By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Eighteen-year-old Jonathan Greer runs his own
wholesale turfgrass business from his wheelchair with help
of partners brought together by Mississippi State
University's AgrAbility. Jonathan's
father, Grover Greer, farms about 1,750 acres of cotton,
corn, soybeans and wheat in Sharkey County. About a year
ago, Greer said they looked for occupations where Jonathan's
cerebral palsy would not be a disadvantage. "He had
gone about as far as he could in school, and his interest
was in the outdoors," Greer said. "When you have a child
with one of these situations, you try a lot of different
things." After
deciding that greenhouse production required more than could
be done from a wheelchair and seeing his ability to maintain
his family's lawn, AgrAbility specialists decided that
Jonathan could manage a turfgrass production. "He has
about 25 acres of hybrid Bermuda planted last August," Greer
said. "We worked out a joint venture with someone already in
the business who needed more production. They planted it,
and he's going to water, fertilize and mow it." The
company will plant, spray and harvest the grass. Each of
these procedures requires specialized equipment, and most
turfgrass producers hire this chore out. "This
arrangement will allow him to be a wholesale turf producer,"
Greer said. Jonathan's
business is called Ability Turf, and he works it using a
specially-modified John Deere tractor. Herb Willcutt,
agricultural and biological engineer with MSU's Extension
Service, modified the tractor for Jonathan. "The
tractor had been bought specifically for Jonathan's needs
and had a hydrostatic transmission. There is no clutch or
brakes that he has to activate," Willcutt said. Willcutt
modified the tractor's two foot petal forward and reverse
controls to make them hand-controlled. He also moved the
switch for the cruise control from the dashboard to the
lever that now provides one-handed driving
controls. Willcutt
said John Deere was extremely helpful in this process. The
company let the university borrow at no charge a model of
the tractor that Jonathan has. Willcutt was able to make the
custom modifications on this tractor, take them off and
install them on Jonathan's tractor. "The
university paid for my time and the materials for the
modifications were donated," Willcutt said. "This is very
much a custom fit, and because of that, it would have been
very expensive, and possibly even impossible, to get someone
else to do the work." In
addition to the turfgrass production, Jonathan is producing
miniature cotton bales for sale. He uses an old cotton press
Willcutt and others modified for hand controls. Emily
Knight, AgrAbility program assistant, said AgrAbility, a
partnership between MSU's Extension Service and a statewide,
non-profit disability service organization, is mainly an
educational program. "We
want everyone to realize the abilities that people with a
physical disadvantage have, and to realize that there are
many ways to assist them in working," Knight said.
"AgrAbility can't buy equipment or pay for modifications,
but it can recommend the most suitable equipment and safest
way to make the modifications." AgrAbility,
available in Mississippi since 1997, was established
nationally in 1991 and is active in 18 states. The
Mississippi project has worked with the Mississippi Society
for Disabilities -- formerly Easter Seals Mississippi, MSU's
T.K. Martin Center for Technology and Disability and the
Mississippi Department of Rehabilitation
Services. Released
February 19, 2001
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Program enables
youth to enter turf business
For more information, contact: Emily Knight, (601)
545-4455
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:38
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an01/010219ek.htm
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