Iowa and Minnesota Double Average Corn Planting

 

 

A week of cooperative weather set planting at near record pace across the corn belt last week. Corn acres planted jumped to 27%, up from 7% the previous week.

Much of that progress was in two key states according to Chip Flory of AgriTalk Radio.

“A couple of the states really stand out, we've got Iowa 39% planted, we've got Minnesota at 40% planted, 40% planted in Minnesota,” Flory said. “Both states are about double the five year average pace. This means that in the Last week, Iowa planted about 5.2 million acres of corn. Minnesota planted about 3.3 million acres of corn.”

The rapid pace and dry weather are a welcome change from the rainy 2019 planting season.

“We've got more done by April 27 than we did by May 27 of last year,” Flory noted.

It’s not just the wide weather window that sparked a jump in corn acres planted. Farmers like Ryan Meyerkorth of northwest Missouri are reporting very good soil conditions.

“The conditions couldn't be better for us right now,” Meyerkorth told U.S. Farm Report’s Tyne Morgan.  “The ground’s working like it hasn't for several years, so we've been able to really get after it and get a lot planted here in the last week.”

Myerkorth said he planted 35% of his corn crop last week.

Despite the progress in the heart of the corn belt, there are areas that are behind in planting, and they could stay behind.

“North Dakota hasn't planted an acre of corn yet,” Flory noted. “Normally, North Dakota would only have 4% of the crop planted, but still, they're off to a slow start. Pennsylvania, nothing planted, they would normally have about 7% planted. In Ohio, 3% planted versus 8% for a five year average. And those are some of the areas that are expected to see the most rain.”

Watch Flory’s full analysis of the Crop Progress Report in the video above.
 

 

Latest News

Renewable Fuels Industry Waiting for Key Policy Decisions
Renewable Fuels Industry Waiting for Key Policy Decisions

Sales of E15 fuel blends this summer is another concern.

AgDay Markets Now: Arlan Suderman says Soybeans Fall on South American Hedge Pressure and Could Take Out Contract Lows
AgDay Markets Now: Arlan Suderman says Soybeans Fall on South American Hedge Pressure and Could Take Out Contract Lows

Soybeans continue to see South American hedge pressure and that is dragging down corn says Arlan Suderman of StoneX.

There’s No Shortage of Cool Machinery On the Auction Trail 
There’s No Shortage of Cool Machinery On the Auction Trail 

An International Harvester 856 diesel tractor, a Peterbilt 389 Glider kit day cab semi and a collection of John Deere 55 series tractors are just a few pieces of equipment that have caught Machinery Pete's eye lately.

IGC Cuts World Corn Production Forecast
IGC Cuts World Corn Production Forecast

The International Grains Council (IGC) cut its forecast for 2024-25 global corn production by 7 MMT.

Soybeans Make Near Term Lows and Pull Down Corn, While Wheat Shakes Off China Cancellations
Soybeans Make Near Term Lows and Pull Down Corn, While Wheat Shakes Off China Cancellations

Soybeans make near term lows pulling down corn, wheat bounces on crop concerns. Cattle firm ahead of the COF, while outside markets continue to watch geopolitical developments. Arlan Suderman, with StoneX, has more.

Spring Planter Setup: Seed Meters Must Be a Focus
Spring Planter Setup: Seed Meters Must Be a Focus

You can save time and headache by calibrating seed meters well ahead of planting time.