Latest News From Sara Schafer

Crop Tech

Volunteer Corn Concerns, Familiar Herbicide Becomes Trait, New Oil Offering

Farm Show Lineup

Take a few days this winter to brush up on the latest production practices and see the newest machinery

Bull’s-Eye On Your Back

It’s time for farmers to speak up on trade disputes, regulations and criticism of production agriculture

Mold Matters

Consider Diplodia when you choose hybrids for next year

Refuge Revamp

New technology shakes up refuge requirements

Going Hog Wild

Feral hogs wreak havoc in farm country to the tune of $1.5 billion

Corn College Campus

Take a look at the happenings from Corn College 2009!

A Fierce Competitor

Around corn, velvetleaf juices up its genes

Wild Beans

Genetic diversity could boost soybeans’ genetic potential

Drip by Drip

Underground irrigation can pay off in the long term

Residue Pays With Water Savings

Reduced irrigation pumping means farmers conserve dollars, as well

Black Gold

Biochar fertilizer puts carbon back into the soil

Market Demands Reman

CNH diversifies from within

Hybrid Hunt

How to shop for corn hybrids in today’s marketplace

CropTech

Top Line

Dairy Machinery Company Reaches Milestone

DeLaval produced its 5,000th Voluntary Milking System.

Tailgate Talk, Wilmer award winner

Katie Humphreys wins Wilmer Award, Memorial Day on the farm, U.S. dairy industry

Outlook

Production Journal

Our Mantra: Do The Right Thing,Premium Fertilizer Fits VRT, and Check Out Our Free Electronic Newsletters!

It''s a Classic

Commodity conference puts farmers in touch with a range of opportunities

Conservation Now

Onion and Corn Rotations May Require Less Nitrogen and Managing Fertility in No-Till

Production Journal

Time for our next crop, USDA''s acreage predictions, and Welding University Winners!

Better Luck This Year

10 lessons learned from the 2008 growing season

Peanut Predicament

Salmonella problem hits when stocks are plentiful

Route 2: Fields That Never Catch Up

By the middle of July, you start to notice them—fields, like the one pictured above, with plants that are green on the top but yellow on the bottom. The plants are starving for nitrogen (N) and cannibalizing themselves, trying—but failing—to fill their ears. They are labeled as the fields that never caught up.

Shop Journal

New welding resources and products and a new stick electrode.

Disaster Rescue For Livestock

Animal rescue volunteers extend a hand when it’s most needed

Air on Demand

Compressed air systems that can keep up with modern air tools require careful planning

Upbeat Prospects

Tobacco growers find new ways to turn a profit

Minimize Stubble Damage

Healthier hybrids are good for yield but hard on combine, tractor and implement tires

Big Water, Big Work

The W. G. Huxtable stormwater pumping plant keeps eastern Arkansas farmers on the land

Should I Sign Up Again?

Many landowners, such as these Missourians, are facing decisions about re-enrolling CRP land

More of the Same

At Beltwide, cotton’s prospects continue to sag

Conserve Water

Aboveground drip irrigation works for Californians

Wheat Freeze

Late February is the time for farmers to start evaluating their winter wheat crop for freeze injury

Letters

Trees in Corn and Bean Country

Willow and poplar might work well in less productive areas

The New Century Farm

A biofuel farm grows in Iowa

Tobacco Looks Golden Again

An old crop could be the best alternative to challenging times

Cotton Journal

Pigweed is blowin'' in the wind

More Yield, More Residue

20" rows pay, but no-till corn on corn raises residue concerns

What Happens Now?

Withcrops in the bin, farmers cast a wary eye on 2009

What the Elections Mean to Ag

Shifts in White House, congress will impact ag

Catch Those Cobs

Choices abound for cob collection and transport