This will adjust the wall streeters thinking on farmland value. If its not a pig in a poke, they find some other avenue for short term profit. Now we grinding corn to silage, if it does not rain, the wind will raise havock across the tree sawed hedgerows, and vacant plains of dirt. Only man is creating his own disasters. Maybe instead of a tile plow, this would be a time to retire a lot of acres to set aside programs. this how the thirties started, we in my neck, in Kansas City, we are 5 " or so under in rainfall, have seen a shower in weeks, it's 100 degrees for 3 weeks, my yard looks like burned up short grass hay, just the dogs trampling make it dust, and the trees about 20' tall have lost their leaves to dormancy, and or are dead. Waiting for the fire. I can believe the 4th of July idiots didn't get us already. The landowners are worse off, record flood last year, no rain this year, year before last, to cold for corn to tassle right, we had sild streaming down on not exsiting ears. Alot of good producers will not survive this, and the risk takers are going to fail, unless the have a bank to keep them alive. Then they'll give up so much profit, it will be 5 years to get even, assuming conditions are normal. How does that 300.00 an acre cash rent on 7500.00 purchase price per acre ground look now. Looks like chinese overtime, the more you work, you get less for hour of labor.