Author’s note: You can participate in the Feedback from the Field series as frequently as you like throughout the growing season! Questions have been updated to reflect current crop conditions. If you’d like to share your insights, click this link to take the survey and share updates about your farm’s spring progress. I review and upload results daily to the FFTF Google MyMap, so farmers can see others’ responses from across the country – or even across the county!
Planting progress was slowed last week as saturated fields kept farmers from pushing forward with spring fieldwork activities. Feedback from the Field respondents mostly expressed frustration over the soggy conditions but also reported spotty planting completion rates over the past couple weeks.
“It rains all the time,” lamented a grower in Central Ohio at the beginning of May. “[The] ground just gets dry, and another shower comes through.”
The widespread wetness spanned the Western Plains all the way to the Appalachian Mountains. “It rained April 25 – the day I wanted to plant,” a corn producer in Eastern Nebraska shared. “It’s been too wet since.”
Persistent showers across the “I”-states, which comprise the heart of the Corn Belt, as well as the Upper Midwest allowed farmers only three to four days of suitable fieldwork conditions throughout the reporting week. Growers in the Plains had a little extra time, but not much. Suitable fieldwork days ranged between 3.7 and 5.8 between North Dakota and Oklahoma, with wetter conditions further north.
Farmers’ reactions
This seems a little higher than the prior week’s suitable days for fieldwork. But I suspect – based on anecdotes through the grapevine – that even if soil conditions looked good on the surface, farmers were still unable to make meaningful planting progress last week.
“The topsoil looked dry, but everything underneath it was soaked,” my brother, an agronomist in Northwest Illinois, noted of the fields he watches.
USDA’s Crop Progress report published on Monday found corn planting paces dipping below the five-year average benchmark for the reporting week ending May 5, 2024 as widespread showers across the Heartland limited planting activity. As of last Sunday, 36% of expected 2024 corn acres were in the ground.
What progress has been made has been spotty. While parts of Iowa – the country’s top corn-producing state – have largely completed planting over the past week, portions of the Eastern Plains, Upper Midwest, and Eastern Corn Belt are struggling to get started.
“[It’s been] nothing, nothing, [then planting] 18 hours a day for five days in a row and then nothing, nothing [again],” a Northern Illinois corn grower explained.
“Too wet to plant,” reported a Western Illinois farmer. “Terribly wet conditions,” echoed a grower further south by St. Louis.
Temperature has also played a factor, with less heat last week slowing progress further north. “Very wet and cold soil,” said a Northwestern Wisconsin producer.
Some optimism prevails
But not everyone has been deterred by the weather. Some are banking on the long-term benefits of recent rain showers. Indeed – we are still within the optimal planting window to maximize corn yields for the next couple weeks and sunny skies this weekend will help advance planting progress across the Heartland.
“After a dry winter rain has been plentiful drought is over will be a week before get in field rain every other day,” shared a Central Minnesota farmer.
Clear skies on Friday should create planting opportunities this weekend.
“We've been waiting for ground to dry out, but planting has gone smooth so far,” echoed a Northern Indiana producer. “We were glad to get the rain as our subsoils were dry, but we were glad they quit for a while.”
“Finally got rain starting last Tuesday,” reported a South-Central Iowa grower who had already completed corn planting this spring. “Now we need some warm sunny days!”
Soybeans off to strong start
Soybean planting progress has also gone in fits and starts for farmers, with many opting to plant beans ahead of corn to maximize yield potential. Soybeans tend to handle cooler germination conditions heartier than their corn counterparts, which justifies the scattered planting progress reports.
“Decent stand,” a Louisiana soybean farmer shared. “Soybeans planted on April 10 and 16 are coming up and looking good,” shared a grower in Northern Indiana who still had the majority of the 2024 soybean crop to plant as of late last week.
“Nice planting conditions, but now it’s wet,” observed a Northwestern Iowa soybean grower who had finished planting beans early last week. “Good planting conditions,” echoed a producer in Northwestern Illinois who had completed planting.