FOOD In blistering drought, California farmers rip up precious almond trees

1911user

Veteran Member
I like almonds, so I have purchased 15 pounds sealed in mylar bags (walmart) at 39 cents per ounce. The price for the smaller bags is already being raised.

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In blistering drought, California farmers rip up precious almond trees

August 5, 2021

In blistering drought, California farmers rip up precious almond trees

by Camille Camdessus


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Uprooted almond trees, destroyed for lack of water, lie in a field in Huron, California, in July 2021.
Crushed by a devastating drought and new water restrictions, Daniel Hartwig had no choice but to pull thousands of precious, fragrant almond trees from his California farm.


"It breaks your heart," he sighed as he surveyed the once vibrant landscape before him—curled, yellowed leaves covering the shrunken husks that would have been this year's crop of almonds, had the water arrived.


Their exposed roots are already starting to turn powdery with rot, and the temperature of almost 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius) on this summer morning speeds their decomposition.


Moving among them are huge machines that will turn Hartwig's "beautiful prime almond trees" into large piles of woodchips.


'Brutal Shock'


"It's a sudden brutal shock," the farmer said.


Hartwig is in charge of water management for the mega-property of Woolf Farms, an estate of over 20,000 acres (8,000 hectares) around the small market town of Huron.


This is the first time that the farm has had to uproot so many trees before they reach the end of their life.


From drip irrigation systems to cutting-edge sensors installed throughout the property, everything has been designed to optimize the use of water.


But almond trees are very thirsty, and this is a valley that is sorely lacking in water.

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Dried and shrivelled almond husks on uprooted trees are all that remain of what would have been this year's crop - had water been available.

After several years of very low rainfall and a particularly dry winter, California authorities turned off the tap to agricultural producers. In April, after a series of calculations, the farm had to face the hard facts.


"There is not enough water on the market" to keep the almond trees alive, Hartwig said. "It's surely painful to make those changes."

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And for good reason: The California almond market is worth nearly $6 billion a year.


'Bad Guys'


California produces 80 percent of the almonds consumed worldwide, a market that has doubled in 15 years driven by demand for substitutes for animal products, such as almond milk.


Woolf Farms almonds travel as far as India or Australia. But is that era now over?


"There is a perception that farmers are here to waste water," said Hartwig, his hands tucked into his jean pockets. "It makes us sound like we are the bad guys."





  • 'There is not enough water on the market' to keep the almond trees alive, said Daniel Hartwig, in charge of water management for the mega-property of Woolf Farms.

  • This is the first time that Woolf Farms has had to uproot so many trees before they reach the end of their life.

  • The California almond industry is worth $6 billion a year, providing 80 percent of the nuts consumed worldwide - but the trees are thirsty, and water is scarce in parts of the western state.

To irrigate the crops they have managed to preserve, Woolf Farms pumps water found deep underground.


"I'm very proud that we can feed the world from here," he said.


"If we don't have the tools to be able to do that, where is that food going to come from?" he asked.


Driving through the estate, which stretches as far as the eye can see, Hartwig pointed to a series of fallow fields.


"Almost all of this would've been farm," he said. "Now it's just a patchwork of crops."


He sighed. "We've done as much as we can."
 
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Freeholder

This too shall pass.
It costs $$$ to remove trees. Odd that he spent those $$$.

Prickly pear cactus need little water and taste good once the needles are removed.

The trees are dying and were going to have to be removed anyway, to make room for new ones to be replanted. The farmers may decide to plant something other than almonds, but if they are going to plant anything at all there, the trees had to be removed. And I'm sure they have their own equipment, as old trees (whole sections of them) are regularly removed and the area replanted.

Kathleen
 

Bps1691

Veteran Member
Wonder how many millions of gallons of water were pushed down to keep the snail darters habitat full?

read somewhere that the greenies programs have used billions of gallons of water for these types of things when it would have been cheaper to build special habitats somewhere where the water wasn’t such an issue

not to mentioned the added hardships to humans who will need that wasted water
 
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coalcracker

Veteran Member
I know from personal experience that almonds store well in those foil bags in which they are often packaged. Anyone know how long? I always eat mine before they go bad. :cool:
 

Hfcomms

EN66iq
California like Nevada historically has been very dry. California in particular was turned into a lush place by overtaxing the water tables and with construction of dams and basins to hold water. Eventually the long term norms catch up with you and they simply don't have enough water to support the mega footprint. There comes a point where you can't pump deep enough as the water table drops too low and that has it's own set of risks.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
This has almost nothing to do with "snail darters" anymore and is mostly about the fact that California and the West are having a Mega Drought that given what happened in the 14th-century solar minimum could last decades (it may not but it could).

There is NO Water, the hydroelectric dams are shutting down, the salmon may not spawn (even with the help of human intervention trying to help them, the rivers are simply drying up).

In the past, this was partly about farmers vs mega cities vs wildlife conservation (all going at each other) but this time, it is simply that there is almost no rain and very little snowpack.

There is a reason the Native Americans in California especially do not try to farm and it wasn't because they didn't know what farming was. It was probably because any tribe that tried it beyond the level of small temporary gardens either had to give it up during times like these or they died of thirst and starvation.

Even the Anasazi had to leave their Cliff houses during a similar mega-drought and move down to where there were wells and other sources of water.
 

NoDandy

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Maybe, they should talk to Israelis, seem to remember they developed a way to desalinate sea water.
 

Old Gray Mare

TB Fanatic
It costs $$$ to remove trees. Odd that he spent those $$$.

Prickly pear cactus need little water and taste good once the needles are removed.
I see where you're going with that. Yes prickly pear cactus would use less water but:
they are much more delicate
as you pointed out they need careful handling
They don't last on store shelves as long as almonds
They aren't in as high a demand as almonds
If all CA almond farmer planted Prickly pears demand would crater
Almonds can be harvested mechanically
Both take some years before producing a significant amount of fruit

The only answer to the problem is water.
 

Hfcomms

EN66iq
Maybe, they should talk to Israelis, seem to remember they developed a way to desalinate sea water.

That would be the way to go but it requires power.....a lot of power. With your hydro's shutting down and all the coal plants being decommissioned they are in a world of hurt. Solar and wind ain't going to get the job done. The kind of power you need for desalination plants is going to take nuclear and that is a very dirty word to the tree huggers. So choose your poison I guess.
 

SSTemplar

Veteran Member
That would be the way to go but it requires power.....a lot of power. With your hydro's shutting down and all the coal plants being decommissioned they are in a world of hurt. Solar and wind ain't going to get the job done. The kind of power you need for desalination plants is going to take nuclear and that is a very dirty word to the tree huggers. So choose your poison I guess.
They shut down their nuclear power plants so let them drink salt.
 

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
_______________
This will strike home with the snowflakes.

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bassaholic

Veteran Member
I live in the central valley. They are planting trees here around me. I haven’t seen anything being taken out. Not sure in the southern part though I’m in the northern part.
 

1911user

Veteran Member
I live in the central valley. They are planting trees here around me. I haven’t seen anything being taken out. Not sure in the southern part though I’m in the northern part.
I like your report better. The article said it was about the Huron area.
 

Seeker

3 Bombs for Hawkins
. . . "It breaks your heart," he sighed as he surveyed the once vibrant landscape before him—curled, yellowed leaves covering the shrunken husks that would have been this year's crop of almonds. . .

Does it hurt a tree to die?
 

Knoxville's Joker

Has No Life - Lives on TB
They are going to have to desalinate sea water and figure out a way to encapsulate all the salt. The only way to replenish is to take from the sea. The amounts needed are going to be insane though, but once it is setup the surpluses could reforest substantial swaths of desert.
 
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