One of a Kind

Partners & Friends,

Summer is upon us! Graduation season is in full swing. We have known and employed some wonderful students over the years. Today, I want to take a minute to recognize an employee who is a high school senior this year. Justin Daniel Runyan has been helping us at Hess Family Farm for about 4 years. He can do anything mechanical, weld superbly, drive any vehicle, solve any motor problem, and is just an all-around awesome follower of Christ. Justin helps with any and every task asked of him with full energy and engagement. We can make a similar claim about several other employees, students, and friends that have come up through the ranks over the years. The Lord has truly blessed us with some talented, timely hands these past several decades. We could not do what we do without you!

We are fervently applying NH3 before the corn outgrows our ability to drive through; the corn is in a growth stage where it doubles in height every week. We have completed harvest of our alfalfa and are currently working on several acres of grass hay from the many waterways we maintain. Additionally, the Hess Family Farm team is now starting to spray the second pass of corn herbicides to keep the fields weed-free. There are also the last calves to get out to pasture, as well as a bit of replant to do in areas where water saturated the soil during the heavy rain we received a few weeks ago. We have had no rain over the past 12 days, and the forecast is looking dry for the next couple of weeks. There is an old saying that states a dry June helps deep root the crop for a better outcome. Hopefully Snodgrass is right in that, and the El Niño pattern will give us moisture during the last part of June. Lastly, thanks to my brother-in-law, Phil Doll, who traveled from Michigan to help us for a few weeks, the Hess Family Farm managed to custom seed a couple hundred acres of CRP fields. Phil’s help gave us a huge boost this month!

I am keeping an eye on energy and fertilizer prices. At some point, this decline will turn and it will be time to lock-in needs for 2024 crop. The farm bill debate is heating up in DC. It appears that the Ukrainian war could last for years. The national labor shortage is a real thing—even down on the farm.

Summer break is almost here as end-of-school activities conclude. Phyllis and I are looking forward to attending Convocation at the University of Chicago on June 3rd next weekend. Ali Elaine Hess has earned her Bachelors degree and we are so excited to be there to witness her receiving her diploma! She has already put her degree to work by accepting employment with Berkeley2Academy as a college admissions counselor, and has moved to Asheville, North Carolina to begin this next chapter of her life. Summer camps, jobs, and sports are in play for the grandchildren. 

Fall Prices:

Corn—5.15

Soybeans—11.65

Enjoy summer!

Steve

Biding Time

Partners & Friends,

Spring is in full swing, and we are getting closer to putting planters in the field. This week, the Hess Family Farm team is finishing some tiling repair and ground preparation over recently tiled lines, applying more NH3 on acres being switched from beans to corn, calving our small beef herd, voting, drawing field boundaries, seeding waterways, attending spring concerts, and completing other miscellaneous tasks. We just received almost an inch of rain overnight, along with some high winds. The planters are hooked up and almost field ready. The last of the seed beans have been delivered and most of the bins are swept. Between the longer days and warmer weather, the urge to begin planting is growing more and more.

Commodity markets have found support for now. Oil prices are up due to the OPEC announcement of reduced production. 8 of every 10 dollars we spend are related to energy/oil. Following yesterday’s election, it seems that progressives may have won the day.

The family is doing well. Our grandchildren are in the home run as summer break draws nearer and spring fever infects schools. Ali is also working hard through her last quarter at UChicago. Lindsay is within 2 weeks of her due date. Our plan is to celebrate the good news of Jesus on Resurrection Day, then begin fieldwork shortly after.

Fall Prices:

Corn—5.39

Soybeans—12.96

Give glory to our Risen Savior!

Steve