By
Linda Breazeale STARKVILLE
-- Most farmers welcomed recent rains, but growers along the
Mississippi River are experiencing an unbelievable fourth
year of late season flooding. Wayland
Hill, hydrologic engineer with the Army Corps of Engineers
in Vicksburg, said flooding along the lower Mississippi is a
result of rains much farther north. "Last
month, states such as Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio
and Pennsylvania received about 300 percent of their normal
rainfall," Hill said. "The Mississippi River drains 43
percent of the continental United States and parts of two
Canadian provinces." Warren
County agent Terry Rector said more than 9,000 acres are
under water from the Mississippi and Yazoo
rivers. "All of
our land that wasn't under water needed the recent rain,"
Rector said. "We really don't want the folks upriver around
Missouri to get any more for a while." Rector
said most farmers appreciated the first inch and a half of
rain. "The
next three-quarter inches didn't matter one way or the
other, but anything more than that was unwelcomed by most
cropland farmers," Rector said. It is
an understatement to say that a fourth straight year of late
season flooding is unusual. "Last
year was worse. The river rose higher and stayed high
longer," Hill said. "But since the river normally crests in
April, these late May and June crests are especially hard on
farmers." In
1995, the river crested at 47 feet in Vicksburg on June 12,
compared to this year's crest of almost 44 feet around June
1. The river crested in May in 1994. The
good news from the Corps of Engineers is that the Steele
Bayou control structure is holding back about 7 feet of the
Mississippi and Yazoo backwater. Since smaller rivers empty
into this area, local rains pose an area flooding
threat. While
recent rains brought some relief to most of the state,
Coahoma County experienced crop damaging storms. Charlie
Estess, Coahoma County agent, said about 12,000 acres
received a massive "footprint" from hail, rains and strong
winds. "About
5,000 acres of cotton were the hardest hit and more than
half will have to be replanted either in cotton or
soybeans," Estess said. "Corn and older soybeans weathered
the storm in better shape." Released:
May 31, 1996
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Rains bring
relief, river floods again
Contact: Terry Rector (601) 636-5442 or Charlie Estess (601)
624-3070
Visit: DAFVM
|| USDA
Search our Site ||
Need more information about this subject?
Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:21
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop96/cr053196.html
Mississippi State University
is an equal opportunity institution.
Recommendations on this web site do not endorse
any commercial products or trade names.