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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Weather hurting beet crop

Associated Press The Spokesman-Review

BILLINGS – Unusually cold and wet weather has damaged the eastern Montana sugar-beet crop, some of it left frozen in the ground because harvest equipment cannot cross the wet fields.

Heavy rain since mid-September and four consecutive nights of temperatures in the teens or lower jeopardized almost 400,000 tons of beets, said Tony Zitterkopf, agriculture manager for Western Sugar Cooperative.

It operates Billings and Lovell, Wyo., refineries that have been accepting frost-damaged beets for processing. Rapid handling is essential because the beets deteriorate quickly as they warm, Zitterkopf said.

Farmer Kelly Brester, of the Laurel area, had only six days of harvest in October and said the chances that he will harvest more of his beets “get dimmer every day. There is so little drying weather in November.”

The 8 inches of rain his land has received since mid-September is unprecedented, Brester said.

Greg Lackman, of Hysham, said beets remain to be dug on nearly one-third of the 880 acres that he and his brother farm.

Lackman, president of the Mountain States Beet Growers Association, said the harvest is turning out to be the most difficult since he began farming in 1980. He said he carries crop insurance, as do about half of the association’s members.