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@Aztech_Ag

Minnesota Farmer/AG service business owner. Faith, Family, Farming

Canby, MN शामिल हुए Ocak 2016
1.3K फ़ॉलोइंग1.9K फ़ॉलोवर्स
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Aus10
Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
Introducing the "BOX BULLET" New Seed Box openers we are building, will have them for sale online soon! Been about a year in the making...These work on both the Buckhorn and gen 2 orbis boxes, fast, compact, and light! #AgTwitter
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@braunfarm No, unless it's in June.
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
So some dude in Australia is now an expert in American agriculture? Guess what guy, I've got my seed corn bought, and most of my fertilizer. I'm not switching acres to beans.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

JUST IN: The most irreversible consequence of this war is not happening in Tehran. It is happening in a barn in Iowa. A farmer is standing over a kitchen table looking at two seed catalogues. One is corn. One is soybeans. Corn needs 180 pounds of nitrogen per acre. Nitrogen costs $610 per ton on the CBOT March futures settlement as of yesterday, up 35 percent in a month. Soybeans fix their own nitrogen from the atmosphere through root bacteria called rhizobia. They need nothing from the Strait of Hormuz. The farmer is choosing soybeans. Millions of acres are choosing soybeans. And once the planter rolls into the field, the choice cannot be reversed until next year. USDA projected corn at roughly 94 million acres for 2026, down from 98.8 million. Soybeans at 85 million, up from 81.2 million. Those projections were published February 19, before urea surged past $683 at New Orleans. The actual shift will be larger. USDA Prospective Plantings reports March 31. By then the seeds will be in the ground. This is the transmission channel the world is not watching. A 21-mile strait enforced by provincial commanders with sealed radio orders just rewrote the planting economics of 90 million acres of the most productive farmland on Earth. Not through sanctions. Not through diplomacy. Through the price of a single molecule that corn cannot grow without and soybeans do not need. Now follow the cascade. The Renewable Fuel Standard mandates 15 billion gallons of corn ethanol annually. That consumes roughly 43 percent of the entire US corn crop. The mandate is set by the EPA. It does not flex when corn acres shrink. It is inelastic demand consuming a fixed share of a declining supply. When supply tightens against a fixed mandate, the remaining corn reprices upward. Corn above $5 per bushel compresses every margin downstream. The US cattle herd stands at 86.2 million head, a 75-year low per USDA NASS. Poultry and pork operations face compression from higher corn prices. Feed is the single largest cost in livestock production. When feed reprices, protein reprices. When protein reprices, every grocery shelf in America absorbs the increase. This is the protein cascade. Corn to feed to meat to eggs to dairy to the checkout counter. Each link tightens because the link before it tightened. The originating cause is a urea molecule that cannot transit a strait because a provincial commander’s sealed orders say it cannot. The farmer did not start this war. The farmer cannot end it. The farmer responds to the price on the screen and the biology of the two crops in front of him. Corn needs the molecule. Soybeans do not. At $610 the arithmetic is settled. The planter rolls. The season is locked. Israel just authorised the assassination of every Iranian official on sight. The US has spent $16.5 billion. South Pars is burning. The Fed is holding rates because oil inflation will not break. Gold touched $5,000. Bitcoin is bleeding. China is running exercises near Taiwan. Sri Lanka shut down on Wednesdays. And underneath all of it, a man in a barn is making the decision that determines whether four billion people pay more for food this year. He has never heard of the Mosaic Doctrine. He does not know what a sealed contingency packet is. He knows what nitrogen costs. And he is planting soybeans. Full analysis - open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@burnhamfarms @TandTAg 2 directional, the long way on the box. Can't go in on the wide side if that makes sense.
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Zach Townsend
Zach Townsend@TandTAg·
Do you dump proboxes on your farm? The SeedShoot from @Aztech_Ag gives you that little bit of extra reach you need to fill the planter or the middle of a tender. $525 to your farm! Also available are shoot extensions and extendable poly spout!
Zach Townsend tweet mediaZach Townsend tweet media
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@braunfarm Same reason they buy wind, solar and hydro. But the advantage would be having energy storage scattered all across the US as electric demand keeps ramping up. I'll buy you a beer next time I see ya and we can discuss more in depth..ha
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Tim “Clownshow Farms” Braun
@Aztech_Ag So what’s the value proposition here? Why would the power company invest in or buy electricity that’s more expensive than what seems to be the current alternative?
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Tim “Clownshow Farms” Braun
I’ve seen some discourse lately about burning corn for electricity so we can power EVs and data centers. All to keep the big ag machine greased up and turning. Have we thought about how dumb that is?
Tim “Clownshow Farms” Braun tweet mediaTim “Clownshow Farms” Braun tweet media
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@braunfarm Idk, isn't that the point of any industry? Create demand for their product?
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Tim “Clownshow Farms” Braun
@Aztech_Ag Why create artificial demand for corn that’s really inefficient? Yes the infrastructure exists but it doesn’t mean we should use it just to use it. Burning wood, gas or coal would probably be far more net energy positive
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@braunfarm Why do we have to compare it to solar farms? If one could set a $5 floor on corn by selling small scale power back to the power company why not? We already have the infrastructure to grow corn, no ones forcing us to do it. The more uses we can find for a crop the better imo.
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Tim “Clownshow Farms” Braun
Yeah, but a corn fired power plant would likely take much longer to permit and construct I think. Even at 100% efficiency it still would capture 10% of the energy per acre as solar. We all love driving tractors and growing shit but to make electricity with crops it’s just a giant circle jerk for our egos
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@braunfarm Solar is great but it takes years to get permits and all the infrastructure is expensive to upgrade. I do think we need as much solar as possible, but to keep up with energy demand why not look at our own crop as a potential feedstock, especially if technology can be improved?
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@braunfarm Don't you think we could increase efficiency of burning corn to get it more viable? I'm sure there could be advances in technology to make it more efficient. Also, Europe has thousands of biogas energy plants using corn silage.
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@FoulkShay Thanks. I should probably pull my planter in shop for service soon.
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Shay Foulk
Shay Foulk@FoulkShay·
It’s March now, get your life together people No one in particular, but I’m probably talking to you. Have a great day, everyone
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@Bkitch1Bodie Just lower your yield goal 50 bushels then.
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Bodie Kitchel
Bodie Kitchel@Bkitch1Bodie·
@Aztech_Ag Upon further thought, I did think about it hard, corn is a grass so I’ll jus plant that again lol
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
Has anyone used a switch plow like this before? Do they work in sod? I'm taking the x advice on here and have a quarter to bust out of sod this spring.
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Bodie Kitchel
Bodie Kitchel@Bkitch1Bodie·
@Aztech_Ag I’ve thought about putting 15 ac to grass does the thought count
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@McNeilBJ The equipment that we sell we offer demo's. Most farmers are great, but there's also a lot who sign up with no intention of buying. Then there are some that sign up and you reach out to schedule and they won't respond or answer the phone.
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BJ McNeil
BJ McNeil@McNeilBJ·
Walked up to two short line tillage companies at Commodity Classic who had equipment I was interested in for our organic operation. I asked both for a demo to see how it performed in our conditions. Neither was interested in demoing. Why are we as farmers expected to pay $100K for equipment hoping it works like the salesman says it will. How many of them buy a car without driving it first?? I refuse to buy something before I try it.
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@Bkitch1Bodie That's in response to any of the anti sod busting people on here...lol
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@Bkitch1Bodie I reseeded 360 back to grass this fall so I'm net -200 for row crops. How many acres did you take out of row crops for next year?
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@BeetfarmerDave It wasn't hayed or mowed this last year so it's fairly hairy.
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🇺🇸Gauche Farmer©️
🇺🇸Gauche Farmer©️@BeetfarmerDave·
@Aztech_Ag I’ve never experienced a switch plow, but the key to sod is hoping it’s not too thick you can plow some dirt over with it and also cut and bury it good, if you’re just flipping sod with little dirt it’s a mess second time and after.
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Aus10@Aztech_Ag·
@KurtHolscher Main reason thinking switch plow is that it's in 10 fields, so lots of turning, and time can be limited in spring. But cost is definitely a consideration.
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Kurt holscher
Kurt holscher@KurtHolscher·
@Aztech_Ag Seems pricey for 160 acres. An old 5 bottom and a couple days would get it done.
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Grant Wiese
Grant Wiese@gwiesefarms·
Rob is always looking to buy ground and is known as a strong producer in the area. There was a parcel of ground he was slightly interested in owning but didn’t bother going to the auction. At a break in the auction, the realtor called asking for help with the sale which the farmer place 1 bid and won the ground. It sold for $475,000 but appraised for $700,000.
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Chris K.
Chris K.@ChrisK_Banded·
Just had a conversation this morning with a fella driving back from Commodity Classic. He mentioned a few companies he was surprised to see, and a few he did not see this year. But one comment made me chuckle to myself: "They must be doing pretty good this year" said in regards to a particular group/company he saw there. In case you don't know, groups, products, companies, and most speakers pay DEARLY to be there. Educational sessions and main stage sessions are not selected based on value, importance, or track record, the people presenting PAID to do it, with very few exceptions (politicians, some university presenters, etc). This isn't necessarily a bad thing and it can still be a great time with valuable takeaways, but every banner, post wrap, meeting/session, lunch, break, tour, dinner is sponsored and paid for by someone. Even the clings on the mirrors in the bathroom. Don't confuse earned clout with bought clout at these events. The link below is the 2026 Sponsorship book for this year's Classic. If you didn't already realize this was how it works, it can be eye-opening. commodityclassic.com/file/1234/2026…
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