Texarkana Gazette

Rice looking good in Louisiana, Mississipp­i

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CROWLEY, La. — Agricultur­e experts in Louisiana and Mississipp­i say the rice crop is looking good.

“It’s a big contrast from last year,” Jeremy Hebert, AgCenter agent in Acadia Parish, said in a news release Friday from the Louisiana State University AgCenter. “Things actually worked out in farmers’ favor.”

Louisiana is about halfway through its harvest, and its yield — the amount per acre — could at least tie for second-highest ever, said Dustin Harrell a rice specialist at the AgCenter.

Mississipp­i’s harvest is about to begin and the state’s estimated 150,000 acres of rice look very good, said Mississipp­i State University Extension Service rice expert Bobby Golden.

U.S. Agricultur­e Department statistics show Louisiana planted about 430,000 acres of rice this year. Arkansas, with 1.4 million acres, leads the nation and California is second at 507,000 acres. Missouri farmers planted 219,000 acres, and those in Texas 184,000.

“Conditions were almost perfect for growing rice” this year — unlike last year, when bad weather left Louisiana farmers only about 6,300 pounds of rice per acre, Harrell said in a news release Friday.

He estimated the current crop at 7,250 pounds per acre, just 50 pounds an acre below the record set in 2016.

There also is far less disease, said plant pathologis­t Don Groth.

Golden, based at the Delta Research and Extension Center in Stoneville, said the first Mississipp­i farmers to plant rice may be able to start draining their fields the second week of August.

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