By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi cotton farmers had what looked like the
best crop in the history of the state until fall rains
reduced yields and quality. Will
McCarty, cotton specialist with the Mississippi State
University Extension Service, said the 2002 crop still
promises to be above average, but the harvest was the
wettest it has been in years. Rains destroyed some cotton on
the plant and delayed farmers getting the rest out of the
fields on time. "We
very easily could have made the best crop in Mississippi
history on a yield per acre basis if the rain hadn't caught
us," McCarty said. Cotton
has a 2002 projected value of production at $432 million,
down 1.5 percent from the previous year. It ranks as the
state's third largest commodity, behind poultry and
forestry. The crop was expected to yield 788 pounds an acre,
or about 50 pounds above the five-year average. Weather
caused losses averaging 30 percent, although in places the
damage was as high as 60 percent, McCarty said. "We
probably lost almost 200 pounds per acre on 1.16 million
acres of cotton," McCarty said. "That's in excess of 450,000
bales of cotton lost due to adverse weather." Of the
cotton salvaged, much of the seed is non-merchantable.
Others are bringing $20 to $30 a ton, down from a typical
value of $100. The cotton seed normally covers the cost of
ginning, but farmers will either have to pay that cost this
year or gins will absorb the loss. McCarty
said for every 480 pound bale of cotton lost, about 900
pounds of seed were lost, too. In Mississippi, this seed is
used for feed and oil, but also as planting seed for some of
the major seed companies. "Very
little planting seed was salvaged out of Mississippi this
year. Much of it has deteriorated to the point it is
unacceptable for planting, forcing cotton seed companies to
gather seed from other cotton-growing regions," McCarty
said. The
year started off slow as cold and wet weather at the end of
April and early May delayed planting and caused some fields
to be replanted. Once the crop was in, weather cooperated to
provide ideal growing conditions. The cotton developed
extremely fast and was ready for harvest on
schedule. No
major outbreaks of disease or pests threatened the crop, and
by early September, farmers were harvesting a record
crop. "Cotton
prices have been depressed, but when farmers began to
harvest and saw such tremendous yields coming out of the
fields, there was a good atmosphere everywhere," McCarty
said. "Then the rains started, and we've seen that feeling
evaporate. When all is said and done, it will still be a
pretty good year for production." Price
this year has averaged in the low-40 cents per pound range,
which is 8 to 10 cents a pound above 2001's average of 32.6
cents. Growers planted 1,180 acres of cotton in 2002, down
from 1,620 acres in 2001. McCarty said cotton acreage is
projected to be down slightly in 2003. Released:
Dec. 16, 2002
Mississippi
Agricultural News
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Rains rob
growers of
best cotton crop
Contact: Dr. Will McCarty, (662) 325-2701
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:00
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an02/021216_cotton.html
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