10 0 t1h91A7nni2v0e1r7sary GGEEOORGRIAGDIEAPADRTEMPENATROTF MAGERNICTULTOURFE A GGARRYI CWU. BLLTACUKR, CEOMM ISSGIOANRERY W WE.DBNELSADACY,KM,ACY 2O3,M20M18I S VSOI LO. 1N01E, NRO. 11 COPYRIGHT 2018 `A desperate situation for blueberry producers in Georgia' Crop forecast to sustain significant losses for second year in a row By Amy Carter amy.carter@agr.georgia.gov Georgia's fledgling blueberry industry is at a crossroads. Back-to-back years of weather-related losses have growers pondering the sustainability of their industry. "We've never seen a season like we're undergoing right now. We've been trying for a generation to build a blueberry industry in Georgia, and we're seeing as tough a two years as anyone can remember," said Georgia Agriculture Commissioner Gary W. Black. "We have some folks that have some good fruit, but then our Extension estimates are pointing us toward another significant loss this year." Black hosted a conference call May 15 that allowed growers and University of Georgia Extension agents to discuss the state of the industry with Bill Northey, the USDA's Under Secretary of Agriculture for Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services. Northey heard from growers that crop insurance is little consolation in a multi-year disaster and that foreign competition is di- luting the market for domestic products. The group asked that blueberries be considered for inclusion in federal disaster-aid legislation and Farm Bill discussions going forward. Rene Allen, area blueberry agent for the University of Georgia based in Bacon County Extension Office, said conservative estimates put the loss for highbush blueberries and rabbiteye varieties at 60 percent each. Major producing counties of Ware, Bacon, Pierce and Jeff Davis are reporting 25 to 70 percent crop losses. Minor producing counties of Treutlen, Screven and Emanuel are reporting crop losses of 25 to 80 percent. In a memo to U.S. Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue, the Georgia Blueberry Growers Association blamed weather for widespread losses in 2017 and 2018. A warm winter in late 2016 and early 2017 prompted blueberry bushes to bloom two weeks earlier than average. When a hard freeze struck in mid-March 2017, the crop was devastated. The loss was particularly stinging because experts See BLUEBERRIES, page 6 Immature blueberries on the bush. GDA file photo Harvest time in the onion fields A mechanical harvester lifts Vidalia Onions from a field at M & T Farms in Lyons. If weather conditions are favorable, the onions will be left on the ground to dry for several days before they are collected for finishing and packing. Although Vidalia onions are grown exclusively in a 20-county region in Georgia, they represent about 40 percent of the sweet onion market in the U.S. and are sold in every state. According to the Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development at the University of Georgia, the state's 2017 Vidalia crop was worth $120 million. Andy Harrison/GDA Gov. Deal signs law establishing Center for Rural Prosperity and Innovation at ABAC By Kendall McWilliams kendall.mcwilliams@agr.georgia.gov TIFTON Gov. Nathan Deal signed House Bill 951 into law May 2. The bill establishes a Center for Rural Prosperity and Innovation, which will be housed on campus at Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College. According to the General Assembly, the state of Georgia has seen flourishing economic activity and tremendous job growth since 2010. Despite being named the best state in the nation for business by Site Selection Magazine for the past five years, the state's economic successes are not proportionally reflected in rural communities. Rural populations are dwindling in part due to the lack of sufficient health care, poor infrastructure, lack of quality education, lack of employment opportunities and the downward spiral of economic growth. In concert with the University System of Georgia, the Center for Rural Prosperity and Innovation will serve as a central information and research hub for rural leadership training and best practices. According to a press release is- sued by the House Rural Development Council, best practices may include community planning models, industry-specific assistance and cooperative efforts with nonprofits, religious organizations and other higher education partners. The House Rural Development Council aimed to address the woes of rural Georgia by proposing several bills during the 2018 legislative session. HB 951 was among the bills proposed. The objective of this legislation was to provide a center that will exclusively study the issues that rural communities face and identify policies to enhance economic opportunity across the state, especially in rural and underserved areas. "Rural Georgia faces distinct economic challenges, and with this legislation, we could continue to study these issues," said Rep. Jason Shaw, R-Lakeland. "The Center for Rural Prosperity and Innovation would provide a central location for research and information on rural development, which is crucial to enhancing economic opportunities in these regions." HB 951 also provides for the creation of See HB-951, page 6 Eve Guevara/The Tifton Gazette Gov. Nathan Deal signs legislation in Tifton May 2. Mail to: Published by the Ga. Department of Agriculture Gary W. Black, Commissioner PAGE 2 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2018 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 404.656.3680 Food Safety 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 FARMLAND RENT/ `52 Ford 8N, like new; $3800. 7' 3 ph 1953 Jubilee tractor 3500. 1610 Yanscrape blade; $350. Bumper for Ford mar 3500. Farm implements. 4-wheel LEASE tractor; $95. Jeffrey M Knowles Eaton- trailer. 1992 Ranger. Carter Stewart ton 706-473-1418 Baldwin 706-778-5204 If you have questions regarding ads in `96 Lely Lotus 300 tedder, 4 baskets, 1963 Ford 2000 gas, all original, runs this category, call 404-656-3722. 4 spinners, hydraulic fold-up, used last great. $2950, obo. Jeff Bishop Jesup The Farmland for Rent/Lease cat- yr. barn kept. $900. Robert Greene 912-207-0603 egory is published the last issue of Roopville 770-324-4323 1966 B414 Int'l Tractor. Selling whole each month. Please adhere to the (1) 4.5 yard dirt pan; $3000. T G Hol- or parts. Larry Houston Covington 770- following guidelines when submitting loway 750 Childs Rd Roberta 31078 235-3082 770-235-3782 an ad for Farmland for Rent/Lease or 478-214-3184 1971 4020; 12' lift type harrow; 7' Rent/Lease Wanted * When submit- (1) GSE combine wobble box. (2) BushHog mower; 6 row KMC ripper spi- ting ad, please designate it for the 4-row CTN pkrs. JD and CSE. (1) Two der for parts. Craig Huckaby Arabi 229- Farmland for Rent/Lease category. motor forklift, 4000 lb; $2000. JD and 322-3794 Notices to buy or sell farmland are CSE hyd. stats. "Half price". Ralph C 1972 International 354 gas tractor, 60" published only in the special fall or Nutt Cordele 229-276-5336 EZEE frontend bucket and bushhog; spring farmland editions * Ads must (2) 18.4x34 tires, 70%.2 seats. TW-15 $5000. J. Hencely Forsyth 478-338- not exceed 30 words. 6-row 7300 JD planters. 32' Taylorway 1455 13 acres for rent. Level pasture land harrow. 18-row sprayer. Bill Senkbeil 1972 International 966 hydro cab, one with some woods in Stephens County. Sylvester 229-347-1195 owner. 2134 hours, new rear tires and Partially fenced, electricity and wa- (2) 550 gal fuel tanks with Gasboy paint; $12,000, OBO. Bill Gowin Rocky ter available. $5 per acre per month. pumps; $1200 with skids, $1100 with- Face 706-270-4890 Charles Wayne Toccoa 256-881-9356 out skids. Leon Carter Sycamore 229- 1973 Ford 2000 gas tractor, mechani- 44 acres; 3 bedroom/2 bath house. 3 567-4469 cally sound. $5200, cash. Robert Elliott ponds. Harold Howell Rd, Portal, GA (2) Farmall Super As; (1) C; (3) As; all Buford 770-945-2248 770-313-5456 Creighton Laircey Lincolnton 706-533- need repair; planters, cultivators. Cole 1979 Duetz D4506, 1334 hours, bush- 5426 Cooper Grovetown 706-863-2555 706- hog, pallet forks, trailer hitch, $7,000 45+ acres of pasture for lease, for cut- 830-5906 OBS. Robert Walker Social Circle 770- ting hay or crops located South Rich- (2) Used rear turf tires/rims. 21.5 855-7841 770-464-1079 mond Co. Christopher Hayes Blythe L/16.1. (2) front turf tires and rims. 10"; 1979 JD 950 tractor, 1035 hrs; $6,000. 706-288-7058 $200, OBO. Off Ford 30 series tractor. New tires well maintained and cared for. Approx. 16 acres in Bacon County, Russell Bishop Jesup 912-427-2281 David Odegaard Monticello 770-714- not farmed and no chemicals in past 1 1,000 gallon fuel tank and hand 0354 20 years. Prefer organic tenant. Harold pump. Good condition. $950. Ben L Nail 1984 NH stackwagon, Perkins diesel; Mclain Stockbridge 770-474-2044 Collins 706-424-7463 $15,500. 160 bales. Freeman 270 hay Pony Express stockyard for rent. Some 1, 2 and 4 row cultivator; JD/MF/AC/ baler; $12,500. DewEze Super Slicer II; pasture. Mobile home. Serious inquiries Cole/Covington planters. 4',5',6' box $3500. 5 NH balers, 3 for parts, 2 work- only. Edwin Bridges 1852 Hwy 11 South and scrape blades. 100s Cov. Cole and ing; $7500 for all. Phillip Raley Mitchell Covington 30014 704-434-6389 others plates, dirt scoops. Cash. Carl 706-699-2440 Seeking 10 acres for dairy goats & trav- Crosby Blackshear 912-449-6573 1985 Ford 7710 Tractor with cab. el trailer, electric & water needed. Have 1-row Covington cultivator; $75. C744841 4.4L 4 cyl Diesel engine. 97 my own fencing, goat shelter and stor- Thomas Corbett Greenville 706-402- HP. Runs good. Janis Carrier Cloudland age unit. 2 year lease wanted. Alexander 6792 706-862-2601 Flaherty Danielsville 706-254-7717 1-row Covington planter; $360. Floyd 1986 F150 shortbed truck, 4-speed. Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted Barnes Hiram 678-715-5535 New crate 300i6, clutch, brakes, interior, 1-row cultivator, new. For sale or trade excellent farm truck. Billy Andrews Bog- Seeking hunting lease in Central & North for larger type 2-wheel garden tractor. art 770-725-7716 Georgia, Christian family men, never hunt Howard Moore Loganville 770-466- 1990 JD 2955 tractor, 8500 hrs, new on Sunday: $500-$2500 range. Jonathan 4485 injector pump and PTO clutch new seat; Holbrook Cumming 678-294-3182 1.5 yard pull behind self-loading dirt $15000. Charles Godwin Lenox 229- TWH trainer looking for Barn & Pas- pan. Gerald Parker Butler 478-862- 326-1144 ture (10+ acres) to lease near Loganville/ 9846 1999 International 8100 litter spreader snellville. For training & lessons. Prefer 105-bale NH stack wagon, 40' NC liq- truck, 20 ft. BBI bed; $13,000, OBO. to live on site. Please call/email with uid applicator, 18' pinestraw trailer, IH Wes Hopper Pitts 229-322-3745 info. ironcrestwalkers.weebly.com Nata- grain drill. Doug Huff Dearing 31326 2-11.2x24 rear tractor tires, 75%. No lie Johnson Loganville tnwalker00@ya- 706-833-1163 tread cracks. $150/ea. 2-600x16 triple hoo.com 423-716-5359 140 Farmall 1975 key start, new en- ridge front tractor tires. Good tread; FARM EMPLOYMENT gine, front tires, seat, w/ cultivators. $25/ea. Kenneth Carlyle Cleveland 706$4500, OBO. Planter available. Harley E 865-3686 If you have questions regarding ads in Thomas Elberton 706-988-3560 2-row Covington planters with fertilizer this category, call 404-656-3722. 140 International Farmall wheel box and cultivators; $800. B R Williams Only farm work or farm help weights, cultivators, disc, buzzard Monroe 770-267-3180 wanted advertisements allowed. No wings, real good condition. Excellent 20 disc harrow, has 18 discs, 3 pt commercial, industrial or domestic garden tractor. Wayne Cason Mansfield hitch. 65"wide. $500.00 obo. Karen employment permitted. 770-294-4596 Duncan Hoschton 770-867-8044 1973 Ford 2000 gas tractor, mechani- 15' tandem, low profile trailer con- 20 disc smoothing harrow, $450.00; cally sound. Will make someone a good structed with 2.25" deck plate channels, cultivator, $250.00; 8 disc harrow, tractor. $5200 cash. Bob Elliott Buford 26"x6" spaced 35" apart on 10 cross- $400.00; rotary mower, $350.00. Nelson 770-313-5456 rails, electric brakes, lights 8 bolt wheels, Massey Conyers 770-483-2639 36 -year-old seeking employment in Johns Creek, Roswell area. Experience 91" between tires, GI hitch; $950. Paul Stacey Toccoa 706-886-6994 2001 John Deere 6605 tractor, 4WD; 4000 hours,115 HP, 6/cycl, turbo en- with horses, stablehand. Hardworking. 16 ft Chandler liter and shaving bed, gine, excellent conditio, cold air, Richard Hayes Roswell 678-262-7407 mounted on 93 GMC topkick, 5 speed/2 $29000. James Cliett Jacksonville 229- Experienced part time farm help needed. Fences, cattle, tractor work, speed. Has 366 engine. Tommy Scoggins Dallas 404-732-6538 860-0252 2007 AG-King tractor 4540 Koyker yard work. Crawford/Stephens area of 16 ft. equipment trailer, cattle trailer, front end loader, Kodiak brush hog, Oglethorpe County. Mark Payne Gray- both ready to use; $650 each. Alvin Mor- good rubber all around, needs starter son 678-575-2843 gan Oxford 770-787-0161 replaced; $9000 OBO. Rl Class Bruns- Need responsible couple w/ expe- 16 ft. flatbed trailer with siderails, fair wick 912-262-0074 rienced to work on hen farm. Salary/ condition; $700. Terry Hosey Grayson 2013 Kubota B2920 hydrostatic trans. housing included. Can train if necessary. 770-972-7962 170hr, new BushHog 5' finishing mower, Greg Or Delores Wells Maysville job- 165 MF W Farmhand loader; $5500. like new; $15,000. James Wade Musel- swells.2018@gmail.com 678-410-7256 310 JD TLB 3525 Mahindra tractor and la 478-951-2682 678-410-7255 9 pieces equipment or trade for larger 2015 McCormick X1.45 C enclosed Rabbit farm, light work for woman, tractor. W.O. Carter Odum 912-586- cab 4X4, frontend loader, 50HP, AC/ must like animals, 40 hours/week, no 6861 heat, Am/Fm/Cd, 70 hrs. Excellent drugs, hablamos Espanol. Walter Ter- 180 Massey Ferguson tractor. Com- condition. $28,000 OBO. Ron Welborn hune Dawson 229-254-4848 plete has 4 cyl. Perkins engine. Needs Baldwin ronwelborn73@yahoo.com Weekend stable hand needed in Such- fuel line. Used for parts or to be re- 706-282-0249 es GA. $70-$100/day depending on stored. $1200. Bobby & Peggy Hunter 2016/2017 Branson 3520 tractor w/ horse handling experience. Text or call. Pavo 229-224-1700 front loader. 215 hours. Must sell. Philip Annetta Coleman Suches 678-936-8087 1909 Threshing machine/pea sheller; D Lynch Cumming 770-540-0770 $1200. 4' cutting harrow, very good 2017 7x12 cargo trailer, barn doors. FARM MACHINERY condition; $400. Marvin Garner Resaca insulated, electrical, camp, haul ready, 706-913-3165 706-625-5291 one axle, more. Thomas Bentley Mon- If you have questions regarding this 1930s Lilliston hay baler w/ 3-5HP, roe tomhb53@windstream.net 770-480- category, call 404-656-3722. IHC, FlyWheel engine totally restored; 0499 Only farm machinery and equipment $1600. Also pullets, flat bels, other farm 25K Winco generator, new, never used, owned by the advertiser and used in pieces. Jimmy Mckinley Thomaston needs 540 RPM PTO with 48 HP. Sell- his/her own farming operation can be 706-975-7244 ing for $1500. New $2700. Gary Wright advertised; those persons advertising 1948 Allis Chalmers G, new paint, tires, Waleska 770-324-9535 for machinery and equipment wanted runs perfect, cultivator, turn plow, sickle 3 Blue Bonnet Farm grain bins for sale. must be seeking those items for their bar and belly mower; $3500. Wayne Robert Cooper Jr. Rupert 478-957- own farming operation. Swanson Ringgold 706-935-4691 5809 `49 Ford 8N tractor. Needs to be re- 1952 Allis Chalmers G; $3950. Collec- 3 David Bradley tractors and plows; stored. $1250.00. John Martin Jasper tor item. David West Calhoun 770-712- $85.00 - $750.00 or $1000 for all. D 706-692-7626 1388 Noles Winston 770-378-4414 WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2018 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov PAGE 3 3-ph drum mower, C.C.M., 165, good condition: $1900. Two-basket tedder: $200. Lou Beal Ellijay 706-502-8266 300 gal fuel tank; $400. 500 gal fuel tank; $100. Fuel tank and pump; $500. Keith Garvin Byron 478-955-4236 3008 8' BushHog mower, like new, mowed approx. 50 acres. $3300. Glenn Knight Rentz 478-983-4121 311 New Holland square baler. Shelter kept. Baled about 2000 bales. Like new condition. Paint faded some. $5500. Kenneth Wilbanks Baldwin 706-4911221 4 Gehl feed mills and one Arts Way feed mill. Mostly for parts. Gehl have hyd. motors on augers. Donald Stodghill Alapaha 229-686-4289 4-wheel side-dump wagon. Gehl 9000 hydra-tilt box, 10' wide, 13' high, 12' long. 8 ton capacity; $4000. Richard L Acree Calhoun 706-629-7694 404 International tractor, unrefurbished, 1962. One owner. $2000. Ken Flanders Dublin 478-278-0908 435 JD Baler w/ monitor and kicker, good condition. Vermeer 8 disc rake, good condition. James Kelly Monticello 706-467-1328 5000 lb propane operated Caterpillar forklift, needs work; $2500. Tommy Jackson Juliette 478-986-9446 5100m open station, JD tractor, 4WD, wet clutch, 2 remotes, 950 hours, excellent condition; $39000. Email for pics. Jimmy Grimes Helena 31037 grimesalicia@gmail.com 229-699-1816 6 Cole planters on frame; 6 no till KMC spider planters on frame; Golden 3 roller cane mill. Donald Wooten Denton 912347-2009 6 foot box blade w/ shanks; $350. Boom sprayer, 200 gallon; $250. Pam Whitmire Jefferson 678-617-0607 6 ft. Athens model, 105 offset harrow. New front bearings & hydraulic hose. $2950, obo. Brandon Wall Auburn 770307-8907 6 ft. off set hydraulic harrow, 14 discs; $2000. Ivey T Jeanes Gordon 478-2330347 6-inch Rainbow irrigation, 30 feet joints, elbows risers, connectors. Rainbow 2-piece traveler and soft hose. Gene Wood Dexter 478-290-4326 600 Ford diesel tractor, runs good, 1400 hours; $3,800. 6, BushHog rotary mower; $795. Emily Kenney Vidalia 912-537-2890 71 feet long, 8 in. Westfield grain auger; $3500. 71 feet long, 6 in. grain auger; $500. James J Greene Bainbridge 229-254-3312 71 planters on cultivator; $1350. Ford 532 square hay baler, $2250. Cole Jernigan Buena Vista 706-570-2171 8 wheel V-rake, like new; $2500. Ford 555B, 4x4 loader, big bucket weight box, 2600 hrs, nice; $12,000. Herbert Owen Baldwin 706-499-3606 8' 2018 Plotmaster 800, 3pt hitch. One pass disc plant drag. Broadcast or drill any seed. Ed Roddenbery Columbus 706-315-6658 706-568-0124 8'x24' bumper pull tandem axle tiltbed equipment trailer. Almost new. Ronald Parten Ashburn 229-567-3053 229566-3746 966 IH tractor, runs good, needs work on PTO and hydraulic lift. $4000. Anthony Frost Wrightsville 478-864-0209 478-290-2550 Allis Chalmers 160 diesel, remote hyd, VGC, 12 spd front weights, owners manual; $6200. C T Hanse Lizella 478935-9985 Allis Chalmers gleaner combine, Model K, no head, repairable or for parts, has A/C, 6 cyl gas: $800. Roger Holley Wrightsville 478-232-8381 Antique hay rake. All metal. $650. James R. Ewing Gainesville 770-9677982 Avery tractor wheel, size 9-24; $100, obo. Mule drawn hay baler. $700. Ezee flow operator manual; $10. Donald Smith Wrightsville 478-232-5913 Baltic fertilizer seed sewer, 2 row cultivator (under shelter). Ford flat bottom plow, A Frame 1 row cultivator, 1 slat turning plow. Eldon Patterson 149 Cold Branch Rd Eatonton 31024 706-4857355 Big Tex Trailers! The largest and fastest growing professional grade open trailer manufacturer in North America. Steve Carson Athens 706-540-5804 BushHog 286, 6 ft wide, in good shape. $1600. Connie Covington Eatonton 706-816-9752 404-310-5305 BushHog mower 3368, 13' rigid deck, VGC, John Blue N applicator, Pecan special, 300 gal. 20' flexible, VGC. Travis P Cook Mc Rae Helena 229-8601562 BushHog ROTH60 finish mower, rear discharge. 5 ft cut, very good condition, new blades, new wheel bearings; $950. Doug A Askew Greensboro 706-3471610 BushHog squealer, 5 ft. tail wheel, excellent condition; $500. Jerry Bennett Cumming 770-887-6843 BushHog, SM60 side mounted rotary cutter. 5' cutting width. With extras practically new. $3500. George Adams Thomaston 706-975-5257 Carburetor, new condition, 1950 and up Farmall Super A; $250. Alvin G George Bowdon 770-328-5195 Case 1450 crawler with dozer and root rake; good, running: $6500. John Reed Hahira 229-794-4060 Case IH 1660 combine, grain table, 4 row John Deere corn head. Case 1150B bulldozer. Donnie Hopkins Fitzgerald 229-424-3261 Case Skid Steer tires and rims. 12x16.5, fair tread, clean, ready to use. $475. Sam Saliba Marietta 770-5141431 Case/IH 1660 combine w/1020 head: $25,000; 4-row JD7100 planters on/Unverferth strip-till w/lift assist: $10,000. Excellent condition. Stephen Allen Butler 336-314-4841 Caterpillar/New Holland backhoe buckets; $200. Tire 169-28, 148 a8; $200. Fuel tank; $200. Mike Mullinax Rome 770-318-8573 Chandler 4-ton pull lime and fertilizer spreader, stainless steel, bottom and chain. $3500, in excellent condition. John Case Trenton 423-413-1257 Clipper Super X-29D seed cleaner; $5000. Troy Chandler Danielsville 706338-9144 Compact tractor. 2015 Jd 3033 R, 32 HP. 560 hrs. 4x4 with H-160 loader, Woods rotary mower. RC.5; $16,500 with mower. $15,500 without. RF Waldhour Guyton 912-665-1830 Country Line spreader, 3 point hitch, excellent condition; $250. Tom Krobot Comer 706-795-5471 Covington 2-hopper planter; $700. 6 plow cultivators; $600. 1905 Wooden corn/pea sheller; $200. Claudine Morris Brooks 678-654-5073 Craftsman 10" radial arm saw, like new, laser trac. Table saw on rolling stand w/ front wheels, 10" blade. You load/haul. James T Caldwell Thomaston 706-6479565 Cub Cadet RZTVT50. Zero turn mower. Briggs 26HP Only 46 hours. Excellent condition. $1,795. Bill Scully Toccoa 706-282-1845 Cultivators, Taylorway 8 disc harrow, 5 ft. BushHog, 2 wing turning plow, 2 disc turning plow, all purpose plow. Slate Long Madison 706-318-0402 Dearborn 2 disc turning plow, 3 point hitch. Jim Thompson Thompson Fayetteville 770-680-0817 Deutz D4506, 45 hp, good mech. condition, aux hyd., aux hand clutch, 10 ton winch on front. Frank Gibbs Gordon 478-258-1630 Dirt Dog land leveler, DD plugger, JD disc harrow, Willmar fertilizer spreader, Toro Reelmaster. Tracie Reichel Maysville 706-652-2185 Dirtdog 3505, 5' scraper blade, like new, only used once; $450. Stephen Presnell Washington 706-293-1026 DR Power Wagon 6.75 HP, Tecumseh 4 speeds, dump bed and mixing tub. Sulkey w/ seat. 800 lb capacity. $650, OBO. James Welch Villa Rica 770-4598608 DR Tow-behind Rototiller Pro-Electric start, 56" tilling width-OHV engine1200, 900 series. Excellent for garden or deer plots. $1500. Darryl Nealis Hampton 770-946-9160 Fanex 500 hay tedder, needs repair, no hydraulics; $500. James Duncan Royston 706-498-2349 Farmall 140 w/ weights, fast hitch good condition, good tires, turnplows, harrows, distributor, planters, cultivators and accessories; $6000. Earl V Neurath Rincon 912-826-5621 Farmall Cub tractor 1952, new tires, seat battery and grill, everything works, no dents or rust in sheet metal. New paint and decals. $2000. Thomas Tucker Lithia Springs 770-941-2354 Farmall Cub tractor with cultivators; $2800. Bobby Craven Toccoa 706-8866118 Farmall Super A tractor with cultivators, 12 volt, runs good. Frank Brown Mcdonough fdbrownj@charter.net 770898-8701 Fertilizer spreader, 3 pt. hitch, For sale or trade for small manure spreader to pull behind lawn tractor. Louise Jacobs Waycross 912-282-3483 Finish mower. 6' King Kutter, used 2 hrs, excellent condition. $1100. New ones are much more. Robert Watkins Douglasville 770-942-8687 Finishing mower; $450. Scrape blade; $350. Husky riding mower; $200. Norris Houze Hiram 770-943-2968 404-7916523 Finn B70 straw blower; $12,000. Bob Brady Augusta 706-373-8397 Ford 2-row planters with fertilized on 2-row fertilized on 2-row cultivator frame with plats; $450. Other equipment. Paul Anderson Millen 912-863-6144 Ford 4000 tractor 1970s model; $6000. Van 18 row sprayer; $2500. Waldon 6000 loader; $4500. Brett Boatright Montrose 478-960-1162 Ford 4600 SU with roll top canopy, 53 HP, ps sow, new injection pump, new rear tires; $7,500. James Sullivan Vidalia 912-537-4944 Ford 5000 tractor, diesel, with frontend loader, good tires and paint, runs fair. $4500. Willie Thomas Reynolds 478672-7134 Ford 8N 1951 (reconditioned) with 5' BushHog. $3500, OBO. Jay Johnston Jackson 770-861-0231 Ford 8N tractor, $2,895. Boom pole; $100. Jd Reece Powder Springs 770439-6303 Ford 8N, 1948, very good condition, new battery; $2500. Larry Boddie Williamson 770-228-4932 Ford 905 post-hole digger 8" auger; $250. Front bumper for a 8N tractor. $100. R L Moore Hoschton 770-867-5068 Ford Industrial loader frame w/bucket/ forks with everything needed to put on another tractor came off a 67; $3500. J. Shelton Martin 706-969-4244 Ford Model 1500 2-wheel drive 18 HP tractor, less than 900 hours, excellent condition. Jo Allen Blairsville jandtbuy@brmemc.net 706-400-9124 Ford tractor 1952 8N, rebuilt, new paint, gas tank, drag blade, used tires, pulls good; $3200. No offers. Leo Turner Clarkesville 706-754-3087 Ford Tractor 2000 series refurbished, 3 cyl gas, 36 hp, rollover bar sunshade, 72 in. BushHog finish mower. Scott Jarrett Gainesville 770-539-1739 770-5360658 Four wheel hay rake, 3 pt. hitch; $400. Arvel Watkins Mansfield 770-314-1490 Free 4 stand Continental gin w/ hydraulic press to be dismantled and moved. Paul Saxon Woodland 256-610-7064 Great Plains drill caddy cart to convert 3pt drill to pull type. Asking $2200. Tim Shiver Ocilla 229-854-9648 Hardee bushhog, 7 ft. heavy duty; $1600. Blandton harrow, 10 ft., 20 discs, hydraulic cylinder; $1000. Gary Fauscett Crandall 706-695-5545 706-264-5816 Hardee MR1442, Ditch Bank mower, 75 hrs, like new; $7000. KMC 4-row Ripper Spider/KMC15 planters. Field ready. $2500. Lori Downs Sylvester 229-2726122 Harrows: 8', three point hitch; $1000, firm. John Futch Broxton 912-359-3000 Hay baler, Deutz Allis GP 250 (4x5) Roll. One owner, great condition. $2500. Hubie Colquitt Lexington 706-338-0633 Hay balers; 630 NH; $300. Gp 2.50 Deutz, GP 520 Deutz; $1750 each. Larry Cook Statham 706-202-8083 Hay elevator, 40 ft. long with 5 HP Honda motor. Sheltered. Good condition. $800. R M Patterson Douglasville 770-314-0517 Hooper trailer, 6.5'x16'; $1200. Kodak BushHog, 5'; $600. Box Blade 5'; $500. Marie D Hasty Franklin 678-378-9946 International 574 gas tractor. 70 horse. New carburetor, tank cleaned, full tune up. $3500 obo. Timothy Fortin Toccoa 30577 864-557-0098 International Harvester 1420 axial JD7100 planters (6 row); $500. 6 row flow combine, 17' grain table, and shielded sprayer; $500. 3-bladed bot- 4-row cornhead, 1500 hrs, good condi- tom plow; $300. 2-row hustler peanut tion; $9500. Ricky Sparkman Moultrie picker; $250. F3 gleaner, 4-row, make ricky@scvmilk.com 229-873-5051 offer. Michael R Newman Dawson 229- International Harvester 574, runs 886-0373 good, good tire, has bad hydraulic leak John Deere 2-row corn planter; $400. on power steering. Roger Gillam Fay- 2 disc turn plow; $300. 3 pt. Bog harrow; etteville 770-461-5688 $300. Fred Evans Rocky Face 423-364- JD 1530 tractor, 50HP with power- 8335 steering, good condition with 6 ft Bush- John Deere 2630 Tractor, 70 HP, rear Hog; $6900. C.D. Gravitt Buford 770- hydraulics, canopy. Very nice. Ready to 945-4371 work. $9300. Cary Walton Eatonton 706- JD 348 square baler; $6000. 8 bale ac- 473-6248 cumulator and 8 bale grapple; $4000. John Deere 26ft harrow; Redball 420 S&J Farms. S R Obannon 421 Eagle 6-row hooded sprayer; KMC 6 row pea- Grove School Rd Canon 30520 706376-5046 nut inverter. Donald Wingate 229-776-6145 229-349-0026 Doerun JD 3830 tractor, 176 HRS. JD 305 loader, frontier cutter, 18 ft trailer; $19000. James Green Canton 678-485-5651 JD 40S 2500. JD M 2000. Both run good, good tires, good paint. Jesse Rogers Eastman 478-559-0015 John Deere 327 square baler. Used lightly. Always sheltered. $6000. Connie Walker Pearson 912-422-8100 John Deere 336 baler, kept in barn, field ready; $3600. Galfire 10' fluffer; $900. John Deere 10' rake; $900. Gerald Mcpherson Buchanan 404-632-4807 JD 4240 cab and air, low hours, good tires, quad range transmission, dual remotes, full front weights. Carl Gay Chula 229-402-0447 JD 435 hay baler w/ bale kicker twine John Deere 375, hay baler, 5x4 rolls; $3000. Homer Brown Midville 478-2065759 John Deere 4650, 2WD cab and A/C, quick hitch, power shift transmission, tie, only good condition, sheltered; 20.38 bolt on duals; $18000. Karl Dop- $5000. James Kennedy Tennille 478- son Rhine 229-425-8080 552-9223 John Deere 4720 with cab, loader w/ JD 535 round baler. Mervin J Rudolph bucket, Grill Guard, industrial tires, 4x4, Resaca 706-671-9730 1300 hours. $26,900. Dexter Whigham JD 660 side delivery hay rake, pull Vidalia 912-293-0747 912-293-0748 type, good teeth, field ready; $1500. John Deere 6" irrigation pump, 4 cylinRyan Baerne Nicholson 706-757- der diesel, excellent condition; $5,000. 2672 Mickey Morris Odum 912-586-2241 JD 9950 cotton picker, picked 120 John Deere 6200 tractor, 2WD, can- acres in 2017, good condition; $9500. opy, roll guard, 5600 hours, very good Stanley Jordan Lakeland 229-560-8989 condition, $12,500. Ted Milliron Shell- JD R280 9' Mower; JD 328 baler; man 229-317-3795 WR1008 rake; low usage, excellent John Deere 730 propane, not running, condition; will split; $25,000. Charlie wide front, good sheet metal; $3000. Jackson Lawrenceville jackson_c19@ James R Crane Meansville 770-550-6727 yahoo.com 678-910-0561 John Deere 920, conditioner, mower JD4430 w/ loader; $21500. JD4450 10 ft cut, ready for the field. Chris Dun- cab/air; $26500. JD4560, excellent; smore Lincolnton 706-401-0990 $25000. JD443 cab/air $21500. JD3020; John Deere backhoe for John Deere $6250. Andy Sumner Wrightsville 478- 450; $600, OBO. Wayne Hodges Cony- 484-6984 ers 770-778-6930 JD4560 MFWD, 8K hours, duals, John Deere M, Serial #M37410 with 3 quick hitch, saddle tanks, clean and PH, belly and rear, cultivators, mower, nice. $35,000. John Torpy 466 Blundale sprayer, harrow, good tires, miscella- Church Road Swainsboro 30401 neous equipment, good condition. John johntorpy55@gmail.com 478-455-4208 J Brown Eastman 478-374-5211 JD467 baler, megawide (twine only), Kioti KRM03-72MM MidMount groom- mint condition, `03 model, always shel- ing mower 72" for Koiti D35 or D40 trac- tered, no peanuts: $14,000 neg. Whip- tors: $400. Tony Freeman Good Hope ple Simpson Cochran 478-934-7863 770-207-9816 678-429-4733 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 23, 2018 Livestock Sales and Events Calendar APPLING COUNTY 1st & 3rd Saturdays, 12:30 p.m.: Goats, sheep, small animals, feeder pigs; A&A Goat Sales, 187 Industrial Drive, Baxley; Call Allen Ahl, 912.590.2096 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 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 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, 560 GA Hwy. 56 N, Swainsboro. Call Ron & Karen Claxton, 478.455.4765 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 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. Truck bed fuel tank/toolbox combination with manual pump. Black diamond plate. $350. Randy Tankersley Appling 706-339-5319 Two Ford tractors, Kuhn rotary mower, cutting harrow, brush harrow and much more. Call Anthony for a detailed list. Charles Hackney Dalton 706-463-0207 706-263-1077 Used Dayton submersible effluent pump model 3BB85, 1HP, 240V, 2 years old; $475, OBO. Frank Rodriguez Madison 404-456-4482 V-hayrake, 3 pt hitch, fair condition; $500. Alton Garner Adrian 912-5293921 Vereer Rebel baler, netwrap, 6 Disc Kuhn cutter, 8 wheel V-Rake. Gene Perry Adairsville 770-769-9888 770324-4451 BLECKLEY COUNTY 2nd& 4th Saturdays, 9 a.m.: Farm misc., 1:00 p.m. Ga. Lic. #3050; Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Cochran Auction Barn, 290 Ash St., Cochran. Call Mark Arnold 478.230.2482 or 478.230.5397 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 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 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 1st & 3rd Thursdays, 7 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Auction 41, 4275 GA Hwy. 41 N, Buena Vista. Call Jim Rush, 706.326.3549. Email rushfam4275@ windstream.net PULASKI COUNTY Every Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.: Cattle, goats, sheep; Pulaski County Stockyard, 1 Houston Street, 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. Vermeer 504 Super I baler. Low usage, excellent condition. 80 year old retiring. $4500. Bob Willoughby Villa Rica 770459-5982 Vermeer 504 Super I round baler, electric tie. Gehl 8 wheel rake. 3 tedders. Patrick Broder Stockbridge 404-4016134 Vermeer track, walk-behind trencher RTX100, bought new, used very little, stored inside, plus various equipment. Roberta Verdone Lexington 706-7433994 Vicon 10 ft hay mower, New Holland hay rake, great condition. Leave message. Kyle Barron Demorest 706-9689208 Livestock, 813 Old Villa Rica Road, Temple. Call Ricky Summerville, 404.787.1865 Every Thursday, 12:30 p.m.: Cattle, goats, sheep, slaughter hogs; Calhoun Stockyard Hwy. 53, 2270 Rome Road SW, Calhoun. Call Hawkinsville. Call John Walker, 478.892.9071 WHITE COUNTY SEMINOLE COUNTY Every Saturday, 4 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, Want 1-row subsoiler for ditch, for laying water/electric line. Must be 3 pt. hitch with "c" curve. From hitch to Every Monday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Dennis Little & Gene Williams, 706.629.1900 Every Wednesday, 1:30 p.m., 3rd Saturday small animals; Coker's Sale Barn, 9648 ground one solid piece. Mack Cham- 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 GREENE COUNTY Every Thursday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Duvall Livestock Market, 101 Apalachee Ave., Greensboro. Call Jim Malcom, 706.453.7368 HOUSTON COUNTY June 2, noon: Southeastern Kiko Goat Association Roundup and Sale; Georgia National Fairgrounds and Agricenter, 401 Larry Walker Pkwy., Perry. Call Marilyn Seleska, 229.263.7977; springacres@windstream.net 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' 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 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, 706.678.2632 Notices for auctions selling farm-related 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 Amy Carter at 404.656.3722 or amy.carter@agr. georgia.gov. bers Uvalda 912-223-6743 Yard Machines garden tiller, 5HP, OHV B&S gas engine, 18" tilling width, rear tines, very good condition; $350. Sandra Harrison Canton 770-617-4620 Ford 3000 tractor,1966, gas, runs great, good tires; $3,000. James Hutcheson Bremen 770-598-5441 Haymaster 8 bale hay accumulator with grapple. It pulls behind baler. $5000. Shawn Cox Covington 678409-6233 Farm Machinery Wanted 1 trailer, 20 foot, 4 tires, open sides w/ loading skids for hauling pines & tractors. Davis Yaun Soperton aikenyaun@ gmail.com 912-399-1988 1965 or newer tractor 55 to 125 hp, gd cab and loader; $10,000 or less. Roy A 1st, 3rd & 5th Saturdays, 1 p.m.: Goats, sheep, Times Auction, 503 Hill Salter Road, Kite. Call Every Monday, 1 p.m.: Cattle; Sumter County Talley Lyons 912-526-8426 chickens, small animals; Deer Run Auction, Robert Colston, 478.299.6240 1158 Parrish Road, Adel; Call John Strickland, 229.896.4553 Stockyard, 505 Southerfield Road, Americus. Call Dr. LeAnna Wilder and Sam Steele, 229.380.4901 Athens 97 offset harrow. 6' 2" in width and in good condition. Patrick Holton Leesburg 229-881-4688 KMC 2-row peanut vine cutter. 6-row Lawn tractor, 12 HP BS, 5 speed, 38" New Holland 1069, self-propelled bale Pecan crackers for sale: Meyers and Ford diesel tractor, Ford 3000 or 4000, Lilliston rolling cultivator, complete. Mike cut, $300. Craftsman, self-propelled, wagon. Good condition. Ready to go. Champion. Also repair crackers and all not running, sheet metal in good shape, Bird Americus 229-942-3835 9 HP vacuum shredder/chipper, $350. Call for price. Danny Wilkins Mansfield pecan equipment. Thomas Hatcher Al- small no till planter or drill. R C Bundrage Kodiak 5ft. BushHog mower; $425. 5.5 Juanita Kerrick Gainesville 678-989- 770-363-6857 bany 229-347-2990 Sparta 706-444-8598 478-232-4723 ft. scrape blade; $175. Subsoiler; $140. 5880 702-612-7346 New Holland 675E 4WD backhoe w/ Ripper Stripper, Unverferth, Monosem Front end loader attachment for 50 Other items. Leonard Coker Gainesville Mahindra 485DI w/ loader 829 hrs, 45 36" and 24" buckets. 3300 hrs. Air/ planters w/ row cleaners/lift assist; KMC HP Mahindra tractor. Robert Wiegand 770-531-1657 hp, new front tires, 13.6.28 back tires cab/heat. CD player. VIN/Serial No. 3376 peanut combine. Dell Stephens 950 Omaha 229-321-9366 10 kW generator, propane gas, auto- w/weights; $7,000. Tommy Hawkins 301027938; $24,500. Roy Garrett Bow- Winn Rd Odum 31555 912-256-3429 In need of a 5' box scrape, in good matic transfer panel, good for house- Wrens 706-830-7042 706-547-6269 don 770-301-1673 Rotary mower, Brown 484, less than condition, within an hours drive of Fay- hold, heavy-duty, cast iron, new sev- Mahindra tractor, 6 ft. BushHog box New Holland 847; $1500. 2 rakes; 20 hrs; $3000. Steve Blalock Temple etteville. Calvin Norred Fayetteville eral thousand dollars, now $1800. Runs scrape, blade boom pole; $5500. $1200 for both. Deutz-Fahr model Ks85. 229-400-7003 770-461-5585 good. Jess Arnett Tifton 229-382-6517 Charles Chastain Talking Rock 706- Teether 10 ft; $800. Dwight Souther Dal- Spreader; $400. BushHog Auger; John Deere 1360 MoCo. Jeff Bacon Krone Tedder 4 basket, 2004, barn 972-1103 ton 706-280-4588 $800. Middle buster; $60. Row Hipper; Dudley 478-875-3918 kept, in very good condition. $4750. Clete Sanders Forsyth 478-214-7612 Massey Ferguson 281X, one owner, very good condition, complete workshop, New Holland LX665 skid steer with super boom.1999 model, 1054 hrs, $350. Carry all w/ 26 gallon sprayer; $325. Ronnie Jones Rockmart 404- John Deere model L rear wheels, 1937-1946. May be interested in other Kubota 1990 G-1900 lawn tractor, 54" manual canopy, kept inside. Call for info. good tires. Always kept inside, excellent 285-2665 parts for L as well. Ty Sigman Elberton cut, always sheltered, excellent condition; $3200. Thomas Aiken 390 Freeman Rd Barnesville 30204 770-358-4184 Kubota L2050, 20HP, 2WD, 3CYL diesel tractor with front loader, 1600, runs great: $5900. Bill Bradley Hamilton 706662-0616 Kubota L3940DT, 4WD, 425 hrs, w/ loader, 6' finish mower, 5' bushhog, 6' box blade, forks; $18,500. Robert Cochran Ellijay 404-226-2713 Kuhn GT 3200 hay rake, field ready good condition. Douglas Dempsey William H Dean Toccoa 706-244-5414 Massey Ferguson TO30, gas motor, lock up, good for parts. Joe Batchelor 2015 Ga Highway 127 Perry 31069 478987-1503 MF 135 gas, 2080 hrs, runs and works, good power steering, 3 pt. hitch, refurbished w/ new fuel tank, carb/alt starter, condenser, etc. $35. Geraldine B Hogan Cordele 229-699-2697 MF 1745 hay baler, net wrap, 975 rolls total, like new; $17500. Donald Morrison condition. Phillip Tippens Talking Rock 770-893-7741 706-253-1968 NH 1412 Discbine mower; $11,000. NH BC5070 baler; $18,000. NH163 tedder; $3,500. NH 256 rake; $1,200. Fred Cook Fort Valley 478-747-8444 NH 474 haybine, 7' cut; $1000. Have operators manuals. No Sunday calls. Timothy Peifer Metter 912-685-6853 NH 616 mowing machine, excellent condition; $3800. Thomas Harrell Ringgold 706-935-4124 Super A - Super C Farmall parts. Starter flywheel PTO waterpump, other John Deere; $750 or $850. 3 pt. hitch, left arms; $50 each. J T Daws Monroe 770-267-6082 Takeuchi excavator, low hours; $39,500. Hardeebitt 25' dual tandem trailer; $5500. Leinback 5' forks; $450. Charles R Merrell Canton 770-479-5060 Til-All, fuel tanks, 110 volt pumps; Grain dryer, 250 bushel batch dryer; JD1700, 8-30s, vacuum planters. Carter 706-283-3234 John Deere, 2 cylinder farm tractor. Harold Gilder Macon oldgil@aol.com 478-951-0613 Looking for a tractor mount loader for a John Deere 4430 such as a 158. Dana Hill Brooklet 912-536-9155 912-4897739 Looking for hay spear and forks. BushHog QT2426 loader. 95 model. SN1203377. Roy Gibson 155 Ore Mine Rd Taylorsville 30178 770-377-8779 Adairsville 770-548-1700 Folkston 912-462-5811 912-614-8968 NH TR86 MFWD combine, 20' 973 Swancy Ranger 770-881-0127 Looking for tandem harrow, 5' to 5.5' L2050 Kubota tractor, 831 hrs. with 16 ft. trailer and King Kutter finish mower. $5600. Herbert Mason Hazlehurst 912- MF230 tractor PS, excellent paint and tires, stablizers, swing draw bar, used to BushHog and hay rides; $4800. Joel flexhead, 6RW 974 cornhead, $25,000. 2007 Case MXM120PRO MFWD tractor; $45,000. Joey Davis Clyo 912-655- Tracks for skid steer loader, metal; $500. James Ray Jasper 770-893-7030 Troy-Bilt chipper/shredder, 4 HP, have with scallop discs, 3 pt. hitch. Robert Crowell Mcdonough crowellrobert@ bellsouth.net 770-957-5347 731-616- 539-7157 Boss Kingston 770-606-9238 2283 extra chipper and hammer blades and 1435 Land Pride rotary tiller, model RTA3576, MF50, diesel, 3 cyl Perkins, power North American tool NAP80C high ca- many other additional parts: $250. Ed Magneta in good condition for 1949- heavy duty, used one season; $3,800, steering, live lift, completely overhauled pacity water pump, 4.75 hp, 3" inlet, 3" Panebianco Marietta 770-973-0280 1950 B Allis Chalmers tractor. Ellis Den- firm. IH 3 BTM 16" plow. Keith Brown and painted. $5,850, firm. Pics on re- outlet. New, never been cranked. $400. Troy-Bilt Horse 8hp Kohler tiller w/as- nis Franklin 770-880-8960 Dahlonega 706-525-9229 quest. Coleman Cown Monroe 678- Douglas Alexander Buchanan 770-646- sorted plows, scrape blade, new tines: Molder and planer for ban sawmill. Large wagon running gear. It is ready 580-9922 5006 $700. James Crowe Lawrenceville Single phase preferred. Elvin H Nix Phe- for you to build the upper portion. Price Mule drawn Oliver mowing machine Parade wagon with running lights; 678-982-4053 nix City 706-505-9397 is $3,450. Larry Fitzgerald Rutledge su- (sickle bar) for sale. $150.00. George $600. Scrape blade and harrows for Troy-Bilt Tuffy roto-tiller, 6HP, new mo- Need a bale monitor for a John periorcabinetry@bellsouth.net 706-318- Cochran Murrayville 770-532-2024 G-Allis Chalmers, $50/each. J D Smith tor, in good condition; $450. Michael Deere 430. Guy Sharp Pembroke 9251 770-532-2024 Tucker 404-863-4462 Magrum Rydal 706-509-8576 guysharp123@gmail.com 912-682-9774 WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2018 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov PAGE 5 Need hay equipment, baker, tether, cutter and take. Nothing fancy, just functional. No calls after 9 pm. Robert Hardie Eatonton thardie65@gmail.com 706-816-2885 Need JD318 lawn tractor rear end. Will consider buying entire machine for parts. Hugh Bradley Cartersville 770891-2924 Need rear tire for Cub tractor, size 8.324 within 100 miles from Blairsville. Bobby Murphy Blairsville 706-781-7405 Sheet metal parts for a Ford 7710. Paul Smith Warner Robins 478-952-3899 Small to medium sized litter spreader for horse barn. Mark Durham Dawsonville 706-216-8624 Used quick attach loader for Ford 2000 tractor. James Brady Fairburn 404-6805617 Want rear-mount fertilizer hopper and planter combo for Farmall Super A. Wade Ross Hazlehurst 912-347-2184 Wanted MF 65 spin-out, rim size 1238. Brian Holman Blairsville 706-9940044 FARM SUPPLIES If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. (3) 3000-gallon plastic food grade water tanks, above or below ground. $900 each. Billy Chapman Dahlonega 678450-5990 (30) 4x4 treated plywood calf boxes. Painted white. Earnest Turk Eatonton 706-473-1526 10 LB White Guardian furnaces. New GE 1/2 HP motors. 4 feed bins. New unloader systems fans, generators. James Smith Winder 770-867-2994 11 teak wood columns, 11 ft. long, 9" diameter bottom, 6" diameter top; $150. 1 Troy-Bilt Pony; $300. Paul R Brown Lithia Springs 770-942-7710 2 Behlen liquid mineral feeders. 2-wheel, 250 gallon, used, in excellent condition. $150 each or $125 each for both. Joe Moxley Tarrytown 912-2990671 2 Kiko bucks, born in Nov. and Dec. Parents on site. $85 each or $150 for both. David Combs Jefferson 706-3674107 2003 gooseneck trailer with 28'x8' bed, tool box, new floor, new LED lights; $5000 J J Johnson Conley 404-3129789 2018 Horton hauler cargo V nose, 12 ft., side door, pull down back door. White in color. 6x12. Jerry T Cooper Hull 706-788-3260 24' gooseneck 3-axle trailer, all steel, each axle has a load weight of 7000 lbs. New wiring, lights and brakes. Warren Tatum Dawsonville 770-530-4950 24' gooseneck, 3-axle trailer, all steel, each axle has a load weight of 7000 lbs. New wiring, lights and brakes. W.L. Tatum Dawsonville 770-530-4950 27 ton gas log splitter for horizontal or vertical splitting; $925. B. Phillips Monroe 678-414-3887 275+ gallon tank (tote) w/ metal cages. 5" top cap, bottom valve. $50.00 each. C. Stovall Dahlonega 678-491-0838 3 60" high lift mulching blades for Kubota mower. Asking $40. Keith Isdell Sylvester 229-809-1531 229-224-7730 3 pt. 1-row hitch cultivator; $100. 3 pt. hitch boom; $50. Hipper for plants; $100. Annie H Reid Loganville 770466-4868 770-630-4342 30" round tomato cages. 4 ft. Hog wire. 1-20; $4 each. 21-50; $3.50 each. 51-100; $3 each. 100-200; $2.50 each. Al Herndon Grayson 678-442-6686 5 HP MTD chipper shredder, good condition. $175. 2 iron wash pots; $100 each. Jimmy L Turner Monroe 770-2074306 5 rolls JD netwrap edge. $250 each/$1000 all. Sam & Matthew Moon Homer 706-677-3540 55 gallon metal/plastic barrels; $20-30. 55 gallon food grade stainless steel, 275 and 330 gallon totes. Liz Allanson Cumming 678-231-2324 55 gallon steel barrels, clean food grade with removable tops and rings, $15 each. Emerson Bennett Royston 706-680-1432 6 ft. Rhino BushHog heavy duty. Used 3 days. $1400. Will cost $2200 new. Call any time. James C Wallace Buford 770945-5973 6 metal shelving racks-12 shelves per unit; each rack 6'hx3'wx1'd; bins 5"Wx10"dx5"d. WK Brinson Winston 770-949-5624 6 used boat dock floats, in good shape 4'x4'x20" with ladder; $100 ea. All for $500. Brian Garrett Franklin 770-3285212 6"-60" PVC/Aluminum fittings available.(SDR26/35,C900/Pressure,IPS/ Pressure200,DR18,Sch.40/DWV) Specializing in lake drainage systems, construction/management and renovation. D. Beall Pine Mountain 706-672-1450 615 New Holland disc mower. 6 ft. 10 in cut; $600. 16' cattle trailer, 2 sxle with middle gate; $600. Randy Milam Tyrone 770-964-2920 A.I. nitrogen tank, 14 week, six color coded cannisters; $100. Henry Terhune Fort Valley 478-825-1911 Alaskan Mk 111 portable mill, model #G77624. $100. Ryobi portable planer, model #AP1301 $50. Both used very little. Michael Rowe Hogansville 706637-0773 Bluebird houses, painted to order or plain. $85.00 per lots of 5 shipping. Includes basic design. William Timmerman Harlem thetroll1943bt@yahoo. com 803-640-6265 706-799-5311 Broiler house equipment, flood pans, frinkers, field sytems, baffel machines and more. Randall Hanley Commerce 706-207-2153 Cast iron bathtub used for watering livestock; $115. Sis Sewell Elberton 706-283-5817 Choretime feeders, lubing drinkers, brooders, bins, 48 inch fans, mini drinkers. Bobby W Evans Commerce 706335-5001 Clean metal drums, 55 gal w/ lids. Leonard Crane Dawsonville 678-947-6744 Commercial grade roofing tin in 9'& 18' lengths. Robert Henderson Jefferson 706-352-0694 Cool cells fan 36-48. LB White heaters, feed lines, ceiling vents, linear lifts, etc. Harold Hill 347 Greasy Creek St Homer 30547 706-677-3916 Custom built Gooseneck low boy hay trailer, six bales; $3000. Lloyd Mitchell 433 Daisy Adams Rd Cochran 31014 478-308-2483 Elect John Deere gator; $4300. New batteries, seats, rear dump, garage stored. 3337 hours. Eugene Lunceford Elberton glunceford@ymail.com 706-283-5519 Free large amount of old brick from wall. Helen Nixon Macon 478-477-3470 Heavy duty trailer, 18', 3 axle, electric brakes, all 3 axles, with ramps, pintle hitch; $2700. Julius Mcallister Buena Vista 706-975-4726 Hen nests for sale. Metal 4 hole with wooden perches. $75.00 each. Lamar Bryant Cleveland 706-878-8509 Locust fence post and rails. Barney Cook Blairsville 706-994-2600 706745-8724 Materials for 40x60 or 36x60 pole barn: trusses, lathes, tin has some surface rust; $2500. Delivery available. Bill Durham Summerville 706-252-1084 Nation E 20x50 greenhouse cap; installs on 4 ft. walls, redwood and steel frame. Two 24" fans. Make offer. Joseph Yeargin Dallas 770-778-3441 Newer spreader, very good condition. $200, OBO. David Craig Roswell 770998-1756 Oak and pine shoe molding and bead board. Call for prices. William Briggs Atlanta 404-349-2315 Old hand hewn log cabin. Delivery & set up available. Kerry Hix Chatsworth 706-695-6431 One irrigation pump, 3,500 ft of 6-in pipe, one hard hose reel with gun, three stationary guns. R. Byrd Lizella 478256-4200 Red Oak live edge slabs, 2-2.5" thick, 20-24" wide, 8' slabs. $250. 12' slabs, $350. Bob Marsh Lawrenceville 404384-8715 Selling all show equipment. Includes blocking chute, blower, show box/supplies, clippers, much more. 1600.00. Brenda Irwin Macon 478-745-6954 Shopsmith Mark V; $1500. 40 ft. storage container; $1050. M.P. Bailey Po Box 31 Redan 30074 770-482-2812 Six 36" Acme fans without motors. Model #AG36G. In good condition. $35.00 ea. Gary Williams 594 Carson Segars Rd Maysville 30558 706-499-5391 Three hay rings; $169 @ T.S.C. Excellent condition; $100.00 each. Roger Ansley Cornelia 706-778-4165 Troybilt 7HP Horse Tiller. Kohler cast iron engine. Bought 1981. Still digging. One heck of a tractor. Ted Chadwick Canton 470-557-3377 Turf tires with rims. Size 21.5L-16.1 never used; $200 each. Alfred King 274 Owens Cutoff Rd Ne Calhoun 30701 678-332-9288 Turkey barn, 1950s era. Block, tin and wood to be torn down. Glen Whitley Bethlehem 770-307-7098 Two 136-28 tractor tires and tubes. $350. James Mccain Dahlonega 706864-5977 Two Chore-Time rooster feeders for 400 ft. houses; used for two flocks of hens. Also, two Birch egg room coolers, model 6000. W.L. Tatum Dawsonville 770-530-4950 Used 5 V tin roofing, 150 sheets, make offer. Thomas Clements Rutledge 706557-9667 Wanted: Cattle guard. Steel pipe 3" diameter or larger. Mike Bloodworth Knoxville 478-836-2535 Whirlpool 220V 17.800 BTU and Maytag 220V 18,000 BTU window units; $150 each. $250 for both. Cash. James A Purvis Juliette 478-477-1204 Sawmill lumber- pine, oak, walnut, cedar, portable sawing boards, beams, slabs, turning blocks. Todd Chaney Cartersville 404-861-7402 5 floor joists, 32 ft long, 14 in deep, more that are shorter. Matt Whitehead Colbert 706-206-1250 LIVESTOCK All livestock must have been in the advertiser's possession for at least 90 days before they can be advertised. Livestock listed must be for specific animals. Generalized ads such as "many breeds of cattle" or "want horses, any amount" will not be published. Ads for free or unwanted livestock will not be published. Ads for cats, dogs, reptiles, rodents and other animals not specifically bred for on-farm use will not be published. Cattle If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. (1) black Angus bull, 4 y/o, (1) 6 mos Baldy bull, (2) Baldy heifers, (1) Hereford heifer. Wilson Farm. Debbie Wilson Cartersville 404-308-8543 (1) Brangus bull, 5 yr old and gentle and proven. $2500. Call or text. Neal Bennett Blackshear 912-281-6600 (4) Black Baldy open heifers. $1000 each. Travis Legg Comer 706-255-2592 1 Purebred bull, 20 mos old, 2 heifer, 14 mos. old, 7 young grown cows, all bred. Bull is not related to tohers. Perfect starter herd, all are black Angus. 1 hay ring. Everything for $8800. Billy L Joiner Eastman 478-374-3972 12 reg. Charolais heifers, all open, ready for bull; take all or choose; also, Charolais bulls. Curtiss Kicliter Marshallville 478-967-2940 18 m/o reg. Limflex bull, stacked, calving ease, heifer-safe, docile: $1800. Free del. Sid Arnold Nicholson 706-2076113 18 two year old polled Hereford bulls, top bloodlines, gentle. E. Jeanes Macon 478-972-0912 2 1/2 year old registered Hereford bull. Barrett Tatum Sandersville 478-2321142 2 registered bulls, one Simmental 4 yrs old. One Angus 3 yrs old. Kirk Little Lyons 912-326-3512 20 Braford cross heifers 12 to 14 months old. All vaccinations current. Chris Keller Alma 912-286-0286 20 Reg. Polled Hereford cow-calf pairs, spring and fall born calves, cows pasture exposed back to our Victor bulls. Ricky Lane Carrollton 770-301-5901 24 bred registered Black Angus heifers. Also a good selection of registeredd 2-3 year old bulls. Fred Blitch Statesboro 912-865-5454 3 belted Galloway bulls, good marking, 1-18 mo. old. 2 -8 mo. old. Jeff Stewart Toccoa 706-244-4912 3 Black Angus, 1 Black Baldy cows. Vet CK to have 3rd calves; $1550 ea. Dave Davis Commerce 770-616-6038 3 y/o Black Baldy cow; $850. Hereford Black Angus: Aristocrat of Wye grand- bull, 7 mos, dark red; $700. Hereford sons/daughters - 11 bulls, 2 heifers, heifer, 6 mos; $500. Calf feeder $550. 10-13 mos; $1000 each. Grass genet- Larry Mongin Metter 912-687-5030 ics. Arthur Ferdinand Palmetto wstrvlr@ 3 young registered SimAngus cows, bellsouth.net 404-867-8773 bred to registered Angus bull, due in fall. Brangus bull, SVF, 5 yr old. Excellent All docile. Marty Clark Jefferson 770- breeder. $2500. Lloyd Axon Dearing 294-5579 706-564-1297 30 yearling Braford bulls. 20 coming Brangus bulls, purebred, good blood- 2 yr old Hereford bulls. Jonny Harris line, gentle, low birth weight, 16-18 m/o, Odum 912-586-6585 semen tested; $1500+. Barry Mcmanus 4 purebred Black Angus bulls, 14-16 Roopville 770-854-5570 mos. $1200-1600 each. Brangus bulls. Bulls: Simmental, Angus, and SimAn- $1600-$1800. 20 bred Angus cows, Oct. gus. 2.5 y/o and 16 mos. Bred and open calving. $1000-1200. Can deliver. All heifers. Many years of extensive AI shots. Jeff Williams Milan 229-315-1261 breeding. 912-256-1382 William Clan- 4 registered black Angus purebred ton Odum 912-221-1383 912-586-2388 bulls, 17-20 mos., very gentle, excel- Calving ease, milking ability, gentle- lent bloodlines, forage raised. Eric Hutto ness, registered polled Shorthorn bulls/ Alma 912-286-0568 show heifers/steers, excellent quality, 4 Registered Dexter cows due to calve Club Calf member. Kenneth R Bridges May-June. $1100 each. Dual purpose. Commerce 706-768-3480 Meat/milk. Gentle. Peter Fogg Fort Val- Commercial Angus yearling bulls. ley 478-293-2833 Grass genetics, forage raise. Average 4 year old Jersey cow; $900. 2 Jersey weight 1100 lbs. 14 mos. old. David R heifer, 2 year old; $800 each. Thurman Brown Senoia 770-599-1830 Duran Cumming 770-844-0919 Dexter cattle, 2 young bulls, cows and 40 Brangus crossed heifers. 16 to 17 heifers also available. Thomas Franklin months old, 750 lbs. $1125. Ricky We- Junction City smibutlerga@gmail.com hunt Hoschton 706-254-2639 706-975-4111 706-975-3842 5 black Angus Heifers sired by Reg. Gentle 2 year old black Angus bull for black Angus bull. 8/9 months old, vax, sale or trade. Darrel Harwood Eatonton weaned. $4500. Vic West Canton 678- 706-252-0602 447-8665 Hereford bulls for sale. Coming 2 yr 7 BWF heifers 900 pounds, exposed olds and one 7 yr old. Wrangler 19D. Mi- to LBW Angus bull, since Jan 1; $1200. chael Bennett Cumming 404-771-5454 Carey Knowles Mc Rae Helena 229868-8382 Hereford, F1 Braford, F1 Angus Hereford bulls and FI Angus-Hereford bred 8 yearling heifers; $650 each. 7 mature heifers. Larry M Lane Carrollton 678- cows exposed to Hereford bull; $950 378-5170 each. Preston Born Elberton 404-2741800 706-283-0161 Holstein Springers bred to Holstein bull. Pick the ones you want. $1000 per Angus registered herd bull, angus head. Glen Butcher 8133 Ga Highway commercial heifers, shots, wormed, 112 Camilla 31730 229-449-3294 8/10 months old. Robin Blythe 706-825-2544 Auldridge Jersey Bull 14 m/o, polled, gentle. Melvin Gordon Springfield 912-754- Black Angus bull calves, vaccinated/ 6701 dewormed, ear tattoo/tag, good feet, grass fed, closed herd, pictures available,9-12 m/o: $1000. Clayton Leathers Dallas 678-836-6793 Black Angus cross replacement heifers. 10-15 mos. old. Registered black Angus bull. Heifer bull. Very docile. Eddie Caudell Carnesville 706-870-4565 Black Angus for sale. 4 calves (2 heifers, 2 bulls). AI sired by Rampage. 8 mos old. Top of the line.$3500. Vance Gafnea Whitesburg 678-446-1829 Black Angus heifer bred, 4 months, excellent condition, all shots, very gentle. Jersey cows for sale, 3 available. Bred to Hereford. Various due dates. $1200. Pam Severson Rockmart 30153 678956-2453 Purebred yearling F-1 Braford bulls, yearling Brahman bull and yearling Hereford Bull. Satilla Creek Ranch. Darwin Anderson Jesup 912-427-6430 Reg. Angus bull, 2 y/o, moderate frame, Objective bloodline, $1700. Bill And Jeanette Shipp Winston 706-2458866 Reg. black Polled Beefmaster, 4 bulls $950. Charles Griffis Covington 770- 18-24 mos. semen tested. Gentle, good 786-1093 conformation. Also some purebred heif- Black Angus weaned heifers: one purebred Angus, one SimAngus; $900 ers. Open and bred. Vernon Turner Dalton 706-278-7814 Each. Email for photos. Eddie Thomas Reg. Santa Gertrudis bulls. Breeding Bogart thomascontractor@gmail.com age and younger. Polled and horned. 770-725-5746 Eddy Mullinax Ellijay 706-273-4282 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 6 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2018 Mercer Medical Moment: `Woman's intuition' may be sole early-warning sign of ovarian cancer By Morgan Smith and Jaehwa Choi In 2015, more than 2.7 million deaths oc- curred in the U.S. While the most common cause of death was heart disease, the second most common cause was cancer. Cancers can present with a wide variety of signs and symptoms. In some cases, as a tumor grows, Morgan Smith it causes pain by compressing nearby bones, nerves and other organs. In other cases, such as ovarian cancer, the tumor may cause no symptoms until it has spread to other sites in the body. This ability of ovarian cancer to spread without being detected greatly affects the number of deaths it causes. In fact, there is a 90 percent survival rate five years after diag- Jaehwa Choi nosis in patients with Stage I disease, meaning the cancer is confined to the ovary itself. However, in Stage IV cancers that have spread to other organs, like the liver or lungs, the survival rate at five years is only 17 percent. Unfortunately, since ovarian can- cer is unlikely to cause many early symptoms, it is more com- monly diagnosed at later stages. This delay in diagnosis makes ovarian cancer the most lethal cancer of the female reproductive system despite its rare occurrence. In addition to a lack of symptoms, the vague and delocalized symptoms that may be due to ovarian cancer can also delay diagnosis. Common complaints caused by ovarian cancer include stomach and pelvic pain, increasing stomach size, bloating, a feeling of fullness and difficulty eating. These signs warrant additional investigation. However, because of the cross-over with gut symptoms, it is not uncommon for patients to be sent to a gastrointestinal physician before their eventual diagnosis. After diagnosis, patients often point to these vague symptoms as warning signs, stating that they "felt something was not right" but often attributed their symptoms to general aging. Even though early diagnosis of ovarian cancer greatly enhances the cancer-free survival rate, in 2017 the United States Preventive Services Task Force renewed its 2010 recommendation against screening for ovarian cancer in women without symptoms, family history or genetic risk factors. The current mainstay of screening for ovarian cancer is a blood test and an ultrasound taken with an instrument inserted into the vagina. Unfortunately, these tests are not very specific for ovarian cancer, and so some women without cancer may undergo a major surgical procedure due to a false positive test. For this reason, the USPSTF stands by its recommendation against screening women without an increased risk of developing ovarian cancer. In addition to the family history and genetic risk factors, increased age, obesity and hormone replacement therapy are all known to increase the risk of developing ovarian cancer. Patients with endometriosis also have an increased risk of devel- oping a specific subtype of ovarian cancer. More controversial risk factors include a high-fat diet, ex- posure to talc, and smoking. Though there are many things that increase the risk of cancer, there are a few that may decrease that risk. Taking the hormone medroxyprogesterone (Depo-Provera), removal of the fallopian tubes, tying the fallopian tubes closed, breastfeeding, and taking oral contraceptive pills all decrease the risk of ovarian cancer, though oral contraceptive pill use may increase the risk of breast cancer. Additional factors under investigation for their role in ovarian cancer risk include having multiple children, beginning menstrual cycles later in life, taking non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and undergoing early menopause. For women with factors that increase their risk of ovarian cancer, it is of utmost importance that they listen to their bodies, especially if they feel that something is wrong. Being proactive in consulting a physician may help women distinguish between the possible vague symptoms of ovarian cancer and those of the normal aging process. A feeling that something is just not right may be the earliest or only warning sign of a silent disease like ovarian cancer. -Morgan Smith is a third-year medical student at Mercer University School of Medicine in Columbus. She graduated with a B.S. in Biology from Mercer University in 2015. -Dr. Jaehwa Choi is assistant professor of Physiology. She has a Ph.D. in Pharmacology and Toxicology with over 25 years' experience in cancer research. Cook Georgia Grown: Georgia Peach Upside Down Cake Ingredients: 6 Tbsps. butter 1 cup packed brown sugar cup coarsely broken pecans 2 cups sliced Georgia peaches 3 eggs, separated 1 cup sugar 1 cup self-rising flour 1 Tbsp. pecan oil tsp. vanilla extract 2 Tbsps. cream or milk Preparation: Preheat oven 325 degrees. Melt butter in 9-inch cast iron skillet, then sprinkle brown sugar evenly over butter. Distribute pecans over brown sugar in skillet then arrange peach slices decoratively, covering the bottom of skillet. Beat egg yolks until light and lemon colored. Gradually add sugar, cream or milk, extract and pecan oil. Whisk dry ingredients together then incorporate into yolk mixture. In a separate bowl, whisk egg whites until firm peaks. Gently fold egg whites into batter until fully incorporated. Scoop batter into skillet then bake 40-50 minutes or until center is set. Allow to cool 30 minutes then unmold onto a plate. Serve with ice cream or whipped cream. -All recipes have been tested for accuracy in our Georgia Grown Test Kitchen unless otherwise noted. For more recipes and to watch cooking in action, find our "Pick, Cook, Keep" series at www.gpb.org/ pick-cook-keep. Blueberries: Cold, blustery weather hampered pollination Continued From Page 1 say Georgia was on track to produce a record harvest of 120 million pounds. The farm gate value of that harvest would have approached $400 million, according to Scott NeSmith, Ph.D., UGA blueberry breeder. That would have beat the 2014 record for the state, which pushed Michigan from the top spot nationally by producing 95 million pounds of blueberries worth $300 million to Georgia. The actual 2017 harvest came in at 30 million pounds. Weather once again took a toll on what was expected to be a bumper crop of blueberries this year. The last two weeks of February were exceptionally warm, and the plants responded with rapid growth. Bushes were in full bloom when the temperature plummeted below freezing the first two weeks of March. Cold, cloudy and windy conditions prevented honeybees from flying, which caused poor pollination and resulted in small berries and subsequent fruit drop. "We now believe the 2018 Georgia blueberry crop could be equally as bad, if not worse, than the 2017 crop," the growers association wrote to Perdue. The blueberry industry has been a boon to small, rural communities, particularly throughout South Georgia. Nearly 500 growers throughout the region have dedicated about 26,000 acres to blueberries. Roughly half that acreage has been cultivated in the past decade; 15 to 25 percent of it was established in the past five years. Russ Goodman, who grows more than 500 acres of blueberries at Cogdell Berry Farm near Homerville, said it costs about $15,000 to establish one acre of blueberries. It takes about three years for young blueberry bushes to produce marketable fruit. Entire communities depend on the investments farmers make in blueberries. Growers pay property taxes on their farms, purchase goods and services to support their operations, and pay labor to plant, tend and harvest their crops. Goodman estimated that 35 percent of loans written by the local bank in Homerville are written to blueberry growers, and speculated that the numbers are similar for banks in other major blueberry-growing regions. "When we're in the blueberry business down here, we're in the blueberry business for good," Goodman said. "We're very interested in making this industry work long-term because, to be honest with you, this industry has been a great boost to our economy down here in South Georgia." HB-951: Rural Council will guide the center Continued From Page 1 the Georgia Rural Development Council, which will foster conversation and policy development centered around the challenges faced by rural Georgia communities. In addition to an appointed center director, the Georgia Rural Development Council will have 12 members who will offer guidance to the Center for Rural Prosperity and Innovation. Half of those members will be appointed by the Governor, with each of those six representing interest in one of the following areas: leadership management, business development and entrepreneurship, finance and taxes, logistics of rural industries, health care and education. The Speaker of the House and the President of the Senate will each appoint three council members from different geographic regions of the state. This council will meet quarterly to discuss and interact with local government officials and community leaders and gather information that can help facilitate policy initiatives that will spur economic growth. "On behalf of all Georgians who live in rural Georgia or who grew up in rural Georgia, I want to thank Governor Deal and the legislators who turned this idea into reality," said David Bridges, president of ABAC and a lifelong resident of rural Georgia. "Rural communities face many challenges, hurdles and obstacles as they attempt to revitalize and strengthen their situations." FARMERS & CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN (ISSN 0889-5619) is published biweekly by the Georgia Department of Agriculture 19 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive Atlanta, GA 30334-4250 404-656-3722 Fax 404-463-4389 Office hours 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday Friday Gary W. Black, Commissioner MARKET BULLETIN STAFF Julie McPeake, Chief Communication Officer Amy H. Carter, Editor Kendall McWilliams, Media Specialist Leslie Davis, Social Media Specialist Erin Burnett, Creative Projects Specialist Subscriptions to the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin are $10 per year. To start or renew a subscription, go to our website to pay by Visa or MasterCard, or send a check payable to the Georgia Department of Agriculture along with your name, complete mailing address and phone number to PO Box 742510 Atlanta, GA 30374-2510. Designate "Market Bulletin" in the "for" line. To determine if an existing subscription is due for renewal, look for the expiration date on the mailing 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 23, 2018 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov PAGE 7 Guest Gardener: Consider succession planting for an extended harvest By Alicia Holloway Georgie's Drive Thru Vidalia Hello! I'm Georgie, the Georgia Grown mascot. I travel the state of Georgia promoting our No. 1 industry, agriculture! Did you know Georgia is the No. 1 producer of Vidalia Onions? In fact, Georgia is the only state where Vidalia Onions can be grown. I saw my friend Yumion, the Vidalia Onion mascot, at Bleckley County's Pre-K Farm Day. Yumion told me that Vidalia Onions are the Georgia state vegetable. They are the sweetest onions in the world because the soil in Southeast Georgia is naturally low in sulfur. Each year, Georgia farmers grow about 12,000 acres of Vidalia sweet onions. Select, approved onion seeds are sprouted and then transplanted by hand from September through Christmas. They grow during the fall and winter when the days are short. The onions should then be ready to pick from April through June. The production area for this sweetest of sweet onions is a 20-county area centered around the city of Vidalia. Vidalia has onions painted on the walls of its banks, city limit signs, and even the water tanks. But the one you can't miss has got to be the stainless-steel onion fountain at City Park, home of the Vidalia Sweet Onion Festival. Lee Lancaster/GDA Time is running out to complete the 2017 Ag Census NASS conducting phone and in-person follow-up ATHENS The U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Agricultural Statistics Service is reminding Georgia farmers and ranchers that the window is closing on the opportunity to participate in the 2017 Census of Agriculture. "NASS is grateful for the response from producers to date, but it is important that others who received a Census questionnaire join their neighbors, colleagues, friends, and family in being part of the Census count," said NASS Southern Regional Director Jim Ewing. "If you produced and sold $1,000 or more of agricultural product in 2017, or normally would have produced and sold that much, we need to hear from you," said Ewing. "If you're a landowner who leases your land to a producer, we need to hear from you. If you received a census but do not fit this definition of a farm, please write your status on the form and send it back." The NASS has already begun to follow up with producers who have not yet completed the questionnaire. "We sent the questionnaire to many potential farmers and ranchers who may not be familiar with it," Ewing said. The Census of Agriculture is the only comprehensive source of Georgia county-level data. Georgia agriculture has changed since 2012 and this is the opportunity to quantify that change. Georgia producers can respond to the 2017 Census of Agriculture online at www.agcounts.usda.gov or by mail. The same law, Title 7 USC 2204(g) Public Law 105-113, that requires response also requires NASS to keep all information confidential, to use the data only for statistical purposes, and to only publish in aggregate form to prevent disclosing the identity of any individual producer or farm operation. NASS will release Census results in February 2019. For more information about the 2017 Census of Agriculture or for assistance with the questionnaire, visit www.agcensus.usd.gov or call toll-free (888) 424-7828. Green beans are, hands down, my favorite garden vegetable. I could eat them every day of the week and never grow weary of them. Sauted, boiled, roasted or pick- led, I am ready. Canning green beans, however, is not my favorite task. Every year, I can and freeze produce, but I have learned through ex- perience that I just don't enjoy canning green beans. Harvest time al- ways seems to fall when it's just not practical to spend hours in the kitch- en preserving produce. So, instead of planting beds of green beans and having an unmanageable overabundance, I do suc- cession plantings so that I have smaller harvests for a longer period of time. "Succession planting" simply means you plant vegetables continuously throughout the season. It can also refer to planting the same crop, such as my UGA CAES image For spring and fall gardens, most greens and root vegetables are good candidates for succession planting. Green beans, squash, zucchini, cucumber and corn are appropriate for summer gardens. green beans, at intervals throughout the planting season. Planting this way ensures that, as older plants mature and end their production cycle, new ones start to produce. This practice ex- tends the harvest window and ensures the availability of produce at the peak of production throughout the growing season. Farmers regularly use this practice, but it can be a useful tool for home gardeners, too. It is especially useful if you prioritize eating fresh vegetables rather than preserving them. For spring and fall gardens, most greens and root vegetables are good candidates for succession planting. For summer gardens, green beans, squash, zucchini, cucumber and corn are appropriate. You can also use succession planting with annual flowers, such as sunflowers, to make sure you have beautiful blooms from spring to fall. Two weeks throughout the planting season makes for a good planting interval for most crops. For vegetables like green beans that can be planted in the spring and fall, this is a double win and can add weeks to your production times. Another way to achieve a staggered harvest is to plant varieties with different maturing times. There are numerous varieties avail- able for each vegetable. Many vegetables have early-producing vari- eties in addition to the old standbys. By planting several varieties that mature over different time spans, you can enjoy the subtle difference in flavor between varieties and have a longer season. Just check seed packets or seed catalogs for average days to maturity to select variet- ies that will work for you. Succession planting also refers to planting a sequence of different plants within the growing season. For example, if you plant lettuce for early spring, follow it with sweet potatoes in the same space after the lettuce is finished. Once the sweet potatoes are harvested, plant spinach. You will plant three crops where most gardeners plant one. Wise use of available space is essential, especially in small gar- dens. Planning your garden will help you take advantage of available space at planting and throughout the growing season and will en- sure your garden stays bountiful from spring to summer to fall. Who doesn't get a thrill from making a color-coded vegetable planting chart and map for each season? As we enter into the planting season, keep succession planting in mind as a technique to keep your kitchen stocked with your garden favorites. If you have questions about succession planting or vegetable gar- dening, visit the University of Georgia Cooperative Extension publi- cation website at www.extension.uga.edu/publications. -Alicia Holloway is the University of Georgia Cooperative Extension Agriculture and Natural Resources agent in Barrow County. PAGE 8 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2018 April Farmers Markets Price Report Swine Kathadin X White Dorper rams for sale. Kangal livestock guardian dog. Stud 5 months old; $150. Visit creeksidefarm. service fee; $2,000 with registered male. If you have questions regarding ads in info John Pope Forsyth 478-994-6911 Peacock Hill Farm. T Eleanor Davis Local and regional reporting by the USDA Agricultural Marketing Service. this category, call 404-656-3722. Miniature goats. 12 weeks old. One Stockbridge 770-860-8989 Advertisers submitting swine ads male; $50. One female; $70. Joe Burns Equine For Sale must submit proof of a negative bru- Lawrenceville joeb@color-burst.com cellosis and pseudorabies test from 678-591-9422 If you have questions regarding ads in Cordele Farmers Market Produce: within the past 30 days. Exceptions Nigeria Doe w/ 2 male babies all this category, call 404-656-3722. are swine from a validated brucellosis- polled, $250.00 Available soon males/ Advertisers in the Equine for Sale or Cabbage.............. $3.50/head Green onions ........ $2/bundle free and qualified pseudorabies-free female babies. Donna Milligan Martin Equine at Stud categories must sub- Collards..................... $4/2 lbs Mustard greens..... $3/bundle herd; these operations must submit 706-716-0413 mit current negative Coggins tests for Pole beans .....................$2/lb Peaches.......... $1.69-$2.49/lb proof of that certification. If you are Nigerian Dwarf does, born January each equine advertised. This includes Snap beans ......... $1.50-$2/lb Squash ......................$1.99/lb faxing or mailing in an ad, the test 2018 , full-blooded, dehorned, $200 horses, ponies, donkeys, etc. Buyers Specialty Items: Apple BBQ sauce .. $4.75/pint Blueberry syrup . $6.95/bottle Cane syrup .............. $6/bottle Cut comb honey $18.95/24 oz Fig preserves.............. $6/pint Fried peanuts............. $3/pint Honey ........................ $5/pint Pecan oil ...... $16.95/half pint Pickled peaches ............ $7/qt Macon Farmers Market Produce: Cabbage ................... $3.50/ea Collards..................... $4/2 lbs Mustard greens......... $4/2 lbs Turnips ...................... $4/2 lbs Vidalia green onions$3/bunch Specialty Items: Blackberry jelly .......... $6/pint Cashew brittle.............$4/bag Chow Chow................ $6/pint Fig preserves.............. $6/pint Fried peanuts..............$3/bag Strawberries .......$3-4/basket Turnips .................. $3/bundle Vidalia onions ...........$1.49/lb Specialty Items: Blueberry syrup ....... $8/12 oz Butter....................... $6/16 oz Cane Syrup............... $8/12 oz Eggs........................ $3.50/doz Honey ...................... $7/12 oz Pepper jelly........$7.99/8-9 oz Pepper sauce ........ $3.39/3 oz Valdosta Farmers Market Produce: Blueberries ............$6/2 pints Broccoli ................ $1.99/pack Carrots ............................ $.79 Collards............ $5/2 bunches Cucumbers.................$.39/ea English peas ....... $.99-1.69/lb Green top onions.....$1.99/ea Mustard greens $5/2 bunches New potatoes ..........$1.39/ea Peaches................. $2.99/tray Squash ......................$1.49/lb needs to be sent along with it. For ads with registration papers, $175 without are urged to request verification of a submitted online, the test can be at- papers. Rudy/Elise Corpus Jefferson negative Coggins from the advertiser tached using the attachments button. 706-614-4376 before purchasing any equine. Nega- Buyers are urged to request proof of Nigerian mixed goats. 1 proven buck, tive Coggins reports are valid for 12 a negative brucellosis and pseudora- 2 young bucks. 2 does. $75 each. John months from the date the blood sam- bies test prior to purchase. Smith Harlem 706-556-0027 706-699- ple is drawn. Falsification or altering 1 year old pot belly female to swap for 1528 of any Coggins results can result in male pot belly pig. North Georgia area. Nubian goats, non-registered, disbud- fines and suspension of advertising Kathy French Clermont 770-519-3503 ded, healthy, 3 months to 1 year old, privileges. If you are faxing or mail- 650lb, 3 y/o Boar 1/2 Berkshire 1/4 Du- $150-$250. Krystal Beise Blairsville ing in an ad, the Coggins needs to be roc 1/4 Hampsire crossed: $250. Travis 706-897-6562 sent along with it. For ads submitted Ellington Senoia 678-787-9341 Pygmy billy, 2 y/o; $125. Pygmy and online, the Coggins can be attached Hampshire Duroc piglets: 1 female, 1 mixed kids, wethers/does, 6 mos, using the attachments button. Gen- cut male; $50. 4 pigs, ready to butcher, wormed/vaccinated; $75 up. Christy eralized ads, such as "many horses," 250+ lbs; $160+ each. Mike Nalewako Champagne Comer 706-207-1851 "variety to choose from," etc., will not Newnan 770-630-6541 Pygmy goats, 8 weeks to 1 year, be published. Equine at Stud ads will Modern Hog Concept farrowing crates males; $60. Females; $80. Leigh Rowe also require a current stable license in for sale; $150 per crate. Heath Simmons Pendergrass 678-943-4219 order to be published. Twin City 478-299-6697 Pygmy/Boer mix-does and billies, 2-5 6 y/o Palamino mare, TWH, very gentle, Tamworth/Hampshire & Hampshire/ years old, will sell as herd or individual. rides great, 15.2 hands. Tony Green Fair- Yorkshire piglets. $65, ready for pickup. Quantity discount; $150 each. Gordon mount 770-605-0888 706-337-2467 Finish hogs on woodlot. 75-200 lbs; Teel Alpharetta 770-355-4542 Brown/white paint, 13 yrs. Black and $100 and up. Allen Clevenger Locust Ram lambs, ready in June, full blooded white paint, 14 yrs. $800 each. Ride Grove 30248 404-285-1719 Katahdin from registered breeding stock, great. Milton Campbell 530 Homestead Vietnamese Pot-belly/German mini pig excellent bloodlines,$300. Email for Rd Danielsville 30633 706-247-6862 cross babies. $40 each. Donna Holden pics Suzanne Kozee Molena sunridge- Reg AQHA bay roan gelding 17 yrs/old. Sylvester 229-733-9954 farms01@gmail.com 678-877-9860 owned 13yrs. Great ranch/cutting horse/ Honey ......................... $20/qt Peach preserves......... $6/pint Strawberries ..........$5/2 pints Yorkshire pigs born mid February; $50 Reg. purebread Nubian does in milk. no quit. No bad habits. $6500. Daniel Sweet potatoes......... $1/4 lbs each. Marvin Ransom Sparta 478-456- Roy Stanaland 1153 Salem Church Rd Hodges Pembroke 912-515-8887 Pear relish.................. $6/pint Turnips ............. $5/2 bunches 4046 Jasper 30143 770-337-3162 Registered Mini-Donkey stud for sale. Pepper jelly................... $1/oz Vidalia Onions.............$.99/lb Yorkshire-Hampshire X piglets, born Registered Alpine & LaMancha. Show White from spotted stock $300 Pa- Pickled cayennes.......... $5/jar 3/27/18. 2 girls, 5 boys (uncut). 1 male, quality milking does. Excellent health. pers included. 15 y/o. Sonya Jones Salsa........................... $6/pint Specialty Items: uncut, red wattler-Hampshire X born Tons of amazing milk. Beautiful. Pro- Chatsworth 706-264-0323 Sorghum syrup.............. $6/qt Cane syrup$3.99-$5.99/bottle 4/3/18. Marilyn Bruce Fairburn 770- ducers love their job. Photos available. Tame donkeys, 3 males. Make offer. Sriracha peanuts.........$3/bag Dressing .............. $4.99/12 oz 363-0371 Barbie Williams-Sauerbier Watkinsville Mary Kent 88 Sam Hill Rd Sparta 31087 Vidalia onion relish .... $6/pint Ham ..................... $8.99/2 lbs Goats And Sheep 404-493-1058 706-444-5017 Wildflower honey ...... $12/jar Moultrie Farmers Market Produce: Broccoli .....................$1.89/lb Collards................. $3/bundle English peas ..............$2.99/lb Frozen zipper peas.........$5/lb Frozen pecans ..............$10/lb Registered Angus heifers, young cow pairs, AI sired and bred, DNA tested; $2500 up. McMichael Angus Farm. Ken Mcmichael Monticello 706-819-9295 Registered Black Angus bred cows and heifers, fall calving, quality bred cows; $1800 each. Janice Mathis Jefferson jmathis@norcrosselectric.com 404-317-6173 Registered black Angus bulls, 15 mo. old and up. $1500 each. Eugene Ridley Lafayette 706-764-6110 Registered Black Angus. 2 AI bred cows due. September 2. Pairs. Indian Hill Farm. Steve Deal Statesboro 912531-3549 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. Superior genetics and disposition. Semen tested bulls, cows, heifers and calves. Quantity discounts. Bobby C Burch Eastman 478718-2128 Registered Hereford bulls, 18 months old. Calving ease, low birth weight, rapid weaning and yearling growth rate. $2000-2500 each. John Watson Lafayette 423-834-3457 Registered polled Hereford bull, Born Honey ................. $5.99/12 oz Jam ..................... $4.99/20 oz Jelly..................... $5.99/10 oz Mayhaw jelly....... $5.99/10 oz Salsa.................... $5.99/17 oz Smoked pork sausage ............ ..................................$5.99/lb Sugar cane ........... $1.99/stalk SimAngus and Angus bulls, 14-18 m/o, AI sired, calving ease, semen tested; $1700. Chet Barrett Mount Airy 706-499-8008 SimAngus bull, 15 months old. Reg# 3190805 Sire: GAR Prophet MGS MYTTY in Focus. $2750. Andrew Davis Statesboro edrsimmental@yahoo.com 912-587-5216 912-536-5868 Simmental and Simbrah young bulls and heifers. Cliff Adams Bowdon 770258-2069 The best bottle calves in the Southeast bulls and heifers. Guaranteed colostrum, multimin 90, triangle 5. Dairy and beef available. Brittney Peters Social Circle 470-334-1933 Three Jersey cows for sale. Two are 2 years old, one is 4 years. $800 and $900, cash. Thurman Duncan Cumming 770-877-0919 Watusi cattle for sale. Bulls, cows, all ages. Some Limo mix. Steve Mcallister Rock Spring 706-996-3254 Yon Black Angus and C.E.S.Hereford cattle for sale. Registered and non-registered. Approximately 50 cattle available. PBI Farms. Heath Pittman Vidalia 912-293-2535 Bulls for sale: registered Angus and registered horned Hereford. Wes Smith Thomaston 706-648-4210 If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. 1 year old Boer buck, ready for breeding. Current on immunizations. Hogansville area. $150. Tom Schmitz Hogansville 678-516-0671 1 year old registered Lamancha buck, proven breeder, disbudded, current on vaccines. Excellent milking lines, $200. Kelly Maxwell Winder 404-925-2369 100% Nubian bucklings, $110 each. Nubian/Boer mix buckling, $95. Trading or selling 100% Nubian 2 year old buck. Paula Robertson Covington robertson. paula81@gmail.com 404-702-8642 2 Boer wethers. 2 year old, brothers, raised from kids. Friendly and healthy. Brush and weed eaters. $200. Linda Duke Good Hope 678-635-3675 770549-5383 Boer doe, 3 years old; $200. Two doelings born Feb.18; $125 each. Large Nubian Buck; $275. Sherrie Liford Canton 678-521-8689 Fainting/Myotonic goats, registered adults, some w/babies, weanlings, disbudded, UTD/vaccines/deworming, healthy, no diseases, friendly, many colors, hair lengths. Marsha Kelly Newnan 770-251-8896 Field stone, 10 pounds to 50 pounds, one ton. Will pick up from Oconee, Greene, Clarke counties. Jim Dawe Watkinsville 706-202-7531 Full blood White Dorper ram with papers. Proven breed stock with offspring on premises. Healthy, raised on pasture. John Laneve Waynesville 954-478-7943 Goats for sale. For pasture, not for slaughter. John Hash Mcintyre 478414-8438 Goats: Boer mix, 3 to 4 months old. Registered Katahdin rams from 7 m/o to 12 m/o, x-large Midwest bloodlines. Duke Burgess Louisville juliesvance@wildblue. net 478-625-9542 305-923-0262 Saanan goats for sale. One 3 yr old buck. Proven sire. $200.00. Also this springs kids.$100.00 ea. John Holder Gray 478-737-9055 478-737-9400 Saanens: kids, milking does/bucks, registered, purebred and American, DHIA records on dams, CL/CAE-free herd. Joseph Lashley Lagrange 404-274-1702 Two Pygmy goat billies for sale. Friendly. Not for slaughter. $50.00 each. Carter Williamson 12525 Jones Ferry Rd Palmetto 30268 770-703-9272 Wanted: Boer and dairy goat nanny crosses. Thomas Findley Box Springs 706-326-2186 Wool ram lambs, Cheviot-Shetland cross; 2 ewe lambs, black or white, 5 m/o. Shereen Crowley Milner boboscostumes@hotmail.com 678-468-1051 Registered Nubian Kids. Lots of color! Doelings and bucklings. Disbudded, tattooed, vaccinated. Taking deposits. Joan Kiser Carnesville 706-247-0976 Nigerian Dwarf ADGA and Mini Lamancha Bucklings blue eyes. $300 up. Leslie Barber Ellijay 706-637-2002 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. AKC lab puppies. 8 wks old on May 4. Chocolate (1) female, (4) males. Parents on site. Suzanne Harris Jefferson 706- Equine At Stud If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. Equine Miscellaneous If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. 16" crates roping saddle. Excellent shape, kept inside, hardly used. $850.00. Leave message. Patricia Anderson Taylorsville 770-655-1827 ABI Arena Rascal Pro drag for utility vehicle/tractor. Drag arenas, driveways, farrow, manure breakup. Moira Mccracken Dawsonville 770-893-3687 Breaking sled blacksmith built horses or mules. Nice. Can text pictures. Randy Cason Powder Springs 404-787-0227 Colts started & older horses. Tuned-up gaited horse specialist, all breeds welcomed, quality groundwork foundation, call for deals. N. Garner Kingston 770203-9699 Like new 13" Western saddle; $150, used. New bridles, saddle pads; $15, $45. No texting. Willie L Coggins Flowery Branch 770-500-9318 New black trail saddle, 16" seat; $500 with halter and blanket. Carol Nichols Gainesville 770-540-3760 Pine shavings. Available for pickup or delivery around the South Fulton and Coweta county areas. Nick Saye Douglasville 404-379-8737 Two horse wagon, all new, new bed, all new bearings and brakes, metals bows, no top, bucket seats. Gordon L Boyd Summerville 706-857-5010 Wanted: Used Tucker Equitation Endurance trail saddle or an Endurance trail saddle. Martha Thurmond Madison 706-342-1989 Oct. 2016, halter-broke, excellent EPDs, Registered Black Angus bull for sale, $75. James L Johnson 334 Goose Creek 983-0489 706-367-1795 semen-tested. Paul Smith Watkinsville BSE tested; $2200. Gives low birth Rd West Point 31833 706-681-4060 Anatolian shepherd puppies, born Boarding Facilities 706-224-2898 weight. Lalla Tanner Monroe 678-823- Handling equip. sheep & goat, sweep 2/17/2018, both parents here; raised If you have questions regarding ads in Registered polled Hereford bulls, rug- 5742 tube w/30 ft of alley, rotating chute, di- with chickens, goats, children: $300 this category, call 404-656-3722. ged, pasture-raised, gentle, excellent bloodlines/EPDs, small calves, excellent growth. Bobby R Brantley Tennille 478553-8598 Registered Red Angus Bulls, (4), 12 FIND GEORGIA'S BEST LOCALLY rectional release gate. Gregg Howell ea. Call or text. Eric Douglas Lagrange Advertisers must submit a current Hahira 229-563-1419 706-957-0275 stable license in order to advertise I have 2 billies for sale 5 months old. Anatolian Shepherd. born 3/6/2017. boarding and breeding facilities. Ads $100. Ask for Linda. Linda Bell Monti- Male. Purebred. CKC papers. Wormed. submitted without this information will cello 706-925-2172 Shots up to date. Charles Mills Flowery not be published. For questions re- month old bulls; $1450 and up. Joe Gibson Rome joe.surf@comcast.net 706506-3026 706-802-1620 GROWN I have several mix breed goats and Branch 770-967-3227 garding licenses and applications, call sheep for sale. Larry Booth 181 Booth Australian Shepherds, born 2/24/18. 404-656-3713. Rd Norman Park 31771 229-520-9441 Blacktries. $500 for males and $450 for Boarding facility for retired horses. Dai- Registered SimAngus bull, 4.5 years old, ready to breed. Joseph Rhodes FOODS Katahdin-Dorper cross sheep. Susan females. Vet work current. Parents regis- ly attention, barns, pasture, free choice Cobb Cedartown 404-215-1615 770- tered. Julian Nichols Cuthbert 229-732- hay, dietary, health management. Jo- Knoxville 478-214-0759 Online at georgiagrown.com 546-9601 7661 229-732-7660 seph Douglas Villa Rica 770-402-6590 WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2018 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov PAGE 9 Pasture boarding near Hampton/McDonough. Trails, round pen, arena, wash rack and emergency stall for injured/ sick horse. Dan Robertson Stockbridge 678-300-3434 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. (4) Ameraucana and game mixed roostersl $20 each. 70 mos old. 2 white Leghorn roosters; $10 each. Danny Sipsy Auburn 770-307-6284 14 Black Australorps layers for sale. Call for details. Sid Maynard 2733 Jodeco Dr Jonesboro 30236 770-8332647 2017 game stags, hens, Red Quill, Pumpkin Hulsey, Minor Blues, Minor Blue Mugs, Blue Splash, Grey Hatch. Ray Watts Macon 478-361-3468 478743-6692 3 adult male ducks: 2 black Cayuga and 1 Rouen. $12.50 each. Eugene Garland Talking Rock 706-692-2524 3-4 week old chicks. Mixed breed. Rhode Island Reds. $3 each. Andrew Mcgowan Collins 912-541-2877 912481-0782 5 dark pied spalding male peacocks 1- 4 yr white male peacock. $250 each. Ray Watts Macon 478-361-3468 478743-6692 5 Pekin pet ducks.1 male, 4 females. Great layers. Need good home w/ pond. $25. Stacie Tucker Chula 229-3921846 7 Guinea fowl; $8 each. Robert Kitchens Gibson rkitchens101@gmail.com 706-914-0630 706-598-3634 Baby chicks hatching weekly, Rhode Island Reds, Red Stars; $1.50 ea. Black Copper Marans; $5.00 ea. Dennis Martin Monroe martinsbackacres@gmail. com 404-234-6038 Baby Chicks- Cherry Eggers, Red Sex Links, Barred Rocks, Delawares, Ameracaunas, Buff Rocks, New Hampshire Reds. Travis Mclendon Hawkinsville 478-783-1634 Baby Chicks. Rhode Island Red, Buff Orpington and American Dominique. Pure breeds. Monte Poitevint Lakeland 229-482-3854 Barred Rock hens; $15. Roosters; $12. William J Edes 341 Ga Highway 26 E Elko 31025 478-952-7381 Black Roundhead eggs for sale. For hatching; $25 a dozen. Shipping cost extra. David Kettle Arnoldsville 706410-8390 Bovans brown pullets. Best layers in USA. Four weeks old. Get big brown eggs. $3 each. Andrew Schneider Gainesville 478-294-9456 Chicks sexed and unsexed and ducklings, assorted breeds; Ayam Cemani, too. Sherry Amerson - White Augusta blackberrycreekminifarm@gmail.com 706-833-5535 Copper Marans, Real Araucanas, Easter Eggers, Buff Orpingtons, Blue Laced Red Wyandottes. Robert Reese Stockbridge 770-633-9294 d'Uccle rooster Mille Fleur porcelain; $10 ea. Rhode Island Red Roosters. (2) 1 mo. old; $3 ea. Andy Lawrence Alto 470-248-6169 Game stags and hens. Also have heavy breeds. Johnny Carney Danielsville 706-201-4465 706-247-6862 Gamefowl. Gilmore hatch, Mclean hatch Sweater Grey, Wingate Brownred, Mel Sims Brownred. Micah Edge East Dublin 478-290-3313 Golden Comet and Black Sex Link Chicks. Pullets. Brian Sturdy Dahlonega 706-865-9201 Guinea Keets in assorted colors available late May thru October. Flint River Guinea NPIP. Angelique Weldon Thomaston flintriverguinea@gmail.com 706741-2904 Guineas for sale. Theo Engelmohr Milner 678-967-9899 Heritage Narraganset & Chocolate forage-fed Turkeys; $75 each. Peacock Hill Farm. Don Meyer Stockbridge 770815-3704 Homing pigeons various colors. Asking $15 each. Scott Willoughby Watkinsville 706-818-3171 Looking for breeding doves or Ring necks for sale within 60 miles of Valdosta. Leon L Bryan 4967 Ousley Rd Valdosta 31601 229-559-7262 Narragansett Poults, $10.00 each. Dozen fresh/fertile; $40.00. Text for pictures or more info. Kenneth Spear Chickamauga 423-667-7864 Peafowl, Royal Palm turkeys and beautiful Bantam and silkie roosters. Most are free range. Sara Robbins Blairsville 706-745-2328 Pigeons: white rollers, turner rollers, colored rollers and white homers: $20/ pair. Wyatt Johnson Midville 478-4943240 Quail eggs hatched weekly and chicks. Larry Corbin Fayetteville flintriverstore50@yahoo.com 770-527-1988 Rare Welsh Harlequin ducklings. Hatch May 21, 2018. Pre-orders being taken now. Anna-Reece Thomas Hapeville 404-909-9511 Rhode Island Red and Whites, Red STars, Ameraucanas, Red Rangers, Pullets started laying; $15.00. Roosters, $12.00. Gary Ridley Lafayette 706-6381911 Ringneck pheasants, Black Shoulder Peafowl and Indian Blue Peafowl. Gerald Hayes Flowery Branch 470-2080309 Silkies Bearded Partridge, from show stock, 1 w/o-3 m/o: $25 ea. Ken Hatley Barnesville 770-358-1300 Swedish flower hens. Pure and mixed available, laying now. $20 each. Kirk Mussell Fairburn 404-805-0714 Trio turkeys, fertile eggs, turkey and guineas, selling out. Certified organic feed. Debra Ridings Cleveland debsbread@yahoo.com 706-348-2257 Wanted 4 recently hatched female Pilgrim Geese. Northeast Georgia area. Clarence Mason 1610 Robertson Loop Rd Clarkesville 30523 706-7549682 Welsummer pullets, purebred beauties, 3-4 mo old. $16 each. Females guaranteed. Cumming-Alpharetta region. John Mackey Suwanee 404-6255621 Young RIR, Barred Rock, Easter Egger, Cochin, Leghorn, Australorp, and Buff Orpington. Michelle Brantley Pine Mountain 678-736-3911 Poultry/Fowl Requiring Permit/License If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722. Advertisers selling wood ducks must submit a USDA permit with their ad. Ads for wood ducks that do not have this permit will not be published. For information on these permits, call the US Fish & Wildlife Service Atlanta office at 404-679-7319. Advertisers selling quail must be accompanied by a copy of the commercial quail breeder's license. Ads for quail that do not have this license will not be published. For information on these licenses, call the Georgia Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Resources Division at 770-918-6401. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the permit/license needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the permit/license can be attached using the attachments button. Bobwhite Quail, flight conditioned, now available for the 2018/2019 season. Call for pricing. Rembert Hancock Fairmount 706-337-5711 404-376-0550 Bobwhite/Coturnix quail eggs: $70/100, $155/500, $290/1000. Willie And Barbara Strickland Pooler 912748-5769 Nankin chicks, any age, pure bloods only, will pay top price for quality. William J Ivie Mc Rae Helena 229-3150125 Poultry/Fowl Wanted I'm looking for free chickens, ducks, and turkeys around Homer. Billy Montgomery Homer 678-591-6410 Looking for Blue Copper Marans. Hens or chicks. Sarel Robberts Newnan 770480-2595 Looking for game fowl. Hens, roosters chicks and eggs. We also accept any and all free poultry. Matt Adcock Lincolnton 470-261-2134 Looking for Hennies roosters. Terry Edins Riverdale 770-478-0900 Want to buy 1 or 2 mated pairs of white doves. M Lynch Griffin 404-268-4506 ALTERNATIVE LIVESTOCK If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722. Two Alpaca babies and grown males and females. Deborah Rodriguez Commerce 706-336-6683 Alternative Livestock Requiring Permit/License If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. Advertisers selling fallow deer, axis deer, sika deer, elk, red deer, reindeer and caribou must submit a current deer farming license with their ads. Ads submitted without this license will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the license needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the license can be attached using the attachments button. For information about the deer farming license, contact the Georgia Department of Agriculture at 404-656-3667. For information on other hoofed stock, excluding llamas and buffalo, contact the Georgia Department of Natural Resources at 770-761-3044. LIVESTOCK WANTED If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. ISO registered and non-registered mini Jersey cows. Carl Mccoy Monticello 770-468-2190 Want to buy any breed horses and goats; also mules and donkeys; will pick up, pay cash. Wayne Green Bremen 770-841-6815 Want to purchase a full belted Galloway bull. 2-4 years old. Ready to work. 100 miles of Rockmart. Jerry Bullock Rockmart 770-445-6235 Wanted Zebu cows, heifers and pairs. Emmett Clower Eatonton 678-9433518 LIVESTOCK HANDLING If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. `08 Ponderosa 3HSLGN, w/ electric water hookup. 30 amp, rear tack, cabinets, sink, good tires. $4500. Leave message. Clayton Pollard Covington 404-354-5684 16 ft gooseneck, no rust, good tires, excellent condition. Call for photos. Jeff Givens Butler 478-294-0068 2009 Calico 16' Gooseneck Livestock trailer. Divide gate, storage in nose, escape door, electric brakes on both axles. Joel Stillwell Ellijay 706-889-7529 31' GN stock trailer, 24' box overhead, storage compartment new brakes, tires, hard top, good pulling trailer. Clark Holton Douglas 912-592-8584 32' Gooseneck brand cattle trailer, good condition. Escape door, solid sides, new tires; $8500. Josh Pennino Sparta 706-340-3146 Two horse wagon, with 41" wheels front, 45" wheels rear; $1,185. Cole 1-Horse, 3-row grain drill No. 36; $285. John Fleming Hartwell 770-718-6740 RABBITS If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. 2 female Holland Lop, 4 male Holland Lop, 3 male New Z./Netherland Dwarf cross. Lindsey Knight Dawsonville 706531-4751 Bunnies, small to large, mixed breeds, $15-$20 each. Michael Phippen Newnan 678-233-4980 Harlequin rabbits ready to go at Easter. Solid colors as well as Harlequin. $2025 each. Melita Struve Dawsonville 706-525-0472 706-947-9661 Netherland Dwarf kits. 7 weeks old; $35 each. Teresa Mcclellan Martin 706244-7345 San Juan rabbits for sale; $13 each. Patrica Bentley Rutledge 404-983-8306 San Juan runners: 6 weeks old, 10 weeks old, $10.00 each. Leave message and number. Louis Tompkins Danielsville 706-789-2414 BARROW COUNTY Fleeman U-Pick Blueberries Crops: blueberries 716 Harrison Mill Rd. Winder 30680 770.867.3420 | 678.863.1765 www.fleemansblueberries.com Call or check website for hours of operation and availability. Family-friendly, large and small groups welcome. Picnic tables. BUTTS COUNTY Weaver Berryland Farm Crops: blueberries, blackberries 2252 Hwy 16 W. Jackson 30233 770.595.8303 9 a.m.-5 p.m. M-Sat or call We provide buckets. FAYETTE COUNTY Adams Farm Crops: blackberries, blueberries, raspberries 1486 Hwy. 54 West Fayetteville 30214 770.461.9395 9 a.m.-4 p.m. M-Sat Check or cash only Bring containers HALL COUNTY Snare Farm Crops: thornless blueberries (late May-Aug.); blueberries (late May-July); figs (July-Sept.); scuppernong & muscadine grapes (Aug.-Oct.) 3736 Gillsville Highway (Ga. 323) Gillsville 30543 Wanted: weaned rabbits to finish for custom market. 20 plus per month for market season Brady Bala Oxford 404456-4333 FEED, HAY AND GRAIN If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. All feed, hay and grain ads must include the variety offered for sale. Ads for mulch hay will not be accepted in this category; they will be published in the Fertilizers & Mulches category. `16 and `17. Approx. 40 square bales Bermuda and Bermuda/Crab grass mix. $2.75. Bobby Reeves Carrollton 404449-0020 `17 4x5.5 fertilized, wrapped, sheltered bales, 50+ Russell Bermuda grass hay: $50/bale; 20 or more @$40/bale. Delivery negotiable. Wayne Pruitt Statesboro 912-682-4481 `17 Bermuda/Fescue 4x5 rolls, fertilized & weeded; $45. Burton Eichel Thomson 30824 706-421-4945 `17 cow hay, 4x5 in barn, $15.00. Making room. Approx. 50 bales. Robert Matthews Newnan 678-552-3859 `17 mixed grass Bermuda; $4.00. Sq. bale, barn, rain free, feed, 3-50 lb. Vit N Harris Winder 770-867-0733 `17 Tift 85 Bermuda hay, round bales, excellent quality fertilized, weed free barn stored. Delivery available. Tim Jarriel Collins 912-614-5595 100+ rolls of horse/cow quality. 2017 hay for sale. Fescue, orchard mix . $40.00 per roll. Joe Young Chatsworth 706-463-1836 18' Alfalfa sq. bales; $12 or $10 ea. for 100+. Fescue sq. bales $4.50 ea. 4x5 round bales available. Dale Hall Calhoun 706-506-0351 770.605.1121 snarefarm@gmail.com Open daily during daylight. Call before you visit. Bring take-home containers. OGLETHORPE COUNTY Buffalo Creek Berry Farm Crops: blueberries; blackberries, mulberries 810 Stevens Grove Church Rd. Lexington 30648 706.201.5553 www.bcberryfarmga.com 7 a.m.-2 p.m. Thurs-Sun U-pick half-gallon and gallon; prepicked gallon and pint. Call for rainy day hours. Join our Facebook group. TATTNALL COUNTY DC Durrence Farm Crops: tomatoes, sweet corn, melons 14381 Hwy. 301 N. Glennville 30427 912.237.1041 8 a.m.-until M-Sat Closed Sundays TREUTLEN COUNTY Whispering Pines Produce Crops: blueberries; blackberries, peaches, apples later. 15412 Ga. Hwy. 86 Soperton 30457 912.399.1988 aikenyaun@gmail.com 9 a.m.-7 p.m. M-Sat 2 p.m.-7 p.m. Sun U-pick by the pound; containers provided.Thornless blackberry and freestone-white peach tree plants: $5. For up-to-date information on availability, detailed directions and hours of operation, call before visiting a pick-your-own farm. 2017 135 rolls, 5'x5'. Fertilized Bermuda Fescue, stored in barn; $35 a roll. Porter Fowler Elberton 706-9888247 2017 Alfalfa baleage available in large rounds. Excellent quality, analysis available. Terry Embry Eatonton 706-4852346 2017 Alfalfa hay, 55 lb bales; $13, pickup. Delivery available. 2018 first cutting coming soon. References available. Christopher Moore Griffin 770634-5339 2017 Alfalfa square bales available, sold in bundles of 21. Horse quality, weed free. Analysis available. Roy Embry Eatonton 706-485-9848 2017 Alicia Bermuda hay, 4x5 rolls, net wrap, $50 per roll. Discount on 100 or more. James Martin Waynesboro 706558-5005 2017 Alicia Bermuda hay, 4x5 rolls: $40 per bale, or $35 per bale for 3 or more. Ron Reed Waynesboro 706-5510317 2017 Bahia 4x5 rolls, stored in barn since baled, about 70 available, $35. David Odom Thomaston 770-715-5761 706-646-9693 2017 Coastal Bermuda 4x5 tight bales, limed, fertilized, sheltered, rain free. $60. Grace Brady Hephzibah 706-231-0985 706-231-8563 2017 Coastal Bermuda hay, 4x5, net wrapped, stored in barn, horse quality. Fred Sackett Butler 478-862-5120 478952-5399 2017 Coastal Bermuda hay, horse quality, $5.50 a bale. Andrew Carpenter Metter 912-682-9690 912-685-3812 2017 Coastal Bermuda hay. 4x5 round and square bales. Larry Morgan Lizella 478-972-5977 478-781-1990 PAGE 10 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2018 Bulletin Calendar AG SEED FOR SALE Ag Seed/Plants Wanted In search of fescue seed. Jacob Bow- If you have questions regarding this en Lula 678-858-0382 May 25-28 Southern Junior Rodeo Finals Georgia National Fairgrounds & Agricenter June 11-16 Georgia 4-H State Horse Show Georgia National Fairgrounds & Agricenter August 4 Chattahoochee Trail Horse Association/NE GA Southern Off-Road Bicycle Association category, call 404-656-3722. Jenkins Giant peanut seeds; small Advertisers must submit a current amount okay. Bobby Patterson Comer state laboratory report, fewer than 706-783-5740 401 Larry Walker Pkwy. 401 Larry Walker Pkwy. Monthly Multi-use Trail Improvement Day nine months old, for purity, noxious Want satsuma and pawpaw trees, at Perry, Ga. 31069 Perry, Ga. 31069 Jake Mountain Parking Lot weeds and germination for each seed least 2 years old in pots. Gerald Garnto www.sjra-rodeo.com www.georgia4h.org Nimblewill Church Road lot advertised. Ads submitted without Maysville 706-335-2226 Dahlonega, Ga. 30533 this information will not be published. Want to buy Old Timey Puerto Rico May 26 June 14-16 georgiacrowes22@bellsouth.net If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, seed potatoes. Charles Littlejohn Lafay- West Georgia Two-Cylinder Club Antique Southeast Regional Junior Hereford Show & this report needs to be sent along ette 706-638-1743 Tractor Pull & Show Georgia Hereford Field Day Sept. 8 with it. For ads submitted online, the The Steed Farm Georgia National Fairgrounds & Agricenter Chattahoochee Trail Horse Association/NE GA report can be attached using the at- FLOWERS AND 2080 East Hwy. 5 Carrollton, Ga. 30116 401 Larry Walker Pkwy. Perry, Ga. 31069 Southern Off-Road Bicycle Association Monthly Multi-use Trail Improvement Day tachments button. Seed lots must be uniform and cannot exceed 400 ORNAMENTALS 770.301.8388 | 770.301.6319 Georgiaherford.com/juniors.php Jake Mountain Parking Lot 770.301.6320 Nimblewill Church Road June 21-23 Dahlonega, Ga. 30533 June 2 Journeyman Farmers Certificate Program georgiacrowes22@bellsouth.net Chattahoochee Trail Horse Association/NE GA Fruit and Vegetable Production Session Southern Off-Road Bicycle Association UGA Extension Gwinnett County Oct. 6 Monthly Multi-use Trail Improvement Day 750 South Perry St. Chattahoochee Trail Horse Association/NE GA Jake Mountain Parking Lot Lawrenceville, Ga. 30046 Southern Off-Road Bicycle Association Nimblewill Church Road 678.377.4011 Monthly Multi-use Trail Improvement Day Dahlonega, Ga. 30533 tdaly@uga.edu Jake Mountain Parking Lot georgiacrowes22@bellsouth.net www.ugaextension.org/gwinnett Nimblewill Church Road Dahlonega, Ga. 30533 Georgia Equine Rescue League's July 7 georgiacrowes22@bellsouth.net Second Annual Help-A-Horse Day Chattahoochee Trail Horse Association/NE GA 50-pound bags. Certain varieties of FOR SALE seed are protected from propagation unless they are grown as a class of If you have questions about this cat- certified seed. These include Florida egory, call 404-656-3722. 304, Coker 9152, Coker 9835, 6738 2017 Cleome seeds: light pink or white, soybean, Haskell, Bennings and oth- 35 seeds; $3 (cash) + Self-addressed ers. For questions regarding certified stamped envelope. Donna Miltimore seed, call the Department's Seed Di- 1766 Pleasant Hill Rd Ne Ranger 30734 vision at 404-656-3635. 4" perennials, 350 varieties; $1.50 Alicia, Coastal Bermuda & Tift 85 ea. including helleborus. 1 gal. grafted sprigs for sale. Custom sprigging also Japanese Maples, $20-25, display gar- available. Chester Kight 5551 Old Louis- den. Selah Ahlstrom Jackson 770-775- ville Rd Tarrytown 30470 478-290-5558 4967 Georgia Department of Agriculture Equine Southern Off-Road Bicycle Association Nov. 3 Browntop Millet, 50 lb bags, germi- Angel Trumpet, elephant ears, black Center Monthly Multi-use Trail Improvement Day Chattahoochee Trail Horse Association/NE GA nations from 62 to 71%, $20 per bag. ginger lilies, banana trees, purple Iris, lo- 2834 Marben Farm Road Jake Mountain Parking Lot Southern Off-Road Bicycle Association Brent Mize Royston 706-308-8300 tus, pond plants and more. Patrice Cook Mansfield, Ga. 30055 770.905.7091 wereoutriding@aol.com Georgia Sheep and Wool Growers Annual Meeting UGA Veterinary Medical School Education Center 2200 College Station Road Athens, Ga. 30602 706.340.6748 | 478.230.7972 June 8 & 9 Journeyman Farmers Certificate Program Nimblewill Church Road Dahlonega, Ga. 30533 georgiacrowes22@bellsouth.net July 20-28 National Barrel Horse Association Youth World Championships Georgia National Fairgrounds & Agricenter 401 Larry Walker Pkwy. Perry, Ga. 31069 www.nbha.com July 23-25 AgTech Conference of the South Monthly Multi-use Trail Improvement Day Jake Mountain Parking Lot Nimblewill Church Road Dahlonega, Ga. 30533 georgiacrowes22@bellsouth.net Have an event to put on our calendar? Contact Amy Carter at 404.656.3722 or amy.carter@agr.georgia.gov We accept calendar submissions for food, craft and agriculture festivals and events. Submissions for festivals that do not Conventional Cook soybeans, 84% Covington 770-787-6141 germination, cleaned, bagged 50 pound Angel trumpets, Christmas roses (hel- bags, non GMO, $15 bag. Phil Sanders leborus), Confederate roses; $5. Hy- Stephens 706-340-5669 706-759-3655 drangeas, Harlequin glorybower, Ferns, Custom-sprigging; Bermuda grass, Alicia, Coastal, Russell and Tift 85 sprigs Burning bushes, Beautyberry; $3.50. Carla Houghton Marietta 770-428-2227 available. Ronnie Hart Guyton 912-665- Azaleas-large growing Azaleas in 1 2261 gallon pots. All colors. $2.50 each. Jack Gourd Seeds. Speckled swan. Gourd seeds. 20 seeds/$2 +SASE. John Wad- Maffett Montezuma 478-472-7133 478-954-2111 ley 44 Plant Camellia Rd Juliette 31046 Beautiful Japanese Maple trees. Ev- 478-319-6252 elyn Brock Cairo 229-872-3554 Old-time hot cowhorn pepper, hot red Black and gold bamboo and more. Da- Small Business Planning Session The Alpharetta Conference Center specifically promote those industries will peter pepper, German pink and rutger vid Pelton Covington 678-654-0571 UGA Extension Gwinnett County at The Hotel at Avalon not be printed. tomato seed: $1/pkt. w/SASE. Amory L Cleome, marigold, touch-me-not, four- 750 South Perry St. 9000 Avalon Boulevard Hall 130 Ellison St Maysville 30558 706- o-clock, Mexican sunflower, Tiger lily; Lawrenceville, Ga. 30046 Alpharetta, Ga. 30009 Additional pesticide recertification training 652-2521 $1/each + SASE. B.L. Savage 3017 At- 678.377.4011 agtechsouth.com notices are available on the department Rooster Spur, Old Timey Cayenne, kins Dr Gainesville 30507 tdaly@uga.edu www.ugaextension.org/gwinnett website under the Plant Industry Division tab. Peter Pepper; Yellow Cayenne seeds; Daylilies, 600+ varieties. See website 25 seeds/$2 per pkg. + SASE. Terry for pictures. katielou_lilies.plantfans. Madaris 2017 Cloud Springs Rd Ross- com Katielou Greene Whitesburg ka- ville 30741 tielou402@gmail.com 770-836-1351 2017 cow hay for sale: Bermuda/ Johnson grass mix, fertilized, 4x5 twine, stored outside: $30/roll. Jake Gower Covington 404-391-6182 2017 Fescue Bermuda mix, 4X5 rolls, cow hay. Twine tied. $15 per roll. Beth Hearn Franklin Springs 706-498-2451 2017 Fescue/Bermuda mix hay, large round bales, fertilized; $30 per bale. Linda Bullock Dallas 770-880-2244 770445-9392 2017 Fescue/Bermuda mixed, horsequality, net-wrapped; $50-60/inside, $35-40/outside. Coy Baker Loganville 770-466-4609 2017 Fescue/Orchard grass, horsequality, 4x5.5 rolls, net-wrapped, fertilized, rain-free, barn-stored: $25, quantity discount. Ellis Linn Summerville 706-766-9338 706-857-1377 2017 Hay fescue, mixed grasses. Fertilized, urea sprayed, graze on reach: $35 at barn. Lewis Shirley Rockmart 770-646-5912 2017 high performance UGA tested Alicia/Russell hay, round/square, sheltered. Delivery available. PBI Farms. Be it home-raised bees Heath Pittman Vidalia 912-537-9721 912-537-9721 or handmade beads, 2017 net wrapped horse hay; $45. Cow hay; $35 per roll. Fescue/Bermuda. William And Patricia Chambers Fay- we've got something etteville 678-409-0704 2017 net-wrapped Bermuda & Bahia for everyone! mixed hay, barn-stored, bales $40 ea. Matt Brown 706-561-7860 Brad Mac- Advertising in the donald Waverly Hall 770-826-8299 2018 Alfalfa round rolls; $70 each and small squares; $10 each. Andy Murdock Cordele 229-881-4957 2018 coastal Bermuda hay, highly fertilized, weed free, rain free. Square bales; $4.50. Rolls $40 to $45 each. Curtis Durden Lyons 912-245-1081 2018 Coastal Bermuda or rye grass, horse quality, fertilized, UGA soil/specs. Barned, square/4x5 round bales; $60. Cow hay; $35. Delivery available. Olin Trammell Forsyth 478-960-7239 478994-6463 2018 Fescue, 4x5 rolls, twine wrapped, fertilized with commercial 28-8-12. Out of field, $35. Out of barn, $45. Grady Sutton Clarkesville 706-499-6761 2018 horse quality net-wrapped rolls; $50.00. Sq bales; $5.00 fertilized fescue/ orchard grass. Ronald Campbell Rockmart 706-936-3294 770-686-9563 600 rolls 5x4 Alicia Bermuda/peanut hay, horse quality, under barn, $40. Walt Dockery Broxton 912-359-3153 Bermuda grass and Peanut hay, 4x5, good quality, net-wrapped, shelter kept. Brandon Lightsey Bristol 912-240-0667 Bermuda/Fescue/Rye hay: heavily fertilized, rain free, horse quality; square, $7; round, $50. Large quantity delivery available. Stephen Stana Carrollton 770-241-3201 Coastal Bermuda mixed hay, 4x6 rolls, $35 a roll. Terry Dockery Leesburg 229343-1849 Coastal Bermuda/Alicia/Tifton, 9 hay, 4x5 rolls, net-wrapped, delivery avail- Large quantity of square Bermuda hay, round hay and haylage. Large quantity round peanut hay. Paul Harris Screven 912-294-2470 New crop clover/wild oat hay for horses. Excellent quality $5.00 per bale. John Faulk Jeffersonville 478-945-3415 Order 2018 Fescue horse hay, sprayed and fertilized, 4x5 John Deere net-wrap; $50. Cow hay; $35 per bale. Jack Jones Dahlonega 706-429-7130 Top quality Tift 44/Dallas grass mix; lg. square bales, $7. Ralph W Mills Gainesville rmfarm@bellsouth.net 770-5368438 Feed, Hay and Grain Wanted 2017 peanut hay, 4x6 rolls; $40.00/roll at barn. Sq. bales; $5.00/bale at barn. Delivery available. Glenn Brinson 1800 Corsey Grove Way Tarrytown 30470 912-288-5960 500 pounds of corn wanted for deer feed. Lee Sauer Greensboro 706-1871297 Velvet bean seed, 87 percent germination; old-time open-pollinated white corn seed, 88 percent germination. Charlie Sorrels Ellaville 229-937-2768 Want White Sugar crowder peas that make in September. Gary King 690 Thigpen Rd. Newnan 30263 770-2539773 Ag Plants for Sale 50+ varieties tomatoes, egglants, peppers, squash, cucumbers, angel trumpets, catalpa, crinum lilies, houseplants, other plants. Mickey Anderson Dallas 770-443-7675 Black walnut trees; 2 ft tall; $5/each. Burtis Taylor Hazlehurst 912-3755997 Ginko trees, 7'-10' tall. $35-$75. H.T. Lyon Atlanta 770-891-3939 Peachtree seedlings 1-2 ft. $1 each pickup. Can mail for additional charge. Blooms in 3 years. Margaret Hottle Atlanta 404-344-0568 Pecan trees, growing in three gallon pots, plantable year round. Stuart, Elliot. Jimmy And Tanya Crum Bainbridge 229-220-3907 229-220-5226 Pindo Palms 1-7 gal; Forsythia, Banana trees; large variety of herbs; Heirloom tomato plants. Circle W Plants. Vicky Washburn Forsyth circlewplants@ gmail.com 478-994-4334 Privacy trees, planted for you, straight from our farm, serving all of Georgia. John Cowherd Monticello 770-8627442 Daylilies, potted; $30 each. Blooming size. Etheleen James 197 Glynn James Rd Lyons 30436 912-526-8516 Daylilies. Many. Buy two, get two free. Price list and photos on website. Alcovy Daylily Farm. Mary Burgess Covington www.alcovydaylilies.com 770-7877177 Healthy, full, lush-growth August Beauty Gardenia plants in two gallon buckets: $15. John T. Anding Roswell 770-552-1405 Heirloom roses, daylillies, sweet William, bronze fennel, pineapple sage, amaryllis, succulents, ground covers, dwarfs daises. Carole Scott Metter 912685-6984 Hummingbird vine seeds red trumpet flower, $5 tsp. Larry Vickers 756 Corinth Poseyville Rd Bremen 30110 770-4901904 Japanese maples, azaleas, hostas, angel trumpets, confederate roses and more Linda Waites Fayetteville 770964-6414 Marigolds: dynamic bi-color blooms, orange and deep red: $3/tablespoon plus SASE. Larry Odom 868 Maerick Rd Dawson 39842 Mature Lenten roses (Hellebores) $5 each; Bare-root Pachysandra - 50 plants for $10. Carol Olson Marietta carololsonmar@hotmail.com 770-9981076 770-490-5685 Perennials: Iris, Daylilies, Daisies. $2 fan. You dig while in bloom. Call for appointment. Lori Thomas Dawsonville 706-216-3384 2017 peanut hay, 4x5 rolls, cover edge, able. $35-$40 each. RFQ's 82-124. David sheltered; $30. Blaine Walden Moultrie Clemens Waynesboro 706-466-2944 229-798-2424 Crimson Clover/winter mix, 4x5 round 2017 Russell hay, 4x5 rolls, horse qual- bales; $40. Alicia bermuda 4x5; $40. Rice paper plants, tetra tanax "Ste- Pond Plants, Tea Olives, Easter Rose, roidal Giant" winter hardy tropical. $17 Cherokee Rose, Burning Bush, Acers, includes postage. Ernest Jessee Bra- Ginger, Angel Trumpets, Pussy Willows selton 770-965-6972 & more. Susan Kingsolver Hull 706-254- ity, weed free, UGA tested; $50 a roll. Braxton Simmons Hazlehurst 843-793- Small Leyland Cypress trees, 8"-12" 3115 Lonnie Mckinney Cordele 229-947- 8787 478-952-3899 tall, only $4 ea, will ship, see website for Red Caster bean seed. 12/$2. Send 2878 Fescue mixed round bales, 4x5; $45, 2017 square bales Bahia and Fescue, inside. $35, outside. Located near Ath- gets your farm goods, ordering info. Hans Gruetzenbach Dal- cash + SASE. 40/$5 (double postage). ton 706-483-4220 Allison Adams Newnan 770-253-8941 services and land seen by good quality, my horses love it: $3 per ens, GA. Steve Arnold Nicholson 706- bale. Harry Hughes Warm Springs 706- 207-4356 Sprigs for sale:Tift 85 and Russell Reseeding petunias, mixed. Angel bermuda, custom-sprigging available. trumpet, double purple or double yel- 655-2475 Fescue/Mixed Grass Hay. Horse Qual- 2017 Tift 44 Bermuda, 4x5 rolls, net- ity/rain free/fertilized/sprayed. Bales $3; 40,000 people each issue! James Paul White Dry Branch 478- low: $1/pkt. w/SASE. Carolyn Arnold 214-1197 644 Lynn Ave Jefferson 30549 wrapped, fertilized and under cover; 4x5 Rolls $40. Barn stored. Steve Con- Wild plum, berries, dogwood, redbud, River birch trees, 3 gallon containers, $40. Everett Parrott Alvaton 706-538- nell Ranger 706-334-4023 770-846- See page 2 for advertising guidelines! catalba, and more; $7 and up. Grace 10+ ft. Over 100 in stock. $5 each. Barry 1263 404-319-5326 9027 Walsh Jonesboro 404-307-8113 Gay Blairsville 706-835-1662 WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2018 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov PAGE 11 Seeds: Devil's trumpet, mullein, pink touch-me-nots, morning glory, hibiscus, four-o-clocks, money plant, $1 cash per teaspoon +SASE; mole bean, other. E. Beach 2966 Cardinal Lake Cir Duluth 30096 770-476-1163 Flowers and Ornamentals Wanted Huckleberry bushes/seeds wanted. To be planted in Rome area. Jeff Wigley Marietta 770-206-0794 FLOWERS REQUIRING PERMITS If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722. Advertisers selling officially protected plants must have a permit to sell such plants. Ads submitted without this permit will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the permit needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the permit can be attached using the attachments button. For information on the sale or shipment of protected plants, call the Protected Plant Program at 770-918-6411. MISCELLANEOUS If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. 10 gal. and 25 gal. wash pots; $175. Antique fire plug; $50. 2 broken wagon wheels; $40. W.G. Griffin Byron 478396-2409 16000 used bricks, light red, from three-bedroom home; Hwy 20 in Cumming, you remove; $0.05 each. Edwin Dallas Alpharetta 404-641-0421 1920-1930s antique cast iron wood kitchen stove, 6 bruners (gree). $350. Anna Gibson Pendergrass 706-693-1919 1950s general electric refrigerator, works well; $150. 1950s Kenmore washing machine, wringer type; $150. Jean Loomis Cumming 770-778-2790 2 Lewis steel PTO logging winches: one axle mount & one full belly mount with forestry package. J. Shelton Martin 706-969-4244 2000 Brew utility trailer, 6'x10' with Gorilla arms to lift 4'x6' tail gate; $1000. Phil Adkins Vienna 229-273-7691 Air compressor tanks: 120 gal./80 gal. Vertical $200.00/$100.00; 60 gal. horizontal $50.00. Larry Sturdevant Cumming 770-887-7931 Antique electric stove; $400. Cast iron double sink; $75. Metal kitchen cabinet; $100. Antique sausage press; $50. Jimmy Garvin Byron 478-396-2409 Antique two horse wagon, fair condition, good yard decoration; $595. Sarah Briscoe 703 White Hill School Rd Commerce 30529 706-658-6829 Buck stove insert, has blower, 33.5" front, 23.5" back. Can send pictures. James Dickson Chickamauga 423443-2044 Carpenter bee traps and instructions, shipped in lots of 5 for $85. Call for info. William Timmerman Harlem 706-7995311 706-799-5311 Carpenter bee traps; $15.00 each. Free shipping. Please leave message. Billy Middlebrooks Monroe 770-267-7084 Club Car in excellent condition. Battery is good and holds charge. $2100, negotiable. Don Sorrell Gainesville 770-5367960 770-377-9114 Craftsman radial saw, 10 ball bearing motor, 3450 RPM model 113.197751. Mounted on casters. Jerry Casey Fairmount 770-773-6384 DR leaf and lawn vacuum Pro XL, electric start, very good condition; $1295. Thomas Lyons Mitchell 706-832-4805 Enviro Pak CVU350E electric smokehouse with Liquid Smoke injector: $14,500, very low hours. Rick Worrell Morganton 404-314-1498 Farm tools, plow paints, sweeps, Cole planter parts, grain cradle, plow stock and irons. Homer London Cornelia 706894-2867 Have Bator incubator with heater and thermometer; $25. Betty Ardron 637 Dock Lathem Trl Ball Ground 30107 770-301-7356 Hawke fire place, insert wood stove; $400, obo. Some wood included. Ben F Wright Jackson 770-775-3596 Honda rear tine 7 HP tiller. Quick start. Mint condition. $1650. Glenn Register Fayetteville 770-461-2842 I can trap predators in exchange for hunting in Oglethorpe County area. James Barry Comer 706-224-4814 ISO standard size Acetylene bottle in good condition. Johnny Mcdonald Wrens 706-547-9567 Kook KWC steam pressure cooker, 22 presto, 7 qts; $40.00. Can not ship. Faye Chambers 2579 Boyt Rd Yatesville 31097 706-472-3371 Lodge cast iron 12" ribbed grill pan; $40. Flat griddle; $20. Both for $50. T L Huskey 108 Pinewood Way Dalton 30721 Memory Bears made out of your loved ones clothing. Sherry Mcdaniel Buford 770-945-4869 770-366-1306 Pine Paneling T&G, 8"x "x diff lengths, many 8, long, approx 130 sq. ft.; $50. Joseph Gill Warner Robins jpaugill@cox.net 478-334-2792 Presto pressure canner, used 1-season; $65. Buy and get lots jars free. Edna Graves Loganville 678-639-0118 Steel traps and rare early 1900s cotton farm sacks. Ann English Cochran 478934-4260 Unique blueberry cookbook with 150 great blueberry recipes and tips. Order at: www.theblueberryfarm.com or call. $15 each. Joe Kilpatrick Lafayette 423301-2717 Miscellaneous Wanted Chicken tractor coop/run for 8 large hens. Needs to roll, weldwire bottom coop and run. $600. Will pickup. Kenneth Simpson Jasper 770-851-9957 770-735-7462 Fishing boats 10' and smaller for flower beds @ church camp in Roberta, GA. Holes okay. Gloria Malcom Social Circle 770-464-4303 Large bell, 24" to 36", for 501-3-C Christian school. Please, no cracks or welds. Paul Belk Dalton 706-280-6259 Looking for YT3000 Craftsman mower, inoperable, free haul off or cheap for parts. Gary Singleton Hartwell 706-376-6776 Old chicken brooder tops. Old signs/ cars/parts/tools, etc. Old barn/farm junk. Craig Walker Cleveland 770-294-5920 Want ole timey crochet patterns- enjoy filet, pineapple, etc. House plants or cuttings, philodendron, etc. Will pay postage. Katherine Ayash Conyers 770483-5667 Want swing gate with slide door on rear Ponderosa goose-neck cattle trailer--68 inches wide. Jerry Simmons Colbert 706-248-7590 Wanted leaf vacuum shredder/chipper. Text brand, model, photos and info or call. Lee Greene Winder 770-652-8036 Would like wild plum, persimmon, elderberry or wild berry bush seedlings or seeds. Harold Phillips Tallapoosa 678416-5857 Bees, Honey & Supplies 10-8-5 frame equipment, Bees, beekeeping supplies, nucs, classes, tools, wildflower honey. Swarms. Buford, Flowery Branch, Oakwood, Suwanee/ Winder. Harold Lanier Buford harold@ lanierbeebarn.com 678-471-7758 10-frame beehive, $85; 5-fram beehive NUCs, $65, NO BEES. Also make inner covers, supers and top-bar beehive. Eliseo Delia Mineral Bluff 706-492-5119 5 comb nucs; $165. with gentle productive Italian queens marked. Empty hives, extra equipment. Closed Saturdays. Edward Colston Taylorsville 770382-9619 5-frame NUCS; $150 with new laying queen. Pick up only. Mary Lacksen Sparta mlacksen@gmail.com 478-456-1049 Albany/SW Georgia complete bee removal, also hornets, wasps, yellow jackets. Licensed and insured. Dale Richter Leesburg 229-886-7663 All bees; Russian hybrid nucs $170, swarms & beekeeping equipment wanted, looking for locations to keep bees. David Larson Mitchell 770-542-9546 Bee removal, work guaranteed, Metro Atlanta and West Georgia areas. W.O. Canady Villa Rica 770-942-3887 Gallberry, voted best-tasting honey in Georgia; $52/gallon, includes shipping. Ben Bruce Homerville www.brucesnutnhoney.com 912-487-5001 Industrial quality Varroa oxalic acid vaporizer. Used 3 times. Instructions and original box. $145.00. Barney Kendall Canton 770-597-9560 Italian 3lbs. pkgs., $115; 5-frame NUCs, $150; mated queens, $30. Mack Mack Rome 706-389-5425 Italian Honey Bees, and Queens. Slade Jarrett Baldwin 706-677-2854 New 10 frame hive bodies with frames: $35; 10 frame shallow supers with frames: $25. Jan Wooton Canton jmwooto@gmail.com 404-422-6952 Raw honey and oneycomb from Kennesaw and Sourwood area. 5 frames Nucs $150. www.assalap.com Shakeel Nasir Kennesaw 678-468-6238 Want bee equipment. Will pick up swarms for free; remove bees from structure for a fee. Leonard Day Macon 478-719-5588 Will pick-up swarms, remove from structures and remove unwanted bee equipment Derry Oliver Commerce 706-335-7226 Will relocate swarms for free, remove colonies from structures for a fee. Burke, Columbia and Richmond counties. Justin Stitt Augusta 706-829-9372 Will remove bee swarms near the ground FREE, will remove unwanted hives East of Atlanta. Robert Pruden Monroe 770-466-9100 Will remove low hanging honey bee swarms for free. Hall/Gwinnett/Jackson counties. No structures. Reasonably accessible. Robert Williams Gainesville 770-967-4060 Things To Eat `17 sun dried sage leaves, grew in my garden, 6.5 x 3.25 bag; $4. Leave message. Wallace Kendrick Good Hope 770-207-0059 2017 Desirable Pecans, $11/lb + postage. Russell Eaton Stockbridge 770506-2727 2017/2018 Pecan halves and pieces, properly stored in freezer. $8/lb. + shipping. Wade Parker 360 Woodrum Ln Millen 30442 rocklakepecans@gmail. com 478-494-6536 All natural grain finished beef, no hormones or implants. Raised on grass. Finished on grain. Custom processing. $3.25/lb hanging weight. Tom Brown Canton 404-259-0998 Angus cross beef. No antibiotics/ steroids. Vacuum packed, delivered to your freezer. Details at wellsfarmhealthymeats.com. Joey Wells Buena Vista 229-942-1855 Clean black walnuts; $25 per quart plus shipping. Mildred Corbin Ellijay 706-635-7496 For sale: 2017 pecan halves, $8/lb. plus shipping. Jesse Arnett Tifton 229392-3921 Grain-finished Angus beef, side or quarter, cut to order, $3.50/lb hanging weight plus processing. Jason Cox Social Circle 404-925-5412 Grassfed beef. Taking orders, deposit $150 per quarter. Butchering soon. $3.35 lb, hanging weight + processing. John Dyal Twin City 912-805-4557 Grassfed/grain-finished SimAngus beef, sold whole, half or quarter. $2.00/ lb on hoof. $3.50/lb hanging weight plus processing fee. Mid-July. Pam Duckworth Calhoun 706-346-0217 Lowline quality freezer beef, 1/2 or whole beef. $3.50/lb hang weight, approx 500 lbs hw Woodrow Little Danville 478-290-0679 Marview Farms provides grass fed and pastured: beef, pork, lamb, goat, chicken & eggs. MarviewFarms.com Fernando Mendez Arabi 786-210-6544 Pink or white half runner beans for canning. Need 1 or 2 bushels. Lawana Morrison Lawrenceville 770-757-0602 Sugar cane syrup, pure premium quality, three 25 ounce bottles shipped free; $42/3. paypal.me/parrishcanesyrup. Ben Parrish Statesboro 912-536-2200 Herbs Advertisers selling ginseng must be registered with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources and proof of this registration must be submitted with each ad. Ads for ginseng submitted without this registration will not be published. For more information, contact the Georgia Natural Heritage program at 770-918-6411. Basil, Lavender, Mints, Oregano, Rosemary, Tarragon, Thyme & more. Grown in nursery trade #1 gallon containers. Buzz Mann Hampton bigpinefarm@live. com 470-336-8351 Fish & Supplies Advertisers selling sterile triploid grass carp must submit a current Wild Animal License from the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Ads submitted without this license will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the license needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the license can be attached using the attachments button. For license information, call 770-761-3044. 1st Class Big Reds, $35/lb; Red Wigglers $18/lb; Casting $.070 plus shipping. Lew Bush Byron bigreds1@cox. net 478-955-4780 3"-14" Grass Carp, F1/Bass, Threadfin/Shad, Coppernose/BlueGill, Shellcrackers, Catfish and cages. Please inquire about our unique, unmatched genetic/ delivery guarantee. David Beall Greenville 706-289-1874 All sizes bass, bluegill, channel catfish, threadfin, gizzard shad, shellcracker and more. Free delivery or pickup. Danny Austin Roberta 478-836-4938 Bass, bluegill, catfish, sterile grass carp, koi. State-wide delivery, lake management. David Cochran Ellijay 706889-8113 Channel catfish 1 to 3 lbs. Several thousand pounds. Orville L Carver Douglas 912-381-0767 Commercial electric worm separator, 7' long, 21" diameter; $500. 12 oz cups and lids, 2 cases; $100. Robert Mcdonough 928 Airport Rd Smithville 31787 229-815-0541 Koi Goldfish and Albino catfish. Fish food and pond supplies. Call for more info or appointment. Glenn Kicklighter Sandersville 478-232-7704 Looking for earthworms, red wigglers, night crawlers in Coweta Co. I will dig. Call before 7pm. Denney Cummings Moreland 770-251-6570 Rainbow Trout: DNR certified. Quality stockers, hatched on our farm. Various sizes with delivery/pick-up available. David Cantrell Ellijay 706-273-6199 Red wiggler worms. $20 per pound. Free shipping on 10 pounds or better. Joseph Tucker Chula 229-425-1409 Fertilizers & Mulches 2017 4x5 mixed grass rolls for mulch; 45 tight rolls available. $15/roll. Raymond Gilbert Bishop 706-769-5820 706-296-4360 2018 wheat straw, $3.50/bale at barn, delivery available. Gary Brinson 6786 Old Louisville Rd Tarrytown 30470 912286-3191 Clean, fresh pinestraw installed; $4.25 per bale. No additional fees. Discounts available. Reliable, friendly service. 50 bale minimum. Gloria Williamson Gainesville ysrvc@hotmail.com 770912-6671 Cow manure for sale; price varies by quantity. Have Bobcat to load. Scotty Ingram Ball Ground 770-596-7718 Free aged horse manure mixed with shavings. Can load with tractor. Monti Hight Macon 478-960-2008 Free aged horse manure, very few shavings mixed in, West Cobb, you pick-up and load. Kerry Quillen Marietta 770-714-7364 Free compost horse manure and shavings. Jerry Riles Douglasville 770-3371516 Free horse manure mixed with shavings. Leave message. Landline. Cindy Griffeth Dawsonville 706-216-8007 Free horse manure w/shavings. You load/ you haul. Easy access. Bobcats/ loaders welcome. Have plenty. Billy Burke Covington 770-861-4574 678602-1343 Fresh, clean red pinestraw, installed and cleaned; $4/bale. We also have long needle. Travis Golden Conyers 404710-9884 Long leaf pine straw delivery and installation available or semi trailers dropped. Joshua Bulloch Manchester 404-925-1076 Pre-bagged horse manure; $1.50/bag (20-40lbs per bag). Quantity discounts for 100+ bags. You load. Call first. Martha Braumann Lawrenceville 678-6629393 Rotted sawdust, 15 years old. $30 per tractor scoop. I load, you haul. Greg Coker Rydal 770-324-7687 Slash pine straw, $2 bale at farm, leave message. Donald Akins Collins 912557-4616 Poultry Litter/Compost Chicken litter by the truckload. 25+ tons per load, special pricing for orders over 500 tons! Jerald Sargent Dawsonville 678-245-1700 Oddities Gourds, many varieties. Martin gourds fixed and ready to hang. At farm or shipped to you. Charles Lang Cordele 229-406-5039 Lucky Buckeyes; $4.25/doz. Planting Buckeyes; $5.25/dozen. Instructions included, please include postage. Jules Simmons Stone Mountain 828-226-4700 The Gourd Pile: come shop or we ship. Pamela Morrison Po Box 516 Morven 31638 229-775-2123 407-538-4700 Garden Space If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722. (2) 1 year old billy goats. LaMancha/ Kiko mix. 75.00 each. Robert Mckenney Brooklet 912-842-4644 Farmers Markets Markets may use this category to advertise vendor space for rent or lease, as well as days and hours of operation. Cobb Mableton Farmers Market is looking for farmer/gardener producer vendors. No retailers. Open 8:30 a.m.12:30 p.m. Thursdays, June 7-Aug. 23. Mableton Farmers Market Mableton www.mableton.org/mableton-farmersmarket 404-323-0608 Out-Of-State Wanted Wanted for parts. #20 Southern Plow Co. syrup power mill. Ask for Mary. Mark S Keisler Lexington SC 803-359-9589 Firewood Firewood must be cut from the advertiser's personal property. Ads for firewood must use the cord when specifying the amount of firewood for sale. (1) 22" oak up-rooted in Loganville, GA. Have backhoe on site. Firewood or saw timber. Free. Thomas Burch Snellville 404-274-0102 2 premium oak trees (long trunks). Barbeque, heating, etc. You cut/haul, must be experienced. Gerry Gibson Atlanta 678-595-2790 Timber Timber must be individually owned and produced by the advertiser on his personal property. No companies or businesses are allowed to advertise timberland in this category. Timberland advertised must be at least one acre. Timber wanted ads will not be published. 25 acres of pine and hardwoods for sale in Apalachee area of Morgan County. Robert Ray Madison 706-717-0985 Oak, pine, cedar, sweetgum trees for harvest on 4 acres. Also, large tree limbs on ground. Cut/remove. A. Kmetz Hampton 770-897-0423 CORRECTIONS 16000 used bricks, light red, from three-bedroom home; Hwy 20 in Cumming, you remove; $0.05 each. Edwin Dallas Alpharetta 404-641-0421 JD 4240 cab and air, low hours, good tires, quad range transmission, dual remotes, full front weights. Carl Gay Chula 229-402-0447 Lawn tractor, 12 HP BS, 5 speed, 38" cut, $300. Craftsman, self-propelled, 9 HP vacuum shredder/chipper, $350. Juanita Kerrick Gainesville 678-9895880 702-612-7346 Massey Ferguson 281X, one owner, very good condition, complete workshop, manual canopy, kept inside. Call for info. William H Dean Toccoa 706244-5414 New Holland 675E 4WD backhoe w/ 36" and 24" buckets. 3300 hrs. Air/ cab/heat. CD player. VIN/Serial No. 301027938; $24,500. Roy Garrett Bowdon 770-301-1673 770-258-5627 PAGE 12 FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2018 Australian seeds could produce new Georgia cultivars of raspberries, peaches By Sharon Dowdy University of Georgia horticulturists Rachel Itle and Dario Chavez recently spent a busy two weeks in Australia collecting seeds from wild raspberries and peaches to bring back to the UGA Griffin campus. As scientists in the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences (CAES), Itle and Chavez research Georgiagrown fruit. Itle works with blueberries and Chavez focuses on peaches. They will use this collection of seeds from Australia to breed new varieties of raspberries and peaches specifically for Georgia and the Southeast U.S. They traveled to Queensland, Australia, in South Wales on international travel grants provided by the CAES Office of Global Programs. Itle collected wild raspberry seeds. She had to "calibrate" her eyes in her search for the tiny, red berries, which made finding them easier, but the wild berries were not plentiful. "It was late spring, early summer in Australia when we traveled, so the raspberries were ripe. Some were bright red, some dull red and some golden," she said. "The fruit size was about a half or a fourth the size of the commercial berries we have in the U.S. I wanted to eat some, but I couldn't justify it because we drove for miles and only collected a few berries at each location." Itle was able to collect about 100 seeds from each berry and a few hundred from each wild specimen, collecting 16 Rubus specimens in total. She hopes to cross the plants that grow from these berries with common raspberry varieties grown in the U.S. to create varieties that can be grown by Georgia farmers. "We don't really have a commercial raspberry that is suitable for Georgia. They get too many diseases, and they are especially susceptible to viruses," she said. "The first step will be to grow the seeds, screen the plant material for pathogens and see what survives. If it can be grown here with the disease pressures we have, we can breed that disease resistance into commercial varieties." Photo courtesy UGA CAES When collecting wild raspberry seeds in Australia, University of Georgia scientist Rachel Itle first had to "calibrate" her eyes to search for the tiny, red berries. The fruit is about a half or a fourth the size of commercial berries sold in the U.S., she said. Chavez was on a similar mission to collect seeds from wild peaches. "These peaches were brought to Australia by the Chinese when they were there building the railroads. They brought peaches from China and threw down the pits, which became trees," he said. "(The trees) colonized along small rivers and creeks." These peach trees produce small, white-fleshed fruit with "a good fragrance and aroma," he said. He collected fruit, removed the seeds and brought them home to the U.S. He also collected budwood, or fruiting branches that contain buds meant for grafting onto the rootstock of another plant, that he later used in Australia with his collaborator, Australian researcher Bruce Topp of the Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation. Chavez used the budwood he collected to graft trees that will grow in Topp's program and be used to obtain more seeds, which will be used in future crosses to create new, hybrid varieties. "We could bring the seeds back to the U.S., but we were not allowed to bring plant material," said Chavez, who returned to UGA-Griffin with 80 seeds that are now sprouting in his greenhouse. The UGA research team worked together to collect specimens and planned each day in Australia to make the most of their time. Planning was made easier by a map of Australia's living plant species, which included GPS coordinates. To take advantage of the early Australian sunrise, their days began at 5:30 a.m. and ended around 10 p.m. "We were able to cover a giant chunk of a region in one day until the sun went down at around 6 p.m. Then we had to keep driving until we got close to the next collection site, where he looked for a hotel. Each night we planned our next day, mapping coordinates for the various species. It was a very exhausting trip, but it was so much fun too," Itle said. "We had to hike to many of the spots. Sometimes we hiked to a spot and never found any plant material; others were right by the highways." Fruit tree breeder Jose Chaparro of the University of Florida accompanied Itle and Chavez. He collected seeds from wild relatives of peaches and citrus fruits. The researchers also toured the macadamia nut-, strawberry- and apple-breeding programs at the University of Queensland Maroochy Research Facility. The collection trip was a major first step in the UGA scientists' breeding efforts, but consumers won't be enjoying the literal fruits of their labor anytime soon. "The varieties we breed are for potential markets in the future, but that will take 10 to 15 years," Chavez said. "All perennial fruit crops take that long to breed, but we can speed it up a bit by using molecular tools, if possible." -Sharon Dowdy is a news editor with the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. Fort Valley students investigate `royal empress' of China for Georgia planting Fast-growing tree could supplement farm income By Latasha Ford A native of China, the "royal empress" tree called paulownia could rule America's economy as a multipurpose crop. Research suggests that this fast-growing tree may help farmers establish sustainable income. Fort Valley State University graduate students Richa Bajaj and Lubana Shahin, who are both pursuing Masters of Science in Biotechnology, are exploring two possible options. Bajaj is studying the cloning of proven elite trees from the field and genetic transformation of paulownia, while Shahin investigates flowers and leaves for tea properties. They are conducting this research on FVSU's 5-acre research plot containing approximately 2,600 paulownia trees. Delving into the cloning process, Bajaj's research focuses on in vitro regeneration of paulownia elongata elite trees using various tissues and growing media. Her findings could aid farmers and growers in procuring desirable plants/species for ornamental or afforestation purposes. She noted there is no documentation of this type of research on paulownia. Holding a tray of individual glassware each containing numerous green plants in transparent soil (agar-based nutrient gel), Bajaj explained how she initially took one section from a paulownia plant. "Each shoot can now regenerate into a plant," Bajaj said. She is trying various combinations of plant growth regulators. Before transferring the shoots to the campus greenhouse, Bajaj stored the plants in a controlled environment for about two to three weeks. Expanding her research, Bajaj is also planting artificial seeds of paulownia elongata. She is storing the cultures (beads) at different times up to 20 weeks at 4 degrees Celsius and then will transfer them to a modified gel medium at 25 degrees Celsius to monitor how they regenerate. "Synthetic seeds are stored for in vitro preservation at 4 degrees Celsius and then tested for their vitality and regeneration," Bajaj noted. Photo courtesy FVSU Fort Valley State University biotechnology graduate students Richa Bajaj, left, and Lubana Shahin are investigating in-vitro cloning of elite paulownia trees and the possibility of making herbal tea from the leaves. Because paulownia is a fast-growing tree, Bajaj said the major benefit of her research is forestation. Farmers could procure more trees in a shorter period. Therefore, this opens the door for multiple uses, such as timber, biodegradable products, honey production and biochar, which improves the quality of the soil. Bajaj said the most exciting part about her research is that she formulated one treatment that can work for many stages of paulownia tissue cultures. "I'm looking forward to the outcome, the regeneration potential and the viability in the greenhouse and in field conditions," Bajaj said. An expert in paulownia research, Dr. Nirmal Joshee, an FVSU professor of plant science, said the advantage of Bajaj's research is that she is optimizing paulownia elongata regeneration from many tissues. "She has modified the culture media in such a way that from one small tissue, you can have 50 to 100 plants on average. In one bottle, you have a small forest," Joshee said. "Because they are cloned plants, all of them are identical to the mother plant, high quality and free of any pathogens." More interested in the delectable aspect of the versatile plant, Shahin is investigating the use of flowers and leaves of paulownia fortunei and paulownia elongata as tea. Her research could provide another avenue for farmers to market the crop. She said people in China use different parts of paulownia, such as the flowers, bark, fruits and leaves, to make tea. "There are particular genes that are responsible for the quality of tea. I'm trying to validate scientifically if paulownia has the same qualities," said Shahin, adding that the fragrant flowers of paulownia would be a good addition as a new herbal tea for tea drinkers. First, Shahin is researching the properties of the paulownia fortunei flower using different temperatures. Standing next to a cart with several foil pans and paper napkins containing something that resembles potato chips, Shahin explained that drying the flowers is one of the processing steps to determine the best way to make tea. Drying the flowers at room temperature in different stages, she will then analyze the tissues for chemical markers and antioxidant capacity and determine which drying method is best to retain important chemicals that impart flavor and medicinal properties. "The taste of tea comes from the chemicals present in it. All of these chemicals behave in a different manner at different temperatures," Shahin said. -Latasha Ford is a research communications specialist in the Agricultural Communications Department at Fort Valley State University. 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 20 issue -- including Farmland for Rent -- are due by noon, June 6.