Louisiana corn growers had a hard time getting the crop planted this spring, hampered by wet, cold conditions. Cotton, on the other hand, had nearly ideal planting conditions. But May and early June turned "abnormally dry," according to Dan Fromme, associate professor and Extension corn and cotton specialist from the AgCenter in Alexandria.
Fromme discussed crop conditions during the recent LSU AgCenter Field Day at the Scott Research, Extension and Education Center in Winnsboro.
“We’re irrigating corn,” Fromme said. “We didn’t get corn planted in a timely manner. Then April and May turned dry and June is following suit.”
He says 60 percent of the state’s corn acreage is irrigated. Still, yields likely will be off because of the dry weather. “Also, temperatures have been higher than usual. Those factors aren’t good for corn yields.”
Cotton got off to a good start. “You couldn’t ask for better conditions,” Fromme says. “We had enough soil moisture to plant and temperatures were warm. About 80 percent of our acreage was planted from May 1 to May 15. Fromme says about 50 percent of Louisiana’s cotton acreage is irrigated.
He says the crops are needing rain.
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