Farm Futures
   Search Site:  Search Site Friday, May 24, 2013 | Bookmark This Site   
Skip Navigation Links
Home
Markets
News
Weather
Farm Futures NOW!
Magazine Online
RSS News
Mobile
Subscribe
Reprints
Register
Login
About Us
Advertise
This Business of FarmingThis Business of Farming   
A critical, oft-times irreverent look at cutting edge issues that impact U.S. farmers.
 
  • Post to Your Wall.
 
 

Farm Futures Announces Tour Dates

Posted on May 23, 2013

Farm Futures is set to host farm tours to four continents, each designed to give you and your spouse the experience of a lifetime. From South Africa to China, and from Brazil to Australia, you'll broaden your perspective on global agriculture while enjoying some of the great sight-seeing wonders of the world.

"I've often said that when you return from a trip of this nature, you never watch the news the same way again," says Max Armstrong, one of the tour hosts and Farm Progress director of broadcasting. "It truly gives you a new and different perspective of the world outside our borders - out there where 96% of the world's population resides."





A farm tour is an excellent opportunity to chat with other farmers and exchange ideas. Those conversations at the airport, over dinner or on a bus rolling through the countryside offer wonderful insights. You'll travel with like-minded farmers, as experienced guides and translators accompany each tour.

RELATED: FACES OF CHINA

One of the great benefits of international travel for farmers is that you can see firsthand what's happening with crops or livestock.

“As a market analyst I’ve read about Brazil for years, but reading reports and crunching numbers is one thing; Actually being on the ground is quite another," says senior editor Bryce Knorr, who hosted a tour to Brazil earlier this year. “For example, I’d always read about “bags” of soybeans in Brazil. But it wasn’t until I talked to farmers there and saw them negotiating input purchases, paid for with bags of soybeans priced off the Chicago Board of Trade, that I really got how their system works, and why currency fluctuations are so crucial to their profitability.”

Li En Jun, a farm manager in China, was one of several folks we met on a tour there last November.

Li En Jun, a farm manager in China, was one of several folks we met on a tour there last November.
RELATED: Farm Management a Different Ballgame in Brazil

Walking the fields of Brazil or talking with trade experts in China, you'll get new ideas for your own business. In Australia or South Africa visit cattle feedlots, stud farms and game preserves to learn firsthand what's happening in our global market.

MORE ON FARM FUTURES: In Search of China's Red Capitalists

These excursions are organized by Trump Tours, an award-winning Ag tour business based out of Arkansas. Itineraries mix a blend of farm visits and agribusinesses with breath-taking scenic stopovers. From a business perspective you'll hear firsthand from local experts on important issues facing each country.

Once you've traveled overseas your view of the world will be changed forever. Don't miss out on this excellent opportunity.

For more information on each tour go to www.agtoursusa.com and check out the Ag Tours Calendar to explore itineraries - and start planning for the trip of a lifetime.

For routine coverage of Brazilian agriculture, check out blogger James Thompson's South American Crop Watch HERE.

 

 



 

 

Add a Comment

Recent Posts
Back to Top
Is Farmland in a Bubble – and Does it Matter?
Posted on January 08, 2013
With expectations high, potential buyers say they will look to buy anyway
Category: Natural resources
Mississippi's Battle to Keep Nutrients in Place
Posted on May 31, 2012
Recycling irrigation water is one of many strategies in Delta Farming conservation strategies
Category: Natural resources
South America’s No-till Pioneer
Posted on April 18, 2012
Brazil’s no-till revolution started with one man who dared to think in unconventional ways
Category: Natural resources
No-till: An Answer for Climate Change?
Posted on April 16, 2012
No-till can mitigate extreme weather and keep soil in place
Category: Natural resources
Tour Proves Why Conservation is Still Cool
Posted on August 09, 2011
No-tillers, innovators gather to learn latest precision, soil-saving techniques
Category: Natural resources
Illinois Farmland Tops $11,000 Per Acre
Posted on June 27, 2011
Red hot land market shows no signs of letting up
Category: Natural resources
Is This the Moon? No, it’s Missouri Farmland
Posted on June 15, 2011
Waters recede near breached levee, revealing crop fields that look more like the Badlands of South Dakota than productive acreage
Category: Natural resources
The Trouble with CSP
Posted on April 18, 2011
Why conservation programs aren't set up to do what farmers – and consumers - want
Category: Natural resources
Farmland: Still Red Hot
Posted on February 25, 2011
Recent Central Illinois sales average around $8,000 per acre
Category: Natural resources
Are We Running Out of Phosphorus?
Posted on February 15, 2011
Maybe not, but the countries that own reserves may scare you
Category: Natural resources
Are We Running Out of Phosphorus?
Posted on November 23, 2010
Fertilizer reserves may be okay, but the countries that own them may scare you
Category: Natural resources
Controlled Drainage: Next Big Thing for Ag?
Posted on October 29, 2010
Subsurface systems provide better water table management and less nitrate runoff
Category: Natural resources
Fifty Years of Service to Agriculture
Posted on September 21, 2010
Agronomist devotes life to improving water efficiency in Nebraska crop production
Category: Natural resources
Why Conservation is Cool (Again)
Posted on August 09, 2010
New generation of 'never-till' farmers are building organic matter – and profits
Category: Natural resources
Dialogue with a Farmer, Part One
Posted on May 27, 2010
Nebraska grower makes a case for more sustainable agriculture
Category: Natural resources
Global Ag Leaders Talk Climate Change
Posted on January 22, 2010
They're looking at ways to make ag more climate friendly, yet feed more people
Category: Natural resources
Blog

Category

Archives

About The Writer
This Business of Farming

Mike Wilson has spent the last 25 years as a writer, photographer and editor for various U.S. agricultural magazines. He grew up on a grain and livestock farm in Ogle County, Ill., and earned a bachelor's degree in agricultural journalism from the University of Illinois in 1981.

He served as editor of Prairie Farmer magazine from 1990 to 2001. He has been executive editor of Farm Futures since 2004.