Thursday, August 9, 2012

Sweet Potatoes for Animal Feed, 1949


By F.H. Jeter, Extension Editor, N.C. State College, as published in the Wilmington Star on Aug. 4, 1949

A movement is on foot tin Carteret to install one of the sweet potato dehydrators. Ronker Stanfield of a local fertilizer company has a number of well-constructed buildings with concrete foundations which are not to use at the time of the sweet potato harvest. Johnny Lassiter was done there the other day and found Mr. Stanfield interested in installing a dehydrator to process the size and cull sweets for use as cattle feed.

Farm Agent Williams says that most of the sweet potatoes in that section are grown in dark soils and often do not have the eye appeal as to those grown in other parts of the state. There is also a great need for an additional feed supply in that section and since three bushels of the sweets properly processed are equal in value as a stock feed to one bushel of corn, and because Carteret growers produce about 100 bushels of the sweets per acre, it is felt that local growers could more than double their present yield of feed by enlarging the acreage to sweet potatoes.

No comments:

Post a Comment