By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Spring temperature have been great for planting
gardens, but rains have kept gardeners out of their plots
until recently. Dr.
David Nagel, horticulturist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said favorable weather in
the growing season should allow the gardens to recover from
lost time and still yield good harvests. "Most
gardens that have been put in were planted in the last two
weeks," Nagel said. "That's a little late for cool season
crops like cabbage, cauliflower and broccoli, and it's a
little early for warm season crops like peppers, tomatoes
and corn." Although
these types of crops have different ideal conditions, they
will now face the same weather at the same time in their
growing season. "If we
have a typical, hot June, we won't have as good yields from
the cool crops," Nagel said. "The warm crops will be OK as
long as night temperatures stay above 45
degrees." A cool
June would benefit the cool crops, but slow maturity for the
warm crops. "If the
sun shines and the temperatures are above 75 degrees in the
daytime, you can expect a pretty good garden," Nagel said.
"It's better to have cool weather for warm crops than warm
weather for cool crops." Dr.
Charles Wax, professor of geosciences at MSU, said no
weather forecasts can reliably predict what the summer will
hold for gardens. "When
you're looking that far ahead, you have to consider
climatology, not weather forecasts," Wax said. "Past
experiences, weather patterns and other data cannot predict
weather that far in advance." Wax said
La Nina -- cooler, dryer weather caused by a cooling of
Pacific Ocean waters -- does not necessarily follow on the
heels of its counterpart, El Nino. The effects of El Nino
appear to be about finished, and Mississippians can expect
the weather to return to normal. "But
unfortunately in Mississippi, normal can be bizarre," Wax
said. Because
of the weather, Jefferson Davis County home gardeners are
two to three weeks behind schedule, said James Richmond,
Extension agent for that county. "The
commercial gardeners were probably not hurt as bad by the
weather because our market window is July 1 to frost for
most crops," Richmond said. "Most should catch up when the
weather warms up more, and the crops that are sitting in wet
soil now should have a chance to dry out and mature on
schedule." Ada
Mason works with the state Department of Agriculture and
Commerce at the Dixie Fruit and Vegetable Growers'
Association in Bassfield. Gardeners from a six-county area
sell their produce at this market. "Right
now, everything is on line that has been planted here,"
Mason said. "On average, crops were three to three weeks
late getting in the ground because it rained so much and the
ground was too saturated." This
will likely push harvest back two to three weeks for many of
the crops, but shouldn't affect yield, she said. "A slow
start shouldn't hurt anything, and if the weather
cooperates, it should be a really good year," Mason
said. Released:
April 17, 1998
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Gardens In Late,
But Shouldn't Hurt Harvest
Contact: Dr. David Nagel, (601) 325-2311
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:28
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop98/cr980417.htm
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