Season-to-season factors continue to keep Texas pecan production from reaching previous yield benchmarks, said a Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service expert.Monte Nesbitt, Ph.D., AgriLife Extension horticulture specialist and assistant professor in the Texas A&M Department of Horticultural Sciences, said pecan trees typically produce good to heavy crops followed by a light to very light crop the following year.But that typical on-ando _ cycle pecan growers and homeowners have come to expect from their trees has gotten o_ track due to a range of factors, Nesbitt said.“Things are just out of sync, and we’re not seeing the production our 80,000plus acres ...