Is that a great pig or what!!!!! Only the Grand Champion Barrow at the Junior Show at the Illinois State Fair !!!! Congratulation to Dylan and the whole Decker family for growing and showing such a fine animal at the State Fair. 
(and well fed...it has such a good appetite it wants to eat even while taking pictures!)....Atkinson and all of us at AGF couldn't be prouder!!!!


Congratulations to Haley Haverback!!! 2010 Illinois State Fair Cattle Showmanship Champion!!!!

Yes....if you are wondering where it rained the other day and where it didn't rain, I can tell you this.....it was more or less just following our sprayers around all day....we get ready to spray-it clouds up and starts to rain...we quit-it quits....so , anyway , this was very inconvenient for us yesterday, but in August we again will be offering our $5 per acre rain offer and we will back it up by driving our sprayers around and pretending to spray for whoever needs rain.....

Something NEW has been added!!!!!! If you would like to receive twice daily text messages or emails that would tell you what the grain futures markets are doing and what our AGF cash markets are....you can sign up below. Under the futures markets below, there is an area for registering on the website. You can put your Name and phone # and your e-mail address in that area and let me know and I will get you lined up.

****Fact or Crap......07/19/10    
   Fish scales have been a key ingredient in lipstick........... Fact or Crap????  Yes, it's fact, and I can't believe how much trouble this got me into.......here's the story....I got an email from Becky Geuns that said, "Fact....they call it pearlessence. It's what gives your lips the sparkle" .....I replied to her..."I will never look at pearl lips the same". I hit the send button and as I watched it go I realized that it was not going to Becky but it WAS going to our female representative, Cassandra, from Ameren, who had written me about the energy rates on our dryers. She wanted to know which rate we wanted and I replied...."I will never look at pearl lips the same".......oh my......

If anyone has any information about any of the subjects that are under discussion on this or any other website or any newspaper or TV show or conversations between you and AGF employees or customers or anyone else that you might have talked to about anything, like moles, you can e-mail me at agfinc@nbsmail.net  .....thank you.  

 
  (About half of the comments made on these headlines have about a 50-50 chance of being true and usually don't reflect the opinionated opinions of Atkinson Grain or most of its employees!



Sunday, September 5, 2010  
 
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- DTN Headline News
Iowans Target Direct Payments
By Chris Clayton
9/3/10 3:57 PM

DES MOINES (DTN) -- Congress should eliminate direct payments, and the Average Crop Revenue Election program should be based on county, rather than state, yields and revenue, Iowa Farm Bureau delegates stated Friday.

The group's two-day policy meeting ended with members backing a resolution that the farm bill should "provide a dependable, fiscally responsible safety net for farmers." But the group took the major step of proposing the elimination of the $5.2 billion direct payment program. "Direct payments should be replaced by using this money for an improved revenue insurance program and risk management and fair trade," the resolution stated.

Further, the group's policy stated that the risk management program needs to be better coordinated to avoid gaps and reduce redundancy. In particular, the group stated that the ACRE program would work better if it were based on county yields and revenue triggers rather than the current state yield and revenue triggers.

Voting delegates from 89 Iowa counties also repeatedly rejected resolution language to end farm programs, saying that they need wording to take to the American Farm Bureau Federation meeting next January that reflected the views of Iowa's general membership.

Tony Allen of Diagonal, Iowa, proposed the failed resolutions to eliminate commodity payments altogether and privatize crop insurance. Allen also wanted to move food-aid programs out of the farm bill. He said farmers need to make a statement on a shift in federal spending.

"The point that we're going to have a farm bill is that we're standing there with our hand out to get our senators to vote for it," Allen said. "If we go up and say we don't want a farm bill anymore, and take the money and put the food-stamp program where it should be. The food-stamp program and aid to dependent children doesn't belong in the farm bill. That's what we get counted on is how much is in the farm bill, but it doesn't go to the farm bill."

About 75 percent of USDA's budget goes to various food-aid programs. Urban lawmakers often are swayed to back the farm bill because of boosts in spending for such programs. Some Iowa Farm Bureau members highlighted thepoint that there is a tie between food-aid and farm programs. Further, some suggested, those food programs carry the farm programs.

"Without the food stamps and welfare program, we will not have a secretary of agriculture in the cabinet," said Carol Messer of Yarmouth, Iowa.

But Allen wasn't alone in seeking to eliminate farm subsidies. Clark BreDahl of Greenfield, Iowa, pointed out that New Zealand took the step of eliminating farm payments and has become one of the world's strongest exporters in some livestock sectors.

"Their farm economy has not only survived, but thrived since eliminating subsidies," BreDahl said. He added that it's time for farmers to "put our money where our mouths are."

Others said Iowa Farm Bureau is already taking an aggressive step calling for the elimination of $5.2 billion in direct payments. But a safety net is needed to cope with factors outside of farmers' control, such as a collapse in exports that drives down prices.

"We at least need a floor under our commodities at some point," said Dave Denne of Griswold, Iowa.

Crop insurance also is a public-private partnership with USDA paying half the farmer premium and overhead costs for companies. Dave Miller, director of research and commodity services for the Iowa Farm Bureau, said eliminating the USDA subsidies would likely raise farmer premiums to more than twice their current cost.

Eliminating all language backing a farm bill also opens up conservation concerns. In a survey, only about 18 percent of Iowa Farm Bureau members said they would put in place the best conservation practices without USDA support. David Jones of Hedrick, Iowa, said taking the language out suggests IAFB doesn't support conservation, which then opens the group up to criticism from environmentalists.

"We take this out, we're kind of setting up the precedent that we're not in favor of conservation, and I don't think we want to do that," Jones said.

The Iowans also recognized that they face battles in regional differences over the farm bill with Southern farmers who grow cotton and rice that will surely arise at the AFBF annual meeting. So the group added language that they want programs that improve the safety net for all farmers.

COOPERATIVES

Delegates rejected language from Thursday suggesting an end to antitrust exemptions for farmer-owned cooperatives, but there clearly was a sentiment that cooperatives are becoming too large and competing directly in some cases against the farmers or livestock producers the cooperatives are supposed to represent.

Language adopted reaffirmed IAFB's support for the Capper-Volstead Act, a law that exempts farm cooperatives from some federal anti-trust laws.

"I do think the intent of this group yesterday was to send a message that we're a little disappointed with our co-ops," said Jeff Berkland of Cylinder, Iowa. "They need to understand their farmer-owners are not happy with them."

ETHANOL

Though Iowa is the nation's largest producer of ethanol, the state doesn't have a mandate to blend the fuel in all vehicles such as neighboring Minnesota does. Right now, E-10 is in about 70 percent of gasoline sold in Iowa.

Delegates adopted a resolution supporting "requiring all gasoline sold in Iowa to be blended at the maximum rate allowed," implying the Environmental Protection Agency could potentially raise the blend level to E-15 for standard vehicles.

YOUNG FARMERS

Wording was added that USDA's beginning and young farmer programs should focus on increasing income rather than purchasing assets.

Brandon Vorthmann of Treynor, Iowa, said the programs are geared too much toward trying to buy land or assets, yet young farmers are geared toward renting land rather than trying to buy it. Vorthmann noted that because of the strong agricultural economy, more young people such as himself are trying to get into farming than over the past decade or two.

"A lot of the program is tied to buying assets, specifically buying land," Vorthmann said. "With young farmers, it's more about renting land or renting cows, ways to produce more income rather than buying assets."

Chris Clayton can be reached at chris.clayton@telventdtn.com

(AG/KM)

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