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Losses
from storm in millions
July 12, 2007
Klamath Falls
Herald and News
By
Lee Juillerat
Damage to
Klamath
Basin
crops from last week’s
thunderstorm could exceed millions of dollars.
“It’s
a multi-million dollar loss for the growers,” said Bob Gasser,
co-owner of Basin Fertilizer, which services farmers throughout the
Klamath
Basin
. “Farming is not a fun
game sometimes.”
The Friday night storm moved through the Basin from southern
Siskiyou
County
. Basin areas hardest hit
included Macdoel, Malin and Bonanza’s
Yonna
Valley
. Damage to strawberries,
potatoes, grain and alfalfa was caused by hail, heavy rain and powerful
winds. Tuesday’s night storm added more rain and standing water to
already soaked fields.
The
storms hit as farmers were well into the growing season. Strawberry
growers are halfway into the season, which means there are about 80 days
until the harvest season, said Scott Scholer, ranch manager for Lassen
Canyon Nursery’s Macdoel operations.
“We’re so far into the season that we’re going to have to play
catch-up,” said John Walls, ranch manager for Sierra Cascade
Nurseries, which has strawberry fields in the
Yonna
Valley
and Macdoel. “We’ve
never been down this road before.”
“You just can’t make this lost time up,” Gasser said.
Strawberry growers appear hardest hit, but others also suffered heavy
losses. Gasser estimates about 600 to 700 acres of
Klamath
Basin
alfalfa were destroyed, and
many farmers lost at least one cutting.
“There’s not much left,” said Roy Wright, a Malin area farmer.
Instead of fields yielding 2 to 2 ½ tons of alfalfa per acre, he now
expects ¼ to ½ ton per acre on 350 to 400 acres. He also estimates to
harvest only 30 to 40 percent of his 100 acres of grain fields.
Gasser estimated about a dozen potato fields in the Malin area were
damaged by the storm, with about half of those total losses. Of those,
many surviving potato fields will have poor yields.
“When
you stun crops like that you just won’t have a good crop,” Gasser
said, noting farmers also will have to use fungicides to prevent
disease.
Many farmers were
continuing to locate and repair irrigation lines Wednesday, five days
after the storm.
Wright said four wheel lines and 25 sections were completely destroyed
and many remain missing.
“We don’t even know where parts of them are. And we’ve been
looking and working since Saturday. We’re looking at every drainage
ditch. We found some of them a half-mile away,” he said.
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NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to:http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2007/07/12/news/local_news/local4.txt
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