foggy1111
Elite Member
I just posted on my lime spreader over at the attachments section. I was planning to buy a trailer-load of lime tomorrow. The lime company will deliver 22+ tons in an end dump trailer.
I did some math on my lime costs....and thought I would share the results. The products shown have similar liming qualities....but I think the ag-lime will have longer lasting effects.
1. The first time I put down lime I bought bagged product in skid quantities at Fleet Farm for $3.10 per 50 lb bag.
2. Then I bought a dump truck of lime (14 tons) at $600 for the load. This works out to the equivalent of $1.07 per 50 "bag"....when compared to #1. Not bad.
3. Now I am buying 22 tons at $600. This works out to $.68 per 50 lb bag. About 1/5 the cost of a bagged lime product.
I now have enough land to apply all the lime that they deliver (a bit over ten acres). Early on I would have drown in lime as I only had a few tillable acres.
I have sandy loam soils....so I am contemplating getting a trailer load about every three years - depending on what my next soil samples tell me.
Hopefully an average of $200 per year for lime will provide much better crop results.
I did some math on my lime costs....and thought I would share the results. The products shown have similar liming qualities....but I think the ag-lime will have longer lasting effects.
1. The first time I put down lime I bought bagged product in skid quantities at Fleet Farm for $3.10 per 50 lb bag.
2. Then I bought a dump truck of lime (14 tons) at $600 for the load. This works out to the equivalent of $1.07 per 50 "bag"....when compared to #1. Not bad.
3. Now I am buying 22 tons at $600. This works out to $.68 per 50 lb bag. About 1/5 the cost of a bagged lime product.
I now have enough land to apply all the lime that they deliver (a bit over ten acres). Early on I would have drown in lime as I only had a few tillable acres.
I have sandy loam soils....so I am contemplating getting a trailer load about every three years - depending on what my next soil samples tell me.
Hopefully an average of $200 per year for lime will provide much better crop results.