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Ag Blogs
Silence is golden
John Schlageck
Monday, 24 December 2012 11:51

 Today, information bombards us like a meteor shower. It’s everywhere.

 Each day our eyes see thousands of images on television and computer screens. Our ears hear thousands of words. Many people read thousands of words on the printed page.

Read more...
 
Yes, sorghum
John Montgomery
Tuesday, 11 December 2012 14:06

Sorghum deserves designation as federally approved renewable fuel

Federal designation of sorghum-based ethanol as a renewable fuel is good for the nation and for Kansas, its top sorghum-growing state.

Read more...
 
Same players must make new decisions on farm bill
Steve Baccus
Monday, 03 December 2012 09:15

The election has passed and maybe surprisingly, not much has changed in Washington, D.C. 

We returned a strong Republican House, a Democrat Senate, and Barack Obama to the White House.

Read more...
 
Another Dust Bowl?
Cody Barilla
Monday, 03 December 2012 09:13

In November, I had a chance to imagine myself in the shoes of my forefathers as I witnessed the worst man-made ecological disaster in American history.

Read more...
 
In search of a voice
Sarah Goss
Monday, 26 November 2012 10:01

We bought a farm. A small farm. With years of work ahead before we will even begin to see its true productive potential. Nonetheless, we bought a farm. And we have moved one step closer to making the dreams we’ve only talked about become reality.

Read more...
 
Drought conditions intensify
John Schlageck
Wednesday, 21 November 2012 11:04
If the dry conditions we experienced in Ellis County on the opening weekend of pheasant season are any indication of what’s to come, we’re in for a lot of trouble. We walked several miles on Nov. 10 and 11 and drove across much of the county and into northern Ness County.
Read more...
 
Now That's Rural
Ron Wilson
Wednesday, 21 November 2012 10:36
There's a battalion on the move. This battalion is mobilized and has a mission in mind. But these aren't uniformed troops on foreign soil. These are people in the U.S. beef industry who are finding a way to support our brave soldiers here at home.
Read more...
 
Estate taxes threaten family farms
John Schlageck
Thursday, 15 November 2012 15:26
Smart hard work combined with good planning increases the likelihood of a bright and prosperous future. This is considered the American way - the American dream.
Read more...
 
Why it's called Turkey Day
John Schlageck
Monday, 12 November 2012 14:48
How did the turkey reserve its place on our traditional Thanksgiving table?
That bird is what the pilgrims feasted upon according to fact and fable.
You’ve all heard how our ancestors hunted this bird. But here is the real story – the turkey scoop.
Read more...
 
Farm transition
Jonie James
Friday, 09 November 2012 14:04
Passing on the Family Farm or Agri-Business Conference Planned for December 8th in McPherson
Read more...
 
Ag needs its voice in the media
John Schlageck
Friday, 26 October 2012 14:43

Life experiences teach plenty to those willing to learn. From the time I was a small boy, I remember my dad, uncles and grandfather talking and debating the issues of the day whenever we visited one another.

Read more...
 
Is Brazil the reservoir of future agricultural productive capacity?
Daryll Ray
Thursday, 18 October 2012 15:23

Back in 2001, we estimated that Brazil could bring 200 to 300 million acres of land into agricultural production—an area equal to the US acreage involved in major crop production. Two years later the, USDA Foreign Agricultural Service, (FAS) estimated that over time the potential added production acreage could be closer 420 million acres.

Read more...
 
Give the people what they want
John Schlageck
Wednesday, 17 October 2012 07:25

While almost every industry today does a less than perfect job of living by the motto, “the customer is the most important part of business,” Kansas farmers and ranchers are one segment that adheres to this philosophy.

Read more...
 
In support of farming
John Schlageck
Wednesday, 10 October 2012 16:46

With each new generation, more of this country's population becomes further and further removed from the farm. It's easy to understand why many people in this country have no concept where their food comes from. Many have forgotten, or may have never known, that individual producers supply staples for the U.S. diet. Some people believe there will never be a food shortage in our country, as long as the doors remain open on their neighborhood supermarket.

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Exceptionally high prices are nice, but they usually worsen future low-price problems
Daryll Ray
Wednesday, 10 October 2012 16:10

The high prices being fetched this year for corn and soybeans this year may turn out to be a mixed blessing for crop farmers.

Read more...
 
Sky-high food prices: Now with sprinkles!
Guest Columnist
Friday, 05 October 2012 16:36
By Megan Whitacre

Here in the Midwest, we know farmers can get creative to deal with fluctuating prices. But this summer local farmers are turning their feed trough into an ice cream sundae. In Elkhart County, Indiana, one farmer has started to feed his dairy cows ice cream sprinkles, cookies, marshmallows, and gummy bears to give his cows the energy they need to produce milk. And in Reno County, Kansas, another farmer is feeding his cows thousands of pounds of chocolate scraps from a local chocolate factory.

Read more...
 
Community investment
John Schlageck
Wednesday, 03 October 2012 16:30
While Kansas is blessed with many resources, without question its people are the most valuable. While traveling from Colby to Leavenworth a couple weeks ago, the importance of people came into sharp focus once again.
Read more...
 
Animal Care: It’s What We Do
Dale Rodman
Tuesday, 18 September 2012 09:06

Picture this. It’s Christmas morning and snow is falling outside. Gifts are stacked around the family tree, stockings are stuffed, coffee is made and breakfast is warm. But the celebration has to wait. Outside, mom and dad and their three children are chopping ice so the cattle have access to water, delivering hay to pastures and bringing a mama cow and her calf into the warm barn to provide shelter and care for the weak calf.
Read more...
 
Land Values, Farm Size, Farm Policy
Jay Cook
Friday, 31 August 2012 19:41

Now that sounds like three discussions, not one.  But I just read a book recently, “Breakout Nations”, where the author stated that the speculation in commodities recently could be traced to the low interest policies of the Federal Reserve System.  As you remember these began with Greenspan during the George W. term.  Now that the recession has set in we will live with these low interest rates until there is no will to accept these poor savings terms.

 

When I began farming we had a government policy enforced by the Federal Reserve Bank(Paul Volker) who was  attempting to end the inflation which began with deficit spending during the Vietnam conflict and perhaps the initiation of “The Great Society” spending of the late 1960’s both of which were created or accelerated by Linden Johnson.  I paid 13.5 percent interest on a land loan in 1981, now I pay 6.5 percent.  Does this lower interest rate  encourage speculation in land?  Yes, I agree it does.

 

Read more...
 
The Dark Side of No Till
Vance Ehmke
Thursday, 16 August 2012 15:41

 

 Severe wind erosion of a recently planted no-till milo field.

 

Like they say, there's good points and bad points about everything. And no till is no different.

Read more...
 
The Grass is Dead, the Crops are Dying and I Don’t Feel So Good Myself
Bill Spiegel
Thursday, 16 August 2012 09:04
I love mowing the yard at the farm. It gives me my mind a chance to wander, to think about things: the farm, the family, work. Some folks think of mowing as drudgery; I look at it as opportunity: the more I have to mow, the more it has rained and thus, increased potential for spring-planted crops to thrive.
Read more...
 
Why should I serve?
John Schlageck
Monday, 13 August 2012 15:46

While farmers and ranchers continue to fill our plates with food, their plates are filled with an ever-increasing number of issues. Such issues include escalating production costs, tightening use of water, continuing drought in some western Kansas counties, an ongoing search for new markets for agricultural crops and increasing oversight and regulation to mention a few.

Read more...
 
The Roberts Report
Sen. Pat Roberts
Friday, 03 August 2012 09:09
The Obama administration came to Washington with much fanfare promising “change.”
Read more...
 
Why should I serve?
John Schlageck
Friday, 03 August 2012 08:52
While farmers and ranchers continue to fill our plates with food, their plates are filled with an ever-increasing number of issues. Such issues include escalating production costs, tightening use of water, continuing drought in some western Kansas counties, an ongoing search for new markets for agricultural crops and increasing oversight and regulation to mention a few.
Read more...
 
Resilience in my neighborhood and beyond
Jim French
Tuesday, 24 July 2012 07:29

Years ago I heard a banker say that if he had to choose between managing an agricultural loan portfolio made up of 20 mid-sized farms covering 10,000 acres or 5 large farms managing the same area, he would choose the former.  He admitted that only dealing with the five could greatly simplify his workload and consolidate many of his complex lines of oversight. But, if one of the twenty mid-sized farms experienced a hardship other linked businesses and institutions like grain elevators, seed and input dealers, even schools and churches could weather the storm. On the other hand, if just one out of five large farms experienced a failure, the shock could threaten the whole system.

Read more...
 
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