Osage Bio Energy, along with co-sponsors Perdue AgriBusiness, the Virginia Farm Bureau Federation and General Motors, recently announced the overall grand prize winner of the 2009 Barley Bin Builder Yield Contest.
Bobby Hutchison of Hutchison Brothers Farms in Cordova, MD, won the grand prize of a brand new GM Flex Fuel pickup truck with his yield of 130 bushels per acre. Cash prizes of between $500 and $1000 were also awarded to the top-yielding farmers in Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, North Carolina and Virginia.
“We are thrilled to reward these leading farmers for their outstanding barley yields in what was a tough year for small grains in the Mid-Atlantic,” said Craig Shealy, president and CEO of Osage Bio Energy. “The average yield per acre among all entrants to the yield contest was over 100 bushels an acre, with an average yield in Virginia of approximately 109 bushels an acre. These are nice results, especially considering the weather prior to harvest.”
Osage Bio Energy plans to sponsor another yield contest next year. Details will be available this fall through the company’s Web site, www.osagebioenergy.com, and through local extension agents.
Osage Bio Energy is scheduled to open the first major barley-to-ethanol bioprocessing facility in the United States, located in Hopewell, Va., to coincide with the 2010 barley harvest. The facility will use barley as its primary raw material in ethanol production, creating a new market for the local barley. Barley also will be used to produce a high-quality barley protein meal for livestock, along with fuel pellets and food-grade carbon dioxide.




“Currently in the United States 98 percent of the soybean meal goes for animal feed for poultry, beef cattle and dairy cattle,” explained Dunn. “So we feel that animal agriculture is very important to the industry.”
Quadruple Super Bowl champion quarterback and Pro Football Hall of Famer Terry Bradshaw is the keynoter for the
Bradshaw will address more than 5,000 Farm Bureau members from across the nation who will gather in Seattle Jan. 10-13 to participate in the organization’s annual grassroots policy setting process. The meeting begins Sunday morning, Jan. 10 with the opening presidential address by Stallman. The annual Young Farmer and Rancher competitions, scheduled for Jan. 10 and Monday, Jan. 11, are just one of the highlights on the agenda. Another important feature on Sunday is the annual Farm Bureau Women’s luncheon and business session, which is open to all women attendees but advance purchase tickets are required to attend.
“What we’re trying to to get the world and the public to see and know is that we have the capability to produce more food and conserve resources at the same time,” explained Eblen. “So we went on record saying in the core crops that we focus on as a company which is corn, soybeans and cotton, that we can double the yields of these crops by 2030 with the starting year of 2000. And at the same time, through the use of technology we have and others’ have, that we could conserve resources by one-third to produce each unit of corn, beans and cotton.”
I was able to learn more about
Almost 60% of of U. S. farms now have internet access and the use of DSL has become the most common method of accessing it. The National Agricultural Statistics Service just released its
The first ever
We have had a couple of comments asking if the
Ned interviewed BIVI’s Stephan Lange, who was the moderator for the seminar, about the event on Friday. Stephan gave a short synopsis of the presenters’ major take-home points and what he hoped the producers got out of the event. “We put together a really nice program,” said Stephan. “The essence of it was to take a look at where the swine industry, even in dire times, can find efficiencies, even when profitability is low.”
USDA has kicked off their
Besides their website you can find the Rural Tour on:
It’s time once again for the NAFB Plambeck Award.