Toe In The Water

Partners & Friends,


We planted 80 acres of beans last week; they are not up yet. Soil temperatures are still below 50 degrees, but since heat is in the forecast, there could be some sprouting this week. A main reason we took the planter to the field was to solve first field bugs. Marcus encountered many of them.🙃 We will now be ready to hit the ground running, once the weather clears. The corn planter has not been started up yet, so there will be some first day issues to sort out there. The Hess Family Farm team spend much of time and money each year ensuring the planters are ready to roll. Crop has the most potential the minute the seed hits the soil, so we want to be certain we give it the best placement and position as possible. Planter technology has come so far over my career. Planting no longer entails just dropping seed into the ground in any soil conditions. Rather, down force, row cleaning, depth wheels, seed firmers, sidewall compaction, air pockets, closing down pressure, and seed singulation are some of the issues we now aim to perfect when placing seed in the trench.


Our other duties, such as leveling tile ditches from the winter projects, hauling grain, livestock care (goats and cows), equipment readiness, office details, mushroom hunting, and relaxing before season starts, are also keeping us busy. The new sprayer was delivered last week and is now fully operational, having run it for a day. I will share more about that decision soon—it was a big commitment.


I recently saw pictures of Ukrainian farmers wearing helmets and bulletproof vests while planting.😔 There will be no way to export the crop that is produced with some of the ports being so heavily damaged. Commodity markets show little weakness. This could be an extended bubble, and with inflation running hot on its heels, will create additional management issues. Take a look at interest rates for 2-year bonds since the beginning of this year; our issues are still minor compared to others!


Family is in full school mode. We had a wonderful Easter celebration, despite Phyllis having to get a COVID test that morning for her surgery on Wednesday. The surgery was a bit complicated, and she is now facing a long recovery time from it. The carbon pipeline issues are heating up.


Current prices:

Corn—7.96

Soybeans—17.28


Keep in touch,

Steve

Livestock

Partners & Friends,


Livestock of various kinds have dwelled at this farm all but one of the 153 years since 1869, when the Doll family homesteaded the property. Before Phyllis and I moved here in 1992, the farm was known for the feedlots of up to 400 head of feeder cattle. There was also a thriving pasture farrowing hog enterprise and sheep on the farm. When we discontinued milking our 250 cows ten years ago, the chores and animal care did not halt. After selling the milking herd, we custom raised dairy heifers for about 6 years. When the pandemic hit two years ago, Ali raised almost 100 bottle calves while doing college from home. Nowadays, we have a very small beef herd and sell farm raised beef (let us know if you are interested). There are currently 9 goats here for Harper’s show and breeding herd. We also had 3 pigs for Finley’s 4-H project last summer. Over the years, the farm has been home to countless horses, dogs, cats, rabbits, and chickens. We love animals!


We bide our time waiting for dry weather and warmth to plant by fixing tile holes, hauling grain, cleaning out the barn and hauling manure, organizing storage, making final adjustments to the planting equipment, servicing the trucks and tractors, and putting together planting prescriptions and SOPs. With commodity prices at the levels they are, more than ever we want to make every seed count . Our seed and chemicals are on hand, and we will be ready to go in short order. Regarding the weather forecast, we anticipate short planting and spraying windows, similar to the past few years, which tests our strength and stamina. 🙂


The Ukraine situation has made several things unpredictable. Fertilizer is looking to be very expensive this next year, mainly because much of it is manufactured with natural gas. We have overcome a few parts supply issues. The commodity markets are quite volatile, which makes sales decisions difficult. The inflation factor has hit all sectors…and what goes up often does not come back down. Every government crop report adds volatility to the market.


The family is doing well. Phyliss and I were blessed to attend grandparents day at Trinity Academy on March 24th, where Harper was in the school play (Oliver Twist), Finley portrayed Queen Elizabeth I in the wax museum, and Abbott was in the second grade Reader’s Theater (Romeo and Juliet). Harper showed her Boer goats that weekend at the Little Sioux Showdown in Afton, Iowa and did very well, including a Reserve Champion Percentage Doe. Phyliss is currently spending time in St Louis with Miriam, Cora, Walker, and Lincoln while their parents attend a conference. Phyllis is also scheduled for surgery to remove the silicone oil from her eye in two weeks, with cataract surgery soon to follow. Prayers are welcome.

Here is a post from a Ukrainian farmer about an update on the whole situation, please have a read.

Fall Prices (we are mostly sold out of 2021 crop):

Corn—6.84

Soybeans—14.43


Feel free to like and comment,

Steve

Good Start

Partners & Friends,

Just got rained out today after a couple of days planting. We have over 400 acres of beans in the ground and about 200 acres of corn. Soil conditions were perfect with the long, warm, dry period we just experienced. Research the last several years has shown early bean planting can really boost yields, and that the soybean seed can withstand more adverse conditions than corn. Ideally we would like to plant all the beans the second week of April and corn the third week.

Elsewhere we are doing tile repairs (never-ending), plumbing a fire department tanker repurposed to sprayer tender, surface drainage projects, building repair, bin site remodeling, show pig procurement and housing, and some job realignment. We also have our first calf of the season--a nice heifer! We are also wrapping up some grain shipments of corn and beans and cleaning out the barns from the winter accumulation. There seems to be some extra fertilizer going in some fields around here (not ours) which indicates some more corn acres. Lots of new iron coming out of the neighbors’ sheds this spring too.

Farmers are trying to do everything possible to capitalize on the higher commodity prices this year--extra fertilizer, early planting, higher yield potential seed. The latest stimulus bill really did little for the farm community unless you are a disadvantaged farmer. The last scheduled CFAP payments are due any day now but are minuscule compared to last year's relief package. China seems really hungry for corn and soy for their food needs—but are being very tight lipped about the actual Asian Swine Flu that is sweeping through the hog population there again.

Family is heading for the home stretch for this spring schooling. Ali is in her last quarter of her junior year. Trinity school kids are headed for summer vacation starting around Memorial Day. Homeschool bunch is aiming for the same summer vacation. We have another grand child due on the 4th of July. :)


Fall Prices--

Corn--4.68

Soybeans--12.63


Keep in touch and enjoy this beautiful spring green-up!

Steve

Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!!!

Partners and friends,

We are coming out of a long cold spell which has set some records for low temps for this time of year; temperature last Saturday morning was around 28. We had very little crop emerging (due to cold soil) so it was hard to judge the effect on the growing crop. We have replanted some corn on our bottom ground that was flooded for a day and did not survive. Corn planting the first time was complete Wednesday. We have lost very few growing degree days with the cold temps . Some neighboring corn that has been in the ground for more than 3 weeks is still coming through. Soybean planting is up to date but we are still waiting for one variety of seed beans that had winter production in Chile. Apparently, there are weather issues with harvest there. Around the farm we have been occupied with repairs of equipment, tearing out old unused fences, tile repairs, washout repairs, grain hauling, mushroom hunting and landscaping. We are preparing to enter another intense few weeks with corn to side dress with NH3, all fields to be sprayed for last pass, hay making, roadside mowing and weed maintenance, fencerow spraying, building upkeep, bin repair and other misc jobs. We will not run out of work and are keeping our high schools and college staff busy. 

The pandemic has certainly caused a lot of black swans to appear for agriculture. The oil debacle has turned the ethanol market totally on its head with so much in storage and several plants shut down and not even posting bids. The equity markets are trying to figure out what the real interest rate is and now there is talk of negative interest! Kind of like crude oil going negative. Fertilizer prices are totally flat as producers decide how little money to spend. Livestock is in a real quandary as packing plants shut down and finished cattle and hogs and chickens pile up on tightly scheduled slaughter schedules. And the cold weather is keeping us all inside more instead of being able to get out and enjoy spring nature and its beauty. 

Family is doing well but cabin fever is growing. I haven't held our youngest grandchild since the night she was born--January 17. I'm not sure which region of IL we are in or what phase of coming out we are experiencing. Hoping we can salvage county fairs and 4-H shows this summer and find some normalcy with sports schedules. One of our college employees had a virtual college graduation last week. Now that Alison is completing virtual college I wonder if we can go ahead with that and change education for the future. We are certainly changing the world as we know it and this event has just sped up the change!

Fall prices

Corn--3.03

SB--8.33

Keep in touch and share pics of your face masks!

Steve

We're Experts at Working From Home

Partners & Friends,

On one hand it seems like time is flying by, but with all the uncertainty in the world it seems like the unknown ahead of us is coming very slowly. As much as we are used to instant gratification in today's society the pace of "shelter in place" is perilously slow. At Hess Family Farm we are adapting to differences as best we can, including

  • Social distancing among families-keeping 6' between people when working or socializing

  • Staying home at night

  • Grocery shopping every 10 days

  • Ali is doing the last quarter of her second year at UChicago from home 

  • Watching Dr. Pol on Disney 

  • No hugging or spending time with grandkids

  • Riding in backseats transporting people—feels like being chauffeured

  • Watching someone fixing a machine and not being able to help

  • Not being able to visit my parents face to face

Someday we'll look back and say all this makes sense when we see the results. So far there have been very few positive tests in our area, but I feel it is just a matter of time till most have some exposure and get some sort of immunity. Like everyone is discussing, the world is going to be a lot different and this has only sped up the change that is coming. It does seem to be harder for older people to accept and adapt—keep us in your prayers.

On the farm we have completed the first pass of spraying all the crop ground. Last week we planted about 200 acres of soybeans. We are also fervently trying to repair issues from last year's extreme rains. We have hauled dirt to repair washouts for days. Our excavator has been used almost every day repairing tile holes. We have seeded several new waterways to prevent future erosion. Our corn planter has gone through another major rebuild with more technology added.

With Ali home she has rebooted our livestock enterprise with a group of bucket calves. We have also picked up a couple of beef cows for the pasture. We have been selling unused equipment online to clean up some storage space and we even purchased a combine online in Mississippi. We have been in on several zoom meetings with suppliers and could actually get used to the efficiencies of all this technology. I do miss the personal contact but the world is changing.

On the US agriculture front things are in chaos. I'm sure you are aware of pork and chicken processing plants closing, dairy farmers dumping milk, and the bottom falling out of corn prices due to ethanol demand and China not buying and the huge predicted planted acres forecast.  Even with government help this is going to be a very difficult year to stay on top of marketing, production, and finance (our three legs of the business). I have been lecturing my family. We need to be very aware of the future and how we can adapt to it. The opportunities are going to be great but I fear also the downsides will be horrendous.

Family is doing well. Having a college daughter taking class from home makes me ask the question, why not make this offering a part of education and skip the expense of college room and board? We are enjoying FaceTime and Duo to see the families but miss the personal time and hugs and cuddling. We were already used to church online when we travel but miss the face to face time there as well. Last Sunday we took in 3 services. One big concern I have is we are becoming more addicted to the news and feeling like we need to read and see everything. The downside of that is the news is so depressing it keeps us from realizing how blessed we really are. 

New Crop Prices:

Corn 3.17

Soybeans 8.51

Let us know how you all are doing.

Steve