 
          Page 30   October 27, 2015
        
        
          
            2015 Logan County Farm Outlook Magazine
          
        
        
          LINCOLN DAILY NEWS.COM
        
        
          
            At the
          
        
        
          E
        
        
          levator
        
        
          O
        
        
          n October 19  harvest
        
        
          was not quite over.  Most
        
        
          locations were expected to wind
        
        
          down in the next week or two.
        
        
          At that time Amy Bramer from
        
        
          Topflight Grain Cooperative
        
        
          remarked that it was odd to be
        
        
          done in mid-October.
        
        
          This was the first harvest in Bramer’s 17
        
        
          years of experience with no “rain rest.”
        
        
          Harvest started in earnest the first week of
        
        
          September and continued without any let-up.
        
        
          Many farmers have their harvest and their
        
        
          field work already done, too.  The down side
        
        
          of having no rain-rest is that there was no
        
        
          time to rest and recover and spend time with
        
        
          friends and family.  And the lack of rain-rest
        
        
          underscores that producers in this area need
        
        
          rain for next year’s crop.
        
        
          The other surprise this season was that bean
        
        
          volumes were much better than expected.
        
        
          Bramer quickly ran a report that said that
        
        
          Topflight was over 107% of last year on
        
        
          beans.   Usually farmers count on an average
        
        
          of about 55 bushels of beans per acre, but this
        
        
          year many farmers were reporting over 80
        
        
          (Bramer said like 83 comes to mind).  These
        
        
          kind of numbers were seen across the grain
        
        
          belt.
        
        
          The hybrids are really showing what they
        
        
          can do, especially beans.  The old adage is
        
        
          that beans don’t like “wet feet.”  However,
        
        
          with these hybrids, early “wet feet” seems to
        
        
          be ok.  Even though the price continues to
        
        
          be higher for beans and lower for corn, there
        
        
          were not a lot of acres converted from corn
        
        
          to beans.  Bramer said in this area farmers
        
        
          largely stick to their crop rotations.
        
        
          Corn yields were in line with expectations:
        
        
          slightly above to slightly below.  In the
        
        
          Atlanta area and in fields along Route 10
        
        
          near Beason and Johnson Siding, they had a
        
        
          greater accumulation of rain in the mid June
        
        
          to early July deluge, and corn yields there
        
        
          were lower than expected.  It all depended
        
        
          on what kind of ground the corn was planted
        
        
          in.  Rolling ground handled the extreme June/
        
        
          July rains better than flat ground.  Overall,
        
        
          93% of last year’s corn crop was expected.
        
        
          This corn harvest this year is as solid as any
        
        
          year.
        
        
          Corn that was harvested early was coming in
        
        
          12-13% moisture at first, but later Topflight
        
        
          Based on an interview with Amy Bramer,
        
        
          
            TopFlight Grain Cooperative
          
        
        
          Continued