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Planting may have been early, but it seems the maturing was a little late this year. Then the rains delayed the harvest a little more?

Two weeks ago I did some scouting where I gun hunt every year, and then spent the afternoon helping the landowner fix one of his tractors. The farmer who leases his tillable acreage does about 2000 acres of corn and beans and was just starting to harvest his other leased areas, and we're last on the list. Hunting could be a little tough this year if the corn is still up.

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They like to harvest shelled corn when the moisture content is 22% or less. Propane cost cut in pretty good on $3.71  a bushel corn over that. Also some combines tend to damage kernals more at higher moistures. The exception would be cob corn mix for the silo, where a higher moisture content is needed.

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Planting may have been early, but it seems the maturing was a little late this year. Then the rains delayed the harvest a little more?

Two weeks ago I did some scouting where I gun hunt every year, and then spent the afternoon helping the landowner fix one of his tractors. The farmer who leases his tillable acreage does about 2000 acres of corn and beans and was just starting to harvest his other leased areas, and we're last on the list. Hunting could be a little tough this year if the corn is still up.

 

We didn't have a very hot summer, so the corn itself didn't grow very well.  

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We didn't have a very hot summer, so the corn itself didn't grow very well.  

 

I have lots of friends who are crop farmers, and I know it hasn't been a good year for a lot of them. Some will probably even leave the corn in the fields rather than losing money to harvest what little there is of it. Hopefully it can work out for everybody.

The stuff I saw on my hike a couple of weeks ago looked pretty good, and the soil is sandy and well-drained. Maybe it'll be cut for the opener or shortly thereafter.

It's a double-whammy for me as I usually get calls to help with harvesting when the pressure's on. No calls yet. And my hunting spot is socked in so tight with corn that access is almost impossible. No money and no meat is not how I like to go into the winter. Plan 'B' is being reviewed to keep the freezer filled and the checking account solvent.

Best of luck to everyone.

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I was with the farmer combining corn the other day. Moisture was averaging 24 percent. Drier was running all day... the farm I hunt they combined half the corn and left the rest standing. It was around almost 27 percent. To wet... he won't cut it down until around Thanksgiving he said.

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Here the early frost put a hurting on the local corn.  Most all are chopping it as silage and running packers over it in big heaping piles.  Was told that a frost will harden the outside of the kernal and seal the moisture in and there is nothing that can be done except spend more money than its worth running dryers.  Some are leaving it and putting a claim on the crop insurance.  Good for the wildlife I guess but not so much for the farmers and hunters.

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