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Missouri | That is kind of a loaded question. Here in Nebraska they have put a moratorium on adding new irrigated land. That has driven up irrigated land values. Soil types have a lot to do with values. Some land would never have been farmed without irrigation. I also have some dryland that with timely rains will hang right with irrigated yields. I would say in a very general value, Irrigated land would be worth double what dryland is worth. My reason behind saying that is dryland rents are in general half what irrigated land brings. | |
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