Previous Page  4 / 44 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 4 / 44 Next Page
Page Background

4 March 24, 2016

2016 Logan County Farm Outlook Magazine

Lincoln Daily

News.com

Spring 2016 Ag

Perspective

This sounds like a big deal, and it

is! At current market prices, this

translates to a bit over $200 per corn

acre in lost income. What makes this

important is the loss in ability to pay

higher rents, the ability to upgrade

equipment, buy inputs, and to provide

for family living needs. You do the

math on what $200 per acre at just

short of 195,000 acres takes out of

the Logan County economy.

Soybean yields were off of the record

of 63.7 bushels per acre last year by

about 11%, coming in at 56.6 bushels

per acre for 2015. At least soybeans

remained above the 10 year average

yield, whereas corn was below by

about five bushels per acre.

The culprit was water. We just had

too much of it in a short period

of time, and when the crops were

susceptible to damage. Granted, there

were some exceptional yields where

there wasn’t water damage.

On the other hand, there were some

really rotten ones where the damage

did occur. That’s how we get an

average.

For a bit of a comparison,

neighboring counties DeWitt and

Macon both had corn yield averages

over 207 bushels to the acre for 2015.

Many producers will be using some

of the income “safety nets” in place.

The main ones include Federal Crop

Insurance and the Farm Programs

such as ARC or PLC. These become

very important in maintaining income

to help with bills including the inputs

and land rental.

Probably the number one question

we receive annually is “What is the

going cash rent?” And, of course,

John Fulton

County Extension

Director

University of Illinois

Extension

700 South Airport

Drive

Springfield, IL 62707

http://web.extension

.

illinois.edu/lms/ fultonj@illinois.edu

phone 217.782.4617

fax 217.524.6662

Serving Logan,

Menard, and

Sangamon Counties

T

he results are in, and as heady as the climb to record yields

was last year, the fall to average was just as quick this year.

The National Agricultural Statistics Service placed Logan County

corn yields for 2015 at 172.8 bushels per acre. The fall happened

to be 58 bushels per acre average from the record yield established

the prior year.

Continue

8