THE LAND ~ July 4, 2014 ~ Southern Edition

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© 2014

July 4, 2014

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SOUTHERN EDITION

Confusion reigns on prevent planting By DICK HAGEN The Land Staff Writer A somewhat hastily called UniA big concern versity of Minnesota Extension for area liveService information meeting on stock farmers is prevent planting drew a crowd of being able to about 125 farmers, crop consultants, and crop insurance reps to produce enough the Hutchinson Event Center June Nathan Winter feed for their 19. As much as 8 inches of rain had operations. The fallen in the previous 48 hours, and crop insurance one day prior it was announced payment for that prevent planting deadlines for Minnesota had been set back to prevent plant July 15 because of extremely wet will not go very conditions throughout the state. far to feed their “The reason we held the meeting livestock in was due to extremely wet conditions 2014 and 2015. throughout this area,” said Nathan John Larsen Winter, Extension Educator for — Nathan Winter McLeod and Meeker counties. “There are significant acres of corn and soybean not yet planted and probably will not be planted in 2014. “Some livestock producers have not even harvested their first cutting of alfalfa due to the wet conditions. Farmers and agricultural Jim Salfer professionals have had some questions pertaining to cover can seed cover crop, but you cannot bale or crops and planting emergency forages.” graze until Nov. 1 or you will decrease your Winter noted that there has been PP payment to 35 percent. By the same some confusion regarding crop insur- token, you can plant corn as late as July 5 ance rules, with farmers trying to find and you can insure that crop, but only for the best way to move forward this year. the 60 percent coverage payment.” He emphasized the importance of “We wanted farmers to be aware of the crop insurance rules and try to pro- getting your insured acres right. “Your vide them with options to make their insurance adjuster will be working decisions,” he said. “A big concern for from your four-year history on your area livestock farmers is being able to farm. Just make certain that you turn produce enough feed for their opera- in a notice to your local agent.” tions. The crop insurance payment for How about a July planting of corn, as prevent plant will not go very far to a prevent planting option can that be feed their livestock in 2014 and 2015.” cut for silage? The answer, simply, is “Not fair for everyone” “no” — you can only bale or graze that A lively question-and-answer session corn, and not until after Nov. 1. started the meeting, including input from “There’s no doubt in my mind that John Larsen, with Rural Community prevent planting favors the crop proInsurance Services of Danube, Minn. ducer, with little assistance for live“Prevent Planting is simply not fair for stock producers who may desperately everyone,” Larsen said. “For example you need feed,” said Larsen.

Options if you need forage You may plant a cover crop on prevent planting acres for hay or grazing. However your prevent planting payment may be significantly reduced if you harvest that forage before Nov. 1. Producers should check with their Farm Service Agency office and their crop insurance agent for details, then pencil out the economics for their own enterprise to decide whether or not this is a viable option. There may also be restrictions on feeding a cover crop depending on which herbicides have been used. For example, crops treated with glyphosate cannot be fed or harvested for eight weeks, while herbicides containing acetochlor — Harness, Surpass, etc. — have an 18-month restriction for grazing or harvesting for feed. But information may still be lacking at FSA offices. An insurance agent in the audience described the offices as “gun shy” until rules are published in the Federal Register, and suggested that farmers shouldn’t wait for regulators to interpret the farm bill — “It’s your land, take care of it.” “How do we plan when the final rules may not yet be set?” asked Jim Salfer, University of Minnesota extension dairy specialist. He agreed that confusion reigns on prevent planting right now. “Dairy farmers may be scrambling for feed this fall and winter because of PP and the possible consequences if making an error,” he said. “It’s a harder decision for livestock producers simply because they’ve got to feed something to their cattle. “Do you take your PP and just not plant and buy from a neighbor, or the open market? I think for many livestock producers they will plant something later than the PP planting date and not suffer the consequences of that PP discount. In other words, they may not even apply for PP. And to me it looks like that something should be corn. Today our short-season hybrids yield remarkably well even if lateplanted. It may not set ears but it will provide protein, sugar and digestible fiber.” See PREVENT, pg. 9


A time for everything — and crop talk

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

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P.O. Box 3169 418 South Second St. Mankato, MN 56002 (800) 657-4665 Vol. XXXVIII ❖ No. XIV 40 pages

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Opinion Farm and Food File Calendar Marketing Mielke Market Weekly The Bookworm Sez Table Talk Auctions/Classifieds Advertiser Listing Back Roads

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Publisher: Jim Santori: jsantori@cnhi.com General Manager: Kathleen Connelly: kconnelly@TheLandOnline.com Managing Editor: Tom Royer: troyer@TheLandOnline.com Copy Editor: Kristin Kveno: copyeditor@TheLandOnline.com Staff Writer: Dick Hagen: dickhagen@mvtvwireless.com Advertising Representatives: Kim Henrickson: khenrickson@TheLandOnline.com Mike Schafer: mike.schafer2@gmail.com Danny Storlie: theland@TheLandOnline.com Office/Advertising Assistants: Vail Belgard: vbelgard@TheLandOnline.com Joan Compart: theland@TheLandOnline.com Ad Production: Brad Hardt: lndcomp@mankatofreepress.com For Customer Service Concerns: (507) 345-4523, (800) 657-4665, theland@TheLandOnline.com Fax: (507) 345-1027 For Editorial Concerns or Story Ideas: (507) 344-6342, (800) 657-4665, editor@TheLandOnline.com National Sales Representative: Bock & Associates Inc., 7650 Executive Drive, Minneapolis, MN 55344-3677. (952) 905-3251. Because of the nature of articles appearing in The Land, product or business names may be included to provide clarity. This does not constitute an endorsement of any product or business. Opinions and viewpoints expressed in editorials or by news sources are not necessarily those of the management. The Publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. The Publisher’s liability for other errors or omissions in connection with an advertisement is strictly limited to publication of the advertisement in any subsequent issue or the refund of any monies paid for the advertisement. Classified Advertising: $17.70 for seven (7) lines for a private classified, each additional line is $1.33; $23.46 for business classifieds, each additional line is $1.33. Classified ads accepted by mail or by phone with VISA, MasterCard, Discover or American Express. Classified ads can also be sent by e-mail to theland@TheLandOnline.com. Mail classified ads to The Land, P.O. Box 3169, Mankato, MN 56002. Please include credit card number, expiration date and your postal address with ads sent on either mail version. Classified ads may also be called into (800) 657-4665. Deadline for classified ads is noon on the Monday prior to publication date, with holiday exceptions. Distributed to farmers in all Minnesota counties and northern Iowa, as well as on The Land’s website. Each classified ad is separately copyrighted by The Land. Reproduction without permission is strictly prohibited. Subscription and Distribution: Free to farmers and agribusinesses in Minnesota and northern Iowa. $24 per year for non-farmers and people outside the service area. The Land (ISSN 0279-1633) is published Fridays and is a division of The Free Press Media (part of Community Newspaper Holdings Inc.), 418 S. Second St., Mankato MN 56001. Periodicals postage paid at Mankato, Minn. Postmaster and Change of Address: Address all letters and change of address notices to The Land, P.O. Box 3169, Mankato, MN 56002; call (507) 345-4523 or e-mail to theland@TheLandOnline.com.

The genuine sincerity of rural folks is from heavy June rains. Outside markets never more evident than when attending are still nervous but could benefit from funerals. We’ve had three in our what appear to be easing world tensions. Olivia/Bird Island/Danube communities “Corn prices are weaker, as both old and the past couple of weeks. The first a gennew crop futures hone in on last week’s uine Bird Island-area farmer who prolows following disappointing bearish duced a great family and great corn crops, reversals yesterday. too; then a co-op fuel delivery friend who “Monday’s Crop Progress showed deteriointroduced me to the great fun of horse rating conditions across the northwest rodeos, a growing Minnesota entertainCorn Belt in Minnesota, Iowa and South ment; and the latest my neighboring LAND MINDS Dakota, mostly offset by gains in North farmer who valiantly did a 10-year battle By Dick Hagen Dakota and Indiana, chopping about 1 against a rare disease but accepted the bushel per acre off yield potential nationreality that though Earth had been good wide. Still, the average yield forecast by to him, Heaven was his next residence. our model was strong at 169 bpa, enough Yes, always some tears, lots of hugs, to produce a 14-billion-bushel-plus crop and heartfelt sorrow at our country goodbyes to even if some areas are lost completely.” loved ones. But also very evident is the overall I’m questioning that 169 bushel per acre projecwarmth and friendship, even joy and smiles, as we share our memories about the newly departed. Eccle- tion. I’m thinking crop hurt over much of our Upper siastes 3 — “A Time for Everything” — often sets the Midwest is a bit more than the trade is willing to admit. Granted, these 80 degrees Fahrenheit days stage for the farewell messages from the pulpit. At with bright sunshine accelerate growth immensely. these beautiful country funerals you so vividly are As always, the Weather Man has the last at bat and reminded that there is no greater treasure than a so far he’s been carrying a big bat. So we’ll revisit good friend. this topic later this season. For my neighbor Rabi Peterson, his bulletin ■ included the poignant verse “A Fallen Limb.” It fits so well for all my lost friends ... and yours, too. Rabi, Talking weather often leads to wind talk ... and I know, would enjoy sharing: possible hail storms, and gusts that can seriously A limb has fallen from the family tree. I keep hear- lean young corn plants, and of course wind energy. A surprise, at least to those of us living in Minnesota, ing a voice that says, “Grieve not for me.” Remember is the fact that Iowa now leads the nation in the perthe best times, the laughter, the song. The good life I centage of energy generated from wind. According to lived while I was strong. Continue my heritage, I’m counting on you. Keep smiling and surely the sun will the American Wind Energy Association, Iowa now shine through. My mind is at ease, my soul is at rest. generates about 27 percent of its energy from wind Remembering all, how I truly was blessed. Continue power, ahead of South Dakota at 26 percent. traditions, no matter how small. Go on with your life, Texas leads the nation in total wind power, curdon’t worry about fall. I miss you all dearly, so keep rently generating enough wind energy to power 3.3 up your chin. Until the day comes we’re together million homes; that figure for Iowa is 1.4 million again. — Author Unknown homes. Amidst those thousands of corn and soybean fields in Iowa there is now 5,117 megawatts of ■ installed wind energy capacity, with 1,056 At all three of these funerals, Minnesota weather megawatts under construction. All of that wind put on its finest despite the several days of intense energy generated in Iowa has generated lots of jobs, moisture. So “funeral talk” involved the crop outlook too — up to 7,000 direct and indirect based on 2012 as well. One can only speculate about the eventual data. Iowa wind companies include Siemens and TPI impact of what likely will be the wettest June in Composites, the maker of blades, and Trinity StrucMinnesota history. We’re hearing of corn and soytural Towers, the maker of towers. bean “good to excellent” ratings dropping 10 points in According to the Wind Energy Association, Iowa one week because of excessive moisture. Very likely landowners receive about $16 million annually in this latest “weather barometer” is causing more jitlease payments for wind generation. This outfit also ters in the commodity markets. said that American wind power topped 4 percent of In a June 24 report, Bryce Knorr of Farm Futures the U.S. power grid for the first time last year, and said, “Grain futures are lower across the board this has delivered 30 percent of all new generating capacmorning, with new selling emerging overnight after the latest crop ratings showed only minor losses See LAND MINDS, pg. 3

OPINION

INSIDE THIS ISSUE:

5 — Tornado is no match for wood-andtin elevator built in 1954 8 — From the Fields: Crops are showing stress from all the rain

12 — Harlan Anderson: Prevent planting no deal for livestock farmers 13 — Tall tires are big business after relentless rains 40 — Back Roads: A pilgrimage to the place the music died


Cows won’t care for FDA’s proposed rule for brewers bourbon and other alcohol producers happy, too, as they avoid paying to dispose of massive quantities of “wet mash” while also helping reduce farmers’ feed costs. On average, one gallon of beer will yield about a pound of spent grain. One gallon of bourbon yields more than nine pounds. The Brewers Association estimates that 80 percent of its members currently give away their spent grain to livestock farmers. This is certainly not the case with the American ethanol industry, which markets virtually all of its “spent grain” to livestock farmers both here and overseas. ■ Obviously this challenging spring and early summer has also challenged the wording and interpretation of the 2014 farm bill, especially on sticky issues like prevent planting. This monstrosity of over 900 pages includes 12 titles and over 450 provisions. And because the end result of these massive pieces of legislation is left in the hands of the regulator agencies to interpret and put

OPINION

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the proper language to these provisions, most farmers, crop managers, and ag retailers are still waiting. At a recent prevent planting information meeting I attended in Hutchinson, Harlan Anderson, one of my favorite government curmudgeons said, “Right now our FSA offices are gun shy until the rules and regulations are published in the Federal Register. “My advice: It’s your land, take care of it. This new farm bill is slowing the process big time. In essence the rules are being written by the regulators as they determine what was meant in various portions of this farm bill. Right now, it’s a mess.” So continue on, farm friends. Pause to enjoy the blessings of your Lord. And ponder these words: The problem America faces today exist because the people who work for a living are now outnumbered by those who vote for a living. Peace. Dick Hagen is staff writer of The Land. He may be reached at dickhagen@mvtvwireless.com. ❖

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■ And Federal agencies should start applying “common sense” when it comes to interpretation of their powers. Get this: According to a proposed rule from the Food and Drug Administration to ensure the safety of animal feed and pet food, brewers and distillers of beer and whiskey may soon have to send their “spent grains” into landfills. Brewers and distillers, even some members of Congress, are up in arms. A growing number of cows likely aren’t so happy either. Cows just happen to love chewing their cud after they fill their rumen with leftover wet grain from making alcohol. Apparently this relationship between alcohol-makers and farmers is a centuries-old symbiotic partnership that even George Washington took part in, according to my source. Cows love it so much that many farmers call it “happy hour” when they feed their animals spent grain, whether it’s the byproduct of bourbon or IPA. The arrangement makes beer,

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

LAND MINDS, from pg. 2 ity for the last five years. ■ Perhaps ironic, perhaps intentional, but now let’s talk salaries of a few elected officials. Did you know, the salary of retired U.S. Presidents is $180,000 for life. Retired House and Senate members get $174,000 for life. The Speaker of the House picks up a $223,000 stipend for life. The average salary of an American teacher is $40,065. The average salary of a soldier deployed to Afghanistan, or anywhere else, is $38,000. This is simply an insult to common sense. More deplorable is the fact that those serving in Congress get to vote themselves what their salaries should be plus other perks and benefits such as better retirement plans than Social Security, better health plans, and an excessive amount of paid vacation, plus they don’t contribute a dime to any of it. Little wonder approval of Congress and the workings of our government are at alltime lows. Term limits have simply got to happen in this U.S. Congress.

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Readers speak their minds: ‘As usual, little useful information’ At the end of every fiscal tion into a USDA investigayear, June 30, and the end of tion — over shenanigans in every calendar year, Dec. 31, the federally-chartered beef readers claim this space to checkoff, brought a similar offer their views of my views. analysis of my work from Jim S. in Montana. Take Mike C. from Texas who, after I wrote a spring “When it comes to the column on how climate beef industry, (Guebert’s) change will affect food proignorance of the topic is duction in 2050, sent a parreadily apparent… It’s ody of a similar story with FARM & FOOD FILE easy to tell when he is writthe following opinion ing on a subject that’s over By Alan Guebert printed in large capital lethis head, he resorts to sarters in its side margin: casm and name calling.” “You socialists DemocOne veterinarian three rats will fall for anything time zones away in that Hussein Obama and those wacko Delaware agrees. After a mid-March colscientists send down the pike… After umn on a pending USDA proposal to we had one of the coldest winters on “allow poultry company employees to do record, (you) conveniently changed the job currently done by 800 or so USDA ‘global warming’ ‘to climate change.’” inspectors” on slaughter lines, Dr. K. eA mid-February column on a U.S. mailed a knuckle-cracking complaint. Department of Agriculture investigation “I have become accustomed to ‘illinto an earlier USDA investigation — I informed articles’ in the news media,” didn’t make that up: a USDA investiga- it began, “but to be honest, I am sur-

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prised to see such a blatant lack of knowledge… Your article… is poorly researched verbiage. I read your article every week and will read it in the future with a ‘jaundiced eye.’” A late-April column that outlined how Big Food and Big Ag have parted company over the Humane Society of the U.S. and the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals brought a smoking hot e-mail from John Y. from, well, he didn’t say. “PETA and HSUS are no friends of mine! Both these organizations are pegged to the LEFT. They are anti-gun, anti-hunting, anti-fishing, and antimeat. Do you understand what that means to … ranchers and farmers? I do!” One Illinois reader spent much of the long winter and delayed spring writing e-mails to me pointing out my “obvious” lack of skills as both a reporter and ag journalist. One mid-April grenade captures their tone well. “As usual,” it starts, “your column provided little useful information to operating farmers and farm crop-share landlords… I learn more in 15 minutes listening to (a local radio station) than

I glean from reading a month’s worth of your columns…” Moreover, he added, “Please, no more columns on your farm childhood and your rural church. You are supposed to be a provider of agricultural information, not a wannabe novelist.” Most of 2014’s reader mail was friendlier. Several eagle-eyed readers wrote to thank me for posting links to column source material on the “In the News” page of the column’s website, www.farmandfoodfile.com. “Thanks for setting what should be a universal standard for all opinion columns,” wrote Ken S. from Indiana. Full disclosure: I do not post the links. I e-mail them to the talented, nofear team at Foxwell Digital, daughter Mary Grace and son-in-law Andrew Foxwell, who post them. They do electrons; I do pronouns. Alan Guebert’s “Farm and Food File” is published weekly in more than 70 newspapers in North America. Contact him at agcomm@farmandfoodfile.com. Past columns, news and events are posted at www.farmandfoodfile.com. ❖


Tornado was no match for elevator built in 1954

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014 << www.TheLandOnline.com >>

By RICHARD SIEMERS The Land Correspondent When the wind storm and tornado swept across Minnesota on July 1, 2011, it tore apart pole sheds and left other major damage behind. It also had the nerve to take on an elevator on Gary Schmidt’s Gary Schmidt farm west of Vesta, and while it managed to tear off part of the roof, the storm never really had a chance. This is not just any old elevator, however. It’s a solid 85-foot commercial elevator that started its life in Vesta. Vesta has always been a collection point for grain. When the town was incorporated 1900, three elevators stood there, according to Richard Siemers Schmidt. The “Blue Elevator” burned down in The wood construction of Gary Schmidt’s elevator has easily survived everything Mother Nature has sent its way. 1907. The Bingham or “East” Elevator was torn town in 1974 when the cooperative expanded its “They said they wanted to get rid of both of them,” headed west of Vesta on County Highway 30 for two storage facility, adding two large grain legs and a 60- Schmidt said. “The larger one had uses.” miles and turned off on a gravel road. With a steady ton truck scale. What started as an interest in history moved into a pace, the trip lasted fifteen minutes. The third was called the “Red” Elevator, a 60-foot practical way to have storage on his farm. Because Given the height of the buildings, raising the 18,000 bushel building erected by the Minnesota the Co-op was saving the demolition costs, they gave power lines was not an option. Ahead of the elevaElevator Company. In 1954 the cooperative had the two elevators to Schmidt and even helped with tors, one crew cut the power lines. A second crew foladded the 85-foot 36,000 bushel building. the moving cost. lowed and put the lines back together. Vesta continued to grow as a collection point, and The move took place in January of 2001 and natuThe 1899 elevator was placed on a building site in 2000 Vesta Farmers Elevator (now Meadowlands rally drew onlookers. The mover jacked up the build- owned by Schmidt’s son. It rests on a hillside, Farmers Co-op) constructed a million bushel bin. ings and put wheels under them. His pressure gauge The two remaining wooden elevators had to go and showed the larger building weighed 120 tons. They See ELEVATOR, pg. 6 were slated for demolition. Given their solid wood construction, it would be an expensive project — tearing down, hauling away, and burning. Schmidt said he hated to see the 1899 elevator demolished, given its long history in the area. He approached the company about acquiring it.

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THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

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Schmidt preserving pieces of local agricultural history ELEVATOR, from pg. 5 unused at the moment, as a salvaged piece of history. Schmidt has had thoughts of remodeling it into living space, but he has no definite plans. The 1954 elevator turned in at Schmidt’s farmsite and was placed on a foundation that is eight inches of cement six feet into the ground, “sitting on solid clay,” Schmidt said. “There are foundation walls that crisscross underneath so that each bin sits on a complete four-sided foundation. In addition, there are six posts under each bin.”

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The foundation was designed to hold the 120-ton building plus the added weight of 36,000 bushels of corn. While it is covered with tin, the elevator is solid wood. “It’s what they call cribbing,” Schmidt said. “There are 10 feet of 2x8 boards on the bottom, then 40 feet of 2x6 boards, and the rest 2x4 boards, all laid flatwise, building up an inch-and-a-half at time, and they’re nailed about a foot on each side, staggered, so about every six inches on one side or the other

JULY 12 & 13, 2014

Richard Siemers

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Gary Schmidt also acquired this 1899 elevator.

there’s a spike going down. It’s solid.” Schmidt was told it is one of the safest places to be in a tornado. No doubt the 2011 storm realized that, so it tore off part of the roof and moved on. That was trouble enough. “It’s hard to find people who are willing to come up there and help me,” Schmidt said with a grin. “There are very few days even I can work up there. We watch the cottonwood tree. If the leaves are fluttering, it’s too windy. If the leaves are just hanging there, quick, get up and do something.” An interest in history and practicality combined to bring these two elevators to the 320-acre farm of Gary and Barb Schmidt. He used PCV pipe to add the “Schmidt” name and the year “1905” to the storage elevator, indicating the year his great-grandfather purchased the farm. Now the Schmidt farm and its 85-foot tall elevator will continue their history together. ❖

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From the Fields: Crops showing some stress from rain By KRISTIN KVENO

The Thronsons Gary, Minn.

Jared Thronson has been spending a lot of time getting to know his new sprayer. When The Land spoke with him the Jared Thronson morning of June 25 he had sprayed his winter wheat and corn, and was optimistic that field conditions would allow him to get back in the sprayer to do beans that afternoon. Located in northern Minnesota, Thronson knows the two and a half inches of rain that fell at this farm the previous week was nothing compared to what southern Minnesota had received. Nonetheless, the rain he got, and the forecast for the weekend, was not exactly giving his crop a boost in the right direction. Wheat is showing stress due to excess moisture, said Thronson — it’s “getting yellow color to it because it’s too wet.” He knows that field will need an aerial sprayer. Thronson has “one field of corn that looks real good,” while the other has lighter green corn. That one is a cornon-corn field; Thronson suspects it could use some extra nitrogen. The soybeans are “overall pretty good.” He is already thinking harvest. “I’m trying to get my combine out and ready to go for winter wheat harvest.” Thronson thinks he should be out combining winter wheat in about a month, as it is already flowering and heading out. This will be a new adventure for Thronson; he’s never grown winter wheat before. As he looks out on his crop he’s happy to report there’s “not too much to complain about.” Considering how this year’s growing season has gone for many farmers across Minnesota and Iowa, that statement says a lot.

The Wiltses Herman, Minn.

Rain has kept things pretty quiet on Dennis Wilts’ farm. The Land spoke with Wilts June 25 as he reported he

The Thronsons ❖ Gary, Minn ❖ Norman-Mahnomen Counties corn, soybeans and wheat

The Wiltses ❖ Herman, Minn ❖ Stevens County corn, soybeans, wheat and sugar beets

The Hoffmans ❖ New Ulm, Minn ❖ Brown County dairy cattle, corn, soybeans and alfalfa

The Hagens ❖ Lake Mills, Iowa ❖ Winnebago County corn and soybeans

hadn’t been able to get in the field to spray in over two weeks. That’s because the rains came; six inches of rain to be precise. All of that moisture caused “some of the corn to Dennis Wilts yellow,” he said. Some of the crop has been drowned out. While he’d like to have a do-over, Wilts said that “nothing has dried out to plant (and) it won’t be dried out in time to replant.” More rain was in the forecast: “They’re talking about two inches by Sunday,” Right now, he is looking for some sunshine instead of rain clouds. “We don’t need any more rain for a while.” At the very least, he said, “if we do get a bunch, (hopefully) it won’t come all at once.” Wilts’ brother was able to get in the field this day and get some spraying done — a spray plane has been hired to do more soon from the air. “We’ll have a lot of spraying,” Wilts said. Corn, soybeans and sugar beets are all on the docket. Trying to beat the rain and get the crops sprayed is the name of the game so far this summer. Looking at the positive in the midst of rain, wet fields and yellowed crops, Wilts said that at least they’ve had no hail or truly severe weather. He should probably should knock on wood after

that statement ... just to be safe.

The Hoffmans New Ulm, Minn.

Sometimes a road trip is just what a producer needs when rain puts a stop to the field work. That’s exactly what Don Hoffman was on Don Hoffman when The Land spoke with him on June 26. Having left the soggy New Ulm area, Hoffman and his wife, Diane, were headed to Indianapolis and enjoying a driving adventure along the way. Speaking from the town of Ottawa, Ill. — which Hoffman called a “rustic town with low humidity” — he gave an update on what’s going back at the farm. They’d had 10.5 inches of rain thus far in June, though there hadn’t been additional precipitation in nearly a week. The corn is “looking better,” said Hoffman, meaning that “some of what was yellowing is getting color again.” Even with the corn making a comeback, “I’m sure that we lost 4 or 5 percent to drown-out.” Meanwhile, the soybeans were “pretty good, actually,” although “they, too, have some of that yellowing color.” Overall, he said, they’re “growing nicely.” In the barn they’re “about to start calving a little bit again,” said Hoff-

man. That “should turn milk production up again.” As they drove along the Illinois farm fields he admired what is growing out there. “The crops down here look excellent.” With corn four feet high, “it looks good everywhere you look.” The crops out on Hoffman’s fields may not win any beauty pageants right now, they’re still coming along — and in this crazy growing season, he’ll take it.

The Hagens Lake Mills, Iowa

Heavy rains have worn out their welcome at the Hagen farm. “We got 6 inches last week; soaked ‘er Jim Hagen down pretty good,” Jim Hagen said. The Land spoke with him on June 25 as he was actually feeling some relief — “we missed out on a lot of the huge flooding.” While severe flooding wasn’t an issue in Hagen’s fields, rain nevertheless did drown out some of his crops. He reported that he had finished replanting 10 acres of soybeans due to the large amount of rain. The storms, while not severe, “blew pretty hard on the corn,” Hagen said, but thankfully the corn didn’t snap. He said that it’s “getting late to replant now,” so the weather had better behave and lend a helping hand to what’s still growing. With the rain came the heat. “We’ve gotten pretty good heat units here,” Hagen said. Heavy rains were forecast for the weekend but if they luck out and it stays away, he said it would be “really good corn growing weather.” Hagen hopes to finish up spraying beans in the next few days, as well as doing “some scouting in the fields to see if we need to put any fungicide on.” He said that “it’s easier to kill the weeds right now as they are growing fast.” He estmated that 99 percent of his crops “look real good.” Focusing on the big picture, Hagen said he is grateful for that 99 percent and is trying not be overly concerned about the one percent. Probably not a bad way to look at life ... and farming. ❖

Look for the next update in your July 18 issue of The Land


Salfer: California farmers face different water problems seeking ‘greener pastures.’” Approximately half of the water used by California dairy operations comes from ground water which, as yet, is not so tightly regulated, according to Salfer. But it’s the reductions in mountain water that’s beginning to greatly impact the California dairy industry. “Also, if we continue to have high crop prices,” he said, “that will become a bigger challenge out there since so much of their feed stocks are shipped in. But they’ve had a big dairy industry for a long time; they’re smart people and they will continue to be a major player in this industry.” Meanwhile, in Minnesota, Salfer noted that production per cow in the state, even with near-record milk prices, is down a bit this year.

Cover story: Prevent confusion

these high crop prices and buy land if I can to raise more of my own feed.’” Will the record high milk prices start pricing dairy products out of the consumer market? Salfer acknowledged that demand has dropped a bit, especially for fluid milk. He’s confident milk prices will stay strong right into this fall season, and points out that dairy markets, like some livestock markets, especially pork products, are determined by exports. “We’re now exporting 15 to 18 percent of our milk. Ten years ago our net exports were essentially zero,” Salfer said. “So much of the demand is driven by export markets, which are driven by currency exchange rates; in essence the economy of these foreign buyers. But note that as the rest of the world becomes wealthier they like animal products. And that is a real plus for the U.S. dairy industry.” ❖

like others, wonders about the huge precipitation much of the region experienced this late spring/early summer. “If this is the new normal of Minnesota weather,” he said, “we really need to do some research on crop choices, when to plant, yield projections based on late plantings, etc. To me at least in central Minnesota this is by far the ‘worst’ planting season we have ever experienced.” ❖

<< www.TheLandOnline.com >>

PREVENT, from pg. 1 Weather “what-ifs” If it gets hot and dry, Salfer said that a brown midrib sorghum or sorghumsudan grass might be a better choice. Of course, no one knows what’s around the corner, weather-wise, and with plenty of moisture in the ground, then corn might still be the best bet. Salfer is a long-time veteran of the Minnesota agriculture landscape and,

“Most of that is simply because the 2013 forage crop was not the best quality,” he said. “But the Minnesota dairy industry is pretty stable. The past six or seven years we’ve been growing 1 percent to 2 percent per year and that’s likely to continue, partly because robots for smaller dairy operations have been a Godsend. They continue being dairy producers because they like cows and it’s now a much easier task. This tends to ramp up production per cow somewhat.” Another reason for slower growth of the Minnesota dairy business are the high crop prices the past few years. “Larger producers have tried to get extra land so they have more feed sources without having to pay high corn prices,” said Salfer. “They rationalize that ‘I’ve got the manure anyway. So I want to minimize my risks on

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

By DICK HAGEN The Land Staff Writer Despite continuing as the No. 1 dairy state in the United States, California has the most intense water challenges. “I think even Califor- Jim Salfer nia people think they have peaked in dairy production with no more expansion,” said Jim Salfer, University of Minnesota Extension Service dairy specialist. “Part of that is water; part is the constant challenges on environmental issues out there; part is simply land prices. A lot of California dairy farmers now have ‘satellite operations’ in other areas, Idaho in particular. Most of the expansion of dairying in Idaho comes from California dairy farmers

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THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

10

Send us your events by e-mail to editor@TheLandOnline.com Crop Management Field Tour July 8 Rochester, Minn. Info: Call (507) 835-3620 or log on to http://sroc.cfans.umn.edu Minnesota State Cattlemen’s Summer Beef Tour and Trade Show July 8 Redwood Area Community Center, Redwood Falls, Minn. Info: Registration begins at 6:30 a.m.; tour bus leaves at 7 a.m., and every 15 min-

utes after that; log on to www.mnsca.org or www.facebook.com/ RedwoodAreaCattlemen.com for registration information; $25 before June 15, $35 after that, $20/student, $10/additional lunch ticket, $15/additional dinner tickets; payment can be sent to Jeri Hanson, 37590 110th Street, Comfrey, MN 56019 Environment and Swine Health Update Meeting July 15, 1-4:30 p.m. Convention Center, LeMars, Iowa

Log on to www.TheLandOnline.com for our full events calendar Info: Free with advanced registration, or $5 at the door, call (800) 372-7675 or e-mail lclemenson@iowapork.org Using Perennial Planting to Improve Water Quality Workshop July 16, 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Lakeside Ballroom, Glenwood, Minn. Info: $20/person; advanced registration requested, log on to z.umn.edu/wq; contact Diomy Zamora, (612) 6269272 or zamor015@umn.edu, or Gary Wyatt, (507) 3896748 or wyatt@umn.edu

Renville County 4-H Golf Tournament July 16, 4:30 p.m. Olivia Golf Club, Olivia, Minn. Info: Shotgun start at 4:30 p.m., 7 p.m. meal and auction to support 4-H; call (800) 4502522 or (320) 523-3713 to register a team; save your spot by July 9

Environment and Swine Health Update Meeting July 22, 1-4:30 p.m. Delaware County Community Center, Manchester, Iowa Info: Free with advanced registration, or $5 at the door, call (800) 372-7675 or e-mail lclemenson@iowapork.org

July 23, 1-4:30 p.m. Washington County Extension Office, Washington, Iowa Info: Free with advanced registration, or $5 at the door, call (800) 372-7675 or e-mail lclemenson@iowapork.org

Environment and Swine Health Update Meeting Pork Quality Assurance July 24, 1-4:30 p.m. Community Center, Dows, Training July 23 Environment and Swine Iowa Health Update Meeting AmericInn, Marshall, Minn. Info: Free with advanced regInfo: PQA Plus, 9 a.m.-Noon; istration, or $5 at the door, July 17, 1-4:30 p.m. Swan Lake Conservation Transport Quality Assurance, call (800) 372-7675 or e-mail Education Center, Carroll, 1-4 p.m.; contact lclemenson@iowapork.org Iowa colleen@mnpork.com or (800) Info: Free with advanced reg- 537-7675 to register; log on to Horticulture Night July 24, 5-9 p.m. istration, or $5 at the door, www.mnpork.com call (800) 372-7675 or e-mail West Central Research and lclemenson@iowapork.org Environment and Swine Outreach Center HorticulHealth Update Meeting ture Display Garden, Morris, Minn. Info: Free admission; contact Steve Poppe, (320) 589-1711 or log on to wcroc.cfans.umn.edu

See the The Land’s 2014 County Fair-Goer’s and Festivals Guides at www.TheLandOnline.com

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Send us your events by e-mail to editor@TheLandOnline.com

The Good Old Days & Threshing Show Aug. 2-3 Hanley Falls, Minn. Info: $6/person; call (507) 828-9130 or (507) 828-5437

Threshing Day and Antique Tractor Display Aug. 10 Heritage Acres Interpretive Center, Fairmont, Minn. Info: Log on to www.heritageacresmn.org or call Jerry Simon, (507) 2384645 or Norma Brolsma, (507) 764-3531

or call (507) 835-2052 Pork Quality Assurance Training Aug. 13 Southern Research and Out-

reach Center, Waseca, Minn. Info: PQA Plus, 9 a.m.-Noon; Transport Quality Assurance, 1-4 p.m.; contact colleen@mnpork.com or (800) 537-7675 to register; log on to

www.mnpork.com Minnesota Valley Antique Farm Power Threshing Show Aug. 15-17

Heritage Hill, Montevideo, Minn. Info: Featuring Minneapolis Moline; call Wes Thompson at (320) 269-8470 or visit www.heritagehill.us ❖

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

Sioux Falls, S.D. Info: American Soybean Association partnering with eLegacy Connect for six regional workshops; online registration available, log on to www.soygrowers.com for more information; $50/ASA member and $30/each additional family member; $90/non-ASA member and $70/each additional non-ASA family member

Log on to www.TheLandOnline.com 11 for our full events calendar

3rd Annual Farm Camp Minnesota Aug. 11-12 Farmamerica, Waseca, Minn. Info: Open to students entering grades 3-6; attendees pick one of the two days; registration closes July 25; $10/camper; log on to www.farmcampminnesota.org

<< www.TheLandOnline.com >> “Where Farm and Family Meet”


<< www.TheLandOnline.com >>

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

12

Anderson: Prevent planting no deal for livestock derstanding over just what the prevent plantBy DICK HAGEN ing program was all about. The Land Staff Writer “For the livestock farmers your issue is “I wouldn’t be concerned with July planting,” that you need feed. The dollars from preAnderson said. “Those seeds will germinate, vent planting payments really mean nothemerge and grow so quickly. Soils will be ing to you,” said Cokato-area alfalfa prowarm, there’s going to be plenty of sunshine, ducer Harlan Anderson, never one to everyday photosynthesis will be going on. mince words. Sure, the later you plant, the less you yield. “So my recommendation is ignore the Harlan Anderson But even with half the yield that’s better than trying to figure out where you’re going to find PP program and plant full season corn at regular populations, even if planting in July. Real- your feed next fall if you have none from your own ize you may end up chopping the crop since it’s not farm.” likely to produce mature grain, but you will have a Farm bill foibles high-sugar corn, high-protein corn and I’m confiCommenting on the new farm bill, Anderson, dent it will taste better to your cattle than a bunch strongly critical of Federal legislation guiding agriof ‘prevent planting’ paperwork.” culture, said his sources tell him it will be into Anderson was one of about 125 farmers, crop con- December before all the rules, regulations and sultants, insurance reps and others who partici- details are fully understood. And that applies to prepated in a June 19 session at Hutchinson, Minn., vent planting programs where local Farm Service Event Center and hosted by Nathan Winter, Uni- Agency offices remain “gun shy” about disclosing versity of Minnesota Extension Educator for details because details aren’t yet printed in the Federal Register. McLeod and Meeker counties. “I thought they should not do a new farm bill,” he Evident during the two-hour question and answer session was the confusion, uncertainty, and misun- said. “And it apparently was within just a few hours

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of not passing but last-minute lobbying by all the farm group interests pushed through passage even though they don’t know what they passed. Now it’s taking months to figure out exactly what is in this 900-page document. “Hopefully this is the last farm bill because as details spill out, regulators and now farmers are confused with what they are seeing and hearing. Details on this latest prevent plant program are a good example. I see this as the dumbest, most confusing, most devastating farm legislation that I have ever seen.” Alfalfa know-how A long-time alfalfa producer primarily for the equine population around the Twin Cities, Anderson knows the characteristics of this legume when too much water is the situation. He said alfalfa doesn’t like wet feet so low-lying areas of his cropland are seeded to reed canary grass which takes wet feet in stride. That quality has been tested recently on Anderson Farms. “We now have a lot of lakeshore property that we didn’t have four days ago,” he said. “I heard this morning this is the most June rain we’ve had since 2002. In 2002, ’03, and ’04 we probably had 100 acres under water each season. But with alfalfa we didn’t have any erosion; we still had the land and it wasn’t in the Gulf of Mexico. “Since that time we keep all our low ground in reed canary grass which we grind up and incorporate into our horse feed. We normally get three cuttings from the reed; this year probably only two. Because we’re growing for the equine industry we let our alfalfa go full bloom which gives us high fiber, low energy and low protein. Full bloom yields more tonnage and meets the needs of our clients. Horse people are particular.” ❖

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Tall tires are big business after relentless rains

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damage” has become a very large issue in the world of farm tires. Even soybean stalks have become an issue as breeders develop stronger stems to “carry more bushels” per acre. Many soybean growers also harvest their fields at an angle to the soybean rows, thus exposing tires to even more stubble. “What makes us unique,” said Hanson, “is that we’re offering a product that you can’t get from the factory, be that red machinery or green machinery or yellow or whatever the brand name of the equipment manufacturer.”

He said there are only a couple of tractor and farm equipment rim manufacturers in the United States but some outfits buy the various factory pieces and then resell them as special custom rims. “They’re taking the cookie cutter stuff and reselling as custom made. But that’s a stretch,” Hanson said. “We make our own steel centers. We buy blank rims and reconfigure to fit equipment units as needed. Ours are not the ‘cookie cutter’ rims that you get from John Deere, Case-IH and such.” They’re particular about the rubber that gets fitted on the rims they build. “I don’t like to have problems in the field so we always equip with the best rubber,” he said. “But you live with reality — agriculture puts equipment in a hazardous environment which often is running over stuff damaging to the rubber regardless the brand. We predominantly are selling Michelin and Firestone. If a customer requests, we also do Goodyear/Titan. We can sell the cheaper generic tire but if it’s got our Tall Tire label on the wheel we want a totally good setup for that customer.” A good agricultural economy the past three to four years has translated to good business for Keltgen Tall Tires. “When equipment is moving we’re busy,” said Hanson. “Quite often a farmer buys a used tractor with wide rubber but he wants narrow. We can be very specific when it comes to meeting the demands of any particular farmer.” ❖

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

By DICK HAGEN The Land Staff Writer Wet weather has generated interest in bigger tires with more flotation to carry crop sprayers. Obviously dual tires provide much more flotation and more traction, both key in making wet fields doable. Chris Hanson, sales rep for Keltgen Tall Tires of Olivia, Minn., indicated growers in both 20/22-inch rows and 30-inch rows were ramping up with duals. “It boils down to more flotation, better stability, simply more rubber on the ground,” he said. “Tall tires for tractors have been our mainstay for the past 20-plus years but the last couple of years we’ve had lots of activity with crop sprayers, both the big self-propelled and pull-type units. And in today’s world everyone is spraying more so this has been great business for us.” Another expanding market for Keltgen Tall Tires is the rapidly expanding size of combines. “Machinery keeps getting bigger,” Hanson said. “These new combine heads, especially if equipped with chopper heads and 400 bushel and larger grain tanks, are incredibly heavy. So we build the special rims and size them up with the rubber. It’s a bigger tire option than what’s offered from the factory and we feel a stronger package, too.” Hanson said the tougher corn stalks of today’s hybrids are a challenge to field tires, saying “stubble

13


THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

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Local Corn and Soybean Price Index

15

Dover Edgerton Jackson Janesville Cannon Falls Sleepy Eye Average: Year Ago Average:

corn/change*

soybeans/change*

$3.85

$13.54

$6.49

$15.40

$3.85 $3.78 $3.94 $3.86 $3.83 $3.83

-.34 -.24 -.17 -.25 -.24 -.20

$13.42 $13.63 $13.58 $13.51 $13.50 $13.62

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

Cash Grain Markets -.80 -.23 -.20 -.25 -.05 -.07

AUG’13

SEP

OCT

NOV

DEC

JAN ’14

FEB

MAR

APR

MAY

JUN

JUL

Grain prices are effective cash close on July 1. The price index chart compares an average of most recently reported local cash prices with the same average for a year ago. *Cash grain price change represents a two-week period.

Grain Outlook Corn acres water-logged

Livestock Angles Grain Angles Livestock markets Managing cash are on fire flow projections I’ve been thinking a lot about the extremely low to negative margins facing the 2014 and 2015 corn crops when using the December 2014 and 2015 Chicago Board of Trade prices ($4.43 and $4.58 as of Dec. 26, 2014). If these slim to negative margins continue to persist this fall and next spring we will start to see working capital positions — (Current Assets - Current Liabilities) and Term Debt Coverage Ratios ((Net Farm Income from Operations + Non-Farm Income + Depreciation + Term Interest Expense – Income Taxes – Family Living) / (Term Principal Payments + Term MARTY KRIENER Interest Expenses)) — tighten up AgStar Senior Financial Serivces Executive for a larger pool of grain farmers. Rochester, Minn. Dramatically lower year-end prices on our Dec. 31, 2013 balance sheets started tightening up many producers’ working capital positions last winter. Couple this with a second straight year of tight margins, and cash positions will continue to deteriorate. So, what are we actively doing today about this situation? In order to get our arms around this problem we need to stay engaged in our 2014 and 2015 cash flow projections. We need to manage the things we can control: • Manage your 2014 income tax situation wisely. It’s extremely important for all producers to stay on top of this. Make sure capital purchases are for the right reasons and don’t put your Term Debt Coverage Ratio below a 1:1 situation because you borrowed funds to save tax dollars.

See NYSTROM, pg. 16

See TEALE, pg. 16

See KRIENER, pg. 16

Information in the above columns is the writer’s opinion. It is no way guaranteed and should not be interpreted as buy/sell advice. Futures trading always involves a certain degree of risk.

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

As we finish the month of June the livestock markets are on fire. New contract highs in the futures of live cattle, feeder cattle and hogs and all time highs in the cash cattle and feeder cattle markets were accomplished entering the end of the month. Sometimes it appears that there is no end in the cattle rally, however as with every market it will end when no one expects it. The rally started with the decline in numbers or the decrease in supply. The end of the market will come from the other side of the equation, the decline in the demand for beef. When this takes place would be merely a guess by all the JOE TEALE Broker prognosticators and analysts. Until this event takes place the Great Plains Commodity Afton, Minn. momentum and bullish attitudes will dominate the market. From a fundamental standpoint, the higher the beef cutout climbs, the better chance that there will be resistance to the higher prices paid by the consumers. That has been evident each time the cutout has surpassed the $240.00 cwt. level the movement of boxed beef has reacted with fewer loads traded. From the producer’s point of view, caution should be the main factor in their marketing scheme. Caution toward protecting the gains achieved during this current bull move in the anticipation and reality that this move will not last forever. The hog market has seen prices paid for live inventory by the packers improve dramatically in the past few weeks. The decline in hog numbers seems to be the factor that has turned the market from a decline

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The following market analysis is for the week ending June 27. CORN — Nearby July corn dropped nearly a dime to begin the week, posting a key reversal lower on the chart as a result, and spent the remaining four trading days in a tight, sideways 6 1⁄2 cent range. The September and December contracts also posted key reversals lower, but spent the balance of the week regaining half of Monday’s loss. July corn was down 10 1⁄4 cents for the week at $4.43 per bushel, September fell 6 cents to $4.42 1⁄4, and December dropped 4 3⁄4 cents to $4.47 1⁄4 per NYSTROM bushel. Weather was discussed at PHYLLIS CHS Hedging Inc. length as the trade tried to put a St. Paul figure on how many acres were under water and how overall yields would be affected. Adding pertinence to the discussion is how the water-logged acres will or will not be accounted for in the June 30 Planted Acreage report. Most of the flooding came after June 1, so they shouldn’t be included. Once the report is released, look for analysis to try and put a value on the “lost” or “damaged” acres. Current forecasts look very favorable for crop development with no excessive heat for pollination in the outlook. When traders return from the Fourth of July holiday, pollination will be well underway in the Corn Belt. Corn conditions declined 2 percent to 74 percent good/excellent as of the June 22 report. The range of estimates for corn stocks as of June 1 is huge, from 3.046 billion to 3.950 billion bushels.


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THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

16

Old crop soybeans making a move higher NYSTROM, from pg. 15 The average prediction is 3.722 billion bushels versus last year’s 2.766 billion bushels on June 1. If correct, the corn stocks number would be the highest in four years. Planted corn acreage is estimated at 91.725 million acres. This compares to the working U.S. Department of Agriculture number of 91.7 million acres and last year’s 95.365 million planted acres. In each of the last four years, the June acreage number has not varied from the March number by more than 1 million acres. In six of the last seven years, the June acreage number has been higher than the trade estimate. The International Grain Council raised their world corn production estimate by 8 million metric tons to 963 mmt. The U.S. attaché to China cut their 2014-15 feed usage to 158 mmt compared to USDA’s 162 mmt number. They put 2014-15 ending corn stocks to 82.1 mmt when the USDA is carrying it at 78.1 mmt. The world has plenty of corn and the opinion is that very little has been sold. Large supplies should weigh on the market into new crop and beyond. If pollination weather is uneventful, prices should trend lower.

Weekly export sales of 12.7 million bushels were very good when we only need 10 million bushels of sales per week to hit the USDA target of 1.9 billion bushels. Total export commitments stand at 1.850 billion bushels or 97 percent of the forecast with 10 weeks left in the marketing year. The USDA forecast looks like a doable number. Weekly ethanol production fell to 938,000 barrels per day from last week’s record 972,000 bpd. Since the first of the marketing year, ethanol production is averaging an annualized grind of 5.090 billion bushels, slightly higher than the USDA’s 5.050 estimate. Argentina’s corn harvest continues to be plagued by wet conditions with harvest reported at 49 percent complete versus 77 percent last year. OUTLOOK: By the time many of you are enjoying this article, the USDA’s Planted Acreage and Grain Stocks as of June 1 reports will be being digested by the market. Depending on what the numbers indicate, all bets may be off for price direction. The reports do coincide with month and quarter end positioning, as well as first notice day for the July contract. This means that begin-

KRIENER, from pg. 15 • Corn/soybean rotations? Continue to review your 2015 projections and make sound decisions on your 2015 planting intentions. • Consider marketing strategies to protect your bottom side revenue. If you’re not communicating with a marketing expert now is the time to search one out. • Manage all of your expense categories. It’s extremely difficult to save large dollars in any one expense category. We all need to do our homework and save a little bit in each and every expense category. Diligently work on plans that will help you achieve these small expense category wins and the outcome will surprise you. • If not already reviewing and discussing rental contract arrangements, now is the time to start the process. Rental arrangements will determine our largest input expense and will also determine landlord rate of returns. Due to the past strong grain profitability we have had a dramatic rise in rental rates. The upper-end rental arrangements worked with proper management but with the significantly lower prices fac-

ing us today our margins on these farms have pushed significantly below breakeven. Landlords and tenants need to find a middle ground on these farms. An extremely good option is a flexible lease rental agreement. We started to see rents soften this spring and with tight margins and we can all assume that this trend will continue. Now is the time to be proactive as a landlord or a tenant and explore flexible leasing options. Landlords who take a smaller rent upfront today will help their tenant stay closer to breakeven with the ability to profit greatly if grain prices move up dramatically. The past has proven that we are in a highly volatile grain market and with volatility comes opportunity. Don’t be short-sighted today and miss out on tremendous upside in future years. Starting a strong partnership between landlord and tenant today will help both parties achieve their long-term goals. AgStar Financial Services is a cooperative owned by client stockholders. As part of the Farm Credit System, AgStar has served 69 counties in Minnesota and northwest Wisconsin with a wide range of financial products and services for more than 95 years. ❖

ning June 30 the July contract is not subject to daily price limits. From 2004-13, July corn has closed higher the day of June reports four times and lower six times, so there is no good correlation of price direction based on the last 10 years. As for the Fourth of July, December corn has closed lower six times out of the last 10 years the day after the holiday and higher four times. Let’s get the reports and the holiday behind us so we can once again focus on pollination weather. SOYBEANS — After struggling early in the week, old crop soybeans made their move higher this week once the weekly export sales report was published. This week’s sales of 11.7 million brought total export commitments for the year to 1.671 billion bushels, 71 million bushels over the yearly projection. This was the largest single week sales number since late February. In order to keep the export line under the USDA’s 1.6 billion bushels forecast, we need consistent weekly net cancellations that average 7.1 million bushels for the last ten weeks of the marketing year. Net cancellations have only occurred once thus far in the marketing year, and it was only for a 600,000 bushel net cancellation. We normally see 67 million bushels of old crop sales rolled over into new crop. Could this year see a bigger rollover? New crop sales were impressive at 16.8 million bushels, bringing total new crop commitments to 395.5 million bushels versus 442.8 million at this time last year. Meal sales were also very good with 66.3 tmt for old crop and 187.1 tmt for new crop. Meal futures are up about $20 per ton from recent lows. Weather remains mostly favorable for the crop, except for the areas that have received excessive rainfall. It’s still a lit-

MARKETING

Grain market highly volatile

tle early to make a definite determination on how many acres will not be planted or how yields may be affected. This should result in another week of condition declines, but since we started so high we have some room to give. Soybean ratings fell 1 percent to 72 percent good/excellent as of June 22. The June 1 stocks estimate is 378 million bushels with a range of guesses from 334-440 million bushels. If the estimate is realized, it will be lowest soybean stocks in June in 37 years! Last year, there were 435 million bushels in storage on June 1. The average trade prediction for planted acres is 82.154 million acres. The USDA’s current working number is 81.5 million. Last year we planted 76.533 million acres to soybeans. Any changes to previous year production won’t come until the September Grain Stocks report. Reports from two major seed companies hinted what the trade is anticipating, that soybean seed sales are up and corn seed sales are down this year. OUTLOOK: Weather will dominate daily highlights once the reports are behind us, but other factors will come into play as well. Included in those factors are the results of the stocks and acreage reports, competition in the feed chain from DDGs, speed of soybean imports, and export sales. If there are no report surprises or threatening weather, the path of least resistance is a grind lower for new crop. In the last 10 years (2004-13) on the day of June reports, July soybeans have closed higher three times and lower seven times. For the Fourth of July holiday, November beans have closed lower six times the day after the Fourth and higher four times out of the last ten years. This material has been prepared by a sales or trading employee or agent of CHS Hedging Inc. and should be considered a solicitation. ❖

Demand for pork is up TEALE, from pg. 15 in prices to a decent recovery. The demand for pork product has also been a positive in this recent upturn in the prices. The comparison of competitive meats prices, pork is a very good value. However like everything considered, if pork cutouts increase too much the demand for pork could decline. When it comes to the supply, the USDA released the Quarterly Hogs and Pigs report on June 27. The findings were as follows: All hogs and pigs 95 percent; Kept for Breeding 100 per-

cent; and Kept for marketing 95 percent. The March- May pig crop 95 percent and the pigs per litter 95 percent. This report was seen as friendly as all major categories were below expectations, and is likely reflecting the effects of the porcine epidemic diarrhea virus on the entire hog herd. With hog numbers lower, the prospects for higher prices begins to increase in possibilities. Producers should not forget that the fact that demand will be the determining factor in where the market eventually goes and should protect inventories when the opportunity presents itself. ❖


$2 cheese reign tested again; butter is soaring the surplus milk because, as one cheese plant manager said, his operation is already scheduled seven days a week and can’t physically make any more cheese. Cheese buyers, looking for blocks or barrels this week, were told by many manufacturers that no cheese is

available, due to existing commitments. A few cheese plants are dipping into inventory to make sales. Inventories are termed tight to comfortable. See MIELKE, pg.18

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

This column was written for the marketing week ending June 27. Cash cheese prices strengthened the last week of June Dairy Month but gave back some of the gains on Friday. The Cheddar blocks closed at $2.02 per pound, after hitting MIELKE MARKET $2.04 Thursday, but are WEEKLY still up 2 cents on the week By Lee Mielke and 38.25 cents above a year ago when they dropped 8.75 cents. The barrels, after eight consecutive sessions of gain took them to $2.05 on Thursday, backed down to $2.01 Friday, unchanged on the week, but 41.25 cents above a year ago when they plummeted 12 cents. Fourteen loads of block and four of barrel traded hands on the week. The U.S. average National Dairy Products Sales Report-surveyed block price averaged $2.0320, up 1.7 cents. The barrels averaged $2.0131, down 0.5 cent. Some Wisconsin cheesemakers have been offered milk at $5 under the class price but are also seeing peak levels of milk intake, according to USDA’s Dairy Market News. Many are unable to take advantage of

17

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THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

18

Summer means lower milk production rates MIELKE, from pg. 17 Cash butter soared to levels not seen in over a decade, closing Friday $2.39 per pound, up 15.5 cents on the week and a whopping 96.25 cents above a year ago when it dropped 7.25 cents. The all-time record high is $2.81 per pound in September 1998. Only four cars were sold this week. NDPSR butter averaged $2.1675 per pound, down 1.6 cents. Butter prices re-surged on a bullish market as butter sales continue above historical trends resulting in tighter than typical inventories, according to DMN. More churn operators backed off highly sought after cream supplies as cream prices are rising to unprofitable

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levels to produce butter. Due to cream prices, use and demand for bulk butter is picking up steadily. However, buyers are finding supplies difficult to secure. Production rates are steady to lower. Some butter manufacturers noted lower butterfat levels in the milk. Domestic demand is very good, while international interest is light. Butter prices continue to show strength in the West. Tight supplies have buyers looking to acquire inventory for future needs. Domestic sales for retail have slowed, but end users are buying spot loads of bulk butter when available. Butter production is steady to lower. Some manufacturers continue to sell cream to satisfy demand. Export

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demand is slower as international prices are below current U.S. pricing. ■ Cash Grade A nonfat dry milk closed at $1.8075 per pound, down 1.75 cents on the week, with three sales on the week. NDPSR powder averaged $1.8731, up 1.1 cent, and dry whey averaged 67.95 cents per pound, up 0.3 cent. May butter stocks totaled 192.5 million pounds, according to preliminary data in the Agriculture Department’s latest Cold Storage report issued this afternoon. That’s up 18.5 million pounds or 11 percent from April but a whopping 129.5 million pounds or 40 percent below that of May 2013. American cheese stocks, at 656.8 million pounds, are up 7.9 million or 1 percent from April but 57.8 million pounds or 8 percent below a year ago. The total cheese inventory stood at 1.068 billion pounds on May 30, up 30.2 million or 3 percent from April but 82.3 million pounds or 7 percent below a year ago. ■ Cooperatives Working Together accepted five requests for export assistance this week from Dairy Farmers of America, Michigan Milk Producers Association and Northwest Dairy Association (Darigold) to sell 158,733 pounds of cheese, 2.315 million pounds of butter (82 percent butterfat) and 1.574 million pounds of whole milk powder to customers in Asia and the Middle East. The product will be delivered through

November and raises CWT’s 2014 cheese exports to 57.232 million pounds, plus 50.229 million pounds of butter and 13.596 million pounds of whole milk powder to 41 countries on six continents. These sales are the equivalent of 1.746 billion pounds of milk on a milkfat basis. Several states in the Southwest and Southeast regions, along with California, are seeing some declines in farm milk production, according to USDA’s weekly update. Most states in the northern tier of the country from West to East are mostly steady with a few states showing some increases. However, as summer advances and temperatures rise, lower milk production rates are expected in those states. ■ Western European milk production remains robust with producers experiencing good margins and encouraged to produce as much milk as possible, prior to anticipated milk price reductions. April milk production estimates for the EU-28 were on average 7.3 percent above year-ago levels and 3.7 percent higher compared to April 2012. The strong April increase over last year is as much a comment on last year’s weak start to milk production as it is on this year’s strong start, says DMN. Lee Mielke is a syndicated columnist who resides in Everson, Wash. His weekly column is featured in newspapers across the country and he may be reached at lkmielke@juno.com. ❖


How a traveling salesman became a trusted name in food

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

Tonight’s dessert is courtesy of your childhood. “Duncan Hines: How a Traveling Salesman Became the Most Trusted Name in Food” The cake you’ll have after by Louis Hatchett, foreword by Michael and Jane Stern dinner is just like the one c.2014, University of Kentucky Press Mom used to make. It’ll be round, mostly, maybe a little $19.95 / higher in Canada lopsided, with a divot in the 326 pages center from letting the oven door slam. Like Mom’s cake, your icing will be thick on THE BOOKWORM palate for fine foods so, as top, thin on the sides. And SEZ later health issues took him like hers, yours came from a to the newly-settled West; By Terri Schlichenmeyer box, too. They Need A New Home marriage brought him to Cake mix. What a concept. New York; and a sales gig 13x74 MKX, SN: 247740 So how did something so revolutionled him to Chicago, he seized every 13x74 MKX, SN: 248792 ary (in the 1930s) end up in nearly opportunity to sample various every kitchen in the country? Read 13x74 MKX, SN: 259184 cuisines. Furthermore, Hines and his “Duncan Hines” by Louis Hatchett wife made it a “hobby” to dine out on 13x61 MK, old style, SN: 235990 and find out. weekends and he kept meticulous 13x71 SD, PTO, SN: 258725 notes on restaurants, sanitation and Born in Bowling Green, Ky., at a 13x31 EMD w/hopper food. time when automobiles were new, 13x31 EMD w/hopper & wheel kit Duncan Hines was the eighth of 10 By late 1935, after trading his infor13x41 SD, PTO, Coming Back children, but the last to live. He mation with other traveling salesmen, seemed to have an idyllic childhood 10x71 MK, SN: 255562 Hines’ notes grew to include 167 but when his mother died in 1884, restaurants in 30 states. He saw that 10x71 MK, SN: 255575 young Hines was sent to live with his automobile travel was quickly becom10x71 MK, SN: 247451 grandparents. It was a decision that ing popular and he knew that every10x71 MK, SN: 247446 changed his life. body wanted know where to get a 10x71 MK, SN: 258726 decent meal away so, that year, he and Because his grandmother was an excellent cook, eating became Hines’ 10x71 MK, SN: 258724 See BOOKWORM, pg. 23 “great passion.” He developed a keen 10x71 SD, PTO, SN 255323

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Soybeans in ‘14?

10x61 10x61 10x61 10x41 10x41 10x36 10x31 10x31 10x31 8x71 8x71 8x61 8x61 8x61 8x56 8x51 8x51 8x51 8x31 8x31 8x31 8x26


20

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

KIMBALL, MN 320-398-3800 ST. MARTIN, MN 320-548-3285 TRACTORS 4WD

TRACTORS 4WD Continued

TRACTORS AWD/MFD Continued

JD 9620, '04, 3835 hrs ..........................................................$167,900 JD 9560RT, '12, 660 hrs ........................................................$335,000 JD 9460RT, '12, 1010 hrs ......................................................$292,000 JD 9400, '98, 7865 hrs ............................................................$84,500 JD 9330, 435 hrs ....................................................................$239,500 JD 8450, '84, 6460 hrs ............................................................$29,500 NH 9682, '98, 6545 hrs ............................................................$74,500 NH 9682, '96, 4965 hrs ............................................................$69,900 NH 9680, '94, 4855 hrs ............................................................$53,900 NH 9020, '10, 580 hrs ............................................................$159,500 Steiger ST325III, '78 ................................................................$15,500

CIH 245 Mag, '07, 3540 hrs....................................................$119,500 CIH MX240, '00, 9295 hrs ........................................................$67,500 CIH 235 Mag, '13, 265 hrs......................................................$179,900 CIH 235 Mag, '13, 675 hrs......................................................$179,500 CIH 225 Mag, '13, 160 hrs......................................................$162,676 CIH 225 Mag, '12, 325 hrs......................................................$149,500 CIH MX200, '99, 8900 hrs ........................................................$69,500 CIH 190 Mag, '11, 2100 hrs....................................................$115,000 CIH 190 Mag, '09, 3740 hrs....................................................$109,500 CIH 180 Mag, '13, 1930 hrs....................................................$117,500 CIH MX170, '98, 10295 hrs ......................................................$44,500 CIH 200 Puma, '11, 435 hrs ..................................................$141,500 CIH 125 Maxxum, '13, 280 hrs ................................................$89,000 CIH 125 Maxxum, '11, 1190 hrs ..............................................$89,000 CIH 115 Maxxum MC, '13, 85 hrs ............................................$75,500 CIH JX95, '06, 3395 hrs ..........................................................$33,500 CIH 7220, '94, 10735 hrs ........................................................$59,500 CIH 7120, '92, 5740 hrs ..........................................................$57,500 CIH 5130, '91, 16,665 hrs ........................................................$15,000 Case 1490, 5000 hrs ..................................................................$5,500 IH 5088, 3660 hrs ....................................................................$12,500 Agco RT120A, '07, 2400 hrs ....................................................$66,900 JD 9200, '00, 4150 hrs ............................................................$96,900 JD 8345RT, '10, 1470 hrs ......................................................$225,000 JD 8310R, '12, 475 hrs ..........................................................$249,900 JD 6430, '10, 1445 hrs ............................................................$79,500 NH 9680, '94, 4855 hrs ............................................................$53,900 NH T8040, '10, 1110 hrs ........................................................$169,500 NH T8010, '08, 2020 hrs ........................................................$119,500 NH 8.360, '11, 2050 hrs ........................................................$180,000 NH T5.115, '13, 20 hrs ............................................................$64,900 NH TJ380, '06, 2745 hrs ........................................................$145,900 NH TS6.140, '13, 105 hrs ........................................................$72,500 White 6144F, '95, 940 hrs ........................................................$44,500

TRACTORS AWD/MFD

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CIH 600 Quad, ‘11, 840 hrs. ....$339,900 CIH 600 Quad, '12, 1135 hrs ..................................................$335,000 CIH 600 Quad, '12, 1545 hrs ..................................................$325,000 CIH 600 Quad, '11, 840 hrs ....................................................$339,900 CIH 600 Quad, '11, 720 hrs ....................................................$339,900 CIH 600 Quad, '11, 925 hrs ....................................................$299,500 CIH 600 Quad, '11, 935 hrs ....................................................$339,000 CIH 600 Quad, '11, 1270 hrs ..................................................$338,500 CIH 550 Quad, '14, 245 hrs ....................................................$367,900 CIH 550 Quad, '14, 250 hrs ....................................................$365,670 CIH 550 Quad, '14, 340 hrs ....................................................$365,125 CIH 550 Quad, '13, 240 hrs ....................................................$277,149 CIH 550 Quad, '13, 290 hrs ....................................................$314,390 CIH 550 Quad, '13, 485 hrs ....................................................$339,500 CIH 550 Quad, '11, 630 hrs ....................................................$334,900 CIH 550 Quad, '11, 1070 hrs ..................................................$315,000 CIH 535 Quad, '08, 1785 hrs ..................................................$265,000 CIH 535 Quad, '07, 180 hrs ....................................................$271,500 CIH 500 Steiger, '13, 210 hrs..................................................$267,703 CIH 500 Quad, '11, 1070 hrs ..................................................$300,000 CIH 485 Quad, '10, 1425 hrs ..................................................$225,000 CIH 485 Steiger, '10, 1600 hrs................................................$226,500 CIH 485 Quad, '08, 1930 hrs ..................................................$270,000 CIH STX480, '06, 3085 hrs ....................................................$182,500 CIH STX450Q, '02, 4935 hrs ..................................................$164,500

CIH 340 Magnum, ‘11, 1755 hrs. $198,500

CIH 105C, ‘13, 115 hrs. ............$40,000

CIH 485 Quad, ‘08, 1930 hrs. ....$270,000

CIH 8850, ‘98, 1980 hrs. ............$36,900

Claas 980, ‘09, 1860 hrs. ........

CIH DCX101 MowCond ............................................................$19,900 CIH DCX91 MowCond ..............................................................$15,900 CIH 8360 MowCond....................................................................$5,500 Claas 9100C MowCond ............................................................$68,000 Claas 8550C MowCond ............................................................$54,000 Claas 8400RC MowCond ..........................................................$55,000 (2) Gehl DC2412 MowCond ......................................starting at $8,500 JD 946, '04 MowCond ..............................................................$18,500 (2) Krone 9140EV, 30' MowCond ............................starting at $44,000 NH 1475, 14' MowCond............................................................$16,000 NH 489 MowCond ......................................................................$2,250 Hesston 1004, 5.5' Disc Mower..................................................$5,800 JD 265, 7' Disc Mower ..............................................................$4,900 Kuhn GMD800 Disc Mower ........................................................$7,900 Kuhn GMD700HD Disc Mower....................................................$9,500 JD 350, 7' Sickle Mower ............................................................$2,550 CIH RR90 Rotary Mower ............................................................$2,000 JD 606, 6' Rotary Mower ..............................................................$940 Kuhn GMD400 Rotary Mower ....................................................$7,000 Landpride AFM4211 Rotary Mower ..........................................$12,500 Woods S106, 6' Rotary Mower ..................................................$2,500 Gehl WM2109 Wind Merg ..........................................................$9,800 Millerpro 7916 Wind Merg..........................................................$9,500 Millerpro 14-16 Wind Merg ......................................................$38,500 Millerpro 310 Wind Merg..........................................................$67,000 NH 144 Wind Merg ....................................................................$2,450 (2) Oxbo 330 Wind Merg ......................................starting at $104,500 Phiber SM848 Wind Merg ........................................................$28,500 Rowse 8' Wind Merg ..................................................................$6,500 Krone SWADRO Rake ..............................................................$16,500 Kuhn 4120 Rake..........................................................................$4,750 Pottinger 801A Rake ..................................................................$9,500

BALERS

COMPACT TRACTORS/RTV’s CIH 290 Magnum, ‘13, 405 hrs. $199,500

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

CIH 290 Mag, '13, 405 hrs......................................................$199,500 CIH 290 Mag, '11, 960 hrs......................................................$179,500 CIH 290 Mag, '11, 1760 hrs....................................................$169,500 CIH MX285, '04, 4955 hrs ......................................................$106,000 CIH MX285, '04, 7300 hrs ........................................................$87,500 CIH MX270, '01, 3200 hrs ........................................................$94,900 CIH 260 Mag, '12, 595 hrs......................................................$179,900 CIH 260 Mag, '12, 830 hrs......................................................$177,500 CIH MX255, '05, 3455 hrs ......................................................$106,000

CIH 400 Steiger, ‘12, 475 hrs. ....$239,500 CIH 9390, '97, 8000 hrs ..........................................................$74,500 CIH 9370, '00, 6705 hrs ..........................................................$82,000 CIH 9270, '91, 7130 hrs ..........................................................$55,000 Cat 75L, '93, 6100 hrs ..............................................................$59,500 Cat 75, '92, 7290 hrs ................................................................$49,000 Challenger 755C, '10, 1535 hrs ..............................................$182,500 Challenger MT855B, '07, 4420 hrs ........................................$210,000 Ford 946, '89, 7595 hrs ............................................................$29,900 JD 9560R, '12, 320 hrs ..........................................................$320,000 JD 9620T, '06, 3485 hrs ........................................................$169,500 JD 9620, 04, 3680 hrs ............................................................$165,900

CIH 260 Magnum, ‘12, 830 hrs. ..$177,500

Financing provided by

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Bobcat CT440, '13, 105 hrs ......................................................$23,500 Cub Cadet 6284, '07, 245 hrs ....................................................$8,875 JD X475 ......................................................................................$6,500 JD 2305, 495 hrs ........................................................................$8,975 JD 855, '95, 1275 hrs ..............................................................$14,900 Kubota B750HSD, '02, 1310 hrs ................................................$8,900 Kubota B3000HSDC, '11, 315 hrs ............................................$25,750 Kubota B2710, '04, 755 hrs ......................................................$13,950 Kubota B2620, '12, 45 hrs ........................................................$16,500 Kubota B1700HST, '98, 1170 hrs................................................$9,900 Kubota BX2360RV, '09, 355 hrs ..............................................$12,400 Kubota BX2230, '06, 1060 hrs....................................................$9,950 Kubota BX2230, '04, 1985 hrs....................................................$7,750 Kubota BX2200, '02, 1980 hrs....................................................$6,850 Kubota BX1800, '00, 1510 hrs....................................................$6,600 Kubota L3130HST, '04, 3485 hrs..............................................$10,800 NH TC30, '02, 775 hrs ..............................................................$13,900 NH TC29D, '10, 650 hrs............................................................$13,500 Artic Cat 700EFI, '11, 1120 hrs ................................................$16,500 Cub Cadet 4x4 Trail, '06, 610 hrs................................................$6,900 Kawasaki 650, '06, 600 hrs ........................................................$4,500 Kubota RTV1100CWXH, '12, 105 hrs ......................................$17,900 Kubota RTV1100CW, '09, 340 hrs ............................................$17,800 Kubota RTV1100, '08, 105 hrs..................................................$15,500 Kubota RTV1100, '08, 1590 hrs................................................$11,250 Kubota RTV1100, '07, 850 hrs..................................................$14,250 Kubota RTV900, '08, 585 hrs......................................................$9,995 NH 125 Rustler, '11, 115 hrs ......................................................$8,750 Polaris 500HO, '00, 2340 miles ..................................................$4,995 Polaris Ranger, '13, 245 hrs ....................................................$13,900

FORAGE EQUIPMENT

CIH 8850, '98, 1980 hrs ..........................................................$36,900 JD R450, '12, 695 hrs ............................................................$106,000 (2) CIH DC132, 13' MowCond ................................starting at $29,900

CIH DCX101 MowCond ..............$19,900

CIH MX180, '00, 2685 hrs ........................................................$68,500 CIH 7110, '90, 8620 hrs ..........................................................$35,450 CIH 5130, '91, 14065 hrs ........................................................$17,000 CIH 5130, '90, 9140 hrs ..........................................................$22,500 Case 2394, '84, 6165 hrs..........................................................$17,500 IH 5088, '81, 12,890 hrs ..........................................................$15,900 IH 3488, 11000 hrs ..................................................................$29,500 IH 986, '80, 5185 hrs................................................................$13,500 IH 966, '75, 7530 hrs................................................................$12,500 IH 656, 11,045 hrs......................................................................$6,500 IH M, '40 ....................................................................................$1,800 JD 7600, '94, 8000 hrs ............................................................$46,900 JD 5065E, '13, 25 hrs ..............................................................$21,000 JD 2840 ......................................................................................$7,900 JD 2630B, '75, 5840 hrs ............................................................$8,900

NO. MANKATO, 507-387-551

Bob Joubert • East - (507) 402 Randy Olmscheid • West - (320) 5

TRACTORS 2WD

CIH 340 Mag, '13, 560 hrs......................................................$234,000 CIH 340 Mag, '13, 950 hrs......................................................$225,000 CIH 340 Mag, '13, 955 hrs......................................................$225,000 CIH 340 Mag, '12, 750 hrs......................................................$225,000 CIH 340 Mag, '11, 1755 hrs....................................................$198,500 CIH 340 Mag, '11, 1780 hrs....................................................$199,000 CIH 340 Mag, '11, 1975 hrs....................................................$197,500 CIH 340 Mag, '11, 2125 hrs....................................................$196,500 CIH 335 Mag, '11, 900 hrs......................................................$192,500 CIH 335 Mag, '08, 3600 hrs....................................................$144,900 CIH 335 Mag, '08, 925 hrs......................................................$144,900 CIH 315 Mag, '13, 200 hrs......................................................$234,500 CIH 315 Mag, '13, 815 hrs......................................................$210,000 CIH 315 Mag, '13, 935 hrs......................................................$210,000 CIH 315 Mag, '12, 1560 hrs....................................................$190,000 CIH 315 Mag, '11, 1440 hrs....................................................$172,500 CIH 305 Mag, '10, 4545 hrs....................................................$145,500 CIH 305 Mag, '09, 1695 hrs....................................................$169,500 CIH 305 Mag, '09, 1940 hrs....................................................$172,500 CIH 305 Mag, '07, 2335 hrs....................................................$159,500 CIH MX305, '06, 2785 hrs ......................................................$129,500

CIH 435 Steiger, '10, 895 hrs..................................................$235,000 CIH 435 Steiger, '09, 1785 hrs................................................$199,500 CIH 435 Quad, '09, 2490 hrs ..................................................$239,000 CIH 400 Steiger, '12, 475 hrs..................................................$239,500 CIH 380 Steiger, '07, 2285 hrs................................................$180,000 CIH 350HD Steiger, '12, 1090 hrs ..........................................$210,000 CIH 350HD Steiger, '11, 795 hrs ............................................$195,000 CIH 335 Steiger, '10, 1455 hrs................................................$185,000

HAY EQUIPMENT

W 3

CIH RB564 Round Baler ............$22,900 (2) CIH RB564 Rnd Baler ........................................starting at $22,900 CIH RB561, 5x6 Rnd Baler..........................................................$9,950 CIH RS561, 5x6 Rnd Baler........................................................$10,750 Claas 280RC Rnd Baler ............................................................$19,500 Claas 255 UNI Rnd Baler ..........................................................$31,000 Gehl 544 Rnd Baler ....................................................................$5,500 (2) JD 854 Rnd Baler ..............................................starting at $26,900 NH BR7070 Rnd Baler ..............................................................$23,500 Vermeer 554XL Rnd Baler ..........................................................$9,250 (2) CIH LB333 Rec Baler..........................................starting at $69,000 CIH 8520 Rec Baler ....................................................................$5,300 (2) NH BB940A Rec Baler ........................................starting at $49,500

Claas 980, '09, 1860 hrs Claas 980, '08, 2730 hrs Claas 980, '08, 1145 hrs Claas 970, '08, 1875 hrs Claas 960, '10, 1685 hrs Claas 960, '10, 1950 hrs Claas 960, '09, 1650 hrs Claas 960, '08, 3710 hrs Claas 940, '12, 1655 hrs Claas 900, '09, 1880 hrs Claas 900, '08, 4000 hrs Claas 900, '05, 3240 hrs

............................................. ............................................. ............................................. ............................................. ............................................. ............................................. ............................................. ............................................. ............................................. ............................................. ............................................. .............................................

Claas 900, ‘01, 3975 hrs. ........

Claas 900, '01, 3975 hrs ............................................. Claas 900, '01, 4200 hrs ............................................. Claas 900, '01, 4320 hrs ............................................. Claas 880, '00 ............................................................. Claas 880, '97, 4525 hrs ............................................. Claas 880, '96, 1285 hrs ............................................. Claas 870, '03, 2865 hrs ............................................. Claas 870, '03, 2900 hrs ............................................. Claas 860, '00, 5100 hrs ............................................. Claas 860, '99, 4300 hrs ............................................. JD 7850, '09, 1300 hrs ............................................... JD 7800, '05, 3870 hrs ............................................... JD 7500, '04, 2840 hrs ............................................... JD 6810, '93 ............................................................... NH FX58, '01, 3665 hrs ............................................... NH FX38, '01, 2120 hrs ............................................... NH 1900....................................................................... CIH FHX300 PT Forg Harv ........................................... Gehl CB1265 PT Forg Harv ......................................... Gehl CB1075 PT Forg Harv ......................................... Gehl CB860 PT Forg Harv ........................................... NH FP240 PT Forg Harv............................................... NH FP230 PT Forg Harv............................................... NH 892 PT Forg Harv................................................... CIH HDX10P Hayhead ................................................. Claas DD520 Disc Hayhead ......................................... (3) Claas PU380HD Hayhead ..................................sta (15) Claas PU380 Hayhead ......................................sta (2) Claas PU300 Hayhead ..........................................st JD 645C Hayhead......................................................... (2) JD 640B Hayhead ..............................................sta JD 630A, 10' Hayhead ................................................. NH 365W Hayhead....................................................... NH 355W Hayhead....................................................... NH 340W Hayhead....................................................... (2) CIH HDX3R Cornhead ..........................................st (5) Claas Orbis 900 Cornhead................................start (7) Claas Orbis 750 Cornhead..................................sta (4) Claas Orbis 600 Cornhead..................................sta (12) Claas RU600, 8R30 Cornhead..........................sta Claas RU450XTRA Cornhead ....................................... (8) Claas RU450 Cornhead ......................................sta Claas 6 Row Cornhead.................................................


, MN 15

2-3147 583-6014

GLENCOE, MN 320-864-5531

ALDEN, MN 507-874-3400 FORAGE EQUIPMENT Continued

SKIDLOADERS/EXC./TLB Continued

Gehl TR330 Cornhead ................................................................$4,500 (2) JD 686, 6R30 Cornhead ....................................starting at $29,500 (2) JD 678, 8R30 Cornhead ......................................................$62,500 JD 666R, 6R30 Cornhead ........................................................$13,000 JD 4R30 Cornhead......................................................................$3,800 JD 3R30 Cornhead......................................................................$3,200 Kemper 6008 Cornhead ............................................................$51,500 (2) Kemper 4500 Cornhead ....................................starting at $19,500 Kemper 3000 Cornhead ............................................................$17,500 NH 360N6 Cornhead ................................................................$16,900 NH 3PN Cornhead ......................................................................$8,500

NH LS180, '02, 1600 hrs ..........................................................$18,900 Terex PT100G, '10, 1800 hrs ....................................................$45,900 Kubota KX91-352, '11, 990 hrs ................................................$28,900 Groomer BR180MP, '02, 2145 hrs............................................$37,000

SKIDLOADERS/EXCAVATORS/TLB

$275,000

Case SR220, '12, 565 hrs ........................................................$36,900 Case SR220, '11, 2960 hrs ......................................................$27,000 Case SR200, '12, 800 hrs ........................................................$37,900 Case SR200, '12, 1295 hrs ......................................................$31,900 Case SR200, '11, 1130 hrs ......................................................$31,500 Case SR200, '11, 1300 hrs ......................................................$30,000 Case SV300, '11, 1635 hrs ......................................................$36,900 Case SV300, '11, 2270 hrs ......................................................$41,500 Case SV250, '12, 1425 hrs ......................................................$33,000 Case SV250, '12, 2865 hrs ......................................................$29,500 Case SV250, '11, 1145 hrs ......................................................$33,500 Case SV250, '11, 1200 hrs ......................................................$33,500 Case TV380, '12, 575 hrs ........................................................$47,500 Case TV380, '12, 650 hrs ........................................................$45,500 Case 1840, '96, 3125 hrs..........................................................$10,900 Case 1840, '95, 4955 hrs............................................................$9,500

Case 445CT, ‘06, 1570 hrs. ........$35,500

$118,000

COMBINES CIH 9230, '13, 360 hrs ..........................................................$345,000 CIH 9120, '12, 535 hrs ..........................................................$299,500 CIH 9120, '11, 605 hrs ..........................................................$282,500 CIH 9120T, '11, 650 hrs..........................................................$325,000 CIH 9120, '11, 765 hrs ..........................................................$265,000 CIH 9120T, '11, 1095 hrs........................................................$314,900 CIH 8230, '13, 285 hrs ..........................................................$335,500 CIH 8230, '13, 320 hrs ..........................................................$342,500 CIH 8230, '13, 665 hrs ..........................................................$295,000 CIH 8230, '13, 850 hrs ..........................................................$279,500 CIH 8230, '12, 500 hrs ..........................................................$319,500 CIH 8230T, '12, 730 hrs..........................................................$353,000 CIH 8230, '12, 750 hrs ..........................................................$278,500 CIH 8230T, '12, 1000 hrs........................................................$341,000 CIH 8120, '10, 820 hrs ..........................................................$268,500 CIH 8120, '10, 1215 hrs ........................................................$240,000 CIH 8120, '10, 1275 hrs ........................................................$245,500 CIH 8120, '09, 1195 hrs ........................................................$235,900 CIH 8120, '09, 1415 hrs ........................................................$239,500 CIH 8010, '08, 1480 hrs ........................................................$189,900 CIH 8010, '06, 1945 hrs ........................................................$174,900 CIH 8010, '06, 2125 hrs ........................................................$154,900 CIH 8010, '05, 2260 hrs ........................................................$153,500 CIH 7230, '13, 360 hrs ..........................................................$309,900 CIH 7230, '13, 395 hrs ..........................................................$319,500 CIH 7230, '12, 465 hrs ..........................................................$289,500 CIH 7120, '10, 1205 hrs ........................................................$229,500 CIH 7120, '10, 1765 hrs ........................................................$203,500 CIH 7120, '09, 1230 hrs ........................................................$229,500 CIH 7120, '09, 1375 hrs ........................................................$212,500 CIH 7120, '09, 1715 hrs ........................................................$209,500 CIH 7088, '09, 1380 hrs ........................................................$197,900 CIH 7010, '07, 1560 hrs ........................................................$191,000 CIH 6130, '13, 390 hrs ..........................................................$259,900 CIH 6130, '13, 515 hrs ..........................................................$254,500 CIH 6130, '13, 525 hrs ..........................................................$254,500 CIH 6088, '12, 695 hrs ..........................................................$234,500 CIH 6088, '11, 590 hrs ..........................................................$205,000 CIH 6088, '11, 740 hrs ..........................................................$225,000 CIH 6088, '09, 980 hrs ..........................................................$189,500 CIH 2588, '08, 1255 hrs ........................................................$179,500 CIH 2588, '08, 1450 hrs ........................................................$179,500 CIH 2588, '08, 1800 hrs ........................................................$169,500 CIH 2588, '07, 1500 hrs ........................................................$169,500 CIH 2388, '05, 1820 hrs ........................................................$134,500 CIH 2388, '05, 2365 hrs ........................................................$123,500 CIH 2388, '05, 2505 hrs ........................................................$126,500 CIH 2388, '05, 3110 hrs ........................................................$126,500 CIH 2388, '03, 2425 hrs ........................................................$122,500 CIH 2388, '03, 2920 hrs ........................................................$113,000 CIH 2388, '03, 3500 hrs ..........................................................$89,900 CIH 2388, '02, 2115 hrs ........................................................$109,500 CIH 2388, '02, 3035 hrs ..........................................................$94,500 CIH 2388, '01, 2940 hrs ..........................................................$79,500 CIH 2388, '01, 3005 hrs ..........................................................$72,500 CIH 2388, '01, 3230 hrs ..........................................................$69,500 CIH 2388, '99, 4700 hrs ..........................................................$64,500 CIH 2388, '98, 2990 hrs ..........................................................$69,500 CIH 2388, '98, 3240 hrs ..........................................................$65,900 CIH 2388, '98, 3295 hrs ..........................................................$69,500 CIH 2388, '98, 5110 hrs ..........................................................$69,950 CIH 2366, '02, 1920 hrs ........................................................$113,500 CIH 2366, '02, 2450 hrs ........................................................$102,500 CIH 2366, '98, 2700 hrs ..........................................................$92,500 CIH 2366, '98, 3445 hrs ..........................................................$82,500 CIH 2188, '97, 3200 hrs ..........................................................$64,500 CIH 2188, '97, 3805 hrs ..........................................................$62,500 CIH 2188, '96, 3095 hrs ..........................................................$59,900 CIH 2188, '96, 3970 hrs ..........................................................$51,500 CIH 2188, '95, 4285 hrs ..........................................................$52,500 CIH 2166, '95, 3010 hrs ..........................................................$63,500 CIH 1688, '94, 2715 hrs ..........................................................$34,500 CIH 1688, '94, 4465 hrs ..........................................................$34,500 CIH 1688, '93, 3320 hrs ..........................................................$39,000 CIH 1680, '92, 4375 hrs ..........................................................$29,500 CIH 1680, '90, 4415 hrs ..........................................................$24,500 CIH 1660, '91, 4230 hrs ..........................................................$26,500 JD 9870, '09, 1430 hrs ..........................................................$208,000 JD 9860STS, '07, 1870 hrs ....................................................$159,000 JD 9750, '03, 2320 hrs ............................................................$95,000 JD 9570, '08, 1555 hrs ..........................................................$164,900

TEC

DRAPER HEADS, BEAN/CORN HEADS

NH L230, ‘12, 220 hrs ..............$42,500

(2) MacDon FD70, 40' Draper..................................starting at $49,900 (2) MacDon FD70, 35' Draper..................................starting at $59,900 MacDon 974, 35' Draper ..........................................................$38,500 (9) CIH 2162, 40' Draper ..........................................................$52,500 (6) CIH 2162, 35' Draper ........................................starting at $58,900 (2) CIH 2162, 30' Draper ........................................starting at $52,500 CIH 3020, 35' Beanhead ..........................................................$39,500 CIH 3020, 30' Beanhead ..........................................starting at $38,500 (2) CIH 2062, 36' Beanhead ....................................starting at $39,500 (13) CIH 2020, 35' Beanhead ..................................starting at $23,500 (6) CIH 2020, 30' Beanhead ....................................starting at $16,500 (33) CIH 1020, 30' Beanhead ....................................starting at $5,400 (12) CIH 1020, 25' Beanhead ....................................starting at $4,900 (2) CIH 1020, 22.5' Beanhead....................................starting at $4,900 (3) CIH 1020, 20' Beanhead ......................................starting at $4,900 (2) IH 820, 20' Beanhead ..........................................starting at $1,350 JD 930F, 30' Beanhead................................................................$8,900 JD 930, 30' Beanhead ................................................................$5,400

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

...........$118,000 ...........$125,000 ...........$118,000 .............$79,500 .............$76,500 .............$78,000 ...........$168,500 ...........$156,000 .............$79,900 .............$86,000 ...........$254,000 ...........$149,500 ...........$145,000 .............$58,500 .............$78,000 .............$78,000 .............$16,850 .............$29,000 ...............$5,000 .............$15,500 ...............$1,750 .............$23,000 .............$34,000 ...............$5,500 ...............$5,000 .............$39,500 arting at $14,500 arting at $12,000 tarting at $8,900 .............$19,500 arting at $11,500 ...............$8,000 ...............$7,900 ...............$8,000 ...............$5,000 tarting at $9,500 ting at $110,000 arting at $73,500 arting at $68,000 arting at $15,500 .............$42,000 arting at $26,000 .............$16,000

Case 445CT, '06, 1570 hrs........................................................$35,500 Case 430, '07, 5650 hrs............................................................$16,400 Case 430, '06, 2215 hrs............................................................$17,900 Case 420CT, '08, 2390 hrs........................................................$30,900 Case 75XT, '03, 1935 hrs..........................................................$19,500 Case 60XT, '04, 4065 hrs..........................................................$16,000 Case 60XT, '02, 1090 hrs..........................................................$16,500 Case 40XT, '02, 2625 hrs..........................................................$17,900 Bobcat S-205, '08, 3500 hrs ....................................................$25,900 Bobcat 773G, 7780 hrs ............................................................$11,500 Cat 277B, '04, 3270 hrs ............................................................$21,900 Cat 236B, '06, 1990 hrs ............................................................$19,500 Gehl 7810E, '07, 1185 hrs ........................................................$40,900 Gehl 5640E, '11, 1760 hrs ........................................................$27,500 Gehl 5640E, '11, 2745 hrs ........................................................$27,500 Gehl 5640E, '08, 3900 hrs ........................................................$21,900 Gehl 5635, 2570 hrs ................................................................$14,500 Gehl 5635SXT, '98 ....................................................................$10,900 Gehl 5240E, '11, 2450 hrs ........................................................$24,000 Gehl 5240E, '11, 2775 hrs ........................................................$22,900 Gehl 5240E, '10, 3030 hrs ........................................................$19,900 Gehl 4840, '05, 3755 hrs ..........................................................$16,500 Gehl 4640E, '06, 4085 hrs ........................................................$13,500 Gehl CTL70, '06, 1600 hrs ........................................................$29,500 Gehl V330, '12, 640 hrs ............................................................$42,500 Hydramac MMII, '75 ..................................................................$5,500 JD 323D, '11, 925 hrs ..............................................................$40,900 Mustang 2109, '07, 1600 hrs ..................................................$42,900 Mustang 2066, 3140 hrs ..........................................................$18,900 Mustang 2060, '00, 765 hrs ....................................................$16,900 NH L230, '12, 220 hrs ..............................................................$42,500

www.arnoldsinc.com

<< www.TheLandOnline.com >>

...........$275,000 ...........$220,000 ...........$289,000 ...........$239,000 ...........$285,000 ...........$275,000 ...........$285,000 ...........$185,000 ...........$239,000 ...........$239,000 ...........$149,500 ...........$198,000

ST. CLOUD, MN 320-251-2585

Visit our website to see more equipment!

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

WILLMAR, MN 320-235-4898

21


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THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

22

Making plans on the farm takes spit, verbal fertilizer Every now and again I’m reminded of the notion that the word “farm” is both a noun and a verb. Come to think of it, the words “plan” and “spit” are of the same vintage. This past spring I was once again witness to our group of guys trying to make the plan to get the day’s spring planting done. It’s a group of guys of all ages — young farmers, middle age farmers and one getting a little closer to retirement age each year, but not getting close to retiring. They sort out seed and load the seed ten-

Mankato Area Steve Schwebke, Fairmont, MN David Baldner, Northeast, IA Andrew Dodds, Owatonna, MN

RN

ders, and when it’s all finished, they It’s quite an intellectual process that makes stand around in a circle with dirt my head spin, and I’m certain that so much swirling around their work boots as time and thought was never put into planthey shuffle back and forth. ning our wedding day, nor subsequently in the planning of our family. It’s a group of guys, so of course, this elaborate thinking process requires Of course, each plan is meticulously conjocularity overload, verbal fertilizer structed, and two or three plans might be and a certain amount of spitting. scrapped before the final revision is accepted by the entire congress. When it receives all I’ve learned that it’s not always the “ayes,” they scatter, firing up tractors and greatest thing to be on the receiving TABLE TALK trucks for the day’s work ahead of them. end of any of those things. Nearly three decades of marriage and a quarter cen- By Karen Schwaller And, as we all know from time to time, the tury of being a mother has taught me plan is subject to change without notice. When I to stand clear of all things spewed — bring supper to the field I sometimes get roped from babies to children to grown men — whether in into helping move them from field to field. It takes an food, word or salivary form. axe to my own plan, but the getting the crop in or out And especially if tobacco and wind speed and direc- trumps all other plans. And I know the inconvenience is only temporary. Better a temporary inconvenience than tion are involved. a temporary marriage. Most of the time, anyway. Some of the guys run field cultivators, some run All of this planning reminds me of our sons when planters, some haul seed tenders and everyone has a they were in middle school and deciding the pecking job to do. When the monkey business has subsided, the plan is made as to who will be working where order when it came to making planning decisions and how seed tenders and pickups filled with seed outside when their dad was not home. There would bags will get to the fields where they need to be be a wicked feud every now and then, which the throughout the day, and what the seed tender driv- neighbor’s dog could tune into by cocking his head ers will be doing after they reach their destinations. sideways and turning up his ears. After a certain And if making the plan for the entire day, they amount of bickering, our guys came up with a plan. extend their planning by figuring out who should One day my husband asked one of them a question drive what pickup somewhere so everyone has some- about something they were doing, and he answered thing to come home in at quitting time, or who will with a clear and present tone of apathy. “I don’t be around to drive so-and-such home. know. I’m not the boss today.” I bet that plan involved a lot of spitting, but I’m glad I wasn’t there to see where — or on whom — it may have landed. Karen Schwaller brings “Table Talk” to The Land from her home near Milford, Iowa. She can be reached at kschwaller@evertek.net. ❖

TH E C LEAR CHOICE

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

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Bookworm: ‘Duncan Hines’ a rags-to-riches story

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also find the book at online book retailers. The Bookworm is Terri Schlichenmeyer. Terri has been reading since she was 3 years old and never goes anywhere without a book. She lives in Wisconsin with three dogs and 10,000 books. ❖

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“Where Farm and Family Meet”

SEEDS AofNDERSON St. Peter, MN

time and place, and I liked that. This book is perfect if you’d like an unusual (and lively) biography to enjoy while dining, vacationing or any time. With “Duncan Hines,” you can have your cake and read it, too. Look for the reviewed book at a bookstore or a library near you. You may

<< www.TheLandOnline.com >>

Huh. Who knew? Apparently, says author Louis Hatchett, everybody did, including thousands from around the world. In fact, he believes, it’s a pretty safe bet that if you were born before 1955, you knew where to look before you dined. In “Duncan Hines,” Hatchett describes his subject as a mercurial man who fiercely protected his reputation but still managed to make money, despite the Depression and World Wars. The story of this rags-to-riches salesman is surprising and surprisingly fascinating — perhaps because Hines is not Hatchett’s only subject. We also get a sense of

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

BOOKWORM, from pg. 19 his wife added a self-published booklet to Christmas cards and “mailed them to everyone they could think of…” Beginning with that giveaway, and until a few years after his death in 1959, Duncan Hines enjoyed fortune and popularity as America ’s foremost restaurant critic. His was not the first such ratings book, but it was arguably the world’s most trusted. So why is the name Duncan Hines synonymous with cake mix today, and not with the travelrestaurant guides that Hines first created? The answer lies with a young marketer who knew the right things to say…

23


AUCTIONS & CLASSIFIEDS

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

• PO Box 3169 • 418 S 2nd Street • Mankato, MN 56001 • theland@thelandonline.com

A D V E RT I S E R L I S T I N G

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THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

24

Ag Power Enterprises Inc..38 Ag Systems Inc......................4 Agro-Culture Liquid Fertilizers ............................7 Anderson Seeds ............19, 23 Arnold Companies Inc 20, 21 Bayer Truck & Equipment Inc ........................................9 Big Gain ................................5 Blethen Gage & Krause ....10 Bob Burns Sales & Service 36 Boss Supply Inc ....................9 Broskoff Structures ......10, 19 C & C Roofing ....................12 Courtland Waste Handling18 Curts Truck & Diesel Service................................14 Dan Pike Clerking ..............26 Diers Ag & Trailer Sales Inc6 Double B Manufacturing ..14 Duncan Trailers LLC ........31 Factory Home Center Inc ....9 Gags Camperway................11 Greenwald Farm Center....36 Gypsoil ..................................3 Henslin Auctions ................25 Hewitt Drainage Equip. ....12 Holland Auction Co......24, 27 Jackpot Junction ..................4 Joy’s Estate Sales ................28 K & S Millwrights Inc........23 Keltgens Inc ........................22 Kerkhoff Auction & Real Estate ................................27 Kibble Equipment Inc........33 Kiester Implement ..............30 Larson Brothers Impl ..30, 35 Lundeen Auctions ..............27 M S Diversified ..................30 Mages Auction Service ......29 Mankato Spray Center ......12

Massop Electric ..................31 Matejcek Implement ..........37 Matt Maring Auctions ................25, 26, 32 Mike’s Collision ....................5 Murray County Draft Horse Show ....................................6 New Prague Auto Group....13 New Ulm Tractor & Equipment ........................32 Northern Ag Service ..........35 Northland Buildings ..........22 Pruess Elevator ..................26 Ritter Ag Inc..........................3 Roger Summers Auctions ..29 Rush River Steel & Trim ..17 Schweiss Inc ........................35 Smiths Mill Implement Inc35 Sorensen Sales & Rentals ..36 Southwest MN K-Fence ....12 Steffes Group ................29, 30 Syntex ..................................14 Tjosvold Equipment ..........31 Triple R Auction ................28 Trocke-Pinske Auctioneers 25 Wagner Trucks....................12 Wahl Spray Foam Insulation ..........................18 Wearda Implement ............31 Westman Freightliner ........22 Westrum Truck & Body Inc ............................36 Whitcomb Brothers ............22 Willmar Farm Center ........39 Windridge Implements ......34 Wingert Realty & Land Service................................24 Ziegler ............................11, 17 Zielsdorf Auction Service ..30

July 4, 2014

(3) JD TRACTORS • JD 4X4 MOWER JD GATOR • OUTDOOR ITEMS • SHOP & WOODWORKING TOOLS • HOUSEHOLD • COLLECTIBLES

“YOUR #1 AUCTION PROFESSIONALS”

SUNDAY, JULY 13, 2014 • 10:30 A.M.

Location: From Wells, MN, 5 miles west on Hwy. 109, then 11⁄2 miles south on Cty. Rd. 21

WATCH FOR AUCTION SIGNS!

Auctioneer’s Note: A very good auction to attend with many high quality shop & woodworking tools. Will be running two rings part of the day. Hope to see you at the auction. Tracy Holland

TRACTORS • LOADER • LAWN MOWER • GATOR • TILLER • FARM EQUIP. • MISC. • JD 4240, 3 hyd. Quad, 8250 hrs., 18.4-38”tires w/axle duals, SN: 005847R (ldr. sold separately) • JD B fenders, elec. start, SN: 275387 • ‘03 JD X595 mower, 4x4, 3 pt., dsl., 945 hrs., PTO, 24 hp. w/62”deck (wgts. sold separately) • JD 825i Gator, EFI, 712 hrs., 2635 mi., 3-cyl., gas, top, windshield & mirrors, brush guard, pwr. tilt box • JD 60, rear wgts., NF (needs assembly) • JD Model 148 hyd. ldr., 7’bkt. • (5) JD wgts. for mower • JD 450 tiller, 3 pt., 50”(like new) • 25 gal. 3 pt. yard sprayer • JD leaf bagger (3 bags) • JD Model 10 yard trailer • Kawasaki 250 Prairie 3-wheeler • Power tilt box • Hansen 81⁄2’snowblower, 3 pt., hyd. spout • 12-ton running gear w/flat rack • Winpower generator, 3-ph., 45-25PT3J, 25,000 watt, on cart • (2) 500 gal. fuel barrels w/elec. pump • Westgo 8”x60’grain auger • Bin ext. for 7700 combine • 6”bin unloading auger w/pwr. head • 6”grain sweep • (2) JD planter plate units • (4) Screw-in grain aeration fans • Set of Ford rear whl. wgts. • (3) Aeration fans, 7.2 hp. • Several elec. motors • Homemade 6’x6’2-whl. trailer • (2) Hand oil/fuel pumps • (2) 8”power heads • Upkeeper garage vac. • 12-volt fuel pump • Gasboy pump w/miter • Victor XL/C string mower, elec. start

WOODWORKING • SHOP TOOLS • MISC. ITEMS • Delta Model 50-654 3 hp. planer • Delta 18”sander x5 • Delta 6” belt disc sander • Delta band saw • Delta 1” belt sander • Delta scroll saw • Router w/cabinet • Makita miter saw • Delta 12”planer • Delta 18”scroll saw • Craftsman dust collector • Sears 12”table saw • Sears 6”belt sander • Craftsman radial arm saw • Small air compressor • Many wood & steel bits • Wood clamps • Several air nailers • Router bits • Craftsman drill press • Sears 2 hp. air compressor • Torch set w/cart • B.D. 3⁄4”drill • Tecumsch 71⁄2 hp. gas motor • 10-ton porta power • 30-ton cap. chop press • Sheet metal brake • Cherry picker • Overhead shop hoist • (2) Floor jacks • Curtis 60 gal. air compressor, 5 hp. • AC-DC stick welder • Makita cut-off saw • Sears 3⁄4 hp. grinder • C clamps • Craftsman stackable toolbox • Misc. metal & rack • Many elec. cords • 220 pwr. cords • Shop Vac • Knipco heater • Drill press • Central Machinery 12”table saw, 2 hp. • 1300 lb. elec. overhead hoist – MANY WOODWORKING & SHOP TOOLS NOT LISTED

POOL TABLE • HOUSEHOLD • OUTDOOR ITEMS HAND CARVED PAINTED HORSE TEAM (JOY BEHR 1987) • Brunswick 8’pool table w/balls & cues • Rolltop desk • (7) roller chairs • (2) sofas • Lg. dresser • Misc. end tables • (2) full size beds • Story Clark piano w/bench • 4-Drawer dresser w/mirror • Wood headboard • Misc. household items not listed • (2) recliners • Schwinn exercise bike • Council TV • (2) smaller Sentry safes • Champion 29”x60”safe • V-belts & pulleys • Many log chains • 42”forks • JD chainsaw • Nuts & bolts & nails • Organizers • Squirrel cage fan • Wood platform scale • Misc. insulation • (3) roof vents • Elec. & T-posts • (3) chicken feeders • Snowmobile mover • 9:00x24”tires & rims • Walk-behind digger • Sheldon wood hand corn sheller • (3) horse wagon poles • 8’pickup topper • Several elec. fencers • Horse saddle & bridles • Several hand sprayers • Garden supplies • Egg basket • (3) washtubs • Old scale • LOTS OF MISC. LUMBER - VARIOUS SIZES & TYPES – MANY ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION!

Terms: Cash or good check, picture ID required. No property removed until fully settled for. Any verbal announcements made day of auction takes precedence over print. Sales staff and owners not responsible for accidents. Lunch and restroom will be available on grounds. Clerk: Holland Auction Company

LAVERNE GOODRICH - ESTATE PAT GOODRICH - OWNER 16347 520th Ave., Wells, MN 56097

HOLLAND AUCTION & REAL ESTATE (507) 684-2955

FOR FULL COLOR PICTURES & LISTING Visit Our Website www.hollandauction.com • A Professional Full Service Auction Company • Member of State & National Auctioneer’s Association

Auctioneers:

Tracy Holland & Associates #7405002 • Ellendale, MN (507) 684-2955 or (507) 456-5128 (cell)

Celebrating 30 years!


Call The Land Office to place your auction in

THE LAND

(800) 657-4665

25 THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

Have an upcoming AUCTION?

theland@TheLandOnline.com • www.TheLandOnline.com

Hobby Farm-Pickup-Collectible Tractors-Farm Misc. -Gas Engines-Household-Antique

AUCTION

Saturday, July 19, 2014 - 9:30 a.m.

Mary Ann Marquardt and Bill “Sonny” Marquardt, Estate – Owners Located: 31418 391st Ave., Henderson, MN 56044 Directions: 8 1⁄2 mi. South of Arlington on Sibley Co. Rd #17, or from St. Hwy. 169 at LeSueur, go West 7 miles on Sibley Co. Rd #8 to Rush River, & 2 miles North on Co. Rd #17. Park on west side of #17 only.

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

Pinske-Trocke Auctioneers

Auctioneers: Peter J. Trocke, Lic. # 52-13-007, St. Peter, MN 56082, 507-382-8092; Bill Pinske, Lic. # 72-06, Arlington, MN, 507-964-2250; Dave Pinske, North Mankato, MN Clerk: Trocke Auctioneers, St. Peter, MN. Photos and complete list at www.trockeauctions.com, or midwestauctions.com, click on “Pinske”

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Note: Real Estate sells at 9:30 a.m. Household, Toys and Antiques at 9:45 a.m., followed by Farm Items. Vehicles, Tractors and Gas Engines starting at 12:00 Noon. REAL ESTATE TO BE SOLD AT 9:30 a.m. 5.45 acre Hobby Farm - Property includes good older 1 1⁄2 story, 3 Bedrm Updated Home. 1 1⁄2 Bath, Newer Kitchen, 34'x64' Barn, 38'x60' machine shed, 24'x44' Garage & 2 - 6500 bu Grain Bins. TERMS: $15,000 Down Day Of Auction, & Balance In Full On August 28, 2014. There are no contingencies for financing or any other type of contingency. For a complete booklet giving all terms and conditions, or to view property, contact: Bill Pinske, Real Estate Broker & Auctioneer, 507-964-2250, Arlington, MN 55307. Pictures at www.midwestauctions.com, click on Pinske COLLECTIBLE TRACTORS (To Start Selling at Noon): ‘27 McCormick-Deering Model 10-20, restored w/new rear rubber, SN: KC 85348; ‘57 Farmall 450 row crop, NF, gas, fast hitch, pwr steering, TA, very good tin, repainted, SN: 21571; ‘60 JD 630, NF, pwr steering, gas, good tin, SN: 6315098; ‘45 Farmall M, gas, NF, SN:FBK92099; twin post loader on M, sells separate VEHICLES & GARDEN TRACTOR: ‘11 Chevrolet Silverado LT Ext. Cab 4WD pickup, 5.3L V8, auto, fully equipped, trailer pkg., running boards, only 23K miles, One Owner; ‘78 Lincoln Continental Mark V, 2 dr, leather w/factory 8 track & CB, odometer shows 56K; JD X540 garden tractor, 54” deck, power steering, Kawasaki eng., bought new in ‘12; E-Z Go gas golf cart; ‘71 Aristocrat Camper 22-ANTIQUE GAS ENGINES: JD 1 1⁄2 hp & 3 hp on carts; Cushman Cub 2 hp on cart; 4 McCormick 1 1⁄2 hp, one on cart; Fairbanks Morse 3 hp; Stover 2-2 1⁄2 hp on cart; New Idea 1 1/23 hp on cart; Fairbanks Morse Model Z 1 1⁄2 hp on cart; Fairbanks Morse 1 1⁄2 hp; McCormick Model LA 1 1⁄2 hp; McCormick Model L on cart; Stover 1 1⁄2 hp on cart; Fuller Johnson 1 1⁄2 hp; 4Maytags; 2-Briggs & Stratton; cart wheels & axles FARM MACHINERY & MISC: Surge 15kw PTO gen. on trailer; McCormick #312, 3 btm fast hitch plow; 7' fast hitch blade; 5'x8' 2whl utility trailer; Simplicity #860 snowblower; 500 gal fuel barrel w/elec. pump; tubular grain elev.; 3T eng. hoist; acetylene torch & cart; anvil; hand tools & wrenches; 20' alum. ext. ladder; PT lawn sprayer; alum. trailer ramps; SS bulk tank on trailer; IH whl wgts; port. air tank; upright crank oil dispenser; grille for M; hyd. & floor jacks; Duro-Jet elec. pressure washer; 100psi & port. air compressors; 2 section yard drag; auger hopper; portable fish house; walk behind 1 btm plow & cult.; 200 amp battery charger; Knipco htr; 240” steel tractor whls; steel impl. & spoke whls & seats; platform scale; oil, oil cans & funnels; Mowzall push mower; shovels & forks; various belting; grindstone; 2-reel mowers; 2-cream sep.; 4-cream cans; eveners; DeLaval milker ANTIQUES-TOYS-HOUSEHOLD: Butler Mfg. visible gas pump; Tidex brand gas pump globe; Savage Model 620 12 ga pump action shotgun; Sears 20 ga bolt action shotgun; Enamel wood cook stove; good selection of farm toys,including: 1/8th scale Farmall M; 1/16th scale Farmall's H; F20; 350; C; A; B & BN; JD's 3020 w/plow-NIB, D & C; McCormick Model D gas eng.; IHC TD-14 & T340 crawlers; McCormick W-30; Rumley Oil Pull; Truscale tractor; wrecker; ‘38 Ford pickup; Revell metal '56 T-Bird; Structo metal pickup; Cat ‘31 Model 60; other replica toys; selection of wooden toys; some modern dolls; Jim Beam fire chief car decantor; Much more including usual household, see website for complete list.


Announcements

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

26

WANTED

DAMAGED GRAIN STATE-WIDE

We pay top dollar for your damaged grain. We are experienced handlers of your wet, dry, burnt and mixed grains. Trucks and Vacs available. Immediate response anywhere. CALL FOR A QUOTE TODAY

PRUESS ELEV., INC. << www.TheLandOnline.com >>

1-800-828-6642

010 Employment

ADVERTISING NOTICE: Please check your ad the first week it runs. We make every effort to avoid errors by checking all copy, but sometimes errors are missed. Therefore, we ask that you review your ad for correctness. If you find a mistake, please call (507) 345-4523 immediately so that the error can be corrected. We regret that we cannot be responsible for more than one week's insertion if the error is not called to our attention. We cannot be liable for an amount greater than the cost of the ad. THE LAND has the right to edit, reject or properly classify any ad. Each classified line ad is separately copyrighted to THE LAND. Reproduction without permission is strictly prohibited.

015

Family Swine & Grain farm near Madison Lake, MN. Looking for full time employee to manage farrowto-finish swine operation. Also, involves operating & maintaining farm equipment. For further information & application call 507934-4888. Family swine & grain farm in Mower County MN looking for full time employee to assist in managing farrow to finish swine operation. Call 507-438-2104 for full job description and application. Real Estate

020

40 Acres McLeod County Land, 33.53 A. cropland. Could become excellent hunting area. Call Carl, Agent, Stockman Financial Services Co. Inc., Broker 952-944-8737 or 612-240-5770 Sell your land or real estate in 30 days for 0% commission. Call Ray 507-339-1272 Selling or Buying Farms or 1031 Exchange! Private Sale or Sealed Bid Auction! Call “The Land Specialists!” Northland Real Estate 612-756-1899 or 320-894-7337 www.farms1031.com We have extensive lists of Land Investors & farm buyers throughout MN. We always have interested buyers. For top prices, go with our proven methods over thousands of acres. Serving Minnesota Mages Land Co & Auc Serv www.magesland.com 800-803-8761 Real Estate Wanted

021

WANTED: Land & farms. I have clients looking for dairy, & cash grain operations, as well as bare land parcels from 40-1000 acres. Both for relocation & investments. If you have even thought about selling contact: Paul Krueger, Farm & Land Specialist, Edina Realty, SW Suburban Office, 14198 Commerce Ave NE, Prior Lake, MN 55372. paulkrueger@edinarealty.com

(952)447-4700

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

Call today to place your classified ad in The Land!

1-507-345-4523

1-800-657-4665


Real Estate Wanted

021 Grain Handling Equip

034

035 Farm Implements

035 Tractors

4 Used Haybuster bale pro- FOR SALE: IHC #153 8R corn & soybean cultivator, cessors, save on hay & bedrolling shields, good shovding, starting at $3,995; els, nice shape, $450used rock pickers, L106, $500/OBO. 320-752-4353 $3,995, H106, $9,250, BO/Trade, can deliver. 320- JD 567 baler, twine tie, 543-3523 $6,900; JD 235, 26', Duracushion disc, $7,450; JD FOR SALE: 806 Wheatland 4055 MFW tractor, pwr SN 1121S, rear tires 23.1x34, shift, 3 hyds., open station, has a cab. Also, '30 2236 SN $19,750; '07 Summers 40' TG135872M, on steel, no super chisel w/106 Sumlugs, but has commercial mers harrow, $28,750; JD rubber strip on rear. All tin 328 baler w/40 bale thrower, complete & good, engine is $6,750. 320-769-2756 stuck. 320-857-2291 Kovar 80' spike tooth drag, like new, $6,000; Cat 5000 FOR SALE: PFM rock picklb. forklift, air tires, 3 stage er, excellent condition, lift, low hours, $4,500. 507$12,900; Also, Degelman 381-3840 rock rake, model RR1500, very good condition, 14' NH BR780A baler, twine tie, working width, $8,800. auto wrap, $6,900; Rowse 9' Please call (507)847-2710. sickle mower, IH head, $4,450; NH 258 rake, nice, Hydrostatic & Hydraulic Re$2,450; IH 856 custom dsl. pair Repair-Troubleshoottractor w/ldr., 2 pt. width, ing Sales-Design Custom $5,450; CIH 5600, 39', chisel plow w/Summers 104 harhydraulic hose-making up row, $6,900. 320-769-2756 to 2” Service calls made. STOEN'S Hydrostatic SerTop Air sprayer, 48' boom, vice 16084 State Hwy 29 N $1,400; JD 212 oats pickup Glenwood, MN 56334 320head, $1,400; 12” truck box 634-4360 extension, $300. 507-380-0863

TRACTORS • HOUSEHOLD “YOUR #1 AUCTION PROFESSIONALS” OUTDOOR ITEMS FARM MACHINERY

SATURDAY, JULY 12, 2014 • 10:00 A.M.

Location: From New Richland, MN, 6 miles north on Hwy. 13, or from Waseca, MN, 7 miles south on Hwy. 13, then 1 mile east on Waseca Cty. 15 or 290 Ave. WATCH FOR AUCTION SIGNS!

Material Handling

Auctioneer’s Note: After many years of farming, the Eatons have decided to retire and hold a public auction on their farm equipment. Hope to see you at the auction. Tracy Holland

New Idea 3739, 390 bu., floats, 1 year on apron, shedded, $7,500. 612-618-1226 Bins & Buildings

033

42' floor; 3 - 54' floors; 3 - 10” Sudenga power sweeps for 54' bins; 2 - 33,000 bu. bins; several 10,000 bu. bins & many other size bins. 507-697-6133 www.usedbinsales.com FOR SALE: 6 grain bins for sale, (1) 67,000, (2) 22,500, (1) 30,000, (1) 12,500, (1) 10,000 bushels. 612-741-2010

Stormor Bins & EZ-Drys. 100% financing w/no liens or red tape, call Steve at Fairfax Ag for an appointment. 888-830-7757

7 TRACTORS • WAGONS • AUGERS • FARM EQUIPMENT

• JD 4640, rock box, 7589 hrs., 20.8R-38” tires w/duals, SN: 015254R • White 2-135, rock box, approx. 500 hrs. on complete engine overhaul, 20.8R-38” tires, SN: 278105-415 • White 445 disc chisel plow, 14shank, 13’ • (2) Dakon gravity wagons w/gears, approx. 350 bu. • White 2-105, rock box, 4990 hrs., 18.4R-38” tires, SN: 273263-406 • Oliver 1755, rock box, diesel, approx. 1411 hrs. on complete overhaul, tach shows 3611 hrs., SN: 252-842-676 • Minneapolis Moline/White G-955, rock box, diesel, 5458 hrs., SN: 248-085402 • JD 630, gas, WF, 13.6-38” tires, 5179 hrs., Ad-On 3 pt., SN: 6302002 • Minneapolis Moline UB Special, WF, w/Vaughn loader • JD 960 field cultivator, 31’, walking tandems w/3-bar harrow • Brady 1680 stalk chopper, 15’, 1000 RPM • IH 8R30” cultivator (Danish tooth) • JD VanBrundt 10’ grain drill, low rubber, grass seed • Dakon gravity wagon w/gear, approx. 250 bu. • Parker 2600 gravity wagon w/JD 1075 gear, approx. 400 bu. • Demco 500 gal. field sprayer, 40’ booms • Hutchinson 10”x72’ grain auger, swing hopper, PTO, hyd. lift • Westfield 80-71 grain auger, PTO drive, 8”x71’ • Westfield 80-50 grain auger, PTO drive, 8”x56’ • Westfield 80-31 grain auger, PTO drive, 8”x31’

JD MOWER • MOTORCYCLE • MISC. FARM ITEMS • HOUSEHOLD • JD 345 riding mower, 54” deck, P.S., 780 hrs., liquid cooled (reconditioned) • Suzuki 100 motorcycle, 5500 miles • Snowco 6’ grain screener, 8” fill • Snowco 6’ grain screener, 6” fill • 7’x13’ flat wagon w/gear • Cherokee 3 pt. V-type snowblower • (2) 3 pt. quick hitches • Misc. White weights • 500-gal. fuel barrel w/electric pump • (2) Weed eaters • Misc. hand tools • Tool boxes • Organizers • Hyd. jacks • Golf clubs + bags. • MISC. HOUSEHOLD ITEMS & FURNITURE – MANY ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION! Terms: Cash or good check, picture ID required. No property removed until fully settled for. Any verbal announcements made day of sale takes precedence over print. Sales staff and owners not responsible for accidents. Lunch and restroom will be available on grounds. Clerk: Holland Auction Company

KEN & HARRIET EATON - OWNERS 14390 290th Ave., Waseca, MN • 507-521-0880 (cell)

HOLLAND AUCTION & REAL ESTATE (507) 684-2955

FOR FULL COLOR PICTURES & LISTING Visit Our Website www.hollandauction.com • A Professional Full Service Auction Company • Member of State & National Auctioneer’s Association

036

PRIME RECREATIONAL LAND FOR SALE

Farmall 560 diesel, WF, fast hitch, w/IH loader & snow bucket, late model, low hours, from retired farmer, $5,000 OBO. 320-979-5643 FOR SALE: JD 6300 open station w/ canopy, syncro plus transmission, 75% rubber, dual SCVs, 5200 hrs, exc cond, $10,500. 218-3896961 or 218-428-9139

27

76.34 ACRES - BROWN CO. SECTION 9, STARK TWP. FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Doug Kerkhoff – 507-829-6859 kerkhoff@redred.com

Ford 8730, pwr shift, FWA, 3100 hrs., 3 hyds., near new tires, duals, rock box, was grain hauling & sprayer tractor, AC works, very good cond. 507-276-7466

Auctioneers:

Tracy Holland & Associates #7405002 • Ellendale, MN (507) 684-2955 or (507) 456-5128 (cell)

Celebrating 30 years!

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

New Sukup door, $500; 12,000 bu. bin, $4,900; 13,000 bu. bin, $5,400; 27' CMC floor planking, $1,000; 21' CMC floor planking, $500; 3 7,500 bu. bins, $3,250 ea.; 2 – 42' floors, supports & flashing, $5,500 ea.; 300 new super wave Sukup floor supports, $8 ea.; 1,000 18 gauge Sukup floor supports, $4.50 ea.; many other bins available. 507-697-6133 www.usedbinsales.com

036 Tractors

We buy Salvage Equipment Parts Available Hammell Equip., Inc. (507)867-4910

NH model 116-14FT hay bine. Good condition, field ready, $3,900. 715-273-5756 032

036 Tractors

'38 long frame JD B, me- JD 620, 3pt, PS, fenders, JD 6210R, MFWD, 2013, 210 good rubber, original paint, hp, auto quad plus, only 330 chanically perfect, round nice; JD 50, WF, side hrs., 3 hyds., 3 pt., 540/1000 spokes, still in work mount JD 10 mower, very PTO, 2 drs, LH reverser, clothes; '36 JD A, flat good; Imperial 10R20” cult; FF, HID lights, pwr mir, spokes, runs good, clutch Imperial 4RW cult; both warr til Apr 2015, $144,500. snaps like new, still in work have Danish tine. 320-864507-514-4910 clothes. 507-831-1308 4583 or 320-779-4583 '56 JD tractor 720 gas, NF, runs good. '63 Farmall 460 row crop tractor, runs good, good rubber. Both restorable, housed. $5,000/ea/OBO (608)751-9422

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JD327 small square baler, decent shape, $6,500/OBO. (715)875-4288

Farm Implements

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

Young Farmer looking for a farmer ready to retire, who would sell their farmsite & rent any land that they currently own or rent, with op- FOR SALE: Grain Dryer tion to purchase in future. Farm Fan model CF/SA320-291-9033 410. 240 volt 3 phase. Top half has all new belts, bearings, chains, sprockets. Hay & Forage Equip 031 Bottom half has new chains, belts. Excellent 2013 New Rhino #AGM52-7 Ft condition. (507) 399-9173 3 Pt Disk Mower (83”) (540 RPM). List Price $9,914 SALE: Westfield Sale Price $7,900. Also New FOR 13”x71' auger, no swing 9 Ft Models On Hand. New hopper, $5,500/OBO. 507-327Rhino Model SE8A-8 Ft 3 6340 Pt Rotary Cutter/Chain Guards/Stump Jumper Sale FOR SALE:Used grain bins, $4,399. Dealer 319-347-6282 floors unload systems, stirators, fans & heaters, aerFOR SALE: International ation fans, buying or sell8480 automatic reset baler. ing, try me first and also Also a NH baler, asking call for very competitive $2,000/OBO. (320)760-5622 contract rates! Office hours 8am-5pm Monday – FOR SALE: JD 5400-5830 & Friday Saturday 9am - 12 6000 & 7000 series forage noon or call 507-697-6133 harvesters. Used kernel Ask for Gary processors, also, used JD 40 knife Dura-Drums, & Farm Implements 035 drum conversions for 5400 & 5460. Call (507)427-3520 24R30” JD planter, Kinze www.ok-enterprise.com bar; 708 & 706 White CH; 964 C-IH CH; 175 Michigan JD 327 baler w/ thrower, like ldr; Hiniker 3300 FC; Big A new; OMC 595 round baler; floater; '79 IHC 1680 comNH 851 round baler; H&S bine; JD 40' FC; White Load King 500 forage box, plows & parts; 8R Artsway nice; 16' bale racks on stalk chopper. 507-380-5324 gears; JD 212 grain pickup, 5 belt, nice. Farmhand 5 wheel rakes. 320-864-4583 or 320-779-4583


Tractors

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

28

– Assistant Editor – The Land Magazine Mankato, Minnesota

The Land, a weekly farm and rural life magazine, seeks an assistant editor for its circulation of 30,000. Candidates should have a bachelor’s degree in English, communications or journalism. Also essential are strong organizational, communication and editing skills, attention to detail and an interest in digital/social media. The Land is considered to be the best at providing timely and credible agricultural information, according to the Readex 2014 Preference Study.

Interested candidates should email their resume, salary requirements and a cover letter to General Manager Kathy Connelly at kconnelly@thelandonline.com. The application deadline is Friday, July 18.

036 Harvesting Equip

037 Harvesting Equip

FOR SALE: Int'l 826 dsl hy- '03 JD 9750, 20.8-38 duals, CM, sgl pt hookup, bin ext., dro w/ Hiniker cab, $7,500. 2877 eng. hrs., $69,500 OBO. 507-525-2473 507-766-3017 John Deere 4240 tractor '05 2388 IH combine, exc cond, 4WD, 1300 sep hrs. with Allied 594 loader, Soybean & cornhead avail8073 hrs, 8-speed powerable also. Asking $140,000. shift, a/c, 18.4x38 rear Call 715-313-0095 tires, very good rubber all around, 540/1000 PTO, FOR SALE: '12 Stalkmaster joystick control for load618C, 18R22” cornhead, er with skidsteer quick loaded w/row sense, 18 attach brackets, 96" stalk stompers, lights, 2500 bucket, good clean tracacres, new knives, very tor, $23,500 with loader, nice, in shed. 320-212-3201 $21,000 w/o. (320) 282-6658 FOR SALE: Harvest Equipment: Two 42' 3 auger stiNEW AND USED TRACTOR rator with burners, 22' eave PARTS JD 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, height. One 2006 single 55, 50 Series & newer tracphase 2,600,000 BTU burntors, AC-all models, Large er, one 2009 3 phase Inventory, We ship! Mark 2,700,000 BTU burner, Heitman Tractor Salvage $5,400/ea. One 30 hp 3 phase 715-673-4829 motor with 38" fan, 14 adjustable blades used less River Dale Farms Engine than 12 hrs, $2,100. Reason building, cylinder headfor selling - bought new work, port polishing, dryer. Worthington, MN restorations. (920)295-3278 (507)360-9805

037 Tillage Equip

039

FOR SALE: JD 442 cornhead IHC 183 8R36” flat fold cultivator, always shedded, like good condition, $600/OBO new. 507-764-3943 (or best offer). (320) 2753524 040 WANTED TO BUY: JD 444 Machinery Wanted cornhead, good condition. All kinds of New & Used (320) 275-3524 farm equipment – disc chisels, field cults, planters, Planting Equip 038 soil finishers, cornheads, feed mills, discs, balers, JD 7000 2R corn planter, 3pt, haybines, etc. 507-438-9782 $1,600. Fertilizer Optional $600. 715-234-1993 Disc chisels: JD 714 & 712, Glencoe 7400; Field Cults under 30': JD 980, small Tillage Equip 039 grain carts & gravity boxes 300-400 bu. Finishers under FOR SALE: 66 International 20', clean 4 & 6R stalk choptrailer type plow, automatpers; Nice JD 215 & 216 ic reset. Also 1066 Internaflex heads; JD 643 corntional w/ cab. (320)760-5622 heads Must be clean; JD corn planters, 4-6-8 row. NEW GREAT PLAINS 715-299-4338 Turbo-Max's 7 Models 12-1518-24-30-35-40 Ft Some On WANTED TO BUY: Older tractor, 4WD, 150hp - 200hp, Hand. Great Plains Is The good shape, reasonable Leader in Vertical Tillage. price. (608)778-6026 Dealer 319-347-6282 Let It Ring Deliver Anywhere WANTED: (1) 16” x 38” tractor tire rim for 18.4 tire, 12 lug, 9” space. 320221-3489 WANTED: Dummy head that will fit on JD6600. Must be in good shape. 715928-3526

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WANTED: JD #71 planting unit, complete unit. 507-8301376 WANTED: JD 7100 8R30 corn planter. 715-235-8272 WANTED: Late model JD 9500 hillside combine or JD 6620 late model combine. (507) 523-3305 or (507) 4506115 Spraying Equip

041

FOR SALE: '98 854 RoGater, 4697 hrs, 80' booms, 800 gal stainless steel tank, 460 Raven Controller, hyd tread adjustment, 380x85x46 tires, 23.1x26 floater tires, also, JD GreenStar ready. 507-8296733 JD 6000 Hi-boy, cab, 60' boom, nice, $12,000. 507-3813840 Wanted

042

WANTED: Gooseneck dump grain box for truck. 952-7582621 Fencing Material

046

(200) T post 6', $2/ea. 6'' x 8' treated wood post, some new, other sizes also. 715273-5756

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

Feed Seed Hay

050

Dairy Quality Alfalfa Tested big squares & round bales, delivered from South Dakota John Haensel (605) 351-5760 Dairy quality western alfalfa, big squares or small squares, delivered in semi loads. Clint Haensel (605) 310-6653 Feeding Pigs, Steers, Heifers or dry Cows? WE have small grains and screenings; oats, barley, wheat, rye, corn. All non-GMO, we can deliver in truck load lots. Wymore Seed Farms (715)322-5636


Feed Seed Hay

050

Grass, alfalfa grass, alfalfa, and straw in rounds & 3x3x8 squares. Net wrapped. Delivered in semi loads. Call Tim 320-221-2085 Premium tested, high protein, high RFV alfalfa square, wrapped baleage. Delivered by truckload. Call Wes at Red River Forage. 866-575-7562 WANTED AND FOR SALE ALL TYPES of hay & straw. Also buying corn, wheat & oats. Western Hay available. Fox Valley Alfalfa Mill. 920-853-3554 Dairy

055

FOR SALE: Parlor free stall cows & tie stall cows. 715928-3526 WANTED TO BUY! USED BULK MILK COOLER ALL SIZES 920-867-3048 WANTED TO BUY: Dairy heifers and cows. 320-2352664

29 FARMLAND * 3 BDRM HOME * SHOP * BUILDINGS

ESTATE AUCTION

James Sorom Estate • Arla Sorom – Owner Saturday, July 12th – 9AM 67233 – 275th St, Alden, MN

Directions: From Albert Lea at I-90 go North 4 miles on Hwy 13 to #29 & go West 3 miles, or from Freeborn go 2 miles North East.

REAL ESTATE OFFERED AT 9 AM Parcel 1) 72.32 Acres Quality Farmland Parcel 2) 3 Bdrm Ranch, Shop & Outbuildings, Four Wind Generators On 4 Acres. Parcel 3) 76.32 Acres – Entire Farm Site CONTRACTORS TOOLS & EQUIPMENT: ‘09 Bobcat V417 VersaHandler; Case 580E Construction King Backhoe; Scaffold, Tandem Trlr, Laser, Transits. TRACTORS: JD 4230 Dsl –Freshened; 4x4 Versatile 555 – New Cummins Turbo, Disks, Diggers, Zero Turn mowers, Generators. SHOP EQUIPMENT & TOOLS: South Bend Lathe, Drill Press, Ind’l Hammer Drill,Table & Miter Saws, Joiners, Planers, Sanders, Grinders, Sandblaster, Compressor, Nailers, Staplers, Cherry Picker, Floor Jack, Metal Brake, Corn Burner, LP Tanks, Hand Tools, Guns, Antiques & Household.

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

FOR SALE: Re-cleaned oat/wheat/barley for animal feed. 6 cents per pound by the semi load. Call on smaller quantities. Albert Lea Seed 507-373-3161

NOTE: For a detailed list w/Pictures go to: www.auctionsgo.com

Owatonna, MN. • Phone: 507-456-3440 Auctioneers: Roger Summer Lic. # 74-14-05 & Bruce Meyer # 66-55

CHECKERED FLAG AUCTIONS

RETIREMENT AUCTION

Tuesday, July 8th, 2014 - 4:00pm 48346 350th St - Lafayette, MN. 56054

Auctioneers Note: Preview for Farm Machinery is July 5th from 9am to 11am Directions from Lafayette, MN go 8 miles East on Co Rd 1

Owner: Wayne & Cathy Wills

Listing Auctioneer: Matt Mages #08-14-004 (507-) 276-7002 Auctioneers: Larry Mages - Lafayette :: Joe Maidl - Lafayette John Goelz - Franklin ::: Joe Wersal - Winthrop Clerk: Mages Land Co. & Auction Service LLC - Not Responsible for Accidents at Auction or During Inspection. Everything sold “AS IS”, Everything to be paid for immediately after the auction. Lunch & restroom on grounds. For complete list & more pictures go to: magesland.com

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

Tractors, Bobcat & Machinery: ‘90 CIH 7150, MFWD, 6590 hrs, axle mt dual; 3 hyd, front 16.9R30, rear 20.8R42; ‘89 CIH Magnum 7120, 7460 hrs, triple hyd, w/rock box, rear 8.4R42 duals; AC One NinetyXT, 3465 hrs, sgl hyd, console control; ‘07 Bobcat S160 diesel, aux hookups, bobtach, 1678 hrs; 68” dirt bucket; pallet fork; SB 200 Bobcat 66” snowblower; McCormick Farmall FC w/Woods belly mower; Gravity boxes - Demco 550, brake, lites, 425/65/R22.5; Demco 365, posi flow, 385/65/R22.5; JM 365 12 ton w/JM gear; Demco 360 w/Demco float tires; Demco 360, 450 yd round center or side dump; Demco gear, lites; Butler Kan-Sun crop dryer MDL #81510; 1000 bu holding bins; (2) Butler grain bins, 7,000 bu, 24’; 5,300 bu, 21’; DMI Ecolo-Tiger 527; CIH MDL 4800, 28.5’ field cultivator; 3 bar harrow; JD stalk chopper, 6RW; Westfield auger WR 80-31, 5 hp elec motor; Neco 6’ unloading auger; Feterl auger, 60x8, PTO; Feterl auger, 50’, 7.5 hp; Kuker 500 gal sprayer, 50’ boom, Adams foamer-not working, PTO pump, elec controls; Melroe 5 section drag; 300 gal gas tank; 500 gal diesel tank w/elec pump, on stand; PT 16’ rotary hoe; Fidelity elec generator; PTO alternator; MN Gear hayrack; assorted poly auger hoppers; round bale rock brackets; assort. auger head motors; 10.5’ & 12’ bin sweeps. ATVs, Lawnmowers, Tools, Livestock: ‘12 Polaris Sportsman 550 EFI, FWD, 41.2 hrs, 325 miles; ‘02 Polaris Sportsman 500 w/snowplow, adj wings, 4997 hrs; ‘08 Ferris IS3100Z, 284 hrs, gas, 61” FWD commercial mower w/suspension; Dixon XRT 4424 mower, 15 hp; ATV aluminum folding ramp; Raley 20” push mower; fiberglass 40’ ext ladder; Bison 16’ trailer w/brakes, ramps; PT lawn spreader; ATV yard cart & sprayer, 20 gal w/boom & gun; Ace Roto poly tank mold, 1000 gal, hoses, valves; Poly nursery pig floor, 12x12 sections; All American pressure washer, 220V, 3000 psi; 1000 gal propane tank; empty barrels; 3 pt blade; hog waterers; assorted hog gates; Honeywell fan controls; stainless steel posts; (2) 2-sided 5’ stainless feeders; (4) 1-sided stainless feeders; pit fans & barn fans; cordless grease gun; Iron Horse air compressor, 60 gal air tank; (2) new Chicago pneumatic impact wrenchs, 15 amp, 220V, 6.5 hp; air hammer; assortment of tools; Husqvarna chainsaw; cordless tool kit; Lincoln A/C arc welder; garden wheel barrel. Furniture, Household: Iron Man inversion table; ‘11 Nautilus incline R514 bike; single lift hospital bed; sectional couch; pottery barn office furniture; Paul Vidor oil painting; antique wash stand; Shirley Temple brass frame picture; bed bench w/storage; hutch; hurricane lamp; wicker furniture set; oak end table, night stand, & ‘30’s round oak coffee table; king size bed; queen size bed; dresser drawer set; Roosevelt vases; pink depression glass; RW 5 gal jug; spinning wheel; linens; dishtowels; glassware; kitchenaid mixer; TV; vacuum; stereo; suitcases; kitchen table & chairs; coolers; step stool; card table & chairs; 50’s dolls; birdhouses; pots & pans; roaster; golf clubs; stainless steel gas grill; safe; garden items; bicycles; yard art; lamps; toy barn; 20 lb LP tank; assortment steel wheels; insulation; pallet landscaping panes; dishes; misc Christmas items; old & new picture frames; 60’s & 70’s LP records; printer-scanner.

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Tractors, Farm Machinery, Tools, Furniture & Household


Cattle

30 THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

EQUIPMENT

CIH 8950, MFD ........................................$59,900 CIH 7130 ..................................................$29,900 CIH 7120, 4900 hrs. ................................$39,900 (2) IH 1026, hydro ..........................From $15,900 JD 4230, w/JD 720 loader ......................$18,900 JD 4040, Quad ........................................$22,900 ‘74 JD 4430, Quad ..................................$16,900 ‘77 JD 4430, Quad ..................................$18,900 JD 4240, Quad ..................................5 Coming In ‘69 JD 4020, diesel ..................................“CALL” JD 2640 w/JD loader ..............................$10,900 IH 460, 560, 560D ....................................“CALL” Gehl 4635 skid steer ..................................$9,900 IH 826, 856, 1256, 1456 ............................“SAVE” (2) JD 4030, Open Station ......................$14,900 JD 720, diesel ............................................$6,900

LOADERS

JD Loaders, Many to Choose From Starting @ $2,495 “New” Koyker Loaders - “CALL” JD 48, 58, 146, 148, 158; Koyker 510, K5

JD Soundguard Cabs, Call for info

KIESTER IMPLEMENT, INC. 110 S. Main, P.O. Box 249 • Kiester, MN

507-294-3387

www.midwestfarmsales.com

USED PARTS LARSON SALVAGE Good selection of tractor parts - New & Used All kinds of hay equipment, haybines, balers, choppers parted out. New combine belts for all makes. Swather canvases, round baler belting, used & new tires. 6 miles East of

CAMBRIDGE, MN 763-689-1179 We Ship Daily

Visa and MasterCard Accepted

‘13 JD S670, 440 hrs., GS3 color mon., CM w/hi-torque reverser, 20.8x42’s, 3-spd. trans., 7.9M unload auger ..................................................$259,500 ‘12 JD S670, 616 hrs., GS3 color mon., Command Touch 5-spd. reverser, Pro-drives, 6.9M unload auger $229,500 ‘12 JD 9460R, 4WD, PS, 590 hrs., 800/70R35’s, leather trim, HID lights, wgt. pkg., Ext. Warranty ..........$229,500 ‘10 JD 9870STS, 995-775 hrs., CM, Pro-drives w/5-spd. reverser, 20.8x42’s, 28Lx26 rears, chopper, 22’ auger ..................................................$182,500

M.S. Diversified monte@ms-diversified.com

Fairfax, MN

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056 Cattle

056

FOR SALE OR LEASE FOR SALE OR LEASE: REGISTERED BLACK Purebred Registered ANGUS Bulls, 2 year old & Charolais bulls, heifers, & yearlings; bred heifers, cows. Great bloodlines, excalving ease, club calves & cellent performance, balbalance performance. Al anced EPD's, low birth sired. In herd improvement weights. Delivery availprogram. J.W. Riverview able. Angus Farm Glencoe, MN Laumann Charolais 55336 Conklin Dealer 320Mayer, MN 612-490-2254 864-4625 FOR SALE: Purebred Black Angus bulls, calf ease & good disposition. 320-5983790

800-432-3565 • 320-894-6560 www.ms-diversified.com

Holstein feeder steers, have room to start 275 calves. Will be ready late August. Call for more information. 715-613-2072 Reg. Angus Bulls For Sale: AAR Windy & Sitz Dash Sons, balanced EPDs w/ extra thickness and muscle. Lausted's Green Meadows, Menomonie, (715)308-9954 Registered Texas Longhorn breeding stock, cows, heifers or roping stock, top blood lines. 507-235-3467 Simmentals 20 bred black heifers to calve next spring, to easy calving black bull. 10 long yearling bulls. Black, polled, calm, excellent quality. Over 40 yrs of Simmental breeding. Riverside Simmentals, Gerald Polzin, Cokato 320-2865805 WAKEFIELD FARMS Performance tested Charolais & Red Angus bulls, 50+ yrs in the seed stock business. Delivery available. Put more profit in your pocket with a Wakefield bred bull. 507-402-4640 WANT TO BUY: Butcher cows, bulls, fats & walkable cripples; also horses, sheep & goats. 320-235-2664 Sheep

060

FOR SALE: Registered Suffolk ram lambs, RR-NN. 507-549-3122 WANTED: Tunis buck sheep grade or part bred. (715) 379-5654

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

Swine

065

Compart's total program features superior boars & open gilts documented by BLUP technology. Duroc, York, Landrace & F1 lines. Terminal boars offer leanness, muscle, growth. Maternal gilts & boars are productive, lean, durable. All are stress free & PRRS free. Semen also available through Elite Genes A.I. Make 'em Grow! Comparts Boar Store, INC. Toll Free: 877-441-2627 FOR SALE: Yorkshire, Hampshire, Duroc & Hamp/Duroc boars, also gilts. Excellent selection. Raised outside. Exc herd health. No PRSS. Delivery avail. 320-568-2225 ORR FEEDER PIGS Tim Orr. Call for availability. (563) 920-2680


USED EQUIPMENT • Sunflower Tillage • Hardi Sprayers • REM Grain Vac • Woods Mowers • J&M Grain Carts • Westfield Augers • Summers Equipment • White Planters • Wilrich Tillage

USED EQUIPMENT • White 8524-22 planter • Friesen 240 seed tender • Pickett thinner, 24-22 • Alloway 22’ shredder • Alloway 20’ shredder • J&M 525 grain cart • J&M 1131 grain cart • J&M 1151 grain cart • Killbros 1810 cart, tracks • Killbros 890 cart • Sheyenne 1410, 10x66 hopper • Westfield MK 13x71 • Westfield 13x61 • Hutch 13x71, swing • Coverall 13” drive over • REM 2100 grain vac. • ‘09 JD 2700, 7-30 • MW 2200, 9-24 • Wilrich 957, 9-24 w/harrow • Wilshek 862, 26’ disk

• EZ-On 4600, 30’ disk • JD 2410, 41’ chisel • DMI 730B, 7-30 • DMI crumbler, 50’ • Wilrich QX2, 60’, rolling baskets • Wilrich Quad X, 55’, rolling basket • Wilrich Quad X, 50’ F.C. • Wilrich Quad 5, 45’ F.C. • JD 2210, 581⁄2’ F.C. • CIH TII, 55’, rolling basket • Kongskilde 3500, 28’ • Hardi 4400, 120’ • Hardi Com. 1500, 132’ • Hardi Nav. 1100, 90’ • Hardi Nav. 1000, 88’ • Hardi Nav. 950, 88’ • Hardi 1000, 66’ • Redball 570, 90’ • Flex-Coil 67XL, 90’ • ‘12 Amity 12-22 • ‘10 Amity 12-22 • ‘07 Amity 8-22 • Amity 8-22, (3) • ‘11 Artsway 6812, 12-22 • ‘10 Artsway 6812, 12-22 • ‘11 Artsway 6812, 8-22 • ‘06 Artsway 6812, 8-22 • Artsway 898, 8-22 • Artsway 692, 8-22 • (2) Alloway 12-22 folding topper • Alloway 12-22 topper, St. Ft, (2) • Artsway 12-22 topper

TJOSVOLD EQUIPMENT Sales & Service • West Hwy. 212 — Granite Falls, MN 56241 800-337-1581 • 320-564-2331 • After Hours (320) 212-4849 www.tjosvoldequip.com

USED TRACTORS

‘08 NH C175, cab/heat, hyd. Q/A, 850 hrs., New Tracks, w/bucket & forks ....................$34,900 ‘07 NH L175 SSL, w/2-spd., cab/AC, hyd. Q/A, New Engine ................................................$24,900 ‘06 NH L170 SSL, cab/heat, 2060 hrs. ........$21,900 ‘06 NH TC55, MFD, ROPS, w/loader, 1300 hrs. ................................................................Coming In ‘93 Ford 8830, MFWD, 18.4R42 duals, 2637 hrs., New Engine! ................................................$41,900 ‘04 Buhler 2425, 4WD, 710/70R38 duals, full wgts., 3350 hrs. ..................................$119,900 ‘95 Ford 9680, 20.8R42 duals (90%), 4 remotes, 3050 hrs. ....................................................$96,900 ‘89 Deutz 5215, MFD w/325 loader................$8,500

COMBINES/HEADS

Visit Us At: www.tjosvoldequip.com

USED DELUX DRYERS DELUX 10’ MODEL 2515, LP/NG, 1 PH, 300 BPH DELUX 20’ MODEL 6030, LP/NG, 3 PH, 600 BPH DELUX 20’ MODEL 5030, LP/NG, 3 PH, 500 BPH DELUX 15’ MODEL DPX7040, LP/NG, 3 PH, 700 BPH

USED DRYERS KANSUN 1025 215, LP, 1 PH BEHLEN 380, 1 PH, LP, HEAT RECLAIM BEHLEN 700, 3 PH, LP, HEAT RECLAIM BEHLEN 700, 3 PH, LP, DOUBLE BURNER We carry a full line of Behlen & Delux dryer parts; Mayrath and Hutch auger parts. Large inventory of Welda sprockets, hubs, bearings, chains & pulleys

‘98 Wilson, 41x96, 66” Sides, Extra Lights, Roll Tarp, BELTED 24.5 LP Tires ................$18,000 ‘02 Red River, 48’, 78/102, 63” ‘95 Merritt, 42’ AL Hopper, Belt, 3 Single AR Axles, 1 Lift 68” Sides, 2-Spd. Doors, Rebuilt ..........................$12,500 Axle, 385x225 Super Singles, ‘94 Wilson Commander AL Grain Electric Tarp, Wind Kit, Weight Gauges, Clean ..............$35,500 Hopper, 41’, SPR, 80% Brakes ......................................$16,000 END DUMPS ‘94 Wilson Convert-a-Hopper, Summit End Dump, 30’, 45x102, 78” Sides, 80% Virgin 72” Sides, 3 Axle, AR ....$16,750 Rubber, AL Wheels, Electric ‘90 Load King Belly Dump, Door Openers................$15,000 40’ New Brakes & Drums, SEMI TRUCKS 80% Tires......................$16,000 (2) ‘04 Volvo Day Cab, Single AUTOS Axle, 365 Hp., 10c Trans., 390 Ratio, 450K Mi. ..Ea. $8,000 ‘07 Hyundai Sonata SE, 85K Mi., ‘95 Kenworth T800 Conventional, Light Hail Damage ..........$6,250 ‘06 Hyundai Sonata, 114K Mi. Series 60 Detroit Eng., 860K ........................................$5,000 Mi., Jake Brake & Cruise, 10-Spd., 40,000 lb., 3.90 Ratio, ‘06 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT, AR, 2 Line Wet Kit, Air Slide 5th, 3.8L, 108K Mi., Silver......$6,000 235” WB, Full Screw, 80% 22.5 ‘02 Chevy Impala, 160K Mi., LP Radial Tires..............$16,000 Tan ..................................$4,500 ‘04 Malibu Max LS, V6, 32 mpg., TRUSS TRAILERS Good Tires, Sunroof, 76K Mi., ‘98 Lakeside RollerMaster, Silver ..............................$6,500 32’-45’/102, Elec. over Hyd. ‘00 Chevrolet Impala, 147K Mi., Lift, Top Locking Deck Rollers, Loaded, Heated Leather Seats, New Paint, Winches, 80% Sunroof, Black ................$4,000 T&B ................................$6,500 ‘88 Ford F150 XLT Lariat, 4.9L ‘97 JDH TrussMaster, 6-Cyl., 2WD, 5-Spd. Overdrive 42’-60’/102, 8 Winches, Elec. Rebuilt Trans., New Clutch, over Hyd. Tilt, Elec. over Air AC, PS/PB, Dual Tanks, Topper, Extend, Tandem Axle ......$5,500 4 New Tires ....................$1,350

FLATBEDS

‘99 Transcraft, 48/96, All Steel, 80% T&B, Closed Tandem ........................................$8,750 ‘98 Fontaine, 48/102, All Steel, New Airbags & Brakes, SPX/AR, No Rust, 80% T&B, California Trailer..............................$9,000 ‘99 Transcraft, 48/96 AL Combo, Winches, Tie Down Chains, SPX, AR, 80% Tires ........$9,500 ‘95 Utility, 48/96 AL Combo, AL Floor, Winches, Tie Downs, Storage Box, SPX, AR......$8,500 Utility, 45-102, Closed Tandem, SPR, All Steel ..................$6,000

DROPDECKS

‘05 Fontaine, 48/102, Tandem SPX, 22.5 Tires..............$23,900 ‘94 Utility, 48/102, Sandblasted/ Painted, New Floor, New T&B, New Lights, New Airbags ......................................$17,000 Engineered 5’ Beavertail, Kit includes Paint & LED Lights & All Electrical ............$3,750/$5,750 Installed ‘80 Transcraft DoubleDrop, 53’, 33’ Well Non-Detachable, AR, Polished AL Wheels, New Hardwood Decking, 80% Tires & Brakes, Clean ............$14,000

CATTLE/HOG TRAILERS

MISCELLANEOUS

(10) Van Trailers, 48/102-53/102; Great for water storage or over the road..............$3,000-$7,000 Rent For Storage Only. 48’ & 53’ Van Trailers ................$145/Mo. ‘70 JD Tractor, Gas, Wide Front, Runs Good ......................$4,000 ‘64 IH 806 Gas Tractor, Wide Front, 2P, Runs Good ......$4,000 Hyster Forklift, 6000 lb., Side Shift, 131⁄2’ Lift, 15” Pneumatic Tires................................$5,000 Custom Haysides Stationary ........................$1,250 Tip In Tip Out ....................$1,750 Front & Rear Extensions ....................................$350/Ea. Reefer Units ....................$1,000 Complete Suspensions, Air Ride or Spring Ride ..........................$1,000 AR/Axle (50) Steel & (25) Aluminum Rims - In Stock: 24.5 & 22.5 ..................................$50 Steel ........................$150 Aluminum Pre-Hung Interior Doors, Over 50 To Choose From ....$10-$80 Ea. 10,000 board feet of Interior Wood Trim .......... .50/linear foot 10,000 lbs. New Steel - On Hand ..................$1.00/lb.

We Can Convert

‘07 Barrett, 53’ Drop Center, Flatbeds To Bridges Closed Tandem, AL Wheels, To Suit Your Needs. New Tires, 50% Floor, Clean Call For A Quote ......................................$25,500 • All Trailers DOTable •

1409 Silver Street E. Mapleton, MN 56065 507-524-3726 massopelectric.com

Will Consider Trades!

Call: 320-212-5220 or 320-392-5361

CHECK OUT OUR WEBSITE!!! www.DuncanTrailersInc.com Delivery Available!

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

‘04 NH CR940, 20.5-32 tires, Y/M, 1350 hrs. ..................................................................$119,900 ‘01 NH TR99, RWA combine, straddle duals, bin ext., chaff spreader, 40K in parts, Field Ready! ..................................................................$109,900 ‘94 NH TR87, 30.5-32 singles ......................$43,900 (4) ‘10 NH 99C, 8R30” chopping cornheads ..........................................................From $60,900 ‘00 NH 996, 8R30” cornhead w/K&M chopper ....................................................................$39,950 (2) ‘10 NH 74C, 35’ flex heads............From $29,900 ‘04 NH 98C, 6R30” cornhead, Like New! ....$33,000 ‘02 NH 96C, 8R30” cornhead, Loaded! ........$25,900 ‘00 NH 73C, 30’ flex head w/AWS, 3” cut, New!............................................................$25,900 NH 974, 10R22” cornhead, poly ..................$11,900 (2) ‘97 NH 973, 30’ flex head ......................$10,500 (2) ‘98 NH 973, 25’ flex head ........................$9,500 ‘94 NH 974, 8R30 cornhead ..........................$8,900 ‘92 NH 974, 6R30” cornhead ........................$8,900 ‘14 Westfield MK100-71 GLP swing hopper auger ....................................................................$10,900

MISCELLANEOUS EQUIP.

‘05 JD 1780, 16/31 planter, 3 bu. boxes ......$45,900 ‘93 JD 7300, 12R30” planter, Nice!..............$13,900 ‘13 Degelman LR7651, Demo ............................Call ‘12 EZ Trail 510 grain cart, tarps & lights ....$14,900 ‘01 EZ Trail 475 grain cart w/Shurlock tarp....$9,900 ‘11 Loftness 240, semi-mtd. shredder w/tow bar ....................................................................$22,900 ‘13 MDS RK500 Roto King bale shredder........DEMO ‘89 NH 855 round baler, Nice! ........................$5,500 ‘06 NH 616 disc mower ..................................$5,950 ‘12 NH H6750, 7 disc mower ........................$9,500 ‘11 NH H6750, 7 disc mower ........................$8,500 ‘11 Parker 524 grain cart, Holdover ............$19,900 ‘10 Parker 1048 grain cart w/tarp ................$36,900 NEW NH SG110 60’ coil packers, (3 Left) ..............................................................Ea. $37,900 ‘05 Great Plains 50’ crumbler ......................$15,900 ‘13 Great Plains 40’ turbo max, vertical tillage, Like New! ................................................Coming In ‘07 Parker 838 grain cart w/tarp ..................$24,000 ‘07 NH 617, 7 disc mower, Rebuilt! ..............$6,900 ‘04 Wilrich 957DDR ripper, 5 shank w/harrow, 30” spacing ................................................$22,900 ‘92 DMI 530 ripper ......................................$14,900 ‘11 Wilrich 513SP 9-shank ripper w/spike harrow ........................................................$44,900 ‘08 Wilrich QX2 field cult., 47’ w/harrow & baskets ........................................................$49,900 ‘05 JD 2210, 50’ field cult. w/4 bar harrow ..$45,900 ‘00 JD 980, 45’ field cult. w/harrow, Nice! ..$19,900 New Virnig rock grapples ....................................Call New Vivnig post hole augers ..............................Call New Unverferth rolling reels, 18’ & 22’ ..............Call ‘10 Krause 4850-21 Dominator, Nice! ..........$45,900 ‘04 Allied 108” snowblower w/truck spout, NIce!..............................................................$6,500

NEW DRYERS DELUX 10’ MODEL DP3015, LP/NG, 1 PH, W/MOISTURELINK

Merrit, 46’, 3 Floors 1 Removable, 50% 24.5 Tires, 70% Brakes ..........$5,000 AS IS

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Clara City, MN 56222 320-847-3218 www.wearda.com

HANCOCK, MN

HOPPERS

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

NEW EQUIPMENT

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THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

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Pets & Supplies

070

Livestock Equip

075

Cars & Pickups

080

Trucks & Trailers

084

Stop predators/raptors great WANTED TO BUY: An older Pick-up long box for Chevro- 97' Timpte hopper bottom trailer, 40' long, 66" high, let '88-'98, in very good style small vacuum pump Pyrenees LGD's (experisprings, new tarp, new recond, $700. (715)837-1469 for milking cows. (715)415enced) puppies $300 & up. caps, very good condition, 0316 Working parents. (815)988$15,000. 651-380-6921 8867 Trucks & Trailers 084 Cars & Pickups 080 Flying L gooseneck stock Livestock Equip 075 '14 PJ gooseneck car trlr, 16' trailer, 21' long, $2,500. '11 Chevrolet 2500 4x4, stan+ 2', 5200 lb. axles, cross (715)837-1469 dard cab, Dura-Max dsl, FOR SALE: New steer feedmembers on 16” ctr, tool pwr seats, locks, windows, ers, calf and finisher sizes box, pulled less than 100 mirrors, cruise, tilt, fiber1 ton to 8 ton cap. 920-948mi., $4,200; '13 Wilson glass topper, spray-on bed3516 www.steerfeeder.com gooseneck livest. trlr., liner, never driven in win7'x24', lower side vent ter, 29,000 miles, $25,500. Surge bulk tank, 1,000 gal., holes, cold weather inserts, 218-389-6961 or 218-428-9139 complete, exc. cond., hauled about 460 head of $1,950. 612-618-1226 hogs, $16,000; 16' hyd. '87 GMC Sierra Classic, 4x4, livest. trlr., hi-lift, $2,500. 350 auto, exc. cond., $4,750 Manson, IA 515-570-3617 OBO. 612-618-1226

Trucks & Trailers

084

Miscellaneous

090

FOR SALE: '91 Wilson Pace FOR SALE: JD quick hitch category 2, JD cast iron Setter 41' hopper trailer, category 2 & 3, JD steel 66” sides, tires 90%, good category 3N. 612-741-2010 brakes, good condition. Bought new, only used on IH Super M block & pistons. my farm, $12,000. Ron at 1974 Arctic Cat snowmobile 320-523-1099 (hydro drive). (608)296-2203 Miscellaneous

090

FOR SALE: (2) 11.2x36 tires, 85%. (4) 10x16.5 foam fill skid steer tires on 8 bolt rims. 612-741-2010 FOR SALE: New Tahoe 4” trash and water pump, gas Honda engine, 25,000 gal per hr, no hoses, portable unit. 507-370-2149

Miscellaneous

090

REINKE IRRIGATION Sales & Service New & Used For your irrigation needs 888-830-7757 or 320-212-2520

WANT MORE READERS One call does it all! TO SEE YOUR AD?? With one phone call, you can Expand your coverage area! place your classified ad in The Land has teamed up The Land, Farm News, with Farm News, and The AND The Country Today. Country Today so you can Call The Land for more do just that! Place a classiinfo @ 507-345-4523 • 800-657fied ad in The Land and 4665. have the option of placing it in these papers as well. PARMA DRAINAGE More readers = better rePUMPS New pumps & sults! Call The Land for parts on hand. Call Minmore information. 507-345nesota's largest distributor 4523 • 800-657-4665 HJ Olson & Company 320974-8990 Cell – 320-212-5336 Winpower Sales & Service RANGER PUMP CO. Reliable Power Solutions Custom Manufacturer of Since 1925 PTO & automatWater Lift Pumps ic Emergency Electric for field drainage Generators. New & Used Sales & Service Rich Opsata-Distributor 507-984-2025 or 406-314-0334 800-343-9376 www.rangerpumpco.com

SUMMER SAVINGS! << www.TheLandOnline.com >>

USED POWER UNITS

Ford 4000 Super Utility, 50 hp., gas, HD loader $7,500 Ford 2910, FWA, dsl., 8 spd., ROPS & canopy, 3500 hrs. ........................................................$9,500 Ford 960 Row Crop, 35 hp., gas, 5 spd., 12 volt conversion ......................................................$3,500 ACWD, gas NF, 12 conversion ..........................$1,450 Polaris 500 cc ATV, dsl., 1800 miles, 4WD, winch..............................................................$2,900 ‘04 Cub Cadet Model 2518C, 20 hp., gas, hydro ......................................................................$1,400 *w/front mount 42” Cub Cadet snowblower *w/rear chains & rear wgts. *w/48” mid MTD mower deck

LAWN MOWERS

Walco Douglas 6’ rear discharge 3 pt. mount ..$1,275 (2) Cartner 6’ flail mowers , hyd. drive..Choice $1,000 Kubota F2560E, dsl., 60” front deck ..........Coming In w/optional 72” deck or optional bagger attachment

HAY TOOLS

‘00 Vicon CM1700, 4 rotor disc mower ............$3,875 Gehl 260 rotary rake............................................$775

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

MISC. EQUIPMENT

3 pt. sprayer, 15 gal. tank, 5’, 3 nozzles, electric pump ..................................................................$75 Pull type lawn sprayer, wheel drive pump, 3 nozzle boom ..................................................................$35 Ford 781, 3 pt. blade, 6’, additional wgt. bracket $225 (2) Cat I 3 pt. scoops, 1 new, 1 used ......Choice $100 New Land Pride 3 pt. blade, Choice of 7’ or 8’ moldboard ......................................................$1,071 New Land Pride 3 pt., 5 shank, subsoiler ............$875

New Ulm Tractor & Equipment Inc. 13144 Co. Rd. #25 New Ulm, MN

507-354-3612

Kubota, Land Pride, Vicon, Meyers, Artsway


33

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

<< www.TheLandOnline.com >> “Where Farm and Family Meet”


New Low Rate Lease Programs Now Available, Call Today, We Are Leasing Our Late Model Equipment Now

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

34

SEE OUR WEBSITE: www.windridgeimplements.com FOR ALL EQUIPMENT LISTINGS

‘09 CIH Steiger 435, Articulated 4WD, 16F/2R spd. full-powershift, 40 gpm standard pump, 4 remote valves, high cap. drawbar, 1000 RPM indpendent PTO, True Ground speed sensor. #13325 - $195,500

‘10 JD 8320RT, 1882.8 eng. hrs., 320 hp. eng., 255 hp. PTO, 22 front wgts. w/brkt., Premium HID front lights, 30” tracks. #13317 - $212,000

‘08 NH T8040, 1252 eng. hrs., HD FWD w/diff. lock, 6 cyl. eng., 255 hp. PTO, 4 hyd. Mega Flow, Power Beyond, radar ground sensor, 540/1000 PTO, 19/4 powershift trans. #ODTTEGNVGQQB - $149,000

‘09 JCB 8250, 4WD, 3710 eng. hrs., front wgt., CVT 43 mph trans, 4 remotes, 70% tire tread, HD drawbar, 3 pt., air susp. seat, ABS brake system, trailer air brake connection, Cummins eng. #16388 - $116,500

‘12 CIH 6130, 562 eng. hrs., 42” duals, (6) HID lighting, electric grain tank cover. #16466 - $210,000

‘09 CIH 7120, 1619 eng./1141 sep. hrs., axle ext., AFS antenna, (6) HID lighting, 24” unloading auger, rock trap, AFS Pro 600 color touch screen display, 30” platform ext., adj. steer axle. #13988 - $180,000

‘09 CIH 5088, 754 eng. hrs., axle ext., AFS yield/moisture monitor w/display, (6) HID lighting, 2spd feeder house, lateral header feeder house tilt syst., rock trap, elec. adj. sieve. #14322 - $169,995

‘98 CIH 2366, 3582 eng. hrs., Hillco header tilt syst. #16291 - $79,500

‘95 CIH 2188, 5002 eng./3587 sep. hrs., 505 C.I.D. eng., 210 bu grain tank cap., 260 hp. eng., chaff spreader, feeder house field tracker, rock trap, specialty rotor, Y&M monitor. #10848 - $49,995

‘13 JD S670, 475 eng. hrs., Aspiration turbo eng., 9.0L C.I.D. eng., 6-cyl. eng., 4 tier eng., 373 hp. eng., Greenstar 3 monitor/GPS, HID lighting, 300 bu. grain tank cap., Auto Trac complete. #13333 - $329,995

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

<< www.TheLandOnline.com >>

– USED EQUIPMENT – TRACTORS

2013 2011 2010 2010 2010 2010 2007 2010 2012 2011 2011 2008

Case IH Farmall 110A, #14264 ..............................$51,500 Case IH Farmall 95 w/loader, #16470 ..................$48,500 John Deere 8320R, #14143 ................................$183,500 John Deere 8320R, #14144 ................................$183,500 John Deere 8320R, #14145 ................................$189,950 John Deere 8320R, #14147 ................................$184,000 New Holland T6010 Plus w/ldr, #14205 ................$58,500 New Holland Workmaster 55 ldr, #14265 ............$22,800 Case IH Maxxum 140 MC w/loader, #14297 ......$113,750 Case IH Magnum 235, #14302 ............................$168,900 Case IH Puma 185, #16211 ................................$118,500 New Holland T8040, Pending ..............................$149,000

2009 2011 2009 2010 2010

Case IH Steiger 435, #13325 ..............................$195,500 Case IH Steiger 550, #14073 ..............................$300,000 JCB 8250 Factrac, #16388 ..................................$116,500 John Deere 8320RT, #13317................................$212,000 John Deere 9430T, #13295 ..................................$268,500

TRACTORS 4WD

2003 2002 2008 2007 1994 2013 2013 2010 2013 2010 2008 2010 2008 2009 2002 2011 1991 2004 2001

2009 TRACK LOADERS 2007 Case 440CT, #12888 ..............................................$31,900 2012 2007 Case 440CT, #13356 ..............................................$33,000 2011 2007 PLANTERS 2010 2011 Case IH 1250, #13360..........................................$102,500 2009 2009 Case IH 1250, 16R, #14052 ..................................$92,995 2009 2007 Case IH 1240, 16R, #12760 ..................................$89,995 2011 2007 John Deere DB90, 36RN/30, #14266 ..................$146,000 2009 Kinze 3600, 16/31, #14286..............................................$99,800 2009 Kinze 3600, 16RN, #14308..............................................$89,800 2009 1998 Case IH 955, #13315..............................................$15,995 2009 2011 Agco White 8824, #13357....................................$119,800 2010 COMBINES 2009 2003 Case IH 2388, #8914 ............................................$119,000 2010 2000 Case IH 2366, #14217 ............................................$78,500 2011 1995 Case IH 2188, #10848............................................$49,995 2008 2009 Case IH 5088, #12469..........................................$159,500 2012 2009 Case IH 7120, #13988..........................................$180,000 2004 2009 Case IH 5088, #14322 ..........................................$169,995 2009 2004 Case IH 2388, #13508..........................................$105,000 2011 2011 Case IH 7088, #14084..........................................$218,950 2013 2012 Case IH 8230, #13260 ..........................................$298,000 2013 2012 Case IH 6130, #16446..........................................$210,000 2009 John Deere 9770STS, #14177 ............................$216,500 2011 2010 Case IH 5088, #16254..........................................$188,500 2012 1998 Case IH 2366 w/Hillco, #16291 ............................$79,500 2012 1997 Case IH 2188, #16239............................................$39,995 2012

Case IH 2388, #14203............................................$87,000 Case IH 2388, #13311..........................................$107,500 Case IH 7010, #14215..........................................$172,000 Case IH 2577, #16307..........................................$127,500 Case IH 1644, #13302............................................$31,500 John Deere S670H, #13331 ................................$329,995 John Deere S670, #13333....................................$329,995

2007 Case 430, #16438 ..................................................$21,995 2007 Case 430, #13312 ..................................................$17,850 2011 Case IH SR250, #14267 ........................................$36,950 2002 Case 90XT, #13363 ................................................$21,000 2002 Case 60XT, #16485 ..................................................$8,550 1997 Case 1845C, #16462 ................................................$6,800 2011 New Holland L220, #16132....................................$29,900 2008 Case 440 S3, #13246 ............................................$19,500 BEAN HEADS John Deere 635F, #13322 ......................................$35,900 2011 Case SV300, #13288 ..............................................$38,950 Case IH 2606, #16436............................................$52,760 2012 JCB 300, side entry, #14301..................................$47,800 BALERS Case IH 2020-30F, #13501 ....................................$34,500 Case IH 2020-35F, #13130 ....................................$25,995 2008 Case IH RB564 Round Baler, #12932 ..................$28,995 Case IH 2020-30F, #12276 ....................................$21,715 MOWER CONDITIONERS Case IH 2020-30F, #13101 ....................................$23,900 2011 New Holland H7230, #16399 ................................$21,900 Case IH 2020-30, #8961 ........................................$22,500 2007 New Holland 499, #14336......................................$13,500 Case IH 1020-30F, #13263 ....................................$16,995 2009 Case IH DC132, Pending ......................................$26,250 Case IH 3020-25, #16081 ......................................$26,400 2011 Case IH DC102, #13204 ........................................$21,500 Case IH 1020-20F, #13273 ......................................$4,450 2005 Case IH DCX131, #16430 ......................................$15,995 Case IH 1020-30F, #14155 ....................................$17,850 MOWER/ROTARY CUTTERS Case IH 1020-30F, #16308 ....................................$13,995 2013 Rhino Implement FR180, #14281 ..........................$17,000 CORN HEADS John Deere CX20, #14212 ..............................................$14,500 Case IH 2608, #14216............................................$49,995 GRAIN CARTS John Deere 608C, #14178 ....................................$72,500 Case IH 3406, #16255 ............................................$35,500 Parker 614 Series II, #14321 ............................................$8,100 Case IH 2606, #13235............................................$36,995 2013 Brent GCB782-750BU-RED, #13680 ....................$32,000 GRAVITY BOXES Case IH 3406, #12944............................................$32,000 Case IH 2608, #16079............................................$52,500 2013 Brent GT757-750BU-RED, #13676........................$21,420 Case IH 3208, #14076............................................$35,995 2013 Brent GT757-750BU-RED, #13677........................$21,420 Case IH 3406, #14059............................................$35,995 Brent 644, #14078 ..........................................................$14,350 Case IH 2608, #13238............................................$44,500 DISK TANDEMS Case IH 3208, #13256............................................$34,995 2010 Case IH True-Tandem 330 Turbo, 25’, #14092 ....$48,750 Case IH 3206, #13359............................................$34,250 2009 Case IH True-Tandem 330 Turbo, 25’, #16129 ....$39,995 Case IH 2608, #13596............................................$44,000 FIELD CULTIVATORS Case IH 3408, #13565............................................$43,500 2010 John Deere 2210-31’6”, #16410 ............................$31,995 Case IH 2606, #13635............................................$41,995 Case IH Tigermate II-44.5’, #16379................................$39,900 Case IH 3406, #13171............................................$34,995 1992 DMI Tigermate-30’, #14260 ..................................$16,900 Case IH 2606, #13639............................................$49,995 2006 DMI Tigermate II-31.5’, #16440 ............................$24,995 Case IH 2606, #14219............................................$41,000 TELEHANDLERS Case IH 2608, #14228............................................$67,500 Case IH 2208, #14221............................................$29,000 2010 JCB 527-55, #14318 ..............................................$63,500 Case IH 3206, #13304 ............................................$33,900 2005 JCB 535-60, #16179 ..............................................$52,000 Case IH 3408, #13324 ............................................$44,500 2007 JCB 536-60 Agri Plus, #16074 ..............................$55,000 John Deere 608C, #13330 ....................................$74,500 2013 JCB TM 320 Articulated, Pending ......................$118,995 Drago N-12, #13316 ..............................................$84,500 2011 New Holland LM5060 Plus, #13365 ......................$54,500 Case Case Case Case

SKIDSTEER LOADERS

MISCELLANEOUS

SR220, #13327..............................................$33,400 2004 Gehl 521T Wheel Loader, #16366 ........................$35,900 LOW RATE FINANCING AVAILABLE SV300, #14141 ..............................................$52,920 SV300, #16267 ..............................................$41,995 thru Call For Details SV185, #14280 ..............................................$34,000

WINDRIDGE IMPLEMENTS, LLC CRESCO, IA • 563-547-3688

DECORAH, IA • 563-382-3614

ELKADER, IA • 563-245-2636

Full inventory listing & details, Go To: www.windridgeimplements.com


4WD & TRACK TRACTORS

ANYWHERE We buy damaged corn and grain any condition - wet or dry TOP DOLLAR We have vacs and trucks CALL HEIDI OR LARRY

NORTHERN AG SERVICE INC 800-205-5751

TILLAGE

Sunflower 4630, 11-shank, Demo ..................CALL Sunflower 4412-07, 7-shank ......................$29,500 Wilrich 957, 7-shank ....................................$18,500 Wilrich 513, 5-shank, Demo............................CALL ‘09 Wilrich QX2, 55.5’ w/bskt. ....................$54,500 ‘12 JD 3710, 10 bottom ..............................$52,500 ‘08 JD 3710, 10 bottom ..............................$34,500 CIH 4900, 46.5’ ............................................$12,500 ‘08 JD 2210, 44.5’ w/3-bar ..........................$38,900

SKIDSTEERS

NEW NH skidsteers on hand ..........................CALL NH LS170 ....................................................$13,750 NH L170 cab, New Rubber ............................CALL

PLANTERS

COMBINES

NEW Fantini chopping cornhead ..................CALL (2) Fantini pre-owned 8-30 chopping CH ......CALL ‘11 Gleaner S77 ..............................................CALL ‘10 Gleaner R76, Loaded ..........................$235,000 ‘03 Gleaner R75, Loaded ..........................$129,500 ‘01 Gleaner R72, Just Thru Shop ............$110,000 ‘00 Gleaner R72 ..........................................$78,000 ‘90 Gleaner R60 w/duals ............................$24,500 Gleaner F3 w/15’ platform and 430 & 438 CH, Nice ..........................................................$12,900

HAY TOOLS

New Hesston & NH Hay Tools On Hand

MISCELLANEOUS

NEW Salford RTS units ..................................CALL NEW Salford Plows ........................................CALL NEW Unverferth seed tenders ................ON HAND NEW Westfield augers ....................................CALL NEW Rem 2700 vac ........................................CALL NEW Hardi sprayers ........................................CALL NEW Riteway rollers........................................CALL NEW Lorenz snowblowers ..............................CALL NEW Batco conveyors ....................................CALL NEW Brent wagons & grain carts ..................CALL NEW E-Z Trail seed wagons ..........................CALL NEW rock buckets & pallet forks .................. CALL REM 2700, Rental............................................CALL Unverferth 8000 grain cart ..............................CALL Kinze 1050 w/duals ........................................CALL Pre-owned Snowblowers, 7’-9’ ......................CALL Pre-owned Sprayers........................................CALL

(DMI Parts Available)

SMITHS MILL IMPLEMENT Hwy. 14, 3 miles West of Janesville, MN

Phone (507) 234-5191 or (507) 625-8649 Mon. - Fri. 7:30-5:00, Sat. 7:30-Noon www.smithsmillimp.com

ROW CROP TRACTORS ‘11 JD 8335R, MFWD, 1777 hrs., ILS, IVT trans., 4 hyd., big pump, front wgts., 18.4x50 tires & duals ......................................$187,500 ‘11 JD 8285R, MFWD, 1214 hrs., powershift, 4 hyd., big pump, 18.4x46 tires & duals ......$165,000 ‘13 JD 6190R, 585 hrs., Premium cab, 3 pt., 540/1000 PTO, IVT trans., 18.4x46 tires & duals ......................................$125,000 ‘13 JD 7200R, MFWD, IVT trans., 540/1000 PTO, 3 pt., 3 hyd., 710x38 rear tires ............$132,000 ‘12 CIH Magnum 260, MFWD, 525 hrs., 540/1000 PTO, 4 hyd., big pump, complete auto guidance setup, 420x46 tires & duals ......................................$149,000 ‘08 JD 8430, MFWD, 4468 hrs., 3 pt., 1000 PTO, 4 hyd., big pump, front wgts., 480x50 tires & duals ......................................$120,000 ‘13 CIH 340, 40 hrs., Deluxe cab, 5 hyd. big pump, 540/1000 PTO,

‘12 JD S690, 6905 eng./571 sep. hrs., 4x4, 650x38” Michelin tires & duals, Clean, Well Equipped ......................................$260,000 ‘11 JD 9670, 1160 eng./736 sep. hrs., Contour Master, chopper, SLS shoe, 20.8x38 duals $165,000 ‘11 CIH 8120, 934 eng./729 sep. hrs., rock trap, chopper, tracker, 520x42” duals ....$189,000 ‘11 CIH 7120, 871 eng./732 sep. hrs., Luxury cab, rock trap, tracker, chopper, 520x42 tires & duals ................................$188,500 ‘87 CIH 1640, 3468 hrs., rock trap, auto header controls, 24.5x32 tires ........................................$18,500 ‘09 JD 9870STS, 1895 eng./1233 sep. hrs., Premier Cab, Pro-drive, 5 spd. Feederhouse, CM, 520x42” duals, 28L-26 rears ........$145,000 ‘09 CIH 7088, 1193 eng./895 sep. hrs., tracker, chopper, rock trap, 30.5x32 tires ..$142,000 ‘11 JD 9770, 880 eng./613 sep. hrs., CM, 5 spd. feederhouse, Pro-drive, chopper, 520x42 tires & duals ............................$189,000 ‘08 JD 9770, 1380 eng./938 sep. hrs., 4x4, CM, chopper, 1250/45/32 tires ..............$155,000 ‘98 JD 9610, 3578 eng./2379 sep. hrs., chopper, bin ext., 20.8x42 duals ....................$49,000

LARSON IMPLEMENTS 5 miles east of Cambridge, MN on Hwy. 95 763-689-1179

Look at our Web site for pictures & more listings www.larsonimplements.com

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

NEW White planters ........................................CALL ‘11 White 8516 CFS, Loaded ......................$97,500 ‘10 White 8186, 16-30 w/3 bu. ..................COMING White 6222, 12-30, front fold ......................$29,500 White 6186, 16-30 w/ins..............................$21,500 White 6122, 12-30........................................$16,500

White 6100, 12-30 w/twin row ....................$18,500 ‘09 JD 1790, 24-20” w/liq. Esets 20-20 ....COMING

COMBINES

<< www.TheLandOnline.com >>

USED TRACTORS

NEW NH T9.565, 4WD ....................................CALL NEW NH T9.505, 4WD ....................................CALL NEW NH T8.300, FWA ....................................CALL NEW NH T7.200, FWA ....................................CALL NEW Massey 8670, FWA ................................CALL NEW Massey 7620, FWA ................................CALL NEW Massey 6615, FWA ................................CALL NEW Versatile 450, 4WD ................................CALL NEW Versatile 310, FWA ................................CALL NEW Versatile 305, FWA ................................CALL NH TV6070 bi-directional ............................$95,000 Versatile 895, 4WD ......................................$21,500

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

DAMAGED GRAIN WANTED

‘12 JD 9560RT, 799 hrs., 36” tracks, 1000 PTO, 5 hyd. hi-flow $269,000 ‘12 Cat 865C, 992 hrs., 36” tracks, 5 hyd., hyd. swing draw bar, HID lights ........................$250,000 ‘12 JD 9560R, cab, powershift, 808 hrs., 4 hyd., Michelin 800x38 tires & duals ....................$250,500 ‘11 JD 8360RT, 1101 hrs., 16” tracks, 1000 PTO, 3 pt., 5 hyd., big pump, front wgts. ......$220,000 ‘11 JD 8360RT, 1167 hrs., ultra wide stance up to 160”, 16” tracks, 5 hyd., big pump, 3 pt., 1000 PTO, front wgts. ......................................$220,000 ‘12 CIH Steiger 400HD, 298 hrs., power shift, 3 pt. hitch, 1000 PTO, 480x50 duals, diff. lock ..$225,000 ‘12 CIH Steiger 400, 318 hrs., power shift, 4 hyd., big pump, 520x46 tires & duals ......$195,000 ‘09 Versatile 485, 1704 hrs., 4 hyd., 12-spd., manual front & rear wgts., 800x38 tires & duals 80% ................................$155,000 ‘93 JD 8570, 6682 hrs., 12-spd., 3 hyds., 18.4x38 tires & duals ........................................$39,000

complete Auto Guidance system, 35 380x54” duals, 380x38 front tire duals ................................$189,000 ‘09 CIH Magnum 275, MFWD, 2380 hrs., 4 hyd., 540/1000 PTO, 280x54 duals, front duals $110,000 ‘07 CIH Magnum 245, MFWD, 3050 hrs., 3 pt., 540/1000 PTO, 4 hyd., 420x46 tires & duals ......................................$100,000 ‘07 CIH Magnum 245, MFWD, 4090 hrs., 3 pt., 540/1000 PTO, 4 hyd., 420x46 rear tires w/18.4x42” duals ..............$92,000 ‘06 CIH MX245, MFWD, 4975 hrs., 3 pt., 540/1000 PTO, 14.9x46” tires & duals ......................$82,000 ‘80 Ford TW20, 2WD, 8075 hrs., cab, air, 3 pt., 540/1000 PTO, 2 hyd., 18.4x38 tires, 10 front wgts...................................$16,500


THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

36 1907 E. Main. Albert Lea, MN 56007 www.westrumtruck.com

-Day Cabs-

Misc.Equipment:

BALZER BUILDS THE BEST LIQUID MANURE HANDLING EQUUPMENT

Balzer Express Tank

<< www.TheLandOnline.com >>

• 1/4” Uni-body Construction • 5” and 6” Solid Steel Spindles in Sleeves • Long Tongue and PTO • 5,000, 6,000 and 6,750 gallon sizes available

V-Pump • Up to 4000 gallons per minute The most durable and dependable high capacity pump available.

VISIT OUR WEBSITE: www.burns-sales.com New Tanks & Pumps: Any Size Available

Other

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

- Doda 13’ vertical pump - Balzer 8’ V-6 vertical manure pump - Balzer 314 agitator - 8”x30’ wheeled load stand

- Hardi 1500 gal. w/90’ boom - Fast 9430 1250 gal., 80’ boom, Raven 450 monitor - Top Air 1100 gal., 88’ boom, Raven 150 monitor - Top Air 1100 gal., 60’ boom - Demco Conquest 1100 gal., 60’ boom, Raven 440 monitor - Redball 665, 1000 gal., 60’ x-fold boom - AgChem 750 gal., 60’ x-fold boom - Walsh 500 gal., 45’ boom - M&W center dump, 400 bu. gravity wagon - Brent 640 gravity wagon - Demco 550 gravity wagon - (2) Brent 540 gravity wagons - Parker 4800 - New Balzer 20’ stalk chopper - New Balzer 15’ stalk chopper - Hiniker Model 1700, 20’ stalk chopper - Alloway semi-mount 20’ stalk chopper - Balzer 20’ BT stalk chopper - Balzer 1500, 15’ stalk chopper - JD 7830, MFWD, 1689 hrs. - JD 7800, 2WD, w/2047 hrs. - JD 9530T, 2730 hrs. - JD 8120, MFWD, 1997 hrs. - NH 9282 w/3704 hrs. - JD 4555, MFWD w/950 hrs. - JD 4455, MFWD, 2918 one-owner hrs. - Shulte hyd. drive rock picker - JD 724, 29’ soil finisher - Glencoe 16’ soil finisher, new 3 pt., 10’ mounted blade - DMI Coulter Champ II, 9-shank - JD VanBrunt 13’ end wheel drill - NEW Lee Model 475 fuel trailer - H&S 175 manure spreader - Kewanee Model 760, 141⁄2’ rock flex disk - Kewanee Model 740, 151⁄2’ rock flex disk - Brady Model 1000, 12-shank, 3 pt. chisel plow - Glencoe 9-shank soil saver - Big Dog pull type 8 yd. hyd. scraper - DMI 530B Econo disk ripper - JD 3710, 10 bottom flex frame moldboard plow - Clark C-30-B forklift - CIH Model 4600, 31’ field cult. - Roose 6x12’ hog cart

Used Tanks:

• Better Bilt 3400 gal. vacuum tank, w/4 unit rear mount injector • LMT 3350 vacuum w/3 shank rear injector • Balzer 2600 vacuum tank • Better Bilt 2300 vacuum tank • Better Bilt 1500 gal. vacuum tank • Better Bilt 1100 gal. vacuum tank

‘05 Freightliner, Cat power ..................Call ‘98 Volvo, Cummins, wet kit ................Call ‘94 IH single axle tractor, w/tandem trailer ..........................................$15,900 ‘80 Timpte hopper ..........................$8,500 ‘91 IH single axle dump box ..........$6,900

-Trailers-

‘15 Dakota AL, 38’ ................................Call ‘15 Dakota AL, 41’ ................................Call ‘00 40’ steel trailer ................................Call

507-383-8976 Cell 507-373-4218 • 507-448-3306 • 5/8” drum roller wall thickness • 42” drum diameter • 4”x8” frame tubing 3/8” thick • Auto fold

MANDAKO

FOR THE BEST DEAL ORDER NOW!

12’-60’ LONG ROLLERS

GREENWALD FARM CENTER Greenwald, MN • 320-987-3177 14 miles So. of Sauk Centre

~ NEW EQUIPMENT/BIG INVENTORY ~

Notch Equipment: • Rock Buckets • Grapple Forks • Manure Forks • Bale Spears • Hi-Volume Buckets & Pallet Forks • Bale Transports & Feeder Wagons, 16’-34’ • Adult & Young Stock Feeders & Bale Feeders • Land Levelers Smidley Equipment: • Steer Stuffers • Hog Feeders • Hog Huts • Calf Creep Feeders • Lamb & Sheep Feeders • Cattle & Hog Waterers • Mini Scale Sioux Equipment: • Gates • Calving Pens • Haymax Bale Feeders • Cattle & Feeder Panels • Head Gates • Hog Feeders • Sqz. Chutes & Tubs • Calf Warmer JBM Equipment: • Feeder Wagons - Several Models • Self-locking Head Gates • Self-locking Bunk Feeders • Tombstone Horse & Horned Cattle Feeders • Skid Feeders • BunkFeeders • Bale Wagons • Bale Thrower Racks • Flat Racks for big sq. bales • Self-locking Feeder Wagons • Fenceline Feeders • Several Types of Bale Feeders • Port-A-Hut Shelters (Many Sizes) • Bergman Cattle Feeders – Special Prices

~ USED EQUIPMENT ~

• Grasshopper 227, 61” deck, 15 hrs., Demo • Bergman Cattle Special Grasshopper 620Feeders ZT, 48” –fold deck,Prices 140 hrs.! • 9x16 Bale Rack • Smidley Hog & Cattle Feeders • 3-4 yd. Soil Scraper • MF 3 pt. pitmanless 7’ mower • 12x21 Porta Hut w/door • Bale Baskets • New Idea 213 Spreader, Very Good

• GT (Tox-O-Wic) Grain Dryers, 350-800 bu. EARLY ORDER DISCOUNTS NOW IN EFFECT! • Parts for GT Tox-O-Wic Grain Dryers • Sheep & Calf Feeders • Livestock Equipment by Vern’s Mfg. • Mister Squeeze Cattle Chutes & Hd. Gates • Peck Grain Augers – Big Discounts • MDS Buckets for Loaders & Skidloaders • Powder River Livestock & Horse Equipment • Tire Scrapers for Skidsteers, 6’-9’ • EZ Trail Wagons & Boxes • EZ Trail Bale Baskets, • MDS Roto King Round Bale Processor • Sitrex Wheel Rakes • Bale Baskets • SI Feeders, Wagons & Bunks • (Hayhopper) Bale Feeders • Calftel Hutches & Animal Barns • R&C Poly Bale Feeders • Amish Built Oak Bunk Feeders & Bale Racks • Goat & Sheep Feeders • Mist Sprayers, gas or PTO • 3 Pt. Fence Mowers • Fainting goats & min. donkeys

DR® POWER EQUIPMENT • Field & Brush Mowers • Roto-Hog Power Tillers • Stump Grinders • Log Splitters • Chippers • Power Graders • Power Wagons • Leaf & Lawn Vacuums • Versa-trailers

Wanted to Buy:

• Green Choppers • Hog & Cattle Scales • Good Smaller Manure Spreaders • Cattle & Calf Feeders, Hog Feeders • Cattle Handling Equipment

FARM, HOME & CONSTRUCTION

Office Location - 305 Adams Street Hutchinson, MN 55350

320-587-2162, Ask for Larry


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‘12 CIH Steiger 600Q, 1300 hrs., 36” tracks, PTO ..................$324,500

‘01 JD 9400, 3542 hrs., 425 hp. ............................................$115,000

‘08 CIH Steiger 485, 3216 hrs. ............................................$149,900

‘09 CIH 3330, 1750 hrs., 100’ boom ............................................$183,000

‘13 CIH 3330, 546 hrs., 90’ boom ............................................$210,000

‘12 CIH 4430, 880 hrs., 120’ boom ............................................$287,500

‘13 CIH Puma 145, 258 hrs., 125 PTO hp., with loader ....$105,900

‘00 CIH MX220, 3600 hrs................... ..............................................$79,500

‘87 Steiger Cougar 1000, 280 hp., PS, 8455 hrs. ........................$39,500

‘12 CIH Puma 160 CVT, 356 hrs., with loader ......................$114,900

Set For 20” Rows

‘13 CIH Steiger 350, 555 hrs., Bareback ............................$179,900

‘09 CIH Magnum 305, 3119 hrs., full Pro 600 auto steer, loaded ..$135,500

‘14 CIH Steiger 350 Row Track, 16” track, Lux. cab, PTO......$275,000

USED 4WD TRACTORS

USED COMBINES

Interest Waiver Available Thru Case Credit* • Call For Details

‘14 CIH Steiger 350 RCQ, 16” tracks, Lux. cab, PTO, set to track 20” rows, Auto Steer Rental Return ......$275,000 CIH Steiger 600Q, 1300 hrs., Lux. cab, PTO ..................................................................................................$324,500 CIH Steiger 600Q, 800 hrs...........................................................................................................................COMING IN ‘13 CIH Steiger 550Q, 715 hrs., Lux. cab, HID lites ......................................................................................$329,900 ‘08 CIH Steiger 535Q, 2762 hrs., Lux. cab, HID lites, HD scraper drawbar, HD hyd. pump ..........................$199,500 ‘02 CIH STX450 Quad, 3900 hrs., 5 hyd. valves, 1000 PTO, Trimble auto steer............................................$165,000 ‘13 CIH Steiger 350, 555 hrs., Bareback ......................................................................................................$179,900 ‘08 CIH Steiger 485, 3600 hrs, Lux. cab ......................................................................................................$149,900 ‘08 CIH Steiger 485, 3216 hrs, Lux. cab........................................................................................................$149,900 ‘01 JD 9400, 3542 hrs., 710/70R42 tires ......................................................................................................$115,000 Steiger Cougar 1000, powershift, 20.8x38 tires ............................................................................................$39,500

‘13 CIH 9230, 323 sep. hrs., track drive, RWA, HID lites ....................................................................$369,900 ‘11 CIH 7120, 579 sep. hrs., duals, HID lites, Lux. cab ......................................................................$239,900 ‘10 CIH 6088, 694 sep hrs., ................................................................................................................$185,000 ‘06 CIH 8010, 1223 sep. hrs., duals ....................................................................................................$129,900 ‘95 CIH 2188......................................................................................................................................COMING IN ‘13 CIH 2612, New 12-row chopping cornhead ....................................................................................$99,000 ‘13 CIH 2608, 8R30” chopping cornhead ..............................................................................................$64,500 ‘13 CIH 2608, 8R30” chopping cornhead ..............................................................................................$64,500 ‘13 CIH 3408, New 8R30” cornhead............................................................................................................CALL ‘12 CIH 3408, 8R30” cornhead ..............................................................................................................$44,900 ‘89 CIH 1083, 8R30” ................................................................................................................................$7,900 ‘10 CIH 2020, 25’ platform w/Crary air reel ..........................................................................................$26,800 ‘04 CIH 1020, 30’, 3” knife, rock guard ................................................................................................$12,900 ‘04 CIH 1020, 30’ 3” knife, rock guard ..................................................................................................$12,900

USED 2WD TRACTORS

‘13 CIH Puma 160 CVT, 110 hrs. ........................................$122,900

12 Months Interest Free • Call For Details • ‘13 CIH Magnum 235, 337 hrs., susp. Lux. cab, full Pro 700 auto guide, hi cap. hyd. pump, 360 HID lites $169,900 ‘11 CIH Magnum 235, 1000 hrs., Lux. susp. cab, front & rear duals..........................................................COMING IN ‘09 CIH Magnum 305, 3120 hrs., Lux. cab, susp. front axle, HID lites..........................................................$135,500 ‘13 CIH Puma 160, 250 hrs., powershift trans., L765 loader, w/grapple ......................................................$117,900 ‘12 CIH Puma 160, 356 hrs., CVT trans., L765 loader, susp. axle, w/grapple................................................$114,900 ‘12 CIH Puma 160, 569 hrs., CVT trans., susp. axle, 320x50 tires, w/loader, w/grapple ..............................$113,900 ‘13 CIH Puma 145, 258 hrs., powershift trans., susp. axle, w/loader ..........................................................$105,900 ‘00 CIH MX220, 3600 hrs.............................................................................................................................COMING IN ‘14 CIH Farmall 105C, MFD, cab, power shuttle, w/loader, Rental Return Unit ..............................................$55,500

USED SPRAYERS

‘12 CIH 4330, 880 hrs., 120’ boom, aim, auto boom, Pro 700 steering, active suspension................$287,500 ‘09 CIH 3330, 1750 hrs., 100’ boom, aim, auto boom, Pro 700 steering, active suspension..............$183,000 ‘12 CIH 3330, 546 hrs, 90’ boom, standard spray ..............................................................................`$210,000

‘12 CIH Puma 160 CVT, with loader, 320R50 tires ....................$113,900

<< www.TheLandOnline.com >>

12 Month Interest Waiver or Low Rates Available • Call Details •

STX and STEIGER PTO, TOW CABLE & 3 PT. KITS ON HAND!!!

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

‘13 CIH Steiger 550Q, 715 hrs., Lux. cab, HID lights, loaded ........$326,000

LOW RATE FINANCING AVAILABLE thru ‘13 CIH Magnum 235, 337 hrs., full Pro 700 auto steer ........$169,900

‘11 CIH Magnum 235, 1074 hrs., Lux. cab ..............................$144,500

‘11 CIH 7120, 579 sep. hrs. ............................................$239,900

‘06 CIH 8010, 1223 sep. hrs. ............................................$129,900

‘13 CIH 9230, 323 sep. hrs., tracks, RWA ....................................$369,900

‘06 Kinze 1050 Cart, tracks, scale, trap ........................................$77,500

Call For Details

‘11 Bobcat S-750, joystick control ..............................................$41,900

‘12 Bobcat T190 Track, 1140 hrs., cab w/AC ..............................$34,900

‘11 Bobcat T190 Track, loader, roller suspension ............................$34,900

‘04 Bobcat T300 Track, loader 3382 hrs. ..............................$29,900

‘14 Leon 10 yard scraper ..............................................$24,000

‘13 Ashland I-130 scraper ..............................................$39,000

‘12 Ashland I-950 scraper ..............................................$29,500

©2014 CNH Capital America LLC. All rights reserved. CNH Capital and Case IH are registered trademarks of CNH America LLC. Printed in the USA.

Herb

www.matejcek.com

Paul

Blake

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

I-35 & Highway 60 West • Faribault, MN • 507-334-2233 CNH Capital’s Commercial Revolving Account provides financial assistance for parts and service when you need it, keeping your equipment running as its best with the quality parts and service you’ve come to expect from Case IH. Contact your local dealer or visit www.cnhcapital.com today for details.


THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

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(OW)

‘12 JD 9460R, 358 Hrs., PS, 710/42’s............................$278,500

‘10 JD 9630T, 1589 Hrs., Auto Trak ready ..............$269,900

‘11 JD 4930, 1725 Hrs., 1200 Gal. SS, 120’ SS Boom ..........$229,500

Tractors

<< www.TheLandOnline.com >>

4WD Tractors

(N) ‘13 JD 9560R, 172 hrs........................................$346,500 (N) ‘13 JD 9560R, 218 hrs........................................$346,500 (OW) ‘13 JD 9560R, 606 hrs, ext. warranty ............$304,900 (OW) ‘12 JD 9560R, 579 hrs, ext. warranty ............$285,900 (B) ‘12 JD 9560R, 840 hrs........................................$288,900 (OW) ‘13 JD 9510R, 450 hrs, lease return ..............$284,500 (OS) ‘12 JD 9460R, 358 hrs ....................................$278,500 (OW) ‘13 JD 9410R, 435 hrs, lease return ..............$269,900 ‘12 JD 8260R, 357 Hrs., (OW) ‘09 JD 9530, 2538 hrs, 800/38’s ....................$214,900 ILS, PS ............................$216,500 (B) ‘97 JD 9200, 4695 hrs, 710/38’s ........................$105,000 (OW) ‘98 JD 9200, 3963 hrs, 20.8x42’s ....................$96,900 (OS) ‘01 JD 9100, 3100 hrs, 20.8x38’s ......................$95,000 (N) ‘97 JD 9400, 4888 hrs, 710/70R38’s ....................$95,000 (B) ‘00 JD 9100, 4802 hrs, 20.8x42............................$79,900 (H) ‘97 JD 8770, 5640 hrs, 20.8x42’s ........................$59,500 (OS) ‘90 JD 8760, 4906 hrs........................................$56,500 (B) ‘92 JD 8760, 6878 hrs ..........................................$52,900 (OS) ‘89 JD 8760, 6915 hrs........................................$52,000

Track Tractors

(OS) ‘10 JD 9650T, 930 hrs ......................................$315,000 (OW) ‘12 JD 9460RT, 1099 hrs, ext warranty ..........$299,900 ‘13 JD 8335RT, 540 Hrs., (OW) ‘11 JD 9630T, 1472 hrs ..................................$288,900 18” Tracks, Leather ........$269,900 (OW) ‘13 JD 8335RT, 391 hrs, 18” tracks................$269,900 (B) ‘10 JD 9630T, 1675 hrs ......................................$269,900 (B) ‘09 JD 9630T, 1482 hrs ......................................$264,900 (H) ‘13 JD 8335RT, 606 hrs, 18” tracks ..................$259,900 (H) ‘11 JD 9530T, 1545 hrs ......................................$254,900 (B) ‘07 JD 8430T, 3170 hrs, 18” tracks ....................$170,000 (OS) ‘06 JD 8430T, 3062 hrs, 18” tracks ................$165,000 (OW) ‘07 JD 8430T, 3292 hrs, 25” tracks ................$159,900 (H) ‘06 JD 9520T, 3808 hrs ......................................$149,900 (B) ‘97 JD 8200T, 5280 hrs, 16” tracks ......................$62,900

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

Row Crop Tractors

(OS) ‘13 JD 8310R, power shift ..............................$255,000 ‘11 JD 568, Surface Wrap (OS) ‘10 JD 8320R, 1907 hrs, ILS, PS ....................$225,000 ............................................$32,500 (N) ‘12 JD 8260R, 485 hrs, ILS, PS..........................$216,500 (N) ‘12 JD 7260R, 300 hrs, IVT ................................$185,000 (OS) ‘12 JD 7215R, 295 hrs, IVT ..............................$172,500 (OS) ‘13 JD 7200R, 200 hrs, IVT ..............................$169,900 (N) ‘13 JD 7200R, 200 hrs, IVT ................................$169,900 (OS) ‘11 JD 7215R, 760 hrs, IVT ..............................$167,000 (OS) ‘12 JD 7200R, 135 hrs, IVT ..............................$162,500 (OW) ‘13 JD 6150R, 669 hrs, IVT ............................$131,900 (OW) ‘09 JD 7830, 1274 hrs, 2WD, Auto Quad ......$114,900 (OS) ‘97 JD 8200, 7800 hrs, MFWD, PS ....................$75,000 (H) ‘90 JD 4755, 5500 hrs, 2WD, PS..........................$57,500 (OW) ‘13 JD 6105D, 202 hrs., Lease Return..............$54,900 (OS) ‘00 JD 7410, 6342 hrs, Power Quad..................$49,500 ‘12 JD S680, 513 eng. hrs, 650/38’s ......................$345,000 (OW) ‘85 JD 4450, 11,000 hrs, 2WD, loader ............$39,500 (B) ‘90 Ford TW-35, 3905 hrs., MFWD ......................$29,900 (OW) ‘79 JD 4440, 8052 hrs, Quad............................$25,900 (OW) ‘80 JD 4840, 7850 hrs.......................................$25,250 (OW) ‘71 JD 4320, 6380 hrs, cab, Syncro ................$15,500 (OW) ‘76 IH 1586, 5178 hrs, 18.4R38 ........................$11,900 (N) ‘67 JD 4520, 6330 hrs, Syncro ..............................$9,995 (OW) ‘75 Case 1070, 4924 hrs, 20.8x38......................$9,000

Utility Tractors

(OW) ‘09 JD 5105M, 1600 hrs, loader ......................$67,900 (OS) ‘11 JD 6330, 625 hrs, OS, loader ......................$65,000 (OW) ‘04 JD 6420, 5136 hrs, loader ..........................$56,000 ‘06 JD 9760, 2337 eng hrs, PRWD (OW) ‘13 JD 6105D, 202 hrs, Lease Return ..............$54,900 ..........................................$154,900 (B) ‘12 JD 5085M, 427 hrs, MFWD ............................$51,900

‘12 JD 4830, 1155 Hrs., Boom ...... ..........................................$235,750

‘12 JD 4730, 1065 Hrs., 800 Gal. SS, 90’ Boom ..................$208,500

(OS) ‘12 JD 5075E, 2012 hrs, MFWD, OS ................$29,500 (N) ‘12 JD 5075E, 63 hrs, MFWD, OS........................$29,250 (OS) ‘13 JD 5065E, 300 hrs, MFWD ..........................$28,500 (OS) ‘13 JD 5065E, MFWD ........................................$26,500 (OS) ‘13 JD 5064E, MFWD ........................................$26,500 (OW) ‘96 White 6105, 5480 hrs, MFWD, cab ............$24,900 (N) ‘12 JD 5065E, 138 hrs, MFWD, OS......................$24,500 (N) ‘11 JD 5045D, 110 hrs, 2WD, OS ........................$14,800 (N) ‘88 JD 2555, 7200 hrs, loader ..............................$12,950

Combines (B) ‘13 JD S680, 282 sep hrs, PRWD ......................$377,500 (H) ‘12 JD S680, 108 sep hrs, 650/38’s ..................$358,000 (OW) ‘13 JD S680, 239 sep hrs ..............................$352,900 (OW) ‘12 JD S680, ext warranty ..............................$345,000 (OW) ‘13 JD S670, 260 eng hrs ..............................$332,000 (H) ‘13 JD S670, 270 sep hrs, duals ........................$329,900 (OW) ‘13 JD S670, 190 sep hrs, duals ....................$329,900 (N) ‘13 JD S670, 223 sep hrs ..................................$326,000 (OS) ‘13 JD S670, 234 sep hrs, duals......................$320,000 (B) ‘12 JD S660, 163 hrs, PRWD ............................$299,900 (OW) ‘12 JD S660, 155 sep hrs, duals ....................$295,000 (OW) ‘11 CIH 9120, 727 sep hrs, tracks, PRWD ....$295,000 (OW) ‘11 JD 9870, 798 sep hrs, PRWD ..................$294,900 (OW) ‘11 JD 9870, 700 sep hrs, PRWD ..................$294,900 (H) ‘12 JD S670, 350 sep hrs, ext warranty ............$289,900 (OS) ‘11 JD 9870, 557 sep hrs, PRWD ....................$288,000 (N) ‘11 JD 9870, 827 sep hrs, PRWD ......................$280,000 (OW) ‘12 JD S660, 420 sep hrs, duals ....................$279,900 (B) ‘11 JD 9870, 544 sep hrs, PRWD, 800/70R38 ..$279,900 (N) ‘12 JD S660, duals ............................................$270,000 (B) ‘11 JD 9770, 530 sep hrs ..................................$256,500 (OS) ‘13 JD S550, 203 sep hrs, duals......................$255,000 (B) ‘10 JD 9870, 1067 sep hrs, PRWD ....................$244,900 (N) ‘10 CIH 7120, duals ............................................$230,000 (OS) ‘11 JD 9570, 521 sep hrs ................................$220,000 (OS) ‘08 JD 9670, 915 sep hrs, duals ......................$220,000 (OS) ‘09 JD 9670, 845 sep hrs, duals ......................$215,000 (B) ‘09 JD 9770, 1323 eng hrs, PRWD ....................$214,900 (B) ‘09 JD 9770, 1323 hrs, duals..............................$214,900 (N) ‘09 JD 9770, 772 sep hrs ..................................$210,000 (H) ‘07 JD 9570, 888 hrs, duals................................$208,000 (OW) ‘09 JD 9770, 1068 sep hrs..............................$204,900 (OW) ‘09 JD 9770, 1068 sep hrs, duals ..................$204,900 (H) ‘09 JD 9570, 700 sep hrs, duals ........................$197,000 (OS) ‘08 JD 9570, 775 sep hrs ................................$190,000 (OS) ‘07 JD 9760, 1364 sep hrs, auto trac ready ....$174,500 (N) ‘05 JD 9760, 1911 hrs, duals..............................$172,500 (H) ‘07 JD 9660, 1203 sep hrs ................................$169,900 (H) ‘05 JD 9660, 1792 sep hrs, duals ......................$168,500 (B) ‘07 JD 9560, 876 sep hrs, PRWD ......................$163,900 (B) ‘06 JD 9760, 1750 sep hrs, PRWD ....................$154,900 (OW) ‘05 JD 9660, 1442 sep hrs, duals ..................$151,900 (OW) ‘06 JD 9760, 1760 sep hrs, duals ..................$149,000 (OS) ‘07 JD 9560, 1049 sep hrs, duals ....................$148,000 (OS) ‘05 JD 9560, 1010 sep hrs, duals ....................$145,000 (H) ‘04 JD 9760, 2350 hrs, duals..............................$132,500 (OS) ‘01 JD 9650, 2306 sep hrs, duals ......................$95,000 (OS) ‘02 JD 9650, 1942 sep hrs, duals ......................$95,000 (OS) ‘01 JD 9550, 1872 sep hrs, walker, duals ..........$89,000 (OS) ‘99 JD 9510, 2026 sep hrs, duals ......................$69,000 (N) ‘97 JD 9600, 2052 hrs, duals................................$53,000 (N) ‘91 JD 9500, 1900 sep hrs, duals ........................$47,500 (H) ‘99 JD 9610, 2064 sep hrs, duals ........................$45,000 (OW) ‘96 JD 9600, 2790 sep hrs, duals ....................$39,900 (OS) ‘90 JD 9500, 2765 sep hrs ................................$39,000

‘12 JD 4940, 981 Hrs., 120’ Boom ..........................................$269,750

(OS) ‘90 JD 9500, 3392 sep hrs ................................$37,500 (N) ‘90 JD 9500, 2636 sep hrs ..................................$37,000 (OS) ‘90 JD 9500, 2613 sep hrs ................................$30,000 (B) ‘92 JD 9500, 2803 sep hrs, duals ........................$29,900

Planters - Seeding (OW) ‘14 JD DB60, 36 row 20”, tracks, liq fert........$279,900 (N) ‘13 JD 1770, CCS, 24 row 30” ..........................$164,500 (OW) ‘08 JD DB44, 24 row 22”, CCS, liq fert ..........$141,000 (OS) ‘11 JD 1790, CCS, 32 row 15” ........................$135,000 (N) ‘08 JD 1770NT, CCS, 24 row 30” ......................$129,000 (OS) ‘05 JD 1770NT, CCS, 24 row 30” ....................$120,000 (H) ‘09 JD 1770NT, CCS, 24 row 30” ......................$119,000 (H) ‘12 JD 1770NT, CCS, 16 row 30” ......................$114,000 (OS) ‘07 JD 1770NT, 24 row 30”..............................$110,000 (N) White 8524, CCS, 24 row 30”, liq fert................$109,900 (N) ‘10 JD 1770NT, CCS, 16 row 30” ........................$99,000 (OS) ‘10 JD 1770NT, CCS, 16 row 30” ......................$92,500 (H) ‘04 JD 1770NT, 16 row 30”, 3 bushel ..................$79,900 (OW) ‘03 JD 1770NT, 16 row 30”, liq fert ..................$76,900 (OS) ‘97 JD 1770, 24 row 30” ....................................$62,000 (N) ‘06 JD 1770NT, 16 row 30” ..................................$58,500 (OS) ‘96 JD 1770, 16 row 30” ....................................$37,500

Sprayers (OW) ‘12 JD 4940, 756 hrs, 120’ boom ..................$281,500 (OW) ‘12 JD 4830, 386 hrs, 120’ Pommier boom....$279,900 (OW) ‘13 JD 4830, 405 hrs, 120’ boom ..................$269,700 (OW) ‘13 JD 4830, 410 hrs, 90’ boom ....................$259,900 (OW) ‘13 JD 4830, 442 hrs, 90’ boom ....................$259,500 (OW) ‘12 JD 4830, 668 hrs, 90’ boom ....................$236,500 (OW) ‘12 JD 4830, 1155 hrs, 90’ boom ..................$235,750 (OW) ‘12 JD 4830, 775 hrs, 90’ boom ....................$234,500 (OW) ‘12 JD 4830, 792 hrs, 90’ boom ....................$233,000 (OW) ‘12 JD 4830, 722 hrs, 90’ boom ....................$232,900 (OW) ‘11 JD 4930, 1725 hrs, 120’ boom ................$229,500 (OW) ‘11 JD 4830, 1011 hrs, 90’ boom ..................$225,000 (OW) ‘12 JD 4730, 694 hrs, 90’ boom ....................$215,500 (OW) ‘12 JD 4730, 800 gal, 90, boom ....................$209,900 (OW) ‘12 JD 4730, 800 hrs, 90’ boom ....................$208,500 (OW) ‘09 JD 4930, 2403 hrs, 120’ boom ................$169,900 (OW) ‘07 JD 4930, 3093 hrs, dry box ......................$160,000 (B) ‘05 JD 4720, 3794 hrs, 80’ boom ......................$124,900 (H) ‘12 Fast 8318, 16 row applicator, 1800 gal..........$43,000 (H) ‘95 Ag-Chem 854, 6750 hrs, 90’ boom ..............$32,500 (N) Fast 7420, 1500 gal., 90’ boom ..........................$25,000

(H) Gallenburg AG600, 4114 hrs, 90’ boom ..................$17,500

Hay Equipment (B) ‘11 JD 568, 4500 bales ........................................$36,000 (OS) ‘11 JD 568, surface wrap ..................................$32,500 (N) ‘09 JD 568, surface wrap......................................$30,900 (N) ‘12 JD 468, silage special ....................................$29,900 (B) ‘11 JD 946, 13’ rotary moco ................................$25,900 (H) ‘08 JD 568 round baler, surface wrap ..................$22,900 (N) Vermeer top gun bale processor ........................$22,500 (OS) ‘01 JD 567, surface wrap ..................................$17,500 (B) Cat RB46 round baler ..........................................$14,900 (OS) ‘90 JD 535, surface wrap ..................................$11,500 (B) ‘94 JD 3950, chopper ............................................$7,900 (B) NH 315 square baler, thrower ................................$5,900 (B) ‘96 Hesston 565A round baler ..............................$5,500 (B) JD 530 round baler ................................................$5,000 (H) Hesston 1120 haybine ..........................................$4,995 (B) NH 144, hay inverter ..............................................$3,500


39

Livestock, Machinery, Farmland - you name it People will buy it when they see it in The Land!

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To submit your classified ad use one of the following options: Phone: 1-800-657-4665 or 507-345-4523 Mail to: The Land Classifieds, P.O. Box 3169, Mankato, MN 56002 Fax to: 507-345-1027 • Email: theland@TheLandOnline.com Online at: www.thelandonline.com

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HAY SPECIALS

‘12 NH 7450, 12’, disc mower conditioner ......................$27,900 ‘14 MF 1358, 8.4’, disc mower ........................................$10,150 ‘14 MF 1361, disc mower, 3 pt, w/tine condit. ................$17,500 MF 1372, disc mower conditioner, 12’..............................$30,500 Bale King 2881 bale processor, RH discharge................$16,700 ‘89 MF 200 windrower ........................................................$9,950 ‘12 MF 2856 baler w/kicker ..............................................$32,000 TRACTORS • ‘13 MF 8690, 340 hp • ‘13 MF 7626, 240 hp • ‘13 MF 7624, 225 hp • ‘13 MF 7620, 185 hp • (2) ‘14 MF 6616, MFD, cab w/ldr • ‘05 MF 451, 45 PTO hp., 400 hrs. • ‘14 MF 1754 Compact, MFD, w/ldr, hydro • ‘81 Ford 7600 platform, w/Schwartz loader

CORN HEADS • ‘09 Geringhoff 1822RD • ‘09 Geringhoff 1820RD, w/reel • ‘09 Geringhoff 1630RD • (2) Geringhoff 1622RD • ‘08 Geringhoff 1230RD • (9) Geringhoff 1222RD • (6) Geringhoff 1220RD • ‘08 Geringhoff 830NS • ‘08 Geringhoff 830RD • (12) Geringhoff 830RD • ‘13 Geringhoff 822RD • (4) Geringhoff 630RD • ‘12 CIH 2608, chopping cornhead • ‘04 Gleaner 1222, GVL poly • ‘98 MF 844 • JD 822 KR • JD 622, GVL poly

COMBINES • ‘(2) MF 9540, RWA, duals • ‘07 MF 9790, RWA, duals, 1440/1001 hrs. • ‘98 MF 8780, RWA. duals. 3170/2087 hrs. • ‘91 MF 8570, RWA, 5007 hrs. • ‘86 MF 8560, 4941 hrs. • ‘97 Gleaner R62, duals, 2888/2052 hrs.

• ‘92 Gleaner R62, 4210/2643 hrs.

GRAIN HANDLING • Brandt augers: 8x35, 8x40, 8x47, 10x35 • ‘02 Brandt 8x62, SC, PTO • Brandt 8x45, 18 hp. Briggs • ‘11 Hutchinson 10x61 • (3) Brandt 1070XL swing hoppers • Brandt 1080XL swing hopper • ‘13 Buhler 1282 swing hopper • Brandt 1390 swing hopper XL & HP • Brandt 20 Series drive over deck • Brandt, 1515LP, 1535LP, 1535TD, 1545LP, 1575, 1585 grain belts • Brandt 7500HP grain vac. • ‘03 Brandt 4500 EX, grain vac. • Parker 839 grain cart • Parker 1048 grain cart, tarp, 900 tires, 1000 bu. • ‘10 Killbros 1175 grain cart, tarp, 750 bu. • A&L 850S grain cart, 850 bu. • ‘08 Unverferth 5000 • ‘05 Demco 650 gravity box • ‘05 Parker 625 gravity box • Parker 165-B gravity box • Parker 1020 seed tender

HAY & LIVESTOCK • MF 1330, disc mower, 10’ • Roto-Grind 760T bale grinder • Woods S-106 ditch bank mower • Kodiak SD72, SD60 rotary cutter

• Everest 5700 finish mower • Sitrex RP2, RP5, 3 pt. rakes • Sitrex 10- & 12-wheel rakes on cart • Sitrex MK12 & MK16 hy-cap rakes • IH 14, 5 bar rake • JD #5, sickle mower

MISCELLANEOUS • Degelman 7200, 6000HD & R570P rock pickers • Degelman RD320 rock digger • Degelman RR1500 rock rake • Degelman LR7645 & LR7651, land rollers Rental Units • Degelman 5 ft. skidsteer buckets • JD 520 stalk chopper, high speed • Loftness 20’ stalk chopper, SM • Loftness 240 stalk chopper • Wil-Rich 25’ stalk chopper • Maurer HT42, HT38, HT32 & HT28 header trailers • WRS 30’ header trailers • E-Z Trail 880 header trailer • SB Select 108 snowblowers, 540 & 1000 PTO • Lucke 8’, snowblower • Loftness 96” & 84” snowblowers

TILLAGE

• Sunflower 1550-50, 1435-36 & 1435-21 discs • Sunflower 5035-36, 5056-49 & 5056-63 field cultivators • Sunflower 4311-14, 4412-07 disc rippers • Sunflower 4511-15 disc chisel • Sunflower 4212-13 coulter chisel

“Where Farm and Family Meet”

26

1) Slices stalks vertically with 15 serrated discs. No swing blades 2) Ground speed and moister have very little effect on material size. 3) Much lower horse power requirements than competition. 4) Corn head driven with drive shafts and gear boxes. No chain and sprockets like the competition. 5) Aluminum alloy gear boxes to reduce weight and dissipate heat. 6) Self-tightening gathering chains. 7) Double acting stripper plates with welding on hardened edge. 8) Large diameter auger that turn slower, reducing ear loss. 9) Corn stalk stubble in field is splintered to reduce tire damage if driven over. 10) Optional Integrated Crop Sweeper and End Row Augers for improved crop.

<< www.TheLandOnline.com >>

DEADLINE: Monday at Noon for the following Friday edition Plus - look for your classified ad in the e-edition

THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014

THE LAND CAN SELL IT! - Your First Choice for Classifieds - Place Your Ad Today -

ELITE SERIES ROTA-DISC CORNHEADS GENERATIONS AHEAD OF THE COMPETITION


THE LAND, JULY 4, 2014 << www.TheLandOnline.com >> “Where Farm and Family Meet”

The place the music died This week’s Back Roads is the work of The Land Managing Editor Tom Royer

40

H

is plane took off from the Clear Lake, Iowa, airport at 12:55 a.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 3, 1959, as weather conditions were beginning to deteriorate. On a flight to Fargo, N.D., that was cut short after just five miles, a rock ‘n’ roll superstar’s life was cut short after just 22 years. Only two years prior, Buddy Holly had become an overnight sensation with the release of “That’ll Be the Day,” followed by hits such as “Peggy Sue,” “Everyday,” “Not Fade Away,” “Oh, Boy!” and “Rave On.” Appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show and American Bandstand made Holly the next big thing in music, and he was asked to join a group including fellow up-and-comers Ritchie Valens and J.P. “The Big Bopper” Richardson on a grueling winter tour of 24 cities in 24 days across the Upper Midwest. After 10 days of darting back and forth across Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa on frigid and foul-smelling tour buses, their 11th performance was Feb. 2 at Clear Lake’s Surf Ballroom. Holly chose to charter a small plane to their next gig in Moorhead, Minn., rather than put up with yet another tedious and uncomfortable bus ride. There was room for only two others among the tour group’s musicians. Suffering from the flu, Richardson grabbed the second spot on the plane; the final seat went to Valens on a coin flip. Investigators determined that the trio’s young pilot did not see weather reports that might have dissuaded him from flying that snowy night, in a plane with which he was not entirely familiar. No radio contact with them could be made after their early morning takeoff, and the Fargo airport never heard from them. The plane’s wreckage, along with the bodies of Holly, Valens, Richardson and the pilot, Roger Peterson, was found later that morning only a few miles northwest of Clear Lake, crumpled against the fenceline of a frozen cornfield. You are welcome to make a pilgrimage to the crash site to pay your respects to the young men who died that day 55 years ago, but you’re on your own to find it. The landowner allows visitors access along that solemn fenceline, but locating the site — marked by an oversized replica of Holly’s trademark black-framed eyeglasses along a gravel road — is up to you. ❖

Northwest of Clear Lake, Iowa

Do you have a Back Roads story suggestion? E-mail editor@TheLandOnline.com or write to Editor, The Land, P.O. Box 3169, Mankato, MN 56002.


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