Anonymous ID: e705d6 May 27, 2019, noon No.6602412   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2413 >>2428 >>2441 >>2445

MidwestFloodAnon here, can confirm onsite, it is looking not so good for corn and soybeans. Farmers had built silos to store their own corn to buffer out price swings, a lot of those got flooded and destroyed = corn inventory down. Fields that are not flooded are too wet to work. What has been planted is not emerging fast enough in a lot of places. Food prices will be higher. Farm communities will be hit hard. A few farmers were well prepared and were ready to take advantage of a brief period of opportunity to work the fields, they will have good prices if weather improves. There are still major transportation disruptions on Missouri river, it looks like a whitewater in Kansas, entire trees still floating by and levees washed out/topped for many miles.

o7

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Anonymous ID: e705d6 May 27, 2019, 12:27 p.m. No.6602553   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>6602524 I've read a book about ag history and a main finding was that for 150 years,

farmers have had to keep getting larger in acres and use more and more expensive machinery to keep making the same return as their ancestors. what do you think of the research showing organic methods and alternative crops are viable economically at scale comparable to the corn/soy farming industrial complex?