By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Most cotton and soybean farmers relaxed as
Hurricane Georges hung a hard right after landfall, but for
Southeast Mississippi growers, the results were
devastating. Dr. Alan
Blaine, agronomist with Mississippi State University's
Extension Service, said growers across the state with fields
almost ready for harvest were working around the clock to
avoid the predicted heavy winds and rain. "The
amount and intensity that was predicted would have been the
final nail in the coffin for much of the soybean crop,"
Blaine said. "For most soybean and cotton growers, if it
hasn't rained by this point in the season, they would prefer
not seeing any until after harvest." Blaine
said most of the rain was to the southeast below a line from
Jackson to Meridian. While only a small percentage of
Mississippi's row crops were affected, those fields were
devastated. George
County agricultural agent Kerry Johnson reported heavy
damage to 4,000 acres of cotton. County Agent Mark Gillie in
neighboring Greene County reported 80 percent losses to
cotton. "We were
fortunate to harvest some cotton the week before the
hurricane. What's left will be very difficult to harvest,"
Gillie said. Across
the state, South Delta growers braced for the worst that
never came. "Because
of the time delay between defoliation and harvest, there was
little way to speed up the process," said Tim Pepper, Yazoo
County agent. "Producers were anxious to harvest all crops
that were ready and worked well into the night." Sharkey
County agent John Coccaro said growers may have picked some
fields a few days earlier than planned, but suffered no
losses from the frantic harvest. Some growers returned for a
second picking on fields that were picked early. Overall,
Coccaro said growers should complete the 1998 harvest about
two weeks earlier than normal. "Yields
have been near Sharkey County's five-year average of 806
pounds an acre and the quality has been good," Coccaro said.
"That means a hurricane would have caused significant losses
to growers. We're definitely feeling lucky." Released:
Oct. 2, 1998
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Georges Causes
Harvest Panic, Devastates Some
Contact: Dr. Alan Blaine, (601) 325-2311
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:29
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop98/cr981002.htm
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