By
Linda Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Planting season is well underway,
and Mississippi's
weather conditions in 1995 have been among the
best in
recent years. "The
best thing this year is that the river hasn't been
the problem
it was in the last couple of years," said Don
Bales, Wilkinson
County agent. "The bottomland (near the river) is
in good
shape except for some cotton acres that had to be
replanted
after
a heavy rain around April 11." In
1994, the Mississippi River reached it highest level
in 11
years. Some growers were forced to select other crops for
late plantings
or look to government programs for relief.
Spring floods
near the river also were a problem in 1993. "Basically,
Wilkinson County has never been dry this
spring. We've
gotten several timely rains that North Mississippi
has missed,"
Bales said. Rains
that arrived April 20 and in the early morning
hours the
next day were a welcome sight for most Mississippi
farmers. "We
were pretty dry so the rain was a blessing,
especially
for
pastures and hay," said Gale Chrestman, Pontotoc
County agent. Rankin
County agent Barney Tanner said the cattle
producers
were
the main farmers looking for rain. Most had taken
advantage
of
the drier days for fertilizer applications on pastures and
hay fields
and were ready for rain to boost growth. Dr.
Alan Blaine, extension soybean specialist at
Mississippi
State
University, said a drier than normal early April put
most farmers
ahead of past years in field preparation. "The
main problem some fields might have had with the
recent rains
would be the intensity and amount," Blaine said. "Hard
and fast
rains may cause some farmers to have to replant." Blaine
said if the state receives drying weather in the
next few
weeks, farmers will be going strong, trying to get as
much planted
as possible. Corn
plantings are almost complete in Mississippi.
Some cotton
and soybeans already are in the ground. State farmers
are expected
to plant 320,000 acres of corn, 1.5 million acres
of cotton
and 1.9 million acres of soybeans. With
cotton planting season beginning, growers should
place boll
weevil traps as soon as possible, no later than May 1.
Data from
the traps is useful for growers and the Mississippi
Boll Weevil
Management Corp. Traps are available from the
county extension
offices. Released:
April 21, 1995
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Timely Rains
Help Crops in Early '95
Contact: Dr. Alan Blaine, (601) 325-4074
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:17
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop95/crop0421.html
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