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Is NEW TECHNOLOGY in Your Future?
The
feature story ("TECHNOLOGY
can improve efficiencies and drive down costs") profiles
two businesses that invested wisely and successfully in new technologies
and that dramatically reduced costs and enhanced the bottom line. Have
you thought about investing in state-of-the-art systems that can make
your operation more efficient? Many other businesses throughout Northeast
Farm Credit have taken the step. Here are a few examples:
-
Computers in harvester/processors. A timber harvester/processor
is a multi-function tree-length processor that cuts and delimbs trees,
and then cuts logs to length, all without the operator ever leaving
the booth. Scott Chaffee, of Chaffee Logging in Belchertown, Mass.,
wanted more accurate records of the board feet he cuts in order to
gauge production and improve communication with the sawmill. A computer
in the booth of his harvester/processor records volume cut in a day’s
time and tallies the total volume in board feet. The rollers in the
harvester feed the tree through the processing head, and sensors calculate
the length, while sensors in the pinchers calculate diameter. Using
length and diameter, the computer calculates and displays the board
feet in that segment of log.
-
Mechanical harvesting of pickling cukes. Hands-free harvesting
of pickling cucumbers was such an incredible revolution about 10 years
ago that when Don Patterson, of Patterson Farm, LLC of Sunderland,
Mass., first spoke of it, some thought he was from Mars. But hand
harvesting was labor intensive, and Don wanted to cut high labor costs.
He worked with a manufacturer and together they developed a mechanical
harvester that cut labor costs from 50 percent of the cost of harvest
to 30 percent.
-
GPS and GIS systems as aids in timber management. Foresters
once used a hand-held compass, a measuring device, and hip chain for
a perimeter measurement of an area. Now foresters, like Mary Wigmore,
of Wigmore Forest Resource Management, Ashfield, Mass., use hand-held
global positioning systems (GPS), and download points of areas to
a GIS (geographic information system) database to help create maps
of an area. They can also download aerial photos and topographic maps
from Web sites. This improved technology provides more accurate mapping
information and saves significant time.


-
Producing an energy source from manure.
As long as Blue Spruce Farm in Bridport, Vt. has cows, they will also
have access to a renewable source of power. The farm produces energy
from animal wastes, relying on anaerobic digesters, which produce
methane gas from the waste products. Central Vermont Public Service
supplies its entire green power program with anaerobic digesters,
selling the resultant power as CVPS Cow Power. In mid-January, 2005,
the 1,500-head dairy farm began supplying power to the CVPS program,
and is expected to produce 1.7 million kilowatt-hours of electricity
annually.
If you think technology might be in
your
future, Farm Credit can provide consulting assistance (for example, by
running “what if ” spreadsheets for you) or helping with a loan or lease.
A call to your local Farm Credit office will get you started.
Case 1 - Steve
Riessen, Sun Orchard,
Click here
Case 2 - Luke Brochu,
Pleasant River Lumber
Click here
Is NEW TECHNOLOGY
in your future?
Click here
Main article
Click here
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