Purdue Commercial AgCast

Purdue Center for Commercial Agriculture

Farm management news and advice for top agricultural producers from ag economists at Purdue University’s Center for Commercial Agriculture.

  1. Lessons From the Delta, Part 8: Why Ducks Are More Valuable Than Crops in the Delta

    16 H FA

    Lessons From the Delta, Part 8: Why Ducks Are More Valuable Than Crops in the Delta

    Lessons From the Delta continues — and this time, the conversation turns to an unexpected connection between rice farming, water management, and wildlife. In the 8th and final episode of the Purdue Commercial AgCast mini-series, Chad Fiechter and Todd Kuethe travel to eastern Arkansas to explore how rice production systems intersect with conservation—and why organizations like Ducks Unlimited are working directly with farmers. What starts as a discussion about rice fields quickly expands into a deeper look at water use, groundwater depletion, and how wildlife habitat can create additional economic value on farmland. The conversation explores: Why rice fields function as surrogate wetlands for waterfowl How duck hunting and recreation influence land values in the Delta The scale of water use in rice production—and why it matters How farmers are adapting to groundwater decline with new practices The tradeoffs between yield, water efficiency, and management complexity Why agriculture in the Delta requires a fundamentally different system approach With water becoming an increasingly binding constraint, this episode highlights how farmers are balancing productivity, conservation, and long-term sustainability—and what that means for the future of agriculture. We’ll continue sharing video clips and behind-the-scenes footage from the Arkansas trip on our YouTube channel throughout the series. Subscribe to the Purdue Commercial AgCast so you don’t miss upcoming episodes in the Lessons From the Delta series. Learn more about Ducks Unlimited: https://www.ducks.org/ For more farm management resources, visit: 👉 https://purdue.ag/commercialag Subscribe to the podcast: 👉 https://purdue.ag/agcast Follow us: X: https://twitter.com/PUCommercialAg Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PUCommercialAg LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/center-for-commercial-agriculture

    30 min
  2. Lessons From the Delta, Part 7: How Rice Farmers Cut $31/Acre Water Costs

    15 APR

    Lessons From the Delta, Part 7: How Rice Farmers Cut $31/Acre Water Costs

    Lessons From the Delta continues — this time from the edge of a 120-acre on-farm reservoir. In Part 7 of the Purdue Commercial AgCast mini-series, Chad Fiechter and Todd Kuethe visit a rice farm in Arkansas to understand how farmers are managing water, labor, and costs in ways that look very different from the Midwest. What starts as a farm tour turns into a practical discussion about irrigation strategy, groundwater replacement, and the economics behind building large on-farm reservoirs. The conversation also covers: How farmers can save up to $31 per acre by pumping surface water instead of groundwater Why reservoirs reduce energy costs and improve water temperature for crop performance Capturing and recycling nutrients through tailwater recovery systems The tradeoff between taking land out of production and lowering long-term costs How pump automation reduces labor needs and improves quality of life Why water management is becoming a central constraint in modern farming systems This episode builds on earlier conversations in the Delta series and brings the focus directly to how farmers are making real-world management decisions under different constraints. We’ll continue sharing video clips and behind-the-scenes footage from the Arkansas trip on our YouTube channel throughout the series. Subscribe to the Purdue Commercial AgCast so you don’t miss upcoming episodes in the Lessons From the Delta series. For more farm management resources, visit: 👉 https://purdue.ag/commercialag Subscribe to the podcast: 👉 https://purdue.ag/agcast Follow us: X: https://twitter.com/PUCommercialAg Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PUCommercialAg LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/center-for-commercial-agriculture

    12 min
  3. 8 APR

    Farm Sentiment Is Up… So Why Are Farmers Still Worried?

    Farmer sentiment improved in March—but the underlying pressures in the farm economy haven’t gone away. In this episode of the Purdue Commercial AgCast, Joana Colussi and Michael Langemeier break down the March 2026 Purdue University/CME Group Ag Economy Barometer. Despite rising input costs and global uncertainty tied to geopolitical conflict, farmer sentiment moved higher—driven in part by stronger crop prices and government payments. But the improvement comes with important caveats. Tight margins, rising breakeven costs, and shifting risk priorities are shaping how farmers approach investment, production, and long-term strategy. More importantly, these signals highlight how producers are balancing short-term optimism with longer-term uncertainty. In this episode, we discuss: • What’s driving the recent increase in farmer sentiment • How $35/acre payments and higher corn prices are influencing outlook • Why only 4% of farmers plan to increase machinery purchases • How rising input costs are impacting breakeven prices and profitability • Why financial risk has overtaken marketing risk for many farms • What farmers expect for inflation and interest rates in the year ahead • How solar leasing is evolving across regions and land markets • What’s driving farmland value expectations in 2026 📊 Read the full Ag Economy Barometer report: https://purdue.ag/barometer126 — For more farm management resources, visit: 👉 https://purdue.ag/commercialag Subscribe to the podcast: 👉 https://purdue.ag/agcast Follow us: X: https://twitter.com/PUCommercialAg Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PUCommercialAg LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/center-for-commercial-agriculture

    19 min
  4. Lessons From the Delta, Part 6: Farming with No Margin for Error

    1 APR

    Lessons From the Delta, Part 6: Farming with No Margin for Error

    Lessons From the Delta continues — this time from the perspective of farmers managing one of the most intensive production systems in U.S. agriculture. In Episode 6 of the Purdue Commercial AgCast mini-series, Chad Fiechter and Todd Kuethe visit with Terry and Trent Dabs of LTD Farms near Stuttgart, Arkansas, to discuss what it takes to operate a rice-based farming system in the Mississippi Delta. What emerges is a detailed look at a production environment shaped by water management, labor demands, and capital intensity—where daily decisions around irrigation, equipment, and timing carry significant economic consequences. The conversation also discusses: • Why rice production requires constant water management and monitoring • How labor constraints shape daily operations and long-term strategy • The impact of intensive field conditions on machinery and capital decisions • How rice is marketed and how payment differs from corn and soybeans • The role of global markets in determining profitability As Delta farmers navigate a system defined by irrigation dependence and production intensity, the discussion raises important questions: What does it take to manage risk in a high-cost production system? How do labor and water constraints shape farm structure? And what lessons apply beyond the Delta? This episode builds on earlier conversations about production systems and farmland economics, and brings the focus directly to the farm level. We’ll also continue sharing video clips and behind-the-scenes footage from the Arkansas trip on our YouTube channel throughout the series. Subscribe to the Purdue Commercial AgCast so you don’t miss upcoming episodes in the Lessons From the Delta series. For more farm management resources, visit: 👉 https://purdue.ag/commercialag Subscribe to the podcast: 👉 https://purdue.ag/agcast Follow us: X: https://twitter.com/PUCommercialAg Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PUCommercialAg LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/center-for-commercial-agriculture

    26 min
  5. Lessons From the Delta, Part 5: Farm Robotics, Labor, and the Future of Field Work

    25 MAR

    Lessons From the Delta, Part 5: Farm Robotics, Labor, and the Future of Field Work

    Lessons From the Delta continues — this time with an unexpected conversation about farm robotics. In Episode 5 of the Purdue Commercial AgCast mini-series, Chad Fiechter and Todd Kuethe meet Sarah Hinkley, CEO and co-founder of Barn Owl Precision Ag, during a chance stop at a farm in Arkansas. What begins as a serendipitous encounter turns into a discussion about labor shortages, farm profitability, and how automation is being applied in real-world field conditions. The conversation also discusses: • The economic pressure driving labor-saving technologies • How autonomous “nano tractors” are designed for precision tasks • The shift from large equipment to networks of smaller machines • Challenges in scaling robotics across different environments • Opportunities to reduce chemical inputs through precision weeding As labor constraints and cost pressures continue to shape farm decisions, technologies like this raise important questions: What does practical automation look like on the farm? How quickly can these tools scale? And where do they fit in existing production systems? This episode builds on earlier discussions of production systems and research infrastructure, and sets up a return to the farm level in the next episode. We’ll also continue sharing video clips and behind-the-scenes footage from the Arkansas trip on our YouTube channel throughout the series. Subscribe to the Purdue Commercial AgCast so you don’t miss upcoming episodes in the Lessons From the Delta series. For more farm management resources, visit: 👉 https://purdue.ag/commercialag Subscribe to the podcast: 👉 https://purdue.ag/agcast Follow us: X: https://twitter.com/PUCommercialAg Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PUCommercialAg LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/center-for-commercial-agriculture

    11 min
  6. Lessons From the Delta, Part 4: Inside the Research Center Driving U.S. Rice Production

    18 MAR

    Lessons From the Delta, Part 4: Inside the Research Center Driving U.S. Rice Production

    Lessons From the Delta continues — this time with a look at the research and infrastructure behind rice production. In Episode 4 of the Purdue Commercial AgCast mini-series, Chad Fiechter and Todd Kuethe visit the Northeast Rice Research and Extension Center in Arkansas to understand how research, water management, and production systems come together in one of the most concentrated rice-growing regions in the United States. Arkansas produces nearly half of U.S. long grain rice — and a significant share of that production comes from just a few counties surrounding this station. That makes decisions around irrigation, variety selection, and weed control especially important. The conversation also discusses: • Why rice production is highly location-dependent • How groundwater constraints are shaping irrigation strategies • The role of research centers in testing varieties and production systems • Differences between flooded rice and row rice systems • Why weed pressure in rice is fundamentally different from corn and soybeans • The labor and management intensity required to grow rice While the crops may differ, the underlying questions remain familiar: How do you manage risk in a highly specialized system? How do resource constraints shape production decisions? And how does research translate into on-farm profitability? This episode builds on earlier discussions of rice economics and processing, and sets up upcoming conversations on automation and farm-level decision-making in the Delta. We’ll also continue sharing video clips and behind-the-scenes footage from the Arkansas trip on our YouTube channel throughout the series. Subscribe to the Purdue Commercial AgCast so you don’t miss upcoming episodes in the Lessons From the Delta series. For more farm management resources, visit: 👉 https://purdue.ag/commercialag Subscribe to the podcast: 👉 https://purdue.ag/agcast Follow us: X: https://twitter.com/PUCommercialAg Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PUCommercialAg LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/center-for-commercial-agriculture

    20 min
  7. Lessons From the Delta, Part 3: How Investors Are Buying Farmland

    11 MAR

    Lessons From the Delta, Part 3: How Investors Are Buying Farmland

    Lessons From the Delta continues — this time focusing on how farmland moves from farmers to investors and back again. In Episode 3 of the Purdue Commercial AgCast mini-series, Chad Fiechter and Todd Kuethe speak with Colson Tester of AcreTrader about how farmland investment platforms identify properties, evaluate land values, and structure investments for accredited investors. While farmland has long attracted institutional capital, platforms like AcreTrader are opening the door for retail investors to participate in agricultural land ownership. But farmland investing works differently than most asset classes — deals are often sourced locally, data can be limited, and success depends heavily on working with the farmers operating the land. The conversation explores: • How farmland investment platforms source and evaluate farms • Why buying land at or below market value is critical for long-term returns • How farms are structured as investment offerings for retail investors • Typical hold periods and expected return targets for farmland investments • Why many farmland acquisitions involve sale-leaseback arrangements with operators During the trip, the group also visited one of the first farms AcreTrader acquired in the Mississippi Delta and discussed how leasing structures, irrigation systems, and local production practices influence farmland values in the region. As previous episodes in the series have shown, Delta agriculture operates within a different production system — one heavily dependent on irrigation infrastructure and specialized crop rotations. Those same factors also influence how farmland is evaluated as an investment asset. While the production systems may differ from the Midwest, the strategic questions remain familiar: How should farmland be valued? What drives long-term land appreciation? And how does capital access shape farm growth and business decisions? This episode builds on the earlier conversations in the series and sets up upcoming discussions on irrigation systems, water management, and how those investments influence farm productivity and land values. We’ll also continue sharing video clips and behind-the-scenes footage from the Arkansas trip on our YouTube channel throughout the series. Subscribe to the Purdue Commercial AgCast so you don’t miss upcoming episodes in the Lessons From the Delta series. For more farm management resources, visit: 👉 https://purdue.ag/commercialag Subscribe to the podcast: 👉 https://purdue.ag/agcast Follow us: X: https://twitter.com/PUCommercialAg Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PUCommercialAg LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/center-for-commercial-agriculture

    24 min
  8. Producer Sentiment Stabilizes, But Future Expectations Slip | February 2026 Ag Economy Barometer

    4 MAR

    Producer Sentiment Stabilizes, But Future Expectations Slip | February 2026 Ag Economy Barometer

    In this episode of the Purdue Commercial AgCast, Joana Colussi and Michael Langemeier break down results from the February 2026 Purdue University–CME Group Ag Economy Barometer. The overall barometer rose modestly to 116, driven by improved current conditions. However, the Index of Future Expectations slipped, reflecting continued caution among producers. Crop producers remain under financial pressure, while livestock producers—especially cattle operations—report stronger optimism. In this episode, we discuss: Why 63% of producers expect bad financial times ahead for crops Continued strength in cattle and livestock sentiment Why nearly 70% say it’s a bad time to invest in machinery How producers plan to use Farmer Bridge Assistance Payments Rising importance of trade policy in farm decision-making Farmland value expectations and what they signal for balance sheets Farm growth, consolidation, and generational transition trends What do these shifts in sentiment mean for 2026 decision-making? Listen in for insights and implications for commercial farms. Full Ag Economy Barometer report: 👉 https://purdue.ag/agbarometer The Ag Economy Barometer sentiment index is calculated each month from 400 U.S. agricultural producers’ responses to a telephone survey.   For more farm management content, visit: 👉 https://purdue.ag/commercialag Subscribe to the podcast: 👉 https://purdue.ag/agcast Follow us X: https://twitter.com/PUCommercialAg Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PUCommercialAg LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/center-for-commercial-agriculture #Purdue #AgBarometer #FarmManagement #FarmEconomy #AgOutlook #AgEconomy #Agriculture

    18 min

Descrizione

Farm management news and advice for top agricultural producers from ag economists at Purdue University’s Center for Commercial Agriculture.

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