It is a river serving many masters: Farmers demand water for
irrigation, Indians fight for their share of the dwindling salmon, and
we all flip light switches from the dam-supported power grid. The
Klamath embodies all that is at stake regarding water issues in the
West.
Over the next week, I came to see the Klamath as a tamed, utilitarian
river. I drifted past the A Canal, where roughly half the river is
siphoned into a massive plumbing project that brings water to 240,000
acres of farmland. I rode returned irrigation effluent through
whitewater canyons, and saw the river vanish into reservoirs four
different times. Once, it even disappeared into a steel grate, leaving
me with a rain-gutter trickle.
During a re-supply stop, I asked an old-timer in a coffee shop what
he thought of the dams coming down. Not surprisingly, he said, "It’s not
a good idea." But, he added, "If the fish don’t get their water, they’ll
die, so they need it. But a man who has to water his hay, he needs it,
too." Many in this region are now fourth-generation farmers. To them,
watering the hay is as inextricably linked to the rhythms of life as
swimming upstream is for the salmon.
Two days from the river mouth, I saw the other side of the issue.
"Hello, there," a Yurok Indian called out from the captain’s chair of
his fishing boat. "Hello," I replied, as I paddled near. The man asked
me where I’d been, and where I was going. Then he quickly jumped to dam
politics.
"There’s a meeting tonight. We’re trying to get those dams outta
there," he said. "Us and the farmers, we’re working side by side right
now," he said. "We told them we wouldn’t sue them, so they’re with us.
They don’t like the word sue." Then he reached the heart of the matter.
"They say they’ll go bankrupt without water, but this river -- it’s all
we’ve got."
He repeated the same chorus I’ve heard from fisherman on rivers
throughout the West Coast: "I only caught 50 fish this spring.” I
waited. "Fifty fish!" he repeated. "That’s not many -- I have to feed a
lot of people."
As I shoved back into the current, I wished him good luck with the
fall salmon run. "Oh, they’ll come back," he reassured me. I was less
optimistic, dams or no dams.
Fish die and go extinct for many reasons, but on the lower Klamath,
warm water temperatures are often tagged as the main problem. Warmer
water allows for more bacterial pathogens to develop, thus increasing
the chances that disease will break out in the fish. Then there are the
dams that block fish from reaching their historic spawning beds upriver.
This time, there may be a real chance that the Klamath dams will come
down. The question for the salmon is whether it will be too late.
Tyler Williams is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of
High Country News (hcn.org). He lives and writes in Flagstaff,
Arizona.
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