Sunflowers - Any native American crop that takes 373 years to come into its own has got to be called a late bloomer on the agricultural scene. So it is with sunflowers. Grown by Indians in North Godina for food before 1600 ahd raised by New Ebgland colonists for hair oil as early as 1615, sunflowers have had a long but relatively uneventful history in the United States. Down through the decades' most sunflowers that served more than a decorative function in U.S. gardens were raised for the confectionery and bird seed Wbale-OWaih can tackle any deanmg problem you may hava For COMMERCIAL customers we clean heavy equipment truck fleets, construction equipment, tractors, trailers and even aluminum brightening For INDUSTRY Maclean signs, tanks (inside and out), interior and exterior walls and degrease floors and machinery For MOBILE HOME OWNERS we can clean exterior surfaces, canopies and porches, fuel storage tanks end provide an axtenor waxing service For the HOME OWNER we clean exterior sur facts, basement walls and floors, and asphalt and cement flooring If you have a cleaning problem we haven't mentioned CALL US We'll work out a solution with you 5 . e • ui 9 rs * srt> f mr«« *-* t markets, rarely for oil But while we in • the United States weren’t successful in getting yields of oil high enough to make sunflower* a profitable crop, researchers in the Soviet Union were. The USSR desperately needed to find an oilseed crop which would grow successfully in a climate too cold for the traditional world leaders soybeans, peanuts, and cot tonseed. They hit upon, you guessed it, the sunflower-but they took the sunflowers we had im proved through many years of breeding and achieved a A NEW SERVICE FOR FARMERS We’ll mh your whale H you how am... end wt can twl. you with your farm denn-u. chorat tool We deen and aanitize poultry houwa, milk perlore anal cattle italk puiekly and thoroughly. Wo do paml xtrimin. too! TtUphont: (717) 393-3600 MOWLE HIGH PRESSURE WASHING SERVICE WHALE-O-WASH 20 Eeetjemee Street Leneeeter. Pe. 17502 A Blooming Market breakthrough which ap proximately doubled the., oil content of the native American plant to where it ranged between 40 and 45 percent. Soybeans are only about 20 percent oil. In 1966 we imported some of the high-oil Soviet sunflowers into the United States, and a year later commercial production for oil uses began on some 93,000 acres in the Red River Valley of Minnesota and North Dakota. So much for the past. More important is the present and the fqture for oilseed sunflowers in the United States. 'At present best estimates of U.S. sunflower plantings in 1972 put die total somewhere near 350,000 acres-the largest ever. And for the first time in history plantings of oil varieties topped those for confectionery and seed purposes-the ratio being about 3 to I.' Minnesota and North Dakota usually plant about 85 percent of the Nation’s crop-al though sunflowers are getting more and more popular on the northern fringes of the Corn Belt where com and soybeans historically have not performed ex ceptionally well. In addition, oilseed sunflowers are also being grown in several Cotton Belt States where excess capacity in cotton oil mills is an inducement to provide oilseeds for crushing. a ,'f •■rtVi'rt fa'f> UJIiUUUUU >«r» • 11 » Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 31,1973 Of course, theodtimate test for high-oil sunflowers will be how well their costs and returns stack up against those for competing Crops. In the Red River Valley area production costs, based on estimates developed by the North Dakota Agricultural Extenison Service, come to about $23 to obtain present average yields of around 1,000 pounds an acre. A recent study by the Economic Research Service indicates that at recent sun flowerseed price levels of 4 cents a pound, 1,000-pound-per-acre yields would make crop returns superior to those for flaxseed and equal to those for wheat not produced under allotment. However, sunflower yields would have to rise to around 1,100 pounds to compete with soybeans and barley and to 1,900 to 2,000 pounds to compete with allotment wheat. (The higher yields apparently are achievable with existing seed varieties and technologies. Some farmers in North Dakota already report sunflower yields of 2,000 pounds an acre and over and several Red River Valley far mers claim sunflowers are their No. 1 cash crop.) In the Cotton Belt, production costs are estimated by ERS to total about $4O to obtain present average yields of about 1,250 pounds an acre. Compared with other major crops in the Cotton Belt area, if sunflowerseed sells for 4 cents a pound, per acre sunflower yields would have to be about 1,100 to 1.600 pounds to compete with cotton produced without government payments; 1,200 to 1.600 pounds to compete with sorghum raised under the feed grain program; and 1,600 to 2,000 pounds to compete with soybeans and with corn produced under the feed grain program. 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