This year’s growing season in south Georgia has been a mix of very wet and very dry conditions. The growing season started wet, which led to delays in planting in some fields. Then June was quite dry across most of the state, causing problems with pollination in dryland corn and impacts on other crops as well. In July we returned to wet conditions, with frequent downpours in some areas while other areas got missed. Brad Haire describes the impacts we have seen so far in Farm Progress at Recapping a wet-dry-wet season in south Georgia (farmprogress.com).
