For Farmers, Every Planting Season Is a High Stakes Bet

April 25, 2016, 6:45 a.m. ·

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A farm hand on the Nelson farm in north Iowa drives a tractor pulling a 24-row planter as it drops corn seed into the field. (Photo by Amy Mayer, Harvest Public Media)

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Planting season is underway, from backyard gardens to the vast fields of the Corn Belt. As farmers put seeds in the ground, and confidence in another crop season, they know they'll get just one shot at making their business profitable this year.


Near Alexander, Iowa, on a cloudy spring Tuesday, Josh Nelson watches a bright red Case IH Magnum tractor pull a 24-row planter and crest a small hill, dropping corn seed at careful intervals. Nelson says his family farm dodged a weather bullet this week, but it’s just one of many hurdles this season promises.

Planting is underway across the Midwest. As farmers like Nelson put seeds in the ground, they’re also putting their confidence in another crop season and the decisions they made over the winter. Confronting lower prices for corn and soybeans, on top of the routine challenges of labor, weather and expenses, some farmers are grabbing new opportunities where they see potential for a little extra profit.

Josh Nelson hand waters plant starts in his shop. A small vegetable and herb operation helps him supplement the income he makes working corn and soybean acres with his father, two uncles and a cousin. One uncle raises hogs and the other grows hops and barley for local beer. (Photo by Amy Mayer, Harvest Public Media.)


At First State Bank in Belmond, Iowa, vice president Dennis Sloth is confident most of the area’s farmers will pull through the current down economy. He says so far this year he has not had to re-write a single farm loan. (Photo by Amy Mayer, Harvest Public Media)


In addition to row crops and vegetables, Gary Guthrie has bees and lambs on his Nevada, Iowa as well as a wind turbine, solar panels and prairie strips. Diversity helps spread risk. (Photo by Amy Mayer, Harvest Public Media)

Nelson farms with his father, uncles and a cousin in north Iowa. This year, the Nelsons are growing a new product that will fetch a premium price.

“One of the things we’re doing this year is, we're growing a certain kind of corn that's specifically designed for ethanol production,” Nelson said.

They have to keep it separate from the other types of corn they’re growing and then contract with a transportation company that only carries that kind of corn. But the math they did over the winter shows this is a good bet. After lots of calculations, their year’s profit rests on decisions like that one.

Why are planting decisions such a big deal? Imagine if you ran a restaurant but you had to order absolutely all of your ingredients in April. No way to know how many customers you’ll have or what they’ll order. That’s the kind of risk farmers like the Nelsons have to juggle.

Josh Nelson came back to join the farm in late 2012, just as the markets started to tumble. Economists expect corn this year to fetch some of the lowest prices in nearly a decade. To make it work, Nelson says, each farmer in his family has to leverage a little something extra from the business, beyond working together on the row crops.

“On my own operation I've got about a half-acre of produce I sell through the producer cooperative in Mason City,” he said. One uncle finishes hogs. “And then another one of my uncles raises hops and barley for local beer.”

For a restaurant business, you might open a catering arm to bring in additional business. You’d probably use a computer to track your inventory and manage new clients. And you might consult with distributors or grocers to figure out how best to anticipate the year.

In the Nelson farm office, a row of white ring binders fills a shelf, holding more than a decade of farm records. The family uses special software to help them keep track of past yields, expenses and other data. Nelson says planning the farm year also involves talking to experts.

“You got to have a lot of outside help.” He says his family works with an agronomist and a seed dealer. “We talk a lot with our banker.”

Up the road and across the Iowa River from the Nelson farm, Dennis Sloth is vice president of First State Bank in Belmond, Iowa. Despite lower prices and a gloomy outlook from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which says farm income will be down again this year, Sloth says he has not had to re-write a single farm loan.

“I think we're actually in very good shape,” Sloth said. During the good years, Sloth says, farmers paid down debt and put money into savings.

“Our farmers will get through this,” he says, “but they all have to be really aware that you do need to make a profit farming.” It’s no good to just spend down savings in the tough years.

In fact, he’s already seen some farmers cut expenses by giving up fields they’ve been renting—something Sloth says is rare because farmers want to hang onto precious land.

Farmers in north-central Iowa fill a planter with seed. Farm income is expected to drop again this year. (Photo by Amy Mayer, Harvest Public Media)

About an hour south of the Nelson farm, Gary Guthrie’s family recently celebrated 50 years on their Story County farm. Guthrie’s parents never farmed it, they always rented out the row crop acres. When Guthrie came back to the farm in 1997, he started growing produce for community supported agriculture on just two acres right by the house. That business got too big for him and now he focuses on just a few vegetables, including carrots, garlic and sweet potatoes.

Guthrie cares about corn and soybean prices because his row crop acres have to make money to keep the whole enterprise afloat. Also, he needs buyers for all his veggies and tries to line those up before he makes final planting decisions. As he does that, though, he’s not thinking only about money.

“If I plant something it means work,” he says. “Is that work worth the work that I'm going to put into it and what am I going to get out of it?”

Business owners make decisions like these all the time, but they usually have the option to change course throughout the year. Farmers really don’t. That makes planting decisions feel particularly fraught, especially in a lean economy.


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Harvest Public Media is a reporting collaboration focused on issues of food, fuel and field. Harvest covers these agriculture-related topics through an expanding network of reporters and partner stations throughout the Midwest.