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kansasfarmer's blog

June 2009 - Posts

  • 100F should hasten harvest.

    Looks like a corner was turned this weekend.  I got my gentle rain Saturday in 3 half inch increments, total of 1.5 inches.  A neighbor got the 3 inches this time, however much of my area only got a half to three quarters.  Much of the area ended up under tornado warnings Saturday, but most of the damage was at least 75 miles from my farm.  The week ahead is to be very hot, highs brushing 100 if not getting there, with the heat index(a formula using humidity and temp to tell you why you feel so miserable) running 105 or better.  For those of you not fortunate enough to have ever experienced 100F with a humidity around 40%, I can assure you there is nothing comfortable about it, and you have to hope for a nice wind to give you any degree of comfort.  What couples with this is it usually won't drop below 70 or 75 at night, and the humidity runs up to 50%. 

    But, the hot weather should dry out our wheat, harvest has been dragging, I would hope to be in full swing by the end of the week, time will tell.

  • Just a gentle rain, that is all I want, that is what I dream of...

    I have a couple of good farming friends who more often than not I talk with at least every other day on the cell phone.  We were in agreement all winter that there was no way we could have 3 abnormally wet springs in a row.  This is Kansas, we are a drouth prone state,usually we need rain....no way would '09 be wet.  Well, we were wrong.  At first it didn't look that way, after all we lived through March under extreme fire weather nearly every day.  The first of April was cold and dry, all looked in line to get in the field in a timely manner.  My corn ground was fertilized and worked down like a garden, ready to plant, then, the rains came.  They weren't just our ordinary spring rains either, they were big, hard rains.  My new norm is 3+ inches at a time, the faster the better.  I quit keeping track, but I guess for the last two months we are nearing 20 inches on this farm, much of it coming in increments of an inch or more an hour, one morning we got in excess of 3 inches in just over an hour.  I finally got the corn planted the end of May, just about one month later than I like.  I did get a perfect stand, except in the low places that drowned out.  I got some soybeans planted then too, because I hired a friend to plant some while I was planting corn.  All in all I guess I had about 5 good running days in May, then the calender turned to June.  Nothing changed, it kept raining.  Two weeks ago tomorrow I got a good day in drilling soybeans, only to have a hard, 3 inch rain that night crust them under.  Then last Friday and Saturday I had a good run, I stopped Sunday because of an 80% chance of heavy rain, I really didn't want any more crusted under than I already had...when it didn't rain Sunday night, I headed to the field on Monday and planted just a few acres then quit again because of the weather forecast.

    By 6pm Monday evening the weather looked very bad, a little after 6 the Sheriff called to inform me a deputy was watching a tornado on the ground just crossing the county line, and if all things held together it would hit our area and for us to be ready to deploy spotters.  We deployed about 8pm and shortly thereafter our immediate area was put in a tornado warning.  Our new remote controlled siren was activated by the Sheriff, problem was it gave the fire sounding, three successive blasts, our chief protested over the radio it was the wrong signal but I interjected nobody would know the difference anyway, as long as the siren was blowing they would take cover.  One other problem came to light(aside from the fact we still could not activate it ourselves remotely) that was when we activated it manually we also were sounding the all clear in a neighboring community.  I was spotting with another fellow, our cell phones rang constantly asking what was going on, I guess the siren means call someone you know is busy rather than take cover.  The first storm passed with just a funnel and no touchdown in the area.  A short debate was held to decide whether we should sound the all clear, we decided it would just lead to more confusion and nothing would be wrong with whoever took cover staying under cover a while longer so we didn't sound it.  Another guy had picked me up to spot, on the way home the second storm hit, and hit hard with straight wind, so hard we had to sit on the road with several other vehicles and wait it out.  That yielded 2 inches of rain in about an hour and a half.  I slept through the next storm that came through at 3am, all neighbors agreed it was the worst, and gave another inch of rain, giving me my standard 3 inch yield.  Tuesday morning though it was not the rain that bothered me or the fact the soybeans were now going to crust(although the rain did soften the crust to let the beans from the week before through), what bothered me was all the corn(maize) was laying flat on the ground, very battered.  What was amazing was the wheat did not go down, just the corn.   It has stood back up, the leaves are rather tattered.  I cannot fathom how the yield potential will be the same but time will tell.  However, I still have the matter of about 100 acres of soybeans crusted under, and a forecast of temps in the high 90s next week, so, what I want now is a GENTLE quarter inch of rain to soften the crust, then I would very much like 10 days of dry weather, so we can finish planting, and replanting, and haying, and cutting wheat, and maybe if we are lucky put in some soybeans or milo after wheat.  We have a 50% chance of rain tomorrow, and guess what, they say it might be heavy.

  • Wheat harvest marches toward us.

    The last several days with temps in the high 80s and low 90s our wheat has taken a decidedly more yellow look, a reminder that the 2009 Kansas wheat harvest is near.  I would guess that sometime in the next 4 or 5 days we will learn of test cutting in the southern tier of counties, if this has not happened already.  My best guess is test cutting will probably start in our immediate area sometime near the 18th to 20th, and by June 25th harvest will be in full swing. 

    Unlike the previous two years I have posted on FWi, this year our wheat appears to be respectable.  For us, that would put yields in the range of 40-50 bushels per acre, or about one to one and a quarter of your tons to the acre.  Our temps have been fairly cool, so we should also begin harvest with good test weights.  As always, the weather will be the wild card, we have had a particularly stormy Sunday, and are to be in a severe thunderstorm watch until 5am Monday, we went into the first watch at 5pm, so that gives us 12 hours of being in a watch, quite a long time really.  The first storm came through about 8pm, it only gave us 2 tenths of an inch of rain, and winds of around 50 mph.  The second storm hit around 11pm, and apparently we will get a third and maybe fourth before this is over early tomorrow morning.  With all this moisture and good soybean prices, I feel confident to predict nearly every acre of wheat harvested will be planted back to soybeans in eastern Kansas, if the fields are dry enough to plant.

  • Things we never thought we'd see.

    When this "crisis" started last fall, before our historic elections, a friend of mine summed the future up this way.  He said, "we are going to see some things we never thought we'd see,and some things we don't want to see".  Today, those words echoed through my head as the reports that GM had declared bankruptcy circulated over the airwaves and internet, leaving another 21000 without work, on top of the 1000 or so dealerships they forced out, after the US taxpayers had infused a huge amount of money into GM in hopes of avoiding this very thing.  This event was perhaps the tops, thus far, of the things I simply could not fathom would happen in my lifetime. 

    The old jingle use to go, "baseball, hot dogs, apple pie and Chevrolet", that was an ad, but it summed up America.  You could interchange the words at the end of the phrase, "as American as..", Chevy and GM were as American as you could get.  I now have to wonder what exactly America does produce, other than food and lots of sophisticated weaponry.  I needed some bearings for the drill today so my wife and I drove to the nearest big town, Emporia, for a "parts run" that also turned into a grocery and work boot run. Most of the bearings for my Great Plains drill were made in China,( the Timkens were made in France), my workboots were made in Thailand.  Amy's car was made in Germany, running on tires made in South Korea, just like my pickups run on either Chinese or Korean tires.  We spent perhaps $700 today, about $200 or so was on American goods, mostly food.  I have to wonder how long this can last without the USA becoming a third world nation. 

    The experts seem to believe by the fall of 2009 or at the latest the spring of 2010 our economy will be recovering.  My simple farmer mind has trouble reconciling that idea with the things I see happening around me, and the reports I hear on TV and the radio.  GM takes out bankruptcy, the state of Kansas has revenues far below expectations that will perhaps force even more budget cuts (equalling lost jobs) when the new fiscal year starts in July.  Nearly everything we use in our day to day lives is made somewhere besides this nation.  Our own federal reserve predicted a week or so ago unemployment would rise to 10.5% by fall, and our new and dynamic President continues to propose even more deficit spending.  I guess this is why I am a farmer and not an economist, because all these "signs" don't point to a forecast of recovery from my vantage point.  Of course, these are the same economists who didn't see any of this coming........perhaps they should be doing something else for a living, like farm???

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