By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Weather discussions are not new to farmers, but a
recently developed Internet site can take those talks to the
next level. Even
before El Nino put climate trends on the front pages,
farmers were watching weather reports closely and making
decisions accordingly. The Weather Center at the Delta
Research and Extension Center in Stoneville provides
historical and up-to-date data and products to help farmers
make agricultural decisions. The center is a joint effort
between the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment
Station and the Mississippi State University Extension
Service. "Farmers
are definitely interested in weather. It is time to have
this type of information available on the Internet," said
Charlie Estess, Northwest District program director for
MSU's Extension Service. "Our job is not predicting weather,
but we can tell farmers what has happened and what that
means to the crops. There also are links to weather
forecasts on the site." The
Internet site, located at
http://www.ext.msstate.edu/anr/drec/drec.html offers
one-stop shopping for weather information. Estess said the
site helps growers after the loss of Stoneville's
agricultural weather information provided by the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Bart
Freeland, the weather and Geographic Information System
coordinator for the center, said one advantage of the MSU
data sites is that they are located in agricultural
settings. "Television
station weather readings and most NOAA sites are in urban
areas, and those readings can be different from rural
locations," Freeland said. Currently, MSU gathers data in
three counties across the Mississippi Delta -- Sharkey,
Washington and Coahoma. Farmers
can review rainfall amounts, soil temperatures and heat unit
information. Using that data plus individual planting dates,
growers can predict a plant's stages throughout the growing
season. "Farmers
shouldn't make decisions without on-site visits to their
fields," Freeland said. "All programs require growers to
verify the information with their own eyes." John
Coccaro, Sharkey County Extension agent, said the web site
makes it easier for farmers to get more weather details than
they could before it went on-line. "Before
this Internet site, farmers had to have all the weather
gauges, check them daily and calculate the information by
hand," Coccaro said. "There were very few farmers who had
constant access to that kind of weather data. This site also
has a 30-year history for growers to review." Contact
local Extension offices for assistance finding weather
information. Released:
May 15, 1998
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Growers Glean
Weather Details From Web Site
Contact: Bart Freeland, (601) 686-3274
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:28
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop98/cr980515.htm
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