www.willistonherald.com/news/feds-d...cle_1a915ea8-ad61-11e7-b9a0-3f1aa6f05243.html
Good news some help is coming to north dakota
Good news some help is coming to north dakota
I have a friend out by Glen Ullin that had to sell his entire beef herd. His pastures were dry, his wells were losing pressure, his hay land wasn't amounting to shit so he knew he wouldn't have winter feed either. I don't know it there is a conservative minded approach that lets him get by.
where the hell you getting these cheap groceries?Toy haulers, boats, etc. is painting a broad brush over farmers. Do you like cheap groceries? Have any of you year after year out up an ass load of money hoping to get it back and then some at the end of said year? Farming looks easy to some who have never actually done it.
What crops didn't fail out there this year?Droughts indeed suck - but the photo/caption baffles me:
"Corn grows in late July in a field north of Dickinson"
Corn was not grown in the Dickinson area when I went to school out their in the mid 80s. I assume because nobody was silly enough then to expect a decent corn crop?
New crop genetics, retarded ethanol program, and a favorable wet cycle and boom - tons of corn growing in western ND.
One dry year and BAM - corn crops failed - OMG!!!
whodathunk
What crops didn't fail out there this year?
What crops didn't fail out there this year?
where the hell you getting these cheap groceries?
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I'm all for it if it comes with strings. You take the cash you don't post your land. After all the rest of us are providing the cash.
properly managed grasslands
Well you have access to cheap food every day. Compare us to any where else in the world. Also you have more access to land than any where.just to be able to hunt and use that Land is foreign to people in Europe. It's easy to sit from the side lines and say this and that money talks bullshit walks when you starting your farm to make millions
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I saw grass this year this year that hasn't had a cow on it for a year and is still shorter than my pecker. It never hit that 3 inch mark
I believe that. What were input costs? My point is grasslands can handle semi-arid climates without so much as a hiccup. Grasslands are built to tough it out, come back when rains come, with zero input/effort.
I believe that. What were input costs? My point is grasslands can handle semi-arid climates without so much as a hiccup. Grasslands are built to tough it out, come back when rains come, with zero input/effort.
um.......
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There is a fair bit of management and work that goes into properly managing grass to get the most out of it. Those require "input/effort" ESPECIALLY in a drought.
There are growing numbers of feedlots in ND especially western ND where the cows are. Those cows on that grass raise calves that need ot be feed. Those calves need feed stuffs grown ot be fed. So you see corn planted where it traditionally has not been. Drought tolerant varieties no till technologies..most years it works. Farming is funny in that you can;t control Ma Nature so nothing is guaranteed.
Grass is tougher than corn and buffalo are tougher than cows and.............why do farmers in the red river valley plant sugar beets instead of grass? Because guywithsweettooth wants it. Consumer demand is a funny thing. Tabaco is subsidized going into the ground and taxed like hell coming out.
how did I know you would consider "leaving it alone" as input cost/effort
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gosh I wish I had your smarts
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your kneejerk reaction to my supporting ranching over crops in semi-arid climates seems bizarre to me
wait - no it doesn't