Harvest

Partners & Friends,

Harvest is in full swing. As of today, we are 65% complete with soybean harvest and 25% complete with corn. The seed beans are in the bin, and over 50,000 bushels of corn have been delivered to the local pig feed mill. The bushels will help offset the low commodity prices we are experiencing—take note of the prices at the end of each blog post.😳 Yields are excellent. This will be the best corn and bean crop we have ever raised. Grandpa Hess and Doll would not have believed the yields from some of these fields they nurtured and tilled.🙂 Marcus and I have shared some sweet moments reminiscing about harvest memories that ultimately brought Hess Family Farm to where it is today. We owe so much to so many people who worked so hard.❤️

There is talk that Congress might attempt to pass a new Farm Bill yet this year. The prices and structure desperately require updating. Low river levels on the Mississippi are causing great concern and have widened basis levels. Additionally, the dockworker strike will result in major disruptions both in and outside the country. We have a unit down and are waiting on parts from Germany. 😬

Phyllis and I had a wonderful week with the Luecht grandchildren visiting. Lindsay and Keith celebrated 20 years of marriage in Myrtle Beach. Alison received 24 inches of rain in Asheville from Hurricane Helene. We are still very dry here in Illinois, with no rain in the two week forecast.

Harvest Prices:

Corn—3.91

Soybeans—10.08

Soak up all the beauty and wonder of creation that surrounds you! We feel blessed to work in it each day.

Steve

In The Sky

Partners & Friends

We test and experiment with different agronomy practices every year to assess what new methods and/or products will improve yields, soil health, and profitability. Last week, we had a drone spray fungicide and biologicals on a few test plots. The drone only sprayed 2 gallons/acre, but the plant coverage was exceptional thanks to the downdraft of the propellors while flying. The technology of the drone, particularly its guidance system, is incredible. I now understand why drone warfare is so feared! The ease and ability to maneuver along with the clarity of the cameras and video makes it feel as if you are in a Star Wars movie.😄 Other advantages of drones are the ability to fly over tall crops with no crop damage from wheel tracks, as well as not having to worry about wet field conditions. Later on in August, we hope to use the drone to seed cover crops into standing crop in order to get covers established before harvest, which will help lower our carbon score to qualify for tax credits. However, there are many details to work out yet, so stay tuned!

The Hess Family Farm team is staying occupied with haying. We have baled around 2,000 small squares, over 250 big squares, and over 50 big, round bales so far this season. We will do a second cutting of alfalfa next week. All crops have received a post application of herbicide. The NH3 side dressing is complete. Spraying and mowing field edges is underway. Summer construction projects fill in the lulls of crop tending. 

The USDA Crop Acreage report is due to be released this week. Discussions regarding the Farm Bill continue. The dry, hot weather does not have traders too worried about crop size. No one seems concerned that the federal government will spend $2 trillion more than is taken in next fiscal year.

The entire family celebrated PriscaStone 2024 last weekend in Grafton, Wisconsin to honor the passing of baby Prisca one year ago. It was a wonderful time reuniting with many friends, listening to Christian worship music, and seeing God glorified.

Fall Prices:

Corn—4.28

Soybeans—10.90

Stay cool,

Steve

New Year

Partners & Friends,

We are making our way into 2024 after a wonderful holiday season celebrating the birth of our Savior and enjoying time with family and friends. Along with that is a lot of year-end office time and bookkeeping frenzy. We have finalized our corn and soybean seed orders for the next crop season after studying our own field research and consulting with our crop consultants. Our fertilizer needs are mostly booked and applied. The only missing link is our spring side dress NH3 application. We have pre-paid for chemicals and fungicide. When we make our plans, we are preparing for a robust crop with all the inputs needed for top yields. It is encouraging that input costs are mostly lower, except for seed. Commodity prices are certainly lower than year ago. There’ll be some event along the way that will provide marketing opportunities. 

The Hess Family Farm team is putting more tile in the ground whenever the weather allows. Plans are for another 200 acres this year, although the weather forecast does not look good after this week. We have emptied all the corn bins. This is the first time all bins are empty this early, but we took advantage of some early delivery offers that have turned out well. We are now in the midst of year-end bookkeeping tasks, turning out 1099s and W-2s, and preparing for tax filings. There are a few meetings to attend to help with continuing education and business strategy updates.

The current world events are always black swans for our planning. The Middle East conflict is putting energy prices on a roller coaster almost daily. We have booked almost half of our needs for 2024. The situation with the war in Ukraine is jerking commodity prices around daily. Weather in South America is of extreme importance in the midst of their critical growing season. Interest rates are another area we pay constant attention to. Operating interest is almost 2x what rates were 1 year ago.

Our family is doing well. This season of gatherings has shown us just how thankful we are for our friends and family. The support and prayers our family received over the past year of great highs and lows means so much—thank you! We are looking forward to a great New Year with much time for relationships. May you all take time for the ones in your lives.

Fall Prices:

Corn—4.72

Soybeans—11.93

Steve

Christmas Tree Season

Partners & Friends,

Things are busy and going well here on the farm as we celebrate the birth of Jesus.

We have finished fall tillage. The fall fertilizer, both anhydrous and dry, is on the fields. We have hauled over 400,000 bushels of corn to take advantage of basis opportunities. We have also celebrated the success of Toppling Goliath (aka Navigator), at least for now. The barns and manure piles are cleaned up. Many tile holes have been dug up and repaired. Equipment has been cleaned and stored. Tiling projects have begun. We hauled over 200 loads of municipal sludge. Goats have been shown. And it snowed. 😐

Crude oil prices are softer as of now, even with the ongoing wars in the Middle East and Ukraine. The one year extension of the Farm Bill has been passed. South America crops are doing adequately overall. Corn and beans have gone into their usual seasonal doldrums. The used equipment market seems to be softer on most types of farm equipment. The Iowa caucuses are about 2 months away. Farmers are standing up for property rights. At the Illinois Farm Bureau annual meeting in Chicago, resolutions were passed by the delegates opposing Eminent Domain for all renewable energy projects, including CO2 pipelines.🙂 That happened thanks to the effort of a many people doing what they can, or as I like to say: throwing stones at the giant! 👏🏻

Our family is doing well, with school, sports, work, music activities, and goat care filling up schedules. Phyllis and I attended the Illinois Farm Bureau (IFB) meeting in Chicago last weekend, and it was wonderful to see friends and family there involved in grassroots decisions. It was a very gratifying delegate session after a year of meetings, calls, signs, and postcards. 

Fall 2024 Prices:

Corn—4.89

Soybeans—12.41

Remember to celebrate the True Meaning of this Christmas season!

Steve

Toppling Goliath

Partners & Friends,

Navigator—the CO2 pipeline company that had proposed a 5-state pipeline project capturing CO2 from mainly ethanol plants to sequester the product in east central Illinois—announced on October 20th that it is cancelling the project. As most of you are aware, our family has been opposing the project since it was first launched almost 2 years ago. The route of a feeder line to an ethanol plant in Galva would have gone through 5 tracts of farmland that our family grows crops on, mostly patterned tiled fields of very productive soil.

While this project is cancelled, there is still the possibility that another company might pick up the pieces and try again. There are other projects still in the works—mainly Wolf/ADM, which sources CO2 from 2 Iowa ADM ethanol plants to sequester in Macon county. This pipeline would run close to some of my cousins’ and friends’ farmland in Peoria and Tazewell county. There is also a 7 mile pipeline project at the ICC named One Earth Energy, which runs from an ethanol plant in Putnam county to sequester in McLean county with a pipeline sized much larger than is needed for single plant sequestration.

When the McDonough county board first became aware of this project, the States Attorney made the statement that there was nothing the county could do to oppose the project. However, the county board listened to landowners and citizens and twice voted unanimously to intervene, despite the significant cost to the county and tens of thousands of hard-earned taxpayer dollars. Additionally, the county passed a 2-year moratorium on pipelines in McDonough county until new safety rules could be written and implemented. THANK YOU!!

This battle is won but the war is far from over. As long as Eminent Domain is available for private projects like this to confiscate property, our personal property rights—and the land that our ancestors purchased and homesteaded with the intent of improving and making as productive as possible—will always be at risk. The farm Phyllis and I live on has been in her family since 1869. When I plant and harvest these fields, I ponder how much blood, sweat, and tears have been shed over the past 150 years to leave a legacy for this family. At the least, a moratorium could be established until new safety rules are developed by PHMSA, reviewed, and implemented.

As I farm alongside Gen 6 with Gen 7 and watch, learn, and think about their future, I recognize what this effort is truly about. It is about the future. It is about raising crops and animals in a responsible, sustainable way to provide food and shelter for this family, country, and world. It is using the creation that God has provided to prosper and multiply. It is to enjoy the freedom in this God-blessed nation that we do not appreciate enough. It is not to chase some government tax credit so we can be called “carbon neutral.”

Now, time to get off my soapbox.😅 Harvest is almost complete. Fertilizer application and some light fall tillage are planned along with more whole farm tile projects. We truly appreciate all the harvest crew that have been involved! The Hess Family Farm team handled more bushels than ever before, partially due to being heavy on corn acres. We also delivered more bushels at harvest than ever before.

It was officially announced the Panama Canal is reducing traffic by 1/2 due to low rainfall. Mississippi barges are still being light-loaded due to low river levels. Furthermore, world tensions are rising, which usually supports energy prices and causes chaos in commodity markets.

The FFA convention is this week. There are more goat shows in the near future. It is time to get holiday plans and schedules coordinated. Phyllis had a successful eye surgery this week, and more will be known about what the future holds for her vision in a few months.

Current Prices:

Corn—4.59

Soybeans—13.18

Steve