iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Texas Rice Farms Likely To Not Receive Water Due To Drought

Texas Rice

First Posted: 02/21/2012 3:03 am Updated: 02/21/2012 8:26 am

LISSIE, Texas (AP) — Five generations of Ronald Gertson's family have tilled the claylike soil of southeast Texas to grow rice, confident that no matter how fickle Mother Nature was, there would be one constant: water to irrigate their crop.

Until now.

For the first time since Gertson's great-grandfather made his way from Denmark through Kansas to the flat, coastal area south of Houston, his family faces the likelihood officials won't release water from two Austin-area lakes into the rivers and canals they use for irrigation.

Thousands of farmers in Texas' rice-producing region are likely to be affected by action taken in response to one of the most severe droughts in state history. With water management agencies implementing emergency plans never used before, the Lower Colorado River Authority is widely expected to announce March 1 that it will not release water to rice farmers in three counties.

"This is the very first time this has happened," Gertson said. "Rice irrigation was here before LCRA ever existed."

Texas usually produces about 5 percent of the nation's rice. Production also is dropping this year in the other five major rice-growing states, including No. 1 Arkansas, as farmers are pressed by rising production costs and dropping prices.

Gertson said he can grow about a third of his rice with groundwater. If he pushes it, he might get about 45 percent of the acres he normally plants. But he and other farmers are already looking at what they can do to cut costs and make it through what's clearly going to be a hard year.

The three counties unlikely to receive irrigation water — Wharton, Colorado and Matagorda — are some of the poorest in the state, with poverty levels above the national average. Typically, they account for 35 to 45 percent of the 160,000 to 200,000 acres normally dedicated to rice farming in Texas.

Many farmers in the region alternate between growing rice and ranching, but those with cattle sold off much of their livestock last year as the drought parched rangeland and pushed up hay prices. That leaves them with few alternatives now.

Gertson and thousands of other farmers have started preparing for the worst. They're sifting through insurance papers, trying to figure out how to claim an unprecedented crop failure. They believe insurance will cover 20 percent to 25 percent of their lost sales, about $1,400 per acre.

But many of their costs will be the same this year as in ones without drought: fuel, monthly loan payments on combines and rent on land they might not even get to farm.

"We've cut back just about everything we can," said Billy Hefner, who has an 1,100-acre rice farm and ranch in Garwood that provides the sole income for him and his two sons.

Hefner can irrigate 90 acres with well water. He might be able to get water for another 400 or so acres because his farm has senior water rights along the river, and LCRA could decide to provide 40 percent to 45 percent of the water farmers with senior rights need. In the best case, only half of his business will be affected by LCRA's decision, he said.

"Or I could be down to the 90 acres," he added, pulling his baseball cap over his sun weathered face.

Gertson, who has a crop spraying operation along with farming and ranching 8,000 acres with his four brothers, has already told one of his two pilots he won't be needed this year and dropped the $50,000-a-year insurance policy on one of the two planes. Normally, the family business would apply fertilizer and pesticides to about 15,000 acres in the area. Instead, it's preparing to cover 3,500.

Determined to keep the flight service's six other employees working, Gertson's family has started preparing pipelines used in underground water wells since the drought has spurred drilling. They're also doing maintenance and other work usually done in the offseason or that hasn't been gotten to in years.

"We're not gonna turn anyone loose," Gertson said. "We're going to handle this one year at a time. We can't even think of this going on for two years."

To turn the tide in Texas, Mother Nature needs to dump 5 to 8 inches of rain in the Hill Country to produce about 32.6 billion gallons of runoff into the region's lakes, LCRA meteorologist Bob Rose said. It's possible, but Rose "wasn't very optimistic" about it happening soon.

The weather is still being influenced by La Nina, a cooling of the central Pacific that usually causes below average rainfall in Texas and other parts of the Southwest, he said.

With continued drought, Gertson said he worries about losing the rice-dependent businesses whose losses won't be covered by crop insurance: rice dryers, truckers, seed growers and storage facilities.

"Their facilities are gone," he said. "We've got some rice dryers in the area who were just barely making it to begin with."

Dick Ottis, president and chief executive of Rice Belt Warehouse in El Campo, said his rice drying and storage business is big enough to weather a bad year. But he has laid off about 15 of his 60 workers and is preparing to shut down one or two of his five plants.

"The $64,000 question out there is, how do we do this?" Ottis said. "Because we've never been here before. We have never seen the situation with water being this bad."

___

Online:

US Rice Producers Association: http://www.usriceproducers.com/

___

Follow Plushnick-Masti on Twitter at https://twitter.com//RamitMastiAP

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

LISSIE, Texas (AP) — Five generations of Ronald Gertson's family have tilled the claylike soil of southeast Texas to grow rice, confident that no matter how fickle Mother Nature was, there would be ...
LISSIE, Texas (AP) — Five generations of Ronald Gertson's family have tilled the claylike soil of southeast Texas to grow rice, confident that no matter how fickle Mother Nature was, there would be ...
Filed by Joanna Zelman  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 87
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
05:24 PM on 02/22/2012
"We've never seen the situation with water this bad."

Those were the words of Dick Otis. I am not surprised, however. Extreme weather patterns are the by-product of global warming. We may be in for a respite, but the evidence is undeniable. The more carbon emissions we pump into the air, the more extreme weather we will see.

Perhaps now is the time to get gasoline from algae, kelp or switch grass, which grows on soil unfit for farming. We must go green now.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
sabelmouse
i love to tumble , ask me why .
08:44 AM on 02/22/2012
i always imagine texas as arid. rice ?
photo
julieintx
The Typo Queen.
10:09 AM on 02/22/2012
Texas is the size of France. The western part is arid. The eastern part gets 50" per year, on average. Last year the entire region was in drought though.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
sabelmouse
i love to tumble , ask me why .
11:13 AM on 02/22/2012
ok. thanks.
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
11:17 AM on 02/22/2012
If this drought lasts for 20 years, then they'll believe in AGW. The Bedouins would love to move to this place then. Sand storms would be sand blasting everything. But North Texas will most likely be having floods and tornados next year instead cuz AGW is also about extreme weather.
BlackbirdHighway
Brawndo's got electrolites!
07:13 AM on 02/22/2012
How hot has it been in Texas? June of 2011 not only broke records for heat in June in Texas, it was the hottest of any month in any US state in recorded history.

Then July broke the brand new all time record that was just set in June. Then August broke the brand new all time record that was just set in July.

Last year was also the driest in Texas history.

Hansen's 1981 climate paper predicted that Texas would see severe drought and heat in the 21st century. Others say that climate change is a hoax and that more CO2 makes the plants grow better.

The state is now seeing severe heatwaves and drought and the plants are not growing better. Figure it out people.
photo
julieintx
The Typo Queen.
10:10 AM on 02/22/2012
We are having a very wet winter, thank goodness. NOAA says the drought is not linked to AGW.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
iknowscottyknows
07:47 PM on 02/22/2012
Don't you know you can't use local weather to prove or disprove global warming?

Sheesh. Read the memo.
05:21 AM on 02/22/2012
Get used to it...these catastrophes are but the beginning of climate chaos.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
03:10 AM on 02/22/2012
Geez, expect at least a few replies from my posts, from either side. Too much for some I suppose. Will check back later. This has to be a big deal for at least rice farmers in TX. I would like to know who designed and paid for the canals and ditches to bring the water to their clayey rice paddies. And where that water comes from and about water rights. Water rights are big issues in Montana.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
03:01 AM on 02/22/2012
Water is precious in the west. Explains why The Carlyle Group has managed to buy our towns water system in Missoula, MT. We have a huge freshwater aquifer fed by the Clark Fork, Bitterroot, and Blackfoot Rivers. Actually moves 3 feet a day which is fast for an aquifer. And it's not very deep under our valley, and you can drink it without any treatment. So why did big old multinational investors with the Bush family and Saudi investors want this water? Good question................We'll see. But it can't be good for us.
photo
julieintx
The Typo Queen.
10:56 AM on 02/22/2012
I'm always amused by and complaint about the Carlyle group the fails to mention all the Democrats involved with it. You could also mention Republicans like GW Bush and Rumsfeld who hurt Carlyle investments by canceling the Crusader.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
01:44 AM on 02/22/2012
Farmers have always had to deal with weather. It's always either to wet to plant or doesn't rain enough. In the semi-arid regions of the west it's even more unpredictable. 30 yr averages are always used to say what is "normal" but in reality these areas are only "normal" maybe 2 or 3 yrs out of 10. Most years are below "normal" for precip, 1 or 2 are above, sometimes well above, maybe, the rest are drier. Those who live in the east half of the US don't likely know this.
photo
julieintx
The Typo Queen.
10:56 AM on 02/22/2012
True.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
01:21 AM on 02/22/2012
Western MT, like other western states, have a serious problem with bark beetles killing thousands of acres of forest. Lot of griping about not enough logging. But the housing market, new construction, has tanked. Who's going to buy the logs? Bark beetles are natural, always been here, but need -20 temps for a few days in the winter to keep them in check. Haven't had those temps for several years, along with drier summers, earlier springs, etc. But the cut every tree crowd is sure griping.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Theo White
02:05 AM on 02/22/2012
Wrote a term paper in 1975 for a forestry class I was in on the Western pine beetle, Dendroctonus brevicomis LeConte, that was infesting the Sierra National Forest where I resided. This was during severe drought onditions. There is an old saying that "Mother Nature Always Bats Last". Retired as a Forest Service road engineer yet a one time advertisement still rings ture, "It's not nice to try to fool Mother Nature". The only Climate Change hoax that exists is from the deniers.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
02:26 AM on 02/22/2012
So, where did you spend your career? My uncle did engineering for FS roads at one time out of Kalispell, MT. He told me how they used to skid the trees out during the winter right down the creek bottoms. They knew it was wrong then but it was the way it was done. Thanks for the reply. I sort of bombarded the comments on this as I have a lot of experience and real world knowledge. Also did some ag engineering surveying and design in my early years. And love to engage deniers and other no nothings that post. Without them HP comments would be boring.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
01:16 AM on 02/22/2012
Where I grew up, for decades we had tons of snow. My dad took pictures, even old home movies of snow plowed along the roads, it was amazing, lots and lots of snow, and I remember some of that. That area doesn't get much snow anymore. Never could grow winter wheat, it would freeze out from the -30 to -40 degree winters. Now they can. Where I live in a western MT valley they used to get a lot of snow. Not much anymore, spring snowmelt is now about 3 weeks earlier. Climate, not just the weather, is changing people.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
01:03 AM on 02/22/2012
Grew up on a dryland farm in north central Montana my grandfather from Denmark homesteaded, an area that got maybe 14 inches of total precip in a year including snow. Mapped soils and worked with farmers and ranchers my whole life. Still support USDA subsidies for the average family farm as gov policies have supported a cheap food policy for decades. Most family farms had to get bigger to survive. Yet most farmers and ranchers west of the 20 inch precip zone in the north part of the US and those in that zone in TX and other southwest states vote republican. Irrigation projects designed and paid for by taxpayers, federal grazing leases, etc. have supported these families for generations. I'm older now and my sympathy and support for them is waning............
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
10:33 AM on 02/22/2012
Aren't there some species of rice that can be dryland farmed.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Just4theHalibut
12:42 PM on 02/22/2012
The development of drought and salinity-tolerant rice is a big issue in the genetically-modified food industry. Depends if the consumers will stand for it.
photo
julieintx
The Typo Queen.
11:03 AM on 02/22/2012
In West Texas we don't have federal grazing leases, and very little in the way of government irrigation projects. Most our land is privately owned and used for grazing, not farming, and the water comes from private wells.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
snewell
10:58 PM on 02/21/2012
ALL turf grass lawns should be totally banned in Texas until further notice.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
bbrecht
"pray for the dead, fight like hell for the liv
08:11 PM on 02/21/2012
Shouldn't rice be grown in a naturally wet area?
photo
julieintx
The Typo Queen.
10:14 AM on 02/22/2012
East Texas is wet.
07:15 PM on 02/21/2012
This whole situation is due to mismanagement and special interests upstream .. last year the Sierra Nevada's got enormous, record snowfall .. yet the reservoirs aren't filling up.

LCRA should just pay the farmers for this years loss, the precedent here is how Black Farmers who didn't even farm .. were paid off to the tune of billions due to loan discrimination years ago.
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
06:59 PM on 02/21/2012
If that 200,000 acres were used to produce solar energy, how much energy would that be? How many homes would that supply? Could cows, bunnies, sheep, and goats graze in between these solar panels to keep the grass naturally mowed? What would a Texas tornado do to this solar farm? Are there tornado proof solar panels?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
01:06 AM on 02/22/2012
Now that's just a dumb argument. What would a TX tornado do to an oil drilling rig?
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
11:07 AM on 02/22/2012
It wasn't an argument, but rather a question. My guess is that only a few hundred acres of solar panels would have been destroyed out of the 200,000 acres whereby the remaining ones would still be producing. The damaged ones would be recycled and replaced within a few months. If this drought never ends, solar energy could be the only option for these farmers generating income. Fresh water pipelines coming down from Canada might help. If Texas is windy enough, windmill farms could make them some money. Solar could be used to distill fresh water from ocean water?
photo
julieintx
The Typo Queen.
11:10 AM on 02/22/2012
We had a solar water well panel badly damaged by straight line wind, probably a microburst. It also blew out a picture window in our house. It was repaired though. Most of our wells are run off electricity from the grid, or wind mills.

Solar arrays differ. the technology varies as to how much water they use, and what activities can be undertaken around them. We almost signed a solar lease, but we would've had to keep cattle out of there. I suppose bunnies, and other small animals could use that area, but large animus like cattle, elk and antelope couldn't have used it.

The solar arrays on federal land in the Mojave are just bulldozing everything and killing endangered species. It's a scandal. They're killing endangered species in hopes of changing the weather. Appalling.
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
11:32 AM on 02/22/2012
I believe that cattle may graze around windmills. The Japanese now have a windmill that produces three times as much power called the "Wind Lens". Perhaps Texans could just build super windmills everywhere and graze cattle among their windmills. They'd need to build a "Smart Grid" to make windmill power economical. Water pipelines from the North could irrigate their cattle enterprises.
photo
julieintx
The Typo Queen.
12:14 PM on 02/22/2012
Animus=animals

I need to check if if I can turn off autocomplete. Sorry about all the horrible typos in all my comments today.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LeLoup
Res ipsa loquitur, ergo tace!
04:33 PM on 02/21/2012
"We have never seen the situation with water being this bad."

If one examine the Science of AGW, this is only the beginning and it'll get much worse. Now, if people prefer to believe the Heartland Institute or Exxon Mobil minions...see how well it's gonna work for you.
photo
julieintx
The Typo Queen.
06:13 PM on 02/21/2012
Scientists say this drought is not connected to AGW.

one reason their water situation is so bad now is that the state is growing so fast that ag competes with millions more people than it used to, plus now we try to allocate some water for the estuaries in the Gulf.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
02:53 AM on 02/22/2012
What you say is likely true about the water use and allocations. Climate scientists are now reluctant to say much how todays or yesterdays weather is related. They've been bashed to much by, well I'm sure you know who. But there really is only so much water to go around, especially in the west. Do they give it to ag, to cities, to fracking companies? Just not enough for everyone. But in semi-arid west it's always been like that. Whiskey's for drinking, water's for fighting.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
10:37 AM on 02/22/2012
They learned nothing from California did they-you can build all that expensive plumbing to move the water around and build lotsa houses and create lotsa farms but no matter what you do reach a limit.
Gotta get to designing an economic system for a finite planet

It's not rocket science.