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To: OB1kNOb

Delta Farm Press reports that Arkansas would be lucky to make ‘half the crop’.

Soybeans: ‘half the crop’
Nov 12, 2009 10:37 AM, By David Bennett, Farm Press Editorial Staff

On Nov. 4, Gus Wilson took a sample of soybeans with 100 percent damage.

“It was the first time I’ve seen that,” says the Chicot County, Ark., Extension staff chair. “The situation here is bad, bleak. We’ll be lucky to make half the crop we’ve made in the last three to four years. That’s strictly due to the weather.”

Chicot County in extreme southeast Arkansas has caught huge rains all fall. Now, watching crops deteriorate, Wilson says he’s not seen “a group of growers who’ve been more discouraged. Those who were planning to plant wheat may be out of luck. If there’s wheat planted and emerged in Chicot County, I don’t know where it’s at.”

As in the rest of the Mid-South, the county has had several good days of weather. But fields “are rutting up big-time. The cost to our farmers for field preparation next year is going to be high. Rice ground will definitely have be disked a couple of times and landplaned — we’ve got major ruts. The lower ends of fields are horrible.

“People are getting stuck, left and right. This heavy buckshot is just at the right doughy stage where it wants to stick and not shed.

“We have lost some crops already and there’s still water backed up. There will be parts of fields abandoned.”

Plunkett says area elevators are “looking closely at what they accept. Around here, I think they’ll go up to about 20 percent dockage. So far, the bad bean situations have been running in the 15 percent dockage range. Some may be a little higher than that.”

Back in Chicot County, Wilson says the early corn harvested “was okay. I’d estimate that, compared to the last two years, we were down to 35 to 45 bushels per acre [for corn]. That was because of the spring rains.”

Faced with a seemingly unceasing deluge in 2009, veteran farmers are struggling to come up with a similar year in the past.

“My father is 82 years old and he’s farmed 55 to 60 years,” says Wilson. “He says this is the worst harvest season he’s ever seen. Out of his career, he said only one year comes close — he can’t remember if it was in the late 1950s or early 1960s.

“It’s awful. I’m hearing, ‘I won’t be able to pay my bills.’ I hope that doesn’t mean there will be any bankruptcies. Hopefully, there will be a disaster payment, a direct payment from the feds.”


17 posted on 11/16/2009 10:41:05 AM PST by OB1kNOb (ISLAM IS THE H1N1 OF RELIGIONS.)
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To: OB1kNOb
.."Hopefully, there will be a disaster payment, a direct payment from the feds."

Had to get to the end of the article find the truth..

19 posted on 11/16/2009 10:44:44 AM PST by cardinal4 (Dont Tread on Me)
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