By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Late freezes and a predicted light pecan crop are
dampening prospects for Mississippi's fruit and nut growers,
but growers haven't given up on the year. Freddie
Rasberry, horticulture specialist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said last year had the
potential of being the state's best pecan year since the
1994 ice storm caused extensive damage to Delta orchards.
Because pecans ordinarily are alternate bearing fruit,
bumper crops are often followed the next year by much
smaller harvests. "Last
year's trees set a big crop, but the drought caused trees to
abort a lot of nuts. Those that continued through to harvest
failed to fill out to an ideal size," Rasberry
said. Bolivar
County pecan grower Hilliard Lawler only works about a third
of the acreage he handled before the ice storm. His
expectations for his trees near the Mississippi River are
not high because of last year's big crop. "1999
was the first good year since the '94 ice storm. Disaster
relief helped us maintain the orchards without revenue
coming in," Lawler said. "Last fall's quality was hurt by
the drought, but there was still a lot of pecans produced
across the region. There will probably be significant
(market) carryover this year." Rasberry
said the lack of crop insurance for pecans and the absence
of uniform crop insurance statewide in other fruit crops
adds to the challenges for growers. "Peach
acreage is continuing to decline because it is so unreliable
and every year presents challenges," Rasberry said. "About a
third of the state's peaches were lost to cold temperatures
earlier this spring. The wet spring could cause problems
later this summer when hot, dry conditions begin challenging
shallow root systems." Itawamba
County peach grower E.B. Rogers said a late freeze wiped out
half of his trees' potential crop for the second year in a
row. "I've
been growing peaches for more than 20 years. Some years are
great and some are total losses. Most are somewhere in
between," Rogers said. "The freeze could have been nature's
way of thinning the crop and could have done us a
favor." Without
a freeze, growers have to go into an orchard and thin out
the fruit load on a tree, which drives up the labor cost.
Rasberry said he believes the freeze overthinned this year's
crop. "Trees
can set five to six times the amount of fruit needed. If you
want large, attractive peaches to sell, growers may have to
knock off as much as 75 percent of the fruit to help the
remaining peaches fill out," Rasberry said. Released:
May 12, 2000
Mississippi
Crop Report
Fruit And Pecan
Trees Progress Into Summer
Contact: Dr. Freddie Rasberry, (662) 325-2311
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:28:19
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop00/cr000512.htm
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