KENTUCKY CHRISTMAS TREE PRODUCTION WORKBOOK:
ECONOMICS AND BUDGETING
ISSUED: 12-86
REVISED:
Forrest Stegelin; Deborah B. Hill
Many people are attracted to the idea
of Christmas tree production because they perceive it to be a sound economic
investment. This is probably true for both large and small scale levels
of production. The following information should help you determine whether
the investment in time, equipment, labor and money will bring the desired
returns in any particular situation.
Initially, assuming you own the land
necessary for the proposed operation, the most important questions are:
•What equipment is needed to plant,
manage, harvest and market this product?
•What materials are needed for these
operations?
•How much money must be invested before
the start of return on investment?
•At what price do the trees have to
be sold to break even, or how many trees have to be sold to break even
economically?
This publication helps to budget for
an initial 7-year period, (assumed to be a complete production cycle).
By planning and figuring out probable costs and returns over this period,
prospective and novice growers can assess whether Christmas tree production
is a good investment.
Expenses
Cultural Practices
Site Preparation. Most of Kentucky's
farm land or pastureland is covered with fescue grass. This highly competitive
vegetation is not recommended as a ground cover for a Christmas tree plantation.
Therefore, you must remove the fescue, either by plowing, herbicide treatment,
or a combination of the two, and establish a different ground cover (e.g.
legumes such as red or white clover, birdsfoot trefoil or dwarf lespedeza).
Depending on which option you choose, you will have expenses for labor,
heavy equipment (tractor, plow), light equipment (sprayer) and materials
(seed). See Extension publications FOR-18 and FOR-19
before planting Christmas tree seedlings.
Planting. Seedlings can be planted
by hand or by machine, depending on the particular terrain. Determine spacing
and layout by the size of your available equipment (mower, tractor, etc.).
The seedlings themselves will have a cost, whether you purchase or raise
them (see Extension publications FOR-20,-21, and -22). Planting equipment
will also have a cost, either for purchase, lease or to custom build. Mechanizing
the operation (machine planting) may reduce labor costs, but may be less
effective (lower survival rates). Beware of,such labor/equipment trade-offs.
Corrective Pruning/Splinting.
In the first few growing seasons, constant monitoring of the seedlings
on a year round basis is recommended, both to observe any problems in their
earliest stages, and to remove double leaders, excess branches and double
stems on the small trees. Seedlings which grow crooked in their first year
or two can also be splinted to straighten them while they are still young
and flexible. Broken leaders can be replaced by forcing a side branch to
a vertical position and splinting it there for one growing season. Monitoring
requires only hand pruners and perhaps dowels or tape or twist ties for
equipment, but, if done regularly (e.g. once a week), it does take time
that counts as a labor cost.
Vegetation Control. Probably
the single most important cultural practice over the whole cycle of Christmas
tree production is adequate vegetation control. Such control can be either
mechanical (mowing) or chemical (herbicide treatment) or can be a combination
of the two (see FOR-23). Reducing competition from
surrounding vegetation simply means more water, nutrients and sunlight
for your tree crop. Frequency of control measures varies with climate and
rainfall and may be quite different from one part of the state to another.
Probably a good rule of thumb is not to allow the vegetation to grow any
higher than you would allow a lawn to grow before cutting it. In most years
this may mean mowing once a week; in dry years, once a month or every 6
weeks; chemicals are applied as needed. Costs involve equipment, materials
and labor.
Insect and Disease Control.
As of 1989, few insect or disease problems affected Christmas tree plantations
in Kentucky. There have been reports of bagworm, Nantucket pine tip moth,
red-headed pine sawfly, needlecast diseases, scale insects and aphids on
trees in various parts of the state. Constant monitoring of the plantation
enables you to control whatever problems arise in their early stages. Consult
the Christmas Tree Pest Manual (see Extension publications FOR-27
and FOR-34), which gives details of appropriate
chemicals for each pest and correct times of application for control. Again,
costs involve spray equipment and chemicals, but primarily time (labor).
Pruning and Shearing. Corrective
pruning, using a hand clipper or hedge shears, should be done from the
time the seedlings are planted and continued on the leader and top whorl
until harvest. Shearing the trees to the appropriate cone-shape is started
usually in the third growing season, or when the trees are about 2 ft tall
(see FOR-26). In the early years, two-handled hedge
shears may be the easiest way to shear; larger trees may be sheared more
easily with shearing knives or a variety of electric or gas-powered machines.
All pines except Virginia pine require shearing once, during the growing
season; Virginia pine probably will require two shearings. Spruces and
firs can be sheared at any time of year. Knives and clippers are far cheaper
than shearing machinery, but are far more labor intensive. This is another
labor/equipment trade off that you should investigate thoroughly to see
what is most economical and sensible in your situation.
Harvesting and Marketing
Costs incurred at harvest time depend
on the marketing method. Choose-and-cut operations bring the owners the
highest dollar value on their trees, but the labor costs may be high. Wholesaling
brings the lowest return, but the labor costs may be minimal. There are
trade-offs in every situation (see FOR-28 and
-29). Marketing costs can be minimal if you use free media attention. However,
paid advertising, especially in electronic media, can be very expensive
and may not produce enough response to justify the cost.
Miscellaneous
If a small proportion of the trees
(say, 10% or less) are sold as live trees, and if you use greens from the
bases of salable trees and from all unsalable trees for wreath-making,
you may obtain income from the trees earlier in the production cycle (see
FOR-30). Income from these secondary products can off-set costs in
the early years and supplement major income from sale of trees in later
years.
Constant surveillance of the plantation
and regular recordkeeping of financial information and growing conditions,
problems and peculiarities of the plantation, and labor costs should be
considered in overall planning and operations budgeting.
As with any crop, information on how
to grow most efficiently and economically and new ways of marketing are
always changing. Contact the county Extension agent, the Extension specialist
in Forestry at the University of Kentucky, and the Kentucky Christmas Tree
Grower's Association for the most up-to-date information on Christmas tree
production.
Budgets and Budgeting
What is an enterprise budget? It is
a systematic listing of income and expenses for a production period of
a commodity. The budget is used in financial control, forward planning,
management control and marketing strategies. For Christmas trees, the production
period is assumed to be 7 years. Although you cannot expect income until
the last three years, the expenses are incurred monthly throughout the
7 years. Consequently, the budget not only looks at total outlays and revenues,
but the timing of the receipts and expenses.
The projected income shows an expected
yield (harvested trees) multiplied times an anticipated price per tree.
Neither yield nor price are known for sure because the grower must look
7 years into the future.
Projected expenses are both variable
(vary with the level of output, or per tree) and fixed (do not vary with
level of output). Budgets are assembled based on prescribed production
practices of top producers and research results plus grower records. Often
the variable costs are calculated from prescribed practices whereas the
fixed costs (taxes, insurance, depreciation, etc.) are determined from
farm records.
What decisions can be made from budgets?
Basically, a budget indicates if a farmer should grow or produce a commodity.
A budget also helps allocate the use of production inputs (i.e., labor,
equipment) among farm enterprises such as tobacco, cow-calf and vegetable
farming, as well as within an enterprise such as Christmas trees. A word
to the wise: be sure what costs have been included in a budget and do not
compare returns from different sources--the budgets may not be comparable.
A budget is a guideline with extreme
flexibility, not rigid dollars and cents figures. You should put your own
costs for your Christmas tree plantation in the column labeled "your value"
on the following budget. No two farms are alike and no two growers manage
and make decisions alike.
Economics of an Example Kentucky Christmas Tree Farm
The following information is designed
to be representative of the small scale, well-managed Christmas tree enterprise,
planted in one acre blocks. The trees (seedlings) are manually planted
on a 6' x 6' spacing, or 1,200 trees/acre. Of the planted trees, 1,020
trees/acre or 85%, are assumed to be harvested in equal amounts during
the 5th, 6th, and 7th years on the farm. The cultural practices and general
production assumptions follow the guidelines in other parts of the Kentucky
Christmas Tree Production Workbook.
Christmas tree growers need specific
machinery and equipment to grow and merchandise quality trees. The needs
vary greatly with size of operation. The costs of such machinery and equipment
will vary not only with scale, but also with newness, brand name and sophistication.
The needs for a small scale operation are basically the same as for larger
commercial plantations. Table 1 gives a representative list of machinery
and equipment complements, including purchase price (in 1989 dollars).
If you already own appropriate machinery or tobacco equipment that can
be modified for use with Christmas trees, the start-up costs for equipment/
machinery will be lower.
Table 1. --Machinery & Equipment Complement for a 1 to 10 Acre
Christmas Tree Enterprise
Machinery |
List
Price |
Purchase
Price |
Years
Owned |
Hours Used
Annually |
20 H.P. Tractor with Hydraulic Front Loader
|
$9,000
|
$7,830
|
10
|
400
|
3.5' Rotary Mower |
800
|
695
|
10
|
50
|
2-14" Moldboard Plow |
1,100
|
960
|
10
|
20
|
4' Disk Harrow |
800
|
695
|
10
|
50
|
50 gal. Mounted P.T.O. Sprayer with Boom |
1,050
|
910
|
10
|
100
|
Mounted P.T.O. Granular Spreader |
1,025
|
890
|
10
|
20
|
Pull-type P.T.O. Broadcast Seeder |
275
|
240
|
10
|
20
|
Dump Trailer |
535
|
430
|
10
|
50
|
Total Machinery |
$12,650
|
|
Equipment |
Purchase Price |
15-I. Backpack Sprayer |
$100
|
Shears (2) |
50
|
Gas-powered Weed Trimmer with Blade |
150
|
Pruners (2) |
40
|
Knives (2) |
35
|
Chain Saw |
250
|
Bow Saw |
10
|
Tree Baler |
250
|
Leg Guards (pr) |
40
|
Planting Bars (2) |
50
|
Total Equipment |
$975
|
The amount of labor and machine time
required for necessary cultural practices is an important consideration,
especially if you cannot use family labor but must hire labor. The machinery
and labor requirements presented in Table 2, by month and activity within
each year, are representative of well-managed Christmas tree farms using
the machinery and equipment complements cited earlier.
Table 2.--Scots & White Pine: Labor & Power Inputs/Acre for
Establishment & Growing Years*
Month |
Type of Operation |
Equipment Used |
Hours Per Acre
|
Labor |
Power |
Site Preparation: |
August |
Clearing land |
Custom hired |
-- |
-- |
Plow land |
Moldboard plow |
00.93 |
00.83 |
Disk harrow (2x) |
Disk harrow |
01.48 |
01.33 |
Test soil |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
September |
Apply soil amendments |
Rotary spreader, PTO |
00.23 |
00.21 |
Apply pre-emergence |
Sprayer, PTO, |
|
|
herbicide |
50 gal. |
00.23 |
00.21 |
October |
Disk harrow land |
Disk harrow |
00.74 |
00.67 |
Seeding ground cover |
Broadcast seeder
pull-type |
00.23 |
00.21 |
Total Site Preparation Labor Hours |
04.84 |
Table 2. continued
Month |
Type of Operation |
Equipment Used |
Hours Per Acre
|
Labor |
Power |
First Year: |
February |
Apply pre-emergence
herbicide |
Sprayer, PTO,
50 gal. |
00.23 |
00.21 |
March |
Grade, prune,
planting, mulching |
Tractor w/loader,
dump trailer,
misc. hand equip. |
35.40 |
06.00 |
April |
Monitor for pests
& vegetation control |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer, PTO, 50 gal. |
00.92 |
00.84 |
May |
Vegetation control
& pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
June |
Corrective pruning |
Hand |
03.00 |
-- |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
July |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
August |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
September |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer, B/P 4 gal. |
04.00 |
-- |
Total First Year Labor Hours |
48.22 |
Table 2. continued
Month |
Type of Operation |
Equipment Used |
Hours Per Acre
|
Labor |
Power |
Second Year |
January |
Monitor animal damage |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
February |
Survey frost heaving |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Survey winter damage |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Apply pre-emergence
herbicide |
Sprayer, 50gal.
PTO |
00.92 |
00.84 |
March |
Corrective pruning |
Hand |
03.00 |
|
Grading, pruning,
replanting, mulching |
Tractor w/loader,
dump trailer,
misc. equipment |
05.10 |
02.00 |
April |
Vegetation control
& pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer, PTO,
50 gal. |
00.92 |
00.84 |
May |
Vegetation control
& pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
June |
Corrective pruning |
Hand |
03.00 |
-- |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
July |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
Pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
August |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
September |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer. B/P,
4 gal. |
04.00 |
-- |
Total Second Year Labor Hours |
25.61 |
*Power is given in %. For example, .83 hours equals 50 minutes. Labor
is power plus 12%, assuming that a body always has to be with machinery
or equipment and extra time may be needed for fueling, sharpening and moving
equipment.
Table 2. continued
Month |
Type of Operation |
Equipment Used |
Hours Per Acre
|
Labor |
Power |
Third Year: |
January |
Monitor animal damage |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
February |
Survey frost heaving |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Survey winter damage |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Apply pre-emergence
herbicide |
Sprayer, 50 gal.
PTO |
00.92 |
00.84 |
March |
Corrective pruning |
Hand |
05.00 |
-- |
April |
Vegetation control
& pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer, PTO,
50 gal. |
00.92 |
00.84 |
May |
Vegetation control
& pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
June |
Pruning & shearing |
Hand |
06.00 |
-- |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
July |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
Pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
August |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
September |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
04.00 |
-- |
Total Third Year Labor Hours |
25.51 |
Table 2. continued
Month |
Type of Operation |
Equipment Used |
Hours Per Acre
|
Labor |
Power |
Fourth Year: |
February |
Monitor animal &
winter damage |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Apply pre-emergence
herbicide |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
06.00 |
-- |
Test soil |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
March |
Apply soil
amendments |
Hand |
07.40 |
02.00 |
Corrective pruning |
Hand |
05.00 |
-- |
Basal pruning |
Hand |
06.00 |
-- |
April |
Vegetation control
& pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer, PTO,
50 gal. |
00.92 |
00.84 |
May |
Vegetation control
& pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
June |
Corrective pruning
& shearing |
Hand |
11.00 |
-- |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
July |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
Pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
August |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
September |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
04.00 |
-- |
Total Fourth Year Labor Hours |
47.99 |
Table 2. continued
Month |
Type of Operation |
Equipment Used |
Hours Per Acre
|
Labor |
Power |
Fifth Year: |
February |
Monitor animal &
winter damage |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Apply pre-emergence
herbicide |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
06.00 |
-- |
March |
Corrective pruning |
Hand |
05.00 |
-- |
April |
Vegetation control
& pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer, 50 gal.
PTO |
00.92 |
00.84 |
May |
Vegetation control
& pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
June |
Shearing &
corrective pruning |
Hand |
16.00 |
-- |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
July |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
Pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
August |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
Tagging salable
trees |
Hand |
02.00 |
-- |
September |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
04.00 |
-- |
Apply coloring
material |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
04.00 |
-- |
October |
Apply insecticide |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
06.00 |
-- |
November |
Harvesting salable
trees, (cutting,
skidding, baling,
loading, hauling) |
Chainsaw, bagger,
tractor & trailer |
34.00 |
09.00 |
Total Fifth Year Labor Hours |
84.59 |
Table 2. continued
Month |
Type of Operation |
Equipment Used |
Hours Per Acre
|
Labor |
Power |
Sixth Year: |
February |
Monitor winter
damage |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Apply pre-emergence
herbicide |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
06.00 |
-- |
March |
Corrective pruning |
Hand |
05.00 |
-- |
April |
Vegetation control
& pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer, PTO,
50 gal. |
00.92 |
00.84 |
May |
Vegetation control
& pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
June |
Shearing & corrective
pruning |
Hand |
24.00 |
-- |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
July |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
Pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
August |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
Tag salable trees |
Hand |
02.00 |
-- |
September |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
04.00 |
-- |
Apply coloring
material |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
04.00 |
-- |
October |
Apply insecticide |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
06.00 |
-- |
November |
Harvest salable
trees (cutting,
skidding, baling,
loading,hauling) |
Chainsaw, bagger,
tractor & trailer |
34.00 |
09.00 |
Total Sixth Year Labor Hours |
92.59 |
Table 2. continued
Month |
Type of Operation |
Equipment Used |
Hours Per Acre
|
Labor |
Power |
Seventh Year: |
February |
Monitor winter
damage |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Apply pre-emergence
herbicide |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
06.00 |
-- |
March |
Corrective pruning |
Hand |
05.00 |
-- |
April |
Vegetation control
& pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer, PTO,
50 gal. |
00.92 |
00.84 |
May |
Vegetation control
& pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
June |
Shearing & pruning |
Hand |
30.00 |
-- |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
July |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
Pest monitoring |
Hand |
01.00 |
-- |
August |
Mowing |
Rotary mower,
PTO, 3.5' |
00.89 |
00.79 |
Tag salable trees |
Hand |
02.00 |
-- |
September |
Apply herbicide |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
04.00 |
-- |
Apply coloring
materials |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
04.00 |
-- |
October |
Apply insecticide |
Sprayer, B/P,
4 gal. |
06.00 |
-- |
November |
Harvest salable
trees (cutting,
skidding, baling,
loading, hauling) |
Chainsaw, bagger
tractor & trailer |
34.00 |
12.00 |
Total Seventh Year Labor Hours |
98.59 |
Successful production depends on pest
and vegetation control and possibly on use of fertilizers or irrigation.
Rates, number of applications, appropriate herbicides and insecticides,
and chemical costs for these activities are based on other sections of
the workbook, plus current over-the-counter prices of the materials. A
general purpose fertilizer and appropriate soil amendments are assumed
to be needed. Of course, you should take soil samples before establishing
your Christmas tree plantation to determine what, if any, soil amendments
are necessary.
The budgeted annual costs for the Christmas
tree farm are shown in Table 3 on a per acre basis. Both operating and
ownership costs are included for the machinery, equipment and tractor.
The total cost of producing an acre of Christmas trees, including all the
costs of establishing and growing costs over the 7-year planning horizon,
is $6720.87. Labor costs account for 31% of the total cost.
Table 3.--Scots & White Pine: Estimated Establishment & Growing
Costs/Acre, 0-7th Years
Item |
Unit |
Price |
Quantity |
Value |
Your Value |
Site Preparation: |
Land clearing |
acre |
$0500.00 |
0001.00 |
$0500.00 |
Soil amendments |
cwt |
0010.25 |
0006.50 |
0066.63 |
Clover seeds |
bu |
0009.59 |
0001.00 |
0009.59 |
Herbicide |
acre |
|
|
0085.97 |
Tractor |
acre |
|
|
0010.91 |
Machinery |
acre |
|
|
0007.75 |
Labor: |
Machinery |
hour |
0004.85 |
0003.84 |
0018.62 |
Hand |
hour |
0004.85 |
0001.00 |
0004.85 |
Annual operating capital |
$ |
0000.10 |
0162.19 |
0016.22 |
Total Site Preparation Costs |
0720.54 |
Table 3. continued
Item |
Unit |
Price |
Quantity |
Value |
Your Value |
First Year: |
Seedlings (2-0) |
each |
$0000.05 |
1200.00 |
$0060.00 |
Herbicide |
acre |
|
|
0075.75 |
Tractor |
acre |
|
|
0027.72 |
Machinery |
acre |
|
|
0019.18 |
Equipment |
acre |
|
|
0007.84 |
Labor: |
Machinery |
hour |
0004.85 |
0009.82 |
0047.63 |
Hand |
hour |
0004.85 |
0038.40 |
0186.24 |
Annual operating capital |
$ |
0000.10 |
0135.75 |
0013.58 |
Net accumulated
establishment cost |
$ |
0000.10 |
0720.54 |
0072.05 |
Total First Year Expenses |
0509.99 |
Table 3. continued
Item |
Unit |
Price |
Quantity |
Value |
Your Value |
Second Year: |
Seedlings (2-0) |
each |
$0000.05 |
0180.00 |
$0009.00 |
|
Herbicide |
acre |
|
|
0075.75 |
|
Tractor |
acre |
|
|
0025.38 |
|
Machinery |
acre |
|
|
0021.23 |
|
Equipment |
acre |
|
|
0007.84 |
|
Labor: |
Machinery |
hour |
0004.85 |
0007.51 |
0036.42 |
|
Hand |
hour |
0004.85 |
0018.10 |
0087.79 |
|
Annual operating capital |
$ |
0000.10 |
0084.75 |
0008.48 |
|
Net accumulated
establishment cost |
$ |
0000.10 |
1230.53 |
0123.05 |
|
Total Second Year Expenses |
0394.94 |
Table 3. continued
Item |
Unit |
Price |
Quantity |
Value |
Your Value |
Third Year: |
Herbicide |
acre |
|
|
$0075.75 |
|
Tractor |
acre |
|
|
0022.50 |
|
Machinery |
acre |
|
|
0020.65 |
|
Equipment |
acre |
|
|
0007.84 |
|
Labor: |
Machinery |
hour |
0004.85 |
0004.51 |
0021.87 |
|
Hand |
hour |
0004.85 |
0021.00 |
0101.85 |
|
Annual operating capital |
$ |
0000.10 |
0075.75 |
0007.58 |
|
Net accumulated
establishment cost |
$ |
0000.10 |
1625.47 |
0162.55 |
|
Total Third Year Expenses |
420.59 |
Table 3. continued
Item |
Unit |
Price |
Quantity |
Value |
Your Value |
Fourth Year: |
Herbicide |
acre |
|
|
$0075.75 |
|
Tractor |
acre |
|
|
0020.82 |
|
Machinery. |
acre |
|
|
0016.95 |
|
Equipment |
acre |
|
|
0019.60 |
|
Labor: |
Machinery |
hour |
0004.85 |
0005.59 |
0027.11 |
|
Hand |
hour |
0004.85 |
0042.40 |
0205.64 |
|
Annual operating capital |
$ |
0000.10 |
0075.75 |
0007.58 |
|
Net accumulated
establishment cost |
$ |
0000.10 |
2046.06 |
0204.61 |
|
Total Fourth Year Expenses |
0578.06 |
Table 3. continued
Item |
Unit |
Price |
Quantity |
Value |
Your Value |
Fifth Year: |
Herbicide |
acre |
|
|
$0075.75 |
|
Insecticide |
acre |
|
|
0056.95 |
|
Coloring material |
acre |
0050.00 |
0001.00 |
0050.00 |
|
Baling & tags |
each |
0000.45 |
0400.00 |
0180.00 |
|
Advertising |
acre |
0050.00 |
0001.00 |
0050.00 |
|
Tractor |
acre |
|
|
0030.90 |
|
Machinery |
acre |
|
|
0018.98 |
|
Equipment |
acre |
|
|
0021.52 |
|
Labor: |
Machinery |
hour |
0004.85 |
0012.59 |
0061.06 |
|
Hand |
hour |
0004.85 |
0072.00 |
0349.20 |
|
Annual operating capital |
$ |
0000.10 |
0412.70 |
0041.27 |
|
Net accumulated establishment
& growing costs |
$ |
0000.10 |
2624.12 |
0262.41 |
|
Total Fifth Year Expenses |
1198.04 |
Table 3. continued
Item |
Unit |
Price |
Quantity |
Value |
Your Value |
Sixth Year: |
Herbicide |
acre |
|
|
0075.75 |
|
Insecticide |
acre |
|
|
0056.95 |
|
Color material |
acre |
0050.00 |
0001.00 |
0050.00 |
|
Baling & tags |
each |
0000.45 |
0400.00 |
0180.00 |
|
Advertising |
acre |
0050.00 |
0001.00 |
0050.00 |
|
Tractor |
acre |
|
|
0030.90 |
|
Machinery |
acre |
|
|
0018.98 |
|
Equipment |
acre |
|
|
0021.52 |
|
Labor: |
Machinery |
hour |
0004.85 |
0012.59 |
0061.06 |
|
Hand |
hour |
0004.85 |
0080.00 |
0388.00 |
|
Annual operating capital |
$ |
0000.10 |
0412.70 |
0041.27 |
|
Net accumulated establishment
& growing costs |
$ |
0000.10 |
3822.16 |
0382.22 |
|
Total Sixth Year Expenses |
1356.65 |
Table 3. continued
Item |
Unit |
Price |
Quantity |
Value |
Your Value |
Seventh Year: |
Herbicide |
acre |
|
|
0075.75 |
|
Insecticide |
acre |
|
|
0065.95 |
|
Coloring material |
acre |
0050.00 |
0001.00 |
0050.00 |
|
Baling & tags |
each |
0000.45 |
0400.00 |
0180.00 |
|
Advertising |
acre |
0050.00 |
0001.00 |
0050.00 |
|
Tractor |
acre |
|
|
0035.22 |
|
Machinery |
acre |
|
|
0019.85 |
|
Equipment |
acre |
|
|
0027.98 |
|
Labor: |
Machinery |
hour |
0004.85 |
0015.59 |
0075.61 |
|
Hand |
hour |
0004.85 |
0083.00 |
0402.55 |
|
Annual operating capital |
$ |
0000.10 |
0412.70 |
0041.27 |
|
Net accumulated establishment
& growing costs |
$ |
0000.10 |
5178.81 |
0517.88 |
|
Total Seventh Year Expenses |
1542.06 |
|
Total Establishment and Growing Costs |
6720.87 |
If family labor is available so that
only 50% of the labor hours are hired. total costs decrease 16%. Some hired
labor is usually required, but hiring only 25% of the labor lowers total
production costs per acre by nearly 25%.
Cash flow (net and accumulated) over
7 years for the one-acre block is presented in Table 4. Net annual return
or cash flow is the difference between revenue received and total expenses
paid within a 12 month period. Accumulated net returns are the sum of the
annual net returns to date for the production period. Both net annual return
and accumulated net returns to tree sales are positive at the end of the
fifth year, according to the underlying assumptions of this budget. Only
tree sales were assumed; wreath sales and live tree sales in years 3 and
4 could push toward positive cash flow in those earlier years.
Table 4. --Scots & White Pine: Estimated Revenue and Returns
to Land, Overhead, and Management, 0-7th Years (dollars/acre)*
Year |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
Receipts |
-- |
-- |
-- |
-- |
-- |
4640 |
4640 |
4640 |
Costs |
721 |
510 |
395 |
421 |
578 |
1198 |
1357 |
1542 |
Net annual return
to tree sales |
(721) |
(510) |
(395) |
(421) |
(578) |
3442 |
3283 |
3098 |
Accumulated
net returns
to tree sales |
(721) |
(1231) |
(1626) |
(2047) |
(2625) |
817 |
4100 |
7198 |
* Assumes: Total salable production of 1020 trees, or 340 trees per
year, marketed annually as:
140-5' trees @ $12 each = $1680
120-6' trees @ $14 each = $1680
80-7' trees @ $16 each = $1280
Total tree receipts = $4640/year
(harvestable trees)
Considering various amounts of hired
labor and various numbers of trees being sold at alternative selling prices,
Table 5 shows what effect these various combinations of variables have
on the net returns to the one-acre block. The calculated market rate of
return is 12.89% for the Christmas tree farm in this publication (Tables
4 and 5). Few investments are available to small scale farmers which yield
a comparable rate of return to land, overhead and management.
Table 5. --Net Returns on Land, Overhead and Management for Various
Combinations of Trees Sold and Amount of Hired Labor Used on 1 Acre of
Scots and White Pines
Number of Trees Sold |
Selling Price/Tree
|
$8 |
$11 |
$14 |
All Hired Labor |
1000 |
$1279 |
$4279 |
$7279 |
750 |
(721) |
1529 |
3779 |
500 |
(2721) |
(1221) |
279 |
50% Hired Labor |
1000 |
2317 |
5317 |
8317 |
750 |
317 |
2567 |
4827 |
500 |
(1683) |
(183) |
1317 |
25% Hired Labor |
1000 |
2836 |
5836 |
8836 |
750 |
836 |
3086 |
5336 |
500 |
(1164) |
336 |
1836 |
*Parentheses ( ) indicate a negative net return. Money is coming, but
expenses still exceed assets.
To recover all expenses, at what selling
price does each tree need to be sold, or how many trees need to be sold
to repay all expenses from the one-acre block? The answers indicate the
breakeven points at which a profit can be realized. Breakeven selling prices
(per tree) and the breakeven number of trees to be harvested and marketed
from the one-acre block are provided in Table 6 with various assumptions
about how much hired labor you use. Land purchase or lease is not included
in any of the calculations for the budgets; neither is a management cost
for the owner-operator nor family living expenses.
Table 6.--Breakeven Sales Quantifies and Breakeven Selling Prices
for Various Combinations of Trees Sold, Selling Prices and Amounts of Hired
Labor for 1 Acre of Scots and White Pines
Number of
Trees Sold |
All Hired
Labor |
50% Hired
Labor |
25% Hired
Labor |
Per Tree
Selling Price |
Breakeven Selling Price (S/tree)
|
1000 |
$ 6.71 |
$ 5.68 |
$ 5.16 |
|
750 |
$ 8.95 |
$ 7.57 |
$ 6.88 |
500 |
$13.42 |
$11.35 |
$10.31 |
Breakeven Sales Quantity (trees/A)
|
|
480 |
406 |
369 |
$14 |
610 |
516 |
469 |
$11 |
839 |
710 |
645 |
$ 8 |
Assumptions and Observations
•Prices for machinery complements (Table
1) and inputs (Table 3) are 1989 budgeted costs.
•Application rates and frequency of
application of consumable inputs are recommendations for the growing conditions
in North Central Kentucky.
•Figures in Table 3 are from a standard
agricultural economic budget generator, which should be available from
the Agricultural Economics Department of any land-grant university. It
is based on the growing conditions, soils, etc. for that state.
Summary Remarks
Returns from an investment in Christmas
tree production may appear high and, as a result, look attractive and tempting.
Remember you must make substantial investments for both labor and capital
for several years before you realize any positive net returns. A well-planned
marketing program is also essential for a successful Christmas tree enterprise.
As more Christmas trees are grown, the market becomes more uncertain. Closely
evaluate the market potential and develop market plans and strategies before
investing.
Six rules of decision making for probable
success in Christmas tree production are (1) analyze the markets,
(2) determine resource limits and management capabilities, (3)
estimate enterprise costs, (4) set profit objectives, (5)
analyze alternatives to meet objectives, including risk-bearing capabilities,
and (6) take action, including reaction to correct or update strategies
and budgets.