‘Not going to be the crop everybody would hope for’

‘Not going to be the crop everybody would hope for’

Brad Tolson (right) talks with Climate FieldView representative Jacob Schneider

A northwest Missouri farmer says he’s not concerned about what he can’t control. Brad Tolson tells Brownfield his soybeans are behind because they were planted a month late. His corn was planted on time but was stunted early and was hit by drought during pollination.

“Having said all that, I think that we’re going to have some crop,” Tolson told Brownfield Ag News on his farm near Trenton, Missouri.

Continue reading ‘Not going to be the crop everybody would hope for’ at Brownfield Ag News.