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Farmers are still reeling months after Hurricane Helene ravaged crops across the South

LYONS, Ga. (AP) 鈥 Twisted equipment and snapped tree limbs still litter Chris Hopkins鈥 Georgia farm more than two months after Hurricane Helene made its deadly march across the South.
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A cotton picker works in a field of cotton, Friday, Dec. 6, 2024, near Lyons, Ga. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

LYONS, Ga. (AP) 鈥 Twisted equipment and snapped tree limbs still litter Chris Hopkins鈥 Georgia farm more than two months after made its deadly march across the South.

An irrigation sprinkler system about 300 feet (92 meters) long lay overturned in a field, its steel pipes bent and welded joints broken. The mangled remains of a grain bin sat crumpled by a road. On a Friday in early December, Hopkins dragged burly limbs from the path of the tractor-like machine that picks his cotton crop six rows at a time.

鈥淚 have wrestled with lots of emotions the past two months,鈥 said Hopkins, who also grows corn and peanuts in rural Toombs County, about 75 miles (120 kilometers) west of Savannah. 鈥淒o we just get through this one and quit? Do we build back? It is emotionally draining.鈥

Hopkins is among farmers across the South who are still reeling from Helene鈥檚 devastation. The storm as a major Category 4 storm and then raced north across Georgia and neighboring states.

Experts estimate the cost to farmers, timber growers and other agribusinesses from Florida to Virginia will reach more than $10 billion. The toll includes ravaged crops, uprooted timber, wrecked farm equipment and mangled chicken houses, as well as indirect costs such as lost productivity at cotton gins and poultry processing plants.

For cotton growers like Hopkins, Helene hit just as the fall harvest was starting. Many put most cleanup on hold to try to salvage what remained of their crops.

`Staggering鈥 losses to cotton, pecans and fall vegetables

Georgia farmers suffered storm losses of at least , according to an analysis by the University of Georgia. In North Carolina, a state agency calculated farmers suffered $3.1 billion in crop losses and recovery costs after Helene brought . Separate economic analyses of farm damage tallied losses of up to $630 million in Virginia, $452 million in South Carolina and $162 million in Florida.

Hopkins figures he lost half the cotton on his 1,400 acres (560 hectares).

鈥淲e were at the most vulnerable stage we could be,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he lint was open and fluffy and hanging there, waiting to be defoliated or picked. About 50% of the harvestable lint ended up on the ground.鈥

, Hopkins said, he won't recoup an estimated $430,000 in losses from his cotton crop alone. That doesn't include the cost of debris removal, repairing or replacing damaged machinery and the loss of two small pecan orchards uprooted by the storm.

The storm ripped through blooming cotton fields, pecan orchards laden with nuts and fields where fall vegetables like cucumbers and squash awaited picking. Hundreds of large poultry houses used to raise thousands of chickens at a time got destroyed.

Farmers far from Helene's center weren't spared, as tropical-storm force winds reached outward up to 310 miles (499 kilometers).

鈥淚t was staggering,鈥 said Timothy Coolong, a University of Georgia horticulture professor. 鈥淭his may be just too much for some folks."

Helene was one of the deadliest U.S. hurricanes in nearly two decades, . It left more than 100,000 homes damaged or destroyed across the South.

Will aid to farmers come soon enough?

Georgia's government in November diverted that had been set aside for construction projects or paying off existing debt to fund emergency loans to farmers and cleanup in Helene's aftermath. Republican Gov. Brian Kemp has made a priority for the upcoming legislative session.

But Georgia's constitution prohibits using state funds to give direct disaster aid to individuals and private businesses.

In Congress, a spending bill passed early Saturday to avoid a government shutdown included $21 billion in disaster aid to U.S. farmers.

鈥淲e need help, but we need it quick," said Jeffrey Pridgen, a fifth-generation farmer who raises chickens in south Georgia鈥檚 Coffee County.

Pridgen operated a dozen poultry houses, each large enough to raise up to 20,000 chickens at a time. Helene destroyed four of them, along with thousands of chickens. Only one of Pridgen's houses remains in working condition, the others having been badly damaged.

Pridgen said new chicken houses will cost about $450,000 apiece. Because most of his were decades old, he expects insurance to cover just half the cost.

鈥淚 was looking at retirement, but I lost my retirement and my income in one day,鈥 said Pridgen, 62. "It鈥檒l be two years before we get fully operational again. I鈥檓 basically starting over.鈥

'Everybody lost something'

Georgia鈥檚 poultry industry took an estimated $683 million hit, with farmers having to rebuild about 300 chicken houses and repair hundreds more.

The poultry processing plant that relies on Pridgen and other storm-impacted farmers for chickens is now operating just four days per week, he said.

鈥淣ow for at least a year, perhaps a little bit longer, we鈥檙e in rebuilding mode," said Mike Giles, president of the Georgia Poultry Federation. "That affects production in an area for an extended period of time.鈥

Helene's devastation shouldn't have much impact on consumer prices because crops grown elsewhere can make up for most shortages, said Michael Adjemian, a University of Georgia professor of agricultural economics. Pecans are one possible exception. Georgia is responsible for roughly one-third of U.S. production.

鈥淚n most cases, even a terrible storm like this is going to have a relatively small impact,鈥 Adjemian said. "And maybe it's not even noticeable, depending on the product.鈥

Helene cost Georgia cotton farmers roughly one-third of their crop, with direct and indirect losses valued at $560 million. Some were still recovering from .

Cotton growers also were facing low prices this harvest season of around 70 cents per pound (per 0.45 kilograms), said Taylor Sills, executive director of the Georgia Cotton Commission. That meant they needed a big yield to turn any profit.

鈥淭imes were awful, and then they got hit by a hurricane,鈥 Sills said. "There are people who lost everything and there are people who didn鈥檛. But everybody lost something."

Russ Bynum, The Associated Press

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