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  • Major hail damage doesn’t mean total loss

    Pam Knox

    June 5, 2024

    Hail can devastate a field in just a few minutes, flattening crops and causing bruising or loss of leaves. The initial sight of the hail-damaged field may lead producers to assume the crop is a complete loss. But according to this article from the Indiana Prairie Farmer, hail damage to soybeans (and most likely other…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Crops
  • Initial maps for May, spring from @Climatologist49

    Pam Knox

    June 3, 2024

    Brian Brettschneider, @Climatologist49 on Twitter, is one of the first climatologists to provide climate summary maps for the US after the end of each month and season. Here are the maps he produced for May and the March-May periods. They show that May was warmer than normal everywhere but it was especially hot in Florida…

    Posted in: Climate summaries
  • Latest outlook for June 2024 shows Alabama most likely to be warmer and wetter than normal

    Pam Knox

    June 3, 2024

    The final outlook for the June 2024 climate was issued late last week by NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center. It shows that a lot of the region does not have a strong climate signal for June, but Florida and southern Alabama lean towards warmer than normal conditions and Alabama is more likely than the rest of…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks
  • Rare, ideal weather boosts Carolina Blackland cotton planting

    Pam Knox

    June 3, 2024

    Even though the weather has not been perfect for planting in a lot of the Southeast, there is one place that has had almost perfect weather for cotton planting. The North Carolina Blacklands, with its rich, fertile farmland that hugs the Atlantic Coastline, usually has cool and wet weather in spring, but this year had…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Crops
  • Wettest conditions midweek except in South Florida

    Pam Knox

    June 1, 2024

    The latest 7-day QPF map shows that most of the region should see their wettest conditions midweek, although amounts will not be large. In South Florida, the rain will be the heaviest over the next three days and showers should taper off later in the week. The area of central Florida with the worst drought…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks
  • Severe drought appears in central Florida this week

    Pam Knox

    June 1, 2024

    The latest Drought Monitor, released on Thursday, shows that the only state in the Southeast that has drought is Florida, although a few patches of abnormally dry conditions (D0) are found in Alabama, North and South Carolina, and Virginia. The total area of dry conditions in central Florida has not changed much but a section…

    Posted in: Drought
  • Florida faces hectic hurricane season. Can science say who will get hit in coming months?

    Pam Knox

    May 30, 2024

    One question I get asked every hurricane season is where we expect the storms to move this year. It’s not an easy question to answer because it depends on both large-scale weather patterns like the position of the Bermuda high and short-term weather systems like the current jet stream and frontal pattern, since those help…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Tropical weather
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About this blog

The “Climate and Agriculture in the Southeast” blog is provided by the Associate Dean of Extension as a service to Extension agents and agricultural producers across the Southeast US. Come here to find out information about the impacts of weather and climate on agriculture across Georgia and beyond.

Recent Posts

  • NOAA: Latest outlook for fall indicates warmer than normal conditions across the region
  • Everything Hikers Know About Lightning Safety is Wrong
  • To get that perfect ear of corn, weather has to cooperate. But climate change is making it dicier.
  • Video: August 2025 Southeast Climate Webinar + Flash Drought in the Southeast: Patterns, Impacts, and Agricultural Risk
  • Tropical Storm Fernand forms east of Erin’s path, no threat to the Southeast

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