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  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    State of the 2014 Seed Supply

    Day131

    By Mark Grundmeier, Soybean Product Manager

    #Harvest13 is underway across the Upper Midwest. Many farmers prepare to sell their crops – either now or sometime in the near future.  But at family-owned Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds, the 2013 #soybean crop becomes our 2014 seed supply.

    Production growers have started bringing in more bushels than we had expected, and we’ve been pleasantly surprised with the results.  The size of the soybeans is larger than we had expected as dry years often produce small seed sizes.  We’re also happy with the preliminary condition of the seed beans as they’re coming into our plant.

    Product Manager, Mark Grundmeier hand probes a load of freshly harvested Latham Hi‑Tech Soybeans rolling into the plant.
    Product Manager, Mark Grundmeier hand probes a load of freshly harvested Latham Hi‑Tech Soybeans rolling into the plant.

    As the seed travels from our growers’ fields through our processing plant, we aim to be as gentle as possible to preserve the quality of the soybeans and to avoid cracking the seed coats.  Some of our handling equipment is the same as that used by a maker of corn flakes.  You know it’s gentle if it keeps a corn flake intact!

    Farmers who planted Latham® Hi‑Tech Soybeans in 2012, for example, noticed a drastic difference when our soybeans had 10% higher germination than our competitors.  We heard more than one customer tell us he was surprised when the actual germination was higher than the number we had placed on the tag. The reverse situation occurred on the competitor’s soybeans, and the tag on the bag actually showed the germination to be 4% better than the true germ.

    From the growers who take the utmost care of our foundation seed, to the individuals who hand-test the raw product, we follow a stringent, quality-driven process.  Click here for more details about our hands-on process.

    Webspec Admin

    October 21, 2013
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Recognizing People for Improving Quantity & Quality of Food in the World

    BorlaugDialog

    “Musings of a Pig Farmer” by Larry Sailer

    In my blog post last week, I pointed out that farmers can’t just shut down and questioned how civilized is a society whose government shuts down.  This week I promised last week to solve our federal government’s debt problem but… that must wait a week.  Today I can’t pass up the opportunity to share my thoughts about the World Food Prize and the #borlaugdialog Tweet Up I attended yesterday.

    When I first received the invite to yesterday’s Tweet Up, I thought, “I can go if it rains.”  But the more I thought about it, the more I realized it was something that I really want to attend.  After all, I had planned to get done combining beans over the weekend and my corn wasn’t yet ready. That plan sounded reasonable until a few setbacks occurred: (1) my combine broke down and (2) I had to stop and watch my grandson Devin and his ISU teammates play football, and kickoff was scheduled for the silly time of 11 AM Saturday.  Before I knew it, I was down an entire day’s worth of bean combining.

    There's nothing better than eating bacon in a coffeehouse promoting a vegan men
    There’s nothing better than eating bacon in a coffeehouse promoting a vegan men

    The next problem I encountered was the location of the World Food Prize Tweet Up because this particular coffee shop advertised a vegan menu.  No chance of me walking through the door of such an establishment!  After pointing this out to two Tweet Up organizers, Janice Person and Deb Brown assured me BACON would be served there. Game on!

    This Tweet Up gathered together a group of 140 Conference speakers in honor of World Food Prize Week.  One of the three laureates this year is Robb Fraley, PhD.  Dr. Fraley, is responsible for global research as Executive Vice President and Chief Technology Officer.  He has worked for Monsanto for 30 years and was on the ground floor of biotechnology.

    Often referred to as the Father of Biotechnology, Dr. Fraley has literally changed the world of agriculture.  Yet, the one thing that struck me when he visited with us during coffee is that Robb grew up on a small farm about 100 miles south of Chicago.  He’s an old farm boy like me!  Robb reminisced about growing up in a small town with just 17 students were in his graduating class.  He developed a strong work ethic by growing up in a farming community.

    The attention of the world is focused on Iowa this week, as dignitaries around the globe gather in Des Moines for the World Food Prize, which has been called the Nobel Prize for Agriculture. Dr. Robert Fraley was named a 2013 World Food Prize Laureate. This Illinois farm boy and Ph.D. scientist has dedicated his career to advanced crop improvement techniques that are helping feed a hungry world. Pictured from left to right: Doug Getter, Former executive director of the Iowa Bio Tech Industry and current Webster City Councilman and Deb During Brown, Laura Lloyd Abarr Gaulke, Janice Person, Patrick Palmer, Darcy Maulsby, Larry Sailer and Robert Fraley
    The attention of the world is focused on Iowa this week, as dignitaries around the globe gather in Des Moines for the World Food Prize, which has been called the Nobel Prize for Agriculture. Dr. Robert Fraley was named a 2013 World Food Prize Laureate. This Illinois farm boy and Ph.D. scientist has dedicated his career to advanced crop improvement techniques that are helping feed a hungry world. Pictured from left to right: Doug Getter, Former executive director of the Iowa Bio Tech Industry and current Webster City Councilman and Deb During Brown, Laura Lloyd Abarr Gaulke, Janice Person, Patrick Palmer, Darcy Maulsby, Larry Sailer and Robert Fraley.

    Another person attending this Tweet Up from Monsanto was Janice Person, Social Media Director for Monsanto.  Anyone who has ever been around Janice knows what a sweet, sincere and genuine person she is.  A third person in attendance at yesterday’s Tweet Up was Tami Craig Schilling, Technology Communications Lead for Monsanto. Tami and I have been friends for quite some time on Facebook, and I was glad to finally meet her in person.  Online she often talks about being a farm wife, and I know her family is extremely important to her.

    Why am I explaining so much about these Monsanto employees?  Monsanto has been demonized as a huge corporation, trying to take over the world’s food supply!  The truth is, this corporation is made up of people like you and me.  They have families.  They have social lives.  And, yes, they might even have a few faults – just like you and me.

    One statement that Robb said stuck with me: “GM crops are the least size-sensitive of any crop. Small farmers, as well as large farmers, can use them.  They are just seeds, and any farmer knows what to do with a seed.”

    Please do your own research on the topic of GM crops.  Below are a links to resources:

    • Why do farmers plant GMO Crops?
    • GMO Answers
    • Type 5 Myths of GM Seeds Busted

    And if you have more questions, visit directly a farmer.  There are some great chat boards where you can ask questions and receive straight answers.  Please do NOT just listen to some emotional jargon provided by a special interest group or someone with a bone to pick!

    Larry Sailer, Musings of a Pig Farmer

    October 15, 2013
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    How Civilized is a Society that Shuts Down?

    WillRogers21

    MusingsHeader“Musings of a Pig Farmer” by Larry Sailer

    It’s a good thing farmers can’t shut down. If they stopped milking the cows or feeding the pigs and chickens for a day, it would cause more havoc than any shutdown Obama can dream up, writes Randall Reeder, Reeder & Associates LLC, in his “Weekly Comments.”  Reeder goes on to say, “Milking Cows are more essential than parts of government.”

    I couldn’t agree more with Reeder, but it appears the Obama Administration has a much different opinion of what are essential parts of government.  Apparently, it’s in the best interest of national security to secure the World War II Memorial, which has no gates, no doors and no way of closing – until are wise government leaders (insert sarcasm here) installed barricades.  This attraction was hardly manned before the shutdown, but now there are barricades and guards!

    Likewise, it wasn’t enough for the U.S government to close the doors to Mount Rushmore.  When the Feds realized people could still see it from a nearby road, they blocked off part of that road.  (Perhaps our government leaders thought, “Out of sight, out of mind.”  They certainly wouldn’t want American citizens to remember these great presidents and ponder why the U.S. was never close to a mess of this magnitude during their administrations!)

    Reeder had a brilliant idea (IMHO)… invite President Obama and his Cabinet to the Capitol for a joint session of Congress. Then block all the exits, and don’t let anyone out until they agree on something.  Once they get this government shutdown resolved, they’ve can tackle the debt ceiling.

    Throughout history, government – or organized leadership of some type– has been necessary for a civilized society.  I’m beginning to wonder just how civilized our society is.  Just think about how the government shutdown thinks about things we take for granted.

    WillRogers2For example, is the Tomb of The Unknown Soldier still being guarded 24/7?  I heard that Amber Alerts cannot be sent at this time.  The USDA website has been shut down because U.S. Secretary of Vilsack says they can’t afford to keep it secure.  Does it really cost anything for this information to be on the web or is this merely a tactic to show us who’s the boss here?  I can’t say the shutdown of the USDA site has even affected me, but I have noticed its effect on ag education teachers.  Teachers will work around this bump in the road, but it’s just infuriating to know politicians are playing games with our kids’ education!

    What will happen with commodity markets during the government shutdown?  Some folks I’ve visited with believe the markets will not function properly without all the information our government collects. I’m positive markets will not function the same because yesterday it seemed that analysts were trying to digest other information provided by private reports and the media.

    This hiccup in our system of government can have an upside, however.  Now perhaps more Americans will examine what our government really does.  Perhaps more Americans will question what spending is really necessary and what isn’t!  Perhaps more Americans will start asking questions and holding our elected official more accountable instead of being so apathetic.  We need a government for the people, by the people – and that takes engagement.

    Let’s hope we can find a solution soon because Obama’s “all or nothing” mentality will not cut it!  (Play on words intended.)  People are different with different needs.  Government cannot give everything to everyone.  The government can’t continue printing money and expect this country to continue!  Tax dollars come from people, not the government. Someone must pay those tax dollars by producing something.

    Larry Sailer, Musings of a Pig Farmer

    October 8, 2013
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    “Brown Bag It Wednesday” for Only $5!

    4Hmeal flyer13

    In celebration of National 4-H Week and National Pork Month, Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds on Oct. 9 is helping sponsor a pork lunch fundraiser for the Franklin County 4-H Scholarship Endowment.  We’ll be selling “brown bag lunches” in the parking lot of Fareway in Hampton, Iowa, from 11 a.m. until 1:30 p.m.

    4Hmeal-flyerWe’re providing two options for the Brown Bag Lunch: Option 1 is 2 pork burgers for $5; Option 2 includes 1 pork burger, a bag of chips and a bottle of water for $5.  Lunches will be ready to “grab and go” for farmers who are busy and need lunch taken out to the field or for any local resident who would like to support 4-H with a quick and easy lunch.

    Thanks to the Franklin County Pork Producers for donating the pork burgers, and special thanks to Larry Sailer is halting his own harvest to grill Wednesday’s lunch.  We also appreciate the support of Fareway and KLMJ Radio for contributing to the success of this event.  Broadcaster Craig Donnelly has been known to flip burgers and fill orders in between his live radio reports, and we greatly appreciate that!

    Last year we grilled 400 burgers and raised a record-setting $4,000 thanks to matching funds from an anonymous donor.  Please help make this year’s Brown Bag fundraiser another successful event.

    We hope to see you at Fareway in Hampton on Wednesday!  The forecast calls for sunshine and 74 degrees – perfect for grilling and enjoying a tailgate lunch.

    Related Posts:

    • Franklin County Family Raises Winning Pork 
    • 4-H Brought this Family Together
    • Farming and 4-H Are Plagge Family Traditions 

    Larry Sailer, Musings of a Pig Farmer

    October 7, 2013
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Livestock Producers Can’t Shut Down

    New group pigs1

    I’m so frustrated with D.C. Right now that I’m going back to talking about pigs instead of government!

    Pigs are about 10 weeks old when they arrive on Larry’s farm
    Pigs are about 10 weeks old when they arrive on Larry’s farm

    I just refilled the barns I manage with a nice group of pigs that are about 10 weeks old. Any time you move a pig, there can be stress just like a person going to a new place. And just like with people, stress can make them more prone to sickness.  Some pigs in this group had a bout of flu although the modern hog barns I use are very good at keeping the pigs comfortable. These pigs are getting better as they adjust to their new environment.

    And this is the control panel view of the environment computer.
    And this is the control panel view of the environment computer.

    The ideal temperature is 75 degrees inside the hog barns. To get the buildings ready for the arrival of a new group of pigs, I set the computer to control the heat, fans, curtains and cool spray. I have eight of these computers, each costing about $1,000.  Six of these computers have been replaced, and many of the switches and other controls get replaced as needed.

    When I set the temperature at 75, the computer controller does many things. First of all, it turns on the heaters to bring up the temperature. It also turns on fans to keep fresh air flowing into and out of the buildings.  “Minimum air fans” ensure there is always the right amount of fresh air no matter how hot or cold it is outside. As the temperature warms, the controller tells these fans to turn faster. When this isn’t enough air to keep the temperature in the barns constant, the second stage fans are turned on by the computer.

    Pic5
    This is a view of the curtains and secondary fans.

    As the pigs grow bigger, they make more heat just like any living thing. The computers work to maintain the ideal temperature, so it starts opening curtains on the side of the buildings. On a warm summer day, the curtains serve as a big sunshade with a cool breeze blowing through. Many days this past summer, the pigs had the coolest place on the farm so it was more comfortable doing chores than spending time outside on the farm.

    Also inside of these barns, there are additional fans that circulate the air.  But we don’t stop there… the computer also controls the system that sprays a mist of cooling water on the pigs. Pigs can’t sweat ya know! The evaporation process moves heat energy away from the pig. This computer turns the water off and on as needed to let the pigs dry and cool.  Neat huh?!

    Top box controls the secondary fans Bottom left controls the heaters and the spray cool systems
    Top box controls the secondary fans
    Bottom left controls the heaters and the spray cool systems

    This entire system works in reverse as the building cools down: The cooling sprays stop.  The circulation fans shut off. The curtains go back up, just a little at a time. The big fans turn off.  As the building needs to warm up, the little fans slow down to the minimum that they need to turn to keep fresh air on the pigs. Finally, as the wind blows the snow into drifts outside, the heaters run inside to keep our pigs at a very constant temperature.

    If the temperature gets outside the perimeters I set, or if the barns looses water pressure, I get a phone call.  This “alarm system” works any time of the day – even on weekends and holidays! Pig comfort is always our priority. Yet, some people think we are mean by building barns that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to pamper our pigs!

    Larry Sailer, Musings of a Pig Farmer

    October 1, 2013
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    More Latham Cowbell, Please!

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    Tomorrow marks the beginning of the 2013 World Dairy Expo, a week which kicks off with the 4-H & FFA member contests. To help ring in this year’s expo, we’re holding our very own #MoreLathamCowbell Contest for 4-H and FFA attendees. Participants will have the chance to win one of three $25 iTunes gift cards.

    LathamCowbellTo join in on the fun, stop by the Latham booth #883 in the New Holland Trade Center to get your Latham Cowbell and contest instructions. Then take a photo or video with your Latham Cowbell while you’re exploring all World Dairy Expo has to offer. Share your photo or video with us via one of your favorite social media channels (Twitter, Facebook, Instagram or Vine) or send us a photo message. Be sure to tag your entry with #MoreLathamCowbell! Winners will be chosen at random at the end of the day. Feel free to send us multiple photos or videos to increase your chances of winning!

    Follow us on our social media pages throughout the day as we post our own Latham Cowbell photos and videos visiting our favorite places at the Expo. Need some inspiration on where to take your Latham Cowbell while at Expo? Here are some stops we’d recommend:

    • Badger Dairy Club Cheese Stand (The best grilled cheese sandwich you’ll ever eat!)
    • GEA Ice Cream Booth (Who doesn’t like ice cream?)
    • Purple Cow Gift Shop
    • World Forage Analysis Superbowl
    • Cattle Showring (Sure to be a good photo or video opp!)
    • And of course, the Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds booth #883

    Latham experts Corey Catt, Forage Products Manager and Steve Bailie, Regional Sales Manager, will be meeting with dairy industry professionals throughout the week as well as discussing new forage technologies for 2014 and our AlfaShield™ seed treatment for better emergence in dry or wet weather.

    We look forward to seeing all your Latham Cowbell pictures and videos!

    • Facebook: Facebook.com/LathamSeeds
    • Twitter: @LathamSeeds
    • Instagram: @LathamSeeds
    • Vine: @Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Team Latham

    September 30, 2013
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Making the CASE for Education Reform

    Superintendents1

    The federal budget.  The Farm Bill.  The Middle East…  There are so many major topics weighing on Americans right now, but in today’s blog, I’m going to focus on education and topics discussed at last week’s county Farm Bureau board meeting.

    You might think that all that farming and ranching is all that gets discussed at a Farm Bureau meeting, but that’s not true.  Board members help develop the organization’s policy.  Actually, any Farm Bureau member can provide policy input at the grassroots level.  Our policy covers things like the legal system, emergency service fees, energy facilities, as well as items directly tied to farming like conservation.  Education is also very high on this list.

    Most Farm Bureau members have kids or grandkids.  (If you have been following me, you know I have lots of grandkids!)  That’s why once a year we invite the superintendents of our county schools to meeting for a chat.  The supers talk about their concerns for the year:  budgets, building projects and enrollment numbers.  New programs and ideas also are shared.

    SuperintendentsOne new program discussed at last week’s meeting was CASE, Curriculum for Agricultural Science Education.  Mr. Brett Spurgin, ag instructor for West Fork Schools, explained how CASE teaches science and math concepts through activity-, project- and problem-based instruction.  Students need a background in science, math and language, but CASE goes beyond textbook learning and teaches them how to work together to actually solve problems.

    I really like the idea of the CASE program.  Not only do students have an opportunity to apply what they’re learning in the classroom, but it provides them with an understanding of production agriculture outside a typical ag class.  I’ve always thought all school kids should be taught the basics of food production, and now I wonder how we can get a program like this into the big city schools.  A curriculum like this is needed so kids grow up knowing that milk comes from a cow, not the grocery store!

    Education basics (the old 3 R’s) are extremely important.  To be successful in school – and life – a person needs to be able to read and write, understand math and know a little something about the world (history).  But, sadly many young people lack needed skills when they enter the workforce.

    Workers don’t have the required skills, says Bob Funk, president and founder of Express Employment Services, America’s fifth-largest employment agency with annual sales of $2.5 billion and more than 600 franchises across the country.  Express has as many as 20,000 jobs across the U.S. that it can’t fill now because workers don’t have the skills required.

    Funk is mystified why Express has so much trouble filling thousands of information-technology jobs when so many young, working-age adults are computer literate.  He blames public schools and universities for the skills mismatch.  In an article entitled Where the Jobs Are—and How to Get One, published Sept. 20 by the Wall Street Journal, Funk encourages young people looking for a solid career is to get training in accounting, information technology, manufacturing-robotics programming, welding and engineering.

    All of these “top jobs” relate somehow to science and math.  There is truly a need for America’s education system to strengthen its core curriculum, but I don’t believe in taking a cookie cutter approach to education.  Every child is different, with different ideas, wants and needs.  If we were all the same, the world would never progress!  However, I was reading about some of laws the Iowa Legislature passed last session and am concerned about their impact on our state’s educational system.

    One law passed last session addresses home schooling.  Wording of laws is critical, and it appears that Iowa kids can be home schooled without any supervision or testing.  I’m on the fence here.  On one hand, I believe parents should determine how they educate their children.  On the other hand, I’ve known some parents whom shouldn’t even had kids!

    Like farming, I believe the educational sector can be overregulated.  And I haven’t even mentioned school lunches yet!  However, I believe there are some standards worth meeting.  What are your thoughts?

    Larry Sailer, Musings of a Pig Farmer

    September 24, 2013
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    A lesson in rural road safety

    6339893 l 300x2001

    FS4JK-logoguest blog by, Tracy Schlater of Farm Safety For Just Kids

    Safety on rural roads largely depends on knowing what the other vehicle is going to do.  Turn signals and brake lights are the only means we have of alerting others to our actions, and I learned that lesson – the hard way – shortly after getting my driver’s license at age 16.

    6339893_l-300x200On my way home from school, I was following a pickup hauling a couple of grain wagons on the gravel road leading to my family’s farm.  There was a field drive coming up on the left and a farmhouse drive to the right.  As we approached the intersection where the two driveways met the road, the driver of the pickup moved to the left side of the road.

    Since he moved left, my 16-year-old self thought he was turning into the field drive on the left.  I assumed that he moved into the oncoming “lane” of our gravel road, so I wouldn’t have to slow down while he made his turn.

    I was wrong.

    He was swinging wide to make the right hand turn into the farm yard without taking out the mailbox on the corner.  His turn would have been obvious had the signal been working on his wagons.  I was seconds from plowing into the passenger side of his pick up as he made his turn.

    My mistake was making an assumption.  I should have slowed down long enough to see his next move. I’m fortunate to have learned that lesson at such a young age without the costly implications of an accident.

    About one-third of fatal tractor accidents occur on public roads, according to the National Safety Council.  That’s why I’d like to share the following tips for sharing the road safely this harvest season.

    What’s the best way to share the road?

    • Plan the BEST route; avoid busy streets and towns when possible
    • You MUST allow 1/2 the roadway to oncoming traffic AND behind you
    • Try to move equipment during daylight hours whenever possible.  Avoid moving farm equipment on public roads between sunset and sunrise or anytime when visibility is limited to 500 feet.

    What lighting is required on farm equipment and wagons?

    • DOT regulations state you must have at least 1 solid red light on the rear of an ag trailer
    • Properly light your farm equipment. Ensure turn signals, headlights and taillights conform to state vehicle codes.
    • Use amber flashers to provide warning to motorists that hazards may exist.
    • Have slow moving vehicle emblems and reflectors in place on all tractors and implements.
    • Emblems should be clean and in good condition; SMV signs are required for speeds less than 35 mph.
    • **Speeds greater than 35 mph, signs need to be covered or removed.
    • Make sure your load does not obscure lights and warning devices. Pay special attention to the outward edge of equipment such as knives.

    How should you prepare your drivers?

    • DON’T ASSUME your drivers know the hazards of large equipment on the road.
    • Prepare selected maps for your drivers so you can avoid narrow bridges, blind hills and generally unsafe areas along the way

    Start with a PLAN and make sure your drivers know what you expect of them in terms of safe passage.

    Gary Geske

    September 23, 2013
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Diversify & Limit Risk

    nickB_FR13No two crop years are exactly alike, so why base next year’s potential off last year’s results? In 2010, we received excessive rainfall. In 2011, we experienced three weeks of 100-plus degree heat. Last season we experienced the most severe drought since 1956.  This year we experienced excessively wet spring conditions, followed by extreme heat and now a lack of moisture.

    Making seed selections based only on this year’s yield results could risk performance next year due to the drastic changes in growing conditions from year to year. Because the weather is unpredictable, it’s important to minimize risk by planting a portfolio of products.

    Treat your seed product portfolio much like a financial portfolio. Minimize risk by (1) planting seed products with different traits and genetics; (2) varying maturity; plus (3) balancing offensive and defensive characteristics.

    Products that are typically thought of as more defensive could actually be the highest yielders depending on: weed pressure, insect pressure, heat stress, emergence issues, and disease pressure. It’s all about balance.

    No matter how good a particular football team is, it can’t win on the gridiron by having a strong offense or a strong defense. It takes both! And the same is true whether you’re planting in a corn field or a soybean field. Remember to plant a minimum or three different seed numbers, with a mixture of offensive and defensive traits.

    Webspec Admin

    September 19, 2013
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Imagine Having 4,500 Landlords!

    FarmingOperation

    When I have a lot of windshield time – whether it’s driving to meetings or combining corn – I contemplate all sorts of things.  For example, have you ever wondered about the term “landlord”?

    The term dates back to the Roman Empire and feudalism when peasants (or serfs) were bound to the land.  The peasants worked the land and paid homage to their lord; they shared their produce and other fruits of their labor in exchange for military protection.

    Fast forward a couple thousand years to the country of Ukraine. The tables have turned during the last 20 years, so now the people who used to be the peasants are the landlords.  When the Soviet Union fell apart, land that has been confiscated by the government was returned to the farm villagers.

    Kees Huizinga
    Kees Huizinga

    Each qualifying person received about three to four hectares, but there was a catch… the villagers could not buy or sell that land! If the owners of the ground cannot sell it, that means they must either farm it themselves or rent it.  This is where the story really gets interesting (IMHO)…

    During our Black Sea Study Trip last July with Iowa Farm Bureau, we had an opportunity to visit many farms in the Ukraine.  One particular farmer, Kees Huizinga, stands out in my mind.  His farm operation is called “krychenka.”  He has grown it from scratch to 14,000 hectares, or about 35,000 acres.

    Kees (Case) Huizinga is an investor-owner, operator of “Krychenka”, a 14,000+ hectare farm (35,000 acres). A native of the Netherlands, Kees began farming in the Ukraine about 10 years ago. The initial farming operation had 1,000 hectares. Kees said that when they started farming there the fields were full of weeds that really had not been farmed. They used a moldboard plow to get started and to begin the process of cleaning up the fields and leveling them out.
    Kees (Case) Huizinga is an investor-owner, operator of “Krychenka”, a 14,000+ hectare farm (35,000 acres). A native of the Netherlands, Kees began farming in the Ukraine about 10 years ago. The initial farming operation had 1,000 hectares. Kees said that when they started farming there the fields were full of weeds that really had not been farmed. They used a moldboard plow to get started and to begin the process of cleaning up the fields and leveling them out.

    Now if you’re an old farmer like me, you start doing the math!  Kees has about 4,500 landlords living in about 10 villages, which Kees is now responsible for taking care of.  Not only does Kees need contracts with 4,500 landlords, he must take care of the needs of their villages.  There aren’t any property taxes to fund the schools, supply water, maintain roads or remove snow.  Kees has large equipment, so he’s expected to take care of all these needs!  Basically, he is taxed by the services he must provide.

    Can you imagine?  Many Midwest farmers feel that one landlord is one too many!  Imagine having 4,500 landlords who expect you to take care of more than just their farm acres.  As frustrated as I can get with the rules and regulations, I can’t imagine having thousands of landlords.  Hmm…  maybe there are more similarities between the two than I first thought!

    For more stories about our trip to the Ukraine, click on the links below:

    • Busting Myths about Dracula’s Castle
    • Farmer’s Markets Open 24/7 in the Ukraine
    • How Eastern European Farms Measure Up

    Larry Sailer, Musings of a Pig Farmer

    September 17, 2013
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
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