Seed corn at Trelay goes back
to 1906 when Elmer Biddick sold his first bushel of seed corn
at age 11. At that time there were no hybrids but rather open
pollinated varieties like Golden Glow and Clark's Yellow Dent.
Elmer grew up working with his father, Adolphus, who had a "good
eye in selecting ears" to be used for seed. This hand
selection and appreciation for good seed corn was ingrained
in Elmer from the start. Elmer attended the U.W. short course
in 1910. This connection to the U.W. became the source of help
in the following years to successfully grow hybrid seed corn.
Elmer married Ada Bethke in 1919.
Ada contributed to the success of the seed corn business with
her bag designs, brand names, and display signs. She was an
artist with a strong constitution.
Elmer's first bin dryer, built
in 1928, had 5 bins, each 3 ft. x 10 ft. He used a 5 H.P. fan
to blow air heated by the burning of corn cobs. Later in 1936
his second dryer used a 25 H.P. fan with coal as the heat source.
Elmer says, "The sparks would really fly when we turned
on that son of a gun." This dryer was used until 1967.
During those years many loads of coal were shoveled, and several
chimney fires occurred. The smell of burning coal and drying
corn left a lasting memory.
Roger, Elmer's son, born in 1923,
grew up amidst this seed corn development. His dual interest
in cattle feeding and seed corn helped develop the diversity
that characterizes Trelay today. Whether it was shoveling coal
into the burners at midnight or detasseling 3/4 mile corn rows
in 90 degree heat, success at Trelay has been based on total
dedication and hard work.
Brad, Rogers son, spent many years
perfecting Trelays seed production capabilities & also transformed
Trelay into a seed marketing company. Thru insightful & innovative
management principals Brad grew the company for 35 years &
guided Trelay to our current relationship with ASI, a Monsanto
holding company.
The name "Trelay" was
given to the farm by Hercules Rundle, Elmer's great uncle.
Having come from Cornwall England, Hercules combined the prefix "Tre" which
means "homestead" and "Lay" meaning "grove
of trees" to form "Trelay". A large group of
cottonwood trees characterize the original Hercules Rundle
farm. Many of these same trees still stand today on the home
farm at Trelay.
Hybrid seed corn and the Biddicks
have been together since the conception of hybrid seed corn.
Today, Trelay continues with as much history as any seed corn
business can claim. Our history dates from Elmer's pioneering
efforts in the first days of the seed corn business, followed
by Roger's leadership and Brads innovation
and now the fourth generation's unique answers to the modern
seed corn world. |