PROCESSING
THE CROP
The
cotton gin is where cotton fiber is separated
from the cotton seed. The first step
in the ginning process is when the cotton
is vacuumed into tubes that carry it
to a dryer to reduce moisture and improve
the fiber quality. Then it runs through
cleaning equipment to remove leaf trash,
sticks and other foreign matter.
Ginning
is accomplished by one of two methods. Cotton
varieties with shorter staple or fiber
length are ginned with saw gins. This process involves the use of
circular saws that grip the fibers and
pull them through narrow slots.
Cotton Trivia
| The
cotton industry as
a whole creates more
than 340,000 jobs and
generates over $60
billion of business
in the United States—the
greatest of any U.S.
crop. |
|
|
The
seeds are too large to pass through
these openings, resulting in the
fibers being pulled away from the
seed. Long fiber cottons must
be ginned in a roller gin because saw gins can damage their delicate
fibers. The roller gin was invented
in India centuries ago and this
concept is still used in modern
gins. Long
staple cottons, like Pima, separate
from the seed more easily than
Upland varietie. A roller gin
uses a rough roller to grab the
fiber and pull it under a rotating
bar with gaps too small for the
seed to pass.
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The
raw fiber, now called lint,
makes its way through another series of pipes
to a press where it is compressed into bales (lint packaged
for market), banded with eight steel straps,
sampled for classing, wrapped for protection
then loaded onto trucks for shipment to storage
yards, textile mills and foreign countries. The
cotton industry has adopted a standard for
a bale of cotton, 55 inches tall, 28 inches
wide, and 21 inches thick, weighing approximately
500 pounds. A bale meeting these requirements
is called a universal density bale. This
is enough cotton to make 325 pairs of denim
jeans.
Every
bale of cotton is classed from a sample
taken after its formation. The classing of
cotton lint is the process of measuring
fiber characteristics against a set of
standards (grades). Classing is done by
experts, called classers, who use scientific
instruments to judge the samples of lint. All
standards are established by the U.S. Department
of Agriculture. Once the quality of the
cotton bale is determined, pricing parameters
are set and the lint may be taken to market. Cotton marketing is the selling and buying of cotton lint. Cotton
is priced in cents per pound when sold
and the price is negotiated according to
the cotton's quality. After baling, the
cotton lint is hauled to either storage
yards, textile mills, or shipped to foreign
countries. The cotton seed is delivered
to a seed storage area. Where it will
remain until it is loaded into trucks and
transported to a cottonseed oil mill or
directly for livestock feed.
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Dunavant
of California
Dunavant
of California believes "education
is everyone's business" and
that "agribusiness
is at the heart of America's
values and history." We
support our nations educators! |
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Cotton's Journey-A Field Trip SUPPLEMENT KIT

Here's the perfect item for the educator who wants to build h/her own cotton study unit. Includes the same proven curriculum book, 23-minute video, and planting seeds found in Cotton's Journey-A Field Trip in A Box complete kit (#CJ00 & #CJ01). Lessons: teach core subjects, written for grades.....
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BALE O' COTTON: THE MECHANICAL ART OF COTTON GINNING Book

This book offers a unique blend of fact and folklore about cotton ginning, the process that takes cotton from the field, separates fibers from seed, and packages the lint into a bale for shipment to market. It traces the development of the industry, the equipment and the techniques, of this integral.....
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QUILTING NOW & THEN Book

Shirley Johnson explains to her children how she makes her intricate quilts, and how her great-grandmother did it all by hand.
* 36 full-color pages features 19 exquisite quilts made exclusively for this book.
* Explains how quilts are made and compares today’s methods with those used.....
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