sticky
Member
- Location
- Near Stratford upon Avon
Don’t have the ground now to make enough grub.if you you want 300 youll have to wade in and be be very brave, good luck .
Don’t have the ground now to make enough grub.if you you want 300 youll have to wade in and be be very brave, good luck .
Bad day today on prices,not doing my nerves any good ,selling up tomorrow at these fantastic prices while I can
Why have they fallen?
I want to sell, but too busy to load the grain.
Yes and the reason why l’m contemplating having to join the scheme even though I really don’t want to.
Currently my grain is in a perfectly good shed but if I join it will be classed as temporary accommodation and I will have to sell before the end of October.
Yes I know, will probably earn an extra £20/ton keeping it past October.It would have cost you more than £12/t if you’d have sold it all before the end of October this year!
The cure for high prices is not viable. Market signals to growers are beware of over planting N hungry crops and scale back N rates. That isn’t conducive to future yields, so why isn’t this featuring on future yields? Lots of growers planting on the basis of expectation of price rises, that’s a place we shouldn’t be?Funds must be taking some profits and market now featuring on future yields,I’m happy with over 200 so my run is over,all the best holders
I presume the markets are thinking one more Southern Hemisphere harvest powered by “cheap” N, these same areas will be buying N for there next harvest at present prices whereas a proportion of the Northern Hemisphere harvest has the potential to be powered by potential “relatively cheap” N so it’s all eyes on how big the heaps are in the South for the next few months and wether they are big enough to put a lid on the market or throw fuel on the fire with lower than expected yields.The cure for high prices is not viable. Market signals to growers are beware of over planting N hungry crops and scale back N rates. That isn’t conducive to future yields, so why isn’t this featuring on future yields? Lots of growers planting on the basis of expectation of price rises, that’s a place we shouldn’t be?