Northeast Kansas farmer Glenn Brunkow says timely rains during the growing season have delayed the start of harvest a couple of weeks. “We’ve had earlier years but usually in an earlier year it’s because we’ve burned up in drought,” he says. “I’ll take a year like this where we’ve had a little more moisture and have delayed harvest.”
He tells Brownfield he expects soybeans to have an average yield. “They’re just starting to dry down now, but they’ve dried down in the last week,” Brunkhow says.


