South Dakota farmers making good progress

Corn and soybean planting remain ahead of average in South Dakota. USDA says 39 percent of the corn and 25 percent of the soybeans are planted, respectively, with four percent of the corn emerged. Eight percent of the sorghum crop has been planted. Winter wheat is rated 25 percent good to excellent, an improvement from…Continue Reading

Kentucky planting pace remains slower than average

The corn planting pace nearly doubled in the last week for Kentucky, but it’s moving slower than usual for this time of the year. The USDA says 40 percent of the crop is planted, with 19 percent of the crop emerged. Soybean planting is 28 percent complete, in-line with the average pace, with five percent…Continue Reading

Pasture and crops advance in MO with the warm, wet weather

Above average temperatures and moisture in Missouri the final week of April helped green up pastures and encouraged crop emergence. USDA says 31 percent of the state’s corn emerged, more than double the previous week with corn planting at 54 percent complete. Forty percent of the state’s rice crop has emerged with planting at 59…Continue Reading

Minnesota corn planting nears halfway mark

Planting continues to pace ahead of normal in Minnesota. USDA’s latest weekly crop report says corn planting reached 44 percent, two days ahead of last year and slightly ahead of the five-year average of 43 percent. Soybeans are 22 percent planted, compared to 17 percent at this time a year ago and 20 percent normally.…Continue Reading

Corn planting slightly behind normal pace in Iowa

Wet conditions slowed planting progress across parts of Iowa last week. USDA’s latest weekly crop report says corn is 49 percent planted, which is three days ahead of last year but two days behind the five-year average. Corn is 10 percent emerged as of Sunday. North Iowa farmer Rusty Olson tells Brownfield warmer weather forecast…Continue Reading

Tennessee corn planting surpasses halfway mark

Several good days for fieldwork helped speed up planting in Tennessee. The USDA says 63 percent of corn, 37 percent of soybeans, and 14 percent of cotton is planted. Pastures continue to improve, with 69 percent rated good to excellent. Topsoil moisture is 16 percent surplus, and subsoil moisture supplies have a 14 percent surplus.…Continue Reading

Weather patterns causing spring delays in Indiana

A central Indiana farmer says unpredictable weather patterns have caused spring planting delays. Jonathon Sparks farms in Hancock County. “You don’t have to go very far south of us and they’ve gotten a lot of rain through Shelby and Rush counties,” he says. “We’ve gotten off to a good start, but that’s certainly not the…Continue Reading

Planting weather outlook sends soybeans, corn lower

Soybeans were lower on profit taking and technical selling. Planting weather looks favorable in much of the Midwest and Plains into mid-month. The USDA says 30% of the U.S. crop is planted, compared to the five-year average of 23%, with 7% emerged, compared to 5% on average. There was also spillover pressure from crude and…Continue Reading

Ag research coalition calls for funding in the name of food security

Leaders from the agricultural research community are calling on Congress to prioritize USDA funding amid spending cuts. Michigan State University AgBioResearch Director George Smith tells Brownfield the uncertainty for land-grant universities today is more significant than even during the pandemic. “It’s limiting their ability to do the work that is so important at this period…Continue Reading

Efforts to increase interest in ag education

A student at Ohio State says there’s a rising interest in students wanting to pursue a career in ag education. Mallory Kramer says Teach Ag Ohio is helping students find careers beyond the traditional ag pathways. “They just think it’s taking your animals to fair, but really you’re advancing your leadership skills, getting involved by taking…Continue Reading

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