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January 9, 2006
Klamath Falls Herald and News
Snow in the mountains is a good sight for Klamath Basin irrigators. With a
healthy snowpack, the first federal streamflow forecast of 2006 for Upper
Klamath Lake is for 680,000 acre-feet of water to come in between April and
September. That's 132 percent of average.
“Things look pretty good overall,”
said Dave Solem, manager of the Klamath Irrigation District. “Now it needs to
just stay up on the mountains and not come down anymore.”
Recent rains have melted some of the precious snowpack, where 50 percent of the
water for the Klamath Reclamation Project is stored.
While the winter and the numbers are
looking good, federal officials and irrigators aren't getting too excited yet.
“The bottom line is, it is too soon to tell,” said Cecil Lesley, Project
land and operations chief.
About this time last year the snowpack was also hefty. Then the winter weather
stopped and forecasts from the Natural Resource Conservation Service, steadily
worsened until by March the predictions were for a drier year than 2001.
The Basin got bailed out by a wet spring, but the experience left officials
wary.
“It creates an illusion in people's minds that things will be okay,” Sabo
said.
Officials and irrigators will continue to watch weather forecasts as the growing
season, which typically goes from April to October in the Basin, gets closer.
Conservation Service forecasts come out in the first week of the month from now into the summer. For now the forecast appears good.
“It looks pretty positive at this point,” said Jon Lea, a
Conservation Service, the federal agency that crunched the forecast
numbers.”But it is pretty early in the year.”
On the Net: www.wcc.nrcs.usda.gov/special/klamath.pl
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Source: http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2006/01/09/news/local_news/top2.txt