Anyone? Anyone? Bueller? Bueller?
Suppose I was an idiot. Suppose I was a member of congress. But, I repeat myself.
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I'm talking about renting land and start-up cotton farming
scottimus said:
Even with poor soils, using drones I can make management decisions pretty easy and pick and choose my strategies for a profitable crop.
Yeah. Sometimes threads get hijacked and go the wrong way. This has gone well.insulator_king said:
This continues to be a most illuminating thread.
Lots of good info.
scottimus said:
I am talking about how to approach the equipment issue. A farmer down the road? Just invest on a neighboring crop strategy.
Just trying to figure out how to get in, slowly.
You got any bad land I can use?SunrayAg said:scottimus said:
Even with poor soils, using drones I can make management decisions pretty easy and pick and choose my strategies for a profitable crop.
Please don't take this the wrong way. But if you honestly believe that statement, you should leave the farming to someone else.
Scott, where along the river or in Cameron County has there been an appreciable increase in Ag acreage since the 1960's or 70's? And I don't mean someone working on a 20 or 40 that was just a grown up pasture. The sparwl of Brownsville, pop up colonias/subdivisions along the river, hell, even the glacial pace of Harlingen's growth has done nothing but consume tillable land over the last 30 years.Quote:
I came from Cameron County along the river, and there, they are increasing in registered Ag acres and clearing land for more farming and ranching. With all the rain recently, the resacas are full.
I grew up swimming in those resacas, and have seen the lost cities of Falcon reservoir when the "lake" got low enough.Centerpole90 said:
Also, for future reference - resacas are charged by the irrigation districts to deliver surface irrigation water. They're full because in preparation for some pre-irrigating that may or may not take place after the front last weekend; but they are not drainage ditches. Thankfully Falcon is in good shape so there is irrigation water, but don't confuse seeing an irrigation canal full with 'wet' conditions.
Not trying to shoot you down, but if you want to raise cotton you have to have a pretty good handle on the moisture situation - and it's not exactly good right now.
You would be pressed to EVER get an irrigated farmer to say, "things are fine" in Cameron County.Quote:
In CAMERON County, rainfall has been sparse leaving all dryland acres in a lurch, and you would be hard pressed to get an irrigated farmer to say today 'things are fine' - as I understood you to mean by 'all the recent rains'.
Forgot that one. I saw one north of Santa Fe several years ago. I also saw one sell at an auction in Amarillo a few years ago. They started it...in gear...and nearly hit the auctioneers truck. Will look for that video.Centerpole90 said:
And the 435 had a 2-53 Detroit Diesel. I've actually seen one in the wild in TN.