Cotton Looks Promising in Texas’ Rolling and High Plains

By Adam Russell, Texas A&M AgriLife

Good late-summer rains improved conditions for cotton in the Rolling and High Plains regions of Texas and likely mean an above-average crop for 2016, according to Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service experts.

Advertisement

Dr. Seth Byrd, AgriLife Extension cotton agronomist, Lubbock, said cotton harvests in two top cotton-producing regions began on a small scale a few weeks ago, but should ramp up soon. So far, the cotton fields there look better than expected.

“Producers had low expectations for dryland fields because of a hot, dry July, but they seem happy with where the crop is at this point,” he said.

Byrd said leaf grades, which are determined by the amount of plant material left in lint, was a big issue last year. With about 4,000 bales ginned, Byrd said this year’s small sampling of cotton showed leaf grades in the 2-3 range.

Top Articles
Precision and Agricultural Technology Adoption Trends in Cotton

“It’s pretty clean cotton so far,” he said.

Dr. Gaylon Morgan, AgriLife Extension state cotton specialist, College Station, visited the Rolling Plains last week and said overall, fields represented “one of the better crops they’ve had in quite some time.

“They caught some more timely rains than previous years, and the dryland crop looks like it could be 25% better than average, especially in the Northern Rolling Plains.”

Not enough cotton had been harvested to give a good indication about fiber quality, Morgan said.

He said there were issues with weather, pests and diseases. Hail storms led to substantial damage for isolated fields, and stink bugs surprised producers by the amount of damage they caused in some areas. Bacterial blight also impacted production in some of the northern tier counties of the Rolling Plains.

Byrd and Morgan said irrigated fields looked very good, and the rainfall also reduced irrigation costs. Morgan estimated 10-15% of dryland fields were defoliated, while irrigated and late-planted fields still had a significant number of green bolls.

Morgan said temperatures were at or above 90 degrees and were expected to remain in the region for a while before cooler temperatures return. Fields in the Rolling Plains were planted later than usual due to late May rains, and fields in the High Plains – which are typically harvested late – could be later than usual also.

There remains some concern of frost for some late maturing cotton, Byrd said.

“They’ll be up against a freeze at some point, but weather the past two weeks and the forecast for the near future is perfect for maturing cotton,” he said.

 

Source – Texas A&M AgriLife

0