Farmers and consumers market bulletin, vol. 97 [i.e. 101], no. 21 (2014 October 15)

Georgia's Senate, the reigning champions, took on the state House again this year in the annual Legislative Livestock Showdown. See who won in our latest video!
www.youtube.com/user/ gamktbulletin

GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE GARY W. BLACK, COMMISSIONER WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014 VOL. 97, NO. 21 COPYRIGHT 2014

State's sweet potato growers cater to area restaurants, retailers

A Butts County sweet potato farmer shows off part of his harvest. Sweet potatoes are growing in popularity as restaurant fare, and Georgia producers are trying their hand to answer the call for this starchy vegetable. Photo courtesy Sharon Dowdy, Georgia FACES

By Dallas Duncan
A hamburger, in many Georgia restaurants, comes with a side of fries but more and more restaurants are adding a sweeter variety to the mix.
"You go into restaurants now and you get a choice of a baked potato or sweet potato fries," said Boyd Hagerson, a producer in Plains, Ga. "I think it's something that the market is growing into."
In fact, Hagerson first began growing sweet potatoes to help supply local restaurants.
"I'd been toying with it in my garden, and I provided everybody in our church with sweet potatoes," he said.
One metro Atlanta-area chef was so inspired by the crop that it became the namesake for her Stone Mountain, Ga., restaurant: Sweet Potato Caf.
"I have always loved sweet potatoes," Chef Karen Patton said. "Growing up, my mother prepared them all the time and when I was contemplating a name for the restaurant and thinking about a menu, it became quite clear to

me that I had several recipes that contained sweet potatoes. That is actually how I came up with the name of the restaurant."
Patton's menu includes sweet potato pie, fries, loaded sweet potatoes and sweet potato hash.
"Occasionally we have a sweet potato salsa, and I think the most unusual is the sweet potato hummus," she said. "For additional desserts, I have a sweet potato cheesecake, sweet potato cobbler and sweet potato pound cake."
The nutritional content of sweet potatoes is what makes them so popular, Patton believes. According to the US Department of Agriculture, one medium sweet potato baked in its skin, without salt, contributes 37 percent of the daily value of vitamin C and 15 percent of the daily value of dietary fiber. It also has four times the recommended daily intake for vitamin A, according to the North Carolina Sweet Potato Commission.
Patton sources locally from farmers in a 100-mile radius of her restaurant.
See SWEET, page 7

INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Feed My School updates.............6 Feature recipe.............................7 Market Bulletin ad form...............9 Handicraft ads........................... 11
Notice
Deadline to submit ads for the Nov. 26 issue is
noon, Nov. 12.

Thousands flock to 25th Georgia National Fair, Georgia Grown Building

By Dallas Duncan
There was a lot to celebrate during the silver anniversary of the Georgia National Fair this month in Perry, Ga., including an all-new Georgia Grown Building.
The 2014 building plans expanded upon the previous year's attraction, with an expanded pavilion store, contests, demonstrations and interactive kids' activities, said Jack Spruill, the Department's Marketing Division director. The commercial exhibit area, in addition to welcoming Georgia Grown members as vendors, featured four 80-inch flat-screen TVs playing ads that featured agribusinesses, commodities and more.
"It's going to be touting the economic benefit that those companies are to Georgia in terms of more sales, the footprint of the busi-

nesses and why they're important to Georgia's economy," Spruill said.
But the "biggest effort" in this year's building was hard to miss.
"We launched into the project known as the Seasons and Faces of Georgia Agriculture. In this exhibit, which is roughly 25 percent of the Georgia Grown Building, there are over 1,200 square feet of pictures and displays of Georgia agriculture and Georgia agriculturalists," Spruill said.
More than 120 producers are featured along with dozens of little-known facts about the state's commodities in the exhibit, he said.
The Seasons and Faces display drew repeat visitors, some of whom came to the fair on the weekend and brought their families back later, said Happy Wyatt, manager of the Macon State Farmers Market. Even former Georgia

Gov. Sonny Perdue made a pit stop. The exhibit is crucial not only as part of the
Fair's 25th anniversary celebration this year's theme was Georgia Grown but to share the mission and message about Georgia agriculture, Spruill said.
"We found out last year, in the 11 days of the Fair, that a lot of people still do not know a great deal about the bounty of Georgia agriculture and why we grow what we do, and what is invested in these crops and what we get in return for these crops," he said. "What is expected yield? What is this yield worth? What does the farmer have to invest in that acre of cotton he plants?"
The goal of Seasons and Faces was to give insight into the abundant economic impact of Georgia's agricultural industry, and to high-
See FAIR, page 12

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

GEORGIA GROWN PROFILE: Regenerate
Juice provides new stage for Georgia's rising produce star

By Dallas Duncan
Shawn Davis and Clara and Francis Spellman joined forces in 2008 to found Southern Press & Packing in Blackshear, Ga., with an ultimate dream of creating an all-natural blueberry juice so one of the state's fastest-growing commodities could be enjoyed year-round.
"Regenerate is made from 100 percent pure Georgia blueberries and it was important for us to include the Georgia Grown logo and the meaning behind it on our juice label," said Davis, the company's vice president. "With blueberries being a major cash crop for Georgia, it makes sense we make every effort to keep our Georgia Grown products local."
One pound of blueberries goes into each 10-ounce bottle, providing nearly one cup's worth of fruit per serving, with no additives, Davis said. The juice is now available in Kroger, just one partnership that serves as an example of its popularity.
Southern Press & Packing also helped fund a new sports nutrition

assistant position for the University of Georgia's Sports Nutrition Department as part of its ongoing mission to promote healthy, delicious foods.
"Health and wellness for student athletes is a critical component to their training program," company President Francis Spellman said in a news release. "Our commitment not only celebrates the importance
of qualified education and healthy choices, but also illustrates the impact local farmers can have with strong relationships to healthcare."
Regenerate is also a common feature during Feed My School for a Week, and thanks to its becoming an approved commodity processor by the US Department of Agriculture in April, will now be able to be accessed by other Georgia schools. "In taking one of Georgia's top commodities and turning it into a value-added product that is shelf-stable, we have found students identify with the local product and receive the health benefits of the juice at the same time," Davis said.

PAGE 2

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 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.
Please note that due to space limitations, all ad category requirements cannot be listed in the Market Bulletin each week. If you have questions concerning these guidelines, call 404-656-3722 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.
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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.
To cancel or correct an ad, call the Bulletin staff between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Cancellations and corrections will be reflected in the next available issue. Ads submitted online cannot be corrected online contact our office to delete the incorrect ad so a new one can be submitted.
Questions about advertising? Call 404656-3722

FARM EMPLOYMENT FARM MACHINERY

If you have questions regarding ads in If you have questions regarding this

this category, call 404-656-3722.

category, call 404-656-3722.

Only farm work or farm help wanted Only farm machinery and equipment

advertisements allowed. No com- owned by the advertiser and used in

mercial, industrial or domestic em-
ployment permitted.
Couple for broiler farm, references, no drinking, drugs or pets, one child only, housing, utilities and salary. Kermit Tanner Dawsonville 706-265-2619

his/her own farming operation can be advertised; those persons advertising for machinery and equipment wanted must be seeking those items for their own farming operation.
`50s Fordson Dexta tractor, three-cylinder diesel, high/low range, six-speed;

Experienced broiler farm worker; no $2,500. Steve Harris Ball Ground 770-

drugs or pets; housing, utility allowance, 894-2092

salary. Sharon Mills Royston swru- 10 horsepower, MTD three-way system

mors@bellsouth.net 770-530-2040 706- wood chipper, good cond.; $250. Larry

245-0730

Singley McDonough 678-787-4953

Farm manager; looking to manage 1020 Case IH 25-foot grain table, dual broiler farm; call or email. Anthony John- drive, three-inch cut, $3,500; Super A

son Hoschton suzanne.johnson45@ya- Farmall, Super A High Crop. John Low-

hoo.com 706-982-3226

rey Rome 706-252-0121

Help wanted: experience with horses, 12-foot, 11-tooth chisel plow; $800

cattle, tractors, fencing; furnished apart- OBO. Billy Barlow Woodland 706-741-

ment with salary, background check, 0192

non-smoker. Barbara Draper Cedar- 14.5-foot pull-behind harrow, three-

town 770-748-2042

inch tube frame; like new; $3,000 OBO.

Husband and wife looking for work on Chris Peavy Warthen 478-232-9644

small animal farm, not willing to relocate; 16-disk International offset on cylinder,

Henry, Newton, Butts counties. Angelina great for deer food plots, good disks;

Darity Ellenwood 404-704-4800

$350. Jerry Craft Hartwell 706-436-

Male looking for job on horse farm, 8480 706-376-3339

must have salary and place to live. Johnny Weaver Snellville 678-848-1624
Married couple for farm work in exchange for small house and pond; other income, experience, references required. Ann Daniel Macon 478-741-

1720 Ford diesel tractor, 2,500 hours, new tires, new clutch, rebuilt hydraulic pump, no equipment; $4,995. Kenneth Bell Williamson 770-229-8306
1720 Ford tractor, 571 hours, remotes; 1988 model; $5,200. Bobby Yarbrough Pine Mountain 706-884-1873 706-333-

2067 706-646-4873

1998

Need experienced, dependable help 18-inch backhoe bucket for Ford 4500

for cattle, crop, hay farm; salary based backhoe, good condition; $200. Ellis

on qualifications; references required. Wood Statesboro rranew@elliswood-

Roy Embry Eatonton 706-485-9848 contracting.com 912-681-6730

Ranch hand position available; cow- 1947 Farmall Cub; engine cranks and

calf operation, opportunity to learn runs, just needs tune-up, drive train in

ranch-roping, colt starting; single ac- excellent condition; $1,500. Chad Scar-

commodations provided. Nancy Barnes bor Leesburg 229-328-6179

Forsyth bbnranch@gmail.com 478- 1949 John Deere Model M, SN 26687,

256-4029

restored, three pieces original equip-

Small private barn near Clayton community, needs part-time help with cleaning stalls and other barn chores. Elaine McAllister Ball Ground 770-366-6585

ment: turnplow, cultivators, planters; exc. cond.; $6,500. Dan Dixon Gordon dandaled362@yahoo.com 478-628-2551
1950 8N Ford, WR, 16-foot trailer; homemade; four-foot Bush Hog; five-

foot scrape blade. Wallace Cochran

Cartersville 770-655-2879

1950 B-model John Deere, with cul-

tivator, new carburetor, needs battery

and clutch, nice one to resstore, closed

Saturday. Edward Colston Taylorsville

770-382-9619

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.

1950 Case tractor, completely rebuilt, 2240 John Deere tractor with loader,

20 horsepower, 50 hours on engine; runs well, 2,750 hours, $10,000; Snap-

parade-ready; $3,000. Bill Smith Lizella per SR930 rider mower, $550. Tony

478-951-7308

Alston Warm Springs 706-977-9078

1950; 420 John Deere tractor popper; 245 Massey Ferguson with loader, in

1951, 411 John Deere with plows; both, good condition; $6,500. Johnny Black

$5,000 firm. Benny Cole Valdosta 229- Canon 770-633-9866

559-9132

270A International backhoe with cab,

1952 8N, showroom quality, excel- working condition, needs engine repair;

lent condition, original owner's manual; $5,500 OBO. Bobby Hamlin Lizella 478-

$3,500. Jennifer Long Hephzibah jen- 972-4870

niferleelong1973@gmail.com 706-871- 30 KW Pincor generator, tractor driven

0789

power take-off; comes with a 200-amp

1959 John Deere 430 tractor Bush double throw; $1,850. Vanessa Story

Hog, 16-disk harrow; good tractor; Waleska 770-796-2338

$5,500; 12-volt system, original parts 40-gallon pull-type sprayer; 5x8, all-

available. Ricky Bailey Stone Mountain metal utility trailer. Jim Williams Carroll-

404-444-6301

ton 770-328-4590

1960s bulldozer, Allis Chalmers H-3, 4200 Savage tree shaker, $5,000; non-

four-cylinder, gas, six-way blade, extra negotiable. Emory Mixon Lyons mix-

parts, $3,840. Ron Scherer Blue Ridge onpecan@live.com 912-293-5570 912-

rscherer@tds.net 706-632-7592

526-0406

1964 Case 310 bulldozer, diesel en- 450-C crawler loader, new undercar-

gine, runs and operates well; $5,200 riage, hand steer; LN9000 Ford road

OBO. Patrick Cline Waleska 678-230- tractor and lowboy. Harry Puckett Bu-

2002

ford 770-945-0174

1967 John Deere 3020 restored, ex- 5000 Ford tractor, runs well, needs

cellent condition, field-ready; $13,000. work, injection pump leaks, steering

Kerry Tomlinson Homerville 912-487- sector leaks; $4,500; also equipment.

6451

Rick Holder Monroe 678-246-9185

1974 Cub Loboy 154 with belly mower, 5300 John Deere 4x4 with loader, 1,400

good condition; $2,000. Bob Chapman hours, $19,000, no cab; Ford 4600 with

Fayetteville 770-997-0628

loader, great condition, $5,800. Buck

1978 D.6.C Cat dozer, 80 percent un- Dills Blairsville 706-897-1235

dercarriage; 12-foot blade. Johnny Ross 580 Case backhoe, loader; engine in

Nashville 229-686-4590

excellent condition; two buckets for

1980 Tuff-Bilt garden tractor; runs well; rear, bucket and forks for front. F. Nich-

$2,000 OBO. David Hopkins Augusta ols Cumming 678-758-0497

706-798-6497

8200 John Deere grain drill, $600; cab,

1983 Lewis Bros. loader-spreader for doors for 66 series, International; $350.

sale, power take-off, good cond., well- Todd Keesee Madison 770-207-6253

maintained, stored under shed; $1,800. 880 David Brown tractor, ready for Karen Martinez Gillsville 678-943-9625 work, 65; Massey Ferguson, both diesel,

1983 white GMC tractor with a 15-ton P/S; $3,000 each. S.W. Herndon Hazle-

trailer. J. T Austin Douglasville 770- hurst 912-375-4320

652-2164 770-652-3383

8N Ford 1952 tractor, six-volt; $3,800

1985 International 274 diesel with cul- OBO. Albert Norris Ellijay 706-273-4171

tivators, three-point hitch, 334 hours; 8N Ford tractor with five-foot rotary

$6,500. John T Stringer Jefferson 706- cutter, good shape; $2,400. Harvey Wat-

224-0243

kins Statham 404-852-8010

1987 New Holland skid loader, one 9960 John Deere cotton combine, owner, low hours, located in Homer, Ga. four-row, four-wheel drive, good condiDarryl Riggins Tucker 770-842-9900 tion; $18,000. Melvin Waters Nicholls

1989 Gravely 9000 tractor, belly motor, 912-285-1309

72-inch mower, continental gas pow- 9965 John Deere cotton picker; great

ered, four-cylinder; $2,800. Mark Cortez shape, field ready, four-row, 1,625 en-

Palmetto 770-231-4740

gine hours; 1,235 fan hours. John Bul-

1990 CPS 42-foot peanut hop- lington Cordele 229-273-3597

per, good paint and tarp; $12,500 or Allis Chalmers HD6B dozer, engine,

will trade for grain hopper. Val Smith drive train, rebuilt, 150 hours, excellent

Cadwell 478-278-7317

condition, under roof; $9,750. Carl Kel-

1994 Ford 4630 tractor, 1,100 hours, ley Madison 706-246-0715

original owner, six-foot Bush Hog; Aluminum hopper bottom 40-foot; $12,500, great condition. William Couey 80-inch sides, new brakes and tires; Rutledge 706-342-2342 404-317-8074 $15,000. Mike Preston Blakely 229-

1994 Wilson hopper; 45-foot length; 723-5069

standard height; aluminum; spring Avco New Idea 324 corn picker, two-

ride; new tires, tarp; clean, ready for row harvester; $3,500 OBO. John Shaw

work; $17,500 OBO. Perry Avery Dub- Byron 478-951-1204

lin perry@sumneravery.com 478-272- Bush Hog, RDTH 60 finish mower; four

7933

hours, optional hard wheels, roller bar,

1996 John Deere 5500 in excellent 15 to 30 power take-off horsepower. T.

condition; $13,500; with 5,000 hours. J. Sprinkle Warrenton 706-465-1171

WL Taylor Abbeville 229-425-0543

Bush Hog: John Deere No. 413, good

1998 John Deere 655 compact trac- condition, will load; $150. Bill Hartrampf

tor, with front end loader and Bush Hog, Canton 770-345-6396

1,063 hours; $6,800. Todd Chitwood Case 1420 combine with 820 header;

Fayetteville 404-886-1115

very good condition; $8,500. Ed Reyn-

200 Farmall, three-point hitch, $1,600; olds Mauk 229-649-8093

Super H Farmall 1953, $2,400; SATHo, Case 2055, four-row cotton picker,

650 G-3, three-point hitch, $1,500. D. two-wheel drive, 2,200 hours, new fans,

House Winder 770-867-7500

new cam tracks and bushings; $12,500.

2002 New Holland TC33D, 4x4, turf Bill Barrs Dexter 229-425-1355

tires, hydrostatic drive, 72-inch rear Case 2590 tractor, 180 horsepower,

discharge mower, 600 hours; $11,500. two-wheel drive cab and duals, good

William Kastner Clarkesville 706-499- engine has transmission problem;

2720

$3,800. Brent Pearman Chula 229-392-

2009 Craftsman mower, 21 horsepow- 5569

er, Briggs & Stratton engine, 46-inch cut, Case 444 mowing deck, with rear dis-

$1,300; BCS rear-tine tiller, eight horse- charge; or will trade for side discharge.

power Honda engine, new tines, $550. Ted Wach Bolingbroke/Macon 478-

Harvel Hamm Carrollton 770-854-6675 994-1120

2012 Kubota ZD323 zero turn 60-inch Case IH 8545 square baler, eight-bale

mower; 325 hours, excellent condition, Haymaster accumulator, two eight-bale

extra blades and deck belt; $9,500. Roy grapples. Daniel Paulk Ambrose 912-

Goddard Lithonia 770-987-9671

393-5144

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.
Case International hydraulic rake, Kuhn GF 5001, THA hydraulic fluffer, Deutz-Allis GP 230 baler. Allen Warren Alpharetta 404-391-0594
Caterpillar 955K loader, rebuilt to be used on farm for 15 years, engine rebuilt, undercarriage 80 percent; $15,000. Mark Fennell Rockmart markfennell04@yahoo.com 678-314-0722
Caterpillar D7F crawler, hydraulic tilt, new undercarriage, excellent condition; $20,000 OBO. David McGahee Dearing 706-466-2246
Chattanooga No. 11; vertical, threeroller cane mill. Richard Lord East Dublin 478-272-3720
Chicken house sprayer, 500-gallon tank on trailer; power take-off driven, 750 PSI diaphragm pump, $2,300. Betty Williams Toccoa 706-886-9530
Cord wood saw, 27-inch blade, approximately 20-foot belt, 90 degree power take-off, pulley mount onto tractor; $375. Chris Phillips Carnesville mr.clphillip@gmail.com 706-244-1353
Craftsman 19.5 lawn tractor, Briggs & Stratton, 42 inches, good condition; $500 OBO. D.B. Hart Smyrna 770-4324898 404-660-3107
Dearborn bottom plow; three plows; $350. Mike Giddens Sylvester 229-7760259 229-894-7029
Ditch Witch 4010 backhoe; A420 with trencher, heavy-duty trailer; $10,000. Alan Noon Hampton 404-234-0212
Drop spreader, six-foot width; spread ag lime, seed and fertilizer; great condition. Bobby Grant Dalton 706226-9389
Eight-foot offset cutting disk harrow, 24-inch disks, excellent cond.; $3,000. Mike Buford Concord 770-584-6675
Farmall A with Woods belly mower; runs, need tune-up, tires are 100 percent; $1,200. Joe Webb McDonough 678-986-2048
Farmall Cub; good engine, 2-year-old paint plows, attached; ready to plow. Richard Matthews Villa Rica dingmat@ bellsouth.ner 770-459-5072
Farmall H 1951, 12-volt, expo restoration, all new tires, paint; $3,000 firm. Jack Morrell Albany 229-886-4700
Farmall H tractor, 1946, front end loader, motor rebuilt, runs excellent, side pulley, all good; $14,500 OBO. Richard Zorin Baldwin rzorin@rzorin.net 706894-1208 727-744-0611
Farmall Super A with equipment, $1,750 OBO; tires 75 percent, one-point hitch. Jim Young Gainesville jyoung52@ bellsouth.net 770-540-0858
Finish mower five-foot, County Line, works well, 3 years old, three sets blades, got six-foot mower; $400. Cary McDaniel Covington 404-245-3026
Five horsepower Campbell Hausfeld two-stage air compressor, 14.3CFM, 175 PSI, 80 gallons; numerous attachments included; $800 OBO. Doug Bailey Bogart 404-444-9047
Five-foot box scrape with rippers, eight-foot boom. Paul Watson 17 Winston Way Hampton 30228
Five-foot Bush Hog, cuts well, fair condition, good blade; $250; three-point hitch 2160. Jimmy Furgerson Conyers 770-483-4845
Five-foot Howse mower; good condition, works great; rebuilt drive shaft; located in Preston, Ga.; $350. Jeff Schramm Richland 229-317-1700
Five-foot scrape blade, $150; sixfoot heavy-duty box scrape with rippers, $350. Raymond Harrison Flowery Branch 770-965-6287
Ford 2810 diesel tractor, new paint, runs well, great condition; $6,500. Tim McCrary Molena 706-601-4422
Ford 2810, 2.6L three-cylinder diesel, very good condition; $6,900; call after 5 p.m. weekdays, anytime on weekends. Mark Scott Bonaire 478-293-8101
Ford 3000 tractor, front scrape blade, five-foot Bush Hog, $4,200; 16-foot dual axle trailer, 3,500-pound axles, $950. Mike Crane Bremen 770-363-4378
Ford 3000, harrows, Bush Hog, drag harrow, excellent condition; $5,200. Robert Koon Shiloh 706-846-9123 706457-1481
Ford 4000 tractor, good shape, good paint and with boom pole; $5,000. Eddie Guest Patterson 912-282-9553

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

PAGE 3

Ford 801 diesel, $4,250; 801 gas, $3,850; very good local tractors, new paint. T. A. Floyd Blairsville 706-9946451
Ford 8N tractor, complete, good sheet metal; $900. Thomas Tucker Lithia Springs 770-941-2354
Ford, New Holland 1715 tractor, 245 hours, box blade, five-foot Bush Hog mower, harrow. Tommy Hurst Coolidge 229-941-2083
Gehl 100 feed grinder mixer, $1,200 or trade for 10- to 14-foot harrow or sevenfoot tiller. Barry Carter Morris 678-4574038
Generator Snapper, 10 horspower, recoil, start 8600/5600 watts, 120/240 volts, excellent condition. Frank Gibbs Gordon 478-258-1630
Goosen square bale chopper, sheltered; $750. Ed Parent Fort Valley 478822-9483
Goossen chipper-shredder, threepoint hitch, power take-off, model CS-1/ CS-5400, with operator's manual. Bill Durrett Jasper 770-367-0345
Grapple bucket for Bobcat or skid steer machine; dual hydraulic cylinder, like-new bottom, cutting edge; $1,450. Roy Pruitt Douglasville 770-949-5453 770-595-7891
Gravity flow trailers, excellent, $1,650; 195- and 175-bushel, $175, 26.5-bushel. Johnny Shiver Americus jshiver@ shiverlumber.com 229-924-2717
Hay buster, no-till drill, small seed attachment, excellent condition; $15,000. Melvin Durham Union Point 706-4864250
Hay rake, tedder and baler; $985 each; IHC 240 model, runs well, stout lift; no power take-off; $1,900. Lynne Rhinehart Ringgold 706-338-7176
Hesston 1091 mower conditioner; $850. Jeff Mallard Girard 478-569-9902
Honda straw blower; 13 horsepower and five hoses, new battery and electric start; $4,000. Jeffrey Johnson Cumming 678-687-2588
Horse-drawn turn plow; good handles; $50 firm. John Eberhart Hiram 770-9430775
IH 10-foot grain drill, double disk, excellent condition; $1,600. Charles McCrary Americus 229-815-6540
International 1086 cab and air conditioning, $7,500; International 884, top canopy, good condition, $5,000. Wes Conner Hawkinsville 478-951-3548
International Cub Lo-Boy 154 tractor, turf tires, five-foot belly mower, new belts, mower deck, $1,750; no threepoint hitch. Doyle Barnes Social Circle 678-481-5067
International Farmall Cub with cultivators, good condition; the yellow and white model. Jerry Taylor Tyrone 770632-1278
John Deere 2040, 40 horsepower, three-cylinder diesel, PS, PB, live power take-off, good tires, sheet metal; $5,500. Gary Lane Carrollton lane894@bellsouth.net 404-502-4000
John Deere 275 disk mower; Bush Hog 3210, 10.5-foot mower pull behind, in superb condition. Charles Smith Ochlocknee riverwind620@rose.net 229379-4619
John Deere 310SG backhoe, 4x4, two buckets, 1,800 hours, well-maintained, $40,000 OBO; trade for cattle. Gary Roberts Martin backhoer@yahoo.com 706-491-3242
John Deere 329 irrigation motor, 650 gpm Berkely pump, six-row Sundance stalk puller; 18.4x38 snap-on duals Chad Hawkins Rochelle 229-425-0283
John Deere 348 baler, 40-foot Gooseneck flatbed trailer, Falcon 2000; $10,000. Terry Bush Forsyth 770-584-7529
John Deere 400; 18 horsepower, hydro front, mid power take-off, no threepoint, needs housing; $2,000 OBO. Christopher North Carrollton 770-8424198
John Deere 410 backhoe, $7,000; 1086 International tractor, $10,000. Royce Hulett Hazlehurst 912-375-3008 912-253-0161
John Deere 4300, diesel, 4x4, 787 hours, like new; $8,900. Gary Copeland Jasper 770-366-8166
John Deere 500C backhoe with extend-a-hoe and four-way bucket; $8,000. T. Lumley Danville 478-2784399
John Deere 535 baler, like new; net wrap, string and bale kicker. Donnie Allen Dudley 478-875-3496
John Deere 5420, two-wheel drive, 542 loader, canopy, 2,200 hours,16-foot trailer. Benny Lasseter Franklin 678378-1884

John Deere 6620 combine; corn and grain heads, excellent cond.; $15,000. John Faulk Jeffersonville 478-945-3415
John Deere 7720 combine 220, grain head; $12,000. Alan Mobley Griffin 770560-3441
John Deere 8300 grain drill, double disk, John Deere 1209 mower conditioner. Stan Jackson Crawfordville 706817-0261
John Deere 9970 cotton picker; KMC five-shank ripper, KMC four-row bedder; 1,000-gallon Peerless water wagon. Hugh Hosch Waynesboro 770-7893258
John Deere 9986 cotton picker; 1,500 hours, 4x4, field-ready, $90,000; 9770 combine, 4x4, 1,200 hours, 630 head, $150,000. Alan Baggett Montrose 478484-0656
John Deere B double disk grain drill, 10 feet wide; $1,250. E Brown Avera 706831-3442 706-547-6162
John Deere disk, 12-foot, good condition, excellent hydraulic tires, always stored inside; $4,500. Frank Wright Ellijay 706-889-0998
John Deere double toolbar, 12-point with nine heavy coil shanks; $650. Ryan Baerne Nicholson 706-757-2672 706247-6240
John Deere five-bottom pull-behind plow lift, cylinder missing, one mold board broken, on rubber; $1,250. Bones Perry Dawsonville 706-265-2347
John Deere grain drill, model FBB, 10 feet wide, good condition; $1,350. John J Maloney Doraville 770-457-6441
John Deere M, $1,500, parts; John Deere 420, $800, parts; Cub Cadet LT -1000, 14 horsepower, $600; cash only. Herbert R Wilson Millwood 912-2839266
John Deere Model A; 1250 five-bottom, 16-inch lift-type plow in good condition; $500. Eli Kauffman Montezuma elikauffman@juno.com 478-472-8842
John Deere pull-type bottom plow, harrow; needs a little TLC; make offer. Brian Adams Palmetto brian@precisionclearing.com 404-787-1542
John Deere tractors, models A, B, G, H, L and M C. Clifford Jones Waynesboro 706-554-4828 706-360-0513
John Deere two-bottom plow; trailertype with hydraulic cylinder; International 430 square baler, good shape. Calvin Barnett Carnesville 706-384-4726
John Deere; 1.5 horsepower hit-andmiss engine. Charles Clayton Sharpsburg 770-463-3250
John Deere1550, eight-foot, threepoint power take-off no-till drill; 7.5-inch spacing, small, large seed box, good condition; $2,800 OBO. Jim Downs Sylvester 229-272-6122
K Gleaner Combine, gas, 10-foot, grain head, four-row corn; 1989 50H Massey loader, oversized bucket, chicken house clean-out. Mark Ledford Commerce 706-658-6455
Kioti DK 65, four-wheel drive, bucket, forks, hay spear, new side arm mower attched; $25,000. Joe Hood Lafayette 706-638-8644
KMC 3360, six-row peanut combine, shed-kept, ready for work; $15,000 OBO. David Hibner Stapleton 478-4949014
KMC, four-row peanut plow, in good condition. Anthony Stapleton Lumber 912-539-0749
Komatsu WA 180 TLC wheel loader with hydraulic quick disconnect, twoyard bucket, JR-B fork; $20,000. Billy Greer Hampton 404-444-2436
Kubota 2710 tractor, four-wheel, dual power take-off, power steering, hydraulic transmission, 400 hours, 48-inch Bush Hog; $8,000. Fred Eggers Social Circle 770-267-8174
Kubota L2350; 4x4, 494 hours; Bush Hog, blade, single-turn plow, fertlizer, seed distributor; excellent condition, turf tires. Delores Anderson Dahlonega 706-864-4726
Kubota M7950, DT, 76 horsepower, four-wheel drive, front end loader; $6,500. Robert Greer Hampton 404405-4867
Kubota midmount mower, off BX2230; runs fine or good for parts; $200. Dean Fenley Monroe 678-635-5180
Kuhn FC283RTG rubber roller mower conditioner, nine-foot cut, great condition, $15,000; three-bar, seven-shank chisel plow, $1,500. Phillip Merk Commerce 706-367-5972
Lawson 12-foot pasture aerator, $15,000; Massey Ferguson 43 12-foot grain drill, $3,750 and 124 square baler, $2,650. Ted Smith Washington dangaflat@yahoo.com 706-214-0442

Long 2360 tractor, runs, works great, $4,000; BEFCO sickle mower, $400; Gill pulverizer, $750; Rock Hound, five-foot, $1,800. Tom Singleton Covington 404925-2899
Mahindra 65 horsepower, four-wheel drive front loader, heavy-duty, sheltered, 50 hours, like new; $20,000. Wayne Parker Ranger 770-926-3284
Mahindra tractor 2810, 28 horsepower, four-wheel drive, front end loader, S/S transmission, R-4, IND tires, 475 hours; $10,800 OBO. William Cochran Cherry Log 706-632-5744
Massey Ferguson 210 tractor; very clean, always sheltered, 1983 model; $3,000. Lynn Stanfield 130 Saint Gabriel Way Fayetteville 30215
Massey Ferguson 471 tractor, 72 horsepower, Perkins diesel, four-wheel drive, cab, loader; only 470 hours, excellent condition. Tim Smith Milledgeville timbersmith63@gmail.com 478363-6631
Massey Ferguson GC2300, 22.5 horsepower,107 hours, bucket, threepoint, four-wheel drive, PS, new, 54-inch deck; $8,500. Richard Dunham Jackson 678-572-4540
Massey Ferguson industrial 20 front end loader; $1,600 or trade for farm tractor. Nelson Massey Conyers 770483-2639
Massey Furguson 165/235 loader, 50 horsepower diesel, power steering, bucket, hay spear; $5,000. Ralph W Mills Gainesville rmfarm@bellsouth.net 770-536-8438
Medium duty CAT, three-point hitch attached; paint 95 percent new, factory John Deere green, used two times. Dwight Swanson Dallas 404-307-7106 404-307-7106
Mohawk six-foot scrape blade, will offset, $425; Frontier five-foot scrape blade, $325. W. A Allen Commerce 706-677-3300
Mounted manure spreader and one other spreader for parts; both for sale. Lois Dockery Dahlonega 706-865-1558
Mule-drawn dirt scoop, $60; Woods, three-point hitch brush cutter, deck gone, $60; both, $110. Ben W Hanson Snellville 770-979-1371
New Holland 256 hay rake; ready, $750; neck catcher $150; planters for Super A tractor, $550. Denver Bishop Buchanan 770-646-5241
New Idea; one-row corn pickers, $3,650 and $2,850. Scott Hancock PO Box 305 Sautee NValleyfarm@gmail. com 706-878-5590 404-310-2558
One Bush Hog Lilliston four-row peanut combine, model No. 4044, real good machine. Eric Clark Lyons 912-5657977
Pecan cleaner, Savage model No. 2400, excellent condition, five horsepower motor; $8,400. Robert Ray Fort Valley 478-955-4330 478-825-7202
Pecan dump cart, large Jackrabbit conveyor type for Windrow harvester, good cond., includes desticker; $7,000. Jake Ford Alapaha 229-686-4203
Pecan equipment: 2004 Weiss McNair harvester with cart, $22,500; Durand Werand 1,000-gallon sprayer, $18,500; 2012 WMV sweeper, $21,000. Richard Thomas Albany 229-347-9197
Pecan shaker, self-propelled, boomtype. Russ Huffman Jeffersonville 478214-7272
Pecan shaker; 1984 OMC, 3WMB; good condition; $16,500. Tim Sikes Dawson 229-395-8735
Powermatic 18-inch planer, five horsepower, three-point hitch, $900; rotary phase converter, 15 horsepower; $500. Jimmy McKinley Thomaston 706-9757244
Rebuilt eight-foot stone rake, all new tines, bolts; paint swivels all directions; $400. John Gonsalves Blairsville 706374-1522
Rhino Turf Flex, 165 A, 16-foot finishing mower. Charles Lanier McDonough 404-538-2191
Set of cultivators and two-disk turning plow for Farmall Super A. Donald H Daniel Calhoun 770-881-0524
Seven-foot heavy-duty box blade, $375; two Allis Chalmers suitcase weights, $40 each; front tank mounting brackets, $50. Donald Smith Wrightsville 478-232-5913
Skid steer auger: McMillen Extreme HD auger attachment, great cond. with choice of six- or 12-inch auger; $2,500. Mark Woodham Madison 404-379-8037
Snapper chipper shreader; heavy duty, eight horsepower; Briggs & Stratton electric start; four sizing crates, like new. Donna Crowe Tate 770-735-1389

Snapper mower, 13.5 horsepower, 30- Ford 841 diesel tractor with Sherman

inch cut, electric start, heavy duty; $525. transmission. Simmie King Hahira 229-

David Blasczyk Dallas 770-445-5646 896-4386

Spring tooth plow, approximately 68 Front end loader bucket for a Ford

inches, good condition, $450; located 555 tractor, backhoe. Tommy Hawkins

in Blue Ridge, Ga. Glen Coatney Cum- Wrens 706-830-7042

ming 770-887-8720 678-520-7558

Front loader for a Massey Ferguson

Three pecan crackers for sale. M. E. 573, 72 horsepower tractor with con-

Smith Alma 912-614-0945

trols and hoses. Marvin Derryberry

Three-point hitch carryall with top rail, Springfield 912-754-6713

2x5 feet; $150. Ronald Boyd Sharps- Gas-powered log splitter, must be in

burg 478-454-6171

excellent condition; if not local to Mari-

Three-point hitch equipment: boom etta, must deliver. Dorris Matthews Mar-

pole, $50; six-foot finish mower, $300; ietta 770-422-9908

and 36-inch dirt pan, $150. Johnny Hay conveyor, elevator to put hay

Hobbs Crawford 706-743-3801

into barn loft; any power source; good

Three-point hitch subsoiler, $125; cut- or repairable condition. David Bennett

ting harrow, fits Massey Harris Pacer on Chickamauga endure161@yahoo.com

Pony, $100. Robert Nealey Canton 770- 423-991-6211

843-0561

Horse-drawn grain binder and belt-

Three-quarter-inch Elector magnetic driven thrashing machine. John C

drill press, heavy duty, good condition, Vaughan Rydal 770-383-1442

use in farm shop, will sell or trade. V Model 2010 John Deere diesel, four-

Felkel Millen 912-682-5813

cylinder head and tractors in need of

Two 1946 Gibson tractors, model repair, any type. Micheal Horne Byron

D, good condition, lots of extra parts, 478-957-3691

ready to work. Mack Shaw Waycross Old six-foot sidewinder rotary cutter,

912-283-7150

for parts. William Adams Hull 706-789-

Two Farmall tractors,1948 and 1949 3790

restored; $2,500 each. Jerry Wheat Propane-powered tractor, at least 45

Crandall jerrywheat@windstream.net horsepower, in good condition. T. Busby

706-260-0530

Dawson 229-343-3627

Two horse-drawn hay racks, stalk cut- Rear rockshaft, lift rod, lift arm and

ter, mowing machine; two cultivators, draw bar for a International Cub or rea-

two horse-drawn wagon good wheels; sonably priced parts tractor. WM How-

total $1,850. Tom Wilkie Jasper 770- ard Nahunta 912-462-5471

893-8305

Rhino Bush Hog SE15 for parts. Willie

Two John Deere 9965 cotton pickers; 1996, 1997 model, approximately 4,000 engine hours, #3000 fan, excellent condition. Rayburn Johnson Millen 706551-8834

Harrison Maysville 706-652-2608
Right front knee assembly needed for 1954 John Deere 40. Huron Nichols Lake Park 229-559-5758

Two Lilliston 1500 peanut combines, $1,400 each; one KMC peanut plow,

ROP's for John Deere tractor; 3010 or adaptable. Johnny Tingle Jonesboro

$600. Randall Fountain Rentz 478-984- 404-915-5487

6036

Sandblast equipment, for farm equip-

Two Troy-Bilt horse model tillers, both ment restoration. Herbert Metz Cum-

will run; $350. Jack Murphy Trenton ming 678-947-6987

706-657-4740

Seven-foot rotary mower, subsoiler,

Two wagons: one John Deere chuck- three-point hitch, good condition, rea-

wagon, $3,800; one Peddlers wagon, sonable. John Gunn Reynolds 478-

$1,100. James Skelton Sugar Hill 770- 847-3387

945-4764 770-617-9492

Small garden tractor, 10 to 15 horse-

Two-row New Idea corn picker; $2,500. power, to pull small trailer. Charles Fon-

J.R. Sullivan Vidalia 912-537-4944

tenot Dublin 478-275-7040

Wallenstein MX 50-bushel manure spreader, power take-off driven, power coated paint, hardly used; $3,000

FARM SUPPLIES

OBO. Jessica Lane Stone Mountain If you have questions regarding ads in

lane423@bellsouth.net 770-315-7193 this category, call 404-656-3722.

Wick boom applicator with hydraulic 100-kilowatt Olympian diesel gen-

front tractor mount; used one season; erator, automatic transfer, 552 hours;

$1,500. Stephen Allen Butler 336-314- $13,500; email pictures available. Rob-

4841 478-955-7199

ert Reepe Demorest 706-754-6747

Wood splitter, hoses, motor, hydraulic 12 heavy plastic 50-pound feed

fluid and filter recently replaced; $750. bags, for free. Lee Pearce Sharpsburg

Dan Tanner Dacula 770-826-2566

leepearce1969@yahoo.com 678-552-

Yanmar YM2000 and four-foot fin- 0107

ish mower; runs well, mower used two times; $3,500. Bill Earnest Folkston 912-276-4142

150-bushel grain trailer; $950. Buck Goff Ochlocknee 229-403-0100 229403-0100

Farm Machinery Wanted

150-kilowatt Onan generator with

Clipping wheel attachment for Ford Cummins engine, 680-hour runtime, will 501 series sickle mower. Michael How- sell or trade for midsize backhoe. Vinh

ard Rydal 770-547-8821

Ta Buena Vista 229-314-0530

Drag conveyor, power take-off driven 20 aluminum skid pallets, 24x36x3

for handling ear corn. Luther S Garrett inches high; $12 each. Josh Daniels At-

Loganville 770-466-4480

lanta 678-600-1671

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PAGE 4

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014

Livestock Sales and Events Calendar

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 912-278-1460
ATKINSON COUNTY 2nd & 4th Saturdays: Livestock auc-
tion at Pearson Livestock; sale at 1 p.m.; goats, sheep, poultry, small 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
COOK COUNTY 1st & 3rd Saturdays: Small animal
sale; goats, sheep and poultry, 1 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. Call 229-246-4955 or 229-416-7217

MARION COUNTY Every Thursday: Auction 41 Goat
Sale, miscellaneous equipment; 6 p.m. goat sale; 7 p.m. poultry and small animals; 4275 Georgia Highway 41 N, Buena Vista. Call Jim Rush, 706-326-3549 or 229-649-9940. Email auction41@windstream.net
NEWTON COUNTY 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, Highway 17 between Toccoa and Lavonia. Call 706-779-5944 or 706-599-7606
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. Call Ricky Chatham, 706-491-2812 or Jason Wilson, 706-491-8840

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)

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 706-975-5732

JEFF DAVIS COUNTY

TELFAIR COUNTY

1st & 3rd Fridays: Horse sale, 7:30

2nd & 4th Thursdays: Chickens, fowl,

p.m.; Circle Double S, 102 Lumber

goats and sheep; check-in at 1 p.m.,

City Highway, Hazlehurst.

sale at 6:30 p.m. Horse Creek Auc-

Call Steve Underwood, 912-594-

tion, between Dublin and McRae off

6200 (night) or 912-375-5543 (day)

Highway 441.

JONES COUNTY

Call 478-595-5418

Every Saturday: Spring selling hours: TOOMBS COUNTY

hatching eggs, biddies at 5:30 p.m.; 1st & 3rd Saturdays: Livestock sale

goats and sheep, 7 p.m.; poultry,

starts at 10 a.m.; tack, horses; pigs

small animals follow; merchandise,

at 11:30; cows at 12; goats at 1

4 p.m.; 1035 Monticello Highway,

p.m.; poultry sale follows; Metter

gray; GAL AU-C002992;

Livestock Market, Lyons; GAL 3415.

www.bradleywaysideauction.com.

Call Lewie Fortner, 478-553-6066

Call Nancy Wilson, 478-986-4413 Email bradleywaysideauction@ gmail.com

WHITE COUNTY Every Saturday: Small animals,
chickens, rabbits, sheep, goats and

LAMAR COUNTY

horse sale; 4 p.m.; Coker Sale Barn,

Every Friday: Farm miscellaneous at 5 Duncan Bridge Road at Old Chat-

p.m.; baby chickens, eggs at 6 p.m.; tahoochee Livestock Barn.

goats and poultry at 7 p.m.; Buggy

Call Wayne Coker, 706-540-8418

Town Auction, 1315 Highway 341 S,

Barnesville; GAL #3177.

Call 770-358-0872/1786

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

accompanied by the auction license number of the principal auctioneer or auc-

tion 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 404-656-

3722 or dallas.duncan@agr.georgia.gov.

20-, 30-, 55-gallon plastic drums, two 2007 Roto-Mix real-type mixer wagon

bung plugs, 55-gallon lock ring metal, for mixing cattle feed, good condition,

55-gallon burn barrel, 55-gallon stain- has been kept under shed. Charles

less, etc. Jimmy Cannon Canton 770- Crawley Unadilla 229-942-0243

889-2342

250-gallon propane tank; $250. James

20-foot by three-eighths-inch chain, Tumlin Shiloh 706-846-5075

two lever binders, two ratchet bind- 250-gallon tank "tote," good for pres-

ers; four six-foot by three-eighths-inch sure washer; $50 each. Jesse Garrett

chains, d-hooks, link hooks; $250. Auburn 770-652-7915

Clark Hudson Newnan 678-953- 28x96-foot greenhouses for sale,

2704

$1,500 each; hundreds of flowers pots

20-foot flatbed, dovetail, three-axle for sale, huge walk-in cooler, $2,000.

Gooseneck trailer with all-new tires; Rick Viars Milner 404-444-9100

$1,500. Walstein Jordan Blackshear 300-gallon fuel tank; six-foot hay

912-449-5520

mower. Randall Waits Rockmart 678-

2005 Delta Gooseneck trailer; five-foot 332-7923

dovetail, 21 feet total, sheltered ramps; 300-gallon propane tank with regula-

$4,000. Kenneth Corbin Chickamauga tor; $250. Randall Smith Jefferson 706-

423-260-6602

338-3130

300-plus gallon plastic tank in metal cages, five-inch caps on top, valve in bottom; $50 per tank. C. Stovall Dahlonega 678-491-0838
325-gallon propane tank, $125, can load. Shane Burnett Covington 770827-0999
40 rolls four-prong barb wire, new wire, American-made; $40 per roll. David Eubanks Molena 770-584-0665
4x8 utility trailer; $300. James Brown Omega 229-776-2458
500- to 600-gallon fuel tank, electric station-type pump, 25-foot hose and electric motor included, you move; $900. Jerry Doyal Villa Rica 770-4593822
500-gallon propane tank in good condition, two regulators; $500. Luke Chandler Douglasville 770-577-1143
6x12 double axle trailer, new wood bed, $995; Miller welder with trailer generator, $1,595 OBO. J. D. Reece Powder Springs 770-943-2968
6x12 trailor with ramps, lights, jack, all metal; $475. J. T. Daws Monroe 770267-6082
800 to 1,000 Chore-Time feed pans, $2 per pan; email, text or call. Marshall Davis Pearson beckydavis1996@gmail. com 912-422-5404
Air compressor, 120-gallon; 18.5 CFM Rockwell Homecraft table saw, eight inches, Joiner, four inches. W. A. Handley, Jr Atlanta 404-325-2121
Air, kiln-dried Wood-Mizer sawn lumber, large selection wood specials, paneling, wide-plank flooring, fencing, barn wood. John Sell Milner sellj@bellsouth. net 770-480-2326
Antique heart pine flooring sills, 37foot trusses; 12-hole laying cages; two 2,000-bushel grain bins, two chicken house fans. James B Donaldson Metter 912-685-4095 912-682-0347
Barrels, plastic heavy-duty, 55-gallon, 20-inch screw top, air tight, food grade; $35, while supplies last. Bill Sewell Brunswick 912-270-8278
Blue 55-gallon plastic drums, closed tops, two twist-off caps, food grade, other types sometimes available. Eugene Needham Loganville 770-4664284
Buckets, white plastic, wire handle, resealable lids, new condition; for wine and pickling, five-gallon; $1.75 each. Dennis Grizzle Gainesville 770-5328510
Ceder logs for sale. Charles Street Cleveland 706-809-0862
Chicken houses; Lo-Be farm down equipment fans, 20- 36-48 feed bins, perfect litter saver, five-foot mold. Charles Chappelear Madison 706-4537772
Clean 55-gallon metal drums with lids; Chain link fence, black coated, 5 ft. high. Leonard Crane Dawsonville 678-9476744 404-210-1516
Corn bin, 3,600 bushel (will hold 4,000); perforated floor, blower, unloading auger, sweep in bin; buyer must move bin. Jimmy Dubberly Baxley 912-367-7265
Corn shocks, $2 each; pick up only. Deb Ruby Good Hope dlr2824@monroeaccess.net 404-218-0642
Cotton Scales for weight. David Pearson Sylvester 229-776-3183
Cyclone leaf rake, 200-gallon hopper, nine horsepower, Honda engine, 30-foot vacuum hose; $1,500. Marsha Ackerman Lithia Springs 770-944-4250
Delta 14-inch radial arm saw, five horsepower, three-point hitch; $1,000. David Dye Rockmart daviddye110@ live.com 470-336-9849
DR Powerwagon, great condition, 5.75 horsepower, battery charger, cover, electric start, dump bed; $1,250. Richard Bright Molena 404-558-2764
Eight feet used fence posts, $6.50 each, also 2x6 treated lumber, good shape. Sam Freeman Forsyth 478-994-2526
Equipment trailer; heavy duty, three axles, 20 feet long, six feet, seven inches wide, good condition; $1,200. Johnny Burns Tignall lindasbasketcase@ yahoo.com 706-359-2256
Flooring: oak, pine tongue and groove, various widths; call for prices, also beadboard and shavings. William Briggs Union City /Atlanta 404-349-2315
Four stainless steel gas tanks, fourgallon capacity with straps; $10 each. Carl Dobson Atlanta 404-247-7343
Fuel tank mountede on a trailer, 280 gal. capacity with a 12 volt pump, $800. Gene Tucker Hahira 229-794-2595

Fuel tank, 1,000-gallon with 12-volt pump and filter, good condition; $800. Wayne Swanson Ringgold 706-9354691
Gas tank, 300-gallon, excellent condition, some gas inside, must sell; $200. Laura Cobb Auburn 770-682-2323
Gates: four, eight, 10 and 16 feet, $5 per foot; (TSC brand) two 100-mile fence chargers; two two-way gate latches. Tom Taunton Butler 478-862-3138
GQF 1502 incubator and a GQF 1550 hatcher for sale; both used one season; $900. Travis Ellington Senoia 678-7879341
Hay equipment, post driver, HD subsoiler, two portable cattle work chutes. Dennis Christopher Mansfield 770-3850714 404-558-1637
Hen nests; 12 metal nests per box; $40 per box. Lamar Bryant Cleveland 706878-8509
Hooper 24-foot, 10-ton dual tandem trailer with ramps; $4,200. Herman King Marietta 404-395-1042 770-971-5618
Husqvarna model 137 16-inch chainsaw; three chains, files and tools; $100. James M Cox Woodstock 770-9269370
In good overall condition, $210; kerosene tank for filling farm equipment, pumps, etc. Karen Blackmon Dallas 770-445-0185
International Onan; 100-kilowatt generator with auto switching panel, 298.4 hours; $14,995. Wayne Hudgins Roopville 770-301-9355
Locust fence post and rails. Eugene Cook Blairsville 706-745-8724 706897-5828
Metal and plastic barrels with locks, tops; solid with bung holes; plastic tanks, 275 gallons in wire cages. G. Allen Covington 770-786-6377
Millstones 16 inches, $300 each, 20-inch $350 each; 56-inch hay rake wheels, $125 each; Craftsman tool chest, $800. L S Lewis Waleska 770428-7996
No. 15 cooking-grade wash pot; blacksmith tools, anvils, tongs, Hardees, broad ax (horseshoe) hammer. Ben Hendrick Austell 770-948-9842
Old 5V barn tin, nice patina, 50 cents per foot. C. Harrell McDonough 678591-8070
One rear tractor tire, 14x9x28, like new; $175. Fred Harcrow Franklin 706302-1004
Poultry equipment; feed bins, egg cooler, 50-kilowatt generator and more. Bill Thomason Dalton 706-847-1136
Power cane mill for sale; good cond. Ray Freeman Dublin 478-272-1307
Power take-off pump on five horsepower Briggs engine for spraying, $300; poly water tank, 225 gallons, $200. Hank Bell Madison 706-474-0289
Pressure washer, three-point hitch, 160-gallon, $500; three-point hitch, $400. Sam Moon Homer 706-340-7237 706-677-3540
Red line Big Cat portable electric cement mixer, very good condition; $75. Phil Adkins Vienna 229-273-7691
Sawmill lumber (TimberKing sawmill), low as 35 cents per board foot, pine and hardwood available, custom cuts. Mitchell Smith Griffin 404-867-5106
Sawmill lumber: pine, poplar, oak, cedar, cherry, black walnut; portable sawmill service starting at 25 cents. Todd Chaney Cartersville 404-861-7402
Scooter stocks; one-horse turning plow, push garden plow; $100 OBO. Barry R Pittman Gibson 706-598-3664
Shopsmith Mark V home workshop; includes bandsaw, jointer, belt sander; $995; Rabun County. Richard F Sanders Lakemont 707-782-9846
Six three-eighths-inch chains, 20 feet long with hooks, $40 each; six wrench chains, $45 each; three ratchet for turning $55 each; $550 for all. Ricky Williams Cumming 770-715-0756
Six-foot chain link fence. seven-foot chain link fence; metal posts and hardware; double dipper and galvanized. Chandler Maxwell Dewy Rose 706283-1513
Six-foot Gill pulverizer, $400 OBO. Steve Hoffman Newnan 770-304-4351
Steel I-beam, three, 15 feet long, 12 inches tall, galvanized, can email papers; $180. Tom Waller Johns Creek 770-855-7726
Storage units: 8x40, $2,000; 8x20 $1,000; located in Bowman, Ga. Harold Lee Canton 678-234-0392

Tiltbed Gooseneck trailer, 12 ton, 25 feet, upper deck, toolbox, dual jacks, never used, stored inside; $8,700. David Rock Savannah 912-313-7625
Tractor tire, size 14x9x28 six-ply B.F. Goodrich, 90 percent tread or more, no holes; $225. Rembert Cragg Alto 706776-3318 706-499-8063
Treated lumber: 90 2x8x8 at $6 each; 25 2x6x8 at $3 each. Chris Coulter Colbert 706-338-8729
Two 40x400 broiler houses; all equipment included, you tear down and move; $60,000. Buddy Martin Talmo 404-680-2833
Two greenhouses, 20x96 feet, heaters and fans with drippers and other supplies. Ronald Rakestraw Dallas 404216-6859
Weed Kill A (brandname), wicking device to kill johnsongrass and unwanted weeds; new, never used. James Ray Jasper 770-893-7030
Well-screen 4x10-inch slotted thick wall PVC pipe, 20 pieces in box; $175. Thomas C Burch Snellville tburch@bellsouth.net 404-274-0102
White oak lumber for trailer flooring, up to 20 feet in length; pine, poplar, hickory available also. Brad Stephens Grantville 706-594-3136
Winco power take-off generator, 35,000 watts; Like New; $2,500. Ted Yeargin Bowersville 706-498-1776
Wood-Mizer lumber, 1x12 pine, poplar, oak lumber for trailer flooring, any thickness. Larry Moore Newnan 678-2785709
Ziggity drinkers, Chore-Time feeders and other miscellaneous poultry house equipment; used building materials, cement blocks, boards, lumber. Joshua Martin Clarkesville 770-519-2982
LIVESTOCK
All livestock must have been in the advertiser's possession for at least 90 days before they can be advertised. Livestock listed must be for specific animals. Generalized ads such as "many breeds of cattle" or "want horses, 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.
Cattle
If you have any questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
12 3-year-old Black Angus cows, exposed to SimAngus bulls. Jeffery Bloodworth Pineview 229-313-9154
12 commercial Black Angus heifers; some AI-sired; weaned, wormed, vaccinated; 600-plus pounds. David Sharpton Commerce 706-367-0876
12 SimAngus 2-year-old bulls; eight Simmental yearling bulls, black polled, embryo and AI, raised well, gentle, you pick; $2,500. Lanier Warbington Cumming 404-281-2433
120 15- to 20-month-old Hereford and F1 Braford bulls. Jonny Harris Odum 912-586-6585
14 fresh roping heifers and one bull to sell as a group; good horns, ready to rope; $10,000. Hunter Grayson Athens 706-206-1824
15 Black Angus heilfers, from 7 to 12 months old; sell all or part, farm-raised. Don Hudgins Marietta 404-886-6849 404-886-6849
2-year-old, purebred bred Jersey heifers for sale; due to calve soon. Addison Hooks Swainsboro 478-494-0390
20 registered Charolais bulls, 10 registered Charolais open heifers; 10 registered cows. Kirk Little Lyons 912-3263512
20 registered polled Hereford cow-calf pairs, spring and fall-born calves, cows pasture exposed back to our Victor bulls. Ricky Lane Carrollton 770-2585890
5-year-old registered Angus bull; O36 bloodlines, very gentle, calves come small and grow fast; $3,500. Dean Pringle Crawford pringledean@aol.com 706-215-5008
50 Angus heifers; six with calves, others bred; must take all, $2,000 each; three low birth weight bulls, $3,000 each. James Hunter Bishop 706-2555214
9-month-old registered Brangus bull. Todd Price Grantville 404-272-7223
Angus bull; 3 years old; registered No. 17264290; calving ease direct +4, birth weight +2, weaning weight +50, yearling weight +96. Henry Terhune Fort Valley 478-825-1911

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

PAGE 5

BBU-registered Beefmaster bulls, red Registered AI Black Angus 1- to Pasture-raised; Old Spot heritage pigs; Nubian buckling; registered, disbud- Miniature donkeys: guard or breeding,

polled, 14 to 18 months old. Bill Hutson 2-year-old bulls, cows, fall and spring 200 plus. Murray Provine Clarkesville ded, tattooed, CD&T done; 4 months donkey jack, $200; nice colors; jennies,

Blairsville 404-550-8766

calvers and year-old replacement heif- murray@grassfed.us.com 404-316- old, big enough to breed this fall; $250. $300 and up; small, registered donkeys.

Belted Galloway bull with excellent ers. Alvin Mashburn Ringgold 423-421- 4679

Joan Kiser Commerce 706-247-0976 Bill Wray Perry 478-825-1297

markings, 8 years old; $1,000. Gene 1007

Registered Berkshire boars from Mid- Oberhasli buck, 3 years old, disbud- POA, registered,very gentle, smart,

Acree Luthersville ka6504@yahoo.com Registered Angus bull, 33 months west stock, only a few left, reserve now. ded, leads, super demeanor, excellent athletic, Leopard color,13 years old,

770-927-9059

old, gentle, selling to prevent inbreed- Duke Burgess Louisville 478-625-9542 milking bloodlines, healthy; $400. Kelly $2,000; (Pictures upon request) Jenny

Belted Galloway bull, very good blood- ing; $2,300. Raymond Bramlett Auburn Tamworth pigs for sale; 8 weeks old, Maxwell Winder 404-925-2369

Eckman Hamilton 706-464-7228 706-

line, $750 for bull; $850 for heifer, 6 770-867-9864

barrows and gilts; $100 and up. Noah Oberhasli milk goats: does, $200; doe- 324-7678

months old. Tom Rogers Thomaston Registered Angus bulls, 23 to 25 Langely Carrollton oldfarmstables@ya- lings, $80; or $150 for two. Wilbur Cam- Tennessee Walking Horses, two

706-647-4090

months old, semen-tested, docile and hoo.com 770-845-9347

eron Dry Branch 478-308-3341

mares, two geldings, all registered; one

Belted Galloway herd: one bull, $2,500; two bull calves, four heifers, $800 each; three bred cows, $1,600 each. Johnny Amos Cumming 678-793-7615
Black fullblooded Senepol bull for sale; 21 months old. Bobby Griffin Elko 478230-0422
Black registered polled Beefmaster bulls; 12 to 24 months; gentle, sementested, wormed, shots; Soulman, Synergy, Sirkitter bloodlines. Vernon Turner Dalton 706-278-7814
Bulls for sale; registered Angus, registered Hereford, starting at $2,600; 20

many AI-sired. John Stuedemann Comer 706-202-2371
Registered Angus, Gelbvieh, also commercial and Brangus cows for sale; bred for easy calving and fast growth. Gene Cantrell Shady Dale 770-312-6224
Registered Black Angus bulls; 13 months, excellent bloodlines, alll shots. William Hix Comer 706-248-5851 706540-2470
Registered Brangus bred heifers; six available, vet-checked, extensive health management; $3,000 each. Seth Hunt Calhoun 770-548-1667

Teacup piglets; lots of colors; will be under 16 inches when grown. Michelle Israel Dallas 678-363-3199
Three registered litters of Guinea hogs; quality breeding stock, diverse, ideal homestead hog; easy keepers. Cathy Payne Elberton broadriverpastures@ gmail.com 706-283-7946
We have Hereford, Hampshire, Yorkshire and Blue Butt show pigs for sale; prices range from $175 to $200. Jamie Hall Baxley 912-218-0042
Yorkshire-Duroc cross pigs, ready to go. Tammy Anderson Elberton 770403-8964

Pygmy goats, 2 to 3 years old; one nanny, $75; two billies, $50 each; friendly, not for slaughter. Chuck Borden Griffin 770-630-2035
Registered Boer goat; billy, great breeder; $300. Ben Phillips Dewy Rose 706-376-6343
Registered Katahdin hair sheep, excellent bloodlines; $200 and up. Linda McMillan Cleveland 706-865-3216 706892-7677
Suffolk rams and ewes; show-quality bloodlines, registration available. Lisa Parks Murrayville lmw1374@gmail.com

paint Quarter Horse gelding; all ride. Tony Green Fairmount 770-605-0888
Two Tennessee Walking Horses, 14 years old, black (gelded); 13-year-old bay mare, very gentle and rides; $800 each. Bill Nappier Dallas 770-377-0545
Equine Miscellaneous
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
2011 Merhow Equistar, two-horse straight-load Gooseneck; four-foot DR; seven feet, six inches tall, rear ramp, Dutch doors, like new; $12,800. Sandy Aultman Ila 352-591-5368

months and older. Wes Smith Thomas- Registered Charolais bulls, breeding

ton 706-648-4210

age, semen-tested, cow-ready. Curtis

Goats And Sheep

678-936-0105

21 pallets of equine pine at $225 per

Three half-Boer, half-Nubian nannies, pallet; 50 bags per pallet. Betty Teems

Bulls: approximately 50 Angus and Kicliter Marshallville 478-967-2940

If you have questions regarding ads one Spanish buck, two kids, half-Span- Canton 770-714-2672 770-479-5919

SimAngus yearling bulls for sale; 10 Registered polled Hereford bulls, gen- in this category, call 404-656-3722. ish, quarter-Boer, quarter-Nubian. W.W. Amish-made wagon box with spring

2-year-olds. Bart Davis Doerun 229- tle, rugged pasture-raised, easy calv- 100 percent Boer bucks, USBGA reg- Abney Franklin 770-301-5658

seat, 48 inches wide, nine feet long, 12

881-3510

ing, good EPDs and bloodlines. Bobby istered, excellent bloodlines including Two ADGA registered black Nubian inches high. Ronnie Wiley Auburn 770-

Bulls: Simmental and Simbrah, young Brantley Tennille 478-553-8598 478- TarzanT66, Warlord, Hudson's Shadow; does; ready to breed, certified and ac- 963-0050

bulls. Cliff Adams Bowdon 770-258- 552-9328

ready for breeding now. Susan Bragg credited herd. Paul Frantz Abbeville Baum Passier Hannover 16.5-inch

2069

Registered polled Hereford bulls, good Conyers 404-375-3401

229-423-7350

leather saddle, three-day stirrups, pad

Calving ease, milking ability, gentle- EPDs, ultrasound carcass, info pro- 12 Boer cross nannies, bred to Boer- Two disbudded, proven purebred reg- leathers included, kept inside, excellent

ness, registered polled Shorthorn bulls, show heifers, steers, excellent quality,

vided. Larry Lane Carrollton 678-3785170

Kiko, $1,500; 15-month-old purebred Norwegian Dwarf billy, $125. Charles

istered Nubian bucks, $300 each; ready for service; pale apricot, one with spots.

condition; $850. Fred Wynn Jonesboro 770-375-7935

Club Calf member. Ken Bridges Com- Registered purebred Shorthorn heif- McCorkle Dearing 706-699-2860

Bryant Vaughn Box Springs bcvaughn@ King Series 16-inch saddle, reins, hal-

merce 706-768-3480
CCR Ultrablack bull, registered; born Sept. 12, 2011; excellent bull with papers; $4,500. Dean Morgan Rockmart deanm@flgraphix.net 770-231-1166
Charolais bull; 3 years old (heifer bull), asking $3,500; delivery available, easy to work. J.R. Burns Woodbine 478320-2222
CMC Limousin, Lim-Flex bulls, leading AI sires; performance ultrasound, all black, polled, 12 to 24 months old. Jerry Bradley Covington 678-201-2287
Cracker cattle: 11 bred heifers (first calf), $800 each; one Cracker bull. $1,500. Tommy Marchant Pavo 229859-2742 229-292-3556
Five pairs $12,500; 10 bred heifers, $22,000; bred to Gardiner Angus bull. Tom Findley Box Springs 706-575-3889
Four 9-month-old registered Black Angus bulls for sale; can email pictures. Larry Bennett Hawkinsville 478-6369404
Gelbvieh bulls and bred cows; all registered purebred; bred for easy calving and fast growth. John Kiss Gainesville 770-531-1126
Good Jersey milk cow with 6-monthold calf; half Jersey, half Red Angus; $1,500 for both. Leroy Floyd Hampton 770-946-4063
Hereford bulls, registered polled, many to choose from, great EPDs. Brad Mullins Martin 706-491-7556
Holstein heifers, $850 each; 10 to pick from, weigh 700 to 800, take all; $800.

er; September 2013, weighs approximately 900 pounds. Monica Turner Box Springs 229-649-6700 706-329-7843
Service-aged purebred Black Angus and black Simmental bulls, extensive AI breeding experience; registered and semen-tested. William Clanton Odum 912-221-1383 912-586-2388
Simmental bulls; birthdates Oct. 26, 2013, calving ease 6.1, birth weight 1.7; Jan. 1, 2014, calving ease 9.7, birth weight 1.9. James Woodard Madison 770-601-0492
Simmental with heifer calf, exposed to a registered Simmental; I can email the papers; $2,300. Mark Lynn Dallas johndeerefarm@live.com 770-490-6698
Six Black Angus heifers, averaging 600 pounds each; $8,000 for all; call or text. David Capell Elberton 706-988-8915 706-283-5950
Three Jersey bulls, 8 months old; one polled, $600; three Jersey bulls, 5 months old, $400. Brandon Carter Eatonton 706-473-4199
Two black registered yearling SimAngus bulls, gentle, lots of growth, eyeappeal, 68- to 70-pound birth weights; $2,500 to $2,800. Shannon Irvin Alto 706-768-1410
Two Hereford bulls, 20 and 22 months old, grass-based, easy calving. Angie H Stober Carrollton 770-854-4258
Yearling registered Hereford bulls and heifers, excellent bloodlines to choose from. Tim Parks Ellijay 706-635-2531
Swine

3-year-old registered 100 percent New Zealand Kiko billy; $300 or will trade for comparable billy. John Woodruff Tifton 229-388-0677 229-425-0801
50/50 Boer and Kiko kids, white with lemon heads; $100 each. Chris Nichols Hogansville 706-594-1910
ADGA Lamancha buck, champion bloodlines, great herd sire. Preston Garner Braselton 706-654-3423 678-6178836
ADGA registered American-Saanen dairy goats; superior genetics bucks, one doe, one wether, all show quality. S. Stephens Hoschton 706-654-2867
AKGA goats, does for sale; both registered and unregistered, lots of color; see website photos, www.greenwoodvalley.com Ruth Hancock LaGrange 706-333-1702
American purebred Kiko bucks, great bloodlines, also purebred does and kids. James Sarratt Jasper stevensarratt@gmail.com 706-260-5131
Babydoll sheep: rams, ewes, white and black, mock registered; $150 and up. Dianne Westbrook Crawford 706540-0633
Billy goats for sale, Boer mother on farm. E. Sims Carnesville 706-3845279
Boer semen, $25 or less; fullblood buck, $300; fullblood and percentage does for sale, call for info. Landon Boyett Glennville 912-213-4062
Five 6-month-old Boer goats; four fully grown goats; priced according to size;

windstream.net 229-649-9438
Two Nubian bucks, born February 2014, dehorned, bottle-fed, not registered; $75 each. Marvin Reynolds Pelham 229-224-4158
Two purebred Nigerian Dwarf bucks; 4 months old, friendly, disbudded; $250 each; email for pictures. Kaitlyn Johns Washington standfirmfarm@yahoo. com 706-293-2578
Two Spanish paint does; three colors: brown, black and white; $150 each. Ken Hatley Zebulon 770-358-1300
Equine For Sale
If you have questions regarding ads in 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

ter, bit and blanket; $125 for all. David Coppolino Newnan oniloppoc@yahoo. com 678-879-2585
One-horse Bagwell wagon with extra drop tongue to work two horses, fair condition; $1,000. Virgil Hunt Cleveland 706-865-3955
Pioneer forecart, red; draft, regular horse; pole, shafts, bench, single seat; $750; for training or fun. Tom Clark Winston naradog@att.net 770-596-0273
Round pen; 10 panels with walkthrough gate. Ivy Hailey Forsyth ichailey@bellsouth.net 478-737-6303
Still looking for "Doc," old swayback barrel horse sold to a girl in Gainesville. Roger Keebaugh Gainesville irineroger@yahoo.com 770-869-7941
Tucker Trail pleasure saddle, matching bridle, brown, like-new condition; $850 for both. Steve Stowers Dawsonville 706-974-0576
Two 16-inch soft seat, lightweight, black Bighorn saddles, excellent condition, $400 each; harness, other miscellaneous tack; cash only. Wyndell Carroll Rome 770-823-5737
Two-horse slant-load Gooseneck, rear tack, loft, 110-volt wiring, good recent tires, title; $3,600 or partial trade. William Miller LaFayette pupista@gmail. com 423-330-2938
Two-horse straight-load with ramp, 1989 newly painted and serviced, Jackson bumper pull, great condition, reduced to $3,250. Charlene Ratliff Monroe 404-217-2037
Two-horse wagon, good condition; $800. George Nunn Crawfordville 706-

Hubert Barbaree Buena Vista 229-3144839
Jersey nurse cows, can hand-milk, bred to Angus bull; $850. Joel Weatherford Millen 478-982-7813 478-9821212
Lim-Flex bull, 3.5 years old, wellmannered, sell or trade to keep from inbreeding. Frank Nocera Winder 770868-6026
Limousin bull; black polled, perfect in every way. Lewis Lairsey, Jr Waycross 912-285-5149
Miniature Brahman bull, would be great for junior rodeos or novelty animal, pictures available; $700. Clifford Chancey Blythe 706-554-0050
Miniature Zebu bull; 11 months old; gray in color; $750. Doug Williams Bluffton 229-308-0925
N-Bar Primetime D806 semen for sale; call for more information. Candi Willis Manchester Lands_farm@yahoo.com 706-573-1380
Performance-tested black full-blood

If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers submitting swine ads must submit proof of a negative brucellosis and pseudorabies test from within the past 30 days. Exceptions are swine from a validated brucellosis-free and qualified pseudorabies-free herd; 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 using the attachments button. Buyers are urged to request proof of a negative brucellosis and pseudorabies test prior to purchase.
Berkshire boar; 9 months, registered, good bloodlines; this sire is from the Powerline bloodline; $450 OBO. Jonathan Frazier Douglasville fraz2129@ gmail.com 404-431-2638
Grown and baby mini Potbelly pigs, $50-plus; rare colors, breeders proven and under 17 inches tall. Michelle Israel

no Sunday sales. David Rylee Monroe 770-267-3051
Four Kiko bucks, 6 months old; $150 each or trade for different bloodline; call after 12 p.m. Winfred Atkinson Homer 706-677-2484
Full-blooded Nubian nanny goat, call for infromation. Russell Cantrell Newborn 770-855-3008
Katahdin lambs, ewes and rams for sale; born February through March 2014; Bullfrog Hollow Farm on Facebook. Teresa Coggins Ranger 770-5955229
Katahdin-Dorper cross ram lambs. Susan Cobb Cedartown 404-218-1615 770-546-1565
Looking to trade Nubian doeling for Saanen doeling, friendly CAE-negative, ready to breed this year, want equivalent. Sharon Adams Clarkesville 706968-1644
Merino rams: produces beautiful Merino wool fleeces; gentle temperments; only serious sheep breeders, families need inquire. David Brannon Ranger

also require a current stable license in order to be published.
14-year-old palomino gelding, super gentle, performed well in Western and English events; $2,500. Lisa Weldon Americus 229-942-2306
20-year-old Hanoverian retired lesson horse; companion, potential trail horse, needs good home. Dawn Lovern Conyers 404-406-7055
2006 AQHA mare; 15.2 hands, wellbred, not trained to ride, but handled daily; pretty and smart; $250. Laura Terry Leesburg lterry00@gmail.com 229-894-6227
4-year-old Rocky Mountain gelding; chocolate, flaxon mare, tail; exceptional pedigree, temperament, gait; good on trails. Martha Thurmond Madison 706342-1989 706-372-2560
7-year-old Appaloosa mare, need good home; very pretty, requires training under saddle; email only please,
$200. Michelle Weeks Colbert petpalswinder@yahoo.com 770-363-2948

717-0398 Voitures carriage, royal blue, four to six
passengers, beautiful, ready to drive; $2,500 negotiable. Ronald Shelnutt Madison 706-818-3548
Boarding Facilities
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers must submit a current staple license in order to advertise boarding and breeding facilities. Ads submitted without this information will not be published. For questions regarding licenses and applications, call 404-656-3713.
Rosehaven Farm: horse boarding adjacent to state park (trails), barn, pastures, cover, grain, hay; $300 per month, license No. 12091. Lori Schmidt Rutledge 706-342-8834
Poultry/Fowl For Sale
If you have any questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Mallard ducks must be at least

Simmental, SimAngus bulls, cow-calf Dallas 678-363-1399

sweetveloblue@gmail.com 770-548- AQHA 17-year-old red roan mare, very three generations removed from the

pairs, heifers; AI, embryo bred, easy Guinea Hog piglets; weaning age, $25 1941

gentle, easy keeper, rides well; asking wild before they can be advertised.

calving, high milk, satisfaction guaran- each; all black, both sexes available. Nigerian Dwarf, excellent genetics, $900. David Mull Lexington ddmull93@ Advertisers must include this infor-

teed. Milton Martin Jr. Clarkesville 770- Steve Barronton Thomasville 229-224- registerable, disbudded, bottle-fed; yahoo.com 706-338-6056 706-743- mation in ads, or they will not be

519-0008

1398

wethers, bucklings, bottle babies, non- 7649

published.

Registered 2-year-old polled Devon Large black heritage hogs; will take to breeding doe; some moon-spotted, Miniature AMHR black Appaloosa 6- to 24-month-old Auracana, Dixie bull (P43294); breeding soundness eval- processor; registered large black boar. blue-eyed; $75 to $500. Mandy Adams mare; frosted blanket, gentle, pretty, 33 Queen, Cuckoo Maran, Seabrights,

uation available. Steven Peskoe Sand- Ed Shealey Douglasville bradbent- Greensboro/Monroe mthillart@yahoo. inches, 5 years old; delivery, $350. J Wil- blue Maran; $10 each. Thomas Bentley

ersville 478-232-1479

ley0@gmail.com 678-249-7319

com 404-606-2188

kes Athens 706-207-9366

Monroe 770-266-6942 770-480-0499

PAGE 6

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014

GUEST COLUMN: Celebrating October Agritourism Month

Gov. Nathan Deal has declared

October as Agritourism Month in

Georgia, and Georgia is a plethora

of agritourism sites in great vari-

ety. We have close to 600 farms

that allow the public to come and

visit for recreational, entertainment

or educational purposes. They are

not limited to north or south, but

are spread out all over our state

NORTON

and show some of the best parts of rural life. Find them by going

to our website, looking for the state's green agritour-

ism directional signs or asking your local chamber of

commerce.

Why are people so interested in agritourism? The

general population is now several generations removed

from the farm. Children and adults have no idea where

their food comes from and how it gets to the grocery

store. People are more and more interested in eating

healthy and buying directly from the farm. They want

to not only meet the farmer, they want to see where

the product is grown and learn more about the process.

And the public wants to spend days closer to home and

explore their local area and state. Agritourism allows

them to do all of these things and have fun!

Agritourism has allowed many farmers to keep prop-

erty that has been in their family for generations. They

are able to earn extra funds by sharing their passion

for the land and what they do. Farmers are big-hearted

folks and when they are able to share that emotion and

experience and see the eyes of others light up at making

the connections, it creates life-long memories.

It is fall y'all! Go experience it! Go pick apples, find

a corn maze, cane maze or sorghum maze; go watch sor-

ghum syrup being made in north Georgia or cane syrup in south Georgia; get pumpkins to decorate or make pies; take a hay ride; pet some farm animals; eat a farm-to-table dinner; get some local produce, jams and jellies; and celebrate all the things this great state has to offer.
What is agritourism, you ask? It is reaching into a peach tree and plucking that perfect piece of fruit and biting into the flesh to feel juice running down your chin. It is getting lost with a group of friends, laughing and giggling, trying to find your way out of acres of corn. It is sleeping in a barn loft under an old quilt, impatiently waiting to be able to get up in the morning and feed the farm animals. It is a long trail ride on horseback through the woods, the meadows and the shore, anywhere. It is riding the hay wagon through an apple orchard or cattle pasture. It is sitting on a veranda with a glass of wine made from the fruit growing just a few feet away. It is seeing the wonder on a child's face at the feel of the roughness of a cow's tongue across his hand, or the fuzzy head of a sheep or the tug of a goat nibbling your shirttail. It is the smell of a fresh Christmas tree being cut and attached to the car as you stand around a bonfire and drink hot chocolate. It is experiencing and learning about life on the farm, past and present. It is seeing a potter's wheel turn red clay from right up the road. It is a garden full of beautiful things grown right here. It is taking something grown from the soil and making it into something wonderful on the plate in front of you. It is becoming a part of what is around you, wherever you live in Georgia.
Cindy Norton is the Department's agritourism director. For more information about Georgia agritourism, visit www.georgiagrown.com or contact Norton at cynthia.norton@agr.georgia.gov or 404-656-3368.

The 2014 Georgia Grown farmto-school programs are off to a great start. East Jackson Elementary School in Commerce, Ga., was selected as a Test Kitchen Initiative school. Faculty, staff and students kicked off the program with an Ag Day featuring costumes, educational setups and an entire menu of Georgia-grown fare. Debra Morris, school nutrition director for Jackson County and Chef Rich Friedman of East Jackson Elementary pose with some of the students who participated in the costume parade (photo 1). Meanwhile
in the cafeteria, pre-K student Riley Embrick munches on his Georgia-grown lunch (photo 2). Just a few miles
away, Danielsville Elementary School also celebrated the Madison County Feed My School for a Week pro-
gram. Danielsville Elementary joined the program this year as part of the continuation of Madison County's participation from 2013. Pictured are Principal Angie Waggoner, Superintendent Allen McCannon, Commissioner Gary W. Black, School Nutrition Director Barbara Adair and school cafeteria staff (photo 3). Photos courtesy Misty Friedman and East Jackson Elementary.

agriCULTURE
Letter from the editor
I try to stay away from politics as much as humanly possible. I'm just a journalist who happens to work for a government agency. It's still my job to present multiple perspectives on features and news pieces.
But there's one political thing I want to bring to your attention in this edition's column. Ladies and gents, please mark your calendar for upcoming elections and public comment deadlines!
"Oh no," you say. "This poor, crazy editor chick is going to tell us to vote for Joe Q. Public, Jane Doe and everything else on her liberal media agenda!"
But no, say I! Yep, this is an opinion column (as are all other columns that appear on this page you know, like the op/ed page in your daily newspaper). But nay, it is not a place for me to tell you who and what to vote for, because that's a) dumb and b) your decision and c) not my place. However, I do feel totally appropriate saying that every Market Bulletin subscriber, reader and social media fan should take a few minutes and utilize their rights to freedom of speech and voting this fall. I recently saw a graphic in USA Today that showed what students and teachers believed to be the most important first amendment rights, and the overwhelming majority said "freedom of speech." I'm sure many of you have heard about the US Environmental Protection Agency's recent proposed amendments to the Clean Water Act. Georgia Commissioner of Agriculture Gary W. Black shared his thoughts on the issue in a recent Market Bulletin guest column, and the Farm Bureau's "Ditch the Rule" campaign quite literally takes over my personal and the paper's Twitter feeds on a regular basis. I assumed that thousands of Georgians, both farmers and consumers, submitted comments during the EPA's public comment period on the subject. Imagine my surprise, then, when I learned that only 217,000 people voiced their thoughts on the proposed regulation, known as "Waters of the United States." Yep. That's it. That's like, barely 2 percent of Georgia's population, much less America's! Y'all, that is embarrassing. Whether you are for the proposed amendments, against them or somewhere in the middle, you have got to speak up! The EPA actually extended the public comment period to Nov. 14, which means you've got about one month after this column hits your mailbox to utilize those first amendment rights we find so vitally important! So let me challenge you to take a few moments and educate yourself on this (and other!) legislative and political issues related to agriculture, and then share your thoughts with the EPA and our federal representatives and senators. For this particular amendment (EPA-HA-OW-2011-0880), you can visit www.regulations.gov, email ow-docket@epa.gov or mail to Water Docket, EPA, Mail Code 2822T, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC, 20460 to voice your opinion. Our elected officials do very much care that we speak up. When I was a staff member with Cattlemen's, I had the chance to visit federal and state legislative offices and speak in person to people I'd previously only known through political commercials during election season. No matter if I voted for them to begin with or not, each of these individuals wanted to hear from myself and fellow Cattlemen's representatives. They couldn't represent us if they didn't know what we thought! And folks, it's almost even more important to voice your opinion on an issue if you didn't vote that person into office. They still represent us, so let's make it a point to do our part and make sure they represent us in an informed manner in every instance.
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.

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.

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

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722
ARTY'S GARDEN: A wing and a prayer

PAGE 7

Watch Arty feed his rescued hummingbird at www. youtube.com/user/gamktbulletin

I love watching hummingbirds. The little feathered rockets darting around the garden amaze me with how they hover and fly backwards on wings that move so fast they are a blur.
Last October I noticed a hummingbird in my garden doing aerial maneuvers that alarmed me, however. It would fly, plop to the ground, fly and hit the ground again. It appeared to be bouncing. Something was wrong.
I scooped the bird off the ground into my hands. Hummingbirds are small, but I didn't fully appreciate how small until I held one. It was a juvenile male ruby-throated hummingbird: the red feathers on his throat were starting to come in. His right wing was injured. An injured wing is serious for any bird, but for a hummer especially so. Hummingbirds feed mainly on the wing and feed almost constantly to maintain their high metabolism and to build up fat reserves for their long spring and fall migrations.
What to do? If the tiny bones were actually broken, I feared the bird would be a goner. It was mid-October. Most hummingbirds had already left for the Yucatan and Central America. If he could be rehabilitated, would it be in time for him to migrate? Would he be strong enough to do so? Would valiant efforts to save him only prolong his pain and distress?
I held him up to the flowers of a pineapple sage and firecracker vine. He immediately started feeding. I placed him in a container and took him inside where I made a solution of sugar water. I dipped my index finger in the solution, and the bird leaned in to investigate. Out came a thread-like tongue that began to lap it up. I could barely feel the tiny tongue make contact, and I wondered if my fingerprint felt like a

washboard to him. After an online search and several phone calls, I found
a wildlife rehabilitator with experience handling hummingbirds. I carried the little fellow to her in a dark box to keep him calm.
I confessed to her that I had debated what to do. She reminded me that we are part of nature, too. We alter the environment and do things harmful to birds. Why should we

feel guilty for going out of our way to rescue one? She also explained that if the wing was broken, and there was no way for the bird to survive on its own, she could euthanize him so he would not suffer.
"He's fat; he hasn't been down for long," the rehabilitator said as she gently examined him. She was an expert and had seen hummers that were near starvation because they had been unable to feed. The fact that he was "fat" was good news.
I was also comforted when she said the injury appeared to be a sprain rather than a break. She wrapped him in gauze to immobilize him and placed him into a container that served as a hummingbird ICU.
A week later I received a welcome message: "Thankfully, the wing was just sprained, and he regained flight after some rest and relaxation. I have now released him, and I assume he is starting his long journey south for the winter."
There is no way to tell if the hummingbird released into the October sky came back to Georgia or even if it arrived safely at its winter home. Life is full of dangers for us all big and small, humans and hummers.
I've watched a lot of hummingbirds this year. When I see one now I sometimes stop to whisper the prayer I uttered when I when I handed that injured creature over to the rehabilitator and again when I learned of his recovery and release: "Godspeed, little bird."
Arty Schronce is the Department's resident gardening expert and hummingbird advocate. He urges all Georgians to plant an assortment of flowers to attract hummingbirds. There are many options available at nurseries and garden centers.

SWEET: More than 1,800 acres of sweet potatoes planted in Georgia last year
From Page 1

Delbert Bland, owner of Bland Farms in Glennville, Ga., said that mindset is a great option for Georgia growers.
"It's all about food miles anymore if you can grow something in this area and it can be grown in a closer proximity to what [a customer] has been bringing sweet potatoes into, you're way ahead of the game," he said.
Bland grows about 200 acres of sweet potatoes. This is his first year expanding his farm's sweet success it's known for Vidalia and other sweet onion varieties into this starchy commodity.
"They're doing very well," he said. "Sweet potatoes are an ideal crop because one, the land is ideal in south Georgia for them."
It also helps that much of the same equipment and facilities used for onions can be used for the potatoes. That dual purpose helped to diversify Bland Farms tremendously, he said.
Sweet potatoes were worth nearly $11 million in farm gate value last year, according to the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. They were grown on more than 1,800 acres in 24 Georgia counties during 2013.
"The key to sweet potatoes, sweet onions or anything else is having a market where you can go directly to market on your own," Bland said. "We already have a large customer base."
Bland Farms' Covington sweet potatoes go directly to the retail market and grocery stores.
Sweet potatoes were worth nearly $11 million in farm gate value last year, according to the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. They were grown on more than 1,800 acres in 24 Georgia counties during 2013.
The varieties of sweet potatoes range in color from white to purple, with shades of yellow and orange in between. Georgia's most popular varieties include the Jewel and Georgia Jet, according to the Ocilla-Irwin Chamber of Commerce.
"I planted Beauregard," Hagerson said. "When you bake it and you cut it open, it's or-

ange. It's not a yellow tint to it; it's just a pretty bright orange, a good looking potato."
Cultivating potatoes takes more than just planting the seedlings, known as slips. First, potatoes are planted in beds about six inches deep what Hagerson's father specialized in early in the year. When the temperature warms up, the potatoes sprout, and producers cut the slips to plant. Once they're planted, sweet potatoes don't require much maintenance, other than some fertilizer and water and occasionally a spray to kill weeds. After harvest, the potatoes must be put in a curing room for a period of time. Hagerson harvested approximately 2,700 bushels from his two acres.
Though he's only grown them for a couple of years on the farm, Hagerson is no stranger to the sweet potato business: his father grew them for the sweet potato house in Americus, and used to grade them using a piece of wood with different sizes of holes cut out.
There are several different grades of sweet potatoes, including No. 1, No. 2 and jumbos.
"A No. 1 is going to be about like a Campbell's soup can it's going to be about that big in diameter. I would say a No. 1 is about 2.5 or three inches in diameter," Hagerson said. "Then a jumbo is the one that's real large."
No. 2 sweet potatoes are the smaller ones, he said. Hagerson is working to develop a local market for smaller potatoes, but hopes to have many jumbos this year to sell to nearby country cooking restaurants and individuals to make into pies.
"I'm trying to get a market for all the sizes," he said. "There's too many folks in the country that are hungry."
Though he only has two acres, Hagerson still got between 2,600 and 2,700 bushels of sweet potatoes on this year's crop.
"I'm just playing with it," he said. `It's not a major money-making deal, I just enjoy doing it. I think the sweet potato market, as far as health goes, I think it's got a place."
Fall intern Beth Mohler contributed to this story.

FEATURE RECIPE:
Oven-roasted sweet potatoes
Editor's Note: This is a quick way to prepare sweet potatoes with a spicy kick! We served ours up with some Georgia apple slices for a delectable fall treat. The completed recipe serves four. Ingredients: 4 sweet potatoes, peeled and cubed cup olive oil 2 tablespoons crushed red pepper flakes 1 teaspoon salt Instructions: 1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit. 2. Coat a shallow baking pan with olive oil. 3. Stir cubed sweet potatoes in with red pepper flakes and salt until the pota-
toes are well-coated. 4. Bake for 30 minutes or until potatoes are soft. Stir halfway through cooking
to make sure potatoes are coated evenly and do not stick.

PAGE 8

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014

Americana roosters; homing and mix Gamefowl: Sid Taylor, YLH, Sweater Two breeder pairs of Mandarin ducks Young llamas: female, $600; three New Zealand-Californian mix and

pigeons, young, healthy, beautiful; $7 ea. hatch, Sweater grey, White Hackel and and pool with drain, will trade for high males, $250 each; all beautiful. Marsha purebred Silver Foxes; call 9 a.m. to 5

Lynn Schlup Oconee 478-552-1119

Mug, Gilmore; many hens, pullets and percentage Spalding peahen. Charlie Randolph Locust Grove 678-815-1999 p.m., seven days; inside 285. Lenny Ste-

Americana, buffs, Cochins, Wyandottes, show-quality; Old English, Columbian, splash, quail, blue quail, blue

crosses. Tom Lilley Jeffersonville 478945-6139
Grown 2014 guineas, hatched July and

Townsend Macon 478-258-9930
Two Thompson white cocks; $100 each. Wayman Jordan Douglasville

Alternative Livestock Requiring Permit/License

venson Atlanta 404-867-9525
Rabbits: New Zealand, white California mix, 8 weeks; $2; please call. Don Ader-

brassy back, B.B. red, others. Randy August. Harlin Williamson Bowdon 770- 404-245-9374 770-942-4996

If you have questions regarding ads in holt Rockmart 770-505-6801

Shoemake Carrollton 678-796-9222 258-7360

Young roosters, Cherokee County, me- this category, call 404-656-3722.

San Juan-New Zealand cross, oneb-

Americauna: three roosters; $10 for all. Guineas: 4 months old, coral blue, vio- dium size, white and buff. Caralee Ha- Advertisers selling fallow deer, buck, one doe; good producers. Jerry

Bobby Drake Gainesville 770-536-6268 let, purple, chocolate, brown and pow- good White 770-224-8974

axis deer, sika deer, elk, red deer, Bray Colbert brayjd@uga.edu 706-788-

Australorp hens for sale, $12 each; der blue; $20 each. Kristy Bonner Tay-

great egg layers, only 1 year old. Zach lorsville 770-286-0469

Miller Alto 770-519-0467

Half buff, half black Silkies; $20 per

Poultry/Fowl Requiring Permit/License

reindeer and caribou must submit 2332

a current deer farming license with their ads. Ads submitted without

FEED, HAY AND GRAIN

LIVESTOCK WANTED B.B.Reds, Barred Old English, young
bourbon red turkeys, young Muscovy ducks for sale; priced according to age. Dwayne Beard Royston 706-498-5527
Baby chicks; American Dominique, buff Orpington, Rhode Island Red; pure breeds, reasonable prices. Monte Poitevint Lakeland 229-482-3854
Bamtams: five hens, one rooster, all adults, 1 year old, also just-hatched guineas. Sandra Smith Covington 770337-0160 770-786-6227
Bantam roosters, assorted breeds, Seramas, Silkies; ages 6 months to 2 years; not for eating; $15 each. Mike Shivers Monroe 4mshivers@windstream.net 770-267-2702
Bantams and others for sale. Robert Chambers Flowery Branch 770-9676422
Bantams, buffs, Cochins hens $10; roosters $5; two hens and one rooster, $20. Johnny Mayo Gray 478-960-1446
Breeders: turkeys, blue slate, royal palms; breeder pheasants; elliots, red gold; young big breed chickens. Gerald

trio; 19-month-old Indian Blue peahens, $80 each; white Silkies, $5. Jack R Jenkins Harlem 706-556-3261
Indian runner duck pairs; white Japanese silkies, white Chinese geese males, guineas. Hank Cole Hephzibah 762-333-4961
Laying hens, Rhode Island Reds, Barred Rocks, Black Australorps and some roosters; $5 each. Benny Epps Tunnel Hill 706-673-9442
Marans: 40 hens, 8 to 15 months, copper, blue copper, splash, wheaten; $25 to $40 each. Carlos Leach Stockbridge carlos.g.leach@gmail.com 770-9106989
More than 100 white doves. Lee Adams Macon 478-228-1782
Old English game birds: Crele, Red Quill, show potential Ledford and Cocoran lines, reasonable prices. Clarence Whatley Thomaston 706-647-5122
One male and two female peacocks for sale; male is 1 year old; female 6 months; $300. Alana Hayes Tallapoosa

If you have questions regarding this
category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers selling wood ducks 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 commercial quail breeder's license. Ads for quail that do not have this license will not be published. For information on these licenses, call the Georgia Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Resources Division at 770918-6401. 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.
2 weeks old, healthy and ready to
leave, quails are located in Statesboro,
Ga. James Williams Statesboro 803-

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 404-656-3667. For information on other hoofed stock, excluding llamas and buffalo, contact the Georgia Department of Natural Resources at 770-761-3044.
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Large sows; close to Madison County. Tony Chandler Colbert tcchandler55@ yahoo.com 706-202-5888
Mammoth jenny, 14 hands or more, gentle. Joy Bettis Dahlonega 706-4293872 706-429-3872
Zebu cattle. Phil Seibel Jasper 770881-2382

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 square bermuda, $5.50; round 4x5, $45; fertilized, rainfree; K/P Farm. Horace Pippin Culloden 770-358-0815 770-550-7837
$30 4x4 rolls, fescue hay, rain-free, stored in barn, fertilized; $4 square bales, all 2014. Carl Henson Ellijay 706264-4477
`14 alfalfa square bales, $12, round bales, $100; 4x5 fescue: cow, $25, horse, $35: weed-free, fertilized; delivery. Dale Hall Calhoun 706-5060351
`14 alicia bermuda hay; horse quality, fertilized with nitrogen; under barn; 4x4 round, $30; square bales, $4; can deliver. Dicky Dixon Reidsville 912-6542941

LIVESTOCK HANDLING Hayes Flowery Branch 470-208-0309 404-567-1192

466-0629

Doves: white, unsexed birds; mixed Pair of Golden Seabrights, $20, White Bobwhite quail, flight conditioned, now

`14 alicia bermuda in barn, horse quality, 4x5 rolls; four or more, $50; close

Old English Bantam roosters. Robert G Crested black polish, $5, two Auracana available for the 2014 and 2015 season, If you have questions regarding ads in delivery available. Henry Beckworth

Sybers Stone Mountain 404-713-6393 roosters, $7 each. Thomas Bentley call for pricing. Rembert Hancock Fair- this category, call 404-656-3722.

Gibson 706-598-2106

Ducks (Muscovy) ducklings to mature; Monroe 770-266-6942 770-480-0499 mount 404-376-0550 706-337-5711

120-pound 6x2 cattle panels and com- `14 alicia, horse quality, fertilized, rain-

good variety of colors; $5 to $18 each. J. Lashley LaGrange 404-274-1702
Five black Australorp roosters, 6

Pekin drakes, 4 months old; $10 each; healthy ducks, can send photos. Sabrina Ashley Murrayville ashleysa@yahoo.

Bobwhite, Coturnix quail eggs; $70 for 100, $140 for 500, $270 for 1,000. Willie Strickland Pooler stricklandgamebird.

plete galvanized sweep system. Anthony Carpenter Madison/Lake Oconee 706-318-1979

free, barn-kept, square bales only $4.50; ask for Scott. Cheryl Lynch Waynesville 912-266-4755

months old; $10 each. Glenn Smith com 706-482-8345

com 912-748-5769

16-foot Neckover livestock trailer, `14 coastal bermuda square bales; $5,

Athens redhillfarm74@gmail.com 706207-7878
Five Golden Comet roosters for sale; 3 months old, $10 each. Danny Moore Lithia Springs dannyr47@bellsouth.net 770-819-8144
French Maran roosters, 6 months old and crowing, ready to breed, good stock, good coloring; $20 each. Pat Duggar Eatonton 478-345-0638
Game Harald Brown, 3/4, 1/4 Sweeter Roundhead hatch, feather legs; chicken harald brown hatch 1/2; 1/2 Sweeeter Round Hatch. Clifton Botts Dahlonega 706-429-8887
Gamefowl: Jimmy east, green leg hatch, Leipers and Law grays; pricing varies according to number purchased. Daniel Vickery Royston 706-436-6567

Pond-ready Muscovy ducks and ducklings; $5 each. Micah Whitlock Newnan 678-423-6134
Rhode Island hens; just started laying. Terry Cagle Rome jtlc100@msn.com 706-266-1218
Rhode Island Red pullets, also New Hampshire Red pullets; healthy, wellgrown birds. Brian Sturdy Dahlonega 706-865-9201
Rhode Island Red roosters, $6; pullets, $12; healthy birds, 4 to 6 months old, leave message. Richard McCallister Alto 706-677-5032 706-809-1763
Three pair Diamond doves, healthy and beautiful, asking $40 per pair. Michael Oberbillig Collins 912-557-3460 912-557-3460

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
Nothern Bobwhite quail, flight, penraised; $3.75. Fletcher Christian Rome 706-728-0375 706-895-3030
Poultry/Fowl Wanted
Muscovy ducks and guineas within 15 to 20 miles of Monroe, Ga. Linda Duke Good hope 770-267-1520 770-5495383
One standard light Brahma rooster and one standard salmon Faverolle rooster. Charles Wilkes Demorest 706-7682683
Pairs or trios of brown red Old English games. Darrell Dotson Griffin 678-3269357
Red Trenton homing pigeons and Old English BBR rooster of good quality. Kim Hogan Cleveland hoganguitar1975@ yahoo.com 706-809-1215
Roswell-area lake wants a few white

6,000-pound axles, eight-lug wheels; $3,200; leave message. Mark Boyles Dawson 229-995-4694
16x5-foot stock trailer; good condition, except needs two boards replaced. Lewis Rice Monticello 706-468-0019 706-819-8434
20-foot Gooseneck cattle, stock trailer, tandem 7,000 axles, great condtion, skid-proof flooring, cut gate, no rust; $4,500. Mark Woodham Madison 706752-0077
2000 14x8 Red WW cattle trailer, good condition, barn-kept; call for price. Brett Bozeman Ball Ground 770-5950774
2009 Stoll 20-foot livestock trailer, sliding cut gate, canopy, escape door; $6,900. Joseph Bryson Dawsonville 706-974-8952
36-foot Stoll stock trailer; 2008 model, three cut gates, front walk-out gate, one slide gate, rubber floor, good condition. Dustin Giesbrecht Davisboro 706-8313046
Calf hutches; $225 each, 20 available. Tom Callaway Washington 706-401-

in barn. Larry Cook Statham 706-2028083
`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 coastal bermuda, horse quality, square bales, storage $6; also fescue, mixed, $5.50. Ben Daniels Clarkesville 404-281-6224
`14 coastal, weed-free, fertilized round bales, $45; square bales, field $5.50, barn $6.50. Leonard Kinsley Perry 478714-9900
2013 fescue, bermuda mix; 4x5 round, $40; square bales, $4.50; mulch hay, square bales, $2.75; round $25. Rick Anderson Taylorsville 404-4028470
2013 fescue, orchard; excellent quality, dry in barn; $3.50 per bale. Chris Donath Ellijay 706-636-5224
2014 4x6 rolls, net-wrapped fescue, bermuda, johnson grass; barn-kept, $30 per five or more, otherwise $45. Dale Fletcher Ranger 770-550-4945

ducks. Jimmy Jenkins Roswell clari- 1418

2014 alfalfa hay for sale. Doug Towery

on47g@gmail.com 770-365-8795

Cattle head gates, all steel, heavy-du- Ellijay 706-897-4360

Seeking Bantams in the following: ty, easy manual operating; opens to 28 2014 bermuda hay, 4x5 tight net-

white Plymouth Rock, golden Campine. inches wide, walk-through, self locking; wrapped bales, rain- and weed-free,

Calvin Childers Guyton 912-376-2336 $300 each. Pete Harris Elberton 706- analysis available, barn-stored. William

Two Bantam hens, prefer Old English; 283-6615

Page Wrightsville 478-864-2942

in or near Bartow County, will consider Cattle sweep system, two holding 2014 bermuda hay, horse quality, 16.9

others. Reuben Jones Rydal 770-382- pens, sweep tub, alley, gates and pan- protein, RFQ 149; 4x5 net rolls, $45;

4405

els, galvanized, excellent; $5,250. Larry squares, $6. Mike Dubose Junction

Two Buff Orpington roosters; young Maney Baldwin 706-244-4348

City 706-366-1665

but breeding age, healthy; prefer near Extra large Powder River squeeze 2014 bermuda hay; square bales in

Moultrie, southwest Georgia. Ralph chute, palpation cage and trailer; barn, rain-free, $5; Embry Farm. Mar-

Brown Moultrie 229-985-4808

bought new, asking $4,500. Raleigh lene Embry Johns Creek 770-476-1193

Two silver laced Wyandotte roosters. Gibbs Abbeville 229-365-7113 229- 2014 bermuda, common and coastal;

Christi Baldwin Stockbridge 678-898- 365-3538

square bales $5; round $35, in barn;

4685
ALTERNATIVE

Llama chute on platform, locking wheels, straps; $500; leave message.

fertilized, weed-free. Lynn Hall Madison 706-342-9022

Mary Nix Molena 706-647-9095 678- 2014 bermuda, fescue mix; 4x5 round

LIVESTOCK 572-2275

bales, high quality, fertilized, sprayed,

If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722.
Alpaca: female, bred to championproducing male; older, light fawn; $500. Jason Herr Catersville jason@deerhollowfarm.com 770-862-7102

Sullivan's five feet tall, upright Treadbrite Dolly show box; only used at one show, $565; $400 savings. Paul Smith Watkinsville 706-224-2898
Trojan hydraulic squeeze cattle chute, excellent condition. David Flake Ashburn 229-777-1834

rain-free; $40 to $45; delivery available. Eddie Hilburn Danielsville 706-9883373
2014 bermuda, high quality, $5.50 at barn; delivery available. Al Guillebeau Monroe 770-267-8929
2014 bermuda: square bales, $6; rolls $50; horse quality, delivery available.

Alpacas: some as low as $500 OBO. Deborah Rodriguez Commerce 706-

RABBITS

David Harden LaFayette 706-397-8347 2014 coastal bermuda hay, 4x5 net-

336-6683

If you have questions regarding ads in wrapped, stored in barn, horse quality.

Emus, equipment for sale: 11 adult this category, call 404-656-3722.

Fred Sackett Butler 478-952-5399

birds, GQF incubator new, GQF hatcher, Bunnies for sale, $10; white, gray, 2014 coastal bermuda hay, 4x5

miscellaneous supplies; $1,500. Ken brown black and Siamese, some lop- round, square and mulch hay. Larry Winschuh Augusta rockwisperer@bell- eared. Diane Oxford Covington 770- Morgan Lizella 478-781-1990 478-972-

south.net 706-793-0040

464-2988

5977

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

PAGE 9

2014 coastal bermuda hay, horse qual- Bermuda, fescue mix hay; 4x5 net- 40-pound bags of oats. Myron Colley Aucuba, blue hydrangea, oakleaf hy- Perennials, Helleborus, ferns, small

ity, $5 per bale at barn; delivery avail- wrapped rolls; approximately 800 Metter fendersautosales@hotmail.com drangeas, daylilies, iris, blanket flower, scrubs, vines, shade plants, some na-

able. Glenn Brinson Tarrytown 912- pounds; $40, delivery available. Jack 706-306-3506

verbenas, phlox, ageratum, many more; tives. Gail Hollimon Buford lastplug@

288-5960

Jenkins Athens 706-286-4438 706- Oats: Coker 227, germination 93, pure $1 and up. Jeanette Poss Cumming bellsouth.net 770-855-4252

2014 coastal bermuda hay; $35 per 372-0287

seed 99, 50-pound bags; $11 per bag. 770-889-0566

Planting pots, three-gallon to 40-gal-

roll, 4x4 bales; fertilized and limed; de- Clean, dry, highly fertilized, net- Cody Faulk Dublin 478-697-9592

Azaleas, crape myrtles, leyland cy- lon; 95 for 450; daylilies, free iris, varie-

livery available. Lowinston Jackson wrapped, 72-inch tall bermuda hay for Seed oats, germination 98 percent, press, acuba, hibiscus, red bud, English gated liriope; $3 large clump. J. Wilson

Grantville 770-583-2385

sale, barn-stored, freshly cut; $45 each. purity 99.14, 50-pound bags; $15 per dogwood; lots more $2 and up. Carol Tyrone 770-486-0304

2014 coastal bermuda hay; 4x5 round, Ashley Galbreath Lyons 912-293-7097 bag. Doug Bailey Dudley 478-279-4769 Bland Fayetteville 770-964-3162

Red castor bean or loofah sponge

square and mulch hay. Larry Morgan Li- Coastal bermuda hay, fertilized and Wrens abruzzi rye for sale, 50-pound Beautiful decorative fall mums, variety seeds; 25 for $3, 100 for $10, send

zella 478-972-5977 478-781-1990

limed, quality 4x4 bales, delivery avail- bags, 72 percent germination; $15 per of sizes and colors; $5 to $15 per pot; SASE. Joy Shelnutt P.O. Box 1212 Lo-

2014 coastal bermuda hay; horse able. Jermaine Barlow Luthersville 706- bag. Walter Prescott Wrens 706-547- discounts on volume purchases. Brenda ganville 30052

quality, square bales, $4.50 per bale; 302-7658

6681

Miller Ranger 706-624-0693

Seeds: mullein pink, touch-me-nots,

horse, cow quality rolls, $25 to $45. Curtis Durden Lyons 912-526-3189 912-245-1081

Coastal bermuda hay; horse quality, rain-free, square bales, at barn for $6 each. Bill Turner Brooks 770-401-9648

Ag Plants for Sale

Black bamboo, golden bamboo, beau- four-o-clocks, money plant, morning ty berry, cannas, others. David Pelton glory, hibiscus, devil's trumpet, Siberian

Bare-root Chandler strawberry plants; Covington 678-654-0571

iris; $1 teaspoon, SASE, cash. G. Rob-

2014 coastal bermuda, horse quality, fertilized, limed, rain-free, 4x5 netwrapped; $5.75 Grace Brady Hephzibah 706-231-0985
2014 coastal bermuda, horse quality, square bales; $5.50 per bale, 15-bale minimum; approximately 225 bales available. Scott Chambers Braselton 706-983-0603
2014 coastal, fescue, bahia, 4x4 netwrapped rolls, well-limed, fertilized; $30 per roll in field; $35 in barn. James Pierce Waverly Hall 404-372-8631 678610-6621
2014 fertilized Alicia Bermuda hay, 4x5, net-wrapped rolls; $50 per bale.
FLOWERS REQUIRING Brian Usry Wrens 706-831-4971 706-
547-2144
PERMITS 2014 fescue mixed hay, 4x5 rolls or
square bales, barn-stored, delivery available. Jimmy Payne Rockmart 404557-8448
2014 fescue, bermuda mix, 4x5 rolls, fertilized, sprayed, net-wrapped; horse and cow hay. Glen Whitley Bethlehem 770-867-2718
2014 fescue, bermuda rolls, rain-free in barn; $40 per roll, $35 per roll for 10 or more. Jonathan Holbrook Cumming jono1028@yahoo.com 404-775-8417
2014 hay; fescue and fescue, bermuda mix; $25 per roll and up, or trade. Jerry Glancy Griffin 404-433-3568
2014 peanut hay, 4x6 net-wrap rolls; $100 per ton. Curtis Davis Chester 478697-7784
2014 round bales, 4x5 40 square bales $4.50, barn-kept, fescue, bermuda, sprayed and fertilized; delivery avail. Kenny Sargent Rockmart 770-490-1227
MISCELLANEOUS 2014 russell bermuda hay, 5x4 roll,
$45 per bale; delivered. Tommy Rider Waynesboro 706-554-9785
2014 russell bermuda, 80 four-foot rolls; $40 per roll. Glen Bailey Madison 706-342-1343
2014 Rye and wheat mixed; 4x6 rolls, stored in barn; $35 per roll. Jack Beamon Smithville 229-815-1516
2014 Tift 44 and 85, high-quality horse hay, squares and rolls; delivery

Coastal, bahia mix; 800- to 1,000-pound bales, baled with Claas baler, $60 inside, $35 to $45 outside; $25 mulch. Coy Baker Loganville 770466-4609
Corn, $40 per 55-gallon drum; B&C Farming. Ed Burrell Monticello
Fescue 4x5 round bales in the barn; $35, cow hay. Beth Ellenburg Acworth 770-975-3916
Fescue; horse quality, $3.50; fescue mix, horse and cow quality, $3. Kermit Simmons Jefferson 770-867-7550
Field-ready bermuda, 4x5 bales. Andre Barlow Grantville 706-637-8917 706302-7658
Good cow hay for sale, net-wrapped 4x5; $35 per roll. Frank Scott Hawkinsville frank.scott@windstream.net 478284-1950
Horse quality bermuda hay; 20,000 square bales; 200 round rolls. Paul Harris Odum 912-294-2470
Horse quality fescue hay. Robert Himes Summerville 706-857-3756
Horse quality hay; 2014, 4x6 rolls; Coastal Bermuda, RFQ is 135; protein 16.7 percent; $125 per roll. Michael Jones Eastman 478-285-1343
Quality 2014 round rolls of hay, 4x5.5 with net-wrap; $35 to $50 per roll, delivery available. Chad Hendrix Collins 912-237-3430
Round bales, orchard, fescue grass, 4x4, rain-free bales; $18 per bale, delivery available. Ron Smith LaFayette 706-537-8841
September 2014 Tift 44; excellent horse hay, fresh cut and dry in barn, nice bales; $6. Paige Bullock Dallas 770-402-2421
Shelled yellow feed corn and wheat, for sale by the barrel. Wayne Montgomery Reynolds 478-847-2356
Square bale hay, 2014 bermuda, fertilized and rain-free, can deliver. Peggy McCart McDonough 770-957-2270
Top quality Alicia Bermuda, fresh cut, and 4x5 net-wrapped; $50 per roll. Larry

disease-free, naturally grown to organic standards. Julia Asherman Jeffersonville jasher@saic.edu 617-777-0117
Blueberry plants; Southern highbush varieties, Meadowlark, Farthing, and others. Jason Bell Homerville 912-5990013
Blueberry, thornless blackberry plants, as low as $1.65 with volume; fruit trees $5; wildlife trees, as low as $2. Kelly Blizman Perry blueberrygirl@comsouth. net 478-955-6025
Boxwoods, several sizes, in ground, will help dig, bring burlap. Robert Crowder Greenville 706-663-8276
Chinkapins: delicious, 50 cents each, minimum; shipped free, $4 each, includes instructions, how to grow your own bush. James Vaughn Cornelia jamesvaughn@windstream.net 706778-9554
Coastal, alicia, russell, Tift 85 and bermuda sprigs; also custom planting. Mack McGee Glenwood 912-568-7379 229-868-0262
Coastal, russell sprigs; also custom planting, statewide. Freeman Montgomery Junction City barbfree@gmail.com 706-366-1956 706-575-5697
Egyptian walking onions for sale; $16, half-gallon, postage paid. Jimmy Bowden Woodbury 706-553-2999
Free raspberry plants; call and I will dig for you when you want plants. Margaret Street Covington 770-787-1815
Japanese maple trees; $25 to $60; three-gallon pots. David Byrd Covington 770-786-5654
Mature heritage red raspberry, bear twice annualy, $4; $3 if 100 or more. Stan Gray Ellijay gray@ellijay.com 706273-4251 706-635-4535
Old-fashioned Concord and pink grapevines; gallon and three-gallon sizes available, $5 and $10; must be picked up. Dona Vinson Dillard dona_vinson@ yahoo.com 706-746-9995
Pecan trees: grafted bareroot; call to place your order for January 2015; Pawnee, Sumner, Oconee varieties. Andy

Castor mole bean seed; 40 for $6 , free shipping. Kathleen Biddy 395 Duckett LN Ball Ground 30107 770-735-3548
Crape myrtles, pink or white, 20-gallon containers, no shipping; $35 each. Myrtle Russell Bonaire 478-923-1951
Daffodils: White Mount Hood, old time yellow, old time double bloomers, white narcissis blue bells, mole bean seed. E. Beach Duluth 770-476-1163
Daylily overstock reduction sale: $3 each; considering any offer on shipping. Mary Denney Newnan ferncove98@aol. com 770-367-5095
Four-inch perennials, 350 varieties, $1.50 each including Helleborus; onegallon grafted Japanese maples, $20 to $25; display garden. Selah Ahlstrom Jackson 770-775-4967
Four-o-clock, cleome, touch-me-not, Mexican sunflower, money plant, Shasta daisy, $1 each, large; SASE. B. Savage 3017 Atkins Dr. Gainesville 30507
Free border liriope and several tall red cannas, easy to dig. Marcus Edwards Marietta 770-422-6448
Giant cosmos orange seeds, six to eight feet not unusual, 60-plus seeds; $1 plus SASE. Ira Bray 70 Wilkes Ct. Newnan 30263 770-253-0392
Grancy Greybeard seeds, yellow fouro-clock and red four-o-clock seeds, $1 per package, SASE. L. H. Norton 25384 Hendricks Rd Metter 30439
Iris; beautiful purple, white iris plant, now for spring blooms; $16 per dozen, pre-paid. M. Hemphill 306 Cedar Creek Rd. Winder 30680 770-867-6188
Japanese maples, azaleas, gardenia, hosta, hydrangeas, roses. Linda Waites Fairburn 770-964-6414
Joseph's coat of many color seed, $1 per packet with SASE. Carolyn Arnold 644 Lynn Ave. Jefferson 30549
Lenten roses (Hellebores) mature plants will bloom this January, $4 each; pachysandra 50 plants, $10. Carol Olson Marietta carololsonmar@hotmail. com 770-998-1076

ertson 2966 Cardinal Lake Cir. Duluth 30096
Tea plants -- Camellia sinensis, 24 inches high; pick-up only; $6.50 each. Terry McClure Milledgeville 478-4560624
Variegated and green liriope, one-gallon pots, $150; mondo one-gallon pots, $1.50; pampas grass, three-gallon pots, $7. J.H. Patman Athens 706-549-4487
Variegated liriope: 1,500 one-quart pots available at $1.50 each; gardenias: 100 four-gallon pots at $7 each. Jim Hadaway Athens 706-543-5432
If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers selling officially protected plants must have a permit 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 button. For information on the sale or shipment of protected plants, call the Protected Plant Program at 770-918-6411.
Flowers Wanted
Native plant hepatica. Ann Smith Marietta 770-426-0628
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
1,000-plus tobacco sticks, 50 to 70 yards; 35 cents each. Carl E Beecher Wray 912-359-3699
Burlap, coffee bean bags; approximately 27x37 inches; $3 each; leave message. Steve Jessup Conyers 678425-5104

avail. Durand Deal Tifton 229-388-5054 R Cox Waynesboro 706-829-4174

Smith Hawkinsville 478-225-8433

2014 Tift 85, 4x5 rolls, no rain, net- Top quality, 2014 tested alicia, russell Pecan trees; different varieties; Pawwrapped; $40 per roll, delivery available; hay: round, square bales; sheltered; nee, Kiowa, Cape Fear, Creek, Seedling,

Market Bulletin Ad Form

leave a message. Dan Crispell Reidsville 912-313-1423
2014 Tift 85, 4x5 round bales, netwrap and strings, unsheltered; $30 per roll. Stoney Layfield Tifton stolay@aol. com 229-848-0092
2014 Tifton 85 bermuda horse quality hay, limed, fertilized; $6 per square bale,

delivery available, free storage through March 2015. Heath Pittman Vidalia 912293-2535 912-537-9721
Wheat straw; $4.50 per square bale, clean, no weeds, discount on large quantities. Billy Ewing Madison 770713-9288 770-979-1057

Desirable, Podsednik, Stuart, Sumner, Oconee. Matthew Bailey Pelham 229638-1639
Pindo palms: three- to five-gallon containers, $25 each or two for $45. Vicky Washburn Forsyth circlewplants@ gmail.com 478-394-0029
Quart-sized vegetable plants; broc-

This form may be used to submit an ad. There is a 20-word limit for advertisements unless otherwise noted under category headings. The 20-word limit includes name, city, phone number and complete address, if provided. Market Bulletin staff reserves the right to edit notices exceeding the word limit. Only one notice per subscriber per issue. In order to advertise in the Bulletin, you must be a paid subscriber with a current subscription.

delivered. Charlie Jackson Lawrencev- Feed, Hay and Grain Wanted coli, collard and lettuce. Aaron Dorrough

ille jackson_c19@yahoo.com 678-9100561
2014, Tift 44, horse quality hay, large square bales, fertilized, rain-free, barn-

Ear corn for shelling, with or without shucks, 2014 crop. Ricky Callaway Washington 706-401-6320

Senoia 404-429-3825
Sawtooth oak, tulip poplar, loblolly pine; seven-gallon pot, six to eight feet tall; $25 each; delivery available; Walton

AG SEED FOR SALE kept; $5 per bale. Toni White Monticello
770-823-0740

County. Ed Smith Monroe 706-6212550

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.

50-pound bags crushed corn for sale. If you have questions regarding this Thornless blackberry bushes. Jimmie

Everett Panter Blue Ridge 706-455- category, call 404-656-3722.

W Mize Greensboro 706-318-1156

7227

Advertisers must submit a current Yellow multiplying onions, $19 per gal-

50-pound bags of oats; $12.50 per state laboratory report, fewer than lon, no shipping. Eugene White Lithonia

bag. Hunter Gray Warrenton 706-339- nine months old, for purity, noxious 770-987-9790

4167 706-465-1004

weeds and germination for each

5x6 heavy rolls, $45 each; small rolls, seed lot advertised. Ads submitted

Ag Seed/Plants Wanted

$25; square bales, $3; bermuda, fescue without this information will not be 200 seedlings, pecan trees. Larry Cal-

mixed. William Chambers Fayetteville published. If you are faxing or mail- laway Collins 912-684-3256

678-409-0704

ing in an ad, this report needs to be Bean Seed: want to buy old fashion

Alfalfa; small square bales, horse qual- sent along with it. For ads submitted white runner bean seed. Chester Pesnell

ity, soil and forage, all-natural element, online, the report can be attached Tallapoosa 770-574-7515

FLOWERS FOR SALE 4x4, located in Cornelia, Ga. Charles P using the attachments button. Seed

Logg Gainesville 678-943-2493

lots must be uniform and cannot

Alicia, Tift 85, coastal bermuda, $6; exceed 400 50-pound bags. Certain perennial peanut, $9; call for volume varieties of seed are protected from If you have questions about this cat-

pricing. Russell Herring Lake Park 229- propagation unless they are grown egory, call 404-656-3722.

316-3017

as a class of certified seed. These Angel trumpets, banana trees, Confed-

Approximately 15 acres thick fescue, include Florida 304, Coker 9152, erate roses, black magic elephant ears,

you cut and bale, will store in barn, call Coker 9835, 6738 soybean, Haskell, ginger lillies, lotus, pond plants and

for price. Donna Ross Watkinsville 706- Bennings and others. For questions more. Patrice Cook Covington 770-

255-0305 706-255-0305

regarding certified seed, call the 787-6141

Phone number:
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 submitting this notice for publication:

Bermuda, bahia; high test results, large Department's Seed Division at 404- Angel trumpets, Christmas roses (Hel-

bales, barn-stored; $55 each; quan- 656-3635.

leborus), $5; hydrangeas, nandinas,

tity and early purchase discounts. Jerry 2014 combine-run oats. Frank Eaton ferns, forsythia, beauty berries, Siberian

Melton Albany jwsjb485@yahoo.com Buckhead 706-342-0727 706-474- iris, $3, burning bushes. Carla Houghton

229-603-2208

0689

Marietta 770-428-2227

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

PAGE 10

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014

Bulletin Calendar

Oct. 10 18 Georgia Mountain Fall Festival Georgia Mountain Fairgrounds Hiawassee, Ga. 706-896-4191
Oct. 14 16 Sunbelt Agricultural Exposition Spence Field Moultrie, Ga. 229-985-1968
Oct. 16 Urban Ag Council 2nd Annual Sporting Clay Tournament Blalock Lakes Newnan, Ga. 1-800-687-6949
Georgia Farm Bureau District 8 Meeting South Georgia Technical College Americus, Ga. 478-474-8411
Oct. 16 25 66th North Georgia Ag Fair 500 Legion Drive Dalton, Ga. 706-278-1712
Oct. 17 North Georgia Forest Landowner Field Day Arrowhead Lodge Elberton, Ga. 706-897-1676
Oct. 17 18 8th Annual Gordon County Antique Engine & Tractor Show Calhoun Fairgrounds Calhoun, Ga. 770-527-5346
Oct. 17 19 16th Annual Great Ogeechee Seafood Festival JF Gregory City Park Richmond Hill, Ga. 912-756-3444
Oct. 18 Make Your Own Garden Trough Workshop Callaway Gardens Pine Mountain, Ga. 706-663-5153
Black Pot Cooking Festival Shields-Ethridge Heritage Farm Jefferson, Ga. 706-367-2949
Metro Atlanta Tour de Farm Community Farmers Markets Atlanta, Ga. www.farmatl.org
Deer Day Festival Oglethorpe City Park Oglethorpe, Ga. 478-235-6391
Cochran-Bleckley Country Fest Downtown Cochran, Ga. 478-934-2965
Farm-to-Table Workshop for Homeschool Educators Buckeye Creek Farm Woodstock, Ga. 770-479-1481
Oct. 18 19 HJ Fox Halloween Classics I & II Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 706-342-3029
Cherry Log Festival Cherry Log Community Clubhouse Cherry Log, Ga. 706-502-3110
43rd Annual Georgia Apple Festival Lions Club Fairgrounds Ellijay, Ga. 706-636-4500
Apple Arts Festival Downtown Ellijay, Ga. 706-635-7400
Apple Pickin' Jubilee Hillcrest Orchards Ellijay, Ga. 706-273-3838

Oct. 18 19 66th Annual Mossy Creek Festival Lake Joy Road Perry, Ga. 478-494-0688
Oct. 19 Harvest on the Hooch Chattahoochee Nature Center Roswell, Ga. 770-992-2055
Oct. 20 Northwest Georgia Master Cattlemen's Class 7 Carroll County Ag Center Carrollton, Ga. 706-624-1403
Oct. 22 Egg Candling Class 1195 Jesse Jewell Parkway Gainesville, Ga. 770-535-5955
Oct. 23 UGA No-Till Field Day Buffalo Creek Straw & Seed Farm Stephens, Ga. 706-743-8341
Oct. 23 26 12th Annual Southeastern Cowboy Festival & Symposium Booth Western Art Museum Cartersville, Ga. 770-387-1300
Oct. 24 25 Fall Farm Festival Lane Southern Orchards Fort Valley, Ga. 478-825-3592
Hillbilly Hog BBQ Throwdown and Fall Leaf Festival BabyLand General Cleveland, Ga. 706-865-2171
Hawkinsville Harvest Fest & BBQ Championship Downtown Hawkinsville, Ga. 478-783-9294
Oct. 24 26 Atlanta Youth Dressage Festival Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 770-634-4089
Oct. 25 Fort Valley State National Alumni Meeting Georgia National Fairgrounds & AgriCenter Perry, Ga. 478-714-5282
22nd Annual Martin Fall Festival Downtown Martin, Ga. 706-356-3573
Fall Jonquil Festival Village Green Smyrna, Ga. 770-434-6600
Chitlin' Hoedown Downtown Yatesville, Ga. 706-647-9686
Briar Patch Arts Festival Downtown Eatonton, Ga. 706-749-9150
23rd Annual Speir's Turnout Festival Downtown Bartow, Ga. 478-252-5596
Inaugural Young Cattlemen's Short Course Rocking W Angus Farm Jefferson, Ga. 229-386-3214
Bartow Fall Classic Steer & Heifer Show 678-207-7516
Oct. 25 26 Westminster/Lovett IEA Horse Show Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 404-723-8384

Oct. 25 26 Chiaha Harvest Fair Ridge Ferry Park Rome, Ga. 706-878-1908
Apple Pickin' Jubilee Hillcrest Orchards Ellijay, Ga. 706-273-3838
Oct. 25 Nov. 1 NBHA World Championships Georgia National Fairgrounds Perry, Ga. 706-823-3728
Oct. 27 Northwest Georgia Master Cattlemen's Class 8 Carroll County Ag Center Carrollton, Ga. 706-624-1403
Oct. 28 29 2014 Southeastern Regional Forest Landowner and Manager Conference Rainwater Conference Center Valdosta, Ga. www.forestlandowners.com
Oct. 30 Urban Ag Council Sporting clays Tournament Blalock Lakes Newnan, Ga. 1-800-687-6949
Nov. 1 Syrup-making class The Panhandle Pioneer Settlement at Sam Atkins Park Blountstown, Fla. 850-674-2777
Rural America Festival Marion County Courthouse Square Buena Vista, Ga. 229-649-8118
Small Ruminant Symposium 900 Newnan Road Carrollton, Ga. 770-836-8546
2nd Annual Unicoi Wine Festival Hardman Farm Sautee Nacoochee, Ga. 1-800-392-8279
15th Annual Granite City Fall Festival Downtown Elberton, Ga. 706-283-5651
Nov. 2 King Show Horses Equestrian Team Presents The Fall Classic Western Challenge Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 770-403-1815
Nov. 3 Urban Ag Council Dinner Meeting John Deere Landscapes Savannah, Ga. 1-800-687-6949
Nov. 5 Cotton Bowl & Consumer Jamboree Georgia National Fairgrounds Perry, Ga. 706-542-4444
Nov. 5 9 Atlanta Fall Classic I Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 843-768-5503
Nov. 7 8 Countryside Festival Downtown Butler, Ga. 478-862-3661
Nov. 8 Basket Weaving: Antique Spool Basket Workshop Callaway Gardens Pine Mountain, Ga. 706-663-5153

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

Cabin to be dismantled; 100 years old, Garlic heirloom, chemical-free, large

wide boards, must see. D. Gay Lyons Bowdon, Caldwell garlic for eating and

912-565-7022

planting; can ship if needed; call, text,

Home Comfort wood cook stove, very email. Nancy Garry Bowdon garrygood condition; $500. Clifford Lunsford farm@gmail.com 770-733-9687

Richland 229-321-9112

Garlic: several varieties; eat or plant,

Mason jars: three 5x3, 5x5; one $15, naturally grown, no chemicals. Patrick

two $25, four $40. Chris Wilkerson Shields Danielsville patandjan@wind-

Nashville 229-316-0522

stream.net 706-795-3977

Old time canning jar lids with glass Green sugar cane syrup; case; bottles;

inserts, $2 each; red rubber rings with first pound 6 p.m., second pound Mon-

tabs, 50 cents each. Philip Carpenter day to Saturday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Harold

Metter 912-685-3812

Barnes Douglas 912-381-1479 912-

Serger sewing machine with motor 384-7835

and cabinet, make offer. Betty Cleveland Marview Farms: organically raised,

Blakely 229-723-3893

grass-fed and finished beef, lamb, pork,

Squeez-o juicer and applesauce goat; ground beef sale, $5 per pound.

maker, solid aluminum, never used; Fernando Mendez Arabi info@marview-

original cost $199; sell $145. Phil Mathis farms.com 229-401-8722

Gainesville 770-532-7227

Muscadines; bronze, black,15 variet-

Syrup kettles, good for burn pits; 50-, ies, standard, improved, easy to pick;

60- and 80-gallon; $6 per gallon and up. $8 per gallon, quantity discount; mus-

John Lewis Lakeland adrianlewis@live. cadine vines, $7. Mary L Mobley Union

com 292-251-6271

Point 706-347-3398

Wild hog traps, $500; turtle baskets. Naturally grown Jerusalem artichoke,

Raymond Long Loganville 770-466- as low as $6 per pound, plus shipping.

2435

Buddy Hutto Warner Robins bud-

Wild hog traps, 4x4x8, continuous dy260@cox.net 478-960-1329

catch spring-loaded door, removeable Pumpkins: prize-winning, 100-plus

top, large and small hogs. J. D Conger pounds and jack-o-lantern size. Char-

Norman Park 229-769-3253 229-339- lie Thomas 1141 Charlie Thomas Road

0104

Cleveland 30528 charlie_nix@hemc.net

Bees, Honey & Supplies

706-809-0515 706-865-2709 Sugar cane: ribbon red, yellow; per

10 and five-frame bee hives, starting gallon. D W Wright Moultrie 229-891kit and some parts, call for more info. 7632

Eliseo Delia Mineral Bluff 706-492- Water-ground meal, whole wheat flour,

5119

grits; $5 for five pounds plus postage;

Albany, southwest Georgia bee re- also, grind your grain. Mike Buckner moval; licensed, insured; also hornets, Junction City 706-269-3630

yellow jackets, wasps. Dale Richter White multiplying onions; $18 per gal-

Leesburg dalerichter@bellsouth.net lon plus $6 shipping. Maggie Walters

229-349-0784 229-886-7663

Murrayville 770-561-3619

All-natural pure, unprocessed honey; sizes available: quart, $14; pint, $8;

Herbs

eight-ounce bear, $5; cut comb, $15. Advertisers selling ginseng must

Jimmy Brown Jackson 770-775-0157 be registered with the Georgia De-

678-448-7781

partment of Natural Resources

Bee removal, metro Atlanta and west and proof of this registration must

Georgia areas, work guaranteed. W.O. be submitted with each ad. Ads

Canady Winston 770-942-3887

for ginseng submitted without this

Dakota Gunness Uncapper; works registration will not be published.

good; used this season; $2,800. Gary For more information, contact the

Gailey Cleveland gailey.gary@yahoo. Georgia Natural Heritage program

com 678-316-9791

at 770-918-6411.

Gallberry honey, voted best-tasting Anise shrubs, useful as spice or flavor-

honey 2010 in the state of Georgia; $46 ing; bare root, $3; two-gallon, $8. Glenn

per gallon, shipping included; www. Register Fayetteville 770-461-2842

brucesnutnhoney.com. Ben Bruce Homerville 912-487-5001

Fish & Supplies

Honey extractor, two-frame Dadant Advertisers selling sterile trip-

manual stainless steel, great condition; loid grass carp must submit a cur-

$250. Robert Houghton Griffin 770- rent Wild Animal License from the

861-4123

Georgia Department of Natural

Pick up swarms for free, removal from Resources. Ads submitted without

structures for a fee; will pick up, pur- this license will not be published. If

chase unwanted beekeeping equip- you are faxing or mailing in an ad,

ment. Dave Larson Mitchell 770-5429546

the license needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online,

Will remove swarms, unwanted bee the license can be attached using

equipment and removal from structure; 2014 all-natural honey for sale. Derry Oliver Commerce 706-335-7226 706621-1781

the attachments button. For license information, call 770-761-3044.
$25 to $30 per pound Big Red Europeans, Red Wigglers and worm castings;

Things To Eat

plus shipping. Lew Bush Byron smoke-

Advertisers submitting ads using fj@gmail.com 478-955-4780 the term "organic" require Certified A-1 quality channel catfish fingerOrganic registration with the Geor- lings; graded, priced by size, accugia Department of Agriculture. Ads rate weights, counts, guaranteed live, submitted without this registration healthy, immediate delivery. J.F. Gilbert will not be published. If you are fax- Thomaston 706-648-2062 770-468ing or mailing in an ad, the registra- 0725 tion needs to be sent along with it. All fish ready for stocking: bluegill, hyFor ads submitted online, the reg- brid bream, redear, redbreast, channel istration can be attached using the catfish and grass carp; delivery availattachments button. For information able. Brian Simmons Hawkinsville 478on this registration, call the Organic 892-3144

Program Manager at 706-595-3408. All fish species; bluegill, shellcracker,

2013 clean black walnuts; $20 per redbreast, shiners, catfish; pond surquart plus $6 shipping, postage. Roy veys; aeration, feeders, weed consulta-

Caine Cumming 770-887-4114

tion. Ethan Edge Brunswick edgesa-

2013 cleaned pecans in freezer; $8 per quatic@gmail.com 912-602-1310

pound. Vickie Hogan Clarkesville 706- Any size bass, bluegill, crappie, chan-

768-8417

nel cat, redbreast, shellcracker, shad,

Angus beef, no antibiotics or hor- minnows, goldfish; free delivery or pick-

mones; grain fed, dry aged 17 days; up; best prices. Danny Austin Roberta

quarters; www.sellfarm.com. Bill Farr / 478-836-4938

Sell Milner 770-584-9727

Bass, bluegill, channel catfish, golden

Chestnuts; 2014, call before to see shiners, fathead minnows, sterile grass

when ready. Dorothy L Moon Loganville carp, fish feeders, aeration, electrofish-

770-979-1596

ing. Caleb Lewallen Ball Ground 770-

Farm-fresh eggs for sale; $4 per doz- 735-3523

en; brown eggs. Cindy Samples Cum- Bass, bluegill, hybrid bream, channel

ming 770-887-2722

catfish, sterile grass carp; statewide de-

Farm-fresh eggs; $2.50 per dozen. livery. David Cochran Ellijay 706-889-

Tony Cadle Winder 678-863-4062

8113

Farm-raised, corn-fed Holstein steers Channel catfish, one to three pounds,

(cattle) for sale; half or whole. Ricky Ar- serv. 1,000 pounds. Orville Carver

mour Clermont 770-540-9017

Douglas 912-384-5090

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

PAGE 11

Grass carp, bluegill, shell cracker Free horse manure, mixed with shav- Bees and bee hives. Albert Cosnahan Seasoned oak firewood: $180 per All types chair caning: blind cane,

bream, channel catfish fingerlings, bass, ings. Danny West Fayetteville 404-771- Metter 912-667-0118

cord; $95 half-cord; hickory $200 cord; French weave, hole-to-hole, press,

threadfin shad; delivery, pick up by ap- 4041

Dead cedar tree, 6.42 feet tall, approxi- $105 half-cord; $55 quarter-cord; de- porch, press, rattan reed and splint;

pointment only. Robert Brown Brooks Free horse manure; you load, mixed mately 12-inch diameter at minimum, livery available. Bob Lewis Fayetteville some repair, quality work; more than 50

770-719-8039

with shavings. Heather Montgomery must be solid; for project. Ronnie Beam 770-461-4083

years experience. George Shelton Cart-

One- to three-inch bluegill, shellcrack- Woodstock 678-591-4329

Jersey 678-618-3905

Seasoned oak, mixed hardwood fire- ersville 770-607-6455

er, redbreast, minnows; threadfin shad; channel catfish; sterile grass carp; feeders; aeration; weed analysis, consultation. Keith and Kim Edge Soperton 478-697-8994
Red Wigglers for composting, worm castings, worm farm starter kits, worm farming workshops, gawigglers.com D. Holman Covington 678-977-7944
Red Wigglers, cups, buckets, tubs, truck load; also compost, call for prices. Bruce Self Byron 478-538-6167
Red Wigglers, worm castings, worm compost tea, composting kits, worm farming workshops; gawigglers.com Keith Holman Newnan 770-713-5781
Trout; good stocking quality, various sizes, hatched and grown on our farm; delivery available. David Cantrell Ellijay 706-273-6199
Wormsite.com: home of the composting worms, check for best prices, free chow; worm castings also sold. Lee Peach Decatur lee.peach@hotmail.com 678-640-4893 678-640-4893
Fertilizers & Mulches
2014 mulch square bales; $2 each; any quantity, will load; call any time; quantiity discounts. David Mitchell Monroe 404-641-1659

Longleaf red pine straw, ready for delivery and installation; also install mulch. Josh Bulloch Manchester 404-9251076
Mulch hay, 5x6 big rolls; $40 each, 100-plus available. Hardy Edwards Winterville 706-714-9012
Pine straw; long needle and slash pine; delivery available; clena tight bales. Matt Cooper Chickamauga 423-595-3410
Vermiculture red wigglers and castings by the pound or bedrun; after 3 p.m. and weekends. Reed Adair Loganville 770527-6064
Poultry Litter/Compost
Chicken litter available; tractor-trailer load, bulk and spread; please call wiith any questions. David Rackley Lexington 478-230-0060
Chicken, wood waste compost for sale; $32 per yard plus delivery; Rock Hill Farms, Inc. Amber Barrett Hiawassee barrettfamilygroup@gmail.com 706-379-4013
Oddities
For Sale: 2) 14" aluminum ladders, row aluminum; 1) aluminum metal break. Ernie Anderson Shellman 229-679-2105

Eight metal milk crates in north Georgia area; reasonably priced. John Masters Loganville 770-298-4614
Fisher "Grandpa" double-door wood stove, 29.5 inches wide and 22 to 29 inches deep. Franz Menge Lakemont 706-782-4481
Good used tin for a small building. Chester Thomas Fayetteville 770-4611010 404-915-4504
Gooseneck 30-foot trailer with dove tail, in excellent condition. Tony Tucker Newnan 404-473-2056
John Deere, 1950 model 40 rear tire, size 11.2x10-34. D. Johnson Kite 478469-3513
Large load of horse manure, delivered. Peter Wall Sparta 706-769-0223
One or two 15x5x38 tractor tires, rear tires. W. J Bird Jesup 912-427-2233
One or two rear tractor tires for Farmall tractor; size 11.2x36. Gene Abbott Conyers 770-483-8483
One set of steel wheels with skid rings for 15-30 McCormick-Deering farm tractor. H. M Simpson McDonough 770-957-3163
Round disk, 26 inches, five-bolt five-inch hole, center half hole. Harry Taylor Macon 478-474-4709 478-718-

wood and pine fatwood; Cabrel's Corner Market. Aline Cabrel Hampton 404513-9353
Seasoned split firewood, free delivery within 50 miles. Al Roberts Fayetteville 404-543-3256
Wood for cooking, smoking and fireplace; cherry, pecan, pear, hickory and oak; pick-up or delivery available. Cynthia McRae Jefferson 706-362-4874
Timber
Timber must be individually owned and produced by the advertiser on his personal property. No companies or businesses are allowed to advertise timberland in this category. Timberland advertised must be at least one acre. Timber wanted ads will not be published.
20 acres, saw timber, hardwood and pine; one mile, Lizella, Ga., off Highway 80. Charles Evans Warner Robins 478929-0890
Christmas Trees
Evergreen, privacy trees: green giants, Leyland cypress, Murray cypress, Carolina sapphire; starting at $5. Kelly Wilson Griffin mapletreefarm99@yahoo.com 770-365-1530

All types of chair caning, refinishing and repairs. James J Lewis Perry 478987-4243
Aprons, sunbonnets, adult bibs, walker bags; $7 each or three for $15, includes postage. Margaret Hottle College Park 404-344-0568
Chair and rocker caning of all kinds; also wicker and rattan repair; 34 years experience. Duke Dufresne Statham 770-725-2554
Crochet items for sale, all handmade; repair work on crochet items done at reasonable prices; Christmas items made year-round. Marcia H Brookins 219 Sheila Circle Thomaston 30286 706-647-0593
Custom handmade T-shirt quilts, memory quilts and memory bears; all created from your loved one's clothing. Margaret Watson Newnan mew542000@yahoo. com 770-251- 695
Deer antler knives, three sizes; each with crown portion of antler, can be personalized; great keepsake or for skinning. Darrel Youngblood Millwood 912282-0167
Hand quilting, 40 years experience; leave name and number on voicemail. Betty Hyman Norwood 706-466-2116

CORRECTIONS 2014 wheat straw; $3 per bale at barn;
delivery available. Gary Brinson Tarrytown 912-286-3191
Aged horse manure, you load any time; I load, call for appointment; $10 truck, $20 trailer, $30 tandem. Raymond Dunnigan Smyrna 678-683-2624 404-4211775
Coastal bermuda hay for mulch or lowquality feed; $2.50 per square bale; discount offered for larger quantities. John McGill Thomson 706-817-1606
Free aged horse manure compost; will load on Saturdays from 9 to 12; email with any questions. Vicki Humphrey Canton VHTC@Vickihumphrey.com 770-740-8432
Free aged horse manure, mixed with shavings; can load with tractor. M. Hight Macon 478-960-2008
Free aged manure, compost, easy access, will help load; in Crabapple area, near Milton High School; ask for Nina. Kristina Macrae Alpharetta 770-4100868 678-793-0694
Free horse manure and shavings mix; easy access. Vida Futch McDonough 404-630-2000

Gourds for sale: Martin, crooked handle, craft, bushel, bottleneck and more; shop anytime. Thelma Moon / Maxwell Royston 706-245-4218
Gourds: martins, crooked neck and more to choose from at farm. Hoyt Howard Cumming 770-887-2039
Kubota workshop manual for M4700 and M5400; $200. Danny R Manning Cochran 478-934-0100
Lucky buckeyes. Richard Haigler Hiawassee 706-994-6850
Used I-beams; one 8x35 feet, one 12x16 feet, one 12x35 feet solid beam. Larry Wimberly Moultrie 229873-0230
Miscellaneous Wanted
10-foot, 2.5-inch piece of rigid conduit for electrical hookup. Jesse Bryant Franklin 706-983-0722
Approximately 500 square feet of factory colored metal roofing; Rabun County. Sherry Vaughan Lakemont 706-4903226
Bee equipment. Leonard Day Macon/ Gray 478-719-5588

7173
Rustic arbors, No. 2 iron bell cradle, iron syrup kettle, shade trees and evergreen shrubs for screening. Jenny Papevies Murrayville 404-405-2754
Someone to do needlework; will furnish supplies and pay reasonably. Frances Forbes McDonough 770-3891859
Three 250- or 300-gallon propane gas tanks, reasonable. Ottis Franklin Blairsville 706-745-5601
Three-inch or larger steel pipe or guardrail; calf creep feeder, 24-foot Gooseneck trailer, feed bins, white vinyl fence. Mike Bloodworth Knoxville 478836-2535 478-957-0985
Tin pieces for replacing roof on my shed, 12x16 feet; it can be old and used. Mary Pierce Lawrenceville 678377-5535
Two bluebird houses, built to spot for Easteern bluebirds, will pay within reason and shipping. Carrie Slay Monroe 678-799-2401
Used greenhouse hoops, 16 to 25 feet; approximately 10 to 20. Steve Hartley Cleveland 706-725-9005

Wholesale, retail Leyland cypress, Virginia pine, fraser, Carolina sapphire, deudora. Don Watson Macon 478-7418796
Farm Machinery: Allis Chalmers HD6B dozer, engine, drive train, rebuilt, 150 hours, excellent condition, under roof; $9,750. Carl Kelley Madison 706-2460715
Farm Machinery: Finishing mower, six feet, three-point hitch, Bush Hog model, perfect condition; $1,200; used very little. George Brewer Lizella 478-8362209
Farm Supplies: Old 5V barn tin, nice patina, 50 cents per foot. C. Harrell McDonough 678-591-8070
Feed, Hay And Grain: Horse quality fescue hay. Robert Himes Summerville 706-857-3756
Fertilizers & Mulches: 2014 mulch square bales, $2 each; any quantity, will load; call any time; quantiity discounts. David Mitchell Monroe 404-641-1659
Farmland Northeast: 56-plus acres, newer home, creek, private, quiet,

Hand-knit dish rags, 100 percent cotton; great gifts; one for $3.50, three for $5, five for $15; all colors. Marty Mitchell Manchester 770-377-6088
Handmade tatted items for sale: Christmas ornaments - snowflakes, crosses, wreaths, stockings, bells, candles; also bookmarks, jewelry and lace by the yard. Amie Cleghorn Tifton 229256-3557
Handmade wooden garden whirligigs, 18 traditional models from $25 to $60, shipping $7.50; ready to mount. Sahron Batchel Buford serenitygardens@mindspring.com 770-932-1932
Homemade natural soaps, made with luxurious butters and oils; packaged in a cotton muslin bag; $5 per bar. Carmen Davey Warner Robins 478-293-9592
Homemade quilts: custom or premade; all sizes $75 to $450; pillows and shams to match, beautiful patterns and colors; think Christmas. Doris Brown McDonough FDBrownJ@charter.net 770-898-8701
Knitted toys, scarves, hats, ornaments and more; order via phone or email by Nov. 15 to ensure holiday delivery; reasonable prices; work examples on

Used windmill and tower for use on my marketable timber, reasonable. Doug Facebook; knitaliciousknitknacks.wee-

land; willing to restore if needed. Glen Cairnes Dewy Rose 706-224-6840

bly.com. Dallas Duncan Atlanta knita-

Hill Dublin 478-290-1932
Notices

Handicrafts

liciousknitknacks@gmail.com 706-3394962

Affordable quail hunts; pheasant tower shoots monthly, only hour from Atlanta. Jacob Nash Danielsville southforkhunting@gmail.com 706-255-6372 706-2559524

If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Handicraft ads are limited to 30 words.
24-inch Raggedy Ann and Andy dolls, painted faces, $40; set sofa covered tissue boxes, $10; afghans, full size, $40;

Porch swings: four feet, $40; five feet, $50. Bill Speer Summerville 706-8574189
Raggedy Ann and Andy dolls, 25 inches; $30 each plus $7 shipping; all handmade, no paints, beautifully dressed,

Firewood

baby afghans, $20. JoAnn York Lexing- original 1970 pattern. B. Hopkins 914

Firewood must be cut from the ad- ton 706-743-5063

28th St E Tifton 31794 229-382-2310

vertiser's personal property. Ads for

firewood must use the cord when

specifying the amount of firewood

for sale.

100 percent hardwood, cut 16 to 18

inches and split; $160 per cord; smaller

quantities available; delivery extra. Alan

Sanders Blairsville hhound@brmemc.

net 706-745-3884

50 pine catface lighter butts, (splitter

wood) 15 inches to 20 inches, six feet

long, 10 cents per pound. Emory Hulett

Milan 229-362-4141

Custom-cut, seasoned hardwood and

pine; pick-up or delivered, $150 full cord;

east metro Atlanta area, call for details.

Terry Ford Snellville 678-231-8007

Firewood For Sale: all hardwood, cut

to order, cord, $225 or half cord, $100.

Lee Harper Hampton 678-544-1886

678-544-1264

Oak firewood, seasoned, split; $100

half-cord; free local delivery, south At-

lanta; $100 third-cord. Mitchell North

Palmetto 770-755-5716 678-570-2311

Oak, pecan or hickory; delivery available; $75 half-cord or $140 cord. Brandon Lowe Thomaston 706-9751353
Seasoned oak firewood, half-cord, $125; delivery fee applies if not local. Shawn Brooks Dahlonega 404-840-

For more information and order form call the Franklin County Extension Office 706-384-2843
Or visit our website: www.caes.uga.edu/extension/franklin
Orders will be taken through October 30, 2014 All proceeds benefit Franklin County 4-H Club activities

6943

PAGE 12

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014

2014 Farm Bill to provide new risk management

options for America's farmers

By Dallas Duncan
The journey to the 2014 Farm Bill so far has been lengthy, and it's far from over. There are still dates to be finalized, but the US Department of Agriculture is urging farmers to start considering their options sooner than later.
One option is choosing between Agricultural Risk Coverage and Price Loss Coverage programs ARC and PLC, respectively which US Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack calls some of the Farm Bill's "most significant reforms."
"These new programs help ensure that risk can be effectively managed so that families don't lose farms that have been passed down through generations because of events beyond their control," he said in a USDA news release. "Unlike the old direct payment program, which paid farmers in good years and bad, these new initiatives are based on market forces and include county and individual coverage options."
ARC and PLC replace the former countercyclical payment program, said David Forbes, agricultural program specialist for the Georgia Farm Service Agency office.
"PLC is strictly price-driven, comparing the average market prices for the year against certain prices set by statute," he said. "The ARC compares history of revenue, either by crop or for the entire farming operation, over a period of time to the revenue generated by the crop in a particular program year."
PLC and ARC County options can be used by commodity on an individual farm, and ARC Individual coverage is a total farm program, Forbes said.
Farmers have until Feb. 27, 2015, to update yields and reallocate base acres with their Farm Service Agency offices, according to the USDA website. From Nov. 14 through March 31, 2015, producers will elect for either PLC or ARC. Contracts for the 2014 and 2015 growing seasons will be signed early next spring, though exact dates were unavailable as of press time.
"Price Loss Coverage and Agricultural Risk Coverage is a one-time decision for the life of the Farm Bill. Once you make the one-time election on your covered commodities, that's it; you're locked in," said Chris Chammoun, director of public affairs for Georgia Cotton Commission. "Insurance programs are year-to-year decisions."
The Farm Bill establishes new insurance programs notable for cotton, peanut and dairy farmers. One of these is the cotton Stacked Income Protection Plan, known as STAX.
"The new cotton program is purely an insurance program," Chammoun said. "The STAX program is essentially a shallow loss program. What that means is, it'll cover small losses from revenue, but if you have a catastrophic failure or a large failure, it essentially only covers 20 percent."
STAX will be available in the 2015 crop year, according to the USDA website. It's based off area-wide revenue, calculated as price times yield, Chammoun said. Loss payments begin when an area's revenue falls below 90 percent of its expected level, according to the USDA website.
"At the beginning of the year when you would enroll in STAX, there would be an expected price for that county ... and an expected yield for the county," Chammoun said. "If your actual county revenue falls below that 90 percent of what you expected, then it triggers a payment."
Cotton producers can also enroll in the Supplemental Coverage Option, set to begin with the 2015 crop year, according to a USDA news release. Supplemental Coverage will be available for a number of crops, including corn, cotton, grain sorghum, rice and soybeans, and must be purchased in addition to an underlying crop insurance policy.
"You can only buy [Supplemental Coverage] if you're enrolled in the PLC program," Chammoun said. "If you know you want insurance, you can't enroll in ARC."
USDA created several decision-making tools for farmers,

available online, Chammoun said. The tools will help producers choose between ARC and PLC, Cotton STAX and Supplemental Coverage, and for dairy producers, whether or not to enroll in the Margin Protection Program.
This voluntary program provides financial assistance when the margin the difference between the price of milk and the price of feed falls below a farmer's selected coverage level, according to a USDA news release.
"When there's a margin of $4 between the two, that's when this program is going to kick in," said Farrah Newberry, executive director of Georgia Milk Producers.
Because prices are high, Newberry said she does not anticipate Margin Protection payments to kick in until 2016. But as the rules of economics dictate, when supply goes up, prices come down. That's when Margin Protection will come into play.
"Next year, prices are not expected to be so great, but the year after that looks like we may have a really bad year," Newberry said. "When they start watching the futures market, when they have to sign up in September next year, they're going to have to decide how much coverage they can sign up for to get them through the bad time."
Producers have until Nov. 28 to enroll for 2014 and 2015. Farmers that participate in Margin Protection must pay at least a $100 fee each year, and can select additional coverage during annual open enrollment.
"Everything we've seen, this program will pay three times more than what we've had before. It's looking like a really good program for our dairy farmers when prices are low," Newberry said. "If they do not sign up this year, they can sign up next year, but once you sign up for the program, you're in it for good."
The Farm Bill also provides new options for peanut growers. The peanut revenue policy, based off crop insurance policies available for other commodities, allows producers to choose between yield protection, revenue protection and revenue protection with harvest price exclusion, according to a USDA news release. Coverage levels will range from 50 to 85 percent.
"We had been working for some time to get a policy that would work where the farmer could cover revenue as well as being able to cover yield," said Don Koehler, executive director of Georgia Peanut Commission.
Producers can opt-in on the peanut revenue policy, Koehler said.
"It helps in a situation where the market goes down and the farmer can buy protection against a declining market," he said. "Let's say the revenue number is $500 per ton. Let's say the market went to $475 per ton. That $25-per-ton loss, based on whatever kind of deductible he may have, is made good by the crop insurance he has."
The improvements to the farmers' safety net will provide better protection to ensure farmers aren't wiped out by events beyond their control, according to a USDA news release.
"It took us a long time to get a Farm Bill and longer to get this revenue coverage and crop insurance, but I think they're just extra management tools farmers can use to protect themselves against uncertainty and go out and farm for a living," Koehler said.
Find the options that work best for your farm using the US Department of Agriculture's online tools: u ARC and PLC: www.fsa.usda.gov/arc-plc u Margin Protection Program:
www.fsa.usda.gov/mpptool u Cotton STAX and Supplemental Coverage:
prodwebnlb.rma.usda.gov/apps/CIDT

FAIR: New exhibit showcased Georgia farmers, commodities
to visitors
From Page 1
light many of the families and people who play crucial roles, said Commissioner of Agriculture Gary W. Black.
"With over 120 faces on display, representing all of Georgia's diverse agricultural community, we hope this interactive exhibit helps to solidify the connection between the grower and the consumer," he said.
Spruill echoed his sentiments. "People need to get closer to understanding where they derive these assets," he said. "We just saw a great need to educate the consumer on what the realities of Georgia agriculture are."
CELEBRATING 25 YEARS
Here are just a few scenes from the 25th annual Georgia National Fair, held Oct. 2 through 12 in Perry, Ga. Visit www.facebook.com/GeorgiaMarketBulletin to view more.
Georgia Commissioner of Agriculture Gary W. Black, center, is flanked by representatives from the Department, the Georgia Grown Commodity Commission and the Georgia National Fair as he cuts the ribbon to officially open the Georgia Grown Building. The building had a number of new features this year and even the Department's mascot, Georgie Grown, gave it two thumbs up.
The 2014 Georgia Grown Building included a number of new features, such as the Seasons and Faces of Georgia exhibit. The exhibit showcased more than 120 Georgia farmers, hundreds of little-known agricultural facts and interactive pieces, inviting all who visited the building to take an active role in learning about the state's agriculture. Photo by Beth Mohler
The Georgia National Fair plays host to a number of livestock shows during its 11 days. Showmen of all ages demonstrate the superior quality of their rabbits, llamas, hogs, cattle and more throughout the event. Here, Judge Chad Coburn of Texas takes a look at animals during the Junior Market Goat Show on Oct. 3. Photo courtesy Holly Alford

www.agr.georgia.gov
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www.georgiagrown.com

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

Bland Farms: 1-800-843-1541

Georgia Peanut Commission: 229-386-3470

Farm Service Agency: 706-546-2266

Hagerson Farms: 229-938-8552

Georgia Cotton Commission: 478-988-4235

Marketing Division: 404-656-3368

Georgia Milk Producers: 706-310-0020

Regenerate: 912-807-0422

Georgia National Fair: 478-987-3247

Risk Management Agency: 229-242-7235

Sweet Potato Caf: 770-559-9030