News
Today’s agriculture headlines and expert perspectives serving farmers, ranchers, crop consultants, livestock nutritionists and the entire U.S. ag community.
Ninety-one percent of the U.S. soybean crop is harvested, according to USDA.
When weeds get tough, you get tougher. This farmer uses two trait technologies to fight weed resistance.
Soybeans showed the most strength this week posting 50-cent gains.
See all the important data and analysis from today’s reports.
AgWeb breaks the report down to make it easy-to-read and navigate.
In one stroke of the pen, in yesterday’s Grain Stocks report, USDA took care of the tight-stocks issue that has carried the market since June.
Start harvest based on weather forecasts, then manage stored grain all winter long
Just one Western bean cutworm per ear of corn can result in a four-bushel per acre yield loss.
USDA’ s corn progress ratings for the week ended July 25.
Agronomic factors and yield benefits are primary considerations.
How sweet it is when roastin’ ears come into season. Look at all the new traits are coming to the garden. Can raccoon resistance be far behind?
Corn and soybean crop conditions have dropped slightly this week.
This was a bullish report in the sense that just about every trader was focused on the new crop.
The July Supply & Demand report suggests corn prices between $3.60 and $4.10 until the August report.
See the full report figures and learn how your marketing plan should react.
Different areas bring different situations for farmers across farm country.
See these links for university research reports and field crop scouting manuals.
Hear some pre-report commentary for the upcoming USDA crop reports.
Corn residue is there for the taking; if you can just figure a way to harvest the stuff. Some new collection systems look promising.
Hear market analysis on the March 3 USDA reports.
While many factors are weighing on the market, the grain outlook is getting brighter.