Be careful what you wish for. The first part of May was unusually cool, delaying crop development and germination. Warmer temperatures were needed. Heat is finally catching up to the season as temperatures will be above average in as much as 80% of the Corn Belt this week. The warmest temperatures seem centered in the Dakotas, where they will see 95 degrees. As we look out ahead through the month of June, extreme temperatures pull back a bit, but they remain elevated by 5 degrees or more above their averages in much of the Western and Northern regions. The Eastern Corn Belt meanwhile hovers closer to its historical temperatures. The near-term forecast has quickly shifted drier. How long that lasts will determine if it is a good thing or a bag thing. I am of the belief that it is a good thing for the time being, for a couple of reasons. First off, after receiving over 3 inches of rain on one of our farms last week, there was some light ponding, and so drier weather is needed. What is amusing (at least to me) is that our farms fell into the US drought monitor’s “abnormally dry” region. …
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