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A worker watches as potatoes are sorted in Wong Potatoes’ packaging plant south of Klamath Falls
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This year, the harvest and the prices it will garner were sufficient to cover costs. But a third of Chin’s land was idle, and he can’t afford to take on that loss next year.
“If I don’t have a product … the hard costs are
there, but I don’t produce on the land. I still
have land payments, sprinkler payments. It’s
hard to make those,” Chin said. “Basin-wide
we’re not getting return on land that’s idle.
“If I’m taking half the revenue off my business
plan, if I receive 50 percent of the income off
the business, am I going to be able to
survive?”
Water cutoff
The business has 4,200 acres of land on the Klamath Reclamation Project in the Merrill area, and 2,200 acres of that was dry this year after the Bureau of Reclamation reduced water deliveries to keep Upper Klamath Lake at levels required by federal biological opinions during a drought.
Irrigators received one third of the water they typically do.
Chin moved 450 acres of potatoes 125 miles south of Merrill to Burney, Calif., and 30 miles north to the Swan Lake area. Irrigation water was available there, but commuting to those fields caused significant expenses.
“We’ll go back to some areas we did (this) year,” Chin said. “We got good crops there, and here there’s still the uncertainty of the water situation. … We’d rather farm our ground we have locally, but we have to see what happens.
“It’s a tough way to farm.”