Daily Press (Sunday)

WITHERING THROUGH 2020

This year’s extreme weather has farmers facing trail of damage

- By Joanne Kimberlin Staff writer

As if 2020 hasn’t been tough enough already, extreme weather is producing pain for local farmers.

Not you too, Mother Nature. Indeed.

City folks on a drive through the countrysid­e might not notice, but a growing season that’s bounced between way too dry and way too wet has left a patchwork of damage across the region’s croplands.

All those acres of rustling corn? They look OK from a car window, but closer inspection on a slew of farms finds a lot of cob with missing kernels.

Those fields of soybeans? On one side of a road, plants might be lush, uniform and waist-high. But on the other side, they’re stunted, choked with weeds and barely recognizab­le.

In a year like this, a few feet of elevation or a few miles in one direction or the other made the difference between boom or bust.

Local grain farmers rely on rain to water their fields — no expensive irrigation — and precipitat­ion has varied wildly across the region.

In late May, when soybean seeds usually go into the ground, bone-dry soil in Virginia Beach delayed planting. Meanwhile, soggy soil did the same thing right next door in Chesapeake, as well as 20 miles across the Bay in Northampto­n County on the Eastern Shore. Faced with late starts, farmers already were resigned to less-than-ideal yields.

Then came July — one of the

hottest on record in Hampton Roads with barely a raindrop on the radar. Soybeans in lower-lying areas held on better, but the young crop largely wilted. And corn — mostly animal feed varieties are grown here — suffered a widespread blow. Corn needs rain to pollinate and produce kernels, and arid weather curtailed the process across large expanses.

“Our corn is devastated,” said Ur s u l a D e i t c h , Northampto­n’s agricultur­al extension agent, who’s trying to get the county’s 9,000-acre crop declared an official disaster. “I shucked three stalks right next to each other and the pollinatio­n was so bad it’s not even harvestabl­e. It’s awful.”

Tropical Storm Isaias, in early August, delivered the next twist. The storm dumped up to 8 inches of rain on Southside crops, but barely dampened the dirt in Northampto­n, where soybeans thirsted for more.

“We got about an inch out of the (storm),” Deitch said last week. “And we really haven’t had a whole lot since.”

Meanwhile, the “faucet” refused to turn off over Chesapeake and Virginia Beach, said Roy Flanagan, the extension agent for Virginia Beach, where the economic impact of agricultur­al products reached $139 million last year.

Isaias, Flanagan said, kicked off a weekslong stretch “where we just got rain all the time.”

Too much moisture can be as deadly as too little. Roots are starved of oxygen.

Fungus thrives.

In such saturated conditions, the advantage swings toward plants on higher ground but “even on our ridge land, we’ve got soybeans with water damage,” Flanagan said. “We hardly ever see that.”

Whiplashed by the extremes, “it doesn’t matter whether you’re the biggest, most meticulous farmer or one of the smallest,” Flanagan said, “every single one of us is having some issues.”

Johnny Knowles, a thirdgener­ation farmer in Chesapeake, cultivates 650 acres of corn and 1,400 of soybeans in the Hickory area. While it’s clearly too late to help his corn, he’s wrestling over soybean decisions.

In a good year, Knowles harvests about 50 bushels per acre, but half of his current soybean crop has been so “seriously affected” by all the ups and downs it’s

“lost its potential.”

“Is it worth investing more money into?” Knowles wondered, to spray for pests or disease or apply more fertilizer. “I mean, I’ve got to try to raise something, but at what point do you cut if off and let it go?”

Like many farmers, Knowles has paid for crop insurance. In October, he’ll harvest what he can and count on insurance to cover his costs.

“It keeps you from going broke,” he said, “so you can play again next year.”

Still, if Mother Nature would just behave “and we get some nice weather over the next six weeks, things could turn out a little better,” Knowles said. “It’s like a soap opera: To be continued.”

In Northampto­n County, farmers, like everyone else, are “ready for 2020 to go away,” Deitch said.

Farming is always a challenge with no shortage of things to complain about, acknowledg­ed Watson Lawrence, the extension agent for Chesapeake.

“But this year,” he said, “we really mean it.”

Joanne Kimberlin, 757-446-2338, joanne.kimberlin@ pilotonlin­e.com

 ?? THE' N. PHAM/STAFF ?? Virginia Beach Agricultur­al Extension Agent Roy Flanagan inspects a damaged soybean plant at a farm in Virginia Beach on Friday.Tthousands of acres of soybeans are stunted.
THE' N. PHAM/STAFF Virginia Beach Agricultur­al Extension Agent Roy Flanagan inspects a damaged soybean plant at a farm in Virginia Beach on Friday.Tthousands of acres of soybeans are stunted.
 ?? URSULA TANKARD DEITCH ?? Thousands of acres of this year’s corn crop has plenty of cobs but sparse kernels, like this field in Northampto­n County. Extreme weather has also affected the area’s soybean crop.
URSULA TANKARD DEITCH Thousands of acres of this year’s corn crop has plenty of cobs but sparse kernels, like this field in Northampto­n County. Extreme weather has also affected the area’s soybean crop.
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