Dust flies as combines work the fields south of Three Hills, Ab., on Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2025. Mike Drew/Postmedia
Faced with falling crop prices and rising costs, many farmers in Western Canada are squeezing as much life as they can out of older equipment — which they say works their fields just as smoothly as the new stuff.
For Jason Schultz, the idea of buying vital equipment for his central Alberta farm, such as new tractors and combines, seems decidedly out of reach.
“I just can’t make the numbers work,” Schultz said in a recent interview. “I haven’t purchased anything since 2022 and the last big purchase was (in) 2021.
“The numbers just don’t pencil at all when you’re talking $400 an hour to run a tractor,” Schultz said, noting he has no plans to buy new machines anytime soon. N

Financial Post

WCPO 9
Ann Arbor News Sports
People Top Story
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Sports
Oh No They Didn't
Raw Story
Joplin Globe Sports