When it comes to propane products, the Ohio Propane Gas Association building is the place to be.
I spoke with Farm Science Review exhibit coordinator Tracey Lemmon, seen here in one of the propane powered vehicles they have on display. His company installs propane systems for marketers. He says they have quite a list of products for farmers to look at. It includes, water heaters, ranges, stove tops, refrigerators, freezers, vehicles, portable heaters, fireplaces, overhead infrared tube heaters, torpedo heaters, gas grills, garage heaters, smokers, fish cookers . . . Just about everything that runs on propane!
Tracey says they put up the building about 10 years ago and this year he was really glad to have it since the weather was disastrous prior to the show opening. However, their building didn’t have any damage.
He says the show has started out great and that farmers are not only looking at agricultural applications of propane but also others since they’re consumers with homes as well.
You can listen to my interview with Tracey here: fsr-08-lemmon.mp3
Farm Science Review Photo Album
AgWired coverage of the Farm Science Review is being sponsored by Monsanto and the Propane Research and Education Council.

Monsanto has their traveling mobile greenhouse on location here at the Farm Science Review. It’s filled with plants at various stages of growth and has been receiving a lot of traffic.
Day two of the Farm Science Review is underway and I’ve got a lot of items to post during the day. I’m kind of playing catch up on the whole jet lag thing but a second cup of coffee is helping.
The statistics for the new Richard W. Stegmann St. Louis Urea Center are pretty amazing.
Diffley showed the media through the storage facility prior to the
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Making that announcement, Lange-Stegmann president Mike Stegmann explained that five years ago he asked Allen to find a way for customers to make their SuperU product at their own locations. “After a little while, he came back and said ‘I don’t think there is a way, but I found something better’ and that something was the stabilized nitrogen center that you see here today,” Mike said. They made the decision to name the center after Allen because of his “commitment and dedication to the technology, the company and the industry as a whole.”
The brand new urea center in St. Louis received its official name at the grand opening ceremony on Tuesday – the Richard W. Stegmann St. Louis Urea Center.
The reason the plant was first located at the site near the Mississippi River was because it was next to the stockyards. “At that time a lot of livestock moved by rail and they had to unload it every 24 hours,” Rich explained. “People would come in with trucks and they would haul back fertilizer.” 
existing energy, transportation and environment segments. DTN has a large list of world class customers in the areas of downstream refined fuels, wind farms, grain producers, agribusinesses, biofuels producers, departments of transportation and aviation companies, among others.
It seemed like the ABN Show midday here at the Farm Science Review. The BARN has a nice barn. Here’s Andy and Lindsay just before their big announcement today.
Also on hand to commemorate the announcement was University of Ohio President, Dr. E. Gordon Gee. He said this was an exciting day for him since ABN Radio founder (deceased), Ed Johnson, was his friend and he knows that Ed would be proud of this announcement and to see Andy and Lindsay carry on his legacy.