It is said that 'knowledge is the bedrock of existence'. As such, this blog serves to freely inform the general public about the importance of agriculture. The blog also serves to educate people on the different products that could be used on plants and animals to boost their growth and minimise loss and mortality.
Roughly one third of the U.S. road network – some 1.4 million miles – is unpaved, meaning those roads have a gravel or dirt surface, according to the Federal Highway Administration in 2012. The total may be rising slowly, says Stateline, which covers state government. Some 550 miles of paved road (the distance from Chicago to Kansas City) were converted to unpaved roads by counties and cities in 27 states in recent years.
Gravel and other unpaved roads require more routine maintenance, but they are much cheaper to install or maintain than a paved road. Some 50 miles of pavement were recycled into gravel roads in three Iowa counties in 2013 and 2014, says Stateline, which cites an estimate by Allamakee County in northeastern Iowa, that resurfacing a paved road costs $100,000 a mile while conversion to gravel costs $5,000 per mile.
This article was produced in collaboration with the Food & Environment Reporting Network, an independent, nonprofit news organization producing investigative reporting on food, agriculture, and environmental health.
Three months after it challenged China’s farm subsidies, the U.S. filed a new case at the World Trade Organization, charging that China has suppressed imports of U.S. corn, wheat, and rice. The “opaque and unpredictable management” of the tariff-rate quota (TRQ) system denied U.S. farmers $3.5 billion in sales in 2015, according to USDA.
TRQs allow a specified amount of merchandise to enter a country at reduced tariff rates during a window of time. The U.S. trade representative’s (USTR) office says China violated its WTO commitments by leaving unclear the application criteria for TRQ imports, by failing to provide notice of the tonnage eligible for TRQ treatment, by changing TRQ volumes, and by not explaining how it runs the program.
As part of entering WTO, China agreed to permit imports of 7.2 million tonnes of corn, 9.6 million tonnes of wheat, and 5.3 million tonnes of wheat at lower tariff rates. “Despite lower global prices that favor the importation of grains into China, the TRQs for each commodity persistently do not fill,” says the USTR.
WTO cases typically take 18 to 24 months to complete, including an appeal of a dispute panel decision. In the WTO case files in mid-September, the U.S. said China provided nearly $100 billion in excess support for corn, wheat, and rice in 2015 by setting domestic grain prices above world market prices. China has huge stockpiles of corn, wheat, and cotton.
BEANS, GRAINS LITTLE CHANGED OVERNIGHT; USDA LIKELY TO RAISE PLANTING ESTIMATES.
1. SOYBEANS, GRAINS LITTLE CHANGED AHEAD OF USDA OUTLOOK FORUM
Soybeans and grains were little changed overnight ahead of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s annual Outlook Forum.
Several data points including outlooks for acreage, food prices, and farm income will be presented at the forum that starts today in Crystal City, Virginia.
Speakers at the event include Representative Mike Conway, the ag committee chairman for the House of Representatives, USDA Chief Economist Robert Johansson, and Iowa Governor Terry Branstad. The event is often traded on and could move markets should the agency’s projections sway too far from estimates.
Soybean futures for March delivery fell 3¢ to $10.19¾ a bushel overnight on the Chicago Board of Trade. Soy meal futures declined 70¢ to $338.80 a short ton, and soy oil lost 0.09¢t to 32.91¢ a pound.
Corn futures fell ½¢ to $3.70½ a bushel in Chicago.
Wheat futures for March delivery lost a penny to $4.55 a bushel. Kansas City wheat declined ½¢ to $4.71 a bushel.
**
2. AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT LIKELY TO RAISE PROJECTIONS ON PLANTING
The U.S. Department of Agriculture is expected to raise its outlook for planted acreage from November forecasts for corn and beans at its annual outlook forum today while lowering its projection for wheat.
Producers are likely to plant 91 million acres with corn and 88 million acres with soybeans this year, according to a Reuters poll. Wheat area is pegged at 47 million acres, analysts said.
The corn and bean forecasts are up from November projections of 90 million acres and 86 million acres, respectively, according to USDA data. While the forecasts for acreage are likely to be higher, the figures are still down 4% year over year for corn and 2% for soybeans, the government said.
Wheat area was pegged at 49 million acres in November, down 3% from the prior marketing year, according to USDA data.
The USDA also will have sessions on economic conditions in Brazil and Argentina and their impact on trade, a food price outlook, farm income outlook, and ag finances.
**
3. EXTREMELY LARGE STORM MOVES INTO MIDWEST, RED-FLAG WARNINGS IN SOUTHERN PLAINS
The weather maps are quite busy this morning, as an extremely large storm stretches from Montana to southern Nebraska then back up into the Great Lakes, and wildfire risks increase in the Southern Plains.
A blizzard warning is in effect for counties in southeastern South Dakota, northeastern Nebraska, southwestern Minnesota, and northwestern Iowa, according to the National Weather Service.
A winter storm warning is in effect for the northern two thirds of Nebraska, the bottom half of South Dakota, and pretty much all of eastern Wyoming, the map shows. The warning also stretches northeast into central Wisconsin.
In the Southern Plains, a red-flag warning is in effect for western Kansas, pretty much all of Oklahoma, and all of west Texas from the panhandle to the Mexican border.
Extremely low humidity, strong winds, and high temperatures are creating tinderbox-like conditions, and fires are not recommended, according to the NWS.
THE ANNOUNCEMENT WAS MADE AT TODAY’S USDA AG OUTLOOK FORUM.
WASHINGTON -- U.S. farmers are projected to plant a record 88 million acres of soybeans this spring, spurred by futures prices that make the oilseed a more profitable choice than corn or wheat, said USDA Chief Economist Robert Johansson.
Opening USDA’s annual Outlook Forum Thursday, Johansson raised the projected soy plantings from last November’s projection of 85.5 million acres. Corn plantings are projected at 90 million acres, same as November, and wheat is projected at 46 acres, down by 2.5 million acres from November.
U.S. farm exports are forecast for $136 billion, up $2 billion from USDA’s previous estimate, said Johansson, led by demand by China.
Plantings of 88 million acres would likely result in the second crop in a row to exceed 4 billion bushels.
Beck’s is excited to release the latest Why I Farm video featuring the story of Long Vue Farms in Allensville, Ky. For Mandy Bryant, the decision to take over the family farm was an easy one. Developing a passion and love for farming at an early age, Mandy views her responsibilities at Long Vue not just as a job, but a way life. A life she knew she could never walk away from.
Mandy and her father, Larry Thompson, operate Long Vue Farms with their farm operations partner, Jason Head. Check out the latest Why I Farm video to learn more about their operation and how they are handling the farm’s transition to the next generation.
Social Media Join us in honoring farmers on our various social media pages. Like Why I Farm on Facebook, follow @WhyIFarm on Twitter and Instagram; and use #WhyIFarm when sharing posts.
Join the Movement Don't wait. Now is the time to honor American Farmers and share their story. Join the movement at WhyIFarm.com
At Beck’s, we know being a farmer isn’t a job. It’s a way of life. A life filled with honor, courage and duty; both in and out of the field. A life empowered by dreams, inspired by God’s wisdom. And a life not only devoted to a community, but the world.
Okra (Abelmoschus esculentus) also known as “lady’s finger,” or “bamia pod” is one of the favorite nutritious vegetables common in almost every household in Nigeria. The pods are usually gathered while they are green, tender, and at the immature stage.
Okra plant which is cultivated throughout the tropical and warm temperate regions around the world for their phytonutrients rich pods grows best in a well-drained and manure rich soil.
Here are the amazing health benefits of the Okra.
The okra pods are among the very low-calorie vegetables. They provide just 30 calories per 100 g besides containing no saturated fats or cholesterol.
The seeds of okra are an excellent source of first-rate vegetable protein and oils, enriched with amino acids like tryptophan, cystine and other sulfur amino acids.
The gumbo pods are an excellent source of antioxidant vitamin, vitamin-C, providing about 36 per cent of daily recommended levels.
The pods also contain good amounts of vitamin-K. Vitamin-K is a co-factor for blood clotting enzymes and is required for strengthening of bones.
Okra increases sexual potency and is beneficial in treating genital disorders like syphilis, gonorrhoea, leucorrhoea, dysuria and excessive menstrual bleeding.
The insoluble fiber found in Okra cleans out the intestinal tract, decreasing the risk of colon-rectal cancer.
The fiber in okra aids toxic waste cleansing while the Vitamin C aids in repairing body tissues, preventing skin pigmentation, reducing acne, psoriasis and other skin conditions
Okra contains beta-carotenes (precursor of vitamin A), xanthin and lutein, all antioxidant properties, preventing eye problems like cataract and glaucoma
The alkaline mucilaginous content helps neutralize acids and provides a temporary protective coating for the digestive tract speeding up the healing of peptic ulcers
Okra helps to support the structure of blood capillaries through its high content of flavonoid and vitamin C.
WHEAT FUTURES LOWER OVERNIGHT ON IGC DATA; USDA FORECASTS JUMP IN BEAN ACRES.
1. WHEAT FUTURES FALL OVERNIGHT ON GRAINS COUNCIL DATA
Wheat futures were lower in overnight trading after the International Grains Council raised its outlook for inventories at the end of the marketing year.
The London-based IGC said in a report yesterday that it expects global inventories of wheat to total 236 million metric tons, up from 235 million a year earlier. Production was pegged at 752 million tons, unchanged from the year earlier, but trade rose by 1 million tons, accounting for the decline in stockpiles.
Corn production was raised in the IGC’s report by 4 million tons to 1.049 billion tons. Consumption, however, was increased to 1.035 billion tons, well above last month’s forecast of 1.028 billion, leading to a projected decline in stockpiles to 224 million tons, down from 225 million in January.
Soybean production globally was forecast at 336 million tons, up from 334 million last month, according to the IGC. Consumption, however, was raised to 334 million tons from 333 million, leaving carryout unchanged at 35 million tons, the agency said.
Wheat futures for May delivery fell 1¾¢ to $4.51¾ a bushel overnight on the Chicago Board of Trade. Kansas City futures lost 2½¢ to $4.69 a bushel.
Corn futures for March delivery were up ¾¢ to $3.66¼ a bushel.
Soybean futures for May delivery gained 3¢ to $10.25½ a bushel overnight in Chicago. Soy meal futures rose 70¢ to $335.90 a short ton, and soy oil added 0.22¢ to 32.81¢ a pound.
**
2. USDA FORECASTS RISE IN SOYBEAN ACRES, DECLINE IN CORN, WHEAT
U.S. growers will increase soybean acreage at the expense of corn and wheat this year, according to projections from the Department of Agriculture.
The area planted with soybeans will rise by 4.6 million acres to a record 88 million, the USDA said at its annual Agricultural Outlook Forum in Crystal City, Virginia, on Thursday.
Corn area will drop by 4 million acres to 90 million, while area seeded with wheat also will drop by 4 million acres to 46 million, the smallest amount in more than a century, according to the USDA.
Prior to the report, analysts had pegged soybean seeding at 88 million acres, corn planting at 91 million acres, and wheat area at 47 million acres.
The rise in soybeans and the drop in corn come as the price ratio between the crops remains wider than normal. Soybeans are trading at 2.8 times corn this morning, according to the CME Group.
**
3. WINTER STORM SLAMS PARTS OF IOWA, MINNESOTA; SCHOOLS, ROADS CLOSED IN SOME AREAS
A storm stretching from western Wyoming into the Upper Peninsula of Michigan is leaving closed schools and treacherous travel conditions in its wake.
The heaviest snow is mostly falling in northern Iowa and southern Minnesota today where a blizzard warning is in effect for the region until midnight, according to the National Weather Service. As much as 9 inches have already fallen in some counties and another 8 inches are expected in areas, the NWS said.
“Storm total snowfall within the heaviest snow band may exceed a foot,” the NWS said.
Strong winds also will be a problem, with gusts up to 45 mph tonight, causing blowing and drifting snow resulting in whiteouts in some counties, the agency said.
In eastern Nebraska, up to 3 inches of snow are expected to fall this morning, and temperatures are well below freezing, making for slick roads in some areas. Another 2 to 4 inches are expected in eastern Nebraska and western Iowa tonight, forecasters said.
Change happens. We can dig our heels in and fight as hard as we can, but the world around us changes. As women in agriculture, part of our responsibility is to adapt to that change. On the dairy farm, it seems like we are always adapting to changes in recommendations, changes in the needs of our cattle, and changes in things like weather. As a nutritionist, I find myself needing to adapt at a faster pace because my clients are adapting for their changes, and it forces change on me for many of the same reasons.
This new year has been full of changes on the farm. Some of those changes we implemented based on results of our management practices. For example, we were getting less than stellar reproductive results in a group of heifers. So, based on recommendations from our vet, breeder, and some of my own research, we changed the age at first breeding and the way we breed off shots and also regrouped our heifers to give them more space. While theses sound like such simple measures, it meant that I had to adapt my record management: There were new lists to run, different days of the week to do those lists, and different methods are sharing that information. For my father-in-law and husband, it meant a more pronounced focus on heat detection for heifers given shots vs. blindly breeding because they should have been in heat. It also means that they are more dependent on my records and need to sort cattle on more a set schedule than we were all used to doing.
As a nutritionist, I have found myself adapting to new technology in the past few months. A need to rely on my computer and phone to assist a farm in implementing new feeding management took some getting used to on my part while the use of cameras, infrared thermometers, and refractometers took some explaining to help my clients adapt. My business has had to adapt to changes within, and I found myself taking time to restructure, rebrand, and reboot. It takes a lot of time to make these adaptations, but if we take steps in a process and with a plan we can successfully navigate the storm and move forward.
Often, I find myself preaching to myself and my clients that we need to be proactive and not reactive when it comes to changes in what we do. The art of predicting those changes that can influence our bottom line, family life, and management is not an easy one. On the farms I work with, we monitor things like the market pricing of milk, cattle, and feed ingredients so that we can try to stay ahead of the curve and proactively make the choices that protect us from possible negative change. In terms of management on our farm, we try to be proactive by monitoring herd performance, calf health, our time management, and the weather. All those things give us indications as to what could be coming down the line, and we can preemptively adapt and hopefully reduce or prevent the impact of those things.
One quick example of being proactive on all farms I am engaged with including my own is that we can sample the TMR for the cows. And, through the efforts of Rock River Laboratory, Inc., we can check that feed for molds, yeasts, c. perfringens, enterococcus, or salmonella bugs as well as the mycotoxin vomitoxin. If we proactively run this type of feed sample, we can predict when we might encounter some problems with the cows. On our farm, we are using that information to prevent loss of dry matter intake and digestive upsets because we know that our TMR in the cold temperatures had a moderate yeast count and a level of enterococcus that warranted watching it. As the temperatures looked to begin increasing earlier in the month, I could utilize a couple of feed additives that helped keep those two potential problem areas in check and maintain the cruise control that our herd was on for milk production.
Adapting to change and being able to proactively work to prevent possible negative effects is all part of what we must do as producers in agriculture. Those steps help us to be more successful in the way we run our farms, give us more time to spend with our family minus the stress, and enable our animals and crops to meet their potential for the benefit of our farms.
THESE NEWCOMERS TO U.S. AGRICULTURE BREAK THROUGH BOUNDARIES TO FARM OR MANAGE FARMS.
Remember when farming was a place where hard work and persistence paid off? You could build a business from scratch?
Well, don’t tell these four immigrants that anything’s changed. Saul Pineda, Nancy Alcala, Nacho Escamilla, and Segundo Gonzalez would beg to differ.
All are Hispanics (from Spanish-speaking countries) or Latinos (from Latin America) who came here to work, and have built thriving careers in agriculture, some even running their own farms. Some came to the U.S. without ag experience, but all chose agriculture as the place to build a better life for their families.
They aren’t alone. There are 1 million hired farmworkers in the U.S. and 42% are born outside our borders, according to the USDA Economic Research Service. An additional 100,000 farm operators are of Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin, according to the 2012 USDA census data.
From picking strawberries in California to managing dairy operations in Wisconsin, these farmworkers, managers, and owners work to ensure that crops are harvested and livestock are tended to across the country.
SEGUNDO GONZALEZ: DAIRY FARMER IN WAUPACA, WISCONSIN
The journey from Ecuador, a mountainous country on the northwestern corner of South America, to Waukapa, Wisconsin, is nearly 4,000 miles. But Segundo Gonzalez, four of his brothers, and a sister have made it, and surpassed obstacles far greater than the miles. Today, they’ve fulfilled a dream of owning their own dairy farm of 200 Holsteins.
Gonzalez’s father was a veterinarian and a farmer in Ecuador, he says, and his mother a nurse in their native village. “We are indigenous people to that area, and she was the first indigenous person to become a nurse,” he says proudly.
He followed his father’s footsteps and became a veterinarian in Ecuador. “But even as a veterinarian, we barely had enough to live on,” says Gonzalez.
A U.S. couple, Jim and Linda Belote, came to Ecuador in the Peace Corps and befriended the Gonzalez family, admiring the value they placed on education. The Belotes offered to sponsor Gonzalez in the U.S. at the University of Minnesota in a master’s degree program in animal science.
It took Gonzalez three tries to pass the English test, but he did it and got an assistantship working in the artificial insemination lab on the Minnesota campus. There, he learned the dairy A.I. business.
At graduation, he took a job on a dairy farm in Wisconsin, Jon-De Farm at Baldwin, working for the Dean Dornink family. “They were skeptical at first, but eventually they gave me a try,” says Gonzalez.
He started at Jon-De at the bottom – cow pusher. “I was moving cows up to be milked, cleaning, sweeping, and flushing manure out,” he says. “Looking back now, I’m really grateful for that beginning. It was a tremendous opportunity to learn how to find sick cows, or cows in heat, or spot mastitis. That’s where I learned all the practical things of a modern dairy farm. It was a lot more than just cleaning pens.
“And, I’m a quick learner!”
When his visa expired, Gonzalez and his family returned to Ecuador where he worked with small dairy farmers, teaching them what he had learned in the U.S. But the Dorninks wanted him back in Wisconsin, and helped work out the visa issues. Gonzalez returned to Wisconsin to manage an expanding dairy that was now hiring mostly Hispanic workers.
“Many of them had language problems, which I knew about from my own experience, so I could help them. Most were from Mexico and had a strong work ethic. Rather than call in sick, they would show up for work a half hour early.”
He also helped several of his siblings immigrate from Ecuador and join the farm. The first to come were brothers Marco and Lauro, but eventually a third brother, Jaime, and sister Silvia, came, too.
And, they soon started looking for a farm to buy to enter the diary business themselves. “We had acquired so much knowledge of and expertise in the dairy industry – milking, feeding, breeding, and housing. We kept thinking we needed to use it for ourselves. But we had no money to speak of,” says Gonzalez.
After a long search, they found the farm at Waupaca. The owner, Leroy Niemuth, wanted to retire and had no one to take it over. He was willing to make the Gonzalez family a land contract, limiting the cash they needed up front. The five siblings made the deal in 2011.
The Niemuth farm had 147 milking cows at the time of purchase. “They were pretty good cows then, averaging about 60 pounds of milk per day” Gonzalez says. “We have been breeding up ever since. We switched to 3X milking within a couple months, then we hired our first employee, Francisco, to help milk. He is still with us. My wife, Maria, takes care of calves.”
Now with 190 cows on 3X milking, the farm averages near 100 pounds of milk per cow per day.
There are 24 acres on the farm, so they have to buy most of the feed. “We’d like to change that someday; it’s a challenge buying feed,” says Gonzalez. “At first, nobody knew us and didn’t fully trust us, but now we have people calling us to sell us feed. Mostly, it’s alfalfa haylage and corn silage.”
Silvia, the Gonzalez sister, has a business management background, and she does all of the bookkeeping and other office chores for the farm. “We work as a team,” she says. “Marco is in charge of the nutrition and machinery, Lauro handles cow health and reproduction, and Jaime manages parlor and milk production.
“The purpose of having the farm is to keep the family together and maintain our traditions while we teach our kids the value of work,” she says.
NANCY ALCALA: SOW FARM MANAGER IN BEARDSTOWN, ILLINOIS
Growing up in a small village south of Mexico City, nothing was further from Nancy Alcala’s mind than pigs. Now 33 years old, she’s a sow farm manager for Hi Power near Beardstown, Illinois. All day, she’s surrounded by 6,800 sows and 37 people – and they all report to her!
Fourteen years ago, she and her husband, Jorge, made the 36-hour car trip to Illinois, where two sisters were already living. “I wasn’t legal, I had no visa. We already had one child, 6-month-old Hugo. I had finished high school, got married, had a baby, and there was no opportunity for us in Mexico. We came here for our family’s future,” she says.
Her sisters worked for Excel meat packing in Beardstown, so she and Jorge got jobs there, too, stripping hog fat with an electric knife. “I did it for about six years and had three more babies,” says Nancy. “It was a hard life, but worth it being here. If I was in Mexico, and got a good job, I might make $100 a week. Here, I make about $800 a week.”
One day Nancy went to get a driver’s license, got led to the immigration office, and ended up in immigration detention in Chicago, with intent to deport her back to Mexico. “I was there for two months, in limbo, with Jorge taking care of my babies. I had no criminal record, and I had a job. So after those two months, they could have deported me. But they said they would work with me to get to legal status, and I was released.”
Even that release was a harrowing experience. She was alone in Chicago with no friends, and not even a phone. Eventually, a kind restaurant owner gave her something to eat, loaned her a phone, and Jorge was able to come get her.
Over the next few years, Alcala got her immigration issues resolved to permanent status. “Toward the end of that five-year process, the attorney told me we either get this resolved now, or I could still be deported. I cried over that, and told Jorge if they send me back, you and the kids are not going with me. There’s nothing there for us. We would have split our family up before I took the kids back. But that year, I got permanent status. I called Jorge and said, ‘We did it!’ ”
During this time, Alcala started working for High Power Pork. “I knew someone who worked there, and that got me in the door,” she says. “The first job was a pig processor. We get over 50 litters a day, so there’s a lot of processing.
“After a year, I was promoted to a farrowing supervisor, and got to help in other parts of the farm, like the breeding barn. I’m always looking to learn something new.”
The pig company had adopted a new computer system that involved a new way of entering sows into the program. There were five books in the farm office that were about this new system, and Alcala started taking them home at night, one at a time, until she’d read them all. “In the evenings, after I’d dealt with the kids and family things, I studied those books.”
One day, Alcala said to her boss, “Let me tag and enter a new group of sows. If I do it wrong, well, I’ll un-do it all myself, on my own time.” The boss agreed, and when Alcala got done tagging that day, he asked her, ‘How did you learn this?’ ”
That kind of initiative eventually got Alcala promoted to assistant manager of the farm. Then when the boss took a new job, Alcala was the easy choice to replace him as farm manager. “Since then, I’ve been in charge of 6,800 sows and 37 employees.” The employees are about 50-50 men and women, and 50-50 Hispanic and non-Hispanic. “We’re all equal here,” she says.
“I like the people at work; everything starts with them,” she says. “My favorite thing is communicating with people and learning about them. I use that knowledge to encourage them and get good work from them.”
Alcala coaxes some impressive production numbers from her staff, and her sows: 11.2 pigs weaned per litter and 96% conception rates.
She is salaried, and gets bonuses for good production. And recently, she was asked to step into a new role at High Power Pork, helping to start up a brand-new sow farm.
She and Jorge and their family live in the little town of Beardstown, Illinois. “We want the kids [Hugo, Charlie, George, and Kimberly] to go to college, that’s what I’m working for. They get good grades, and they know what we expect of them.
“Jorge and I don’t have everything we want, but we’re working for it. We try to teach that same lesson to the kids.”
SAUL PINEDA: ARONIA BERRY FARMER IN OLATHE, KANSAS
Saul Pineda is the last guy you’d have guessed would be running his own farm. The 39-year-old fledgling aronia berry farmer, who grew up a couple hours south of Mexico City, had no farm connections when he came to the U.S. “My grandfather worked on a farm at one time, but that’s the only farming connection I had,” he says.
At age 18 and newly married, he moved to Chicago, where he had sisters and brothers already living. “There was nothing in Mexico for us – no jobs, no future,” he says. Eventually, he, Victoria, and their two children landed in the Omaha area, and he worked construction. Later, he added a second full-time night job in floor maintenance.
The construction job opened the door to farming. “The owner of that company asked me to help out on a piece of property he owned where he was planting aronia berry bushes [also called chokeberries].” The sour berries are used in many food products, including jams, wines, ice cream, and beer, and are said to have health benefits.
“I liked working with the plants and the soil, and a dream started to form in my head to have my own farm,” says Pineda. “It would be a business of our own, and to support our family down the road.”
Land near Omaha was expensive, so he went online and cast a broader search net about five years ago. “It took me seven months before I spotted 5 acres near Olathe, Kansas, for $3,000 an acre. I did the budgets, and bought it in 2013. The next year, I bought another 5 acres next to it.”
Then he went to work developing his new property for the aronia bushes. The little farm is south of Kansas City, and 3.5 hours south of Omaha, where Pineda still lives with his family and works the floor maintenance job.
His schedule since 2013 has been something like this: Monday through Friday, work two jobs, both full-time, in Omaha; get off work Friday night and sleep a few hours before heading to Kansas with his son, Jesse, arriving about sunrise; plant, water, mow, and tend the berry bushes all day Saturday and most of Sunday; drive back to Omaha Sunday evening to start the same schedule over.
Such a schedule may sound grueling, but it never seemed that way to Pineda. “I worked two full-time jobs for about 10 years,” he says, “and could make about $50,000 a year. Victoria works at a hotel. We saved enough to pay for the land outright, and to plant the farm.
“Victoria is a really good saver. We wouldn’t be where we are without her.”
Someday, when they can afford it, they hope to buy more land on the Kansas site, build a house, and live there. “When the aronia fruit gets closer to first harvest and producing income, I’ll get more serious about that,” he says.
For now, they have planted about 6.5 acres of the aronia plants, mostly using a 2-inch auger he rigged up on an electric drill hooked to a portable generator they pulled around the field. The first 5,000 plants are now four years old; 3,000 are three years old. They’ll start producing harvestable berries in a couple years.
“We’re building a future for our family,” Pineda says. “We’re not going back to Mexico.”
Jesse, now 20 years old, also works at the floor maintenance business in Omaha with his dad. Daughter Kimberly, 19, is a college student at Iowa Western Community College.
“It seems odd, even to me, that I’ve become a farmer,” Pineda says. “But I really like it. When I’m working here on the farm, I don’t even feel the hours.
“I hope I can encourage others. Work hard, and you can do good.”
IGNACIO ESCAMILLA: DAIRY FARMWORKER NEAR ALMA CENTER, WISCONSIN
Ignacio Escamilla, called Nacho by his friends, is 39 years old and came to the U.S. in the early 1990s when he was just 16 years old from a town 10 hours south of the Texas border. Because he was underage, it was hard to get work, so he moved from Pennsylvania to Florida to Indiana working on horse and dairy farms, even though he had little experience in farming.
Eventually, the dairy work led him to the Heller Family Farm near Alma Center, Wisconsin.
“I started at the bottom, as a milker, and I had no experience with machine milking,” says Escamilla. “I did that for several years, then I moved to the crop part of the farm, mostly driving tractors and trucks. When an opening came up for me to move back to working with the cows, as the manager of the milking parlor, I took it. Now, I manage the cow barn, treating cows, and managing fresh cows.”
As such, Escamilla does all the hiring, and firing if needed, for the cow barn, and has full authority over the milking operation. That’s 1,500 cows and 12 employees he directly is in charge of. Through his journey, he has become a U.S. citizen, through help from Blake Heller.
Escamilla is married with two children, both now college age. One of them, Omar, age 18, is at Wisconsin-River Falls and wants to be a veterinarian, or a farmer, or maybe both.
“It’s in our long-range plans to have our own farm,” says Escamilla. “We have a few horses already. Now that the kids are where they are, things may change. Maybe there will be enough money to save for a farm.”
Escamilla’s first dream is that the kids will finish college. “I don’t want them to have to start on the bottom, like I did. I want a better life for them.”
Escamilla has developed a side business of helping other dairy farmers in Wisconsin find farm workers. He and a coworker at Hellers, Jose Castillo, teach new Hispanic dairy workers the skills they will need to work on farms. “We have a reputation for training them well,” says Escamilla.
He and Castillo also get called to other farms to help with employee issues such as language skills. “Sometimes they just need a translator,” Escamilla says. “On some farms, hardly anyone speaks English, and we can help. Or they may need to learn a new milking system. It’s a nice sideline job for us.”
Escamilla laughs when asked about his own English language skills. Much of it, he says, came from watching U.S. television. “I can read English decently, but my problem is in writing it,” he says. “When I went for my citizenship test, I had to write something, and that was the hardest part. But I passed, and I couldn’t be happier with my life here!”
The Deputy Governor of Kebbi State, Samaila Yomber has appealed to the federal government for assistance in combating the menace of Quelea birds, which destroys farm produce.
Yomber made this call in a statement signed by the director of Research and Document, Aliyu Jajirma in his office.
Known to always move in massive numbers, Quelea birds have been described as the world’s most destructive birds. Their huge numbers make them a constant threat to sorghum, wheat, millet and rice farms.
Research from IRIN indicate that the average Quelea bird eats around 10 grams of grain per day – roughly half its body weight – hence, a flock of two million can devour as much as 20 tons of grain in a single day.
Though Quelea experts posits that at a national level a country loses only up to 5 per cent of crops, Yomber expressed that the rate of destruction of farm produce by the Birds had been on the increase annually as it was between 10 percent and 35 per cent in 2015.
Yomber said the pests were capable of destroying a hectare of farmland within an hour, adding that extensive farmlands had been under attack by these birds.
Stressing the need for federal government’s assistance, he said that fighting the Birds was capital intensive and that the state government alone would not be able to contain the menace.
He however added that federal government intervention would ensure bumper harvest during the dry and wet season farming season.