Machinery
Today the Farm Journal Foundation’s Farmers Feeding the World initiative co-hosted an agriculture briefing with the Alliance to End Hunger in Washington, D.C.
Technical damage and rains in Brazil open fresh downside risk for soybeans.
USDA’s corn and soybean crop estimates come in higher than expected, pushing projected 2012-13 ending stocks higher than anticipated.
The Nov. 6 elections will put to rest campaigning and return the focus on addressing issues like the fiscal cliff.
The borrowing rate is left unchanged at 0.125%.
Watch a video ride-and-drives featuring both machines.
FFA members from all 50 states will take the first swing Oct. 24 of a long-term fight to help eliminate global hunger.
Chinese flash PMI upticks in October, while euro-zone PMI continues to slide.
This resource provides a digital deworming tool that gives cattle producers immediate evaluations of current deworming protocols.
Lack of fresh news has traders focused on negative outside markets.
USDA official says agency wants to do ‘better.’
The move was expected, but is still supportive for wheat futures.
Below-normal precip in extended forecast for heart of the Corn Belt.
In less than five hours, Lester Langeland and son Marlin attached a hydraulic cylinder to their loader forks to keep bales from getting stuck.
Dryness in the Southern Plains is impacting winter wheat development.
Says slowdown in development of El Nino has occurred.
President Obama’s performance surprising to some.
Corn is seeing light followthrough buying, with soybeans lower.
One $100 Idea contestant and two online survey participants will win.
Your editors digest the Quarterly Grain Stocks Report & Small Grains Summary.
Traders begin to more actively even positions ahead of USDA’s Friday reports.
Dave Mengel, Soil Fertility Specialist from the Kansas State University Extension answers three questions.
Pits with a thick foamy residue over the top of the manure are especially dangerous.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration released its Short-term Energy Outlook today.
More frost expected across the upper Midwest toward week’s end.
Farmers who negotiate for discounts can reap a substantial savings.
Government efforts at quelling bomb attacks have left area farmers without access to fertilizer.
Wheat sees spillover from neighboring pits.