| | Steve K. Young of Carnation, Wash., took a big chance on an old tractor. He bought a 1973 Lamborghini 804 DT sight-unseen. |
| | After several tough years, macro forces point to some reasons for optimism for U.S. farmers. “Going into 2020, the basic fundamentals for many farms look better than they did last year,” says Robert Johansson, USDA chief economist. |
ADVERTISEMENT | | | Join us March 27 at 12 p.m. CST for a webinar powered by Pioneer Agronomy. We’ll discuss a resurfaced fertilizer approach: Fact vs. Fiction? Register now. |
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| | The 2020 spring planting season is starting soggy, which is less than encouraging for farmers, but with 2019 close in the rear-view and means farmers know how to quickly adapt. |
| | How are meat packers keeping processing capacity while maintaining food safety and the safety of workers? John Niemann of Cargill joined Farm Journal live on Friday to talk about how the company is addressing COVID-19. |
| | The coronavirus is having a ripple effect on commodities since the outbreak hit U.S. shores. Grocery stores shelves are in a constant flux. Many bare or picked over as consumers return to eating at home. |
| | The unprecedented demand for eggs has the U-S-D-A taking action, in today's AgDay Minute. |
| | 30 days out from planting and fuel tanks are full, fertilizer in the tank, seed/ herbicide in the shed, putting finishing touches on planters and tractors. Just hoping for sunshine and blue skies. With all that is going on around us, I'm just trying to say it's not all bad news. Some suppliers are ahead of the mess. But this year, if it is marginal for planting it's going to prevent plant. No more dragging the planter through mud here. Be safe. |
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