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The Wrath of 2007 - Drought

Mike

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Montgomery, Al
The wrath of 2007: America's great drought
By Andrew Gumbel in Los Angeles
Published: 11 June 2007
America is facing its worst summer drought since the Dust Bowl years of the Great Depression. Or perhaps worse still.

From the mountains and desert of the West, now into an eighth consecutive dry year, to the wheat farms of Alabama, where crops are failing because of rainfall levels 12 inches lower than usual, to the vast soupy expanse of Lake Okeechobee in southern Florida, which has become so dry it actually caught fire a couple of weeks ago, a continent is crying out for water.

In the south-east, usually a lush, humid region, it is the driest few months since records began in 1895. California and Nevada, where burgeoning population centres co-exist with an often harsh, barren landscape, have seen less rain over the past year than at any time since 1924. The Sierra Nevada range, which straddles the two states, received only 27 per cent of its usual snowfall in winter, with immediate knock-on effects on water supplies for the populations of Las Vegas and Los Angeles.

The human impact, for the moment, has been limited, certainly nothing compared to the great westward migration of Okies in the 1930 - the desperate march described by John Steinbeck in The Grapes of Wrath.

Big farmers are now well protected by government subsidies and emergency funds, and small farmers, some of whom are indeed struggling, have been slowly moving off the land for decades anyway. The most common inconvenience, for the moment, are restrictions on hosepipes and garden sprinklers in eastern cities.

But the long-term implications are escaping nobody. Climatologists see a growing volatility in the south-east's weather - today's drought coming close on the heels of devastating hurricanes two to three years ago. In the West, meanwhile, a growing body of scientific evidence suggests a movement towards a state of perpetual drought by the middle of this century. "The 1930s drought lasted less than a decade. This is something that could remain for 100 years," said Richard Seager a climatologist at Columbia University and lead researcher of a report published recently by the government's National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

While some of this year's dry weather is cyclical - California actually had an unusually wet year last year, so many of the state's farmers still have plenty of water for their crops - some of it portends more permanent changes. In Arizona, the tall mountains in the southern Sonoran desert known as "sky islands" because they have been welcome refuges from the desert heat for millennia, have already shown unmistakable signs of change.

Predatory insects have started ravaging trees already weakened by record temperatures and fires over the past few years. Animal species such as frogs and red squirrels have been forced to move ever higher up the mountains in search of cooler temperatures, and are in danger of dying out altogether. Mount Lemmon, which rises above the city of Tucson, boasts the southernmost ski resort in the US, but has barely attracted any snow these past few years.

"A lot of people think climate change and the ecological repercussions are 50 years away," Thomas Swetnam, an environmental scientist at the University of Arizona in Tucson, told The New York Times a few months ago. "But it's happening now in the West. The data is telling us that we are in the middle of one of the first big indicators of climate change impacts in the continental United States." Across the West, farmers and city water consumers are locked in a perennial battle over water rights - one that the cities are slowly winning. Down the line, though, there are serious questions about how to keep showers and lawn sprinklers going in the retirement communities of Nevada and Arizona. Lake Powell, the reservoir on the upper Colorado River that helps provide water across a vast expanse of the West, has been less than half full for years, with little prospect of filling up in the foreseeable future.

According to the NOAA's recent report, the West can expect 10-20 per cent less rainfall by mid-century, which will increase air pollution in the cities, kill off trees and water-retaining giant cactus plants and shrink the available water supply by as much as 25 per cent.

In the south-east, the crisis is immediate - and may be alleviated at any moment by the arrival of the tropical storm season. In Georgia, where the driest spring on record followed closely on the heels of a devastating frost, farmers are afraid they might lose anywhere from half to two-thirds of crops such as melons and the state's celebrated peaches. Many cities are restricting lawn sprinklers to one hour per day - and some places one hour only every other day.

The most striking effect of the dry weather has been to expose large parts of the bed of Lake Okeechobee, the vast circular expanse of water east of Palm Beach, Florida, which acts as a back-up water supply for five million Floridians. Archaeologists have had a field day - dredging the soil for human bone fragments, tools, bits of pottery and ceremonial jewellery thought to have belonged to the natives who lived near the lake before the Spanish arrived in the 16th century.

Environmentalists are not entirely upset, because the lake is notoriously polluted with pesticides and other farm products that then poison nearby rivers. River fish stocks in the area are now booming.

Nothing, though, was so strange as the fires that broke out over about 12,000 acres on the northern edge of the lake at the end of May. They were eventually doused by Tropical Storm Barry last weekend. State water managers, however, say it will may take a whole summer of rainstorms, or longer, to restore the lake.

The great Dust Bowl disaster

The Dust Bowl was the result of catastrophic dust storms causing major ecological and agricultural damage to American prairies in the 1930s. The fertile soil of the Great Plains had been exposed by removal of grass during ploughing over decades of ill-conceived farming techniques. The First World War and immense profits had driven farmers to push the land well beyond its natural limits.

When drought hit, the soil dried, became dust, and blew eastwards, mostly in large black clouds. This caused an exodus from Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and the surrounding Great Plains, with more than half a million Americans left homeless in the Great Depression.
 
Take about four years of this drought,add a couple "positive"BSE animals...throw in a crazy group called R-canuck beef,no hay,your country has to come together and send your state hay, then whine to me about trying to stay in the beef industry.

I reality I do feel bad about the drought you guys are facing,last year was our real first step out of drought in 12 years,this years looking pretty good...I do hope you all get rain,just had to take this chance to make a point :)
 
Mrs.Greg said:
Take about four years of this drought,add a couple "positive"BSE animals...throw in a crazy group called R-canuck beef,no hay,your country has to come together and send your state hay, then whine to me about trying to stay in the beef industry.

I reality I do feel bad about the drought you guys are facing,last year was our real first step out of drought in 12 years,this years looking pretty good...I do hope you all get rain,just had to take this chance to make a point :)

Thanks for the thoughts Mrs. Greg. We can always find someone else who is worse off than us no matter who we are.

I would like to add to your dilemma if I could.

Your goverment threw good money at the very folks that didn't need it, or deserve it, instead of giving it to the ones that did.

I would hope that there would be a revolution had that happened here.

Funny how you folks always throw R-Calf into the conversation. Is that what you would call a "Whine"?
 
Mike said:
Mrs.Greg said:
Take about four years of this drought,add a couple "positive"BSE animals...throw in a crazy group called R-canuck beef,no hay,your country has to come together and send your state hay, then whine to me about trying to stay in the beef industry.

I reality I do feel bad about the drought you guys are facing,last year was our real first step out of drought in 12 years,this years looking pretty good...I do hope you all get rain,just had to take this chance to make a point :)

Thanks for the thoughts Mrs. Greg. We can always find someone else who is worse off than us no matter who we are.

I would like to add to your dilemma if I could.

Your goverment threw good money at the very folks that didn't need it, or deserve it, instead of giving it to the ones that did.

I would hope that there would be a revolution had that happened here.

Funny how you folks always throw R-Calf into the conversation. Is that what you would call a "Whine"?
No Mike,it wasn't a whine its a fact,just added it to the list....as for that money,trust me,the fact that the packers all got that does NOT impress greg and I at ALL.That being said we wouldn't have takin any of the money anyway,we didn't apply when they were paying the 200 to keep our calves,it costs that much to keep them the two years that was stipulated.We also didn't take the bales of hay when our name was drawn,we had enough hay to scrape by...greg told them to give the bales to a young guy that had just started in the industry,I'm real proud of him for that :!:

It was a real hard time,we know LOTS of cattlemen that didn't make it through a couple to suicide even....trust me this wasn't a whine,r-calf was a tiny part of it,just lets say the straw that broke......
 
Team seeks solution to water woes

By Paul W. Sullivan




Much of Alabama is suffering through the drought needlessly.

That's the conclusion of a team of professors that has spent more than five years studying the state's water resources and woes.

Experts say an abundance of water flows through the state -- at least 10 percent of all that runs through America. But the state doesn't have a plan to capture and store it to get the state through dry periods.

In the wake of an unprecedented drought, scientists will urge state leaders this fall to think of storing and transporting water in the same way natural gas is held and moved across the country. They are busy putting the final touches on a proposal they believe will reshape agriculture in the state.

But to focus on the two-year drought alone is to miss what has transpired over the past 50 years, said team member Dr. Richard McNider of the University of Alabama in Huntsville.

The damage to Alabama agriculture from the failure to embrace irrigation has been taking its toll for decades, he said.

"Several years ago we started looking at the decline of agriculture in Alabama, and we have come to the conclusion that all of it is an inability to deal with drought," he said.

All-too-frequent dry spells have cut into yields and made farming a harder enterprise -- leading to less acreage devoted to row crops. The amount of land in row crops is half the 1950 total. That's all due to the lack of irrigation, the team contends.

That puts state farmers at a competitive disadvantage with the West and Midwest. Those states, with a boost from the federal government, have spent billions on watering infrastructure, or in the case of the Midwest, have built-in soil advantages.

"The Midwest is insulated from drought because of its deep soil," McNider said. "Soils are eight feet deep and act as a sponge, where water can be brought up to the surface by plant root systems. The soil here is shallow and holds much less water, and when we have a drought it's more severe and soils dry out faster."

In the West, government-funded irrigation projects have turned arid land into fields, shielding farmers from the ravages of drought.

As a result, Alabama farmers are agriculture underdogs. The team, with the new-found backing of Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Tuscaloosa, are working to level the playing field.

Their plan will include a system of pipes snaking from streams and rivers through the countryside to above- and below-ground holding areas.

The storage would include simple ponds or lakes, or even caverns. That would enable the state to take advantage of the usual winter and spring rains that form the backbone of what is a typical yearly rainfall of 55 inches.

One team member is ready to dispel several myths about the supply of water, starting with the present drought.

"It's not a water scarcity issue, but a water management issue," argues Dr. Jim Hairston, a professor in agronomy and soils at Auburn University. He said Alabama needs to follow the lead of other states, like Georgia and Nebraska, which rely heavily on irrigation.

"Georgia has increased their irrigated acreage since the mid-1960s by 25 times," he said. "Alabama's has only doubled."

That change will be just one of many Hairston expects the group to recommend to Gov. Bob Riley, agriculture officials, legislators and others this fall. The ongoing drought has quickened the pace of the team's work and the need for their suggestions, McNider said.

He and state climatologist Dr. John Christy, also of UAH, have joined Auburn's Hairston in the effort.

They all agree that a whole new approach to water conservation is in order.

"We have a huge water supply and have to change the mentality on what water conservation is," Hairston said.

While the trio and their associates at other Alabama schools have not wrapped up the project, they are confident of some major items they will push when they present their findings and recommendations.

"We will have to build more dams and reservoirs -- even if we don't build them in major streams," Hairston said. "We will recommend putting water into reservoirs and maybe building reservoirs on small streams and rivers."

He said the construction is needed to keep winter and spring rainwater from flowing unhindered through streams and rivers to its eventual destination, the Gulf of Mexico. Too much of that water now bypasses cities, farms and industries that will be thirsty for it when summer rolls around.

With stable water supplies, farmers could turn to the reserves for relief, Hairston said. That would, in turn, relieve the pressure on water sources already serving cities, industry and other needs.

While many plans and reports have been unveiled to fanfare in Montgomery only to die, Hairston believes the lack of rainfall has transformed how state leaders view water resources.

The state's agriculture chief, Ron Sparks, said Hairston is right on the money. He agrees that recent weather woes have rendered the old way of farming obsolete. He is looking forward to seeing the team's recommendations.

"Putting seeds in the ground and praying for rain is the farming of the past," said Sparks, commissioner of the Alabama Department of Agriculture and Industries.

A new way of approaching Alabama's usually plentiful water resources would be welcomed by farmers, he said.

Back-to-back droughts and a late freeze would make the selling job for putting money into irrigation much easier.

"If you can show farmers there is a better day ahead, farmers aren't afraid of investing," Sparks said. "There is no doubt that if we are going to continue farming as we know it, we are going to have to have some kind of irrigation system to increase yields and keep farmers from getting killed during droughts."

Not getting killed will cost money, but it won't be the first time big bucks have been spent to inoculate farms from arid conditions, McNider contends.

He points to farms in the Midwest and West where state and federal budgets have been tapped to help farming flourish.

"We think it's a role the federal government should have," McNider said. "In the West, the feds have spent billions of dollars bringing water to the edge of farmers' fields."

In fact, the federal government already is involved in Alabama's irrigation initiative. Shelby secured $1 million in 2006 to help fund the work of the university team, McNider said. The team had been toiling for years on a volunteer basis.

Alabama should follow suit in committing money to irrigation, he said. The state's leaders need to grasp that investments in agriculture are similar to incentives used to lure industry to Alabama, the retired professor in atmospheric science argues.

"In the same way the state provided auto industry and steel mill incentives, the numbers will show state investments in helping farms get irrigated will prove long-term benefits to state," McNider said.

In fact, the team said the economic impact of irrigation would rival the much-hailed landing of auto plants. Putting 2 million acres under irrigation would add $1.2 billion to the state's economy. That figure would be nearly the economic jolt of the direct payroll of all the auto plants attracted to the state, the professors wrote in a report. Since 1950, Alabama has lost at least 10 million acres in row crop farming, they said.
 
Here it's the worst drought since 1887. On the way to and from Myrtle Beach , SC it was pitiful. The corn, cotton, tobacco etc was barely up and was so dry that you could see it had almost twisted itself out of the ground. You could see that very few people had even planted gardens.

I've have no hay to cut nor will I have any. My uncle that died, yes he really did die, had a barn FULL of hay. Granted it's 2-3 yrs old but I'm buying it from the estate and have got to haul it home. It's a far piece from me....but at least I've got it.

This old red clay is like red cement now!
 
Mike, bama, If there is anything hubby and I can do to help please let us know... I feel for ya.. We had a drought for 7 or 8 years and I know first hand what you guys are going through.. ( Remember when you guys all supported us when we sold all our hiefiers.) And I think it's still dry at Taps... Nicky is very dry...... So please let us know.......
 
Thank you Katrina but I don't think there is anything that can be done short of selling the herd of my good AIed angus cows. I just can't stand the thought of taking them to the stockyard though.
I am trying to find some hay to buy now. So far all I have found is $60 a roll for 5 X 5 and it is 200 miles away. It is good hay so I should start hauling but I have decided to wait another month.
 
Mike, bama, If there is anything hubby and I can do to help please let us know...

Thanks kiddo! As long as I have some chokecherry jelly to go with my biscuits and some mint, sugar and bourbon to make my juleps, everything else will work it self out.

Did I mention your "WORLD FAMOUS" chokecherry jelly? :lol: :lol:
 
Maybe we can keep them bama... How many do you have? All your hard work and great genetics...... It would be a shame to sell them...... Please try and hold on.......... I wonder what hay is selling for around here?? And then the trucking.... :???:
 
katrina said:
Maybe we can keep them bama... How many do you have? All your hard work and great genetics...... It would be a shame to sell them...... Please try and hold on.......... I wonder what hay is selling for around here?? And then the trucking.... :???:

I am down to 15 grown cows and 7 fall heifers. One herd bull and 3 yearling bulls. I can still hang in for the summer. I have enough hay to make it that far and I will plant everthing in rye. I need to get up about 75 more rolls to make spring.

Mike and I need to get together and have a few Juleps. I hear that Mike makes a julep that will knock you naked. We will be expecting you Katrina.
 
I'm thinkin...........if you drink somethin that'll KNOCK you nekid....then you make a barn run.....with Katrina along......that's gonna cause a Hurricane!!!!!!!!!!! LOL At the very least a good ole tropical storm. Those are great when they come in, long about June or July, and you get a weeks worth of rain out of it.
 
I sell alfalfa and from last summer when it was soo dry in the dakotas, people realized its cheaper to take the cows to the hay instead of the hay to the cows...i feel for you guys...the stress that mother nature puts on us!
 
Lilly is right......... We don't want another hurricane so Mike and bama are going to have to run on your own..... Mike I would have a heart attack trying to jog that far..... Best I could do is to your dog house!!!
bama we have room for your cows so don't sell them...... Or we'll find ya hay......
 
Montgomery, AlabamaCurrent Observations - 4:55 PM on Monday 11 Jun 2007 (Local Time)
100°
Clear
Feels Like
99°
Reporting Station: KMXF
Relative Humidity: 23%
Wind: 210° (SSW) at 3mph
Gusts: 0mph
Pressure: 29.88in
Yesterday's Precip: in
Yesterday's Low Temp: 67°F
Yesterday's High Temp: 100°F
Dew Point: 56°
Visibility: 10mi
Ceiling: Unlimited
Heat Index: 99°
Wind Chill: 100°
6hr Precip: in
6hr Low Temp: 67°F
6hr High Temp: 97°
Intellicast Weather

Have never seen the humidity this consistantly low here.
 
I looked at your weather conditions just a little while ago and did some major rain voodoo for you... As you are running to the barn chant iiiieeeeiiiiiiiiieeeeeeeeeiiiiiiiiiowwww over and over again all the way and do not stop... Then when you get to the barn put your hands in the air and kick a cheerleader kick.... You do this and it will rain..... Mark my words.......


















































What a visual this would be..... :D :D :D :D
 

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