There are more than 300 licensed dairy herds in Kansas with about 143,000 cows total. In 2015 cows produced about 365 million gallons of milk, making Kansas the 16th largest milk producing state.

See full fact

Did you know Kansas farmers grow about 330 million bushels of wheat each year? That’s enough to make 23 billion loaves of bread!

See full fact

The average Kansas dairy cow produces about 7 gallons of milk each day. That’s more than 2,544 gallons of milk over the course of a typical year.

See full fact

Small engines like lawnmowers and boats can use E10 fuel.

See full fact

Mexico and Japan are our top international corn buyers. They buy 50 percent of U.S. corn exports.

See full fact

The majority of oil used for cooking in our country is U.S.-grown 100% soybean oil!

See full fact

The cotton gin first came to Kansas in 1854 when a Polish immigrant wanted to gin local cotton near Valley Falls.

See full fact

Did you know some of the fertilizer farmers add to the soil comes from the air we breathe? Companies can convert nitrogen in the air into nitrogen to nourish the ground.

See full fact

All the wheat grown in Kansas in a single year would fit in a train stretching from western Kansas to the Atlantic Ocean.

See full fact

Kansas exports more than $4.8 billion in agricultural products per year.

See full fact

The United States grows more soybeans than any other country and six out of every ten rows of soybeans are exported to other countries.

See full fact

Beef from cows and steers are used in two different ways. . Cow meat is used primarily as ground beef for hamburgers and the majority of steer meat is used as steaks.

See full fact

98 percent of all corn farms are family-run farms.

See full fact

One bushel of corn makes 2.8 gallons of ethanol.

See full fact

Gluten is what helps bread expand while the dough rises, and hold its shape while baking and after it cools. It’s also what makes bread chewy.

See full fact

There are about 60-80 pods on a mature soybean plant. Each pod contains three small soybeans.

See full fact

In Kansas alone, pig farmers raised over 3.2 million pigs in 2015, producing over 600 million pounds of pork!

See full fact

Corn is produced on every continent of the world with the exception of Antarctica. 

See full fact

Sows give birth (called farrowing) to an average of eight to twelve piglets at a time and will raise six to eight litters of piglets in their lifetime.

See full fact

There are four main types of sorghum: grain, forage, biomass and sweet. Their most popular uses are: for food (grain sorghum), as livestock feed (forage sorghum), to produce bioenergy (biomass...

See full fact

Grains can be categorized into food grains (for people) and feed grains (for cattle). Cattle eat feed grains like field corn and grain sorghum. An average of 4 ½ pounds of grain is used to produce a...

See full fact