Farmers and consumers market bulletin, vol. 96 [i.e. 100], no. 22 (2013 October 30)

Plant a rainbow of pansies this
winter.

Arty's Garden, Page 7

GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE GARY W. BLACK, COMMISSIONER WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013 VOL. 96, NO. 22 COPYRIGHT 2013
Sunbelt Expo honors heritage, sustainability of Southeastern agriculture

By Dallas Duncan

John Deere and Case cotton pickers rove through the demonstration fields at the 2013 Sunbelt Agricultural Exposition in Moultrie, Ga. Photo by Dallas Duncan

The citizens of Moultrie, Ga., welcomed tens of thousands of visitors this month for the 36th annual Sunbelt Agricultural Exposition.
Georgia Commissioner of Agriculture Gary W. Black likened the event to an agricultural family reunion.
"We're gonna get to visit with each other, we're going to get to do a lot of good things, but most of all, commerce is going to take place here in this largest industry in the state of Georgia, and we really look forward to what's going to happen," he said.
And take place it did: a record 1,219 exhibitors were present, showcasing the latest in technology and celebrating the traditions of all facets of agriculture. A large portion of the commerce bore the Georgia Grown label, and Sunbelt visitors flocked to the main gate to get their hands on apparel and products associated with the program. They also received the second issue of Georgia Grown magazine, which was unveiled during a ceremony on Oct. 15.
"In 1959, I was selected to go to the National FFA public speaking competition," Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal said. "My speech was entitled, `The Future of Farming.' I had occasion to look at it some time back and I recognized that I was a pretty good prognosticator. I predicted that agriculture would continue to be one of the foremost leading industries in our country ... Agriculture truly does remain the No. 1 industry in the state of Georgia, and [Black] has had a great influence on branding Georgia agriculture with Georgia Grown," Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal said. "I thank you all for having the foresight to promote these products and to promote our state and to promote its agriculture."
Equally important to Georgia Grown is the idea that Georgia agriculture is sustainable, Black said.
See EXPO, page 12

INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Farmland rent or lease ads.... 2 Take 5.................................... 6 Feature recipe........................7 Visit with a Vet...................... 12
Notice
Ad deadline for the Nov. 27 issue is noon, Nov. 13.

Legislators hear from researchers, farmers during two-day tour

By Dallas Duncan
Members of the Georgia General Assembly got a whirlwind tour of Georgia agriculture in October, traveling as part of the Georgia Agribusiness Council's two-day legislative tour.
"We have a new Senate ag chairman and we also have a lot of new members of the General Assembly, several new folks on the House [Agriculture and Consumer Affairs Committee]," said Bryan Tolar, GAC president. "We really wanted to give them a chance to showcase everything agriculture has in about as much time as we could possibly get."
More than 20 legislators attended the event and heard from a number of researchers, college representatives and producers. Tour stops included the University of Georgia-Tifton campus, Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College, the Sunbelt Agricultural Exposition, Funston Gin Company, Sanderson Farms' hatchery and Langdale Forest Products' sawmill. The visit to Sunbelt took legislators into the demonstration fields to view cotton, peanuts and other crops; to the barns to hear

from Georgia Cattlemen's Association and Georgia Milk Producers; and to the main gate for remarks from Georgia Commissioner of Agriculture Gary W. Black and Georgia Farm Bureau President Zippy Duvall.
"I see and hear from other states that their legislature and their governors ... don't pay them any attention and they just don't get any respect," Duvall said. "Then I come back home and I go see county Farm Bureaus and sit in front of 200 or 300 people and tell them how fortunate we are to have men and women that serve in our legislature that still know that agriculture's the No. 1 industry in the state."
Black reminded legislators that Georgia needs their help telling the state's agriculture story.
"Too often this story gets kind of diluted. I tell lots of people, everywhere across the state, `Guess what, everything on the Internet is not true,'" he said. "Particularly when it comes to agriculture, there are tons of things on the Internet that quite frankly people need to have fact-checked up and down the room, and we're going to stand in the
See TOUR, page 7

GEORGIA GROWN PROFILE: Gin Creek
100 acres of wine, weddings and more

Mail to: Published by the Ga. Department of Agriculture Gary W. Black, Commissioner

By Jenna Saxon, press office
Brothers Richie and Doug DeMott began developing Gin Creek in 1999. The original intention was to build a place to ride jet skis and host a few parties, but after developing DeMott Lake, the idea of hosting outdoor weddings was born.
Gin Creek, located in Hartsfield, Ga., is a parent company of DeMott Lake, RoseMott Vineyards and the Winery at Gin Creek. The lake and vineyards sit atop 100 acres and serve as a destination for retreats, weddings, fishing and recreation. Gin Creek was one of the first outdoor wedding destinations of its kind in the South and has become one of the most sought-after locations for such events. It's also been featured in Southern Living.
"Brides from all over the country have married here saying the one thing that thrills our hearts: `Thank you. You have made my dreams

come true,'" said Richie DeMott. "There were never any blueprints. We were just fulfilling dreams with a farmer's instinct, a good mechanic and a good Daddy's upbringing. My dad would say, `Dream big, work hard and learn to do it yourself. Know that experience comes from mistakes and wisdom comes from experience.'"
Gin Creek joined Georgia Grown during its re-launch in 2011, at the same time it was launching its Georgia Grown Trail on Highway 37. The company was the first to feature the Georgia Grown logo on its wine bottles. "Today the Georgia Grown brand is a huge marketing tool for our business and our Highway 37 trail," Richie DeMott said. "Our Georgia Grown membership keeps us abreast of all the activities going
on in the Georgia agricultural community and we're honored to help promote agriculture and agritourism as two of the mainstays of Georgia's economy."

PAGE 2

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013

Market Bulletin Advertising Guidelines

Only subscribers with a current subscription number are allowed to advertise in the Market Bulletin. Advertisers are limited to one ad per issue per subscriber number. Out-ofstate subscribers are only allowed to publish ads in the Out-of-State Wanted category.
All advertisements published in the Market Bulletin must relate to farming, agriculture or be a part of these industries. All items submitted for sale through the Market Bulletin must meet at least one of the following criteria:
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2. Must be made by the advertisers from materials on their farming operations
3. Must be owned and used by advertisers on their farming operations for at least 90 days prior to offering for sale.
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the next applicable edition of the Market Bulletin. Ads that are not received by deadline will appear in the following applicable edition.
Ads can be scheduled to run in two consecutive issues, if the category allows. A new ad must be submitted if the advertiser wants the ad to run more than two consecutive issues.
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Ads must be received by 12 p.m. on the Questions about advertising? Call 404specified deadline date in order to appear in 656-3722

Six acres of pastureland off Whitesville

FARMLAND RENT/ Road for lease; multiple use options

such as hay, cows, horses, etc.; $500

LEASE

annually. Carl Abercrombie LaGrange

cafpid@yahoo.com 706-575-5692

If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.

Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted

The Farmland for Rent/Lease cat- Looking to lease pasture land in For-

egory is published the last issue of syth, Pickens, Cherokee counties for

each month. Please adhere to the cattle. Sam Howard Canton 770-595-

following guidelines when submitting 5914

an ad for Farmland for Rent/Lease or Rent/Lease Wanted * When submitting ad, please designate it for the Farmland for Rent/Lease category. Notices to buy or sell farmland are published only in the special fall or

Need 30-plus acres of pasture to rent that already has fence posts if possible; near or around Jasper County or Butts, Newton, Greensboro or Madison. Chester Cantrell Shady Dale 770-312-6224

spring farmland editions * Ads must 706-468-1341

not exceed 30 words.

Pastureland for raising cattle; any

25-acre horse pasture with creek wa- size; would prefer the east Athens, Winter; excellent for retired horses; Henry terville, Arnoldsville areas. Clay Dent

County; call for details. Carole Thomp- Hull claydent@gmail.com 706-319-

son McDonough Caroleth@bellsouth. 2175

net 770-954-0993
30-acre horse farm with cottage; across FARM EMPLOYMENT
from 70-acre park, recreation center; fenced yard, two blocks to MARTA. Mel- If you have questions regarding ads in

ba Harris Lithonia 770-633-7429

this category, call 404-656-3722.

300 acres; several pastures for grazing Only farm work or farm help wanted

or hay; call between 7 and 9 p.m. R.S. advertisements allowed. No com-

Auldridge Blythe 706-592-4042

mercial, industrial or domestic em-

Deer hunting lease now available; 246 ployment permitted.

acres; price reduced to $10 per acre; 40-year-old man with class A CDL,

Marion County; best hunting in county. Ryan Hughes Marietta 303-877-1014
Deer hunting lease now available; excellent hunting; 196 acres, Taylor Coun-

looking for row cropping or cattle farm work; permanent only. Michael Martin Zebulon 770-695-5383

ty, $10 per acre. Derek Hughes Butler 52-year-old male looking for job; poul-

770-605-3838

try farm layer or broiler farm; experience

Entire center for lease: Willowbrook in both. Randall Lowery Gainesville

Equestrian Center; covered ring, six 470-213-3212

turnouts, 10 stalls, two apartments, 32 Experienced stable hands wanted at

acres; $2,800 per month; www.LeslieOl- 22-stall dressage barn; feed, turnout,

sen.com. Leslie Olsen Villa Rica 770- stalls, $10 to $14 per hour. Laura Tsivo-

459-1417

glou Milton laura@applewood-farm.

Hunting lease available; 100-plus com 678-315-5325

acres, running creek, established trails; Farm worker, hard working, good at

abundant deer and turkey; $12 per fencing, landscaping, equipment opera-

acre; rural Wilkinson County. Brogdon 4 tion, wanting local farm, Spanish speak-

Farms Irwinton 478-290-1941

ing, excellent references. Freddi Marti-

Pasture for lease, first year free if you nez Rockmart 404-858-3563

provide fence, barn etc.; Loganville, text or call; eight acres. Phillip Almand Stone Mountain phillip@completeconcreteusa.com 770-294-7500
Pasture for rent, private barn. M. Atwood Rex 678-836-9776

General contractor seeking work; lake builder, land clearer; clean fence rows; repair barns, fences, drainage; your equipment or mine. Bobby Karr Fairburn 678-973-7645 770-964-5065

Quitman County: 270 acres on GA 27 paved frontage, camp site, well, elec-

Looking for a Spanish-speaking mature male or couple, to work on a bird

tricity; excellent deer hunting. Benjamin farm; live-in position, $200/wk; leave

Lindsey Lenox bennylindsey@yahoo. message. Tere Lopez Oxford 770-787-

com 770-842-7900

2955

Market Bulletin Subscriber Guidelines
Online-only subscriptions are $5 per year. Print subscriptions, which include a complimentary online subscription, are $10 per year.
To subscribe by mail, send a check or money order payable to Georgia Department of Agriculture along with your name, complete mailing address and phone number to:
Georgia Department of Agriculture Attn: Market Bulletin PO Box 742510 Atlanta, GA 30374-2510 To subscribe or renew online, visit www.thegamarketbulletin.com to pay by electronic check, Visa or MasterCard. Please note we no longer accept cash payment for subscriptions. Subscriptions are only available on a one-year basis. Each subscription or renewal must be paid for separately please do not combine two on a check or money order. To see when your subscription is up for renewal, check the expiration date on the page 1 mailing label.

Looking for full time work; experience 1970 John Deere 110; eight horsepow-

with horses, cattle, haying; can run most er; f/o rest; new battery, wiring, rear with

machines and repairs; housing, salary weights; parade-ready, $1,500. Hollis

required. Joey Savaria Ila 479-222-9241 Crummey Monroe 770-833-9802 770-

Need help on broiler farm, salary and 207-9248

housing. Chaney Waldon Lyerly 706- 1979 International tractor, 741 hours.

844-4114

Don Phillips Walnut Grove 770-786-

Quality horse farm near Athens; seek- 6273

ing responsible, experienced person for 1983 white GMC tractor with a 15-ton

stable work. Melanie Howington Bishop trailer. Mike Austin Douglasville 770-

mommel@mindspring.com 706-767- 652-3383

7287 706-207-6297

1986 Ford 2910 tractor with five-foot

Want help to exercise three horses in Bush Hog rotary mower and posthole

south Monroe County; please call. Ron auger, $8,000. Dave Kingsley Hillsboro

Howell Macon 478-256-3246

twkings@gmail.com 706-468-0794

Woman; must know horses exchange 1991 International 470; single axle box

for 2/1 in exchange. Michael Babbit dump truck, $5,000, good condition,

Homerville 912-487-3661

good tires, $5,000. Doyce Green Silver

Creek 706-767-1848 706-295-0381
FARM MACHINERY 20-foot gooseneck trailer; 10-ton with

two dual wheel axles, $4,500 OBO.

If you have questions regarding this Matthew Wood Tiger 706-490-2051

category, call 404-656-3722.

2000 Mahindra, 4505 DI tractor, 880

Only farm machinery and equipment hours; great running condition, $6,000.

owned by the advertiser and used in Doug Starr Jackson 770-294-4983

his/her own farming operation can be advertised; those persons advertising for machinery and equipment wanted must be seeking those items for their own farming operation.

2006 Magnum mulching head, skid steer loader; very good condition; low usage, $15,000. David Murphy Folkston jmurp003@gmail.com 912-496-4092 912-276-0069

140-kilowatt generator for poultry farm for sale, $5,000 OBO, great for a twohouse farm. Alex Hart Royston 706498-0825
1420 IH combine with 15-foot bean

2010 Sukup Gonse planter, used one year, six-row, $3,500. David Arnold Leesburg 229-343-0644
230 Massey-Ferguson diesel, low hours, excellent condition, six-foot Bush

head and four-row corn head, 2,800 hours, $17,000. Drew Swancy Calhoun 770-324-0617

Hog; six-foot scrapblade, single row plow, $4,000. Ellis Jones Carrollton 770-832-2958

150-bushel Parker grain wagon, great all-around gravity wagon, great for storing deer feed, $1,100. David Thigpen Lumber City 912-568-7711

235 John Deere harrow, 27-foot KMC posthole diggers, not used in 3 years, old baler, 328 John Deere parts. Gary Smith Broxton 912-393-5742

154 Cub Lo-Boy mower, new clutch, pressure plate, $2,500; Cub stationary engine; two Farmall Cubs running. Lanier Burden Comer 706-614-0187
16-foot flatbed trailer (7,000-pound axle) pull out ramps, $1,500 firm. Royce

2N and 8N non-running tractors. Sam Caldwell Barnesville 678-967-9050
320 New Holland square baler; 3000 Melroe, 242 grain drill, $2,500. Cole Jernigan Buena Vista 706-570-2171 706-570-2171

Whittle Dexter 478-689-4358
16-foot gooseneck cattle trailer and 24-foot goose neck hay trailer with ramps for sale. Howard Burnette Mershon 912-288-0091

35 Massey Ferguson, four-cylinder, gas engine, runs well, $2,500, shop manual. Edward Norrington Jonesboro 770-473-9881

1941 John Deere B tractor with electric 3910 Ford four-wheel drive; low profile

start, new rear tire, cranks and runs well. rims and tires, 12.5L-15 fronts, 16.5L-

Skippy Higginbotham Monroe 770- 16.1 rears, $850 OBO. Paul Fonzo

267-2643 404-427-6215

Cumming 404-310-9333

1942 John Deere H, needs some work, 5,500-pound loader, Teledyne with

tin is good, $1,500. Patrick Kissell Pow- block forks; strong lift, cranks and runs

der Springs 678-428-9110

well, $5,500. Mike Hulett Hazlehurst

1948 Ford 8N $2,200; 1949 Ford 8N 912-347-1004

$1,900 ; three-point hitch, 16 disk har- 601 Ford Workmaster, six pieces of

row, $625 Travis Carnes Hartwell Ntrac- equipment, $3,500; Craftsman rear tine

torman@msn.com 706-436-3677 706- tiller, $100; Scag Tiger Cub, $750. Stevie

436-3677

Caudell Homer 706-677-4920 706-983-

1949 Ford 8N tractor, new points, 0878

distributor condenser pump, tire box 7600 Ford tractor; 1981 good condi-

blade, runs good, $2,400. Kim Santoloci tion with Allied 495 loader, scrape blade,

Thomaston 808-651-3598

harrow, $13,500. Jon Tucker Kennesaw

1949 M.T. John Deere, fair cond., 770-377-9306

stored inside, restored, no implements, 8N Ford tractor cultivator; two plant-

20 years, $3,250 Leonard Draper Cedar- ers, $2,500. W. P Fisher Abbeville 229-

town 770-748-2042 404-401-5591

425-0695

1955 WD-45; Allis Chamers tricycle 931 CAT loader, good conditon. Andy

front-end, parade ready, runs great, $5,000. Larry Bulter Hazlehurst 912375-5727
1961 Allis Chalmers model D-10, 29 horsepower cultivators, two 14-foot plows; two Gibson model D; good condition. Mack Shaw Waycross 912-283-

Holder Eatonton 706-473-7078
955 Cat front -end loader in good shape, new bottom, good motor. Pat Cannon Norcross 770-448-8555
9965; John Deere mud hog top condition, reduced; 2055 Case, low hours,

7150

new Doffer grinder, portable,110/Ac.

1961; 841 Power Master with equip- Ralph Nutt Cordele 229-276-5336

ment, $5,000. J. C Clark Waycross 912- Allis Chalmers, W-D45, 1957; wide

548-1887

front, new engine, other new parts;

1963 Ford 2000 tractor, gas engine, owned for 30 years, $3,200. Robert original paint, runs well, new brakes, Cragg Alto 706-776-3318 706-499$3,500, pictures available. Byron Bot- 8063

dorf Camilla botdorfb@gmail.com 229- Belly mower for Cub Farmall, 42 inch-

336-5444

es with belt, $250. Wayne Shelnutt Lo-

1968 Ford 3000 diesel, new mo- ganville 770-466-4943

tor, eight-speed; very good condition; Big Tex dump trailer, 14x8 feet, four-

$4,500 or trade for older Mopar. Kyle foot sides, loading ramps, like new

Johnson Haddock kjohnson@reevescc. condition, used one time. Ray Beaty

com 478-973-8336

Coolidge 229-224-8294

Please note there are two
different mailing addresses for
the Market Bulletin: a PO Box
for subscriptions and a street
address for ads and all other
communications.
Bobcat loader; excavator 770, 90 horsepower, diesel 420 hours, stored, one owner for use, like new, $9,900. Wayne Parker Ranger 770-926-3284
Bobcat Zero Turn 61-inch cut with 37 horsepower Kawasaki, 180 hours; cost $10,800, asking $7,200; like new. Wiley McCants Butler 478-957-3541
Bradco backhoe attachment for New Hollland skid steer model; 9 H.D., like new, needs new hoses. Jack Pearson Ellijay 706-276-3658
Bush Hog RTH 88; rear tiller, heavy duty, used very little. Herbert Prichard Colbert 706-248-5517
Cat D3B bulldozer, 10-foot blade; swamp tracks, 3,800 hours; good condition, $16,000. Raymond Bramlett Auburn 770-867-9864 470-235-0036
Cat D5 dozer, in good condition, 80 percent, used on farm for last 10 years, $15,000. Mark Webb McRae 229-3151300 229-868-6442
Caterpillar 955 trackloader; no problems, very strong, runs great; undercarriage in very good condition. $8,500 OBO. David Pope Jackson 678-7637250
Complete John Deere 42C lawnmower deck, fits LX200, GT and GX Series, like new, $415. G. Denton Hiawassee 706896-2901
Craftman tiller; 5.5 horsepower, 24 inches, never been used, $300. Joe Weeks White 770-241-8330 770-2418330
Custom-made heavy duty trailer, fourinch drop axle,14-ton capacity, $1,500. Dennis Williamson Forsyth debwmson33@aol.com 478-972-9211 478442-2842
DR field and brush mower, 17 horsepower Pro model, excellent condition, $2,295. Conley Haynes Moreland 770583-8994
Easy flow spreader, $200. Kenneth Boss Loganville 678-227-0735
Eight long brand, 21-feet peanut wagons, $2,500; 14-feet peanut wagons, $1,200. Ted Cowan Fitzgerald 229423-5602
Electric hoist, 4,000 pounds; 120/23volt, good condition, $850, Bill Carter Hahira billc50@windstream.net 229224-4900
Equipment hauler gooseneck,19 feet long, good condition, $2,000; 14-foot vehicle hauler, $1,200. Amy Monkus 16 Monkus Lane Preston 31824 229-3211874 229-310-9760
Equipment trailer, 20 feet, seven-ton, ramps, very good condition; 10-ply, eight-lug tires with spare, $2,600. Ellis Belflower Fort Valley 478-951-1104 478-951-1104
Farmall 300 gas, good T/A, metal, rubber, live hydraulic, field ready, $2,500. Ken Lewis Madison 706-342-6240
Five-foot field cultivator, harrow; seven-row, needs one spring and two tines, $325. Jay Johnston Crawfordville 404557-3469
For Sale: 1979 Chevy C60 dump truck; only 31,938 miles; $4,500 OBO. Shira MacLennan Americus 229-331-0557
For Sale: 65 Massey-Ferguson diesel engine power steering, $3,000; call between 6 and 9 p.m. Joe Winkler Chatsworth 706-422-8764
For sale: John Deere 410, 4x5 round baler, works, $1350; New Holland 202 ground drive manure spreader, $650. Bob Witt Newnan 404-372-8395
For Sale: John Deere 435 hay balerr, sheltered, new belts, monitor, good condition, $8,000. Randall Perry Dublin 478-595-5423
For Sale: New Holland 311 square hay baler, good condition, sheltered, $2,500. Chris Perry Dublin 478-676-3660
For Sale: plow points, $5 each. Amy Beasley Fort Valley 478-825-1063 478319-7707
For Sale: sugar cane grinder for $1,000. Martha Lowery Dooling marthalowery@hotmail.com 478-433-6625 478-952-0606
For Sale: Troy-Bilt tiller, 99; equivalent to pony, little use, excellent condition, tuned up, $799. Kathy Skipper Conyers 404-702-3442

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN

PAGE 3

For-Most cattle chute with 30T head International C-153 engine in excel- M&D chipper, 5.5 horsepower, Briggs Seven-foot Tye grain drill $4,000; ZD21 TroyBilt horse tiller, seven horsepower,

gate and palp cage; one man handles, lent condition; fits 424, 2424, 444, 2444 & Stratton; chips limbs and brush, Kubota lawn mower for parts, make of- excellent condition, $750. Glenn Slaton

calves to large bulls, $2,500. Brent Chit- tractors. James Barnes Uvalda 912- leaves; like-new condition, $200. David fer. Ray Bowden Smarr kelrayb@bell- Alpharetta 770-475-7749

ty Moultrie gnfarms@windstream.net 594-8502

Mathis Suwanee 770-887-8580

south.net 478-394-0185

TW-20 Ford tractor, new hydrau-

229-891-5455

International Cub Lowboy, 154 for Massey 235 rebuilt engine, diesel, Six-foot brown tree cutter mower, lic pump and clutch, good tires and in

For Sale: Ford 8N tractor with Bush sale, needs tension pulleys installed, many new parts, 75 percent rubber; $2,100; eight-foot John Deere three- good condition. Jimmy Claxton Metter

Hog, $1,850; also Farmall Super C have them new; asking $1,800 or trade. rebuilt pump, injectors, warranty parts, point harrow, $650. J W Hall Doerun 912-362-0421

tractor with cultivator, $1,850. Nelson Johnny Weaver Snellville 678-848-1624 labor, $5,200. Alex Miller Blue Ridge 229-782-7018

Two 125-bushel side delivery gravity

Massey Conyers 770-483-2639

John Deere 1010 RUS works well, 706-455-6622

Stihl chainsaw, MS 361, 18-inch bar, grain wagons, $2,200; one galvanized

Ford 1710 four-wheel-drive, 2,240- looks good; $3,500 OBO; equipment Massey Ferguson 245; restored, 1980, used 10 hours, $325. Kent Schneider steel with hydraulic spreader mounted

quart Bush Hog loader, ROPS box blade, sold seperatly. Tom Lovingood Doug- second owner; warranty show quality, Gainesville 678-936-2272

under shoot. A. Johns Dawson 229-

smoothing harrow, boom pole, not run- lasville 770-577-5834

field ready; call for details, $7,500; par- Taylor cotton module builder, always 995-5371

ning, $1,600. Danny Pierce Monroe John Deere 2020 diesel tractor; very tial trades. Tim Miller Cherrylog 706- sheltered, no leaks, extra good condi- Two 6000 Hi Cap peanut pickers, shel-

dpierce@windstream.net 770-267-6520 original and straight tractor with power 698-6611

tion. Jimmy Cofield Eastman 478-893- tered, $5,000. Wayne Rivenbark Metter

Ford 3000 diesel, runs great, wedge steering, very nice tractor, $6,700. J.J. Massey Ferguson 275 blown motor, 4996

912-362-2108

wheel weights; with five-foot scrape Altman Statesboro 912-682-3496

like new tires, calll after 6 p.m., no return Taylor-Way 415 disk harrow, $1,200; Two Allis Chalmers 60 combines; re-

blade and 5.5-foot Hardee Bush Hog, John Deere 450B loader, motor out and call, $1,200. Danny Manning Cochran Fred Cain three-point hitch, five-shank pair, parts; sheltered for 30 years. Paul

$4,500. Barry Wood Tiger 706-782-5689 disassembled, good bottom, $3,500. 478-934-0100

plow, $400. Leonard Hampton Watkins- Bryant Monroe bryant4105@gmail.com

Ford 3000 tires like new, new clutch lift, Jim Bishop Franklin 706-675-3943

Massey Ferguson 35 four-cylinder ville 706-769-4669

770-267-5393

good runs strong, $4,000. Danny Martin John Deere 455 G with backhoe, runs diesel with disk harrow; will trade for TD15B International with tilt blade and Two cultivators, two-row, $150 each;

Barnesville 770-468-4532

like new, $35,000. Ray Murphy Marietta 1,000-gallon septic system (installed) or rake; many extra parts, good farm ma- two-row Brown-Harden super seeder,

Ford 3930 tractor; 741 hours, 52 404-569-5909

$1,700. Don Clark Blue Ridge 678-237- chine. Homer Rivers Tarrytown 912- $400 OBO. Doug Aycock Thomaston

horsepower, power steering, turf tires, John Deere 5220 tractor; 541 loader, 7972

537-3731 912-293-4381

706-938-0242

$8,500. Bobby Fountain Cochran 478- diesel, two-wheel-drive, 230 hours, 45 Massey Ferguson; 56 to 35, good con- Three Lilliston Hi-Cap 6000 peanut Two-bottom plow 450, six-foot Rhino

934-6837

to 53 horsepower, USA made, one own- dition, $2,650. D B Hart Smyrna 770- combine, good condition; fully opera- mower, $600; 4020 John Deere, $7,500.

Ford 555 special backhoe, $5,000 er, $18,000. Kelly Hobgood Calhoun 432-4895

tional when last parked; one needs re- B Hall Pavo 229-859-2764

OBO. Mike Bloodworth Knoxville 478- 770-548-7574

Massey-Ferguson 35 deluxe gas, pair, $2,000 each. Gloy Hobbs Vienna Two-horse wooden wagon with rubber

836-2535 478-957-0985
Ford 7600 tractor, runs great, looks good, no problems, dual remotes, canopy, $9,500 OBO. Duke Burgess Louisville juliesvance@wildblue.net 478-6259542 305-923-0262
Ford 914 Bellymower; excellent condition, $500. R. Rooks Winder 770-8671847
Ford tractor, 4000, runs good witrh six-foot Bush Hog; `66 model, runs well. Harlon Langford West Point 706-6452862
G Allis Chalmers tractor with Kubota D600 engine, $4,500. Tommy Butler Forsyth 770-887-4064
G Allis Chalmers tractor, hand lift, good condition, four implements, $290; tractor in Franklin County. Doug Garrison Winder 678-858-2978
Generator, Cummins Power, 80 kilo-

John Deere 55 combine cab; two-row 38 inches, corn head, good condition, field-ready, good rubber, strong engine, $3,500 OBO. Lucia Miller Ellijay 706659-4895
John Deere 566 hay baler with monitor, low bales, excellent condition, $9,000. Scott Stephens Wrightsville 478-2328114
John Deere 6400, 85 horsepower, two-wheel-drive with loader, bucket and spear; 2,845 hours, sheltered, $27,500. John Bryant Eatonton 706-485-8321
John Deere 6405; 2000 model, 85 horsepower, 4x4, oversized rice and cane tires, belly pan, clamp on duals; $17,000. Jake Dean Rentz 478-2793657
John Deere 850 tractor with all equipment; seven pieces, asking $8,500. Kevin Kinney Taylorsville 678-925-4292

four-cylinder Continental, good tractor, $3,250. Larry Morrison Monticello 706318-2800
Mid 80s Ford 555B backhoe, runs great and very strong machine; used on farm don't use anymore. Tony Bannister Rome 770-286-6029
Morra disk mower: model 2270, field ready; seven turtle disk with new blades, $3,500. Kevin Brantley Wrightsville 478-290-5184
New Holland 570 square baler, great shape, used very little, always sheltered, $8,500. Kirk Chambless Elberton 770315-8759
New Holland 644 round baler, excellant condition, $7,850 firm. Scott Hancock Sautee 404-310-2558
New Holland TN70 tractor, excellent condition; 990 hours, one owner, $12,850. Windell Gillis Eastman 478-

229-942-2186
Three-point hitch, Weed Badger, used to weed around blueberry bushes, $2,500. L.G. Mitcham Ludow 912-2704683
Tiller Agri-fab 36-inch pull-behind tiller; pull behind lawnmower or ATV; 206cc motor, in like-new condition, $875. Bob Westerfield Molena 770468-2229
Tractor tires; two Firestone, four-rib 7.50x16 front tires, used, $120 for both. Rick Allison Buford 678-200-2040
Trailer made from truck bed, two-inch pressure treated bed, 1.88-inch hitch, towing jack, good for firewood hauling, $275. David Combs Jefferson 706-3674645
Trailer, 18 feet, dove tail, 7,000-pound axles with ramps, excellent condition, $1,700. James T Archer Dacula 770-

tires, flat hay bed; $400. Dwayne Fortner Dahlonega 706-867-9716
Two-row; John Deere 71, corn planters, double disk openers, $1,800, on toolbar or two-row cultivator frame, trades. Wendell Aenchbacher Talking Rock 706-235-2531
Utility trailer, 5x12, single axle, heavy duty, treated wood floor, $1,200 OBO. James Threlkeld Comer 706-7833298
Vermeer model 7040 nine-foot disk mower with caddy, excellent condition, $9,500. Herman King Marietta 770971-5618 404-395-1042
Vermeer track walk-behind trencher, RTX100, bought new, used very little, stored inside, low hours. Joe Verdone Lexington 706-743-3994
Wide front-end for old Farmall tractor;

watts, sheltered, used less than 20 John Deere 9976 cotton picker, mud 374-4868 478-231-8236

963-6036

cheap. Leroy Couch Toccoa 706-886-

hours. Danny Church Clarkesville 706- hog, pro 16 heads; 2,100 hours; $52,000 New Holland160 excavator, $4,500; Trailer; custom built for heavy equip- 4011

968-2851 706-754-9113

Brad Childers Montrose 478-484-0656 John Deere 555 G track loader, $2,500. ment, $2,995 OBO. Dwight Swanson Woods four-foot Bush Hog; like

Generator; Dayton 50 kilowatt, power John Deere deer plot drill, five feet Jimmy McLane Hartwell 706-376-4092 Dallas swanson_c@bellsouth.net 404- new, $500; 72 Allis Chalmers; all-crop

take-off driven, five-foot King Cutter ro- wide, works on three-point hitch, New Idea No. 206, manure spreader, 569-1993

combine, field ready, sheltered; $2,500.

tary tiller, six-foot scrape blade, boom $1,800; eight feet wide, $2,100; excel- needs work, $300; access to one in Troy-Bilt garden tiller, seven horse- Andy Adams Hartwell aapagent@

poles. Larry Bazemore Conyers baze- lent condition. Royce Hulett Hazlehurst Adairsville for parts, $50. Tamma Trump power, brush guard, electric start plow yahoo.com 706-371-2157 706-436-

morelarry@yahoo.com 678-593-2417 912-253-0161 912-375-3008

Acworth mswhinney@juno.com 770- attachments, $600. Henry Wilson 7031

770-786-1369

John Deere M, 12-volt, runs well, ev- 655-0819

Carnesville 706-287-4561

WTB: 30 to 40 horsepower diesel trac-

Grain wagons; 350-bushel, $1,300; erything works, $2,000. Stan Albert Older set of four-row International Troy-Bilt horse rotary tine (1987 mod- tor with front end loader; four-wheel

400-bushel with auger, $2,100, excel- Waycross 912-285-0220

planters; needs oiling and seed; make el); seven horsepower, Tecumseh en- drive, low hours with or without imple-

lent condition. Hulett Jacksonville 912- John Deere model M tractor with full offer; coches007@gmail.com. Michael gine, good running condition, $500. ments. Kathy Krause Cleveland 678-

253-0162

set of cultivators. Jerry Cox Fayetteville Joyner Perkins 706-551-9022

Larry Mann Cumming 770-844-8717 481-1182

Grasshopper; 612 commerical O-turn 770-461-7938

Oliver five-bottom flip turning plow, on Troy-Bilt tiller; seven horsepower B&S Yanmar tractor; 1500 with front end

mower, almost new condition, $2,950. John Deere, 6620, combine 216 head, land, $1,250. John Reed Jr Hahira 229- engine with hiller, furrower attachment scoop, Bush Hog, scrape; only 49 hours,

Faye Green Alto 706-776-7590

dump body, 20 feet; 20-plus ton hoist 794-4060

and owners manual, $375. Jody Slo- $5,995. Liordn Jordan Blue Ridge 706-

Gravely tractor with implements. Wil- mounted, five bale hay. Joe Shurley One Farmall Cub tractor and finishing cumb Hartsfield 229-891-0173

455-4672

liam Lee Newnan 770-253-3135

Warrenton 706-831-2556

belly mower; tractor runs (needs bat-

Great Plains; 10-foot no-till drill, excel- John Deere; 210 disk harrow; 13 feet, tery), mower needs work, asking $1,250.

lent condition, $13,000. Gary Anderson excellent condition. Seth Young Tennille Jerry Taylor Tyrone 770-632-1278

Lula 770-540-3800

478-232-6104

One Super H Farmall, not running; one

Market Bulletin Ad Form

Harrell 4-R stalk chopper, good condi- John Deere; 22-foot disk, $6,000; Tay- H Farmall with cultivators. J. Blasczyk

tion, $5,500; KMC 4-R stalk puller, very lor Way chisel plow, 11-shank, $1,500. Douglasville 770-942-5018 404-772-

good condition, $5,800. Johnny Craw- Mark Shook Chickamauga 423-605- 0340

ford Chula 229-382-7304

5652

One-row Covington planter, $250,

Harrow - Howse 7.5 HD 20 to 22-inch disk; used less than 10 hours; $1,450. Kim Hagen Carrollton 404-386-9918
Hay rake, Sitrex, H/90-V, eight-wheel, $2,500; Krone tedder, 5,50/4x7T, $4,000;

John Deere; 5420 85 horsepower, cab over tractor with loader, diesel, A/C, excellent condition, under 1,100 hours, $29,000. Charles Mathis Jefferson 404317-6173

six-foot landscape rake, $175. Richard Bobo Macon 478-781-5676
Pecan tree boom shaker, IH truck, four-wheel, used last year; gas engine, $2,500. Anderson Perry 478-952-2875

HayTech accumulator with grapple and hoses, $9,500. W. Glover Griffin 770599-9806
Hay rake, three-point hitch, power take-off driven, in good condition, fieldready, $800. James Sells Monroe 770267-8603
Hit N Miss 1-3/4 economy; runs great, fully restored; lots of brass on trailer;

KBH Mullboy Boll Buggy, good condition, $6,500 OBO. David Burk Pinehurst 229-938-5550
Keener bandsaw mill for sale; full hydraulic, portable, $17,000; Nyle kiln unit and kiln, $3,500; Windham forklift, $2,500. Buck Hames Cartersville 770382-7040

Pull type combine, field ready. Malcolm Wright Trion 706-734-2554
Pull type cutaway harrow, four disk, six feet wide, $300; can load. William Mc. Whirter Royston 706-245-6896
Retired: Farm equipment for sale; coolers, overstock hay and all other farm equipment. E Ashley Danville 478954-1455

$1,500 OBO. Victor Tur Baldwin 678- King Kutter dirt scoop DS-30; 30-inch Rollins; HD eight-foot rotary mower,

316-7815

model, excellent condition, $250. Rudy like new, $2,500. Wayne Swanson Ring-

Howard's Power all backhoe, attach- Glisson Waynesboro glissonjr@aol.com gold 706-935-4691

ment self contained, three-point hitch 706-437-0025

Rollmill, Peerless electric drive,

This form may be used to submit an ad. There is a 20-word limit for advertisements unless otherwise noted under category headings. The 20-word limit includes name, city, phone number and complete address, if provided. Market Bulletin staff reserves the right to edit notices exceeding the word limit. Only one notice per subscriber per issue. In order to advertise in the Bulletin, you must be a paid subscriber with a current subscription.
Category: Please note some categories are not published regularly. In addition, some categories require documentation, such as a Coggins test or organic certification, prior to being published.

$1,400; seven-shank, all-purpose three- KMC, four-row peanut combine, 33 10-horsepower motor International mill.

point hitch, $425. Douglas Adams Hart- series, wide body, field ready, $12,000. Sam Lowrey Rome 706-295-1157 706-

well 706-436-9262

Harold Israel Smithville 229-846-6477 234-7729

IH 140 highcrop with set of cultivators, Koering Fox chopper; silage chopper, Round baler; 2010 New Holland, BR

good sheet metal and fair tires, asking two-row, $1,000. John Gowin Lafayette 7060 silage special; net wrap, wide

$2,600. Bill Abercrombie Lafyette 706- 706-980-2511

pick-up, $18,900. Jack Jenkins Athens

638-5959

Kuhn GMD 55; complete rebuilt cutter 706-286-4438

Phone number:

IH 1440 combine with 820/20-foot bar, new blades, bearings, gears, new Savage 4200 tree shaker, $6,500. Em-

grain head for parts, brand new tires on paint and curtain, $3,800 OBO. Adam ory Mixon Lyons 912-253-5570

front, $4,000. Wesley Unruh Louisville Miller Blue Ridge 706-455-6222

Selling out old Allis Chalmers, As and

Subscriber number:

706-833-1886

Lewis Brothers poultry housekeeper, Super As, Hs, Ms, Cases; Massey-Har-

IH 656 Farmall diesel; 90 percent tires, clean out machine, model No. 5, hy- ris tractors. Douglas Gay Lyons 912-

hydraulic pumps, power take-off, heavy draulic, clean out slats and slingers, 565-7022

built, offset harrow, eight feet, $3,500 $9,000. Terry McCants Butler 770-468- Set of spinout rims and wheels for Ford

Please include your name and full address on all correspondence sent to the Bulletin office. The following statement must be signed by the advertiser submitting this notice for publication:

OBO. Ted Krush Meridian 912-258-2125 2650 478-862-3999

tractor, 13.6x38. Dwain Pittman Mitch-

International 1066; new tires, 6011 Lifting boom for tractor, $100. James ell 706-598-2222

I hereby certify that the above notice meets all the necessary require-

hours,125 horsepower; T/A, works Young Metter 912-682-2917

Seven-foot sickle mower, not sure ments for publication in the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin.

great; cab front, rear glass, A/C; $8,500; Lilliston 1580 peanut picker, good con- of the make or year; call or email with

trade for cattle. Chris McCook William- dition. Hughlon Davis Chester 478-697- questions. Justin Moss McDonough

son 770-584-0333

7784

770-558-5315

PAGE 4

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013

Livestock Sales and Events

Clip and Save Calendar

Every 1st & 3rd Tues. Poultry, Goat & Feeder-Breeder Pig Sale, poultry, 6 pm, hogs & goats, 7 pm, RockRidge Livestock Auction, just off S.R. 128, s. of Reynolds. Info: 478-847-3664 or 706-9755732.
Every 2nd & 4th Thurs. Chickens & other fowl, goats & sheep; check in at 1 pm; sale at 6:30 pm. Horse Creek Auction, btwn. Dublin & McRae off 441 Hwy. Info.: 478-595-5418.
Every Thursday Auction 41 Goat Sale, miscellaneous equip., 6 pm, goat sale, 7 pm, poultry/small animals following goat sale, 4275 Ga. Hwy. 41 n., Buena Vista. Info: Jim Rush, 706-326-3549 or 229-649-9940 or auction41@windstream.net.
Every Thursday Chickens, Rabbits & Related Misc. Small Animal Sale, NE Georgia Sale, 6 pm, GAL #3478, Eastanollee Livestock Market, Hwy. 17 between Toccoa & Lavonia. Info: 706-779-5944 or 706-599-7606.
Every Fri. night Goat, Poultry & Small Animal Sale, 7 pm, Buggy Town Auction, 1315 Hwy. 341 s., Barnesville. GAL #3177 Info: 770-358-0872/1786.
1st & 3rd Fri. night Horse Sale, 7:30 pm, Circle Double S, 102 Lumber City Hwy., Hazlehurst. Info: Steve Underwood, 912-594-6200 (night) or 912-375-5543 (day).
Every Sat. 10 am, farm-related mdse. Auction; 1 pm, goats, fowl & small animal auction; GAL#AU003224; Red Barn Livestock Auction, Sylvester. Info.: 229776-9009.
Every Sat. Small Animals, Chickens, Rabbits, Sheep, Goats & Horse Sale, 4 pm, Coker Sale Barn, Duncan Bridge Rd., White Co., at old Chattahoochee Livestock Barn. Info: Wayne Coker, 706540-8418.
Every Sat. night Goat, Poultry & Small Animal Auction, 7 pm, Bradley-Wayside Auction, 1035 Monticello Hwy., Gray. GAL 306. Info: Nancy Wilson, 478-986-4413.
Every 1st & 3rd Sat. Small Animal Sale, goats, sheep & poultry, 1 pm, misc. merchandise, 6 pm, Deer Run Auction, Hwy. 76, Adel-Nashville Hwy., Adel. GAL 001800 Info: 229-560-2898 or 229896-4553.
Every 1st and 3rd Sat. Livestock Sale; sale starts at 10 a.m., tack/horses; pigs at 11:30, cows at noon, goats at 1 p.m., poultry sale to follow; Metter Livestock Market, Lyons, Ga. Info: Lewie Fortner, 478-553-6066. GAL 3415.

Every 1st & 3rd Sat. S & D Goat Sales, Baxley Fairgrounds, begin 12:30 pm; goats, pigs, poultry. Info.: Steve Smith, 912-367-9268, 912-266-7170.
Every 2nd Sat. Winstead Horse Sales, 5 pm, Eastanollee Livestock Auction, Eastanollee. Info: Shannon Winstead, 864-710-4030 or 864-944-6200.
Every 2nd & 4th Sat. R&R Goat & Livestock Auction, merchandise, 10 am, goats, 12 noon, chickens & caged animals to follow, 526 Ga. Hwy. 56 N., Swainsboro. Ron Claxton, auctioneer, GA Lic. #3485. Info: 478-237-8825 (weekdays), 478-455-3714 (sale day) or 478-469-3533 or 478-455-4765 (nights).
Every 2nd & 4th Sat. Pony Express Stockyard Horse & Tack Auction, 5 pm, GA Lic. AUNR002843, 1852 Highway 11 S., Covington, GA 30014. Info: Scott Bridges, 704-434-6389 or 704-4738715.
Every 2nd & 4th Sat. Livestock Auction, Waddell Auction Barn, Climax, Ga., 1 pm, selling goats, sheep, poultry and small animals; selling miscellaneous at 10 am; #AU003249. Info.: 229-2464955/416-7217.
Every 2nd & 4th Sat. Goat & Chicken Auction, Mid-Georgia Goat & Chicken Auction, 12 noon, Cochran. Info: Frankie Howell, 478-271-0550.
Every 2nd & 4th Sat. Livestock auction at Pearson Livestock; sale, 1 pm; goats, sheep, poultry & small animals; 1168 Hwy. 441 N., Pearson, Ga. Info.: 229798-0271, 912-422-3211.
Every 3rd Sat. Goat & Sheep Sale, 12 noon, Agri Auction Sales, held at Eastanollee Livestock Market, Hwy. 17 btwn. Toccoa & Lavonia. Info: Ricky Chatham, 706-491-2812 or Jason Wilson, 706-491-8840.
Livestock auctions listed in the Market Bulletin sometimes offer related items for sale, such as tack and other livestock equipment. Notices for auctions selling any items other than livestock must be accompanied by the auction license number of the principal auctioneer or auction firm conducting the auction, per regulations of the Georgia Secretary of State. Notices without this information cannot be published.
Have an event to put on our calendar? Contact Dallas Duncan at 404-6563722 or dallas.duncan@agr.georgia.gov

Farm Machinery Wanted

Want to buy small farm tractor with belly mower, repairable, OK. Doyle

150 to 200-bushel gravity wagon. Barnes Social Circle 678-481-5067

good tires and not rusted out; seeking in Wanted: Allis Chalmers rear rim that a Walton, Oconee and adjacent counties. 924 tire will fit. Marvin Fuller Lizella 478Daniel Dover Good Hope 678-617-3468 935-8380

Allis Chalmers 80R sickle hay mower, Wanted: Allis Chambers 320; three-

cutter working or for parts wanted. Allen cylinder diesel motor. Ralph Phillips

Morris Mount Vernon damorris@gfb. Dawson lawpc@mindspring.com 229-

org 912-293-6471

995-3440

Farmall 140 tractor or Super A tractor, running or repairable. Nelson Massey Conyers 404-273-3777

Wanted: chicken plucker, need before Nov. 1. John Pell Fayetteville 770-9647935

I need a front end loader for a David Brown 990. Clayton Lowe Athens 706540-5198
I want a one-row cultivator in good working order, priced reasonable also. Curtis Barfield Gray 478-986-8852 478986-5924
Looking for a 130-horsepower or greater John Deere tractor. Ben Jackson Clermont 770-561-0896

Wanted: corn picker, pull type or mounted, also need corn sheller belt or power take-off. Larry Meyer Gainesville cpbsa1@bellsouth.net 404-2428347
Wanted: film mulch laying machine, four- or five-foot, decent or readily repairable. Herbert Metz Cumming 678947-6987

Looking for old farm trailer. Glenn Smith Athens 706-207-7878
Looking to buy EZ Haul hay hauler, five-roll, bumper pull. Susan Lee Lake-

Wanted: Gear box for Bush Hog 207, rotary cutter, 12492 gearbox number, shaft housing number 60276. Lynn Johnson Alamo 912-568-7672

land 229-482-2242

Wanted: John Deere 709 three-point

Need eight hangers for harrow that will hitch mower for parts. James Rivers

accept sealed bearings, will consider Stapleton 706-598-3633

whole harrow. Randy Lowe Roberta Wanted: model K32 or K42 rototiller for

478-836-3208

Kubota B6000E. Charles Arp Fairburn

Need rear wheel for Farmall M or 400; 678-489-5699 678-571-7791

needs to be in good repair. Bruce Stan- Wanted: one-row Oxbo or like model;

ford Gray 478-256-5763

pull behind pea, bean picker. Matt Dee

Need short power take-off shaft and Bartow 706-410-4570

barrens for Super Major Fordson trac- Wanted: Used six-row rolling cultivator,

tor; 1964; leave message. Bobby Walker good condition. Sam Martin Barwick

Franklin 770-854-8430

229-403-6212

Pecan equipment: sprayer, dumpcart, Will buy dairy, cheesemaking equip-

harvester, sweeper, shaker (self propelled), ment, stainless steel tanks; want curd

blower, 15-foot John Deere mower. Frank mills, cheese mold, milk silos. Rogers

Dixon Camilla 229-328-6130

Beasley Marietta rbeasley@theihcc.

Transmission D-6 Cat, nine-volt oil com 770-516-8313 404-671-9551

clutch or dry clutch, need housing. Dale Anderson Elberton 706-283-2602

FARM SUPPLIES

Want to buy Covington planter; one

row. Major Dowell Lilburn majordow- If you have questions regarding ads in

ell77@hotmail.com 770-634-0488

this category, call 404-656-3722.

Want a front-end loader for a cab Ford 1,000 feet lumber and turning blocks:

7710 and a old cotton wagon or water- oak, maple, hickory, ash, basswood,

melon wagon. Paul Smith Hazlehurst pine, cedar and poplar. David Gray

478-952-3899

Bowdon 770-655-4674

11 horsepower Honda pressure washer; four-gallon, 3,000 PSI Cat pump; 24foot telescoping wand, $600. Charles Blalock Locust Grove 678-432-7069
13.6-28 Multi-Trac 2100 rear tractor tire; R1, four-ply, excellent condition, $250. Joseph DeWitt, III Dearing 706595-1299
140 pieces PVC pipe, 20 feet long, 2.5inch ID, 2.88-inch OD, $10. J. T. Chilton Rutledge 706-557-2555
18-ton feed bins, Choretime feed lines, Ziggity water lines, other chicken house equipment. Robert Reepe Demorest 706-754-6747
2.5 horsepower John Lauson on cart, hit and miss motor, running, $650. W C Quarles Dawsonville 706-265-3732
20 H.P. Briggs + Stratton engine complete with starter; set up for John Deere, $600 cash. Wayne Head Jersey 770639-7791
200-pound and 125-pound anvils; two No. 20 cast iron wash pots, cooking grade and other blacksmith tools. A Hendricks Austell 770-948-9842
25-kilowatt generator set engine, needs work, diesel, $1,000. David Dickson Rutledge 706-474-6956
250-gallon horizontal LP tank; delivery available. Dean Stringer Athens 706548-3315
26-gallon polymer spray tank with Sure-Flo pump, spray wand, tie down straps; $150. L. Nelson Ellaville 229937-2376
30 sheets aluminum tin, four feet wide, 16 feet long, good condition. W. Preston White Alamo 912-568-7407
300-gallon plastic tank with metal cage, five-inch twist cap on top valve on bottom, $50. C. Stovall Dahlonega 678-491-0838
300-gallon propane tank just needs painting, $900 or best offer. Harley Payne Dahlonega hershellpayne202@ gmail.com 404-205-0996 678-316-8518
30x40x10-foot Red Iron, i-beam type steel building, $7,900. David Prater Valdosta 770-686-1917
330-gallon propane gas tank; 605 full tank, $300 plus gas price, less 10 percent. Robert Martin Stockbridge 770474-3479
36-volt crown fork lift with charger, $1,500. Raymond Long Loganville 770466-2435
451 New Holland cycle bar hay mower with extra blade teeth and parts, great condition; always kept inside, $850. James Gunn Rutledge 706-557-1494
50-gallon propane water heater; Bradford White brand, purchased 2010, excellent condition, $100. Linda Tittsworth Cumming 770-886-9828
500-gallon propane tank, new parts, paint, and has 10 percent gas, $500. Jeff Caudell Clarkesville 706-839-7601
500-pound propane gas tank; asking $400. James Berry Conyers 770-6871415
75 fence post; 4x4x8 inches'; treated, in good condition, $5.75 each; cash. Royce Brooks Acworth 770-378-2564
Air, kiln-dried Woodmizer sawn lumber, large selection wood specials, paneling, wide-plank flooring, fencing, barn wood. John Sell Milner sellj@bellsouth. net 770-480-2326
Baker windmill, 20x8-foot blade, Dempster windmill, 34x6-foot blade, Aermotor windmill, 60x8-foot blade. Jimmy Hardin Knoxville 478-361-3907
Bells: farm, school, church for sale; old ones and parts, also looking to buy bells. Shane Burnett Covington 770827-0999
Blue and white 55-gallon plastic drums, closed tops, two twist-off caps, food grade, other types sometimes available. Eugene Needham Loganville 770-466-4284
Breeder house equipment: Lubin Peck waterers, chain feeders, profile grill, motors Spinx scales, slats feeders and inns. Bradley Scott Resaca 706-629-7339
Cedar boards, one inch; six to eightinch, eight feet; dry, approximately 150 feet, some matched, $150. Fred Jones West Point 706-883-8326
Cheese cutter, counter top model, cast iron, very old, in great condition, $500. Walter Kines Covington 678-658-6367
Choretime feed pans, $1 each; rusty 5v. tin $3 each, used lumber free, you take all. Roger Flanagan Murrayville 706-864-6707
Clean 55-gallon metal drums with lids. David Crane Dahlonega 706-265-2559

Clean 55-gallon metal drums with lids; 1,000-gallon fiberglass tank. Leonard Crane Dawsonville 678-947-6744 404210-1516
Corn sheller, corn grinder, well bucket, pulley, tractor boom, manual post hole digger. Bill Fulton Blairsville 706-7457463
Corral panels: 12, 16 and 12-feet with four-foot gates, priced to sell. W. J Moore Conyers 770-480-2274
Ditch Witch trencher, R-40; ride-on, less than 15 hours on new rebuilt fourcylinder Wisconsin engine, new tires, $4,500. Roy Pruitt Douglasville 770949-5453 770-595-7891
Farm lawn jockeys; cement standard size, heavy, black, green, red and white in color, $295 each. G. Gibson Dawsonville 678-595-2790
Farm wagon, four wheels, front steer with tongue, sandblasted and painted; ready for new bed, $800. William Jones Blairsville 706-835-1615
Fisher wood heater, Baby Bear, $400; excellent condition. H.T. Lyon Chamblee 770-891-3939
Five horsepower Briggs & Stratton vertical shaft engine, runs well, $55; 50-foot cutting torch hose, $25. Ryan Baerne Nicholson 706-757-2672
For Sale: 800-gallon milk tank; not usable, $800. Willie Nunn Crawfordville 706-401-0002
For Sale: Old kitchen cooler that uses block ice, made of wood. Sam Smith Elberton 706-283-4170
For sale: two used 14-9x28 tractor tires, $125 each; two used 7.50x16 three-rib tractor tires, $25 each. Frank Bruce Boston 229-498-2665
Four stainless steel gas tanks with straps; four-gallon capacity, $10 each. Carl Dobson Atlanta 404-247-7343
Greenhouse trast, 16 each, 35 feet wide, two-inch galvanized steel, 1.375inch galvanized steel bracing, $100 each. David Warren Warner Robins 478-988-8406
Greenhouses; 28x96, $1,800; thousands of flower pots all sizes and huge cooler, $2,000. Renee Viars Milner 404444-9100
Half-gallon canning jars with lids, $1 each; wagon wheel 40 inches high, wired for lights, good condition. Thomas Stone College Park 404-767-2980
Have 30 sheets of roofing tin, will give to whoever wants to take down. Jack Anthony Athens 706-548-4438
Have six 4x6x16-foot timbers, cut from bridge timbers, great for pole barn, $15 each. Wayne Williamson Senoia 678378-2577
Hay tedder; two-basket fuel tanks, 100, 250 and 500-gallon. Misha Jernigan Buena Vista 706-570-2175
Heater: Black Bart II, wood stove, $100. Louise Barnett Gainesville 770536-8612
Hen nests for sale; 12 all-metal nests per box, $40 per box. Lamar Bryant Cleveland 706-878-8509
Hooper goose-neck trailer, nine-ton, 8x20 feet, three axles, barn kept, equipment or hay, $3,000. Jimmy Rains LaFayette 706-638-3531
Irrigation system: 2,400 feet; four-inch twist lock pipe, 15 rain bird sprinklers, No. 70 elbow, other supplies, $6,000. Dan Skipper Ludowici 912-545-9566 912-294-5901
Lincoln welder; ac 225, amps excellent condition. John Masters Loganville 770-298-4614
Locust posts, rails and oak lumber. Eugene Cook Blairsville 706-745-8724 706-897-5828
Log splitter; two large double acting cylinders, HD pump and control valve and hoses for log splitter, $150. Bob Marriott Concord 770-355-4103
Manure spreader, small, like new, $1,200 OBO. Kimsey Black Braselton 770-967-3095 770-561-1037
Meat cleaver, broad axe, two cowhide bottom chairs, turpentine dip bucket, unused iron heater. Russell Jewell Waycross 912-283-8871
Metal and plastic barrels with locks, tops; solid with bun holes; plastic tanks, 275 gallons in wire cages. G. Allen Covington 770-786-6377
Metal cattle gate wanted; eight to 10 feet. Wayne Kitchens Jackson 678925-0857
Miller Knuth, plumbers tool, power hack saw, in working order, $95, firm. Harold Lee Canton 404-786-6059

Oak boards: four 3.5x18 inches by 16 feet; $100 for all four. John Branan Dry Branch 478-960-6961
Old log house, excellent condition; delivery and set-up available, anywhere. Kerry Hix Chatsworth 706-695-6431
Older model No. 10ER Shopsmith with attachments, owner manual, $20; need good used tin, poles; Barrow County area. Michael Thornhill Hoschton 770867-9033
One beam scales, used to weigh cotton; 150-pound M.G. weight, $60. Pearl Nolan Rocky Face 706-673-4992
One-row corn picker for 801 Ford, good condition, asking $375, sheltering. Carl Sanders Carlton 706-743-3436
Propane tank; 250 gallons with regulator in good condition, can load on trailer, $300. Andy Cooper Hiram 770-2355039
Rabbit boxes, $10 each; carpenter bee traps, $10 each, extra shipping for bee traps. Billy Middlebrooks Monroe 770267-7084
Roofing metal, used, various lengths, 75 cents per foot; leave phone number. M. Johnson Stockbridge 770-474-8965
Sawmill lumber, pine and hardwood, as low as 35 cents per board foot; custom cuts available. Mitchell Smith Griffin 404-867-5106
Sears aluminum fiber coating for roofs and mobile homes, 15 gallons, $100. E. G Johnson Lawrenceville 770-9632782
Three-point Cat I Fimco; 25-gallon sprayer, with boom and handgun, good condition, $275. Miles Hess Fitzgerald 706-983-0387
Three-rail white vinyl ranch fence; 115 16-foot rails, 109 posts, never used; cover 615 feet, not divide, $2,200. Jimmy Wheeler Monticello 770-241-1088
Titan 16.9x24 eight-ply R1 tractor tire, long bar, short bar, new $850; no text, call before 9 p.m. John Seay Woodstock 770-924-4510
Tree stand for Hi Sting aluminum, two inches wide, 12 feet high, $25. W. Lee Canton 404-457-3149
Truck fuel tank, slides under tool box with pump, $125. James Ray Jasper 770-893-7030
Two chicken cages; two 8x8 garage doors, $50. David Powell Monticello 470-233-9592
Two each, straight axles with bearing buddies, $150 each or $175 for both. William Timmerman Harlem thetroll1943bt@yahoo.com 803-640-6265
Two old kerosene or fuel oil tanks with pumps; rectangular in shape, 2x4 feet, $100 each; both $150. Mac Callihan Cleveland 706-892-8641 706-2193680
Walking freezer cooler; freezer 8x5 feet; cooler 5x5 feet, meat grinder, 115 volts. M Mammoth Fairburn 770-9690151
Wanted: 2 gal. nursery pots; large quantity, must be in good conditon. Lucille Browder Waynesboro 706-8332444
Wanted: hog feeders, good condition, reasonably priced. Sibby Green Bremen 678-372-0782
Wood burning stove for sale: great condition. Peggy Griffin Clarkesville 706-768-8417
Woodmizer lumber; 1x12 pine, poplar oak trailer flooring, any thickness. Larry Moore Newnan 678-278-5709
Woodstove with chimney kit, great for shop, $300. Glenn Handrop Cumming ghandrop@bellsouth.net 770-827-3026
LIVESTOCK
All livestock (i.e., those animals such as, but not limited to, cattle, equine, goats, sheep, swine, and poultry) must have been in possession of the advertiser for a minimum of 90 days before they can be advertised.
Cattle
If you have any questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
10 Black Angus heifers; farm raised, bred to IBW Angus bull with top bloodlines. Don Hudgins Marietta donald006@aol.com 404-886-6849
10 black heifers in 650 to 700-pound range, $10,000. Neil Patrick Sylvania 912-687-5045
11 Angus, Brangus-cross heifers; 7 to 9 months, recently weaned, average 600 pounds, vaccinated, $850. Charles Chlker Thomson 706-339-8557

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN

PAGE 5

12 King Ranch Santa Gertrudis cows For Sale: three polled Hereford heif- Registered double polled Hereford bull; 6-week-old pigs, Duroc-Yorkshire ADGA bred Lamancha and Oberhasli-

and pairs, $1,250; cows, $1,500 on pairs. ers, approximately 8 months old; two halter broke, very gentle, just turned 2; cross; vaccinated and cast, $50 each. Lamancha does; two Lamancha buck-

Myron Colley Metter 706-306-3506

polled Hereford bulls, approximately 8 $2,000. Tim Parks Murrayville Parks- Dale Hawbaker Monroe 770-317-0995 lings, one buck; excellent bloodlines.

12-month-old black SimAngus heifers; months old. Henry Crosby Baxley 912- fencing@gmail.com 770-718-6023

7 and 9-week-old pigs for sale. David Preston Garner Braselton mg32144@

all shots current. Jeff Cann Dewy Rose 367-4517

Registered Hereford yearling bulls and Lingefelt Canton 770-480-6177

windstream.net 706-654-3423

678-936-3564 706-245-5003

Gelbvieh bulls; all registered purebred, heifers, pasture ready, September and All ages, breeds, and sizes; fill that ADGA Nubian doelings, $300 and up;

12-year-old purebred Angus bull, very bred for easy calving and fast growth. December bulls to choose from. Tim freezer for the winter; have fresh pork does and bred does, $400 and up; stud

gentle, Predestined grandson, vaccinat- John Kiss Gainesville 770-531-1126 Parks Ellijay 706-635-2531

all year. Angel Pollan Barnesville aypol- service available. Lisa Rees Good Hope

ed, $1,500. C. W Herndon Brunswick Hereford bulls for sale; yearlings and Registered Jersey cow; quiet, hand lan@yahoo.com 770-713-2280

770-267-8279

coastalpt@comcast.net 912-222-9446 2-year-olds, horned and polled, several and machine milked, bred to registered Feeder pigs (Hereford-Blue Butt cross) ADGA registered dairy goats for sale;

15 Black Angus bred to calve in March good bloodlines. Michael Bennett Cum- Jersey bull, due December, $1,500. Lin- born July, $50. Dave Cook Carrollton Nigerian Dwarf, blue eyes and Laman-

and April, $1,250; Angus and Brangus ming 404-771-5454

da Willis Cochran 478-230-7972

770-214-7323

cha, available now; bred does, doelings.

bulls, $1,800 and $1,500. Alan Williams Hereford cross bull, approximately 500 Registered Limousin bull; homozygous Great black piglets for sale, great meat V. Sudderth Commerce 678-283-0752

Milan 229-315-1261

pounds; born March 29, 2013; sire on black, 3 years old; Loadstar bloodline, and temperament, asking $100 per pig; ADGA Saanen milker, $500; five does

2-year-old Angus cross bull; big, beau- premises; $650, nice. S. Sewell Elber- ready to work, $2,500. Kip Jones La- males and females available. Lance Bar- and one buck (8 months old) $350 each,

tiful, burly, extremely gentle, has bred ton 706-283-5817

Fayette 706-639-3982

rett Suches 706-747-2003

excellent bloodlines. Scott Mallory

with 10 percent success, $1,500. Bob Holstein heifers: 14 bred to calve No- Registered polled Hereford bull, gen- Hampshire, Yorkshire, Berkshire, Du- Commerce 706-400-8029

Grisel Hoschton 706-658-4713

vember and December, 27 open, 35 tle, 4 years old, great bloodline (Vic- roc boars, gilts, most 8 to 12 weeks AKGA pure and crossbred buckling;

22 Angus cross yearling heifers, $1,100 years AI history; 22,000 pounds rolling tor); calves on property. Joey Yasinski old, north Georgia delivery Nov. 9; value lots of color, 5 months old, $100 to

each; Chickamauga. Mike Towns Jas- average. Ronald Martin Westminister Senoia 770-251-1408 770-252-0833 herd. Lawton Kemp Dudley 478-875- $250. Ruth Hancock LaGrange gwval-

per 423-580-7815

864-710-1663

Registered polled Hereford bulls, gen- 3243

ley@yahoo.com 706-333-1702

23 bred commercial Brangus cows; 10 Jersey bull, 3 years old, beautiful and tle, rugged pasture raised, easy calving, Hampshire-Yorkshire cross pigs. Tam- Babydoll rams; black and white, all

bred registered Brangus heifers; Bran- gentle, $900. Priscilla Freeman Calhoun 20 to 23 months old, good EPDs and my Anderson Elberton 770-403-8964 Mock registered, $150 cash. Dianne

gus and Angus bulls for sale. Paul Rob- 770-241-0233

bloodlines. Bobby Brantley Tennille Miniature pigs: mention ad for $200 Westbrook Crawford wdw3252@msn.

erts Hogansville 678-378-4697

Jersey bull; 3 year old, farm raised, 478-553-8598 478-552-9328

discount; superior bloodlines, visit our com 706-540-0633

25-plus, mostly black heifers, scored very good bull. Joe Hudgins Doug- Registered polled Hereford bulls, good website www.paradiseminipigs.com.; Barbados and Katahdin sheep for sale;

by vet, ready to breed; $1,250 each; lasville 770-565-7212

EPDs, ultrasound carcass, info provid- email info@minilivestock.com. Hope breeding rams and ewes. Richard Greb-

take all, $1,350, pick and choose. Shaun Limousin bulls; double polled and dou- ed, herd certified and accredited. Larry Bennett Cleveland 706-348-7279

el Albany 229-436-0736 229-869-2547

Cox Washington 706-319-3572

ble black; Lim-Flex bulls, all shots and Lane Carrollton 678-378-5170

Open range hogs for sale, 400 to 500 Boer: herd reduction; registered and

3-year-old Angus bull, 5050 son, beef work health guaranteed. Larry Howard Registered red Simmental cow-calf pounds; each, $350. Lamar Chandler purebred; contact for inventory; www.

value over 93, $3,000; yearling bulls by Flintstone 423-596-3819

pairs for sale; www.edrsimmental.com. Jersey 770-856-4498 770-464-2001 TarzanT66.com pedigree. Tammy Skin-

5050 and Predestined. Anthony Boyett Low birth weight, three-quarter Sim- Andrew Davis Statesboro edrsimmen- Registered Berkshires; born on Sept. ner Winder tmskinner68@yahoo.com

Reidsville 912-557-6240

mental bulls for sale; sired by Upgrade tal@yahoo.com 912-536-5868

28, bloodlines from Grand Champions; 770-867-0009 678-414-0731

30 regd. polled Hereford hefiers,12 out of Macho cows, gentle, $2,500 each. Service-aged purebred Black Angus, Sugar Daddy and Dream On. Justin CAGBA registered colored Angora

months old, and service age bulls, shots Keith Thrasher Carlton 706-296-4031 black-Simmental bulls, extensive A-I Pearson Waycross 912-614-4332

goats, does, bucks, red and black,

and wormed, $1600 and up. Brad Mul- One Angus purebred bull; born De- breeding experience; registered Sim- York, tam pigs, $60 each; 6 weeks handspinning fiber. Tina Evans Taylors-

lins Martin 706-491-7556

cember 2012, good bloodlines, can mental heifers, open and bred. Billie old, wormed and cut; four barrows, two ville 770-324-4380

35 Baldie heifers; 90 days bred, more be registered, no texts please. Mark Clanton Odum 912-221-1383 912-586- gilts. Andrew Thornton Carrollton big- Dorper ram lambs for sale and two full-

than 900 pounds, will start calving in Boatright Bristol dose@accessatc.net 2388

mamasfarm@yahoo.com 404-694-3348 blood Dorper rams for sale, registered

March. Mickey Carnes Waverly 31565 912-288-4442

Seven registered, bred, Black Angus 770-830-8913

with ADSBS. Shannon Copeland Odum

45 heifers; mostly Angus IBW/Brangus One Limousin bull; gentle, black, heifers;12 registered cows and bulls, Yorkshire boar, 2.5 years old, $375. 912-586-2319 912-294-2983

bull heifers; 90 days, good stock pick, polled, 15 months,1,300 pounds; birth ready for service. Fred Blitch States- Nelda Corson Milner 678-859-6074

Fainting Myotonic goats; registered,

10 or more, $1,295. James Hunter Bish- weight 68 pounds. Gray Bowdon 770- boro 912-865-5454

op 706-255-5214

258-2581

Simmental, SimAngus bulls, 30 year-

Goats And Sheep

small, healthy, vaccinated, etc., weanlings, young adults, disbudded, polled,

6-month-old Angus bull, GAR Preci- Performance-tested black full-blood lings, three 2-year-olds; blaze-face, If you have questions regarding ads in silkies and others. Marsha Kelly Newn-

sion and 878, $700. Paul Beck Cedar- Simmental, SimAngus bulls, cow-calf black, raised on fescue, not overfed, this category, call 404-656-3722.

an 770-251-8896

town 706-506-2434

pairs, heifers; AI, embryo bred, easy won't melt. Lanier Warbington Cum- 100 percent Boer bucks, does for sale, For Sale: one full Pygmy billy goat,

75 grass-fed dairy heifers; seven calving, high milk, satisfaction guaran- ming 404-281-2433

championship bloodlines, Tarzan T66, $130; also one 3-month-old Pygmy billy,

months bred, vet checked and certified. teed. Milton Martin Jr. Clarkesville 770- Simmental, SimAngus bulls,12 to 16 Warlord, Tarma, ready for breeding. Su- $35. Denise Barnes Ball Ground 770-

Mike Bell Maysville h_bfarms@live.com 519-0008

months old, top bloodlines, excellent san Bragg Conyers 404-375-3401

893-4803

678-617-4825

Polled Hereford bull; 15 months, regis- EPDs, red and black, polled. Alvin Chas- 18-month-old billy, mixed Boer, $125. Four nice goats for sale. Aubrey New

96 young black cows and heifers, bred tered THM Durango (Mead) bloodlines, tain Danielsville 706-202-2333

W. W Abney Franklin 770-253-0263 Kennesaw 404-694-1828

to low birth weight Angus bulls; will di- ring-necked, big-boned, haltered; FFA Simmental, SimAngus bulls;1 to 2 2-year-old stud Pygmy goat, $65. Kyle Full blood Savanna meat goat bucks,

vide. Connie Walker Pearson 912-422- project. Gabe Brogdon Irwinton 478- years old, black, $2,000 to $3,000, low Vrooman Winder bethvrooman@live. 7 to 9 months, $700 to $900; DNA certi-

8100

595-7644

birth weight, AI sires, excellent EPDs. com 678-472-5427

fied and ID chips. Gerald Freeman Mar-

AI Angus cross heifers; due at the end of October, $1,800. Albert Collins Lyons

Polled Hereford bulls; top bloodlines, 9 to 36 months old. Jimmy Jeanes Macon

Chet Barrett Mt Airy 706-499-8008 Six purebred Simmental heifers and

5-year-old Boer billy; proven breeder, very gentle, must sell to prevent in-

tin gjmeatgoats@gmail.com 6555

706-491-

912-240-2264
Beefmaster bulls; 1-year-olds, $1,000; 4-year-old, $2,000; registered polled red exceptional offspring. Sonny Bettis Blairsville 404-642-4275
Beefmaster bulls; BBU registered, red polled, 14 to 16 months old. Bill Hutson Blairsville 404-550-8766
Black Angus bulls; have two, one with white on face, 2 years old, parents on site, $800 each. Barry Cowan Covington 770-480-5775
Black Angus bulls; registered AI sires by War Party, 8180-004, Mitty Focus, Lead On, Retail Product, 15 months in January. Gary Autry Ringgold 423-9025925
Brangus steers; five steers, 800 to 900 pounds each, $995 each. Anthony Whitworth Martin 770-597-9804

478-972-0912
Purebred black Angus bulls,10 to 12 months, $1,000 each. Roy Millsap Summerville 770-891-0486
Purebred polled Jersey bull; 30 months old, very gentle, $1,500. A.W. Leverett Milledgeville 478-452-8377
Red Angus bull, about 6 months old; 200-plus pounds, $450. P.D. Stratton Locust Grove 770-315-9317
Registered Angus bulls, 24 to 25 months old, semen tested and docile. John Stuedemann Comer 706-202-2371
Registered Angus bulls, excellent EPDs from Upward bloodline. Doyle Waters Chickamauga 423-605-2716 706-375-6565
Registered Angus bulls, late 2012 birthdate, bloodline, ABS Emblazon, $2,000. L&R Farms Swainsboro 478-

bull, all black, three heifers have white face. Kirk Little Lyons 912-326-3512
Six registered polled Beefmaster heifers,12 months. Wayne Farmer Oxford 770-786-6469
Superior herd of registered Charolais cattle, starter herd, service age bulls, delivery available. Bobby Burch Eastman 478-718-2128
Three registered Black Angus bulls, well-bred; Graham Angus line, 9 months; $1,250 each; near Columbus. Bill Cliatt Midland 706-718-0664
Three registered black Angus cows, two heifers and two bulls, can be registered; asking $9,000 OBO. Eddie Aderholdt Eastanollee eddie_aderholdt@ yahoo.com 706-599-1429
Two registered Angus bulls, 21 and 20 months old, great pedigrees, $1,700

breeding, $225. Tim Stanfield Tyrone 770-964-0574
60 Kiko-cross goats for sale; wethers $100, females $150; 60 Katahdin sheep, $150 and up. Ryan Ayers Carrollton ayers.rg@gmail.com 678-378-7116
7 month old, 100 percent Boer doeling; traditional color; dam had triplets; registered sire, Ennobled bloodlines, $250. V.K. Wheeler Monticello 706-468-6806
ADGA Alpines, breeding quality bucks, CAE free, healthy show herd, $200 and up; preorder home milkers. Angela Peevy Dacula apeevy@montagefarm. com 678-873-3017
ADGA American Saanen doelings, born April and May from CAE, brucelosis, and TB-free herd, $450. Susan McPherson Buford 678-618-9728

Full-blood Boer bucks and does for sale; good bloodlines, email or leave message. Stanley Dockery Young Harris stanley.dockery@gmail.com 706745-9899
High percentage Boer goats, five females, four males, $700. Jimmie Mize Greensboro 706-453-2451
Katahdin ram lambs for sale, $150. Talley Culclasure Macon 478-954-3814
Katahdin spring lambs for sale; ewes and rams, $125 to $175 each. Thomas Kittle Ringgold 706-935-3563
Kiko black buck, 100 percent New Zealand, sire is Sonny Boy, $700. Ken Hatley Zebulon 770-358-1300
Kiko bucklings, born March 2013 for sale; one very big purebred is breeding quality. Ann Toles Lindale annetoles@ aol.com 706-766-1729

Bull: registered Balancer bull for sale; 494-4150 478-289-7711

each. Jeannetta Shipp Royston 706-

4 years old; 50 percent Red Angus, Registered Angus bulls; 13 months, 245-8866 50 percent Gelbvieh, $2,000 firm. Ron docile. William Hix Comer 706-248- Two registered Gelbvieh red bulls, one

Market Bulletin Subscription Request Form

Ward Elberton 706-498-2484

5851 706-540-2470

21 months old and the other 34 months,

Bulls: Red Brahman, Simbrah and Registered Black Angus bull; 19 AI. Gene Cantrell Shadydale 770-312-

I would like to receive a subscription to the print version of the Farmers and

Simmental; weaning and breeding age; months old; registered Hereford bull, 6224

few cows and heifers. Cliff Adams Bow- 3 years old; young bull, 8 months old. Two registered Herefords, 10 months

don 770-258-2069

David Ray Rydal DvdRay100@aol.com old, one bull and one cow, all shots

Calving ease, milking ability, gentle- 770-607-3011

and wormed, pasture raised, good

ness, registered polled Shorthorn bulls, show heifers, steers, excellent quality, Club Calf member. Ken Bridges Commerce 706-768-3480

Registered Black Angus bulls; 1 and 2 years old, AI to Objective and GAR5050; calving ease, gentle. K Schwock Homer 404-735-9524

bloodline. Mike Ward Summerville 706862-2405
Two Zebu bull calves for sale, $150 each or $200 for both. Jan Hanson

Charolais bulls; breeding age, easy calving, good EPDs, $2,000 each. Marshall Bennett Adel 229-300-3164
Classic Jersey heifer; 1 year old, bottle fed, very tame; high milk producing genetics, ready to breed, $1,250. William Gholston Dahlonega 706-867-6588
Commercial open Hereford heifers, registered Hereford bulls, registered open heifers; bred heifers Al sired, bred. James Neighbors Americus 229-3370038
Dexter milk cow: A2 milk genes; PHA, Chondro-free; 3.5 years old, black, has two healthy calves, $1,500. Alice Heath Toccoa 770-298-6777
Five Black Angus cows: one Brangus (8 years), one Angus-Hereford (8 years), two Angus (3 years), one Brangus (2 years); $6,500. Mark Woodham Madison 404-379-8037

Registered Black Angus bulls; New Design and War Alliance bloodlines, $1,200. Eugene Ridley LaFayette 706764-6110
Registered Black Angus cows, pairs, heifers; young bulls, $1,000. David Chadwick Waleska 404-386-8194 404790-3068
Registered Black Angus cows; bred to registered Simmental (Steel Force son); top bloodlines, ages 2007 to 2010. Marty Clark Jefferson 770-294-5579
Registered Brangus bull, 5 years old, excellent breeder, gentle; great heifer bull also, 15 months, full Brangus bull. Tommy Walker Rockmart 770-6846150 678-684-9770
Registered Charolais bulls, purebred Simmental bulls, breeding age, gentle. Adam Marsh Statesboro 912-536-1430

Waynesboro 706-558-1015
Swine
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Swine moving from farm to farm must have a negative brucellosis and pseudorabies test within the past 30 days before they are moved whenever there is a change of ownership. Exceptions are swine from a validated brucellosis-free and qualified pseudorabies-free herd. Buyers are urged to request proof of a negative brucellosis and pseudorabies test prior to purchase.
17 feeder pigs, born Sept. 16 and Sept. 30; two 10-month old boars, three finished pigs. Robert Cook Hamilton 706-575-4683

Consumers Market Bulletin. Subscriptions are $10/year (26 issues).

q New Subscriber

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Name:

Address:

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(Please list only the address where you want your Bulletin mailed.)

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(Please provide a phone number in the event Bulletin staff has a question about your address or subscription.)
Please make checks payable to `Georgia Department of Agriculture.' Send payments to: Georgia Department of Agriculture, PO Box 742510, Atlanta, GA 30374-2105.

PAGE 6

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013

TAKE 5: Georgia Grown magazine

1. How did the idea for Georgia Grown magazine come about?
The idea for the magazine came from Commissioner of Agriculture Gary W. Black. He wanted a way to communicate to the public the importance of agriculture in the state of Georgia. The first issue was fantastic and became the calling card of the Department and what we support every day. We think this second issue is even better and we hope you enjoy it.

2. What is the theme for this year's issue?
The theme for the 2013 to 2014 Georgia Grown magazine is "Heritage in Farming." It is something that we thought embodied Georgia agriculture. The majority of Georgia farms are family-owned and many have been passed down through generations. We wanted people to see the passion that is behind these families that put food on our tables and clothes on our backs.

ASBRIDGE

3. Tell us about some of the commodities featured this year.

This year, like last year, we chose to focus on the commodities that make the state of

Georgia a leader in agriculture production. Most people can name the "Five Ps of Georgia

Agriculture" peaches, peanuts, poultry, pecans and pine but beyond that we have some great commodities in this

state that have a huge impact. Turf grass is a great example of one of the commodities featured this year that has global

impacts that many people don't know we grow here in Georgia.

4. How do you choose the farms featured in the issue?
All of the farms featured in the Georgia Grown magazine are chosen from the list of Georgia Grown members. It is our way of giving a little back to the members that support us.

5. Where can I find a copy?
We have the magazines at all of our office locations across the state of Georgia. We hope everyone will stop by their nearest office or state farmers market and pick one up and learn a little bit more about Georgia agriculture. You can also view it online at www.gaagriculture.com.

Alec Asbridge is the special projects coordinator for the Georgia Department of Agriculture.

GUEST COLUMN: Georgia Homemakers Council, Inc., revives craft traditions

In 1936, the National

Home Demonstration

Council was formed. The

name was later changed to

the Homemakers Council,

Inc.

Georgia Homemakers

Council, Inc., is what we're

all about.

We held our 88th an-

nual conference in April

in Athens, Ga. We have a

membership of people on

committees such as educa-

tion, health and family,

Morris, with prize-winning yoyo quilt on display at the 2013 Georgia National Fair

environmental, cultural arts and special community projects. This dedicated membership willingly

serves its community in various capacities and spon-

sors activities that are consistent with its commitment to

education and service.

The officers are president from Chatham County;

president elect from Hall County; vice president from

Fayette County; treasurer from Rabun County; secretary

from Fayette County; district directors from Fannin, Pike

and Chatham counties; and other appointed chairpersons.

Georgia Homemakers Council, Inc., executive board

meets January and August in Macon, Ga.

Our goals and projects support the Southeastern Burn

Center in Augusta, Ga., cancer society and many more.

We give two scholarships annually to senior high school

4-H members and make quilts of valor for the military.

Each Homemaker Club meets each month in their

local areas and supports council projects and the confer-

ence. In addition, some projects are locally done, such

as sponsoring a child to go to 4-H camp, supporting

the military, collecting can tabs for 4-H and the Ronald

McDonald House, local hospices, hospitals and nursing

homes; recycling; and supporting local police and fire departments.
Georgia Homemakers Council, Inc., Week is observed Oct. 6 through 12 each year, statewide.
At our annual conference in April, we have speakers, entertainment, workshops, plant sales and more. We recognize 50-year members, those who have died in the past year with memorial services and present the Homemaker of the Year to a member selected for the award from entries across the state.
We have a fashion revue with all participants wearing handmade or wisely-purchased apparel. Contests include Cotton Creations, which requires all items to be made from cotton; crafts and hobbies are anything not made from cotton; and photography, quilting and recycling projects, all for sharing ideas and working together. Several of Georgia's commissions have sponsored these events so we can present winning ribbons and awards in each category.
One of the most enjoyable and rewarding events of Georgia Homemakers Council, Inc., is to be invited to take part in the Georgia National Fair in October. We started about eight years ago doing one day, then two, then three, now four. We have items to show and sell and teach crafts such as quilting, crocheting, knitting, yo-yos and other projects. The next time you go to the fair, be sure to tour the Miller Murphy Howard Building and visit us. This is a building you walk into and are in another world.
Club members teach children, seniors and anyone wanting to learn sewing, cooking, handcrafts or gardening. You name it, we will find someone to do it!
We need to renew lost traditions that Grandma did! So, join us and be involved in local and state levels, and we'll see you at the 89th conference in 2014!
Sara Morris is a past president of Georgia Homemak-
ers Council, Inc. She encourages all who are interested
in learning more about the organization to write her at
225 Plantation Road, Zebulon, GA 30298.

agriCULTURE
Letter from the Editor
I had the pleasure of meeting a number of new, present and former Market Bulletin subscribers this month at the Georgia National Fair and Sunbelt Agricultural Exposition. Through my conversations, I learned that there's one thing a great number of subscribers want out of this publication: more.
They want the farmland for sale ads to come out more than twice a year.
They want to see more craft patterns, like those that ran back in the 1960s.
They want to see more recipes. They want to see more organic items for sale in a certified organic ad category. They want to see more coupons for grocery stores. The list goes on. Well, folks, here's the thing. I want more, too. That's the main reason I accepted this position, to bring more agriculture coverage and make the Market Bulletin a worthwhile investment for producers and consumers of all ages and backgrounds. But I can't do it without your help. A Market Bulletin print subscription costs $10 per year. That $10 barely covers the printing costs and postage for 26 issues, because the Market Bulletin is not, and has never been, a moneymaking publication. As I was reminded numerous times since I started on July 1, it was free for 93 of its 96 years of existence. Now, it's a nonprofit publication, not funded by taxpayer dollars ... but instead, solely by its subscriber base. As a nonprofit, we have specific guidelines we have to follow for advertisements and revenue sources. Myself, the public affairs office and the commissioner are working on ways to bring you more from your Market Bulletin. We are exploring the possibility of paid advertisements (to fall within the nonprofit regulations) from agribusinesses and commodity groups. We are behind the scenes working with our technology experts to bring the website up to par and continue to build on our social media presence. We are even looking into grants to help fund educational coverage of specific agricultural topics. And starting this fall, we'll be sending reminder notices in the mail to renew your subscription 30 days before it expires, so you won't forget. In order to be able to bring in other sources of revenue to help the Market Bulletin cover its costs, we need to have a healthy subscriber base. Offering paid advertisements to commodity groups and telling them you have 50,000 subscribers sounds a lot better than telling them you have 39,642 (or thereabouts). Telling them you've got 100,000 sounds even better than 50,000. That being said, I ask each of you to ask one person if they'd be interested in subscribing to the Market Bulletin. Maybe it's your cousin in metro Atlanta who wants to start a backyard garden, but doesn't know how. Show him a few of Arty's Garden tips and the flowers and plants for sale ads. Perhaps it's a neighbor who's 87 and getting out of the chicken business and needs a place to sell her equipment that won't break the bank. She could probably be well-served by the ads section as well. What about your county Extension agents and ag teachers? They could get a classroom or office subscription that would act as a resource for students. That feed salesgirl who's always on the road traveling to events could use an online subscription to check on her smartphone, tablet or laptop while she's on the go. We all want more from the Market Bulletin, and we want more people to be interested in it, whether it's to buy, sell or read about agriculture. But we'll never know who those "more people" might be unless we ask them. Dallas Duncan is the editor of the Market Bulletin. Originally from Evans, Ga., she graduated in May 2011 with a double
major in animal science and agricultural communication from the
University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental
Sciences. She previously worked for The Red & Black, The Times newspaper in Gainesville, Ga., and Georgia Cattlemen's Associa-
tion.

FARMERS & CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN (ISSN 0889-5619) is published biweekly by the Georgia Department of Agriculture 19 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive Atlanta, GA 30334-4250 404-656-3722 Fax 404-463-4389 Office hours 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday Friday

Gary W. Black, Commissioner MARKET BULLETIN STAFF Dallas Duncan, editor
Gerrie Fort, circulation manager Merlissa Smith, customer services specialist

Subscriptions are available via US mail at a cost of $10 per year. Online subscriptions are $5 per year and can be renewed on our website. To start or renew a subscription, go to our website to pay by Visa or MasterCard, or send a check or money order payable to the Georgia Department of Agriculture along with your name, complete mailing address and phone number to PO Box 742510 Atlanta, GA 30374-2510. Designate "Market Bulletin" in the "for" line. To determine if an existing subscription is due for renewal, look for the expiration date
on the mailing address label on page 1. Postmaster: Send address changes to 19 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, Atlanta, 30334.

The Department does not discriminate on the basis of sex, race, color, national origin, age or disability in the admission or access to, or treatment in, its employment policy, programs or activities. The Department's Administration Division coordinates compliance with the non-discrimination requirements contained in Section 35.107 of the Department of Justice Regulations. Information concerning the provisions of
the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the rights provided thereunder, are available from this division. If you require special assistance in utilizing our services, please contact us.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN

PAGE 7

ARTY'S GARDEN: Pansies and violas provide a winter rainbow

Even the most ardent

Georgia growers

fans of Gone with the

sowed seeds for pansies

Wind may find it hard

and violas back in July

to believe that when

or August and nursed the

Margaret Mitchell began

seedlings along through

writing her famous

late summer so that all

novel she had a different

we have to do is pick out

name for Scarlett. The

the forms and colors we

original name Mitchell

want when we go to a

gave her heroine was

nursery or garden center.

Pansy.

Plant your pansies

Pansy was a common

and violas in sunny

name for girls in the

areas in well-prepared

19th century. Sources

beds or containers filled

that track these things

with potting soil. Water

claim that Pansy reached

them well at planting.

its peak of popularity in

Especially be sure to

1900 and dropped off

keep those in containers

the charts by 1950.

watered during winter

Though the name

PANSIES and violas may come with "faces," like this one. These dry spells. Keep dead

Pansy is no longer popu- add color to winter gardens, and more colors and varieties are blooms pinched off to

lar, the flower pansy is available now than ever before.

encourage new blooms

more popular than ever!

to appear. If seed pods

In fact, as we look at the millions of pansies in bloom form, the plants may stop flowering. To fertilize, use

all across Georgia in the coming months, we may find an all-purpose balanced fertilizer such as 10-10-10

it hard to believe there was once a time when pansies and follow directions on the label. Remember, it is

were not a widespread part of our winter landscape.

always better to under-fertilize than to use too much.

Some gardeners did not plant pansies in the fall, but

If you don't want just pansies and violas, you can

waited until early spring. Seriously! They were miss- add winter color with other hardy annuals such as

ing months of color and beauty! And the varieties

snapdragons, ornamental kale and cabbage, dusty

available 50 years ago were few and inferior com-

miller, dianthus and curly parsley. Visit a local

pared to what we have today.

nursery or garden center today to see what variet-

Today you will find many varieties of pansies

ies of pansies, violas and winter annuals they have

and violas for sale in nurseries and garden centers.

available. They can also advise you on preparing your

Violas are pansies with smaller, but more numerous

beds with compost or soil amendments and what fer-

flowers. Few flowers other than bearded irises offer

tilizers to choose. If you aren't sure about what color

such an array of color. Yellow, gold, crimson, dark

flowers look best together, they can help you with that

red, rose, blue, violet, lavender, purple, white, cream, as well!

apricot, orange and combinations of these are all part

Arty Schronce is the Department's resident

of the pansy and viola palette. There are some that are gardening expert. He's a lifelong gardener and a hor-

almost black. These dark beauties look like they are

ticulture graduate of North Carolina State University

made of velvet and provide an ideal contrast to yel-

who encourages everyone to discover the pleasures of

low, white and orange varieties.

plants and gardening.

TOUR: Legislators bring knowledge of ag, forestry back to districts
From Page 1 gap and do that."
Many of the tour stops fell in the area represented by Rep. Amy Carter. "Agriculture is the way of life in my district, so I felt it best to even serve as a cheerleader for the south Georgia farms that we spotlighted on this tour," Carter said. "I think it's important that those who live in the urban and suburban areas of the state to see what rural Georgia truly looks like." Rep. Margaret Kaiser, on the other hand, represents part of the metro Atlanta area. As a restaurant owner and representative of a district where farm-to-table eateries are gaining popularity, Kaiser said she has always found the Ag Committee fascinating. She said going on tours such as this allow her to gain a better understanding of technology and advancements in agriculture. "I told my husband I know I'm a city girl, but I think I've got a little farm girl in me," she said. "I'll never buy a 2x4 or a chicken without a totally different appreciation for the process."
State representatives Darlene Taylor (left) and Amy Carter hold freshly cleaned cotton at the Funston Gin Company in Funston, Ga., a stop on the Georgia Agribusiness Council's legislative agriculture tour. Photo by Dallas Duncan
FEATURED RECIPE:
Easy cheese squares

LEGAL NOTICE: Equine auction now set for Nov. 16

Pursuant to section 4-13-7 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated (Humane Care for Equines Act), the Georgia Department of Agriculture will conduct a live auction on the following equine.
The auction will be held Saturday, Nov. 16, 2013, at the Mansfield Impound Barn in Mansfield, Ga. The said equine may be inspected at the facility beginning at 10 a.m. Pictures of the equine will be posted, when available, on the Department website. Sealed bids will not be accepted on these equine.
Hope: 8-month-old palomino grade filly Jack: 9-year-old red dun Quarter Horse grade geld-
ing (rides) Hatchett: 3-year-old black and white grade mare
(rides) Judge: 15-year-old blue roan grade gelding (rides) Creek: 5-year-old bay grade mare (rides) Gilly: 10-year-old Buckskin grade gelding hope
(rides) Cody: 12-year-old dark bay Thoroughbred gelding
tattooed (rides) Pistol: 6-year-old grey Arabian grade gelding (rides) Zack: 9-year-old bay grade gelding (rides) Moses: 22-year-old sorrel grade gelding (rides) No representation is made regarding any registration or possible registration neither of said equine nor of the physical condition of said equine. Any documentation in possession of the Department regarding registration, physical condition or past veterinary treatment of said equine is available upon request; however, notwithstanding the availability of such documentation, lack thereof or verbal information given to the Department, said sale is for the equine on an "as is" basis without any representation regarding registration, physical con-

dition or acceptable use of the animal. The Department reserves the right to add or with-
draw equines to or from any auction. The successful bidder must be prepared to tender the price by cashiers check, money order, cash or with personal check (accompanied with letter of bank approval) and move the animal from the facility by 3 p.m. on Nov. 17.
Payment must be made at the time the animal is picked up. If a successful bidder fails to tender the price as required, the Department may refuse to accept any other bids made by the successful bidder at this auction or any future auction.
These horses are subject to periodic inspection by the Department for a period of 12 months. The purchaser agrees that she will not transfer ownership of equine purchased at this sale to anyone who has had equines impounded by the Department, or a case under investigation for a violation of the Humane Care for Equines Act. If the Department determines that this agreement is violated, the equine may be subject to immediate impoundment.
IF YOU GO ... When: Saturday, Nov. 16, 2013 at 11 a.m. Where: Mansfield Impound Barn 2834 Marben Farm Road Mansfield, GA 30055
VIEW PHOTOS www.agr.georgia.gov
CONTACT Equine Health at 404-656-3713 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday

Editor's Note: These savory, spicy bites can be eaten fresh out of the oven or cooled down in the fridge. Recipe makes approximately 25 squares.

Ingredients: 3 tablespoons jalapeno peppers from a jar, seeded and chopped

16 ounces extra sharp cheddar cheese, shredded 6 eggs, beaten

Instructions: 1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. 2. Sprinkle chopped jalapeno peppers in a well-greased 8x8-inch baking
dish. Cover with shredded cheddar cheese. 3. Pour beaten eggs evenly over cheese and bake for 25 to 30 minutes, or
until firm. 4. Cool and cut into bite-size pieces for serving.
All recipes have been tested for accuracy by Georgia Department of Agriculture home economists unless otherwise noted.
Share your favorite recipes with us! Send recipes to dallas.duncan@ agr.georgia.gov or to Dallas Duncan, Georgia Market Bulletin, 19 MLK Jr. Drive SW Atlanta, GA 30334. If you have questions, concerns or corrections to featured recipes, call 404-656-3722.
For more recipes, find us on Pinterest and watch cooking in action on our "Pick, Cook, Keep" series at www.gpg.org/pick-cook-keep!

PAGE 8

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013

Kiko, Beor goats; 1 year old, can be Registered Tennesee Walking Horse, registered, $250 each. Chris Nichols mare, 7 years; black, white tobiano,

Poultry/Fowl For Sale

Gold and silver sebrights, BB reds, Jumbo Wisconsin Bobwhite quail black tail Japs, bantams and many more. eggs; $48 for 100; $168 for 600; $260

Hogansville cnichols1127@gmail.com beautiful, loads well; needs good rider, If you have any questions regarding James Brooks Maysville 706-652-2474 for 1,000; flight year-round. Raymond

706-594-1910

$2,500. Brenda Culver Macon brenda- ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. Grown laying turkey hens, $30; gob- Meadows Wadley mead5345@wadley-

Kiko, Boer, Spanish billy (75 percent kitchens@att.net 478-456-4998

Any person engaged in buying live bler, $35; chicken pullets, $7.50 to quailfarm.com 478-252-5345

Kiko, one-eighth Boer, one-eighth Spanish); 1.5 years old, $200. Matt Patton Comer 706-296-4930
Large billy goat, dehorned, good breeder, $150; small billy goat, $100. Terry Brewer Loganville 770-466-4820
Male Pygmy goats for sale, $75 and $60. Donald Dyches Savannah marie@ dyches.net 912-429-0720 912-927-9777
Miniature Shetliot ram lamb for sale; white, intact, $200. Julia Davis Savannah 912-547-4625
Nigerian Dwarves; wether and nanny, light blonde and buckskin in color, please no calls after 9 p.m. Larry Pirkle

Riding pony, chocolate in color, 42 inches tall, gentle ride with saddle and bridle or bare back, $600. J Wilkes Athens 706-207-9366
Standard female jenny donkey, 5 years old, very gentle, will make good companion or guard, $250. Jackie Copelan Madison 706-453-2494 706-474-5066
Tennessee Walking Horse: 11-year-old mare,16-plus hands, trail horse or perspective brood mare, $3,500 firm, must see. Ruth Williams Brunswick 912-6022909
Equine At Stud

poultry of any kind for resale, or in selling live poultry of any kind bought for the purpose of resale, must be licensed by the Georgia Department of Agriculture. Possessing such a license does not by itself disqualify an individual from advertising poultry in the Market Bulletin; however, advertisers should note that all livestock (which includes poultry), must have been in possession of the advertiser for a minimum of 90 days or, in the case of chicks, ducklings, etc., must have been raised by the advertiser before offering them for sale in the Market Bulletin. Mallard ducks must be at

$12.50; Pharoh quail, 75 cents to $200. Raymond Seckinger Ellabella 912-8585048
Guineas keet; various ages and prices. Mohammed Islam Carrollton 770-3677244 678-899-3943
Have two Narragansett toms; 6 months old, $45 each. Kenneth Spear Chickamauga 706-539-2423
Old English Bantam silver Duckwing and BB reds; small, show quality; and some others. Mike Bruce Ball Ground 770-655-7164
Old English brassy back; brown red, splash, silver duckwing. Mitch Pohlel

Poultry/Fowl Wanted
One female Peking duck, between 9 and 6. Judith Farmer Carnesville 706384-5013 706-384-5013
Want a hen and rooster guineas, two Barred Rock hens-cloreto. Helen Smith Cartersville 770-382-7031
Want to buy Cornish game bantam chickens; dark, white, blue and spangle. B Milner Eastman 478-231-5440
Want Trio Black Australorps, also want Barred Rock pullets or hens. Darren Wilkes Demorest 706-768-2683
Want two female blue peacocks,

Dawsonville 706-216-2954

If you have questions regarding ads in least three generations from the wild Loganville 770-466-8059

around 6 months old at time of this ad.

Oberhasli buck; ADGA registered, 3 this category, call 404-656-3722.

before they can be advertised in the One New Hampshire rooster, $10; Tina Underwood Hiawassee 706-896-

years old, beautiful, well-built goat, excellent breeding stock, $350 OBO. Jonathan Frazier Douglasville fraz2129@ gmail.com 404-431-2638
Pygmy goat does breed; one buck, $75; does; asking, $175, babies must go with mom. Teresa Brady Martin 706-
ALTERNATIVE 969-0901
Saanen does and Saanen-Lamancha
LIVESTOCK mix does, good bloodline, $100; 3 to
4 months old. Gene Berna Griffin 678358-5466
Savanna-Nubian cross buck, 20 months old, disbudded, praven breeder, nice kids, certified and accredited, CAE free, $400. Willie Young Stockbridge 770-490-4287
Several ADGA Alpine bucks, healthy and ready for service; CAE negative, $250 to $450. Frank Sutton Taylorsville suttonalpines@yahoo.com 770-6845600
Wanted: goat milking stand with head catch. Carol Williams Iron City swilliams1963@comcast.net 239-784-7887
White Dorper ram lambs: 8 to 10 months; five to choose, starting at $160; email for pictures. Ed Lane Chattahoochee Hills 770-842-5027
Young Pygmy billy for sale, $50; friendly, black, dewormed; good for breeding, eating or companion. Molly Dobbins Dacula mollydobbins@bellsouth.net 404-926-6559
Equine For Sale
If you have questions regarding ads in

"Equine At Stud" advertisments must include the stable license number of the advertiser as well as a copy of the current Coggins report for each horse listed. Ads submitted without this information will not be published.
Equine Miscellaneous
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Amish-made Henry Miller Buena Vista Plantation trail saddle; looks like a Australian-Western cross; excellent saddle, $800. Rhonda Chitwood Resaca rchitwood@gcbe.org 706-264-0765
English saddle, Crosby Mark VI comination cutback, 15-inch spring seat, jumping saddle, $475. Margaret Sincere Dahlonega 706-344-8123
For Sale: very good-condition; twohorse trailer with tack and hay space, $1,500, firm. Prince Parris Blue Ridge parr7030@etcmail.com 706-492-7725 706-455-7725
Four-tier saddle rack, $50, bridles, bits, blankets, breast collars, etc., various tack and equipment; cheap. Eddie Hatcher Comer 706-783-3818
Lessons, training and sales; Western and English; serving Paulding, Cobb, Douglas and Haralson counties. M DeFoor Temple 770-778-6796
Looking for "Doc," old swayback horse; sold to girl. Roger Keebaugh

Market Bulletin. Advertisers must include this information in notices submitted for publication.
2013 red, golden Pheasants; 8 to 10 months old. John Herndon Grayson 404-697-7179
Baby chicks: American Dominique, buff Orpington, Rhode Island Red, Delaware; pure breeds, various ages. Monte Poitevint Lakeland 229-482-3854
Bantam BB Red Roosters for sale, $15 each OBO; six, 1 year old, beautiful; leave message. Tanya Ellijay 706-5049599
Bantam Dominique, 5 months; two Old English game roosters, 6 months; Red Pyles, 6months. Steve Pirkle Buford 770-899-2709
Bantams, red Cochins purebred young roosters, $15 each, please leave message. Melinda Hill Colbert 706-795-3357
Bantams: blue spangled, blacktailed buff, blue brassy sport, brassyback, blue quail, splash modern, $20 each; quality birds. Janice Payne Jasper 706692-6769 770-893-8397
Bantams: silver duck wing, black tail buffs; blue tail buffs, 3 months; one pair Seramas, 5 months. Elwood Dudley Cartersville 770-382-8527
BB Reds, Millie Fluers brown, red Old English pigeons, turkeys, peacocks. Danny Ryals Milledgeville 478-8043868 478-452-8497
Bearded Silkies for sale; partridge, white, black, paint, splash and porcelain; breeding pairs available, $18; $55;

three New Hampshire pullets, started, $15 each, other pullets available. Jason Holland Cleveland 912-282-8567 706348-7704
Peacock, blue, green and peahen; lawless gray game rooster, mixed hens. ML Harrington Macon 478-960-0912 478745-3707
Peafowl for sale: 2013 hatch; white and blue, $25 each; leave message. John Fletcher Hampton 678-849-4828
Peafowls, along with healthy, freerange Royal Palm turkeys. Sara Robbins Blairsville 706-745-2328
Pheasants: ringnecks, $10 each; redgold, $60 pair, silver $40 to $60 pair; big breed chickens, $10 to $12.each. Gerald Hayes Flowery Branch 470-208-0309
Pigeons for sale; home rollers, high flyers, many collars, call Ben. Shabanali Jabbar Cheloei Jackson 404-272-7423
Red sex link chicks,1 year old; silver and golden Wyandotte hens, $8 and up. James Cagle Rome jtlc100@msn.com 706-266-1218
Rhode Island Red chicks, $1.50 each, brown eggs, $2 per dozen, hatching eggs, $4 per dozen. Scott Clark Nashville 229-686-2778
Rhode Island Red pullet, healthy, now laying. Brian Sturdy Dahlonega 706865-9201
Silkie and Frizzle chickens for sale; must see these furry friends, $8 each. Keith Cato Manchester 706-977-3467 706-656-3578

3610 706-781-5077 Want white doves. Lee Adams Macon
478-228-1782 Want young rose comb Rhode Island
rooster or young Red Java rooster. Vernon West Newnan 770-304-1637
If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722.
The Alternative Livestock category contains ads for ratites (ostriches, rheas, and emus) as well as other "non-traditional" livestock.
12 baby emus, $50 each; two adult male emus, $50 each. Minnie Lunsford Lawrenceville 770-963-7740
Alpacas for sale; herd reduction, some as low as $500 OBO. Deborah Rodriguez Commerce 706-336-6683
Alpacas, two males and two females; one pregnant, call and lets talk, $500 for all. Fran Curry Maysville 706-652-3409
Alpacas: quality animals, awardwinning fleeces; prices for any budget, individuals or herds. Lisa Corbicz Rockmart circlecalpacas@yahoo.com 678-247-5331
Llamas for sale: one male and four females; selling out; $100 each OBO. Frank Cable Carrollton 404-720-4145
Wanted, a female emu, 4-plus years old. Louie Estep Newnan 770-301-4449

this category, call 404-656-3722.
All equine advertised in the Market Bulletin must have had a negative Cog-

Gainesville irineroger@yahoo.com 770869-7941
Need a farrier to trim horses' feet; be-

show quality. Bryan Cahoon Lexington 678-877-1805
Blue Cochin hen and White Leghorn

Silkie bantams, bearded white, black, blue pairs, $15; downsizing show stock, blue chicks, $3. Mary Robbins Powder

Alternative Livestock Requiring Permit/License

gins test within past 12 months. Negative reports are valid for 12 months from the sample date. A copy of this test report must accompany the ad each time it is submitted or the notice will be returned to the advertiser. For this reason, generalized ads (i.e., many horses, varieties to choose from, others, etc.) cannot be accepted. Buyers are urged to request verification of a negative Coggins test before purchasing any equine. Any falsification of Coggins tests can result in fines and/ or suspension of advertising privileges in the Market Bulletin. This regulation also applies to equine advertised in the "At Stud" and "Boarding" categories of the quarterly equine editions.
4-year-old gelding bay; growning, good hooves; ready to be broken; tack available, possible trade. Becky Arren-

tween Milner and Zebulon, fair prices only and a lot of experience. Ed or Jan Willis Milner 678-688-7382
Show saddle, 16 inches, headstall reins, breast plate, silver trim, saddle pad, like new, $1,200. H. Parker McDonough 770-483-9484
Side saddle, rarely used, $300; child's tooled leather saddle, $150. Rachel Holbrook Ellijay 404-805-9027
Three-saddle rack stand, heavy duty metal, picture available, $150. Lesa Camp Griffin 770-412-7157
Two 26-inch cart wheels; bioplastic black, red cushion set for pony; new in box; one small pony cart. Shannon Copeland Odum vnsc@windstream.net 912-586-2319 912-586-2319
Vis--vis, limousine carriage, white;

rooster, 5 months, friendly, beautiful birds to go to good home. l. Alexander` Athens 312-342-0734
Breeder Java peacock, $100, calm, Pied Spalding peahen, B/S White Eyed Pied peahen, $75. Kevin Daft Decatur 404-325-9969
Chickens for sale: mixed breeds; 18 hens, one rooster, $8 each. Carlos Bagwell Alpharetta 770-827-7366
Chicks: brown egg breeds, sexed, NPIP-certified, we ship; heritage breed fryers: day-old to 12 weeks; offering 14 breeds in 2014. Bob Berry Ray City bobsbiddies@live.com 229-455-6437
Cochin Bantams; several ages, colors; Old English Bantams, blue brassy backs, red fawn sports; sizzles, silkies. J. Mannaert Alpharetta 404-694-9696
Common pigeons, $15 per pair or $5

Springs 770-943-1007
Silver Wyandottes, buff Orpington, buff Brahmas, Rhode Island Red, Red Stars, Black Giants, laying $12. Gary Ridley Lafayette 706-638-1911
Standard bronze turkey male, 2 years old, $30; Royal Palm turkey female, 2 years old, $30. Rachel Smith Pembroke 912-376-1315
Turkeys: Royal Palms, Blue Slates, white and bronze, also Trio Welsh Harlequin ducks, laying every day. Sherrie Liford Canton 678-521-8689
Young mixed game roosters, $5 each; four Muscovy ducks, $7 each. Willie Keen Perry 478-987-3687
Poultry/Fowl Requiring Permit/License

If you have questions regarding ads in
this category, call 404-656-3722.
The Georgia Department of Natural Resources regulates many exotic animals, including most hoofed stock except llama and buffalo. However, upon compliance with applicable state regulations, a deer farming license for the commercial production of meat and fiber is available for the following species: fallow deer, axis deer, sika deer, elk, red deer, reindeer, and caribou. For more information on the deer farming license, contact the Georgia Department of Agriculture at (404) 6563667. For information on licenses of other species of hoofed stock (except llama and buffalo), contact the Georgia Department of Natural Resources Special Permit Unit at (770) 761-3044. Individuals submitting advertisements

dale Franklin 678-877-7801

comfortably seats six plus driver, $5,000. for singles, have mated pairs; small If you have questions regarding this to buy and sell regulated hoofed stock

Four donkeys; two mature jacks, one Tom Clark Winston 770-596-0273

pens; leave message. David Patton Wil- category, call 404-656-3722.

in the Market Bulletin must provide a

jenny, one 6-month-old jack. N Henry Wintec all-purpose black saddle, size liamson 770-228-4415 770-228-4415 Advertisements for bobwhite quail photocopy of the appropriate license

Davis Bolingbroke 478-731-9701

18; Sprengen stirrups and Wintec elas- Ducks: Khaki Campbell, Cayuga, must be accompanied by a copy of with their ad.

LIVESTOCK WANTED Miniature donkeys: jack or breeding tic cinch included, excellent condition, Swedish Black, Blue; geese African, the advertiser's commercial quail
jack, $200; baby jenny, $300; jenny, $125. Janice Hughes Clermont 770- Pomperanian Saddlebacks, 6 months. breeders license. Since this is a state

$400; bred jenny, $500. Bill Wray Perry 983-9609

Cynthia Clohessy Dahlonega hearts- protected bird, the Georgia Depart-

478-825-1297 Miniature male donkey, paint color, hal-

Boarding Facilities

ease@windstream.net 706-429-3876 ment of Natural Resources requires If you have questions regarding ads in Eastern wild turkeys; all born in 2013. anyone selling bobwhite quail to have this category, call 404-656-3722.

ter broken, will lead, 14 months old, very If you have questions regarding ads in James Gantt Barnesville 770-358-6838 this license. For license informa- Items listed in the Livestock Wanted

gentle. Awtrey Moore Powder Springs this category, call 404-656-3722.

For Sale: one Allen Roundhead; Trio tion, write: LBRU - COMMERCIAL category must be for specific live-

770-943-3351
Mule, 7 years old, 14.5 hands, bay, gelding, $600. Tom Tweedell Athens 706-549-9456
One pair registered Haflinger mares, one purebred stud, good home only, also farm equipment for sale. Manson Woody White Plains 706-467-9655
Quarter Horse mare, approximately 18 years and 15 hands, barefoot, vaccinations current; barrels, trail, intermediate rider, $750. Sharon Everett Douglasville

The Georgia Animal Protection Act requires boarding and breeding facilities to be licensed. Current license number must be submitted with notices for publication in the "Boarding Facilities" category. Notices submitted without this information will not be published.
Apalachee Meadows has space for pasture board and winter feeding on 300 acres; stable license #1177419. James

Lacey Roundhead, Trio Garrett Roundhead; six Thi game Asiel mostly stags. Vernon Murphy Cornelia 706-778-5072
Game chickens, stags, pullets, hatch, several breeds, F blues, guineas, all sizes, Allen Roundheads, Lucy Roundheads. Larry Ledford Clarkesville 706754-7064
Game fowl: Law greys, Liepers, green leg Jimmy East hatch; call before 9 p.m. Keith Vickery Hartwell 706-436-6567
Gamefowl for sale; pure bred pullets in

LICENSE, 2065 US Highway 278 SE, Social Circle, GA 30025-4743.
Bobwhite quail for sale; flight read conditioned, $3.50 ea. Fletcher Christian Lyerly 706-728-0375 706-895-3030
Bobwhite quail, flight conditioned, now available for the 2013 season, call for pricing. Rembert Hancock Fairmount 404-376-0550 706-337-5711
Bobwhite quail, flight-ready; $3.50 each, day-old chicks, 35 cents each;

stock; for instance, "want 3 or 4-yr. old quarter horse gelding, approx. 16 hds., suitable for moderately experienced rider." Generalized ads, such as "want horses, any amount," are not acceptable for publication; neither are ads for free or unwanted livestock.
Goats wanted: would like two doe kids, in Douglas or adjacent counties. Linda Stauffer Winston 770-942-9522
Looking for a yearling Angus bull,

404-925-2984

Schwender Bogart jimschwender@bell- Hatch, Roundhead and Grey, $25 each. eggs, 12 cents each. Thomas Findley non-registered and between $800 and

Quarter horse,10 years old; halter bro- south.net 706-410-4452

Lee Townsend Elberton 706-988-9222 Box Springs 706-575-3889 706-326- $1,000. Dewey Seagraves Danielsville

ken, some round pen, needs experi- Full board, stall, turn out, arena, ex- Geese: two African Grey, three White 2186

706-202-2349

enced owner; current negative Coggins. perienced quality care; Coweta, Fulton Chinese; 3 months old, half grown in Bobwhite, Coturnix quail eggs, $65 for Looking for two to three weaned

Vallorie Wood Lithia Springs vallorie@ county line; license 11256. Nancy Jen- size; pictures; $25 each. Rebeca Smith 100, $135 for 500, $265 for 1,000. Willie calves, to grow out for beef. Larry Mc-

bellsouth.net 770-948-8581 404-374- kins Palmetto nancyj149@yahoo.com Dearing joeandrebeccasmith@hotmail. Strickland Pooler stricklandgamebird. Cart Gethlehem larrymccart@yahoo.

8477

770-328-8045

com 706-962-2774

com 912-748-5769

com 770-601-5657

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN

PAGE 9

Want for free: goats, pigs, chickens, $40; 4x5 rolls; bermuda, crabgrass, 2013 coastal bermuda hay, horse qual- 2013 square bales of fescue hay, $2.75 4x5; coastal bermuda, bahia hay for

donkeys or cattle for free-range pastur- fescue mix, net wrapped, dry in barn, ity, 4x4 net wrapped rolls, stored in barn. per bale. Bobby Luke Bogart 770-725- sale, $40 per roll; barn kept, delivery

ing; will pick up. Beau Sally Hampton square bales, $6; delivery available. Fred Sackett Butler 478-862-5120

5094

available. Frank Scott Hawkinsville

bigpinefarm@live.com 678-522-8466 Gary Lane Carrollton 404-502-4000

2013 coastal bermuda hay; horse qual- 2013 Tift 44 bermuda; square bales, 478-284-1950

Want to buy goats, hogs, sheep, pure- $40; 4x6 rolls, bermuda, bahia, fescue ity, square bales, $4.50; cow rolls $25 to excellent horse quality, fertilized and dry 50 rolls; quality mixed hay; 4x5, rain

breed or mixed breed, also want 80 mixed; fertilized, horse quality; call after $45; mulch rolls $10. Curtis Durden Ly- in barn, $5. Paige Bullock Dallas 770- free in field, $18 or all $1; will load. Cal-

pounds and up wether goats. Wayne 6 p.m. George Davis Rutledge 706- ons 912-526-3189 912-245-1081

445-2107

vin Till Thomaston crestvalleyfarms@

Green Bremen 770-841-6815

818-2025 706-719-0555

2013 coastal bermuda square bales, 2013 Tift 44 bermuda; square bales, gmail.com 478-391-7635

$45; 2013 Tift 44, 4x5.5 bales, net $6.50; well-fertilized and limed, horse rain free, horse quality. $5 per bale at 5x5 2013 mixed grass, unwrapped

LIVESTOCK HANDLING wrapped, rain free, in the barn; delivery quality; delivery available. Rhonda Mc- barn. Buddy Bearden Bostwick 706- rolls, cow quality, $35 per roll; delivery

available, quantity discounts. Dennis Cracken Newnan dustytrailfarms@ 474-8097

available. Ray Gilbert Bishop 706-769-

If you have questions regarding ads in Tolbert Comer 706-340-4498

gmail.com 770-304-2487

2013 Tift 85 bermudagrass hay, 4x5 5820 706-296-4360

this category, call 404-656-3722.

$50; large rolls bermuda, fescue mix, 2013 coastal bermuda, 4x6 rolls, $25 net wrapped, limed and fertilized. Allen Bermuda bales, rain free $5; 4x4 fes-

12 door foot trailer, with middle gate in barn, horse quality; cow hay, $20; per roll. Eddy Allen Macon 478-391- Boyd Tifton 229-392-4450

cue, bermuda, rain-free, in barn $20; 4x4

and two axles, good shape, $1,000. Joe can deliver. Jay Townsend Monroe 678- 2377

2013 Tift 85, $55 per bale; coastal wheat, rye mix, $25. Gary Holley Rock-

Vaughn Union Point 706-817-2244

618-6992

2013 coastal bermuda; 4x6 rolls, $25 bermuda, $45 per bale; 4x6 John Deere mart 404-852-8202 770-684-2151

16-foot aluminum Tagalong stock trail- `12 alicia bermuda; net wrap, $25; per roll, 100 rolls available. Steve Allen net wrapped; excellent quality. E. Brown Bermuda, 4x5 round bales in barn,

er with center gate, excellent condition, `13 bermuda, $40 rolls. James Martin Butler 336-314-4841

Avera 706-831-3442 706-547-6162

$25. Danny Bruce Rutledge 706-474-

$7,500. John Vaughan Rydal 770-383- Waynesboro 706-558-5005

2013 coastal hay, 4x5 950 pounds, 2013 Tift bermuda hay; square and 3205

1442

`12 coastal bermuda; horse quality; $30 to $40, fertilized, delivery available. round bales, horse quality, stored in Bermuda; square bales, rain free, $5;

16-foot equipment trailer, fold up fertilized, UGA soil specs; square, 4x5 Bruce Baxter Buena Vista 229-938- barn, delivery available. Dick Stratton 4x4 brmuda, fescue rolls, $15 and $20.

ramps, dual axle, bumper pull, $800. round bales in barn, delivery, stack 2648

Locust Grove 770-842-9317 770-914- Gary Holley Rockmart 770-684-2151

Ron Byrd Tignall 614-531-2157

available. Olin Trammell Forsyth 478- 2013 coastal, fescue mix; well-fertil- 6153

Bermudagrass hay; large bales and

Eight-foot Apache feeder-creek feeder 994-6463 478-960-7239

ized; 4x4 rolls in barn, $30 or $20 per 2013 Tifton 44 bermuda; horse qual- square bales, sheltered, good quality.

on one side, good condition; $1,000 OBO. Carl Ridings Rome 770-315-8321
Horse cart with brakes, heavy duty tires, made very well, $950. Connie Carnes Sparta 478-456-0915

`12 horse quality, bermuda, also mulch hay; square bales only, delivery available; Monroe County. Jimmy Waldrep Forsyth 478-994-0701
`13 bermuda, fescue mix; 4x5 net wrap, horse quality, $45; barn stored,

roll, stored outside, will load. James Pierce McDonough 404-372-8631 678610-6621
2013 fertilized, square bale hay; timothy, orchard mix, $6 at barn, delivery available. C.C. Hemphill Blairsville 706-

ity, fertilized; weed, crabgrass free, 4x5 rolls, barn-stored $70; bermuda, ryegrass mix, $60. Tim Hunter Conyers 770-483-8712 770-922-6653
2013: 500 to 800 pounds, well-fertilized, rain free; Tift 85 hay. Woody Fol-

Floyd Knowles McRae 229-315-0409 229-362-4855
Coastal bermuda hay, $20 to $50 per roll; priced according to quality; delivery available. Wymann Hartley Kathleen 478-987-5835 478-954-0324

RABBITS

delivery available. Neil Brasington Bu- 745-4414

som Baxley 912-253-8166

Coastal bermuda hay; 10 or more,

chanan 770-617-5393

2013 fescue and 2013 mixed grass 2013; 4x5 bermuda hay, $30 per roll. square bales, $6 in barn, round, $35.

If you have questions regarding ads in `13 bermuda, horse quality, $4.25, $5, hay, good quality at barn. Wade Cown Jimmy Keith LaGrange 706-884-4923 Leonard Kinsley Perry 478-714-9900

this category, call 404-656-3722.

$5.50; fescue, $4.25, all at barn; del. Monroe 770-209-6983

2013; 4x5 coastal bermuda round Coastal bermuda hay; 2013, fertilized

ARBA pedigreed, $20 and up, quality Dutch, selling steel grays, blacks, show

avail. Al Guillebeau Monroe 770-2678929

2013 fescue hay for sale; 45 round bales, $30 each; delivery available. Chad

bales in barn, also have some bales outside. John Page Lyons 912-526-6645

per soil test, 4x5 rolls stored in barn, $40 per roll. Edmond Strickland Perry 478-

rabbits and breeders, $15 and up. Katie `13 coastal bermuda; cow hay, 4x5 Thomas Taylorsville 770-547-2594

2013; 4x5 net wrapped bermuda, cow 214-7061 478-957-1039

Hufford Cleveland 706-219-4766 706- rolls, $40. Rex Register Hahira 229- 2013 fescue hay; 4x5 rolls, net quality, $40; horse quality, $60. R. Wil- Coastal bermuda hay; square bales,

969-1953

561-1462

wrapped, barn stored, small squares son Waynesboro 706-551-6059

rain and weed-free, priced from $4.50 to

Bunnies for sale: Lionheads, mini rex, `13 coastal, russell, 4x6, John Deere also available; will deliver. Jimmy Payne 2013; 4x5 rolls, fescue, bermuda mix, $5.50 a bale, at barn. Bill Turner Brooks

$10 each; lops, Netherland Daurds, $15 net wrapped, stored in barn, horse qual- Rockmart 404-557-8448

net wrapped, $30,100 or 150 rolls; large 770-401-9648

each; Dutch, $10 each. Derrick Vaughan ity, $50; can deliver. William Stevens 2013 fescue hay; 5x6-feet rolls, shel- discount, minimum 10, up to 20 miles. Coastal bermuda round bales, hay has

Commerce 706-207-7579

Macon 478-214-1257

tered, $35 each; unsheltered, $25 each; Joe Akin Fayetteville 770-461-1261 been fertilized and sprayed for weeds,

Complete rabbitry; rabbits, auto wa- `13 fescue mix; 4x5 net wrapped, out- more different prices. Bill Davis Cave 2013; 4x5 round rolls bermuda, bahia $40 per bale. Lowinston Jackson Lu-

terers, feeders, cages. Terry Poole side, $30; quantity discount. Edward Spring 706-777-3601

hay, well-fertilized and limed, $40 per thersville 770-583-2385

Carnesville 706-658-5377

Holmes Dallas 404-372-7734

2013 fescue hay; good quality, $4.50 roll. Stanford L Holland Lumber City Corn silage, chopped 2012, stored in

Flemish Giant, New Zealand White, `13 horse hay, square bales, fescue, per bale, at barn. Gordon Cown Monroe 912-363-7759

pit, you haul, $40 per ton. David True-

rabbits for sale, $15 each. Randy Miller clover, in barn, $3.50 each, while they 770-207-6983

2013; 4x6 round bales, coastal hay for love Clermont 404-925-7073

Meigs 229-941-5102

last. Louis Beal Ellijay 770-344-8527

2013 fescue hay; square bales, horse horses or cows, $35, will load. Milam Fescue, 2013 square bales, heavy,

Flemish giants; colors are fawn, white, 180 square bales, 2013 spring hay, dry quality; brown top millet, square bales Henderson dreamfinder982004@ya- tight bales, fertilized, exceptional horse

blue and gray; top quality and handled in barn; fescue, orchardgrass, $3.50 per also available, $3.50 per bale. Steve hoo.com 478-320-2916 478-335-2564 quality, rain-free, weed-free. Ada Spruill

daily; Holland, Mini Lops also. Hannah bale; $3 for all. Lon Bush Ellijay 706- Griffin Dalton 706-260-1912

2013; fertilized, horse quality, square Hoschton 706-654-3434 706-202-8711

Israel Dallas 678-363-3199
Many varieties of rabbits for sale; does and bucks, $15 each. Allison Amos Cumming 678-793-7615
Pure bred New Zealand Red, 45 and New Zealand White, 30, with papers; ARBA, AFNZRC, DRBA. Linda Lee Dawsonville 706-531-4785

636-1806
2012 bermuda mix; good quality, wellfertilized, 4x5 rolls, $ 20 a roll. Louis Hamilton Keysville 706-554-2898 706833-7064
2012 bermuda, fescue mix; big bales, horse quality, in barn, $4; square bales. Nancy Harris Winder 770-867-0733

2013 fescue, bermuda hay, horse quality, fertilized, weed free, $3.75 for square bales, at barn; delivery available. Sheri Fennell Rockmart 770-355-3324
2013 fescue, bermuda mix; 5x5 rolls, tight, heavy, rain-free in barn, $40; 2012, $30. Jimmy Neisler Cumming 770-8891719

bales, bermuda, $5; fescue $4, rain-free in barn. James Wilson Elberton 706371-2485
2013; fescue, bermuda mix; 4x5 rolls, fertilized, in barn, net wrapped. Glen Whitley Bethlehem 770-867-2718 770307-7098
2013; first cutting, fescue, orchard-

Fescue, orchardgrass, clover; 5x5 rolls, no rain, $25. Reed McNabb Nicholson 706-757-3327
Fescue, orchardgrass; also, bermuda, fescue mix; $4.50 per bale, fertilized, rain free, sprayed, square bales. William Cargle Rome 706-235-1226

Silver Fox bunnies, can be registered, to be weaned early Novemeber, $12 each; 14 available.. Mallory Whiddon

2012 fescue, bermuda hay, $10; 4x5 2013 fescue, bermuda first cut, $15; second cut, $30. Sherri Fitzpatrick Col-

2013 fescue, bermuda mix; all in barn, 4x4 rolls, $30; squares, $5. Burton Eichel Thomson 706-421-4945

grass; 4x5 rolls, $27; covered, 2012, barn kept, $20. Jim Woodall Epworth 706-632-8802

Fescue, rye; 4x5 rolls of hay, $40 per roll, ask about delivery. April Sanders Jackson 404-391-3475 404-391-3476

Leesburg info@whiddonfamilyfarms. bert 706-207-5633

2013 fescue; 4x5 rolls, $30; horse qual- 4x5 John Deere rolls; first cutting of Fescue; horse quality, $3; fescue mix,

com 229-886-0763

2012; 4x5 net wrapped, fertilized ity, square bales, $3.75 in barn. Charlie fescue, rye; second cutting of fescue, horse and cow quality, $2.75; bermuda,

Want New Zealand rabbit for meat. coastal bermuda, $20 per roll. Jay Glis- Chastain Talking Rock 770-893-9013 bermuda and millet, $ 20. Mark Ledford weed and rain free, $4. Kermit Simmons

Darren Wilkes Demorest 707-768-2683 son Waynesboro 706-551-3081

2013 hay for sale; fescue; fescue, ber- Commerce 706-658-6455

Jefferson 770-867-7550

2012; horse quality, rain-free, limed, muda mix, $25 a roll and up or trade. 4x5 rolls coastal, alicia and bahia, $30 For Sale: 2012 alicia hay, 4x5 round

FEED, HAY AND GRAIN If you have questions regarding ads in
this category, call 404-656-3722.
All hay ads must contain the variety of hay offered for sale; i.e., Coastal bermuda hay, Alicia hay, etc.
$11 alfalfa; square bales, no weeds or beetles, horse quality, average 70 pounds-plus. Mary Clark Newborn 678625-0338
$2 fescue, square bales; 100 bales, 2012, use for decorating, landscaping, erosion, etc. Jimmy Hendrix Metter 912-687-4034 912-685-6474
$20; 2013 round bales, fescue, bermuda mixed, fertilized. L. Bullock Dallas 770-880-2244

fertilized coastal bermuda hay, net wrapped, 4x5, large bales, good tight, $50; 150 bales. Grace Brady Hephzibah 706-231-0985
2013 4x5, coastal bermuda, $45; 2013 coastal bermuda, bahia mix, $30 in barn; delivery available. Stephen Bell Milledgeville 478-414-8043
2013 alicia bermuda, 4x5 rolls wellfertilized, net wrapped, barn stored, $35 to $45. Marcus Sapp Barney 229-5636255
2013 alicia bermuda, well-fertilized, round and square bales. JoAn Young Locust Grove 770-722-9770
2013 alicia; 4x5 round bales, net wrap, well-fertilized, horse and cow quality, delivery available. Paul Harris Patterson 912-670-0222

Jerry Glancy Griffin 404-433-3568
2013 hay, 4x5 rolls, $25 a roll, we load, you haul. Glenn Argroves Greenville 706-672-1300 404-791-7318
2013 hay, bermuda; square and round bales, horse quality. Don Fulkerson Milner 770-584-9602
2013 hay; bermuda, bahia mix, 300 4x5 bales, $20 per bale; 20 bale minimum, $25 and other amounts. Tim Bramlett Greensboro 706-453-4275
2013 horse hay; well-fertilized, in barn; fescue and orchardgrass, $6 each. Charles Hoffman McDonough 770914-2767
2013 horse quality hay; bermuda, fescue; square bales, $5; 4x5 net wrapped rolls, $20, $30 and $40. Ronald Camp-

in field; $35 under shelter. Herman Adams Nicholls 912-850-7972
4x5 rolls; fescue hay, barn stored, fertilized, horse quality, $35 each; delivery available, also cheaper hay. Rodney Johnson Tallapoosa 678-378-6562 770-574-7246
4x5, net wrap bermudagrass hay, $30 per roll; 50 rolls or more, $25 per roll. James Oates, Jr. Register 912-4882326

bales. Eric Mincey Baxley 912-3675569
For Sale: good quality grain sorghum. Leo Perfect Unadilla 478-627-3820
Freshly cut hay, no rain; orchard, timothy mix, square bales, $3 each at barn. Buck Dills Blairsville 706-400-9314
Good quality bahia hay for sale, $25 to $30. Malcolm Fordham Dublin 478279-4721

$3.50; fescue, orchardgrass mix, horse quality, rain-free, fertilized, square bales.

2013 bermuda mix hay; net wrapped, 4x5 rolls, $25; 2012 hay cheap in Banks

bell Rockmart 706-936-3294 770-6869563

Ronnie Teems Kingston 770-715-1368 County. Aubrey Ledford Commerce 2013 horse quality; russell bermuda,

$30 large; 4x5 rolls, horse hay, fer- 706-654-6861

fertilized, limed and weed-free; 4x4 rolls,

tilized, in barn, rain free; fescue, or- 2013 bermuda mix square bales, $5; stored inside, $25 to $30 each. Edwin chardgrass; also cow hay, $20. Jimmy 4x5 rolls, $40; 2012 cow hay or mulch Allen Mansfield 770-630-7845 Leatherman Carrollton 770-834-8333 rolls, $15. Bryan Cobb Rutledge 678- 2013 large rolls; fescue, bermuda mix,

$30 per bale; 2013 fescue, bermuda 982-3175

barn stored on concrete, $40; 2012 rolls,

hay, 4x5 net, clean; in the field, $30, in 2013 bermuda, horse quality, square same, $30. Retha Hart LaGrange 706-

the barn $45. Lorrie Lavengood Coving- and round bales, delivery available, cow 977-5381

ton 770-841-3673

hay also. Durand Deal Tifton durand- 2013 mixed fescue bermuda; fertilized,

$30 per bale; 2013 fescue, bermuda wdeal@hotmail.com 229-388-5054

cow quality, 5x5 wrapped rolls, $30.

hay; 4x5 net, twine, clean hay, in field, 2013 bermuda, square, round bales; Sarah McKneally Hartwell 706-376-

$30, in barn, $45. Paul Lavengood Mad- horse quality hay. Nicki Halstead 9170

ison 770-318-3859

Barnesville 678-972-7111

2013 mixed grass hay, 4x5 round

$35: fall cutting, fescue, 4x5 rolls in 2013 coastal bermuda hay, $5 per bale, bales, no rain, barn stored, $40; Buck-

barn; very good quality. Pat Sutton at barn, fertilized and limed, horse qual- head delivery. Ken Stevens Buckhead

Clarkesville 706-947-3006 706-499- ity, delivery available. Winford Jackson kstevens@georgiaroof.net 404-625-

9950

Newnan 770-463-3739 678-850-9950 9419

$4; 2013 fescue, orchardgrass hay, 2013 coastal bermuda hay, 4x5 round

horse quality; heavy square bales, fer- bales, net wrapped, weed free, limed

tilized, limed, rain-free. Lamar Long and fertilized to UGA specs, sheltered.

Chatsworth 706-695-5906

William Page Wrightsville 478-864-2942

$4; coastal bermuda, square bales, 2013 coastal bermuda hay, horse qual-

kept in barn; horse, cow or goat qual- ity, $4.50; bale at barn, delivery avail-

2013 orchard hay, $50; fescue, orchard mix, $40; delivery available, horse quality 4x5 rounds. Johnny Amos Cumming 770-616-0452
2013 ryegrass; premium horse hay, fertilized, square bales; 4x5 round bales,

Mason (left, on horse) and Taylor Steck of Forsyth, Ga., were the 1,000th children to sit on Easy Keeper the horse at the Georgia National Fair this year. From left: Ron Smith, advisory board member for the Agricultural Commodity Commission for Equine; father Jonathan Steck; mother Amy Steck; Beth Williams, equine committee board member; Jack Spruill, Department Marketing Division director; John

ity. Jim Wittenberg Fort Valley 478-442- able. Glenn Brinson Tarrytown 912- $60, also mulch hay, $30; delivery. L. Clements, equine committee chairman; and Terry England, chairman of the Georgia

0743 478-952-1196

288-5960

Trammell Juliette 478-550-7898

House Appropriations Committee.

PAGE 10

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013

Bulletin Calendar

Oct. 30 Nov. 6 FFA National Convention Louisville, Ky.
Nov. 1 2 Countryside Festival Celebrating Georgia Farm Life Butler, Ga. 478-862-3661
Nov. 2 Coweta County 4-H Youth Fall Fun Horse Show Newnan, Ga. 770-639-8034
Nov. 2 3 The Royal Alpaca Challenge Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 706-897-2379
Milton High School IEA Horse Show "Horses in our Hearts" Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga.
Harvest Days in Old Talbot Fielder's Water Powered Grist Mill Talbotton, Ga. 706-269-3630
Nov. 2 6 International Plant Propogators' Society Meeting University of Georgia Athens, Ga. 803-743-4283
Nov. 6 Urban Ag Council Sod and Landscape Field Day Super-Sod Farm Perry, Ga. 1-800-687-6949
Nov. 6 10 Atlanta Fall Classic I Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 843-768-5503

Nov. 9 NWGHA State Qualifying Pleasure Show Bartow County Saddle Club Arena Cartersville, Ga. www.nwgha.org
Veterans Day Celebration Georgia Museum of Agriculture Tifton, Ga. 229-391-5200
Nov. 10 NWGHA State Qualifying Running Show Bartow County Saddle Club Arena Cartersville, Ga. www.nwgha.org
Nov. 11 17 Savannah Food & Wine Festival Savannah, Ga. 912-232-1223
Nov. 12 17 Atlanta Fall Classic II Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 843-768-5503
Nov. 13 MM Cattle Co. & Callaway Cattle Co. Bull and Commercial Female Sale Carroll County Livestock Sales Barn Carrollton, Ga. 770-335-2165
Nov. 14 First Annual Urban Ag Council Sporting Clays Tournament Blalock Lakes Newnan, Ga. 770-359-7337
Nov. 16 FFA State Meats CDE
State 4-H Wildlife Judging Rock Eagle 4-H Center Eatonton, Ga.

Nov. 9 Tignall Fall Festival Old Schoolyards Tignall, Ga. 706-285-2736

Georgia Hosta Society Meeting "Small and Mini Hosta" Bellmere Garden House Duluth, Ga. 404-545-9588

Southeastern Goat and Sheep Seminar Woodmont High School Piedmont, SC www.southerngoatproducers.org

Georgia Department of Agriculture Equine Auction Mansfield Impound Barn Mansfield, Ga. 404-656-3713

Cane grinding demonstration Georgia Museum of Agriculture Tifton, Ga. 229-391-5200

Additional pesticide recertification training notices are available on the Department website under the Plant Industry Division tab.
Livestock auctions listed in the Market Bulletin may offer related items for sale. Notices for auctions selling any items other than livestock must be accompanied by the auction license number of the principal auctioneer or firm conduction the auction, per state regulations. Notices without this information cannot be published.
Have an event to put on our calendar? Contact Dallas Duncan at 404-656-3722 or dallas.duncan@agr.georgia.gov.

Grain sorghum, whole or rolled, excel- Horse quality, coastal bermuda, limed,

lent feed for quail, turkeys, etc. John weed free, $40 per bale; 4x5 bales, 65

Lowery Rome 706-252-0121

available. John Wood Gibson 706-598-

Hammer milled corn, $50 for 55-gallon 9805

barrel. Joab Bowen Clermont 678-725- Large 4x5 round bales; 2012 hay, $30

3523

per roll, 2013 hay, $40 per roll; well-

Hay for sale; coastal and fescue fertilized. Larry Cox Waynesboro 706-

mixed, horse and cow square bales, 829-4174

$3.50. Charles Evans Warner Robins Large bales of hay; 2013, $30 per bale,

478-929-0841

you pick up. Hoke Brantley Lincolnton

High quality, 4x6 rolls of russell bermu- Hoke@hokebrantley.com 706-564-5570

da hay, $40 per bale; rye grass, 4x5, $3; 706-836-8448

delivery available. Fred Gretsch Crawford 706-340-0945
Horse quality bermuda hay in barn, 4x5 rolls, fertilized, rain and weed-free, $60 each. Bo Rohrabaugh Stockbridge

Net wrapped bermuda round bale hay; covered, $40 each. Wade Simpson McDonough 404-732-7255
Now taking orders for second cutting;

770-238-8773

coastal, fescue mix, well-fertilized, will

Horse quality hay; 2013, stored in barn, no rain; square, $3; round, 4x5,

run 4x4 or 4x5 rolls; field or barn prices. Jim Pierce Waverly Hall 706-582-3846

$30. W. Terry Dishroon Mansfield 770- 404-372-8631

317-8455

Orchard, fescue, clover mix; horse

Horse quality, 2013 Bermuda, 4x5 quaility hay, five-foot rolls, $45 and large

round rolls, well fetilized, put in barn, square bales, $5 each. David Mull Lex-

rain free and dry. David Allen Atlanta ington ddmull93@yahoo.com 706-338-

404-814-3836

6056 706-743-7649

Pure orchardgrass; square bales, $8; bermuda square bales, $6; rain-free; delivery available. David Harden Lafayette 706-397-8347
Quality bermuda; horse and cow hay, never rained on, 4x5 net wrapped, $30 dollars a roll; delivery available. Cole Padgett Cumming 770-689-6184
Round bales, 4x4, fescue, orchardgrass; rain-free, $10; delivery available. Ron Smith LaFayette jpetrel@floorsoft. com 706-537-8841
Shelled corn in grain bin, $10 per 50 pounds; delivery available. Charles Saunders Montezuma cdbuild@ bellsouth.net 770-475-6520 770-6167914
Shelled yellow feed corn, sold by the barrel or bag. Robert Montgomery Reynolds 478-847-2356
Square bales, mulch hay; $2.50 each in barn; $1.50 each in field, 200 each available. James Scott Royston 706246-0214
Tift 44 bermuda; large round bales, 6x5, $30. Anthony Clark Elberton 706988-8996
Top quality 2013 tested alicia hay; round or square, sheltered, delivery available, free storage through March 2014. Heath Pittman Vidalia 912-2932535
Wheat 2013 combine run, $40, 55-gallon drum. Ken Widner Buena Vista 229649-9606
Wheat and rye grass, clean seed, $15 for 50 pounds. Crystal Duck Hartwell crystal@fabritex.com 706-376-6584 706-436-7031
Wheat and ryegrass; clean seed, $15 for 50 pounds. Andy Adams Hartwell aapagent@yahoo.com 706-4367031
Wheat straw; premium, weed free, sheltered, tightly baled, 2013, $3; south Fulton, Fairburn; delivery available. Bruce Thames Palmetto 770-853-4038
White field corn for sale. James Henderson Dawsonville 770-887-5607 770-265-5691
Feed, Hay And Grain Wanted
Want to buy dairy-quality corn silage; delivered or picked up. J A Lambert Ideal 678-850-0094
Want to roll peanut hay; Worth, Dougherty, surrounding counties. Tom Stanaland Doerun 229-392-0258
AG SEED FOR SALE
If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers of agricultural seed must submit a current state laboratory report (not more than 9 months old) for purity, noxious weeds and germination for each seed lot advertised. A seed lot must be uniform and not exceed 400 50-lb. bags. Laboratory reports will be returned upon request. Any ads for agricultural seed submitted for publication without this documentation will not be published. Licensed seed dealers cannot advertise seed in the Market Bulletin. Certain varieties of seed are protected from propagation unless they are grown as a class of certified seed. For example, wheat seed such as Florida 304, Coker 9152, Coker 9835 and soybean seed, such as Prichard and Benning, may not be propagated for sale unless the seed has been grown as a class of certified seed. Propagation of such seed is a violation of the Plant Variety Protection Act and the Federal Seed Act. If you have questions regarding certified seed, call the Market Bulletin office or the Georgia Department of Agriculture Seed Division at (404) 656-5584.
2012 Florida 501 oat seed, cleaned and bagged, 40 pounds, 97 percent germination, $10 per bag. H. Martin Kite 478-469-5173
Florida 501 oats seed; clean, 95 percent germination; bulk only. John Bullington Cordele 229-273-3597
Wrens Abruzzi rye; 70 percent germination, cleaned, bagged, 50-pound bags. Walter Prescott Wrens 706-5476681
Ag Plants for Sale
If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722.
5248, improved sugar cane for seed or syrup, 40 cents per stalk. John Kirby Swainsboro 478-299-0946

Bare-root whopper strawberry plants; no chemicals; June bearer, fruit can be as big as peaches. Karen Akers 5542 Candler Cr. Rd Gillsville 30543
Blueberry plants; potted 24-inches; Brightwell and Powered Blues, $6 each, volume discount available. John Lane Odum 912-294-1955
Cane for syurp or planting by truck load; wheat seed, clean bin run. Max Carter Douglas 912-384-5974
Catalpa (fishing worm) trees; can ship small ones, four; 10 to dig, five to six feet; $10 to $20 plus shipping. Donald Allen Snellville 404-578-7758
Early June, "Blakemore" strawberry plants, prolific, good preserving, grown chemical-free; 25 for $15, 50 for $25. B. Hughes Dacula 770-963-2114
Ficus trees, nine feet tall; one 4 years old, braided trunk; one 22 years old, solid trunk; $45 each. S. Hunt Temple 770-562-9146
Fig plants; four for $12. R. Dangar Alpharetta 770-377-6411
Fig trees: brown turkey and black mission variety, $12; thornless blackberry plants, $10 one-year. Jim Mabry Marietta jim@mabryfarm.com 770-9934997
Fig trees: brown turkey variety; 1-year, 2-year and 3-year-old trees. John Jeffords Homerville 912-520-0431
For Sale: Mississippi sugar cane for planting or syrup per stalk. Lemon Rozier Montrose 478-676-3521
For Sale: sugar cane, 1,000 linear feet standing, $300 firm. Mack Chambers Vidalia 912-223-6743
For sale: sugar cane; red and green, 50 cents per stalk, ready now. Robert Buchanan Plains 229-924-6236
Greasy green collard seeds, $2 per teaspooon; send SASE with payment to address shown. Barry R Pittman 4121 Lampp Road Gibson 30810 706-5983664
Meyer lemon bushes in flower and with fruit, $10 each. Earl Waters Marietta waters2614@yahoo.com 404-844-9568
Multiplying onion sets, $14 half-gallon, includes shipping; Indian mustard seed, $1 per teaspoon; SASE. E. Thompson Dahlonega 706-864-6816
Multiplying onions, $18 per gallon; $6 shipping. Janda Pruitt Waleska 706337-2544
Multiplying onions, old fashioned onions, $24 per gallon. Eugene White Lithonia 770-987-9780
Old fashioned white multiplying onions for $20 per gallon plus $6 shipping. Emily Nix Winder 770-307-6868
Old time white multiplying onions, $6 per quart plus $6 shipping. Amory Hall Maysville 706-652-2521
Pecan tree: grafted, bareroot, taking orders for January 2015, call for varieties; Browndale Pecan Farms. Andy Smith Hawkinsville 478-225-8433
Red Japanese Maples, palm trees, yellow butterfly bushes, banana shrubs, hibiscus, crape myrtles, lemon trees, Leland cypress. Rick Meadows Augusta 706-833-9320
Sugar cane for sale (red) for planting, making syrup, chewing, decorations. James Coleman Uvalda jcoleman4@ windstream.net 912-594-6434
Sugar cane, Yellow Gal, 50 cents per stalk; whole patch, 25 cent per stalk. Rabun Clark Uvalda 912-2452124
Sugar cane: seed and syrup cane available; Florida Orange and POJ & Ribbon varieties, no calls after 9 p.m. John Meeks Richmond Hill meeksgamehog@yahoo.com 912-313-7363
Sugar cane: yellow and blue gal, red and green. George Merritt Unadilla 229401-8726
Sweet yellow Granex onion plants; 500, $35;1,000 plants, $56; shipping included. Diane Cox Tarrytown 912-5296715
Three-gallon trees, $10 each: Sawtooth oak, four to five feet tall; Leyland, Murray, Corolina Sapphire, Greengaint. Jeff Frederick Fort Valley sunsetgrowers498@aol.com 478-825-1186 478235-0136
White multiplying onions, $16 per gallon plus $6 shipping. Lamar Walters Murrayville 770-534-2348
White multiplying onions, $18 per gallon, no shipping. Eugene White Lithonia 770-987-9790
Wind mill palms, $5; one gallon; frostfree. Bobby Sweatman Cumming 770331-0017

Ag Seed/Plants Wanted
Looking for old varieties of mountain tobacco, for Appalachian farmstead heirloom garden project. Mary Harris Clayton 678-488-9677
McCaslin pole beans seeds; 30 pounds if available, or whatever many seeds available; quote price, will pay. Lynette Murphy Rome 706-622-2671
Potato onion: red or yellow, does not go to seed in May; red hibiscus seed, white hibiscus seed cone flower; white, green. Vivian M Dearman Deny Rose 706-283-1078
Want Jenkins Giant peanut seed for next year. Bobby Patterson Comer 706783-5740 706-206-6158
Want to buy some Stinging Nettle seeds or plants. David Clark Atlanta 404-228-3402
Wanted: chestnuts, paw paws, crabapples and honey locust pods, persimmons for seeds. Harold Phillips Tallapoosa 678-416-5857
Wanted: Ogeechee lime trees or cuttings; will pay shipping, please call. C. Reuter Bishop 706-296-3641
FLOWERS FOR SALE
If you have questions about this category, call 404-656-3722.
Flower seed offered for sale has not been tested for germination since it often is collected in very limited quantities.
4-year-old Lenten Roses (Helleborus) ready to bloom in January, $4; Pachysandra 50 plants for $10. Carol Olson Marietta carololsonmar@hotmail.com 770-998-1076
Angel trumpets, Christmas roses (Helleborus), $5; hydrangeas, nandinas, ferns, forsythia, beauty berries, Siberian iris, weeping cherries, $3. Carla Houghton Marietta 770-428-2227
Azaleas, large growing azaleas in onegallon pots, all colors, $1.95 each. Jack Maffett, Sr. Montezuma 478-954-2111 478-472-7133
Camellias, pindo palms, windmill palms, mondo grass, century plants, and others, $20 each; no shipping. Myrtle Russell Bonaire 478-923-1951
Castor bean seed; 20 for $3, cash only with SASE, two stamps. Newbold 90 Todd Rd Senoia 30276
Crape myrtle, pink seven white, $5; Dogwood trees, 25 feet for $90, you dig. M. H. Thompson Alpharetta 770-4421561
Crape myrtles; a variety of colors, pink, red, purple, white, upright and dwarf. Kelly Wilson Griffin mapletreefarm99yahoo.com 770-365-1530
Daylilies; 1,000 hybrids, none more than $5. Mary Denney Newnan ferncove98@aol.com 770-367-5095
Daylilies; entire stock hybridizer fields, put you into business, let's make a deal. Brenda Brannock Hiawassee 706-8962700
Daylilies; five to eight fan clumps, $3; hundreds of free iris; variegated liriope, large clumps, $3. J. Wilson Tyrone 770487-4767
Floating water lettuce for ponds; keeps water clear, $1 each or five for $4. Teresa Kenton Lilburn 678-677-2095
Four-inch perennials, 350 varieties, $1.50 each including helleborus; onegallon grafted Japanese maples, $20 to $25; display garden. Selah Ahlstrom Jackson 770-775-4967
Hellebores (Lenten Roses); two-gallon size, 5 years old or older, bloom during winter, deer resistant. Mary Wenger Gainesville 770-287-0734
Japanese maple, azaleas, gardenia, hosta, hydrangeas, roses. Linda Waites Fairburn 770-964-6414
Large selection of weeping Japanese maples, many varieties and sizes, ready for fall planting; sale prices in October. Jim Veccie Fayetteville 770-652-6127
It's the hottest commodity
in the state --
the newest
issue of
Georgia
Grown
magazine!
Turn to page 6 to see where you can get a copy!

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN

PAGE 11

Leyland Cypress; three gallon, 30-inch single stem, $6. Bob Welch Ranger welc6332@bellsouth.net 706-629-6332
Liriope, mondo grass, $2, gallon pot. Barry Lackey Roswell 770-475-9216
Mullein pink, touch-me-nots, half-teaspoon, $1; moneyplant, morningglory, hibiscus, more, $1 per teaspoon; SASE, cash. G. Robertson 2966 Cardinal Lake Cir. Duluth 30096
Pomegranate bushes, $5 to $20 each; two six-foot chinaberry trees, $10 each; one gallon variegated liriope, mundograss, $1.75 per pot. J.H. Patman Athens 706-549-4487
Red castor bean seeds, loofah gourd seeds; 25 for $3, 100 for $10; cash, SASE, two stamps. Joy Shelnutt Box 1212 Loganville 30052
Reseeding petunias mixed; angel trumpets, double purple or double yellow, $1 per packet, SASE. Carolyn Arnold 644 Lynn Ave. Jefferson 30549
Seeds: altheas (Rose of Sharon), Jerusalem cherry, yucca, hibiscus, 4 o'clocks, orange cosmos; cash only, $1 per teaspoon, SASE. Gail Wilson 1020 B. Wilson Rd. Commerce 30529
Spider lilies; red, 25 bulbs, $25 plus $6.50 shipping. S. H Hill Sylvester 229206-2963
Three giant rice paper, pink, white Glory Bower, $30 including shipping. Ernest Jessee 5564 Ridgemoor Drive Braselton 30517 770-965-6972
Touch-me-not, Mexican sunflower, 4 o'clock, tiger lily, money plant, cleome, shasta daisy, $1 each; SASE. B. Savage 3017 Atkins Dr. Gainesville 30507
Variegated liriope; one-quart pots, 2,000 available, $2 each; gardenias: 40 four-gallon pots, $10 each. Jim Hadaway Athens 706-543-5432
White Mount Hood daffodils, mole bean seed, blue bells, early blooming white iris, old time blue iris, others. E. Beach Duluth 770-476-1163
Zinnias (old maids) mixed; two taplespoons for $1 or one cup, $3; cash only, SASE. Mildred Bryan 916 Elm Dr. Monroe 30655 770-267-3098

All natural pure, unprocessed honey; sizes available: quart, $12; pint, $7; eight-ounce bear, $4. Jimmy Brown Jackson 770-775-0157 678-448-7781
Bee equipment wanted; will remove swarms for free; remove unwanted bees from a structure for a fee. Leonard Day Macon 478-719-5588
Bee removal, metro Atlanta and west Georgia areas, work guaranteed. W.O. Canady Winston 770-942-3887
Carpenter bee trap, handcrafted wood trap that really works, $20 each, three for $50, free shipping. Jack Snyder Hephzibah 706-554-7959
Gallberry honey, voted best-tasting honey 2010 in the state of Georgia, $46 per gallon, shipping included, www. brucesnutnhoney.com. Ben Bruce Homerville 912-487-5001
Honey for sale; pints are $8 and onepound bottles are $5. Freddie Cheek Sycamore 229-567-1145
Pick up swarms for free, removal from structures for a fee; will pick up, purchase unwanted beekeeping equipment. Dave Larson Mitchell 770-5429546
Taking orders for April 2014; Italian or Carniolan nucs for sale and Italian packages. Ray Civitts Toccoa 706-491-3124
Will come and pick up unwanted bees and equipment; swarm removal, no charge. Brent Nichols Brunswick 912266-5688
Will remove honeybees from trees or structures, middle Georgia area. Bill Dublin 478-290-1957
Things To Eat
Use of the term "organic" requires registration with the Georgia Department of Agriculture. Advertisements submitted without certificate of registration for items offered for sale cannot be published. For more information, access the department website www.agr.state.ga.us and link from the home page to the Organic Agriculture page and registration forms. Those who do not have internet access or are unable to download the forms,

Turnip greens; you pick, call for time. Larry Cook Conyers 770-4827552
Water ground meal, whole wheat flour, grits, $5 for five pounds, plus postage; also, grind your grain. Mike Buckner Junction City 706-269-3630
Wheat bread and Ezekiel bread; made from hard red wheat and dried beans; you order, I make. Angela King Winder 770-855-4962 770-855-4962
Wheat, soft winter berries, $1.25 per pound, flour $1.50 per pound, certified naturally grown; discount 24-plus pounds, pick up. Wendy Crager Bremen 770-537-3720
Yellow Gal sugar cane, whole stalks, great for grinding or starting your own plot, $1 per stalk. Brian Newell Hazlehurst 912-347-8220
Herbs
State law requires all ginseng dealers and growers to be registered with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. For more information, contact the Nongame Conservation Section at (770) 918-6411 or at website www.georgiawildlife.com.
Fish & Supplies
Persons selling sterile triploid grass carp must have a Wild Animal License from the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Market Bulletin advertisements for sterile carp must be accompanied by a photocopy of the advertiser's license. For license information, contact DNR Special Permit Unit at (770) 761-3044.
$25 to $30 per pound; Big Red Europeans, Red Wigglers and worm castings plus shipping. Lew Bush Byron smokefj@gmail.com 478-955-4780
10 to 14-inch sterile grass carp: fourto-six-inch, six-to-eight-inch, eight-to11-inch channel catfish, quantity discounts, free statewide delivery available. Mike Buford Cordele mikecbuford@ gmail.com 229-273-4150
A-1 quality, channel catfish fingerlings; graded, priced by size; accurate weights, counts, guaranteed live,

50 cents to $1 per pound; worm castings, great for any planting project, teas and repairing your soil. Bush Byron sweetie1956@cox.net 478955-4771
5x5 round bales mulch hay, $25 per roll. Tommy Dent Thomson 706-3592355
Aged horse manure, you load any time; I load, call for appointment; $10 truck, $20 trailer, $30 tandem. Chad Willams Smyrna 404-421-1775 207-7768625
Free aged horse manure, mixed with shavings; can load. Monti Hight Macon 478-960-2008
Free aged manure, compost; will help load, easy access; Crabapple area. Kristina Macrae Alpharetta 770-410-0868 770-410-0868
Free horse manure mixed with shavings; we load, you haul. Chris Hoyak Cleveland 706-348-1219
Mulch hay, square bales only; Monroe County. S. Reeves Forsyth 478-9944642
Mulch hay; 4x5 rolls, net wrapped; make offer. Richard Smith Moreland 404-473-7281
Mulch square bales, $2.50; delivered on tractor trailer; round bales, $25; delivery available. Jake Walker Lexington 706-424-6372
Pine straw; clean, tight bales, slash pine; will sell by bale or will deliver and spread. Matt Cooper Chickamauga 423-595-3410
Poultry broiler litter, $20 per ton plus delivery fee; discount given on large orders. Paul Kicklighter Gainesville 770654-6789
Pure pine shavings, kiln dried; super absorbent; bulk deliver, call for pricing. Joel Gibbs Douglasville 404-375-4900
Worm castings and worm compost, tea; all natural soil amendment and fertilizer. D. Holman Covington 678-9777944
Poultry Litter/Compost
To help connect suppliers with those in need of poultry compost, the Market Bulletin is including such

Miscellaneous Wanted
Bumper pull-type livestock, horse trailer. Mike Trott Luthersville 770-9276808
Charcoal cooker; 4x8-foot cooking surface, towable, single door. Tom Rush Fayetteville 678-576-0962
Need used building, metal preferred, suitable for husband and wife workshop, 20x40 feet; affordable price. Bruce Jones Monroe 404-906-0386
Want to buy syrup kettles, cane mills and dinner bells. Ray Freeman Dublin 478-272-1307
Wanted: 55-gallon stainless steel closed end drums, north Georgia area. Bill Croft Dawsonville 706-344-9691
Wanted: Breeder hen chain feeder, 500-foot house, good condition; two houses. Veal Duncan Royston 706-4982349
Wanted: Buggy springs; 20 to 24 inches long. Hugh Moore Cumming 770887-4748
Wanted: Hood for John Deere LT166 lawn tractor. Ken Bishop Woodstock 770-926-8037
Wanted: Shenandoah side belt hen nest. Mike LeCroy Canon 706-4982883
Out-Of-State Wanted
80-gallon or larger cast iron syrup kettle. Robert LaFayette AL 334-864-0142
Looking for 500-pound feeder steers; good quality and preferrably preconditioned, must be on good health, vaccination program. Carroll Moore Iva SC 864-933-2306
Looking for fans, 50-inch diameter blades or larger with shutters or butterflies. Michael Brunson Westville FL engineslick@embarqmail.com 850-9561295
Stock trailer; canvas top, two axle, 14x16 feet; road ready, good condition. Lamar Simmons Gainesville FL 352485-1237
TD6 or TD9 dozer in excellent condition, must have 60 percent undercar-

FLOWERS REQUIRING should call 404-586-1140.

healthy, immediate delivery. J.F. Gilbert advertisements in this portion of the riage and tracks. Darius Scott Calhoun

`12 Desirable pecans, $10 per pound Thomaston 706-648-2062 770-468- Fertilizers and Mulches category. Falls SC 864-378-6658

PERMITS

plus postage. Russell Eaton Stock- 0725

Ads are subject to the same general

bridge 770-506-2727

Bass, bluegill, crappie, catfish, red- guidelines for all Market Bulletin ad-

Firewood

If you have questions regarding this `12 shelled pecans, mostly halves, breast, shellcracker, grass carp, shad, vertisements found on page 2.

All firewood advertised in the Mar-

category, call 404-656-3722.

$8.50 per pound, plus postage, bagged etc; most sizes, free delivery or pickup. Broiler litter out of north Georgia by the ket Bulletin must be cut from the

The Georgia Wildflower Protection in freezer, leave message. Franklin Ea- Danny Austin Roberta 478-836-4938 trailer load. Jeffrey Harben Dawsonville advertiser's personally owned prop-

Act requires that shipments of officially protected plants be accompa-

ton Flowery 770-532-6333

Branch

770-532-9340

Bass, bluegill, hybrid bream, channel catfish, sterile grass carp, statewide de-

706-265-2429 Chicken litter available in large quanti-

erty. In addition, by law, terms such as face cord, rack, pile, truckload,

nied by transport tags displaying a 2013 gourmet crushed pepper, very livery. David Cochran Ellijay 706-889- ties, located in northwest Georgia; leave etc., cannot be used to advertise

permit number issued by the Georgia hot, call for prices; shipping extra. Linda 8113

voicemail; perfect for hayfields and pas- firewood. Advertisers must use the

Department of Natural Resources. Robinson Bremen 770-537-3729 404- Bass, bluegill, shellcracker, hybrid tures. Bill Broome Taylorsville 770-337- standard unit of measure, the cord,

Ladyslipper Orchids and Goldenseal 693-6533

bream, channel catfish, fingerling, ster- 8607

when specifying the amount of fire-

are examples of protected plants. Angus beef, no antibiotics or hor- ile grass carp; delivery available. Tony North Georgia chicken litter for sale; wood for sale.

When advertising protected plants in mones; dry aged 17 days; quarters Chew Manchester 706-846-3657

available in large quantities, delivery Dry seasoned hardwood; $150 per

the Market Bulletin, please submit a available in early 2014; www.sellfarm. Catfish, grass carp, bluegill, large- available. Justin Debord Jasper 678- cord; you pick up. Larry Beuchat Griffin

copy of your permit to sell protected com. Bill Farr Milner 770-584-9727

mouth bass and threadfin shad; delivery 386-5884

770-412-4740 770-228-5174

plants. Ads submitted without this in- Black walnuts, $4 per bushel. Paul available. Paul Williams Hawkinsville

Oddities

Firewood for sale: all dry seasoned

MISCELLANEOUS formation will not be published. For
further information on the sale or shipment of protected plants, contact: Nongame Conservation Section, 2065 U.S. Hwy. 278 SE, Social Circle, GA 30025, (770) 918-6411.
Flowers Wanted
Old fashioned climbing rose bushes and yellow azaleas, reasonably priced. Ernest How Eatonton 478-718-5366
Want 100 surprise lilies at reasonable price. Deloris Smith Gainesville smit5857@bellsouth.net 404-312-1831
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
The Miscellaneous category includes the following subcategories: bees, honey and supplies; things to eat; herbs; fish and supplies; fertilizers and mulches; oddities; miscellaneous wanted; notices; garden space; notices; out-of-state wanted; firewood, timber; and Christmas trees. Only one ad per household is permitted in the Miscellaneous category.
Have one-plus acre pond available for your unwanted waterfowl. Ben Worley Kennesaw bengworley@hotmail.com 770-653-4745
Bees, Honey & Supplies

Bond Royston 706-245-7541
Black walnuts, free, you pick. Beverly Simmons Decatur 404-284-3263
Cane syurp; grown and cooked on farm, cane stalks for planting or grinding. M Carter Douglas 912-393-5253
Dried apples, good for making fried pies, $4 per quart. Earnest Honea Cumming 770-887-3541
Dried apples: $5.50 pound, pickup; two pounds, $18 per pound; five pounds, $37.50 per pound; 10 pounds, $69 per pound. Homer Kinsey Cleveland 706-865-5510
Eggs; farm fresh, yummy and super healthy; store bought eggs no more, $3 per dozen. Tanya Moore Williamson 770-228-9752
Farm fresh brown eggs; hens fed omega-3 feed. David or Rita Bussie McDonough 770-957-1062
Free range brown eggs, $3 per dozen. Beth Vrooman Winder 404-801-5867
Free range farm fresh eggs, no hormones, antibiotics; Crossfit certified, Paleo, $3 dozen; commuters welcome. Jay Leggett Odum 912-256-2452
Garlic for eating, planting, seven varieties and elephant garlic. Patrick Shields Danielsville 706-795-3977
Green sugar cane syrup, case or bottles; first pound after 6 p.m., second pound Monday-Saturday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Harold Barnes Douglas 912-3811479 912-384-7835

478-892-3144
Competitive pricing on bluegill and coppernose bream, ShellCracker F1(Tiger), FL Bass 3-4,/5-6,. prompt statewide delivery available. Ashley Braxton Cordele clarkbufordbait@ gmail.com 229-273-4157
Grass carp, bluegill, shellcracker bream, channel catfish fingerlings, bass, threadfin shad; delivery or pickup by appointment only. Robert Brown Brooks 770-719-8039
Red wigglers for sale. Reed Adair Loganville 770-527-6064
Red worms or Nightcrawlers, for composting or fishing; http://www.herronfarms.webs.com Tim Herron Dawsonville 706-531-4789
Several thousand pounds; channel catfish, size one to three pounds each. Orville Carver Douglas 912-3845090
Fertilizers & Mulches
2012; square bales in barn, $1.50 per bale, mulch hay. Paul Teems Canton 770-231-7414
2013 mulch hay, square bales, dry in barn, $2 per bale. T. Wall Thomaston 706-975-3287 706-975-8154
2013 mulch hay; 4x6 rolls, 300 rolls available, $25 per roll. John Wood Gray 478-714-9564
2013 wheat straw, $2.50 per bale at barn, delivery available. Gary Brinson

Egg gourds for sale; five for $1, will ship, you pay postage. Sybil Gooch Royston 706-654-0338
Gourds for sale: Martin, Crooked Handle, Craft, Bottleneck and more. Wallace Maxwell Royston 706-245-4218
Gourds, many varieties to choose from, at farm or ship UPS. Crystal Lang Cordele 229-322-1321
Luffa sponge (whole) $6, includes postage; seeds 20 for $3; SASE; exfoliate skin, clean glass, vegetables, eggs, body. Davis Yaun Soperton dayaun@ gmail.com 912-399-1988
Smoking wood for sale; can deliver custom cut the size you prefer. Hollis Morris Jasper 676-767-9451
Henry County 4-H Christmas Wreaths For Sale
On sale now through Nov. 6! Balsam wreaths, garlands and door swags
Available for pick-up on Dec. 6 from noon to 6 p.m. at the Henry County 4-H office

hardwood, $150 per cord; $75 per half cord. Donnie Patterson Toomsboro 478-456-4072
Firewood: seasoned oak, you split, you haul, $50 per cord. Richard Eric Forsyth 678-432-7002
For Sale: firewood, split and seasoned, mixed hardwood, not pine. Al Roberts Fayetteville 404-543-6984
Gas logs for sale; good condition, $100. Michelle Copeland Clarkesville 706-499-8611
Oak firewood; delivered in Henry County, $150 per cord. Randy Smith McDonough 404-901-5278
Red oak firewood, $150 per cord; local delivery available at extra charge. Joe Williams Cumming 770-889-8965 678727-6231
Seasoned and split oak hardwood, 18 to 20-inch pieces, $85, half-cord; free local delivery. Corey Campbell Decatur 404-241-0192
Seasoned oak firewood, split 18 inches to 22 inches, half cord, $75, you pick up, cash only. Nick Martin Fayetteville 770-851-5683
Seasoned oak firewood: $200 per cord, $100 per half-cord, $65 per quarter cord; delivery extra. Peter Cabrel Hampton 404-513-9353
Seasoned oak firewood; $175 per cord; $90 per half cord; hickory BBQ wood, $50 per quarter cord; delivery available. Bob Lewis Fayetteville 770-

10 and five- frames bee hives, starting Organically grown Jerusalem arti- Tarrytown 912-286-3191

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Eliseo Delia Mineral Bluff deliaone@ho- shipping. Buddy Hutto Warner Robins bales, barn stored, $2 per bale. Darrells

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information and to get an order form.

half cord. Michael Stone McDonough 770-957-8613

PAGE 12

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2013

Agencies partner for farm equipment road safety message
Courtesy Georgia Department of Agriculture press office

The number of crashes on Georgia roads involving farm equipment rose 7 percent last year. In 2012, there were 429 farm-equipment related crashes in the state, resulting in 185 reported injuries and nine deaths.
With the 2013 harvest season approaching, two state agencies are teaming up to bring attention to the need for more safety on Georgia's rural roads.
"As our farmers are working to bring in this year's
Georgia Commissioner of Agriculture Gary W. Black, left, and Harris Blackwood, director of the Governor's Office of Highway Safety, are teaming up for a third year for the "Improving Georgia's Yield Behind the Wheel" campaign. Here, they address constituents at the Georgia National Fair in Perry, Ga., on the importance of sharing the road with farm equipment. Photo by Jenna Saxon

crop, we want to remind Georgians of farmers' increased presence on the roadways," said Georgia Commissioner of Agriculture Gary W. Black. "While traveling, we urge you to be mindful of tractors and other farm equipment sharing the same roadways and to take extra precaution."
This marks the third year Black and Governor's Office of Highway Safety Director Harris Blackwood will unite their efforts behind the "Improving Georgia's Yield Behind the Wheel" campaign.
"While motorists cruise the beautiful rural roadways of Georgia this year, they should be aware of slow-moving farm equipment using those roads during harvest season," Blackwood said. "We've worked the last two years to get this message out to drive safely around slow-moving vehicles, but it's clear there is still more work to do."
Black and Blackwood appeared together on Oct. 7 at the Georgia National Fair in Perry, Ga., and Oct. 16 at the Sunbelt Agricultural Exposition in Moultrie, Ga., to remind the state's farmers and motorists of the importance of sharing the road.
"When sharing the road with other motorists, farmers should have red reflective triangles posted on their equipment to signal to drivers they are operating a slow-moving vehicle," Black said. "The triangle should be visible and if it is rusted or faded, it should be replaced. We want our farmers to have a happy harvest and for motorists to get home safely."
By law, farm equipment must have the nationally designated slow-moving vehicle sign a red triangle-shaped reflector to warn oncoming drivers that their equipment is on the road. These vehicles often travel at speeds no higher than 25 miles per hour.
"When drivers come up on slow-moving vehicles on an open country road, many won't think twice about passing them in a hurry," Blackwood said. "We want to remind motorists that these farmers have every right to use the roadway, too. Waiting a few minutes to safely pass or for the driver to pull over won't impact their drive substantially, and they will get home unharmed."

EXPO: Florida spotlighted at 2013 event

From Page 1

"We certainly want to be here for the next generation. There are a lot of thoughts about this word, but ... there's no greater picture of that than a family that's been in business for scores of years, who've served Georgians and served a market throughout this country and the world, for year after year after year," he said. "When you have generations come through a heritage, ladies and gentlemen, that's the picture of sustainability. That's the folks who are going to be here next year. They're going to be those tremendous supporters and stewards of the environment. They're going to be the protectors of the food and fiber system."
Ten of these protectors whom Black called "heroes of agriculture and heroes of America" were honored as state Farmer of the Year winners at Sunbelt at the Willie B. Withers luncheon. Georgia's Farmer of the Year was Will Harris of Bluffton, Ga., owner of White Oak Pastures, and the overall Southeastern Farmer of the Year prize went to James Cooley, the South Carolina state winner.
Florida was the 2013 spotlight state, and Commissioner of Agriculture Adam Putnam addressed the crowd during the luncheon.
"I came here for the hot, grilled peanut butter sandwich. That is fine eating," he said. "If we could figure out

a way to get some guava jelly on that thing from Florida, and then co-locate the milk producers next to that booth, we'd have nirvana."
On a more serious note, he called the luncheon "the epitome of preaching to the choir," but added that it was still important to preach it.
"American agriculture has its hands full," Putnam said. "There's only a percent-and-a-half of the American population ... feeding our country, allowing us to be food secure, food independent and create new export markets to help our balance of trade."
But by working together "shoulder to shoulder," Putnam said, the strength of American agriculture will help solve the problem of feeding 9 billion people by 2050, and still maintain global dominance in terms of food security.
"Farmers come and go. But our legacy as commissioners and as farmers and as farm families is to steward this land that the Lord has given us as we borrow it for our time here on this Earth for this next generation," Putnam said. "And we will be able 50 years from now, 100 years from now to come out here and see equipment that we can't fathom today, but we'll see these 4-H and FFA members demonstrating to their kids why agriculture is alive and well in the Southeastern United States."

VISIT WITH A VET:
Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea Virus
Visit with a Georgia veterinarian in this monthly feature. This
edition comes from Dr. Jeremiah Saliki, director of the Athens, Ga.,
Veterinary Diagnostic Lab.
In April and May 2013, multiple Midwestern American pig farms were simultaneously hit with a disease characterized by diarrhea and vomiting. These symptoms led clinicians and diagnosticians to suspect the coronavirus transmissible gastroenteritis virus, or TGEV, as the cause. Testing fecal samples from sick piglets using standard laboratory techniques failed to confirm these suspicions.
However, when the same samples were examined under an electron microscope, coronavirus particles were detected. The unexpected discovery of coronavirus particles that were negative for both US swine coronaviruses TGEV and porcine respiratory coronavirus prompted further testing. Tests done at Iowa State University and the Federal Laboratory at Ames were done for exotic coronaviruses, and resulted in the confirmation of porcine epidemic diarrhea virus for the first time in the US.
Geographic distribution, transmission and clinical signs
Coronaviruses are highly contagious, and the outbreaks in the US spread rapidly. Within six weeks the virus had been confirmed in about 200 hog facilities in 14 states including Arkansas, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, North Carolina, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and South Dakota.
Sporadic outbreaks of porcine epidemic diarrhea were first identified in the United Kingdom in 1971, and this infection has become endemic in most Asian countries since 1982. There was one incursion into Canada in 1980, but it has not been reported in North America since then.
The virus is transmitted by the oral-fecal route, with an incubation period of three to four days. Contaminated personnel, equipment, or other fomites may introduce PEDV into a susceptible herd. The disease is difficult to distinguish from TGEV, with the main clinical sign being watery feces that may resemble tufts of wool and have an unpleasant smell. Vomiting may occur and dehydration is a secondary sign.
Morbidity and mortality can surpass 90 percent in suckling piglets fewer than 14 days old, but gradually decreases with age. During necropsy, histological examinations where thin pieces of tissue are mounted on slides and viewed under a microscope show the small intestine is inflamed with shortened villi, which indicates nutrients are not being properly absorbed, causing diarrhea.
Diagnosis
The most useful diagnostic specimen is feces or a loop of small intestine. A variety of diagnostic tests, including negative-staining electron microscopy, fluorescent antibody staining, immunohistochemical staining and virus isolation, commonly used for TGEV diagnosis are available in our laboratory for presumptive PEDV diagnosis. However, a test known as polymerase chain reaction is the only technique that can differentiate between TGEV and PEDV. The diagnostic labs in Tifton and Athens, Ga., offer a PCR technique that can detect both viruses, and a positive result is followed by an additional test sequencing for definitive diagnosis.
PED and Georgia
The rapid spread of PED across the US and its occurrence in neighboring North Carolina raise concern for its possible introduction into Georgia. Fortunately, we are poised to rapidly detect the virus if it was to enter the state. The vigilance of swine practitioners and animal owners is key to detecting its incursion into our state. We recommend that PEDV testing be requested for all cases in which an acute TGEV-like disease is observed with high morbidity.
Some information in this column comes from the USDA Porcine
Epidemic Diarrhea Technical Note and the 2012 publication "Por-
cine epidemic diarrhea virus: a comprehensive review of molecular
epidemiology, diagnosis, and vaccines."

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