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    grain bins

    Explore " grain bins" with insightful episodes like "Planning and Sizing: Keys to the Perfect Grain Handling Facility", "Discovering the ROI of Grain Storage", "Grain Handling, Quality, & Safety" and "Episode 059: Safe Storage with Grain Weevil" from podcasts like ""Farm4Profit Podcast", "Farm4Profit Podcast", "Farm4Profit Podcast" and "FarmBits"" and more!

    Episodes (4)

    Planning and Sizing: Keys to the Perfect Grain Handling Facility

    Planning and Sizing: Keys to the Perfect Grain Handling Facility

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    " Building Your Grain Handling Facility Right"

     

    • Explain the importance of proper planning and considerations when building or expanding a grain handling facility.
    • Discuss the significance of choosing the right location for your grain handling facility.
    • Explain factors like soil type, drainage, and accessibility.
    • Highlight the importance of proper space and land use planning.
    • Sizing Up Your Grain Bins
    • Explain the various considerations for selecting the appropriate grain bin size.
    • How do you know how wide and how tall to go?
    • Discuss how crop volume, storage needs, and crop diversity impact bin size decisions.
    • Mention factors like grain quality, airflow, and temperature control.
    • Grain Receiving Capacity
    • Discuss the importance of grain receiving capacity for efficiency.
    • Explain how to choose the right number and size of receiving pits or augers.
    • Drag or auger?
    • Highlight strategies for minimizing bottlenecks during harvest.
    • Grain Drying Capabilities
    • Explain the significance of grain drying in preserving crop quality.
    • Discuss different drying methods and technologies.
    • What kind of dryers are there?
    • How do we know what one is right for our farm?
    • Offer guidance on sizing and selecting the right grain dryer for your operation.
    • Powering Your Facility
    • Explore options for the source of power, do you have to have 3 phase?
    • Discuss backup power solutions to ensure uninterrupted operation.
    • Mention energy efficiency considerations.
    • Methods of Unloading
    • Discuss various unloading methods, such as augers, conveyors, overhead bins and legs.
    • Explain the pros and cons of each method.
    • Provide tips on selecting the right unloading equipment for your facility.
    • Safety and Compliance
    • Emphasize the importance of safety in grain handling facilities.
    • Discuss safety measures, training, and equipment.
    • Automation and Technology
    • Explore the role of automation and technology in modern grain handling facilities.
    • Discuss benefits like remote monitoring, data management, and predictive maintenance.
    • Highlight the potential for improved efficiency and profitability.
    • Maintenance and Long-Term Considerations
    • Talk about the importance of ongoing maintenance for facility longevity.
    • Discuss strategies for preventing wear and tear.
    • Summarize 
    • Challenge

     

    Discovering the ROI of Grain Storage

    Discovering the ROI of Grain Storage

    If shiny new grain bins seem to be growing like corn in July on local farms, your eyes are not deceiving you. Numerous reasons exist for a farm operation to add grain storage to its holdings — reasons that affect long-term profitability. “But just like any other strategy, it’s a tool that can help diversify your risk. I’m not suggesting that farmers store all their grain, but maybe store a certain percentage of it, so that it aligns with your bias of the market and what your cash flow needs are.”

    •  
    • advantages 
    • direct effect to the bottom line
    • allowing you to run more of your operation on your terms
    • gives you more control.

    What are ways for farmers to store grain?

    • Farmers have many options for storing their grain including on-farm storage or working with their local elevator.

    Why Store Grain? -Advantages begin right at harvest.

    • Avoid Historically Low Basis Levels
    • As a function of local supply and demand, basis levels vary across geographies and conditions.  Basis is simply the difference between the local cash price for your grain and the corresponding futures price on the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT). 
    • Negative Basis
    • Positive Basis
    • Wide & Narrow Basis
    • “Having on-farm storage gives producers a way to avoid wide basis levels driven by peak harvest supply,” says Steven Aldridge, Origination Manager for Bunge. “Typically basis strengthens post-harvest, and storage allows you to participate in that.”
    • Crop Conditions/Quality
    • crops can also suffer discounting because of other factors, such as quality factors, (e.g. moisture content, damage, or foreign material)
    • One other aspect of storing grain that needs mentioning is grain quality. “You’re storing a perishable product that can be affected by temperature, moisture and pests,” he says. “Keeping the grain in storage without proper monitoring and maintenance could result in ruin. That’s why you need a plan for grain storage and know how marketing that grain aligns with your operation’s financial needs.”
    • Improve Marketing Flexibility
    • Controlling grain storage improves crop-marketing choices in several ways 
    • How far is the elevator or co-op from a processor or export terminal? That basis discount affects your crop and those of your neighbors’ equally.
    • Storage gives you many more options than that. With grain safely in storage, an operation’s delivery radius extends dramatically. It allows producers to search for the best opportunity, rather than being forced to sell as-is to the most convenient local entity.
    • The Futures Hedge
    • On-farm grain storage opens up another important marketing tool that producers can use to manage risk as well as improve their profitability: the futures contract or hedge-to-arrive (HTA)
    • Efficient Operations
    • Time is money” could not ring truer than for farmers during harvest. Delays stemming from weather, transportation time or equipment availability translate to losses in the field or added costs.
    • the local elevator may only accept grains during certain hours or force trucks to wait in queue, causing undesired down-time in the field.
    • There is nothing worse than downtime during great harvest weather
    • If you can haul to your own storage bins, they’re likely within close proximity, cutting down the number of trucks, drivers and fuel required.  This keeps your combine running, making the most of prime harvest days.
    • A delay in harvest could create opportunities for losses from frost, wildlife feeding, wind gusts, stalk deterioration, pests, and fungus all can whittle away at a standing crop.

    ROI and Recouping Investment

    Can I afford to build it? OR How can I afford not to?

    • To get a good idea of the potential return on investment look at tracking the three- to five-year average on basis. That history can show you trends demonstrating basis-level changes on-farm storage can capitalize upon.
    • Use the average in your area divided into the costs of your project to predict your return on investment
    • Overall, four to five years as a typical expectation for an investment in additional storage to capture a return on your investment (ROI)
    • The U.S. Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency runs a program called the Farm Storage Facility Loan Program that typically amortizes the investment over seven years.
    • Once we build the storage should we track the actual ROI?
    • Why would knowing this be valuable?

    Investment in Quality

    • mechanical breakdowns create delays that can force harvesting in less-then-ideal conditions. 
    • Quality and reliable facilities reduce the risk for break downs and delays
    • Commercial elevators have two moisture issues to consider when buying grain 
    • safety and quality: In a confined space, grain containing too much moisture heats up, potentially damaging the stored grain and also putting the elevator itself at risk
    • To get grain to optimum conditions they may charge for shrink in addition to drying charges, and these discounts can quickly eat away at your profits.

     

    Additional Comments?

    • Without on-farm storage, this opportunity doesn’t exist for a producer
    • Dealing with the unpredictability of nature lies at the heart of any farming operation. On-farm storage provides an additional tool that can create efficiencies, lower costs and improve revenue while contributing to better risk management and greater opportunity.”

     

    What Does Success Look like to you?

     

    Summary

     

    Challenge

    Episode 059: Safe Storage with Grain Weevil

    Episode 059: Safe Storage with Grain Weevil
    Safety in agriculture is something that can never be talked about enough. Sometimes, it seems like we hear another news story of a farmer or rancher getting hurt every day. Father son duo, Chad and Ben Johnson, are starting the conversation, joining this episode of the FarmBits podcast as CEO and CIO of Grain Weevil, to discuss their new advancements with robotics in grain storage. After a challenge was presented to them by a family friend, they were driven to create a startup to prevent farmers from having to deal with the danger of entering grain bins. Continuing on with our robotics and automation in agriculture series, this episode shows how autonomy and robotics can minimize the risk that farmers encounter day to day. Join our hosts, Taylor and Kelsey, on this episode to learn more about developing robotic solutions for farming operations and how this product could benefit your own operation. Grain Weevil Contact Information: Email: hello@grainweevil.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/grain_weevil LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/grainweevil Chad's Contact Information: Email: Chad@grainweevil.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chadjohnson72 Ben's Contact Information: Email: Ben@grainweevil.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/benjaminhjohnson FarmBits Contact Information: E-Mail: farmbits@unl.edu Twitter: https://twitter.com/NEDigitalAg Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/UNLFarmBits Kelsey's Twitter: https://twitter.com/kswan713 Kelsey's LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/KelseySwantek Taylor's Twitter: https://twitter.com/tayloranne7170 Taylor's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/taylor-cross/ Opinions expressed by the hosts and guests on this podcast are solely their own, and do not reflect the views of Nebraska Extension or the University of Nebraska - Lincoln.
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