The fourteen plus inches of rain here in the New Roads area from May is gone, and everyone in the state could pretty much use a few showers.
The fungicides I've sprayed with my zinc seem to have kept the scab in check. Sherman Richardson says they're having to spray for leaf scorch mites in the northwestern and central part of the state. With the price of chemicals steadily going up, and four dollar diesel, one has to wonder if 2008 will be a profitable year.
The growers I've talked to seem to think we have an average to light crop of natives from Alexandria south. One of the largest custom harvesters in this area has said that if the prices aren't there, what few pecans he sees may not get picked. Our Candy's seem to have a decent crop, but everyone north to south says there are very few Elliotts. Oconees and Desirables seem to have a decent crop, also.
I'd like to invite everyone to attend Our TriState Pecan Trade Show and Convention in Vicksburg Mississippi on July 24 & 25. This year our show is focusing on our vendors in the pecan industry. Without them, where would we the growers be? This was Perry Jenkins's idea, and the best compliment I can give him is: "I wish it had been my idea". And of course you know the living legend, Ben Littlepage, will be giving his famous prognostication on what the nation-wide pecan crop will be.
While you're out there toiling in your orchard in the heat of the day remember this verse from the Joe Nichols song "The Shade":
There's not another place I'd rather be
'Cause out here in the country
Bluebirds sing for nothin',
And the shade comes free with the tree.
Verl Day
President
Pecan Producers of Louisiana