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2010 Harvest: Early planting brought early harvest for many
2010 Harvest: Early planting brought early harvest for many WOOSTER, Ohio — 2010 brought a great harvest season to grain farmers across the region. The best weather patterns, combined with an early planting, brought an early harvest to farmers. Buckeye State. In Ohio, the corn yield was up, while soybean and winter what yields were
Planting report doesn’t have a clue
Regardless if March arrives with a lion’s roar or a lamb’s bleat, grain and livestock markets will spend each of its days sweating over the U.
FSA Andy
Hello again! Today’s topic is going to seem like it is the wrong time of year to discuss it, but it’s not. I am going to talk about crop acreage reporting. In the past you were required to crop report small grains by June 30 and the rest of your crops by July 15. Starting
New machine squeezes more profit from biomass
COLUMBIA, Mo. — The use of biomass as an alternative energy source has grown rapidly, but most biomass materials such as switchgrass or corn are bulky and therefore costly to handle, store and transport. The University of Missouri and Columbia-based Ecologic Tech are developing an innovative “tabletizer” machine to mass-produce dense biomass tablets of various
Ethanol not to blame for higher food prices
Record crop prices will drive down federal farm program payments.
Replacing oil will take ingenuity, agronomy and guts
ATLANTA – With world oil demand growing, supplies dwindling and the potential for weather- and conflict-related supply interruptions, other types of fuels and technologies are needed to help pick up the slack.
Awful week for grain trading
There is not that much grain out there, and last week’s trading is making it even harder to buy. Marlin Clark weighs in on the state of the grain markets.
Traders love to stir up a weather market
Marlin Clark details how the grain markets have been impacted by recent weather in the Great Plains and South America.
Truth is constant; beliefs will vary
Farmers are steeped in epistemology because they know that dogma won’t raise a crop, wean a calf or repay the banker. That takes knowledge and hard work.
Seldom Seen Farm makes ‘Maple Madness’ with its bourbon maple syrup
Kevin Holy, owner of Seldom Seen Farm, talks about his bourbon barrel-aged maple syrup and participating in the Ohio’s annual Maple Madness Tour in March.






