Farmers and consumers market bulletin, vol. 97 [i.e. 101], no. 19 (2014 September 17)

Our Georgia seafood series continues with a look at processing facilities.

Page 12

GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE GARY W. BLACK, COMMISSIONER WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014 VOL. 97, NO. 19 COPYRIGHT 2014

Cultivated wild Southern grapes becoming a popular pick-your-own fall commodity

By Dallas Duncan
Louis Newsome, owner of Blue House Farm in Harlem, Ga., calls muscadines the "Redneck grape."
"I always just describe it as the native Southern grape. It's distinctly different and you either like it or you won't," he said. "For those of us that grew up on them, we love the things."
He grew up eating wild muscadines fresh from the vine. As a student at the University of Georgia, he was exposed to some of the improved varieties grown at an experiment station, and later worked with them as an Extension agent. After he and his wife Janice retired, they decided to incorporate muscadines into their pick-your-own farm.
"We've got about 40 or 50 plants that are older plants, and we just tried them out to see which ones we liked," he said. "It was just a natural thing, and we were looking for something that somebody else would pick that we didn't have to."
Another bonus for muscadines is that they don't require spraying.
"We're not organic, but it's still good to not have to spray," Janice Newsome said. "You can encourage tasting in the field if you know they haven't been sprayed."
Tasting is the best way to determine which of the many varieties consumers and future farmers prefer.
"They have a really great flavor to them, but they have seeds, so a lot of people would rather go to the store and buy something that didn't have seeds in it. But even the best grapes from out in California, to me, don't have the unique flavor

Vines of muscadines line the roadside at Harlem, Ga.'s Blue House Farm you-pick operation. Muscadines are growing in popularity as a fall agritourism draw. Photo by Dallas Duncan
these do," said David Lane, the inspiration for growing pickyour-own muscadines at Lane Southern Orchards in Fort Valley, Ga.
The different types of muscadines, which range in color from a patina-covered chartreuse green to a deep indigo, each have a slightly different flavor. The Newsomes grow six different varieties, including three pollinators. Pollinators have both male and female parts and are necessary to ensure oth-

er varieties grow properly, Louis Newsome said. However, they're not as sweet, which makes them popular for wine as opposed to jellies.
"The best jelly in the world is muscadine jelly," Janice Newsome said. "There are muscadine cobblers and pies, kind of old-fashioned. They're probably just best enjoyed as fresh fruit, unless you're wanting to make them not so nutritious."
Erin Boettger, director of safety and finished good sales for Paulk Vineyards in Wray, Ga., said muscadines are one of the healthiest grapes.
"We use them in all of our products," she said. "Paulk Vineyards does fresh sales and muscadine products that take some of those [culls]. We make juices, concentrates, even neutraceutical powders."
Paulk Vineyards is the oldest and one of the largest muscadine vineyards in the world, Boettger said. As a native plant, they don't have a lot of pests, and "grow perfectly" in Georgia.
Growing muscadines isn't difficult, it just takes some homework, Louis Newsome said.
"No. 1, find out what variety you like," he said. "You've got to know about pollinators and also know about pruning, training, trellising; once you kind of get it there, it's not that difficult."
When growing for a you-pick farm, Janice Newsome said to advertise both muscadines and scuppernongs, the name many consumers call bronze muscadines but they are the same fruit. All scuppernongs are muscadines, but not all mus-
See MUSCADINES, page 7

INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Farmland rent or lease ads.........2 Take 5..........................................6 Arty's Garden............................... 7 Visit with a Vet...........................12
Notice
Deadline to submit ads for the Oct. 29 issue is
noon, Oct. 15.

Forestry Commission ramps up awareness efforts on emerald ash borers

By Dallas Duncan
Ten Georgia counties were declared no-fly zones this year not for planes, but for an invasive beetle species that's wreaking havoc on ash trees nationwide.
Emerald ash borer was discovered in the US in 2003 and Georgia in 2013, said Mike Evans, plant protection program director for the Department.
"What we have been trying to do is work with the Forestry Commission and the [University of Georgia] to put information out there to make them aware of this pest," Evans said. "Both the Department and the Forestry Commission have regulatory authority, so we've adopted a quarantine."
Whitfield, Fulton, DeKalb, Walton, Henry, Clayton, Newton, Cobb, Gwinnett, Fayette and Rockdale counties are under quarantine regulations for the movement of ash trees and materials, said Chip Bates, forest health coordinator

The emerald ash borer has been killing ash trees across the US since 2003. It was found last year in Georgia and this year, a 10-county quarantine was initiated to help stop the beetle's man-assisted spread. Photo courtesy Kent Loeffler, Cornell University
for the Georgia Forestry Commission. Ash trees and materials can only be moved
from those 10 counties to an outside area between November and March, the months when emerald ash borers are less active, Bates said. Those movers must also obtain a permit. Ash can be moved freely within the regulated coun-

ties, and in counties outside the regulation zone, year-round.
"The idea is, where it's been found, we'll try to stop the man-assisted movement," Evans said. "We know we can't stop the natural spread, so let's try to stop the man-assisted spread."
A major part of that spread comes from transporting firewood.
"The law does not say that you cannot, as a private citizen, transport firewood from one area to another, but as a good environmental steward of the land, our citizens do not need to transport firewood from one area to another," Bates said. "They need to buy it where they burn it."
The Forestry Commission began contacting mills and lumber movers to bring them into a compliance agreement for handling ash material and trees from one of Georgia's regulated counties, Bates said. These materials can be
See ASH, page 12

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

GEORGIA GROWN PROFILE: Southern Valley

Produce farm continues to grow family legacy

By Beth Mohler, fall intern
Southern Valley is a female-owned and family operated farm that has been growing, packing and shipping its own produce since 1987.
The farm, which is based in Norman Park, Ga., consists of more than 2,700 acres of Georgia produce, also has farms located in Yucatn, Mexico, and Tennessee. Though it can be described as a large progressive operation, Southern Valley strives to be innovative as well as staying true to its roots, said Southern Valley Public Relations Representative Katie Murray. Southern Valley grows a wide variety of crops, with a major focus on pole-grown cucumbers. These are cucumbers that are staked in the field versus vines running along the earth, Murray said.
"This allows us to get multiple cuttings from each cucumber planting and also produces a higher quality cucumber since the cucumber is kept off the ground," she said.

The farm also grows many varieties of squash, cabbage, bell peppers, green beans, sweet corn and several types of hot peppers.
"We started with a foundation of integrity, hard work, and family values and that's how we continue to operate today," Murray said.
The conventional family operation began with only 400 acres of produce. Despite the losses of his father and brother, founder Kent Hamilton and his mother, Wanda Hamilton-Tyler, continued on with the farm and grew it to the size it is today. Though it is a large farm, the Southern Valley family remains a family unit, as Hamilton's oldest children still assist in its operations.
Southern Valley joined the Georgia Grown program at the gold level because its owners feel it will be a valuable tool to promote the farm, while at the same time raising the profile of Georgia agriculture and its impact on the community and economy, Murray said.
"It is the backbone of Georgia's economy and as a Georgian, agriculture is not just our history, but our future as well," she said.

PAGE 2

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014

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:
1. Must be produced by advertisers on their farming operation
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.
Businesses, corporations, dealerships, real estate agents and other commercial enterprises are not allowed to advertise in the Market Bulletin. These are enterprises that produce products intended for mass market; handle larger than normal quantities of product for distribution; are supported by business advertisements; listed under business directories in phone books; hold business licenses or other regulatory licenses, permits or registrations.
Items for sale or service must conform to all laws and regulations covering their sale and movements. Note that some categories have certain requirements, such as Coggins tests or USDA Organic certification documentation, in order to be printed. Review the ad requirements for specific categories for more information.
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Ads must be received by 12 p.m. on the

specified deadline date in order to appear in 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.
Regular-run category ads are limited to 20 words, including name and either phone number and city or full physical address. The following ad categories are published periodically and allow up to 30 words: Farm Services, Farm Services Wanted, Farmland Rent/Lease, Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted, Farmland for Sale, Equine at Stud, Equine Miscellaneous, Boarding Facilities, Farmland for Sale and Handicrafts.
To submit an ad: Please include your subscription number in all mail and fax correspondence. Fax: 404-463-4389 Mail: Market Bulletin
Georgia Department of Agriculture 19 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive SW Atlanta, GA 30334-4250 Online: www.thegamarketbulletin.com To submit an ad online, have your subscriber number handy to log into the system. Click "Submit an Ad," fill out the form and required fields, select the ad category and submit. If the ad goes through, you'll see a thank-you message and a reference number. Please save the reference number to use if you have changes, corrections or other concerns about your ad.
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Questions about advertising? Call 404656-3722

FARMLAND RENT/

Pasture needed in Barrow or Jackson County to keep small heifers until

LEASE

they are ready for a bull; will consider doing some fence repairs. Frank Noc-

If you have questions regarding ads in era Winder 770-868-6026

this category, call 404-656-3722.

Pasture to lease for expanding cow-

The Farmland for Rent/Lease cat- calf operation in south Georgia. Karl

egory is published the last issue of Halbig Alapaha khalbig@uga.edu

each month. Please adhere to the 229-445-0424

following guidelines when submit- Pastureland for rent in the east Ath-

ting an ad for Farmland for Rent/ ens, Hull area for cattle. Clay Dent

Lease or Rent/Lease Wanted * When Athens claydent@gmail.com 706-

submitting ad, please designate it 319-2355

for the Farmland for Rent/Lease cat- Pastureland, 20-plus acres;

egory. Notices to buy or sell farm- lakes, ponds a plus; one hour from

land are published only in the special Atlanta or Thomasville; weekend

fall or spring farmland editions * Ads training labradors for field trials; will

must not exceed 30 words.

train your dog or work for access.

110.5 acres; hayfields, water, fenced, Gregg Leonard Roswell 404-580-

cross-fenced, two water wells. Ernie 6268

Anderson Shellman 229-679-2105

117 acres of prime hunting land; FARM EMPLOYMENT

abundant wildlife, $2,500 per year; hunting lodge available at additional charge. Lamar Chandler Jersey 678-

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

300-0104

Only farm work or farm help wanted

Eight acres fenced pasture, four- advertisements allowed. No comstall barn, power, water; 15 additional mercial, industrial or domestic em-

acres for hay; near national forest; ployment permitted.

$500 per month. Kelly Mills Cleveland Broiler manager; 22 years experi-

706-200-2247 706-865-7847

ence; looking to manage broiler farm;

For hunting; approximately 1,500 call or email. Anthony Johnson Ho-

acres on five farms located in Bacon schton suzanne.johnson45@yahoo.

County; deer, turkey, dove. David H com 706-982-3226

Lee Alma 912-218-7952

Couple needed to help on a 38-acre

Henry County, 25 acres pasture for horse estate; room, board, small salthree to five retired horses; creek wa- ary; come join our family. Alvona Urter on farm estate; Ola community bantas Dallas 404-729-6352

exclusive lease. Carole Thompson Farm, stable hand; part-time, barn,

McDonough Caroleth@bellsouth.net pasture, fencing, groundwork; hon-

770-954-0993

est, dependable, own transportation,

Hunting land for lease; father and experience with farm equipment; ref-

son preferred; no four-wheelers; Han- erences. Loyce Kompar Dallas high-

cock County, 77 acres. David Williams countrystables@gmail.com 770-855-

Sparta 706-444-0440

0828

Pasture for rent: eight to 16 acres; Help wanted in Cleveland, Ga.; cut

horses, cows, or crops; well water, grass, riding lawn mower provided;

good fences. Tim Barr Monticello handy with farm equipment; must

770-318-1004

have other income; housing nego-

Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted tiable. Mildred Ross Sandy Springs

404-252-9169

Needed near Athens, pasture or overgrowth lot with acreage; wanted for dairy goat herd; water and power needed, two-year lease desired. L. Alexander Danielsville 312-3420734

Help wanted: experience with horse, cattle, tractors; furnished apartment with salary, background checked, non-smoker. Barbara & Leonard Draper Cedartown 770-949-3014

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 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.

Married couple for farm work in ex- 1963 Farmall Cub; good running,

change for small house, pond; other needs front tires, four-foot belly mow-

income, experience and references er, good condition; pictures available;

required. Ann Daniel Macon 478-741- $2,150. William Wilson Douglasville

2067 706-646-4873

404-660-6902

Need experienced dragline operator; 1963 Massey Ferguson tractor, pow-

part time. Alonzo Walden Glennville er steering, live lift, live power take-off,

912-266-4092

very good tires. Roy L Crowe Gaines-

Need experienced, dependable help ville 678-617-6515

for cattle, crop, hay farm; salary based 1966 102 Cub Cadet, three-speed,

on qualifications; references required. 38-inch deck, working condition;

Roy Embry Eatonton 706-485-2346 $1,000. Travis Rachels Grovetown

706-833-1493
FARM MACHINERY 1967 Ford 2000 tractor, gas, PS,

If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722.
Only farm machinery and equipment owned by the advertiser and used in his/her own farming operation can be advertised; those persons advertising

many new parts and new paint; $3,000. Johnny Hobbs Crawford 706-743-3801
1980 Ford 540, 300 model tractor with six-foot finish mower, good condition; $5,000. I. D. Jones Cleveland

for machinery and equipment wanted 770-287-4687

must be seeking those items for their 1981 Case M4K, 4x4 rough terrain

own farming operation.

forklift, has 142 hours. Bobby Mancil

10-foot leveling drag, three-point Axson 912-850-1500

hitch, heavy duty, 140 HI with cultiva- 1981 Massey-Ferguson 230, 38

tors. Clyde Parker Chatsworth 706- horsepower, 752 original hours, sec-

847-8517

ond owner, good paint and tires;

1080 Massey Ferguson P/S, three- $8,000. Kevin Snell Loganville Knell. point hitch, new tires; front, rear, 30 ersnell.com 678-410-7103

percent dual remote, good straight 1983 white GMC tractor with a 15-

tractor; $3,800. Dave Davis Com- ton trailer. J T Austin Douglasville

merce 706-318-2724

770-652-2164 770-652-3383

11-shank chisel plow, $600; 6.5-foot 1984 John Deere 310 backhoe, runs

three-point rolling stalk cutter, $400; well, hydraulic works, needs transmis-

four-row John Deere 71 planters, sion work; $4,500. William Jackson

$1,000. Donald Smith Wrightsville Whitesburg 770-834-7386 770-876-

478-232-5913

9836

12-foot BHC shedder with new 1996 Cat., 416b backhoe with four-

blades and bearings; Lawson 12-foot in-one loader bucket and 24-inch rear

by 42-inch aerator. Leo Perfect Un- bucket; good running machine. Doris

adilla 478-627-3820

Hefner Adairsville 706-897-0513

12-foot John Deere grain drill, 1997 Massey Ferguson 240 diesel,

$1,100; three-foot Flip IH bottom 840 hours, one owner, always shel-

plow, $950. Benton Williams Milan tered; $800. Charles Reece Canton

478-285-2384

770-345-6779

12-row LMC sprayer with square 20-disk smoothing harrow, Prime

tank, good condition; $2,650. Scott Manufacturing, heavy duty, three-

Rogers Preston 229-591-5158

point hitch; $1,400; Hardee five-foot

1930 Farmall regular and 1936 Bush Hog; heavy-duty, 90 horse-

Farmall F12 for parts or restoration; power, gear box; $1,000. LaDonna

$500 each. Jimmy McKinley Thom- Reynolds Carrollton 770-851-6315

aston 706-975-7244

770-854-8448

1946 IH Farmall H tractor for sale; 2003 New Holland TN75, two-

gas engine, good metal, tires de- wheel drive tractor, 708 hours, 8x8

cent, runs; asking $1,500. Jack Smith shuttle shift transmission; $9,975

Winder 770-867-4171

OBO. Mike Scheaffer Conyers 770-

1949 Ford 8N tractor, good condi- 483-2694

tion, new tires, good paint, new clutch 2005; 5525 John Deer cab, H&A, 91

and other parts; $3,000. James Roy horsepower, 522 loader, two-wheel,

Story, Sr Sycamore 229-567-3692 680 hours, like new; $35,000. Tommy

1949 John Deere Model M, serial No. Turner Gainesville 770-983-7832

26687, restored, three pieces origi- 2007 Roto-Mix real-type mixer wag-

nal equipment: turnplow, cultivators, on used for mixing cattle feed, has

planters; excellent condition; $6,500. been kept under shed. Charles Craw-

Dan Dixon Gordon dandaled362@ya- ley Unadilla 229-942-0243

hoo.com 478-628-5445

2009 Kubota MX5100 two-wheel

1949 John Deere, MT, $2,200; John drive, excellent condition, 215 hours; Deere-L Chassic, $650; John Deere- no bucket, six-foot Bush Hog; L parts, engines, transmission and $10,000 OBO. Alan Mcclain Harrison more; cash only. R. Wilson Millwood 713-292-7813

912-283-9266

2011 John Deere eight-wheel, V Ray

1952 8N, show tractor, like new, rake; New Holland 326 square baler; lots of chrome and powder coating; Kuhn seven-foot mower. Mark Cain call for photos. George B Caudelle Monroe 404-391-6612

Brooks 770-716-3809

20E dresser dozer, rebuilt engine,

1952 Ford 9N tractor, runs well, good $12,000; also 95 Cat dozer. Roy Simtires, no rust; five-foot Howse Bush mons Demorest 706-499-9340

Hog, good condition, $2,195. Lawson 2614 Bush Hog Legend with 15-

J McDade Eatonton 706-923-2964 foot bat wing rotary cutter, six lami-

1955 John Deere model 40, runs nated tires, good working condition; great, power take-off works, three- $6,000. J.R. Sullivan Vidalia 912point; $3,700. Tim Keel Social Circle 537-4944

678-300-2907

3000 Ford tractor diesel for sale,

1959 John Deere 430 tractor, five- $3,000. Carl Ray Tifton 229-402foot Bush Hog,16-disk harrow, good 0575

tractor, $5,500; 12-vold system, origi- 3000 Ford tractor, power steering,

nal parts available. Ricky Bailey Stone very good condition, has eight pieces

Mountain bail5509@bellsouth.net of equipment. D. L Jump Hazlehurst

404-444-6301

912-347-1537

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.
355 New Holland grinder mixer, has loading auger, new hammers, four different size screens, good condition; $3,800 negotiable. Jerry Hulsey Toccoa 706-886-1006
420 John Deere, three-point hitch, live power take-off, good metal and tires, runs well; $2,000. Kirk Gardner Sandersville 478-232-8876
4440 John Deere, low hours, like new; $25,000. Donald Allen Dudley 478-815-3496
465 New Holland disk cutter, good condition; nine-foot cut, $3,500. Wes Conner Hawkinsville 478-951-3548
5100 CIH grain drill, very good condition, 12 feet, new disk, last year press wheels, shedded; $6,000. Don Schmidt Stapleton 478-494-3353 478-625-7002
570 New Holland square baler; good clean used baler; $6,000, always barn-kept. Julian Cook Carrollton 404-787-5768
644 New Holland baler, $8,000; GMD 700 disk mower, $7,000. Michael Bennett Cumming 404-771-5454
8N Ford tractor with five-foot rotary cutter, good shape; $2,400. Harvey Watkins Statham 404-852-8010
951C Cat loader, needs engine or use for parts, otherwise good condition, $5,000. Richard Thompson Moreland 404-473-1426
9976 John Deere cotton picker 2769, engine 1959 fan KBH boll buggy; $60,000 for the pair. Justin Long Bainbridge 229-400-7381
9N Ford tractor; new gas tank, new power take-off shaft, runs very well; $2,000. Marvin Young Tifton 229392-6823
9N Ford; runs, good tires; $1,000 OBO; will consider trade. Frank Gardner Fayetteville 770-851-6705 770487-5991
Allis Chalmers 1984; 6140 diesel, 2,300 hours, Bush Hog and loader, two-speed transmission; $11,500. Ben Daniels Clarkesville 404-2816224
Allis Chalmers HO6B dozer, engine, drive train, rebuilt, 150 hours, excellent condition, under roof; $9,750. Carl Kelley Madison shadowwingsfarm@yahoo.com 706-246-0715
Allis Chalmers model No. 66, combine, $3850; model No. 90, $4,500. Scott Hancock Sautee nvalleyfarm@ gmail.com 706-878-5590 404-3102558
Amadas 2110 six-row peanut combine; six-row KMC digger; six-row KMC re-shaker; KMC 11-shank subsoiler leveler. David Reed Pinehurst jdavidreed@yahoo.com 229-9477194 229-645-3806
Bush Hog squealer, SQ160, five feet, painted green, John Deere from Bush Hog; $1,000, good condition. Joshua Nelson Marietta 404-6441878
Bush Hog, 15-foot batwing, used very little, excellent condition, sheltered; $9,900. Richard R Cook Union Point 706-486-4535
Caroni, six-foot finishing mower, good condition, three-point hitch, three blades, adjustable height. William McElreath Covington 770-2969595
Case 8420 round baler, 4x4 bales; $5,500. Jeff Mallard Girard 478-5699902
Cat D6C dozer, straight blade, $25,000; Cat 426B, four-wheel drive backhoe, $35,000. Larry Morgan Lizella 478-972-5977
Champion CA pecan cracker, also idlers and rollers for AC6 B/G crawler. James McPherson Dawson 229-4496813
Champion water pump, four horsepower, all new, used one time with 325-gallon water tank. Bob Crawford Newnan 770-328-1569

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

PAGE 3

Chattanooga No. 11, animal powered, three-roller, vertical cane mill, in working condition; no missing parts, pictures on Craigslist. Richard Lord East Dublin 478-272-3720
CIN cotton picker bars, fits 2044 through 2355, about 80 total, fingers, etc.; take all, $50 per piece. C. Rodney Mulling Collins 912-240-4840
Covington one-row planter with plates; $450 negotiable. Clint Price Eatonton 706-473-1613
Craftsman; five horsepower tiller, counter rotating tines, 17-inch, heavy duty with reverse. Larry McClure Milledgeville gsusoccer@windstream.net 478-453-1887
Cub Farmall with connected mule planter, lift hydraulic on rear. Wayne Shelnutt Loganville 770-466-4943
Deutz Allis 2.50; round baler, 5x4, good condition, sheltered and fieldready, $3,800. Jermaine Barlow Grantville 706-637-8917
Eight horsepower Briggs yard shark wood chipper; $250, good condition. H. Boykin Jackson 404-316-0170
Eight-foot single-axle feeder, needs some work; $400. Mike Preston Blakely 229-723-5069
Eversman 2.5 yard pan; good condition, all cylinders were recently rebuilt; $3,800 OBO. Bill Hammond 2531 Mallorysville Rd Tignall 30668 706318-8655
Farmall M with three-point hydraulic lift; John Deere 455-G crawler loader, hand steer, new undercarriage. Harry Puckett Buford 770-945-0174
Farmall Super A tractor; front and rear cultivators; draw bar, three-point hitch, exceptionally good condition; $2,500. William Edge Glenwood 912497-7160
Finishing mower, 6 ft., 3 PT hitch, bush hog model, perfect condition, $12; have used it very little. George Brewer Lizella 478-836-2204
Five-foot mower deck, rusted, works, $50; five-foot scrape balde, $50; three-point hitch bucket, $50; post hole drill, $150. Ed Fletcher Molena 706-656-9840
Ford 1710 diesel; 893 hours, runs great; Woods tiller and mower, harrow, scrape, Bush Hog, pole lift; $12,950. Gene Barber Griffin 404-449-2007
Ford 1953: Ford Golden Jubilee tractor, restored, excellent conditon, engine rebuilt, sharp tractor, $6,500. Al Henderson Cherry Log 770-8463262
Ford 3000 diesel tractor, power steering, body in good condition, good tires; $4,850. Don C Harris Danville 478-955-4517
Ford 841 diesel tractor, good condition, new paint, #500. Lonnie Faulk Dublin 478-488-0680
Ford 8N, $1,500; Ford 800 tractor, $2,500; some three-point equipment. Nelson Massey Conyers 770-4832639
Ford Jubilee 1953; front end loader, excellent condition; $6,800. L. S. Lewis Waleska 770-428-7996
Ford new lift arms; 35.5 long, three feet wide, $200 per pair; new Ford top link, $125 each. J Wayne Casey Rome 706-295-4858
Four-row reaper with Monsen planter; 18-foot Bush Hog harrow; 12-foot field cultivator; New Holland 8160, cab, 2,500 hours. R. Lynn Collins 912-334-0267
Galfre two-basket hay tedder, $800; John Deere 71 planter unit, $450. Ryan Baerne Nicholson 706-7572672 706-247-6240
Gleaner R-52 combine, four-wheel drive with corn and small grain heads; John Deere71 planter, four-row. Troy Murray Surrency 912-367-3054
Goosen square bale chopper; sheltered; $750. Ed Parent Fort Valley 478-822-9483
Gooseneck trailer, heavy duty, threeaxle, 8x20 feet, must sell (health); $2,200. Lawton Yawn Baxley 912240-0558
Grapple bucket for Bobcat or skid steer machine, dual hydraulic cylinder, like-new bottom and cutting edge; $1,450. Roy Pruitt Douglasville 770949-5453 770-595-7891

Hay baler, New Holland 658 round baler, makes up to 4x6 bales, netwrap; $5,500. Sam Kyzer Waynesboro samkyzer@gmail.com 706-5512851
Hay tedder, model 230, spider, power take-off driven, eight-foot overall width, excellent condition. Ralph Bryant Temple 770-562-3314
Heavy duty roller, 12-feet wide, 30inch cylinder, heavy frame, three-inch solid axle, Piller block bearings, photos available; $3,000. Robert Lanier White Plains 404-310-0412
Heavy-duty backhoe attachment for tractors or skid steers; $2,499. Dwight Swanson Dallas 404-307-7106 404569-1993
Heavy-duty, custom-made harrow; three-inch square tube frame harrow; 22 20-inch disks; one and one-eighth inch axles, sealed bearings, clevis hitch. Daniel Linder Dearing 706-5510342
Howse; five-foot rotary mower with front and rear chain guards, excellent condition, like new; $750. Ronald Boyd Sharpsburg 478-454-6171
Hustler 3400; pecan, three-point tree shaker. Charles Stewart Matthews 706-533-5035
IH 10-foot grain drill, double disk. excellent condition; $1,600. Charles McCrary Americus 229-815-6540
IH 1420 combine, corn and grain heads; $14,000. Carter Swancy Ranger 770-881-0127
International 856 tractor, 100 horsepower, good solid tractor, 5,700 hours; $9,200. Herman King Marietta 404-395-1042
International Cub Lo-Boy 154 with five-foot belly mower and new belts, mower deck, needs repair; $1,500. Doyle Barnes Social Circle 678-4815067
John Deere (2008) 5083E Limited, cab, 4x4, forestry package and 542 front end loader; 1,494 hours, $45,000 OBO. Perry Avery Dublin 478-2727933
John Deere 1946 LA, very good condition, $4,500; ready for fall show season. Byron Jones Adairsville jdg1956@bellsouth.net 770-773-3843
John Deere 2040, 1979 model, threecylinder diesel; PS, PB, undercarriage exhaust, excellent tires, good running tractor; $5,500. Gary Lane Carrollton lane894@bellsouth.net 404-502-4000
John Deere 275 disk mower, Krone four-rotor tedder, Kuhn SR-108 wheel rake, all in superb condition. Charles Smith Ochlocknee riverwind620@ rose.net 229-379-4619
John Deere 2755, 4,350 hours, twowheel drive; John Deere 245 loader, two sets hydraulics, two post canopy, $12,800. Randy Smith Lyons randocsmith@gmail.com 912-526-3011 912245-2432
John Deere 3320 with 300CX loader; E-hydro, R4 tires, excellent shape and only 330 hours; Franklin County. Terry Pierce Carnesville 404-6804238
John Deere 4110; 250 hours; backhoe, diesel, four-wheel drive, front loader, scraper plow, mower plus sixfoot tandem trailer; $14,900. James Kelly Lithonia 404-576-3011
John Deere 4200 with 420 loader, 4x4, 413 hours, diesel, like new; $12,000. Gary Copeland Jasper 770366-8166
John Deere 435 baler, $6,200; Lilliston grain drill model 244, $2,500; Ford four-row planter, $1,250. Don Williams Carrollton 770-328-2782
John Deere 450 G crawler, all original, 1996 model, six-way blade, excellent condition, 2,000 hours, serviced and maintained. Todd Powell Buena Vista 229-314-9445
John Deere 450 loader with backhoe; $7,500. Barry Vandiver Sautee 706-968-8274
John Deere 467 hay baler, twine wrap, great condition; $16,500. William Franklin Colquitt 229-7523737
John Deere 5205, MFWD 521, loader with Mx6 Bush Hog; $20,000. Trey Perkins Thomaston 770-3172524

John Deere 535 hay baler; baled fewer than 1,000 bales; like new, netwrap, string and bale kicker. Donnie Allen Dudley 478-875-3496
John Deere 60 Orchard, runs well, $6,800.00 John Deere 80 diesel original, good sheet metal, $10,000.00 Ronnie Hardigree Athens 706-2243583
John Deere 60; not running, $1,500, new tires, straight sheet metal. Wayne Pittman Commerce 770-633-0916
John Deere 6320, 4x4 cab, 640 loader, 2,700 hours, very clean. Stan Tankersley Lincolnton setankersley@ gfb.org 706-318-8265
John Deere 6620 Turbo combine; hydrostatic; 444 corn head; 216 grain; 2,900 hours; working now; $14,750. Lewis Kimball Brooklet 912-8427535
John Deere 7230 tractor, John Deere 1700, four-row planter; John Deere 4x14 Bush Hog, six- or four-row hooder sprayer. Lora Hosch Buford 770-945-3971
John Deere 750B dozer in good condition, runs like a Deere; $18,700. Johnny Burns Tignall lindasbasketcase@yahoo.com 706-359-2256
John Deere 8200 10-foot grain drill, KMC two-row peanut combine; shetlered, field-ready, good condition. Floyd Knowles McRae 229-315-0409 229-362-4855
John Deere 8300 grain drill, double disk, 13-foot planting width; $1,500. Hugh Willcox Winterville 706-2012800
John Deere 9970 cotton picker; KMC, five-shank ripper, KMC four-row bedder; 1,000-gallon Peerless water wagon. Hugh Hosch Waynesboro 770-789-3258
John Deere A, 1952, parade-ready, starts and runs well, fenders, rear step, 38 horsepower, kept inside. A. Earl Cheal Ellerslie 706-575-6761 706-575-6761
John Deere buck rake; 10 feet wide, three-point mount, excellent condition, good for stocking loose hay or bales, pick up. William Sell Hoschton 770-658-7084
John Deere farm wagon, good condition; $350. Jerry Cox Fayetteville 770-461-7938
John Deere grain drill, $8,300; equipment, 40-foot trailer, seven-foot disk mower, nine-foot Krone conditioner, Maxeys. Wilbur Moore Union Point 706-817-8430
John Deere hay spear 553 loader, $350; Brown manufactured harrow, 17.5 feet, ,22-inch disk, $1,650. James Brown Omega 229-776-2458
John Deere model 71, two-row planter with bedder; $2,000. Rick Morey Baconton 229-328-8586
John Deere tractor, 2155, 55 horsepower, 1991; new paint, good tires, good condition; $8,500. George Crider Cedartown 678-883-4522
John Deere, 1999, 4300; 330 hours, hydrostatic, 430 loader, $15,900; five-foot Gill core aerator, $1,200. Bobby Cumbie Newnan 770-3048715
John Deere; deer plot grain drill, seven or eight feet wide, works on three-point hitch; $2,100. Royce Hulett Hazlehurst 912-253-0162
KBH boll buggy split chains, two Harrell module builders with Peerless automatic systems; $5,000 each OBO. Cliff Groover Brooklet 912-8239250 912-682-5360
Kilby three-wheel pecan shaker, $12,000 OBO; has John Deere sixcylinder diesel; in Sasser, Ga. Bill Cobb Dawson 229-881-4982
King Kutter II, five-foot rototiller, three-point, like new, $900; Baltimatic seed spreader, three-point, $350. Tavish Presswood Canton 770-4754244
KMC, four-row peanut plow, in good condition; ask for R.A. Anthony Stapleton Lumber 912-539-0749
Kobuta tractor, 32.2 HP, bucket, model L3130 loader, suttle shift, canopy 425, has tires, shelterd, ex. condition. W. J Holtzclaw Canton 770-4793100

Landpride 72-inch pulverizer, used one time; same as Harley rake; $6,500. Tommy Blount Waycross 912-282-3033
Lilliston 1500 peanut combine, good condition; $2,500. Jim Davis Americus jdavis111161@gmail.com 229938-2286
Long 360 in fair shape, needs tire rod ends, runs well; $1,500 or possible trades. Mike Frazier Crandall 706-264-4026
Long remotes, six-speed, live lift power take-off, needs clutch work, excellent running condition; $1,100. Gerald Whalen McDonough 770483-4058
LT-15 Wood-Mizer sawmill, low hours, like new, cut up to 17-foot log; call 7 a.m. until 8 p.m.; $5,000. Marvin Snow Waco 770-689-6042
Mahindra 65 horsepower, fourwheel drive front loader, heavyduty, sheltered, 50 hours, like new; $20,000. Wayne Parker Ranger 770926-3284
Manure spreader, good condition, original owner; $500. James Smith Winder 770-867-2994 678-8630191
Massey Fergerson 35, harrow, plow, $3,500; Cub Farmall, sickle mower cultivator, $2,500. James Palmer Smyrna 770-436-9767
Massey Ferguson 135; four-cylinder, gas, 2,000 hours, front loader, six attachments; asking $4,100 OBO. Lamar Long Jackson 770-775-2452
Massey Ferguson 175 tractor, good condition, harrow, turn-over plow, sickle mower, Covington planter; $7,500. Buster Reese Good Hope 770-331-6417
Massey Ferguson 240 tractor; diesel, power steering, great shape, tires, new fenders, seat, paint, no leaks. Jerry Gabbert Marietta 404281-0216
Massey Ferguson 540 combine with 12-foot grain head; barn-kept, low hours, great condition, runs great; $7,600. Ted Smith Washington 706214-0442
Massey Ferguson ROPS; a fixed, after-market ROPS, removed from a 1988 model MF253, great condition. Robert Moore Senoia cowboyonaboat@att.net 770-599-3496
Massey Ferguson round baler, 5x6 bales, field-ready; $4,800. Tommy McAllister Buena Vista 706-993-5950
Massey Ferguson; 245 diesel tractor, always sheltered, power steering,1985, $7,000; Gill rollover, six feet, $350; pulverizer, six feet, $600. Tom Singleton Covington 404-925-2899
MFTO 30, gas, 22 horsepower, with AP plow, scrape, scoop, boom pole, mid buster, old Bush Hog, $3,350. Ken Phillips Bogart 706-714-7282
N 4 1033 stack wagon, like new, not a dent or scratch on it; $6,950. H. L Barnes Bloomingdale 912-748-4289
New Holland 570 baler, like new, $9,000; slide-in cattle rack, $400. Alvah Adams Byron 478-956-5843
New Holland 617, disk mower, good condition; $3,000. Mark Royal Ellaville royalkat9@hotmail.com 229942-0897
New Holland 850, round balers, one field-ready, other parts, $2,000; threepoint hitch nine-tip sprayer, $250. Steve Albritton Mauk 478-862-5582
New Holland model 310; square hay baler, good condition, $1,000. Sammy McCorkle Thomson 706-831-0798
New Holland round baler, 850 herd ready; Vermeer 6050, new brakes, needs minor repair, must sell. Tony Devito Mauk 229-314-9034
New Holland square baler, hay rake and fluffer; $985 each. Lynne Rhinehart Ringgold 706-338-7176
Pecan shaker, boom-type and 500-gallon mounted sprayer for sale. Russ Huffman Jeffersonville 478214-7272
Pecan shaker, older model, Kirby Boone type, ready to work. Bud Paulk Sr Cecil 229-563-7005
Rhino RC20 mower, 20 feet wide; excellent condition; ready to mow stalks. Matt Berry Americus 229-942-8456

Savage 8261 pecan harvester; fieldready, good condition; $14,000. Mike Jordan Lyons mike@wagonhammock. com 912-526-9964 912-293-0282
Seven-foot Great Plains solid stand no-till drill, extra coulters, excellent condition; $10,500. James Sutton Norman Park 229-873-6142
Six-foot box scrape, excellent condition, heavy duty; $450. Mike Williamson Rex 770-389-9919
Six-foot Bush Hog, model 286, used very little; $1,000. Jay Hanks Jasper 770-894-1958
Smoothing harrow, six-foot, threepoint hitch, 16-disk; 14-foot V-nose Horton enclosed trailer, four-wheel brakes, two 5,200-pound axles, power lift, excellent condition. G. Benefield Oxford 1mrg73@gmail.com 770-8410909 770-728-9718
Snapper chipper shreader; heavy duty, eight horsepower; Briggs & Stratton electric start; four sizing crates, like new. Donna Crowe Tate 770-735-1389
Three-point hitch; c-tine cultivator, six tines, $175; five-foot box scrape with rippers, $350. Mitchell North Palmetto 770-755-5716
Troy-Bilt, Trail Blazer mower, four horsepower, excellent shape, new tires; $375. Foy E Smith Cornelia 706-776-3528
Tuff-Bilt tractor. Eva L Phillips Hiawassee 706-896-8259
Two Farmall tractors,1948 and 1949 restored; $2,500 each. Jerry Wheat Crandall jerrywheat@windstream.net 706-260-0530
Two pecan, peanut trailers; wire mesh sides, sheet metal ends and bottom-dump door; $600. James E Kidd Kathleen 478-988-8653
Two Troy-Bilt horse tillers; six horsepower; both $400 OBO. Roy Moore Mount Zion 770-401-6557
Two wood bat wings, 15 feet, $2,500 and $1,500; two-row John Deere planters, $450. Damon Malcom Bostwick 706-474-2554
Two-row ripper-bedder with John Deere 71 planters, good condition; $2,000. Justin Anderson Glennville 912-213-0917
Utility trailer, 5 ft. x `10 ft.., 15" tines; heavy duty wood floor, tested with 2000 lb. weight, $800, firm. Howard Milsap 361 Thigpen Road Newnan 30263 770-253-4594
Vermeer track, walk-behind trencher, RT100; brought brand new, used very little, stored inside. Joe Verdone Lexington 706-743-3994
Vicon 1210; round baler, $2,000; Vicon eight-wheel V-rake, $1,000; threepoint hitch hydraulic lift, $600. Bill St. John Americus 229-928-5451
Vicon 4000s,13-foot disk cutter, good condition; $7,500. Tracy Boyt Thomaston 706-656-8481
Vicon mower conditioner, pull-type, good cutter, bar needs gearbox work. Wanda Byrd Lizella 478-256-4200
Weed badger, used to weed around blackberry bushes; $2,500. L.G. Mitcham Ludow 912-270-4683
Woodmizser, LT 15, 2013 lots, upgrade, $7,800/cash. Phillip Merritt Buchanan 678-246-4341
Yanmar 276D, three-cylinder, fourwheel drive diesel, 27 horsepower farm tractor, tach time 1403. Brad Stancil Loganville 770-330-9586
Yanmar, four-foot tiller, works well; $400 or trade for four-foot finishing mower. Charles Lashley Albany 229886-7191
Farm Machinery Wanted
15- or 16-foot header for R-50 gleaner combine, excellent condition. W C Ralston Resaca 706-629-8167
2,000- to 5,000-bushel corn bin, decent shape, close to north Georgia area, also looking for feed mill. Darren Hughes Blairsville 706-897-3292
215 Flex header, good condition, for 4400 John Deere combine. Wallace Vassar Hartwell 706-436-2664
24-disk smoothing harrow, six-foot, three-point hitch; 14-foot v-nose Horton hauler, enclosed trailer, 5,200-pound axles, electric brakes, power lift. G. Benefield Oxford 1mrg73@gmail.com 770-784-1655 770-841-0909

PAGE 4

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014

Front end loader attachment for 500/600 gallon fuel tank with electric Large heavy-duty bench vise, jaws

Livestock Sales and Events

Massey Ferguson 275 tractor. Cory station, type pump, with 25 ft. hose open one and one-eighth inches to

Stern Gray 478-319-8484

& electric motor included, you move, six inches wide, eight-inch base;

Calendar

Gear box for an old six-foot side- $900. Jerry Doyal Villa Rica 770-459- long bolts included. Marlowe Collins

winder rotary cutter or a 12-spline 3822

Gainesville 678-207-1993

output shaft. William Adams Hull 706- 60-inch Cool Cell pads, $3 each. Ray Loader, bucket, five feet wide, 20

APPLING COUNTY 1st & 3rd Saturdays: S&D Goat Sales,
Baxley Fairgrounds; begins at 12:30 p.m.; goats, pigs, poultry, calves. Call Steve Smith, 912-367-9268 or

MARION COUNTY Every Thursday: Auction 41 Goat
Sale, miscellaneous equipment; 6 p.m. goat sale; 7 p.m. poultry and small animals; 4275 Georgia High-

789-3790
Good used log splitter for tractor. Glen Coatney Cumming 770-8878720 678-520-7887
Good, used pallet forks for Gehl SL6635 skid steer; prefer close to

Moore Crawfordville 706-401-3894 706-678-3187
6x2 double axle trailer, new wood bed, $995; Miller Welder with railer generator, $1,595 OBO. J. D. Reece Powder Springs 770-943-2968

inches deep, never used; $300. Paul E Williams Dalton 706-278-4621
Locust posts for pole barns; 35 sixinch by 6.5-foot rounds; $12 each. Chris Coulter Colbert 706-338-8729
Lumber (TimberKing sawmill), as low

912-278-1460

way 41 N, Buena Vista.

Moultrie. Ralph Brown Moultrie 229- Air, kiln-dried WoodMizer sawn lum- as 35 cents per board foot; pine, hard-

Call Jim Rush, 706-326-3549 or

985-4808 229-985-4808

ber, large selection wood specials, wood, custom cuts available (trailer

ATKINSON COUNTY

229-649-9940.

K-330 corn head to fit K gleaner paneling, wide-plank flooring, fencing, floors, mantles, etc.). Mitchell Smith

2nd & 4th Saturdays: Livestock auc-

Email auction41@windstream.net

combine. Calvin Smith Chatsworth barn wood. John Sell Milner sellj@ Griffin 404-867-5106

tion at Pearson Livestock; sale at 1

706-517-5110

bellsouth.net 770-480-2326

Metal and plastic barrels with locks,

p.m.; goats, sheep, poultry, small NEWTON COUNTY

KMC ripper spider; need leveling Barrels, plastic heavy-duty, 55-gal- tops; solid with bung holes; plastic

animals; 1168 Highway 441 N, Pearson; Call 229-798-0271 or 912-422-3211
BLECKLEY COUNTY 2nd & 4th Saturdays: Farm miscel-
laneous at 10 a.m.; goats, chickens at 1 p.m.; Buggy Town Auction, 290 Ash Street, Cochran; GAL #3177. Call Jimmy Burnette, 770-584-0388 or 678-972-4599

2nd & 4th Saturdays: Pony Express Stockyard Horse & Tack Auction, 5 p.m.; GAL AUNR002843; 1852 Highway 11 S, Covington. Call Scott Bridges, 704-434-6389 or 704-473-8715
STEPHENS COUNTY Every Thursday: Chickens, rabbits,
related small animal sale; Northeast Georgia Sale; 6 p.m.; GAL #3478; Eastanollee Livestock Market,

doors, back of spiders, in front of planters. Frank Freeman Plains 229942-0939
Plastic mulcher bedder; want to buy from owner located north of Atlanta. Donny Hunter Ellijay hillvalleyfarm@ gmail.com 678-378-6616
Power take-off driven side delivery hay rake. Charles Grimsley, Jr Danville 478-962-3447
Propane-powered tractor, at least 45 horsepower. in good condition. T. Busby Dawson 229-343-3627

lon, 20-inch screw top, air tight, food grade, $35; while supplies last. Bill Sewell Brunswick 912-270-8278
Blue, white, black barrels, $8 to $12 each. Gerald Hayes Flowery Branch 470-208-0309
Brinly moldboard plow; double disk, single point hitch, Deere, Sears, Cub tractor, excellent condition; $595. Royce Brooks Acworth 770-3782564
Buckets, white plastic, wire handle, resealable lids, new condition; for

tanks, 275 gallons in wire cages. G. Allen Covington 770-786-6377
Money-making ice cream factory: two 1931 John Deere hit-and-miss engines, three old fashioned ice cream churns, three trailers; $10,000. Jess Arnett Tifton 229-382-6517
Mountable hay bale spear, good condition, operate with small electric winch; $165. Pete Taylor Bogart 706207-0803 770-725-5062
New 29-gauge galvanized tin, No. 1 quality, 330 pieces, 23 feet, three

COOK COUNTY 1st & 3rd Saturdays: Small animal
sale; goats, sheep and poultry, 1

Highway 17 between Toccoa and Lavonia. Call 706-779-5944 or 706-599-

Savage model 8042 pecan harvest- wine and pickling, five-gallon; $2 inches long, $1.49 per running foot.

er; please call. Charlie Hollars Co- each. Dennis Grizzle Gainesville 770- Randy Jackson Lula 770-654-4649

chran 478-714-4596

532-8510

New 300 feet plus galvanized cable.

p.m.; miscellaneous merchandise, 6 p.m.; Deer Run Auction; Highway 76, Adel-Nashville Highway, Adel; GAL 001800. Call 229-560-2898 or 229-896-4553
DECATUR COUNTY 2nd & 4th Saturdays: Livestock auc-
tion, Waddell Auction Barn; Climax; goats, sheep, poultry, small animals at 1 p.m.; miscellaneous at 10 a.m.; GAL AU003249.

7606
2nd Saturdays: Winstead Horse Sales, 5 p.m.; Eastanollee Livestock Auction, Eastanollee. Call Shannon Winstead, 864-7104030 or 864-944-6200
3rd Saturdays: Goat and sheep sale, 12 p.m.; Agri Auction Sales at Eastanollee Livestock Market; Highway 17 between Toccoa and Lavonia.

Three-point hitch, turning or disk plow; north Georgia area only. John Bailey Morganton jmb2245@yahoo. com 706-374-6081
Tractor pull-type land level. Vinh Ta Buena Vista 229-314-0530
Troy-Bilt horse model tiller, non running OK, just need parts. Stanley Gordy Ringgold 706-673-5801
Used grain drill, in good condition. Samuel Groover Statesboro 912690-2281

Clean 55-gallon metal drums with lids; 1,000-gallon fiberglass tank. Leonard Crane Dawsonville 678-9476744 404-210-1516
Commercial greenhouse; approximately 15x96 feet; currently covered with plastic and shade screen; includes heater, fan, tables; $3,500. Gloria Martin Albany 229-449-5005
Complete Traveler irrigation system. Jimmy Cook Ty Ty 229-388-3489
Concrete culvert drain pipe, tiles; 18inch diameter; eight-foot joints; quan-

Richard Haigler Hiawassee 706-8355222 706-994-6850
New Idea two-row corn combine, pull-type, run off power take-off, picks and shells; $3,500. Buck Goff Ochlocknee 229-403-0102
New trailer mover, fits all size tractors; three-point hitch, $160; threequarter-inch Elector magnetic drill press, good condition, sell or trade. V Felkel Millen 912-682-5813
Old plows, turning plows, $50; muledrawn plows, $25. Willie T Sperin Ball

Call 229-246-4955 or 229-416-7217
EMANUEL COUNTY 2nd & 4th Saturdays: R&R Goat and
Livestock Auction; goats, 12 p.m.; chickens, caged animals to follow; 526 Georgia Highway 56 N, Swainsboro; Ron Claxton, GAL #3485. Call 478-237-8825 (days)
JEFF DAVIS COUNTY 1st & 3rd Fridays: Horse sale, 7:30
p.m.; Circle Double S, 102 Lumber City Highway, Hazlehurst. Call Steve Underwood, 912-5946200 (night) or 912-375-5543 (day)
JONES COUNTY Every Saturday: Spring selling hours:
hatching eggs, biddies at 5:30 p.m.; goats and sheep, 7 p.m.; poultry, small animals follow; merchandise, 4 p.m.; 1035 Monticello Highway, gray; GAL AU-C002992; www.bradleywaysideauction.com. Call Nancy Wilson, 478-986-4413 Email bradleywaysideauction@ gmail.com

Call Ricky Chatham, 706-491-2812 or Jason Wilson, 706-491-8840
TAYLOR COUNTY 1st & 3rd Tuesdays: Poultry, goat and
feeder-breeder pig sale; poultry, 6 p.m.; hogs and goats, 7 p.m. RockRidge Livestock Auction, off SR 128, south of Reynolds. Call 478-847-3664 or 706-9755732
TELFAIR COUNTY 2nd & 4th Thursdays: Chickens,
fowl, goats and sheep; check-in at 1 p.m., sale at 6:30 p.m. Horse Creek Auction, between Dublin and McRae off Highway 441. Call 478-595-5418
TOOMBS COUNTY 1st & 3rd Saturdays: Livestock sale
starts at 10 a.m.; tack, horses; pigs at 11:30; cows at 12; goats at 1 p.m.; poultry sale follows; Metter Livestock Market, Lyons; GAL 3415. Call Lewie Fortner, 478-553-6066

FARM SUPPLIES

tity, 11; you load, haul; $100 each. Al Ground 770-893-3406

Jett Rome 678-200-5825

Peanut roaster; half-bushel capacity,

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

DR trimmer horse, 6.75 horsepower Beaver blade; Troy-Bilt tiller horse,

118 volts, good condition by Hercules Gallion; $500. Charles Fisher Morrow

1,000 feet of six-inch underground seven horsepower; both good con- cmf2etfga@att.net 770-968-8895

PVC water pipe; JM Eagle bell and spigot, 165 PSI; $2,000 OBO. Lori Downs Sylvester 229-272-6122

dition. Lewis Craft Winder 770-8673549
Equipment trailer; three axles, great

Pintal hook; two-axle trailer, 14-foot tie-down chains, fuel tank, tool box and more. Darrell Mitchell Monroe

1,000-gallon Mueller milk tank, for hauling tractor or small to medium 770-601-0582

wash-up system and control box, three horsepower compressor unit. Stan Jackson Crawfordville 706817-0261
1,600 feet eight-inch irrigation pipe, trailer, heavy duty, 20-foot joint. Jack Batten Douglas jackd332001@yahoo.com 912-384-4999
100-year-old barn wood; various sizes and lengths, most with nails removed; Covington area. Lynn Payne Mansfield 770-540-0279
110-pound Peter Wright anvil tongs, hammers, Hardee No. 15 wash pot,

dozer; great deal at $1,400. Ken Gabriel Hull 706-543-0932
Farm bells; different sizes and parts for sale, real old ones, also looking to buy bells. Shane Burnett Covington 770-827-0999
Farm trailer used for hay, rides; trailer is five feet wide and 20 feet long. Robert Yawn McDonough 404-358-5375 770-914-9943
Flooring oak and pine; tongue and groove, various widths, also beadboard and woodshavings; call for prices. William J Briggs Union City

Platform scales with all counter weights included. David Pearson Sylvester 229-776-3183
Rhino turf flex, TX 165 A, 16-foot mower. Charles Lanier McDonough 404-538-2191
Seven feet, 10 inches wide; 19 feet, seven inches long; tri-axle trailer, Gooseneck; $1,400. Willard Edwards LaFayette 706-463-5985
Shrimp growers farm, gas blower, pumps air into shrimp pond; 115 or 230 volts, like new, $300 OBO. Jerry K

cooking grade. Ben Hendrick Austell 404-349-2315

Pace Cochran 478-542-3166

770-948-9842

Ford wheel and tire for 555A back- Six 1,000-gallon LP tanks, good

14,000-gallon vertical steel tank; hoe, $20; old feed mill, $100. William condition; $,1000 each or $900 each

15,000-gallon horizontal steel tank; Howington Pine Mountain 770-842- if take all. David Stanford Gainesville

both sound and 14 tons. George Har- 0083

770-527-4401

ris Covington 404-277-0150

Golden 2 cane mill, good condition. Small off-road utility trailer, 64x39x10

14.5-foot John Deere tilt bed trailer, Ray Freeman Dublin 478-272-1307 inches, to pull behind a lawn tractor,

WHITE COUNTY

new floor; $1,200 OBO. Steve Hoff- Gooseneck trailer, 24x7.5 feet; deck excellent condition; $200, has steel

LAMAR COUNTY

Every Saturday: Small animals,

man Newnan 770-304-4351

over three axles, lights, brakes, spare floor. Dale Jones Flowery Branch

Every Friday: Farm miscellaneous at

chickens, rabbits, sheep, goats and 20 aluminum pallet, skids; 24 inches tire, $1,750; located in Milledgeville. 770-967-6948

5 p.m.; baby chickens, eggs at 6

horse sale; 4 p.m.; Coker Sale Barn, by 36 inches by 3 inches high, $15 ea. Alfred Dobler Gordon 478-452-7929 Smithy metal lathe, model granite

p.m.; goats and poultry at 7 p.m.;

Duncan Bridge Road at Old Chat-

Josh Daniels Atlanta 678-600-1671

Gooseneck trailer, 8.5x25 feet, 20k, 1324, manual, video, extra precision

Buggy Town Auction, 1315 Highway tahoochee Livestock Barn.

200-plus fiberglass step-in electric metal floor included, 2,000-pound tools, never used; $2,500 OBO. Dona

341 S, Barnesville; GAL #3177.

Call Wayne Coker, 706-540-8418

fence posts (four wire) $1.25 each; blast media tank with sandblaster. Vinson Dillard dona_vinson@yahoo.

Call 770-358-0872/1786

many wood and T-posts. Tom Taunton M Harrington Macon 478-745-3707 com 706-746-9995

Butler 478-862-3138

478-318-8312

Stainless steel sink with work area,

Notices for auctions selling farm-related items other than livestock must be

300-gallon propane tank with regu- Greenhouse liquidation: everything 90x30 inches; sink is 30x24x14 inches

accompanied by the auction license number of the principal auctioneer or auction firm conduction the auction, per regulations from the Georgia Secretary of State. Auctions without this information will not be published.
Have an auction to put on our calendar? Contact Dallas Duncan at 404-6563722 or dallas.duncan@agr.georgia.gov.

lator; $250. Randall Smith Jefferson 706-338-3130
300-plus gallon plastic tanks in metal cage; five-inch cap on top, valve on bottom, $50 per tank. C. Stovall Dahlonega 678-491-0838
40-gallon sprayer; three-point hitch.

goes, best offer over $1,500; by appointment only. Nin Garrett Tyrone 770-487-4883
Greenhouses; 28x96, $1,800; thousands of flower pots, all sizes and huge cooler, $2,000. Renee Viars Milner 404-444-9100

deep; 26x96-inch stainless steel flat table, $150. Glen Davis Statham 706207-2128
Three stainless steel gas tanks with straps, four-gallon capacity; $10 each. Carl Dobson Atlanta 404-2477343

80 horsepower tractor, four-wheel De-hulling machine (wheat, oats, in excellent condition, pump not in- Hen nests: 12 metal nests per box, Three-point hitch, elevating hay jack,

drive with loader. Billy Greer Hampton spelts), small grain mill, grain wagons. cluded; $300. Carl Beecher Wray $40 per box. Lamar Bryant Cleveland $850; 20-40 PRO generator, $800.

404-444-2436

Scott Hancock Sautee nvalleyfarm@ 912-359-3699

706-878-8509

David Dickson Rutledge 706-474-

Case 444 housing deck, 52-inch; gmail.com 706-878-7559 404-310- 400 feet of 14-inch gray pipe; culvert Hit and miss 5 HP, Plessville running 6956

wanted for side discharge or trade 2558

pipe, 43 inches wide by 20 feet long. W C Quarles Dawsonville 706-265- TimberKing sawmill, model B20;

rear discharge for side discharge. Ted Drag conveyor, power take-off driven Maze Jeffcoat Blairsville 706-994- 3732

$14,000. Wilford Hensley Ellijay 706-

Wach Bolingbroke/Macon 478-994- for handling ear corn. Luther S Garrett 1721

Irrigation system: 2,400 feet; four- 273-4377

1120

Loganville 770-466-4480

5,000-bushel grain bins, two each inch twist-lock pipe,15 high rise rain Tractor tires: two 16x9x38; two

Case backhoe 580; two or four- Four-inch irrigation pump, power for sale, excellent condition. Robert bird sprinklers, elbows,14 ft. suction 14x9x34; four 20x8x38; two 8x2x24.

wheel drive. Jim Young Metter 912- take-off driven. Gene Tucker Hahira Ztterower Statesboro zetter1@fron- pipe, $6,000 OBO. Dan Skipper Ludo- Donald Wooten Denton 912-539-

486-6569

229-794-8595

tiernet.net 912-690-1930

wici 912-545-9566 912-294-5901 3517

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

PAGE 5

Two 1100, 16 SL tires and rims, Buffalo cow for sale; approximately Registered Angus bulls, 1 and 2 Two purebred Dexter bulls for sale, 100 percent, 2-year-old Boer buck,

eight-ply, eight lug rims; $375. Danny 12 years old; $1,050. Mark Ledford years old; Tenx, Ingenity, Insure. Ken 4 years old. Charles Franklin Junction great breeder, call or email for pic-

Strickland Barney 229-560-8072

Commerce 706-658-6455

McMichael Monticello 706-468-2442 City 706-975-3842

tures; $175. Deanna Teel Milton dean-

Two 34x600 chicken houses; tin, Bulls for sale; registered Angus, reg- Registered Angus bulls, 22 to 24 Wagyu percentage cow, heifer calf nalteel@att.net 770-355-4542

metal trusses and wire; you tear istered Hereford, starting at $2,600; months old, semen-tested, docile pair; $2,000 for the pair. Randy Had- ADGA Alpines, dairy goats, CAE-

down. Danny Deloach Brooklet 912- 20 months or older. Wes Smith Thom- and many AI-sired. John Stuedemann den Metter rndhadden@gmail.com free, healthy milkers, yearlings, klds

687-3919

aston 706-648-4210

Comer 706-202-2371

912-658-5773 912-685-4423

for sale; $350 to $600. Angela Peevy

Two large light poles for pole barns, Bulls: Approximately 65 head of 14- Registered Angus bulls, weaning to weighing approximately 500 pounds to 24-month-old Angus and SimAn- 16 months; all AI, only the best sires

Swine

Dacula apeevy@montagefarm.com 678-873-3017

each; you haul. Henry Moss Ball gus bulls for sale. Bart Davis Doerun used. Duke Burgess Louisville julies- If you have questions regarding ads in ADGA Lamancha buck, champion

Ground 770-479-9454

229-881-3510

vance@wildblue.net 478-626-9542 this category, call 404-656-3722.

bloodlines, great herd sire. Preston

Two whirlybird roof vents for sale; only used two weeks; $20 each. Leann McAlister Talking Rock 770-

Bulls: Simmental and young bulls. Cliff Adams 770-258-2069

Simbrah, Bowdon

Registered Angus, Gelbvieh, also commercial cows, Brangus; bred for easy calving and fast growth. Gene

Advertisers submitting swine ads must submit proof of a negative brucellosis and pseudorabies test from within the past 30 days. Exceptions are

Garner Braselton 706-654-3423
ADGA Nubian does, $350 and up; bucks, unregdistered, $100; great

476-5433

Calving ease, milking ability, gentle- Cantrell Shady Dale 770-312-6224 swine from a validated brucellosis-free bloodlines, bottle-raised. Lisa Rees

Water pump: 1.5 horsepower; Myers ness, registered polled Shorthorn Registered Angus, very high EPDs, and qualified pseudorabies-free herd; Good Hope 770-267-8279

centrifical water pump, good condition, $300; located in Whitesburg. Jerry Tomblin Lawrenceville 770962-9921

bulls, show heifers, steers, excellent quality, Club Calf member. Ken Bridges Commerce 706-768-3480
Commercial Angus and registered

low birth weight, only the best AI sires used, 1 year to 16 months old. Duke Burgess Louisville 478-625-9542
Registered Black Angus bulls; one

these operations must submit proof of that certification. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the test needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the test can be attached

ADGA registered Nubian yearling does; certified and accredited herd. Paul Frantz Abbeville ellenfrantz@ windstream.net 229-423-7350

Wood-Mizer lumber; 1x12 pine, Hereford cows; Herefords are AI and bull, 2.5 years; semen-tested, $2,000; using the attachments button. Buyers American purebred Kiko bucks,

poplar, oak, trailer; flooring any thick- Angus bred to Hereford bull; Decem- three heifers, $1,600; young cows, are urged to request proof of a nega- great bloodlines, also purebred does

LIVESTOCK ness. Larry Moore Newnan 678-278-
5709
Ziggity drinkers, Chore-Time feeders and other miscellaneous poultry house equipment; used building materials, cement blocks, boards, lumber. Joshua Martin Clarkesville 770531-7432

ber calving. John Watson LaFayette 423-834-3457
Five Black Angus cows; four calves, farm-raised, 6- to 7-year-olds. Don Hudgins Marietta 404-886-6849 404886-6684
Gelbvieh bulls and bred cows; all registered purebred, bred for easy calving and fast growth. John Kiss

$1,800. Lalla Tanner Monroe 770267-7174
Registered Black Angus cattle; bulls ready for service, bred heifers, bred cows. Fred Blitch Statesboro 912865-5454
Registered black Gelbvieh bull; registered Angus bulls, excellent bulls,

tive brucellosis and pseudorabies test prior to purchase.
7 months, registered Berkshire hog for breeding, good bloodlines; I also have purebred sows. Jonathan Frazier Douglasville fraz2129@gmail. com 404-431-2638
American Guinea Hog shoats from five litters; feeders and breeders;

and kids. James Sarratt Jasper stevensarratt@gmail.com 706-260-5131
Boer billy; 4 years old, will trade, pastive, Texas background. Cecil Goodell Canon 706-245-8373
Boer semen, $25 or less; fullblood buck, $300; fullblood and percentage does for sale, call for info. Landon Boyett Glennville 912-213-4062

All livestock must have been in the advertiser's possession for at least 90 days before they can be advertised.

Gainesville 770-531-1126
Heavy bred Jersey heifers for sale; bred to Angus bulls, $1,700 each; nine head to pick from. Addison Hooks

low birth weight, fast growth. Tommy Walker Rockmart 770-684-6150 678684-9770
Registered Brangus bull for sale;

email for prices and details. Cathy Payne Elberton broadriverpastures@ gmail.com 706-283-7946
Five 4-month-old Tamworth boar

Full-blooded Boer billies, $100 each; 5 months old; call or email for pictures. Kim Presley Meansville Kimbpresley@gmail.com 706-975-8982

Livestock listed must be for specific Swainsboro 478-434-0390

17-month-old moderate frame bull, pigs, $100 each. Edward Mitchell Goats for sale; females, $75; males,

animals. Generalized ads such as Hereford virgin bull; 20 months, good EPDs; 69 pound birth weight, Barnesville ed@honeywoodfarms. $50. Sharon McCombs Rockmart

"many breeds of cattle" or "want hors- grandson DR World Class; semen- $2,800. Jeff Thomas Summerville com 404-345-1407 678-359-1257

770-714-5533 770-301-1843

es, any amount" will not be published. Ads for free or unwanted livestock will not be published. Ads for cats, dogs, reptiles, rodents and other animals not specifically bred for on-farm use will not be published.

tested. Ennis Ryals Dublin ennis@ earyalsfarm.com 478-676-3127
Jersey bull, 15 months old; $1,000. Brandon Carter Eatonton 706-4734199

770-289-6539
Registered Brangus bulls and one not registered bull, are 14 to 25 months old, price starts at $2,000; 770-317-6340. Lewis Rice Monticello

Large black heritage hogs. Ed Shealey Douglasville 678-249-7319
One Berkshire purebred guilt, 1 year old, breeding or freezer; pastureraised; leave message. Laura Fokes

Healthy, friendly bottle-fed Lamancha buckling for sale; parents: 100 percent Lamancha, born March 2014; $100. Paul VanLoenen Bartow 478364-6960

Cattle

Jersey nurse cows, can hand-milk, 706-468-0019 706-819-8434

Byromville 229-938-4597

Herd Texas Genemaster and Kikos

bred to Angus bull, $850. Joel Weath- Registered Brangus heifers, spring Ossabaw Island hog, born June 13, buck; five nannies, two doelings, two

If you have any questions regard- erford Millen 478-982-7813 478-982- bred, $2,500; bred to low birth weight 2014; tails docked, pin teeth removed young bucks. Richard Matthews Villa

ing ads in this category, call 404-656- 1212

Brangus bull. Seth Hunt Calhoun and males are neutered; females Rica 770-459-5072

Market Bulletin Ad Form 3722. 11 Angus commercial heifers;
exposed to calving ease Angus; 1,000 to 1,100 pounds; top quality, $1,950 per head. Lincoln Jones Dublin 478689-0226
12 commercial Black Angus heifers; some AI-sired; weaned, wormed, vaccinated; 600-plus pounds. David Sharpton Commerce 706-367-0876
120 15- to 20-month-old Hereford and F1 Braford bulls. Jonny Harris Odum 912-586-6585
20 fancy spring-bred Angus heifers, bred by low birth weight Yon bulls; years of feedlot, carcass data;$2,500 each. Tom Davis Marietta 770-3547393

Limousin bull; 6 years old, black, polled, perfect in every way. Lewis Lairsey, jr Waycross 912-285-5149
Nice set of young, gentle bred cows; six blacks, three RWF, one Red Angus, $17,500. William Reynolds Macon 478-550-0629
Performance-tested black full-blood Simmental, SimAngus bulls, cow-calf pairs, heifers; AI, embryo bred, easy calving, high milk, satisfaction guaranteed. Milton Martin Jr. Clarkesville 770-519-0008
Piney Woods cattle; three bred heifers and one young bull; contact for details. Brendan Prendergast Americus brendan@koinoniafarm.org 229-

770-548-1667
Registered Charolais bulls, 20 to pick from, low birth weight, high weaning weight. Kirk Little Lyons 912-3263512
Registered Charolais bulls, breeding age, semen-tested, cow-ready. Curtis Kicliter Marshallville 478-967-2940
Registered Charolais bulls, purebred Brangus bulls, breeding age, gentle, good selection. Adam Marsh Statesboro 912-536-1430
Registered Charolais, three threein-one pairs, with great EPDs, .asking $13,500 for all; can deliver also. J.R. Burns Woodbine 478-320-2222
Registered Hereford bull, 3 years old,

$175; males, $125. Shannon Martin Bishop 706-424-1889
Goats And Sheep
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
10 billy goats, 5 and 6 months old from closed herd; Kiko and Briar cross; $100 each. Gene Lovett Tennille gene@lovettspeedshop.com 478-552-7810 478-232-8554
100 percent Boer bucks, USBGA registered; excellent bloodlines, includingTarzanT66, Warlord, Hudson's Shadow; ready for breeding. Tim Bragg Conyers 404-375-3401

Katahdin lambs for sale: two small ewes, six rams, born spring 2014; see Bullfrog Hollow Farm on Facebook. Teresa Coggins Ranger 770-595-5229
Katahdin sheep, ewe and ram lambs, 60 to 70 pounds; $90 to $100. Charles Mooney Midville 478-589-7645
Katahdin-Dorper lambs for sale; 80 to 110 pounds; $150 to $175; rams and ewes. Kenneth Arrendale Hull 706-788-2674 706-255-1215
Milk sheep ewes for sale now; call or email for details on availability. Leslie Bone Eastanollee bonefamilyfarm@ hotmail.com 706-779-5489

Balancer bull, 1,200 to 1,400 938-0306

have papers, $2,250; excellent quality.

pounds. James Anderson Canon Purebred Red Angus bulls; ranging Curtis Doyle Rome 706-346-7142

706-244-1531

from 9 months to 4 years, moderate Registered Hereford heifer, 10

Belted Galloway bull; registered, ex- frame, good breeding stock. Larry months old, wormed, shots. Morris

cellent markings and proven breeder, Daniel LaGrange 706-882-7423

Akin Carnesville 770-789-3285 706-

13 years old; $1,200. Gene Acree Lu- Registered AI Black Angus, 1- to 384-3638

thersville 770-927-9059

2-year-old bulls, cows, fall and spring Registered Limousin bull, homozy-

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

Black registered polled Beefmaster calvers and year-old replacement gous polled, red, 3 years old, gentle, notice per subscriber per issue. In order to advertise in the Bulletin, you must be

bull; Soulman bloodline, born Aug. 13, heifers. Alvin Mashburn Ringgold proven breeder, $2,000. Bob Yoder a paid subscriber with a current subscription.

2010; $2,250; can send pictures on 423-421-1007

Royston 706-201-6960

request. David Flood Tunnel Hill 706- Registered Angus bull for sale; 33 Registered polled Hereford bulls,

673-6339

months old, gentle, selling to prevent gentle, rugged pasture-raised, easy

Black registered polled Beefmaster inbreeding. Raymond Bramlett Au- calving, good EPDs and bloodlines.

bulls; 16 to 24 months; gentle, semen- burn 770-867-9864

Bobby Brantley Tennille 478-553-

tested, wormed, shots; Soulman, Registered Angus bulls for sale; 17 8598 478-552-9328

Synergy, Sirkitter bloodlines. Vernon months old; New Design 5050. Debi Registered polled Hereford bulls,

Turner Dalton 706-278-7814

Wilkes Jefferson 404-592-7147

good EPDs, ultrasound carcass, info

provided. Larry Lane Carrollton 678-

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.

378-5170

Dairy producers: Enroll today in
the Margin Protection Program!

Registered purebred Shorthorn heifer; September 2013, weighs approximately 900 pounds. Monica Turner Box Springs 229-649-6700 706-3297843

Registered Simbrah heifers and

You could get financial assistance when the

bulls, performance based champion bloodlines; visitors are welcome to

difference between the price of milk and feed

the ranch. Kevin Kent Cleveland kevinwkent@gmail.com 706-344-2355

Phone number:

costs falls below the selected coverage level. Enrollment is open through Nov. 28, 2014. Contact the Georgia Farm Service Agency at

Rugged ranch ready 3-year-old registered Hereford bull, top genetics with heavy carcass qualities. Hunter Grayson Watkinsville 706-206-1824
Seven Dexter cows; six with Angus

Subscriber number:
Please include your name and full address on all correspondence sent to the Bulletin office. The following statement must be signed by the advertiser submit-

706-546-2266 for more information, or visit

calves at side, all bred back; asking ting this notice for publication: $17,500. Kerry Dunaway Roberta

www.fsa.usda.gov/mpptool to determine your farm's level of coverage!

478-957-5374
Two low birth weight registered Angus bulls; 3 years old; tested fertile; $3,500 each. Brett Rowden Bishop

I hereby certify that the above notice meets all the necessary requirements for publication in the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin.

706-224-2723 706-296-9322

PAGE 6

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014

GUEST COLUMN: Meet our fall intern

1. Tell us a little about your

agricultural background.

I was blessed to have a mid-

dle school ag teacher who got me

really excited about agriculture.

He actually helped get me into

raising and showing hogs, and

taught me how much hard work

and dedication goes into grow-

ing crops, raising livestock and

MOHLER

running a farm. I also benefitted

from more than 10 years involvement with the National

FFA Organization, which helped me build a foundation in

the agribusiness world.

2. Why did you want to intern with the Department and the Market Bulletin?
Aside from the fact that it's an amazing opportunity to use all of the skills that I have been developing for the past four years as an agricultural communication student at the University of Georgia, I am super interested in the way that consumers form their opinions about farm commodities and the marketing practices that farms employ. I felt like this internship would give me a real glimpse into some of the practices that Georgia farmers are able to employ.

3. What part of the internship are you most excited about?
The entire experience excites me, but if I had to nail down one thing it's just being in the office and getting to actually write and edit things for the Market Bulletin. I don't have as much newswriting experience as I do magazine

work, but this feels like a great way for me to get some!
4. Many of your extracurricular activities in college revolve around agriculture. Which of these experiences stands out most in your mind and why?
There are two in particular that made the biggest impact on me: my involvement with Sigma Alpha, the professional agricultural sorority, and my job at the UGA Dairy. Through Sigma Alpha I found some of my best friends, and it's wonderful to have a strong support base that feels as strongly about agriculture as I do. Work at the dairy is some of the dirtiest I have ever done, but it's also the most rewarding. Helping take care of baby cows, and even assisting in delivering calves is not something that I would ever have imagined doing, but it really is a labor of love and I know after graduation it's going to break my heart to leave my babies behind.
5. If you could design your last meal using only Georgia-grown commodities, what would you like to eat?
Since it's my last meal I'm going all out! A fresh chicken and blueberry salad with strawberry vinaigrette and fresh produce, all from my beloved south Georgia sounds the best. And since I have the world's biggest sweet tooth, I would end it with ice cream, made from Georgia produced milk of course, and my Granny B's brandied peaches.
Beth Mohler is the fall 2014 intern for the Market Bulletin and the Department communications team. She is an agricultural communications major at UGA with a minor in food and fiber marketing and a leadership in service certificate. Mohler plans to graduate in May 2015.

GUEST COLUMN: Seed germination testing

The seed allowed our ancestors

to have an alternative to hunting for

food. The grain and many of the forage

crops required for animal agriculture

start from the seed. Peanuts, cotton,

corn, soybeans, peaches and pecans

start from seed. Seed is the foundation

for much of production agriculture.

A germination seed test determines

the maximum germination potential, or

HOBBY

viability, of the seed. Why do a germination test?

The germination rate of a particular seed lot is a key

indicator as to how that seed will perform in the field.

Germination rate is expressed as a percentage: a 90 percent

germination rate means 90 out of 100 seeds are likely to

germinate under good growing conditions. This information

is important for calculating optimal seeding rates, as well as

helping to determine whether a particular seed lot has the

potential to produce a good crop, or should be used at all.

How is a germination test done?

All accredited seed testing laboratories in the US use

germination test methods prescribed in the Methods and

Procedures manual published by the Association of Official

Seed Analysts. The testing methods used in a laboratory are

controlled so the tests can be repeated, either within the lab-

oratory or between laboratories. Conditions such as oxygen,

light, moisture and temperature have been standardized for

every crop type to ensure that germination will take place

within a specific period of time. The seeds for planting

(testing) are taken at random, then evenly spaced on a blot-

ter so that they are not in contact with adjacent seeds. At the

Georgia Seed Lab, we ensure that all substrates, containers

and moistening agents are free from phytotoxic properties.

At the end of the test period, seedlings are evaluated and

categorized as follows*:

v Normal: Seedlings that possess essential structures

that are indicative of their ability to produce useful

mature plants under favorable field conditions

v Abnormal: Seedlings that exhibit some form of

growth, but have insufficient plant structures to

maintain a healthy plant, such as missing roots or

shoots v Dormant seeds: Viable seeds (other than hard seeds)
that fail to germinate when given the prescribed or recommended germination conditions. v Hard seeds: Seeds that remain hard at the end of the prescribed test period, because their seed coats are impermeable to water v Dead seeds: Seeds that cannot produce any part of a seedling. An experienced and knowledgeable seed analyst is vital in being able to recognize deficiencies with germination and reporting the results. They can also offer alternative methods and solutions to improve germination results, especially when there have been challenges with harvest conditions for the seed lot in question. Farmers should adhere to the following steps in order to have seed tested at the state seed laboratory: v Send one to two pounds of any large seed, such as soybeans, peanuts or corn, and about one-half to onequarter pound, depending on seed size, of smaller seed. v Include the kind and variety, lot number or other identifying mark, along with your full name, address and telephone number. For greater efficiency in receiving your laboratory report, include your email address. v Mail seed samples in a cardboard box or similar container to protect them. v Allow one to four weeks for testing to be completed, depending on the kind of seed. v Send seed to: Georgia Department of Agriculture Tifton Laboratory Building, PO Box 1507, 3150 Hwy. 41 South, Tifton, GA 31793. Those individuals desiring to advertise agricultural seed for sale through the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin are advised to check the guidelines under the category heading "ag seed for sale" before submitting their advertisements for publication. Scott Hobby is the Department's seed regulatory program director. For questions regarding seed testing, please contact 229-386-3151 or visit the Plant Industry Division website at www.agr.georgia.gov/seed-fertilizer-feed.aspx.

agriCULTURE
Letter from the editor
I'm not sure how many of y'all know this, but every ad that goes into the Market Bulletin is seen by two people on our staff for editing, whether it's a two-row Covington planter or a wanted ad for Egyptian walking onion bulbs. We also double-check to make sure each advertiser is a subscriber, and each subscriber places one ad per issue. Whenever there's a potential problem or an ad does not meet our requirements for advertising, we contact the advertiser and let them know.
In the past year and two months of proofing ads, I've come across a number of things that I figured I should share. I think if one person has questions or confusion, there's someone else who could benefit from hearing the solutions:
* Questions about advertising? Page two of every issue (except for the calendar edition, in which case I believe these come out on page three) has most of the answers! Flip the page back for me and take a peek at the top lefthand corner for advertiser guidelines. This is where you'll find general guidelines for all ads, plus information on how to submit ads and where to send them in. You can also find specific category guidelines periodically published in the print edition, but always on our website at www.thegamarketbulletin. com. You can call our office Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., if you feel neither of these resources answers your question.
* Absolute no-nos: Vehicles, ATVs, pet breeds like dogs and cats, free animals and general livestock (i.e. "horses for sale" versus "Two geldings and one Percheron mare for sale") just don't fly in the Market Bulletin. And if there's not a primary farm use for what you're selling, we're going to call you, find out how it's used on your farm and make sure that is clarified in the ad.
Let me back up and talk about vehicles and ATVs. I have been on tons of farms where four-wheelers are used, and yep, everyone's got a favorite farm truck. But we don't have the manpower to make sure that all vehicles and ATVs are used only for the farm. Sure, you can use them on your farm, but I happen to know a great number of boys and girls that use them to haul people to and from fraternity houses on Saturday nights in Athens instead of hauling hay.
The same goes for four-wheelers and other such vehicles. There just is no feasible way to prove these items have primary on-farm use, so we do not allow them to be advertised. Plus, unlike many of the things sold through the Market Bulletin, there is a plethora of other outlets for these vehicles to be advertised in local newspapers, Iwanta classifieds and online.
We don't get so many dog and cat ads lately, but we do contact a fair few folks who send in ads for free or general livestock. These are no-nos because of state regulations around the sale of animals.
* Top 10 words that come up under spell-checker: Allis Chalmers, Troy-Bilt, Wood-Mizer, TimberKing, Bush Hog, Gelbvieh, SimAngus, Charolais, Boer and EPDs (no apostrophe). Runners-up include semen-tested (not seamen, although I do chuckle at the thought of some poor Navy officer doing a breeding soundness exam), wether and gilt.
* One last thing ... One ad per subscriber per issue. It comes down to space. If Vince Dooley himself tried to sell cattle, pigs and irises under three different ad categories using three different phone numbers, even a Dawgloving fan such as myself would have to put on the defensive. As much as it might make me happy to call Steve Spurrier and tell him we can't run his tractor ad because Dooley had three ads running and we are out of room ... as a professional, I must abide by the rules set in place and make the Market Bulletin classifieds a fair playing field for all.
All that said, a huge thanks from myself and our fabulous staff, Merlissa Smith and Gerrie Fort, to our nearly 41,000 subscribers for supporting the Market Bulletin through reading, buying and selling. Without you, this "little paper" (as some callers like to refer to it) would be plumb broke, and people would resort to selling horses on the side of the road.
With their Coggins attached, of course. 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 Association.
Correction
On page 16 of the Sept. 3, 2014, issue, the contact number for Bagwell Insurance Group was left out of the "inside this issue" box due to an editing error. The number is 770-534-1574. The staff of the Market Bulletin regrets this error.

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
Beth Mohler, fall intern

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 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 ad-
dress label on page 1. Postmaster: Send address changes to 19 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, Atlanta, 30334.

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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

PAGE 7

Ag officials announce efforts to create Georgia pollinator stewardship program

Joe Quick, a master beekeeper and entomology researcher for the University of Georgia, checks on his honeybee hives set up at the UGA-Griffin Campus. These hives will help pollinate the blueberry research plots visible in the background. Photo by Dallas Duncan

By Dallas Duncan
Honeybees are major players in Georgia agriculture but reports of falling hive numbers continue to buzz into the media.
Derrick Lastinger, structural pest control program director for the Department, said officials recently began engaging stakeholders to create a Georgia pollinator protection management plan to address these issues.
"A lot of insecticides will kill bees," Lastinger said. "That's one thing that we're working on. [The Environmental Protection Agency] has put new restrictions on pesticides to protect pollinators. At the national level, we've worked with EPA on making those restrictions workable, so the industry can apply pesticides when they need to, but understand the restrictions because they don't want to kill bees."
Another topic of discussion is colony collapse disorder. With colony collapse, there are no dead or diseased bodies the colony has "simply absconded," said Mike Evans, plant protection program director for the Department.
The theories regarding colony collapse are endless: cell phone towers, verroa mites, alien

abduction and pesticide use are the most wellknown, said Joe Quick, a master beekeeper and research professional with the University of Georgia's Entomology Department in Griffin, Ga.
"What you usually find with colony collapse disorder, most of the times you'll still find a queen in the hive, a lot of times you'll find emerging babies, but the majority of your workforce just isn't there anymore," Quick said. "It's not like a pesticide kill where you find lots of dead bees. It's like they flew off to go to work and never came back."
There's a big difference between an acute kill and colony collapse, said Tommy Gray, Plant Industry Division director for the Department.
He said the Department is looking at what other states are doing to increase communication between beekeepers, agriculture officials and pesticide applicators to minimize pesticides' potential effects on Georgia honeybees. One idea is to put GPS locators on hives, so pesticide applicators can view hive locations on an interactive online map.
"One of the big things is still a question mark: is the insecticide a problem?" Quick said. "It may or may not, because there's no

definitive answer, no smoking gun to what's causing colony collapse disorder."
Neonicotinoid insecticides raise red flags as potential causes for colony collapse. These are systemic treatments, meaning the chemical is poured into the soil or sprayed, picked up by the plant's roots and stays in the plant longer, Quick said.
"There are safe manners to use it, such as spraying late in the evening or early in the morning," he said. "You don't want to spray in the middle of the day when your pollinators are out there on flowers."
Gray said he already sees improvement on combined efforts inspectors are better able to provide beekeepers information on what may have happened to their hive and what they can do differently in the future.
"One of the major recommendations that anyone's going to give is to only use products according to label directions only use products labeled for bees and only use them when labeled," Evans said. "And try to do things to strengthen the colony it may be supplementing food during the winter or leaving honey for them to eat. A lot of it is bee management when we get back to any type of pest application."

MUSCADINES: Native Southern grape vines easy to cultivate, maintain

From Page 1

cadines are scuppernongs, which Louis Newsome said is akin to brand awareness.
"When I was a kid, all refrigerators were Frigidaires. It didn't matter what brand it was, we called it a Frigidaire because they were so much out in front of the others," he said. "Scuppernongs were the first bronze, or light-skinned ones. It was the only one for so long that everyone started calling the bronze ones scuppernongs."
He said the couple does everything they

can to advertise and market their farm in the Augusta, Ga., area, even purchasing a special scuppernong sign. He said different customers are drawn to different advertising methods and products.
"For muscadines, print media works better, at least that's been our experience," Louis Newsome said. "But you gotta do it all. You gotta make it where they want to go tell somebody else, too. And Facebook don't even open up without a Facebook

page." Janice Newsome said the social media re-
sponse to Blue House Farm was tremendous. "It was amazing. And they shared with each other they would go and tell other people about it, and that was really good," she said.
Lane said the best way for farmers to market muscadines to people who don't know about them is to take the fruit to local, independent grocery stores and share what they grow. Boettger, who'd never tried a

muscadine before starting her job, said the grapes can be marketed as a superfood. She said the nutritional benefits of muscadines, which include antioxidants and polyphenols, will help it grow in popularity.
"Our season is so short, but they're very popular for the two months they're in season," Boettger said. "We're just very excited to see each year how more and more people are interested in muscadines. It's a very exciting time to be in the muscadine industry."

ARTY'S GARDEN: Does anyone know

the elusive cabbage pea?

NUMEROUS types of Southern peas are grown in Georgia. Shown here are the cream peas from Calhoun Produce in Ashburn, Ga. However, no one seems to be able to locate the Southern pea known as the "cabbage pea."
Is anyone familiar with "cabbage peas?" I have had two correspondents looking for them: A man from north Florida: "My grandparents used to purchase them at feed and seed stores in south Georgia. They were plentiful in the '40s, '50s and '60s, but now I cannot find them. People remember them, but no one knows where to get any. They are a type of field pea, Southern pea that is very tasty, green with a darker green eye and small like a Lady pea. The plants grew about waist high. Can you help me?" A woman from Macon: "I grew up shelling and eating this pea in middle Georgia. It was my favorite of all the peas we preserved each year!" (She mentioned that she had not seen the pea since the early '70s and has looked for them from Macon to Americus.) "My mother is 72 now, and it would be the best surprise that I can possibly think of for her! Not to mention, my daughter, who has only heard about it and how it just vanished on us, would finally see what we've raved and whined about all these

years!" I was unfamiliar with cabbage peas but did some
checking. I found other people online were also looking, but not having any luck.
I could not find any ads for them or articles about them in old issues of the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin. I could not find them listed in any seed catalog, including ones that specialize in old vegetable varieties. I contacted companies that offer a lot of old and "heirloom" vegetable varieties, but couldn't find them. A colleague checked the Seed Savers Exchange's yearbook archives for the last 30 years and could not find them there, at least under that name there is a chance that "cabbage pea" is a Georgia name for a variety more widely known by another name. Cabbage peas also were not on the list of US Department of Agriculture Southern pea introductions, but that could be because they probably are an old variety that was not developed by a university or commercial breeder.
So, I struck out and am now appealing to Market Bulletin readers. If anyone knows a source for cabbage peas or more information about them, please contact me at the address or email address listed below. Other gardeners want to grow and preserve this variety, and perhaps some seed companies and farmers will want to as well.
If you can help Arty in his search for cabbage peas, write to him at: Arty Schronce, Georgia Department of Agriculture, 19 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, Room 128, Atlanta, GA 30334. You can also reach him at arty.schronce@agr.georgia.gov. Arty Schronce is the Department's resident gardening expert. He is a lifelong gardener and a horticulture graduate of North Carolina State University who encourages everyone to learn more about Georgia's crops and plants.

FEATURE RECIPE:
Muscadine-glazed chicken

Editor's Note: Engulf your senses in this restaurant-quality dish, made with none other than Georgia's native grape! We served this dish with a side of apple sausage stuffing and fresh-sliced apples and muscadines. You can see this dish prepared right in front of your eyes at the Georgia Grown Building during the Georgia National Fair next month!

Ingredients: 4 boneless chicken breasts 2 cups muscadines 1 cup water

1 teaspoon orange zest 3 tablespoons fresh orange juice 2 tablespoons olive oil Salt and pepper, to taste

Instructions: 1. Wash muscadines. Combine them with water in a small pot and bring to a boil.
Cover, then lower to a simmer. 2. Cook muscadines until skins burst and the sauce begins to thicken, about 15
minutes. Strain the seeds and skins out, then return sauce to pot. 3. Add orange juice and zest and bring sauce back to a boil. Lower again to a
simmer, then cook until it's thick enough to coat a spoon, about 10 minutes. 4. Meanwhile, season chicken breasts with salt and pepper. Heat olive oil in a
skill over medium-high heat. 5. Sear chicken breasts on both sides, then cook until chicken reaches an inter-
nal temperature of 170 degrees. This should take 10 to 15 minutes depending on the size of breasts. 6. Slice cooked chicken and serve with sauce drizzled over the top.

PAGE 8

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014

Myotonic (fainting) goats, registered 2 Tennessee walking horses,14 years Two Priefert stalls for sale; 12x12 Eight New Hampshire reds, 10 weeks White racing homing pigeons, real

high percentage females, bucks; top old, black (gelded); 13-year-old bay stalls, easy to take down and put old; $100. Nelson Hollingsworth Mo- healthy, beautiful birds, also common

of the line; www.lookoutmountain- mare, very gentle and rides, $3,500. back together; $850 per stall. Heather lena 404-805-4156

pigeons, must see. Bobby J Moxley

growers.com. Harriet O'Rear Cloud- Bill Nappier Dallas 770-377-0545

Montgomery Woodstock 678-591- Five game hens, $10 each; also Soperton 478-697-6799 478-299-

land harriet@ironagecrafters.com AQHA horses for sale: sorrel mare, 4329

roosters. Annette Combs Hephzibah 0671

706-398-0858

$1,200 OBO; Palomino gelding, $750 Two-horse bumper pull trailer with 706-592-1030

Nigerian Dwarfs; doe, bucks, weth- OBO; moving and must sell. Rachel tack room, 16-foot tandem axle, good Four Bantam hens; one rooster, one

ers; disbudded, UTD shots, de- Holbrook Ellijay 404-805-9027

condition, red with white, $1,950. white Leghorn hen; $8 each; take all,

Poultry/Fowl Requiring Permit/License

wormed, unrigistered, CAE-free, AQHA sorrel gelding, 19 and one- Gene Austin Newington 912-857- $40. Vera Crane Dahlonega 706-265- If you have questions regarding this

healthy, blue eyes, lots of color. Ivy tenth W/P, hunt seat showmanship; 6410

3091

category, call 404-656-3722.

Hailey Forsyth ichailey@bellsouth.net flying lead changes; show, lesson Two-horse bumper-pull, slant load, Four large brown roosters for sale; Advertisers selling wood ducks

478-737-6303
Nubian buck, ADGA registered, young, excellent bloodlines for breeding, gentle; $225; disbudded, see herd. Shuford Jones Winder 678-8734350
Nubian, Nubian-Boer cross goats;

horse; $2,000. Marcia Christopher Gainesville 770-483-1117
Brown gelded donkey for sale; has not been handled, but will keep predators out of pasture; $100. Chad Shrouder Douglas 912-384-2604
Donkeys: small standard rose dun,

trailer, no ramp. Mary Herriott Carrollton 678-642-1781
Two-horse straight-load Bee Gooseneck trailer, large dressing room, excellent condition; two M&W trooper saddles. Roderick E McDonald Winder 678-425-2185

$15 each, or two or more, $10 each. Myron Singley Covington 770-6052113 770-787-0290
Four roosters, $5 each; one white Leghorn; one Easter egg colored rooster; two mixed roosters. Helen Smith White 770-548-6258

must submit a USDA permit with their ad. Ads for wood ducks that do not have this permit will not be published. For information on these permits, call the US Fish & Wildlife Service Atlanta office at 404-679-7319. Advertisers selling quail must be accompanied by a copy of the com-

does 9 months to 2 years; $125 to yearling jack and 2-year-old jenny; Two-horse trailer with tack room, Game fowl Sid Taylor, hatch, grays, mercial quail breeder's license. Ads

$150; spots, lots of color. Jason Cox halter broken, handled daily. Deb good tires and floor; $1,500. Alton crosses; roosters and some hens, call for quail that do not have this license

Social Circle 404-925-5412

Grosenbaugh Hull designerdonkeys@ Rowan Alapaha 229-532-5873 229- for prices and appointment. Richard will not be published. For information

Purebred Kiko buck with papers, live.com 706-613-5918

686-0821

Simmons Clermont 770-503-5169 on these licenses, call the Georgia

$400. Chris Nichols Hogansville 706- Miniature AMHR black Appaloosa Two-horse trailer; four-wheel high Gamefowl; W T green grays, lacy Department of Natural Resources

594-1910

mare; frosted blanket, gentle, pretty, roof surge; control brakes. Kenneth Roundheads, Clarets, BF hatch and Wildlife Resources Division at 770-

Pygmy goats; 2 months old; one nanny, $85; two billies, $70; very friendly, not for slaughter. Chuck Borden Griffin 770-630-2035
Pygmy nannies, billies and babies; for fun and enjoyment, not for meat; $65 to $150. Sandra Smith Covington 770-786-6227 770-337-0160
Ram lambs; Katahdin, Dorper, St. Croix mix; several colors; born December through March; $100. Amy Burnette Woodstock rigsdchamp@ aol.com 678-596-5922
Registered Katahdins: two flashy red ram lambs and few young adult ewes; RR, fully shedding. Cathy Brown Winterville cathybro@uga.edu 706-3388052
Three Kiko bucks, 100 percent New Zealand, 1 year old in November, unregistered; $300. Joe Wilson McDonough 678-858-6538
Three young bucks, Pygmy mixed; $35 each. Faye Hull Locust Grove 678-432-3840 762-245-9000
Two black head Boer bucks, unregistered, 7 months old, $250 each; no Sunday calls. A. D Bryan Blairsville 706-745-2223
Two purebred male Angora goats, ready for breeding; $75 each. Roger D Payton Elberton 706-498-1126
White Nubian buck with apricot markings, excellent confirmation, registered, disbudded, tattooed, CD&T done; ready to go now; $250. Joan Kiser Commerce 706-247-0976
White Pygmy billy for sale, $50; lo-
ALTERNATIVE cated in Paulding County, close to LIVESTOCK White Oak Park. Don Voyles Dallas
770-445-6024

33 inches, 5 years old; delivery, $350. J Wilkes Athens 706-207-9366
Miniature donkeys: guard or breeding, donkey jack, $200; nice colors; jennies, $300 and up; small, registered donkeys. Bill Wray Perry 478825-1297
Palomino gelding, beautiful, 15.2 heads, 7 yrs. old, green broke, but rides. Tony Green Fairmount 770605-0888
Equine Miscellaneous
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
16-foot four-horse bumper-pull trailer, good floor and tires, $1,400; round bale horse hay ring, $175 cash only. Wyndell Carroll Rome 770-823-5737
1992 straight load; two-stall bumperpull horse trailer; $500. Lacey Prue Forsyth 478-960-7642
1997 Delta four-horse Gooseneck stock trailer; new tires, mats on floor, middle gate; $1,800 OBO. DeAnna Lynn Cumming alphastables@msn. com 678-640-8671
2002 Horton 28-foot three-horse slant; DR six-foot short wall, air unit and new tires; can text pictures; $12,000. Christina Harrison Jackson 770-686-4757
2012 Bee three-horse trailer, split load Gooseneck, tack room in front with camper door, like-new condition, A/C. Jeff Heard Newton 229-3444441 229-734-5047
21 pallets of equine pine at $225 per pallet; 50 bags per pallet. Betty Teems Canton 770-714-2672 770-479-5919
Four-horse electric walker, good condition, $1,500. Diann Smith Ced-

Parker Gainesville 770-653-3020
Two-horse, extra tall trailer, solid floor, good condition, $700. Melrose Jones Portal 912-865-2833
Two-seater buggy for sale, excellent condition; $1,800. Larry Lanier Statesboro 912-865-5136
Vis--vis limousine carriage; team or single, white with maroon seats, has lights, ready for a ride, $4,000. Tom Clark Winston naradog@att.net 770-596-0273
Poultry/Fowl For Sale
If you have any questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Mallard ducks must be at least three generations removed from the wild before they can be advertised. Advertisers must include this information in ads, or they will not be published.
2013 Temminck's tragopan male, $125; breeder Spalding peahen, $75; Spalding peachicks, $25. Kevin Daft Decatur 404-325-9969
30 Barred Rock hens; 2 years old, still laying, $8 each. Matthew DeMatteo Wadley 706-410-4570
Americana, Buffs, Cochins, Wyandottes, show quality; Old English, Columbian, splash, quail, blue Quail, blue Brassy Back, B.B.Red, others. Randy Shoemake Carrollton 678-796-9222
Baby chicks from old fashioned breeds, straight-run; great for pasture, free-range, eggs, meat; NPIP certified, can ship. Bob Berry Ray City bobsbiddies@live.com 229-455-6437 229-375-1991
Baby chicks of various ages; American Dominique, buff Orpington,

green leg hatch. Jimmy Young Metter 912-682-2917
Guinea keets hatched Aug. 10, ready for a new home, $4 each; located north of 85, exit 166. Tracy Squires Martin 706-384-2576
Guineas for sale, $10; roosters, $7. Ed Long Harrison 478-240-0253
Guineas for sale, 3 months old; $10. Frances Guest Carlton 706-797-3447
Guineas, six adult chocolates, $20 each; two keets, $10 each; pick up only. Leigh Hamilton Dahlonega 706531-6211
Hatching eggs: Welsummers, Delawares, lavender Ameraucanas, lavender Orpingtons, Silkies (many colors), French black copper, blue copper, splash Marans. Nancy Garry Bowdon garryfarm@gmail.com 770-733-9687
Mallard ducks, three generations from wild, $10 each. Eugene Johns Waycross 912-283-3332
Mixed white geese for sale: four females, one male, all 4 years old; all for $25. Carl Hamilton Townsend bogrunch@darientel.net 912-4376741
More than 100 white doves. Lee Adams Macon 478-228-1782
Musocovy ducks for sale, $7 - $12. Roger Wilson Franklin 770-854-8028
Nine guineas; laying eggs for two month; $11 each. Pete Conner Folkston 912-286-7081
Old Englisih Game Bantams: blue splash, lemon blue, brown red, spangle, wheaton, show quality, healthy birds. Bobbi Maddox Monticello 770616-6034
Pullets, several breeds, hatched

918-6401. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the permit/license needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the permit/license can be attached using the attachments button.
Bobwhite quail, flight conditioned; now available for the 2014 and 2015 season, call for pricing. Rembert Hancock Fairmount 404-376-0550 706337-5711
Bobwhite, Coturnix quail eggs; $70 for 100, $140 for 500, $270 for 1,000. Willie Strickland Pooler stricklandgamebird.com 912-748-5769
Jumbo Wisconsin Bobwhite quail eggs; $58 for 100; $220 for 600; $330 for 1,000, year-round. Raymond Meadows Wadley mead5345@wadleyquailfarm.com 478-252-5345
Poultry/Fowl Wanted
Americauna rooster. David Dye Rockmart daviddye110@live.com 470-336-9849
Birmingham Roller pigeons, in south Georgia; live in Ware County, 18 miles west of Waycross. Ronald O'Berry Millwood 912-670-5557
Female emu, 4-plus years old; call 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. EST. Louie Estep Newnan 770-301-4449
Fertile chicken eggs for hatching. Barbara Dudar Atlanta bdudar39@ gmail.com 678-983-1886
White Rock Bantam hen. Jake Echols Toccoa 770-258-8338
If you have questions regarding this

Equine For Sale

artown 770-748-6801 770-988-7781 Rhode Island Red; pure breeds; rea- Aug. 4, 2014; Delewares, Amerauca- category, call 404-656-3722.

If you have questions regarding ads in Horse, mule harness with brass tip sonable prices. Monte Poitevint Lake- nas, Hampshires, Buffs, Australorps Alternative Livestock Requiring Per-

this category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers in the Equine for Sale or Equine at Stud categories must submit current negative Coggins tests for each equine advertised. This includes horses, ponies, donkeys, etc. Buyers are urged to request verification of a negative Coggins from the advertiser before purchasing any equine. Negative Coggins reports are valid for 12 months from the date the blood sample is drawn. Falsification or altering of any Coggins results can result in fines and suspension of advertising privileges. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the Coggins needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the Coggins can be attached using the attachments button. Generalized ads, such as "many horses," "variety to choose from," etc., will not be published. Equine at Stud ads will also require a current stable license in order to be published.

hamess, all leather, $175 OBO. LeGay Saul Fayetteville 470-765-2331
New Henry Miller trail saddle 2014, 16-inch seat, semi-quarter horse tree, 6.5-inch gullet, flank rigging, EZ-Ride stirrups, comfortable. Annette Bowman Senoia annette-LD@earthlink. net 770-318-8035 770-318-8035
Pioneer forecart, use with standard or draft; fenders, shafts, wooden tongue, padded seat, single seat, mechanical brake. Robert Powell Cordele 229-273-0307
Pleasure, combined driving road horse cart, 44-inch wheels, shaft length 69 inches, width 26 inches; used with 14-hand Quarter Horse; $1,600. Dawn Nossal Newnan danossal@aol.com 678-908-9780
Riding instructor, more than 30 years experience; available to teach locally part-time, Monday through Friday, afternoons; resume. Kelly Tillman Ball Ground ktallaround@aol.com 770-

land 229-482-3854
Baby chicks: Rhode Island Reds, silver Wyandottes, buff Brahmas, Red Stars, Black Giants, 2 months old; $2 each. Gary Ridley LaFayette 706638-1911
Beautiful lavender Orpington (Hinkjc line) and FBCM chicks, available now. Robert Qualls Mineral Bluff evequalls@gmail.com 706-374-0996
Blue Ameraucana hens; two 18 months, laying blue eggs; $12.50 each. Jim Phelps Statesboro 912764-3488 912-601-0032
Breeding stock show quality, Australorp roosters, five generations, breeding purity; $20 ech or trade on honey. Bedford Woodard Dalton 706581-1563
Buff Orpington chickens, Ameraucanas, beautiful colors, 12 weeks old; $8 each. William Pardue Murrayville 706-502-0437

and others; $9 each. Carlos Leach Stockbridge carlos.g.leach@gmail. com 770-910-6989
Rhode Island Red pullets, also New Hampshire Red pullets; healthy, wellgrown birds. Brian Sturdy Dahlonega 706-865-9201
Rhode Island Red, Silver Laced, Comets, Speckled Sussex, BlueFaced Red Wyandottes, 6 months old, $10 & $12.50. George Taylor Waycross 912-285-8264
Serama chickens for sale; ask for Earl. William Boyette Claxton 912739-0638 912-739-0638
Two buff Orpington roosters, 4 months old; $5 each. Christi Baldwin Stockbridge Christibaldwin141@yahoo.com 678-898-4685
White and mix color Homer pigeons; $7 each. Ben Cunningham Fitzgerald bbcunning@hughes.net 229-8317190

Alternative Livestock Requiring
Permit/License
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers selling fallow deer, axis deer, sika deer, elk, red deer, reindeer and caribou must submit a current deer farming license with their ads. Ads submitted without this license will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the license needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the license can be attached using the attachments button. For information about the deer farming license, contact the Georgia Department of Agriculture at 404656-3667. For information on other hoofed stock, excluding llamas and buffalo, contact the Georgia Department of Natural Resources at 770-761-3044.

10-year-old and 13-year-old black 608-7093

Cuckoo Marans, Dixie queens,

Percheron, Morgan mares; 15 hands, Still looking for "Doc," old swayback roosters; $7 each. Thomas Bentley

traffic safe, broke to wagon; $3,000. barrel horse sold to a girl in Gaines- Monroe 770-480-0499 770-266-6942

Kenneth Hollimon Dearing 706-214- ville. Roger Keebaugh Gainesville Cuckoo Marans; lay brownest eggs

0773

irineroger@yahoo.com 770-869-7941 of all chickens, also one rooster, 3

12-year-old sorrel mare; flaxen Three beautiful horse-drawn wag- months old, $18 each; pretty birds.

mane and tail, 51 inches, rides and ons: two-horse Bagwell, $4,000; re- Robert L Burt Atlanta 404-284-4249

drives, $500. Carey Knowles Mcrae built Trailride, $4,000;Thornhill under- Doves: solid white and unsexed,

careymknowles@hotmail.com 229- cut, $3,500; will provide photos. Aron mixed Old English Bantam roost-

868-8382

Hendrix Cumming 678-283-7591

ers and Button quail. Robert Sybers

15-year-old mare, half g.h. half Bel- Three roping saddles, all excellent Stone Mountain 770-879-9087

gian, gentle, green, broke to ride and condition with pads; one Dakota, Eight generations from wild, Mal-

drive; $600 OBO. Danny Stephens $400; two no-brand, $250 OBO. Ron lard ducks. Boyce Hembree Acworth

Odum 912-294-1586

Smith Hampton 770-227-0504

770-529-1285

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

PAGE 9

LIVESTOCK WANTED Netherland Dwarf and Holland Lop 2014 bermuda, fescue mix; 4x5 2014 russell bermuda, horse qual- Shelled yellow feed corn and wheat rabbits; several colors, great breeds round bales, high quality, fertilized, ity, fertilized; rain- and weed-free, for sale by the barrel. Wayne Mont-

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

for kids; will send pictures. Chris Ritts Senoia chrisritts@hotmail.com 404-

sprayed, rain-free; $40 to $45, delivery available. Eddie Hilburn Daniels-

100 square bales, in barn; $5.50. David Jackson Pendergrass 706-654-

gomery Reynolds 478-847-2356 Top quality 2014 tested alicia, russell

Adult Saanen buck in good health; 386-9697

ville 706-988-3373

6757

hay; round, square bales; sheltered;

call, text or email. Lester Davis Pear- Purebred Silver Foxes, $25; New 2014 coastal bermuda hay, 4x5 net- 2014, Tift 85 with some alicia mix, delivery available; free storage until son beckydavis1996@gmail.com Zealand Whites and Californian-New wrapped, stored in barn, horse quality. 4x5 net-wrapped; well-fertilized, March 2015. Heath Pittman Vidalia

912-422-5646

Zealand mix, $15; 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fred Sackett Butler 478-952-5399 no rain; $50 per roll. Walker Blitch 912-293-2535 912-537-9721

Ewe lambs or mature ewes; Suffolk daily. Lenny Stevenson Atlanta 404- 2014 coastal bermuda hay, horse Statesboro wblitch5@gmail.com Feed, Hay and Grain Wanted

FEED, HAY AND GRAIN or Hampshire, or Hampshire Suffolk 867-9525
cross. Darrel Kimball Jackson 678752-0824 770-752-0824

quality, $5 per bale at barn; delivery available. Glenn Brinson Tarrytown 912-288-5960

912-687-6960
4x4 bales fescue, bermuda mixed grass; good hay mulch or feed; $15.

Want to roll peanut hay; hire or share. Tom Stanaland Doerun 229-392-0258

Jersey cow in milk or about to calve.
AG SEED FOR SALE Anna Vaagen Rockmart 404-610-
1540
Male llama, to breed two females; call or email. Jan Sweeney Dacula 770-682-9176
Miniature donkey, breeding jack. Joseph Adams Jasper 678-386-3412
Older donkey; will have good home. Patti Moffett Monroe 678-863-3837
Well-trained riding horse for a youth with little experience; very reasonably priced. Michelle Copeland Clarkesville 706-499-8611
LIVESTOCK HANDLING If you have questions regarding ads in
this category, call 404-656-3722.
$175; Challenge air blower, dryer for llamas, alpacas and other animals. Sally Gwilt Conyers treffynnonfarm@ comcast.net 404-966-0314
14-foot bumper-pull livestock trailer, center gate, good floor and tires; $1,500. B Hall Pavo 229-859-2764
16-foot bumper-pull stock trailer; middle gate, escape door; old, but ready to use; $950 OBO. Larry Thompson Eastman 478-290-7477
16-foot Neckover livestock trailer; 6,000-pound axles, eight-lug wheels; $3,200; leave message. Mark Boyles Dawson 229-995-4694
16-foot Ponderosa Gooseneck stock trailer, cut gate and escape door; great condition; $2,200. Lisa Holman Mauk h_hfarms@yahoo.com 404-217-3640 404-313-3611
20-foot Gooseneck cattle trailer; tandem 7,000 axles, great paint, tires, heavy duty, cut gate, no rust; $4,500. Mark Woodham Madison 404-3798037
Catch pen, head gate, crowding gate, etc. Randall Waits Rockmart 678-332-7923
Extra large Powder River squeeze chute, palpation cage and trailer; bought new, asking $4,500. Raleigh Gibbs Abbeville 229-365-7113 229365-3538
Goat feeders, $25; hay racks, $35; gates, 33 inches, 12 feet, 16 feet, $20 to $50; feed buckets, $2. Beth Saye Watkinsville csaye@att.net 706-5408447
Llama chute on platform, locking wheels, straps; $500; leave message. Mary Nix Molena 706-647-9095 678572-2275

If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
All feed, hay and grain ads must include the variety offered for sale. Ads for mulch hay will not be accepted in this category; they will be published in the Fertilizers & Mulches category.
$10 goat hay; 2014 bermuda, square, $5.50, round 4x5, $45; fertilized, rain-free; K/P Farm. Horace Pippin Culloden 770-358-0815 770-5507837
$20 per roll of bermuda, fescue hay; 2014 hay. John Weaver Bowdon 404316-9099
$35; round bales, fescue, 4x5 rolls, commerical, fertilized, used in hay fields. Pat Sutton Clarkesville 706947-3006 706-499-9950
`14 alicia bermuda in barn, horse quality, 4x5 rolls; four or more, $50; close delivery available. Henry Beckworth Gibson 706-598-2106
`14 alicia, horse quality, fertilized, rain-free, barn-kept, square bales, $4.50; ask for Scott. Cheryl Lynch Waynesville 912-266-4755
`14 bermuda hay, barn-stored, 4x5 net-wrapped rolls; $45. Phil Tyre Alma philtyre@juno.com 912-218-1186
`14 bermuda hay, fertilized, rain-free; $5.50 at barn, delivery available. Al Guillebeau Monroe, 770-267-8929
`14 coastal bermuda hay, weedless, fertilized; round bale, $45; square bales, field $5.50, in barn, $6.50. Leonard Kinsley Perry 478714-9900
`14 coastal bermuda, horse quality, fertilized, UGA soil specs, square; 4x5 round bales in barn; delivery, stack available. Olin Trammell Forsyth 478994-6463 478-960-7239
`14 fescue, 800- to 900-pound rolls, fertilized, off ground, covered; $40. Don Schultz Pine Mountain 706-8817382
`14 fescue, bermuda mix; horse quality hay; 4x5 rolls, $40; square bales $5. Ronald Campbell Rockmart 706-936-3294 770-686-9563
2013 bermuda; large square bales, no rain, in barn, horse quality, $4; 2014 bermuda, $4.50 per bale. H. L von Richthofen Watkinsville 706453-9143
2013 fescue, bermuda mix hay; 4x5 round, $40; square bales, $4.50; mulch hay, square bales, $2.75, round, $25. Ricky Anderson Taylorsville 404-402-8470

2014 coastal bermuda hay; $35 per roll; 4x4 bales, fertilized and limed, delivery available. Lowinston Jackson Grantville 770-583-2385
2014 coastal bermuda hay; horse quality, square bales, $4.50 per bale; horse, cow quality rolls, $25 to $45. Curtis Durden Lyons 912-526-3189 912-245-1081
2014 coastal bermuda, horse quality, fertilized, limed, rain-free, 4x5 netwrapped; $50. Grace Brady Hephzibah 706-231-0985
2014 coastal hay, horse quality, limed and fertilized, per soil test, rainfree, 4x5 rolls in barn; $60 each. Willie Tyson Perry 478-987-1278 478-9571039
2014 fescue mixed hay, 4x5 rolls or bales; barn-stored, delivery available. Jimmy Payne Rockmart 404-5578448
2014 fescue mixed, 4x5 round bales, in the barn; $25 per bale. Steve Arnold Nicholson 706-207-4356
2014 fescue mixed; 4x5 round; $25 per roll; located in Madison, Ga. Tom Benkoski Bostwick 706-342-4807
2014 Fescue square bales; horse quality, stored in barn, rain free, fertilized, limed, $4.50 per bale. Al Blackburn Dawsonville 770-401-2862
2014 fescue, bermuda mix, 4x5 rolls, fertilized, sprayed, net-wrapped; horse and cow hay. Glen Whitley Bethlehem 770-867-2718
2014 fescue, bermuda, 4x5 net-wrap hay, fertilized, mixed grasses, hay in barn; $25 per bale. G. F. Bailey Monticello 706-468-8611
2014 fescue, orchardgrass mix; netwrapped in field, tested protein 8.5 percent, RFQ 107.6; $38 per roll. Patrick Halloran Arnoldsville 706-6143009
2014 hay; fescue, fescue, bermuda mix; $25 per roll and up, or trade. Jerry Glancy Griffin 404-433-3568
2014 orchard grass, fescue mix; large 4x5 round bales, rain-free, stored in barn, fertilized; $35. Tammy Wallace Carrollton 678-416-9194 770-253-5418
2014 russell and alicia hay, 4x5 tight net-wrapped rolls, rain- and weedfree, analysis available, barn-stored. William Page Wrightsville 478-8642942
2014 russell bermuda hay, 4x5 bale; $45, delivered. Tommy Rider Waynesboro 706-554-9785

Bill Callahan Senoia 706-538-6930
Alfalfa blend square bales, very nice; $8 per bale. Hardy Edwards Winterville 706-714-9012
Alfalfa hay, $10 per bale. John Faulk Jeffersonville 478-945-3415
Alfalfa hay; square bales and round bales; weed-free and good quality. Dale Hall Calhoun hall9719@bellsouth.net 706-506-0351
Bermuda mix, horse quality, rainfree; square bales, $3.50 each; $4 each for less than 50; 10-bale minimum. W. Abrams Milner 770-2283865
Bermuda, fescue mix hay, 4x5 netwrapped rolls, approximately 800 pounds; delivery available Jack Jenkins Athens 706-286-4438 706-3720287
Bermuda, fescue, horse quality, limed, fertilized, no rain; 4x5 rounds, $55; squares $5.50; quantity discount. Rex Palmer Auburn 770-8679589
Coastal bermuda hay for mulch or low-quality feed; $2.50 per square bale; discount for multiple quantities. John McGill Thomson 706-817-1606
Coastal bermuda hay; (horse quality) $60 per roll, cow hay, $35; 2013 hay, $25; delivery available. Wymann Hartley Kathleen 478-987-5835 478954-0324
Coastal, bahia mix; 800- to 1,000-pound bales, baled with Claas baler, $60 inside, $35 to $45 outside; $25 mulch. Coy Baker Loganville 770-466-4609
Hay bagged by the pound, less than baled prices; delivery up to 50-mile radius. Hollis Morris Jasper 678-7679451
Quality 2014 round rolls of hay; 4x6 with net wrap; call for prices; delivery available. Chad Hendrix Collins 912237-3430
Round bales, orchard, fescue grass, 4x4, rain-free bales; $18 per bale, delivery available. Ron Smith LaFayette 706-537-8841
Russell bermuda hay; horse quality, $6 per bale, $7 delivered; 10-bale minimum. English Pope Fayetteville englishpope@ymail.com 404-2265492 770-774-3590
Russell bermuda; square bales limed, fertilized, sprayed; $6.50; 10 or more, in barn. Larry Morrison Monticello 706-318-2800

If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers must submit a current state laboratory report, fewer than nine months old, for purity, noxious weeds and germination for each seed lot advertised. Ads submitted without this information will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, this report needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the report can be attached using the attachments button. Seed lots must be uniform and cannot exceed 400 50-pound bags. Certain varieties of seed are protected from propagation unless they are grown as a class of certified seed. These include Florida 304, Coker 9152, Coker 9835, 6738 soybean, Haskell, Bennings and others. For questions regarding certified seed, call the Department's Seed Division at 404656-3635.
40-pound bags of oats for sale. Myron Colley Metter fendersautosales@ hotmail.com 706-306-3506
Seed oats, germination 98 percent, purity 99.14, 50-pound bags, $15 per bag. Doug Bailey Dudley 478-2794769
Ag Plants for Sale
17 dwarf Burford holly in three-gallon pots, $12.50 each or $195.50 for all. Michelle Maxwell Lavonia 706-7163544
2014 white multiplying onions, $12 per gallon, $7 postage. Retha Jones Gainesville 770-536-1712
30-plus year old boxwoods; you dig, make offer or free; you refill hole with dirt, located in Royston, Ga. Frank Hendrix Athens frankchendrix@yahoo.com 706-543-6977 706-5436909
Coastal, alicia, russell,Tift 85 and bermuda sprigs; also, custom planting. Mack McGee Glenwood 912568-7379 229-868-0262
Coastal, russell sprigs; also custom planting, statewide. Freeman Montgomery Junction City barbfree@ gmail.com 706-366-1956 706-5755697
Greasy green collard plants for sale; $2.50 per six-pack; limited quantities. Alfred Cox Appling 706541-0402

Ponderosa Gooseneck stock trailer; white, 16x6, cut gate and escape, completely reconditioned; $3,450. Carl Crews Sylvania palerider43@ planters.net 912-857-3131

2014 4x5 fescue, bermuda mix; round bales, sprayed and fertilized, barn-kept, $40; delivery available. Kenny Sargent Rockmart 770-4901227

Market Bulletin Subscription Request Form
I would like to receive a subscription to the print version of the Farmers and

Stock trailer, 16 feet, bumper pull, escape, slide, cut gate; no dents, great condition; $2,500. Steve Stowers Dawsonville 706-974-0576
Triple axle equipment trailer, 6x21, triple axle, pentail hitch; two-foot beaver tail, heavy ramps, needs new floor; $1,150. David Combs Jefferson 706367-4645
Used 12-foot cattle panels; tubular gates, various lengths, 2x6 used lumber, eight-foot fence posts, good shape. Sam Freeman Forsyth 478994-2526
Used cattle headgate, still serviceable; $60. Perry Jennings Cumming res_emptito@yahoo.com 404-824-

2014 alfalfa hay for sale. Doug Towery Ellijay 706-897-4360
2014 bermuda and bahia 4x5 netwrap, in barn, never wet; $35, delivery available. Jim Sibley Woodbury jasibley@earthlink.net 404-434-8081
2014 bermuda hay, 4x5 rolls, wellfertilized, rain-free, delivery available. Herman Kinchen Louisville 706-8312105
2014 bermuda hay, horse quality; $40 per roll, $6 per square bale. Richard Smith Moreland 404-473-7281
2014 bermuda hay; square bales, $6; round $50; horse quality, delivery available. David Harden Lafayette 706-397-8347

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

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Name:

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

Email address:

9067

2014 bermuda, 4x5, net-wrap, fertil-

Phone number:

RABBITS

ized, in barn, horse quality; $50 per Buddy Cloud of Cumming, Ga., planted roll. Chuck Hecht Waverly Hall 706- some Mammoth cantaloupe seeds in

(Please provide a phone number in the event Bulletin staff has a question

If you have questions regarding ads in 577-6590

the hopes they'd grow. Needless to say, about your address or subscription.)

this category, call 404-656-3722.

2014 bermuda, common and he was surprised to harvest a 33-pound

Bunnies for sale, $10; white, gray, coastal; square bales, $5 per bale; cantaloupe that measured 33 inches in

Please make checks payable to `Georgia Department of Agriculture.'

brown black & Siamese; some Lop- round, $35; in barn; fertilized, weed- diameter and 19 inches long! He said the

Send payments to: Georgia Department of Agriculture, PO Box 742510,

eared. Diane Oxford Covington free. Lynn Hall Madison 706-342- meat was very sweet and his family ate

Atlanta, GA 30374-2510.

30014 770-464-2988

9022

off it for more than two weeks.

PAGE 10

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014

Bulletin Calendar

Olive tree, red miniature daylillies; Seeds: mullein pink, touch-me-nots, will swap miniture iris or ajuga for it, or four-o-clocks, money plant, morning will buy yours. Jo Wood Watkinsville glory, hibiscus, devil's trumpet, Sibe-

Sept. 11 21

Arts Festival and Blue

Georgia Farm Bureau District 5 Meeting 770-725-8744

rian iris, $1 teaspoon, SASE, cash.

Gwinnett County Fair Gwinnett County Fairgrounds Lawrenceville, Ga. 770-963-6522
Sept. 16 18

& Gray Barbecue Contest Gordon-Lee Mansion Chickamauga, Ga. 423-488-0861
Egg Fest

Thomaston Civic Center Thomaston, Ga. 478-474-8411
Sept. 26 Bred Heifer and Bull Sale

Potato onions and some stiff neck G. Robertson 2966 Cardinal Lake Cir.

garlic. Clauden Jones Whigham 229- Duluth 30096

254-7439

Shrub and tree planting; contarioes,

95; three-gallon and larger, $50; many
FLOWERS FOR SALE daylilies. J. Wilson Tyrone 770-486-

Georgia Peanut Tour South Georgia peanut farms www.gapeanuts.com
Sept. 17 20 Southeastern Charity Horse Show Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 770-475-1867
Sept. 18 Georgia Milk Producers District Meeting Western Sizzlin' Dalton, Ga. 706-310-0020
Georgia Farm Bureau District 10 Meeting Jamestown Baptist Church Waycross, Ga. 478-474-8411
Cocktails in the Garden Atlanta Botanical Garden Atlanta, Ga. 404-876-5859
Sept. 18 21 Horseman's Quarter Horse Association Fall Circuit Horse Show Georgia National Fairgrounds & Agricenter Perry, Ga. 770-294-1099
Sept. 18 27 Coweta County Fair Coweta County Fairgrounds Newnan, Ga. 770-254-2620

Downtown Sumner, Ga. 229-776-7384
Statham Sunflower Festival Downtown Statham, Ga. 770-725-5323
23rd Annual Taste of Carrollton Adamson Square Carrollton, Ga. 770-832-6901
Sept. 20 21 Apple Pickin' Jubilee Hillcrest Orchards Ellijay, Ga. 706-204-2295
Buggy Days Downtown Barnesville, Ga. 770-358-5884
Celebrate Autumn Craft Show North Georgia Technical College Blairsville, Ga. 706-896-0932
Helen Arts & Craft Show Unicoi Hill Park Helen, Ga. 706-878-2181
Sept. 22 Northwest Georgia Master Cattlemen's Class 3 Carroll County Ag Center Carrollton, Ga. 706-624-1403
Sept. 23 Urban Ag Council Dinner Meeting Hudson Grille

Turner County Stockyards Ashburn, Ga. 1-800-344-9808
Sept. 26 27 57th Annual Southern Championship Charity Show Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 770-267-7647
Tifton Truck and Tractor Pull American Legion Fairgrounds Tifton, Ga. 229-386-0216
Sept. 27 Fall and Winter Vegetables: Grow Your Own in Containers Workshop Callaway Gardens Pine Mountain, Ga. 706-663-5153
Dahlia Society Show Atlanta Botanical Gardens Atlanta, Ga. 404-876-5859
Lavonia Fall Festival Downtown Lavonia, Ga. 706-356-8202
Plains Peanut Festival Downtown Plains, Ga. 229-824-5373
Wiregrass Festival Courthouse Square Reidsville, Ga. 912-805-1177
9th Annual Union Junction Jamboree

If you have questions about this category, call 404-656-3722.
A-1 wildflower seeds, attracts butterflies and birds, $3; two gigantic

0304
Spider lily bulbs, red, $12 per dozen plus $3.50 shipping. Glenda Crosby P.O. Box 1226 Baxley 31515

packs, SASE. Sam Marler 339 Walden Tuberrose bulbs starting at 10 for

Shore Drive Brunswick 31525 912275-9710
Angel trumpets, Christmas roses (Helleborus), $5; hydrangeas, nandinas, ferns, forsythia, beauty berries, Siberian iris, $3, burning bushes. Carla Houghton Marietta 770-428-2227
Azaleas, Japanese maples, gardenia, hosta, hydrangeas, roses and

$10 plus postage; seeds: Carolina thermopsis, tectorum iris, Japanese iris, columbine, one tablespoon $5, SASE. Liz Tedder Newnan 770-8417077
Variegated liriope, large clumps. Nancy Sarratt Social Circle 770-4641327
Variegated liriope: 1,500 one-quart

more. Linda Waites Fayetteville 770964-6414
Azaleas, large growing azaleas in one-gallon pots, all colors; $1.95 each. Jack Maffett, Sr. Montezuma 478-954-2111 478-472-7133
Beautiful assorted plants, from plant sale; Japanes maple, iris, hosta; call

pots available at $1.50 each; gardenias: 100 four-gallon pots at $7 each. Jim Hadaway Athens 706-543-5432
Year-old apricot foxglove, 10 for $30; Sweet William and Pennyroyal, 12 for $20; postage included. Margaret Sloan Crawfordville mhsloan@nu-z. net 678-357-3253

for varieties, want to sell all, one price. Dorris Matthews Marietta 770-422-

FLOWERS REQUIRING

9908

PERMITS

Beautiful decorative fall mums, vari-

ety of sizes and colors; $5 to $15 per If you have questions regarding this pot; discounts on volume purchases. category, call 404-656-3722.

Brenda Miller Ranger 706-624-0693 Advertisers selling officially pro-

Camellia sinensis: tea plants, 24 tected plants must have a permit

inches tall, one-gallon pots, $6.50 each; pick-up only. Terry McClure Milledgeville 478-456-0624
Castor mole bean seed; 40 for $6, free shipping. Kathleen Biddy Ball Ground 770-735-3548

to sell such plants. Ads submitted without this permit will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the permit needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the permit can be attached using the attachments but-

Crape myrtle, azaleas, knockout ton. For information on the sale or

North Georgia State Fair Jim Miller Park Marietta, Ga. 770-423-1330
Sept. 19 Season Grand Opening Athens Corn Maze Bogart, Ga. 404-308-4028
Georgia Milk Producers District Meeting Ryan's Commerce, Ga. 706-310-0020

Sandy Springs, Ga. 1-800-687-6949
Small and Beginning Vegetable Farmers Workshop Oglethorpe County Extension Office Crawford, Ga. 706-743-8341
Curt Pate Stockmanship & Stewardship Seminar Calhoun Stockyard Calhoun, Ga. 478-474-6560
Sept. 23 24 Georgia Poultry Conference

Sibley Avenue Union Point, Ga. 706-486-2351
Sept. 27 28 Cheryl & Co Fall Festival Horse Show Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 404-518-9198
Newton County Saddle Club Open Horse Show Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 770-786-1596
Cotton South Fine Arts Festival

rose, leyland cypress, acuba, red bud shipment of protected plants, call

tree; $2 and up. Carol Bland Fayette- the Protected Plant Program at

ville 770-964-3162

770-918-6411.

Daffodils: White Mount Hood, old
time yellow, old time double bloom- MISCELLANEOUS

ers, white narcissis blue bells, mole bean seed. E. Beach Duluth 770-4761163
Daylilies; entire stock, hybridizer field, approximately 1,300 plants; sell out, take all; $1.50 each. Brenda Bran-

If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Burlap bags, coffee bean bags; approximately 27x37 inches; $3 each; leave message. Steve Jessup Conyers 678-425-5104

nock Hiawassee 706-896-2700

Grandmother's home comfort wood-

Daylily overstock reduction sale, $3 burning cook stove, good shape, in

each; considering any offer for ship- family 70-plus years; $700; also recipe

ping. Mary Denney Newnan fern- book. Gene Kirkpatrick Chester 478-

IPM Vegetable Troubleshooting Workshop UGA-Griffin Student Learning Center Griffin, Ga. 770-228-7214
Sept. 19 21 Shrimp & Grits Festival Jekyll Island, Ga. 1-877-4-JEKYLL

Classic Center Athens, Ga. 706-542-1325
Sept. 24 Celebrating Wildflowers Fall Hike State Botanical Gardens Athens, Ga. 706-542-1244
Sept. 25

Harbor Clun Greensboro, Ga. 706-342-2050
Wateree Open Cutting Horse Show Rabun Arena Tiger, Ga. 706-212-0452
30th Annual Riverfest Arts and Crafts Festival

cove98@aol.com 770-367-5095

230-4418

Four-inch perennials, 350 variet- Juicer; Champion brand, one-third

ies, $1.50 each including Helleborus; horsepower GE motor, never used;

one-gallon grafted Japanese maples, original cost, $265; sell, $190. Phil

$20 to $25; display garden. Selah Ahl- Mathis Gainesville 770-532-7227

strom Jackson 770-775-4967

Old hand-hewn log cabin, excellent

Free border liriope and several tall condition; delivery and set-up avail-

red cannas, easy to dig. Marcus Ed- able anywhere. Kerry Hix Chatsworth

wards Marietta 770-422-6442

706-695-6431

Grancy Greybeard seeds, yellow Pressue cooker, $75; apple peeler,

Horseman's Quarter Horse Association Fall Circuit Horse Show Georgia National Fairgrounds Perry, Ga. 770-294-1099
Sept. 20 Farm Heritage Day Hunter Cattle Company Brooklet, Ga.

Georgia Olive Growers Annual Conference The Theatre Center Lakeland, Ga. http://tinyurl.com/oliveconf
Date Night on the Farm Jaemor Farms Alto, Ga. 706-248-3402

Boling Park Canton, Ga. 770-704-5991
Sept. 29 Northwest Georgia Master Cattlemen's Class 4 Carroll County Ag Center Carrollton, Ga. 706-624-1403

four-o-clock and red four-o-clock $20; juicer, sauce maker, $20. Peggy

seeds, $1 per package, SASE. L. H. Gonzales Conyers 770-356-1320

Norton 25384 Hendricks Rd Metter Primitive rug hooking frame, cutter

30439

and heads, four, five, eight; hooks,

Hibiscus plants in large planters; $6 wool, half-retail or less. Jean P Sig-

to $8; no shipping. Robert Dickerson mon Cumming 770-475-6726

Conyers 770-761-6669

Repainted hood for 1010 John

Hosta, Stella D'ora daylilies, hy- Deere, decals applied, $250. Thomas

drangeas, snowball, iron plant, sweet Bentley Monroe 770-266-6942

scrubs, dutchinis, wandering jew, Turtle baskets, log rabbit boxes, log

912-823-2333

spirder lilies and more. Mary K Whit- chipmonk traps, old wood birdhous-

Additional pesticide recertification training notices are available on the Department website under the Plant Industry

lock East Point 404-767-2748

es. Raymond Long Loganville 770-

Division tab.

Mature Lenten rose (Hellebores) 466-2435

Livestock auctions listed in the Market Bulletin may offer related items for sale. Notices for auctions selling any items

plants will bloom this January, $4 Two wood stoves for sale; one Ash-

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.

each; pachysandra, 50 plants for $10. ley 21x32x36, $300; one Bettern Ben

Carol Olson Marietta carololsonmar@ 24x27x27, $550. Ron Ebright Milton

hotmail.com 770-998-1076

ebrightr@bellsouth.net 404-861-2141

Green sugar cane for sale; 55 cents per stalk; ready to cut @ end of October. Harold Barnes Douglas 912-3811479 912-384-7835
Japanese maples; great prices and sizes; delivery and installation avail-

Pecan trees for sale: grafted, bare

root; call to place your order for

January 2015 pick up. Andy Smith

Hawkinsville

browndalepecan-

farms@gmail.com 478-225-8433

Sawtooth oaks: 2 years, gallon pots,

Yellow multiplying onions, $24 per gallon, no shipping. Eugene White Lithonia 770-987-9790
Ag Seed/Plants Wanted
Green cast iron plants or bulbs. B T

Perennials, Helleborus, ferns, vines, small scrubs, shade plants, some natives. Gail Hollimon Buford lastplug@ bellsouth.net 770-855-4252
Reseeding petunias, mixed; angel trumpets, double purple or double

Wild hog traps, 4x4x8 continuous catch, spring-loaded door, removeable top, large and small hogs. J. D Conger Norman Park 229-769-3253 229-339-0104
Bees, Honey & Supplies

able. Matt Veccie Atlanta jveccie@ $3; 1 year, quart pots, $2. William L Tapley Vidalia 912-537-4242

yellow, $1 per packet with SASE. Car- 10- and five-frame bee hives, start-

gmail.com 770-652-6127

Hood Elberton 706-818-2213

Green glaze collard seed; call or olyn Arnold 644 Lynn Ave. Jefferson ing kit and some parts. Eliseo Delia

Old fashioned white multiplying on- Varieties of sugar cane stalks for write. Carolyn Phillips 2248 Ga. Hwy. 30549

Mineral Bluff 706-492-5119

ions, $20 per gallon, $6 shipping. Jan- sale; by the stalk, row, field. D.W 49 South Plains 31780 229-846-8804 Seeds, $2 per tablespoon, SASE; Albany, southwest Georgia bee re-

da Pruitt Waleska 706-337-2544

Wright Moultrie 229-891-7632

Indian peach seeds, red flesh cling double zinnias, rose campion, Shasta moval; licensed, insured; also hornets,

Old time white multiplying onions, White peach tree seedlings, $1 each, seed, heritage variety. Dennis Todd daisy, Queen Ann, Stephanatis, hya- yellow jackets, wasps. Dale Richter

$6 per quart, plus $6 postage. Amory pick up; two to three feet tall. Margaret Roopville detodd30170@gmail.com cinth bean vine. F. Brooks 674 New Leesburg dalerichter@bellsouth.net

Hall Maysville 706-652-2521

Hottle Union City 404-344-0568

770-854-5086

Rosedale Rd. Armuchee 30105

229-886-7663

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

PAGE 11

All-natural pure, unprocessed hon- White half runner beans, field corn, Wheat straw bales, $3.25 each, in Handsaw filing attachment for Bel- Sweet cowhorn pepper seed, not

ey; sizes available: quart, $14; pint, squash, orka, pears, field peas, etc.; barn. Cody Grizzle Royston 706-491- saw model 1055, Sharp-All, model the hot kind. Johnny Dansby Eufaula

$8; eight-ounce bear, $5; cut comb, raw honey, comb-strain, quarts and 0249

year 1950s to `60s. Bobby Gilliam AL sarah.dansby.buffy@gmail.com

$15. Jimmy Brown Jackson 770-775- pints; closed Saturdays. Edward Worm castings, worm compost tea, Warner Robins 478-952-6722

334-695-1507

0157 678-448-7781

Colston Taylorsville 770-382-9619 compost, composting units and sup- Horse manure, Cleveland area. Steve

Firewood

Bee removal, metro Atlanta and west Georgia areas, work guaranteed. W.O. Canady Winston 770-942-3887
Carpenter bee trap, handcrafted, the one that really works, $20 each; three for $50, free shipping. Jack Snyder Hephzibah 706-554-7959
Carpenter bee traps, $10 each or three for $25; extra for shipping. Billy Middlebrooks Monroe 770-267-7084
Carpenter bee traps, made of one solid piece of 4x4. Chris Wilkerson Nashville 229-316-0522
Pick up swarms for free; removal from structures for a fee; will pick up, purchase unwanted beekeeping equipment. Dave Larson Mitchell 770-542-9546
Will pick up unwanted bee equipment and swarms. Brent Nichols Brunswick 912-266-5688
Will remove honeybee swarms, un-

Fish & Supplies
Advertisers selling sterile triploid grass carp must submit a current Wild Animal License from the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Ads submitted without this license will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the license needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the license can be attached using the attachments button. For license information, call 770-761-3044.
All fish species; bluegill, shellcracker, redbreast, shiners, catfish; pond surveys, aeration, feeders; weed consultation. Ethan Edge Brunswick 912602-1310
All sizes catfish; minnows, bluegill, shellcracker, bass, sterile carp, electrofishing, feeders, aeration and consulting services. Keith and Kim Edge

plies, worm farming and composting workshops. K. Holman Newnan 770713-5781
Poultry Litter/Compost
Chicken litter available: tractor trailer load, bulk and spread; please call with any questions. David Rackley Lexington 478-230-0060
Free compost. Jerry Riles Douglasville 770-337-1516
North Georgia broiler litter from our farm; high quality, delivery available. Jacob Bowen Gainesville 678-8580382
North Georgia broiler litter, unlimited quantity, tractor-trailer loads, we furnish certified scale ticket. Jeffrey Harben Dawsonville 706-2652429
Oddities
Beautiful emerald green emu eggs;

Hartley Cleveland 706-725-9005
IH C old tire, 11.2x36 or other size that will fit. William Guillebeau Lincolnton 706-359-6151
Large tupelo stump for wood carving; I will cut. Judy Cutchins Decatur 404-321-0243 404-293-0345
Lincoln SA-200 or SA-250 Lincoln welders, for parts; will consider running ones if reasonably priced. Ray Banks Keysville petb3@bellsouth.net 706-547-2724
Miscellaneous cattle equipment. Steve Healy Statesboro 912-6822973
One cast iron skillet (aka spider). Edna Bowers Albany 229-436-4244
Searching for the lady with the forge in Fairmount, I lost your number; please call me. Jack Owens Shiloh 706-577-3698
Steel pipe, three-inch diameter and

Firewood must be cut from the advertiser's personal property. Ads for firewood must use the cord when specifying the amount of firewood for sale.
Custom-cut firewood, cut to your specification; seasoned old hickory, cherry, pecan, apple; east metro area; $75 half-cord; delivery. Terry Ford Snellville 678-231-8007
Firewood, 100 percent hardwood; cut 16 to 18 inches and split; $160 per cord; smaller quantities available; delivery extra. Alan Sanders Blairsville 706-745-3884
Seasoned oak firewood, $125 halfcord, delivered locally. Shawn Brooks Dahlonega 404-840-6943
Seasoned oak firewood, $170 per cord; $85 per half-cord, delivered locally; $20 delivery more than 20 miles.

wanted bee equipment and removal Soperton 478-697-8994

cleaned and blown; excellent carving; larger, or well casing and guard rail. Donald Brooks Dawsonville 706-265-

from structures; 2014 natural honey for sale. Derry Oliver Commerce 706335-7226 706-621-1781

Any size bass, bluegill, crappie, channel cat, redbreast, shellcracker, shad, minnows, goldfish; free delivery

scrimshaw or painting, also pure emu oil. Jacquelyn Paul Conyers 770-7611284

Mike Bloodworth Knoxville 478-9570985 478-836-2535
Syrup-making tools; dippers and

8849
Seasoned oak firewood; Mama's Garden, Orchard & Vineyard. Peter

Will remove swarms for free; remove or pick up; best prices. Danny Austin Gourds: Martin, Crooked Handle, skimmers, no homemade. E. C Murki- Cabrel Hampton 404-513-9353

unwanted bees from a structure for a Roberta 478-836-4938

Craft, Bushel, Bottleneck and more; son Statesboro 912-764-9557

CORRECTIONS fee. Leonard Day Macon/Gray 478-
719-5588
Things To Eat
Advertisers submitting ads using the term "organic" require Certified Organic registration with the Georgia Department of Agriculture. Ads submitted without this registration will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the registration needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the registration can be attached using the attachments button. For information on this registration, call the Organic Program Manager at 706-595-3408.
`13 Desirable pecans; $11 per pound, plus postage. Russell Eaton Stockbridge 770-506-2727
2013 black walnut meats, clean; $20 per quart, $6 postage. Lela Norrell Gainesville 770-532-3945
2013; cleaned black walnuts, $20 per quart, local pick-up, no shipping. C. Sheppard Macon 478-743-7680
LOCALLY All-natural, cage-free, free-range
fresh brown eggs, $4 per dozen; for

Bass, bluegill, channel cats, golden shiners, fathead minnows, sterile grass carp, fish feeders; aeration, electrofishing. Caleb Lewallen Ball Ground 770-735-3523
Bass, bluegill, hybrid bream, channel catfish, sterile grass carp; statewide delivery. David Cochran Ellijay 706889-8113
Bass, bluegill, shellcrackers, hybrid bream, channel catfish fingerlings, sterile grass carp, delivery available. Tony Chew Manchester 706-8463657
Channel catfish, one to three pounds, serv. 1000 pounds. Orville Carver Douglas 912-384-5090
Fresh and frozen catalpa worms, all year; $1.50 per dozen. Joe Mask Fayetteville 770-461-7068
Red Wigglers, worm castings, worm compost tea, worm farm composting kits, worm farming workshops. Dennis Holman Covington 678-977-7944
Trout: good stocking quality, various sizes, hatched and grown on our farm; delivery available. David Cantrell Ellijay 706-273-6199

shop any time. Thelma Moon / Maxwell Royston 706-245-4218
Lucky Buckeyes to carry, $4.25 per dozen; Buckeyes for planting, $5.25 per dozen, instructions included; shipping extra. Jules Simmons Stone Mountain 828-226-4700
Miscellaneous Wanted
18,000- or 30,000-gallon propane tank. Jeff Wigley Canton 770-3155274
All sizes of larger assorted driftwood, assorted rhododendron wood, small and large assorted udzu wood vine. Jenny Papevies Murrayville 404-4052754
Bees and bee hives. Albert Cosnahan Metter 912-667-0118
Brooders and fans, 36 inches. Orleans Cruz Canton 770-655-7647
Composter on a rack with a turn handle. W. A Allen Commerce 706677-3300
Craftsman; three horsepower, 10inch table saw, must be in good condition, older model preferred. Tony Toole Whigham tooletl@windstream. net 229-762-3523

Tractor tire, 13x9x12x36. Johnny O'quinn Sandersville 478-232-9274
Two bushels of pole beans; leave messsage. John Eberhart Hiram 770943-0775
Used old, one- or two-row corn snapper, in good condition, cheap. Samuel Newton Douglas 912-3840520
Used tractor tires, sizes 18.4x38 and 16.9x28; please call. Mark McWhorter Whitesburg 706-302-6733
Valve for pond drain; eight-inch preferred, but can work with other sizes; pipe also Bob Watkins Douglasville 770-942-8687
Wood stove, Fisher Honeybear model, preferably with glass in doors. Kenneth Turnipseed Athens 706-2543396
Notices
Bostwick, Ga., Cotton Gin Festival celebrates 25 years: farm crafters and tractor participants needed; to be held Nov. 1. Claudine Leachmon Madison 706-342-0182
Reward for any information: 30 Katahdin ewes stolen from my farm at

Farm Machinery: Four-foot grater blade, $200, new condition; threepoint hitch belly mower; deck needs three-hitch repair, make offer. Louise Clark Trenton 706-657-4364 706657-6870
Farm Machinery: Troy-Bilt, Trail Blazer mower, four horsepower, excellent shape, new tires; $375. Foy E Smith Cornelia 706-776-3528
Farmland Northeast, Union County: Beautiful 43-acre horse and cattle farm; upscale home overlooking horse paddocks; cattle barn, fenced pasture and year-round creeks; gorgeous views; $399,000. E. Rowsey Blairsville 706-400-8274
FIND GEORGIA'S BEST

more information go to www.cool-

Fertilizers & Mulches

Fenceposts: reasonable prices or I 1980 Kilgore Road in Griffin, Ga. Lon-

chickfarms.net. Michael Smith Dacula michael5365@me.com 770-653-0382
GROWN Angus beef, no antibiotics or hor-
FOODS mones; grain fed, dry-aged 17 days;
quarters; www.sellfarm.com. Bill Farr/ Sell Milner 770-584-9727
Bi-color sweet corn for sale; prob-

$1 or 50 cents per pound worm castings, great for any planting project, teas and repairing your soil. Lew Bush Byron 478-955-4780
2014 square bales, wheat straw; $3 per bale, at barn. Julian Kimbell Jackson 770-630-2466

will take fences down in trade; north of Macon. Chad Zeis Whitesburg 678201-2386
Fiberglass top for New Holland tractor with hardware for mounting. Robert Yates Summerville 706-397-2715 423-645-0646

nie H Pope Sunny Side 770-233-0130
Out-Of-State Wanted
Retiree wishes to lease land to hunt wild quail, one or more days. Glenn Harvey Valdese NC glennharvey@ charter.net 614-406-3749

Online at georgiagrown.com

ably until the end of summer. Charlie Thomas Cleveland 706-809-0515 706-865-2709

2014 wheat straw, $3 per bale at barn; delivery available. Gary Brinson Tarrytown 912-286-3191

Fresh brown eggs for sale; $2 per dozen. Andrea Freeland Carnesville 706-990-9960
Fresh brown eggs from free-range hens; $2.50 per dozen. Edna Dockery Young Harris 706-745-8324
Garlic: eat or plant, varieties and Elephant garlic; naturally grown, no chemicals. Patrick Shields Danielsville patandjan@windstream.net 706795-3977

2014 wheat; $2.50 per bale. Larry Cook Statham 706-202-8083
40 mulch round bales, 5x6; $10 per bale. Larry McKneely Griffin 678-3438677
Aged horse manure, you load any time; I load, call for appointment; $10 truck, $20 trailer, $30 tandem. Raymond Dunnigan Smyrna 678-6832624 404-421-1775

Marview Farms: organically raised, grass-fed and finished beef, pork, lamb and goat; ground beef sale,

Free aged horse manure, mixed with shavings; can load with tractor. Monti Hight Macon 478-960-2008

$5 per pound. Fernando Mendez Free aged manure, compost; will

Cordele Info@marviewfarms.com help load, easy access; Crabapple

229-401-8722

area, near Milton High School; call

Muscadines, bronze and black, easy Nina. Kristina Macrae Milton 770to pick; $8 per gallon; to order please 410-0868 678-793-0694

call. Mary L Mobley Union Point 706- Free horse manure, mixed with shav-

347-3398

ings. Danny West Fayetteville 404-

Muscadines: you pick, black or 771-4041

bronze, no pesticide. David Brown Free, aged horse manure, ready to

Union City 770-964-5304

turn into fall garden; will help load.

Squash, okra, green beans, cucum- Leslie B Elliott Jasper 770-355-5726

bers, peppers for sale; also other gar- Longleaf pine straw delivered and den products. Rick McCallister Alto installed; also install mulch. Josh Bull-

For more information and order form call the Franklin County Extension Office 706-384-2843

706-677-5032 706-809-1763

och Manchester 404-925-1076

Or visit our website:

Water-ground meal, whole wheat Vermiculture Red Wigglers and cast-

www.caes.uga.edu/extension/franklin

flour, grits; $5 for five pounds plus ings, by the pound or bedrun; call afpostage; also, grind your grain. Mike ter 3 p.m. and weekends. Reed Adair Buckner Junction City 706-269-3630 Loganville 770-527-6064

Orders will be taken through October 30, 2014 All proceeds benefit Franklin County 4-H Club activities

PAGE 12

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014

Processing facilities play vital roles in getting

Georgia seafood from waters to consumers

By Dallas Duncan
Editor's Note: This is the fifth story in a series on Georgia's seafood industry. The series culminates next issue with a look at some of the state's top seafood restaurants and chefs.
There's a step before fresh seafood can go from the ocean onto a restaurant menu: processing.
Sidney Shepherd, seafood compliance manager for the Department, said there are about 220 licensed wholesale fish and seafood processors in Georgia. Though other government agencies regulate fishing and farmed fishing, the Department comes into play during processing.
"By processing, I mean freezing or putting a knife to it, gutting and heading, those types of things," Shepherd said. "We require the basic requirements from sanitation that you would expect to see in a processing plant, which would include hot and cold running water, sinks to clean your equipment in, adequate drying and sewage and clean water to process and make ice with."
One of Georgia's unique seafood processors is Golden Island International in Darien. There, cannonball jellyfish, or jellyballs, are processed to fill a growing export market need, company representative April Harper said. The jellyfish are unloaded, separated top from bottom and go through a washing system.
"We wash the slimy residue off the jellyballs, and then we go through and put them in a brine solution," Harper said. "They sit in a brine solution for up to seven days. During that time the salt and alum seep into the jellyfish and they cure them. Basically you have a dried, salted jellyfish at the end."
In 2013, 50 million pounds of jellyfish came through the facility. The markets for jellyfish are China and Japan. Jellyballs processed in Darien come from Georgia and Gulf waters the latter are a higher quality because of the clearer water they filter, Harper said.
The product has to be rehydrated before it hits the plate, she said. The protein takes on the flavor of what it's cooked with, and surprisingly has a crunchy texture, though many assume jellyfish would be rubbery.
Georgia is also home to a Chicken of the Sea tuna canning facility in Lyons, as well as some of the nation's top fish

and seafood wholesalers. One of those is Inland Seafood in Atlanta.
"We've been in the fresh seafood business since 1979," said Bill Demmond, Inland Seafood's chief operating officer. "Sixty to 65 percent of our sales are still fresh fish."
On any given day, the company has an inventory that's six legal-size pages long, single-spaced.
"We carry anything that you would imagine in fresh fish, frozen fish and seafood," Demmond said. "Some of our biggest sellers are salmon, both wild and farm-raised, tuna and swordfish."
Inland Seafood's customers are restaurants and major retail grocery stores. Their products come from Southeastern boats, the West Coast and overseas, but no matter where they come from, Demmond said everything is treated with the highest level of food safety in mind, from the moment it reaches their unloading dock to the second it gets loaded on delivery trucks. Fish are custom-cut to customer specifications, he said.
Inland Seafood's process is similar to what happens on the seafood line at Buckhead Beef in College Park, Ga.
Richard Blahnik, Buckhead Beef's vice president of operations and human resources, estimates about 40,000 pounds of fresh seafood comes through each week.
"We bring in seafood from all over the world. Primarily, most of it comes in with what we call a day boat," Blahnik said. "We have vendors down there who are actual fishermen who own fleets of boats. Whatever comes in, we buy the boat. It is put on a truck and it deadheads straight to our facility."
He said the turnaround time for seafood customers is so fast, a fish could be caught, processed, boxed, iced and delivered within about a day.
Demmond said processors are a vital part of Georgia's food industry.
"We're filling a need for the consumer," he said. "A lot of the product we sell is high in omega-3 fatty acids, which a lot of doctors report is good for heart health. Plus, we're specialists in a part of the food chain that scares most of the public a lot of people don't like cooking fish at home because they just don't know how. Part of my job is to educate the consumer on how to cook fish. That's kind of where we fit in."

ASH: Multi-county quarantine in effect to minimize spread of beetle through human transport

From Page 1

kiln-dried, chipped into paper or turned into mulch, which ensures the emerald ash borer cannot infest them anymore.
A key symptom of infestation is "heavy decline," where multiple limbs near the treetop start to die quickly, Bates said.
"It's a very inconspicuous mortality. It looks like a tree limb is dying; it looks like decline from drought; it looks like almost any other disease that we deal with, but now that we know that emerald ash borer is in the area, you should be a little more suspicious when an ash tree starts to show signs of mortality," he said.
Emerald ash borers are caught in purple prism traps, Bates said. Once in the trap, they're easy to identify.
"The adults are very colorful," said Rick Hoebeke, a research professional with the Georgia Museum of Natural History in Athens, Ga. "Emerald ash borer is somewhat unique in its coloration. The wing covers, head and thorax are generally a bright metallic green. The abdomen is kind of an off-copper red. It's very distinctive."
They work by destroying ash trees from the inside out. "In the spring of the year, they actually emerge out of the tree, and the female goes onto the tree and lays its eggs.

The larvae drill back into the tree and feed right up under the bark," Bates said.
As the larvae feed, they drill a characteristic serpentine pattern into the tree, he said.
"That's one of the things we look for. When you get a lot of those little larvae feeding, the s-shaped galleries intertwine at some point and start to cut off the flow of water to the tree. That's what causes the tree to decline," Bates said.
Though ash only makes up 2 percent of Georgia's forest stand, the species is a valuable hardwood and shade tree, Bates said. He said there are some insecticides that can be injected into trees for both preventative and proactive treatment against the beetle.
The good news for Georgia is, the beetle does not affect the state's other major tree species, Bates said, and with the help of consumers statewide, the potentially devastating effects of the emerald ash borer could be significantly lessened.
"Our job is to work with the people in the state of Georgia to conserve the natural resources we have in the state, so we can continue to maintain the native species we have," Bates said.

VISIT WITH A VET:
Cattle health alert
Visit with a Georgia veterinarian in this monthly feature. This edition comes from Dr. Lee Jones of the Tifton Veterinary Diagnostic Lab.
I received a few calls from farmers who lost cattle in the last few weeks. If possible, I recommend having any animal that dies suddenly with unknown causes to have a thorough necropsy, or autopsy, done by a veterinarian or delivered to one of the University of Georgia diagnostic labs in Athens or Tifton. There are few common causes of sudden death in livestock that farmers and their veterinarians need to be aware of this time of year.
Anaplasmosis Anaplasmosis is caused by a parasite that attacks the red blood cells of cattle. Infected cattle become anemic, feverish and may die. Subtle symptoms include getting tired quickly. If an animal wants to lay down or lag behind the herd while being moved, check its mucous membranes, including the gums or vulva in cows, to see if they are pale. Anaplasmosis affects adults more than calves. In some cases it can cause abortion or weak calves in heavy-bred cows. Typically, animals die one or two here and there, a few days apart. It is diagnosed by using a blood smear. Cattle are very valuable these days, so have blood samples taken of all cows found down, but still alive. Blood samples can tell us if the problem is only with the individual cow or might affect more in the herd. Blue-green algae toxicity With low rainfall our ponds are getting lower. This is an ideal environment for a blue-green algal bloom. Blue-green algae, also known as cyanobacter, produce toxins. Some of these toxins are fast-acting and can kill an animal shortly after drinking. If you find dead livestock or wildlife near water get other animals away from the water source and have the carcasses necropsied as soon as possible. Dead animals may decompose quickly during hot days and be useless information. Cyanobacter can also be deadly to humans and pets, so suspect water should be avoided by all. Suspicious water can be tested for microscopic algae and toxins such as mycrocystin. Perilla mint In late summer and early fall, plants such as perilla mint might be all that is green. Cows that eat large amounts of perilla mint can experience a severe respiratory attack that might resemble asthma or choking. They will have difficulty breathing and may get panicky. Their mucous membranes turn blue because they can't get enough oxygen. If you find perilla in your pastures, it needs to be sprayed and cows kept off until it is dead and withered. Antibiotics aren't helpful because it isn't caused by an infection, so treatment involves anti-inflammatories and steroids to open airways. Severely affected cattle often die. Nitrates Although it is a little early for nitrates, if there are a lot of nitrate-accumulating plants in your field, keep it in the back of your mind. Drought stress, applications of 2-4 D, recent fertilization and sulfur-deficient soils can be risk factors for plants to accumulate nitrates. Most animals succumb to nitrates before they can be treated, but intravenous injections of methylene blue is the best cure. Prussic acid Typically we think of prussic acid poisoning after a frost, but the same plants that accumulate nitrates can also have prussic acid, or cyanide. Plants that are stressed due to drought or sprayed with herbicide can also form prussic acid in the leaves and stems. Treatment for prussic acid is different than that of nitrate toxicity, but animals usually die too fast for treatment to be effective. If you have had sudden deaths in cattle it is important to find out why to determine the risk to the rest of the herd. Cattle are very valuable right now so diagnosing the problem can be money and time well-spent. Contact your local veterinarian or county Extension agent for more information on these and other diseases affecting cattle. To contact the UGA Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratories in Tifton and Athens, call 229-386-3340 or 706-542-5568.

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LEARN MORE ABOUT FARMS AND BUSINESSES IN THIS ISSUE ...

Blue House Farm: 706-699-0762

Inland Seafood: 800-883-3474

Buckhead Beef: 800-888-5578

Lane Southern Orchards: 478-825-3592

Food Safety Seafood Division: 912-963-2500 Paulk Vineyards: 229-468-7873

Georgia Forestry Commission: 478-751-3500 Plant Industry Division: 404-463-8617

Golden Island International: 912-437-6699S Southern Valley Produce: 229-769-3676

Georgia Museum of Natural History: 706-542-1663

UGA-Griffin Entomology Department: 770-228-7236