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Inside Dakota AgInside Dakota Ag   
Commentary on the news, events and people shaping agriculture in the Dakotas.
 
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Will it ever stop raining?
Posted on October 21, 2009 at 8:19 AM
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For most locations in the Dakotas, the first half of October was the coldest on record and the amount of precipitation was in the top 10 on record.

 

Only 6% of the corn in South Dakota had been harvested as of Oct. 18, according to the South Dakota Ag Statistics Service, compared to 27%  for the five-year-average; 30% of the soybeans are in compared to 77% for the five year average.

 

In North Dakota, only 1% of the corn has been combined, compared to 20% for the five year average at this time. Only about 47% of the corn is even mature. Soybeans are 21% harvested, compared with the 82% average.

 

Southeast North Dakota and northeast South Dakota have the most water. One farmer there says he’s had the combine in the field only one day this fall.

 

There’s one bright spot -- range and pastures are in the best condition in years. But that doesn't do much for families who have crops still in the field.

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Will it ever stop raining?
Posted on October 21, 2009 at 8:19 AM
Will it ever stop raining? The situation is starting to get serious is parts of North Dakota and South Dakota.
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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.

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