UACES Facebook Arkansas ginning season goes into extra innings
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Arkansas ginning season goes into extra innings

By Mary Hightower
U of A System Division of Agriculture
Jan. 17, 2020 

Fast facts

  • NASS: Cotton state average yield down 31 pounds from 2018
  • Extended ginning season may be slowing reported numbers

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MANILA, Ark. – For the second straight year, Arkansas’ “ginning season” may go into extra innings.

Cotton Field

Despite the wet weather delays, growers had good reason to be optimistic about their 2019 crop, both Bill Robertson, extension cotton agronomist, and Scott Stiles, extension economist for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, said. The optimism is palpable, taking the form of a bale backlog at some gins. Gins that typically finish their work by late December, may be ginning into spring.

2019 Crop Report

Grower optimism wasn’t reflected by the annual Arkansas Crop Production report issued Jan. 10 by the National Agricultural Statistics Service. The report put Arkansas’ state average cotton yield at 1,102 pounds per acre in 2019, down 31 pounds from 2018.  Harvested acres were up 27 percent over 2018 to 610,000 acres. Total bales were estimated at 1.4 million, up 24 percent from 2018.

“We had some phenomenal cotton yields in this state this year,” Stiles said. “NASS pegged the cotton yield at less than 2017 and less than 2018. Bill and I are both a little – no – a lot surprised by that.” 

“Every year is a tough year and every year has its challenge,” Robertson said. “Last year, we had challenges on the front end and challenges on the back end. We only had half of our cotton planted riding into the Memorial Day weekend.

“It was the same thing when we harvested. We started with excellent harvest conditions for the first half, then we started getting rain,” he said. The same way “planting was dragged out and it was almost the same with harvest.”

“I still think we ended up really good,” Robertson said. “We had several consultants tell me, ‘I thought it would be 1,200 pounds,’ which would be a new state record.”

Still, he said “1,102 is not that shabby – that would be fifth on the all-time list.”

However, growers who saw yields of 1,100 pounds per acre are probably going to have a hard time paying all the bills, Robertson said.

Stiles said the discrepancy between grower expectations and what NASS reported may be due in part to the workloads Arkansas’ cotton gins are now facing because of increased cotton acres this year and strong yields.

“Last year, the ginning season extended into March in some areas,”  he said. “We’ll see that again this year. 

“Increasing cotton acres, strong yields and fewer gins could be why data is slow coming in,” Stiles said.

Other crops

In November, NASS estimated Arkansas’ state average yield at 50 bushels an acre but lowered its estimate to 49 bushels per acre in its January report. Arkansas harvest 2.61 million acres of soybeans, down 19 percent from 2018. Total production was estimated at 128 million bushels, down 21 percent from the previous year.

“To see NASS lower the soybean yield this month seemed to mesh well with grower observations this year,” Stiles said. “You hear from growers, ‘I didn’t feel like I had the bean yields – they seemed off from last year. However, the quality of the 2019 crop was much improved.”

Corn yield was estimated at 175 bushels per acre, down six bushels from last year. Production from 725,000 harvested acres was estimated at 127 million bushels, up 9 percent from 2018.

Yield for all rice was estimated at 7,480 pounds per acre, down 40 pounds from last year. Total production was down 21 percent from 2018 to 84.3 million hundredweight from 1.13 million acres.

Peanut yield was up 300 pounds from 2018 to 5,200 pounds per acre. Production was up 52 percent from to 172 million pounds. The 33,000 harvested acres was up 43 percent from 2018. 

To learn more about Arkansas row crop production, call your county extension office or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow the Cooperative Extension Service on Twitter at @AR_Extension.

 

About the Division of Agriculture

The University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture’s mission is to strengthen agriculture, communities, and families by connecting trusted research to the adoption of best practices. Through the Agricultural Experiment Station and the Cooperative Extension Service, the Division of Agriculture conducts research and extension work within the nation’s historic land grant education system. 

The Division of Agriculture is one of 20 entities within the University of Arkansas System. It has offices in all 75 counties in Arkansas and faculty on five system campuses.  

The University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture offers all its Extension and Research programs to all eligible persons without regard to race, color, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, national origin, religion, age, disability, marital or veteran status, genetic information, or any other legally protected status, and is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer. 

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Media Contact: Mary Hightower
Dir. of Communication Services
U of A Division of Agriculture
(501) 671-2006
mhightower@uada.edu

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