flusher
Super Member
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2005
- Messages
- 7,555
- Location
- Sacramento
- Tractor
- Getting old. Sold the ranch. Sold the tractors. Moved back to the city.
The Bay Area is experiencing a real gully washer at the moment...
Miracle March?
So far this year we've received a whopping 10" of rainfall (the rainy season goes from 1July to 30 June, it's a Mediterranean climate, cold/wet winters, hot/dry summers, plant in Oct/Nov, mow/bale in early May).
My neighbor just finished baling his 8-acre hayfield (forage mix with a little vetch mixed in). Yield was 430 bales (3-twine, about 100 lb). A little over 2.5 tons per acre. His hayfield is irrigated (mine is not, I'm across the road from him). He watered three times in Jan, about 8 acre-feet total at $41 per. So his field received about 22 inches of rainfall equivalent. The only time during the past 5 years that I got anything close to his results dryland farming was in 2009-10 when we got about 24" of rainfall (Kanota oats). The past two years each had about 15" rainfall for the season.
As of 15 April the irrigation district is rationing water. Price is now about $625 per acre-foot. Consequently the well pumps are running during the night to irrigate the orchards (olive, plums for prunes, almond, English walnut mostly) around here (lower electric power rates at night). Hope the water level in my well doesn't get too depressed.
I noticed yesterday that about 100 acres of olive orchard is being removed in my neighborhood. This may be the beginning of the exodus. These trees produce the jumbo size olives that are hand-picked. The trees look pretty good. But the growers have had problems recently getting enough workers to pick the crop. And now you have the huge jump in irrigation water rates to contend with. Looks like the marginal growers are opting out.