Getting the trucks ready for fall harvest

Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Boy, oh boy!  The morning is cool!   48ºF (9C) to start the day!  What a sharp contrast to the heat and humidity of the past several weeks.  And we have had no rain for many days now…perhaps we can lengthen the time between mowing the yard.  It’s needed attention every 4 days for weeks, maybe we can now go a whole week!

The combines and headers have been through our shop and are now as ready as we can make them for fall harvest.  The corn heads are attached, the software updates have been made, and the machines fully serviced and fueled.   They have been washed, the cab interiors cleaned and wiped down, and–essentially– they look like new.

We think they’re really ready…

John is cleaning up the sprayer from that last few days of applying herbicide in double-crop-soybeans (DCB).  It was a little muddy in spots when he was doing that, and his sprayer wheels got dirty.  But he will make it look shiny again, no doubt about that.

Using the pressure washer will make it shine!

The 4 semi-trucks are now taking their turns in our shop to get serviced and prepared for fall.  The old Mack CH is in there now.  It serves all summer as our sprayer’s tender, but now it will be connected to its Wilson hopper-bottom grain trailer.

Both Brandons are servicing the Mack, changing the oil and filters, and then they will lubricate the suspension and driveline.

Lastly, the JD 9520R tractor will be connected to the Demco 1322 grain cart, and the 9R540 connected to the vertical tillage tool.  Then, we will have the machines completely ready.

One last detail is that the two grain legs will be inspected and lubricated.  The grain dryer will be inspected and readied.   Yes, there are some days of preparation work yet to go, but we will soon be ready.  My guess is that harvest will start sometime in the September 10-15 window.

I’ve been mowing along the roadsides one last time before fall.  There is not very much more of that to do.  I like to have them shaped up before the fall busy season.  That usually keeps them looking okay going into winter.  There may be a little bit of ‘touch up’ on roads here near home, but we are almost to the time we can remove the R15 rotary cutter from the 6145R tractor.

Mowing along Robinson Road.

While mowing along US 50 yesterday, I saw this old car moving slowly westbound…can anyone tell me what kind of car that is?

Enjoy these lovely, comfortable days.

 

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A short respite.

Friday, August 22, 2025

This week, Pat and I took off for a few days for a short trip.  We traveled to central Missouri.  I guess it is one of my quirks; to travel to somewhat lesser-known places and see what we can find.

I was very impressed by the farms and crops I saw in that area.  If you map out a triangle in Missouri, bounded by Monroe City, Marceline, and Moberly, you will see some of the finest crops I’ve encountered this year.  The corn and soybeans were beautiful… at least from what you could see from the highways.  Their double-crop soybeans were behind what we see here locally; those DCB were just about stubble-height, much shorter than DCB here.  I really did not know what to expect, agriculture-wise in that area, but I came away greatly impressed.  It was beautiful, at least to this old farmer’s eyes!  The only drawback was that the days were really hot, 100ºF+!

One of our goals of this trip was to take in the boyhood home of Walt Disney at Marceline, Missouri.  His family operated an apple orchard on about 45 acres there from 1906 to 1910.  It seems that this period of young Walt’s life had a lasting impact on him.  He took a bit of Marceline with him throughout his life. In fact, the “Main Street USA” in both Disneyland and Walt Disney World are patterned after Kansas Avenue in Marceline.   All around town were photos of the Disney brothers, Walt and Roy, taken when they made their frequent return trips to Marceline.   The elementary school bears Walt’s name, as well as the town’s park and Post Office.  Local folks proudly told us that this is the only federal building in America named after Walt Disney. We toured the Disney Hometown Museum, housed in the town’s former train station.   It was a great visit.  We found the museum very interesting, and the people of the area very friendly and engaging.   Perhaps, that may be a trait of the people of most small towns across the middle of America.

Kansas Avenue in Marceline was the pattern for Main Street, USA.

The Museum is housed in Marceline’s impressive train station.  The clock was a gift from the Citizen Watch Company, said to be valued at over $100K

This was a very interesting visit!

In the former Allen Hotel building (ca. 1900), is now Ma Vic’s Diner, and the server Rhonda makes the pies. This coconut cream pie of Rhonda’s is one of the best I ever had!

Out on the north end of town, the Disney family home is still standing, and is still occupied. Of course, it has been modernized and added to since the Disney’s lived there. As I understand it, the current occupant of the farmhouse is also the owner of the museum in town. First name is “Inez”.

Downhill and behind the house is a re-creation of the Disney family’s turn-of-the-century barn… Walt Disney had it built in the early 1960s. The property’s current caretaker, Roy, was there on this hot day (101ºF), and he gave us some of the back story about the house, barn, and museum.

The Marceline Post Office is in the Walt Disney Federal Building.

The Walt Disney Elementary School, built in 1960.  Disney had his artists from California come to paint murals on the classroom and gymnasium walls.   If you look closely at the lower right of the picture, you can see two flowerpots… one painted like Mickey and the other painted like Minnie Mouse!

Back on the farm this morning, I found that the guys were delivering the final loads of 2025 wheat crop to market today.  As of this afternoon, we are MT of all grain… ready to fill back up again starting in a few weeks!  The hot weather has departed, to the delight of everyone.

After a visit to the doctor this morning, I took out the JD 6145R with the R15 rotary cutter to mow a few nearby roadsides.  While Pat and I were away, Brandon D used it to groom some waterways and the riparian strips on our levees.  Boy, oh boy… do they look nice now!  He’s out again with it this afternoon, doing some roadsides.

Mowing at the Shake farm along Old Wheatland Road late this morning.

The ‘after’ look is what I’m happy to see

Here is a waterway at the Huey farm, made more beautiful by Brandon D.

The printer in the office quit working last week, it was getting frustrating the way it ate paper and crumpled it while feeding halfway through the printer.  It finally quit.  John ordered another similar one off Amazon.  It’s working well now!

I got another USDA survey in the mail.  I wonder what I could do to get off their mailing list?

This one is about small grains.

Have a great weekend.

 

 

 

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More clean-up

Friday, August 15, 2025

Yes, it’s quite hot today.  Sticky.  Temp of 92ºF (33C).  Add in the humidity, and it soars to 106ºF (41C).

Still, the guys are working to clean up the other combine.  They had it in the shop, removing the inserts for wheat, and then took it out to clean off the debris with compressed air.  Now, it’s back in the shop, getting a good scrubbing with #AndyClean soap.

Brandon is blowing the loose dirt off this S780

Before the AndyClean wash…

…and after…

 

I mowed the yard again today.  For several weeks, it has required mowing every 4th day.  I mowed Monday, and again today.  Yes, it was hot.  Perhaps the growth will slow … after all, we haven’t had a rain since Wednesday!

Have a nice weekend…keep cool!

 

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Pre-harvest clean-up

Tuesday, August 12, 2025

The guys have been working on the combines this week, to get them ready for fall harvest.  We have not had the opportunity to clean them up after wheat harvest, but now that is happening.  First, they take them out to the lot by the old silo, along with the ThunderCreek service/fuel trailer with its air compressor.  They blow off all the dry debris from the machine.  Then, it comes inside our shop and they make all the internal and external changes to make them ready for corn/soybean harvest.  (There are some special internal additional parts that are removed for fall harvest).  Then, the outer body of the machines are washed.  They shine like new when done.  The cab must be cleaned, too.

First step: air cleaning

2nd step, internal adjustments and modifications

Last step, the outer panels get a good scrubbing with #AndyClean soap

Even the headers get serviced… the MacDon gets attention here.

The other S780 combine and header will get its attention soon.  Plus, the two corn heads will be inspected and serviced.

After scrutinizing our cost estimates for 2026, we determined that we would be increasing our wheat acres for 2026.  We met with our Nutrien consultant Greg this morning to plan for wheat planting season, which is only about 6 weeks away.  Among all the decisions to address today, we even went so far as to determine which DynaGro varieties to plant in which fields.   It is great to now have a plan in place.  The per acre costs will be going up for next year’s wheat, but it was a relief to know the increase is not as high as we expected it to be.   We will be making some small changes to our management of wheat, testing two new strategies for better yields.  We will test fall weed control, and engage in more tissue sampling through the growing season.

The roadside and riparian strip mowing is ‘caught up’ for now.  I think I’ll return to that the last week of August, for one last time this summer… just ahead of fall harvest.

Last Saturday, we made the trip across southern Indiana to visit my sister and BIL.  It was a wonderful day at Rising Sun, Indiana.

Dennis, Pat, Sheila, and John

Although the ambient temperature is at 89ºF (32C) today, the ‘feels like’ temperature is 103ºF (39C).   It’s not cool in the shop, but at least it’s out of the direct sunshine.  The heat is predicted to stay with us well into next week.  I guess that’s not surprising… it is August in SWIN!

 

 

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Mow, mow, and more mow

Thursday, August 7, 2025

With the consistently rainy summer we are experiencing, it requires frequent mowing of the yard.  Seems like every 4 days, I’m out there cutting grass (crabgrass and clover, really).  Typically, in August the yard is dry and crunchy, and you can go 20 days without mowing… but not this year.

I try to maintain the stripes as I mow the yard

The last of the wheat has not quite been cleaned out of the storage bins…there is one bin left to sweep.  But as soon as the weather cools back down a bit, that will happen.

We went to a ‘seed meeting’ today, and they served steaks and superb desserts.  It was a helpful meeting as we learned about Dynagro wheat and DeKalb corn and Asgrow soybeans for 2026.  One of the things they stressed was the pre-harvest desiccation of soybeans; the goal with that is to make the ripening of the beans more uniform, and harvest sooner.   They spoke about increases in yield.  We may test that methodology on couple small fields this fall.   We are skeptical, but we ought to give it a try.  The plans for next year’s crops have started to be rolled around in our minds and will get closer and closer as the weeks pass.  By the time we are halfway through the fall harvest, we will know more about 2026 costs and will be firming up the #cropplan26.

The Gator has returned from the shop at Sloan’s.  I’ll probably have it out this afternoon to spray along a couple soybean fields.

Happy Thursday.

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Big Rain

Tuesday, August 5, 2025

School starts here today.  Our granddaughters go back to South Knox today… a 7th grader, a 5th grader, and one in kindergarten.  What happened to summer?  I guess is just goes by too fast.

We’ve had a break from some pretty strong heat and humidity, but it sounds like it is returning by the weekend, with humidity indices near 100ºF.

Yesterday brought a big rain, as much as 3.5″ (89mm)!   My work mowing roadsides and ditch levees will be put on hold until the ground firms back up.   Brandon D will be delivering some wheat to market in Evansville.  John has the spraying ‘caught up’ for now, and he will be looking for ways to minimize the use and expense of it for the remainder of the crop season.  We do know that another trip of herbicide will be needed over the DCB, and perhaps a few spots in other fields, but at this time of year, we are trying to put that behind us.

After the big rain, we had a special sunset.

Monday evening.

This one was pretty nice, too, on Sunday evening.

Off to ADM in Evansville...we always appreciate the way Brandon D operates our trucks and equipment with great care…

Loading again for tomorrow

 

I have been working on the crop plan for 2026.  It is rather hard to know now what the ideal allocation of acres to corn, soybeans, and wheat will be, until we have a clearer picture of the costs associated with each crop.  The commodity prices are in a comparatively low place now and for next year, and those cost numbers are the biggest factor to consider.  With current information, it is leading us to an increase of wheat/DCB acres for 2026.  There are agronomic reasons we cannot move entirely to any one crop, and those are also factors we deliberate in the decision matrix.  As we move through this month into September, some of those economic cost numbers will become better known, and we will adjust our acre plans.  But we have to have a ‘starting point’, and that is where we are at this time.  Always, we must be mindful of the present conditions and have a view of the discernable future at the same moment!

The double-crop soybeans (DCB) are now turning the wheat stubble fields back from gold to green.  Most have grown above the stubble and are looking pretty healthy.  It takes a bit over a month usually for this transition.  And this summer is no exception.  Is it a perfect stand of beans?  No.  That’s hard to achieve when we use an air drill to plant them, and we do not bale up the straw after wheat harvest.  But I think these DCB look pretty good, and the prospects for a good harvest are favorable.

If you look out from our back yard, this is what you’ll currently see. The golden straw is disappearing beneath a carpet of green soybeans.

There was a little fog in the area to start the day.  That brings up an old saying, “The number of fogs in August equals the number of snows in January”.   It generally holds true, and I think we have just predicted the first snow!

Soon, the combines and trucks and tractors will come into the shop one by one to be prepared for fall harvest.  They did not get extremely dirty during wheat harvest, but a good wash will make them shine like new.  Each truck and trailer will be inspected and serviced.  The combines will get the wheat harvest components removed from the threshing system, and the headers will be lubricated, the height and steering components will be adjusted, and all will be made ready!  We hope the days are cooler when we are doing that shop work!

The Indiana State Fair is happening now in Indianapolis.  Are you going?

 

 

 

 

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Another hot, rainy weekend

Monday, July 28, 2025

We got more rain yesterday evening, a little spotty, but in some places, a significant rain!  Here at the farm office, .2″ (5mm), but according to Climate.com, some fields got as much as another inch!  This was on top of a pretty soggy early week.  Late in the week, John was able to put in some extended days of spraying, and he covered many acres of soybeans with herbicide and/or fungicide.  Some acres saw both at the same time applied, others saw one or the other individually.  He is very accurate in his applications.

Crop dusters (I think they prefer to be called ‘aerial applicators’ these days) have been very busy around Knox County applying fungicides to corn fields.

Seems crazy, they often fly under the powerlines!

We had a special sunset yesterday.

This sunset caught my eye yesterday

Today, Pat and I celebrate our 47th wedding anniversary.  It was very hot on that Friday evening in our little non-air-conditioned church.  It was shortly after that event, WCC installed central air in the building!  We had a lovely 2-weeks in Hawaii for our honeymoon, and it was a great start!  We’ve had our ups and downs over the years, but we still have our devotion to each other.  Some of the knocks have been hard ones, and there have been moments of sheer delight.  I think we make a pretty good team, and I’m looking forward to as many years as the Lord continues to give us together.   I’m hoping a nice dinner at a lovely place in Evansville will make our day even more special.

Oh, the long hair and the big glasses, but what a pretty lady on my right hand!

Here we are 47 years later… last Saturday evening, we attended a wedding for a young couple from church.

The hot days and nights continue, but relief is predicted beginning Thursday, with days in the 80s and nights in the low 60s.  That’ll feel much better, and I think the corn and soybeans will prefer it, too.

Have a great week.

 

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Check on corn pollination

Tuesday, July 22, 2025

We’ve been seeing on X and other platforms pictures from farmers showing very poor corn pollination.  We’ve seen pictures of ears of corn with only 3 or 4 grains developing on the cob, and the best ones have only about half the grains developing.  So, it was with some concern that Brandon pulled an ear yesterday on one of our April-planted fields.   The picture below shows both our relief and gratitude.

This ear looks pretty good as far as pollination goes. 16 rows around.

I mowed our yard yesterday afternoon.  It was quite hot, 92ºF (33C), and the sun was blazing down.  The grass was dry, but big areas of the yard were not dry.  I made some muddy tracks in spots, but I felt it was urgent to get the grass (or weeds) mowed down.  It had been 5 days since the previous mowing, and it was looking really shaggy.  With all the rain in July, we’ve had to mow more frequently.  In some years, during July and August the yard is brown and crunchy and doesn’t require much mowing… but in 2025 (at least so far), that’s not the case!  To verify how wet it was, as I began around the edge of the yard, the first pass along the wheat/DCB field was really soggy, with some water standing.  The mower slipped a bit to the left, and I got mired down in that mud.  Brandon had to come over with his 4-wheeler and he pulled me out!  I stayed away from that field border after that and finished the yard mowing in a couple hours.

Yeah, I did….

I always blow the loose clippings off the mower and then wash it after every mow.  It took a bit longer yesterday evening to get it clean!   It may not be quite #Andyclean, but it looks okay, especially the yellow wheels.

We have one final contract of wheat to deliver to ADM in Evansville, in early August.  When that is complete, there won’t be much more to deliver.  There are 3 bins that held wheat, and those will need the sweep and broom clean-out.  The Brandons are using this relatively cooler (80ºF)  morning to clean out the #9 bin.   Probably they’ll save the other two bins for other mornings.  We have a “power sweep” in only one bin… our newest.  The others still require the guys to haul in the sweep auger and motor and set them up.  Then, they follow the sweep auger with shovels and brooms to get the bin cleaned out.   It’s dirty and noisty and hard work.  They wear a mask or a respirator to keep the dust out of their lungs.   I guess I’ve reached the age where I don’t have to be in there anymore, but I can sure feel for them when they clean a bin!

They’ve carried the sweep and its motor into our bin #9.

The sweep auger is nearly to the floor… then the scoop shovels and broom get busy.

 

There has been a lot of rain in the area in July.  White River here has been at or near flood stage for many weeks (we’ve even had 3 flood events since April!).  We’ve received nearly 6″ here at the main farm.  In other field locations, there has been quite a bit more, with multiple rain events of over 2″ each!   These rainy conditions have compressed the window of opportunity to spray the soybeans with herbicide and fungicide.  It has even delayed the aerial application of fungicides to our corn fields!  Once the fields firm up again, John will be very busy with the sprayer.  And we will be busy supporting him.

The Knox County fair was last week, and it was difficult to hold events.  There was rain each day of the fair.  The grounds and parking areas were soggy.  Many vehicles required a tractor to pull them out of the mud.  As you walked around, your shoes and lower legs would get soiled from the soft, squishy ground.  Most folks work rubber boots!  It’s usually a great event but diminished by the weather.  All the events on the closing day Saturday were cancelled.   It’s a good thing the buildings and the show ring for all the 4-H livestock are in great shape.  At least that could go on as needed.  But the evening events in the grandstand arena were not as highly attended.  Yes, Knox County has Indiana’s oldest county fair, but it was truly hurt this year by the wet weather.    As we often say for lots of things, better luck next year!

Have a good week!

 

 

 

 

 

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Spraying DCB

Thursday, July 17, 2025

Brandon K began spraying double-crop soybeans today.  He had to wait a few days after some heavy rain to allow the soil to firm up.  The johnsongrass and waterhemp are surging right now… there is plenty of moisture, and the temperatures are in the low 90s.  The mixture of Roundup and Liberty will use these sunny and hot days to stop the weeds.  Waterhemp, a strong relative of pigweed, has become a real problem.  It just keeps coming and coming.  Each plant makes about a bazillion seeds, and all of those seem to be viable, and with every rain event, a new flush of waterhemp gets started.

Looking good today

Brandon K is making good progress today on spraying DCB.

Brandon D is mowing around the farmstead today, and he has been working with the JD 6145R tractor and R15 cutter to mow roadsides and levees and waterways.  He has most of them looking very nice with only the riparian strip at the Dunn farm still needing a mow.  Some of the roadsides that I did in early June, are ready for a 2nd pass.  He will eventually get to all of those.

From Operations Center, you can see where Brandon D is mowing roadsides…

 

The office crisis of blown hard drive is nearly over.   I have recaptured just about every file that was lost… not all of them were recovered, but I have every word document and excel sheet that is absolutely essential either recovered, restored, or recreated.  It was a mountain of work, but it taught me a good lesson.  My backups will be more frequent in the future!

Wheat deliveries are now caught up.  We will use any little upward blip in the wheat market to price out the remaining bushels.  We want to be empty (MT) of wheat by the end of August.

The weather folks are predicting very hot conditions next week.  Tuesday through Thursday they tell us that the temps will get over 100ºF (38C), and when you add in the humidity factor, it could reach 110ºF or more!  I’ll be looking for more tasks in a tractor or in the office for those days!

We had some very strange clouds around last evening.  As I was driving in the last about 9 pm lane night, this scene towards the east caught my eye…

At first glance, this looks like a forest fire on the other side of a big lake.  But look more closely… it is a shelf cloud low in the sky, with the evening sun shining into it!

Keep cool, out there.

 

 

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A few pictures

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Below are some pictures from recent weeks.  Most are from wheat harvest.  Others I just found interesting.

 

We received 1.4″ (36mm) of rain early this morning.  The WASCoBs are draining out.  I must confess I was surprised when I looked out today… I never heard any rainfall during the night… I must have been sleeping very soundly!  1.4″ is a little on the ‘too much at once’ side, but we are certainly not experiencing any drought conditions here.  We visited our son Ben in NW Hancock County on Saturday, and I noticed his yard was brown and crunchy.  Not here.  I need to mow the yard about every 4 days! If the sun stays out, maybe I can do that this afternoon…

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