2012 agricultural progress
DESCRIPTION
A publication produced by Farm News & The MessengerTRANSCRIPT
+ +
10 S. 25TH ST ~ FORT DODGE, IA ~ 515.576.3158 ~ 866.576.3158
2012 CHEVY SILVERADO 1500 4WD CREW CAB LT
VY SIL2012 CHE
ADO 1500 4W VERVY SIL LVER
TAB L LTW C WD CRE
10 S. 25TH ST ~ FORT DODGE, IA ~
omers will quot all cust tomers will qu No dealer r. Nounts t o es & discttes & discebaAll r rebaers end 2/29/12.��ers end 2/29/12.. Oe detailsomplette detailsor cee dealer f for cSe
.576.3158 ~ 51510 S. 25TH ST ~ FORT DODGE, IA ~
. ountsor all discalify f for all discomers will qutk# 213S
.576.3158 866.576.3158 ~
MSRPade In BONUSrT
er�y OaltyoLA t Sh BON
VY SIL2012 CHE
$38,890$1000$1000
w BONUS $1000
ADO 1 VERVY SIL LVER
TAB L LTW C RE
grape industry
continues to evolve
Page 7h
wind projects set
national pace
Page 5h
new Co-op upgrades
glidden elevator
Page 23h
maurer moves into
alumminum trailers
Page 28h
By LARRY KERSHNERFarm News news editorFORT DODGE — The
North Central Ag IndustrialPark on the northwest edgeof this county seat city ofWebster County, is in theprocess of expansions thelikes that have Iowa leadersbuzzing.
At issue is the March2011 announcement thatCargill purchased the for-mer Tate &Lyle wetmilling plant— puttingabout 100people towork full-time — andthe October2011 an-nouncementthat an “overthe fence”company — CJ America —will build in the park next toCargill to process aminoacids for livestock feed, em-ploying another 180.
Both plants are expectedto be operational in 2013.
“This deal is so big,” saidDennis Plautz, director ofBusiness Affairs and Com-munity Growth for FortDodge. “Not a job out therewill be under $20 an hour.People recognize how bigthis opportunity can be. It’lladd value three times to thecorn product.”
Plautz described the de-velopments as potentiallybeing “a world class bio-economy park out there.”
He confirmed on Feb. 9that since the early 2011 an-nouncements, “everything isprogressing.” He said FortDodge Community Better-ment is ready to close onfarm land where CJ Ameri-ca’s plant will be construct-ed. Site preparation is ex-pected to begin soon.
With Valero already dry-milling more than 40 mil-lion bushels of corn annual-ly for ethanol, selling thebyproduct distillers’ driedgrain as livestock feed, nowwill come Cargill wet-milling more than 50bushels of corn each year,
for ethanol initially — 115million gallons annually.
“Our vision is to eventu-ally produce other bio-basedproducts at the facility, saidCargill spokeswomanNicole Reichert. Exactlywhat else may be producedhas yet to be announced Re-ichert said.
Purchasing amino acidsfrom Cargill will be anotherplant, CJ America, whoseparent company is CJ Cheil-Jedang Corp., based inSouth Korea. It’s a similar
scenario that Cargill hasnear Eddyville in south cen-tral Iowa.
“We believe that a highlyefficient, well-located cornwet mill ethanol plant fitswell into our bio-productportfolio,” said Alan Willits,president of Cargill CornMilling North America, in apress release. “We see anopportunity in Fort Dodgeto replicate the success wehave had at our Blair, Neb.,and Eddyville biorefinerycampuses.
According to Willits, theplant will provide the baseload corn grind for the cam-pus.
Shelly Blunk, director ofeconomic development andindustry training at IowaCentral Community Col-lege, said Cargill will beable to take advantage of jobtraining programs offered atthe college.
When completed, FortDodge will be a world classbiorefinery campus that willproduce ethanol and other
bio-based products, shesaid.
After the Tate & Lyleplant, which never saw aday of commercial produc-tion, was idled in March2009, city officials went towork to find a suitable userof the facility.
Fort Dodge Mayor MattBemrich said officials iden-tified six potential compa-nies that could fill the space.
“Cargill was the best ofthe group,” Plautz said. “Ithink everybody’s going to
come out of this a winner.”In April 2011, the Iowa
Economic DevelopmentBoard awarded Cargill a $2million loan and tax creditsworth up to $603,000 as in-centives to create its pres-ence here.
Late in 2011, CJ Ameri-ca was awarded a $1.9 mil-lion loan by the Iowa Eco-nomic Development Au-thority Board. One-halfpayable at no interest and
Ag Industrial Park is developing
Long-term PLans for the north CentraL ag InDustrIaL Park call for its eventual expansion south to u.S. highway 20near moorland. rail spurs connecting the Canadian national and union Pacific lines, which intersect near the park, are also proposed.Cargill and CJ america plan to open their plants under construction in 2013.
Submitted graphic
CJ america will build next to Cargill, process amino acids
S ee AG PARK, Page
Dennis Plautz
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 1h
+ +
CORPORATE F A R M E R Growing Your Family Farm
CORPORATE F A R M E R Growing Your Family Farm
CORPORATE FARMER, INC. s i n c e 1 9 7 5
Growing Your Family Farm
1307 6th St. SW Mason City, IA 50401
(800) 472-6931 w w w . c o r p o r a t e f a r m e r . c o m
Teaching Corporate Planning To Farmers OOuurr ccoonncceerrnn iiss yyoouurr ffaammiillyy ffaarrmm.. WWee wwiillll aadddd ddoollllaarrss ttoo yyoouurr bboottttoomm lliinnee OOuurr ccoonncceerrnn iiss yyoouurr ffaammiillyy ffaarrmm.. WWee wwiillll aadddd ddoollllaarrss ttoo yyoouurr bboottttoomm lliinnee Our concern is your family farm. We will add dollars to your bottom line tthhrroouugghh pprrooppeerr ttaaxx ppllaannnniinngg,, pprrootteeccttiinngg yyoouurr ooppeerraattiioonn ffrroomm hhoolleess iinn iittss tthhrroouugghh pprrooppeerr ttaaxx ppllaannnniinngg,, pprrootteeccttiinngg yyoouurr ooppeerraattiioonn ffrroomm hhoolleess iinn iittss through proper tax planning, protecting your operation from holes in its
sseeccuurriittyy bbllaannkkeett,, aanndd pprreeppaarriinngg ffoorr tthhee nneexxtt ggeenneerraattiioonn.. sseeccuurriittyy bbllaannkkeett,, aanndd pprreeppaarriinngg ffoorr tthhee nneexxtt ggeenneerraattiioonn.. security blanket, and preparing for the next generation.
ADVISORS TO THE FAMILY FARM
•Income tax planning •Corporate tax management •Separation of liability •Financial planning for profit •Tax bookkeeping •Tax preparation, W2 & 1099s •IRS correspondence •Monthly newsletter
For a complete listing please visit our website at
www.horizonequip.com
6 Iowa Locations To Better Serve You! Manning 712-653-2574
Missouri Valley 712-642-4117 Audubon 712-563-4266
Adair 641-742-3282 Avoca 712-343-6750
Woodbine 712-641-2134
OUR MISSION
iioowwaaffuueellllaabb..ccoomm iioowwaaffuueellllaabb..ccoomm iowafuellab.com 887777--773377--44885533 887777--773377--44885533 877-737-4853
LABORATORY TESTING OF • BIODIESEL • BIODIESEL BLENDS • ETHANOL
is to provide affordable and timely testing for motor vehicle fuels.
We excel in providing personal, low cost services and can provide 3 day turnaround in most cases.
If you don’t know how to get started, are a precision ag pro, or anywhere in between, Labre Crop Consulting’s staff is ready to
help serve your needs for your farm’s successful future.
• Excellent soil sampling and fertility program • Carry a large variety of today’s best precision ag equipment • Currently developing a complete data management program
We Offer
Labre Crop Consulting Is Your Leading Independent Precision Ag Company!
Call 712-469-7512 • www.gpssoilsampling.com
PROGRESS 2012
the other half forgiven if CJAmerica creates and main-tains jobs.
Other incentives include:∫ A refund of up to
$4.79 million in sales taxespaid during construction.
∫ A $2.86 million in-vestment tax credit.
∫ A $100,000 researchand development tax credit.
Plautz said the combinedwater needs for Valero,Cargill and CJ America,once all three are function-ing will be 8 million gallonsper day. Upgrades to thecity’s water supply capabili-ties will be paid through rev-enue bonds, Plautz said.
Fort Dodge’s wastewatertreatment plant is being up-graded, Plautz said, to han-dle the extra flow from theag industrial park.
Plautz predicted the twoprojects will generate hun-dreds of millions of dollarsworth of contracts for localbusinesses, hundreds of jobspaying about $20 per hour,higher corn prices for areafarmers and additional activ-
ity for local stores andrestaurants.
‘’I believe it’s the largestopportunity we’ve everhad,’’ Plautz said of the agindustrial park. ‘’Now it’sup to us to make this oppor-tunity work for us.’’
The availability of land,water, corn and, especially,two major intersecting rail-road lines, led to the creationof the ag industrial park.
‘’I see the economy herechanging from a lower price,lower wage commodityagricultural market to a val-ue-added, higher price, high-er wage kind of economy,’’he said.
Plautz estimated that theconstruction and renovationof the plants will generate$80 million worth of workfor local companies.
Bill Shea, a Messenger staffwriter, contributed to thisreport.
Contact Larry Kershner at(515) 573-2141, ext. 453 [email protected]
Ag Park Continued from Page 1H
By LARRY KERSHNERFarm News news editorCurrently the two area
ethanol plants, Valero inFort Dodge and POET inGowrie, are consuming400,000 corn bushels daily.Once operators at Cargill’swet-milling plant in FortDodge throw the switch in2013, the three entities willbe crushing 550,000bushels daily, an annual rateof more than 120 millionbushels.
As much as that sounds,it’s not quite half of thebushels harvested in Iowa’scentral district comprised ofthe counties of Webster,Hamilton, Hardin, Grundy,Boone, Story, Marshall,Tama, Dallas, Polk, Jasperand Poweshiek. Eventhough a small portion ofcorn was grown and fed as
silage, there is still enoughcorn, on paper anyway, tomeet thethree plants’corn demand.Cargill andthe twoethanolplants will bepurchasingcorn stockfrom otherarea countiesas well.
However,elevators andfeed mills will also be com-peting for corn, which leadsone community leader topredict that the increasedcash sales will tally about$10 million, or the equiva-lent of trimming the cashbasis by 20 cents, onceCargill starts production.
The basis is the difference
a local corn user will buy to-day, as opposed to a futurescontract at a later date. For
instance, onFeb. 9 at 1p.m., Marchfutures pricewas at $6.33per bushel.But elevatorsaround theWebsterCounty areawere offeringimmediatecash sales of
$6.14, 19 cents under thefutures price. That 19 centsis the basis.
Dennis Plautz, director ofBusiness Affairs and Com-munity Growth for FortDodge, the increased corndemand will raise the localbasis by 20 cents, whichmeans it could be equal to,
or greater than the futuresprice.
Keith Dencklau, chair-man of the Webster CountyBoard of Supervisors, saidduring a 2011 interview,that Cargill’s facility in Ed-dyville has, at times, had azero basis effect on WapelloCounty corn sales. That fa-cility produces ethanol, highfructose corn syrup andgluten. That plant also hasled to the creation of twomanufacturers that useCargill’s corn products.
“Even if they lower thebasis by 10 cents,” Denck-lau said, “it’ll be good foragriculture.”
‘’This can generate mil-lions of more dollars thatwill be spent locally,’’ BillHoran, a Knierim-areafarmer and member of aU.S. Department of Agricul-ture biofuels committee,said when the project wasannounced.
Welcome news for E-15Lucy Norton, managing
director for Iowa RenewableFuels, said Cargill’s an-nouncement is good newsfor the industry which mustblend E15 for vehicles man-ufactured in 2001 and later.The Environmental Protec-tion Agency is finalizing itslabeling and other rules gov-erning E15 for a summerstart.
“This will make addition-al ethanol gallons avail-able,” Norton said. Sheadded that the timeliness ofCargill’s start is also good.
She said by the time theplant is operational, therewill be more infrastructurein place to deliver highervolumes of ethanol toblenders.
She said that by 2014, 85percent of the cars that arecapable will be burningE15.
“That’s a need for 7 bil-lion additional gallons,”Norton said, “and that’sequal to Iowa’s total pro-duction in 2010.”
Contact Larry Kershner at(515) 573-2141, ext. 453 [email protected]
Area corn sales could increase by $10 million
Bill
Horan
Keith
Dencklau
Valero, PoeT consuming 400,000 bushels daily“This will make additional
ethanol gallons available.”—Lucy Norton
Managing director, Iowa Renewable Fuels
2H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
By LARRY KERSHNERFarm News staff writerALGONA — A
biodiesel plant that ran forjust one week in 2006, isunder new ownership andback in capacity, in thiscounty seat community ofKossuth County.
Ag Processing Inc. Coop-erative purchased the formerEast Fork Biodiesel LCCplant in2011 fromCoBank. Theplant, with aproductioncapacity of60 milliongallons an-nually, satidle to fiveyears. AfterAGP madesubstantiveimprove-ments andupgrades tothe system,said LouRickers,plant manag-er, the plantwas back inoperation bySeptember2011.
“We’re fully functional,”said John Campbell, AGP’ssenior vice president, duringa Jan. 26 open house.“We’re here, and we’re run-ning.” Reopening the planthas added 31 jobs in theAlgona market.
Campbell said a formalribbon cutting will be heldlater this spring.
Rickers told media andassembled lawmakers atthe open house that theplant ran for one week un-der the direction of a hand-ful of engineers before thecommodity markets in2006 made producingbiodiesel unaffordable forthe new plant.
U.S. Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, said he’s “happy thisplant is back in operation,putting people back to
work and adding value toagriculture.”
King said he recalled thatin the 1970s ag leaderswere puzzling as to how toimprove grain marketing.During the economic crisesof the 1980s, “people re-placed capital with ideas
and developed the renew-able fuels industry.
“We didn’t see largemanufacturers like AGP andCargill, but we saw farmersput their funds together andmade this happen, doing theengineering and product de-velopment.”
He said ag lawmakers inWashington took care of thepolitics getting the blender’scredits and the RenewableFuels Standard passed.
“All new wealth comesfrom the field, a foundationthat will build capital overand over again,” King said.
Campbell said AGP does-n’t purchase soybeans direct-ly from producers, but fromits co-op members. Soybeansare kosher-crushed in EagleGrove. That oil is transferreddirectly to the Algona plant.Within 48 hours, a tanker ofbean oil is ready for shipment
as biodiesel.Glycerin, a co-product of
biodiesel processing, is thensold to the human foodchain, Campbell said.
Methyl ester is the plant’sprimary product. The plant
+
Experience PEOPLE PRODUCTS PRICES SELECTION BEST the
Shim at www.shimkat.com
a t t h e t o p o f t h e F o r t D o d g e A u t o M i l e
FIVE STAR
3126 5th Avenue South, Fort Dodge, Iowa 50501 515-573-7164 toll free 1-888-694-8745
k k We service all makes
& models. Service Department
open ‘til noon on Saturday!
�����
4 Years In A Row!
The Best Used Car
Dealer Not pictured: Scott Johnston
Not pictured: Brad Beahler
PROGRESS 2012
Revived biodiesel plant back in operation
John Campbell, seniorvice president for AGP Co-operative, said the chal-lenge ahead for biodieselplants lies in Washington,where theObama Ad-ministrationhas allowedthe blender’scredit tolapse, withno indicationif the creditwill be ex-tended.
He said theRenewableFuels Stan-dard was set in 2006.
“We’ve done our part,”Campbell said. “And theyhaven’t been consistent.The extension of the creditinvolves 535 people. Ex-tension of the credit and2013 (RFS) mandate in-volves one person — Presi-dent Obama.”
He said the industry isurging the president to ex-tend the RFS.
“The Environmental Pro-tection Agency has beengreat,” Campbell said.“Saying the mandate shouldbe extended to 1.28 billiongallons (in 2013).”
The current mandate is1.2 billion gallons for2012.
“But the White Househas not made a decision,”he said.
At a Jan. 26 open houseof AGP’s resurrectedbiodiesel plant in Algona,U.S. Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, said “we’re not thereyet,” concerning the ex-tended blender’s credit. Buthe indicated there is hope.
He said Washington hasmany ethanol enemies hecalled “uninformed sources.”Ethanol’s blender’s creditwill not be renewed. “Butbiodiesel is out of the targetarea,” he said, adding hehopes to see the credit goback in place and the RFS
Lou RiCKeRS, right, agP’s plant manager, shows rep. Steve King, r-iowa, the process in which the biodiesel plant’s processes ex-tract methyl ester and glycerin, the company’s two primary products from soy oil.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Larry Kershner
agP buys former east fork biodiesel facility, is ‘fully functional’
S ee AGP, Page 4H
Campbellexpectsextensionof blender’scredit in ’13
S ee CREDIT, Page
Steve King
JohnCampbell
LouRickers
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 3h
+ +
PROGRESS 2012
Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Iowa is an Independent Licensee of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association. ©2011 Wellmark, Inc. Form No. IA-03-P-11
Financial Solutions
130 N. 25th Street • Fort Dodge, IA 50501 515-576-1800 • 800-657-8033 • www.khisolutions.com
Affordable health plans designed with you in mind.
AUTHORIZED INDEPENDENT AGENTS FOR
NIIKIA LACINA LYNN SCHREDER BRENDA LASTINE ANDY HEJLIK TRICIA HELMERS
KORANN KENDALL LUKE BRANDEL KATIE NEKVINDA NICOLE THURMAN MARY ULM
JODI LAWMAN
MISTY BETHEL
Over 30 years of experience in the restaurant and catering business.
Call Today For Menu Choices & Price!
712-822-5322
www.lidderdalecountrystore.com Weddings
Anniversaries Funerals
Reunions Company Parties, etc!
Your # 1 Catering Choice!
Niehaus Fencing & Repair
1855 Wadsley Avenue • Fonda, IA 50540 Phone: 712-830-2830
Gallagher Dealer We also sell skidloader attachments
Pre-engineered Buildings
�� ���������� ������������������
Dairy, Poulty, Equestrian,Swine, Storage/Shop,
and More!
isn’t a pain.
At building a relationship with a doctor
To schedule an appointment, call (515) 227-7491
EXPERIENCE THE DIFFERENCE!
CALL 515-227-7491 1523 2nd Avenue North, Fort Dodge activehealthchiro.com
D r . J o s h M a s o n a n d D r . Z a c h M a s o n • Sports Injuries • Hip Pain • Leg Pain • Headache Pain • Scoliosis
• Neck Pain • Arm & Shoulder Pain • Back Pain • Prenatal Chiropractic • Pediatric Chripractic
• Emergency Care • Auto Accidents • On The Job Injuries • Specializing In
Prevention
AGPContinued from Page
recycles all water used inthe process, Rickers said.
The plant operatesaround the clock with fourshifts. The daily goal is tofill 30 railcars.
The loading area is capa-ble of off-loading trucksand loading railcars simul-taneously.
Campbell said whenAGP bought the plant, ithad no railcars available.Most were in South Dakotafor the growing oil industryin there.
However, AGP has se-cured the lease of 250 ofits own cars last July, withmore being refurbished forfuture delivery.
“Our rail customers areon all coasts,” Campbellsaid.
Contact Larry Kershner at(515) 573-2141, ext. 453 or [email protected]
Plant oPerators John tschritter, left, and Todd Lang watch a bank of computer screens, constantly monitoring the distilla-tion processes throughout the aGP’s biodiesel plant in algona.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Larry Kershner
4H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
By LARRY KERSHNERFarm News news editorIowa continues to lead the
U.S. in wind energy as theeconomy has refreshed andwind turbine constructionhas restarted after a two-year hiatus from 2008 to2010. MidAmerican Ener-gy Co., based in DesMoines, announced in Janu-ary the development of newwind projects in Iowa, total-ing 407.1 megawatts. Thecompany said projects solid-ify its rank as the No. 1 rate-regulated utility in the U.S.in terms of ownership ofwind-powered capacity.
“Wind is a viable renew-able energy resource thatenhances our energy portfo-lio, providing additionalgeneration at a reasonablecost for our customers,” saidBill Fehrman, president andchief executive officer ofMidAmerican Energy.“These projects also fulfillour commitment to Iowaregulators and our cus-tomers.” In 2009, Mi-dAmerican Energy receivedapproval from the IowaUtilities Board to add up to1,001 megawatts of wind-powered generation by2013. “I’m proud to say wehave agreements in place tofulfill that commitment,”Fehrman said.
MidAmerican Energy re-cently reached an agreementwith RPM Access for theacquisition of the 103.5-megawatt Vienna wind proj-ect, which will be located inMarshall and Tama coun-ties.In December 2010, Mi-dAmerican announced itwould add 593.4 megawattsof new wind-powered gen-eration in Iowa. The proj-ects included 119.6-megawatt Laurel wind proj-ect, located in MarshallCounty; and the 29.9-megawatt Pomeroy windexpansion project, locatedin Pocahontas and Calhouncounties.The final portion ofthe 593.4-megawatt expan-sion project was placed in-service by year-end 2011.
MidAmerican Energy’sother owned wind projectsare located in Buena Vista,Carroll, Crawford, Hamil-ton, Polk, Sac, Wright,Floyd and Pottawattamiecounties, totaling 1,284.3
megawatts of wind genera-tion.
When the 2012 windprojects are complete, Mi-dAmerican said it will own2,284.8 megawatts of windgeneration, with approxi-mately 29 percent of its to-tal generation capacity pow-ered by wind.
MidAmerican Energy be-gan building wind energyprojects in 2004. When the2012 wind projects arecomplete, the company willhave invested approximate-ly $4 billion in wind-pow-ered generation projects inIowa.
Other projectsRed Rock Wind Energy is
proposing a 300 megawattwind farm developmentsouth of Estherville in Em-met and Dickinson counties.The project area is in the de-
velopment stages of windresource assessment, windturbine layouts scenariosand environmental impactstudies.Red Rock’s parentcompany is National WindLLC, based in Minneapolis,
Minn.Currently, five on-site
meteorological towers arecollecting wind data.
Red Rock retained ExcelEngineering, based in Fonddu Lac, Wisc., to evaluatethe interconnection possibil-ities and prepare an inter-connection strategy.Exceland National Wind haveidentified several options tointerconnect the project’sgeneration to the transmis-sion grid.
The company is currentlyworking with prospectiveutilities to co-develop this
wind project.The project is scheduled
to be commercially opera-tional between 2012 and2015.
Many of the investors inRed Rock Wind, includingNational Wind, are also de-veloping the NorthStarWind Farm, a 200megawatt community windproject adjacent to RedRock Wind Energy in Em-met and Dickinson counties.
Contact Larry Kershner at(515) 573-2141, ext 453, [email protected]
+ +
Energy independence.
Ethanol is proven to greatly reduce our dependence on foreign oil. Since we grow the crops and process them right here at home, ethanol is creating a new multi-billion dollar economy in rural America. This means a brighter future for all of us. POET wants you to be a part of America’s ethanol movement for energy independence
Together with you, POET Biorefining – Gowrie is proud to produce an environmentally friendly, renewable fuel to help meet the ever-increasing energy needs of America.
515.352.2612 877.351.2676
poet.com/gowrie
TM
Bigger Yields Lower Prices
Jeff Longnecker cell: 515-291-0836 Twila Longnecker office: 515-382-4441
Liquid Fertilizers
Serving the man on the land with quality products since 1954.
10-10-10 6-24-6
5-15-15 4-10-10
9-18-9 3-18-18
2 0 1 2 R E V I TA L I Z E D : O R T H M A N G R E E N c a n t u r n t o G O L D
STRONG
the
youtube.com/precisiontillagefacebook.com/orthmanag
i n t h i s i s s u e :
New Grain CartsNew Factory ConstructionResearch Farm Data Sheets
v i s i t p r e c i s i o n t i l l a g e . c o m
2 0 1 2 R E V I TA L I Z E D : O
O R T H M A N G R E E N c a
n t u r n t o G O L D
New G rai n Car sstN e w Facto y y Conr F FacNN
snstruction
Research ch Farm D F Far
Da a a S Sh e e tst
A PRIL 9-11th, 2012 I OWA E VENTS C ENTER , D ES M OINES , I OWA * Membership and Registration information can be found at
www.iowawindenergy.org or by calling 515-320-4057.
PROGRESS 2012
Wind projects set national pace
Four oF the newest wind turbines in Pomeroy stand are now reaping energy from the wind. The towers and turbines wereinstalled in 2011. There are now 170 turbines in the Pomeroy area, owned and operated by midamerican energy.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Larry Kershner
Pocahontas, Calhoun, marshall counties see new turbines
“These projects ... fulfill our commitment
to Iowa regulators and our customers.”—Bill Fehrman
President and CEO, MidAmerican Energy
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 5h
By DARCYDOUGHERTY
MAULSBYFarm News staff writerIDA GROVE — As
Iowa’s grape and wine in-dustry begins to mature,some growers have left thebusiness, while others areexpanding the scale or scopeof their operation. Dr. JohnSinnott and his wife, Lenee,of Ida Grove, plan to taketheir vineyard to the nextlevel by opening their OldTown Winery to the publicon Memorial Day weekend.
“We’re always learningsomething new in this busi-ness,” said John Sinnott, 70,a semi-retired family physi-cian, who established hisvineyard in 2006 and built a64-by-30-foot winery in2009.
“Our goal is to produceonly native Iowa wines fromour own grapes.”
Sinnott, who started hisvineyard with 100 vines,now tends 1,600 vines onnearly 3 acres that wereonce a pasture south of thehouse. The challenges ofgrowing grapes have takenmany forms, said Sinnott,who grew up on a farm inMonroe County.
Some misguided advicefrom an acquaintance whosaid nets weren’t necessaryto ward off birds cost theSinnotts their whole cropone year. In May 2010, aMother’s Day freeze de-stroyed 80 percent of theirgrapes, which were juststarting to blossom.
The couple persevered,however, and learned howto grow wine grapes suc-cessfully on the sloping ter-rain at their acreage, whichis located on the northeast
edge of Ida Grove. Today,they grow nine varieties ofcold-hardy grapes, includ-ing Prairie Star, La Cres-cent, Petite Pearl, Fron-tenac, Marquette and others.
Proper pruning is a vitalskill to master, since it dic-tates how big the vineyard’scrop load will be, the Sin-notts said, who are members
of the Northwest IowaGrape Growers Associationand Western Iowa GrapeGrowers Association.
While the Sinnotts handlenearly all the work in theirvineyard, with some helpfrom family and friends,grape-growing is muchmore labor intensive thanthey anticipated.
“Still, I enjoy the workand enjoy being outdoors,”Sinnott said.
Growers embraceeconomies of scale
A good vineyard operatorwill put in 150 to 200 hoursof labor per acre per year,said Dr. Mike White, anIowa State University Ex-tension viticulture field spe-cialist, who noted that avineyard also requires a sig-nificant investment of mon-ey and management. If avineyard operator doeseverything right, he or she
might net $1,000 to $1,500per acre, he added.
These realities haveprompted some grape grow-ers to pursue other opportu-nities. “Many of the firstpeople in this business gotin when they were 45 to 60years old,” White said. “Tenyears later, they have foundout there are much better us-es of their time. A grapevineyard is extremely man-agement intensive, andmany of the initial people inthis industry did not havethe background or desire to
climb the steep learningcurve.”
Some of the most suc-cessful grape growers inIowa have come from anagricultural background,added White, who beganobserving this phenomenonaround 2005 when moreconventional farmers beganentering the business. “Inmany cases, the kids saidthey would stay around thefarm after college if momand dad would consider a
+ +
3557 5th Avenue South - Fort Dodge • 515-955-2207 • 866-343-JIMS
Celebrating 60 Years in Business - 1952-2012
Stop in and take advantage of
36 Month FINANCE OFFER
on New Purchases!
For 60 years the tradition of outstanding installation service and great customer service has allowed JIMS Floor Covering to build a successful business throughout the years. Now in 2012, JIMS Carpet One Floor & Home is still the same locally-owned business, keeping the money local to benefit our community. More selection, more values and more choices for you to be more satisfied with your flooring purchase.
New carpeting is a beautiful and comforting addition to your home. You need to ensure that your inve stment offers a healthier environment for the care and welfare of your family. JIMS Carpet One Floor & Home is the only flooring store to offer the Healthier Living Carpet Installation System. The perfect remedy for a he althy home.
PHIL M c INTIRE (641) 330-1442
HAIL DAMAGED, RUSTY OR FADED METAL ROOFS OR BINS?
Protect against rust by coating with Columbia paints & Fibre Coating
We provide
professional
application
Made in Iowa
FROM Central Petroleum Company 100 Year Anniversary 1911-2011 American Products • Family-Owned
For estimate contact
Also heavy duty oils, greases, and lubricating fuel additives with anti-gel.
PERSONALLY SERVING NORTH CENTRAL IOWA FOR
OVER 30 YEARS
www.cenpeco.com
“ Stops Rust Dead in it’s Tracks!”
Iowa Company Using American Crude Oil
YYOOUURR CCOOMMPPLLEETTEE HHYYDDRRAAUULLIICC RREEPPAAIIRR SSHHOOPP YYOOUURR CCOOMMPPLLEETTEE HHYYDDRRAAUULLIICC RREEPPAAIIRR SSHHOOPP YOUR COMPLETE HYDRAULIC REPAIR SHOP • Hose Repair • Cylinder Repair • Motor Repair • Pump & Valve Repair • Truck Repair • Install Wet Kits • Large selection of hose fittings • Snow Plow & Sander Equipment (seasonal) • New Clylinders and Motors • We also make DOT approved air brake hoses
Come see Earl for all your hydraulic needs! 880000--226622--88773355 oorr 771122--779922--00331111 800-262-8735 or 712-792-0311
991199--EE.. HHwwyy.. 3300 •• CCaarrrroollll,, IIAA 919-E. Hwy. 30 • Carroll, IA IIFF IITT’’SS HHYYDDRRAAUULLIICC...... WWEE FFIIXX IITT!!!! IF IT’S HYDRAULIC... WE FIX IT!!
PROGRESS 2012
Iowa’s grape industry continues to evolveGrowersembraceeconomyof scale
S ee GRAPES , Page 7H
Dr. John Sinnott checks on the wine in these glass carboys in his winery, which he built in 2009 on his acreage. sinnott, a semi-retired physician, and wife Lenee, of Ida Grove, plan to take their vineyard to the next level by opening their old Town winery to thepublic on memorial Day weekend. The sinnotts tend about 1,600 vines on nearly 3 acres of land that was once a pasture south of theirhouse.
-Messenger photo by Darcy Dougherty Maulsby
6H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
+ +
www.jensenbuilders.com
1175 South 32nd Street, Fort Dodge, IA 50501
515-573-3292 2182 231st Lane, Suite 100,
Ames, IA 50014 515-292-5000
Jensen Builders, Ltd. is a family-owned Design - Build General Contractor that has been in business for 29 years. Our company is unique in that we self-perform concrete, steel erection, both rough and finish carpentry, as well as complete project management. We also employ a full-time architect that can help design your project to meet your needs. Our number one goal is to make sure our customers are satisfied. That is why we work closely with our customers from beginning to end. We have worked hard to build a great reputation.
Jensen Builders, Ltd. self-performs more than 70% of the total contract dollars on our projects. This means that we are able to completely control quality, cost, and schedule for our customers. Several of our competitors hire subcontractors to perform the work that we are capable of performing with our own employees. This is what sets us apart from other companies and has helped us build a strong and solid reputation. Because our highly-skilled employees will be performing the majority of the work, your project will run smoothly and will be completed on time.
Jensen Builders, Ltd. is also a Chief Pre-Engineered Metal Building dealer, as well as a GSI Grain Bin dealer. We have served customers over various markets, such as commercial, manufacturing, industrial, agricultural and retail. We have a very long list of satisfied, repeat customers.
When choosing a contractor, it is important to find a company that is established, dependable, and trustworthy. Call Jensen Builders, Ltd. to help you on your next project.
Kemna Auto, Algona
Iowa Central Resource Center, Fort Dodge
Jensen Builders Fort Dodge Office
Taco Johns, Fort Dodge
Mineral City, Fort Dodge
Inside Mineral City, Fort Dodge
Jensen Trucks
PROGRESS 2012
vineyard and/or winery in the future. These conventionalfarmers are becoming our best grape growers.”
Today, the average commercial vineyard in Iowa isaround four acres, although many growers are finding theyneed at least five to 10 acres to make the effort worthwhile.“One would need to have at least 20 to 30 acres for a fullsingle income,” said White, who noted that there are morethan 300 vineyards covering approximately 1,200 acres inIowa.
Economies of scale are also beginning to reshape the in-dustry. Seasoned growers are starting to purchase equipmentto cut their labor, said White, who noted that there are sixmechanical grape harvesters in Iowa now.
A few growers are installing cold storage facilities so theycan store and transport grapes longer distances. In addition,some of the vineyards, including Old Town in Ida Grove, arestarting their own wineries.
Wine boosts Iowa’s economyAt the end of 2011, there were 95 federal- and state-li-
censed wineries in Iowa. Many of these operations continueto produce higher quality wines, said White. The new IowaVintners Quality Alliance is helping the industry markethigh quality wines of distinct styles representing Iowa’sgrowing regions.
Demand for Iowa wines is growing, White said. Iowawineries have approximately 7 percent of the market shareof wine sales in Iowa. “Though the average prices of Iowawine typically range from $10 to $16 a bottle, sales contin-ue to climb, and our national and international awards con-tinue to increase, as well.”
This is good for economic development, according to a2008 ISU report, which documented the economic impactof wine and vineyards on the Iowa economy totals $234.3million. “It’s exciting to be part of this up-and-coming in-dustry, which increases tourism and offers a fun way to pro-mote Iowa’s rural communities,” Lenee Sinnott said.
Learn moreFor more information on Iowa wineries, visit the Iowa
Wine & Beer Promotion Board at: www.iowawineand-beer.com. To learn more about the Midwest Grape and WineIndustry Institute at Iowa State University, visit: www.ex-tension.iastate.edu/Wine. For more information on OldTown Winery, log onto: www.oldtownwines.com.
Contact darcy dougherty maulsby at [email protected]
Grapes Continued from Page 6H
Randy Roeber, Owner Algona & Iowa Falls 800-747-6652
• FM 2-way Radios & Pagers for business and public safety • FCC License Advice & Assistance • Reconditioned & Rental Radios • Repeater Towers • Narrow Band and Digital Radios r commwireless.com
Reminder: The FCC has mandated
that FM 2 way radios be narrow banded (before) 2013, Your
FCC Licence may also need to be modified or it will be canceled
Jan 1, 2013. Radios made before 1998 may not reprogram to narrowband. Check with us
for all the details.
VERTEX STANDARD is registered in the US Patent & Trademark Office. All other product or service name s are the property of their respective owners © Vertex Standard Co. Ltd. 2011.
Dr. John anD Lenee Sinnott raise nine varieties of cold-hardy grapes at their vineyard near ida grove.
-Messenger photo by Darcy Dougherty Maulsby
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 7h
By LARRY KERSHNERFarm News news editorA thus-far undisclosed
quarter-section in O’BrienCounty, is being negotiatedas the future site for RockIsland Clean Lines’ con-verter station. This stationwill be the official “onramp” for a planned 3,500-megawatt direct currenttransmission line that willstretch 500 miles acrossIowa, much of it throughnorth and north centralIowa.
During June 2011, CaryKottler, project develop-ment manager, and engi-neers met with Iowa localgoverning officials and pri-vate residents who couldpotentially have the linescross their jurisdictions andproperties.
Kottler said the study cor-ridor for the line has beendetermined, and as of Feb.8, “we’re on track to file theroute later this year.”
He said company offi-cials have been doing “out-reach meetings” with localtaxing entities likely to beaffected by the new trans-mission line.
Clean Lines is expectedto hold another slate of pub-lic hearings on the projectduring the second half of2012.
Kottler said the companywill be buying a 200-footright of way for erectingpoles, as well as compensat-ing farmers and otherlandowners for field disrup-tions, broken tiles and croplosses during construction.
Kottler acknowledgedthat right-of-way agree-ments will need to be se-cured along the final route.He said condemnation pro-ceedings could be part ofthe process.
“But that would be ourlast resort,” he said.
He explained that con-demnation could be used toclean up unclear landowner-ship or properties locked inprobate action.
A whole slate of federal,state and local permits willalso be required, especiallyif the line should cross wa-terways. Clean Lines Ener-gy Partners, based in Hous-ton, Texas, the parent com-pany of the Rock IslandClean Lines, is also workingout potential interconnectagreements.
Whether the right-of-waypurchases will be one-timelump sum payments or an-nuities has not been deter-mined.
“We won’t know untilwe’ve presented to the IowaUtility Board,” he said.
CLEP, Kottler said, is de-termined to create as littledisturbance on the land aspossible while creating thetransmission system, prefer-ring to follow section lines,railroad right-of-ways andwaterways, wildlife refuges,endangered habitats andrecreational areas.
He said they will be seek-ing to avoid as many resi-dential areas as possible.
Hans Detweiler, directorof development for CLEP,said the closer residents
lived to the start of the line,which will be sited inO’Brien County, the moreinterest has been shown dueto the potential of new windfarms cropping up to feedthe new line.
When asked about resi-dents’ perception of thehealth impact on livestockand humans living close tothe high-voltage line. De-tweiler said that most healthissues are from alternatecurrent lines. However, di-rect current lines are differ-ent, citing studies from theWorld Health Organization,International Agency forResearch on Cancer and theNational Radiological Pro-tection Board, stating thereare no adverse impacts onanimals or people living un-der or near direct currentlines.
Harlan Hansen, JohnChristianson and CarlMatthes, members of theHumboldt County Board ofSupervisors, said they sawthe potential influx of taxincome as a boon to thecounty’s general fund.
If there were 20 miles ofline through the county, at$7,000 per mile, it wouldgarner a $140,000 annualshot in the arm for the coun-ty.
Mattes said if the incomeis classified as an ag tax, itwill lead to lowering thetaxable value of ag land,bringing no additional rev-enue benefit to the county.
+ +
PROGRESS 2012
By DAVE DEVALOISFarm News staff writerAMES — Dow Agro-
Sciences opened a new cen-tral Iowa field research cen-ter here in summer 2011 toaccommodate its growingcorn and soybean breedingprograms.
In a news release, Agro-Sciences, a subsidiary of theDow Chemical Co., said thefacility is built with furtherexpansion in mind. Thecompany purchased 150acres northwest of Ames forits 17,500-square-foot of-fice/seed lab building and
approximately 15,300-square-foot equipment stor-age building.
“Dow AgroSciences pre-viously had a location inHuxley and wanted to stayin central Iowa,” saidRobyn Heine, Dow Agro-Sciences global public af-fairs leader. “We werelooking for a new locationto expand due to existingspace limitations at ourformer site in Huxley andwe were looking for somefarmland as well.”
AgroSciences has new footprint in Ames
Dow AgriScienceS new fAcility in ames is a 17,500-square-foot seed lab with office spaces. Ithouses more than 20 full-time employees.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Dave DeValois
S ee DOW, Page 9H
Field research facility willaccommodate soybean,corn breeding programs
By the
numbersIf the proposed Rock
Island Clean Line proj-ect comes to fruition itcould create:
∫ Three states seeingwind energy growth —Iowa, Nebraska andSouth Dakota.
∫ 500 miles of newtransmission line acrossIowa.
∫ 3,500 megawattsof power being generat-ed and transmittedacross the state.
∫ 5,000 short-termjobs, with 500 becom-ing permanent.
∫ 1.4 million house-holds powered in 14eastern markets — Illi-nois, Indiana, Michigan,Ohio, Kentucky, Ten-nessee, Maryland, Vir-ginia, West Virginia,North Carolina,Delaware, New Jerseyand Washington, D.C.
∫ $7 billion in newelectric generation in-vestments.
∫ 10 million tons ofcarbon removed fromthe environment annual-ly, equal to 1.9 millioncars taken off the road.
Data gathered fromthe U.S. Energy Infor-mation Administration.Actual benefits may bealtered as the projectprogresses.
Iowa to exportwind energyNegotiations continuefor Clean Line Project
S ee CLEP, Page 9H
8H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
PRAIRIE CITY PRAIRIE AG SUPPLY 515-994-3200
MARSHALLTOWN CENTRAL IOWA FARM STORE
641-753-3996
WEBSTER CITY CASADY BROS. IMPLEMENT
515-832-4447
HARLAN SORENSEN EQUIPMENT
712-755-2455
RENWICK BOONE VALLEY IMPLEMENT
515-824-3231
MASON CITY MASON CITY RED POWER
641-242-2702
LAWTON S&S EQUIPMENT 712-944-5751
CONTACT ONE OF THESE DEALERS TODAY!
COME SEE THE WORLD OF JOHN DEERE...UP CLOSE
THE NEW JOHN DEERE PAVILION
Admission is still free.
An all-new experience – now open.
1000
1-800-433-5620 ext. 322
+ +
D84-06RL
® ®
WWW.ALSEED.COM 507.373.3161 800.352.5247
Y54-04RL
®
®
® ®
HYBRIDS BUILT TO PERFORM WHERE YOU FARMFrankly, we have a lot to choose from. Here are four we highly recommend.
VIKINGC O R N & S O Y B E A N S
C94-00R Genuity® VT3 Pro 60-01N
Frankly, we have a lot to choose fr
LR06-84D
BSDIRBYH
Frankly, we have a lot to choose fr
E POT TLIUB
e four we highly r
L
e arom. HerFrankly, we have a lot to choose frHWMROFRE
4R0-54Y
ecommend.e four we highly r
AFU O YEREH
ecommend.
MRA
®
®yitune GR00-49C
®
or P3T V®
®®
®
N10-06
®
OC.EEDSL.AWWW
161.337.3705MO
7452.523.008
VIKINGC O R N & S O Y B E A N S
NGC O R N & S O Y B E A N S
Linde Equipment Co.
108 S. Idaho Glidden, IA 51443
712-659-3725
Central Iowa Farm Store, Inc.
203 Iowa Ave. Old Hwy. 30 W.
Marshalltown, IA 50158 641-753-3996
Franken Implement & Service
2782 360th St. Rock Valley, IA 51247
712-722-3941
Pocahontas Equipment Co. LLC
1400 W. Elm St. Pocahontas, IA 50574
712-335-4522
Carroll Implement Ltd. 1001 Kossuth Ave. LuVerne, IA 50560
515-882-3261
Robinson Implement 2002 St. F24
Irwin, IA 51446 712-782-3171
2107 25th St | EMMETSBURG, IOWA 50536 P: 712.852.3003 | www.woodfordequipment.com
Your New Gehl Skid Steer
and Articulated Loader Dealer.
Your New Manitou Telehandler Dealer.
Authorized Dealer
www.meridianmfg.com
PROGRESS 2012
However, if it goes into the generalfund, as wind turbine taxes do, “then thatwill help our budget.”
The supervisory trio, last June, saidthere has been no discussion if the countywould share the new revenue with citiesand school districts, or if it would apply itto infrastructure improvements.
A need to move powerAccording to Detweiler, the intent is to
spur additional wind turbine farm creationin northwest Iowa, northeast Nebraska andsouthwest South Dakota.
CLEP’s website — www.clealineener-gy.com — said there is a potential for erect-ing as many as 2,000 new wind turbines, cre-ating 3,500 megawatts of power, whichwould then be transferred from near SiouxCity to Rock Island, Ill. From there, it wouldbe used to supply power to Chicago and far-ther east. Potentially, there are 14 states thatcould benefit from the extra electricity.
“The HVDC line can transmit enoughelectricity to power 1.4 million house-holds,” Detweiler said. “That’s more thanMinnesota uses in a year.”
In 2009, Iowa’s wind energy capabili-ties grew by 10,000 megawatts. This proj-ect would be roughly 25 percent of thatsingle year’s advance, he added.
Kottler said that the $1.7 billion trans-mission line, could spur an additional $7billion in wind turbine investments withinthe three states, although CLEP would notbe involved in creating those farms. Hesaid there is the potential for a substantial
number of the turbines to be erected inNorthwest Iowa.
Detweiler said the entire project is afour-phase, six-year development plan.
Michael Skelly, president of CLEP, saidthat Midwest wind energy generation grewby 40 percent for each of the past severalyears, until construction of turbines cometo a near halt in 2010.
“There’s plenty of wind out there,”Skelly said, there’s just not an efficienttransmission system. “We need to get theharvested wind energy to places that needit.” Concerning the 3,500 megawatts ofnew generation, he added, “This is a sig-nificant amount of power.”
Kottler said once power is uploaded on-to the line, it will be transported virtuallyinstantaneously to Rock Island, Ill., formarkets farther east.
Contact Larry Kersten at (515) 573-2141, ext.
453, or [email protected]
CLEP Continued from Page 8H
The expansion will al-low AgroSciences cornand soybean breeding pro-grams to expand its testingand breeding capacity,which expected to doubleover the next three years.
The Ames site has morethan 20 full-time employ-ees, plus a large number ofseasonal and contract em-ployees and is expected togrow in the near future.
“Our plant breeding ef-forts in corn and soybeansare targeted to developand evaluate products tosatisfy the needs of grow-ers in Iowa and otherneighboring states,” saidMarcelo Queijo, siteleader of Dow Agro-Sciences’ Ames facility.
Heine said DowAgro-Science has “test plots onour property adjacent toour new facilities in Ames
and in the surroundingarea. We also have testplots across Iowa that ourAmes facility conducts inits research program.”
The company expectsgrowth due to increaseddemand for its products,she said.
“The new facilities arebuilt with the latest state-of-the-art equipment inseed processing and farmirrigation,” Queijo said.“Coupled with this invest-ment, Dow AgroScienceshas also acquired plantingand harvesting equipmentto help meet our stricttimelines and allow us toaccelerate the launch ofour newest products andtechnologies to satisfy theneeds of our growers.”
“This expansion is oneof many projects we areengaged in around the
globe to bring farmers thebest technologies and thebest agronomic traits tomeet their needs,” saidDan Kittle, vice presidentof research and develop-ment at AgroSciences.
Using breeding andagricultural biotechnolo-gy, Dow AgroSciencescontinues to work towarddiscovery and develop-ment of traits for insect re-sistance, herbicide toler-ance, oil quality, enhancedmeal quality, drought tol-erance and nitrogen uti-lization.
“The company’s biolog-ical solutions pipelinedemonstrates diverse andinnovative product candi-dates with market poten-tial around the world,”Heine said.
Contact dave deValois [email protected].
Dow Continued from Page 8H
“The HVDC line can
transmit enough energy
to power 1.4 million
households.”— Hans Detweiler
Director of development for CLEP
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 9h
+ +
YOUR FARM.YOUR FAMILY.OUR FOCUS.
Working beside you... to help you interpret rules and regulations
Kent MowrerCSIF Field Specialist
Going It Alone Is Overrated{ }
www.supportfarmers.com
10H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
+ +
1864 Kountry Lane Fort Dodge, Iowa 50501
PH: 515-955-3400 Fax: 515-576-4201
w w w . r a n d j m a t e r i a l h a n d l i n g . c o m
See us for a full line of Kubota Tractors, Mowers and R.T.V.’s.
Call for Financing.
COLFAX TRACTOR PARTS
• Buy, Sell, & Trade Farm Equipment • New & Used Parts • National Locator Service • Parting Late Model Tractors & Combines Colfax, IA, North Side of Interstate 80 at Colfax exit. 1-800-284-3 00 1 • colfaxtractorparts.com
Wright County source for building supplies. Give us a call or stop by:
515-448-3843 204 E. Broadway • Eagle Grove
515-532-2887 1209 Central Ave E • Clarion ““YYoouurr ppaarrttnneerr iinn ccrroopp aanndd lliivveessttoocckk pprroodduuccttiioonn..”” “Your partner in crop and livestock production.”
Locations in: Everly, Greenville, Gruver, Langdon, Milford, Spencer, Superior
Call 800-568-2238 for grain bids
PROGRESS 2012
fdwater.com 612 S. 32nd St., Fort Dodge
WE’RE your NEIGHBOR!
Rickey
YYoouurr CCoommpplleettee WWaatteerr SSttoorree Your Complete Water Store
800-397-6025 • 515-576-6481
• Water Softeners • Coffee Service • Reverse Osmosis • Bottled Water • Salt Delivery • So Much More!
Quality Service Since 1949
Steve
Jason
Sherry Drew
Kyle
Buy from people you know and trust!
Blue Ribbon Pelham Waters has been delivering bottled water in the Fort Dodge area for over 30 years. We want your business and we want to serve you on a direct delivery basis. We are able to continue this tradition because we deliver a variety of products to your area on a regular scheduled basis. Thank you for allowing Blue Ribbon Pelham Waters to serve all your drinking water needs.
Our employees work & live in the Fort Dodge area.
John
Todd
Discover the luxury of indulging your senses with quality and creativity in every room ofyour house. We combine old world cra-smanship with modern technology to provide thebest cabinetry and countertops available. Wheather you’re working with a contractor or
doing the project yourself, we’re your ,rst source of all your cabinet and countertop needs.
• Entertainment Centers• Countertops
������������������������� ��
428 Central Avenue, Fort Dodge • 515-573-2021
• Kitchen Cabinets• Vanities• Home O�ce Cabinets
mandates extended.If the issue is not resolved by summer, King said, it
will lie dormant in Washington during the presidentialelection season.
When asked how the ethanol industry has determinedto survive without the blender’s credit and why biodieselstill needs it, Campbell said the energy value in veg-etable oils “is very close. We in the biodiesel industryare surviving because of the RFS, but it would be betterto have the credits.”
He said that biodiesel plants can’t manufacture biofu-el “until someone feeds a chicken or a pig. We crush thebean for meal and extract the oil for biodiesel.”
Conversely, ethanol plants crush corn first and thebyproducts — distillers dried grain — is sold as live-stock feed.
Contact Larry Kershner at (515) 573-2141, ext. 453 or [email protected]
Credit Continued from Page 4H
By LARRY KERSHNERFarm News staff writer
AGP’s improved harbor in Ab-erdeen, Wash., is in operation, said JohnCampbell, senior vice president forAGP Cooperative.
“We’re just now loading the first ves-sels with the new conveyances,” Camp-bell said.
AGP, in cooperation with the Port ofGray’s Harbor and Puget Sound & Pa-
cific Railroad, created a deep-water portfacility for shipping ag products to Pa-cific Rim countries.
“We’ve been upgrading our speedand space,” Campbell said.
“With larger storage spaces that areunder cover, he said the company cankeep off-loading trains, even if a ship islate, getting the trains turned around andheading back.
A continuous flow of unit trains can
now bring ag products from the Mid-west and Plains States to Gray’s Harborfor shipment to primarily Asian mar-kets.
Before the improvements, AGP wasloading mostly meal, Campbell said, butnow AGP has the capability to load oth-er commodities for overseas markets.
Gray’s Harbor is the only deep waterport along the U.S. West Coast.
The closest deep water facility is inthe Gulf of Mexico.
Contact Larry Kershner at (515) 573-2141, ext. 453 or at [email protected]
Improved Gary’s Harbor isin operation, says CampbellagP has more commodities opportunities
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 11h
515-576-7505 800-362-2174
2723 Fifth Ave. S. Fort Dodge www.fdford.com
Proud to be a part of the Fort Dodge Community.
Nick, Matt, Deb, Casey Johnson -Owners-
• New Abra Auto Body - Ability to work on all makes & models and work with all insurance companies, investment in the latest technology and equipment
• Quick Lane Oil Change Center - Additional resources added to make your oil change experience smoother and faster
• Car Wash - New equipment to ensure better washes and continual operation • One of Central Iowa’s most complete parts and accessories inventories • Commitment to providing the absolutely best customer service
757 COMBINED
YEARS OF SERVICE
Bill Benton Quick Lane Technician
7 years
Rachel Miller Collision Center Coordinator
13 years
Gordon Sunnarborg Parts Manager
36 years
Kyle Kinseth Parts Sales
34 years
Al Telschaw Parts Sales
41 years
Nathan Schelle Parts Sales
4 years
Chris Pedersen Parts Sales
31 years
Jill Mischke Warranty Administrator
17 years
Sandy Richardson Service Coordinator
16 years
Mary Jo Hinds Cashier 5 years
Jan Wendland Cashier/Accounts
10 years
Jason Boll Senior Master Certified Technician
8 years
Bob Jondle Master Certified
Toyota Technician 23 years
Jim Purkapile Service Technician
16 years
Josh Griffin Service Technician
6 years
Tracy Ernst Sales Manager
19 years
Tom Walters Pre-Owned Manager
35 years
Dan Ford Business Manager/Finance
8 years
George Bartlett Business Manager/Finance
12 years
Steve Powell Sales Consultant
19 years
Wyman Kjolsing Sales Consultant
21 years
Paul Reisner Sales Consultant
16 years
Blaine Lensch Sales Consultant
14 years
Tim McGuire Sales Consultant
42 years
Kevin Knutson Body Shop Technician
7 years
Kalan Guthrie Body Shop Technician
1 year
Derick Collins Quick Lane Technician
4 years
Sean Wegener Service Coordinator
6 years
Jon Cory Detail Specialist
6 years
Cory Wolfe Quick Lane Manager
10 years
Gordy Trueslen Quick Lane Technician
32 years
Shawn Link Detail Specialist
1 year
Jesse Beekman Sales Consultant
7 years
Annette Werner Title Clerk 11 years
Lisa Steffen Human Resources
13 years
Nancy Lombard Controller 13 years
Kerk Friday Sales Consultant
2 year
Terry Miller Sales Consultant
7 years
Terry Willardson Sales Consultant
2 year
Dave Kalous Senior Master
Certified Technician 34 years
Kevin Crouse Quick Lane Technician
9 years
Dan Olson Senior Master
Certified Technician 17 years
Joe Miller Senior Master
Certified Technician 34 years
Elijah Ochoa Quick Lane Technician
4 years
Mitch Corell Sales Consultant
1 year
Melissa Hanson Receptionist/
Accounting Assistant 1 year
Jordan Richardson Body Shop Technician
1 year
Geno Kiley Body Shop Technician
7 years
Rick West Service Technician
5 years
Gary Hingeley Service Technician
6 years
Joe Peterson Quick Lane Advisor
1 year
Tyler Lacina Quick Lane Technician
1 year
Ken Mohr Quick Lane Technician
1 year
Jarod Gross Quick Lane Technician
1 year
Mark McGuire Detail Specialist
1 year
Barrett Rolph Quick Lane Technician
1 year
Corey McMullen Quick Lane Technician
1 year
Bob Selhaver, Jr Quick Lane Technician
1 year
Cody Schumacher Detail Manager
2 years
by North Central Iowa Messengerland Readers
NEW CAR DEALER and OIL CHANGE CENTER
4 Years in a Row!
VOTED BEST
Thank You.
Dave Scott General Manager Abra Auto Body
23 years
We really appreciate your business and friendship over the years.
12H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
+ +
Russell Sweet, Owner/ Authorized Hearing Instrument
Specialist
Professional Hearing Solutions Offers
FREE Hearing Tests If you’ve noticed... • You hear...but don’t correctly understand
what’s said to you. • That you feel that people are mumbling
when they talk. • You need the TV much louder than others
in your family.
Suzanne Yoder, Hearing Instrument
Specialist
We can help!
“ W h e n y o u t r e a t p e o p l e r i g h t , w o r d g e t s a r o u n d .
C o m e e x p e r i e n c e t h e d i f f e r e n c e ! ”
Call to schedule your appointment today.
515-955-2985 800-427-1030
328 South 25th St. Fort Dodge (Across from Ja-Mars)
CCuussttoomm DDeessiiggnneedd CCuussttoomm DDeessiiggnneedd Custom Designed MMeemmoorriiaallss MMeemmoorriiaallss Memorials
Since 1921 1914 N. 15th St., Fort Dodge, IA 50501
Phone: 515-576-7233 Toll Free: 1-888-455-4367
Let us create your loved Let us create your loved one’s piece of art that one’s piece of art that
reflects the gracious life reflects the gracious life they lived. they lived.
It’s about you, It’s about you, your life, your life,
Your memories.. Your memories.. Your family. Your family.
www.kjgems.com
INJECT ION TECH NOLOGY DIESEL SERVICE
COMPLETE FUEL INJECTION SERVICE FARM - INDUSTRIAL - AUTOMOTIVE
• ZEXEL • DELPHI
D ENNIS S TONEKING [email protected]
ALSO TURBOCHARGER SALE AND SERVICE 1001 8TH ST. N. NORTHWOOD, IA 50459
PH. 641-324-2010
• DENSO • AMERICAN BOSCH
• ROBERT BOSCH • STANADYNE
We Have Aglime TRUCK REPAIR • AGLIME ROAD STONE • CATWORK JOHN’S AG SERVICE
Hwy. 3 East • Humboldt 515-332-1883
• C REOSITE, C.C.A. POSTS & POLES • RED BRAND PRODUCTS • GATES & HAY RINGS • VINYL & GUARD RAIL FENCING • CONT. PIPE FENCE • S.I. FEEDERS
• MIROFOUNT WATERERS • GALLAGHER PRODUCTS • BALE WRAP & TWINE • PALCO LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT • RANGELAND MINERAL TUBS
Fence Construction and Materials TOM & NITA FAGAN
S u n d s C u s t o m F e n c i n g
3185 Hwy. 25 • Casey, Iowa 50048 Phone 641-746-2284 • 1-877-611-3692
10 S. 25TH ST ~ FORT DODGE, IA ~ 515.576.3158 ~ 866.576.3158
All rebates & discounts to dealer. Not all customers will qualify for all discounts. See dealer for complete details. O�ers end 2/29/12.
2012 BUICK LACROSSE
Stk# 2148F
MSRP $33,390Rebate $1500Loyalty O�er $500Auto Show BONUS $500Presidents Day BONUS $500
As low as
PROGRESS 2012
By LARRY KERSHNERFarm News news editorFarmland values in 2011
continued a meteoric rise,increasing at rates not seensince the 1970s. A pair of2011 land value surveys re-ported a 25 percent jump inIowa ag land from March2010 to March 2011 and a32 percent rise from De-cember 2010 to December2011.
Soaring farmland valueshave led people to askwhether or not farmland ison a speculative “bubble”and due for a price correc-tion as occurred in the mid-1980s.
Mike Duffy, an IowaState University ag econo-mist, who conducts his ownannual land value survey,said that by comparing con-ditions four decades ago andnow, he does not think a1980-like crisis is loomingfor agriculture.
He said the rapid increas-es in land values during the1970s were followed byconsiderable personal, fi-nancial and social disruptionwhen the values collapsed inthe 1980s.
“The 1970s was a trulyunique and unprecedentedperiod in U.S. history,”Duffy wrote in an April2011 evaluation. “Startingin 1972, real farmland val-ues in the United States rosemore than 7 percent a yearfor 10 consecutive years. Incomparison, real land valuesin the United States rose 3.2percent annually from 2005to 2010 as farmland valuesfell during the recession in2009”
Since April 2010, farm-land values have rebounded,yet questions regarding thesustainability of these ele-
vated land values remain.Duffy said there are strongeconomic fundamentals —rising farm incomes and a
limited number of farms forsale — appear to be drivingrecent land price gains.
In addition, much of the
farmland is owned by olderfarmers with little intent tosell. Farmland values willbe shaped by economic re-
turns and the highly volatilemarkets make the futurepath of farmland values un-certain.
In short, Duffy said he’scertain there is not a bubble
Farmland values continue record rise
iowa State university released these statistics on 2011 iowa land values.
-Submitted photo
iSu economist duffy: ‘i’m not thinking there’s a bubble’
S ee IS U, Page 14H
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 13h
waiting to burst. He saidthe gains are solid andfarmers are paying mostlycash for their high-pricedacres with the goal of long-term ownership, not asspeculators.
“They’re financing verylittle of it,” Duffy said.“That’s why I’m not think-ing there’s bubble.”
Still, Duffy thinks farmland values may be show-ing a trend of leveling off.“Prices are not quite asgood and input costs arehigher,” he said.
O’Brien, Sioux leadIowa
O’Brien County leadsthe state on average farmland values at $9,513 peracre as of December 2011,up from the $7,148 a yearearlier. Its neighbor, SiouxCounty, is a close second at$9,419 per acre in 2011,up from $7,048 in 2010.Both counties led the stateduring 2010.
Bruce Brock, of BrockAuction Co., based in LeMars, credits those coun-ties’ leading roles to their
diversity of crop land andopportunities for market-ing.
He said biofuel plants,plus cattle, swine, poultry“and a large dairy industry”offers northwest Iowa graingrowers a wide choice ofmarkets.
“They have a lot of op-tions,” Brock said, and ithas led to a build up of eq-uity with profitable mar-kets and that’s being putback into the land.”
Driving values upThere are several rea-
sons for today’s rising land
values, said Duffy and oth-er regional land brokers.
Most are based on soundeconomic fundamentals.Over the past decade, realnet farm incomes have av-eraged almost $70 billionper year, more than 10 per-cent above the 1990s aver-age. The expectation is thatfarm incomes will remainhigh for at least the nextyear or so. In addition,farm wealth is on the rise asfarmers appear to not beusing as much debt as wasused in the 1970s.
In fact, it appears thatfarmers are using at least aportion of the newfound in-come and wealth to pay offdebt at a near record pace,Duffy said. “Further evi-dence that market disci-pline still exists is thatfarmland values fell whenfarm incomes dropped in2009.
“In the 1970s, farmlandvalues continued to riseeven as farm income con-tracted.”
Another driver of values,Duffy said, is that fewerfarms and acres are comingto the auction block, whiledemand for land remainshigh.
“It’s a strong market,”said Bob Flynn, of FlynnReal Estate Inc., of Web-ster City. “They aren’tmaking any more (farmacres), but the demand forthem is there.” He said a re-cent local sale saw a farmerspend $7,500 for each of250 acres..
If commodity prices stayup, Flynn said, he expectsto see land values continueto rise.
“But if (commodityprices) comes down, itwon’t happen in 2012.”When it does, he said of agland, “it recovers fasterthan residential.”
Flynn said the HamiltonCounty area is a solidfarm land market and saidthe local economy bene-fits from a healthy agri-culture.
“It pulls us all up a littlebit,” he said. “Farmers arebuying trucks and jewelry.”
+ +
FREE DELIVERYQuality Home Furnishings
STORE HOURS:Monday-Thursday 9:00-5:30Friday 9:00-8:00Saturday 9:00-5:00
4 Floors
515-448-3413www.christfurniture.com
EAGLE GROVE
1948 201264th
© 2012 LA-Z-BOY
o
EAGLwwww.
Saturday 9:00-5:00Friday 9:00-8:00Monday-Thursday 9:00-5:30
ORE HOURS:ST
Quality Home Furnishings
.christfurniture.co
YFREE DELIVER
om515-448-3413
4 Floors
E GROVEEAGL
64th
E GROVE
20121948
210 South 25 th Street • Fort Dodge, IA • (515) 955-8200 H OURS: Mon. - Thur. 9 am - 7 pm • Fri. 9 am - 6 pm • Sat. 9 am - 5 pm • Sun. 12 pm - 5 pm
SS hh oo ee FF ii tt CC oo mm pp aa nn yy S h o e F i t C o m p a n y
Durable, Comfortable Boots
The Ultimate Stability Walking Shoe
S t o p i n t o d a y a n d t r y o n a p a i r !
F o r t D o d g e
F o r t D o d g e I o w a . o r g / A i r p o r t
Delta.com
Regional Airport
�
Delicious Lunches
�������������������������!�����"��������������������$� �!���#��������������$�����������������
��������� ������$������������������������������ ��!�!�"�!%�#���"
��!%�������������� ��������&���#$!��&
����������������� ���������
PROGRESS 2012
ISU Continued from Page 13H
At $9,513 per Acre AverAge, fArm lAnd in o’brien County leads the state for the second year running. Last year, the county’s agland averaged $7,148. one land broker said the diversity of ag enterprises in the county, has made crop production acres highly valuable.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Robyn Kruger
“It pulls us all up
a little bit.
Farmers are
buying trucks
and jewelry.”—Bob Flynn
Flynn Real Estate
S ee IS U, Page 15H
14H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
+ +
Call 1-888-386-9680 to see if you qualify! www.BASEonline.com
Helping Farmers Across Iowa Keep More of Their Hard Earned Money
BASE® HRA provides an additional $4000 in tax savings to qualifying farmers.
Do any of the following statements apply to you?
Do you own your farm or business? Does your spouse help you with the farm or business? Do you have to pay for any health insurance premiums or
out-of-pocket healthcare costs?
If you said yes, then you could qualify for a BASE HRA.
$4000 In Additional Tax Savings
BASE® provides tax advantaged bene�t plans for farmers and business owners across the country, including the BASE® HRA®, BASE® 125 Cafeteria Plan and BASE® HRA+.
A BASE® HR RA pr
He p n g elping
n additional $4000 vides a
H
o os s g a rm me rs A oss
n additional $4000
crcrarmers A Fg F
I wa Kee ep p M o e e eep Mora Kwwoo I
e of The ir H ard Ea d Ea heir HarTe of
on yy a rn e d Mo y e arned Mone
et healthcpockoff out-y fo pae tvou hao y D
our spouse help yoes y Dour farm or business?wn you oo y D
wing staolloy of the f folloo anD
in tax savings tvides aoA prBASE® HR RA pr
osts?e caret healthcemiums or e prancy health insuror any f
ou with the farm or business?our spouse help your farm or business?
ou?o yts apply tementwing sta
rmersaying f faaliffying fo quin tax savings tn additional $4000 vides a
emiums or
ou with the farm or business?
.rmersn additional $4000
ASE® HR, including the Bytrounthe ctaged bene�t plans for faranvvides tax adoASE® prB
, then yesou said yIf y
et healthc-pockoff- out-
ia Plan and BerafetASE® 125 CA®, BASE® HRmers and business otaged bene�t plans for far
®or a BASEould qualify fou c, then y
osts?e caret healthc
A+.ASE® HRia Plan and Boss wners acrmers and business o
A. HR
on Hwy 69 in Ankeny 11--551155--996644--11442244 oorr 11--880000--444444--11442244 1-515-964-1424 or 1-800-444-1424
HHOOUURRSS:: MMoonn..--FFrrii.. 88--66;; SSaatt.. 99--22 HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 8-6; Sat. 9-2
Providing Family Fun for 41 Years
www.imperialrvcenter.com
Family Owned for 41 Years MMaakkiinngg FFaammiillyy MMeemmoorriieess TToo LLaasstt AA LLiiffeettiimmee!! Making Family Memories To Last A Lifetime!
� Large Selection of New Trailers & 5th Wheels
� Large Selection of Pre-Owned Trailers & 5th Wheels
� Large Selection of Parts & Supplies
� Excellent Service
GRAHAM TRAILERS
Enclosed & Open Race Car & Utility Trailers, Trucks &
Truck Conversions
www.grahamtrailers.8m.com [email protected]
800.238.8314 IDA GROVE, IA
LoadTrail HYD Dovetail Trailer 30’ and up in length, 9’ hyd tail, Low Pro or Standard Height, axle choices, we can set one up to meet your needs.
2010 TYM 433 43 hp open station, MFWD, shuttle shift, loader with skid steer quick attach bucket, only 185 hrs one owner, traded for one with cab, very nice.
Fuel Trailers, 600 gal and 960 gal units, 25 gpm pump, 30’ of 1” hose, 40 gpm filtration 600 gal units $5,450
John Deere 3010 gas, 8 sp syncro, wide front, new rubber, loader with fender mount controls, starts and runs good, nice 2 owner tractor
TYM 1003 MFWD 100 hp MFWD Power Shuttle/Partial Power Shift Trans, triple hyd, Cab, air ,heat, cd stereo, loaded, 5 yr warranty
PROGRESS 2012
Some instabilityStill, some of the recent
increases may be due tomore transitory factors thatare not sustainable, Duffysaid.
“For example, we are inunprecedented times withrespect to the monetary andfiscal policies,” he said.
“These policy decisionswere made as a result of thesevere economic downturn.But, the policies encourageborrowing and they also in-crease the attractiveness ofmore risky investments.
”In the case of interestrates, in the fourth quarterof 2010, both the Chicagoand the Kansas City Feder-al Reserve banks reportedthe lowest real estate inter-est rates in their data series.Lower interest rates makeborrowing cheaper, but al-so decrease the rate of re-turn in alternative invest-ments. “Lower returns else-where in the economy in-crease the demand forfarmland,” Duffy said.
The U.S. Department ofAgriculture reports that in-flation-adjusted farm realestate debt has declinedsince 2008. When farmersdo take on new debt, theredoesn’t appear to be an ir-rational exuberance, Duffysaid.
“With interest rateslow,” he said, “the demandfor farmland exceeding thesupply of land for sale andwith strong commodityprices, land values shouldcontinue to increase or atleast maintain their currentlevels for the foreseeablefuture.”
Who’s buying?Another issue surround-
ing land values is thechanging nature of owner-ship. Who owns the farmwill influence how it willbe farmed, Duffy said.There are two trends inland ownership that war-rant consideration —who’s buying and the agingland owner population.
Midwest data shows thatexisting farmers remain theprimary purchasers offarmland, Duffy wrote in
2011. “As a result, farm-land is purchased primarilyby existing farmers. InIowa, during 2010, 70 per-cent of the land was pur-chased by existing farmers.In Illinois, 56 percent ofthe buyers were farmers.Other states show similartrends.
”Although farmers rep-resent the majority of pur-chasers in many states, therelative percentage of landbought by farmers had de-creased, while investor pur-chases have increased pres-suring the market.
Brock said that non-farminvestors “know what we(in Iowa) have here.”Stocks and bonds interestrates are not as attractive asIowa farmland.
“With the worldwide
growth in food demand,”Brock said, “and instantcommunications, the worldknows we can produce pro-tein. And the world is de-manding that now.”
Brock thinks that landvalues will continue to fol-low commodity prices. “Ifthere’s a big uptick in com-modity prices, there couldbe some increases,” hesaid.
Even so, he believes itwould be unhealthy for theag economy if valuesjumped 30 percent annual-ly.
From 2000 to 2007, thepercentage of Iowa farm-land purchased by farmersfell below 60 percent, com-pared to 80 percent in theearly 1990s. At the sametime, the percentage of land
purchased by what wereclassified as investors rosefrom less than 20 percentin the early 1990s to al-most 40 percent in the mid-2000s.
“There does not appearto be any increase in theamount of land being soldon the market,” Duffy said,“at least not in Iowa.
“The preliminary re-sults of the lead study ex-amining Iowa land salesdata shows 1.5 percent ofIowa’s cropland was soldin 1990, 1.9 percent wassold in 2005, 1.3 percentsold in 2009 and 1.4 per-cent sold in 2010,” hesaid.
These numbers, Duffysaid, led him to think thatdespite sharp land value in-creases in 2007, rising land
values had little effect onIowa landowner plans.When asked about the im-pact of rising land values,80 percent of the ownerssaid higher farmland valueswould have no impact ontheir plans regarding keep-ing or selling their land.
“Moreover, 54 percentsaid higher farmland val-ues would have no impacton land purchase plans,while another 43 percentsaid they were less likelyto buy land. Will thischange of ownership in-crease the amount of landfor sale and have a damp-ening impact on land val-ues? No one knows forsure,” Duffy said, but theevidence suggests thatthere will not be a largeincrease in the amount of
land for sale, at least notin the foreseeable future.
It appears that the aginglandowners will transferthe land primarily to theirfamilies and not gothrough the market. Whatis not known is what thenext generation of ownerswill do with the land. Theindications are that thefirst inheritors will keepthe land, but what the sub-sequent generations willdo with the land remainsto be seen.
“Some of this land (be-ing sold) is inherited and(heirs) are moving on,”Duffy said. “Sentimentalvalue has its price and theprices are starting to hit it.”
Contact Larry Kershner at(515) 573-2141, ext. 453, [email protected].
ISU Continued from Page 14H
EstimatEs of average dollar value per acre are shown for high-, medium- and low-grade farmland on nov. 11, 2011.
-Submitted graphic
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 15h
+ +
Roofing, Remodeling, Additions, Kitchen & Bathrooms, Siding, Insulations
www.rojohns.com Ph. (515) 576-6301 Email: [email protected]
Patio & Decks, 3 Season Rooms, Garages, Doors & Windows, Awnings
Roofing
Homes For 75 Years
429 1st Avenue South Fort Dodge, Iowa 50501
Fully Insured & Licensed Contractor FREE Estimates • www.CycloneSprayFoamers.com
NNEEWW!! NNEEWW!! NEW! Fort Dodge, Iowa
Jeff Nelson 515-408-3735
Ryan Nelson 515-297-2887
We now offer Blow-In Insulation
Residential • Commercial • Ag Building Insulations
with Fiberglass & Cellulose
Pocahontas Equipment Co. LLC 1400 W. Elm St.
Pocahontas, IA 50574 712-335-4522
Central Iowa Farm Store, Inc. 203 Iowa Ave. Old Hwy. 30 W.
Marshalltown, IA 50158 641-753-3996
Carroll Implement Ltd. 1001 Kossuth Ave. LuVerne, IA 50560
515-882-3261
Linde Equipment Co. 108 S. Idaho
Glidden, IA 51443 712-659-3725
Robinson Implement 2002 St. F24
Irwin, IA 51446 712-782-3171
Franken Implement & Service 2782 360th St.
Rock Valley, IA 51247 712-722-3941
Call for a Free Demo Today!
New 2012 Apache 20 series sprayers are here!
Visit us at: www.brokawsupply.com 2761 200th St., Fort Dodge (1 mi. east of F.D. on old Hwy. 20) 1-800-362-1640 Go to ETsprayers.com
Call Brokaw Supply Company today about New Special Program Discounts!
www.brokawsupply.com 2761 200th St., Fort Dodge 1-800-362-1640
VAN KOOTEN AG SERVICE 1160 280th St., Callender, IA 50523 515-548-3630 or 515-570-5837
RReeaapp tthhee bbeenneeffiittss ooff aa RReeaapp tthhee bbeenneeffiittss ooff aa Reap the benefits of a ssmmooootthh rruunnnniinngg ssmmooootthh rruunnnniinngg smooth running
ooppeerraattiioonn.. ooppeerraattiioonn.. operation. SSeeee uuss ffoorr yyoouurr ffaarrmm SSeeee uuss ffoorr yyoouurr ffaarrmm See us for your farm
nneeeeddss.. nneeeeddss.. needs. • Agri-SC Soil Treatment • NA-Churs Alpine Solutions Liquid Fertilizer • AMSOIL - BVK Synthetic Lubes • Demco Products - Sprayers & Fertilizer Equipment & Wagons • Mauer Mfg - Header Transports • Agri-Speed Quick Hitch
PROGRESS 2012
Corn oil: A win-win situation
By CLAYTON RYEFarm News staff writerMASON CITY — When
an ethanol plant has extract-ed what it needs from eachbushel of corn for theethanol process, there’s 18pounds remaining fromthose 55 pounds that com-prised the bushel.
Those 18 pounds arecalled distiller’s driedgrains, or simplyDDGs.Within those 18pounds is a half-pound ofcorn oil. Until recently thecorn oil was left in theDDGs where it was a com-ponent of livestock feed,the end use of DDGs.In re-cent months ethanol plants
have begun removing thecorn oil and selling it as acompetitor to soybean andpalm oil. It has found favorwith biodiesel plants be-cause the oil represents asteady and abundant stockat a competitive price.Ethanol plants are seekingadditional sources of in-come as the industry be-comes a mature businesswith plants buying corn andselling ethanol andDDGs.Profitability ofethanol plants was strongwhen 2011 ended, but mar-gins have become paperthin in 2012.
Trains and Trucks at the entrance of Golden Grain energyís plant entrance provide a steady streamof traffic throughout the day.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Clayton Rye
New revenue forethanol, affordablestock for biodiesel
S ee OIL, Page 17H
16H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
“Ethanol profitability isvery low right now,” saidWalt Wendland, chief ex-ecutive officer of GoldenGrain Energy, an ethanolplant in Mason City.
Wendland identified thereasons for the sudden dropin ethanol plant profitabili-ty as:
∫ Corn prices rebound-ed in December whileethanol prices did not.
∫ Export markets van-ished.
∫ Gasoline demandtrended lower with domes-tic ethanol demand movingdown accordingly.
∫ Ethanol inventoriesincreased hitting what isknown as the “blender’swall” when supplies equaldemand at the 10 percentblend.
“We have record inven-tories of ethanol. We needE15 and need it now,” saidWendland
With the expiration ofthe blender’s credit, no onewanted to own ethanol, hesaid.
The ethanol industry’sgross margins as 2011ended in December was$1.30 per gallon, Wend-land said, the best marginsince 2005.
Weeks later, in earlyFebruary, Wendland saidGolden Grain’s gross mar-gin is 22 cents a gall —even lower than the low of2008.
Corn oil sales are adding5 to 6 cents of those 22cents of margin for GoldenGrain Energy.
“In these economictimes, corn oil can be thedifference between profitand loss,” Wendland said.He estimated that corn oiladds an extra 15 cents ofvalue to a bushel of corn.
Golden Grain Energyhas been extracting corn oilfrom DDGs since spring2009.
The equipment to re-move corn oil was placedin the syrup stream and canbe turned off or on withoutinterrupting the flow of theethanol process, he ex-plained.
Golden Grain Energy
+ +
W E B S T E R C O U N T Y
H E A L T H D E P A R T M E N T
W W W . W E B S T E R C O U N T Y I A . O R G
Jamie Saxton hawk-i Coordinator
Free or low-cost health care coverage for kids.
Call Jamie today to discuss the hawk-i program.
Tricia Nichols, RN
A family of 4 can earn up to $67,050 and pay no more than $40.00 a month.
Some of the services covered under hawk-i: Doctor Visits, Emergencies, Mental Health & Substance Abuse Care,
Hospital Care, Surgery, Chiropractic Care, Prescriptions, Dental Care, Vision Exams,Well-child Visits, & Vaccines.
hawk-i offers dental only coverage too! hawk-i offers dental only coverage for children who have health insurance but
may not have dental coverage!
To qualify for hawk-i, a child must: • Be under 19 years old • Be uninsured • Be ineligible for Medicaid • Be a citizen or a lawful
permanent resident alien • Meet income guidelines
Healthy Kids are Iowa’s Future
Family Found ati ons
• FREE family support service available to all pregnant women and families with children up to age 5 in Webster County. Offering support & education on pregnancy, infant & toddler growth & development, & family life skills.
• The program offers visitation services at your home from a variety of different people including a Register Nurse, Dental Hygienist, Dietician, Social Worker, & a Family Support Worker.
Building your families future ...at home!
We are here to help you be a healthy happy family!
Please contact Tricia Nichols at 515-573-4107 for more information
5 1 5 - 5 7 3 - 4 1 0 7 F A X : 5 1 5 - 9 5 5 - 1 6 8 2
3 3
0 1 S T A V E . N
. , F O R T D O D G E
BERRY HEARING AID & AUDIOLOGY CENTERS Fort Dodge’s Oldest Established Hearing Aid Center
573-7821 or 1-800-728-7821 • 9 N 18th St. Fort Dodge
At Berry Hearing Aid & Audiology Centers, we believe that our job isn’t finished until our patients’ lives are improved. Our staff of professionals have many years of experience in bringing the best possible hearing care to the Fort Dodge area. We will work with you to find the hearing solution that best fits your individual needs and budget. Call us today and you will see that visiting Berry Hearing Aid & Audiology Centers, is the best way to take the first step toward improved hearing.
1949-2012 C ELEBRATING 63 Y EARS
with offices in Humboldt, Manson, Pocahontas and Lake City
IItt’’ss
ttiimm
ee.. IItt
’’ss ttii
mmee..
It’s
tim
e.
Cornwell, Frideres, Maher & Associates, P.L.C.
515-955-4805 714 14th Ave. North • Fort Dodge (Across from Expo Pool)
It’s that easy.
TAX Season is here.
Call to set up an appointment
Cornwell, Frideres, Maher, & Associates, P.L.C. provides a wide range of services to individuals and businesses in a variety of industries. At Cornwell, Frideres, Maher, & Associates, P.L.C., we strive to meet each client’s specific needs in planning for the future and achieving their goals in an ever-changing financial and regulatory environment.
PROGRESS 2012
Oil Continued from Page 16H
Deb ausTin, a golden grain energy employee, examines one of the two centrifuges placed in the ethanol stream to remove corn oil.
-Messenger/Farm News photos by Clayton Rye
The Manly TerMinal handles various commodities from ethanol to acid and more. railcars are both loaded and unloaded at sev-eral sites at the facility.
S ee OIL, Page 18H
friday, feb . 24, 2011/Sunday, feb. 26, 2011 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 17h
produces 2 million poundsof corn oil monthly, whichis approximately 25,000gallons, and can store up to40,000 gallons of corn oilon its site.
Wendland foresees thepotential for much of Gold-en Grain’s corn oil travel-ing a few miles away toSoy Energy LLC, whichpurchased and reopened in2011, the former FreedomFuels plant.
After sitting idle, theplant was bought by agroup from Marcus, innorthwest Iowa, and re-cently reopened as Soy En-ergy LLC.
At capacity, Wendlandsaid, Soy Energy LLC willuse 87,000 gallons of oildaily from various sourcesin the manufacturing ofbiodiesel.
One of POET Biorefin-ing’s 27 locations is 20miles northwest of Mason
City at Hanlontown. KellyHansen is plant manager.
Hansen said the equip-ment to remove corn oilwas installed last fall andafter two months of con-struction, the plant begancollecting corn oil on Dec.19, 2011, and its first semiload of corn oil wasshipped two days later..
Hanlontown was thefifth POET facility to ex-tract corn oil from DDGs.Eventually, all 27 POETfacilities, scattered acrossseven states, will beequipped for corn oil re-trieval, Hansen said.
The equipment for cornoil collection is a “fairlysmall footprint” in the plantand a “small expense inconstruction,” he said.“The only other require-ment was extensive train-ing for the plant operatorsto maintain quality.
“It was a tremendousamount of training for theoperators as it is a very au-tomated process.”
POET Biorefining uses aslightly different technolo-gy in corn oil removal, re-lying on enzymes rather
than using heat, giving itscorn oil a reddish tint. PO-ET markets its corn oil un-der the brand name Voila.
Hansen said POET pro-motes corn oil as “renew-
+ +
T I M E F F O R A N N EW EW OO L LOOKK?St Sto to p & s e e B
yo o u r fa a b r i c & d e s i g n s p e
S h e c a n c o o r d i n a at
B e l i n d a , & i nt te te r i o r
e c i a l i st st. h e l p
te te yo o u r c o o r d i n at t w wh o l e ro o o m
te te y o u r m d e c o r. r r.
No w wa l k U p ph o ol ls st te ry, y rrrt th e C a n d i c e Ol ls so n C o l ll le c c ct ti io n
HOME FURNISHINGSHOME FURNISHINGS
REGIO
NA
L RECYCLING
ACCEPTABLE Clothing
Plastic Containers Metal Cans, Foil Glass-Clear, Brown Newsprint & Inserts Corrugated Cardboard Junk Mail Magazines & Cereal Boxes Brown Paper Bags Plastic Bags/Shrink Wrap
NOT ACCEPTABLE Styrofoam Aerosol Cans Motor Oil Containers Window Glass Light Bulbs
2150 South 22nd Street Fort Dodge, IA 50501 1-800-582-4379 955-2781
Iowa’s #1 Ag BankOur seventh year!
Member FDIC www.unitedbk.com
1608 1st Ave. S.Fort Dodge, Iowa515-576-5111
PROGRESS 2012
Oil Continued from Page 17H
Walt Wendland is president and chief executive officer of Golden Grain energy of mason City.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Clayton Rye
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. – POET is upping its stake in thedairy feed market with the introduction of Dakota GoldLow Fat dried distiller’s grains with solubles, which re-search is showing can be fed to dairy cattle at a higher in-clusion rate than traditional DDGS.
Dakota Gold Low Fat DDGS have a 5 percent fat content,which allows for higher inclusion rates in dairy cows. It is anew opportunity for dairy operations that have had to limitDDGS use in the past because DDGS’ fat content can causemilk fat depression issues, said Dr. Kip Karges, technicalservices and research director at POET Nutrition.
“Dairy operations can feed more low-fat DDGS to theirlivestock by using Dakota Gold Low Fat,” Karges said.“That will allow for optimum milk production while low-ering ration cost.”
Low-fat distillers
grains target
dairy market
S ee OIL Page 19H
S ee DAIRY, Page 19H
18H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
Follow Us! #FarmNewsIA
+ +
Linde Equipment Co. 108 S. Idaho
Glidden, IA 51443 712-659-3725
Pocahontas Equipment Co. LLC 1400 W. Elm St.
Pocahontas, IA 50574 712-335-4522
Franken Implement & Service 2782 360th St.
Rock Valley, IA 51247 712-722-3941
Robinson Implement 2002 St. F24
Irwin, IA 51446 712-782-3171
metal recycling W E W A N T Y O U R J U N K !
For a FREE price quote, give Ron or Shannon a Call today ( 5 1 5 ) 5 7 3 - 5 9 0 4
2120 South 11th Street • Fort Dodge
Plus We Buy Tin, Radiators, Scrap Iron and automobiles.
On-site Farm Clean Up of Farm Machinery, Combines & Grain Bins.
17995 Iris Avenue • Carroll, IA 51401 Watts: 800-798-5421 • Fax: 712-792-5910 • Phone: 712-792-5424
K OSTER G RINDING , I NC . We offer the following services:
Hay Grinding Cornstalk Grinding Corn Grinding Corn Cob Grinding
Office Hours: Mon-Fri • 7am-5pm Sat • 7am-12 Noon
Call Trudy today to schedule your appointment 800-798-5421
www.quandtautosalvage.com We are DNR licensed to take appliances for a small fee. Gary, Steve & Tom Quandt Owners 712-792-9204 IA Watts: 800-522-1903
OVER 1,000 CARS & LIGHT TRUCKS WITH QUALITY USED
PARTS.
BUYERS & PROCESSORS
OF SCRAP IRON
& METALS.
HHwwyy.. 3300 WW..,, CCaarrrroollll,, IIAA 5511440011 Hwy. 30 W., Carroll, IA 51401
QQuuaannddtt AAuuttoo SSaallvvaaggee IInncc.. Quandt Auto Salvage Inc.
AAgg LLiimmee •• RRoocckk •• SSaanndd •• GGrraavveell Ag Lime • Rock • Sand • Gravel
We offer a complete service of We offer a complete service of bbuuyyiinngg and sseelllliinngg bbuuyyiinngg and sseelllliinngg buying selling AALLLL classes and AALLLL classes and ALL weights of hhooggss weights of hhooggss hogs
������������������ ���������������������������������
Skid Steer AttachmentsHigh Quality – Low Price
Farmer to Farmer 98 Years on the Same Farm Over 20 Years in Business
Visit our website for specs and prices
www.lackender-fab.com 800-498-8032 Iowa City, IA
PROGRESS 2012
able energy from a renew-able source, the DDGs.”
The removal of the oilalters the quality of DDGsas livestock feed, Hansensaid, lowering fat content.Dairy cattle fare better withthe lower fat content feed,Hansen said.
POET has the capabilityto tailor its DDGs to cus-tomer specifications on fatcontent, according towhether it will be fed tocattle, hogs or poultry.
The bulk of POET’s cornoil is sold to the biodieselmarket.
POET Biorefining islooking to the future withfurther improvements in itscorn oil technology and hasplans to produce a food-grade quality of corn oil.
Once loaded onto semitrucks, much of the corn oilfrom Golden Grain Energyand POET’s Hanlontownfacility ends up at the Man-ly Terminal where it isloaded on rail cars.
The Manly Terminal is
just north of Manly, inWorth County, 10 milesnorth of Mason City and 10miles east of Hanlontown.Its president is Lee Kiewi-et.
Kiewiet said Manly Ter-minal loads rail cars withcorn oil at the rate of 20 to75 cars a month, with 50being an average monthlyrate.
He anticipates that Man-ly Terminal will eventuallybe loading railcars withcorn oil at the rate of 100cars per month.
Corn oil is brought in tothe Manly Terminal fromethanol plants within a150-mile radius of Manly.
Once loaded with cornoil, the railcars are destinedfor the state of Mississippi,and points along the GulfCoast, where the majorityof it goes to biodiesel man-ufacture and the rest fed tolivestock, said Kiewiet.
Contact Clayton rye at
Oil Continued from Page 18H
With volatile ingredientcosts, Dakota Gold LFDDGS are one of the mostcost-effective feed ingre-dients available today, re-placing more expensiveingredient sources in dairyrations without giving upperformance.
By feeding higher inclu-sion rates one could seesavings approaching or insome cases exceeding 10cents per cow per day —this is real money returnedto the producers’ bottomline, Karges said.
General research intothe subject has shown thatincreasing concentrationsof low-fat DDGS havecorrelated to increasing ef-ficiency of milk produc-tion.
“When feeding regularDDGS you really have tolimit feeds with high lev-els of unsaturated fattyacids and may cause limi-tations in formulation pro-cedures,” said PaulKononoff, a dairy nutri-
tion specialist at the Uni-versity of Nebraska in Lin-coln. “The reduction in fatin low fat DDGS allowsfor higher inclusion of theco-product without theworries of milk fat depres-sion.”
Kononoff and others atthe University of Nebraskahave performed trials forPOET and will be releas-ing data to the public thissummer.
A deliberate researchand development processwas followed in bringingDakota Gold Low FatDDGS to market. The op-tion is possible because ofPOET’s Voila corn oilproduction, which re-moves oil from DDGS.The resulting product willcontinued to be researchedto find new ways in whichDDGS, the second-largesttraded feed ingredient onthe market, can be used toproduce protein for humanconsumption, a POET re-lease said.
Dairy Continued from Page 18H
Golden Grain enerGy is a 100-million-gallonper year ethanol plant located on the south side ofmason City. it is owned by 800 members and pur-chases 40 million bushels of corn annually.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Clayton Rye
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 19h
By DAVE DEVALOISFarm News staff writerDALLAS CENTER —
From Pioneer Hi-Bred’s per-spective, the new 50,000-square-foot research centernearing completion here isjust another step in the hybridseed giant’s goal of helpingto feed the booming popula-tion of the world.
Pioneer’s new corn breed-ing and corn and soybeanproduct testing at its new re-search center will add an as-yet-undetermined number ofjobs to the 160 employees al-ready at the company’s cam-pus of buildings in DallasCenter, where Pioneer hashad operations since 2004.
The new center is expectedto open later this spring. TheDallas Center location cur-rently houses a global molec-ular marker lab, laser-assistedseed selection, and corn andsoybean product develop-ment.
The new Dallas Center re-search facility is one of the
many investments Pioneer ismaking to expand its researchin Iowa. The company isbuilding a new $40 millionresearch facility in Johnstonthat will include space for400 new positions and is inthe midst of a $32 milliongreenhouse and research fa-cility renovation and expan-sion project that will includespace for 100 new full-timepositions by the end of 2014.
Improvement in corn hy-brids will be targeted forfarmers in western and cen-tral Iowa, eastern Nebraskaand northwest Missouri, ac-cording to a Pioneer release.
“As we have expanded thesize and scope of our productdevelopment efforts, we haveoutgrown the size of our ex-isting facility,” John Soper,Pioneer’s vice president ofcrop genetics research anddevelopment, said in a re-lease. “This expansion willenable us to develop im-proved products from a state-of-the-art, technology-en-
abled facility.”While these numbers are
certainly significant for Dal-las Center and its tax base,
the facility is one small steptoward fulfilling big world-
+ +
www.kubota.com©Kubota Tractor Corporation, 2012
It Pays to Own Orange
$0 Down & 0%
A.P.R. Financing for 4 Years*
L5740
This is the year to reward yourself with long-term, low-rate financing on a Kubota L Series compact tractor. It always pays to own quality. Offer ends March 31, 2012.
Dealer NameDealer Address
Dealer City, ST ZIPDealer Phone
������� �������������������� ��� ������
���������
������� ��������������������������������������������
����������������������
����� �����������������
785-743-2820
36 YEARS OF SERVING THE CARROLL AREA
18493 Kittyhawk Ave. • Carroll, IA 51401 1-800-756-1219 • 712-792-4189 All Major Brands Of New Truck Equipment:
Boxes • Hoists • Rear Ends • Transmissions • Engines Tag Axles • Frame Alterations • Grain Trailers
www.jorgensentruck.com DAKOTA
Since 1975
The F INE T WINE C OMPANY
“We Tie Up Your Business”
FROM SEED TO FEED WE HAVE ALL YOUR HAY NEEDS • Americas Alfalfa • Millborn Grass Seeds • Baler Twine • Net Wrap • Hay Preservatives
Contact Tony or Rick 866-999-1006
712-756-4388 Alton, Iowa
NEW CAB INTERIORS
We custom cut to your needs! Quality Guaranteed! 10116 N. 1900 Road • Fairbury, IL 61739 Call for a complete Listing: (815)692-3355
PRE-CUT INSULATION KITS complete with original material, adhesive & instructions
Uncut 54 wide Roll Stock $14.50 per running foot PRE-CUT FLOOR MATS Industrial durability & superior sound proofing
• CIH 9230-9390 Complete . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $340 • AC 7000 Srs. Black Belly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $255 • Case 2394-3594 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $245 • AC 8000 Srs. Formed Headliner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $257 • AC 8000 Srs. Lower (Tan) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $215 • Ford 7700, TW10 Lwr. (Blue) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $225 • Ford Formed 7700 Headliner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $267 • JD 8100-8520 lwr/posts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $455 • JD 7200-7810 lwr/posts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $385 • JD 40, 50, 55, 2W LWR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $175 • JD 40, 50, 55, 60 posts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $60 • Versatile 835-975 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $425 • JD 30, 40, 50, 3 Part Formed Headliner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $226 • JD 30, 40, 55, 60 2W Cowl Unit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $139 • JD 6620-7720, Complete . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$345 •JD 9400-9860 Combine 3part headliner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $499
• AC 7000 Srs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $101 • Case 70 Srs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $91 • Ford 7700, TW10 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $91 • Gleaner Combine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $102
Visit our website at: www.fehrcab.com
• IH 86-88 2W . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $72 • JD 30 Srs 2W . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $82 • Steiger Srs 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $137 • Versatile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $137
Premium Seed Corn Proud To Be Farmer Owned & Operated “Buy Direct”
FOR SAVINGS ON SEED CORN COSTS
CALL NOW AND START SAVING! 11--880000--334455--77779988 1-800-345-7798
Visit us online at www.seedquest.net/premiumseed
Premium Seed, Inc. Hybrid Seed Corn
1028 130th St., P.O. Box 218 • Berwick, IL 61417 309-462-2396 • Fax 309-462-3044
• Helped thousands of farmers regain profits • Continually in top percentage of all test plots • Operated by farmers for farmers
Auto Parts Wholesale Inc.
Hampton • 621 4th St SE (641) 456-2594 • (800) 770-2594
TOM EISCHEN SALES INC. 603 Hwy. 18, Algona, IA
Phone: 515-295-3377 • Fax: 515-295-3493 Tom Cell: 515-320-3377 Tim Cell: 515-320-3431 [email protected]
Corn, soybean seed, farm chemicals, native grass seed, STIHL & TORO sales
SUNDOWNER, H&H, DOOLITTLE, PJ TRAILERS
“Home Owners and Farm Property” Highway 4 & 7 • Pomeroy, IA 50575
Phone: 712-468-2215 • 1-800-257-5037
GERMAN MUTUAL INSURANCE ASSN.
GLEN’S Tire Service Inc. GLEN
McINTIRE Owner/Manager
Hrs. M-F 7:30-5:30 Sat. 8:00-Noon 880 Highway 18 West Clear Lake, IA 50428
641-357-7117
™
PROGRESS 2012
1103 West Main Lake City, Iowa 51449
Lake City: 712-464-8911 Toll Free: 800-347-8911
Fax 712-464-8016 email: [email protected]
LAKE CITY VETERINARY SERVICE, P.C.
Arthur H. Mally D.V.M. Paul J. Armbrecht D.V.M.
Home 712-464-3211 Home 712-297-7916
NORTHWOOD LUMBER 512 West Central, Northwood, IA 641-324-1215
Pioneercontinuesexpansions
Workers are nearing completion of a new 50,000-square-foot Pioneer corn breeding research center andwarehouse in Dallas Center. The new building is expected to open late this spring and will add to the 160Pioneer workers now employed in Dallas Center.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Dave DeValois
adds new facilities in
Dallas Center, Johnston
S ee PIONEER, Page
20H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
712.852.8700 poet.com/emmetsburg
Writing the next chapter in renewable energy.
LOCAL NEWS Covering Your World One Day At A Time!
NoPo
9-1-1 Fire - Ambulance Sheriff - Police
Non-Emergency Police 573-2323 Sheriff 573-1410
www.messengernews.net
+ +
Visit Our Web Site At: www.suncomarketing.com
TheStandard safety
shield
29” coulter
Equipped with heavy duty implement hub and spindle
Dependablecoil spring protection
14 inches of quick and easy coulter
height adjustment
Maintenance-free pre-lubed bushing
Spring pre-load to keep coulter from sagging when implement is raised
Mount brackets available for most implements, including planters
THE BEST TIME TO APPLY NITROGENIS WHEN YOU PLANT!
Attention planter owners!
SUPPLIES NUTRIENTS FOR THE FIRST CRITICAL
. . . 50 GROWING DAYSMounts
On the PlanterRow Unit
Iowa RepresentativeMARKPETERSON
With Sunco’s exclusive Disc separation - Discs don’t compete for the same trash! Disc concavity and unique tooth design allow discs to turn easily while they fl ow and release residue out of the seed bed.
Straighten It Outwith
SUNCO STABILIZERS HELP PLANTERS PULL STRAIGHT
WHEN THE PLANTER TRAILS ON HILLS LIKE THIS
800-676-2146
STABILIZERS ALSO AVAILABLE FOR CULTIVATORS, BEDDERS AND STRIP TILL MACHINES
Disc concavity
Call about the NEW Floating Row Cleaners that FLOAT independently of the Planter Row Unit.
V B5 5 56 60
TW TW I N TW TW WI ST ST E R
V B5 B5 6 60
T W I N T W WI ST T E R
W WE
A AR RE T
T H E B E
E ST ST !
T
VB44440TW TW I N TW TW I ST ST E R
W WE
A AR RE T
T H E B E
E ST T !
V B 7 5 50 T
TW TW I N TW TW I ST ST E R
5 0
S
wwwww.www
oudly Man
emcsprPrroudly Manufactured in the USAin Dorchester
oudly Manufactured in the USA
eaders.
isconsin, W Wisconsin er r, W
com
in Dorchester
Phone 715.654.5200ax 715.654.5558F
isconsin, W Wisconsin er r, W
15.654.520ax 715.654.5558
THE WARRANTY YOU WANT. THE SERVICE YOU NEED. THE BRAND THAT DELIVERS BOTH.
When you need farm tire service, give us a call. We are specially trained and equipped to handle all of your on-farm and in-field repair and replacement needs.
Nothing kicks dirt like Firestone farm tires. Stop by and see for yourself!
Carroll 712-792-4378 Cedar Rapids 319-366-1608
Davenport 563-386-8470 Des Moines 515-266-7128
Dubuque 563-582-3102 Mason City 641-423-5164
Sac City 712-662-4704 Waterloo 319-232-6448
West Burlington 319-753-2895 w w w. b a u e r b u i l t . c o m
The Versatile High Horsepower Series is available in 435, 485 and 535 horsepower.
The Cummins QSX 15-litre turbocharged
working range. The 7% power bulge at 1800 RPM and 35% torque rise at 1400 RPM means these tractors are capable of
CUMMINS POWER
©2008 Buhler Versatile Inc. All rights reserved. www.versatile-ag.com
��� ���������������� ����� �
������� �������������!!!���� �������� ��������
���������
Meet the only baler with a dual-stage belt tightening system. This patented design simpli�es the bale-starting process to give you faster starts and smooth performance in a wide variety of crops and conditions. That’s why you have better-looking bales and fewer hassles in the end … another reason we call it “Super.”
*Offer valid January 10, 2012 – March 31, 2012 on selected Vermeer hay equipment. Vermeer and the Vermeer logo are trademarks of Vermeer Manufacturing Company in the U.S. and/or other countries. © 2012 Vermeer Corporation. All rights reserved.
Watch it work at vermeer.com.
0%
FOR 36 MONTHS
OR CASH BACK ON SELECT MODELS*
SEE YOUR DEALER TODAY!
IT GETS LONELY AT THE TOP.Super M-Series Balers
�� ��(������!�"� )���
��������
��� �������#'�"�� &���� �����
���� ������!!��!$���#'�"�� &
�����������
� ����� ���$��&���%��������! %��&��
����������
Box 189 • Arlington, NE 68002 (402) 478-4433 www.gnusemfg.com
� 1 1/2 to 3 yard bucket � Choose from 90” to 144”
widths � Rear mounting gives maximum
traction � Full 3 pt. mounted
GREAT FOR SNOW REMOVAL & DIRT MOVING! Out-Performs Snow Blowers
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 21h
wide goals for Pioneer.“This investment in local
product development andtesting ... is one of the manyinvestments we are makingto deliver innovative solu-tions to farmers locally andhelp to respond to the chal-lenges of feeding a growingpopulation,” Soper said.
DuPont, Pioneer’s parentcompany, announced inFebruary, that it is establish-
ing specific, measurablegoals toward improvingfood security around theworld by 2020 including:
∫ Innovation to feed theworld — investing $10 bil-lion in research and develop-ment and introducing 4,000new products centered onproducing more food; en-hancing nutrition, food andagriculture sustainabilityand safety; boosting food
availability and shelf life,and reducing waste.
∫ Improving rural com-munities. Improving thelivelihoods of at least 3 mil-lion farmers and their ruralcommunities through target-ed collaboration and invest-ments that strengthen agri-cultural systems and makefood more available, nutri-tious and culturally appro-priate. This is in addition to
the work already being doneto enhance the lives of hun-dreds of millions of farmersthrough DuPont’s normalbusiness practices.
“No one company, coun-try or non-profit organiza-tion can meet the challengeof feeding the world alone,”said Ellen Kullman,Dupont’s chief executive of-ficer. “But each of us cancommit to doing our part
and hold ourselves account-able to make a meaningfulcontribution to this globalchallenge. “Establishingspecific, measurable goalsfor what we can do to ad-dress that challenge is key toturning talk into results.”
The new Dallas Centerfacility’s contributions tothose worldwide goals startwith improving plant genet-ics for Iowa farmers.
“People look at seed cornand don’t necessarily thinkof all that goes into it,” saidJulie Kenney, a communica-tions manager for Pioneer inJohnston. “We’re workingto have better germplasm,better base genetics and bet-ter traits to protect thoseplants.” Kenney said.
Contact Dave DeValois [email protected]
+ +
11664444 222200TTHH SSTTRREEEETT •• FFOORRTT DDOODDGGEE A forest of trees cradles this unique 3 BR, 2 bath country home on 7.86 acres less than 5 miles west of Fort Dodge... wood floors, fireplaces, efficient kitchen highlighted by antique accents, wooded views from every room including the main floor FR, greenhouse w/hot tub, full basement with workshop, double attached garage and 2 sheds. Now just $199,500.
MLS # 13206 Sandy Bushman 955-7633
$199,500 $159,900
22881111 225500TTHH SSTT..,, DDUUNNCCOOMMBBEE This 5 BR brick home is located on a hard surface road 8 miles from Fort Dodge. New roof, paint, carpet, septic, & many other inprovements in 2011. 48 x 72 metal building, 34 x 50 barn with hay mound, 24 x 60 shop, 28 x 20 garage, all on 5 acres M/L. MLS # 13378 Jim Egemo 955-7636
1728 Central Ave.• Suite 1 Fort Dodge, IA 50501
955-7633 Res. 955-5598 Toll-free 1-800-798-0007
Associated, Realtors. ®
Expect the Best. TM 11 ACRES, HOUSE & BUILDINGS Century acreage for sale North of Gowrie. This is a beautiful setting eleven Acres + (some tillable), fenced pasture, many trees, out buildings, large barn and a comfortable 3 bedroom home with a large kitchen, dining room, main floor den or office, plus a two car garage. Suitable for cattle, hogs, sheep or start your own vineyard!! Xenia water to the house, plus two wells for livestock. 1744 320th St., Gowrie.
MLS # 13165 Call Donni Mitchell 955-7640
$134,900
990011 NNoorrtthh 1155tthh SSttrreeeett •• FFoorrtt DDooddggee 990011 NNoorrtthh 1155tthh SSttrreeeett •• FFoorrtt DDooddggee RReeggeennccyy RReeaa ll ttoorr ss RReeggeennccyy RReeaa ll ttoorr ss
551155--557733--33111111 $$113355,,000000 $$113355,,000000 $$113355,,000000 2030 330TH ST. GOWRIE
Hurry to see this attractive, renovated home with too many newer features to list them all. The 2 MF BRs were added on in 2006. MF laundry. Recent improvements include but are not limited to: furnace, central-air, plumbing, electrical wiring & breaker box, roof shingles, exterior doors, windows, landscaping, garage roof, kitchen laminate flooring & counters, 2nd floor carpeting, stove, bathroom, & water softener. Xenia hookup available on the road . TTiimm DDuuBBooiiss
3252 170th St 8.76 ACRES COUNTRY LIVING! 4+BR home w/lots of potential. Newer bath, finished great room, MF laundry, & corn
burning stove make this home very cozy. Home needs a little TLC but has lots of possibilities!
$94,900. MLS #13462.
Amy Seehusen Phone: 574-HOME
Cell: 571-3150 [email protected]
Acreage / Farm landFor SaleAcreage / Farm landFor Sale
Leland L. Metzger Listing - Buying - Tax Free Exchange - Lease Backs - Auctions - www.farmhomeservices.com
Farms For Sale
220 East State St. Algona, IA 50511
Office: 515-295-2401 Cell: 515-341-5402
Kossuth County • 80 Acre M/L, Portland Twp., Section 24,
79.2 Tillable Acres, 66.7 CSR Friday, March 2nd, 2012, 10:00 a.m. Auction Location: Burt Community Center Burt, IA Owners: Iva Heaney Trust
Palo Alto County • 77 Acre M/L, Fern Valley Twp., Section 14
75.1 Tillable Acres, 71.3 CSR Wednesday, March 7th, 2012, 10:00 a.m. Auction Location: New Whittemore Fire Station, Whittemore, IA Owners: Roger Struecker, Gary Struecker & Mike Struecker
Kossuth County • 73 Acre M/L, Prairie Twp., Section 7
69.67 Tillable Acres, 79.8 CSR Thursday, March 8th, 2012, 10:00 a.m. Auction Location: KC Hall 1501 E. Walnut Street, Algona, IA Owners: Eischen Family Trust
Kossuth County • 80 Acre M/L, Sherman Twp., 73.4 Cropland
3.3 Acres CRP, 76 CSR Saturday, March 3rd, 2012 , 10:00 a.m. Auction Location: Algona Public Library, Algona, IA Owners: Thill Family Farm
1122 1122 12 AACCRREESS
AACCRREESS ACRES MM//LL MM//LL M/L
11778877 225500TTHH SSTT.. MMOOOORRLLAANNDD 11778877 225500TTHH SSTT.. MMOOOORRLLAANNDD 1787 250TH ST. MOORLAND
$$226699,,000000 $$226699,,000000 $269,000
CHARMING COUNTRY HOME 12 PICTURESQUE ACRES - UPDATED & NEWER ADDITION CLEARY 42X60 HORSE BARN,
5 STALLS, FINISHED OFFICE WITH AIR, HEAT & WATER AND SO MUCH
MORE!
Troy Anderson 515-955-7465 AACC
RREE AA
GGEE
AACC
RREE AA
GGEE
AC
REA
GE
Nearly 80 Acres Of Recration Land Just 10 Minutes From Fort Dodge. Large Morton Building, W/ Water And 3/4 Bath. Formally Known As
“Camp Wanoki”
78 Acres Pasture And Timber Just East Of Coalville. Great Building Sites.
$$559955,,000000 $$559955,,000000 mmllss##1133111166
AS BEAUTIFUL AS A NATIONAL PARK
CCaallll mmee ffoorr aa ppeerrssoonnaall ttoouurr
CCrraaiigg PPaatttteerrssoonn
551155--995555--77446622
$$331199,,550000 mmllss## 1133444433
IROQUOIS, SD 888.546.2485
SIOUX CITY, IA 712.898.8418
MANKATO, MN 507.381.1413
WEB SEEDPOINT.COM
GREAT FOR WET CORN STORAGE
PROGRESS 2012
Pioneer Continued from Page 20H
22H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
+ +
John Wells Fonda, IA
712-288-6586 712-730-3780 (cell)
Jeff Arends Webster City, IA
515-832-3255
Jeff Yeager Kamrar, IA
515-835-1161 (cell) 515-539-2609
Matt Schreiber Eagle Grove, IA
641-425-9211 (cell)
Green Bros. Seed Somers, IA
515-463-2254 Keith 515-463-2257 Wayne
Olson Ag Solutions Humboldt, IA 515-332-4609
Dean Carden Duncombe, IA 515-543-5463
CPS/Pioneer Thad Diersen
Odebolt, IA 712-668-2266
Scott Sebby Clarion, IA
515-532-2121 515-689-0630 (cell)
Southern Calhoun Ag Lohrville, IA 712-465-2008
712-830-9038 (cell)
Erik Underberg Livermore, IA 515-379-2206
515-890-1078 (cell)
PPrroovviiddiinngg SSuuppppoorrtt ttoo PPrroovviiddiinngg SSuuppppoorrtt ttoo Providing Support to pprrootteecctt yyoouurr bboottttoomm lliinnee.. pprrootteecctt yyoouurr bboottttoomm lliinnee.. protect your bottom line. • Optimize your investment • Timely Planning and Monitoring • Cost Effective Inputs
Roland 800-662-4642 Sully 800-469-1040 Nevada, McCallsburg, Gilbert, Story City, Zearing, Kelly Grinnell, Newton, New Sharon, Barnes City, LeGrand
• Spring Planting • Weed & Insect Control • Disease Prevention
A Partner for Your Business All Growing Season • Harvest • Seed Selection
biorefining
Specialty Contracts & Diversified Marketing Programs
POET Biorefining – Coon Rapids offers a variety of specialty contracts including cash, basis fixed, futures fixed and minimum price contracts. Our specialty contracts give you the ability to manage your price risk, while our competitive prices and DTN Portal allow you to efficiently sell your corn in a profitable manner.
Grain delivery benefits:
by DTN Portal
Together with you, POET is proud to produce an environmentally friendly, renewable fuel to help
pricing, sale and delivery of corn, please call
poet.com/coon rapids
PROGRESS 2012
Meyer Moves Forage and Manure Better! (800) 325-9103 www.meyermfg.com Meyer Manufacturing Corp. Dorchester, WI See our website for: dealer locator/video/specs
GRAND JUNCTION Neese, Inc. 515-738-2744
ALTON Hawke & Co. Ag. 800-657-4398
SAC CITY Engel Agri Sales 800-945-9738
MACEDONIA Keast Enterprises 800-480-2487
FORT DODGE Anderson Implement 515-547-2370
ROCKWELL CITY Haley Equipment 877-397-7600
EVERLY Cornbelt Equipment & Supply 712-834-2661
Shown with S-200 vertical expeller attachment
9500 Crop Max Spreaders Combination Box 20-24-30 Silage / Manure / Grain / Litter Vertical or Horizontal / Pull Type or Trk Mnt
Industrial / V-Force / V-Max Spreaders Dairy Manure / Litter / Sludge Rear Unload
“Boss” 8100 & 9100 Live Floors Truck Trailer or Ag Carts Silage / Grain / Distillers / Bedding Tarps, Grain Kits and Scales Available!
6000/4000/3000 Forage Boxes Wagon-Trailer-Truck Mount Front / Rear / Front & Rear Unload
9530
7400
8124
6222
The Move Is On To The Move Is On To
RUTHVEN Peterson Farm Equipment 712-837-4816
By KRISS NELSONFarm News staff writerGLIDDEN — With the
goals to improve trafficflow and make for a saferfacility, the NEW Coopera-tive location in Glidden iscurrently undergoing anextensive grain extensionproject.
Rick Brincks, locationmanager, said deconstruc-tion of two concrete struc-tures began in early De-cember 2011. The projectwill be complete for the2012 harvest delivery.
“Once harvest wasover,” Brincks said, “itgave us some time to emp-ty the concrete structureand finalize things with thecity and receive board ap-proval. Then deconstruc-tion began.”
Brincks said one of theconcrete structures wasbuilt during the 1920s andthe other during the 1950s.A feed fill and feed millload out was also takendown. A dryer was relocat-ed.
Metal scrap from the old
NEW Co-op upgrades Glidden elevator
Rick BRincks, glidden location manager at new Cooperative, stands near the deconstruction where two new 365,000 bushel binswill be erected. The co-op will have more storage space for the 2012 harvest season.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Kriss Nelsom
Project toimprove trafficflow, fastergrain reception
S ee NEW, Page 24H
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 23h
structures will be re-claimed, Brincks said, andconcrete will be ground upand used elsewhere, in-cluding at project plots.
When demolition andcleanup is completed, theconstruction of two365,000-bushel, 78 feet indiameter and 85 feet tall,steel grain bins will begin.
Brincks said three newauger legs, two for the dry-er and one for receivinggrain, and a new 15,000-bushel per hour receivingpit, are part of the newgrain extension project.
With the new additions,Brincks said NEW Co-opwill have the capability ofreceiving 25,000 bushelsper hour — an increase ofabout 10,000 bushels perhour.
The expansion will alsoincrease the location’s ca-pacity to 1.4 millionbushels, up from 1.2 mil-lion bushels previously.
In addition to increasedstorage capacity and ahigher receiving capacity,Brincks said one of themain benefits to this proj-ect will be the improvedtraffic pattern at the eleva-tor.
“Local producers arevery excited about the up-grades of the facility,” hesaid. “Not only will we be asafer facility, but we willhelp with the farmers’ effi-ciency and make them
more profitable with aquicker turn around, get-ting them back to the fieldfaster.”
The cooperative contin-ues to look to the future, asplenty of room will be leftfor the possibility of furtherexpansion.
“NEW Co-op tries tohave state of the art facili-ties, and the Glidden loca-tion was due,” saidBrincks. “This positionsNEW Co-op to be a com-petitor in the future andshows NEW’s commitmentin this area.”
Contact Kriss Nelson [email protected]
+ +
www.harvestauger.com Laurens
Olson Sales 712-358-2726
Grand Junction Neese, Inc.
515-738-2744
Pomeroy & Hamburg Bluff Ridge, Inc.
877-468-2022
West Bend J.B. Mertz & Sons, Inc.
515-887-4511
Everly Corn Belt Equipment
712-834-2661
Sac City Engel Agri-Sales
877-468-2022
Onawa Vetter Equipment
712-423-1069
Webster City Weisberg Implement
515-832-2701
Audubon Vetter Equipment
712-563-4219
HARVEST INTERNATIONAL, INC. 401 W. 20th St. Storm Lake, IA 50588 1.888.218.5373
Zearing Nessa Inc.
641-487-7608
Top quality materials. Smart design. Built to last.
www.ritchiefount.com
Fresh water on demand,24 hours a day.
Ritchie manufactures a complete line of livestock watering products with the highestspecifications in the industry. From a single horse Stall Fount to a fountain that waters upto 500 head, Ritchie fountains are top quality. Products are available in stainless steel,heavy-duty poly or a combination of both. Every Ritchie fountain is backed by our 10 yearlimited warranty.
The color arrangement on Ritchie fountains is a registered trademarkof Ritchie Industries. Register number 2,009,625.© 2010 Ritchie Industries
OmniFount 1
OmniFount 3OmniFount 5
OmniFount 10
OmniFount 2
EcoFount 2EcoFount 1
For more information, or the name of your nearest dealer, call
800-669-4038 or [email protected]���������
�$(�#!�"'��������
������ (���������
�"������� �����
���������������&��
�"���� ����
��� ������)����*�"�
��������� ������ ��
�������� �����( +&�����%)���
�����������
���������''�%
�$(�#!�"'�����������
5678 NE. 14th St. Des Moines, IA 515-265-9901 800-362-2970
5000 Harbor Dr. Sioux City, IA 712-255-0174 800-352-4989
.
www.inlandtruck.com
ITP Parts & Service you have relied on for almost 70 years.
Authorized Allison Transmission Dealers
INLAND TRUCK PARTS & SERVICE
YYoouurr AAlllliissoonn TTrraannssmmiissssiioonn HHeeaaddqquuaarrtteerrss Your Allison Transmission Headquarters
CCoommpplleettee IInnssttaallllaattiioonn aanndd SSeerrvviiccee Complete Installation and Service
MORE PRODUCTIVITY, DECREASED COSTS.
Casady Bros Implement, Inc1705 W 2nd St
Webster City, IA 50595(515) 832-4447
www.casadybrosimpl.com
RE POMCEDW T8 SEN
DUORRE PD CESARE
S GROTCARS TEIREW T8 S
YTIVITCDU.STSOD C
HTOU BOE YVIS G
,YY,
W T8 SENs feningL er 9osruCr 4eit Tnengirtt seemh” T.yy.tilibahtaaerb“fforet pnacifingisng citarepr ootcar8 tTeseiD
S GROTCARS TEIREW T8 SBocd Enallow Hee Nrutaates f. Tencailpmos cnoissimA er 4r fih aser, fnalee chtaatery beh
mo. Csegatnavde acnamroe—rewo% l0e 1rs atsong cas t) iFEDd (ilut Fsuahxl Ee
SEARCNI
DNETXE
.HTOU BOE YVIS Gng SCisy ugolonhce™ teluB
ite ulrutaaes feninge eseh. Tn aoitsubmol camitpr oor f
, sleods muoivero pd terapmBdt of Asoe chn tehn weve
. tnuocco atnn iek
YCNEICIF EFELU FEDS
SLAVVAERVTN IECIVERV SEDD
o R tng SCe taam
d nn a,
eluB ®
ENINGE
ERWOL
TNEMEGAN MADEEP S
SNOISSI EM
w He. NCLa LciremH AN1 C10© 2
Nf Ck oramedard teretsiges a rd inallow H
www.casadybrosimpl.com(515) 832-4447
Webster City, IA 505951705 W 2nd St
Casady Bros Implement, Inc
.CLa LciremH AN
www.casadybrosimpl.com(515) 832-4447
Webster City, IA 505951705 W 2nd St
Casady Bros Implement, Inc
Casady Bros Implement, Inc1705 W 2nd St
Webster City, IA 50595(515) 832-4447
www.casadybrosimpl.com
www.casadybrosimpl.com(515) 832-4447
Webster City, IA 505951705 W 2nd St
Casady Bros Implement, Inc
www.casadybrosimpl.com(515) 832-4447
Webster City, IA 505951705 W 2nd St
Casady Bros Implement, Inc
PROGRESS 2012
NEW Continued from Page 23H
The former grain sTorage facilities at New Cooperative in Glidden wererazed during 2011 and new facilities will be up and ready for the 2012 harvest,according to rick brincks, location manager.
-Submitted photo
“Not only will we have a safer facility,
but we will help with the farmers’
efficiency and make them more profitable
with a quicker turn around.”—Rick Brincks
Glidden, NEW Cooperative manager
24H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
+ +
10 S. 25TH ST ~ FORT DODGE, IA ~ 515.576.3158 ~ 866.576.3158
All rebates & discounts to dealer. Not all customers will qualify for all discounts. See dealer for complete details. O�ers end 2/29/12.
MSRP $40,310Trade In BONUS $1000Loyalty O�er $1000Auto Show BONUS $1000
2012 GMC SIERRA 1500 4WD CREW CAB SLE
Stk# 2130F
as low as
PROGRESS 2012
By DARCY DOUGHERTY
MAULSBYFarm News staff writerLAKE CITY — Oppor-
tunities multiply as they areseized at Bowie Internation-al LLC, which has remainedtrue to its mobile veterinaryunit roots, while expandinginto new ventures, fromsports car kits to animalcontrol systems.
“The businesses we’veacquired recently werestrong companies before,and we’re making themeven better,” said Steve Sin-nard, 44, executive vicepresident of Bowie Interna-tional, which boasts morethan 50 years of fiberglassmanufacturing expertise.
The company’s historydates back to1960, whenBowie Manufacturing Inc.,was founded in Lake Cityby a local veterinarian. Dr.M.C. Bowie was frustratedby working out of his carwhen making veterinarycalls. Bowie Manufacturingbecame the first company tomanufacture a mobile vet-erinary clinic out of fiber-glass. The company, whichbecame known for its chas-sis-mounted units, brokenew ground again in 1969when it introduced vet unitsthat slipped into pickuptruck beds.
After Scranton Manufac-turing Co. purchased Bowiein 2007, the company grewfrom 15 employees to 35employees today.Theteam’s expertise in fiber-glass has allowed Bowie tomove into many new direc-tions in recent years, thanksto the acquisition of Hurri-cane Motorsports, whichproduces a replica 427 Co-bra kit car, and CustomFiberglass Coaches, whichsupplies animal controlunits.
Diversifying the compa-ny’s customer base has beenvital to Bowie as veterinary
medicine has changed, Sin-nard said. “There are fewerlarge-animal practitionerstoday, so it has made sensefor us to pursue other rev-enue streams while stillmanufacturing the mobilevet units.”
Kit car is designed tothrill
Bowie, which has 60,000square feet of manufactur-ing space on 25 acres, hasaccelerated into new territo-ry with the rebirth of asports car legend throughHurricane Motorsports,which Bowie acquired inOctober 2009. The compa-ny manufactures compo-nents for the 427 Cobra kitcar, including the frame,fiberglass body, roll bar andsome portion for suspensionsystem.
“After we acquired Hurri-cane Motorsports, we ana-lyzed what was great andnot too great about the car,and we did some retooling,”Sinnard said. Bowie em-ployees in Lake City beganmanufacturing Cobra 427components in February2010. The company also or-ders OEM components forthe car and supplies cus-tomers with an instruction
manual that shows how toassemble the sports car.
A base kit for the Cobra427 starts at $21,500, andthe price can rise into thehigh $20,000 range to low$30,000 range, dependingon how much assembly thecustomer asks HurricaneMotorsports to complete.“For many buyers, owning acar like this is a lifelongdream,” said Sinnard, whonoted that much of the kitcar business is driven oventhe Internet through siteslike ClubCobra.com and aHurricane Motorsports’ on-line forum.
Transporting animalssafely
Custom FiberglassCoaches is another recentaddition that fits well withBowie’s manufacturing ca-pabilities. In 2008, Bowieacquired this Florida com-pany, which sold animalcontrol units primarily in thesoutheastern United States.
Today, Bowie employeesmanufacture these durable,chassis-mounted fiberglassbodies for transport vehiclesthat are used by animal con-
trol agencies, police depart-ments, animal shelters andwildlife conservationists.The units, which are avail-able with air conditioning,heating, lighting packagesand Backsaver hoists to loadlarge, heavy animals, rangefrom $10,000 to $20,000.
“We’re expanding themarket for Custom Fiber-glass Coaches to Texas, thewestern United States, theNortheast and the Mid-west,” Sinnard said.
Bowie has also developedanother animal transportsystem, thanks to MontyRohrbeck, an avid hunterwho manages the Lake Cityplant. His compact, portablekennel called “The Com-panion” includes room for
hunting dogs in the lowerpart, along with a gun stor-age area in the top of thefiberglass unit.
“Each unit fits in the backof a pickup truck and can betransferred from truck totruck, which is a big pluswith buyers,” Rohrbecksaid.
Mobile vet units evolveProviding unique solu-
tions for customers has longbeen a hallmark of Bowie,which continues to offernew innovations for its mo-bile veterinary units that aresold across the United Statesand Canada. While the com-pany only produced a chas-
Bowie expands into diverse marketsLake City manufacturer stays true to mobile veterinary roots
bowie inTernaTional eMployee Dylan peDersen sands a fiberglass unit that has come out of the mold and will form theback end on a chassis-mounted mobile veterinary unit.
-Messenger/Farm News photos by Darcy Dougherty Maulsby
“The businesses
we’ve acquired
recently were strong
companies before,
and we’re making
them even better.”—Steve Sinnard
Executive vice president,Bowie International LLC
MonTy rohrbeck, plant manager at bowie international, in Lake City, has developed a portable dogkennel called The Companion that is designed to meet hunters needs. gun storage is included on the top ofthe fiberglass unit, which fits in the back of a pickup truck and can be transferred from truck to truck.
Jerry Tannehill, who has worked at bowie international for 44 years, re-conditions used mobile veterinary units that clients have traded in. The units canthen be resold and come with a warranty.
“The diversification
keeps the work interesting.”—Gary “Rowdy” Reicks
Parts specialist and customer service manager
S ee BOWIE, Page 27H
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 25h
By KRISS NELSONFarm News staff writerAMES — The idea of us-
ing flight simulators is noth-ing new to training person-nel in the aviation industry.Now, that same concept willsoon be used to train em-ployees needing to gain ex-perience in operating abiorefinery, as well as stu-dents majoring in the biore-finery industry.
The Interactive Biorefin-ery Simulation has been indevelopment since 2008,said its developer DavidGrewell, associate professorwith Iowa State university’sdepartment of agriculturaland biosystems engineering.
I-BOS is a virtual biore-finery control room on theISU campus that Grewellcalls a “Nintendo for biofuelnerds.”
Grewell said I-BOS willeventually move from thecampus and into the indus-try for training purposes.
“We are still working onthe program,” Grewell said.“We’re hoping to have it to-tally debugged by the end ofthis summer.”
The I-BOS lab features avideo loop of a security sys-tem from Lincolnway Ener-gy and takes students
+ +
Linde Equipment Co. 108 S. Idaho
Glidden, IA 51443 712-659-3725
Robinson Implement 2002 St. F24
Irwin, IA 51446 712-782-3171
Pocahontas Equipment Co. LLC
1400 W. Elm St. Pocahontas, IA 50574
712-335-4522
Franken Implement & Service
2782 360th St. Rock Valley, IA 51247
712-722-3941
STOP-FYRE The World’s Best Fire Extinguisher
25th ANNUAL FEBRUARY 28, 29, MARCH 1, 2012
• ISU EXTENSION SEMINARS CHECK WEBSITE FOR DETAILS
• OVER 700 LINES ON DISPLAY
• ALL THE NEWEST IN AGRICULTURE
Sponsored by:
Register 9AM - Noon Drawing at noon
Must be present to win
FREE Coffee and Rolls 8:30 - 10AM Daily
Sponsored by:
MIDWEST SHOWS, INC. (507) 437-7969
www. farm shows usa .com
The name may be the same; but truth be told, the Weatherproofer III from Landoll is a lot more than a third-generation tillage tool. One-pass tillage now comes with a heavier 4 X 8-inch tubing frame; UHMW polymer bearings that eliminate the need for grease; larger disc gang shafts; larger-diameter disc blades; single-point depth adjustment, and self-aligning trunnion bearings. Available in eight working widths from 10’ to 20’, the Weatherproofer III is still tough on residue and compaction. But now, it’s even easier on you and your repair budget. And it’s only available from Landoll…The Company Who Knows You Best.
New features improve performance while reducing
wear and maintenance.
Address compaction left from last Fall.
y be the same; but truth be the name maT
e than a thiris a lot morvier 4 X 8-inch tubing fra hea
ease; larror gneed fdepth adjustmen
t wailable in eighvAesidue and cough on rt
.
y be the same; but truth be t
tion tillage tagenerd-e than a thirame; UHMW polymer bearvier 4 X 8-inch tubing fr
ts; larger disc gang shafease; larning trunnion bear, and self-aligtdepth adjustmen
om 10’ing widths frkort wtion. But noompacesidue and c
e ooff prthereaW, the oldy be the same; but truth be t
-pass tillage no. Oneooltion tillage tt eliminaings thaame; UHMW polymer bear
er disc blades; singlediamet-gerts; lar. ingsning trunnion bear
oofprthereaW, the o 20’ ’, t 0’ ’ ou and yen easier on ys ev’’ itwtion. But no
om Landoll er III fromes with w c-pass tillage no
e the tt eliminat -poiner disc blades; single
er III is still oofepair our rou and y
esidue and cough on rts o ’’ nd it. Abudget
tion. But noompacesidue and com Landollailable frvs only a
ou and yen easier on ys ev, itw, tion. But noho KWy ompanhe C…Tom Landoll
epair our rou and y.estou BYo s wnoho K
��� ��������� � ����� ��������� � ����������� ����"�����������!�����������������������
‘00 Volvo ISM Cummins, 10 Speed, 500K Miles $21,900
‘03 Kenworth T-800 12.7 Detroit, 10 Speed, Alums $29,900
DDeennnniiss WWaaggnneerr Dennis Wagner 404 Broad Street • Rolfe, Iowa 50581 712-848-3443 • Cell 515-368-3443
Toll Free 1-888-254-4595 Eves 712-848-3540 Fax: 712-848-3193 BBoobb WWaaggnneerr Bob Wagner
712-848-3203• Cell 712-358-1312 wagnertruckandauto.com
truckpaper.com
Wagner Truck & Auto Sales
‘06 Volvo VNL, 10 spd, autoshift, 450 Cummins, 799K $34,900
‘00 Jet 42’ Alum A/R Ag Tubs Alums $17,900
‘05 Timpte 40’ Ag tubs, S/R $22,900
28’ Van Trailer Call ‘10 Jet 34’ Steel, Ex $20,900
‘05 Jet 40’ Alum. Ag Hoppers $19,900 ‘00 Volvo D-Cab, 345hp, 10 spd, silver
$18,900
98’ Hawkmaster 32’ Hopper $9,250 ‘00 Frtl Century Single Axle, D-Cab $7,995!
‘91 Frtl FLD 120 $6,950 ‘02 Jet 34’ Alum Ag Hoppers $20,900
‘10 Jet 38’ Alum El tarp Coming In
‘88 Mack LTL, S/A w/ 22’ Doonan hopper $12,500
‘98 Utility 45’ van trailer Call ‘94 Frtl FLD-120 N-14 Cummins, 10 Spd,
500K Miles Just IN
‘03 Frtl FLD-112 D-cab C12 355hp, 380K $27,900
‘98 Frtl FLD-112 D-cab M-11 355hp, 380K $21,000 New Jet 34’ Alum & 22’, 26’ Steel hoppers on hand
‘79 Wilson 41’ Just In
‘02 Wilson 43’ A/R Strap doors, $22,500 ‘95 Timpte 42’ S/R Alums $16,500
‘03 Timpte Ag tubs - A/R 42’ Coming In ‘98 Jet 34’ Steel, $11,900
‘02 Wilson 41’ A/R Ag tubs $24,200
PROGRESS 2012
IBOS: ‘Nintendo for biofuel nerds’?
Priyanka Chand, a biorenewable resources and technology graduate student at Iowa state university and David Grewel, associateprofessor, look over the new Interactive biorefinery simulation during a late-January training session.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Kriss Nelson
employeescan learnin virtualbiorefinery
S ee IBOS , Page 27H
26H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
through the entire processof producing eitherethanol or biodiesel —from feedstock delivery toloading finished productonto a railcar or into stor-age.
Grewell said he cansend com-mands to thesystemthrough hisphone tosimulate asystem mal-function. Hecan also re-ceive feed-backthrough hisphone to de-termine how long it tookstudents to identify theproblem.
Companies, such asethanol plants andbiodiesel plants, Grewellsaid, will be enabled touse the virtual programfor employee training.This should be offered atno cost, he said, becauseI-BOS was federally fund-ed.
Most plants in the bio-fuel industry, Grewellsaid, are operated on simi-lar platforms, so I-BOSwould be a universaltraining tool.
As the usage of otherfeedstocks and technolo-gies, such as cellulosicethanol, come to the fore-front in biofuels, softwarecan be written into theprogram fairly easily, hesaid.
Grewell said he devel-oped the idea for I-BOSafter using a simulatormade for a different pur-pose.
“I thought a simulatorcould be used in differentteaching applications andran with it from there tocreate the biorefinery sim-ulator,” he said. “It’s a lotlike a flight simulator,” hesaid, “with trainees learn-
ing how to run an ethanolor biodiesel plant, beforeactually going in to thatsituation.”
Grewell said the I-BOSclass is a 15-week cur-riculum, but estimateswhen used in an industrysituation, an employeecould be trained in a fewweeks.
“The students will learnmore of the fundamentals
of a biorefinery,” he said.A huge benefit to using
simulators, Grewell said,is it allows students tolearn how to respond toemergency situations,something that, of course,can’t be done in a real sit-uation.
“They can experimentwith all sorts of differentaspects and learn throughtrial and error,” he said.
The I-BOS was built byGrewell with assistancefrom Melissa Montalbo-Lomboy, a post-doctoralresearch associate;Priyanka Chand, a doctor-al student; ChristopherRempe, a senior in indus-trial technology and for-mer students, David Chip-man and Yuriy Gritsenko.
This project was sup-ported by a three-year,
$300,000 grant funded bythe U.S. Department ofAgriculture; the Renew-able Energy Group Inc., ofAmes; Lincolnway Ener-gy, of Nevada; Fastek In-ternational, of CedarRapids; Cargill; CrownIron Works Co.; andEmerson Electric Co.
Contact Kriss nelson [email protected]
+ +
B O E H R I N G E R I N G E L H E I M V E T M E D I C A , I N C .
THANK YOU Fort Dodge for
making us a part of the
community.
PROGRESS 2012
BowieContinued from Page
sis-mounted fiberglass mo-bile veterinary clinic in theearly years, today Bowiemanufactures a variety ofunits that can slip into dif-ferent types of trucks, frommid-sized pickups to ex-tended-cab vehicles andother models. Bowie alsomanufactures the DIPLO-MAT II, a slide-in unitthat’s compact enough tofit into the back of sport-utility vehicles and minivans.
“These units are a vet-erinarian’s office onwheels,” said Sinnard.Bowie’s 2008 acquisitionof Iowa-based Porta-Vet,of Hudson, brought to-gether more than 90 yearsof veterinary mobile man-ufacturing experience.“The vet units have al-ways been a successfulpart of our business.”
In the last few years,Bowie has made a numberof improvements on itsmobile vet units, includ-ing redesigned electricalsystems, complete withbright LED lights thatmake it easier to work atnight. Depending on themodel, units can rangefrom $2,995 to $21,000and can include refrigera-tion for medications, awater system, room for x-ray equipment.
While it’s not uncom-mon for units to last up to20 years, many clientstrade every three to fiveyears, said Sinnard.Bowie reconditions usedmobile veterinary unitsfor resale, with war-ranties.
Future focus
Bowie’s ability to pro-vide quality products andservice is enhanced by thecompany’s sizeable num-ber of long-time employ-ees.
“The diversificationkeeps the work interest-ing,” said Gary “Rowdy”Reicks, a parts specialistand customer servicemanager who has workedat Bowie for nearly 45years.
Lake City is a goodbase of operations for thecompany, because the em-ployees have a strongMidwestern work ethic,said Sinnard, who is opti-mistic about the future.
“Sales have been posi-tive and the prospects forgrowth are outstanding aswe enhance our technolo-gies and continue to findnew product lines to de-velop,” he said.
For more information onBowie International, logonto www.bowieintl.com.
Contact darcy doughertymaulsby at [email protected]
IBOS Continued from Page 26H
David
Grewell
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 27h
By KARENSCHWALLER
Farm News staff writerSPENCER — A strong
agricultural economy wasthe driving force behind aSpencer manufacturingfirm’s decision to expandits product line and workforce.
Lakes Enterprises Inc.,doing business as MaurerManufacturing, in Spencer,a manufacturer of steelgrain trailers and otherfarm equipment acces-sories, purchased an alu-minum trailer product linein March 2011 from Gem-L, based in Brandon, S.D.
The purchase was madewith the goal to move pro-duction to the Spencerplant, and have it up andrunning by late summer2012.
Company officials ex-pect to expand the initialwork force from six to 12workers with the new alu-minum trailer line, withplans of expanding thateven further once produc-tion begins and if salescontinue to be successful.
Currently, there are 94people employed at MaurerManufacturing.
“We were wanting (tointroduce) an aluminumproduct line,” said JohnTatman, plant manager forMaurer Manufacturing,“and we talked about doingit ourselves or buying aproduct line.
“We went this way sothat we could hit the mar-
ket sooner. When we ac-quired the aluminum line,it rounded out our offer-ings.”
Although production hasyet to begin in Spencer,Tatman said the trailerswill feature a steel subframe, steel kingpin andaxle and an aluminum trail-er. Trailer lengths will varyfrom 28 feet to 48 feet.
“Steel grain trailers are alittle stronger and less ex-pensive, but the aluminumtrailers are lighter weight,(meaning that grain pro-ducers) can haul moregrain to town at a time,”Tatman said.
He added that the trailerswill take three differentforms, including springride, which he said is less
+ +
1316 South Main St. Clarion, IA 50525
Toll Free: 855-WRIGHT-1
www.wrightmed.com
WMC Stands for Progressive
Consistently Exceeding Your Expectations!www.wrightmed.com
Wright Medical Center is proud to bring you the following with our new construction and renovation:
State-of-the-art technologyIncreased spaceMore servicesSame dedicated staff and high quality, reliable care you’ve come to know and trustConsistent award winning patient satisfaction
New WMC Surgical Addition & Renovations
New Operating Rooms (Three Total)
Renovated General X-Ray SuiteNew Outpatient Recovery Rooms
New Endoscopy Room (Scopes)New Surgical Recovery Room
New State-Of-The-Art In-House MRI
For more information on any of these upcoming courses,please call 515-574-1292 or 800-362-2793 ext. 1292.
Microsoft Word - March 6Microsoft Excel – March 20
DC Controls - March 31Electrical Grounding & Bonding - CEU - April 7 & April 14
Introduction to Controllogix 5000 - May 14-18Industrial Motor Control - May 19 & May 26
NFPA 79 - CEU – June 2 SLC 500 - June 4-8
Introduction to Mill - June 11-28NEC 2011 Code Changes - CEU - June 16 & 23
Introduction to Lathe - July 9-26Industrial Mechanics at Night - Starts Summer 2012
Looking to update your skills or explore
new job opportunities?Flexible classes for every schedule!
Follow us online at www.iowacentral.edu and on Facebook at “Iowa Central Community College”
WE’VE GOT YOUR BACK WHEN IT COMES TO FLOORING!
Downtown Humboldt 515-332-1102
HRS: Mon.-Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-1 Your Family Flooring Store
� Mastectomy Supplies � Seat Lift Chairs-
Expanded Selection � Wheelchairs � Hospital Beds � Bathroom Aids � Ostomy Supplies � Canes, Crutches &
Walkers � Oxygen &
Respiratory Equipment
� Commodes � Patient Lifts � Enteral Nutrition � C PAP Equipment &
Supplies (For Obstructive Sleep Apnea)
We File Medicare, Medicaid, & Insurance
JCAHO Accredited
118 S 25th St • Fort Dodge, IA 50501 515-955-8500 • 800-383-8500
Locally Owned
Celebrating 33 Years In Business!
A-1 Home Healthcare provides quality
service, equipment & supplies to special
people by professionals
who care!
HYDROSTATIC TRANSMISSION
ROLAND, IA•515-388-4096
Combines•Skid Steers & Choppers
• Rebuild • Sales • Technical Support
PROGRESS 2012
Maurer moves into aluminum trailersPurchase goal is to move production to the spencer plant
Maurer Manufacturing has purchased thedesign for a new line of aluminum trailers, which willbe produced at its spencer factory. Production is tar-geted to begin in late in summer.
-Messenger/Farm News photos by Karen Schwaller
Maurer Manufacturing employee mitchmiller works on one of the companyís new aluminumtrailers. The company estimates itíll produce 300 to400 of the trailers in its first year of assembly, start-ing in late summer.
S ee MAURER, Page
28H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
expensive; air ride, which is a little more expensive; and triple axle.“With triple axle trailers, farmers can haul more because of the longer (trailer)
lengths,” Tatman said.Standard features on the aluminum trailers will include 22.5K tandem axles with
ABS brakes on single axles, and 10-bolt hub piloted rims; front and rear aluminumladders, manifest holder, sealed wiring systems, two-speed landing gear on 36-foot to48-foot trailers, full center dividers on all trailers 36 feet long and longer, and 20-by-30-inch hopper openings.
The company produces about 600 steel trailers annually and is targeted to produce300 to 400 aluminum trailers in its first year of production.
That number could increase if sales are strong, Tatman said.Headquartered in Spencer, the company has dealers across the nation, and ships its
ag accessory products around the world— including Australia and Kazakhstan.Maurer Manufacturing was born on a farm near Sutherland in 1992, under the di-
rection of Bob and Peg Maurer.At that time, it produced combine grain tank extensions.The company was moved to its Spencer location in 1995. Its production line ex-
panded to include steel grain trailers, extensions for combine augers, head trailers,various combine auger products, gondola trailers for the scrap industry and drop decktrailers.
“Our drop deck trailers have been very strong for us,” Tatman said.The company’s newest offering is called a “Revolver,” a flow attachment which
hooks onto the end of a combine auger.“It can be rotated (facing) up so that there is less spillage of grain as the combine
finishes emptying,” Tatman said.Maurer Manufacturing is located in Spencer’s industrial park on the city’s west
edge.
Contact Karen Schwaller at [email protected].
+ +
W E S T C E N T R A L I O W A Foundation Repair Basement Waterproofing Crawl Space Recovery
Dehumidification Egress Windows
880066 QQuuiinntt AAvvee •• CCaarrrrooll ll 880066 QQuuiinntt AAvvee •• CCaarrrrooll ll 806 Quint Ave • Carroll 771122--777755--22330066 •• 886666--559955--77556666 771122--777755--22330066 •• 886666--559955--77556666 712-775-2306 • 866-595-7566 wwwwww..wwcciibbaasseemmeennttrreeppaaiirr..ccoomm wwwwww..wwcciibbaasseemmeennttrreeppaaiirr..ccoomm www.wcibasementrepair.com Co-owners Scott Schon & Brian Badding
have a combined 16 years of experience in the industry.
Fabra Dome Structures
Custom Sizes - Economical - Versatile
Fabra Dome Structures are very low in cost, heavy duty and are able to fit all
types of applications
877-257-4311
Dealer Inquiries Welcome
Custom fit replacement covers available for all brands of hoop buildings
for fastest and
simplest structure to install.
NEESE INC. Sales - Service - Rentals
Hwy 30 E. • Grand Junction, IA • 515-738-2744
Bigger Stronger Faster Zetor
delivers a premium-quality product for the price of many ligh-duty competitors.
515-964-6100 2402 S.E. Hulsizer • Ankeny, Iowa
fax 515-964-6119 www.northstarpowerllc.com
authorized distributor •Diesel Engines •Power Generators •Drive Train Components
P O W E R L L C
BBUUIILLDD oonn oouurr BBUUIILLDD oonn oouurr BUILD on our EEXXPPEERRIIEENNCCEE EEXXPPEERRIIEENNCCEE EXPERIENCE
Tom Witt Contractor, Inc. Newell, IA (712) 272-4678
Some of the buildings we’ve constructed in this area are shown here. Since 1976, Tom & Debbie Witt have made a committment to live up to the highest standards for fairness, honesty, superior workmanship and service. We’re dedicated to designing the most innovative and cost-effective building solutions for our valued customers. Call Tom or Debbie today for a free quote on your next building project!
Taking Reliability to the Extreme Since 1947
John Mowrey License # 041000416 044000247 License # 301 E Frederick St., Milford, IL 60953 Phone # 1-815-889-4191 Fax # 1-815-889-5365
Give us a call for all your auction needs. www.mowreyauction.com Consignment Auctions 3rd Wednesday of Each Month
� February 15th � March 21st � April 18th
� May 16th � June 20th � July 18th � August 15th
Upcoming Equipment Auctions Auctions Start at 8:00AM
� September 19th � October 17th � November 21st � December 19th
PROGRESS 2012
Maurer Continued from Page 28H
Maurer Manufacturing employee Travis Langholz works on one of thecompany’s new aluminum trailers. The company purchased a trailer design,rather than design its own in order to ìhit the market sooner,î said John Tatman,plant manager.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Karen Schwaller
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 29h
+ +
Steven R. Heddinger - Registered Representative, John W. Bruner, Joni Reiling - Investment Advisor R epresentatives. Securities and investment advisory service offered through Ameritas Investment Corp. (AIC) Member FI NRA, SIPC. AIC & CFG are not affiliated. No Bank Guarantee, May Lose Value. Not FDIC Insured.
Located at 1207 Central Avenue, Fort Dodge, IA
515-955-0607 • 800-657-4562
Y OUR T EAM at
Where You Belong John W. Bruner 515-955-1909
Steven R. Heddinger 515-955-0607
Joni Reiling 515-955-0633
www.hfmgt.com
�������$���$�����)� %�����$���������
515.332.1406�����$������$����)���#�����$(����������
641.423.9531
��� ������� ����������������������������������������� �"#������$$��$����'�$�� "�&�����"����������$�$�����!%�#��"�����#$�$��#$"�$����#�����#%���##���� �������������������������� �������������
Dr. John Reis Voted Best Audiologist
2010 and 2011
Burgess Construction, Inc.
A m e s , I A 5 1 5 - 2 3 1 - 3 1 4 5 • a m e s f r a m e r @ m c h s i . c o m Custom Buildings • Residential • Commercial • Agricultural
New Construction • Remodeling • Repairs
Licensed & Insured Contractor since 1971
PROGRESS 2012
Oil refiner enters ethanol manufacturing
Flint Hill owns four Iowa plants
Flint Hills ResouRces, whose core business is refining oil, has acquired four Iowa ethanol plants over the past two years, including this one in menlo. Com-bined, the four plants produce 435 million gallons of ethanol and employ 200 people.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Dave DeValois
By DAVE DEVALOISFarm News staff writer
AMES — Flint Hills Resources, an in-dependent refining and chemicals compa-ny, has been involved in ethanol for manyyears, but only recently became a produc-er of ethanol.
Over the past two years, the company
has purchased four Iowa ethanol plantsand now produces nearly 435 million gal-lons of ethanol annually, its plants con-sume approximately 155 million bushelsof Iowa corn each year.
Flint Hills Resources, which is based in
S ee FLINT HILL, Page 31H
30H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012
Wichita, Kan., owns plantsin Fairbank, Iowa Falls,Menlo and Shell Rock. TheIowa Falls and Fairbank fa-cilities were acquired inFebruary 2011. The fourethanol plants employ ap-proximately 200 employ-ees. The company alsoopened an office in Amesin April 2011 to supportthe four plants. The Ameslocation includes opera-tions, human resources,purchasing and marketingactivities, according to aFlint Hills release.
That office houses 20employees and is responsi-ble for marketing nearly1.2 million tons of ethanoland its byproducts, includ-ing distiller’s dried grains,according to a company re-lease.
Jake Reint, public affairsdirector for Flint Hills Re-sources, said the companyhas been blending ethanolin Minnesota for manyyears.
“We’re that state’slargest purchaser of biofu-els,” Reint said.
Last year, it blended 435million gallons of ethanol.
The company decided toexpand into ethanol pro-duction, since ethanol fitswell with the company’score business.
“For us, these plants andinvestments enhance ourexisting base transportationfuels business, while pro-viding a platform to growand develop the renewablesmarket,” Reint said.
In addition to the fourIowa ethanol plants, FlintHills operates biodieselplants in Texas and Ne-braska. Flint Hills’ corebusiness includes oil refin-ing complexes in Alaska,Rosemount, Minn., andCorpus Christi, Texas. Ithas a combined daily crude
oil processing capacity ofmore than 800,000 barrels.Ethanol produced at thefour Iowa plants is not usedin the company’s blendingoperations or its fuelpipelines, Reint said.
“The ethanol we producecompetes in the open mar-ket,” he said.
The ethanol is shippedprimarily by rail. Whilemany ethanol producersthroughout Iowa have
failed in recent years as theprice of corn eclipsed $7per bushel, Flint Hills isprepared to withstandtough market conditions,Reint said.
“We know what’s infront of us. Our goal is tobe able to compete in anymarket environment,” hesaid. “For us, the key isbroad-based optimizationand utilization. We’re high-ly efficient and productive.
We’re very pleased withour results so far.”
Flint Hills Resources op-erates several enterprises inIowa. The company distrib-utes refined petroleumproducts throughout thestate, owns a fuel terminalin Bettendorf, and also op-erates asphalt plants inAlgona, Davenport andDubuque.
Contact dave devalois [email protected].
+ +
Full Time Bariatric Surgeon Cash Lap Band Program Available
Offices in Fort Dodge, Clarion and Mason City
Kyle Ver Steeg M.D., F.A.C.S.
w w w . i o w a b a r i a t r i c s . c o m
Weight Loss Surgery A Proven Way To Get Your
Life Back
Free Informational Seminars for Weight Loss Surgery
For Appointment Call: 515-955-6797 • 800-684-1317
Medicare Patients Accepted ASMBS Certified Bariatric Surgery Center of Excellence ®
BBeeffoorree BBeeffoorree Before AAfftteerr AAfftteerr After
Not just books... possibilities. FORT DODGE PUBLIC LIBRARY
515-573-8167 424 Central Avenue, Fort Dodge, IA
www.fortdodgeiowa.org/library
Progress is EVERYONE’S business.
515-955-5500 515-955-7788
We are committed to advancing
change, improving
communications and
collaboration, marketing our area,
promoting development and
building relationships by
partnering with government,
business, education and the entire
community in order to enhance
the quality of life for our citizens.
Greater Fort Dodge Growth Alliance
Welcome!
The Greater Fort Dodge Growth Alliance thanks Cargill and CJ America for their selection of Webster County to locate their new value added agricultural facilities.
PROGRESS 2012
Flint Hills ResouRces, whose core business is refining oil, has acquiredfour iowa ethanol plants over the past two years, including this one in menlo.Combined, the four plants produce 435 million gallons of ethanol and employ 200people.
-Messenger/Farm News photo by Dave DeValois
Go ahead, be C O L O R F U L Make your ad stand out with a
S P L A S H O F C O L O R To learn more about using color in your ad just call your
Advertising Consultant at 515-573-2141
Flint Hill Continued from Page 30H
“The ethanol we
produce competes
in the open
market.”—Jake Reint
Public affairs director,
Flint HIll Resources
friday, feb. 24, 2012/Sunday, feb. 26, 2012 www.farm-news.com farm newS / The meSSenger, forT dodge, iowa 31h
+ +
32H Farm News / THe messeNGer, ForT DoDGe, Iowa FrIDay, Feb. 24, 2012/suNDay, Feb. 26, 2012