COMMUNITY THURSDAY, AUGUST 19, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — A3 “I don’t like cold weather but I hope we get a lot of snow. I’ll plow snow every day if I have to.” — George Chandler, Baker Valley rancher, who’s hoping for a snowy winter, which would help replenish Phillips Reservoir rapid, albeit temporary, glut of meltwater that fl ows into rivers. Their anecdotes are cor- roborated by statistics. Phillips Reservoir reached a maximum active stor- age volume this spring (not including the 5,000 acre-feet of dead storage) of just 16,632 acre-feet, on April 26. In many years the reser- voir holds more than 40,000 acre-feet in late April. Even in 1988, when the reservoir’s level plummeted in the fall, Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald it was holding about 26,000 This image taken from a drone on Tuesday, Aug. 17, shows Mason Dam and the expanse of shoreline exposed as acre-feet the fi nal week of Phillips Reservoir has receded this summer. April. “It doesn’t take long to get rid of that” amount of water, Chandler said, and that was indeed the case in 2021. Continued from Page A1 Worse still, farmers needed Numbers also illustrate the reservoir water earlier than severity of the drawdown. By JAYSON JACOBY usual due to the aforemen- jjacoby@bakercityherald.com As of Wednesday Aug. 18, tioned lack of spring rain, and PHILLIPS RESER- the reservoir’s “active storage” persistent wind that leached VOIR — A brisk wind that volume was 479 acre-feet, much of the sparse moisture which is less than 1% of its feels more like October from the topsoil. storage capacity. That’s the than August is whipping Rainfall at the Baker lowest volume since the fall up whitecaps and pushing City Airport for the fi rst of 1988, when the reservoir the two lengths of fi shing six months of the year — a reached a minimum of 449 line into curves, but the period that includes what are acre-feet on Nov. 1. Foersterling brothers are statistically the two wettest, unperturbed. There is, however, more May and June — totaled 2.44 They’re concentrating on water in the reservoir. inches. That’s 43% of average. the rod tips, waiting for the The active storage fi gure is “We just don’t seem to get telltale twitch. the amount of water poten- the rains like we used to,” And hoping that the fi sh tially available for irrigation. Ward said. The reservoir’s offi cial capac- on the other end of the Then came the June heat ity for irrigation is 73,570 line, below the choppy sur- wave. acre-feet, according to the face of Phillips Reservoir, is “It was the perfect storm,” Multiple factors contribute Ward said — although in U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, a yellow perch. to reservoir’s depletion which built Mason Dam. Fred Foersterling, 78, this case it was the absence Both Chandler and Ward and his brother, Terry, 72, The reservoir can hold an- of storms that caused the blame a combination of both of Baker City, don’t other 17,000 acre-feet — up problems. factors, which happened to begrudge the autumnal to a total of 90,570 — for fl ood With much more water coincide over the past year, for fl owing through Mason Dam chill on this Tuesday control. the possibly unprecedented morning, Aug. 17. But the reservoir was also than was coming in from the depletion of the reservoir. Not during a summer of designed with what’s known Powder River, the reservoir The trouble started almost receded rapidly, dipping below record-breaking heat. as “dead storage.” That’s wa- a year ago. With the torrid tempera- ter that won’t drain from the 10,000 acre-feet by June 29, Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald In the fall of 2020, Phillips which happened to be the tures that have predomi- reservoir by gravity. The dead Terry Foersterling, right, with a just-caught yellow dropped to about 5,500 acre- 103-degree day at the airport. nated since late June, the storage for Phillips is 5,000 feet in November, so there brothers haven’t hauled a perch at Phillips Reservoir on Tuesday morning, Aug. acre-feet, and that water is By the end of July the res- 17. Terry and his brother, Fred, also of Baker City, are was a lot of space to fi ll. boat to Phillips Reservoir, the reason the reservoir still ervoir’s active storage volume The biggest source of water was below 3,000 acre-feet. their favorite fi shing hole, frequent anglers at the reservoir. looks like, well, a reservoir. to refi ll the reservoir isn’t even once. Chandler said that In that bellwether year water at all — it’s snow. “It’s so doggone hot we although the dead storage Valley reservoirs, as well as the Powder 1988, the reservoir didn’t drop Winter snowpack in the haven’t thought about getting out in the capacity has likely been River in between, due to warm water and below that threshold until mountains is the largest boat and cooking in the middle of the day,” low water levels that threaten fi sh, the reduced some by silt accumu- Sept. 6. reservoir in the region. As Terry said. lation over the past 53 years, Foersterlings say that hasn’t affected their that snow melts in the spring Banking on blizzards “And come up here today and almost that water, since it won’t angling. With the reservoir so it fl ows into the streams and wish you had more clothes on,” said Fred, drain by gravity, means the There’s no limit on perch anyway. diminished, even a bountiful rivers that replenish reser- reservoir’s level can’t drop who’s clad in a plaid fl annel shirt as the Neither the persistent heat, nor the snowpack this coming winter voirs. much farther. brothers sit in a pair of folding chairs a few drought that has contributed to the res- The snowpack was actually probably won’t be suffi cient to On Tuesday, the main feet from water’s edge. ervoir dropping to its lowest level in more refi ll Phillips. about average in the upper source of water entering the The Foersterlings, who are fi shing than 30 years (see related story on this But a skimpy snowpack Powder River basin, the head- reservoir — the Powder River with worms, hope to attract perch rather page), has dissuaded the Foersterlings from waters for its namesake river could make for even more dire than rainbow trout because, they say, the — was fl owing at a rate of 39 driving to Phillips a couple times per week. conditions in 2022. and other streams that feed hatchery-raised rainbows tend to have cubic feet per second. They said the severe drawdown of the “I don’t like cold weather Phillips Reservoir. rather fl accid fl esh in the warm water of Some reservoirs, including reservoir hasn’t had any noticeable effects but I hope we get a lot of The problem, Chandler Thief Valley along the lower late summer. on fi shing. and Ward agree, is that most snow,” Chandler said. “I’ll plow Powder River near North Fred said he prefers perch and other “Sometimes they bite, sometimes they snow every day if I have to.” of that melted snow soaked Powder, have no dead storage, warmwater species, including crappie and don’t,” Terry says with the nonchalance of Ward also wouldn’t com- into the ground rather than so when they’re drained — as bass. the frequent angler. “You just never know.” plain about a repeat of the trickling into the reservoir. Thief Valley has been most One day last week he said he reeled in 25 The brothers have noticed that there are “The creeks never ran like 2016-17 winter, when snow perch, two trout, two bass and two squaw- fewer motorboats on the reservoir, since years in the past decade — all depths topped two feet in they normally do,” Chandler fi sh. that’s left is the river in its the main boat ramps are all stranded well Baker City and the tempera- said. Although the Oregon Department of Fish about the water. original channel. He and Ward attribute this ture at the airport plummeted But dead storage capacity and Wildlife has suspended daily fi sh catch “We have seen a lot of paddleboards and in part to cold nights that pre- to 24 below zero in early in Phillips isn’t available to limits through Oct. 10 for Phillips and Thief kayaks,” Fred said. dominated this spring, which January. nourish crops. But he’d like to see heavy slowed the snowmelt and And that means irrigation allowed much of the water to rain fall in October or Novem- from the reservoir, with the Valley Irrigation District’s 30,000 acres of land, mostly almost 326,000 gallons.) ber, before snow starts piling leach into the soil. exception of small volumes fi ve directors. in Baker Valley, with rights to But in 2021 the reservoir up. Another factor was the for livestock, is over for the When water is plentiful stored water. provided just 0.4 of an acre- That would start refi lling lack of signifi cant rainstorms. year, and a meager year — a rarity over the past 15 (One acre-foot of water foot per acre, Ward said. the reservoir, making for a it was, said Mark Ward, a years, Ward said — Phillips would cover one acre of fl at “That’s the lowest allocation Heavy rain, especially when smaller hole to fi ll come the coupled with relatively mild Baker Valley farmer and, like can supply 3.5 acre-feet of wa- ground to a depth of one foot. we’ve ever had,” he said. spring of 2022. Chandler, one of the Baker ter for each of the more than The measurement is equal to The previous record was 0.5 temperatures, can cause a RESERVOIR Low water doesn’t deter anglers L OCAL B RIEFING Lien, Paige Pearce, Laura Price, Jayme Ramos, Corrina Stadler, Mitchell Stephens Locals earn dean’s erage of 3.5 or higher on a list honors at Eastern 4.0 scale while completing Oregon University at least 12 hours of graded Halfway LA GRANDE — More than a dozen Baker County students were among the 556 named to the dean’s list for the spring 2021 term at Eastern Oregon University. To qualify, students must maintain a grade point av- coursework. Baker City Kayley AhHee, Alayne Bennett, Koedi Birming- ham, Boston Colton, Ashley Dyke, Kirsten Esposito, Isabella Evans, Elijah Jay & Kristin Wilson, Owners 2036 Main Street, Baker City 541-523-6284 • ccb#219615 Madison Morgan Baker students graduate from EOU LA GRANDE — Baker County students earned degrees during the 2020-21 academic year at Eastern of an acre-foot, about 15 years ago, Ward said. Although Ward said farm- ers who grow higher-value crops such as potatoes typi- cally have wells for irrigation rather than relying solely on reservoirs, the paltry supply from Phillips trimmed yields from some of his family’s crops, including peppermint. Ward said they used “the bare minimum” of irrigation water on their mint, which contributed to a lower-than- usual yield of mint oil — the most valuable part of the crop. (He said they also made hay from mint.) The bigger culprit in the low oil yield, though, was not a lack of water but rather an abundance of another ele- ment — heat. “We learned that mint does not like 100-degree heat in June,” Ward said, referring to the record-setting heat wave in that month’s fi nal week, when the temperature topped out at 103 degrees at the Baker City Airport. Although Chandler also laments the scant amount of irrigation water this year, he also remembers the era before Mason Dam was built. Chandler, who graduated from Baker High School in 1965, recalls a summer when the Powder River ceased fl ow- ing through Baker City. Oregon University. in Business Bachelor of Science in Mul- • Laura Price, Bachelor of tidisciplinary Studies and Baker City Science in Health and Hu- Elementary Education • Rochelle Adams, man Performance Bachelor of Science in Early • Joanie Sells, Bachelor of Haines Childhood Education Chelsea Blatchford, Science in Early Childhood • Kayley AhHee, Bach- Bachelor of Science in Lib- Education elor of Science in Business eral Studies/2 EOU Minors • Alexandria Wachtel, Administration • Erin Blincoe, Bachelor of Science in Anthropology/ 2192 Court Avenue, Baker City • 541-523-5357 Sociology • Makenna Huggins, Services Provided: Master of Business Admin Free Pregnancy Tests A resource NOTICE The Eagles Lodge Dinner & Dance on August 20th at 2935 H St. has been cancelled due to new COVID restrictions Sorry Members Rachel Pregnancy Center center for Referrals for Free Ultrasounds families Pregnancy Options Counseling Adoption Referrals Prenatal, Infant Care & Parenting Classes Maternity & Baby Clothing Post Abortion Recovery Helping women & men in an unplanned pregnancy. All services free & confidential. Open Tues -Thurs 10 am - 5 pm (closed for lunch)