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It has helped in the past so here goes again!!
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<blockquote data-quote="stocky" data-source="post: 100355" data-attributes="member: 1150"><p>BWranch----very good site, thanks alot. I guess for those of us in the dry areas, the brightest news is that the majority of the corn growing areas have good moisture. With the dry weather and shorter hay supply the price of calves is already off 10-15 from a couple of weeks ago and cow-calf pairs were 150-200 cheaper this week and springers 100-150 cheaper. If the corn growing areas come up with dry news and lower corn estimates it would shoot the price of corn up and we would see a fast 30 percent or more drop in calf prices. Last year, I was afraid of a drought because May and June were so dry, but then July was the wettest on record, which saved us, but then we had a combined 3 tenths of an inch in august and september. Never can tell what will happen. Hope everyone gets the rain they need in time</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="stocky, post: 100355, member: 1150"] BWranch----very good site, thanks alot. I guess for those of us in the dry areas, the brightest news is that the majority of the corn growing areas have good moisture. With the dry weather and shorter hay supply the price of calves is already off 10-15 from a couple of weeks ago and cow-calf pairs were 150-200 cheaper this week and springers 100-150 cheaper. If the corn growing areas come up with dry news and lower corn estimates it would shoot the price of corn up and we would see a fast 30 percent or more drop in calf prices. Last year, I was afraid of a drought because May and June were so dry, but then July was the wettest on record, which saved us, but then we had a combined 3 tenths of an inch in august and september. Never can tell what will happen. Hope everyone gets the rain they need in time [/QUOTE]
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