Harvesters For Sale in Canada

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    About Harvesters

    Mechanical harvesters date back to the 1800s, and are collectively considered one of the most important agricultural inventions in the history of man for the time they save and the efficiency gains they provide in perpetuating the global food supply.

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    Hours5,241
    Location: Armstrong, British Columbia, Canada
    On-Site Auction
    NEW HOLLAND 818 SELF-PROPELLED CHOPPER, NON-RUNNER 109738 Used Pull-Type Forage Harvesters upcoming auctionsNEW HOLLAND 818 SELF-PROPELLED CHOPPER, NON-RUNNER 109738 Used Pull-Type Forage Harvesters upcoming auctions
     
     
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    Auction Date:2026-07-17 9:00:00 AM (CDT)
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Dexter, Minnesota, USA
    Seller: Hamilton-Maring Auction Group
    Number of Rows12
    Row Spacing30 in
    Location: Killarney, Manitoba, Canada
    Cutting Width40 ft
    Location: Cypress River, Manitoba, Canada
    Cutting Width40 ft
    Location: Cypress River, Manitoba, Canada
    Cutting Width40 ft
    Location: Cypress River, Manitoba, Canada
    Hours585
    Separator Hours1,485
    Serial NumberYJG235840
    Location: Macgregor, Manitoba, Canada
    Seller: Travis Snaith
    Hours3,510
    Separator Hours2,300
    Drive4WD
    Location: Montmagny, Quebec, Canada
    Seller: Groupe Bosse
    Hours2,185
    Location: Montmagny, Quebec, Canada
    Seller: Groupe Bosse
    Hours4,094
    Separator Hours2,725
    Crop TypeCorn/Beans
    Location: Montmagny, Quebec, Canada
    Seller: Groupe Bosse
    Hours2,874
    Location: Montmagny, Quebec, Canada
    Seller: Groupe Bosse
    Hours5,957
    Separator Hours4,604
    Drive4WD
    Location: Foxwarren, Manitoba, Canada
    Seller: Ernest Hofer
    Hours3,533.2
    Separator Hours2,627.9
    Crop TypeGrain
    Location: Morris, Manitoba, Canada
    Seller: Ronald Dreger
    Number of Rows12
    Row Spacing30 in
    Location: Winkler, Manitoba, Canada
    Seller: Garry Froese
    Hours474
    Separator Hours363
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Keg River, Alberta, Canada
    Seller: Doug Jaeger
    Cutterbar TypeRigid
    Location: Drumheller, Alberta, Canada
    Seller: Verdant Valley Colony
    Cutterbar TypeRigid
    Location: Drumheller, Alberta, Canada
    Seller: Verdant Valley Colony
    Cutterbar TypeRigid
    Location: Drumheller, Alberta, Canada
    Seller: Verdant Valley Colony
    Cutterbar TypeRigid
    Location: Drumheller, Alberta, Canada
    Seller: Verdant Valley Colony
    Cutterbar TypeRigid
    Location: Drumheller, Alberta, Canada
    Seller: Verdant Valley Colony
    Cutting Width35 ft
    Location: Mount Elgin, Ontario, Canada
    Seller: Oxford Elginstead Farms Inc
    Hours4,432.2
    Separator Hours3,312.7
    Crop TypeGrain
    Location: Morris, Manitoba, Canada
    Seller: Ronald Dreger
    Serial NumberI5101344
    Location: Haywood, Manitoba, Canada
    Seller: Adrian Borstlap
    Hours5,019
    Separator Hours5,019
    Drive2WD
    Location: Kinkora, Prince Edward Island, Canada
    Seller: Jason Webster
    Hours4,244
    Separator Hours2,389
    Drive2WD
    Location: Kinkora, Prince Edward Island, Canada
    Seller: Jason Webster
    Hours2,946
    Separator Hours2,200
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Teeswater, Ontario, Canada
    Seller: Will Vloet
    Hours1,490
    Separator Hours1,135
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Ripley, Ontario, Canada
    Seller: Brucelea Poultry Farm
    Cutting Width40 ft
    Location: Macgregor, Manitoba, Canada
    Seller: Travis Snaith

    About Harvesters

    Mechanical harvesters date back to the 1800s and are used the world over to bring in crops quickly and efficiently. Technological and design advancements introduced throughout the ensuing 200-plus years have dramatically reduced the time and labor required to accomplish this crucial task, and modern combines are the culmination of all of this progress, as they allow growers to accomplish the processes of cutting, threshing, and winnowing crops using a single machine. Recent advancements have included the use of continuously variable transmissions (CVTs), data-gathering and monitoring sensors and systems, camera systems, hillside leveling technologies, crop-processing refinements, and precision ag features that automate steering and other aspects of combine operation.


    CLAAS LEXION 8700 TERRA TRAC Combine Harvester

    Harvester History

    Cyrus McCormick patented a mechanical reaper in 1834, and Hiram Moore patented the first combine in 1835. In 1891, William J. Conroy received a patent for his forage harvester. These machines and others helped demonstrate the potential machines held for automating what had been a time-consuming, labor-intensive process for a very long time. Then in 1937, Massey-Harris Chief Engineer Thomas Carroll and his team designed the Massey-Harris No. 20, thought by many to have been the first commercially viable self-propelled combine. A number of leading agricultural machinery brands including Case IH, CLAAS, Gleaner, John Deere, Massey-Harris descendant Massey Ferguson, New Holland, and others have been hard at work refining the combine ever since.

    Recent advancements have increasingly leaned on digital technology to improve what was once solely a mechanical process. Today’s combines have sophisticated onboard computers that allow them to optimize harvesting speeds based on terrain and crop conditions, as well as GPS-based guidance technologies that automate some of the most repetitive and physically demanding components of harvester operation, making combines ever more efficient and freeing operators to focus on the big picture.

    Harvester Varieties

    The main Harvesters category on MarketBook.ca is a wide-ranging one that’s organized into Combines, Cotton Pickers & Strippers, Forage Harvesters (Self-propelled and Pull-type), Headers (Platform, Row Crop, and Forage Headers), and Other Harvesters subcategories. In addition, Forage Headers are split into Row Crop, Rotary, and Windrow sub-subcategories.

    Harvester Heads

    Platform headers feature a cutter bar, a revolving wheel, and an auger or draper to advance the crop into the combine for processing. Row crop headers function similarly but use points, or snouts, positioned between rows of corn, cotton, rice, sunflowers, or other crops. Forage headers, meanwhile, include row crop, rotary, and windrow styles, and are used to harvest grasses, maize, and other forage plants for processing into silage or haylage.

    Find The Right Harvester

    MarketBook.ca offers a big selection of new and used harvesters for sale, including machines from leading manufacturers such as Case IH, CLAAS, Gleaner, John Deere, MacDon, Massey Ferguson, New Holland, and others.

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