At Campbell, we believe farmers play a significant role in making the food you love to eat. For over 150 years, we鈥檝e built strong connections with farmers. Today, we鈥檙e proud to introduce you to Tommy Dollar, third-generation owner and President of Dollar Family Farms in Bainbridge, Georgia.
According to Tommy Dollar, his farm operation has 4,000 acres of cotton, corn, peanuts, cattle, pine trees鈥攁nd grandchildren.
鈥淢y grandfather started Dollar Farm Products, a farm supply business, in 1939,鈥� Tommy says. 鈥淚 built our first cotton gin in 1988 and started Dollar Family Farms in 1990.鈥�
Today, Tommy鈥檚 son, Hugh, manages the farm operations while Tommy focuses on broader initiatives such as managing water quality. Tommy also co-founded and serves on the board of the American Peanut Growers Group [APGG], a cooperative handling and peanut shelling group for farmers in Georgia and Alabama.
Peanuts are a longtime rotation crop in the sandy soils of southwest Georgia. The planting season begins in April or May, after the field has been sampled to confirm growing conditions are right. The Dollars sow 150 pounds of seeds per acre鈥攐ne seed every two inches, in twin rows seven inches apart. The plants, with their delicate yellow flowers, grow above ground, but the pods with the peanuts鈥攚hich are the seeds鈥攇row underground.
After 140 to 145 days, sometime in September through November, as much as 2 tons of pods are ready for harvesting.
The Dollars plow up the peanuts and let them dry in the field for two to four days, depending on the sunlight. Then they pick the peanuts and use dryers to reduce the moisture. Government inspectors grade the peanuts for size, volume, coloration, and other parameters. The peanuts are stored in 27 warehouses until they can be hauled to the shelling plant.
In the early 2000s, a group of peanut growers including Tommy got together to invest and start their own peanut shelling organization.
was formed as a grower-owned shelling facility so they could sell directly to the end user, companies like Campbell! In fact, APGG鈥檚 longest relationship is with Lance crackers. Our Lance peanut butter sandwich crackers include their split kernels.
The shelling facility is known for its high-quality peanuts and President and CEO Neal Flanagan thinks that鈥檚 partly because of the equitable way they operate.
鈥淓veryone is treated the same,鈥� says Neal. 鈥淭ommy is one of our larger share-holders, but the way all 130-plus growers are paid is the same, whether you鈥檙e a 50-ton grower or a 10,000-ton grower.鈥�
In addition to their focus on quality and food safety, APGG is also committed to reducing their environmental impact. One way they promote sustainability is by conducting surveys to learn how their farmers manage resources, from water to soil. By sharing their findings, farmers can learn from one another and have a baseline to improve performance over time.
APGG also installed solar panels, to help meet the rising cost of electricity.
Hugh and Tommy meet every morning at 7 a.m.
鈥淚 want him to be an expert,鈥� Tommy says, 鈥渁nd I try to help with what I’ve learned. It鈥檚 not as simple as planting a seed and harvesting it.鈥�
The Dollars rely heavily on experts at the University of Georgia, Auburn University, and the University of Florida to understand how to grow peanuts sustainably by preserving water quality and quantity, and natural habitats.
鈥淚’ll never learn everything about growing crops, but I can learn something every day. Never quit learning.鈥� -Tommy Dollar, Peanut farmer and co-founder of American Peanut Growers Group
鈥淚’ll never learn everything about growing crops, but I can learn something every day. Never quit learning.鈥�
That learning has helped Tommy and his team weather the inevitable bad times.
鈥淚 have to do everything I can to be the cheerleader. I try to help our farm and our industry be profitable and stay in business through the good years and bad years. When I come to work and see the trucks going out to get a load of fertilizer, the workers planting peanuts that will become food people will enjoy, and the farmers coming to talk鈥攖hat鈥檚 what I thrive on.鈥�
You can taste Tommy and Hugh’s peanuts in our Lance snacks. Learn more about Lance history and find out where to buy your favorite snack.
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