[AT] Sad!
Cecil R Bearden
crbearden at copper.net
Tue Nov 5 18:57:56 PST 2013
There was a large fruit farm/orchard in this state that had been passed
down from Indian territory days. I was told that in order to buy out
the sisters and brothers-in-law that did not want to continue the fruit
farm and just wanted their share of the land that was overvalued for
hunting and development, the land was used as collateral. The original
mode of operation was selling fruit by the bushel. Lat er when
pickers were not available, they tried U-pick. A large process plant
moved into town to use the fruit and make frozen pies. The process
plant was bought out and outsourced outside the US and is now for sale.
The fruit orchards are now gone and the new owner is a large cattle
rancher and the local banker who had the note....
That is how it happens. Greedy family members.
Cecil in OKla
On 11/5/2013 6:39 PM, David Bruce wrote:
> It is easy to blame others like the government and "big business" (and
> possibly all true) but in the end it is up to the owner/farmer to guide
> the ship through troubled waters.
>
> Years ago I had a boss who had a motto "If it is to be it is up to me".
> I try to take that to heart every day.
>
> David
> NW NC
>
> On 11/5/2013 7:00 PM, Chuck Saunders wrote:
>> selling at a loss and trying to make it up on volume
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Nov 5, 2013 at 5:43 PM, Mike<meulenms at gmx.com> wrote:
>>
>>> How the heck do you have debt on a farm that's been in the family since
>>> 1632? Mike M
>>>
>>> On 11/5/2013 6:17 PM, David Rotigel wrote:
>>>> See:
>>> http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/11/05/after-380-plus-years-new-hampshire-family-sells-farm/
> _______________________________________________
> AT mailing list
> http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at
More information about the AT
mailing list