Eagle's Wings

Partners & Friends,

We have been busy harvesting soybeans these past few days. The dry weather has allowed us to combine uninterruptedly every day since starting last week. While doing so, we have noticed much wildlife in the fields. Since we farm along trees and creeks, we see much more of these interesting sights than other farmers who only work on flat, black fields. A bald eagle, who followed the combine from field to field, made an appearance while we were finishing lands and pushing rabbits into the open. The pictures above do not do justice to the beauty and majesty of these creatures—what bold, charming birds!

Harvest is progressing well. The beans should be completed by Friday if all comes together as planned. The Hess Family Farm team has been pleasantly surprised by the higher yields in the later maturity beans. Unload lines at the river terminals are growing this week as more farmers begin harvesting their beans. We have been spreading our cover crops and incorporating into the soil with our vertical tillage disc. We are also making field repairs to washouts, fixing tile holes, and working on some conservation projects. If weather holds and all continues going well, harvest may be complete by around midweek of October 18th. The corn and beans are yielding well considering the amount of moisture they've gotten over the past 2 months. Our test plots are showing some interesting results too—update will come soon.

Markets are truly getting jerked around by harvest pressure, low water levels on Mississippi (higher freight rates), Ukraine tension in the shipping lanes that opened up, interest rates, and some apparent demand destruction. The pipeline battle is heating up on a local level; our McDonough County board voted to intervene. This is a big deal and we applaud their courage to take a stand.

Family is busy with school, work, and some play. Everyone is looking forward to the pressure of harvest diminishing soon.

For those wanting a more comprehensive update on Phyllis and her recent (or not so😔) eye issues, back in August, she was referred by her local ophthalmologist to the retina and cornea specialists at the University of Iowa Health Care Eye Institute at Iowa City. After many scans and tests, it was determined that Phyllis was a good candidate for complex retinal detachment repair and a cornea transplant. She had surgery in Iowa City on September 19th. So far it seems as if she is healing up as well as possible. She has had some vision restored, for which she is extremely grateful. There is reason to hope that her vision may continue to improve, if the eye drop protocol is followed precisely and if she can manage to follow doctors' orders for not lifting anything over ten pounds, or strenuous activity of any kind. Thankfully the eye doctors at Iowa City do NOT restrict reading nor computer work, so that is a very welcome change from previous experiences after eye surgeries. We are praying that her body will not reject the donor cornea, and that the new eye drops will prevent the buildup of scar tissue so healthy healing may take place.

Lastly, we wanted to mention that an article based on an interview with Marcus, Phyllis, and I was recently published in the Fall 2022 issue of Cultivate! If you receive that periodical by Compeer Financial, feel free to flip through and read our feature, Leveraging Outside Expertise.

Current Delivery Prices:

Corn—6.52

Soybeans—13.40

Let us know what you want to learn, see, or hear about!

Steve

First Fruits

Partners & Friends,

We began harvest on Monday. It was a typical first day with more technological glitches than mechanical. The first field is good; moisture is under 25% and yields over 200 bushels per acre. A service call is needed to get the dryer lit, but then we’ll be ready to roll. We will continue harvesting for a few days until the wet bin gets full or beans are ready to cut. A few of the beans are dropping leaves rapidly. Prices are being supported nicely by Monday's crop report. We will keep you all updated!

Stay safe,

Steve

Finish Line

Partners & Friends,

We finished up the last corn field Wednesday, November 3rd, about 9:30pm. On the last day, Oma (Wilma) came to the field to ride with her grandson, and got to help complete harvest on land she and Charles had purchased 58 years ago. It is a good feeling to be done with the combine for the time being. Now on to all the peripheral stuff that involves a lot of details to complete. NH3 application, field mowing, equipment washing, truck maintenance, fall burndown spraying, and tiling projects, to name a few. We are still plenty busy but the late nites have dissipated. We welcome the time change as it gives us more early light to get chores done and projects underway. We are giving thanks for the good yields that held thru the entire harvest season--probably our second or third best corn and bean yields ever. We will need some office time now to get analyses and summaries completed. We are facing parts availability issues on a couple of pieces of equipment, and it does appear there might be some supply problems for fertilizer next spring. We are so glad we did the bin site upgrade this year--the storage and time savings really paid off. We are monitoring the corn/soybean price ratio for this next year's crop to determine profitability for next year’s crop mix. As of now we plan on keeping our 50/50 corn/soybean rotation.

Farmer sentiment is waning as prices are sliding and there is so much uncertainty where the federal government is taking us for taxes and infrastructure. Planning is becoming difficult . Brazil is planting record bean acres at a very good pace. Livestock issues worldwide are causing concern for soybean usage and meal supplies. Ethanol production is at record levels and oil is surging higher. Seems like a perfect storm for something?

Family great! Phyllis is healing after her second retina surgery. Looks like she will have restricted activities for 2-4 more weeks. UChicago Family Weekend was interesting and well attended. Harper gave a great devotional at chapel this week. Getting thanksgiving plans organized--lots to give thanks for!

Prices currently:

Corn 5.48

Soybeans 11.92

Stay safe & keep in touch - appreciate any and all comments!

Steve

Heat of the Battle

Partners & Friends,

Sometimes harvest feels like we are in a war with the standing crops and each day we go see what we can conquer. In the middle of harvest sometimes it seems we are making little progress and then suddenly we realize we are much further along than we thought. As I have referred to before this fall, the stalk quality of the corn is very poor. We are dealing with downed corn stalk problems that we haven't seen in over ten years. The warm and dry weather has caused the corn to dry down very rapidly (which is good for saving on drying costs) but harvesting is getting to be a struggle; Monday we spent the better part of the day working through 40 acres. We did deal with a combine tire problem that day too, but usually we can easily harvest 100 acres a day.

But enough whining! Our new cornhead is a real lifesaver and really glides through the downed corn and picks up a vast majority of it. Also the crop is a good one--both corn and beans! Marcus keeps reminding us that despite all the challenges the crop is good! And the crew we have in place is really doing a great job of filling in gaps. We really appreciate all of them!

Commodity prices are sideways to steady for harvest--looking like we will see some strength in the future. It does appear that Brazil is planting beans at a record pace and more acres than ever. We are trying to lock in some inputs for next year and the nitrogen for corn seems to be the most challenging. Some chemicals are going to be hard to source, mainly because the suppliers cannot get plastic containers to put the chemicals in.

Family updates: We made a trip to the apple butter festival in Missouri last weekend. Harper took a position as a 4-H officer. Phyllis is recovering from retina surgery. A beloved Uhman uncle - the oldest surviving sibling - passed away this week.

Fall Prices:

Corn 5.26

Soybeans 11.92


Keep in touch!

Steve

Moving Along

Partners & Friends,


Harvest is progressing rapidly with the dry weather. We are 75% complete with beans and 30% finished with corn harvest. The remaining beans are losing moisture and leaves rapidly--it is a struggle to keep up. The early planted corn is mostly down around 15%, so we can put it directly into the bins without drying. Things will move quickly now if the weather cooperates. We received over an inch of rain this past weekend and there are some light showers predicted at different times this week. The weather probably is not the best for bean harvest but we hope to keep attacking the corn. The poor stalk strength is causing more downed corn each day. A windstorm would really wreak havoc. We have an excellent crew this fall--a total of 8 part-time college and high school students. Phyllis and Shanna are on parts runs and Shanna is heading up meal detail--no one is losing weight this fall! Our red combine is performing well but we are having a few struggles with the new corn head. Still dealing with the replacement generator at the corn handling site but not delaying harvest.


Prices are in the harvest doldrums. Corn yields seem to be a bit below expectations and that is supporting the corn market somewhat. It seems the late August rains did help the beans, and yields there are doing well--at or above expectations. I think the majority of farmers are not in favor of the $3.5 trillion Build Back Better bill being debated in Congress. We are facing supply issues with parts and crop inputs. The world is different!


New goats on the ground! Time to make cider. Harvest celebration will be October 30th, 2-10pm at Marcus and Shanna’s shop: bounce house, kids’ activities, the local favorite band The Rockin’ Papas play 5-8pm. Plenty of food and fun for all!


Prices:

Corn 5.27

Soybeans 12.09


Keep in Touch,

Steve