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Articles Tagged with ''Idaho''

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Capturing seasonal basis gains: Optimal hedging strategies for Northwest grain producers

Pacific Northwest wheat markets face volatility, but seasonal basis trends show short hedging from July to January improves returns, outperforming cash sales and offering a reliable risk management strategy.
April 2, 2026
Norm Ruhoff

Grain producers in the Pacific Northwest know that marketing wheat is rarely straightforward. Prices move constantly, global events can shake markets overnight and input costs continue to rise. Over the past decade, these pressures have made it increasingly difficult for producers to lock in profitable prices.


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The sugar market under pressure: What it means for growers

Sugarbeet growers across the Northwest face mounting losses as global oversupply, shifting consumer demand and outdated trade tariffs allow more foreign sugar to enter the U.S. market.
March 31, 2026
Samantha Parrott

Across the Pacific Northwest, sugarbeet growers are facing one of the most challenging market environments in decades. Domestic sugar prices have fallen sharply, dropping more than 33% over the past two years. For many sugarbeet growers, the 2025 crop resulted in losses exceeding $500 per acre. If current conditions continue, the economic outlook for the sugarbeet industry is grim.


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Irons in the Fire: A rush to judgment

A gentle start to March had calving running smooth and spirits high. Then a sudden blizzard swept in, delivering the sharp reminder that spring never arrives without a fight.
March 30, 2026
Paul Marchant

A mild start to March had me believing spring had settled in – right up until the storm proved otherwise.


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Tales of a Hay Hauler: Even a short nap is a good nap!

The Anchor‑Loc’s enclosed air chamber and simple vertical suspension made it the most comfortable seat I ever drove. Years later, a mega‑cab pickup and a salvaged low‑profile air suspension brought that same pursuit of fit and ride back to the forefront.
March 25, 2026
Brad Nelson

A hay truck Anchor‑Loc seat once set the bar for comfort, and I’ve been chasing that perfect ride ever since.


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University of Idaho extension Farm Stress Team: Breaking the silence in rural Idaho

University of Idaho Extension’s Farm Stress Team is working to reduce high suicide rates among Idaho farmers through community outreach, videos, education and stigma-breaking conversations – offering hope, prevention tools and support statewide.
March 25, 2026
David Callister, Selena Davila, Bracken Henderson, Tasha Howard, Klae O’Brien, and Kathee Tifft

Our local farmers are under financial pressure, face unpredictable weather and market swings, and are under an overwhelming cultural expectation to “rub some dirt on it” or “cowboy up” and get through it regardless of how they feel. All of these things just compound the strain and lead to silence and, in some cases, tragedy.


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Adapting in a down market: The Garner family’s approach

March 23, 2026
Lynn Jaynes

As an individual farm that relies largely on the sugarbeet crop, Garner recognizes the need to meet current and future challenges with efficiency, water management and “loosening the reins” to involve the younger generation.



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The Outside Circle: Homestead cat

March 18, 2026
Gus Brackett

My least favorite animal on our outfit is our indoor cat, Wendell. (If he is my least favorite, then why do I mention him in my column so frequently?) Wendell was a stray kitten we rescued from the pound. Half of his tail was missing, and he was found on the mean streets of Wendell, Idaho, thus the name.


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Who gets the family operation? How do I start on a succession plan?

Succession planning prepares the next manager before crisis forces decisions, clarifies roles separate from estate planning, and draws on what worked – and what didn’t.
March 16, 2026
Shannon Williams

Succession planning protects the family operation before crisis forces decisions no one is ready to make.


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The dawn of new pesticide restrictions

EPA’s new ESA-driven pesticide mitigation rules are tightening label requirements, increasing runoff and drift restrictions, and reducing application flexibility, requiring growers to follow stricter compliance measures nationwide.
March 15, 2026
Oliver T. Neher

What would you think if I told you that the era of near‑unlimited flexibility in pesticide applications is coming to a close? The days of jumping into the sprayer as soon as fields are dry or calling the crop duster the moment conditions turn favorable for pests or pathogens are quickly fading. Change is coming – but why?


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Spring calving roundup: Challenges now, questions for summer

A mild winter with low snowfall portends scours and drought. Experts urge sanitation and planning, while warning that limited snowpack could reduce summer forage and force supplementation or early weaning.
March 13, 2026
Julia McCarthy

Whatever the combination of market, forage and cow health conditions emerge as the year wears on, says Brackenbury, “That’s the beauty of livestock – you always have to be prepared and have a willingness to adapt. You never know what kind of event will come.”


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  • RECENT ARTICLES
  • 63636-woolsey-1.jpg

    Low snowpack, early runoff: Idaho's tough water year

    June 16, 2026
  • Corn price unchanged at $4.40 per bushel

    June 16, 2026
    • What Idaho grain producers need to know about ARC-CO and PLC changes

      June 16, 2026

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