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Angus Productions Inc.

May 21, 2012

Dicey Odds for Continued Drought

Producers may need more than luck to manage.

A "coin toss" is how a Texas drought expert describes the forecast for rainfall across the state this season. But there are some actions farmers and ranchers can take rather than hoping for a stroke of luck.

Travis Miller

Travis Miller, Texas Agrislife Extension Service agronomist, said about one-third of the state has received enough rainfall this year to climb out of the drought that began in October 2010, but the remainder is in "significant drought."

"There's a high probability that we're going to have abnormally warm temperatures over the next six months," said Travis Miller, Texas AgriLife Extension Service agronomist and drought spokesperson. "And there's an equal chance of above- or below-normal precipitation. This drought is not over for large areas of the state."

The National Integrated Drought Information System predicts that the drought will persist or intensify for more than half of Texas through July.

Miller said about one-third of the state has received enough rainfall this year to climb out of the drought that began in October 2010, but the remainder is in "significant drought." That means even with normal or above-normal rainfall in those areas, more is needed to end the drought there.

"The High Plains, much of the Western Rolling Plains, and virtually all of Far West Texas remains in significant drought and is predicted to stay in drought," he said. "We know that the areas of the state that haven't had significant rainfall have to have a lot more rainfall before they can get back to normal. A lot remains to be determined, because it's still very dry."

In the eastern part of Texas, where sufficient rainfall has been received this year, producers are cutting and baling hay. In the western part, where it is still dry, ranchers are still feeding supplemental feed or hay, Miller noted.

He added that the East Texas hay supply is helpful for the western livestock raisers because it can be hauled from a shorter distance than from the places it came from in 2011.

The drought specialist said that many Texas ranchers lost stands of perennial grasses from their acreages in the drought and are encouraged not to restock if that grass has not grown back significantly.

"They need to go out and evaluate their forage supplies," he suggested. "They need to determine if the grass has begun to regrow and become well-established before they 'pull the trigger' on restocking."

"That's how the effect of one really horrific year of drought can affect multiple years," Miller said. "If you can't restock, then you can't have income coming in from your cattle herd. And it trickles down from that part of the economy throughout the state."

The lack of grass has a ripple effect in other ways, as well, he added.

"A good stand of grass suppresses all kinds of weeds. If you've got a dense shade on your land, it discourages the germination of weeds. Many of the weeds in Texas have hard seeds that can last many years in the soil," he said, "so when you have a major drought like that of 2011 and it kills your grass off, then you're going to have weeds."

Compounding that, he said, is the fact that thousands of tons of hay were transported into Texas from all over the United States to try to keep Texas cow herds in business.
"So we have brought weed seed in from everywhere," Miller said, adding that no noxious weed infestations have been reported yet.

"I'm advising cattle operators to look very carefully for weeds they don't recognize, and to contact their AgriLife Extension county agent if they see something that doesn't look right," he said.

Miller said among the key places to watch are locations where hay was stacked and fed.

"And of course, cattle take the weed everywhere, so if you see unusual weeds where the hay was fed, you're going to see it out in your pastures," he said.

On the positive side, Miller noted, wheat producers are nearing harvest on perhaps one of the best crops in more than a decade.

"We have an excellent wheat crop through much of the Eastern Rolling Plains and the Blacklands," he said. "It's a beautiful crop, if we can get it out of the field. One of the issues on wheat is that its harvest time coincides with the highest probability of rain. So, whereas last year wheat farmers suffered with drought, this year we're hoping we can get some of that beautiful wheat cut."

The outcome of the remainder of the year for crops and livestock in the field will depend on water supply, Miller said.

"Water is the most precious resource we have, and we found out how finite it was in just one year of drought. If you look back at the drought of the 1950s, where we had seven years of drought in a row, we would totally rethink how we value water," he noted.


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