Storm deals blow to farmers in Texas

Cotton, sorghum storage tanks blown away; livestock moved from low areas

Texas farmers are assessing damage caused by Hurricane Harvey after it slammed into the coast, knocking over grain storage tanks and damaging cotton crops.

At least 100 cotton storage modules -- capable of holding 13 to 15 bales -- blew away in the Gregory area, said farmer Jeff McKamey, who owns a cotton gin that had minor damage after part of the piping and roof blew away. The storm hit at a time when many producers are storing excess supplies on fields after a bumper harvest. The cotton that was not swept away by the storm may have been damaged or might be too wet to gin, he said.

"We've had the most cotton ever in storage in the history of San Patricio County when the hurricane hit," McKamey said by phone. "It's just the worst possible time."

Harvey slammed ashore as a Category 4 hurricane near Rockport, Texas, on Friday night. The strongest storm to hit the U.S. since 2004 was then downgraded to a tropical storm and threatened to drop several feet of rain. Grain elevators suspended shipments last week as port facilities braced for flooding, storm surges and power failures. Cotton and soybean futures climbed Thursday amid the outlook for heavy rains, which could damage crops from Texas to Mississippi.

A storage tank containing sorghum at a grain elevator in the town of Odem is completely gone and at least three other tanks containing sorghum collapsed at an elevator between Taft and Gregory, McKamey said.

The storm is also striking an area home to thousands of head of cattle. Texas A&M University's AgriLife Extension Service is helping to set up animal sheltering sites around the state in case ranchers need to relocate cattle or other animals, said Andy Vestal, a professor and extension specialist. Some livestock owners closest to the coast have already been working to move animals to higher ground via trailers, away from low-lying areas and tributaries, he said.

Damage assessment will start as early as today and teams will be available to deploy to distribute feed and portable water troughs, if necessary, Vestal said.

"We've never experienced 20 to 30 inches of rainfall in a 48-hour period," Vestal said by phone from College Station, Texas.

Elsewhere in the state, agricultural producers unscathed by the worst of the storm were hoping to resume operations.

Gulf Coast Cooperative, which has a grain elevator about 20 miles outside Corpus Christi, hopes to restart cotton ginning operations as early as today, General Manager Chris Yaklin said.

"We were spared right here," Yaklin said Saturday by phone. "We didn't lose power. We're in good shape."

A Section on 08/27/2017

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