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Country Boys Auction & Realty auctioneer Mike Gurkins of Washington calls the bidding Friday as farmers from across the nation compete for more than 25 tractors, along with pallates of parts and miscellaneous goods that lined the 8.5-acre lot at 411 Hope Lodge St. in Tarboro.
T. J. ROYAL / Staff Writer


Published April 28, 2008 10:59 am -

Farmtrac auction draws opinionated crowd


T. J. ROYAL
Staff Writer

More than 300 dealers and individuals from all over the state, the Southeast and outside the United States descended on Tarboro Friday for the Farmtrac salvage auction. It was held on Hope Lodge Street across from Stocks Elementary School.

Country Boys Auction & Realty, based in Washington, N.C., handled the auction, with Mike Gurkins serving as auctioneer for part of the morning sale.

Doug Gurkins, who runs Country Boys Auction & Realty with Mike, his son, was appointed by attorney Jim Marrow, Farmtrac's receiver, to sort through the beleaguered company's finance and accounting backlog.

Before Friday's auction, Farmtrac retailers from across the U.S. met Thursday with Marrow and Doug Gurkins to discuss the state of the financially crippled company.

Before Thursday's meeting, Marrow said the sale was part of a cleanup project slated to generate revenue for the troubled tractor company.

Doug Gurkins was present at the auction. Marrow was not present because of personal business.

Some of the people who came were curious to see what equipment was for sale. Others came to take advantage of discounted prices on used, discontinued Farmtrac parts, operable tractors and scrap metal that were put on the auction block.

Most of the attendees came to connect with fellow individuals and dealers, to try to address their dire financial situation and understand what the auction meant for their livelihoods and their futures in the tractor industry.

Kevin Taylor, a Farmtrac dealer from Corydon, Ind., arrived in Tarboro Thursday afternoon for Friday's auction. Taylor said he signed on with Farmtrac in the tractor industry because he was confident their brand could help "save" his company, Kevin Taylor Farm & Construction Repair.

Now, Taylor feels signing on with Farmtrac "looks like it's going to take us under."

After he saw a lot of four-wheel drive tractor axles go for $5,900, Taylor said the dealers will "never see a penny" of the money from Friday's auction. "You can bet on that," Taylor added.

That's because the money gathered from the auction is certain to go largely to Atlanta company Textron Financial, Farmtrac's largest secured creditor that is owed more than $12 million by the Tarboro company.

Tony Pearce, 59, is one of 12 current Farmtrac employees put in place by Jim Marrow to work with Doug Gurkins as a "skeleton" operation: to operate the company at minimal cost.

Pearce said he thought having Gurkins' help operating Farmtrac was a "big plus." He said he did not know what to expect the auction could do to help the company.

Albert Lester, 65, a Farmtrac dealer from Shreveport, La. was frank with his feelings about the auction.



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