A winter storm will bring heavy snowfall to the Northern Plains with potential blizzard conditions while Tropical Storm Nicole could be hurricane status before reaching Florida. This will be followed by a burst of arctic air that could challenge low-temperature records.
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All Posts
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by John Baranick , DTN Meteorologist
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by John Baranick , DTN Meteorologist
Winter wheat in the southwestern Plains has gone through horrendous weather conditions thus far. This area has also missed out on recent precipitation that has occurred elsewhere in the country. Will the active pattern give the southwestern Plains any chance for reducing...
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by John Baranick , DTN Meteorologist
With La Nina in control, weather conditions are expected to follow its typical pattern of producing clippers across northern areas, resulting in colder and wetter conditions across the north and warmer and drier conditions across the south. However, the pattern also favors...
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by Bryce Anderson , Ag Meteorologist Emeritus
La Nina-related flooding rain is hitting Eastern Australia for the third time in less than two years.
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by John Baranick , DTN Meteorologist
An active pattern over the next couple of weeks will feature storm systems that seem to be on the heels of the last. Models are understandably inconsistent with these features.
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by John Baranick , DTN Meteorologist
An active pattern over the next couple of weeks will feature storm systems that seem to be on the heels of the last. Models are understandably inconsistent with these features.
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by Bryce Anderson , Ag Meteorologist Emeritus
Ongoing drought has both hard red winter wheat and soft red winter wheat off to a slow start for the 2022-23 cycle.
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by John Baranick , DTN Meteorologist
A persistent ridge in the west and trough in the east feature that is bringing some near-record cold air to the eastern U.S. this week will completely flip next week. What is causing the big swings in the pattern?
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by Bryce Anderson , Ag Meteorologist Emeritus
A top-five ranking for temperatures and a bottom-ten precipitation total, plus more billion-dollar level storm damage, all hit the U.S. during September.
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by John Baranick , DTN Meteorologist
Drought has been a major topic of concern for farmers this season. Very few areas have not seen some category of dryness or drought show up on the Drought Monitor this season. That begs the question: With drought so entrenched across the country, how much rain will it...
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by John Baranick , DTN Meteorologist
A series of cold fronts moving through the country will bring in some colder air to the eastern half of the country through next week. This pattern will not be locked into place for long as the pattern starts to flip for the end of October.
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by Bryce Anderson , Ag Meteorologist Emeritus
A wildfire which destroyed a prominent 4-H camp and the lowest harvested winter wheat acreage in over 130 years point to more impact of the La Nina-enhanced drought of 2022.
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by John Baranick , DTN Meteorologist
A brief but potent shot of cold air will come sweeping down through the U.S. later this week. It will likely bring widespread frosts and freezes to the Corn Belt, which may damage corn and soybeans that have yet to reach maturity.
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by Bryce Anderson , Ag Meteorologist Emeritus
Ogallala Aquifer water ran out in some areas of the southwestern Plains during late summer due to extreme drought and high irrigation demand.
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by John Baranick , DTN Meteorologist
Hurricane Ian is likely to produce widespread heavy rains and potential flooding for Southeastern U.S. farmers. Producers with citrus groves in Florida, cottonfields in Georgia, and mature corn stands in North Carolina are taking note of the storm's track through their...
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by Bryce Anderson , Ag Meteorologist Emeritus
Dryness boosted by La Nina continues to deny drought recovery in much of the lower 48 states this fall season.
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by John Baranick , DTN Meteorologist
A stretch of mostly good weather continues for harvesting corn and soybeans. It is more detrimental for winter wheat planting and establishment, especially in the southwestern Plains.
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by Bryce Anderson , Ag Meteorologist Emeritus
La Nina-enhanced dryness is dragging even drought-tolerant crop yields down.
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by John Baranick , DTN Meteorologist
Heat and dryness are sapping soil moisture for winter wheat planting and establishment in the southwestern Plains. Models keep that pattern going through early next week, but there is a chance for a better rainfall event mid-late next week.
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by Bryce Anderson , Ag Meteorologist Emeritus
Late-summer dryness in Nebraska is an example of how crops, pastures and hay supplies are withering.
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Markets
- Market Matters Blog by DTN Staff
- Technically Speaking by DTN Staff
- Sort & Cull by DTN Staff
- Fundamentally Speaking by Joel Karlin
- Canada Markets by Cliff Jamieson
News
- Production Blog by Pam Smith
- Ethanol Blog by DTN Staff
- Ag Policy Blog by Chris Clayton
- South America Calling by DTN Staff
- An Urban's Rural View by Urban Lehner
- MachineryLink by Dan Miller
- Editors' Notebook by Greg D.Horstmeier