Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.

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 ...

PLEASE LOG IN FOR PREMIUM CONTENT. Our website requires visitors to log in to view the best local news. Not yet a subscriber? Subscribe today!

Lamesa Press-Reporter

P.O. Box 710
Lamesa, TX 79331
806-872-2177