By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi farmers have looked to the sky, the
markets and their pocketbooks to make planting decisions for
a year that already promises to be a challenge. Winter
rains brought little relief from last year's late season
drought, so farmers had a rare opportunity to begin planting
corn earlier than normal this spring. Mississippi farmers
planted about 55 percent of their corn with 40 percent
emerging by the end of March, compared to the five-year
average of 21 percent planted and 4 percent
emerged. "The
accelerated corn planting progress, particularly emerged
corn, is because of the warm, dry weather during late
February and the first part of March," said Erick Larson,
corn specialist with Mississippi State University's
Extension Service. "Normally, wet, cool conditions severely
limit corn planting during late February and early
March." Rains
the last half of March slowed planting progress
considerably. Larson said he expects corn's planted acreage
in 2000 to be near the five-year average. "1998
was a terrible corn year with low yields (86 bushels per
acre), corn borer and aflatoxin problems. That prompted
growers to reduce acreage last year to a five-year low of
350,000 acres," Larson said. "Then 1999 was as good as 1998
was bad. Growers were able to beat the previous record yield
by 10 bushels per acre." State
corn growers produced a record 107 bushel-per-acre average
in 1997 and 117 bushels in 1999. The U.S.
Department of Agriculture's planting intentions report
predicts Mississippi's corn acreage to increase 6 percent to
360,000 acres. The national corn crop is expected to have
about 1 percent more acres than in 1999. Larson
said Mississippi's grain sorghum has been making a steady
increase in recent years. Farmers grew 40,000 acres in 1998
and 60,000 acres last year. According to USDA, grain sorghum
acreage will double this year. "Grain
sorghum is a hardy crop on less productive soils, is not
expensive to grow and is drought tolerant," Larson said.
"We'll see some soybean acreage switching over because they
are good rotation crops and are well suited on similar
soils." The USDA
report predicted a 10 percent decline in Mississippi
soybeans. Growers are expected to plant 1.75 million soybean
acres, or 200,000 fewer than last year. Mississippi's
cotton is expected to increase 50,000 acres to about 1.25
million acres. Extension
cotton specialist Will McCarty said state growers will
likely exceed USDA's planting estimate. "We are
already concerned about soil moisture since we're starting
the year about 15 inches short from 1999," McCarty said.
"Growers will need to be prepared to irrigate earlier than
normal." Some
growers are opting for stale or no-till methods to improve
moisture retention and to help cut fuel costs. McCarty
encouraged growers to apply burn-down herbicides before
competing plants begin robbing the crop of
moisture. Released:
March 31, 2000
Mississippi
Crop Report
2000 Planting
Intentions Reflect Crop Challenges
Contact: Dr. Erick Larson or Will McCarty, (662)
325-2311
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:18
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop00/cr000331.htm
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