Anyone who attempts to grow anything quickly discovers that there are two eternal truths—you got to have the right growing conditions and you simply must have the right seeds. The great gardeners I know treat the arrival of the seed catalogues in the dead of winter as an event. Farmers proudly advertise the kinds of seeds they planted with signs on the edge of their fields.
Even more interestingly, the people who have figured out ways to produce better seeds are accorded phenomenal respect.
Henry Wallace, FDR's über-enlightened vice president was a plant geneticist (Pioneer Seeds) who was both scientifically and commercially successful—the Bill Gates of his day. His magazine,
Wallace's Farmer was read carefully by thousands who wanted to better their methods—those loyal readers were the basis of his political influence. And so we had a millionaire Republican Iowa scientist who was thrown off the Democratic ticket of FDR in 1944 for being excessively progressive. He was replaced by
Harry Truman, a two-bit creature of Kansas City organized crime. I would argue that between the nuking of Japan and the creation of the national security state, Truman is clearly the worst President we ever had. And we could have had Wallace. (BTW, one of the
best reasons to watch Oliver Stone's
Untold History of the United States is that he gets the Wallace story right.)
Between the predatory behavior of senior management at Monsanto and the fight over GMOs, the very idea of the plant geneticist as the very distillation of the promises of the Enlightenment seems quaint and distant. But it
once was true.
We have a Syngenta research facility about six miles (10 km) from the house. Considering the plant magic going on in there and the serious qualifications of their scientists, the place is very unpretentious.
Syngenta is a Basel Switzerland-based agricultural / chemical conglomerate that merely claims they are
Bringing Plant Potential to Life. The seed station was originally part of
Northrup-King—a Minneapolis seed company founded in 1896. It was sold to
Sandoz in 1976 (also of Basel) which in turn sold it to Syngenta in 1996. The latest word is that
Syngenta is merging with Monsanto.
The quaint little research station that was once known around here for giving high school kids summer jobs
detasseling corn, is now going to be a wing of the agribusiness giant that many consider the distillation of evil.
Those are some seriously healthy-looking corn plants
The small offices of the research station.
As you can see. the subject of plant genetics is big business. Growing enough food to feed the planet is actually a LOT harder than it looks. And even though the senior management of companies like Monsanto are Dick-Cheney evil, the guys who figure out how to make better plants are quite literally, doing the work of the gods.
The following is a long and quite comprehensive look at the big picture of growing corn. I don't agree with it all but most of the descriptions of the facts on the ground are very accurate.