The Old Farmer's Red Notebook Saved My Grain Business From Ruin-nga9999 - Chainityai

The Old Farmer’s Red Notebook Saved My Grain Business From Ruin-nga9999

That Tuesday morning in October, I learned how loud grain can be when it is dying.

It does not scream.

It heats.

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It gives off sour air.

It turns your expensive monitors into little prophets of ruin and lets every man in the yard pretend he is not afraid.

I stood at the gate of my Ottumwa facility with a cold coffee in one hand and my phone in the other.

The plant in Burlington wanted answers.

The co-ops wanted delivery schedules.

My attorney wanted me to stop talking on speakerphone.

My foreman Pete wanted me to make a decision before the whole county heard I had two bins going bad from the inside.

I had built that business with a kind of confidence that looks admirable until it becomes expensive.

Three facilities.

Eleven employees.

Four regional contracts.

A dryer that had cost more than the first house my wife and I ever bought.

I had expanded in the spring of 2018 because the numbers said storage capacity was going to be king.

The numbers were not exactly wrong.

They were just innocent.

They did not know about the rain that hit southeast Iowa in August.

They did not know corn would come in wetter than any spreadsheet had promised.

They did not know I would accept grain I should have rejected because pride can dress itself up as customer service.

By the first week of October, the CO2 readings had climbed.

The temperature cables showed heat pockets.

The samples told a story no businessman wants to read.

Some of the corn was compromised.

Some of it might still be feed.

Some of it, I was told, was probably gone.

Two specialists gave me careful language.

The agronomist gave me a softer version of the same answer.

My attorney gave me three doors, and every door had teeth.

Blend it and risk my license, my contracts, and maybe worse.

Sell the damaged grain for livestock feed and eat a loss big enough to bend the company.

Declare force majeure and let the lawyers spend two years turning my name into a warning.

Then Brett Cole came from the plant and smiled at the bins like they belonged to him already.

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