TIFTON, Georgia – Legislative issues, peanut promotions
and production research were the hot topics addressed during
the Sixth Annual Southern Peanut Growers Conference held
July 18-20 in Panama City Beach, Fla. The three-day conference
provided the 500 farmers and industry representatives in
attendance with the latest knowledge on legislative activities
in Washington, D.C.
One highlight of the conference put farmers in the hot seat as they were asked
questions related to their farm production. The answers from the audience were
analyzed and then appeared in a chart on the big screen for everyone to see.
Of course, the answers revealed the difference in acreage of the peanut farmers
in the audience and the costs per acre that farmers are spending on fungicides
and herbicides.
The answers from the audience were also compared to the Southeast
Peanut Representative Farms, which is actual farm data obtained by the National
Center for Peanut Competitiveness from farms in Georgia, Florida and Alabama.
Next the entire audience, from farmers to industry representatives, was able
to participate in the interactive consumer type question category. This series
of questions compared peanut farmers and industry representatives to the general
public when it came to how many times they eat out a week, the percentage that
are diabetic or have high blood pressure and tested the group on their knowledge
of peanuts and peanut butter.
The conference also highlighted legislative issues, domestic and export promotional
activities regarding peanuts, buying and selling on eBay, as well as production
issues concerning new and emerging weed problems, economics and marketing options,
and peanut production indexes.
In addition to the conference program, Valent U.S.A. Corporation, a crop protection
company, awarded four peanut agronomists with the Valor Award for their many
contributions to the Southeast peanut growing area and for their tireless efforts
and dedication to peanut growers. The honorees are John Beasley and John Baldwin
with the University of Georgia, Dallas Hartzog, Auburn University, and Ben
Whitty, University of Florida.
Valor is defined by Webster’s dictionary, “strength
of mind or spirit that enables a person to encounter danger with firmness;
personal bravery.”
During the conference, winners of the 2004 Farm Press Peanut Profitability
Awards were recognized at an awards breakfast. Winners of the 2004 Farm Press
Peanut Profitability Awards combined a year of record or near-record yields
with innovative and efficient production systems to distinguish themselves
among their peers.
Each of the winners represents one of the three major U.S. peanut production
regions - the Southwest Region, the Southeast Region and the Virginia-Carolina
Region. Farm Press established the awards program in cooperation with the Southern
Peanut Growers Conference and the Southern Peanut Farmers Federation.
This year’s winners include: Southwest Region – Jimbo Grissom,
Gaines County, Texas; Southeast Region – Sauls Partnership, Randolph
County, Ga.; Virginia-Carolina Region – Joseph H. Ward, Chowan County,
S.C.
One of the common traits among this year’s Peanut Profitability winners,
says Marshall Lamb, advisor to the program and economist with the National
Peanut Research Laboratory, is that they were not afraid to spend the money
required to make good yields, which ultimately benefited their bottom line. “We’ve
had a couple of winners in the past that held back on inputs and sacrificed
yields in the process. But that’s not true with this year’s group.”
The 2004 honorees also practiced good crop rotation with their peanuts, he
adds. “Another key to efficiency for these growers was detailed management.
Their management skills translated into extremely good yields over a large
amount of peanut acreage.” |