Rachael Brooke, Phillips-Rooks District Extension Agent Agriculture and Natural Resources

Body
ife By Rachael Brooke Rooks County’s Agriculture & Natural Resources Agent Harvesting Drought Stressed Corn as Forage Before directly grazing or mechanically harvesting the corn as forage, check the labels of all chemicals that were applied. Be sure all pesticides (herbicides and insecticides) applied to the crop are cleared for forage and the minimum harvest interval has been met.
corn harvest

Insight From Kansas Farm Bureau

Body
The most important thing is to get out and vote in November. It is the best way for us to make our voices heard. It was ingrained in me early on that if you did not participate and vote, you really had no right to complain. I know I still get a feeling of pride every time I go to the polls and cast my vote. Regardless of how I feel about the slate of candidates or the issues I am voting on, I do get a great deal of satisfaction participating in the process. It isn’t perfect, but it is the best in the world. So go cast your vote and wear that sticker with pride, you earned it.
insight

Insight from Kansas Farm Bureau

Body
It’s ironic how I checked my weather app multiple times daily as we harvested wheat in June. We wanted to get the crop out of the fields before the summer storms rolled in, which always offers the potential of damaging hail or winds and could put harvest on hold while things would need to dry up.
Surviving Summer Kim Baldwin, McPherson County farmer and rancher

Rachael Brooke, Phillips-Rooks District Extension Agent Agriculture and Natural Resources

Body
Blister Beetles Blister beetles are notorious for quickly stripping vegetables (especially tomatoes) and ornamentals of their foliage. There are several species of blister beetles which vary in size (often between 0.5- 0.75 inch long) and color (such as black, gray or brown-striped), but most are recognized by their elongated, narrow, cylindrical, soft bodies with middle body part (thorax) narrower than the head or wingcovers.
bloister beetle

Insight from Kansas Farm Bureau

Body
We have turned the calendar to July, and that means different things to different people. For students and teachers July means summer is at the halfway point, and the first day of school is near. For those of us in agriculture it means haying season and watching fall crops grow. In the Farm Bureau world, July is the start of county Farm Bureau annual meetings.
Summits of Summer Glenn Brunkow, Pottawatomie County farmer and rancher

Insight From Kansas Farm Bureau

Body
The biggest strength of Kansas Farm Bureau (KFB) is its grassroots policy process that undergoes at least a year of debate before it’s enshrined in the organization’s policy book. This manual serves a blueprint for the advocacy work of state staff in the Kansas Legislature. In 2022, this member-driven process was crucial to improving farming, ranching and rural living during the legislative session. The success Kansas
Putting Policy Into Action Greg Doering, Kansas Farm Bureau
Subscribe to Extension News & Insight