Posted by Leroy on September 17, 2015 at 10:00:40 from (69.88.202.68):
In Reply to: Land lease question posted by ditchwitch on September 17, 2015 at 07:09:56:
Sounds like normal crop share. Renter paying for all inputs gets 2/3 of income. Next is 50-50 share and Renter and land owner each paying half of seed and fertilizer or chemicals and each gets half the income. On either renter furnishes all labor and machinery. If baling done on the 50-50 share then each pays for half the twine but on land owner that is only on the twine, all labor hired or his own to renter. Now on share no mater if the 1/3-2/3 or 50-50 plan if the owner wants his share delievered to a different elevator then would devide by rows in landowners share forrowed by renters share and repeat, usually no of ros would be determined by sixe of machine, say 6 row machine and 1/3-2/3 share the renter would get the first 12 rows, owner the next 6, renter next 12 and keep repeating across field. If 50-50 then it would be every 6 rows changed. If land owner wants the delievery point a lot farther away then they may figure aditional to land owner for aditional cost for hauling. If land owner wants to store and has bin space and renter wants to sell then split bu rows and then the emptying of bin would fall to landowner. This method was being used way before cash rent was heard of. It came about because owner could no longer do field work but still wanted to raise some livestalk and still have the feed for that. Actually the most fair to both. And together they both decide what crop goes in what field.
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Today's Featured Article - Memories of a Farmall C - by Monty Bradley. When I was a child, my grandparents lived on a farm owned by a Mr. Walters. The crops raised were cotton and soybeans, with about forty head of mixed breed cattle. Mr. Walters owned two tractors then. A Farmall 300 on gasoline and a Farmall C, that had once belonged to his father-in-law, and had been converted from gasoline to LP Gas. Many times, as a small boy, I would cross the fence behind the house my grandparents lived in and walk down the turn row to where granddaddy would be cultivati
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