A story in a recent issue of Farm Journal magazine provides an excellent lesson in location economics. The story details how the south is losing its hen houses and hog bams to midwestem competition. The story raises some points that should be pondered by Delmarva farmers. Back in the 70’s there was a great rush to the south by egg producers. Drawn by the warmer climate, cheap labor and other seeming advantages there was a tremendous boom in hen house construction. Those were prosperous times and almost any kind of an operation could show a profit. The warm weather was nice and the cost of feed was still manageable and so those big egg Small Bear Farm 750x20 4 ply 59.95 750x24 4 ply 64.95 8 3x24 4 ply 79.00 9 5x24 4 ply 84.00 11 2x34 4 ply 135.00 11 2x36 4 ply 137.00 12 4x36 4 ply 155.00 13 6x36 4 ply 189.00 Farm Talk Jerry Webb factories grew and prospered. „ But then came a much sterner econmic period starting in the late 70’s and continuing right up to the present time. That’s when egg producers found that the south just couldn’t compete. That a balmy day can’t make up for an extra 50 cents a bushel in feed costs. That’s really what southern livestock producers are starting to find according to the Farm Journal information. Those highly con centrated livestock enterprises that require tremendous amounts of com and soybeans really aren’t doing that well in the deep south. In really good years, Georgia, for instance, could produce enough grain for the egg factories. But most of the time it meant shipping All Orders This Week Delivered Free To Your Farm Over 250.00 - Under 250.00, Only Small Fee Extra from the midwest and adding on anywhere from 30 to 60 cents a bushel to the price*just for tran sportation. Year in and year out southern row crop farmers cannot compete with Indiana, Illinois and lowa. Yields are lower, half or less on the average and production expenses are higher in the south, - more fertilizer, more weed control, more irrigation. After several years of trying to work with the situation, the egg factories are relocating back to the source of grain and closer to the population centers. The supposed advantages of the sunny south have disappeared. There is a warning in this relocation that has implications in a lot of places. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out the natural advantage the midwest has when it comes to producing corn and soybeans. You need only to drive through Illinois in August to un derstand that Georgia, the Carolinas, Virginia, even the Delmarva peninsula will never compete when it comes to producing corn and soybeans. And if that’s an important part of the business then the midwest has an advantage. On the other hand there is no magic involved in shipping com and soybeans from Evansville, Indiana to Baltimore, Maryland or Atlanta, Georgia. There is a set price you must pay if you want the grain. Otherwise an egg factory or hog palace or other concentrated Armstrong FARM MUSCLE Hi Power Lug 22x11 00-8 25x12-9 18x950-8 Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, September 29,1984-D2S livestock enterprise is it the profitable and they can close it up mercy of local production. If that when the deal goes sour, supply is inadequate or uneven. So what happens to those then perhaps the location is wrong ' Georgia farmers who were - that’s what a lot of these producing com and soybeans for operations are finding out. They the egg producers? Obviously, left the midwest 20 years ago for a their local market is gone. They better climate and some other can ship grain to Chicago but at a hoped for advantages and now they substantial cost. Or they can shift are going back. to some other crop. No doubt the Location economics is a funny land will go on producing thing. It takes time to work it all something even though the chicken out. While it may be heart houses are empty, breaking to the investors in Coffee A parallel could be drawn for the County, Georgia to see only 2of 60 Delmarva peninsula. As long as egg producers left in the county, it the local broiler industry prospers is a statement on our free en- there will be a good demand for terprise system. We are free to get corn and soybeans. But should that into and out of business as we see industry move for whatever reason fit and to make as much money or and com and soybean farmers will lose as much as the situation fall on difficult times. They dictates. A county full of empty flourish now because of the broiler chicken houses attests to this. No industry. Without it, they simply doubt hundreds of thousands of would be competing with midwest dollars have been wasted on idle farmers and carrying the added buildings, equipment and land, burden of large transportation And at the same time somewhere costs. in Illinois or Indiana an en terprising soul is investing thousands of dollars in a brand new egg producing complex. It’s all part of what makes our agricultural system so productive. Farmers are not locked in by government mandate or birth right. They can chose the en terprise that seems the most Oct. 11 2x24 4 ply 14 9x24 4 ply 14 9x24 6 ply 14 9x24 8 ply 16 9x24 6 ply 16 9x24 8 ply 14 9x26 6 ply 18 4x26 6 ply 23 1x26 8 ply 11 2x28 4 ply 12 4x28 4 ply 13 6x28 4 ply 13 6x28 6 ply 14 9x28 4 ply 14 9x28 6 ply 16 9x28 6 ply 16 9x28 8 ply 16 9x30 6 ply 18 4x30 6 ply 23 Ix3o 8 ply 24 5x32 10 ply 16 9x34 6 ply 18 4x34 6 ply 18 4x34 8 ply 20 8x34 6 ply 20 8x34 8 ply 23 1x34 8 ply 11 2x38 4 ply 12 4x38 4 ply 13 6x38 4 ply 13 6x38 6 ply 14 9x38 6 ply 15 5x38 6 ply 16 9x38 6 ply 18 4x38 6 ply 18 4x38 8 ply 20 Bx3B 8 ply $38.01 $54.71 $30.65 13 forestry session planned EASTON, Md. - The 6th Annual Delmarva Forestry Seminar is scheduled for Oct. 13 at Easton’s Tidewater Inn, sponsored by the University Maryland Cooperative Extension Service (UMCES). In addition to a general session, headed by representatives of a number of state regulatory agencies and conservationists, participants can choose from several workshops offered: —How to sell your timber and stay at peace with your govern ment - Some state regulations govern timber harvesting operations. As a forest landowner, you are still responsible for loggers on your property meeting these regulations. —Real estate taxes and forest land - If you own forest land in either Maryland or Delaware, preferential real estate tax assessments can save you tax dollars. —Wildlife, waterfowl and forest management -- Wildlife and waterfowl can add immeasurably to the value of your forest land, and they take little in return. Learn how forest management practices can encourage their adopting your forest as their home. Planners of the seminar say they also will focus on the interaction of forest land and the Chesapeake Bay ecosystem. And they have planned an optional tour of forest land on the Bay for Oct. 14 from 8:30 to noon. The seminar runs from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Registration is a must and the $2O registration fee includes lunch. After Oct. 8, registration fees increase to $25. If you plan to attend the optional forestry tour on Oct. 14, include an additional $5. For more information about the seminar, or to register, call: K. Marc Teffeau, Estension Agent, Talbot County, at (301) 822- 1244. ONTHE GROW This is all part of location economics, a slowly evolving process that allows the factors of production-land, labor, capital and management-to gravitate to the place where production is the most profitable. For egg producers in the 70s that seemed to be the south. Now it looks like the midwest. In another decade it may be somewhere else.