Wheat
USDA progress ratings for corn, cotton, wheat, rice, sorghum and pasture for the week ending June 26.
USDA progress ratings for corn, cotton, wheat, rice, sorghum and pasture for the week ending June 19.
With the exception of sorghum and spring wheat, only a handful of acres are left to plant this season.
USDA progress ratings for corn, cotton, wheat, rice, sorghum and pasture for the week ending June 12.
USDA progress ratings for corn, cotton, wheat, rice, sorghum and pasture for the week ending June 5.
USDA progress ratings for corn, cotton, wheat, rice, sorghum and pasture for the week ending May 30.
USDA progress ratings for corn, cotton, wheat, rice, sorghum and pasture for the week ending May 22.
USDA progress ratings for corn, cotton, wheat, rice, sorghum and pasture for the week ending May 15.
USDA progress ratings for corn, cotton, wheat, rice, sorghum and pasture for the week ending May 8.
USDA progress ratings for corn, cotton, wheat, rice, sorghum and pasture for the week ending May 1.
See this week’s USDA Crop Progress and Condition Rating reports.
Corn, cotton and grain sorghum condition all have the same percentages good and excellent as last week. Soybeans improved by two percentage points.
In spite of what we heard for months of sideways trading markets and media fear of being saddled long term by mountains of grains (especially corn), some real issues are surfacing.
Indigo Ag, Inc., is launching an on-farm storage program for U.S. farmers to enable identity preservation of corn, soybeans, cotton, wheat and rice.
Growers focus on dry weather and shrug off U.S.-China trade woes.
Here’s the latest from the USDA’s World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates:
For more than two decades, Commodity Classic has helped set the stage for the growing season. Farmers and presenters from across the country pour into one place with one goal in mind—to get ready for 2017. As attendance has grown, so has the event’s influence.
Demand and increasing that demand both domestically and internationally may be the biggest topic of all among farmers this year. We discussed how to make that happen with the chief executives of each of the grain associations.
Drought hurt crop production for Canadian wheat and canola this year, according to Statistics Canada’s latest Production of Principal Field Crops report released Friday, Oct. 2.
According to a recent Stats Canada crop survey, extremely dry fields in Alberta and Saskatchewan have cut into the yield potential of both crops.
Canadian wheat growers will probably reduce output by 26 percent this year and canola production will also fall, the government’s statistics agency said today.
Agency is looking to start making payouts in Oct. 2010
The winter-grain planting period is drawing to a close across the Northern Hemisphere, and young crops across some of the world’s top exporters face a mixed bag of conditions.
USDA crop progress and condition report highlights.
It’s time to start thinking about 2011 crop budgets