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Farm show an educational experience

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With only 59 percent of normal precipitation, Higgins said 2012 was the second driest year on record (20.38 inches), after 2005 (20.11). Last year was also the hottest year since 1881, when weather records were first kept.

This past December alone, King said, temperatures were 8 degrees above normal, which she called “quite significant.”

King, who grew up on a farm near Ridott and is now a weather forecaster for WTVO-TV in Rockford, said that weather follows a pattern.

“It’s going to take some time before we get out of this,” she told the crowd during her seminar, in which she explained how the current conditions developed over time.

While she isn’t sure if she believes in global warming, King said she does believe in climate change, which affects the amount of moisture we get. Although she expects the current drought conditions to last at least through spring, she said the long-range weather outlook could change next week without warning.

“That’s how it works,” she joked.

The news, however, didn’t put most farmers in a joking frame of mind.

“My corn yields are probably off by 60 percent,” said Bob Miller of rural LaSalle County. “I’m just watching the weather and waiting for rain.”

If the area doesn’t get significant moisture in the near future, he and fellow farmer Randy Riebe said, they may switch from corn to soybeans.

Both men, who said they were attending their second show in four years, said they benefited a lot from them.

“We learned a lot,” Riebe said.

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