Farmer Joins Biodiesel Producers, Senators on Hill

John Davis

goergerBiodiesel producers and farmers who raise the feedstocks for the biodiesel industry took to Capitol Hill this week, joining a group of U.S. Senate Democrats in their calls to end policy uncertainty that is hurting their industry. Terry Goerger, a soybean grower from North Dakota, expressed his concerns, especially how many farmers made plans believing Congress and the Obama Administration would continue to back biodiesel.

“We all bought into the [Renewable Fuel Standard] thinking it was the road map to the future for domestic fuels, like biodiesel. So we made the investments, we made the road map to do these things, and right now, those things are being pulled back. And it’s really caused us to think, ‘What is going to happen to our industry?'” despite the growth in the renewable fuels industry, he said.

Terry went on to tell me it’s hard for the biodiesel industry to expand, or even maintain at current levels, with the way now federal tax incentives are renewed year-to-year. He’d like to see the legislation changed to a five or 10 year plan.

“With biodiesel, it’s important to have a structured program that will assist the biodiesel industry in growing and getting where it needs to be in solving our energy needs in America,” Terry said.

He’s optimistic that there’s enough support in Congress to make the programs supporting biodiesel more stable.

“We’re hoping they’ll listen and think about if they really want a renewable fuel industry in the United States. The farmers who produce the feedstock are ready to go, and a lot of the people operating the plants are ready to go and increase and move ahead. We just need a little help to make that all happen.”

Listen to my conversation with Terry here: Terry Goerger, North Dakota soybean farmer

And you can hear what the senators had to say here: Senators Voice Biodiesel Concerns And what other stakeholders had to say here: Biodiesel Industry Concerns

Audio, Biodiesel, Soybean

Alltech Craft Brews & Food Fest

Chuck Zimmerman

Alltech Commonwealth Craft Brew Cup WinnerIf you’re going to hold a world class customer event why not start with a craft brew festival? Brilliant! That’s what Alltech did yesterday here in Lexington, KY. A thousand beers from 30 countries were featured at this event which was packed with 4,500 fans and early arriving attendees to this week’s 2014 Alltech Symposium.

During the festival yesterday Dr. Pearse Lyons, Alltech founder, presented the first Alltech Commonwealth Craft Beer Cup winner with a trophy. Levente Gati of Hungary accepted the Alltech Commonwealth Craft Beer Cup on behalf of brewer Jozsef Turoczi of Zip’s Brewhouse in Miskolc, Hungary. The brewery’s “Zip’s Christmas 2013” Christmas Ale took the top prize.

So, you couldn’t make it? Don’t despair. Wearing ZimmGlass I created a walk through look at the festival that includes interviews at several brewery stops, with Dr. Lyons and with Levente. You can also see the full stage presentation of the winners. Assuming Alltech does this next year you might want to add the date to your calendar. I’m here for the Symposium again this year which kicks off with an opening banquet this evening.


Photos from yesterday’s event and the Symposium can be found here as I add to them: 2014 Alltech Symposium Photo Album

Agribusiness, Alltech, Food, Video

Zimfo Bytes

Talia Goes

Zimfo Bytes

  • David Schapker of Indianapolis has been named chief financial officer of the National FFA Organization and National FFA Foundation.
  • The U.S. Grains Council launched an enhanced version of http://www.grains.org.
  • BASF announced that Nealta miticide received full, unconditional registration with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
  • CropLife America (CLA) commends the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) for continuing to closely monitor and record the health of bee colonies in the U.S. and for collaborating with a variety of stakeholders to address pollinator health issues.
Zimfo Bytes

Homegrown Farmer Veteran Coalition

Chuck Zimmerman

Farmer Veteran CoalitionYesterday the Farmer Veteran Coalition announced the national launch of the Homegrown By Heroes initiative. This product labeling program allows farmers, ranchers and fishermen from all 50 states and U.S. territories who have served or are still serving in any branch of the U.S. military the ability to use the logo on their agricultural products. Consumers and businesses purchasing agricultural products will begin to see this logo at the point-of-purchase and on business signage, enabling them to select products that support our country’s farmer veterans.

The Kentucky Department of Agriculture (KDA) created the Homegrown By Heroes labeling as part of its Kentucky Proud marketing program in 2013. More than 60 Kentucky farmer veterans have already registered their farms with KDA to use the Homegrown By Heroes label. At a bi-partisan event in Louisville on Veterans Day 2013, Kentucky’s political and National Guard leaders joined Agricultural Commissioner James Comer as he announced a national partnership for FVC to launch the Homegrown By Heroes program outside of the Commonwealth.

Homegrown by HeroesMark and Denise Beyers are the first certified Homegrown By Heroes producers outside of Kentucky. The high school sweethearts entered the Marine Corps in 1998 and 1999, respectively. While serving in Iraq in 2005, Mark’s team hit an improvised explosive device (IED), resulting in combat injuries that led to the loss of his right arm and right leg. Upon returning from service overseas, Mark and Denise built a thriving maple syrup business on their 15-acre property in upstate New York. The couple will use the Homegrown By Heroes label to help sell the maple syrup they produce on their farm as well as eggs and vegetables they will market in the summer.

“Farming and military service are more closely linked that one might think. Thousands of our service men and women leave the rural communities and farms they call home in order to serve our country in the military. Upon completion of their service, they often return home to resume work on the family farm,” said Michael O’Gorman, executive director of the Farmer Veteran Coalition. “Conversely, we work with hundreds of veterans with no agriculture background who, upon returning from service, see opportunity in farming and ranching and decide to embark on a new career path in agriculture. By supporting this label, we can help the veterans who are serving our country in a new way – by producing the food and fiber that feeds and clothes us all. At the same time, we’re helping thousands of young veterans find a new calling in a farming community whose average age is 58 years.”
Read More

Ag Groups, Farming

Missouri Cattlemen’s Raffling New Holland Equipment

Chuck Zimmerman

Missouri Cattlemens AssocationMy good friends at the Missouri Cattlemen’s Association are holding a raffle to win the use of some New Holland equipment, specifically a T6 tractor and Roll-Belt 560 round baler. Tickets are $20/ea. or 3 for $50. A drawing will be held at the MCA Convention on January 3, 2015. You can contact the office to buy tickets. If you sell tickets for them there are additional prizes for individuals and county affiliate groups that sell the most.

Since there is a New Holland Roll-Belt Facebook campaign to share baling tips it just caught my eye. If you’ve got some tips to share just go to FB to do so.

And while you’re online you might as well get registered at MyNewHolland.com.

Ag Groups, Agribusiness, New Holland

Rise of the Giants Film Project

Chuck Zimmerman

Rise of the GiantsWhile we’re speaking about movies about farming . . . do you know about Rise of the Giants? – A feature-length documentary following the 2013 race to grow the world’s largest pumpkin. This is a Kickstarter project by filmmaker Daria Matza. And she just started following me on Twitter. I’ll let her tell the story about her project, which is actually pretty close to its funding goal. Help her out if you can.

A lot of work has already been done on the film project but there’s more to do. See the trailer below.

Rise of the Giants – Trailer from Daria Matza on Vimeo.

Farming, Video

Dryland Movie

Chuck Zimmerman

Dryland MovieSpeaking of movies about farming . . . We were speaking about movies about farming weren’t we? Have you heard of Dryland? I just found it because it just started following me on Twitter. Here’s what I know and I have not seen it. Have you? What do you think? I see that there are showings coming up at the Ritz Theater in Ritzville, WA, May 22/23.

Filmed over a decade and set in the American West, Dryland traces a young man’s quest for victory in a rambunctious contest, while battling to preserve a threatened way of life. Josh Knodel and best friend Matt Miller strive to win the Lind Combine Demolition Derby, save their town, and preserve the legacy of their families’ Eastern Washington wheat farms.

The derby supports Lind through dry years and economic uncertainty. The tiny town of 500 swells to 5,000 for one day each year and, with barn-raising community spirit, funds critical local services. Paradoxically, as agricultural technology advances, promoting more efficient production, the need for labor decreases and fewer young farmers can stay on the land. Higher costs force farms to consolidate or grow, and many family farms and the rural towns depending on them simply disappear.

Galvanizing optimism, strategy, and elbow grease, Josh and Matt rebuild JAWS each year to vie for the derby title. They complete high school, then college, preparing to farm. But even as Josh leads JAWS to victory, he’s defeated in his lifelong passion to harvest the fields his great-grandfather first tilled, and he is forced to leave the farm to find a job.

In this visceral, cinematic duet of hard work and harder play, Josh, Matt, and their community unite to propel the legacy of the American family farm. Bittersweet and exuberant, Dryland ultimately champions hope, in a celebration of hard work and harder play, fueled by ingenuity, heart, and axle grease.

Education, Farming, Video

Ag Leader Reports on Seasonal Progress

Melissa Sandfort

Insights Weekly Spring field operations are well underway and Ag Leader’s Technical Support department is buzzing! agleader2

Any given business day, over 40 members of the Support department are here to help advance the usability of our comprehensive lineup of precision agriculture products. From 7am to 7pm Monday through Friday, 8am to 4pm on Saturdays and 12pm to 4pm on Sundays during the spring planting season, we’re here for you!

Technical Support Seasonal Schedule

And judging by this map showing percentage of corn crop planted, we’ll still have plenty of opportunities to speak with you yet this planting season!
agleader3

Happy Farming!

“Corn Planting Map.” Ag Web. Farm Journal, Inc. 12 May 2014. Web. 12 May 2014

Become a fan of Ag Leader on Facebook today, and get the latest precision ag videos on the YouTube channel. For more information about Ag Leader products and services, or to visit the blog site, go to www.agleader.com.

Ag Leader, Agribusiness

FS Sales Lens Offers New Views

Cindy Zimmerman

fs-sales-lensA great benefit of new communications technology is how it provides farmers the opportunity to access information nearly anyplace or time right in the palm of their hand.

GROWMARK is utilizing the immediacy of tablets and smartphones for crop specialists to provide farmers with visual information on the spot with FS Sales Lens. “It’s really designed for them to understand their customer better to be able to service them better,” says Lance Rupert, GROWMARK Agronomy Marketing Manager.

The tool allows crop specialists to create personalized proposals for farmers based on their specific needs. “It is exported to an app on an iPad so when they go see a grower they can walk through it with them face to face,” Lance explained. Connected with that is a scenario calculator which allows the specialist to work with the farmer using different variables to help them determine what is best for their particular situation. “It runs different profit-loss scenarios,” he said. “That’s really important now with crop prices coming down a little.”

Lance says FS Sales Lens also has a scouting app, which allows the specialist to go through a field and check for insects, diseases and weeds. “He can track his movements in a field through GPS, drop a pin or highlight the area where the issue is … take pictures, attach it to a report, and then be able to communicate those issues to the grower,” said Lance.

The FS Sales Lens tool is brand new for this season, after being field tested last year, so growers can expect to see it in use by their FS crop specialists. In addition, Lance says they plan to build on the functionality of it as growers and crop specialists come up with new ways it can be utilized.

Find out more in this interview with Lance Rupert: FS Sales Lens interview

Audio, Farming, FS System, GROWMARK, Technology

WRRDA Conference Report Released

Cindy Zimmerman

wrrdaThe long-awaited Water Resources Reform and Development Act (WRRDA) conference report was released by House and Senate negotiators on Thursday, to the great relief of agricultural interests.

“This is a huge step forward to ensure the continued success of the soybean supply chain, and leaders in both the House and Senate deserve a great deal of credit for shepherding this bill through a challenging policymaking climate,” said American Soybean Association President and Iowa farmer Ray Gaesser.

rod-davisConference committee member Congressman Rodney Davis (R-IL) is pleased with the final outcome. “The conference report I believe is a well balanced piece of legislation that takes into consideration the Senate needs and the House needs,” Davis told AgWired. “I’m just excited to get this bill across the finish line – the first one since 2007.”

The legislation is designed to “strengthen the nation’s transportation network, keep America competitive in the global marketplace, and reform and streamline the way we move forward with improvements to our ports, locks, dams, and other water resources infrastructure.” Davis expects the conference report to pass both houses of Congress with little opposition. “And we’ll chalk it up as a success in bi-partisanship and move on to other work that we’ve got to get done,” he added. The legislation is expected to come to the floor next week.

Listen to my interview with Rep. Davis here: Rep. Rodney Davis interview on WRRDA

Audio, Soybean, transportation