14 CapitalPress.com April 22, 2016 Southern Idaho grower raising hay with buried drip By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press RAFT RIVER, Idaho — Farmer Todd Garrett believes water has become a precious enough commodity in south- east Idaho to justify his in- vestment in costly buried drip irrigation at a commercial scale. On April 15, Garrett fin- ished installing drip lines buried a foot deep and spaced 36 inches apart on an 80- acre field. He’ll plant alfalfa this season, but Garrett said the spacing of the drip lines makes drip potato production a future possibility. He’s seeking solutions to address a water shortage within a designated critical area of the Raft River Aqui- fer, knowing he could soon be expected to dry 200 acres irrigated by so-called expan- sion water rights — in which growers who didn’t fully uti- lize groundwater rights years ago were allowed to add new pivots elsewhere. In addition to buried drip, he’ll experiment this sea- son with a pivot dragging John O’Connell/Capital Press Workers on Todd Garrett’s farm in Raft River, Idaho, install drip tape on an 80-acre field in rows buried a foot deep and 36 inches apart. Garrett is experimenting with buried drip and other novel approaches to irrigation to help conserve groundwater. drip tape and Low Elevation Spray Application. LESA, which entails running pivots with low-pressure nozzles dangling about a foot off the ground, was developed by University of Idaho irrigation specialist Howard Neibling and his Washington State University counterpart, Troy Peters. Garrett will use identical water meters on each system, plus a standard pivot with a new irrigation package as a control, to evaluate which option provides the most per-gallon water savings for the money. Each field has sim- ilar soil and will be planted in alfalfa. He’ll host a field day in mid-July, after his second cutting, to share his results. “I want to see what is going to be the most economical for me, the most user-friendly and the most maintenance-friend- ly,” Garrett said. “I wanted to do it in full-scale-production- sized fields so it’s real-world, real-life scenarios.” Based on prior testing, Garrett said buried drip — which recycles unused water in a closed system — should cut his water use by 40 to 60 percent, compared with 15 to 20 percent with LESA and 20 to 25 percent with drag-drip. Garrett said buried drip costs about $2,000 per acre to install, and he’ll likely soon expand to 160 acres, which would equal the capacity of his new buried-drip sediment filtration system. He hopes to lease the buried-drip ripper he purchased to other regional growers installing buried drip, or to custom install for them. Neibling, who will help Garrett evaluate data, ex- plained surface drip systems are widely used in high-val- ue crops, such as mint and onions, in Western Idaho, but buried drip systems are a rarity in the state. In Western Idaho, Neibling said rodents have posed an obstacle to bur- ied drip, and he anticipates LESA and drag-drip will pro- vide Garrett the best return for his investment. Neibling said all three op- tions should provide ample water savings, but growers will likely adopt “the easiest option to install and manage and the cheapest, particularly because it’s something they’re used to.” Butte Irrigation, the Israeli drip-irrigation manufacturer Netafim and buried-drip ex- pert Jerry Funck, with Pro- fessional Water Management Associates in Lubbock, Tex- as, are also helping Garrett set up the trials. Garrett traveled to Lubbock to see growers’ water-efficient systems and was impressed that many bur- ied-drip systems were still working well after more than 15 years. He’ll run rodenti- cide through his drip lines to prevent chewing, and herbi- cide to keep roots from grow- ing into lines, and he’ll use an additive to avoid calcium de- posits. He’ll limit tillage to no deeper than 4 inches. Funck said his state has about 600,000 acres of bur- ied drip, and they’ve boosted yields while curbing water and power use. He said sys- tems also precisely deliver fertilizer exactly where crops need it. “I think it’s ripe for drip in Eastern Idaho,” Funck said. Kathy Keatley Garvey/UC-Davis photo Kathy Keatley Garvey/UC-Davis photo Ryan Anenson of the Tremont 4-H Club, Dixon, Calif., sews a “Cuddle Me Close” blanket. Wyatt Morris, 6, of the Vaca Valley 4-H Club Kathy Keatley Garvey/UC-Davis photo in Vacaville, Calif., learns how to sew a “Cuddle Me Close” blanket from Erica Lull 4-H leader Audrey Ritchey of the Tremont 4-H of the Tremont 4-H Club, Dixon, Calif. Club, Dixon, Calif., shows Lillie Sheppard of the Vaca Valley 4-H Club, Vacaville, Calif., how to make a “Cuddle Me Close” cover-up. By KATHY KEATLEY GARVEY University of California-Davis DIXON, Calif. — You can’t get any closer than “Cuddle Me Close.” It’s a soft, flannel blanket or cover-up that provides privacy to breastfeeding mothers and their newborns, but it’s much more than that. It’s a 4-H project launched in 2013 by longtime Dixon 4-H leader Audrey Ritchey, an X-ray technician at the North Bay Medical Center in Fairfield. It helps promote breastfeeding and its many health and bonding benefits. To date, Solano County 4-H’ers, under Ritchey’s direction, have sewn 1,000 one-yard blankets for the new moms at North Bay. “I was told that one mom started to cry when she got the cover-up,” Ritchey said. “She stated that it was the only thing she had for her baby. “Two years ago, a Girl Scout troop donated $250 from their cookie sales. Many nurses have donated their Christmas gift cards to the project.” Ritchey, a co-community leader of the Tremont 4-H Club in Dixon and vice president of the Solano County 4-H Leaders’ Council, recalled that “three years ago I thought that 4-H was missing an opportunity to share the 4-H program with new moms at North Bay.” She contacted a director at North Bay and learned about “a baby-friendly program that encourages new moms to breastfeed and have skin-to-skin contact with their newborns.” So Ritchey, along with some 4-H members and their parents, gave birth, so to speak, to the “Cuddle Me Close” cover-up project using her own pattern and sewing machines. “The five youth currently in our service-learning project make many blankets each time we meet,” she said. Many other 4-H’ers of all ages in Solano County make them during countywide events or at home, she said. Ritchey applied for and received a Revolution of Responsibility grant. They’ve toured the North Bay Medical Center. They’ve given presentations at the hospital and at club and community events. The project is closely linked to the 4-H Pledge — “I pledge my head to clearer thinking; my heart to greater loyalty; my hands to larger service; and my health to better living — for my club, my community, my country and my world.” Ritchey says the youngsters in her project not only learn how to sew, but learn to connect with one another, learn to budget and fulfill a public service need. Studies show that breast milk contains antibodies that help babies fight off viruses and bacteria and lowers the risk of allergies, ear infections, respiratory illnesses and bouts of diarrhea. Breastfed babies have a lower risk of childhood obesity. Ritchey said the project “promotes mother-baby bonding through skin-to-skin contact, supports positive and physical and mental development, is healthier for mother and child and is inexpensive in comparison to formula.” “As long as I have youth that want to do this I will keep making them,” Ritchey vows. In addition to the sewing project, Ritchey teaches a number of countywide 4-H projects, including poultry, rabbits and cavies (guinea pigs). For information on the Solano County 4-H Program, access http://cesolano.ucanr.edu/ or contact Valerie Williams at vawilliams@ucanr.edu or (707) 784-1319. For donations of fabric or funds to the “Cuddle Me Close” 4-H project, contact Audrey Ritchey at ritcheysribbits@gmail.com 17-2/#13