I am surprised you are not a billionaire by now. No kidding. You've got what it takes, in my opinion.Yeah! I drove a tri for years on weekends and filled in for guys when they wanted vacation. Even worked as a doorman at bars lol
I am surprised you are not a billionaire by now. No kidding. You've got what it takes, in my opinion.Yeah! I drove a tri for years on weekends and filled in for guys when they wanted vacation. Even worked as a doorman at bars lol
Very impressive!Heres what I did. Im not saying itll work for you. Knowing I had to sustain with the equipment I had invested into, I put it to use doing a LOT of field and pasture mowing. Went to local land conservancies and accumulated contracts over one winter about 15 years ago. Once I got my first couple contracts, took out a small loan to buy (2) 15’ mowers. A good decision as those mowers made me extra income cutting their fallow farmlands they dont want crops on or in between hay mowings.
I also offered them snow plowing of their access roads, which again used a tractor to plow them, then switched to a truck for a number of years.
I was born into a construction family and had a knack for masonry and carpentry. I still do some of that, but would like to exit that business for good soon.
You are going to have a tough time making a living unless you are a good size operation, without another source of off farm income.
We just moved this year to Tonasket from western WA. We got here too late to make connections for local hay so I made 5 trips over the mountains for our winter hay from our regular supplier, 3 tons at a time. The price was approximate $300 a ton then for horse hay. The owner said they had been shipping it by the semi load to Montana. We might have to do it again next year, but hoping to make connections here and save a little gas.A couple years ago I was in WA state passed by a hay broker and saw tractor trailer after tractor trailer with TX plate loaded with hay...
I got our hay from Andrews Hay between the freeway and Arlington. Their 3x3x8' bales are as big as my little Ford can handle and we much prefer machine handling. I'm 70 my brother is 75 and blind, stacking 15 tons of hay in a loft didn't appeal to either of us.In my area most hay seems to go to horses. Unlike cattle folks, horse folks rarely have horses as a business concern (not a great income model, IMHO). Shrinking disposable income is leading the way... (picture is worth a thousand words: Share of Total Net Worth Held by the 50th to 90th Wealth Percentiles)
On that note, I've known a lot of firemen over the years, and I cannot remember one of them that didn't have a 2nd job.Very impressive!
My wife and I did similar with both of us having full-time jobs plus multiple part-time jobs when we were dating and for a few years after we got married, but before we had kids. That allowed us to get a big grub stake early.
My wife has a good friend who's husband is involved with a 10,000 acre family farm (grain and 8000 hogs). He was a fireman for about 30 years and farming on the off days.