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CLICK HERE for the latest market quotes from the Brownfield Ag News Network!
The Cass County Conservation Board is holding “Stand Up Paddleboard” (SUP) demonstration this Saturday, August 25th, from 9-a.m. to Noon. The FREE event takes place at Cold Springs Park beach. After a quick demonstration, you can try out the boards for yourself. If you do not bring a life jacket one will be provided to you. You must weigh less than 250lbs. Children must be 16 years or older. The final paddleboard demonstration event is Sept. 1st, with times available at 1-p.m. and 2:30-p.m. The program will be cancelled is there is unsafe weather or conditions on the lake. Reserve your spot for either date by calling the CCCB at 712-769-2372.
SUP is the fastest growing sport in the paddling community not only across the country, but especially here in land-locked areas like Iowa. It’s described as a fun, healthy as a total body work-out and offers a unique perspective when it comes to being on the water.
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — An Omaha-based company has agreed to pay a $500,000 fine levied by federal regulators citing spill protection violations at production facilities in Iowa, Nebraska and Minnesota. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says Ag Processing Inc. didn’t have adequate Clean Water Act protections at several vegetable oil and biodiesel production facilities. The facilities are in Algona, Eagle Grove, Everly, Manning and Sheldon, Iowa; Hastings, Nebraska, and Dawson, Minnesota.
AG Processing also will be installing an electronic monitoring system on seven large crude soybean oil storage tanks at its Everly and Emmetsburg, Iowa, facilities. The settlement’s consent decree is subject to 30 days of public comment and review by a federal court.
(Radio Iowa) — The latest U-S-D-A report on Iowa crops indicates the rain that’s fallen recently in parts of Iowa may help boost corn and soybean yields. About two-thirds of the state has adequate moisture levels in the topsoil and subsoil to support the final stages of crop development, but the report indicates 11 percent of the state is “very short” of topsoil moisture.
Davis County in south central Johnson farms in southern Iowa’s Wapello County, near the community of Agency. He has about 700 acres of row crops. “It’s such a spotty year all around the state, but ours look pretty good. I’m not going to complain. You go south of us in the southern half of Davis County and they’re cooked,” Johnson says. “They’re probably worse off than they were a year ago.” Johnson says fewer than 10 inches of rain has fallen crops since the end of April, but luckily he planted drought-tolerant corn.
“In our soils, we don’t have that natural water-holding capacity, the tilth that I think we do in the rich soils of northern Iowa and so the drought-resistent hybrids really pay off for us,” Johnson says. Johnson has pastures, too, and has produced enough hay to feed his cattle. In northwest Iowa, Iowa State University Extension Crop Specialist Joel DeJong expects to see good, but not record corn yields.
“We’re actually about 10 or more days ahead of normal since the first of May, so we’ve made great progress,” DeJong says. “Corn looks like most of its going to be mature in early September to mid-September, which means we’re going to have fairly good dry-down weather and we’re probably going to have a fairly early harvest, barring excessive rainfall.” DeJong says soybean pods in northwest Iowa are filling nicely.
“The good news there was we haven’t seen a lot of disease pressure, occasionally we see a field with some diseases. We haven’t seen a lot of soybean aphid issues like we see some years. I think there are some scattered locations that have had some problems, ” DeJong says. “…For me to guess soybean yields, it’s kind of look at the weather and make your best guess.” Nearly three-quarters of the state’s corn crop is rated good to excellent in the weekly U-S-D-A report, while statewide soybean conditions declined slightly to 70 percent rates as good to excellent.
(Radio Iowa) — J.D. Scholten, the Democrat challenging Republican Congressman Steve King’s bid for a ninth term, says consolidation in agriculture and President Trump’s trade war are making it harder for farmers to make a profit. The E-P-A’s anti-ethanol moves to benefit the oil industry isn’t helping either, according to Scholten. “Our American government is pushing down on our farmers,” Scholten says. “Who’s looking out for farmers? Who’s looking out for us?”
Scholten made his comments this weekend during a speech at The Des Moines Register’s Political Soapbox at the Iowa State Fair. Scholten, a former professional baseball player who now works as a paralegal in Sioux City, stressed his family’s farm roots. “My great-great grandparents turned the field in Worth County and so it’s in my blood,” Scholten said. “I’m a fifth-generation Iowan, first to be raised in town. Our family farm we rent out to a family friend.”
Scholten criticized the Bayer-Monsanto merger, arguing farmers will have to pay more for seeds and farm chemicals. And Scholten says farmers are the first victims in the Trump Administration’s trade policies. “The fourth district is bearing the brunt of these tariffs and that’s got to end,” Scholten said. “You look at the $12 billion bailout…It’s like you’re getting punched in the face and that same guy that’s punching you in the face gives you an ice cube.”
Scholten says both Democrats and Republicans have failed farmers by allowing the mergers of grain processing, meat packing and seed companies to create monopolies and “it’s time to get ahead of the curve.”
A round table discussion about the Farm Bill and Iowa’s Agricultural Economy will be held this Thursday, Aug. 23rd, in Atlantic. The Farm Forum takes place at the Atlantic Public Library, from 10-until 11:30-a.m., and features Democratic candidates for political office that include Tim Gannon (Ag. Secretary Candidate), Cindy Axne (3rd District Congressional candidate) and Denise O’Brien (Dem. candidate for House District 21). The forum will be moderated by retired Des Moines Register columnist Chuck Offenburger.
Iowa State University Extension and Outreach is conducting farmland leasing meetings across 4 different sites in Southwest Iowa during late August. Meeting sites include Carson, Shenandoah, Mount Ayr and Humeston and are coordinated by county ISU Extension and Outreach offices. The discussion will focus on various methods to determine a fair 2019 cash rental rate and the importance of good tenant/landlord communications. Also, a brief economic outlook will be presented along with a look at farmland prices. According the Cash Rental Rates for Iowa – 2018 Survey released in mid-May, the average 2018 cash rent statewide is $222 per tillable acre, a 1.4 percent increase as compared to 2017. Average cash rents statewide stabilized in 2018 after a decline of nearly 19 percent from the 2013 peak.
The Page County meeting site will be Thursday, Aug. 23, beginning at 1:30 pm. with doors open at 1 pm. The meeting will be held at the Shenandoah Public Library located at 201 S Elm St. The meeting will last approximately three hours and will be facilitated by Charles Brown, Farm Management Specialist, with ISU Extension and Outreach. Pre-registration is required at least two days before the meeting and a $20 per individual or $30 per couple fee is payable at the door. Participants will receive a 100-page booklet and meeting handouts designed to assist landowners, tenants and other agri-business professionals with issues related to farmland ownership, management and leasing arrangements.
Contact the Page County Extension office at 712-542-5171 with your questions or to pre-register on or before August 21, 2018 at 4:30 pm