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Day 16, Final Kansas Wheat Harvest Report

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Kansas Wheat

Contact: Marsha Boswell, [email protected]

For audio file, please visit kswheat.com.

This is day 16, the final day of the Kansas Wheat Harvest Reports, brought to you by the Kansas Wheat Commission, Kansas Association of Wheat Growers, Kansas Grain and Feed Association and the Kansas Cooperative Council.

The Kansas wheat harvest is finally drawing to a close with 95 percent of wheat harvest complete, according to the official statistics provided by the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service in its crop progress report for the week ending July 30, 2023. That is still well behind last year’s 100 percent completion at this time and the five-year average of nearly 99 percent.

Ahead of the weekend, the last remaining farmers in the harvest field were cutting down toward the Oklahoma border, primarily so they could report numbers to crop insurance, according to Lawson Hemberger, MKC senior location manager of rail terminals who is based out of the Sumner County Terminal in Milan. Hemberger oversees both of MKC’s current terminal elevators as well as the one under construction near Sterling. The terminal in Milan covers Sumner County, southwest of Wichita, and into neighboring Harper and Cowley counties.

The terminal took in its first loads of wheat around June 8. While that makes the length of harvest very long in total, Hemberger noted the majority of acres were harvested by the Fourth of July. The area caught five to six inches of rain that week, forcing farmers out of the field and starting a cycle of every-other-day rain delays, increasing weed pressure and falling test weights.

“This is definitely the first year I’ve seen a wheat harvest go darn near two months long,” he said.

Hemberger noted the area was pretty decent on moisture compared to other areas of Kansas as the wheat came out of dormancy. The wheat was up and looking pretty average, but then the area went all the way to early May before finally catching rain.

Hemberger estimated abandonment ranged from 10 to 15 percent. Some of those planted acres were abandoned before harvest so farmers could plant a second crop, others were zeroed out during harvest when some producers could send the combine down and back once in the field and not even fill up a coffee can.

He noted he was holding his breath when the rains arrived — calling it the do-or-die moment — but the wheat was at the exact right stage to fill the kernels that it put on. Test weights were excellent during the first few weeks of harvest, right at 60 to 60.5 pounds per bushel.

Yields were widespread from five bushels per acre — primarily where crop insurance would not release acres ahead of harvest — up to 48 bushels per acre. For the early part of harvest ahead of the holiday, Hemberger estimated most farmers averaged about 20 bushels per acre.

Protein was exceptional — even higher than last year’s drought-stressed crop — with Hemberger estimating 80 percent of wheat coming in was at 13 percent protein or higher. He noted for wheat report readers that the protein levels are mostly locked in once the wheat matures, meaning the protein values do not drop significantly like test weight.

The Sumner County Terminal has four different pits, allowing MKC to set up a really good segregation plan. Hemberger explained that most of the time they have four to five protein breaks — so trying to separate every percentage point (10 percent, 11 percent, etc.). This year, the crop came in so much higher with protein content that they had to adjust that segregation plan every other day to continue separating the highest protein wheat. He noted they are putting higher protein wheat — 14 and higher — into long-term storage, stashing it away for another time when good protein wheat may not be as readily available as this year’s crop.

Hemberger reported the most consistently reported top wheat variety this year was AgriPro’s Bob Dole, which was developed by K-State. He noted producers also highlighted Larry, also developed at K-State, and Paradise from Polansky Seed, as varieties that performed well in the area this year.

After the big rains around July 4, however, the rain kept coming. As a result, damage has substantially increased on those tail-end acres and test weights dropped off and at the end of harvest were down to 56 to 57 pounds per bushel. Weeds were a whole other debacle as producers struggled to control late-season emergence options in order to harvest. Crop insurance ended up zeroing out some fields due to crabgrass that came in after pigweed was sprayed.

Even with the frustrating end of harvest, Hemberger reported this year’s harvest was better than expected.

“We figured we got about 60 to 65 percent compared to a normal year,” Hemberger said. “Looking back at where we were going into May, we didn’t think we would have a crop at all.”

Despite the challenges the rain caused for the wheat, the ample moisture means the fall crops are looking really good, even with the long period of triple-digit weather that is threatening the crop at a critical growth period. Hemberger noted a rain at the end of last week of 1.5 to 3 inches could not have come at a better time.

Now the challenge is to turn house quickly at the terminal to make space for those fall crops. Most of the wheat will be sent to local mills. The MKC terminal does have two train loaders, but with such a short crop, there is not a strong export market out of Kansas this year. Still, he noted they will load a few trains that were contracted back this spring.

Overall, this wheat harvest will be one for the record books, although not in the way that producers would prefer, according to Justin Gilpin, Kansas Wheat CEO. As of its last estimate, USDA predicted Kansas wheat production will total 208 million bushels on 6.5 million acres, the smallest crop since 1966.

Breaking down that overall number, however, average yields for 2023 are currently estimated at 32 bushels per acre compared to 19.5 bushels per acre in 1966. That gain is directly attributable to the improvement in available wheat genetics, recommended farming practices and decades of on-farm knowledge.

“What shouldn’t be lost in everything that’s going on is the gains that have been made through genetics to try and keep a disaster from being more of a disaster,” Gilpin said. “The 2023 wheat crop had more than its share of twists and turns, but overall, we’ve come a long way. Every year is a little bit different, but 2023 is probably going to be one of those years that does stand out for a long time on charts, and not just due to the overall challenges this crop faced. Combined with the market volatility and unprecedented geopolitical events — everything that is occurring simultaneously within the wheat market right now is pretty incredible.”

Learn more about Gilpin’s perspectives on this year’s harvest, supply-and-demand factors across wheat classes, end-use quality, international market influences and more in the latest episode of the “Wheat’s On Your Mind” podcast at wheatsonyourmind.com.

The 2023 Harvest Reports were brought to you by the Kansas Wheat Commission, Kansas Association of Wheat Growers, Kansas Grain and Feed Association and the Kansas Cooperative Council.

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Written by Julia Debes for Kansas Wheat

Meals from Thoughtful Church Families Help the Eichers in a Busy Time

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We have entered the month of August. We are having cool mornings after having hot and humid weather last week. We also had a few storms that took down trees and branches in the area. Son Benjamin mowed the grass last night and also cleared up a lot of branches from our yard. We have lots of trees. The grass looks nice and green, and the rain perks up the gardens.

Today my plans are to can sweet dill pickles. I use Palace King cucumbers and grow my own dill so it’s easy to make them. Last week we canned 14 quarts for daughter Elizabeth while helping her. We also use the Palace King cucumber for fresh eating. It has a rougher skin, but I just scrape it and then slice them. Or sometimes I peel them for cucumber salad. They stay very crisp when canning them. I usually serve this kind when we host church services.

Today, daughters Lovina and Verena are assisting Elizabeth with last-minute jobs that need to be done before they host church services on Sunday. Lovina left last night and spent the night at Verena’s house. Daughter Loretta and her son Denzel are here. Denzel is starting to walk. When he wants to go somewhere fast, he crawls because he still thinks it’s faster than walking. Right now he’s sitting beside me looking at a book. He is taking an interest in books now. Of course, we only give him the cardboard types because he loves to tear up paper. When he gets ahold of a newspaper, there isn’t much left of it when he gets done with it.

Last night’s supper was brought in for us, and also for Dustin and Loretta. This is the third meal brought to us from church families. Our bishop’s wife passed out slips of paper to our church families or whoever wanted to help with a date on it to bring some in to Dustin and us. She told me that every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday for several months the meals will be brought in. This is just so thoughtful! We really appreciate it. We cannot be thankful enough for our church families that show support and are willing to help out each other. The meals have been really delicious as well. It will give me some more time in the weeks ahead to help out Loretta.

Monday, I took son Kevin to get his stitches removed. It seems to be healing well. The doctor did a good job to put the stitches close to the eyebrows to help hide the scar. 

I can smell freshly cut hay from the field beside us. Dustin also has hay cut that needs to be put in most likely today or tomorrow. We have put our hayfield into pasture for our horses and were buying hay. Benjamin has two horses, Joseph has two horses, and Joe and I have one horse and a colt and our pony, Stormy. Joe wants to get some beef calves to raise for our own use. 

I need to get started with the pickles. My work won’t get done with me sitting here! 

I will share the pickle recipe I will use today. May God bless you all!

 

Sweet Dill Pickles

Pickling cucumbers, sliced (enough to fill 3 quarts)

2 cups vinegar (I use white vinegar)

2 cups water

3 cups white sugar

2 tablespoons salt (I use a canning and pickling salt)

4 cloves garlic (per quart)

2 dill weed heads, or 1 teaspoon dill weed seeds (per quart)

Pinch alum (per quart)

 

This recipe will make about 3 quarts. Place sliced cucumbers, dill, garlic, and alum into quart jars. Heat vinegar and water until hot, then add sugar and salt and stir to dissolve. Pour liquid over cucumbers, leaving 1/2 inch of headspace above the top level of the brine. Cover jars with lids and bands and process in a boiling water canner for 5 minutes.

Note: Canning times are subject to change according to USDA regulations. Check your county extension office.

Lovina’s Amish Kitchen is written by Lovina Eicher, Old Order Amish writer, cook, wife, and mother of eight. Her newest cookbook, Amish Family Recipes, is available wherever books are sold. Readers can write to Eicher at Lovina’s Amish Kitchen, PO Box 234, Sturgis, MI 49091 (please include a self-addressed stamped envelope for a reply); or email [email protected] and your message will be passed on to her to read. She does not personally respond to emails.

Roots of discord (2)

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john marshal

 

Second of five articles on the history of trouble in the Kansas Republican party

Among the historic battles among Kansas Republicans, few match the decade-long skirmish between Gov. Robert Bennett and former state party chairman Don Concannon.
Both were successful lawyers and politicians. Bennett was from the plush suburbs of Johnson County, a party moderate and president of the Kansas Senate. Concannon, from Hugoton in the state’s rural southwest, had been Republican state chairman (1968-70) and was a popular and avid conservative.
The heat source for this feud developed in the early 1970s when arguments over legislative reapportionment were reignited. In a bald power grab, delegations from the metropolitan counties rekindled rural-urban conflict when State Sen. C.Y. “Kit” Thomas, a Mission Hills Republican, propelled legislation to shrink the party’s rural voice.
His bill removed county chairmen and vice-chairmen from the state party committees, abolishing the county memberships. Thomas, chairman of the sub-committee on elections, was successful. District committees, heavily urban, would elect the parties’ state boards.
This further angered rural Republicans, who believed that reapportionment in 1966 had already throttled their voice in the legislature. Urban legislators had now shut them out of their own party process.
Later in 1972, it was learned that state Republican platform hearings had been staged. Civic Services, a St. Louis public relations firm, actually had written the Kansas planks even before platform subcommittees had convened for hearings. The Republican candidate for governor, Morris Kay, had little to say about the position statements.
The dispute cost Republicans a fourth consecutive election for governor, a two-year term of office at the time. Incumbent Robert Docking was reelected.
In 1974, Concannon, Bennett and The Rev. Forrest Robinson, of Wichita, ran for governor in a fierce, neck-and-neck Republican primary. All were popular candidates, and Bennett defeated Concannon by only 299 votes, 67,284 to 66,985. Robinson finished third with 56,341. Bennett was elected governor in November.
Concannon claimed he wasn’t bitter.” But in 1976 he became Kansas chairman for Ronald Reagan’s presidential campaign, infuriating party officials and Bennett, who were campaigning for incumbent President Gerald Ford.
When Concannon and the Reagan forces moved into Topeka for the state GOP convention in May 1976, they were only 29 votes short among 979 delegates registered. But ‒ in what seemed a flash ‒ Ford swept the convention. There were accusations of padded urban delegations, among them Johnson, Sedgwick and Shawnee Counties.
Frank Shelton, a Reagan chairman from Montgomery County, was so furious that he ran for governor in 1978 and got 17,000 votes, most of them from Republicans. Bennett lost to Democrat John Carlin by 15,000.
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By 1992, Kansas had elected only two Republican governors in 25 years ‒ Bennett (1974) and Mike Hayden (1986). State Treasurer Joan Finney, a popular Democrat, had been elected governor in 1990. Although Democrats seemed to run the executive branch, Republicans ‒ especially urban Republicans ‒ were building power in the legislature.
Bennett had retired from the scene, but fellow Republicans from Sedgwick and Johnson Counties were leveraging influence in Topeka. Eventually they would acquire strength enough to rule the state senate and chair its most powerful committees.
In early 1992, Concannon emerged from his quiet zone to denounce historic school finance reforms as a raid on the pocketbooks of southwest Kansas. As modified legislation headed toward approval, southwest citizens mobilized, voting in nine southwestern counties to start the process of seceding from Kansas.
Resentment in the mineral-rich and ag-abundant southwest had simmered for decades. Massive school consolidations in 1963, legislative reapportionment in 1966, court unification in 1974 ‒ all were seen as attacks on rural sovereignty. And a new (1983) severance tax on oil and gas had added to the region’s dismay.
The school finance formula, by which wealthier school districts help finance education in poor communities, pushed resentment to anger. The legislature, started hearings. More than 1,000 people traveled to Topeka from the southwest, many of them in busses. Meetings were moved to the Topeka Expo Center.
In the months following enactment of the new school law it became clear that much of the southwest wealth lay more with corporations that owned the land and the minerals and less with the people who lived there. The new formula found that in several “wealthy” school districts, at least half the students qualified, by poverty guidelines, for free and reduced-price meals.
Although seven of the nine southwest counties had voted to secede from Kansas, the movement would wane. In a region nearer the capitals of three other states, a sense of distance and isolation remained.
(Next: The religious left)

 

What is going on with our trees?

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What is going on with our trees? Well we’ve had a year of drought from last summer, fall, winter and spring it has been a difficult time to be a tree or shrub! Now we are once again dealing with multiple 100 degree days.

Environmental stressors such as drought, heat and cold are cumulative. In other words, trees can gradually weaken under continued stresses such as drought until they reach a point where significant damage or even death can occur quickly. Damage that occurred earlier may not appear until summer weather arrives. Plants may wither seemingly overnight. These trees probably died earlier but had enough food reserves to put out leaves and even to grow for a period of time. When the food reserves became depleted, the plants died suddenly. Be careful not to confuse this with feeding damage from May beetles or other insects.

Drought can leave trees looking dead so before any tree is cut down, check the twigs. Dead trees will have brittle, dry stems that snap. Live stems may break, but they won’t be dry. If the tree is still alive, give it time to put out a new set of leaves.

If you suspect you have plants under stress, try to water them once a week if there is no rainfall. Trees should be watered to a depth of 12 to 18 inches if possible. Water from the trunk out to the edge of the branches. Though this will not reach all the roots of a tree, it will reach the majority of them. Trees normally have at least 80 percent of their roots in the top foot of soil. Use a dowel or metal rod to check the depth of water. The rod will penetrate moist soil easily but will stop when dry earth is reached.

Shrubs should be watered to a depth of 8 to 12 inches. Check the depth of watering by pushing a wooden dowel or metal rod into the soil. It will stop when it hits dry soil.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Council Grove Youth Rodeo To Be August 5

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Frank J Buchman
Frank Buchman

A youth rodeo is planned Saturday evening, Aug. 5, at 6 o’clock, in the Morris County Rodeo Arena east of Council Grove.
Sponsored by the Morris County Youth Rodeo Association, divisions are planned for juniors, eight and under; intermediate, nine to 13; and seniors, 14 to 19, said Lisa Wainwright, entry coordinator.
Events include steer riding, goat tail untying, goat tying, breakaway roping, barrel racing, pole bending, chute dogging, calf roping, and team roping.
A $3 entry fee per contestant in each event is to be charged. With no payback, working prizes will be awarded the top four placing participants in each competition.
All-around cowgirl and cowboy are to receive special awards in all divisions.
A $5 admission donation will be accepted at the gate for entrance by all contestants, parents, and spectators.
Entries with payment and release form are required in advance to Lisa Wainwright, 1379 Old Highway 4, Council Grove, Kansas, 66846.
Information is available at [email protected].

CUTLINE
Cowboys and cowgirls from throughout the Midwest are expected for the youth rodeo sponsored by the Morris County Youth Rodeo Association Saturday evening, Aug. 5, at Council Grove.