By
Bethany Waldrop Keiper VERONA
-- Scorching temperatures that have reduced
hay yields
and quality in some areas of the state are providing
good conditions
for harvest. "Our
growers are busy making hay while the sun shines,"
said Charles
Fitts, Chickasaw County agent. "The dry weather
is providing
an optimum time for hay harvesting and curing." Recent
reports estimate Mississippi's 1995 hay production
to total
1.65 million tons, down 12 percent from last
year. Dr. Pat
Bagley, head of the North Mississippi Research
and Extension
Center in Verona, said the amount and timing of rainfall
is the deciding factor in hay yields. "In
areas with dry conditions, the crop is short,"
Bagley said.
"But a few areas have had adequate rainfall, and the
crop is
in good shape." Mississippi's
hay acreage for harvest is expected to
total 750,000
acres with a yield of 2.2 tons per acre. Growers
have harvested
about 90 percent of the state's warm season hay. Bagley
said recent hay prices to growers have been up
about 6
percent as hay supply is short, but prices will be held down
by low
cattle prices. Mike
Skipper, Winston County agent, said hay yields
are drastically
short compared with the past few years. "The
drought situation this year has caused a 25 to
30 percent
reduction in hay yields," Skipper said. "Our growers
are nearly
80 percent through with harvest, and so far the quality
of the
crop is about average." Quality
also is a concern for growers who have
received
adequate
rainfall. "Early
rains have helped boost yields, but some growers
have left
the crop in the field too long waiting for dry weather
to harvest,"
Fitts said. "This has reduced quality in some
cases." Attacks
from fall armyworms have turned many of the
state's later
season hay fields into battlegrounds. Armyworms
leave growers with two management choices
-- spraying
fields or harvesting the crop early to prevent
damage. "Growers
harvesting early may see reduced yields, but
higher quality,"
Bagley said. "But if armyworms get into fields
and damage
the forage crop, both quality and yields drop." Most
state growers have chosen to cut hay early,
stopping
the
armyworms short. "We've
had some scattered outbreaks of fall armyworms in
the hay,
but most of our growers were in tune with the attacks
and just
cut the fields a little early to eliminate the
pest population,"
Skipper said. Released:
Sept. 1, 1995
Mississippi
Crop Report:
State Growers
Reap Short Hay Harvest
Contact: Dr. Pat Bagley,
(601)
566-2201
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:32
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop95/crop0901.html
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