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Volume VIII, Issue 7 July 2014
PRST STDU.S. POSTAGE
PAIDOMAHA, NE
PERMIT NO. 36
Section
A
Weathering the extremes
Some fields doing well, others battered by rain, wind and hail
compiled by Gordon WolfIowa farmers continued to work around
the weather as more rain fell throughout the state last week.
For the week ending July 6, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service reported that only 2.6 days were suitable for field work, on a statewide average. It marked the third consecutive week with less than three suitable days for field work.
State Climatologist Harry Hillaker with the Iowa Department of Agriculture said in his weekly weather summary that heavy rains fell across the state for the third consecutive week. Rain during the week ending July 6 fell more in the central one-third of the state, particularly across the east central sections of Iowa.
He said that high winds and/or large hail was reported from 24 counties on June 29 and from 41 counties on June 30, and every county between Interstate 80 and Highway 20 reported severe weather on one or both of those days.
NASS rated statewide crop conditions for the week ending July 6 as follows.
Corn: 2% very poor, 5% poor, 17% fair, 53% good and 23% excellent
Soybeans: 2% very poor, 6% poor, 19% fair, 55% good and 18% excellent
Hay: 1% very poor, 5% poor, 27% fair, 51% good and 16% excellent
Pasture and range: 1% very poor, 3% poor, 22% fair, 54% good and 2% excel-lent
Oats: 0% very poor, 3% poor, 24% fair, 60% good and 13% excellent
Iowa State University Extension Field Agronomist Clarke McGrath said “strug-gling” was the best term he could use to describe how the crops were doing in the southwest and west central Iowa counties he serves.
“While some areas are doing pretty well, for the most part southwest and west central Iowa has been battered by wind, hail, and now an overabundance of rain,” McGrath said in a report emailed to
Iowa Farm & Ranch.He added that excessive rains, especial-
ly heavy rains that fell in a short amount of time, created many ditches, blown-out terraces and soil erosion.
“Ditches and terrace blow-outs are un-fortunate since guys have to try to farm through them the rest of the season and then fix them after harvest,” McGrath said. “Since they can be pretty well hidden in crop canopy, we’ve seen bent and bro-ken equipment or even tractors or grain carts upset by some of these ditches.”
He continued the soil erosion that oc-curred will have a long-term effect on crop productivity as it takes decades to replace what can be lost in just one rain storm.
The heavy rains also caused concern about nitrogen loss. Options for remedies at this stage of the growing season are few.
FLOODING, Page 3A
Following torrential rains during June, areas of flooding dotted the landscapes of western Iowa. The photo above was taken from the top of the MaxYield Cooperative in Mallard, facing west of the town. Photo submitted
A field on the east side of Woodbury County road L36 near Correctionville shows effects of flooding from the Little Sioux River on June 22. Photo by Gordon Wolf
IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014PAGE 2A
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Cattle producers in many parts of Iowa are shifting rapidly from drought conditions to extremely wet and flood conditions, and they have a new set of issues to manage.
Water-logged facilities, flooded pastures, earthen basins that are full and financial issues are immediate concerns. The Iowa Beef Center and Iowa State Univer-sity Extension and Outreach are addressing producers concerns in multiple ways, including online resources.
“One of the first things to check is the structural strength of the livestock buildings, electrical equip-ment and safety of the water systems,” said Beth Doran, beef program specialist with Iowa State Uni-versity Extension and Outreach.
“The potential for flooded or spilled pesticides, fuel or oil spills and flooded grain bins should also be monitored.”
Doran also reminds producers that flood conditions can affect the health of animals. Producers should watch for symptoms of lameness, fever, difficulty breathing, muscle contractions or swelling of the shoulders, chest, back, neck or throat.
“The potential exists for grazing cattle to swallow storm debris, such as nails or staples,” she said. “Con-sequently, cattle should be monitored for hardware disease.”
Pasture management is critical. Remove any debris and return cattle to the pasture when the ground is dry and solid.
Returning cattle too soon results in trampled pas-tures and damaged plants. If areas of the pasture or hay ground are eroded or silt- or sand-covered, re-seeding may be necessary.
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For more assistance, contact a local extension beef specialist. A list of specialists is available at www.extension.iastate.edu/ag/beef.
“There is no doubt that people who experienced
flooding were affected financially,” said Doran. “For-tunately, the new Farm Bill contains several kinds of disaster assistance programs for livestock producers.”
Livestock producers with livestock losses should contact their local United States Department of Agri-culture Farm Service Agency. Applicants will be asked to provide documentation of the number and kind of livestock that have died.
Dealing with Flooding – 2014 is the Iowa State Uni-versity Extension and Outreach website with resourc-es for dealing with flooded gardens, drinking well, basements and many other home cleanup, health and safety issues that come with home flooding – includ-ing stress. Find a link to it at www.extension.iastate.edu.
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FLOODING, from Page 1A
“We are at the point where we can’t do much about it unless guys want to try aerial application or high clear-ance ground application of nitrogen,” said McGrath.
“At this time of year, as we approach tasseling, it is a tough decision to make since these methods can be expensive.”
McGrath said he has had casual conversations with friends in the crop insurance industry and the Natural Resources Conservation Service about the number of acres affected by flooding.
“They are still getting a handle on the total damage,” he said.
“It is hard to put numbers on it because the damage runs on a continuum from hundreds of thousands of acres with moderate damage (guys will get to harvest but yield is impacted significantly) to tens (maybe hun-dreds) of thousands of acres that hail totally destroyed. We also lost or are in process of losing acres to flooding or soil saturation.”
McGrath said some replanting occurred in his area after the early June storms, and the prognosis on those acres is decent.
He explained that producers will typically face a sig-nificant yield penalty for replanting later but this is im-possible to predict.
Flat ground west of the Loess Hills and east of Hornick looks more like a lake than corn and soybean fields after several heavy storms. The photo was taken on July 5. Photo by Gordon Wolf
IOWA FARM & RANCH PAGE 5AJULY 2014
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“Corn that was replanted in June is in a race with Mother Nature to mature before frost. Early June planted soybeans are usually decent unless we get an unusually early frost,” said McGrath.
The wet weather will bring challenges related to weeds and diseases.
“Our early-season residual soil-applied products (for weeds) have or will soon run out of gas; wet weather speeds up that process,” McGrath said. “We expect weed pressure to increase in fields that haven’t yet canopied.
“The wet weather has also made it tough to get soy-beans sprayed so weeds are getting some size to them and will be tougher to control. There may be some fields that guys will either live with some weed escapes or someone will be walking them.”
He continued that disease is a huge concern due to the wet fields and wet weather. Most corn and soybean diseases thrive in the humid conditions that occurred in late June and early July.
“I suspect that guys will be lining up fungicide applica-tions in both corn and beans on a pretty good chunk of the acres that still look decent - meaning they survived the hail and haven’t flooded out yet,” McGrath said. “I’d still like guys to scout and prioritize what needs fungi-cides and hit the optimum application timing rather than just arbitrarily sending planes out, but with small spray windows and a limited number of applicators, that is easier said than done.”
He added that crop damage from insects is more dif-ficult to predict as wet weather tends to keep a few spe-cies, such as spider mites and grasshoppers, at lower numbers. But he advised producers to continue to scout their crops.
In his integrated agronomy newsletter dated July 7, Extension Field Agronomist Mark Johnson said the NASS crop condition report was quite good considering the excessive rain and the some wide areas of hail.
For advice on handling drowned out spots in fields, Johnson also referred to a June 2010 paper written by then Extension Forage Specialist Steve Barnhart, which can be found at http://www.extension.iastate.edu/CropNews/2010/0629barnhart.htm. Johnson said it is late enough now that even if producers don’t need for-age, they should consider planting cover crops on large bare spots.
Pastures turned to streams and lakes following heavy rains during June. The “stream” above formed near Curlew. Photo submitted
Rows of corn plants are swallowed by water that covers a low-lying area in a field south of Sheldon on June 22. Photo by Gordon Wolf
The Rock River surpassed flood stage on June 17, affect-ing property and people in Rock Rapids and Rock Valley. Above is a photograph of flooded fields adjacent to Rock Valley, taken on June 22. Photo by Gordon Wolf
IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014PAGE 6A
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“Fields of Champions” pairs agriculture and fun
The fourth annual “Fields of Champions” celebrating food, farming and fitness will be a highlight of the Sum-mer Iowa Games Athlete Jamboree & Opening Ceremonies Friday, July 18, beginning at 5 p.m. in Ames.
The event, powered by the Iowa Food & Family Project, will feature interactive activities for people of all ages, the chance to win an iPad mini and Casey’s pizza for a year and an opportunity to meet Ames native and Golden State Warriors basketball star Harrison Barnes.
In addition to inflatable games, face painting, balloon artists and more kid-friendly activities, the Fields of Champions celebration will feature the Ag Magic Show hosted by Rhonda Renee.
Through magic, storytelling, juggling and music, Renee offers children and their parents a glimpse into the impor-tant role agriculture plays in their daily lives.
Spectators will learn that nearly everything they touch, consume and wear has a direct connection to agriculture and farmers.
Iowa farmers will be on hand throughout the “Fields of Champions” celebration to chat about what they do and answer questions about food and farming.
Children can obtain a Zone Score Card that will send them through a series of interactive stations to learn about food and farming. Participants will then take the card to ‘The End Zone’ to register for prizes including four tickets to the Golden State Warriors vs. Denver Nuggets NBA pre-game on October 16 and Casey’s pizza for a year.
Barnes will be on hand to sign autographs that eve-ning. Additionally, Champions Forever will perform their Spin-tacular basketball show, as seen on the finals of ‘America’s Got Talent’.
Iowa Food & Family Project partners helping power the Fields of Champions celebration include the Iowa Beef Industry Council, Iowa Egg Council, Iowa Pork Producers Association, Iowa Select Farms, Iowa Soybean Associa-tion, Midwest Dairy Association, The Soyfoods Council, Iowa Corn, Iowa Turkey Federation, Feed Energy, United Soybean Board and Iowa Food Bank Association.
The Iowa Food & Family Project (www.iowa-foodandfamily.com) celebrates the continuous improve-ment of Iowa’s farm families and their dedication to pro-viding wholesome food for everyone.
It invites Iowans to become better acquainted with the dedicated farmers who grow their food and more confi-dent in today’s agriculture. The Iowa Food & Family Proj-ect is funded in part by soybean, pork, beef, egg, corn, turkey and dairy checkoffs.
IOWA FARM & RANCH PAGE 7AJULY 2014
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Man pursues childhood dream to compete in World Livestock Championship
by Stasha PadgettWill Epperly, of Dunlap Livestock Auc-
tion, is in the business of making every word count.
He can speak around 150 words per minute and sell a lot of cattle within 30 seconds. He explained that in some cases it might take a little longer if he feels that he can get more money for his constitu-ents.
“We are dealing with some people’s one check a year,” he said.
Selling livestock is only part of Epper-ly’s life goal.
“My main focus is winning the Worlds,” he said.
The “Worlds” is the Livestock Market-ing Association World Livestock Auction-eer Championship (WLAC).
Each year livestock auctioneers are given the chance to compete in the WLAC. The event is highly structured, and an auctioneer must meet many qualification standards before he or she can partici-pate.
The WLAC is conducted in four stages: qualifying events, semi-finals interview competition, semi-finals live auction competition, and finals live auction com-petition. LMAweb.com says in order to participate, entrants have to complete a WLAC entry form, be a livestock auction-eer, be at least 18 years of age, be em-ployed by at least one traditional fixed-facility livestock auction market and must not have sold at that year’s WLAC host market.
Contestants also need to have a spon-sor and at least one fixed facility livestock auction market that is willing to vouch for his or her status as a livestock auctioneer.
After an auctioneer has determined his or her eligibility and turned in an applica-tion, he or she may compete in up to two of three qualifying events.
The top 10 from each of the three events advances to compete in the semi-finals, and from each qualifying group three people are named champion, reserve and runner-up.
Epperly, a third-generation auctioneer, grew up in Moneta, Virginia, where his father and grandfather ran a sale building from 1987 to 2001. Epperly remembers watching Superior Livestock, “Amer-ica’s leader in livestock marketing,” on
TV with his grandfather. Epperly recalls turning from the TV and saying, “I want to be a champion.”
His grandfather took six-year-old Ep-perly seriously and put him on the selling block to auction baby calves.
Epperly said his grandfather told him, “I believe you can and you will win the Worlds someday. You have a God-given talent.”
Epperly finds strength from his grand-father’s encouragement, and believes, if at the least, the WLAC helped him get his job in Dunlap.
At age 16 Epperly was hired by Lynch-burg Livestock Market, of Rustburg, Vir-ginia, and worked there until he was 19. After high school he attended Iowa Lakes Community College to study agricultural business. When he finished school he worked for Spencer Livestock Sales in Spencer and later moved on to South Da-kota to work for Mitchell Livestock Mar-ket and Bushy Park Farms.
Later, Epperly moved back to his hometown to help his father at their fam-ily ranch in Moneta, Virginia. After his father no longer needed assistance, he
moved to Kentucky to work at Blue Grass Stockyards.
Epperly explained that while he was grateful for his job it was not his preferred place to work. In May 2013 Epperly got a phone call from Jon Schaben of Dunlap Livestock Auction, asking if he wanted to consider moving to Iowa.
“It was the call of my life,” he said. On July 9 last year, Epperly’s birthday,
he said he got one of the best birthday surprises, an official job offer to work in Dunlap.
Epperly said his coworkers and bosses, Jim and Jon Schaben, have made a large impact on his career and ability to auc-tion well.
“I thought I knew about the business,” he said and added that Jim and Jon Scha-ben have taught him a lot more than he has ever known and helped him to pre-pare for the WLAC.
In 2013 Epperly qualified in Stanford, Kentucky, for the fifth time and went on to Knoxville to compete in the semi-finals and then the finals. The finals took place June 19 through 21.
“It was a great honor,” he said.
Epperly explained that the semifinals are a two-step process. The first is an in-terview consisting of three questions.
“They ask you questions like ‘How does the weather affect the livestock,’” he said.
The day after the interview the semi-finalists compete in the sales barn and are judged on clarity, conduct of sale, ability to catch bids and if they would be a good employee and spokesperson.
Ten finalists are chosen by combining 25 percent of the interview score and 75 percent of the sale barn score. Out of the ten, judges decide on a champion, reserve and runner up. The 2014 winners were Champion Blaine Lotz, of Edna, Kan-sas, Reserve Champion Preston Smith, of Dodge City, Kansas, and Runner-up Brennin Jack, of Prince Albert, Saskatch-ewan.
Epperly is happy to have made it to the finalist round; his official place was fourth.
Now Epperly is busy trying to achieve the goal he set for himself at six years old; he plans to compete in the 2015 WLAC. He said Jon, Jim and Jay Schaben are helping him prepare for the interview.
“I always want to get ahead of the game,” he said.
His goal is to understand every inch and detail of the livestock market by par-ticipating in mock interviews conducted by his coworkers.
Above all the recognition and all of his success, Epperly treasures the relation-ships he has gained.
“One thing I enjoy most are the friend-ship and contacts that I get to take away.”
He commented he never thought all of his success would come so quickly.
As Epperly prepares for the 2015 quali-fying rounds, he looks to family for en-couragement. He said his brother, Joe, the assistant executive director of the North American Limousin Foundation, is one of his biggest influences.
“He makes sure I’m down to earth,” Ep-perly said and added that he hopes to be as successful as his brother one day.
Epperly said his parents, Albert and Susan Epperly, have helped push him to-ward success.
“They put the drive in me. They still support me every day.”
Will Epperly (right), a 2014 World Livestock Auctioneer Championship finalist, stands be-tween Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wade. “Ralph is one of my heroes. He was the 1974 champion,” Epperly said. Epperly works at Dunlap Livestock Auction. Photo submitted
IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014PAGE 8A
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Current owners of land that had been part of the Brookmont Farm, also known as the Cook Ranch, in Sac County, fill the lobby of the First State Bank in Odebolt as they pose behind the 110-year-old A.E. Cook Corn Trophy on June 21 during Creek Days. The trophy is on loan from Iowa State University and will be on display at the bank until July 25. The trophy had an interesting journey in the past 110 years. Photos by Gordon Wolf
Remarkable journey returns 110-year-old corn trophy to OdeboltWill remainon loan to Sac County community until July 25
Bruce Raasch, of Odebolt, meticulously inspected all four sides of the 110-year-old A.E. Cook Corn Trophy as it sat on a table in the lobby of the First State Bank of Odebolt during an open house on Saturday, June 21.
The trophy’s return to Odebolt, from June
16 to July 25, was anxiously awaited by the community, community historians and members of families that own portions of the Brookmont Farm, also known as the Cook Ranch, in Sac County.
The trophy was a virtually unknown ar-tifact from the Brookmont Farm, accord-ing to a release from the Odebolt Historical Museum Association. The trophy was com-missioned in 1903 by Albert E. Cook as a tribute to his then recently deceased father, Charles W. Cook.
In 1873, the elder Cook purchased and developed 12 square miles of unbroken Iowa prairie that made up the Brookmont Farm north of Odebolt. The farm, 7,860 acres, was the largest in Iowa for more than 35 years and had the largest Hereford cattle herd in the world.
The 36-inch-tall trophy, which cost $1,500 in 1903 (nearly $40,000 today),
was commissioned to hold the winning ears of corn from annual corn judging con-tests that Iowa Agricultural College in Ames participated in during the era. In 1904, the trophy was presented to the college, which was renamed Iowa State University in 1959.
According to information from Iowa State, the A.E. Cook Corn Trophy spent its first year in Manhattan, Kansas, and trav-eled annually to Chicago for intercollegiate corn judging competitions. The trophy re-mained at Iowa Agricultural College for at least three years of the contest.
However, the trophy was only used for four years as inter-collegiate corn judging contests fell out of popularity.
Then, for the next eight decades, the tro-phy was lost.
It was rediscovered in the late 1980s by construction workers who were renovating Curtiss Hall at Iowa State University. The
trophy was found in an empty space behind a wall.
A release from Iowa State University said the trophy was restored and moved to Agronomy Hall to be put on display. At the request of Wendy Wintersteen, dean of ISU’s College of Agriculture and Life Sci-ences, the trophy was moved to Curtiss Hall as part of the renovation and has been prominently featured along with other agri-cultural artwork as a part of the Dean’s Gal-lery on the first floor of the building.
The trophy’s history and current location was made known to the Odebolt commu-nity when it was featured in the university’s museums’ newsletter written as a research essay and report. A member of the Odebolt community read the article and realized its significance to the town and county.
A group of Brookmont land owners worked during the past year with Iowa State
IOWA FARM & RANCH PAGE 9AJULY 2014
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to arrange the loan of the trophy to the Ode-bolt Museum for display in conjunction with this year’s Creek Days festival.
First State Bank of Odebolt funded all transportation and insurance costs for the trophy’s return.
The history of the Brookmont Farm was featured in special presentations during Creek Days on June 21 and the trophy was photographed with representatives of the 52 families that now own land that com-prised the Brookmont Farm.
Prior to the group photo, the lobby of First State Bank was filled with individu-als eager to inspect the trophy’s features, including the three winning ears of corn, believed to be from the 1907 corn contest. The parched ears are encased in separate glass cylinders.
Other features of the trophy are stat-ues of C. W. Cook and a Native American dressed in full war regalia on either side of the prize-winning ears of corn. On top of the three winning ears, three eagles support the earth with the state of Iowa raised within the globe, representing the Corn Belt.
The plaque on the left side of the trophy reads: “The Cook Trophy Presented to Iowa State Agricultural College by A. E. Cook, Odebolt, Iowa, for Excellence in Corn Judg-ing To Be Awarded in State or National Contests as the College May Direct — the Cylinders To Hold the Sweepstake Ears.”
On the opposite side, the trophy is en-graved with the winning colleges, and team member names, from the years the trophy was used. After Kansas Agricultural School won the first year of competition in 1904, Iowa State took home the trophy for the next three years.
Raasch said he came to the bank on June 21 to see the trophy as it was a community function and also as he owns land that was part of the Brookmont Farm.
Stephanie Fleenor, of Ida Grove, was also among those who came to view the trophy on June 21.
Fleenor, a member of the Odebolt Bet-terment Committee, said she was glad the trophy finally arrived to be displayed at the First State Bank.
Raasch called the trophy “magnificent.”“It was amazing that Mr. Cook had the
foresight to have the trophy built for corn contests,” he said. “We were thankful that Iowa State would lend us the trophy until the end of July. I can’t say enough about that.”
After its visit to Odebolt, the A.E. Cook Corn Trophy will return to the Dean’s Gal-lery at Curtiss Hall at Iowa State.
Note: The above story was compiled from information provided by the Odebolt Historical Museum Association and Iowa State University and from interviews con-ducted by Iowa Farm & Ranch.
People gather around for a close view of the A.E. Book Corn Trophy. After July 24, the trophy will return to Curtiss Hall at Iowa State University where it will be on display at the Dean’s Gallery.
Ron Salmonson and wife Lois, of Tipton, examine informa-tion about P.G. Holden on display at the First State Bank of Odebolt during an open house and special presentation for the A.E. Cook Corn Trophy on June 21. Salmonson grew up on a farm between Odebolt and Kiron and returned to the community for an all-school reunion, conducted in con-junction with Creek Days in Odebolt. He graduated from Odebolt High School in 1953.
Bruce Raasch, of Odebolt, inspects an inscription on the side of the A.E. Cook Corn Trophy.
IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014PAGE 10A
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Iowa State Crop Production Extension moving to an integrated approach
Iowa State University Extension and Outreach has created a new team and direction to advise farmers on corn and soybean production.
“We’re moving from the more tradi-tional model of dedicated corn or soy-bean specialists to a new team of inte-grated cropping systems specialists who will focus on how corn and soybean production interacts with soil, weather, cover crops, crop rotation and manage-ment practices and support farmers’ use of data-driven technologies in precision agriculture,” said John Lawrence, direc-tor of agriculture and natural resources extension and associate dean of the Col-lege of Agriculture and Life Sciences.
He added ISU Extension is more close-ly integrating research, extension and teaching in the positions.
Helping to move along the change was a recent initiative by Iowa State Presi-dent Steven Leath to help colleges and other units hire “high impact” faculty positions.
A new integrated cropping system position with an emphasis on precision agriculture was part of the initiative and will be part of the new extension team in the Department of Agronomy.
Sotirios Archontoulis, who joined Iowa State in 2012 as a postdoctoral research associate in agronomy, began July 1 as an assistant professor respon-sible for leading the team.
Archontoulis, a native of Greece, earned master’s and doctorate degrees in 2006 and 2011 from Wageningen University in the Netherlands, and a bachelor’s degree from the University of
Thessaly in Greece in 2004. His research interests include crop-
ping systems modeling, agronomy, crop physiology and bioenergy.
“Dr. Archontoulis is an excellent addi-tion to our faculty and will be a tremen-dous resource for Iowa agriculture.
His strong background in cropping systems and cropping systems modeling will lead to asking better research ques-tions, decision support tools for agricul-ture and enhanced extension education programs,” said Kendall Lamkey, chair of the agronomy department.
Another member of extension’s inte-grated cropping systems team is Mark Licht, who has served as the extension field agronomist for central Iowa since 2011. Licht moved to campus as part of the new team.
He is an Iowa State agronomy alum-nus who joined agronomy extension in 2006.
Both of the new positions will inte-grate research and extension and will be involved in teaching the next generation of agronomists, Lawrence said.
To fill the field agronomist position held by Licht, Mark Johnson, the exten-sion field agronomist for north central Iowa, moved to the central region.
Angie Rieck-Hinz, former coordinator for the Manure Applicator Certification Program, was recently appointed field agronomist for north central Iowa.
Roger Elmore, professor of agronomy and extension’s campus specialist for corn production since 2005, left Iowa State last January to take a faculty posi-tion at the University of Nebraska.
IOWA FARM & RANCH PAGE 11AJULY 2014
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Auctions
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SATURDAY, JULY 12• Living Estate Auction, 10:30 a.m. 5072 Jay Ave., Ross, IA. Jim Bobenmoyer, owner. Spanky & Sons Auc-tion Co. (D)• Mapleton Processing Plant, 10:30 a.m. 301 Main St., Mapleton, IA, Rick Nichols, owner. Schleis Auction Service (D)
• Lake View, Iowa, Home & Large Garage, 11:00 a.m. 222 Denison Beach Drive, Lake View, IA. Ross & Tami Moeller, owners. Green Real Estate & Auction Co. (D)
SUNDAY, JULY 13• Household Goods, Antiques, Lawn-Garden & Golf Cart, 12:30 p.m. 703 Birch St., Schleswig, IA. Heirs of Allen (Stoney) Stoneking, Owner. Korner Auction Ser-vice (D)• Vehicles, Tools, Furniture Auction, 11:30 a.m. Den-ison Livestock North Building, 501 North 9th Street, Denison. Abe & Lynne Gronau Estate, Owners. Pauley Family Auction Services, Auctioneers. (D)• Valrie & the late Dale Hansen Auction, 9:00 a.m. furniture, collectable, tools, 60+ guns, and fishing and outdoor. Kretzinger Auction building in Corning, IA. Kretzinger Auction Service, auctioneer. (ATL)• Machinery, Antiques, Primitives, Horse & Live-stock Equipment, Household & Misc. 11:00 a.m. 34349 Honeysuckle Rd., Oakland, IA. Marge Nelson, Owner. Brich-Grote Auction Service. (D)
TUESDAY, JULY 15• Special Calf and Yearling, Bred Females, Pairs, Bulls Auction. 12:30 p.m. Dunlap Livestock Auction, Dunlap, IA. (D)
WEDNESDAY, JULY 16• Online Unreserved Auction. 396 Lots selling. First lots close at 10 am. www.BigIron.com, Stock Realty & Auction Co. (D)• Mowery Auction Co. Monthly Consignment Sale, 8:00 a.m. 301 E. Frederick St., Milford, Il and online at www.moweryauction.com (D)• Collectibles, Bar & Restaurant, Carlos O’Kelly’s, 10:30 a.m. 631 Lincolnway, Ames, IA. Backes Auction-eers & Realty (D)
SATURDAY, JULY 19• Antiques, Vintage, Military Items, Primitive, House-hold, Carm 10:00 a.m. 126 Harrison St., Oakland, IA. Rosealie Smith Clark Estate. Property Connection Real Estate Auctioneer, (D)
TRACTORS ABSOLUTE‘78 STEIGER PT225 #141-00027 ‘97 NH 8970 #D413410, 7650HR MFWD ‘97 JD 9300 #RW9300S001943 5279HR ‘97 JD 9100 #1895, 3PT 24SPD
6271HRJD 8760 #RW8760H002001JD 8640 #004759R, 4663HR JD 8320 #29721 3500 HRS ‘01 JD 8310T #901002, 4890HR 120”
25” JD 8300 #3964 2WD 6000 HRS JD 8295RT #901078 25” BELTS
800 HRS 2-’13 JD 6170R #6667, 1032HR 480-46 ’13 JD 6115D CAB 2WD 250HRSJD 5083 #541103 MFWD 375HRSJD 4960 #RW4960P008424, MFWD
7810HR JD 4760 #RW4760P001351 MFWD
7890HRS ‘76 JD 4430 #068892 JD 4430 #054998R “AS IS”CIH 7140 ,MFWD 18.4-42 CIH 1586CIH 1466 PULLING TRACTOR #099989
LOTS OF $$ INVESTEDCIH 1466 #028016 6866HR CIH 1066 #29368 CIH 1066 #039369 NO CAB‘94 CAT 65C #2ZJ00614, 7744HR
36” 1PTOAC 7060 #2065 4426HR
COMBINES ABSOLUTE‘12 JD S680 #746772, 4X4 563/380‘12 JD S660 #745641 755/600 PRO
DRIVE 2WD ‘08 JD 9870 #725942, 2WD 2850/1520 ‘06 JD 9860 #715821, 2763/2034 4WD ‘08 JD 9770 #H09770S727736 2WD
2116/1442‘11 JD 9770 #741650, 4X4 2201/1746
“VERY NICE”‘10 JD 9770 #735458, 2225/1650 4X4 ‘09 JD 9770 #731269, 1562/1107 2WD ‘05 JD 9760 #H09760S711239 2WD
2794/2094 HRS‘03 JD 9750 #701115, 4X4 28L26
3971/2476 JD 9750 #691389, 4WD 28L26
3334/2403 ‘09 JD 9670 #731206 HILLCO
1832/1200 MBE 2WD‘06 JD 9660 #716442, 2294HR STS
800-70R38 2WD 2294/1635‘05 JD 9660 #711895 4WD SPREADER
2295/1447‘05 JD 9660 #711496 STS 2WD
28L26 2265/1424‘05 JD 9660 #710873, HILLCO
3029/2096 2WD ‘00 JD 9650W #685369, 2WD
3687/2473HR CM ‘03 JD 9650 #700715 DUALS 4WD
SPREADER 3319/2361‘00 JD 9650 #686341, STS 2WD
3238/2492 W/DISP NEW STYLE H/U‘00 JD 9650 #686162, STS 2042/1600 ‘98 JD 9610 #678368, 2WD 4645/3491‘94 JD 9600 #655515‘10 JD 9570 #735670 2WD C.M.
1005/688 HRS‘04 JD 9560W #705405, 800-65R32
2WD CM 4000/2949
‘07 JD 9560 #720285, STS 30.5-32 2WD CM 2019/1395
‘04 JD 9560 #705763, STS 2WD 1801/1302
‘04 JD 9560W #705122, SH 30.5R32 4X4 3695/2460 “V-NICE”
JD 9550W #685474 30.5-32 LL 2WD 2850/1900
‘99 JD 9510 #680396 4X4 30.5-32JD 9500 #651619 SH 5639/3648 2WD JD 9400 #650492 2WD‘87 JD 8820 #625954 2WD 3474HRSJD 7720 4787HRS 2-JD 6620 #X600566 2WD ‘93 GLEANER R62 4X4 3662/2807 HRS‘92 GLEANER R52 #R5205071 4WD‘00 CIH 2388 #JJC0268370, 3055/2348
DUALS 2WD FT ‘98 CIH 2388 #JJC0198094 3992/2604
2WD DUALS RT ‘98 CIH 2388 #198647 30.5-32 2WD FT
RT 2SPD 4335/3357‘96 CIH 2166 #JJC0181480 30.5-32 FT
2WD 4229/2960‘94 CIH 1666 #106450 2WD 2983HR
“VERY NICE”‘92 CIH 1660 COMBINE #103854‘90 CIH 1660 #JJC0041670, 6014HR
RT 2WD ‘91 CIH 1660 #JJC00102320‘87 CIH 1660 #26855 5481HRS 2WD RT ‘92 CIH 1660 #104063 3885 HRS 2WD ‘87 CIH 1640 #34207‘81 CIH 1460 #042924 “VERY NICE”
TILLAGE ABSOLUTE2-JD 960 F CULTJD 637 #1829 DISC 21’ 7.5”’12 JD 637 32’ DISC W/HARROWJD 230 DISC, 24’2-JD 210 DISC 12’GLENCOE 7X CHISEL DMI 2500 RIPPER 5XCIH 496 DISC 22’SUNFLOWER 1435 40’ R.F. DISC
PLANTERS/DRILLS ABSOLUTE’96 JD 1850 #665388, 40’ 7.5”
MARKERS MONITOR ‘96 JD 787 COMMODITY CART
JD 1590 #700466 NT 15’GP DRILL #1210M 20’ 3PT 15”SPACING CIH 955 #JAG1010140, 6R30 CIH 5400 W/ NT CADDY CIH 5100 16 HOLE
CORNHEADS ABSOLUTE2-MF 1163 #27391140735-JD 893, 844, 843 ’97 JD 693 “V-NICE” 6-JD 643 ’09 JD 616C,16R20 KNIFE HYD ’12 JD 608C #746679, 8R30 KNIFE HYD ’09 JD 608C #731347, 8R303-JD 444 3-JD 443 3-JD 1293 3-CIH 9633-CIH 863 CIH 2208 #CBJ024594CIH 2206 #24493-CIH 1083 5-CIH 1063
GRAINHEADS ABSOLUTE’11 MACDON FD70 DRAPER HEAD
#YBZN15263, CIH H/U “EXC COND”
MF 9118, 9120SEVERAL JD 930F 2-’02 JD 925F #696918 SEVERAL OTHER 925’S’01 JD 920F #690850SEVERAL JD 920’S’98 JD 918F #675755’92 JD 653A RC HEAD #6452422 ’12 JD 635FD
#1H0635FDAB0745121, 2 ’09 JD 635F 2 ’08 JD 635F 4 ’07 JD 635F #721629, ’04 JD 630F #706280 FA HISTONE ’05 JD 625F #710880’11 JD 625D #740139JD 218F #H00218P225915JD 212 #378562 6 BELT P/UGLEANER 500 HEAD #44626 25’ GLEANER 20’ #2054900FSEVERAL CIH 1020 30-25-20-17.5-
16.5-15CIH 1010R #300126, 25’ RIGID
FORAGE ABSOLUTE11-VERMEER 605 MR RD. BALERNH 355 MIXMILL ’04 JD MX7’02 JD 946 MOCO, RUBBER
ROLLS 3-JD 567 BALER #301631JD 530 #668462JD 1418 SHREDDER JD 120 SHREDDER 20’ “V-GOOD”
WAGONS ABSOLUTESEVERAL WAGONS
MISCELLANEOUS ABSOLUTE’11 XL50 RGN 53’ ALUM PULL OUTS’10 XL50 RGN 53’ ALUM PULL OUTSSEV. HEAD CARTSJD 717A L&G 501HR ’12 JD 4730 SPRAYER
#1N04730XKA0013249, 830HR 90’ BOOM SS TANK 380R46 2630 SF1 ACT
JD 4700 SPRAYER #2478, 90’ BOOM 2460HR “V-NICE”
GAYLEN ROAD GRADER #625631CHAMPION ROAD GRADERS DET. ENG.’04 CHEVY TAHOE, 4WD
TRACTORS REGULARJD 9460R #2926 760 HRS 620R42 3PT
PTO P/S ‘08 JD 9330 #3101, 1687HR P/S 710-42 ‘12 JD 8360R #61562, 688HR IVT ILS
710-42 ‘12 JD 8360R #58389,798HR
710-70R42R JD 8335RT #1RW8335RCCP908049,
2630 SCREEN SF1 ACT WARRANTY 180 HR
‘06 JD 8330 #RW8330P001982, 18.4-46 9126HR “V-GOOD”
‘12 JD 8310R #57389, 404HR IVT ILS 46”
‘11 JD 8310R #1RW8310RLBD046032, IVT ILS 1870HR
JD 7410 #002012 W/740LDR 7708HR ‘09 JD 7330 2WD 950 HRS CAHJD 4555 #021767 18.4R42 DUALS QH FORD NH 9882 #D103702 4WD‘07 CASE MAGNUM 275 4100 HRSCAT 35 #8DNC0240 7045HR
18”TRACKS 4HYD
COMBINES REGULAR‘11 NH CR9065 #YBG114974, 712/603
2WD 650/65R42 DUALS ‘12 JD S680 #745523, HILLCO
780/480HRS‘13 JD S550 #755122, 2WD 800-65R32
CM 255/171‘04 JD 9860 #706168 DUALS 2WD
3402/2439HRS‘10 JD 9770 #736098, 1376/1046
DUALS ‘09 JD 9770 #731719, STS 20.8R42
DUALS 2WD 1348/875‘11 JD 9670 #741282, HILLCO
880/700HRS‘08 JD 9670 #726955 HILLCO 76X50-32
FLOATERS 2WD 1759/1172‘05 JD 9660 STS 2100/1400 HRS‘07 JD 9660 #721209 20.8R42 DUALS
2WD 1932/1330‘04 JD 9660 #706165 DUALS ‘91 JD 9600 #640924 2WD 4867/3317’90 JD 9600 #636667 4WD
4992/3065 HRS ‘00 JD 9550 #685690, 1852/1274 2WD ‘98 JD 9510 #676784 2720/1825 ’98 JD 9510 #680783 4WD
2990/2097HRS‘92 JD 9400 #645390 30.5-32 ‘83 GLEANER M3 “VERY NICE”CIH 2377 #HAJ296192 1804/1167 4X4CIH 2188 #0192420 3519/2633 4WDCIH 1680 #028737 2415HR RT
TILLAGE REGULARWHITE 445 DISC CHISEL 9XMCFARLANE 30’ REEL DISC #11710‘10 LANDALL 7431 #74E1000387,
29’ VTKRAUSE 4900 DISC #490015A 22.5’JD 980 F CULT #019714, 45’ SPIKE
W/ROLL BASKETJD 910 RIPPER 5XJD 637 RF DISC 32’‘09 JD 637 DISC #014763, 35’ 9”
“SAME AS NEW”JD 637 #14513, 26’ 9” SPACING
“LIKE NEW”JD 512 DISC RIPPER, 7X HYD FOLD
W/HARROWJD 510 RIPPER 5XCIH DMI 50’ F CULT #JFH0009713,
TIGERMATE II SPIKE W/ROLLING BASKET
CIH 496 DISC 31’CIH 4300 F C 28’ CIH 3950 DISC 30’ 9” SPACING
PLANTERS/DRILLSKINZIE 3800 PLANTER #755254, 24RKINZIE 2600 #613333, 16-31 NT JD 750 #X018758 NO TIL 20’ JD 7200 #106462 LIQFERT 6-30 ‘98 JD 1850 42’ AIR SEEDER #671921,
7.5 SPACE W/1900 270BU CART MARKERS
99 JD 1780 #690254, 9R20” VAC NT LIQ FERT
JD 1780 #665148, 12/23 ‘10 JD 1770 #735455, 24-30 CCS PNDP
TRASH WHEELS‘02 JD 1690 #695105, CART 36’ 15”
W/1910 CARTCORNHEADS REGULAR
’13 JD 640FD #755176’13 JD 635FD #755853JD 643 #620531 6X KNIFE ROLL
’13 JD 612C #756886 12R20SEVERAL JD 608C2-JD 1293 #X706170GLEANER 430A #5639 LM‘10 CIH 3412 #023400, 12R30 HYD
DECK KNIFE ROLLS 2PTOWAGONS REGULAR
UNVERFERTH 1115 GRAINCART‘11 ORTHMAN 810 #221106, 840BU
30.5-32R3KINZIE 640 #2038, 24.5-32 RT‘02 J&M 750 #34606, 208R42GY HYD
SPOUTJ&M 1150 #2076 1250-45-32 22”
AUGER ROLL TARP‘09 BALZER 1550 #571-0409, 30.5-32
ROLL TARP SCALESMISCELLANEOUS REGULAR
SPRAYCOUPE 3630 #209411757, 2305HR 2WD 60’ BOOM “V-NICE”
2-NI 324 CORN PICKER 2RW‘09 JD 4730 #N04730X005538, 1098HR
SS TANKJD 4720 SPRAYER #2233, 90’ BOOM
SS TANK CASE SUPERM 580 TLB #JUG0283692
4X4 3037 HRSGRADALL 534D-9 TELEHANDLER 40’
5929HRSEV. NEW P.J. TRAILERS
301 E. Frederick St. • Milford, IL 60953Ph: 815-889-4191 • Fax: 815-889-5365
www.mowreyauction.comJULY 16, 2014 8:00 A.M.
NEXT AUCTION AUGUST 20, 2014
8:00 A.M.MOWREY AUCTION CO., INC. LICENSE #044000247, JON MOWREY LICENSE
#041000416EQ. MUST BE REMOVED IN
30 DAYS OF PURCHASE.PLEASE BRING BANK LETTER OF
CREDIT IF YOU HAVE NEVER BEEN HERE
FINANCING OPTIONS AVAILABLE:LEASING SPECIALISTS, INC. – ON EQUIPMENT > $50,000 OR ABOVE.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT
STEVE WESTBAY @ (309) 343-2099 OR
VISIT www.lease-today.comWELLS FARGO – PLEASE
CONTACT THE OFFICE FOR MORE INFORMATION
Live Online Bidding through BidSpotter. Please visit
www.mowreyauction.com and click BID ONLINE to
register for the auction. There will be 2% Buyers
Premium charged on items purchased online, with a $500.00
cap per item.
FARMER #3 DALE BARNESROGER (309)824-4493SMALL ACRE FARMER NICE
LINE OF OLDER EQUIP. SELL APPROX: 11:00
JD 6620 COMBINE #358217 3440 HRS
JD 443 #241160 RECENT REBUILD
JD 220 #498008 3” JD #2700 5X PLOW IH 4600 26’ F. CULTIH #800 15R 15” BEAN PLANTER
FARMER#4 TY--(815)471-9750JD 8640 W/DUALS 7400 HRS
V-NICE W/LOTS OF REPAIRSJD 20’ 750 DRILL #17383KRAUSE 3950 25’ DISCUNVERFERTH FLAT FOLD 27’
CRUMBLER
OWNER RETIRED GENE (217)254-3349
‘09 JD 9670 #H9670S730577 1150/620HRS 20.8-38 DUALS
‘09 JD 608C #H0608CX730451 KNIFE ROLLS
‘09 JD 625F PLATFORM #730155UNVERFERTH HT-25 HEAD
TRAILERCALL GENE (217)254-3349‘00 JD 9550 #686022‘96 JD 693 #666017‘99 JD 920 #680808
FARMER #2 BANK CLOSEOUT ROGER (309)275-6145
JD 9530 #019040 1082 HRS 4X4JD 8400T #902675 5050 HRS‘05 FORD F350 4X4 96,192 MILES
UTILITY BEDJD 512 RIPPER 9SKJD 980 FIELD CULT 44’DIRT SCRAPER 12’CLARK FORKLIFT GAS 4000 LB.DAEWOO G30E FORKLIFT 6600
LB.UNVERFERTH 3750 SEED
WAGON
FARMER #1 MICHAEL MOONEY (815)471-4191
SMALL ACERAGE EQUIP. ALWAYS SHEDDED V-NICE SELLS APPROX: 10:00
‘97 JD 8100 #P012080 2661HR MFWD 18.4R42 CHANGEABLE PTO
REMLINGER 28’ HARROGATOR 2-JD RM8 8/30 CULT ‘00 JD 726 MULCH FINISHER
#4206 20’ 3 BAR SPIKE W/BASKET
JD 512 DISC RIPPER #3377 12’ 6” 5X
JD 400 HOE 20’ ‘99 JD 1760 #R680236 8/30
CONSERVATION 2-SETS BOXES NT COMBO’S 250 MON W/RADAR GUN
JD 10’ DRILL GRASS SEED 18X7JD 27 FLAIL SHREDDER ‘10 UNVERFERTH 1110 GRAIN
CART 900-60R32 ROLL TARP 22’ UNLD
4 SMALL WAGONS‘76 IH LOADSTAR 1700 TRUCK
37,123MI 4SPD/2SPD P.S. 15’ BED V8 GAS
‘75 IH 1710B TRUCK 42,623MI 15’ BED V8 GAS P.S. 5SPD/2SPD
1-IFR72014(Mowery)MS
IOWA FARM & RANCH PAGE 13AJULY 2014
Auctions
ONLINE UNRESERVED AUCTION • BigIron.comWEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014
First Lots Scheduled to Close at 10:00 AM Central TimeNO BUYERS PREMIUM FEE & NO RESERVES!!
BigIron.com Auctions Every Wednesday!BigIron.com is a division of Stock Realty & Auction Co., 1-800-937-3558
SELL YOUR EQUIPMENT ON BIGIRON.COMCall Today! 1-800-937-3558
396 LOTS SELLING! Air Seeder (1); Backhoes (1); Balers (8); Combines (6); Cranes (1); Grain Carts (4); Headers (15); Motor Graders (1); Planters (3); Skid Steers (2); Tractors (20); Trailers (18); Trucks/Pickups (30); Semis (4); PLUS MUCH MORE!
1-TA28(7-16Sale/StockBigiron)SS
ONLINE UNRESERVED AUCTION • BigIron.comWEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 2014
First Lots Scheduled to Close at 10:00 AM Central TimeNO BUYERS PREMIUM FEE & NO RESERVES!!
BigIron.com Auctions Every Wednesday! BigIron.com is a division of Stock Realty & Auction Co., 1-800-937-3558
SELL YOUR EQUIPMENT ON BIGIRON.COM Call Today! 1-800-937-3558
241 LOTS SELLING! Tractors (22); Combines (7); Balers (2); Cultivators (5); Disks (4); Drills (3); Grain Carts (2); Headers (5); Loaders; Planters (3); Sprayers (3); Telehandler (1); Trailers (13); Trucks/Pickups (18); Semis (3); Wheel Loaders (1); ATVs/Recreational (7); PLUS MUCH MORE!
1-TA29(7-23Sale/StockBigIron)SS
ONLINE UNRESERVED AUCTION • BigIron.comWEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 2014
First Lots Scheduled to Close at 10:00 AM Central TimeNO BUYERS PREMIUM FEE & NO RESERVES!!
BigIron.com Auctions Every Wednesday! BigIron.com is a division of Stock Realty & Auction Co., 1-800-937-3558
SELL YOUR EQUIPMENT ON BIGIRON.COM Call Today! 1-800-937-3558
447 LOTS SELLING! Tractors (30); Combines (4); Backhoes (1); Balers (4); Grain Carts (4); Cranes (2); Dozers (2); Head-ers (5); Scrapers (1); Skid Steers (2); Sprayers (2); Trailers (15); Trucks/Pickups (29); Semis (4); PLUS MUCH MORE!
1-IFR7&TA30(7-30 Sale/Stock)SS
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SATURDAY, JULY 19, continued• Large Quality Household, Collectibles, Guns, Ve-hicles, 1/16 Scale Farm Toys & Much More, 10:00 a.m. From Villisca: 7 miles N on Hwy. 71 to Tenville Jct, W 1 mile on old Hwy. 34, 1/4 mile N on T Ave. From the Junction of Hwy. 34 & 71 North of Villisca: 3 miles N on 71, 1 mile W, 1/4 mile N (auction signs posted). Dean Gourley Estate & Joyce Gourley, West & Frey Auc-tioneers and Creston Livestock Auctioneer Services (D)• 2 Sales: Sale 1-Liquidation Tool Sale; Sale 2 Small Household Sale, 8:45 a.m. Denison Livestock North Building, Pauley Family Auction Services, Auctioneers (D)
SUNDAY, JULY 20• Daniel Boone Malone Estate, 11:30 a.m. Dow City. Dave VanNess, Bob Boettger, Vic Thomsen, auctioneers (D)• Joe & Terri Johnson Household Acreage Equipment 12:30 pm, 2544 Falson Ave., Audubon, IA. Osborn Auc-tion LLC. (D)
MONDAY, JULY 21• 236.06 Acres M/L Shelby Co Farmland, 9:00 a.m. at Therkildsen Activity Center, 1103 Victoria St., Harlan, IA. GSL LLC, owner. Osborn Auctioneer, LLC (D)• Real Estate Auction 69.60 acres, 10:00 a.m. 27849 Pinoak Rd., Hancock, IA. Intersection of Hwy M16 & G30. Lawrence Young Heirs, owners. Brich-Grote Auc-tion Service. (D)
TUESDAY, JULY 22 • Special Bred Female/Pairs & Bulls Sale, Dunlap Livestock Auction, Dunlap, IA. (D)
TUESDAY, JULY 22 & THURSDAY, JULY 31• Plumbing & Sheet Metal Equipment 2 Day Auc-tion, 8:00 am each day Tues. July 22, 3516 Maple Dr., Fort Dodge, IA and Thurs., July 31, 216 N. 12th St., Fort Dodge, IA., Gadbury Plumbing and Sheet Metal. Hilpipre Auction Co (D)
CLOSES TUESDAY, JULY 22• Timed Online Auction KEI Kibble Equipment, 1150 S. Victory Dr., Mankato, MN SteffesGroup.com (D)
WEDNESDAY, JULY 23• Online Unreserved Auction. 241 Lots selling. First lots close at 10 am. www.BigIron.com, Stock Realty & Auction Co. (D)
FRIDAY, JULY 25• Construction Equipment Retirement Auction, 8:00 a.m. 150 West 1st St, Earlham, IA. 30 mi. W of Des Moines off I-80. Associated Grading and Excavation, Hilpipre Auction Co., (D)• Absolute 2+ Bedroom House Auction, 5:30 p.m. 209 Chamberlin Drive, Lowell Aldag Estate, Owner. Pauley Family Auction Services, Auctioneers. (D)
SATURDAY, JULY 26• Household, Garage and Tool Sale, 8:45 a.m. Denison Livestock North Building, Pauley Family Auction Ser-vices, Auctioneers (D)
WEDNESDAY, JULY 30• Online Unreserved Auction. 447 Lots selling. First lots close at 10 am. www.BigIron.com, Stock Realty & Auction Co. (D)
THURSDAY, JULY 31• Plumbing & Sheet Metal Equipment 2nd Auction, 8:00 am, 216 N. 12th St., Fort Dodge, IA, Gadbury Plumbing and Sheet Metal. Hilpipre Auction Co (D)
FRIDAY, AUGUST 1• 64th Annual BBQ & Calf & Yearling Auction, Dun-lap Livestock Auction, Dunlap, IA. (D)
SATURDAY AUGUST 2• Roger & Connie Smith Farm Retirement Auction, 11:00 a.m. 1905 335th St., Missouri Valley, IA, Ed Spencer Real Estate & Auction (D)• Retirement Farm Equip Auction, 11:00 a.m., 3 S of Kanawha, IA on R35, 3 1/4 miles W on 110th to 1585. Lyle & Dawn Zeigler, owners. Ryerson Auction & Realty, LTD. (D)
MONDAY, AUGUST 4• Antique, Collectible & Household Auction, 5:00 p.m. Vet’s Auditorium, Harlan, IA. Helen Wubben-horst, Owner. Osborn Auction LLC (D)
• Retirement Farm Equip Auction, 10:30 a.m., 5 S of Clarion, IA on R38, 3 E on C54, 3 South on Page Ave, 1 E on 300th, Bill Maxon, Owner, Ryerson Auction & Realty, LTD. (D)
TUESDAY, AUGUST 5• Audubon County T-Bone Fat Cattle Auction, 9:00 a.m. Anita Livestock Auction, Anita, IA. Bernard Vais & Jessie Vais Auctioneers (Au)
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6• 227 Acres Clay County Farm Ground, 10:00 a.m. 3 Tracts in Royal-Spencer-Everly area. Acre Co Farm Real Estate. (D)
THURSDAY, AUGUST 7• Retirement Farm Equip Auction, 11:00 a.m. 2 S. of Renwick, IA on Hwy 17 to 175th St., East 1/2 mile to 1026 175th, Harley and Harvey Friesleben Owner. Ryerson Auction & Realty, LTD. (D)• 160 Acres Clay County Farm Ground, 10:00 a.m. 2 Tracts in Gillett Grove-Webb-Dickens-Ruthven area. Acre Co Farm Real Estate. (D)
SATURDAY, AUGUST 9• Bob and Mary Weis Retirement Farm Auction, Woodbine, IA. Randy Pryor Auctioneer, 712-644-7610 (WTN)
MONDAY, AUGUST 11• Missouri’s Largest Monthly Machinery Consign-ment Auction, Hwy 7, Clinton MO, www.cookauction-co.com. Cook Auction Co.(D)
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13• Real Estate Auction, 11 a.m. 38.43 ACRES, Sec. 15, Jefferson Township, Shelby Co, Iowa, Kyle & Suzanne Christensen, owners. Schaben Real Estate LLC (D)• Pocahontas Machinery Auction, 9:00 a.m. 401 1/2 E Elm, Pocahontas, IA (D)
IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014PAGE 14A
Auctions
Wed., August 6, 2014 • 10 AM227 Acres Clay CountySection 28 Riverton Township
• Will be a choice of 3 tracts or any combination• All tillable, nearly level, attractive farm
• On a blacktop in the Royal-Spencer-Everly area
Thurs., August 7, 2014 • 10 AM160 Acres Clay CountySection 27 Logan Township
• Will be offered as choice of 2 tracts or entire parcel• Inside, all tillable, gently rolling, productive farm
• Located on a blacktop in the Gillett Grove-Webb- Dickens-Ruthven area
Land auctions
JonHjelmALC, BrokerChuck Sikora, SalesTheAcreCo.
712-262-3529 Spencer, IA
No. 1 ranked Iowa farmlandwebsite onGoogle
theacreco.com
LandAuctions
May 21113.5AcresEmmetCoSection 33 -EmmetTownship
93.7 ac cropland - balance in pastureonA20 northwest ofEsthervilleCall Chuck Sikora 712-260-2788
June 5284AcresPaloAltoCo
offered in 4 tracts(1) 33.6 ac Sec 36 -Highland
all tillable, very gently rolling - 65.5 CSR
(3) 249.8 ac Sec 1 - SilverLake3 all tillable tracts cropland,mixed sizes
productive soils - Ayrshire/Emmetsburg area
June 18120AcresPaloAltoCoSection 27,EllingtonTownshipnearly level, inside tract - 68.5 CSR
115.6 crop acres - county&private tileCall Chuck Sikora 712-260-2788
FarmsFor Sale - check theacreco.com
Realtors - LandAuctioneers -Developers
BookingSummerSalesNow!
1-IFR7 2014-AS
Call Us To Book Your Land Auction!
712-262-3529 theacreco.comNo. 1 ranked Iowa farmland website on Google
Iowa’s Land Auctioneer
The Acre Co. Spencer, IAJon Hjelm ALC712-240-3529
Chuck Sikora712-260-2788
Auctions end the last Wednesday of each month.www.amundsonpeterson.com
Check out this month’s list of Machinery Items
Check Out our Huge Inventoryof Used Equipment at
www.amundsonpeterson.com
110 2ND ST NEELBOW LAKE, MN 56531
218-685-4438 • 800-524-6814
516 1ST ST EMADISON, MN 56256
320-598-7575 • 800-201-1941380 ATLANTIC AVE
BENSON, MN 56215320-843-2610 • 800-508-9530
23604 STATE HWY 9MORRIS, MN 56267
320-589-2011 • 888-248-2011
4 Locations To Serve You!
1-IFR (ONLINE FARM AUCTIONS-AMUNDSON) AM
Wilderness Log Home on 3.5 acres.with 740-ft. of lake shore on
Lake Hanska in South Minnesota.Outbuildings include garage/shop,
boat house, tool shed all with log siding. Listing price $397,000.
Aukrust Realty507-439-6643
7-IFR7(11789 Co Rd Hanska/Aukrust Realty)AS
For Sale
11789 Co. Rd. 11Hanska, MN
1-IFR7 2014 (AUCTIONS-COOK TRACTOR CO) CS
Missouri’s Largest Monthly
Consignment Auction
Consignments Taken Daily
UPCOMING AUCTIONS:
Monday, August 11th
Monday, September 8th
For pictures & our current sale bill check out our website:
www.cookauctionco.com
John Hoelck Machinery, LLC1-IFR (IFR /Users/John Hoelck)JM
402-694-9203
We Specialize InMACHINERY HAULING
Lenox, IA 50851641-333-2205
www.maynesrealty.com
80 ACRES FOR SALE80 ac of bottomland 5 mi SE of
New Market, IA, 72.79 ac of productive, tiled bottom
land. $9,500/ac. Make offers, as this one is
going to sell!
MaynesReal Estate
1-IFR7(MaynesRE)MS
Auction Location: 401 1/2 E. Elm, Pocahontas, IA
Next Auction Will BeWed., August 13, 2014 • 9am
Farmers and Dealers ~ We are now preparing the next listing for this upcoming sale. We need equipment of all types, especially – TRACTORS, SEMIS TRAILERS, TRUCKS, COMBINES & HEADS, SKID LOADERS, TRACTOR ACCESSORIES, All types of TILLAGE and LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT!
Advertising Deadline: 5pm Mon., July 28, 2014Contact Sales Managers early to assure you make the list.
Sales Managers: Rick & Kendra WinegardenThe Sale Barn - 712-335-3117
Rick’s Cell 712-358-0974Jim Malecek - Lot Manager - 712-358-2754Email list to: [email protected]
Website: salebarn.ncn.net
1-IFR7 (NEXT AUCTION/POCAHONTAS) PS
Machinery WantedPocahontas
Machinery Auction
MONDAY, AUGUST 25• Real Estate Auction, 11 a.m. 182.86 Acres, Sect. 2, Westphalia Twnshp, Shelby, Co., IA. Held at Shelby Co. Golf Course, Shelby, IA. Marlene Dayle Klingenborg Estate, owner Schaben Real Estate LLC (D)
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8• Missouri’s Largest Monthly Machinery Consign-ment Auction, Hwy 7, Clinton MO, www.cookauction-co.com. Cook Auction Co. (D)
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14• Motorcycle Repair, Tool and Shop Equipment, 12:30 p.m., 1801 900th St., Harlan, Ron (Norton) Pash Estate. Osborn Auction LLC (D)
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21• Dale E. & Linda Nelson Antique, Primitive & Col-lectible Auction, 11:00 a.m., Veteran’s Memorial Au-ditorium Harlan, Osborn Auction LLC (D)
1-IFR7(Crystal/Ryerson)RS
RETIREMENT FARM AUCTION3 S of Kanawha, Ia on R 35, 3 1/4 miles W on 110th to 1585
Friday, August 1, 2014 11 AMLunch by Jessica
79 4440 JD, quad, 5683 hrs. 65 4020 JD gas, overhauled, factory wide front, new 18.4-34, 7905 hrs. Paulson Loader , 4020 mtns. 55 60 JD, PS, fenders, 49 H Farmall w/Woods Belly Mower. 82 JD 7720 combine, 3679 hrs. 91 920 JD flexhead. JD 4-36 High tin crn hd 8-36 JD 7000 pull planter w/herb boxes, Kinzie bean units. 8-36 JD RM 3 pt cult20’ JD 400 hoe. 20’ 9” JD 230 disc. Two 24’ JD 1100 3 pt fld cult915 JD 5 shank toggle trip V Ripper. 5-16 JD 1450 plow w/coulters.12’ Glencoe 3 pt chisel plow 12’ Krause disc. 27 JD flail stalk cutter500 Killbros 2 door, Knowles gear, Truck tires. 375 Killsbros w/1075 JD gear. Two 350 Killbros w/JD gears. 300 gravity w/1075 JD gear.
PICTURES ON THE WEBLyle & Dawn Zeigler, Owners
641-762-3992
www.ryersonauctionrealtyltd.com
For info contact Gene Ryersoncell 515-689-3714
office 515-448-3079Eagle Grove, Iowa
Eugene Ryerson, Auctioneer
1-IFR7(Maxon/Ryerson)RS
RETIREMENT FARM EQUIPMENT AUCTION5 S of Clarion IA on R38, 3 E on C54, 3 South on Page Ave, 1 E on 300th
Monday, August 4, • 10:30 A.M.1995 JD 8100 2 WD w/18.4R-46 duals, 1000 PTO, 3081 hrs.; JD 8640 w/50 series engine, 20.8-38 duals, PTO, 3 pt,7231 hrs.;1966 JD 4020 Die-sel, open station, fact, WF, fresh paint, 2 valves; 1974 Oliver 1655, die-sel, wide front; Polaris 400 2 WD Liquid cooled, 994 miles; JD 345 water cooled riding mower, 48” deck; 2004 CIH 2366, Mauer ext, rock trap, field tracker. Inspected every year, 1940/2714 hrs.; 2003 CIH 1020 30’ Flex-head, 3” sections; 2008 Drago N6 cornhead; 1995 IH 4500 Detroit, 60. 430HP, ProSleeper Cab, 10 speed; 2000 34’ Jet steel Hopper Trailer, 60” sides, roll tarp; 2000 Super B batch dryer, Model 50185V, 338 bu. hr.; 10”x71 Westfield PTO auger w/Truck hopper, 2 seasons; 12-30” JD 1760 Vac Cons. planter, big boxes, Trash Whips, hyd wing fold; 12-30 JD 7100 mtd planter, 2 lift assist, insect, herb, Dickey John; 12-30 Hiniker 5000 cult, big sweep; Sold following cultivator a Hiniker 50-60 bag 2 wheel air seeder w/tubes & the brackets to attach to Hiniker Cult, hyd run.; Toreq 4 wheel 10 yard scraper, 3 way hyd; Kelly 3 pt back hoe.; 8’ Lundell snow blower.; 6 bot JD 2800 plow, coulters.; 5 shk M&W 1165 disc ripper.; 6-30 MC Flail stalk cutter,; 13 shank Glenco Soil Saver; 28’ IH 490 disc.; 36’ Willrich field cult leveler.. 16’ JD 1600 pull chisel plow
PARTIAL LIST - PICTURES ON THE WEB
Bill Maxon, OwnerCall for info 515-851-1515
www.ryersonauctionrealtyltd.com
Auctioneer: Eugene Ryersoncell 515-689-3714
Eagle Grove, Iowaoffice 515-448-3079
1-IFR7(Frieselben/Ryerson)RS
RETIREMENT FARM EQUIPMENT AUCTION2 S. of Renwick, IA on Hwy 17 to 175th St.,
East 1/2 mile to 1026 175thThurs., August 7, • 11:00 A.M.
2004 9760 JD STS contour master, Mauer tank ext, 20.8-42 duals. 1720/2479 hrs, Green Star display, thru shop 13 & 14; 2008 8-30 JD 608 C chopper cornhead w/Roll-A-Cone augers on end snouts, stalk stompers, hyd deck plates; 2005 30’ JD 630 F hdyra flex platform; 2010 MD Stud King 32’ head trailer; 2003 8120 JD MFW, 18.4R rears w/duals, 2910 hrs;l 1987 JD 4650 MFWD, engine overhaul in 2010, 5683 hrs; 1996 8770 JD 4 WD, R42 duals, bareback, 3967 hrs.; 1961 JD 3010 gas, JD wide front; Brent 880 grain cart, SRT-2 tarp; (2) Brent 640; (2)Parker 605; 4800 Parker single door; 2009 16-30 JD CCS 1770 NT centerfil planter, Yetter Trash Whips, row cleaners, 350 monitor, pro shaft drive; SS 290 Seed Shuttle, tandem, conveyor belt style, Honda engine, 2 seasons;12-30 JD 400 F F hoe; 2011 7-shank JD 2700 disc ripper w/disc leveler; 34’ JD 980 field cult; 30’ JD 960 field cult; 28’ IH 490 disc; 7-shank HD 3-pt. 915 V ripper; Fast 7400 pull sprayer, 60’ boom, 1000 gal; 1000 gal banded poly tank on tandem trailer w/pump; 8’ Loftness snowblower;
PARTIAL LIST - PICTURES ON THE WEB LATER
Harley & Harvey Friesleben, OwnersFor sale info: 515-689-5978 or 515-689-5977
www.ryersonauctionrealtyltd.com
Auctioneer: Eugene Ryersoncell 515-689-3714
Eagle Grove, Iowaoffice 515-448-3079
See our auctions at MidlandsAuctions.com
IOWA FARM & RANCH PAGE 15AJULY 2014
Auctions
CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT OWNER RETIRING
MULTI MILLION DOLLAR, HIGH QUALITY!!!!
150 WEST 1ST — EARLHAM, IOWA (30 miles West of Des Moines off of Interstate 80)
FRIDAY, JULY 25 — 8:00 AM Offering both LIVE Onsite and LIVE Webcast bidding!!
DON’T MISS THIS AUCTION!!! Shop equipment and tools beginning at 8:00 am. Major equipment approx. 10:00 am
MUCH, MUCH, MORE.
or er your ee your A 5% yers’ premium for onsite pu A 8% buy premium applies for purchases.
our Web ite —‐ .hilpipre.com AUCTION —WATERL O, IA—319‐235‐6007
AUCTIONASSOCIATED GRADING & EXCAVATION
TRENCHER - PLOW: 1998 Wolfe 400 HDX / TRENCHER: Koehring 700 WD / DOZER: Caterpillar D8R; Caterpillar D6RLGP; Caterpillar D6M LGP; D8H, pwr shift / SCRAPER TRACTOR: Caterpillar D9H / ARTICULATOR TRKS.: (2) John Deere 250D / EXCAVATORS: 2005 Volvo CC46013; Kobelco ED150 / MINI EXCAVATOR: John Deere 35D / BACKHOE: 2004 Caterpillar 420D / WHEEL LOADER: 2005 Cat 950 / ENLOADER: Cat 963 / SCRAPERS: JD 860 and Terex TS-14 / GRADER: Dresser A560E / MECHANICS TRK.: 1999 Freightliner / TRUCK: 1997 IHC, w/National crane 300B ; IHC 4700 w/knuckle crane / TRK. TRACTOR: 1989 Peterbilt 377 / DUMP TRK. / FORKLIFT: Caterpillar TH83 / PICKUPS / AG TRACTORS: Challenger AGCO; Others / TRAILERS: 2007 Trail King; Talbert detach; Others / SHOP EQUIP. / VINTAGE DOZERS: Cat D2, D3 / Many, Many More items.
TERMS: Cash or letter of credit from your bank to guarantee your bank. A 5% buyers’ premium applies for onsite purchases. A 8% buyers’ premium applies for webcast purchases.
MARK YOUR CALENDARS NOW. DON’T MISS THIS AUCTION!!!
See our Website ––– www.hilpipre.com
HILPIPRE AUCTION CO. – WATERLOO, IA – 319-235-6007
IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014PAGE 16A
Auctions
TERMS: All items sold as is where is. Payment of cash or check must be made sale day before removal of items. Statements made auction day take precedence over all advertising. $35 documentation fee applies to all titled vehicles. Titles will be mailed. ND Sales Tax laws apply. Canadian buyers need a bank letter of credit to facilitate border transfer.
2012 JD 9560RT, deluxe cab, JDLink, powershift, 4 hyd., 36” Camoplast tracks, 482 hrs., S/NRW9560RHCP901468
2012 JD 9560RT, deluxe cab, leather trim, JDLink, powershift, 4 hyd., Durabilt 3500 30” tracks, 510 hrs., S/N901406
2012 JD 9510RT, deluxe cab, buddy seat, powershift, 4 hyd., 36” tracks, 502 hrs., S/N1RW9510RTCP901672
2013 JD 8360RT, IVT, premium cab, JDLink, 4 hyd., Durabilt 3500 16” tracks, 386 hrs., S/N909033
2012 JD 8335RT, IVT, premium cab, JDLink, 5 hyd., Durabilt 5500 16” tracks, wide stance 72”-120”, 607 hrs., S/N907974
2010 Caterpillar Challenger MT865C, powershift, 5 hyd., 30” tracks, 1,798 hrs., S/NAGCC865JNVKG1048
1994 Caterpillar 75C, 10 spd. powershift, 4 hyd., Durabilt 3500 30” tracks at 50%, S/N4KK00611
1990 Caterpillar 65, 4 hyd., 24” tracks at approx. 20%, 6,746 hrs.
2013 JD 9410R, premium cab, JDLink, 18 spd. powershift, 5 hyd., 845 hrs., S/N006962
2011 JD 9630, deluxe cab, powershift, 5 hyd., 781 hrs., S/N1RW9630PHBP025056
2011 Case-IH Steiger 385, deluxe cab, 16 spd. powershift, 5 hyd., 968 hrs., S/NZBF1213243
2002 NH TJ375, 24 spd., 5 hyd., high iron & positive coolant, shows 4,971 hrs., S/NRVS001180
1998 NH TV140 bi-directional, hydro, front & rear PTO, front & rear hyd., loader w/grapple, shows 3,725 hrs. but hrs. & S/N unknown
1998 Ford NH TV140, hydro, 3 hyd., 3 pt., NH 7614 self-leveling loader, shows 2,615 hrs., S/ND203289
1997 JD 9300, deluxe seat, 24 spd., 4 hyd., shows 4,633 hrs., S/NRW9300H001772
1997 JD 9200, 24 spd., 4 hyd., shows 8,418 hrs., S/NRW9200H001642
1996 Case-IH 9370, 12 spd. powershift, 4 hyd., 4,652 actual hrs.
1994 Ford NH Versatile 9680, 855 Cummins, 350 hp., 12 spd., 4 hyd., shows 5,978 hrs., S/N0102924
1992 JD 8760, 24 spd., 3 hyd., diff lock, shows 6,873 hrs., S/NRW8760H004742
1988 JD 8650, quad range, 3 hyd., shows 9,699 hrs., S/NH009012
JD 8640, PTO, shows 3,820 hrs. 1982 Versatile 875, 12 spd., 4 hyd., S/N150640
Versatile 800, converted to hydro, used for pull tractor
1979 Case 4690, 12 spd. powershift, 3 hyd., shows 6,831 hrs., S/N881728
1976 Case 2470, powershift, 4 hyd., 3 pt., no PTO, shows 6,358 hrs.
2011 JD 8360R, MFWD, IVT, ILS, premium cab, JDLink, 5 hyd., 696 hrs., S/N046384
2012 JD 8335R, MFWD, IVT, ILS, premium cab, JDLink, 5 hyd., 811 hrs., S/N062677
2013 JD 8310R, MFWD, IVT, ILS, deluxe cab, 5 hyd., 684 hrs., S/N1RW8310PDD069305
2011 JD 8310R, MFWD, deluxe cab, IVT, ILS, 4 hyd., shows 1,276 hrs., S/N1RW8310RHBD047165
2012 JD 8285R, MFWD, IVT, ILS, premium cab, JDLink, 5 hyd., 479 hrs., S/N063200
2011 JD 8285R, MFWD, powershift, deluxe cab, JDLink, 4 hyd., 1,600 hrs., S/N044590
2013 JD 8235R, MFWD, IVT, ILS, premium cab, JDLink, 5 hyd., 777 hrs., S/N062540
2014 JD 7230R, MFWD, premium cab, JDLink, auto quad 20/20, 4 hyd., 84 hrs., S/N015039
2014 JD 7215R, MFWD, premium cab, JDLink, auto quad 20/20, 4 hyd., 48 hrs., S/N015075
2014 JD 7200R, MFWD, premium cab, JDLink, auto quad 20/20, 4 hyd., 112 hrs., S/N015037
2013 JD 7140R, MFWD, premium cab, auto quad 20/20 40K, 4 hyd., JD H360 self-leveling loader, 183 hrs., S/N008722
2014 JD 6170R, MFWD, premium cab, JDLink, auto quad 20/20, 4 hyd., JD H360 self-leveling loader, 93 hrs., S/N010138
2013 JD 6150R, MFWD, premium cab, JDLink, auto quad 20/20 40K, 4 hyd., JD H360 self-leveling loader, 191 hrs., S/N008660
2004 JD 8320, MFWD, deluxe cab, buddy seat, powershift, 3 hyd., 3,164 hrs., S/NRW8320P021675
1999 JD 8200, MFWD, deluxe cab, buddy seat, 4 hyd., 3 pt., 7,400 hrs., S/NRW8200T026855
2002 JD 8120, MFWD, deluxe cab, active seat, powershift, 4 hyd., 3 pt.,
shows 5,937 hrs., S/NRW8120P003812
1996 JD 8100, MFWD, powershift, 3 hyd., 3 pt., shows 10,460 hrs., S/NRW8100P01288
1994 JD 7800, MFWD, deluxe cab, 16 spd. power quad, 3 hyd., 3 pt., shows 11,081 hrs., S/NRW7800H009949
2004 JD 6420, MFWD, 16 spd. quad range, 2 hyd., 3 pt., 540/1000 PTO
2012 JD 6210, MFWD, deluxe cab, IVT, 3 hyd., 3 pt., 350 hrs., S/N1RW6210RECD002708
2013 JD 4720, MFWD, deluxe cab, radio, HST 25 spd., 1 hyd., 3 pt., PTO, S/N947035
2011 Case-IH Steiger Puma 165C, MFWD, 4 hyd., 3 pt., PTO, 460 hrs., S/NZA13H10135
2006 Case-IH MX230, MFWD, 5 hyd., 3 pt., 3 PTOs, 3,500 hrs., S/NJAZ133266
2006 Agco GT45, MFWD, CAH, 46 hp., 16F/8R, 2 hyd., 3 pt., 1,167 hrs., S/NGT454WDATN060095
2012 JD 1026R, MFWD, 25 hp. diesel, hydro, New drive-over 60” mower, front-mount 54” quick hitch snowblower, hyd. controls
2008 Kubota M135X, MFWD, CAH, 8 spd. powershift w/Hi-Low, LH reverser, 2 hyd., 3 pt., Kubota LA2253 quick tach loader, 7’ quick tach bucket, joystick, 1,840 hrs., loader S/NA0160, tractor S/N50133
2003 NH TG285, MFWD, powershift, 5 hyd., 3 pt., quick hitch, 1000 PTO, shows 5,393 hrs., S/NJAW127086
Ford NH 455D landscape tractor, MFWD, EROPS, 3 pt., 5,058 hrs.
Gannon box, 6-way rear, w/scarifiers, for Ford 455D
Quick attach plate bucket w/rippers, for Ford 455D
1981 JD 4440, quad range, 2 hyd., 3 pt., 540/1000 PTO, JD 148’ loader, 8’ bucket, shows 11,121 hrs., single owner
1977 JD 4430, quad range, 2 hyd., 3 pt., PTO, 9,629 hrs.
1976 JD 4430, quad range, 3 hyd., 3 pt., quick hitch, 540/1000 PTO, shows 13,540 hrs., S/N048466
JD 4430, CAH, quad range, 3 hyd., 3 pt., JD 158 loader
1965 JD 4020, diesel, 8 spd., 2 hyd., PTO, shows 6,051 hrs., cracked block, S/NT213R102190R
JD 2755, CAH, diesel, 8 spd. syncro, 3 hyd., 3 pt., 4,180 hrs., S/N02755G744346
1981 IHC 1586, 3 hyd., 540/1000 PTO1974 AC 7050, 3 hyd., 3 pt., 1000 PTO, shows 4,521 hrs.
AC 190, wide front, open station, diesel, hyd., 3 pt., PTO
Farmall 826, cab, 2 hyd., 540/1000 PTO IHC 706, wide front, open station, 3 pt., 540/1000 PTO, 6,800 hrs.
IHC 706, no cab, wide front, diesel, 2 hyd., Farmhand hyd. loader, 7’ bucket
IHC 184 Lowboy, 60” deck, 3 pt., S/N2000115U044262
2012 JD S680, STS, Contour-Master, premium cab, deluxe controls, PRWD, high cap. 26’ unloading auger, 654 sep. hrs., 972 engine hrs., S/N1H0S680SCC0747344
2012 JD S680, STS, premium cab, Contour-Master, Pro drive, PRWD, 669 sep. hrs., 1,054 engine hrs., S/N745615
2009 JD 9870, STS, Contour-Master, premium cab, deluxe controls, PRWD, high cap. unloading auger, 1,027 sep. hrs., 1,456 engine hrs., S/N1H09870S730672
2006 JD 9860, STS, Contour-Master, PRWD, deluxe controls, Bullet rotor, Y&M, high cap. unloading, 1,811 sep. hrs., 3,008 engine hrs., S/NH09860S715941
2006 JD 9860, STS, Contour-Master, Bullet rotor, deluxe controls, Y&M, HID lights, high cap. unloading auger, 2,152 sep. hrs., 3,061 engine hrs., S/NH09860S716158
2010 JD 9770, STS, Contour-Master, Pro drive, PRWD, integrated auto steer, Y&M, high cap. 22-1/2’ unloading auger,1,668 sep. hrs., 2,304 engine hrs., S/N1H09770STA0738499
2009 JD 9770, STS, Contour-Master, premium cab, deluxe controls, PRWD, integrated auto steer, Y&M, high cap. unloading auger, 1,165 sep. hrs., 1,647 engine hrs., S/NH09770S730885
2009 JD 9770, STS, Contour-Master, deluxe controls, PRWD, integrated auto steer, Y&M, 5 spd. feeder house, high cap. 26’ unloading auger, 1,384 sep. hrs., 1,797 engine hrs., S/NH09770731916
2001 JD 9750, STS, deluxe controls, JD auto steer, Y&M, long auger, MAV straw chopper, 2,230 sep. hrs., 2,966 engine hrs., S/N691165
2001 JD 9750, STS, deluxe controls, Y&M, long auger, 2,812 sep. hrs.,
4,044 engine hrs., S/N6912882003 JD 9650, Walker, deluxe controls, PRWD, 20’ unloading auger, 2,665 sep. hrs., 3,673 engine hrs., S/N700393
2002 JD 9650, STS, fore/aft, GreenStar ready, long auger, 2,204 sep. hrs., 2,888 engine hrs., S/NH09650S696898
1998 JD 9610, Contour-Master, DHH, DAS, fore/aft, chaff spreader, Y&M, long auger, 2,820 sep. hrs., 3,960 engine hrs., S/NH09610X678418
1997 JD 9600, DHH, DAS, fore/aft, factory PRWD, 3,310 sep. hrs., 4,626 engine hrs., S/NH09600X673281
1997 JD 9600, DHH, DAS, fore/aft, GreenStar Y&M, no display, long auger, 3,507 sep. hrs., 4,970 engine hrs., S/NH09600X672022
1991 JD 9600, chaff spreader, 1,006 sep. hrs, 3,807 engine hrs., S/N640801
1990 JD 9600, DHH, DAS, fore/aft, long auger, 3,194 sep. hrs., 4,799 engine hrs., S/NH9600X635374
1990 JD 9600, DHH, DAS, fore/aft, long auger, 4,738 sep. hrs., 6,778 engine hrs., S/NH09600X636564
1998 JD 9510, deluxe controls, Ag Leader Yield w/Nav II and Ag Leader Insight, long auger, 2,264 sep. hrs., 3,166 engine hrs., JD Harvester Works combine, S/N shows 9510, all working operations of combine JD 9550, S/N676831
1981 JD 8820, air foil sieve, 6,051 engine hrs.
1986 JD 7720, diesel, DAM, Ag Leader grain monitor, 3,680 hrs., S/N600873
1981 JD 7720, A/C, DAM, chaff spreader, S/N461788
1979 JD 7720, 2 spd. cyl., bean slow down kit
1975 JD 7700, diesel, posi torque drive, 8,230 hrs., S/N166029
JD 7700, turbo diesel, posi torque, 4,825 hrs.
1997 Case-IH 2188, axial flow, AFX rotor, 2,774 sep. hrs., 3,464 engine hrs., S/NJJC0195737
Case-IH 1680, straw chopper, S/NJJC0048931X
1994 Gleaner R72, 330 hp. Deutz, hydro, shows 2,519 sep. hrs., 3,700 engine hrs., S/NR7240922
1993 Gleaner R62, Deutz air-cooled engine, 325 hp., 3,484 sep. hrs., 4,802 engine hrs., 2 yrs. on elevator chains
AC Gleaner L2, 6 cyl., gear drive, Windrow Plus, with LM 13’ pickup head w/Sund pickup, S/NLW19026
2013 JD 615P pickup head, 15’ belt pickup
2010 JD 615P pickup head, 15-belt, S/N1H00615PCA0735654
JD 914 pickup head, JD 7-belt pickup, S/NH00914W675213
JD 214 pickup head, 7-belt pickup JD 212 pickup head, 5-belt pickup, S/N541072
(2) JD 212 pickup head, 6-belt pickup, S/N372599H, S/N372354H
JD 212 pickup head, Melroe hyd. drive pickup
JD pickup head, 5-belt pickup (2) JD 100 pickup head, JD 5-belt pickup
Westward 914 pickup with 397 Westward 8-belt pickup
(2) Case-IH 1015 pickup head IHC 810 pickup head, Case-IH 5-belt pickup, S/N33427
2011 MacDon FD70 flex draper head, 45’, dual sickle drive
2010 MacDon D60 draper head, 35’, steel drum fingers, S/N169548
2009 MacDon flex draper, 40’, hyd. fore/aft, S/N193854
(2) 2009 JD 635 flex head2008 JD 635 flex head, 35’, S/N7253642011 JD 635 flex head, S/NCACC755125
2010 JD 635 flex head, S/N1H00635FKA0737436
(4) 2009 JD 635 flex heads(4) 2008 JD 635 flex heads(2) 2007 JD 635 flex heads, 35’, S/N721141, S/NH00635F721203
(2) 2005 JD 635 flex heads, S/NH00635F711141, S/N711863
2004 JD 635 flex head, S/N7063382008 JD 630 flex head, S/NH00630F725183
2007 JD 630 flex head, S/N721310(2) 2005 JD 630 flex heads, S/NH00630F712273, S/NH00630F711084
(3) 2004 JD 630 flex heads2002 JD 930, Contour-Master, S/NH00930F697499
2002 JD 930 flex head, S/N6972802001 JD 930 flex head, S/N6928831998 JD 930 flex head, 30’, S/N6716511997 JD 930 flex head, S/N671354(6) JD 930 flex heads2002 JD 925 flex head, S/NH000925F696679
2001 JD 925 flex head, S/NH00925F696001
1990 JD 925 flex head, 25’, S/NH00925F635687
JD 925 flex head, fore/aft 1992 JD 925 flex head, fore/aft, steel snouts, stubble lights, finger reel, S/N656094
1999 JD 920 flex head, poly, SS decking, stubble lights, S/NH00920F681158
2000 NH 73C flex head, fore/aft, lateral tilt, 3” cut, Crary air reel,S/N663812
2000 Case-IH 1020 flex head, 25’, poly skids, finger reel, S/NJJC0316617
1997 Case-IH 1020 flex head, 30’, poly, EasyCut sickle, set up for Field Tracker, S/NJJC0223603
1987 Case-IH 1020 flex head, 25’, fore/aft, finger reel, 3” sickle, 2007 Crary air reel, S/N003064
(2) Case-IH 1020 flex head, 30’, 25’ IHC 1020 flex head, 25’, fore/aft, finger reel, poly
(2) MF 1859 flex heads, 20’, UII aluminum reel
MF 1859 flex head, 20’, standard reel
2013 JD 618C chopping corn head, 18x22”, S/N1H00618
2012 JD 618C chopping corn head, 18x22”, S/N745348
2012 JD 612C chopping corn head, 12x22”, S/N746049
2011 JD 612C chopping corn head, 12x20”, S/N1H0612CCJB0740397
2010 JD 612C chopping corn head, 12x30”, S/N1H0612CCLA0735608
(2) 2009 JD 612C chopping corn head, 12x22”, S/NH0612CC730354, S/N730107
2009 JD 612C chopping corn head, 12x30”, S/NH0612CC730223
2012 JD 608C chopping corn head, 8x30”, S/N1H00608CKB0745201
2011 Capella chopping corn head, 18x22”, S/N8319
2008 Case-IH 2612 chopping corn head, 12x30”, S/N686506006
2009 Drago chopping corn head, 12x22”, S/N25639
2008 Geringhoff RD chopping corn head, 6x30”, S/N90047630
2008 Geringhoff RD chopping corn head, 18x22”
2005 Geringhoff RD chopping corn head, 8x30”, S/N91485830/B
2008 Case-IH 2208 corn head, 8x22”, S/NCBJ038503
2009 JD 612C corn head, 12x22”, S/NH0612CX730105
(2) 2004 JD 1293 corn head, S/NH01293X70564
1998 JD 1291 corn head, 12x22”, S/NH01291X680702
1997 JD 1291 corn head, 12x22”, S/NH01291X670729
2005 JD 1290 corn head, 12x20”, S/NH01290X670692
2008 JD 893 corn head, 8x30”, S/N721574
2004 JD Clark conv. corn head, 12x22”
2003 Clark corn head, 12x22”, S/N0906021222
JD Clark conv. corn head, 10x22”, S/N625771
1820 corn head on Clark frame, 30’ JD corn head, 8x22”JD corn head, 12x22”1996 JD 693 corn head, 6x30”, S/N665749
JD corn head, 12x22”JD 444 corn head, high tinCase-IH 983 corn head, converted to 1083
IHC 883 corn head, 8x22”IHC corn head, 8x22”1994 Agco Gleaner hugger corn head, 8x30”, S/N83017277
MF 63 corn head, 6x30”MF corn head, 8x22”
(2) JD 925 rigid heads, bat reel, pro plates, S/N646226, S/N646240
JD 230 rigid head, 30’, bat reel, S/N616871
JD 230 rigid head, 30’, bat reel(2) MF 1859 rigid heads, 20’, bat reelsMF rigid head, 20
JD 853A all crop head, 8x30”JD 853A all crop head, 8x30”JD 653 all crop head, converted to 8x22”
JD 454A all crop head, 38” rowsJD 100 Series head, 22’, SSR 12” sunflower pans & reel
JD 853 all crop head, 8x30”JD 222 head with sunflower pansJD 100 Series head, 20’ w/Sund pickup, perforated floor
JD 924 pickup head, Sund pickups, bean roller, screen bottom
2004 JD 2700 ripper, 18’, S/N2700X001274
2001 JD 2700 disc ripper, S/NN02700X000246
1995 JD 726 mulch finisher, 36/39’, S/NN00726X000356
JD 712 disc chisel, 13 shankJD 712 disc chisel, no discs 2009 JD 512 ripper, 22-1/2’2011 Summers disc chisel, 28’ 1997 Sunflower 4410 disc ripper, 9 shank, S/N4496902
Case-IH ET730 disc ripper, 9 shank, S/NJFH0025364
2003 Case-IH 9300 Ecolotiger disc ripper, 9 shank, S/NJFH0017312
Case-IH 9300 disc ripper, 9 shank2003 Case-IH 730B ripper, 18’, S/NJFH0012783
Case-IH 730B disc ripper, 9 shank, S/N1FH0007829
Case-IH 930 disc ripper, 9 shank, S/NJFH0017320
DMI Ecolotiger, 9 shank, S/NJFH0002495
Brillion ripper, 4 shankLandoll Soilmaster, 13 shank Summers Super Coulter, 40’, S/NJ0206
Summers coulter chisel, 35’IHC McCormick 21 subsoiler, single shank, 3 pt.
King Kutter single pt. ripper, 3 pt.
2008 JD 2410 chisel plow, 33’2004 JD 2410 chisel plow, 45’, S/NN02410X000306
JD 1610 chisel plow, 15’, ext. to 17’, S/N01610X015070
JD 1600 chisel plow, 16’ JD 1600 chisel plow, 29’ JD 737 chisel plow, 40’JD 680 chisel plow, 31’ 2005 Wil-Rich Quad 4 chisel plow, 39’, S/N456422
Wil-Rich 4400 chisel plow, 43’Wil-Rich 4400 chisel plow, 39’IHC 5500 chisel plow, 29’Flexi-Coil 820 chisel plow, 12” spacing
IHC 55 chisel plow, 27’ IHC 55 chisel plow, 19’Melroe Gysler chisel plow, 24’ Melroe Gysler chisel plow, 24’ Oliver chisel plow, 20’
2009 JD 4930 self-propelled sprayer, 120’ boom, 1,200 gal. SS tank, shows 2,630 hrs., S/NN04930X008212
2007 JD 4930 self-propelled sprayer, 120’ boom, 1,200 gal. SS tank, shows 2,440 hrs., S/NN04930X00245
2005 JD 4920 self-propelled sprayer, 120’ boom, 1,200 gal. SS tank, shows 3,764 hrs., S/NN04920X004038
2009 JD 4830 self-propelled sprayer, 90’ boom, 1,000 gal. SS tank, shows 2,100 hrs., S/NN04830X003198
2008 Apache AS1010 sprayer, AM/FM, A/C, Cummins 6 spd., 100’ auto fold boom, 1,000 gal. tank, 1,455 hrs.
2005 Ag Chem Rogator 1074 self-propelled sprayer, 100’ 5-section boom, 20” spacing, 1,000 gal. SS tank, shows 3,497 hrs., S/N107010205
2001 Ag Chem Rogator 854 self-propelled sprayer, 100’ boom, 20” space, 800 gal. SS tank, shows 4,996 hrs., S/N850434901
1994 Ag Chem Rogator 664 self-propelled sprayer, 80’ boom, hyd. tread adj., 800 gal. SS tank
2002 Loral 3000SS, 60’ AirMax V system, Allison automatic, 8 ton SS tank, 37,066 miles
NYB pickup sprayer, 60’, 500 gal. tankSummers pickup sprayer, 350 gal. tank, 60’, S/N8622
Melroe 216 spra-coupe, cab Melroe 210 spra-coupe, 3-wheel, 50’, 200 gal. tank
Melroe 103 spra-coupe, 58’ booms, 130 gal. tank
ATV sprayer, 25 gal. w/boom
2001 Ag Chem Terragator TG8103, Air Spread 70’ boom, shows 4,408 engine hrs., S/N83076901
1998 Ag Chem Terragator TG8103, Air Spread 70’ boom, shows 4,696 hrs., S/N83009598
1995 Ag Chem Terragator TG1803, Air Spread 67’ boom, shows 3,982 hrs., S/N1835435
1993 Volvo WIA64T, sleeper, 855 Cummins
1992 Peterbilt 377, conventional, 3176 Cat, 9 spd.
1985 White, integral sleeper, 3406 Cat, 9 spd.
2007 Freightliner Columbia CL12064ST, day cab conventional
2006 Freightliner C12064ST Century 120 day cab
2006 Freightliner Columbia, day cab, 460 Mercedes
2006 Peterbilt 385, day cab conventional, C13 Cat
2006 Sterling AT9500, day cab, C12 Cat
2005 Peterbilt 385, day cab conventional, C13 Cat
2002 Volvo VNL, day cab conventional, ISM Cummins
2001 Freightliner Century, day cab, 12.7 Detroit
2000 IHC 9100I, day cab, N14 Cummins1999 Mack CH613, day cab, E7 Mack1999 Peterbilt 379, day cab, 3176 Cat1999 Peterbilt 379 tandem axle, 3406 Cat
1999 IHC 8100, day cab, M11 Cummins1998 IHC 9300 Eagle, day cab, M11 Cummins
1998 Mack CH613, day cab, E7 Mack 1997 Peterbilt 385, day cab, 3176 Cat1997 Volvo, day cab, M11 Cummins1994 Kenworth T600, day cab, 3406 Cat
1993 Kenworth T800, day cab, 12.7 liter 60 Series Detroit
1993 Volvo, day cab, N14 Cummins1992 Peterbilt 377, day cab, 3406B Cat1991 Kenworth T800, day cab, 3176 Cat
1990 Kenworth T400, day cab, L10 Cummins
1988 Kenworth T600, day cab, 3406B Cat
1978 IHC 2275, day cab, 290 Cummins
2013 Maurer aluminum hopper bottom, 42’
2013 Timpte Super Hopper, 40’x72”2009 Wilson Commander hopper bottom, 41’
2009 Wilson hopper bottom, 50’x96”x72” sides
2005 Timpte Super Cubed hopper bottom, 43’x102”x78”
2005 Wilson hopper bottom, 50’x96”2003 Cornhusker Ultralite hopper bottom, 43’x102”x84”
2002 Field Master hopper bottom, 42’2001 Timpte tri-axle hopper bottom, 46’x102”x78”
2000 Wilson hopper bottom, 43’x102”x78”
1999 Wilson tri-axle hopper bottom, 50’x102”x86”
1999 Wilson hopper bottom, 41’x102”x78”
1998 Timpte hopper bottom, 42’1997 Jetco hopper bottom, 42’1996 Merritt hopper bottom, 43’x74” sides
1988 Timpte hopper bottom, 42’x66” sides
1987 Timpte Super Hopper, 42’1985 Wilson tandem axle hopper bottom, 42’
Shop-built tandem axle hopper bottom, 40’
1998 BT drop deck, 40’1997 Load King, 53’2003 Transcraft drop deck, 50’x102”Fontaine 352 tandem axle drop deck, 42’x102”
1965 American drop deck, 43’1998 Globe hyd. RGN tri-axle, air lift tag, 52’ long
1999 Talbert TSDW fixed neck spread tandem axle, 48’x102”
1999 Talbert NR2008 detach trailer, 53’
1997 Trail Eze fixed tri-axle RGN, 50’x102”
1990 Trail King lowboy, 45’, hyd. beavertail
2006 DCT tandem axle gooseneck flatbed trailer, 30’
1998 Fontaine flatbed, 48’1999 Econoline tilt deck equipment trailer, 30’ total deck
1977 Dorsey tandem axle flatbed, 38’1979 Wisconsin tandem axle lowboy, 20’x8’ main deck
2007 Delta gooseneck trailer, 27’ bed2005 May tri-axle trailer, 33’x8-1/2’1999 Towmaster pintle hitch trailer, 29’
1980 tandem axle flatbed trailer w/ramps
Donahue equipment trailer, 32’x10’ Donahue trailer, 28’Donahue trailer, 28’x8’
Auctioneers & Clerk: Steffes Group, Inc., 2000 Main Avenue East, West Fargo, ND 58078Scott Steffes ND81, Brad Olstad ND319, Bob Steffes ND82, Max Steffes ND999, Ashley Huhn ND843,
Eric Gabrielson ND890, Randy Kath ND894 | 701.237.9173 | 800.726.8609 | SteffesGroup.com
West FargoAgIronAgIronWest FargoWest Fargo
TRACK TRACTORS
4WD TRACTORS
MFWD TRACTORS
Red River Valley Fairgrounds, 1805 West Main Ave, West Fargo, ND. I-94 & Exit 343.
Enter Fairground from the East at Grand Stand Avenue.
De
tail
s at
Ste
ffe
sGro
up.
co
m
AUCTIONEER’S NOTE: Auctioneers will run multiple rings with live online bidding. There will be no loading assistance until 2:00PM on sale day. Cars and pickups may enter grounds at 12:00 Noon for self-loading. Registration, terms, and details at SteffesGroup.com. Equipment removal by Friday, August 1, unless other arrangements are made. Hauling and loading are available. Contact auctioneers for owner information, new consignments, or changes at 701.237.9173 or 800.726.8609.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 2014 • 9AMWEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 2014 • 9AM
2WD TRACTORS
COMBINES
PICKUP HEADS
CHOPPINGCORN HEADS
RIPPERS, COULTER CHISELS, MULCH
FINISHERS
NON-SLEEPERSEMI TRACTORS
HOPPER BOTTOM TRAILERS
DROP DECK, RGN, IMPLEMENT &
LOWBOY TRAILERS
DRAPER HEADS
FLEX HEADS
STANDARDCORN HEADS
RIGID HEADS
ALL CROP, SUNFLOWER, & BEAN HEADS
CHISEL PLOWS
SELF-PROPELLED SPRAYERS
SELF-PROPELLED SPREADERS
SLEEPERSEMI TRACTORS
OVER 2000 LOTS TO BE SOLD!
IOWA FARM & RANCH PAGE 17AJULY 2014
Auctions
Post Frame Buildings
www.qualitystructures.com www.qualitystructures.com
SERVICE QUALITY DURABILITY STRENGTH
• • • • • •
SERVICE QUALITY DURABILITY STRENGTH
Being located in America’s bread basket, Quality Structures, Inc. is committed to providing farmers with one of their most important tools to get the job done. Whether it’s hay storage, machinery storage, a livestock facility or an insulated work shop, our agricultural buildings are built to your specific needs.
89-IFR7(Specializing/QSI)QS
1-IFR5(2010QualityToolsStarHillJaws)SS
PREVIEW:Mon.-Fri., 7am-6pmSat., 7:30am-4:30pm
LOADOUT:Wed., July 23 - Fri., Aug 1*After August 1st at 5:00 PM, any items not removed will be charged $50 per day lot rent and shop time to load.
CLOSES: TUE., JULY 22CLOSES: TUE., JULY 22OPENS: FRI., JULY 11OPENS: FRI., JULY 11
1150 South Victory Dr., Mankato, MN 56601AUCTIONEER’S NOTE: JD 2.9% financing available on 20 Series Tractors and newer & 50 Series Combines and newer for 5 years. Contact dealership for details and pre-approval at 507.387.8201. 15% parts discount on auction items until Friday, August 1, 2014. Shop rates apply for
any assistance required outside of normal loading. For trucking info, contact Joleen or Kelcy at Warmka Transport, Inc. 507.787.2289.
1-IFR7(7-11Online/Steffes/Iquid)IS
GADBURY PLUMBING & SHEET METAL FORT DODGE, IA
NOTE: DATES CHANGED TO:TUES., JULY 22 & THURS., JULY 31
Starting at 8:00 am each dayOffering both LIVE Onsite and LIVE Webcast bidding
DON’T MISS this VERY LARGE AUCTION!!!–– Bring your Trucks and TrailersAUCTIONEERS NOTE: Owner retiring after the business has been
serving the area for 85 years. This was a Union Shop. Selling 2 different days and 2 different locations.
1,000 Lots Selling Tues. July 22, 3516 Maple Dr: $300,000 Current Inventory: To be sold in large and small lots: General stock: Valves; Faucets; Copper; 1,000’s Cast Iron sewer 8’ pipe; Thermostats; PVC; Flanges; Many thousand galvanized fittings; Brass fittings; Ridgid Big Pallet Lok fittings; Plumbing repair kits; Boiler & water testing kits; Set boiler flue rollers; Smith Fibercast type thickness adjuster; Prep-Star copper cleaner unit; (30) Freon tanks: #25, 410A; MO99; AC tool testers; Other like inventory / SHEET METAL: Several thousand pounds / SHOP SUPPORT: 300 lot hand tools and power tools; Winches; Hoists; Chop saws; Drop cords; Carts; Bench; Power washer; Fans; Shovels, hoes; Scaffolding; (3) Ladders / OFFICE: (6) 2 dr. lateral files, wood grain; Storage cabinets; Drafting chairs; Metal desks; Bookcases; Paper shredder; Several 4 dr. file cabinets; Hering Hall Marvin safe; Brothers fax; Prints: Ducks Unlimited; Other limited editions; Other Like Items 1,500 Lots Selling, Thurs., July 31, 216 N. 12th St: - FULL LINE SHEET METAL SHOP: PRESS BRAKE: 2006; Accu, 12’, 175 T. with Hurco autobend mtd on press brake, all front controls, automatic ; Chicago D&K /PLASMAS: Lockformer Vulcan 1000B; Thermal Arc Pak 5XR, cutter / BRAKES: Roper Whitney & Chicago leaf; Others / MAGNABEND: Roper Whitney, model MBB4181, sn 7701085, 18 ga., 16” steel up to 51” / 3 BAR ROLLS: Lown open end, Others / BENDER: Niagara 30” / PUNCH: W.A. Whitney sn 92468, 9” throat / EDGER & CRIMPER: Niagara & Peck Stow / QTY. WELDERS: including - Dyer spot welder / DRILL PRESS: Powermatic 1150, sn 7V0994 / SHEAR: Niagara 36” manual / OTHER EQUIP.: Several Lockformers; Ridgids; Dries & Krump 4’ box & pan brakes; Chop saws; Power sewer cleaners; Pin-spotter; Geni-lifts; Qty. Ladders; Slitter; SHOP SUPPORT: Cabinets; Tables; Parts bins; Parts cabinets; Rotating bolt bin; Storage racks; Rolling metal work tables; 1,100 power & hand tools; (150) Pipe wrenches; (50) Ladders / VEHICLES: (20) Trucks & Trailers.TERMS: Cash or letter of credit from your bank to guarantee your check. A 10% buyers’ premium applies for onsite purchases. A 13% buyers’ premium applies for webcast purchases.
PLUMBING & SHEET METAL EQUIPMENT2 DAY AUCTION
1-IFR7(plumbing/HilpipreAuct)HS
See our websitewww.hilpipre.com
HILPIPRE AUCTION COMPANYWATERLOO, IOWA
319-235-6007
Want to see more auctions?
Visit our auction website atMidlandsAuctions.com
IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014PAGE 18A
Graham TrailersGraham Trailers2090 Market Ave. • Ida Grove, IA • 1-800-238-8314
www.grahamtrailers.8m.com85-IFR 7(GRAHAM) GS
Your Source for Quality Used Equipment, and Also
Enclosed Trailers Flatbed Trailers
600 & 900 GallonFuel Trailers
DEF Systems Available.
STARTING AT .... $5,450
2003 TexMex 25’ GN Flatbed2 - 10,000# Axles, New Rubber,
2 Flip Over Ramps. Good condition,paint faded.
2014 RC 27’ Combination Trailer
5200# axles, Aluminum Wheels, Finished Interior, Overhead Cabinet, Front and Rear Ramp Doors, Two Tone Paint, Blue/Silver
$9,000
CALL
New TYM 50350 HP, MFWD, Dual rear remotes,
Cab with air, Heat, CD Stereo, Shuttle shift, Quick attach loader
CALL
The legendary low maintenance and high accuracy of White Planters continues with the new 9000 Series.
WHILE YOUR WHITE PLANTERWILL LAST A GOOD LONG TIME,
THIS DEAL WON’T.
The earlier you order the more you save.Your chance to get a better price and delivery date ends July 11th.
© 2014 AGCO Corporation • WP14C005JB • white-planters.com
TILLAGE EQUIPMENT ‘11 Sunflower 1435-30’ ‘08 Sunflower 1435-26’ ‘04 Sunflower 1434-29’ Summers Super Coulter 40’ Sunflower 5034-32’ Field Cultivator
Heller Implement, Inc.310 N. 6th.
Dunlap,IA 51529(712) 643-5501
Heller Implement, Inc.310 N. 6th.
Dunlap,IA 51529(712) 643-5501
Our Inventory Changes Daily!Give us a CALL!!
** ORDER YOUR NEW 9000 SERIES TODAY! **
www.hellerimplement.com
MISCELLANEOUS EQUIPMENT 1330 10’ Disc Mower Brandt 7500 EX Vac ‘11 KB 1950 Cart 1000 Bu - Tarp ‘11 KB 1950 Cart 1000 Bu - Tarp ‘11 RTV 1100 105 Hrs
‘08 8186 16 row, 30”‘09 8222 12 row, 30”
‘05 8222 12 row, 30”6106 6 row, 30”
PLANTERS -
‘11 New Holland T8040‘97 Kubota M9580
IH 1486Allis Chalmers 180Agco ST30
TRACTORS -
85-TA25(WhitePlanter/Heller)HS
USDA announces wetland compliance listening session
USDA provides update on disaster assistance
USDA’s Natural Resources Conserva-tion Service (NRCS) will host a listening session on Monday, July 28, to seek com-ments on proposed changes to wetland compliance provisions.
The session will be at Ankeny Fire Sta-tion #1, 120 NW Ash Drive, from 1 to 4 p.m.
The session will provide an opportu-nity for farmers and the public to provide comments on several proposed technical changes and clarifications, including the agency’s use of offsite wetland determi-nation procedures.
NRCS is also soliciting input on the wet-land mitigation banking pilot provision provided in the Agricultural Act of 2014.
Iowa is one of six states to conduct listening sessions. Four of the sessions, including Iowa, will take place in the Prairie Pothole Region, where numerous small seasonal wetlands provide impor-tant breeding and nesting for more than 60 percent of the Nation’s migratory wa-terfowl.
“We want landowners to understand and meet their wetland compliance re-sponsibilities which are a condition of participating in USDA programs, includ-ing crop insurance,” said Jay Mar, state conservationist for Iowa NRCS.
For more information about wetland compliance, visit a local NRCS office or go online to www.nrcs.usda.gov.
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack provided a 12-week progress report on U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) disaster assistance programs on July 9, announcing that USDA has processed 106,000 payments to farmers in 40 states across the country who suffered livestock and grazing losses between October 2011 and passage of the 2014 Farm Bill.
“Farmers and ranchers who waited two and a half years for a Farm Bill are now getting some relief,” said Vilsack. “We met the very ambitious goal to get these programs up and running in just 60 days. Now, thanks to our dedicated staff in of-fices across the country, we’ve provided more than 106,000 payments to farmers and ranchers in 40 states who suffered drought, blizzard, and other weather re-lated losses.”
A quick implementation of the disas-ter assistance programs has been a top priority for USDA. In February, the Farm Service Agency (FSA) announced that enrollment for four disaster assistance programs would begin April 15, 60 days from the date the programs were re-stab-lished by the 2014 Farm Bill.
After the 2008 Farm Bill, it took over one year for the programs to get up and running.
Since then, dedicated full-time FSA staff, as well as temporary employees hired to expedite the application process, have processed over $1.2 billion in pay-ments to qualifying farmers and ranch-ers. The first payments were sent out to farmers and ranchers within two weeks of enrollment.
USDA estimated that roughly $2.5 bil-lion would be provided in disaster relief to cover losses from October 2011 through September 2014. If those estimates prove accurate, it would mean nearly half of all disaster payments have already been pro-vided.
While disaster relief is a critical lifeline that can prevent farmers and ranchers who do not have access to crop insurance from being wiped out by weather-related losses beyond their control, most produc-ers only receive support equal to 60 per-cent of their actual losses.
USDA disaster programs include:The Livestock Forage Disaster Program
(LFP) and the Livestock Indemnity Pro-gram (LIP) provides payments for graz-ing losses due to drought and livestock deaths due to adverse weather.
The Emergency Assistance for Live-stock, Honeybees, and Farm-Raised Fish Program (ELAP) provides assistance for livestock, honeybees and farm-raised fish losses due to disease (including cattle tick fever), weather, wildfires and colony col-lapse disorder, or for losses not covered under other disaster assistance programs established by the 2014 Farm Bill.
The Tree Assistance Program (TAP) provides financial assistance to eligible orchardists and nursery tree growers to replant or rehabilitate trees, bushes and vines that were lost or damaged by natu-ral disasters.
Specific program deadlines are as fol-lows:
2011-2013 ELAP – Friday, August 1, 2014
2011-2014 LFP – Friday, January 30, 2015
2011-2014 LIP – Friday, January 30, 2015
2011-2014 TAP – Monday, February 2, 2015
Producers affected by adverse weather should contact their FSA county office to make an appointment and learn if they are eligible for disaster assistance. For more information, producers may review the 2014 Farm Bill Fact Sheet, and the LIP, LFP, ELAP and TAP fact sheets on-line, or visit any local FSA office.
IOWA FARM & RANCH PAGE 19AJULY 2014
88 (ifr 2014-zimmerman) za
ZimmermanSales & Service
Neola, IA • 712-485-2677 or 1-800-377-1685
Specializing in • Grain Bins • Buildings
• Electrical • Contracting
GRAIN BINSYour Dealer For:
Spring Discountsand Crews Available.
WE SPECIALIZE IN...• Farm Tiling• Land Clearing & Leveling• Sewer Installation• Sewer Jetting• Water Line Installation• Basement & Footing Excavation• Building Demolition• Dump Trucks
lundell construction co.cherokee • 712-225-5763ida grove • 712-364-2423
LundellConstruction Co., Inc.
Established in 1948
Benefits of Agricultural Drainage• Increased crop yields• Improved land use and efficiency• Better spring and fall traffic ability• Reduction in soil erosion• Deeper/heartier root development• Longer growing season• Improved plant quality• Hancor products
88-IFR (IFR 2X5-LunDELL ConST) Lm
KRAJICEK PALLET, INC.611 N. 10th St. • Denison, Iowa712-263-6373 or 800-786-6118
85-TA8-9, SS,WT9 (MULCH-KRAJICEK/PALLET) KM
BULK MULCH SALE!
BULK MULCH SALE!
• Composting• Bedding
• Landscaping• Gardening
• Ground Cover
vacuum tanksTank Parts, Hoses, Pumps • Replacement Tanks & Injectors
We Rent Tanks & Pumps!
naberhaus implement co.
Halbur, Iowa 51444
712-658-2531
We build tanks and rebuild collapsed tanks.
All tanks have a guarantee!
- vacuum Tanks -1- Better Bilt 1500 - USED1- Better Bilt 1500 - NEW TANK1- Balzar 2300 - USED1- Better Bilt 4200 - USED
- TOP LOaD Tanks -1- Better Bilt 3300
- useD LOaDeR -1- Westendorf WL-20, like new
85-TA28(IFR,TA-Naberhaus) NS 1-IFR(14LOCATIONS-CUSTOM) CS
Call 800-760-7871 AnytimeSee our complete inventory at www.gncmp.com
Custom Made Products
Riteway, Degelman,
or Summers Land Rollers
14 Locations To ServeYou: Home Office: Humboldt, IAAlso In: De Soto, Iowa Falls, Union, Manchester, Britt, Readlyn, Bayard,
Fremont, Chariton, Decatur City, Marshalltown, Newton & Wayne, NE
SCRAPERS & ROLLERS FOR SALE OR RENT
ScRapeRS/RoLLeRS on HanD in 14 LocationS!Ashland • Big Dog • Cat • Durabilt
• Garfield • Leon • Rowse • Iron Wolf • Johnson & Arts-Way Graders Direct Mount or Dolly Wheel
50 to 60 on hand from 12’ to 85’ for sale or rent
Want more customers? Each month, put your message in
Iowa Farm & RanchCall 712-263-2122 to place an ad.
Iowa Farm & Ranch
We cover your ag!
Quad County Corn Processors optimizes corn grains
by Stasha PadgettQuad County Corn Processors (Quad)
started in 2000, and 14 years later the company is producing 35 million gallons of ethanol per year.
The company has made many develop-ments throughout the years, including the generation of premium feed co-prod-ucts under the name Golden Bran, accord-ing to a release.
Quad’s most recent success took place on July 1, in which it added cellulosic eth-anol to the production.
Monte Shaw, director of the Iowa Re-newable Fuels Association (IRFA), said the new process allows for higher product optimization.
“You take a low value part of the corn
and turn it into a high value product,” he told Iowa Farm & Ranch.
Shaw explained that in most cases the starch is converted to ethanol and the re-mainder of the grain is sold as feed prod-uct.
Now, Quad has developed what com-pany officials refer to as a “bolt-on” pro-cess. Shaw said they are able to hook into the plants’ fiber and convert it to ethanol through fermentation. He said the main difference it Quad’s ability to utilize the fiber.
According to a press release from IRFA, the new technology will improve the plant’s distiller grains co-product and will increase livestock feed by 40 percent and corn oil extraction by 300 percent.
Quad County Corn Processors CEO Delayne Johnson is quoted as saying, “Through hard work and forward-think-ing, we’re excited to be the first cellulosic ethanol producers in Iowa.”
“This is the first of its kind with corn fiber as far as I’m aware of,” Shaw said.
He explained that the new procedure brings the same high quality ethanol that consumers are accustomed to.
“At the end of the process the end prod-uct is the same molecule,” he said.
He also believes there are multiple ben-efits to producing cellulosic ethanol. Shaw explained that Quad is able to produce more ethanol per bushel of corn, which means not only a higher yield for Quad, but more available ethanol for consum-
ers. Since ethanol is cheaper than gas, he said it is a good situation to be in.
According to IRFA press release, they will be able to produce an additional two million gallons of cellulosic ethanol in addition to its 35 million gallons. Shaw added that the Quad’s feed grain will also be lower in fiber, which will be beneficial for many livestock herds.
Shaw believes that Quad’s new devel-opments will catch on.
“I think everyone is going to keep an eye on it,” he said.
He reported that Quad has developed the new system on their own and is try-ing to focus on optimizing its system and getting hard data on its production before branching out.
IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014PAGE 20A
Come see a live demo at AgPHD Field DayJuly 24 – Hefty Brothers Farm, Baltic, SD
Contact your local Titan Machinery Store for more details about the Yieldtrac Planter.
Yieldtrac 24R-30 Testimonial from Ballard Farms
3-Yieldtrac Operation Testimonial from Sczepanski Farms
2015 Models24R-30 • 24R-22 • 36R-22 (NEW for 2015)
Yieldtrac Features• Standard - Track Undercarriage
Only 14 PSI Ground Pressure Under Tracks Greatly Reduces Yield-Robbing Compaction
• Eliminate Pinched Rows Half as many Field Tracks (4) as Conventional Planters (8)
• Case IH Early Riser® Planting System Row units with ASM, Bulk Fill, & Liquid Fertilizer Photocopy Plants with Early, Even Emergence Eliminates the need for Aftermarket Add-ons
Better FlotationLess CompactionMORE YIELD!
www.titanmachinery.com
Come see a live demo at AgPHD Field DayJuly 24 – Hefty Brothers Farm, Baltic, SD
Contact your local Titan Machinery Store for more details about the Yieldtrac Planter.
Case IH Early Riser® Planting System
Front-folding tool bar on tracks
“You can hardly tell where the center section of that planter runs through the field.” - Gary Ballard Marshalltown, IA
“This is by far the best planter I have seen.”
Bill SczepanskiStephen, MN
Owns 3 Yieldtrac Planters
2015 Models24R-30 • 24R-22 • 36R-22 (NEW for 2015)
Yieldtrac Features• Standard - Track Undercarriage
− Only 14 PSI Ground Pressure Under Tracks − Greatly Reduces Yield-Robbing Compaction
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Volume VIII, Issue 7 July 2014
Section
B
A pack of alpacasRetirement strategy turnsinto a lifelong hobby
by Stasha PadgettTamara Chapman and her sister, Christy
Rush, started raising alpacas in 2003 outside of Logan as an effort to prod their father into retirement. Chapman and Rush’s father was a cattle farmer and didn’t want to give up animals.
“He loved all animals. He was a farmer at heart,” Chapman said and added that he loved the idea of raising alpacas.
After her father died, Chapman continued to raise alpacas and currently has 40, includ-ing two babies. If her estimation is correct,
she should have 13 more this month after they are born.
Chapman explained alpacas only give birth between morning and early afternoon, because they are originally from hostile con-ditions and the baby needs to be up and ready to hide by evening. According to Pannonia Alpacas, newborns are usually walking with-in one hour after birth and nursing within four.
ALPACAS, Page 4B
Hailey and Christian Husted help their grand-ma, Tamara Chapman, at the alpaca farm in their free time. The Husteds are getting a few alpacas ready for the Crawford County Fair. They will be entering them in the “pet” category because there is no alpaca class avail-able. Photo submitted
IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014Page 2B
PFI program Savings Incentive Program matches farmers with mentors
Twenty beginning farmers recently graduated from Practical Farmers of Iowa’s Savings Incentive Program. Together, these farmers – who became the second class to graduate from the program – saved $47,000 to put toward building capital on their farms.
The program matched their savings, for a total of $94,000 to be invested into Iowa farm businesses.
This figure, combined with the $40,000 invested with the first graduating class in spring 2013, brings the total money invested into beginning farm businesses by the Savings Incentive Program to $134,000.
The Savings Incentive Program was developed by members of Practical Farmers of Iowa to help the next generation of Iowa farmers develop successful busi-nesses. Beginning farmers accepted into the program are matched with an experienced farmer mentor, attend events to help learn farming skills and create a busi-ness plan over the two-year duration of the program while saving money to invest into their businesses. Upon graduating from the program, the beginners re-ceive business plan feedback from an industry expert, along with a savings match up to $2,400 to put toward a farm asset.
The savings and match build the capital of these farms. Recent graduates used the money to purchase land, tractors, cold storage, tractor implements, high tunnels, fencing, farm vehicles, website development and more. Participants’ farm enterprises are diverse, in-cluding fruits, vegetables, row crops, hay, beef cattle, dairy, poultry and other livestock.
Cheryl Hopkins operates Frog Hollow Farm, a 30-acre farm near Walker, with her husband Mike. They raise Boer meat goats on pasture.
“The program helped us see the big picture of our farm,” Cheryl said. “The business plan helped us see how it all comes together, especially with income, assets, expenses and cash flow.”
She added the mentorship was excellent and she and Mike still keep in touch with their mentors.
“We made lifetime friends with our mentors, Jim and Elly Fink, of rural Vinton. They have been wonderful, going above and beyond mentoring us on marketing, which was our original objective in working with them as mentors.”
Cheryl said they used their program savings and match money to help purchase an ATV to check pastures and move fence.
“Through EQIP (Environmental Quality Incentives Program), we are going to be dividing our pastures into smaller paddocks and doing more frequent rotations. The ATV will allow us to work with this system where we will be moving portable fences on a daily basis.”
Practical Farmers of Iowa members designated begin-ning farmers as their highest priority in 2009, and the organization spent the next two years creating the pro-gram and raising money. An advisory group of farmers and business people helped create the components of the program it felt were most essential: combining learning technical skills with creating mentor and peer relation-ships; developing a business plan; and accountability to complete requirements through quarterly coaching from Practical Farmers staff.
Through donations by Practical Farmers members and supporters and a federal Assets for Independence grant, the organization has raised $298,000 to match begin-ning farmers’ savings and put toward building farm businesses. The match money is held in reserve at Lin-coln Savings Bank, where participants all have free sav-ings accounts. Lincoln Savings Bank has been generous with its business plan expertise and its return rate on investment, allowing Practical Farmers to earn $4,970 off of the reserves, enough money to provide matches for two more participants.
To date, 29 beginning farmers have graduated from the Savings Incentive Program and 42 are currently participating. Of these, 20 have completed the first six months of their program and the other 21 have six months remaining until they graduate. Practical Farmers will open recruitment for another group of participants in August 2014.
For additional information, call 515-232-5661 or visit www.practicalfarmers.org.
Single file, pleaseCows and their calves mosey up the hill in the late evening in a single file line to the feed bunks. Photo by Bruce a. Binning
52 Iowa 4-H’ers receive state 4-H project awards
Fifty-two Iowa 4-H’ers were selected to receive state 4-H project awards in 2014.
A total of 163 4-H youth from 52 counties applied for the awards this year, about 25 percent more than in 2013.
The awards are given to youth who have exhibited mastery, leadership, communication and service in a specific project area.
The 4-H’ers receiving the awards are recognized as the top in the state.
4-H projects give youth the opportunity to strengthen their skills and knowledge in a wide variety of areas ranging from communication to food and nutrition.
“4-H’ers can choose from one or more project areas that allow them to develop skills and interests in the areas of healthy living, citizenship and leadership, and STEM - science, technology, engineering and math,” said Cayla Taylor, a state 4-H program coordinator with Iowa State University Extension and Outreach.
The 4-H’ers completed a rigorous written application and were interviewed, which gave the applicants valu-able communication experiences.
“Achieving a state 4-H project award is a great honor and testament to the 4-H’ers’ dedication to mastering skills in a project area, while also sharing their knowl-edge of the project with others through communica-tions, leadership and citizenship opportunities,” said Taylor.
The recipients of this year’s awards were recognized at the State 4-H Youth Conference during the closing ceremony in Ames on June 26.
4-H project award winners from western Iowa are listed by county.
AdairMerritt Caviness, 17 of Greenfield, 4-H science, engi-
neering and technology project award Heath Downing, 17 of Creston, 4-H beef project awardAnna Horn, 17 of Stuart, 4-H horse and pony project
awardRiley Lonsdale, 15 of Greenfield, 4-H citizenship proj-
ect awardMorgan Smith, 16 of Stuart, 4-H communication proj-
ect awardHannah Yount, 17 of Greenfield, 4-H horse and pony
project awardBooneMadeleine Bretey, 16 of Boone, 4-H sewing and needle
arts project awardKenton Reece, 18 of Boone, 4-H safety and education
in shooting sports project awardAaliyah Scott, 16 of Pilot Mound, 4-H leadership proj-
ect awardBraeden Weyhrich, 16 of Boone, 4-H dog project award Emma Whalen, 16 of Pilot Mound, 4-H communica-
tion project awardBuena VistaAnna Marie Ehlers, 16 of Storm Lake, 4-H food and
nutrition project award
CalhounOlivia Hanlon, 15 of Churdan, 4-H child development
project awardRaeann Hanlon, 17 of Churdan, 4-H leadership project
awardCarrollBeth Pottroff, 17 of Glidden, 4-H photography project
awardCherokeeClare Conley, 14 of Cherokee, 4-H swine project awardCrawfordAnna Baughman, 18 of Denison, 4-H citizenship proj-
ect awardDallasEmma Skahill, 17 of Earlham, 4-H communication
project awardHamiltonRyan Godfredsen, 17 of Webster City, 4-H leadership
project award Tanner Hild, 18 of Webster City, 4-H sheep project awardJenna Short, 17 of Webster City, 4-H communication
awardOlivia Young, 17 of Webster City, 4-H dog project
awardMadisonShelby Dunbar, 16 of Van Meter, 4-H communication
project awardO’BrienKrayton Schnepf, 16 of Granville, 4-H leadership proj-
ect awardSacGrace Feilmeier, 18 of Early, 4-H communication proj-
ect awardAubrey Houska, 17 of Sac City, leadership project
award Alex Pickhinke, 16 of Early, 4-H woodworking project
awardTyler Pickhinke, 18 of Early, 4-H citizenship project
awardStoryCaleb Lichty, 16 of Ames, 4-H photography project
awardLydia Richards, 18 of Nevada, 4-H music project awardWebsterRebecca Nellis, 17 of Fort Dodge, 4-H food and nutri-
tion project awardWoodburyEmily Dawn Widman, 18 of Sergeant Bluff, 4-H citi-
zenship project awardWorthVivian Benjegerdes, 15 of Mason City, 4-H clothing
project awardRori Bowman, 15 of Lake Mills, 4-H sewing and nee-
dle arts project awardJayde Hapgood, 18 of Kensett, 4-H leadership project
awardMatt Moretz, 16 of Manly, 4-H citizenship project
award
IOWA FARM & RANCH Page 3BJULY 2014
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ALPACAS, from Page 1B
Raising alpacas has many benefits, Chapman said. One perk of alpaca farm-ing is the financial side.
Shearing takes place one time annually, typically in April.
Chapman said shearing one alpaca can result in seven to 10 pounds of fleece. She said fleece is sold by the ounce and is usually $15 per ounce. Sometimes, if the coat is very soft and fine, it can be sold for $30 per ounce.
Chapman and her grandchildren keep the alpacas’ coats soft by bringing them into a shelter one week before shearing, and they never groom their coat beyond picking burrs and sticks out.
She said shearing is the most challeng-ing part of raising alpacas. She hires an individual every April to complete the task and is part of a co-op that makes selling the fleece more beneficial. She ex-plained that joining a co-op is like buying in bulk; you save money because produc-tion costs are lower.
Chapman added that alpacas are lower maintenance than other animals.
“They take one soup can of food a day for each alpaca,” she said.
Alpacas eat an inexpensive diet of grass and hay. Chapman also said they don’t require a lot of housing.
A brochure by Alpaca Registry Inc. and Alpaca Owners and Breeders Association suggests building a fence designed to keep local predators out.
Chapman said alpacas are not known for charging the fence and they don’t usually try to escape. Chapman’s biggest problems include a mountain lion that killed three of her alpacas and a stray dog that killed one.
One of Chapman’s favorite aspects of
raising alpacas is taking them to shows. “I love the different personalities you
run into. Their curiosity is something else,” Chapman said.
She has been to shows in Kansas City, Missouri; Minnesota; Nebraska; and Denver, Colorado. Judges check the teeth, fleece and confirm the alpacas.
Chapman and her grandchildren get the alpacas ready to show by taking a har-ness and attaching it to a bicycle tire tube,
which is attached to a pole. The alpacas learn that pulling on a har-
ness does not result in going where they want.
Kaylee, who is four, said she loves to pet the alpacas.
“I’m going to catch them with a blue rope and take them to the fair,” she said.
Chapman and her grandchildren, Chris-tian, Kaylee and Hailey, are looking for-ward to attending the Crawford County
Fair this year with a few of their alpacas. Hailey and Christian help their grand-
ma with the alpacas, and will be showing them in the 4-H portion of the fair.
Chapman said her grandchildren have registered them for the fair as pets be-cause 4-H doesn’t have an alpaca class yet.
The family will be happy to answer any questions people have about their alpacas during the fair.
Cambry Husted sits with one of her grandma, Tamara Chapman’s, alpacas. Chapman said alpacas are known for their curious behav-ior. Photo submitted
IOWA FARM & RANCH Page 5BJULY 2014
Iowa Farm & RanchYour source for agricul-ture news in and around
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Volume VIIIIssue 7
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I learn something new almost every month about being married to a farmer.
For example, this month I learned that farmers give their wives concrete as a 45th birthday present. That’s right … concrete.
I should probably start at the beginning of our life on the farm. When my husband’s parents lived there, part of the driveway and parking area had never been paved over. As I un-derstand it, the septic tank was in that location and they needed to keep an ac-cess to it. When we moved to the farm, we had to put in a larger septic tank farther away from the house.
When we changed the front of the house a little bit, we had an area of sand that people had to walk through to get to the front door. I’m a patient person, and I don’t mind a little sand being tracked in. However, our dogs had decided that dig-ging out holes in the middle of said sand and lounging there was ever so refresh-ing. They did this so often that in order to get to our front door, visitors had to go through a small obstacle course.
We purchased the house on February 29, 2008, and moved in later that fall. So for almost six years, I’ve been waiting for pavement in those two areas. The farmer kept saying we’d have it someday. And, I kept
being rather patient about the situation.
My wish for concrete by the front door and drive-way was second only to my fondness for door handles on the kitchen cabinets. That problem was partly of my making, because I’m rather finicky about such things. I took awhile to find the handles that I liked, and that were inexpensive, be-fore purchasing them. The door handles were finally purchased last Christmas. But they haven’t found their way to the cabinets yet. I’d do it myself, but the farmer insists upon being a part of the installation.
Back to the birthday, this spring the farmer decided he had to have concrete on an area between two of his sheds. And since the truck was coming out anyway, I might as well (finally) get my concrete in the drive way and by the front door. Halleluiah!
The main event was sup-posed to happen before Mother’s Day in May, but we had some delays. Fi-nally in June, around my 45th birthday, concrete was poured by my front door. A few days later my driveway and parking area was paved as well.
Now I am reminded that society says we should find enjoyment in the little things. Believe me, I was a happy camper, especially on the first day I was able to
drive on it! You can’t imag-ine how much a little bit of pavement can make.
This whole episode got me thinking about other “gifts” farmers can give to their wives through the years. You know the anniversary suggestions, like paper for the first anniversary, wood for the fifth anniversary, tin for the 10th anniversary, gold for the 25th anniversa-ry and so on? Just like that.
Here are some sugges-tions, but feel free to adjust the years as needed.
For your wife’s 25th birth-day, how about getting her a tiller? By this time you’re both settled on the farm and she probably wants to start a garden, or make her gar-dening easier. A tiller would be perfect.
By age 30, she probably has to chase elementary school sons and daughters around the farm. Or she’s running here and there, back and forth, to help out. Might I suggest an ATV? It would come in handy for the entire family, but es-pecially for mom. Come to think of it, I think my farmer purchased a brand new ATV around the time I turned 40, saying it was for me on the farm. After five years, I don’t run it as much as the farmer and his mini-mes do. But, I do appreciate it when I have to get somewhere quickly.
Around age 35, the kids are helping out with chores
more and you all are com-ing in packed with mud and manure from head to toe. Here’s where you might want to consider get-ting that second washer, a cheaper model, for the mud room. The dirty clothes can go right into the laundry to get the first layer of gunk and goo off it before they make their way into the family laundry. In the long run, it will end up saving you money because if you trash that one, you still have the original model.
The kids are starting to head off to their high school activities, or going to college around age 40. Two words: riding lawnmower. While using the old push version might have been good when
your kids were hoofing it through your 5 acre lawn, your wife might not appre-ciate the workout. Plus, they last forever, so this is the gift that will keep on giving for years.
Concrete at 45, we’ve cov-ered this one.
Around age 50, the kids are all out of the house so maybe now is the time to invest in something that will really help out, a dish-washer. This will free her up to help you outside after you’ve lost your dishwash-ing minions, I mean chil-dren, to college and careers. Have lunch, throw the dish-es in the dishwasher, and keep on moving.
From here on out, it gets tricky. Some farmers will work the farm until they can’t walk anymore, and others will want to sell it all and retire. So, you’re on your own purchasing the gifts from your golden years. Good luck with that.
Just remember though, concrete works at any age. Or really, just something that she’s wanted done for years.
Now if I could just get the handles on my cabinets.
Note: In last month’s col-umn, I listed the wrong high school for the FFA Chapter who is making a difference in Haiti with the Safe-T-Homes. The correct school is Sioux Central, Sioux Rap-ids. I’m sorry for the error.
Birthdays and concrete
THE
FARMER’SWIFE
By Christy Welch
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IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014Page 6B
“Sweet Fire” Porterhouse Pork Chops
Ingredients 4 porterhouse (bone-in loin) pork chops, about 3/4-inch thick 2 tablespoons olive oil 1½ teaspoons ground chipotle chile, * 1½ teaspoons coarse salt Grated zest of 1 large orange 2 teaspoons garlic, minced 1/3 cup honey
Instructions1. In a small bowl, stir oil, ground chipotle, salt, orange zest and garlic together
into a paste. Using a rubber spatula, spread chipotle mixture over both sides of pork. Let stand for 15 to 30 minutes.
2. Prepare a medium-hot fire in grill. Place chops on grill and close lid. Grill over direct heat, turning once, about 4-5 minutes per side, until the internal tem-perature of the pork on a meat thermometer measures between 145 degrees F. (medium rare) and 160 degrees F. (medium).
3. During the last 2 minutes, brush chops on both sides with honey. Remove from grill and let rest for 3 minutes.
* You can substitute another smoked chile powder per heat preference.
Bacon and Sweet Potato Biscuits
Ingredients Biscuits 2 slices bacon, cut crosswise into ¼-inch strips 2 small sweet potatoes, peeled 2 cups flour 4 teaspoons baking powder 1 tablespoon sugar 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon salt ¾ teaspoon allspice 8 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into ½-inch cubes and chilled 1 cup buttermilk, (low-fat is okay) Honey Butter 8 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened 2 tablespoons honey Salt
Instructions1. Wrap the sweet potato with a damp paper towel and microwave on high until
very soft, 3 to 4 minutes. Transfer to a bowl, mash with a potato masher, and set aside to cool. Meanwhile, in a medium skillet over medium heat, cook the bacon until golden and crisp, about 8 minutes. Use a slotted spoon to transfer bacon to a paper towel-lined plate, then set aside to cool. Carefully set aside 2 tablespoons of bacon drippings from the skillet.
2. Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Line a large baking sheet with parchment paper.
3. In a food processor, combine the flour, baking powder, sugar, baking soda, salt, and allspice and pulse a few times. Add the cubed butter and pulse to make a coarse meal with a few pea-sized pieces. Transfer mixture to a large bowl and gently mix in the bacon, buttermilk, and 1 cup of the mashed sweet potato (save any remaining potato for another use).
4. Transfer mixture to a floured work surface and knead a few times to form a dough. Pat the dough to about 1-inch thick, then gently fold in half. Gently repeat 4 more times. Roll the dough out to ¾-inch thick, then use a floured 2½-inch biscuit cutter to cut dough into biscuits, arranging them on the pre-pared baking sheet. Gather the scraps and repeat to make a total of 12 biscuits. Bake until the biscuits are browned and a tester comes out clean, 15 to 18 minutes.
5. Meanwhile, combine the softened butter, honey, and reserved bacon drippings, mixing until smooth. Add salt to taste.
6. Serve the biscuits with the honey butter on the side.
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Six farm families to be honored at state fair
Six Iowa farm families will be honored as recipients of The Way We Live Award at the 2014 Iowa State Fair.
Each family will be recognized for their love of the land and the products they produce in award ceremonies during the fair, August 7 through 17.
Each entrant was asked to submit a short essay describ-ing how the occupation of farming and living on a farm has shaped their lives. Six families were chosen out of 38 entries from a variety of commodities and areas in Iowa.
Each family will receive a prize package including $250 cash, fair tickets, free parking and recognition in the Paul R. Knapp Animal Learning Center during the Fair at 10:30 a.m. on various days. The Way We Live Award is spon-sored by WHO NewsRadio 1040 and Tractor Supply Com-pany.
randolph Family, Goose lake Friday, August 8
Seven generations of Kruse family members have lived and worked on the same plot of land, a Heritage Farm, in Goose Lake. Now the Randolph Family Farm, its day-to-day operations were maintained by Leroy and Hannah Kruse until 1955 when they handed the reins to their son, Wally, and his wife, Joan. The two raised four daughters, Barb, Lynn, Kelly and Julie, on the original farm and con-tinued living there until 2000. Today, farm operations are handled by Barb, her husband Todd, their son Daniel, his wife, Laurel, and their four children, Brandon, Sean, Joana and a new baby. Daniel’s sisters, Jessica and Emily, also help out. Todd farms 115 acres of corn, soybeans, hay and oats. Forty-five acres of Todd’s pasture are rented to his son Daniel for his cows. Daniel has 95 head of stock cows and farms more than 330 acres of corn, soybeans and hay.
Feldman Family, Honey CreekSaturday, August 9
Thomas and Janna Feldman, along with children Mat-thew, 22, and Mia, 19, are owners of Doe’s and Diva’s Inc., a goat and sheep dairy. The family purchased a goat to aid in Mia’s health-related digestion issues and, over time, more goats and sheep were added until they had an excess of milk. They found an outlet in cheese making and built their own goat and sheep dairy. The milk from Doe’s and Diva’s does not contain any artificial growth hormones or antibiotics, and their goats and sheep are raised using natural herd management. The Feldmans also create natu-ral goat milk soap products. The family provides tours of the dairy and takes goats and lambs on the road to Omaha and local stores to demonstrate farm life.
Van regenmorter Family, InwoodSunday, August 10
Chad and Jody Van Regenmorter and their two daugh-ters, Rebecca, 16, and Emily, 13, farm approximately 1,800 acres of corn, soybeans and oats and manage a 160-sow farrow operation. The farm has been in their family for three generations beginning in the 1950s. Chad and Jody have been members of Farm Bureau, the Corn Growers
Association and the Pork Producers Association as well as several church groups and local and state boards. Rebecca and Emily both attend West Lyon Community Schools and are active in 4-H and showing hogs Rebecca also serves on the county council and participates in FFA.
Clemsen Family, BraytonTuesday, August 12
Bryan and Shari Clemsen and their five boys, Dillion, 25, Aaron, 23, Emmet, 21, Garnner, 18, and Jarrid, 16, live on a farm that has been in their family for 59 years. They currently own 1,700 acres of land, 1,500 of which are used to grown corn and soybeans, and the rest is for hay and pasture. They also feed out approximately 1,000 head of beef cattle and have a herd of 40 cows. When they are not farming, the Clemsens take time for church, school and family meals. They also like to perform music when they can. Often hosting children without farming backgrounds, the family tries to educate them on the importance of hard work and agriculture.
Grier Family, GuernseySaturday, August 16
Ron and Christine Grier and their son, Ryan, began their farming journey in 2005 when they decided to buy a farm and go back to their roots.
Ryan had goats for a 4-H project and those goats soon developed into a 77 Boer goat operation. The Griers also have three bee colonies and grow corn, soybeans and hay on their 154 acres of land.
In addition to the farm, both Ron and Christine have full-time jobs away from the farm. They keep the opera-tion going with hard work and help from family members. Ryan, a computer science major at Iowa State University, often comes home to help out when needed. Ron is cur-rently the vice president of the Tall Corn Meat Goat Wether Association, and both Ron and Christine are youth leaders and members of the American Boer Goat Association, the Iowa Meat Goat Association, the Iowa Honey Producers Association and the Farm Bureau.
Adams Family, WaucomaSunday, August 17
The Adams Family Farm has been operating in Wauco-ma since the early 1900s. Scott Adams, the current owner, was preceded by his father in the late 1940s after his return from World War II and Scott’s grandfather in the 1900s. In 1981, Scott and his wife Jeanie took over the operation full-time after working alongside Scott’s father for several years.
In 2009, they began Adaway Dairy with their oldest son, Nathan. Nathan currently lives on Adams Century Farms, which was the first dairy to have a DeLaval robotic milking system in the state of Iowa. Nathan handles the dairy man-agement with his wife, Annie, and two children. Scott and Jeanie’s oldest daughters, Nicole and Jackie, often return to the farm to help out, and their younger children, Katie and Joey, plan on running the family farm one day.
“Field of Dreams” sculpture to accompany butter cow at Iowa State Fair
The world-famous Iowa State Fair Butter Cow will be featured alongside a sculpture celebrating the 25th anniversary of the Iowa-based feature film “Field of Dreams” at the 2014 Iowa State Fair.
The sculptures will be on display in the John Deere Agriculture Building’s 40-degree cooler throughout the state fair, which runs from August 7 through 17.
The Academy Award-nominated classic was filmed at the century-old Lansing Family Farm near Dyers-ville.
The movie’s heartwarming celebration of family val-ues and hope in the face of adversity not only jump-started star Kevin Costner’s acting career, but also placed Iowa squarely on the movie-making map.
Based on the novel “Shoeless Joe,” written by W. P. Kinsella, former graduate student at the University of Iowa, the film has served as a point of pride for Iowans and a true collaboration of the very best Iowa has to offer.
In celebration of the family favorite, this year’s sculpture features elements from America’s favorite past-time of baseball and the rural Iowa landscape, all in butter.
In addition to these two sculptures, a new interac-tive exhibit called Farm with Us will also debut in the Agriculture Building. Farm with Us is an interactive experience for all ages that teaches about Iowa’s top commodities of corn and soybeans.
Fairgoers can see and touch bushels of corn and soybeans and even “visit” an Iowa farm through a green screen. Complimentary photos of the experience will be available.
Other great agriculture exhibits and demonstrations include giant pumpkins, jumbo vegetables, the Dis-covery Garden, daily stage presentations and more. All exhibits will be on display in the 110-year old John Deere Agriculture Building 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily dur-ing the fair.
IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014Page 8B
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USDA announces new support for beginning farmers and ranches
U.S. Agriculture Deputy Secretary Krysta Harden an-nounced the implementation of new Farm Bill measures and other policy changes to improve the financial security of new and beginning farmers and ranchers. Harden also unveiled www.USDA.gov/newfarmers, a new website that will provide a centralized, one-stop resource where beginning farmers and ranchers can explore the variety of USDA initiatives designed to help them succeed.
“New and beginning farmers are the future of Ameri-can agriculture,” said Harden. “The average age of an American farmer is 58 and rising, so we must help new farmers get started if America is going to continue feeding the world and maintain a strong agriculture economy. The new policies announced will help give beginning farm-ers the financial security they need to succeed. Our new online tool will provide one-stop shopping for beginning farmers to learn more about accessing USDA services that can help their operations thrive.”
USDA’s www.usda.gov/newfarmers has in depth in-formation for new farmers and ranchers, including how to increase access to land and capital; build new market opportunities; participate in conservation opportunities; select and use the right risk management tools; and ac-cess USDA education, and technical support programs. These issues have been identified as top priorities by new farmers.
The website will also feature instructive case studies about beginning farmers who have successfully utilized USDA resources to start or expand their business opera-tions.
The policy announcements in support of beginning farmers and ranchers include:
Waiving service fees for new and beginning farmers or ranchers to enroll in the Non-Insured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) for the 2014 crop year. NAP provides risk management tools to farmers who grow crops for which there is no crop insurance product. Under this waiver, announced via an official notice to Farm Ser-vice Agency offices, farmers and ranchers whom already enrolled in NAP for the 2014 crop year are eligible for a service fee refund.
Eliminating payment reductions under the Conserva-tion Reserve Program (CRP) for new and beginning farm-ers which will allow routine, prescribed, and emergency grazing outside the primary nesting season on enrolled land consistent with approved conservation plans. Previ-ously, farmers and ranchers grazing on CRP land were subject to a reduction in CRP payments of up to 25 per-cent. Waiving these reductions for new and beginning farmers will provide extra financial support during times of emergency like drought and other natural disasters.
Increasing payment rates to beginning farmers and ranchers under Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Hon-eybees and Farm-Raised Fish Program (ELAP). Under this provision, beginning and farmers can claim up 90 percent of losses for lost livestock, such as bees, under ELAP. This is a 50 percent increase over previously available payment amounts to new and beginning farm-ers.
In the near future, USDA will also announce additional crop insurance program changes for beginning farmers and ranchers – including discounted premiums, waiver of administrative fees, and other benefits.
Harden made the announcement at the inaugural meet-ing of the reconvened Beginning Farmer and Rancher Ad-visory Committee at the University of California Davis, California.
The advisory committee, composed of 20 members, in-cluding Extension agents, lenders, farmers, ranchers and academics, will meet through 2015 to learn, discuss and formulate recommendations to USDA on how to support new and beginning farmers.
IOWA FARM & RANCH Page 9BJULY 2014
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IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014Page 10B
Quilt Block of the MonthQuilters can make a mystery quilt this year. Each month, readers will find directions
to make the block of the month. Each unfinished block will measure 12½” (or 12” when finished). Please refer to the January, 2014 and May, 2014 issues for equipment, fabric, and thread suggestions to finish this quilt.
For this month’s block you will need three contrasting colors (unless you are using scraps). A is a light fabric, B is a medium, and C is a dark.
Cutting instructionsFabric B: Cut twelve (12) 2½” squares.Fabric A: Cut three 6” squares.Fabric C: Cut three 6” squares.
Piecing Instructions1. Make 24 half square triangles from the A (light) and C (dark)
fabrics. Trim to 2½” square. 2. Layout the finished blocks as pictured below. They are pictured
separated so quilters can better see how to lay it out. Sew the square into rows and the rows into the final block, which should measure 12½” unfinished.
3. Now, store this block (and fabric) until the August Iowa Farm and Ranch arrives with the next one!
This series is being submitted by Cindy Kaufman of The Family Quilt Shop in Fort Dodge, Iowa. If you need assistance, please call her at 515-576-0295.
B B
B
B
B
B
B
B
B
B
B
B
AC
AC
AC
CA
CA
CA
AC
AC
AC
AC
AC
AC
AC
AC
AC
CA
CA
CA
CA
CA
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CA
Row 1 Row 3 Row 5Row 2 Row 4 Row 6
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Speed Tills. The Joker RT Series from Horsch
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Unlike vertical tillage, the Joker is a true residue management system. That means it perfectly sizes residue and incorporates it into the soil for fast decomposition. The Joker also consolidates the soil and promotes faster warming. This helps manage moisture better and gets you planting faster.
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For cover crops, no-till/strip-till or nitrification inhibitor
Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Bill Northey announced that $1.4 million in cost share funds are available to help farmers install new nutrient reduction practices. The practices eligible for this funding are cover crops, no-till or strip till, or using a nitrification inhibitor when applying fertilizer.
“We continue to hear from farmers in-terested in doing even more to limit nutri-ent loss and better protect water quality and these funds will help them try new voluntary science-based conservation practices on their farm,” Northey said. “We were extremely pleased by the re-sponse last year from farmers and we are excited to have funds available again this year.”
The cost share rate for farmers plant-ing cover crops is $25 per acre and for farmers trying no-till or strip till is $10 per acre.
Farmers using a nitrapyrin nitrification inhibitor when applying fall fertilizer can receive $3 per acre.
Any farmer not already utilizing these practices can apply for this assistance. Farmers are only eligible for cost share
on up to 160 acres. The funds will be made available on Thursday, July 17, but farmers can immediately start submitting applications through their local Soil and Water Conservation District office.
Farmers that have already used these practices on their farm and are ineligible for this funding are still encouraged to visit their local Soil and Water Conserva-tion District office to discuss other cost share funding that may be available.
“By allowing farmers to try new prac-tices on a limited number of acres at a reduced cost we want to showcase the benefits of these practices and encourage farmers to incorporate them into their op-eration,” Northey said.
The Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship received $4.4 mil-lion for the Iowa Water Quality Initiative in fiscal 2015. These funds will allow the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship to continue to encourage the broad adoption of water quality practices through statewide cost share assistance as well as more intensive work in targeted watersheds.
Last year in just two weeks over 1,000 farmers signed up for cost share funding to help implement new nutrient reduction practices on 100,000 acres.
The state provided $2.8 million in cost share funding to help farmers try a water quality practice for the first time and Iowa farmers provided at least another $2.8 million to support these water quality practices.
$1.4 million available for water quality practices
IOWA FARM & RANCH Page 11BJULY 2014
Welcome to area fairs!
207 Altona St., Holstein, Iowa 712-368-4332
Buyer of All Metals
24 Hr. Heavy Duty Towing5936 - 260thIda Grove, Iowa 712-364-3550
First State Bank continues to serve the financial
needs of the business, agricultural, professional
and consumer populations of our trade area. FSB is dedicated to helping our customers and in
making a difference in the communities we serve.
First state bankBig Enough To SErvE - Small Enough To CarE
Visit us on the web: www.firststbk.com
P.O. Box 276 • Ida Grove, IA 51445712-364-3181
P.O. Box 467 • Odebolt, IA 51458712-668-2218
P.O. Box 98 • Battle Creek, IA 51006712-365-4341
P.O. Box 109 • Danbury, IA 51019712-883-2161
P.O. Box 467 • Odebolt, IA51458712-668-2218
FSB Bank PLUS+P.O. Box 195 • Mapleton, IA 51034
712-881-2161
www.unitedbk.com
501 2nd St. Ida Grove, Iowa 51445
712-364-3393
Proud Supporter of our 4-H
Alta | Anthon | Aurelia | Cushing | Holstein Lytton | Sioux City | Storm Lake
Member FDIC
Agnew-SosemanInsurance Agency
• Farm • Home • auto • CommerCial • Crop insuranCe
712-368-4341Dave Kistenmacher
Doug Soellner • Ardell Downs
LUNDELL CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.“We’re So Happy When We’re Digging”
Cherokee712-225-5763Ida Grove
712-364-242388-IFR7(fairinsertLundellCon)LS
Wednesday, July 166:00 a.m. - 12 Noon Livestock Weigh/Check in 5:00-7:00 p.m. - Farm Bureau Appreciation Free Supper
(Comm’l Bldg)7:30 p.m. - Little Miss Ida County Contest 8:00 p.m. - IDA COUNTY KING & QUEEN CONTESTThursday, July 178:00 a.m. - Sheep Show2:00 p.m. - Dairy & Goat Show2 to 7 p.m. - Little Ida Farm Hands6:00 p.m. - HOG MUD WRESTLING 8:00 p.m. - IDA COUNTY BILL RILEY
TALENT SHOW (Grandstand)
Friday, July 188:00 a.m. - Beef Show6:00 p.m. - OUT Of THE fIELD TRACTOR pULL6:30 p.m. - 4-H Night, Style Show, Share the Fun,
4-H Awards (Grandstand)
Saturday, July 197:30 a.m. - Swine Show8:30 a.m. - Tractor Ride Begins10:00 a.m. - Art Attack11:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. - Buffalo Ridge Music Festival1:00 p.m. - Food Cooking Contest (Comm’l Bldg)2:00-3:00 p.m. - Magican Show (Comm’l Bldg)7:00-8:00 p.m. - Magician Show (Grandstand)8:00 p.m. BARNES RODEO BULLS & BARRELS,
MUTTON BUSTING (Grandstand)
Sunday, July 2010:00 a.m. - Worship Service11:00 a.m. - Invitational Team Roping
followed by 4-Wheeler Olympics 2:00 p.m. - Ag Olympics2:30 p.m. - Pedal Tractor Pull5:00 p.m. - MUD DRAGS &
4-WHEELER RACES (Grandstand)
IDA COUNTY FAIRJuly 15 - 20, 2014 Ida Grove, IA
ADMISSION: $10 per person (ages 7 and older)SEASON TICKETS: $20 Adults • $15 StudentsAvailable at the Gate, ISU Ext Office or an 4-H Member
www.unitedbk.com
120 S. 1st St. Moville, IA
712-873-3666
Valley Lodge
1118 E. Hwy. 20Correctionville, IA 51016
Ph: 712-372-4466
Assisted LivingProud Supporter of our 4-H
Alta | Anthon | Aurelia | Cushing | Holstein Lytton | Sioux City | Storm Lake
Member FDIC
SIOUX CITY TARP, Inc.
712-577-3237 www.siouxcitytarp.com
504 Driftwood, PO Box 65Correctionville, IA 51016
(712) 372-4421(888) 372-4421
fax (712) 372-4424
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• 24-hr. Towing •307 Sioux Ave. • Correctionville, IA 51016
712-372-4786 Fax 712-372-4752
- Robert Beasley & Mary Todd, Owners -
Woodbury County FairMoville, Iowa • July 30 thru Aug. 3
Go to website for details: www.woodburycountyfair.com
WEDNESDAY, JULY 307:30 a.m. - 4-H FFA Dairy Cattle Show7:00 p.m. - Woodbury County Royalty Contest - Flathers Hall
THURSDAY, JULY 31KID’S DAY- Children 11 & Under Admitted Free All Day
7:30 a.m. - 4-H FFA Swine Show7:00 p.m. - Bill Riley Talent Show
FRIDAY, AUGUST 1SENIOR CITIZENS’ DAY- Sponsored by United Bank of Iowa,
Moville, & Char-Mac Assisted Living, Lawton • 65 years & Older admitted Free •
MILITARY APPRECIATION DAY - All Veterans of Armed Forces and Active Duty Personnel Admitted Free
7:30 a.m. - Judge 4-H/FFA Market & Breeding Beef - Show Ring3:00 p.m. - Pedal Power Pull, - Flathers Hall Sponsored by
Woodbury County Farm Bureau
SATURDAY, AUGUST 2Sloan State Bank, sponsor of the day
10:00 a.m. - 8 Second Productions Bull Riding Opens1:00 p.m. - Celebrity Beef Show - Show Ring2:00 - 5:00 p.m. - Car Show Sponsored by C&B Holst Agrigold Seed 6:30 p.m. - Parade of Antique Tractors & Machines - Grandstand
7:00 P.M. Grandstand Entertainment: Joe Dirt Motocross Races
adults $7 - youth 5 to 11 $5
7:30 P.M. Grandstand Entertainment:Grand River Rodeo & Mini Wild Horse Race
adults $7 - youth 5 to 11 $5
7:30 P.M. Grandstand Entertainment: Tuff Truck
adults $7 - youth 5 to 11 $5
7:30 P.M. Grandstand Entertainment:Outlaw Tractor Pull featuring the
High Plaines Sweepadults $8 - youth 5 to 11 $5
McDermott Family Shows on the Midway
SUNDAY, AUGUST 312:00 p.m. - Cookout Contest
6:00 P.m. Grandstand entertainment:Ultimate Derby - Demo Derby
adults $10 - youth 5 to 11 $5 ($2 off with season Pass)88-IFR7 (WOODBURY CO FAIR 2014-WOODBURY) W
IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014Page 12B
Welcome to area fairs!
168 Public SquareP.O. Box 210Greenfield, Iowa 50849
Since 1888641-743-2632
insurance
U BS Union State BankA proud sponsor of the Adair County Fair and
supporter of the youth in our community since 1890.Greenfield
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641-369-2741www.usbgfd.com
88-IFR7(ClayCoPromo/AdairFair/Archives)AS
Sat., Sept. 6 Cheap Trick with special
guest Here Come the Mummies (7:30 p.m.)Sun., Sept. 7
Hunter Hays with special guest Kelsey K (7:30 p.m.)
Mon., Sept. 8 Sawyer Brown with special guest Arron Tippin (7:30 p.m.)
Tues., Sept. 9 Newsboys with special guest Matthew West (7:30 p.m.)
Wed., Sept. 10 IMCA Auto Race (6:30 p.m.)
Thurs, Sept. 11 NTPA Truck & Tractor Pull (1:00 & 6:30 pm)
Fri., Sept. 12 8th Annual Arnold Motor Supply Shootout (6:30 p.m.)
Sat., Sept. 13 Arnold Motor Supply MPA Truck Pull Nationals (11:00 am)
Emblem3 with special guest MKTO (7:30 p.m.)
Sun., Sept. 14 Gary Allan with special guest Jerrod Niemann (6:30 p.m.)
DAILY GRANDSTAND EVENTS
Go to claycountyfair.com for ticket information
county fairaDair July 16-20,
2014
Grandstand Events are included in Admission Price.Adults $6, Kids (5-10) $3, Preschool Free.
Wristbands (5 day pass) $25For a complete schedule & info go to
www.adaircountyfair.org
Wednesday, July 16 6:00 p.m. - Free BBQ Hamburger/Pork Burger Supper 8:00 p.m. - Little Miss, Mister & Fair Queen Crowning
Thursday, July 17 8:00 a.m. - Swine Show
3:00 p.m. - Poultry Show7:00 p.m. OUTLAW TRUCK & TRACTOR PULL - Four Big
ClassesFriday, July 18 - SeniOR DAy Half price admission
for those 60+ (8–11 a.m. only) 8:00 a.m. - 4-H/FFA Horse Show 8:30 - 11:30 a.m. Senior Citizen Event 8:30 a.m. - Sheep Show
10:00 am - 5:00 p.m. - Quilt Show6:30 p.m. - iOWA SHORT COURSe SeRieS SiDe-By-SiDe/
ATV RACeSSaturday, July 19 - KiD’S DAy Half price admission
8:30 a.m. - Jr Feeder Calf Pen, Cow/Calf Pen and Breeding Heifer Show
8:30 a.m. - Greenfield Tractor Ride 10:00 a.m. - Baby Show7:30 p.m. DeMOLiTOn DeRBySunday, July 20 10:00 a.m. - Ranch Horse Rodeo
10:30 a.m. - Bucket/Bottle Calf Show 12:00 - 3:00 p.m - Antique Tractor & Lawn Tractor Show 3:00 p.m. - Auction 2104 Fair Quilt, Livestock Sale6:00 p.m. - BiLL RiLey TALenT SHOW6:30 p.m. - WRiGHT RODeO COMPAny
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SIOUX CITY TARP, Inc.
712-577-3237 www.siouxcitytarp.com
LUNDELL CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.“We’re So Happy When We’re Digging”
Cherokee712-225-5763
Ida Grove712-364-2423
Dr. David Wurth
P.O. Box 526416 N. Main
Manilla, Iowa 51035
712-376-2572• Emphasis on low back and leg pain• Carpet tunnel syndrome
91st AnnualCherokee County Fair
July 17, 18, 19, 20, 2014Cherokee County Fairgrounds
Cherokee, IowaDAIly:Wild World of AnimalsKent Family Magic CircusTHURSDAy, JUly 17TH8:00 a.m. 4-H Swine Show-Showmanship, Sr. & Jr.2:00 p.m. 4-H Poultry Show- Showmanship, Sr. & Jr.4:00 p.m. Introduction of Little Miss Cherokee County Fair
Candidates - activity building5:00 p.m. Crowning of Little Miss Cherokee County by Lauren
Schubert, 2013 Little Cherokee Co. Fair6:45 p.m. Presentation of Flags by Vietnam Veterans of America
Chapter 888. American Legion Post 230 & VFW Post 22537:00 p.m. Casey Muessigmann, Nashville Recording Country
Artist, “Team Blake” on “The Voice” – main arenaFRIDAy, JUly 18TH7:45 a.m. 4-H Sheep Show/Advanced Sheep Feeding &
Meat Goat Show9:30 a.m. 4-H Horse Show10:30 a.m. 4-H Dairy Show6:00 p.m. Cherokee Co. Cattleman’s Assn. grilling burgers 7:00 p.m. Nebraska Power Pullers Pickup Pull9:00 p.m. Teen Dance - Activity Building, HP DJ Kevin BorkowskiSATURDAy, JUly 19TH - Kid’s Day from 1 to 5 pm Midway by
Gee Willie8:15 a.m. Advanced Cattle Feeding/4-H Beef Show-Showmanship,
Sr. & Jr.12:30 p.m. Sanctioned Pedal Tractor Pull, Main Stage, sponsored by
Cherokee Co. Farm Bureau Financial Services4:00 p.m. Pork Producers grilling pork burgers7:00 p.m. Demo Derby - main arenaBetween Consolation & Feature Demo Chain Saw
carving by Runaway Saws, Jeff Klatt will auction SUNDAy, JUly 20TH 1:00 p.m. Bill Riley Talent Show - activity building3:00 p.m. Senior 4-H Awards & Hall of Fame reception for 2014
inductees5:00 p.m. Queen crowning - Activity Building. Crowned by 2013
Cherokee County Fair Queen, McKenna MummertVisit our web-site @ www.cherokeecountyfair.org
IOWA FARM & RANCH Page 13BJULY 2014
Welcome to area fairs!
712-644-2310www.loganstatebank.com
serving the community since 188824-hour ATM at Drive-through
310 E. HuronMissouri Valley, IA 51555
712-642-2745800-642-2745
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H
united western coop
“look to us”Dunlap ............712-643-5442logan ..............712-644-3256Persia ..............712-488-2425Pisgah .............712-456-2291soldier ............712-884-2255ute ...................712-885-2275Modale ............712-645-2255
Member FDIC www.communitybankiowa.com
AgReCom, Inc.vCertified Appraisers - Ag, Residential & CommercialCertified in IA and NE - FIHA Approved Notary Public
Office: 712-643-1400 •Fax: 712-643-1600
701 Hwy. 30 W., P.O. Box 63 • Dunlap, IA 51529
Alan FaraCell: 712-263-7535
Home: 712-653-3712
Susan SohmCell: 712-880-0134
Home: 712-882-2727
Logan Memorial Chapel
Randall D. Scott, Funeral Director
215 North Fourth AvenueLogan, IA 51546
712-644-2929 or 877-269-8981
FARMERSbankAND SAVINGS
trust
Earling • 747-2000Woodbine • 647-3375 Harlan • 235-2000
www.ftnsbank.net
Your Bank for Today and Tomorrow
88-IFR7(Fair 2012-HC FAIR) H2
Tuesday, July 22 thru Sunday, July 27
“ticket to success”
Visit Our Website: www.harrisoncofair.com
Tuesday, July 22 9:00 A.M. 4-H Horse Show 7:30 P.M. Talent Show at the Logan-Magnolia High School
Auditorium and Crowning of Fair King & Queen immediately following
Wednesday, July 23 8 A.M. TO 7 P.M. Open Class Entry Day 7:00 P.M. RODEO at Grandstand
Thursday, July 24 8:00 A.M. Open Class Judging, Garden, Art, Hobbies, Textiles 9:30 A.M. 4-H Sheep Show followed by 4-H Goat Show 6:30 P.M. NEBRASKA POWER PULLERS TRACTOR &
PICKUP PULL at Grandstand
Friday, July 25 TBA. Codgill Farm Supply will serve breakfast for 4-Hers and
their families. 9:00 A.M. 4-H Beef Breeding Heifers followed by Cow/
Calf Units, Produce Classes, Market Heifers, Beef Showmanship, Maker Steers, Packer’s Choice. 4-H Feeder Calves & Bucket/Bottle Calves
NOON United Western Coop Grill for 4-H’ers 1:00-5:00 P.M. 4-H Apple Pie & Muffing Baking Contest 7:30 P.M. ATV & MOTORCYCLE RACES at Grandstand
Saturday, July 26 TBA. Codgill Farm Supply will serve breakfast for 4-Hers and
their families. 8:30 A.M. 4-H Swine Showmanship, followed by 4-H Swine
Classes, followed by Open Class Swine Show 10:30 A.M. Harrison County Fair Parade - “Ticket to Success” 5:30 P.M. DEMOLITION DERBY at Grandstand
Sunday, July 27 8:00 A.M. Continental Breakfast 1:00 P.M. Pedal Tractor Pull sponsored by Harrison County
Farm Bureau 4:00 P.M. 4-H Style Show
FAIR2014Harrison County
Walter A. Huebner & Sons’ Funeral Homes• Denison
• Charter Oak • Schleswig• Westside
1437 Broadway • Denison • 712-263-4158 •
Design/Build of Garages, Shops, Machinery Storage,
Residential or Commercial BuildingsMark A. Garrett, P.E.Sundquist Engineering, P.C.120 South Main, P.O. Box 220, Denison, IA 51442
Phone 712-263-8118 ~ Cell [email protected]
mummautomotive Inc.
Automotive Parts & Service721 3rd Street • Box 99Westside, Iowa 51467
Phone: 712-663-4517Fax: 712-663-4519
LINDSTROMLINDSTROMFarm Supply
118 Main St. • KironCurt Pietig/Darren GoshornAgronomy Sales & Service
(712) 675-4712 Office Cellular Phone(712) 369-0187 or 269-0123
Wall Lake Used Parts and Equipment
210 South Center Street • P.O. Box 427Wall Lake, Iowa 51466
712-664-2837Iowa: 1-800-522-1909 • Out of State: 1-800-233-7107
“We Buy & Sell Used Equipment & Sell New After Market Parts.”
Where Innovation Takes ShapeFor over 25 years we have been discovering ways to
improve your equipment with our products.
Visit www.lundellplastics.com or Call 877.367.7659 to learn more.
Ask for Genuity® Traits in your Channel® Seed.
ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW PESTICIDE LABEL DIRECTIONS. Genuity and Design® is a registered trademark of Monsanto Technology LLC. Channel® and the Arrow Design® and Seedsmanship at Work™ are trademarks of Channel Bio, LLC. ©2013 Monsanto Company.
Brian BrodersenCertified Seed Technology Advisor712-269-0278
Welch Agri ServiceSyngenta Seed Advisor
Mike Welch: 712-263-8352 or 712-269-1150
CrawfordCounty Fair
Tuesday, July 22 6:00 pm MAIN EVENT: TRACTOR PULLWednesday, July 23 9:00 am Poultry Shows 11:00 am 4-H/FFA Horse Show 4:00 pm 4-H Communications 6:00 pm MAIN EVENT: Bill Riley Talent ShowThursday, July 24 9:00 am Goat Show followed by Sheep Show 10:00 am Senior Citizen Day program, Morton Bldg 4:00 pm 4-H Style Show 7:30 pm MAIN EVENT: SLMR & 360 SPRINTSFriday, July 25 8:00 am Swine Shows 4:00 pm Rabbit Shows 6:00 pm 4-H Communications 7:00 pm MAIN EVENT: FRIDAY NIGHT RACES Saturday, July 26 8:00 am 4-H/FFA Beef Show 10:00 am Rubber Duck Races 10:00 am Antique tractor display, Expo building 11:00 am Farm Olympics for kids age 13 to 18 12:00 pm Little Cuties contest 1:00 pm 4-H Pet Show, 4-H Building 2:00 pm Joe Cole Magic Shows 4:00 pm Kids Pedal Pull 5:00 pm “Minute To Win It” games, kids age 5-12 7:00 pm MAIN EVENT: AMAZING MONSTER TRUCK SHOW WITH DIRT BIKESSunday, July 27 10:00 am Henninsen Memorial Jackpot Swine Show 10:00 am Antique tractors display 11:00 am Go Cart Racing noon Car Show by Fair office noon Open Class Bucket Bottle 1:00 pm Mud Volleyball 1:00 pm Mutton Busting 2:00 pm Youth U-FIT-IT Contest 3:00 pm All around Showmanship competition 6:00 pm MAIN EVENT: FIGURE 8 RACING, RV DEMO, AND FIREWORKSMonday, July 28 9:00 am Livestock sale
Wednesday, July 23 - Sunday, July 27Buildings open from 10 am to 9 am
Grandstand Entertainment Each Night!See crawfordcountyiafair.com for updates!
IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014Page 14B
Welcome to area fairs!
Rush Family Care Service
Family owned funeral care1629 Tenth St.
Onawa, IA 51040Ph: 423-3293
“look to us”Dunlap ............712-643-5442logan ..............712-644-3256Persia ..............712-488-2425Pisgah .............712-456-2291soldier ............712-884-2255ute ...................712-885-2275Modale ............712-645-2255
Member FDIC www.communitybankiowa.com
Kevin Brandt, AgentProviding Insurance
and Financial Services915 Iowa Ave. • Onawa, IA
712-423-12341-888-423-1233
www.kevinbrandt.org
VALLEY AG SERVICE620 Monona Ave.
Ute, IA
712-885-2400
We hope you enjoy the 2014 fair! Be sure to visit us at our booth! John Deere toysand apparel for sale!
411 Main St. • Mapleton, IA 51034712-881-1033 • 1-800-383-4743
Hours: Mon.-Thur. 8am-5:30pm;Fri. 8am-8pm; Sat. 8am-2pm; Closed Sun.
THE
HOFFMAN AGENCYSee us for all
your insurance.1016 10thOnawa, IA Ph 712-433-2481
Design/Build of Garages, Shops, Machinery Storage,
Residential or Commercial BuildingsMark A. Garrett, P.E.Sundquist Engineering, P.C.120 South Main, P.O. Box 220, Denison, IA 51442
Phone 712-263-8118 ~ Cell [email protected]
Check out the...
Onawa, Iowa2014 Monona County FairOnawa, IowaOnawa, Iowa2014 Monona County Fair2014 Monona County Fair2014 Monona County Fair2014 Monona County FairOnawa, Iowa2014 Monona County FairOnawa, Iowa2014 Monona County FairWednesday, July 168:30-10:00 AM - Free Rolls, Juice & Coffee Sponsored by
Farm Bureau Financial Services7:00 PM - Monona County Fair Opening Ceremonies -
Grandstand; Bill Riley Talent Show Winners Presentation; Little Miss Princess and Queen Crowning; 4-H Pie Auction; Monona County Fair Quilt Auction
Thursday, July 175:00 - 6:00 PM - Pet Show & Open Class Pet Show6:00-6:30 PM Doc Anderson’s Traveling Medicine Wagon Show7:00 PM - Outlaw Tractor Pull ~ $10 adult, $5 children,
Pre-K and under free
Friday, July 188:00 AM - 4-H & FFA Sheep & Goat Show followed
by 4-H & FFA Swine Show9:30-10:30 AM - Onawa Chamber Coffee5:00 - 4-H Educational Presentations5:00-6-:00 PM - Mapleton Fire Department Mini Train
Rides1:30 PM - 4-H, FFA & Adult Livestock Judging Contest7:30 PM - Enduro Cross Competition, ATVs, & Dirt Bikes -
$10 adult, $5 children, Pre-K and under free
Saturday, July 198:00 AM - Open Class, 4-H, FFA Bucket Calf & Diary Show; FFA & 4-H Beef Show1:00 PM - Pedal Pull Competition - Free1:00 - 2:30 PM - Ag Olympics6:00-7:30 PM - 4-H County Council Pie Throwing Fundraiser7:30 PM – Demolition Derby - Ultimate Derby $10 adult,
$5 children, Pre-K and under free
Sunday, July 20 - FAMILY DAY1:00 PM - Monona County Fair Parade2:30 - 4:30 PM - Bingo presented by 4-H County Council2:30 PM - Horseshoe Pitching Contest - Free3:00 PM - Radio Control Races - Free to watch3:00 P.M. - Country Western Show - Free
Doc Anderson’s Traveling Medicine Wagon Show - Free Fun daily at various times
www.unitedbk.com
400 Morningside Dr. Sac City, Iowa712-662-4114
HEALY EXCAVATINGSand & Gravel
Denison Division811 North 10th St.
712-263-3582
3483 Perkins Ave.Lake View
712-665-4500201 W. 1st St. • Wall Lake, IA 51466
712-664-2357
Locations at • Wall Lake • Lake View • Odebolt• Carroll
Barbara Powell, Agent
State Farm®
Providing Insurance and Financial ServicesHome Office, Bloomington, Illinois 61710
1420 W. MainSac City, IA 50583Bus: &12-662-7817www.barbpowell.usPO45151 4/04
CONSTRUCTIONDavid King, President
104 Main St. • P.O. Box 369 • Wall Lake, IA 51466Bus Office 712-664-2918 Shop 712-675-4365Bus. Fax 712-664-2920 [email protected]
Grading, excavating and underground utilities including sanitary sewer,
storm sewer and water main.
3137 255th St.Sac City, Iowa 712-612-7125
Proud Supporter of our 4-H
Alta | Anthon | Aurelia | Cushing | Holstein Lytton | Sioux City | Storm Lake
Member FDIC
We hope you enjoy the 2014 fair! Be sure to visit us at our booth! John Deere toysand apparel for sale!
weDnesDAY, JULY 236:30 P.M. - OFFICIAL OPENING of THE FAIR - Grandstand
Crowning of Sac County Fair Little MissCrowing of 2014 Sac County Fair Queen
THURsDAY, JULY 248:00 A.M. - Sheep Show & Poultry Show
9:30 A.M. 4-H Horse Show10:00 A.M. 4-H Goat Show
6:30 P.M. - Chuck Wagon Races9:00 P.M. - Duane Murley DJ - Beer Garden
FRIDAY, JULY 258:00 A.M. - 4-H & FFA Market Swine Show
1:30 P.M. - Dairy Show7:00 P.M. - Tractor Pull
9:00 P.M. - Duane Murley DJ - Beer GardensATURDAY, JULY 26KID’s DAY & PARADe
8:00 A.M. - 4-H & FFA Beef Show9:30 A.M. - Kid’s Day Parade & Games
9:30 A.M. - Antiques & Antique Classic Tractor Pull10:00 A.M. - Iowa Draft Pony Assoc Show
11:00 A.M. - Bike Rodeo sponsored by Sac City Police11:00 A.M. - Baby Contest
1:30 P.M. - Sanctioned Pedal Power Pull6:00 P.M. - All American Lumberjack Show
8:30 P.M. - Impact Pro Wrestling9:00 P.M. - Reckless Abandon Band - Beer Garden
**FIREWORKS**
4-H/FFA Schedule2014 Sac County
oTHeR FAIR HIgHLIgHTsSpecial K’s Clown - Walk Around Friday & Saturday
Face Painter - SaturdayPetting Zoo & Pony Rides
Hypnotist - Friday & SaturdayInflatables and Free Lazer Tag
DAILY GATE FEE: $10 - 14 and older$3.00 - 9 to 13 yrs • Free to 8 yrs and under
IOWA FARM & RANCH Page 15BJULY 2014
ClassifiedsEQUIPMENT
Tractors For Sale
Ia:www.agstuff.com The newest farm machinery locator website featuring equipment dealers. Farmer to farmer ads across the Midwest! Check us out today! www.agstuff.com Ia:Field Ready. MF 850 late new parts. 712-387-5361
Ia: I586 Model 4CH-7 duals. good condition. 712-2515493
Ia:900 Ford tractor with 3pt. grooming mower, or can sell separate. 712-748-4466.
Ia: Wanted International 340 UT tractor 712-722-0486
Ia:Want to buy: Farmall “B” tractor w/or w/out belly mower. 507-224-2243 ask for Dick.
Ia:JD MI (tractor) wide front starts and runs good. 300 IH (tractor) nice tractor good starter and run-ner 641-425-6139
Tilliage Equipment for Sale
a: C-IH 12R36”Vertical Fold 3 pt, always shedded 308-995-5515
IIa: JD 960 Field Cultivator, 27ft, 3 Bar Harrow, walking Beam axles, $4200. 515-402-1219.
Ia: Massey Ferguson 820, 21 foot disk 2,950. 641-345-2885
Grain Harvest & Handling Equipment For Sale
Ia:I1997 Case-IH 2188 with 30 ft JD bean head specialty rotor machine in great shape 712-880-0484 for details.
Ia:Demco 550 or 650 gravity wagons. Call 712-210-6587
Ia: Combine head movers from 25’ to 40’ wide please call 712-210-6587
Ia: 2188 Vominr 3300 hours 30’ 1020 head 1083 corn head 672 Brent grain cart 674 grain cart unverferth mover 712-621-05112
Ia: IH no. 45 feild cultivator 10 pt with mulcher $450. give away 16.9 x 38 band type duals. 712-728-3239
Do you like auctions? are you looking for a special item? Do you collect anything? The Mid-landauction.com site will email you only auction Sale bills that match what you’re looking for. ITS eaSY ITS FRee go to www.midlandsauctions.com
Ia: new idea 2 row mounted corn picker. good shape, $500. 712-246-1847
Irrigation Equipment For Sale
Ia: WINCO geNeRaTORS, NeW & USeD, 1PH 50KW $4,170. KaTO LIgHT NeW 1PH aND 3PH WINPOWeR USeD 1PH $1,000. CaLL WeS SeBeTKa aT, (641) 990-1094
Livestock Equipment For Sale
Ia: Livestock equipment for sale. 26 4’ x 12’ precast concrete hog slats. 515-230-4733 or 515-230-1485
Ia: 24’ Hay feeders meals on wheels, Saves hay , saves time and saves money. Call 712-210-6587
Livestock Equip, cont.
Ia: 2 Smidley feeders, 10 hole with lids, new, $900 each. 641-590-2815.
Ia: IH 560 gas Fendens fast hitch. NF good rubber Westendorf W130 losfr t zz45,000 515-368-1358
Other Equip. for Sale
Ia: auctions auctions more auc-tions. Let us search for the items you need. We notify you when what your looking for comes up for sale at auction. Its FRee. www.midlandsauctions.com
Ia: For Sale: 55 gallon drums. Only $5 each! Smitty Bee Honey, Defiance, Ia 712-748-4292
Ia: 8’ Bush hog 3 point.stored, auger C Peck 71’ 8” like new. 712-251-5493
Ia: Kuhn Bale accumutator with two grapples 319-640-5215 after five. Ia: Westendorf loader mounts for Ta series loader on 1655 Oliver or similar tractors $450. 712-375-5077
Ia: M.M rope tie small square baler bought new 1955. always inside $700. 712-722-0655
Ia: 1995 international, 4000 series, 6 cyl. ,13 ton., 7x12 flatbed. ,13,000 miles. ,duals wheels., mallard 712-857-3432
Ia: Hog oiler round $350, JD 2-row cultivate fits only 50 520 $350 conectible, 14-14-21/4” solid JD tool bar 3 point 712-420--3030
Ia:Used Ringsted welding stalk smasher, large unit covers 800-38 duals, 1 1/2 years old, like new 641-590-1820
Ia:Orthman MP3 Tracker guid-ance system, 2 blades, always shedded, $4,700. 641-590-2815
Ia: Hawkins Fertilizer Units, 16 units and parts, $125 per unit. 641-590-2815
Ia: JD Fert. Openers, single disk, frame mounted, 16 units, excellent $570 each unite. 641-590-2815
Ia: Watermelon style hog oiler $350, six section John Deere har-row wooden eveners $700 Parker 200 bushel wagon Westendorf gear $2,400. 712-420-3030
L I V E S T O C K & ANIMALS
Livestock For Sale
Ia: Dorset Rams fall and Jan born Dorset ewes and Few southdown ewe lambs 641-449-3226
Ia: Minature donkeys any sex any age [email protected] or call 712-353-6730
Ia: Leonard Limousin & angus Bulls for Sale Private Treaty. 70 red, black, polled Limousin and angus bulls, Holstein, Iowa. 712-368-2611. [email protected]
Ia: Registered gelbvieh Bulls, quality black gentle polled yearn-ing bulls. Hobbs gelbvieh 641-766-6779 or 641-203-0863
Ia: aKa australian cattle dog pupplies (aKa Blue Heelers) Farm family raised. Had shots and de-wormed 712-883-2249
Ia: Steer and heifer show pros-pects. For more information and photos, visit our website at www.mikemillerclubcalves.com or call 515-370-0695. Dana
Livestock Wanted
Ia: Farrowing unit 1,500 to 2,000 sows, can switch to nursery or finishing. In compliance, Ia NC Iowa. Call 641-590-2815
Hay, Grain & Forage For Sale
Ia: Sioux Big Round Bull hay feeder 712-210-2611
Ia: Custom hay hauling; big rounds, big square etx can haul troughout midwest. For Sale Round Big Squares of alfalfa/grass & straight alfalfa 641-640-0492
Hay, Grain & Forage Wanted
Ia: “Wanted: alfalfa, round and square bales, picked up or deliver, call Roy at Pleasant acres. 620-804-1506
Ia: Quality small or lg sq alfalfa or misxed in semi loads 641-658-2738
VEHICLES
Cars/SUV’s For Sale
Ia: 1986 Iroc Camero. Chrome wheels, new tires, black leather interior, bucket seats, 305 with racing cam. Candy apple Red. 712-792-5326
Ia: 1986 Monte Carlo LS fixed up $6,000. 1961 Chevy pickup original 3/4 ton $6,000. 712-253-1261
Cars/SUV’s Wanted
Ia:1950 Ford Crestliner & 1951 Victoria Call 308-876-2515
Ia: 1928 Dodge Bros 4 dr sedan good solid stored in barn, very little rust, tacky org int. $4,000 712-229-1735
For sale by owner. 2001 Chev-rolet 2500 HD 3/4 ton extended cab 4 door, 4 x 2 6.0 liter V-8, ali-son trans, 106,000 miles. $6,750 firm. Call 712-269-2190 (304-tfn)
WANTED: USED OIL
200 Gal. MinimumFREE pickup service
within 200 miles of Sioux Falls
Toll Free: 1-866-304-6070
Why isn’t your classified ad here, to be
seen by THOUSANDS of Farmers?
Word classifiedsare free for farmers
Call us at 712-263-2122!
Trucks/Trailers For Sale
Ia: l1985 Chevey C-60 grain truck hoist tires tarp like new allisn auto trans, low miles. excellent condition 712-330-1988
Ia: 1995 International 4000 series, 6 cyl,. 13 ton, flat bed, 13,000 miles, dual wheels, Mal-lard, Iowa 712-857-3432.
1999 Jet 42’ Steel Grain Trailer with Rounded hoppers, virgin rubber, good tarp and good paint. $10,000.00 Call 515-240-1499 (06-2014)
Campers/RV’s For Sale
Do you like auctions? are you looking for a special item? Do you collect anything? The Midlan-dauction.com site will email you only auction Sale bills that match what you’re looking for. ITS eaSY ITS FRee go to www.midlandsauc-tions.comI
a: 1996 allegro bus 87,000 miles diesel 8.3 Cummings, many extras $36,000 obo 319-269-6431 Jack @ Dike Iowa
Vehicle Parts/Service
Ia: 2 11.2 x 24 like new tires on 8 bolt rims $350. 319-981-1438
OTHER
Other For Sale
Ia: Steel post. Dennis Becker Ban-croft, Ia 515-538-1547
Ia: 76’ x 112’ 8512 square foot insulated building that will be available Jan 1, 2014. We would be happy to dicuss your needs. adams Turkey Farms, Kirkman, Ia 712-766-3318 or 712-579-1355.
Other Wanted
Ia: Wanted to buy old farm tools, hand woodworking tools, old seed corn items, boxed corn-sheller, hog oilers, corn items, foot powered machinery Call 515-890-0262
WORK
Ia:Wanted: Person to custom far-row bred sows and gilts. Includ-ing facility and care. Nov 2014 - March 2015 or possibly year around. Will bring them bred and ready to farrow. Bruce Lorch 712-260-4555 or 712-735-4555.
Vetter Equipment Your Case IH Dealership has
ImmEDIatE JOB OPENINGS
712-263-4637 • Denison Serving Iowa since 1975 - Now with 10 Locations!
1-(Jobopeningswk27)VA
Case IH Agriculture Equipment Dealership Store Managers in Ida Grove & Audubon: Manage day to day operations in Ida Grove, Agriculture sales of Case IH Agriculture Machinery and our Short lines of equipment, Agriculture background a plus, Good employee, customer relations, and computer skills required.
Agriculture Service Manager in Audubon: Manage all shop operations/shop facility; Supervise technicians; schedule service work; Bidding repair orders; Customer service relationship skills required; Good computer skills also required. Great pay, Benefits, Bonuses, Salaried position.
Agriculture Service Technicians at all locations: Perform repair/maintenance work on farm/consumer products equipment. Agriculture or heavy duty truck repair experience preferred but not necessary. Great pay, Benefits, Bonuses.
Job Application & Descriptions Available at the stores or online at www.vetterequip.com
We are an EOE. Family Owned Business since 1975.
DAMAGEDGRAIN
WANTEDANYWHERE
WE BUY DAMAGEDGRAIN & FEED PRODUCTS
IN ANY CONDITIONWET OR DRY INCLUDING
DAMAGED SILO CORNAT TOP DOLLAR
WE HAVE VACS & TRUCKSCALL HEIDI OR LARRY
NORTHERN AGSERVICE, INC.800-205-5751
88-IFR (TRACTOR PAINTING/DEANS AUTOBODY&SAND)DS
TRACTOR PAINTING & SAND BLASTING
21 Years Experience
DEAN’S AUTOBODY& SAND BLASTING
SHELBY, IOWA712-544-2365
Farm or Industrial Equipment Painting
Most Tractors$1695
New, Used & Rebuilt Parts for All Types of
Farm Equipment!EIKLENBORG SALVAGE
319-347-551085-IFR(2012-EIKLENBORG) EM
1-IFR11(IFR 2013-TIRE) TS
Tire Town inc.
Nationwide Shipping Special Prices • New & Used
All Sizes • Major BrandsWe Deal
800-444-7209 • 800-451-9864www.tiretown.com
18.4-34 New. 10-ply .................$610800/70R38, 80% tread ............$150016.5L-16.1 Rib 10-ply. New .......$23566x44.00-25 R3 Flotation .........$1250480/70R28 R1-w, full tread .......$500710/70R38 Goodyear. New ...$267518.4R42. New. R1-w ..............$145073/44.00-32 12-ply. New .......$170020.8R38. New. R1 ....................$90018.4-38. New. 10-ply ................$610320/90R46 Irregular ..................$900
When the Price Makes the Difference and Quality Won’t Be Compromised
Midwest trucksales & leasing l.l.c.
Gretna, newww.mwtrucksales.com
(2) 2005 378 Peterbilt, Day cab, Cat, 13-spd ................... $35,000
2005 IH 9400, Day cab, Cummins, 10 Spd ........ $25,000
2003 Peterbilt 378 63” F/T C-12(overhauled) 10 Spd.
2000 Pete 379, 63” F/T C-12, 10 Spd ................ $29,500
2000 IH 9400, 70” Midroof, Detroit, 10 Spd ............. $12,500
2000 Freightliner FLD-120 Day Cab, Cummins, 10 Spd
1997 Freightliner FLD-120 Day Cab, Detroit, 10 Spd
NEW 2015 Wilson tandem & triple axle ag hoppers, ARRIVING ........................CALL!
89-IFR7(MidwestTruckSales/Listing)MS
402-934-7727
FOR RENT43-ft. Wilson Ag Hopper
53-ft. Dry Vans53-ft. Stepdecks
Year - Month - Week
IOWA FARM & RANCH JULY 2014Page 16B
85-IFR 11 2013(coldweatheR-Iowa spRay Foam)Im
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