Capital Press EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER Friday, November 19, 2021 Volume 94, Number 47 CapitalPress.com $2.00 GO WITH THE FLOW Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press Marc Thalacker advises other irrigation districts, pipe manufacturers and water managers in Oregon based on what he has learned. Here, he is visiting a new pipeline being installed in a nearby district. Barriers to modernizing irrigation systems and how to overcome them By SIERRA DAWN McCLAIN Capital Press S Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press Ron Alvarado, state conservationist for USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Center, speaks to other state water experts at the site of a fi sh screen in Three Sisters Irrigation District. Marc Thalacker says NRCS has been a great resource for helping his district modernize. ISTERS, Ore. — When Marc Thalacker fi rst walked into Cen- tral Oregon’s Three Sisters Irri- gation District Offi ce in 1988, he was taken aback. The dilapidated offi ce had no running water, a sputtering oil stove and an out- house. The offi ce served a district with a canal system so old it had been built by mule-drag. “It was a real wild west show,” said Thalacker. His big laugh fi lled the room. Many years, according to district records, 50% of the water in the canals and laterals was lost to seepage and evapora- tion, farmers received only half their allot- Supply chain issues to hit crop inputs By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press As producers plan for the next growing season, chaos in the supply chain has them concerned about the cost and availability of crop inputs. By and large, producers — other than fruit and vege- table growers — didn’t face the structural shifts in the supply-chain when COVID- 19 hit in the spring of 2020 because they were already in the middle of produc- ted water and the local creek was dried, stranding fi sh. “I was overwhelmed with what I was looking at,” said Thalacker. He had come to the offi ce to volunteer. Thalacker was a new farmer — he and his now ex-wife had bought 400 acres near Sisters that year to raise cattle and grow crops. He wanted to understand more about the local water system and how to make it better. Making it better is precisely what he did. In the past 24 years since Thalacker moved into the role of district manager Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press in 1997, Three Sisters Irrigation District, Revenue-producing hy- generators or TSID, has been transformed through dropower Three Sisters Irrigation modernization. District installed in its hy- See Irrigation, Page 13 droelectric plant in 2014. Scope of wolf protection in the hands of judge By DON JENKINS Capital Press Don Jenkins/Capital Press FIle Most chemical ingredients for crop inputs are manufac- tured in China. That means the backlog in shipping be- tween Asia and the U.S. could impact farmers. tion, said Allan Gray, direc- tor of the Center for Food and Agribusiness at Purdue University. He doesn’t think produc- ers faced the supply-chain fallout this year, either, because agrochemical sup- pliers had inventories on hand. “What’s happening now is there’s no adjustment left in the system; the invento- ries are gone,” he said during the latest “Farm Country Update” podcast, presented by Farm Journal. It’s important to realize the supply-chain problems are a confl uence of several factors, not just one or two things, he said. “The reality is it’s a very, very complicated set of See Supply chain, Page 13 Founded in 1945 by Farmers and Ranchers. The West’s tug-of-war over wolves went via Zoom to a federal judge in Oak- land on Nov. 4, as environmental groups asked U.S. District Judge Jeff rey White to restore federal protection to wolves along the West Coast, and in the central Rockies and Great Lakes states. Attorney Kristen Boyles said the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service was abandoning gray wolves outside the Northern Rockies. Justice Department attorney Michael Eitel said state boundaries shouldn’t dic- tate how the agency carries out the Endan- gered Species Act. “This is not a case where Fish and Wild- life is trying to skirt its obligations under the ESA,” he said. The lawsuits before White challenge the Trump administration’s decision to take gray wolves throughout the Lower 48 off the federal list of endangered species. Wolves in Idaho, Montana, Wyoming and the eastern one-third of Oregon and Washington were already de-listed and are not addressed in the suits. The Biden administration has defended Stock Image A federal judge heard arguments Nov. 12 over the Trump administration’s de- cision to remove endangered species protections from gray wolves. the Trump rule, arguing that gray wolves aren’t threatened in the U.S. because wolves are established in the Northern Rockies, as well as the western Great Lakes. Ironically, however, the Biden adminis- tration is also reviewing the ESA status of wolves in the Northern Rockies because of wolf hunts in Idaho and Montana. WE WISH EACH OF YOU a Wonderful Season of Thanksgiving! See wolf, Page 13 CALDWELL ONTARIO ALAN BULLARD JED MYERS BECKY TEMPLE NIAL BRADSHAW GAYE DOANATO KENDRA BUTTERFIELD LOGAN SCHLEICHER CALDWELL LOAN OFFICE 208-402-4887 / 422 S. 9TH ST. ONTARIO LOAN OFFICE 541-889-4464 / 435 SW 24TH ST. Member FDIC S228624-1