The BulleTin • Sunday, May 23, 2021 A5 Continued from A4 “We’ll know at the end of the season, depending on the yields and price, but we’re defi- nitely not going to be able to cover all the bills,” he said. Scott Seus, of Seus Family Farms in Tulelake, said he is working with his neighbors to stretch every drop of ground- water they can. PVC pipe is in short supply around the basin as farmers buy up what they can to deliver water from wells to fields with higher-value crops like garlic, mint and onions. Onion planting is now underway, with fewer acres available to farm, Seus said. Processors buy onions in the Klamath Basin which they de- hydrate to use in things such as soup mixes, ketchup and salad dressing. Farmers risk losing those contracts if they can’t de- liver. “I think everybody is just trying to find their way through this the best they can,” Seus said. “This is an extreme situation. We’re making tough decisions where we need to make them.” Supplemental water right Only the Klamath Drain- Holly Dillemuth/For the Capital Press The canal carrying irrigation water to the Klamath Project is at a standstill after the U.S. Bureau of Reclama- tion cut off water earlier this month. age District has received any water from the Klamath River system in 2021, exercising a supplemental water right with the state dating back to 1977. Two other irrigation districts, the Langell Valley and Horse- Bachelor Continued from A1 “Cascade views from Mt. Bache- lor overlooking Broken Top and the Three Sisters are stunning, and we look forward to offering this unique alpine mountain experience to locals and visitors in the near future,” Mc- Leod shared in a prepared statement. McLeod said the ski resort has been working with the U.S. Forest Service for several years on the vi- sion and approval of the 5.5-mile Mt. Bachelor Summit Hiking Trail. The Forest Service, which allows the resort to operate on its land under a special use permit, recently finished an environmental analysis and for- mally approved the plans. “Our environmental analysis is completed on it,” said Jean Nel- son-Dean, spokesperson for the fly districts, are also part of the Klamath Project, but rely exclusively on water from the Lost River system. Scott White, KDD manager, said the district is diverting 42 cubic feet of water per second Deschutes National Forest. “We are expecting that they would do some construction activities this summer after the snow melts off.” The 5.5-mile trail would connect Pine Marten Lodge near the sum- mit and the West Village at the base. From the Pine Marten Lodge, the trail would go toward the Outback chairlift and then down to the West Village. The proposed snow cat trail would be built from the top of the Sunrise lift to the top of the Carnival ski run to allow the snow-grooming equip- ment to reach the beginner ski runs. McLeod said the hiking trail will incorporate historical landmarks and interpretive signs. Most of the trail will be suitable for hikers of all abilities, he said. Hikers will also have the option to take the Pine Marten chairlift, — 8% of its permitted rate — into the North Canal, south of Klamath Falls. The diversions, which began in April, drew a sharp rebuke from the Bureau of Reclama- tion, which ordered the district to immediately stop or be ex- empt from federal emergency drought funding. White has asserted the district is doing nothing wrong. “Whenever Project water is curtailed, we exercise this per- mit,” he said. “This is no dif- ferent than any other drought year.” In its announcement shut- ting down the A Canal, the bureau cited both drought and “unauthorized diversions at private facilities along the Klamath River and Upper Klamath Lake,” though it did not call out KDD by name. A spokeswoman for the agency did not return messages for comment. “We can only assume that they acknowledge our rights as being legal,” White said. “We have certainly asserted that our (diversions) are not illegal.” KDD’s supplemental wa- ter right applies to just under 20,000 acres of private land within the district. DuVal, with the Klamath Water Users As- sociation, said that while he does not necessarily like it, he does not blame KDD for tak- ing advantage of supplemental water. “I don’t think there’s any re- Submitted photo “We know what a zero allocation is going to mean to our individ- ual farms and the community as a whole,” said Ben DuVal, who grows alfalfa hay and raises cattle near Tulelake, California. sentment in the community for them trying to survive,” he said. The bigger fear, DuVal said, is outsider and extremist groups coming into the com- munity and using the Klamath Project’s crisis as a soapbox for their own agenda. “We don’t need that,” he said. “It’s the people in this commu- nity who live and farm here whose voices need to be heard.” which runs seven days a week in the summer, to reduce the total hiking distance or change the experience, McLeod said. The trail will also be a good option for spontaneous hikers who did not obtain permits to hike in nearby ar- eas in the Deschutes National Forest, McLeod added. Nelson-Dean said the new trail loop will be a major benefit for the national forest since it could draw more people from the surrounding wilderness areas who are seeing a high volume of hikers. “The big thing is getting some more trails,” Nelson-Dean said. “Get- ting some higher elevation trails on Mt. Bachelor will help relieve some Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin file pressure on some of our wilderness “Cascade views from Mt. Bachelor overlooking Broken Top and the Three Sisters are stun- areas.” ning, and we look forward to offering this unique alpine mountain experience to locals e e Reporter: 541-617-7820, kspurr@bendbulletin.com and visitors in the near future,” said John McLeod, president and general manager of Mt. Bachelor ski area.