Search Site   
Current News Stories
Ohio men delve into history of farm implements in Hamilton
Ice cream, sales and farming drive Tyler McCann
City leaders meet to share priorities for Illinois River
Middle Tennessee farm first to grow pineapples in state
MIFarmLink connects Michigan farmland owners with potential buyers
Heading into COP30 summit, US set to showcase sustainable advances
Size of United States corn and soybean crops debated
Michigan farm tractor accidents reminders that safety is important
Farmers’ Almanac to cease publication with 2026 issue
Coalition remains on front lines in fight against soybean cyst nematode
September milk production up; government shutdown ends
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
Federal ag officials tour drought-stricken North Dakota
 
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) – Federal agriculture officials recently continued their tour of drought-stricken North Dakota to hear directly from farmers and ranchers about how one of the driest years in recent history is affecting their livelihood.
U.S. Sen. John Hoeven invited Farm Service Agency Administrator Zach Ducheneaux and Risk Management Agency Acting Administrator Richard Flournoy to visit the state. About two-thirds of the state is under extreme or exceptional drought conditions – the top two categories, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.
The two-day tour took the group to a federal Agricultural Research Service grazing unit in Mandan with a second stop in Minot. The tour also stopped in Carrington and Argusville.
Lt. Gov. Brent Sanford, who joined the tour group, said a shortage of hay is among the biggest concerns for producers, the Bismarck Tribune reported. “It’s not going to be a good year anywhere,” he said. “We’re asking for flexibility. If there’s a total loss, can you take what’s there and hay it.”
Producers want to graze some failed crops but feel stifled by some of the rules in place, said Sterling farmer Lucas Lang, who serves on the North Dakota Farm Bureau board. “We’ve got to get cows out on these crops that are shot, and we’ve got to do it without the grazing or haying (insurance) penalty,” he said.
A plan to allow emergency haying on land enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program before Aug. 1 is in the works, Hoeven said. Acreage in the program is usually left idle to prevent erosion and provide wildlife habitat.
Ducheneaux ranches on the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation in South Dakota. He said any new programs or adjustments need to be made with a long-term outlook in mind.

7/20/2021