Strom Farms
Bio
There are major moments in life that are unforgettable: graduation day, getting married, the birth of a child. Grant and Kristen Strom have another to add to that list: the day the American Farm Bureau Federation selected them for the Young Farmers & Ranchers Achievement Award.
“That was an unbelievable feeling,” Grant said. “It was hard to describe. It was very emotional. Outside of the family stuff … this is one of those moments we’ll never forget.”
The couple from Knox County, Illinois, were selected in January 2017 after a rigorous application and interview process that looks deep into the numbers of their business and their resume. Years of hard work and expanding their 5,000-acre operation was on full display in front of the nation’s marquee organization for farmers. In addition to applause and recognition, they were given the keys to a 2017 Chevrolet Silverado.
The Stroms grow corn, soybeans and some wheat and hay, and operate a 20-head Angus cow/calf operation with other family members. The corn is used mostly for ethanol production, while the soybeans go toward seed production and commercial processing.
Grant, who is the third generation to work on the farm full-time, has long worked with his father to be progressive with testing new technology, whether that was with GPS usage and auto shut-offs 15 years ago or more recently with no-till, sidedressing, and other conservation strategies. Their farm has been in conversion phases for more than a decade, and some of the new structures include a shop and office — things that have helped make them more efficient with their business.
“The margins are so much tighter and smaller and more erratic than they used to be,” Grant said of the industry. There’s so much pressure to find ways to be more efficient.
“Success in farming today is considerably different than what it was for my grandfather, or even my father,” he said. “Back when my grandfather started farming, him and his brother started from scratch, and it was all about how hard you worked. The harder you worked, the more money you made. And it was all about hours. Now, it’s all about efficiency of the work. You can have one guy who can work two hours, but if you can do that same job or do more in an hour than he did in two hours, then that puts you at a competitive advantage.”
Sounds like the recipe for achievement.