Search
Better Farming OntarioBetter PorkBetter Farming Prairies

Better Farming Ontario Featured Articles

Better Farming Ontario magazine is published 11 times per year. After each edition is published, we share featured articles online.


Southern crops come to the Midwest

Friday, April 4, 2014

When life hands you lemons, you make lemonade. And when temperatures soar and it doesn't rain for weeks, you stop planting corn and you start growing okra.

That's what many farmers in the U.S. Midwest are doing, according to Aljazeera America. Some growers in Kansas are producing 1,200 pounds of okra a week, and farmers in Wisconsin are planting it, too.

Other Southern crops are creeping northward as well. "We're seeing the expansion of cotton into the Midwest," says Charles Rice, chair of the International Union of Soil Sciences. "It's already in the southern tier of Kansas."  

Sorghum, which can handle heat and water stress better than corn, is being planted all over Kansas. Some 2,750,000 acres of sorghum were planted in 2013, compared to 650,000 acres in 2012.

"It's because of the climate, and it's also because of economic opportunities," says Jerry Hatfield, a laboratory director at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. "Farmers are opportunistic, and they're entrepreneurial. They've discovered there's a market for okra and you can profitably grow that crop." As for corn, Hatfield says it's moving to North and South Dakota.

Courtney Skeeba, a Kansas farmer who started growing okra after her sustainable tomatoes kept succumbing to heat stress, says her customers are warming up to okra, too. "We constantly sell out of the okra that we bring to the market. Even though it's not a Midwest food in general, something is changing because, by the end of the day, it's gone." BF

Current Issue

November 2025

Better Farming Magazine

Farms.com Breaking News

CGC issues multiple licences in early November

Thursday, November 6, 2025

The Canadian Grain Commission (CGC) has been busy in the first week of November. The CGC issued four licences on Nov. 1 with three going to companies in Saskatchewan. Eskdale Seed Farm in Leross received a primary elevator licence. This type of licence goes to “an operator of an... Read this article online

Railroads push record grain shipments

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

As Ontario farmers wrap up a season marked by weather extremes and yield variability, Canada’s two major railways—Canadian National Railway Company (CN Rail) and Canadian Pacific Kansas City Limited (CPKC)—are reporting strong performance in moving corn, soybeans, and grain across the... Read this article online

BF logo

It's farming. And it's better.

 

a Farms.com Company

Subscriptions

Subscriber inquiries, change of address, or USA and international orders, please email: subscriptions@betterfarming.com or call 888-248-4893 x 281.


Article Ideas & Media Releases

Have a story idea or media release? If you want coverage of an ag issue, trend, or company news, please email us.

Follow us on Social Media

 

Sign up to a Farms.com Newsletter

 

DisclaimerPrivacy Policy2025 ©AgMedia Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Back To Top