Billy Ray of Ray Farms shells part of a 59 acre corn field off of Adams Lane, Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2012. Ray said that he is averaging 100 bushels per acre in that field but that he has others that won't make 20 bushels per acre because of the drought. (AP Photo/The Gleaner, Mike Lawrence)
August 30, 2012 - 9:34 AM
ST. LOUIS - Some key farm states punished by the nation's worst drought in decades benefited slightly from recent rains, with a bigger dousing forecast from the remnants of Hurricane Isaac.
The weekly U.S. Drought Monitor map released Thursday shows that the section of the continental U.S. in the worst two categories of drought — extreme and exceptional — remained relatively unchanged at 23.2 per cent as of the report's Tuesday cutoff.
But thanks to rains last weekend, the amount of Iowa in the two worst drought classifications fell by 9 percentage points to 58.3 per cent. Illinois saw a 7 percentage point drop-off while Kansas' numbers slid 6 points.
Forecasters expect portions of the Midwest to get as much as 12 inches of rain within days due to Isaac, now a tropical storm.
News from © The Associated Press, 2012