The certified letter comes March 10th, three weeks before planting. Inside: an exclusive early-adopter contract for a new corn hybrid developed for western Corn Belt drought cycles.
Price is $287 per bag, a steeper jump than the $10 drought-tolerance premium documented back in 2016, when DT seed cost $264 versus $254 for conventional hybrids.
My grandfather bought this land in 1947. Dad expanded it in 1982. I took over in 2018, the year before five straight years where July rains didn't come when we needed them. We've planted the drought-tolerant varieties since 2021, paying extra because watching corn die in July wasn't an option.
Field Seven is different now.
Last year it produced 127 bushels per acre while the rest of the operation averaged 165. Same hybrid we used everywhere. The soil test showed what I already knew walking it: depleted organic matter, compaction from continuous row cropping. The agronomist didn't sugarcoat it. This field needs something else.
The seed contract sits on my desk next to a proposal from a regional cooperative. They want farms to establish diversified rotations, four-year cycles with corn, soybeans, oats with alfalfa, then pure alfalfa stands. They've lined up processing contracts for the alfalfa, feed markets for the oats. Technical support and guaranteed markets for three years while the system establishes.
Their pilot farm numbers are good. A South Dakota operation running similar rotations kept costs stable during the 2033 drought while continuous corn operations lost 22% of revenue. An Iowa study showed 24% higher net income over five years with alfalfa in rotation, even with lower per-acre revenue from forages.
Those are research farms with patient money and long timelines. I have an equipment loan due in 2037. The operating line gets reviewed every year. Crop insurance covers corn and soybean yields, not diversified rotations with forages that don't qualify the same way.
Field Seven is 120 acres. Committing it to the four-year rotation means taking a quarter of that ground out of corn production immediately. No guarantee the cooperative's markets survive to year three when the alfalfa needs buyers.
Planting the new hybrid means betting the seed company's research, backed by $144 million in recent funding, actually solved drought tolerance better than what I've been planting.
I call the agronomist whose name is on the technical sheet. He's careful. The genetics show real promise under controlled stress. But you're still dependent on rainfall timing. Three-week dry spell during pollination, even this hybrid can't make water appear.
The cooperative coordinator is equally honest. We're building infrastructure as we go. Processing facility is running but we're at 40% capacity. If we can't get enough farms committed to diversified rotations, the economics fall apart and the markets disappear.
So here's what I'm actually choosing between: $287 per bag for seed that might deliver better performance under stress, the kind of claims that have driven drought-tolerant varieties to 42% adoption in Nebraska, though independent verification of field performance remains limited. Or commit Field Seven to diversified rotation that research shows builds soil resilience and maintains stable economics, but requires infrastructure and markets that might not last the three years needed to see results.
The new seed is $34,440 for Field Seven alone, spent in April regardless of what July brings.
The diversified rotation needs different equipment, new relationships with the cooperative, and accepting that for four years this 120 acres won't produce the corn yields my lender uses to calculate my debt service coverage.
Federal conservation programs offer some support for diversification. The Regional Conservation Partnership Program funded 92 projects last year with $1.5 billion. But applications are competitive, funding is uncertain, and they require matching contributions I'm not sure I can provide.
The seed company made their bet clear when they went public in 2033. Their valuation explicitly cited climate-resilient trait pipeline. Their investor presentations emphasize expanding drought-tolerant seed markets and recurring revenue from stacked trait licensing. They need farmers like me to keep paying the premium, keep adopting new varieties, keep validating market projections that justify their stock price.
The cooperative needs something harder to monetize: critical mass of farms willing to accept lower short-term returns for long-term resilience, and regional infrastructure that can process and market crops that don't fit the commodity system.
I walk Field Seven on a cold morning in late March. Corn stubble from last year's disappointing harvest still shows in places.
My grandfather would recognize this field. My father would know exactly what I'm facing.
The soil here is tired. Fifteen years of continuous row crops did that. What I can't know is whether what it needs is better genetics or a completely different approach. Whether the premium I'd pay for drought-resistant seed buys actual resilience or just validates someone else's investment thesis. Whether the cooperative's markets will survive long enough for diversification to prove itself.
The contract deadline is April 1st. Signing means betting institutional capital flowing into climate-resilient seed development actually aligned with what my farm needs. Committing to the cooperative's rotation means betting regional infrastructure and patient markets can survive long enough for the agronomic benefits to show up.
Both bets could fail for reasons that have nothing to do with the quality of the genetics or the soundness of the agronomy. The seed company could be selling me varieties that work in controlled conditions but fail when real drought hits during pollination. The cooperative could fold before year three when the alfalfa needs buyers.
Field Seven needs a decision. I have six days to figure out which institutional bet to make, the one backed by venture capital and patents, or the one that requires patience and regional cooperation that might not materialize.
Either way, I'm not really choosing based on what the land needs. I'm choosing based on which financial structure I think will still be standing when the next drought comes.
The certified letter sits on my desk. The cooperative proposal sits next to it.
Outside, Field Seven waits for whatever I decide to plant in it.

