Published February 23, 2005
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By DYLAN DARLING
H&N Staff Writer
As irrigation season draws closer, the summer streamflow forecasts are getting
worse.
"It isn't good,"
said Dave Solem, manager of the Klamath Irrigation District. "Things
haven't gotten any better. Time is getting shorter now for things to
recover."
The Natural Resources Conservation Service, the federal agency in charge of
forecasting streamflow from snow runoff in the Klamath Basin and around the
country, came out with a mid-month forecast last week.
As in the first Basin
forecast released at the start of the new year, streamflow looks to be well
below average.
The latest forecast is for 309,000 acre-feet of water, or 60 percent of water
to flow into Upper Klamath Lake between April and September. The lake is the
main reservoir for the Klamath Reclamation Project.
There are now two more
streamflow forecasts before the April 1 forecast, which is a key piece in the
Project officials' determination of year type for Upper Klamath Lake and the
Klamath River. The year type will come out in the Bureau's operation plan in
early April.
So far, it's looking like both will be classified as "dry" this
year, said Dave Sabo, Project manager. The plan will also detail irrigation
deliveries for the season, which runs from April to mid-October.
Although snow and rain
didn't develop as Project officials had hoped, there still is time for a
turnaround.
"You still have a month and a half to go," he said.
But since the forecasts
started a month and a half ago, the streamflow predictions have been going
down. They have dropped by 25,000 acre-feet in each of the two weeks between
the three forecasts made so far.
"This is going to be a really tight year," Sabo said.
Water users need to be ready
if the weather doesn't cooperate with improving streamflow forecasts, he said.
They should plan their crops accordingly and be prepared to take conservation
measures.
The dropping forecasts are a result of light precipitation throughout the
winter so far, said Jon Lea, a hydrologist with the Conservation Service.
"There have just been a couple of sputterings of snowfall and rain,"
he said.
As of Tuesday, the Basin's
snowpack was at 50 percent of average.
"What's needed to get the snowpack up would be massive snowfall," he
said. "We are getting to the point where we are at the whim of mother
nature to provide timely inputs."
Those would include spring
rains and summer showers.
Even if snow and rain come, Sabo said he is concerned streamflow could drop
off partway through the irrigation season, not matching the forecasts. The
phenomenon has happened the past two years, with inflows falling off in late
June, and officials are still working on ways to improve the forecasting
system.
"If inflows drop off
even earlier, like in May, then it is going to get very serious," he
said.
Part of the problem is the unpredictability of weather, Sabo said. If the
weather predictions don't hold then neither do the streamflow forecasts.
"Unfortunately, we have
to use something that is not a very good tool," he said.
The Basin is small and there is little water storage for carryover from one
year to the next, making it dependent on the snowpack in the mountains.
"It is real dependent
on the winter being a good winter, and if it's not, it's tough to get
through," Sabo said.
This winter has been a poor one, he said.
Solem said the weather
conditions have not been what anybody expected or hoped for.
"They are pretty bleak," he said. "The window for conditions to
get better is getting smaller."
Source: The Klamath Falls Herald and News
http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2005/02/23/news/community_news/cit1.txt