Spelt
Gelt: The Vollmar brothers standing
in a field of spelt that will be sold in the US and Germany.
| Farm
At A Glance |

Farm name: Vollmar Family Farms, Inc.
Related business: Organic Bean
& Grain, which markets organic soybeans and
grains internationally
Location: Caro, MI, in Southeast
Michigan's thumb region
Important people: Mark and Steven
Vollmar
Years farming: the family has
been farming in Michigan since 1910
Tillable acres: 1,502
Soil type: loam
Crops: soybeans, wheat, spelt,
corn, dry beans; cover crops include Mammoth clover,
alfalfa, oats and rye
Livestock: none
Regenerataive farming practices:
intensively managed crop rotations that include
cover crops
Marketing: market directly to
customers in Japan, Korea and Germany
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Michigan
Department of Agriculture
Use this link to check out their home page.
Select
Michigan Global Newsletter
Find trade leads, consult with international and
domestic marketing specialists at the Michigan
Department of Agriculture website.
International
and New Market Development
This Michigan Department of Ag program provides
services and implements activities that help Michigan
food and agricultural firms initiate or expand
their international and domestic markets. The
Web Site provides a brief explanation of services
provided by INMDP. For information or greater
detail, call (517) 241-2178. Or, contact the following:
Christine E. Lietzau
Sustainable Organic Agriculture Coordinator
(517) 373-9800
lietzauc@michigan.gov
Paul Burke
International Program Manager
(517) 373-9710
burkep@michigan.gov
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In the “thumb” region of Michigan’s mitten
shape, sugar beets and soybeans grow on fine-textured soils
in lush fields that seem to stretch all the way to the Great
Lakes. Like most farmers, Michigan growers are reaching out
for new markets beyond their state line—in Europe, South
America, and Asia. In the past four years, a group of organic
grain producers in Michigan’s thumb, Organic Bean and
Grain (OBNG), have successfully marketed their soybeans direct
to Japan.
Together, Mark Vollmar, president of OBNG, and Steve Vollmar,
president of Vollmar Family Farms, produce soybeans, corn,
wheat and spelt on a 1,000-acre family farm. Mark’s
responsibilities lie in marketing organic grains for the family
farm. In addition, as president of OBNG, Mark buys organic
soybeans from individuals in a loosely organized group of
independent Michigan growers, selling the beans to customers
in Japan and elsewhere. In four years, the group has swelled
from three to ten growers. As the middleman, Mark saves OBNG
customers the trouble of working with ten different farms.
“Our largest Japanese customer wants to retain his privacy,
so we have a confidential contract and I take care of communications”,
says Mark.
Mark began by selling his family’s organic grains
to US brokers who sold to Japan. Four years ago, a representative
from a large Japanese company contacted Mark, offering a confidential
contract to purchase organic food grade soybeans for soymilk
and tofu. Things took off from there. “About 80% of
our soybeans are now sold, processed and consumed as soymilk
and tofu in Japan”, says Mark. Currently, OBNG has several
Japanese customers, as well as business in Korea, Germany,
and North America. In July 2000, the Vollmars took advantage
of assistance from a local marketing program and traveled
to Japan in order to represent their products in person. “I
wanted to visit our existing customer, and develop new customers
in Japan. I hope to do business with those new companies in
the future”, Mark said.
Vollmar Family Farms was an established organic producer,
certified by OCIA and QAI, before they began selling on the
international market. So, USDA’s recent Federal Organic
Program and Federal Rule haven’t changed the way the
Vollmars farm. However, OBNG had to become certified by Japan,
too. According to Mark, “Down the road, the USDA organic
standard will be accepted by Japan, but that isn’t the
case now. It will be easier to sell to Japan when that happens.”
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The
Vollmars' Crop Rotation
Their three-year rotation starts with soybeans,
as follows:
- soybeans
- winter wheat, spelt or rye cover with spring
Mammoth clover
- grain corn or soybeans
The Vollmars sow ‘Michigan’ Mammoth
clover into grains in the spring, plowing it down
in the fall after grain harvest. After a quick
pass with a chisel plow or moldboard plow, some
trash will remain on the surface. According to
Mark, “The clover starts growing again in
the spring, but it will be much thinner. In the
spring, we start again with corn or soybeans.
After the row crops, it’s back into winter
grains or a cover crop. Any bare ground goes to
a cover crop grain like rye or leftover wheat
or grain cleanings. We get most of our bean ground
back into winter grain. After corn, we like to
plant the rye cover. Then, it’s back to
soybeans. When soybean harvest is late, like this
year, we hire a plane to sow the rye.” |
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The Vollmar family farm is a good example of other farms
in the group. Mark and Steve are fourth generation farmers.
Their family has farmed at the same location in Michigan’s
thumb region since 1910. In order to produce their high-quality
grains, the Vollmars renovated the barn their great-grandfather
built in 1920, adding grain-cleaning equipment and a warehouse.
Soybeans, corn, wheat and spelt are the focus, along with
some dry beans, a little oats, and assorted cover crops.
Organic farmers in the OBNG group grow food-grade soybeans
and expect yields lower than standard beans. For tofu, ‘Vinton’
is the choice. For soymilk, the Vollmars produce their own
organic Syngenta ‘2020’. “We license ‘2020’
from Syngenta. Syngenta was going to phase it out, since they
are replacing it with a new organic variety that has improved
agronomic traits. But our contractor wants the old variety”,
Mark said. “We had to start producing our own organic
seed, in this case, and we sell it to other organic growers.
In the future, additional organic varieties should become
readily available on the market.”
Of course, any market can be unpredictable. Mark related,
“Now, our Japanese customers are telling us that their
economy is poor, and so their prices have gone down in the
last year. For a while, there was such a strong demand. Our
production has increased here, but their economy may not be
able to absorb all of the beans produced here.”
Paul Burke, Manager of the Market Development Program, Michigan
Department of Agriculture, adds: “Japan is still a strong
market for Michigan organic soybeans. Besides OBNG, there
are many other groups in Michigan and the US that sell to
Japan. The market is becoming more competitive in Europe,
too. Taiwan and Korea are also opening up. All of the organic
grains—wheat, spelt, dry edible beans—are big
on the international market now. And, there’s a growing
export market for processed products,” says Burke, who
works with Michigan growers.
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