By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Heat and drought are claiming another Mississippi
casualty as hay production is way down in most areas of the
state. While
some parts of the state have received ample rain, most are
parched and facing severe hay shortages this
fall. John
Wilson, Itawamba County agricultural program assistant with
the Mississippi State University Extension Service, said the
commercial hay producers in his county are going to be at
least one-third short on filling hay orders. "We
usually cut a lot of hay in August, but there's not anything
now because nothing can grow," Wilson said. "What hay is cut
is not very good quality. We haven't had a rain since just
after July 4 except for a few showers in spots." Producers
in Itawamba County are culling cattle herds earlier than
usual because they won't have the hay to feed them through
the winter. "I met
with 41 beef producers this week and about 15 are already
feeding hay," Wilson said. "They should be grazing until
about October. We're going to be real short this
winter." Gary
Miller, who produces hay on an 80-acre farm in Macon, said
he has gotten just 1/2 inch of rain in five
weeks. "In May
we got 1 1/2 inches of rain and we had our best production
in June and July because we got showers and had enough
moisture to get a good crop of hay off," Miller said. "We're
in the critical stage in August." While
widely scattered showers have helped some hay producers in
the area, Miller may have to purchase hay to fill some
orders. The region has had three cuttings, the third of good
quality, but Miller said the fourth cutting likely will be
very short and of poor quality. "We will
lose money on this cutting," Miller said. "Fertilizing costs
$72 an acre, but if we don't fertilize, we're not even going
to get a fourth crop." Armyworms
are another problem on the dry fields, adding $5 per acre to
production costs. If it rains before harvest, Miller said he
may get 50 bales an acre on hybrid Bermudagrass. "If we
were to get a timely rain, we could get a couple weeks of
growth out of the fields," Miller said. "We've got to make
the decision to spend money on spray and hope we get rain so
we can have some of a crop." The
outlook is not so grim farther south. Billy Joe Lee, Pearl
River County agent, said production got off to a slow start
but has been good since then. "We're
going to be somewhat short of hay because we didn't get the
necessary rainfall at the beginning of summer to get the
grass growing and toward the end of the growing season," Lee
said. "We got sufficient rain through July until the first
of August, but since then the drought is beginning to take
an extensive toll on grasses." Released:
Aug. 20, 1999
-
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Drought Takes
Toll On Hay, Pastures
Contact: John Wilson, (662) 862-3201; Billy Joe Lee, (601)
795-4224
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:38
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop99/cr990820.htm
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