Latham Hi-Tech Seeds

(641) 692-3258

  • Home
  • Products
    • Corn
    • Soybeans
    • Alfalfa
    • Corn Silage
    • Seed Guide
  • Performance
  • Find a Rep
  • Media
    • Blog
    • News
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
    • TECHTalk
  • About Us
    • Company History
    • Our Mission
    • Careers
    • Become a Rep
    • Sowing Seeds of Hope
  • Contact Us
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Items Topping a Fashionable Farm Girl’s Wish List

    CanonT3i1
    Celeste Settrini

    Guest Blog post by Celeste Settrini of Couture Cowgirl –n- Company

    For the last few years, I’ve posted my favorite things for the holidays on Facebook.  It’s been a hit because, as December approaches, I start getting notes from my favorite farm girl’s saying, “Celeste, are you going to post your favorite things again this year?”  Now I feel that if I don’t come up with at least a few things I’ll be letting my friend’s down – so let’s go!

    Joe Malone Fragrances – Yep, they are a bit pricey but they’re oh so lovely!  The array of citrus, spices and floral create an amazing mixture of really different scents in candles, colognes and lotions.  Admit it, who doesn’t love smelling nice?

    Fun, Hip, Cool, Trendy Rain Boots – All of us farm girls wear rubber boots from time to time.  Why look manly when there is a whole slew of feminine rubber boots available?  Show your own unique style with stars or stripes or swirls of fun color!  You will be the hit of the barn!

    Anything JCREW – I simply love the effortless look of JCrew – all of it! Ballerina flats, sweaters, t-shirts, capris, scarves, fun jewelry, coats and jammies… the list keeps going.  The one thing I love about this website is that it puts outfits together for a simple personal creation.  Just try it… I think you’ll love what it offers!

    Canon Rebel Camera – I’m the proud owner of a “big girl” camera, one that’s a bit above the little “Sure Shot” that I hauled around for years!  Photographers looking for an easy-to-use camera that will help them create their next masterpiece need look no further than the Canon EOS Rebel T3i.   I cannot say enough about mine – great photos and a great way to share your story on social media, too!

    Dean & Delucca Gourmet Food – From meats to shellfish to wines to gourmet deserts this site offers all sorts of wonderful high end treats. I personally love the fun cookies and cupcakes and cakes especially for the holidays. What a fun surprise to send one of these fancy yummies to a special friend or family member.

    Motivational and Inspirational Books – I love books and am still a fan of a REAL book, not on an electronic reader, but a real book that I can pickup and touch and turn the pages.  I enjoy motivational books and this one is a must read, Be the Miracle – 50 lessons for making the impossible possible by Regina Brett.  This book will motivate, inspire and make you just feel oh so good!  I love that it’s bound in my favorite “Tiffany blue color.”  Any book is a special gift, but you can make it ever more special by signing a personal note inside to a friend or loved one.

    Thanks for indulging me by letting me share a few of my most favorite things!  Above all, my most favorite holiday gift is the time spent on my family farm with loved ones.

    Team Latham

    December 6, 2012
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Tell your ag story or someone else will – and you may not like it!

    Larrymeeting
    Larry Sailer

    It’s hard to believe that 12 years have passed since I began telling others the story of pork production and crop farming.  I believe I even started talking to non-farming groups before the phrase agvocating was coined!  The reason I started making time to deliver free speeches across the state (and sometimes even out of state) is because it’s so important for us to share with others.

    Farmers have done a great job or taking care of our animals and crops, including soil and natural resources.  However, most farmers are also very modest and don’t go around telling others – especially non-farmers – all that we do or how we do it.  Other groups, like PETA and HSUS, have unfortunately filled the communication void for us by painting a picture based on misinformation and emotion.  By doing so, they’ve pushed their agendas and have gained widespread national media attention.

    Farmers are starting to make the headlines, too.  We’re gaining coverage in farm publications like Farm Talk, Agri-View and occasionally mainstream papers like The Des Moines Register.  It’s a start…

    Click Here to visit their Facebook Page

    We’re having more impact reaching consumers, one group at a time through speaker’s bureaus like Operation Main Street (OMS).  Formed in 2004 by the National Pork Board with 15 trained volunteer speakers, Operation Main Street grew to 250 trained speakers in 2005.  This group of speakers was formed because there was a need for farmers to not only talk with, but to listen to, our customers otherwise known as consumers.  With OMSspeakers trained and at the ready, pork producers have a force to spread the truth about how and why we have made changes to our farms.  The OMS program even started to address college classes and groups of dietitians and county commissioners.

    Shortly after the New Year 2012, a milestone 5,000th speech was delivered through Operation Main Street by Arcola, Ill., pork producer Pat Titus to the Ambucs Club.

    “The OMS program has allowed me to have a dialogue with consumers who rarely have any contact with agriculture,” said Titus, in an article posted Feb. 6 by Wallaces Farmer.  “It’s really up to us to tell our story and connect with consumers so they know that we are committed to producing good, safe food, and to caring for our animals and the environment.”

    I couldn’t have said it better!  I’ve made close to 50 presentations to civic groups like Rotary, Kiwanis, Lions, Optimists, Civitians and groups I had never heard of before they called me.  Last week I talked to a great group of Optimists from Marshalltown, Iowa.  These groups appreciate having a “real farmer” come and talk with them about what that farmer does.  I know why I’ve made certain changes to my operation, so I just explain “the why and how.”  The groups to which I have spoken have been very receptive to my presentations.

    With more consumers curious about where food comes from, there is a greater need for more farmers to share their stories.  If you’re a fellow farmer, I encourage you to take the leap and advocate!  If you’re a consumer, I encourage you to check out fact-based information and learn more about what farmers do through programs like Operation Main Street.

    Larry Sailer, Musings of a Pig Farmer

    December 4, 2012
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Financial Statements Are Top of Mind for These Farm Women

    Ruth Hambleton1

    This week I’ve had the pleasure of meeting many inspiring agricultural leaders while attending the Executive Women in Agriculture (#EWA) conference in Chicago.  Although the event is held in a hotel located on the Windy City’s famous Miracle Mile, attendees are more concerned with financial statements than they are with fashion statements.

    Ruth Hambleton

    Balance sheets, tax plans, succession plans and the like are topics near and dear to the heart of Ruth Fleck Hambleton.  Yesterday I had the pleasure meeting with Ruth and learning more about her mission “to empower farm women to be better business partners through networks and by managing and organizing critical information.”

    During her 30-year career with Extension, Ruth saw all the needs farm women have for information and education.  Overcoming the challenges of being married to a farmer or being a woman leader in a male-dominated business helped shaped Annie’s Project, which is named in honor of Ruth’s mother.  (Click here to read Annie’s Story.)  Because this program was developed by a woman for women, it fills a need that was previously unmet.

    “It’s been so exciting to see Annie’s Project grow,” says Ruth. “Often times we apply for grants, do the work, file a report and then the project ends.  With Annie’s Project, however, we’ve been able to grow and enhance the program each year since 2003.”

    Relevant content and sound programming – combined with the trend that more women are engaging in agriculture – are likely contributing to the increased demand for curriculum offered through Annie’s Project.  Today Annie’s Project is offered in nearly every state.  Through educational sessions, farm women learn problem-solving, record-keeping, and decision-making skills.  They focus on topics such as balance sheets, income statements and financial ratios.

    While programming and curriculum is made largely available through Extension, Annie’s Project is a collaborative effort with local and area professionals since those are the experts with whom farm women will be doing business.  Collaborative efforts, like one with Farm Credit Services of America, are key for the project’s continued success.

    Through Annie’s Project, farm women are able to find answers, build confidence and form friendships.  It’s only fitting that the recipe Ruth shares with us today is aptly named, “Best Friend’s Casserole.”  Ruth got this recipe from her best friend of 30 years.  May this hearty casserole bring you warmth on a cold, winter’s day!

    BEST FRIEND’S CASSEROLE

    Ingredients:

    • 1 pound ground beef, browned and cooked
    • 1 medium onion, sliced
    • 1 can (16 ounces) stewed tomatoes
    • 2 large potatoes, washed and sliced
    • 2 c. (16 ounces) green beans (not cooked)

    Season to taste:

    • 3/4 tsp. salt
    • 1/4 tsp. oregano leaves
    • 1/8 tsp. ground pepper

    In a 9×13 pan, layer all ingredients.  Bake at 375° for approximate 45 minutes. Yield: 6 servings. 

    COOK’S TIP:  You can put a little twist on this casserole by adding 1½ c. grated cheddar cheese.  You might even want to try adding 3 cups cooked macaroni and 1/4 c. water.  You could also substitute French fried onions for fresh onions.

    This hearty casserole is very versatile.  You can take it to the field during harvest or planting seasons.  It’s also a great dish for community potlucks.

    Team Latham

    November 30, 2012
    Agriculture, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    The Hygiene Hypothesis—Farm Germs Might Be the Best Medicine

    Dog and kid corbisimages1

    Guest Blog by Dan Gogerty

    New research suggests that farm kids have fewer allergies than city kids do—and the hygiene hypothesis might demonstrate why.  According to some experts, we’re too clean nowadays. Our immune systems protect us by learning how to fight bacteria and other invaders. We need to “get down and dirty.”

    I’m a bit skeptical of this theory, but because of my upbringing, I want to believe it. Raised on a Midwest farm a long time ago—in a galaxy far, far away—my brothers and I were the perfect study group for the “unhygienic theory.”

    About the time JFK was asking the country to ask not, we were exposing ourselves to just about any germ that had ever heard of central Iowa.  During summer—before we were old enough to do much farm work—mom would open the screen door after breakfast, letting us out and a few flies in. Dad and his brother ran the traditional corn, soybeans, pigs, and cattle farm, but in reality, it was a 400-acre magic kingdom for my brothers, cousins, and me.

    photo from corbisimages.com

    The creeks, barns, pastures, and groves provided the types of playgrounds no modern designer could match. And even though we never thought of it, these places must have been crawling with enough germs to make a bacteriologist drool.

    During a typical day, we might crawl through poison ivy, build dams in murky stream water, and run through clouds of ragweed pollen. Our kid quests would take us under rusty barbed wire fences, through tick infested groves, and across pastures laden with fresh cow pies hidden in the grass.  By lunchtime, one of the gang had been stung by a bee, stabbed by a fish hook, or hit in the back with a mud pie.

    We didn’t call it locavore food back then, but the hearty noon meal gave us a few minutes to pick cockleburs out of our socks and flick a few garden peas at a brother when the folks weren’t looking. For their part, Mom and Dad would take a head count, tell us to be safe, and then release us hounds again after the 12:30 cartoon show was over.

    We’d had the usual school vaccinations, and in those days, the folks might “cleanse us” with deworming medicine or take us in for a tetanus booster shot if we stepped on something nasty in the creek. By the time we returned to the house each summer day, Mom could shake the dust off our overalls, but we had spent the hours as host organisms in a rural petri dish, so I imagine a half billion or so germs stayed attached.

    After supper, we slid out into the yard where we played ball or set up miniature farms in the dirt.  The barn cats scratched around with us, and my brothers occasionally shared their tootsie roll pops with our dog, Smoky. By the time the mosquitoes let up and the lightning bugs started flashing low along the grass, we knew it was time to go in.

    I don’t know if we farm kids ended up with fewer allergies and illness, but if having fun is a way to immunize yourself from disease, then we had a heavy dose of some powerful medicine.

    Team Latham

    November 28, 2012
    Agriculture, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Why Use the Hammer if the Carrot Works?

    Recently, I have read many editorials that are very critical of farmers’ nutrient management practices.  One particular letter in The Des Moines Register likened farmers to the proverbial fox watching the hen house.  In this case, the author was referring to the environment (land) as a defenseless chicken being preyed upon by the farmer (fox).  I have always thought of myself more as the farmer who protects his chickens from the fox, and that’s why conservation has always been one of my top priorities.

    Farmers and ranchers are on the front lines, living and working with the soil every day.  As a result, we’ve changed our farming practices as new information and new technologies have become available.  I’ve seen several changes occur over the last 60 years.  In the 1950s and 60s, the soil was plowed black.  Today, however, we can no-till without disturbing the soil thanks to improvements in equipment and weed control systems.  These vast improvements have reduced soil loss, so we no longer have dust bowls or black snow in the ditches like when we plowed.

    Iowa’s “carrot on a stick approach” is working.  However, the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has accused the Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR) of being too soft on farmers and has threatened to take over enforcement here in Iowa.   Before we rush judgment, let’s take a look at past successes and give the new Nutrient Reduction Strategy time to work.  More than 16,000 new practices have been implemented on more than 220,000 acres by Iowa farmers since 2007.

    “Iowa farmers continue to aggressively implement new conservation practices,” said Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Bill Northey in an article posted Nov. 20 by farms.com about Iowa’s Nutrient Reduction Strategy.  “The driving force of this focused effort is best-management practices.  This also looks at new and emerging technologies… This is not about rules and regulations. This is about giving farmers tools.”

    Iowa’s farmers have made big improvements – without the threats of fines – and more improvements are sure to come as a result of the collaborative approach that’s being taken to further reduce nutrient losses.  To develop the Iowa Nutrient Reduction Strategy, input was gathered from13 point and non-point source groups plus the DNR, IDALS and ISU researchers.  Many points of view were studied, yet some folks are accusing the Iowa Farm Bureau of having too much influence.  It only makes sense for the Farm Bureau, “the voice of agriculture,” to be involved as we’re the experts and the ones charged with helping contain the Dead Zone in the Gulf of Mexico.

    This Dead Zone is mostly blamed on Midwest farmers.  What isn’t being talked about, however, is the fact the Dead Zone was around before there were Midwest farmers!  As long as the Mississippi has been a river, it has dumped sediment into the Gulf.  Changes to our watershed have compounded the situation; the Mississippi has changed from a sprinkle can to a fire hose.  Levies and flood control are in place.  Swamps and wetlands no longer filter out sediments before they’re carried downstream.  The place where the Mississippi dumps into the Gulf has also changed over time.

    Farmers’ involvement in the Iowa Nutrient Reduction Strategy is not enough; how the watershed and rivers are managed needs to be addressed.  You can bet that I’ll be sharing this thought with lawmakers and regulators!  I encourage you to do the same.  Everyone can share their thoughts on this plan and should.  You can review the strategy and provide feedback between now and January 4,2013, at www.nutrientstrategy.iastate.edu.

     

    Larry Sailer, Musings of a Pig Farmer

    November 27, 2012
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Iowan Talks “Pork” in the Big Apple

    BarbDeterman1
    Barb Determan

    Guest Blog by Barb Determan

    What is a small town Iowa farmwoman doing in New York City on a panel of experts about antibiotics with a moderator from CNN? That’s exactly what I was wondering Thursday, November 15!

    A few weeks ago I was asked to represent the pork industry in the New York City Food Dialogues sponsored by the US Farmers and Ranchers Alliance. The panel I was on centered around antibiotics in livestock, specifically pigs.  Two additional panels discussing GMOs and Marketing and the Media were also a part of the day. Here are my major take-aways from the experience.

    First, our consumers are woefully uneducated about food production. Now I have been aware of this for some time, but participating in the panel brought this fact home! Highly educated people have some real misconceptions and misunderstandings about where their food comes from. And to complicate matters, they don’t know where to find good information.

    Second, they believe antibiotics are fed to animals (especially pigs in my panel’s case) from birth to harvest. They think the antibiotics are added for no reason and at high levels. They don’t realize the use of antibiotics come with a veterinarian’s advice and are fed on a very limited and defined basis. Explaining our practices for meat production is a tedious process, but we must do it so we don’t have those assumptions circulating. This follows he age old public relations advice of you must tell your story, because if you don’t someone else will and you won’t like that version!

    Third, livestock production has changed and this group does not understand that better health, genetics, and environmental practices are the result of these changes. Modern buildings with controlled temperatures and nutrition designed for each day of the pig’s life help us provide the world’s safest food supply at a reasonable price. Efficient production does not mean bad production.

    Fourth, we have to be careful not to use what I call “ag-ese”, the words that only those of us in the agriculture production business use. Our ag slang only further complicates everyone’s understanding of what we do every day. We need to stop and think what those words mean and how we need to explain to a non-agriculture population.

    Fifth, some reporters really do want to learn more about our food production system and are not judgmental about that learning process. Our moderator, Ali Velshi, CNN’s Chief Business Correspondent, did an excellent job making sure all participants were involved answering questions. He asked some tough but fair questions as well as handled audience, Twitter and email questions. His genuine curiosity made it easy to explain farming practices, both crop and livestock. My favorite line from him throughout the day was, “Seedless watermelons are GMOs? I’m in! What’s the problem?”

    We as agricultural producers are proud of feeding our world but that doesn’t go far when the world doesn’t understand how we produce that food. We must participate in conversations with consumers at every opportunity. I am proud of the U.S. Farmers and Ranchers Alliance for starting these dialogues with both the pro and con sides represented. It’s the only way we can explain our story to others and not just ourselves.

    Useful Links

    • Click here for the Food Dialogues Website
    • Click here to read tweets from the Food Dialogues: New York


    Media, Marketing and Healthy Choices

    [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9C7PAsU5r_I&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

    Antibiotics and Your Food

    [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NYQh-iCs9oQ&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

    Biotechnology (GMOs) and Your Food

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vdle5PvTBrc&feature=player_embedded

    Team Latham

    November 26, 2012
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Thanksgiving and the Real Black Friday

    Turkeypaper

    Guest blog post by Dan Gogerty, communications editor for CAST

    The Farm Bureau posted their annual report regarding the cost of the typical Thanksgiving Day meal, and at approximately $5 per person, it seems a bargain. If you compare the menu items to what you’d get for $5 at most fast food places, you’d about have to say, “I’m lovin’ it.”

    I looked up the prices for 1961. I was eleven years old then, sitting at a long, crowded table in Granny Faye’s house. She wasn’t much for hosting events, but even after my grandpa died, she kept up the Thanksgiving tradition. Apparently back then she could buy turkey at 35 cents a pound, potatoes at 8 cents a pound, and two cans of pumpkin for 29 cents.

    Granny’s two sons both farmed within a half mile of the home place. Farms were closer together then, and these were filled with kids—fourteen between the two families. Most of us were boys growing up under the influence of Moe, Larry, and Curly, but we managed to sit quietly during the prayer, and we appreciated the accordion-paper turkeys and pumpkins that made up the table décor. No one wrote texts or tweets as we shaped our mashed potatoes into lake beds for the gravy. No noon football games on the black and white TV, but cousin Terry might have a beat up pigskin on his lap. We were itching to get outside to play ball—what kid really likes cranberry sauce anyway? A promise of pumpkin pie is the only thing that kept us from bolting.

    I have little recall of the meal chatter, but Granny might inform us that turkeys were not always the guest of honor at Thanksgiving. “Back then,” she’d say, “we used to butcher and dress barnyard chickens for the feast. Not much fun steaming and plucking feathers on a chilly morning.” We kids had been present at poultry harvest times, so a cousin might start describing the chicken-with-its-head-cut-off ritual until he was shushed. Grossing each other out was a national pastime for us boys at that age, but the Thanksgiving table was not prime territory for it.

    As the autumn sun shone through the large south windows, Dad might point out, “Even though today is perfect for football, we’ve seen Thanksgivings when the ground was covered with snow. When I was about your age, the 1940 Armistice Day blizzard surprised us all. Farmers were caught out in the cornfields, hunters were nearly frozen to death in duck blinds, and chickens were stuck solid to their roosts. No weather forecasts to warn us back then.”

    Even at that age, I’d seen a Thanksgiving or two when the creek banks were lined with thin ice, and the morning sun lit up frost that coated woven wire fences and corn stalks left in the field after the harvest. But today had the brilliant light of a slanting autumn sun, and as soon as we hit the yard, it was all pass, run, argue, punt, fumble, and argue some more as we conveniently ignored the fact that someone was cleaning up after the big event. Back then, adults were like benevolent extraterrestrials who usually stayed in their own universe—until chore time.

    “The cow needs milkin’,” some galactic overlord would announce. “And the steers in the lot across the road need five buckets of grain and eight bales of hay.” No holiday shopping excuses to save us. The advertizing Madmen of the 60s hadn’t come up with Black Friday Frenzy, which is now morphing into Thanksgiving Day Dilemma. We were bright enough kids, but the word “shopping” was not in our vocabulary, and  merchants back then didn’t even think of hoisting Christmas on us until Thanksgiving was over.

    The day was for celebrating family, and the harvest, and kids playing outside in the sunshine or the snow. And the evening was for eating the meal that I liked best—the leftovers. Dark turkey meat, warmed-up dressing with gravy on it, Mom’s homemade bread, a slice of pumpkin pie—living was easy. Until the morning after Thanksgiving.

    We’re trudging up the lane toward the yellow school bus that stops in a cloud of gravel dust and dread. In a tryptophan stupor and laden with books and gym clothes, I climb aboard the not-so-magic bus and plop down in a cold seat next to a lanky high school kid with a comb in his pocket and a sneer on his face. Now that’s what I call the real Black Friday.

    by dan gogerty (turkey pic from blogher.com; school bus pic from schoolbusdriver.org)

    Team Latham

    November 21, 2012
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Time to Count Our Blessings

    ThanksgivingTime21

    “Musings of a Pig Farmer”
    By Larry Sailer

    Today I’d like to share some of the things for which I’m thankful.  There’s no way that I can cover everything, and that alone speaks volumes!

    First of all, I’m thankful to live in a democracy where we’re afforded the freedom of speech.  I’m thankful for TheFieldPosition.com for giving me a platform to voice my concerns, as well to share why and how I farm with those who are interested enough to read my weekly “Musings of a Pig Farmer” blog.  I’m also thankful for you since you’re reading my post!  ?

    I’m thankful for the ability to express my thoughts – this alone would have been unimaginable 10 years ago.  I can still remember my first interview as the State of Iowa Feeder Pig Chairman.  Farm broadcaster Von Ketelsen interviewed me during our last feeder pig show, which we were forced to shut down to help eradicate pseudorabies.  I answered many of Von’s questions with “yes” or “no.”  Such one-word answers should have been the end of my interviews.  Fortunately, Von called me again last week for another interview.  He must still think I have something worth sharing, and I’m thankful for second chances.

    In addition to learning how to better communicate my message, over the years I’ve become a better listener.  Helping farmers and ranchers be understood by the folks, who are far removed from the farm, keeps me motivated.  I’m thankful for technologies like the Internet, iPads, computers and Smartphones that allow me to make friends across the globe.  Thank you, my social media network!  I feel blessed to talk with and learn from people all over the world – from my home office.

    Advocating is just one of the challenges facing us in agriculture.  Every year presents new hurdles, whether they’re regulatory or weather-related.  This past year has been no different.  Lack of rainfall caused the 2012 crop conditions to decline week after week.  Yet, we raised a crop!  I am very thankful to have had the yields I did with the very short amount of rain that fell.

    Last but certainly not least, I am thankful for my close family.  We’ve made it through another year with only minor bumps in the road.  Some of those bumps seemed big at the time, but looking back, you all handled things pretty smoothly.  A heartfelt “thank you” to my wife, Janice, for putting up with me for another year and for allowing me to spend time agvocating when I could be working on her “Honey Do List.”  (Janice, I promise to try harder next year!  Maybe I’ll even get that waterfall built in 2013.)  I also want to thank my kids and grandkids for helping me on the farm and for giving me so much pleasure as I follow their lives.  Thirty-five years ago, I never thought that would never happen!  I am truly blessed by all of you.

    Thanksgiving gives us time to step back and reflect.  I hope you’ll take the time this week to say a prayer and count your blessings, too!

    Larry Sailer, Musings of a Pig Farmer

    November 20, 2012
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Threats of New Regulations on the Horizon

    No till1
    This grass filter strip, planted between my corn field and a creek, traps and filters sediments and nutrients.  It prevents potential pollutants from entering the surface water.

    Now that the 2012 election is behind us and government officials are returning to work, new regulations are threatening agriculture.  I’m hearing the Farm Bill will be tied to something, perhaps conservation.  It’s as though farmers will destroy the world if we’re not threatened with something severe enough to make sure that we comply!

    Actually, I find it ironic that regulators believe the proverbial stick will be more effective than the carrot when most farmers take great pride in being stewards of the land.  This whole idea of tying any conservation practice to some type of support is not a threat to me – or the great majority of farmers and ranchers.  Conservation is one of our top priorities anyway.  If we don’t take care of our land and soil, it’s not going to produce for very long.

    Planted in 1980, this filter strip also serves as a wildlife refuge.  It creates food and cover for small birds and animals.

    I will admit that “back in the day” I did enjoy plowing the soil in the fall.  Plowing was a task where you could see what was getting done.  Turning the soil black and covering up corn stalks in preparation for next year’s crop was fun.  It was even fun 20 years ago, and the tractors we used then weren’t nearly as warm as those we use today.

    As much as I enjoyed farming, I also realized it was a practice that I needed to reconsider.  That’s why I first tried no-till farming in the 1970s.  At that time, the types of equipment and weed control options available didn’t favor no-till farming.  We also didn’t s today’s higher-yielding seed technology, so I kept different types of minimum tillage practices.

    In no-till farming, crop residue is left on the field.  Crop residue helps prevent erosion and can help conserve soil moisture.

    I switched to no till about 5 years ago, but this fall I had to do some deep tillage because of effects from the drought and the fact that I use a lot of natural manure.  But even with this tillage pass, the ground is covered by a thick layer of organic matter and is protected from wind and rain.

    Bottom line: It doesn’t take a government threat to make farmers do what is right.  Doing what’s right just comes naturally to farmers!

    Larry Sailer, Musings of a Pig Farmer

    November 13, 2012
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
  • Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

    Cast Your Vote for Agriculture

    ChineseLarry
    Larry Sailer with the crew in his home office

    Musings of a Pig Farmer
    by Larry Sailer

    It’s election day!  Hopefully, you’ve made a list of the issues are most important to you and have studied how each candidate stand on agriculture. The rural vote is extremely important given such a close election.  The Farm Bill, ethanol and estate taxes are just a few of the hot-button issues with farmers.

    Because I’m truly concerned about how the outcome of this election could affect my livelihood, I’ve spent quite a bit of time this fall answering questions from members of the media.  Reuters talked to me by phone. Fox News came to my farm during harvest.  I also spent parts of three day during fall harvest with a video crew from the NHK network from Japan, which I understand is comparable to our public TV.

    It amazed me how these media found an old hog farmer in North Central Iowa, so I asked.  A producer from New York said he listened to an interview I did with National Public Radio.  Fox Network said my name kept popping up during Google searches.  Oh, the power of the Internet!

    NHK collected hours of video for a documentary about our political process.  It seemed to me that these Japanese were more interested in the politics shaping our future than many of my fellow Americans!  They asked me about my concerns and why I believe there is a need for compromise.  Over the course of three days, I answered many of their questions.   They wanted to know how the Farm Bill affected my farming operation and how my crop insurance worked.

    House Ag Committee Chairwoman Annette Sweeney being interviewed by the Japanese TV crew

    The Japanese also wanted to know how I work with my elected officials, so I contacted Rep. Annette Sweeney.  Annette was very gracious and came to my farm, so she could be a part of this interview.  Annette’s farming experience, combined with her position as Iowa House Ag Committee Chair, made for some great discussion.

    As you can see in my video, we had a fun time.  This segment aired last Thursday on Japanese TV.  While I haven’t actually timed it, it appears they used about two minutes from the hours and hours of videotape.  So was it worth it? You bet!  It was a great experience talk with people from another part of the world, who had a totally different perspective than mine.  It also reminded me how fortunate American are to have the right to vote.  Remember, exercise your right to vote today!

    [youtube]http://youtu.be/L1OjHo2rF1o[/youtube]

    Larry Sailer, Musings of a Pig Farmer

    November 6, 2012
    Agriculture, General, Industry News
Previous Page
1 … 60 61 62 63 64 … 95
Next Page

Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds

131 180th Street | Alexander, IA 50420

(641) 692-3258

SIGNUP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER
  • Contact
  • Legal
  • Dealer Center
  • Seedware Login
  • Latham Gear

© 2025 Latham Hi‑Tech Seeds. All rights reserved. | Iowa Web Design by Webspec | Privacy Policy

Latham® Hi-Tech Seeds is a trademark of M.S. Technologies, L.L.C., 103 Avenue D, West Point, IA 52656.