Thursday, February 27, 2026
Vol. 3 · Issue 47

HARVEST

"The earthworm moves through soil the way credit moves through a farm — invisibly, and only when conditions are right."

— Dr. Miriam Okafor, Latest Episode

Soil

What the Earthworm Knows That the Agronomist Forgot

Dr. Miriam Okafor, Soil Ecologist · 58 min

Markets

Reading the Corn Futures Like a Fourth-Generation Farmer

Dale Westerfield, Commodity Broker · 44 min

Legacy

The Quarter-Section That Survived Three Droughts and One Bank

Ruth & Cal Brennan, Ranchers · 1 hr 12 min

Begin Reading
01
Soil
3 Episodes
EP. 047
Close-up of dark rich soil being held in weathered hands, earthworm visible, soft morning light
Soil

The earthworm moves through soil the way credit moves through a farm — invisibly, and only when conditions are right.

What the Earthworm Knows That the Agronomist Forgot

Dr. Miriam OkaforSoil Ecologist, Cornell CALS

Miriam spent six years cataloguing earthworm populations across no-till plots in the Finger Lakes. What she found upended three decades of extension service advice about soil compaction — and nobody wanted to hear it.

0:0058 min

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EP. 039
Green cover crop field with rows of crimson clover in late afternoon golden light, flat horizon
Soil

Every farmer who failed with cover crops skipped the same step: they never asked what problem they were actually trying to solve.

Cover Crops Are Not a Religion. They Are a Calculation.

Ben HargroveAgronomist, Hargrove Consulting

Ben has been knee-deep in cover crop trials for eleven years. He does not evangelize. He runs the numbers — input costs, cash flow timing, soil organic matter gains — and tells you what the spreadsheet says.

0:0051 min

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EP. 031
Scientist in field kneeling beside soil core sample, clipboard in hand, wheat field background
Soil

We have been farming the top two inches for a century. The real leverage is in the next eighteen.

The Microbiome Beneath Your Feet Is Worth More Than the Crop Above It

Dr. Priya SubramaniamMicrobiologist, USDA ARS

A single tablespoon of healthy prairie soil contains more microorganisms than there are people on Earth. Priya is mapping them. Her goal is a living atlas of soil health that farmers can actually use at the field level.

0:001 hr 4 min

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02
Markets
2 Episodes
EP. 045
Grain elevator silhouette against dramatic orange sunset sky, truck unloading in foreground
Markets

The Chicago Board of Trade does not know your county. Your county basis does. Learn to read the spread and you are ahead of ninety percent of the room.

Reading the Corn Futures Like a Fourth-Generation Farmer

Dale WesterfieldCommodity Broker, Westerfield & Sons

Dale grew up watching his grandfather read cattle markets by feel. Now he trades grain futures on a screen, but the instinct is the same. He explains what the basis tells you that the headline price never will.

0:0044 min

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EP. 038
Farmer reviewing paperwork at wooden kitchen table, coffee mug beside spreadsheets, morning window light
Markets

Cash flow and marketing are not the same conversation. The day you separate them is the day you start farming like a business.

Why the Farmer Always Sells at the Bottom and How to Stop

Josephine CallowayFarm Financial Advisor, FCS Financial

Jo has sat across the kitchen table from three hundred farm families and watched the same pattern repeat: the crop is sold at harvest, at the worst possible moment, because the operating note is due. She has a fix.

0:0049 min

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03
Legacy
2 Episodes
EP. 042
Elderly couple standing at weathered wooden fence on ranch at sunset, cattle grazing in distance
Legacy

You do not survive a drought by being tough. You survive it by having made a decision three years earlier that your neighbors thought was foolish.

The Quarter-Section That Survived Three Droughts and One Bank

Ruth & Cal BrennanRanchers, Brennan Bar B Ranch

The Brennans bought their first 160 acres in 1987 with a loan at sixteen percent interest. They still have it. Cal talks about the two decisions that saved the ranch; Ruth talks about the one decision Cal still does not know she made.

0:001 hr 12 min

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EP. 035
Father and adult daughter walking side by side through corn rows at dusk, long shadows on field
Legacy

The hardest part of succession is not the legal documents. It is admitting that your vision for the farm and your child's vision are not the same farm.

Passing the Operation to a Daughter Who Did Not Ask For It

Marcus & Deja FontaineGrain Farmers, Fontaine Family Farms

Marcus spent twenty years assuming his son would take over. His daughter Deja had other plans — until she did not. This episode is about the conversation they never had, and the one they finally did.

0:0055 min

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04
Machines
2 Episodes
EP. 044
Researcher examining corn plant in greenhouse, examining leaf under magnification, controlled environment
Machines

A drone can tell you a plant is stressed. It cannot tell you why the genetics you planted cannot handle stress in the first place. That is a different problem.

The Seed Breeder Who Is Not Impressed by the Drone

Henrik VasquezSeed Breeder, Vasquez Genetics

Henrik has been developing drought-tolerant corn genetics for twenty-three years. He has seen every technology wave come through. He explains why the precision ag revolution has not yet touched the part of the system that matters most.

0:001 hr 1 min

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EP. 036
Mechanic in overalls working on large tractor engine in rural repair shop, tools scattered on floor
Machines

The tractor is smarter than I am. But it cannot fix itself. And the dealer is three hours away and wants four hundred dollars just to show up.

The Repair Shop That Refuses to Die Because It Cannot Be Replaced

Terrence "TJ" HolbrookFarm Equipment Mechanic, Holbrook Repair

TJ fixes things that manufacturers say cannot be fixed. His waiting list is eight months long. He talks about what right-to-repair legislation actually means at the ground level, and why the next generation of mechanics is the scarcest resource in agriculture.

0:0047 min

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47

The Archive

47 conversations from the field.

Three years of Thursday mornings. Every episode is transcribed, timestamped, and searchable. The full archive is free.

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