Minnesota farmers are getting ready to harvest what looks like another huge crop of corn and soybeans, something which seemed unlikely a few months ago. Drought concerns have disappeared and so have farmers hopes that dry weather and a poor harvest would boost rock bottom grain prices. That means many Minnesota farmers who gambled on drought have lost out. If predictions for a record harvest come true, grain prices will remain at the same depressed levels where they've been for the past three years. Tonight in the first of two stories looking toward harvest season, Mainstreet Radio's Mark Steil reports: