Crop Report

Region 1 | May 7, 2026 | Lake, McHenry and DeKalb

Steve Brand
sbbrand2@illinois.edu

SYNOPSIS

Hello and welcome back to another year of crop scouting reports! For those who don’t know me, I am Steve Brand, a commercial agronomy specialist covering the northern region of Illinois through University of Illinois Extension. To start our crop scouting journey this year, we have had quite a difference from the start of 2025 in that we are not currently in a drought. The problem with that is, to get to this point, we have had excessive rain across all of northern Illinois through March and April, with some cooler temperatures to boot. Fields are currently still wet, with little corn and soybeans in the ground by the end of the first week in May.

Driving through Lake County, McHenry County and DeKalb County this week showed little field activity, with few fields planted overall. Recent storms followed by cool and frosty nights have led to very poor drying conditions. As we enter the weekend and next week, I expect fields to dry out and the big planting push for corn and soybeans to begin. A bit farther south along the Interstate 80 corridor, I saw active field tillage, pre-emergent herbicide applications and general field maintenance in preparation for planting, so those areas are a bit further ahead than the far northern reaches of the state.

With the large amount of rain accumulated in April, we also saw plenty of localized flooding along the Fox River and Rock River, with some areas seeing 2- to 3-foot water-level increases. Those levels are close to returning to normal as I write this. April obviously brought plenty of severe weather to induce the flooding. Illinois, from Jan. 1 through April 30, has experienced 119 tornadoes across the state, which is more than double the number of the next closest state. I, for one, am hopeful these weather patterns have passed and we can move forward into the summer with calmer weather.

I’ll see you all next week with another report, and I am excited to see fields planted through the weekend and really get this season underway.

WHICH OF THE FOLLOWING BEST DESCRIBES CURRENT CONDITIONS IN THIS COUNTY?
Moderately Wet (soil is damp, standing water may be present in low areas, water bodies are full)