Lessons From the Delta, Part 6: Farming with No Margin for Error
Lessons From the Delta continues — this time from the perspective of farmers managing one of the most intensive production systems in U.S. agriculture.
In Episode 6 of the Purdue Commercial AgCast mini-series, Chad Fiechter and Todd Kuethe visit with Terry and Trent Dabs of LTD Farms near Stuttgart, Arkansas, to discuss what it takes to operate a rice-based farming system in the Mississippi Delta.
What emerges is a detailed look at a production environment shaped by water management, labor demands, and capital intensity—where daily decisions around irrigation, equipment, and timing carry significant economic consequences.
The conversation also discusses:
• Why rice production requires constant water management and monitoring
• How labor constraints shape daily operations and long-term strategy
• The impact of intensive field conditions on machinery and capital decisions
• How rice is marketed and how payment differs from corn and soybeans
• The role of global markets in determining profitability
As Delta farmers navigate a system defined by irrigation dependence and production intensity, the discussion raises important questions:
What does it take to manage risk in a high-cost production system?
How do labor and water constraints shape farm structure?
And what lessons apply beyond the Delta?
This episode builds on earlier conversations about production systems and farmland economics, and brings the focus directly to the farm level.
We’ll also continue sharing video clips and behind-the-scenes footage from the Arkansas trip on our YouTube channel throughout the series.
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