for corn and soy bean harvests.
http://corncommentary.com/category/usda/"> USDA Nov 2009Weather Taking Toll on Corn
By Cindy
Posted: November 10, 2009
USDA lowered its forecast for 2009 corn production in the latest report out today, due to lower yields. Despite the decrease, yields are still expected to be a record and production is still expected to be the second highest on record.
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Within the Corn Belt, forecasted yields in Minnesota and Wisconsin increased, while Illinois, Iowa, and Michigan yields decreased.
High moisture, low test weights, and mold issues are getting to be major concerns throughout the Midwest. According to USDA, just 37 percent of the corn had been combined as of Sunday, compared to 82 percent average and even well behind last year’s slow harvest which was 69 percent complete at this time in 2008.
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I couldn't find it now, but a portion of the 2009 crop ended left in the field as moisture and inability to harvest it rendered it ruined.
USDA - Jan 2010: 2009 Crop Year is One for the Record Books, USDA ReportsWASHINGTON, Jan. 12, 2010 – U.S. farmers produced the largest corn and soybean crops on record in 2009, according to the Crop Production 2009 Summary released today by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS).
Corn production is 13.2 billion bushels, 1 percent above the previous record of 13 billion bushels set in 2007, and 9 percent higher than 2008. Corn yields reached an all-time high in 2009 at 165.2 bushels per acre, eclipsing the previous record of 160.3 bushels per acre set in 2004. Planted area, at 86.5 million acres, is the second highest since 1949, behind 2007’s 93.5 million acres.
(note: while production was up 9%, 2009
planted area was down 7.5% from the next highest planted area in 2007)
And THAT was in a bad weather year!