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What we can learn from crop contest winners

It is good to look back at some strategies used by crop yield winners in 2020.

Curt Arens, Editor, Nebraska Farmer

June 25, 2021

6 Slides
Closeup of soybean plant
Photos by Curt Arens

This past spring, Nebraska Farmer ran a series of interviews with numerous 2020 crop yield contest winners, as well as the University of Nebraska Testing Ag Performance Solutions winners, to identify some individual strategies these farmers have in their own operations.

Perhaps, other producers can learn from these “big picture” strategies that not only focus on yield, but also on profitability as well as input efficiency and natural resources conservation.

At this point in the growing season, with wheat harvest around the corner and through the midpoint in the growing season for corn, soybeans and grain sorghum, we felt it was a good time to reflect on these strategies and find some takeaways that can be used on the farms of our readers.

Here is a gallery of the winners and their stories. Click through the gallery to learn more insights into the thought processes and practices of Nebraska’s 2020 crop winners.

About the Author

Curt Arens

Editor, Nebraska Farmer

Curt Arens began writing about Nebraska’s farm families when he was in high school. Before joining Farm Progress as a field editor in April 2010, he had worked as a freelance farm writer for 27 years, first for newspapers and then for farm magazines, including Nebraska Farmer.

His real full-time career, however, during that same period was farming his family’s fourth generation land in northeast Nebraska. He also operated his Christmas tree farm and grew black oil sunflowers for wild birdseed. Curt continues to raise corn, soybeans and alfalfa and runs a cow-calf herd.

Curt and his wife Donna have four children, Lauren, Taylor, Zachary and Benjamin. They are active in their church and St. Rose School in Crofton, where Donna teaches and their children attend classes.

Previously, the 1986 University of Nebraska animal science graduate wrote a weekly rural life column, developed a farm radio program and wrote books about farm direct marketing and farmers markets. He received media honors from the Nebraska Forest Service, Center for Rural Affairs and Northeast Nebraska Experimental Farm Association.

He wrote about the spiritual side of farming in his 2008 book, “Down to Earth: Celebrating a Blessed Life on the Land,” garnering a Catholic Press Association award.

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