By Barb Hall and Julie Kay
Smithson
http://www.klamathbucketbrigade.org/
and http://www.propertyrightsresearch.org/
The other definition of
watershed is of interest to everyone who's aware of the Klamath.
Watershed - A crucial
dividing point, line or factor: a turning point.
2001 was a watershed year
for the Klamath and for
In 2001, the Klamath's
farming community lost its guarantee of water -- a guarantee that had stood
the Klamath and
For all the talk of
"restoration," the Klamath has never been static.
The Klamath -- its land and
water, its people, plants and animals -- has always been changing and adapting
to shifting weather patterns. In dry years -- before the Klamath Project --
everyone suffered. Change brought the Klamath Project to the
Water evaporated or ran
downstream. Water, in the years before irrigated farming in the
The birth of the Klamath
Project was a watershed moment: for the people, plants, animals, birds and
fish of the
At last came the chance for
the use and reuse of water, over and over, with little evaporation but vastly
increased production -- and with just 2 - 4 percent of the water going
into agriculture.
The Basin bloomed and
blossomed. What was once a place where people lived at the mercy of the
weather became a place of verdant beauty and measurable success. The bounty of
the land fed everyone, from the people of the Klamath to its plants and
animals, both cultivated and wild. No longer was the Klamath at the mercy of
the weather with its ever-changing "feast or famine."
The Bucket was born in
2001, crafted by those with an intimate knowledge of the importance of water:
to people, plants, animals, birds, fish, and land. The Bucket was huge, but it
symbolized a huge issue: Water in the Klamath and Water for the Future of the
Klamath. The Bucket was simple, both in design and adornment. Its very
presence brought grown men to tears and teenagers to cheers. People looked
upon it in amazement, just as they did the arrival in their neighborhood of
loads of hay from distant states, donated food (for people and animals) and
other necessities, and the gathering of good people in
The Bucket was built to
last. The Bucket came to stay, for it signified all that was -- and is -- good
in the Klamath. Water is the lifeblood of life itself in the Klamath: for
everyone. No one and nothing can live without it.
When guaranteed water was
shut off to the irrigators who had paid for it in advance, a play began in the
Klamath. Act One was the shutting off of the water.
Act Two was the reaction to
the shutoff.
Act Three was the
convergence on
Act Four was the peaceful
encampment at the
The Klamath was where
Water for agriculture
cannot, should not and must not be "mitigated."
The Basin, The Bucket and
Backbone are not negotiable. All are here to stay. Those seeking to sell
"restoration" and "mitigation" are marketing snake oil in
the twenty-first century. It's time to see that and recognize it for the
Trojan Horse it is.
The Wildlands Project --
goes. For all its slick talk, "restoration" and
"protection" by outsiders is a sham. Everyone is wounded by such an
agenda, except those pushing it, but they are not farmers and irrigators that
raise food that feeds people. No one doubts that parts of the Klamath are wild
-- the wild flocks that migrate and winter in the Klamath are wild, but they
go where the food is: food that is there because of the Klamath farmers and
irrigators, not in spite of them. Cut off the water to the Klamath Project and
you kill much more than the 1,400 farmers and their way of life.
The Basin, The Bucket and
Backbone stay.