Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Ag Today Wednesday, August 28, 2013




Another lawsuit aims to stop Willits bypass work [Santa Rosa Press Democrat]
Environmentalists have filed another lawsuit aimed at stalling work on the Willits bypass. They will be asking a Mendocino County judge on Wednesday for an injunction to stop soil from being moved from timber company property to wetlands Caltrans is filling as part of the $210 million, 5.9-mile Highway 101 bypass around Willits. The bypass, conceived more than five decades ago, has increasingly sparked opposition as it verges on reality. It generated another lawsuit last year and a multitude of protests since construction began early this year.

Kings Co. blocking high-speed rail soil work [Fresno Business Journal]
The Tulare County Board of Supervisors is being asked to approve a permit for California High Speed Rail Authority (CHSRA) engineering contractors to do soil borings — geotechnical sampling — along county rights-of-way, mostly roads. The work is already under way in Fresno County along the expected path of the proposed bullet train, part of the first 29-mile segment that appears closest to breaking ground. A Tulare County staff report says that in Kern County, an application to do the same has been made from the Tulare/Kern county line south to near Bakersfield on what would be the third leg of the Central Valley 120 mile segment. Kings County is a different story.

Growers get cracking on almond harvest [Chico Enterprise Record]
The mostly tranquil back roads of the county will be busier from now until the end of the season. Almond harvest has begun, with shakers, sweepers, and trucks bringing the nuts from orchards to hullers to storage facilities. The No. 2 agricultural crop will soon be followed by rice and walnuts, the other top dogs in the ag economic hierarchy. George Nicolaus started shaking his trees along the Midway about 10 days ago with the Nonpareil almonds raining down to the orchard floor. He talked in the dappled shade of his trees this week as his crew gathered the nuts from tidy rows and filled trucks just down the road. Nonpareils are the earliest to be harvested, and fetch the highest price for growers. The "pollinator trees" nearby were ready for harvest, and when Nicolaus jiggled a thin branch, the nuts fell. But he doesn't want to mix them with the other varieties already on the ground.

Modesto area irrigation districts anticipate sooty aftermath from blaze [Modesto Bee]
Even valley water leaders are talking about the Rim fire. The fire itself doesn't threaten mountain water going to thousands of farmers and hundreds of thousands of Modesto water customers, all of whom rely on Tuolumne River flows. But the aftermath could provoke headaches, Modesto Irrigation District board members heard Tuesday. That's because soot and ash and blackened trees eventually will wash into Don Pedro Reservoir, the main holding pot for the MID and the Turlock Irrigation District, when snow melts next spring. Tons of icky residue from the burned "lunar landscape look of the land," the Stanislaus County Farm Bureau's Tom Orvis told the board, will settle in Don Pedro, leaving less room for its main mission of storing water.

Unanswered questions in the water tunnel analysis [California Focus]
Backers of the water tunnels at the heart of the proposed $25 billion plan for updating and replumbing the Delta of the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers thought they had played a trump card the other day when they presented a 244-page economic impact report. The analysis authored by UC Berkeley economist David Sunding puts the state’s profits from building the tunnels at $84 billion over the first 50 years after the project is completed (http://ht.ly/nEobp). Long before it’s finished, the project would be a jobs bonanza, Sunding asserted, producing 177,000 jobs over 10 years of construction. And yet… there was confirmation, too, that this expensive plan would not produce much more water than comes through the Delta today, somewhere between 4.7 million and 5.2 million acre feet of water yearly. The difference, said Sunding and his sponsor, California Natural Resources Secretary John Laird, is that the flow would be steady – everyone involved knowing from year to year how much water to expect.

Smarter Food: Does big farming mean bad farming? [Washington Post]
In high summer, fields of wildflowers bloom at Tony Thompson’s Minnesota farm: gray-headed coneflowers, phlox and white prairie clover. Those plants are designed to do more than just beautify. They prevent water runoff and block nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorus, from spilling into and polluting the Mississippi River. It’s just the kind of farming that inspires the kind of folks who shop at Whole Foods. That is, until you tell them that Thompson grows 3,000 acres of corn and soybeans from genetically modified seed. That classifies Thompson as an “industrial” farmer — and in today’s debates on agriculture, big usually equals bad. Size, as they say, isn’t everything. As shorthand, the big-equals-bad equation is convenient. But it obscures an inconvenient truth: Plenty of small farmers do not embrace sustainable practices — the Amish farmers I know, for example, love their pesticides — and some big farmers are creative, responsible stewards of the land. “Tony’s is a fantastic operation,” says Helene Murray, executive director of the Minnesota Institute for Sustainable Agriculture. “And he just happens to grow a lot of corn and soybeans.”

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