It certainly does not feel like spring. Spring should be warm (or at least not snowing) with cheerful tulips and magnolia trees in blossom. Instead we have frost advisories and rain, rain, and more rain. Which, naturally, puts a bit of a damper on the farm's plans.
Brian would like to be done with anhydrous by now, in reality he has hardly started. Corn could be going in the ground within a week or two; I count us blessed if the ground dries out by the end of the month!
They are hauling a lot of grain to town on a somewhat miraculous contract. The Chicago Board of Trade is not paying much of anything for commodities, but the local markets still need corn and beans. Brian and his Dad worked a deal with a local plant to deliver corn now at a great price! It meant locking in prices for next year-- which is an uncertain business-- but for the moment it appears to be a great deal, both now and next year. The other plus, the little guy can ride in the semi as Brian hauls the grain. Provided he doesn't scream in his car seat for pancakes all the way to Kansas City and back that is!
So if you are reading this from some sun drenched plain or scorching desert, please. Share.
All I Want for Christmas - a DV poem
5 years ago
2 comments:
Hi guys, yeah sunny and warm in our little part of the world, in Australia. We are heading into winter, which is our planting season. We start planting in about 6 weeks. We don't get any snow here. How far is it to Kansas city? How far are you carting the grain. I am lucky here, it's a 15minute trip to our local port. One of our blocks is even closer, I can get to the sea port in under 5 minutes.
KC is about 90 minutes away for us, depending on which plant he hauls to. We can also ship to a hog farm, but no local sea ports in landlocked Missouri--LOL!
Post a Comment