***OKIES in the BYC III ***

Why is feed going to go up even higher?




Grain prices set records as U.S. drought, food worries spread Fri Jul 20, 2012 10:28am IST

1 of 3 By Karl Plume and Deborah Zabarenko

CHICAGO/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Grain prices pushed to record highs on Thursday as scattered rains in U.S. Midwest did little to douse fears that the worst drought in half a century will not end soon or relieve worries around the world about higher food prices.

Government forecasters did not rule out that the drought in the U.S. heartland could last past October, continuing what has been the hottest half-year on record.

"There's a greater chance that there is no relief possible or in sight" for the U.S. Midwest, Dan Collins of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Climate Prediction Center said on Thursday.

More than half the United States was experiencing moderate drought or worse this week,according to the latest U.S. Drought Monitor report issued on Thursday.

More than 70 percent of the Midwest Corn Belt was in some stage of drought in the week ended July 17, up from 63 percent a week earlier. It adds up to the worst drought conditions in the United States since at least 1956, climate experts said.

"We don't have a reason for saying it's going to improve," Kelly Helm Smith of the National Drought Mitigation Center told a briefing on Thursday, adding that warmer conditions in the coming months might well exceed current levels.

CROPS PLOWED UNDER

That is bad news for farmers and consumers, with corn, soybeans and wheat in the United States -- the largest world exporter of those key crops -- baking in fields, losing yield potential daily or being plowed under for insurance claims.

Corn for September delivery at the Chicago Board of Trade set a record high of $8.16-3/4 a bushel, while soybeans for August delivery also set a record high of $17.49. Wheat for September rose 4 percent at $9.35 and set a four-year high.

The knock-on effect of such soaring prices was already being felt around the world, where drought has also hit other grain exporters who are starting to cancel previous sales and leave hungry countries in the Middle East and elsewhere scrambling.

"A lot of buyers waited in the hope that rain in the U.S. and east Europe would cool prices," one grain exporter said. "But this is not happening and the U.S. drought is not over."

The two big questions in the U.S. Corn Belt --how low the harvest and how high the prices --were still unanswered. But conditions were worsening as corn was failing to pollinate and soybeans, planted later,face their key growth stage in stress.

Iowa and Illinois, which together produce about a third of all U.S. corn and soybeans, continue to bake.

"The soil moisture in Iowa is pretty much gone so there's not much to keep crops going. Even if temperatures went down 5 degrees and rainfall increased 50 percent for the rest of this month, it might slow the rate of decline but it's not going to reverse the decline in crop conditions and the ultimate yield," said Harry Hillaker, Iowa state climatologist. "There's not much left of the Corn Belt that's in good shape."

In Williamsport, Ohio, Scott Metzger, 37, said it rained for about 45 minutes on his farm on Thursday and according to his rain gauge he got 1-3/10 inch of rain. But since May 13, he said, the farm has only had 2.1 inches of rain.

"This has been my toughest year of farming so far," he said, saying his corn crop was "finished" because it never pollinated.

WARMEST HALF-YEAR IN HISTORY

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said that the January-June period was the hottest half-year on record in the United States, with 29 states seriously affected.

Around the world, last month was the fourth-warmest June, NOAA experts said. Temperatures on land were the warmest ever recorded, while ocean temperatures were the 10th warmest. The Northern Hemisphere had its second-warmest June on record.

A La Nina pattern of cool water in the equatorial Pacific, which normally brings colder, wetter conditions to parts of the continental United States, ended earlier this year, and there is a good chance that an El Nino pattern could develop before year's end and prolong drought in the central United States, Collins of NOAA's Climate Prediction Center said on Thursday.

U.S. grain farmers, buoyed in recent years by soaring prices for grain and farmland, are in better shape to weather the storm than in 1988, the year of the last major drought.

But worst hit are likely to be dairy, pork, poultry and beef farmers, who are seeing their feed costs go through the roof and already taking action to reduce their herd sizes. Consumers may not see immediate food inflation, but it is coming.

(Additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee and Kim Palmer in Cleveland. Writing by Peter Bohan; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
 
Well, the neighbors are at it again. Only now they decided they can complain about our chickens. They said our bantam rooster crows too much ... it only crows when they start messing around in the driveway and against the fence next to the chicken house. We can't even hear our rooster crow in our house (and they never go outside except to do yard work) but it certainly doesn't make as much noise as their constant (every other day) mowing and weed eating. Besides as long as they aren't crowing between midnight and day light, the city won't do anything. We've already talked to our city code enforcement who gave us the thumbs up for our birds so the neighbors can just whine all they want. It's just a big pain in the rear end to deal with the constant harassment from them. They also said their coop smells horrible, which is doesn't. Sure it smells like chickens and in the 108 degree temps, what do they expect exactly? We clean it once a week and put down fresh straw every day. It's better than their gas exhaust from the generator they've been running next to the coop and the smells of acetone and ammonia coming from their yard that are strong enough to make us all sick to our stomachs. I told them the smell was just going to get worse because I was moving my compost pile to the driveway beside their house and they started screaming that I couldn't do that. Funny, but they keep telling me I can't tell them what to do on their side of the driveway so why do they think they can tell me what to do on my side of the driveway ... that they insist isn't a driveway ... and they want to grow grass on ... but that they now have a car parked on so we can't even get into our driveway ...
barnie.gif
. I heard once that you can't put sense into a fools brain and now I guess I'm finding out the truth of it.

I would give just about anything to have a farm and move out in the country right now!!!
 
Well, the neighbors are at it again. Only now they decided they can complain about our chickens. They said our bantam rooster crows too much ... it only crows when they start messing around in the driveway and against the fence next to the chicken house. We can't even hear our rooster crow in our house (and they never go outside except to do yard work) but it certainly doesn't make as much noise as their constant (every other day) mowing and weed eating. Besides as long as they aren't crowing between midnight and day light, the city won't do anything. We've already talked to our city code enforcement who gave us the thumbs up for our birds so the neighbors can just whine all they want. It's just a big pain in the rear end to deal with the constant harassment from them. They also said their coop smells horrible, which is doesn't. Sure it smells like chickens and in the 108 degree temps, what do they expect exactly? We clean it once a week and put down fresh straw every day. It's better than their gas exhaust from the generator they've been running next to the coop and the smells of acetone and ammonia coming from their yard that are strong enough to make us all sick to our stomachs. I told them the smell was just going to get worse because I was moving my compost pile to the driveway beside their house and they started screaming that I couldn't do that. Funny, but they keep telling me I can't tell them what to do on their side of the driveway so why do they think they can tell me what to do on my side of the driveway ... that they insist isn't a driveway ... and they want to grow grass on ... but that they now have a car parked on so we can't even get into our driveway ...
barnie.gif
. I heard once that you can't put sense into a fools brain and now I guess I'm finding out the truth of it.

I would give just about anything to have a farm and move out in the country right now!!!
LOL. I can relate too your frustration. Every house I ever moved into in town I had neighbors as your describing. I think the best move I ever done was into a ritzy neighbor hood. That was all doctors and lawyers. I had a Jag military officer on one side and a Heart Surgeon on the other side. Here comes the Sawyers family and my 3 Coondogs to wreck there neighbor hood.
big_smile.png
I would catch a coon and let my dogs bark at it in the backyard. hoist it in the tree and go into town and buy a 12 pack of cold ones, and leave the dogs out to tree for 30 min. while I was gone. The house had a 20x40 inground pool and the neighbors would look over the fence and here we are in the pool with 3 coondogs and my wifes Pitbull Terrier all treading water, Yea they called us the Clampetts I heard.. We sold that house after we got our house out on the farm here built. they all gathered at their front doors grinning ear to ear when we were loading up the U-Haul. Now I live out here on our farm on 35 acres, all creek bottom and the closest neighbor is a half mile.. IT'S NICE ! !
 
I checked on the bees today. Looks like they're doing well, in spite of the heat. The high winds earlier this week blew the hive cover off, exposing the inner cover, but the bees didn't seem to notice. I've got a few dog dishes filled with water close to the hive so the bees don't have to travel too far to get a drink. I don't know if the chickens would eat the bees if the bees went into the pens for a drink. I know the ducks will eat the bees, and wasps, and hornets, and anything else that's smaller than they are.
I've made muddy puddles for the chickens and will put out some frozen jugs of water later. Shade cloth is up in strategic locations. Now what we need is a nice steady rain.
Chickens! Start your rain dance!


Left foot Right food


Right foot Left foot


Flap your wings Wag your tail


Spin around (No. It's too hot.)

One, two.... Make it rain
yippiechickie.gif

Mitzi, I bought our 3 and 5 gallon ones at Rural King online, I got the 7 gallon one at auction. I can't recomend Rural King just yet. Our first order of 6 of the 5 gallon ones came boxed in boxes that looked like they had been in battle. I chalked it up to UPS shipping everything was fine so I didn't complain. This last shippment of 4-3 gallon and 2-5 gallon came in a huge wind machine fan box all boxed together, just dumped in there I am missing 3 of the caps and 2 seals. I have a call into their customer service line. I hope they make it right. We did have the UPS driver note we were not happy with the delivery. Depending on how they handle our complaint on if I will order from them again. I like the 3 gallon ones in our chick pens but can see that they get warm quicker. I don't care for the 7 gallon one but it is a Brower brand instead of Little Giant and it seal differently.



Finally got the east pasture mowed and could move my hoop house under the trees out there.
My EE and Jack's Ameraucanas are the consistent layers around here.They almost never take a day off. Just this past week, with the highest heat, have they cut back a little. Plus, Jack's rooster has 7 girls to cover and still gets great fertility. Jack's Welsummers seem to be doing the worst just like last year.

Jeez, I didn't know it was that bad. I'm thinking I need to hurry up and get the miniature horse and donkey placed while I can. Any takers??
 
Last edited:
If I remember right of the world's 10 deadliest snakes Australia has 9 of them. But with a snake if you stay in open areas and keep your eyes open they can usually be avoided. Insects are another matter though, love the song "Redback on the toilet seat" LOL
8.20am Monday am, I'm just going down to let out the crew. Wish me luck, I may not survive all the nasties you guys were kind enough to alert me too!!! If I can survive the trip, I will come back and prepare myself for the bushfire, flood or cyclone which is no doubt looming! Oh well, at least I have GREAT neighbours who love the sound of my rooster crowing!
 
I was gonna say I'd ask my friend Paul, but you already got a good answer. If you box a roo, I want video!
She did box a roo, sold it to Okracefan. He hasn't been agressive since the water in the face. I was in his pen last night, the roo kept behind the roost while I was in the pen.
 
She did box a roo, sold it to Okracefan. He hasn't been agressive since the water in the face. I was in his pen last night, the roo kept behind the roost while I was in the pen.
I am sooooo hooked on waterboarding to keep a roo in line, Oreo still is a perfect gentleman. I haven't even had to re-teach the lesson at all.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom