond., $85,000 OBO. Ph. 204-838-2352, livery, large tires, hyd. fore/aft, tilt, valley gauge wheels, slow spd. mover kit, 1500 Virden, MB. Email: sdryden@rfnow.com eng. hrs, 1100 header hrs. 204-242-2940, HESSTON 16’ 9145 mower conditioner 204-242-4036, Manitou, MB. header, c/w double conditioner rolls, fits MF and Hesston 9000 Series swathers, 2011 WESTWARD M150, W35’ D50, pea $19,900. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., auger, 370 hrs., $120,000; 2012 Westward M155, w/35’ D60 pea auger, 137 hrs., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. $135,000. 306-567-8235, Davidson, SK. USED SCHULTE FX520 HD mower, 20’ cut, five blades, 1000 PTO, fair cond. $27,500. 1998 PREMIER SWATHER, 30’, DSA, 1485 hrs., PU reel, turbo diesel, 2 knives, exc. Call Flaman in Saskatoon, 306-934-2121. cond, $43,000. 306-728-3337, Melville, SK 2003 JOHN DEERE 956, $20,600. Wynyard, SK. 306-554-2536 or call one of our JOHN DEERE 4890 c/w HoneyBee ST36, PU reel and double knife drive, $55,000. 7 Stores near you. www.maplefarm.com 780-847-3792, Marwayne, AB. 14’ HAY HEADER to fit 4000 or 5000 Case/IH swather, $4000; HESSTON 1160 25’ WESTWARD 7000, gas, UII PU, CAH, 14’ haybine hydroswing, $8000. Both units HoneyBee knife, 2044 hrs, 64” opening; good condition, and shedded. Thorhild, AB. Three 20’ 400 Versatiles, one w/MacDon PU reel, one w/hay crimper, good knifes 780-398-3858, or cell 780-307-8337. and canvasses, field ready, all have good cabs; New 25’ UII PU reel; One Case/IH 36’ PTO; Two Blanchard swath rollers, 6’ HONEYBEE 50’ SWATHER, TM50, good and 8’. Good all around cond. Wainwright, condition, choice of 2 units, $11,500. Call AB. 780-755-2115 or cell: 780-842-7836. Brent 403-578-8444, Coronation, AB. 1994 MASSEY FERGUSON 210 PT CASE/IH 8820 swather, 1500 hrs, PU swather, 30’, UII PU reel, in-cab controls, reel, very good. Call 403-327-0349 cell or exc. shape, $6500. Call Jordan anytime 403-330-9345, Lethbridge, AB. 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 400 VERSATILE, good knife, new guards, straight table, engine recently rebuilt, unit s h e d d e d , g o o d s h ap e , $ 2 5 0 0 . C a l l : 306-693-9837, Moose Jaw, SK.

’08 Case IH WDX1203 36’ SWATHER Includes 36’ header, hydraulic center limbs, clean cab & body, in overall great cond’n! $76,800. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. Financing available. www.combineworld.com 2002 PREMIER (MACDON) 2952, large tires, turbo, 1595 hrs, w/30’ 972 triple delivery header, double PU reel, $59,500 OBO. 403-485-8116, Vulcan, AB. 2011 WESTWARD M205 w/40’ D60, double knife header, 140 hrs., mtd. hyd. swath roller, exc. cond., canola only, $135,000. 306-267-7320, Coronach, SK. 2010 WD1203, 36’, $106,000; 2011 WD1203, 36’, $119,000; 1996 Prairie Star, 30’, $45,000; 2010 MacDon M150, 35’, $119,000; 2005 NH 325, 30’, $72,900; 2010 WD1903, 36’, 190 HP, $110,000; 2004 CIH WDX1101, 30’, $64,500; 1994 CIH 8820, 25’, $19,900; 2006 MF 9420, 30’, $75,000; 1995 CIH 8820, 30’, $27,500; 2010 WD1203, 36’, $109,000. Call Hergott Farm Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK. 2009 JD 4895, 30’ SP, 1040 hrs., good cond., $79,900. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 2005 HESSTON 9240, 25’ header, 6 batt PU reel, skid shoes, gauge wheels, fore/aft, extra clips, lifters, 730 hrs, $68,000. 780-777-3892, Stony Plain, AB. CASE/IH 4000 SP swather, 24.5’, w/PU reel, ACHR, hydrostatic 6 cyl. Ford, left and right rotor sheers, w/aux. hyd. system, new canvass and guards, new bearings in rollers, throats modified for heavy canola crops w/roller and belly pan, vg cond $9500. 204-734-3043 Swan River MB JOHN DEERE 590 30’ PT swather w/MacDon PU reel. 306-771-2527, Edenwold, SK.

2010 MF 9430 SP swather, 295 hrs, 30’ double swath, new condition, $90,000 OBO. 403-527-9661. Located at Leader, SK 2001 HESSTON 8110S 25’, UII PU reel, triple delivery, double swath, 1880 hrs, shedded, $35,000 OBO. 780-679-5980, 780-679-5723, Daysland, AB. 1999 PRAIRIE STAR 4930, 30’, 1200 hrs., 2 spd., turbo, gauge wheels, PU reels, nice shape, field ready, priced to sell. Call Rob 306-222-6035, Saskatoon, SK. VERSATILE 400, runs well, no canvases, $1200. 306-335-2777, Abernethy, SK. MF 9430, 2010, 18.4-26 front, 14Lx16.1 rear, quick couplers, east attach header, UII, fore/aft, 396 hours. Call 306-864-2200, Kinistino, SK. 1996 HESSTON 1200 35’ swather. Always shedded. Excellent condition. Phone 306-731-7197, Holdfast, SK. 885 MASSEY, diesel, 3015 hrs, 1994 M a c D o n 3 0 ’ h e a d e r, s h e d d e d . 306-567-8081, Davidson, SK. 1903 CASE/IH SWATHER, 510 hours, 30’ HoneyBee header, Roto-Shears, hyd. header tilt, rear axle susp., suspended cab, 2 spd. hydro, double knife drive and header transport kit, large 18.4x26 fronts and 14Lx16.1 8 PR rear tires, 5000 acres, new canvases start of 2012 due to update, field ready, $105,000. Can arrange delivery. 403-901-5390, Strathmore, AB. 2000 NH HW300, field ready, has been gone over: canvasses, bearings, fingers, guards, sections, etc., 2450 hrs., $30,000. 204-842-3713, 204-782-9438, Birtle, MB. CIH 730 PT swather 30’, batt reel, exc. condition. $3500. Phone 306-725-7908, 306-484-4612, Govan, SK. 1996 PRAIRIE STAR 4900, turbo Cummins 2 spd. hydro, 2398 hrs, w/960 MacDon 25’ single delivery grain header w/PU reels. Good service record, always shedded, clean unit, $35,000. 306-893-2879. Maidstone, SK. buddy_biggully@hotmail.ca

2009 MASSEY 9430, 120 HP, 30’ loaded, shedded, one owner, 670 hrs., new Schumacher knife, guard and canvas, $65,000. 306-369-7653, 306-369-2649, Bruno, SK. 1984 VERSATILE 4400, CAHR, new: 2003 WESTWARD 3020 30’, PU reel, Rotoknife, canvases and MacDon PU reel, good Shear, new condition, $8500 OBO; Case 8230 30’, new knife drive. 306-734-2967, shape. 306-734-2970, Chamberlain, SK. Aylesbury, SK. 2009 JD 4895, 36’ HoneyBee, UII PU reel, 1680 eng. hrs., 1288 cutting hrs., $71,000. 2001 WESTWARD 9350, 972 hyd. tilt, 30’, triple delivery, large tires, $55,000. Call 204-648-7129, Grandview, MB. 306-536-9528, Francis, SK. 25’ PRAIRIE STAR 4900 w/MacDon PU reel, triple delivery, Keer Shears, setup for 2003 HARVEST PRO 8152 (MacDon) 25’, JD AutoSteer, exc. cond., $32,500 OBO. big tires, PU reel plastic, triple delivery, TRAILTECH SWATHER TRANSPORT, dual knife drive, 108 HP Cummins, hyd. good condition, $4250 OBO. Shellbrook, tilt, 2010 header hours, 2610 eng. hours, SK. 306-747-2514, 306-961-8061. almost new canvases, inside roller drive, PRAIRIE STAR 4600 and JD 590. Both 30’, high/low spd., mostly shedded, $53,500 w/autofold and new tires, $2500 each. OBO. Call 780-204-0391 or 780-786-2867, 306-389-4827, 306-441-2097 Maymont SK jefarm@xplornet.com Mayerthorpe, AB. 1995 30’, 8820 Case/IH, SP, w/PU reel, MF 9740, 2012, wide cab, hi-speed dr., $18,500; 1997 30’ 8825 Case/IH, w/PU susp. rear axle, 620/75R26 RI tires, sys- reel, $26,500; 2009 30’ H8040 New Holt e m 1 5 0 k i t , b e a c o n l i g h t . C a l l land, SP, PU reel, transport, sliding cable, 306-864-2200, Kinistino, SK. $98,000. A.E. Chicoine Farm Equipment, JD A400, 36’ HoneyBee header, light pkg, 306-449-2255, Storthoaks, SK. Roto-Shear, 480/80R38 tires, rear steer, 1998 PREMIER 1900 PTO swather w/UII 235 hrs. Call 306-864-2200, Kinistino, SK. pickup reel, good condition, $4500. Phone: MF 200, 1995, UII reel, DSA, 2083 hours. 306-287-4083, Spalding, SK. Call 306-864-2200, Kinistino, SK. 4000 IH SWATHER, 24.5’, no cab, needs wobble box, $1500 OBO. Call 306-946-7151, Watrous, SK. 2010 HESSTON 9435, c/w 36’ header, 640 hrs., $89,000. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. M 150 & M 155

W E HAVE 10

MF 9430, 2011, adj. axle, frkd caster, R1 bar, 480/85R26 GY, hdr. angle, tilt, system 150 AutoSteer. Call 306-864-2200, Kinistino, SK. MF 220, 25’, UII PU reel, Schumacher drive, 2000 hrs., good condition, $25,000 OBO. 306-831-7252, Rosetown, SK. 1997 PRAIRIE STAR 4920, 2400 eng. hrs. 30’ MacDon 960 header, new style wobble box, gd. cond. $37,000 OBO. 306-548-4344, Sturgis, SK. 1994 MF 200 22.5’, Roto-Shear, Verns custom hyd. swath feeder, mounted swath roller, tall narrow drive wheels, single arm rear castors, extra set rear V wheels, works well in wet conditions, $24,000. 204-355-4887, 204-326-7465, St Anne MB 30’ HONEYBEE swather, UII reel, mounts o n T V- 1 4 0 b i - d i r e c t i o n a l , $ 6 0 0 0 . 306-776-2496, Wilcox, SK. 1997 CASE 8820, 2338 hrs, 30’ UII PU reel, good shape. Phone 306-270-8594, Simpson, SK. 25’ CASE/IH PTO 725 swather, w/Keer Shear, new canvasses and knife, harvest ready, $3700; All steel 1 year old 10’ swath roller, $1800. 306-628-8092, Eatonia, SK. 2011 MF 9430, 36’ SP, 275 hrs., $97,000. 0% OAC for 24 months. Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. MF 200 SWATHER, 1994, 1774 hrs., UII PU, 26’, very good condition. Phone: 306-961-4682, Prince Albert, SK. WESTWARD 3000 25’ PT swather, autofold, not used last 5 yrs., always shedded, exc. cond, $5500. 306-595-4706, Pelly, SK 2000 9250 WESTWARD, 972 header, RotoShears, HoneyBee drive, shedded, $50,000 OBO. 306-539-1723, Cupar, SK. JD 2320 SWATHER w/21’ header, UII PU reel, CAH, 2081 hrs., $7500. 306-469-2027, Big River, SK. MACDON 2952 WINDROWER, bought new in 2006, c/w 30’ 972 harvest header, hyd. fore/aft, split reel, 1180 eng. hrs., 870 cutting hrs., exc. shape, asking $70,000. Contact Larry at 204-937-7120, Roblin, MB. or e-mail mazurfarms@hotmail.com

M ACDON SW ATHERS AVAILABLE

ALL W ITH D6 0 3 0’ OR 3 5’ SK OR DK HEADS $

STARTING AT

115,000 CASH

53 42-50 Ave . | V e gre ville , AB. | T9C 1M 3

M ike Gotts e lig | Sa le s M a n a ge r V e gre ville : 1-8 77-6 3 2-6 772 Bu s in e s s : (78 0) 6 3 2-6 772 C e ll: (78 0) 6 03 -3 28 9 Fa x: (78 0) 6 3 2-3 223

m ike .gotts e lig@ w e b b s .ca 1999 HESSTON 8100, 25’ double swath w/HoneyBee knife, field ready. Contact Harvey 780-753-0353, Kirriemuir, AB. NH HW300, 30’, w/320 upgrades, RotoShears, 940 hrs, header transport, windrow plus insp. complete, shedded, exc. cond., w/Trimble 750 AutoSteer, $55,000, without $50,000. 204-725-7885 Souris MB 1995 WESTWARD 9000, MacDon, 30’ header, 2700 hrs, large tires, good cond, field ready, $31,000 OBO. 306-497-7756, 306-497-3186, Blaine Lake, SK. 2001 CASE 8825, 30’ double swath, field ready. Harvey at 780-753-0353, Kirriemuir, AB. 1996 MACDON 9300 w/14’ hay header, PU reel, conditioner, 3100 hrs., good tires, good condition, $28,000. 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. JD 2360 SWATHER, 21’ PU reel, diesel, 2400 hours, exc. cond., $15,000. Call 204-886-2179, Petersfield, MB. 1996 21’ MACDON PT swather, PU reel, 1000 PTO, used very little. 306-738-4735, Riceton, SK. 2000 WESTWARD 9250, 2176/1638 hrs., 30’, 972 header w/triple delivery, double knife, split reel, gage wheels, attached swathroller, vg, $60,000. 306-921-5402, St. Brieux, SK.

MF 9220 SWATHER, 30’, 2010, Shumaker drive, guards, gauge wheels, F&A, hyd. tilt, rotor sheers, weights, UII reel, TopCon A/S, low hrs., excellent. Going to bigger swather. Call for price. Gregoire Seed Farms Ltd., North Battleford, SK. 306-441-7851, 306-445-5516. 1996 MACDON 36’ SP swather, PU reel, turbo diesel engine, swath roller, always shedded, $40,000. 306-254-2042 or WANTED FOR PARTS: JD 800 swather 17’, 18’ or 24’ header. Call 403-845-3888, 306-229-4432, Dalmeny, SK. Rocky Mountain House, AB. 2008 MASSEY FERGUSON 9635, dual headers, 600 hrs., 25’ draper header, 16’ JD 590-30’ PT, straight, no welds, $3900 OBO. Call Dave at 306-424-7511, Montdisc. header. 403-501-4891, Duchess, AB. martre, SK. 2008 MF 9435, 800 hrs., 25’ header, mint condition, $67,000. Call 403-501-4891, NEW HOLLAND 1033 BALE wagon and IH 4000 24-1/2’ SP swather. 306-882-3082, Duchess, AB. Rosetown, SK. 2008 JD 4895 swather, 640 hrs., c/w 30’ HoneyBee header, UII PU reel, RotoShear, swath roller, new canvas, always shedded, spotless, $90,000 OBO. Chris UNIVERSAL SWATHER TRANSPORTER, 403-312-0229, Blackie, AB. $8,000. 306-669-2182, 403-548-8928, MASSEY 220XL, 1518 hrs, 30’ double Richmound, SK. swath, shedded. 306-567-7533, Davidson, 6’ STEEL SWATH ROLLER, $400. Call SK. 306-682-3024, Humboldt, SK. 2009 JOHN DEERE 4895 w/30’ Honey Bee, 160 JOHN DEERE headers, 25’ and 18’, 460 sep. hrs., $84,000. Call or text both w/pickup reels and skid shoes, newer 306-654-7888, Prud’Homme, SK. canvases. 780-837-4486, Falher, AB. 9260 SWATHER, big cab and big power 2007 HONEYBEE WS36 36’ draper swather unit, Hesston same as Challenger and header, $18,500. 306-961-1231, Kinistino, Massey. Power unit is a 2005 Hesston SK. w/36’ 2010 header w/PU reel, very nice, KOENDERS 8’ POLY canola roller, exc. $72,000. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. cond. $725 OBO. 403-857-8899, Hanna, RETIRED: 18’ VERSATILE swather for sale, AB premium condition. Call 306-549-4011, 24.5’ UII PU reel, good shape, wire spring Hafford, SK. PU teeth, $3200 OBO. Call 306-946-7151, NEW 2012 MF 9735WR, 137 HP, 30’ DSA, Watrous, SK. 0% OAC or huge cash discount. One only. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, 2011 HAUSER REVO ROLLER, used for 3500 acres, excellent condition, shedded, Perdue, SK. $2900. Ph. 306-435-7526, Moosomin, SK. 2012 BERGEN 6000 partial carry swather 2001 MACDON 972 25’ draper header transport, new cond. never used, $10,000 w/tear shears, triple swath, excellent confirm. 306-896-2311, Langenburg, SK. dition. Willing to trade for 30’ 962 or 972 2004 NH HW320, 30’, Roto-Shears, roller, draper header in excellent condition. UII reel, transport kit, 1631 hrs, shedded, 306-435-7893, Moosomin, SK. $49,500. 306-776-2496, Wilcox, SK. TRAILTECH SWATHER TRANSPORT with 2008 MF 9435 25’ swather, 445 hours, PU cradles to haul combine header, $4500; reel, Roto-Shears. Phone 204-248-2359, Leon 808 loader, $3500. 306-960-3000, St. Louis, SK. Notre Dame, MB.


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

CLASSIFIED ADS 49

IMPLEMENT TIRES. Firestone 11L15 8P TLS, RIB IMP, $140. OK Tire, Idylwyld Dr N, Saskatoon, SK. Phone 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com

ATTN CANOLA PRODUCERS: Achieve maximum yield w/the new Hauser Revo Roller, all steel 10’ drum swath roller. Mimics every movement of the swather, accurate and consistent ground gauging, legal width transport. Fits most SP swathers. Hauser’s Machinery, 1-888-939-4444, Melville, SK. www.hausers.ca HESSTON 30’ HEADER fits Hesston 8100 swather, $7500. Call Barry 780-632-9756, Vegreville, AB. 2011 35’ MACDON D50 header with transport. For pictures or more info. call 360-398-4714, Cut Knife, SK.

CASE/IH COMBINES and other makes and models. 5 years interest free on most units. Call the combine superstore. Trades welcome, delivery can be arranged. Call Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. RME-BOISSEVAIN, MB. UP to $10,000 off w/bring a pair, buy a pair harvest promo. 2004 CIH 8010 w/2009 HoneyBee SP36, $134,500. 204-534-2463 or rockymtn.com LATE MODEL 1682 Case/IH PT combine, good paint, excellent shape, $6700. 306-741-0247, Swift Current, SK. 1688 AXIAL-FLOW, 3689 hrs., 1015 PU header, good working cond., $30,000 OBO. Call 403-635-0042, Assiniboia, SK.

2004 CIH 2388, 1788 rotor hrs., AFX ro2008 NH 1431 discbine; 2007 Claas liner tor, Strawmaster PU, hopper extension, 470T rake; 2003 NH BR 780 baler; Laurier field tracker, large work order. Retired. 306-847-4413, 306-963-7755, Liberty, SK. 7 bale picker. 204-483-3617, Souris, MB. NH SUPER 1049 bale wagon, 160 bales, 2012 CASE/IH AF7230, 220 hrs., leather, converted from gas to 5.9 turbo Cummins Pro-700 color monitor, SLS, HC unload audiesel engine, new tires, vg shape, field ger (40’ heads), CVT drive, 20.8x42s with duals, lateral tilt, rock trap, chopper, ready, $28,900. 306-762-2131, Vibank, SK. $249,500 US. www.ms-diversified.com Phone: 320-848-2496 or 320-894-6560, Fairfax, MN. S W ATH RO LLERS 2002 CIH 2388, 1960 sep. hrs., 2015 • La rge Dia m eterS teelDru m Swathmaster PU, hopper ext., one year on • Hea vy Du ty Tu b in g Fra m e rub bars, chains and filters, shedded, $85,000. 306-644-4742, Loreburn, SK. • S teelDru m ha s W eight& o u tla sts Pla stic R o llers 2006 CASE 8010, 1084 threshing hrs, Y&M, Pro 600, 28L26 rears, lateral tilt, vari G RAIN BAG S speed feeder, diff. lock, fine cut chopper, 2016 PU, large hopper topper, downspout Up N o rth & Ag Ba g ext., all updates including air intake. Only thrashed barley and canola. Great shape. • To p Q u a lity G ra in , S ila ge $176,000. Keith 403-638-0660, Olds, AB. Ba gs a n d Co vers 1994 1688, excellor kit, 2500 eng. hrs., • AllS izes shedded, $23,000 w/o by Case/IH, mint, • Am erica n M a d e asking $46,000; 2005 Case/IH 30’ rigid PU reel, shedded, low acres, Apo llo M a chin e & Pro d u cts header, $15,000. 306-576-2242, Wishart, SK. S a ska to o n , S K 1995 CASE 1688, 2515 eng. hrs, hopper Ph: 306- 2 42 - 9884 o r top, long auger, loaded, over $30,000 in 1- 8 77- 2 5 5 - 018 7 upgrades, new AFX rotor, chains, belts, sprockets, tires, etc., shedded, excellent, w w w .a po llo m a chin ea n d pro d u cts .co m $45,000 offers. 204-535-2573 Glenora, MB 2004 CASE/IH 2388, 1595 rotor hrs., AFX rotor, PU header, 30’ flex header, hopper ext., chopper, loaded, great shape. $110,000 OBO. Kyle, SK. Armin Loftsgard 306-375-2923 or cell: 306-375-7257 2009 9120, loaded, 767 hrs., $209,000; 1998 2388, 2841 hrs., $54,000; 1999 MORRIS HAY HIKER 1400, good condi- 2386, 3900 hrs., $42,000. 306-370-8010, Saskatoon, SK. ironmandan.ca tion. Phone: 306-861-1352, Weyburn, SK. 2388 CASE and pickup header, 2900 NH SUPER 1049 bale wagon, shedded, 2000 hrs., hopper extension, long auger, field ready, $10,000. 306-729-3271, Lums- rotor always shedded, very good. Phone: den, SK. 306-698-2102, Wolseley, SK. 7’ SICKLE MOWER; self unloading flat bale wagon; 5’ rotary mower; hay crimper; bale 2007 CIH 7010, 1080 sep./1365 eng. hrs., spear. 306-283-4747, 306-220-0429, well maintained, shedded. Call for specs. 306-621-7777, 306-783-2245, Yorkton, SK Langham, SK. 2003 CASE 2388, AFX, AFS, 2015 header, FORESTER MODEL #40 large bale hiker. 2140 sep. hrs., $69,900; 2001 Case 2388, Wanted: forage/silage wagon. Call Roger specialty rotor, 2015 header, 2540 sep. Britnell 306-243-4215, Macrorie, SK. hrs., $59,900. 306-274-7604, Lestock, SK. CASE/IH RBX 563 round baler and CIH 2 0 0 5 C I H 8 0 1 0 , 4 WD, front tires SCX 100 haybine, 1 owner, very low acres, 1250-45-32 means 45” wide, rear tires like new cond. 306-748-2696, Neudorf, SK. 28Lx26 means 28” wide, apparently will go 30’ MF 9030 rigid header, $1500 OBO; NH as far as a track machine, 4 spd. hyd. 114 haybine, $3250 OBO; NH 116 haybine, trans., straw chopper and spreaders, Pro $3250 OBO; NH 1033 bale wagon, $2500. 600 monitor, approx. 1950 sep. hrs. c/w 2052 30’ draper header, $130,000; 2008 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. IHC 8010, AWD, 45x32 front tires, 28x26 rear tires, spreader and chopper, approx. 800 sep. hrs., 30’ flex draper header, $240,000. Can email pics. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. 1-8 6 6 -8 42-48 03 1985 CIH 1480, 2 heads: PU header, and Ce ll: (3 06 ) 8 6 1-749 9 25’ 1020 flex head w/skid plates. AHC, w w w .m rm a ch in e s .ca rock trap, chopper, new rub bars, 2 sets of concaves, recent new tires, always shedUpgra d e yo u r e xis tin g a u ge r to a c o n tin u o u s fe e d ded, good cond., $10,000 OBO; 1020 flex a u ge r w ith yo u r c ho ic e o f head $8000 OBO. 306-483-5034 Oxbow SK po ly o r s te e l fin ge rs . The y IH 1480 SP combine with reverser and a re m o re e ffic ie n ta n d ve ry long auger. Alvin Miller Farm Equipment AUGER a ffo rd a b le . Auction, Saturday, August 17, 2013, R EBUILDING Stoughton, SK. area. For sale bill and pho* Fo r co m b in e tos visit www.mackauctioncompany.com hea d ers a n d ha yb in es 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815, Mack * All m a k es /m o d els Auction Co. PL 311962. * Co m plete in s pectio n a n d s tra ighten in g HAYBINE 1996 CIH 2188, 2685/2182 hrs., extensive * Flo o r tin s , b a ts & tin e R OLLER S upgrades, very good, $58,000 OBO. b a rs pro vid ed * S teel ro llers m a d e 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. * Ca n b e b u ilt n ew o r to to OEM s pecs OEM s pecs CASE 1480, 3600 engine hrs., 1015 PU * Cu s to m -d es ign ed * S ta n d a rd o r co n tin o u s header, reverser, bushings just done, Kirby fo r a ll m a k es /m o d els feed m o d els a va ila b le * S o ld in s ets o r a s spreader, no chopper, good shape, $8000 OBO. 306-528-4777, Nokomis, SK. s in gle ro llers 1986 CASE/IH 1640, 3066 hrs., new 1550 Hw y. 39 Ea s t, W eyb urn, S K 23.1x26 tires, Kirby spreader, 1015 PU “Pride in Quality” header, shedded, vg and 24’ 810 straight header, large auger, 1000 acres on new NEW 2013 MORRIS 1400 hay hiker, lease guards, knife and batts, exc., $20,000 for $541 a month! 60 mos. term. Cam-Don OBO. Call 403-379-3960, Bindloss, AB. Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK. 2006 8010, 579 ROTOR HOURS, 900 N H B I - D I R E C T I O N A L M O U N T 9 7 2 rubber, Swathmaster PU, Pro600 monitor, MacDon 21’ triple delivery header, PU field ready. Retired. $187,500 OBO. 306-598-2195 306-231-6242 Annaheim SK reel, vg cond. 306-842-4752 Weyburn, SK. NH 1033 and 1044 bale wagons, good 1985 CASE/IH 1480, 3950 eng. hrs, speshape. 306-283-4747, 306-291-9395, cialty rotor, rock trap, chopper, 12’, PU header, must see, $22,500. Call Clint at Langham, SK. 204-362-4532, Morden, MB. FA R M T I R E S. B K T r a d i a l f a r m R - 1 , 600/65R28 157A8, $1496. Phone OK Tire, 1987 1660, 3900 hrs, Melroe PU, specialty I d y l w y l d D r N , S a s k a t o o n , S K . rotor, shedded, off stone free heavy soil, $9900 OBO. Elrose, SK. 306-378-2904 or 306-933-1115 www.oktire.com 306-831-5338 cell. LIKE NEW MATADOR swath inverter, hyd. driven, flow control. Call 306-640-8600, 1995 CASE/IH 2188, 2545 rotor hrs., internal chopper, Kirby chaff spreader, hopAssiniboia, SK. per extension, nearly new tires, wired for 1986 TRAILMASTER HAY trailer 42’, li- JD GPS, always shedded, $33,000; 1995 censed; NH 660 baler with bale command; 36’ HoneyBee header with UII PU reel, NH 2300 18’ haybine header; Conveyair gauge wheels, to fit above combine, # 1 a i r va c . S t o ny B e a c h , S K , c a l l $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 . W i l l s e l l s e p a r at e ly. C e l l : 306-858-7575, Lacadena, SK. 306-345-2806, cell 306-527-6088. BALERS: JD 510, $1250; JD 530, $3500; JD 535, $6000. Haybines: Gehl 2270, $3900; NH 116, $3000; Case/IH 8312 discbine, $6900. Rakes: 14 wheel, $6500; Vermeer R23 hyd., $7000. NH swath inverter, $3000. NH 9’ mower, $2200. JD 9’ mower, $2200. 1-866-938-8537.

1998 CIH 2388 COMBINE, w/ AFX rotor, AFS, new concaves & rubbars, chopper, 3,157 hrs., Mauer hopper topper, long auger w/ Stewart steel extensions, comes w/ pickup & warranty. $59,800. Trades welcome, financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com.

2009 CR9070 with Swathmaster PU, dual 620-70Rx42 tires, yield and moisture and y i e l d m ap p i n g , 7 2 3 t h r e s h i n g h r s . , $175,000. 306-793-2190, 306-745-7274, Stockholm, SK. 2007 NH CX8070 Super Series Conventional combine, 1064 sep. hrs., loaded, mint shape, $130,000; 2007 NH 76C, 14’ very little use, always shedded, $17,500. Call Larry at 705-728-1610, Minesing, ON. NH TR98 SP combine with 1571 rotor hours and recent work orders consigned by Tom Flath to the Alvin Miller Farm Equipment Auction, Saturday, August 17, 2013, Stoughton, SK. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962

GLEANER G; 1976 L; 1983 L3, 20’ header; 2010 JOHN DEERE 9870, Contour-Mastaking offers; 1989 R70, 2594 eng. hrs., ter, 2WD, 650x85R38 duals, 849 sep. hrs, 1992 sep. hrs., asking $20,000. All shed- $199,900. 605-480-1750, 605-270-4841. ded. Call 780-674-4287 or 780-674-1850, Barrhead, AB. GLEANER R72, 1837 eng. hrs, shedded, PU header, 24’ straight cut header, $59,000. Call Barry 780-632-9756, Vegreville, AB.

1991 JD 9600 combine, w/new complete rebuilt engine, head and injectors, good cond. 306-741-7012, Swift Current, SK. NICE 1997 JD CTS, Y&M, fine cut chopper, Swathmaster PU, shedded, field ready, 2515 hrs, $54,000 OBO. May deliver. Contact 204-546-2131, 204-572-5032, 204-572-5186, Grandview, MB. 1988 JD 8820, 4020 eng. hrs, 914 PU, fine cut chopper, chaff spreader, air foil chaffer, hopper cover, good rubber, $16,900. 204-937-0866, Roblin, MB.

1997 NH TR98, 3591 sep. hrs., $32,500. Cash is King!!! 0% financing for 60 months. 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for full online listings. RME-BOISSEVAIN, MB. UP to $10,000 off CX840 w/1593 sep. hrs, 2124 eng. hrs. w/bring a pair, buy a pair harvest promo. w/16’ Rake-Up PU, very well maintained, 2009 JOHN DEERE 9770, Contour-Master, 2WD, 520x85R42 duals, 1282/849 1998 CIH 2388 w/1994 MacDon 960 vg cond. 403-391-6021, Red Deer, AB. extended warranty, $172,500. $47,490. 204-534-2463 or rockymtn.com 2003 NH CX840, 1827 sep. hrs., $96,000. hours, 605-480-1750 or, 605-270-4841. RME-BOISSEVAIN, MB. UP to $10,000 off Cash is King!!! 0% financing for 60 months. w/bring a pair, buy a pair Harvest promo- 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for 1997 JD 9600 w/914 table, ContourMaster, DAM, DAS, chaff spreader, widetion. 1999 CIH 2388 w/CIH 1042 PU reels, full online listings. chopper, topper, 1590 thrash hrs., $71,900. 204-534-2463 or rockymtn.com 2009 NH CR9080, 492 sep. hrs, $256,000. spread shedded, exc. cond, 224 straight cut table 2004 C/IH 2388, AFX rotor, chopper, hop- Cash is King!!! 0% financing for 60 months. is optional. 306-827-7704, Radisson, SK. per topper, big tires, auger ext, Auto-Steer 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca for 1998 9510, w/914 PU, 2012 threshing ready, 2,096/1700 hrs. shedded, excellent, full online listings. $98,000. 306-776-2496, Wilcox, SK. 1992 TR96, FORD motor, 2231 threshing hrs, hopper topper w/cover, shedded, hrs., new tires, many new parts, vg cond., chopper and chaff spreader, $65,000 OBO. $ 1 5 , 0 0 0 c a s h o r t r a d e fo r c a t t l e . 306-338-2710, Hendon, SK. 306-863-4177, Star City, SK. WANTED: 6601 JD PT combine, must be WILL SELL EITHER: 205-570R, 1470 hrs. 1997 TR98, 3810 engine hrs., Redekop shedded. 403-363-3736, Brooks, AB. or 208-580R, 500 hrs. Both completely chopper, Swathmaster PU, $30,000 OBO; 1996 JD 9600, Greenlighted, 2716 sep. field ready in excellent condition. Also 1993 TR96, 2996 eng. hrs., good cond., hrs., 914 pickup, AutoSteer, yield and have a P14 PU head and 2012 35’ FD70 $15,000 OBO. 204-365-7186, Hamiota, MB moisture. 306-625-3674, Ponteix, SK. MacDon. 306-267-4815, Big Beaver, SK. 2001 NH TX 66, Serial #821190002, 1983 JD 6620 combine, 212 PU header, shedded, lateral tilt, straw chopper, chaff approx. 3,300 eng. hrs., reverser, good spreader, two spd. cyl., radial drive tires, 2 cond., chopper, recent Greenlight, asking yr old Swathmaster Series IV PU (cost $14,000. Ph. 204-324-4352, Emerson, MB. $14,000). Clean grain elevator, feeder 2001 9650W, Greenstar equipped, header chain and hopper bubble auger all near height, Redekop fine cut chopper, 914P new. Exclusive tilting shoe. On the go con- PU, 177 hrs. on new engine, 2916 sep. cave etc. adjustments. All monitors. Big 1999 CAT LEXION 480, 2200 sep. hrs, Cat top hopper ext., 1316/1681 hrs. Clean hrs., delivery avail., shedded, $105,000. cert., wide body machine, Mud-Hog RWA, premium combine, $69,900. Ph. toll free 306-424-2732, 306-424-7712, Kendal, SK. 14’ Precision header PU, shedded, 2005 1-877-862-2413, cell 306-862-7761 or 1993 JD 9400, 1367 sep. hrs, 914 PU HoneyBee SP 30’ draper header w/trailer, 1-877-862-2387, cell 306 862 7524, Ni- header, 925R platform c/w transport trail$115,000 OBO. 204-868-5329 Newdale MB pawin, SK. er, $65,000. 306-378-2902, Elrose, SK. NEW LEXION STRAW CHOPPER c/w belts 1995 NH TR97, 2278 sep. hrs., $22,000. 2007 JD 9660 STS, 1242/1595 hrs, Conand shields, 57”W; 3- 6.5mmx40mm Cat Cash is King!!! 0% financing for 60 months tour-Master, AHH, duals, high torque reconcaves. 306-373-2568, Saskatoon, SK. OAC. 1-888-462-3816 or for full online verser, 2013 inspection, $155,000; 2008 listings www.farmworld.ca JD 635F, w/HHS, $28,000. Both shedded. 2012 LEXION 670, 150 sep. hrs., deluxe 306-831-9411, Rosetown, SK. cab, long auger, auto grease, mint cond. RME-BOISSEVAIN, MB. UP to $10,000 off w/bring a pair, buy a pair harvest promo. TWO SHEDDED, FIELD ready JD 9600 780-768-3766,780-603-0331,Hairy Hill, AB 2002 NH TR99 w/2000 MacDon 962 combines: 1996 w/3000 sep. hrs.; 1997 2003 CHALLENGER 660, 1660 sep. hrs., $92,499. 204-534-2463 or rockymtn.com w/3520 sep. hours. $85,000 spent on $22,000 spent in repairs, shedded, field Greenlight in last 2 yrs. Also pickup heads, ready. Pickup head and 30’ flex header 2012 FORD/NEW HOLLAND CR 7090 36’ HoneyBee headers, 30’ flex headers available. Fraser Farms Ltd., Pambrun, SK, combine. 377 eng. hrs, 255 sep. hrs, and chaff collectors available. Fraser 790C-12 header, reverser, auto header Farms Ltd., 306-741-0240, Pambrun, SK. call 306-741-0475. height control, hyd. fore and aft, Terrain Tracer, long auger, grain tank ext, chaff JOHN DEERE 9610, 3050 sep hrs., c/w spreader, chopper, Intelliview IV monitor, 914 PU, Greenlight annually. Phone ESTATE SALE: NH CR 9070 combine, yield and moisture, Terrain Tracer feeder 306-775-2845, Regina, SK. w/14’ Swathmaster PU, less than 200 hrs, house, HID lighting, 900/60R-32 tires, 1997 9600, LOADED, c/w 914, long auger, as new, shedded, hopper cover, $260,000. 402 HP. One owner. Factory warranty to fine cut chopper, JD chaff spreader, new Located at Cupar, SK. Call 306-545-7024 Sept 1, 2013, ext. engine warranty to Sept 800x65R32 Michelins, shedded, exc. cond, 1, 2014, $275,000. Trades welcome. Top or 306-723-4773. dollar for any make. 1-877-862-2387, cell $65,000. 780-847-3792, Marwayne, AB. 1997 TR98, 3840 eng/ 2945 sep hrs, c/w 306-862-7524 or 1-877-862-2413, cell 2001 9650 WALKER w/PU head, Y&M and Counter-Master, 2800 sep. hrs, $79,000; Victory Super 8 PU, 4150 Redekop chop- 306-862-7761, Nipawin, SK. per, extra set of Harvest Ind. concaves, 2003 CR940, 2 spd. rotor, 1820 sep. hrs., 1998 36’ HoneyBee w/PU reel, $16,900; hopper topper, $37,500. 306-648-8005, good condition, field ready, shedded, 2005 JD 35’ flex header, $24,900; 2008 JD 35’ flex header, $29,000. 306-948-3949, 306-648-7595, Gravelbourg, SK. $90,000 OBO. 306-843-7046, Wilkie, SK. 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. 1990 NH TR96, 3821 sep. hrs., $10,900. 1990 TR96, 2999 engine hours, spent Cash is King!!! 0% financing for 60 months. $26,000 on insurance claim, many new 2000 JD 9650 STS combine, premium 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for parts, 8 belt Victory PU, chopper, $21,000 cond., low hrs., shedded, Greenlighted yearly, $115,000. 780-831-8776, Valhalla full online listings. OBO. 306-233-7529, Cudworth, SK. Centre, AB. 2003 NH CR960, 1250 sep. hrs, $125,000. 3- NH TR98’s SP, 971 pickups, shedded, Cash is King!!! 0% financing for 60 months. well maintained, 1400-2300 sep. hrs., 7720 TITAN II, rice tires, well maintained, 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for $ 3 5 , 0 0 0 e a c h O B O. 3 0 6 - 6 2 1 - 0 6 1 4 , $12,000; 4700 VERSATILE SP swather, good in mud, $10,000. 1-866-507-3369, full online listings. 306-269-0215, Foam Lake, SK. 204-735-2313, Starbuck, MB. 1982 NH TR95, Kirby spreader and straw 2000 NH TR99, 1600 sep. hrs., auger chopper, 4500 hrs., new bearings on drive ext., big top hopper, grain loss monitor, 1987 JD TITAN II, long auger, good cond., pully, all tires two years old, $5500 OBO. factory duals, PU header, always shedded, s h e d d e d , $ 2 2 , 0 0 0 . 3 0 6 - 7 3 6 - 3 3 0 4 , 306-536-2840, Balgonie, SK. $65,000 OBO. 36’ HoneyBee straight cut 306-435-9517, Langbank, SK. also available. 403-552-2106, Altario, AB. 2001 JD 9650 STS, 1875/2537 hrs., 914 2009 NH CR9070, 617 sep. hrs, $227,500. PU, Y&M, hopper ext., 800/65/32, most Cash is King!!! 0% financing for 60 months. modifications, no stones, yearly pre-har1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca for vest maintenance inspection, shedded, full online listing. 1985 L3 GLEANER, 2 headers, rebuilt $100,000. Contact Don Thompson at 1994 TR97 TERRAIN Tracer, electronic eng., heavy hydro, large rubber vg, 16’ un- 306-768-3705, cell 306-768-7765, Carrot stone trap, long auger, Redekop chopper, loading auger, will dump into semi or cart River, SK. or dlthompson@sasktel.net R a ke - U p P U, h o p p e r t o p p e r. A s k i n g with ease, shedded, excellent. One of the finest L series left. Must be seen. Approx. $24,000. 306-742-5912, Churchbridge, SK. $5000 of new parts included. Asking 1996 NH TX66 w/Rake-UP PU, 2213 eng. $15,000. 306-299-7767, Consul, SK. hrs, 1721 cyl. hrs, $50,000 OBO. Phone: LONGER LASTING GLEANER accelerator 204-467-5638, Rosser, MB. rollers, 3 to 5 times longer than OEM. 2003 NH CR960, 1273 sep. hrs, $105,000. Phone 306-759-2572, Eyebrow, SK. Cash is King!!! 0% financing for 60 months. FOR SALE: 2002 R62 gleaner, 300 HP 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for Cummins, Rake-Up PU, $15,000. prevenfull online listings. tive maintance inspection done in 2011, 2006 NH CR970, w/2009 16’ PU, Y&M, 26’ $55,000. 306-460-4060, Kindersley, SK. ‘04 JD 9660 STS Greenstar, NEW factory auger, new sieves, Mav chopper, air comduals, FC chopper, 2,523/3,579 hrs., new pressor, 1453 sep. hrs, $120,000 OBO. pickup available. $118,800. Trades welcome. 306-662-3388, Maple Creek, SK. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 1985 NH TR96, 2942 sep. hrs., $11,500. Cash is King!!! 0% financing for 60 months. 7721 JD pull type for parts, new tires, 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for $4000 OBO. 403-734-2148, Gleichen, AB. full online listings. 1985 JD 6620 Titan II, 3302 hrs, 212 PU, harvest track monitor, header reverser, 2010 NEW HOLLAND CR9060, Contourshaft monitors, 2 spd. cyl., shedded, one Master, 2WD, 20.8x42 duals, 607/504 hrs, owner, $8000. 306-728-3263, Melville, SK. $189,900. 605-480-1750, 605-270-4841. ’97 HONEYBEE SP30 - UII reel w/ 2009 NH 9070, 570 separator hours. Deal- new fingers, hyd. fore/aft, good IF YOU SPRAYED LIBERTY and received er serviced fall 2012, ready to go, in great knife, guards & sections, adapter for crop damage call Back-Track Investigacondition. Not used fall of 2012. Fully inte- JD9600, 2388 CIH, or Gleaner R72 tions for assistance 1-866-882-4779. grated factory GPS with AutoSteer/yield available. $19,800. Trades welcome. 1982 JD 6620, 3670 engine hours, 212 mapping, two sets of concaves, $170,000. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. pickup, posi-torque drive, chopper, A-1 Call: 306-722-7644 or 406-268-1028. www.combineworld.com. mechanical and appearance, $7000. E m a i l : j f l a t e n @ j m g r a i n . c o m 1981 L2, 1845 hrs, always shedded, new 306-748-2851, Neudorf, SK. or hjohnson@jmgrain.com rubber, field ready, $10,000 OBO. Call FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS 2004 NH CR970, 2240 sep. hrs, $127,000. 403-935-4331, 587-888-2112, Airdrie, AB. We also specialize in: Crop insurance apCash is King!!! 0% financing for 60 months. L2 GLEANER with PU and straight cut peals; Chemical drift; Residual herbicide; 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca for header, field ready, $4500. 306-781-2954, Custom operator issues; Equipment malfull online listings. Regina, SK. function. Qualified Agrologist on staff. Call TR86, 4100 hrs., fair condition, w/near 2008 A85 GLEANER, 1500 threshing hrs., Back-Track Investigations for assistance new tires, Rake-Up PU, $7500. Call duals, Y&M, mapping, Redekop chopper, 9 regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779. 306-561-7780, Davidson, SK. belt Swathmaster PU, updates done. 1997 JD CTS, 3100 sep hrs., 914 PU 306-745-7018, Tantallon, SK. header, annual Greenlights, field ready, 2000 NH TR89, 1531 threshing hrs., exc. cond, very well maintained, $58,000; Also WANTED: N7 or R Series combine, must $45,000. 306-782-8303, Yorkton, SK. 30’ HONEYBEE straight cut header, b e i n g o o d s h a p e . C a l l J a c k a t 9650 STS, 2002, 2000 sep. hrs, w/914 PU. Call 306-531-7600, Regina, SK. 306-675-4419, Ituna, SK. $20,000. Mark 403-505-9524, Ponoka, AB 2001 CIH 2388, 2360 sep. hrs., hopper top, AFX rotor, Swathmaster PU, Y&M, exc. cond., $82,500 OBO. 204-523-7469 or 204-534-8115, Killarney, MB.

2010 9870 STS, low hrs., 343 sep. hrs, 520 duals, 4 WD, Contour-Master, c/w 615P header, optional to include 635 HydraFlex header, $284,000. Call 204-227-5679, Warren, MB. Email: riddellseed@mts.net

‘07 JD 936D HEADER - Single pt., factory transport, hyd. F/A, new canvas, knife, & PUR fingers. $38,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 1993 9600, recent Greenlight, approx. 2700 threshing hrs, Redekop chopper, exc. cond. 306-228-3062, Unity, SK. 1979 JD 8820, 2935 hours, diesel, AC, w i d e - b e l t P U, $ 1 1 , 5 0 0 O B O. P h o n e 204-564-2527, Shellmouth, MB. 2010 JD 9770STS, 625 sep. hrs., c/w 2012 JD 615P PU header w/only 100 hours on header, Contour-Master high torque variable spd. feeder house, high cap lift cyl., 22’ high cap unload auger, wide spread fine cut chopper, 800/70R38, small and large grain concave’s, always shedded, exc. cond. $235,000. Call Jordan anytime at 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 1992 JD 9600, 914 PU, new tires, chopper, chaff spreader, 2900 sep. hrs., good shape, $37,000. 306-332-6776, Ft. Qu’Appelle, SK 1995 JD CTS, like new, 2839 thrashing hrs., completely looked over (2011), replaced rub bars, elevator chains, many bearings and all filters. Selling because needed larger combine, $45,000. Call Tom 306-753-7575, Cactus Lake, SK. 2001 JD 9650 STS w/914, Y&M, header height control, hopper ext., 2060 sep. hrs., $90,000. Call or text: 306-654-7888, Prud’Homme, SK. 1996 JD 9600, 914 PU, dual range, 4340 eng. hrs., 3300 threshing hrs., excellent condition, $42,000 OBO. 306-549-7635 or 306-549-2389, Hafford, SK. 2008 JOHN DEERE 9770, Contour-Master, 2WD, 20.8X42 duals, 800 sep. hours, ext. warranty, $174,900. 605-480-1750, or 605-270-4841. 2007 JD 9660WTS, 528 sep. hrs., GreenStar ready, chopper, chaff spreader, hyd. fore/aft, grain loss monitor, rock trap, 21’x6” unloading auger, hopper topper, Greenlighted, c/w 2011 JD 615 PU header, always shedded, $169,000. Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 1994 JD 9600, 212 PU, 4950 eng./3583 sep. hrs., dual spd. cyl. fore/aft, chopper, chaff spreader, unload auger extension, shedded, 400 hrs. on $18,000 Greenlight, maintenance records available, field ready, $47,500 OBO. 306-642-8611, Limerick, SK. 2004 JD 9860, Precision header, duals, 1025 engine, 740 sep. hrs. 204-248-2372, 204-828-3565, Notre Dame, MB. 1982 7720 TURBO hydro, 2 spd cylinder, fine cut chopper, new PU belts, hyd. pump, primary countershaft and bearings, $14,000 in recent Greenlights, 4600 hrs., $12,000 OBO. Phone: 204-868-5504 or 204-874-2206 eves, Minnedosa, MB. or email: neilgalb@gmail.com 1985 JD 7720 Titan II, good shape. 7721 for parts. 306-867-8477, 306-867-8457, Outlook, SK. 2004 JOHN DEERE 9760, Contour-Master, 2WD, 20.8X42 duals, 3088/2082 hrs, $106,900. 605-480-1750, 605-270-4841. 1995 JD 9600, new: front tires, rub bars, and concave, chaff spreader, $9,000 spent on Greenlight, $50,000. Call Dale 204-649-2288, 204-522-5708, Pierson, MB 1987 JD 7721 pull type combine, field ready, good condition, asking $9000. Phone 306-228-3251, Unity, SK. 1997 JD 9600, 914 header, long auger, fine tooth chopper, shedded, work done on it, very clean machine, $49,000. 780-674-5516, 780-305-7152 Barrhead AB JD 9610, FINE cut chopper, chaff spreader, $60,000. Phone 306-383-2915, Rose Valley, SK. 1994 JD 9600, w/914 header, long auger, chaff spreader, 2137 sep. hrs, 2876 eng. hrs, shedded, $65,000. Call 403-304-4883, 403-773-2477, Elnora, AB. 2002 9650 STS, recent Greenlight, exc. cond., 2182 eng. hrs, 1581 sep. hrs, $105,000. 2002 930 header, mint cond., with mover, $15,000. 224 header w/22’ Sund PU, great for peas and blown canola, $5,000. Call 306-577-8771, 306-577-1626, Carlyle, SK. 2005 JD 9760, 1425/1790 hrs., Y&M, 914 PU, plumbed for Outback, shedded; Also 2000 930 draper header. $142,000. for both. Call 403-823-5308, Drumheller, AB. 2005 JOHN DEERE 9660, Contour-Master, 2WD, 20.8X38 duals, 3138/2270 hrs, $99,900. 605-480-1750, or 605-270-4841. 1982 JD 7720, 3817 eng. hrs, 212 PU header, chopper, front axle ext., rice tires, good cond., always shedded, $12,000 OBO. 204-746-2818, Morris, MB.


50 CLASSIFIED ADS

1995 JD 9600, 914 PU, reverser, chaff spreader, fine cut chopper, long auger, 3660 eng. hrs., 2960 sep. hrs., recent work done, $62,000. 306-728-3337, Melville, SK 1981 7720, 212 PU, auto header control, 2 spd. cyl., Kirby, long auger, chopper, hoppper cover, 3900 eng. hrs., good cond., $13,000. 306-882-5101, D’Arcy, SK. 1986 JD 6620 TITAN II, 2734 hrs, positorque, 212 PU and reverse variable speed feeder house, many new parts, new tires, always shedded, vg condition, asking $10,000 OBO. 306-846-7521, Dinsmore SK 2012 JD S670, 303 hrs, ATR, GS3 color TS monitor, Premium cab, HIDs, Contour Master w/hi-torque reverser, Pro Drive, 20.8x42s w/duals, chopper, $259,500 US; 2012 JD S660, 282 hrs, GS3 color TS Monitor, Premium cab, Contour Master w/hi-torque reverser, 3 speed trans, 18.4x42s w/duals, chopper, $239,500 US. Phone 320-848-2496 or 320-894-6560, Fairfax, MN. www.ms-diversified.com 1987 8820 TITAN II, 214 PU, long auger, 2200 hrs., dual range, hydro, reverser, always shedded, vg cond., $32,500; 925 rigid header available, $9500. 780-905-2979, Westlock, AB. 1982 8820, 3860 hrs, 214 PU, long auger, chaff spreader, hydro reverser, field ready $18,500. 780-905-2979, Westlock, AB 2001 9750, 2171 sep. hrs, Y&M, shedded, ext. auger, many updates done, $85,000. 306-221-8155, 306-257-3897, Allan, SK. JD 9500, 3156 sep. hrs., 4400 eng. hrs., c/w chopper, JD 930 rigid header, trailer, JD PU, field ready. Call 306-588-2588, Vanguard, SK. 2006 9760 STS, bullet rotor, 615 pickup, Michel’s elec. tarp, crop catcher, excellent condition, 1300 sep. hrs., $170,000. 306-946-7457, 306-230-9853, Watrous SK 1999 9610, duals, 2300 sep. hrs, $78,500. 1993 9600, 2550 sep. hrs, $48,500. Both have 914 headers, Precision cyl., concave and beater, Rodono choppers, H.H.C., airfoil chaffer, big hopper topper, shedded, good cond. 630F heads also available. 204-736-4201, La Salle, MB. 2009 JD 9770 STS, 463 hrs, Premier cab, Contour Master with hi-torque reverser, 20.8x42s with duals, 600/65R38 rears, chopper, JD factory bin extension. Very nice low hour combine! $199,500 US. Phone: 320-848-2496 or 320-894-6560, Fairfax, MN, www.ms-diversified.com

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

2010 MF 9795, lateral tilt, power hopper, power ladder, leather seat, MAV chopper, Outback GPS ready, 900/60R32 fronts 28L-26 rear tires, 1072 eng./772 thresher hrs., $265,000. 306-463-8600, Coleville SK MF 9690, 1070 eng. hrs, 760 sep. hrs, exc. shape, 30’ draper, Agco 5100. 306-243-4960 306-867-4167 Dinsmore SK 1982 MASSEY 850, 354 turbo, hydro, Melroe 378 PU, chopper, 2857 hrs., lots of recent work done, always shedded, premium cond., $9500 OBO. Call 204-564-2310, leave message, Russell, MB. 2000 MF 8780 XP SP combine, Swathmaster PU, Redekop chopper, $55,000; 2000 AgCo 30’ straight cut header, Massey adapter, built-in transport, pea auger, Empire gauge wheels, $22,000. 306-237-4518, Sonningdale, SK. 9690 MF 2006, 1220 sep./1650 eng. hrs, updated Roto at 500 hrs, hopper cover, shedded, Melroe PU, exc., $105,000. Carrot River SK 306-768-7812, 306-768-7392 1995 MF 8460, shedded, one owner, field ready. 306-874-7795, 306-874-2354, Naicam, SK. 2009 MF 9795, 609 eng. hrs., 421 thresh hrs., Howard concave, airfoil top, elec. bottom sieve, lat. tilt, hyd. fore/aft, PU header, MAV chopper, hopper ext., front duals 520/85R42, rears 480/80R26, adj. axle, thru MF shop- winter 2012, field ready. Call for price. Gregoire Seed Farms Ltd. 306-441-7851, 306-445-5516, North Battleford, SK. 1983 MF 860, 3636 hrs, V8 hydro, 9001 table w/Victory PU, 9030 straight header, field ready. 306-297-3317, Shaunavon, SK. 1996 MF 8570, 2486 hrs., Swathmaster pickup, $35,000. 306-726-4326, Southey, SK. 1982 MF 850 combine w/Strawstorm chopper, $5000. Ph. 306-576-2207 eves., Elfros, SK. REDUCED: 8460 MF, 1500 eng. hrs, Westward 388 PU, exc. shape, $25,000. 306-823-4319, 306-823-7556, Neilburg SK 1984 MF 860, $4000 work order done in 2012, always shedded, $7900 OBO. Call Lorne 306-383-2961, Quill Lake, SK.

2011 CIH 8120, duals, $289,000; 2012 CIH 8120, duals, $315,000; 2008 JD 9870, duals, $218,000; 2003 JD 9650STS, $127,000; 1996 JD CTS, $49,900; 2006 CIH 8010, 1165 hrs., $189,000; 2004 CIH 8010, 1700 hrs., $155,000; 2007 CIH 7010, 1190 hrs., duals, $185,000; 2009 CIH 9120, 765 hrs., $249,000; 2010 NH CR9080, duals, $249,000; 1995 TR97, 1450 hrs., $39,900; 1999 CIH 2388, $76,000; 1994 CIH 1688, $35,000; 2010 CIH 9120, 620 hrs., $269,000; 2002 CIH 2388, $88,000; 1986 CIH 1680, $17,500; 2006 CIH 8010, $195,000; 1995 CIH 2188, $59,900; 2010 CIH 8120, $253,000; 2010 CIH 8120, $269,000. Call Hergott Farm Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK. 96 CLASS with PU and 22’ straight cut header w/steel reel PU, some new parts. Take trades or offers. 780-383-3805 leave message, Warspite, AB.

1986 JD 8820 TITAN II, 2482 hrs., 914 PU, dual range cyl., fine cut chopper, long auger, new concave and beater, Sunnybrook threshing cylinder, nice shape, $35,000. Contact Bob 780-755-2115, 780-842-7836, Edgerton, AB. THREE JD 9600 combines, two are 1993’s with approx. 2965 sep and 3850 engine hrs.; 1 is a 1997 year with 1953 sep. and 2510 engine hrs., all have 914 PU, fine cut, hopper ext., chaff spreader, shedded. One 1993 has duals and variable straight header; 1997 has rice tires. $45,000 for 1993’s, $62,000 for 1997, 930 flex $7500; 8x30” and 6x36” corn heads also avail. Roland, MB. 204-745-7868, pdfroese@pmcnet.ca 2004 JD 9760, 969 eng. hrs, 647 thresher hrs, high spd unload, 800x32 tires, Greenlight done, $160,000; 2003 36’ HoneyBee RME-BOISSEVAIN, MB. UP to $10,000 off header w/quick attach. Both in vg cond., w/bring a pair, buy a pair harvest promo. 204-328-7441, 204-724-7949, Rivers, MB. 2002 NH TR99 c/w MacDon 962, $92,499. Call 204-534-2463 or rockymtn.com 2006 JD 9760, 945 sep. hrs, dual wheels, 615 PU, hopper topper, power spreader, RME-BOISSEVAIN, MB. UP to $10,000 off field ready, $172,000. 306-753-7615, with bring a pair, buy a pair harvest promo. 1998 CIH 2388 w/MacDon 960 306-753-7618, Macklin, SK. $47,490. 204-534-2463 or rockymtn.com 2009 JD 9870, 650 sep. hrs., 615P PU header, always stored inside, 2013 Greenlight inspected, $245,000. Call Ron 204-941-0045, 204-322-5638, Rosser, MB. 1990 JD 9500 combine, one owner, always shedded, vg cond., 4350 threshing hrs., $23,000. OBO. 306-595-4858, Arran, SK. 2007 JD 930D 30’ draper, PU reels/guards, fore/aft, shedded, bought new, less than 2001 JD 9750 STS, 2000 sep. hrs, Y&R, 4000 acres. 204-734-0422, Minitonas, MB. $70,000; Call Lyle at 306-224-4272, Windthorst, SK. 2002 30’ HONEYBEE draper header, pea auger, UII PU reels, IHC adapter, 800 1997 JD 9600, 914 PU, long auger, MAV, acres on new knife and guards, fore/aft data center, JD chaff spreader, Maurer gauge wheels, shedded, one owner. hopper extension, shedded, 2961 sep. hrs, 306-353-2280 leave msg, Riverhurst, SK. $55,000. 780-608-9297, Rosalind, AB. CIH 810 24’ straight cut header, PU 2000 JD 9650W, 2538 sep. hrs., auto. 1986 transport, rebuilt wobble box, new sensing, Sunnybrook cyl., Redekop MAV reel, knife, $3000. 204-535-2453, Glenora, MB. chopper, hopper topper, chaff spreader, HID lights, 914 PU header w/new belts, 1995 CIH 1020 flex platform, 30’, PU $93,500; 2003 JD 930F w/PU reel, Crary reel, poly skids, fore & aft, reconditioned, Air system, poly skids, trailer, $21,500; $11,900; 2001 CIH 1020 flex platform, 30’, Two 24.5x32 Firestone rice tires on JD PU reel, poly skids, fore & aft, recondirims, $3200. 204-347-5244, St. Malo, MB. tioned, $14,900. Call Gary Reimer 2011 JD 9870 STS, 520/85-42 dual front 204-326-7000 reimerfarmequipment.com tires, 28L-26 rear tires, 155 sep. hrs., Con- Steinbach, MB. tour-Master, 26’ auger, 615P PU header. Asking $320,000. 306-921-7295, Star City, SK., email mike.mcavoy@sasktel.net 2- 2008 JD 936D’s w/Ag Shield cross au2- 1983 JD 8820, 212 PU headers, unload- ger, nylon skids, hyd. fore/aft, PU reel, ing augers 20’, dual range cyls., reversers, fact. transport, 1 owner, low acres, mostly good cond., approx. 3,250 eng. and 3,300 shedded, $39,900 ea. or $76,000/both. eng. hours, grain loss monitors, chopper, Phone 780-204-0391 or 780-786-2867, 330 bu. hopper topper. Asking $22,000 ea. Mayerthorpe, AB, jefarm@xplornet.com 204-324-4352, Emerson, MB. 2008 NH 94C (HoneyBee), 30’ CR/CX/AFX 1987 JD 8820 Titan II, hydro drive, dual adapter, vg, one owner, $38,000 OBO. range cyl., airfoil sieve, fine cut chopper, 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Yorkton, SK dual chaff spreaders, 4100 hrs., vg cond., shedded, $22,000 OBO. 204-274-2054, 2004 JD 936 draper header, excellent 204-856-9385, Portage, MB. condition, $35,000. Phone 403-664-2414, Oyen, AB. MACDON 960 30’ draper header, w/PU TR adapter and transport, shedded, 1 9 9 3 M F 8 5 7 0 , 4 0 0 7 e n g i n e h r s . , reel, cond., $13,500 OBO. Shellbrook, SK. $18,000; 1994 MF 8570, 3670 engine exc. hrs., $20,000; 24’ MF header, UII pickup 306-747-2514, 306-961-8061. reels, fits 8570, 8780 MF; 30’ MACDON JD 230 STRAIGHT cut auger header, batt draper header, pickup reels, fits 8570, reel, good shape, header, $4,000. Trans8780 MF; 1984 MF 860, 3000 eng. hours, p o r t ava i l a b l e . 3 0 6 - 4 2 9 - 2 7 8 5 , c e l l 306-424-7575, Glenavon, SK. chopper, $5500. 306-753-7465, Denzil, SK. 1997 MASSEY FERGUSON 8780, 1986 sep. 230 STRAIGHT CUT header, 30’, fits 9000 hours, new feeder and elevator chains, series JD combines, PU reel, 2 knives, $65,000. 306-726-4326, Southey, SK. trailer, $8000. 306-728-3337, Melville, SK. 1980 750 COMBINE with PU and 24’ 1997 CASE/IH 1020 flex header, 30’, straight cut header, always shedded. Ph. s h e d d e d , g o o d s h a p e , $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 . 306-486-4514, Oxbow, SK. 306-644-4742, Loreburn, SK. 2011 MF 9895, 245 hours, MAV chopper, 36’ MACDON PEA AUGER, fits 974 or FD 16’ Rake-Up PU, warranty. 403-412-4456, 70, $2900 OBO. Located Viscount, SK. Three Hills, AB. 403-312-5113.

GR A TTON C OUL EE A GR I P A R TS L TD . in g Ce le brat

RS 25 YuEsA in e ss in B

’12 40’ MD FD70/CIH 2162 FLEX DRAPER Excellent cond’n, Fits CNH, Adapters avail. for every make & Trades welcome. model. $74,800. 1-800-667-4515. Financing available. www.combineworld.com MF 9024 24’ straight cut header, UII PU reel, good cond., $4500. 306-782-8303 or 306-521-0329, Yorkton, SK. 2006 CIH 2020 flex platform, 30’, PU reel, poly skids, F/A, Crary air reel, $23,900; 2009 CIH 2020 flex platform, 35’, PU reel, poly skids, F/A, $23,900. Call Gary Reimer, 204-326-7000, Steinbach, MB. reimerfarmequipment.com MUST SELL: 1989 MACDON 960, 36’, priced for quick sale at $3500. Also have available CIH or JD combine adapter for above. Dave 306-424-7511 Montmartre SK HONEYBEE 25’ DRAPER header, PU reel, c/w JD adapter, exc. cond., $26,500 OBO. Call 403-823-1894, Morrin, AB.

190 V e rs a tile

2 012 FW A (82 Hrs) w /3895 Bu hler Lo a d er& 3PT Hitch, Du a lS pd PTO $

124,90000

(x2 ) 2 388 In tern a tio n a l 1999(3645/2 756 Hrs) • 1999(3671/2 793 Hrs) AFX R o to r, 1015 w /14FT R a ke Up, Fa cto ry Cha ff/S tra w S prea d er, 3rd Lift Cylin d er, Clea n Un its $

Choice for

’10 MacDon D60 HEADER Double knife drive, pea auger, transport, hyd. head tilt, adapters avail. Excellent cond’n. $ 59,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com MACDON 960 36’, PU reel JD adapter, fore/aft, built-on transport, $10,000. 306-634-7920, 306-421-1753, Estevan, SK GLEANER 30’ HART Carter, 6 batt PU reel, $8500; 14’ Gleaner PU head, $2500 Pro Ag Sales, 306-441-2030, North Battleford, SK.

2004 CX86 0

(32 49 EN G . HR S /2 2 48 S EP HR S .) W /HHC; FO R E/AFT; LAT Tilt; Lo n g U n lo a d Au ger; Fa cto ry H o pperEXT, C ho pper& C ha ff S prd r; 900/60R 32 & 540/65R 30 Tires. $

74,50000

HONEYBEE 2004 94C 30’ draper, PU reel, fore & aft, AutoHeight, CX and CR adaptor $39,500. 306-424-7312, Candiac, SK. 2004 JD 635 Hydra flex platform, 35’, PU reel, poly skids, F/A, reconditioned, $15,900; 2009 JD 635 hydra flex platform, 35’, PU reel, poly skids, mint cond, $15,900; 2012 JD 635 hydra flex platform 35’, PU reel, poly skids, like new, $29,900. Call Gary Reimer, 204-326-7000, Steinbach, MB. reimerfarmequipment.com 2006 CASE/IH 1010 header, 25’ PU reel, plastic fingers, hyd. fore/aft, always shedded, exc. cond., asking $12,000. Can deliver. 204-857-2585, Portage la Prairie, MB. 1993 JD 930 flex platform, 30’, PU reel, poly skids, fore & aft, needs reel repair, $3900; 1998 JD 930 flex platform, 30’, PU reel, poly skids, fore & aft, reconditioned, $11,900; 2001 JD 930 flex platform, 30’, PU reel, poly skids, fore & aft, full fingered auger, reconditioned, $15,900; 2002 JD 930 flex platform, 30’, PU reel, poly skids, fore & aft, reconditioned, Crary air reel, $21,900. Gary Reimer, 204-326-7000, reimerfarmequipment.com Steinbach, MB. 2002 30’ HONEYBEE header, UII PU reel, IH adapter, fore/aft, gauge wheels, new roller bearings and canvases, vg cond, always shedded, $22,500. 306-759-2689, 306-630-9838, Brownlee, SK.

54,90000

25FT Hon e y Be e 1995 w /PU R eel& CIH Ad a pter $

16 ,90000

(x2) 9022 M F

2 2 FT w /PU R eel $

4,45000

2 2 FT w /Ba ttR eel $

3,50000

2 002 36FT w /PU R eelw /CIH Ad a pter $

1997 MACDON 960, 30’ straight header c/w PU reel, $12,000. Call 306-648-8005, 306-648-7595, Gravelbourg, SK. TWO 30’ HONEYBEE DRAPER headers, 2001 and 2005, both in exc. cond., w/JD adapters. Call 306-298-4445, Bracken, SK.

$

15,90000

(x3) 930 JD $

10,50000 $ 7,95000 $ 00 1988 30FT w /Ba ttR eel 6 ,750

RME-BOISSEVAIN, MB. UP to $10,000 off w/bring a pair, buy a pair harvest promo. 2004 CIH 8010 w/2009 HoneyBee SP36 $134,500. 204-534-2463 or rockymtn.com NH 971 header 30’, pickup reel, fore and aft. Call 780-847-2619, Marwayne, AB. NEW HEADER TRAILERS: 38’ double beam, w/lights and brakes, 3 axles, $7175; 30’ 4-wheel w/flex bar and lights, $4445; 30’ 2-wheel, flex kit, lights, $3300; 36’ 4-wheel, flex kit, lights, $5250. 204-746-6605, 204-325-2496, Morris, MB. WANTED: 30’ BATT reel to fit CIH 1010 header. Must be in better shape than mine! Jeff 306-831-9969, Milden, SK. email: jjc@yourlink.ca

1991 30Ftw /PU R eel

1994 30FT w /Ba ttR eel

(x4) 1859 M F $

00

2 0FT w /PU R eel 3,750 $ 00 2 0FT w /Ba ttR eel 3,250 $ 00 2 0FT w /PU R eel 2,750 $ 00 2 0FT w /Ba ttR eel 1,250

(X3) 36 FT Hon e y Be e

2 w /Ba ttR eel& JD Ad a pters $ 00 $ (96) & (94) 1 w /PU R eel& JD Ad a pter $ 00 (98)

15,900 12,90000 16 ,900

2002 MACDON 962 30’ harvest header and MacDon 871 adapter, to fit following combines: JD 9500, 9600, CTS and 50 series; Case/IH 1404, 1600, 2100 and 2300 series; NH TR and TX series; Agco Gleaner R62 and R72 series; Cat Lexion 450, 460, 465, 470, 480 and 485 series combines; Elmer’s Transport. Low acres, exc. cond., always shedded. Variety of new replacement parts inclcluded. $23,000 OBO. 204-845-2113, Elkhorn, MB. 2001 JD 930R full finger auger, pickup reel, plastic teeth, new wobble box and knift 600 acres ago; Also 2001 trailer. 403-934-4407, Strathmore, AB. CASE/IH 1020 FLEX head, 25’, PU reel, skid plates, $8000 OBO. 306-483-5034, Oxbow, SK. 2011 635F w/Crary air reel and header mounted fan, spare knife, fully loaded, $57,500. 2012 MAURER HEADER TRANSPORT w/lights, brakes, telescoping hitch, front fender, and spare tire, $8,500. 306-472-3000, Lafleche, SK. 1998 JD 925 flex header, good condition, asking $10,000. Phone 204-324-4352, Emerson, MB. 2009 JOHN DEERE 635F flex header, needs some repair, $22,000. Contact 306-327-8019, Kelvington, SK.

1 S eto f 78x45x32 (10 Bo lt) w illfit 8430- 9530 JD, TJ Fo rd & S TX CIH; w illsellin pa irs fo rco m b in es. (tra d es w elco m e) $

25,00000

’10 40’ MacDon D60 W/ transport, new knife, adapter for 8010/CR/CX, others avail. Guards, reel, & canvas are 9/10 cond’n. $59,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

(x2) M a c D on 96 2 (CIH 1042) 2004 16’ Rake-up pick-up Very good cond’n w/ good gearbox, bars & teeth. 9 belt. $5,800 Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com 2006 NH 94C (HoneyBee), 30’ draper header, end strut wheels, gauge wheels, transport, fore/aft, poly skid, double knife drive, UII PU reels, lifters, all JD hookups, shedded, excellent condition, $38,000. 306-224-4606 leave msg, Glenavon, SK.

1086 In te rn a tion a l

1981 (7519 Hrs) w /10FT Bla d e, N ea rN ew Tires

2- 36’ MACDON 960 straight cut draper headers with IH and NH adaptors. Alvin Miller Farm Equipment Auction, Saturday, August 17, 2013, Stoughton, Sask. area. Visit www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 2010 CASE/IH 2152 AFX/CR/CX adapter, $49,000 OBO. Maple Creek, SK., 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586. 1997 HONEYBEE SP30 with TR/TX adaptor, good shape. Asking $18,000. Call 204-479-6665, St. Francois Xavier, MB.

29,50000

1996 36FT w /Ba ttR eelw /CIH Ad a pter $

17,90000

M a c D on D 6 0-S (CIH 2152) 2 010 40FT w /PU R eel, S plitR eel, V ery N ice Co n d itio n w /CIH/CR Ad a pter $

59,90000

M a c D on 972 (CIH 1052) 1999 36FT w /PU R eel, S plitR eel, Fa cto ry Tra n spo rtw /CIH Ad a pter $

23,90000

2016 CIH (s a m e a s 76 C)

2 009 16FT w /S w a thm a sterPU $

21,50000

30FT Ho n ey Bee - 19 9 8 w /Ba tt Reel & CIH Ad a pter..................................$16 ,9 00.00 (x3) M a cDo n 9 6 0 - 19 9 4 36 FT w /PU Reel w /JD Ad a pter...........................$14,500.00 19 9 5 36 FT w /Ba tt Reel w /CIH Ad a pter...................................................$12,500.00 19 9 4 36 FT w /PU Reel w /o Ad a pter............................................................$4,500.00 M a cDo n D50 (CIH 2142) - 2010 35FT w /PU Reel (Reb u ild a b le) w /CAT Ad a pter.....................................................................................................$10,250.00 (x3) 1010 CIH - (x1) 19 9 3 30FT w /Ba tt Reel.................................................$7,9 50.00 19 9 0 30FT w /Ba tt Reel................................................................Cho ice fo r $7,450.00 224 JD 24FT w /Ba tt Reel..............................................................................$3 ,250.00 (x3) AC L M GL EAN ER - 24FT w /Ba tt Reel.....................................................$4,000.00 22FT w /Ba tt Reel........................................................................................$1,750.00 20FT w /Ba tt Reel........................................................................................$2,750.00 300 S eries GL EAN ER - 27FT w /Ba tt Reel.....................................................$5,000.00 (x2) 9 71 N H - 19 8 6 30FT w /Ba tt Reel...........................................................$6 ,500.00 19 8 7 24FT w /Ba tt Reel.................................................................................$5,9 50.00 902 4 M F 2 4FT w /Ba ttR eel............................................................................$4,500.00 92 30 M F/W hite 30FT w /Ba ttR eelLittle Use ..............................................$9 ,500.00 92 30 M F/W hite 30FT w /Ba ttR eel................................................................$7,500.00 9 25 JD 25FT w /Ba tt Reel, S in gle Po in t & P-S eries 1000 S plin e Ho o k Up. . .$7,9 50.00 9 25 JD 25FT Flex w /PU Reel, 20-9 000 S eries Cha in Ho o k Up, Exc. Hd r ...$10,9 50.00 9 36 D JD 36 FT w /Ba tt Reel, 9 000 P-S eries Ho o k Up & Fa cto ry Tra n s po rt.$23 ,9 00.00 4025 V ERS w /M a cDo n Tea r-Dro p S tyle PU Reel, w /o Ad a pter ...................$5,000.00 9 700-25 M F 25FT w /PU Reel........................................................................$5,750.00

1-8 8 8 -3 2 7-6 76 7

w w w .gcpa r ts .com

2010 HONEY BEE, WS36, $51,900. Balcarres, SK. Phone 306-334-2492 or call one of our 7 Stores near you. Visit www.maplefarm.com 2005 JD 936D, PU reel, fore/aft, transport, $35,000. 204-937-7335 or 204-937-7040, Roblin, MB. RME-BOISSEVAIN, MB. UP to $10,000 off w/bring a pair, buy a pair harvest promo. 1999 CIH 2388 w/2001 CIH 1042 36’ $71,900. 204-534-2463 or rockymtn.com 1995 36’ HONEYBEE header with 2 piece UII PU reel, gauge wheels, Case/IH Series 8 8 a d ap t e r, s h e d d e d , $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 . C e l l 306-858-7575, Lacadena, SK.

EASY HARVEST SYSTEM S LTD * used combine headers - all makes - all sizes * new EHR PU reels * used Draper Headers * PU reel updates: to rebuild Hart Carter reels

P hone 78 0- 8 75 - 8 5 05

Llo yd m in ster, Alta . Em a il: ra b en o it@ m csn et.ca Fa x: 780- 875- 8567 2009 HONEYBEE 30’, red/black AFX/ CR/CX adaptor, low acres, $39,000 OBO. 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. MF 9650 FLEX header, fits 8460 and 8450 combines, $4,000. 306-629-3976, Morse, SK. 1993 CIH 1020 flex platform, 25’, PU reel, poly skids, $5900; 1997 CIH 1020 flex platform, 25’, PU reel, poly skids, reconditioned, $11,900; 2000 CIH 1020 flex platform, 25’, PU reel, poly skids, nice s h ap e , $ 1 0 , 9 0 0 . C a l l G a r y R e i m e r, 204-326-7000 reimerfarmequipment.com Steinbach, MB. CORN HEADER 2009, 16x30, Cat Lexion C516, 16-row, low profile, w/little change to adapt to Case/IH or JD, w/counter head, hyd. deck plates, knife and rollers, nice condition, $55,000. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. J D 3 0 ’ BAT T r e e l , v e r y n i c e . C a l l 306-771-2527, Edenwold, SK.


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

HEADERS AT WHOLESALE PRICES: 1998 930 flex, Crary air reel, $16,500; 2 0 0 3 9 3 0 F, f u l l fi n g e r e d , $ 1 2 , 2 0 0 ; 2004 635 flex w/Crary air reel, full fingered, $21,900; 2005 635 flex, $13,750; 2006 635 flex, $19,650; 2009 645 flex, $23,900. 204-746-6605, 204-325-2496, Morris, MB. 2010 CASE/IH 2152 35’ draper header c/w split PU reel, hydraulic fore/aft, cross auger, factory transport, $36,000. Call 306-937-2022, 306-481-4907, Cando, SK. 1995 JD 925 flex platform, 25’, PU reel, poly skids, fore & aft., $7900; 1998 JD 925 flex platform, 25’, PU reel, poly skids, fore & aft, reconditioned, $11,900; 1998 JD 925 flex platform, 25’, PU reel, poly skids, fore & aft, Crary air reel, reconditioned, $14,900; 2001 JD 925 flex platform, 25’, PU reel, poly skids, fore & aft, full fingered auger, reconditioned, $14,900. Steinbach, MB. Call: Gary Reimer 204-326-7000 reimerfarmequipment.com 1997 JOHN DEERE 930R, $9700. Wynyard, SK. 306-554-2536 or call one of our 7 Stores near you. www.maplefarm.com FD70 35’, loaded, mint, $54,000; 36’ HoneyBee, double knife drive, $36,000. Will consider trade. 306-478-2451, Kincaid, SK. 2009 MACDON D60D, 40’, cross auger, JD adapter, always shedded, only used on 3000 acres of wheat, $57,500. Call 306-843-7192, 306-658-4734, Wilkie, SK. 2010 HONEYBEE SP36, CR/CX/AFX adapter, very good, one owner, $43,000 OBO. 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Brandon MB 2009 CASE/IH 2015 PU table Swathmaster, shedded, used only 3 yrs. $18,000. 306-644-4742, Loreburn, SK. 2004 36’ HONEYBEE, 1 piece UII reel, double knife drive, pea auger, recent knife and canvas, Case or JD adapter, shedded, $21,500. 306-776-2496, Wilcox, SK.

CLASSIFIED ADS 51

MAXIMIZE NEED COMBINE HEADERS? ’94 30’ CIH 1010, $6,980; ‘94 36’ Macdon 960, $4,900; ‘96 JD 930F, $6,980; ’97 HB SP30, $19,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

NEW PICKUP REELS – GUARANTEED AVAILABILITY. Hart Carter 25’,$5,795; 30’, $6,795; 35’, $7,300; 36’, $7,900. UII 25’, $6,830; 30’, $7,900; 36’, $8,900. Plastic teeth, fit JD/NH/CIH/MacDon headers & Swathers. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

NEW ROTO CAGE with doors and helicial bars for N6/N7 Gleaner combine, $6500. CASE/IH 30’ 1010, w/transport, recent 780-290-0057, St. Vincent, AB. wobble box, guards and knife, $5500. Call REDEKOP CHOPPER for 2388 Case/IH 306-725-4869, 306-726-4617, Southey, SK combine, $5000 OBO. Call 403-664-2172, 2001 JD 930F flex header, 30’. Transport Oyen, AB. available. $13,000 OBO. 306-563-8482, NEW REM CHAFF SPREADER for JD 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. 9400, 9500, 9600, $2,500 OBO. TWO HONEYBEE DRAPERS 2009 and 2010 306-424-7511, Montmartre, SK. l o a d e d , N H a d ap t e r s , $ 4 4 , 0 0 0 a n d 2- SETS OF 20.8x38 clamp-on duals, used $49,000. 403-350-2510, Lacombe, AB. to clamp up to 30.5x32 combine tires, incl. 1997 ADAPTER TO fit 960 MacDon header, all hardware, good shape, $4000/set. One for IHC combines, $2500. 306-246-4251, poorer older set, $1500. Set of Firestone Mayfair, SK. 800/70R38’s w/10 hole rims, came off JD JD FLEX HEADERS: 1998 JD 930, fore/aft combine, less than one season use, like $10,500; 2003 JD 930F, full finger, new, $7000/set OBO. Chris 306-628-7840, fore/aft, $14,500. Both are in vg cond. Can Eatonia, SK. deliver. Call 701-330-2590, Carman, MB. ALLISON TRANSMISSIONS Service, 12’ JD PICKUP, heavy shaft, big wheels, Sales and Parts. Exchange or custom reshedded, $2600. 306-576-2242, Wishart, builds available. Competitive warranty. Spectrum Industrial Automatics Ltd., SK. Blackfalds, AB. 1-877-321-7732. RME-BOISSEVAIN, MB. UP to $10,000 off w/bring a pair, buy a pair harvest promo. STEIGER TRACTOR PARTS for sale. Very 2009 HoneyBee SP36 w/CIH adaptor affordable new and used parts available, made in Canada and USA. 1-800-982-1769 $29,900. 204-534-2463 or rockymtn.com JD 914 PU, 1 owner, shedded, low acres, FA R M T I R E S. B K T r a d i a l f a r m R - 1 , converted to single point hookup, HHS, 520/85R42, 157A8, $1,528. Phone OK DAS, $14,500. 306-596-1467, Craven, SK. Tire, Idylwyld Dr N , Saskatoon, SK. 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com

CASE/IH 1020 25’ flex header with PU r e e l s , fo r e a n d a f t w i t h t r a n s p o r t . 306-896-2817, Churchbridge, SK. 2005 CASE 2020 30’ flex with Case/IH adaptor, PU reel, $17,000 OBO. Grant 306-524-4339, 306-746-7336, Semans, SK

2002 30’ HONEYBEE HEADER, UII PU reel, fore/aft, pea auger, gauge wheels, fits NH or Case/IH combine, $22,500 OBO. 403-588-9497, Bashaw, AB. NEED PICKUP HEADERS? ‘02 JD 1300, $6,800; ‘91 JD 914 $4,900; ‘97 CIH 1015 $3,880; ’87 NH 971 $1,180. Trades welcome. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

A Division of Rockn L Enterprises Ltd.

Box 1496 | Biggar, SK | SOK OMO 306-948-5335 | 1-800-667-6700

www.howardconcave.com PUMPS, PRESSURE WASHERS, Honda/Koshin pumps, 1-1/2” to 4”, Landa pressure washers, steam washers, parts washers. M&M Equip. Ltd. Parts and Service, Regina, SK., 306-543-8377, fax 306-543-2111.

THE LEADER AND INNOVATOR IN

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

gallantsales.com Large inventory of New and Used potato equip. Dealer for Tristeel Mfg. wash line equip. Dealer for Logan Equipment. Call Dave 204-254-8126, MB.

Huge Inventory Of Used, New & Rebuilt Combine & Tractor Parts. Tested And Ready To Ship. We Purchase Late Model Equipment For Parts. S EXS M ITH US ED FARM P ARTS LTD . S EX S M ITH , ALTA. w w w .u sed fa rm pa rts.co m Em ail: fa rm pa rt@ telu spla n et.n et

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

1-8 00-340-119 2 USED PICKUP REELS - 21’ UII, $3,180; 25’ Macdon, $3,850; 21’ UII, $3,780; 24’ UII, $4,480; 36’ HCC, $5,980; 36’ UII, $5,980; 42’ UII, $7,800. Trades welcome. Call 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

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

Swift Current, SK

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M e d icine Ha t Tra ctor Sa lva ge I nc. Specia lizing In N ew, Used & Reb uiltAgricultura l And C onstruction Pa rts Call Today

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Bu yin g Fa rm Equ ipm en t Fo rD ism a n tlin g 1981 TR85 COMBINE, 3208 Cat engine, new feeder chain, 4 year old tires. Call 306-424-2812, Montmartre, SK.

GOODS USED TRACTOR parts (always 2006 JF 1350-55 silage cutter, updated buying tractors) David or Curtis, Roblin, to 1355 model, new bigger U-joints, new: MB., 204-564-2528, 1-877-564-8734. rotor, knife and shear bar, always shedded, one owner, excellent shape, $32,500. 403-588-0958, Alix, AB. B R A N D N E W, never used 2011 NH FR9050, 0 hrs. on machine with NH 290 FP 17’ pickup header, full warranty. Harvey 780-753-0353, Kirriemuir, AB. 881 IH SILAGE cutter with corn and forage header. Green belt silage wagon. $9900 OBO. 204-250-4796, Plumas, MB.

www.mhtractor.ca M edicine Ha t, AB .

B uying Ag & Construction Equipm ent For D ism antling

Harvest Salvage Co. Ltd. 1-866-729-9876 5150 Richmond Ave. East Brandon, MB

www.harvestsalvage.ca New Used & Re-man parts

2006 26’ CANCADE silage box, 60” sides plus 2’ extensions c/w silage gate, great condition, used very little. Contact Kevin at 306-435-7313, Moosomin, SK.

Combine World 1-800-667-4515, www. combineworld.com; 20 minutes E. of Saskatoon, SK on Highway #16. Used Ag & Industrial equipment, new, used & rebuilt parts, & premium quality tires at unbeatable prices! 1 yr. warranty on all parts. Canada’s largest inventory of late model combines & swathers. Exceptional service. NEW SALVAGE TRACTORS: IH 5288, 885, 574; Ford 2600, 5000, 7710; MF 65, 35, 3165, S90; DB 1690, 1410, 885; Volvo 810T. County and Nuffield. Unity, SK., 306-228-3011. www.britishtractor.com

2003 NH 240 CUTTER, good working condition, and 900 Jiffy high dump wagon. 403-304-4883, 403-773-2477, Elnora, AB. NEW HOLLAND FP240 silage cutter, good condition. Phone 780-877-2339 or 780-877-2326. Edberg, AB. JD 5730 SP forage harvester, field ready. For info call 306-587-2388 or 306-741-2006 cell, Cabri, SK. NH 900 SILAGE cutter, c/w 600 Crawford Jiffy Dump, very good cond., sell as a unit, $9800. 780-446-5348, Calmar, AB.

JF 1350-55 HARVESTERS for sale. From dealership dispersal. Phone Al Dunlop at: LOEFFELHOLZ TRACTOR AND COMBINE 780-349-0448, Westlock, AB. Salvage, Cudworth, SK., 306-256-7107. We sell new, used and remanufactured SMITH’S TRACTOR WRECKING. Huge parts for most farm tractors and combines. inventory new and used tractor parts. AGRA PARTS PLUS, parting older trac- 1-888-676-4847. tors, tillage, seeding, haying, along w/other Ag equipment. 3 miles NW of Battle- TOP $$$ PAID for scrap batteries. Call 306-761-1688, Regina, SK. ford, SK. off #16 Hwy. Ph: 306-445-6769.

TRADE IN YOUR JD 615, NH 76C OR CIH 2016 for a brand new Macdon PW7 header w/ 16’ Swathmaster pickup, pay as little as $2,000 with trade-in. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

RECONDITIONED rigid and flex, most makes and sizes; also header transports. Ed Lorenz, 306-344-4811, Paradise Hill, SK. www.straightcutheaders.com 2010 MACDON D50 35’ header, MF9000 Series combines, $50,000. 306-831-8696, Rosetown, SK. 1998 HONEYBEE 30’ draper, PU reel, CIH adapter, shedded, $18,500; 914 JD PU header w/new belts, $8500; 2005 14’ NEW PICKUPS GUARANTEED Rake-Up PU w/hyd. wind guard, $2500. AVAILABILITY. Swathmaster 14’, $13,838; 16’, $15,838. Used pickups available. 306-548-2801, 306-547-8064, Stenen, SK. Trades welcome. Financing available. 2010 MACDON FD70 45’ flex header, 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com $70,000; 2011 CIH 2162 35’ flex header, 4000 acres, $65,000; 2012 MacDon FD70 40’ flex header, 5,000 acres, $80,000. All w/NH adapters. 306-296-7753 Frontier SK MUST SELL: HONEYBEE 36’ upper cross 2002 930 JD header, mint cond., with auger for 36’ header, new, priced to sell at mover, $15,000. 224 JD header w/22’ $2450. 306-424-7511, Montmartre, SK. Sund PU, great for peas and blown canola, $5,000. Call 306-577-8771, 306-577-1626, Carlyle, SK. For Over 30 Years JOHN DEERE 930 rigid header, batt reel c/w transport, excellent, $8800 OBO. 306-549-7635, 306-549-2389, Hafford, SK. CIH 1010, 30’, 5 batt reel, hyd. fore/aft, rigid header w/new trailer, very straight, excellent cond., $9,500. 403-823-1928, armor@xplornet.ca Drumheller, AB HONEY BEE HEADERS: 2007 4555, 45’ flex draper, 2007 36’; 2006 42’; 2005 36’; 1995 36’; 2008 CIH 2020, 35’, $24,000. Also have CIH, JD and NH PU heads available. 306-370-8010, Saskatoon, SK. ironmandan.ca 2007 MACDON 973 36’ w/ hydraulic fore & aft, auger, transport, 873 adaptor for JD, $42,500. Call Dave at 306-424-7511, Montmartre, SK.

$ All makes and models $ Outlasts and outperforms all others $ Universal Concave that saves you time and money $ Increase capacity, improve thrashing, and Save Grain

IRMA, AB.

Plu s M u ch M o re!

1-800-667-7421

FLEXHEADS: CASE/IH 1020, 30’, $8000; Case/IH 1010 rigid, 30’, $4500; IH 820, $2000; JD 925, $6500; JD 930, $7000. Website www.zettlerfarmequipment.com Ph. 204-857-8403, Portage la Prairie, MB. NH 971 30’ header w/transport, good shape, $5500. Phone 306-629-3772, Morse, SK.

YOUR COMBINES POTENTIAL!!!

HIGHWAY SPECIAL TIRES. BKT 125L 12P Tractors Combines Swathers 12P TLS, $250. OK Tire, Idylwyld Dr N, Saskatoon, SK. Phone 306-933-1115, TRIPLE B WRECKING, wrecking tractors, www.oktire.com combines, cults., drills, swathers, mixmills. etc. We buy equipment. 306-246-4260, 306-441-0655, Richard, SK.

’09 30’ MacDon D60-S W/ CNH adapter for 8120/CR9070, other adapters avail. New knife, guards, & reel fingers. Excellent welcome. cond’n. $49,800. Trades 1-800-667-4515. Financing available. www.combineworld.com

PARTING OUT 7010 Belarus; also various other older tractor models, parts; Also parting out NH haybines and balers. 306-395-2668, 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK.

AGRI PARTS LTD. 1½ Mi. W. of Biggar, SK on Hwy. #14

NEW WOBBLE BOXES for JD, IH, MacDon headers. Made in Europe, factory quality. Get it direct from Western Canada’s sole distributor starting at $1,095. 1-800-6674515. www.combineworld.com

NH 971 30’ flex header, Crary knife, 3/8 poly skids w/PU reel and transport. Asking $7500. 306-742-5912, Churchbridge, SK. VARIOUS PICKUPS IN STOCK - ‘93 12’ 2007 HONEY BEE 30’, PU reels, cross au- Rake-up, $3,900; ‘81 JD212, $1,980; ‘02 14’ ger, Case adapter, always shedded, very Rake-up, $8,900; ‘96 14’ Rake-up, $3,980. good shape, $36,000 OBO. 306-628-8020, Trades welcome. Financing available. Prelate, SK. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com MACDON 960, 30’, PU reel, TR adapter, RME-BOISSEVAIN, MB. UP to $10,000 off built in transport, $10,000. 306-762-2176, w/bring a pair, buy a pair harvest promo. 306-537-0651, Odessa, SK. 1994 MacDon 960 30’, CIH adaptor $5,000 Call 204-534-2463 or rockymtn.com 2004 JD 635F, full finger auger, fore/aft, including 4 wheel header trailer, $19,000 OBO. Call 306-728-8676, Regina, SK. 2000 36’ HONEYBEE, UII reel, double knife drive, shedded, Case or JD adapter, pea auger, $18,500. 306-776-2496, Wilcox, SK.

GRATTON COULEE

DEUTZ TRACTOR SALVAGE: Used parts COMB-TRAC SALVAGE. We sell new and for Deutz and Agco. Uncle Abes Tractor, used parts for most makes of tractors, combines, balers, mixmills and swathers. 519-338-5769, fax 338-3963, Harriston ON Phone 306-997-2209, 1-877-318-2221, G.S. TRACTOR SALVAGE, JD tractors Borden, SK. www.comb-tracsalvage.com only. 306-497-3535, Blaine Lake, SK. We buy machinery.

W H Y PAY M O RE?? CALL FYFE & SAVE

BALER BELTIN G

John Deere Model 530 -535 3 ply Diamond top laced with alligator lacing Complete Set - $2269.00 • New Holland Model 660-664-668 3 ply mini rough top laced with alligator lacing Complete Set - $1735.00 Case IH/Hesston model 8460/8560/560/565 3 Ply Chevron w/alligator lacing

Complete Set - $2,235.00 Com plete s ets form os tm akes ...Call forpricing • B u lk B eltin g M os t Sizes • En dles s B elts Too

COMBINE PARTS

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

HARVEST SERVICES LTD. 1-800-667-2601 www.harvestservicesltd.com

NET WRAP

CO M BIN E PARTS

Rub Bars, Concaves, Cages, Rotor Cones, Vane Kits, Walkers, Feeder Chains, front drums and sprockets, augers, auger troughs, top chaffers and bottom sieves, (air foil and standard), shoe frames.

PICK UP BELTS & TEETH, DRIVE BELTS • G UARD S & CUTTIN G PARTS • SCH EASYCUT SYSTEM S • SW ATH ER CAN VAS UP TO 42” – $14.49/FT • H O N EY BEE H EAD ER 413⁄4” W /G UID E/EXTRA TH ICK,M ACD O N 411⁄2” W /G UID E • PICK UP REEL FIN G ERS:H ARTCARTER,M ACD O N ,U-2

S a ska to o n 1- 800- 667- 3095 R egin a 1- 800- 667- 9871

M a n ito b a 1- 800- 387- 2 768 Ed m o n to n 1- 800- 2 2 2 - 6594

FYFE P A R TS w w w .fyfepa rts .com

FP230 SILAGE CHOPPER, premium shape, always shedded, $22,000 OBO. Also hydump available. 780-940-0549 Leduc AB NH CHOPPER FP 240, Metalalert, new knifes, good cond., asking price $12,500; Jiffy, good condition, asking price $1000. Call cell 403-635-0641, Fort MacLeod, AB. or email: pvandriel@xplornet.com 2012 McHALE 991 LBER bale wrapper, brand new, stationary with remote and powerpack, $23,050. Salmon Arm, BC. 1-800-663-6022, www.silagrow.com NH FP240 Forage Harvester and JIFFY 700 high dump. Both exc. cond. with little use. 780-864-0612, Spirit River, AB. RICHARDTON HIGH DUMPS: 1200, 700, 770; Miller #1093, $6000; JD 3970 harvester, $8900; NH 890, $2500; IH 781, $2500. Heads available. 1-866-938-8537. RICHARDTON 750, 1000 cu. ft. 15’ long, in good condition, $12,000 OBO 204-937-4853, 204-937-7202, Roblin, MB. 1995 NH 900 silage cutter, new chains, new top feed roll, good cond., always shedded. Call 403-742-4867, Stettler, AB. 18’ JIFFY HYDUMP wagon with 3 axles; NH #892 silage cutter w/#890A 3 row corn header. 306-398-4714, Cut Knife, SK. NEW KEMPER CORNHEADS. 4, 6, 8 and 10 row; Kernelcracker, fits Claas 850, used very little. Call 403-327-0349 cell or 403-330-9345, Lethbridge, AB.


52

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

1-800-667-4515 www.combineworld.com 20 min. E of Saskatoon on Hwy. 16

• SAVE UP TO 50% • NEW & USED PARTS • 1 YEAR WARRANTY NEW PICKUP REELS IN STOCK

6,830 UII 30’ HB SP30/MD 960 ..................... 7,900 $ UII 36’ HB SP36/MD960....................... 8,900 $ UII 26’ MF200/CI722............................ 6,950 $ HCC 24.5’ CIH 4/5000 ......................... 5,395 UII 25’ MD 960 ....................................

6,795 $ HCC 35’ CIH 2010/20 .......................... 7,300 $ HCC 36’ HB SP36 ................................ 7,900 HCC 30’ JD930/CIH 2010/20 ...............

$

PREMIUM QUALITY - FACTORY DIRECT - MORE SIZES AVAILABLE - WE MOUNT! USED AVAILABLE

USED STRAWCHOPPERS

NEW REDEKOP CHOPPERS

JD 9600/10, 9750/60 STS tight knife rotor upgrade kit .................. $4,100 TR95-TR99 .......................................... $8,900 CIH 88 series ....................................... $9,350 CR960/9060 ........................................ $9,000 TX66/68 .............................................. $6,800

NEW STRAWCHOPPERS IN STOCK JD 9600/10 fine cut ......... $3,845 JD STS 70 Series ...... $5,145 CIH 40/60 chopper w/drive .................. $4,080 CIH 80/88 series ................................... $4,310

SASKATOON

1,495 MacDon (New-Style) .......................... 1,995 $ JD 200/900 ....................................... 1,095 MacDon (Old-Style)............................

$ $

FINAL DRIVES

$

$

NEW WOBBLE BOXES

CIH 80/88. Starts at ..........................

2,950 3,950 3,000 1,950 8,800

$

$ TR96-99 fine cut ............................... $ TX66................................................. $ JD 9600/10 w/ extra wide fin kit ....... $ Redekop MAV for NH, CR Combines .

USED ENGINES Cummins 8.3L . $6,900 Cat 3208 .......... $3,750 Perkins 640 ..... $5,000 JD 7.6L................................................ $6,550 Ford 7.8L ............................................. $4,500 Genesis 7.5L......................................... $7,500

2011 BUICK ENCLAVE

READY TO GO! JD 9400-9600/CTS/ $ CTSII Rebuilt ................ 4,750 Used LHS.................... $3,250 Used RHS .................... $2,870

LONG UNLOADING AUGERS

JD auger......................... $990 CIH auger ......................... $770

“We needed a pick-up reel quick. No one in Alberta had stock so we tried Combine World in Saskatchewan. They had 5 on hand. The reel was loaded & I was on my way home in under an hour! I was really impressed with Jodie’s, CWI salesperson, knowledge on parts! Great doing business with them!� — Billy Bogdan, Smoky Lake, AB

USED KITS

$

Cross flow fan kit CIH 80/88 series....... 1,275 2-spd cylinder kit JD9400 - CTSII ......... $2,750 Bubble-up auger upgrade kit TR96-98 . $1,250 Long unloading auger kit TR96-98 ...... $2,480 Auto-header height control, CIH 80/88 series ....................................... $750 Terrain tracer TR86-88, TR96-97 ............ $650

2006 CHEV EQUINOX

5VM 5- 7

REGINA

1,595 MacDon update kit ............................ 2,497 CIH 1010/1020/4000/5000 ................

$ $

New arm and bearing are required for warranty

NEW PARTS IN STOCK 1,695 2,975 $ JD/CIH auger extension .......................... 895 $ CIH header lift cylinder ........................... 555 $

CIH 80 series front axceller kit ........... Crary dual disk chaff $ spreader for JD/CIH/NH .....................

650 1,795 295 $ Pick-up belts for JD/SM/IH ..... Starting at 175 JD steering arm $ spindle....................................................

$

Hopper extensions JD/CIH/NH ............. CIH 1460-2388 front $ rotor bearing holder ................................

NEW TIRE DEALS

DUAL KITS

FACTORY DIRECT – NO MIDDLEMEN

770 $698 $ 18.4-38 12 ply ................. 898 789 $ $ 20.8-38 12 ply ................. 866 795 $ 23.1-26 12 ply .................................. 990 $ 14.9-24 12 ply .................................. 486 $ 24.5-32 14 ply .............................. 1,749 $ 30.5-32 16 ply ............................ 2,195 $ 16.9-28 12 ply .................................. 558 18.4-34 12 ply ..................

$

$

MORE SIZES IN STOCK. RIMS ALSO AVAILABLE

9,850

JD 9400-9600/10/CTS/ $ CTSII Kit w/o tires ....................... JD 9400-9600/10/CTS/CTSII Kit c/w new $ 20.8-38 tires ........................... CIH 1680-2588 Dual Kit $ w/ new 20.8-38 tires ............... JD STS Kit $ c/w new 20.8-42 tires .............. TRADE YOUR SINGLES FOR DUALS

14,046 13,900 17,498

2010 CHEV EQUINOX

2006 NISSAN X-TRAIL

5VM 5- 5 #

5VM 5- 7

5VM 5- 5 #

3.4L., AUTO, LOADED, SUNROOF, TOW PACKAGE 79,000 KM

2.4L, AUTO LOADED

15,495

2009 SUBARU FORESTER

5VM 5- 7

CALL

3.6L V6., AUTO, SUNROOF, 75,031 KM

2008 SUBARU TRIBECA

2007 TOYOTA RAV4

5VM 5- 5 #

CALL

$

2008 FORD ESCAPE 5VM 5- 7

2.5L 4 CYL., AUTO, 80,000 KM

13,995

$

2008 SUBARU FORESTER

5VM 5- 7

2.5L H-4 CYL., AUTO, 64,242 KM

22,995

$

2009 VOLKSWAGEN TIGUAN

3.0L, AUTO, 71,000 KM

21,995

$

2.5L 4 CYL., AUTO, HEATED SEATS, 38,000 KM

22,995

$

2008 SUBARU TRIBECA 5VM 5- 7

3.6L, AUTO, AWD, DVD, HEATED SEATS, NAV. SYS, 68,000 KM

29,995

$

2007 SUBARU TRIBECA 5VM 5- 7

AWD, AC, CC, CD, HTD , LEATHER, SEATS, PWR GRP

20,995

$

CALL

2.4L, 4 CYL., AUTO, 58,795 KM

2012 CHEV TRAVERSE

5VM 5- 7

3.6L, AUTO, ONSTAR, DUAL CLIMATE CONT, 23,000 KM

34,995

$

2.0L, 4 CYL., AUTO, AWD, 63,000 KM

CALL

2007 SUBARU TRIBECA

5VM 5- 5 $

LTD, PREMIER, AWD, NAV, DVD, AC, CD, CC, LEATHER

22,995

$

AC, CC, CD, DVD, NAV, HTD SEATS, LT, 67,626 KM

29,995

$

MANY MORE UNITS IN STOCK... OPEN 24 HOURS AT WWW.SUBARUOFSASKATOON.CA

ELITE AUTOMOTIVE GROUP INC. O/A

Open 24 Hours @

www.subaruofsaskatoon.com

SUBARU OF SASKATOON 471 CIRCLE PLACE • 306-665-6898 OR 1-877-373-2662

Open 24 Hours @

www.bramerauto.com

BRAMER AUTOMOTIVE GROUP

CORNER OF SARGENT & KING EDWARD • CALL 204-474-1011 • TOLL FREE 1-877-474-1011


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

1.888.986.2946 2014 TIMPTE SUPER B GRAIN

2014 TIMPTE 3 HOPPER

Grain, Super B, Air Ride suspension, Tandem axle, Aluminum rims, 24” king pin, Tarp: Shurco Shur-loc Black, Hoppers: Split tub - 24” clearance Black, Width: 102in, Length: 30ft. Stock #EB142205

Grain, 3 hopper, Air Ride suspension, Tridem axle, Aluminum (polished out) rims, 20 king pin, Tarp: Rollover Black, Hoppers: Ag Hopper w/3rd Hopper Black w.Interior Access steps, Width: 102in, Length: 45ft. Stock #EB141278

CALL 2014 TIMPTE GRAIN HOPPER Grain, Hopper, Air Ride suspension, Tandem axle, Aluminum rims, 20” king pin, Tarp: Rollover Black, Hoppers: AG Black w.Int access 5 steps, Width: 96in, Length: 40ft. Stock #EB141483

CALL

2006 INTERNATIONAL 9400 Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cat C13 engine (430 HP), Eaton Fuller transmission (13 speed), Air brakes, 1,250,000 km, 12,000 lbs front axle capacity, 40,000 lbs rear axle capacity, Diff Lock rear lockup, A/C Stock #9694-06A

$

72,500

2007 PETERBILT 386

2003 CASTLETON 4070A Grain, Air Ride suspension, Tandem axle, Aluminum Look-A-Like In and out rims, Tarp: Rollover Black, Hoppers: Ag Hoppers Black w.Front & Rear steps, Width: 102in, Length: 40ft. Stock #3S133269U

$

24,900

2007 2009PETERBILT INTERNATIONAL 386 PROSTAR Tandem TandemAxle AxleGrain GrainTruck, Truck,Cummins CumminsISX ISXengine engine,(450 Eaton HP), Fuller Eaton Fuller D/O transmission D/O transmission (13 speed), (13 speed), Air brakes, Air brakes, 729,000 1,147,000 km, 12,000 km, 12,000 lbs front lbsaxle front capacity, axle capacity, 40,00040,000 lbs rearlbs axle rear capacity, axle capacity, 4-Way Diff rear Lock lockup, rearA/C. lockup, A/C Stock Stock#8216-07A #V492705

72,500 82,500

$$

2009 INTERNATIONAL PROSTAR

Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISX engine (450 HP), Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (13 speed), Air brakes, 1,147,000 km, 12,000 lbs front axle capacity, 40,000 lbs rear axle capacity, Diff Lock rear lockup, A/C. Stock #8216-07A

$

69,900

2009 INTERNATIONAL 9900I 6X4 Tandem Axle Sleeper Tractor, Cummins ISX engine (530 HP), Eaton Fuller transmission (18 speed), Air brakes, 400,000 km, 12,000 lbs front axle capacity, 46,000 lbs rear axle capacity, 4-Way rear lockup, 51” Hi-Rise sleeper. Stock #0600-09A

$

83,500

Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISX engine, Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (13 speed), Air brakes, 825,000 km, 12,000 lbs front axle capacity, 40,000 lbs rear axle capacity, 4-Way rear lockup, A/C, power tailgate. Stock #V492713

$

77,500

2008 INTERNATIONAL 9900I 6X4 Tandem Axle Sleeper Tractor, Cummins ISX engine, Eaton Fuller D/O transmission (13 speed), ABS brakes, 367,603 km, 12,000 lbs front axle capacity, 40,000 lbs rear axle capacity, 4-Way rear lockup, A/C, 72” Hi-Rise sleeper. Stock #6831-08A

$

75,000

CALL 2014 INTERNATIONAL 4400 6X4 Tandem Axle Grain Truck, MaxxForce 9 engine, Allison (Auto) transmission (6 speed), Air brakes, 14,000 lbs front axle capacity, 40,000 lbs rear axle capacity, 4-Way rear lockup Stock #8143-14

$

130,160

2014 INTERNATIONAL 4400 6X4 Tandem Axle Grain Truck, MaxxForce 9 engine, Allison (Auto) transmission (6 speed), Air brakes, 14,600 lbs front axle capacity, 40,000 lbs rear axle capacity, 4-Way rear lockup Stock #:2922-14

$

130,150

2014 INTERNATIONAL 4400 6X4 Tandem Axle Grain Truck, MaxxForce 9 engine, Allison (Auto) transmission (6 speed), Air brakes, 14,000 lbs front axle capacity, 40,000 lbs rear axle capacity, 4-Way rear lockup. Stock #5648-14

$

131,095

2014 INTERNATIONAL TERRASTAR SFA 4X4 AVAILABLE 2013-09-02. Single Axle Cab & Chassis, MaxxForce 7 engine, Allison (Auto) transmission (5 speed), Hydraulic brakes, 8,000 lbs front axle capacity, 13,500 lbs rear axle capacity, Diff Lock rear lockup. Stock #5187-14

$

69,500

2009 INTERNATIONAL 9200I 6X4 Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISM engine, Eaton Fuller Auto Shift transmission (10 speed), ABS brakes, 412,000 km, 12,000 lbs front axle capacity, 40,000 lbs rear axle capacity, 3-Way rear lockup, A/C Stock #V492718

$

85,000

1999 INTERNATIONAL 7600 4X2 Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISM engine (370 HP), Eaton Fuller transmission (10 speed), Air brakes, 644,000 km, 12,000 lbs front axle capacity, 40,000 lbs rear axle capacity, A/C Stock #7508-08A

$

80,000

2008 INTERNATIONAL PROSTAR Tandem Axle Grain Truck, Cummins ISX engine, Eaton Fuller Auto Shift transmission (10 speed), Air brakes, 883,000 km, 12,000 lbs front axle capacity, 40,000 lbs rear axle capacity, Diff Lock rear lockup. Stock #5428-08B

67,500

$

2012 INTERNATIONAL TERRASTAR SFA 4X2 Single Axle Flat Deck, MaxxForce 7 engine, Allison (Auto) transmission (5 speed), Hydraulic brakes, 7,000 lbs front axle capacity, 13,500 lbs rear axle capacity, A/C. Stock #6401-12

62,900

$

53


54

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

MAPLE FARM EQUIPMENT 1994 Case IH 8820

1997 NH TR98

2485 hrs., 8820 hdr.

4060 hrs., 971 hdr

$

$

22,700

2001 MacDon 2950

2008 John Deere 568 Baler/Round Number of Bales: 12000 Bales ......................... $24,000 2010 John Deere 568 Baler/Round Number of Bales: 3200 Bales ........................... $39,000 2003 Case IH 2388 Combine Engine Hours: 2941 Sep Hours: 2275 ............... $80,000 1996 John Deere 9600 Combine Engine Hours: 3789 Sep Hours: 2824 ............... $69,000 1990 John Deere 9600 Combine Engine Hours: 6264 Sep Hours: 4626 ............... $21,000 1996 John Deere 9600 Combine Engine Hours: 3747 Sep Hours: 2808 ............... $55,600 2000 John Deere 9650STS Combine Engine Hours: 3085 Sep Hours: 2265 ............ $105,500 2002 John Deere 9650STS Combine Engine Hours: 2643 Sep Hours: 1873 ............ $112,200 2004 John Deere 9660STS Combine Engine Hours: 2600 Sep Hours: 1872 ............ $150,000 2004 John Deere 9760STS Combine Engine Hours: 2361 Sep Hours: 1686 ............ $172,200 2010 John Deere 9770STS Combine Engine Hours: 731 Sep Hours: 557 ................ $275,600 2010 John Deere 9770STS Combine Engine Hours: 789 Sep Hours: 534 ................ $288,000 2004 John Deere 9860STS Combine Engine Hours: 3068 Sep Hours: 2150 ............ $177,800 2006 John Deere 9860STS Combine Engine Hours: 2176 Sep Hours: 1650 ............ $222,000 2004 John Deere 9860STS Combine Engine Hours: 2344 Sep Hours: 1700 ............ $195,000

33,000

2004 Brent 620

1562 hrs., 1349 sep., 962 hdr.

$

$

79,900

19,500

2005 JD 9760 STS

2009 Case IH 7120

2364 hrs., 1710 sep., 914P hdr

903 hrs., 748 sep., 2016 hdr.

$

$

178,000

BALCARRES, SK 306-334-2492

257,300

FOAM LAKE, SK 306-272-3345

E G

O U W HO L B

2008 John Deere 9870STS Combine Engine Hours: 1121 Sep Hours: 681 .............. $267,000 2011 John Deere 9870STS Combine Engine Hours: 1036 Sep Hours: 728 .............. $339,000 2008 John Deere 9870STS Combine Engine Hours: 1422 Sep Hours: 1045 ............ $250,000

G I B

2009 FORD F350 HARLEY DAVIDSON V10 4X4 FULLY LOADED 71KM

ON SALE NOW 2009 FORD SPORT TRAC ADRENALINE EDITION

2010 MacDon M150

756 hrs., 578 sep. 30’ D60 hdr.

509 hrs., 35’ D50 hdr.

$

128,000

$

148,000

2012 John Deere S690 Combine Engine Hours: 264 Sep Hours: 206 ................ $445,000 1994 Case IH 8820 Windrower Hours: 2485 ..................................................... $22,700 2006 MacDon 4952I Windrower Hours: 1997 Sep Hours: 1607 .......................... $80,500

2011 JD 9870 STS

2012 JD S680

2010 John Deere A400 Windrower Hours: 477 Sep Hours: 360 ........................... $123,000

1036 hrs., 728 sep., 615P hdr.

290 hrs., 206 sep., 615P hdr.

$

339,000

$

2012 JD S690

2012 MacDon A30D

2011 John Deere D450 Windrower Hours: 150 Sep Hours: 115 ........................... $170,000

421,700

2009 MacDon M150 Windrower Hours: 756 Sep Hours: 578 ........................... $128,000 2010 MacDon M150 Windrower Hours: 389 Sep Hours: 303 ........................... $135,500 2012 MacDon M155 Windrower Hours: 254 Sep Hours: 173 ........................... $150,000 2012 MacDon M155 Windrower Hours: 199 Sep Hours: 136 ........................... $150,000

281 hrs., 205 sep. 615P hdr.

$

$

445,000

MOOSOMIN, SK 306-435-3301

37,200

RUSSELL, MB 204-773-2149

View ALL INVENTORY ON-LINE

www.GreenlightAuto.ca

2010 FORD F150 HARLEY DAVIDSON

2012 DODGE RAM 1500 SPORT

FULLY LOADED PST PD 4X4 5.4L SUNROOF NAVIGATION BACK UP CAMERA PRICED TO SELL

LOADED 52KM HEMI 4X4

SAVE $$$

4 TO CHOOSE FROM!

BEST

SELECTION

2012 DODGE RAM 1500 LARAMIE LONG HORN

2 TO CHOOSE FROM!

4X4 5.4L PST PD

FULLY LOADED

WHITE 20,000KM PST PD 5.7L HEMI 4X4

2 TO CHOOSE

2 TO CHOOSE FROM

2008 CADILLAC ESCALADE EXT

FROM

2011 CHEV SILVERADO 1500

5.3L FULLY LOADED LEATHER 4X4 PST PD

FULLY LOADED 90KM PST PD

NOW

07.. 09.. OR 2011 TO CHOOSE FROM

4 TO

CHOOSE FROM 2005 CHEV SILVERADO 3500 LTZ

FULLY LOADED LEATHER

IN STOCK

BLACK BEAUTY

GET YOURS

NOW

2001 DODGE RAM 2500 SLT

DVD PST PD 4X4 6.6L DIESEL 246KM

MUST SEE

JUST IN!!!

2009 FORD F150 KING RANCH

FULLY LOADED PEARL

FULLY LOADED

LEATHER SUNROOF 88KM

2009 MacDon M150

2012 John Deere S680 Combine Engine Hours: 297 Sep Hours: 220 ................ $421,700

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

T O T H G& AU I L K C N U E TR E ! R T G U! E V SA

2010 John Deere 9870STS Combine Engine Hours: 651 Sep Hours: 463 ................ $318,100

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

AUTO 321KM 4X4 PST PD LOADED 5.9L CUMMINS DIESEL

GREAT SHAPE TRUCK

14,995

$

DL#311430


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

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56

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

INDUSTRY LEADING FLEXI GRAIN STORAGE SYSTEM

www.bagyourgrain.com

Don’t Buy a Grain Bagger... Until You Check Out the NEW R-950 & R-1050 NEW passive breaking anchor creates increased compaction and less demand on the brakes

NEW deflector plate and rubber side guards to prevent grain flowby NEW bag slack adjuster to ensure smooth bag extraction

NEW hydraulic brake system with dual independent pumps and gauges

NEW larger, industrial grip tires provide increased clearance, flotation and improved breaking action

NEW disc brakes for superior restraining power, compaction and filling

Model R-950

Model R-1050

- 9’ for 200’, 250’ & 300’ long bags - Capacity: 11,400 bu/hr

- 10’ for 250’, 300’ & 400’ long bags - Capacity: 23,600 bu/hr

Distributed by:

Wheat-Belt Industries

Call for More Information and Dealer Names

Balzac, Alberta

Also Inquire About Our Truck Unloading System

(403) 291-1489

1-800-644-6050

www.wheat-belt.com

Astro 3($&( 400 UNITS &28175<Âś6 OVER

Diesel Hp Mercedes diesel engine, FL60 Stock# L-6727

CAR & TRUCK SALES LTD.

&28175<Âś6 TO CHOOSE FROM

LARGEST •CARS•TRUCKS USED DEALER! •RVS•TRAILERS 780-567-4202

•HEAVY EQUIPMENT

2006 ALFA SEE-YA 40 GOLD

2004 FREIGHTLINER FL60

2003 GULF STREAM ATRIUM 8410

2006 KENWORTH T800

Standard , M11 350 Cummins dsl engine, 13 spd, 240� WB, c/w 1500PK Palfinger Folding Picker, 20,000lb winch Stock# L-6718

330 HP engine and sits on a freightliner chassis, 41’ Motorhome, Triple slides, Corian countertops, Tile Floors. Very clean unit. Stock#L-6636A

Visit our Website:

2005 CAT D5G

Single Drop Tridem Lowboy Stock# L-6604

2010 JOHN DEERE 326 SKIDSTEER

Turbo charged diesel engine, 70 Hp. Only 439 Hours Stock# L-6540

Diesel, 2 Door, Standard Stock# L-6802

2008 INTERNATIONAL MXT Very clean unit only 80,000 Km STOCK #L6889

2006 GULF STREAM 5231BT

2008 REITNOUER

23’ Class C Motorhome, 1 slide

Step Deck Tandem Axle Trailer

STOCK #L-6581

STOCK #L-6605

ONLY 50,000 KM

2007 GMC C5500 W/ Amco Veba Picker & Deck STOCK #L-6688

c/w 36� Digging Bucket & 72� Churchblade STOCK #L-5838

2005 PETERBILT 378

6 way blade, winch, pro-heat, mulcher hydraulics

Gravel Crusher Stock# L-5197A

2006 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA

2001 JOHN DEERE 330LC

www.astro-sales.com

Double Drop tridem trailer w/ hydraulic Stock# L-6625

2002 ASPEN TRAILER

6.7 L Engine, Diesel, Crew Cab, Automatic, 4WD, AM/FM Radio Stock# L-6813

400 HP, Triple slide-outs, only 28,000 miles

2006 BWS TRAILER

DRUM 2002 EENER SCR

2008 DODGE C5500

4800 Hours

2004 JOHN DEERE 710G

Winch Tractor STOCK #L-6624

2006 FLEETWOOD AMERICAN TRADITION 40’, Quad slide-outs

1997 NEWMAR MOUNTAIN AIRE

STOCK #L-6731

Only 22,000 miles!

Turbocharged 325hp Cummins C8.3 diesel engine, 6-speed automatic transmission Stock# C-2705


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

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58

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

)DUP :RUOG LV QRZ \RXU RIILFLDO 7KXQGHU &UHHN (TXLSPHQW )XHO '() DQG 6HUYLFH 7UDLOHU GHDOHU &DOO WRGD\ IRU SULFLQJ DQG LQIRUPDWLRQ

SEE OUR FULL INVENTORY ONLINE AT WWW.FARMWORLD.CA 2003 GLEANER R75

102,000

$

MORE COMBINES

2000 NEW HOLLAND HW320

2012 NEW HOLLAND SP.365F

55,500

$

$

MORE SWATHERS

1996 BOURGAULT 5710

351,500

$

25,000

MORE SPRAYERS

CASH DEALS

CASH

N21766B 2009 New Holland CR9070 $212,000

W21192B 1992 Hesston 8100 $26,500

N22107A 2011 New Holland SP.365F $328,000

PN2670A 2008 New Holland BR7090 $23,000 CASH

N21871B 2010 New Holland CR9070 $239,000

HN3123A 2012 New Holland H8040 $122,800

PN3072A 2010 Ag-Chem Rogator 1386 $299,000

N21472B 2000 John Deere 9650 $77,900 CASH

N22096B 2009 New Holland CR9070 $226,000

PN2997A 2011 New Holland H8060 $105,500

N21884A 2010 Miller G-75 $219,000

HN2911C 1993 New Holland TR96 $13,900 CASH

PN2914A 2010 Case IH 9120 $290,000

W22083A 2009 Westward M200 $142,000

PN3063A 2010 Miller G-40 $200,000

HN2642B 1997 New Holland TR98 $32,500 CASH

N22081A 2010 John Deere 9870 STS $279,000

HN2948B 1993 Case IH 8820 $19,500

N21753A 2012 New Holland SP.275R $315,000

HN2390B 1995 New Holland TR97 $25,900 CASH

HN2890A 2009 New Holland CX8080 $235,000

W22094B 2002 MacDon 9250 $69,500

PN3067A 2005 Flexi-Coil SF115 $17,600

B21677D 1999 Bourgault 5710 $38,500 CASH

HN2643B 2009 New Holland CR9080 $289,000

PW2910B 2009 Massey Ferguson 9430 $78,500

C22280 2005 Willmar 8650 $99,000

PN2672A 2006 New Holland BR780A $17,500 CASH

HN3209A 2006 John Deere 9860 STS $193,000

W21859C 1995 Case IH 8820 $22,000

HN3210A 2004 John Deere 9860 STS $165,000

HN2525A 1996 MacDon 4930 $39,500

PS2919A 2005 Unverferth 8250 $29,500 CASH

FIND THE ABSOLUTE BEST DEALS ON USED EQUIPMENT AT WWW.FARMWORLDAUCTIONS.COM Follow Twitter Farm World on for parts NH ld or W rm @Fa ecials, sp t en and equipm ts, ld Farm Wor even n, fu , ts es nt co and winning!

HWY. #3, KINISTINO, SK — Bill, David H, Jim, Kelly SPRAYER DEPARTMENT, KINISTINO — Jay, David J., 306-864-7603

306-864-3667

HWY. #5, HUMBOLDT, SK — Paul, Tyler

306-682-9920

235 38TH ST. E., PRINCE ALBERT, SK — Brent, Aaron SPRAYER DEPARTMENT, PRINCE ALBERT — Chris, 306-922-2525

306-922-2525

Check out our website at www.farmworld.ca


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

),1$1 &, 02 1* )25 17+ 2$& 6

1995 NEW HOLLAND TR97

1997 NEW HOLLAND TR98

2278 sep hrs.

$

3591 sep hrs.

22,000

$

94,500

10,900

124,500

$

2007 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

183,500

158,000

$

1488 sep. hrs.

169,000

$

$

2003 NEW HOLLAND CX860 1880 sep. hrs.

119,000

$

$

62,500 2003 NEW HOLLAND CR960

$

105,000

1998 NEW HOLLAND TR98 2566 sep. hrs.

32,000

$

632 sep hrs.

$

199,000

1500 sep hrs.

$

2009 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

215,000

110,000 2009 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

543 sep hrs.

$

199,000 2003 NEW HOLLAND CR970

1230 sep hrs.

$

1272 sep hrs.

127,000

170,000

96,000 2008 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

2008 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

2641 sep hrs.

81,900

1827 sep hrs.

$

1197 sep hrs.

62/' $

227,500

11,500 2003 NEW HOLLAND CX840

2005 NEW HOLLAND CR970

1998 JOHN DEERE 9610

2240 sep hrs.

72,500

$

205,000

2004 NEW HOLLAND CR970

2570 sep hrs.

145,000

2006 NEW HOLLAND CR970

$

2002 GLEANER R62

1410 sep hrs.

$

$

617 sep hrs.

$

2008 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

2325 sep hrs.

110,000

2004 NEW HOLLAND CR970

1365 sep hrs.

1999 CASE IH 2388

1449 sep hrs.

77,000

212,000

165,000

2942 sep hrs.

2009 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

538 sep hrs.

279,000

2003 NEW HOLLAND CR970

$

77,900 2010 JOHN DEERE 9870

$

$

733 sep hrs.

$

1985 NEW HOLLAND TR96

1549 sep hrs.

2009 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

497 sep hrs.

242,000

2262 sep hrs.

$

2005 NEW HOLLAND CR970

$

$

2000 CASE IH 2388

988 sep hrs.

$

22,500

440 sep hrs.

283,000

193,000

2420 sep hrs.

2009 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

552 sep hrs.

$

2000 JOHN DEERE 9650

$

2004 JOHN DEERE 9860 STS

1051 sep hrs.

256,000

3904 sep hrs.

2011 NEW HOLLAND CR9070

897 sep hrs.

$

1995 NEW HOLLAND TR97

$

2006 JOHN DEERE 9860 STS

492 sep hrs.

125,000

3821 sep hrs.

$

2006 GLEANER R65

$

$

1990 NEW HOLLAND TR96

2681 sep hrs.

2009 NEW HOLLAND CR9080

1250 sep hrs.

32,500

2003 GLEANER R75

$

2003 NEW HOLLAND CR960

538 sep hrs.

$

215,000

$// 35,&(6 $5(

&$ +

CLICK ON FARMWORLD.CA FOR MORE PICTURES AND INFO Follow Twitter Farm World on for parts NH ld or W rm @Fa ecials, sp t en and equipm ts, ld Farm Wor even n, fu , ts es nt co and winning!

HWY. #3, KINISTINO, SK HWY. #5, HUMBOLDT, SK 235 38TH ST. E., PRINCE ALBERT, SK

306-864-3667 306-682-9920 306-922-2525

Check out our website at www.farmworld.ca

59


60

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

SUBARU’S #1 DEALER FOR SELECTION & SAVINGS AWARD-WINNING 2013 OUTBACK The Outback is more fuel-efficient and higher-performing than ever before. The Outback comes standard with legendary Subaru symmetrical full-time AWD and high ground clearance which make it uniquely qualified to negotiate everything from highway on-ramps to rutted cottage roads with precision plus incredible cargo-carrying capacity. Rugged on the outside, refined on the inside and utterly capable throughout, the Subaru Outback is the clear choice! FULLY EQUIPPED ALL WHEEL DRIVE

28,495

$

$

ONLY

159

BI-WEEKLY

0.9%

LEASE OR FINANCE

$3,495 DOWN*

PART SUV - PART CAR - ALL SUBARU

LEGENDARY 2013 LEGACY ONLY

$

139

BI-WEEKLY

0.9%

LEASE OR FINANCE

$2,013 DOWN*

The 2013 Subaru Legacy features class leading style and performance. the Legacy also boasts Subaru symmetrical full-time AllWheel Drive with confidence-inspiring control. A spacious cabin, loaded with a wide range of entertainment and convenience features, and class-leading safety standards reinforce that this family sedan means business and says no to compromise at every turn.

23,495

$

FULLY EQUIPPED ALL WHEEL DRIVE

JAPANESE SEDAN OF THE YEAR

THE SPORTY 2013 IMPREZA The 2013 Impreza is guaranteed to generate attention. The exterior design features include the trademark hawk-eye headlights, powerful wheel arches and hexagonal front grille – all of which serve to reinforce the car’s sporty nature. The fully loaded Impreza’s styles combine striking good looks with smile-inducing performance with Subaru’s legendary Symmetrical All Wheel Drive. FULLY EQUIPPED ALL WHEEL DRIVE

19,995

$

ONLY

$

99

BI-WEEKLY

0.9%

LEASE OR FINANCE

$1,995 DOWN*

44 miles per gallon or 5.2/100 km

EXCITING 2013 XV CROSSTREK $

O ONLY N

129

BI-WEEKLY

2.9%

LEASE OR FINANCE

$2,495 DOWN*

The economical all-new 2013 Subaru XV Crosstrek is the perfect choice for urban types who crave fun, inside or outside city limits. The loaded Crosstrek has all the benefits of a true crossover combined with the advantages of driving a sport hatchback. With the legendary Subaru symmetrical All-Wheel Drive and SUBARU BOXER engine, as well as class-leading safety systems, the XV Crosstrek stands alone.

24,495

$

FULLY EQUIPPED ALL WHEEL DRIVE

The Game-Changing Compact Crossover

VERSATILE 2013 FORESTER 2.5

(306)525-6700 609 WINNIPEG STREET REGINA, SASKATCHEWAN

1-888-763-6700 www.autogallery.com

e. N

Sale Location 609 Winnipeg St. Regina, Sk. R

Winnipeg St.

ALL WHEEL HOTLINES:

Hwy #6

$1,995 DOWN*

Broad St.

0.5%

LEASE OR FINANCE

Albert St.

YOUR ALL WHEEL DRIVE CENTRE

129

BI-WEEKLY

11 y#

25,995

$

ONLY

Hw

FULLY EQUIPPED ALL WHEEL DRIVE

$

Pasqua St.

The 2013 Subaru Forester is a multiple award-winning SUV and the perfect blend of performance, versatility and pure driving fun. The legendary Subaru symmetrical All-Wheel Drive creates superior driving dynamics with nimble handling. The Forester is enjoyable, easy to maneuver and great for quick getaways. And best of all – it looks as good as it performs.

4th Ave.

ing

Ro

ad

Ross Ave.

e. Victoria Ave.

Hwy #1 East


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

61

Quality Undercarriage & Repair Parts for use on equipment manufactured by: Cat, Case, Deere, Hitachi, Hyundai, Kobelco, Komatsu, Volvo, and other fine manufacturers.

Sealed & Greased Excavator Chains

Forged Links

Excavator links are lubricated using “Extreme Pressure Synthetic Grease” and fitted with the latest style Polyurethane Seal Groups to maximize lubricant retention and insure long life.

ITR Links are forged from Boron Steel, quenched, tempered, and induction hardened using the latest automated link hardening equipment to ensure excellent wear resistance under even the most severe working conditions.

Sealed & Lubricated Dozer/Loader Chains

Lubricated Dozer Chains are sealed with Polyurethane Seals and Metal rings to extend operating life and to eliminate the possibility of dry joints between “west turns”.

Pins & Bushings

Pins and bushings are critical to track chain wear life and are manufactured and dimensionally matched to ensure a perfect fit and sealing and joint integrity. Outside Surface Hardness is > Rockwell C58 to a depth of > 4mm with a core hardness of > Rockwell C34.

Chain Assembly

Lubricated Chains are assembled on fully automated chain assembly lines. Seal installation, Plug introduction and Oil fill quantities are 100% computer controlled and every joint is individually pressure tested to eliminate the possibility of leakage during working conditions. Min / Max interference fit tolerances between the Pins, Bushings and Links are maintained automatically by min/max press force specifications. This process minimizes link breakage and pin/bushing drifting.

“IT’S WHAT WE DO”

9004B YELLOWHEAD TRAIL, EDMONTON, AB T5B 1G2 TOLL FREE 1-877-413-1744 LOCAL 780-413-1740 FAX 780-413-1720 E-MAIL: info@terrateam.ca www.terrateam.ca

WARMAN HOME CENTRE

SERVING SASKATOON & AREA FOR OVER 25 YEARS

w w w. w a r m a n h o m e c e n t re . c o m

CUSTOM BUILD TO OUR PLAN OR YOUR PLAN

GREAT PRICES, EVEN BETTER SERVICE GALVANIZED WINDOW WELLS ASSORTED SIZES

19

$

95

READY TO MOVE HOMES

FENCING SEASON 3¼ x 6 Doweled ..................................................$3.88 3¼ x 7 Doweled ..................................................$5.15 4¼ x 6 Doweled ..................................................$5.50 4¼ x 7 Doweled ..................................................$6.64 1x6 - 8’ Spruce Rough Cut...................................$2.00

Delivering homes ON TIME to happy customers in Sask., Alta., and Man. for over 25 years JOB 1206 1217 1221 1259 1275 1306 *=A 67? 1310 =;- 1< 1329 <01; ;=55-: 1350 1371

MT. BLANCHARD

Size 16 ft. Walls

Materials (Coloured Walls)

Material & Labour

Size 16 ft. Walls

Materials (Coloured Walls)

Material & Labour

32x48x16

$12,145

$19,595

32x48x16

$12,340

$20,290

40x56x16

$15,995

$24,620

40x56x16

$16,200

$25,325

40x64x16

$16,900

$26,750

40x64x16

$16,495

$26,850

48x80x16

$22,535

$37,315

48x80x16

$22,560

$37,845

48x96x16

$26,150

$43,890

48x96x16

$25,350

$43,590

60x120x16

$40,895

$69,335

60x120x16

$39,835

$68,775

PACKAGES INCLUDE: •29 Gauge #1 Colored Metal Walls and Galvalume Roof •1 Large Sliding Door •1 Steel Walk-In Door OPTIONS: •Other Sizes and Wall Heights Available •Windows •Overhead Door South Railway Street West, Warman, Sask.

Phone 306-933-4950 Toll F ree: 1-800-667-4990

175,000

SALE $ PRICE

PRICE SALE PRICE $189,991 $183,143 $191,285 $175,000 $181,599 $175,607 $161,715 $155,943 $222,083 $215,363 $200,425 $376,264 $152,174 $151,000 $229,528

FOR MORE HOMES AVAILABLE NOW SEE OUR WEBSITE OR CALL FOR DETAILS

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

HOURS:

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

HOUSE NAME SQ. FT. MT CHAPMAN 1712 MT BLANCHARD 1296 MT BLACKBURN 1498 MT ROBSON 1443 MT VANIER 1680 MT MICHENER 1644 MT FOSTER 2144 MT COLUMBIA 1341 MT RAE 1319 MT FOSTER 1702

SASKATCHEWAN

NEW HOME WARRANTY


62

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

ON-FARM SERVICE!!

DUAL AND TRIPLE WHEEL KITS AVAILABLE

SUMMER SAVINGS ON FARM TIRES IN STOCK! BKT

11L16 10P TT RIB IMP .........................

HIGHWAY SPECIAL

IMPLEMENT TIRES

60 $ 00 760-15 10P TT RIB IMP ............................ 90 $ 00 95L14 8P TLS RIB IMP .............................. 90 $ 00 95L15 8P TT RIB IMP................................ 85 $ 00 95L15 8P TLS RIB IMP .............................. 95 $ 00 95L15 12P TLS RIB IMP........................ 110 $ 00 11L15 8P TLS RIB IMP .......................... 100 $ 00 11L15 12P TLS RIB IMP........................ 120 $ 00 125L15 10P TLS RIB IMP ..................... 140 $ 00 125L15 12P TLS RIB IMP ..................... 165

FIRESTONE

HIGHWAY SPECIAL

670-15 6P TT RIB IMP ..............................

IMPLEMENT TIRES

00

$

$

FRONT TRACTOR

8000 $ 00 95L15 8P TLS 4 RIB .............................. 140 $ 00 1000-16 8P TT 4 RIB ............................ 188 $ 00 1100-16 8P TT 4 RIB ............................ 209 600-16 8P TT 3 RIB...................................

BIAS REAR FARM R-1

$

196 $ 00 124-24 8P TT ........................................ 252 $ 00 169-28 10P TT ...................................... 580 95-24 8P TT ..........................................

$

00

60900 $ 00 184-38 8P TT ........................................ 690 $ 00 208-38 8P TT .................................. 1,002 184-34 8P TT ........................................

RADIAL FARM R-1

30000 $ 00 169-24 12P TLS .................................... 588 $ 00 21L24 12P TLS...................................... 850 125/80-18 12P TLS ..............................

11500 $ 00 1000-16 8P TLS 4 RIB........................... 200 $ 00 1100-16 8P TLS 4 RIB........................... 320

RADIAL FARM R-1

BIAS REAR FARM R-1

INDUSTRIAL TREAD R-4

$

600-16 6P TLS 3 RIB .............................

$

460 $ 00 169-26 10P SAT FW TLS................. 1,400 $ 00 169-28 6P TLS ...................................... 650 124-24 8P TLS .....................................

$

00

$

1,40000 $ 00 184-30 8P TLS ...................................... 800 $ 00 184-34 8P TLS ...................................... 800 $ 00 208-38 8P TLS ............................... 1,250

FRONT TRACTOR

00

$

INDUSTRIAL TREAD R-4

225 00 11L15 12P TLS HWY SPEC ................... 250 $ 00 125L15 12P HWY SPEC ....................... 340 $

$

1,02500 $ 00 600/65R28 157A8.......................... 1,496 $ 00 520/85R38 155A8 ......................... 1,370 $ 00 520/85R42 157A8.......................... 1,528 $ 00 520/85R46 158A8.......................... 1,700 420/85R28 144A8..........................

231-26 12P SAT23 TLS...................

95L15 10P TLS HWY SPEC ...................

11500 $ 00 760-15 8P TLS RIB IMP ........................ 130 $ 00 85L14 6P TT RIB IMP............................ 135 $ 00 95L14 8P TLS RIB IMP .......................... 140 $ 00 95L15 8PLY TLS RIB IMP ...................... 140 $ 00 11L15 8P TLS RIB IMP .......................... 140 $ 00 11L15 12P TLS RIB IMP........................ 200 $ 00 165L161 10P TLS RIB IMP ................... 440 670-15 4P TLS RIB IMP ........................

11700

18200 $ 00 125L15 12P TLS HWY SPEC................. 250 11L15 12P TLS HWY SPEC ...................

$

$

$

1,27500 $ 00 480/80R38 149A8.......................... 1,250 $ 00 520/85R38 155A8.......................... 1,550 420/85R28 139A8..........................

$

38000 $ 00 169-24 12P TLS .................................... 700 $ 00 195L24 10P TLS ................................... 775 125/80-18 12P TLS ..............................

$

EXCELLENT PRICING ON OTHER SIZES NOT LISTED! Prices in Effect Until August 15, While Stock Lasts

306-933-1115

103-3240 Idylwyld Dr. N, Saskatoon www.oktireidylwyld.com


THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

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

SASKATOON

20 min. E of Saskatoon on Hwy. 16 REGINA

Text Us! 306-229-9507 ‘04 JD 9660 STS

‘99 CIH 3185 HIGH CLEARANCE

’12 40’ MD FD70/CIH 2162 FLEX DRAPER

Field-ready, 2013 $20,000 work order, Greenstar, $ FC chopper, 2,523 hrs ....

2,755 hrs., T-jet QJ360 5 nozzle body w/ 4 nozzles, Raven rate control, $ overall good cond’n ............

Excellent cond’n, Fits CNH, Adapters avail. $ for every make & model .......

‘98 CIH 2388

‘08 CIH 36’ SWATHER

’09 30’ MACDON D60-S

’10 45’ MACDON D60 HEADER

AFX rotor, AFS w/ pick-up incl., Mauer hopper-topper, $ 3,157 hrs............................

817 hrs., hyd. center limbs. Clean cab & body - overall excellent $ cond’n! .................................

NEW knife, guards & reel fingers, includes CNH adapter $ for 8120/CR9070 ................

Double knife drive, pea auger, fits all combine makes, hyd. head tilt, $ excellent cond’n .................

NEW 16’ MACDON PICKUP HEADER

HEADER TRANSPORTS

USED BALERS

Like-new 35’ Horst Drawpin hitch, 36’ flex bar, built-in rachet strap w/ quick$ adjust saddles. 2 available! .............. NEW Elmers Mfg HT30 30’, full trailer, 6,000lb axle, & header supports, clevis $ hitch, std brackets. 5 available ..........

‘03 NH BR780 Xtra-sweep PU, $ bale command plus, good cond’n ... ’01 Hesston 856A 1000 PTO, $ hyd. PU, 5x6 bales, good cond’n....... ’83 MF 124 Square Baler 540 PTO, $ little use, great cond’n ......................

OR Email:

coleman@combineworld.com

AG DEALS CONSTRUCTION DEALS

59,800

109,800

76,800

4,980

Premium PW7 Swathmaster, Fits JD, NH, CIH. $ Starting at ..........................

25,800

2,780

59,800

49,800

12,400 9,800 4,850

74,800

TRADES WANTED! WE LEASE & FINANCE TELEHANDLERS

59,800

’05 Terex TH644C 4,497 hrs., 44’ reach, 4.5L JD, 6000 lb capacity heated cab ........ $42,800 ’05 Terex TH644C 3,735 hrs., 44’ reach, 4.5L JD eng., 6000 lb capacity ........... $39,800 ’00 Lull 644D34 w/ 4,600hrs., 6000lb capacity, 34’ reach, well maintained ................. $29,800

OTHER DEALS

‘94 FLEXI-COIL 8000 AIR DRILL 57’ Air drill w/ 9” spacing, single shoot, steel packers, single fan, 7” $ auger, includes 2320 tank ....

13,900

’05 Degelman 1220 sidearm 1000 PTO, mower attachment, fits 10’-20’ mowers ............................. $6,980 ’12 CIH 95” Bucket/Grapple Brackets, quick-attach, model L765 .... $9,800 ‘66 CAT Model 12 Grader New front tires, runs well .................... $9,800

WHY BUY EQUIPMENT FROM

USED HEADER & PICKUP SET

’07 JD 936D

‘04 BRENT 1084 AVALANCHE

New guards, canvas, & reel bushings. Factory transport. Overall $ excellent cond’n .................

Grain cart, 1,100 bu., tandem walking axle, new roll tarp, 20’ hydraulic $ auger, 1000 PTO ................

38,800

34,800

‘09 CIH 2016 w/ 16’ Swathmaster ......................... $22,800 ‘12 NH 790CP-15............................. $23,800 ‘08 MacDon PW7 w/16’ Swathmaster ......................... $23,900

CombineWorld

’10 40’ MACDON D60 HEADER

REASON #2: OUR NICHE

Factory transport, hyd. reel fore & aft. Good guards, reel, canvas, $ & skid shoe ........................

59,800

A Smart Solution

For Every Need. AGCO Parts has the high-quality parts you need to keep your sprayer operating at peak performance. AGCO Parts provides the latest in spray technology to continually increase your productivity and effectively protect your crops. With thousands of parts from industry-leading suppliers, AGCO Parts is your one-stop shop for all your sprayer parts needs. Stop into your AGCO Parts Dealer and get the parts and services you need to “Keep you in the Field” this season. Find out more at AGCOParts.com.

Valves Spray Tips Nozzle Bodies Pumps Hose Couplers Pressure Gauges Precision Products Strainers Foam Tanks Sprayers Spray Guns Controllers

(306) 864-2200 Kinistino, SK

www.agworld.cc

In a market where many businesses are going “Big Box New”, we are able to find the time and resources to offer quality, pre-owned equipment that others do not.

63


64 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

NH FR 9080 CHOPPER, c/w 8-row corn 2010 MILLER G40, PN3063A, $200,000. MORRIS CONTOUR I 8370, 2010, 71’ header, 15’ PU header, 900 cutter hrs. Will 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca for TBH drill, 12� space, c/w Bourgault paired take trade. 403-394-4401, Lethbridge, AB. full online listings. row seed tips, front castor wheels, 3-tank metering 450 bu., TopCon X20 monitor YOUNG’S EQUIPMENT INC. For all your 2010 AGCHEM Rogator 1386, PN3072A, w/tank cameras, 10� load/unload with silage equipment needs call Kevin or Ron $ 3 2 2 , 0 0 0 . C a l l 1 - 8 8 8 - 4 4 2 - 6 0 8 4 o r large hopper, single fan configuration, exc. toll free 1-800-803-8346, Regina, SK. www.farmworld.ca for full online listings. cond. Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. 2008 JF-STOLL 1355 forage harvester, 2012 JD 4730 sprayer, 300 hrs, 100’, 800 1997 BOURGAULT 5710, 54’ with MRB’s, used 4 seasons, less than 500 hrs, with gal. poly, 2 sets of tires, full GPS. Call 3/4� carbide openers, carbide scrapers, backup parts. New rotor, knives, and shear 306-747-7911, Shellbrook, SK. complete Raven NH3 set-up, all tires upbar, always shedded, 1 owner, exc. shape, dated, all hoses, blockage monitors, 3.5� $49,900. 306-668-4218, Vanscoy, SK. steel packers with mud scrapers, serviced and ready for the field, always shedded, JF 1350 HARVESTER and Jiffy 900 hy$40,000 OBO. 306-873-7822, Tisdale, SK. dump, both exc. cond., $48,500 for both. 306-747-7116, Shellbrook, SK. 2010 NH 70’, P2070 precision drill, 430 bu. P1060 VR cart, 10� spacing, double NH 2115 SP forage harvester, c/w hay shoot dry w/liquid fertilizer kit, low acres pickup and 360 N6 corn header. Has new on openers, dual hi-floatation tires on cylinder knives and tires. Good cond., front, dual fans, tow hitch on cart, extra $25,000. 204-655-3550 or 204-655-3286, rollers included, field ready, $149,000. FiSifton, MB. nancing available. Deposit will hold until spring. Call 306-535-7708, Regina, SK. 2006 FLEXI-COIL 5000, 33’, Stealth knives, ’99 CIH 3185 High-Clearance Sprayer 2012 SCHULTE FX530, 30’ mower, like 2,755 hrs., T-jet QJ360 5 nozzle body less than 7000 acres, $45,000; 2011 3850 new condition. Phone: Machinery Dave w/ 4 nozzles, Raven rate control, overall TBT var. rate cart, 3000 acres, $57,000; 403-545-2580, Bow Island, AB. good cond’n. $59,800. Trades welcome. 2013 4350 TBT, less than 1000 acres, 1-800-667-4515. $67,000; 2013 5000, 51’, less than 1000 Financing available. www.combineworld.com acres, $115,000. 780-385-5704, Viking, AB 2009 MILLER NITRO 4275 120’ booms, new 20.8x38, 1600 gal. SS tank, AutoBoom, 3 way nozzles, boom tilt accumula2008 NH SF216, 134’, suspended boom tors, Raven 460 controller, 2300 hrs. Very sprayer, 1600 US gallons, 3� fill, rinse tank, Clean. $185,000 USD. Call 605-226-0695 18.4x38 radials, Raven AutoBoom, autorate Flexi-Coil controller, triple combo jets, can option up to JD control and sectional control with your 2600 screen, $38,000. TRIDEKON CROP SAVER, crop dividers. Call 306-537-3241, Briercrest, SK. Reduce trampling losses by 80% to 90%. Great West Agro, 306-398-8000, Cut FLEXI-COIL #65 80’, 800 gal., new tires, Call wind curtains, chem. tank, $4000 OBO. Knife, SK. 306-389-4827, 306-441-2097 Maymont SK TOW BAR FOR 3640 Spra-Coupe, $800. Also crop dividers, $200. 780-939-3601, 80’ WILGER SPRAYER, 400 gal., SS tank, 780-718-3778, Morinville, AB. low drift nozzles, disc markers, remote boom control, $1250. Call 306-463-7802, SET OF 4 12.4R/46 High Clearance sprayer Eatonia, SK. tires and rims, $5,000 for set. 306-233-5722, Wakaw, SK. BRANDT SPRAYER PARTS for QS2000 sprayers: tanks, booms, castors, and more. WHEELS AND TIRES, set of 4, 9.5x48 to 204-274-2314, Portage la Prairie, MB. fi t 1 9 9 7 R o G at o r 8 5 4 , $ 4 0 0 0 O B O. 2003 BRANDT SB4000, 90’, double bodies, 306-254-4401, 306-229-8409 Dalmeny, SK chem eductor, autorate, duals. Call: 306-381-7689, Hague, SK. 2004 BRANDT SB4000 90’ suspended boom sprayer, S/N 074067-04, 1350 Imp. gal. tank, Micro Trak 9000 autorate controller, mix and fill tank, frost kit, tank rinse nozzles, twin nozzle bodies, windcones, foam marker, boom touchdown wheels, exc. cond., no welds or damage, approx. 14,000 acres, reduced $26,500. Nipawin, SK. Call toll free 1-877-862-2413, 306-862-7761 cell or 1-877-862-2387, 306-862-7524 cell.

1998 PATRIOT NT, $56,900; 2004 Rogator 864, $105,000; 1994 BG 850, $6500; JD 4830, 100’, 1000 gal., $219,000; 1996 BG 1450, $6900; 2009 Rogator 1084, 100’, 1000 gallon, $225,000; 1984 Wilger 880, 80’, 800 gal., $1990. Call Hergott Farm Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK.

DROP DECK semi style and pintle hitch sprayer trailers. Air ride, tandem and tridems. Contact SK: 306-398-8000; AB: 403-350-0336.

2002 ROGATOR 854, 2850 hrs., 800 gal., 90’, AutoSteer, AccuBoom, AutoBoom, two sets of tires, crop dividers, shedded, 306-921-7000, Birch Hills, SK. 2012 NEW HOLLAND SP 275R, N21753A, $315,000. Call 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for full online listings. FOUR TRIDEKON CROP dividers for John Deere 4700, with air lift, $3000. 204-847-0000, Birtle, MB.

2010 JD 1830 61’, 12.5� space, 5.5� packers, single shoot, primary blockage, Dutch carbide 4� paired row boots, AgroMac hitch. JD 1910 cart 430 TBT, var. drive on 3 tanks, powered calibration system, 20.8R42 duals, 12� conveyor. Virden, MB., 2010 MILLER G75, N21884A, $219,000. 204-748-8332. john@galvinfarms.com 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for 2000 FLEXI-COIL 7500 ‘Slim’ 60’ air drill, full online listings. S/N 7000-096360-00, 10� spacing, double WANTED CROP DIVIDERS for JD 4730 shoot, 4� steel packers, approx. 20,000 sprayer, prefer Tridekon. 780-939-3601, acres, good cond., no tank or openers, 780-718-3778, Morinville, AB. $14,900. Located near Saskatoon, SK. Toll free 1-877-862-2413, cell 306-862-7761, ROGATOR 1184, 2010, 2 sets of tires, 1-877-862-2387, cell 306-862-7524. 380/90R46, 24.5R32, AutoBoom, AccuBoom, Raven GPS system, 5-way noz- WANTED: CASE 8500 air drill, any spaczles/end row nozzles, HID lites, Raven i n g . P r e f e r A B . / S K . , g o o d s h a p e . SmartTrac, boom wheels. Call Gord at 403-333-0736, Rocky View, AB. 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. 1998 MORRIS MAXIM 49’, 12� spacings, 2 0 0 5 FLEXI-COIL SF115, PN3067A, d o u b l e s h o o t , 7 3 0 0 t a n k , $ 3 5 , 0 0 0 . $ 1 7 , 6 0 0 . C a l l 1 - 8 8 8 - 4 6 2 - 3 8 1 6 o r 306-736-7940, Glenavon, SK. www.farmworld.ca for full online listings.

FLEXI-COIL 5000 39’, 9� spacing, single shoot, 4� rubber packers, 3 row 2-bar harrows, 550 lb. trips w/HD shanks, 1720 TBH air cart, fine, coarse and extra fine rollers, exc, $33,500. 306-272-7300 Foam Lake SK 2007 NH 58’, 9� spacing, 4.5� steel, c/w 430 tank, TBT, mech., exc., $85,000. Swift Current, SK. 306-773-6761, 306-774-5994. FLEX-COIL 57’, 9� spacing w/2320 TBH cart, $50,000 OBO; Valmar on 40’ Morris cult. $3500. 780-888-2245, Hardisty, AB. WANTED: 2013 SEED HAWK, 60’ or 65’ with 10� spacing, tow behind air tank. Call 780-359-2141, Tangent, AB.

MORRIS CP750, 50’, Magnum I HD cult., asking $17,500. Morris Challenger II, L233, 35’, med. duty cult., asking $2000. 306-782-7749, 306-621-5136, Yorkton, SK

2006 STX 530 Quadtrac, 30� tracks, Cummins QSX-15, 4 hyd., scraper and Ag hitches, deluxe cab, 16 spd, powershift, $192,500 USD.605-226-0695 Aberdeen SD

EXPERIENCED EQUIPMENT: 14’ Kello series 275 offset disc; 12’ Kello series 210 offset disc; 12’ Kello series 176 offset disc; 12’ Kello series 155G offset disc. Call 403-347-2688, Red Deer, AB. MORRIS 750 50’ cultivator, 16� shovels, 3 bar harrows, $6,000. Call 306-682-3024, Humboldt, SK. 2008 WISHEK 842NT disc 30’, 11� spacing, 3-bar harrows, 385/65R 22.5 truck tires. 26� blades $58,000 USD. 605-226-0695. NEW 2012 BOURGAULT 8910 cultivator, 70’, 12� spacing w/spd. lock adapters and 4 bar harrows. 306-231-8060 Englefeld, SK 54’ FLEXI-COIL DT, Model 800, 650 lb. trip, mounted harrows, exc. shape; Also extra fine roller, 8 run for Flexi-Coil seeder tank. Call 204-522-8640, Melita, MB.

WANTED: SUITCASE WEIGHTS and bracket for Case 2294 2 WD tractor. 306-595-4780, Norquay, SK.

FLEXI-COIL 800, 60’, 12�, 650 lb. trips, $13,000 OBO. Located at Viscount, SK. Call 403-312-5113. CASE/IH 5600, 45’, HD cultivator w/harrows, new shovels, excellent condition, $10,500. 306-358-4342, Denzil, SK. 42’ CCIL DEEP tillage cultivator w/tines, $2000; 30’ CCIL deep tillage cultivator DEGELMAN STRAWMASTER 7000 heavy w/tines, $800. 306-463-7802, Eatonia, SK. harrow drawbar, hydraulic lift, 70’, good condition, $36,000, located in Kamsack, MORRIS 743 45’ cultivator, vg cond.; Morris 643 cultivator; Morris 29’ cult.; Case 20’ SK. Call 204-526-0321 cultivator. 306-297-3865, Shaunavon, SK. HIGHLINE 40’ ROTARY harrow w/coil packers, 1-3/4� coils, exc. cond., $10,000. B ETTER DIS K IN G S TARTS HERE Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 60’ ALLIED DIAMOND harrow bar. Call 306-771-2527, Edenwold, SK. 2013 BRANDT 50’ heavy harrow, 9/16th N EW SUM M ERS DISKS tine, brand new harrows, used on 600 H IGH Q U ALITY... N O RID GIN G acres. Call 204-686-2471, Tilston, MB. CALL: M ACH IN ERYD AVE 70’ BLANCHARD HARROW, 5 bar tines, au403-545-2580 - BO W IS LAN D , AB tofold, good condition, $3500. 306-287-7808 leave msg., Watson, SK.

1979 CASE 1270, 6800 hrs. CAH, $7500. Call 306-469-2027, Big River, SK.

WANTED: FLEXI-COIL 820, 25’-40’ or 50’-60’. Please call 403-586-0641, Olds, AB. 1996 BOURGAULT 2155 air seeder cart, c/w rear hitch, NH3 set-up, new air seeder hopper, always shedded, looks like new, $8900 OBO. 306-873-7822, Tisdale, SK. 1990 FLEXI-COIL 800 35’ air seeder w/Bourgault 2155 tank, 12� spacing, single shoot, 14� knock-on shovels, splitter boot (4-1/2� wide), liquid fert. kit, harrows. 2 bin 155 bu. cap., loading auger, single clutch drive, $25,000. Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 35’ BOURGAULT AIR SEEDER, 8� spacing, w/wo 1610 plus Flexi-Coil tank, premium cond., $16,500 OBO. Call 403-823-1894, Morrin, AB.

2008 CIH 700, 70’, 10� spacing, w/3430 TBT tank, 650 lb. trips, LD sweeps, harrow closures, 5.5� packers, UR cart w/auger, flex control monitors, low acres - 2000 per year, always shedded, 3 comp. tank, like new. 10% down balance March/April 2014. 2009 BOURGAULT MODEL 6000 70’ mid 306-382-1200, Saskatoon, SK. size harrow, asking $25,000. Phone 2004 JD 1895 disc drill, 36’, w/Raven 204-324-4352, Emerson, MB. NH3, Flexi-Coil 2340 TBT tank, 3 tanks, var rate, new discs, boots and hose, $85,000 OBO. 403-333-3730, Nanton, AB. 41’ CASE/IH 5600 air seeder and Bourgault 2115 air cart plus granular kit, also consigned 41’ Harmon 4480 air drill with Harmon 1830 air cart. Alvin Miller Farm 2012 SEEDMASTER 80’x12�, 300 bu. on- Equipment Auction, Saturday, August 17, frame tank, w/UltraPro canola meters and 2 0 1 3 , S t o u g h t o n , S a s k . a r e a . V i s i t cameras, w/scales, fully loaded, sectional www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale control, run block monitors, packing force b i l l a n d p h o t o s . 3 0 6 - 4 2 1 - 2 9 2 8 o r sensors, duals, c/w 2012 Nova cart, 3 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 comp. 780 bu. w/scales and duals, field ready, $325,000. Deposit will hold until IH CORN PLANTER for parts. Also 7 Masspring, will seperate; 2013 SEEDMASTER sey 63 drills, 4 connected as 1 unit. Drill 88’x14�, 360 bu. on-frame tank, w/Ultra- transport. Call 204-250-4796, Plumas, MB. Pro Canola meters and cameras, w/scales, 15’ SAKUNDIAK HYD. drill fill; 12’ Smith fully loaded, sectional control, run block Roles hyd. drill fill. 306-738-4735, Riceton, monitors, packing force sensors, duals, SK. c/w 2013 Nova XP-cart, 3 comp. 780 bu. w/scales and duals, field ready, $420,000. Deposit will hold until spring, will seperate. Call 306-535-7708, Regina, SK. 18’ ALLIS CHALMERS tandem disc, $3750. 2003 MORRIS MAXIM 11 40’ air drill, 204-523-7469 or 204-534-8115, Killarney, S / N 3 9 0 2 0 3 4 9 1 6 , 7 1 8 0 t a n k S / N MB. 7189500272, 10� spacing, single shoot, 4� DIKA ROOT RAKE, 12’ HD, RW-173, steel press wheels w/mud scrapers, tan- $7900. Call 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. dem gauge wheels, shank type anhydrous mid-row banders, NH3 kit, semi hopper, KELLO-BILT DISC PARTS: Blades and 12,000 acres, premium, straight, no welds, bearings. Parts to fit most makes and $ 4 9 , 9 0 0 . N i p a w i n , S K . To l l f r e e models. 1-888-500-2646, Red Deer, AB. 1-877-862-2413, cell 306-862-7761 or www.kelloughs.com 1-877-862-2387, cell 306-862-7524. 1997 JD 1810 52’ cultivator, 9.5� spacing DAVIDSON TRUCKING, PULLING air drills/ w/knock-on 12� shovels, good cond. Call air seeders, packer bars, Alberta and Sask. Gary at 306-873-8060, Prairie River, SK. 30 years experience. Bob Davidson, Drum- 14’ AND 16’ deep tiller 2 bottom plow, 2- 6 heller, AB. 403-823-0746. bottom plows. Call for price. 2008 BOURGAULT 3310 Paralink air drill, 204-250-4796, Plumas, MB. 55’, double shoot, MRB’s, 10� space, 4.5� V CO-OP 40’ deep tillage, orange, all walkpackers, 3/4� tips, shedded, $120,000. An- ing axles, $3900. Phone 306-287-8062, hydrous kit avail. 306-731-3449 Craven SK Watson, SK.

2 0 0 5 FLEXI-COIL SF115, HN3185A, $17,600. Call 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for full online listings.

2008 7660 SPRA-COUPE, 735 hrs, 90’ booms, 725 gal. tank, fully loaded, AutoBoom, AutoGlide, SmarTrax AutoSteer, FWA, HID lighting, $128,500 OBO. Vegreville, AB, 780-603-7833, 780-688-2348. 2 0 1 1 N E W N e w H o l l a n d S P 3 6 5 F, N22107A, $328,000. 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca for full online listings. 2007 GVM PREDATOR, C22279, $145,000. 1-888-462-3816 or www.farmworld.ca for full online listings. FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS We also specialize in: Crop insurance appeals; Chemical drift; Residual herbicide; Custom operator issues; Equipment malfunction. Qualified Agrologist on staff. Call Back-Track Investigations for assistance regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779. 2006 APACHE 1010, KK21601B, $144,000. Call 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for full online listings. 2007 SPRA-COUPE 4655, 900 hrs., Outback GPS, 2 sets of rear tires, crop dividers, vg cond., field ready, $75,000 OBO. 780-877-2191, 780-781-3133, Bashaw, AB

AGROPLOW MODEL 19SAP2H, all options, including tow hitch or 3 PTH, used on 350 acres so like new. Will send pictures if you want to see more or google the model no. $45,000 OBO. Bruce at 780-405-8638, Fort Saskatchewan, AB.

CASE AIM COMMAND AND SHARP SHOOTER “The Air Bubble Jet 90% LESS DRIFT, consistently produces droplets that are 200-550 microns in LESS RUN OFF, size. Too big to drift - too $ 25 SUPERIOR COVERAGE 11 small to run off.� Drift occurs when droplets are smaller than 200 microns. Standard sprayer nozzles drift because they produce droplets that are 50-300 micron in size with a large percentage under 200. With a droplet range of 200-550 microns, the Air Bubble Jet has 90% less drift than standard nozzles.

NEW!

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. 2005 9800 BOURGAULT chisel plow, 42’, heavy harrows, 600 lb. trip, Bourgault knock-on clips, orig. owner, $37,000 OBO. 204-785-0456, East Selkirk, MB.

8

$ 95

1989 CASE 7110, 2WD, near new tires all around, rear tires 20.8x42’s, c/w 790 loader with joystick, $23,500. 306-429-2820, Glenavon, SK. 1982 IHC 5088, 8979 hrs., triple hyds., Leon 707 FEL, $17,500. 204-525-4521, www.waltersequipment.com Minitonas MB

1986 CASE/IH 2294, 5200 hrs, mint, new PU for 530/535/566 baler; 7000 bale processor 2001; bale monitor for 566/567 baler. 780-576-2146, Thorhild, AB. 2009 435 CASE/IH STEIGER, 970 hrs., 800/70R38 duals, output hyd. pump, powershift, 5 remotes, HID lighting, luxury cab, stored inside, one owner/operator, $215,000. Ron Young, Lumsden, SK. 306-731-7641, 306-731-3212. CASE/IH 5088, 140 HP, 3 PTH, FEL, cab, A C , v e r y g o o d r u b b e r, $ 1 5 , 0 0 0 . 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. 2003 CASE/IH MX210, 210 HP, 5976 hrs, 18 spd. powershift w/shuttle, MFD, 3 PTH, dual PTO, CAH, 480/80R46 duals, always shedded, $69,500. Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher, Creek, AB. 2006 STX280, 16 spd. powershift, PTO, diff. locks, 900R50 big single tires, 1632 hrs, asking $130,000. Call 403-755-6374, 780-385-0260, Alliance, AB 1967 730 GAS CASE-O-MATIC, 5700 orig. hrs, 1200 on major overhaul, new rad., mint cond. 306-563-6312, Canora SK

2010 CASE/IH 335, 1155 hrs, 480/50 duals, powershift, 5 SCVs, PTO, $174,900. 605-480-1750, or 605-270-4841. COMPLETE SHANK ASSEMBLIES: JD 1610, 1993 9280 CASE/IH 4 WD, $60,000. $135; JD 610, black, $180; JD 1600, $90; 306-449-2255, A.E. Chicoine Farm Equip. Morris 7-series, $135. 306-946-7923, Ltd., Storthoaks, SK. 306-946-4923, Young, SK. 1987 CASE 2294 and 7721 Titan II JD IMPLEMENT TIRES. BKT 95L15 12P TLS combine, both good condition. Reason for RIB IMP, $110. OK Tire, Idylwyld Dr N, selling, retiring. 306-587-2730, Cabri, SK. Saskatoon, SK. Phone 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com LIZARD CREEK REPAIR and Tractor. We 90 and 94 Series Case 2 WD, FWA BOURGAULT MOUNTED HARROWS, buy for parts and rebuilding. Also have 4.5’, 4-bar HD, quantity 7, new never used, tractors 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 . $350 ea. 306-424-7511, Montmartre, SK. 306-784-7841, Herbert, SK. 2- MASSEY FERGUSON 360, 15’ discers, Martin hitch, grey wheels, good shape. CASE 1370 c/w like new Ezee-On 2100 loader, 7’ bucket, joystick and bale spear, 306-753-7116, Macklin, SK. $14,900. Tractor alone, $6900. Pro Ag Sales, 306-441-2030, North Battleford, SK. 1992 7120 MAGNUM 2 WD, 20.8 singles, 18 spd, 3 hyd, 7100 hrs., orig. owner. Langham,SK 306-283-4747, 306-291-9395 1991 DEUTZ ALLIS 9130, 2WD, 5500 hrs., original owner, 20.8x38 singles, $19,900. Call Cam-Don Motors Ltd., 306-237-4212, Perdue, SK.

2001 STX 375, 3400 hrs., 5 hyd., big hydraulic pump 55 GPM, excellent tractor. Call 306-640-8003, Willowbunch, SK.

WRECKING FOR PARTS: CASE/IH 3394 WANTED: DEUTZ 7110 with FWA. Must FWA, vg running eng., exc. sheet metal; be in good shape. Call 204-467-5608 or 2290 Case, vg engine, vg powershift; 1070 Case, vg engine, exc. sheet metal. Call cell 204-461-0706, Stonewall, MB. 1-877-564-8734, Roblin, MB. CASE/IH 9130 4 WD tractor. Alvin Miller Farm Equip. Auction, Saturday, August 17, 2-105 WHITE, COMPLETE new engine in- 2 0 1 3 , S t o u g h t o n , S a s k . a r e a . V i s i t frame 10 hrs. ago, rear tires approx. 80%, www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale LPTO, high-low shift, nice tractor, $9000. b i l l a n d p h o t o s . 3 0 6 - 4 2 1 - 2 9 2 8 o r 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962

CIH 8920 MAGNUM, 3 PTH, 540/1000 PTO, 4 WD, 6.9x28 fronts, 18.4R42 rears, plus duals, showing just over 6500 hrs., $45,000. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB. 1985 CASE 2394, 5200 hrs., 24 spd. trans, rubber- 90%, good shape, $19,000. 306-228-9974, Unity, SK.

2009 SEEDHAWK 800, 84’, sectional control, liquid kit w/var. rate control, 12� spacing, DS, run monitors, new fertilizer knives, $329,000 OBO. Will consider trades. 306-435-8008, Wapella, SK.

2 0 0 5 FLEXI-COIL SF115, PN3067A, $17,600. Call 1-888-442-6084 or www.farmworld.ca for full online listings.

Vis it o u r we b s ite a t: www.s u m m e rs m fg.co m

CASE/IH STEIGER built, 4 WD/Quads; Plus other makes and models. Call the Tractor Man! Trades welcome. We deliver. Gord 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. IH 1066, FEL, $11,900; 2010 CIH 485, PTO, $269,000; 2010 CIH 435 quad, PTO, $279,000. Call Hergott Farm Equipment 306-682-2592, Humboldt, SK.

1993 STEIGER 9270, 3400 orig. hrs., new rubber, standard, Case Up-time, mint shape. Call 306-744-8113, Saltcoats, SK. 1996 CASE 7220 MAGNUM, 2 WD, 6800 hrs, vg running cond., 18 spd., modified front weights, dual PTO, triple hyds., floatation front tires, always shedded, asking $30,000. 306-746-7330, 306-761-1235, Regina, SK.

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Run off occurs with big droplets - 600 microns and over. Depending on the manufacturer, other low drift nozzles produce droplets that range in size from 250-1000 microns. That is why run off can be a problem. With a droplet size of 200-550 microns, your chemical stays on the plant when applied with the Air Bubble Jet. New Twin Air Bubble Jet. With the twin cap, you can use 2-5 gallon nozzles rather than 1-10 gallon nozzles. The advantage is you get over twice as many droplets per square inch for superior coverage.

1997 WILLMAR 90’, 3300 hrs., new tires, rear duals, AutoSteer, vg cond., $48,000 OBO. Call 780-352-2865, Wetaskiwin, AB.

Air Bubble jet nozzles operate at 30-45 psi and have an overall range of 20-90 psi.They can be used to apply fungicides, insecticides and herbicides to any crop including potatoes and pulse crops. Ag Canada tested.

MILLER A75, 2008, full load, 103’ boom and hypro nozzles, 1000 gal. tank, crop dividers, AutoSteer, AutoBoom, AccuBoom, $160,000 OBO. 780-674-7944 Barrhead AB

ABJ AGRI PRODUCTS

www.abjagri.com

Murray Purvis Brandon, MB. 204-724-4519 | Gary Moffat Lethbridge, AB. 403-330-9085

BIG G- GREENLINE 14’ 4-bottom disc. c/w 24� disc, hyd. transport wheels, $6,000 OBO. 780-914-2069, Spruce Grove, AB. 11’ TRCH ROME hinge offset disc, $13,000; 8’ ROME offset breaking disc, $13,000. 204-256-2098, Treherne, MB. www.hirdequipment.com 2007 WISHEK DISC, 14’, 26� blades, good condition, $23,900. Phone 306-435-8008, Wapella, SK.

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THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

CLASSIFIED ADS 65

2002 JD 9220, 4 WD, 24 spd, deluxe cab, 4 hyds., 20.8x42 duals, 2369 hrs., exc. cond., $129,900. 306-272-7300, Foam Lake, SK. 1966 JD 4020, powershift, 540/1000 PTO, tires good, cab, 7700 hrs. Call 306-736-3022, Glenavon, SK.

’12 IH 95� Bucket/Grapple - FEL complete w/ brackets & quick-attach. Case model L765. $9,800. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

1986 COUGAR KR1225, 20 spd., PTO, vg 18.4x38, $35,900. Call 306-948-3949, 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK.

CAT CHALLENGER 65 with powershift, PTO, $28,000. 204-871-0925, MacGregor, MB.

2010 JOHN DEERE 9430, powershift, 1849 hrs, 710x70R42 duals, 4 SCVs, PTO, $188,900. 605-480-1750, 605-270-4841. STEVE’S TRACTOR REBUILDER looking for JD tractors to rebuild, Series 20s, 30s, 40s or 50s, or for parts. Will pay top dollar. Now selling JD parts. 204-466-2927, 204-871-5170, Austin, MB. LOOKING FOR: JD 30, 40, 50 series tractor in good cond. with mechanical issues. 306-621-7170, Yorkton, SK. 1991 4560 2 WD, duals, 3 hyd. outlets, 4500 hrs., 15 spd. powershift. One owner, retired. 306-436-4667, Milestone, SK. 2010 JOHN DEERE 9630, 4WD, 2100 hrs, 800x38 duals, powershift, 4 SCVs, $219,900. 605-480-1750, 605-270-4841. 1976 4630, w/QUAD range, diff lock, 3 hyd. outlets, 1000 PTO, rear wheel weights, 20.8x38 duals, 7990 hrs., shedded. 306-228-2554 or cell: 306-228-8104, Unity, SK. 1981 JOHN DEERE 4640, 160 HP, 16 spd. quad trans, 3 SCVs, 1000 PTO, 20.8R38 duals, completely rebuilt engine, excellent condition, $22,900. Call Jordan anytime 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. 2012 JOHN DEERE 9560R, 4WD, 233 hrs, 800x70R38 duals, powershift, 5 SCVs, PTO, warranty, $299,900. 605-480-1750, or 605-270-4841. 1976 4430 QUAD, 3 PTH, 7100 orig. hrs., good rubber, sharp. 306-744-8113, Yorkton, SK. 1974 JD 4630 2 WD tractor, quad range, 2 remotes, new 18.4-38 rear tires, duals, 8000 hrs., very good condition, $14,500. 306-429-2785, Glenavon, SK. 2012 JOHN DEERE 9510R, 4WD, 582 hrs, 800x70R38 duals, powershift, 5 SCVs, warranty, $269,500. 605-480-1750, or 605-270-4841. 2004 JOHN DEERE 9520, 5547 hours, 800/70R38 duals, powershift, 4 SCVs, $99,900. 605-480-1750, or 605-270-4841. 7930 2009, 50 kms/hr, IVT, 3258 hrs, TLS, 3 PTH, 2 spd. PTO, 4 remotes, active seat, buddy seat, trailer air brakes, 600x70R30 20%, 650x85R38 50%. 306-457-8044, Kisbey, SK. 2008 JD 9530 4WD, 1397 hrs, 800/ 70R38’s, weight package, 4 remotes, AutoTrac ready, active seat $189,500 USD. 320-848-2496, 320-894-6560, Fairfax, MN. www.ms-diversified.com 2002 7810 JD FWA tractor, c/w 740 loader, 5012 hrs, E-range powerquad, RH d o o r, $ 7 4 , 5 0 0 O B O. Ve g r e v i l l e , A B , 780-603-7833, 780-688-2348. JD 7810 MFD, quad with LHR, loaded, 3 PTH, 740 loader, exc. cond. Financing available. 780-990-8412, Edmonton, AB. 1999 NH TS110 tractor, cab, air, MFWD, 3 pt, Quickie loader w/grapple, joystick, 6500 hrs., $37,900. Call Gary Reimer, 204-326-7000 reimerfarmequipment.com Steinbach, MB. 4010 JD DIESEL tractor w/cab and FEL, $5750. 306-395-2668 or 306-681-7610, Chaplin, SK. WANTED: JD 5020 named Lazy Nellie. Former owner would like to hear from present owner. 204-734-8071, Swan River 1990 JD 4455, 3785 hrs, MFD, complete service of all fluids and filters. 2 hydraulics, quad shift, excellent condition, $59,500. 306-728-4340, Yorkton, SK. JD 4450, low hrs; JD 4050, 4030, 4640, 4440, 4240 w/rebuilt engines. 740, 640, 280, 158 and 148 loaders. Taking JD tractors in trade that need work. 204-466-2927, 204-871-5170, Austin, MB. JD 4450, 20.8x38 factory dual tires, cab, dual range, 6000 hrs, always shedded, $32,000. Call 306-828-2950, Yorkton, SK. 2003 JD 7320, self levelling loader, 3 PTH, 5900 hrs, MFWD, LHR, excellent condition, $65,000. Call 204-845-2068, Elkhorn, MB.

2010 NH T6030 PLUS MFWD, CAHR, sunroof, 3 PTH, loader, joystick, diff. lock, 16x16 PowerShift w/left hand reverser, only 250 hrs., as new, sold cows and never used, $77,500. 306-699-2442, McLean, SK. 2008 NH T6020, 715, hrs., with 830TL loader, sunroof, diff. lock, mint cond., JD 8400 1996, 225 HP, 4 hydraulics $57,000. 204-648-7129, Grandview, MB. 710-38 duals, 16 spd. powershift, 840 loader, grapple, joystick, 9300 hrs., $75,000. 306-264-3834, Kincaid, SK. 1986 JD 4450, FWA, JD 280 loader, grap- 8N FORD TRACTOR, NEW back tires, ple, joystick, 3 PTH, low hrs., runs and FEL, 3 PTH, includes cultivator, blade, works excellent, $44,000; 1996 JD 7800, mower, plow, asking $6000. Good for FWA, 740 loader w/grapple, exc. rubber, acreages. 306-747-2775, Shellbrook, SK. low hrs. 403-504-9607, Medicine Hat, AB. 2012 JOHN DEERE 9460R, 4WD, 332 hrs, 800x70R38 duals, powershift, 5 SCVs, warranty, $267,900. 605-480-1750, or 825 VERSATILE, 250 HP, 18.4x38 tires, new paint, $12,000. Call 306-463-7802, 605-270-4841. Eatonia, SK. 1979 JD 4640, 8965 hrs, 20.8x38 duals, VERSATILE 256 BI-DIRECTIONAL tractor exc. cond. 306-283-4747, Langham, SK. with FEL and grapple fork. Alvin Miller 1997 JD 9300, 4 WD, 6300 hrs, 12 spd. Farm Equip. Auction, Saturday, August 17, std., 4 hyds, Michelin XM108 650-65x42 2 0 1 3 , S t o u g h t o n , S a s k . a r e a . V i s i t radials at 60%, vg condition, $85,000 OBO. www.mackauctioncompany.com for sale 306-654-4905, Prud’Homme, SK. bill and photos. 306-421-2928 or 306-487-7815 Mack Auction Co. PL311962 1998 7810, 2 WD, PQ, 3 PTH, 3 remotes, factory duals, 150 HP, shedded, exc., 1983 VERSATILE 835, 5770 hours, one $45,000. Jared 204-740-0851 Cromer, MB owner, excellent condition, $28,900. Call 7810, VERY CLEAN CONDITION, 2002, 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. 4213 hrs, 3 PTH, TLS, 20 spd. powerquad, 1990 BLUE FORD Versatile 876, 5280 hrs., 3 spools, 2 spd. PTO, 710x70R38 85%, 20.8x38 duals, $42,000. 780-905-2979, 600x65R28 30%. 306-457-8044, Kisbey SK Westlock, AB 1994 JD 4760, FWA, powershift, 4950 hrs., 2012 VERSATILE 190, FWA, 16.9R28 excellent condition. Call 204-686-2471, fronts, 20.8R42 duals, rear weights, 3 PTH, Tilston, MB. with 3895 loader, bucket, large bale grap1995 JOHN DEERE 8770, 300 HP, approx. ple, Hydrafast, cushion ride, bale tines, 7000 hrs, full AutoSteer w/mapping, 24 pallet forks F/R 6 manual ranges, 4 powerspd, diff. locks, 4 SCVs, 650/65R38 duals, shift/ range, 24F/24R, shuttle shift, 560 14’ Degelman 6 way dozer blade. Excellent hrs. 306-834-7579, Major, SK. shape, $69,500. Call Jordan anytime 1999 9200 WESTWARD, c/w 30’ 962 403-627-9300, Pincher Creek, AB. header, new style wobble box, valley pack1982 JD 4640, quad range, 155 HP, triple er gauge wheels, new canvas, large rear hyd., 10,000 hrs., exc. cond., $25,000 firm. tires, $39,000 OBO. Churchbridge, SK. 306-745-9269. 306-638-4569, 306-631-3597, Findlater SK 1980 JD 4640, 2056 orig. hrs., shedded, $39,000 OBO. Call 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Rama, SK. F R O N T T R AC TO R T I R E S. F i r e s t o n e JD 4250 2 WD, 1984, 8000 hrs., PS, duals 1100-16 8P TLS, 4 RIB, $320. OK Tire, available, 2 hyd. w/split to three, shedded. Idylwyld Dr N, Saskatoon, SK. Phone Excellent cond. Ph. 306-742-4624 home, 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com or 306-742-7795 cell, MacNutt, SK. SMALL TRACTORS: 25 to 60 HP, various 1998 JD 8300 FWA, 3700 hrs., 16 spd. makes and models. All running condition. powershift, duals all around, diff. locks, 403-504-0468, Medicine Hat, AB. large PTO, c/w 12’ Degelman 4-way blade FARM TIRES. BKT front tractor tires, with two 1’ ext., great cart tractor, very 95L15 8P TLS 4 RIB, $140. Phone OK Tire, clean. Asking $100,000. Can email pics. I d y l w y l d D r. N , S a s k a t o o n , S K . 306-847-2048, 306-946-7668, Liberty, SK 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com 2010 JOHN DEERE 9630T, 1548 hrs, 36� SUPER 570 CCIL Co-op tractor, 1960’s, tracks, powershift, 5 SCVs, extended war- 3300 orig. hrs, Hercules diesel, vg, shedr a n t y, $ 2 5 9 , 9 0 0 . 6 0 5 - 4 8 0 - 1 7 5 0 , o r ded; 1850 Cockshutt, 4400 orig. hrs., vg, 605-270-4841. shedded. 306-372-7715, Luseland, SK. JD 4240, 16 spd. quad trans., 7000 hrs., 3 PTH. Also 789 Butler loader, good cond. AGRICULTURAL TIRE needs available at OK Tire, Idylwyld Dr. N, Saskatoon, SK. $25,000. Call 403-505-7129, Olds, AB. featuring Firestone and BKT. On Farm ser1992 JD 4455 MFWD, 265 loader, joystick, vice avail. 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com powershift, 3 hyds., shedded, excellent r u b b e r. G o l d e n P r a i r i e , S K . c a l l 306-662-3404 or 403-504-1095. 7810 2 WD, 16 spd. PowrQuad, 6700 hrs., $33,900. 306-948-3949, 306-948-7223, Biggar, SK. JD 9510 4 WD c/w 18/6 power shift, 7� colour touch display, Commandview II cab c/w leather trim, hi-flo hyd. system, 5 remotes, 800/70R38 Michelin duals, premium HID lights, 8630 lb. cast weight kit. Two to choose from, one with PTO. Call Gord at 403-308-1135, Lethbridge, AB. 1996 JD 7800, 2 WD, 3478 hrs., one owner, shedded, $56,000 OBO. Trades? Call 306-563-8482, 306-782-2586, Yorkton, SK JD 8440, 20.8x38 singles, PTO, 8400 hrs., $18,900 or with Degelman blade, $23,900. Call 306-222-2115, Allan, SK. 2012 JD 9410R 4 WD, powershift, 330 hrs., 7� color display, premium cab, prem. HID lites, 710/70R42’s, weight pkg, powertrain warranty until April 2015, $230,000 USD. 320-848-2496, 320-894-6560, Fairfax, MN. www.ms-diversified.com JD 7810 MFWD; JD 7710 MFWD. Low hours, can be equipped with loaders. JD 8110 MFWD, low hours. 204-522-6333, Melita, MB.

2009 TV6070, bi-directional, 3 PTH, grapple, manure tines, 1500 hrs., like new, $105,000. Dave 403-556-3992, Olds, AB. 2012 NH 9615, 800 metric duals, factory AutoSteer, HD axles, HID lites, 680 hrs., warranty- Nov./14, like new, $255,000 negotiable. Jim 403-575-0069 Coronation AB 1994 NH 8970, FWA, 20.8x38 duals, has 3 PTH, super steer, front weights, 6500 hrs., asking $55,000. Call: 204-856-9697 or 204-379-2939, St. Claude, MB. 2007 JD 5325 tractor, cab, MFWD, JD 542 loader, 2900 hrs, looks like new, $42,900. Steinbach, MB. 1998 TV140, 2500 HRS, 18’ grain heade r a n d 1 4 ’ h a y h e a d e r av a i l a b l e . 780-789-0195 for info, Thorsby, AB.

Tractors From 24.5 HP up to 90 HP with loaders and backhoes 4 Year Warranty

DK90

Ray’s Trailer Sales

Ph: Don - 780-672-4596 Camrose, AB Ph: Pat 780-878-1126 Wetaskiwin, AB www.raystrailersandtractors.com

FARM TIRES. BKT bias rear farm R-1, 184-34 8P TT, $609. Ph OK Tire, Idylwyld Dr N Saskatoon, SK. 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com 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. FIRESTONE BIAS REAR farm R-1 tires, 184-30 8P TLS, $800. OK Tire, Idylwyld Dr N, Saskatoon, SK. Phone 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com FIRESTONE BIAS REAR farm R-1 Tires, 124-24 8P TLS, $460. OK Tire, Idylwyld Dr N, Saskatoon, SK. Phone 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com F R O N T T R AC TO R T I R E S. F i r e s t o n e 1000-16 8P TLS, 4 RIB, $200. Phone OK T i r e I dy l w y l d D r N , S a s k at o o n , S K . 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com

LIKE NEW 6-WAY 14’ Degelman dozer blade. 306-741-7012, Swift Current, SK. WANTED: DOZER to fit 7120 or 7220 Case/IH tractor. 306-287-8062, Watson, SK.

JD 148 W/BUCKET, exc. cond., no brakes or bends c/w JD mounts, $5400. Call 306-944-4431, Watrous, SK. LEON 626 front end loader, Ezee-On w/bucket and mounts. Phone Bill at 306-865-2049, Hudson Bay, SK. NEW 3 YD. IMAC feedlot grapple bucket, fits Case 621, 721, NH 130, $12,000. doddbeef@gmail.com Olds, AB. EZEE-ON FEL Model 125, high lift, self levelling, c/w 8’ bucket, very good, $6000. 250-567-2607, Vanderhoof, BC. LEON 805 QUICK ATTACH loader, w/8’ bucket and grapple, joystick, asking $8000. 306-782-7749, 306-621-5136, Yorkton, SK. C R O W N 6 0 0 , 6 y d . s c r a p e r, A - 1 . 306-738-4735, Riceton, SK. 2011 DEGELMAN 7900, 16’ blade, 6-way, 2’ silage extension, very good. Fits 30 series JD. 306-227-4882, Vanscoy, SK.

2055 BOURGAULT CULTIVATOR w/Valmar airflo attachment, $1800; Leon 10’ dozer blade, SN #77-10983, $3500; 8700 Harvest Boss diesel combine w/pickup, offers; Ford 5000 diesel tractor, $2500; Ford F500 2 ton with Westeel Rosco B&H, $1500; Friggstad DT cultivator, $1000; SP Versatile swather, hydrostatic 400 w/cab, $500; Mid town rockpicker, $800; hay rake $200; MF drill seeder w/2610 Melroe attachment (2), $200/ea; Aeration fan, $500; Morris M10 30’ drill seeder, $1000; Versatile auger w/PTO, $200; Red hyd. press, 50 ton, $1200; drill press, $250; 1995 30’ FlexiCoil harrow system w/packers, $4000; Morris rodweeder, 36’, $300; Post pounder, $1800; ATV sprayer attachment, $300. Contact Ian Lamb, 306-823-7111, Neilburg, SK.

RETIRING: JD 4640 tractor, new duals, $24,000; 1993 NH TR96 combine, 2692 threshing hrs., PU header, shedded, $15,500; Case 930 w/Case FEL, 4682 hrs., $8,000; Versatile 4400 swather, 22’ headDEGELMAN 9’ DOZER c/w 1’ extension, er, PU reel, $2500. Located at Richard, SK. new hydraulic cylinders, $1900; Leon 9’ Call 306-480-9579 or 780-635-3856. blade, needs repair, $600; Leon 7’ blade, 1995 IHC 4700 truck, 466 eng., 10 bale $600; S C H U LT E S C R A P E R , 2 yard, deck self load and unload, $19,900. Pan$1100. Call 306-287-8062, Watson, SK. ther III Steiger PTA, 325 HP, auto, DegelLIKE NEW EZEE-ON 2100 loader and joy- man dozer, angle and tilt, $19,900. 1994 stick, QA bucket, $8500. Pro Ag Sales, Ford 1 ton dually, auto, w/service body, 306-441-2030, North Battleford, SK. $1900. Also Cockshutt 30 tractor, w/post pounder, $1950. 115 Spra-Coupe, $1900. Phone 780-943-2191, Heinsburg, AB.

1998 CAT IT28G loader quick attach tool changer, 20,620 hours, new Reman fuel pump, all new brakes, mint cond, $55,000. 204-981-3636, 204-864-2391, Cartier, MB. USED 2006 10’ Wishek disc., Model 842, great condition, blades measure 25�, serial #32061114. Call Flaman Nisku for pricing 1-800-352-6264. ALLIED 595 LOADER with mounts to fit White 2-85, w/6’ bucket, $4250 OBO. 306-762-2176, 306-537-0651, Odessa, SK. JD 746 LOADER, 98� bucket and grapple, excellent cond., $12,500 OBO. Shellbrook, SK., call 306-747-2514, 306-961-8061. USED LEON 650 land scraper, 2011, 6.5 cu. yd. bowl capacity, 5500 lbs., 100-150 HP, asking $20,500. Call 1-800-352-6264, Flaman Sales, Nisku, AB.

WANTED: JD 7810 tractor w/FEL, 3 PTH; NH 1037, 1033, 1036, 1032 bale wagons, sq. balers. 403-394-4401, Lethbridge, AB. WANTED: MF 18’ 360 discers with single or duplex hitch. Need blade size. Call 250-491-5633.

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. CUSTOM FENCING SPECIALIZING in barbwire, corrals, hitensil. Will travel. Call 306-931-3397, Saskatoon, SK. WHEATHEART H&H POST POUNDER, c/w 9 HP Honda. 780-875-7051, Lloydminster, AB. CUSTOM FENCING AND corral building, no job too big or too small. Call 306-699-7450, Qu’Appelle, SK.

5x10 PORTABLE CORRAL PANELS new design. 403-226-1722, 1-866-517-8335, Calgary, AB. magnatesteel.com SPEEDRITE/PATRIOT ELEC. FENCERS and accessories. Lamb Acres, Bulyea, SK. 306-725-4820, www.lambacres.ca WILL DO FENCE repairs, tear downs, barbwire and corrals. Reasonable rates. Will ESTATE SALE: 2009 CIH 7120, 958/742 travel. 306-344-7067, Onion Lake, SK. hrs., $165,000; 2000 JD 9650 Walker, WARMAN HOME CENTRE can design, 1621/1164 hrs., $110,000; 2010 CIH 2152 supply and install a home fence pkg. that header, 35’; 1993 MacDon 960, 30’, $9500; works for you incl. vinyl. 1-800-667-4990 2007 Wheatheart 8�x46’ w/mover, $8900; or www.warmanhomecentre.com 1998 Castleton tri-axle grain trailer, $26,000; 2007 Doepker 53’ stepdeck, MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. $39,000; 48’ cattleliner, $18,000; 2003 Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: Flexi-Coil 51’ 3450, $49,000; Allis Chalm- www.maverickconstruction.ca ers scraper, $18,000 OBO. 306-563-8482, CUSTOM FENCING. Will travel. Call for 306-782-2586, Maple Creek, SK. pricing and booking. 306-221-8806. 2007 CONSERVA PAK 5112 56’ air drill, GUARANTEED PRESSURE TREATED fence 440 tank, $150,000; 1993 JD 9600 com- posts, lumber slabs and rails. Call Lehner bine, 914 PU, $68,000; JD 930D straight Wo o d P r e s e r ve r s L t d . , a s k fo r R o n cut header, $35,000; 2006 JD 4995 SP 306-763-4232, Prince Albert, SK. swather w/30’ HoneyBee header and JD 5 meter discbine, $110,000; 1997 JD 9400 4 WD tractor, GS3 and 2630 screen, $128,000; 1997 JD 7810 FWA tractor, 740 loader and SI grapple, $60,000; 1999 JD Fin a n c in g 7410 FWA tractor, 740 loader, silage grapand ple, brand new rubber, $58,000; 2005 JD L ea sin g 567 round baler, netwrap, $25,000; Jiffy R egin a , S K 712 12 wheel rake, $9500; Renn 36� roller3 0 6 -3 47-0 774 o r mill, $3000; Crown hyd. 3 batt rockpicker, To ll F ree a t 1-8 6 6 -8 9 9 -9 9 6 5 $3750; 1987 Freightliner tandem dump truck, $20,000; 1997 Freightliner semi, Selling your Ag. equipm ent privately $24,000; 2012 Wilson tridem trailer, and the buyer is in need offunds. $55,000; 2001 IHC 9200 semi, $24,000; Have them callus: W e can help! Leon 16’ 4-way blade, $15,000. Lougheed, AB., call 780-386-2220, 780-888-1278. – Equipm ent up to 15 yrs. old.

L& M

ODESSA ROCKPICKER SALES: New Degelman equipment, land rollers, Strawmaster, rockpickers, rock rakes, dozer blades. Phone 306-957-4403, cell 306-536-5097, Odessa, SK.

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DON’T GET STUCK without a Tow Rope! Best selection of tow ropes and straps in C a n a d a . F o r t r a c t o r s u p t o 6 0 0 H P. FIAT ALLIS FD 12B wheel loader, 3 yd. 1-888-435-2626. www.flaman.com bucket, rebuilt trans 2 yrs. ago, no leaks, quick attach, c/w a set of forks, vg working condition, can deliver. $39,000. 204-743-2324, Cypress River, MB.

BLOCKED SEASONED JACK Pine firewood and wood chips for sale. Lehner Wood Preservers Ltd., 306-763-4232, Prince Albert, SK. Will deliver. Self-unloading trailer. F I R E W O O D : C u t a n d s p l i t , d e l i ve r y available. 306-862-7831, 306-862-3086, Nipawin, SK.

IF YOU SPRAYED LIBERTY and received crop damage call Back-Track Investigations for assistance 1-866-882-4779. 5000EX BRANDT grain vac; 860 Massey combine; 4400 18’ Versatile swather; 3650 Case/IH round baler; 51’ Flexi-Coil 5000 air drill, c/w 3450 air tank; 1482 Case/IH combine; 8x50 Sakundiak auger, c/w engine; Two canola rollers. 403-882-2401, ROSKAMP ROLLER MILL completely refur403-323-0409 cell, Castor, AB. bished to excellent condition. Re-grooved solid white iron rolls 9�x30�, 240/460 volts by 20 HP motor, new belts, bearings, pulleys, normally $45,000+, a steal at $18,000. Includes freight in Western Used 13x70 Farm Canada. 780-809-3600, Leduc, AB.

BEV’S FISH & SEAFOOD LTD., buy direct, fresh fish: Pickerel, Northern Pike, Whitefish and Lake Trout. Seafood also available. Phone toll free 1-877-434-7477, 306-763-8277, Prince Albert, SK.

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King Auger with hyd. mover & winch........$13,900 Used 13 x 85 .........coming soon New 10�, 13� & 16�. . . . in stock Meridian Hopper Bins Honda & Kohler Engines

JD 665 air seeder w/40’ 1610 cult. and harrows; 30’ 9350 JD hoe drill; 18’ 360 MF discer; 28’ MF PT swather; 124 MF square DISCOUNT PRICES for woodcutting supb a l e r ; 3 5 7 N H m i x m i l l . O f f e r s . plies. Over 5000 quality chain saw parts in 306-789-9731, Regina SK. stock. Free flyer. www.cutterschoice.com 1-888-817-4707. COMPLETE LINE OF LOGGING EQUIP., ready for work. Sell as package or single WANTED: MF #36 DISCERS, all sizes, piece. Timber Jack, feller bunchers, Cat prompt pick-up. Phone 306-259-4923, wheel skidders, D8 Cat w/attachments, delimber, 4 log trailers w/Jeeps, log load306-946-9669, 306-946-7923, Young, SK. Crystal City, MB er. Call Bill or Glen 780-482-5273, Edmonwww.cudmorebros.com WANTED: USED, BURNT, old or ugly trac- ton, AB. or email: group.6@live.com tors. Newer models too! Smith’s Tractor 145 VERSATILE 4 WD, running; 860 MF combine w/flex header, shedded; 860 tur- Wrecking, 1-888-676-4847. bo combine for parts, rubber good; Versa- WANTED: 25’ JD 655 air seeder, must tile minimum till hoe drill 21’. Outlook, SK. be in good shape. 306-648-7595 or fax 306-867-4595, 306-867-8833 eves. 306-648-3164, Gravelbourg, SK. OVER 100 SETS of forklift forks in stock 50’ FLEXI-COIL HARROW packer w/P30 3-8’ long; 15 forklifts up to 10 ton; packers; 36’ Westward Model 3000 PT WANTED: MF dyna balance 3 PTH mower from parting out over 20 units. 2 yards, over 50 in good running condition. 780-305-4106, swather. 306-210-7573, Reward, SK. acres, salvage of all types, new and used 780-674-2440, Barrhead, AB. parts. Low, low prices. Cambrian EquipSUNFLOWER HARVEST SYSTEMS. Call for literature. 1-800-735-5848. Lucke Mfg., WANTED: 1970’s JD 6030 tractor, any con- ment Sales. Phone: 204-667-2867, fax: dition. Call 204-955-8970. 204-667-2932, Winnipeg, MB. www.luckemanufacturing.com

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66 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

ELK VALLEY RANCHES, buying all ages of feeder bison. Call Frank 780-846-2980, Kitscoty, AB or elkvalley@xplornet.com 100% WOOD BREEDING bulls, 2 and 3 year olds, $3,000 each OBO. Can deliver. 403-289-0327, Sundre, AB. BISON PRODUCERS OF ALBERTA is hosting Summer Field Day at HeadSmashed-In Buffalo Jump on August 10th near Fort MacLeod. Activities include guided tour, movie, lunch and BPA update. Fee is $20/person. Registration for tour is at 9:00 AM. Info. call Linda at 780-955-1995 or www.bisoncentre.com ’00 LULL 644D34 TELEHANDLER, 6,000 lbs., 34’ reach, w/ cab, well maintained, good shape. $29,800. Trades welcome, financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com.

SOLAR TRACKERS - NET METERING 20% Government Grant avail. Kelln Solar, website: www.kellnsolar.com Lumsden, SK. 1-888-731-8882.

2007 CAT TL 1055, 10,000 lb. 4x4x4 telescopic forklift, S/N TBM00572, c/w Cat dsl. eng., CAH, outriggers, QA fork carriage, 4 wheel fender package, 10,000 lb. lift, 55’ reach, 4865 hrs., $75,000. 780-914-2069, Spruce Grove, AB.

WAREHOUSE DIRECT. Best in class. Indoor/outdoor wood gasification boilers. Water/hot air eff., 93% to 97%. CSA approved. Starting $4950. 1-877-538-3818. www.orlancanada.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. Chimney, heat exchangers, parts, piping, pumps, etc. Athabasca, AB, 780-628-4835.

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.

2009 CUMMINS 50KW GENERATOR, High hours though it has been fully tested by CUMMINS before we bought it & is ready to go, 3.9L, 120/240V single phase. $8,900. Trades welcome. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com

SURPLUS STEEL ALWAYS stored inside, 8”x8”x1/4”x48’, 1,152’; 8”x8”x1/4”x40’, 320’; 8”x8”x1/2”x40’, 200’; 3”x6”x3/8”, 3,216’; 8”x4”x1/2”, 2,880’. All steel p r i c e d a t 0 . 6 8 / l b . C a l l M i ke a t 204-829-3092 day, or 204-362-5233 evenings, or email: mike@mandakoagri.com Plum Coulee, MB. PIPE FOR SALE, 2-7/8” and 3-1/2”. Call Lloyd at 306-463-8044, Kindersley, SK.

RAIN MAKER IRRIGATION Zimmatic by Lindsay pivots/Greenfield mini pivots, KLine towable irrigation, spare parts/accessories, new and used equipment. 32 years in business. www.rainmaker-irrigation.com Call 306-867-9606, Outlook, SK. WESTERN IRRIGATION - Large supply of new and used irrigation equipment. New and used Cadman travelling gun dealer. PTO pump, used elec. Zimatic centre pivot, etc, used dsl. pumping units. 8”, 10”, and 12” gated pipe. 306-867-9461, Outlook, SK BAUER RAIN BOY travelling gun, $2000. doddbeef@gmail.com Olds, AB.

NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for over 15 years, is looking for finished Bison, grain or grass fed. “If you have them, we want them.” Make your final call with Northfork for pricing! Guaranteed prompt payment! 514-643-4447, Winnipeg, MB.

BLACK ANGUS BULLS on moderate growing ration. Performance info available Adrian, Brian or Elaine Edwards, Valleyhills Angus, 306-342-4407, Glaslyn, SK. BENLOCK FARMS working two yr. olds, developed and bred to survive and thrive. Cover more cows with fewer wrecks. Why buy a yearling when you can buy a two yr. old for the same price. Excellent service, excellent selection of heifer or performance bulls. Time tested, family bred genetics since 1910. Complete listing at: www.benlockfarms.com 306-668-2125 or cell: 306-230-9809, Saskatoon, SK. BLACK ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, semen tested, guaranteed breeders, delivery available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com SELLING: BLACK ANGUS bulls. Wayside Angus, Henry and Bernie Jungwirth, 306-256-3607, Cudworth, SK. BLACK ANGUS HERD Dispersal: 40 pairs and pregnant cows with bulls. Home raised, very quiet, some halter broken. 250-226-7054, Windlaw, BC.

JOHNSTON/FERTILE VALLEY is selling yearling and 2 yr. old Black Angus bulls. Most are sired by the best AI bulls in the industry including Final Answer, Mustang, Pioneer, Hoover Dam and King. Also a group sired by our low maintenance New Zealand outcross Sire VVV Glanworth 57U. These are thick, easy fleshing bulls produced by over 500 low maintenance, high production cows. Many of these bulls are suitable for heifers. All bulls are semen tested with complete performance and carcass info available. Dennis or David Johnston at 306-856-4726, Conquest, SK. YEARLING BULLS FOR sale, representing Panarama, Focus and Predominate bloodKODIAK ROUGH CUT mowers available lines. Semen tested and vet evaluated. now: 4’, 5’, 6’, 7’, 8’, 9’, 10’, 3 PTH and TBH Easy calving. Delivery arranged. Netherlea units. Call Flaman today for pricing and Cattle Co., 306-433-2091, Creelman, SK. details 1-800-352-6264, Nisku, AB. PUREBRED BLACK ANGUS long yearling USED BANDIT Tree Chippers: 65XL w/24 bulls, replacement heifers, AI service. HP Honda v-twin, cuts 6” material; 95XL Meadow Ridge Enterprises, 306-373-9140 w/50 HP Kubota diesel, cuts 9” material. or 306-270-6628, Saskatoon, SK. 1-800-352-6264, Flaman Sales, Nisku, AB. YEARLING AND 2 yr. old Black Angus bulls. Nordal Angus, Rob Garner, Simpson, SK. 306-946-7946.

SPRUCE FOR SALE! Beautiful locally grown trees. Plan ahead and renew your shelterbelt or landscape a new yardsite, get the year round protection you need. We sell on farm near Didsbury, AB. or deliver anywhere in western Canada. Details phone 403-586-8733 or check out our website at www.didsburysprucefarms.com

JD GPS SYSTEM 2600 monitor, ATU, new 3000 receiver, $11,500 OBO as pkg. or will separate. Ph: 780-889-2223, Heis- CYPRESS BISON FEEDER, 350 bushel, good condition. Phone: 306-861-1352, ler, AB. email: wellermalcolm@gmail.com Weyburn, SK. 2012 BISON CALVES for sale, off of good Clairside Bison breeding stock. Phone Clairside Bison at 306-383-4094, Clair, SK. 35 COWS AVAILABLE for fall pickup. Exposed to Miller and Griller bulls. 306-944-4930, Plunkett, SK. or email: l.duke@sasktel.net 120- 2011 HEIFERS, ready to breed, avg 2009 JOHN DEERE GSD4, original weight 1,000 lbs; also, breeding bulls. Call brown box, w/SF1 AutoTrac activation, Kevin 306-429-2029 or cell 306-539-4090, Glenavon, SK. $2100. 306-854-2053, Elbow, SK.

CATTLE FINANCING AVAILABLE for feeder cattle and bred heifers/cows. Competitive interest rates. Call Marjorie Blacklock, Stockmens Assistance Corp., 306-931-0088, Saskatoon, SK.

MAMMOTH JACK DONKEY, halter broke. Also yearlings jacks. Call 306-685-2224, 30 SALERS BULLS, weighed and perfor- Gainsborough, SK. mance tested. Delivery available and can feed until needed. Call 780-924-2464 or MINIATURE DONKEYS: 2 jacks, jennies. Also, Miniature stallion and gelding. Call 780-982-2472, Alberta Beach, AB. Irene 780-648-2228, Whitecourt, AB.

PUREBRED CATTLE HERD DISPERSAL. Exc. genetics, 30 young cow/calf pairs. Won’t last, call today!! 403-512-5364, Calgary AB REGISTERED YEARLING CHAROLAIS bulls, polled and horned, quiet, hand fed. Call Wilf at: Cougar Hill Ranch, 306-728-2800, 306-730-8722, Melville, SK. POLLED 2 YEAR old and yearling Charolais bulls, some Red Factor. Kings Polled Charolais, 306-435-7116, 306-645-4383 or 306-645-2955, Rocanville, SK. 4-G CHAROLAIS RANCH bulls, 2 yr. olds, yearlings, reds, tans and whites, all polled. Jonathan 306-783-4457, 306-621-7101, Yorkton, SK. www.4gcharolais.com 40 WHITE PB COW/CALF PAIRS. Bull out to calve March 1st. Also red purebred cow/calf pairs. 306-394-4406, Courval, SK REG. WHITE CHAROLAIS bulls, polled and horned, growthy, calving ease and quiet. Semen test and deliver. Call Qualman Charolais, 306-492-4634, Dundurn, SK. 2 YR OLD and yearling bulls, polled, horned, white and red factor. Semen tested, delivered and guaranteed. Prairie Gold Charolais, 306-882-4081, Rosetown, SK. WHITECAP CHAROLAIS YEARLING bulls for sale. Semen tested and fully guaranteed. Call Mike Howe at 306-631-8779, 306-691-5011, Moose Jaw, SK.

FOR SALE OR RENT: Red, black and fullblood Simmental bulls. A.I. breeding, se- PUREBRED MARES AND geldings, all halter men tested, reasonable prices. Phone Dale broke, some started for harness, $600 to $800. Email: rblanchard@sasktel.net or 780-853-2223, Vermilion, AB. 306-467-4516, Duck Lake, SK. HERD DISPERSAL: 38 reg. full blood PB Fleckvieh Simmental cattle, young herd, Harrach, Piona, Expert, Hosea, Messiah, Primo, Kaptain, Eli, Bruno, South Seven 5 YR. OLD blue roan grade QH gelding, Trooper. 250-847-0547, Telkwa, BC. 14.3 HH, w/big butt and lots of speed, broke calving cows in 2011, good w/rope, JOHNSON STOCK FARM Herd Reduc- shoes, hauls and all shots incl. Cogins tion: approximately 80 young reg. Red, negative papers. Would make great heel Black and full blood Simmental cows bred horse but needs training. Experienced ridto top quality walking bulls. Start calving er. $3500 OBO. Call Claude 780-842-3932 in Oct. Free pasture until Aug. 1st. eves, Wainwright, AB. 306-736-7877, Windthorst, SK. QUARTER HORSE MARES - 2 w/foals, young geldings and studs, well bred, low priced. Call Don, Olsons Quarter Horses, SPECKLE PARK BULLS, two year old and 306-492-2180, Dundurn, SK. yearling for sale. Phone 780-872-0134, Dewberry, AB. 6 STANDARDBRED HORSES, all harness broke and quiet, 2 mares and 4 geldings. REG. TEXAS LONGHORN cattle for sale. 306-742-4530, Wroxton, SK. Bred cows, open and bred heifers. Also a good supply of yearling and 2 yr. old bulls. Solid or colored. Call Dean at Panorama TRIM BOSS: The Power Hoof Trimmer. Ranch 403-391-6043, Stauffer, AB. Take the work out of hoof trimming. Trim wall, sole and flare on saddle horses, drafts and minis. Call 780-898-3752, Alder Flats, AB. www.trimboss.ca RK AN IM AL S UPPL IES - Be o n FOR SALE OR TRADE Reg. Quarter Horses ta rget, Us e the p ro d u cts for well broke to harness mare over 1400 en d o rs ed b y the lbs. or cattle. Call 306-945-4887 night or p ro fes s io n a ls . 306-945-7622 day, Waldheim, SK.

RK & S UL L IV AN S UPPL IES

MARTENS CHAROLAIS has yearling and C a ll fo r d e ta ils a n d a fre e c a ta lo gu e 1-8 00-440-26 9 4. 2yr old bulls. Dateline Sons for calving ease, Specialist Sons for consistent thickw w w .rka n im a lsu pplies.co m ness. 204-534-8370, Boissevain. MB. CREEK’S EDGE LAND AND CATTLE ORDER YOUR BRED cows now for fall pickpurebred Charolais bulls for sale. Still an up. Reds, tans, yellows. Call 204-250-4796 excellent selection of yearlings. Thick, for details, Plumas, MB. hairy, deep, quiet, good footed, semen tested, and delivered. View our bulls online at www.creeksedgecharolais.ca Call Stephen 306-279-2033, Yellow Creek, SK. EXCELLENT FOUR YEAR Red herd sire; MIDNITE OIL CATTLE CO. has on offer yearling bulls, red, white, tan, low birth s e m e n t e s t e d y e a r l i n g b u l l s . weight, polled. 306-931-8069, Saskatoon. 306-734-2850, 306-734-7675, Craik, SK. REG. BULLS, 2 year olds and yearlings, AI sires, herdsires, can be viewed, moderate birthweight, quiet. Call JP Monvoisin, COW/CALF PAIRS and yearling heifers, 1 and 2 year old bulls. 403-845-5763, Rocky 80 CLEVER WAYS to cut corral costs and 306-648-3634, Gravelbourg, SK. Mountain House, AB. improve cattle flow plus 12 One-Man plans 2 YEAR OLD BLACK ANGUS BULLS 120 diagrams. OneManCorrals.com from easy calving herd, birthweight 70 to 90 lbs, will deliver. Sharpley Angus, 170 YOUNG CHAROLAIS/ANGUS cow/calf 403-325-1245, Strathmore, AB. 2 YEAR OLD and yearling Polled GELVIEH p a i r s o r b r e d c o w s fo r s a l e . C a l l 2 YEAR OLD Angus bulls, stout and rugged BULLS for sale from our 34 year breeding 306-848-0076, Weyburn, SK. for your cow herd. Easy calving for your program. Semen evaluations will be done QUALITY 1 IRON open replacement Black heifers. Everblack Angus, Ernest Gibson, in March. Winders Gelbvieh 780-672-9950, Angus/Simmental cross heifers, some Camrose, AB. 780-853-2422, Vermilion, AB. reds. Raised from reputation herd, you KNUDSON FARMS GELBVIEH has polled QUALITY LIGHT TO MODERATE birth- red and black bulls. Guaranteed. Kept until pick from 128 head. Harry Danychuk, 306-948-2810, 306-948-9431, Biggar, SK. weight yearling bulls. Call Ken Bell needed James 306-322-4682 Archerwill Sk 306-591-7792, Pense, SK. BLACK AND RED Angus cow/calf pairs GELBVIEH AND ANGUS yearling and two RAVEN RIDGE ANGUS has a herd of year old bulls. Call 306-997-4917, Borden, for sale. 306-773-1049, Swift Current, SK. Reg. Black Angus for sale. A great op- SK. 5 ANGUS HEREFORD cross pairs: 9 yr. old, portunity to start or expand a purebred 3 yr. old and 3- 2 yr. olds. Exposed starting herd of cattle. Approx. 70 cow/calf pairs, 9 July 1st. $1700 a pair. Located north of heifers, 5 herd bulls. Cows are in great Prince Albert, SK. Call 306-961-3572. shape, raising quality calves. Avg. age of HEREFORD BULLS FOR Sale, mostly decows is 6 years. Serious inquiries only. Call horned, great selection including ‘Surefire FIRST CALF HEIFERS mostly all black and Derek 204-725-6004, Oak River, MB. Hereferd Bulls’. Dependable maternal gen- red, vaccinated in fall, calves on vaccinatics selected for 39 years. 780-696-3878, tion program. Can make packages to accommodate your operation, $1950-$2100, www.bretonwestherefords.com Breton, AB depending on quantity and quality. Phone LONG YEARLING RED ANGUS bulls, calv- REGISTERED POLLED HEREFORD bulls for 4 0 3 - 6 2 7 - 7 7 3 7 , 4 0 3 - 6 2 7 - 2 7 6 4 , ing ease, semen tested. Little de Ranch sale, semen tested. Phone Harold or Tim 403-627-7363, Pincher Creek, AB. or email Strauch, 306-677-2580, Shamrock, SK 306-845-2406, Turtleford, SK. hdranching@gmail.com REG. BLACK ANGUS bulls, semen tested, and EPD’s available. Call High Tree Cattle, Wilkie, SK., 306-843-7354, 306-843-2054. YEARLING ANGUS BULLS sired by Hoover Dam, Connealy Impression, DM Upward 2W. Contact David McLean 306-455-2503, Arcola, SK. 12 REG. ANGUS cows w/calves, will be bred to grandson of HF Kodiak 5R, can be pastured till beginning Sept. George Nachtegaele 306-386-2469, North Battleford SK

LOWEST PRICES IN CANADA on new, high quality generator systems. Quality diesel generators, Winpower PTO tractor driven alternators, automatic / manual switch gear, and commercial duty Sommers Powermaster and Sommers / Winco portable generators and home standby packages. 75+ years of reliable service. Contact Sommers Motor Generator Sales for all your generator requirements at 1-800-690-2396 sales@sommersgen.com Online: www.sommersgen.com

PROVEN 2 YEAR old Hereford Bull, 82 lb. BW, heifer approved. Also yearling bulls. Call Duncan or Jeff Lees at 306-455-2619 or 306-577-1375, Arcola, SK.

YEARLING, 2 YR. old and one 3 yr. old Polled Hereford bulls. Excellent selection of calving ease and performance bloodlines. Semen tested, guaranteed, delivery BBJ Farms, Harris, SK. Brian: WANTED: CULL COWS for slaughter. For WARDS RED ANGUS, Saskatoon, SK. available. bookings call Kelly at Drake Meat ProcesYearling and two year old red and black 306-656-4542, or 306-831-9856. sors, 306-363-2117, ext. 111, Drake, SK. bulls. Semen tested, guaranteed, delivered. Clarke 306-931-3824, 306-220-6372. HOWE RED ANGUS yearling bulls and 2 FRESH AND SPRINGING heifers for sale. mature bulls. Semen tested and fully guar- Cows and quota needed. We buy all classanteed. Call Mike Howe at 306-631-8779, es of slaughter cattle-beef and dairy. R&F 306-691-5011, Moose Jaw, SK. Livestock Inc. Bryce Fisher, Warman, SK. HORSE SALE, JOHNSTONE Auction Mart, Thursday, Aug. 1, 2013. Tack sells: 2 PM; YEARLING AND 2 yr. old Red Angus bulls. Phone 306-239-2298, cell 306-221-2620. Horses sell 4 PM. All classes of horses acSelection of low birth and performance cepted. www.johnstoneauction.ca Call bulls. Nordal Angus, Rob Garner, Simpson, 306-6934715, Moose Jaw, SK. SK. 306-946-7946. 2 YR. OLD black and red polled Limousin 2 7 t h A N N U A L R O C K I N G W FA L L RED OR BLACK BULLS, 1 and 2 years, rea- bulls. Nodal Limousin, Rob Garner, SimpHORSE SALE. Sat., August 31st, Keystone sonable prices. Tom Ward 306-668-4333, son, SK. 306-946-7946. Centre, Brandon, MB. Consignment deadClark Ward 306-931-3824, Saskatoon, SK. GOOD SELECTION OF stout red and black line: Friday, July 26th. More info call: YEARLING AND TWO year old Red Angus bulls with good dispositions and calving 204-325-7237 or rockingw@xplornet.com bulls, semen tested, will deliver. Guy ease. Qually-T Limousin, Rose Valley, SK., Held in conjunction with Northern Lights Sampson, Davidson, SK. 306-567-4207 or 306-322-4755 or 306-322-7554. Barrel Racing Faturity. www.rockingw.com 306-561-7665. LIVING SKIES FIRST ANNUAL PROD. RED POLLED LIMOUSIN, two yearling PB WHEELER’S STOCK FARM has yearling and SALE, Sat., August 10, Tack 11:00 AM, bulls, registered, semen tested. Call Donna 2 year old bulls. Quality calving ease and Horses 3:00 PM, OK Corral, Martensville, performance bulls for every budget. Se- at 403-650-9848, Rocky View, AB. SK. Approx. 60 head. Barbeque and social men tested, guaranteed, delivery avail. to follow. bodnarusauctioneering.com or Saskatoon, SK. Harvey at 306-931-8471, call Robin 306-567-5596, Nanette or Michael at 306-382-9324. 306-476-2476. PL #318200. BIG ISLAND LOWLINES Farmfair Int. THREE YEAR OLD Registered bull for sale, Premier Breeder. Fullblood/percentage, CANDIAC AUCTION MART Regular Horse $ 3 5 0 0 . P h o n e : 3 0 6 - 6 8 2 - 1 4 7 7 d ay s , Black/Red Carrier, females, bulls, red Sale, Sat., Aug 3rd. Tack at 10:30, Horses 306-682-4233 eves., Muenster, SK. fullblood semen, embryos. 780-486-7553 at 1:30. Each horse, with the exception of colts must have a completed EID. Go to KC CATTLE CO. yearling bulls, top quality, Darrell, 780-434-8059 Paul, Edmonton AB. the website candiacauctionmart.com to private sale only, not bull sale leftovers. get the form. For more info contact 306-290-8431, Saskatoon, SK. View at 306-424-2967. www.kccattleco.com THREE YEARLING BULLS, solid Red and REG. PUREBRED yearling Red Angus bulls Black, semen tested. Call Deanna at for sale. Maple Ridge Acres. Call Les 403-935-4395, Irricana, AB. Saunders 306-997-4507, Borden, SK. PUREBRED ICELANDIC HORSES, all ages. CANADIAN MAINE-ANJOU ASSOCIATION. LOOKING TO PURCHASED a complete herd Power, performance and profit. For info on Kozmeniuk’s Icelandics, 306-548-4693, o f R e d A n g u s c o w / c a l f p a i r s . Maine-Anjou genetics. Call 403-291-7077, melodykozmeniuk.com Danbury, SK. 306-861-4592, Fillmore, SK. Calgary, AB., or www.maine-anjou.ca

REGISTERED BLACK ANGUS BULLS sired by Chisum, Thunder, Game Day and Kodiak 9194. Semen tested. Delivery available. 306-768-8388, Carrot River, SK. QUIET TOP QUALITY 2 yr. old and yearling PB Black Angus bulls. Spruce Acres, Foam Lake, SK, 306-272-3997, 306-272-7841.

NEED TO MOVE water or irrigate? 6”-10” alum. pipe, pump units. Taber, AB. Dennis at: 403-308-1400, dfpickerell@shaw.ca IRRIGATION TURBINE WATER pumps, 6”-8”, 4 cyl. dsl, 600-1000 gal/min, very efficient; HYD. PIPE SPINNER for oil/water pipe. 403-878-6302, Grassy Lake, AB. NEW CUMMINS 50 and 85 KW, Stanford style 12 lead generator, 5.9 diesel engine, 10 KW ISUZU GENERATOR set, designed to run pivot, runs good. Contact Mike at $19,900. 780-699-9771, Stony Plain, AB. 403-894-4598, Lethbridge, AB. GENERATORS: 20 KW to 2000 KW, low hour diesel and natural gas/ propane units Abraham Generator Sales Co. Phone: 701-797-4766 or 701-371-9526, Cooperstown, ND. www.abrahamindustrial.com

RED ANGUS BULLS, two year olds, semen tested, guaranteed breeders, delivery available. 306-287-3900, 306-287-8006, Englefeld, SK. skinnerfarmsangus.com YEARLING AND 2 YR. old bulls for sale, many from AI sires like Fully Loaded, Gold Bar King and Sakic. Fully tested and ready to work. 306-773-6633, Swift Current, SK.

WWW.ELLIOTTCUTTINGHORSES.COM 35 plus years of training, showing, sales, clinics, lessons. Clifford and Sandra Elliott, Paynton, SK. Phone 306-895-2107. RAMSAY PONY RIDES have for sale wellbroke kids horses from pony to saddle horse sizes. Some horses and ponies also broke to drive. All broke horses sold with a written guarantee. Also new and used riding saddles. 306-386-2490, Cochin, SK.

CANADIAN FARRIER SCHOOL: Gary Johnston, www.canadianfarrierschool.ca Email gary@canadianfarrierschool.ca 403-359-4424, 403-637-2189, Calgary, AB.

THE LIVERY STABLE, for harness sales and repairs. 306-283-4580, 306-262-4580, Langham, SK. HORSE COLLARS, all sizes, steel and aluminum horseshoes. We ship anywhere. Keddie’s, 1-800-390-6924 or keddies.com METAL CARTS- 1” tubing, seats 2, motorcycle wheels or skis, detachable pole and shafts, $550. 306-561-7823, Davidson, SK. LONG STRAW HORSE collars. New softer and smoother designs fits better on shoulders, stuffed with sheep’s wool. For free brochure fax to 519-335-3941, Gorrie, ON. GEORGE’S HARNESS & SADDLERY, makers of leather and nylon harness. Custom saddles, tack, collars, neck yoke, double trees. www.georgesharnessandsaddlery.com Call 780-663-3611, Ryley, AB. NEW BUGGY, WAGON, sleigh, cutterwood and metal parts. Wooden wheel manufacture and restoration. Wolfe Wagons, Saskatoon, SK. Phone 306-933-4763 after 6 PM weekdays. Email rwolfe@sasktel.net


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

F. EAMOR SADDLE No. 80S, in new cond., was bought in 1965, offers. Call 306-472-5996, Woodrow, SK.

CANADA ORGANIC CERTIFIED by OCIA Canada. The ultimate in organic integrity for producers, processors and brokers. Call Ruth Baumann, 306-682-3126, Humboldt, SK, rbaumann@ocia.org, www.ocia.org ECOCERT CANADA organic certification for producers, processors and brokers. Call the western office 306-665-9072, Saskatoon, SK, www.ecocertcanada.com

SUPERIOR BALE FEEDERS the only cost effective feeder on the market. For info go to superiorbalefeeders.ca or call your local dealer 1-866-690-7431 or 250-567-8731, Fort Fraser, BC. Quality is priceless, if it doesn’t say Superior, it isn’t. PEARSON HEADGATE 2-way livestock tub and alley way, palpation cage, like new, RETIREMENT DISPERSAL SALE. Online L e w i s c a t t l e o i l e r. A l l a n F o l d e n Auction August 3-10. Selling all fullblood 306-747-3182, Shellbrook, SK. Dorpers, working Great Pyrenees, production equipment. Catalogue online July 20. STEEL VIEW MFG: 30’ portable wind To register, viewing, and/or online bidding breaks, HD self-standing panels, silage/ at www.ramhbreeders.com For info email hay bunks, feeder panels. Quality portable am@ramhbreeders.com or Ray/Ann Marie p a n e l s at a f fo r d a b l e p r i c e s . S h a n e 306-493-2300, Delisle, SK. 403-932-3135, 403-540-0029 Cochrane AB

COMPLETE FLOCK DISPERSAL. Registered PB Suffolks, 17 Ewes, 3 Rams. Hodges Farm, 306-254-2678, Dalmeny, SK.

MORAND INDUSTRIES SHEEP DEVELOPMENT BOARD offers extension, marketing services and a full line of sheep and goat supplies. 306-933-5200, Saskatoon, SK.

CLASSIFIED ADS 67

Builders of Quality Livestock Equipment, Made with Your Safety in Mind!

TWO YEAR OLD post and beam home, 10 minutes east of Creston, BC. Quiet location, 12 acres, some wooded, borders creek. 1-1/2 storey 2038 sq. ft. plus fully finished walkout basement, large kitchen, 3 bdrms, 3-1/2 baths, wood and timber open ceiling throughout living, dining, kitchen and laundry areas. Hardwood flooring, main floor and upstairs. Detached double car garage. $559,000. For more info and photos call Ray at: 250-428-4835 or email: rloetkeman@gmail.com

LOOKING FOR HARD Red Spring Wheat old crop and new crop contracts. Prompt delivery and payment. 306-354-2660, R.W. Organic Ltd., Mossbank, SK. TRADE AND EXPORT Canada now buying organic feed grains: flax, peas, oats and barley. Quick pay. 1-877-339-1959. BEST COOKING PULSES accepting samples of org. green/yellow peas for 2012/2013 crop year. Matt 306-586-7111, Rowatt, SK CERT. ORGANIC RED CLOVER seed, approx. 15,000 lbs. Custom blend of Cert. Algonquin alfalfa, w/Carlton smooth brome grass and common Timothy, 70/20/10 split, 3500 lbs. Call Tim 306-542-4353, 306-542-8280, Veregin, SK.

AUSSIE PUPS- Only 4 of the original 8 left to rehome, ready to go July 15. Will have first shots, vet check and be on a deworming program from 4 wks., c/w registration papers to the ASCA. Come from working parents that have great conformaWANTED: BUYING ORGANIC screenings, tion. Siblings have gone on to trials, agility delivered. Loreburn, SK. Prompt payment. and obedience work. They are a great dog to take to work and then home to be the 306-644-4888 or 1-888-531-4888 ext. 2 family pet at night. Wonderful w/children. $500. Call 306-567-8548, Bladworth, SK. PUREBRED GERMAN SHEPHERD pups, 16 wks old, vaccinations, 6 wks free health insurance, $900. 306-567-7384 Davidson SK

1-800-582-4037

CERTIFIED ORGANIC CALVES, Stockers from 600 to 900 lbs and finished cattle. Also producers remember to certify cows PORTABLE PANELS 30’ freestanding 3- and calves for 2013. Kelley 306-767-2640 FREE TO GOOD country home, German bar windbreak frames, 5-bar, 4-bar panels or Clem 306-862-7416, Zenon Park, SK. Sheppard, Border Collie cross, male puppy, w/wo double hinge gates and more. On r e a dy a n d e a s y t o t r a i n . C a l l C a r l WANTED: CERTIFIED ORGANIC grass 306-563-2020, Canora, SK. farm welding. Oxbow, SK., 306-485-8559, BUYING WILD BOAR pigs/swine for 20 fed slaughter beef. Call Peter Lundgard at years, all sizes. 1-877-226-1395. Highest 306-483-2199. Nature’s Way Farm 780-338-2934, Grim- LASSIE COLLIE PUPPIES, 8 wks, ready $$$. www.canadianheritagemeats.com JD 550 TA manure spreader, $5500; NH shaw, AB. to go $300 ea. 306-563-6678, Canora, SK. 795 manure spreader, $7250. Both field ready. Call 204-525-4521, Minitonas, MB. GREAT DANES, various ages. Call 306-468-4545, Debden, SK. View RED RHINO SELF unloading hay trailers! www.doggydaydanes.com Fast and simple! 306-227-4503, Saskatoon, SK. www.norheimranching.com USED CONCRETE SLATS for grower/fin- YOUNG’S EQUIPMENT INC. For your ishers 2’x6’, 2’x8’, 2’x10’; Used wall fans 24” livestock feeding, cutting, chopping and and 36”. 403-396-7822, Innisfail, AB. KELPIE BORDER COLLIE cross pups from handling headquarters. 1-800-803-8346. working cow dogs. To go to working CATTLE SHELTER PACKAGES. Packages homes only. These dogs will work, $250. 30’x36’, materials $4935 or $7635 material Coldstream, BC. ebapty@hotmail.com and labour. For info call 1-800-667-4990, KUVASZ/PYRENEES PUPPIES, 3 males, 2 www.warmanhomecentre.com females, farm raised. Phone PHEASANTS AND WILD TURKEYS. FROSTFREE NOSEPUMPS: Energy free 403-502-9470, Medicine Hat, AB. Jumbo, Chinese and White pheasants. solution to livestock watering. No power Merriam, Eastern and Rio Grande wild tur- required to heat or pump. Prevents backBORDER COLLIE PUPPIES from working keys. Chukar Partridge. We also sell game- wash. Grants available. 1-866-843-6744. parents, ready to go Aug. 6th, vet checked, bird netting. Dirt Willy Gamebird Farm & www.frostfreenosepumps.com first shots, asking $200. 403-932-1675, Hatchery, 780-983-4112, Ardrossan, AB. Cochrane, AB. 58 YR. OLD TALL male looking for female FREESTANDING WINDBREAK PANELS, up www.dirtwilly.com to 30’, made from 2-3/8” oilfield pipe. companion 35-55, nice figure, athletic, and BONIFIED WORKING STOCK dogs, reg. Square bale feeders, any size. Can build kids? Like horses, biking, travel and have a Australian Kelpie pups, guaranteed, sire other things. Elkhorn, MB. 204-851-6423, sense of humour. Red Deer, AB area. Reply Australian import. Parents work at Comto: Box 5577, c/o The Western Producer, CARFIO HATCHERY. Pheasant, Wild turkey 204-845-2188, 204-851-6714. munity Pasture. Also started cowdogs and Saskatoon, SK. S7K 2C4. Guinea; Partridge; Bobwhite; Wide variety stockdog training available. Watkinson of ducks and geese; Ross, Bantam and DWM, 67, RETIRED farmer, NS, ND, look- Cowdogs, 306-692-2573, Moose Jaw, SK. Heritage chicks. carfio@videotron.ca ing for a woman 53-66 years old. I’m seekwww.carfio.com Call 1-877-441-0368. ing companionship and friendship. I live in BORDER COLLIE PUPS out of good worka small town in central SK. Would like to ing parents, guaranteed, over 20 years HIGH QUALITY WHITE or brown ready to meet a woman that enjoys the same. Box breeding. Pam McIntyre, 204-365-0372, lay pullets. Avail. end of October. Hutch’s 5580, c/o The Western Producer, 2310 Strathclair, MB www.riverhillsranchltd.com Poultry, 306-435-3530, Moosomin, SK. Millar Avenue, Saskatoon, SK, S7K 2C4. GREAT PYRANEES PUPPIES, good working 49 YEAR OLD male looking for female parents, will deliver or meet part way. companion 35-55. Enjoys outdoors, ani- 306-965-2603, Coleville, SK. mals, quiet time, relaxing and watching movies. Southwest MB. Box 5581, c/o The KELLN SOLAR FLOAT Pumps: efficient, Western Producer, Saskatoon, SK S7K 2C4 NORTHFORK- INDUSTRY LEADER for economical and easy to use. Lumsden, SK. over 15 years, is looking for Elk. “If you www.kellnsolar.com 1-888-731-8882. have them, we want them.” Make your final call with Northfork for pricing! Guaran- SILVER STREAM SHELTERS. Super teed prompt payment! 514-643-4447, Spring Fabric Building Sale. 30x72 single SINGLE? MEET THE MATCHMAKER Winnipeg, MB. black steel, $4700; 30x70 dbl. truss P/R, The only way it works! In-person inter38x100 dbl. truss P/R, $11,900; views July 17th and 18th in Regina and G E N E T I C S W I T H C L A R I T Y. P h o n e $6995; 42x100 dbl. truss P/R, $14,250; 12-1/2 Saskatoon. Membership $700 plus taxes. 403-227-2449 www.antlerhillelkranch.com oz. tarp, 15 yr. warranty. Trucks running 18 years experience. Have matched thouELK FOR SALE for meat price, 12 males w e s t w e e k l y, d e l i v e r y a v a i l a b l e . sands of people! Camelot Introductions, and 9 females, various ages plus this year’s 1-877-547-4738, silverstreamshelters.com www.camelotintroductions.com or call calves. 306-825-4000, Lloydminster, SK. NORHEIM RANCHING HAS a full line of 204-888-1529 to book your appointhigh quality livestock handling equipment ment with an award winning Matchmaker! at discount prices. 20’ of continuous steel fence only $120! Gates; free standing panels; loading chutes; bunks; self unloading hay trailers, etc. 306-227-4503 Saskatoon, SK. www.norheimranching.com www.morandindustries.com

ELK TROPHY BULL & BREEDING Stock Auction, 7 PM, Friday, Aug. 9th, 2013 Nisku Inn, Nisku, AB. Live video auction Online bidding available. For details and updates call: 1-866-304-4664 or go to: www.gwacountry.com ATTENTION ELK PRODUCERS: If you have elk to supply to market give AWAPCO a call today. No marketing fees. Non-members welcome. info@wapitiriver.com or 780-980-7589.

BREEDING BUCKS for sale, 10 PB Neubians and 4 PB Alpines, also have a very friendly Saanen X doeling avail. Jesse, Hague, SK 306-225-2180 or cell: 306-270-6975. FOR SALE: 2 milking nannies, 2 doeling kids. Call 204-966-3566, Eden, MB.

GREG’S WELDING: Free standing corral panels, windbreak panels, calf shelters, belting troughs, etc. Many different styles to choose from. Call for pricing, delivery available. 306-768-8555, Carrot River, SK. 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. AVAILABLE BACHELORETTE Slim, 40, www.apollomachineandproducts.com no children, never married. I guess when PAYSEN LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT INC. it comes to men, I am shy. I have been We manufacture an extensive line of cattle out on a couple of dates but nothing conhandling and feeding equipment including nected. I need to be emotionally attached squeeze chutes, adj. width alleys, crowd- to a man on a mental and physical level. I ing tubs, calf tip tables, maternity pens, love do-it-yourself projects. I own several gates and panels, bale feeders, Bison homes and I’m always looking for a great equipment, Texas gates, steel water deal. I love interior design. My current troughs and rodeo equipment. Distributors home was featured in a prominent magafor Cancrete concrete waterers, El-Toro zine. I’m from a strict Mennonite family electric branders and twine cutters. Our who are farmers. I am the most successful squeeze chutes and headgates are now personal in my family. Yes, I am the black available with a neck extender. Phone sheep of the family. Matchmakers Select 306-796-4508, email: ple@sasktel.net call 1-888-916-2824. Customized memwebsite: www.paysen.com berships, thorough screening process, ARROW FARMQUIP LIVESTOCK handling guaranteed service. Rural, remote, isolatsolutions. Solar West. Port. windbreaks. ed, agriculture, permanent relationships Custom built panels and gates. Phone only. www.selectintroductions.com 1-866-354-7655, Mossbank, SK. FINDING YOUR LOVE AND HAPPINESS. Magnetix Matchmaking Agency. Call Connie 780-940-3235 or connie@magnetix.ca

RENN ROLLER MILL, 12” wide rollers, 16” diameter, fixed unloading auger, undercarriage w/wheels, 540 PTO, 12” magnet, concentrate hopper, $4000; HIGHLINE BALE PRO 8000, 1000 PTO, right-hand discharge, hyd. chute, 16.5Lx16.1SL tires, $9500. 306-654-7657, Prud’Homme, SK. FREESTANDING PANELS: 30’ windbreak panels; 6-bar 24’ and 30’ panels; 10’, 20’ and 30’ feed troughs; Bale shredder bunks; Silage bunks; Feeder panels; HD bale feed- PRO-CERT ORGANIC CERTIFICATION. ers; All metal 16’ and 24’ calf shelters. Will Canadian family owned. No Royalties! Ph. custom build. 306-424-2094, Kendal, SK. 306-382-1299 or visit www.pro-cert.org

GT2006 GOPHER TRAPS by Lees Trapworks Ltd. See them in action at www.leestrapworks.com $18 each. Call 306-677-7441, Swift Current, SK.

AUTHENTIC ALL SEASON LOG HOME w/central air, 432 Vivian Bay Street, Hitchcock Bay, Lake Diefenbaker, SK. 1440 sq. ft. 2 bdrm. plus den, fully furnished. Close to amenities. Quiet location. Titled lot. Ph 306-493-7153 or info@kandkent.ca www.kandkent.ca PRIME FULLY SERVICED lake lot located at Lauman’s Landing on beautiful Lac des Isles near Goodsoil, SK. Phone 306-843-3315, 306-843-7853.

SMALL CABIN/BUNKHOUSE to be moved, 16x20’, insulated and finished, $6,000 at STORE AND LAND, like new, currently Prince Albert, SK. Call 306-244-6402. not being used. On main street going towards the lake in a tourist town, two lots, asking $175,000. Big River, SK. Call WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to 306-469-5675, 306-469-0074. go!!! Mt. Blanchard- 1296 sq. ft. was WARMAN HOMES CUSTOM built commer- $191,285- Sale price $175,000. Call cial buildings, to your plan or ours. Call 1-866-933-9595, www.warmanhomes.ca 1-866-933-9595 or www.warmanhomes.ca TO BE MOVED. 1400 sq. ft., 3 bdrm bunPOTENTIAL COMMERCIAL 800+ acres galow, exc. cond., new shingles July 2013, bordering Saskatoon, SK. city limits next double attached garage, 13 miles North to airport, just off Highway 16. Can split and 1 mile West of Spiritwood, SK. into parcels. Call Bill at 780-482-5273 or 306-883-2964, 306-883-8843. email group.6@live.com 1925 EATON HOUSE two storey for sale to be moved, always lived in, complete plumbing, some renos done, but still 90% 10 MINS. TO UNIVERSITY, 3 bdrm town- original. 306-287-7928, Quill Lake, SK. house, Willowgrove, 5 appl., avail. Aug. 1, WARMAN HOMES. LOTS for sale in Lang$279,000. 306-222-0146, Saskatoon, SK. ham, SK. or Warman Legends or Southlands, www.warmanhomes.ca to view or call 1-866-933-9595. GREEN LAKE, SK. Fishing Lodge subdivi- OLDER STYLE 2 storey, 3 bedroom farm sion. Immaculate mobile home on 2 lots, 3 house, 26’x18’, to be moved off farm site. bdrms, wood stove, 24x28’ double garage, Would make a good lake cabin. Located one owner, elder gent, no kids, no pets. near Elrose, SK. 306-378-2854. Will sell fully furnished, $248,500. Must be SUPREME AUCTION SERVICES will offer seen. Call 306-832-2191. for sale by public auction, a serviced lot located at 714 Beckwell Ave. in Radville, SK.; And a house and property at 628 Crane Avenue in Radville, SK. at 10 AM, Monday, Au g u s t 5 t h . C o n t a c t B r a d S t e n b e r g 306-551-9411 or Ken McDonald 306-695-0121. PL #314604 For details go to: www.supremeauctions.ca WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to go!!! Mt. Vanier- 1680 sq. ft. was $222,083 Sale price $215,363. Call 1-866-933-9595 or go to www.warmanhomes.ca SUN HILLS RESORT at Lake of the Prairies, SK., only 40 minutes East of Yorkton. Lots selling now! Starting at $56,000, fully serviced! Phone 306-597-4660 or visit www.sunhillsresort.com CEDAR LOG HOMES AND CABINS, sidings, paneling, decking. Fir and Hemlock flooring, timbers, special orders. Rouck Bros., Lumby, BC., www.rouckbros.com 1-800-960-3388.

SOUTHEY LUXURY HOME FO R SA L E BY M OTIV ATED O W N ER

50 K iplin g Cresen t 1

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519,000O BO

$

476 4 sq . f t. 4 b d rm , 3 f ull b a th, 2 upd a ted kit, 3 g a sF/P, 3 off ices w /lib ra ry, in d oorsola rium , pool & spa , O /S d b l g a r., 2000 sq . f t. pa tios, m a ture la n d sca pin g , 1 ⁄2 b lk K-12 & d a yca re, 1 ⁄2 hr. to Reg in a , off ered a tlesstha n $110 sq . f t. Go to: propertygu ys.c om I.D .#24 9 588 ca ll Joe @ 3 06 - 209 - 9 9 55 or

L a rry @ 587 - 3 6 3 - 229 2

BEAUTIFUL NEW HOME on titled lakefront property, 35 min. South of Flin Flon. 1271 sq. ft., 1.5 storey, 3 bdrms, 1.5 baths, 4 appliances, wood burning cultured stone fireplace, central vac, electric heat. $375,000. Ph: 306-747-8011, Cranberry Portage, MB. ratkinson@sasktel.net FULLY SERVICED ready to build on lake lot at Chitek Lake, SK., across the street from the lake. Call 306-275-4803. OVER 8000 SQ. FT. lakefront property at Lake Newell, near Brooks, AB., $160,000. 403-832-2112, ddvine@xplornet.com ADAMS LAKE CEDAR HOME, 3 bedroom, 2 COZY 2.3 ACRES 2 story home, 2 shops, bath, 2 vaulted living rooms, extra large close to great snowmobiling and Shuswap kitchen, large garage and carport, separate Lakes. 250-308-2110, Mara, BC. insulated shop and RV site and storage shelter, on landscaped acre lot with year LAKE LOT LAC DES ISLES- NEW 2 round creek, $299,000. gail_r@telus.net acres, $85,000. $10,000 down, balance 250-679-8769, Chase, BC. when title raised. 5 acre lot, $215,000. Call 306-373-4808, loiselh@msn.com 5 ACRE HOBBY, Nursery and Landscape business. 2 miles North of Courtenay, Vancouver Island, BC. Buy inventory and equipment with lease, $249,000 or buy everything $749,000. Beautiful view property, near by 4 golf courses, skiing, hunting and big salmon. Mild winters. Build your retirement home. 250-218-0142. www.ospreystoneandbamboo/forsale2012

LOG HOMES, builders of quality handcrafted log and timber frame homes. Call Jeff at 306-493-2448, Saskatoon, SK. www.backcountryloghomes.ca STORAGE GARAGE, 25’x25’, metal building on concrete slab and 2 storey, 3 bdrm house on lot, Parry, SK. 604-576-8594. TO BE MOVED. 1963 bungalow with 2 car att. garage, 1300 sq. ft., main floor fully renovated, 2/3 hardwood floor. Selling with stove, fridge, furnace, water treatment system, hot water heater and sewage pump, asking $80,000. Call 306-338-7114, Clair, SK. WARMAN HOMES RTM homes ready to go!!! Mt. Robson- 1443 sq. ft. was $161,715- Sale price $155,943. Call 1-866-933-9595, www.warmanhomes.ca 4 BDRM HOME, 1981, 1380 sq. ft., 6” walls, gas fireplace, new basement development, 2 car garage, near school, arena, $220,000. 306-547-4701, 604-832-5542, ruthkm@telus.net Preeceville, SK.

R E A D Y TO M O VE H O M E S

RETIRE IN KELOWNA AND STILL FARM YOUR LAND in SK. or AB. Will trade up or down my Kelowna, BC. clear titled downtown penthouse on the Okanagan Lake, and lease your land back to you. To view please Google dolphins Kelowna. Contact Marshall 780-499-0126 or 778-484-0023, or email northpeace@hotmail.com 26 ACRES HOBBY or horse farm, mix of hay, pasture, timber, good home. Quonset, hay sheds, $514,900. Contact Ron Evans, CV Realty, evansron201@gmail.com 250-428-9040, Creston, BC. WATERFRONT DEVELOPMENT LAND. Four acres, 650’ frontage on Columbia River. Hotel, condominium, apartment potential. $595,000. 250-365-3155 Castlegar BC SHUSWAP COUNTRY ESTATES. Manuf. homes start at $69,900. Retire with us...on time...on budget. 250-835-2366, Salmon Arm BC. www.shuswapcountryestates.com

A re you plan n in g to b u ild a h om e in 2 01 3. W ood C ou n try w ill b u ild you a R T M or a cu s tom b u ilt h om e on s ite to m eet you r requ irem en ts . W ood C ou n try prid es its elf on b u ild in g top qu ality h om es w ith a h igh level of cu s tom er s atis faction s in ce its in ception in 1 980.

C all L eigh at 306 -6 9 9 -7284 Ce rtifie d Hom e Builde r

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68 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

FOR SALE: UNDEVELOPED lot #06-16NBX2922, in Hafford, SK. at 203 1st Ave. W. Email: lotsale01@gmail.com TO BE MOVED: 3 bedroom bungalow and buildings for sale. Phone: 306-931-8686, Saskatoon, SK. TO BE MOVED, house for sale. Make us an offer! Located at Porcupine Plain, SK. Phone 306-278-7115 or 306-469-0074. TO BE MOVED: 1977 1380 sq.ft. bungalow, 100 YEAR OLD farm house needing to be 3 bdrm., 1-1/2 baths, woodburning fire- renovated, ready to move, offers accepted. place, central vac, $84,900. Located near Call 306-692-3868, Drinkwater, SK. Hanley, SK. 306-544-2441, 306-381-3671.

MEDALLION HOMES 1-800-249-3969 Immediate delivery: New 16’ and 20’ modular homes; Also used 14’ and 16’ homes. Now available: Lake homes. Medallion Homes, 306-764-2121, Prince Albert, SK. THINKING MODULAR? Think Dynamic Modular Homes! The lowest prices in Sask. are in Alberta! Compare and save. We will not be undersold on identical product. Toll f r e e 1 - 8 7 7 - 3 4 1 - 4 4 2 2 o r v i s i t u s at www.dynamicmodular.ca

VESTA HOMES NEW 16’, 20’ and 22’ modular homes in stock. 306-242-9099, Vanscoy, SK. www.vestamfghomes.com NEW MODULER HOMES, Canadian built by Moduline, 16x60, $68,900. 20x76, $96,900. New sales lot opening soon in Yorkton, SK. www.affordablehomesales.ca or call 306-496-7538, 1-888-699-9280.

ON THE GREENS COTTONWOOD, AZ. Gated 55 plus manufactured home golf course community located in the heart of Verde Valley just 20 mins south of Sedona, 1 hr from Phoenix, Prescott and Flagstaff. All homes come complete with garage, covered deck and landscaping. Land lease fees include $1 million clubhouse, large indoor lap pool, hot tub and complete gym. Also includes water, sewer, trash pickup and reduced golf fees. For information call 1-800-871-8187 or 928-634-7003.

GOOD COUNTRY LIFE. 143 acres on Wascana Creek, 25 min. NW of Regina, SK. Native prairie land w/potential for sub division or an amazing retreat from the city. Call Wally Meili, Chateau Real Estate, Moose Jaw, 306-690-8663. 1/4 SECTION NE Sask, c/w 2 legal titles, 21 kms from thriving community w/new school and most amenities, 60 acre parcel w/approx. 1700 sq. ft. home and heated shop. 100 acre parcel w/small recreational cabin. Would like to sell entire pkg., some TLC required. More details please call 306-230-6644, 306-278-2048, Porcupine, Plain, SK. All calls returned.

TO BE MOVED: 1996 SRI 28x52’, 3 bdrm, 2 bathrooms, spacious kitchen, wood stove, $47,000. 403-578-8185, Coronation, AB.

W o rkin g R a n ch - C o w /C a lf Ope ra tio n

$6 09 ,500.00 Ap p ro x. 317 Acres . Atta ched : lo n g ra n ge gra zin g lea s e fo r s u m m er ra n ge. F ive b ed ro o m , 2 b a th, a p p ro x. 2680 s q . ft., S ho p / in s u la ted w o rks ho p , in s u la ted 5 s ta ll b a rn w ith s helter, fen ced s ta ck-ya rd fo r ha y. F u ll u s e co rra l s ys tem in clu d in g lo a d in g chu te. All the co rra ls a n d Pen s ha ve a cces s to s to ck w a terers ,. 140 a cres ha y, 170 a cres in 4 la rge ro ta tio n a l p a s tu res - gra vity fed w a ter lin es to a ll 4 p a s tu res . (fu ll lin e o feq u ip m en ta va ila b le fo r s ep a ra te p u rcha s e). M L S # 143194

Fully Ope ra tio n a l G ra in a n d C a ttle Fa rm !!!

$9 6 5,000.00 794: fo u r q u a rters co n n ected a n d o n e q u a rter o n ly 1/2 m ile a w a y.  W a ter s o u rce: 2 w a ter w ells , a n d 3 d u go u ts . Ho m e q u a rter in clu d es 1156 s q ft ho m e: 3 BD. 2 b a ths . In s u la ted s ho p 32’ X 48’ w ith co n crete flo o r a n d ra d ia n t hea t, Ba rn 30’ X 40’, Ca ttle S hed s 32’ X 96’ & 24’X 32’, M a chin e S hed , S teel Gra in Bin s , Plu s co rra ls w ith a w a terin g s ys tem fed b y w ell. M L S #129455 Ca ll us for m ore in form a tion or to vie w e ith e r of th e s e Productive fa rm s .

DOUBLE WIDE MOBILE home for sale to be moved, fairly new siding and windows. 306-734-2809, Craik, SK.

L o rra in e Co rn is h 250-78 4-8 06 5

Ca ro l Fis cher 250-78 4-78 8 9

Ce n tury 21 En e rgy Re a lty.

WANTED TO PURCHASE: good used 14’ and 16’ wide mobile homes. Call 306-249-2222, Saskatoon, SK.

201-1112-102 Ave. Da w s o n Creek , B.C. w w w .d a w s o n creek pro perty.co m

IF YOU SPRAYED LIBERTY and received IF YOU SPRAYED LIBERTY and received crop damage call Back-Track Investiga- crop damage call Back-Track Investigations for assistance 1-866-882-4779. tions for assistance 1-866-882-4779. LARGE CATTLE PROPERTY, two homes, lots of water, good yard, surface lease in- FOR SALE BY TENDER, 1280 acres, RM of come, exclusive; Ranch and grain property M i l d e n , 1 0 4 0 c u l t . a c r e s . S W a n d west of Edmonton, approx. 400 cow/calf NW-25-27-11-W3, SW-36-27-11-W3, SE and approx. 2500 acres. Have buyers for and NE 35-27-11-W3, NE-14-28-11-W3, large farm properties, very confidential. SW and SE 26-28-11-W3. Good house, Call if you are thinking of selling, I special- 20,000 bu. bins, outbuildings, good soil ize in agricultural properties. Phone Don class. Written offers to Box 421, Standard, J a r r e t t , R e a l t y E xe c u t i ve s L e a d i n g , AB. T0J 3G0. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Closing date July 31, 780-991-1180, Spruce Grove, AB. 2013. Inquiries call 403-644-3808. RANCH FOR SALE in Northern Alberta, 160 acres, great area to raise cattle, hors- TIM HAMMOND REALTY, Grenfell, SK. es or sheep. 1600 sq. ft. house, 40x60 Summerberry, 2 adjoining listings with a heated shop, misc. other outbuildings. total of 29 quarters of productive F, G and 500,000 gal. dugout/water system, new H soil currently in tame hay/tame pasture. 100’ deep well, drilled in 2008, feeds corral Johnston, MLS #457236 consisting of 2859 acres, 1829 cult., 635 hay/native, and house. 780-672-0337, High Level, AB. excellent corrals, outbuildings; Byma, MLS 298.76 ACRES all cultivated farmland 2.5 #455877 consisting of 1861 acres, 1199 miles east of Tofield, AB. on 626. Good #2 cult., 266 hay and forage, but would make soil, no bush, no stones, very flat, annual excellent grainland. Call Guy Shepherd, s u r f a c e l e a s e r e ve n u e $ 3 2 0 0 . M L S 306-434-8857. www.TimHammond.ca MH0013867. Southland Realty, call Len RM 169: 1760 acres grain and pastureland. Rempel 306-741-6358, Medicine Hat, AB. 306-773-7379, John Cave, Edge Realty TITLED (DEEDED) W1/2-06-88-21-W5th, Ltd., Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com located 35 miles NW Peace River area, in District of Reinwood. 35 min. from Peace RM 162: 480 acres of adjoining pasture Pulp and 35 min. Peace River, AB. Yardsite approx. 20 minutes West of Moose Jaw, consists of spruce and aspen, ample sup- SK. Call John or Joel Cave, Edge Realty ply of water and community dugout. Pow- Ltd., 306-773-7379, Swift Current, SK. er in yard, gas available. 135 acres cult. www.farmsask.com excellent soil, grain canola, grasses and legumes, asking $217,000. 780-219-3420. FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS RED DEER/ SYLVAN LAKE, 125 acres on We also specialize in: Crop insurance apblacktop, 10 min. from city on Burnt Lake peals; Chemical drift; Residual herbicide; Trail, prime location for new yard develop- Custom operator issues; Equipment malfunction. Qualified Agrologist on staff. Call ment, $6000/acre firm 403-575-1146. Back-Track Investigations for assistance regarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779. WANTED: FARMLAND TO PURCHASE, RM #470 or #471. Phone 306-895-2027, Paynton, SK.

LUSELAND AREA 57 Qu a rters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $19 ,570,500 LUSELAND AREA 25 Qu a rters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6 ,8 8 5,000 LUSELAND AREA 6 Qu a rters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,3 9 5,500 RM SNIPE LAKE 1 Qu a rter w ith cro p . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $23 5,000

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R.M. #555 BIG River, SK. Great hunting quarter, partially fenced with dugout, close to Delaronde Lake. Neil, 306-469-4562. FOR SALE 320 acres of treed prime hunting area for deer, moose, elk and bear. Property is surrounded by 640 acres of Crown land designated to wildlife habitate, open to hunting in season. Situated in NW Alberta. East 1/2-27-83-2, bordered by a paved secondary Hwy. #685. A 16x52’ cottage on steel skids avail. 780-494-3649, 780-835-8063 cell, Fairview, AB.

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INVESTMENT INCOME FARM, 17.52 irrigated acres, ranch style home, shop, hay shed. Priced to sell. 250-308-2110, Enderby, BC.

306-652-0343, Saskatoon, SK

80 ACRE FARM with large ranch style home, shop barn, hay shed. Scenic and 2- READY TO MOVE homes. Many op- quiet location. 250-308-2110, Lumby, BC. tions like front roof overhang for deck, deluxe cabinets, stone front, etc. 1593 sq. ft. CATTLE RANCH in BC. foothills, large adfor $161,000. Also 1525 sq. ft. for joining grazing lease, lots of water, great $150,000. Swanson Builders (Saskatoon, hunting, beautiful scenery, fenced, cross S K . a r e a ) at 3 0 6 - 4 9 3 - 3 0 8 9 o r v i s i t fenced, some oil revenue. 250-719-0343, 250-719-8006, Dawson Creek, BC. www.swansonbuilders.ca for details.

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MINERAL RIGHTS. We will purchase and or lease your mineral rights. 1-877-269-9990. cndfree@telusplanet.net 160 ACRES GOOD FARMLAND, no buildings, $140,000. Approx. 15 miles north of Prince Albert, SK. 306-764-8134, 306-789-1590, 403-457-1441, leave msg. 156 ACRES, YARDSITE, 3 bedroom home. Land renter in place, Wadena, SK. area, $169,000. Flo Christianson Re/Max Blue Chip Realty, Yorkton SK., 306-338-3231. RM 501: NE-24-52-25-W3. Northeast of Lloydminster, SK. 36 acres cult., balance pasture and recreational. Monetary river runs thru. Lots of sand, some gravel, 1 oil well, $99,000. Call 306-821-6044. RM 69: 5 quarters PASTURE for sale. 3 quarters tame grass, remainder native. 306-442-4545, Weyburn, SK.

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LAN D FO R S ALE RM # 34 39 42 66 127 130 157 216 221 & 251 275

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AGRICULTURAL LAND & EQUIPMENT

ALBERTA LAND FOR SALE: BE YOUR OWN BOSS! Plant yourself in Dunmore and own a blooming good business with this fully operational Greenhouse and Garden Centre, located between Medicine Hat and Dunmore along the Trans-Canada Hwy visible to traffic in both directions. (#2062); PRIME IRRIGATION LAND! in the heart of potato country, 398.44 acres with 367.81 acres BRID water rights, 17,000 bu. steel grain bins, quonset, 1150 sq. ft. home. (#2055); 100 COW DAIRY OPERATION! c/w support buildings, 2 homes and 160 acres of pivot irrigated land. 110 cows milking and dry, 94 head from calves to springing heifers, 100 kg. d a i ly b u t t e r f at A l b e r t a m i l k q u o t a . (#2056); 180 COW DAIRY! 3 farmyards w/buildings and homes, 130 milking and dry cows, 120 dairy heifers, 144.5 kg. msq. (#2045); GREAT VIEWS OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS! Irrigated hay and crop farm on the Belly River just west of Lethbridge. Many buildings, hay storage, shop, 2 homes, feedlot, feed mill, river front, secluded. (#2013); MODERN 150 COW DAIRY! 275 acres irrigation, 135 cows, 126 kg. msq, 120 heifers, 2 Lely fully automated computer milkers, 3700 sq. ft. home, city water, (#2008). Real Estate C e n t r e , w w w. f a r m r e a l e s t a t e . c o m 866-345-3414.

SIJTZE & LOUISE KEULEN OF BASHAW, AB

MONDAY AUGUST 12, 2013 @ 10:00am

DIRECTIONS: From Bashaw Go Approx. 6 Miles South to Milton Gatsby Rd, Then go 300 Yards East to Range Road 220 & Go 4 Miles South to Yardsite

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TERMS ON REAL ESTATE Sq. Ft. Bungalow , Five Bedrooms, Four Baths, 1. 15% Non-refundable Deposit Saleday. Attached Two Car Garage, Developed Basement. 2. Balance On Or Before September 30th, Built in 1988 With Manicured Yard And Mature 2013. Yardsite Only, Lands Subject To Trees. With Wood Lot Along The Lake. Approx. Existing Land Rental Agreement Until 32x25 House With Attached 10x16 Porch En3. December 31, 2013. trance, 50x80 Cold Storage. 60x40 Shop With 8x10 4. Possession By September 30, 2013. Overhead Door, 12x12 Overhead Door 40x14 5. High Bid Subject To Sellers Approval Sliding Door. Has In Floor Heat . Also comes with 6. Parcels to be sold individualy, as numerous outbuildings! CONTACT: Sijtze & combinations or as an entirety. Louise Keulen @ 403-788-2665 FEATURED EQUIPMENT: TRACTORS: '&/%5 t MOWER CONDITIONER: NH

85 %JTD #JOF t TANDEM DISK: 46/'-08&3 t HAY RAKE: 2010 CLASS/ -*.&3 3PUBSZ 3BLF t LARGE SQUARE BALER: )&4450/ t MANURE WAGON: 580 /6)/ 4 t &*4&- .0%&- t MIX WAGON: 53*0-&5 .0%&- t ROCK PICKER )*()-*/& 9- t BINS: 10,000 Bu. Assorted Steel Bins

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RM SPIRITWOOD: 8 deeded quarters and 1 leased, fully fenced, cross-fenced, slough or dugouts on every quarter. Old yardsite is split on E half of section 33. 90 acres of canola seeded 2012 crop year on section 33. The remainder of cultivated acres is seeded to a brome/alfalfa/crested wheat mixture. MLSÂŽ 462349. Shawna SchiraKroeker, Re/Max of the Battlefords, North Battleford, SK. www.remaxbattlefords.com 306-446-8800, 306-441-1624 (cell).

Harry Sheppard

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A COMPLETE FULL LINE OF WINDOWS!!!

SASK. GRAIN FARM, 2080 acres heavy clay, full set of buildings. Surface leases. John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd. 306-773-7379 Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com

Thin kin g o fBuying o r Selling Fa rm La n d ?

C a ll Jim o r S h e rry to d a y

LOT IN CAMROSE, AB. asking $55,000 RM 334. 160 acres 4 miles SW of Preecefirm. Well below market value! Call ville, SK. 1270 sq. ft. 1970’s house w/full basement and enclosed garage, quonset, 306-681-4309 or text. shop, barn, bins, good cattle facilities. Nice AGRICULTURAL LAND FOR SALE, 2880 clean sheltered yard. For sale at bank cert. acres on Hwy. #23, beautiful mountain appraisal, $315,000. Ph. 306-547-3221. view, lots of water (3 artesian wells and large creek). Private sale, brokers welcome. Call Don 403-558-2345, Brant, AB. suzannedepaoli@yahoo.com

BUYING OR SELLING FARMLAND. I have the farm experience to get the deal done. Call Darren Bostock Realty P.C. Inc. 306-351-3900, Regina, SK., or email darrenbostock@myaccess.ca

hodginsauctioneers.com

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THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

CLASSIFIED ADS 69

SASK GRAIN FARM North of Togo, SK. on SK/MB border. 290 acres on SK. side, 483 acres on MB. side. Ph. Cottenie & Gardner Inc., 306-542-2565, Kamsack, SK. or tedgardner@sasktel.net SUPREME AUCTION SERVICES will offer E-1/2 and SW-27-6-19-W2 in the RM of NO FEES The Gap for sale by public auction in RadNO COMMISSIONS ville, SK. at 10 AM, Monday, Aug. 5. Contact Brad Stenberg 306-551-9411 or Ken QUICK PAYMENTS McDonald 306-695-0121. PL #314604, For CONFIDENTIAL details go to: www.supremeauctions.ca RENT BACKS AVAILABLE REALTY EXECUTIVES BATTLEFORDSMike Janostin. Wanted: Grainland, pasture or bushland in SK, have cash buyers. FOR THE LONG TERM Ph 306-481-5574, www.mikejanostin.com Ashley | 306-491-5226 Email mikejanostin@realtyexecutives.com Ashley@demetercapital.ca RM #s 221 and 251: 10 quarters grainland Realtor Enquiries Welcome w/assignable lease agreements. Harry www.demetercapital.ca Sheppard, Sutton Group - Results Realty, Thanks again Doug for buying our property. RM 228/257: 11,000 acre ranch, full set of Regina, SK. 306-530-8035. Dealing with you and your company, Freshwater buildings. Call 306-773-7379 John or Joel DEBDEN, BIG RIVER area: This approx. Land Holding Co. Ltd., made the sale quick and Cave, Edge Realty Ltd, Swift Current, SK. 3100 sq. ft. hunting lodge is set up on 154 www.farmsask.com efficient. It was a tough transaction but you acres of mainly heavy bush, with 140 acres came through and kept all of the promises you fenced with high game fencing. The lodge made at the beginning of our talks. I would has 5 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, wood burnTim H a m m o n d R ea lty recommend you to anyone who’s interested in ing stove, elk chandelier, pine and log acK evin Ja r r ett cents, 21’ open ceilings, power, phone and selling quickly and efficiently. I will pass on your well. This lodge can be used for many difname to anyone who’s interested. Selling Farm s & R anches for OF GOOD CROP PRODUCTI ON ferent things, with the location it is great Thanks again. Leo and Linda. over 10 years throughout for hunting and fishing. Plus this parcel L AN D I N S AS K ATCHEW AN Saskatchew an, w ith over backs onto the Provincial forest both north AN D AL BERTA 30 current listings. and east. One must view this property to see the added value. MLS®465295; This Plea s e ca ll M a rcel a t 403-350-6 8 6 8 To view listing brochures please 237 acre farm is located just 2 1/2 miles M a rcel L eBla n c Rea l Es t a t e I n c. visit: w w w .tim ham m ond.ca 1 south of Spiritwood. Approx. 132 acres Cen tra l...............................19 1 ⁄4’s FOR SALE BY TENDER: RM 371 Bayne cultivated, balance bush pasture. Has a Cell306.441.4152 SW11-39-27-W2, home quarter, house, very nice solid S o u th...................................70 1⁄4’s 26x60’ hip roof barn, 40x60’ Cell306.537.8086 buildings, yard 120 cult., 30 fenced pas- steel quonset with S o u th Ea s t...........................31 1⁄4’s dirt floor, 2 steel grain Fax 306.477.1268 ture; NE10-39-27-W2, 140 cult., 20 par- bins and several wooden bins. 28x40’ S o u th W es t..........................6 5 1⁄4’s tially fenced pasture; SE03-39-27-W2, 100 Em ai l kevi nj arrett@sasktel . net garage, 3 bedroom bungalow built N o rth.....................................6 1⁄4’s cult., 60 fenced pasture. Highest or any 4-stall in 1957. Very well sheltered yard. This FARM/RANCH/RECREATION, buying or tender not necessarily accepted. Tenders N o rth W es t..........................12 1⁄4’s selling. Call Tom Neufeld 306-260-7838, close Aug. 1, 2013. Please send tenders to: property with its location and your ideas could serve different uses. MLS®464242. Ea s t.....................................51 1⁄4’s Coldwell Banker ResCom Realty. Turta.Estate@gmail.com 306-652-4771, For additional information or viewing call Prud’Homme, SK. Lloyd Ledinski of Re/Max of the Battle9000+ ACRES farm and ranchland, all in FARM AND PASTURE LAND one block, bordering Hwy. 7 near Delisle, RM 45 RANCH: We have two adjoining list- fords, 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512, AVAILABLE TO RENT SK., approx. 30 minutes from Saskatoon. ings for a total of 6616 acres, 2 yard sites. North Battleford, SK. Ph: 780-482-5273 ask for Bill or email: Call 306-773-7379, John or Joel Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Current, SK. RM LEASK #464: 29 quarters all adjoingroup.6@live.com www.farmsask.com. ing but one. 4499.72 acres w/approx. RM 45: APPROX. 4160 acre ranch. 2 yardsites. Full set of buildings. 306-773-7379, w w w. d w e i n . c a R M O F V i s c o u n t 3164 cultivated to tame pasture and hay. John or Joel Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift NE-16-35-26-W2, old assess. $47,900, Balance is natural pasture, wooded and S IN G LE TO LAR G E Current, SK. www.farmsask.com long term tenant available. Dwein Trask sheltered areas, bodies of water, plus several dugouts. All mainly fenced with 3 and BLOC KS OF LAN D . RM 49: APPROX. 640 acres irrigation and Realty Inc., 306-221-1035, Saskatoon, SK. 4 wire and treated posts. The winter headdry land with buildings. 306-773-7379, RM CANWOOD #494, 4 quarters, grain, quarters has a 36x51’ shop w/20x36’ atP R EM IUM P R IC ES P AID John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd, Swift Current, pasture and hay, lots of water, on school tached ranch hand living quarters, natural SK. www.farmsask.com bus route. 400 acres cult., power on 2 gas, power, phone, well, silage pit, 4 cattle W ITH QUIC K P AYM EN T. sites. House, 2 large garages, grain storand corrals. Ranch is located PURCHASER TO MEET MOTIVATED sell- age on home quarter. Close to lakes and shelters 2-1/2 miles SW of Leask on Hwy. #40 er, SE Sask., RM 153 and 123. 8 quarters: Parkland. 306-747-2775, Shellbrook, SK. then 2-1/2 miles East. MLS® 468365. For 5 hay and pasture, 3 cult., barn, house and info. on this exc. cattle operation shop. Option on 10 more quarters, all in ONE QUARTER FARMLAND for rent, 3 further Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the BattleCa ll DOUG one block. 403-888-0045, Whitewood, SK. miles SE of Saskatoon, SK. Presently in call fords, 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512, hayland. Phone 306-374-2369. Jack@dobbynelectric.com North Battleford, SK. RM 79: APPROX. 640 acres of grain land RM OF FRANCIS #127, one square seclocated North of Dollard, SK. John or Joel tion, highly productive, gently rolling grain RM 110: 1120 acre ranch, set of buildings. Em a il: s a s kfa rm s @ s h a w .ca Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., 306-773-7379, land, just east of Regina. Harry Sheppard, 306-773-7379, John Cave, Edge Realty w w w . Ca Fa rm la n d.com Sutton Group - Results Realty, Regina, SK. Ltd., Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com 306-530-8035. RM 49/51: 6720 acre ranch, set of build- RM 45: 2560 acres grain and pastureland. ings. 306-773-7379, John Cave, Edge Re- 306-773-7379, John Cave, Edge Realty alty, Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com Ltd., Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com

FARM LAND W ANTED N O FEES N O C OM M IS S ION S

RM OF SPIRITWOOD: Just listed five quarters of deeded land mainly bush pasture. Possibility of 12.5 quarters of Crown Lease. Lots of openings, ideal water (3 springs and small lake area). Mainly all fenced. Great big game hunting in the area. MLS ®468532; Spiritwood 2.5 miles South, 237 acres w/approx. 132 acres cultivated, balance bush/pasture. 26x60 hip roof barn, very solid, 40x60 steel quonset w/3rd floor, 2 steel bins, 4 stall garage, 3 bdrm home (built 1957), very well sheltered yard, unique location gives this property many excellent possibilities. MLS ®464242. For more info. or viewing call Lloyd Ledinski, Re/Max of the Battlefords 306-446-8800 or 306-441-0512. RM 139: 6720 acre ranch, set of buildings. 306-773-7379, John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com

Farmland

WANTED WE BUY FARMLAND

W ANTED

APPROX . 4000 ACRES

SUM M ARY OF SOLD PROPERTIES

PURCHASING:

RENT BACK AVAILABLE

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306-5 84 -364 0 in fo @ m a xcro p.ca

CALL

PU RCH ASIN G FARM LAN D

REN TERS W AN TED w w w .m a xcro p.ca

DAVE M O L B ER G

Sutton Group – Norland Realty

Is proud to announce Justin Yin as our top farm & ranch agent. With his unique Chinese background, he has attracted a great number of eager Chinese buyers who are coming for agricultural opportunities in Saskatchewan. Justin Yin’s knowledge and professional service can connect you with reliable buyers, many of whom are looking for quick possessions. Get to know more about Justin Yin by searching his interviews on: CTV News, Global News, The Western Producer, The Globe and Mail. Or visit: www.JustinYin.com Call now: 306-230-1588 or Email: justin.yin.ca@gmail.com

R E A L TY

C O R P.

For the m ost VALU E & EXPO SU RE that you deserve w hen selling your farm or ranch property,contact one of our Farm & Ranch Specialists today! BOB LANE - Broker (306) 569-3380 (306) 539-7975

Da ve@ Tim H a m m o n d .c a | w w w .Tim H a m m o n d .c a

ED BEUTLER - Yorkton/Whitewood

(306) 620-7260

1 1 3 3rd Ave W e s t P .O . Bo x 1 054 Bigga r, S K S 0K 0M 0

JASON BEUTLER - Yorkton/Estevan

(306) 735-7811

GARTH HENDRY - Moose Jaw/South Central

(306) 631-0802

JEFF HEGLAND - Saskatoon/Prince Albert

(306) 270-9050

R ea lto r

Farm land for Sale By Tender

Ducks Unlim ited Conservation Land

N euberger Kuhn Riehl Bueller

Top Farm Agent

L A N E

RM 152 152 244 247 273 273 273 276 277

Leg a l La nd Descrip tion N E 25-19-33 W 1 N W 25-19-33 W 1 SW 8-25-04 W 2 N W 28-26-15 W 2 SW 15-28-01 W 2 SE 33-29-02 W 2 N E 33-29-02 W 2 SW 14-28-12 W 2 N W 33-29-13 W 2

282 N W 31-30-01 W 3 304 N E 8-33-06 W 2 342 N E 5-34-28 W 2 403 E 1⁄2 N E 16-42-02 W 3

Tota l Acres 160.7 159.8 161.2 158.9 155.9 159.7 155.9 160.0 159.6

Up la nd Acres 113.1 118.7 86.6 131.9 133.1 70.4 106.3 113.8 132.4

O ther Acres 47.6 41.1 74.6 27.0 22.8 89.3 49.6 46.2 27.2

Fa rm la nd 201 3 Asm t $63,700 $72,500 $28,700 $80,300 $61,200 $92,600 $71,200 $66,800 $70,000

148.9 150.2 158.4 79.8

118.6 111.4 99.0 58.8

30.3 38.8 59.4 21.0

$50,000 $84,200 $53,500 $25,900

Tenders C lose July 31,2013,view details atw w w .tim ham m ond.ca. To receive Tender Packages and additionalinform ation, contactDave M olberg at306-948-4478 or dave@ tim ham m ond.ca

FARM FOR SALE in Langruth, MB. 645 acres fenced, ideal starter farm. 1120 sq. ft. newer 3 bdrm bungalow w/attached deck and garage. Workshop, granaries, insulated calving barn, pole shed w/one bay, RM 49: 960 acres of Native pasture, all ad- insulated for calving pens w/maternity joining. John or Joel Cave, Edge Realty pen. Good 75 - 80 cow/calf operation. Ltd., 306-773-7379, Swift Current, SK. Ample water supply, 2 wells with good www.farmsask.com dugouts. Close to schools and shopping centers. Call 204-445-2317. ONE QUARTER FARMLAND for sale, 150 acres cultivated, near Quill Lake, SK. Call GOOD CATTLE FARM on the shores of Lake Manitoba. 512 acres deeded and 1,500 Louise at 306-663-5187 evenings. acres of Crown lease. The land is all in a RM #34: 40.5 quarters level to gently roll- block and contained on a peninsula. The ing grain producing land with hopper bins, owners produce enough feed on the farm numerous oil surface leases not included, for 150 beef cows. Mobile home, machine but are negotiable. Additional 25 quarters shed built 2009, insulated barn, corrals. grainland for sale in the same area for a Tel: Gordon Gentles 204-761-0511 or Jim total of 65.5 quarter sections. Call Harry McLachlan 204-724-7753, HomeLife Home Sheppard, Sutton Group - Results Realty, Professional Realty Inc., Brandon MB. Regina, SK. 306-530-8035. www.homelifepro.com FOR SALE BY TENDER: RM of Gravelbourg. 160 total cult. acres all grainland. NW-30-10-06-W3. Tender closing date: October 15, 2013. Please email tender to: corkery.suzanne@hotmail.ca For more information contact 306-543-1992. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Only successful bidders will be contacted. Gravelbourg, SK.

DOUG JENSEN - Melville/Raymore

(306) 621-9955

STAN HALL - Davidson/Strasbourg/Humboldt

(306) 725-7826

MORWENNA SUTTER - Melfort/Wadena

(306) 327-7129

MURRAY MURDOCH - Outlook/Rosetown

(306) 858-8000

DARRELL HERAUF - Dairy/Poultry

(306) 527-9636

DALE MURDOCH - Swift Current/Kindersley

(306) 774-6100

DARREN SANDER - Battlefords/NW Sask.

(306) 441-6777

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W ITH O V ER 30 YEARS IN THE BUS IN ES S “Now representing purchasers from across Canada,and around the w orld!”

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EXCELLENT LIVESTOCK FARM extending to 1,578 deeded acres with 4,425 acres of Crown land. All the land is fenced and the farm has vg buildings and metal corral system. The farm can carry up to 400- 450 cow/calf pairs. There is a small bungalow home. Gordon Gentles 204-761-0511 or Jim McLachlan 204-724-7753. HomeLife Home Professional Realty Inc., Brandon, MB. www.homelifepro.com

RM #216, 10 quarter sections grainland c/w beautiful treed well-kept yard site, land in exc. cond, is being farmed by sellers. Harry Sheppard, Sutton Group - Re- NEED SOMEONE TO help you keep the sults Realty, Regina, SK. 306-530-8035. cows, dairy or other? Will take cattle on or will rent out nice luscious paswww.EdBobiashTeam.com Lake Karnit- shares, ski Edgewater 155 acres hay and natural tures and hayland. 780-696-3630. treed land at edge of lake. MLS® 466093. FOR RENT RM #193, one quarter, half alRM of Insinger 275, located west of York- falfa and half pasture, NW7-21-2-W3. For ton. As per seller’s instruction, all offers more info. 306-231-5611, Eyebrow, SK. are to be presented on August 16, 2013 at 2 PM. Highest or any offer not necessarily WANTED TO RENT/BUY fenced pasture/ accepted. Call Steven Bobiash, Re/Max hayland for 10 horses with water immediSaskatoon, SK. 306-222-7770 for offer in- ately anywhere within 30- 40 minutes of Saskatoon, SK., call 306-461-4430. structions before August 16, 2013. SMILEY, SK FARMLAND: 152 acres, organic, lots of water, on pavement, oil leases, house and buildings, $225,000. Call 403-986-3280.

620 2 ACRES O F RAN CH LAN D • N EAR KEN ASTO N •

This unique parcelofland includes a feedlot,bins,shop and barn. The ow ner is w illing to convert the land back to grain land ifrequired. The ow ner is w illing to rent back at 5% RO I ifrequired.

MULCHING - TREES, BRUSH, Stumps. Call today 306-933-2950. Visit us at: www.maverickconstruction.ca FOR RENT RM #256, 1/2 section, SE and SW-5-25-12-W3, pasture/hay, between Beechy and Dinsmore, 306-231-5611. FOR RENT RM #74, 1/2 section pasture/hay, SW and SE-15-7-6, new fence, two dug outs, low price. Between Woodrow and Glentworth, SK. 306-231-5611.

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RM 18: 10,720 acre grain farm, full set of buildings. Call 306-773-7379, John Cave, Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Current, SK. www.farmsask.com

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COM PL ETE TURN K EY RAN CH S OUTHERN S AS K ATCHEW AN Yea r ro u n d s elf- s u fficien tpro perty w ith 8 00 + co w ca lfca pa city, 49 72 + /- d eed ed a cres a n d 3200 + /- a cres lea s ed , m a chin ery a n d lives to ck ca n b e pu rcha s ed .

Plea s e ca ll M a rcel a t403-350-6 8 6 8 M a rcel L eBla n c Rea l Es ta te In c. RM #157: 3- quarter sections grainland along HWY #10, near Edgeley, SK. Harry Sheppard, Sutton Group - Results Realty, P R I VAT E S A L E O F A C R E AG E . 12.5 acres, 30 min. North of Regina, SK. 1440 Regina, SK. 306-530-8035. sq. ft. home, 40x60 quonset, set up for livestock, many upgrades to house and new shingles to quonset. Taxes $750/year. Please call 306-530-7915 for more info. FEEDLOT: 3000 HEAD capacity, includes 1040 sq. ft. house, 60,000 bushel grain SASKATOON AREA ACREAGE’s’ 8 miles storage, equipment, 6 deeded quarters. 2 west, NE-23-37-7-W3rd. Leave message at miles North of Ste. Rose du Lac, MB. 306-384-4512. RANCH: 8064 acres of lease land, 1600 Angus cows. Crane River, MB. Call Dale 40 CLEAR ACRES, 5 minutes north of City of Saskatoon, SK. One mile off 4 lane 204-638-5581, Doug 204-447-2382. highway, power, water well, 1/2 mile air SASK GRAIN FARM North of Togo, SK. strip, 60x105’ equipment shed, 2 dugouts, on SK/MB border. 290 acres on SK. side, many extras. Call for price 306-244-7003. 483 acres on MB. side. Ph. Cottenie & 42 ACRES with water rights. 15 min. from Gardner Inc., 306-542-2565, Kamsack, SK. Medicine Hat, AB. 1999, 5 bdrm, 2 bath or email tedgardner@sasktel.net home, mature yard, 3 shops. 1 mile from MANITBOA’S INTERLAKE: 640 deeded Seven Persons, on pavement, $530,000. acres, 310 acres cult., cattle facilities, out- 403-832-2112, ddvine@xplornet.com buildings and 3 bedroom bungalow. Call RM 166: APPROX. 25 acres w/house, barn, 204-659-5842, St. Martin, MB. corrals, quonset. Call 306-773-7379, John Edge Realty Ltd., Swift Current, SK. HOBBY FARM LARGE enough for two fami- Cave, lies! 78 acres c/w 2 homes, 40x60’ shop, www.farmsask.com Prairie Lane (Saskatoon Business) plus 62 10.1 ACRES ONLY 8 miles west of Regina, acres of cultivated land. 9725 Hwy. 9, St. very well kept house, buildings and yard Andrews. Judy Moyer, Century 21 Jeffer- site. Harry Sheppard, Sutton Group - Reson & Assoc., 204-784-6604, Selkirk, MB. sults Realty, Regina, SK. 306-530-8035.

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RM #34, 25 quarter sections, very well cared for grainland, near Lampman, SK. oil surface leases not incl. but are negotiable. 40.5 other quarter sections also for sale in the same area w/numerous surface leases for total of 65.5 quarters of grainland. Call Harry Sheppard, Sutton Group - Results Realty, Regina, SK. 306-530-8035.

A solid understanding of Saskatchewan agricultural business built from years of farming and Ag. Industry involvement. Strong work ethic and exceptional customer service. Database of qualified buyers-both investors and local buyers.

Ted Cawkwell Agriculture Specialist BLUE CHIP REALTY

1-306-327-5148 www.tedcawkwell.com


70 CLASSIFIED ADS

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

80 ACRES, 3 miles NW of Saskatoon, SK. in Corman Park, City of Saskatoon Planning Area, on city water. 2250 sq. ft., 2 storey split built in 1980, sheds and shop OUTLAW CLASSIC 21’x8’ River Boat c/w with mechanics pit. All in exc. cond., custom built 454 V8 eng. (approx 500 HP), $790,000. 306-933-1121 or 306-222-3883 Berkley JB12 pump, TT approx. 127 hrs. on T I M H A M M O N D R E A LT Y Character eng. and pump. Much more, must see! home only 30 minutes west of Saskatoon. $27,500. 780-914-2069, Spruce Grove, AB. Approx 10 acres with option of more land. Immaculate yardsite with workshops and horse barn with adjoining paddock. Complete with 2.5 storey home. Shows 10/10, COUGAR 5TH WHEEL, Model 292RKS, like features 3 bdrms, 2 bathrooms, developed new inside and out, always stored inside, 2 basement. MLS 460163. $390,000. Tim slides w/awnings, $24,900. Pro Ag Sales, Hammond, 306-948-9168, Biggar, SK. 306-441-2030. North Battleford, SK. http://beckettacreage.timhammond.ca 1997 AVION FLEETWOOD, 37’ 5th wheel, 20 ACRE YARD next to 40 hunting Crown- 2 slides, washer/dryer hookup, central land quarters. House, barn with hayloft. vac, fridge, freezer, microwave, forced air AC, $17,500 OBO. 306-225-4711, Good water. 204-858-2555, Hartney, MB. 306-270-5099, Osler, SK. WANTED: ACREAGE to buy, 3 acres or 2007 KEYSTONE RAPTOR 3712 Toy Hauler, less. Must be very close to city of Moose 3 slides, 12’ garage, some upgrades. Coach Jaw, SK. Near major grid for winter access. vg condition. 2004 Dodge 1 ton, 240,000 Livable house on property preferred. Call kms w/Diablo Predator programmer, AFE 306-692-2764, evenings. air cleaner and intake Banks exhaust. Steering done. Brakes done in both units. 9 ACRES, 12 miles North of Melfort, SK on Both units have inside storage. $47,500. Hwy #6. 1615 sq. ft. bungalow, 3 bdrms., 780-926-1191, Kenaston, SK. 2 baths, landscaped yard, natural gas, city TRUCK CAMPERS: 2000 Citation Supreme, water. Asking $235,000. Ph 306-887-2159 slide-out, AC, clean bed, bathroom, elec. jacks, exc. cond.; 1988 Cascade 8-1/2’, hyd. jacks, bathroom, new fridge, exc. Battleford, SK. 306-441-7680, 306-937-7719.

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

39 ACRES, 1 mile West of Maple Creek, SK on Hwy. #271. Ranch style home, 10 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. REALTY EXECUTIVES BATTLEFORDSMike Janostin. RM of Redberry, 4 bdrm., 2 car garage, 2 quonsets on 14.5 acres, featuring swimming pool and sauna. MLS #436102. View www.mikejanostin.com Email mikejanostin@realtyexecutives.com or call 306-481-5574.

FOUR WINDS HURRICANE Class A, 2006, 30’, Ford Classic, 5 KW gen., front queen bed, 26,745 kms, white, exc. cond., $32,500. 306-384-9814, Saskatoon, SK.

MIDALE, SK. ACREAGE: QUICK POSSESSION 30-60 days, Super location! MLS #461192. 13 acres with a 1500 sq. ft. bungalow c/w attached double garage, patio area and nice yard. Heated quonset built in 2002 c/w 2 overhead doors, bathroom and mezzanine. Priced to sell. Offered at $525,000. Contact your local realtor or Mack MacDonald at 306-539-6806 or email saskcommercial@gmail.com or website www.saskrealproperty.com

RM OF SLIDING HILLS, SW-08-29-01-W2, approx. 10 acres, 4 bdrm bi-level, built 1982. 1632 sq. ft. on 2 levels. Spacious 2tiered deck. Living room adorned w/detailed pillars that looks into modernized kitchen/dining area. Kitchen/dining equipped with duraceramic floors, stunning oak cupboards and island. Main floor laundry. Walkout basement includes family room, 2 bdrms, 3 piece bathroom, large mechanical/storage area. Beautifully manicured yard. $375,000. MLSÂŽ 465391. Call Cottenie & Gardner Inc. 306-542-2565, Kamsack, SK.

IF YOU SPRAYED LIBERTY and received crop damage call Back-Track Investigations for assistance 1-866-882-4779. 2009 HONDA 420, 4x4, AutoShift, good condition, $5800 OBO. 306-421-6306, 306-457-2911, Benson, SK. 2011 ARGO 750, 8-wheel w/tracks, roll bar, winch, bilge pump, extra seat, $22,000. 306-982-4888, Prince Albert, SK.

2008 NEWMAR DUTCH-STAR 40’, four slides, 46,000 kms, 425 HP Cummins, tile floor, Moto-sat, many options. Three Hills, AB. 403-443-0599. 2006 ITASCA MERIDIAN 36’, 2 slides, washer/dryer combo, oak package, diesel Genset, Cat 350 HP, 70,000 kms, nonsmokers, excellent, condition, $95,000 OBO. 306-457-7771, Stoughton, SK. 1997 REXAIR 32’ Class A motorhome w/slide, 58,000 kms, $15,000. Take camper van on trade. 306-774-4135, Morse, SK. 1976 GMC BIRCHWOOD 23’, new rubber, low mileage, generator. Near Beiseker, AB. 250-428-4012. No Saturday calls please. 1992 FORD 29’, 350, sleeps 8, 70,000 kms, shedded, senior owned, $12,000. Call Irene 780-648-2228, Whitecourt, AB. TRIPLE E 2004 COMMANDER, 36’, 2 slides, 42,720 kms, Ford V10 chassis, always shedded, Onan generator, Blueox towbar, smoke free, $55,000 OBO. Phone 306-334-2493, 306-332-7269, Balcarres, SK, email e.d.baber@sasktel.net 2004 MONACO DIPLOMAT 40PDQ, 8.3 Cummins, 330 HP, 12,000 miles, 4 slides, auto, 7.5 KW Onan gen.- 147 hrs, satellite system, solar panel, full air brakes, washer/dryer, loaded. Too many options to list! $100,000. For more photos please see www.can-amtruck.com Can-Am Truck Export Ltd 1-800-938-3323. DL #910420. 2005 MONACO CAYMAN 34PDD, 35’, 5.9 Cummins, 300 HP, 21,500 miles, auto, satellite, air over hyd. brakes, 5.5 KW Onan dsl. gen.- 148 hrs, exc. cond., 2 slides, $85,000. More photos on our website www.can-amtruck.com Can-Am Truck Export Ltd 1-800-938-3323. DL #910420.

GrainEx International Ltd. WANTED

LENTILS, CANARY AND CHICK PEAS. Call GrainEx International Ltd. for current pricing at 306-885-2288, Sedley SK. Visit us on our website at: www.grainex.net

BUYING CANARY SEED, farm pickup. Call 1-877-752-4115, Naber Specialty Grains Ltd. Email: nsgl@sasktel.net

MUSTARD SEED AVAILABLE. Custom cleaning and bagging all types of mustard for seed. Color sorting available. Also looking for low grade mustard. Call Ackerman Ag - 306-638-2282, Chamberlain, SK.

Schluter & Maack NEW CROP MUSTARD CONTRACTS

NEW UNUSED 2012 TIMER RIDGE Model 250RLS RV trailer 25’, 2 axle, built for all year round living, 4 season pkg. For info and website ph 306-834-5590, Major, SK.

2005 TITANIUM 5TH wheel trailer, nonsmokers and no pets, 3 slides, exc. cond., price negotiable. Phone 306-626-3525, 306-741-0512, Pennant, SK. THINKING ABOUT GOING SOUTH? We have a 30’ Kustom Koach 5th wheel, loaded, winterized, oak int., like new. For viewing call 306-374-0927, Saskatoon, SK.

WANTED: FEED GRAIN, barley, wheat, peas, green or damaged canola. Phone Gary 306-823-4493, Neilburg, SK.

Yellow & Brown

Flexible Pricing with Guaranteed Delivery Dates Act of God Clause New Crop Lentil and Pea Contracts available as well. Old Crop movement available also. Malt Barley/Feed Grains/Pulses best price/best delivery/best payment

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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.

WE BUY DAMAGED GRAIN

1-306-781-4987

BESCO GRAIN LTD. Buyer of all varieties of mustard. Call for competitive pricing. Call 204-736-3570, Brunkild, MB.

Licen s ed & bon d ed 1- 800- 2 58- 7434 ro ger@ seed - ex.co m

Green and/or heated Canola/Flax, Wheat, Barley, Oats, Peas, etc.

WANTED: ALFALFA/GRASS hay, large round bales. We are interested in all qualities of hay delivered to Bethune, SK. Call 306-638-3051. SOLID CORE ROUND alfalfa, alfalfa grass, greenfeed, grass, and straw. Delivered. Call 306-237-4582, Perdue, SK. WANTED TO BUY: straight alfalfa bales, rounds or squares. Picked up or delivered to Ellinwood, Kansas. 620-786-0589. WANTED: LARGE ROUND bales, prefer 1600 lbs plus. Would also consider standing hay. Ryan 306-646-7743, Fairlight, SK. C U S TO M B A L E H AU L I N G . Phone 306-567-7199, Kenaston, SK. CUSTOM BALE HAULING with 2 trucks and t r a i l e r s , 3 4 b a l e s p e r t r a i l e r. C a l l 306-567-7100, Imperial, SK. RM BENSON #35: 80 acres hayland, brome/alfalfa mix for baling. For info. call 306-931-6660, Saskatoon, SK. 1969 1200 sq. ft. FARMHOUSE, to be moved, 170 miles east of Saskatoon, SK. Clarence 306-382-8666 for more details. HAY TO CUT for sale, Alfalfa and grass mixture. Contact 306-488-2103, Holdfast, SK.

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BOW VALLEY TRADING LTD.

1-877-641-2798

TOP QUALITY ALFALFA, variety of grasses and custom blends, farmer to farmer. Gary BUYING OATS ALL GRADES, farm pick- Waterhouse 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK. up. Call 1-877-752-4115, Naber Specialty ALFALFAS/ CLOVERS/ GRASSES, hay Grains Ltd. Email: nsgl@sasktel.net blends and pasture blends. Custom blends no charge. Free delivery. Dyck Forages & Grasses Ltd., Elie, MB, 1-888-204-1000. Visit us at www.dyckseeds.com CERT. GLENN, UNITY, Harvest, Utmost, Carberry, Pasteur seed wheat; Fdn. Vesper ALFALFA, SWEET CLOVER, Red Clover, Alwheat. We can deliver. Boissevain Select sike Clover, Organic alfalfa and clovers, plowdown legumes, vetches, grasses, pasSeeds, 1-866-534-6846. ture blends. Free delivery! 306-863-2900, CERT. GLENN, Carberry, Vesper VB, CDC Birch Rose Acres Ltd., Star City, SK. Utmost VB, Infinity, Red Spring wheats, Snowstar White wheat. Good germ, low ORGANIC SWEET CLOVER, Red Clover, Aldisease. Sorgard Seeds, Churchbridge, SK., falfa, Cicer Milk Vetch, Timothy. Free delivery. 306-863-2900, Birch Rose Acres, 306-399-0040, gsorgard@gmail.com Star City, SK. CDC BUTEO RED WINTER, fdn. reg. cert., cleaned, available now! Moats, reg. Big Dog Seeds Inc. 306-483-2963, Oxbow, SK. HAY BLENDS AND PASTURE BLENDS, no charge custom blends. Dyck Forages & Grasses Ltd., Elie, MB. Free delivery. 1-888-204-1000, www.dyckseeds.com

BUYING YELLOW AND GREEN PEAS, all grades, farm pickup. Naber Specialty Grains Ltd., 1-877-752-4115, Melfort, SK. email: nsgl@sasktel.net

BUYING RYE M USGRAVE ENTERPRISES Ph : 204.8 3 5.2527 Fa x: 204.8 3 5.2712

XPELLER PRESSING. Offgrade oilseeds needed! Lethbridge crusher looking for offgrade canola, flax, camelina and canola or flax screenings. Prompt payment. Phone: Darcy at: 403-894-4394, Lethbridge, AB. or email: xpellerpressing@gmail.com

LACKAWANNA PRODUCTS CORP. Buyers and sellers of all types of feed grain and grain by-products. Call 306-862-2723, Nipawin, SK. WANTED: FEED/ OFF-GRADE Pulses and tough, heated green oilseeds and also cereals. Prairie Wide Grain, Saskatoon, SK., 306-230-8101, 306-716-2297.

TOP PRICES PAID FOR FEED BARLEY, WHEAT, OATS, RYE, TRITICALE, PEAS, LENTILS, HEATED OIL SEEDS Priced at your b in.

TOP QUALITY CERT. alfalfa and grass seed. Call Gary or Janice Waterhouse 306-874-5684, Naicam, SK.

PEARMAN GRAIN LTD.

CERT. ALFALFA AND GRASSES, free delivery. Dyck Forages & Grasses Ltd., Elie, MB, 1-888-204-1000. www.dyckseeds.com

Saskatoon

TA P / C R E E P I N G A L FA L FA , C L OVE R S, grasses, pasture mixes. Free blending and WANTED HEATED CANOLA. No broker delivery! Organic also. 306-863-2900, involved. Sell direct to crushing plant. Cash on delivery or pickup. Unity, SK. Call: HARLEY DAVIDSON LOVERS: 2007 Har- Birch Rose Acres Ltd., Star City, SK 306-228-7306 or 306-228-1502. ley Davidson Classic Touring bike, upgraded extras, below 1000 kms., like new, L O O K I N G F O R A L L t y p e s o f fe e d $21,500 OBO, many accessories available grains, paying top dollar. Booking new 403-239-4812, Calgary, AB. ANNUAL FORAGE GRASSES produce huge crop. Prompt movement. 1-855-752-0116. tonnage! Tall fescue, annual Ryegrass, cactuscommodity.com Italian Ryegrass, perennial Ryegrass. Free delivery! 306-863-2900, Birch Rose Acres PARTING OUT Polaris snowmobiles, 1985 Ltd., Star City, SK. to 2005. Edfield Motors Ltd., phone: 306-272-3832, Foam Lake, SK. NUVISION COMMODITIES is currently purchasing feed barley, wheat, peas and milling oats. 204-758-3401, St. Jean, MB. SINGLE AND DOUBLE cut Red Clover, Sweet Clover, Alsike, Alfalfa, Organic, 20 different grasses, pasture blends! Free blending and delivery! 306-863-2900, Com petitive Ra tes Birch Rose Acres Ltd., Star City, SK. P ro m pt P a ym en t SEASONAL HOUSE FOR rent. Fully furnished, 3 bedroom, 3 bath. Avail Sept 1. to May/June, $1300 utilities incl. Peachland, BC., 403-464-9839 or 778-479-4985. SWEET CLOVER, Red Clover, HOME ON THE RANGE, living accommoda- ALFALFA, CONTRACTING Brome, Meadow Brome, Crested tions for seniors. 780-696-3630. We can Smooth Linden, AB Wheat, Timothy, Milk Vetch, Sainfoin, and help. 15 other grasses. Free delivery and blendP AUL M O W ER D AV E K O EH N ing! 306-863-2900, Birch Rose Acres Ltd., 4 03 - 3 04 - 1 4 9 6 4 03 - 54 6 - 006 0 Star City, SK.

FARM CHEMICAL/ SEED COMPLAINTS We also specialize in: Crop insurance appeals; Chemical drift; Residual herbicide; Custom operator issues; Equipment malfunction. Qualified Agrologist on staff. Call Back-Track Investigations for assistance PRESTON PLANER MOULDER, 6�x4� caregarding compensation, 1-866-882-4779. pacity, fully jointed, 460 volt, 3 phase, hopper feed, above average condition, 30 HP, 3 phase Blower, 10� inlet/outlet. 403-627-2485, Pincher Creek, AB. 2011 19’ TRIUMPH fishing boat, 150 Merc Optimax, fish finder, Livewell, tandem WOOD-MIZER PORTABLE SAWMILLS, BUYING BROWN FLAX farm pickup. Call trailer, $28,500 + tax. Call Mark, Saska- eight models, options and accessories. 1-877-752-4115, Naber Specialty Grains 1-877-866-0667. www.woodmizer.ca Ltd. Email: nsgl@sasktel.net toon, SK., 306-934-2121, 306-370-1337.

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SAWMILLS from only $4897 - Make Money and Save Money with your own bandmill. Cut lumber any dimension. In stock, ready to ship. Free Info and DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/168 or call 1-800-566-6899 ext. 168.

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PRICE REDUCED: Bladworth, SK, 17 acres, 1900 sq. ft. 1-1/2 storey house, addition 1982, 26x30’ garage, 52x80’ Behlen quonset, 22x60’ wooden quonset, 12x34’ wooden bin, 14x28’ storage building. 15 acres fenced pasture, corrals w/open faced shelters, water bowl. 306-561-7733.

NOW B UYIN G O ATS!

AL L GRAD ES

306-374-1968

HEATED CANOLA WANTED • GREEN • HEATED • SPRING THRASHED

LIGHT/TOUGH FEEDGRAINS • OATS • BARLEY

SweetGrass L IN D EN ,AL BER TA

GREEN CANOLA

CAN AD A BINS TO CLEAN out before harvest? Newco Grain Ltd., is brokering barley, oats and wheat. Now is a good time to sell! Please call for further info. 1-800-661-2312. LETHBRIDGE FEEDLOT COMPANY looking f o r f e e d b a r l e y. C a l l R o x a n n e a t 1-800-710-8803.

BIRD HUNTING, Zone #51 to #53, incl. decoys, blinds, trailer, etc. Allan Folden 306-747-3182, Shellbrook, SK.

FIBERGLASS SEPTIC TANKS- Various sizes available, starting from 250 gal. up to 34,000 gal. Visit Flaman store today or call 1-888-435-2626, or www.flaman.com

M AGNUM TANKS

• WHEAT • PEAS

DAMAGED FLAX/PEAS • HEATED

ATTENTION TRAPPERS. Personal trapping instruction avail. For coyote and fox, w/snares or traps, 55 years experience, June 15th to Sept 30th. Call for details. Gilliland Lures. 204-634-2425, Pierson, MB

• DISEASED

• FROZEN • HAILED “ON FARM PICKUPâ€?

WESTCAN FEED & GRAIN

1-877-250-5252

• U P TO 1 000 GAL L O N • ISO 9001 :2008 Appro ved • SINGL E W AL L SQ U AR E TANK • TR ANSP O R T CANAD A AP P R O V ED 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

POLY TANKS: 15 to 10,000 gallons; Bladder tanks from 220 to 88,000 gal; Water and liquid fertilizer; Fuel tanks, single and double wall; Truck and storage, gas or dsl. Wilke Sales, 306-586-5711, Regina, SK.


THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

CLASSIFIED ADS 71

Progressive Yard Works Ltd. 1-306-244-6911

3423 Millar Ave., Saskatoon, SK

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.

MANUFACTURER OF EXCEPTIONAL QUALITY FIBERGLASS TANKS • Above ground and below ground • Sectional in-door water tanks • Sewage holding and two-compartment

COMBINE DUAL KITS IN STOCK, JD 94009600/10/CTS/CTSII kit w/o tires starts from $9,850; JD STS dual kit w/ new 20.8x38 tires, $15,046; CIH 1680-2588 kit w/ new 20.838 tires, $13,900. Trade in your singles for duals. Financing available. 1-800-667-4515. www.combineworld.com IMPLEMENT TIRES. Firestone 670-15 4P TLS, RIB IMP, $115. OK Tire, Idylwyld Dr N, Saskatoon, SK. Phone 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com

• 150 gallons to 10,000 gallons • Ask us about our easy burial “drop and go” 1000 gallon tanks Visit our website at:

www.progressiveyardworks.com

TARPCO, SHUR-LOK, MICHEL’S sales, service, installations, repairs. Canadian company. We carry aeration socks. We now carry electric chute openers for grain trailer hoppers. 1-866-663-0000. TA R P S / C O V E R S / A C C E S S O R I E S ! Manufacture and repair of all tarps and covers. Ph. Canadian Tarpaulin, Saskatoon, S K . S e e : w w w. c a n t a r p . c o m o r c a l l : 1-888-226-8277 or 306-933-2343. SHUR-LOK TRUCK TARPS and replacement tarps for all makes of trucks. Alan, 306-723-4967, 306-726-7808, Cupar, SK.

TWO 18.4x26 GOODYEAR Torque II good used tractor tires mounted on rims, $260 each. 403-378-4979, Duchess, AB.

REDUCED TO CLEAR new and used specialized tires 37.5/38-39, 30 ply; 24.5-32; 29.5-29; 33.5-33; 16R-21; 33.25-35. Many other odd ball sizes avail. 204-667-2867, fax: 204-667-2932, Winnipeg, MB.

NEW MODERN LATHE, 22”x80” swing w/DRO and 4” spindle bore, 3 phase, FULL TIME LIVE-IN care giver required by 220V. 3 jaw, 4 jaw, tool attachments and elderly lady on farm close to Saskatoon, steady rest, follower rest and tool post in- SK. $10.25/hr. 306-374-2385. cluded. $29,000 OBO; Also modern drill press and bandsaw, offers. Email Mark at: rmarksmith@sasktel.net or call 306-541-4422, Carnduff, SK.

M id w es t US A ~ O ct2013 Au s tra lia /N ew Zea la n d ~ Jan 2014 K en ya /Ta n za n ia ~ Jan 2014 In d ia ~ Feb 2014 S o u th Am erica ~ Feb 2014 V ietn a m /Ca m b o d ia /Tha ila n d NEW 20.8-38 12 PLY $866; 16.9-30 12 ply, $595; 18.4-38 12 ply, $898; 24.5- 32 14 ply, $1,749; 14.9-24 12 ply, $486; 16.9-28 12 ply, $558; 18.4-26 10 ply, $890. Factory direct. More sizes available, new and used. 1-800-667-4515, www.combineworld.com

~ M ar 2014

Chin a ~ M arch 2014 Irela n d & S co tla n d ~ June 2014 Uk ra in e Agricu ltu re To u r ~ June 2014

Portion oftours m a y b e Ta x Ded uc tib le. FIRESTONE RADIAL FARM R-1 tires, Se le ct Holida ys 520/85R38 155A8, $1550. Phone OK Tire, 1- 800- 661- 432 6 Idylwyld Dr N, Saskatoon, SK. 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com w w w .selectho lid a ys.co m FIRESTONE PERFORMER 85 radial lugged tractor tires, 2- 18.4x38 and 2- 13.6x28. 780-875-7051, Lloydminster, AB. AG-VENTURE TOURS to South America, Kenya, Romania/Hungry, partially tax deNEW 23.1x26, diamond tread, $1200/pair. d u c t i b l e . r w t h o m a s @ s t a r t . c a P h : 780-962-5272, Acheson, AB. 519-633-2390. www.rwthomastours.com FARM TIRES. BKT bias rear farm R-1, 95-24 8P TT, $196. OK Tire Idylwyld Dr N, Saskatoon, SK. Phone 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com USED 30.5L-32 and 20.8-38 combine or tractor tires. 306-771-2527, Edenwold, SK. D6 DIESEL CAT, 318 engine, 12” Fairbanks SET OF 20.8x38 Firestone radials w/10 Morse volume pump, 5500 GPM, floating hole JD rims, to fit JD 4710 sprayer, platform, exc. cond., $4,000; 140’ 14” steel pipe, 600’ 10” alum., $10,000 for pump $9000 OBO. 780-877-2513, Camrose, AB. and pipe. 306-244-8503, Saskatoon, SK. USED 710X38 TIRES and tubes, good for duals. Ask for Ray, 306-742-4576, six FLYGT 3152 HT SUBMERSIBLE PUMP, miles north of Wroxton, SK. 1 5 H P, 4 3 a m p , 2 0 8 vo l t , $ 1 5 , 0 0 0 . SEEDMASTER PACKER TIRES. Phone 587-794-4666, Ext. 138, Hanna, AB. 306-771-2527, Edenwold, SK. FIRESTONE BIAS REAR farm R-1 tires, 208-38 8P TLS, $1,250. OK Tire, Idylwyld Dr N, Saskatoon, SK. Phone 306-933-1115, www.oktire.com

103 -3240 Id ylw yld Dr. N . FORM ERLY

AUSTRALIAN GRAIN HARVEST: Seasonal positions available for experienced operators, late model JD combines. Age between 18-30 with harvesting experience preferred. Starting mid October, finishing late January. Benefits offered. Drivers licience required. For more information contact Chris 61-427-523-331 or email ce.bartlett09@gmail.com HELP WANTED ON GRAIN FARM. Ability to operate and maintain large farm equipment. Wages negotiable. Starting August 1 through harvest. Ph. 306-567-8558, fax resume to 306-567-4374 or email: mcnabb@yourlink.ca Davidson, SK.

FULL-TIME YEAR-ROUND help wanted on a large Southern Alberta Cattle Ranch near Milk River, AB. Must be experienced at riding horses, good with cattle and be able to work with others. Requires own horse tack. Farrier training, welding or mechanical ability is an asset, but not required. Job entails feeding cattle in winter, running haying equipment in summer and riding horses to move cattle the rest of the year. Resume and references required. Contact milkrivercattle@rossranch.ca or call 403-344-2205 or 403-344-4333.

2- FULL TIME PERMANENT positions at farm located near Spruce Grove, AB. One requires experience with livestock and machinery; two requires experience with potato production. Benefits package and competitive wages! Send resume or enquire to email: lewis@xplornet.com FARM LABOURER NEEDED: Grain farm, late model equipment, seasonal and/or full-time available. Competitive wages. Class 1A license an asset but not required. In the Avonlea, SK. area. Call Jerry at 306-868-4633 or 306-868-7733. EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Full-time and seasonal people to assist in operating a large modern grain farm. Preference given to experience. Mechanical knowledge and Class 1 driver’s license an asset. Wages based on experience, range $12-20/hr. but not limited to. Housing avail. Apply to: Galvin Farms Ltd., 204-748-8332, john@galvinfarms.com Virden, MB. CROP AND FIELD OPERATOR wanted. Family owned farm NE of Edmonton is currently seeking applicants for a full-time Crop and Field Operator. Responsible for daily farm operations including but not limited to driving farm equipment, hauling grain to terminal, maintenance support of farm equipment, maintaining farm appearance, and assisting the Operations Supervisor in achieving farm goals. Must have a high school diploma and Class 1 driver’s license. Compensation: $50,000 - $65,000 depending on experience with competitive benefits package. Job post closes July 31 for flexible start date. Email resume to: office@kalcofarms.com Gibbons, AB. GRAIN FARM HELP wanted: up to $30/hr. based on experience. Class 1A preferred. Full-time position for motivated individual, accom. available 306-776-2496 Wilcox, SK FULL-TIME POSITION. Housing avail. N/S. grain/cow operation. Assets Class 1 and cattle exp, Carbon, AB wfarms@gmail.com

FARM HAND: Capable of caring for and feeding horses and small buffalo herd on a small farm 3 miles from Grande Prairie, AB. Self-starter able to work unsupervised. Repair and maintenance of equipment and grounds keeping required. Good opportunity for a couple. Permanent position. Living quarters on farm if required. Wages commensurate with experience. Email resume to info@sidemanagement.ca or fax SEEKING SELF-MOTIVATED R A N C H 780-532-0402. MANAGER for purebred/commercial FULL-TIME RANCH HAND needed imBlack Angus cow/calf operation in South- mediately for a purebred/commercial cow ern AB. Needs experience in purebred cat- /calf and back-grounding operation near tle, irrigation, haying and mechanical Buffalo Pound Lake. Wages are negotiable ability. Wages are negotiable depending depending on experience. Duties include: on experience. Housing is available in a general ranch activities in a purebred/ family orientated area. Available to start as commercial cow/calf operation, operating soon as possible. Call 403-362-0672, feeding equipment, and performing herd Duchess, AB., email 66@66ranchltd.com health practices. The successful candidate must be self-motivated and will report to ranch manager. Requirements: Driver’s license, experience w/livestock, roping and riding skills, honesty, integrity, a good work ethic, and references. Opportunity exists for matching pension and health plan. For more info call 306-638-3051 or fax resume to 306-638-2267, Bethune, SK. or email: towaldorfranch@sasktel.net POSITION AVAILABLE on cow/calf operation. Housing supplied. References and driver’s abstract required. Phone 403-577-0011, u2dryad4@hotmail.com Consort, AB.

9 3 3 -1115 TIRE & W HEEL

N EW STATE OF THE ART FACILITY

• PAS S EN GER, L IGHT TRUCK , S EM I, AGRICUL TURE, CON S TRUCTION • M ECHAN ICAL & AL IGN M EN T FOR CAR, BUS RV , TRUCK & TRAIL ER • TIRES /W HEEL S & CUS TOM DUAL & TRIPL E K ITS • TIRE V UL CAN IZIN G • 24 HOUR M OBIL E TRUCK S FOR ON S ITE W ORK

FULL-TIME POSITION AVAILABLE on large mixed farm. Duties include feeding and handling of livestock, fencing, field work, maintenance and other farming acEXPERIENCED PRESCHOOL BILINGUAL tivities. Vehicle for farm use and accomHelper required full-time, seasonal, $11-14 modation provided. Call 780-745-2540 for per hour. Must have education and/or ex- more info., Paradise Valley, AB. perience working with children. Artistic background will be an asset. Must be COWBOY WANTED for large cow/calf fluent in Spanish and English. Current First operation in northern SK. Needs to be able Aid and CPR certification and a clear crimi- to ride and rope, treat cattle on pasture. nal background supported by a recent po- Phone Mike 306-469-7741, Big River, SK. lice check and clear vulnerable persons DAIRY FARM in Lacombe, AB. is looking screen are mandatory. Apply at Alerces for a full-time Herdsman with min. of 2 Spanish Immersion via email only at: ad- yrs. experience and an Assistant Herdsman ministration@alercesspanishimmer- with at least 1 yr. experience. Must be able sion.com 2617 Clarence Ave. South, Sas- to A.I. and I.V. cows. Phone 403-782-3325 katoon, SK. S7J 1M5. or fax resume to: 403-782-4471.

WANTED: CIH SERIES 9300 QUADTRAC HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATORS for tracks any condition! Phone John at late model Cat equipment: motor scrapers 204-825-2715, Pilot Mound, MB. (cushion ride), dozers, excavators, rock trucks, graders (trim operators). Camp job. Competitive wages plus room and board. Valid drivers license required. Send resume, work references to: Bryden Construction and Transport Co. Inc., Box 100, 50 TON SCOTCHMAN IRONWORKER, 5 Arborfield, SK S0E 0A0. Fax 306-769-8844, ye a r s o l d , $ 6 5 0 0 . 3 0 6 - 3 6 7 - 2 4 0 8 o r brydenconstruct@xplornet.ca 306-367-4306, Middle Lake, SK.

RURAL & CULTURAL TOURS

SEASONAL FARM WORKER on modern grain farm. Drivers license required. Farm knowledge and experience preferred. Salary negotiable. 306-648-7553, Kincaid, SK.

NEW SRS CRISAFULLI PTO water pumps. Available in 8”, 12”, 16” and 24”, PTO, elec. or engine driven available. These pumps can move up to 18,000 GPM. We have 16” PTO 15,000 GPM in stock, ready to deliver. For more information call your SK dealer T.J. Markusson Agro Ltd. Foam Lake, SK. 306-272-4545 or 306-272-7225 See www.crisafullipumps.com

TWO 14.9x24 10 ply tires in new cond., c/w rims, $395 each. 306-693-2142, WATER PUMPS 1” to 6” starting at $199. Ask about our selection of hose and fit306-631-7531 cell, Moose Jaw, SK. tings. See your nearest Flaman store or G O O D U S E D T R U C K T I R E S : 8.25/ call Saskatoon 1-888-435-2626. 900/1000/1100x20’s; 11R22.5/11R24.5; 9R17.5. Fresh load arriving June 1. Pricing from $90. Call Ladimer, 306-795-7779, Ituna, SK.; Chris 306-537-2027, Regina. PAIR OF GOODYE AR super traction, 800x65/32, less than 300 hrs., $3250/ea; STAUBER DRILLING INC. Water well 4 Goodyear 10.00/15”, 8 ply, farm utility, drilling and servicing, Geotechnical, Environmental, Geothermal. Professional ser$140/ea. 306-961-1170, Domremy, SK. vice since 1959. Call the experts at TRUCK TIRES. Highway Special, Firestone 1-800-919-9211 info@stauberdrilling.com 95L15 10P TLS, $225. OK Tire, Idylwyld Dr N, Saskatoon, SK. Phone 306-933-1115, KORNUM WELL DRILLING, farm, cottage www.oktire.com and acreage wells, test holes, well rehabiliIMPLEMENT TIRES. BKT 760-15 10P TT tation, witching. PVC/SS construction, exRIB IMP, $90. OK Tire, Idylwyld Dr. N, pert workmanship and fair pricing. 50% Saskatoon, SK. Phone 306-933-1115, government grant now available. Indian Head, SK., 306-541-7210 or 306-695-2061 www.oktire.com

GRAIN CART OPERATOR wanted for 2013 harvest, $30/hr. On farm accommodations included, 25 miles south of Regina, Gray, SK. lekivetzfarms@sasktel.net or 306-533-4891. SEASONAL HARVEST HELP. Farm experienced to maintain, operate and repair farm machinery. Valid driver’s license required, Class 3A an asset. Must be hardworking, honest and dedicated. Position available immediately, no accommodations but close to Calgary, AB and other small towns. Fax resume to: 403-279-6957, Ph 403-680-4318. harmeson@platinum.ca

FARM LABOURERS WANTED: Includes room and board, other jobs may include carpentry and construction. Will train. Edmonton, AB. 780-902-2108, 780-920-7360 LARGE PROGRESSIVE 5TH Generation grain farm located 15 min. from Regina, CAREER OPPORTUNITY Edgeview Farms SK. has opening for full-time year round Ltd. is looking for a career minded indi- and seasonal 1A Truck Drivers and Equipvidual for a full-time position. We are a ment Operators. Successful candidates will large family owned and operated grain join our team and be tasked with hauling farm located near Stettler, AB. We offer grain from bin to market during harvest great wages, positive work environment and throughout the year. Drivers will also and an excellent holiday schedule. We run be hauling fertilizer during seeding operalarge modern, well maintained equipment tions. All short hauls, home every night. and offer on-going education and skill Equipment operators will be operating training. Applicants must possess a posi- new top of the line farm equipment as well tive attitude, be able to work with others as other heavy duty equipment. Weekends in a fast paced environment. The success- off in non-peak season, flexible schedulful candidate must also possess or be able ing. Experience in Super B’s and Operating to obtain a class 1 license, and have a ba- Equipment an asset. Top wages paid, acsic understanding of farm equipment op- commodations avail. Call 306-535-7708. eration and maintenance. Please send res u m e s w i t h c u r r e n t r e fe r e n c e s t o : FARMHANDS WANTED for large SE Sask. t l s e r i c k s o n @ g m a i l . c o m o r f a x t o : cow/calf operation. Jobs may include but 403-883-2614. Other inquires please call not limited to equipment operator, me403-741-5133 or 403-742-7849. chanic, welder, repair and maintenance of equipment and facilities, handyman duties, WANTED: FARM MANAGER/ Supervisor and various animal husbandry duties. (NOC 8252) Position for 1 year, full-time Knowledge of equipment maintenance and on farm near Rosetown, SK. Duties include operation a must. Class 1A an asset. Wagoperating machinery, crop scouting, book- es negotiable dependent on experience. keeping, maintaining records, hauling Position avail. immediately. 306-245-3310, grain, machinery repair and maintenance, Tyvan, SK. Email youngslandc@gmail.com and other farm duties. Must have: min. 3 years farm management or equivalent ex- SEASONAL GRAIN FARM Labourer, Aug. perience, exc. computer skills, Accounting 15 to Oct. for harvest season. Experience skills. Proficient in Microsoft Excel, Class preferred. Competitive wages. Fax resume 1A driver’s license. Must have Canadian with references to 306-398-2567 or call work visa. Wage: $16-$18/hr. based on 306-398-4714, Cut Knife, SK. experience. Contact M-Sand Farm Corp., Box 2079, Rosetown, SK. S0L 2V0. Phone FARM OPERATOR: Applicant should have 306-717-1660. Matty03@hotmail.com previous farm experience and mechanical HUNTER’S PARADISE GRAINFARM, locat- ability. Class 1 license would be preferred. ed in Mossbank, SK, seeks motivated inde- Grain operation only. Wages are negopendant employee, experience in operat- tiable depending on experience. Permaing large farm machinery and Class 1A nent full-time and/or seasonal. Vermilion, license an asset. Great wages available for AB. Ph. 780-853-5146, fax 780-853-1932. experienced applicant, refs required. Email resume to Mike: nagelm44@hotmail.com HELP WANTED ON MIXED FARM. Year round for the right applicant. Mechanically or phone 306-354-7822. inclined an asset. Large new shop. Must be LARGE GRAIN AND Poultry Farm, North of willing to do manual labour and operate Edmonton, AB. looking for a farm worker and maintain equipment. Send resume to with a potential future in farm manage- buggfarms@hotmail.com Paynton, SK, fax ment. We have an up-to-date beautiful 306-895-4601. farm. Class 1A, experience with livestock, large equipment and computers is neces- CUSTOM HARVESTER looking for truck sary. We offer accommodations. Wages driver’s, combine, and grain cart operators will be discussed. Only serious applicants. to go on Custom Harvesting Run that beSend resume to: Martin and Catharina, fax gins August 1st in Saskatchewan and ends 780-961-3967, or catacyr@hotmail.com in Northern Alberta. Operating four new JD S670 combines and Peterbilt semis. I or call 780-220-8144, Legal, AB. may help obtain 1A license, year round SEED PLANT AND Grain Farm Labourer, employment hauling logs, grain or crude full-time permanent position available at oil. 306-421-9270 leave msg., or fax reVeikle Seeds Ltd., Cut Knife, SK. Duties in- sume to: 306-456-2835, Bromhead, SK clude operation and maintenance of farm machinery, general farm duties, operation ROY HARVESTING now hiring Combine of seed plant. Experience preferred. Class Operators and Truck Drivers for the 2013 1A an asset. Competitive wages offered. harvest. Call Chuck 306-642-0055 or Chris E m a i l r e s u m e w i t h r e fe r e n c e s t o : 306-642-0076, Glentworth, SK. vike1@sasktel.net or call 306-398-4714. FULL-TIME HELP REQUIRED on modern LOOKING FOR FULL-TIME farmhand on grain farm at Rouleau, SK. Must have Class mixed farm to operate big equipment and 1A license, experience operating large work in shop out of season to do mainte- farm equipment. Health benefits available. nance. Offering close to new JD equip- Fax resume to 306-776-2382, or call Dave ment and large new shop. Class 1 license 306-536-0548 or email jdkirby@live.ca and/or mechanical training would be an asset. Housing w/nice yardsite in country HELP WANTED: LARGE grain farm, late will be provided with benefit package. model equipment, grain only. Competitive Wage to be negotiated based on qualifica- wages depending on experience. Full-time tions. Call 306-730-9814, Neudorf, SK. work available. Demaine and Birsay area. Call Don at 306-859-7649, Demaine, SK. HELP WANTED FOR 1800 acre grain farm, present to Oct. 31. $12-$18/hr, depending LARGE SOUTHEAST SK. grainfarm hiring on experience. 306-335-2777, Abernethy. full-time/part-time experienced farm help with Class 1A, starting at $25/hr. Phone 306-634-4758, 306-421-1110, Torquay, SK. Email: duaneforrester@sasktel.net

LARGE MIXED FARM and ranch requires full-time employee. Experience with cattle and equipment operation and maintenance an asset. Housing available on site, suitable for a family. Call 780-376-2241, Strome, AB. www.rawesranches.com WANTED FULL-TIME RANCH HAND cow/ calf operation in remote location. Experience with livestock, operating machinery and maintenance and farm labour an asset. $14-$17/hour. Fax 780-981-2282 Keg River, AB. or dmjgrade1@yahoo.ca TIRED OF WHERE you are? Looking for a new place to work? Christian family with large grain farm in southern SK. is looking for a full-time farm family to help in farm operation. Excellent wages. Good farm location and community to raise a family. Call 306-267-6110, fax 306-267-4526 or email: hillcrestent@sasktel.net COMBINE OPERATORS AND TRUCK DRIVERS needed for harvest on large grain farm. Accommodation available. Call Jim 403-575-0069, t4gerbers@yahoo.ca Coronation, AB.

LOOKING FOR A self motivated individual capable of working unsupervised. Duties include feeding 200 plus head of purebred Black Angus bulls and heifers, haying, silage, fencing, field work, operate and maintain equipment. Newer JD equipment. Older house included. $50,000 per year. Contact Tanya at 250-845-8474 or 250-845-3050, tdbelsham@gmail.com Located in Fort Fraser, BC. WANTED: FARM LABOURERS able to run farm equipment on cattle/grain farm. F u l l - t i m e wo r k ava i l a b l e . C a l l M i ke 306-469-7741, Big River, SK. ORGANIC FARM FULL-TIME permanent position: Grace Hill Farms, a large family-owned organic grain farm and seed cleaning operation is seeking an individual to join our team. The position requires operating and maintaining large machinery as well as grain cleaning. Must have: valid class 1A driver’s licence; experience in grain farming and heavy equipment maintenance preferred; ability to work long hours during peak season; ability to be a team player, but work independently. Housing available. For more info contact Dwayne or Doreen 306-264-3721. Please send resume to wefarm@gracehill.ca or fax 306-264-3726, Mankota, SK.


72 CLASSIFIED ADS

W orking GeneralM anager for feedlot and farm Duties • Operate feed tru ck , tracto rs m o st farm equ ipm en t. • So m e co m pu ter an d cattle k n o wledge wo u ld be ben eficial. Health ben efits, ho u se an d co m pan y tru ck pro vided. Lo cated in cen tral Sask atchewan For m ore info callLyle 403-381-3700 Or e-m ail: lyle@ prim roselivestock.com FULL-TIME OPPORTUNITY on large mixed farm. Must be able to maintain and operate farm and cattle equipment. Must have current driver’s license. Cattle experience and Class 1A an asset. Wages vary with experience and qualifications. Contact Rene at 306-642-7801, Lafleche, SK.

THE WESTERN PRODUCER, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2013

EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER REQUIRED. 30-40 hrs per week, year round work, $16-$21. per hour. Must have education courses in accounting and relevant experience: prepare payroll, accounts receivable, accounts payable, balances and more. Ability to speak Greek is an asset. Apply at Royal Exteriors Inc., 103 Reindeer Road, S a s k at o o n , S K . S 7 K 4 W 8 , o r f a x t o 306-974-4943, royal_exteriors@mail.com THE TOWN OF PORCUPINE PLAIN is accepting applications for the position of Town Foreman. Duties include supervising and co-ordinating work for 4-6 employees while being responsible for the overall organization of Public Works. Must possess a valid Class 5 with knowledge of road maintenance and equipment operation. Applicant must be mechanically inclined, well organized and be able to delegate duties. Level 1 Certification in Water Treatment/ Distribution is required. Submit resume by fax: 306-278-3378 or email: porcupineplain@sasktel.net

A U S T R A L I A N H A R V E S T ! Po s i t i o n s available from Oct.-Dec., $22-28/hr., food and accommodation incl. Experienced operators with relevant working holiday visas need only apply. Visit our website to find out more about visas or to register your interest! www.ruralenterprises.com.au

GRATTON COUL EE AGRIPARTS L TD.

Is a pro gre s s ive , e xpa n d in g a gric u ltu ra l s a lva ge pa rts c o m pa n y s pe c ia lizin g in la te m o d e l tra c to r a n d c o m b in e pa rts a n d lo c a te d a tIrm a , Alb e rta . W e a re looking for

M E CH ANICAL AS S E M BL E R S

(4 va ca n cies ) Perm a n en t, fu ll tim e p o s itio n s -44 hrs p er w eek. S a la ry $19.25 to $20.00/hr. Va lid d rivers licen s e. Previo u s exp erien ce a n a s s et. To a pply fo r a po s itio n w ith u s , plea s e e-m a il res u m e to : m a rc@ gcpa rts .co m o r s en d fa x to 78 0-754-2333 Atten tio n : Alvin W a n n echk o 3 GUEST SERVICE Representatives Needed. Full time, year round with shift work, evenings/weekends, $11.25-13.00/hr. depending on experience. Experience with hotel guest service and/or education in hotel management is an asset but willing to train. Multiple languages also an asset. Apply with resume to Park Town Hotel reception at 924 Spadina Cres. E, Saskatoon, SK, S7K 3H5 or fax 306-665-8698, or email: heather@parktownhotel.com

GRAIN FARM LOCATED near Coderre, SK. looking for 1A truck driver with experience for harvest season and possible year round full-time employment. Previous farm experience a definite asset, housing can be provided for spring and fall season. Contact Derek at: 306-631-5302, or e-mail: pepinfarms@gmail.com Coderre, SK. LOOKING FOR QUALIFIED mechanic to work on semi trucks and trailers for an oilfield trucking company. Competitive wages and benefits available. Please email resumes to: foxtailhauling@hotmail.com or call Kyle at 204-764-0031, shop located at Kenton, MB. BIG GAME HUNTING GUIDE in BC for October. Return travel, room and board paid. Good wage. 250-480-1202, Victoria, BC. office@rocky-mountain-outfitter.com

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.

B I N S

SteelView O ilPressu re ServicesLtd is seekin g a n o pera to rfo ro u rn ew co n tin u o u sro d gripperu n it fo rthe Cha u vin /Pro vo st,AB a rea .Ro d gr ipperexperien ce a m u st. W illin g to sta rt w a ge ra n gin g fro m $35.00 to $40.00/hrfo ra regu la rshift ba sed o n experien ce.Ben efitsa n d o vertim e a fter8 ho u rs.Gu a ra n teed 180 hrs/m o n th. Em a ilresu m e to bria n @ stlview.ca or fa x 780.85 8.23 70 ATTN :Bria n Joh n son

MAINTENANCE POSITON at South Sask. Quality Processors. Tasks include: basic welding/fabrication, replacing bearings, lubrication, etc. Facility is 1 mile West of Regina. Fax/email resume: 306-935-2224, stoneyridge@sasktel.net Please include wage expected and references.

Lloydminster, AB Requires 5 Service Rig Derrick Hands @ $29.50/hr – 40 hrs/wk and 12 Service Rig Floor Hands @ $27.00/hr – 40 hrs/wk, for work in the Lloydminster area.

FULL-TIME SHOP LABORER REQUIRED. Wages based upon experience, $14 to $18 per hour. Duties include: shop clean up, grinding and cutting steel. Benefit package included. Please call 204-556-2209 Kola, MB. or email littlecreek@hotmail.ca

Please fax resume to 780-871-6908 or email: royalwel@telus.net

RM OF WAVERLEY #44- Seasonal Grader Operator required. Start date approx. Aug. 1st. Send resumes and salary expectations by July 26th to rm44@yourlink.ca or fax BLUE DIAMOND ENTERPRISES Ltd. is to 306-266-2077. Phone 306-266-4920, looking for full-time and seasonal Heavy Duty Truck Mechanics. Operating in the Glentworth, SK. north year round and seasonally on the ice roads. Competitive wages depending on experience. Please contact Austin King 867-874-6032, Hay River, NWT, or email PROFESSIONAL FARM Manager Piper bluediamond@northwestel.net Farms Ltd., Creston, BC. Permanent fulltime position for Manager of 3800 acre grain, canola, Timothy hay/seed farm. Agricultural training and pesticide applicator course. Will be responsible for all aspects of farm management including crop planning, seeding, harvesting, and marketing. Competitive salary/benefits. Include references. Apply to: gwentelling@gmail.com

PIPELINE POSITIONS We are currently looking to fill several of the following positions in our pipeline division: • B Pressure Welders • Welders Helpers • Pipefitters • Equipment Operators • Labourers • Field Supervisors These are camp-based positions located throughout Northern Alberta. Site Energy Services Ltd. offers competitive salary packages, benefits, and an incredible work environment with career advancement opportunities. If you are interested in applying for this opportunity, please forward your resume to careers@siteenergy.com or jmanning@siteenergy.com www.siteenergy.com

BIN CREW S W AN TED

EAR N UP TO $4,5 00/D AY Du e to H IG H D EM AN D D AR M AN I is recru itin g m o re b i n crew s

QUAL ITY W ORK M AN S HIP ON L Y

Co n ta ct: DARM

AN IS ET UP DIV IS ION

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CanWest DHI is currently accepting applications for a technician in the LaCombe area of Alberta. This is a contract position for up to 6 months or less. The successful applicant will be responsible for the regular weighing and sampling of milk from cows in DHI herds, keeping records and statistical data, and promoting dairy herd improvement. Applicants should have a thorough knowledge of the Alberta dairy industry along with excellent interpersonal skills. PC skills and a degree/diploma in agriculture will be considered a definite asset. This position could require the occasional heavy lifting of up to 65 lbs. If you possess the right qualifications for this position, please fax or email your resume no later than August 2, 2013 to Larry Ouimet, Head of Human Resources at:

louimet@canwestdhi.com Fax: (519) 824-1330

D A R M A N I B I N S

CLASS 1 AND 3 TRUCK DRIVERS needed for harvest on large grain farm. Accommodation available. Jim 403-575-0069, t4gerbers@yahoo.ca Coronation, AB. SELECT CLASSIC CARRIERS immediately requires Leased Operators with new model 1 tons and 5 ton straight trucks/ tractors, and Company Drivers; Also require 1 driver with 5L or Class 1 license for operating a haul and tow. Transporting RVs/general freight, USA/Canada. Clean abstract required. Competitive rates. Fuel surcharge/benefits. 1-800-409-1733. CLASS 1 DRIVERS required immediately for log haul in Alberta, accommodations provided, $30.00 cycle time hour. Please fax or email resume and current abstract to: Church Creek Livestock Ltd., Athabasca, AB. woodccll@mcsnet.ca or fax: 780-675-9206. 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.

Only successful applicants will be contacted. WE ARE LOOKING for a Journeyman Automotive Tech to come join our team, fulltime. 7 bay 3 person shop in sunny Grand Forks, BC. For info. on wages please call Tom at Tomkat Automotive 250-442-2289, or fax resume to 250-442-2884.

CLASS 1 DRIVER to run AB to TX/OK w/flatdeck and Peterbilt tractor, some tarping. Must be clean, professional, good driving record. Lacombe, AB., email: wayne@northforkcarriers.com LONG HAUL SEMI Drivers and O/O required to haul RVs and general freight. D r i ve r s p a i d 4 0 ¢ / r u n n i n g m i l e a n d pick/drop/border. O/O paid 85% of gross revenue. Benefits, company fuel cards and subsidized insurance. Must have valid passport and ability to cross border. Call Jeremy at 1-800-867-6233, Saskatoon, SK. www.roadexservices.com CLASS 1 DRIVER needed immediately to haul oilfield fluid locally in the Lloydminster/Vermilion, Alberta areas. Home every night. Must have experience pulling trailer. Good wages, $25-$35/hr. depending on experience. Oilfield experience preferred but will train reliable driver. Call Derrick anytime at 780-853-0747.

CAREERS

DARM AN I - Bu ild in g Be tte r Bin s ---- DARM AN I - Bu ild in g Be tte r Bin s ---- DARM AN I - Bu ild in g Be tte r Bin s

D A R M A N I

5

PARTS PERSO N REQ UIRED

TO HAUL SELF-PROPELLED farm equipment, Canada and USA, over-sized experience an asset, 306-776-2349, dkti@sasktel.net Rouleau, SK. ROY HARVESTING now hiring Combine Operators and Truck Drivers for the 2013 harvest. Call Chuck 306-642-0055 or Chris 306-642-0076, Glentworth, SK. HEAVY TOW TRUCK driver wanted with minimum Class 3 license and air brakes. Class 1 license preferred. Please e-mail resumes to: allrig@allrigtowing.com or fax to: 204-275-3443, Winnipeg, MB. TRAIL-X EXPRESS immediately requires 1 ton diesel trucks to haul RV’s, full-time employment with top rates. Must be able to enter the US. Email steve@trailx.ca Toll free 1-866-585-6770. EVEREST TRUCKING LTD. Now hiring class 1A and owner operator for livestock hauling in AB. and SK. Experience an asset. Fax resume w/drivers abstract: 780-853-6872 or call Larry 780-853-6330, Vermilion, AB.

IMMEDIATELY: Class 3A and 1A drivers to haul water on drilling rigs. Must have all safety tickets and clean abstract. Experience preferred. Competitive wages. Fax resumes to: 306-826-5623, or phone: 306-826-5751 between 7:00 AM and 6:00 PM, Marsden, SK.

TERRITORY SALES MANAGERS NORTHERN & SOUTHERN PRAIRIES

Atom-Jet Industries is currently seeking energetic, talented and committed team members for the positions of Territory Sales Managers Northern & Southern Prairies. The successful team members will be responsible for: - Building strong, effective customer relationships with new, existing & potential customers - Initiating customer contact & responding to customer needs by promoting Atom-Jet’s line of Seed Openers to the agricultural community - Accountable for achieving monthly revenue targets by effectively negotiating & closing sales opportunities - Participation in industry trades shows including pre-show lead/ traffic generation & post-show follow-up - Maintain & exceed exceptional customer relations throughout the respective territory by regular customer site visits The ideal candidate has a minimum of three years’ experience in the agricultural equipment business and a strong agricultural background. The motivated, customer service orientated and sales driven individual will demonstrate exceptional written and oral communication skills. Proficiency with Microsoft Office programs is a requirement. Both travel and a class five drivers’ license are required for this position. Atom-Jet offers a competitive salary, bonus plan, vehicle allowance and company pension and benefits. Applicants are encouraged to apply at agriculture@atomjet.com attention Robin Ponto, Agriculture Sales Director, Atom-Jet Industries Ltd. Please provide resume and cover letter by Friday, August 8th, 2013 by 4:30PM. A Division of Atom-Jet Group

LARGE PROGRESSIVE 5TH Generation grain farm located 15 min. from Regina, SK. has opening for full-time year round and seasonal 1A truck drivers. Successful candidates will join our team and be tasked with hauling grain from bin to market during harvest and throughout the year. Drivers will also be hauling fertilizer during seeding operations. All short hauls, home every night, weekends off in nonpeak season, flexible scheduling. Experience in Super B’s an asset. Top wages paid. Call 306-535-7708.

Tr u ck Driver sW a n ted ~Big g a r Tr a n s p or t~

Co m pa n y Drivers& Lea sed O pera to rs to pu llSu perB’sin bu lk gra in & fertilizerd ivisio n Co m petitive w a ges& ben efits& Sign in g Bo n u s S en d Resu m e & DriversAbstra ctto ro d p a cik@ tra n sa llg ro u p .co m o r fa x:3 06 -24 2-2077 C a ll:Ro d Pa cik 3 06 -24 9-6 85 3 3 06 -3 81-6 5 3 5

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


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LAND DRAINAGE | UNDERGROUND TILES

Underground tiles seen as long-term investment Rare in Alberta | Tiles allow growers to farm the low spots BY MARY MACARTHUR CAMROSE BUREAU

LACOMBE, Alta. — Tired of seeing his best land not produce his best crops, Craig Shaw has started to install underground tile drainage on his Alberta farm. “We were losing our best land,” said Shaw, who farms near Lacombe. “We’re trying to get better crops over the low parts of our fields.” Shaw and his neighbour, Dirk Drost, who co-own the tiling plow, believe it is the answer to the problem of their waterlogged fields. “It’s a long-term investment,” he said. “Instead of renting more land, use what we have.” Drost also wants to use all the acres in his fields instead of bypassing the low spots each spring, especially in fields where he grows his high-value seed potatoes. “Land values are sky high. We should utilize many of the acres we have already,” said Drost, who will start installing the tile this fall after harvest. Shaw has installed six kilometres of tile, and water is already running out the ends into ditches. He uses a combination of six-inch main line and four-inch perforated tile, covered in a type of sock to ensure that the sandy soil doesn’t block the perforations. Tile drainage is common in other parts of Canada but rare in Alberta. Shaw expects that rising land prices will encourage more farmers in wetter regions to install tile. “I anticipate seeing quite a bit of tiling happening in the Parkland area where land is wetter,” he said. While the plow can lay tile 1 1/2 metres deep, Shaw aims to place the tile one into the ground. The computerized GPS system will adjust the depth depending on topography. Shaw said engineered drawings

It doesn’t take much horsepower to pull the tile plow, just good traction, said Craig Shaw of Lacombe, Alta., who wants to tile the low-lying areas of the field so they can be seeded. | MARY MACARTHUR PHOTOS FAR LEFT: Before the tile is plowed underground, it is spun off the reel and laid out roughly where the tile will be dug into the ground.

aren’t required to figure out where to place the tile. Producers need only an elevation map, a GPS and good knowledge of the farm’s low spots. “It’s fairly straightforward.” Shaw said special licenses aren’t required for tile drainage, but farmers must make sure they don’t harm neighbours’ land. “It’s important to know where the water is going and not negatively impacting the neighbours lower down.” Calvin Sargeant of Rimbey, Alta., also bought a tile plow this spring. “There are too many low areas where there is no crop,” he said. “Land is getting expensive and hard to buy, so I better utilize what I’ve got.”

LEFT: Two kinds of tile are placed underground: a six inch main line and this four inch hose covered with a sock to prevent the perforations filling with soil.

PHOSPHORUS STUDY | LAKE WINNIPEG

Today’s farmers not to blame for contamination of past: report BY ED WHITE WINNIPEG BUREAU

Today’s farmers aren’t responsible for most of the phosphorus that is slowly killing Lake Winnipeg, concludes a draft study examining the issue. However, heavy phosphorus use in the past is haunting the vast watershed that feeds the rivers that lead into the world’s 10th largest body of fresh water. “The phosphorus that’s in the system from decades past is still being mobilized and is still loading up Lake Winnipeg,” Hank Venema of the International Institute For Sustainable Development said as he released the study at the recent Keeping Water On The Land conference.

HANK VENEMA INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

“Despite the fact that we’re efficient and getting more efficient, there’s still a lot out there.” In his remarks and in the paper, Venema and his co-researchers repeatedly refer to present-day farmers’ efficient use of fertilizer application rates and methods. Only two percent of the phosphorus fertilizer that is now applied escapes into waterways, and many parts of Manitoba have declining

phosphorus content in their soil as f a r m e r s “ m i n e d ow n ” s u r p lu s amounts. Yet the nutrient flow to Lake Winnipeg continues as water picks up soil laden with old phosphorus and carries it out of fields. It means farmers can only marginally improve the situation by application and farming methods. “We can do a little bit on the input side, but probably not a lot, because we’re efficient … but there’s so much in the system from decades past that … the only way to remove them from the system will be by interception,” said Venema. Interception occurs when water ends up in wetlands rather than rushing through drains off fields and into ditches and streams that quickly lead to lakes.

It’s why preserving wetlands is important, speakers at the conference said. However, building “distributed storage” is also essential to block the flow of “legacy phosphorus” off the land during major water events, Venema said. Big water outflows, as happen in floods or major rainstorms, could be held back either by flooding large areas with excess water or using numerous dugouts that could recirculate the water in agricultural operations. The key is to stop water collecting on the surface of farmland, absorb phosphorus and then pour off through drains into the river system. Venema said researchers hope water storage can slowly reduce the phosphorus surplus by either using it

in agriculture or harvesting marsh plants in which phosphorus is absorbed. He said there is still room for Manitoba farmers to improve their fertilizer application. The two percent phosphorus loss that is now occurring seems small, he added, but this small percentage can still add up to a lot of phosphorus because Lake Winnipeg gets its water from such a large watershed of farmland. However, Venema said Manitoba’s farmers are some of the best when it comes to using fertilizer properly. “Manitoba Agriculture is actually a very efficient user of fertilizers in total, compared to other jurisdictions in the world, and they’re getting better,” said Venema.


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NEWS

CALGARY STAMPEDE | ANIMAL HEALTH

Vet helps watch over animals at Stampede Looking out for the livestock | Veterinarian finds animal exhibitions challenging, but worth it for public awareness BY JUSTINA CONTENTI FREELANCE WRITER

CALGARY — Every day, as tens of thousands of visitors pass through the agricultural buildings on the grounds of the Calgary Stampede, Dr. Ryan Wennekamp makes his own rounds watching for anything out of the ordinary. Wennekamp is a Stampede veterinarian and for the past three years he has worked as part of a team of six vets that spend the 10 day event monitoring the health and safety of animals on the grounds. Wennekamp’s love of animals began like that of many rural veterinarians, on his family farm. He owns the Cochrane Animal Clinic, and was partially introduced to working at the Stampede by the clinic’s former owner and long-time Stampede veterinarian, Brian Edge, who Wennekamp said has earned a rest after more than 50 years with the Stampede. This year, as a part of a new generation of veterinarians taking the reins, Wennekamp helped oversee the agricultural part of the Stampede. Wennekamp is a mixed animal practitioner with more than 13 years experience dealing with all kinds of animals. His daily routine at the Stampede includes checking in at the Agrium Ag-tivity in the City tent several times a day to check on the sheep, goats, alpacas, cows, pigs, ducks and llamas there. As well, he attends many of the competitions, such as the stock dog championship to make sure there are no animals

that need his attention. “We just want to make sure that if anything does go wrong, a veterinarian can be there as quick as I can hop over the fence to deal with it,” said Wennekamp. “Treating animals is something I do every day all day without fail,” he said. “But I am not used to having an audience while doing everything I do.” With people watching as he checks on and often treats animals at the Stampede, part of Wennekamp’s job becomes public education. “Trying to balance doing my job with maintaining a good public understanding of what we are doing (and why) is a really interesting part of working on the Stampede,” he said. He added that maintaining that balance for both him and the animals, who can get stressed by the crowds, is often also the hardest part of the job. However, despite the increased difficulty, he believes giving the public access to the animals is one the best parts of the annual event. “I think people need to know why agriculture is important, and where our beef, chicken or eggs come from, and I don’t think the Superstore is a proper answer to that question.” With the Stampede attracting the best in each breed from around the world, Wennekamp said it gives a unique opportunity for exhibitors to show and for him to work on some elite athletes, especially on the equine side. But while the focus is often on the animals, the Stampede is just as much about the people behind them.

ABOVE: Calgary Stampede veterinarian Ryan Wennekamp, left, talks to Ivan Nisley, a trainer with Thiel Percherons. RIGHT: Wennekamp looks over animals at the Agrium Ag-tivity tent on July 8. | JUSTINA CONTENTI PHOTOS

CALGARY STAMPEDE | 4-H

Alberta university student claims dairy show crown for second time Youth show | Winning Jersey heifer comes from Northland Dairy Ltd., Alberta’s largest purebred herd BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

OLDS, Alta. — For the second time in its history, the Alberta provincial 4-H dairy show was won by a Jersey and both times, Casey Morey was at the halter. The 19-year-old University of Alberta student has been showing cattle most of her life at dairy shows and through 4-H. “I was in the barn since I was born,” she said. Her Jersey heifer was named

supreme champion at the 4-H show held during Summer Synergy, an open livestock youth show held at Olds, Alta., that culminates at the Calgary Stampede on July 13. The program offers a week of education, judging, showing and interviews where participants receive points. She did so well she was the senior aggregate winner, which entitles her to scholarships and bursaries. Last year she won $4,000 in scholarships. Her club, Moo’s on the Move at Westlock, Alta.,is one of a handful of

dairy 4-H clubs in Alberta. Her club is 12 years old. She joined as soon as she was old enough and plans to continue until she is 21. She is studying agriculture business management at the University of Alberta. Eventually she hopes to return to the family operation, Northland Dairy Ltd., where her family raises Canada’s largest herd of purebred Jerseys. They have about 800 head and milk 220 cows. “I want to work in corporate agriculture and go back to the dairy farm

because that is where my real passion is,” she said. A division of the farm is Unique Stock Farm and they sell Jersey genetics all over the world as well as show cattle extensively. She has shown throughout her 4-H career as well as the World Dairy Expo at Madison, Wisconsin, Royal Winter Fair and other large dairy events. Her winning heifer came from the family string. “To us, each animal belongs to each and every one of us,” she said.

Casey Morey is studying agriculture business management at the University of Alberta. | BARBARA DUCKWORTH PHOTO


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The show goes on Calgary Stampede 2013 | Just weeks after a devastating flood, Calgary opened its doors to the world for the 101st annual Calgary Stampede, held July 5-14. Some events had to be cancelled because of flood damage to the Saddledome, but most went ahead. | JUSTINA CONTENTI PHOTOS

TOP ROW, LEFT TO RIGHT: An Express staff member readies the team of Clydesdales for an evening show. • Stampede goers watch a wheel smithing demonstration conducted by wheelwrights Glen McKee, left, and John and Jean LaVoie. • Braxton Webster, left, pretends to ride a tractor while his dad, Clay, looks on. • MIDDLE ROW: Tim Haroldson, driving the Desjardins Financial Security wagon, drives his team around the barrels during the Rangeland Derby on July 6. • BOTTOM ROW, LEFT TO RIGHT: Jake Marshall from Moree, Australia, competes in the rodeo bareback riding competition. • Nancy Csabay, from Taber, Alta., competes in the barrel racing competition. • Bradley Bynum, from Sterling City, Texas, competes in tie-down roping. • Ryder Wright, from Milford, Utah, tests his mettle in the junior steer riding competition.


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PRODUCTION

FARM PROGRESS AWARDS Check out our latest feature: high-def video. Our reporters have put together video highlights of each of the innovative, award winning entries from the 2013 Farm Progress Show. | See it online at www.producer.com

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

EQUIPMENT | TILLAGE

When vertical tillage isn’t vertical tillage Till, but don’t | If you’re doing more than tickling the top, then you’re in too deep BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU

A string of wet springs has steered a lot of prairie farmers into vertical tillage as a way to seed into soggy soil. Most producers say their new equipment accomplished what it was supposed to, which was to get them seeding sooner. However, vertical tillage can also be an important tool in fighting crop disease, says Jim Boak, a field representative for Salford Machinery, one of the first companies to sell vertical tillage machines to prairie farmers. “Guys caught on right away that vertical tillage is a big help seeding in wet conditions, but it’s an important tool in any zero till operation,” said Boak. “Zero till is based on the fact that we retain undisturbed crop residue on the surface. Whether a producer uses a disc drill or hoe drill, the success of the seeding operation depends on cutting a fresh trench into a firm, pure seedbed. Seeds don’t like a disturbed seedbed.” He said producers don’t want to incorporate crop residue, especially in the spring. “Residue carries all kinds of diseases that flourish when buried, and decomposing plant matter creates toxins that impact the young crop,” he said. “Leave residue on the surface. Tandem discs are especially bad for burying pathogenic residues.” Boak said a true vertical tillage machine, when adjusted properly, leaves a firm seed bed while retaining crop residue on the surface where it won’t harm the emerging crop. However, not everyone who has bought a vertical tillage machine is certain they’re doing true vertical tillage or are even sure they know what vertical tillage is. Boak said vertical tillage is simply lifting the shallow top surface of the soil without causing horizontal soil movement. “Here’s what we find. When vertical till is done correctly, it puts some air movement into the residue cover and the top layer of soil. The operation releases a small amount of moisture at the surface, which evaporates through the residue cover. All other moisture remains locked in the soil for the crop.” He said moisture rising in the soil is trapped below the residue layer, which is like a vapour barrier that prevents migrating moisture from escaping into the atmosphere. “If your morning air temperature is

Whether equipped with smooth or rippled discs, the two chief characteristics of vertical tillage are a shallow working depth and zero lateral geometry to the discs. | SALFORD PHOTO 50 degrees (10 C)and your soil temperature is 45 degrees (7 C)... if you work that field with your vertical till machine to get some air movement, the soil will be 70 degrees (21 C) by early afternoon and you can go seeding,” he said. “If you run the discs deeper than two and a half inches, or if you have any horizontal soil movement, then you’re not doing true vertical tillage. When you do it right, the field should look like a stick of butter after you gently pulled your fork over the top. Just parallel lines on the surface, that’s all.” Boak said there’s nothing wrong with horizontal tillage if more soil disturbance is the goal. It’s simply a matter of keeping intent and terminology straight. “The term vertical tillage used to refer to deep tillage, deep rippers, vertical rippers, inline rippers and all those practices deeper than 13 inches that were intended to alleviate deep compaction,” he said. “Today when we say vertical tillage, we’re referring to shallow disturbance in the seeding zone only. And never so deep that we lose the firm seed bed.” Boak said the concept of shallow vertical tillage began to gain acceptance a decade ago when some

SALFORD VERTICAL TILLER When a vertical tillage machine is properly adjusted, it touches only the soil surface, allowing top moisture to evaporate while sealing in deeper moisture for crop roots.

TOPSOIL LAYER

Source: Salford | MICHELLE HOULDEN GRAPHIC

manufacturers started developing machines that significantly reduced lateral soil movement and caused only straight up and straight down soil movement.

“There were only a few of us building true vertical tillage machines: Salford, Summers, Great Plains, McFarlane down in Wisconsin and Phoenix, who went out of business.”

He said the five competitors had a lot in common. They all ran ripple discs, straight discs or a combination of both, but the discs ran at a zero degree angle. They all had harrows for residue management and recommended a maximum working depth of two to 2.5 inches unless the field was badly rutted. Running that shallow through trash cover disturbs an inch of residue and the top inch of surface soil. It weakens the crust so the harrows can break it up. “Don’t go any deeper because you want your drill to place seed into firm soil that has not been worked,” he said. “If you run your vertical tillage machine deeper, then you’ll be placing seed into loose soil. We all know that loose soil is a problem with any horizontal tillage or horizontal soil movement. If you work the whole seed bed so it’s loose, you’ve got to go deeper to find firm ground for the seeds. “Canola, for example, should go in at three-quarters of an inch. So you’ll want your vertical till machine to leave you about three-quarters of an inch of mixed soil and residue. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

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PRODUCTION

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CORN | HARVESTER PANS

Flexxifinger cuts corn stalks without cost of corn header Easy mounting | Unit guides stalks to cutter bar and directs cobs to auger BY MICHAEL RAINE SASKATOON NEWSROOM

The Flexxifinger corn pans guide corn stalks to the cutter bar and ensure the cobs and stalks make it into the table auger or onto the canvas. | MICHAEL RAINE PHOTO

“Below that, you have the firm soil for the canola seed.” Boak said other companies have recently started labelling machines as vertical tillage tools, but they don’t meet the criteria. They either work too deep or the discs run at an angle causing horizontal soil movement. “Smart-Till and Airway tried to fit the vertical till class, but they were deeper working tools, not true vertical till,” he said. “Back in about 2006 or 2007, Case IH took their 340 discer and bought some slightly dished blades for it and installed them on an 18 degree angle. They called it vertical tillage, but it’s not. Discs at 18 degrees disturb a lot of soil disturbance.” Boak said Case opened the floodgate, and anyone who sold any type of disc cultivator now had a vertical tillage machine on the market. “None of this is vertical tillage. This is really the finest hour for horizontal tillage.” He said the Landoll VT has discs angled at 10 degrees on seven inch spacing, which creates lots of side movement of soil. It’s full cultivation but not vertical tillage, he added. “These new European compact disc cultivators are promoted by some local dealers as vertical tillage, but they do not meet the criteria. Those are the Lemken, Joker, Amazon and Vaderstad,” he said. “A vertical tillage machine must have zero degrees of angle on the disc. It must make a straight line in the soil and it must work shallow. If it cannot do those two things, it’s not true vertical tillage.” For more information, contact Boak at 519-670-1004 or visit www. salfordmachine.com. SEE A RELATED STORY ON PAGE 79

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THE HISTORY OF VERTICAL TILLAGE Soil scientists first began to consider the idea of vertical tillage in the early 1950s when researchers at Ohio State University compared fence row soil to soil in the middle of fields in Kentucky and Virginia. “The soil in the field was tough, ugly, erodible clay,” said Jim Boak, field rep for Salford Machinery and a student of tillage history. “But the soil in the fence row had more diversity and better moisture retention. It allowed the roots to grow and move around in the ground.” The giant step forward in understanding vertical root penetration came from private agronomist Ken Ferrie in Illinois, who has dedicated his career to the study of how corn roots go about their business. “Ferrie digs these enormous field pits so farmers can climb down and walk right up to the roots and see what different types of tillage tools do to the soil,” said Boak. “The pits demonstrate that tools which move the soil vertically allow the roots to grow deeper and faster than tools that create a horizontal barrier. “Climb into the pit and see for yourself that when roots hit a density layer, they go lateral until they find a crack or a worm hole so they can continue going straight vertically downward. I’d say Ken Ferrie invented vertical tillage.”

Dave Dietrich watched from his vantage point in southern Saskatchewan as corn crept north across the U.S. border. The farm equipment builder, who runs Flexxifinger in Assiniboia, felt he could give western Canadian producers a way to harvest the crop without investing in a new, specialty combine header. “We already knew how to lift crops up and get them into the combine,” he said. “Sorting them left and right and getting them to the (cutter bar) is a natural extension of that.” Extra effort is required to efficiently cut corn stalks, which relies on pressure from the crop’s mass. Ron Wheeler of Flexxifinger said the company experimented with a few concepts, but it pretty much knew what the tool should do and built it to be compatible with its quick detaching lifter system. “We built mild steel pans that draw the corn into the header. The same knives that were cutting wheat or

lentils a few hours before are now cutting corn,” he said. “It’s not dependent on a row spacing either, unlike a dedicated corn header.” Flexxifinger took its invention to a large, international farm show in Kansas City this spring, where the U.S. Custom Harvesters association was meeting. “We’ve got a lot of those folks looking at our corn harvest pans,” Wheeler said. “These folks have a lot of gear to truck around depending on what crops they’re taking. It might be an option for some of them.” Texas custom harvester Ed Pipwell said Flexxifinger’s units would be attractive to farmers and commercial operators, as long as they are tough enough. “It’s a good looking product and a lot cheaper than a (corn) header,” he said. “Easy to change out with that mount. There’s lots of times when you only need 500 or 1,000 acres of corn before you go back to something else. Heck, maybe this is what you use on all your corn.” Dietrich designed the corn pans to

We built mild steel pans that draw the corn into the header. The same knives that were cutting wheat or lentils a few hours before are now cutting corn. RON WHEELER FLEXXIFINGER

fit most three-inch knife spaced grain headers. The units guide corn stalks to the cutter bar and ensure the cobs and upper stalks make it into the table auger or onto the canvas. At $295 per pan, the system costs far less than comparable corn header. For more information, visit www. flexxifinger.com.

AGRONOMY | DISEASE MONITORING

Scout canola now for sclerotinia Spraying is advised if yield potential is 35 bushels per acre or more BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM

Conditions across the West are ideal for the development of sclerotinia, which can reduce canola yield by 50 percent or more if left unchecked. Dense canola stands across the Prairies, frequent rains and moist, humid conditions in the crop canopy have combined to make an ideal environment for sclerotinia infection. Clint Jurke, agronomy specialist with the Canola Council of Canada, said many growers are applying fungicides. “There certainly has been moisture, and that’s the one thing that the disease needs,” Jurke said. “It just really comes down to how much moisture is in that crop canopy as to what the sclerotinia risk is going to be.” For many producers, deciding whether to apply fungicides will be influenced by the crop’s yield potential, Jurke said. In general, crops with a yield potential of 35 bushels per acre or more should be considered for fungicide application. Crops with yield potential of 30 bu. or less generally have canopies that are less dense, meaning air flow in the canopy is greater and the risk for infection is lower. “The wet spring has caused that

Sclerotinia develops on canola when the spore carrying petals drop onto the leaves of the canola plant. | FILE PHOTO sclerotia to germinate and produce apothecia, so there will be lots of ascospores around, regardless of which part of the Prairies you’re in,” he said. “If that crop is fairly wet during the day, that’s all the fungus needs to begin causing a yield loss.” Fungicide application is expensive. Costs can be $20 to $30 per acre, depending on the fungicide and application method. Canola can reach 20 percent bloom

just four or five days after the first sign of flowering, so producers should be ready to assess crops shortly after the first flowers appear. Application is recommended when the crop is 20 to 50 percent in bloom. Spraying too early or too late will limit the fungicide’s effectiveness. Late applications might also breach harvest intervals for fungicides. Fungicide must land on canola petals before they fall into the canopy to be effective. Sclerotinia ascospores cannot infect plants directly. Instead, they need dead plant tissue, such as petals that fall into the canopy and stick to the leaves and stems of canola plants. Decaying petals give ascospores the energy they need to begin infection. Once inside the plant, the fungus grows throughout the stem, eventually cutting off moisture and nutrient flow. Jurke said fungicide application can reduce the severity of losses but will not eliminate infection completely, especially if conditions are favourable throughout flowering. Sclerotinia tolerant canola varieties are less susceptible to the disease but should not be considered a silver bullet, he added. “There are sclerotinia tolerant varieties out there, but those varieties will not give you the same kind of control as a fungicide application.”


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PRODUCTION

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

WATER | MOISTURE MEASURING

Irrigation management systems give heads up on soil needs BY REBECA KUROPATWA FREELANCE WRITER

Ted Harms and his team have been working with farmers for 13 years as they evaluate soil water sensors. Harms, a provincial irrigation specialist in Alberta, said soil water sensors that are suitable for adoption by irrigators must be “fairly inexpensive (under $1,000), easy to use and interpret.� He began his three-year project in 2000 by installing five kinds of sensors on farmers’ fields and comparing them for accuracy, stability and reliability of readings. However, he said few farmers have continued using any of the sensors.

“Some did buy and install them initially, but most found the effort wasn’t worth the information the instruments gleaned,� he said. “Most of today’s market’s soil water sensors, for use by irrigation farmers, have as their output volumetric soil water content or a measure of soil tension (kPa or bars). Interpretation of that output to make a decision on when to and how much to irrigate is very much soil texture specific.� Harms said farmers need a high level of analytical skill to understand these readings. “For instance, if you have sandy loam soil and get a reading of 23 percent volumetric water content, you might not know where to go from

there. With that kind of soil, that reading would mean that’s all the water that profile can hold. But if you get that same water content reading in clay soil, you’d better start irrigating,â€? he said. There are easier ways to get the information. Many farmers will go with a manual step-on sampler called an Oakfield or a crank in Eijkelkamp auger,called a Dutch Auger. “Then they feel the soil to see if it’s dry or wet to determine its water needs.â€? There are three main methods to measure or estimate crop evapotranspiration: • A weighing lysimeter is a sensitive weighing mechanism. If the con-

tainer is getting lighter, the weight loss is attributed to the water that the plants are transpiring. • The Eddy flux covariant/correlation system measures turbulent fluxes such as wind speed and direction, incoming solar radiation, temperature and relative humidity. • The Bowen ratio system, which Harms’ team uses, measures many of the same factors. The variables are then related by equations to how a crop is using water. It’s mostly based on meteorological parameters, such as incoming solar radiation, temperature, relative humidity and wind speed. CWB started promoting its Weather

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Bug Network in 2009. Producers would buy a weather station and soil probe. For a fee, CWB would advise them of the meteorological readings as well as their fields’ potential for evapo-transpiration. Harms said irrigation farmers are most interested in irrigation management products based on measured meteorological parameters. “At last count, we had about 15 percent of irrigated acres in southern Alberta using them,� he said. “We have an irrigation management model, which is a field-specific model that tracks your soil water, giving you a head’s up when you need to irrigate and how much water your soil profile is lacking. “We also have a web-based one that tells you how a crop is using water on a daily basis: a chequebook method that tracks how much soil water has been used and how much precipitation has been received.� The system uses local meteorological stations to measure short-wave solar radiation, temperature, RH, wind speeds and precipitation. No station is more than 30 kilometres from a field. “The meteorological readings are related to how a crop is using water by calculating reference evapo-transpiration (alfalfa) using the Penman Montieth equation and relating that calculation to a specific crop using locally calibrated crop coefficient curves. The crop coefficient curve we use is unique for any crop,� he said. “They all have their own curve for the particular way they mature, use water, and more. For high weed pressure situations, where weeds use more water that the system predicts, you just adjust it as needed. The same goes if there’s poor germination or hail.� Weather Innovations offers similar services in Ontario, while Agriculture Canada provides it for fruit growers in British Columbia. Harms and his team make it available in Alberta, and it is also used in Saskatchewan and Manitoba. Harms and his team just started working with variable rate irrigation from Nebraska manufacturers Valmont, T&L, and Reinky, which hire CropMetrics, an agronomic data services provider, to sell their technology. “The technology was originally promoted to us as a way to avoid irrigating a particularly low spot,� said Harms. “I was told they’d (CropMetrics) come up from Nebraska, do a map of the field, go back and send me a prescription for how to irrigate that particular field. “What’s become apparent from that study is that we need a way to get information on what the pivot is doing and what we need it to do. We need soil water sensors in the field because we really need to know what’s going on with the soil water. It will have to be wireless and to be able to communicate on an almost hourly basis.� This year, Harms is evaluating a wireless, soil water sensor network from Campbell Scientific, which will provide hourly soil water readings in specific areas of a field. This will tell him if his soil water readings increased and how much irrigation water the pivot applied. Producers may choose to adopt this for its energy and water saving attributes, which Harms said is seven to 20 percent, and for maximizing production per unit area.


PRODUCTION

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

TOP LEFT: When Salford ran tests with a Valmar and granular fertilizer mixed with wheat seed for better visual inspection, the company also found wheat yields improved and turned its attention toward a drill option.

CROPS | SEEDING

Growers find new uses for cultivator Salford RTS 1100 | Lightweight machine for small seed crops can seed wheat BY RON LYSENG WINNIPEG BUREAU

Matt Kremeniuk, who uses his Salford RTS 1100 to apply fertilizer, underseed timothy and seed canola and barley, says wheat will be the next crop to be seeded using vertical tillage. After two years using the RTS 1100, Kremeniuk said light weight seeding rigs with shallow working tools are the obvious winners when it comes to early seeding in the notoriously wet conditions around Evansburg, Alta., where he farms. “Last year was bad for barley here. We put down 110 pounds of seed with 240 lb. fertilizer through the Salford,” said Kremeniuk, which is the same rate he put down through his regular air drill. “Mud was sticking to the tires on the Salford and it was all looking pretty bad. So we were surprised that it came up out of the ground in such a hurry. But the big surprise was when we got a better yield than we got through our air drill. We only got 50 bu., but that’s good for those conditions.” Kremeniuk’s under-seeded timothy for seed production germinated quickly and was almost too thick to handle. Converting the 30-foot tillage machine into a drill was not difficult. He said the boot mounts on an adjustable arm just behind the coulter so it blows seed and fertilizer into the trench from his FlexiCoil cart. Harrows cover the trench. Adjustable, spring-loaded rolling baskets at the back pack the soil and trench. “Everything is adjustable on this 1100,” he said. “There’s a lot of adjustment on the baskets, the pressure, the depth, the tilt on the harrows, weight front to rear on the frame. Everything. Some guys adjust the harrows so they flatten out. I run mine more straight up because we do one-pass seed and

fertilizer. It stirs things and covers better with the harrows straight up. A lot of people think this is like broadcasting, so you end up with a solid seeded field. But it’s not. It leaves distinct rows.” Kremeniuk said he’s just beginning to understand the multitude of tasks the machine is capable of performing. “From now on, I’m not going to wait so long to use it. We waste too much time waiting for fields to dry. This lets me get out on the land sooner,” he said. “The new drills are so heavy and they sink so easily. Plus they only run at four or five m.p.h. This 1100 may only be 30 feet, but we seed at eight m.p.h. in wet fields, so that makes up for a lot.” Jim Boak of Salford Machine said the vertical tillage cultivator has been overlooked as a seeding tool until just recently. It weighs less than conventional air drills and works only the top surface of the soil, he added. “So far, we have about 100 customers in Canada and the U.S. who are seeding small seed crops and cover crops with our 1100,” he said. “Our seed boot blows seed and fertilizer in right behind the coulter, so the coulter serves as an opener. Guys hook up to our Salford air cart or Val mars or FlexiCoil carts and just about any cart you can imagine. Guys tell us they can put a crop into a wet field when no other seeder can do it. That’s with our 1100 Vertical Tillage Drill.” Boak said soybean growers use it as a rotary hoe, going in before plants emerge and running at about a 20 degree angle to the crop rows. “This whole seeding thing started when we were working with a Valmar to spread fertilizer. We added some wheat seeds to make it easier to see where the granules were flying,” he said. “What we got out of that was a fantastic crop of wheat. So we decided

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TOP RIGHT: Salford dealer Don Droesch says the shallow disc disturbs just enough of the soil surface to create a good seed bed.

we’d better look into the seeding idea. We started with just small seeds, but this year we have a customer who put in 400 acres of soybeans with our vertical till drill. So we’re watching to see how that turns out.” For more information, contact Kremeniuk at 780-621-4656.

NEAR LEFT: The optional seed boot converts the Salford RTS 1100 vertical tillage cultivator into an air drill with the ability to seed into wet soil. | SALFORD PHOTOS

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JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

LIVESTOCK

ANCIENT LINEAGE A British Columbia farm keeps an ancient breed of sheep from northern Scotland called Soay. | Page 82

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LIVESTOCK SALE | HOLSTEIN PRODUCER RETIRES

$265,000 heifer tops retirement sale Doug Blair recognized | Other owners plan to carry on Rocky Mountain Holsteins ranch BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

COCHRANE, Alta. — Selling a young dairy heifer for a record price in Western Canada was like a farewell toast for Doug Blair. The July 9 sale marked Blair’s friendly goodbye to his partnership with David Chalack and Glenn Hockley, who will continue the Rocky Mountain Holsteins brand at the Cochrane area farm. The 10-month-old female, named Rockymountain Uno Cheyanne, sold for $265,000 at the Rocky Mountain sale. Stanton Brothers of Ilderton, Ont., were the buyers. It also bought her full sister, Rockymountain Uno Clarisa, for $95,000. The sale offered 104 lots, which sold for $1,136,950 and averaged $10,535. The farm also sold 62 embryos for an average price of $667. Blair plans to retire to Cobble Hill, B.C., with his wife, Anne, and write a book about his experiences in the cattle genetics business. He said he has watched the dairy industry adopt new technology, starting with artificial insemination in 1944. That technology was the beginning of a journey that made Canadian Holsteins respected around the world, he added. “When artificial insemination arrived, it was a milestone,” he said. Blair founded the artificial insemination company Western Breeders Service in 1968 and was chief executive officer until 1988, when a merger resulted in the formation of Alta Genetics Inc. He continued as chief executive officer until he retired in 2002. He watched artificial insemination offer faster genetic improvement for the beef and dairy sectors.

DOUG BLAIR ROCKY MOUNTAIN HOLSTEINS

Breeding decisions were further improved with computer power in the 1960s that could create databases and rapidly evaluate sires. Even so, calculations of parent averages had only a 35 percent reliability in predicting the heritability of certain valuable traits. Genomic calculations changed all that. “Genomics finally were able to get the DNA profile in cows, but what really makes it work is there are about 10,000 proven Holstein sires that have about 26 million daughters,” he said. The big database allows producers to correlate DNA information with breeding results. “Now when we take a DNA sample from a heifer calf, for example, we correlate what her DNA says against a very large database of genetic information,” he said. The database is updated every three months. The reliability of the data is 70 percent for a young animal, 80 percent for a cow and 85 percent for a proven bull. “We know just about as much

about a calf when it is born now as we did before, after she had two lactations,” said Blair. He has judged Holsteins around the world and still values the visual assessment of proper conformation. However, added genomic information means that harder to identify traits, such as daughter fertility and herd life, are now more accessible at an earlier age. He said producers are now willing to spend big money on heifers such as Cheyanne because the genetic information indicates superiority before a calf ever hits the ground. Selling the concept of genomics was met with skepticism in the early days, but others were keen to adopt it, especially since 2010 when genetic information became more stable and reliable as more data was added. The cost of testing is also lower, so commercial dairy producers are starting to test their heifers. Those with the best numbers become replacements. “It is not just the elite dairymen that are using DNA,” he said.

“It is basically progressive commercial dairymen who are using it, too.” As for Cheyanne, the new owners will send her to an embryo transfer centre, where she will enter an invitro fertilization program. Her oocytes will be harvested and fertilized in a petri dish with semen from top performing sires. The heifer’s eggs will be collected ever y two weeks until she is 15 months old. She will then be bred, and more IVF work can be done for another two months once she is 60 days pregnant, “If she works like she should work, they will probably end up with 20 or 25 progeny from that heifer before she is two years old,” he said. “We still like to have the verification of the actual production records and what they look like when they are milked.” Blair said the Stanton brothers are progressive dairy producers and have one of the highest genomic rated herds in Canada. “They are concentrating on having the very best dairy herd in Canada, and she is a step along the

way for them,” he said. There have been other honours since Rocky Mountain was formed 10 years ago, first using traditional breeding methods and later genomic evaluation. In 2011, the farm won the breeders herd award at the World Dairy Expo at Madison, Wisconsin. Its herd was the unanimous choice among 17 judges for conformation. The farm has also placed 21 bulls in AI centres, and the Rockymountain prefix is gaining recognition around the world. Blair will continue his involvement with various boards in retirement. He has also received considerable recognition for his contributions to the dairy business and agriculture. He was the founding president of the Canadian Association of Animal Breeders and the Canadian Embryo Exporters Association, and is a past president of the Canadian Livestock Exporters Association. He also served as co-chair of the Canadian Sectoral Advisory Group on International Trade for four years, which advises Canadian agriculture and trade ministers. Blair was chair of the Canadian Dairy Network (CDN) and the National Association of Animal Breeders in the United States. He received the Pinnacle Award for outstanding business success, the Canadian Export Achievement Award and the Commemorative Medal for Contributions to Canada and was inducted into the Canadian Agriculture Hall of Fame in 2003. In 2007, he was made an honorary member of the Klussendorf Association at World Dairy Expo, and in 2008 he was the first co-recipient of the Dairy Cattle Improvement Industry of Distinction Award by CDN.

This Holstein heifer, which was born in September 2012, sold for $265,000 at the Rocky Mountain Holsteins sale held July 9 at the farm near Cochrane, Alta. The buyer, Jim Stanton of Ilderton, Ont., also bought a full sister to this female for $95,000. | BARBARA DUCKWORTH PHOTO


LIVESTOCK

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

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CALGARY STAMPEDE | SUMMER SYNERGY

Youth excel at Calgary Stampede shows Future farmers | Teenage winners honour family heritage while working toward their own futures BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

A world class show like the Calgary Stampede often brings out the best in the livestock world. This year, a group of high achieving teenagers won the big prizes with their beef cattle. The beef business has been part of their lives since they were born and many were showing cattle before they started school. Kathryn Dolliver of Stettler, Alta., was a major winner. She had the grand champion market heifer and reserve grand champion junior steer and the supreme champion purebred cow at Summer Synergy, all of which netted her thousands of dollars in cash prizes and a $1,000 scholarship. Most of her week was spent at Summer Synergy, a partnership between the Stampede and the Olds Agricultural Society to showcase dairy and beef cattle and host the provincial 4-H sheep show. A serious, quiet girl, Dolliver said all her extra time is devoted to her cattle and building her herd. Her champion heifer was the first female she bought with money she had earned from past shows. Dolliver said she has learned independence and the value of dedication. “I like to do my own work with them so they get used to me,” she said. At 15, she has had an extensive show career, which started when she was little as a means to gain self confidence. Her ambition is to become a veterinarian. Seventeen-year-old Chase Miller had the supreme champion commercial female at Summer Synergy with a Maintainer calf at foot. The Maintainer female was bought as a youngster from Kansas. The Synergy show was its first time out and was judged as the most feminine of the class. Miller’s family, who lives near Cremona, Alta., raises Maintainers, which are a cross between Maine Anjou and any other cattle. His father is a veterinarian with an extensive embryo transfer practice. The teenager decided to start his own business, Chase Show Cattle, two years ago and now has 17 show steers for sale. “It is my planning, my breeding selection and I am the one out there doing the work in the morning and getting the show cattle ready,” he said. “The point of me bringing her out was to sell genetics off this cow.” He won cash prizes for the supreme

cow and a $1,000 scholarship. Show steers are becoming a popular business, in which breeders seek out the top sires using artificial insemination to create a perfect animal that not only looks good but produces high quality beef. Miller’s entry to the Stampede steer classic two years ago won the carcass competition with a quality grade of Prime 60. The Calgary Stampede attracted 1.1 million visitors this year despite floods that ravaged the city and area. At the steer show, Riley Chalack of Carstairs, won the Stampede Steer Classic. The Maine Anjou cross earned $10,000 for him and his partners, Curtis Flewelling, Royden Anderson and Logan Chalack. He and Anderson bought the steer as a calf and worked with it this spring using a special feed ration. They started by entering smaller shows, but Chalack said he felt some trepidation when he walked into the ring at the Stampede and checked out the competition. However, he figured his chances of placing high were good. “Today I was more nervous than anything,” he said. He finished high school this year and plans to work on his family’s mixed farm and build a show steer business with Anderson.

The reserve grand champion steer at the Stampede show was a straightbred Hereford from the Brost Bros. operation at Irvine, Alta. Nicona Brost raised the steer as part of her 4-H project. It was sold for $4,600 to Perry Deering of Deerview Meats in Medicine Hat., after winning the Medicine Hat 4-H division show. The new owners agreed the steer should go to the Stampede steer show. “My living is buying good carcass cattle. I picked that calf as one of the best calves out of Medicine Hat and then we brought him up here and obviously he is,” said Deering. Flewelling Cattle Co. and Logan Chalack are also owners who helped prepare the 1,400 pound steer for the show. The $4,000 prize money will be split among the owners. “As for the money, I don’t even care,” Nicona said. For her father, Blaine Brost, the win was a vindication. “The Hereford cattle have taken a lot of knocking for the last 15 years and we have been building up steam and our cattle are getting better over the years. This is going to help push them back to where we were 30 years ago,” he said. Nicona, 17, was pleased to see a

Top: Kathryn Dolliver of Stettler, Alta., was a major winner at the Calgary Stampede livestock shows. She won the supreme champion purebred female with a Simmental cow at Summer Synergy, grand champion market heifer, pictured, at the Stampede heifer show and reserve grand champion junior. Above: Chase Miller of Cremona, Alta., had the supreme champion commercial female at the Summer Synergy show held at Olds, Alta. The Maintainer cow with a calf at foot was on display at the Calgary Stampede. | BARBARA DUCKWORTH PHOTOS home-raised steer achieve so much. It is her biggest win and was a good farewell because she is retiring from 4-H this year to pursue a post secondary education.

Unlike some of the other competitors, she did not show her steer extensively because she also had to devote time to being the rodeo queen in Maple Creek, Sask.

CALGARY STAMPEDE | SUMMER SYNERGY

Supreme champion winner plans flock expansion, 4-H work and ambassador duties BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

Shannon McLaughlin has raised sheep for only two years, but she already has learned enough to show her lambs to the championship circle. Her Suffolk-North Country Cheviot yearling ewe with two lambs at foot were champions at the Alberta provincial 4-H show held in Olds, Alta.,

as part of Summer Synergy, a youth livestock program sponsored by the Calgary Stampede and the Olds Agriculture Society. Her little flock was named supreme sheep champions at the Calgary Stampede July 13. She also won a $1,000 scholarship. McLaughlin is full of enthusiasm for the program, which brings children and livestock together for a week of

education and competition. About 240 young people from Alberta and Saskatchewan participated in Summer Synergy. “It is really busy and tiring, but it is an amazing experience,” she said. “It is so fun and you learn so much.” There is also an opportunity to win more than $150,000 in scholarships and bursaries as well as cash prizes. McLaughlin belongs to the White-

court 4-H Multi Club, which offers sheep, goat, horse and life skills projects. She started in the horse program but was attracted to cute, cuddly sheep. McLaughlin said programs such as 4-H and Summer Synergy have taught her how to be a sheep ambassador at events such as the Stampede and small town fairs. Her 4-H club has also taught her to milk goats and make soap. She hopes to pursue a similar proj-

ect when the ewes are more mature, as well as learn spinning. The 15-year-old plans to expand her flock on her parents’ farm, where they raise cattle. She said sheep are part of her future, and she wants to return to the Synergy program, whether she wins big prizes or not. “It will be tough to repeat what I did this year,” she said.


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LIVESTOCK

SHEEP | ENDANGERED BREED

GRAZING | AGROFORESTRY

Rancher helping to preserve breed Soay sheep | B.C. breeder building a flock of sheep originally from northern Scotland

Forestry, forage can work together

BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH

BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH

CALGARY BUREAU

CALGARY BUREAU

BARRIERE, B.C. — Erin Wilson feels a special affinity with an ancient breed of sheep. The Soay, with their brown woolly fleeces and curving horns, have lived in northern Scotland for centuries. Wilson’s ancestors tended those sheep, and she is now striving to build a breeding flock of this rare breed at her farm near Burns Lake, B.C. “Ever since I can remember, I have been interested in preserving animals that are disappearing,” said Wilson, who brought some of her flock to the All Canada Sheep Classic in Barriere at the end of June. The sheep are a primitive breed and still retain some of their feral qualities. Although the rams circle Wilson when she offers a bucket of barley, the others are shy and prefer to avoid visitors. She has 15 breeding ewes, 16 lambs, seven rams and seven yearling ewes, which she registers with the British Soay Sheep Society. An estimated 2,000 Soay live in North America with most being in the United States. She imported hers five years ago from breeders in Oregon and Washington. “It is hard to build up a flock because there are not the ewes available,” she said. Wilson wants to build her flock to a size where she can offer breeding groups for sale. The ewes usually deliver one lamb, but twins are possible. “If the flock is unstressed and everybody is healthy, you will see more twins,” she said. Her sheep graze on 80 acres, and she rarely supplements their diets. “They don’t take grain or alfalfa pellets well. It is not natural to them,” she said.

Agroforestry projects in British Columbia show that trees and cattle can live harmoniously. The trees provide shade, hold soil moisture and protect riparian areas, while the livestock can control plant growth. The B.C. Agroforestry Industry Development Initiative is developing projects that integrate trees and shrubs with crops and livestock. Initiatives include shelterbelts, riparian management and growing crops between rows of trees. Provincial forester Rob Dinwoodie wants the sector to move away from just growing timber to managing B.C.’s public lands for multiple use so that several industries can benefit. “One of the key things of forage supply for the ranching industry and people who hold a grazing license, if you do not have the forage, you don’t have any industry,” he told a B.C. Cattlemen’s Association meeting that was held in Vernon May 23-25. There is considerable competition for productive land in the province, most of which is owned by the crown. Dinwoodie, who is the northern resource operations ministry’s range officer for the Okanagan-Shuswap district, predicted that the population on privately held land in his district is likely to double in the next 25 years with more vineyards, golf courses and houses. Conflicts have erupted over how much productive land can be developed for urban areas. He said the timber industry is a major resource for the province. It is well managed and complies with provincial legislation. However, other users, such as ranchers who want to graze their cattle under the tree canopies, feel neglected. The ministry issues grazing licenses, but it is generally agreed that forage production needs more attention so that range managers and livestock producers know what is available. Dinwoodie’s district is working on a strategy to analyze land on a pasture by pasture basis to see what kind of plants, wildlife and trees exist. This would help the province develop a database and better use current forage resources. Werner Stump, president of the North Okanagan Livestock Association, agreed that a better database is needed to resolve some of the conflicts over land use. “We have this wealth of information on timber growth and inventory to manage the harvests in an area,” he said during an education session at the BCCA meeting. “We don’t have that yield information for forage to a satisfactory degree or a consistent level across the province,” he said. “Until we get a solid database we are not going to be able to manage forage on a sustainable basis.” Stump said timber is tightly managed, but there is no similar planning for forage. “Forest harvest did not consider the long-term supply or flow of forage.”

A pair of Soay sheep owned by Erin Wilson of Burns Lake, B.C., was on display at the All Canada Sheep Classic held in Barriere, B.C. | BARBARA DUCKWORTH PHOTO The breed is considered endangered in Great Britain. The University of Edinburgh and the Imperial College in London started the St. Kilda Soay Sheep Project to preserve the breed and trace its genetic heritage. They are similar in type to the mou-

flon seen in the wild in Corsica , Sardinia and Cyprus. The fleece is fine and is shed in the spring rather than being shorn. It produces good yarn. No one is sure how they ended up in northern Scotland, but researchers

believe they were there before the Roman occupation. To preserve the breed, more than 100 were removed from their island home of Soay in 1932 and released on Herat, which is one of the islands of the St. Kilda group.

LEADERSHIP | ACCEPTING CHANGE

‘Horse sense’ helps us get away from the chaos COWBOY LOGIC

RYAN TAYLOR

I

got home late last night from speaking at a meeting about 280 kilometres west of our ranch, and since this morning is my column deadline and I was driving until the wee hours of morning, I’m going to write about the speech. It’s either that, or write about the magical properties of sunflower seeds and gas station coffee to keep you driving and alert late at night. I’ll pick the speech. The group I spoke to was the Rural Leadership North Dakota class of aspiring leaders, who come from all across the state. I’m familiar with the group, having served on its guiding council for six years and I believe in

what it does to prepare new leaders for the challenges. I was asked to speak on the subject of “leadership in a changing world.” I’ve been given plenty of leadership roles in my community and in the state of North Dakota. As well, there has been a whole lot of change where I live, so I guess I have done my research. I just had to boil it down and put it in a 30 minute speech. I tried to think about what the speeches were like that I’ve most enjoyed listening to and those I have gotten the most out of. I’ve always liked speakers who were good storytellers, and I remembered the speeches best when the story illustrated their point. A lot of the good leaders I’ve known have been good storytellers, too. I saw plenty of change as I drove to the meeting through the traffic of one of the world’s hottest oil exploration booms in western North Dakota. My wife and I got married in a little white-steepled country church in the area 10 years ago. When we got mar-

ried, the church was surrounded by canola and durum fields. Today, there are at least a dozen oil wells, pumping derricks, gas flares and tank batteries surrounding the church. Things have changed. Some will say for better, some will say for worse. But like a marriage, you accept both, for better or worse. The story I used as I thought about leadership and change was about horses I’ve trained in the round pen of our corrals. I’ve seen a few horse whisperers work with fresh colts and learned a lot from them about horses and people. When you have a new colt in the round pen, they’ll run around the outside edge of the pen in flight mode. Animals are either fight or flight, and horses are flight. If we stand in the middle of the pen and wave our arms or toss a rope or make some other predatory movement, we increase the chaos and the flight. But, if you watch that horse, things

will change after awhile. Their mannerisms change, the look in their eye, the way they hold their head, and then, if it’s me in the middle, I put my arms at my side, drop my shoulder a little, look away and make a quarter turn away from the horse. And that horse will leave the chaos at the edge of the pen, walk to me, and, sometimes, even stick its nose over my shoulder. It’s safe, it’s calm, it’s time to learn and to lead. Change is often chaotic and tends to put us in flight mode. A leader will bring us to the middle for a conversation where there is trust and calmness. We become better together in that relationship. We get through change and chaos by coming to the middle. A good leader will get us there. Call it horse sense, or cowboy logic, or a little of both when we discuss leadership in a changing world. Ryan Taylor is a rancher, writer and senator in the state legislature from Towner, North Dakota.


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ALL CANADA SHEEP CLASSIC | JUDGING

Ontario Suffolk takes top prize at purebred event Tough trip for winner | Keith Todd dodged flooded roads to get to national show BY BARBARA DUCKWORTH CALGARY BUREAU

BARRIERE, B.C. — Judges Doug Higginson and Raymond Read had their work cut out for them when it came to the final showdown at the All Canada Sheep Classic. They had to ponder how to pick the best out of 15 breeds of sheep that came in all colours, sizes and body shapes. Ultimately, Higginson from Mill Bay, B.C., and Raymond from South Africa agreed that a Charollais ewe and a Suffolk ram should be supreme champions at the national purebred show held in Barriere June 30. “Comparing different breeds can be difficult, ” said Raymond. Both said they liked the femininity of the ewe and the meatiness of the ram. The ram came from Keith Todd of Lucknow, Ont., who made his first trip to British Columbia as part of a vacation and at the last minute decided to bring two sheep. It was an extra long journey because they had to find an alternate route to the B.C. Interior after flooding washed out the Trans-Canada Highway at Canmore, Alta. He farms with his son, Hugh, and raises the Southdown, Suffolk, Hampshire and Ile de France breeds, which he crosses with Arcott ewes. The Southdowns are popular with local customers.

“We can’t keep up,” he said. “There are so many people who want them for crossbreeding.” The national show was also a first time event for John and Kathy Hope of Langley. B.C., who brought the winning ewe “The show was close, so we thought we’d try our luck,” said Kathy. Their children are involved in 4-H sheep projects on their mixed farm, where they also raise cattle and a large broiler operation. They are looking for extra lamb production and have selected Charollais for that purpose, said Kathy.

The supreme ram at the All Canada Sheep Classic held at Barriere, B.C., June 28-30 was a Suffolk entered by Keith and Hugh Todd of Lucknow, Ont. | BARBARA DUCKWORTH PHOTO

BREED CHAMPIONS • Supreme flock: North Country Cheviot from Don and Deborah Wytinck, Nanaimo. B.C. • British Milk Sheep: Double JT Ranch, Kamloops, B.C. • Charollais: grand and reserve champion ewe, Golden View Farm, John and Kathy Hope, Langley; grand champion ram, Shepherd’s Haven, the Walker family, Langley; reserve, Fieldstone Ovine, Millet, Alta. • Clun Forest: grand champion ewe, Melanie Lee, Surrey, B.C.; reserve, Martin Penfold, Oakwood Farm, Manson, Man.; grand champion ram, Martin Penfold; reserve ram, Melanie Lee. • Dorper: grand champion ewe, David

and Janet Ellison, Kamloops, B.C.; reserve, Lochend Dorpers, Bob and Kate Janzen, Cochrane; grand champion ram, Bob and Kate Janzen; reserve, David and Janet Ellison. • Dorset: grand champion and reserve ewe, Randy McDermitt, Southey, Sask.; grand champion ram, Chris and Marianne Heeroma, Neilburg, Sask.; reserve, Briar Glen Farms, Sooke, B.C. • Hampshire: grand champion ewe, Clint Ashbacher, Halkirk, Alta.; reserve, Hazelmere Farms, Sidney, B.C.; grand champion ram, Clint Ashbacher; reserve, Hazelmere Farms. • Horned Dorset: grand champion

ewe, Double JT Ranch; reserve, Coyote Acres, Halkirk, Alta.; grand champion ram, Double JT Ranch; reserve, Coyote Acres. • North Country Cheviot: grand champion ewe, Freda Horton, Keremeos, B.C.; reserve, John and Sarah Lewis, Kirkellam Man.; grand champion ram, A & S Livestock, Hillsdale, Ont.; reserve, Freda Horton. • Romney (two entries): grand champion ram and ewe, Jo and David Sleigh, Whonnock, B.C. • Shropshire: grand champion ewe and reserve, Coyote Acres; grand champion ram, Danika Zinger, Pritchard, B.C.; reserve, Coyote Acres.

• Southdown: grand champion ewe, Donald J.J. Cluny, Grand Pre, N.S.; reserve, Mountain Side Southdowns, Prince George, B.C.; grand champion ram, Mountain Side Southdowns; reserve, Donald J.J. Cluny. • Suffolk: grand champion and reserve ewe, Jordan Livestock, Rimbey, Alta.; grand champion ram, Keith Todd, Lucknow, Ont.; reserve, Jordan Livestock • Texel: grand champion and reserve ewe, Hazelmere Farms, Sidney, B.C.; grand champion ram, G. & L. Brien, Ridgetown, Ont.; reserve, Finlay Farm and Lochridge Texels, Armstrong, B.C.

EYES | INFECTIONS

Pinkeye remains problematic for young calves in pasture ANIMAL HEALTH

JOHN CAMPBELL, DVM, DVSC

P

inkeye in cattle is a common disease that ranchers deal with this time of year when cattle are on pasture. Pinkeye was described in cattle in North America back in the early 1800s and although there has been significant research into the disease, it still presents many unknowns and challenges. Dr. Annette O’Connor, a faculty member and veterinary epidemiologist at the veterinary school at Iowa State University, presented her insights and research on pinkeye in cattle at a meeting of the Academy of Veterinary Consultants in Oklahoma City in April. O’Connor described three kinds of herds with respect to pinkeye infections: herds that never get pinkeye,

herds that sporadically get pinkeye infections and herds that consistently have pinkeye infections. Unfortunately, we don’t have a good handle on why these problem herds occur and what factors are most important in creating the problems. One of the herds at Iowa State University fell into the third category. It consistently had at least a third of the herd affected with pinkeye problems each year. O’Connor described the significant production impact of the disease by showing that calves affected with pinkeye weighed on average 30 pounds less than calves not affected. Calves with both eyes affected had even more dramatic decreases in productivity. Their weaning weights were 40 lb. less than calves not affected with pinkeye. Post-weaning data was available on many of the calves and although there were some compensatory gains, calves affected by pinkeye before weaning still weighed on average 15 lb. less at 12 months of age. The economic damage continues because calves weaned with obvious

pinkeye scars are often discounted at sale time. One of the more dramatic aspects of O’Connor’s research was her description of how rapidly the disease progressed in some of the experimental infections she followed. Within five hours of experimentally infecting an eye, a one centimetre wide ulcer was already visible. Very dramatic lesions could be created within 24 hours. O’Connor described how as a veterinary clinician she had initially been skeptical when producers had told her the cattle were fine yesterday and had dramatic lesions the next day. After observing the rapid development of ulcers in the experimental infections, we now have a better understanding of just how rapidly these eyes can deteriorate. Moraxella bovis is the name of the bacteria that is traditionally thought of as the primary cause of pinkeye infections. This bacteria can persist in the nasal cavity and may be transmitted by face flies from one animal to another.

Recently, several other studies have suggested a number of other bacteria such as Mycoplasma bovis or Moraxella bovoculi could potentially be alternative causes of pinkeye outbreaks as well. O’Connor’s research demonstrated that some of these bacteria were common in the eyes of cattle regardless of whether they had signs of pinkeye or not. In addition, experimental infections with these bacteria did not consistently cause pinkeye lesions. She did not think these other species of bacteria played an important role in causing pinkeye outbreaks. The traditional theory of some irritation to the eye along with Moraxella bovis infection is still the most likely two factors in causing pinkeye outbreaks. The three main sources of irritation for pastured cattle are flies, UV light, and grass. Dust may also be a contributor in some cases. UV light may be an important irritant especially in cattle with little pigmentation around the eye. Long grass can mechanically irritate the eye as well. Preventing pinkeye is not always

an easy task. Fly control through the use of a combination of ear tags, pour-ons, or insecticides can be one component of control, although resistance to insecticides can be an issue. Pasture clipping can decrease irritation from pollen and seeds, but unfortunately, this is not always a practical solution. Vaccines are available for pinkeye but these are not always effective perhaps due to the presence of multiple strains of the Moraxella bovis bacteria. A veterinarian can recommend an appropriate treatment protocol for dealing with pinkeye cases when they occur. Mild cases usually respond to systemic antibiotics such as long acting oxytetracycline. More severely affected animals may require other therapies and in some cases the bacteria may be resistant to normal antibiotic therapy.

John Campbell is head of Large Animal Clinical Sciences at the University of Saskatchewan’s Western College of Veterinary Medicine.


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CDN. DOLLAR:

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1.30% 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

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2.10% 1.90% 1.70% 1.50% 7/8

7/15

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AG STOCKS FOR JULY 8-12 U.S Federal Reserve chairperson Ben Bernanke said the bank would continue to stimulate the economy for the foreseeable future. That supported share values and pressured the U.S. dollar lower. For the week, the TSX composite was up 2.7 percent, the Dow rose 2.1 percent, the S&P rose 2.9 percent and the Nasdaq added 3.5 percent.

FRUIT | CLONING

Test tube food has arrived

Cdn. exchanges in $Cdn. U.S. exchanges in $U.S.

Micro-propagation | Saskatoon company uses laboratory to produce millions of seedlings

GRAIN TRADERS

BY AMY JO EHMAN

NAME

FREELANCE WRITER

EXCH

ADM NY Alliance Grain TSX Bunge Ltd. NY ConAgra Foods NY W.I.T. OTC

CLOSE LAST WK 36.31 16.55 74.23 36.58 13.15

34.88 16.33 71.35 35.62 13.15

PRAIRIE PORTFOLIO NAME

EXCH

Assiniboia FLP OTC Ceapro Inc. TSXV Cervus Equip. TSX Ridley Canada TSX Rocky Mtn D’ship TSX

CLOSE LAST WK 61.621 0.06 20.13 12.00 13.28

57.886 0.06 19.65 12.24 13.94

FOOD PROCESSORS NAME

EXCH

BioExx Hormel Foods Maple Leaf Premium Brands Smithfield Sun-Rype Tyson Foods

TSX NY TSX TSX NY TSX NY

CLOSE LAST WK 0.04 40.97 14.93 19.66 32.90 7.38 27.19

0.035 39.10 14.76 19.49 32.69 7.40 26.32

FARM EQUIPMENT MFG. NAME

EXCH

AGCO Corp. NY Ag Growth Int’l TSX Buhler Ind. TSX Caterpillar Inc. NY CNH Global NY Deere and Co. NY Vicwest Fund TSX

CLOSE LAST WK 54.34 37.72 6.17 87.17 43.74 83.94 12.90

50.39 35.69 6.10 82.14 41.79 81.44 12.52

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 95.3 92.1 110.84 34.12 54.41 1.60 102.94 56.09 41.13 82.84

92.74 86.58 103.40 32.69 53.00 1.53 98.71 53.75 40.33 79.00

TRANSPORTATION NAME

EXCH

CN Rail CPR

TSX TSX

CLOSE LAST WK 104.93 131.73

103.46 127.21

Toronto Stock Exchange is TSX. Canadian Venture Exchange is TSX Venture or TSXV. NAS: Nasdaq Stock Exchange. NY: New York Stock Exchange. ADR: New York/American Depository Receipt. OTC: Over the counter. List courtesy of Ian Morrison, financial advisor with Raymond James Ltd. in Calgary. Member of CIPF. Equity prices are from Thomson Reuters and OTC prices from Union Securities Ltd, Assiniboia Farmland LP. Sources are believed to be reliable, but accuracy cannot be guaranteed. Within the last year, Raymond James provided paid advice regarding securities of Cervus Equip. Contact Morrison at 877-264-0333.

Food from a petri dish? It doesn’t sound appetizing, but scientifically speaking, the petri dish may be a good place to give food a start. Prairie Plant Systems, a biotech company based in Saskatoon, is using lab technology and plant cloning to produce sour cherry, saskatoon berry and haskap seedlings for the local and export market. The goal, according to chief executive officer Brent Zettl, is to propagate new fruit varieties more quickly and accurately to feed a growing interest in prairie orchards and on-farm diversification. “This is where we think the future of agriculture is going to be,” he said. “As water resources become further limited in the southern hemisphere, the northern hemisphere is going see more demand for fruit production.” Micro propagation begins by cutting small pieces from the parent plant. These cuttings are “planted” in an opaque jello-like substrate that contains all the nutrients they need to grow without a root system. The substrate “recipe” is different for each species. “Plants don’t talk, of course, so it’s trial and error,” said Zettl. “There are about 30 constituents that go into making up that media.” When the seedlings reach about 10 centimetres, they are cut into smaller pieces and replanted in the agar substrate. By repeating the process over and over, thousands and even millions of little seedlings can be produced from the parent plant. “It’s a form of cloning,” said Zettl. “Each piece will be genetically identical to the one we started with.” Once sufficient seedlings are produced, they are planted in soil and encouraged to root, first in a warm mist tent, where they acclimatize

and grow a thicker skin, and then into the greenhouse to mature. “When they come to us, they don’t have a cuticle so they need near 100 percent humidity,” said greenhouse supervisor Derek Tiessen. “Without that transition, they would all die in the greenhouse within a few days.” Using these lab technologies, new fruit varieties can be propagated more quickly and more reliably than with traditional methods of grafting or growing fruit from seed, which isn’t true to the parent plant. As well, the petri dish environment is disease free and not subject to seasonal constraints.

With micro propagation, Zettl said a new fruit variety can be grown in sufficient volume, quality and consistency to take it to market in just one year. “This system is being used quite extensively around the world for orchids and ornamental trees. It’s the most common method of cloning plants today and the fastest way to build up a population.” The parent plants propagated by PPS are obtained from the University of Saskatchewan’s prairie fruit breeding program, where plant scientists have created several new fruit varieties through selection and cross breeding, using stock

material from Canada and northern climates around the world. The newest of these fruits is haskap, also known as blue honeysuckle, a plump bluish berry that is popular in Japan as a medicinal food because it is high in nutrients such as vitamin C, calcium and antioxidants. The U of S sour cherry is smaller and tarter than the big meaty cherries grown in British Columbia, but is higher in sugar content and therefore more suited to pies, jellies and juice. The granddaddy of prairie berries, the saskatoon, was bred for U-pick orchards in the 1980s and 1990s and remains a popular orchard fruit as new markets are developed for saskatoons in the food processing industry. In the orchard, haskap is the first to ripen, in late June, well before saskatoons in mid-July and cherries in August. A U of S alumnus, Zettl started PPS in 1988 while completing a degree in agriculture. Methods of tissue culture were being developed at that time and he saw an opportunity to use these techniques to propagate saskatoon berries. However, there wasn’t enough demand for saskatoons to keep the fledgling company going, so Zettl used the technology to produce other kinds of plants for other markets. This included medical marijuana and pharmaceutical plants, which were previously grown by PPS in a defunct underground mine at Flin Flon, Man. “We’ve moved beyond just cloning plants for agriculture. We use the same agronomic features, but in a contained way in the mines,” he said. As for the fruit, Zettl is bullish on the future of haskap. “We think people are going to want to eat them, and as a consequence, people are going to have to grow them. Those growers are going to need plants.”

DID YOU KNOW?

Haskaps, also called blue honeysuckle, produce berries in pairs on their shoots.

Prairie Plant Systems, a Saskatoon biotech company, is cloning cherries, saskatoons and haskap through micro-propagation. Small cuttings of a parent plant are “planted” in an agar substrate that contains all the needed nutrients. The resulting seedlings are distributed to greenhouses and orchards. Prairie Plant Systems chief executive officer Brent Zettl believes fruit farming will become more common in prairie agriculture and is working with the University of Saskatchewan’s fruit breeding program to get new varieties to market. | AMY JO EHMAN PHOTOS


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FINANCE | RETAIL OPERATIONS

Viterra crop input centres remain unresolved Nineteen centres affected | Centres not part of previous sale to Agrium will be sold to another buyer, company says BY BRIAN CROSS SASKATOON NEWSROOM

Employees at 19 Viterra crop input centres are still waiting to learn how they will be affected by the company’s plan to sell its retail operations in Western Canada. Employees working at nine locations in Saskatchewan, nine locations in Alberta and one location in Manitoba have been advised that they will not be part of a larger, yet-tobe-approved deal that will see Agrium buy 230 Viterra crop retail centres in Canada. Viterra has indicated the 19 locations not included in the Agrium deal will instead be sold to another buyer, which has yet to be announced.

In the meantime, affected employees — more than 54 in Saskatchewan and an undisclosed number in Manitoba and Alberta — are waiting for information and hoping their employment will not be affected. The locations are Barons, Claresholm, Crossfield, Eaglesham, Grimshaw, High River, Manning, Stettler and Viking in Alberta, Canwood, C u p a r, K a m s a c k , L e o v i l l e , Lloydminster, North Battleford, Prince Albert, Strasbourg and White Star in Saskatchewan and Roblin in Manitoba. The Grain Services Union, which represents some of the workers, said the affected employees have received no information to suggest that the operations will be closed or that their

jobs will be terminated Nonetheless, the uncertainty is affecting workers. “GSU is pressing Viterra to disclose its complete plan and to show more sensitivity to the concerns of affected employees,” said a document posted on the union’s website Western Producer efforts to speak with officials from Viterra and its parent company, Glencore Xstrata, were unsuccessful. Glencore, which acquired Viterra last December in a deal valued at more than $6 billion, has been steadily selling off pieces of Viterra’s global grain empire over the past few months. Last week, Reuters reported that Glencore is working with Barclay’s

PLC in an effort to sell Dakota Growers Pasta Co., a pasta processing plant located in St. Louis Park, Minnesota. Earlier this year, Richardson International concluded an $800 million deal with Glencore to acquire 19 western Canadian elevators formerly owned by Viterra, 13 crop input centres, terminal facilities in Thunder Bay, Ont., and milling operations in Saskatchewan, Alberta, Manitoba, Nebraska and Texas. That deal closed May 1. Meanwhile, the Agrium deal, which is still waiting for necessary approvals from federal competition re g u l at o r s, w o u l d s e e A g r i u m acquire 232 Viterra farm retail outlets in Canada, a number of farm retail

outlets in Australia and other assets. Glencore is also seeking buyers for Australian malting assets that were acquired in its original deal with Viterra. Media reports in Australia say at least six companies — including Cargill and Malteurop — are expected to submit a final offer for Glencore’s Australian malt business, Joe White Maltings, by the end of July. Joe White, which professes to be the biggest maltster in the Asia-Pacific region, owns seven malting plants in Australia and reported revenues of more than $250 million (US) in the 12 months ending Oct. 31, 2012. Some Western Producer editorial staff are members of a different local of the Grain Services Union.

ON THE JOB TRAINING | LEARNING THE BUSINESS

Have your kids ride along to learn farm management Bring them along

MANAGING THE FARM

PETER MANNESS

O

n most farms it is common for children to ride along with Mom or Dad in the combine or tractor. I have fond memories of riding the tractor sitting on a stool beside my dad. Intended or not, this is the beginning of the training program that will turn your children into farmers, and it’s a model that can be extended to make sure they know everything they need to know, including farm management, to be as successful as you’ve been. The benefit of farming as a business is that it allows children to be part of the farm and learn about it at an early age. They have accumulated hundreds of ride-along hours by the time they graduate from high school, and in the process have learned important skills. They may already be taking on important roles on the farm before they head off to college, such as operating equipment and handling livestock. This hands-on teaching method is effective at transferring necessary skills. The other benefit of a ride-along approach is that mentorship happens over a relatively long time so there is lots of opportunity for feedback and development. So how does the ride-along apply to farm management? The same principles can be used to develop a similar mentorship program to adequately train the next generation to manage a farming operation. Here are three tips to help get your ride-along started.

Your children should be exposed to the business side as early as possible if you expect them to take over complete management of the farm. I am not suggesting that you bring your eight-year-old to a meeting with your accountant, but if your children are interested in taking over the business, they should start to attend these meetings as soon as they are working on the farm full time. The purpose is to expose them to the business side of farming. This may seem simple enough, but in many farm families I meet, the children have been working on the farm for more than five years and want to take over the business but have never seen the farm’s financial statements. Have a plan for how you want them to participate Just as important as bringing them along is having an understanding of the desirable outcome. For example, the next time you attend a trade show, take a list of information you want to acquire at the show. Items may include a stop at your grain buyer to see if it is offering a show special for fall crop bookings or information on a new piece of equipment. With this plan, you can involve your children in the discussion process and create an opportunity for them to learn.

with a different perspective. If they are involved in solving the problem, they will also be more determined to make the solution work. It may seem strange to begin with,

and successful retirement. Peter Manness is a farm management consultant with MNP in Brandon. Email him at peter.manness@mnp.ca or follow him on Twitter or LinkedIn.

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08:30 09:15 10:00 10:20 11:00 11:20 12:00 13:00 14:00

15:00

Bring them along no matter what Did I mention it was important to bring them along? Sometimes people don’t, especially if the farm is struggling financially because they don’t want their children to know how bad things are. In the same way your children were alongside you in the field fighting the mud or combining in a drought, they need to be with you to learn about the business, no matter what. It helps them understand why decisions are made and provides you

but taking the time to explain the importance of the business side of farming to your children, and then having them ride along with you, will provide the best chance for them to succeed and for you to have a long

16:00 17:00 18:00 19:00 20:00

Grounds open to the public Exhibitor tent opens (closes 18:00) Opening Ceremony World Competitors parade to stubble plots START OPENING SPLITS – PLOWING Antique Tractor Demo Plowing JUDGE OPENING SPLITS Horse Plowing Demo Entertainment – Ambient Wake Up START CROWN – PLOWING Entertainment – Local Feature Parade of Power Entertainment – Ambient World JUDGE FINISH PLOTS Antique Tractor Demo Plowing Vintage Tractor Pull (Day 2) Entertainment – Local Feature Entertainment – Dani Lynn Vintage Tractor Pull Entertainment – Doug Waites Entertainment – Dallas Wolbaum Entertainment – The Polyjesters Entertainment – Jack Semple Entertainment – Ambient Wind Down

VISIT US ONLINE AT:

WORLDPLOWING2013.COM

*schedule of events subject to change

DAILY ADMISSION: TICKETS AT THE GATE $10 Adults, $5 Seniors & Youth (ages 4-17)

SATURDAY, JULY 20 - GRASSLANDS PLOWING 08:00

08:45 10:00 10:20 11:00

11:20 12:00 13:00 14:00

15:00 16:00 17:00 18:00 19:00 20:00

Grounds open to the public Exhibitor tent opens (closes 18:00) World Competitors parade to grass plots START OPENING SPLITS – PLOWING Antique Tractor Demo Plowing JUDGE OPENING SPLIT Horse Plowing Demo Children’s Activities: 11:00 – 16:00 Entertainment – Ambient Wake Up START CROWN – PLOWING Entertainment – Local Feature Entertainment – Ambient World Parade of Power JUDGE FINISH PLOTS Entertainment – Jack Peters Vintage Tractor Pull – FINALS Antique Tractor Demo Plowing Lowering of Flags Entertainment – Matt Masters Entertainment – Scott Cook Entertainment – Dallas Walbaum Entertainment – Schultz Sisters Entertainment – Aaron Kinjo Entertainment – Ambient Wind Down


86

MARKETS

JULY 18, 2013 | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | THE WESTERN PRODUCER

CATTLE & SHEEP

GRAINS Slaughter Cattle ($/cwt)

Steers 600-700 lb. (average $/cwt)

Grade A

Alberta

Live July 5-11

Previous June 28-July 4

Year ago

Rail July 5-11

120.10 108.99-131.49 n/a 105.00-112.00

n/a 111.41-135.92 n/a 104.00-110.00

110.43 112.90 n/a 100.00

196.00-198.75 208.00-213.00 n/a n/a

n/a 207.00-211.00 n/a n/a

120.00 110.39-129.07 n/a 103.00-110.00

n/a 117.82-129.70 n/a 100.00-106.25

109.43 110.05 n/a 96.00

197.75-198.75 207.00-212.00 n/a n/a

n/a 206.00-210.00 n/a n/a

$145

Steers Alta. Ont. Sask. Man. Heifers Alta. Ont. Sask. Man.

$140

*Live f.o.b. feedlot, rail f.o.b. plant.

$155 $150 $145 $140 $135 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

7/8

7/15

Saskatchewan $150

$135 $130 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

7/8

7/15

Manitoba $145 $140 $135 $130 $125 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

Canfax

Feeder Cattle ($/cwt)

n/a

n/a

n/a

7/8

7/15

Heifers 500-600 lb. (average $/cwt) Alberta $140

Steers 900-1000 800-900 700-800 600-700 500-600 400-500 Heifers 800-900 700-800 600-700 500-600 400-500 300-400

Cattle Slaughter

Sask.

Man.

Alta.

B.C.

Report not available -

Report not available -

120-132 121-142 130-147 136-155 145-158 148-160

Report not available -

Report not available -

Report not available -

114-129 116-133 120-139 129-141 130-145 125-145

Report not available Canfax

$135 $130

Average Carcass Weight

$125 $120 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

n/a 7/8

7/15

July 6/13 847 776 678 847

Canfax

Steers Heifers Cows Bulls

Saskatchewan $135 $130 $125

July 7/12 866 802 693 1072

YTD 13 874 820 674 916

YTD 12 873 821 677 1025

U.S. Cash cattle ($US/cwt)

$120 $115 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

n/a 7/8

7/15

Manitoba $135 $130 $125 $120 $115 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

n/a

n/a

7/8

7/15

Slaughter cattle (35-65% choice) National Kansas Nebraska Nebraska (dressed) Feeders No. 1 (800-900 lb) South Dakota Billings Dodge City

Steers 119.08 119.00 120.22 193.00 Steers 138-150 n/a 143-149

Basis Cattle / Beef Trade

Alta-Neb Sask-Neb Ont-Neb

n/a n/a n/a

-9.36 n/a -2.92

Canadian Beef Production million lb. YTD % change Fed 925.1 -10 Non-fed 154.5 -11 Total beef 1079.5 -10

Exports % from 2012 400,502 (1) +33.0 159,265 (1) +61.0 82,959 (3) -19.3 115,697 (3) -12.5 Imports % from 2012 n/a (2) n/a 15,362 (2) -30.0 90,364 (4) +9.6 115,678 (4) +6.0

Sltr. cattle to U.S. (head) Feeder C&C to U.S. (head) Total beef to U.S. (tonnes) Total beef, all nations (tonnes) Sltr. cattle from U.S. (head) Feeder C&C from U.S. (head) Total beef from U.S. (tonnes) Total beef, all nations (tonnes)

(1) to June 29/13 (2) to May 31/12 (3) to May 31/12 (4) to July 6/13

Canfax

Agriculture Canada

Close July 12 Live Cattle Aug 121.85 Oct 126.08 Dec 128.33 Feb 129.58 Apr 130.70 Feeder Cattle Aug 150.13 Sep 152.73 Oct 154.45 Nov 155.73 Jan 156.95

121.95 126.25 128.10 128.95 130.15

-0.10 -0.17 +0.23 +0.63 +0.55

117.20 121.45 124.90 128.45 131.25

151.80 154.18 155.78 156.78 157.73

-1.67 -1.45 -1.33 -1.05 -0.78

139.00 142.15 144.30 145.55 148.38

Est. Beef Wholesale ($/cwt) This wk Last wk Yr. ago n/a 218-219 209-211 Canfax

Sheep ($/lb.) & Goats ($/head) July 5 Base rail (index 100) 2.01 Range off base 2.16-2.17 Feeder lambs 0.90-0.95 Sheep (live) 0.10

Index 100 Hog Price Trends ($/ckg) Alberta $210 $200 $190 $180

Previous 2.08 2.08-2.32 0.90-0.95 0.10

New lambs 65-80 lb 80-95 lb > 95 lb > 110 lb Feeder lambs Sheep Rams Kids

July 8 1.35-1.92 1.58-1.80 1.47-1.62 1.49-1.58 0.92-1.40 1.20-1.60 0.60-0.74 0.65-0.85 70-110

n/a $170 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

n/a 7/8

7/15

1.40-1.80 1.30-1.54 1.20-1.35 1.39-1.45 1.25-1.35 1.37-1.54 0.55-0.74 0.65-0.85 n/a

Ontario Stockyards Inc.

July 15 Wool, new crop >80 lb Wool, new crop <80 lb Hair lambs Fed sheep

$210

Sltr. hogs to/fm U.S. (head) Total pork to/fm U.S. (tonnes) Total pork, all nations (tonnes)

$200 $190 $180 $170 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

(1) to June 29/13 7/8

(2) to May 31/12

0.85-0.90 0.91 0.80-0.86 0.15-0.18

To July 6

Fed. inspections only Canada U.S. 10,243,969 56,374,122 10,360,650 56,090,243 -1.1 +0.5

To date 2013 To date 2012 % change 13/12

Agriculture Canada

$190 $180 $170 7/8

7/15

Jul Aug Oct Dec

Close July 12 102.10 94.90 84.20 81.35

Close July 5 102.35 97.75 85.05 82.05

n/a 190.32

Man. Que.

184.00 201.00 *incl. wt. premiums

-0.25 -2.85 -0.85 -0.70

Year ago 97.23 90.40 79.48 77.00

% from 2012 -0.1 +9.6 +1.1

Import n/a 105,560 (3) 111,566 (3)

% from 2012 n/a +0.8 +1.6 Agriculture Canada

Feb Apr May Jun

EXCHANGE RATE: JULY 15 $1 Cdn. = $0.9619 U.S. $1 U.S. = $1.0399 Cdn.

7/8

7/15

Durum (Oct.) $310 $305 $300

$290 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

Milling Wheat (Oct.) $305 $300

$285 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

7/8

7/15

Close July 12 83.43 84.85 89.40 91.85

Trend -0.22 0.00 +0.20 +0.75

Year ago 81.53 85.18 91.03 93.30

July 15 23.00-23.50 17.25-19.00 16.00-22.00 21.75-23.00 17.75-18.75 21.00-25.00 18.75-19.50 12.80-13.00 10.80-11.00 8.40-9.50 8.30-8.55 13.00-13.25 6.25-8.60 38.75-40.75 35.75-38.75 29.20-30.75 26.00-27.75 23.80-25.00 27.75-29.00 22.75-24.00 23.75-24.00

Avg. 23.10 18.08 19.70 22.14 18.20 23.44 19.17 12.96 10.96 8.76 8.46 13.17 7.11 39.75 36.75 30.23 26.91 24.60 28.50 23.50 23.92

July 8 24.19 18.17 20.30 22.14 18.20 24.47 19.50 12.96 10.96 9.09 8.96 13.17 6.66 39.75 37.17 30.23 27.06 24.60 29.10 24.10 24.58

Cash Prices

Canola (cash - Oct.) No. 3 Oats Saskatoon ($/tonne) No. 1 Rye Saskatoon ($/tonne) Snflwr NuSun Enderlin ND (¢/lb)

$660 $640

July 10 July 3 Year Ago 221.13 227.38 175.02 n/a n/a 160.24 23.05 23.05 22.05

$600 $580 6/7

6/14 6/21 6/28

7/5

USDA

No. 1 DNS (14%) Montana elevator No. 1 DNS (13%) Montana elevator No. 1 Durum (13%) Montana elevator No. 1 Malt Barley Montana elevator No. 2 Feed Barley Montana elevator

$90 $60 $30 $0 $-30 6/7

6/14 6/21 6/28

U.S. Grain Cash Prices ($US/bu.)

7/12

Canola (basis - Oct.)

7/5

July 12 7.22 7.06 7.65 5.76 4.80

7/12

Grain Futures Feed Wheat (Lethbridge) $310 $300 $290 $280 $270 6/7

6/14 6/21 6/28

7/5

7/12

$680 $660 $640 $620 $600 6/7

n/a 6/14 6/21 6/28

7/5

7/12

Barley (cash - Oct.) $300 $290

Basis: $76

$270 $260 6/7

6/14 6/21 6/28

7/5

7/12

Canola and barley are basis par region. Feed wheat basis Lethbridge. Basis is best bid.

Corn (Sept.) $600 $580 $560 $540 $520 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

7/8

7/15

$1480 $1460 $1440 $1420 7/8

7/15

Oats (Sept.) $420 $400 $380 $360 $340 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

Close July 5 83.65 84.85 89.20 91.10

Laird lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Laird lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Richlea lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Eston lentils, No. 1 (¢/lb) Eston lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Sm. Red lentils, No. 2 (¢/lb) Sm. Red lentils, Xtra 3 (¢/lb) Peas, green No. 1 ($/bu) Peas, green 10% bleach ($/bu) Peas, med. yellow No. 1 ($/bu) Peas, sm. yellow No. 2 ($/bu) Maple peas ($/bu) Feed peas ($/bu) Mustard, yellow, No. 1 (¢/lb) Mustard, brown, No. 1 (¢/lb) Mustard, Oriental, No. 1 (¢/lb) Canaryseed (¢/lb) Desi chickpeas (¢/lb) Kabuli, 8mm, No. 1 (¢/lb) Kabuli, 7mm, No. 1 (¢/lb) B-90 ckpeas, No. 1 (¢/lb)

Cash Prices

$1400 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

(3) to July 6/13

Trend

7/15

Soybeans (Aug.)

Index 100 hogs $/ckg

Chicago Hogs Lean ($US/cwt)

$200

7/8

Chicago Nearby Futures ($US/100 bu.)

7/15

Manitoba

$160 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

Export 434,143 (1) 145,025 (2) 497,099 (2)

$185 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

$280

Hogs / Pork Trade

Saskatchewan

$190

Flax (elevator bid- S’toon)

Hog Slaughter

Alta. Sask.

$195

SunGold Meats

Fixed contract $/ckg

Aug 04-Aug 17 Aug 18-Aug 31 Sep 01-Sep 14 Sep 15-Sep 28 Sep 29-Oct 12 Oct 13-Oct 26 Oct 27-Nov 09 Nov 10-Nov 23 Nov 24-Dec 07 Dec 08-Dec 21 Dec 22-Jan 04

$200

$620

HOGS Maple Leaf Hams Mktg. July 12 July 12 174.86-175.81 174.19-175.14 165.31-171.99 164.68-171.33 157.20-159.11 156.57-158.48 157.68-159.11 157.05-158.48 157.12-158.55 156.47-157.91 150.90-154.25 150.26-153.60 146.84-148.27 146.87-148.30 142.05-143.97 142.09-144.00 142.05-147.31 142.09-147.35 147.79-147.79 147.83-147.83 144.92-145.54 144.96-145.24

$205

$290

Close Trend Year July 5 ago

Sask. Sheep Dev. Bd.

Due to wide reporting and collection methods, it is misleading to compare hog prices between provinces.

Source: STAT Publishing, which solicits bids from Maviga N.A., Legumex Walker, CGF Brokerage, Parrish & Heimbecker, Simpson Seeds and Alliance Grain Traders. Prices paid for dressed product at plant.

Barley (Oct.)

$295

Chicago Futures ($US/cwt)

Montreal Heifers 119.16 119.00 120.31 193.00 Trend n/a n/a +4/+6

Pulse and Special Crops

ICE Futures Canada

$295

To July 6 Fed. inspections only Canada U.S. To date 2013 1,312,888 16,490,786 To date 2012 1,454,906 16,653,093 % Change 13/12 -9.8 -1.0

USDA

Cash Futures

Previous June 28-July 4

7/8

7/15

Minneapolis Nearby Futures ($US/100bu.) Spring Wheat (Sept.) $820 $800 $780 $760 $740 6/10 6/17 6/24 6/28

7/8

7/15

July 15 July 8 Trend Wpg ICE Canola ($/tonne) Nov 524.80 543.20 -18.40 Jan 530.80 548.50 -17.70 Mar 536.10 550.10 -14.00 May 535.60 548.50 -12.90 Wpg ICE Milling Wheat ($/tonne) Oct 266.00 294.00 -28.00 Dec 270.00 294.00 -24.00 Mar 278.00 294.00 -16.00 May 281.00 294.00 -13.00 Wpg ICE Durum Wheat ($/tonne) Oct 302.00 294.90 +7.10 Dec 307.00 299.40 +7.60 Mar 312.00 302.40 +9.60 Wpg ICE Barley ($/tonne) Oct 194.00 194.00 0.00 Dec 199.00 199.00 0.00 Mar 199.00 199.00 0.00 Chicago Wheat ($US/bu.) Sep 6.6950 6.6300 +0.0650 Dec 6.8225 6.7475 +0.0750 Mar 6.9425 6.8675 +0.0750 May 7.0175 6.9225 +0.0950 Chicago Oats ($US/bu.) Sep 3.5325 3.5700 -0.0375 Dec 3.4175 3.4500 -0.0325 Mar 3.4825 3.5025 -0.0200 May 3.4850 3.5600 -0.0750 Chicago Soybeans ($US/bu.) Aug 14.5375 14.5550 -0.0175 Sep 13.1450 13.0025 +0.1425 Nov 12.6375 12.5225 +0.1150 Jan 12.6850 12.5750 +0.1100 Chicago Soy Oil (¢US/lb.) Aug 45.84 46.96 -1.12 Sep 45.76 46.60 -0.84 Oct 45.44 46.17 -0.73 Chicago Corn ($US/bu.) Sep 5.3625 5.3325 +0.0300 Dec 5.0350 5.0050 +0.0300 Mar 5.1575 5.1225 +0.0350 May 5.2350 5.1975 +0.0375 Minneapolis Wheat ($US/bu.) Sep 7.5500 7.6100 -0.0600 Dec 7.6650 7.7075 -0.0425 Mar 7.8050 7.8525 -0.0475 May 7.8850 7.9300 -0.0450 Kansas City Wheat ($US/bu.) Sep 7.0100 6.8900 +0.1200 Dec 7.1800 7.0875 +0.0925 Mar 7.3050 7.2150 +0.0900

Year ago 634.50 637.30 635.90 632.80 312.50 320.00 330.00 333.00 325.50 330.00 336.60 262.00 267.00 270.00 8.8450 8.9775 9.0375 8.9175 3.8025 3.8225 3.8675 3.9225 16.3375 16.0950 15.9050 15.8625 54.65 54.87 55.07 7.7675 7.7250 7.7250 7.6750 9.8300 9.7850 9.8075 9.7725 8.8450 9.0300 9.1050

Canadian Exports & Crush (1,000 To To tonnes) July 7 June 30 Wheat 298.1 126.8 Durum 76.3 32.9 Oats 25.4 13.5 Barley 3.7 10.7 Flax 0.9 18.2 Canola 61.1 39.7 Peas 25.4 31.6 Canola crush 115.7 116.1

Total to date 12973.2 4097.9 999.7 1290.4 312.1 6873.3 1938.8 6357.1

Last year 12977.2 3421.0 1094.5 1099.8 237.5 8253.3 1548.7 6346.1


NEWS

LIGHT UP THE SKY |

THE WESTERN PRODUCER | WWW.PRODUCER.COM | JULY 18, 2013

87

The late night sky put on a show June 29 as the northern lights (Aurora Borealis) danced with the stars, near Gleichen, Alta. | KEVIN LINK PHOTO

PUBLISHER: SHAUN JESSOME EDITOR: JOANNE PAULSON MANAGING EDITOR: MICHAEL RAINE

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President, Glacier Media Agricultural Information Group: BOB WILLCOX Contact: bwillcox@glaciermedia.ca Phone: (204) 944-5751

ADVERTISING Classified ads: Display ads: In Saskatoon: Fax:

TEMP. MAP

TEMPERATURE FORECAST

PRECIP. MAP

Above normal

Churchill

Prince George

Normal

Prince George Edmonton

Edmonton

Vancouver

Calgary

Saskatoon Regina

Below normal

Vancouver

Calgary

Regina

Winnipeg

Much below normal

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)

We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Periodical Fund of the Department of Canadian Heritage.

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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. ™

Assiniboia Broadview Eastend Estevan Kindersley Maple Creek Meadow Lake Melfort Nipawin North Battleford Prince Albert Regina Rockglen Saskatoon Swift Current Val Marie Yorkton Wynyard

Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %

29.4 29.3 27.1 31.2 30.5 30.3 28.6 29.0 29.1 28.9 31.1 29.1 29.5 29.2 29.2 30.3 29.6 30.5

4.8 14.0 19.2 31.4 4.0 8.4 4.4 0.0 4.9 0.0 0.9 8.5 2.1 5.4 21.9 24.0 7.4 22.0

7.0 9.7 5.0 10.0 5.5 3.4 2.7 5.3 6.1 4.0 5.4 5.7 9.5 4.9 4.2 8.7 7.2 8.0

159.0 196.1 226.4 269.1 139.9 241.3 154.0 190.0 175.8 195.8 255.3 157.8 222.1 171.7 194.5 261.7 144.5 160.6

89 99 127 138 92 145 92 113 99 124 145 90 126 105 115 166 73 92

MANITOBA Temperature last week High Low

Brooks Calgary Cold Lake Coronation Edmonton Grande Prairie High Level Lethbridge Lloydminster Medicine Hat Milk River Peace River Pincher Creek Red Deer Stavely Vegreville

Printed with inks containing canola oil

Member, Canadian Farm Press Association

Publications Mail Agreement No. 40069240

ALBERTA Temperature last week High Low

Letters to the Editor/contact a columnist Mail, fax or e-mail letters to joanne.paulson@producer.com or newsroom@producer.com. Include your full name, address and phone number for verification purposes. To contact a columnist, write the letter in care of this newspaper. We’ll forward it to the columnist.

The Western Producer reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement submitted to it for publication.

LAST WEEK’S WEATHER SUMMARY ENDING JULY 14 SASKATCHEWAN

The Western Producer Online Features all current classified ads and other information. Ads posted online each Thursday morning. See www.producer.com or contact webmaster@producer.com

CANADIAN HERITAGE ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Saskatoon

Winnipeg

News stories and photos to be submitted by Friday or sooner each week.

ADVERTISING RATES Classified liner ads: $5.85 per printed line (3 line minimum) Classified display ads: $6.50 per agate line ROP display: $9.25 per agate line

July 18 - 24 (in mm)

Churchill

Newsroom toll-free: 1-800-667-6978 Fax: (306) 934-2401 News editor: TERRY FRIES e-mail: newsroom@producer.com

HOURS: Mon.& Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Tues., Wed., Thurs. 8:30 a.m. – 8 p.m. e-mail: advertising@producer.com Advertising director: KELLY BERG Classified sales mgr: SHAUNA BRAND

PRECIPITATION FORECAST

Much above normal

July 18 - 24 (in °C)

EDITORIAL

1-800-667-7770 1-800-667-7776 (306) 665-3515 (306) 653-8750

29.8 27.5 27.8 28.9 27.1 25.7 27.3 29.3 29.1 31.2 30.2 24.6 28.1 27.1 26.1 29.0

4.8 6.7 2.8 5.6 0.2 1.6 3.9 4.7 6.9 5.9 4.4 -2.2 2.8 5.7 6.3 3.7

Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %

1.9 16.3 1.4 6.1 29.9 6.2 9.5 4.6 3.6 10.3 12.6 3.5 1.6 22.6 14.8 20.0

215.8 329.6 160.6 194.8 189.1 169.3 123.8 268.1 160.8 221.8 245.7 205.8 235.8 248.0 278.4 165.4

142 161 91 120 95 102 90 154 93 149 130 133 101 112 134 97

Temperature last week High Low

Brandon Dauphin Gimli Melita Morden Portage La Prairie Swan River Winnipeg

29.3 29.1 28.8 30.9 29.7 29.6 29.4 29.6

Precipitation last week since April 1 mm mm %

8.4 10.5 12.3 11.3 14.2 13.9 7.3 11.8

11.6 14.9 2.8 22.9 37.7 7.4 13.1 11.3

263.8 277.0 134.5 189.5 281.8 218.4 202.4 174.9

130 139 65 98 126 103 100 80

7.2 3.6 7.9 6.6 7.1

6.0 11.8 1.3 0.0 35.3

220.4 212.6 148.3 178.5 185.3

142 132 144 140 106

BRITISH COLUMBIA Cranbrook Fort St. John Kamloops Kelowna Prince George

30.6 25.1 34.3 32.4 28.0

All data provided by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s National Agroclimate Information Service: www.agr.gc.ca/drought. Data has undergone only preliminary quality checking. Maps provided by WeatherTec Services Inc.: www.weathertec.mb.ca

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