brownfield

9402 Results / Page 897 of 1045

Background

Brownfield

Tennessee planting update: 42% corn and 9% soybeans planted

Planting pace is picking up for Tennessee farmers.  Corn is 42% planted, 21% behind last year’s pace and 13% behind the 5-year average.  Ten percent of the crop has emerged. Soybeans are 9% planted slightly behind last year’s pace and the 5-year average.  Cotton is 3% planted. Wheat conditions across much of the state are mostly good with 69% of the crop rated good to excellent and 94% is jointed […]

todayMay 2, 2022 89

Brownfield

Wisconsin farmer waits for planting opportunity

A northcentral Wisconsin farmer says it will be a while before he can get in the fields.  Ryan Klussendorf tells Brownfield, “The seed is tucked away in the shed. The equipment is still getting worked on because you can’t get in the field. It’s too cold, too wet.” Klussendorf operates a 120-cow dairy farm near Medford in Taylor County, and he says their heavy clay soils are still cold and […]

todayMay 2, 2022 46

Brownfield

Iowa planting progress furthest ahead across western third

Corn planting is behind in Iowa. The latest USDA crop progress report says at just nine percent, this year’s pace trails 2021 by 11 days and the five-year average by nine days. Four percent of the soybean crop is planted, nine days behind a year ago and five days slower than normal. Farmers in the western third of Iowa are the furthest along. Oat planting is at 63 percent with […]

todayMay 2, 2022 60

Brownfield

Arkansas planting update: 62% corn, 40% rice planted

Planting pace in Arkansas is picking up steam. Sixty-two percent of the corn crop has been planted, still running behind both last year and the 5-year average. Sixty-two percent is rated good to excellent.  Thirty-two percent of the crop has emerged.  Rice planting is 40% complete, 20% behind last year, and 19% behind the 5-year average.  Thirteen percent of the crop has emerged.  Soybeans are 23% planted, behind last year […]

todayMay 2, 2022 73

Brownfield

Crop progress update shows moderate drought relief in Nebraska

The latest crop progress and condition report from USDA says 28 percent of Nebraska’s crop is in, nine percent behind last year. The state remains severely dry but did improve on the week with topsoil moisture 31 percent adequate-to-surplus and subsoil moisture is 34 percent adequate-to-surplus. Soybean planting is near last year’s market at 19 percent complete. Winter wheat is rated 39 percent poor to very poor and 25 percent […]

todayMay 2, 2022 49

Brownfield

Cool & wet weather continues to slow Wisconsin farmers

Most Wisconsin farmers are still waiting for better weather and soil conditions before planting crops. USDA reporters say less than three days were suitable for fieldwork last week, and cool, wet weather continued to keep machinery parked.  Rainfall last week ranged from three-tenths of an inch from Madison north-east into the Fox Valley to more than an inch south of Milwaukee and in parts of Polk and Burnett counties in […]

todayMay 2, 2022 17

Brownfield

MO crops fall further behind normal planting pace

Planting remains well behind in the state with widespread moisture across Missouri. USDA says 27 percent of the state’s corn crop is planted, nearly 20 percent behind last year and 25 percent behind the five – year average. Three percent of the crop has emerged, 11 percent behind last year. Five percent of Missouri’s soybean crop is planted, about half of last year’s total but close to even with the […]

todayMay 2, 2022 6

Brownfield

3% of Ohio corn, 2% of soybeans planted

Corn and soybean planting is off to a slow start in Ohio. Three percent of the state’s corn crop is planted, compared to the one-year average of 20 percent. Two percent of soybeans are planted, compared to 16 percent a year ago. Forty-six percent of oats are planted, and 16 percent of the crop has emerged. The winter wheat crop is 66 percent good to excellent. Topsoil moisture is 99 […]

todayMay 2, 2022 11

Brownfield

Cattle futures start the week higher

At the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, live and feeder cattle were higher on oversold signals with feeders in the lead on the lower move in corn.  June live cattle closed $2.55 higher at $135.20 and August live cattle closed $1.77 higher at $137.05.  August feeder cattle closed $5.80 higher at $174.67.  Direct cash cattle trade activity started the week slowly.  Showlists are somewhat smaller in Kansas, lower in Texas, and Nebraska/Colorado.  […]

todayMay 2, 2022 5