Rice Production in Arkansas
Rice production in the U.S.A. is reported to have started in Arkansas. It stated with a single acre of the crop that was planted in Lonoke County. Other indications suggest that the crop was grown in some locations in Arkansas prior to WWII. official record keeping by the state started in 1905. These reflect the yields in acres and the respective prices per unit weight (Arkansas Rice -- Commercial Row Crops -- Production Practices).
Acreage of rice rose until 1955 when the government control on acreage peaked the production of the crop at 500 000 acres. Marketing quotas were stopped in 1974. The acreage of rice rose and hit the peak in 1981. 1.54 million acres were harvested. This amount of harvest was not exceeded until 1999. The highest harvest ever harvested in Arkansas was realized in 2010 in which 1.785 million acres were harvested. Arkansas produced 1.286 acres of rice in 2015.The average production of the state measuring 163bu per acre came as the fourth highest on record. Arkansas also accounted for almost half of the total rice production in the U.S.A. at 49% and half of the total acreage under the crop in 2015. The crop is planted in 40 of the 75 counties in Arkansas (Arkansas Rice -- Commercial Row Crops -- Production Practices).
It is one of the top three highest earning crops in Arkansas. The Eastern half of Arkansas provides the rice producing region. The crop is produced in such other areas as Arkansas River Valley, Ouachita and Red River Valleys. The latitude of the state is 33o N. Louisiana is Arkansas' neighbor to the south at 36o N. it is located on the border to the north. Missouri is also along the northern border. Arkansas neighbors are Mississippi and Tennessee towards the east that is shared with Texas and Oklahoma.
The Independent Rice Farmers
Rice growing requires soil that can hold water for long. The clay soil just below the surface of grand Prairie is suited for rice farming. Rice is normally grown between the later dates of March and the subsequent April and harvested in August or September thereabout. The crop is threshed by combine harvesters and delivered for storage and milling through the year. Flooding is normally done shortly after harvesting so as to prevent erosion, control weeds and protect soil nutrients. The right topography and sufficient water are necessary ingredients for growing rice according to Keith Glover, CEO of Producers Rice Mill in Stuttgart. The miller handles over fifty million bushels of rice every year (Madlom).
Glover reports that Arkansas has over 40 inches of rain each year. He says that the state also has abundant surface water reservoirs and river channels that flow across the state to assist with irrigation efforts. Glover reports that rice production started in the Southern part around coastal southern Louisiana and the state of Texas. Rice production gradually moved to Arkansas; which was discovered to present even more conducive conditions. Glover reports that the movement towards the north came with Fuller's hunting trip in 1896. He was headed to Louisiana and saw the ideal rice growing fields. He imbibed a few lessons about rice growing and settled on the Grand Prairie in the state of Arkansas for planting rice in the initial year.
There are some major rice farmers such as John Kerksieck who are almost draining the largest aquifers of Arkansas. That turn of events is worrisome in a state that gets 50 inches of rain per year. The situation is a dilemma for the farmers. They do not know what they should do about it. A lot of farmers have been advocating for the government to supply them with water from the White River (Jehl).
The incurred cost thereof adds up to about $300,000 per farmer. They argue that the plan is even overdue. They say that the government should also do the same for other states. The West is known for such programs. They provide irrigation for farmers with limited choice. Farmers in Arkansas Grand Prairie view the issue differently. Mr. Kierksieck says that they really do not have a water problem. He is a hunter and is waiting for a bumper duck hunting season. Duck hunting competes favorably with rice production in Grand Prairie (Jehl).
Mr Kierksieck traces his ancestry and origin from the early farmers who tapped water from the aquifers at unsustainable rates for over a century from 1900. Kerksieck claims that there is a lot of water in the river. He says that all the authorities need to do is to license the use of river water for irrigation purposes. Lynn Sickel is yet another farmer aged 51. He reaffirms that he is a conservative and points out that if that is the cost of securing rice production for the country, then it is best to leave it to the tax payer to bear the burden. The fields in South East Arkansas are under water deluge. The state has been left behind in as far as the rice planting season is concerned....
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