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My Generation - the BlogMy Generation - the Blog   
A closer look at life on a young farmer's operation.
 
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Pre-Harvest Stress
Posted on October 07, 2009 at 9:52 PM
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Ear rot, diplodia, frost, immature corn. And we’re closing in on the second week of October. This is beginning to sound like one long whine, except that it’s getting serious now.

Temperatures are expected to dip below freezing across parts of Illinois over the weekend. Our forecast in western Illinois is calling for 31 degrees on Saturday night; Rockford is expected to hit 27. We haven’t even been able to bag silage yet.

Grain quality concerns are mounting, as terms like diplodia and ear rot get tossed about. Thanks to Pioneer's Ben Shelby for sharing this chart from Ohio State University on ear deformities; it sounds as though he's walked fields with significant examples of each of these problems.

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Pre-Harvest Stress
Posted on October 07, 2009 at 9:52 PM
The potential for grain quality problems mounts across the state.
Category: Corn
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About The Writer
My Generation - the Blog

Holly Spangler has covered Illinois agriculture for the past 10 years, beginning her career with Prairie Farmer even before graduating from college. As field editor, she brings real-world production agriculture experience to the topics she covers, including a range of production, management and issue-oriented stories. She also shares the trials and tribulations of young farmers through her monthly column, My Generation.

 

Holly and her husband, John, farm in western Illinois where they raise corn, soybeans and cattle on 2,000 acres. Their operation includes 60 head of commercial cows in a cow/calf operation, plus several Shorthorns for the local show calf market. The family operation includes John’s parents, and their three children, Jenna, Nathan and Caroline.

 

A member of the American Agricultural Editors Association, Holly was named a Master Writer in 2005 and has received numerous writing and photography awards. She graduated in 1998 from the University of Illinois in agricultural communications, and received the Warren K. Wessels Award for outstanding senior in the College of ACES.

 

Holly and her husband are active in state and local farm organizations, receiving the Illinois Farm Bureau’s Young Farmer Achievement Award in 2007. As members of the local community church, she and her husband serve in youth and music ministries.


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