Search Site   
News Stories at a Glance
Diverse Corn Belt Project looks at agricultural diversification
Deere settles right-to-repair lawsuit for $99 million; judge still has to approve the deal
YEDA: From a kitchen table to a national movement
Insurer: Illinois farm collision claims reached 180 last year
Indiana to invest $1 billion to add jobs in ag, life sciences
Illinois farmer turned flood prone fields to his advantage with rice
1,702 students participate in Wilmington College judging contest
Despite heavy rain and snow in April drought conditions expanding
Indiana company uses AI to supply farmers with their own corn genetics
Crash Course Village, Montgomery County FB offer ag rescue training
Panel examines effects of Iran war at the farm gate
   
Archive
Search Archive  
   
Outstanding Young Farmer from Ohio going to Nashville
By CELESTE BAUMGARTNER
Ohio Correspondent

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Erik Scott of Georgetown has been named the 2012 Outstanding Young Farmer by the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation (OFBF). This contest is designed to help young farmers strengthen their business skills, develop marketing opportunities and receive recognition for their accomplishments.

Contestants are judged on the growth of their farm businesses and involvement in Farm Bureau and their community. Scott farms with his parents, Fred and Frankie, and his sister, Hannah. They raise corn, soybeans, tobacco, hay and pasture. They also raise beef cattle and market all natural beef direct to consumers.

Scott worked off the farm for three months after college, but said he missed being outside and seeing the farm. “I like farming because I get to do it with my family,” he said. “It’s a kind of freedom. I don’t have a boss other than the checkbook.”

He graduated from The Ohio State University’s Agricultural Technical Institute where he dual-majored in powered equipment and fluid power and motion control. He learned diagnostic skills and problem-solving, which he uses on the farm and in his agricultural consulting business wherein he is “trying to put technology in everybody’s hands.

“My college education is invaluable to me,” he said.
Scott, 27, won 250 hours free use of a Kubota M-series tractor provided by Kubota, $1,000 in Grainger merchandise sponsored by Farm Credit Services and an all-expenses-paid trip to the American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF) annual meeting in Nashville, Tenn., where he will represent Ohio in the national competition.

He is a member of the Brown County Farm Bureau and has been active in the state’s Young Agricultural Professionals program. He served on the AFBF Tobacco Advisory Committee and is a member of the board of directors for the Ohio Valley Antique Machinery Show.

Jeff and Beth Roehm of Hillsboro were also finalists in the statewide contest.
11/21/2012