By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi farmers have the rest of the season to
wait and see if the state's earliest soybean planting ever
will pay off in a good crop this year. Alan
Blaine, soybean specialist with the Mississippi State
University Extension Service, said the state's acreage is
down 200,000 acres from last year for a total of 1.5 million
acres. "This is
the first time in probably over 30 years that the cotton and
soybean acreage are at the same level," Blaine
said. Poor
prices caused this recent Mississippi trend to reduced
acreage, but soybean acreage nationwide increased. Cotton is
picking up a lot of the acreage, but so are corn and
rice. "We had
a good spring when it finally dried up and allowed us to get
in and plant," Blaine said. "May has been extremely dry and
a lot of plants are short and already blooming. We usually
see blooming around June 1, but they're blooming now either
because they were stressed by dry weather early or they've
been emerged for a good while." The
recent trend to plant the state's soybean crop early is an
attempt for the crop to reach peak water demand when there's
better soil moisture and a greater chance of
rainfall. "With
this crop being early, we should be in our most demanding
time by the first of June instead of the middle of June to
early July," Blaine said. Scattered
showers in mid-May helped some areas, but farmers had to
irrigate other fields by late May. Blaine said many will
need irrigation by early June unless rains continue to come
in a timely manner across the state. "We must
remember this is an early crop, so it is ahead of schedule,"
Blaine said. "As a whole, we're in excellent shape compared
to years past, but we've got a long way to go." Don
Respess, Bolivar County Extension agent, said his county
planted just 175,000 acres of soybeans this year, down from
about 218,000 last year. "Prices
for soybeans are low and farmers are thinking that if
they're going to have to irrigate, they might as well put in
rice," Respess said. Bolivar
County farmers planted early, trying to avoid problems from
normal late summer dry weather. "We're
trying to reduce irrigation if we can because of cost, but
many of the fields are dryland fields without irrigation,"
Respess said. "We want this crop to make early so we are not
as dependent on late summer rainfall." Blaine
said the main problems soybean farmers have encountered this
year have been in no-till fields. Farmers have seen numerous
grubs and some worms, but the biggest problem has been
grasshoppers. Spraying has been very effective, but the
grasshopper problem surfaced much earlier than usual this
year. "With
the large planting of Roundup Ready soybeans, growers have
the tendency to spray their turn rows and ditches," Blaine
said. "Don't spray these areas with Roundup because you are
removing a cover and food source, and could force
grasshoppers to move into adjacent fields." Released:
May 25, 2001
Mississippi
Crop Report
Soybeans are off
to earliest start ever
Ideal
spring planting conditions enabled state farmers to get
about 85 percent of the crop in the ground by the middle of
May, a pace that was 30 percent ahead of normal. Much of
what remains to be planted will go onto fields that are
double-cropped with wheat or are waiting on much-needed
moisture.
Contact:
Dr. Alan Blaine, (662) 325-2311
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:20
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop01/010525.htm
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