November 27, 2007

Minor change...

Have decided this blog is better suited to just the farm. My brain dumps regarding less farm-like issues will be here from now on... http://wjwieland.blogspot.com/

November 8, 2007

...Answers...

There is no such thing as an answer. Entropy ensures this. Assuming that entropy is a continuous flow process which is itself characteristically dynamic in response to the changes it incites, and that an answer is a singleton solution to a set of static conditions, the possibility of an answer impossible.

Mankind has spent a great deal of time searching for answers. Science looks for answers. Religion seeks to provide answers. Philosophy professes to examine questions so that we can understand the answers. A whole economy has been built around selling us answers that are based on question which led to solutions which have been examined by experts. But what if there are not any? What if that opening sentence is a truth?

It would be easy to classify this line of thought as destructive, pacifistic, defeatist, or even nihilistic. But maybe it is not. We are trained to seek results, little points in time when we can say that a particular statement is true, that it is a statement of fact. We seem to search for and hang on to statics, and value them when we think we have found them. Sometimes to the point of blindness.

I think that if we are to survive our future, we are going to have to adjust ourselves to a new way of thinking. We need to continually search for the properly scoped question. And a properly scoped question has no answer, only subsets of questions which drive us to discover.

Maybe the question to the answer is 'Ain't it cool to just accept that life is a strange place?' And just think, I don't need a team of experts with a team of marketing people supporting them to sell that to me. It is free, open source. I think I will stick with that... . I just ain't buying anymore... :-)

November 2, 2007

Geometry (not) remembered...

Just some notes about the bins for my own reference:

Bin in the valley ~= 9940 bu
94' circumference
15' radius
17.5' height(actual is 18.5, subtract for ventilated floor)

Main Bin on farm ~= 11364 bu
94' circumference
15' radius
20' height (actual is 21', but have to subtract for ventilated floor)

Overflow bin farm ~= 3273 bu
56.5' circumference
9' radius
16' height
(cone to within 1' of roof ~=543 bu

radius of a circle = (c/pi)/2
volume of a cylinder = (pi*r^2)*h
1 cubic foot = 0.803569313 bushel ... or
1 bushel = 1.244456083 cubic feet.

...

November 1, 2007

Beans...

The soybeans are out of the fields. What a relief! The yield was not good, moisture was higher than we wanted resulting in a fair amount of pod being left in with the harvest, we lost some due to the plants having laid down, and some we just plain had to leave because the fields were too wet. All that having been said, we easily made what I had contracted for river open in march. Even if I get docked for quality, I will have enough to make up for it in volume over and above the contract.

Lesson learned: Don't contract more than 40% of what you have in the field for future delivery. We got lucky. I hedged my bets and counted on 20% per acre less than what we hoped for (average yield), then used that 40% of that number to gauge what I should contract ahead of time. I did that because I wanted to be safe, but all along I was figuring on having 60% to contract off after harvest.

My real numbers actually split the other way, with 60% of my crop already contracted and 40% still in the bin uncontracted. Considering the quality of what we harvested, we can probably count on 10% - 15% loss at the terminal. Time to call the crop insurance guy. Based on projected yields, we lost almost 50% of the expected revenue from soybeans. Sad, but not catastrophic. I am gratefull Nola insured for 80% of expected revenue.

Overall, The Farm has done alright in spite of the absense of Nola. As I have mentioned before, our neighbors (now fast becoming friends) have pulled us through with a lot of good advice and a lot of hard work. The crops are out of the fields, the fields are prepped for next spring. The seed and fertilizer have been ordered for next spring as well. We have enough fuel to run the house furnace enough to keep the pipes from freezing. The estate auction has been planned.

The last two months of the year will be spent paying a lot of bills from harvest, getting ready for tax season...., and wondering what we are going to look like come next year. With the operation shrinking back to the original 240 acres, we are going to have a very different picture. Our tillable land will have been reduced by about 68 acres, or about 32%. That of course reduces what we can produce. However, it also reduces our input costs substatially. That is 100 acres that we don't have to pay taxes on, 68 acres that we don't have to til, fertilize, spray, insure, or worry about flooding. I suspect that when we look at the number spread over a couple of years, we will find that the overall profitability of The Farm will go up by reducing in size. Time will tell.

There is a lot left to learn, many decisions to be made. The land will guide us and teach us as long as we listen.

About Me

This is a blog without a particular reason other than occasionally I need to "thought dump". The second half of the title implies this. The first half refers to a place that I have loved since I recall having memories. The Farm. The place where my father was born, and his father. The Farm has recently come to my brother and me, and has been the seed of many ideas and reflections.