Fields softened early this year, but corn farmers await April 10 to kick off planting season [Star Tribune]
With squishy black dirt from a relatively snowless winter,
They wouldn't dare sow seeds before
Those living in the northernmost counties will need to wait until
Crop insurance, as many farmers will attest, doesn't make a farmer financially whole if a crop is partially lost in bad weather or market conditions. But the extra revenue can provide peace of mind and help pay down the costs of inputs, such as fertilizer or fuel or seed.
And farmers will take every penny this coming year.
In November, the Minneapolis Federal Reserve reported out increasing pessimism among farm country lenders, revealing a 35% year-over-year decrease in farmers' spending on machinery and property upgrades. Just last week, a much-watched survey on farm income revealed farm profits last year fell about 76% — from nearly
The common driver? Commodity prices are in the gutter. Corn on the
That's why favorable growing conditions this spring feel like a godsend to some growers.
Peterson said farmers are really starting to watch the sky for weather and check their soil for moisture.
"There's a little bit of snow within a day or two," said Peterson, who sits on the Minnesota Corn Growers Association Board of Directors. "But after this weekend, it's going to be bare fields."
The mild winter allowed some farmers into their fields early to spread fertilizer or haul manure.
Peterson spent last week selling seed and prepping his operations.
But nearly all corn farmers wait for that mid-April planting date to lay seed.
"I still think it's pretty cold," Peterson said. "We're going to need 60s here for a week before you'd bring things around to think about planting anything."
After a winter light on snow, the latest drought monitor from the
"On a scale of 1 to 100 with 1 being dry, it's somewhere right in the middle at 50," Peterson said. "There was some good recharge of snow that helped. It all seemed to soak right in. None of the ground was frozen."
And the warmer-than-average temperatures, according to
"This is going to cause optimism for growers," said
Corn is a crop that loves midsummer heat, right around the mid-80s. Even with forecasts showing southwestern
Some farmers, however, have managed to get into the fields.
According to Monday's USDA Crop Report for
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