Save lives, not seeds: a look at protected
plants
Page 12
georgia department of agriculture gary w. black, commissioner Wednesday, FEBRUARY 5, 2014 Vol. 97, no. 3 Copyright 2014
Poultry, meat processing expo draws attendees from around the globe
By Dallas Duncan and Erica Lummus
Atlanta's population grew by several thousand at the end of January as manufacturers, producers and international businesses flocked to the World Congress Center for the annual International Production & Processing Expo.
2014 marked the second year the former International Poultry Expo integrated with the International Feed Expo and Meat Expo. Experts gathered to discuss topics including traceability, food safety, biosecurity and connecting with the media.
"Information is power and those who curate it, gather it and share it really have the power," said Kim Essex, North American Food Practice director for Ketchum Public Relations, in her Jan. 28 seminar. "Consumers are doing the sharing, the curating and that is giving them the power. Only a fraction of the information out there is being shared by food and agriculture companies today."
These so-called "food evangelists"
are the ones demanding to go behind the scenes to see where their food is grown and processed, Essex said.
Were they to go into Canada's Maple Leaf foods these days, however, they might be in for a surprise. Maple Leaf was involved in a Listeria recall in the mid-2000s and since then has worked diligently to develop new methods to improve its food sanitation processes in production plants.
The company implemented processes from its ready-to-eat production lines, including steam tenting and disassembling all machines down to the nuts and bolts for cleaning. It was only then that people realized just how many nooks and crannies existed for bacteria -- including those that cause foodborne illness -- to flourish, spokesman Christian Fouchs told attendees at the New Approaches to Ground Poultry Pathogen Reduction seminar.
Outside the seminar rooms, more than 1,100 exhibitors set up in a massive tradeshow spotlighting the latest in poul-
See IPPE, page 12
More than 1,100 vendors lined the floor of the Georgia World Congress Center in January for the International Production & Processing Expo in Atlanta, Ga. Photo by Dallas Duncan
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Farm services ads..................2 Feature recipe.......................7 Public notices.................. 8, 10 Livestock prices................... 12
Notice
Ad deadline for the March 5 issue is noon, Feb. 19. This includes all spring farmland for sale ads.
2014 Ag Forecast series focuses on farm succession planning
By Dallas Duncan
If there's one thing producers should take home from the 2014 Ag Forecast series, it's this: plan, plan, plan -- for farm succession, that is.
"We don't know when the good Lord's going to call us home. We don't know when our health is going to fail," said keynote speaker Will Thompson, an associate with James, Bates, Brannan, Groover LLP in Macon, Ga. "Jump in there. Start identifying who's going to be your leader, who's going to carry on your business."
Planning for farm succession sooner rather than later will "save some heartache on the back end," Thompson said. He advises communicating, finding a way to be fair rather than equal and start showing family and trusted employees the ropes to leading.
There are a number of ways to handle farm succession -- joint ownership, dividing the farm up, investing in a limited liability corporation, just to name a few. But whatever the possibilities are, Thompson said now is the time to start talking about them. And at the very least, have a will, he said. For Georgians without a will, state code defines how assets will pass on and the deceased has no control.
"It's like reaching in a bag and pulling out some seed and you have
no idea if it's cotton or peanuts or ragweed and you throw it up in the air and say, `Come on, soybeans!'" he said. "A properly drafted will allows you to properly provide for [your family]. Ultimately once your wishes are done and set forth, then a will helps to minimize estate tax in the best possible way."
Cattleman Russ Page of the Oconee Partnership for Farmer Protection was among the attendees at the Athens, Ga., forecast.
"If you can reduce the value in your land to about 25 percent of it, then when you die your kids won't have to sell off the farm just to pay the [estate tax] and that will help protect a lot of farmers," he said. "[Thompson's] talking about planning, this is part of planning."
Thompson said with the average age of farmers rising, the topic of farm succession is starting to ring home. Peggy Gates, a University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences Alumni Association volunteer, agreed with his sentiments.
"When I go to farm meetings, I'm seeing people with white hair just like mine, and how are they planning so they don't lose their farms?" Gates said. "I think that this is very important and everybody needs to have a plan."
See FORECAST, page 7
Mail to: Published by the Ga. Department of Agriculture Gary W. Black, Commissioner
GEORGIA GROWN PROFILE: Sanders, Inc.
Distributor supplies inputs, technology for Georgia-grown crops
By Erica Lummus, spring intern
After 60 years, the same values are still what drive the company
today: grower success, integrity, innovation, community and country.
Sanders, Inc. is one of the leading farm supply retail
The company believes that it will succeed only if its
and distribution businesses in the United States.
growers succeed.
The business has more than 100 locations within the
Sanders, Inc. joined Georgia Grown at the gold mem-
United States. Some of the company's main operations
bership level because it is important to them to work
include farm and hardware, agricultural chemical distri-
with other agricultural retailers, distributors, produc-
bution, seed production and sales, bulk handling fertil-
ers and suppliers in hopes to make a positive impact
izer and precision agriculture services through the com-
on Georgia's economy and facilitate the success of the
pany's award-winning OptiGro program. It also providesCwOildRlifeEfoPoRd INstaCte'IsPagLriEbuSsinesses. In order to promote the Georgia Grown program,
plot products and services through the company's Wildwood Genetics Sanders, Inc. supplies the inputs and technology used to produce vari-
brand.
ous crops that are grown in Georgia.
Sanders, Inc. was founded in Cleveland, Miss., in 1953. GROWER SUC"CWESeSare always open to the sharing of knowledge and ideas that help "Jimmy Sanders founded his company based on the principles of us all to grow. The Georgia Grown platform creates an opportunity for humility, integrity and going to extraordinary lW gernoewgbeetlrhise'svfeaitrnhmastswaeservtwhiielcilresuinctvcoeesetdhmoiesnnlty, iafniodtusrwgemrohweavemersbbsuueiclrtcseoeudtr.oeWnpeteovrpiterewisneotutiorally identify and implement better or more efcustomers," said Brand Communication ManagmeraxMimiezelathneiirereOturunzotns.that investmenfti.cient ways of doing things," Ouzts said.
INTEGRITY
We will safeguard our growers' trust in us, which we have earned diligently
page 2
farmers and consumers market Bulletin
Wednesday, FEBRUARY 5, 2014
Market Bulletin Advertising Guidelines
Only subscribers with a current subscription number are allowed to advertise in the Market Bulletin. Advertisers are limited to one ad per issue per subscriber number. Out-ofstate subscribers are only allowed to publish ads in the Out-of-State Wanted category.
All advertisements published in the Market Bulletin must relate to farming, agriculture or be a part of these industries. All items submitted for sale through the Market Bulletin must meet at least one of the following criteria:
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Ads must be received by 12 p.m. on the Questions about advertising? Call 404specified deadline date in order to appear in 656-3722
Farm Services
Fences, statewide, farm, horse, wood, wire, vinyl, high-tensile, electric, NRCS;
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
free estimate, 16-plus years competitive prices. Charles Mooney Midville 478589-7645
Farm Services and Services Wanted ads must be related to agriculture. Wanted services must be performed on the farm of the individual desiring the service. Commercial contractors are not allowed to advertise services in this category. Farm Services and Farm Services Wanted ads are limited to 30 words.
35 years experience laser-grading horse arenas and toppings; custom tree clearing, topsoil, dirt, bulk mulch, gravel, barn pads graded, horse paddocks, residential grading, track-hoe, trucking, driveways built, demolition; insured. Bill
Grinding, mulching, clearing land, up to six- to eight-inch trees, light Bobcat grading, single-axle dump truck work. Steve King Conyers 770-616-6870
Livestock hauling, statewide or out of state; hauling to weekly sales or farm to farm; experienced in all livestock transportation. Scott McDaniel Yatesville 706-472-3013
Mud and water no problem; beaver dam removal, creek channel cleaning, drainage ditching, silt removal, lake rimming. Jim Moon Oakfield 226-5356562 229-881-2997
Butler Braselton 770-231-4662 770- One call for all farm fencing: wood,
685-0288
woven, electric, barbed wire; staining,
Agricultural fence built with wood or wire; USDA, NCRS qualified standards; also corrals, barns and all other related work. Robert Hayes Hartwell 706-3766708
painting; barn, shed, horse stall construction and repair, pasture mowing, weed-control spraying, fertilizing, aerating, overseeding. Casey Kent Monroe kentrc2@windstream.net 678-446-8520
All types of fencing: barbed, wire, board, field fence, electric. David Parks 903 Robin Hood Drive Murrayville 770540-6794
Portable sawmill service starting at 25 cents per board foot; pine, poplar, oak, cedar, hickory, walnut, firewood and lighter knot. Todd Chaney Cartersville 404-861-7402
All types of grading, clearing, hauling and tractor work. Paul Lavengood Madison 770-318-3859
Saw your logs into lumber at your place or mine; call for pricing and details. Taylor Davis Fayetteville 770-402-
Bush Hog, light grading, plowing, post 1180 770-461-4418
holes digging and ground clearing Al Small engine repair, service.repair of
Roberts Fayetteville 404-543-6984
mowers, saws, trimmers, generators,
Bush Hogging and light clearing ser- tillers, etc. Brian Collett Canton 770-
vices. James Tumlin Shiloh 706-846- 731-7210
5075
Stumps ground neatly below
Clearing or stump grinding needed; we ground level; reasonably priced; free
do a good job with reasonable prices, estimate. Glen Whitley Bethlehem 770-
references available and insured. Vickie 867-2718
Hill Madison 706-248-7057 706-453- Tractor services, Bush Hogging, loader
4790
work, grading, dirt and gravel hauled,
Clearing, grading, roads, lakes and area clean-up, fence repair, drainage is-
ponds; rock, dirt delivered; all types of sues. Wayne Humbard Loganville 678-
Bobcat work; references available. Matt 825-4597
Eskew Newnan 678-725-1680
Tractor work, light grading, landscap-
Farm buildings built, repaired; fences ing, planting, fertilizing, Bush Hogging;
built, repaired; tractor, Bobcat work. will deadwood your unwanted hard-
Jerry Glancy Griffin 404-433-3568
woods on halves or by hour; tree ser-
Farm buildings, any size built any- vices also. Bert Brand Lawrenceville
where in Georgia; buildings include hay 770-608-1613
barns, equipment storage, horse barns, Will do artificial insemination of beef
run-in sheds and pole barns; we can and dairy cattle in Butts and surround-
supply everything needed. David Char- ing counties. Paul Reamer Jackson
ity Ranger 678-431-3122
770-775-0158
Market Bulletin Subscriber Guidelines
Online-only subscriptions are $5 per year. Print subscriptions, which include a complimentary online subscription, are $10 per year.
To subscribe by mail, send a check or money order payable to Georgia Department of Agriculture along with your name, complete mailing address and phone number to:
Georgia Department of Agriculture Attn: Market Bulletin PO Box 742510 Atlanta, GA 30374-2510 To subscribe or renew online, visit www.thegamarketbulletin.com to pay by electronic check, Visa or MasterCard. Please note we no longer accept cash payment for subscriptions. Subscriptions are only available on a one-year basis. Each subscription or renewal must be paid for separately please do not combine two on a check or money order. To see when your subscription is up for renewal, check the expiration date on the page 1 mailing label.
Farm EMPLOYMENT
1949 Ford 8N tractor, new points distributor, condenser pump, tire box
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
blade, runs well, $2,400. Kim Santoloci Thomaston 808-651-3598
Only farm work or farm help 1957 John Deere 420TW, good condi-
wanted advertisements allowed. No tion, runs well, new front tires; $4,100.
commercial, industrial or domestic Rickey Wall Thomaston 706-647-1313
employment permitted.
1961 Cockshutt, 570 Super tractor,
34-year-old seeking employment in Wheatland, SHDR1347 D Hercues, Johns Creek, Roswell area; experience good metal, no calls after 8 p.m. Jack with horses, stablehand, tractor driver, Fleming Lavonia 706-436-3563
hard working. Richard Hayes Roswell 1961 Fordson Super Major with loader,
678-262-7407
engine stuck $1,500; New Idea 270 con-
40-year-old looking for row cropping ditioner; seven-foot Flail shredder $500. or cattle farm job, Class A CDL. Shane Greg Coker Toccoa 706-476-1972
Martin Griffin 770-695-5383
1963 Ford 2000 tractor, runs well,
54-year-old man; work on horses and new brakes, gas engine, original paint, cattle farm; cleaning stalls, feeding, $3,000. Byron Botdorf Camilla botturning horses and all other animals. dorfb@gmail.com 229-336-5444
Chip E Edins Riverdale 770-478-0900 1968 Ford 4000 diesel tractor, three-
Barn help needed in exchange for cylinder; strong 50 horsepower; rear housing; four horses, requires one tires in good conditon, $3,500. Glenn to two hours daily, single, no children. Akin Clarkesville 706-957-7670
Marsha Chambers Grantville 770-301- 1968 John Deere 4020; front-end load-
9165
er, hay speer; new clutch, rebuilt motor;
Farm work, household chores for rent call after 1 p.m. Roy Daniel Americus or rent subsidy, great for retired couple, 229-928-8879
private drive. Kendall Rosbury Royston 1975 Tuff-Bilt tractor, 20 horsepower
rrosbury@aol.com 706-206-9802
hydrastatic transmission, front and rear
Full time, herdsman, cow-calf op- hydraulic lift. Billy McDonald Sumner eration, farm, ranch, row crop, experi- 229-776-2298
enced, work people, reliable, benefits. 1978 Case 780 CK loader and back-
Olin Wooten Hazlehurst ow@owacc. hoe, $11,000. Peggy Bland Valdosta
com 828-898-7296
229-559-0760 229-559-3888
Looking to relocate; experience with 1980 Claas combine with 16-foot plat-
horses, cattle and hay; fix most ma- form header, $3,500. Clint Crumley Lula
chines, must have housing and salary. 678-451-9627
Joey Savaria Ila 479-222-9241
1983 Ford 700 14-foot flat dump 429,
Part-time helper to care for horses, gas with 5+2 speed, $4,500. Tracy All-
feed, groom, etc., experienced only, good Danielsville 678-575-4003
good appearance, no nicotine, drugs 1992 International tractor, 24.5 horse-
or alcohol. W. Abrams Milner 770-228- power with plow, $5,000. Paul Tabor
3865
Harlem 706-556-0489
Searching for farm work for Saturdays; 1997 John Deere 870 tractor; 4x4,
mucking stalls, water, feed; hard-work- 650 hours, good tires, dual SCV, power
ing, dependable adult. Paul Barron Mil- steering, Synch transmission, $8,250.
ton 2pbarron@comcast.net 404-456- Silviu Gavriliuc Buford 678-997-4119
3649
1997 Wood-Mizer LT40 portable saw-
Seeking experienced middle-aged mill with diesel, 40 horsepower engine,
couple to work for layer houses; fur- $16,500 OBO. Cyrus Harris Deepstep
nished housing and weekly salary. Tom ctjr@harristrans.com 478-731-6364
Huynh Gillsville 404-889-0728
1999 CaseIH 1020: 25-foot flex grain
Would like to caretake farm in ex- head, oil bathed gearbox on sickle drive,
change for housing; experience with good condition, $7,500. Brian Dyck Sta-
horses, cattle, tractors, etc; honest, pleton 706-830-5102 706-830-5102
Christian, nonsmoker. Mary Stockton 20-foot Hooper equipment: trailor
Commerce 706-336-8800
or hay hauler, Gooseneck with return
Farm Machinery dovetails and fold-down ramps, $2,600. Felton Dutton Eatonton 706-923-5616
If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722.
2002 John Deere 5105 tractor. 260 hours; plus Bush Hog, scrape blade, disk plow, harrow, $11,000. Bill Marsh
Only farm machinery and equipment Monticello irondogcanecorso@gmail.
owned by the advertiser and used in com 706-318-2571
his/her own farming operation can be advertised; those persons advertising for machinery and equipment wanted must be seeking those items for their own farming operation.
2004 John Deere tractor, 6415, fourwheel drive cab, 85 horsepower, one owner, 3600 original hours, excellent condition, sheltered. Todd Powell Buena Vista 229-314-9445
1100 Ford compact diesel tractor, low hours, like new, $2500. Jesse Brown Fort Valley 478-988-4360
2004 Volvo backhoe: four-wheel drive, full cab extend hoe, 1,100 hours, $25,000; 750 Ford tractor: four-foot
12-foot hydraulic box blade, $3,500; Bush Hog; 800 hours, $4,000. Forrest
Yanmar CR25 steel track dump, $3,500; Boss Adairsville 678-859-6280
12-inch trench bucket, $400 OBO. Doris 2009 Kubota MX5100DT, 4x4 with
Cherry Bowman 678-429-2450
Kubota LA844 loader, industrial tires,
16-foot trailer, six feet wide, dual axle, 155 hours, no problems with tractor,
two-inch hitch, new tires, good shape, $20,000 OBO. Chris Harris Newnan
$1,200. William Starnes Newnan 770- chrismower31@gmail.com 770-652-
253-9432
0289
1700 Ford tractor, two-cylinder diesel, 2013 108SHDC Kubota tractor: dual
25 horsepower, 812 hours, two-wheel remotes, loader, forks, grapple, dual
drive, no smoke, strong lift, five-foot speed, 70 hours, $55,000; 2000 Yan-
scrape blade, $5,800. Wayne Thomp- mar diesel tractor: power take-off, 275
son Conyers 770-922-9504
hours, $2,975. J.R. Sullivan Vidalia 912-
18.4x34 clamp-on dual wheels, 537-4944
$350, single front wheel for M Farmall, 3.4 RW cotton pickers; green and red;
$150. Roy Barrett Marshallville 478- 2 new, all-model portable Doffer grind-
957-0289
ers, $3,800 each. Ralph Nutt Cordele
1949 8N tractor, Bush Hog, new cul- 229-276-5336
tivator, plow/sodbuster, attachment 3208 CAT engine, 300 hours, since
for Covington planter, new headlights; factory rebuild, $4,500 OBO. James
$3,250. Mike Roseberry Cumming McMillan Macon 478-397-0322 478-
m1ke@bellsouth.net 770-888-5366
781-0082
Please note there are two
different mailing addresses for
the Market Bulletin: a PO Box
for subscriptions and a street
address for ads and all other
communications.
350-bushel Gravity flow grain wagon, $1,200; 400-bushel, $1,500. Mike Hulett Hazlehurst 912-347-1004
430 John Deere baler, $4,900; Bush Hog DM80 disk mower, $2,700; International nine-foot fluffer, $500; eight-reel three-point hitch Ford rake, $600. Jim Keith LaGrange 706-884-4923
450B John Deere crawler with fourway blade, 95 percent undercarriage, no leaks, everything works, $14,500 OBO. Rick Thomas Elberton 706-540-0941
500-gallon saddle tanks for John Deere 7830, everything included for mounting, $2,000. Leon Arant Pitts 229-365-3612
6x12 trailer; wood floor, single axle, excellent condition, $700. Darald Binsz Winterville 706-742-2851
702 John Deere nine-wheel hay rake, excellent condition, $2,500. Glenn Knight Rentz 478-984-5555
8N Ford parts; grill, hood, bumper, carburetor and fuel tank. Sam Caldwell Barnesville 678-967-9050
951B Caterpillar; four-in-one bucket rebuilt motor, 85 percent undercarriage, good condition, $10,000; 951C same as above, $12,000. Ricky Paradise Milledgeville 478-363-3162
9700 Ford tractor, $2,500; 24-foot Gooseneck stock trailer, $2,800. Steven Davis Dawson 229-376-6342
Allis Chalmers; diesel engine for sale, b2900 inline turbo charged six cylinder, complete $2,500 OBO. James Braddock Waycross 912-283-1942 912550-6565
Amanda's four-row peanut combine, 1996 model, good condition. Jerrod Mallard Statesboro 912-531-2385
Belarus 250AS, five-foot Bush Hog, disk harrow, root rake, box scrape, boom pole, dirt pan, ripper. $3,450. William Prince Oxford 770-560-9772
Bush Hog FL200 pallet fork attachment, quick attach, like-new condition, heavy duty, $750. Rodney Johnson Tallapoosa 678-378-6562 770-574-7246
Case 450, 450B track chain and pads; 14 inches, 95 percent, 450 right final drive, 850 final drives. Cecil Bryant Bethlehem 770-867-6257
Case 900, runs well, good tires, $2,200; New Holland 451 sickle mower, $750; 20-foot tri-axle trailer, $2,500 OBO. Steve Hoffman Newnan 770-304-3435
Cat D7E, good running machine, good undercarriage, call for information and pictures. Dan Lampe Danielsville 770601-5331
Caterpillar 955H loader, 75 percent undercarriage, very strong machine, runs and operates excellent, $7,500. David Pope Jackson 678-763-7250
Caterpillar D7E dozer, good shape, ROPS, good undercarriage; used to clear pasture, $19,500. Dan Lampe Danielsville 770-601-5331
Champion pecan cracker in excellent condition, $3,500; John Deere HX20 rotary mower in good condition, $9,500. Gregg Pilkinton Pelham 229-336-2460
Covington one-row planter, model TP46, with double seed hoppers mounted to a cultivator, like new, $950. Gary Johnson Jasper 770-893-8168
Cub Cadet mower 1200, 12 horsepower; Kohler 52-inch deck, three-speed transmission, electric clutch. James Morris Waynesboro 706-551-4455
Dodge truck 3500, 1997 5.9, Cummings, 46,000 miles, original owner, tow package, 5th wheel and bumper, new tires, etc. Lowell Rainey Athens 706316-0407
Dual beam subsoiler, three-point hitch, $500. Reed McNabb Nicholson 706340-7236 706-757-3327
Dump trailer 30 feet, double insulated, air-lock back gate, fifth-wheel. $4,000. Charles Crawley Unadilla 229-9420243
Eight-bale hay grapple and hay accummulator, excellent condition, both for $4,500. R. H. Whitman Adel 229896-8777 229-356-9987
Eight-disk cutting harrow, three-point hitch, fair condition, $125; New Holland LS, 180, excellent condition, new tires, 2003, $13,500. Walter Terrell Decatur 404-395-5476
Wednesday, FEBRUARY 5, 2014
farmers and consumers market BulletinPage 3
Eight-row KMC disk bedder; CI 3900 International 1650 cub; cadet hydro- Kubota 121-3 excavator, cab, $28,000; RhinoTM72: turbo mower, 2 years old, Very nice New Holland baler, $6,000
harrow, 23 feet; both good condition. static, 44-inch mower, $500 firm, no 2000 Ford F450 flatbed dump, 87,000 $1,600; Zennon YN1600 tractor, four- and fluffer, $1,900 for sale. Ashley Gal-
Pat West Pinehurst 229-928-7427
return calls. Danny Manning Cochran miles, $19,000. Dave Harris Gainesville foot finishing mower, 202 hours, $3,600. breath Vidalia 912-293-7097
Factory-built log winch, power take-off 478-934-0100
678-617-2074
C Holton Douglas 912-592-8584
Whitfield pine tree planter, field-ready.
driven, new cable, tongs, power take- International 490 Harrow 22 ft., $4,100; Kuhn 353 mower conditioner, needs Roanoke tobacco stripper with side Charles Heard Newton 229-734-5047
off gear, chain, cable roller frame, pulley and bush hog 14 ft., Harrow, $2,500. work, $4,000; Bobcat V 518 telehandler, delivery, $10,000; Taylor stripper, $4,500 229-734-5629
block. Frank Nichols Cumming 678- Dennis Purvis Adel 229-896-5269
needs repair. Philipp Hanstein Madison OBO; Powell stripper, $2,500 OBO. Yanmar 165-D, four-wheel drive, finish
758-0497
International TD, 15b hydraulic tilt, 706-342-4886
Tommy Lee Nashville 229-686-7993 mower, good paint, $1,895. Carl Smith
Farmall Cub Lo-Boy, drawbar, very heavy duty root rake, 90 percent un- Kuhn SR 110 hay rake, excellent con- Rock hound, six feet, good condi- Jonesboro 770-478-2792
good condition with mounting brackets, dercarriage, strong machine, $12,500. dition, $4,000; Bush Hog 2010, 10-foot, tion, $1,850. Howard Roach Powder Zetor tractor 5211, owner deceased,
not bent or beat up, $100. Chris Gibbs Mitch Bradberry Bishop 706-338-3290 excellent condition, $4,200. Scotty Phil- Springs 770-596-0503
with bush hog, $5000. Anna Fuller Ma-
Gainesville 678-936-9141
J.D. 1" coil shanks clamps, $80 each; lips Royston 706-498-0657
Round hay baler, unroller, three-point con 478-745-7868
Farmall H 1942, excellent condition, Gill 1 row cultivator, excellent, $375. Land leveler; new, 12-foot, never used, hitch, hydraulic cyclinder. Wendell Holnew front tires, good rear tires, fresh Ryan Baerne Nicholson 706-757-2672 with hydraulic cylinder, $2,700; single land Conyers wholland.smc@gmail.
Farm Machinery Wanted
paint, runs well, $2,500. Wayne Swan- 706-247-6240
hay bale transport, two-inch ball pull com 404-444-3090
1510 Ford tractor for parts. Ray John-
son Ringgold 706-935-4691
John Deere 1250, 4x4, 44 horsepower, with spear, $400. Ron Hulett Milan 912- Seven-foot Bush Hog brand Bush son Metter 912-660-1081
Finish mower: Rhino five-foot, rear dis- 1,040 hours, with front-end loader; ex- 363-5978
Hog, $700. Dale Westmoreland Cleve- 5103 John Deere front-end loader,
charge, good condition, asking $895. cellent condition, lots of extras, $14,950. Lewis Brothers No. 2 Housekeeper, land 706-878-0702
good used condition. William Spinks
Mike Hattaway Dearing 706-556-6422 Don Gantt Marietta 678-488-6724
well-maintained, washed and greased Six-row, 420 Rod Ball, 150-gallon and Marietta 770-424-7171 770-428-7622
Five-foot brand Bush Hog, good con- John Deere 2010 338; square baler, after every use, $4,200. Roger Suggs pump sprayer, six-row hydrapak lay Backhoe with four-wheel drive, four-
dition, $375 firm. Wallace German Sr. excellent condition, regularly pressure Ringgold 423-432-9952
bay, 150-gallon and pump. Hugh Hosch in-one bucket, extendahoe, fewer than
Winder 770-316-4071
cleaned, greased; tight, consistent Lewis Brothers poultry housekeeper, Waynesboro 770-759-3258
4,000 hours, runs well, cost less than
Five-foot King cutter, tiller three-point bales, $15,500. Russell Smith Hiram good condition, $1,900. Kenneth Carlyle Spreader for sale: New Holland, full $15,000. Mark Bevill Springfield mbev-
attachment, only about 20 hours, great 404-435-5590
Cleveland 706-865-3686
size and in good condition, $1,750. Joe ill@hotmail.com 770-605-3902
shape. Gary Nix Flowery Branch 770- John Deere 2550 with 175 loader cab Lewis Brothers Poultry Housekeeper, Daniels Loganville 770-913-8789
Backhoe, 4-in-one bucket, extenda-
401-4932
Five-foot King Kutter rotary mower with slip clutch, used very little, $775. J
tractor; runs great, new hoses. Benny Lasseter Franklin 678-378-1884
John Deere 310SE, 4x4, 5,100 hours,
model No. 2; stored in barn, 98 percent paint, well-maintained, washed after use, $7,000. John Ford Clermont 404-
Super M Farmall tractor with power steering, pull-type Bush Hog; H Farmall tractor with hydraulic hook-up. Billy
hoe, 5,000 hours max; four-wheel drive. Carroll Hughes Thomson 706-5957111
C McEver Winder 706-970-9127
quick coupler bucket and forks, very 375-2584
Hudson Loganville 770-787-1323
Bush Hog disk mower, DM-70/80/90
For sale: 35 Ferguson diesel tractor, asking $4,500. Patrick Spell Baxley 912-367-6913
clean and tight machine. Raymond Milam Palmetto 770-527-1999
John Deere 348 square baler, $10,500;
Lilliston grain drill,16 feet, three-bottom Ford turning flip plow. Gary Smith Broxton 912-393-5742
Tarver Plant-O-Vator: plant, fertilize, renovate; six-row, stainless boxes, barn stored, $10,000. Henry Mitcham Warm
wanted for parts; does not need to be operable. Bradley Robert Kingston gruntf15e@yahoo.com 706-506-6586
For sale: five-foot "Frontier" scrape blade, model RB1060, $325. James Allen Commerce 706-677-3300
For Sale: Ford 3000, gas with Bush Hog loader; seven pieces equipment, all very good condition; cash. Jerry
Vicon 1211 round baler, $7,000; 2554 Haybuster, round bale blower, $9,000. Lanny Brown Hiawassee 706-9942494
John Deere 450 dozer, oversized blade, cab, repair or part out, $3,000
Massey Ferguson 231 tractor, like new, 4x8 utility trailer, forks for uniloader; 14ton Belshe trailer. Raymond Long Loganville 770-466-2435
Massey Ferguson 540 combine with 12-foot grain head; barn kept, good
Springs 706-977-3964
Taylor-Way eight-disk harrow; Ferguson turning plow; five-foot Rhino RGM renovator, scrape blade; Woods box scrape with rippers, pull Bush Hog, boom pole. Mark Woodham Madison
Disk harrow wanted, three-point hitch, six- to seven-foot needed. Richard Daniel Cartersville 770-655-4013
Farmall 140 or 130 tractor, running or repairable, with cultivators. Nelson Massey Conyers 404-273-3777
Crunkleton Carnesville 706-716-1320 OBO. James Woody Morganton 706- condition; $7,600. Ted Smith Washing- 404-379-8037
Farmall Cub parts and attachments;
706-384-2023
For sale: Land Pride six-foot finishing mower, $550, fair condition. David Mitchell Juliette 478-986-9759
Ford 2000 gas tractor, good tires, fivefoot rotary mower, $4,500. Robert Manning Thomson bmann@classicsouth. net 706-833-1162
Ford 2000, gas, harrow, blade, Bush Hog, planter, cultivator, pulverizer, rake, fin, mower, priced separate. Ken Phillips Bogart 706-714-7282
Ford 641 Workmaster, like-new tires, three-point hitch, five-foot Bush Hog mower, $3,750. Robert Brock Scottdale 404-402-9150
Ford 8N, 1952, good condition, garaged, four-foot Bush Hog, boom pole, scrape blade, plow, and more, $3,100. Patricia Mahoney Comer 770-294-2043
Four-bottom pull plow, three-bottom, three-point hitch plow. Larry McKneely Griffin 678-343-8677
838-5439
John Deere 450B crawler loader, engine out, $3,500; Solesbees skidsteer grapple, $2,500; Rhino mower five-foot TW60, $1,500. Jim Bishop Franklin 706-675-3943
John Deere 4650, 980 hours, new engine, front weights, duals, three remotes, new rear tires, $28,000. Perry Hudson Leary 229-400-1259
John Deere 5420: four-wheel drive, MXG Bush Hog, six-foot box blade, 521 loader, 80 horsepower, power take-off, $24,000 OBO. Larry Rodgers Douglasville 304-312-9257
John Deere 5500; two-wheel drive, 467 baler, all-purpose plow; Kuhn 283TG, tedder, rake; 24-foot Gooseneck trailer. Ed Boston Newnan 678-231-9134
John Deere 566 baler, hydraulic V rake, Morra tedder, all $14,000 or trade equal value. Ben Newton Lyons 912-5657040 912-585-1842
ton 706-214-0442
Massey Ferguson 596 tractor, 4x4 front loader, 99 horsepower Canopy top, 1,800 hours, one owner; $26,500. Mark Thomas Dalton 706-260-8381
Miller 200 amp portable gas arc welder/generator, new carburetor, gas tank and battery. Bill Laughlin Dahlonega 770-354-1247
Miller Big, 40G generator welder, fourcylinder continental engine, low hours, good shape. Johnny Seabolt Cleveland 706-969-9061
New Hollalnd 555, EM 14 loader, backhoe, 850 hours, $16,000 OBO. Henry Williams Milan 229-315-9864
New Holland 4x4 round baler; 1992 model, 630 twine only, field ready, $3,900; Yanmar GT14 garden tractor, diesel, $400. Brian Martin Metter 912682-2700
New three-point hitch heavy duty hay mower, 48-inch spear, fits all size trac-
Taylor-Way, 3 pt. backhole series 700, in good condition, $4,500; 6 row Lay Bay, 150 gal. tank. Hugh Hosch Waynesboro 770-789-3258
Three backhoe buckets; 15-inch, 30inch and 36-inch, like new. James Wehunt Winder 770-867-5852 770-3076477
Three bulldozer cutting edges, $150. Bill Dabb Eatonton 706-485-6249
Three-point hitch harrow, 18-disk, $850. Timothy Goodwin Augusta 706414-0641
Three-point hitch hay spear, $150. William McWhirter Royston 706-245-6896
TO30 Ferguson tractor, totally restored, must see to appreciate, runs and looks like new. D. L Jump Hazlehurst 912-347-1537
Tumblebug hay hauler, seldom used, electric brakes, bumper pull, $1,400 firm. Derrell Rutherford Rochelle 229365-7111
building a cub for my son's first tractor, need plows. etc. Jeremy Johnson Lithonia 770-918-1561
Ford LGT 14 D 44-inch mower deck in good condition; would consider nonrunning tractor. L. Garrett Blairsville 706-897-7708
Heavy duty trailer, homemade steel floor, wood sides, 4x11 feet, painted John Deere green and yellow, Michelin AT tires. Jim Butts Thomaston 706975-8266
International 826 engine, complete, can remove. K G Brown Byron 478956-4327
John Deere 1360 hay mower conditioner, working or for parts. Jeff Bacon Dudley 478-697-0485
Looking for 60 to 85 horsepower tractor with bucket. Charles Chastain Talking Rock 770-893-9013
Looking for a good used dump trailer about a 7x14, 10,000-pound capacity. Tom Hoy Clarkesville 706-499-7553
Four-foot, three-point tiller for 15 to 40 horsepower tractor; used little, $900. Craig Brown Albany 229-435-7914 229-432-1010
John Deere 62D mower deck, fits John Deere 2320 etc., also canopy for same models. I. Kosior Locust Grove 770957-6114
tors, $175. V Felkel Millen 912-6825813
New Vermeer VR 1022, 10-wheel hay rake, converts to eight-wheel, $5,000.
Two six-row 2100 Amadas peanut combines, $45,000 each. Felton Leverette Ambrose 912-393-5345
Looking for medium or large manure spreader in working condition. Wayne Parker Trion 706-734-3053
Generator, Cummins, powered, 80 John Deere 6500 Highboy, runs and Paul Teems Canton 770-479-5919 kilowatt, under shelter, used fewer functions well; new flow meter, cold A/C. One almost new three-point hitch, onethan 20 hours, $11,000. Danny Church Trey Adams Garfield treyadams16@ row cultivator; one 14-inch and one 16-
Market Bulletin Ad Form
Clarkesville 706-754-9113 706-968- gmail.com 912-602-0983
inch turning plow and other equipment.
2851
John Deere 6620 turbo combine with Darwin Blansit Trion 404-243-9557
This form may be used to submit an ad. There is a 20-word limit for adver-
Ghel170, mix-all feed mill, $1,250. Mel- 216 grain head, field-ready, second One three-point hitch, 10-foot section tisements unless otherwise noted under category headings. The 20-word limit
vin Knight Whigham 229-378-0986
owner, $10,500 OBO. Jim Jackson hires, one three-point hitch pulverizer, includes name, city, phone number and complete address, if provided. Market
Grinding wheel on metal stand, Wrightsville 478-290-0263
one three-point rip plow; one 8.5 Rhino
set up to use with tractor or hit-and- John Deere 74 side delivery rake, hy- finished mower, etc. Burl Couch Toccoa
miss engine, $125. Rick Worrell Ken- draulic operated, excellent condition, 770-539-4193
nesaw wrch688@yahoo.com 404-314- $3,400; Kuhn 10-foot pull-type tedder, One two-row John Deere 71 planter;
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.
1498
bought new, $2,400. Gary Oder Dry field-ready. Jim Williams Carrollton
Hammermill, excellent condition, two Branch 478-973-1183
770-328-4608
screens, sheltered, $1,000. Tom Size- John Deere 920 grain platform, One-row Covington planter on cultiva-
more Box Springs 706-269-3487
field-ready, $3,800. Prentice McCra- tor frame. Bobby House Calhoun 770-
Category: Please note some categories are not published regularly. In addition, some categories require documentation, such as a Coggins test or organic certification,
Hay baler, Claas Markant 51, square nie Eastman 229-385-6155 229-318- 773-6162
prior to being published.
baler, good condition, $4,500. J. Greer 9203
One-row Covington planter with dis-
Hampton 770-946-3136
John Deere 920 MoCo, field ready, tributor, $250; two two-row cultivator
Hay equipment, Vermeer 5310, net $6,500; Ford 3000 diesel, $4,500 c/w frames, $175 each; all or individually. wrap, bale; Kuhn rotary rake, tedder, wedge weights, five-foot Hardee mow- Clint Guthrie Pearson 888-261-3215
Kuhn disk mower, all excellent condi- er, Ford scrape blade. Barry Wood Tiger Parting out 92 Ford F 700 gas engine
tion. Bob Miller Greenville 706-672- 706-782-5689
with auto. Shawn Cox Covington cox-
4556
John Deere 9500 combine 3333, 2283 shawn@hotmail.com 978-409-6233
Hay grapple; 10-bale, 6x8 feet, in- hours, 920,643, 653a heads. David Hib- Peanut wagon for sale, $500 OBO.
cludes cylinder and hoses, works great. ner Stapleton 478-494-9014
Shira MacLennan Americus 229-331-
Dennis Parman Fayetteville 678-595- John Deere 9950 cotton picker with 0557
5112
mudhog, good condition, $8,000 OBO. Pecan dump cart, Jack Rabbitt
Hay rake, Sitrex H/90-V, eight- John Griffin Tifton 229-445-0495
conveyer; can dump into eight-foot
wheel, $2,500; Haytech accumula- John Deere deer plot drill, seven or trailer, excellent condition, de-sticker
tor with grapple and hoses, $9,500, all eight feet wide, works on three-point attached, $85. Jake Ford Alapaha 229-
good condition. W. Glover Griffin 770- hitch, $2,000. Royce Hulett Hazlehurst 686-4203
Phone number:
599-9806
912-253-0161 912-375-3008
Pittman, 15 K hydralift boom, 55-foot
Haybuster 107; ready to plant, John Deere eleven shank, V-plow Har- reach plus 10-foot jib, $7,000. Ken Col-
Subscriber number:
$12,500. Wade Whitaker Rutledge 706- rell, six bottom switch plow, 18 ft. field vin Forsyth 478-994-0856
318-4526
cultivator. Al Breedlove Dawson 229- Power take-off or John Deere LUC
Hydraulic spin-off for round bales; 881-2141
powered cane mill $1,500; power take-
three-point mounted, hydraulically driv- John Deere four-row bean planters, off $2,000 with John Deere engine.
en bale spin-off, $750. Danny Williams 7000 series, pull type; Massey Fergu- Lanier Brantley Ailey 912-583-2557
Please include your name and full address on all correspondence sent to the Bulletin office. The following statement must be signed by the advertiser submitting this notice for publication:
Kite danbo@pineland.net 478-469- son model, 35 with four-foot Bush Hog. 912-347-2240
3600
James Martin Waynesboro 706-558- Quonset building 22ga., 45WX, 17' Hx,
I hereby certify that the above notice meets all the necessary require-
IH-5288, parting out, transmission, 5005
72'L door, opening each end, 14'x28', ments for publication in the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin.
back-end with wheels, square front-end John Deere quick hitch for 7200R se- $15999; International 496 disk harrow,
with tires, tractor, $1,200. James Whittle ries tractor, $600. Morgan Trapnell Met- $8,000. Glen Butcher Camilla 229-449-
Chester 478-278-2091
ter 912-685-5254
3294
page 4
farmers and consumers market Bulletin
Wednesday, FEBRUARY 5, 2014
Livestock Sales and Events Clip and Save Calendar
Every 1st & 3rd Tues. Poultry, Goat & Feeder-Breeder Pig Sale, poultry, 6 pm, hogs & goats, 7 pm, RockRidge Livestock Auction, just off S.R. 128, s. of Reynolds. Info: 478-847-3664 or 706-975-5732.
Every 2nd & 4th Thurs. Chickens & other fowl, goats & sheep; check in at 1 pm; sale at 6:30 pm. Horse Creek Auction, btwn. Dublin & McRae off 441 Hwy. Info.: 478-595-5418.
Every Thursday Auction 41 Goat Sale, miscellaneous equip., 6 pm, goat sale, 7 pm, poultry/small animals following goat sale, 4275 Ga. Hwy. 41 n., Buena Vista. Info: Jim Rush, 706-326-3549 or 229-649-9940 or auction41@windstream.net.
Every Thursday Chickens, Rabbits & Related Misc. Small Animal Sale, NE Georgia Sale, 6 pm, GAL #3478, Eastanollee Livestock Market, Hwy. 17 between Toccoa & Lavonia. Info: 706779-5944 or 706-599-7606.
Every Fri. night Goat, Poultry & Small Animal Sale, 7 pm, Buggy Town Auction, 1315 Hwy. 341 s., Barnesville. GAL #3177 Info: 770-358-0872/1786.
1st & 3rd Fri. night Horse Sale, 7:30 pm, Circle Double S, 102 Lumber City Hwy., Hazlehurst. Info: Steve Underwood, 912-594-6200 (night) or 912375-5543 (day).
Every Sat. 10 am, farm-related mdse. Auction; 1 pm, goats, fowl & small animal auction; GAL#AU003224; Red Barn Livestock Auction, Sylvester. Info.: 229-776-9009.
Every Sat. Small Animals, Chickens, Rabbits, Sheep, Goats & Horse Sale, 4 pm, Coker Sale Barn, Duncan Bridge Rd., White Co., at old Chattahoochee Livestock Barn. Info: Wayne Coker, 706540-8418.
Every Sat. night Goat, Poultry & Small Animal Auction, 7 pm, Bradley-Wayside Auction, 1035 Monticello Hwy., Gray. GAL 306. Info: Nancy Wilson, 478-9864413.
Every 1st & 3rd Sat. Small Animal Sale, goats, sheep & poultry, 1 pm, misc. merchandise, 6 pm, Deer Run Auction, Hwy. 76, Adel-Nashville Hwy., Adel. GAL 001800 Info: 229-560-2898 or 229-896-4553.
Every 1st and 3rd Sat. Livestock Sale; sale starts at 10 a.m., tack/horses; pigs at 11:30, cows at noon, goats at 1 p.m., poultry sale to follow; Metter Livestock Market, Lyons, Ga. Info: Lewie Fortner, 478-553-6066. GAL 3415.
Every 1st & 3rd Sat. S & D Goat Sales, Baxley Fairgrounds, begin 12:30 pm; goats, pigs, poultry, calves. Info.: Steve Smith, 912-367-9268, 912278-1460.
Every 2nd Sat. Winstead Horse Sales, 5 pm, Eastanollee Livestock Auction, Eastanollee. Info: Shannon Winstead, 864-710-4030 or 864-944-6200.
Every 2nd & 4th Sat. R&R Goat & Livestock Auction, merchandise, 10 am, goats, 12 noon, chickens & caged animals to follow, 526 Ga. Hwy. 56 N., Swainsboro. Ron Claxton, auctioneer, GA Lic. #3485. Info: 478237-8825 (weekdays), 478-455-3714 (sale day) or 478-469-3533 or 478455-4765 (nights).
Every 2nd & 4th Sat. Pony Express Stockyard Horse & Tack Auction, 5 pm, GA Lic. AUNR002843, 1852 Highway 11 S., Covington, GA 30014. Info: Scott Bridges, 704-4346389 or 704-473-8715.
Every 2nd & 4th Sat. Livestock Auction, Waddell Auction Barn, Climax, Ga., 1 pm, selling goats, sheep, poultry and small animals; selling miscellaneous at 10 am; #AU003249. Info.: 229246-4955/416-7217.
Every 2nd & 4th Sat. Goat & Chicken Auction, Mid-Georgia Goat & Chicken Auction, 12 noon, Cochran. Info: Frankie Howell, 478-271-0550.
Every 2nd & 4th Sat. Livestock auction at Pearson Livestock; sale, 1 pm; goats, sheep, poultry & small animals; 1168 Hwy. 441 N., Pearson, Ga. Info.: 229798-0271, 912-422-3211.
Every 3rd Sat. Goat & Sheep Sale, 12 noon, Agri Auction Sales, held at Eastanollee Livestock Market, Hwy. 17 btwn. Toccoa & Lavonia. Info: Ricky Chatham, 706-491-2812 or Jason Wilson, 706-491-8840.
Livestock auctions listed in the Market Bulletin sometimes offer related items for sale, such as tack and other livestock equipment. Notices for auctions selling any items other than livestock must be accompanied by the auction license number of the principal auctioneer or auction firm conducting the auction, per regulations of the Georgia Secretary of State. Notices without this information cannot be published.
Have an event to put on our calendar? Contact Dallas Duncan at 404656-3722 or dallas.duncan@agr.georgia.gov
Looking for used set of lifting forks for Wanted: JF CR320, hay rake tedder,
a front loader bucket on CAT backhoe. any condition. Robert Jeans Jasper
Roy Hefner Blairsville 706-897-0513 770-735-3638
Need eight sealed bearing hangers Wanted: looking for a Durand Wayland
or harrow frame with hangers; want to pecan harvester. Jerry Davis Sparta
change from cast iron to sealed. Bobby 478-456-7437
Fountain Cochran 478-934-6837 478- Wanted: pull grader or terracer, Ad-
697-3150
ams, Russell or Caterpillar, any make
Need front end loader for 5610 Ford and condition considered. Ricky Calla-
tractor. Bobby Yarbrough Pine Moun- way Washington 706-401-6320
tain 706-333-1998
Wanted: Super Major Fordson power
Need small hydraulic Bush Hog for take-off; shaft and barren, leave mes-
mounting on Kubota mini- excavator. sage. Bobby Walker Franklin 770-854-
Phillip Combs Loganville 770-825-6956 8430
Old Cultipacker wanted, at good price, Wanted: TAG quick connecting one-
in working condition for affordable price foot trenching bucket with teeth for a
in north, west Georgia. Brady DeLo Dal- Takeuchi TB 153 mini excavator. Bruce
las 404-319-5464
Shedd Blue Ridge 706-838-0392
Recycling trailer, 16-foot trailer. Jerry Wanted: wagon running gear in good
Waters Dawsonville 706-265-1481
condition with wheels and tires, send
Sickle mower; belt driven. C. Layne pics to msbugden@gmail.com. Mike
Jenkins Madison 706-342-1682
Bugden Newnan 678-428-2917
Small grain drill and a small manure Wanted: water ram pump, working or
spreader. John Kendrick Yatesville 706- in repairable conditon. John Maloney
741-1629
Doraville 770-457-6441
Tractor with bad motor with good center chunk. John Romaus Lafayette 423-
Farm Supplies
596-7206
Used, one piece cable tow Rainbow irrigation traveler, newer model. Billy Wright Warwick 229-406-0170
V-wheel closing attachment for 7300 John Deere planters, six each. Donnie Keene Abbeville 229-425-8055
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
10-ton Hudson tag-along trailer, good condition, $5,500. Heath Ewton Rocky Face 706-463-0670
11 horsepower pressure washer, four-
Want to buy a three-point hitch fertilizer spreader. Royce Wallis 3949 s. Bogan Rd. Buford 30519 404-402-2250
gallon, 3,000 psi,150-foot hose and more, $600. Charles Blalock Locust Grove 678-432-7069
770-945-7621
14,000-gallon vertical steel tank and
Want to buy an one point huck-up a 15,000-gallon horizontal steel tank.
Ford, 130 Farmall tractor, somewhere George Harris Covington 404-277-0150
close to East Coast. Robert Roberson 17 Choretime radiant brooders, excel-
Hortense 912-269-0578
lent condition, $20 each. Allen Conner
Wanted: an abandoned G Allis Chalm- Clermont 678-943-5626
ers rear engine tractor in poor condition 2-piece flat bed tarp with eight-foot
for parts or restore. James Elliott Lavo- drop, good condition. $400; 2 load lock
nia 706-356-4839
bars, $35. Pat Barrett Marshallville
Wanted: diesel fuel pump for farm trac- 478-957-1181
tor, Ford 45 horsepower, mechanical or 20 aluminum pallet, skids; 24x36x3
electric in old tractor. James Peterson inches, $15 each. Josh Daniels Atlanta
Monticello 470-233-9592
404-247-7343
20-foot Gooseneck trailer, 5-foot folding ramps, 20-ton GVWR, $4,500. David Sinclair Norman Park 229-798-2915
200-pound and 125-pound anvils; two No. 20 cast iron wash pots, cooking grade and other blacksmith tools. A Hendricks Austell 770-948-9842
22 greenhouse heaters, some working when removed, 140 to 200 BTU, $50 to $100 each, great deal, take all. Mary King Bishop 678-753-1818
24-foot Gooseneck hay trailer for sale; loading ramps on back, call for more informaiton Howard Burnette Mershon 912-288-0091
30 8x20 plastic cross drain pipe, fogger pads , 2x5 feet. Danny Fausett Dawsonville 706-265-8432
30x96 used greenhouse, louvers, fans, new lumber, two rolls of new plastic, $4,500. Anna Hutchinson Soperton 478-299-3880
6x12 trailer, new wood floor, double axle, $995. J D Reece Powder Springs 770-439-6303
Aermotor windmill, 60-foot tower, 10foot blades, needs some work; as is, $4,500, repaired, $6,000. Jimmy Hardin Knoxville 478-361-3907
Aeromotor windmill, eight-inch fan, 40-inch town skid steer grapple; John Deere implement trailer. John Lowery Rome 706-252-0121 706-295-1157
Air, kiln-dried Woodmizer sawn lumber, large selection wood specials, paneling, wide-plank flooring, fencing, barn wood. John Sell Milner sellj@bellsouth. net 770-480-2326
Barrels, plastic heavy duty, 55-gallon, 20-inch screw top, air tight, food grade, $35 while they last. Bill Sewell Brunswick 912-265-7633
Blue and white 55-gallon plastic drums, closed tops, two twist-off caps, food grade, other types sometimes available. Eugene Needham Loganville 770-466-4284
Brand-new complete set of tires and rims; 18.4x38 Firestone, 14.9x24 Firestone, never used off John Deere 6115D, $2,400. Michael Reeves Rochelle 229365-3737
Cane mill and syrup kettle wanted; good working condition, loaded on my truck, no chips or cracks. Ben Parrish Statesboro ben@benparrish.net 912536-2200
Cedar posts, six feet by six inches, $6 each; buy 100 at $5 each; sawmill lumber, many varieties, sizes. George Wallace Elberton 706-213-0698
Chore Time feeders w/chick mates, ziggity lines; 2) 500' houses, excellent, $1500/each. Jerry Glover Rock Spring 706-764-2216 706-764-7245
Clean 55-gallon metal drums with lids; 1,000-gallon tank. Leonard Crane Dawsonville 678-947-6744 404-210-1516
Five plastic 500-gallon chemical totes in cage with suction valves, $200 each. Scott Lindsey Wrightsville slindsey@ sltservicesinc.com 478-278-4351
Flooring, oak and pine, T&G, various widths, also wood shavings and beadboard; call for prices. William Briggs Union City 404-349-2315
For sale: low profile hen feeder grills; five feet for $1.75 each. James Duncan Royston 706-498-2349
For Sale: syrup kettle, 80-gallon, manufactured by Golden's F&W, Columbus, Ga., excellent condition, $500. Larry Stewart Broxton 912-389-7201
Four stainless steel gas tanks; fourgallon capacity; $10 each with straps. Carl Dobson Atlanta 404-247-7343
Gate: nine feet, eight inches by four feet, four inches; five-panel metal, $25. Costoon Powell Griffin SkipPowell@aol. com 770-826-7049
Greenhouse poly rolls; four-year sixmil clear 100-foot rolls; 20, 24, 32 feet wide. Anthony Everett Monroe plowboy1101@aol.com 678-630-9608
Greenhouse trast, 16 each, 35 feet wide, two-inch galvanized steel, one three-eighths-inch galvanized steel bracing, $100 each. David Warren Warner Robins 478-988-8406
Hand-fed thresher for sale; small enough to be pulled by Hit N Miss engine; good condition, $400. Jim Henderson Dawsonville 770-265-5691
Heart pine timber, two 6x6 inches x 30 feet, $1,500 each; four 10x10 inches x 10 feet, $400 each. William Burk Jr Armuchee 706-802-8164
Heavy duty trailer, four-inch drop axle; 14,000-pound capacity, $1,100; 13x5 feet; eight lugs on tires, pictures available, Houston County. Dennis Williamson Forsyth 478-972-9211
Iron soaking pots, draw nife, large grainding rock, large wash pot, lard press, complete, meat cleaver. Russell Jewell Waycross 912-283-8871
Kohler fast-response generator, 50 kilowatt model, 50RZ62 with automatic transfer switch, natural gas, like new, 960 hours, $8,500. Tom Wilkie Jasper 770-893-8305
Locust posts, rails and oak lumber. Eugene Cook Blairsville 706-745-8724 706-897-5828
Looking for an 18,000 or 30,000-gallon propane tank for my chicken farm. Jeff Wigley Canton 770-315-5274
Lumber: TimberKing sawmill lumber, low as 35 cents per board foot; pine and hardwood, custom cuts available. Mitchell Smith Griffin Smithmdjb@aol. com 401-867-5106
Lumber: unfinished boards, $15 each: 2x8x10 and tongue and grove flooring. Lannie Hamsley Unadilla 478-627-3713
Metal and plastic barrels with locks, tops; solid with bung holes; plastic tanks, 275 gallons in wire cages. G. Allen Covington 770-786-6377
Onan generator, 70 kilowatt, propane gas, on trailer, good condition, $6,000; also project tractors. Jess Arnett Tifton 229-382-6517
Propane tank; 550-gallon, underground propane tank, $250; Athens. John Beard Nicholson 706-548-3315
Propane tanks;1,000 gallons each, $1,000 each; six available, email pictures available. Matt Hughes Crawford 706-340-3369
Rabbit boxes, $10 each; Carpenter bee traps, $10 each extra for shipping. Billy Middlebrooks Monroe 770-2677084
Roofing metal, used, various lengths, 75 cents per foot; leave phone number. M. Johnson Stockbridge 770-474-8965
Set of spin-out tires with Ford rims, 10x38, fits 4000 series. Dwain Pittman Mitchell 706-598-2222
Six 4x8 sheets styrofoam, 10 inches thick, $20 each or $100 all. Willie Young Stockbridge 770-490-4287
Solid steel wheel, about four feet tall, $75. Curtis Barfield Gray cebarfield31@ yahoo.com 478-986-8852 478-9865924
Steel I-beam, 6x6 inches, 12.5 feet, 300 pounds $114; 30-inch Snapper, 13.5 horsepower, $226. Alan Atwood Gainesville 770-654-6371
Syrup kettle, $675. Evelyn Fountain Cochran 478-697-4837
Three 4x20 feet congrated galvanized tiles, $1,200 for all or $450 each. Ricky Veatch Summerville 706-857-7395
Three styrofoam incubators for sale, still air, $60 each. Jerry Childs Commerce 706-654-6856
Three-fourths-inch iron gas pipe, feeder pipe $8; 18- and 12-ton feed bin, $500 each. Roger Flanagan Murrayville 706-864-6707
Throvie AV40 sharpening system, saw blades up to 30 inches; and Foley retipping fixture, $3,500. Jim Wyatt Ball Ground 770-861-6978
Two 6x8x6 long oak, 150-foot chain link fence with three-foot gate. Charles Sawyer Mount Airy 706-839-7405
Used chicken house equipment, heaters, feed bins, pilot pancake brooders, drinkers, waters and more, make offer. Joel Babcock Royston 770-853-4806 770-883-9208
Used roof metal; very good, no rust;19 feet, eight inches by three feet; $19 per sheet; 200 sheets. Keith Hayes Jefferson keith@keithhayesconstruction.com 706-215-4026
V-Ribbed tin roofing, 12-foot length. Grady Cole Dallas 678-840-8066
Wanted: Millstones and syrup kettles with wide lip; will pick up. Wayne Czechowski Monroe wayne3015@ gmail.com 770-267-9087
Wanted: one-gallon nursery pots; large quantity, must be in good condition. Kathy Holston knoxville 478-207-7694
Wanted: reasonably priced used metal nest boxes. Beth Lewis Greensboro 706-347-0856
Wanted: used 42-inch stock panels; in or around Cedartown area. Lamar Owens Cedartown 770-314-9708
Winco generator; 25,000 watts, 104.2 amps, power take-off driven. G. Taylor Waycross 912-381-4098
Wood cook stove, Red Mountain B, good working condition with warmer, $500. John Cowan Greenboro 706347-1174
Woodmizer lumber; 1x12 pine, poplar, oak, trailer flooring, any thickness. Larry Moore Newnan 678-278-5709
Livestock
All livestock must have been in the advertiser's possession for at least 90 days before they can be advertised. Livestock listed must be for specific animals. Generalized ads such as "many breeds of cattle" or "want horses, any amount" will not be published. Ads for free or unwanted livestock will not be published. Ads for cats, dogs, reptiles, rodents and other animals not specifically bred for on-farm use will not be published.
Cattle
If you have any questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-6563722.
1 full blooded polls Hereford bull, 11 mos. old; 1-15-14, all shots, wormed, 2013. David Jaillette Covington 770786-5143
1 Jersey Spinger cow; calf, 2nd week , Feb. Bert English Locust Grove 770957-3276
10 black cows, one black bull, four calves, rest to calve soon, $17,000. C.L. Grizzle Dahlonega 706-864-6474
12 yearling registered Angus bulls for sale; Stevenson Angus genetics bloodlines. Neil Keener Chatsworth 706-2703731
14 to 15 months registered Red Angus bulls, excellent bloodline and EPD, esy calving, all shots, good prices. Jorge Haber Midland 706-323-2405
15 ready-to-breed Charolais-cross heifers; $1,450 each. Jeff Banks Carnesville 678-910-4588
2) 1 yr. old bulls; Black Baldie bull; 6 months from Meade cattle stock. D. Hancock Hephzibah 706-799-2488
2-year-old polled Hereford and F1 Braford bulls with performance data. Jonny Harris Odum 912-586-6585
2-year-old registered Black Angus bull, excellent bloodlines. Earl Williams Hawkinsville 478-892-7981
2-year-old Santa Gertrudis bull; unregistered, from south Georgia stock, calved here; must pick up, $1,200 firm. Jeff Kelley Rome 678-879-2802
20 registered Black Angus bulls; registered pairs and heifers in with bull. Fred Blitch Statesboro 912-865-5454
5-year-old cow, half Brahman and half Angus (four feet tall, stout), used for cow sorting, $900. Traci Pitts Newborn tjpitts@bellsouth.net 770-784-5756
88 large frame, gentle, bred AngusCharolais cross heifers for sale; bred to Black Angus bulls; calve in fall. John Williams Colquitt 229-400-0777
ADCA registered red Dexter bull, 18 months old, chrondo and PHAfree, A2N. Richard Carr Keysville dcarr61727@yahoo.com 217-972-8186
Angus bulls, 26 months of age, semen checked. Gary Brock Arabi 229-3227608
Angus bulls: AI genetics, fancy looks, easy calving, high marbling, good as you'll find; $2,500 to $3,500. Jeff Heuer Greensboro jeff@deltaHranch.com 404-421-0686
Black Angus bulls, registered AI sires by War Party, 8180-004, Mitty Focus, Lead On, Retail Product., 15 months January. Gary Autry Ringgold 423-9025925
Black Angus four replacement heifers, out of registered stock, 1-year-olds. Ron Jones Jasper 770-608-1990
Black Angus steer feeder calf for sale; all shots, wormed, grass fed, protein fed, $675. Carla Mayes Warrenton mcm4588@windstream.net 770-8830688
Black Beefmaster bull, registered white, underline, gentle, born Aug. 13, 2010; used for two seasons, good calves, $2,500. David Flood Tunnel Hill davidflood@windstream.net 706-537-3633
Black registered polled Beefmaster bulls; gentle, good confirmation, shots; Soulman, Synergy, Sirkitter bloodlines; 10 months to 2 years. Vernon Turner Dalton 706-278-7814
Black Simmental bull, 16 months, easy calver, sired by Kikemans Sure Bet, $2,500. Steve Watson Dawsonville 706-265-6383
Bred heifers, 16 black, start calving in March, average 1,000 pounds; open heifers, average 750 pounds, two rounds vaccinations. Mickey Carnes Waverly 912-269-2050
Wednesday, FEBRUARY 5, 2014
farmers and consumers market BulletinPage 5
Bulls for sale; Hereford, 2-year-olds. Registered Angus bulls, GAR Ingenu- Two registered Braford cows, 3 years Boer-Kiko cross goat buck, 12 months Two 3-year-old crossbred does; both
Michael Bennett Cumming 404-771- ity, New Day, New Design bloodlines; old, calve January and February; calves old, proven breeder, white body, brown very healthy and tame, $175 each or
5454
great EPDs; $2,000 to $2,800; free de- can be registered, $1,800. Terry Moody faced, $150. Kyle Knight Sylvania 912- $300 for both. Bobbi Maddox Monti-
Calving ease, milking ability, gentle- livery within 100 miles. Vernon Hagen Baxley 912-278-1041
690-5097
cello 770-616-6034
ness, registered polled Shorthorn bulls, Douglasville 404-520-4511
Two registered red Senepol bulls, 20 Commercial hair sheep: Katahdin-
Equine For Sale
show heifers, steers, excellent quality, Registered Angus heifers, 14 months months old, you pick one, $2,500. Dave Dorper cross; ewes, rams, lambs, two
Club Calf member. Ken Bridges Com- old, low birth weight, all shots, good Davis Commerce 770-963-9264
goats: one wether, $75, one billy, $50. If you have questions regarding ads in
merce 706-768-3480
Coming, 2-year-old registered Angus bulls, passed breeding soundness exam; most AI sired; ready for service. James Vaughn Forsyth jamesavaughn@ att.net 478-258-2232
Dairy heifers, pick five or more, $450 each. William Hauser Arnoldsville 706247-5824 706-742-2880
For sale: 1-year-old Brangus bull, approximately 500 pounds; will make excellent breed bull. Roger Payton Elberton 706-498-1126
EPDs, good disposition, Objective bloodline. Travis Dyer Gainesville 770983-7685 404-578-0328
Registered Angus performance bulls; excellent EPDs, low birth, explosive growth and power; delivery available. Windell Gillis Eastman 478-374-4868 478-231-8236
Registered Angus, 8 to 9 months, two heifers, $1,400 each; three bulls, $1,300 each, low birth weight, excellent bloodlines, vaccinations. David Strawn Clermont 678-617-9717
Swine
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers submitting swine ads must submit proof of a negative brucellosis and pseudorabies test from within the past 30 days. Exceptions are swine from a validated brucellosis-free and qualified pseudorabies-free herd; these operations must submit proof of that certification. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the test needs to be sent along with it. For ads submit-
Susan Cobb Cedartown 404-218-1615
Dorper-Katahdin cross ewes, breeding age (11-plus mos), beautiful healthy ewes, exposed to ram since Dec. 16. Derryl Thomas Nahunta Libbyjoe62@ gmail.com 912-288-2310
Eight grass-fed meat sheep for sale, $150 each. Peter Jones Monticello 478-256-3857
Fainting goats: billies, $75; females, $225. David Pitts Cordele 229-9380898
For sale: 100 percent New Zealand
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
For Sale: bulls, four Simmental, one Si- Registered Black Angus bull with pa- ted online, the test can be attached Kiko bucks and does, starting at $500 privileges. If you are faxing or mailing
mAngus, 4 years, two Charlaois, 5 years, pers, 3.5 years old, gentle, excellent using the attachments button. Buyers each. RL Peacock Broxton rlpeacock@ in an ad, the Coggins needs to be sent
one Brangus. Steve Healy Statesboro herdsire. William Penland Buford 404- are urged to request proof of a nega- winstream.net 912-381-1015
along with it. For ads submitted online,
912-682-2973
444-6790 828-835-0589
tive brucellosis and pseudorabies test For Sale: young billy, 100 percent Kiko- the Coggins can be attached using
Four purebred Angus heifers; 500 Registered Black Angus bull; 10 prior to purchase.
Spanish cross, $175; four nannies, $125 the attachments button. Generalized
Market Bulletin Subscription Request Form to 600 pounds, $4,000. Gary Roberts
Martin backhoer@yahoo.com 706-4913342
Four Zebu bulls for sale; age varies from 7 months to 7 years; priced from $350 to $750. William Haas Perry 478987-1789
Fullblood Senepol red and black heifers and bulls for sale. Bobby Griffin Elko 478-230-0422
Gelbvieh bulls, all bred for easy calving and fast growth, purebred from 8 months to 3 years. Gene Cantrell Shady Dale 770-312-6224 706-468-1341
Gelbvieh bulls, all registered purebred, bred for easy calving and fast growth. John Kiss Gainesville 770-531-1126 770-531-1126
Gretsch Bros. Angus, SimAngus bulls; semen tested, calving ease, growth; commercial heifers Jan. 25, noon in Danielsville. Fred Gretsch Lexington 706-340-0945
Hereford bull for sale; bull was bought in March 2013 Calhoun Bull Test, price is $1,600. Jimmy Stewart Talking Rock 770-363-4754
Jersey heifer, classic, beautiful, tame, 1-year-old, ready to breed, $1,200; high milk genetics; short bred to Jersey-Angus bull. William Gholston Dahlonega 706-867-6588
Newborn bull, heifer dairy calves; Holstein, Jersey-cross bulls, $20, heifers, $100. Clay Wehner Pavo claywehner@ gmail.com 229-263-9380
Nine registered AI-sired bulls, ready for service; call for more Information. Allen Ellicott Abbeville 229-401-8590
One Angus bull, 6 months old, fiveeighths Angus and three-eighths Brahman. Lou Batchelor Baxley 912-3661673
One registered homozygous black, polled Gelbvieh bull, 4 years, $2,800; registered Black Angus bull, 15 months, $2,000. Eddie Caudell Carnesville 706870-4565
One Watusi bull, 18 months, for sale. Paul King Alapaha 229-686-3749
One yearling Angus bull, approximately 500 to 600 pounds, $950. Eddie Hatcher Comer 706-783-3818
Performance-tested black full-blood Simmental, SimAngus bulls, cow-calf pairs, heifers; AI, embryo bred, easy calving, high milk, satisfaction guaranteed. Milton Martin Jr. Clarkesville 770519-0008
months old, sired by 878 son, very gentle, excellent, $1,100. Gene Ashley Hartwell 706-377-2994
Registered Black Angus bulls; 9 months, 16 months, 2 years; Objective, 5050; AI, ET, NS; calving ease, docile. K Schwock Homer 404-735-9524
Registered Black Angus cows, 2007 to 2010, four with 2 to 3 months AI'd calves from Prophet and Complete, $14,500. Dennis Scott Sylvania 912-682-4422
Registered Charolais, SimAngus bulls, 15 to 24 months, pick from 20; $1,650 to $2,500, cow-ready. Curtis Kicliter Marshallville 478-967-2940
Registered Hereford bull, 5 years old, gentle, easy calving, calves on farm. Morris Akin Carnesville 770-789-3285
Registered Hereford bull; 3.5 years old, proven breeder, $2,500, easy calver; calves on farm. Mark Scott Chatsworth 706-980-9334
Registered Hereford September heifers, September and December bulls, excellent bloodlines to choose from. Tim Parks Ellijay 706-635-2531
Registered Hereford, born in 2009; very gentle bred, real good cow. Don Hudgins Douglasville 404-886-6849
Registered horned Hereford bull, 3 years old, $2,800; also 4-year-old polled bull, $2,800, excellent EPDs. Jacob Stephenson Commerce 706-207-5320
Registered Limousin bull, double black, double polled; 14 months old; AI sired. Larry Walker Barnesville 770358-2044
Registered polled Hereford bulls, gentle, rugged pasture-raised, easy calving, 20 to 23 months old, good EPDs and bloodlines. Bobby Brantley Tennille 478-553-8598 478-552-9328
Registered polled Hereford bulls, good EPDs, ultrasound carcass, info provided, herd certified and accredited. Larry Lane Carrollton 678-378-5170
Registered polled Herefords, service age bulls and breeding age hefiers, many to pick from. Brad Mullins Martin 706-491-7556
Registered polled Herefords; two cows and calf pairs; four heifers, one bull, good bloodline, pasture-raised. Mike Ward Summerville 706-862-2405
Registered SimAngus bull, 3 years old, kept his heifers, $2,500. Don Douglas Dalton 706-259-3723
Service-age purebred Black Angus and black Simmental bulls; registered Simmental heifers, open, bred, 40 to choose from. Billie Clanton Odum 912221-1383 912-586-2388
6-week-old pure white Landrace pigs, $50 each. Bobby Floyd Forsyth 478394-1325
ABA registered Berkshire, top AI bloodlines; boars, barrows, sows, gilts. Mike Findley Madison 706-474-0980 706-342-1970
Boar pig, Landrace-Yorkshire, 8 weeks old and 75 pounds; sell or trade for boar, gilt. Norman Callaway Carlton 706-2079444
Crossbred Hampshire pigs; 6 weeks old, $40 each; wormed and males cut. Morris Jennings Cumming 770-4015263
Great black pigs available, $150; great meat and temperament; 5 months old. Lance Barrett Suches lrbarrett@earthlink.net 706-747-2003
Hampshire, 12 weeks, $65; Landrace Hampshire, 9 weeks, will trade Hampshire for Hampshire. Mary Nix Molena 706-647-9095 678-572-2275
Mini pigs for sale; mention ad for $100 off piglet; visit www.paradiseminipigs. com. Hope Bennett Cleveland 706348-7279
Six Yorkshire piglets, born on Jan. 6, 2014; ready to go on March 6, $75 each; call to reserve. Kevin Kilgore Hogansville 404-227-1159
Tamworth pigs for sale; gilts, feeders pigs and piglets; one 2-year-old sow. Floyd Baldwin Maysville 706-652-2301 770-287-5288
Tamworth pigs, registered, 2 to 3 months old; boars, gilts, and feeders, good bloodline, $75 to $200. Mark Chastain Ellijay 706-635-6322
Two registered large black boars, breeding age. Ed Shealey Douglasville 678-249-7319
Yorkshire cross feeder pigs; wormed, castarated and on feed, $40 to $50. Erin Tewksbury Madison tewkfive@bellsouth.net 706-474-0972
Goats And Sheep
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
32 high-quality Katahdin ewes, lambs for sale, $200 to $150; out of top-end ewes, 8 to 10 months old. T. Wright Rome 706-766-1445
4-year-old Pygmy female and 2-yearold mixed male, must take both, $100 for both. Richard Gower Stockbridge 678-805-5940
5-month-old Pygmy billy, $40. Dexter Carlton Jeffersonville 478-945-6565
90 Boer and common nanny goats;
each. John Woodruff Tifton 229-388- ads, such as "many horses," "variety
0677 229-425-0801
to choose from," etc., will not be pub-
Horned brush goats/ no particular breed. Alan Jacobs Warrenton 706465-3866
lished. Equine at Stud ads will also require a current stable license in order to be published.
Katahdin-Dorper cross lambs, ewes and wethers from weanlings to 5 months old; Katahdin-Dorper cross ram, proven producer. Aubrey Nelson Milledgeville
16 year old Belgian mare, $1100, rides and drives, beautiful, easy keeper. L. Maletz Monticello wildfire2451@yahoo. com 706-476-0233
478-457-5951 478-968-5162
4-year-old AQHA gelding, incentive
Kiko doe, $150, 2 years old, tan and white color, good breeder; can text pictures. Jimmy Hawk Rutledge 770-2651189
fund, green broke, versatility and ranch horse prospect. S. Hunt Thomson 706825-1455
5-year-old female Quarter Horse; bay,
Kiko herd: nine nannies; one Boer, 3and 2-year-old Kiko billies, sell together, $150 each nannies, $350 each billies. Lori Duncan Newnan 404-543-4919
approximately 15 hands; $400 OBO; must pick up, no delivery available. Dwight Morgan Stockbridge 678-4673844
Lowcountry-Spanish yearling buck, twin, parents are twins; $250. Susan Peach Maysville 706-658-6033
Nigerian Dwarf bottle kids for sale, healthy, $50 each for males, no females available. James Johnson Nevils janejohnson102111@yahoo.com 912-5368012
Black mare, TB cross, 15.2 hands, 19 years, current Coggins, healthy and sound; $500 OBO. Rhonda Cangemi Villa Rica hawkviewfarms@gmail.com 404-983-0692 770-364-0375
Miniature donkeys: guard or breeding jack, $200; jennies, $200 and up. Bill Wray Perry 478-825-1297
Nigerian Dwarves, all ages and col-
Equine At Stud
ors, $75 to $150; please no calls after If you have questions regarding ads in
9 p.m. Larry Pirkle Dawsonville 706- this category, call 404-656-3722.
216-2954
AQHA, copper red dun; Azure Te,
One Saanen doeling, 10 months old, Te'N'Te, Quick M Silver, Barleo lines;
$250. James Perkins Morganton 706- good head, muscles, disposition; lazy-
374-4347
cfarm.net, fee $500; m/care, negotiable,
Pygmy goats: two males, 8 weeks APHA. L. Cason McDonough 404-226-
old, $50 each. Richard Day Monroe 9228
wad1954@windstream.net 770-2670004
Equine Miscellaneous
Registered Polypay lambs, born April 2013; two rams, $350 each; two ewes,
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
$285 each. George Lyons Dawsonville lyonsfarm@windstream.net 706-2653328 770-316-8351
Seven mixed does, 2 years old; one Baylis buck, 3 years old; serious in-
20 miniature horse halters, $15 for all, 10 assorted sized mini blankets, $10 to $30 each. Fay Oday Griffin 770-2282515
Aluminum gooseneck; two-horse trailer; 2001 SilverStar, straight load, new
quiries only. Jim Hudson Broxton jim- tires, great condition, fully insulated,
dhudson@windstream.net 912-359- $8,500 OBO. Lea Cornelius Jefferson
5546
904-591-3355
Spanish-cross billy, 1-year-old; tame Still looking for "Doc," old swayback
and healthy, $200; negotiable. Kimberly barrel horse sold to a girl in Gainesville.
Yearwood Crawfordville 706-816-1339 Roger Keebaugh Gainesville irinero-
706-816-1184
ger@yahoo.com 770-869-7941
I would like to receive a subscription to the print version of the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin. Subscriptions are $10/year (26 issues).
q New Subscriber
q Renewal
Red Angus registered yearling heifers Simmental and SimAngus bulls and also herd of Katahdin cross ewes ex-
and bulls, all shots, ready to breed for pairs, $1,500 and up, black, low birth posed to ram, will lamb in spring. Alan Name:
spring calving. Michael Smith Newnan weights, Habersham County. Chet Bar- Wasden Louisville 706-831-0441
770-253-7099 770-301-1945
rett Mount Airy 706-499-8008
ADGA registered bucklings for sale;
Registered 2-year-old Angus bull, AI Simmental bulls, 15 months, AI sired. herd is CAE, Cl, brucellosis and Johnnes
Address:
sire; $2,000. Dave Davis Commerce low birth weight; $2,250 each; semen tested and negative, $350. Cathy Pol-
770-616-6038
tested, all shots. Rick Wood Clarkes- lard Thomaston cathy30@windstream.
Registered Angus bull, selling to pre- ville 706-499-2325
net 706-656-7091
City:
State
Zip
vent inbreeding; 6 years old in March Simmental, Simbrah and Brahman ADGA registered with papers, Nubian
2014; Traveler bloodlines, gentle, bulls; breeding and weaning age; few buck, born Feb. 10, 2011; handsome, (Please list only the address where you want your Bulletin mailed.)
$1,900. Bob Seaton Cohutta 706-278- cows and heifers. Cliff Adams Bowdon large, apricot grey spotted, proven
7073
770-258-2069
breeder, disbudded, $300. Bryant
Registered Angus bulls, 15 months, excellent bloodlines. William Hix Comer 706-248-5851 706-540-2470
Registered Angus bulls, 15 to 16 months, oustanding Upward bloodlines,
Six registered Charolais heifers, bred 90 days to low birth weight black Simmental bull, $1,650 each. Terry Moody Baxley 912-278-1041
Superior herd of registered Charolais cattle, starter herd, service age bulls,
Vaughn Box Springs 229-649-9438
ADGA Saanen does, bred, $400; buckling from best doe, $175, wethers, $7; CAE-free closed herd. Darcy Reinagel Thomaston 706-646-3682
breeding soundness tested, great EPDs. delivery available. Bobby Burch East- Beautiful miniature Pygmy goats for
Doyle Waters Chickamauga 423-605- man 478-718-2128
sale; males, females, wethers. Louie Es-
Email address:
Phone number:
(Please provide a phone number in the event Bulletin staff has a question about your address or subscription.)
2716
Two PT registered Angus bulls, 15 tep Newnan 770-301-4449
Registered Angus bulls, 15 to 17 to 16 months, approximately 1,400 Boer doelings, mixed doelings, does
months old, semen-tested, docile and pounds, $1,800 and $2,000; breeding with kids, Kiko buck, three male Ana-
many AI-sired. John Stuedemann Com- soundness examined. Lanny Benson tolians. Tom Taunton Butler 478-862-
Please make checks payable to `Georgia Department of Agriculture.' Send payments to: Georgia Department of Agriculture, PO Box 742510, Atlanta, GA 30374-2105.
er 706-202-2371
LaFayette 706-397-2329
3138
page 6
farmers and consumers market Bulletin
Wednesday, FEBRUARY 5, 2014
GUEST COLUMN: Georgia growers prepare to increase funding for Georgia pecans
Georgia Pecan Growers
have begun the formal process
of amending the Georgia
Marketing Order for Pecans
in hopes of raising additional
funds to support the industry.
The proposed change would
increase the grower contribu-
tion from one half-cent per
pound to one cent per pound
beginning with the 2014 pecan
crop. The increased produc-
HUDSON
tion from new plantings across
the United States necessitates
a more vigorously funded market and research program to
sustain and grow the profitability of the crop.
Georgia pecan growers will annually produce around
100 million pounds of pecans. This represents about a
third of all pecans produced in the United States and
about 20 percent of the world's production. The farm
gate value of pecans will annually exceed $200 million
in Georgia and contribute nearly $1 billion to the rural
economies of our state.
In the last five years, Georgia pecans gained inter-
national recognition and acceptance. Nearly 70 percent
of the Georgia pecan crop was exported in 2013. It is
estimated that as much as 50 percent of the crop will
be exported this crop year. International marketing and
exports have been credited with increasing Georgia pecan
prices by as much as 30 percent. Georgia pecan growers
need additional funds to increase and support the interna-
tional marketing of pecans.
Unlike other nuts, the growth and value of the pecan
industry has remained relatively flat for the last 50 years.
Per capita consumption of pecans in the United States has
not increased in comparison to other nuts. As a result of
active national marketing efforts, the value of the almond,
walnut and pistachio industries increased exponentially. At the same time that pecan production and price remained somewhat stable or flat, the almond industry quadrupled production and more than doubled price.
Recent increases in pecan prices stimulated significant new pecan plantings across Georgia and the nation. It is estimated that producers may very well have planted sufficient trees to more than double production in Georgia within the next 10 years. It is imperative that we begin to market and prepare for this new production that will be coming into the Georgia marketplace.
The Georgia Pecan Growers Association Board voted unanimously to support the half-cent increase in the marketing contribution. The Pecan Growers Association dedicated all its efforts to inform pecan growers of the importance to our industry of passing this referendum. It is extremely important that our industry begin marketing efforts to increase the consumption of pecans and provide the demand for the expected 200 million pounds that will be coming to Georgia soon!
A public hearing on the revised Georgia Pecan Marketing Order will be held at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 11 at the Tift County Extension Office in Tifton, Ga. The Tift County Extension Office is located at 1468 Carpenter Road South.
All pecan growers with more than 30 acres in an orchard situation should take time and make an effort to learn and participate in the referendum. Come to the Tifton hearing to ask questions and learn more about the program. The industry needs your support. Please take the time and make the effort to support the future growth and development of the Georgia Pecan Industry.
Randy Hudson is a fourth-generation pecan farmer and owner of The Hudson Pecan Company in Ocilla, Ga. He is president of the Georgia Pecan Growers Association and vice president of the National Pecan Growers Council.
Pickens County 4 H & Master Gardener Plant Sale
Order Taken Feb 1-28 u Plant Pickup Mar 22 and 24
Wide Variety of Berries, Grapes, Muscadines, Figs and Landscape Shrubs and Trees
For information and order forms Call 706-253-8840 or See details at pickensmg.org
Limited Edition Georgia Grown painting, signed by the artist, Kevin Burchett
Order your 1 of 250 prints by filling out the form. Limit one.
Price: $50.00 Measurements: 11" X 14"
Matte included.
Please make check payable to "Georgia Grown
Commodity Commission"
Name: Address:
Please mail form and check to: Georgia Grown Commodity Commission 19 Martin Luther King Dr. SW Rm. 324, Atlanta, GA 30334
agriculture
Letter from the editor
Everyone knows Georgia and snowy weather tend to mix worse than oil and water. It's like trying to put two male betta fish in the same bowl and expecting them to turn into BFFLs in under an hour.
But whoa-mah-gawd, did Georgia and snowy weather not mix this year.
On the morning of Jan. 28, I decided Erica Lummus -- our new intern, who you will meet in the Feb. 19 issue in a Take 5 questionnaire -- and I would walk from the office to the International Production & Processing Expo at the World Congress Center. It's not that bad of a walk, really, although it was friggin' cold at 7:30 a.m.
By the time we left our respective seminars and were walking the trade show floor a bit before 11, it had started snowing. Of course, I being the responsible supervisor that I am did not have a snow plan. Apparently like the Atlanta city officials, I had assumed that the weather was lying and we would not get snow.
So Erica and I walked 1.5 miles in the snow, which by the time we left IPPE was already sticking to cars, tables, our hair and roads that weren't heavily traveled. We received word that the office was closing at 1, said our goodbyes and that was that.
Well y'all. Apparently everyone else in Atlanta decided to close at 1, too. And because Atlanta, like me with my "let's be awesome and walk to this place because it's not going to snow, we won't need umbrellas/snow boots/salt/etc.," did not have a snow plan either, Atlanta became a parking lot in roughly 20 minutes.
Thankfully, I only spent an hour caught up in the gridlock, and then I spent the rest of the night on Twitter with the city's ABC affiliate station playing in the background. It was only then that I realized just how insane it was to not have a snow plan. I'm sure you heard about it on the news. Interstates 85, 75, 20, 285 and I believe even the tiny little 675 and 575 roads were out of commission before I made it home. I was in my car sitting through the fourth light at Ponce de Leon Avenue when the first ambulance careened its way toward I-20, and shortly thereafter the radio started announcing road closures due to wrecks, jack-knifed 18-wheelers and the suddenly quick accumulation of snow, ice, slush and people driving the wrong way to get around traffic.
City officials claimed there was a snow plan. Maybe I was blind, but I didn't see it. There wasn't any salt or sand on the roads. Schools were still open. Everything shut down at the same time without the infrastructure to handle that level of traffic and hazardous (yes, Northerners, it is hazardous when you don't drive in it every week) conditions. And I'm pretty sure we knew this thing was a'coming about a week ago.
Atlanta could have had a snow plan. I could have had a snow plan for the morning walk (which yes, might have consisted of not walking). But hindsight is 20/20 and our lessons have been learned.
If you've got a farm, you should have a plan, too. I'm not talking about covering your plants to make sure they don't freeze or putting fresh straw in the barn for calves. I'm talking about what's going to happen to your farm when the unexpected happens: like when it comes time to cross the Pearly Gates. Will Thompson spoke on this point during the 2014 Ag Forecast series -- we have to have a plan. Start talking now. Start figuring out the who, the what and the where of what's going to happen to your farm so the code of Georgia doesn't make the decision for you.
Like he said in his presentation, we don't know when the good Lord is going to call us home. So please, don't emulate the gridlock of #Atlantarctica (as it became known on Twitter) when it comes to deciding the fate of your family farm.
Don't get caught without a snow plan. Dallas Duncan is the editor of the Market Bulletin. Originally from Evans, Ga., she graduated in May 2011 with a double major in animal science and agricultural communication from the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. She previously worked for The Red & Black, The Times newspaper in Gainesville, Ga., and Georgia Cattlemen's Association.
FARMERS & CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN (ISSN 0889-5619) is published biweekly by the Georgia Department of Agriculture 19 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive Atlanta, GA 30334-4250 404-656-3722 Fax 404-463-4389 Office hours 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday Friday
Gary W. Black, Commissioner MARKET BULLETIN STAFF Dallas Duncan, editor
Gerrie Fort, circulation manager Merlissa Smith, customer services specialist
Erica Lummus, spring 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 or money order payable to the Georgia Department of Agriculture along with your name, complete mailing address and phone number to PO Box 742510 Atlanta, GA 30374-2510. Designate "Market Bulletin" in the "for" line. To determine if an existing subscription is due for renewal, look for the expiration date
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Wednesday, FEBRUARY 5, 2014
farmers and consumers market BulletinPage 7
ARTY'S GARDEN:
Go tropicalissimo in your garden
Snow is in the forecast, but I am thinking about creating tropical gardens in Georgia. Not truly tropical, of course, but gardens that are lush and colorful, full of plants with large leaves and bright blooms that will make you think you are in Aruba instead of Atlanta.
I am not alone in my love of this type of garden. Horticulturists even gave a name to the movement: tropicalissimo gardening, and people from Seattle to Bar Harbor are creating gardens in the tropical style.
Tropicalissimo gardens are full of color, either from foliage or flowers. Reds and oranges are favored because they are strong, statement-making colors. They hold up on even the sunniest summer afternoon. Timidity is not allowed. Put contrasting colors together such as purple with lemon yellow and orange with blue. Create a riot of color!
Selecting plants with large leaves is perhaps the best way to create a tropical effect. Cannas, bananas, elephant ears, caladiums, aspidistra, Japanese fatsia, Japanese rice paper plant and butterfly ginger are good choices. Cannas with maroon foliage or variegated varieties such as Bengal Tiger provide even more color and contrast. Their bright flowers are a bonus. Palms always add a tropical touch. Dwarf palmetto and needle palm are hardy in most of Georgia. Our Southern magnolia may look like a rubber plant at a distance, and the rarer big-leaf magnolia (Magnolia macrophylla) looks even more tropical. It
has the largest unsegmented leaves of any tree in North America. And it is native to the Southeast US, including Georgia.
To contrast with the large-leafed plants, put in some ornamental grasses such as zebra grass and other miscanthus grasses. Yuccas provide contrast as well. Variegated varieties such as Golden Sword add yellow starbursts when planted amid Purple Homestead verbena and other flowers. Ferns such as ostrich fern, holly fern and cinnamon fern add a primeval and jungle-like quality to moist and shady areas.
There are new coleuses that are much more tolerant of sun than old varieties, but they are just as bright with their multi-colored leaves. Zinnias, Turk's cap mallow, sunset hibiscus (Abelmoschus manihot), New Guinea impatiens, jewelweed, mollypops and other passionflowers, cape plumbago, tiger lily, daylilies, scarlet rosemallow (Hibiscus coccineus), seashore mallow (Kosteletzkya virginica), crinums and amarcrinums are a few flowers that in form and color are excellent candidates for a tropicalissimo garden. Even the common and old-fashioned Rose of Sharon looks exotic when planted with its hibiscus cousins in a tropical setting.
Arty Schronce is the Department's resident gardening expert. He is a lifelong gardener and encourages all Georgia gardeners to hold on until the spring thaw!
FORECAST: Favorable predictions for many ag industries in 2014
From Page 1
Attendees also heard helpful advice to plan for their 2014 growing seasons from Kent Wolfe, director of the UGA Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development, and Extension economist Nathan Smith.
"Georgia had somewhat of a challenging year when you look at the growing conditions," Smith said. "We had a cold, wet spring, we got some early plantings in, but then they just sat there because it got so cool and then it got really wet."
Despite the unusual weather, he said some US crops actually had good yields -- such as the record 14 billion bushels of corn -- and production is rising back to outpace demand.
Previous high prices have feed corn on the downtrend and ethanol production has flattened as well. Smith expects that to continue unless the ethanol market grows to be more competitive with gasoline. Georgia's cotton industry is steadily growing, and producers appear to be planting more soybeans than wheat this year.
On the dairy side, the cowherd and number of farms continues to decline, but at the same time production became more efficient: cows are producing 19,200 pounds per animal. Favorable production is expected in the poultry and timber industries as well, Wolfe said.
For hog producers, Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea Virus and high feed costs could lead to a two to three percent decrease in production, and honeybees in north Georgia experienced low yields last year as well. This could cause honey prices to rise about 11 percent, Wolfe said.
And promising news for beef cattle producers: the number of cows is down, but replacement heifer numbers are increasing.
"We're looking at lower production, higher prices. The higher prices and lower feed costs will hopefully lead to higher profits," Wolfe said. "We are going to see some more heifers, just not at the level you'd expect compared to 10 years ago."
Keynote speaker Will Thompson, left, speaks with Watkinsville, Ga., cattleman Russ Page following the Athens Ag Forecast event on Jan. 27. Photo by Dallas Duncan
FEATURE RECIPE:
Margie's chicken salad
Editor's Note: Margie Leger of Cordele, Ga., sent in this favorite recipe, which she said is always requested for church functions and family gatherings. Makes approximately 10 servings.
Ingredients: 5 cups cooked chicken 1 cup chopped celery 2 cups mayonnaise 1.5 cups Georgia apple
2 cups Georgia pecan halves 1 cup sweet pickle relish 4 hardboiled eggs (optional) Salt and pepper, to taste
Instructions: 1. Chop chicken, hardboiled eggs and apples. Leave the peel on apples. 2. Combine all ingredients in a large bowl and mix well. 3. Spoon servings over lettuce leaves. Sprinkle with additional pecan halves if desired.
All recipes have been tested for accuracy by Georgia Department of Agriculture home economists unless otherwise noted.
Share your favorite recipes with us! Send recipes to dallas.duncan@ agr.georgia.gov or to Dallas Duncan, Georgia Market Bulletin, 19 MLK Jr. Drive SW Atlanta, GA 30334. If you have questions, concerns or corrections to featured recipes, call 404-656-3722.
For more recipes, find us on Pinterest and watch cooking in action on our "Pick, Cook, Keep" series at www.gpg.org/pick-cook-keep!
page 8
farmers and consumers market Bulletin
Wednesday, FEBRUARY 5, 2014
Tucker Old West saddle 17.5; $1,100 Rhode Island Red chickens; 22 weeks Wanted: Six black Fench Maran pul- Meat rabbits; New Zealand white, fry- 2012, 2013 alicia hay, 5x5 round bales,
and Tucker Apache limited edition old and younger, priced according to lets, approximately 6 months old. Rob- ers, broilers, $10 each, dress to about approximately 76; make offer for 2012
saddle 16.5; $1,400, both in excellent size, also Eastern turkeys. Gerald Hayes ert Smith Homer whitehorseone@wind- three pounds. Ron Ward Auburn 770- and 2013, $55 each. Mike Sirmans
condition. Claude Bratcher Clarkesville Flowery Branch 470-208-0309
stream.net 404-697-9623
601-5121
Milledgeville kam0124@yahoo.com
770-530-6595
Rhode Island Red rooster for sale; ap-
Wanted: black leather Tucker or very proximately 6 months old, needs to go;
Alternative
New Zealand White 1-month-old bun- 478-251-0723 nies from national show line and out- 2013 45 rolls bermuda mixed, fer-
similar saddle bags in excellent condi- $10. Chris Woodward williamson 770tion, reasonable. Susan Shedd Blue 833-5538
Livestock
standing breeding stock. Joanna Porter tilized in field, $20 per roll, will deliver.
Jefferson 706-367-8106
Chris Crawford Warm Springs ccraw-
Feed, Hay And Grain Ridge 706-838-0392
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.
Full-service equestrian facility: 40 stalls, wash stalls, arenas, trails, jumps; private, group lessons, training; full or pasture board; layovers. Ashley Stiles Griffin ashleystileseventing@gmail.com
Rhode Island Reds, healthy pullets. Brian Sturdy Dahlonega 706-865-9201
Ring Neck doves, adults and young birds, males and females, and pairs. Sandra Smith Covington 770-786-6227
Two pairs black Bantam, frizzle Cochins, 10 months old, $25 per pair. Randy Norton Bremen 404-535-3076
Two white Silkie roosters; loads of personality and lovely; end of july hatch; $25 each Brian Jester Covington 770786-9544
WT green grays, Alabama brown reds and Aseels. James Young Metter 912682-2917
Poultry/Fowl Requiring
If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722.
Llama: Appaloosa possibly bred; white with brown spots all over, runs with goats, $500. Ken Hatley Zebulon 770358-1300
Two 6-month-old water buffalo bull calves for sale; not for slaughter; $500 each. Steve Kinsey Cleveland 770-5391651
Two grade female llamas, trade for grade male, 3 year-plus. Sgt. Capps Comer 770-490-5537
Alternative Livestock Requiring Permit/License
Seven females and three or four males, mostly long haired, $100 for all. Vernon West Newnan 770-304-1637
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; 2013 bermuda mix, netwrapped, rain-free in field, $30 and $25. Horace Pippin Culloden 770-358-0815 770-550-7837
ford120875@gmail.com 770-584-0110
2013 4x5 net-wrapped alicia bermudagrass hay. Fred Fletcher Sparks 229546-5188
2013 4x5 rolls fescue and bermuda mix cow hay; in field $25 per roll, delivery available within 25 miles. Otha Knight Rutledge 770-403-9422
2013 alicia bermuda and 2012 alicia bermudagrass hay, 4x5 net-wrap, wellfertilized. Allen Boyd Tifton aboyd@ friendlycity.net 229-392-4450
2013 Alicia hay, 4x5 net-wrapped, horse and cow quality, well-fertilized, weed-free, delivery available. Paul Harris Patterson 912-670-0222
Livestock Wanted 678-634-6710 Home for retired horses; pasture, barn, free choice hay; daily feeding, care; stable license 11940. Joe Douglas Villa Rica 770-402-6590
Poultry/Fowl For Sale
If you have any questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Mallard ducks must be at least three generations removed from the wild before they can be advertised. Advertisers must include this information in ads, or they will not be published.
15 Red Sex Link laying hens, 6 months old, just started laying beautiful, brown eggs, $15 each. Paul Frantz Abbeville ellenfrantz@windstream.net 229-4237350
15 varieties of peafowl for sale; 1 year and up, cocks and hens. Ray Watts Macon 478-743-6692
2-year-old layer hens and roosters (quantity 11); Black Australorps, Buff Orpingtons, Golden Comets,$10 each. Jeff Speed Cleveland Speedyx4@ gmail.com 404-285-6960
2013 hatch, $45 each; pairs and trios, late hatch males, some trios, $35 each. Jack R Jenkins Harlem 706-556-3261
3-month-old rooster for sale, $2. Wendy Foster Dallas 404-313-5906
Baby chicks, brown egg layers, now available, professional, we ship; NPIP certified. Bob Berry Ray City bobsbiddies@live.com 229-455-6437
Barred rock pullets, hatched Nov. 25; also grown guienas, Thai and shamo gamefowl. Brian Fowler Monroe 678-
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 404-679-7319. Advertisers selling quail must be accompanied by a copy of the commercial quail breeder's license. Ads for quail that do not have this license will not be published. For information on these licenses, call the Georgia Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Resources Division at 770918-6401. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the permit/license needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the permit/license can be attached using the attachments button.
5,000 fligh-conditioned Bobwhite quail, $3.50 each, and Chukars, $6 each. Thomas Findley Box Springs 706-575-3889 706-326-2186
Bobwhite quail, flight conditioned, now available for the 2013 season, call for pricing. Rembert Hancock Fairmount 404-376-0550 706-337-5711
Bobwhite quail, weathered and flight conditioned, great flyers, ready for 2013-2014 season, $3.75. Gene Clark Buena Vista 706-575-7848
Bobwhite, Coturnix quail eggs, $70 for 100, $140 for 500, $270 for 1,000. Willie
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 404-656-3667. For information on other hoofed stock, excluding llamas and buffalo, contact the Georgia Department of Natural Resources at 770-761-3044.
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Want Longhorn-sired dairy heifers and Nubian or Oberhasli doelings, reasonably priced; can bottle feed. Gerald Garnto Maysville 706-335-2226
Want polled billy from twin or triplet, 1 year or less, meat type. W. W. Abney Franklin 770-253-0263
Want to buy Nubian mix buck, reasonably priced. Brannon Chitwood Clarkesville chitwood991@windstream. net 706-754-9740 706-499-2036
Wanted: 8 to 20 beef calves, and /or 4 to 8 bred cows. C.E. Mccallie Chickamauga 423-413-3124
$20 cow hay, $25 horse hay, 4x4 rolls, fescue hay, storage in barn, rain-free, fertilized. Walter Henson Ellijay 706264-4477
$25; 2013 4x5 rolls; fescue, in field. Bill Garrett Covington 770-787-1012
$4 square bales, $30 and $35, 4x5 round bales; 2013 fertilized fescue mix. Robert Greene Roopville 770-324-4323
$4; 2013 fescue, orchardgrass hay, horse quality; heavy square bales, fertilized, limed, rain-free. Lamar Long Chatsworth 706-695-5906
$40; 4x5 rolls, bermuda, net-wrapped in barn; fescue, $30. Terry Stephenson Commerce 706-207-5279
$50; 4x5 rolls,1,000 pounds; fescue, orchard mix; sprayed, fertlized, limed, high quality, horse hay, barn-kept; cut 2013. Richard Surles Clayton Rsurles@ flightline.com 770-301-1924
$50; large rolls of bermuda, fescue mix; in barn, horse quality; can deliver. Jay Townsend Monroe 678-618-6992
`13 bermuda: Cow, goat, hay; also mulch hay, square bales only; delivery available. Jimmy Waldrep Forsyth 478994-0701
`13 coastal bermuda hay; horse quality, UGA soil specs, square, 4x5 round bales in barn, delivery, stack available. Olin Trammell Forsyth 478-994-6463 478-960-7239
`13 coastal, russell, 4x6 John Deere net-wrapped, stored in barn, horse quality, $50; can deliver. William Stevens Macon 478-214-1257
`13 Tift 44 round rolls, barn stored,
2013 alicia hay, shelter kept, 4x5 rolls, 900 to 1,000 pounds, $50; Appling County area. Kelly Turner Baxley 912339-2914
2013 alicia, coastal and bahia varieties, 4x5 net-wrapped, cow quality, delivery available. Robert Harris Patterson 912670-1133
2013 bermuda and fescue; 4x5 round bales, $35 and $40. Patrick Broder Stockbridge 404-401-6134
2013 bermuda hay, 5x4.5, $35 each. Scott Stephens Wrightsville 478-2328114
2013 bermuda hay, coastal and Tift 85, net-wrapped, 4x5 bales. Scott Barber Alapaha 229-468-0632
2013 bermuda hay, round and square bales, horse quality, fertilized, sprayed for weeds, Mike Dubose Junction City 706-366-1665
2013 Bermuda hay,Tiff 44, $4/bale for sale, well-fertilized, clean, keep in barn. Helmut Cawthon Rome 706-346-9064
2013 bermuda mix hay, 4x5 rolls, $45 per roll and $5 for square. Tommy Scoggins Dallas 404-732-6538
2013 bermuda or bermuda, orchard mix, $20; well-fertilized and sprayed, real tight; 4x5 net-wrapped. L. Partain Elberton 706-283-5058
2013 bermuda, 4x5 rolls, horse quality, barn-kept, $50 per roll. Steve Matthews Griffin 404-247-9789
2013 bermuda, fescue horse quality, 4x5 net wrapped rolls, $20, $30, $40; square bales $5. Ronald Campbell Rockmart 706-936-3294
2013 bermuda; horse quality, square
Livestock Handling 602-7291
Strickland Pooler stricklandgamebird.
Beautiful, healthy Australorp rooster, 8 com 912-748-5769
well-fertilized, horse quality; leave mes- bales, $6, fertilized, rain-free, in barn; sage. John Hanington Sasses 229-995- 4x5 round bales, $55 for bermuda. Guy
months old, $20; leave message 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Ginger Marine Ellijay 706-2731128
Bourbon Red turkeys; 2013 hatch, 4 months to 8 months old; 14 hens and
Jumbo Wisconsin Bobwhite quail eggs, $55 for 100, $198 for 600, $300 for 1,000; flight year-round; mead5345@ wadleyquailfarm.com. Raymond Meadows Wadley 478-252-5345
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
16-foot Gooseneck livestock trailer for sale. Howard Burnette Mershon 912288-0091
5446
2012 alicia, lots off 25, 4x5 bales at get-rid-of prices. Michael Joyner Perkins ourbiz08@yahoo.com 706-5519022
Seals Hiram 770-942-3759
2013 coastal bermuda hay, 4x5 netwrapped rolls, sprayed for weeds, horse quality, stored in barn. Fred Sackett Butler 478-952-5399
a few toms. George Pawlowski Silver Creek 706-766-2727
Poultry/Fowl Wanted
20-foot Gooseneck brand stock trailer, excellent condition, canvas top, $4,175.
Breeder peahens: Spalding pied and Looking for a Buff rooster around 8 J.L. Thomas Rooperville 404-272-2881
purple B/S white-eyed pied, $75 each. Kevin Daft Decatur 404-325-9969
Game chickens; Bates hatch, Blue-
months to 1 year old. Charles Nutt Hephzibah nuttdeerhunter@yahoo.com 706-793-0571
2005 Classic aluminum bumper pull trailer, like new, $7,800. Dennis Jordan Temple 678-977-2063
face, Leiper hatch, Bates blacks, NPIP certified flock, from proven brood stock. John Beard Nicholson 903-312-8278
Grown Muscovy ducks, $20 per pair. Eugene Johns Waycross 912-283-3332
Looking for one Belgian Bearded d'uccle rooster (Bantam); also a pair of good Butchers' Morgan Whitehackles, Wingate Brown-Reds. Matt Hewell Alma 912-286-0234
24-foot Gooseneck brand stock trailer, two cut gates, 2x 8,000 pounds, oil both axles, canvas top, near-new tires, $6,300. Robert Allen Grantsville 678923-6159
Laying hens, Golden Laced, columbian rock and others, $10. Hoyt Howard Cumming 770-887-2039
One or two Chinese brown female geese wanted. Gary Todd Bowdon 770258-3533
Boar boxes to haul sheep, goats, etc., 4x4x4 with safety lock door. J. D Conger Norman Park 229-769-3253
PUBLIC NOTICE:
Georgia Agricultural Commodity Commission for Beef
A public hearing will be held at 10 a.m. on Feb. 28, 2014, at the Macon State Farmers Market, Room 3 in Macon, Ga. The Farmers Market address is 2055 Eisenhower Parkway, Macon, GA 31206.
The purpose of the hearing will be for the Georgia Agricultural Commodity Commission for Beef to receive comments on the proposed Marketing Order for Beef.
affected producers; (12) Explain that the Commissioner of Agriculture shall administer and enforce the Order; (13) Authorize the Commission to expend funds; (14) Authorize the Commission to enter into contracts; and (15) Require all affected persons to keep records and make the same available for inspection by the Commissioner.
Muscovy ducks, healthy, 2013 hatch; started laying, pairs $37.50; trios $50; singles $18 each, various colors. Joseph Lashley LaGrange 404-274-1702
O.E. Bantams for sale or trade, starting at $10/pair, Silverduckwing, Fawn duckwing, Spangles Silver blues, Brown
One Wood Duck drake, two Mandarin females, one white female peahen; one female Silver Pheasant. John Herndon Grayson 404-697-7179
Pigeons, any type; will trap pigeons for free; will pick up pigeons for free. Gregg Leonard Roswell 404-580-6268
Portable milking machine for one or two cows, $1,000. Mervin Rudolph Resaca 706-602-4608
Stock trailer; 16 feet, two-inch hitch escape door, rear gate, spare tire, two 3,500-pound axles with brakes, $1,700. Dennis Keebaugh Fayetteville 770-
Synopsis and main features: The Commission is proposing to
establish a Marketing Order for Beef. Said Marketing Order would: (1) Define necessary terminology; (2) Establish beef as the affected product for the Order; (3) Establish the entire state of
At the hearing, anyone may present data, make a statement or comment or offer a point of view or an argument orally. Participants at the hearing are required to register upon arrival. Oral statements should be concise to permit everyone an opportunity to be heard.
Reds & many more. Johnny Reece SQ Cochin, Japanese Wyandottes, 487-2229
Georgia as the affected area of produc- Interested individuals may also submit
Rabbits Woodstock 770-905-2014 Old English Bantams from show stock, BB reds, Old English quail, Blue Splash, Blacks, Blues, Brassy Backs, Blue Brassy Backs, Opals. Mack McBurnett Tyrone 770-487-2233
Silkie, Polish, Frizzle, and Fantail, house pigeons,etc. Brian Blair Loganville 678537-1187
Wanted: 10 barred rock laying hens no older than 2 years, please contact me with a price. Travis Ellington Senoia 678-787-9341
WW sweep tub; good condition, $2,500; Sioux manual head gate, $1,000. Jim Gore Griffin 770-5278183
Old English Bantams; Royal Palm turkeys, black shouldered peafowl and more. Danny Ryals Milledgeville 478804-3868 478-452-8497
Wanted: Cuban chickens (Cuban Headhunters). Don Edge Soperton 478697-2618
Wanted: Egyptian goose, companion
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Dutch: registered gray doe bred to proven registered buck; also younger
Rhode Island pullets, $10; 16 weeks, for lonely female who's lost her mate, rabbits, some show quality. Katie Huf-
tion; (4) Explain that the scope of operation includes research, promotion and education; (5) Explain the extent of operations; (6) Set the term of operation for a three-year period; (7) Direct that the method of approval be by referendum of affected producers; (8) Set a 30day time period for approval by referendum; (9) Clarify that the Order would apply to all producers of bovine animals within this state; (10) Set an assessment and levy of $1 per head on bovine ani-
written comments concerning the proposed Marketing Order by mail or email to Nathan Wilson, Commodities Promotion Manager, Georgia Department of Agriculture, 19 MLK Jr. Dr. S.W., Room 324, Atlanta, GA 30334; or email nathan.wilson@ agr.georgia.gov.
Written comments must be received no later than 4:30 p.m. EST Feb. 28, 2014, in order to be considered by the Commission.
Those desiring further information may contact Nathan Wilson at 404-656-
$13. James Cagle Rome 706-266- female preferred. Lynn Mashburn Cum- ford Cleveland 706-219-4766 706-969-
1218
ming ford_mashburn@msn.com 770- 1953
mals sold for $100 or more effective 3678. This notice is given in compliance July 1, 2014, and explain other methods with the Georgia Administrative Procedure
Rhode Island Red and Dominiques, 887-9056
For Sale: I have spotted and velvet
of finance; (11) Explain the methods Act, O.C.G.A. 50-13-4 and the Georgia
turkeys and Ringneck pheasants. Ger- Wanted: Pair, trio Cochin bantams and bunnies; males and females; call for
for collection of the assessment and Agricultural Commodities Promotion Act
ald Hayes Flowery Branch 470-208- Sebrights and pair, trio Rouen ducks. prices. Cassey Hand Tifton cassey.
levy which shall be collected from all O.C.G.A. 2-8-23.
030
Darren Wilkes Demorest 706-768-2683 clement@gmail.com 229-325-9042
Wednesday, FEBRUARY 5, 2014
farmers and consumers market BulletinPage 9
2013 coastal bermuda hay, 4x5 rolls, 2013 horse quality, barn-stored, coast- Alicia, bermuda; round hay bales, well- Quality coastal 1,000-pound net- Persimmon trees: American Common
well-fertilized, $25 per roll, delivery avail- al bermuda, $5, square bale. Bill Mc- fertilized, net-wrapped, excellent quality. wrapped in barn, will deliver. Kirk Little "deer magnet" bareroot, dormant two to
able. Tracy Watson Buena Vista 229- Daniel Elko 478-542-4200
Larry Cox Waynesboro 706-829-4174 Lyons 912-326-3512
seven feet; $20 to $75 each. Mike Barr
928-7625
2013 horse quality, round, square Bermuda and bahia, 4x5 round, in Round bales, fescue, orchardgrass, Fairmount 770-714-4868
2013 coastal bermuda hay, horse qual- bales; bermuda, coastal mix; quantity barn, never wet, fertilized, $30 and $35; 4x4, rain-free, $18; delivery available. Southern apples: Stayman, Bucking-
ity, $4.50 per bale at barn, delivery avail- discounts; cow hay. Don Fulkerson Mil- delivery available. Jim Sibley Mableton Ron Smith LaFayette jpetrel@floorsoft. ham, Old Fashion Limbertwig; grafted
able. Glenn Brinson Tarrytown 912- ner 770-584-9602
404-434-8081 404-434-8081
com 706-537-8841
on 111 rootstock, $20 each, two to
288-5960
2013 horse quality; fescue, ochard- Bermuda, fescue mix hay; 4x5 tightly Shelled corn, $6 for 40-pound bag. three-foot height. Charles Adams West
2013 coastal bermuda or Tift 44 ber- grass, bermuda mix, tested, 4x5 net- net-wrapped round rolls, $30 to $40; Janie Willis Dahlonega 706-867-5177 Point 678-313-1873
muda hay, horse quality, fertilized, 4x5 wrapped rolls and square bales. Randall 2012 hay $20 to $25, delivery available Shelled yellow feed corn, sold by
Ag Seed/Plants Wanted
rolls in barn, $40 each. Edmond Strick- Carter Cedartown 770-546-1319
Jack Jenkins Athens 706-286-4438
the barrel or bag. Robert Montgomery
land Perry 478-214-7061 478-957-1039 2013 net-wrapped bermuda; horse Bermuda, fescue, horse quality; Reynolds 478-847-2356
Wanted: leek plants and instructions
2013 coastal bermuda square bales $6 in barn, round $35. Leonard Kinsley Perry 478-714-9900
hay, 4x5.5 bales; well-fertilized, weedfree, $50 per bale. Russ Walters Barnesville 404-444-0274
squares $5, 4x5 net-wrapped $50; cow hay $30 roll; quantity discount. Rex Palmer Auburn 770-867-9589
Square baled coastal bermuda hay, does have crabgrass mixed in; fertilized and rain-free, delivery available. Barry
for growing. Myrtle Russell Bonaire robertrussell@bellsouth.net 478-9231951
Flowers For Sale 2013 coastal bermuda square bales; 2013 russell bermuda hay, 4x5 rolls, Bermuda; small squares, mixed, $2.50 McCart Jackson 678-432-0423 770-
horse quality, $5 per bale; 15 bale minu- $45, well-limed and fertilized. Edwin per bale. Gordon Kula Armuchee 319- 957-2270
mum, approximately 125 bales avail- Childs Pine Mountain 706-663-0575 480-7300
Top-quality 2013 tested alicia hay; If you have questions about this cat-
able. Scott Chambers Braselton 706- 706-341-8118
Cattle quality hay, bermuda, fescue round or square, sheltered; delivery egory, call 404-656-3722.
983-0603
2013 rye mix, horse quality, 4x6 round mix, 4x5 rolls, $20 per roll; approximate- available, free storage through March 2013 Sweet William, Foxglove, pop-
2013 coastal bermuda, 4x5 rolls, 950 bales, $50; coastal, crabgrass, $45, ly 200 rolls. Curtis Collier Athens 709- 2014. Heath Pittman Vidalia 912-293- pies, Larkspur, hollyhocks, maypop, $1
pounds, fertilized, $25 to $35, hauling stored in dry barn, cow hay, $25 to $35. 613-2922 706-540-3993
2535 912-537-9721
per packet, SASE. Sara O'Shields PO
available. Bruce Baxter Buena Vista Tony Smith Monticello 706-476-2051 Cheyanne II bermudagrass hay; square Wheat for feed or planting; pick up Box 185 Tate 30177 770-735-3657
229-938-2648
2013 spring fescue, bermuda mix, 5x5 bales, $5.75 in barn; delivery available, at grain bin near Douglas. Max Carter 25 red spider lily bulbs, $20, free ship-
2013 coastal bermuda, horse and cow rain-free, stored in barn, $40 per roll; 10.2 percent protein. Josh Banta Dallas Douglas 912-384-5974
ping. Jean Metzger Macon 478-737-
hay, 4x5 round, square and mulch hay. Wrens Bruzzi rye, $45 per roll. Jimmy jdbanta@hughes.net 770-443-8840
Yellow field corn 2012 crop, $12/ 100 2404
Larry Morgan Lizella 478-972-5977 Neisler Cumming 770-889-1719
Coastal bermuda and bahia mixled, lbs., bring your barrels/containers. Sta- Achimenes (widows tears) rhizomes,
478-781-1990
2013 square and round bale; fescue 4x6; 1,200-pound rolls, stored under cey Burden Comer 706-783-5840 706- order now for best selection of various
2013 coastal bermuda; 4x5 bales, $40; mix hay, horse quality and mulch. E W shelter, $30 each, also peanut hay. Terry 714-7194
colors. D. Hinson Yatesville 770-468-
bahia $25, in barn; delivery available. Stephen Bell Milledgeville 478-4148043
2013 coastal hay, 4x5 net-wrapped, sheltered; we can load semi-truck, call for details. Billy Helton Warthen 478232-2849
2013 coastal, alicia mix, 4x5, stored in barn, net-wrapped. B. Dan Harrell Eastman 478-231-8321
Cochran Cumming 770-887-2675
2013 square fescue bales, $4, horse quality, fertilized, rain-free, in barn. Bruce Tatum Dawsonville 404-7877520
2013 Tift 44 and 85 hay; horse quality square and round bales, delivery available. Durand Deal Tifton 229-388-5054
2013 Tift 44 bermuda, 4x5 rolls, rainfree, horse quality, fertlized, in barn,
Dockery Leesburg 229-343-1849
Coastal bermuda hay, $35 and $40 per roll; delivery available. Wymann Hartley Kathleen 478-954-0324 478-987-5835
Coastal bermuda; square bale, $3 per bale. Steve Allen Butler 336-314-4841
Coastal, bahia mix; 800- to 1,000-pound bales, baled with Claas baler, $60 inside, $35 to $45 outside; $25 mulch. Coy Baker Loganville 770-
Feed, Hay And Grain Wanted
Needed: round bales of horse hay in Conyers; Flat Shoals, Klondike Road. Eddie & Jan Willis Conyers 678-6887382
Square bales, horse hay, delivered to rescue farm in Grayson; 200 bales or fewer. Terry Russell Grayson petparty1@aol.com 770-682-8670
6254
Apricot foxglove plants: should bloom this year; 10 plants, $20, includes postage. Margaret Sloan Crawfordville mhsloan@nu-z.net 706-456-1058
Boxwoods, several sizes, a lot of them, in ground, we dig, bring burlap. Robert Crowder Greenville 706-663-8276
Boxwoods: American, old English, Korean (Harlandi) daylilies: Stella DeOro,
Ag Seed For Sale 2013 Coastal, Fescue mix; well-fertil- $35 per roll, also cow hay. Mike Keesee 466-4609
ized; 4x4 rolls in barn, $30 or $20 per Monroe 404-472-5416
Delivering good quality hay, bermu-
Happy Returns; please leave message. Faye Chambers Yatesville 706-472-
roll, stored outside, will load. James Pierce Weaverly Hall 404-372-8631 678-610-6621
2013 fertilized square bale hay; timothy, orchard mix, $6 at barn, delivery available. C.C. Hemphill Blairsville 706-
2013 Tift 85, alicia hay, 4x5 rolls, wellfertilized, weed-free, net-wrapped in barn, field, $40 per roll. Stephen Wilson Wray 912-592-8655
2013 Tift bermuda hay; square and round bales, horse quality, stored in
dagrass, 4x5 tight rolls, $400 a load; delivered; 15 rolls horse quality hay available. David Rackley Lexington 706-410-5784
Feed oats; bright; $5 per bushel. James Gaston Americus gaston7460@
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
3371
Callaloo (Caribbean spinach) seeds; large leaf callaloo, no bitterness, will reseed, SASE, $1. William Hayes 294 Old Speer Road Stockbridge 30281 770474-3082
745-4414
barn, delivery available. Dick Stratton bellsouth.net 229-924-7460
lot advertised. Ads submitted without Castor bean, loofah gourd seeds, 25
2013 fertilized, horse quality, square Locust Grove 770-842-9317 770-914- Fescue and rye hay; 4x5 round bales, this information will not be published. for $3 or 100 for $10; cash, SASE, two
bales, bermuda, $5; fescue, $4, rain- 6153
$25 per roll. Joe Higginbotham Elber- If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, stamps. J. Shelnutt Box 1212 Logan-
free, barn-kept. James Wilson Elberton 2013 Tifton 44 bermuda; horse qual- ton 706-283-1204
this report needs to be sent along ville 30052
706-371-2485
ity, fertilized, weed and crabgrass-free, Fescue hay and bermuda hay, 6x4 with it. For ads submitted online, the Daffodils: White Mt. Hood, old time
2013 fescue and 2013 fescue mixed 4x5 rolls $70; coastal bermuda $60. Tim string-wrapped, 5x4 net-wrapped; report can be attached using the at- yellow; tiny jonquils, blue bells, yellow
hay, good quality, at barn, $4.50; Walton County.. Gordon Cown Monroe 770207-6983
2013 Fescue mix, hay, 5x4, $35; 4x4, $25. Bob Pruitt Villa Rica 770-445-2423
2013 fescue mixed hay; 4x5 rolls, barn stored; delivery available. Jimmy Payne Rockmart 404-557-8448
2013 fescue mixed, 4x5 rolls, $25 per
Hunter Conyers 770-483-8712 770922-6653
2013 wheat, rye mix; horse quality, $40 per 4x5 roll; fescue mix, $25 per roll, $3 per bale. Tim Willis Aragon 706-3318177 706-235-6222
2013, 5x6, alicia bermuda hay, $40, delivery available. Dustin Ward Ashburn 229-445-0876
horse and cow quality. Jake Holliman Comer 706-338-5617
Fescue hay, 4x5 rolls, $30; well-fertilized, no rain, stored in barn, 300 available. William McDonald Jefferson 706713-7176 706-713-6222
Fescue hay, heavily fertilized, rain-free, horse quality, square bale, $4, in barn. Nolan Haygood Dawsonville 706-265-
tachments button. Seed lots must be uniform and cannot exceed 400 50-pound bags. Certain varieties of seed are protected from propagation unless they are grown as a class of certified seed. These include Florida 304, Coker 9152, Coker 9835, 6738 soybean, Haskell, Bennings and others. For questions regarding certified seed, call the Department's Seed Divi-
cannas. tall blue phloux, mole bean seed; shrubbery. E. Beach Duluth 770476-1163
Four-inch perennials, 350 varieties, $1.50 each including Helleborus; onegallon grafted Japanese maples, $20 to $25; display garden. Selah Ahlstrom Jackson 770-775-4967
Giant cosmos seeds, six to eight feet,
roll or trade for heifers. Darrel Davis Min- 2013; 4x5 rolled bermuda mixed, limed 2361
sion at 404-656-3635.
not unusual, 60-plus seeds, $1 plus
eral Bluff 706-851-5909
and fertilized, net-wrapped, $35; deliv- For Sale: mixed bermuda, fescue hay,
2013 fescue, bermuda mix hay; 4x5 ery available. Todd Perkins Newnan 4x5 rolls, stored in shed, $35; mulch hay,
Ag Plants for Sale
SASE. Ira Bray 70 Wilkes Ct. Newnan 30263 770-253-0392
round, $40; square bales, $4.50; mulch 678-699-6256
stored outside, $20. Harry McCord Car- If you have questions regarding this Hellebores (Lenten roses); mature two-
hay, square bales, $2.75, round $25. 2013; 4x5 rolls, bermuda and bermu- rollton 770-830-0005
category, call 404-656-3722.
gallon size, $10; new buds, ready to
Ricky Anderson Taylorsville 404-402- da, fescue mix, fertilized, barn-stored, Hammermilled, ground corn for sale, Alicia, bermuda, coastal, Tift 44, 78, bloom. Mary Wenger Gainesville 770-
8470
$50 per roll. Jerry Watson Palmetto $40 per 55-gallon drum. Joab Bowen 85 sprigs for sale; also provide custom 287-0734
2013 fescue, bermuda mix; good hay, 770-855-3293 770-463-3200
Clermont 678-725-3523
planting and delivery. Chester Kight Hydrangeas, gardenias, crape myrtles,
net-wrapped in barn, fertilized, 4x5 roll, 2013; 4x5 rolls, fescue, bermuda mix; Hay in barn, 2,000, rain free, square Soperton 478-232-6122 478-290- dogwoods, Japanese maples, butter-
bales. Glen Whitley Bethlehem 770- net-wrapped, $30; will deliver $5 per bales; 300 round bales; sprayed, lime 5558
fly bush, fruit trees, pomegranate, lots
867-2718
bale, minimum 10, up to 20 miles. Joe fertilized mix coastal, Tifton 44. Gary Bermuda sprigs: alicia, coastal russell more; great prices, selections. Balaji
2013 fescue, bermuda, rye mixed, Akin Fayetteville 404-862-3857
Bagley Buford 770-231-2148
and Tift 85; also custom planting. Ron- Dommeti Conyers baladom7@hotmail.
4x5 rolls, good hay, stored outside, $20 2014 square bales; fescue, bermuda, Hay sale, large round bales; bermuda, nie Hart Guyton 912-665-2261
com 770-679-5125
each, inside stored, $25. Tim Bramlett mixed grasses, $3 to $4; round, 6x5.5, fescue mix, in the barn, $50. Carter Bermudagrass sprigs; Alicia, Rus- Japanese maple, azaleas, gardenia,
Greensboro 706-453-4275
$25 to $45, volume discount, delivery Lumsden Williamson 678-672-0725 sell, Coastal,Tift 85, 44, 78, also cus- hosta, hydrangea, roses. Linda Waites
2013 fescue, clover, 32 square bales available. Jim Robinson Good Hope Horse quality bermuda hay; 25,000 tom planting available. Floyd Knowles Fairburn 770-964-6414
left, good hay, dry in barn; take all, $3 770-207-4700
square bales, 500 round bales; 500 McRae 229-315-0409 229-362-4855 Lenten Roses (Hellebores) ready to
each. Louis Beal Ellijay 770-344-8527 22 rolls, 4x5 fescue and bermuda round peanut hay. Paul Harris Odum Blueberry plants, Tifblue, $2 each, bloom, $4 each; already in bloom $6;
2013 fescue, orchardgrass, horse mixed, fertilized, $25 each, if take all. 912-294-2470
three, four or five feet tall, 2 to 3 years Pachysandra, 50 plants for $10. Carol
quality, well-fertilized, rain-free, 4x4, in Joe Cronan McDonough 770-957-4761 Large round bales of hay, mixed fertil- old, February shipment. Sidney Roland Olson Marietta 770-998-1076
barn, $30. James Payne Suches 706- 4x5 2013 net-wrap John Deere rolls; ized fescue, bermuda mixed grass, $30 Demorest 706-754-6700
Liriope, mondo grass, $2, gallon pot.
838-4338
2013 fescue; fertilized, square bales, $3.50, 4x5 round bales, $20 stored out-
ryegrass and bermuda mix; horse, cow quality, $25 and up; delivery available. Ronnie Thomas Bogart 706-207-7366
per bale. Tom Hadden Sparta 478-4564422
Mixed grass hay, 4X6, 1000+ lbs.,
Citrus rootstock, trifoliate; 12 to 18inch height.10 for $18 plus shipping and handling; Georgia only. Robert MGuinty
Barry Lackey Roswell 770-475-9216
Mexican sunflower, cleome, fouro-clocks, Shasta lily, touch-me-not,
side, $25 barn. Lee Gurley Rockmart leegurley@aol.com 770-684-7384
2013 fescue; round bales, $30; square bales, $5; delivery available. Chad Thomas Taylorsville 770-547-2594
2013 hay for sale; 100 large rolls, coastal bermuda, net-wrapped, $40 per roll. Morris Lively Collins 912-213-8249
2013 horse hay, bermuda, fescue mixed, 4x5, heavy net-wrapped, $30 to $35; cow hay, $20; fertilized, sprayed, no rain. Lori Catron Douglasville 404213-8594
4x5 bales of coastal, bahia hay, $35 per bale; hay located in Perry, Hawkinsville area. Frank Scott Hawkinsville 478-284-1950
4x5 rolls, 2013 fescue hay in shed. Everett Panter Blue Ridge 706-455-7227
4x5, 2013 netwrap John Deere rolls; ryegrass, bermuda mix; horse, cow quality, $25 and up; delivery available. Josh Pennino Watkinsville 706-3403146
5x5 unwrapped fescue, bermuda mixed grass; round bales, $40; square
some fair, some good, $15 to $35. Rock Tanner Harrison 478-278-1741
Mixed grass hay; baled, rain free; 300-plus big rolls, 5x6, $50 each; you haul. Hardy Edwards Winterville hmeherefords@windstream.net 706-7149012
Net-wrapped bermuda round bale hay; covered, $40 each. Wade Simpson McDonough 404-732-7255
Oat hay, fertilized, horse quality, 5x5 round bales, stored in barn; Morgan
Rochelle mcapple1@windstream.net 229-365-2384 229-276-5852
Fig trees: sweet brown turkey variety; 1-year, 2-year and 3-year-old trees; can ship. John Jeffords Homerville 912520-0431
Figs: 3 varieties, Mulberries, $5, selfpollinating Issai, Kiwi, $6, sweet shrub, $3, Dewberries, raspberries, $2 & much more. Carla Houghton Marietta 770428-2227
Georgia Jet vine sweet potatoes for
money plant, marigolds, $1 each; SASE. B. Savage 3017 Atkins Dr. Gainesville 30507
Reseeding petunias mixed; Angel Trumpets, double purple or double yellow, $1 per packet with SASE. Carolyn Arnold 644 Lynn Ave. Jefferson 30549
Seeds: altheas (Rose of Sharon), Jerusalem cherry, yucca, hibiscus, fouro-clocks, orange cosmos; cash, $1 per teaspoon, SASE. Gail Wilson 1020 B. Wilson Rd. Commerce 30529
2013 horse hay, square bales; bermuda, fescue mix; barn stored, sprayed and fertilized, $5, delivery available. Kenny
bales, $4. Ray Gilbert Bishop 760-7695820 706-296-4360
6x5 rolls, coastal, net-wrapped, $25,
County near Madison. Frank Eaton Buckhead 706-342-0727 706-4740689
draws; good genetics. Rodney Mullis Alma rlmconst@atc.cc 912-614-9140 912-632-8348
Zinnias (old maids) $3 per cup; cash, SASE, extra postage. Mildred Bryan 916 Elm Dr. Monroe 30655 770-267-
Sargent Rockmart 770-490-1227
4x4 rolls, bermuda, bahia, dallas mixed, Peanut butter-flavored shelled corn for Green sugar cane for sale, 0.55 cents 3098
2013 horse quality hay, bermuda mix under barn, $15. Jim Griggs Washing- deer or wild hogs, bags or drum. Gary per stalk; Monday through Saturday, 8
square bales, $3.50 if more than 100 ton griggsrealty@gmail.com 706-401- Jones Woodbury 706-326-0042
a.m. to 5 p.m. Harold Barnes Douglas
bales, $4 if fewer. David Welch Carroll- 9547
Quality 2013 coastal bermuda hay, 912-381-1479 912-384-7835
ton Dwelch@bhroof.com 770-352-4591 Alicia bermuda, 4x4 rolls, $30; bermu- 4x5.5 net-wrapped round bales, prices Pecan trees: taking orders now for
2013 horse quality round bales, fes- da square bales, $4.50; bermuda, fes- range from $25 to $45, delivery avail- January 2015; call for avaliable varities.
cue, alicia and mixed hay. JoAn Young cue 4x4, $25, 4x5 $35 in barn. Bill Wells able. Chad Hendrix Collins 912-237- Andy Smith Hawkinsville 478-225-
Locust Grove 770-722-9770
Gay 404-597-6531 770-463-3775
3430
8433
page 10
farmers and consumers market Bulletin
Wednesday, FEBRUARY 5, 2014
Bulletin Calendar
Feb. 5 Registration deadline for UGA College of Veterinary Medicine VetCAMP 2014 To be held July 13 19 Athens, Ga. 706-542-8411
Feb. 15 Houston County Young Farmers Market Swine Show Georgia National Fairgrounds Perry, Ga. 478-988-6312
Registration deadline for Inspired Gardner Symposium To be held Feb. 22 Atlanta, Ga. 404-876-5859
Georgia State Rabbit and Cavy Association Show Georgia National Fairgrounds Perry, Ga. 706-639-7379
Registration deadline for Food Safety
Poultry Show and Swap Meet
for the Fresh Produce Industry
Coweta County Fairgrounds
To be held Feb. 18 - 20
Newnan, Ga.
Athens, Ga.
770-900-1669
706-583-0992
East Metro Beekeepers Short Course
Feb. 7
Rockdale County Cooperative Extension
Deadline to enter Flavor of Georgia Food Conyers, Ga.
Product Contest
770-278-7373
706-583-0347
Feb. 15 16
Soybean/Small Grain Expo
President's Day Kick Off
Georgia National Fairgrounds
Paint Horse Show
Perry, Ga.
Georgia National Fairgrounds
706-542-3793
Perry, Ga.
727-430-0515
Feb. 7 9
Georgia Wildlife Federation 2014
Feb. 16 22
Great Outdoors Show
National FFA Week
Georgia National Fairgrounds
Perry, Ga.
Feb. 18
770-787-7887
FFA Day at the Capitol
Feb. 8 FFA State CDEs at Fort Valley
Georgia Iris Society Meeting Northlake Barbara Loar Library Tucker, Ga. 678-583-8603
Asian Dumplings & Pot Stickers Hands-On by Chinese Southern Belle Cook's Warehouse Midtown Atlanta, Ga. 404-494-0088
Feb. 10 Egg Candling Class Macon State Farmers Market Macon, Ga. 229-386-3489
Public hearing on proposed Pecan Assessment Referendum Tift County Extension Office Tifton, Ga. 404-656-3678
Feb. 11 Egg Candling Class Appling County Cooperative Extension Office Baxley, Ga. 912-367-8130
Southeast Georgia Master Cattlemen's Program (week 4) Johnson County Ag Center Wrightsville, Ga. 478-552-2011
Georgia Farm Bureau Day at the Capitol Georgia State Capitol Atlanta, Ga. 1-800-342-1192
Feb. 13 UGA 22nd Annual Focus on EPDs Bull Sale UGA Livestock Instructional Arena Athens, Ga. 229-776-4383
Egg Candling Class Tift County High School Agriscience Center Tifton, Ga. 229-386-3489
Third Annual Unmanned Systems in Precision Agriculture Conference UGA-Tifton Campus Conference Center Tifton, Ga. 404-876-6120
Feb. 14 Houston County Young Farmers Beef Cattle Show Georgia National Fairgrounds Perry, Ga. 478-988-6312
Southeast Georgia Master Cattlemen's Program (week 5) Johnson County Ag Center Wrightsville, Ga. 478-552-2011
Georgia Pork Congress Georgia Farm Bureau Macon, Ga. 229-246-8297
Registration deadline for Precision Agriculture Workshop UGA-Tifton NESPAL Tifton, Ga. yiorgos@uga.edu
Feb. 18 - 20 Food Safety for the Fresh Produce Industry University of Georgia Athens, Ga. 706-583-0992
Feb. 19 22 Georgia Junior National Livestock Show Georgia National Fairgrounds Perry, Ga.
Feb. 20 Georgia Junior Livestock Foundation Meet & Greet Georgia National Fairgrounds Perry, Ga. 800-726-2474
Feb. 20 22 Georgia National Rodeo Georgia National Fairgrounds Perry, Ga. 478-987-3247
Feb. 21 22 17th Annual Georgia Organics Conference & Expo Jekyll Island, Ga. 678-702-0401
Feb. 22 4-H State Indoor Archery Match Georgia National Fairgrounds Perry, Ga. 706-542-5667
Forsyth Beekeepers School Sawnee Mountain Preserve Cumming, Ga. 770-888-9652
Inspired Gardner Symposium Atlanta Botanical Garden Atlanta, Ga. 404-876-5859
Feb. 22 23 Gypsy Vanner Horse Society Meeting Georgia International Horse Park Conyers, Ga. 770-860-4190
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.
Three old farm dinner bells, good con- 2013 pecans, one pound, $8. Vickie
Flowers Requiring dition, $275. Nathaniel Hester Madison Hogan Batesville 706-768-8417
Permits
706-342-2572
All-natural Black Angus beef; whole,
Walnut stump, hand dug, approxi- half, quarter; no antibiotics, steroids or
mately two feet diameter, $200; last hormones, February. David Sharpton
If you have questions regarding this chance for low price of $200. Rick Commerce 706-367-0876
category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers selling officially protected plants must have a permit to sell such plants. Ads submitted without this permit will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the permit needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the permit can be attached using the attachments button. For information on the sale or shipment of protected plants, call the Protected Plant Program at
Lance Blairsville 706-835-8655 WTB canning supplies, jars of all sizes.
Connie Grantham Douglas cat2grant@ yahoo.com 912-384-7067 912-3813923
Bees, Honey & Supplies
10- and five-frame bee hives, starting kit and some parts, call for more info. Eliseo Delia Mineral Bluff 706-4925119
Allen's 2013 shelled pecans, $8 per pound plus shipping. James Allen Thomaston 478-955-7106
Angus beef, no antibiotics or hormones; grain fed, dry-aged 17 days; quarters; www.sellfarm.com. Bill Farr Milner 770-584-9727
Black walnut meat, clean, 2013 crop, $17 per quart plus postage. Joan Spears Washington 706-678-2266
Collards, turnip greens, kale, mustard
770-918-6411.
10-frame hives for sale. Arthur Hudgins greens for sale. Ruth Brooks Roswell
Flowers Wanted
Cedartown 678-988-0794
770-993-2315
All-natural pure, unprocessed honey, Eggs: delicious free-range eggs for
Aporocactus (Rattail cactus). Nina sizes available: quart, $12; pint, $7; sale, GMO- and hormone-free, $3 per
Cooper Moultrie 229-985-1970
eight-ounce bear, $4. Jimmy Brown dozen. Alan Carr Jr Macon 478-538-
Looking for heirloom garden seeds, Jackson 770-775-0157 678-448-7781 1548 478-538-0461
dipper gourd seeds, sunflower seeds, Carpenter bee trap, handcrafted, re- For sale: sugar cane syrup; 1/5, $6.50;
flowering vine seeds. Candice Clark ally works, $20 each, three for $50; free can be shipped, call for info. Roy Holt
5422 Apison Rd Cohutta 30710 Can- shipping. Jack Snyder Hephizibah 706- Dudley 478-676-2760 478-697-2583
dice.clark326@gmail.com
554-7959
Fresh brown eggs, $3 per dozen;
Miscellaneous
Gallberry honey, voted best-tasting straight hens, they are on scratch feed honey 2010 in the state of Georgia, $46 and layer and bread. Amy Murray Fort
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
2x4 web floor trusses; 31 feet, nine inches, 18 inches tall, quantity 12, $50 per piece; Walton County. Brent Kitchens Oxford 678-794-4280
Atlanta Stove Works cast iron cook stove, cast iron fisher wood burning stove. Louann York Marietta 770-4351384 404-630-7297
Bells: farm, school, church, old ones, some parts also, I buy bells and parts or broken ones. Shane Burnett Covington 770-827-0999
Cotton wagon, 1800s; needs repair, $950 OBO; will donate to nonprofit, extra wheels, rims. Glenn Eskew Madison gteskew@gsu.edu 706-818-8815
E-Z insert wood stove, Model EZ36CT, excellent condition, new wiring and blowers, $350. Glenn Register Fayetteville 770-461-2842
Fireplace insert; wood burning heater, steel and cast iron, $1,100. Doris Casa
per gallon, shipping included, www. brucesnutnhoney.com. Ben Bruce Homerville 912-487-5001
Honey extractor wanted. Ganten Kirby Atlanta 404-285-0652
Miscellaneous bee keeping items; two-frame extractor, hives, frames, suit and veil; make offer. William Repzynski Gray 478-986-5829
Pick up swarms for free, removal from structures for a fee; will pick up, purchase unwanted beekeeping equipment. Dave Larson Mitchell 770-5429546
Queenless package bees, frames of brood and bees, starting February. Patrick Wilbanks Metter 912-286-7789
Taking orders for 2014, 5 frame nucs, $100 in your nuc box; $107 in my nuc boxes. Gary Gailey Cleveland gailey. gary@yahoo.com 678-316-9791
Taking orders for complete hives, early nucs, three-pound packages; good supply of Cypress woodware and beekeeping supplies. Bill Posey Carters-
Valley amyl712@live.com 478-3193909 478-808-0572
Jerusalem artichokes; Sunchoke bulbs, Georgia Grown on our farm, $5 per pound plus exact shipping. Elizabeth Camp Concord bethannecamp74@ bellsouth.net 770-530-6798
Mar-View Farms provides organically grown, grass-fed meat and animals; cattle, sheep, goats, and hogs available. Fernando Mendez Arabi MarviewFarms@gmail.com 229-401-8722
Naturally grown, Jerusalem artichoke, as low as $6 per pound, plus shipping. Buddy Hutto Warner Robins buddy260@cox.net 478-960-1329
Pecans, $8 per pound halves; wildflower honey for $7 per pound jar. Gary Greenlee Cumming 678-386-5962
Pork sausage or ground pork, USDA inspected, $3.50 per pound, farm fresh eggs, $3 per dozen. Frank Sutton Taylorsville suttonalpines@yahoo.com 770-684-5600
Homer 706-677-3338
ville 770-595-9332
Wanted: sweet cowhorn pepper
Heavy duty dehumidifier. Livadas Sylvania 912-425-9270
Debra
Taking orders for five-frame nucs, two frames honey, pollen, three frames
seeds. Carolyn Ledford Monroe ledford412@aol.com 770-267-3021
Hobart model 1612 meat slicer, good brood and full of bees with queen. Alex Water ground meal, whole wheat flour,
working order. Randy Mosteller Blairs- Zubkov Gwinnett 678-628-4878
grits, $5 for five pounds, plus postage;
ville 706-781-5117 I have a one-acre pond for your un-
Taking orders, five-comb nucs, hives, bees, spring delivery, empty hives, su-
also, grind your grain. Mike Buckner Junction City 706-269-3630
wanted waterfowl; guineas welcome, pers, raw honey, heavy extra equipment; We machine shell your pecans for 30
too. Ben Worley Kennesaw bengwor- closed Saturdays. Edward Colston Tay- cents per pound while you wait. Jody
ley@hotmail.com 770-653-4745
lorsville 770-382-9619
Glidewell Jackson 770-775-6592
Martin gourds for sale; also have ap- Three-pound Italian packages avail-
Herbs
ple and snowman gourds; pick up only, $2 each. Andy Carroll Rome roadrunner8861@yahoo.com 706-346-3142
Old hand-hewn log house, excellent condition, will deliver and set up anywhere. Kerry Hix Chatsworth 706-6966431
Power poles, 28 to 30 feet long, six to 80 feet long; excellent condition. Philip
able; Carniolan and Italian nucs available for March, April and May; pick-ups available. Ray Civitts Toccoa 706-4913124
Will remove honeybees from trees or structures; middle Georgia area. Bill Timmerman Dublin 478-290-1957
Things To Eat
Advertisers selling ginseng must be registered with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources and proof of this registration must be submitted with each ad. Ads for ginseng submitted without this registration will not be published. For more information, contact the Georgia Natural Heritage
Ivey Lizella 478-361-0956
Advertisers submitting ads using program at 770-918-6411.
Purplish-grey slate mantel, bench, the term "organic" require Certified Balloon pepper seed, 25 plus $2,
one-inch thick, hand-beveled, five feet Organic registration with the Geor- with SASE; free seeds with order.
long,12 inches wide, $400 OBO. Sam gia Department of Agriculture. Ads Luther Watkins P.O. Box 165 Statham
Saliba Jr. Marietta 770-514-1431
submitted without this registration 30666
PUBLIC NOTICE: Small cart, wagon and contents of
shop. Martha Puckett Talmo 770-5357175
will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the registration needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the registration can be attached using the attachments button. For information on this
Cuttings: rosemary, oregano; starts: garlic, taragon, tansy, coriander, chives, yarrow and jade; limited quantities. Sandra Butterworth Locust Grove 770229-9388
registration, call the Organic Program Peppers: Carolina reapers, hottest in
Georgia Pork Producers
Manager at 706-595-3408.
the world, $2 per pack with SASE. Ray
Association and National Pork Board
`13 Desirable pecan halves, $11 per Sapp 2386 Alexander Munnerlyn Rd pound plus postage; will crack, shell, Sardis 30456 separate pecans for 50 cents per Wildfire pepper tree, grows six feet tall;
The election of pork producer delegate candidates for the 2015 National Pork Producers (Pork Act) Delegate Body will take
pound. Russell Eaton Stockbridge 770- peppers year-round, seed, $2, SASE
506-2727
Brent Nichols P.O. Box 1881 Brunswick
`13 shelled pecans, mostly halves, 31521
place at 2 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2014, in conjunction with a Board of Directors meeting of Georgia Pork Producers Association in the auditorium of the Georgia Farm Bureau building in Macon, Ga. All Georgia pork producers are invited to attend. Any producer age 18 or older, who is a resident of the state and has paid all assessments due, may be considered as a delegate candidate or participate in the election. All eligible producers are encouraged to bring with them a sales receipt proving that hogs were sold in their name and the checkoff deducted.
For more information, contact Georgia Pork Producers Association, PO Box 1566, Bainbridge, GA, or call 229-246-8297.
$8.50 per pound, plus postage, bagged
Fish & Supplies
in freezer, leave message. Franklin Ea-
ton Flowery Branch 770-532-9340 Advertisers selling sterile trip-
770-532-6333
loid grass carp must submit a cur-
2013 black walnut meat, clean, $20/ rent Wild Animal License from the
qt., $6 postage. Lela Norrell 3903 Turner Georgia Department of Natural Re-
Rd. Gainesville 30506 770-532-3945 sources. Ads submitted without this
2013 black walnuts, $23 per quart; I license will not be published. If you
pay shipping. Odell Cripps Harlem 706- are faxing or mailing in an ad, the li-
556-9130
cense needs to be sent along with
2013 black walnuts; one quart, $20, it. For ads submitted online, the li-
shipping extra. Linda Robinson Bremen cense can be attached using the at-
770-537-3729
tachments button. For license infor-
2013 frozen blueberries, $3 per pound, mation, call 770-761-3044.
blackberries $7.50 per pound, musca- $25 to $30 per pound; Big Red Euro-
dines $1.50 per pound, foam box ship- peans, Red Wigglers and worm castings
ping extra. Davis Yaun Soperton day- plus shipping. Lew Bush Byron smoke-
aun@gmail.com 912-399-1988
fj@gmail.com 478-955-4780
Wednesday, FEBRUARY 5, 2014
farmers and consumers market BulletinPage 11
A-1 quality channel catfish fingerlings; graded, priced by size, accurate weights, counts, guaranteed live, healthy, immediate delivery. J.F. Gilbert Thomaston 706-648-2062 770-4680725
All sizes channel catfish; minnows, bluegill, shellcracker, hybrid bream, sterile carp, electrofishing, feeders, aeration. Keith and Kim Edge Soperton 478-697-8994
Bass, bluegill, crappie, catfish, redbreast, shellcracker, grass carp, shad, etc; most sizes, free delivery or pick up. Danny Austin Roberta 478-836-4938
Bass, bluegill, shellcrackers, hybrid bream, channel catfish fingerlings, sterile grass carp, delivery available. Tony Chew Manchester 706-846-3657
Crappie, grass carp, catfish, bluegill, shell-cracker, redbreast, hybrid bream and threadfin shad; delivery available. Paul Williams Hawkinsville 478-8923144
Grass carp, largemouth bass, bluegill, threadfin shad; delivery available; pond liming and electrofishing services. Roger Burge Richmond Hill 912704-9201
Red wigglers fishing worms; fish love them by the bait cup. Reed Adair Loganville 770-527-6064
Red Worms or Nightcrawlers, for composting or fishing. Tim Herron Dawsonville herronfarms@gmail.com 706-5314789
Trout: good stocking quality, various sizes, hatched and grown on our farm; delivery available. David Cantrell Ellijay 706-273-6199
Fertilizers & Mulches
2013 square bales, mulch hay, in barn, $1.50 per bale. Jerry Cox Fayetteville 770-461-7938
2013 wheat straw bales, $2.50; dry in barn. Edward Rappold Molena 770550-3048 770-884-0262
2013 wheat straw, $2.50 per bale at barn, delivery available. Gary Brinson Tarrytown 912-286-3191
Aged horse manure, you load any time; I load, call for appointment; $10 truck, $20 trailer, $30 tandem. Chad Willams Smyrna 404-421-1775 207776-8625
Clean pine straw, $4 per bale, delivered, spreading available; garden tilling, 32 years experience. Steve Schultheis Winder 770-235-1351
Free aged horse manure; can load with tractor. Monti Hight Macon 478-9602008
Free mulch, wood chips, you load; I load for $10 per load. Bobby Wallace Cumming 770-887-2964
Mixed grass mulch hay, square bales in barn, $1.50. Guy Sharp Pembroke guysharp123@gmail.com 912-6829774
Pure pine shavings, kiln dried, super absorbent; bulk delivers, call for pricing. Joel Gibbs Douglasville 404-375-4900
Worm castings, worm compost tea, red worms, nightcrawlers, composting kits and worm farming supplies. K. Holman Sharpsburg 770-713-5781
Poultry Litter/Compost
Broiler litter for sale; stored-in-dry, large quantities, local delivery; will spread for you on site; new 16-foot Chandler beds. Cody Spence Chatsworth Jcspence88@yahoo.com 706-264-5397
Broiler litter from my farm; unlimited quantities; delivery available. Jacob Bowen Gainesville 678-858-0382
North Georgia chicken litter; been in business for 10 years, place your orders now. Bob Loggins Dahlonega 706-2650517
Oddities
Beautiful emerald green emu eggs; cleaned and blown; excellent carving; scrimshaw painting, also pure emu oil. Jacquelyn Paul Conyers 770-761-1284
Gourds, many varieties to choose from, at farm or ship UPS. Crystal Lang Cordele 229-322-1321
Lucky Buckeyes, $4.25 per dozen, planting buckeyes, $5.25 per dozen; planting instructions included. Jules Simmons Stone Mountain 828-2264700
Miscellaneous Wanted
Cotton boll stalks, 24 to 30 inches; need 36 stalks. Pam Strickland McDonough pbstrickland60@gmail.com 770-883-0529
Handmade old folk pottery and antique huntboard wanted; churns, pitchers, roosters, face jugs; pictures appreciated. Joe Piper Gainesville 770-337-0488
Looking for old cast iron syrup bowl to make fire pit. Brian Hughs Gainesville 678-316-4445
Looking for walnut, maple or other trees to harvest for lumber. Rick Wood Griffin 770-468-8588
Want 40 to 150 acres to lease for hunting; please call after 5 p.m. Joe Pettit Conyers 770-862-2451 770696-7588
Want wood burning heater, Vermont Castings brand only. James Hughie Fortson jhughiesr@bellsouth.net 706442-7575
Wanted: 1,000-gallon liquid tank, stainless or aluminum. Shane Holt Whitesburg shane@ngturf.com 404-535-1248 706-302-6733
Wanted: 10-plus feet telephone pole for Martin gourds, reasonably priced. Truman Henderson Waleska tphendersonwal@frontiernet.net 770-796-2522
Wanted: 11x38 and 12.4x38 rear tractor tires, in good used condition; would consider pairs. Harry Freeman Statesboro staceyf@nctv.com 912-682-7723
Wanted: 20.8x38 tire, new or used. Donald Akins Collins dakins@windstream.net 912-557-4616 912-2459837
Wanted: 200 pounds dried ground molasses, 42 percent sugar content, application spreading. David Robson Brunswick 404-723-9868
Wanted: two used tractor tires, size 15.5x38, three-point hitch spear to move hay bales. Michael Wharton Brooks 770-719-8147 770-616-8232
Notices
Henry County Extension is now taking orders for annual Small Fruit Plant Sale. Colleen Currie McDonough 770-2888421
May 10: huge plant sale for spay/neuter in McIntosh County, Pine Harbor. Emmy Minor Townsend 912-832-6788
Out-Of-State Wanted
Looking for feeder calves; 500-pound steers or heifers, good vaccination program and preferrably preconditioned, good quality. Carroll Moore Iva SC 864933-2306
Need information on Elliott Pecan trees. Johnny Dansby Eufaula AL sarah.dansby.buffy@gmail.com 334-6951507
Unused poultry farm with structurally sound building and 15 to 25 acres of good pastureland; north-central to northeast Georgia. Jan Dockery Murphy NC costumes@dnet.net 828-8351800
Firewood
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.
Dry, seasoned hardwood, $150 for cord; you pick up. Larry Beuchat Griffin 770-412-4740
Firewood, seasoned, $190 full cord, $100 half-cord; delivered locally; delivery extra outside county. Tracy Caldwell Dahlonega 678-207-7508
For sale: firewood seasoned and spilt, call for price, mixed hardwood only. Al Roberts Fayetteville 404-543-6984
Half-cord seasoned oak firewood, $100; delivery fee may apply. Shawn Brooks Dahlonega 404-840-6943 706344-9941
Half-cord, $80, oak firewood, local delivery on weekends included. Randy Smith McDonough 404-901-5278
Oak for $275 and hickory for $350 full cord; delivery is by location. Will Simbell Tyrone 770-228-7573
Oak, $180 per cord; hickory, $225 per cord; poplar, $150 per cord; plus-or-minus 16-inch lengths, bark for smoking. Buzz Mann Sunny Side 678-834-0755
Seasoned and split firewood, mixed hardwood, call for prices. Al Roberts Fayetteville 404-543-3256
Seasoned and split oak hardwood, 18 to 20-inch pieces, $85, half-cord; free local delivery. Corey Campbell Decatur 404-241-0192
Seasoned hardwood, $160 cord, $85 half-cord; delivered in 20 miles; pick-up available in any amount. Andy Cooper Hiram 770-235-5039
Seasoned oak firewood, $200 for cord; $100 for half-cord; delivery extra. J. T Austin Douglasville 770-652-2164 770652-3383
Seasoned oak firewood; $90 half-cord. free delivery within 15 miles. Larry Moon Conyers 678-301-0359
Seasoned oak firewood; cord, $150, half-cord, $80; you pick up at our farm or we deliver, extra. Peter Cabrel Hampton 404-513-9353
Seasoned oak, 75.W, half-cord, 150w, full cord picked up at barn; Walton County. Cory Cown Monroe 770-6899769
Timber
Timber must be individually owned and produced by the advertiser on his personal property. No companies or businesses are allowed to advertise timberland in this category. Timberland advertised must be at least one acre. Timber wanted ads will not be published.
Free for the cutting, several large pine trees. Leroy Floyd Hampton 770-9464063
Free hardwood timber, good access, two acres, down and collected, load up, haul off, Gratis area. CJ Fagan Monroe 770-378-5176
Christmas Trees
Evergreen trees for sale; both one- and three-gallon containers; Green Giants, cyrptomeria, junipers, cypress. Kelly Wilson Griffin 770-365-1530
Leyland cypress, three-gallon pots, 30 inches, single stem, $6. Bob Welch 425 Taylor Town Loop, NE Ranger 30734 welc6332@bellsouth.net 706629-6332
Handicrafts
If you have questions regarding ads in
Adult bibs, walker bags, sunbonnets, aprons full or half; $7 each or three for $15, includes postage. Margaret Hottle 4220 Union Road SW College Park 30349 404-344-0568
All types chair caning: blind cane, French weave, porch, press, rattan splint; some repair and refinishing; quality work; more than 50 years experience. George Shelton Cartersville 770-6076455
All types chair caning: rockers, rush, seating, cane binding, lace. Rob Curry McDonough 678-827-2293
Crochet items for sale, all handmade; Christmas items made any time; repair work done at reasonable prices. Marcia H Brookins 219 Sheila Circle Thomaston 30286 706-647-0593
Custom-made turkey calls: yellow poplar, walnut, cedar, teak, $25; seashell calls and striker, $20; shipping and handling, $5. Bernie Moore Greensboro 706-453-1892
Deer antler knives: three sizes, comes with handmade leather sheave; can be personalized, crown portion of antler on each knife, unique gift for any occasion Darrel Youngblood Millwood 912-2820167
Handmade T-shirt quilt, memory quilt or memory bears from loved ones' clothing; add pictures or embroidery. Margaret Watson Newnan mew5442000@ yahoo.com 770-251-6951
Handpoured soap; butters, glycerine, honey, butterfly, flowers, horse, etc.; lavender, rose, gardenia, jasmine, different colors; three bars $12; shipping included. Steve Eslinger Tunnel Hill 423-8274767 423-827-4767
Homemade lye soap with goat milk, $4 per bar; includes shipping and handling. Mary Kinney Taylorsville 678-335-9625
Offering handspinning of Alpaca, wool, or other fibers; spinning lessons, fiber workshops for growers. Jo Roy Rome BorderwindsFarm@aol.com 585-3697073
Porch swings: four feet, $40; five feet, $50. Bill Speer Summerville 706-8574189
Raggedy Ann and Andy dolls, 25 inches; $30 each plus $7 shipping; all handmade, no paints, beautifully dressed, original 1970 pattern. B. Hopkins 914 28th St E Tifton 31794 229-382-2310
We eat
this category, call 404-656-3722.
Market Bulletin Farmland Ad Form
The spring 2014 farmland edition of the Market Bulletin is scheduled for March 5. Deadline for this issue is Feb. 19. Ad guidelines: Only Georgia farmland of five acres or more may be advertised. Include price, acreage and county where
100 percent wool blankets: queen size, natural white, couch size, red and black; Georgia colors, made from our own sheep. Mona Huber Watkinsville 706769-6721
FOR BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DINNER.
property is located. All property must be for sale by owner. No real estate agents or brokers are allowed to advertise, and property under contract with a real estate agent is not eligible to be advertised. Limit descriptive terms to property charac-
Farmland Sections and Counties
ters or structures do not include descriptive terms of homes on the property such as bedrooms, bathrooms and square footage. Farmland ads are up to 30 words including name, phone number and city. Only one ad per subscriber per issue. In order to advertise in the Market Bulletin, you must be a paid subscriber with a current subscriber number.
Northwest Bartow
Southeast Appling
Wayne Wheeler
Jenkins Johnson Jones
Dougherty Early Grady
DeKalb Douglas Fayette
Subscriber Number: County:
Section
Carroll Catoosa Chattooga Dade
Atkinson Bacon Brantley Bryan
Northeast
Banks Dawson
Laurens Lincoln McDuffie Putnam
Irwin Lee Lowndes Marion
Forsyth Fulton Gwinnett Henry
Floyd
Bulloch
Fannin
Richmond Miller
Newton
Gordon
Camden Gilmer
Taliaferro Mitchell
Rockdale
Haralson Candler
Habersham Treutlen
Pulaski
Spalding
Murray
Charlton Hall
Twiggs
Quitman
Paulding Chatham Lumpkin Warren
Randolph West Central
Polk Walker
Clinch Coffee
Pickens Rabun
Washington Schley
Wilkes
Seminole Bibb
Whitfield Echols
Stephens Wilkinson Stewart
Butts
Effingham Towns
Sumter
Coweta
Northeast Evans
Union
Southwest Terrell
Crawford
Central
Glynn
White
Jeff Davis
Baker
Thomas Tift
Harris Heard
Barrow
Lanier
East Central Ben Hill
Turner
Houston
Clarke
Liberty
Berrien
Webster Lamar
Elbert
Long
Baldwin
Brooks
Wilcox
Macon
Franklin
McIntosh Bleckley
Calhoun
Worth
Meriwether
The following statement must be signed by the advertiser submitting this notice for publication:
Greene Hart
Montgomery Burke
Pierce
Columbia
Chattahoochee
Greater
Monroe Muscogee
I hereby certify that the above notice meets all the necessary requirements for publication in the upcoming farmland edition of the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin.
Jackson Madison Morgan
Screven Tattnall Telfair
Dodge Emanuel Glascock
Clay Colquitt Cook
Atlanta Cherokee
Peach Pike Talbot
Oconee
Toombs
Hancock Crisp
Clayton
Taylor
Oglethorpe Ware
Jasper
Decatur
Cobb
Troup
Walton
Jefferson Dooly
Upson
page 12
farmers and consumers market Bulletin
IPPE: Expo highlights evolution of processing industry
From Page 1
Visitors go through a pop-up museum spotlighting the history of America's poultry production during the IPPE tradeshow in Atlanta, Ga., on Jan. 28. Photo by Dallas Duncan
try, processing and feed technologies.
After perusing the pop-up "poultry museum," visitors traversed on to view new designs for rubber fingers, a patty stacker machine developed by FBEC and a butcher breaking down pork into retail cuts.
"This is a huge show because it's not just poultry now," said Jim Rose, Southeastern area technical service manager for Chore-Time. "For us as a manufacturer, this is where we present our new products, especially to get customers to see new things that we're coming out with."
At the Chore-Time setup, visitors from a dozen countries tried out a new touch-screen chicken house system that provides total environmental control from a laptop. A new composite fan material, aimed to reduce corrosion common on metal fans, was also on display.
The technology demonstrates not just how far Chore-Time has come, but the poultry industry as a whole, Rose said.
"When I first started with ChoreTime 40 years ago, we were just then beginning to really put birds for laying commercial eggs in a cage system. Usually there was just one cage and it would be in a house
that was on a concrete walkway," Rose said. "You'd ride down the middle with a cart and you'd scoop feed out in a trough."
Now, colonies of cages are stacked high, providing birds with individual watering and feeding space, as well as better controlled houses, he said. It's technology such as this that allows the poultry industry to keep egg and meat prices down, because less human labor is required, Rose added.
The 2014 event was part of a tradition for Kristie Emory, whose grandfather founded equipment manufacturer FPEC decades ago. The company specializes in custom-building US-made processing equipment in its California and Arkansas facilities.
"We make tumblers, marinators, brine systems ... anything you can think of for processing," Emory said. "Kind of anything that you can come up with we'll try to custommake a machine for whatever you need."
One such machine is the patty stacker.
"That's really starting to catch on," Emory said. "We are trying to expand everywhere we can to try to touch every part of the industry."
Saving, selling protected seed can land producers in hot water
By Dallas Duncan
Blue Suede blueberries are growing in popularity, but producers who save and sell the plants can face criminal charges.
That's because Blue Suede is one of many cultivars protected by either patents or the Plant Variety Protection Act of 1970, deeming them intellectual property of their developers. In the case of Blue Suede, that would be the University of Georgia.
The PVPA was written to increase crop varieties and allow for researchers to recoup development costs, said Terry Hollifield, executive director of the Georgia Crop Improvement Association. Under a PVP, which covers most seed-propagated cultivars, farmers can save enough seed to plant back their acreage, but cannot sell seed. Patented plants' seed or cuttings, such as turfgrasses, cannot be saved or sold.
"Like blueberry farmers, they can't go out -- unless they have a license -- and take cuttings off their blueberry plants and plant 40 acres," said Brent Marable, plant licensing manager for the UGA Research Foundation.
The idea of protecting plants was to get income streaming back into breeding programs, said James Sutton, assistant commissioner for the Department.
"It costs so much to come up with a new variety and it's so short-lived. A variety may only last three or four years," he said. "So all that money going to make this new variety, you don't reap the benefits, especially if you're just giving away the seed."
Producers pay royalties when purchasing protected seed. For instance, if UGA developed the fictitious Soybean U34 and licensed it out to be sold, farmers who purchased U34 seed would pay an extra five cents per pound. The five cents goes back to UGA breeding programs, Sutton said.
Producers sign contracts as well, allowing developers to audit their fields and financials to make sure they're following the law. However, farmers tend to police themselves, Sutton said.
Universities and companies have legal recourse against those who propagate and sell seed illegally and are caught doing so, though most settle out of court, Hollifield said.
He said the analysis tag on seed bag will note whether a variety is protected or not.
There are limitations on how long patents and PVPA protections last, however, usually between 15 and 18 years.
"If I come up with a Georgia green, great peanut variety ... it had a PVP, it had a run of about 15 years. If it had a patent, nobody's
growing it after the patent runs out," Sutton said. "You have a great new variety and it runs for about four or five years, then something takes its place."
In essence, it's like smart phones. "By the time this one is about to go out, they come out with the iPhone 5," he said. "It's the same with seed. By the time the patent's ready to run out, they've come out with a new and improved [cultivar]." And if a variety remains popular after its patent is up, there's a chance it will still evolve over years of use. Take Silver Queen Corn, for example. "Silver Queen isn't like it used to be," said Alan Lowman, program director for the Department's Agricultural Inputs Section. "It's not because nobody has a vested interest in it -- nobody is keeping it true to type. Part of the PVP and patent stuff is that you get what you pay for, that varieties stay true." It also helps ensure plants are developed to thrive in the Southeast, since royalties from one plant are being used to spur research on others -- like Blue Suede blueberries. "Ten years ago, we're taking peanut money down to Griffin to help blueberries get going. And blueberries have overtaken peaches," Sutton said. "If [the royalties] hadn't happened, you wouldn't have the blueberry market like you have now."
Wednesday, FEBRUARY 5, 2014
LIVESTOCK QUOTATIONS Average prices for January 2014 Auction Market at Georgia Auction Markets, Georgia Department of Agriculture and U.S.D.A. Cooperative Federal-State Livestock Market News and Grading Service. For daily quotations, call (229) 226-1641 (7:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.)
(Cattle prices expressed in price/hundredweight)
Slaughter Classes . . . . . Averages Cows: Breakers 75-80% lean. . . . . . . . . . . 88.83 Boners 80-85% Lean . . . . . . . . . . . 88.02 Lean 85-90% Lean. . . . . . . . . . . . . 80.49 Bulls: Yield Grade 1 1000-1500 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102.51 1500-2100 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104.19
Feeder Classes: Weighted . . . . . . . . . . . . . Avg Prices. Steers: Medium and Large 1-2
200-250 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 252.34 250-300 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241.29 300-350 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232.06 350-400 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223.45 400-450 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207.45 450-500 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193.27 500-550 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181.78 550-600 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 171.30 600-650 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 162.11 650-700 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155.33 Steers: Medium and Large 2-3 300-350 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214.47 350-400 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205.40 400-450 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190.76 450-500 lbs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 178.67 500-550 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167.72 550-600 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158.07 Heifers: Medium and Large 1-2 200-250 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 217.63 250-300 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202.36 300-350 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194.22 350-400 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184.42 400-450 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175.76 450-500 lbs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 168.90 500-550 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160.95 550-600 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154.68 600-650 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147.41 650-700 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142.67 Goats (priced per head) Slaughter Classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Selection 2 Billies/Bucks 75-100 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131.25 100-150 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181.25 150-300 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228.75 Nannies/Does 60-80 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112.50 80-100 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152.50 100-150 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kids & Yearlings 20-40 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63.75 40-60 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109.38 60-80 lbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142.50.
Producers can obtain daily cattle prices by Internet at the following website: http://www.ams.usda.gov
Once at the site, select Market News and Transportation Data in the left column. Click on Livestock, Meats, Grain and Hay under the heading Market News Reports by Program. Next, click on Cattle under the heading Browse by Commodity. Then click on Feeder and Replacement Cattle Auctions and select Georgia.
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