Talkin' Cotton Podcast
One wrong assumption in a cotton field can get expensive fast. We sit down with UGA’s Dr. Bob Kemerait to talk through the 2026 decisions that are easy to “cut out” on a spreadsheet but hard to recover once the planter runs, especially nematode management, variety selection, and early-season disease prevention. We dig into the reality that nematodes are already there, including reniform nematode, root-knot nematode, and sting nematode, and why winter weather mostly slows them down rather than erasing the problem. Dr. Kemerait explains how to think about nematicide choices, why rates and product types matter, and how nematode resistant cotton varieties can protect yield differently depending on which nematode you’re fighting. We also cover why stalk destruction can help hit a “reset button” by breaking the life cycle, even if the economics are still being pinned down. Then we shift to diagnosis and mid-season protection: jassid injury that can look like potassium deficiency, how Stemphylium leaf spot ties back to nutrition, and why scouting prevents wasted sprays. We wrap with practical updates on target spot and areolate mildew fungicide timing, the warning signs around declining azoxystrobin performance on mildew, and why boll rot remains a weather-driven headache. Finally, we talk rotation, including the long-term risks of peanuts behind peanuts and why cotton still matters for Georgia agriculture.
58 episodios
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