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Weather Trends International Forecast Highlights
4/9/2007
AgWeb.com Editors
Following are weather forecast highlights from Weather
Trends International:
LAST WEEKs WEATHER TREND (1-7 APR): Temperatures plummeted as
a strong Arctic cold front dove deep into the South late in the week. There
were 100s of record low temperatures across the U.S. with the Southwest being
the one exception. Hard freezes most likely did 10s of millions of dollars damage
to trees and crops in the Southeast over the Easter weekend. Snowfall was also
the most in at least 14 years with dozens of record snowfall totals from Texas
to the Middle Atlantic and throughout the interior Northeast and Great Lakes.
Even Dallas had a trace of snow which was the latest snowfall in 69 years.
After 3 consecutive weeks of mild temperatures across the Corn Belt, last
weeks temperatures were the coldest in 15 years. The same week in 1996 and
2002 were cold. Corn Belt moisture was not overpowering. However, with cold
temperatures, evaporation was minimal so field firming was at a snails
pace. The commodity markets are primed for instability and this past weeks
weather can only be called unsettling.
THIS WEEK (8-14 APR): Last year was record warm, this year record cold!
April is currently tracking as the coldest April in 113 years - a dramatic change
from last years #1 warmest ever. Even after some late month moderation, April
2007 will likely keep the month in the top 7 coldest in history. The Southwest
is the one exception, but even here temperatures will cool dramatically late
in the week. And, the snow is not over! Short range computer models hint at
the possibility of a stronger snow storm from Colorado to Wisconsin late in
the week into the weekend. This will be the heavy wet variety. The week overall
is expected to show the greatest change toward wetter weather in two years -
another very big negative for retail sales and for early planting of this years
Corn and Bean crop. Weather Trends had forecast this to be the coldest April
in 7 years and the wettest in 3 years. It will very likely be the coldest in
10 years and wettest in three. On a more uplifting note, Al Peterlin, Weather
Trends International VP, reminds growers, Planting rates can accelerate
quickly after a slow start. Consider 1998 and 2005. In 1998 only about 15 percent
of the crop was in the ground by the end of April, in 2005 only about 30 percent.
Still, by the last week of May, 93 to 95 percent of planting was complete and
final yields were strong.
NEXT WEEK (15-21 APR): More of the same, although not as wet. Another
reinforcing shot of cold air for the East early in the week with more frost
and freezes likely in the Middle Atlantic.
MAY: The next solid week for warm seasonal activities could be May 6-12th,
and the middle May period could be one of the bright spots of Spring and Summer!
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