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Allan on articulated tractors

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Hugh MacKay

06-15-2005 03:26:17




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Allan: A few days ago you along with a few others chose to ridicule my thoughts on articulated tractors being more efficient when it comes to heavy drawbar work. Your argument was nothing more than new versus old and the fact that most of these operations were heavily subsidized by taxpayers dollars. While I can agree to some extent with your argument, the same can be said for some operations buying new conventional tractors.

Since that thread, I've talked with a couple of farm operators who have been using articulateds now going on for 35 years. In both cases I was told efficiency was the name of the game when it came to drawbar work. There is just nothing will match those 8 big tires putting horsepower on the ground. Both also agreed balance is very important. You must weight rear of tractor so both drive axles and differentials are sharing the strain equally. I should point out, 1 of these guys is using still using Deere 40 series vintage, while the other guy has new Deere and FordNH.

From my own experience, in 1975 I purchased a Deere 540A forestry skidder, same rearends as 20 series tractors, same 8 speed power shift as used in those tractors and a 329 cubic inch 6 cylinder turbo charged Deere diesel. I bought this machine as I had 500 acres of woodland. I also wanted a machine I could use around farm in summer growing season. This machine was equiped with 4 large tires as was my 1066 with duals. You can see from engine size this machine was less hp than 1066, and yes it was a wee bit slower on disk or cultivator than 1066. It would however do the job using substancially less fuel per acre. I did tend to use it on disk where speed was less important than cultivator. I also had the ocasional basketball size rocks and those were not kind to individual disk blades on a 20' disk, thus I was quite happy to see disk going 3.5 to 4 mph. On an hour meter basis this articulated machine was less for repairs as well.

It is my contention, that there is a good reason why 20+ year old 2 wheel drive big tractors, sell for close to nothing prices. That is exactly what they are worth. Your comments PLEASE.

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NDS

06-15-2005 13:55:42




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Hugh MacKay, 06-15-2005 03:26:17  
Hugh I do not want to get into the articulated argument but I would like to know where you find the 20 year old rear wheel drive tractors for next to nothing. I will certaibnly look into having some trucked South as they are still in demand here. No full time farmer in 2o miles of me has less than 5 150 HP up tractors and the only articulated tractors I know of have been parked for years as they do not work well on Southern cotton, bean and corn operations. Some of these farms have been operated by the same familys since before the Civil War so they may be stuck in the past.

There is a large tractor auction every first monday in Sikeston MO which is at the Northern edge of cotton belt. A good clean 150 HP up 20 year old 2 wheel drive John Deere will bring as much as it cost new there.

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Illinois Boy

06-15-2005 09:50:47




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Hugh MacKay, 06-15-2005 03:26:17  
Anybody that's still farming in this day and age is a GOOD business man!!!



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Mudcat49

06-15-2005 08:16:15




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Hugh MacKay, 06-15-2005 03:26:17  
I have read all this with interest! all I can say is that the American family farmer cannot keep paying retail for what they need to produce and keep selling their products for below wholesale!
I know I tried for years!
A Farmer who nows makes a good living selling cars/trucks!



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captaink

06-15-2005 07:46:56




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Hugh MacKay, 06-15-2005 03:26:17  
Well, I’m going to pour some gas on the fire now and probably end up with third degree burns, but I would like to encourage some deep thinking here.

It seems to me that our current society is based on the premise that bigger is better. Larger businesses including farming or ranching can spread fixed costs like family living and health insurance over a larger asset base which means that the profit margin and return on investment can be a lot smaller per unit. There was and probably still are available quantity discounts for large purchasers. See Wal-Mart as an example here. This philosophy has trickled down to ag. In my area there used to be at least two farms to a square mile 40 years ago. Now, I’m lucky to find two genuine full time farmers making a living off the land in ten square miles!

I still attribute this phenomenon mostly to fathers wanting to hand down the farm to their son(s) and still keep on farming themselves. This desire is admirable and ideally will not decrease the population but in reality it has. Since the prices for farm products have not gone up since the 1940’s farmers have had to find more cost efficient ways to produce and produce more from the same land base. Unfortunately these strategies have included the economies of large scale and willingness to invest in the latest technologies. It really doesn’t matter if the technology we are talking about is retiring Mr. Ed to the stable in lieu of an H Farmall or investing in global positioning equipment so that we can more effectively apply inputs to the land. Until the economy reaches a point where the small businessman can find his niche in the market I believe this upsizing spiral will continue and will continue to see fewer neighbors and larger equipment. As others have pointed out, there will be another downturn probably in the near future where operators will be forced to sell out or get bailed out again by government subsidies, but again, that is part of the current philosophy of our world. Keep in mind that the farm bill for many years had the official title of “Food and Securities Act” and that other countries as well see to it that food is available at affordable prices for their people.

Now, it that didn’t raise your blood pressure the following probably will. I have read on here several times where bankers catch the blame when a farmer ends up broke but have never seen one recognized when someone is successful. A banker is just a middleman who’s job is to take money that people have deposited in his bank and loan it to people that prove to him they are a good risk and can pay it back. The banker job is to do all the proper work to the best of his ability to ensure that the person entrusting him with their money will get it back plus interest. He is not the financial manager of the business or individual borrowing the money, nor should a borrower expect the banker to be an expert in his business regardless if it be farming or General Motors. He should be knowledgeable about financial reports like balance sheets and profit and loss statements so that he can recognize a sound business or problems in a business if they arise. I don’t take my car to my dentist for his opinion on getting the transmission fixed, why do we expect our banker to tell us when it is good for us to borrow money?

I have borrowed my share of money in the past and present. Some times I have regretted it, others not. The bottom line still is that whenever I borrowed money it was always MY idea, MY want, or even MY GREED that had me signing on the line to use and pay someone else to use their money. No one has ever held a gun to my head and forced me to borrow money.

When I decided to quit farming several years ago, it was my decision, based on my own knowledge and analysis of my business situation. I am currently working on staring a business so that I can be on my own as I’m tired of working for the large corporate conglomerates that really don’t “give a turkey” about me and just see me and their other employees as an expense. Because of this I have some money borrowed again and am working long hours in an attempt to make this work.

I know this has been long, but felt I needed to express my thoughts. I’m sorry and apologize if I offended anyone here by what I have said. That was not my intent. However, I do believe in what the good book says about removing the beam from our own eye before we try to find the speck in our neighbor’s eye (paraphrase). A lot of our problems we bring on ourselves either as individuals or as a collective.

End of sermon. Thanks for reading. I now have my flame retardant suit on! :>)

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Hugh MacKay

06-15-2005 08:49:33




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to captaink, 06-15-2005 07:46:56  
Well said captain.



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Allan in NE

06-15-2005 07:56:33




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to captaink, 06-15-2005 07:46:56  
Whadda talkin' 'bout? That was a darned good post, as usual.

As fer the deep thinking part; I would if I could, I'm just not capable. :>)

Thanks for yer thoughts; I enjoyed it.

Allan



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dhermesc

06-15-2005 05:46:51




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Hugh MacKay, 06-15-2005 03:26:17  
In the 1920s farmers argued over the affordability of a tractor over a horse. In 1939 farmers argued over who could ever need and afford a 30+ hp M and make it pay for itself. In 1960 they argued over the need for a cab tractor with 100 hp and how they could pay for themselves. The arguement over articulating tractors and their ability to pay for themselves was had back in the 1970s. We are now seeing the result as big two wheel drive tractors age out and farms continue to enlarge.

My brothers run a pair of 4X4s, a 9350 and a 9370 with a 7120 for a planting tractor they cover well over 2000 acres of their own and do custom work on the side. Even my B-I-L that teaches school full time runs a 7140 with FWA, he farms over 600 acres of row crop in his part time. The trend had been bigger every since McCormick invented the reaper and it will continue.

All that old faded iron was purchased new at some time.

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Sloroll

06-15-2005 06:33:19




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to dhermesc, 06-15-2005 05:46:51  
The afluent twenties lead to the Great Depression, The 60s/early seventies lead to the collaps of the banking institutions and again loss of farms in the late 70s. Both a result of over extending. Those that don't remember the past are doomed to repeat it. I heard that somewhere. The farm economy was picked back up by the buying of propperty for pennies (or less) on the dollar and the cycle starts again.

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dhermesc

06-15-2005 08:08:03




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Sloroll, 06-15-2005 06:33:19  
"Those that don't remember the past are doomed to repeat it."

Those that live in the past will never escape it.


Having grown up during the collapse of the farm economy in the 1980s and watched my father's farm go to the highest bidder in 1985 my brothers and I have also learned a few things from the past. My two older brothers started farming in 1980, I don't think they've forgotten too much about that time frame either.

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Sloroll

06-15-2005 08:13:44




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to dhermesc, 06-15-2005 08:08:03  
Dad never lost our farm.



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dhermesc

06-15-2005 08:41:07




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Sloroll, 06-15-2005 08:13:44  
Good for him.



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dhermesc

06-15-2005 08:43:50




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to dhermesc, 06-15-2005 08:41:07  
Dad never lost his farm either, he bought it back at his own auction with financing from a new bank based on his word. At that point he could pay for farming or continuing paying for his cancer treatment, he chose farming, and died 6 months later.



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Sloroll

06-15-2005 09:26:27




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to dhermesc, 06-15-2005 08:43:50  
I am sorry for your loss. No it wasn't good for him (my father). He didn't over extend and never had the luxuries of ac in the cab or time off for a family vacation. He worked another job, raised cattle, 6 kids, two 40 ft. gardens in the back yard. His father died before he was born. His mother (Single Mother) raised five kids alone through the depression. I am only saying that The philosophy I have is proven, at least to me. Somewhere money was lost to someone in the 80s; either the bank, its investors or the people that the land was purchased from. Did they get repayed? Yes they probably did mostly through Gov bank bail outs Hmmmm Where did that money come from? I haven't seen my taxes go down. The Banks ( a needed institution) this next go around I am sure have their tales covered. People like your father will not have the opportunity to buy their farms back. Your father, I am sure, was an honerable man as you said he got financing on his word alone. Not many will cover that anymore. My father also was treated with that respect. I have done that myself 5 years ago. I too would have made the same choice as your dad involving cancer treatment but that is a seperate volatile issue. Time will tell and we can yell across the fence our opinions. I don't think either of us will change our minds. If money is borrowed on big equipment or whatever based on land values ,and gov payments, not what is coming out of the ground, lenders will not be the ones taking the fall. Big "efficient" farmers will effiently farm themselves into the ground they are working.

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Hugh MacKay

06-15-2005 06:40:28




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Sloroll, 06-15-2005 06:33:19  
Bill: Right on, my dad bought land in 1938 for $1.00 per acre. Save your pennies, timing is what it's all about. In the 1930s governments didn't have money to bail out the corperate elite. In 1983 they did, hopefully next time they will not.



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Hugh MacKay

06-15-2005 06:09:46




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to dhermesc, 06-15-2005 05:46:51  
dhermese: Couldn't agree more with what you say. There are a lot of nice old Hs, SHs, Ms and SMs around the country side rendered unusuable by the diesels that followed them. Same can be said for the 100+ hp 2 wheel drives. But then maybe that is what it's been all about, building something new to relieve the farmer of his hard earned money.

As many of you know, my background is in the dairy industry. I remember my dad saying in 1960, having bought 3 new tractors in past 5 years, new line of haying equipment that year and just built a new 50 cow tie stall barn. He said, " It's little wonder poor old bossy has tears running down her cheeks, as she looks around the farm yard and sees what she has to pay for." If he was right, and I'm not about to argue that point, it's a wonder that poor old bossy can still produce milk, considering the amount of body fluids that must be going to tears in 2005.

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Allan in NE

06-15-2005 05:59:06




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to dhermesc, 06-15-2005 05:46:51  
Dan,

Another thing constant about all this is the resale of old tractors.

The old H and the $80K articulated both sell for 'bout $1500 on any given day. :>)

Allan



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Allan in NE

06-15-2005 05:04:25




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Hugh MacKay, 06-15-2005 03:26:17  
Hi Hugh,

No, you took my comments and opinions about the big new tractors as ridicule of something you said; this is not the case and nothing could be further from the truth, because I just don't do that. I was just stating my view.

What I meant to say, was that I would much rather own an old flop-house, broken down tractor and have it paid for, rather than owe a $200K note on new tractor in at the bank while having to trade the silly thing every year to stay one step ahead of, and having to keep from getting it repossessed by the wolves, which is really who one is working for if he opens himself up to this sort of game.

It is hard to explain this view to anyone who has never made a trip to the poorhouse and back. We live in a “charge it” and “finance it” society nowadays.

Out of my 60 years, the one day that stands out most vividly in my mind is that day I woke up and realized full well that the only thing I had to my name was $11.20 and a tired old Chevy pickup. That is a wake up call that will jar a feller to the bone.

As far as the economics, the operation, it’s merits and points of ponder on these big new, tripled-up rigs, I simply can’t comment, because I’ve never, ever been around one of the large outfits. I do know however, for any given field, that the old H with an 8 foot disc will probably get the same job done if he is given enough time and it’s owner does not have to worry ‘bout that yearly payment. Well, it’s not a payment is it? More like a rental tab in at the money house. :>)

On the other hand, if a operator is sizeable, is trying to get across 5 sections in a timely manner, is fluid and is making his living from farming, he, in all probability, MUST buy that big rig.

I don’t know. It is totally outside the boundaries of my little world. :>(

Allan

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Hugh MacKay

06-15-2005 06:28:41




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Allan in NE, 06-15-2005 05:04:25  
Allan: Like you I'm not saying I'm right. Can tell you this, I did it once, not going to do it again even with all paid for equipment. I will use my three little tractors to produce some of what I consume. No it will not be cheap food, but it will be good healthy food. I really have never been afraid of chemicals farmers used. The ones that scare me are used by the processing industry. When it comes to just looking at them, my little offset Farmalls give me just as much pleasure as the big ones.

The entire food industry in North America, maybe even the entire world is controlled in about 4 or 5 corperate board rooms. That my friend, scares me one H@$$ of a lot more than the horse versus 300 horses. We think in North America, that we have elected governments that encourage competition, truth is they just kill competition in favour of their corperate buddies.

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Frustrating

06-15-2005 08:56:52




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Hugh MacKay, 06-15-2005 06:28:41  
I s'pose you probably blame it on the liberals, right? Nope, couldn't be big-business "Dubbya" and all his corporate right-wing cronies that are currently in the majority at the national level. Gotta be them hippie liberal Dems.



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Hugh MacKay

06-16-2005 20:12:30




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Frustrating, 06-15-2005 08:56:52  
Frustrating: Very few politicians were born corrupt, most acquired the taste for corruption along the way. Here in Canada we almost had an election recently. Our system provides for non confidence in the government. If enough members loose confidence in the sitting government they can vote on it and force an election. During this I had an e mail from an acquaintence, suggesting we should contact our member to encourage this move. I responded saying, " Since politicians are the best organized bunch of criminals known, why spend the millions of dollars required to hold an election. Most families of organized crime just use one chunk of lead per head for the changing of the guard." No my friend, we the masses of people elect governments, then are content to go on and let them serve big money folks. Actually we get exactly what we deserve.

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Allan in NE

06-15-2005 06:46:48




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Hugh MacKay, 06-15-2005 06:28:41  
Yep,

Stop and think about it. It is far easier to controll 100,000 farmers than it is to dictate to 2 million farmers. And, dictate is exactly what is going on, make no mistake about it. It is just happening very, very slowly is all. So slow, that folks don't realize what is going on.

Me too. I don't care if I make any money at this or not. I'm doing this for my own shear enjoyment.

That's the nice part of getting old. You can look back on your life and realize what really did make you happy in days past.

I'm gonna do exactly like you are doing with your garden; just a little bigger garden is all. I'm gonna go out and play in the dirt and get myself a darned good sunburn. I haven't felt this good in years. :>)

Allan

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John A.

06-15-2005 04:51:48




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Hugh MacKay, 06-15-2005 03:26:17  
Hugh, I know you asked this question to Allan, ButI couldn't help but jump in here!
You are Preaching to the Chior here. Efficiency and H20 conservation is the Name of the Game NOW!
My relatives do all primary tillage with this type if tractor. The larger 150+ hp are now relagated to lessor tillage practices, or smaller fields where the 4x4 are not practial. Even the smaller farmers have made the jump to MFWD 150+hp row-crop models.
The day of the high hp 2 wheeler is over. Yes they are used in places or on sure-enough smaller farms. Most of the high hp 2 wheelers have simply moved from farms to ranches and such. They have a loader on them now and live with a batwing shredder. Where they are now on the front line, keeping noxious weeds,forbs ,invading woody spieies in check on Ranches. Water conservation or grass land is just as important as on tillable land. or they have been hauled to Mexico never to be seen again!
Later,
John A.

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Baelee05

06-15-2005 04:40:46




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 Re: Allan on articulated tractors in reply to Hugh MacKay, 06-15-2005 03:26:17  
Yeah Hugh I pretty much have to agree. In our part of Illinois you just don't see many two wheel drive tractors doing tillage work anymore. There are mostly MFWD and articulated tractors doing the bull work anymore. You hit the nail on the head. It is all about efficiency. We bought a new Versatile last fall and are amazed at how much more efficient it is than the MFWDs that we were using. I can't imagine going back to a 2wd. Wheel slippage, compaction, more fuel etc.

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Sloroll

06-15-2005 04:48:27




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 Just wondering in reply to Baelee05, 06-15-2005 04:40:46  
Are they paid for? I don't mean on paper but are they actually in the pocket paid for where if the economy goes to heck they belong to the individual and won't be auctioned off?



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Andy Martin

06-15-2005 05:17:15




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 Re: Just wondering in reply to Sloroll, 06-15-2005 04:48:27  
That is really not a good business question. It's a good quarter section family farm question, but these days if the economy "goes to heck", you really want to give the tractor back to the bank until better times. They are the ones that made the mistake in loaning on it prior to a business turndown. Tractors are a depreciable business asset and in most business plans having the equipment paid for and depreciated out is incidental does not make a lot of sense. What is key is net, after taxes, cost per acre to plant and harvest. Tillage is an option. A businessman cannot be romantic about his assets or he will not make sound business decisions. Hence the delimma of selling old favorite cows. I cull my son-in-laws, and he culls mine. When he tells me one needs to go, it is hard to accept sometimes, but we are not running a retirement center.

I have to believe that the successful large farmers are paying attention to business and not just buying large green equipment to impress the neighbors, although it really looks that way sometimes. You rarely see corporations nursing along old outdated equipment.

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dph

06-15-2005 07:03:29




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 Re: Just wondering in reply to Andy Martin, 06-15-2005 05:17:15  
Andy, totally agree, except for one thing. Everyone pays the same, almost, for their seed, fertilizer, chemicals. What seperates the high profit 1/3 from the low profit 1/3 is almost always equipment expense. Most guys are running more equipment than they need. I think most people who run farm analysis will tell you that. There is a certain degree of "luxury" built into some operations today, which isn't bad, but it should be luxury that is paid for, not finaced. You will find a lot of sharp producers that tell you most of the time you stand to lose a ton of $ on the new tractor just in its valuation, and a slightly used tractor at auction avoids that. It is no longer $2,000-3 dollars, it is $20,000 and $30,000. And if a fella cash rents, or has what he owns mortgaged pretty hard, that is a ton of money. Although here in the last year, with auction prices they way they are, some of them are over the dealer's price, I don't know if used equipment is selling as hard as new. But I wouldn't think it would remain like that too long.

One thing I wonder about is the $ some people are paying for GPS guidance. I mean there are some very big farmers with very big fields that are making GPS technology pay for itself. Then there are some more that must just have an aversion for steering. I think, by the end of the next decade, we will find out if buy now, pay later is viable or a disaster. IMHO, I think there are some tough times for everybody down the road. And it will be what pushes the ineffecient ones out, and will cause at lot of the large ones to grow even bigger, but hopefully the producer with his or her eye on the budget will be able to squeak by.

Explain to me this. A neighbor bought a new Deere combine and heads at around $450,000. Now 9600s, which are a heck of a combine, were selling at auction for around $30,000-$40,000. Grant it, you have to buy heads for them all, but is that one combine really worth the price of 7-8 equipped 9600s with around 1500 hours? It is like the used Cadillac I bought. Nobody wants them, anyone who is going to buy a Cadillac buys new. That's fine, but I feel pretty good about buying a 1994 Deville with 80,000 miles for $3,000 USD. And I feel pretty cofindent I can get 120,000 more miles out of it pretty cheaply. That is what worries me, the disparity that existed up till this spring between new and used. And it isn't worrying me any less that used is selling for more.

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Andy Martin

06-15-2005 07:43:22




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 Re: Just wondering in reply to dph, 06-15-2005 07:03:29  
I'll tell you about my combines.

Two AllCrop 66's. The big ones. With two we can cut almost 11 ft swath.

I said what I did above based on the fact that the well run successful farms don't run junk like I do.



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Sloroll

06-15-2005 07:08:26




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 :? ) 94 Deville in reply to dph, 06-15-2005 07:03:29  
I have 180,000 on my 94 Deville, Still gowing strong and is my good car!



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Allan in NE

06-15-2005 05:25:57




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 Re: Just wondering in reply to Andy Martin, 06-15-2005 05:17:15  
Mornin' Andy,

Heck, maybe you are right.

I was having this coversation the other day with a fellow about land prices and how they have soared totally and completley out of the relm of reality and I commented on how those prices will never, ever return their costs.

He looked at me with the darnest look on his face, and said, "Where have you been? Of course it won't pay for itself; it's been that way for years."

Heaven help us if it turns south again, tho. Heaven help us. Anyone remember those lard sandwiches?

Allan

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Andy Martin

06-15-2005 06:53:53




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 Re: Just wondering in reply to Allan in NE, 06-15-2005 05:25:57  
Let me preface this with the fact that I hay with M's, and my newest tractor is a 450D needing work. I think I am a low cost hay producer. My costs for fuel, wire (yes we still use wire balers) maintenance, and hired labor works out to $0.42 per bale last year. I use old used equipment and maintain it and have never bought a piece of farm equipment on credit.

My uncle the dairyman lived and worked the uplands for many years (SW MO). When he had achieved a little affluence, he bought some of that overpriced bottom land. He said he wished he'd known sooner why it was overpriced, because at double the money it was 3 to 4 times as productive. He was a cash only pay as you go guy who died with 300 momma cows (he had retired from the dairy) and about 500 owned acres. His only debt was his original purchase of his parent's homestead 160. He started with nothing in 1946 and did quite well by working hard. He had two large Ford 2WD tractors at his death.

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FC

06-15-2005 06:32:28




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 Re: Just wondering in reply to Allan in NE, 06-15-2005 05:25:57  
While going through some of my parents belongings after their passing I stumbled across a mortgage note my grandfather had. Apparently a neighbor had mortgaged a cow for $8.00 (yes the decimal is in the correct place) with my grandfather holding the note on it. I cannot off hand remember the date, but it was in the 30's. Sure puts things in perspective, and shows how far things have come to those of us who did not live through those times.

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Sloroll

06-15-2005 05:25:49




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 Re: Just wondering in reply to Andy Martin, 06-15-2005 05:17:15  
You rarely see CEOs of corportations with their brains being washed off the barn wall after everything they worked for was auctioned off. Sounds dramatic but I've seen it. So did Ikes youngest son. Corporations play with other peoples money and dreams. If you can afford to be self insured or are working off someone elses dime you have a great argument. Been there and seen it. The banks won't be the ones holding the bag next time.

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Andy Martin

06-15-2005 07:21:10




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 Re: Just wondering in reply to Sloroll, 06-15-2005 05:25:49  
Boy it is tough.

You have to be stubborn to farm. You have to plant when it is dry and mow hay when rain is threatening.

It is hard to know when to quit. There is a time to quit. It is also hard to make good business decisions when you have a banker helping you to the poor house.

Read the post above about my uncle. I've had lots of successful relatives farming, but none that started with nothing like this guy.

He had to go to town and get a job to supplement his income a few times. The jobs were never very good.

My dad left the farm he was buying form his dad in 1951 to work in Kansas City. His brother fed the cattle. I remember going to Iowa in August to buy hay. They sold their registered Hereford herd for $0.10 on the dollar. The third winter in KC was followed finally be drought busting rain and the fields stayed too wet to get any wheat out. My dad went to KC for good. His brother (not the uncle mentioned above) went to CA and worked a year on corporate farms. He came back and ran both farms successfully until his death in '72 (rolled a tractor over stretching fence with a loader). By the way, they all farmed with 9N Fords. My dad bought the M in '52 because he could not custom hay because of wet fields. The dealer convinced him the larger wheels would help. The M is all I remember and is why I got started on IH. It was only a few years ago I found out it was a last-ditch attempt to stay afloat.

Hard times, and stubborn, but they took extreme action to save their farms.

Depression, stress, fear of failure, who knows why otherwise successful bright people let it get to them? I just cannot blame the corporations, banks, nor the government. Allan survived a forced sale, as have many others. All I know is what my extended family has gone through in the last 70 years.

In my response you answered, I prefaced it that pay as you go is a good plan for a quarter section family farm. But 160 acres is not a business that will support a family any more. Or a new tractor of any size.

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Sloroll

06-15-2005 07:34:25




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 Re: Just wondering in reply to Andy Martin, 06-15-2005 07:21:10  
1000 acres won't support a family anymore. If all you have is the farm income and debt of the larger machinery to run it. I believe most successful farmers have jobs off of their farms to subsidize their existance. One can step off of a curb when the piper is payed or the roof.



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Pharmall

06-15-2005 08:03:55




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 Size Matters in reply to Sloroll, 06-15-2005 07:34:25  
Out of sixteen sets of aunts and uncles in Missouri, Iowa, and Illinois, twelve made their living farming, but drifted away to other occupations over the years. Some sold out. Others rented the land and took jobs in town. Of the seventy-four(!) children from these families, only one is still in the business, and he subsidizes with a "City Slickers" type bed-and-breakfast. Like Willie Nelson says, the rest (including me) relocated all over the country to become doctors and lawyers and such. I think it's a pretty typical story.

In the 1930's, eighty percent of the country made it's living (sort of) on the farm. Today that number is less than five percent. That's a lot fewer tractor drivers covering more acreage.

Is bigger better? I don't know. It's certainly more efficient. Time will tell, I suppose. During the depression years many of my relatives (and lots of others) were able to get by with no income. They owned the land, ate what they grew, hunted and fished, canned for the winter, kept chickens, a few beef and dairy cattle, woodlot for heat, and bartered for sugar and flour. I'm sure it wasn't pretty, but it wasn't destitute and starving.

Don't think we would be so fortunate if times turned bad again. I live in New England now, and God forbid if we couldn't get our produce from California and Argentina, or the inexpensive high-
fructose corn syrup and soy products that are used to make so many prepared foods. There's about a three day supply of food in the pipeline that feeds the mega-grocery stores. Most of the hundred acre 2WD tractor farms that used to supply food locally have given over to subdivisions and golf courses, and the long-
vacant Farmers Market in town that acted as the wholesaler for the neighborhood groceries was torn down to build a Wally-
World. A hundred acre hay operation near here just sold out to a housing developer for $3 million. The old guy ain't crazy! But if really cheap transportation ever became a problem and we had to supply food locally, one of those 30HP 2WD pieces of iron would be a good piece of equipment to turn over the 18th fairway...

ps - Grandpa never did buy a tractor - stuck with that pair of draft horses until he retired sometime in the forties, and he kept a pair around until he passed away in '69 (at 98). Guess he felt the same way about them as some of us do about the old tractors. Or maybe with two boys and eight girls he just couldn't afford one!

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ericlb

06-15-2005 05:13:44




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 Re: Just wondering in reply to Sloroll, 06-15-2005 04:48:27  
i got to agree with ya sloroll, my grandpa taught me that many years ago when i commented on a big new jd working the next field, he said it may be nice, but it has a payment too, and one reason he was still farming was that his worn and faded old m and c were HIS worn and faded old m and c, along with all the machinery that they used,



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dph

06-15-2005 15:54:37




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 Re: Just wondering in reply to ericlb, 06-15-2005 05:13:44  
This has been an interesting post. Sorry to hi-jack it from one about articulated tractors, Hugh. I have enjoyed reading everyone's opinion on the subject and hope to hear some more. Andy, we have an old 66 also. Liked your posts. I live S. of Des Moines. My father told the story of Grandpa taking his cattle out ot the stockyards in Omaha. He said they would pen them, then someone would come buy and price them. He was very disappointed one year, prices had went to heck. They had offered him pennies on the dollar. He went to say something to the man whose cattle was penned next to his, and realized that man was crying. "At least they wanted yours," he said, "they won't even take mine."

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