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U.S. Agricultural Weather Outlook: Early-Winter Contrasts, Western Snow, and Fieldwork Windows for the Week Ahead

U.S. Agricultural Weather Outlook: Early-Winter Contrasts, Western Snow, and Fieldwork Windows for the Week Ahead

Early-winter contrasts persist: northern chill and light snow, Southern Plains/Southeast milder, West periodically wet with mountain snow. Next week: Pacific waves, California fog, Southwest dry, Plains frontal rain, intermittent Corn Belt/Northeast mixed precip. Risks include frost, wind, fog, mountain snow; best field windows early in Southern Plains/Southwest.

Weather

U.S. Ag Policy Weekly Brief: Farm Bill Sticking Points, Regulatory Moves, and Market Signals to Watch

U.S. agriculture policy is in flux as Congress and agencies negotiate the farm bill, appropriations riders, and major rules on labor, pesticides, water, biofuels, competition, and trade. Court and state actions add uncertainty. Near-term calendars signal movement; producers should stress-test budgets, monitor compliance shifts, hedge markets, and time program enrollments.

Politics
December 11’s Quiet Revolutions: How One Date Keeps Reshaping U.S. Agriculture

December 11’s Quiet Revolutions: How One Date Keeps Reshaping U.S. Agriculture

December 11 punctuates U.S. agriculture’s evolution: the 1930 bank collapse squeezed farm credit; 1941 war declarations mobilized production and mechanization; the 1980 Superfund law tightened environmental stewardship; and China’s 2001 WTO entry reoriented trade. Together, these shocks forged today’s finance, supply, and risk systems across America’s fields and markets.

December 10 in U.S. Agriculture: Milestones in Science, Trade, Resilience, and Rights

December 10 in U.S. Agriculture: Milestones in Science, Trade, Resilience, and Rights

Across U.S. agricultural history, December 10 marks turning points: Borlaug’s 1970 Nobel validating crop science; 2019 USMCA trade fixes; 2021 tornado resilience; the 1898 Treaty of Paris reshaping territories; 1869 Wyoming suffrage broadening civic roles, plus Roosevelt’s 1906 Nobel and 1948 UDHR—underscoring science, markets, trade, governance, and community.

Dec. 9 and the Farm Front: How Wartime Mobilization and Year‑End Forces Shaped U.S. Agriculture

Dec. 9 and the Farm Front: How Wartime Mobilization and Year‑End Forces Shaped U.S. Agriculture

FDR’s Dec. 9, 1941 address catalyzed wartime farm mobilization—price supports, logistics, Bracero labor, and mechanization—foundations of today’s safety net and research. Early December often brings agricultural turning points: weather shocks, year‑end policy deals (CRP, 2018 Farm Bill, COOL), and trade pivots (NAFTA, China’s WTO entry, USMCA).

The December 8 Effect: How One Date Keeps Resetting the Rules of U.S. Agriculture

The December 8 Effect: How One Date Keeps Resetting the Rules of U.S. Agriculture

December 8 has repeatedly reset U.S. agriculture: NAFTA’s implementation (1993) opened North American markets; the Uruguay Round (1994) launched WTO rules; Pigford II funding (2010) advanced civil-rights redress; WWII mobilization (1941) transformed production; and MF Global scrutiny (2011) strengthened hedging safeguards—shaping market access, equity, and institutional resilience.

Pearl Harbor’s Ripple Effect: How World War II Remade American Agriculture

Pearl Harbor’s Ripple Effect: How World War II Remade American Agriculture

Pearl Harbor reshaped U.S. agriculture: wartime mobilization imposed rationing, price controls, and guaranteed markets; labor shortages spurred Bracero, women/youth, and POW labor; Japanese American farmers were dispossessed; victory gardens proliferated; mechanization and fertilizers accelerated; and postwar policy frameworks emerged—offering lasting lessons on workforce, resilience, equity, and innovation.

December 6 and the American Farm: Emancipation, Trade, and the Work of Winter

December 6 and the American Farm: Emancipation, Trade, and the Work of Winter

December 6 marks pivotal shifts in U.S. agriculture: the 1865 abolition of slavery reshaped labor, land ownership, and spurred sharecropping, mechanization, and migration; the 2012 PNTR vote briefly expanded, then geopolitics curtailed, farm exports to Russia. Early December also signals regional field wrap-up, processing, and market planning—labor, markets, resilience.

Dec. 5’s Double Legacy: How Repeal and Soil Stewardship Remade U.S. Farming

Dec. 5’s Double Legacy: How Repeal and Soil Stewardship Remade U.S. Farming

Dec. 5 marks two forces shaping U.S. agriculture: the 1933 repeal of Prohibition, which revived markets for barley, hops, grapes, and distilling grains under state-regulated supply chains and New Deal tailwinds; and World Soil Day, spotlighting soil health practices that boost resilience, efficiency, and long-term farm profitability.

Birth of the National Grange: The Cooperative Spark That Rewired Rural America

Birth of the National Grange: The Cooperative Spark That Rewired Rural America

Founded December 4, 1867, the National Grange united farmers in a family-centered, nonpartisan movement for cooperation, education, and fair markets. It spurred co-ops, Granger Laws, Munn v. Illinois, and the Interstate Commerce Act, advanced Rural Free Delivery and extension, and still shapes rural institutions and debates over consolidation and infrastructure.