Farm Progress

Some places on the High Plains are still very dry, but nowhere is it as dry as it was last year.Farmers are also guardedly optimistic about prices.Cotton is holding its own. 

Ron Smith 1, Senior Content Director

March 29, 2012

2 Min Read

Cotton farmers face the 2012 planting season in slightly better shape than they were a year ago.

“We see some guarded optimism,” says Steve Verett, executive vice president, Plains Cotton Growers, Inc., Lubbock, Texas.

“We’re not where we need to be, and some places on the High Plains are still very dry, but nowhere is it as dry as it was last year.”

Over the past few weeks, a few farmers who summer fallowed fields last year—partly due to failed cotton—have found a soil profile in pretty good shape, in spite of continuing dry conditions.

Irrigated acreage, where farmers tried to make a crop last summer, are not in as good shape, he says. “But overall, the land worked up much better than it did in 2011.”

Verett says 2012 has produced “a more typical spring. The Dallas Metroplex area gets rain and it starts backing up to the West. That’s what we’ve been seeing. Also, the long-range forecast shows La Nina fading so we should have at least an equal chance for rain.”

April will tell the tale, however. As the days begin to count down in April, farmers will be looking for rain. Irrigated farmers like to plant in May and would like a good planting rain to get the crop started.

He says dryland farmers to the south have a little more time, until June 10 in some cases, to plant cotton. “Dryland farmers can plant dry, and if they get some timely rainfall, they can make a decent crop.”

Farmers are also cautiously optimistic about prices although “supply and demand numbers are pretty troubling. But the price, at least so far, has held up at reasonable levels. It’s not where it was in 2010 or at harvest in 2011 but December futures are still holding at 90 cents, so cotton is holding its own.”

About the Author(s)

Ron Smith 1

Senior Content Director, Farm Press/Farm Progress

Ron Smith has spent more than 40 years covering Sunbelt agriculture. Ron began his career in agricultural journalism as an Experiment Station and Extension editor at Clemson University, where he earned a Masters Degree in English in 1975. He served as associate editor for Southeast Farm Press from 1978 through 1989. In 1990, Smith helped launch Southern Turf Management Magazine and served as editor. He also helped launch two other regional Turf and Landscape publications and launched and edited Florida Grove and Vegetable Management for the Farm Press Group. Within two years of launch, the turf magazines were well-respected, award-winning publications. Ron has received numerous awards for writing and photography in both agriculture and landscape journalism. He is past president of The Turf and Ornamental Communicators Association and was chosen as the first media representative to the University of Georgia College of Agriculture Advisory Board. He was named Communicator of the Year for the Metropolitan Atlanta Agricultural Communicators Association. More recently, he was awarded the Norman Borlaug Lifetime Achievement Award by the Texas Plant Protection Association. Smith also worked in public relations, specializing in media relations for agricultural companies. Ron lives with his wife Pat in Johnson City, Tenn. They have two grown children, Stacey and Nick, and three grandsons, Aaron, Hunter and Walker.

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