-Caveat Lector-

Farmers hope for rain as drought grips much of nation

Copyright � 2002 Christian Science Monitor Service


Discuss this story in our Health & Science forum

By TODD WILKINSON, Christian Science Monitor

CARTWRIGHT, N.D. (March 14, 2002 10:38 p.m. EST) - High plains rancher Bill
Lassey recently made a pilgrimage that nature hadn't allowed him to repeat for
67 years: He walked across the Yellowstone River and barely got wet.

Normally, fording the storied river's girth as it flows here through the
eastern part of North Dakota would require a boat, but Lassey needed only a
pair of worn galoshes.

"I never thought I'd see the Yellowstone so low again in my lifetime," says the
rancher, recalling his childhood in the 1930s Dust Bowl era.

The languid condition of the Yellowstone - the longest free-flowing river in
the U.S. - is symbolic of a worsening dry spell that, for large swathes of the
country, is shaping up to be the worst drought of the past 100 years.

>From Georgia to Maine, officials are issuing water conservation measures as
blue skies across the East Coast continue to show little sign of impending
snowfall or rain. It's not the only region declared to be in a state of
"severe" or "extreme" drought. In the croplands of Oklahoma, Kansas and Texas,
wheat-crop ratings are being graded as "very poor" by state agriculture boards
due to drought-stress conditions. Other regions are feeling the effects too.

New Jersey, which has just experienced the driest February on record, has
instituted drought restrictions such as banning car washing and forbidding
restaurants to serve water to customers unless it is requested.

Boat launch ramps at Lake Marburg in Codorous State Park, Harrisburg, Pa., have
been closed as the water levels across the state continue to sink as if someone
had pulled a bath plug.

The Los Angeles Times reports that drought conditions in the wild are
encouraging coyotes to venture into L.A.'s hillside neighborhoods.

Few areas of the country, however, are struggling as much as the "inner West."
Five consecutive years of drought have been nearly invisible to outsiders yet
devastating to locals, who see no relief in sight.

"This is turning out to be a staggering event for a lot of rural people and
communities," says Jess Aber, who sits on a special drought task force created
by Montana's governor. "Before the drought, there were many towns sliding
downward because of the challenging economics of agriculture, but now they're
being pushed over a precipice."

Not long ago, a group of county commissioners from Montana's "Golden Triangle"
wheat-growing belt, which stretches across north central Montana, warned that
ripple effects could be far-reaching. Last year, the Montana Agricultural
Statistics Service reported that there were 1,000 fewer farms in the state than
the year before.

Small-town economies that anchored the state's $1 billion agriculture industry
are also drying up. Lower crop yields mean farmers can't pay off bank debt and,
in turn, are unable to secure loans for necessary supplies, machinery and pick-
up trucks. "Auto dealerships and implement stores, which were the anchors of
these communities, are going under," Aber says.

In an effort to maintain financial solvency, ranchers in a large portion of the
heartland covering thousands of square miles are dramatically cutting back the
size of their cattle herds. Auction yards, which usually do brisk winter
business with bull sales, for example, are finding few buyers, forcing owners
to sell the animals at hugely discounted prices.

While Lassey never believed the Yellowstone would again be reduced to a
trickle, the talkative agrarian admits that most of his life he had no reason
to incorporate the words "El Nino" or "La Nina" into his provincial vocabulary
either.

But the increasing regularity of those weather phenomena - both linked to the
warming of the Pacific Ocean - is causing Lassey's younger neighbors to worry
about the potential onslaught of another ominous threat: global warming.

The National Weather Service recently announced that the past three months
formed the warmest documented stretch of winter weather in 120 years of modern
record keeping.

In Montana, it's also been the driest period Roy Kaiser has witnessed in his 26
years as a water-supply specialist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. "I
always use the example of a sponge. You've got to get it wet before it will
soak up water," Kaiser says. "In many places, the fields are so dry and hard
that water runs off the surface of the soil like it would from a sheet of
asphalt."

The paradox, Kaiser says, is that even as the snowpack continues to build to
average depths in the Western mountains, the flows it generates in the spring
will not be nearly enough to alleviate drought.

Unfortunately, with the National Weather Service predicting another El Nino
weather pattern forming in the Pacific, many agrarians have literally been
brought to their knees - in prayer vigils and in asking for mercy from banks.

The reason: The current drought began with the last El Nino cycle which causes
flooding for some parts of the country but left others parched.

Not only that, forestry officials blame El Nino for bringing intense summer
heat, strong winds and lack of precipitation that created the epic wildfire
season of 2000 which left millions of acres of forests and grasslands burned in
the West.

Farmers, ranchers and even suburban residents watching their groundwater wells
dry up in places like Bozeman and Helena, Mont., need a deluge of rain.

Bracing for the worst, Montana Gov. Judy Martz has notified Agriculture
Secretary Ann Venneman that she may ask the Bush administration to declare her
state a drought disaster area in the months ahead.

Back in Cartwright, Lassey holds out hope that the big river that passes
through his land will regain its formidable sparkle.

"We've had some tough times over the years, but we're tough people and we
always find a way to get through," he says. "The only difference is that there
might be fewer of us left out here when the drought finally breaks."

------------------------
"In little more than a year we have gone from enjoying peace
and the most prosperous economy in our history, to a nation
plunged into war, recession and fear. This is a nation being
transformed before our very eyes."

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