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U.S. Hay Production Declined 9 Percent in 2022
By: James Mitchell

Last week USDA-NASS published the 2022 Crop Production Summary. The report includes information about U.S. hay production, acreage, and yield. The report also includes data for December 1 hay stocks. The report splits the data into two categories, alfalfa and other hay. For producers in the southeast, other hay is the relevant production.
 
The hay marketing year starts in May and ends the following April. For example, the 2022-2023 hay marketing year began in May 2022 and will end in April 2023. May 1 hay stocks were tight, totaling 16.77 million tons or 7% lower year over year. May 1 stocks, combined with lower 2022 hay production, put hay supplies at the lowest level on record since the data began in 1974. The previous record low in hay supplies was in 2021.
 
Other hay production totaled 64.84 million tons in 2022, down 9% from the prior year and the largest annual decline since 2011. Most Southern Plains and Southeast states had double-digit hay production declines. Other hay production in Texas, the largest hay-producing state, totaled 6.15 million tons, a 40% decline compared to 2021. Production declined by 16%, 13%, and 10% in Arkansas, Mississippi, and Tennessee, respectively. USDA’s estimate for Arkansas is much better than what I would have predicted last summer. Kentucky hay production declined 20% year over year. In Florida, hay production increased by 7%.
 
Other hay acreage declined 2% in 2022 to 34.63 million acres. In the Southeast (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MS, NC, SC, TN, VA, WV), hay acreage ranged from a 10% increase in West Virginia to a 5% decline in Arkansas. Mississippi and Kentucky's hay acreage both declined by 5%. Texas acreage declined by 25%. Declining cattle inventories, expensive inputs, and high crop prices all likely contributed to the decline in 2022 hay acreage.
 
Expensive fertilizer and poor precipitation impacted yields. U.S. hay yields averaged 1.87 tons per acre or 6% lower year over year. Yields dropped 9% in Arkansas (2.00 tons per acre) and Mississippi (2.00 tons per acre). Kentucky hay yields averaged 2.20 tons per acre, a 15% decline compared to the previous year. Oklahoma and Texas yields averaged 1.25 tons per acre and 1.50 tons per acre, respectively.

The Markets
Comparisons to previous weeks and years remains difficult with holidays the last couple of weeks. Feeder cattle and calf markets continue to show strength compared to this time last year. Fed cattle prices were largely steady last week and remain significantly higher than year-ago. 

Pasture Conditions

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