Now, as I’m all recuperated from the Farm Progress Show, I’m back writing again. I was going to write my final thoughts after the show but after my drive back to Ames, I fell asleep and didn’t wake up until this morning for class!
I had a wonderful experience at the Farm Progress Show. I met some wonderful people, especially thanks to Monsanto, Tami, Mica, Chuck, and many others. You guys were welcoming, friendly, and were willing to help me with anything I needed. I wasn’t sure what I was getting into when I took the internship and now I’m pleased to have taken the job.
I hope all of you readers enjoyed my writings/posts because I sure enjoyed writing them for you. This was my first experience doing interviews, taking pictures, and writing with the purpose to be published on the Internet. I tried to cover stories that I thought you would think was interesting and really give you the inside of what was happening at the Farm Progress Show.
I just want to thank everybody again, it really meant a lot to me to come to the Farm Progress Show. I hope to being writing blogs again sometime in the future and I hope that everybody I met and who influenced me here, I will see again!
Thanks so much!!
Coverage of the Farm Progress Show is sponsored by Monsanto: 

It’s nice to be home and have the dust showered off. Before leaving the Farm Progress Show today I remembered to have a picture taken of Kelcy and me.
A new exhibit out here at the Farm Progress Show was put together in just the last 45 days by FlexFuel Motors.
I know it’s kind of corny. Especially since it’s a corn field.
All the tractors out here have the chance to fill up with biodiesel.
One of the only reporters left working in the media tent this morning was our very own Kelcy Schroder. I think she’s doing a great job helping me cover the show here and I hope you do too.
At the Farm Progress Show, the gentleman by the name of Craig Cameron was here demonstrating how to break a horse.
I thought I knew quite a bit about handling cattle from classes and my own experience, which I still do but companies have come out with a lot of new machinery to move cattle safely, quickly, and easier.
When I saw the
It seems like the number 17 Team Ethanol Indy Car is all over the place. It’s here on display at the Farm Progress Show courtesy of the Ethanol Promotion and Information Council (EPIC).
I asked Alan how it’s going here at the show. He says the line has been long at times with people waiting their turn driving the car. As a farmer he’s very proud of the work being done in the renewable fuels area to make America independent of foreign oil. He doesn’t mind the hard work and long hours driving this demonstrator around the country to promote ethanol which he firmly believes is good for America, the environment and farmers like himself. He not only grows corn that’s turned into ethanol but feeds the by-product (DDG’s) to his cattle.