Shop all year at state farmers markets.
Guest column, page 6
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE GARY W. BLACK, COMMISSIONER WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2014 VOL. 97, NO. 24 COPYRIGHT 2014
Mail to: Published by the Ga. Department of Agriculture Gary W. Black, Commissioner
American Standard Bronze Turkeys at White Oak Pastures in Bluffton, Ga. Photo courtesy White Oak Pastures
Free-range fowl dominate state's turkey industry
By Beth Mohler, fall intern
The turkey, very nearly the national bird, instead serves as the centerpiece for Thanksgiving feasts. According to the National Turkey Federation, the average American consumes nearly 16 pounds of turkey annually, meaning these birds are in hot demand.
"Traditionally turkey production is vertically integrated, much like the Georgia chicken industry," said Julie DeYoung, vice president of communication with Perdue. "Turkeys are bought by the company and contracted out to farmers to provide care and lodging. The company will often pay for feed, veterinary costs and the poults [young turkeys]. For their services, farmers are then paid a fee per head raised to maturity."
Though this style of turkey production is popular in other states, it is not the model used on Georgia's 326 turkey farms. Nearly all of the farms in the state produce free-range, heritage breed birds, while operating on relatively small scales, according to the University of Georgia Cooperative Extension Services.
"We produce American Standard Bronze turkeys. During our peak season, near Thanksgiving and up on `til Christmas we have nearly 6,000 birds on the farm," said Will Harris, owner of White Oak Pastures in Bluffton, Ga. "These birds are allowed to roam freely on the farm and have a range of two or three miles. We're a lot smaller than some of the large farms that produce for big companies, but we use a lot more land and are able to produce other livestock on the same tract
of land at the same time." To help overcome some of the adversity associated with
this unique industry, farms rely on innovative ideas and technology, often building equipment themselves. For alternative housing, farmers created "turkey mobiles," as they are called at Hunter Cattle Company, which recently ventured into the turkey business in Brooklet, Ga.
"We were approached by people who really want healthy, responsibly sourced, local meats, and we thought, why not turkeys," said Kristan Fretwell, a representative of Hunter Cattle Company.
These "turkey mobiles" are open-sided, portable roosts where turkeys are fed and watered.
See TURKEY, page 12
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Farmland rent or lease ads.........2 Feature recipe.............................7 2015 classified ad deadlines....... 11 Visit with a Vet.......................... 12
Notice
Deadline to submit ads for the Jan. 7 issue is
noon, Dec. 24.
Former Georgia FFA president to lead national organization
By Dallas Duncan
Hear from newly inducted National FFA
President Andy Paul in our latest video
at www.youtube.com/user/gamktbulletin.
This time last month, 19-year-old Andy Paul was a sophomore at Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College in Tifton, Ga., deciding what clothes to pack for National FFA Convention in Lexington, Ky.
Now, he's on a whirlwind to finish his fall semester early so he can spend 300 of the next 365 days traveling the US and Japan, representing Georgia as the National FFA president.
"We're all excited for Andy not only because it's going to be a great opportunity for him, but every time he goes anywhere, he'll be introduced as `National FFA president from Georgia,'" said Ben Lastly, Georgia FFA executive secretary.
Paul is the 15th national officer and third national president to hail from the Peach State. He follows former national presidents Jim Thomas, 1959 to '60, and Hillary Smith, 1997 to 1998.
Paul will take a year off of school to fulfil his presidential duties.
"He'll do some local chapter meetings, local chapter banquets, corporate events. He'll probably travel to eight or 10 state FFA conventions," Lastly said, adding that Georgia's convention next May will be a pit stop for Paul.
Paul is most excited about working with the nation's more than 600,000 FFA members during his term. He's also looking forward to practicing for his future career as an agricultural education teacher.
"There's such a gap between the 2.2 million that are on the farm and those that aren't,"
See FFA, page 12
National FFA President Andy Paul stands at his favorite place on campus at Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College, a prayer garden funded by Georgia FFA in 1974. Paul will lead the national organization and represent more than 600,000 FFA members during the next year. Photo by Dallas Duncan
GEORGIA GROWN PROFILE: Snyder's-Lance, Inc.
Georgia branch home to bakery, candy plant and more
By Beth Mohler, fall intern
Snyder's-Lance, Inc. is the second-largest salty snack producer in the United States. It was formed in 2010 by the merger of Lance and Snyder's of Hanover.
The company owns 14 different brands including Krunchers!, Cape Cod Potato Chips, Jays, Snyder's of Hanover, Lance, Grande and Toms. Snyder's-Lance distributes its products widely through grocery and mass merchandisers, convenience stores, membership club stores and food service outlets.
Snyder's-Lance prides itself on its values of supporting local communities, quality, sustainability and its history and culture. Snyder'sLance helps support nine different states with production facilities, including Georgia.
"We now are the peanut nucleus for the entire corporation, as we
shell our own peanuts and process the peanuts into snack nuts ... and produce peanut paste [for peanut butter] and ship to our bakeries," said Jonathon White, the assistant peanut commodity manager.
The branch in Columbus, Ga., houses a bakery, peanut plant, candy plant and distribution center. The location, formerly the home of Tom Huston Peanut Co., was purchased by the company in 2005. At this facility, Snyders-Lance does a little bit of everything. The company
makes granola and snack bars in the candy plant and ships out orders to wholesale locations from its distribution center.
With products from so many of the company's brands, the Columbus branch is a great sampling of all the tasty treats Snyder's-Lance offers, White said.
All of the peanut butter that is used in the various snacks in the
See PROFILE, page 7
PAGE 2
FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2014
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All advertisements published in the Market utive issues, if the category allows. A new ad
PO Box 742510
Bulletin must relate to farming, agriculture or must be submitted if the advertiser wants the
Atlanta, GA 30374-2510
2011 John Deere 5045 with loader,
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
ad to run more than two consecutive issues.
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108 hours, sheltered, like new. W. H. Hortman Roberta 478-714-3210 478-345-1699
2011 John Deere 995, six-bottom
2. Must be made by the advertisers from The following ad categories are published
for renewal, check the expiration date on the page 1 mailing label.
switch plow, like new; $15,000. Randy
materials on their farming operations 3. Must be owned and used by advertis-
ers on their farming operations for at least 90 days prior to offering for sale.
Businesses, corporations, dealerships, real estate agents and other commercial en-
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.
Bennett Blackshear 912-281-5285
Need experienced, dependable help 1949 Allis Model C tractor; stored 2012 BX 25 Kubota with front end
for cattle, crop, hay farm; salary based in shed, good restoration project; loader, back hoe, four SD, 210 hours,
on qualifications, references required. $1,100. Louann York Marietta 770- like new; $14,500 OBO. Bob Fiedler
Roy Embry Eatonton 706-485-9848 435-1384
Pendergrass 706-693-4520
terprises 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
To submit an ad: Please include your subscription number in all mail and fax correspondence. Fax: 404-463-4389 Mail: Market Bulletin
Want person or family to run a broiler 1949 John Deere model M, SN 250-bushel grain wagon; $1,350.
farm in north Georgia, experience pre- 26687, restored, three pieces, origi- Mike Hulett Hazlehurst 912-347-
ferred, must provide references. Bud- nal equipment: turnplow, cultivators, 1004
dy Hitt Resaca 706-278-4535
planters; excellent condition; $6,200. 311 New Holland square baler and
Would like job on horse farm; groom- Dan Dixon Gordon 478-628-2551 GMD-55 Kuhn disk mower, both
directories in phone books; hold business
Georgia Department of Agriculture ing, feeding, cleaning stalls, grounds 1950; 420 John Deere tractor pop- stored in barn, good condition. Lamar
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
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
upkeep; must have salary and place per; 1951, 411 John Deere with plows; Long Chatsworth 706-695-5906
to live. Johnny Weaver Chatsworth both for $5,000 firm. Benny Cole Val- 3400 Ford heavy-duty tractor-loader,
706-695-7954
dosta 229-559-9132
diesel, power-steering, three-point
FARM MACHINERY 1950s Ford 600 tractor, restored, hitch and power take-off. Brenda new paint, runs great; $2,500 or Brown Fort Valley 478-988-4360
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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If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722.
Only farm machinery and equipment owned by the advertiser and used in his/her own farming operation can be advertised; those persons advertising for machinery and
$3,000 with attachments. Diane Owen Newnan 770-820-9619 404385-4358
1951 John Deere MT with cultivators and mower, good condition, perfect for restoration; asking $2,700. Harvel Hamm Carrollton 770-854-6675
478-954-2627
4x4--foot John Deere Bush Hog, rotary cutter; $600 OBO. Frances Goss Hampton 770-946-3510
6,075 horsepower Toro Kohler engine, variable speed, front wheel drive, push mower with bag, almost
equipment wanted must be seeking those items for their own farming operation.
1952 8N with 60-inch mower, both new paint, new starter, radiator, fly wheel, altenator; $4,200. Joe Sun-
new. Terry Mikle Snellville 770-9798981
8N 1949 Ford tractor, has many
to designate ad length and edit ads for spelling, grammar and word count. Staff also reserve the right to not publish ads that do not follow advertising guidelines.
Ads must be received by 12 p.m. on the
not be corrected online contact our office to delete the incorrect ad so a new one can be submitted.
Questions about advertising? Call 404656-3722
`09 Mill Creek manure spreader, model 77, power take-off, great con-
day Sycamore sundyjoe@gmail.com 229-567-9498 229-313-1412
new parts, does not run, decent tires; $900. John Weaver Ringgold 706-
dition; $2,700 OBO; contact for pictures. Heather Montgomery Woodstock 678-591-4329
1955 John Deere 40S, serial No. 69608; hydraulic system, three-point hitch; straight metal, spin-outs; rebuilt
866-0207
8N 1952 Ford tractor, six-volt, good metal paint, tires, also one horse wag-
FARMLAND RENT/
Pastureland, 20-plus acres; lakes, ponds a plus; one hour from Atlanta
`52 Ford 8N, completely rebuilt, new paint, new rear tires; $3,500 firm. MJ Hemphill Toccoa 706-886-3437
engine; $3,600. Loyd Johnson Valdosta 229-242-5777 229-251-1072
1958 Ford Fordson diesel tractor;
on. James D Ivy Blue Ridge 706-8356669
8N Ford tractor, new paint and parts,
LEASE If you have questions regarding ads
in this category, call 404-656-3722.
The Farmland for Rent/Lease category is published the last issue of each month. Please adhere to the following guidelines when submitting an ad for Farmland for Rent/Lease or Rent/Lease Wanted * When submitting ad, please designate it for the Farmland for Rent/ Lease category. Notices to buy or sell farmland are published only in the special fall or spring farmland
FARM EMPLOYMENT editions * Ads must not exceed 30
or Thomasville; weekend training labradors for field trials; will train your dog or work for access. Gregg Leonard Roswell 404-580-6268
Rent or lease pasture near Dawsonville to put small herd of cattle on; if needed will fence or re-fence pasture. Josh Moore Dawsonville 770-6708595
Rent, lease pasture for cows, hayfields and row crops; in Spalding, Butts, Pike or Meriwether counties only. Jerry Glancy Griffin 404-4333568
1050 John Deere 1,800 hours, perfect condition, $7,500; John Deere six-foot finishing mower, perfect condition, $1,200. William Kitchen Social Circle 770-464-2412
12 horsepower Toro Wheelhouse rider mower, 32-inch cut; meeds engine, work; can email photo; $150. Johnny Tingle Jonesboro 404-9155487
12-foot Athens model 62 disk harrow with drag bar; great condition, rarely used, 10 years old; $4,200. Gary Prince Leesburg garymprince@ bellsouth.net 229-759-1456 229-6691745
runs well, lift weak, very good rear tires; $2,000. Jack Clower Douglasville 404-290-0860 770-489-4836
1962 Ford 601 Workmaster tractor, runs well, hydraulic lift, needs work; $3,200. Tom Bohannon Winder 770601-6147
1963 Massey Ferguson 35; runs well, needs radiator; Perkins threecylinder motor, make offer. Tom Gardner Hampton 678-333-8111
1965 Massey Ferguson 35 with three-cylinder diesel, Bush Hog, harrow, boom pole; very good rubber; $2,650. Ted Dixon Gordon 478-6285445
$2,200; scrape blade, $300; all-purpose plow, $350. Norris Houze Hiram 404-791-6523
9965 John Deere cotton picker; great shape, field-ready, four-row, 1,625 engine hours, 1,235 fan hours. John Bullington Cordele 229-273-3597
Allis Chalmers HD6B dozer, engine, drive train, rebuilt, 150 hours, excellent condition, under roof; $9,750. Carl Kelley Madison 706-246-0715
Aluminum 40-foot hopper bottom, new brakes, tires, 80-inch sides; $15,000 or $25,000 OBO. Mike Preston Blakely 229-723-5069
Athens model, 62 harrow; 30 disk
words.
10 acres of land for deer hunting in Dodge County. Emory Hulett Milan 229-362-4141
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Only farm work or farm help wanted advertisements allowed.
12-foot bulldozer blade with John Deere cylinders for farm tractor; $1,000. Clifford Lunsford Richland 229-321-9112
1976 John Deere 6030, mostly restored; starts, runs well; $12,000 OBO. Lynn Schultz Louisville 706526-7262
at 10-foot hydraulic lift; $2,500; can email pictures. David Allmond Swainsboro 803-278-1573
Auxiliary hydraulic valve, hoses and
110.5 acres; hayfields, water, fenced, cross-fenced, two water wells. Ernie Anderson Shellman 229-679-2105
84 acres of hunting land with plenty of game, in Hancock County for rent for 2014. Willie Reese Stockbridge SReese4512@aol.com 770-855-8695
Approximately 20 acres of fescue, bremuda mix pastures for lease for hay or grazing; some fence repair required. Bruce O'Connor Carnesville 770-344-8478 706-384-3259
Horse pasture board in Talmo, near Jefferson, Ga.; shed for tack, shelter, hay. Cleon Akins Sugar Hill 770-9452030 404-226-1097
Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted
Cultivatable land in Cook and Colquitt counties, within a 10-mile radius of Reed Bingham State Park. Ross Purvis Adel 229-507-1957
Father, son looking for hunting property, 25 to 200 acres, larger if right land, terms; within 90 minutes of Jefferson, Ga.; safe, responsible, ethical hunters, land managers. Kevin Bare Jefferson 706-247-9701 706-2479701
No commercial, industrial or domestic employment permitted.
40-year-old looking for farm management job, CDL driver, equipment operator. Michael Martin Griffin 770695-5383
55-year-old man; work on horses and cattle farm; cleaning stalls, feeding, turning horses and all other animals. Chip Edins Riverdale 770-4780900
Couple looking for a caretaker job on a farm, all kinds of farm experience, will relocate anywhere. Pamela Baswell Douglasville 770-883-2696
Experienced farm hand with maintainance and mechanic experience. Richard Jones Covington cynthiabroadnax99@yahoo.com 404736-4961
Garden assistant: this position involves raking, trimming, planting, weeding and general cleanup; $10 per hour. Alan Feingold Decatur 404633-6970
Help wanted: experience with horses, cattle, tractors, fencing; furnished apartment with salary, background check, non-smoker. Barbara Draper
12-foot offset harrow, heavy duty. Jimmy Dubberly Baxley 912-3677265
125-bushel gravity wagon, galvanized, $1,500; lube trailer, five tanks, air pump, $2,000; six-shank paratill,15-foot, worksaver, $6,000. Carlin Giesbrecht Louisville carlingiesbrecht@yahoo.com 478-494-4007
16-foot BBI litter spreader, mounted, stainless steel bottom, used a lot. Jason Cox Social Circle 404-925-5412
16-foot Durable Manufacturing chicken litter bed; in good working condition, manual lift gate. Brett Bozeman Ball Ground 770-595-0774
1720 Ford diesel tractor, 2,500 hours, new tires, new clutch, rebuilt hydraulic pump, no equipment; $4,995. Kenneth Bell Williamson 770-229-8306
175 Massey Ferguson tractor PS, good condition, two harrows, sickle mower, two-row planter, big turn plow; $6,500. Buster Reese Good Hope 770-331-6417
1942 B414 International diesel tractor, needs some work; $1,500 firm. Patricia Gunter Milledgeville 706-
1979 John Deere 4440 power shift transmission, snap-on duals, one owner, excellent condition. John Woodard Cordele 229-273-3510
1979) 464, 65 horsepower, International tractor, case front end loader, new tires with Bush Hog, $9,000. Mark Cortez Palmetto 770-231-4740
1983 white GMC tractor with a 15ton trailer. J.T. Austin Douglasville 770-652-3383 770-652-2164
20-disk harrow, three-point hitch. Barney Colquitt Social Circle nanamargi@att.net 770-787-1295
2001 Mahindra 4110 (39 horsepower) four-wheel drive tractor with loader and Bush Hog; $14,000 OBO. Christopher Bauch Molena Southernman51@hotmail.com 678-326-2853
2002 Ag-Chem 1000 sprayer, pulltype, big tires, 60-foot booms, Raven 440 controller; $6,000 OBO. Ryan Becker Avera 706-631-0086
2003 Branson tractor, 2810 parts, loader, forks, Bush Hog, tires, engine, rear end, hay spear, body parts; all or parts. Leon Bates Cumming 404310-6185
2006 John Deere 790, 44 hours, garaged, like new; $9,000. Sara S Heirn
couplings for Ford tractor, single spool, double acting; $200. Roger Bryant Summerville 706-857-6768
Box scrape blade, good condition, 66 inches wide; $300 OBO. Joyce Littlejohn Yatesville 770-468-8607
Case 46 tractor; $1,000. BJ Gothard McDonough 404-579-4628
Case diesel, 43 horsepower, 885 tractor, mower, blade. plow, auger, scoop, sprayer; 16-foot steel bed trailer. Wil Sommer Gainesville 404803-0306
CAT 955L front end loader, excellent condition, undercarriage 80 percent, will need used set rails, $11,500 OBO. Sherry Gay Talbotton 706601-3550
CAT D3B bulldozer, 10-foot blade,Swamp Tracks, 3,800 hours, new sprockets; $16,000. Raymond Bramlett Auburn 770-867-9864
Cat D4D, hydraulic lift blade, homemade root rake, needs pony motor, very good engine, tracks, steering clutches; $5,000. Marvin Samples Dawsonville 706-265-2329
Covington one-row planter, TP-46, with fertilizer distributor, on frame,
Looking for poultry houses to lease Cedartown 770-748-2042
816-8439
Shannon 706-506-4611
good condition; $550. Tommy
that are currently in operation; layers Horse farm needs live-in caretaker 1948 H Massey Ferguson trac- 2009; 20-foot Adams hydraulic pull- Hawkins Wrens 706-830-7042
or broilers; in Franklin, Hart or sur- for six to eight horses, in exchange for tor, good condition; power take-off, type spreader; floatation tires and Crustbuster Boll Buggy, model Su-
rounding counties; short-term or long apartment; pay for additional chores. three-point hitch, runs well, new tires; double bar chain, hardly used, like per BB, excellent condition; call to
or possible owner financing. Wanda Glenn Smoot Social Circle glenns- $1,850. Bobby Barber Statham 678- new. Joe Moore Union Point 706- discuss. Rayburn Johnson Millen
Dove Royston 706-245-8930
moot@yahoo.com 470-207-4030
726-7186
338-2747
706-551-8834
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2014
FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722
PAGE 3
Cub Farmall with five-foot mower, good condition. Franklin B Clark, Jr Macon 478-477-0867
Dozer trailer, 15-foot body, five-foot tongue, Birmingham Manufacturing, 20,000-pound rating, pintle hitch; $1,750. Lewis Kimball Brooklet 912842-7535
Drag harrows, $200; located in Bowman, Ga. Harold Lee Canton 678234-0392
Excavator 690B, John Deere; $18,999; very strong, cylinders newly repacked. Craig Selph McRae tammyselph@yahoo.com 229-315-8909
Farmall "A" tractor with power takeoff and belly mower, in good condition. Albert M Monroe Madison 706818-0035
Farmall H parts: hood, grill, gas tank, magneto, original switch. Lynn Stanfield Fayetteville 770-653-1852 770716-6678
Farmall H tractor, 1946, front end loader, motor rebuilt, runs excellent, side pulley, all good; $1,450 OBO. Richard Zorin Baldwin rzorin@rzorin. net 706-894-1208 727-744-0611
Farmall M 1948 and 1949; new paint, 12-volt, good running; $2,500 for one, $2,300 for the other, OBO. Jerry Wheat Crandall 706-260-0530
Farmall tractor models, no batttery, flat right rear tire, good restoring for the right person. William McWhirter Royston 706-245-6896
Finish mower; three-point hitch; fivefoot; extra blades; works great; $400; leave message; Walnut Grove area. Cary McDaniel Covington 404-2453026
Finishing mower, five-foot, $400; section harrow, 12-foot, $300; rock rake, six-foot, $300. CD Gravitt Buford 770-945-4371
Five horsepower Campbell Hausfeld two-stage air compressor, 14.3 CFM, 175 PSI, 80-gallon, attachments included. Doug Bailey Bogart 404-4449047
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 4000 and Bush Hog brand Bush Hog, 1969 model, diesel 55 horsepower, good condition; $5,500. James Bryant LaGrange 706-3027300
Ford 4000 SU tractor, original paint, new tires, good tractor; $5,200. Roy Clark Ellijay 706-276-3302
Ford 4000 with new lift and tires, planter, cultivator, harrow, turning plow, tiltavator; $7,500. Donald Wooten Denton 912-539-3517
Ford 4630 with loader, 1995 made in England, 1,045 hours, good tires; $11,750. Silviu Gavriliuc Hoschton 678-997-4119
Ford 601 Workmaster diesel with loader and power steering; $3,200. Travis Smitherman Bowdon travis3380@centurytel.net 678-796-3380
Ford Jubilee 1953; owned approximately 10 years, Bush Hog, scoop and scrape blade; $3,500 OBO. David Burns Powder Springs perryburns@ bellsouth.net 770-241-4120
Ford New Holland 1715 tractor, 245 hours, box blade, five-foot Bush Hog mower, harrow. Tommy Hurst Coolidge 229-941-2083
Ford three double-turn flip-bottom plow; asking $600, in excellent condition. James Brown Omega 229-7762458
Gehl 1470, 4x5 round hay baler, field-ready, auto or manual tie. Donnie W Hart Chauncey 229-315-9782
Gehl eight-wheel hay rake; Hardee 24-disk (Tiger) harrow; New Holland 640 baler, auto, wide pick-up baler. Bob Hill Griffin 770-227-2383
Gravely tractor with Bush Hog attachment, walk-behind, manual throttle, no governor, runs well; $300. William Starnes Newnan 770-253-9432
Hay Express, 5 bale rotary grain cleaner, 3 cultivators, 6 RN 230 JD harrow, 21 feet, & other. Night only. Joe Shurley Warrenton 706-4653161
Hay wagon, 25x8 feet, tires 95 percent; $2,000. Gary Copeland Jasper 770-366-8166
Hesston 1091 mower conditioner, $1,850; Case 8420 baler, 4x4 bales, $4,500. Jeff Mallard Girard 478-5699902
Horse-drawn hay rack, stalk cutter, mowing machine, cultivator, cutting harrow; $275 each. Thomas Wilkie Jasper 770-890-8305
John Deere `06 9970 cotton picker, 1,255 hours, excellent condition; $125,000. Hugh Hosch Waynesboro 770-789-3258
John Deere 1026R tractor, midmount 60-inch, quick disconnect mower; $2,500 or trade for a 54-inch mower. Michael Magrum Rydal 706509-8576
John Deere 2040, 40 horsepower, three-cylinder diesel, PS, PB, undercarriage muffler, live power take-off, good tires, sheet metal. Gary Lane Carrollton lane894@bellsouth.net 404-502-4000
John Deere 2950 cab/air, John Deere 148 loader, dual wheels; runs great, needs hydraulic pump; $12,000 OBO. Billy Barlow Woodland 706-741-0192
John Deere 348 square baler, good condition; $5,500. Clint Gauldin Cochran 478-957-6509
John Deere 567 baler, net-wrap, good condition; $18,500. Roger McAvoy Washington 706-678-1745
John Deere 60, 1953, excellent condition, good paint, good tires, twopoint hitch, work or parade; $3,000. Jack Morrell Albany 229-886-4700
John Deere 7000 planter, four-row, excellent condition, $4,500; John Deere 210 harrow, 13 feet, excellent condition, $3,500. Morris Faircloth Pelham 229-328-8036
John Deere 750 no-till grain drill; $11,000. Randy Hanley Hull randy@ rsbplumbing.com 706-338-4508 706789-2161
John Deere 790 four-wheel drive tractor, loader, Bush Hog, finish mower, rake; Yanmar 30 horsepower engine; $19,000, reasonable offer. Bonnie Merritt Loganville 770-554-0074
John Deere 9570 cotton picker, 1,200 hours, excellent condition; `06 harrow, four-row stalk puller; John Deere 1700 planter. Lora Hosch Buford 770-945-3971
John Deere 9965 with mud hog heads, totally reworked. George Griffis Odum 912-579-2457
John Deere deer plot drills, seven or eight feet wide, works on threepoint hitch; $2,100. Royce Hulett Hazlehurst 912-253-0161 912-3753008
John Deere MX10 Bush Gog, 10 feet, used three times; $5,400. Bobby Yarbrough Pine Mountain 706-8841873 706-333-1998
KBH cotton boll buggy; $5,000. Wade Kirkland Brinson 229-2202679
KMC 436 peanut inverter, 2000 model; $800 worth of extra blades, shelter-kept, excellent shape; $7,500. Zach Shanklin Albany 229881-6383
KMC four-row peanut plow; good condition. Anthony Stapleton Lumber City 912-539-0749
Krone tedder, 19 feet, great condition. Benny Lasseter Franklin 678378-1884
Kubota 7200HST; 17 horsepower, all fluids changed, new seat, in family since new, everything works; $4,500. Larry Barnes Cumming 678-3600266
Lawson pasture aerator, $15,000; Massey Ferguson 43 grain drill, 12foot, $3,750; Massey Ferguson 124 square baler, $2,650. Ted Smith Washington dangaflat@yahoo.com 706-214-0442
Lewis Brothers poultry cake Housekeeper, No. 3 with spinners, good tires, good condition; $3,500. Dennis Garland White 770-382-4325
M John Deere; three-point harrow, rotary mower, good condition; $3,000. Allen Beasley Statesboro 912-7645254
Massey Ferguson 135 tractor, threepoint hitch; diesel engine; power take-off lift, $5,500 for both tractor and mower. Deborah Ramer Hahira 229-794-2077
Massey Ferguson 16-inch grain drill, double disks, no rust, $2,500; 22-inch John Deere harrow, $2,500. William St. John Americus 229-928-5451
Massey Ferguson two-disk turning plow, good condition; $400. Harold Mooney Eastanollee 706-599-5209
Mini trackhoe, I.H.I., 18J model 2000 trailer, Kubota diesel engine, pumps; tracks, bucket, scrape blade, detachable thumb; $18,000. Roy Pruitt Douglasville 770-949-5453 770-5957891
New Holland 451 sickle mower, nine feet, good condition, two extra bar blades, many extra parts; $1,600. Jay Jackson Sandersville 478-232-8228
New Idea 206 manure spreader, new paint and wood; $1,200. Brendan Prendergast Americus 513-532-3160
New power take-off shaft; one and three-eighths inches, No. 312428 600,700, 800; Ford tractors; 900, 2000, 4000; $60 cash. John Chaney Winder 470-399-2122
One Bush Hog Hilliston, four-row peanut combine, model No. 4044, real good machine. Eric Clark Lyons 912-565-7977
One Farmall cub tractor with cultivators; 1975 model (yellow, white), 12volt system, good condition;$1,950. Jerry Taylor Tyrone 770-632-1278 770-632-1278
One-row Ford picker, mounted, for parts; $475. J.R. Sullivan Vidalia 912537-4944
Pecan shaker, $5,500; blower, $2,500; harvester, $7,500; sprayer, $15,000; irrigation pump, $15,000; 400 hours. Jody Kemp Lyons 912293-4902
Pecan shaker, Kilby boom-type, new engine, ready to work. Russ Huffman Jeffersonville 478-214-7272
Pecan shaker, Savage model 2042 for sale or trade, good condition; $6,500. Pat Biddy Wrightsville 478278-6314
Pecan shaker, Savage model No. 2542; excellent plus condition, little used, doughnut pads; $7,200. David Perlow Macon 770-330-5084
Rhino 15-foot flex-wing mower, $4,000; 300-gallon boomless sprayer with three-point hitch, $500. Billy Greer Hampton 404-444-2436
Scag 48-inch walk-behind lawn mower, sulky included, in very good condition. Pete Cobb Fairburn 770964-5644
Sears collector's item, dump trailer, 1965 model, very good condition, light rust; $150 firm. Tom McClendon Fayettesville 770-461-2955
Six-foot box scrape with rippers, excellent condition; $350. Raymond Harrison Flowery Branch 770-9656287
Six-foot hydraulic scrape blade, new, $1,995; heavy-duty root grappler, new, $1,875; purchased items new in April. Ronnie Jones McDonough 404-285-2665
Six-foot rotary mower; five-shank all-purpose plow; 20-disk harrow; sixfoot finishing mower, good condition; $300 each, all $1,100. Weldon Crook Madison 706-474-6611
Swisher Predator 24-inch rough cut, walk-behind brush cutter; USA, used one hour; $1,000. Gerald Gossett Cartersville gegossett@comcast.net 770-334-3130
Synder 100-gallon, three-point hitch boomless sprayer; $500. Tommy Vaughn Forsyth 478-256-6395
Three round bale collector; collect bales and transport wherever; hydraulics necessary, need hoses; $1,000. Bobby Fountain Cochran 478-934-6837
Tufline disk harrow, 6.5-foot, 20 disks; $275 OBO. Rob Hazen Silver Creek 770-655-9431
Two Ford 5000 tractors; one with loader, one without; also Ford 2000 tractor gas burner. Erick Blitch Statesboro 912-536-8578
Two-disk turning plow for Su- Seven-foot disk mower, prefer
per A Farmall; $200. James Lyles Kubota or Cicon, in good condition;
Chatsworth 706-695-2520
reasonable. Bob Smith Hoschton
Tye no-till drill, seven feet wide, 770-867-3850
three-point hitch, good condition; Small feed mixer to make 100 to 150
$6,500 OBO. Randy Carithers Cov- pounds of show pig feed at a time.
ington 770-464-2404 770-312-4157 Chipper Jones Pinehurst 229-938-
Used and possibly homemade iron 9968
scoop, attaches to three-point tractor hitch; looks heavy duty; $100. Perry
FARM SUPPLIES
Jennings Cumming res_emptito@yahoo.com 404-824-9067
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Wood-Mizer LT40 super hydraulic 51 horsepower Cat diesel 2007, 1,700 hours; $29,500 firm. Randy Kitchens Covington 404-213-7186
1,000 feet lumber and turning blocks; cherry, poplar, pine, basswood, oak, maple. David Gray Bowdon 770-655-4674
Farm Machinery Wanted
100 cut cedar trees; seven feet,
10- to 12-foot hydraulic box scraper, four- to six-foot diameter, dry storage,
good condition, please call. David more available; 20 minimum; $4 each.
Bentley Valdosta davidbentley58@ Max McDaniel Winder 706-567-5207
yahoo.com 229-460-2952
770-868-7700
1972 Massey Ferguson 175; parts 10x20 storage unit; metal, plywood
tractor, seven-foot rotary mower. floor, sealed walls, 32x80 door, win-
John Gunn Reynolds 478-847-3387 dow. Rhonda Keith Cassiville 7708N Ford and Farmall Cub tractors for 866-7669
parts, running or not. Thomas Tucker 12-foot metal flatbed, headboard;
Lithia Springs 770-941-2354
two and five-sixteenths center ball,
Fertilizer spreader with wide chain for lime or fertilizer; pull-type. Wade Simpson McDonough 404-732-7255
need paint, $650; fuel tank with pump, $600. Bob Brady Augusta 706-3738397
Fertilizer spreader, needs stainless bed, good shape, field- and roadready. Mark McWhorter Whitesburg 706-302-6733
14-foot flatbed trailer; two axles, two-inch ball, tires good condition; $480. Ryan Baerne Nicholson 706757-2672 706-247-6240
Five yard Reynolds dirt pan. Vinh Ta Buena Vista 229-314-0530
15-ton feed bins; $800. Wayne Hudgins Roopville 770-301-9355
Ford 14-foot two-bottom turning plow; one three-point hitch subsoiler; one three-point hitch carryall. Darwin
150-gallon spray outfit, 20-foot polyurethane tank, three-point hitch, new coverage spray, all new, $1600. V
Blansit Trion 706-238-0465
Felkel Millen 912-682-5813
Ford 7109 front end loader. Brian 20 aluminum skids, pallets; 24 by 36
Moffett Senoia penmoffett@hotmai.. by three inches tall; $14 each. Josh
com 678-329-7677
Daniels Atlanta/Decatur 678-600-
Front loader for 1510 or 1710 Ford 1671
tractor. Clay Walden Marietta 706- 2014 Gooseneck enclosed trailer,
831-2392 706-598-9838
dual torsion axles, many extras;
Front section or complete drive shaft $18,000. Dave Harris Clermont 678-
for John Deere 457 hay baler. Ray 617-2074 770-983-7793
Waters Calhoun 706-629-0968
22-kilowatt generator, Perkins die-
Good used grain drill, eight- or 10- sel engine, 120/240 volts, 92 amps, foot food plots and around farm, small mounted on trailer, nearly new. Dena
seed hopper is fine, too. Bubba Walk- Lanier Madison 404-326-5751
er Hazlehurst 865-719-4766
250-gallon tank "tote," good for
Good used tractor with foot loader pressure washer; $50 each. Jesse
bucket. Doris Hefner Blairsville 706- Garrett Auburn 770-652-7915
897-0513
270-gallon metal fuel tank; 62-inch
International model 656; diesel, length, 36 inches high; $400. Scot-
also A International model 600. Jerry tie Bohlinger Douglasville 770-949-
Knight Monticello 706-476-1020
9089
KMC ripper spider leveling, doors 36-inch used broiler pans from
mounted behind spiders. Frank Free- chicken house; $30 each; have 20
man Plains 229-942-0939
available. Bill Durham Summerville
Perkins three-cylinder engine or 706-252-1084
block, and good used 13.6x28 rear 55-gallon food-grade metal drums
tractor tires. Brian Mitchell Byron Bri- with lids, $20 each; 55-gallon plas-
an355sc@gmail.com 478-808-7640 tic drums, $20 each, bung plug in
Propane-powered tractor, at least top. Windle Sneed Ellijay 706-276-
45 horsepower, in good condition. T. 7027
Busby Dawson 229-343-3627
Antique butter churn, glass, brassy
Pull-behind manure spreader, in fair churn, paddles, excellent conditon;
shape. Glenn Smith Athens 706-207- $250 firm. Ron Wolfe Albany 229-
7878
291-4207
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Please make checks payable to `Georgia Department of Agriculture.' Send payments to: Georgia Department of Agriculture, PO Box 742510, Atlanta, GA 30374-2510.
PAGE 4
FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2014
Flatbed trailer, 20-foot, heavy duty; Syrup evaporator pan, steel, 4x14; 3.5-year-old registered miniature
Livestock Sales and Events
best offer over $800. Ted Hart Eaton- excellent condition; 80-gallon kettle, Jersey bull, proven breeder; $2,000. ton ted@eh-antenna.com 706-473- John Deere mill, Golden Columbus Belinda Schell Warner Robins 478-
Calendar
3360
mill; $5,000, will separate. Ron Hulett 954-3840
Fleet Master commerical pressure Milan 912-363-5978
47 Angus, Charolais cows; bred or
washer; hot, cold; 3,000 PSI, 50-foot Three grain bins; free for disassem- with calf; one Charolais bull; $96,000
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
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
hose and wand, 25-gallon cleaner; bly; Maple Hole Road in Garfield, Ga., for all. Ben Deal Bristol 912-282-0133
used little; $1,000. Charles F Holland Emanuel County. Charles Brown Sau- 5-year-old registered Longhorn bull,
Sr. Oglethorpe 478-472-8267
tee 706-878-1511 912-682-4942
brindle color, gentle herd bull; asking
Flooring oak and pine, tongue and Three stainless steel gas tanks with $2,500. David Simmons Tignall 706-
groove, various widths, also bead- straps, four-gallon capacity; $10 207-3671
board and wood shavings; call for each. Carl Dobson Atlanta 404-247- Angus bull; 878 son, used two years
prices. William Briggs Union City 7343
as cleanup bull on heifers; big and
404-349-2315
Three-eighths by 18 feet chain with stout. DJ Sheppard White Plains
Generator: 100-kilowatt Deutz die- hooks, $40 firm. John Eberhart Hiram 706-453-6879
sel, 54 hours, with Cutler hammer, 400 770-943-0775
Angus semen, Special Focus, 10
amp, auto transfer switch; $9,500, will Troy-Bilt Super Tomahawk chipper- straws; $175. Calvin Minchew Macon
separate. Dennis Sutton Fairmount shredder; eight horsepower, Briggs 478-781-0604 478-951-1697
770-387-6714
& Stratton engine; not for commercial Black and red Limousin, Lim-Flex
Hay tarps, heavy-duty silver agro, use; north DeKalb; $300. Jim Buter- bulls: polled, gentle, AI-sired, ready to
25x48; $150 each. Charles Crawley baugh Dunwoody jbuter@aol.com breed, 18 to 24 mounths old, Jimbo
Unadilla 229-942-0243
770-393-9947
Crumley Bostwick 678-409-3572
Heavy equipment trailer, triple axle, Two 18-ton, six-leg feed bins, like Black polled purebred registered
pentail hitch, six feet wide, 16 feet new bottoms; $1,500 for both. At- Beefmaster bulls, ranging from 18 to
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,
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
long; two-foot beaver tail; needs new wood Ledbetter Cumming 770-366- 21 months; vet breeding soundness
floor; $900. David Combs Jefferson 4615
tested. David Flood Tunnel Hill 706-
706-296-1906
Two 18.4x34 Farm King tractor tires, 537-3633
Heavy-duty four-shank subsoiler; 12-ply, 90 to 95 percent tread, $900; Bred Angus-Hereford cross cows,
200-gallon round steel fuel tank, other farm supplies. James Wilhite also exposed heifers. B Hall Pavo
$200; Gill rollover, $400; and other Jefferson 706-870-4470
229-859-2764
items. Dennis Christopher Mansfield Two liquid feed tanks; $200 each. Breeding age Red Angus heifers
770-385-0714 404-558-1637
Derrick Irby Montezuma 478-217- and bulls from 8 months to 4 years,
Hired Hand heater for chicken house, 0004
all are moderate framed. L. Daniel La-
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-
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,
$350; only used for three months. Two-disk turning plow, three-point Grange 706-882-7423
Lucy Hatt Calhoun 706-629-4690 hitch dump pan, spike tooth harrow, Bulls for sale: registered Angus, reg-
Honda black max electric generator; mold board plow, fence wire. Charles istered Hereford starting at $2,600.
13 horsepower Honda OHV engine, Self Cedartown cself2018@att.net Wes Smith Thomaston 706-648-
20 amps, 120/240 receptacle; less 706-346-3100
4210
than 25 hours; $200. Bill Chancey US7 3,500-watt gasoline generator, Bulls: young Simmental and Sim-
Bishop 770-363-7756
12 volts, 10 amps, like new; $300. brah; few heifers. Cliff Adams Bow-
tion, Waddell Auction Barn; Climax;
12 p.m.; Agri Auction Sales at Easta- Irrigation system: 2,400 feet; four- Roy & Elizabeth H Rickles Sharps- don 770-258-2069
goats, sheep, poultry, small animals at 1 p.m.; miscellaneous at 10 a.m.; GAL AU003249. Call 229-246-4955 or 229-416-7217
nollee Livestock Market; Highway 17 between Toccoa and Lavonia. Call Ricky Chatham, 706-491-2812 or Jason Wilson, 706-491-8840
inch twist-lock pipe, 15 high-rise Rain burg 770-599-6996
Calving ease, milking ability, gentle-
Bird sprinklers, elbows, 14-foot suc- Wallenstein power take-off chipper ness, registered polled Shorthorn
tion pipe; $6,000 OBO. Dan Skipper BX62, only light use; $2,500. William bulls, show heifers, steers, excellent
Ludowici 912-545-9566 912-294- Toole Stockbridge geminigt@aol. quality, Club Calf member. Ken Bridg-
5901
com 770-402-7191
es Commerce 706-768-3480
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, Swains-
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,
L-shaped fuel transfer tank; 100-gal- Wood from seven full-grown black CMC Limousin, Lim-Flex bulls; lead-
lon aluminum, diamond plate with walnut trees; great for cabinets, floor- ing AI sires; performance ultrasound;
electric pump and cut-off spout; $600 ing; make offer. Patsy Sams Jeffer- all black, polled; 12 to 24 months old.
OBO. Chris Clark Pendergrass 770- sonville patriciasams@att.net 478- Jerry Bradley Covington 678-201-
503-5148
731-3864 478-945-6038
2287 678-201-2287
boro; Ron Claxton, GAL #3485. Call 478-237-8825 (days)
JEFF DAVIS COUNTY 1st & 3rd Fridays: Horse sale, 7:30
p.m.; Circle Double S, 102 Lumber City Highway, Hazlehurst.
south of Reynolds. Call 478-847-3664 or 706-975-5732
TELFAIR COUNTY 2nd & 4th Thursdays: Chickens, fowl,
goats and sheep; check-in at 1 p.m., sale at 6:30 p.m. Horse Creek Auc-
Lineback hay unroller, $600; syrup Wood-Mizer lumber, 1x12 pine, pop- Commercial Black Angus heifers;
tank, $150; in good condition. Bo lar, oak, lumber for trailer flooring, any Predestined and Final Answer blood-
Rohrabaugh Stockbridge 770-238- thickness. Larry Moore Newnan 678- lines. John Bryant Eatonton 706-485-
8773
278-5709
8321
Locust fence post and rails. Eugene Ziggity drinkers, Chore-Time feed- Dream On prime semen, 14 straws
Cook Blairsville 706-745-8724 706- ers and other miscellaneous poultry total. Ennis Ryals Dublin 478-676-
897-5828
house equipment; used building ma- 3127
Call Steve Underwood, 912-5946200 (night) or 912-375-5543 (day)
JONES COUNTY Every Saturday: Spring selling hours:
hatching eggs, biddies at 5:30 p.m.; goats and sheep, 7 p.m.; poultry, small animals follow; merchandise, 4 p.m.; 1035 Monticello Highway, gray; GAL AU-C002992; www.bradleywaysideauction.com. Call Nancy Wilson, 478-986-4413 Email bradleywaysideauction@ gmail.com
LAMAR COUNTY Every Friday: Farm miscellaneous at 5
p.m.; baby chickens, eggs at 6 p.m.; goats and poultry at 7 p.m.; Buggy Town Auction, 1315 Highway 341 S,
tion, between Dublin and McRae off Highway 441. Call 478-595-5418
TOOMBS COUNTY 1st & 3rd Saturdays: Livestock sale
starts at 10 a.m.; tack, horses; pigs at 11:30; cows at 12; goats at 1 p.m.; poultry sale follows; Metter Livestock Market, Lyons; GAL 3415. Call Lewie Fortner, 478-553-6066
WHITE COUNTY Every Saturday: Small animals,
chickens, rabbits, sheep, goats and horse sale; 4 p.m.; Coker Sale Barn, Duncan Bridge Road at Old Chattahoochee Livestock Barn. Call Wayne Coker, 706-540-8418
Metal and plastic barrels with locks, terials, cement blocks, boards, lum- Five registered Red Angus yearling
tops; solid with bung holes; plastic ber. Joshua Martin Clarkesville 678- bulls, excellent bloodline, EPDs, easy
tanks, 275 gallons in wire cages. G. 897-7072
calving, good price. Jorge Haber Mid-
Allen Covington 770-786-6377 Metal pipe, 18-inch and 24-inch, un-
LIVESTOCK
land 706-323-2405 Four bred Red Angus heifers, bred
used, track hoe buckets, 3408 CAT engine, good condition. D. K Griffith Newnan 770-304-2456
Midway blacksmith blowgun, made in 1901; on stand, in good working condition; $350. H.M Greene Tallapoosa 770-833-1035
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
to low birth weight Black Angus bull, March calvers; $10,000. C.E. McCallie Chickamauga 423-413-3124 706539-2522
Gelbvieh bulls; cow-calf pairs, bred cows; all registered purebred; bred for easy calving, fast growth. John Kiss
Money-making ice cream factory: be published. Ads for free or un- Gainesville 770-531-1126 770-531-
two 1931 John Deere hit-and-miss wanted livestock will not be pub- 1126
engines, three old fashioned ice lished. Ads for cats, dogs, reptiles, Lim-Flex black bull; 14 months,
cream churns, three trailers; $10,000. rodents and other animals not spe- double polled, sired by Brickyard,
Jess Arnett Tifton 229-382-6517
cifically bred for on-farm use will not semen-tested; $3,000. Tommy Size-
Nature Form NOM-45 Incubator be published.
more Barnesville 770-358-6229 770-
(F68SH45I) with three 28-egg trays; for emus; call or email for details. Mi-
Cattle
235-4891 Miniature bull calf; cross between
Barnesville; GAL #3177.
chael Turner Loganville michael_turn- If you have any questions regard- Belted Galloway, Zebu and Scottish
Call 770-358-0872/1786
er6295@yahoo.com 404-630-2404 ing ads in this category, call 404-656- Highlander. Hope Bennett Cleveland
Onan K5000 generetor; 120 to 240 3722.
706-348-7279
Notices for auctions selling farm-related items other than livestock must be volts, 35.8 amperes; $150. Ronald 120 15- to 20-month-old Hereford Nine bred Black Angus cows and
accompanied by the auction license number of the principal auctioneer or
Rush Franklin 706-812-5271 706- and F1 Braford bulls. Jonny Harris one Black Angus bull; $22,000. Wil-
auction firm conduction the auction, per regulations from the Georgia Secretary 675-3417
Odum 912-586-6585
liam Reynolds Macon 478-550-0629
of State. Auctions without this information will not be published.
One-horse turning plow, push gar- 14-month purebred Angus bull; One 4-year-old registered Black An-
Have an auction to put on our calendar? Contact Dallas Duncan at 404-656- den plow; $100 OBO. Terrell Williford 13-month F1 Baldy bull; $1,950 and gus bull; good bloodline, calving ease,
3722 or dallas.duncan@agr.georgia.gov.
Gibson 706-598-3669
$1,600. James Fincher LaGrange proven breeder; $3,500. Garry Shaw
RGV6101 Robin Subaru generator; 706-298-1156
Carlton garryshaw@windstream.net
Antique heart pine flooring sills, 37- Chore-Time feed lines, and all pans 11 horsepower electric start; $800, 15 Black Angus heilfers; 7 to 12 706-614-1728
foot trusses; 12-hole laying cages; flood; fewer than five years, excellent excellent. Johnny Godwin Thomas- months old, will make good mama Performance-tested black full-blood
two 2,000-bushel grain bins and cond. Lynda Hackney Rocky Face ville 229-225-6983
cows, please call. Don Hudgins Mari- Simmental, SimAngus bulls, cow-calf
more. James B Donaldson Metter lhac@windstream.net 706-673-9548 Sawmill lumber, low as 35 cents etta 404-886-6849
pairs, heifers; AI, embryo bred, easy
912-685-4095 912-682-0347
Chore-Time PNT controllers, circuit per board foot; pine, hardwood, 19 Angus and Angus-cross; AI-sired calving, high milk, satisfaction guar-
Barrels, plastic heavy-duty, 55-gal- boards; Brooder parts, Plasson wa- custom cuts available, trailer heifers, bred AI to calve February and anteed. Milton Martin Jr. Clarkesville
lon, 20-inch screw top, air tight, food ter regulators, 25 KVA brooder trans- boards, etc. Mitchell Smith Griffin March; $3,000 each. Danny Fausett 770-519-0008
grade, $35, while supplies last. Bill former. Mike Bloodworth Knoxville 404-867-5106
Dawsonville 706-265-8432
Red Angus herdsires; approximately
Sewell Brunswick 912-270-8278
478-957-0985
Shallow well pump with bladder 2-year-old Black Angus bulls; Basin 19 months old; forage-raised. Jim
Boom pole; nine-foot, extra heavy Clean 55-gallon metal drums with tank, excellent condition; $125. Will Lucy, EXAR263, Rito Revenue; and Hudson Broxton jimdhudson@wind-
duty with hook on end; $150. Bobby lids. Leonard Crane Dawsonville Lacy Pine Mountain 706-302-1509 9-month-olds Lucy, New Design. K stream.net 912-359-5546
Grant Dalton 706-226-9389
678-947-6744 404-210-1516
Stock watering tank; 24 inches Schwock Homer 404-735-9524
Regisered Black Angus bulls, 12
Broodertop round pens; great for Eight single wheel tire chains, never tall by eight-foot diameter, tough 29 SimAngus heifers, 14 months months of age, October 2014; AI-
gamefowl; $5 to $10 each. Roger Dal- used, fits 275/80 R. 245; 285/75R. polyethylene stock tank; $225. Paul old in December, 800-plus pounds; Comrade, Rito Revenue, Signature;
ton Winder rogerdalton1964@yahoo. 245; 295/75R. 225; $300. Bradley McCullough Stockbridge 404-392- $2,000 each. Bruce Parker Butler Autry Farms. Gary Autry Ringgold
com 678-863-2133
Griffin Gillsville 770-654-4413
0457
478-214-0473
423-902-5925
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2014
FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722
PAGE 5
Registered 2-year-old polled Devon bull (P43294), breeding soundness
Swine
Three ADGA registered dairy goat About 10 horse stalls oak, hemfir, Americauna pullets, hatched April 5, females, two proven milkers, $250 tongue and groove pine; heavy inter- 2014; Buff Orpington, Cuckoo Maran,
evaluation available. Steven Peskoe If you have questions regarding ads each; one doeling, $150; Nigerian locking stall mats; sell or trade; $60 Rhode Island Red pullets hatched
Sandersville 478-232-1479
in this category, call 404-656-3722. dwarf buck, $250. William Arthur Syl- each. Kim Kosciusko Monroe wind- June 3,2014; $20 each. Alan Sanders
Registered 2-year-old polled Her- Advertisers submitting swine vania 912-829-9118
saloft61@yahoo.com
Blairsville hhound@brmemc.net 706-
eford bull. John Williams Elberton ads must submit proof of a nega- Three-fourths Boer, one-fourth Kiko Big Horn roper saddle, 16-inch seat, 745-3884
jcwilliams581976@gmail.com 706- tive brucellosis and pseudorabies female, red paint, 8 months; she was excellent condition, light oil; $350. Baby chicks; American Dominique,
988-2926
test from within the past 30 days. a 4-H project goat. Steve Shenk Bar- James Carnes Sparta 478-456-0915 Buff Orpington, Rhode Island Red;
Registered 25-month-old Angus Exceptions are swine from a vali- tow 478-290-4600
Black tucker saddle, River Planta- pure breeds, reasonable prices. Mon-
bulls, semen-tested; young open and dated brucellosis-free and quali- Two Dorper-cross ram lambs, both tion trail No. 146, size 15.5; includes te Poitevint Lakeland 229-482-3854
bred cows. John Stuedemann Comer fied pseudorabies-free herd; these are 5 months old; $125 each. Patrick saddle, breast collar and headstall; Breeder pheasants; 2011 to 2014
706-202-2371
operations must submit proof of Conner Uvalda 912-293-4177
$1,100. Joan Sims Bowdon 770-328- Red Gold, $45 to $70 per pair; Am-
Registered 3-year-old polled Hereford bull; selling to prevent inbreeding; $3,000. Bill Redmond Rock Spring 423-580-3449
Registered AI Black Angus, 1- and 2-year-old bulls, replacement heifers, fall and spring calvers. Alvin Mashburn Ringgold alvin@willowtreefarms.com 423-421-1007
Registered Angus bull; 2 years old, 878 son, gentle; $2,500. Vance Gafnea Whitesburg 678-446-1829
Registered Angus bulls, 2 years old; Tenx, Ingenity; AI-sired, insured. Ken McMichael Monticello 706-468-2442
Registered Black Angus bull; 13 months, complete and objective, very good carcass EPDs. Dennis Scott Sylvania 912-682-4422
Registered Black Angus bulls, heifers, young cow; bulls semen-tested. Lalla Tanner Monroe lalla_tanner@ hotmail.com 770-267-7179 678-8235742
Registered Black Angus bulls; 13 months, excellent bloodlines, all shots. William Hix Comer 706-2485851 706-540-2470
Registered Charolais bulls, breeding age, semen-tested, cow-ready. Curtis Kicliter Marshallville 478-967-2940
Registered Hereford bulls, heifers, cow-calf pairs and bred cows; excellent bloodlines. Tim Parks Ellijay 706-
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.
Grown and baby mini Potbelly pigs, $50 and up; rare colors, breeders proven and under 17 inches tall. Michelle Israel Dallas 678-363-1399
Male potbelled pig, 4 months old; $80. Larry Smith LaGrange 706-4165404
Registered Berkshire boars from Midwest stock, only a few left, reserve now. Duke Burgess Louisville 478-625-9542
Tamworth boar, 5 months old; $200. Edward Mitchell Barnesville ed@ honeywoodfarms.com 678-359-1257 404-345-1407
Yorkshire-Duroc cross pigs, ready to go. Tammy Anderson Elberton 770403-8964
Goats And Sheep
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
100 percent solid red Boer buck, almost 2 Texas Bonjoli bloodline; $1,100 OBO. Steve Gore Tallapoosa
Two male Pygmy goats, 5 months and 7 months old; $40 each. Dexter Carlton Jeffersonville 478-945-6565
Two purebred Nubian bucks; will lead, 6 months old, gentle; $125 each; call after 8 p.m. Joann Whitlock Sharpsburg 770-599-6811
White Nubian buck, apricot markings; registered, disbudded, tattooed, CD&T; born April 18, 2014, ready to breed; $250 OBO. Joan Kiser Commerce 706-247-0976
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 at-
1642
Carriage, royal blue, four to six passengers, Voitures Canadian built, beautiful, good condition; $2,500, negotable. Ronald Shelnutt Madison 706-818-3548 706-818-3548
Dollywood made Spring- buckboard wagon, Light oak, front/back cushioned seats,very good condition, $2700(half price); Call for details. David Brannon Ranger sweetveloblue@ gmail.com 770-548-1941
Like-new saddles at used saddle prices: Circle Y 16-inch trail, $1,000; Big Horn show 16-inch, $1,500. Charlene Ratliff Monroe 404-217-2037
New easy entry horse cart, for large to draft; auto tires, leaf springs; $950. Joe Watkins Winder backwhen@ windstream.net 770-307-6979
Still looking for "Doc," old swayed back barrel horse sold to a girl in Gainesville. Roger Keebaugh Gainesville irineroger@yahoo.com 770-8697941
Stubben Siegfried all-purpose saddle, in excellent condition, 17 inches with leathers and stirrups, suede knee rolls; $1,000. Pat Vaillancourt Tyrone 678-592-6298 770-487-2527
Two saddles with bridles, reins; $300 for both. James Young Gainesville 770-540-0858
Two-horse trailer, new paint, good
hearst, $90 per pair. Leon Simmons Cleveland 706-865-7603
Breeding stock, show quality, Australorp roosters, six generations, breeding purity; $20 less for young ones. Bedford Woodard Dalton 706581-1563
Bronze tom turkey, 6 months old. Jaye Henderson Mansfield 770-7863959
Buffs, Wyandottes, Cochins, show quality; Old English Columbian, B.B. red, blue brassy back. Randy Shoemake Carrollton 678-796-9222
Five young roosters, two pounds; $3.50 each. Bert English Locust Grove 404-444-5588
Game chickens, rooster and hen for sale; $8 each. Jimmy Taylor Newborn 706-819-7390
Game fowl: Eslin Red Quill stags and pullets. Curtis Warnock Vidalia 912537-2061 912-293-9221
Gamefowl: Sid Taylor, YL hatch, Sweater hatch, Sweater grey, White Hackel and Mug, Gilmore; many hens, pullets, crosses. Tom Lilley Jeffersonville 478-945-6139
Gamefowl; jimm yeast Green Leg hatch, Law Grays and Leipers; please call before 9. Daniel Vickery Royston 706-436-6567
Games: pullets and hens, no roosters; $2 each. Darrell Humphries Car-
635-2531
770-574-2829
tachments button. Generalized ads, condition; $1,150. Royce Chitwood rollton 770-832-3846
Registered polled Hereford bulls, ADGA Nubian yearling does; certi- such as "many horses," "variety to Sharpsburg 770-328-2564
Hundreds of white doves. Lee Ad-
gentle, rugged pasture-raised, easy fied and accredited herd; ready to choose from," etc., will not be pub- Two-horse WW trailer, saddle and ams Macon 478-228-1782
calving, good EPDs and bloodlines. breed. Paul Frantz Abbeville 229- lished. Equine at Stud ads will also tack compartment, good tires and Japanese white Silkie, pair $10;
Bobby Brantley Tennille 478-553- 423-7350
require a current stable license in spare; rear load, 6.5 feet tall; $1,800. peach ring neck doves, $15 per pair,
8598 478-552-9328
ADGA registered American-Saanen order to be published.
Bill Nappier Dallas 770-377-0545 will trade for fan tail pigeons. David
Registered polled Hereford bulls; bucks; superior genetics bucks, one 14 hands; 900-pound gelding; Two-seater Surrey buggy, excel- Patton Williamson 770-228-4415
20 to 24 months old, gentle, pasture doe, one wether, all show quality; cur- daughter rode horse for six years, lent condition; $1,800. Larry Lanier Laying hens: Buff Orphington and
raised; great EPDs, bloodline; pic- rent vaccinations, worming. S. Ste- Quarter Horse; $1,200. Steve Gillispie Statesboro 912-865-5136
Cuckoo Marans, hatched spring
tures available. Joey Yasinski Senoia 678-471-7106 770-251-2441
phens Hoschton 706-654-2867 ADGA registered Nubian buck,
Washington 706-401-6452 Miniature donkeys: guard or breed-
Wood shavings; large bags, good for horse stalls; $3.50 per bag. Harry
2014; $15 each. Sabrina Ashley Murrayville ashleysga@yahoo.com 706-
Registered purebred Black Angus bull, 11 months, Objective bloodline; $1,500; Lone Branch Farm. Wilbert Minter Sparta Minterwd@aol.com 865-850-5442
Registered Texas Longhorn heifers, top bloodlines; out of big-horned sires and dams; priced reasonably. Billy Walker Rhine 229-385-8950
Simmental bulls: 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 770601-0492
Simmental, Angus breeding-age bulls, calving ease and performance data. Scott Carey Madison 706-474-0738
Two purebred Red Angus crosses, purebred red Simmental bulls, one registered Red Angus bull; all 700 pounds. Joe Gibson Rome 706-506-3026
Two registered Angus bulls, 2-plus years old, Expectation Bloodline; $1,800 each; in Royston, Ga. Bill Shipp Winston 770-949-5516 706245-7613
Wagyu bull, 6 years old, registered with AWA, proven breeder; for sale or trade to get new bloodlines. Jonathan Byers Suches 706-747-5413
proven breeder, 2.5 years old, red with spots; $250. Bobby Willis Dublin 478-272-8020
All white three-quarters Nubian buck, "Arthur;" disbudded, born Feb. 14, 2014, ready to go; $100. Bryant Vaughn Box Springs bcvaughn@ windstream.net 229-649-9438
Boer buck, 3 years old, full blood; $500 OBO. Henry Terhune Fort Valley 478-825-1911
Fainting goat, FB and mixed; kids: $80 female, $60 male; adults: $120 female, $80 male. B. Dietz Elberton 706-213-2394
Kiko bucks: ready to breed, 100 percent New Zealands; Loverboy grandsons, reduced prices. Anne Rogers Thomaston kikolady@yahoo.com 706-647-1472
Kiko bucks; four purebred and two crossbred, born January 2014; ready to work. Bridget Bell Taylorsville 770316-2603
Kiko, Boer, Savannah stud goat, 22 months old; $200. Lavon Kuykendall Acworth 770-241-7393
Pygmy goats: three females and one male; all $100, or females $75 each
ing, donkey jack, $200; nice colors; jennies, $300 and up; small and registered donkeys. Bill Wray Perry 478825-1297
Miniature riding mare, 33 inches, sorrel and white, pretty and smart, can deliver, call for pictures; $450. J Wilkes Athens 706-207-9366
POA, registered, very gentle, smart, athletic, leopard color, 13 years old, $2,000; pictures; stud; over 13 hands. Jenny Eckman Hamilton 706-4647228 706-324-7678
Quarter Arab mare, 16 years, 15 hands; grey, trail horse; intermediate rider. Terry Russell Grayson petparty1@aol.com 770-682-8670
Equine Miscellaneous
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
15 pallets of equine pine at $225 per pallet; 50 bags per pallet. Betty Teems Canton 770-714-2672 770-479-5919
1978 horse, stock trailer, four-horse; new paint, tires, wheels, jack, light and lighting harness; good solid floor. Bill Smith Lizella 478-951-7561
1991 black Niedersuss dressage saddle, 16.5, medium width, well-
Hughes Warm Springs 706-6552475
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.
40-stall barn, wash stalls; indoor, outdoor arenas; trails, XC jumps; lessons, horse training; full, pasture board, layovers. Ashley Stiles Griffin ashleystileseventing@gmail.com 678634-6710
Opening for one to two horses, private farm; north Forsyth; 12 x16-foot stalls, mats, fan, custom feeding; owner's residence; adults only. Reena Yonkosky Cumming 770-889-4561
Private five-stall barn, feed rom, shaving shed, two run-in sheds, large ring, three turnout pastures; Macedonia area. E A Beaver Ball Ground 678-493-1817
482-8345
Mixed Bantam pairs; $5 per pair. James Lawrence Alto 706-778-3447
Old English Bantams, show stock: BB reds, Old English quail, Blue Splash, Blacks, Blues, Brassy Backs, Blue Brassy Backs, Opals. Mack McBurnett Tyrone 770-487-2233
Old English Game Birds, top-notch breeders; GDW (three trios) BB Red (two pairs); getting out of these varieties. Jeff Hooper Holly Springs 678773-8689
One male and two females peacocks; male is 1 year old, female 6 months; $300. Alana Hayes Tallapoosa 404-567-1192
Pair of Golden Seabrights, $20; white crested black Polish, $5; two Auracana roosters, $7 each. Thomas Bentley Monroe 770-266-6942 770480-0499
Polish chickens, 4 to 6 months old, for sale or trade. Paul van Loenen Bartow polylab48@hotmail.com 478364-6960
Pure white buchers and spangled; brunner roundheads, also high roller stags, cocks, hens, pullets; no calls
and male $50. Marsha Randolph Lo- used, good condition, has many
Poultry/Fowl For Sale
after 9 p.m. Ricky Ray Ball Ground
FIND GEORGIA'S BEST
cust Grove 678-815-1999
more rides in it; $250. Jeanni Walters If you have any questions regarding 706-692-5172
Registered fullblood Dorper ewes Cleveland 706-969-9637
ads in this category, call 404-656- Rhode Island Red pullets, also New
LOCALLY GROWN
and rams; several have been ex- 2005 three-horse slant Gooseneck, 3722.
Hampshire Red pullets, healthy, well-
posed. Kyle Copeland Odum 912294-2983
Saanen billies, born March 12, 2014; bred Saanen nannies. J. T Fulford Glenwood 912-245-9804
Saanen doeling, born Feb. 20, 2014,
escape door, tack room, camper door, only used twice, sheltered; $3,500 OBO. Ray McKneely Milner 770-3581228
2008, three-horse Sundowner trailer, air conditioning and electrical, excellent condition; $12,500; ask for Court-
Mallard ducks must be at least three generations removed from the wild before they can be advertised. Advertisers must include this information in ads, or they will not be published.
grown birds. Brian Sturdy Dahlonega 706-865-9201
Silkie roosters, other Bantams: make offer. Robert Chambers Flowery Branch 770-967-6422
Six laying hens: $15 each, $80 for all;
disbudded, vaccinated, wormed, ex- ney. James Hunter Bishop 706-255- 18 Pilgrim geese flock for sale; $270 Sexlinks, Americauna, Rhode Island;
cellent health; $175. James Perkins 5214 706-424-2774
for whole flock. Deanna Teel Milton need to downsize. Molly Dobbins
FOODS
Morganton 706-374-4347
99 Sundowner horse trailer, three- deannalteel@att.net 770-355-4542 Dacula mollydobbins@bellsouth.net
St. Croix ewes, quantity five, flock horse slant load, six-foot short wall, 40 assorted clean leg and Cochin 404-926-6559
Online at georgiagrown.com
reduction, mature twin producers; seven feet wide, saddle rack, all- Bantam hens and three roosters. Three 2-year-old laying hens; $5
$300 each, please call for info. Rachel aluminum, awning, stud door. Jerry Deborah Shand Loganville 770-294- each. Kevin Daft Decatur 404-325-
Vest Jefferson 770-634-5582
Townley Dawsonville 770-616-9392 3418
9969
PAGE 6
FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2014
GUEST COLUMN: Farmers markets offer fall, winter options
It's Farmers Market Season!
Wait, I know what you are
thinking: farmers market "sea-
son" is spring and summer. We
are about to celebrate Thanks-
giving and head into our winter
months. Certainly this article
has been published in the wrong
issue!
Let me explain. According
THOMPSON
to the Cambridge Dictionary, a farmers market is "a regular
event in a town or city when farmers come to sell
their fruit, vegetables, eggs, meats, etc. directly to
consumers." We have seen this to certainly be true
with the recent popularity and demand for local
foods. One can likely find a market in their home-
town on a Saturday morning or a given weekday
afternoon for the majority of the "growing season."
Luckily, Georgia has such a diverse growing
season that we are able to find some type of fresh,
local produce year-round, including fall and winter.
The Department operates nine state markets in Forest
Park (the Atlanta Market), Macon, Cordele, Moultrie,
Thomasville, Cairo, Valdosta, Savannah and Augusta,
many of which operate all year.
The Atlanta State Farmers Market is the largest
market in our network. What was once referred to as
the "World's Largest Roadside Stand" has become
the terminal market for the Southeastern United
States. A terminal market as defined by Wikipedia
is a "central site, often in a metropolitan area, that
serves as an assembly and trading place for com-
modities. Terminal markets for agricultural com-
modities are usually at or near major transportation
hubs." It stands to reason with that type of responsi-
bility that the Atlanta Market is one that operates on a
year-round basis, with produce being shipped in and
out 24-7, 365 days a year. Aside from the wholesale
produce trade, the market offers a garden center,
retail produce and two on-site restaurants for your
enjoyment.
Year-round opportunities exist on just about ev-
ery other state market as well. Get out and visit the
meat market and the several hardy produce vendors who call the Macon Market home. Although our Cordele Market is thought of as a seasonal market that explodes with business in cantaloupe and watermelon season, there are a few vendors operating just about year round here as well, taking off for a bit of R&R in the winter months before getting ready for another season. Try the Moultrie and Thomasville Markets for fresh, local produce from one of the vendors who operate all year as well as onsite restaurants on each market that do a wonderful job. A trip to the Cairo market will yield two vendors operating under the "shed" with a variety of produce to choose from. Head east from Cairo to the Valdosta Market to find great vendors with a wide range to choose from, as well as a business specializing in pecan sales. Continuing on east, a trip to the Savannah Market will find another wonderful restaurant and several wholesale and retail produce dealers operating year-round. Wrap up with a trip to the Augusta Market to find fresh greens in the winter and a variety of produce in the spring and summer months.
As you are making out the Thanksgiving menu, make sure visit these markets and add some Georgia-grown items to the plate. Sweet potato souffl covered in pecans, pecan pie and a fresh batch of the greens of your choice are just several ideas to add to your menu. When Thanksgiving lunch is over and you're ready to decorate for Christmas, don't forget the markets for your Christmas tree shopping experience. The Atlanta, Macon and Moultrie markets have a wide variety of fresh Christmas trees, wreaths and garland.
Give your nearest market a call to see what is available and then head out for a market trip whenever the mood strikes, not just in the spring and summer.
Paul Thompson is the director of markets for the
Department. For questions about the Atlanta State
Farmers Market, call 404-675-1782. Visit www.agr.
georgia.gov/state-farmers-market.aspx for more
information about each of the nine state markets.
GEORGIA STATE FARMERS MARKETS
Looking for a variety of agricultural products bought from a farmer? Look no further than Georgia's State Farmers Markets.
Visit the one nearest you for Christmas trees and other seasonal products!
ATLANTA 16 Forest Parkway, Forest Park 404-675-1782 www.agr.georgia.gov/atlanta-farmers-market.aspx
MOULTRIE Quitman Highway, Moultrie 229-891-7240 www.agr.georgia.gov/moultrie-farmers-market.aspx
AUGUSTA 1150 5th Street, Augusta 706-721-3004 www.agr.georgia.gov/augusta-farmers-market.aspx
SAVANNAH 701 US Highway 80 West, Savannah 912-966-7801 www.agr.georgia.gov/savannah-farmers-market.aspx
CAIRO 1110 North Bend Street, Cairo 229-377-4504 www.agr.georgia.gov/cairo-farmers-market.aspx
THOMASVILLE 502 Smith Avenue, Thomasville 229-225-4072 www.agr.georgia.gov/thomasville-farmers-market.aspx
CORDELE 1901 US Highway 41 North, Cordele 229-276-2335 www.agr.georgia.gov/cordele-farmers-market.aspx
VALDOSTA 1500 South Patterson Street, Valdosta 229-225-4072 www.agr.georgia.gov/valdosta-farmers-market.aspx
MACON 2055 Eisenhower Parkway, Macon 478-752-1097 www.agr.georgia.gov/macon-farmers-market.aspx
2015 Georgia Grown Farmers Showcases coming next summer! Dates to be announced
in future issues.
agriCULTURE
Letter from the editor
Happy (almost) Thanksgiving, Market Bulletin readers! As we gather around the table this week and dive into turkey, stuffing, dressing, pies, green bean casserole, rolls and all of the other mouth-watering goodies that await us, I want you to join me in reflecting on a major thing to be thankful for: safe food. Georgia is home to thousands of farmers of all shapes and sizes who work day in and day out to ensure that what is grown in their fields, cultivated in their gardens and raised in their pastures is safe to eat. Georgia is also home to hundreds of federal, state and local agriculture and public health inspectors whose jobs are to make sure that once that food leaves the field and hits further processing, restaurants or straight-up store shelves, is still safe to eat. I've heard it said before that the US has an increasing number of food recalls. People who get their information from incredibly credible sources like The Internets, Dr. Google and Dr. Oz sometimes get the notion that these food recalls are because farmers, inspectors, retailers or aliens from Venus pump food full of chemicals that make people sick. No. Just ... no. Here's why food recalls happen: we are increasingly aware of our food. There are stringent label requirements, detailed HACCP plans (that's the Hazard Analysis & Critical Control Points plan that processors, abattoirs and other such facilities must create before they can even open their buildings) and rigorous testing that all surround food. Despite all of the controls and monitoring in place, sometimes an ingredient gets left off the label. Boom, food recall! Occasionally a chocolate bar is made and the wrapper designer accidentally leaves off an egg or dairy allergen warning. Wham, food recall! One time, glass of all things ended up off the processing line and in jars of salsa. Bam, food recall! A concerned mother purchases a bag of trail mix that got swapped in the line and it's actually granola inside the wrong package. Yikes, food recall! And yes, every now and then, there's a serious foodborne pathogen that leads to a food recall Salmonella, E. coli, Clostridium botulinum, for starters. When a recall happens, for any reason, Department retail and food safety inspectors are on the case, making sure recalled products are off the shelves and consumers are aware of the recall. Food recalls are kind of like opening mail every day. For every 30 envelopes that enter your mailbox, you probably manage to get a paper cut from opening one. You're always careful because you know paper cuts sting, but sometimes, it happens. And for a food manufacturer or farmer, the sting caused by a food recall can really sting. I'm talking millions and billions of dollars in lost sales, lawsuits and closed businesses sting. So it's in absolutely no one's best interest to intentionally do anything that could lead consumers to get ill, either from a food allergy or a foodborne pathogen. That being said, a portion of our safe food is also up to us, the consuming public. We must make sure that the food that stayed safe from the moment the seed hit the ground to the second the carrot wound up in our grocery carts is still safe when we pop it in our mouths on Thanksgiving Day as part of a carrot souffl. That means wash your produce before you cut into it (otherwise, your knife is drawing potential contaminants from the surface into the "meat" of the produce). It means don't cross-contaminate, so wash your utensils between uses and don't chop your romaine lettuce on the same cutting board you just laid the raw turkey on. Oh, and stuffing! Don't cook your stuffing inside your turkey (that's just asking for a side dish of something not-sosavory). Cook it as a separate dish and stuff the cooked turkey right before serving. Lastly, make sure you properly reheat and refrigerate leftovers after the main meal. Even though our families will graze throughout the afternoon and evening, we don't want to serve them botulism alongside room-temperature deviled eggs. Just as the grower, the manufacturer and the inspectors do their part to keep our food safe, we must do our part too. We've got some more Thanksgiving-specific food safety tips posted to the Bulletin Blog (you can find the website address at the bottom of page 12) to help you make sure your Turkey Day feast is memorable for all the good, safe food without a side of Salmonella.
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 ag-
ricultural 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, NOVEMBER 26, 2014
FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722
PAGE 7
ARTY'S GARDEN: Gifts for gardeners
I am sometimes asked about what to give gardeners for Christmas. Here are a few suggestions:
A beginner with an empty garden may desire almost any plant and accept it eagerly, but you may not want to give a plant to a longtime gardener unless it was expressly asked for. Your friend may love irises, but might not have room for another or want one that doesn't fit into his or her garden design. This is doubly true for trees and shrubs: loving apples does not mean that someone wants an apple tree.
Although you may not think it is imaginative, a gift certificate from a nursery is probably more appropriate for both beginner and advanced gardeners. It's beneficial to go to the nursery with the beginning gardener to answer questions and to help plant what is chosen.
Avoid gadgets no matter how cute the name or clever the sales pitch. People have been gardening for thousands of years. If a new design is found for a hoe, you are not going to hear about it from an infomercial at 3 a.m. And none of those tools has ever been tested in hard red clay. If you are going to give a tool, find out what the gardener needs and buy the best one you can afford. Go for quality and stick with the classics.
Novices and experts enjoy visiting other gardens, so consider a membership or a ticket to a botanical or public garden. A few in Georgia that come to mind are Coastal Georgia Botanical Gardens in Savannah (www.coastalgeorgiabg.org), Atlanta Botanical Garden (www.atlantabotanicalgarden.
org), Gibbs Gardens in Ball Ground (www.gibbsgardens. com), Callaway Gardens in Pine Mountain (www.callawaygardens.com) and the State Botanical Garden of Georgia in Athens (www.botgarden.uga.edu).
With skin cancer rates on the rise, help protect your friend with a wide-brimmed garden hat or a havelock-style cap. Baseball caps are popular, but do not protect the ears
and neck. Throw in a tube of sunscreen with the highest SPF possible.
If your gardener has a bird feeder, consider a bag of birdseed. Slyly check beforehand to find out what kind is used Safflower? Black-oil sunflower?
A rain gauge or outdoor thermometer will help the gardener compare notes with the weatherman. Go for quality, not decorativeness.
Since gardening and cooking are sister arts, does your friend need a cast-iron skillet, colander, cutting board or knife to prepare the vegetables, fruits and herbs he or she grows?
Garden books are also a great idea. My favorite garden writer is Marietta-born Elizabeth Lawrence. She has been called the "Jane Austen of Garden Writing." Other favorites include Roger Swain, William Lanier Hunt, Henry Mitchell, Allen Lacy and Nancy Goodwin.
A subscription to Horticulture or another garden magazine is like a flower that blooms all year. Another gift that gives all year is the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin. It has something for everyone, including seeds, plants and supplies for those who garden, recipes for those who cook and articles and notices about horticulture and agriculture. But you knew that... Arty Schronce is the Department's resident gardening
expert. He's a lifelong gardener and a horticulture gradu-
ate of North Carolina State University who encourages
everyone to discover the pleasures of plants and gardening.
PROFILE: Snyders-Lance joined program at Founder's Circle level
From Page 1
Snyder's-Lance pantry come from the buying point that is sourced by a large number of Georgia peanut producers, according to the company website. Snyder's-Lance produces 18 million pounds of peanut butter annually with all of those nuts sourced from the Southeast and nearly 50 percent annually coming from Georgia.
The company joined Georgia Grown at the Founder's Circle level.
"Georgia Grown seemed like a natural partnership for us and a great platform to promote our business across the state and the Southeast," White said.
Snyder's-Lance utilized this opportunity to get in-
volved and get exposure by participating in events such as Agriculture Day at the Capital and hosting a booth at the Georgia National Fair.
"We need to encourage, educate and expose as many children as possible to agriculture to ensure that we have a bright future for our kids and our farms," White said.
Snyder's-Lance feels that it is important for people to know just how important agriculture is not only for its business practices, but for the state as well.
"It's really important for us to develop relationships throughout the agribusiness sector," White said. "You meet so many great folks."
FEATURE RECIPE:
Fall flavors salad
LEGAL NOTICE: Equine auction set for Dec. 6
Pursuant to Section 4-13-7 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated (Humane Care for Equines Act), the Georgia Department of Agriculture will conduct a live auction on the following equine.
The auction will be held on Saturday, Dec. 6, 2014 at the Mansfield Impound Barn in Mansfield, Ga. The said equine may be inspected at the facility beginning at 10 a.m. Pictures of the equine will be posted, when available, on the Department website. Sealed bids will not be accepted on these equine.
Sadie: 17-year-old sorrel Saddlebred grade mare, rides (green)
Ricky: 9-year-old Appaloosa grade gelding, will know more before sale
Gertrude: 18-year-old sorrel Quarter Horse grade mare, rides
Sunshine: 1-year-old sorrel Quarter Horse grade filly, leads
Agnes: 12-year-old sorrel Quarter Horse grade mare, rides
Thelma: 10-year-old sorrel grade mare, rides Louise: 11-year-old bay grade mare, rides (green) Hershel: 5-year-old bay grade gelding, will know
more before sale Susie: 10-year-old dun Quarter Horse grade mare,
will know more before sale Ariat: 12-year-old bay grade mare, rides Maggie: 18-year-old sorrel Quarter Horse grade
mare, rides (green) Wrangler: 10-year-old bay grade gelding, rides No representation is made regarding any registration or possible registration neither of said equine nor of the physical condition of said equine. Any documentation in possession of the Department regarding registration, physical condition or past veterinary treatment of said equine is available upon request; however,
notwithstanding the availability of such documentation, lack thereof or verbal information given to the Department, said sale is for the equine on an "as is" basis without any representation regarding registration, physical condition or acceptable use of the animal.
The Department reserves the right to add or withdraw equines to or from any auction. The successful bidder must be prepared to tender the price by cashiers check, money order, cash or with personal check (accompanied with letter of bank approval) and move the animal from the facility by 3 p.m. on Dec. 7.
Payment must be made at the time the animal is picked up. If a successful bidder fails to tender the price as required, the Department may refuse to accept any other bids made by the successful bidder at this auction or any future auction.
These horses are subject to periodic inspection by the Department for a period of 12 months. The purchaser agrees that she will not transfer ownership of equine purchased at this sale to anyone who has had equines impounded by the Department, or a case under investigation for a violation of the Humane Care for Equines Act. If the Department determines that this agreement is violated, the equine may be subject to immediate impoundment.
IF YOU GO ...
When: Saturday, Dec. 6, at 11 a.m.
Where: Mansfield Impound Barn
2834 Marben Farm Road
Mansfield, Ga.
VIEW PHOTOS: www.agr.georgia.gov
CONTACT: Equine Health at 404-656-3713
between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday
Editor's Note: Combine favorite fall flavors into this tasty side! This salad features cranberries and pecans, perfect complements for a Thanksgiving feast for six. Top it off with turkey to serve, or wait until the day after Thanksgiving and use it to feature the leftovers if there are any!
Ingredients: 1 cup wild rice 1 pound smoked turkey 1 to 1.5 cups toasted pecans 1 cup dried cranberries 4 stalks celery, chopped 1/3 cup red onion, chopped
3 tablespoons mayonnaise 2 tablespoons water 2 tablespoons cider vinegar 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard Salt and pepper, to taste Lettuce leaves Apple slices (optional)
Instructions: 1. Cook rice according to package directions, and allow to
cool. 2. While rice is cooking, cut smoked turkey into bite-size
pieces. 3. Put cooled rice in a large serving bowl and add turkey,
pecans, cranberries, celery and onion. 4. Whisk mayonnaise, water, cider vinegar, Dijon mustard,
salt and pepper together in a small bowl. Stir into rice mixture. 5. Spoon salad mix over lettuce leaves to serve. Garnish with thinly sliced apples, if desired.
PAGE 8
FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2014
Three pair Eastern wild turkeys. John Herndon Grayson 404-697-7179
Poultry/Fowl Wanted
LIVESTOCK WANTED
Dutch rabbits, most colors; service age bucks and bunnies; $10 and
2014 bermuda mix square bales, horse quality, $6.50; round, $40/50;
White Silkies (all ages), Indian runner ducks, guineas. Hank/Ann Cole Hephzibah 762-333-4961
Poultry/Fowl Requiring Permit/License
Poultry/Fowl Requiring Permit/License
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-
ALTERNATIVE 7319. Advertisers selling quail must
be accompanied by a copy of the
LIVESTOCK FEED, HAY AND GRAIN 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
LIVESTOCK HANDLING Georgia Department of Natural Re-
sources Wildlife Resources Division at 770-918-6401. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the permit/license needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the permit/ license can be attached using the attachments button.
Bobwhite quail available for the 2014 season, call for pricing. Ralph Holley Temple 770-562-3820
Bobwhite quail, flight conditioned, now available for the 2014 and 2015 season, call for pricing. Rembert Hancock Fairmount 404-376-0550 706337-5711
Bobwhite quail, flight conditioned. Roy Peterson Ideal 478-949-5842
Bobwhite, Coturnix quail eggs: $70 for 100, $140 for 500, $270 for 1,000. Willie Strickland Pooler stricklandgamebird.com 912-748-5769
Flight conditioned Bobwhite quail, also Chukar available; call for price and availability. Heath Harrelson Reidsville 912-237-4883
Jumbo Wisconsin Bobwhite quail eggs; $48 for 100, $168 for 600, $260 for 1,000; year-round. Raymond Meadows Wadley mead5345@wadleyquailfarm.com 478-252-5345
Nothern Bobwhite quail, flight, pen-raised; $3.75. Fletcher Christian Rome 706-728-0375 706-895-3030
Black copper Marans: blue copper Maran pullets; also looking for any colored bantam Cochins; reasonable price. Tina Easter Dahlonega 706973-1295
One light Brahma, one salmon Faverolles rooster and pied or any oddcolor guineas. Charles Wilkes Demorest 706-768-2683
One purebred, brown Leghorn rooster, 12 to 15 months old, in Colbert area or nearby. Jerry Bray Colbert brayjd@uga.edu 706-788-2332
Pheasant rooster. Johnny Reece Woodstock 678-668-5976
Young pair of Embden geese. Sammy Pointer Cedartown 770-712-5970
If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722.
Emu: two females, 3 years old, hand raised, very tame; $125 each. T. Smith Gray 478-986-0831
Llama herd reduction, males, females, mama and baby pairs. Merrill Randolph Locust Grove 770-3610261
Two alpacas: selling together, white female, quality fiber, bred or open; $1,500 OBO. L L Whitlock Baldwin 706-677-2131
Alternative Livestock Requiring Permit/License
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers selling fallow deer, axis deer, sika deer, elk, red deer, reindeer and caribou must submit a current deer farming license with their ads. Ads submitted without this license will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the license needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the license can be attached using the attachments button. For information about the deer farming license, contact the Georgia Department of Agriculture at 404656-3667. For information on other hoofed stock, excluding llamas and buffalo, contact the Georgia Department of Natural Resources at 770-761-3044.
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Cattle: BA, BB or Brangus, 5 to 9 year old, brood cows with fall calves. Richard Beckham Molena cbnisbet@ gmail.com 770-884-5378
Half-breed dairy heifers, $200 (prefer half-Longhorn); also NubianOberhasli buckling. Gerald Garnto Maysville 706-335-2226
Looking to hire a horse or mule to pull a sugar cane grinding on Nov. 22. Annie Quinting 711 Sandtown Rd. Savannah 31410 912-395-1509
Orphaned beef calves in Franklin, Stephens, Banks County area; will buy and pick up. Barry Crunkleton Toccoa 706-491-4363
Reasonably priced Boer goats in the Commerce, Ga., area. Ron Blackwell Danielsville 706-335-2977 706-2554906
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
16-foot Neckover livestock trailer, good condition; $3,200 OBO; leave message. Mark Boyles Dawson 229995-4694
20-foot bumper pull, heavy-duty stock trailer with dove tail, ramps, dual axles; $2,500. Lamar Bryant Cleveland 706-878-8509
2008 Stoll livestock trailer; three 800-pound axles, hydraulic brakes, removable front gate, three cut gates, good condition; $12,000. Dustin Giesbrecht Davisboro 706-831-3046 706831-3046
2009 24-foot Gooseneck stock trailer with five-foot dovetail with ramps; rated 14,000 pounds, sheltered; $3,600. Henry Chastain Tallapoosa 770-634-5322
Bumper pull 15-foot livestock trailer; center gate, escape door; $1,200. Kenneth Carlyle Cleveland 706-8653686
Creep feeder, 750 pounds, good condition, $250. Harold Rosser McDonough 770-957-3774
Danshken goat battery powered vacuum milking machine, half-gallon, new condition; $60, will ship. Wilbur Cameron Dry Branch 478-308-3341
Gooseneck cattle trailer: 20-foot, good paint, floor, lights, metal and tires, cut gate, skid-proof rubber floor; $4,200. Mark Woodham Madison 404-379-8037
Heavy six-foot galvanized livestock panels and full sweep system. Anthony Carpenter Madison 706-318-1979
Hog farrowing crates, call for details. Don Edge Soperton 912-529-6739
Round pen, nine 12-foot panels and one four-foot walk-through gate; $450 OBO. Ivy Hailey Forsyth ivhailey@ bellsouth.net 478-737-6303
Trojan hydraulic squeeze chute, ex-
up; call after 5 p.m. Tommy Whittle Thomaston 404-502-7025
Dutch: Show rabbits and breeding stock; small, friendly, lively and unique; excellent mothers. Katie Hufford Cleveland 706-219-4766 706969-1953
Large gray does; reasonal price; call 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Stephen Culberson Kingston 404-859-7487
Mini Rex kits, 8 weeks old, two solid black, three broken, black and white. Kim Scoggin Armuchee 706-2660230
New Zealand Whites, adults and half-grown kits; $10 each. Andy Howell Covington dhowell466@bellsouth. net 770-786-0514
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, bermuda square, $5.50; round bales 4x5, $45; fertilized, rain-free. 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 706-264-4477
$35; 4X5 net wraped, $40; 5X4 round bales; 2014 Fescue mix, fertilized, rain free in barn. Robert Greene Roopville 770-324-4323
`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 square bale hay, clean, well-fertilized. Mike Phillips Screven 912-253-8489
`14 alicia; horse quality squares, 15.4 protein, $7.25; wheat straw, bright clean squares, $4. Neil Wingfield Leesburg 229-407-0371
`14 coastal bermuda, horse quality, fertilized, UGA soil specs, square; 4x5 round bales in barn; delivery, stack available. Olin Trammell Forsyth 478994-6463 478-960-7239
`14 fescue, 800- to 900-pound rolls, fertilized, off ground, covered; $40, quantity discount. Donald P Schultz Pine Mountain 706-663-4588
14 fescue, bermuda; 4x5 rolls, rainfree in barn; $40 each or $35 for fourplus. Jonathan Holbrook Cumming 404-775-8417
14, alicia bermuda in barn, horse quility, 4x5 rolls, no bahia; $50; close delivery available. Henry Beckworth Gibson 706-598-2106
2012 crop; oat hay, square bales in barn; $4 per bale, quantity discounts. Tim Smith Milledgeville timber-
mulch hay, $3.25. Rick Anderson Taylorsville 404-402-8470
2014 bermuda square bales, $6; rolls, $50; horse quality, delivery available. David Harden LaFayette 706397-8347
2014 bermuda square bales, horse quality, fertilized per UGA, 16.9 protein, 149 RFQ; $6 per bale. Mike Dubose Junction City 706-366-1665
2014 bermuda, fescue, rain-free in barn; $40 per roll; horse hay. Gary Bagley Buford 770-231-2148
2014 bermuda, fescue; mixed horse quality hay; $40 per roll, $5 per square bale. Ronald Campbell Rockmart 706-936-3294 770-686-9563
2014 coastal bermuda hay, 4x5 round, square and mulch hay. Larry Morgan Lizella 478-781-1990 478972-5977
2014 coastal bermuda hay, fertilized, rain-free, under shelter, round bales, net-wrapped; $45. Morris Lively Collins 912-213-8249
2014 coastal bermuda hay, horse quality; $5 per bale at barn; delivery available. Glenn Brinson Tarrytown 912-288-5960
2014 coastal bermuda hay, wellfertized, weed- and rain-free, horse quality, approximately 2,500 square bales; $4.50 per bale. Curtis Durden Lyons 912-526-3189 912-245-1081
2014 coastal bermuda hay; $35 per roll, 4x4 bales, fertilized and limed, delivery available. Lowinston Jackson Grantville 770-583-2385
2014 coastal bermuda, horse quality, fertilized, limed, 4x5 rolls, $45; mulch hay, $25, 4x5 roll. Danny Brady Hephzibah 706-231-8563
2014 coastal bermuda, horse quality, fertilized, limed, rain-free, 4x5 netwrapped; $50. Grace Brady Hephzibah 706-231-0985
2014 coastal bermuda, horse quality, square bales; $5.50 per bale; 15bale minimum; approximately 225 bales available. Scott Chambers Braselton 706-983-0603
2014 coastal hay, horse quality,16 percent protein, limed, fertilized per test, rain-free, 4x5 rolls in barn; $60 each. Willie Tyson Perry 478-9571039 478-987-1278
2014 coastal hay, well-fertilized and limed, 4x5-foot rolls, barn-stored; $45 per roll. Michael Carter Knoxville 478-256-6372
2014 Coastal, Fescue, Bahia, 4x4 net-wrapped rolls, well-limed, fertilized; $30 per roll in field; $35 in barn. James Pierce Waverly Hall 404-3728631 678-610-6621
2014 fescue bermuda mix; barn square bales, $4; 2013, $3; mulch, $2. Brian Nix Winder 770-867-1897
2014 fescue mixed hay, 4x5 rolls or square bales; barn-stored, delivery available. Jimmy Payne Rockmart 404-557-8448
cellent condition. David Flake Ash- smith63@gmail.com 478-363-6631
2014 fescue square bales; horse
burn 229-777-1834
2013 bermuda mix hay; large square quality, stored in barn, rain-free,
Two-horse or stock trailer; double bales, no rain, in barn, horse quality; fertilized, limed; $4.25 per bale. Al
swinging doors, good tires, solid floor, $4. H. L von Richthofen Watkinsville Blackburn Dawsonville 770-401-
mats included; can send pictures; 706-453-9143
2862
$2,500. Jimmy Bass Concord 678- 2014 4x5 fescue, bermuda mix 2014 peanut hay, irrigated, 4x5
967-9710 770-884-0717
round bales; $40; delivery available. bales, sheltered; $35. Eric Taft Manor
Very nice, almost new, Gooseneck Kenny Sargent Rockmart 770-490- 912-281-8456
trailer, used five times, grey, 16 feet; 1227
2014 russell bermuda hay, 4x5 bale;
$5,000. Cheryl Nichols Hogansville 2014 alicia bermuda hay, horse qual- $45 delivered. Tommy Rider Waynescnichols1127@gmail.com 706-975- ity, square bales, heavy bales, barn- boro 706-554-9785
1335
WW cattle chute with auto headgate; has wheels and tongue, new boards and paint, good condition; $3,000. Jeff Cann Dewy Rose 678-936-3564 706-246-0243
stored. Tony Nugent Ambrose 912309-9666
2014 bermuda crop, two size rolls, net-wrap and square bales. Lonnie Dupree Sylvester 229-776-3122 229878-8594
2014 bermuda hay, 4x5 net-
2014 russell bermuda hay, 4x5 bales; $60, other $50; horse hay squares, $5.50; UGA analyzed; delivery available. Carl Crews Sylvania palerider43@planters.net 912-8573131
2014 square bales of bahia, dallas,
RABBITS
wrapped, 204 bales; rain- and weed- bermuda and other mixed grasses free; fertilized UGA specs, analysis for sale; rain-free and barn-stored.
If you have questions regarding ads available upon request. William Page Wilson Phelps Greensboro 706-347-
in this category, call 404-656-3722. Wrightsville 478-864-2942
0492
8-week-old Mini Lop, Hot Toes, mul- 2014 bermuda hay; square bales in 2014 square bales, mixed grasses,
ticolored Dutch, Loin Head; ask for barn, rain-free, $5; Embry Farm. Mar- good quality; $4.50 per bale, delivery
Stephanie. Kathy Stone Gainesville lene Embry Johns Creek 770-476- available. Ray Gilbert Bishop 760-
678-602-6698
1193
769-5820 706-296-4360
Assorted bunnies; all are approxi- 2014 bermuda high quality, fertilized, 2014 Tift 44 and 85; high quality,
mately 8 to 12 weeks of age; Holland rain-free; $5.50 at barn, delivery avail- horse hay; squares and rolls; delivery
Lop cross and Dutch cross. Thomas able. Al Guillebeau Monroe 770-267- available. Durand Deal Tifton 229-
Collins Lizella 478-256-3213
8929
388-5054
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2014
FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722
PAGE 9
2014 Tift 44, horse quality, large Top quality hay, 4x6 rolls, 1,000 Three varieties of sugar cane for Red castor bean or loofah sponge square bales, fertilized, rain-free, pounds; alicia, Tift 9; wrapped, fertil- sale; good for chewing, syrup or seed; seeds; 25 for $3,100 for $10; send
MISCELLANEOUS
barn-kept; $5 per bale. Toni White Monticello 770-823-0740
2014 Tift bermuda hay; square and round bales, horse quality, stored in barn, delivery available. Dick Stratton Locust Grove 770-842-9317 770914-6153
2014 Tifton 85 bermuda horse quality hay, limed, fertilized; $6 per square bale delivered. Charlie Jackson Lawrenceville jackson_c19@yahoo.com 678-910-0561
2014; 4x5 tight bales, bermuda mix,
AG SEED FOR SALE $400 per load delivered; 15 2014
horse quality bales available in barn. David Rackley Lexington 706-4105784
35 square bales, fescue, 2013 cut, barn dry; $2.50 per bale. Michelle Weeks Colbert 770-363-2948
4x5 net-wrapped fescue, bermuda mix, in barn, fertilized, cow and horse hay. Glen Whitley Bethlehem 770867-2718 770-307-7098
Alfalfa hay, $10 per bale; coastal
FLOWERS FOR SALE hay, $5 per bale; horse quality. John
G Faulk Jeffersonville 478-9453415
Bermuda and bermuda, fescue hay; horse quality, 4x5 net-wrapped, $50 to $60; cow hay also, delivery avail-
ized, also 2014 peanut hay; wrapped, will deliver. Josh Yawn Milan 229315-7339
Top quality, 2014 tested alicia, russell hay; round or square, sheltered; delivery available; free storage through March 2015. Heath Pittman Vidalia 912-293-2535 912-537-9721
Wheat straw, $4.50 per square bale; clean, no weeds, discount for large quantities. Billy Ewing Madison 770713-9288 770-979-1057
If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers must submit a current state laboratory report, fewer than nine months old, for purity, noxious weeds and germination for each seed lot advertised. Ads submitted without this information will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, this report needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the report can be attached using the attachments button. Seed lots must be uniform and cannot exceed 400 50-pound bags. Certain varieties of seed are protected
call for more information. Howard Burnette Mershon 912-288-0091
Varieties of sugar cane for sale by the stalk, row or field. Dustin Wright Moultrie 229-234-7575
Yellow multiplying onions, $19 per gallon, no shipping. Eugene White Lithonia 770-987-9790
Ag Seed/Plants Wanted
Approximately 400 stalks of CP 5248 sugar cane for planting. Ollie Lindell Jesup 912-427-7187 912-4277187
Fresh sage. K. J. Franklin Elberton 706-988-4311
Supplier of fresh mistletoe with white berries for our Christmas tree lots in north Atlanta. Luca Gianturco Alpharetta 770-777-5875 770-8264738
To collect or buy osage oranges; call April or Bill. April Yenson Decatur 404-377-3261
If you have questions about this category, call 404-656-3722.
2014 variegated four-o-clock seed, 2014 hummingbird vine seeds; $1 per package with SASE. Polly Young
SASE. Joy Shelnutt P.O. Box 1212 Loganville 30052
Red spider lily bulbs; $12 per dozen plus $3.50 shipping. Glenda Crosby P.O. Box 1226 Baxley 31515
Reseeding petunias mixed; angel trumpet, double purple or double yellow; $1 per packet with SASE. Carolyn Arnold Jefferson 706-3673813
Reseeding petunias, mixed; angel trumpets, double purple or double yellow; $1 per packet with SASE. Carolyn Arnold 644 Lynn Ave. Jefferson 30549
Seeds: mullein pink, touch-me-nots, four-o-clocks, money plant, morning glory, hibiscus, devil's trumpet, Siberian iris; $1 teaspoon, SASE, cash. G. Robertson 2966 Cardinal Lake Cir. Duluth 30096
Texas Star hibiscus seed; 10 for $2 with SASE; Donna's Blossoms. Donna Miltimore 1396 Kiley Lane Dalton 30721
Variegated liriope; 3,500 one-quart pots available at $1.50 each, also gardenias; 90, four-gallon pots at $7 each. Jim Hadaway Athens 706-5435432
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
13.7 cubic foot upright freezer; $225. Dorothy Moss Midway 912-884-7555
60-gallon syrup kettle with wide lip; $600. Joe Norman Moultrie BLEN1944@gmail.com 229-8918412
Antique 50-gallon syrup kettle, in good condition. Ruth Cole Nicholls 912-592-2636 912-632-4989
Beautiful blue peacock feathers; small ones for jewerly, etc.; large ones for wedding flower arrangements, decorations. Willene Haigler Hiawassee 706-994-6850
Dog houses for large working farm dogs only; well-built, well-designed, strong, heavy build to suit your size farm working dog. Wayne Knight Auburn 678-425-4550
Five-foot iron posts for sale, at farm in Clarkesville, Ga. Al Thornton Cumming 678-357-5432
Mason jars: three; 3, 5x3, 5x5; one, $15; two, $25; four, $40. Chris Wilkerson Nashville 229-316-0522
Old fashioned rabbit boxes; $10 each, no shipping. Billy Middlebrooks Monroe 770-267-7084
FLOWERS REQUIRING able. Jack Jenkins Athens 706-286- from propagation unless they are 173 Creekview Drive Leesburg 31763
4438 706-372-0287
grown as a class of certified seed. 229-888-7650
Old hand-hewn log cabin, excellent condition; delivery and set-up avail-
Bermuda hay, square bales; $4 per These include Florida 304, Coker A-1 wildflower seeds, attracts butbale. John McCombs Rockmart 770- 9152, Coker 9835, 6738 soybean, terflies and birds; $2, gigantic pack.
PERMITS
able anywhere. Kerry Hix Chatsworth 706-695-6431
301-1843
Haskell, Bennings and others. Sammie L Marler Brunswick 912- If you have questions regarding this One 13.6x28 tractor tire for sale;
Bermuda, Bahia mix, 4x5 rolls, For questions regarding certified 223-8165
category, call 404-656-3722.
$125 with tube. Jim Young Gaines-
stored outside, $25; stored inside, seed, call the Department's Seed Angel trumpets, banana trees, Con- Advertisers selling officially pro- ville 770-540-0858
$30, good hay. Tim Bramlett Greens- Division at 404-656-3635.
federate roses, black magic elephant tected plants must have a permit Sawtooth oak acorns; Georgia state
boro 706-453-4275
2014 combine-run oats; Morgan ears, ginger lillies, lotus, pond plants to sell such plants. Ads submit- champion tree; 30 for $5 or 75 for $10;
Coastal bermuda 2014; rain-free, 5x6 rolls; $50 each. Hardy Edwards Winterville hmeherefords@windstream.net 706-714-9012
Coastal bermuda, fescue mix hay, $35 per bale; 4x4 bales, fertilized and limed, delivery available. Jermaine Barlow Luthersville 706-302-7658
Fescue 4x5 round bales in the barn;
County (near Madison). Frank Eaton Buckhead 706-342-0727 706-4740689
Oats, 96 percent germination, 40-pound bag, $12; oats, ryegrass mix, 98 and 95 percent germination, 40-pound bag, $11. Danny Cook Dudley 478-290-8055
Wheat seeds: 50-pound bag; 99.79
and more. Patrice Cook Covington 770-787-6141
Angel trumpets, Christmas roses (Helleborus), $5; hydrangeas, nandinas, ferns, forsythia, beauty berries, Siberian iris, $3; burning bushes. Carla Houghton Marietta 770-428-2227
August, La lily, $12 per dozen, $2 postage; seeds, angel trumpet, dou-
ted 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
$4 shipping. John Trussell Warner Robins jtrusswr@cox.net 478-9539320
Six-inch concrete blocks; about 1,500 of them; 40 cents each. Tony Bennett Hiram 678-381-5547
Wild hog traps, 4x4x8, continuous catch spring-loaded door, removeable top, large and small hogs. J. D
$35, cow hay. Beth Ellenburg Ac- pure seed, 95 percent germination; ble zinnias, coropsis spider flowers, plants, call the Protected Plant Conger Norman Park 229-769-3253
worth 770-975-3916
$9 per bag. Lisa Biggers Metter 706- $2 per tablespoon, SASE. F. Brooks Program at 770-918-6411.
229-339-0104
Fescue, horse quality, $3.50; fescue 306-3506 912-685-2824
674 New Rosedale Rd. Armuchee
Flowers Wanted
Bees, Honey & Supplies
Market Bulletin Ad Form mix, horse and cow quality, $3. Kermit
Simmons Jefferson 770-867-7550
Good quality 4x5 round bales, coastal hay, net-wrapped and stored in barn. Leo Perfect Unadilla 478627-3820
Ground, hammer-milled corn and cobs; shelled yellow corn; $40 per 55-gallon barrel. Joab Bowen Clermont 678-725-3523
Hay; round bales, 4x5, excellent quality, alicia bermuda; $50 per roll. Larry Cox Waynesboro 706-8294174
Horse quality bermuda hay; 20,000 square bales; 200 round rolls. Paul Harris Odum 912-294-2470
Ag Plants for Sale
2,000 stalks of sugar cane for sale; four different kinds; ask for Ben. Lanier Brantley Ailey 912-583-2557 912347-0529
Bamboo plants and trees, all sizes, very cheap. Frank Byrd Atlanta 770939-9564
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
30105
Black bamboo, golden bamboo, beauty berry, cannas, others. David Pelton Covington 678-654-0571
Carolina jasmine, autumn joy, porcline berry, cross vine, ajuga, forsythia, beauty berry, lace cap hydrangea, more. Gail Hollimon Buford lastplug@ bellsouth.net 770-855-4252
Cleome, touch-me-not, Mexican sunflower, money plant, tiger lily; $1 each, large; SASE. B. Savage 3017 Atkins Dr. Gainesville 30507
Daffodils: White Mount Hood, old time yellow, old time double bloomers, white narcissis, blue bells, mole bean seed. E. Beach Duluth 770-476-
Snowball, phlox and hydrangea 10 and five-frame bee hives, starting
plants; all colors. Clara Lamb Louis- kit and some parts. Eliseo Delia Min-
ville 478-494-5650
eral Bluff 706-492-5119
This form may be used to submit an ad. There is a 20-word limit for advertisements unless otherwise noted under category headings. The 20-word limit includes name, city, phone number and complete address, if provided. Market Bulletin staff reserves the right to edit notices exceeding the word limit. Only one notice per subscriber per issue. In order to advertise in the Bulletin, you must be a paid subscriber with a current subscription.
Category:
Horse quality fescue, orchardgrass hay, 4x5 rolls, in barn on pallets, can deliver; $40. Andy Cooper Hiram
Fruit trees: figs, six feet tall in pots; $5 each or six for $25. Ruth Bruce Decatur 404-634-4106
1163
Four-inch perennials, 350 varieties, $1.50 each including Helleborus;
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.
770-235-5039
Green sugar cane for sale; 55 cents one-gallon grafted Japanese maples,
Large square bales of bermuda; horse hay from third cutting, 2014; barn-kept, delivery available, call,
per stalk; ready to cut at end of October. Harold Barnes Douglas 912-3811479 912-384-7835
$20 to $25; display garden. Selah Ahlstrom Jackson 770-775-4967
Four-o-clocks, different colors, pol-
text. Doug Durian Zebulon brinarz@ Luffa gourd seeds, 25 (dish-rag linate, large; sunflower seeds; table-
yahoo.com 770-584-5158
squash); send SASE plus $1. Sgt. spoon, $1 each plus SASE. Mary
Mixed fescue square bale hay, not horse quality. Lamar Cox Fayetteville
Douglas S Capps Comer 770-4905537
Pursley 253 Ryan Road Winder 30680 770-307-5645 770-540-1567
404-824-7569
Old fashioned white multplying on- Free iris, already dug, Stone Moun-
New crop, freshly baled, 50 bales; orchard, bermuda mix; $3.50 per
ions; $20 per gallon plus $6 shipping. Brian Nix Winder 770-307-6868
tain area. Pat Crowley Stone Mountain 770-465-6641
bale; at barn, horse quality. Buck Dills Pecan trees: grafted, bare root; tak- Free perennials, you dig. D. Sat-
Blairsville 706-994-0294 706-400- ing orders for January 2015 pick up; terfield Baldwin 706-499-8842 706-
2704
call to order before we sell out. Andy 778-5762
Quality 2014; 4x5.5 round rolls of Smith Hawkinsville 478-225-8433
Japanese maples, azaleas, garde-
Phone number:
hay, net-wrapped; $35 to $50 per roll; Raspberry plants: Heritage and Red- nia, hosta, hydrangeas, roses. Linda delivery available. Chad Hendrix Col- wing, approximately 30 for sale. Tom Waites Fairburn 770-964-6414
Subscriber number:
lins 912-237-3430
Johnson Atlanta 404-234-8427
Leyland cypress, red bud trees, aza-
Round bales; orchard, fescue, wild Seed sugar cane. Glynn Thornton leas, perennials, iris, daylilies, hosta,
bermuda, 4x4, rain-free, $18 per roll; Senoia 770-599-3521
lots of indoor plants; $2 and up. Carol
Please include your name and full address on all correspondence sent to the Bulletin office. The following statement must be signed by the advertiser submit-
delivery available. Ron Smith LaFay- Several varieties of sugar cane for Bland Fayetteville 770-964-3162
ting this notice for publication:
ette jpetrel@floorsoft.com 706-537- sale, by the stalk, row or field. D.W. Old timey zinnias, $3 per half-cup,
8841
Wright Moultrie 229-891-7632
$5 per cup; cash, two stamps; mari-
I hereby certify that the above notice meets all the necessary require-
Shelled yellow feed corn and wheat, Sugar cane (red); planting, making golds, orange, yellow, $1 per table- ments for publication in the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin.
by the barrel. Wayne Montgomery syrup, chewing, decorations. James spoon; SASE. Mildred Bryan 916 Elm
Reynolds 478-847-2356
Coleman Uvalda jmcoleman1975@ Dr. Monroe 30655 770-267-3098
Square bale hay, 2014 bermuda; gmail.com 912-594-6434
Planting pots, three-gallon to 40-gal-
Please mail ads separate from subscription payments. Ads should be mailed
fertilized and rain-free, can deliver. Sugar cane: red, green, blue gal and lon; 95 for $50; daylilies, free iris, var- to Georgia Department of Agriculture, Attention: Market Bulletin, 19 Martin Luther
Peggy McCart McDonough 770- others. George Merritt Unadilla 229- iegated liriope; $3 large clump. J. Wil- King Jr. Drive SW, Atlanta, GA 30334.
957-2270
401-8726
son Tyrone 770-486-0304
PAGE 10
FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2014
Bulletin Calendar
Nov. 22 30 Holiday Gingerbread Village Augusta Museum of History Augusta, Ga. 706-722-8454
Nov. 22 Dec. 30 Fantasy in Lights Callaway Gardens Pine Mountain, Ga. 800-832-3810
Dec. 6 Fresh Greenery Christmas Workshop Callaway Gardens Pine Mountain, Ga. 706-663-5153
Wreath-Making Class Jaemor Farms Market Commerce, Ga. caroline@jaemorfarms.com
Nov. 22 Jan. 3 Enchanted Gardens of Light Rock City Gardens Blue Ridge, Ga. 800-854-0675
Garden Lights, Holiday Nights Atlanta Botanical Gardens Atlanta, Ga. 404-876-5859
Nov. 27 Thanksgiving Meals Callaway Gardens Pine Mountain, Ga. 1-844-227-9085
Nov. 29 Swine Time Festival Climax Community Club Climax, Ga. Swinetimefestival.com
Dec. 1 Deadline to apply for Georgia NPDES Dairy Permit 706-310-0020
Dec. 2 Wreath-Making Class Jaemor Farms Alto, Ga. caroline@jaemorfarms.com
Dec. 4 Taste of Perry Georgia National Fairgrounds & Agricenter Perry, Ga. 478-987-1234
Dec. 4 6 Technical Large Animal Emergency Rescue Course Gray, Ga. 214-679-3629
Dec. 4 7 GQHA Georgia Classic Quarter Horse Show Georgia International Fairgrounds & Agricenter Perry, Ga. 706-201-6724
Dec. 5 Calhoun Performance Tested Bull Sale Northwest Georgia Research & Education Center Livestock Pavilion Calhoun, Ga. 706-624-1403
Deadline to sign up for Dairy Margin Protection Program Contact local Farm Service Agency for details
Dec. 5 6 2014 Southern Invitational Dairy Cattle Show Georgia National Fairgrounds & Agricenter 478-737-6897
Dec. 6 7 Classic City IEA Horse Show Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 678-549-7012
Dec. 7 9 Georgia Farm Bureau Convention Jekyll Island, Ga.
Dec. 10 11 Urban Ag Council EDGE Expo Gwinnett Center Duluth, Ga. 1-800-687-6949
Dec. 13 Christmas at Stepback 176 A Dennis Station Road Eatonton, Ga. 706-473-1379
Dec. 24 Christmas Eve Dinner Callaway Gardens Pine Mountain, Ga. 1-844-227-9085
Dec. 25 Christmas Day Brunch Callaway Gardens Atlanta, Ga. 1-844-227-9085
Jan. 2 4 South Georgia Championship Team Roping Georgia National Fairgrounds & Agricenter Perry, Ga. 423-340-0640
Jan. 8 11 Southeast Regional Fruit & Vegetable Conference International Trade and Convention Center Savannah, Ga. www.seregionalconference.com
Jan. 9 10 Georgia Farm Credit Winter Pig Classic Georgia National Fairgrounds & Agricenter Perry, Ga. 229-254-3886
Jan. 10 Houston County Commercial Dairy Heifer Show Georgia National Fairgrounds & Agricenter 478-230-4108
Jan. 11 GJSB Sunglo Feeds Throw-down Futurity Georgia National Fairgrounds & Agricenter 229-221-7381
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.
Albany, southwest Georgia bee re- Large red and green cane for plant- A-1 quality channel catfish finger-
moval; licensed, insured; also hornets, ing or grinding; mobile mill will grind lings; graded, priced by size, accu-
yellow jackets, wasps. Dale Richter your cane. Lynn Reeves Dearing 706- rate weights, counts, guaranteed live,
Leesburg dalerichter@bellsouth.net 825-6274 706-595-1798
healthy, immediate delivery. J.F. Gil-
229-349-0784 229-886-7663
Marview Farms offers organically bert Thomaston 706-648-2062 770-
All-natural pure, unprocessed hon- raised, grass-fed beef, lamb, goat, 468-0725
ey; sizes available: quart, $14; pint, pork. Fernando Mendez Arabi Info@ All fish species: bluegill, shellcracker,
$8; eight-ounce bear, $5; cut comb, marviewfarms.com 229-401-8732 redbreast, shiners, catfish; pond sur-
$15. Jimmy Brown Jackson 770- Mostly pecan halves; $8 per pound veys, aeration, feeders, weed consul-
775-0157 678-448-7781
plus shipping. Andy Adams Hartwell tation. Ethan Edge Baxley edgesa-
Bee removal, metro Atlanta and west aapagent@yahoo.com 706-376-8968 quatic@gmail.com 912-602-1310
Georgia areas, work guaranteed. W.O. Naturally grown Jerusalem arti- Any size bass, bluegill, crappie,
Canady Winston 770-942-3887
choke; as low as $6 per pound, plus channel cat, shellcracker, shad, min-
Dadant 300-pound storage tank, shipping. Buddy Hutto Warner Rob- nows; free delivery or pick up; best
new in box; $250. David Dye Rock- ins buddy260@cox.net 478-960-1329 prices. Danny Austin, Sr. Roberta
mart daviddye110@live.com 470- Rose Hill Farms: farm-fresh eggs in 478-836-4938
336-9849
Winder, Ga.; $2 per dozen. Tony Ca- Bass, bluegill, channel catfish, gold-
Honey extractor: stainless steel, dle Winder 678-863-4062
en shiners, fathead minnows, sterile
good shape; $100 cash. David Bobo Woodstock mrdavidbobo@gmail. com 404-312-0503
Stoneground grits, cornmeal, whole wheat flour, two-pound bags; white and yellow grits and meal; will ship.
grass carp, fish feeders, aeration, electrofishing. Caleb Lewallen Ball Ground info@lakework.com 770-
Maxant honey extractor; $300. Mary Stacey Freeman Statesboro 912- 735-3523
Norris Dahlonega 706-864-6116
852-9381
Bass, bluegill, hybrid bream, channel
Pick up swarms for free, removal from structures for a fee; will pick up, purchase unwanted beekeeping equipment. Dave Larson Mitchell 770-542-9546
Taking orders, five-comb nucs, hives, bees, spring delivery, empty hives, supers, raw honey, heavy extra equipment; closed Saturdays. Edward Colston Taylorsville 770-3829619
Three-pound package Italian bees,
Sugar cane for juice and syrup making. Ray Freeman Dublin 478-2721307
Sweet potatoes: Beauregard and Covington, by the bin, bushel, halfushel or 10-pound bag; Scarbor & Son's. Randy Scarbor Tifton 229528-4204
Water-ground meal, whole wheat flour, grits; $5 for five pounds plus postage; also, grind your grain. Mike Buckner Junction City 706-269-3630
catfish, sterile grass carp; statewide delivery. David Cochran Ellijay 706889-8113
Bass, bluegill, shellcrackers, hybrid bream, channel catfish fingerlings, sterile grass carp; delivery available. Tony Chew Manchester 706-8463657
Red Wigglers and castings, $15 per pound plus shipping. Ronnie Parker Pitts 229-322-9719
$90; marked queen, $95; 100 percent We machine-shell your pecans while Stocking fish, catfish, blugill, crap-
non-refundable deposit, ready first you wait, for 30 cents per pound. Jody pie and more, free delivery available;
and second weeks of April. Billy Craft Glidewell Jackson 770-775-6592
family-owned and operated. Ashley
Elberton 864-617-7630 Will remove swarms for free; remove
Herbs
Galbreath Lyons 912-293-7097 Trout: good stocking quality, vari-
unwanted bees from a structure for a Advertisers selling ginseng must ous sizes, hatched and grown on our
fee. Leonard Day Macon/Gray 478- be registered with the Georgia farm; delivery available. David Cantrell
719-5588
Department of Natural Resources Ellijay 706-273-6199
Will remove unwanted bee equip- and proof of this registration must ment and removal from structures; be submitted with each ad. Ads
Fertilizers & Mulches
2014 natural honey for sale. Derry Oli- for ginseng submitted without this 100 4x6 bales of rye straw for mulch;
ver Commerce 706-335-7226 706- registration will not be published. $20 per bale; will load, no Sunday
621-1781
For more information, contact the calls. Eugene Lovett Tennille 478-
Things To Eat
Georgia Natural Heritage program 552-7819 478-232-8554
at 770-918-6411.
2014 square bale mulch hay, in
Advertisers submitting ads using
Fish & Supplies
barn. Jerry Cox Fayetteville 770-
the term "organic" require Certified Organic registration with the Georgia Department of Agriculture. Ads submitted without this registration will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the registration needs to be sent along with it. For ads submit-
Advertisers selling sterile triploid grass carp must submit a current Wild Animal License from the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Ads submitted without this license will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad,
461-7938
2014 square bales, wheat straw; $3 per bale, at barn. Julian Kimbell Jackson 770-630-2466
2014 wheat straw; $3 per bale, at barn; delivery available. Gary Brinson Tarrytown 912-286-3191
ted online, the registration can be the license needs to be sent along Aged horse manure, you load any
attached using the attachments with it. For ads submitted online, time; I load, call for appointment; $10
button. For information on this the license can be attached using truck, $20 trailer, $30 tandem. Ray-
registration, call the Organic Pro- the attachments button. For license mond Dunnigan Smyrna 678-683-
gram Manager at 706-595-3408. information, call 770-761-3044.
2624 404-421-1775
`14 Desirable pecans; $11 per pound
plus postage; will crack, shell, sepa-
rate pecans for 50 cents per pound.
Russell Eaton Stockbridge 770-506-
2727
2013 black walnut meats, clean; $20
per quart, $6 postage. Lela Norrell
Gainesville 770-532-3945
2013 cleaned black walnuts, in
freezer; $15 per quart, local pick up;
no shipping. Jesse Sheppard Gray
478-986-0759
2014 shelled pecans; $8 per pound
plus postage; Horizon Orchards. Phil
Williams Jesup 912-270-4676
Angus beef, no antibiotics or hor-
mones; grain-fed, dry aged 17 days;
quarters; www.sellfarm.com. Bill Farr/
Sell Milner 770-584-9727
Black walnut meat (2014); $17 per
quart plus postage. Joan Spears Washington 706-678-2266
Citrons (fruit) for preserves; free, Alpharetta area. George Cook Alpharetta 770-475-5909 770-7898554
Collards, turnip greens, kale, mustard greens. Ruth Brooks Roswell
The Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin is now accepting items for its 2014 Georgia Grown Gift Guide! Georgia Grown members are invited to submit one super-awesome holiday item or gift basket for inclusion in the guide, to be published in the Dec. 10 issue and on the Bulletin Blog. Please send the following information, along with a 1 MB or higher image of your item, to editor Dallas Duncan at dallas.duncan@ agr.georgia.gov. The deadline is Monday, Dec. 1. Late submissions will not be considered for publication.
770-993-2315
Farm-fresh sweet potoes at Hag- Company/Farm name: __________________________________________
erson Farm. Boyd Hagerson Plains
229-938-8552 803-406-5029
Item name: ____________________________________________________
Fresh 2014 Stuart pecans, shelled;
$8 per pound, plus shipping; get your Description of item (30 words or fewer): ___________________________
order in while supplies last. James Al-
len Thomaston 478-955-7106
Price: _________________________________________________________
Homegrown mushrooms: oyster,
stropharia, shiitake and wild strains, Where to buy item: _____________________________________________
when available; all vary with the sea-
sons. A.J. Newman Cumming have- Contact phone number: _________________________________________
hope@bellsouth.net 404-725-8133
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2014
FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722
PAGE 11
Bermudagrass, square bales for Rear rim for a John Deere M series Split seasonal red oak; 14 to 16 mulch; baled late and dry; 300 bales tractor. Bubba Pucko McDonough inches; $160 per cord, $80 half-cord;
Timber
Christmas Trees
available; Pike County. James R Blan- ctx5500@gmail.com 770-957-8239 delivery extra. Larry Houston Coving- Timber must be individually Choose and cut Leyland cypress,
kenship Fayetteville 770-584-7007
Fescue Mulch hay, dry heavy square bales, $2. Bob Turner Brooks 770719-8545
Free aged horse manure mixed with shavings; can load with tractor. Monti Hight Macon 478-960-2008
Free horse manure, mixed with shavings. Danny West Fayetteville
SA-200 Lincoln welders; working or non-working for parts, at a reasonable price. Ray Banks Keysville petb3@ bellsouth.net 706-547-2724
Seasoned tongue and groove wall boards trailer, load seasoned lumber 2/10/16 (50 boards); taking bids on loadout. Paul Mcphail Atlanta 404378-2801 404-259-0450
ton 770-786-4015
Split, seasoned, oak firewood; you load and haul; $65 per half-cord; no delivery. Len Jordan Cumming 770887-2975
Top quality hardwood, half-cord delivered within 30 miles; $140. Angie Lynn Cumming 770-231-9738
Well-seasoned split oak firewood;
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.
Walnut trees to cut, 30 to 80 years
Carolina sapphire, pre-cut Fraser fir; hay rides, wreaths, hot drinks, open weekends only; www.springbrooktrees.com David Taylor Carrollton 770-861-5333
Fresh-cut Fraser fir Christmas trees and wreaths, starting Nov. 28. Gaines Weaver Dawsonville bradspumpkinpatch@windstream.net 770-3803632 770-380-3636
404-771-4041
Free horse manure; horses are fed high-quality feed and hay; we load while you wait. Paul MacRae Al-
Small feed hammermill grinder-mixer. Greg Daniel Thomaston gmdaniel@charter.net 706-648-3282
Syrup kettle; 30-, 40-, 50-gallon; will
quarter-cord, $47; delivery possible, (not long distance for Atlanta). David Schenck Senoia 706-538-1185 404642-6766
old;Trees are located on 5 + acres. Rosalind McMichael Monticello 706468-6471
Wholesale Leylands, Carolinas, Virginia pine, Deodora cedar, Green Giant. Don Watson Macon 478-3615114
pharetta 404-429-2839
pay cash and pick up. Henry J Hine
Long leaf pine straw available for Conyers 404-310-6490
delivery and installation. Josh Bulloch Used tin, three feet. Floyd Knowles
Manchester 404-925-1076
McRae 229-315-0409 229-362-4855
Mulch hay, 4x5, net-wrapped rolls; Wisteria vines, for crafts, will come
$20. Nancy Stead Alto 770-287-5407 to your property to harvest them. Bar-
Square bales in barn, easy access; bara Nelson Resaca 706-264-3921
$1 per bale, 100 or more bales. Jim
Notices
Wylie Calhoun 770-596-4388
Poultry Litter/Compost
Farmers' Market Atlanta needs vendors: $10, 100 percent of fee goes to
Free compost, horse manure and orphans; produce, crafts, meat, eggs,
pine shavings. Jerry Riles Doug- milk; May to October. Eugenie Viener
lasville 770-337-1516
Atlanta 404-936-1818
Red Wigglers for composting, worm
Out-Of-State Wanted
castings, worm farm starter kits, worm farming workshops, gawigglers.com.
Cattle creep feeder, in good condi-
D. Holman Covington 678-977-7944
Red Wigglers, worm castings, worm compost tea, composting kits, worm farming workshops; gawigglers.com. Keith Holman Newnan 770-713-5781
Red Wigglers: cups, buckets, tubs, truck loads; also compost. Bruce Self Byron 478-538-6167
tion, ready to use; two-ton or larger. Lamar Simmons Gainesville FL 352317-2869
Farm brass steam bells, extra large. Mike Long Newberry SC 803-9249039
Lilium formosanum phillipinense bulbs; contact me to work out the details; email best. Noel Gieleghem
A cord is defined as 128 cubic feet of wood stacked by the line or row in a compact manner with individual pieces
Oddities
Darien GA lapageria@aol.com 707- touching; it can be four feet high, four feet wide (deep), and eight feet long, or any combination of these measure-
Lucky buckeyes to carry, $4.25 per 290-2221
ments (height, width and length) that yields 128 cubit feet.
dozen; buckeyes for planting, $5.25
Firewood
per dozen, instructions included;
shipping extra. Jules Simmons Stone Mountain 828-226-4700
Martin gourds, plain or fixed, ready to hang, other varieties at farm or ship. Crystal Lang Cordele 229-3221321
Firewood must be cut from the advertiser's personal property. Ads for firewood must use the cord when specifying the amount of firewood for sale.
Firewood and cooking wood; delivery available; $130 per half-cord; dis-
Miscellaneous Wanted
count for pick-up; oak, hickory, cher-
2014 - 2015 Market Bulletin Ad Deadlines
Print Date
Dec. 24, 2014 Jan. 7, 2015
Special Categories All ads are due by noon on these dates Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted Farm Services; Farm Services Wanted; Handicrafts
Deadline Date
Dec. 10, 2014 Dec. 24, 2014
100 pounds of pecans, cracked or ry, pecan; call Tommy. Cynthia Mcrae
un-cracked. John Crosby Blue Ridge Jefferson 706-362-4874
706-632-7915
Free pecan firewood, you cut and
20-pound used propane tanks (grill haul. D.C. McDowell Kathleen 478-
size); must have current OPD valves, 988-4587
quantities needed. Bill Croft Dawson- Half-cord, $75; local delivery and
ville 706-344-9691
stacked. Dillon Anthony Jefferson
500-gallon propane tank, in good 706-870-6434
condition, located in the northeast Oak firewood, seasoned, split; $95
Georgia area. W.A. Allen Commerce per half-cord, free local delivery; third-
706-677-3300
cord, $90, free south Atlanta delivery.
Anvil. Michael McGee Milledgeville Mitchell North Palmetto 770-755-
478-456-2861
5716
Jan. 21, 2015 Feb. 4, 2015 Feb. 18, 2015 March 4, 2015 March 18, 2015 April 1, 2015 April 15, 2015 April 29, 2015 May 13, 2015
Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted Farm Services; Farm Services Wanted; Handicrafts Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted Farm Services; Farm Services Wanted; Handicrafts Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted
Farm Services; Farm Services Wanted Handicrafts
Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted Farm Services; Farm Services Wanted; Handicrafts
Jan. 7, 2015 Jan. 21, 2015 Feb. 4, 2015 Feb. 18, 2015 March 4, 2015 March 18, 2015 April 1, 2015 April 15, 2015 April 29, 2015
Blacksmith or ferrier's anvil, also Oak firewood; $175 per cord; smallother blacksmith tools and equip- er quanties available upon request. ment; Cartersville. Charles Hegedus Talmadge Westbrook Tignall 706-
Emerson 678-986-1453
285-2790
Guard rail, creep feeder, 24-foot Oak firewood; half-cord, $85; free
Gooseneck trailer, feed bins, white local delivery. Greg Davis Maysville
vinyl fence, concrete steps. Mike 678-283-8298
Bloodworth Knoxville 478-836-2535 Seasoned firewood, $80 per half-
Metal milk crates in north Georgia cord. Johnny Blasczyk Douglasville
May 27, 2015 June 10, 2015 June 24, 2015 July 8, 2015 July 22, 2015 Aug. 5, 2015
Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted Farm Services; Farm Services Wanted; Handicrafts Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted Farm Services; Farm Services Wanted; Handicrafts Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted Farm Services; Farm Services Wanted; Handicrafts
May 13, 2015 May 27, 2015 June 10, 2015 June 24, 2015 July 8, 2015 July 22, 2015
area. John Masters Loganville 770- 770-942-5018
Aug. 19, 2015
Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted
Aug. 5, 2015
298-4614
Seasoned firewood, dry, ready to
Need hog or cattle panels and T- burn; $150/ half cord, stacked to the
post; also looking for other miscella- top of truck bed. Dorris Matthews
Sept. 2, 2015 Sept. 16, 2015
Farm Services; Farm Services Wanted Handicrafts
Aug. 19, 2015 Sept. 2, 2015
neous supplies for raising pigs. Edwin Marietta 770-422-9908
Patrick Swainsboro epatrick@am- Seasoned hardwood and oak fire-
cinc.net 478-299-6919
wood, fat lighter. Peter Cabrel Sunny
Sept. 30, 2015 Oct. 14, 2015
Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted Farm Services; Farm Services Wanted; Handicrafts
Sept. 16, 2015 Sept. 30, 2015
No. 3 farm bell upright (mount). Gary Side 404-513-9353
Couch Monroe 770-267-3672 770- Seasoned oak firewood: $180 per
866-2978
cord; $95 half-cord; hickory barbecue
Oct. 28, 2015 Nov. 11, 2015
Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted Farm Services; Farm Services Wanted; Handicrafts
Oct. 14, 2015 Oct. 28, 2015
Old cable tow irrigation system, wood, $55 per quarter-cord; delivery
Boss preferred. Richard Wallace Wil- available. Bob Lewis Fayetteville
liamson 229-400-6411
770-461-4083
Nov. 25, 2015 Dec. 9, 2015
Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted Farm Services; Farm Services Wanted; Handicrafts
Nov. 11, 2015 Nov. 25, 2015
Old chicken house or barn tin and Seasoned oak firewood: $180 per
Dec. 23, 2015
Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted
Dec. 9, 2015
trusses, at least 20 feet or more; mid- cord; $95 per half-cord; hickory BBQ
dle Georgia area. Sandra Walker By- wood, $55 per quarter-cord; delivery
ron 478-951-6145 478-951-5676
available. Bob Lewis Fayetteville
Old sawmill to restore. Daniel Wells 770-471-4083
128 Decatur Ave Macon 31217 Seasoned oak firewood; $125
dhw1946@gmail.com
half-cord with local delivery. Shawn
Pecans in shell; 200-plus pounds, Brooks Dahlonega 404-840-6943
quality Stuarts preferred; paying $2 Seasoned oak firewood; $150 per
per pound, near Jackson County. Deb cord, $80 half-cord; delivery extra,
Allwein Nicholson 706-757-8810
free stacking. Robert Thompson Ath-
Pecans, 200 to 300 pounds (de- ens 706-342-5686
pending on price), prefer already Seasoned split oak firewood; $70
cracked; call with price. Richard Dunn per half-cord. Michael Stone Mc-
Douglasville 770-403-7981
Donough 770-957-8613
Special deadlines for the following editions and published lists are below:
Special Edition
Deadline Date
Print Date
All ads are due by noon on these dates
Farmland for sale (spring)
Feb. 18, 2015
March 4, 2015
Strawberry Pick-Your-Own
Feb. 23, 2015
March 4, 2015
Spring Crops Pick-Your-Own
May 4, 2015
May 13, 2015
Summer Crops Pick-Your-Own
June 15, 2015
June 24, 2015
Fall Crops Pick-Your-Own
Aug. 10, 2015
Aug. 19, 2015
Farmland for sale (fall)
Aug. 19, 2015
Sept. 2, 2015
PAGE 12
FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2014
TURKEY: Georgia farmers find innovative ways to raise heritage breeds
From Page 1
"Having the turkey houses be portable allows us to keep up with the mess that a large number of birds create," Harris said.
Georgia's turkey producers also have alternative feed for their flocks.
"Since turkeys are omnivores, they eat both grains and insects, and that's exactly what we feed them," Fretwell said. "We've developed a way to harvest insects from our compost here on the farm. The insects and worm larvae are harvested from the composter on the farm, allowing us to get even more use out of waste."
Nearly two-thirds of the cost of raising a poult to maturity is feed costs, so farms that must outsource their processing will often only process the turkeys that have been presold.
"We really can't process a turkey without someone to buy it. If the bird is not sold one year, we can keep it alive, keep it growing and try to sell it again
next year," Fretwell said. "We really don't have that happen that often though. The birds practically sell themselves: people want to eat them, they're healthy and good for you and they taste a lot of people say better then store-bought turkeys."
Social media and the Internet act as huge benefactors for the industry by providing both a larger customer base with little extra cost associated with heavy marketing campaigns, and an outlet for education.
"People are able to purchase our turkeys and turkey products, from home, over the Internet and then have it delivered to their door," Harris said. "They can also come out to the farm and tour the processing plant, and come see the turkeys out in the pastures. It's a pretty wild thing. We feed them and water them daily by hand and you'll walk out there and 6,000 birds just surround you. People really get a kick out of watching that."
FFA: Paul reminds students to not be defined by `potholes' in their journeys
From Page 1
Paul said. "Agricultural literacy is at the time of its greatest need. When people think about agriculture, they think of that picturesque barn with the rolling hills and a red barn and some dairy cows. They don't realize agriculture is involved in everything."
Travis Sertich, Paul's former agricultural education teacher at Oglethorpe County High School, said it's a "pretty big thing" for the county to be home to the national president.
"I don't believe he's the national president by accident. He worked hard. He deserves it," Sertich said. "We're proud that we can call him one of our own."
During his time with Oglethorpe FFA, Paul served as a chapter officer, competed in livestock judging and placed in a number of contests. He even got to bring a show pig to the Georgia Department of Education building in Atlanta for a "kiss the pig" contest.
"Andy's always had leadership capabilities as far as being an officer. He's always been eager to learn and to improve and develop his knowledge of agriculture in many different ways," Sertich said.
Paul began his foray into agriculture after his sister started showing swine. He followed her footsteps into the show ring and into an Oglethorpe FFA officer jacket several years later. But where his sister did not pursue state or national leadership, Paul decided to forge a path of his own. He likens his journey to national president to driving his "tiny Ford Ranger" down a pothole-studded road.
"I got in the truck, I cranked it up and I started moving and I was able to get elected as a chapter officer," Paul said. "My truck was smooth sailing down the highway. My sophomore year of high school, I decided I'm going to run for area office. I had my truck going, had my speech ready bam, there's a pothole. I didn't get elected to area office, something I had worked really hard for."
He said "OK," and swerved back onto the road. "My junior year, I decided I was going to run for state office. I didn't let my failure running for area
office define my experience, so I kept going. Bam, another pothole I made it past the first round, got up to give my speech and then the next day came and they started playing all the suspenseful music, and my name wasn't one of the eight that was called," Paul said. "Every day after that for the next year I woke up thinking, `I could be a state officer right now. I could be doing something different.' It just ate me up."
So, Paul said, though he had a long way to go and a short time to get there, he jumped back in the Ranger and took things up a notch. He got involved in as many Career Development Events as he could and met as many people as he could. And this time, his harder work paid off: Paul was the 2013 to 2014 Georgia FFA president.
"I remember the exact moment [I wanted to run for national office]. I was sitting with Bainbridge High School's chapter officer team. We were sitting around having a little bit of facilitated discussion," Paul said. "I had an opportunity to sit there and watch these chapter officers' tears fill their eyes. They wanted to have the best year possible. That's the moment I knew I wanted to serve this organization in the best capacity that I could."
Even with a newly embroidered blue corduroy jacket, Paul is "just Andy," Lastly said.
"He's not a big guy. He'd probably tell you he's even a nerdy guy. He is just so comfortable in his own skin," he said. "He's very bright, got a ton of personality just so genuine and good with people. Our students loved him. When he speaks to students, he really makes an impression."
Paul hopes his journey to national office serves as inspiration to fellow FFA members in achieving their goals.
"Through this organization, I've had an opportunity to grow and I hit all those potholes, but those potholes don't define my experience," he said. "What defines my experience is working around those potholes and keeping on going down the road."
VISIT WITH A VET:
Livestock wellbeing begins on the farm
Visit with a Georgia veterinarian in this monthly feature. This edition
comes from Dr. Lee Jones of the University of Georgia-Tifton Veterinary
Diagnostic Laboratory.
Producing healthy, low-risk calves begins on the farm. It is important to assess our own farms and make sure we are doing everything we can do to improve the lives of the animals in our care. It is just good stewardship.
The question we could ask is, "Am I doing all I can to make sure my cattle are healthy and produce calves that are not high-risk cattle?" On-farm practices that have the most benefit on the health and wellbeing of calves are low-stress weaning, vaccinations, deworming and proper castration and dehorning.
There is a lot of information about the benefits of low-stress weaning. Some people just remove their calves from their mama cows and take them to the sale barn. Many of these calves sit at the barn for a day or two before being sold and taken to a gathering facility. Commingling abruptly weaned calves is one of the most significant causes of stress and disease in young calves.
Anybody who has taken their young children to a new kindergarten class knows that something is going to be passed around pretty quickly. Since many of these calves are not vaccinated against respiratory diseases they are easily infected and often get sick within seven to 10 days of being exposed.
Some producers practice fence-line weaning or a two-step weaning process. Fence-line weaning allows the calf to be close to its mama, but keeps it from nursing. The calves fuss some, but not nearly as much as with a complete, abrupt separation. Because the calves are calmer, they also eat better, don't get hoarse from bawling and don't lose as much weight during weaning. Two-step weaning uses nose paddles clipped into the nose that keep the calf from nursing, but allow it to still graze next to mom or eat creep feed. These weaning methods have been proven to reduce stress in calves and improve calf health.
Vaccination to enhance the immunity and resistance to common diseases is a good management practice. Vaccines stimulate the immune system by mimicking natural infection. The type of vaccine, selection of antigens and timing of administration are important. Typical calf vaccination programs include the respiratory viruses that cause pneumonia. It is important to follow the label instructions when vaccinating calves with a modified live vaccine, or MLV. MLVs are not recommended for calves nursing pregnant cows that have not been vaccinated with a MLV vaccine.
Clostridial organisms also cause diseases in cattle, such as tetanus, blackleg and intestinal disease. Ideally, calves should receive a combination seven-way clostridial toxoid vaccine by 2 to 3 months of age with a booster three to four weeks later. Bulls castrated by banding should also be vaccinated with tetanus toxoid two weeks before banding.
Internal parasites can cause significant health problems and production losses in cattle. Often, production losses caused by parasites are subtle, but severe infestations cause disease and even death in any age of cattle. Subtle infestations can reduce the animal's immunity and resistance to infections. There have been reports of cattle intestinal parasites that are resistant to our generic pour-on wormers due to their overuse.
Overgrazing increases the likelihood calves will get infected by parasite larvae on pasture. Rotational grazing helps break the lifecycle of internal parasites and reduces the need for regular deworming and the negative environmental effects of some products.
Preferably, castration and dehorning should be done by 4 months of age to reduce the effect on the calf. The easiest way to dehorn calves is by using polled bulls.
Age of calf, available facilities, time of year and experience of person performing the procedure may determine the method selected. Some producers believe later castration will aid in weight gain, but delayed castration has been proven to increase pain, stress, bleeding, reduce feed intake and increase risk of disease after the procedure.
These practices and good nutrition can get our calves off to a healthy start. We have the power to make a positive difference in the lives of our cattle with very little effort and expense. It's just good animal welfare.
For more information about low-stress procedures on the farm, con-
tact your local veterinarian. The Tifton and Athens diagnostic labs can be
reached at 229-386-7128 and 706-542-5977, respectively, or visit www.
ugavetlab.org.
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