|
Dateline: February
13,
2003
High
cotton yield
breaks
gin record
By Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Paymaster
Gin in Lelia Lake broke all its records last Tuesday when it finished
working the 2002 cotton crop. A total of 19,069 bales were ginned this
year.
“We
took in a lot more area from up toward Pampa and White Deer,” said gin
manager Earl Shields, “and it was a really good crop.”
The
previous record for the gin, 16,600 bales, was set in the mid 1990s. The
gin has been in operation for about 80 years and works about 90 percent of
the cotton in Donley County as well as bringing in modules from the
surrounding areas.
While
acknowledging that some farmers didn’t do as well, Shields says overall
this year’s yield is unheard of in this area.
“On
land that usually makes three-quarters to one bale per acre, this year
many farmers got two to 2½ bales,” he said
One
Donley County farmer produced 94 bales on 34 acres in 20-inch rows.
Shields
said a combination of things led to the successful year, including the
ongoing boll weevil eradication program, better fertilizer, and the use of
Round Up Ready or stacked gene cottonseed. But the number one thing, he
says, is the farmers themselves.
“I
think we’re just flat learning how to grow cotton,” Shields said.
“Better management is the top reason for the success. These farmers have
taken the time to learn, and the ones who can stay with it are the ones
who can get the yields up there.”
Prices
are low – ranging from the high 30s to the low 40s, but better yields
are making up for it, he said.
“I
tell guys they’re really getting 80-cent cotton because they brought in
twice as much as usual.”
The
good crop is being felt across the area. Some farmers on the high plains
have reportedly brought in four bales to the acre. Shields also says that
there were a lot more acres to the north planted this year.
Paymaster
started ginning cotton on October 10 this season, and for a time it looked
like wet weather might ruin the crops before they could be stripped. By
November the gin was running full tilt, and Shields says his employees did
a good job of maintenance and repairs and prevented any major breakdowns.
The
local economy may get a boost from the good year; and while the future may
be better if the trend continues, Shields has decided to go out on a high
note by announcing his retirement.
“I’ve
got to get out of the dust,” he said. “I think I’m going to start
farming.”
Shields
has held the manager’s job for 36 years and says he has no intention of
trying to match or beat the years of service of his predecessor, Quinn
Aten, who worked for 42 years. Shields took the job two years after Aten
left the post. Eldon Lyles held the position during the interim two years.
No
replacement has been named at this time. That decision will come from
corporate offices in Lubbock.
Shields
is grateful to have spent his career in the company of the “best people
in the world” in Donley County, and he credits the gin’s success to
customer service.
“When
our customers have problems, we have problems,” he said. “Their
concerns are ours, and we make sure they know it. I attribute our success
to treating people fair. There’s no other way to do it.”
|