26 Thursday, September 12, 2024 BATTLE CREEK SHOPPER NEWS http://www.thebattlecreekshopper.com
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SHELLY KEHRLE-SULSER
Executiver Editor
Anyone taking a scenic drive
around the 718 square miles around
Calhoun County will likely see
seemingly countless acres of corn,
soybeans and wheat growing in the
fields.
Last year, 80,100 acres of Calhoun
County was planted with corn,
70,700 with soybeans and 5,200
with winter wheat, according to
the United States Department of
Agriculture’s National Agriculture
Statistics Great Lake Region report.
There are more than 459,000 acres
in the county.
“We are providing timely, accurate
and useful statistics to the USDA,”
explained Great Lakes Region
Director Marlo D. Johnson, whose
region includes all 83 Michigan
counties. “And, that’s committed
to our core values. We take great
pride in working together to serve
American farmers and ranches in
rural communities who all rely on
the information we produce.”
Not only does Calhoun County
produce the three major certified
crops, but it also produces a number
of specialty crops including veg-
etables, some of which end up at
farmer’s markets.
Others supply food hubs and com-
munity supported agriculture (CSA)
which sells subscription boxes to
customers such as Of the Land on H
Drive North in Battle Creek.
And then, said one area data moni-
Some crops have already been harvested in the area, like this field of winter
wheat near Scotts. In this July photo, the stalks are turned into bales of straw.
(Shopper News photo by Shelly Kehrle-Sulser)
How Calhoun County contributes to the food chain
tor, the county also can count the
bedding plant industry, such as Post
Gardens, as part of its agriculture
industry.
It’s the job of Michigan State
University (MSU) Field Crop educa-
tor Nicolle Ritchie to monitor six
area counties including Calhoun
though she is based in St. Joseph
County.
She helps growers diversify pest
management techniques while tak-
ing a whole-system approach to
resistance management and focus on
improving nutrient use efficiency and
sustainability in practical
and approachable ways,
she said.
Already this year in
Calhoun County, said
Ritchie, feed corn har-
vest (in which the entire
cob is removed from
the stalks) has already
begun, while corn grown
for grain and ethanol, for
example, happens later in
the fall.
“Feed corn just started
harvest which is pretty typical, it’s
not too far ahead,” she said last
week, “and wheat did get harvested
about two weeks earlier.”
Soybeans, however, are more
tricky due to the need for the crop to
dry before harvest.
“Soybeans, everything points to an
earlier harvest but it depends on how
quickly they able to dry out during
the fall,” she said. “Last year, it took
a long time to dry due to the wet fall
so it took long time for the farm-
ers to be able to get into the field.
Right now, it’s looking good but it is
tracking ahead but it is also weather
dependent.”
Ritchie’s primary role is to gather
information from research being
done in Lansing and pass it along as
needed directly to farmers.
“I’m outreach for the university,”
she explained. “The research doesn’t
help if it doesn’t get out so I put on
educational events to help understand
what the research is saying, what
best practices are or if someone says
‘I don’t know how to manage this’, I
can come and check it out.”
She can also take calls for help and
guidance.
One example of why she may get
a call from a farmer is due to the
appearance of a corn disease called
tar spot.
According to a Michigan Farm
News report, tar spot became a major
concern in July.
First appearing in Michigan in
2016, tar spot can now be found
statewide, with a yield impact rang-
ing from zero to 100 bushels per
acre.
Tar spot symptoms are distinc-
tive and look like specks of tar on
the leaf. The infection and develop-
ment of the disease are favored by
cool temperatures (60 to 70 degrees
Fahrenheit), humid conditions
(greater than 75-percent relative
humidity) and at least seven hours
of leaf wetness due to rain, fog, dew
or overhead irrigation, according to
Michigan Farm News.
In Michigan, tar spot typically
appears during July but sometimes
shows up in late June.
Ritchie said Tuesday, Aug. 27 that
tar spot created a “big scare” in early
to mid July.
“We thought it would be an awful
tar spot year but thankfully,” she
said, “it is in a lot of areas but not
at high pressures so fingers crossed
it’s not going to blow up and destroy
anything. A lot of measures have
been taken to prevent it from spread-
ing.”
Most other pests that emerge annu-
ally are also appearing about two
weeks ahead of schedule, she said,
but most farmers monitor such vari-
ables and adapt.
“There’s so much to be said for the
resiliency of farmers,” said Ritchie.
“Sometimes they get a bad rap but
every year is different so it takes so
much adaptation, there’s so much
going on, they often have to change
things so they’re always addressing
new problems going forward and
facing new challenges the next year.”