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U.S Farmers On Verge Of Giant Corn Harvest

MICHAEL J. CRUMB   09/16/09 08:16 AM ET   AP

Corn

DES MOINES, Iowa — Darrel McAlexander has been farming for 43 years and he's never seen his corn crop look so good.

"This is probably the best corn crop I've raised," McAlexander said from his farm in the southwestern Iowa town of Sidney.

It's the same across the country as favorable weather has helped farmers produce what could be a huge harvest, with projections calling for 13 billion bushels. That would be just shy of the 13.04 billion bushels harvested in 2007.

The giant crop is good news for farmers and livestock producers, who should benefit from lower feed costs, but it probably won't make a big difference to the cost of groceries.

Although corn is a key ingredient in countless products, from Coke to corn flakes, most of a product's cost is tied to labor and transportation, not ingredients, said Kent Thiesse, a farm management analyst and vice president of MinnStar Bank in Lake Crystal, Minn.

"Depending on what you're looking at on the store shelf, less than 25 percent of the cost goes back to the base product," Thiesse said.

Ephraim Liebtag, senior economist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's economics research service, agreed.

"The effect of corn changes on retail prices is pretty mild and at this point we don't see anyone predicting a major swing in corn prices," Liebtag said. "If there isn't a major swing there is no major impact and the effect will be pretty negligible for the consumer."

A drop in corn prices is a rare bit of good news for a pork industry that has been battered by pricey feed, a drop in demand due to the recession and unfounded concerns about their product's safety in the wake of the swine flu outbreak that has led other countries to limit imports.

"We have seen, over the past two years, production costs go way up – 70 percent of that is corn and soybean meal, so this would most definitely help pork producers," said Dave Warner, spokesman for the National Pork Producers Council.

The expected harvest has helped drive down corn prices from about $4.30 a bushel in early July to $3.17 currently. That's a drop from a peak price of more than $6.80 a bushel in mid-2008 when prices soared because of increases in ethanol production and demands by the livestock industry.

Doug Kleckner, who grows corn on his farm near St. Ansgar in northern Iowa, said the nearly $7 corn is coming back to "haunt us."

"It was nice for the time being, but it's driven a lot of our input costs up and now reality has set in – prices have come down but our input costs are still relatively high," said Kleckner, 61, who farms on land once owned by his grandfather.

The price decline, coupled with persistent high costs of fuel, fertilizer and equipment, isn't good news for farmers, but the huge expected yield should ensure this season remains profitable.

McAlexander, 65, said the weather deserves most of the credit.

"We've had ideal weather," he said. "We got it planted early, around the 12th of April, and we just had a decent growing season."

Lance Honig, chief of the crops branch at the National Agricultural Statistics Service, said record high yields are forecast for Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, Ohio, Kentucky, Pennsylvania and Georgia.

Yields range from 187 bushels per acre in Iowa to 143 bushels an acre in Georgia.

Despite the good news, farmers remain edgy because cool temperatures that have largely helped the crop also have delayed it by a few weeks. That increases dangers of an early frost.

"We're at the point where it's the biggest factor and depending on where you're at, guys are very anxious to see when the first frost occurs," Honig said. "I'm sure that's high on their list of concerns."

Average first frosts in the Corn Belt can range from as early as Sept. 20 in far northwestern Minnesota to Oct. 25 in Kentucky and the Ohio Valley region, said Harry Hillaker, the Iowa state climatologist.

Kleckner said his crop remains a couple weeks behind schedule and an early frost could lower his yields.

"We're getting short on moisture," he said. "A rain would help. It's unbelievable how many kernels of corn are in an acre and if they're nice and plump it makes a world of difference."

But Steve Wendel, 49, who grows corn on about 2,000 acres in northern Iowa near Mason City, said although an early frost is a concern, the recent dry, warm weather has been a big help.

"Where we're at it's not going to hurt us much," Wendel said, adding that this year's corn crop is among the best he's seen in his more than 20 years of farming.

McAlexander said he anticipates his yields to be 10-15 bushels higher than last year and he expects others will see similar results. At least for him, that will translate into money in the bank.

"We're not going to have a record year, but it should be a profitable year for us," he said.

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DES MOINES, Iowa — Darrel McAlexander has been farming for 43 years and he's never seen his corn crop look so good. "This is probably the best corn crop I've raised," McAlexander said from his ...
DES MOINES, Iowa — Darrel McAlexander has been farming for 43 years and he's never seen his corn crop look so good. "This is probably the best corn crop I've raised," McAlexander said from his ...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:00 PM on 09/17/2009
I highly recommend the documentary film King Corn by Ian Chaney and Curt Ellis - two Yale grads who discover that each of their grandfathers hail from the same tiny farm town in Iowa - Green, Iowa, of all possible names - and decide to go there and raise one acre of corn. We learn as they learn exactly how pervasive corn is in our biology, economy, and politics - and what modern corn and farming practices are really about. Fascinating and eye-opening, but in a charming and low-key way. I promise you will learn things about corn that you didn't even know you didn't know. Like - did you know that each individual strand of corn silk goes to exactly one kernel of corn on the cob - every kernel has it's own strand. Of course - makes perfect sense if you think about it - but did you ever think about it?
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11:41 PM on 09/17/2009
Corn is used to fatten meat animals.
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08:37 PM on 09/17/2009
I hate to burst anyone's belief bubble (and have as much hope of actuall changing those beliefs as I do of changing the birthers minds or any other group that refuses to see the facts ) but...
http://www.foodnavigator-usa.com/Financial-Industry/Fructose-in-the-firing-line/?c=tT%2B%2BfQf9nJn8CQDXElSwvQ%3D%3D&utm_source=newsletter_daily&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Newsletter%2BDaily
In other words high fructose corn syrup=sugar=fruit juice (well theoretically fruit juice is the worst one, scientifically speaking since there's way more fructose in juice)
So while there's some political/financial shenannigans re: corn products, there's nothing inherently wrong with corn syrup from a health standpoint.
Glad the farmers are having a good year.
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11:40 PM on 09/17/2009
Wrong. Pure fruit juice contains natural fruit sugars (fructose) and it has always been recommended to drink it in limited quantities. Eating fruit is preferred because it has many nutrients as well as fiber.

Still, HIGH fructose CORN SYRUP is
A) extremely concentrated (HIGH fructose)
B) corn is NOT FRUIT
C) it is in almost every prepared product on the grocery stores
D) it is metabolized differently than simple cane sugar (which should not be overeaten either)

It is not healthful in any way.
03:40 PM on 09/17/2009
Everyday we, the people, get ripped off by those we put in office..and this cycle continues year after year

good articles 4 slow news day: http://www.iamned.com
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
10:16 PM on 09/16/2009
Don't support Farming.

Eat Recycyled Food ~~~~~~~~~~
08:28 PM on 09/16/2009
We can't eat this corn. It's for corn syrup. You know the stuff that is making this country "FAT"
Monsanto is at the helm of this plan to "feed the world" oh! sorry you cannot eat it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
10:14 PM on 09/16/2009
Flour !!!!!!!
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11:32 PM on 09/17/2009
Corn flour?
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LunaPark
Don't believe it until it's officially denied
06:30 PM on 09/16/2009
Just great. Now we have to bailout ADM and ConAgra for making a bad decision to plant corn. They'll tell us if don't bail out these huge agri companies, we'll all starve. Just like they told us if we didn't bail out the banks there would be riots in the streets. Just like they told us if didn't invade Iraq we would see a mushroom cloud.
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Hopalongpoppyseed
May you reap what you sow.
05:07 PM on 09/16/2009
Mom! Can i have some more corn syrup!
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11:43 PM on 09/17/2009
No, Hoppy. You may not.
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BlueZoo
Independent voter, Independent thinker!
03:16 PM on 09/16/2009
I note that not one word of this article mentions the decline in the use of ethanol! Remember when it seemed every farmer was planting corn, convinced that ethanol would take the nation by storm? That was when the prices for corn were at all-time highs. Not so much anymore... E-85 and the hoopla surrounding it should serve as warning not to jump on these "green" bandwagons until they've been proven to be what they claim. Greedy farms now reap the whirlwind! Karma!
03:16 PM on 09/16/2009
Our future has been spent. The bail out is like throwing water on a electrical fire. It will be a miracle if in 10 years if "real" unemployment falls below 10%. The middle class will be joining the ranks of the impoverished. If you have ever been to europe this is what our society will become. Some may like this others not. Our steady decline over the last 30 years from a great nation to a begger nation could have been avoided but greed triumphed over the public good .

hat tip to http://www.iamned.com good articles

The nation as a whole has changed morally and ethically for the worse and we are reaping what we have all sowed..
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10:48 PM on 09/17/2009
Man - that was suspenseful - you saved two words in the very last sentence to be the ones related to the thread!
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RJII
Yes "you" can. BO2012
01:37 PM on 09/16/2009
US Farm Bill is one of this country's biggest form of welfare. Time to stop cease the gravy train checks to middle and upper class farmer/landowners, most who were already turning large profits.
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Soule23
Anti-micro-biol
08:37 PM on 09/16/2009
90% of the farm bill funds food stamps. Also, if you knew any farmers, you would probably also know that most are not turning large profits.
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RJII
Yes "you" can. BO2012
11:43 AM on 09/17/2009
WRONG! The bulk goes to landowners-- producing and non-producing.

I know one soy/corn farmer ( a friend) who turns half mill profit, but still gets a guranteed $275K check. He only takes it cause if he doesn't it goes to someone else. Even Dave Letterman got a check by surprise for a ranch (non producing) for $8K. He returned it. People in Mahattan get thousands in checks.

While black farmers make up a very small percentage-- about 2% and declining. Smaller farmers too are on the decline because the Bill gives large money to wealthier farmers who now can afford to buy them out and/or more land.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
10:15 PM on 09/16/2009
Well don't support Farming.

Eat Recycyled Food ~
01:05 PM on 09/16/2009
Corn VS Hemp
Hemp 6X the BTUS per ACRE
Corn lots of water pesticides and chemical fertilizer and tilling the soil.
Corn low protein animal feed (Also makes cows sick)
Hemp seeds high protein animal feed for pigs chickens and turkeys.
Hemp strongest root structure known NO-TILL farming.
08:33 PM on 09/16/2009
I am on your side on this one. Hemp is the way to go.
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12:34 PM on 09/16/2009
Oh goodie. More High Fructose Corn Syrup.

As if it wasn't already in damn-near everything.

Read the labels, everyone, and stop buying that poison.
12:08 PM on 09/16/2009
Let's hear it for corn subsidies that allow us to produce ungodly quantities of corn syrup that we can use to destroy our health.
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Hopalongpoppyseed
May you reap what you sow.
05:09 PM on 09/16/2009
Now, if they could only use it to make toilet paper.
07:03 PM on 09/16/2009
Use the corncobs.

Seriously there is probably a way of turning the cellulose from the corn into paper.
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11:00 AM on 09/16/2009
Good, maybe they can repay some of the subsidies they got from the government, i.e. us. Oh, but that would probably just wind up in the bonus checks of Monsanto, DuPont, Conagra, Cargill and ADM execs.