Australia - Drought ravages Macalister corn

22.06.2015 225 views
Australia - Drought ravages Macalister corn

Macalister grain grower has vowed to plough on in the face of continued drought after yielding only half of his annual corn crop. The farmer said what started out as a 'terrific' season soon turned into one of the worst he had ever experienced. The family property Curraweena copped consistent heatwaves throughout March, which battered his 100 hectare corn crop. Hoping to harvest about seven tonnes per hectare, farmer said he would now be lucky to end up with half of that.

Macalister grain grower Rob Taylor has vowed to plough on in the face of continued drought after yielding only half of his annual corn crop.

The farmer said what started out as a 'terrific' season soon turned into one of the worst he had ever experienced.

The family property Curraweena copped consistent heatwaves throughout March, which battered his 100 hectare corn crop.

"Corn is usually pretty weather resistant but it just doesn't handle heat like that," he said.

Hoping to harvest about seven tonnes per hectare, Mr Taylor said he would now be lucky to end up with half of that.

"We planted in December and had good rain through the January period and the crop was looking very good, but then we had 10 or so days of just under and above 40 degrees in March and it just knocked it. Now we might only get just over three tonnes a hectare."

Returning to the family property in 1977, Mr Taylor began farming corn about 16 years ago as a way to diversify the operation, planting upwards of 40,000 seeds/ha of Pac624 variety.

"This is all dryland cropping area and I chose corn because we normally get a similar yield to our sorghum crop - but we never plant it unless we've got a full profile."

Mr Taylor said although he was disappointed in the corn crop, the future was bolstered by solid market prices, with the grain-grower recently quoted $320/tonne for his July yield.

"We'll sell it and it will probably head to local feedlots and then we'll be focusing on our winter plant."

On the back of a crop loss, Mr Taylor said he had turned his attention to planting 142ha of wheat, 272ha of barley, 271ha of chickpea and 85ha of fava bean.

"We've got good starting moisture and we'll just hang out for rain in August and September."

Source - http://www.queenslandcountrylife.com.au/

25.05.2026

Algeria - CASH Assurances to diversify into agriculture insurance

CASH Assurances will launch agriculture insurance plans in June 2026, as part of its diversification strategy.

25.05.2026

U.S. specialty crop growers push for stronger Farm Bill support

Specialty crop growers in the U.S. are calling for stronger support measures in the 2026 Farm Bill, particularly around risk management, market access, and crop insurance. 

25.05.2026

ASF outbreak leaves Bhutan piggery farmers with heavy losses

For piggery farmers in Damzhagsa, the African Swine Fever outbreak did more than wipe out their animals, it also wiped out a major source of income while leaving many of them with loans to pay and no clear way to recover – putting insurance in the spotlight.

25.05.2026

Australia - RoBird takes to the skies to protect $100m strawberry crops from the real thing

RoBird is now flying around Moreton Bay skies to protect the city’s $100 million strawberry industry from the real deal.

25.05.2026

India - 1.75 Lakh Hectares of Crops Damaged as Cyclone ‘Dana’ Hits Coastal Odisha

In Odisha, the severe cyclonic storm ‘Dana’ has badly damaged agriculture and property in the coastal districts of Bhadrak, Kendrapara, Balasore, Mayurbhanj, and Jagatsinghpur. 

25.05.2026

USA - National Pennsylvania Seeks USDA Disaster Aid After Crop Freeze

Pennsylvania’s congressional delegation urged the U.S. Department of Agriculture to issue a Secretarial Disaster Designation for all counties in the commonwealth after late spring freezes caused widespread damage to fruit and specialty crop farms, with industry losses estimated between $150 million and $200 million.

24.05.2026

Severe Hailstorm and Flooding Devastate Farmland in Central Greece

Torrential rain, strong winds and intense hail battered rural communities, leaving thousands of acres of agricultural land flooded or heavily damaged as authorities assess the extent of the losses.

24.05.2026

USA - Long Island oyster operations look to bounce back after winter temperatures cause severe damage

"This winter was unprecedented, weather-wise - at least in my lifetime," said Peeko Oysters owner Peter Stein.