The cobs are small and the stalks are short and limp across much of Dave Marquardt's Waverly, Minn.-area cornfields as harvest gets underway, starved by meager rainfall through much of prime growing season.
Just 40 miles to the southwest, the cornstalks tower over Ryan Mackenthun's head at his farm near Brownton, the cobs fat with juicy kernels. This area was spared the worst of the drought, Mackenthun said, with regular spurts of rainfall from mid-June onward.
"We're looking at an above-average year for yields," Mackenthun said Tuesday, standing next to rows of corn he said he's in no particular hurry to harvest. His soybeans are in strong shape too. "We were very lucky."
Back up in Waverly, Marquardt has already started harvesting corn, worried its condition is too weak to withstand the elements much longer.
"Pretty poor to start with," Marquardt said of his corn yield so far. Land that normally produces 180 bushels per acre has been more like 110 to 150 bushels. He has higher hopes for his soybeans, but was disheartened on Tuesday as he inspected nearly mature plants that looked small and weak.
All over Minnesota, farmers have or are about to start harvesting this season's crops, which in large parts of the state were subject to drought conditions for much of the spring and the early part of the summer.
It's too early for the definitive word on Minnesota's yields this year. Worries of a drought-driven wipeout look unlikely to materialize, although plenty of farmers in harder-hit areas are expecting to break less than even on this year's crop.
"In terms of Minnesota's overall crop this year, it's going to be in the fair to good range," Agriculture Commissioner Thom Petersen said. There's plenty of exceptions, Petersen said, but in rough terms he's seeing fair to poor yields in the St. Cloud area and northward, but good to excellent yields anywhere south of that.