 
          16  November 4, 2014    2014 LOGAN COUNTY FARM OUTLOOK MAGAZINE   LINCOLN DAILY NEWS.com
        
        
          The up-side-down harvest
        
        
          Is it a new trend, or just history repeating itself?
        
        
          Story and by Nila Smith
        
        
          W
        
        
          hether it be better than the last
        
        
          two years, or worse; one might
        
        
          not want to venture a guess.
        
        
          But the fact is this is a different year for
        
        
          farmers, one that they haven’t seen in a
        
        
          while.
        
        
          Summer was almost non-existent, and the
        
        
          hottest weather of the year arrived in late
        
        
          August, and even then only lasted a week
        
        
          or so.
        
        
          Spring was cold, following an
        
        
          unusuallycold winter leaving a deep
        
        
          permafrost, soil temperatures were slow to
        
        
          rise, making corn planting late.
        
        
          Throughout the summer, the land was
        
        
          blessed with rain like it hasn’t seen in the
        
        
          last few years, but as fall approached the
        
        
          blessing became a plague.  With each day
        
        
          Continued
        
        
          →
        
        
          Fields north of Lincoln were part of many in Logan County that
        
        
          were harvested in portions related to seed moisture or soil too wet,
        
        
          threatening soil compaction.  There is that critical point when the
        
        
          safest choice is to begin harvest.  Numerous farm implements were
        
        
          stuck in wet fields all over central Illinois following heavy September
        
        
          rains over already moist soils.
        
        
          
            Photo by Jan Youngquist