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Texas crop, weather Dry fall weather promotes
harvests
November 19, 2008
Robert Burns
COLLEGE STATION – In much of Texas, mild fall weather
allowed for the harvesting of cotton, sorghum and other crops, according
to reports by Texas AgriLife Extension Service personnel throughout the
state. It also allowed for producers in North Texas and other regions to
over-seed winter pastures, a month late in some instances.
But for much of the state west of U.S. Interstate 35, lack of moisture
was again becoming the main limiting factor.
"Livestock and pastures are in good shape, but we are beginning to get a
little dry," said Ryan Martin, AgriLife Extension agent in Motley
County, northeast of Lubbock. "It's been several weeks since we received
a good rain, and some winter wheat is starting to show it."
"Strong winds caused soil conditions to dry," said Miles Dabovich,
AgriLife Extension agent in Wichita County. "Winter wheat could use a
shower, but cotton does not need any at this time."
"Wheat and oats are needing rainfall right now," said Brad Easterling,
AgriLife Extension agent in Baylor County, west of Wichita Falls.
"Fields are showing (symptoms of) stress from several different factors
at this time."
"Strong winds have continued to dry wheat and grass throughout the
county," said Adam Bonner, AgriLife Extension agent in Knox County,
north of Abilene. "Wheat is starting to look blue in many places. Wheat
farmers are hoping for a rain, and cotton farmers are enjoying the
optimum weather for stripping cotton. Cotton has been averaging between
one and three bales to the acre."
"It has been dry and mild this week, with temperatures forecast to be a
lot cooler this weekend, and no moisture," said Greg Gruben, AgriLife
Extension agent for Scurry County in Snyder. "It is very dry and the
wheat needs a rain, however cotton farmers do not want rain. They are
still waiting on a freeze to kill the rest of the cotton."
"Bell County continues to suffer from very dry conditions," said Dirk
Aaron, AgriLife Extension agent located in Temple. "Cooler temperatures
were present over the weekend with some areas receiving a mild frost."
Story Continues Below
The following summaries were compiled by AgriLife Extension district
reporters this week:
CENTRAL: Most counties received rain this past week that helped planting
conditions and promoted the emergence of small grains. Cooler temperatures
resulted in a light frost. The cotton harvest and ginning were nearly
complete. Winter feeding programs were in full swing.
COASTAL BEND: As much as 2 inches of rain fell in some counties, which
brought some drought relief. Producers were actively over-seeding ryegrass
for winter pasture, but the grass should have been planted in mid-October,
so grazing benefits will be delayed a month. Forage was becoming sparse, and
livestock producers were feeding hay.
EAST: Most areas received rain that relieved some of the dry soil conditions
that have slowed winter forage growth. Feral hogs continued to be active in
many counties.
FAR WEST: The regional weather was windy and dry with no precipitation.
Fall onions were planted and emerged. Pecan harvest began. Cotton and grain
sorghum harvest were in full swing. The last cutting of alfalfa was baled.
The harvest of red, dry chiles was ongoing. Wheat planting neared
completion.
NORTH: Rain raised soil moisture to adequate levels, greened up small grains
that were planted earlier, and helped late plantings germinate.
In many counties, frost accompanied cooler conditions. Cattle were in good
condition for this time of the year. Some producers began supplemental
feeding; other livestock were doing well on the stockpiled forages. The
pecan crop was short this year. Winter wheat was in fair condition, and
planting neared completion. Oats were about 75 percent planted. The corn,
soybeans and sorghum harvests were finished. The cotton harvest neared
completion. Range and pasture conditions were fair to good.
PANHANDLE: Temperatures ranged from above normal to cooler than normal.
Soil moisture varied from very short to surplus with most areas reporting
adequate. The corn harvest was nearly completed. Cotton varied from very
poor to good with most areas reporting fair to poor. A few fields of soybean
were yet to be harvested. The sorghum harvest continued. Wheat varied from
poor to excellent with most areas reporting fair to good. Range conditions
varied from very poor to fair with most areas reporting fair. Cattle were in
good condition.
ROLLING PLAINS: It's been several weeks since the region has received a good
rain. The cotton harvest continued, but many producers won't begin
harvesting until a freeze kills the crop. Harvest yields were variable.
The sorghum crop was doing well. A small portion of the crop has been
harvested and producers are very pleased with their yields. Some farmers
said they will plant sorghum again next year instead of cotton – if sorghum
prices remain high. Wheat and oats were showing stress from several factors,
the least of which was lack of moisture. Diseases such as rust and wheat
streak mosaic increased. Many producers were spraying for weeds and hoping
they would not have to treat for greenbugs.
Livestock and pastures were in good shape but were beginning to dry out.
SOUTH: Soil moisture conditions in most of the region remained very short,
except in the south, where they were adequate. In the northern parts of the
region, oat and wheat crops were newly planted. Those already planted were
sprouting but not growing due to the lack of moisture. Peanut harvesting
continued. Agents in the region's eastern counties reported wildfire risks
were rising because of the extremely dry conditions. Light showers fell in
the western counties, but there was not enough accumulation to make planting
feasible. Producers there were waiting for more moisture before attempting
to plant spring wheat.
The cabbage and early-planted spinach harvests were ongoing. The harvesting
of sugarcane, citrus and winter vegetables continued. Tomato growers were
preparing for harvesting. Supplemental feeding of livestock increased.
SOUTH PLAINS: Soil moisture was short to adequate. Above-normal temperatures
and minimal moisture made for optimum conditions for harvest across the
region. The cotton and sorghum harvests were in full swing with highly
variable yields from field to field for both crops.
The corn harvest was nearly completed, with a wide range of yields depending
upon hail damage and moisture. The peanut harvest was nearly over. Winter
wheat was in good condition but could use rain. Pastures and ranges were in
fair to good condition. Cattle were in good condition.
SOUTHEAST: Some areas received as much as 5.5 inches of rain. Winter pasture
conditions remained poor as the rain came a month too late.
Producers were over-seeding warm-season pastures with ryegrass, albeit a
month late, so grazing benefits from winter pastures will be a month behind.
Livestock producers were feeding hay.
SOUTHWEST: The region has remained completely rainless for nearly 40 days
and missed the fall growing period. Year-to-date cumulative rainfall at
10.75 inches is 50 percent below the long-term average for the year and the
second-driest period on record. (The driest was in 1956 with 9.3 inches.)
Forage availability was below average entering winter dormancy. The cabbage,
cucumber and spinach harvests continued. Fall vegetable crops and some
winter wheat were making good progress under heavy irrigation. Land has been
prepared for early spring planting, but planting dryland crops may be very
limited because of depleted soil moisture.
WEST CENTRAL: Warm days with cool nights continued. A few areas reported
scattered showers, but most areas remained extremely dry. The cotton harvest
was in full swing. Most cotton looked good. Small grains emerged but needed
moisture for continued growth. The peanut harvest was completed. Range and
pastures were showing signs of moisture stress, and quality was declining.
Livestock remained in fair to good condition.
Supplemental feeding of livestock increased. The pecan harvest was ongoing
with low yields.
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