Farms.com Home   Ag Industry News

Bringing home that dream equipment

Bringing home that dream equipment

Producers share the machinery they would buy if they won the lottery

By Diego Flammini
Staff Writer
Farms.com

What would you buy if you hit the jackpot?

It’s a question friends and families chat about on occasion – fantasizing about large homes, a luxury car or an extravagant vacation.

Farms.com posed the same question to producers, asking them what piece of equipment they would bring home after cashing in that winning lottery ticket.

For Kelsey Huber, a cash crop producer near Edmonton, a new tractor would be in her future.

“I’d be buying the Versatile 535 tractor,” she told Farms.com. “Versatile makes really good tractors and that’s one I’d like to have.”

She recalls seeing an ad for the tractor in a magazine and it has stuck with her ever since.

Kevin Duddridge, a beef producer from Grunthal, Man., would be looking to buy a new TMR mixer.

“As a beef farmer, a Supreme TMR would be my first buy,” he told Farms.com. “It’s got so many benefits that I can’t even count them.”

Duddridge first spotted the Supreme machine while researching other mixers but ultimately purchased one from a different manufacturer.

“We’ve had nothing but trouble with it,” he said. “(The research) indicated getting a Supreme but we went (with a different one) and I’ve regretted it ever since.”

And Wayne Truman, a cash crop producer from Redvers, Sask. would buy a new combine.

“I think it would be the new John Deere X9 Series combine,” he told Farms.com. “I’ve been following along on Twitter, and it’s such a beautiful machine. I’d love to have something like that on the farm.”

Keep the conversation going and tell us what piece of equipment you’d bring back to the farm if you won the lottery.




Trending Video

Spring weed control in winter wheat with Broadway® Star (pyroxsulam + florasulam)

Video: Spring weed control in winter wheat with Broadway® Star (pyroxsulam + florasulam)

#CortevaTalks brings you a short update with Cereal Herbicides Category Manager, Alister McRobbie, on how to get the most out of Broadway® Star.

Significant populations of grassweeds, including ryegrass and brome, can threaten winter wheat yields. Spring applications of a contact graminicide, such as Broadway Star from Corteva Agriscience, can clear problem weeds, allowing crops to grow away in the spring.

Broadway Star (pyroxsulam + florasulam) controls ryegrass, sterile brome, wild oats and a range of broad-leaved weeds such as cleavers. It can be applied to winter wheat up until GS32, but the earlier the application is made, the smaller the weed, and the greater the benefit to the crop. Weeds should be actively growing. A good rule of thumb is that if your grass needs cutting, conditions are right to apply Broadway Star.

 

Comments


Your email address will not be published