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Midwest rancher recovers from drought

Recent rain in Missouri has helped drought-stricken farmers. Cattle rancher Ken Lenox says the grass is practically jumping out of the ground. Despite the promise of new feed, hay prices remain high, and ranchers are closely guarding what they have.

After a long, dry summer, farmers in the Midwest have caught a break with some rain.

Ken Lenox is a fifth-generation cattle rancher in Rolla, Mo. Typically the grasslands on his ranch feed his 450 cattle throughout the spring, summer and fall. But with this year’s drought, Lenox had to buy hay to feed them. Sinking money into hay this early in the year — even finding enough hay to feed his cattle — made Lenox worry about a tough winter ahead.

But Hurricane Isaac brought several inches of rain back in late August, and the past month has brought more. Lenox says the grass is practically jumping out of the ground, and he’s out the woods, for now. “I feel a lot better,” says Lenox. “The grass that has grown will not get me as far into the wintertime than it normally would, but it’ll take me a lot farther than I thought it would a month ago.  We’re in so much better shape.”

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