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Today’s agriculture headlines and expert perspectives serving farmers, ranchers, crop consultants, livestock nutritionists and the entire U.S. ag community.

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This tractor brought the second highest price ever for a 1466.
This almost record-setting price is from an Ohio auction.
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This combine sold this past Saturday.
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Here’s video of the tractor selling
Since 2015, the two companies had an agreement being reviewed by the DOJ.
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Watch video of intense video action.
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Read about ideas farmers have designed to make their jobs easier
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This tractor sold in Ohio.
Cotton acres are climbing this year, with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) projecting acres to see a 21 percent jump. If that holds true, U.S. cotton farmers will plant 12.2 million all-cotton acres. In the Mississippi, cotton was once the staple crop, and this year, farmers are getting back into growing it in a big way.
Click through to search almost 200 for sale today.
As wheels begin to turn for spring fieldwork, this week’s price action may lend clues to our summertime outlook.
A March 28 auction in Stevens Co., Kan., saw...
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Our first look at fertilizer and farm fuels pricing for the week ended March 24, 2017.
Rains were not adequate enough last week to stabilize winter wheat crops in Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.
Cotton acres are gaining momentum in Mississippi as price and yields point to a more favorable option for farmers this year. That’s also helping strengthen cotton equipment prices, a trend Machinery Pete is watching closely.
Cotton and pork sales were also highly impressive. Get more report highlights.
Revisions within food-at-home areas include poultry & eggs, fruits and vegetables.
Farmers have used glyphosate safely for decades, but in recent years anti-GMO activists have tried to target the product - aided by a sensationalist media - because it often works in harmony with biotechnology.
Urea failed to violate last year’s price and has actually softened this week. But the nitrogen margins suggest upside risk for the rest of the segment.
Today, farmers and ranchers across the U.S. and in Washington, D.C. are making a special effort to advocate for agriculture in observance of National Ag Day.
Although nobody has a magic eight ball, there’s one way farmers can have a good idea of what could happen in the future: stress testing.
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