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Press photo by Lance Waldren Tulelake farmer, Steve Kandra, shows the improvements made to his land for wildlife habitat |
Kandra's farm borders the Tulelake Wildlife Refuge.
Kandra said farming next to the refuge in the past was miserable.
They were always in an adversarial role.
But he said there has been a major modification in the U.S. Fish
and Game philosophy since the last administration.
Kandra has taken it
upon himself to make changes in the way he farms.
He is working in cooperation with the refuge and other groups.
Instead of fighting the wildlife and trying to keep them off of
his productive farm land. He
now utilizes a portion of his ground to provide them with habitat, on
and around his fields.
"Regulation and
litigation are not the answer. Cooperation
and collaboration are the future.
By working together we can make stuff happen.
When politics become involved is when you have problems.
Remember we are doing this for the critters," said Kandra.
A buffer zone now
surrounds each field. The
approximate 30-foot perimeter is planted with perennial grasses, shrubs
and other habitat for wildlife.
The ground is filled with ducks' nests and the deer live the
summer here, grazing the alfalfa and grains.
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Pioneer
Press Photo by Lance Waldren |
"I have a deer herd living on my farm.
There are about 30 does that come down from the mountains in the
spring and have their fawns around my fields.
There is enough human activity here that it keeps the predators
away and the deer do well." said
Kandra
Kandra also has
several large pivots for irrigation.
The pivots water in a circle, so Kandra has planted safflower in
the corner of each field. The
safflower produces an oil seed that birds devour.
It is also a thickly grown, thorny plant which keeps the coyotes
and other predators out. These
otherwise unproductive pieces of land now are home to hundreds of
pheasants, quail and other birds.
The biggest project
under construction on the farm is a 30-acre water treatment wetland.
The wetland, which was designed by the Bureau of Reclamation,
will be divided into two stages.
The first stage will be used to remove phosphate rich sediment
from the water and the second will be a vegetative area which will
remove nitrates.
Kandra said everyone
has been talking about turning farm ground into wetlands to purify the
water. He began asking
experts about how much land would be needed to clean up a certain amount
of water. No one knew
the answer, so he decided to build one himself and find out.
The wetlands construction has been a cooperative effort from many
different agencies and groups.
The water will be tested both entering and leaving the wetlands
by the
"This has been a
very expensive project, just taking 30 acres of my best ground out of
production. Also the time I
have spent putting this together. Now
I have to get the darn thing finished," said Kandra.
The U.S. Fish and
Wildlife has played an active role in these changes happening in the
basin. As have numerous
foundations including California Waterfowl.
"Every farm is a
refuge and every refuge needs a farm," Kandra stated.
Some might go so far as to
call Kandra's project it's own refuge, even as closely tied as Basin
farms and refuges are due to local farms supplying water to refuges in
times of drought.
"Without
Agriculture, you would never see the abundance of waterfowl we have in
the basin," said Dave
Mauser, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Biologist.
"With innovative farming, you can have your cake and eat it
too. It is a win/win
situation for the animals living here."
It is crucial for
farmers and the refuges to work together.
Focusing on common ground, rather than the differences, is what
makes the difference.
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Press photo by Lance Waldren This sign stands next to the road as you enter the Tulelake Wildlife Refuge. |
"Birds have wings and do not respect ownership boundaries.
Refuges as well as agricultural land are essential for the large
populations of migratory waterfowl in the basin," said Mauser.
"All the large refuges in the country are interspersed with
agricultural land. They
have to work together."
In 2001, the refuge
lease lands were dry. Also
the whole Lower Klamath Refuge dried completely up.
What about the other
wildlife not protected by the Endangered Species Act?
When the water was turned off, many of them died.
The mink, raccoons, weasels, frogs, snakes, turtles and skunks,
the list goes on and on. These
animals use the refuge as well as the agricultural land as their homes.
It seems that there
are several organizations in the country which want agriculture removed
from the Lower Klamath Refuge and the Tulelake Refuge.
"I have invited
groups such as Oregon Wild, to come and see what we have done, they
won't come. They do
not want to see the truth, it would ruin their fundraising." said
Kandra.
(Permission to post from the publisher.)