Capital Press EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER Friday, October 29, 2021 Volume 94, Number 44 CapitalPress.com $2.00 Brad Carlson/Capital Press The Malad River near its confl uence with the Snake River outside Bliss, Idaho. WAIT AND SEE Boise River Dams Challis Ontario Boise Area in detail Arrowrock Dam IDAHO Lucky Peak na Dam ke Mountain Home R i v er S Brad Carlson/Capital Press Boise River Watermaster Rex Barrie on Oct. 1 at the Star, Idaho, diversion for the Canyon County Canal. Council Idaho S TAR, Idaho — Rex Bar- rie viewed the Boise River as it crawled under the bridge that straddles it near Star, Idaho. It was Oct. 1 — the fi rst day of the new water year — and Barrie, the Boise River’s water- master, was inspecting diversions that feed water to irrigators. “As the season winds up, demand is less,” Barrie said. “So we can reduce fl ows and keep water in the reservoirs.” Doing that will be crucial to next year’s irrigation season. For 84 the Boise River — and rivers like it around the West — 2022 could be a make-or-break year for irrigated agriculture. This year’s drought and high heat left most of the region’s rivers and reservoirs running low, and farmers have their fi ngers crossed that the winter will bring a lot of rain and a hefty snowpack in the mountains that will replenish them through next summer. The Boise River is fed by three major reservoirs — Anderson Ranch, Arrowrock and Lucky Peak. All of them had above-average Oregon By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press Sn ak Western farmers hope to bounce back from an exceptionally dry year Anderson Ranch Dam Twin Falls See Water, Page 11 Capital Press graphic Farmers skeptical of Inslee-Murray plan, oppose breaching dams By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press Matthew Weaver/Capital Press File Michelle Hennings, executive director of the Washington Association of Wheat Growers, says farmers oppose breaching the Snake River dams. Farmers hope the benefi ts of the Colum- bia-Snake river system don’t get lost as two of Washington’s top Democrats “assess” breaching four dams on the lower Snake River. U.S. Sen. Patty Murray and Gov. Jay Inslee want a joint federal-state process to consider salmon recovery, including poten- tially breaching the four dams on the lower Snake River, long targeted by environmen- tal groups. Murray and Inslee say they will engage in “robust” outreach to communities across the region. Recommendations will be made by July 31. Washington wheat farmers rely on the system to move their crop to customers around the world, said Michelle Hennings, executive director of the Washington Asso- ciation of Wheat Growers. “We remain strongly opposed to any eff orts to breach the lower Snake River dams, which would cause undue harm to the food supply, weaken vital agricultural exports and remove a critical clean energy source — all without necessarily mov- ing the needle on desired salmon recovery eff orts,” Hennings said. “It is critical that wheat growers have a meaningful seat at the table,” she said. The association plans to work directly with Murray, Inslee and the rest of the state’s congressional delegation to “ensure our voice is heard and that removal of the dams remains off the table,” she said. “Time and time again, federal and state eff orts to evaluate the economic and envi- ronmental impacts of breaching the lower Snake River dams have come to the same conclusion: dam removal is an extreme — and unnecessary — measure that would not only destroy a critical transportation network for agricultural exports, inputs ... but would also harm the environment and impact power supply and reliability,” said Glen Squires, CEO of the Washington Grain Commission. “We remain committed to fi nding collaborative, science-based salmon recovery plans that consider the impacts on See Dams, Page 9 Hazelnut growers weather ice, heat to successful harvest SALEM — Freshly harvested hazelnuts arrived by the truckload at Chapin Dehy- drating LLC, where they are washed and dried for packaging. Bruce Chapin, who runs the receiving station north of Salem, is so far pleased with what he sees. He anticipates the crop will be roughly on par with last year’s record haul of 61,000 tons, despite challenging conditions that have kept Willamette Valley growers on their toes. “We had a very dry summer,” Chapin said. “As a result, we’re seeing smaller nuts coming in here.” In addition to the heat and drought, a major ice storm in February severely damaged some orchards, with branches or, in some cases, whole trees breaking under pressure. Bruce A shortage of workers at Chapin the USDA National Agri- cultural Statistics Service means the industry did not receive its annual crop forecast, but hazelnut growers say they are seeing decent yields and good quality after weathering a diffi cult year. “I think we were basically fl ush or maybe Courtesy of Tim Aman See Hazelnuts, Page 11 Wooden totes are fi lled with hazelnuts recently har- vested at Aman Bros. LLC in Mt. Angel, Ore. TIME TO PLAN for next year. Bank of Eastern Oregon and Washington Specialize in Operating Lines of Credit and Term loans on Equipment and Land. Contact your local loan officer. We’re just down the road! OREGON BOARDMAN BURNS CONDON HERMISTON IONE ENTERPRISE HEPPNER IRRIGON JOHN DAY LA GRANDE MADRAS WASHINGTON IDAHO MORO COLFAX CALDWELL ONTARIO DAYTON PENDLETON PASCO POMEROY Member FDIC S265617-1 By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press