Sunrise to Sunset

Partners & Friends,

Last Friday was one for the books. I woke up to a weather alert for rain at 7:30 a.m., but Chuck and I had already left for the field at 5:30 to get the trucks on the road before they got stuck in the mud. While we were out there, we realized we had enough time before the rain—and enough empty grain carts—to make a round in the mile-long rows. We ended up catching a gorgeous sunrise in the field, and even saw a rainbow as the rain began to fall!

Later that same day, after the brief shower passed and harvest resumed, we watched the sun set as we finished our last rounds. What a beautiful reminder of the wonder and glory of God’s creation…and we get to experience it every day. PTL! 🙌

Harvest is moving along steadily. We’ve finished the beans and are back on corn. Yields are holding up well, with moisture around 14.5%, and the corn is still standing reasonably strong. We’ve started running the strip-till bar to apply fertilizer, but the ground is very dry and hard, wearing out tillage points fast. We’re keeping pace with the combine using the VT disc to till and break down stalks, but a little rain would sure help. Unfortunately, there’s not much in the forecast. 😬 At this rate, we have about 13 days of corn harvest left.

The government shutdown hasn’t affected us much. Maybe we don’t need so many workers after all? Basis levels for both corn and beans are unusually strong for such a big crop, so something feels a bit off. The Mississippi River is even lower than it was this time last year, which has pushed barge shipping rates higher—not great news for export prices. 🫤

On the home front: goat showing season is starting back up, and we had lots of babies last week. Spoon River Drive wrapped up over the past couple of weekends, basketball season is just around the corner, and we’ve got one more mountain bike race left. 😍

Fall Prices:
Corn: $3.86
Soybeans: $9.66

Stay safe,

Steve