All responders have made good comments about the ethanol situation. Sugar cane is now being considered as one of the potential highest yielding sources.
I am a farmer, too, and there are many issues about it that bother me. Articles in Successful Farming and Time magazine have pointed out many of the unmentioned problems with this course. It will shake out in time, but I personally from my reading do not think it is the golden chalice answer it is currently being presented to be. One concern I have is how the land is now being treated. Farmers do not seem to be what I call "stewards of the soil" like my father and others were. With the removal of all of the remaining fodder from field crops off the fields for biomass, and with minimum or no tillage, we are running on borrowed time. We always made it a point to plow down cover crops to keep the soil loose and full of humus for plant feeding. That is not happening to the same extent now. It is amusing how the thinking about farming methods has changed. We were told years ago to throw away the moldboard plow and use chisel plows to break up the compaction below the plow depth. Dream yields would result. We are now told to drive over it repeatedly with heavy no-till machinery without any breaking up of the soil for years. This makes me say there is a problem when basic thinking changes that way. I was renting my farm; seeing this kind of farming going on has made me take it back. I am going back to the tried and true methods for the soils in this area; moldboard plowing, turning down the plant matter to build up the soil. Taking off crops without this replacement process as is done today is headed for lower yields and hard, depleted soil. They are still reaping the benefits of what was done by the true soil stewards in the past, but it will end.
My son and I have modified the carbs on our 880's to run E85. We have not changed any rubber parts or fuel pumps. We have been running it for two years now with no problems. The plastic fuel tank on these trucks is a plus.
Regards Marti