Case IH Power Tab

Farm Futures
   Search Site:   Thursday, May 24, 2012 | 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
 
Share This
 

Ag Climatologist Predicts Corn Yield Above Trend

Iowa State University weather guru Elwynn Taylor's models show 152 bushels per acre.
Tom J Bechman 
Published: Jul 30, 2007

The long-time ag climatologist, Elwynn Taylor, Iowa State University, made a car trip to West Lafayette, Ind., last week to address Purdue University's Top Farmer Crop Workshop. He traveled by car to get a better feel for what crops are like, he noted.

"Illinois is a garden spot," he says. "It looks very good." It's one of the reasons why, based on weather alone, Taylor's models indicate a U.S. corn yield above trend yield, at 152 bushels per acre. He says another source, dealing more with observations, is at 150 bushels per acre. When asked about the minimal quality of some of the extra acreage brought into corn production nationally this year, Taylor responded that he had already accounted for that in his weather model.

He is one of the few ag climatologists doing crop modeling based on weather now that Jim Newman, former Purdue agronomy professor, has retired ... again. This time Newman has hung it up for real, he insists, and is not following crop development this summer. Newman, still active but pursuing other interests, is in his mid-80s.

Here's the rub from Taylor. The western Corn Belt started out great, with Nebraska, Minnesota and much of Iowa getting off to near-ideal starts. If anything, there was too much water in a few places. Our Nebraska editor, Don McCabe, says that until July 1, Nebraska was ideal. Known as an irrigation state for corn, many of the irrigation rigs had yet to run.

That's not the case now, and Taylor predicts those rigs will continue to run. He's looking for drier than normal weather for the rest of the season in the western Corn Belt.

Meanwhile, the eastern Corn Belt, except for Illinois, which he counts in the eastern belt, got off to a rocky start, with a wet April and then dry-as-a-bone May and June in many areas. While some areas have seen relief, it continues to be hand-to-mouth, with real damage being locked in every day, especially for corn, in parts of the eastern Corn Belt. But Taylor sees normal weather patterns as most likely for the rest of the season for the eastern Corn Belt.

Put it all together and the eastern belt should improve from here on out, while the western belt may decline in corn yield. The result will be his predicted 152 bushels per acre, Taylor notes.

"Am I saying Ohio will reach trend yield, where many parts were hit hard by dry weather early?" Taylor asks out loud. "No, but Illinois will offset it. When it's all said and done, my model still shows us above trend yield."



Permalink: Click here

Tagged: Corn Belt, Irrigation, corn yield, corn production

Comments
Read comments from others and share your own thoughts.
Please provide the answer to the following question:

 = 
 
Search this site:   

Read More Stories
Weak Corn Exports Undermine Farm Futures Prices
Read this storySoybeans find support in strong weekly sales of old-crop supplies. (audio)
Read this story

Grain Market Eyes Europe, Weather
Read this storyWeakening economic conditions are the latest fallout from the Greek debt crisis. (audio)
Read this story

USDA Expands Credit Available to Farms
Read this storyAgency expands credit available to farmers and ranchers. And a new microloan program targets small farmers to help them avoid high-interest debt.
Read this story

 
Morning Call by Bryce Knorr
Afternoon Recap by Arlan Suderman
Grain Market Eyes Europe, Weather
USDA Expands Credit Available to Farms
Weak Corn Exports Undermine Farm Futures Prices
Livestock Call By John Otte
Are Milk and Meat Selection Overemphasized?
Corn Futures Price Rise Speaks Volumes
Weekly Fertilizer Review
Grain Price Declines Have Deeper Roots
Top 50 Tags
4-H afternoon recap American Farm Bureau Federation American Soybean Association animal health arlan suderman biodiesel biofuels bryce knorr BSE Bushel checkoff cotton Drought Environmental Protection Agency EPA ethanol Extension extension service farm farm bill Farm Bureau farm futures farm futures magazine farm futures market farm progress Farm Service Agency farmfutures farmfutures.com farming farmprogress.com fertilizer FFA free trade agreement Harvest insurance labor legal National Cattlemen's Beef Association National Corn Growers Association NCGA soybean soybean association soybeans SURE usda wheat winter wheat www.farmfutures www.farmfutures.com