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Glory
May 31st, 2008, 07:13 PM
Wet spring dampening corn crop hopes
Consumers will be spending even more for groceries this summer

The Associated Press

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - In a year of rising food prices and high fuel costs that are creating pressure to produce more ethanol, the country could really use a perfect corn crop.

So far, it isn't happening.

And depending on the right mix of sun, heat, rain and cool, it could drive prices up even further.

That may mean consumers will be spending even more for groceries like soda, cookies, cake or anything that contains high fructose corn syrup and for any meat that relies on corn as animal feed.

A cold, wet spring put crop planting weeks behind schedule across much of the U.S. Corn Belt and drastically slowed growth where corn is already in the ground.

Now, farmers in parts of Iowa, Illinois and Indiana are replanting corn that either sat under water in flooded fields too long to germinate or can't break through sodden, compacted soils. And the cool, soggy weather continues, the last thing a heat-loving crop like corn needs.

"It's starting to look like a very difficult year," University of Illinois agronomy professor Emerson Nafziger said.

Now, farmers and crop experts say it's up to the weather to deliver an ideal growing season to make up for the slow start.

"I haven't given up hope yet," said Roger Elmore, a corn expert at Iowa State University.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture said this week 88 percent of the corn crop has been planted. Last year at this time, farmers were all but finished.

This year's figure doesn't account for farmers who have to replant â€" that number won't be known for possibly months.

The later corn is planted, the less it will yield, Nafziger said. Corn planted in mid June in central Illinois, for instance, is likely to produce only about half what it would if planted in early May.

Late planting and USDA projections that farmers will plant less corn this year â€" in spite of heavy demand for corn to make ethanol, animal feed and other products â€" have propped up corn prices, keeping them near record highs.

Those prices, while potentially adding to already high prices for food, offer farmers like Terry Bartley the prospect of a lucrative year.

Now, though, Bartley is replanting almost half his Illinois crop â€" 195 acres â€" costing an extra $45 to $50 an acre. That will take at least $8,700 out of his pocket now and he stands to lose even more down the road because the late planting means less corn will be produced.

"I think most of the guys in this area are going to have to replant every acre of it," the 46-year-old said from Iuka, about 75 miles east of St. Louis.

Elmore says he's hearing similar reports from around Iowa, the nation's top corn state. Iowa farmers grew 13.85 million acres last year, about 16 percent of the U.S. corn crop, according to the USDA. Illinois was the No. 2 producer, with 13.05 million acres.

This year's Iowa crop, Elmore says, was planted wet, then rained on some more.

"If you plant wet and you get a hard, driving rain afterward, it pulverizes the soil," he said. "And you get a pretty hard, dry crust on the soil."
Young plants, he said, can't punch through.
Other fields, he added, sat in water for days. They'll likely have to be replanted.

National Weather Service maps show wet, soggy soil stretches across the heart of the Corn Belt, from eastern Nebraska and Iowa through Ohio, where only two-thirds of the crop is in the ground.

In southern Indiana, many fields haven't dried out long enough to allow farmers to plant â€" period, said Purdue University corn expert Bob Nielsen.

Even a month after farmers would like to have their corn planted, "there's probably still quite a few fields that are too wet to get into," he said.
Only 77 percent of the state's expected corn crop is planted, according to the USDA. Indiana farmers were essentially finished planting this time last year.

For farmers to make up ground lost to late planting, Iowa State's Elmore said, skies need to clear and temperatures need to rise in the next few weeks. That would encourage plant growth. Then, Elmore says, the weather needs to cool a little to slow growth and allow ears to fill with grain.
But forecasts offer potentially bad news. The weather service expects cooler, wetter weather than usual for the next month in the Corn Belt.

In states where farmers have planted most of their corn, the weather has slowed growth.

"Everybody's standing around waiting for the sun to come out here and see the corn crop catch up as much as possible," Keith Glewen of the University of Nebraska Extension Service said. "We're probably two weeks behind normal."

What all this means for food costs and the ethanol industry â€" already under pressure for using a quarter of last year's corn crop and contributing to food-price escalation â€" will depend on the next few months.

Corn futures investors already appear to have priced in the delays in spring planting, according to Elaine Kub, a grain-market analyst with Omaha, Neb.-agricultural data firm DTN.

Prices haven't moved much this week on the Chicago Board of Trade, and were steady near a historically high $6 a bushel Friday.

Where prices go now, Kub said, depends on what farmers can coax from the ground and whether they'll get the right mix of sun, rain, heat and cool.

"In a couple of weeks, when we get into mid June, that's when we look at the weather," she said.

LINK
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24894069/

Even higher?! :faint

heybales219
May 31st, 2008, 07:39 PM
High fructose corn syrup is bad anyways so foods that contain should be avoided anyways. It's best to eat grass-fed animals too so I pray this does not affect the price of these natural foods which I've been trying to consume.

heybales219
May 31st, 2008, 07:41 PM
Some nutrition experts blame increased consumption of high-fructose corn syrup for the growing obesity problem. One theory is that fructose is more readily converted to fat by your liver than is sucrose, increasing the levels of fat in your bloodstream. But this hasn't been proved.
In addition, animal studies have shown a link between increased consumption of high-fructose corn syrup and adverse health effects, such as diabetes and high cholesterol. However, the evidence is not as clear in human studies.


To reduce high-fructose corn syrup in your diet, read food labels. Avoid or limit foods that contain high-fructose corn syrup. Some other easy tips for cutting back on high-fructose corn syrup include:

Buy 100 percent fruit juice instead of fruit-flavored drinks.
Choose fresh fruit instead of fruit juices. Even 100 percent fruit juice has a high concentration of sugar.
Choose fruit canned in its own juices instead of heavy syrup.
Cut back on soda.

http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/high-fructose-corn-syrup/AN01588

RebMel
May 31st, 2008, 08:32 PM
I just finished looking at our budget before stopping in here. With today's trip to the grocery store, we have ALREADY spent $466.00 MORE than what we spent at this time last year (we're a family of six). Last year, I was working full time, putting in eleven hour days with a commute, and quite understandably I was buying more 'quick' (and more expensive) meals.

Today, I'm home running my own business and shopping much more economically minded, and we're still on track for spending a thousand dollars higher by the end of the year than what we spent in '07.

Heartstorm
May 31st, 2008, 08:35 PM
Hummm Let me see..... Oil, Rice, Wheat, now Corn? what next??
Well the Bible clearly says that it will cost a days wages for food so this should really not surprize any of us, we are so close to going home !!!!!

Legacy
May 31st, 2008, 08:46 PM
Too wet, east. Too dry, here. No winter wheat this year. It's dried up. So sad to drive by thousands of acres of worthless crops. :tsk We don't make up a large quantity of the nation's wheat supply, but every little bit helps.

Jubilee21
May 31st, 2008, 10:41 PM
It's very hard to come to terms with how fast the rise of food cost's along side of the gas and other things has risen so rapidly..the best thing to do is simply take a very serious inventory of where money is going out and try to cut back where ever possible as the first response..

lifestyles have become so hectic with the demands and schedules..especially in homes where both parents or a single work all day and then have to find time to cook or shop for food..it is very easy and sometimes just desperation that kicks in when so pressed for time that tends to leave the windows open to 'splurge' on shortcuts just to preserve the last functioning brain cell and sanity in many cases..I remember well how exhausted I was an "pizza" was one of my best friends.

Making a game plan that does an inventory, and implementing it when it comes to food shopping, making from scratch in bulk meals is such a great way to save money..as well as buying in bulk to cut down trips to the store or local drive thru's..every little step like this will pay off big time..and eventually become a way of life after the innitial adjustments. Better to invest in a freezer than gas money and prices of take out meals if possible..

Today's prices, sadly may be a bargain if things go the way they look like they are so it's never too late to start with a new lifestyle and way to approach these crazy prices IMHO!

Glory
June 1st, 2008, 10:35 AM
And let's not forget THE BEES are disappearing, which they said will cause high prices with fruits, vegetables, as well as other crops which need bees to pollinate them.

And Bananas within 10 years may be just a memory!
Just as with the wheat and soy, they have been invaded by fungus and there's no cure! I think we are beginning to truly witness the beginning of plagues.:nod


Bananas are dying off :sob
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/364179_bananaonline23.html

I'm thinking maybe we should start a thread which keeps all of these links together as we witness ANOTHER food source endangered, whether it be by fungus, locusts, drought, floods, earthquakes, typhoons, hurricanes, Bees disappearing, etc.:faint Agree?

How can SO MANY things go wrong with the worlds food supply... all at once... Except we are near the end and IT IS WRITTEN!

Ohh, my daughter found TWO locusts (big ones too!:eek:) in her lentil soup! Eyes and all!:puke As well as a rock!

shayera
June 1st, 2008, 10:45 AM
Buy 100 percent fruit juice instead of fruit-flavored drinks.
Choose fresh fruit instead of fruit juices. Even 100 percent fruit juice has a high concentration of sugar.
Choose fruit canned in its own juices instead of heavy syrup.
Cut back on soda.

http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/high-fructose-corn-syrup/AN01588

Cut back on soda????? :twitch

Never!

If need be, in the end times, I will go down with the ship with my luxury items of Diet Dr. Pepper and Diet Pepsi!

Glory
June 1st, 2008, 10:57 AM
Buy 100 percent fruit juice instead of fruit-flavored drinks.
Choose fresh fruit instead of fruit juices. Even 100 percent fruit juice has a high concentration of sugar.
Choose fruit canned in its own juices instead of heavy syrup.
Cut back on soda.



Cut back on soda????? :twitch

Never!

If need be, in the end times, I will go down with the ship with my luxury items of Diet Dr. Pepper and Diet Pepsi!

:pound You sound like my husband! All he drinks is coffee and soda! :lol2