Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Project irrigation:
A primer
Water from
Upper Klamath Lake is recycled through a canal system before
being returned to the Klamath River
by JOEL
ASCHBRENNER, Herald and News 4/19/12
H&N photo by Joel Aschbrenner
Mark Stuntebeck, manager of the Klamath
Irrigation District,
stands near the Klamath Reclamation Project’s C Canal. With
a channel that flows backward, recirculated water and
hundreds of miles of canals, the Project is a complex and
often misunderstood system, he said.
The Klamath Reclamation
Project is a complex and often misunderstood system, said
Mark Stuntebeck, manager of the Klamath Irrigation District.
Many Klamath Basin
residents, even some irrigators, think getting water to
farmers and ranchers is as easy as pushing a button to open
the A Canal headgates at Upper Klamath Lake. Not the case,
Stuntebeck said.
The district must make
precise adjustments daily to ensure irrigators have enough
water for their crops, but not so much that water goes to
waste. In years like this, when a drought threatens to limit
irrigators’ water supply, conserving water is critical,
Stuntebeck said.
Project irrigators get
whatever water is left after certain amounts are retained in
Upper Klamath Lake and sent downriver for endangered sucker
and salmon, respectively.
Before the early 1990s,
when endangered species protections first began to limit
irrigators’ water supply, many Project irrigators knew
little about the canal system, Stuntebeck said. Today,
there’s more interest in how the system works and making it
more efficient, he said.
From lake
to farmer to river: How Project water flows
Here’s a look at how
water gets from Upper Klamath Lake to producers’ fields:
• Most of the
Klamath Reclamation Project’s water flows through the A
Canal headgates just above Link River Dam, though some is
taken downstream from the Klamath River at the Lost River
Diversion Channel. The headgates can be adjusted remotely
from the Klamath Irrigation District office.
• Each evening,
producers tell the Klamath Irrigation District if they will
need water the next day. KID also provides water for the
Enterprise, Pine Grove, Shasta View, Malin, Van Brimmer and
Klamath Basin Improvement irrigation districts.
• Ditch riders, district
employees who each maintain and operate canals for about 300
producers, then begin making adjustments so water will
arrive where needed. They use a series of “checks” and
“spills” to manage the water flow. “Checks” are like small
dams with slots in them, said Mark Stuntebeck, manager of
the Klamath Irrigation District; ditch riders manually place
or remove boards in the slots to adjust the flow. When water
is too high in the canal it flows into a “spill” structure,
where water can be held for later use, he said.
“Ditch riding is a
learned skill over time,” Stuntebeck said. “There isn’t
exactly a book out there that tells you what to do.”
• Much of the water
that drains off producers’ fields flows into the Lost River,
but at that point it hasn’t finished its irrigation duties
yet. The Lost River flows from Clear Lake Reservoir through
the Langell and Poe valleys, around the Henley area and
Merrill before dead-ending in Tule Lake. Tulelake Irrigation
District producers use the Lost River water to irrigate
their potatoes,
horseradish and other crops.
• Water from the
Tulelake area — a natural marsh — must be pumped uphill
through Sheepy Ridge to Lower Klamath
Lake. From there it
flows to the Klamath River via the Klamath Straits Drain.
But not all of the Lost
River’s water makes it to Tule Lake. Some is sent back to
the Klamath River through the Lost River Diversion Channel,
the canal that flows under Highway 39 just south of Henley
High School.
The diversion channel
may be the Project’s oddest feature. It can flow in either
direction, depending on how high the water is at the Wilson
Dam, where the channel meets the Lost River, Stuntebeck
said.
• Even the water
flowing out of the Project through the diversion channel can
be put to use once more. Pumps can divert water from the
channel south to the Tulelake Irrigation District,
Stuntebeck said.
“There aren’t many
places where you have a canal that flows both ways and you
can use water who knows how many times before dumping it
back in the river,” Stuntebeck said.
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Page Updated: Friday April 20, 2012 02:36 AM Pacific
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