General information about the Homerville Wholesale Produce Auction.
Name and address:

Homerville Wholesale Produce Auction
9430 Spencer Rd
Homerville, OH 44235

Location:

One mile south of Homerville on State Route 301.

Date of startup:

1997.  We have completed nine years with 20-40% growth per year.

The 2005 gross auction sales were more than 40% greater than 2004.

Owners:

The business organization is a partnership of F. W. Owen (manager) and Andrea Owen-Shearer (auctioneer).

Committee:

There is a seven member advisory committee.  

Current chairman is Noah H. Hostetler, 12139 Flemming Rd., West Salem, OH  44287

Website:

www.HomerProduceAuction.com

or

www.brightdsl.net/~fwo

Many documents that we use are available online.

This includes market reports, charts of quantities and prices, our Guidebook, sales agreements, and photos.

Manager:

FW Owen (background dairy farming)

The Dockwalker is an important person at Homerville:

Currently it is Menno S. Yoder.

The Dockwalker's job description:

Auctioneer:

Andrea Owen-Shearer cell 330/461-2612

Paul Emerson

Order Buyer:

Ken Baumhardt - cell 440/225-0882

Cost 2.5% with a $5 minimum.

Building:

Open, clear span, pole construction,

size 325x60 feet with over 500 feet of loading dock,

and more than 24,000 sq. feet of concrete.

There is a two-lane drive through inside the building.

Volume of Sales in 2005:

Our policy is that we do not announce gross sales.

However it is a large amount, and has a significant effect in the community.

Growth since 1997 has been 20-40% per year.

% Local Grown Produce:  

Over 99% local.  Any produce grown in Ohio is considered to be local.

% Organic Produce Sales:  

We have two organic sections.  One section for Certified and another for Exempted(<$5000).  Organic sales are 3-5% of the yearly gross.

Amount of Acres Farmed When Started:

This was never surveyed.  The manager's guess is between 50 and 100 acres.

Amount of Acres Currently Farmed:

This also has never been fully surveyed.  It is expanding rapidly.

Probably hundreds of acres.  479 growers sold produce here in 2005.  Could they have averaged over one acre each?  Very likely it's far more.

Amount of Growers When We Started:

We started with about twenty growers. Only two had much experience with commercial vegetable production.

Amount of Growers Currently:

479 growers sold produce at Homerville in 2005.

Of that number 95 growers sold 75% of the gross.

Many sold between $20,000 and $50,000 each.

Who are the buyers?

We had 1162 different individual buyers in 2005.

Of these, at least 184 are thought to be resellers (having bought $500 or more).

Of the 184, the typical buyer is a "Farm Marketer" at the edge of Cleveland, Akron, Canton, Wooster, Mansfield, Elyria, and Lorain.

Many are from deeper into the Cleveland metropolitan area.

Other buyers are grocery stores, small chains, and restaurants.  Occasionally a bigger chain will buy a load.

We attract a large number of table lot buyers and many tourists.

We had 90 lineal feet of table lots tables in 2005 and that was often double-stacked.


Dates, times, and sale order:

Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

Table lots 5:30 PM

Large lots 6:00 PM

Usually selling with two auctioneers at opposite ends of the building.

Sale order:

1. Drive through

2. Bins and Pallet Lots (full pallets)

3. Carts (2-10 boxes)

4. Pecks rows

5. #2 produce

6. Non-produce (boxes and other farm related)

Notes:

82 produce auctions were held during 2005.

We emailed and faxed over 8200 market reports.

We said "SOLD" 34,922 times in 2005.

We sold 609,798 items by the count in 2005.


Market Report:

Market reports are published after each auction.

We will send market reports to anyone in the world by email, and to anyone in Ohio by fax.

Please send a request to join the list to fwo@bright.net.


History:

Two local dairy farmers happened to have a conversation about starting a produce auction while attending a pasture walk in May of 1995.

This conversation led directly to the organization of the Homerville Wholesale Produce Auction.

About half of the original Homerville auction growers were Shiloh Mennonites.  The other half were Amish from Homerville and Ashland.

Several years later, Blooming Grove Auction was built 26.5 miles west of Homerville.  At that time many of our Shiloh growers transferred to the new auction nearer their homes.

By then local Amish were ready to greatly increase production.  At the same time many English growers, who had been shipping to other wholesale outlets, began hauling much more produce to Homerville.

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Homerville Wholesale Produce Auction