Yeah, 'gone' is right--you folks are forgetting about northern New England. Maine is a poor state, except along the coast. Once you get past the part that's a suburb of Boston, New Hampshire is, too. Vermont is mostly poor, though there are some rich parts. And Maine has the lowest population density of any state east of the Mississippi. Maine is poor and country. But we pay Boston-suburb prices for tractors.
I'd expect high prices near Portland--Maine's biggest city, and a place where housing prices are high and lot sizes are low. But the lowest quote I've found on a Kubota was at the dealer nearest the city. The higher bids were inland.
As for not selling many tractors, that may be, but all three dealers I've visited had at least 50 tractors on their lots, and lots more in crates.
As a transplanted southerner, I've got to admit that there's a certain "coldness" to folks up this way (that goes for the weather, too /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif). I've lived in my small town for about ten years now and still feel like a stranger when I go into the hardware store, even though I've been in there probably two, three hundred times over the years. Folks up here aren't mean, but they aren't friendly, either.
Jim