Farmers and consumers market bulletin, 2018 January 31

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GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE GARY W. BLACK, COMMISSIONER WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2018 VOL. 101, NO. 3 COPYRIGHT 2018
GEOR GIA DE PAR T M E NT O F AGR I CU LT U R E GA RY W. BLAC K, COMMISS ION ER
Cold weather fosters optimism for Georgia peaches

To our subscribers and advertisers

Number of chill hours already considerably higher than 2017 season
By Kendall McWilliams

In early December, the

kendall.mcwilliams@agr.georgia.gov

Georgia Department of Agriculture experienced a significant network outage that temporarily disabled

As the mercury dips below 45 degrees Fahrenheit, confidence in a prolific 2018 harvest rises for Georgia's peach farmers.
"The cold weather this week, in addition

our web site and internal computer servers.
If you renewed your subscription or purchased a new subscription as a gift for a friend or family member between Nov. 1, 2017, and Jan. 15, 2018, it is possible that we have not properly credited your account. Please give us a call at 404.656.3722 so that we may update your account. Please have your order confirmation and/ or payment information handy when you call.
If you submitted an ad to us during that period and it has not yet appeared in print, please resubmit online, by mail or by fax.

to cooler temperatures throughout this winter season, has proven beneficial to many of our crops by providing much-needed chill hours," said Georgia Commissioner of Agriculture Gary W. Black. "In fact, peach and blueberry crops have received more chill hours this year than the last two years combined."
Fruit crops, like peaches and blueberries, require a certain number of chill hours. These chilling requirements are necessary for the plant's growth cycle because they ensure that the trees don't break dormancy until the tender buds are ready for new growth. Temperatures less than 45 degrees Fahrenheit are tallied in the number of chill hours that fruit crops are exposed to from Oct. 1 to Feb. 15.
"We're in better shape than we've been since 2011. That was the last year we had a full peach crop," said Lawton Pearson of Pearson Farm in Fort Valley. "Dormancy on 95 percent of our varieties has been satisfied, and we still have three weeks left."
Last year's unusually warm winter temperatures devastated Georgia peach growers, wiping out an estimated 70 percent of the state's crop and making this year's weather patterns even more crucial. Many farm-

Snow blankets a peach orchard at Pearson Farm in Fort Valley Jan. 17.

Andy Harrison/GDA

ers, like Pearson, are welcoming the drastic change with open arms and resounding optimism.
"Bottom line, it's just what the doctor ordered and an answer to prayer," said Pearson. "We are tickled pink."
However, with several weeks left in the growing season, it is crucial for growers to remain realistic about what could happen in

the coming days, according to Commissioner Black.
"As we experienced last year on the night of March 28, one late freeze can break an entire crop," said Black. "But as of right now, we feel blessed to have set the foundation of the chill hours and are optimistic that this season will be a productive and profitable one for our farmers."

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

We apologize for any inconvenience this has caused.

Georgia Grown tests national ad campaign

The Georgia Grown Commodity Commission is excited to officially announce a marketing plan aimed at increasing sales of Georgia's agricultural products outside the State of Georgia. "Nature's Favorite State" is a

pilot branding project designed to broaden the highly successful marketing efforts of Georgia Grown.
"Many consumers across the country are aware of Georgia peaches and Vidalia onions,

but they may not be as familiar with some of our other delicious commodities, such as blueberries, sweet corn and pecans," said Georgia Agriculture Commissioner Gary W. Black. "This program will leverage brand equity created by those famous products to help Georgia sell more agricultural products."
While there are many other geographic branding programs throughout the country, most focus on one specific crop. "Nature's Favorite State" is the first marketing campaign specifically designed to promote a wide selection of Georgia's agricultural products to consumers outside their state of origin.
The commission is currently test-marketing advertising concepts and signage for the program. They will identify the ads that have the best consumer response and highlight them in future promotional efforts outside of the state.
Georgia Grown has already created marketing concepts for sweet potatoes, pecans and greens. In the spring and summer, they will be marketing Vidalia onions, blueberries, peaches, watermelons and sweet corn.
"We see `Nature's Favorite State' kind of like Georgia Grown 2.0," said Commissioner Black. "Our first phase was to promote Georgia Grown inside the state of Georgia; now we are looking to take it across the country."

PAGE 2

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 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

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Questions about advertising? Call 404.656.3722

Subscribe to the Market Bulletin
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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/

FARM MACHINERY 2014 Midwest biosystem model PT120 compost turner, very good condition;

LEASE

$15,000. Mike Hutchins Summerville If you have questions regarding this 706-676-7093

If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
The Farmland for Rent/Lease category is published the last issue of each month. Please adhere to the following guidelines when submitting an ad for Farmland for Rent/Lease or Rent/ Lease Wanted * When submitting ad,

category, call 404-656-3722.
Only farm machinery and equipment owned by the advertiser and used in his/her own farming operation can be advertised; those persons advertising for machinery and equipment wanted must be seeking those items for their own farming operation.

2016 Kubota B3350 hydro/trans, bellymower, cab heat/air, radio, 258 hrs., excellent showroom condition. Wayne Bashlor Waycross 912-288-1939
2016 Mahindra 2555hst 55 hp 4x4 cab w/loader, 520 hrs: $25,000. Paul McNeal Hazlehurst 912-209-2106 912375-7420

please designate it for the Farmland `07 Massey Ferguson tractor, less than 2017 model 2815 Brush Hog flex-

for Rent/Lease category. Notices to 400 hrs., one owner: $14,480 OBO. wing, only 14 hrs. cutting time: $19,800.

buy or sell farmland are published only Leonard Coker Gainesville 770-531- Mark Blackmon Hartwell 706-436-4155

in the special fall or spring farmland 1657

21ft-dual axle Hooper trailer: ramps,

editions * Ads must not exceed 30 `75 F600, steel grain body w/ dump, wood floor, good condition, heavy duty:

words.

330 XD Gas, less than 55,000 miles, $1800. Donald Tillman Hillsboro 706-

11.76 acres in Jasper: 3/2 ranch, 1700 sheltered, one owner. $4,000. Douglas 476-4616

sq. ft., mature mixed fruit orchard, 9 Carter Nicholls 912-345-2885

2554 Vermeer hay buster, chute ex-

acres+/- crop/grazing land, perennial (1) TP 46 Covington planter. (1) Ford tension like new: $15,000. Carey Bunn

stream; can subdivide acreage and dis- 12" two bottom turning plow. (1) Ford Barnesville 678-350-5380

count price. Loyd Fasselt Acworth 770- 14" two bottom turnover plow. Darwin 3-yard dirt pan, 6-row tillivator, 10-foot

652-7205

Blansit Trion 706-238-0465

grain drill, 4-row ripper spider. Billy Sen-

13 acres for rent. Level pasture land (2) 160 Bush Hog mowers, for parts, kbeil Sylvester 229-347-1195

with some woods in Stephens County. Partially fenced, electricity and water available. $10 per acre per month. Charles Wayne Toccoa 256-881-9356
2.5 acre mini farm for lease/lease purchase: house+carport, shop, mini greenhouse, two wells, blueberries, large garden, chicken house, pole barn, fenced: $1500/month. Available April 2018. Call/text. A.J. Newman Cumming 404-725-8133
40 acres of open fields. Jefferson Co. near Stapleton. Peanuts grown this year. $30 per acre. Samuel F Beasley Wrens 706-547-9237

low price. Cliff Groover Brooklet 912682-5360
(2) JD 9965. (1) 9976 4 row. (1) new Doffer facet "portable". (1) BushHog front loader. Best offer. Ralph C Nutt Cordele 229-276-5336
135 Massey Ferguson; diesel, power steering, 8 pieces of equipment. Jim And Susan Thompson Fayetteville 770680-0817
1460 International Axial-Flow combine; 863 6-row corn head; 1020 grain head; grain wagon. Everett Panter Blue Ridge 706-455-7227

30 ft. gooseneck 10-ton trailer; 8 new tires, needs floor: $5000 firm. Chad Allen Dudley 478-290-3901
30-35 4" Rainbow irrigation, 30' joints: $.50 per foot OBO. No trailer. Terrell Rutland Lenox 229-382-5504
4 wheel hay rake, 3 pt attach, left side delivery; $500. Jim Stone Warrenton 706-962-1696
4-row Pittsburgh cultivators with 4 John Deere 71 planters + (2) 500 lb. First Product hoppers, excellent condition: $3200. Carson Cannington Eastman 478-374-0579

Farmland Rent/Lease Wanted

15 ft. all steel low profile (18" from 420 Belarus tractor with front-end ground) tandem trailer. 7'5" between 8 loader, parts tractor: $2500. Danny

100+ acres wanted for cattle anywhere bolt, 16.5" wheels, electric brakes; $975. Spires Douglas 229-938-4240

in Georgia, fenced pasture land with Paul Stacey Toccoa 706-886-6994

5 ft. brushmower; $2850. 6 ft bucket

water; long-term lease needed. Scott 16 ft. bumper pull trailer, dual axles, grapple; $1050. 48" pallet forks; $450

Or Caleb Williams Buckhead 706-474- 7000 lbs. with wench. Drive on ramp. and $550. 6 ft. bucket; $575. Jim Bishop

1712 706-474-9170

Good tires. Also quick hitch. Cat. 1 trail- Franklin 706-675-3943

200+ acres wanted! Established bird dog club in search of training grounds. Will not interfere with haying operation. Walt Sanderson Barnesville 770-5849004
200-500 acres for still deer/turkey hunting in Southeast Georgia. Barbara Davis Richmond Hill 912-312-0377
I am looking for an old farm to rent with option to buy. For 4 horses. Need barn, water and pasture. Handyman special. Seclusion is a plus. Meriwether County area. Reginald Lenard Atlanta 770-8734199
Looking for barn & pasture to lease or rent for horses. Prefer to live onsite but will look at other properties. Please call/ email for more info. Natalie Johnson Loganville tnwalker00@yahoo.com 423716-5359

er; $1400. Hoyt Lindsey Greensboro 706-817-0782
1949 Allis Chalmers G, front and rear cultivator, restored like new: $3500. John W Gray Perry 478-461-5868
1950 Farmall Cub tractor, runs good, tires and sheet metal good, 12-volt, everything works, plus International belly mower, in good condition: $2200 for both. Johnny Williams Carrollton 770546-0968
1958 Case 430 diesel, 40 HP, hi-low trans, PTO, 3 point hitch, wide front end, good condition, $4000, OBO. Ted Kramer Ranger 770-310-3308
1978 Ford 600: 390 motor with 5000k, two speed rear end,14ft.dump, good farm truck: $5750. Larry Wilkie Cumming 404-277-5720

5 hp mulch-maker, leave chipper/ shedder, good condition, covered: $400. Imogene S Watson Cumming 770-887-5661
5-shank all-purpose plow, New Holland 7' sickle mower, 6' bush hog Ford dirt scoop; all good cond. Clay Pentecost Winder 770-601-3855 770-867-4373
500 gallon propane tank underground; $350. J. Carroll Loganville 770-8230704
54 running tractors, 125 parts tractors. Assorted makes and models. Will sell one or all. Robert Collins Calhoun 706602-9027
6' scrape blade 3pt. hitch; $325. 6 volt tractor headlight assembly, 6" tract-olite $50. W A Allen Commerce 706-6773300

Looking to lease 150-450 acres to deer hunt with my family; preferably in the

1979 International with heavy hauling Anderson trailer, in great condition.

6-row KMC peanut inverter plow, fieldready, complete rebuild. John T Bulling-

counties around the Athens area. Ear- Case front-end loader and bush hog ton Cordele 229-273-3597

nest Landrum Cumming 770-887-7393 Want to lease 100-150 acres in Mid-

included: $10,250. Will consider selling separately. Call/text. Mark Cortez Pal-

753 Bobcat Kubota diesel, low hours, new tires and wheels, like new tooth

dle Georgia for deer, turkey hunting. metto 770-231-4740

bucket, excellent condition. Roy Pruitt

Safety-minded group of 4, good stew- 1980 Intl. spreader truck, diesel in- Douglasville 770-595-7891

ards. Email, call or text. Craig Lindberg Peachtree Corners clindberg95@ gmail.com 404-788-2304

cinerator, 100kW John Deere generator; used on poultry farm. Otha Brown Yatesville 706-472-3552 770-550-5133

841 Ford diesel, new motor, new paint, 4-speed, used in hay field 2017: $4850. T.A. Floyd Blairsville 706-994-6451

FARM EMPLOYMENT 1986 Ford F150 shortbed truck, 9/8R all-wheel jack, good condition; 4-speed. New crate 300i6, clutch, $150. 3-pt boom pole, $75. Lary A

If you have questions regarding ads in breaks, interior; excellent farm truck. Smith Rome 706-234-1347

this category, call 404-656-3722.

Billy Andrews Bogart 770-725-7716

920 CAT rubber tire front-end loader,

Only farm work or farm help 1992 John Deere 3055: 5800 hrs. with $6000; also have one for parts. George

wanted advertisements allowed. No wide front end: $13,000. Blake Cauley Stern Macon 478-361-1491

commercial, industrial or domestic Baxley 912-339-3686

93 JD 630 harrow, 22' with 22' Unver-

employment permitted.

1997 International 4900 DT466 ferth harrow; $15,000. R Bennett Black-

Part time barn help. 6 mornings a spreader truck, 150000 miles, 6-speed, shear 912-281-5285

week. General duties. Must have trans- airbrakes, hydraulic 16 ft. bed. Chad 943 track loader: four-in-one bucket,

portation and willing to work some Grogan Kingston 706-252-3333

good shape, top cylinder leaks: $20,000.

weekends. Linda Ridley Conyers 770- 2 new bulldozer blade cutting edges, Roger Ansley Cornelia 706-778-4165

918-1272

7.5 feet long; $75 each. W.A. Dabbs Ea- ABI spreader classic, like new, 28"

Refrigerated trailer, 7x12, dual axle, tonton 706-473-3075

wide; $700. Doris Cash Homer 706-

excellent condition: $10,500. Great for hauling produce and farm products. Dick Griffis Axson 912-381-1300

2, 3 & 4 bottom plows, scrape and box blades, 20-disc harrow, post-hole digger, 1 (2+4) rolling cultivator, 2-disc

677-3338
All-purpose plow, 5pts, 3ph, 5'; $450. Karen Duncan Hoschton 770-867-8044

We eat

tiller; cash. Carl Crosby Blackshear Athens model 107, 8' wide offset pull

912-449-6573

type harrow, 24" discs; $5000. Shannon

2000 3700 Ditch Witch trencher, 6-wy Sell Hoschton 770-823-7631

blade, 43 HP, diesel engine, new battery Bale wrapper, tube-line single wrapper,

belt; $6500, OBO. 1000 hrs. Tom Bar- 2 years old, like new; $5250.00. James

nett Moreland 678-877-9998

Duncan Royston 706-498-2349

2006 Anderson 8'X20' 10-ton goose- Bowie hydromulcher, hydroseeder;

neck dump trailer, 2- 10,000 axles, good $3500 ea. Power arm, side arm mower

condition; $9000. John A Broome Tig- 3 pt. hitch; $6700. Norman Mcconnell

nall 706-318-3455

Hiawassee 706-896-6319

FOR BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DINNER.

2011 Honda Foreman four-wheeler, Brothers #2 House Keeper, no spinfarm use only, power steering, excellent ners, stored inside; $2000. 5' Priefert condition; $4995. Donald Chandler Hull litter saver; $750. Both in good shape.

706-548-7500

William Dillard Calhoun 706-625-2677

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2018

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov

PAGE 3

Bush Hog-brand rotary cutter, 72" Squealer model, new blades, works good: $500. Thomas Tucker Lithia Springs 770-941-2354
Caroni 6 ft. flail mower, used three times, almost new; $1000. Danny Kinard Griffin 706-601-9286
Case/IH 5300 grain drill like new, 21 double discs; $6000. John Deere 530 round baler; $5500. Round bales hay, net-wrapped. Jeff Bacon Dudley 478875-3918
CAT 24" tooth backhoe bucket, like new condition; $350. 22" smooth bucket. Call or text. Christopher North Whitesburg 770-842-4198
CAT loader 955, serial # 2715286. Good sheet metal, fair under carriage, runs and operates well; $9500. James Delay Douglasville 678-313-0370
CAT trackhoe, 2251980, 30 ft. reach, 34 inch bucket, 20K. Ron Smallwood 316 Hawks Nest Dr Greenville 30222 770-463-8697
Cultivators for Farmall Cub, belly plow, draw bars, rock shaft, misc. parts and Cub power unit. Steve Graham Taylorsville 770-324-8779
DR all-terrain tow behind trimmer/ mower. Used very little. $875. Jerry Booker Midland 706-569-8183
Drill presses; $1000. Pressure washer; $600. Post hole digger; $1800. Truck bed F-250 Ford; $500. Asphalt roller; $2500. Mark Blank Dawsonville 770905-6235
Farmall Cub tractor, not running, belly mower, hydraulic lift, good battery, has all four tires; $500, OBO. Charlotte Sisson Ailey 912-594-8138
Farmall M, restored, pictures available; $4800 OBO. E S Hasel Hartwell 706436-1832
Ford 2-bottom plow, excellent condition: $350. Charles McCrary Americus 229-815-6540
Ford 4WD 1500 diesel tractor, 2 cyl, occasionally BushHog/blade work, manual provided; $1800, cash. Jerry D Sterling Calhoun 706-625-8887
Ford 552 round baler, all new belts, new tires good condition: $2,800. Paul McNeal Hazlehurst 912-209-2106 912375-7420
Ford 6600 tractor with 2846 Bush Hog loader: forks, bucket, bale spear; $12,500. Brown 8' pull-type aerator with brand new knives; $7500. Brian Henry Hartwell 864-617-6436
Ford 8-N tractor, refinish, new gas tank, steering wheel; $3700 or trade for old pickup truck. Leave message. Leo Turner Clarkesville 706-754-3087
Ford 801 Diesel, powersteering, very good sheet metal; $2500. Ray Thompson Vidalia 912-281-3030
Ford 8N tractor; gas new front tires; good rear tires, 12 vote system, good metal, new radiator; $2500, obo. Larry Houston Covington 770-235-3082
Ford LN9000 S/A road tractor, Cummings, 7-speed and good lowboy. Harry Puckett Buford 770-655-7354
Ford log hog tractor with 2 pto winches. J. Shelton 241 Salubrity Rd Martin 30557 trucksncars33@hotmail.com 706-969-4244
Ford tractor, 4610, completely rebuilt in the last 300 hours; 24' gooseneck stock trailer, new tires, breaks. Clark Holton Douglas 912-592-8584
Ford Workmaster 601, gas tractor, parade or work, excellent condition w/3 pieces of equipment; $4200, w/o equipment $3700. Ron Smith Hampton 770227-0504
Gill pulverizer, 6', 3 pt. hitch; $750. 6' double wheel cultipacker, 3 pt. hitch; $750. Mike Adams 814 Pinevilla Drive Toccoa 30577 706-886-9617
Grain wagon, $1200. Mike Hulett Hazlehurst 912-253-0162
Hammer mill O.B. Wise, size 12, three screens, runs great, needs minor sheet metal work. ED Weber Barnesville 678588-0459
Hay accumulator for square hay bales. $1000. Keith Isdell Sylvester 229-8091531
Heavy duty tag-a-long trailer approx. 20' including dove tail and ramps. needs new wood and tires. Frame in excellent condition; $1500. Tim Cook Hazlehurst 912-539-3544
International 115 4-bottom flip plow, on-land; $1500. Massey Ferguson 57 4-bottom plow, in-furrow; $1200. Patrick Hogan Fitzgerald 229-425-8394

JD 1720 8-row wide planter; stackfold, insecticide, row cleaners, excellent condition. Lee Nunn Madison 706-3425596
JD 1938 Model G, great condition, runs; $3500. JD model B, great condition; $2000. Joan Mcelroy Rex 770-8436356
JD 4200 HST, 26 HP, 4WD, 420 loader, 900 hrs, 12 implements, all w/ jiffy-hitch. Outstanding package deal; $22,000. Jeffrey Gresch Marietta 770-565-9860
JD 4555, $29,500; JD 4440, $24,000; JD 4230 w/148 loader, $18,500; JD 4040, $15,000; JD 4020, $10,500. Andy Sumner Wrightsville 478-484-6984
JD 5055: 350 hours, (2) 2012 hayforks, 6 ft. rototiller, 4 wheel-drive, canopy: $30,000. Wayne Smith Macon 478-4772567
JD 7810 with JD 4-row strip till rig; tractor has 7000 hrs., excellent shape. Dennis Tucker Dixie 229-506-8775
JD 8270R, 2010 model, 2619 hours, auto steering; JD 7830, 2694 hours; JD 637 harrow, 26.5"; 9-shank subsoiler leveler. Wayne Hobbs Vienna 229-8050712
JD 8ft. hydraulic blade, tilts, offsets, scrapes, smooths, digs roadside ditches, new hoses. David Norvell Monroe 770-354-3453 770-267-8267
JD 9600 combine with 3700 hours with 920 flex head; $2500. Also, 4435 with 920 flex; $8000. Tim Phillips Wrightsville 478-640-1263
JD combine 6620, turbo charged 4-row and 6-row cornhead and 16 ft. rigid head. All in excellent condition; $13500. Glenn Davis Carnesville 706201-9232
John Deere 1990s 790 tractor with front-end loader, back hoe and bush hog: $12,000 OBO. Gary H Peters Lagrange 678-548-6513
John Deere 71 planters, 2 or 4 row. Cole Jernigan Buena Vista 706-5702171
John Deere 8630 w/3 pt hitch, Great Plains twin row planters, 14' Brillion cultipacker. Keith Lord Danielsville 706202-6701
John Deere deer plot drills: 7' and 8' wide, works on 3 pt.hitch; $2400 $2600. Royce Hulett Hazlehurst 912375-3008 912-253-0161
John Deere grain drill, good condition: $3000. Charles Crawley Unadilla 229942-0243
Kobelco SK115DZ excavator, 2 cyl. 102" push blade with heavy duty thumb, 24v fan; $35,000. James Sullivan Vidalia 912-537-4944
Kohler generator, 60 kW-230-460 voltage, will handle 120--240-460, Ford industrial engine, approx. 6 y/o w/125 gallon diesel fuel tan: $8,000. Jesse Arnett Tifton 229-382-6517
Kubota 4030su w/harrows, rotary mower, box blade, dirt scoop, Jiffy Hitch. 3165 hrs., very good condition: $12,500. Greg Hughes Ludowici mer57@windstream.net 912-658-9915
Kubota L2600DT 4WD, under 500 hrs, LB400 frontend loader, Andy 500 bushhog; $10,000, obo. David Murray Powder Springs 251-895-3510
Kubota L3710 HST with LA681 loader, 4x4 ind. tires, 37hp, 1230 hours; $13,000. William J Peterman Macon 478-957-7171
Kubota M5140 tractor with loader, 500 hours, 4WD, industrial tires, one owner; $24,000. Paul Mashburn Cumming 404-234-1897
Kubota M9540, 725 hours, 4WD excellent; $30,000 OBO. Model 3210 Bush Hog mower, excellent; $4500 OBO. Jesse M Black Gainesville 678-617-6852
Land leveler 10 ft. New, never used, full hydraulic lift, universal couplings; $3250. Ron Hulett Milan 912-3635978
Landall Till-all 16" Centerfold: $4500. (2) 570-gall. skid tanks with 110 volt pumps: $800 ea. or $1500 for both. James Swancy Ranger 770-881-0127
Lewis Bros. #2 Housekeeper, works good; $2500. B. Jerry Ferguson Gillsville 770-869-3536
Lewis housekeeper, DB-1, never been used. Darrell Parker Adairsville 770324-8590
Mahindra 2538 tractor, bought new, stored inside, used very little, automatic power steering, 20 hrs. Joe Verdone Lexington 706-743-3994

Manual pine tree planter, 3ph, $400, OBO. 9 ft. 3ph hay fluffer; $450. Jimmy Keith Lagrange 706-884-4923
Manual pine tree planter, ex. condition; $2000. Also, subsoiler plow; $1500. Joe C Chance Ashburn 229-567-4729
Massey Ferguson 135 diesel, 2922 hours, new tires, clutch and pressure plate; $4500. Phil Mcmullan Oxford 770-385-5032
Massey Ferguson 1979, 235 rebuilt engine: $6500. New rotary cutter, $450. Box blade, $300. William Boyette Fortson 912-739-0638
Massey Ferguson 3690, motor excellent, duals, A/C, 6000 hrs, strong tractor; $16,000. Jimmy Forrest Ward jforrest@ dixiebellepeaches.com 803-685-7735
Misc. 8N Ford tractor parts: engine, clutches, block, etc. Call for list. Norman R Cook Buena Vista 229-649-7430
Model 2000 Timber King band mill, dump trailer, Mack log truck, Bob cut trailer, wood splitter, cow trailer. Mark Walker Cartersville 404-451-2714
New Holland 469 haybine. Works really well. Cuts and conditions crop. $2500. Jim Stone Warrenton 706-962-1696
New Holland 648 round baler, sheltered, used last fall; $4500. J Dillard Ausburn Homer 706-677-3740
Niemeyer drum hay mower; $1500. Ford 532 square hay baler; $2500. Deutz Allis round hay baler; $6000. 310B JD backhoe; $7500. All sheltered. Victor P Floyd Pembroke 912-653-2345
Old propane tractor, finishing mower tractor, ,95 Ford F-350 dually, steel 5th wheel trailer. Richard Stafford Monroe 678-559-6449
One roll at a time hay buggy, good condition. Ronnie Lancaster Milan 229362-4619
Post-hole digger, old New Holland manure spreader, lay-off plow, 7' finish mower, all 3pt. hitch, call for prices. W H Turner Brooks 770-401-9648
Rotary mower: Bush Hog 3210, 10', pull-type, CV shaft, front chains, manual: $3300. W.C. Sims Monroe 770-2678090
Sprayer 100 gallon, 15 ft. boom, hand wand, used very little, on wheels or 3 pt. hitch; $600. Thomas R Henderson Chickamauga 706-375-3917
Three-point hitch hydraulic hay forks: $400. Daniel Usry Dearing 706-4664325
Tillsmith rototiller, 4 1/2 hp, new oil, spark plugs, filter, hasn't been used in 3-4 years; $100. Danny Whitworth Dallas 770-443-2685
TO35 Ferguson, 1958, used for show and parades last 20 years; $3500. Robert Cragg Alto 706-499-8063 706-7763318
Toro Greensmaster 3000 Reel Mower - mdl04350-60564. Kohler Magnum 16 Gas Engine - 60 cut$2100.00 Randy Precise Williamson 678-603-1900
Trailer 2014 7'x18' equipment, 2' dovetail, 2- 3500 lb axles, metal ramps, P.T. wood floor, 2 5/16" ball, like new, asking $1800. Mitchell Wages Loganville 770466-2314
Troy-Bilt Tomahawk pro chipper, 10 hp, on wheels, good condition: $350. Charles Brown Blairsville 706-9942500
TroyBilt chipper/shredder. 4HP needs motor work, have many ext. parts and blades; $300. Ed Panebianco Marietta 770-973-0280
TroyBilt roto-tiller, econo horse; $300. 4 ft. BushHog; $200. 4 ft. box scraper; $150. Ralph I Sebacher Sharpsburg 678-378-6650
TroyBilt tiller, top of the line. Kohler, 8HP engine, electric and recoil start, barn kept, very low hours use, well maintained; $900. Larry Lane Sr Danielsville 706-362-7438 706-795-5924
Unferverth zone builder 6-row 30in, rear-packing wheels; $7500/obo. 2 JD 1210A grain carts, upright augers, was used 2017 corn harvest, sheltered; $4500/both Kenny Mehearg Wetumpka 334-399-6448
Yanmar 2000 diesel farm tractor with 5 pieces of equipment, good condition. James Stancil Rabun Gap 770-5190117
Farm Machinery Wanted
14 ft-18 ft metal body for 6 wheel farm truck. Stoney Layfield Tifton 229-8480092

14' enclosed 2 axle trailer, H/D with Looking for a Ford 4000 or 5000 row

barn doors. Ernest Presley Macon 478- crop tractor. Prefer diesel engine. Chuck

284-9265

Phillips Cumming 678-414-2313

140 Farmall with 3 pt. hitch. 3000 Ford Looking for JD 68 feed wagon. Alonzo

running or retainable. Nelson Massey Walden Glennville 912-266-4093

Conyers 770-483-2639

Older Vicon disc mower for parts.

1967-1972 Chevrolet farm trucks Need drill for 2610 Long tractor. Sher-

for parts, running or not. Roger Holley man Smith Trenton 706-657-8812 423-

Wrightsville 478-232-8381

645-3709

3 pt. hitch backhoe for 40 to 50 H.P. Rear tractor tire for A John Deere size

tractor, hydraulic or PTO. Horace Cham- 13-6-38. Hubert Fleming Elberton 706-

bers Sr. Milledgeville 478-456-4400 283-6321

3" hard hose traveler irrigation pan. Want to buy one-wheel garden til-

Prefer Hobbs. Jimmy Miller Donalson- ler (Plow Hoss, Power Wheel, Won-

ville 229-400-6411

der Plow), running or not. Terry Brown

4 or 5 HP electric motor. Larry Dove Chatsworth 706-463-3480

Franklin Springs 706-498-3438

Want: 100g or larger syrup kettle, will

Beaird-Poulan chainsaw wanted; `54, pay reasonable price and pick up. Henry `68, `72. Jim Shockley Milner 770-229- Hine Conyers 404-310-6490

5462

Winch radial arm saw, good condition.

Bucket for 7209 Ford front end loader, Robert Worley Rome 706-766-3578

very good shape only. Scott Moye Pine Woodmizer Super hydraulic LT40 with

Mountain Valley 706-457-2145

trailer package. Must be in good condi-

BushHog, 10' rigid deck to 15' flex tion and able to demonstrate. Andy Adwing. Must be in top condition. Frank ams Hartwell andyadams2005@yahoo.

Freeman Plains 229-942-0939

com 706-436-7031

Carburetor for 1950 8N. Jim Barry Comer 706-224-4814

FARM SUPPLIES

Donor tractor 3006 Deutz parts need- If you have questions regarding ads

ed. Liftrods, stabilizing chains, etc. Bill in this category, call 404-656-3722.

Berry Cataula 706-681-4760

(1) 250 gallon propane tank, no rust/

Drawbar and attachments for 80R fresh pain; $250. Earl Smith Canton

twin-wheel AC sickle mower for D-12 770-344-8721

or D-14 AC tractors. Marvin W Garrett Gillsville 770-869-7618

(1) 300- and (1) 350-gallon propane tank for sale. Sandra Smith Covington

Empire tractor or lead on locating one. 770-337-0160

Any condition/location. Call or text. David & Noralie Hering Cassville 913-9086955 770-835-5509

(2) 22-ton feed bins, Chore-Time, no rust; $1000 each. Can load. Donald Morrison Folkston 912-614-8968

Field cultivator with 9 shanks. Harry Taylor Macon 478-718-7173 478-4744709

1000 gallon fuel tank, single wall, currently used above ground in containment wall; $1100. Fred Jarrell Butler

Ford backhoe 445, parts or complete 478-847-4301 478-862-5301

unit. Neal Spooner Iron City 229-2056450

10KW generator; $500. Edsel Orr Cumming 770-887-3348 770-280-5998

Garden purpose small harrow, small turning plow for small garden tractor,

250 gallon propane tank, half full; $300. Randy Milam Tyrone 770-964-2920

3pt. hitch. Call if you have one. Robert R Roberson Fitzgerald 912-269-0578

275+ gallon plastic tank/tote in metal cage; 5" top caps, bottom valve: $50. C.

Good used hay cutter, prefer 8' or 9'. Stovall Dahlonega 678-491-0838

Vernon A Copeland Waverly 912-2611459 912-230-4857

3.5'Wx8'L portable lighted sign w/ adjustable legs, two new boxes of let-

Ice cream freezer, gasoline-powered. ters/numbers; $375. After 10 AM. Sam

John Bontrager Fayetteville 770-487- Saliba Marietta 770-514-1431

1727

4 telephone poles, 30 ft. 4 or 5 half

Jonsered 930 chainsaw. Running or poles, 10-12 ft. Good fence posts. $25

not. Hydraulic front block for 800 Ford per long pole. You make offer for all.

tractor. Scott Odom Buford 770-945- Clarence Mccorkle Thomson 706-466-

7945

1105

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

Livestock Sales and Events Calendar

APPLING COUNTY
1st & 3rd Saturdays, 1 p.m.: Goats, sheep, small animals, feeder pigs; S&D Livestock, 187 Industrial Drive, Baxley; Call Steve Smith, 912.366.9207 or 912.278.1460
ATKINSON COUNTY
2nd & 4th Saturdays, 1 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Pearson Livestock, 1168 Highway 441 N, Pearson; Call Roberto Silveria, 229.798.0271
BARTOW COUNTY
Every Wednesday, 1 p.m.: Cattle, goats, sheep; The New Peoples Livestock Mkt., 407 Burnt Hickory Road, Cartersville; Call Haynie Cochran, 770.547.1717; Phil Tuck, 770.881.0502
BEN HILL COUNTY
Every Monday, 1 p.m.: Cattle; South Central Livestock, 146 Broad Road, Fitzgerald. Call Thomas Stripling, 229.423.4400 or 229.423.4436
BLECKLEY COUNTY
2nd& 4th 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 Livestock, 813 Old Villa Rica Road, Temple. Call Ricky Summerville, 404.787.1865
Every Monday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Carroll County Livestock Sales Barn, 225 Salebarn Road, Carrollton. Call Barry Robinson, 770.834.6608 or 770.834.6609
CHATTOOGA COUNTY
Every Friday, 7 p.m.: Goats, sheep; Trion Livestock Auction, 15577 Hwy. 27, Trion. Call McKinley Evans, 678.276.5127
CLARKE COUNTY
Every Wednesday, 11 a.m.: Goats and sheep; noon, cattle. Northeast Georgia Livestock, 1200 Winterville Road, Athens. Call Todd Stephens, 706.549.4790
Thursday, Feb. 8, Noon: UGA 26th annual Focus on EPDs Bull Sale; Selling 40 Angus and Lim-Flex Bulls, six registered Angus heifers and 15 Angus and Angus-cross commercial heifers. UGA Livestock Instructional

Arena, Athens. Call Carroll T. Cannon, 229.881.0721; cannonmarketingcompany@ gmail.com.
COLQUITT COUNTY
Every Wednesday, 1 p.m.: Cattle; Moultrie Livestock Co., 1200 1st Street NE, Moultrie. Call Randy Bannister, 229.985.1019
COOK COUNTY
1st, 3rd & 5th Saturdays, 1 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Deer Run Auction, 1158 Parrish Road, Adel; Call John Strickland, 229.896.4553
DECATUR COUNTY
2nd & 4th Saturdays, 1 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Waddell Auction Co., 979 Old Pelham Road, Climax. Call John Waddell, 229.246.4955
EMANUEL COUNTY
Every Monday, 1 p.m.: Cattle, slaughter hogs; Swainsboro Stockyard, 310 Lambs Bridge Road, Swainsboro. Call Clay Floyd and David N. Floyd, 478.945.3793
2nd & 4th Saturdays, noon: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; R&R Goat & Livestock Auction, 526 Hwy. 56 N, Swainsboro. Call Ron & Karen Claxton, 478.237.4628 or 478.237.8825
Every Tuesday, 10 a.m. & 1st Fridays: Cattle special sale; Dixie Livestock Market, 133 Old Hwy. 46, Oak Park. Call Willis & Tammy Sikes, 912.578.3263
FORSYTH COUNTY
Every Tuesday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Lanier Farm's Livestock Corp., 8325 Jot-Em Down Road, Gainesville. Call Tyler Bagwell, 770.844.9223 or 770.844.9231
FRANKLIN COUNTY
Every Tuesday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Franklin County Livestock Sales, 6461 Stone Bridge Road, Carnesville. Call Chad and Clay Ellison, 706.384.2975 or 706.384.2105
GORDON COUNTY
Every Thursday, 12:30 p.m.: Cattle, goats, sheep, slaughter hogs; Calhoun Stockyard Hwy. 53, 2270 Rome Road SW, Calhoun. Call Dennis Little & Gene Williams, 706.629.1900
GREENE COUNTY
Every Thursday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Duvall Livestock Market, 101 Apalachee Ave., Greensboro. Call Jim Malcom, 706.453.7368
JEFF DAVIS COUNTY
1st & 3rd Fridays: Horse sale, 7:30 p.m.; Circle Double S, 102 Lumber City Highway, Hazlehurst. Call Steve Underwood, 912.594.6200 (night) or 912.375.5543 (day)

JOHNSON COUNTY
1st & 3rd Mondays, 7:30 p.m.: Chickens; Ol' Times Auction, 503 Hill Salter Road, Kite. Call Robert Colston, 478.299.6240
JONES COUNTY
Every Saturday, 6 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; 5 p.m., farm miscellaneous, Ga. Lic. #3188; Buggy Town Auction, 1035 Hwy. 11, Gray. Call Jimmy Burnett 770.584.0388 or 678.972.4599
LAMAR COUNTY
Every Friday, 6 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; 5 p.m., farm miscellaneous, Ga. Lic. #3188; Buggy Town Auction Market, 1315 Highway 341 S, Barnesville. Call James Burnette 770.584.0388 or 678.972.4599
LAURENS COUNTY
2nd & 4th Thursday, 6 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Horse Creek Auction Co., 5971 Hwy. 441 S, Dublin. Call Daniel Harrelson, 478.595.5418
MADISON COUNTY
Every Friday, 6 p.m.: Chickens, small animals; Gray Bell Animal Auction, Hwy. 281, Royston. Call Billy Joe Bell, 706.245.4205
MARION COUNTY
Every Thursday, 7 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Auction 41, 4275 GA Hwy. 41 N, Buena Vista. Call Jim Rush, 706.326.3549. Email auction41@ windstream.net
NEWTON COUNTY
2nd & 4th Saturdays: Pony Express Stockyard Horse & Tack Auction, 5 p.m.; GAL AUNR002843; 1852 Highway 11 S, Covington. Call Scott Bridges, 704.434.6389 or 704.473.8715
PULASKI COUNTY
Every Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.: Cattle, goats, sheep; Pulaski County Stockyard, 1 Houston Street, Hawkinsville. Call John Walker, 478.892.9071
SEMINOLE COUNTY
Every Wednesday, 1:30 p.m., 3rd Saturday Special Sale, 1:30 p.m.: Cattle, goats, sheep; Seminole Stockyard, 5061 Hwy. 91, Donalsonville. Call Bryant Garland and Edwina Skipper, 229.524.2305
STEPHENS COUNTY
2nd Saturdays, 5 p.m.: W&W Livestock, Eastanollee Livestock Auction, Eastanollee. Call Brad Wood, 864.903.0296
3rd Saturdays, noon: Goats, sheep; Agri Auction Sales at Eastanollee Livestock Market, Highway 17 between Toccoa and Lavonia. Call Ricky Chatham, 706.491.2812 or Jason Wilson, 706.491.8840

Every Monday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Eastanollee Livestock, 40 Cattle Drive, Eastanollee. Call Mark Smith, 706.779.5944
TAYLOR COUNTY
1st & 3rd Tuesdays, 6:30 p.m.: Feeder pigs, goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; RockRidge Livestock Auction, 1357 Tommy Purvis Jr. Road, Reynolds. Call Melba Strickland, 706.975.5732
TELFAIR COUNTY
2nd & 4th Thursdays: Chickens, fowl, goats and sheep; check-in at 1 p.m., sale at 6:30 p.m. Horse Creek Auction, between Dublin and McRae off Highway 441. Call 478.595.5418
THOMAS COUNTY
Every Tuesday, 1 p.m.: Cattle. 1st & 3rd Tuesdays: Slaughter hogs; Thomas County Stockyards, 20975 Hwy. 19 N, Thomasville. Call Jimmy P. Benton, 229.228.6960
TOOMBS COUNTY
1st & 3rd Saturdays, 11 a.m.: Feeder pigs, goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Metter Livestock Auction, 621 Hwy. 1 S, Lyons. Call Lewie Fortner, 478.553.6066
TURNER COUNTY
Every Wednesday, 1 p.m.: Cattle; Turner County Stockyards, 1315 Hwy. 41 S, Ashburn. Call Alan Wiggins, 229.567.3371
UPSON COUNTY
Every Thursday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep. L&K Farmers Livestock Market, 2626 Yatesville Hwy., Thomaston. Call Kathy and Lewis Rice, 706.468.0019.
WHITE COUNTY
Every Saturday, 4 p.m.: Goats, sheep, chickens, small animals; Coker's Sale Barn, 9648 Duncan Bridge Road, Cleveland. Call Wayne Coker Sr., 706.540.8418
WILKES COUNTY
Every Wednesday, noon: Cattle, goats, sheep; Wilkes County Stockyard, Hwy. 78 Bypass/302 Third Street, Washington. Call Kenny Durden and Linda Robertson, 706.678.2632
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.

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2018
50 fence posts: dried red cedar, 4-8 inch diameter, 6-7 feet long; $5-$10 each. Mike Potts Conyers 770-679-4262
Air/kiln dried lumber all species. T&G flooring & molding & we cut your logs. Call for quotes. Andy Adams Hartwell crystal@fabritex.com 706-376-8968
All equipment for 100' breeder pullet dark out poultry house, Choretime feeder, bell, waters. Billy Witt Calhoun 706-629-7412
Apple grader/sorter, has stored in shed several years. Call for more info and to make offer. Kyle Holcomb Ellijay 404661-3813
Brick for sale, old, not cleaned. Insert wood heater; $500. Treated fencing; $150. Evelyn S. Sims Hull 706-7882135
Cattle head gates, steel, heavy-duty, easy operated; $350 each. 3 pt. hitch hay spears; $185 each. William P Harris Elberton 706-283-6615
Custom-cut lumber, Wood-Mizer sawn, kiln-dried, milled for homes, flooring, cabinetry, barns, fencing, restorations. timber frames. John Sell Milner 770-480-2326
DIY wiring connector leads, four auxiliary equipment circuits or portable power application. sae2pin.com Raymond Bowers Eatonton 302-562-1706
Gator tires, 24x12x10, new mud tread by Inndra. Never mounted. Graham Thompson Danville 478-308-1317
Hannay hose reel, 12 volt, E1520-1718 with hose PSI 300; $150. Donald Matthews Stockbridge 770-474-2742
Heavy duty 3/8" 25' forged chain, with hooks. Two forged heavy chain binders; $150 for all. David Combs Jefferson 706-367-4107
Large load of treated lumber 2x6-8, 8-10-16 ft; $300. Connie Powell Monticello 706-476-0637 770-545-9339
Locust fence posts and rails. Barney Cook Blairsville 706-745-8724 706994-2600
New galvanized tin; (2) 23'x3' and (16) 20'x3'; $1.30 per/ft. Reginald Cochran Lula 770-539-0368
Old hand hewn log cabin. Can deliver & set up. Kerry Hix Chatsworth 706695-6431
PH Equip., 48" fans, computers, motors, windpower, PH tiller, 325k heaters, fogger pump. Harold Hill Homer 706677-3916
Sawmill blade with insert; 42"; $200. Lamar Bryant Cleveland 706-878-8509
Sawmill lumber- pine, oak, walnut, cedar, portable sawing @.35 bdft boards, beams, slabs, turning blocks, firewood. Todd Chaney Cartersville 404-861-7402
Shenandoah zone control brooders. Chore-Time feed hopper switches. Dimmers and timers. Leave a message. Marcus Dyer Calhoun 931-808-1122
Strawberry farm supplies, row covers, buckets, cardboard flats, quarts, signs, 15 gal. ATV mount sprayer, irrigation supplies. Jason Amstutz Resaca 706299-3033
Two 1-ton feed bin; $500. Two fence line hay feeder, 6 ft. long; $400. Nancy England 4373 E Hall Rd Gainesville 30507 770-532-8818
Wanted: Farm wagon with ball hitch in usable condition. Approx. 12' long. Double axel. Joe And Pat Burns Lawrenceville joeb@color-burst.com 678591-9422
Woodmizer lumber, 1x12 pine, poplar, oak trailer flooring, any thickness. Larry Moore Newnan 678-278-5709
Get your Georgia Grown apparel today!
www.georgiagrown.com

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2018

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov

PAGE 5

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.
(2) Reg. LimFlex breeding age bulls, docile, low birth weight; free delivery. Sid Arnold Nicholson 706-207-6113
(20) 2 y/o Polled Hereford bulls, 16 bred PH cows calving now, top bloodlines. James Jeanes Macon 478-9720912
(8) black Angus heifers, purebred, and (5) black w/whiteface, vaccinated, ready to breed: $875, can deliver. Jeff Williams Milan 229-315-1261
1/2 Angus, 1/2 Hereford bull, black w/ white face, DOB 3/2015, fertility tested, very docile; calf easy with our heifers: $1800 OBO. Heath Brodnax Thomaston 706-938-8537
10 registered 2 y/o Angus bulls: semen-tested, forage-fed. Free delivery within 100 miles: $1800. Allen Ellicott Abbeville 229-401-8590
11 purebred black Angus bulls: 1,2,3 years old, docile, vaccinated, AI'd & natural service. K. Schwock Homer 404-735-9524
2 black Angus bulls, 4 years old, full ET brothers. Sired by SAV 1867, dam's sire SAV Providence.. Brian Hart La Fayette brianhart@windstream.net 706-996-5070
2-year-old SimAngus bulls for sale. Buddy Fordham Cochran 478-9342226 478-308-4550
25 replacement quality heifers, mixed Simmental/Angus, exposed to LBW registered Angus bull, priced by size. Ron Elliott Mansfield 404-538-2904
3 AI-sired SimAngus bulls, 2 almost 2 y/o, 1 almost 18 m/o, very gentle, ready for use. Edward Allen Marble Hill 770894-2195
30 yearling Braford bulls. 20 coming 2 yr old Hereford bulls. Jonny Harris Odum 912-586-6585
4 Angus, 2nd calf pairs, 350 lb calves. Dave Davis Commerce 770-616-6038
4 black Angus bulls, 1 to 3 y/o. Joseph Bartolone Madison 609-226-2614
40 Brangus cross replacement heifers, ages 13 and 14 m/o. Ricky Wehunt Hoschton 706-254-2639
ABS semen tank, MVE2000 XC20, 20 week hold, five y/o; 140 units Limousin, 9 units Angus, complete AI kit: $750. Calvin Minchew Macon 478-951-1697
AHA registered polled miniature Hereford bull calf, calved 9/25/17; homozygous polled bloodlines. Conce Ranch Montezuma conceranch@gmail.com 478-345-3307
Angus, Gelbvieh, Beefmaster cows, some are registered, all for sale due to my health. Gene Cantrell Monroe trailblazeroo7@yahoo.com 770-312-6224
Bermuda/Bahia mixed hay, 4x5 net rolls; $30 per bale. J M or Rickey Ricketson 626 Wh Smith Rd Denton 31532 912-359-3675
Black Angus and SimAngus bulls, cow/calf pairs, and heifers. Turnpike Creek Farms, sale Saturday, Feb. 3. Derek T Williams Milan 229-315-0986
Black Angus bull, born 12/12/16; docile, UGA H.E.R.D. program offspring: $1200. Matthew Sanford Chatsworth mattsanford3@hotmail.com 706-463-2141
Black Angus bulls, nice, 1 y/o, five to choose from. Kenneth Jones Greenville 706-672-4845
Black Angus heifers, 45, 750 lbs, Aug.; $1100 each. Troy Chandler Danielsville 706-338-9144
Black Gelbvieh Balancer bull, ET BOB 9-20-1012 Dam Ver Lee Ann 309MET Sire JDPD 140w: $2500. Dan Paulk Ambrose 912-359-3330
Calving ease, milking ability, gentleness, registered polled Shorthorn bulls/ show heifers/steers, excellent quality, Club Calf member. Kenneth R Bridges Commerce 706-768-3480

Dairy/beef cross and beef calves available. Guaranteed colostrum. Multimin 90 and triangle 5. Come see me. Brittney Peters Social Circle 470-334-1933
Dexter cattle "17:" 2 black bulls, one polled; 1 black heifer; 1 Dunn heifer, purebred, no papers, sire was registered. Gary Vaughn Sparta 706-444-5059
Excellent 22 m/o bull, 3/4 Angus/1/4 Limousin: $2500. 3 yearling, similar breeding: $1500. Harrison McDonald Jefferson 706-713-7176 706-713-6222
Fullblood Senepol red and black bulls for sale. Bobby Griffin Elko 478-2300422
Hereford bulls, $2000 each. Fully tested, top bloodlines. Hardy Edwards Winterville 706-714-9012
High quality registered Angus bulls, 12-24 mo, A.I. sired by All-In, DNA/BSE tested, LBW, gentle; $2000 up. Ken Mcmichael Monticello 706-819-9295
Polled shorthorn bulls, breeding age, excellent quality; $1200. David Nixon Commerce 706-255-9837
Purebred black Angus bulls for sale. Eric Hutto Alma 912-286-0568
Purebred black Angus, 18 m/o, can be registered, UTD on vaccinations: $1450. Sarah Mims Fort Valley 478-442-2112
Red Angus Bulls: 10 yearling, (5) 2 y/o; registered, ready to go: $1500 to $2000. Western blood lines. Michael Smith Newnan 770-301-1945
Reg. Angus bulls, excellent quality and EPDs, low birth weight, delivery available. Windell Gillis Eastman 478-2318236
Reg. Angus bulls, Gar Prophet bloodline. Semen tested. Great EPDs; $2500. Free delivery within 100 miles. Vernon Hagen Douglasville 404-520-4511
Registered black Angus bull, 5 y/o, gentle, semen tested; $1800. Ricky Hix Comer 706-248-5851
Registered black Angus bulls, 12-15 m/o. $1250. Eugene Ridley La Fayette 706-764-6110
Registered black Angus Bulls, 16 m/o, delivery available; calving ease for use on heifers or cows. Steve Deal Statesboro 912-531-3549
Registered Black Angus Bulls, superior genetics, 2+YO, Predestined sire, LBW, $2,500. 5 weaned. $1,200 for younger bulls. Allen Morris Mount Vernon southerncrossangusfarm@gmail.com 912-293-6471
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 black, polled, gentle SimAngus bull, Mytty in Focus grandson, CE 11.9, BW 1.7, WW 77.3, YW 19.5, calves on site. Morris Shields Crandall 706-328-3087
Registered Charolais and SimAngus bulls, cow-ready, low birth weights, semen and BVD tested, gentle, good selection, delivery available. Curtiss Kicliter Marshallville 478-967-2940 479-396-1537
Registered Hereford bull, 3 y/o: $2500. Darrell McCoy Greenville 706-977-9269
Registered Hereford heifers, 8 - 10 m/o: $750. 3 y/o bull: $1700. Older cowcalf pair: $1000. Ricky Worsham Macon 478-745-6642
Registered polled Hereford bulls, rugged, pasture-raised, gentle, excellent bloodlines/EPDs, small calves, excellent growth. Bobby R Brantley Tennille 478553-8598
Registered purebred black polled Simmental bulls. 12-16 months old. Steve Watson Dawsonville 706-429-5349
Registered red Angus heifers and bulls, 13-14 months, excellent bloodline and EPDs. Easy calving. Jorge Haber Midland 706-323-2405
Registered red Angus heifers and bulls, vac. cycling, good EPDs, ready for spring breeding. Ronald Williams Cochran 478-934-6998
Registered, polled Shorthorn bulls/ show heifers/steers, excellent quality, calving ease, milking ability, gentleness, Club Calf member. Ken And Kay Bridges Commerce 706-768-3480
Santa Gertrudis, registered, weaning- and yearling-aged heifers and bulls. Santa Gertrudis/Hereford cross weaning-aged heifers. John Loughridge Chatsworth jaloughridge@aol.com 706-270-4518

Selling registered Charolais herd (farm) due to illness. S R Reed Waynesboro 706-437-1477 706-551-0317
SimAngus bulls, 2 year olds and yearlings, low birth weight, gentle: $2500. Keith Thrasher Carlton 706-296-4031
Simmental and Simbrah young bulls and heifers. Cliff Adams Bowdon 770258-2069
Superior registered Charolais cattle; cows, bulls, heifers and calves. Bobby Burch Eastman 478-718-2128
Texas Longhorns, 2 yearling heifers; $750 each. 2 yearling bulls; $650 each, 1 yearling bull; $750. Wayne Hughes Molena 706-647-9782
Two y/o registered Angus bulls available for sale. Contact for more info. Robert Nichols Warm Springs 706329-4688
Angus, Gelbvieh, Beefmaster cows, some are registered, all for sale due to my health. Gene Cantrell Monroe 770312-6224
Swine
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers submitting swine ads must submit proof of a negative brucellosis and pseudorabies test from within the past 30 days. Exceptions are swine from a validated brucellosisfree and qualified pseudorabies-free herd; these operations must submit proof of that certification. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the test needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the test can be attached using the attachments button. Buyers are urged to request proof of a negative brucellosis and pseudorabies test prior to purchase.
Large black pigs, male and female, DOB: 04/06/17, ready for pickup. Belinda Schell Fort Valley 478-954-3840
Goats And Sheep
If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
10 month old Boer Bucks, $275 & $325. Steve Gore Tallapoosa 770-574-2829
17 goats, male and female, 3 m/o to 3 y/o, wormed and healthy: all for $1500. James Hendrix Blackshear 912-2895523
2 month old Nubian/Toggenburg babies. Will make excellent milkers. Will send pics. Lee Holloway Greenville 706-672-0015
2 white buck, 8 mos. 2 black buck, 8 mos. No registered. Can be. William W Landress Loganville 678-414-2505
2-year-old Pygmy billy, proven breeder, selling to prevent inbreeding, not for slaughter; $100. Barbara Mccommons Dallas rogercmccommons@bellsouth. net 404-790-5420
Approx. 30 nannies, 50 babies, 1 registered Kiko billy. Sell as whole only. Jeff Dorsey Nashville 229-445-1278
Boer bucks 9-10 months old. Traditional and dapple. Pictures available. Deborah Shuman Winterville 706-5468610
Goats. Boer and Billy mix Kikos. Young goats. H.N. Ralston Eatonton 706-4733119
Handsome brown Boer mix billy, born Sept. 17 2017. Very sweet personality. $75. S. Jakes Williamson 678-5884482
Low Country Morefield Spanish buck, forage-fed, cashmere coat: $350. Peacock Hill Farm. Thora Davis Stockbridge 770-860-8989
Milking, registered Purebred Nubian does, also doelings. Roy Stanaland 1153 Salem Church Rd Jasper 30143 770-337-3162
Nigerian Dwarfs, 3 doelings: 8 wks-6 months, bucklings: 8 weeks, colorful, dehorned, registered, small, beautiful. Pat Daniel Sandersville 478-456-5535
Purebred Kikos, male and female, female has 3 babies by male, 3 weeks old, 1 male and 2 female. $500 for all. Stephen Shaw Cedartown 678-988-0544
Wanted: Pair of Nigerian dwarf goats, unrelated, reasonably priced, within 75 miles. Joe Futch Adel 229-896-2055
White Dorper ram. Yearling. Ready for service. Great genetics. Registered. $350. Kevin Campbell Mcdonough 770-274-9093
Young male Briar goats; $50 and up. John Truitt Kathleen 478-987-6960

Stock Dogs

Beautiful palomino mare, easy ride, gentle, used on trail, grief/emotional

If you have questions regarding ads in therapy, approx. 15 hands, 29 years;

this category, call 404-656-3722.

$600. Miniature horse; $250. Scarlett

Advertisers must submit a copy of Yow Canton 770-569-1212

a current Rabies Vaccination Certifi- Donkeys available. Gene Register

cate signed by a licensed veterinar- Homerville 912-487-1211

ian for dogs 12 weeks and older. Ads Jenny donkey, 4 y/o, grey, been with

submitted without this information heard of cows, good pasture guard.

will not be published.

Jackie Copelan Greensboro 706-474-

AKC registered Bloodhound puppies. 5066

Black and tan and liver and tan. Vet- Miniature donkey, 9 m/o male, dark

checked, shots and worming up to date. color; email for pictures; mother/father

Jerry Atkins Dublin 478-279-1163

on farm, runs with cows. Chaz Holt Tay-

Anatolian shepherds: UTD shots, avail- lorsville montanaholt@gmail.com 406-

able 2/8/18, 8 w/o; raised with goats. 425-3039

Males, $250; females, $300. Jim Willis Miniature horse, mare, bred, 7 years

Rupert 478-862-5749

old, gentle; $225. Can deliver. Wynn Co-

Australian cattle dog/Blue Heeler: pelan Greensboro 706-453-7687

male, neutered, 1 y/o; UTD on vaccines; needs lots of activity and attention. Tom

Equine At Stud

Cowan Conyers 678-977-7975

If you have questions regarding ads in

Female Great Pyrenees puppy, born this category, call 404-656-3722.

11/10/17; raised with goats, parents and

grandparents on site: $250. Call or text. Andy Givhan Rydal 770-655-0578

Equine Miscellaneous

Great Pyrenees puppies, born 11/7/17: If you have questions regarding ads in one male, two females, wormed, shots, this category, call 404-656-3722.

parents on premises. Sydney Mabe 100 years old, barn kept: one horse

Dawsonville 706-265-7778

sled homemade, red; $175. Wagon;

Kangal livestock guardian dog, stud $1175. John Fleming Hartwell 770-718-

service fee $2,000 with registered 6740

male. Peacock Hill Farm. Eleanor Davis Pioneer riding turning plow. Also

Stockbridge 770-860-8989

horse-drawn riding cultivator. F.C. Col-

Equine For Sale

lins Blairsville 706-745-6720 Silver show saddle and bridle, groom-

If you have questions regarding ads in ing items, bits, leg wraps and stable

this category, call 404-656-3722.

blankets. Patti McLeroy Kathleen tm-

Advertisers in the Equine for Sale or cleroy@windstream.net 478-987-0019

Equine at Stud categories must sub- Two draft harnesses, used little, good

mit current negative Coggins tests for shape, some mildew from storage:

each equine advertised. This includes $300. Western saddle, $40. James Fly-

horses, ponies, donkeys, etc. Buyers nn Box Springs 706-566-4882

are urged to request verification of a negative Coggins from the advertiser before purchasing any equine. Negative Coggins reports are valid for 12 months from the date the blood sam-

Wedge seat for carriage driving, 15" wide; $20. Photo available upon request. Valette Adkins Milledgeville 478968-5261

ple is drawn. Falsification or altering

Boarding Facilities

of any Coggins results can result in fines and suspension of advertising privileges. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the Coggins needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the Coggins can be attached

If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers must submit a current stable license in order to advertise boarding and breeding facilities. Ads

using the attachments button. Gen- submitted without this information will

eralized ads, such as "many horses," not be published. For questions re-

"variety to choose from," etc., will not garding licenses and applications, call

be published. Equine at Stud ads will 404-656-3713.

also require a current stable license in order to be published.
8 year old, bay and white, SSH gelding, good with feet, gentle, rides great and loads great. Tony Green Fairmount 770-605-0888 706-337-2467
Beautiful black riding pony, 4 years

FIND GEORGIA'S BEST
LOCALLY GROWN

old, 9 hands, super gentle, can deliver; $600 cash. Janice Wilkes Bogart 706-

FOODS

207-9366

Online at georgiagrown.com

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PAGE 6

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2018

Cook Georgia Grown:
Roast Pork Tenderloin with Blackberry Mustard Glaze and Blueberry Succotash

Roast Pork
Sear whole tenderloin on all sides, rub with 3 BEERS GARLIC HERB RUB*, salt and pepper. Place in a 425 degree oven, reduce heat to 375 degrees and roast for 10-12 minutes. Remove from oven, brush all sides with Blackberry Mustard Glaze, return to oven for additional 10-15 minutes or until pork reaches an internal temp of 140 to 145 at the thickest part of the meat. Transfer to a cutting board, tent with foil and allow to rest for 10 minutes before slicing and serving.
Blackberry Mustard Glaze
cup ABBY J's JALAPENO MUSTARD SAUCE* cup LAURI JO's BLACKBERRY PEPPER JELLY* 2 tablespoons 3 BEERS GARLIC HERB RUB* Salt & Pepper to taste
Combine all ingredients until ready to apply. Store in airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.
Succotash
Ingredients 2 tablespoons OLIVER FARMS OKRA OIL* pound fresh or frozen baby butter or lima beans cup chopped andouille (Can sub smoked turkey
or ham) 1 cup sliced fresh or frozen okra, thawed 1 cup chopped Vidalia onion cup chopped sweet bell pepper (green, red,
yellow, orange or combination) 3 BEERS GARLIC RUB* tablespoon brown sugar 1 teaspoon kosher salt, or to taste teaspoon freshly cracked black pepper, or to taste 2 teaspoons fresh, chopped parsley 1 tablespoon unsalted butter, or 1/8 cup heavy
cream 1 container, 6oz, fresh blueberries, tossed in just
prior to serving
Instructions If using fresh corn, cook or roast until tender. Meanwhile, add butterbeans to a small saucepan and cover with water. Bring to a boil, boil for 3 minutes, reduce to simmer and cook for 15 minutes, or until mostly tender. Drain, setting aside 1/2 cup of

the cooking water. Rinse beans and set aside. Cook the onions and sausage (turkey or ham) in 2 tablespoons of the OLIVER FARMS OKRA OIL* in a large skillet, remove sausage with a slotted spoon and leave drippings in the skillet. Chop sausage and transfer to the beans. Add the okra to the drippings and cook for about 3 minutes or until lightly browned. Add bell pepper and cook another 4 minutes until softened; add the garlic rub and cook another minute.
Add the corn, sugar, butter beans, meat and seasonings to the skillet. Add some of the reserved cooking water, a little at a time, only if mixture is too dry. Reduce heat to medium low, cook and stir until everything is heated through, add tomatoes, parsley. Stir in butter or cream until warmed through; taste and adjust seasonings as needed. Serve immediately.
TO PLATE: Spoon the Succotash onto a large platter and place the sliced pork loin on top. Garnish with additional parsley and fresh blueberries.
*Source Georgia Grown products at GeorgiaGrown.com

Georgie's Drive
through Cordele
Hello, I'm Georgie, the Georgia Grown mascot. I travel the state promoting the Georgia Grown program. Last week I was in Cordele, the Watermelon Capital of the World, and noticed something I hadn't paid attention to in years. Sitting at the corner of Interstate 75 and U.S. Highway 280 is a huge missile. My uncle Melvin told me when I was a pup that it belonged to the Krystal next door, so we called it the Krystal Missile. My aunt Rita told me that aliens landed in Cordele on that rocket, but I figured that was made up because the numbers on the side were in English. That's the kind of litter I was raised in. I found out the rocket really came to Cordele in the 1960s. Back then, the Rotary Club wanted something to catch travelers' attention going down the new interstate. So the Rotary president, a retiree from the Air Force, made a phone call. The owner of the Holiday Inn nearby donated land for the missile, and it's been there ever since. They got the missile for free -- well, on loan from the US Air Force. Because, I suppose, it would be illegal to own a Titan Intercontinental Ballistic Missile...

Tractor Supply, FFA looking for FFA projects to fund Grants for Growing applications open through Feb. 14

BRENTWOOD, Tenn. Local FFA chapters in search of funding for their next animal science lab, community garden or other noteworthy agricultural projects, take note. Tractor Supply Company, the largest rural lifestyle retailer in the United States, will soon launch its third annual Grants for Growing campaign a competitive grant program designed to support local FFA chapters across the country that want to make a difference in their communities through sustainable agriculture-focused projects.
To qualify for a grant, FFA advisors must visit http://www.FFA.org/ grantsforgrowing and submit an application by Feb. 14. The submission process requires entrants to provide a detailed proposal, including how they will start, maintain or expand on a project that will benefit their communities.
Grants, which are awarded to chapters in the spring, have a minimum value of $500 and a maximum value of $5,000.
Since 2016, Grants for Growing has raised more than $1.4 million for the National FFA Organization, including a record-setting $731,000 in 2017. In total, the initiative has funded 692 grants supporting projects involving 69,134 students.
"FFA is well known for its civic-centered initiatives, and Grants for Growing is Tractor Supply's way of supporting the students who are striving to make their communities better, more sustainable places," said Jessica Holmes, marketing manager at Tractor Supply Company. "Whether it's a project focused around greenhouse development, public landscaping or livestock, by applying for a grant FFA advisors help increase their students' ability to make long-term community impacts."
To support the program, Tractor Supply will host a 10-day in-store fundraising period Feb. 1625, which will give customers the opportunity to donate at checkout. All in-store donations will remain within the state they are donated.
For more details about the program, visit https://www.FFA.org/grantsforgrowing.

Lee Lancaster/GDA

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, JANUARY 31, 2018

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov

PAGE 7

Guest Column:
Protect yourself and others from the flu

Editor's Note:
Back in the saddle again, sort of

By Edwin W. Grimsley,
MD, MACP
Winter months bring short days, cold weather and increased risk of respiratory illnesses. Influenza (flu) is certainly one of the most feared and debilitating of these illnesses. Flu can occur any time of the year, but is much more common in the winter and early spring months, because people spend more time in close contact with one another in winter, and influenza virus is more stable and stays in the air longer when air is cold and dry the ideal conditions for flu season. The name influenza may originate from an Italian word meaning "influence of the cold." Flu spreads easily from person to person through coughing, sneezing or touching surfaces contaminated by the flu virus. Flu symptoms can vary, but usually patients experience a sudden onset of high fever (greater than 100.5 degrees Fahrenheit), chills, headache, muscle aches, extreme fatigue and chest discomfort. Sometimes they have a sore throat and stuffy nose, though these are much more common with a cold. Fever is also rare with a cold. Generally, a cold is more of an aggravation, whereas the flu is severe. The fever of flu usually lasts for two to five days. Some people may experience flu complications. The most common complication is pneumonia, which can lead to hospitalization and sometimes death. Other complications include bronchitis, sinus infection and ear infections. Certain people are at higher risk of developing flu-related complications. These include: children younger than five years of age, adults older than 65 years of age, pregnant women, nursing home residents, Native Americans and patients with asthma, neurological conditions, COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), cystic fibrosis, heart disease, blood disorders, diabetes, kidney disorders, liver disease, metabolic disorders, immune system disorders, extreme obesity and people younger than 19 years of age who must take long-term aspirin therapy. Symptoms usually indicate the diagnosis of flu, especially if influenza is prevalent in the community at the time. There is lab testing available, but we more often use it in high-risk patients to confirm the diagnosis. If you have a mild case of the flu, you do not need medical care or anti-flu drugs. You should stay home and avoid contact with others. Get plenty of rest, drink plenty of fluids and take over-the-counter pain medications. Children less

than 19 years of age who have the flu should avoid taking aspirin.
If you get better, then get worse, seek medical attention, as this could indicate a complication. You should also see your physician if you are in a high-risk group, or if you have severe symptoms, such as trouble breathing, chest pain, decreased urination, confusion or severe vomiting.
High-risk patients and patients with severe symptoms may benefit by taking antiviral medications such as oseltamivir (Tamiflu). The medications work best if given within 48 hours of illness onset. In high-risk patients, these drugs can be lifesaving. Antibiotics are not useful, since a virus, not bacteria, causes the flu. However, antibiotics may be useful in the setting of certain flu complications.
Getting the influenza vaccine is the most effective way to reduce the chance of getting the flu. At best, it can prevent the flu. At the least, it can lessen the severity of the flu and may prevent complications. Contrary to what some say, the influenza vaccine cannot cause the flu. Because the flu virus changes from year to year, the vaccine must be given yearly. Vaccine effectiveness can vary from year to year, but it usually prevents flu in 40 to 70 percent of those who receive the vaccine.
Unfortunately, this year's vaccine may not be as protective against one of the flu strains causing illness. However, it does offer some protection against the "targeted" strain and more protection against other illness-causing strains. It takes about two weeks after the injection for the flu vaccine to become protective. Though the vaccine may cause mild reactions, the risk of vaccine complications is much less than the risk of complications from the flu itself.
The influenza vaccine is recommended for nearly all people six months of age or older. Patients with mild egg allergy (such as hives) can take the vaccine. Patients who have had more severe reactions to egg should consult their health care provider. It is always better to get vaccinated than not to get vaccinated.
Frequent handwashing and avoiding sick people is certainly important in preventing the spread of the flu. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates the flu infects up to 30 million people each year in the United States. Many thousands of people die from influenza, so take action to avoid becoming part of this statistic.
-Dr. Edwin Grimsley is Professor of Medicine, Senior
Associate Dean, on the Macon Campus of Mercer
University School of Medicine.

Guest Gardener:
`Kanjiro' Camellias add beauty and life to the landscape

By Norman Winter

In Japanese, the word "kanjiro" means "you must feel." I'm not sure if that means "to touch" or "to experience," but the Kanjiro Camellia is certainly one to experience. The Kanjiro Camellia is known botanically as Camellia hiemalis and debuted in 1954. The longevity of this camellia cultivar, which is entering its 64th year, is a testament to both its character and performance in the landscape.
Over the last dozen years, I've experienced the full beauty of the Kanjiro. When I was a Mississippi State University horticulturist, I had the opportunity to film several that were planted along the streets of downtown Brookhaven, Miss., as part of a beautification project.
My son uses it to provide some fall-blooming razzledazzle in Columbus. At the Coastal Georgia Botanical Garden at the Historic Bamboo Farm in Savannah, we planted hundreds about five years ago as a screen for a chain-link fence. I remember thinking that these camellias would take a while to screen the fence. In the present, I think that this was a great idea.
The Kanjiro is cold hardy from zones 7 through 10. In terms of geography, a little more than a third of the country can experience its beauty. It will grow in a container but must be moved to a protected space during the winter.
The Kanjiro camellia is evergreen with dark, glossy leaves that seem to be the perfect backdrop for the scores of rose-pink blooms with bright, golden stamens. You can expect it to reach 8 to 10 feet in height and 6 to 8 feet in width.
I always preach about the placement of the necessary bones of the landscape. An adequate portion of evergreen

plant material is required to accomplish this structure. Camellias, like the Kanjiro, are a perfect choice. They have deep green, glossy leaves and offer weeks of terrific blooms.
Like all other camellias, they require fertile, welldrained, acidic soil. This coming spring would be a great time to plant woody shrubs, trees and camellias like the Kanjiro. Garden centers will have their best inventory then.
The camellias along the Coastal Botanical Garden's Judge Arthur Solomon Camellia Trail are all placed in a series of beds. The canopy of trees high overhead allows just the right amount of light for the camellias' vigorous, healthy growth. If we make an investment in the landscape, it only makes sense that we do it right by putting our shrubs to bed. It is so sad to see a fine camellia like the Kanjiro in a location where it's surrounded by turf.
Glossy leaves and hundreds of buds and blooms that attract pollinators, including the long-tailed skipper butterfly, make the Kanjiro camellia highly desirable. I hope you will add a Kanjiro camellia to your garden this spring.
-Norman Winter is the director of the Coastal Georgia
Botanical Gardens at the Historic Bamboo Farm in
Savannah.

By Amy Carter
amy.carter@agr.georgia.gov
The most frequent question we hear at the Market Bulletin is this: Is the editor "the real" Amy Carter -- you know, President Jimmy Carter's daughter?
Answer: Nope. And just in case I wasn't clear: Niet. Non. Nein. Negatory. The second most frequent question we hear at the Market Bulletin is this: What has happened to my Market Bulletin? Answer: It's complicated. To be a little more specific, the Market Bulletin isn't the same paper it was a year ago, or even a month ago. Why? Two reasons. First, a cyber event. Second, life -- you know, that thing that happens when you're making other plans. Even so, we've got this. We are working days, nights, weekends, snow days and holidays to reclaim information that was temporarily lost to us as the result of an unfortunate run-in with some malware in early December. We have a tenacious team of cyber warriors on staff here at the Georgia Department of Agriculture, and they've been working nonstop since that event to get us right again. They've already restored all the usual links to the Market Bulletin online at agr.georgia.gov. Barring the occasional glitch, you should be able to log in online using your subscriber number to view the digital version of the paper or to submit an ad. However, as we continue to work out the kinks, we will offer two temporary links to both functions that you may access without your subscriber number. They are located along the right-hand side of our landing page at agr.georgia.gov/marketbulletin.aspx. One link says "View the Recent Issues," and the other says "Submit an Ad (subscribers only)." As always, feel free to call or email if the occasional quirks excuse me, wonders of technology make a liar out of me. We're here to help. Happily, we're back to our fighting weight of 12 pages this issue, thanks once again to our indefatigable IT Department. The aforementioned malware temporarily prevented us from accessing our database of ads submitted online prior to Dec. 11, 2017, and also prevented us from receiving new ads via our website for a time. Hence the smaller sizes of the papers you received earlier this month. Our ad numbers are steadily climbing back to our target range, which is allowing us to resume our regularly scheduled programming. While advertising and subscription queries have commanded the lion's share of your attention and ours these past few weeks, many of you have also lamented the absence of our usual complement of editorial content. In particular, you've been missing our garden columnist, Arty Schronce. Having put in many years of dedicated service to the department, Arty has taken a well-deserved retirement. We wish him Godspeed in this new phase of his life. While no one can replicate Arty's thoughtful and informative writing style, we are looking at other options -- such as the Guest Gardener column at left -- to provide you with the horticultural content so many of you crave. In the meantime, you might have noticed the addition of a new column for kids, "Georgie's Drive through Georgia Agriculture." An educational tour of Georgia's unique rural landmarks, "Georgie's Drive" is researched and written in the guise of Georgie, our Georgia Grown mascot, by our very own Lee Lancaster. We hope you'll find Lee as amusing as we do, and share the column with your children and grandchildren. We are also excited to bring you a new monthly column from the Mercer University School of Medicine. Mercer's Medical School exists solely to educate Georgia residents in the art and science of practicing medicine in rural areas, and we know you'll find these columns to be helpful in living a healthy and productive life on the farm. For many of you, the recipes we publish are a beloved staple of our editorial line-up, and something you occasionally love to hate. Our audience seems to consist of two schools of cooks those who adore old-fashioned recipes with plenty of butter and grease, and those who don't. Be that as it may, we fully intend to keep stirring the pot with tasty suggestions for taking Georgia Grown goodies from the farm to your family. That probably sounds like plenty enough work to keep us off the streets and out of trouble, but we're out there anyway, gathering news and feature stories that enrich your knowledge of and appreciation for the business of agriculture in Georgia. We are grateful for your continued support of the Market Bulletin, and for the passion with which many of you have expressed that support in recent weeks. For as long as you'll allow us to, we'll strive to publish a paper worthy of that emotion.

PAGE 8

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2018

LIVESTOCK HANDLING 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.
(5) Golden Comet pullets. 26 weeks old-laying 55%. Ground raised and wormed. $20.00 each or all for $90. Gene Garrison Clermont 770-983-3070
12 mixed hens, different ages. Need to get rid of because of health issues. Thomas P Henderson Waleska 770796-2522
12 varieties peacocks and peahens, various breeds game chickens, peacock feathers. Raymond Watts Macon 478743-6692 478-361-3468
12 varieties peafowl including java

Cobb 500 pasture broilers & Novogen Brown layers for sale as day-old-chicks; ship or pick up; NPIP certified. Diane Berry Ray City 229-455-6437
Game fowl: Blackwater Sweaters, BlackMomba Sweaters, Dink Fair Sweaters, a few Blueface Hatch; stags and cocks, a few pullets. Roger L Singletary Whigham 229-220-5261
Guineas: Adult, 2017 hatched; Pearl, Pied, Slate; $10/ea. Wyndle Bates Blue Ridge 706-632-7584
Hatch, White Hackles, and Blue game chickens. Ronald L Shepard Fortson 706-317-9924
Hens, chicks, roosters, mixed colors and ages; $3 to $10. Leave a message. K. Hyde Ellijay 706-635-5574
Heritage Breed 2 Narraganset tom & 1 Chocolate tom Turkeys: $75 each Don, Peacock Hill Farm. Don Meyer Stockbridge 770-815-3704

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

If you have questions regarding ads in this category, call 404-656-3722.
`04 22ft Sundowner stock combo, great shape, good tires, lights, rubber mats, coated walls: $10,000 OBO. Jessie Hollifield Jasper 770-894-7098
1996 Ponderosa stock trailer, 16 ft, middle gate, escape door, new floor, rubber mats, dual axle, bumper pull, excellent condition. S. Lockhart Auburn 678-898-2017
1998 Sundowner, 4 horse slant load, gooseneck trailer, good condition; $10,900. David Crile Cedartown 770748-7487
Priefert SO-4 cattle working chute. Used 2 seasons; $3200. Pap cage available. Jim Jackson Wrightsville 478290-0263

17 Fescue/Rye, 1600 lb. round, 5.5x5.5; $70. Sq. bales; $5.50. All barn stored. Jim Robinson Good Hope 770363-6406
200+ 4x5.5 fertilized, wrapped, sheltered bales, 2017 Russell Bermuda grass hay: $60/bale, 10+@$50/bale. Delivery negotiable. Wayne Pruitt Statesboro 912-682-4481
2017 4x5 mixed grass round bales; good cow hay: $35/bale. Delivery available within 40 miles for a fee. Ray Gilbert Bishop 706-769-5820 706-2964360
2017 4x5 rolls, net-wrapped fescue, rye grass hay fertilized; $35 per roll. James Sells Monroe 678-425-7543
2017 Alfalfa square bales; $12. Horse quality, 4x5 rolls of fescue & orchard; $45. Square bales fescue & orchard; $5. Dale Hall Calhoun 706-506-0351
2017 Alicia Bermuda hay, stored in

green, game chickens, peacock feath- Large, healthy Easter Egger and White permit/license needs to be sent along ers. Raymond Watts Macon 478-361- Leghorn roosters; hatched last Spring, with it. For ads submitted online, the

RABBITS

barn, square bales; $3.00 per bale. Gregory Miliner Fort Gaines 229-254-

3468 478-743-6692

not aggressive towards people: $14 ea. permit/license can be attached using If you have questions regarding ads in 0729

20 Rhode Island Red hens, 2 roosters. Linda Duke Good Hope 678-635-3675 the attachments button.

this category, call 404-656-3722.

2017 Alicia-Bermuda; $60/roll. Mixed

2 Barred Rock Roosters. Chuck Hatt 770-549-5383

Bobwhite Quail, flight conditioned,

grass; $40/roll. Mulch; $20/roll. Alan

Calhoun 706-629-4690

Laying hens; Wyandottes, Speck- now available for the 2017/2018 sea-

Mobley Griffin 770-560-3441

FEED, HAY AND GRAIN 2015 red and gold pheasants; hens led Sussex, Barred Rocks. H A Dyer son. Call for pricing. Rembert Hancock

$40, males $40. Pair gold leaf bantams, Maysville 706-654-0595

Fairmount 404-376-0550 706-337-

2017 barn stored square bales of Bahia and mixed grasses; $5. Wilson T

$25. Robert W Borchert Lincolnton OE Bantams from show stock: BB 5711

If you have questions regarding ads in Phelps Greensboro 706-347-0492

706-359-3325

Reds, Splash, Blacks, Brassy Backs, Bobwhite quail, flight conditioned. Roy this category, call 404-656-3722.

2017 Bermuda hay for sale. 100

4 Ameraucana roosters/1 Ameraucana Blue Brassy Backs, Opals, Fawns, Silver Peterson Ideal 478-662-4532

All feed, hay and grain ads must rolls available. 4x5 net-wrapped, well

hen, variety of colors, hatched 9/4/2017: Duckwings. William McBurnett Tyrone Jumbo Brown Pharoah Coturnix Quail include the variety offered for sale. fertilized; $45 per roll. Take all for $35

roosters $10, hen $20. AKA Easter Eggers 770-487-2233

chicks, birds, and eggs. Bob Reese Ads for mulch hay will not be ac- per roll. Chris Creech Collins 912-213-

Haley Roebuck Canton 770-630-9712

Pigeons, white rollers, colored rollers, Stockbridge 770-633-9294

cepted in this category; they will be 0005

6 Rhode Island Red hens & 1 Rhode Turner rollers; $20/pair. Wyatt Johnson

published in the Fertilizers & Mulch- 2017 Bermuda hay, barn-stored, 4x5

Island rooster. $60 for all. Jim Hudgins Midville 478-494-3240

Alternative Livestock Requiring es category.

roll, $50; square bales, $5; Bermuda mix

Flowery Branch 678-997-5790

Pure breed Madigin Clarets stag/pul-

6-12 week old roosters, Plymouth lets 8 mos. Old rooster cocks, 2-3 years

Permit/License

$35: 2017 4x5 round bales. Fes- cow hay, $4/bale. Steve Matthews Grifcue/mixed grasses, fertilized, rain fin 404-247-9789

Rock mixed. $8-15. Hank White Atlanta old. Vernon Murphy Cornelia 706-778- If you have questions regarding ads in free/stored in barn. Robert Greene 2017 Bermuda/Fescue hay, barn in,

404-755-0505

5072

this category, call 404-656-3722.

Roopville 770-324-4323

well fertilized, 4x5 rolls; $40 per roll. La-

Adult Guineas available from Milner Red and yellow buff cochins, beautiful Advertisers selling fallow deer, axis $4.50: 2017 Fescue/orchard grass mar Jones Dallas 770-445-1227

Bird Breeders. Theo Engelmohr Milner birds. Eldon Patterson Eatonton 706- deer, sika deer, elk, red deer, reindeer hay, horse quality, heavy square bales, 2017 Bermuda/Fescue hay, in barn,

678-967-9899

485-7355

and caribou must submit a current fertilized/limed, rain-free. Lamar Long square bales; $4. 4x5 round bales; $30-

LIVESTOCK WANTED Ameraucana Mille Fleur bantams.
Colleen Freeman Gainesville 678-8979318
Ameraucana pullets, 10 m/o; $20 ea. James Young 3988 Spell Rd Metter 30439 912-682-2917
Birmingham Roller pigeons, rare recessive red and yellow, and also Turner bloodline; $20ea. Ken Hatley Barnesville 770-358-1300
Buff and black silkie trios, $120; hens, $10. Also, white topknot bearded silkies. Call for more info. Jack R Jenkins Harlem 706-799-8597 706-556-3261
Chicks: Rhode Island Red, Buff Orpington, American Dominique; pure

Rhode Island Red pullets, also Golden Comet pullets; healthy, quality birds. Brian Sturdy Dahlonega 706-865-9201
Rhode Island Red Roosters; $3.88. Spring 2017 hatch. David Mcdade Eatonton 706-473-2366
RIR hens or rooster, $10 or $12 ea., 24 w/o; Guinea, $10 each; young Peafowl pair, $150. Gerald Hayes Flowery Branch 470-208-0309
Tom turkeys, pheasants, bantams and pigeons. Danny Ryals Milledgeville 478-804-3868 478-452-8497
White Leghorns, Rhode Island Whites, Golden Comishs, Black Sex Link pullets, started laying; $15. Gary Ridley La Fayette 706-638-1911

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 404-6563667. For information on other hoofed stock, excluding llamas and buffalo, contact the Georgia Department of Natural Resources at 770-761-3044.

Chatsworth 706-695-5906
`17 Bermuda 4x5 fertilized, netwrapped, barn stored, horse quality; $60. Chuck Hecht Columbus 706-5776590
`17 Crimson Clover, very high quality, 16.5 protein, 5.5x4 netwrapped, discount on quantity, also Russell/Bermuda. Dar Bohnenstiehl Fort Valley 770-468-4682
100 large rolls Coastal hay, wrapped; $45/roll. Take all, $40/roll. Tommy Butler Dexter tbutler2@earthlink.net 478875-3560
17 Bermuda/Fescue mix hay, square bales: $5 at barn. Hugh Weaver Jack-

$45. Patrick Broder Stockbridge 404401-6134
2017 Bermuda/Fescue mix round bales, 4x4, rain free; $35-40. Bob Pruitt Villa Rica 770-445-2423
2017 Bermuda/Fescue mix, fertilized, 4x4 round bales, $35/bale. Stored outside. Jermaine Barlow Grantville 706302-7658
2017 Bermuda/Fescue mixed, 4x5 rolls, fertilized, rain free, in barn; $40 per roll. Mike Keesee Monroe 470-8999668
2017 Bermuda/Fescue, 4x5 rolls, fertilized, in barn; $45. Outside barn; $35. B. Eichel Thomson 30824 706421-4945

breeds, not mixed. Monte Poitevint Lakeland 229-482-3854

son 678-445-3628

2017 Coastal Bermuda 4x5 tight bales,

If you have questions regarding ads in 17 cow hay mix summer grass; 4x5 netwrapped, horse quality, fertilized,

Cobb 500 pasture broilers & Novogen

this category, call 404-656-3722.

bales , twine-tie: $35. David Smith Car- limed, sheltered, rain free; $60. Grace

Brown layers for sale as day-old-chicks;

Any breed horses/goats, no pygmy rollton 404-323-4622

Brady Hephzibah 706-231-0985

ship or pick up; NPIP certified. Diane

goats, will pick-up and pay cash. Wayne

Berry Ray City 229-375-1991

Green Bremen 770-841-6815

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2018

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov

PAGE 9

2017 Coastal Bermuda and Alicia hay, fertilized by UGA specs; 4x5 round bales, net-wrapped: $50. Heath Pendley Davisboro 770-823-5127
2017 Coastal Bermuda hay, 4X5 netwrapped, stored in barn. Fred Sackett Butler 478-862-5120
2017 Coastal Bermuda hay, 4x5.5 netwrapped bales; $45/roll. Daniel Usry Wrens 706-831-4971
2017 Coastal Bermuda hay, horse quality, $5/bale at barn, delivery available. Glenn Brinson 1800 Corsey Grove Way Tarrytown 30470 912-2885960
2017 Coastal Bermuda hay, square bales, horse quality, fertilized/limed, weed-free. Michael Dubose Junction City 706-366-1665
2017 Coastal Bermuda hay. 4x5 round and square bales. Larry Morgan Lizella 478-972-5977 478-781-1990
2017 Coastal Bermuda well fertilized/ limed. Sq. bales; $6.50 in barn. Round bales; $50. Leonard Kinsley Perry 478714-9900
2017 Coastal Bermuda, horse quality, fertilized UGA soil/specs. Barned, square/round 4x5 bales. Delivery available. Olin Trammell Forsyth 478-9607239 478-994-6463
2017 Coastal Bermuda, large bales, high quality; $45. Bill Caldwell 4043 Cove Rd Woodbury 30293 706-5532149
2017 Coastal Bermuda/Alicia/Tifton 9 hay, 4x5 rolls, net-wrapped, delivery available: $40-$50 each. David Clemens Waynesboro 706-466-2944
2017 cow hay, Bermuda Johnson grass mix, 4x5, string-wrapped, stored outside, tight rolls. Jake Gower Covington 404-391-6182
2017 Fescue Bermuda mixed hay, 4x5 rolls, rain free, stored in barn, 10+ rolls; $25. Barry Porter Martin 706-3843926
2017 Fescue hay, good quality; $4.50/ bale at barn. Walton County. Wade Cown Monroe 770-207-6983

2017 Fescue mix round bales, stored in barn: $40 per bale, $35 for 10 or more. Bob Thomas Dawsonville 706265-4770
2017 Fescue square bales, fertilized, limed, sprayed, kept in barn, horse quality; $6 per bale. Al Blackburn Dawsonville 770-401-2862
2017 Fescue square bales, sprayed, fertilized/limed, horse-quality: $5/bale. Debbie Roseberry-Odom Murrayville 305-304-5878 770-536-8076
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, $35-45/outside. Coy Baker Loganville 770-466-4609
2017 Fescue/Orchard grass, horsequality, 4x5.5 rolls, net-wrapped, fertilized, rain-free, barn-stored: $45, quantity discount. Ellis Linn Summerville 706-766-9338 706-857-1377
2017 Fescue/Orchard grass, square bales, horse quality in barn. 60 bales; $4.25. Delivery available. David Craig Roswell 770-998-1756
2017 Fescue/Orchard, 1000+ sq. bales. Tift 44 500+ sq. bales. Fertilized; $5 per bale at barn. Larry Jones Colbert 706-338-7773 706-621-1037
2017 hay, 4x5 rolls, some Bermuda left, Fescue/crabgrass mix, 200+ rolls available: $30 per roll. Discount on full loads. Joseph Ballenger Royston 706498-2469
2017 hay, Coastal Bermuda/Bahia Mix, 4x5 net-wrapped bales, fertilized; $35/roll. Phil Amos Louisville 706-7062608
2017 high performance UGA tested Alicia/Russell hay, round/square, sheltered. Delivery available. PBI Farms. Heath Pittman Vidalia 912-5379721
2017 horse quality Tift 85, 4x5; $45. Bahia/peanut hay; $30. Rain free, sheltered. Dannie Gingerich Metter 912314-9568

2017 horse-quality Bermuda hay, inbarn, sq. bales, $7; 4x5 round bales, rain-free, $55. Frank Eaves Elberton 706-201-7267
2017 inside 4x5 rolls. Fescue, Bermuda and Clover mix. Well fertilized; $60 ea. Joe Cronan Mcdonough 770-2353586
2017 just cut netted Bermuda & Bahia mixed hay; $45/bale. Please call. Brad Macdonald Waverly Hall 706-582-3530 770-826-8299
2017 Net wrapped, 4x5, Tift 44 Larado, other mixed, outside; $35. H D Cannon Comer 706-783-2151
2017 peanut hay, 4x6 rolls, $40/roll at barn; sq. bales, $5/bale at barn; delivery available. Gary Brinson 6786 Old Louisville Rd Tarrytown 30470 912286-3191
2017 Russell Bermuda: limed, fertilized, 4x5 net-wrapped rolls. Andy Dykes Reynolds 478-235-0087
2017 Russell hay, 4x5 rolls, horse quality, weed free, UGA tested; $55 a roll. Lonnie Mckinney Cordele 229-2738307
2017 square bales Bahia and Fescue, good quality, my horses love it. $4.50 per bale. Harry Hughes Warm Springs 706-655-2475
2017 Tift 78, rain free, fertilized, round bales, barn stored, DEP Farms. Dwight Purvis Sparks 229-560-2301
2017 Tift Bermuda hay square & round horse quality stored in barn. Delivery available. Dick Stratton Locust Grove 770-842-9317
2017 yellow feed corn, wheat & oats. Barrel or bulk for food plots or feed. Wayne Montgomery Reynolds 478837-2356
4x5 round 2017 Bermuda/Fescue mix, sprayed/fertilized, horse-quality, in barn; $40. Sprayed/fertilized cow hay, $25 in barn. Lori Catron Bremen 404-2138594
4x5.5 JD net-wrap rolls, horse quality Bermuda grass in barn, fertilized and weed-free; delivery available. Josh Pennino Sparta 706-340-3146

Cow-quality square hay bales, sold in bundles of 21 square bales: $105/ bundle. Terry Embry Eatonton 706-4859848
Fescue mix, horse quality; $3.75. Ryegrass, horse quality; $3.75. Kermit Simmons Jefferson 770-867-7550
Good quality peanut hay for sale, 4x6 rolls. Mack Patterson Ty Ty 229-3474572
Hay for sell, 4x5 mix hay, 25 rolls in barn. Justin Evans Rocky Face 423364-8335
Horse-quality Bermuda hay, large square bales, stored in barn: $6. Laurel Whitmire Bishop 678-462-9640
Large quantity of square Bermuda hay and round haylage. Large quantity round peanut hay. Paul Harris Screven 912-294-2470
Premium 2017 Tifton 44 Bermuda, horse quality, fertilized, weed/crabgrass free, barn stored; $75/4x5 roll. Tim Hunter Conyers 770-483-8712 770922-6653
Quality 2017 Coastal Bermuda hay, 4x5.5 net-wrapped rolls: $45. Delivery available, priced by distance. Chad Hendrix Collins 912-237-3430
Russell Bermuda rolls, Rye rolls, 4x5: $65. Michael Bugden Newnan 678428-2917
Rye Grass or Bermuda square bales; $6. Horse and cow hay, 4x5 netwrapped rolls. Sam Jackson Comer jacksonranchlivestock@gmail.com 706215-3988
Rye/Fescue mixed hay, well fertilized, net wrapped, shedded - $35 per roll. Roy Chadwick Adairsville 706-6298550
Top quality Tift 44/Dallas grass mix; lg. square bales, $7. Netwrapped JD round bales; $45. Ralph W Mills Gainesville rmfarm@bellsouth.net 770-536-8438

AG SEED FOR SALE
If you have questions regarding this category, call 404-656-3722.
Advertisers must submit a current state laboratory report, fewer than nine months old, for purity, noxious weeds and germination for each seed lot advertised. Ads submitted without this information will not be published. If you are faxing or mailing in an ad, this report needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the report can be attached using the attachments button. Seed lots must be uniform and cannot exceed 400 50-pound bags. Certain varieties of seed are protected from propagation unless they are grown as a class of certified seed. These include Florida 304, Coker 9152, Coker 9835, 6738 soybean, Haskell, Bennings and others. For questions regarding certified seed, call the Department's Seed Division at 404-656-3635.
Custom sprigging Bermuda grass, Alicia, Coastal, Russell and Tift 85. Also sprigs for sale. Ronald Hart Guyton 912-665-2261
Ghost pepper seeds; 15 seeds for $1, send SASE. Elwood Holt 102 Hatcher Rd Warner Robins 31088 478-3969841
Rooster Spur, Old Timey Cayenne, Peter Pepper; Yellow Cayenne seeds; $2 per pkg. 25+ seeds + SASE. Terry Madaris 2017 Cloud Springs Road Rossville 30741
Ag Plants for Sale
Comfery root stock, 10 pieces of root. $10 and 2 postage. Marvin Mcwilliams Marietta 770-427-6848
Few figs- 3 varieties, many mulberries; $5. Many dewberries; $2. Many other plants. No shipping. Carla Houghton Marietta 770-428-2227
Small Leyland Cypress trees: 8"-12" tall, only $4 ea., see website for ordering info; will ship. Hans Gruetzenbach Dalton www.muscadinesandmore.com 706-483-4221

Market Bulletin Farmland Ad Form
The Spring 2018 Farmland Edition of the Market Bulletin will be published March 14. The deadline to submit ads for that issue is noon Feb. 28.
Ad guidelines: Only Georgia farmland of five acres or more may be advertised. Include price, acreage and county where the property is located. All property must be for sale by the owner. A maximum word count of 30 including name, address, phone number and city is permitted in Farmland ads. Only one ad per subscriber per issue. You must be a paid subscriber to advertise in the Market Bulletin. Fax to 404.463.4389 or mail to: Georgia Department of Agriculture, Att: Market Bulletin, 19 Martin Luther King Jr. Dr. SW, Atlanta, GA 30330.

Subscriber Number: County:

Section:

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 upcoming farmland edition of the Farmers and Consumers Market Bulletin.

FARMLAND SECTIONS AND COUNTIES

Northwest
Bartow Carroll Catoosa Chattooga Dade Floyd Gordon Haralson Murray Paulding Polk Walker Whitfield
Northeast Central
Barrow Clarke Elbert Franklin Greene Hart Jackson Madison Morgan Oconee Oglethorpe Walton
Southeast
Appling Atkinson Bacon Brantley

Bryan

Stephens Brooks

Bulloch

Towns

Calhoun

Camden Union

Chatta-

Candler White

hoochee

Charlton

Clay

Chatham East Central Colquitt

Clinch

Cook

Coffee

Baldwin Crisp

Echols

Bleckley Decatur

Effingham Burke

Dooly

Evans

Columbia Dougherty

Glynn

Dodge

Early

Jeff Davis Emanuel Grady

Lanier

Glascock Irwin

Liberty

Hancock Lee

Long

Jasper

Lowndes

McIntosh Jefferson Marion

Montgomery Jenkins

Miller

Pierce

Johnson Mitchell

Screven Jones

Pulaski

Tattnall

Laurens Quitman

Telfair

Lincoln

Randolph

Toombs McDuffie Schley

Ware

Putnam Seminole

Wayne

Richmond Stewart

Wheeler Taliaferro Sumter

Treutlen Terrell

Northeast Twiggs

Thomas

Warren

Tift

Banks

Washington Turner

Dawson Wilkes

Webster

Fannin

Wilkinson Wilcox

Gilmer

Worth

Habersham Southwest

Hall

Greater

Lumpkin Baker

Atlanta

Pickens Ben Hill

Rabun

Berrien

Cherokee

Clayton Cobb DeKalb Douglas Fayette Forsyth Fulton Gwinnett Henry Newton Rockdale Spalding
West Central
Bibb Butts Coweta Crawford Harris Heard Houston Lamar Macon Meriwether Monroe Muscogee Peach Pike Talbot Taylor Troup Upson

PAGE 10

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2018

Bulletin Calendar

Ag Seed/Plants Wanted

Old Southern Utah formula for saddle refinishing and restoring: $30. Money-

Want tomato seed for tomatoes that back guarantee. Call for references. Ed

are edible after months stored in cool, Anderson Hull 706-714-6139

Feb. 1 Georgia Ag Forecast Decatur County Agricultural Center 101 B Ag Lane Bainbridge, Ga. 39817

Feb. 10 Georgia Iris Society Meeting St. Bartholomew Episcopal Church 1790 Lavista Road NE Atlanta, Ga. 30329

March 2 Georgia Department of Agriculture Egg Candling Class Effingham County Extension Office 284 Hwy. 119 S.

dry environment. Lost previous seed. Pair of very old wagon wheels, metal

Blake Putnam Calhoun 706-629-2593 rim, have been enclosed in carport.

706-264-7476

Good condition and price. Pair for $450.

FLOWERS AND

John Davis Morganton 770-971-9992 404-422-1189

ORNAMENTALS

Miscellaneous Wanted

706.542.5046 http://www.caes.uga.edu/about/
signature-events/ag-forecast.html
Feb. 2 Georgia Ag Forecast Tifton Campus Conference Center 15 RDC Road Tifton, Ga. 31794 706.542.5046 http://www.caes.uga.edu/about/ signature-events/ag-forecast.html
Feral Swine Workshop and Trapping Demonstration
Union County Schools Agriscience Center
225 Lovell Drive Blairsville, Ga. 30512 Pre-registration required https://gooutdoorsgeorgia.com Click on Events

678.471.2604
2018 Georgia Native Plant Symposium Middle Georgia State University 100 College Station Drive Macon, Ga. 31206 gnps.org/2018-georgia-native-plant-
symposium-registration-open/ symposium@gnps.org

Springfield, Ga. 31329 912.754.8040
March 2-3 26th Annual Hellebore Days at Piccadilly Farm 1971 Whippoorwill Road Bishop, Ga. 30621 706.765.4444

Feb. 15 Vegetable and Small Fruit Production Training Lanier Technical College Forsyth Campus 3410 Ronald Reagan Blvd. Cumming, Ga. 30041 http://sustainagga.org/ Journeyman%20Farmer%20BRFD/ JourneymanFarmer.html
Feb. 16-17

March 5 & 6 Georgia Agritourism Association Annual Conference Unicoi State Park 1788 Hwy. 356 Helen, Ga. 30545 georgia-agritourism.org
March 8 Georgia Grown Feed My School Source Show Atlanta State Farmers Market

FOR SALE

Blacksmith anvil, old, in good shape,

100-130 lbs. Eddie Stephens Rome

If you have questions about this cat- 706-235-5032

egory, call 404-656-3722.

Burn barrel in Marietta or Cobb County

2017 Blackberry Lily seeds: 15 seeds area. Bobbie Garrison Marietta 404-

for $3 cash and SASE. Donna Miltimore 403-4102 770-509-3752

1766 Pleasant Hill Rd NE Ranger 30734 Looking for a hay conveyor or a belt

706-618-3890

conveyor. Charles Nutt Hephzibah nutt-

2017 Cosmos poppy seeds, $1.00/ deerhunter@yahoo.com 706-793-0571

tsp + SASE. Sara O'shields Po Box 185 Used Chore-Time 6-stager controller.

Tate 30177 770-735-3657

Matt Rouse Braselton 770-540-2047

4" perennials, 350 varieties; $1.50 ea. Wanted: Large diameter culvert pipes,

including helleborus. 1 gal. grafted Jap- 30-36 in. and 15-20ft long. Let me know

anese Maples $20-25, display garden. what you got. Tommy Nale Milner 770-

Selah Ahlstrom Jackson 770-775-4967 584-7654

Beautiful Leyland Cypress; direct from grower, several hundred available, single

Bees, Honey & Supplies

trunk, 5ft, very green, uniform in size, 10-frame beehive, $85; 5-fram beehive

great prices. Bob Brookshire Hoschton NUCs, $65, NO BEES. Also make inner

770-932-5795

covers, supers and top-bar beehive.

Boxwoods, American, both large and Eliseo Delia Mineral Bluff 706-492-

small, in the ground, will help dig and 5119

load. Robert L Crowder 1970 Chipley 2018 5-frame NUCs; $150. Call to

Hwy Greenville 30222 706-663-8276 place your order before they fill up. Jack

Georgia Organics Conference & Expo

16 Forest Parkway

Cosmo seeds, 6' tall is not unusual; Jones Dahlonega 706-429-7130

Feb. 2-3

Augusta Marriott & Convention Center Forest Park, Ga. 30297

$1/60 seeds + SASE. Ira Bray 70 Wilkes 5-frame high quality NUCS; $185. Nuc

Georgia Young Farmers Convention

2 Tenth Street

misty.friedman@agr.georgia.gov

Ct Newnan 30263

boxes; $50. Med. frame drawn comb;

Chateau Elan Winery & Resort

Augusta, Ga. 30901

Day lilies, Foxglove, Columbine roses, $15. www.mountainmanbees.com.

100 Rue Charlemagne Drive Braselton, Ga. 30517 georgiaffa.org
Feb. 3 Old South Farm Museum Hog Killing Pleasant Valley Road Woodland, Ga. 31836

678.702.0400 georgiaorganics.org
Feb. 22 2018 U.S. Dept. of Labor Farm Labor Seminar for Agricultural Businesses Omega Club House 5471 Alabama Ave.

March 22 Vegetable and Small Fruit Production Training Lanier Technical College Forsyth Campus 3410 Ronald Reagan Blvd. Cumming, Ga. 30041 http://sustainagga.org/ Journeyman%20Farmer%20BRFD/

Rosemary. Carole Scott Metter 912- Caleb Lachmann Blue Ridge 706-851-

685-6984

8639

Leyland Cypress, Leighton Green, All bees: Russian hybrid NUCs, $170.

Murray Cypress, Thuja Green Giant; 1 Free swarm pick-up close by. Unused

gal. and 3 gal., call for prices. Tim Keel beekeeping equipment and new loca-

Covington 678-300-2907

tions wanted. David Larson Mitchell

Magic Lily, 10 for $5.00, pomegran- 770-542-9546

ate for $3.00, Boxwoods old English, Bee removal, work guaranteed, Metro

Korean, American. Raymond And Faye Atlanta and West Georgia areas. W.O.

Chambers Yatesville 706-472-3371

Canady Villa Rica 770-942-3887

706.975.9136

Omega, Ga. 31775

JourneymanFarmer.html

Orange Cliva Miniata seeds. $1 each Free bee swarm removal from your

www.oldsouthfarm.com

678.237.0540

+SASE. Limited supply. Email for pic- home, office or yard. Must be reason-

paulbulloch@oldsouthfarm.com

mast-matos.rachel@dol.gov

April 14

tures. Elaine Flanagan Lizella eflana- ably accessible. Gainesville/Hall County

Feb. 5 Georgia Ag Forecast Georgia Farm Bureau 1620 Bass Road Macon, Ga. 31209 706.542.5046 http://www.caes.uga.edu/about/ signature-events/ag-forecast.html
Feb. 6 Georgia Ag Forecast Clarence Brown Conference Center 5450 Georgia Hwy. 20 Cartersville, Ga. 30121 706.542.5046 http://www.caes.uga.edu/about/ signature-events/ag-forecast.html
Feb. 7 Georgia Ag Forecast

Feb. 24 Walton County Bee Association Advanced Beekeeping Class WaltonBees.org waltoncobeepresident@gmail.com Find us on Facebook
Feb. 27 Georgia Department of Agriculture Egg Candling Class Lowndes County Extension Office 2102 East Hill Avenue Valdosta, Ga. 31601 229.333.5185
March 1 Georgia Department of Agriculture Egg Candling Class Dougherty County Extension Office 125 Pine Ave., Suite 100

Jasper County FFA Alumni Antique Tractor and Diesel Truck Pull
Shady Dale Rodeo Grounds 22019 Hwy. 83 N. Shady Dale, Ga. 31085 706.816.8142
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 specifically promote those industries will not be printed.

gan@hotmail.com 478-335-3364

area. Todd Folger Gainesville 678-410-

3259

FLOWERS REQUIRING I will have #3 package honey bees for

PERMITS

sale 3/30 & 3/31. Call for info. William Craft Elberton 864-617-7630

If you have questions regarding this Italian 3lbs. pkgs., $125; 5-frame

category, call 404-656-3722.

NUCs, $175; mated queens, $30. Mack

Advertisers selling officially protect- Mack Rome 706-389-5425

ed plants must have a permit to sell Italian bees, NE Georgia, 3lb. pack-

such plants. Ads submitted without ages, 2018 spring queens. Pick-up only,

this permit will not be published. If order online. Slade Jarrett Baldwin 706-

you are faxing or mailing in an ad, the 677-2854

permit needs to be sent along with it. Pure, all-natural, unprocessed honey:

For ads submitted online, the permit quart, $14; pint, $8; 8oz. bear, $5. Jim-

can be attached using the attach- my Brown Jackson 770-775-0157 678-

ments button. For information on the 448-7781

sale or shipment of protected plants, Wanted bee equipment. Will pick up

call the Protected Plant Program at swarms for free; remove bees from

770-918-6411.

structure for a fee. Leonard Day Macon

478-719-5588

MISCELLANEOUS

Things To Eat
`17 shelled pecans, mostly halves,

The Classic Center 300 N. Thomas Street Athens, Ga. 30601 706.542.5046 http://www.caes.uga.edu/about/
signature-events/ag-forecast.html

Albany, Ga. 31701 229.436.7216

Additional pesticide recertification training notices are available on the department website under the Plant Industry Division tab.

If you have questions regarding ads in $9 per pound plus postage, bagged in

this category, call 404-656-3722.

freezer. Leave message. Frank Eaton

520 unused bricks manufactured by Buckhead 706-342-0727

General Shale (color: morning smoke): 2017 black walnuts, shelled, large, ex-

$200 OBO. Call for more info. Randall tra clean; $23/quart, postage paid. Hoyt

Temples Bethlehem 678-485-4303

Payne Mc Caysville 706-492-7781

Carpenter bee traps and instructions, 2017 Desirable Pecans, $11/lb + post-

shipped in lots of 5 for $85. Call for info. age. Will crack, shell, separate your

William Timmerman Harlem 706-799- pecans, $.50 cents/lb. Russell Eaton

5311 803-640-6265

Stockbridge 770-506-2727

Cast iron pot and fry pans, cast iron 2017 pecans, in the shell; $5/lb. +

apple press, cast iron farm bell. Jimmy shipping. Charles T Sawyer Mount Airy Garvin Warner Robins 478-396-2409 706-768-4776

Craftsman 10" table saw on locking All natural Grassfed beef. No antibiot-

legs. Extensions on both sides of top; ics or hormones. Custom cut to order.

$2185. Pictures available. Robert Crit- Jim Toney Stockbridge 678-794-3661

tenden Kennesaw 770-428-5105
Econo-Horse TroyBilt tiller, $300; TroyBilt Super Tomahawk 2in1 shredder, $300: both, $500. Recently serviced. Wayne Johnson Roberta 478-960-1250
Good used tin. Franklin Cheek

All-natural beef. Whole beef, all natural feeds. Angus and Angus/Hereford cross. $3.25/lb hanging weight. Includes custom processing. Tom Brown Canton 404-259-0998

Hawkinsville 478-892-9326 478-892- All-natural black Angus beef, sold

9326

whole, half or quarter; no steroids, an-

Heavy duty aluminum ladders, 40 ft; tibiotics or hormones. David Sharpton

$200. 28 ft.; $100. Refrigerator and Commerce 706-367-0876

furniture dollies; $15 each. R.F. Pollard For sale: 2017 pecan halves, $8/lb.

524 Earlvine Way Nw Kennesaw 30152 plus shipping. Jesse Arnett Tifton 229-

770-427-1201

392-3921

New in-the-box wood burning stove w/ Grain-finished Angus beef, side or

blower by England Stove Works. Heats quarter, cut to order, $3.50/lb hanging

A cord is defined as 128 cubic feet of wood stacked by the line or row in a compact manner with individual pieces touching; it can be four feet high, 1200-1800 sq. ft.: $600. George Reeves weight plus processing. Jason Cox So-

four feet wide (deep), and eight feet long, or any combination of these measurements (height, width and length) that yields 128 cubic feet.

Moreland 678-315-4517

cial Circle 404-925-5412

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2018

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov

On the hoof or by the cut, Wagyu/ Wild Shad for stocking; call now for

Angus beef, Prices available. James Spring delivery, limited loads. Terry

Whitaker Warner Robins 478-929-2000 Richardson Rutledge 706-464-9333

Stone-ground cornmeal from Hastings

Fertilizers & Mulches

Prolific corn: $6/10 lb. bag. Shipping

extra. Larry Savage Lula 770-530-0646 Cow manure for sale; price varies by

Sugar cane syrup, pure premium qual- quantity. Have Bobcat to load. Scotty

ity, three 25 ounce bottles shipped free; Ingram Ball Ground 770-596-7718

$42/3. Ben Parrish Statesboro paypal. Fresh, clean red pinestraw installed &

me/parrishcanesyrup 912-536-2200

cleaned. We also have long needle. $4/

Sugarcane syrup, no additives, no bale. Travis Golden Conyers 404-710-

preservatives. $9/25.4 oz $6/12.7 oz. 9884 770-648-6244

Organic Sugarcane syrup $10/12.7 oz. Square bale mulch hay' $3 per bale.

Mickey Morris Odum 912-586-2241

Also large rolls. Phil Cochran Canton

Taking orders for high-quality, farm- 770-289-3876

fresh, grain-fed beef; selling by weight or whole, halves or quarters. Jimbo

Poultry Litter/Compost

Crumley Bostwick 678-409-3572 Water-ground meal, whole wheat flour,

Oddities

grits, will also grind your grain; $5/5 lbs Gourds, many varieties. Martin gourds

+ postage. Mike H Buckner Junction fixed and ready to hang. At farm or

City 706-269-3630

shipped to you. Charles Lang Cordele

Herbs

229-406-5039

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

Martin gourds, 2017 crop: $3.50 each, no shipping. Paul Bailey Hoschton 706654-9245
The Gourd Pile: come shop or we ship. Pamela Morrison Po Box 516 Morven 31638 229-775-2123 407-538-4700

be published. For more information,

Garden Space

contact the Georgia Natural Heritage If you have questions regarding ads in

program at 770-918-6411.

this category, call 404-656-3722.

Fish & Supplies

Notices

Advertisers selling sterile trip-

loid grass carp must submit a current Wild Animal License from the

Out-Of-State Wanted

Georgia Department of Natural Re- High quality Simmental or Maine

sources. Ads submitted without this crossbred steers. Fall born, pay pre-

license will not be published. If you mium over market price. Sam Robinson

are faxing or mailing in an ad, the li- Lake City FL 386-365-6765

cense needs to be sent along with it. For ads submitted online, the li-

Firewood

cense can be attached using the at- Firewood must be cut from the adtachments button. For license infor- vertiser's personal property. Ads for

mation, call 770-761-3044.

firewood must use the cord when

1st Class Big Reds, $35/lb; Red Wig- specifying the amount of firewood

glers $18/lb; Casting $.070, plus ship- for sale.

ping. Lew Bush Byron 478-955-4780

Firewood for sale. Protected from

A1 quality, farm-grown channel catfish weather. 1/2 cord; $130. Claudine Morfingerlings; graded, priced by size; ac- ris Brooks 678-654-5073

curate weights and counts. Other spe- Free firewood, easy access. George

cies available on request. J.F. Gilbert Scoville Macon 478-745-2524

Thomaston 770-468-0725 770-567- Mixed seasons red/white oak, hickory;

1223

dump trailer equals 1.25 cords. Can de-

AI quality farm grown channel catfish liver. $85 long-bed/$65 for a short bed,

fingerlings, graded/priced by size, ac- you pick up. Norm Johnson Taylorsville

curate weights/counts, guaranteed live 770-684-7298

and healthy! J.F. Gilbert Thomaston Seasoned oak and mixed hardwood.

706-648-2062 770-468-0725

Delivery available. Shane Kitchens Cov-

All sizes bass, bluegill, channel catfish, ington 404-213-7186

threadfin, gizzard shad, shellcracker,

Timber

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 706-

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.

889-8113

Timberland advertised must be at

Grass carp, bluegill and shellcracker least one acre. Timber wanted ads

bream, channel catfish fingerlings, will not be published.

bass, fathead minnows, delivery/pick- Oak, pine, cedar, sweetgum trees for

up, by appointment only. Robert Brown harvest on 4 acres. Also large limbs on

Brooks 770-719-8039

ground; cut/remove. A. Kmetz Hamp-

Grass carp, catfish, bluegill, shellcrack- ton 770-897-0423

er, crappie and threadfin shad. Delivery

available. Brian Simmons Hawkinsville

478-892-3144

Rainbow trout: DNR certified, quality stockers, hatched on farm. Various sizes with delivery/pick-up available. David Cantrell Ellijay 706-273-6199

Public Notice by Georgia Pork Producers Association and the National Pork Board
The election of pork producer delegate candidates for the 2019 National Pork Producers (Pork Act) Delegate Body will take place at 1 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 20, 2018, in conjunction with a Board of Directors meeting of Georgia Pork Producers Association in the auditorium of the Georgia Farm Bureau building in Macon. All Georgia pork producers are invited to attend.
Any producer age 18 or older who is a resident of the state and has paid all assessments due may be considered as a delegate candidate and/or participate in the election. All eligible producers are encouraged to bring with them a sales receipt proving that hogs were sold in their name and the checkoff deducted. For more information, contact Georgia Pork Producers Association, P.O. Box 1566, Bainbridge, Ga., 39818, or call 1.229.246.8297.

PAGE 11

PAGE 12

FARMERS AND CONSUMERS MARKET BULLETIN 404-656-3722 agr.georgia.gov

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2018

Farmers Under 40: Jan Jones

Farm: Jones Farms Hometown: Climax Age: 27
Q: How did you get your start farming?
A: I've grown up on our farm, so my start came really early. I have always had chores on the farm and helped out however I could growing up, but I never planned on farming for a career; I wanted to write and/or publish books. I graduated from Mercer University in 2012 with an English degree and no job experience, so finding that dream job was a challenge. I tried teaching for a year and didn't like it, so I moved back home and continued the job search. During that time, I started working with my dad every day and soon realized I really liked what I was doing. Four years later, I couldn't imagine living or working anywhere else.
Q: What does your farming operation primarily consist of?
A: We have a typical South Georgia row

crop operation cotton, corn, and peanuts. We also raise about 275 commercial beef cows.
Q: What advantages and disadvantages do you think there are to being a younger farmer? How has being a woman played into these?
A: An advantage to being a young farmer and one who has no formal Ag education is that I don't pretend to know everything. So, I question everything. How do we do this? Why do we do it that Jan Jones way and not another way? Can we do it better?
I don't know if my gender has really hurt or helped me, but it's always a conversation starter.
Q: Who has been your biggest role model in farming, and what is the best piece of ad-

vice they have given you?

A: My Dad is my biggest role model, and he's given me lots of advice over the years.
The one that sticks out the most is "Stay focused," which usually means stay focused so you don't tear something up, but it also means stay focused on your end goal and find the best way to get there.

Provided photo

Q: What are your hobbies and interests outside of farming, and how are you able to maintain your work schedule while also participating in those?

A: I am a perpetual hobbyist and am always finding some new skill that I want to learn. I took up beekeeping last year, and I've greatly loved the ups and downs of that endeavor. Most recently, I've been learning to quilt.

Our "downtime" is December through February, when we're not growing any crops. We still have plenty of work to do with the cows and getting the farm ready for planting season, but that's when I have the most time to devote to hobbies. Throughout the rest of the year, I just fit them in when I can.
Q: What do you think is the most important thing that young female (or male) farmers need to know?
A: Find a network or support group of other young farmers, whether that means joining an organization like Farm Bureau, Georgia Young Farmers, or just creating one of your own. Farms are, of course, rural and can be isolating. It's important for me to feel connected to other people who share the same experiences.
-Do you know a young farmer under 40 who would make an interesting profile in the Market Bulletin? Email Leslie Davis at leslie.davis@agr.georgia.gov with your suggestions.

Sunbelt Agricultural Expo in Moultrie announces staffing changes

Gina McDonald to retire after 20 years of service

MOULTRIE The Sunbelt Agricultural Expo announced the appointment of Becca Turner to the position of vice-president of marketing for "North America's Premier Farm Show".
"Becca brings a wealth of knowledge and experience, and we look forward to having her join our outstanding staff," said Sunbelt Executive Director Chip Blalock.
Turner graduated with her Master's in Mass Communication from the University of Georgia in 2002. Since that time she has worked as the executive director of the Colquitt County Arts Center, interim director of ABAC on the Square, and most recently as associate professor of communication at ABAC. She was instrumental in developing the Rural Studies and Communications program and its curriculum for the four-year program. Turner and her husband, Richie, reside in Moultrie with their children, Carolyne and Ret.
Turner will replace Gina McDonald, who announced her retirement in November after 20 years at the Expo.
"It's been a great opportunity to work for the Expo. I've had the privilege to work alongside some of the best people in

Becca Turner

Mary Beth Watson

agriculture," McDonald said. McDonald will remain on staff through March 1. "Gina's commitment to relationship-building with our
community, exhibitors and visitors has taken this show to new heights," Blalock said. "We wish Gina the best in her retirement."
Other Expo staff updates include the appointment of Mary Beth Watson as vice-president of accounting and administration.
Prior to joining the Sunbelt staff, Watson was employed as economic development director for Southern Regional Technical College. She holds a Master's Degree in Education from the University of Georgia.
Watson has served as a volunteer for many community organizations. Currently, she serves as the chairman of the Colquitt County School Board, president of the YMCA Board and is an active member of First Baptist Church. Watson and her husband, James, have a daughter, Mary Grace.
-Submitted by Sunbelt Ag Expo

Southeast United Dairy Industry Association rebrands itself to better reflect focus on growth, partnerships in the industry

The Southeast United Dairy Industry Association has new leadership, new branding and a new name The Dairy Alliance. This change represents the new vision and mission of the organization.
The Dairy Alliance has an emphasis on market-focused partnerships that proactively promote and protect the interests of 2,100 dairy farm families in the Southeast. The new branding initiative includes a new logo, a strategic mission and vision and a renewed effort to expand partnerships and provide growth opportunities in the dairy industry.
"We are aligning our organization to more accurately reflect the vision of our dairy farmer board of directors and bring focus and clarity to the new mission of The Dairy Alliance," said Doug Ackerman, who joined the organization as chief executive officer in January 2017. "The rebranding is more than a

new logo and a new name. It is a fundamental shift in how we position ourselves within the dairy industry, individual business channels and communities where we live and partner for a healthier future for us all."
Since 1971, The Dairy Alliance has been the voice for dairy in the Southeast. The primary goal has been promoting milk and dairy foods for farmers and working with industry partners. The organization started with just four states and has grown to nine, including Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia.
The reorganization aims to represent its

partners, to grow and to meet the challenges facing the dairy industry with knowledge and innovation.
"The dairy industry is facing several challenges, including the loss of producers, globalization and regulation," said Glen Easter, a third-generation dairy farmer who serves as chairman of the board of directors of The Dairy Alliance. "This effort ensures the alliance is hitting our targets and that our families and partners are part of the conversations and, ultimately, the solutions."
The Dairy Alliance uses scientificallybased research and information to champion the dairy industry to organizations around the country including farm bureaus, departments of education, school nutrition associations, state nutrition directors, health professional organizations and others.
-Submitted by The Dairy Alliance

The Dairy Alliance represents more than 2,100 dairy farm families across the Southeast.
Total milk production by dairy farmers represented by The Dairy Alliance was 804.7 million gallons in 2016.
Dairy farmers in Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North and South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia employ 149,368 people.
Southeastern dairy farms have a direct $20,406,655,800 economic impact on the U.S. economy.

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 Feb. 28 issue -- including Farmland for Rent/Lease -- are due by
noon, Feb. 14.