Truro News

‘A green carpet’

U.S. farmers fear it will take years to recover from storm strike

- BY JEFF MARTIN

Hurricane Michael left a snowy landscape of ruined white cotton on Georgia’s red clay, destroying a crop and likely bringing hard times to the region’s many small communitie­s built on agricultur­e.

When the storm struck, most of the cotton was still in the fields, “wide open and susceptibl­e to the wind,” said farmer Ron Lee of Mccleskey Cotton Co. in hard-hit southwest Georgia.

“Everything was just ready to harvest, so it couldn’t have been a worse time,” Lee said.

Georgia is the No. 2 cotton-producing state in the nation, trailing only Texas, U.S. Department of Agricultur­e statistics show.

Just 12 to 18 per cent of Georgia’s cotton crop had been harvested when Michael invaded Georgia on Oct. 10, said Richey Seaton, executive director of the Georgia Cotton Commission.

The powerful storm tracked near the heart of Georgia’s cotton country.

“Every row looked like snow on the ground,” recalled Andy Lucas of the Georgia Farm Bureau, who went to south Georgia shortly after the storm to witness the damage.

Before the storm struck, Lee was looking at the best cotton crop he’d seen in more than two decades, he said. He was still assessing the damage, but estimated a 50 to 70 per cent loss. That could cost him $2.5 to $3 million. But farmers to the south of him lost their entire crop, he said.

“These little towns like Dawson where I’m from, it’s just a poor area of the state,” he said. “Agricultur­e is the lifeblood of what’s left.”

Statewide, storm damage to Georgia’s cotton crop amounted to $550 to $600 million, University of Georgia agricultur­e officials estimated.

Overall, Michael’s damage to Georgia agricultur­e amounted to nearly $3 billion, Georgia Agricultur­e Commission­er Gary Black said one week after the storm.

Michael wrecked many pecan trees, which take an entire decade to mature and begin producing nuts. Georgia’s pecan crop sustained an estimated $560 million loss in the storm, Black said.

Vegetable crops, including sweet corn, cucumbers, squash, peppers and peas, took an estimated $480 million hit, the state Agricultur­e Department reported.

Many tall corn stalks were blown to the ground.

“It’s just a green carpet,” Lucas said.

Georgia’s peanut harvest was somewhere around 45 to 50 per cent complete, Lucas said. Offi- cials were still assessing damage to buildings where peanuts are stored and dried, he said. Repair costs will be key in the final loss estimates for the peanut crop, the Agricultur­e Department reported. Early estimates of losses to the peanut crop range from $10 million to $20 million.

Georgia’s poultry industry also sustained an estimated $25 million in losses, which includes the loss of 97 chicken houses and more than 2 million chickens, state agricultur­e officials said.

However, most of the state’s poultry production is in north Georgia, which escaped the worst of the storm. The damage was in areas further south, home to about 30 per cent of the state’s poultry industry, said Mike Giles, president of the Georgia Poultry Federation.

To the south, Hurricane Michael did substantia­l damage to Florida’s cotton, peanut and fruit crops, nurseries and livestock.

The Florida Forest Service estimates the state lost almost $1.3 billion in timber that would have been harvested over several years.

Almost all of Florida’s cotton crop was wiped out, with losses totalling around $51 million, the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultur­al Sciences reported in a recent study.

\Florida’s greenhouse, nursery and floricultu­re production suffered $39 million in losses and the state’s peanut crop took a hit of $22 million. Damage to the area’s livestock was around $23 million. Florida lost $9 million in vegetables and melons, $4 million in fruits and $3 million in tree nuts, including pecans.

Now, farmers and nearly everyone else across the region are bracing for the fallout.

Many of the small towns in Georgia’s southwest corner were struggling already, and “all you got left are farming, chemical dealers, tractor salesmen, car and truck dealers,” Lee said.

“They’re going to feel the impact because you don’t know what you have left, and you don’t want to spend anything that you don’t have,” he said.

“It’s going to be a long, long recovery,” he added. “They’ll feel it now, they’ll feel it during holiday season and they’ll feel it next year.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? This Oct. 11 photo, shows branches of a damaged cotton tree in Newton, Ga. When Hurricane Michael tore through Georgia’s cotton crop, it set in motion a grim future for rural areas that depend on agricultur­e.
AP PHOTO This Oct. 11 photo, shows branches of a damaged cotton tree in Newton, Ga. When Hurricane Michael tore through Georgia’s cotton crop, it set in motion a grim future for rural areas that depend on agricultur­e.

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