Rice Harvest Starts In Louisiana, Texas; Time Will Tell On Quality, Yield
Texas rice harvest is well underway west of Houston and just getting started on the east side of the state. This is typical as the west zone tends to plant earlier than the east. The consensus among growers in the area is that yields are average at best to below average.
Another common comment from growers is that fields are taking longer than normal to mature due to excessive levels of rainfall and overcast skies earlier in the season that tended to slow down the crop.
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Shipping Act Reform Bill Could Make US Rice Exports More Competitive
This week, Reps. John Garamendi (D-CA) and Dusty Johnson (R-SD) introduced the Ocean Shipping Reform Act of 2021, a bill focused on prohibiting shipping companies “from unreasonably declining export cargo bookings if the cargo can be loaded in a safe and timely manner.”
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Rice Harvest Starts In Texas & Louisiana; Time Will Tell On Quality And Yield
Texas rice harvest is well underway west of Houston and just getting started on the east side of the state. This is typical as the west zone tends to plant earlier than the east. The consensus among growers in the area is that yields are average at best to below average. Another common comment from growers is that fields are taking longer than normal to mature due to excessive levels of rainfall and overcast skies earlier in the season that tended to slow down the crop.
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Muddy Fields Delay Texas Rice Harvest
Texas rice growers need drier conditions to harvest a main crop before quality begins to fade along with hopes for a second harvest, according to a Texas A&M AgriLife Research expert.
Like many Texas crops along the Gulf Coast this growing season, persistent rains preceded major problems and concerns, said Lee Tarpley, AgriLife Research crop physiologist, Beaumont. The amount of rain is an issue, but the timing has also contributed to problems from reduced management effectiveness, lower solar radiation for plant development and muddy fields delaying harvest.
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Long Grain Rough Rice Sales Up 27% From 2020
The big news this week came on Thursday with the announcement of U.S. rice sales to Iraq. This pushed nearby futures up to $13.85 at one point in Thursday’s trading. September rice futures followed the other CBOT grains lower in early trading Friday. However, the contract remains in an up-trending channel that’s been in place since July 12.
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120K Tons Of US Rice Sold To Iraq
Sales of 80,000 tons of U.S. rice to Iraq have just been announced by ADM (subject to letter of credit approval), and an additional 40,000 tons was sold by Supreme Rice, also pending letter of credit approval. They are the first sales to Iraq in two years, arriving at the Umm Qasr port in October and November.
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Rolling Field Day Brings Ag Agencies Together
Commodity field days are a normal summertime occurrence for LSU AgCenter agriculture agents and specialists, but a field day without growers is just different.
During “normal” years, the AgCenter brings together other state and federal agriculture agencies to discuss the condition of crops and livestock in the region.
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EPA Grants Exemption for Armyworm Battle in Arkansas
The EPA has granted Arkansas rice farmers a Section 18 exemption for use of the pesticide Intrepid.
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Anheuser-Busch Working With Rice Farmers On Water
Kimberly Rogowski says Anheuser-Busch believes you can’t make a great beer without high quality agricultural ingredients, and, in today’s environment, that increasingly means with sustainably produced crops such as barley, hops and rice.
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Consumer Research In China Indicates US Rice Is Well Positioned
As interest in U.S.-grown rice amongst Chinese importers rises, USA Rice commissioned a consumer research study to help refine marketing targets, gauge attitudes, and develop general market intelligence on which to base a strategic approach to the consumer market.
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Arkansas Armyworm Situation Is 'Epic'
University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture entomologists are seeking an emergency exemption to allow for the use of Intrepid to help control armyworms that threaten the state’s 1.24 million acres of rice.
“This is the biggest outbreak of fall armyworm situation that I’ve ever seen in my career,” Gus Lorenz, extension entomologist for the Division of Agriculture, said Wednesday. “They’re in pastures, rice, soybeans, grain sorghum. It’s epic.”
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USDA to Measure Crop Production Throughout the Growing Season
How will this year’s weather conditions affect crop production? The Monthly Agricultural Yield Survey conducted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) will survey U.S. farmers beginning July 30, 2021, regarding yields of the major row crops and hay, as well as hay stocks throughout the growing season across the United States.
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Protests In Cuba Signal Internal Changes On The Horizon, Sparks Hope For US Rice Trade
Earlier this month, the largest anti-communist protest in decades took place here as Cuban citizens begin to fight for their freedom. The protests have been led primarily by backers of the United States and disenfranchised young Cubans in response to major medicine and food shortages and in opposition to the Cuban government’s COVID-19 lockdowns.
The Cuban government responded by jailing protesters and further censoring internet access to “banned content,” including some social media platforms.
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H. Rouse Caffey Rice Research Station: A Rich History Of Research & Variety Deveolopment
Rice production in southwest Louisiana began in earnest during the early 1880s. The rice industry rapidly increased in the region in the years that followed. From 1896 to 1909, rice acreage in southwest Louisiana expanded from 148,000 to 370,000 acres with average rice yields ranging from a low of 855 pounds per acre in 1896 to a high of 1,642 pounds per acre in 1908. Rice industry leaders in the region recognized the importance of rice to southwest Louisiana and began to take measures to ensure the sustainability of the rice industry.
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Louisiana Farmer Appointed to Chair USA Rice Council Board Of Directors
With their two-year terms ending later this month, the chairs of two USA Rice governing boards handed their gavels to two rising industry leaders.
Kirk Satterfield, a Mississippi rice farmer from Bolivar County, was unanimously elected to serve as the new chair of the USA Rice Farmers Board of Directors and Eric Unkel, a Louisiana rice farmer from Allen Parish, was unanimously elected to serve as the new chair of the USA Rice Council Board of Directors.
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