10 0 t1h91A7nni2v0e1r7sary GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE GARY W. BLACK, COMMISSIONER WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2017 VOL. 100, NO. 10 COPYRIGHT 2017 GEOR GIA DE PAR T M E NT O F AGR I CU LT U R E GA RY W. BLAC K, COMMISS ION ER Former Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue takes the helm at USDA Washington, D.C. Former Georgia Gov. George Ervin "Sonny" Perdue III was sworn in as the 31st U.S. Secretary of Agriculture by fellow Georgian and Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court Clarence Thomas in a brief ceremony April 25 at the Supreme Court building. The U.S. Senate confirmed Secretary Perdue by a vote of 87-to-11 the evening before. After Secretary Perdue took the oath of office, he addressed employees at the U.S. Department of Agriculture before getting to work on his first day. "The only legacy that I seek is the only one that any grandparent or parent seeks to be good stewards, and to hand off our nation, our home, our fields, our forests and our farms to the next generation in better shape than we found it," Secretary Perdue said. "Making sure that Americans who make their livelihoods in the agriculture industry have the ability to thrive will be one of my top priorities. I am committed to serving the customers of USDA, and I will be an unapologetic advocate for American agriculture." Georgia Department of Agriculture Commissioner Gary W. Black traveled to Washington to attend Perdue's swearing in ceremony. "We are very pleased that the confirmation process is complete and now the real work can begin," Commissioner Black said. "We look forward to working with Secretary Perdue as he focuses fully on the issues and concerns currently facing the agricultural community." U.S. Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga., a member of the Senate Agriculture Committee, presided over the vote to confirm his first cousin. "As Secretary of Agriculture, my cousin has a big job," Sen. Perdue said. "I look forward to working with him as a member of the Senate Agriculture Committee to make our agriculture, farming and ranching industries vigorous and strong now, and for future generations." Capping a busy first day on the job, Secre- tary Perdue joined President Donald J. Trump for a "Farmers Roundtable" at the White House, where Trump signed an executive order establishing an Interagency Task Force on Agriculture and Rural Prosperity. American Farm Bureau President Zippy Duval of Greensboro joined Secretary Perdue and more than a dozen farmers and other members of the agriculture community to discuss a variety of topics, including agricultural trade, regulatory reform, rural investment and infrastructure, labor issues and the Farm Bill. "The Farmers Roundtable provided the chance for the President to hear directly from the people on the front lines of American agriculture about what they are dealing with every day," Secretary Perdue said. "By hosting this discussion, the President has demonstrated his awareness of the plight of American farmers, ranchers, foresters, and producers, his intention See PERDUE, page 7 U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue will chair a task force on rural prosperity created by President Donald Trump's Executive Order. (USDA Photo) Georgia FFA names new officers Georgia FFA held its 89th annual convention in Macon April 27-29. Nearly 6,000 people attended the event, which saw the election of state officers for 2017-2018. Pictured from left to right are: State V.P. Jake Harris (Harris County), State V.P. Katibeth Mims (Seminole County), State V.P. Laurabeth Bland (Southeast Bulloch), State V.P. Brooks Fletcher (North Oconee), State V.P. Tyler Robinson (Colquitt County), State Secretary Hinkley Hood (Ware County), State V.P. Rebecca Wallace (Cambridge) and State President Tucker Felkins (Bleckley County). (Provided Photo) Reader Profile: Fred Barnes Mail to: Published by the Ga. Department of Agriculture Gary W. Black, Commissioner By Arty Schronce arty.schronce@agr.georgia.gov Fred Barnes of Tifton is many things husband, father, grandfather, retired agricultural researcher, gardener and pen maker. He is also a giver who likes to stay busy. Barnes, 75, retired from the University of Georgia Coastal Plain Experiment Station after 36 years. "I worked with a lot of different crops," he said. "I enjoyed the plant variety tests best." Barnes came to the Market Bulletin's attention through a photograph of him holding a perfect cluster of sweet potatoes. "My father grew sweet potatoes. I've been around them all my life. I love to eat them, and I love to grow them. I think my wife and I eat more sweet potatoes than any two people in Tift County," he said. When asked his secret for sweet potato success, Barnes shared, "They need to be set in a bed with a lot of soft soil. I dug one clump with 19 in it without separating them. That tells you my soil is soft." His years of variety trials at the research station left him with an appreciation of velvet beans, a running bean with fuzzy pods often used as a cover crop to add nutrients to the soil or as a fodder crop. "A lot of people used to plant them with corn. They look like kudzu. I probably picked and grew more velvet beans than anyone around here. I sold many a velvet bean through the Market Bulletin. Smaller amounts we mailed. Those wanting large amounts would come pick them up. One man bought 20 bushels at one time," he said. The seeds of velvet beans contain L-Dopa, or Levodopa, which is used to treat Parkinson's Disease. Scientists synthetically produce LDopa today. Barnes still grows some velvet beans. "I'm trying to keep the seed of them," he Fred Barnes said. Barnes cultivates two garden spots with a 50-year-old tractor, purchased through the Market Bulletin, as well as a fence row planted with various crops. Depending on the season, his garden may contain cabbage, rutabagas, Irish and sweet potatoes, onions, broccoli, garlic, squash, bell pepper, string beans, okra, wa- See READER PROFILE, page 6 PAGE 2 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2017 Advertise in the Market Bulletin Classified advertisements in the Market Bulletin are free to subscribers and limited to one ad per issue per subscriber number. Out-of-state subscribers may only publish ads in the Out-of-State Wanted category. Advertisements from businesses, corporations, dealerships, real estate agents or other commercial entities are not permitted. Advertising is limited to farm-related items. Advertisers and buyers are advised to be aware of state and federal laws governing the sale and transfer of live animals. The Georgia Department of Agriculture does not assume responsibility for transactions initiated through the Market Bulletin but will use every effort to prevent fraud. Advertisers are expected to fulfill the terms of their offers. Failure to do so through either negligence or intention may require the Market Bulletin to refuse future ads. Market Bulletin staff reserves the right to designate ad length and to edit for spelling, grammar and word count. Ads run a maximum of two consecutive issues if the category allows. A new ad must be submitted to run longer than two consecutive issues. Ads in regularly published categories are limited to 20 words including name, address, email address and phone number. The following ad categories are published periodically and allow up to 30 words: Farm Services; Farm Services Wanted; Farmland Rent/Lease; Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted; Farmland for Sale; Handicrafts. Ads for Farmland for Sale are published twice per year, in the spring and the fall. There are three ways to submit your ad. Fax: 404.463.4389 Mail: Georgia Department of Agriculture Attn: Market Bulletin 19 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive SW Atlanta, GA 30334-4250 Online: www.agr.georgia.gov Please include your subscription number on all mailed and faxed correspondence. Questions about advertising? Call 404.656.3722 Subscribe to the Market Bulletin A one-year subscription to the Market Bulletin is $10 and includes both print and online access. To subscribe or renew online visit agr.georgia.gov to pay via electronic check, Visa or MasterCard. To subscribe by phone, renew your subscription, update your address or report delivery problems call 404.586.1190 or 800.282.5852. To subscribe by mail send a check or money order payable to the Georgia Department of Agriculture along with your name, complete mailing address, email address and phone number to: Georgia Department of Agriculture Attn: Market Bulletin P.O. Box 742510 Atlanta, GA 30374 Multi-year subscriptions may be purchased by mail. Call the Department of Agriculture 404.656.3600 | 800.282.5852 AI Hotline 855.491.1432 Georgia Grown Food Safety 404.656.3680 404.656.3627 GATE 855.327.6829 Plant Protection 404.463.8617 Equine Health 404.656.3713 Animal Protection 404.656.4914 Licensing 855.424.5423 State Veterinarian 404.656.3671 Fuel and Measures 404.656.3605 Market Bulletin 404.656.3722 Georgia Department of Law Consumer Protection Unit 404.651.8600 | 1.800.869.1123 FARM SERVICES Livestock hauling, horse/cattle, garden 1-row cultivator, excellent condition, and food plot, bush-hogging, any handy $200; new finish mower deck, 72", If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. man work. Leland Milton Watkinsville 706-296-0732 Mud and water are no problem, bea- $400; also gearboxes and spindles. Daniel Linder Dearing 706-551-0342 1-row planter/cultivator, like new; $625. Farm Services and Services Wanted ver dam removal, creek channel clean- Bryan Phillips Jefferson 706-654-2645 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. 18 years of experience: Bobcat, no-till grain drill, bush-hogging, clearing, light grading, tree removal, fences, on/offsite welding. Chris Wilkie Commerce 706-870-6256 38 years of experience: Horse arenas laser-graded, tree clearing, driveways built/regraded, gravel, barns graded, drainage correction, trucking and demolition. Luke Butler Braselton 770685-0288 39 years of experience, N. GA/metro Atlanta: Bush-hogging/grading, post holes, gardens/food plots, aerating/ seeding, chainsaw work, more; $50/ hour, 3 hour minimum. Rick Allison Buford 678-200-2040 Aerial photography, FAA licensed drone operator, high resolution photos and video, monitor plantings, timber harvests, etc., reasonable rates, 20"x30" color enlargement; $99+. Steve Evans Dallas www.asoaringview.com 770-262-6633 All farm fencing installed, land management, woven, board, electric, high tensile fence, bush-hogging, food plots, trail maintenance. Casey Kent Monroe 678-446-8520 Bobcat/tractor work, bush-hogging, lawn mowing, pasture maintenance/ restoration, grading, clearing, plowing, garden, deer plots, pesticide spraying, welding fencing, heavy equipment. Larry Houston Covington 770-235-3082 770-235-3782 Bush hog, drives scraped and tilling services. Larry Boatright Dallas 678386-1466 ing, drainage ditching, silt removal, lake rimming. Jim Moon Oakfield 229-5356562 229-881-0048 Stumps ground neatly below ground level, free estimate and reasonably priced. Glen Whitley Bethlehem 770867-2718 Will come to your farm to repair starters and alternators, 6-12V generators, only on farm equipment and tractors. Randy Thomas Conyers 678-758-5881 Farm Services Wanted 4 large red/white oak trees with long trunks, and 1 huge Ponderosa pine, you cut/haul; $400 to you. Gerry Gibson Atlanta 678-595-2790 Custom combining/harvesting Abruzzi rye for grain, cleaning, hauling 2018 crop. Jim Boggs Aragon 706-936-4558 Need someone with a tiller to till an intown garden. Mary Gozdziewski Atlanta 404-636-9139 Oak tree, you cut and haul, easy access, wind blew down; $1/you take all. Ken Hatley Zebulon 770-358-1300 Part-time barn and farm help, will be weekends and some weekdays, pay negotiable. Elizabeth Clavette Danielsville 303-887-6030 Seeking contract farms in Georgia to grow spices/herb crop in spring 2017, need approximately 10-20 acres, email for details. Tony Goreja Buford 404578-7490 Seeking mature and experienced help for repairing/painting board fencing, mowing and front end loader work. Sonja Cooper Powder Springs 678313-8285 Seeking someone with mulch head on skid steer to clear private hedge, about 1 acre in South Forsyth. John Titshaw Cumming 678-425-8255 Water well digger needed, Spalding County, to dig a well for operating a future irrigation system. Tony Simmons 1-row/2-row JD/MF/AC/Cole planters, bush hogs, bottom plows, scrape/box blades, harrow, post digger, subsoiler, booms; cash Carl Crosby Blackshear 912-449-6573 10' and 12' heavy-duty land levelers; $1600-$1800. Mike Hulett Hazlehurst 912-253-0162 1086 International tractor, runs great; $8000 OBO. D.T. Mcneal Alamo 912568-7469 478-464-6314 12HP Gravely tractor, with Kohler engine, rotary plow, mower, sulky, excellent condition; $1500. Don Porter Newnan 770-304-6451 154 Cab low-boy tractor, for parts, $450; John Deere 130 tractor, 48" cut, $450. Michael Richardson Elberton 706-283-7134 16' hay conveyor, with new 3/4HP motor, works great; $125. Dennis Fehrman Evans 706-830-4902 1720 Ford diesel, FWD, 12-speed, synchronized shuttle shift, 1000 hours, 80% tires, sheltered, work ready; $7200. Archie Adams Newnan 770-253-8941 18' flatbed hay body; $1250. Jimmy Garvin Warner Robins 478-396-2409 1939 John Deere tractor, and beltdriven grist mill. Ken Holton Jackson 770-354-6388 1940 Farmall Super A cultivators, runs good, needs paint and TLC; $1200 OBO. Wallace Edwards 1748 Pleasant Hill Rd Elberton 30635 706-283-3629 1940 John Deere H, runs well, good rubber, good paint, photos by email; $3000. Hillory Stanton Macon 478-7812367 1942 Ford 8W, good tires. Jessie Wilson Canton 404-427-5150 1947 JD B tractor, 2 AC G tractors, 2 Cubs, 1 Farmall Super A with implements. Jim Hammond Gainesville 678316-1611 FARM EMPLOYMENT Bush hog, rotary mow, garden and Griffin 678-961-9674 food plot, harrow/plow, cut, rake and bale square hay, Monroe County area. 1948 Allis Chalmers G, with front/rear cultivators, restored, great condition. John Gray Perry 478-461-5868 FARM MACHINERY Jimmy Waldrep Forsyth 478-994-0701 Certified welder mobile, specializing in heavy, farming, logging equipment and any type of trailers, flat rates and quality work. David Brown Oxford 678-5911061 Custom cattle freeze branding. Cole Meeks Statesboro 912-601-5283 912531-3549 Custom harvest wheat, oats, rye, soybeans and corn, including 30" row spacing, Worth Country and surrounding counties. Wesley Lassiter Tyty 229326-9862 Custom harvesting, with John Deere 9400, have 9222F and 444 corn head, will travel within a 20 mile radius; $35/ hour. Jacob Pope Covington 678-7638941 Custom portable sawmill service, Wood-Mizer LT35, can cut your logs at your place or mine. Zach Ware Fort Valley 478-960-2014 Custom sawing, done with portable sawmill, serving all of South Georgia, 30 years of experience. Steven Smith Baxley 912-210-8656 Farm buildings and fences built and repaired, tractor/bobcat work, hay baling and cutting. Jerry Glancy Griffin 404433-3568 For all of your farm needs: Bobcat, tractor, D3 dozer work, bush-hogging, clearing, anything in between, free estimates. Kyle Combs Locust Grove 770880-3698 Garden plots tilled, raised beds, plastic mulch, drip irrigation-tape installed, within a 25 mile radius from me. Lou Cabrel Griffin 404-513-9353 Get rid of ticks, fire ants and other bugs in the vegetable garden the ecological way w/guineas. Theo Engelmohr Milner 678-967-9899 Goat hoofs trimmed, 5 goat minimum; $20/head + travel. Isaac Sheffield Decatur 678-964-1286 Grass sprigging, Tift 85, call for details. James Hicks Collins 912-5578965 Land services, forestry, mulching/ brush mowing, with loader or excavator, grading/clearing and tub grinding. Josh Halderman Carnesville 678-227-2976 If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. Only farm work or farm help wanted advertisements allowed. No commercial, industrial or domestic employment permitted. Farm help wanted, must have experience with cattle and driving a tractor. Justin Paschal Eatonton 706-473-9846 Horse stable seeks full-time or parttime help, experience and references required, call before 7 p.m. L. Harper Loganville 404-680-7027 678-283-9526 Lockwood pecan harvester; Lockwood 3PT hitch shaker; pecan sweepers. Eddie Mcdonald Alma 912-632-8808 Seeking experienced full-time ranch hand, with competitive salary, full benefits, housing, ranching lifestyle, picturesque environment. Nathan Clackum White nclackum@rollinsranches.net 770-382-6502 770-382-6502 Seeking full-time chicken farm laborer, housing available if needed, Culloden/ Forsyth. Johnnie Morrison Macon 478808-8302 Seeking full-time or part-time farm employment, tractor driving, purebred cattle, commercial horses, years of experience. H.C. Wilson Sandersville 478-232-6436 Seeking mature Spanish speaking male/couple to work on bird farm, livein position with housing provided; $200/ week. Tere Lopez Oxford 770-787-2955 WGRA, full-time, must have some experience with horses, general labor. Jo Roberts Roopville 770-854-4440 If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722. Only farm machinery and equipment owned by the advertiser and used in his/her own farming operation can be advertised; those persons advertising for machinery and equipment wanted must be seeking those items for their own farming operation. 1-row Covington planter, very good condition; $400. Dale Ferguson Grovetown 706-836-0699 1949 Farmall C tractor, front/back plows, planters and pull-disc harrow, runs good; $2500 OBO. Andy Carroll Rome roadrunner8861@yahoo.com 706-346-3142 1950 Ford 8N tractor, 3PT hitch, runs great, well-maintained; $3000. Wayne Jones Athens 706-255-8648 1950 Ford 8N, converted to 12V, new starter, alternator, gauges, decals, new lights, hi-lo beams; $4500. Clifton Crawford Jasper 770-289-1110 770-7353706 1950 JD B tractor, restored, new tires/ lights, white-face gauges, steering wheel, 3PT hitch available; $3500 OBO. Johnny Barnes Statham 770-7257508 1952 Allis Chalmers CA, good tires, runs well, sheltered, comes with wellused bush hog; $2200. James Laster Kathleen 478-320-9537 1953 Ford Jubilee, good condition, 12V system, 5' bush hog finishing mower, like new; $2800. William Griffin Thomaston 706-647-8233 1959 Case 211B tractor, 30HP, wellmaintained, runs well, good tires, new seat/battery, barn stored, field ready; $2500. Tony Seymore Powder Springs 770-856-0638 1961 Ford 841 Power Master, 10 implements; $5000. J.C. Clark 3976 Albany Ave Waycross 31503 912-2828533 1963 Ford 2000 gas tractor, good condition, runs well; $3900. J.W. Law Dawson 229-854-3115 1973 Oliver 1855, 95HP, and a 1974 Oliver 1755, 85HP, cab/no air, both are good tractors; $8500/each. Lee Boone Franklin 678-378-1534 1979 International 584, 52HP diesel, with 6' harrow; Farmall 140 tractor, w/ cultivator, bush hog and harrow. Shane Austin Jackson 678-201-5629 1979 International 584, 52HP diesel, with 6' harrow; Farmall 140 tractor, w/ cultivator, bush hog and harrow. Shane Austin Jackson 678-201-5651 1982 Ford 1200 tractor with tiller, excellent condition; $2900. Brooksie Weaver Molena 706-647-5055 WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2017 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov PAGE 3 1982 MF 383 diesel tractor, good condition, used only in hay field; $7500 OBO. Elward Matthews Newton 229734-5334 1985 JD 327 square baler, $5500; 1994 JD 535 round baler, good shape, $6500. Chris Bishop Louisville 704-651-9758 1987 Long UTB 360 tractor, 1624 hours, diesel, roll bar w/metal roof, new starter, good condition; $4350. Don Wintermute Blairsville 305-393-0097 1989 Great Plains 30' grain drill; $4500. John Williams Colquitt 229-400-5827 1992 B7200 belly mower, new back tires, PTO, hydrostatic transmission, photos available, priced to move. Allan Rotter Milledgeville 201-486-4253 1998 Ford 4630 front end loader, 4x4, 3400 hours, bucket, forks, spear, runs great; $16,900. John Pate Whitesburg 770-722-6340 1999 John Deere bulldozer, enclosed cab, heat and A/C; $45,000. Steve Millwood Forsyth 478-258-7190 1PT hitch cutting harrow, Super A, with cultivators. Juanita Parker Chatsworth 706-847-8517 2 JD9965, harvest ready; 2 JD9996 2WD/4WD; Newall Doffer grinder; 2 good tires, 18-9x26; good prices. Ralph Nutt Cordele 229-276-5336 20' Rhino mower, $4500; 15' bush hog mower, $3500. Chop Evans Fort Valley 478-955-4642 2000 Ford tractor, very good, $3000; 2-row planters, $250; 9N Ford tractor, $1000. Richard Nelson Irwinton 478456-1046 2001 Roadrunner gooseneck flatbed trailer, 20' with 5' dovetail, fold ramps, two 7000 lb. axles; $4500. Candler Bennett Hahira 912-381-0329 229-794-3238 2005 Case CP620 cotton picker, call for details. Terry Lewis Mc Rae Helena 229-833-5381 2006 John Deere 5103 tractor, 50HP, 132 hours, canopy, front weight, 5' rotary mower; $12,600. Doug Huff Rincon 706-595-2328 2007 Bobcat S250, 3587 hours; $19,500. Judy Wallace Jackson 770775-0876 404-427-0960 2012 Bush Hog 2212 rotary cutter, 12' pull-type, excellent condition. Miles Hess Fitzgerald 706-983-0387 2012 Kubota L3940 cab tractor, 4WD, 40HP, with front loader, 300 hours, like new; $25,900. Andy Dove Royston bank0man@bellsouth.net 706-244-5009 2014 New Holland Workmaster TR55 tractor, BH16 rotary cutter, DD 3PT bale spear, 106 hours. Jerry Crunkleton Carnesville 706-716-1320 2015 John Deere 1025R tractor, with loader and 48'' bush hog, like new; $12,500. Joe Ritch Milner 770-3588118 706-741-2249 2016 NH 450 utility baler, still under warranty, baled 75 bales, like new, excellent condition; $$19,300. John Moore Adrian 478-668-3937 478-494-8623 2040 John Deere tractor, w/front-end loader, good condition; $10,500. C.D. Gravitt Buford 770-945-4371 220 spray coupe, wide front, gas motor, electric boom fold, A/C runs well. Mark Knaus Cleveland 706-969-8798 24' Stoll gooseneck trailer, excellent condition; $4000. Lee Ashmore Thomson 706-832-3277 253 MF tractor, $8750; hay cutter, $2500; 16' cattle trailer, $2150; Craftsman radial arm saw, $300. Charles Shewbert Jefferson 706-654-7037 26'6" dry box, hay/pine straw, truck body; $5000. Keith Garvin Byron 478955-4236 3 Farmall Cub tractors, run well, w/ mowers, cultivator; also 12' cattle trailer, good tires, sheltered, $1250. Stacey Burden Comer 706-714-7194 706-6140187 30" Snapper riding mower, new 13.5 engine, 2015 new rear end, 2016 extra 30" deck; $500. Kenneth Poole Baldwin 706-716-0341 3PT hitch Generac 60kW/30kW, alternator, 50A, 240V; $750 OBO. Matt Rouse Braselton 770-540-2047 3PT hitch hay forks, good; 2-row cultivator on Pittsburgh frame, good; 3PT gooseneck hitch. Shane Lemonds Social Circle 404-969-8635 3PT hitch post-hole auger, 9", never used, $300; 20' equipment trailer, 2-axle, w/ramps, $800. Tommy Dixon Macon 478-743-2906 3PT plow, 3PT hitch, lightweight. Walter Terrell Decatur 404-395-5476 3PT scrape blade, heavy-duty, adjustable, $275; also have 2-disc tiller, $125. David Cooke Carrollton cookekd@aol. com 770-832-2919 770-365-1692 4440, 1974 model; 4230, 1978 model; 16-disc International harrow; 16' all-purpose leveler; 4-row cultivator. B.L. Kent Millen 478-982-5870 5' box blade, very good condition. Mark Osburn Waycross 912-286-4306 5-shank all-purpose plow; NH 7' sickle mower; 7' heavy-duty bush hog; all good condition. Clay Pentecost Winder 770-601-3855 770-867-4373 5.5' tiller, 3PT hitch; 14" Ford 2-bottom turning plow with tail wheel; single-gang distributor harrow. Darwin Blansit Trion 706-238-0465 50kW generator, self-contained fuel tank, on trailer, John Deere engine; $5000. Larry Anderson Rayle 770-4039822 5300 John Deere tractor, 2350 hours, loader, forks and bucket, 1 owner; $15,000 OBO. Richard Morgan Cleveland 706-892-7677 55-gallon tow-behind sprayer, 5HP motor needs minor repairs, $250; 3PT hitch 6' aerator, custom made, $450. Wayne Holbrook Canton 404-277-3177 6 used truck tires, LT 235/85/R-16; $30/each, or $150/all. Joe Scott Lafayette 706-638-6501 6' Massey Ferguson scrape blade, $225; 5' Phillips rock rake, $250; 5' Dearborn scrape blade, $150; all 3PT. Johnny Williams Villa Rica 770-5460968 6-row rip-strip Pats, auto-reset with rolling baskets, new Uniferth hubs and bearings, field ready; $4500. Chase Grantham Douglas 912-331-3090 6-row vacuum JD 1700 planter, $7500; 18' Taylor-Way harrow, $3500. Ann Youngblood Unadilla 478-957-0454 601 Ford Work Master tractor, good condition; $2750. Samuel Parks Buford 770-945-7440 7' Bush Hog brand mower, $950; 6' box blade, $200; please leave a message. Mark Boyles Dawson 229-9954694 7' Fred Cain 8-shank all-purpose plow; all 8-shanks are fully adjustable. Jerry Brautigan Griffin 770-855-3243 7' heavy-duty sidewinder, tire drive, rotary cutter, 3PT hitch; $2000 OBO. A.N. Simpson Milledgeville 478-456-9992 8 bale hay accumulator and grapple, great condition; $5500. Brian Hill Zebulon 770-468-3027 8' rotary mower, 2012 Land Pride RCR2596, good condition; $2850. Rex Register Hahira rxregister@gmail.com 229-561-1462 8'x18 all steel flatbed truck body with bulk head; $1500. W.G. Griffin Byron 478-396-2409 9-shank chisel plow, with gauge wheels; $900. Larry Mckneely Griffin 678-343-8677 AC B tractor, 5' pull-type mower, 2-disc plow, cultivator, $1500; JD 2-disc plow, $375; 6-ply tractor tire, 16x9x28. Gary Blalock White 770-382-1206 Allis Chalmers 160, with 40HP Perkins diesel engine, 2500 hours, well-maintained; $4250. Billy Cagle Po Box 1415 Cartersville 30120 770-382-9391 Allis Chalmers G tractor, with cultivators, for work or show, runs well; $3200. James Downey Calhoun 706625-2170 Antique Allis Chalmers tractors, B, 2 WD40 and WD45, not running; also have a running Ford Jubilee. Jesse Arnett Tifton 229-382-6517 Asphalt roller, $1300; Tennant sweeper, $1500. Mark Blank Dawsonville 770905-6235 Athens 12' offset harrow, land leveler, excellent condition, 70% blades. Robert Harrell Davisboro 478-232-2036 Box scrape, turning plow, corn planter and more. Lynne Rhinehart Ringgold 706-338-7176 Brown 2-row subsoiler, $575; 2 Cole Edge drop planters, $1/each; 5' rotary mower, $575. Tim Smith Milledgeville timbersmith63@gmail.com 478-3636631 Bush hog, 3PT hitch, 62" tiller w/new tines, can try at my place; $800. Roy Watson Senoia 706-538-1185 Caroni 5' finish mower, 3PT hitch, good condition; $400 cash. Suzanne Cottongim Buckhead 706-342-3775 Caroni 6' finish mower, good condition, photos available; $1000. Richard Wallace Williamson 770-468-6061 Case 2388 combine, 20' grain table, 6-row corn head, head trailer. John Leab Cordele 229-276-5364 Case IH 5130, 99HP at PTO, 16-speed, 2 remotes, 6509 hours, 1992 year; $21,000. William Stevens Macon 478214-1257 Case VAC, 1953 year, still runs, ideal for restoring, used for racking hay; $2500. Bill Bleckley Clayton 706-3191593 706-782-3310 Cat 941, 80H5878 motor finals great, undercarriage weak, needs pins and bushings; $7000. Gary Berrong Hiawassee 706-897-2019 Claas Rollant 160 baler; New Holland 654 baler; 10-wheel rake; 4-basket hay tedder. Fred Sackett Butler 478-9525399 Covington planter on frame; TaylorWay 8-disc harrow. Jim Williams Carrollton 770-834-0962 Covington TP46, 1-row planter, on cultivator, extra plates, fertilizer box, excellent condition; $900. Roland Ebright Jr Watkinsville ebrightr@bellsouth.net 404-861-2141 Crab tree 14 cubic yard scraper pan; $10,500. Allen Oglesby Lyons 912-2931697 D3C Cat bulldozer, good condition, w/ root rake, 6-way tilt blade. Henry Crosby Baxley 912-240-3243 Dearborn 20-disc plow, 9' spike-tooth harrow. Don Walls Roopville 770-3284839 Deutz-Allis GP2.50 round baler, 4x5, very good condition; Case-IH 244 compact tractor, 2WD, 3-cylinder, diesel, shed stored. Alex Miller Morganton 706-455-6622 DR tiller, tow-behind your ATV, riding mower tractor, 3'W, remote control with hydraulic lift; $1500. Bobby Waldrop Eatonton 706-484-2058 Dr. Power field and brush mower, walkbehind, 17HP Kawasaki engine, electric start; $1500. Cliff Anderson Franklin 770-500-6166 Early 60s Fordson Dexta tractor, with bush hog, working condition; $2000. Laymon Brannon Loganville 678-4104849 Farmall 100 tractor, good condition for restoring, tires in good condition; $2500 OBO. Wayne Crumbley Cartersville 770-382-4794 Farmall 140 tractor, 1PT hitch harrow, bottom plow, small blade rake, new battery; $3500. Sam Larimer Barnesville 770-358-3564 Farmall Cub Runner mounts, very good condition, can send photos; $130. Luther Ray Bethlehem 770-307-7744 Farmall cub tractor, not running, complete w/rear wheel weights, $650; International belly mower, for Farmall cub, $300. Thomas Tucker Lithia Springs 770-941-2354 Farmall Cub, 1956-ish, rebuilt, runs well, new front tires, many restored or restorable implements included; $2500. Andy Peryam Brooks 770-823-2966 Farmall Super C, 1952 year, new motor, runs great, single front wheel with extra. Bob Houghton Griffin 770-4121586 Finish mower, 72", Land Pride, 3PT hitch, good condition; $500. Patrick Broder Stockbridge 404-401-6134 Finishing mower, 7' bush hog, very low hours, excellent condition; $2200. Danny Greene Cordele 817-983-3466 FMC speed sprayer 1093CPD, 1-way pecan volute, 2500 hours, 13' bush hog 3368 pull-type mower, both VGC. Travis Cook Mc Rae Helena 229-860-1562 Ford 1920I loader, fits early Ford tractors, $950 firm; Western Starr loader, fits Ford tractors, $650. Scott Odom Buford 770-945-7945 Ford 2000, gas, 1700 hours, bush hog, scoop and scrape blade, new brakes/ carburetor/alternator, everything works; $3800. Bill Millians Moreland 678-4160710 Ford 2445QT loader, $3000; 20 rolls Sisal twine for square bailers. Homer Rivers Tarrytown 912-293-4381 912537-8490 Ford 3000 gas tractor/bush hog, new Hesston in-line square baler, excellent alternator/starter/muffler, good brakes, condition, 1 owner, always sheltered. lights, lift, new/uninstalled front tires; David Harden Lafayette 706-397- $4800. James Smalley Marietta 404- 8347 550-6973 Hop, McCulloch 5.50 tractor tiller, like Ford 4000, wet brakes, power steer- new, used very little; $225. John Wilson ing, remote power, good lift, tires, motor, Tyrone 770-486-0304 transmission and paint. Glenda Gober Horse-drawn mowing machine, 1 part Buchanan 770-646-9677 is broken; $700 OBO. Harry Edge For- Ford 8N tractor, runs well/looks good, syth 478-994-6789 tires and paint stand out; $2750 OBO. IH 500 harrow, 13'24" disc-frame, Wayne Norman Marietta 404-245-5023 good condition, scrapers on rear-middle Ford 8N, new tires, battery, runs well, buster. Janice Morris Waynesboro 706- 4' bush hog included; $2300 firm. Mi- 551-4455 chael Clarke Moreland 404-354-1090 IHI 28J mini-excavator, runs and op- Ford 8N/9N, Ford 800, Ferguson T20/ erates well; $15,800. Herbert Mason T30, Farmall M, 4-disc harrow, box Hazlehurst 912-551-0475 blade with rippers, 4-wheel trailer. Cecil International 1086 tractor with Inter- Mitchell Eatonton 404-456-4929 national 2350 loader, 4 post roll guard, Ford Jubilee tractor, runs well, looks both in very good condition. Larry Young good, $2500; Yanmar diesel, 4WD, runs Tennille 478-232-6321 well, $2500. Carter Stewart Baldwin International 430 square baler, shel- 706-778-5204 tered, $450; Walton hay fluffer, 3PT Ford single turning-plow, $250; hitch, excellent condition, $750. R.C. 20-disc harrow, $200; scrape blade, Johnson Lexington 706-743-5248 $125; turf tires, 14.9x24, $200; call after International TD20 E-dozer, 75% un- 5 pm. Bruce Gray Blairsville 706-781- dercarriage, K.G. blade, root rake; sell/ 5878 trade for small dozer w/6-way blade or Ford TW-10 tractor; $7500 OBO. Greg small excavator. Randy Mcneal Mon- Lewis Baxley 912-367-9283 trose 478-697-4133 Forklift, portable, hydraulic, can pull on JD 2-horse wagon, needs work, $950; highway, move hay, equipment, pallets, two 18.4-26 tires, 60% tread, $150. w/2 containers, email for photos. Perry Greg Coker Toccoa 706-476-1972 Burns Powder Springs perryburns@ JD 207B grain drill, 20-row, double- bellsouth.net 770-241-4120 disc, with press wheels, big, galvanized Gooseneck dump trailer, 8x16x3.5; box, small seed. L. Partain Elberton Baltic fertilizer spreader; Gile 1-row 706-283-5058 cultivator; 6' scrape blade. Slate Long JD 2940 diesel tractor, 13,000 hours, Madison 706-318-0402 needs repairs, 16-speed transmission, Grapple 72", $1250; 48" pallet forks, 2-speed PTO, dual remotes, 2-post $550; for skid steer type hook-up. Jim Bishop Franklin 706-675-3943 canopy; $5800. Waylon Richland 229-321-2314 Davenport Hay baler, JD 2500, side delivery rakes; 6' fluffer; 7' sickle mower; 18' trailer; Ford 4000 tractor. Bob Sprinkle Duluth 404-427-5480 Hay Master 8-bale hay accumulator, pulls behind the baler; $5500. Shawn Cox Covington 678-409-6233 Hay rake, 4-wheel pull-type, 3PT, excellent condition; $350. Jonathan Roberts Bremen 404-538-4909 Hesston 4550 baler, $4000; Bush Hog bale loader, $500; King Kutter, 6' finish mower, $600. William Lumley Wrights- JD 2940, 80HP, 1594 hours, JD hydraulic blade, new everything; $19,600. David Norvell Monroe 770-267-8267 JD 348 square baler, field ready, $7500; New Holland 1049S stack wagon, new back tires, $15,000. Josh White Cuthbert 229-603-3818 JD 350 PTO driven rake, 3PT, have teeth, new belt, nice shape; $500. Ryan Baerne Nicholson 706-757-2672 JD 458 round baler, like new. JD 2350, Newton Crouch 150 gallon 3 pt. hitch sprayer. Gene Bankston Stockbridge 770-688-9770 ville 478-469-3411 JD 5420, with loader; JD 468 round Hesston 545 round baler, 4x5 bales, baler; Tye 15' grain drill; NH side hay new belts, good tires and a kicker. Jerry rake. James Martin Waynesboro 706- Williams Buchanan 770-328-5573 558-5005 Market Bulletin Ad Form This form may be used to submit an ad. There is a 20-word limit for advertisements unless otherwise noted under category headings. The 20-word limit includes name, city, phone number and complete address, if provided. Market Bulletin staff reserves the right to edit notices exceeding the word limit. Only one notice per subscriber per issue. In order to advertise in the Bulletin, you must be a paid subscriber with a current subscription. Category: Please note some categories are not published regularly. In addition, some categories require documentation, such as a Coggins test or organic certification, prior to being published. Phone number: Subscriber number: Please include your name and full address on all correspondence sent to the Bulletin office. The following statement must be signed by the advertiser submitting this notice for publication: I hereby certify that the above notice meets all the necessary requirements for publication in the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin. Please mail ads separate from subscription payments. Ads should be mailed to Georgia Department of Agriculture, Attention: Market Bulletin, 19 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive SW, Atlanta, GA 30334. PAGE 4 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2017 Livestock Sales and Events Calendar APPLING COUNTY 1st & 3rd Saturdays, 1 p.m.: Goats, sheep, small animals, feeder pigs; S&D Livestock, 187 Industrial Drive, Baxley; Call Steve Smith, 912.366.9207 or 912.278.1460 ATKINSON COUNTY 2nd & 4th Saturdays, 1 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Pearson Livestock, 1168 Highway 441 N, Pearson; Call Roberto Silveria, 229.798.0271 BARTOW COUNTY Every Wednesday, 1 p.m.: Cattle, goats, sheep; The New Peoples Livestock Mkt., 407 Burnt Hickory Road, Cartersville; Call Haynie Cochran, 770.547.1717; Phil Tuck, 770.881.0502 BEN HILL COUNTY Every Monday, 1 p.m.: Cattle; South Central Livestock, 146 Broad Road, Fitzgerald. Call Thomas Stripling, 229.423.4400 or 229.423.4436 BLECKLEY COUNTY 2nd, 4th & 5th Saturdays, 1 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Coker's Sale Barn, 9648 Duncan Bridge Road, Cleveland. Call Wayne Coker Sr., 706.540.8418 BUTTS COUNTY Every Wednesday, 11:30 a.m.: Cattle 2nd & 4th Wednesdays, 11:30 a.m.: Dairy cattle; Mid-Georgia Livestock Market, 478 Fairfield Church Road/Hwy. 16 W, Jackson. Call Brent Galloway, 770.775.7314 CARROLL COUNTY 2nd & 4th Saturdays, 4 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Long Branch Livestock, 813 Old Villa Rica Road, Temple. Call Ricky Summerville, 404.787.1865 Every Monday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Carroll County Livestock Sales Barn, 225 Salebarn Road, Carrollton. Call Barry Robinson, 770.834.6608 or 770.834.6609 CHATTOOGA COUNTY Every Friday, 7 p.m.: Goats, sheep; Trion Livestock Auction, 15577 Hwy. 27, Trion. Call McKinley Evans, 678.276.5127 CLARKE COUNTY Every Wednesday, 11 a.m.: Goats and sheep; noon, cattle. Northeast Georgia Livestock, 1200 Winterville Road, Athens. Call Todd Stephens, 706.549.4790 COLQUITT COUNTY Every Wednesday, 1 p.m.: Cattle; Moultrie Livestock Co., 1200 1st Street NE, Moultrie. Call Randy Bannister, 229.985.1019 COOK COUNTY 1st, 3rd & 5th Saturdays, 1 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Deer Run Auction, 1158 Parrish Road, Adel; Call John Strickland, 229.896.4553 DECATUR COUNTY 2nd & 4th Saturdays, 1 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Waddell Auction Co., 979 Old Pelham Road, Climax. Call John Waddell, 229.246.4955 EMANUEL COUNTY Every Monday, 1 p.m.: Cattle, slaughter hogs; Swainsboro Stockyard, 310 Lambs Bridge Road, Swainsboro. Call Clay Floyd and David N. Floyd, 478.945.3793 2nd & 4th Saturdays, noon: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; R&R Goat & Livestock Auction, 526 Hwy. 56 N, Swainsboro. Call Ron & Karen Claxton, 478.237.4628 or 478.237.8825 Every Tuesday, 10 a.m. & 1st Fridays: Cattle special sale; Dixie Livestock Market, 133 Old Hwy. 46, Oak Park. Call Willis & Tammy Sikes, 912.578.3263 FORSYTH COUNTY Every Tuesday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Lanier Farm's Livestock Corp., 8325 Jot-Em Down Road, Gainesville. Call Tyler Bagwell, 770.844.9223 or 770.844.9231 FRANKLIN COUNTY Every Tuesday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Franklin County Livestock Sales, 6461 Stone Bridge Road, Carnesville. Call Chad and Clay Ellison, 706.384.2975 or 706.384.2105 GORDON COUNTY Every Thursday, 12:30 p.m.: Cattle, goats, sheep, slaughter hogs; Calhoun Stockyard Hwy. 53, 2270 Rome Road SW, Calhoun. Call Dennis Little & Gene Williams, 706.629.1900 GREENE COUNTY Every Thursday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Duvall Livestock Market, 101 Apalachee Ave., Greensboro. Call Jim Malcom, 706.453.7368 JEFF DAVIS COUNTY 1st & 3rd Fridays: Horse sale, 7:30 p.m.; Circle Double S, 102 Lumber City Highway, Hazlehurst. Call Steve Underwood, 912.594.6200 (night) or 912.375.5543 (day) JOHNSON COUNTY 1st & 3rd Mondays, 7:30 p.m.: Chickens; Ol' Times Auction, 503 Hill Salter Road, Kite. Call Robert Colston, 478.299.6240 JONES COUNTY Every Saturday, 6 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; 5 p.m., farm miscellaneous, Ga. Lic. #3188; Buggy Town Auction, 1035 Hwy. 11, Gray. Call Jimmy Burnett 770.584.0388 or 678.972.4599 LAMAR COUNTY Every Friday, 6 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; 5 p.m., farm miscellaneous, Ga. Lic. #3188; Buggy Town Auction Market, 1315 Highway 341 S, Barnesville. Call James Burnette 770.584.0388 or 678.972.4599 LAURENS COUNTY 2nd & 4th Thursday, 6 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Horse Creek Auction Co., 5971 Hwy. 441 S, Dublin. Call Daniel Harrelson, 478.595.5418 MADISON COUNTY Every Friday, 6 p.m.: Chickens, small animals; Gray Bell Animal Auction, Hwy. 281, Royston. Call Billy Joe Bell, 706.245.4205 MARION COUNTY Every Thursday, 7 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Auction 41, 4275 GA Hwy. 41 N, Buena Vista. Call Jim Rush, 706.326.3549. Email auction41@ windstream.net NEWTON COUNTY 2nd & 4th Saturdays: Pony Express Stockyard Horse & Tack Auction, 5 p.m.; GAL AUNR002843; 1852 Highway 11 S, Covington. Call Scott Bridges, 704.434.6389 or 704.473.8715 PULASKI COUNTY Every Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.: Cattle, goats, sheep; Pulaski County Stockyard, 1 Houston Street, Hawkinsville. Call John Walker, 478.892.9071 SEMINOLE COUNTY Every Wednesday, 1:30 p.m., 3rd Saturday Special Sale, 1:30 p.m.: Cattle, goats, sheep; Seminole Stockyard, 5061 Hwy. 91, Donalsonville. Call Bryant Garland and Edwina Skipper, 229.524.2305 STEPHENS COUNTY 2nd Saturdays, 5 p.m.: W&W Livestock, Eastanollee Livestock Auction, Eastanollee. Call Brad Wood, 864.903.0296 3rd Saturdays, noon: Goats, sheep; Agri Auction Sales at Eastanollee Livestock Market, Highway 17 between Toccoa and Lavonia. Call Ricky Chatham, 706.491.2812 or Jason Wilson, 706.491.8840 Every Monday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Eastanollee Livestock, 40 Cattle Drive, Eastanollee. Call Mark Smith, 706.779.5944 SUMTER COUNTY Every Thursday, 1 p.m.: Cattle; Sumter County Stockyard, 505 Southerfield Lane, Americus. Call Bobby Gooden, 229.815.7127 TAYLOR COUNTY 1st & 3rd Tuesdays, 6:30 p.m.: Feeder pigs, goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; RockRidge Livestock Auction, 1357 Tommy Purvis Jr. Road, Reynolds. Call Melba Strickland, 706.975.5732 TELFAIR COUNTY 2nd & 4th Thursdays: Chickens, fowl, goats and sheep; check-in at 1 p.m., sale at 6:30 p.m. Horse Creek Auction, between Dublin and McRae off Highway 441. Call 478.595.5418 THOMAS COUNTY Every Tuesday, 1 p.m.: Cattle. 1st & 3rd Tuesdays: Slaughter hogs; Thomas County Stockyards, 20975 Hwy. 19 N, Thomasville. Call Jimmy P. Benton, 229.228.6960 TOOMBS COUNTY 1st & 3rd Saturdays, 11 a.m.: Feeder pigs, goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Metter Livestock Auction, 621 Hwy. 1 S, Lyons. Call Lewie Fortner, 478.553.6066 TURNER COUNTY Every Wednesday, 1 p.m.: Cattle; Turner County Stockyards, 1315 Hwy. 41 S, Ashburn. Call Alan Wiggins, 229.567.3371 UPSON COUNTY Every Thursday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep. L&K Farmers Livestock Market, 2626 Yatesville Hwy., Thomaston. Call Kathy and Lewis Rice, 706.468.0019. WHITE COUNTY Every Saturday, 4 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Coker's Sale Barn, 9648 Duncan Bridge Road, Cleveland. Call Wayne Coker Sr., 706.540.8418 WILKES COUNTY Every Wednesday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Wilkes County Stockyard, Hwy. 78 Bypass/302 Third Street, Washington. Call Kenny Durden and Linda Robertson, 706.868.0160 Notices for auctions selling farmrelated items other than livestock must be accompanied by the auction license number of the principal auctioneer or auction firm conducting the auction, per regulations from the Georgia Secretary of State. Auctions without this information will not be published. Have an auction to put on our calendar? Contact Arty Schronce at 404.656.3656 or arty.schronce@agr.georgia.gov. JD 6600 combine, 4-row corn header, Kubota B8200, with finishing mower, 454 row crop header, 216 grain platform, 897 hours, new battery. Denney Rogers low freon; $5000. Joe Walden Bartow Ephesus denneyrogers@aol.com 770- 478-364-6352 301-1290 JD 7000 6-row planter, 30" no-till finger Kubota L260 diesel tractor, with 4' pickup, dry fertilizer, $6000; 6-row culti- Bush Hog brand bush hog; $4500 OBO. vator, $1200; all sheltered. Travis Gilbert S. Walls Gainesville 770-539-0680 Woodbury 706-575-0593 Kubota L3600, with loader at fork lift, JD 9950 4-row cotton picker, with mud 919 hours. Dale Farmer Rome 706-266- hog, good condition, runs/picks well, 6772 cheap picking; $6500 OBO. John Griffin Kubota M125X, 4WD, self-leveling Tifton 229-445-0495 loader, cab, A/C, 2008 year, 5000 JD GT262, motor is good, but needs hours, good condition; $36,500. Dustin other work, extra parts, deck is good; Churchwell Union Point 706-817-0296 $250. Nancy Stephens Sparta 706-444- Kubota M9540, 800 hours, 4WD; 848 8201 NH baler; Kuhn hay cutter; NH 57 rake; JD3032E, 305 loader, 16' trailer, bush Kuhn fluffer, field ready. C.F. Collins hog, hoist boon, subsoiler, cultivator, 5' Dahlonega 706-973-9135 harrow, dirt pan; $18,500/all, call 9a-8p. Land Pride 6' finish mower, with own- Dan Priest Moultrie 229-798-2678 er's manual, 3PT hitch; $1200. Bo Res- JD43 harrow; 26' Art's Way (Interna- encrantz Gray 770-374-1907 tional Super Chief) 6-disc flip turning Landscape gill, used very little; $425. plow; both in great condition. Donald Bobby Crawford Sharpsburg 770-328- Wingate Doerun 229-776-6145 229- 1569 349-0026 Lewis Brother's #2 housekeeper, $3500; JD4600, 43HP, 4x4, 540 PTO, power Lewis Brothers loader/spreader, $1000. reverse, loader, new tires, 2600 hours, John Beatty Talmo 678-617-9916 hay fork, bucket, box scrape; $15,500. Philip Weathington Douglasville 678229-7770 Log splitter, Bush Hog brand, hydraulic remote, 3PT hitch, excellent condition; $750. M.E. Cooke Fayetteville 770- JD5310 tractor, 4500 hours, good/ 316-8547 clean/strong, new rubber, photos avail- Loyal manure spreader, for 4-wheeler, able; $18,000. Jonathan Smith Metter like new, perfect for equine use; $1200. 912-531-0686 Randy Barbe Cave Spring 435-640- JD6430, CA, 2WD, 115HP, 4800 hours, 0225 $33,000; JD5085M, 2WD, 85HP, 1470 M&W 4500 hay baler, 1 owner, always hours, $32,000. Dale Wiley Covington 770-464-3276 sheltered, VGC, string tie, 4'x5' round bales; $5000. M. Summers Elko 478- John Deere 2750 loader, 4WD, restored, 987-7151 478-447-0555 3107 hours, rebuilt engine, new clutch, cab interior, front tires, paint, more. Tim Miller Cherrylog 706-455-1664 Mahindra 7520, 65 hours, radio, canopy, shuttle shift, 4WD, like new; $12,000. Michael Crumbley Jasper 706-692- John Deere 336 baler, small bales; 5040 $4000. Bobby Odom Metter 912-6872107 Massey Ferguson 165, w/front loader, bucket, hay fork, runs well, good con- John Deere 4-row Max Emerge, 2 air dition; $4500. James Bouchard Com- planters on KMC frame, w/pop-up tank merce 404-317-1932 and 2-row markers. Earnest Padgett Massey Ferguson 165, with loader, Jacksonville 229-833-5240 $7500; Ford 2600, $4500; Farmtrac 35, John Deere 4020; International cub; $4750; JD7720 combine, 9500. Andy Deutz 4506; Case; John Deere A har- Sumner Wrightsville 478-484-6984 row, John Deere bush hog. Dennis Hinton Covington 770-786-2014 Massey Ferguson 360 turbo, Perkins diesel w/2311 hours, wheel weights/dif- John Deere 4030, for parts, best offer; ferential lock, 80% rubber, ROPS/FOPS, 10'L harrow, $600. Rusty Black Sylva- no leaks; $6250. Justin Mitchell Stone nia 912-857-3233 912-682-6159 Mountain 917-893-1138 John Deere 435 round baler, 1 owner, Massey Ferguson 7-shank chisel plow, field ready, barn kept; $8750. Kenneth 3PT hitch, with gauge wheels; $500. Bagwell Cumming bagwell66@gmail. Jerry Cox Fayetteville 770-461-7938 com 770-616-8268 Massey Harris 101JR, $1200 OBO; 6' John Deere 435 round baler; $3500. Jerry Patterson Griffin 678-283-6889 770-228-3071 John Deere 5420 tractor, 4WD, cab, heat/air, front-loader hay fork, heavy-duty bucket, selling due to health; $2950. Hoyt Maxwell Dewy Rose 706-2831513 John Deere 567 mega wide, w/monitor, 2004 year, 8235 bales, twine-wrap, good belts, field ready, sheltered. Jake Gower Covington 404-391-6182 John Deere 6140D tractor, 4WD, with 310 loader, 620 hours. Anthony Martin Millen 706-871-8254 John Deere 650 tractor, great condition, with attachments, bush hog, box blade, ripper and pull bar; $6500. Gary Hennessee Claxton 770-480-9600 John Deere 6500 sprayer; 4-disc flip turning plow; KMC 6-row peanut inverter. Jean Wingate Doerun 229-881-4792 John Deere 7200 high crop tractor, 1994 year, 2WD, cab, A/C, 10,650 hours, 1 owner, good condition; $19,000. Ted Milliron Shellman 229-317-3795 Mott flail mower, $600 OBO. Paul Stacey Toccoa 706-886-6994 Mechanical transplanter, new seats, double disk opener with new bearings, row knockers, 12-holder plant chain; $2500 OBO. Thomas Taunton Butler 478-862-3138 MF bottom plows; 6' box scrape, needs paint; trade 6' Land Pride for HD 8' bush hog. W.C. Jones Tunnel Hill 706-673-2731 MF240 w/232 loader, 1100 hours, 48HP at PTO, 1 owner, runs great, 1992, used garden/bush hog; $9995. Dennis Barr Mcdonough 770-231-0003 Mini excavator T-Rex schaeffer HR16, 1998, 10,000 lb. weight; $13,000. Doug Hagn Statesboo 912-839-5141 Modern Manufacturing 7' scrape blade, $350; Vans 55-gallon 4-row sprayer, $400. Daniel Harrell Baconton 229-343-1930 New Holland 616 disc mower, good condition; Lely Rottera 4-row, w/4 attached John Deere planters; $2500/ John Deere 7300, 6-row vacuum planter, good condition. Chad Hawkins each. Wayne Dykes Cochran 478-2908695 Rochelle 229-425-0283 New Holland LX565, runs good, tooth John Deere 7800 tractor, 4WD, cab and A/C, 6917 hours, Amadas hard hose, 4"x1250', Newton Crouch spinners. Les- bucket with attached grapple, foamfilled spare. Ric Williams Gainesville 678-316-8673 lie Jones Jacksonville 229-860-1277 New Holland Super 49 bale wagon, John Deere 8440 articulating trac- great shape; $9000 OBO. Kenneth Col- tor, 4WD, 1982 year, with cab, running; lins Blairsville 706-897-1933 $11,500. Danny Ward Waco 770-876- New Holland TC-30 tractor, 30HP, 4WD, 0492 front-end loader, R-4 tires, excellent con- John Deere 9986 cotton picker; Red- dition, 1030 hours; $10,800 OBO. W.H. ball 420 6-row hooded sprayer; JD 450 Cochran Cherry Log 706-632-5744 grain drill. Donnie Wingate Moultrie Newton Crouch 6-row nitrogen appli- 229-881-4191 cator, 500-gallon tank, like new, used John Deere deer plot drills, 7'-8'W, less than 400 acres. Mike Bird Ameri- works on 3PT hitch; $2200-$2500. cus 229-942-3835 Royce Hulett Hazlehurst 912-375-3008 NH 1409 mower conditioner, $8000; Krone round baler, 4'x5', wide pickup, JD 336 square baler, $4000; Vicon sheltered, great condition, bale monitor, 4000s disc mower, $7500; all field field ready, string-wrap; $8200. Donald ready. Tracy Boyt Thomaston 706-656- Allgood Temple 770-562-3720 8481 WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2017 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov PAGE 5 NH Boomer 30 tractor, 2014 year, 4x4 6'-9' chisel plow, spring plow, all-pur- 20-gallon cast iron pot, excellent con- Front tine tiller, 2013 engine, $150; hydrostatic loader, 66" belly mower, pose plow or 3PT cultivator; also seek dition; $165. Richard Dougals Logan- 6x8x16 cement blocks, used, $.35-cents cultivator, 170 hours; $17,500. Charlie running 2000-gallon water truck. Mi- ville 678-294-7100 each. Kenneth Wehunt Barnesville 770- Eastland Senoia 706-957-7449 chael Bugden Newnan 678-428-2917 2003 Exiss 24' cattle and horse trailer, 358-2587 Old 7.6 Gravely, not running, several Bush Hog RTS50 rotary tiller, 3PT tack room, all aluminum, newer tires, Grass carpet to stack hay onto, saves accessories; make an offer. David Wood hitch. Elizabeth Gravley Waleska 770- very good condition. Lisa Pearson Ila hay so it won't rot, 2 truckloads; $2/sq. Danielsville 706-202-3436 356-2326 770-789-7261 706-789-3850 yd. Lee Gravitt Calhoun 770-548-3528 Old Hay Master turbo tedder, for parts, Chore-Time 48" linear lift. Clay Echols 20x20 log cabin, built 1900; $5000. Hay, Fescue/Orchard, good quality, or small gear on end wheeler, call before Alto 770-540-0930 Jimmy Hardin 4377 Us Highway 80 E square and round bales, first 2017 cut- 8:30 pm. Rodney Webb Adrian 478- Front rack for 5075E John Deere trac- Knoxville 31050 478-361-3907 ting. Lou Beal Marietta 770-344-8527 275-0859 tor, and some weights too. Melvin Paulk 250-gallon fuel tank, you load; Hen nests, metal 4-hole or 6-hole; $85 Price reduced: Allis Chalmers B, Sylvester 229-776-5411 $275. Dolph Bosse Hampton 770-605- each. Lamar Bryant Cleveland 706- $2250; Farmall A, $2250; Farmall C, John Deere factory canopy, in good 9922 878-8509 $3250, Farmall F20, $3250. Ted Reeves condition, to fit late model 3020. Bobby 250-gallon LP tanks, 2 available; Hot water pressure washer unit, self- Sparta 706-878-8562 Moore Crawfordville 706-318-3789 $250 each. F. White Buckhead 706- contained, 4000PSI, enclosed trailer Quick detach loader bucket, good John Deere X520 lawn tractor, for 614-4900 unit, great for cleaning equipment. condition, good cutting edge, used very parts. Ray Gilbert Bishop 706-769-5820 250-gallon propane tank, with 100-gal- Grady Thomas Odum 912-294-6185 little; $750. Todd Keesee Madison 678- 706-296-4360 lons of propane, $250; propane wall Large churns, $45; small churns, $25; 201-6050 Kubota B6100, 3PT hitch, used culti- heater, $175. Debbie Turlington Coving- butter mold, $$15. Tillie Harris Preston Raised mulch layer, Berryhill RB448, vator and plow, inexpensive start, small ton 678-372-9529 229-939-0214 36", 42", 48"; $1525. Rick Mabry Bu- garden spot plant. Earnest Mcdowell 275-gallon plastic tank tote in metal Large Deutz tractor, 60-70HP; chanan 770-313-0317 Shiloh 706-566-7750 cages, 5" top caps, bottom valve; $50 1000-gallon propane tank, good condi- Rake, $1500; 3-blade tiller, 3PT hitch, Loader pallet forks, with pin for Case/ each. C. Stovall Dahlonega 678-491- tion, $800; Deutz tractor, $1200. Donal $350; rolling 2-row cultivator, $500. Jim- JD backhoe, not clamp-on type, please 0838 Dorsey Talking Rock 706-253-9888 my Freeman Boston 229-221-0606 leave message or text. B. Roller Turner- 35 joints of 30'6" twist-lock aluminum Locust fence posts and rails. Barney Restored Allis Chalmers: Two 45 series ville 678-835-7384 pipe. Bobby Clay De Soto 229-874- Cook Blairsville 706-994-2600 706- and one 15 series with fresh paint, work Miniature backhoe, Terramite, Kubota 4485 745-8724 ready. Jesse Black Gainesville 678- or Allmand Brothers, in good condition. 35 used cross-ties, $75; tool box, Lumber custom-cut, Wood-Mizer 617-6852 Chris Huston Talking Rock 706-299- $150. John Walton Powder Springs sawed, kiln dried, milled for homes, Side dump forage wagon, Gehl 9000 0061 404-805-0978 flooring/cabinetry, barns, fencing, resto- Hydra tilt box, 10'W x13'H, with 9-ton Need irrigation pump, lines and sprin- 4" blocks, new, 90 available, $.70-cents rations/timber frames, horse shavings.. capacity; $4000. Richard Acree Cal- klers appropriate for small hay field or each; 20" brick saw, $300; 42" Crafts- John Sell Milner 30257 sellj@bellsouth. houn 706-629-7694 large garden. Marie Roberts Lindale man mower. Connie Powell Monticello net 770-480-2326 Silver Edge 225 gravity wagon, good 706-676-1235 706-476-0637 Lumber, 2x4s, 2x6s and various as- tires, sheltered, excellent condition, Portable electric welder, gas powered, 50 pieces of tin 3'x24', $20/each; 16 sorted others available; also stainless $1350; heavy-built hay forks, $200. 225-250A, Miller/Lincoln/Hobart. Benny trusses, 2"x6"x40', $40/each. Dewel steel bar, $40. Bill Sewell Brunswick Donald Smith Wrightsville 478-232- Brookshire Suches 706-747-3693 706- Lawrence Vienna 229-322-4048 912-270-8278 5913 897-1174 5V tin: 3'x7', 3'x23' and 2'x11'; new Meber SR-R1900 power band saw, Spreader truck, 1982 GMC General, Pull-type tumblebug 1-roll/bale hay 1.5HP 1-phase motor; used 2HP resaw, 36" autofeed, 10HP, almost new, 14' litter spreader body, call/text; $5000. hauler, or the equivalent, leave number if 2-phase. Michael Bennett Cumming 20" cut; $6000. Ralph Gordon Dalton Ethan Hutchins Summerville 706-506- no answer. Tom Colvin Cobbtown 912- 770-889-4515 706-259-5903 6511 684-3879 60 egg flats, hold 30 eggs each, $15. MF 35 diesel deluxe tractor, $2500; Subsoiler, $275; 2-disc turning plow, R1 tractor tires, 14.9-24, tread not Joseph Durante Alpharetta 305-318- scrape blade, $250; bush hog, $250; $300; 7' cultivator, $185; grader blade, important but no dry-rot please. Tracie 2337 mowing machine, $200, Taylor-Way, $300. J.W. Brown La Fayette 423-3644355 Reichel Maysville tr2009@windstream. net 706-652-2185 650 lb. Applegate creep feeder, used 2 months, like new; $550. Donald Chan- $600. Hoyt Howard Cumming 770-8872039 Swisher 11.5HP walk-behind, 23" Seeking a 2/3 stage pecan inspection dler Hull 706-548-7500 Nursery pots, 1-gallon and 3-gallon; rough cut, used once, must sell due to table, and a pecan meat sizer. Doug Band-sawed lumber, cut from your $.15-cents/each. Wesley Smith Athens health; $1200 firm. Lee Johnson Sum- Kesler Colbert dkesler5@msn.com trees or mine; $.21+ cents per bd./ft. 706-247-5254 merville 423-593-3836 706-338-1035 706-788-2703 Doug Schneider Taylorsville 678-361- Old, knotty pine paneling, good for Tires for an Arctic Cat, two 25x10x12, Small used tractor, good condition, 6206 wainscoting; $200. Phyllis Futch Cal- and two 26x12x12; $100/all. David with front-end loader. Harry Entrekin Bells, buy and sell, farm/school/church houn 706-625-5575 Echols Dahlonega 706-867-8481 Americus 229-924-7040 bells, different sizes; 8-wheel hay rake w/ Pelton water wheel, makes electricity, Tractor tires, 14.9-28, 2 available, 1 Tractor with front end loader or loader kicker wheel; large cast iron pot. Shane $1200; 250 lb. anvil, table forge, buff needs boot; $100/both. James Thomp- for hay and dirt; also seeking old silage Burnett Mansfield 770-827-2240 blower, $1200. Tim Marcoux Morgan- son, Jr. Hephzibah 706-726-5771 equipment. Randy Groover Statesboro Black plastic nursery pots, all sizes, ton 706-374-2214 Troy-Bilt Horse tiller, Briggs & Strat- 912-690-2281 used once, pick-up truck load, must Pine shavings, top quality, for horse ton 8HP engine, brand new; $800. Larry Lane Danielsville 706-362-7438 FARM SUPPLIES take all; $1/all. Don Irwin Cumming 770- barn/chicken houses, sold by cubic 887-1376 yard, will load your transportation; $5. Troy-Bilt Proline tiller, used 1 season, $500/firm; also 6' Woods HD box blade, $550; both like new. Eddie Roberts Suwanee 404-558-9987 Troy-Bilt tiller, 8HP, 2 sets new tines; 5' King Kutter bush hog; 5' rotary tiller; sell together/separately. Bill Hensler Milner 770-358-9877 Troy-Bilt Tuffy tiller, excellent condition, 3.5HP engine, walk-behind; $250. James Chapman Winder 770-725-4477 Vermeer 605F round baler, $2500; MF 43 grain drill, $3750; Mantis compost tumbler, $350; electric fencing supplies. Ted Smith Washington 706-678-4011 Vermeer track, walk-behind trencher RTX100, bought new, used very little, stored inside, plus various equipment. Roberta Verdone Lexington 706-7433994 Water Winch 6000 cable-tow irrigation system, excellent condition, several years old but used very little. Danny Hogan Dexter 478-984-6415 Wood splitter, 50-ton, brand new motor and tires, works, pulls good; $1250. Roy Pruitt Douglasville 770595-7891 Woods stump grinder, tractor-mounted, 15-50HP, grinds stumps 16" above and below ground, like new; $3500. Ollie Lindell Jesup ollielindell@gmail.com 912-427-7187 Worksaver HDP-20 hydraulic post driver, 3PT hitch, excellent condition. John Wood Gray 478-714-9564 Yanmar 2000, with loader and 4' bush hog, low hours, $6900; trailer and other equipment available. Dan Hagler Social Circle 770-464-0567 Farm Machinery Wanted If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. 1.5HP sprinkler pump, 230V, for garden or lawn, used very little, with manual; $175. Jack Tatum Cumming 770887-3856 10' feeders and hay rings; also have water troughs. Gene Cantrell Shady Dale 770-321-6224 706-468-1341 1000 chimney bricks, clean, good condition; $1 each. Ronnie Jones Davisboro 478-232-5694 478-247-9319 100kW generator, Caterpillar, diesel, two 200A double-throw switches; $3500. Andrew Bookmiller Murrayville andrewbookmiller@yahoo.com 770231-4153 12 pieces of rusty tin; also have lumber, red and white oak, Tiger maple, basswood and poplar. David Gray Bowdon 770-655-4674 12, corral panels, 17 available; $40 each. Curtis Elliott Dahlonega 770-2311677 15 suitcase-type front weights, 60 lbs. each, $250; 2230 Heinzman soft hose traveler, Lagoon setup, $400. Clay Washburn Macon 478-718-6263 18' dovetail trailer, steel and meat cuber, both used little. Wayne Mazness Loganville 770-554-3537 2 chicken house feed bins, 2800 lbs.; eight 48" and fourteen 36" chicken house fans w/shutters. Willard Stowe Commerce 706-335-5248 706-534-4286 2 chicken houses, Chore-Time feed lines, flood pan, easy remove, 2 vent machines, bi-fold door; $200/each. Herbert Fendley Ellijay 706-273-6896 706273-8391 2 Fill-Rite oil pumps and drums, se- Broad axe, turpentine cat face; 1-row fowler plow; large wash pot; saw mill blade. Russell Jewell 2160 W Jackson St Waycross 31503 912-283-8871 Canning jars, pints. quarts and 12 oz. jelly, $4.50 dozen; also have food-grade buckets, 3-6-gallon, $1-$3. Br45uce Wills Cleveland 706-878-9787 Canning jars, quarts, pints and jelly; $3/dozen. Lois Ashley Gainesville 678316-6523 Chest freezer, Sears brand, 110V, 41"Lx21"Wx32"D, $150; stainless steel milk/cooler refrigerator box, $100. Mehmed Mammoth Fairburn 770-9690151 Clean 55-gallon metal drums with lids. Leonard Crane Dawsonville 678-9476744 404-213-1516 Clean hog slats, 19 pieces, 4x8, you haul; $10 each. John Simpson Talbotton 706-665-3480 706-577-5286 Electric fencing, 100'x60' garden, quarter-mile wire, post, 2 chargers, MTD yard machine/trailer, 18HP twin; $350/ both. Jim Money Columbus 706-5610255 706-987-3864 Farm cart with pneumatic bicycle tires, excellent condition, 42"x24"x12"; $125. Dale Jones Flowery Branch 770-9676948 Feed bins, 21-tons, Chore-Time, $750; auger motors and other poultry equipment. Keith Boozer Monroe 770-6015217 Fence post, treated, 4"-6" diameter, 6'+/- tall, 100+ available; $4 each/new, or $3 each/used. Thomas Clements Rutledge 770-335-6315 Field rocks, good for erosion control, etc., call for appointments and direc- Wes Brawley Blairsville 706-781-9911 828-837-2145 Poultry house equipment: Chore-Time feed bins, furnaces, drinkers, cooling cells, fans and generator. Richard Godfrey Clayton 706-782-3603 Push plow, $75; wash pot, $75; buck saw, $25; flat irons, $12. M.P. Bailey Redan 770-482-2812 Rain barrel, remove and reconnect drain pipe, $20; perfect backyard chicken coop, has 3 nesting boxes, 1 y/o. I. Nash Lilburn 770-931-7977 Reclaimed chicken house tin/trusses, selling together, 40' open span, great for a shop/storage building; $30/tin, and $100/trusses John Ford Lula 404-3752584 Rockwell radial arm saw, $250; large clawfoot tub, good condition, $200; 2 pressure washers, 2500 PSI. Gerald Irvin Mcdonough 404-310-0598 770954-9329 Rough sawn lumber, White oak trailer decking, pine, poplar, walnut and cedar, call for details. Peter Jones Monticello 478-256-3857 Scott's mower, 42" cut, cast iron front axle, new blades/air filters/oil and filter, 17HP Briggs engine; $525. David Combs Jefferson 706-367-4107 Silt saver caps; $200 OBO. Teressa Channell Gainesville 678-316-1866 Sugarcane syrup, pure premium quality, three 25.6 ounce bottles, shipped anywhere in the USA; $42/3. Ben Parrish Statesboro ben@benparrish.net 912-536-2200 Timbermill truss saw, for trusses. J.T. Austin Douglasville 770-652-3383 770942-2057 Troy-Bilt Junior, runs great, not used 5' bush hog, good condition. Donnie ries 100/model 122, 1 has meter series tions; $50/pick-up load. Steve Newman much, always dry kept; $350. Richard Sullivan Carrollton 678-416-5469 800A; $450. Larry Knowles Fayetteville Eatonton 706-485-8760 Haigler Hiawassee 706-835-5222 5534 Savage pecan sprayer. Wayne 770-560-3512 Flooring, oak and pine, tongue & Vulcan anvil, 100 lbs., $225; also 5/16 Dasher Glennville wiregras@wind- 20 pieces of 33x43 diamond plate groove, various widths, also have bead- aluminum cable, 2 pieces, 250' each, stream.net 912-213-3331 912-654- steel, 12-gauge; $10/sheet. Clint Adams board and trim, call for prices. William $125. Michael Maner Morganton 706- 3332 Winder 706-296-4676 Briggs Atlanta 404-349-2315 374-5924 LIVESTOCK QUOTATIONS Average prices for April 2017 Auction Market at Georgia Auction Markets, Georgia Department of Agriculture and U.S.D.A. Cooperative FederalState 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..... 64.52 Boners 80-85% Lean....... 66.39 Lean 85-90% Lean.......... 61.40 BULLS: Yield Grade 1 1000-1500 lbs.................. 91.36 1500-2100 lbs.................. 93.07 FEEDER CLASSES: WEIGHTED .AVG PRICES STEERS: MEDIUM AND LARGE ................................1........... 2 300-350 lbs.......172.84.. 161.56 350-400 lbs.......167.91.. 155.26 400-450 lbs.......160.02.. 149.17 450-500 lbs.......153.64.. 143.36 500-550 lbs.......146.41.. 137.83 550-600 lbs.......140.16.. 133.61 600-650 lbs.......135.90.. 125.76 650-700 lbs.......129.48.. 122.45 HEIFERS: MEDIUM AND LARGE ....................1........... 2 300-350 lbs.......148.21.. 138.39 350-400 lbs.......142.84.. 134.05 400-450 lbs.......137.69.. 128.31 450-500 lbs ......133.65.. 124.66 500-550 lbs.......130.01.. 121.11 550-600 lbs.......126.72.. 118.17 600-650 lbs.......123.03.. 111.46 650-700 lbs.......121.01.. 108.81 BULLS: MEDIUM AND LARGE .................................1........... 2 300-350 lbs.......166.12.. 154.79 350-400 lbs.......161.42.. 150.68 400-450 lbs.......153.84.. 143.75 450-500 lbs ......146.98.. 137.35 500-550 lbs.......139.55.. 130.61 550-600 lbs.......133.68.. 125.43 600-650 lbs.......127.63.. 119.07 650-700 lbs.......122.59.. 113.93 GOATS (priced per head) SLAUGHTER CLASSES .SELECTION 2 BILLIES/BUCKS 75-100 lbs...................... 132.68 100-150 lbs.................... 169.38 150-300 lbs.................... 221.18 NANNIES/DOES 60-80 lbs.......................... 95.94 80-100 lbs...................... 136.69 100-150 lbs.................... 168.75 KIDS & YEARLINGS 20-40 lbs.......................... 66.47 40-60 lbs........................ 100.91 60-80 lbs........................ 132.92 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. PAGE 6 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2017 Field Notes: We're from the government, and we're here to help you By Amy H. Carter Editor I was a 23-year-old newspaper reporter with two years on the job the first time I asked an emergency first responder how he coped with memories of the miseries he witnessed on a near daily basis. His name was Jesse, and he was a deputy fire chief for rescue services. A bear of a man at least 10 years my senior, Jesse stared through me for what felt like an eternity before he put his head in his hands and sobbed. It was the kind of soulshaking cry that makes your ribs sore. That was a cruel day in April many years ago, after we'd both done our respective duties at the fiery scene of a commuter plane crash that claimed 23 souls, including a former U.S. Senator and his daughter from Texas, a NASA shuttle astronaut from Warner Robins, and a nine-year-old boy named Brian, who was flying from Atlanta with his sister, Laura, 6, to spend spring break with their grandparents at the beach. They died two miles from their destination. It was another cruel day this past April that prompted me to ask that question of an emergency aid giver for just the second time in my career. It was on the tip of my tongue to ask Jessie Murray as we stood stroking the lice-infested mane of a three-year-old filly named C.J., who was steadily munching hay while suspended in a sling secured by heavy chains affixed to the trusses of the Georgia Department of Agriculture's Impound Barn in Mansfield. C.J. was one of several horses surrendered by a neglectful owner in Putnam County just four days earlier. Jessie stayed with C.J. until 8 o'clock the night before my visit, worrying that the horse would not survive. C.J. went down while grazing in the sun around 4 o'clock that afternoon and would not (or could not) rise again on her own, hence the sling. At the time, C.J. weighed just 480 pounds, about 400 pounds less than she should. Her former owner was literally starving her to death. The image of her hip bones, ribs and legs a skeleton upholstered in hide, basically haunts me still. Jessie, who has worked in the Equine Program for seven years, sees this on a regular basis. How does she come back smiling, day after day? Two weeks after leaving Mansfield, I finally mustered the courage to ask her via email. "Unfortunately we don't save them all. Sometimes they don't make it," she wrote back. "It is devastating. It does take a toll on me personally, because I treat every horse that comes through the door as if they were my own horse. If there is a possibility of saving these horses within our capabilities and means (donated means), we do all we can for them. I have to know that I did all I could for them, and I have to know they are no longer suffering. I guess I look to the next horse that needs our help and that keeps me concentrated on what they need now." I've been a state employee for two years, one month and 24 days as of this printing, and I'm still surprised almost daily at the reality of government work as compared to how I perceived it as an outsider. Government workers like newspaper reporters get a bum rap sometimes. I'll take my lumps for my own performance on both fronts, but people like Jessie put the civility in the title "civil servant." A grateful horse can't say thank you or write a letter to Jessie's boss praising her willingness to go the extra mile to save his life, and yet she persists. That's good people. Reader Profile: Fred Barnes Continued From Page 1 termelons, pumpkins, sweet corn, a little sugar cane, peanuts and "lots of tomatoes." "Someone said it's cheaper to buy vegetables at the grocery store than to grow them yourself. That may be true if you're buying for one or two people, but you don't get to share. I wouldn't have the joy of giving if I did that," he said. Barnes especially likes to share with those who can't grow their own. He doesn't spend all his time in the garden, though. Helping his brother cut down a leaning sycamore that was endangering the house led to a new pursuit and a new opportunity to give. The brothers gave the wood to a local wood turning club who, in turn, invited them to their meetings. That's where Barnes learned about woodworking and began making wooden pens. He has made bowls and vases, but admitted "pens are my thing." He has worked with black cherry, persimmon, dogwood, pear and apple wood. He also rescues wood from old buildings that are slated for demolition. He recycled mahogany from an old church and oak from an old school that was torn down. "Now people have pens made of wood they walked on as young people," he said. He's also made pens from tobacco sticks the pieces of wood that tobacco was hung on to cure. He sells some and gives some away. He started giving them to the women at church for their birthdays, but things progressed and now he has given a pen to everyone at his church. "I always have to have something to do. Like they say, `Idle hands and minds are the devil's workshop,'" he said. "If the Lord lets me work until the day I die, it would be great." Arty's Garden: Learning from the robins By Arty Schronce arty.schronce@agr.georgia.gov Robins built a nest in the camellia, or perhaps I should say the remains of the camellia, at the end of the porch. The camellia was there when I moved into the house, and I've never liked it. Its flowers are those jumbled types with stamens sticking out in various places. I pruned it mercilessly over the years. Now it looks like a camellia lollipop a mass of leaves atop a barren trunk. I had plans of whittling it away entirely and planting something else. The robins nested there again this year any- way, just as they have several times before. They win. The camellia stays. If I can't appreciate its flowers, I appreciate the robins. I didn't notice when they actually started building, but even though there wasn't much of a canopy, the birds found a perfect foundation of branches and enough leaves to conceal the nest from full view. Robin nests are masterfully constructed of mud, twigs, grass, plant fibers and occasionally manmade materials. People who have never seen a nest recognize "robin's egg blue" as a color similar to one of those prized boxes from Tiffany & Co. A nest so close can be an inconvenience. I had to stay out of the porch swing, speak in quiet tones and move slowly when I was near. I put off repairing the porch spigot. A plumber would be too disruptive. I used another source to water plants and fill birdbaths. Robins are worth the inconvenience, however. I love them. They were among the first birds I learned as a child. When One of last year's crop of robins, photographed shortly after it left the nest in April of 2016. I created my first vegetable garden in 1972, a robin came almost within reach, like a pet, waiting for me to turn up an earthworm. That familiarity along with its distinctive appearance (rust breast and charcoal back) and hab- its (industrious, brave and vocal) has brought the robin flocks of admirers. Connecticut, Michigan and Wisconsin named it their state bird. I especially enjoy watching robins patrol lawns and gardens. They are the personification of the early bird getting the worm, as they start before the crack of dawn. They alternatively hop like little feathered kangaroos or stroll rapidly, moving both legs before abruptly stop- ping like a wind-up toy. They cock their heads to the side as if listening for something. This has to do with their monocular vision and nothing to do with their hearing, however. And they are pros at spotting worms and bugs. I spent several hours quietly watching both parents bring meals to the three nest- lings. They landed and launched about every four minutes. Each landing would bring a chorus of chirps. It was like watching a song- bird version of the Berlin Airlift. On April 25 they took wing. When I came home at lunch, two had already flown and one stood on the rim of the nest ready to launch it- self into the post-nest world. Robins, however friendly, are still wary of humans, especially when nesting. My pair eyed me suspiciously every time I appeared. How little did they know I was changing my life to accommodate them, including haul- ing gallons of water from inside the house to make sure they had a ready supply for drink- This photo was were taken several years ago behind the Georgia Department of Agriculture building. The nest was in a flowering cherry growing at the base of an embankment. ing and bathing. Some of their nest materials were clippings I scattered around the garden for birds to use. I even placed a half-eaten strawberry nearby and watched the mother gobble it down. Of course, I didn't expect thanks from a wild animal. I had my rewards, though. I also had a lesson. How often have I been oblivious to the care and protection of God and others parents, teachers and people whose names I never knew. Robins remind me I am the one who should say thanks. FARMERS & CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN (ISSN 0889-5619) Gary W. Black, Commissioner Subscriptions to the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin are $10 per year. To start 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 MARKET BULLETIN STAFF Julie McPeake, Chief Communication Officer Amy H. Carter, Editor Arty Schronce, Staff Writer Caroline Phillips, Intern Mikki Dixon, Executive Administrative Assistant or renew a subscription, go to our website to pay by Visa or MasterCard, or send a check payable to the Georgia Department of Agriculture along with your name, complete mailing address and phone number to PO Box 742510 Atlanta, GA 30374-2510. Designate "Market Bulletin" in the "for" line. To determine if an existing subscription is due for renewal, look for the expiration date on the mailing address label on page 1. Postmaster: Send address changes to 19 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, Atlanta, 30334. The Department does not discriminate on the basis of sex, race, color, national origin, age or disability in the admission or access to, or treatment in, its employment policy, programs or activities. The Department's Administration Division coordinates compliance with the non-discrimination requirements contained in Section 35.107 of the Department of Justice Regulations. Information concerning the provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the rights provided thereunder, are available from this division. If you require special assistance in utilizing our services, please contact us. WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2017 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov PAGE 7 Cook Georgia Grown: Shrimp and Grits May 10th is National Shrimp Day. Shrimp is Georgia's most valuable seafood crop, but Georgia shrimpers are a dying breed. The Coastal Resources Division of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources issues fewer than 300 commercial licenses per year to fishermen seeking to trawl for white and brown shrimp along Georgia's 100-mile coastline. In the past, as many as 500 trawlers worked the sounds and state waters up to three miles off the coast. In the 1970s, a year's haul could exceed six million shrimp. Today's average annual harvest is down by half or more, due largely to farm-raised imports. Support a Georgia shrimper. Buy Georgia-grown shrimp. -Amy H. Carter, editor Ingredients: 1 cup course ground Gayla's Grits* 4 cups chicken broth 2 Tbsp. butter 1/2 tsp. pepper 8 oz. smoked Gouda 1 large Vidalia onion, chopped 2 Tbsp. Georgia Olive Farms Olive Oil** 1/2 tsp. salt 1 tsp. sugar 1 lb. large Georgia white shrimp, peeled and deveined 2 cloves garlic, minced 1 stick butter, melted 2 Tbsp. fresh rosemary, chopped Directions: For the grits, bring the chicken broth, butter and pepper to a boil. Add the grits to the broth mixture and cook covered over low to medium heat for one hour, stirring frequently. Add water of a cup at a time as needed during the cooking to keep the grits from sticking. During the last 15 minutes of cooking, add the cheese to the grits and stir to allow it to dissolve into the grits. This part alone is creamy delicious comfort food. For the onions, place the olive oil in a skillet over low to medium heat and add the Vidalia onion, salt and sugar. Cook for 20 minutes until caramelized. For the shrimp, spread the shrimp on a greased baking sheet. Melt the butter and mix in the garlic and rosemary. Pour the butter mixture over the shrimp and roast the shrimp in a 400 degree oven for 8 to 10 minutes. To serve, ladle the grits into 4 large serving bowls and top with equal portions of the onions. Place equal portions of the shrimp around the edges of the bowls. *Order Gayla's Grits online at GaylasGrits.com **Order Georgia Olive Farms Olive Oil at GeorgiaOliveFarms.com The Sapelo Lady, a shrimp trawler out of Valona near Darien, drags for Georgia shrimp. (NOAA photo) Georgia corn growers approve continued assessment on corn Georgia corn growers voted their overwhelming support of continuation of the assessment of one cent per bushel of corn for the Georgia Agriculture Commodity Commission for Corn. The voting for the market order was conducted from March 15 to April 14 and was reaffirmed by a 93.5 percent favorable vote. The market order for corn requires a vote by producers every three years for continuation. Funds received by the Georgia Agriculture Commodity Commission for Corn are used for research, education and promotion projects for corn. The Georgia Agriculture Commodity Commission for Corn was established in 1995 by the Georgia General Assembly and has continued to support important projects for Georgia corn growers in the areas of fertility, insects, diseases, hybrid evaluation, hybrid development, aflatoxin research, extension and education on production practices. Corn grown in Georgia is utilized in Georgia to manufacture ethanol for fuel and as a feed ingredient for poultry and other animals. Corn is an important crop for rotation with the other row crops grown in Georgia, such as cotton and peanuts. -Georgia Department of Agriculture Communications Division Perdue: Will chair new task force Continued From Page 1 to seek input, and his determination to help." The order states, in part, that "it is in the national interest to promote American agriculture while protecting and supporting the rural communities where food, forestry, fiber and renewable fuels are grown. It is further in the national interest to ensure that regulatory burdens do not unnecessarily encumber agricultural production, constrain economic growth, hamper job creation, or increase the cost of food for Americans and our customers around the world." Secretary Perdue, who was born into a farming family in Bonaire and has worked in various sectors of agriculture and agribusiness, served as the 81st Governor of Georgia from 2003 to 2011. "As secretary, I will champion the concerns of farmers, ranchers, foresters and producers, and will work tirelessly to solve the issues facing our farm families," he said. "I am proud to have been given this opportunity and look forward to rolling up my sleeves and getting to work as we continue to move the USDA and our nation forward." -Compiled from USDA, U.S. Senate and Georgia Department of Agriculture releases. Wayback Wednesday: High Cotton On April 27, 1955, the Market Bulletin called attention to Georgia's "champion" cotton stalk on display in the museum of the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta. Calling it "the largest cotton stalk ever produced," the specimen measured 6 ft. wide, stood 6 ft., 10 in. tall and contained 715 bolls. It was grown in Milton County (now north Fulton County) in 1911. On June 8, the paper reported that George E. Meriwether of Montgomery, Ala., challenged Georgia's claim and submitted a photo of himself holding a portion of a stalk grown in 1850 on the plantation of P.A. Wray, Esq., of Montgomery. The Alabama stalk bore 1,000 bolls of cotton and grew to be 20 feet high. -Wayback Wednesday is an occasional series of fun facts and figures pulled from the archives of the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin in honor of our 100th anniversary. BALDWIN COUNTY Potluck BlueBerry Farm Crop: blueberries 282 Coxwood Land Road Milledgeville 31061 478.932.5390 8 a.m.-dark, daily Call for availability after June 1. BARROW COUNTY Fleeman u-Pick BlueBerries Crop: blueberries 716 Harrison Mill Road Winder 30680 770.867.3420 or 678.863.1765 FleemansBlueberries.com Open mid-June. Call four hours. Groups welcome. Picnic tables. BERRIEN COUNTY Duggan Farms Crops: tomatoes, peas, peppers, butter beans, Fordhooks, squash, cucumbers, corn, lettuce 900 Bannockburn Road Nashville 31639 229.507.0130 7 a.m.-7 p.m. M-Sat Pickling size okra, picked daily. HALL COUNTY cool sPrings BlueBerry Farm Crops: blueberries, blackberries 5975 Smith Mill Road Gainesville 30506 770.480.8085 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Restrooms, picnic area, handicapped access. snare Farm Crops: thornless blackberries and blueberries (June-Aug.); figs (JulySept.); scuppernong and muscadine grapes (Aug.-Oct.) 3736 Gillsville Highway Gillsville 30543 770.605.1121 Daylight hours daily. Call before you visit; bring your own containers. MERIWETHER COUNTY sweet Berry orcharD Crops: strawberries, blueberries, blackberries 6659 Lone Oak Road Hogansville 30230 772.342.1224 10 a.m.-6 p.m. M-Sat Call for availability. PAULDING COUNTY yarDBirD Farm Crops: blueberries 11143 Buchanan Hwy. Temple 30179 678.563.5099 8 a.m.-7 p.m. M-Sat Call for appointment. Proceeds donated to Mylon Lefevre ministries. TREUTLEN COUNTY whisPering Pines georgia Farm Crops: blackberries, blueberries, muscadines 15412 GA Hwy. 86 Soperton 30457 912.399.1988 8a.m.-8 p.m. M-Sat Call or email dayaun@gmail.com for availability. The maturity of fruits and vegetables is directly influenced by the weather. For up-to-date information, detailed directions and hours of operation, call before visiting a pick-your-own farm. PAGE 8 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2017 Walkin poultry pens, quality built, must 3 registered, polled Hereford bulls, 17 Purebred Black Angus bulls and bred Registered SimAngus bred cows, bred sell, large and small; also 2 carry cages; m/o, sire Revolution 4R, good disposi- replacement heifers. Eric Hutto Alma heifers, open heifers, weaned bulls, top will trade all. Bedford Woodard Dalton tion, blocky, guaranteed breeder; $2200 912-286-0568 1% indexes; $2500+. Andrew Davis 706-581-1563 each, Jason Mccallum Ambrose 912- Purebred Black Angus, 3 heifers, 10- Statesboro www.edrsimmental.com Wanted: 20-gallon or 40-gallon syrup 309-3842 12 m/o, reasonable prices. Curtis An- 912-587-5216 912-536-5868 kettle, must be in good/useable condi- 3 y/o registered Angus bull, have all derson Gainesville 770-536-4854 Registered, polled Hereford bulls, 12- tion. Avery Blanton Valdosta 229-559- paperwork available, proven, can view Purebred Brangus bull and 2 Black 29 m/o, top bloodlines, 13 open, polled 5572 229-200-3606 by appointment. Shawn Hickman East- Angus/Brangus bulls; $1200-$1400. F1 Baldies. James Jeanes Gray 478- Wanted: Round pen panels, used man 478-231-9282 Anthony Whitworth Martin 770-597- 972-0912 but in good condition, located in 912 3 y/o registered Hereford bull, Innisfail 9804 Registered, polled Hereford bulls, 20 area code only. Janisse Ray Reidsville Frontier, excellent genetics; $2500. Ellis Purebred Red Angus: 18 open heifers, m/o, excellent genetics. John Bailey wildfire1491@yahoo.com 912-557- Godbee, Jr 618 Godbee Rd Waynes- 23 bulls, 14-16 m/o, Beckton sired, ro- Summerville coveyset1@aol.com 706- 1053 boro 30830 706-840-4566 tated/handles daily, can deliver. Wayne 859-1061 Wanted: Syrup kettles/small 24"-30" 3 y/o registered Jersey bull, from Ber- Stradling Palmetto stradlingjwcs@ya- Registered, polled Hereford, and 71 millstones, good condition; will pay rea- ry College genetics, great/fertile bull; hoo.com 770-463-1408 Angus/Hereford bulls. Larry Lane Car- sonable price and pick up. H.J. Hine $1500 OBO. Edward Holton Dawson- Purebred shorthorn bull, sired from rollton 678-378-5170 is proud to welcome these new members: Conyers 404-310-6490 ville 678-316-1236 770-718-8271 SHO-ME-GOLDSTONE, 2.5 y/o, $2500; Registered, polled Shorthorn bulls/ Wanted: Used 10'cedar fence rails, 30 m/o registered Red Angus bull; registered shorthorn calves, DOB 9/16- show heifers/steers, excellent quality, will take down, don't need any posts. J. $4000/negotiable. Nelson Rhinehart 10/16. Trent Sellers Brooklet 912-842- calving ease, milking ability, gentleness, Chaney Winder 470-399-2122 Calhoun 770-548-2219 4111 Club Calf member. Ken Bridges Com- Windmill pump jack with flat belt pul- 30 registered Hereford heifers, open Red Angus bulls, dark red, registered, merce 706-768-3480 Silver Level Fam O Lee Farms GeorgiaGrown.com Unadilla, Ga. ley, $175; Howe platform scale, $225; and ready to breed; also have 40 service semen checked, 16 m/o, service ready. Service-age purebred Black Angus, Howe elevator scale, 10-ton, $325. aged bulls. Brad Mullins Martin 706- Michael Smith Newnan lazysnewnan@ Simmental, SimAngus bulls, registered/ Duane Conner Mc Rae Helena 912- 491-7556 yahoo.com 770-253-7099 770-301- semen tested, extensive AI over many 568-7689 Wood extension ladder, 12' extends to 40 bred registered Black Angus heifers and young cows, also have good selec- 1945 Red Angus heifers/bulls, registered, years. William Clanton Odum 912-2211383 912-586-2388 20', also have other styles. Wilma Major tion of semen tested bulls. Fred Blitch ready for spring breeding, above av- Shorthorn cow, 5 y/o, with bull calf that 2595 Elzey Dr Cumming 30028 770- Statesboro 912-865-5454 erage EPDs, UTD shots, move ready. is 5 m/o, bred back; $3000. Henry Hall 887-4833 50 Brangus and SimAngus heifers, will Ronald Williams Cochran 478-934- Guyton 912-547-0125 Healthy Living Farms HealthyLivingFarms.org Albany, Ga. Mary Alicia's Artisan Pasta Mary-Alicias.com White, Ga. Wood-Mizer lumber, 1x12 pine, poplar, start calving in October, bred to easy 6998 478-951-3312 Two 22 m/o registered Angus virgin oak trailer flooring, any thickness. Larry calving Braford bulls. Chris Keller Alma Registered Angus and SimAngus bulls, bulls, soundness exam, $2650/each; Moore Newnan 678-278-5709 912-286-0286 18 m/o-2 y/o, AI embryo genetics, se- 1 5 y/o proven, registered Angus bull, Working Leahy redwood incubator, 8 Limousin cows, 4-8 y/o, bred to men tested. Glenda Walker Calhoun $3500. Chris Garmon Winder 678-207- Pecanmilk Cooperative PecanMilk.com Atlanta, Ga. holds thousands of eggs, new wiring LBW Braford bull, start calving October; 678-986-5420 770-878-0961 7195 and parts; $1000. Robert Eidson 965 $1500 each. Charles Brannen Sylvania Registered Angus bulls, 14-16 m/o, Swine Rockaway Rd Senoia 30276 roberteidson34287@yahoo.com 941-7576963 Ziggity drinkers, Chore-Time feeders, fans, winches and assorted control 912-682-1037 912-682-4060 8 registered Red Angus bulls, 15-16 m/o, work ready, calving ease, fertility, moderation performance; $1450+. Joe Gibson Rome 706-506-3026 i50K tested, outstanding bloodlines, reasonably priced. Doyle Waters Chickamauga 423-605-2716 Registered Black Angus and SimAngus bulls, performance tested, free de- If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. Advertisers submitting swine ads must submit proof of a negative bru- Sweet Berry Orchard GeorgiaGrown.com Hogansville, Ga. The Farm at Quail Branch QuailBranchLodge.com LIVESTOCK room equipment. Eva Adams Clarkes- ville 828-361-2563 8 registered Red Angus heifers, 9-17 m/o, excellent bloodline and EPDs, easy calving, good prices. Jorge Haber Mid- livery within 100 miles, Turnpike Creek Farms. Derek Williams Milan 229-3150986 cellosis and pseudorabies test from within the past 30 days. Exceptions are swine from a validated brucellosis- land 706-323-2405 Registered Black Angus bull, halter free and qualified pseudorabies-free Lake Park, Ga. Val's Kale Chips ValsKale.com 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. 8 registered yearling Black Angus bulls, Stevenson Angus genetics. Neil Keener Chatsworth 706-270-3731 Angus bull, 3 y/o, with his sired calves on-site; $2000. Gary Harvin Jefferson 404-538-7367 Angus bulls and cows as well as Limousin bulls and cows. Mike Wright Box Springs 706-523-1222 706-992-5824 Black and red Limousin bulls, AI sired, gentle, calving easy, ready to start breeding now. Jimbo Crumley Bostwick 678-409-3572 broken, AI sired from the Berry College herd, calving ease; $2250. Josh Moore Dawsonville 770-670-8595 Registered Black Angus bulls, 15 m/o2o m/o; $1500 each. Eugene Ridley La Fayette 706-764-6110 Registered Black Angus bulls, 19-32 m/o, semen tested and docile, many AI sired. John Stuedemann Comer 706202-2371 Registered Black Angus bulls, 2 y/o, LBW, 600+ lbs. weaning weight, AI since 1980. James Miller Hawkinsville 478- herd; these operations must submit proof of that certification. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the test needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the test can be attached using the attachments button. Buyers are urged to request proof of a negative brucellosis and pseudorabies test prior to purchase. 9 purebred Yorkshire feeder pigs, DOB 3/5/17; $50 each. Heath Simmons Twin City 478-299-6697 Duroc purebred boars and sows, good Fayetteville, Ga. Woofs-n-Wags Boutique WoofsNwagsBoutique.com Macon, Ga. and these returning members: Gold Level Brush Creek Farm BrushCreekFarm.net Colbert, Ga. Cattle If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. 1 registered SimAngus bull, 19 m/o, solid black, built like a bull, LBW, lots of muscle, service ready. Shannon Irvin Alto 706-768-1410 10 Black Angus yearling heifers, will make excellent mama cows. Don Hudgins Douglasville 404-886-6849 2 bred pureblood Jersey heifers, healthy, bred to Angus bull; $950/each OBO. Addison Hooks Swainsboro 478494-0390 912-562-4226 20 black w/white face and Brangus pairs, 3-in-1s, will not separate; $40,000. Kim Cosnahan Metter 912-3142270 20 m/o bull: 3/4-Simmental and 1/4-Angus. Jack Lanier La Fayette 706397-2212 22 pairs, Angus cross dams, registered Hereford sires, calves born Jan-March, vaccinated, excellent quality. Glenn Beckham Molena beckhament@gmail. com 770-331-8819 27 m/o registered Santa Gertrudis bull, polled; $2000. Steve Kauger Surrency 912-240-1893 29 healthy beefalo, 1 is a white buffalo heifer, selling all due to personal illness. Alvin Strickland Patterson 904-3357463 3 Black Angus/Gelbvieh cross open heifers, 14-16 m/o; $900 each. Robert Miller Danielsville 706-614-4923 3 Holstein steer feeder calves, 4 m/o, 300 lbs. each; $1000 OBO. Lamar Thompson Irwinton 478-353-7518 3 Limousin bulls, top AI sires, LBW, lots of growth. Tommy Sizemore Barnesville 770-358-6229 3 registered Angus bulls, 22+ m/o, Expectation bloodline; $1700-$1800. Bill Shipp Royston 706-245-8866 Black Angus bulls, 14 m/o, 16 m/o and 2 y/o, docile and vaccinated, AI/natural service. K. Schwock Homer 404-7359524 Black Angus bulls, gentle, calving ease sires. John Bryant Eatonton 706-4858321 Black Angus bulls. John Williams Colquitt 229-400-0777 Black balancer bulls, 14-15 m/o, reasonably priced. Eddie Caudell Carnesville 706-870-4565 Brahma bull, 4 y/o, and Brahma/Red Angus bull; $800-$1800. W.W. Abney Franklin 770-301-5658 Bred heifers: Jersey and a Dexter/ Guernsey cross, both bred to a Dexter bull. Theresa Medcalf Barnesville 678572-0723 Calving ease, milking ability, gentleness, registered polled Shorthorn bulls/ show heifers/steers, excellent quality, Club Calf member. Kenneth Bridges Commerce 706-768-3480 Cow/calf commercial pairs, $1750/ each; also bred commercial cows, $1250/each. Jack Beckom Barnesville 678-588-3824 Gelbvieh herd liquidation: Cows, pairs, 3-in-1, bred heifers, bulls, all purebred, all registered. John Kiss Gainesville 770-531-1126 High quality Angus bulls, 17-48 m/o, AI sired by Tex-X/All-In, DNA tested, 890 lbs./w. weight, 1200 lb./y. weight. Ken Mcmichael Monticello 404-9255412 Jersey bull, purebred, not registered, DOB 10/25/14; $1500. Seab Hughes Vidalia 912-537-0584 Jersey heifer, 7 m/o; $650. Wendy Scott Fort Valley 478-954-6568 Jersey heifer. C.H. Conner Flowery Branch 770-967-6828 Polled Hereford heifers, 16+ m/o, great bloodline. Elaine Lancaster Milan 229- 892-2839 478-355-0224 Registered Black Angus bulls, 20 m/o, UTD shots, semen tested. Ricky Hix Comer 706-248-5851 Registered Black Angus bulls, performance EPDs, high $B values, 24 m/o, free delivery, range ages/prices. Allen Morris Mount Vernon southerncrossangusfarm@gmail.com 912-293-6471 Registered Black Angus bulls, performance tested, add pounds to your calves, free delivery; $2500. C.L. Cook Social Circle 678-910-4891 Registered Black Angus heifer, 12 mos., gentle, great bloodlines, $1000 David Strawn Clermont 678-617-9717 Registered Black Angus replacement heifers, AI bred; also have some 3-in-1 and cow/calf pairs. Steve Deal Statesboro 912-531-3549 912-531-3549 Registered black Simmental, SimAngus bulls, performance tested; cow/ calf pairs, heifers, heavy milk, AI embryo bred, satisfaction guaranteed. Milton Martin Clarkesville 770-519-0008 Registered Charolais and Angus bulls, work ready, LBW, semen/BVD tested, gentle, good selection, delivery available. Curtiss Kicliter Marshallville 478967-2940 479-396-1537 Registered Charolais cattle, bulls with superior calving ease. Bobby Burch Eastman 478-718-2128 Registered Hereford bulls, polled and horned, rugged, pasture-raised, gentle, excellent bloodlines/EPDs, small calves, 36 years of experience. Bobby Brantley Tennille 478-553-8598 Registered Hereford bulls, polled, excellent EPDs/bloodlines, pasture-raised, gentle, service ready. Joey Yasinski Senoia 678-471-7106 Registered Jersey heifer, 14 m/o, priced reasonably. Rondal Fields Clermont 770-983-7104 bloodlines; show pigs available. Harry Freeman Statesboro 912-852-9381 Feeder pigs; $50/each, or $75/2. Steven Moore Dawsonville 404-567-2241 Large black piglets, male and female, DOB 04/06/17, ready for pickup 06/01/17. Belinda Schell Fort Valley 478-954-3840 Miniature pet piglets, adorable, different colors, can be litter trained; $300 each. James Stewart Carrollton 678372-2855 Spring litters of registered American Guinea hogs, pasture-raised and supplemented with non-GMO feed. Delacy Leverette Eatonton 706-816-9127 Tamworth/Hampshire and Yorkshire/ Hampshire piglets, ready 4/14, $50; finish hogs, DOB 8/20/16, 150-200 lbs., $125-$175. Allen Clevenger Locust Grove 404-285-1719 Goats And Sheep If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. 1 y/o or 2 y/o healthy female Pygmy goat for pet, will pay fair price. Joe Burns Lawrenceville joeb@color-burst. com 678-591-9422 100% Boer kids, 2 m/o, show prospects, 3 female and 2 male; $200 each. Willis Brown Byron 478-956-2798 2 female goats, 14 m/o, 1 black and 1 brown, Boar/Kiko mix, sire is full-blooded Kiko; $75 each. Terri Trott Luthersville 770-927-6808 2 female Kiko/Lamancha goats, 8 m/o; $130/both. Tim Teague Clarkesville 706-968-8016 2 thick Boer bucks, DOB 02/2017, great youth show prospects, lots of potential, photos available, call/text. Earl Carter Villa Rica 404-938-5477 2 y/o ABGA registered Boer does, 2 available, $500/each; 4 y/o Boer wether, $300; all love attention. Mary Hall Wat- Union County Farmers Market ucfarmersmarket.com Blairsville, Ga. Silver Level Anderson Farms GeorgiaGrown.com Athens, Ga. Bistro to Go b2goinc.com College Park, Ga. Smokin' Temptations Catering SmokinTemptations.com Moultrie, Ga. Southern Soy Candle SouthernSoyCandle.com Metter, Ga. The Sawmill Place Restaurant TheSawmillPlace.com Blairsville, Ga. Georgia Grown is a marketing and economic development program of the Georgia Department of Agriculture. For more information or to join, visit GeorgiaGrown.com or call 404.656.3680. 4 m/o billy goats, wormed, ready to rehome; $80. Kaye Grant Forsyth 478994-1522 4 registered purebred Nigerian Dwarf does, DOB 3/1/17, ready 5/20/17; $300 each. Mike Plumb Social Circle 678386-5806 6 wether goats, DOB 10/31/2017; $100. James Hunt Union Point 706486-4139 678-898-0495 3 registered Black Angus bulls, 15-18 362-4619 Registered Santa Gertrudis bulls, ser- kinsville 678-863-3692 7 y/o male billy, great breeder/herd m/o, semen tested, AI from Resource; $1800. Larry Maney Baldwin 706-8869551 706-244-4348 Polled shorthorn bulls, breeding age, can deliver. David Nixon Commerce 706-255-9837 vice ready, ADG/EPDs available; $2000$3500. Wayne Jernigan Buena Vista 229-649-7724 3 m/o, goats, Alpine mixed, medium sized; $75. John Mccombs Rockmart 770-714-5533 770-301-1843 protector; sell or trade for a new billy. Beth Ayres Lithia Springs 770-9481238 WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2017 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov PAGE 9 B/W male goat, no horns, you must catch; must be rehomed; $1/to good home. Linda Bishop Athens 706-6120808 Boer/Kiko goats, doelings, bucklings, nannies, breeding billies, born and raised on our farm. Stacey Wilson Lexington sswilson71@aol.com 770-6013080 770-601-3612 Dairy sheep, gentle rams and ewes now, taking orders for lambs, small family farm. Leslie Bone Eastanollee bonefamilyfarm@hotmail.com 706-779-5489 Fainting/Myotonic registered goats, adults, babies, disbudded, healthy, friendly, UTD vaccinations/deworming, small and miniature, Silkies and short hair. Marsha Kelly Newnan 770-2518896 Gulf Coast Native ram lamb, DOB 02/28/17, registered, excellent bloodlines, photos available; $300. Daniel West Rutledge 706-474-1710 Katahdin ram lambs; $120+. Jerry Lawrence Kite 31049 478-494-1844 Katahdin spring ram lambs; $150+. Patsy Brown Jackson 770-504-9507 Katahdin/Dorper cross lambs, weaning end of April; yearling rams, sire is a purebred Dorper. Susan/Phil Cobb Cedartown 404-215-1615 770-546-9601 Kiko goats, 100% and purebred, can register, all parents on-site, most DOB 01/2017. Erik Toivonen Talking Rock 706-697-1958 Kiko/Boer buck, 1 y/o; $140. Tony Irvin Mount Airy 706-499-0301 Kiko/Nubian doeling, DOB 2/21/17, and 7 Alpine/Nubian bucklings, DOB 2/19-2/24, $100/each; purebred Nubian buckling, DOB 2/19/17, $200; photos/ text. Stephen Jones La Fayette 423693-4778 Mature NZ Kiko bucks, registered or non-registered. R.L. Peacock Broxton 912-381-1015 Mini Oberhasli doelings/bucklings, made from Nigerian Dwarf and American Oberhasli, rich milk and great dispositions; $150+. Alexander Flaherty Royston 706-254-7717 Miniature Saanen, DOB 3/4/17, polled, CD/T vaccine, coccidia prevention, bottle fed; $65/doeling, or $35/ buckling. James Rewis Ranger 770364-3498 Myotonic meat goats, bucks and bucklings; $200+. Eric Yawn Warm Springs 770-584-7477 Nigerian Dwarf bucks, DOB 12017, can be registered, full-blooded, blue eyes, dehorned; $75. Rudy/Elise Corpus Jefferson 706-614-4376 Nigerian Dwarf goats, 1 male and 1 female, DOB 3/17/17, very cute; $50-$75. Annette Van Goosen Mount Airy 770547-4904 Nigerian Dwarf kids, DOB 3/20174/2017, some are Pygmy cross; $125/ bucklings, or $175/doelings. Ann Wyrosdick Dahlonega 706-867-9073 Nubian and Toggenburg babies; does, $200; bucks, $150; will text photos. Lee Holloway Greenville leeholloway@ hughes.net 706-672-0015 706-9773959 Nubian buckling, DOB 1/26/17, bottle baby, very friendly, dehorned; $100. Gail Johnson Covington 770-784-0767 404431-5555 Nubian bucklings, registered, disbudded, tattooed, vaccinated, very fancy, too many colors and spots to describe; $250-$400. Joan Kiser Carnesville 706247-0976 Nubian does/bucks, 1+ y/o, disease free, excellent lines. Shuford Jones Winder 678-873-4350 Nubian/Saanen buckling, dehorned, sire registered, dam family milk goat, excellent dairy lines, tame, ready 4/30/17; $150. Sandra Blount Thomson poppydear706@aol.com 762-218-0295 Purebred LaMancha bottle babies, exceptional homestead milkers and great pets, will neuter; $100/doelings, or $75/ bucklings. B. Mccormick Bowdon 770258-9505 Pygmy goats, adults and babies; $100-$200. Denisha Waldrop Gainesville 678-687-7609 Pygmy goats, two 4 m/o 2 does, 4 m/o buck, 1 y/o buck; $75+. Desiree Tolar Homer 678-943-3076 Pygmy/Nigerian Dwarf mixed buck, wether, DOB 01/28/17, weaned; $150. Amanda Crowe Mansfield 404-2138511 Registered Katahdin rams, grandsons of world-famous Diesel, perfect conformation, large, fast-growing yearlings. Duke Burgess Louisville 478-625-9542 305-923-0262 Several thick Boer bucks, DOB 2/2017, great youth show project, will grow big, photos by request. Brandy Austin Jackson 678-251-6075 Well-bred Katahdin rams, various colors/ages, Katahdin/Dorper X rams, email or text for photos. Diana Hegger Royston dhhegger@gmail.com 706338-1615 White Dorper sheep, lambs and adults. Tammie Walls Hiawassee 706-8962418 Young Boer/Kiko cross billy, 4 m/o, will produce beautiful/healthy babies; $125. Herman Thames Perry 478-9521305 Stock Dogs If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. Advertisers must submit a copy of a current Rabies Vaccination Certificate signed by a licensed veterinarian for dogs 12 weeks and older. Ads submitted without this information will not be published. Great Pyrenees puppies, DOB 03/03/17, parents on-site, currently with sheep; purebred; $450. J. Minish Commerce 706-789-2913 706-255-5984 Great Pyrenees puppies, DOB 2/8/17, parents on-site, 2 males and 1 female left, raised with goats; $300. Douglas Thames Elko 478-230-3071 Great Pyrenees puppies, DOB 4/5/17, 2 female/8 male, CKC registered litter, dame AKC/CKC, sire CKC registered; $800. Jake Willliams Epworth 706-6338558 Kangal puppies, DOB 3/10/27, dewormed/UTD shots, ready 4/10/17, w/ goats, great w/family and livestock, micro-chipping available; $1200/each. Eleanor Davis Stockbridge 770-8608989 Equine For Sale If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. Advertisers in the Equine for Sale or Equine at Stud categories must submit current negative Coggins tests for each equine advertised. This includes horses, ponies, donkeys, etc. Buyers are urged to request verification of a negative Coggins from the advertiser before purchasing any equine. Negative Coggins reports are valid for 12 months from the date the blood sample is drawn. Falsification or altering of any Coggins results can result in fines and suspension of advertising privileges. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the Coggins needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the Coggins can be attached using the attachments button. Generalized ads, such as "many horses," "variety to choose from," etc., will not be published. Equine at Stud ads will also require a current stable license in order to be published. 15 y/o Palomino mare, 14.3H, UTD Coggins, experienced rider, good feet, easy keeper, gentle, good trail horse. Susan Singleton Comer 706-202-5734 AQHA 2005 mare, quiet, calm, 14H, type, dark bay with small white spot. Joseph Douglas Villa Rica 770-4026590 John mule, 7 y/o, broke to drive, pull and plow, sweet and easy to handle; $1500. Jeanette Dodd Alto 706-4997052 Miniature Palomino Appaloosa filly, 4 y/o, 38", gentle, rides; $650. Janice Wilkes Bogart 706-207-9366 Paint Mammoth jack, at stud, 14H, produces spotted babies. Charles Jackson Collins 912-693-5703 SSH filly by JoseJose, 2 y/o soon, leads, stands for trims, flashy, natural gait, beautiful. Martha Thurmond Madison 706-372-2560 Equine Miscellaneous If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. 1997 Bee gooseneck horse trailer, 3-horse slant, living quarters, $3000; also have 7 roping saddles. Sharon Fausett Dawsonville 706-265-8432 2013 Cimarron 3-horse slant-load trailer, 8', living quarter, extra wide/tall, used 10 times, shed kept; $39,500. Charles Heard Newton 229-344-4441 229-7345047 3-horse slant-load Ponderosa trailer, front saddle racks, always sheltered; $2800. Steve Stowers Dawsonville 706-974-0576 Antique 2-horse wagon, fair condition; $600. Sarah Briscoe Commerce 706658-6829 Australian saddle, new condition; also have new silver embossed show halter and lead. Linda Gordon Commerce 706-255-6485 Black Surrey with red fringe around top, good condition, 2 available; $1500. C S Bowman 2455 Costley Mill Rd Ne Conyers 30013 770-483-2455 Bob Falvey round pen work/training saddle, 16", rough out, good condition, just cleaned, extra dees. Lee Terry Leesburg 229-894-6227 Easy-entry pony cart, $225; mini pony harness, $95. Carlton Williams Albany 229-881-5560 Horse training, young horse training, older horse tune-up/refresher course, horse breaking, trailer loading. N. Garner Kingston 770-203-9699 Pack saddle with britches, for mule or horse; $250. Phil Adkins Vienna 229273-7691 Silver show saddle and bridle, grooming items, bits, leg wraps and stable blankets. Patti Mcleroy Kathleen tmcleroy@windstream.net 478-9870019 Wanted: Panels for round pen. Ashley Caldwell Newnan 678-378-1723 Boarding Facilities If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. Advertisers must submit a current stable 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. Wanted: Pasture boarding for 2 horses, in Gwinnett County if possible. Dianne Overmyer Grayson 404-545-9961 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. 10 Ameraucana, purebred, laying hens, 2 roosters, $12/hens, or $10/roosters; red and yellow checked pheasants, $50/pair. Robert Borchert Lincolnton 706-359-3325 10 female and 1 male Silver Laced Wyandotte chickens. Travis Mclendon Hawkinsville 478-783-1634 13 varieties peacocks and peahens, including Javas Greens, game roosters and hens, also have peacock feathers. Ray Watts Macon 478-361-3468 2 Barred Rock roosters, both 1 y/o; $5/ each, or $7/both. Perry Dixon Acworth cindydixon13@outlook.com 770-9750633 2 beautiful, adult female peacocks, must be sold together; $50 each. Denise Dallas Gibson 706-832-0237 8 breeds of chickens hatching, 150/ week, 3 breeds of Bantam, 150+ are 5 m/o. Larry Burch Midville 478-5897526 9 m/o Brahma rooster, too loud for city life, to good home. Emily Howard Decatur 770-896-4234 Adult Guineas, 1 y/o, only a few left; $10 each. Wyndle Bates Blue Ridge 706-632-7584 Baby chicks: American Dominique, Rhode Island Red and Buff Orpington, purebreds, various ages. Monte Poitevint Lakeland 229-482-3854 Baby geese, variety of baby chickens, baby ducks; also have laying hens and roosters. Sandra Smith Covington 770337-0160 Baby turkeys, chicks and ducks, mixed breeds. Mary Kent Sparta 706444-5017 Beautiful black shouldered Silver Pied peacocks, Ringneck pheasants and Buff Orpington chickens. Herbert Tart Cumming 770-841-5713 Blue Laced Red Wyandotte: Hatching White doves; $10 each. Karen Byrd eggs, can ship, $20/dozen; also pullets, Cumming 770-844-0312 6 w/o, $15. Stan Okelley Commerce White Emden goslings, hatching 706-335-2439 762-436-3600 weekly; $10 each. Kenneth Buffington Blue Maran rooster, beautiful, fully Royston 706-245-9706 grown; $40. Maryann Propper Doug- Poultry/Fowl Requiring lasville 770-861-2222 Permit/License Feather legged Bantam Cochin laying hens, lots of colors; $8 each. Brenda If you have questions regarding this Johnston Dawsonville 706-344-9684 category, call 404-656-3722. Hatching eggs: Spanish Black turkeys, Advertisers selling wood ducks $2/each; guineas, $4/dozen; barnyard must submit a USDA permit with their eggs, $3/dozen; BB Red Bantams eggs, ad. Ads for wood ducks that do not $2/dozen. James Dickerson Mauk 229- have this permit will not be published. 649-5651 For information on these permits, call Laying hens, 1-3 y/o, RIR, White Rock, New Hampshire Reds, bring your cages; the US Fish & Wildlife Service Atlanta office at 404-679-7319. Advertisers $15 each. Lori Smith Gordon 478-2212593 selling quail must be accompanied by a copy of the commercial quail Murray McMurray laying hens, 14 m/o, several breeds, $20/each; others, $10+. Gloria Malcom Social Circle 770-4644303 Muscovy ducks, various ages, 50 adults available: $15/adult males; $13/10+ laying females. Joseph Lashley Lagrange 404-274-1702 New Hampshire Red and Plymouth Barred Rock chicks, 4 w/o, straight-run only; $3 each. Kenneth Spear Chickamauga 706-539-2423 NPIP licensed breeder, 12 different breeds, 2-17 w/o, $3+; also have brooders, $75. Sandra Lord Juliette 478-986- 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 770-918-6401. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the permit/license needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the permit/license can be attached using the attachments button. Bobwhite/Coturnix quail eggs: $70/100, $155/500, $290/1000. Willie Strickland Pooler 912-748-5769 Poultry/Fowl Wanted 6967 Male Wood duck, and red and yellow Peacock, blue male, 1 y/o; $65. Diane Golden hen. John Herndon Grayson Hall Macon 478-808-9128 404-697-7179 Peacocks, gentle, healthy, friendly, free range; $50+. Nancy Dougherty Carroll- ALTERNATIVE ton 770-832-9345 Pigeons, white rollers, Birmingham LIVESTOCK rollers, Turner rollers, white homers and If you have questions regarding this owls; $20/pair. Wyatt Johnson Midville category, call 404-656-3722. 478-494-3240 Alpacas: 2 black Suri females, bred for Rhode Island Red pullets, good qual- 05/17, Crias championship bloodlines, ity birds, ready late May. Brian Sturdy beautiful fiber; $1000. William Gholston Dahlonega 706-865-9201 Dahlonega 706-867-6588 RIR, Ameraucana, Brahma, Australorp, Emu chicks, text or leave message, Sussex, Red Star, Leghorns, Golden will return your call; $150. Donna James Comish; $15/laying, or $1/babies. Gary Madison 706-207-1561 Ridley La Fayette 706-638-1911 Trio buff Silkie, $30; trio black Silkie, LIVESTOCK WANTED $30. Jack Jenkins Harlem 706-799- If you have questions regarding ads in 8597 this category, call 404-656-3722. Turkey eggs, to hatch. Billy Aycock Summerville 706-857-2241 Any breed horses, goats and hogs, except pot-bellied pigs, will pick-up and Welsummer pullets; $15 each. James pay cash. Wayne Green Bremen 770- Young Metter 912-682-2917 841-6815 Donkey or horse, for guard duty for sheep herd. Tommy Copelan Eatonton 706-473-0613 Walking horse gelding, 15H, 7-12 y/o, must be very gentle, well broke, rea- sonably priced. Lamar Fountain Vidalia 912-293-1303 Market Bulletin Subscription Request Form The fee for an annual subscription to the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin is $10 (26 issues). This includes both print and online access. If you do not wish to receive the printed version of the Market Bulletin by mail, please opt-out where indicated below. New Subscriber Renewal Subscriber Number I do not wish to receive the Market Bulletin by mail. I will use my subscriber number to log on to agr.georgia.gov and read the digital version. Name: Address: City: State: Zip: Email address: Phone number: (We will use your email address only to inform you when a new digital issue is available on our website. We will only call if staff has a question about your subscription.) Please make your check/money order payable to: Georgia Department of Agriculture Please mail your payment to: Georgia Department of Agriculture Attn: Market Bulletin P.O. Box 742510 Atlanta, GA 30374 PAGE 10 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2017 Bulletin Calendar May 11 June 2 - 3 FEED, HAY AND GRAIN AG SEED FOR SALE White freestone peach tree seedlings, 12"T, blooms 4-5 years, postage addi- If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. All feed, hay and grain ads must in- If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722. Advertisers must submit a current tional; $1 each. Margaret Hottle Atlanta 404-344-0568 Ag Seed/Plants Wanted Georgia Department of Agriculture Egg Journeyman Farmers Certificate Program clude the variety offered for sale. Ads state laboratory report, fewer than Native paw paw plants. Kenneth Beas- Candling Class Small Farm Business Planning for mulch hay will not be accepted in nine months old, for purity, noxious ley Dahlonega 706-864-6261 Dade County Ag Center UGA Extension Gwinnett this category; they will be published weeds and germination for each seed Snap dragon seeds. Johnny Lancaster 114 Pace Dr. Gwinnett County Government Annex in the Fertilizers & Mulches category. lot advertised. Ads submitted without Loganville 770-394-2946 Trenton, Ga. 30752 770.535.5955 Building 750 South Perry St. 2016 Alica Bermuda, horse quality, this information will not be published. 4x5 rolls, under barn; $45. Walt Dockery If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, FLOWERS AND Georgia Veterinary Medical Association Sporting Clays Fundraiser Lawrenceville, Ga. 30046 678.377.4010 tdaly@uga.edu Broxton 912-359-3153 this report needs to be sent along 2016 Bermuda grass, excellent horse with it. For ads submitted online, the quality hay, fertilized, weed free, square report can be attached using the at- ORNAMENTALS FOR SALE LIVESTOCK HANDLING RABBITS Foxhall Resort and Sporting Club 8000 Capps Ferry Rd. Douglasville, Ga. 30135 May 11-13 Central Georgia Horse-Carriage and Antique Auction Southeastern Arena 2410 Arena Rd. Unadilla, Ga. 31091 706.961.0475 May 13 Marietta Gardeners Club Annual Plant Sale Marietta First United Methodist Church 120 Loop & Polk St. Parking Lot Marietta, Ga. 30064 770.443.7675 MariettaGardenersClub.jimbo.com Farmers Market and Ag Expo Claxton Elementary School U.S. Hwy. 301 S. Claxton, Ga. 30417 912.739.3544 tblocker@evans.k12.ga.us Kel-Mac Saddle Club Open Horse Show Morgan County Ag Center 2268 Athens Hwy. (441 N.) Madison, Ga. 30650 706.342.3775 bcumming@bellsouth.net May 16-17 Georgia Urban Forest Council Arborist Certification Review Course J.F. Gregory Park 521 Cedar St. Richmond Hill, Ga. 31324 470.210.5900 May 20 Garden Club of Ellijay Annual Plant Sale Lions Club Pavilion 1729 S. Main St. Ellijay, Ga. 30540 May 27 Antique Tractor Pull and Show The Steed Farm 2080 East Hwy. 5 Carrollton, Ga. 30116 770.301.8388 | 770.301.6319 770.301.6320 If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. 2008 Ponderosa 3-horse slant-load trailer, weekend package; $4500. S. Pollard Covington 404-354-5684 2013 Exiss 24'x7' stock trailer, 2 cut June 3 Chattahoochee Valley Daylily Festival Columbus Botanical Garden 3603 Weems Rd. Columbus, Ga. 31909 706.327.8400 June 15 - 17 Journeyman Farmers Certificate Program Fruit and Vegetable Production UGA Extension Gwinnett Second Floor Conf. Rm. Gwinnett County Government Annex Building 750 South Perry St. Lawrenceville, Ga 30046 678.377.4010 tdaly@uga.edu Sept. 16 Georgia's Spirit of Appalachia Food, Wine & Art Festival Hardman Farm Historic Site 143 Highway 17 Sautee Nacoochee, Ga. 30571 706.865.5356 www.whitecountychamber.org info@whitecountychamber.org Oct. 28 Henry County Beekeepers Club Beginner Beekeeping Course Heritage Park 97 Lake Dow Rd. McDonough, Ga. 30252 770.461.6686 | 678.983.7698 jchayg1@attglobal.net tombonnell@bellsouth.net Have an event to put on our calendar? Contact Arty Schronce at 404.656.3656 or arty.schronce@agr.georgia.gov We accept calendar submissions for food, craft and agriculture festivals and events. Submissions for festivals that do not specifically promote those industries will not be printed. 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 conducting the auction, per state regulations. Notices without this information cannot be published. If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. Bunnies, Lionheads and smooth coat varieties; text or email; $15 each. Tracy Truslow Gainesville tracys3littleowls@ gmail.com 770-597-9271 bales, can deliver. Mike Council Cordele 229-406-8105 2016 Coastal Bermuda hay, horse quality, 4x5 round and square bales. Larry Morgan Lizella 478-972-5977 478-781-1990 2016 Coastal Bermuda, horse quality, well-fertilized and limed, stored in trailer, not weather exposed; $75/round, or $7/ square. Rhonda Mccracken Newnan 770-328-9453 2016 feed oats, excellent horse feed, etc.: $50/barrel; $4/bushel bulk. Robert Montgomery Reynolds 478-837-2356 2016 Russell Bermuda hay, square bales only, top quality horse hay, delivery available; $6/each, or $5 each/100+. Carl Crews Sylvania 912-857-3131 2017 Bermuda square bales, taking orders now, Concord hay fields, must pick up; $5/each. Cindy Buford Concord 770-584-6674 2017 Coastal Bermuda hay, horse quality, delivery available; $5 each/at barn. Glenn Brinson 1800 Corsey Grove Way Tarrytown 30470 912-288-5960 2017 Coastal Bermuda, taking orders, horse quality, fertilized to UGA specifications, barned, square/4x5 round bales. Olin Trammell Forsyth 478-9607239 478-994-6463 2017 Fescue/Orchard grass horse quality hay, have both square bales and 4x5 net-wrapped rolls. R.J. Campbell Rockmart 706-936-3294 770-6869563 2017 horse quality Fescue hay, pellet fertilized and sprayed, John Deere 4x5 net-wrapped; $50 each. Jack Jones Dahlonega 30533 706-429-7130 2017 Russell hay, 4x5 rolls, horse quality, weed free; $55 each. Lonnie Mckinney Cordele 229-947-2878 230 bales of 2016 Coastal 4x6 hay; $35/$45. Rocky Yelton Waynesboro 706-551-1770 Bermuda grass, high quality, sheltered square bales, $4/each; also 4x4 round bales, 500-550 lbs., twine-wrapped, $30/each. Dale Jackson Clyo 912-7547459 912-665-2789 Feed oats and rye grass, mixed, bulk only. John Bullington Cordele 229-2733597 Fresh feed: Chicken, horse, cattle, goat, fish food, whole corn. Brandon Cothran 400 Gumlog Rd. Lavonia 30553 706-680-4938 706-491-8708 Hay, round bales, $50, $75, $85; also have mulch hay, square bales, $4.50. Rick Anderson Taylorsville 404-4028470 Horse quality weed/rain free hay, fertilized and limed, square and round bales available. Danny Reid Cumming 770560-9806 Mulch hay, square bales; $2.50/each. John Mcgill Thomson 706-817-1606 Quality horse hay, weed-free, fertilized Fescue and Orchard grass; $5.50/ square, and $45/roll. Ed Cochran Canton 770-827-8269 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 oth- ers. For questions regarding certified seed, call the Department's Seed Di- vision at 404-656-3635. 2017 planting: Loofah "wash cloth," 41 seeds, $3/SASE; castor beans, 14/ order, $2/SASE. Davis Yaun 15412 Ga Highway 86 Soperton 30457 dayaun@ gmail.com 912-399-1988 Bermuda grasses, Coastal, Tift 85 and Tift 44, as well as available custom planting. Chester Kight 5551 Old Louisville Rd Tarrytown 30470 478290-5558 Brown Top millet, 80% germination, 99% pure, 50 lb. bags. Jimbo Hatcher 125 Ashford Park Macon 31210 478954-1688 Italian pepper seeds, Corno di Toro, sweet, mild, wonderful; $1/25 seeds + SASE. Roberta Watts 2252 Whitney Rd Se Monroe 30655 770-464-1979 Non-GMO, not Roundup ready, Cook soybeans, with 92% germination, cleaned, in 50 lb. bags. Phil Sanders Stephens 706-340-5669 Old-timey cowhorn pepper, red Peter pepper, cayenne pepper, German pink tomato; $1 + SASE. Amory Hall Maysville 706-652-2521 Rooster Spur, old-timey cayenne, 25+ seeds, $2 + SASE; also red Peter pepper. Terry Madaris Rossville 423-8837264 Wildlife feed, certified Cook soybean, non-GMO, 39% crude protein, 50 lb. bags; $20 each. Bryan Maw Tifton 229382-6832 Ag Plants for Sale Assorted vegetable plants, call for details. Mickey Anderson Dallas 770-4437675 Banana trees, various sizes; $10. Ronnie Butler Good Hope 770-3718722 Bermuda sprigs, Russell, Coastal, Tift 85 custom planting statewide with references available, book early. Robert Mcnair Junction City 706-575-5697 706-366-1956 Desirable and seedling pecan trees growing in pots, plant anytime of year, 2'-3' size, 3-gallon pots. Jim Crum Bainbridge 229-220-3907 Fig trees: Celeste and Brown Turkey, potted 2-3-gallons; $20. Sandra Goldi Atlanta 404-201-0063 404-247-7343 Heirloom tomato plants; Pindo Palms, 1-gallon to 7-gallon pots; herbs. Vicky Washburn Forsyth circlewplants@ gmail.com 478-994-4334 Leyland Cypress, Thuja Giants, privacy trees, delivery and planting, all of GA, buy direct from grower. John Cowherd Monticello 770-862-7442 New 2017 crop sweet potato plants, Scarbor & Sons, we ship, Beauregard/ If you have questions about this cat- egory, call 404-656-3722. 12 y/o Japanese maples, Dissectums, Palmatums, cash only; $150/each, $1000/10, or $1750/20. Wylene Townley Ellenwood 678-489-7580 2016 Lemon yellow sunflowers, 25 seeds; $3/cash + SASE. D. Miltimore 1766 Pleasant Hill Rd Ne Ranger 30734 350 varieties of 4" perennials including helleborus, $1.50 each; 1-gallon grafted Japanese maples, $20-$25; display garden. Selah Ahlstrom Jackson 770-7754967 Achimenes, a.k.a. Widow's Tears, order now to ship. Evie Bowker Griffin 770-530-1708 Angel Trumpet, elephant ears, ginger lilies, banana trees, lotus, pond plants and more. Patrice Cook Covington 770-787-6141 Angel trumpets, Christmas/helleborus roses $5; Harlequin glory bowers, hydrangeas, ferns, double altheas, burning bushes, beauty berries, $3.50. Carla Houghton Marietta 770-428-2227 Azaleas and hostas, $2.50 each; Leyland Cypress, 3'-4', $3 each; plants in greenhouse too. Carol Bland Fayetteville 770-964-3162 Azaleas, large growing, 1-gallon pots, all colors; $2.50 each. Jack Maffett Montezuma 478-954-2111 478-4727133 Black and gold bamboo, and more. David Pelton Covington 678-6540571 Castor bean or loofah seeds, 25 seeds/ pack; $3/cash + SASE. J. Shelnutt P.O. Box 1212 Loganville 30052 joyshelnutt@bellsouth.net Daylilies, 300+ different varieties, from Alcovy Daylily Farm, see website for photos and pricing. Mary Burgess Covington www.alcovydaylilies.com 770787-7177 Daylilies, 500+ varieties, see website for photos and availability list. Katielou Greene Whitesburg www.Daylilyfans. com/katielous_lilies 770-836-1351 Daylily plants blooming, add instant beauty your yard, 100+ varieties, conveniently located, Douglas-Carroll Counties. Laura Frank Villa Rica 770-4595428 Dogwood, redbud, crape myrtle, $5+; daylilies, $2.50+; clearance or 30% off regular price. Jean Phillips Bonaire 478988-4926 Japanese maples, red and green weeping varieties, many colors, varieties and sizes to choose, delivery/installation available. James Veccie Senoia jveccie@yahoo.com 770-652-6127 Mexican sunflower, Cleome, money plant, touch-me-not, four-o-clock, Shasta daisy, Tiger lily Rose of Sharon; $1/each + large SASE. B.L. Savage Gainesville 770-534-7856 Mondo and variegated liriope, gallon pots, $2/each; Nandina, 3-gallon pots, $8.50/each. J.H. Patman Athens 706549-4487 Native plants, Bluebells, Bloodroot, gates with sliders, 50" escape door, tie Bunnies, not leftover Easter bun- Covington. Randy Scarbor 5194 Us Indian Pink, Trilliums, Cardinal Flower rails. Keith Mitcham Oxford 770-855- nies, 2015 does and bucks from meat Highway 319 S Tifton 31793 229-528- and many others. David Taylor Rome 6563 producing herd, text for details; $30/ 5204 dlt51758@bellsouth.net 706-291-6015 Alleys, panels, tubs/sweeps, gates, seniors. Philip Busman Alpharetta 770etc., built to order. Randy Floyd Hart- 714-2523 Small Leyland Cypress trees, 8"-12" Pond plants, ginger, Angel Trumpets tall, will ship, see website for ordering; and much more, call or email for list. well 706-318-9468 Bunnies, small to large, mixed breeds; $4 each. Hans Gruetzenbach Dalton Susan Kingsolver Hull frogbit2@yahoo. Sooner 3-horse aluminum gooseneck $15-$20 each. Flip/Laurie Phippen www.MuscadinesAndMore.com 706- com 706-363-8892 slant trailer, A/C, heat, dressing room, Newnan 770-755-8702 483-4221 Reseeding petunias, mixed; Angel roof rack/drop windows, rear tack/new Lionhead/Holland Lops, purebred, tor- tires; $9500. David Smith Sugar Valley toise, gray, black/white, orange/white, 770-402-3115 white, black, visit website for availabil- Sweet potato plants, various varieties, trumpet, double-purple or double-yel- available late April, no mail orders. Garry low; $1/pack + SASE. Carolyn Arnold Newman Hazlehurst 912-375-1568 644 Lynn Ave Jefferson 30549 706- Sullivan 5' upright 2-door show box, ity; $50-$85. Leslie Barber Ellijay www. excellent condition; $600. Daniel Wil- CartecayFarm.com. 706-637-2002 liams Milan 229-860-1729 New Zealand mix meat rabbits; $15 ea. Get your Georgia Grown Tift 85 and Russell Bermuda sprigs, 367-4700 with custom planting available. Alton Seeds: Devil's trumpet, mullein pink/ White Dry Branch 478-214-4119 touch-me-nots, morning glory/hibiscus, WW squeeze chute, needs wood floor, Blake Besosa Franklin 770-780-1936 has been in shed, photos available; Wanted: Young, purebred Holland Lop $450. Chris Newman Canton 770-883- buck rabbits, call/text. Jimmy Lindsey apparel today! www.georgiagrown.com Tomatoes plants, squash, peppers, four-o-clocks, money plant, $1 cash/ okra and more; will also have CSA box- teaspoon + SASE; also mole bean. E. es in June. Kathy Hales Chatsworth Beach 2966 Cardinal Lake Cir Duluth 5952 Arnoldsville 706-338-8272 706-847-3646 30096 770-476-1163 WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2017 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov PAGE 11 Star of Bethlehem flowers, 15 bulbs, email all questions, price includes postage; $10/cash. Vickie Robinson 416 Parks Mill Rd Auburn 30011 vrobinson1012@gmail.com White blooming monkey tail cactus. Elise Arthur 312 Frank Church Rd Ocilla 31774 229-325-5134 Flowers and Ornamentals Wanted 2 yellow iris flower roots or plants wanted. Leola Mcclendon Carrollton 770-836-0674 Seven sisters' roses. Erika Emery Watkinsville 706-248-0665 Yellow Flag iris. Glynn Flanagan Midland gwflan@aol.com 706-563-3314 MISCELLANEOUS If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. 2-door metal storage cabinet, 2-shelves, 36"Wx26"Tx18"D; $1. Glenn Register Fayetteville 770-461-2842 Antique scythe with wooden cradle, and single hill hand corn planter; $175/ both. Ron Wolfe Albany 229-291-4207 Fill dirt for sale: Large dirt pit in Lamar County with red dirt. Sandee Potts Zebulon 678-910-7579 Hardback blueberry cookbook with 150 recipes, order online; $18/each, includes shipping. Joe Kilpatrick La Fayette www.theblueberryfarm.com 423301-2717 Propane heater; $20. Nelson Hollingsworth Molena 404-805-4156 Shop-built 30' triple-axle gooseneck trailer, electric brakes, on 2 axles, new floor; $2500. Mac Wright Fairmount 706-629-0406 Trailer: ATV style dual with ramps, side loads, excellent condition, 5.5"x8'11"; $1200. Brenda Macrenaris Tucker 770493-8939 Wood burning Earth stove, excellent condition, solid door and screen; $600. LaVenier Mize Cleveland 706-8657605 Bees, Honey & Supplies 10-frame bee hive, $85; 5-frame bee hive NUCs, $65; also inner covers, supers, top bar bee hives. Eliseo Delia Mineral Bluff 706-492-5119 3 lb. package of Italian bees, $125; NUCs, $175; queens, $30; many other supplies. David Mcdaniel Rome 706234-6585 5-frame NUCs, $150; young queen and queens, $25; marked and clipped for extra, $5; call for availability. Aubrey Ledford Commerce 706-654-6861 5/8/10-frame equipment, bees/supplies, NUCs, classes, veils, gloves, tools/more; swarms in Buford/Flowery Branch, Oakwood, Suwanee/Winder; honey. Harold Lanier Buford harold@ lanierbeebarn.com 678-471-7758 6-frame wooden swarm catchers, 3186 cubic inches, $35; 5-frame wooden transport NUCs, $25. Monty Usher 1678 Ga Highway 178 Lyons 30436 912-293-0310 Albany/SW Georgia, complete bee removal, also hornets, wasps and yellow jackets, licensed and insured. Dale Richter Leesburg 229-886-7663 All bees: Will pick up swarms for free; seeking new locations to keep bees; Russian-hybrid NUCs, $150. David Larson Mitchell 770-542-9546 Bee removal, work guaranteed, Metro Atlanta and West Georgia areas. W.O. Canady Villa Rica 770-942-3887 Carpenter bee traps, sold by lots of 5; $85/5 shipped. William Timmerman 1660 Swint Rd Harlem 30814 thetroll1943bt@yahoo.com 803-640-6265 803-640-6265 We eat FOR BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DINNER. Free removal of low hanging honey bee swarms, structural removal of bees for a fee, Rockdale area. Ronald Johnson Conyers 678-357-1814 Free swarm removal, remove unwanted bees from a structure for a fee; seeking bee equipment, pick up. Leonard Day Macon 478-719-5588 Grand opening March 24th, honey bee supply store, Barnyard Bees. D. Haught Chatsworth www.equipment.barnyardbees.com 706-508-2257 706-581-0473 Italian bees, NE Georgia, queens, call for availability/ship dates, 5-Frame NUCs, 3 lb. packages/pickup only, order online. Slade Jarrett Baldwin www.jarrettbees.com 706-677-2854 New 8-frame hives, complete Cypress tops with screen wire Cypress bottom; $58. Kenneth Oliver Collins 912-2931621 New and used bee equipment, brood boxes, supers, tops, bottoms, inner covers, hive stands and more. Bob Lewis Fayetteville 30215 770-461-4083 Pure all-natural unprocessed honey: quart, $14; pint, $8; 8 oz. bear, $5. Jimmy Brown Jackson 770-775-0157 678448-7781 Queens, bee supplies and equipment; retail, wholesale and bulk; honey; bee gift items. Bob Binnie Lakemont 706782-6722 Queens, bee supplies and equipment; retail, wholesale and bulk; honey; bee gift items. Bob Binnie Lakemont 706782-4656 Used brood boxes, supers and frames; also 3 hand-powered extractors, good tubs, need reworking. Bill Slack La Fayette 706-638-3791 Will collect low-hanging honey bee swarms, no houses/buildings, N. Gwinnett, S. Hall/Gainesville area. Robert Williams Gainesville 770-967-4060 Will collect low-hanging honey bee swarms, no houses/buildings, W. Cobb and E. Paulding Counties. Ray James Dallas 770-912-8128 Will pick up swarms, remove from structures, and will remove unwanted bee equipment. Derry Oliver Commerce 706-335-7226 706-621-1781 Things To Eat Advertisers submitting ads using the term "organic" require Certified Organic registration with the Geor- gia Department of Agriculture. Ads submitted without this registration will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the registration needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the registration can be attached using the attach- ments button. For information on this registration, call the Organic Program Manager at 706-595-3408. 2016 Desirable pecans, $11/lb. + postage; will crack, shell and separate your pecans, $.50-cents/lb. Russell Eaton Stockbridge 770-506-2727 2016 pecans, in the shell; $5/lb. + shipping. Charles Sawyer Mount Airy 706768-4776 2017 shelled pecans, mostly halves, bagged in freezer, leave message; $9/ quart + postage. Frank Eaton Buckhead 706-342-0727 Award winning cold-pressed farm made oils, sunflower, pecan, peanut and others; also gluten-free flours. Clay Oliver Pitts www.oliverfarm.com 229406-0906 Boiled peanuts, from Kennesaw to Blairsville, State Route 5, 2-gallon minimum; $30/delivered. Hollis Morris Jasper 703-299-0377 Farm fresh brown and white eggs; $3/ dozen. Patsy Long Rutledge 404-7870805 Farm fresh brown eggs, large to extralarge. Betty Sharpe Morrow 404-3666930 Free-range fresh brown eggs Habersham, County; $2 dozen, or $4/flat. Darren Wilkes Demorest 706-768-2683 Fresh eggs; $5-$6/dozen. Kimberly Bramblett 1681 Tipperary Circle Monroe 30656 404-425-4841 Fresh free range eggs; $3/dozen. Sam Bailey Douglasville 770-318-4838 770318-4837 Fresh yard eggs, cage-free happy hens, no antibiotics or hormones; $4/ dozen. Harriet Chaney Lithonia 404290-1122 Gallberry, voted best-tasting honey in Pre-bagged horse manure, 20-40 lb. Georgia; $52/gallon, includes shipping. bags, you load, call first; $1.50/bag, Ben Bruce Homerville www.bruces- reduced price for 100+ bags. Martha nutnhoney.com 912-487-5001 Braumann Lawrenceville 678-662- Ready for slaughter, still on the hoof, 9393 Wagyu/Angus beef, whole, half or quar- Worm castings: $25/50 lbs., or $14/25 ter. James Whitaker Warner Robins lbs.; also have worm tea, $15/gallon. 478-929-2000 Aron Walsh Jonesboro 404-307-8113 Sugarcane syrup, no additives, no Oddities preservatives, $9/25.4 fl.oz., or $6/12.7 fl.oz.; certified organic sugarcane syrup, $10/12.7 fl.oz. Mickey Morris Odum 912-586-2241 Gourds: Close-out sale due to health, call before coming, any size/number; $2. Thelma Moon Royston 706-2454218 U-pick strawberries, I-85 to exit 28, turn east away from Hogansville, 1.3 Out-Of-State Wanted miles; $10/bucket. Tom Hagan Ho- LP gas forklift, 6000 lb. capacity, pallet gansville 772-342-1224 forks, side-shift, pneumatic, tires, mint Water-ground meal, whole wheat flour, condition. Edward Sistrunk Auburn AL grits, will also grind your grain; $5/5 lbs. 334-727-1919 + postage. Mike Buckner Junction City Multiplying onions, any color. Bunyan 706-269-3630 Parker Ocala FL 352-300-9707 Fish & Supplies Firewood Advertisers selling sterile trip- Firewood must be cut from the adloid grass carp must submit a cur- vertiser's personal property. Ads for rent Wild Animal License from the firewood must use the cord when Georgia Department of Natural Re- specifying the amount of firewood sources. Ads submitted without this for sale. license will not be published. If you Pecan barbecue wood, won 65 troare faxing or mailing in an ad, the li- phies, seasoned, cut and ready; $200/ cense needs to be sent along with full-cord. Jesse Arnett Tifton 229-382it. For ads submitted online, the li- 6517 cense can be attached using the at- Split oak firewood; $50/half-cord. Mitachments button. For license infor- chael Stone Mcdonough 770-957-8613 mation, call 770-761-3044. Timber AI quality farm grown channel catfish fingerlings, graded/priced by size, accurate weights/counts, guaranteed live and healthy. J.F. Gilbert Thomaston 706-648-2062 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. All fish species, pond liming, phos- Timberland advertised must be at phorus mitigation, vegetation control, least one acre. Timber wanted ads consultation, pond surveys, aeration, will not be published. fountains, fish feeders, structures. Ethan Edge Lumber City 912-602-1310 Poplar trees. Vickie ville 706-768-5441 Hogan Clarkes- All size bass, bluegill, channel catfish, threadfin, gizzard shad, shell cracker and more; free delivery or pickup. Danny Wanted: Large walnut trees; also seeking maple and cherry trees. R. Wood Concord 770-468-8588 Austin Roberta 478-836-4938 All sizes catfish, minnows, shiners, bluegill, shellcracker, sterile carp, feed- CORRECTIONS ers, shad, aeration, fish structure and 2014 New Holland Workmaster TR55 consulting services. Keith Edge Soper- tractor, BH16 rotary cutter, DD 3PT ton 478-697-8994 bale spear, 106 hours. Jerry Crunkleton Bass, bluegill, hybrid bream, channel Carnesville 706-716-1320 catfish and sterile grass carp. David Cochran Ellijay 706-889-8113 Handicrafts First class Big Reds, $35/lb.; Red Wig- If you have questions regarding ads in glers, $25/lb.; worm castings $1 + ship- this category, call 404-656-3722. ping (not included). Lew Bush Byron Handicraft ads are limited to 30 bigreds1@cox.net 478-955-4780 words. Grass carp, bluegill and shellcracker AAA/Quilts: Homemade, premade/ bream, channel catfish fingerlings, custom, T-shirt, cotton clothing, or other bass, fathead minnows, delivery/pick- material, all sizes; bed runners, pillows/ up, by appointment only. Robert Brown Brooks 770-719-8039 Koi and goldfish: Koi, all sizes, $5+; goldfish, $2 each; albino catfish, $5 pillow shams, complete old quilt tops, pot holders, microwave bowl holders; $6-$500. Doris Brown Mcdonough fdbrownj@charter.net 770-898-8701 each. Glenn Kicklighter Sandersville 478-232-7704 Red Wigglers: $3/cup; $35/5-gallon bucket; $100/25-gallon tub; also have compost available. Anthony Self Byron 478-538-6167 Fertilizers & Mulches 2016 hay, will load, no delivery on mulch hay; $15. Steven Rosamond Hamilton 706-350-0833 2017 wheat straw, delivery available; $3 each/at barn. Gary Brinson 6786 Old Louisville Rd Tarrytown 30470 912286-3191 Aged garden compost, horse manure/ shavings, we load, by appointment; $5/ small truck, or $10/full-size truck. Fred Cook Fort Valley 478-825-1981 478825-0259 Fresh worm castings, extra microbes, best in GA, pick-up in Acworth or Cumming; $5/gallon. Shane Jones Cumming 404-964-7534 Horse manure located in town, can be loaded; $1/as much as you want. Vogt Riding Academy 1084 Houston Mill Road Atlanta 30329 404-321-9506 Horse manure/shavings, for composting, from Little Creek Farm. Tamra DIllard Decatur 404-399-1750 Long leaf pine straw, delivery and installation, also semi-trailer loads dropped at location. Joshua Bulloch Manchester 404-925-1076 Mulch hay; $2/at barn. Weebie Guillebeau Monroe 779-026-7892 770-2678929 All types of chair caning, refinishing and repairs. J. Lewis 1404 Kenwood Dr Perry 31069 478-987-4243 Audubon approved cedar birdhouses, feeders and carpenter bee traps, specializing in Bluebird nest boxes, handcrafted with repurposed materials. George Burkett Mableton gbetter@outlook.com 770-401-0315 Beautiful emerald green emu eggs, cleaned and blown, excellent for carving, etching, scrimshaw or painting. Jacquelyn Paul Conyers rmckin2146@ aol.com 770-761-1284 Chair and rocker caning of all kinds, also wicker and rattan repair, 36 years of experience. Duke Dufresne Statham 770-725-2554 Crocheted doilies, bookmarks, fridge magnets, dolls, kitchen towels, Christmas ornaments done year round; repair work done at reasonable prices. Marcia Brookins Thomaston 706-647-0593 Custom handmade t-shirt quilts, memory quilts, memory bears, memory pillows, can add embroidery or pictures. Margaret Watson 1254 Jim Starr Rd Newnan 30263 mew542000@yahoo. com 770-251-6951 Handmade bird houses, duck boxes and bat houses, call for prices, with discounts for 3+ ordered. Lindsey Wynn Ocilla mjwynn@windstream.net 229457-0534 Linen for rug hooking, 37"x60; half the price of new linen; please leave a message. Jean Sigmon Cumming 770-4756726 Memory bears made from your loved one's clothing, pants, shirts or pajamas, etc. Sherry Mcdaniel Buford 770-9454869 770-366-1306 Old fashioned rabbit boxes w/sticktrigger system, weathered wood, 50+ years building/trapping, $20/each + $12/GA shipping; cedar blue bird house, clean-out lid, $12/GA shipping. Donald Allen Snellville 404-578-7758 Old-fashioned bib and bonnet, aqua colored; $7 + postage. Mary V Pursley 253 Ryan Rd Winder 30680 678-9790057 Quilt top, crazy style, unfinished, 56x66 hand embroidery stems. M. Tice 677 Old 441 S Clayton 30525 http://AmandasGranny.etsy.com 706-782-5883 Wanted: Someone in middle Georgia to recane old chairs and the bottom of an old cotton basket. Sharon Walker Macon 478-954-1976 FIND GEORGIA'S BEST LOCALLY GROWN FOODS Online at georgiagrown.com PAGE 12 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2017 Athens Technical College students lend a hand to rehabilitate horses School donates vaccinations to equine impound barn in exchange for experience providing animal care By Amy H. Carter amy.carter@agr.georgia.gov If horses are inclined to think they're all that and a bag of carrots, C.J. must certainly have been feeling it April 14. With the sun shining on her back, a copse of Bermuda grass under her nose, and no fewer than 10 hands brushing, petting and pampering her from mane to tail, C.J. was queen of the day. If she was feeling it, it was an elation that was long overdue. C.J., a three-year-old filly, was delivered to the Georgia Department of Agriculture's Impound Barn in Mansfield just four days prior. She was one of several horses surrendered to Putnam County Animal Control by a neglectful owner facing criminal charges. C.J. weighed 480 pounds, about 400 pounds less than is healthy for a horse her size and age. The timing of her arrival was fortuitous, as it occurred days before the 2017 class of Athens Technical College's Veterinarian Technician Program visited Mansfield for some hands-on application of their education. Under the guidance of Barn Manager Jessie Murray and Program Chair Dr. Carole Miller, the students vaccinated every barn cat, donkey and horse they could safely capture. "We have done this every year since the program's inception," said Miller, who recently retired as program chair. The veterinary technician program began in 2001. It is a 21-month course that teaches students to perform a highly skilled set of duties to assist small and large animal veterinarians. Graduates of the program must pass a national exam and obtain state licensure before working in the field. Athens Technical College admits 18 students per class. Those students must go through a competitive admission process to gain admittance. Veterinary technicians essentially act as nurses in the veterinarian's office. They can draw blood, perform lab tests, take x-rays, assist in surgery and prepare patients for surgery, apply bandaging and splints anything a veterinarian can provide orders and immediate supervision to do is within a vet tech's scope of work, Miller said. Starting salaries are nearing $30,000 per year outside Atlanta, and Miller said she encourages her colleagues to pay a decent wage when recruiting technicians. "If we're going to be good veterinarians, we need good technicians beside us to do Licensed Veterinary Technician Melissa Hunt instructs students in treating C.J., a three-yearold filly, for horse lice. (Photos by Amy Carter) Amber Kelly, a student enrolled in Athens Technical College's Veterinary Technician Program, holds Kisma, a barn cat who lives at the department's equine impound facility in Mansfield. At rear is Dr. Jeff Light, a clinical instructor for the program. Dr. Carole Miller, left, supervises as student Hannah Nix administers a Jessie Murray, manager of the Georgia Department of Agriculture's vaccine to an equine patient. Equine Impound Barn in Mansfield, corrals two patients. that, so it's really a career choice," Miller said. "It's a less extensive amount of time to train, so you have less college expense. You get out and do it quicker and you really have more hands-on time with the animals because you're the one providing the nursing care." That is a great help to Murray, who usually has just one other set of hands available to draw blood, vaccinate and test newcomers to the rehabilitation center she runs on behalf of the department. "It's just a wonderful opportunity for us to have this group of people to come out with these veterinarians and do a wonderful service. They donate their time. They donate the vaccines," Murray said. "None of it is state funded and I wouldn't have all these hands to help me. It gets little hairy sometimes." Murray has worked in the department's equine program for seven years, and has worked in the equine facility management field for 20. She draws double duty as an equine inspector, as well, serving as one of 15 statewide who investigate complaints of neglect and abuse. Georgia's Equine Protection Program is the only one of its kind among agriculture departments nationwide. The program is authorized to impound and accept through voluntary surrender equine that have been abused, neglected and abandoned. Funds to support care and rehabilitation of seized horses come through donations of time, money, equipment and goods, primarily from the private nonprofit Georgia Equine Rescue League Periodical cicadas emerging after 17 years underground By Merritt Melancon What has large, red eyes, translucent wings and an undulating, 7-kilohertz chirp that sounds like the background music to a horror movie? Georgians can find the answer over the next few weeks by traveling north into the state's mountains to witness the emergence of the latest brood of 17-year periodical cicadas. The harmless insects started emerging from their underground burrows in late April, and will spend several weeks making a racket, mating, laying eggs and dying. They won't be seen again until 2034. Entomologists have identified 12 broods, or distinct groups, of periodical cicadas. This brood, Brood VI, last emerged in 2000 across far northern Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina. There's no good way to know exactly what parts of the state will see the most cicadas, but based on previous emergences, several thousand could be seen coming out of the ground in the mountains. Early reports indicate the cicadas emerging as far south as Cobb County already this month, so their range may have spread. Most of the Southeast sees an annual population of "dog day" cicadas emerge in July. Periodical cicadas are noteworthy because of the long periods they spend underground between emergences. The periodical cicadas' novelty and their sheer numbers make them one of the most bizarre and awe-inspiring phenomena in nature. "It's a good excuse to get out in the woods and enjoy nature," said Nancy Hinkle, a cicada enthusiast and professor of veterinary entomology at the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. "It's something your kids will remember because it only happens every 17 years. There's a good chance that the next time it happens, they can take their children out to see them." Periodical cicadas emerge from under trees that are at least 17 years old. The tree had to be present 17 years ago when the female laid her eggs to start this generation. If the tree where the eggs were laid was cut down or the area is paved, the nymphs die and no cicadas will emerge. The last brood of 17-year periodical cicadas, Brood II, emerged in 2013. For more information about periodical cicadas in Georgia, visit www.georgiawildlife. com/node/2659. -Merritt Melancon is a news editor with the University of Georgia College of Agricul- tural and Environmental Sciences. Find Georgia Agriculture Online! www.agr.georgia.gov www.facebook.com/georgiangrown @GeorgiaGrown: https://twitter.com/ @GaPoultry @Iamgeorgiagrown Georgia Grown: https://www.pinterest.com/GaDepAg/ Notice Ads for the June 7 issue -- including Farm Services and Handicrafts -- are due by noon, May 24.