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Beef prices are surging, but processors are benefiting more than farmers

Beef prices are surging, but processors are benefiting more than farmers
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Drought forces Minnesota farmers to make tough decisions

The drought is hitting Minnesota farmers hard and forcing some to take extra measures to keep going. Author: Heidi Wigdahl Updated: 7:06 PM CDT July 19, 2021 KIMBALL, Minnesota At Schiefelbein Farms in Kimball, the cows are on the move.  They know that if I take them to the next pasture, there may be better groceries there. So they re ready to eat something better, said Don Schiefelbein.  The family farm which started in 1955 has thousands of cattle.  Schiefelbein said they have been dealing with dry conditions for the past three to four weeks.  When it gets dry like this, just emotionally it s very tough, Schiefelbein said. All you have to do is look at the corn field. When it looks more like pineapples than it does corn, you know it s devastating.  

We re to the point where anything helps : Drought hits Minnesota farmers, ranchers hard

Dry, hot conditions are also fueling wildfires in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. Written By: Dan Kraker / MPR News | 2:00 pm, Jul. 16, 2021 × Corn plant leaves roll up in response to drought and heat as the plant tries to conserve moisture. Photo taken June 22, 2021, near Frazee, Minn. (Dan Gunderson / MPR News File) Rachel Gray and her family raise beef cattle on their farm in Blackduck, in Beltrami County, in far north-central Minnesota. Right now she says they re grazing about 500 heifers, along with 17 bulls. But she said that s not going to last much longer. We are currently running out of pasture even though we ve been very careful to manage those areas,” said Gray. “It is like nothing we have seen up here.

Goodhue County farmer forced to sell cattle because of drought

Goodhue County farmer forced to sell cattle because of drought Unmute The drought has some deciding to go into early retirement or sell their animals. “These cows should be in grass that should be up to my waist and it’s down at my ankles. It’s just not growing,” said Katie Brenny, of Brenny Farms. Brenny Farms has 25 cows, a bull and a donkey. She runs the farm with her husband, and the couple is fifth-generation farmers. They raise the cows for beef. Farmer Katie Brenny “We have the white cows behind me which are Charolais. And the black cows are Angus,” Brenny said.

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