
Indiana Corn – Americana Collection
American farmers hit by the US-China trade battle are preparing to reshape the US Farm Belt by planting more corn and less soybeans next year over a land mass potentially equal to the size of Connecticut. For decades, corn was US farmers’ crop of choice, its tall stalks carpeting the Midwestern landscape. Soybeans, shorter and bushier, began decades ago as a niche crop raised on less acreage but came to rival corn in recent years because of growing demand from China. US farmers in 2018 planted more soybeans than corn for the first time in more than three decades, betting on that demand. But Chinese tariffs on US soybeans have hurt that bet: US exporters have sold less soybeans to China, typically the largest foreign buyer of the crop, in the past seven weeks than in a single week last fall.
"Prices will tell you that you would see a significant shift out of soybeans toward corn in the US," said Soren Schroder, chief executive of grain-trading giant Bunge Ltd., speaking at a Wall Street Journal conference in September. Some analysts say farmers could convert as much as four million acres from soybeans to corn next spring.1
1Newman, Jesse, and Jacob Bunge. Tariffs May Crown Corn King Again. The Wall Street Journal, Dow Jones & Company, 28 October 2018, www.wsj.com/articles/tariffs-may-crown-corn-king-again-1540728000.
camera: Nikon D3 | lens: VR Nikkor Zoom 55-200mm f/4-5.6G IF-ED
focal length: 135mm | exposure: f/8 – 1/500 – ISO 250

Andrew Gillum – Americana Collection
2018 November 05 | Monday: Mayor Andrew Gillum, candidate for Governor of Florida, speaks at the Monticello Opera House in Monticello, Florida, his last campaign stop before election day. At that stop, Gillum declared victory to the enthusiastic audience.
Campaign planning documents indicated that 100 were expected to attend. Nearly three-times that many people jammed into the historic site for Gillum’s rally.
camera: Nikon D500 | lens: AF Nikkor VR Zoom 70-200mm f/2.8G IF-ED
exposure: f/3.2 – 1/200 – ISO 10000

Indiana Corn – Americana Collection
"Farmers are fiercely independent, hard workers. We prefer to sell a quality product in a fair, open trade environment," Sarah Delbecq, President of the Indiana Corn Growers Association (ICGA), said. Hoosier farmers would rather have key markets such as China reopened instead of accepting government payments. Since the tariffs, ethanol exports have dropped significantly.1
The Indiana Corn Growers Association board works with state and federal governments to develop and promote policies that benefit Indiana corn farmers.
1Fitzpatrick, Melanie. “Press Releases.” Indiana Corn, Indiana Corn Growers Association, 26 July 2018, www.incorn.org/press-releases/hoosier-farmers-appreciate-assistance-but-want-long-term-solutions.
camera: Nikon D3 | lens: VR Nikkor Zoom 55-200mm f/4-5.6G IF-ED
focal length: 116mm | exposure: f/8 – 1/125 – ISO 250