Wine is a crop berico, with all the risks associated with ag production (if not more...because if they brew a bad bottle Dawnie won't drink it)
The production is as much ag as the growing of the grapes.
What would not be an ag deal would be the distributer if they're using an outside party for this (ie a local booze seller who distributes wine as well as gin, vodka, etc.) They're not part of the process to get the wine to market, they are the market (ie while Walmart might sell vegies, they're not a farm in any sense of the word).
Becca, same thing goes for your deal. You have a deal that is obviously part of the process to bring the food to market, which makes it a farm. An example here would be a fish processing plant. They process and freeze the fish for use in ugly frozen meals
like fish sticks. They're part of the "process" to bring it to market and fall under the ag defination.
For arguments sake....are we talking about a lumber yard like Lowes? They fall under the same type of deal as that liqour distributor I was chatting about. If they are retailing finished product they're no longer part of the process, but instead they're the "market". They probably sell drywall and bricks too
BUT!!! If we're talking about a lumber yard that is processing (ie they MAKE the 2x4's from trees verses selling the final product) they would then be an ag deal as they're part of the process to bring the raw product to market
Yes, fancy, but no caffeen dangit. I'm only drinking hot cocoa (yes I know it has caffeen but less then coffee) so make that a double
skinny with no whipped cream. And a bowl of chili please, as long as you're up. Heh heh