April Tip for the Growing Season

SE Farmers up against big time drought. Measuring soil temp and moisture are critical. 

Every spring, throughout the USA, gardeners and farmers are consulting their USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Maps, checking for updates that will help them decide when to plant their seeds. For some growers, they already have a date picked on their calendar based on what they have more or less always done. This year, farmers in the southeast (SE region will need to be a little more crafty. Call it climate change, call it interannual variability, but whatever it is, the SE in the spring of 2026 is in a major drought. SEE FIGURE 1. 

Even during a drought, sometimes soil conditions can be good for planting. This April 7th, for example, it has been raining all day in Central Florida. The fact remains, however, that as of March 31, 2026, according to the National Drought Mitigation Center, 96% of the US peanut production areas are under drought conditions. The numbers for crops are bad across the nation: rice, 83% in drought; cotton, 96% in drought, sugarcane, 76% in drought (agindrought.unl.edu/RowCrops.aspx). 

This year, if you don’t use them already, consider employing soil thermometers and moisture meters to determine when to plant, and do not solely rely on pre-printed plans and maps, as they may not always be accurate under current weather and climate patterns. This will not be a normal year for the SE, if weather patterns hold much longer. We may still see the usual summer rains, but compared to last year, things look a lot dryer. 

A farm wide monitoring system with permanent probes, data logging and analysis systems might cost thousands of dollars for a medium sized farm. However, doing some long-term planning with your local NRCS agents to establish a proper system would be forward thinking for sure. Handheld soil multi-meters that measure moisture, temperature and pH, that will do the job reliably, can be quickly purchased on-line and in agricultural service stores for less than $200. This is a small investment to ensure good germination and establishment of springtime plantings.  

On the positive side, current predictions are for a very strong El niño event later this year, which should bring cooler and wetter weather to Florida, and the rest of the southeast coast from Texas through the Carolinas. Until that happens, things are likely to stay on the dry side throughout the region. 

Here at Florida Organic Growers, we may be dancing for rain, but we have no idea if normal rains will come on schedule to fill the voids in the soil. Be prepared. Have your soil meters ready! 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Southeast region is much dryer this spring than the same time last year 

24 March 2026    

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

24 March 2025  SE Drought Map 

droughtmonitor.unl.edu