Dundas, Minn. – Brent Fuchs planted corn all day Saturday into the early hours of Sunday. He stayed up late again Monday, hoping to get his last 250 acres of soybeans in the ground.
He didn't quite get there and, on Tuesday, he said the day's rain may keep him from finishing until Friday.
Farmers across Minnesota are racing this week to get the last of their corn and soybeans planted after a cold, wet spring busted plans and kept some of them out of fields until after Memorial Day.
As of Sunday, 20% of the soybean crop and 8% of the corn crop in Minnesota were yet to be planted, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. That's way behind the average of the past five years; statistically, Minnesota farmers two weeks ago should have been where they are now.
Harvests are sure to be reduced as a result, and so will farmers' crop insurance coverage.
For Fuchs, this has been the latest planting in his 21 years as a farmer. Two weeks ago, he hadn't even started. "I don't remember a year where on Memorial Day weekend we had nothing planted," he said.
He and his neighbor Larry Salaba are helping each other by sharing the workload — one tills the fields ahead of the other, who runs a tractor pulling a planter on the freshly prepared ground.
Salaba was planting on Monday morning on a field west of Dundas while Fuchs knelt at the edge of the field, scooped a handful of dirt clods into his hand and squeezed. Blessedly, the clods broke apart.