Tillerman Seeds Buys DF Seeds, Seeks More Acquisitions

Tillerman Seeds, LLC, of Grand Rapids, Mich. was formed to acquire specialty, GMO and non-GMO seed assets. This week it completed its first transaction with the successful purchase of DF Seeds Inc., of Dansville, Mich.

Planting2017-Texas
Planting2017-Texas
(Chris Holy, Crop Comments)

Tillerman Seeds, LLC, of Grand Rapids, Mich. was formed to acquire specialty, GMO and non-GMO seed assets. This week it completed its first transaction with the successful purchase of DF Seeds Inc., of Dansville, Mich.

DF Seeds has provided about 400 farmers with wheat and soybean varieties since 1992. The company will continue to operate under the name DF seeds despite change in ownership and will keep the same employees.

Tillerman is honing in on small seed companies with established regional presences or specialty products with the intent to purchase those it can.

“We believe there is a significant opportunity to consolidate small seed companies around the country,” says James Sheppard, chief executive officer of Tillerman Seeds. “There is a growing number of seed company owners who are preparing to retire, but want to ensure that the legacy, jobs and culture of the companies they built are carried forward. That is what Tillerman Seeds was created to do.”

The companies Tillerman acquires will act as standalone companies with shared back-offices in accounting, HR and purchasing. Any acquired company will be expected to collaborate with others on R&D, customer service approaches, marketing and cross-selling product lines.

Tillerman plans to take advantage of what Shepherd says are opportunities for small, local firms with a focus on developing seeds for specific microclimates and grower needs.

AgWeb-Logo crop
Related Stories
Using crop diversity, conservation tillage and a contract-first mindset, the Ruddenklau family works to keep their operation moving forward.
Oliver Sloup with Blue Line Futures says grain markets were trying to divorce from the war headlines and crude oil the last few weeks but now are right back trading with the energy moves.
Spotty spring rains have slowed planting in southwest Iowa, leaving farmers slightly behind. Despite delays, strong planning, good moisture, and a favorable forecast has Pat Sheldon optimistic for the 2026 crop season.
Read Next
As the Strait closure enters its tenth week, supply chain gridlock and policy hurdles suggest high input costs will persist through the 2027 planting season, according to Josh Linville, vice president of fertilizer with StoneX.
Get News Daily
Get Market Alerts
Get News & Markets App