Is that a great pig or what!!!!! Only the Grand Champion Barrow at the Junior Show at the Illinois State Fair !!!! Congratulation to Dylan and the whole Decker family for growing and showing such a fine animal at the State Fair. 
(and well fed...it has such a good appetite it wants to eat even while taking pictures!)....Atkinson and all of us at AGF couldn't be prouder!!!!


Congratulations to Haley Haverback!!! 2010 Illinois State Fair Cattle Showmanship Champion!!!!

Yes....if you are wondering where it rained the other day and where it didn't rain, I can tell you this.....it was more or less just following our sprayers around all day....we get ready to spray-it clouds up and starts to rain...we quit-it quits....so , anyway , this was very inconvenient for us yesterday, but in August we again will be offering our $5 per acre rain offer and we will back it up by driving our sprayers around and pretending to spray for whoever needs rain.....

Something NEW has been added!!!!!! If you would like to receive twice daily text messages or emails that would tell you what the grain futures markets are doing and what our AGF cash markets are....you can sign up below. Under the futures markets below, there is an area for registering on the website. You can put your Name and phone # and your e-mail address in that area and let me know and I will get you lined up.

****Fact or Crap......07/19/10    
   Fish scales have been a key ingredient in lipstick........... Fact or Crap????  Yes, it's fact, and I can't believe how much trouble this got me into.......here's the story....I got an email from Becky Geuns that said, "Fact....they call it pearlessence. It's what gives your lips the sparkle" .....I replied to her..."I will never look at pearl lips the same". I hit the send button and as I watched it go I realized that it was not going to Becky but it WAS going to our female representative, Cassandra, from Ameren, who had written me about the energy rates on our dryers. She wanted to know which rate we wanted and I replied...."I will never look at pearl lips the same".......oh my......

If anyone has any information about any of the subjects that are under discussion on this or any other website or any newspaper or TV show or conversations between you and AGF employees or customers or anyone else that you might have talked to about anything, like moles, you can e-mail me at agfinc@nbsmail.net  .....thank you.  

 
  (About half of the comments made on these headlines have about a 50-50 chance of being true and usually don't reflect the opinionated opinions of Atkinson Grain or most of its employees!



Sunday, September 5, 2010  
 
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- DTN Headline News
MBAg by Adam Erwin
By Adam Erwin
9/1/10 8:31 AM

Autumn is fast approaching. The school buses are running again, the crops have that dull cast that signals the end is near, and every night I have a corn test plot to attend.

From the farmer's perspective, the smallest purpose of a corn test plot is to help identify top corn varieties. The primary purpose is social.

Test plot nights are great. They give you a chance to chat with the neighbors, pick up on any gossip, and best of all, with a well-planned strategy, your grocery bill for a family of six can approach zero.

This year's hot gossip topic is the prevalence of sudden death syndrome (SDS) in soybeans. Although SDS has been identified by the scientific community as "late-season fusarium" caused by wet conditions earlier in the growing season, farmer skeptics have clearly identified other key factors which profoundly increase yield loss.

HOW GREAT THOU ART

Little known to professional agronomists is the fact that a farmer's religion can cause the onset of SDS. I live in a community primarily populated by good-natured Catholic and Lutheran farmers. It's martyrdom at its best. In light-hearted discussion, each side seeks bragging rights about who is the most devastated by SDS.

Both denominations have developed a rational for being plagued. Catholics tend to believe that they got SDS because they didn't follow the rules, while Lutherans tend to believe that they got SDS simply because they didn't have enough rules to follow. However, the absolute worst two fields I've observed belong to a Dutch Reformed agronomy wonk and Evangelical Bible church perfectionist. And between the two of them, they have more rules to follow than Catholics and the Lutherans combined, and they rarely, if ever, break any rules. Go figure!

FARMERS OF COLOR

Equipment color that is. Another factor clearly defined during test plot chit-chat is that farmers with funny color equipment get much more SDS than farmers with the "right" color equipment. For example, green farmers know that red farmers get more SDS, and vice versa.

A casual observation that I have made in recent years is that more farms than ever seem to have a mono-colored fleet. You can attribute this to multi-unit deals and the fact that equipment is ever more married to satellite technology (making it harder to mix or switch brands). You just don't see farm fashion faux pas like red tractors pulling green planters or other rainbow coalition units quite like you used to.

But if you do run a fleet of many colors, purists will most certainly deem you a "mongrel" and will crown you the area King of SDS for violating the unwritten color code of agriculture.

THE SEED SELECTION QUAGMIRE

Yet another factor overlooked by agronomy professionals is that seed brand and variety are perhaps the largest part of the equation, but it's not as simple as just avoiding the susceptible cultivars. In fact, this is the most complex thing to understand, and you absolutely must attend test plots and visit with your neighbors to decode the matrix of choices.

For instance, if a Methodist farmer plants a brand X variety with a green planter, he will invariably contract severe SDS. However, if a Presbyterian farmer plants the same brand X variety with a blue planter, then he still has a good chance of blowing Kip Culler's world record 117-bushel-per-acre yield right out of the water.

Again, you can't get this stuff out of the seed catalog, you have to attend the test plots and engage in the discussion to glean this information. Neighbors who can express opinion as absolute fact on these matters quickly assume the tribal position of "witch doctor" or "shaman" if they can produce fields of clean, SDS-free beans.

DRILLING OR TILLING?

The no-till guys stand on one side of the tent and point over to the tillage farmers and say things like, "Did you see how quick that chiseled plowed field died?" I'll bet you don't need three guesses to figure out what the tillage guys are saying!

GIVE IT TIME

The final underappreciated factor about SDS regards the length of time an individual farmer has operated a property.

I picked up a new farm in a hot, hot area this spring. The list of farmers who wanted this piece of land wouldn't fit on a ream of paper. The SDS isn't that bad, but I think the wannabes are ready to put little yellow ribbon magnets on the tailgates of their pickups in concern over my field.

On the other hand, the absolute worst affected fields in the area are right on main stage at our home farm. Taking no chances, my god-fearing, 80-year-old father planted it himself with a brand new, green tractor-green planter combo using big name elite seed.

Now the home farm's been in the family for almost a century, but nonetheless, the bean leaves fell off a week ago. When dad attends a test plot event, a line forms to offer him sympathy and condolences like it was a funeral home visitation. Even longer than the line to load up the barbecued pork loin, cheesy potatoes and brownies!

Editor's note: Real Midwest farmer Adam Erwin writes under a pseudonym. He farms more than 10,000 acres of corn, soybeans and wheat in several states and is a former international banker.

(MZT/CZ/AG)

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