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Harvest Public Media is a reporting collaboration focused on issues of food, fuel and field. Based at KCUR in Kansas City, Harvest covers these agriculture-related topics through an expanding network of reporters and partner stations throughout the Midwest.Most Harvest Public Media stories begin with radio- regular reports are aired on member stations in the Midwest. But Harvest also explores issues through online analyses, television documentaries and features, podcasts, photography, video, blogs and social networking. They are committed to the highest journalistic standards. Click here to read their ethics standards.Harvest Public Media was launched in 2010 with the support of a grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Today, the collaboration is supported by CPB, the partner stations, and contributions from underwriters and individuals.Tri States Public Radio is an associate partner of Harvest Public Media. You can play an important role in helping Harvest Public Media and Tri States Public Radio improve our coverage of food, field and fuel issues by joining the Harvest Network.

Drones: Coming Soon to a Farm Near You?

Peter Gray/Harvest Public Media

Unmanned aerial vehicles aren’t just for spies or for the battlefield. Farmers all over the country think drones can give them a leg up, too.

Tech-savvy farmers have been waiting for years for the government to make up its mind about the commercial use of unmanned aerial vehicles. Right now, anyone flying a drone for business instead of as a hobby is actually breaking federal law. But the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), which oversees U.S. airspace, says it plans to roll out rules for drones this year.

Getting farmers out in their field, knowing what's going on in their field I think would have a huge benefit.

Privacy and public safety concerns abound when it comes to camera-mounted machines flying around.   That’s the primary reason the United States lags behind other nations in allowing unmanned vehicles for commercial use.

Still, farmers with acres and acres of land want to keep an eye on their investment. Instead of spending days driving the edges of fields in a truck or ATV, farmers could use drone-mounted cameras to produce thermal image maps that can tell if crops aren’t properly irrigated or if they are being eaten by insects. 

“I’ve been a seed dealer and involved in precision ag, and I look at this from a scouting standpoint,” said farmer Jared Brown of Beason, Ill. “Getting farmers out in their field, knowing what’s going on in their field I think would have a huge benefit.”

The same rugged yet inexpensive cameras strapped to surfboards and skydivers can gather the images farmers need for a fraction of what they’d pay to hire a plane or helicopter pilot. Camera and all, quadcopters sold to the public generally have a sticker price of $5,000-10,000.  That investment is small compared to other purchases in the growing high-tech arsenal available to farmers with deep pockets.

“The yield monitors are getting better, and the planters are getting more accurate and the tractors are getting more efficient,” said 19-year-old farmer Mark Sullivan of Rushville, Ill.

Drones fit in with recent innovations designed to use data and technology to get as much out of a field as possible.

“Everything is developing on its own, but you don’t have true precision ag in its fullest form until you use all of them,” Sullivan said.

Chad Colby, an agriculture consultant who runs agtechtalk.com, says drones could be useful in the technology toolbox for farmers who are trying to cut down on fertilizer by targeting the specific areas of a field that need it most, or plant efficient crop varieties based on moisture levels.

At a recent seminar in Bloomington, Ill., Colby showed a group of Midwest farmers what drones can do.

“It’s so exciting to see that look in these guys’ faces after they fly it,” Colby said. “That, ‘Wow, this is easy, and I can do it.  And, oh my, do I get to see my crop in a different perspective.’”

The FAA says it is still working on rules for the commercial use of UAVs. But for now, they’re grounded. 

“We have been trying to work with the FAA to allow for some expedited access,” said Ben Gielow with the Association of Unmanned Vehicles International (AUVSI), a trade group representing drone manufacturers. “We’ve pointed to rural farms as a great area where some limited operations could happen very soon, if not immediately.”

Gielow says agribusiness is the single-largest market for drone technology at this point, followed by law enforcement and filmmaking. But rulemaking for an emerging technology that will share the air with commercial and private aircraft is slow and deliberate.

“I applaud the FAA,” Colby said. “They need to do this correctly. Because there’s nothing I want more than safe airspace.  You know, I’m a pilot, I want privacy over my home.”

Colby and tech-savvy farmers hope having safely piloted “eyes in the sky” will make precision ag really take off in years to come.