[AT] Tobacco transplanting time
charlie hill
chill8 at cox.net
Wed May 4 14:56:00 PDT 2005
Now that the price support system and allotments are gone I think the top
contract price is about $1.30 a pound. That again is for the top grades.
Under the old system the guys were paying anywhere from 35 to 55 cents a
pound to lease the allotments. The top grades under the old system brought
about $1.90 a pound. That means that there is about 20 cents of "profit"
gone out of the deal.
However, the farmers that are staying in the business are no longer
constrained as to which tract of land they have to plant the tobacco on or
how many pounds per acre they can produce so it will probably work out ok
for the better farmers with the best land. The sloppy farmers who taxed
the old system will fall by the way side. That is the way it should be.
Now it will work just like it does with vegetable crops. If you can get a
contract with the tobacco company, you can grow tobacco and take your
chances.
The guys that stay in will still be more mechanized here than where David is
but I suspect the ones that can get enough good labor will go back to manual
harvest. It is easier to control quality that way.
The machine can't tell green from ripe.
My family has been in the tobacco business one way or another for as many
generations as we can trace. I never thought I'd feel this way but I'm
kinda glad to finally be out of the business. I just hope we don't have to
let the farm grow up in trees or plant it with little vinyl boxes (tract
houses).
Charlie
----- Original Message -----
From: "David Bruce" <davidbruce at yadtel.net>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Wednesday, May 04, 2005 4:25 PM
Subject: [AT] Tobacco transplanting time
>I took my pup for a walk "up the road" and some of the locals were
>transplanting tobacco sets. I had noticed earlier they had "laid by"
>(listed) the rows. There transplant operation consists of a four row
>transplanted that carries eight men (two for each row) carried by a big JD
>tractor (sorry I didn't get the model). The tractor also has strapped to
>it three water tanks (one in front and one on each side). They transplant
>four rows, skip one "blank balk" and then repeat. The "blank balk" is to
>drive a tractor through at harvest time pulling a trailer where the leaves
>are piled. Around here tobacco is still manually harvested, fields are too
>small and the terrain is too hilly for mechanical harvesters like I'm sure
>Charlie Hill is used to seeing.
> The operation is fascinating to watch, and very similar to what my
> grandparents did 50 years ago. Wonder how long they can survive in the
> new days of tobacco without the price supports.
>
> David
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