Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation for DWR personnel of significant news articles and comment
November 7, 2008
1. Top Item -
Calif. drought forces cattle ranchers to downsize
Associated Press – 11/7/08
The parched, yellow pastures on Joe Gonzales' cattle ranch attest to the severity of a dry spell that is devastating the economic fortunes of many of the state's beef producers.
Gonzales, who normally runs 500 cows on his 2,000-acre spread about 30 miles south of San Jose, cut his herd by half over the past year and may have to sell more if the drought persists.
"When there's no rain, there's no grass," said Gonzales, 65. "As the drought continues, you have to either continue to feed your cattle or sell them. ... It's the worst I've seen it in more than 30 years."
During most dry years,
"Cattle producers in the state are facing some serious management decisions," said Matt Byrne, executive vice president of the California Cattlemen's Association. "When you're counting on something from Mother Nature, it's always a risky business."
The number of beef cows on
The drought has also hurt out-of-state ranchers who normally bring their cattle to graze on
"Six months from now, there's not going to be the flow of animals out of the system, so you're going to see prices go up," said Alex Avery, research director of the Hudson Institute's Center for Global Food Studies in
In
In the first eight months of this year, state officials say, rangeland losses made up $95 million of the estimated $260 million in drought-related agricultural losses.
A recent federal report found that 95 percent of the state's rangelands are in "poor" or "very poor" condition.
"We've been through droughts before, but it's been a long time since we've gone through a drought as severe as this," said John Smythe, executive director of the U.S Department of Agriculture Farm Services Agency in
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a statewide drought in May after the state recorded two years of below-average rainfall, a sharp reduction in
The drought has drained many reservoirs, left lawns and golf courses brown, stranded fish in dried out creeks and forced homeowners and businesses to cut their water usage. It also contributed to an unprecedented wildfire season that scorched hundreds of thousands of acres of forest and rangeland this year.
In rural
Wayne Farrell, 59, and his partner usually run about 200 cows on their
"If we were to have another year like this, I would probably be out of business," Farrell said. "I would like to stay in it until I'm so old that I can't do it anymore, but economics plays a big part of this. If you can't make money doing something, you have to quit."
The cattle sell-off has brought a short-term spike in business for Jim Warren, who has run a livestock auction since 1975, but it leaves fewer animals to sell in the future. He said many ranchers have liquidated their entire herds and left the business.
"Economically, this is the worst I've seen it by a long ways,"
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gkSXAySPQFE2pfCRjdTrFX1T3ZOwD94A4C800
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