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OK | Interesting discussion.
As a landowner and a renter, I can see valid points on both sides. But this brings up a question that I've wandered about, have considered and have also seen the negitive side of. I am in an area that has been winter wheat for most of the last 100 years and so rents/shares are based on that. Having been NTfor several years, I have been some what successfull, along with a few others, in growing other more profitable crops. What might be a fair cash rent for wheat ground looks like a bargin for another crop. If this is a free market societly and a person is willing to take a little more risk both to the landlords and the tenants benefit, at what point can landlords be approached with a higher rent offer? This has happened here locally and now the tenant that offered more and is raising other crops is not thought to highly of but yet he is the one willing to take a risk and think outside the box. | |
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