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Arable Farming
Cropping
roquette corby to close
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<blockquote data-quote="Andy26" data-source="post: 7173654" data-attributes="member: 199"><p>Not sent any Wheat there for over ten years, but back then they did hire a very large grain store near Peterborough and bought thousands and thousands of tons off the combine.</p><p></p><p>As mentioned one of the few homes for non assured Wheat and I understand quite flexible on the quality, as in it needed very little.</p><p></p><p>Was always a good place to send, they had there own contracted haulier back then (probably still do as I see the same lorries go past daily) and they had several spare trailers so could drop a trailer and return with an empty promptly, leaving a shunter in the yard to tip the trailers.</p><p></p><p>Sad, but economics change, things go full circle. Perhaps years in the future, when the exported environmental cost is added back in, local processing of bulk commodities will again become economic.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Andy26, post: 7173654, member: 199"] Not sent any Wheat there for over ten years, but back then they did hire a very large grain store near Peterborough and bought thousands and thousands of tons off the combine. As mentioned one of the few homes for non assured Wheat and I understand quite flexible on the quality, as in it needed very little. Was always a good place to send, they had there own contracted haulier back then (probably still do as I see the same lorries go past daily) and they had several spare trailers so could drop a trailer and return with an empty promptly, leaving a shunter in the yard to tip the trailers. Sad, but economics change, things go full circle. Perhaps years in the future, when the exported environmental cost is added back in, local processing of bulk commodities will again become economic. [/QUOTE]
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