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This Week in Ag #40

I’ll never forget the sage words an old farmer told me when I announced my intention to start farming in the late 1990s. I explained that I was not leaving my marketing job and that I was also doing a fair amount of freelance consulting work. He told me, “It’s funny how many other jobs you need

By |2024-04-02T20:04:43-07:00November 14th, 2023|Ag News, Blog Post, Company, Plant & Soil|0 Comments

This Week in Ag #38

When you’re carving your Halloween pumpkins this week, be sure to thank a bee. That’s because pumpkins are not self-pollinating plants. Unlike cotton and soybeans, where pollen produced within a flower fertilizes the ovary of the same flower on the same plant, pumpkins have specific male and female flowers across their vines. So they need bees to carry pollen between the flowers. Pumpkin growers will rent bee colonies during the growing season to ensure better pollination and higher yields.

By |2024-04-02T20:14:34-07:00October 31st, 2023|Ag News, Blog Post, Company, Plant & Soil|0 Comments

This Week in Ag #37

One of the greatest inventions in history is the combine. The concept of threshing and separating grain in one operation revolutionized our food system, as well as redefined our labor force. Consider that in the mid-1800s, 90% of the US workforce was involved in some aspect of farming. Now it’s under 2%. To think my grandfather harvested corn by hand and threw the ears in a wagon! He used the pull-behind model in the 1940s to harvest small grains (that’s him, Fred Nichols, combining oats on our family farm). My mother still talks about dad wearing a Jesse James style mask while operating their first self-propelled combine without a cab.

By |2024-04-02T20:15:03-07:00October 24th, 2023|Ag News, Blog Post, Company, Plant & Soil|0 Comments

This Week in Ag #35

Last week I was a guest on the TopSoil Webinar series hosted by Mitchell Hora of Continuum Ag (you can check it out here). I mentioned how western growers seem further along in their regenerative agriculture journey. That’s largely driven by regional attitudes and the food companies, who have pledged to sell products grown using regen ag practices. This has motivated growers of crops such as potatoes, onions, apples, and blueberries to hasten their adoption. But in the Heartland, where commodity crops fill the landscape, these growers have lacked many of the market-driven economic incentives. Until now.

By |2024-04-02T20:15:45-07:00October 10th, 2023|Ag News, Blog Post, Company, Plant & Soil|0 Comments

This Week in Ag #34

Earl Butz, one of the most famous and popular US Secretaries of Agriculture, once told me that a key competitive advantage for US farmers in the global marketplace is our built-in natural infrastructure. Our Great Lakes and river system is perfectly designed to transport grain efficiently. The Mississippi River is the backbone of our agricultural transportation system: 60% of all grain exported from the USA is shipped by barge down the Mighty Mississippi.

By |2024-04-02T20:17:16-07:00October 3rd, 2023|Ag News, Blog Post, Company, Plant & Soil|0 Comments

This Week in Ag #33

In commodity crop production, we talk a lot about bushels per acre. Because that’s how farmers get paid. But what exactly does bushels per acre mean? A bushel is the unit of measure we use in the USA (other parts of the world use tons or metric tons) to calculate yield, verify shipments and set pricing standards for crops such as corn, soybeans, wheat, canola, rice and sorghum. There’s a good chance your grandparents had a bushel basket laying around their house, garage, or barn. If you were to fill that basket to the brim with corn, you’d have one bushel’s worth.

By |2024-04-02T20:17:51-07:00September 26th, 2023|Ag News, Blog Post, Company, Plant & Soil|0 Comments

This Week in Ag #28

The recent fertilizer market may be best described by two catch phrases: “wait-and-see” and “just in time.” In the fall of 2021, sky-rocketing energy prices pointed toward looming inflation and an inevitable rise in fertilizer prices. Many savvy growers, including those aligned with the regen ag movement, hedged their bets by purchasing crop nutrients that

By |2024-04-02T20:37:39-07:00August 22nd, 2023|Ag News, Blog Post, Company, Plant & Soil, Video|0 Comments

This Week in Ag #27

Just as the seasons inevitably turn, so does the farming landscape within a tight-knit rural community. That reality hit close to home for me last Thursday with the passing of my uncle, Gary Nichols. He and my father farmed together for decades, and like most farming families, Uncle Gary was a solid fixture in my life,

By |2024-04-02T20:38:11-07:00August 15th, 2023|Ag News, Blog Post, Company, Plant & Soil|0 Comments

This Week in Ag #26

This summer we’ve entertained a visitor from Japan, my son’s girlfriend, Riko. So what do you suppose one of her favorite things to do in America is? Go to the grocery store. A trivial, if not mundane task for most of us is a full-on experience for her. Now keep in mind, Japan is

By |2024-04-02T20:38:43-07:00August 8th, 2023|Ag News, Blog Post, Company, Plant & Soil|0 Comments
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