Western Indiana farmer Kevin Cox says his early-planted crops look better than expected despite variable weather conditions.
“Our corn looks good and the early soybeans we planted look fantastic,” he says.
He tells Brownfield he started planting the first week of April and two weeks later his farm received two inches of snow.
“I was scared to death that I was going to have to redo all of it and it’s the best-looking stuff I have right now,” he says.