By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Extremely high temperatures and dry conditions
combined to deliver the knockout blow to Mississippi's 1999
commercial pumpkin crop. Dr.
David Nagel, horticulturist with Mississippi State
University Extension Service, said after growers planted
pumpkins from late June through July, rain almost never fell
in the North Mississippi fields. "Although
the southern half of the state had adequate moisture, the
high temperatures prevented fruit set. Even if they were
irrigated, pumpkins do not pollinate well when the air
temperatures are above 100 degrees," Nagel said. "For the
northern half, the drought just compounded the
problem." Pumpkins
did set fruit when temperatures fell to normal levels in
late August, but jack-o'-lanterns are not worth much money
the day after Halloween. Nagel
said jack-o'-lantern pumpkins should be the size of golf
balls by Sept. 1. Most Mississippi pumpkins were slightly
smaller, about 1 inch in diameter. "Locally
grown pumpkins will be scarce this fall, but the traditional
pumpkin growing regions of the country are expecting a
normal crop," Nagel said. "Mississippi usually imports more
than half of its pumpkins from states such as Colorado,
Texas, Indiana and Illinois." Nagel
said he does not expect prices to be influenced by the lack
of local pumpkins. Unfortunately,
1999 was a year Mississippi pumpkin growers increased their
commercial acreage to 600 acres, Nagel said. For
Yalobusha County grower Walt Moore, 1999 may be his first
and last year to attempt to grow pumpkins. "I was
told that you'll succeed with pumpkins about one out of
three years; this just wasn't our year," Moore said. "We
took a gamble and like with every other crop, we
lost." Moore
said he hopes to get half a crop, but on a recent
walk-through, he only found four pumpkins in a 20 acre
field. "If you
hit, you hit, if you miss, you miss. We missed," Moore
said. Released:
Sept. 3, 1999
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Mother Nature
Knocks Out State's Pumpkins
Contact: Dr. David Nagel, (662) 325-4558
Visit: DAFVM
|| USDA
Search our Site ||
Need more information about this subject?
Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:32
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop99/cr990903.htm
Mississippi State University
is an equal opportunity institution.
Recommendations on this web site do not endorse
any commercial products or trade names.