
Farmers struggle as shifting weather patterns disrupt crops
Clip: 6/23/2026 | 7m 45sVideo has Closed Captions
Farmers struggle with crops as climate change makes weather less predictable
More than half of the continental U.S. is facing drought conditions. But other parts of the country are facing the opposite problem. Extreme weather conditions can have major impacts on farmers and their crops at a time when they’re already facing high production costs. Paul Solman recently traveled to southern Georgia to hear from some of those farmers. It's for our series, Tipping Point.
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Farmers struggle as shifting weather patterns disrupt crops
Clip: 6/23/2026 | 7m 45sVideo has Closed Captions
More than half of the continental U.S. is facing drought conditions. But other parts of the country are facing the opposite problem. Extreme weather conditions can have major impacts on farmers and their crops at a time when they’re already facing high production costs. Paul Solman recently traveled to southern Georgia to hear from some of those farmers. It's for our series, Tipping Point.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipAMNA NAWAZ: More than half of the continental# U.S.
is facing drought.
Meanwhile, in just the## South this year, tens of millions of# people have been under flood watches.## These extreme weather conditions can have# major impacts on farmers and their crops,## at a time when they're already# facing high production costs.
Paul Solman recently traveled to# southern Georgia to hear from some## of those farmers.
It's part of our# continuing series Tipping Point.
PAUL SOLMAN: In Southeast Georgia, the# Berry family farming for generations,## their grandpa a sharecropper,# but, this spring, drought.
But your dad said you have never# seen a drought like this before.
CEDRIC BERRY, Farmer, Ludowici, Georgia: Right.
PAUL SOLMAN: Hav.. CEDRIC BERRY: No, not in my life.. I haven't.
Never heard of stories# of a drought this bad either.
TONY BERRY, Farmer, Ludowici, Georgia: If we were# to plant on schedule in the heart of the drought,## we pretty much would have lost all those crops.
PAUL SOLMAN: One hundred and seventy# miles west, the opposite problem at## the 2,400-acre Longleaf Ridge Farm run by# sixth-generation farmer Casey Cox Kerr.
CASEY COX KERR, Longleaf Ridge# Farm: I wanted to come back and## build on the foundation that my parents had built.
PAUL SOLMAN: She too faces drought,# though, her part of Southern Georgia## finally did get rain a few weeks ago.
But# it was a downpour that menaced the crops.
CASEY COX KERR: It's not only does# it drown some of the plants.
It also## creates disease and pest problems.# We're seeing wetter wets and drier## dries.
And that can be a big challenge# with what we're experiencing on the floor.
PAUL SOLMAN: Wetter wets, drier# dries.
You won't be surprised to## hear this has something to do with climate change.
RACHEL CLEETUS, Union of Concerned Scientists:# It's affecting precisely those things that people## defend on for their livelihoods, their food,# their water supplies.
These are essentials.
PAUL SOLMAN: Rachel Cleetus of# the Union of Concerned Scientists.
RACHEL CLEETUS: Climate change is making these# more frequent, both the short-duration kinds of## droughts that we're seeing in some places, but# also the longer megadroughts like the Southwest## is experiencing.
The unpredictability of it, the# extremes, both the droughts and then the whiplash## with extreme rainfall events, that makes it very# difficult to plan for these kinds of conditions.
PAUL SOLMAN: During drought, ag Professor# Wes Porter of the University of Georgia says,## the local soil compounds the problem.
WES PORTER, University of Georgia: If you look in# our region where we're at now in Southern Georgia,## we have a really sandy soil.
So sandy soils can't# hold a whole lot of water.
So what that means,## we actually evaporated out# significantly higher amounts## of water than what we have received# back in.
So we were looking negative.
PAUL SOLMAN: Meanwhile, those# farmers now face punishing costs,## like diesel spurting up almost 50 percent# since the end of February.
And some seven## in 10 farmers say they now can't# afford rising fertilizer costs.
CEDRIC BERRY: I mean, now we would# normally be at market already.
And## we haven't -- haven't been.# Things just aren't ready.
PAUL SOLMAN: Now, both guys work full-time jobs,## Tony at the Port of Savannah.# Cedric's an electrician.
How much time do you get to spend here,# as opposed to on your regular jobs?
TONY BERRY: For me, two to# three days out of a week.
PAUL SOLMAN: And for you?
CEDRIC BERRY: Evenings and weekends.
PAUL SOLMAN: They help finance the farm# with their salaries.
The drought upped## the cost.
The Berrys usually sell# hay, for example, had to hold some## of it back to feed their cattle, their own# pasture parch-dry, $10,500 in lost sales.
TONY BERRY: Fertilizer, fuel, those things like# that, that money would have covered that for sure.
PAUL SOLMAN: Is that $10,500,# that -- is that a substantial hit?
TONY BERRY: Oh, yes, sir.
I mean, if you want to# give me $10,500, then I ask you that question.
PAUL SOLMAN: Tony Berry grew# up a city boy in Savannah,## never dreamed he'd wind up down on# the farm.
But with cousin Cedric: CEDRIC BERRY: We just naturally came# together and it's like, OK, well,## let's follow the family tradition and do this.
PAUL SOLMAN: Back across the state,# tradition brought Casey Cox Kerr back too.
CASEY COX KERR: Like, most things, a# little bit of time and perspective made## me realize how unique this farm is and# how special it is that I get to do this.
PAUL SOLMAN: But with a changing climate,# what hope is there for family farmers?
B.J.
WASHINGTON, CM Stripling Irrigation Research# Park: This technology is very vital to survival.
PAUL SOLMAN: Aha, technology, like precision# irrigation.
At the University of Georgia## Research Park, B.J.
Washington and team# are helping farmers conserve their water.
B.J.
WASHINGTON: You can program how much# water you put out.
You can program where it## needs to start and stop in the field.
You can# speed it up or slow it down within the field## to put out more water or less water.# You can do all that from this panel.
PAUL SOLMAN: Those big circles you see from# your airplane window seat created by center## pivot irrigation rigs like the ones here,# sprinkling water over crops slowly and evenly,## instead of spritzing it all at once.
And# these soil moisture sensors let the ground## itself signal just how much soaking# it needs so farmers don't overwater.
B.J.
WASHINGTON: Given the# drought, it's a huge deal,## because we want to we want to be as# efficient with irrigation as possible.## We don't want to waste water.
We don't# want to irrigate if we don't need to.
CASEY COX KERR: We could not grow what# we grow without irrigation because of## just the frequency of drought.
The new# irrigation systems, new technologies,## we're doing -- we're taking the# steps that we're able to take## to mitigate the risks that we can.
We# have to focus on what we can control.
PAUL SOLMAN: Which made me wonder, why isn't# everyone doing this?
One obvious answer,## it's not cheap.
The irrigation rigs cost at# least $90,000, the sensors up to $2,500 each.
But, says Professor Porter: WES PORTER: It looks like a big cost, but it's# costly for us to misapply our irrigati.. costly for us to lose yields because of that,# right?
And so I have a lot of return on investment## data that show that anywhere from on the low# end $20 to $30 per acre, all the way up to $150,## $200 per acre return for utilizing advanced# irrigation scheduling.
And that's per acre.
PAUL SOLMAN: So maybe data will get the# nation's farmers to change their ways,## and maybe farm tech will stay# ahead of further climate changes.
WES PORTER: Man, we have got this.
We can we# can adapt.
We can change.
We have been doing## it for a long time.
The way we farm today# might look different the way we farm in 100## years.
But I'm hoping that the work we're# doing today is helping build a foundation.
PAUL SOLMAN: And in the long run, Rachel Cleetus# says, there are policy steps worth considering.
RACHEL CLEETUS: And so we should, as a nation,# not leave farmers on their own to deal with this,## whether they can afford it or not.
We have# got to invest.
We have to make sure that## farmers are aware of the options that might# be there and that they get grants or low-cost## loans that they can maybe install some of these# technologies on their farms if they need them.
PAUL SOLMAN: Meanwhile, the Berrys keep# on pushing without pricey technology,## leaning on a tradition older than the farm.
TONY BERRY: We do put faith in our good lord that# he will provide a way, because he has done that## all these years before us, and I'm a strong# believer that he will continue to do that.
CEDRIC BERRY: We're doing the job that's# important, you know, providing the food for## surrounding communities, letting people know where# the food actually comes from.
And we need that.
And I just feel like, if we're# serving that purpose, he will provide.
PAUL SOLMAN: Well, he moves in mysterious ways.
CEDRIC BERRY: Definitely.
PAUL SOLMAN: For the Berrys, though.. mystery or not, wetter wets and drier# dries are an all-too-present reality.
For the "PBS News Hour," Paul Solman.
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