Home Ag Blogs

By A Web Design

Featured Auctions

May 29

Purple Wave: Ag Equipment Auction

Market snapshot

Sponsored by:

Snapshot as of previous day. Click here for current info

Are you getting the best cash price for your grain?
Enter your zip code:    



Ag Blogs
Harvest a high-tech affair
Guest Columnist
Tuesday, 29 June 2010 07:19

By Richard Shank


Twenty years removed from farming hasn't cured the urge to spend a few hours in the harvest field on the family farm near New Cambria in Saline County.

Read more...
 
Rain, Rain…
Erin Debler
Wednesday, 23 June 2010 08:49

 

Go away and come back some other day…like in August! 


No one complains of too much rain in August, but there is such a thing as too much rain now while we’re trying to bale hay or for others trying to harvest their wheat.  Prior to last week, we had been pretty lucky.  The first week of June, there were several chances of rain, usually around 30% or so, but we wanted to get a lot hay baled that week.  And we did, approximately 100 acres give or take. 

Then, the second week of June, we cut several acres of hay with 30% chance of rain and it got rained on day after day.  Randall, Paul, & Nancy were able to bale all of it, around 130 bales or so this past weekend.  The quality of that hay deteriorated significantly, so it will be saved for the very cold, snowy days of winter.  

Read more...
 
Get the combine ready for a safe harvest
Rick Snell
Tuesday, 15 June 2010 12:12

RICK'S AG ROUNDUP

June and July are typically two of the most dangerous months for Kansas farmers.

That's because these are the months when harvest-related injuries involving combines and other harvest machinery are most common.

Read more...
 
How Low Is Low?
Vance Ehmke
Tuesday, 15 June 2010 12:07
Wheat and More….or less

So far the big story about the 2010 wheat harvest is high yields and low protein—and, of course, how low will wheat prices have to go?
Read more...
 
Wheat stripe rust reports/severity increasing in parts of KS
Vance Ehmke
Friday, 11 June 2010 09:20

Jim Shroyer, Extension wheat specialist at KSU, just left our farm about an hour ago after looking at a number of treated and untreated fields.

Read more...
 
And We’re Off!
Erin Debler
Wednesday, 09 June 2010 15:56

Not to the races that is, but into hay season at full swing.  We were able to get most all of the first cutting of alfalfa and the one and only cutting of triticale, a oat-like grass that is a cross between wheat and rye grass baled and put up the weekend before Memorial Day weekend. 

Read more...
 
Tis the season for Milo
Rick Snell
Friday, 04 June 2010 17:02

By Richard C. Snell

If you are a summer person like I am--meaning you'll take it 100 degrees over 10 degrees every time--you are getting into your favorite time of year.

Read more...
 
Kathy Patton - American Agri-Women TV show
Ron Wilson
Thursday, 03 June 2010 09:38
By Ron Wilson
"Lights, camera, action!" I´m not sure if those terms are used by TV and movie producers these days, but video is more important than ever. Video and television are vital elements of modern communication. The American Agri-Women organization is taking advantage of this technology to communicate with farm and ranch women across the nation. The organization has launched a brand new nationwide television program which is produced and hosted right here in Kansas.
Read more...
 
I fought the lawn, and the lawn won
Rick Snell
Thursday, 03 June 2010 09:29
By Richard C. Snell
I could title this - Hay for sale, only been rained on twice, but good tonnage fescue grass from my lawn, with some weeds. My neighbors will tell you it’s not weed-free, not even close!
Read more...
 
Wheat Yields Hurt by Stripe Rust
Vance Ehmke
Wednesday, 26 May 2010 08:39

Wheat and More….or less

Just back from a quick tour of the neighborhood, I’m less enthusiastic about wheat yields in western Kansas. On a number of fields that I saw which were not treated with fungicides, I’d say it’ll be a miracle if those fields make 10 to 20 bushels per acre while adjacent treated fields could yield 50 to 60.
Read more...
 
Corn growers call on American Meat Institute to temper their beef with ethanol
Jere White
Tuesday, 18 May 2010 08:20
As corn growers nationwide, and in Kansas, are lining up beside livestock producers to defend livestock on many fronts, the American Meat  Institute (AMI) is lining up beside anti-agriculture activist groups to fight against corn and ethanol. AMI’s members include the major meat processors, many with plants in Kansas.

 

Read more...
 
May is Beef Month
Rick Snell
Monday, 17 May 2010 09:57
I love to eat beef! Actually, I love to raise beef also, even though I don’t own any cattle currently. Because of this I get on my soapbox this time of year because May is Beef month.
Read more...
 
A Sea of Green
Erin Debler
Friday, 14 May 2010 10:26

Whew…can you hear that?  Based upon the number of cattle trailers I saw coming and going the first weekend in May, I believe everyone in the cattle industry has sighed a huge sigh of relief. 

Read more...
 
Kansas Barn Alliance
Ron Wilson
Friday, 14 May 2010 10:22

Kansas Profile - Now That´s Rural

The NBA is coming to Kansas! No, not a National Basketball
Association franchise, but is something that is much more deeply
rooted in Kansas heritage: Barns. The NBA, or National Barn Alliance,
will be having its national conference in Kansas, thanks to the work
of the barn alliance here in our state. Some 100 barn enthusiasts
will be coming to Kansas from across the nation. It´s the subject of
today´s Kansas Profile.
   

Read more...
 
What is the Humane Society of the United States?
DeEtta Bohling
Wednesday, 12 May 2010 07:58
Recently, while walking with friends through Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, I picked up a publication called “The Pitch” which caught my attention. The title read “Down on the Farm, The Humane Society and Big Agriculture Slug It Out Over Animal Rights.”
Read more...
 
Wheat tour concludes through Kansas, average yield 40.7 bushels per acre
Aaron Harries
Friday, 07 May 2010 15:42
The 2010 Hard Red Winter Wheat tour concluded in Kansas City on Thursday afternoon at the Kansas City Board of Trade.  The final participant estimate for the three-day tour average was a yield of 40.7 bushels per acre, .1 bushels lower than the 2009 estimate of 40.8 bushels per acre.
Read more...
 
From the Farm to the Fork
Erin Debler
Thursday, 06 May 2010 09:48

In addition to being Rock Hill Ranch’s bookkeeper, part picker-upper, part-time meal maker, and occasional spare hand, I am a Financial Analyst at Frontier Farm Credit in Manhattan, KS.  As we are young, beginning producers, our family relies on my off-farm income to maintain our standard of living.  I love my job because I am able to learn about all types of operations – cattle, crops, hogs, and poultry – and help agricultural operations grow and prosper through financing their credit needs.  This past week, I had the opportunity to represent Frontier Farm Credit at the Riley County Farm Bureau Kids Ag Day and spend a few hours talking with kids from the Manhattan, Ogden, Leonardville, Olsburg, and Randolph communities about careers in agriculture.

Read more...
 
Day 1: Hard Red Winter Wheat Tour through Kansas
Aaron Harries
Wednesday, 05 May 2010 06:53
Day one of the Hard Red Winter Wheat Quality tour came to an end Tuesday evening in Colby, Kansas.  The tour is sponsored by the Wheat Quality Council.  Nearly 70 participants from all segments of the wheat industry attended an orientation in Manhattan Monday evening.  Tour participants include what buyers from Mexico, Columbia and Peru.
Read more...
 
100 years of forestry, wheat plot tour upcoming
Rick Snell
Monday, 03 May 2010 15:12

Rick's Ag Roundup


     Kansans have an abiding love for trees, especially as you go west in the state where we don´t have that many. If you want to add to our tree volume, Monday, May 3, is your last chance to order conservation tree and shrub seedlings this spring through the Barton County Extension Office and the Kansas Forest Service.
Read more...
 
All Caught Up…
Erin Debler
Thursday, 29 April 2010 07:53

ErinAll Caught Up… For now! 

This past week, Randall, Paul, & Nancy worked the month-old spring calves.  Then they turned them and their mamas out to the upland brome until the native grass is tall and lush enough to support them.  Brome is a cool season grass that greens up earlier than the native grass, which is a warm-season grass.  With the past few cool days, it might be awhile before all of our pastures are ready for cattle, but we should still be able to turn around the first of May, which is our target turnout date, and earlier than last year.  In addition to burning, the month of April also includes miles and miles of walking fence to make sure all of the holes or broken wires are patched up and will hold all of the cattle in.  Randall and Paul were able to make it around all of the fence that needed walked except our rented pasture West of Alma and the newly rented one North of town – that will be part of next week’s to-do list!      

 

Read more...
 
Protein Premiums Help Wheat Price
Vance Ehmke
Monday, 26 April 2010 14:19

Wheat and More ... Or Less


With wheat prices already at or below $4, about the only good news in the wheat market are protein premiums. Those premiums can net you up to another 25 cents per bushel if your wheat protein content is l4.6%.

The bad news, though, is that a lot of flourmills aren’t even interested in your wheat if the protein is less than l2%.

Read more...
 
Cedar-apple rust active
Rick Snell
Monday, 26 April 2010 14:05

RICK'S AG ROUNDUP


     It looks like the attack of some mysterious orange crush from outer space or something like that! Many people have noticed the large, bright orange, jelly-like, tendril covered balls on the cedar trees since the rains started last week. These cedar-apple rust galls release millions of spores that can infect apples and crab- apples with the rust disease. There is a related disease named cedar-quince rust that infects hawthorn trees.

Read more...
 
Soil Sampling important key
Mike Bergmeier
Thursday, 22 April 2010 16:54

Modern agronomy programs offer many benefits to the farmer.

Read more...
 
The Hills are Alive…
Erin Debler
Tuesday, 20 April 2010 07:51

ErinThe Hills are Alive… With the sound of fire! 

The snap, crackle, pop of a bright-orange flame curling its way across hills, pastures, and waterways is music to the ears of many a producer during the month of April.  It sounds good because with each successful prescribed burn completed, the stewards of the land know they are controlling the spread of red cedar, dogwood, and buck brush.  These are all invasive plant species that reduce the amount of available grass that helps produce beef to help feed the world.

Read more...
 
Soil Borne Mosaic in western Kansas?
Vance Ehmke
Thursday, 15 April 2010 12:46

It may be rare, but, yes, we do have soil borne mosaic virus infecting wheat in western Kansas this year.

 

Read more...
 
«StartPrev12345678910NextEnd»

Page 10 of 17
Copyright © 2013 Kansas Ag Land. All Rights Reserved.
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.
 
You need to upgrade your Flash Player

Login Form



Explore Other Hutchinson, Kansas Sites