A farm owned by a man who invented a way to heat chicken houses using straw was one of the stops in this area for those taking Roy Blunt's 12th annual agricultural tour on Tuesday.
U.S. Rep Blunt showcased the Bruce Youngblood farm on Missouri Highway 59 south of Diamond.
Hot chickens
Bruce Youngblood and his brother, Doug Youngblood had a developing problem three years ago — the cost to keep one flock of chickens warm in his six chicken houses for the 39 days it took them to mature cost him between $17,000 and $18,000, a cost that would likely drive him out of business if it continued.
With the cost of the natural gas he used to heat those houses continuing to rise, the brothers turned to the Internet for an alternative way to heat the chickens and stay in business.
They found an article about a farmer in Canada who used straw to produce heat and decided to see if that could help them.
With that, B&D Heating, a company selling furnaces that burn bales of straw, was born and Bruce Youngblood said it was born out of necessity.
The brothers built their first furnace and used it for a year, then sold it and built another with improvements based on what they learned. That second furnace is still being used to heat Bruce Youngblood's six chicken houses and Doug Youngblood just finished the fifth furnace they've built and it was standing on a trailer ready for shipment to a farm in McDonald County.
Bruce Youngblood said other poultry growers across the country face ruin without an alternative to fossil fuels.
"If they don't have some source of heat beyond the propane or natural gas, some of them are not going to make it," Youngblood said. "The grower I talked to today at noon said he was still paying off his gas bills from last winter, and he had contracted gas at $1.79 last winter and now it’s $2.19. If they are still paying off last year's gas bill, how are they going to get through this winter."
Blunt said he included the Youngblood farm on his tour because of the innovation the brothers have shown.
"Of the dozen stops we've done this year a handful of them have related to either energy or recycling," Blunt said. "I think that's largely driven by the fact that just like every family has been impacted by these energy costs, family farms, family businesses have been impacted as well. If you're going to stay in this business, you have to figure out a way to minimize your input costs as much as you can or people at the store end of this will not buy chickens if it gets so expensive they can't buy it."