Percentage of Each State Taken Up by Corn Fields
Percentage of Each State Taken Up by Corn Fields
No Data = Stealth Corn
58ReplyHonestly it fits my theory that one of the Dakotas doesn't really exist.
It's probably where all the birds are controlled from.
10ReplyOne of them certainly shouldn't exist. The fact that that area is split into two states is only to have two more Republican Senators.
6Reply
Imaginary corn. Like John Peters, you know, the farmer, grows.
2Reply
Could you imagine living in Hawaii and not having readily available corn fields? How would I do all my corn field based activities?
27ReplyI was literally just thinking that we need more corn fields here
8ReplyOhio is nice this time of year and all the kids are taking about it.
4Reply
Get your shit together, Alaska!
25ReplyEmbarrassing
“No data“ it at that point
7Reply
TIL most US corn is Republican
21ReplyThe second highest on this map, illinois, is a Dem state
17ReplyTo be fair, the corn isn’t growing in the blue part of Illinois
33ReplyMultiple counties in Illinois voted in favor of exploring secession from the state because they don't like how Chicago turns the state blue. It would definitely be a red state without us.
15ReplyOnly because of Chicago & C(r)ook County. Virtually the rest of Illinois is red.
5ReplyYup, and Michigan and Wisconsin are swing states. It’s still the vast majority.
2Reply
Hard to believe there is no data on corn fields in the home state of the Corn Palace.
19ReplyIt's roughly 13%, looked up a more recent map because I was curious about the "garden state" I grew up in. I know we're the most densely populated but not even 2% seemed surprising with how many corn fields I pass by while driving.
1Reply
This makes me wonder what the map creator considers a green amount of corn to be lol. 100%?
16ReplyTo be fair, corn is yellow
16Reply0.4 and 0.7% are different colors, but 10 and 37% are the same
10ReplyAnd how do we have NO DATA about the crops growing in any state?
10ReplyCorn has consumed anyone who could answer.
4Reply
Permanently Deleted
3Reply
We are the children...of ethanol.
15ReplyWhy are you telling me which states have no data?
I thought this was about corn?
14ReplyI don't agree with the color choice. Green would've been much nicer.
13ReplyIt all should have been shades of yellow.
4Reply
Indiana Beach commercials did not lie to me after all!
11ReplyMonocultures are environmentally devastating btw.
10ReplyThere is a massive swing in each of those colors.
10ReplyYeah, 10%, 20%, and 37% should each be
buffetdifferent colors.Damn autocorrect
8Reply
Really? Only 0.4%?
Because it sure feels like there's way more corn here than that.
7ReplyIf you’re referring to CA, it’s % of the entire state. Think of how much of CA is arid, mountainous, or otherwise unsuitable for corn or other agriculture.
7ReplyYou're probably seeing mostly grapes, tomatoes, cotton and cannabis, as well as grains that aren't corn?
4ReplyI definitely see more corn than all of those other things combined. And it's not even for human consumption; it's for the cows.
3Reply
I can't imagine 1/3 of everything you see in an entire state being corn.
6ReplyTry driving through it. It's horrible.
7ReplyCan confirm. I live in the Midwest.
3Reply
if the numbers seem low dont forget about soy. and maybe wheat or alfalfa
5ReplyHaving lived in Chicagoland, what are the corn growing incentives there?! Every empty field in the city is full of corn. Seems smart.
5ReplyDrainage and flood risk. Chicago is basically a swamp. Idk about every lot, there's probably ridiculous tax loopholes and kick backs, etc what with it being Illinois. But there's a lot of shit land in and around Chicago
2Reply
Having flown over Iowa in a small plane many times this checks out
4ReplyLiving in Iowa, this checks out. All I know is corn.
4ReplyHaving lived in Iowa, the number honestly feels a little low. I guess the soybeans have to grow somewhere.
1Reply
I'll be honest, I thought Ohio would be higher...
4ReplyThe other 87% of Ohio is soy beans
6Reply
Drove through North Dakota once. It was all corn for hours. Absolutely stupid amounts.
3Replyayyyy lifelong nebraska resident here! you can absolutely tell if you ever drive through here, shit’s ALL farmland.
2ReplyAs a foreigner, based on my road trip from Houston to Port Fourchon in Louisiana, I would have thunk those two percentages would've been substantially higher. Especially Louisiana.
2ReplyIt's cheaper to grow corn closer to the main roads.
1Reply