If you know a farm family who needs help getting their crop in the ground, please refer them today to Farm Rescue. If you want to be part of keeping farms operating in 2026, please consider a donation.
This is what neighbors helping neighbors looks like. Every acre matters. Refer a family, fund a field, and keep farms going.
"Mother Nature's a unforgiving person thing. She really can be something... three buildings, four grain bins, house, and everything I own, everything. I'll make it. I'll figure something out. My neighbor, Dan Fuller, had seen something on TV about it or a line about it and was reading into it and stuff. And you guys seem like an awesome chance. It's awesome. I mean it really is. They're going to be planting Corn and Soybeans for me. It's hard to come up with a kind of cash to go out and buy a planter. And this time of year it's almost impossible to find one. This will help me a bunch. Doing great. I'm very appreciative of that too. I mean I got nothing. No planter, nothing. It's a wrong time of year to have this happen to. Bad timing. I got a lot of other stuff to clean up but it's going to be a while. I just want to get something on the ground. You've got to get some kind of revenue and build up something. And you guys are saving the day. You really are. Thank you very much for everything. I mean I can't put in the words. This is awesome."
Some incredible organizations like Farm Rescue that are helping out. Also there are resources available through the USDA and through each one of the state's departments of agriculture. Please check with them locally to find out what resources there are to help you recover from recent disasters. Find resources like these on our agricultural search engine, agsearch.us.