KLAMATH BASIN – The Oregon Coastal Salmon
fishermen don’t believe the environmentalists who claim irrigating
fields in Klamath Basin destroyed this year’s coastal fisheries.
Last week fishermen, including several members of the Oregon Salmon
Commission, met with Klamath Basin irrigators to tour the Klamath
Project.
Members of the commission are fishermen
or processors appointed by Oregon Department of Agriculture.
This was the latest in a series of
meetings with farmers and fishermen who are major stakeholders in
Klamath Basin water issues. Dick Carleton worked hard developing
relationships with coastal fishermen, promoting dialogue and organizing
this event.
Farmers and fishermen thank the Oregon
Department of Agriculture for sponsoring the tour.
With direction from the Klamath
Fisheries Management Council, NOAA Fisheries substantially curtailed
this year’s commercial salmon fishing season on 700 miles of Pacific
Coast.
The Council projected a short run of fall chinook salmon in the Klamath
River, chinook that did not spawn in a hatchery. There is no genetic
difference between hatchery-spawned fish and natural-spawned fish.
Similarly, there is no genetic difference between back-seat conceived
and bedroom-conceived babies. Even though other tributaries and rivers
may have record runs of salmon this year, the reduced season is based
only on their guess on the Klamath natural-spawned fall-run Chinook.
Environmentalists, tribes and left-wing
politicians blame the Klamath Project for the fishing season being
decreased, and are advocating dam removal and downsizing agriculture to
fix the river.
Farmers presented a video to the
fishermen explaining the Klamath Project plumbing with its dams,
reservoirs, lakes and canals. Some of the guests were Senator Doug
Whitsett, John Snider from Congressman Greg Walden’s office, Dr Harry
Carlton from U.C. Davis Extension Office, Dr. Ken Rykbost, retired OSU
Extension Office supervisor.
Whitsett said, "Much like the Klamath Basin irrigators endured in 2001,
the coastal salmon fishers are experiencing a perfect regulatory storm
not caused by their actions and beyond their control. The combination of
prolonged salmon hatchery mismanagement, a specious definition of
'natural' salmon that defies a federal court order, sea lion predation
at the mouth of the Klamath River and C. Shasta parasitism in the
mainstem Klamath River has resulted in the financially devastating
closure of 700 miles of the coastal salmon fishery. Like the Klamath
irrigators, the Coastal fishers have met the enemy and it is their own
government. These independent businessmen donated heavily in 2001 to
help the irrigators in their time of financial disaster. We must do no
less for them in their time of need."
Rykbost explained Klamath River
hydrology and pointed out the flaws in Dr. Tom Hardy’s studies. These
studies were used to form the biological opinion that controls
irrigation water allocations and river flow requirements.
“Hardy Flow Regimes requested for
summer months could not be met in a significant number of years even if
the Klamath Project received no diversions from Upper Klamath Lake or
Klamath River,” according to Rykbost’s power point presentation. It may
be viewed at
www.klamathbasincrisis.org/science/04watershedken032304.ppt
Hardy’s studies are flawed and the
National Research Council found them to be dysfunctional regarding
Klamath River fish needs, however the Bureau of Indian Affairs has hired
Dr. Hardy again to create a Hardy 3 report to control Klamath River
flows.
Fishermen tour the Klamath Project
Tours included Upper Klamath Lake, Dick
Carleton’s well, Anderson Rose Dam, D Plant, Sheepy Ridge overlooking
Tulelake and Lower Klamath, and Straits Drain.
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Tulelake Irrigation
District Manager Earl Donosky led the group through D Plant, which
pumps 80,000 acre feet of water through a 6,000’ by 10’ tunnel
through Sheepy Ridge. He explained that when Reclamation turned
Tule Lake into farmland, they needed to get rid of excess water so
they built the tunnel to send water from the farms to Lower Klamath
Refuge and on into the Klamath River for Pacific Power to generate
electricity. The irrigators pay the entire expense of this pumping
station which costs $40,000 per year to operate. If Pacific Power
raises power bills to tariff rate, the cost will be one million
dollars per year.
Photo: Klamath
Water Users Association President Steve Kandra, left, addresses
fishermen at D Plant, which was built by the Bureau of Reclamation
to pump excess water out of the Tule Lake basin so land could be
farmed. The square on Sheepy Ridge to his left is the tunnel that
transports 80,000 acre feet of water every year to lower Klamath
Refuge and into Klamath River. |
| The group viewed Tule Lake and Lower
Klamath farmland and refuges from Sheepy Ridge. Steve Kandra and Bob
Gasser from Klamath Water Users Association described the Reclamation
process, pointing out the large area of the former shallow Tule Lake.
They explained Project benefits and efficiency. The historic lake
evaporated more water than is currently used by the Klamath Project.
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The latest successful farming process
is “walking wetlands,” a cooperative venture with Fish and Wildlife
Service and farmers where they rotate farmland and wetlands on the
refuges every three years. This benefits farms and wildlife.
Farms supply more than 50 percent of
the feed for waterfowl in the Klamath Basin Pacific Flyway.
| Bob Flowers showed the
group Straits Drain, where all the water that goes through the D
Plant tunnel and doesn’t evaporate from Lower Klamath Refuge is
returned to Klamath River.
Flowers explained the history of lake levels before the Klamath
Project was built. He said with the current biological opinion,
Klamath water levels and river flows are kept artificially higher
than historic levels, and excessive warm water will kill fish. Water
from springs near Boyle Dam previously cooled the river. Currently
warm shallow Lower Klamath Refuge water is being sent down the
river.
The photo shows
the ferry that used to take people from Laird's Landing to Klamath
Falls. The basin as far as they could see was the historic Klamath
Lake and Lower Klamath Lake before the Klamath Project was built.
Now the excess water from the Project flows down Strait's Drain and
into the Klamath River. |
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Fishermen tell their stories
The fishermen were amazed at the
complex irrigation system and one stated that he felt the designers must
have been geniuses to create such an efficient, beneficial project.
Fisherman Tommie Hockema is not able to fish at all this year. Being
allowed only four days at a time to fish, he said it takes one or two
days to locate the fish. He is forced to travel to distant towns to put
his boat in the water and pay rent, ice and expenses, and the weather is
usually bad one or two of those days. He said that one day of fishing
that’s left does not cover his expenses.
He does not think the Klamath salmon
solution is dam removal, “I don’t see any evidence that if we take out
the dams, it will help anything. Don’t take dams out.”
Hockema said fishermen have put out
salmon hatching boxes at their own expense since 1898, but now Fish and
Wildlife limits them on how many fish they can hatch.
The fishermen were amazed how different
and positive the Klamath Project is compared to green media myths.
Klamath Water Users Executive Director
Greg Addington said, “This was a great opportunity for us to share
information, show them the Klamath Project and dispel some common
myths. They were a great audience and asked good questions. It is
pretty clear to me that farmers and fisherman have more in common than
not. There were commitments from both sides to continue the dialogue and
to search out common ground where we can help one another.” |