Central Illinois farmers push through long hours for 2025 soybean harvest



High-capacity combines, GPS-guided rows, and LED-lit rigs kept operations rolling past sunset. Technology and teamwork reduced fatigue and streamline operations.

John Deere Combine in the field at harvest
Photo: Alan Look Photography

by Alan Look
Best Look Magazine


HEYWORTH - The 2025 soybean harvest across central Illinois continues during a season marked by steady yields and long hours in the field. Despite early concerns over scattered spring rains and a dry summer stretch, most growers reported consistent pod development and solid stand counts heading into fall.

September brought ideal conditions for harvest: low humidity, minimal rainfall and cool mornings that allowed combines to roll early and often. Fields dried down evenly, and moisture levels held within optimal thresholds, reducing the need for extended drying and helping streamline bin-to-market logistics.

Modern equipment played a pivotal role in the efficiency of this year’s harvest. High-capacity combines with precision yield mapping, paired with grain carts and semis, kept operations moving at a brisk pace. GPS-guided rows and auto-steer systems minimized overlap and fatigue, allowing crews to work well past sunset under LED-lit rigs.

Many operations logged 12- to 16-hour days during peak harvest windows, with some stretches running consecutive weeks without a break. The grind was real, but so were the results: consistent yields, minimal breakdowns and a harvest window that has cooperated from the start.

As bins fill and fields clear, central Illinois begins to close the book on another soybean season — one defined by resilience, technology and the drive to bring in the crop.


2025 soybean harvest Illinois, Central Illinois farm technology, long hours farming harvest, soybean yields Midwest 2025, Illinois agriculture news, Alan Look Photography



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