Farm Futures
   Search Site:   Friday, November 20, 2009 | Bookmark This Site   
Skip Navigation Links
Home
Markets
News
Weather
Farm Futures NOW!
Magazine Online
RSS News
Land For Sale
Mobile
Subscribe
Reprints
Register
Login
About Us
Advertise
Inside Dakota AgInside Dakota Ag   
Commentary on the news, events and people shaping agriculture in the Dakotas.
 
Share This
 
 

Race to harvest
Posted on October 05, 2009 at 9:19 AM
Click here to view recent posts

I once heard a farm management expert from Illinois advise farmers not to spend too much on equipment.

 

Typically, farmers have too much equipment – two planters when one would do, five tractors when you could get by with three, etc, he said. He advised the audience to run longer hours and spread out planting and harvest.

 

I couldn’t help but think about how wrong that Cornbelt advice might be for parts of the Dakotas. I was in the northern Red River Valley last week before it started raining and farmers were harvesting potatoes, soybeans, dry beans, wheat, and surgarbeets – and they were digging up with the land right behind the combine – all on the same farm.

 

Each crop required specialized harvesting equipment and a convoy of trucks and semis to haul it to warehouses, pilers, grain bins and grain elevators.

 

In the northern Dakotas, you don’t have to lose too many fields to the weather before it pays to buy another combine, truck or tractor.

 

Brian O’Toole, of Crystal, N.D., who I rode with while he and his sons combined navy beans, says that for many farms, labor -- not equipment -- is often the limiting factor on how quickly they can get a crop under cover.

Add a Comment

Recent Posts
Back to Top
Race to harvest
Posted on October 05, 2009 at 9:19 AM
Cornbelt advice might be wrong for the Dakota
Category: Farm Management
Blog

Category

About The Writer
Inside Dakota AgLon Tonneson has covered Dakota and Minnesota agriculture for 25 years. A South Dakota State University graduate, Lon worked on several weekly newspapers in South Dakota and southwest Minnesota before joining the staff of The Farmer magazine in 1980.

"I wanted to write about the biggest business in the Midwest – and that was agriculture," Lon says. "It turned out to be a good choice. Agriculture is still one the biggest industries in the region today and there are constantly new things to cover."

The Farmer assigned Lon to the Red River Valley. For one of his first assignments, he teamed up with a veteran freelancer reporter to investigate loan programs targeting financially distressed farmers. The story exposed an advanced fee loan fraud scheme being run out of Winnipeg, Canada, and won the freelancer and Lon writer of the year awards from the American Agricultural Editors Association.

Lon grew up on a hobby farm. As a teenager he raised horses, dairy calves and pickles and worked for a neighboring farmer. His interest in alternative enterprises continues. For the past 15 years, Lon and his family have operated a fall entertainment farm – the Lon Pumpkin Patch. It attracts thousands of visitors from the Fargo, N.D.-Moorhead, Minn., area each year.

Archives

iNet Solutions Group   Powered by iNet Solutions Group   ©2009 All rights reserved.