VELOCITY VIDEO CASE HISTORY
Sweet success
MOST PEOPLE WOULD BE SURPRISED TO LEARN
Mountain Farm are well aware of this, as they are one of
Vermont’s leading processors and distributors of pure maple
syrup and maple-related products, such as cookies, candies, and
granulated maple sugar used as an ingredient in other foods.
The family-owned company produces its own branded syrup and
many private-label brands for mass merchandisers, retailers, natural
food companies, and others that crave the
unique and naturally sweet taste of maple.
Butternut Mountain Farm has its own 1,000-
plus acre farm to draw sap from about 17,000
tree taps, but it relies on regional farmers to supply it with the majority of the maple syrup that
it packages. The farmers take the sap and boil
it down to raw syrup before sending it in large
drums to the processing facility in Morrisville,
Vt. Once there, the syrup is filtered, packaged, warehoused, and then
distributed. The building can hold up to 8 million pounds of syrup.
BULK SYRUP HANDLING
Butternut Mountain Farm trusts a fleet of Toyota forklifts and warehouse equipment to move loads throughout its facility. These include
the heavy stainless steel drums of raw syrup, large totes that can hold
350 gallons, and finished goods from packaging.
“The forklifts help us store and stack,” says John Kingston, CEO.
“They are critical for our storage management and safety.”
Two reach trucks are employed within the production storage area
to stack the drums of raw syrup before processing. These forklifts have
“parrot beak” attachments that can lift two drums at a time, side by
side, by grabbing the rims of the drums and supporting the drums’
backs. The drums are then floor-stacked five levels high, with drums
placed directly on top of one another. These Toyota reach trucks are
rated for a normal capacity of 4,500 pounds. When fully extended
with the attachment, they can lift 1,500 pounds, which is plenty of
muscle to raise the drums easily onto the tops of the stacks.
When the drums are needed in production, these forklift trucks
also take them to the filling machines. The syrup is batched, filtered,
and heated. The sweet liquid is then poured into jugs and bottles of
various sizes – everything from large containers sold in club stores to
single-serve bottles used in restaurants.
The individual farmers own the drums, so they must be washed
and returned to them. “It is critical that we take good care of the
drums and return them in good condition,” says David Ellis, purchasing and supply chain manager. “The careful handling with the Toyota
forklifts minimizes damage.”
FINISHED GOODS
In addition to the reach trucks, four 3,500-
pound capacity sit-down forklifts work primarily
in the warehouse. These bring finished goods
from production to storage in pallet racks. These
three-wheeled electric vehicles offer tight turn-
ing radiuses for negotiating the aisles, and they
are especially well suited for the 90-degree turns into the facility’s
drive-in rack locations.
Additionally, two walkie-stacker trucks, three electric pallet jacks,
and several manual pallet jacks keep products moving throughout the
building and in and out of delivery trucks.
Keeping that fleet in top operating condition is the job of the local
dealer, Northern Toyotalift, based in nearby Burlington. The company
serves Toyota Industrial Truck customers throughout Vermont, New
England, and Upstate New York.
“The customer service that we get from Northern Toyotalift is absolutely excellent,” says Rob Shatney, warehouse manager. “Toyota just
seems to have a really solid product that has always served us well.
They are reliable. They don’t break down often, and if we do have an
issue, it is taken care of right away. So, really we see it not only as our
best option, but really our only option.”
For more information on Toyota’s full-service product line of
forklifts and warehouse equipment, visit www.ToyotaForklift.
com/forklifts.
SPONSORED CONTENT
To see a video of the Toyota fleet in operation at Butternut Mountain Farm,
go to dcvtv.com and click on the Velocity Video on Channel 2.
Butternut Mountain Farm keeps maple syrup flowing with the help
of Toyota forklifts.
A DC VELOCITY SPEED CHALLENGE