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2001 Comments
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Rain
won't end water woes
Failed to execute CGI : Win32 Error Code = 3 "It sure helps alleviate the demand, but it doesn't really change the drought," said Deschutes County Watermaster Kyle Gorman. The quarter-inch of rain that fell last week actually came at a bad time for hay growers, many of whom had hay down and raked or in bails. Moisture is not good for hay, quickly degrading its quality and marketability. Joyce Burdick of Squaw Creek Irrigation District said that having some water on the ground is giving irrigators "a little breather" but it doesn't do much to make up for a reduction to 30 percent of water delivery. That's what farmers are facing, with stream flows low and reservoirs practically empty. The dry year is expected to take a toll on hay growers. "I don't think anybody is going to get three cuttings this year," Burdick said.
Failed to execute CGI : Win32 Error Code = 3 The rain is just a fleeting memory as far as firefighters are concerned. "We're getting to the time of year where the sun comes out and the afternoon wind just wicks the moisture away," said Sisters Ranger District fire manager Mark Rapp. "The effects of any precipitation we get are short-lived." Rapp was pleased enough to be headed into the Fourth of July holiday with a little moisture on the ground, but he emphasized that peak fire season precautions are still necessary. And, he noted, fireworks of any kind are illegal on National Forest lands. By mid-week, fire conditions were expected to be just as dangerous as they were before. "Our guard's still up, for sure," Rapp said.
Failed to execute CGI : Win32 Error Code = 3 "We won't be out of the drought this summer," Gorman said. "It will take next winter's precip and snowpack to creep out of the drought ... hopefully."
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