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Eckert’s Manages Risk through Crop Insurance and Diversification

Posted by: Stefanie Pidgeon, Public Affairs Specialist, RMA

Chris Eckert
Chris Eckert is the president of Eckert’s, Inc., an Illinois-based farm that uses USDA-administered crop insurance as a safety net. (Photos courtesy of Eckert’s, Inc.)

Chris Eckert finds himself spending a lot of time talking about the weather. The president of Eckert’s Inc., a family farm operation in southern Illinois, often talks of its unpredictability with co-workers because they are so highly dependent on it.

“We live in fear of what changes in climate mean for us,” Eckert said. “We do as much as possible to mitigate our exposure because there’s so much that’s not in our control.”

The Eckert’s farm operation has been in the family for seven generations. They farm 600 acres of fruits and vegetable crops as well as run a 400-seat restaurant and a 20,000 square foot specialty food store that features a lot of produce from their farm as well as neighboring farms. Their farm is located near the St. Louis, Missouri metro area, which has enabled them to grow. “We were able to build upon that traffic and sell and market more of the produce that we grow,” said Eckert.

Managing Risk

Eckert’s restaurant and specialty food store are open 12 months out of the year. Therefore, they are always looking at better ways to manage their risk. Crop Insurance and diversification are some of the tools Eckert uses to combat the negative effects of weather.

Tractor ride
Tractor Ride to Fun.

“Crop insurance has literally changed our whole business and what we have the potential to do here, especially when it comes to peaches,” Eckert said.

At the Eckert farm, half of the acres are for peaches. Eckert says the farm took a hit in 2014 when temperatures dropped to 15 degrees below zero. Crop insurance helped Eckert’s come back the following year without being in economic peril.

“The addition of crop insurance in our risk management toolkit really gives us a safety net in a year when we have a total freeze. Peaches are a really profitable crop, but those one-off loss years are so economically devastating that they can cripple the operations.”

Diversifying the Operation

Eckert’s has also found that diversification helps them manage risk throughout the year. The farm specializes in pick-your-own produce. They begin the season in April starting with asparagus, followed by strawberries, blackberries, peaches, apples, pumpkins, and Christmas trees, ending the season in December.

“There are a lot of things that go into the decision process for diversifying. People come to Eckert’s because we have

Pick Veggies
Pick your own veggies.
homegrown produce available, so a main driver for us is filling out as many day of the year as possible with crops that can be harvested at that point in time,” said Eckert. He says they’re always looking to fill in weeks in the year where they don’t have a crop.

How Crop Insurance Works

Federal crop insurance is critical to the farm safety net. It provides producers and owners various methods to mitigate production and revenue risks and helps to maintain a healthy rural economy. Crop insurance is available nationwide and can be purchased through local crop insurance providers.

Producers can receive premium support at varying levels and be covered against natural losses that occur during the crop year.

“Things like crop insurance was a game changer for us,” said Eckert. “I don’t think we would be doing half of the things we’re doing today without crop insurance. It’s a hedge against the most unpredictable variable we have - weather. You can do everything you want to do and be the best farm manager in the world but that doesn’t prevent a hail storm, or a polar vortex, or a rainy weekend. It’s a matter of doing everything we can to mitigate our exposure to those risks, so we can be more manageable in how we run our business.”





Contact Information

For more information, contact RMA Public Affairs.