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Owen Taylor, Editor

COTTON NEWS:

Closing Cotton, 11-12
:
Closes Lower in Heavy Dealings. (Read More)

Delta Cotton Harvest Reports, 11-12
:
Struggling To Finish The 2009 Crop (Read More)

Southeast Cotton Harvest Report, 11-12
:
Some progress, but Ida is a concern (Read More)

Audio: Cotton Conference Call, 11-12
:
Ag Marketing Network panel discusses latest USDA report, possible market direction (Read More)

Opening Cotton, 11-12
:
Opening Cotton: Extends Sharp Midweek Downturn. (Read More)

K. Good's Farm Policy, 11-12
:
Climate Issues and Agriculture; Food Security; and Food Safety. (Read More)

Closing Cotton, 11-11
:
Market Tumbles from New 13-Month Highs (Read More)

Cotton Market Comments, Carl Anderson, 11-11
:
Adverse weather cuts U.S. Production 502,000 bales to smallest crop in 20 years. (Read More)

Resistant Weeds in the Future, 11-11
:
Weeds Harder to Kill in Soybeans, Rice, Corn, Wheat (Read More)

Texas: Subsurface Drip Irrigation, 11-11
:
If it works here, it will work anywhere. (Read More)

Texas Crop, Weather, 11-10
:
Pesticide applicator training set Dec. 1 and Dec. 3 at Overton. (Read More)

Weather: Making NOAA Climate Forecasts Useful to Farmers 11-9
:
Short-term variations or departures from the long-term averages (Read More)

Louisiana Food and Fiber, 11-9
:
Current production situation. (Read More)

Ag Report (E-Central La.), 11-9
:
Lots of cotton acres finished; harvestable soybeans are probably in the elevators; rice harvest going slow--patience, tracks and drainage required; eighty percent of intended wheat acres planted this past week.| (Read More)

Tennessee Market Highlights, 11-6
:
Crop market comments by Chuck Danehower; Livestock comments by Emmit L. Rawls. (Read More)

Arkansas Bi-Weekly Market Briefings, 11-6
:
Soybeans have traded sideways over the past four weeks; harvest moves into high gear; wheat lost momentum; cotton gets a boost; rice futures broke resistance (Read More)

Monsanto Opens Its First Research Center In China 11-4
:
Company recently signed research agreement with major Chinese university (Read More)

Arkansas: Impact of Rain is Being Felt in Chicot County
:
Cotton yields for 2009 cut in half, beans hit hard due to heavy rains in last 6 weeks (Read More)

Nunn Cotton Letter, 11-1
:
Still trying to estimate the Delta crop (Read More)

Mississippi Field Notes (Central Miss), 11-2
:
Corn - Is It Still A Contender For Mississippi Acreage? (Read More)

Mississippi Ag Report, USDA, November.
:
Mississippi cotton ginned as of October 15, 2009, represents only 1 percent of the production forecast of 540,000 bales. During same period last year, 22 percent of the cotton had been ginned. (Read More)

Mississippi Field Crops Newsletter, 10-28
:
Soybeans in fairly good condition; Heavy losses in corn; Cotton in poor condition. (Read More)

Arkansas Cotton Update, 10-24
:
Weather driving the market; harvest progress limited over the next week, chances of rain return. (Read More)

Louisiana Cotton Bulletin, 10-23
:
Atrocious crop development and harvest conditions (Read More)

Mississippi: Excessive fall rains leave the state soggy 10-22
:
A 7-week Autumn stretch plays havoc with 2009 crop, complicates 2010 planting (Read More)

 

Cotton:

Low cotton acres face summer heat

AgFax.Com - Your Online Ag News Source

 

Starkville (July 2) – Mississippi’s 2009 cotton is shaping up to be more a story of how the mighty have fallen than another chapter in the reign of King Cotton.

A poor outlook on market prices and continued high input costs led many producers to move away from cotton, and wet weather during the April and May planting window kept even more acres out of cotton production. The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates Mississippi has 270,000 acres of cotton in 2009, the lowest on record. For comparison, Mississippi had 1.2 million acres of cotton in 2006.

Darrin Dodds, cotton specialist with the Mississippi State University Extension Service, is happy to have even that many acres in the ground.

“In some cases, we have had folks successful with getting a good stand the first time, but others replanted three times,” Dodds said. “It’s kind of surprising with all the weather we’ve had that we got as much cotton planted as we did.”

The majority of Mississippi’s cotton is typically planted between April 15 and May 15. This year, producers didn’t finish until about June 10. That pushes harvest from mid- to late-September to October and November.

“If you start late, you’re going to finish late, and then you really run into problems with weather in the fall,” Dodds said. “We may have a long, favorable growing season where planting late doesn’t necessarily hurt us. However, it appears that we are in for a very hot, very dry summer. This combined with unpredictable weather conditions this fall could lead to lower yields and trouble getting this crop out of the field.”

Producers can do a few things to help cotton mature as quickly as possible.

“Make sure you get irrigation started on time and keep up with it. Don’t get behind on it, as this can really make or break a crop,” Dodds said. “Growth regulators can be used to try to limit the plant’s vegetative growth and put all the effort into boll production.”

Angus Catchot, Extension entomologist, said insects were just becoming a problem in some areas by the end of June.

“We’re dealing with plant bugs in older cotton, especially next to corn. They’ve been relatively light up until this point, but we’re about to start having to treat regularly for them, especially in the Delta,” Catchot said. “The plant bugs have been out there, but they were in wild hosts that had grown up with all the rain in May. As things got hot and dry, the plant bugs began moving into cotton.”

Cotton in the Delta is dealing with spider mites, which find the current hot, dry weather ideal. Cotton aphids are causing problems only in a few places, but those areas with these pests have already had to spray for them.

“All these things are treatable, but it’s a financial problem if you have to treat a lot of insects with cotton prices already so low,” Catchot said.

John Michael Riley, Extension agricultural economist, said cotton prices have been moving higher since mid-June. The October futures price is about 55.5 cents per pound, and December futures are at 60.5 cents a pound.

“At this time last year, we were experiencing a drastic run-up in all commodity prices, and harvest cotton futures were about 75 cents a pound, but that didn’t last,” Riley said. “Current prices are reminiscent of actual harvest prices in 2007.”

He said the decrease in acres continues to indicate cotton is losing ground to other, more attractive crops such as corn and soybeans. But that doesn’t mean cotton is leaving Mississippi.

“Many producers refuse to abandon the crop completely,” Riley said.