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The Son Ordered Two New John Deere's… BUT The Dad Sent The Truck Back Before Entering The Farm

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On a Tuesday morning in April 1978, a

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gleaming red semi-truck pulled onto

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County Road 14 in Marshall County, Iowa,

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hauling two brand new John Deere

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tractors that cost more than most people

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in the county would earn in a decade.

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The driver had delivery instructions to

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the Patterson farm, a 640 acre operation

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that had been in the same family since

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1889. He was supposed to drop off a new

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John Deere 4440 and a new John Deere

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4240 $14700

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and $38,000 respectively. Total value

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$85,000 before tax at the main equipment

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shed. The driver had done this route

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before. He knew the farm. He turned onto

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gravel drive that led through a tunnel

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of oak trees toward the white farmhouse

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and the big red barn. But he never made

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it to the barn because standing in the

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middle of that gravel drive about 300 yd

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from a county road was a 73-year-old man

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named Earl Patterson. And Earl was

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holding up his hand like a traffic cop.

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The truck stopped. The driver leaned out

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the window. Mr. Patterson, I've got your

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delivery. Earl shook his head. Not my

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delivery. my sons and you're not

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bringing them onto this property. The

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driver blinked, confused. Sir, I've got

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paperwork here. Two tractors ordered by

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James Patterson. Delivery addressed this

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location. Earl's expression didn't

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change. I know what the paperwork says,

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"But this is my land, and those tractors

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aren't coming on it. Turn around and

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take them back to the dealership." What

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happened in the next 45 minutes became

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legendary in Marshall County. And the

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lesson it taught is one that every

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farmer, young or old, needs to hear

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before they make the biggest financial

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mistake of their life. Before I explain

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exactly what happened between Earl

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Patterson and his son that morning, you

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need to understand the agricultural

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environment of the late 1970s because

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this wasn't just a family dispute. This

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was a collision between two completely

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different philosophies of farming

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happening at the exact moment when

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American agriculture was splitting into

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two camps. Those who believed debt and

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expansion were the path to survival and

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those who believed debt was a noose

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waiting to tighten. By 1978, the boom

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years of the early '7s were over. Corn

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prices, which had peaked above $3 per

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bushel in 1973 to74, had settled back to

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around $210

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to $230.

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Land values were still high. Iowa

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farmland was averaging $1,800

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to $2,000 per acre, but the explosive

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appreciation had slowed. Interest rates

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were creeping upward as the Federal

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Reserve tried to control inflation, and

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equipment prices had gone through the

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roof. That John Deere 4440 that cost

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$47,000 in 1978. A comparable tractor in

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1970 would have cost about $12,000.

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Equipment costs had nearly quadrupled

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while commodity prices had barely

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doubled. But here's what made 1978

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particularly dangerous. The agricultural

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lending industry was still operating on

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the assumption that the boom would

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continue. Banks were eager to lend to

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farmers, especially young farmers who

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wanted to expand and modernize. The term

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progressive farmer was thrown around

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like a badge of honor. If you weren't

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expanding, if you weren't upgrading to

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bigger equipment, if you weren't

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planning fence row to fence row, you

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were considered backward, old-fashioned,

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destined to be left behind. The John

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Deere dealerships and the farm credit

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lenders had basically formed a

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partnership. The dealers would sell the

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dream of modern farming and the lenders

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would finance it with 7 to 10 year loans

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that seem manageable when you looked at

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the monthly payment in isolation. What

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they didn't emphasize was a total debt

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burden or what would happen if prices

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dropped or how quickly things could

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unravel if you had even one or two bad

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years. Earl Patterson had started

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farming in 1927 when he was 22 years

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old, right before the Great Depression.

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He'd watched his father lose 160 acres

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in 1932 because of debt incurred during

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the 1920s boom. He'd survived a

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depression by farming small, spending

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nothing he didn't have and treating debt

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like poison. He'd built the Patterson

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farm from 160 acres in 1935 to 640 acres

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by 1960. And he'd done it without ever

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taking a loan for equipment. Not once,

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not ever. He bought used tractors, fix

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them himself, and ran them until they

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literally couldn't be repaired anymore.

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His current equipment roster in 1978

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included a 1960 John Deere 4010, a 1965

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John Deere 4020, and a 1953 John Deere

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70, plus implements that range from

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serviceable to barely functional.

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Nothing was new, nothing was financed,

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and the farm was completely paid off.

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640 acres, free and clear, worth over a

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million dollars with zero debt. His son,

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James Patterson, was 34 years old in

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1978. He'd grown up on the farm, worked

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alongside his father since he was old

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enough to drive a tractor, and had every

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intention of taking over the operation

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when Earl retired. But James represented

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a different generation. One that had

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come of age during the boom years of the

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early 70s. One that had been taught by

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agricultural colleges and extension

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agents that modern farming required

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modern equipment, modern techniques,

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modern thinking. James had attended Iowa

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State, majored in agricultural business,

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and come home with ideas that made Earl

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deeply uncomfortable. James talked about

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economies of scale and capital

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efficiency and leveraging appreciating

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assets. Earl talked about not owing

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anyone a damn thing. The tension had

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been building for years, but came to a

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head in March of 1978 when Earl

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announced he was stepping back. He was

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73. His knees were shot, his hands had

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arthritis, and he wanted to slow down.

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He told James a farm was his to run with

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one non-negotiable condition. You don't

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take on debt. Period. You want new

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equipment, you save for it. You want to

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expand, you do it slow with cash. But

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this farm stays debtree. James heard the

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words, but he didn't really listen. He'd

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already been talking to the John Deere

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dealer in town, a smoothtalking salesman

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named Rick Holloway, who convinced James

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that the farm needed to modernize to

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stay competitive. Your dad did great,

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Rick had said. But he's from a different

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era. Today, you need horsepower. You

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need efficiency. You need equipment that

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can cover ground fast, plan precise,

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harvest quick. That 04010,

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it's 30 years behind the curve. Rick had

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shown James a new 4440, a 130 horsepower

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beast with a turbocharged diesel engine,

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powers shift transmission, and a cab

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with air conditioning and a stereo. He'd

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shown him the 4,240,

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slightly smaller at 100 horsepower, but

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still a massive upgrade over the old

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equipment. and he'd shown James the

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financing options. 10-year loan at 9.5%

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interest, monthly payments of about

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$1,100

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for both tractors combined. You're

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farming 640 acres. Rickett said you'll

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cover that payment easy, even in a bad

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year. And in good years, you'll make

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enough extra from increased efficiency

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to pay it off early. James had run the

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numbers. At 640 acres, averaging 115

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bushels of corn per acre. At $2.20 per

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bushel, he'd gross about $162,000.

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Operating costs seed fertilizer, fuel,

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chemicals, maybe $80,000.

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That left $82,000 before equipment

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payments. Annual payment on the

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tractors, $13,200.

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still left $68,800

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seemed like a no-brainer. What James

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didn't calculate. What Rick Holloway

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conveniently didn't mention was how much

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those numbers could change. What if

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yields dropped to 90 bushels in a

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drought year? What if corn fell to $180?

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What if fuel prices spiked? What if the

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tractors needed major repairs that

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weren't covered by warranty? What if

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