Friday 27th January 2012

Audrie Koester named Indiana Dairy Princess

20-year old Audrie Koester of Vanderbugh County has been crowned the 2009 Indiana Dairy Princess.

“You know growing up on a family farm and being a 10-year member in 4-H, always looking up to all those involved in the dairy industry, this is just going to be an experience because I’m now going to be the spokesperson and having a good time doing that,” said the Purdue University junior.

At Purdue, Koester is majoring in ag communications, she grew up on a 200-cow Holstein dairy at Saint Wendel, Indiana, located on the Vanderburgh, Posey County line. In an interview with Brownfield shortly after being crowned, Audrie shared the message she will be taking around the state.

“Really just stressing the importance of getting your 3-A-Day and the nutrition that dairy products provide you, that’s what I really want to stress,” Koester said.

Audrie’s duties as Indiana Dairy Princess will begin during the 2009 Indiana State Fair.

AUDIO: Audrie Koester, Indiana Dairy Princess (2:35 MP3)

NFU leader: Congress better route to GHG regs

The chair of the National Farmers Union’s legislative committee says regulation of greenhouse gases is inevitable.  So, says John Hansen, it’s more a question of whether the rules will be determined by Congress or dictated by the EPA. 

“We think that there’s going to be something done on greenhouse gases,” Hansen says, “and so, if that’s the case, then from a pragmatic standpoint, how does ag get involved in the most constructive kind of way to minimize the downside and maximize the upside?” 

So what does Hansen predict for climate change legislation in the Senate? 

“I think that the crystal ball is either fogged over or cracked at this point,” says Hansen. “It’s a very confusing political situation to analyze.  The Senate is going to be a very different experience, I think, than the House-and the ag community is all over the place.” 

Hansen hopes the Senate will take the House climate change bill and make it even better for farmers and ranchers.  

Hansen also serves as president of Nebraska Farmers Union.

 John Hansen (9 min MP3)

Soybeans, grains recover some session losses: July 29, 2009

Soybeans were supported by active exports and tight old-crop supplies. After opening sharply lower, futures crept back with the August contract closing higher. A rumored sale to China Tuesday was confirmed early Wednesday morning; however DTN says another attempt to sell 500,000 metric tons from reserves failed because the price was too high. Outside market pressure was offset by the sale. In addition, cool temperatures that are keeping crop maturity behind schedule have been bullish.

September corn had a small rally toward the close of trading to end the session fractionally higher. That was in spite of crude oil being sharply lower on large stocks. DTN reports that commercial support came from traders trying to secure cash grain, most likely for near-term export business. Argentina’s corn acreage may be 34 percent less than last year. That would result in a hefty reduction of stocks. Government policy, high production costs and ongoing drought may cause farmers to consider switching to soybeans. But longer-term fundamentals for corn are bearish, limiting the potential of a rally.

Wheat was lower but was able to come up from session lows because of spill-over support from corn. While the row crops received support from commercial buying to limit losses, the same can’t be said for wheat. DTN calls wheat’s fundamentals bearish. It doesn’t look very positive in the long-term either because of excessive global supplies and lackluster exports.

Iowan elected president of National Pork Board

The National Pork Board has elected Larrabee, Iowa pork producer Tim Bierman as its new president. 

Bierman succeeds Steve Weaver of California as Pork Board president. Dr. Gene Nemechek, a veterinarian with Tyson Foods in Springfield, Arkansas, is the new vice president. 

Also during its summer meeting, the Pork Board set its 2010 budget at 46-point-eight million dollars, down from 58-point-five million in 2009.  Because of lower hog prices, checkoff revenues are expected to be lower in 2010.

Senators want precision in Livestock Indemnity rules

A group of Senators is asking Ag Secretary Vilsack to use more precise methods of calculating death losses in the Livestock Indemnity Program. Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley is leading the coalition of lawmakers who question whether new rules of the program will actually help producers if their herds suffer losses from harsh weather.Grassley says some of the new rules fail to follow basic common sense. Such as non-adult beef animals separated into weights of less than 400 pounds and 400 pounds or more. Grassley says the extreme heat has killed heavy steers and heifers in feedlots which can weigh more than one-thousand pounds. “The weight class of 400 pounds and above would not come close to covering a 75 percent market value payment for livestock in these higher ranges which are close to market weight.”

The lawmakers are encouraging the USDA to use monthly or quarterly price points, “To more fairly determine fair market value payment rates for the lost animals…instead of setting payment rates, in most circumstances, based on nationwide prices for the previous calendar year.”

The letter is also signed by Senators Tom Harkin of Iowa, Mike Johanns and Ben Nelson of Nebraska, Pat Roberts and Sam Brownback of Kansas, and, Tim Johnson and John Thune of South Dakota.

Senator Charles Grassley, R-IA

‘Change’ is theme of Iowa ag women conference

The third annual Iowa Women in Ag Conference takes place Thursday (July 30) at the BioFuture Conference Center near Huxley, Iowa.  

The group’s president, Elaine Gaesser of Corning, says this year’s theme is Keeping Up with Changing Times.  “We want to show women the changes that are coming through in technology and marketing,” Gaesser says, “and all the new products that the seed companies are bringing out.” 

Gaesser says 80 women have registered for this year’s conference.

 Elaine Gaesser (1 min MP3)

Cattle futures contracts closed lower and hogs were mixed

Chicago Mercantile Exchange live cattle contracts settled 87 to 140 points lower on profit taking and demand worries. The strength of the U.S. dollar also added to the losses. August settled at 83.95 down 97 points, and October was 132 lower at 89.25. Boxed beef cutout values were steady to weak on light demand and light to moderate offerings. Choice beef was down .28 at 142.69, and select was .13 lower at 137.00.

Feeder cattle ended the session 65 to 100 points lower on the losses in the live pit, sell stops and future’s premium to the boards feeder cattle index. August feeders closed 82 lower at 102.02, and September was down 92 points at 102.05.

Feeder cattle receipts at the Philip Livestock auction, Philip, SD totaled 3394 head. No recent reported auction for a price comparison. Tuesday’s offering consisted mainly of load lots of yearling cattle, along with several small packages coming off grass. The greatest demand was for the load lots, more moderate on the small packages. Feeder steers medium and large 1, 320 head with an average weight of 871 pounds traded at 103.44, 187 heifers averaging 817 brought 96.73 per hundredweight.

Wednesday’s cattle slaughter was estimated at 126,000 head, 1,000 less than last week, but the same as a year ago. Packer inquiry into the cattle remained light. The gap between asking prices of 85 to 86 and bids of 80 to 82 in the South and, 135 + asked and 128 to 130 bid in the North, suggests that we won’t see significant business until Thursday or later. A few cattle sold in Iowa at 132.00, but not enough for a market test.

Hog slaughter was estimated at 419,000 head, 13,000 more than a week ago, and 7,000 greater than last year. Barrows and gilts at the terminals were mostly 1.00 to 200 lower from 34 to 40. The Missouri direct base carcass meat price was also 2.00 lower from 49.00 to 53.00. Iowa/Minnesota hogs closed 1.30 lower at 54.57 on a carcass basis, the West was down 1.23 at 54.83, and the East closed down .94 at 53.98. The pork carcass value continues to erode this week as midsummer pork demand proves increasingly inadequate in the face of rising slaughter and production. Cash bids on Thursday are predicted to be lower again.

Lean hogs settled 100 points higher to 35 lower after bearish trade activity early in the session. Even with sharply lower cash prices at midsession, the selling pressure subsided as the oversold market seemed to come to a stopping point. Nearby contracts rallied some and ended a dollar or more higher than session lows. August settled 10 points lower at 56.75, and October was up 40 at 53.10. Pork trading was, moderate, with very light demand and moderate to heavy offerings. The lean carcass cutout closed 2.50 lower at 59.54.

Pork bellies closed mixed as additional pressure continued to develop in the market. August ended 17 points higher at 61.55, and February was down 77 at 82.52.

Closing Grain and Livestock Futures: July 29, 2009

September corn closed at $3.20 and 3/4, up 1/4 cent
August soybeans closed at $10.57 and 1/2, up 3 cents
August soybean meal closed at $338.50, up $6.60
August soybean oil closed at 33.07, down 75 points
September wheat closed at $5.11 and 1/2, down 4 and 3/4 cents
August live cattle closed at $83.95, down 97 cents
August lean hogs closed at $56.75, down 10 cents
September crude oil closed at $67.23, down $3.98
October cotton closed at 57.06, up 9 points
August Class III milk closed at $10.80, down 4 cents
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 9070.72, down 26.00 points

Signup next week for Farmable Wetlands Program

Producers can start signing up for the expanded Farmable Wetlands program August 3rd. As part of the Conservation Reserve program under the 2008 Farm Bill, the wetlands program was modified to include: land to receive flow from a row crop ag drainage system; land that was devoted to commercial pond-raised aquaculature in the past five years; and, land that was cropped during a certain time period that was subject to the natural overflow of a prairie wetland. Incentives include $100 payments per acre, an incentive payment of 40 percent of the cost to set up wetlands and a rental rate of 120 percent.  Check with your Farm Service Agency office for more details.

USDA – Farm Service Agency – Farmable Wetlands Program

Intense crop damage from hail in Iowa

Hail last Friday caused unprecedented damage to crops in northeast Iowa – from Howard to Dubuque counties – and producers are figuring out what to do next. Iowa State University Extension agronomist Brian Lang tells Brownfield that 400-thousand crop acres were hurt, 10 percent of which have been decimated. Corn in the area was in the tasseling stage, the absolute worst time, Lang says, to be hit by hail, “So, even these other areas that had less hail, if they’re still looking at something like 75 percent defoliation – which is very possible over a large area of this damage – that easily cuts the yield by as much as two-thirds.”Lang says the affected area has a lot of livestock and farmers can green chop some of the corn while figuring out other feed options. “If we can get a little off of that… We’ve still got time in August, here, for maybe a planting of a small grain like oats,” says Lang.

Lang says at least half of their feed is gone because of the storm, “There’s areas where it looks like barren lands that are ready for some spring planting – is kind of what it looks like in some of these places.”

Lang thought he’d seen the worst hail damage in the area last month when hail struck 100-thousand crop acres in Howard and Chickasaw County. But, last week’s hail storm is, by far, the worst he’s seen with Fayette County having the most acreage hit, where they’re considering seeking government disaster aid. Lang advises producers not to touch anything until their crop insurance agents and hail adjustors have done their work.

The same storm system caused crop damage to about 20,000 acres in southwestern Wisconsin.

Interview conducted by Ken Anderson, Waitt Agribusiness

Iowa State University Extension – Crop Notes by Brian Lang – hail damage

AUDIO: Brian Lang, Iowa State University agronomist for northeast Iowa (6 min., MP3)

Brownfield – Storm clobbers crops in southwestern Wisconsin