KEY POINTS
  • In the past year, torrential rains have dumped water on U.S. farmers' lands, destroying acreage and delaying crops from getting planted on time.
  • Now, farmers face yet another hurdle: a stifling heat wave that's spreading across the United States, expected to be the worst in the farm states including Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Iowa and Illinois.
  • "Every time we think we catch a break, it's just another issue we have to solve," Adam Jones, a 28-year-old organic farmer from Central Illinois, tells CNBC.
Farmer walks through his soy fields in Harvard, Illinois.

In the past year, torrential rains have dumped water on U.S. farmlands, destroying acreage and delaying crops from getting planted on time.

Now, farmers face another hurdle: a stifling heat wave that's spreading across the United States and is expected to be the worst in the farm regions, including Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Iowa and Illinois.