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Personal
Story by Tiffany Baldock
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LIFE, LIBERTY AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS
by Tiffany Baldock
As a young girl I dreamed of raising my children the way I had been raised.
Lots of open air and green grass to run and play on. Riding horses, chasing
butterflies, watching the newborn wildlife get its first glimpse of earth.
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Bryce, Age 10
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Well, I thought I was going to be able to fulfill that dream, just like many
other kids raised on ranching. Until now.
The blessings this way of life bestows on those tough enough to live it are
immense and too numerous to list. It is a way of life that most people can
not understand. It is getting up at all hours of the day and night to do
chores that must be done, no matter what the weather conditions. It is
working long hours in the hot dry sun putting up hay for the cattle or
doctoring sick calves when it is -40 outside. It is having your children
work beside you, not because they have to, but because to them it is pure
fun. It is watching the new fawns chasing their mothers through a fresh cut
alfalfa field on a sunny June day. It is hearing the killdeer lure you away
from their nests. It is watching a bald eagle circle over head in search of
sustenance. The list goes on and on.
What most people don't realize is that farming and ranching is more than a
way to earn a living. It is about a love of nature and what it provides us
all. Farming and ranching is about a love of plants and animals and a deep
need to nurture the environment and those creatures in it. Farming and
ranching is about a love of God and an understanding that we must take care
of what he has given us all.
I live in a little basin in Southern Oregon that is filled with beauty and
controversy. Here, the controversy is water and who should have it. Until
recently, the farmers and ranchers were the first priority. This was a
promise made to the farmers and ranchers here when the government decided to
purchase their small irrigation project and expand it greatly. The farmers
and ranchers agreed and the government agreed to provide irrigation water
FOREVER.
After World War I and World War II the government invited veterans to enter
their names into a lottery drawing to homestead land that the government had
reclaimed. The land was formerly marshes, shallow lakes and sand dunes.
Most of the area was covered with either water or sagebrush. After the
reclamation, the area turned into an oasis. The land was very fertile and
despite a short growing season, a large variety of crops have been grown ever
since. Until now.
Many families moved here when they were awarded land in the lottery drawing.
They were/are very patriotic, proud people who have worked very hard and have
been able to experience the American Dream. Until now.
April 2001 will forever be etched in the memory of every citizen of the
Klamath Basin. Every man, woman and child will be affected by the actions
that have taken place. While there are several viewpoints to the issue, it
can not be denied that everyone will feel an impact of what has occurred.
This basin has endured many hard times, and will more than likely figure out
a way to survive this one too. The people who live here are a very
determined people. It doesn't matter what nationality they are or where they
came here from, because we are all in this together no matter how we feel
about the issue.
April 2001 the Bureau of Reclamation announced that for the first time since
the inception of the Klamath Project, project irrigators would receive no
irrigation water. The news was shocking and heartbreaking. The government
had once again denied its own contractual agreement with the people. Why we
expected anything but, I am uncertain. After all, the government has broken
many, many agreements with the people of this nation before. The American
Indians are only the first to come to mind.
We have a local tribe, they are in the fight too. Fighting for their right
to the water, so is the environmental movement, the fisherman, and several
others. I agree that there are issues that need to be dealt with, one of
which is water quality. And we are no doubt enduring a drought. The problem
is the science (if you can call it that) that this decision was based on.
Two biological OPINIONS were used to determine that the basin could not
provide enough water to satisfy the needs of all interested parties. So, the
farmers lost out. There are people in this nation who are applauding this
decision and they shouldn't be. We are only the one of the many areas of
this country under attack from the government and the ESA. Millions of
people and numerous industries are under attack.
While I understand the need to protect species that are endangered of
becoming extinct, I don't think that the farmers should be the only ones to
take the blame and pay the price. If the Coho salmon in the Klamath River
are endangered then, why can people fish for them? If the Lost River and
Shortnose suckers are endangered, then why are they allowed to be used for
ceremony? If enough is known about these species to put them on the
Endangered Species List, then why can't we find out how many are necessary to
get them delisted? If enough is known about the necessary habitat for these
species, then why are we not developing ways to increase and improve the
habitat?
There are common sense solutions to the problems at hand. The problem is the
government agencies involved would rather take a one species approach and
ignore the factors leading to this issue. If these species are endangered at
all.
Nature has the ability to adapt in ways that we will never be able to
reproduce. That is one of the beauties of the world. Aren't there natural
population fluctuations in every species? Aren't drought and fire two natural
ways of determining that age old saying, "Survival of the Fittest?"
If these species have been able to survive for nearly 100 years of the
Klamath Project, I honestly don't think one more will remove them from the
face of the earth.
My ten year old son summarized the feelings of the Agricultural community
very well recently. He said, "Mom, you and Dad have always taught us to work
hard and be proud to be farmers. I used to be proud to live in America. Now
I am not."
Tiffany Baldock
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