Monday, January 19, 2026
Home Blog Page 123

Day 6, Kansas Wheat Harvest Report

0
Kansas Wheat

Contact: Marsha Boswell, [email protected]

For audio version, visit kswheat.com.

This is day 6 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.

Harvest continues across Kansas, with the USDA reporting it halfway complete, behind last year but close to the five-year average. Farmers are still seeing the effects of heavy rainfall, with muddy fields and delayed progress in several areas. Despite the setbacks, farmers across the state continue to make progress as June comes to an end.

Officially, the Kansas wheat harvest is 53 percent complete, well behind 76 percent complete last year but near 56 percent average, according to the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service crop progress report for the week ending June 29, 2025. Winter wheat conditions were rated 24 percent poor to very poor, 28 percent fair and 48 percent good to excellent.

In south central Kansas and north along the I-135 corridor, excessive rainfall on mature wheat has made harvest difficult. As fields start to dry out and combines cut around mud holes, some localized quality issues are being reported.

In Edwards County, farmer Danny Hattrup started cutting around June 17 and is now about two-thirds of the way through harvest. He’s hoping to wrap things up within the next week. Progress has been slowed by rain delays and lingering muddy spots, which have made fieldwork more complicated than usual.

On Monday, the field Hattrup was cutting was yielding around 50 bushels per acre, with a test weight a little below an average year, around 59 pounds per bushel. Hattrup planted two different wheat varieties this season, and both are performing about the same so far.

This past weekend, harvest became a true team effort with help from his daughters, Brooke and Shelby and his son-in-law Cole, all pitching in to keep things moving.

Harvest is underway in Scott County, where Brinlee McNary, grain merchandiser for the Scott Coop, reported they took in their first load on June 20. She said timely spring rains helped the wheat significantly in the area, contributing to a strong start. The elevator has received about 40 percent of its expected volume so far.

Yields have been highly variable, ranging from 40 to 80 bushels per acre, but McNary noted yields are a little higher than in an average year. Protein levels have ranged from 7 to 15 percent, with the average coming in just under 12 percent.

McNary said the main challenges of this harvest have been the wet conditions and the presence of wheat streak mosaic virus, which has affected some fields in the area.

The 2025 Harvest Report is brought to you by the Kansas Wheat Commission, Kansas Association of Wheat Growers, Kansas Grain and Feed Association and the Kansas Cooperative Council. To follow along with harvest updates on social media, use #wheatharvest25. Tag us at @kansaswheat to share your harvest story and photos.

The Eyes Have It

0
lee pitts

When pinkeye raged through my kindergarten class we all looked like a bunch of crybabies who’d been ballin’ our eyes out because our class hamster, Hieronymus, died of suspicious causes. Mothers back then were pulling their kids out of class faster than an Arizona roadrunner with its tail-feathers on fire and pretty soon the weepy-eyed teacher and I were the only ones who showed up for school. So I know what the pinkeye calves are experiencing right now in my neck of the woods.

We had a weird year of rainfall. We didn’t get very much but what we did get was timed perfectly so now the rye grass is as tall as I’ve ever seen it and the seeds and chaff are eye-high to the calves. The face flies are also thicker than bedbugs in a bunkhouse so I’m starting to see little white spots in my eyes everywhere I look.

I’ve tried everything in the book to rid my herd of the peeper-problem from buying goggle-eyed Hereford bulls to actually injecting milk into a calf’s eye according to the theory that the antibody police would rush to the scene of the crime. This last solution was recommended to me by an old cowboy and his idea seemed to work but I always got a little squeamish performing the procedure. I’ve used dust bags, pour-ons, fly control, vaccines, etc. but the only thing that worked 100% of the time was to catch the pinkeye early, dust the calves eyes with magic powders from my vet and then cover the eye with a Levi or Wrangler patch.

I glued the eye patches on with the back-tag glue they use at auction markets. I’m sure you’ve seen 20 or 30 head enter an auction ring and a savvy buyer will indicate that he wants one head taken off, usually because he spotted a calf with a little round spot of white in its eye. In that case the female clerk, (it’s always a female) who is writing down the price and the buyer as she counts the number of head in the ring while also checking for a bad eye, will reach for a back tag, put a glomp of glue on the back which gives it weight for better aerodynamics and then she’ll throw it 20 feet and it will land squarely on the right calf’s back where it will stay for 100 years.

I’ve seen plenty of yearlings headed for the feedlot with a big circle of dried up glue around one or both eyes long after the patch has rotted away dooming the cattle to buyer’s scorn and a lower price. The worst case I ever saw was a pen of stockers that had been on carrots, as is custom in my part of the world. Besides giving them an orange butt 50% of those calves had the distinctive circle of glue around one or both eyes. So much for the theory that carrots are good for your eyesight.

Another problem with patches is that some men and women are such good cattle persons that they don’t use up all their old jeans making patches while others, like myself, have a big problem because my wife will only buy me two pair of Wranglers per year which doesn’t come close to meeting my herd’s pinkeye needs. This is a dead giveaway when comparing yourself to your fellow cattlemen. If they are wearing new, or nearly new jeans to work cows or build fence it means they have a pinkeye problem and are trying to catch up by having to buy way more jeans per year that they can hardly afford.

In my research I’ve found that a good cattlemen should wear out two pair of jeans per year for every 100 cows he or she owns. This is what I famously named the “jeans-to-pinkeye ratio”. Wrangler and Levi’s could save as all a fortune if they’d just come out with a new product… fairly priced packages of pinkeye patches that don’t leave any residue. But they probably won’t because they’d probably sell a lot fewer jeans as a result.

I’m currently attempting to get a million dollar grant from either Wrangler or Levi’s in order to do further research to determine which brand of jeans works better than the other.

Don’t fall victim: Text scams involving KDOT continue to plague motorists across the U.S.

0

Fake texts that appear to come from the Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) and demand payment for tolls and tickets are continuing to be sent to the public. These texts sometimes threaten to have driver’s licenses revoked or penalties for not paying promptly.

Please remember – KDOT does not collect money for tickets or tolls, and the agency does not send unsolicited texts.

Do not click or open any links within these scam texts and never provide personal or financial details by clicking unknown links. Clicking on these links could expose your information to scammers

If you’ve received a scam message, report it to the Federal Trade Commission at ReportFraud.ftc.gov and/or the Internet Crime Complaint Center at https://www.ic3.gov/. Delete the text and report it as junk. If you’ve provided payment information at a fraudulent web site, contact your bank or credit card company immediately.

Stay informed about official KDOT information by visiting our official website at ksdot.gov and our verified social media channels.

Insight: Finding Common Ground

0

Jackie Mundt,
Pratt County farmer and rancher

Good friends can have a good time no matter what they are doing together. That is how I ended up helping with a Yoga on the Farm event at Hildebrand Dairy near Junction City recently. The event was organized by CommonGround Kansas, an organization of farm women in Kansas who share information and personal stories about farming and the food they grow.
Yoga on the farm events have been around for years but this was my first time attended one. I was pretty impressed to see around 50 people show up on a hot June weekend to moo-ve through poses on a lush green lawn next to cattle grazing in a pasture. The cows didn’t make anyone too self-conscious because they only stared at the humans in the strange poses for a little while before they got back to snacking on the grass.
Participants in the event got a lot more than a yoga session. Melissa Hildebrand Reed, one of the farm owners, gave a tour of the farm including a sneak peak of two milking robots they are installing. Participants were also able to learn what the dairy cattle eat by building a trail mix version of the ration, and everyone got delicious soft serve ice cream at the farm’s dairy store.
One of my favorite parts of the day was getting to see Melissa and her staff connecting with curious people. She does such a good job of teaching people about the farm, showing them how they take care of their cows and explaining how they make the dairy products you can buy in their farm store or at grocery stores throughout the state.
Looking around the crowd it was obvious some people were hardcore yoga enthusiasts, others were there for the novelty of a unique experience, a great photo op, to see the cows or for the post-workout ice cream. Regardless of the reason, everyone walked away having met a real life dairy farmer, more clearly understanding of how dairy farms work and having a great story to tell their friends about where dairy products come from.
Events like this are so powerful because they demystify farms, give people the chance to ask questions and help the public build confidence in how their food is grown or produced. The farm women who volunteer for CommonGround Kansas are really effective advocates because in addition to being farmers, they are wives, mothers, caretakers, grocery shoppers and so many other roles. They have so many of the same concerns, fears and goals as all of the rest of us — we have so much common ground.
One of the most important needs we all have is to be well fed. Meeting a farmer and realizing you have something in common can completely change your perspective. Having the opportunity and comfort to ask questions about how food is grown can lead to confidence and peace of mind. Opening farms to the public creates more informed, loyal consumers.
My first time at Yoga on the Farm was delightful, and I look forward to more opportunities like it in the future. If you have the opportunity to attend yoga or any other event on a farm, I hope you will take advantage because you will likely learn something new, make powerful connections and may even get a cute selfie with a farm animal.
“Insight” is a weekly column published by Kansas Farm Bureau, the state’s largest farm organization whose mission is to strengthen agriculture and the lives of Kansans through advocacy, education and service.

Independence Day

0

Richard Shank
Columnist

Friday of this week, America will pause to celebrate the 249th anniversary of the nation’s declaration of independence from England. Fireworks and speeches were introduced into colonial America, early in American history, to observe the celebration, and remain to this day.
Independence Hall in Philadelphia is where it all happened. On a trip to the city of brotherly love, as Philadelphia is affectionately known, I had an occasion to walk the sprawling structure and join dozens of other tourists peering inside a room appropriately named “Assembly Hall.” Here, 56 colonial Americans ratified a document, which signaled our end as a colonial property of England. George Washington, perhaps, the nation’s most famous colonial leader, was not in attendance as he was in the field commanding America’s army in battle against the British.
The Revolutionary War lasted eight years until ratification of a treaty signed in Paris in 1783, which gave America its independence.
Eleven years after the signing of the Declaration of Independence, many of the same founding fathers returned to this very room to draft a constitution that has endured the test of time 238 years later. This time around, Washington was in attendance and was unanimously elected to serve as Chairman of the Constitutional Convention. Without question, this building and its Assembly Hall could lay claim as being the nation’s most historic site.
Ground was broken for Independence Hall is 1732, a project that took 21 years to complete. In 1753, the greats and near greats were on hand to dedicate the new home for Pennsylvania’s colonial government.
Relations between the colonies and the royal government in London soured soon thereafter as a result of new taxation imposed on the American colonies to cover the cost of King George’s European excursions. When the British launched an invasion of the colonies at Lexington and Concord, Massachusetts in April 1775, a colonial congress met at Independence Hall, and as its first order of business was to select George Washington Commander of American forces.
One year later, 56 brave colonists made their way to Philadelphia, including two future Presidents named John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, to consider independence from the royal government.
As the story goes, the Continental Congress tapped Jefferson, then a young Virginia plantation owner barely 33 years old, to draft a document to proclaiming the colony’s independence. It is reputed that Jefferson labored 17 days in a Philadelphia rooming house now known as “Declaration House” where he drafted what would become a 1337-word document, with advice from two of his contemporaries, Adams and Benjamin Franklin. Most historians say Franklin, who was elderly at the time of the proceedings would have, more than likely, been one of the nation’s first presidents had he been younger. Still he left behind a long list of expressions and sayings which remain relevant to this day.
On June 28, 1776, Jefferson’s final product was unveiled at Independence Hall and it should come as no surprise that most of his 55 contemporaries suggested some edit, perhaps to one day lay claim that they were a part of what was about to become the nation’s most historic document. During the next week, about one- fourth of Jefferson’s original words were edited from the first draft, but on July 2, the Continental Congress approved the declaration, and two days later voted a second time to ratify.
Jefferson’s prophetic phrase, “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” is rated by most historians as the most consequential and potent words in American history. From what I read, Jefferson’s original document with sidebar edits survived.
As one should expect, an event of this magnitude has produced its share of great stories and trivia, some of which are worth repeating.
Adams, to his dying day, said the annual Independence Day celebrations should take place on July 2 since that was the date when the first vote to approve was taken.
Adams and Jefferson died hours apart on July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the ratification of the Declaration of Independence. And, James Madison, the nation’s fourth President would die July 4 in 1831. Only one President, Calvin Coolidge, has a birthday of July 4.
In its formative years, preservation of historical attractions was not a priority in the new nation and during the 1800s Philadelphia used Assembly Hall to store feed for the city’s horses. In 1948, the National Park Service totally restored Independence Hall to its original appearance.
Then, there was the story of John Hancock who lectured his fellow signers how they must stick together. Ben Franklin, never a man short on words, rose and responded, “Yes, we must indeed all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately.”
With the current political climate that has engulfed America, it is hard to imagine that those in charge in the nation’s capital would, in these times, be able to enact anything of this magnitude. The Senate would filibuster the idea to death and the House of Representatives would refuse to vote out of fear that it might pass.
Meeting for the first time in 1788, the electoral college unanimously elected Washington to serve as America’s first president. Four years later, he was unanimously re-elected to serve a second term. Adams, vice president for eight years, succeeded Washington to serve as the nation’s second president.
New York served a short time as the nation’s first capital before it moved to Philadelphia, and then, in 1800, to a new city of the Potomac River to be called Washington, D.C. . In 1790, Washington, visited the construction site located barely 20 miles from Mount Vernon, his Virginia plantation, and set the corner stone for a presidential residence to known as the White House. Washington is the only president who did not live in the White House during their time if office.
This July 4, let us celebrate our proud history and pledge to preserve a democratic form of government, which has served us for nearly two-and one-half centuries.