By
Linda Breazeale STARKVILLE
-- Hurricane Opal's unwelcome rains
showed Mississippi's
crops more mercy than Alabama's, but a delay
in harvest
is anything but good news for farmers struggling to
put 1995
behind them. The
late-season hurricane dropped relatively small
amounts of
rain on the Mississippi Delta and from 2 to 3 inches on
the eastern
side of the state. Unfortunately, any rain at this
point in
the season provides only negative effects on the
harvest-ready
crops. Dr.
Will McCarty, extension cotton specialist at
Mississippi
State
University, said rains delay harvest, reduce yields
and hurt
quality. "Crops
lose quality every day they stay in a field
after reaching
maturity -- even without a rain," McCarty said. "No
doubt our crops dodged a tremendous bullet by
the hurricane
going east of us, rather than coming up the
Mississippi
River,"
McCarty said. "That would have been the final blow for
an already
staggering cotton crop." 1995
has been a disappointing season as yields have
been hurt
by high temperatures, dry conditions and insects.
Tobacco budworms
devastated some cotton fields in the state. Dr.
Alan Blaine, extension agronomist at MSU, said
rains were
too late to help most soybeans, and field drying will
be slower
with cooler temperatures ahead. "We
definitely need dry weather for the next two or
three weeks
to let farmers go ahead and get crops out of the
fields,"
Blaine
said. "Soybean yields already are down because of
the drought
conditions this summer." Blaine
said farmers planning to plant wheat and
ryegrass
were
much more appreciative of recent rains. With the
exception
of
eastern Mississippi, much of the state still needs more
rain to
prepare the ground for fall plantings. Lowndes
County agent Joe Love said damage from
Hurricane
Opal
appears to be minimal, but time will tell what the
impact was
of a week's harvest delay. "Cotton
may lose about 10 percent of its weight from
the rains
and another 4 to 12 cents per pound for lost quality,"
Love said.
"Later maturing soybeans will benefit some from the
rains, as
will pastures and fall plantings." Released:
Oct. 5, 1995
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Hurricane Opal
Disrupts Mississippi Harvest
Contact: Dr. Will McCarty,
(601)
325-2701;
Dr.
Alan Blaine,
(601)
325-2311
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:19
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop95/crop1005.html
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