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Harvest USA Report
Harvest USA Report
Author: Hale Broadcasting
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Up-to-date HARVEST NEWS : The Harvest USA Report has been a favorite since 1985 and is produced by Brian Hale. The program airs twice daily M-F on great radio stations across the true midwest.
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[Brian Hale]
Here's more on the fire danger during cotton harvest season from David Misener.
[David Woodruff]
I can't remember the word that I'm trying to say, but the cotton seeds are they're an oil feed, are they not?
[David Misener]
Yes, they are. They're an oil seed in the cotton when it's put into a bale. It's got give off a fume kind of like gas is the easiest way that I could say it. The spark will go a long ways and create a lot of problem really fast and and all the dust and the leaves and the stocks and just your machine is so dirty. You got to be really careful with it when you're harvesting and clean your machine every day to help minimize that fire when it does happen.
[David Woodruff]
So then it looks like there's three things that you have to worry about. The cotton lint, that's got to be super flammable and then that oiliness of the seeds, I know I had a neighbor that raised hemp and he had to stop every round and go and blow off the manifold on the combine because that oily dust would catch on the manifolds and it could be smoldering away and it wouldn't be too long until it burned that John Deere right down. So he had to be out there. Some of the big square balers I understand they have a compressed air system blows off the knaughters every so often. Has anybody done that for cotton strippers?
[David Misener]
Not that I know of, but I can say myself, I do have one of them big air compressors that you pull around you know that it's a whole by itself machine and got a diesel engine in it. Yeah it just when the fire happens there's just a lot of trash out there that can fuel for that fire. It's just laying all over the machine hanging on everywhere.
[Brian Hale]
That's going to do it for today's Harvest USA report. Thanks again for listening and may God bless. I'm Brian Hale.
[David Woodruff] We're talking to Jasper Hansen from Scobey, Montana. So are you harvesting at this point or are you done?
[Jesper Hansen] We are still harvesting. We actually just started cutting sunflowers here south of Scobey We had sunflowers on our own farm. They look pretty decent for the year the late rains. We had that didn't help our wheat and lentils definitely helped our sunflowers. They're running about 1,500 pounds, which we feel like that's pretty good for this area.
[David Woodruff] Do sunflowers normally yield any better than anything else?
[Jesper Hansen] When you get into areas, you know, North Dakota, South Dakota, you can you can get a lot better than that But we're pretty fortunate that we got that kind of yield and and they dry there's seven and a half percent moisture So we're just going
[David Woodruff] So how high of moisture can they go up to before you have to dry them or something?
[Jesper Hansen] Well, we don't have the ability of drying them here But Fargo will take them up to 13 and a half if you ship them directly But we kind of like to get them down there six to eight percent for storing them I would imagine that drying sunflowers would be kind of a hard thing an oil seed or is it a problem?
[David Woodruff] I would think that's kind of hard. I've never experienced it but yeah being an oil seed that could easily start on fire would think and 1500, do you ever see a yield better than that?
[Jesper Hansen] Once we get into the Dakotas and cut them around there. Yes, we definitely do, but around here that is by far the best .
[David Woodruff] So is it a moisture thing?
[Jesper Hansen] Yes, it definitely is, like I said this year we lucked out with the the late rains.
[Brian Hale] That's gonna do it for today's harvest USA report. Thanks again for listening and may God bless. I'm Brian Hale
Welcome to the Harvest USA Report. I'm Brian Hale, an original production of
Howard Hale Broadcasting now expanded throughout North America. Let's join a
conversation with David Woodruff and David Meisner.
I'm in the cotton stripper right now yet still harvesting.
You're still harvesting. Whoa! I better say we're talking to David Meisner. Let's see Elk City, Oklahoma, is that right?
That is correct. The good news is it's getting down and the bad news is it's not done. That's right. It's not done but the end is very very close. I'm down to maybe one to two days left. It's all done. Done harvesting for the year then. So about how many acres is that? It'll take you two days. Somewhere between 100 to 200 is what I got left. Helping the farmer out to get done. He's got his own machine running so just kind of depends on how much he lets me help finish up and what he wants to try to get accomplished himself if you will. So the two machines working man? Yes it is. Getting done and we're doing cotton and it's a really good cotton harvest year around home this year. Had a lot of rain at the beginning of the year and put some moisture in the subsoil and didn't get it towards the end and we're actually really really dry and dust is blowing on and we've actually had high fire danger today where bug normal temperatures were in the upper 70s and low humidity and it's got wind so it makes a good fire day if but we don't need any of that so we're just trying to be careful and watch what we're doing on harvesting and get this part done.
Custom Harvester David Meissner working cotton in his hometown area there at Elk City, Oklahoma.That's gonna do it for today's HarvestUSA report. Thanks again for listening and
may God bless. I'm Brian Hale.
HARVEST USA REPORT for January 5, 2026
[Brian Hale]
Welcome to the Harvest USA Report. I'm Brian Hale... an original production of Howard Hale Broadcasting, now expanded throughout North America.
[AD]
Hey everyone, this is Brian Hale. If you've heard this program before, you know I have been offering website help for many years. In fact, we've been in the business for over 20 and we'd love to help you for anything website related even if you just need some advice. It's free. Email support@HaleMultimedia.com or call 940-224-6315. Portfolio, pricing, and contacts... all on HaleMultimedia.com.
[Brian Hale]
There is proof that soil health can start from absolutely zero. Meet farmer Ryan Urban. He was tasked with the impossible. Converting a gravel pile from interstate construction into workable farmland. Ryan decided to follow the soil health roadmap and begin with what the land needed most. Living biology. Ryan worked to slowly rebuild organic matter and let life do what it does best. Today that same flat is growing something again. Not perfect, not finished, but moving in the right direction. Now here's Ryan Urban with a message from growing resilience, South Dakota.
[Ryan Urban] (via Growing Resilience SD)
At one point that was a hot mix plant and a gravel pile for when they built the interstate and it used to look like a gravel parking lot. So we've been feeding on it. We're slowly getting organic matter back and now this whole flat here starting to grow something. It might not be exactly what we want yet but we're making strides.
[Brian Hale]
That's the real lesson here. Soil health isn't about instant results. It's about steady progress, long-term thinking and giving the land a chance to respond. Visit our Harvest USA Facebook page and look for that link from Everything Cover Crops and you'll see how Ryan rebuilt soil from the ground up.
That's going to do it for today's Harvest USA report. Thanks again for listening and may God bless. I'm Brian Hale.
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From Heil Harvesting LLC
Hey, friends, as you wrap up your end-of-year giving, we want to remind you that there's yet another good cause out there that you can support -- now or any time.
The Bradley Heil Memorial Advancing Agriculture Scholarship awards scholarships in Brad's memory every year to people who are going to college or trade school with ag or ag-adjacent career intentions or students who have started or have plans to start an ag or ag-adjacent business. The Brad Scholarship fund is administered through the Northern Colorado Foundation, a 501(c)3.
The Brad Scholarship is an interesting scholarship. For starters, it's not limited just to people who are planning to go to a four-year college. Those people are eligible, sure, but those who are looking into tech school or are starting their own business right now are eligible, too. In addition, the application is not like most scholarship applications. It is very short. Don't want to write an essay? Not a problem; video submissions are accepted, because essays aren't for everyone. Don't want to ask for letters of reference? That's fine; they're not required. The scholarship's goal is to support agriculture as Brad did and would have continued to do, and it does that by getting money into the hands of people with real plans for a future in agriculture.
If you are interested in giving a gift online, you can do that here: https://cfnc.fcsuite.com/erp/donate/create/fund... . If you scroll down on the page in that link, you'll see the name, phone number and email address of our contact at the NoCo Foundation. John is a great guy and will have the answers to all of your questions, so don't hesitate to contact him.
If you'd like to give but prefer not to donate online, we completely understand. Please send a message or call/text us, or contact John at the NoCo Foundation at 970-580-1013 or john@nocofoundation.org. We can get you a mailing address and any other info you may need.
And if you'd like to read a little more about the scholarship, visit https://thisprairielife.com/brad-scholarship/ . You can also see the list of kind folks who have agreed to sit on the Brad Scholarship Committee.
The scholarship is not yet open to applicants, so don't try to apply yet. The application form will be available starting Feb. 1.
Thank you!






