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  • 17
    Jan
    2013
    8:52pm, EST

    As drought persists, town dries up and states scramble to save every drop of water

    Kevin Murphy / Reuters

    A sprinkler is in use near Dodge City, Kans., on Nov. 26.

    By Carey Gillam, Reuters

    The drought that crippled many communities across the nation last year shows little sign of retreating, and the threat of persistent water scarcity is spurring efforts to preserve every drop.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    As the drought of 2012 creeps into 2013, experts say the slow-spreading catastrophe presents near-term problems for a key U.S. agricultural region and potential long-term challenges for millions of Americans.

    "Everyone is wondering whether this dry weather is the new norm ... or an anomaly that will soon pass," said Barney Austin, director of hydraulic services for INTERA Inc, an Austin, Texas-based geoscience and engineering consulting firm. "We all hope for the latter, but it's hard to tell."

    The signs of distress and the search for answers are most prevalent in the Plains, where historic drought blankets much of Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and parts of Texas.


    This month the small Oklahoma farming town of Wapanucka lost water completely when the spring-fed wells the community relies on ran dry. Officials closed the town's school and residents had to do without tap water until the town could run a line to a neighboring water district.

    In Texas, state lawmakers are pushing for a $2 billion fund to finance water infrastructure projects as numerous communities face their own shortages. But it won't be soon enough to help rice farmers, who were told this month that there is not likely to be enough water to irrigate their fields this spring.

    Meanwhile, in the big wheat-growing state of Kansas, penalties for exceeding water use limits for irrigation were doubled this month and Gov. Sam Brownback has launched a task force to come up with strategies to counter statewide shortages.

    "It's going to be dry again this year," said Lane Letourneau, water appropriations manager for the Kansas Agriculture Department. "We consider this a really big deal."

    Slideshow: America's farmland baking in drought

    Drought conditions plague much of the United States after a summer of scorching temperatures and a lack of rain. The dryness is affecting America's farmland, threatening crops like soybean and corn.

    Launch slideshow

    Searching for solutions
    Water use is already tightly curtailed in many states. Years of low rainfall and high heat - last year was the hottest on record for the United States, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration - have diminished surface waters even as population and water demand expand.

    As well, agricultural and oil and gas interests are pumping the precious commodity from underground aquifers at a pace that often cannot be matched by natural replenishment.

    "Water has been viewed as a basic commodity, a basic right," said Les Lampe, a water expert with consultancy Black & Veatch. "You turn on the tap and water comes out and you don't pay very much for it. That has to change."

    Farmers are feeling the pain of water shortages most acutely. After multibillion-dollar crop and livestock losses tied to last year's drought, they fear more losses are coming.

    Texas rice growers who depend on the lower Colorado River valley for survival are eyeing the fluctuating levels of two key lakes used for irrigation when river levels are too low.

    State officials said this month that without enough rain by spring, rice farmers could be completely cut off from irrigation, jeopardizing about 2 percent of the U.S. crop and about $1 billion for the Texas economy.

    "We've got a shortage of water," said Ronald Gertson, a rice grower and chairman of the Colorado Water Issues Committee. "People are going to be both hungry and thirsty before they wake up to this problem."

    Forecasts show drier-than-normal weather likely prevailing in the Plains and western Midwest for the next few months at least. But even normal rainfall levels would not be enough to fully recharge resources.

    Three to five times more rain than normal is needed in key corn-growing areas that include Nebraska and Kansas, for instance, to ease soil dryness after last summer's drought, according to Don Keeney, an agricultural meteorologist with Cropcast weather service.

    Roughly 60.26 percent of the contiguous United States was in at least moderate drought as of January 8, according to a "Drought Monitor" report issued by a group of federal and state climatology experts. Severe drought still blanketed 86.20 percent of the High Plains.

    "This drought certainly has gotten people's attention," said Joe Straus, speaker of the Texas House of Representatives. "Regardless of whether it starts raining now or not, long-term water planning is essential. We need to be responsible."

    For some, it's already an emergency. Persistent dry conditions in north-central Oklahoma led officials in Payne County to declare a state of emergency this month as the reservoir providing water to nearly 16,000 residents in seven counties fell to record low levels.

    The approximately 500 residents of Wapanucka are talking of higher rates to fund a permanent pipeline to a new water source. But running out of water has shown how harsh doing without water can be, said Julie Wallis, Wapanucka's city water clerk.

    "We are not going to be the only ones who this happens to," said Wallis. "It's coming."

    From the archives, Aug. 2012: Drought: the 'new normal'?

    37 comments

    Indeed. And to top it all off, FRACKING uses gross amounts of fresh water and turns it into a catastrophic chemical stew containing arsenic, benzene, and heavy metals leeched from earth during the process.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: texas, weather, oklahoma, water, kansas, nebraska, drought, plains, droughtof2012
  • 23
    Aug
    2012
    6:08pm, EDT

    Drought makes green marijuana crops more visible for police

    Courtesy Indiana State Police

    A police photo of marijuana planted in between corn in Harrison County, Ind. The drought across the Midwest is allowing police to easier sight green marijuana crop from the air, next to browning, dry corn.

    By Vignesh Ramachandran

    Police in Indiana say they're finding an unexpected benefit to the drought baking the American Midwest: Marijuana crops are easier to find.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Many of the cornfields across the state's parched lands are dry and brown, making the distinctive green marijuana crops stand out "like a sore thumb," according to State Police Sgt. Jerry Goodin.

    The State Police on Tuesday cut down 30 newly flowering marijuana plants, The Courier-Journal in Kentucky reported. If allowed to fully mature, these plants would be worth over $30,000, according to The Courier-Journal. Possessing or growing marijuana in Indiana is illegal, Goodin said, and so far in 2012, nearly 30,000 plants have been cut across the state.


    Trained troopers fly over the land in airplanes and helicopters to look for the green crop.

    "It’s called 'spotting,'" said Goodin. "This year, their jobs are much easier, because much of the foliage (around the marijuana crop) has browned and died."

    "A lot of people think we use infrared scopes, but we don’t," Indiana Trooper Mike Bennett, coordinator of the state police Marijuana Eradication Team, told The Courier-Journal. "Marijuana has a distinct green color.”

    In most of these cases, Goodin said, farmers had no idea that the pot was on their land: "It’s people who come in and sneak in and plant it."

    Courtesy Indiana State Police

    Marijuana captured by police in Scott County, Ind.

    Despite drought conditions, these marijuana squatters still spend time tending their plants because of the money they can reap, according to Goodin.

    Related: The economics of pot legalization

    Police say that although arrests are the goal when they find these crops, the planters' identities might never be known.

    "By eradicating it, hopefully it will discourage that person who’s doing it," Goodin said.

    On Tuesday, Indiana State Police also got rid of about 100 other marijuana plants in rural areas of the state's Harrison and Clark Counties, The Courier-Journal reported.

    But humans aren't always the culprit. Goodin said wild marijuana continues to grow across Indiana, after farmers during World War II grew hemp to produce rope.

    Over in Kentucky, state police Sgt. Richard Saint-Blancard said the drought "really does not make that much of a difference" in marijuana eradication efforts.

    Related: The politics of pot

    Private farms are not the only lands prone to covert marijuana operations.

    Through the end of August, the federal Drug Enforcement Administration is leading "Operation Mountain Sweep," an effort to target large-scale marijuana growing operations on public lands in Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah and Washington. The operation began July 1 and so far more than 578,000 plants, estimated by the DEA to be worth more than $1 billion, have been found.

    Federal data indicates the number of live marijuana plants eradicated in outdoor and indoor grow operations has dropped in most states in the past three years, The Associated Press reported in early August. While authorities can't point to an exact reason, the AP reported that during those same three years, the amount of bulk processed marijuana seized doubled.

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    63 comments

    What an utter waste of time and resources.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, drought, crime, indiana, indiana-state-police, drug-enforcement-administration, pot-busts, droughtof2012, marijuana-crop
  • 16
    Aug
    2012
    12:50pm, EDT

    Lower temps, rain bring some relief from drought conditions

    By Vignesh Ramachandran, NBC News

    Cooler temperatures and rain brought some much-needed relief to the drought-plagued Midwest and South over the past week, according to the latest report from the U.S. Drought Monitor.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    There was notable improvement in drought conditions from Iowa through Ohio, the report found, and also in Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina.


    But the report wasn't all good news. Conditions deteriorated in Oklahoma, where a lack of precipitation and heat parched the state's soil. Parts of Texas and Louisiana also saw worsening drought.

    "It was a week of hit and miss," said the report's author, Michael Brewer, with NOAA's National Climatic Data Center. Brewer told NBC News that some of the areas in the upper Midwest and around the Great Lakes hit hardest by drought "saw some marked improvement from storms."

    "Other folks, such as in the High Plains...got hit pretty hard (by drought)," Brewer said. The U.S. Drought Monitor's latest map indicates "exceptional drought" in a significant portion of Kansas and parts of Nebraska and eastern Colorado.

    The widespread drought is devastating corn and soybean crops, leading to earlier harvests and lower yields. According to the U.S. Drought Monitor, 87% of corn crop areas and 85% of soybean areas in the U.S. were experiencing drought as of last week.

    "That's played out in the markets where the price of corn is going up to record highs," Brewer said.

    With the end of crop season nearing, Brewer added that there's no recovery for this year's crops: "The damage has already been done."

     More coverage of the drought:

    Drought sends Mississippi into ‘uncharted territory’  

    ‘Best year ever’ for some farmers outside drought region     

    Drought expected to take toll at checkout 

    Americans tell their story of #Drought2012  

    In drought-stricken Wisconsin, farmers helping farmers   

    Emergency well drilling brings relief to farmers stricken by drought

    Have you been affected by the worst drought in more than 50 years? Share your photos with us on Instagram, Tumblr or Twitter with the tag #Drought2012. You can also upload your photos in the box below.


    7 comments

    @Jeffery D Parks and you know this how?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: crops, corn, soybeans, food-prices, us-drought-monitor, droughtof2012
  • 15
    Aug
    2012
    3:49pm, EDT

    'Best year ever' for some farmers outside drought region

    The severe drought ruining crops around much of the United States has spared the Pacific Northwest. Farmers in Washington are enjoying high crop yields and high prices.

    See our full drought coverage here. And on Wednesday, Aug. 15, watch NBC News, CNBC, MSNBC, The Weather Channel and Telemundo for daylong, network-wide coverage of the drought.

    “When there is a drought, prices go up. So where you are, that you don’t have a drought, you’re reaping the benefits of someone else taking it in the shorts,” said Justin Waddington, a farmer in Yakima Valley, Washington.

    “It’s kind of sad that someone has to go broke somewhere or have a hard time for somebody to do good,” said Waddington.

    Watch NBCNews.com’s full report from John Brecher above.  


    More coverage of the drought: 

    Drought sends Mississippi into ‘uncharted territory’ 

    ‘Best year ever’ for some farmers outside drought region   

    Forced to sell cattle during drought, dairy farmers ‘just keep praying’ for rain

    Drought expected to take toll at checkout

    Americans tell their story of #Drought2012 

    In drought-stricken Wisconsin, farmers helping farmers  

    Emergency well drilling brings relief to farmers stricken by drought

    Have you been affected by the worst drought in more than 50 years? Share your photos with us on Instagram, Tumblr or Twitter with the tag #Drought2012. You can also upload your photos in the box below. 

    6 comments

    If the problem was dire, we would stop exporting feed corn. At least till we're sure we have enough to meet the needs of U.S. farmers and rancher.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pacific-northwest, featured, yakima-valley, droughtof2012, john-brecher
  • 15
    Aug
    2012
    2:06pm, EDT

    Forced to sell cattle during drought, dairy farmers 'just keep praying' for rain

    Farmers in Missouri and across the Midwest are suffering through a historic drought leaving behind scorched pastures and dried-up ponds. NBC's Jay Gray reports.

    By Jay Gray, NBC News
    BOLIVAR, Mo. –  The crumbling earth and burned out fields in this small town of 10,000 are sad evidence of what has been a dry, hot and, at times, desperate summer.
    See our full drought coverage here. And on Wednesday, Aug. 15, watch NBC News, CNBC, MSNBC, The Weather Channel and Telemundo for daylong, network-wide coverage of the drought.
    "The drought has been excessive in this region for several weeks, and it's not just that we've had the 100 degree-plus temperatures -- but they started so early,” said Darin Chappell, Bolivar’s city administrator.

    “Normally they begin in July and go through the middle of August, but this year they started in June. So we've had an extraordinary amount of heat and lack of water."

    U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Thomas Vilsack designated all of Missouri’s 114 counties as disaster areas, enabling farmers to access federal assistance, in mid-July.  As much as 93 percent of the state is suffering through extreme drought conditions.  

    David Franscka said it's the worst his family has seen in more than 50 years of dairy farming.


    Paying more for feed than getting for milk
    "This year, with the intense heat we've had and the lack of rain, we've had only two measurable rains since April 30,” said Franscka.

    NBC's Jay Gray reports from a dairy farm in Bolivar, Mo., where farmers are struggling to pay sky-high hay and feed prices for their livestock, spurred on by the drought.

    Ponds have dried up, forcing his family to haul as much as 8,000 gallons of water each day to the cattle herd. Pastures aren't producing any hay or grass for grazing either, leaving many farmers, like Franscka, with no choice but to buy feed – which right now costs more than the milk he's producing.

    "'We've spent in excess of $150,000 over the last three months just on the added costs,” he said. “Anytime you're getting less for your milk than you're paying for your feed – it's not going to come out.”

    “That's what's discouraging, knowing you’re going in the hole everyday money-wise,” he said. “But you have to keep hoping and holding on, thinking it's going to change."

    Some smaller farms have been forced to close down – selling-off their cattle for slaughter.

    Slideshow: America's farmland baking in drought

    Drought conditions plague much of the United States after a summer of scorching temperatures and a lack of rain. The dryness is affecting America's farmland, threatening crops like soybean and corn.

    Launch slideshow

    Franscka said he's sold 60 out of the 1,000 head of cattle he had at the start of the summer – to help pay the bills and keep the milk flowing until the rain does.

    "You persevere day to day, and just try to do what you can do today to make it till tomorrow. Just keep praying to the good Lord that he's going to send some rain,” he said.

    It’s a prayer that continues to echo across Missouri, and the entire Midwest. 

    As the drought continues, ranchers worry for the future especially now that the total number of cattle in the U.S. is already the smallest in 60 years. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

    More coverage of the drought: 

    Drought sends Mississippi into ‘uncharted territory’ 

    ‘Best year ever’ for some farmers outside drought region    

    Drought expected to take toll at checkout

    Americans tell their story of #Drought2012 

    In drought-stricken Wisconsin, farmers helping farmers  

    Emergency well drilling brings relief to farmers stricken by drought

    Have you been affected by the worst drought in more than 50 years? Share your photos with us on Instagram, Tumblr or Twitter with the tag #Drought2012. You can also upload your photos in the box below. 

    139 comments

    Prayer...how to think you are helping when you are in actuality doing nothing.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: cattle, dairy-farms, droughtof2012, bolivar-mo
  • 15
    Aug
    2012
    11:46am, EDT

    Drought expected to take toll at checkout

    Grocery stores around the nation may soon see a ripple effect of the drought, with animal-based, perishable foods costs increasing by nearly 5 percent in the coming year. NBC's Janet Shamlian reports

    By Janet Shamlian, NBC News

    FORT WORTH, Texas –  At a grocery store in Fort Worth, shoppers walk the aisles with coupons in their hands and off-brand products in their carts. A still-recovering economy has many looking to save a few dollars on their food bill, a job that is expected to become more difficult before year's end.  

    See our full drought coverage here. And on Wednesday, Aug. 15, watch NBC News, CNBC, MSNBC, The Weather Channel and Telemundo for daylong, network-wide coverage of the drought.

    The lingering and pervasive drought that's taking its toll on farmers and ranchers across America's heartland now is expected to soon impact families across the country in the form of higher prices at the market.  

    How much higher is a tough question.  


    Rising costs
    While the USDA predicts a 3 to 5 percent increase on everything from cereal to steak, some economists believe price hikes will come closer to 10 percent.

     

     

    One study suggests a family of four will spend $600 more in 2013 to buy the same products they purchased last year.  

    "I'll be more careful about how much I buy so there's no waste and be careful what I buy," one woman told me as she was choosing oranges in the produce section.   

    Slideshow: America's farmland baking in drought

    Drought conditions plague much of the United States after a summer of scorching temperatures and a lack of rain. The dryness is affecting America's farmland, threatening crops like soybean and corn.

    Launch slideshow

    The pictures of wilted crops and hungry cattle – so prevalent this summer – tell us beef and corn will affected. But experts say even items like chips and peanut butter will be more expensive at this time next year.  

    “I think we’re going to see price increase across the board,” said Bernard Weinstein, an economist at Southern Methodist University. “Because corn, in particular, is such a ubiquitous product – it’s used in the manufacture of most processed foods. “

    So the ripple effect will mean price hikes down every aisle – on products like cereal and chips.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "I will try to find the best price because we don't have a lot of extra money to spend on groceries," said one woman visiting from Ohio and shopping with her daughter.

    The biggest hikes are expected to be on some of the staples – dairy, eggs, poultry, pork and beef.

    However, beef prices may actually ease a bit in the short term, as ranchers who can't afford to feed their cattle are selling them off early – so there's a healthy supply hitting the market now.

    But next year at this time, there will likely be shortages.  So things like hamburger meat, sometimes considered a budget-friendly meal, may soon be priced more like steak.  

    North Carolina, the second largest poultry producer in the nation, is facing big challenges as the price of grain rises. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

    ‘You’ve got to eat’
    Talking to shoppers in this Texas market, they're aware of what's coming and resigned to it.  

    "Food is not a discretionary item," one man said as he put a carton of eggs in his basket. "You've got to eat."  

    From farmers’ pastures to our own kitchen tables, the drought of 2012 will exact a high toll.

    More coverage of the drought: 

    Drought sends Mississippi into ‘uncharted territory’ 

    ‘Best year ever’ for some farmers outside drought region   

    Forced to sell cattle during drought, dairy farmers ‘just keep praying’ for rain

    Americans tell their story of #Drought2012 

    In drought-stricken Wisconsin, farmers helping farmers  

    Emergency well drilling brings relief to farmers stricken by drought

    Have you been affected by the worst drought in more than 50 years? Share your photos with us on Instagram, Tumblr or Twitter with the tag #Drought2012. You can also upload your photos in the box below. 

    73 comments

    This drought should expose the real believers in capitalism. Do they really believe in the free market? Do they reject all government regulation or do they merely reject regulations on themselves? A free market without government interference does not prop up growers who lose their crops to extreme …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: commodities, economy, corn, featured, food-prices, janet-shamlian, droughtof2012
  • 15
    Aug
    2012
    8:47am, EDT

    Drought sends Mississippi into 'uncharted territory'

    Robert Ray/ AP

    Water levels on the Mississippi River continue to fall near Vicksburg, Miss., seen in this Aug. 6, 2012 photo.

    By John Yang, NBC News

    ABOARD THE DREDGE JADWIN IN THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER – The drought of 2012 has humbled the mighty Mississippi River.

    See our full drought coverage here. And on Wednesday, Aug. 15, watch NBC News, CNBC, MSNBC, The Weather Channel and Telemundo for daylong, network-wide coverage of the drought.

    A year after near-historic flooding, the river’s water levels are at near-historic lows from Cairo, Ill., where the Ohio River empties into it, to New Orleans, just north of its endpoint at the Gulf of Mexico.

    In July, water levels in Cairo, Memphis, Tenn., and Vicksburg, Miss., dipped below those of the historic drought of 1988. That’s affecting everything from commerce on the maritime superhighway to recreation to the drinking water in Louisiana.

    The biggest impact may be on shipping. “It’s getting near critical,” said Austin Golding, a third-generation co-owner of Vicksburg, Miss.-based Golding Barge Lines. “Without more rain, we’re heading into uncharted territory.”


    About $180 billion worth of goods move up and down the river on barges, 500 million tons of the basic ingredients for much of the U.S. economy, according to the American Waterways Operators, a trade group. It carries 60 percent of the nation’s grain, 22 percent of the oil and gas and 20 percent of the coal, according to American Waterways Operators. It would take 60 trailer trucks to carry the cargo in just one barge, 144 18-wheeler tankers to carry the oil and gas in one petroleum barge.

    MSNBC's Thomas Roberts talks to NBC News Correspondent John Yang and CNBC's Jackie Deangelis about the record-breaking drought gripping much of the country.

    The low water levels mean that barge companies have to lighten their load by about 25 percent so the barges ride higher in the water, reducing what’s known as the barges’ “draught.”

    That means each tow boat is moving less cargo than usual even though “it takes up the same amount of fuel to burn and the same amount of manpower,” said Ed Henleben, senior operations manager for Ingram Barge Co. in St. Louis.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Already this summer, there are been 15 to 20 cases of barges running aground, according to Steve Jones, the Army Corps of Engineer’s Mississippi River navigation manager. Some cases have stalled river traffic for as much at three days. At this point in an average summer, there’d be only about eight or 10, Jones said.

    And as the water drops, the river channel narrows. In some places, the Mississippi is a one-way river as barges heading north have to wait for traffic headed south, adding to the costly delays.

    The result: Millions of dollars in higher shipping costs.

    “The products we tow, that product costs more,” said Golding. “Somebody’s got to come up with that cost.”

    Economists say ultimately, it will be the consumer.  “Some markets such as spot markets for agricultural products will be immediately impacted by increased transportation costs,” said Donald Sweeney of the University of Missouri-St. Louis.

    The Mississippi River, an essential waterway responsible for transporting billions of dollars of products every year, is becoming unnavigable. NBC's John Yang reports.

    The navigational hazards of the low water levels are compounded by last year’s flooding, which resulted in a great deal of soil and silt being washed into the river, altering and raising the riverbed.

    Because of that sediment in a flood, “as the ceiling rises, so does the floor,” said Golding. “We’ve just dealt with a historic flood, then the water drops.… We have some 50-year guys who’ve never seen anything like this before. It’s a completely different river than anybody’s ever seen.”

    As the Army Corps of Engineers’ navigation manager, Jones spend eight to 10 hours a day directing dredges to keep a navigable channel from St. Louis south at least nine feet deep (a system of locks and dams manages the water depth north of St. Louis). So far, the government has spent about $60 million in the effort.

    Grocery stores around the nation may soon see a ripple effect of the drought, with animal-based, perishable foods costs increasing by nearly 5 percent in the coming year. NBC's Janet Shamlian reports

    The low water levels in the Mississippi are also resulting in a wedge of salt water creeping upriver from the Gulf of Mexico, threatening the drinking water supply in New Orleans. The Army Corps of Engineers hopes to begin work this week on a $5.8 million underwater barrier to block the saltwater’s advance.

    The river’s low levels are the result of a combination of the mild winter in the Upper Midwest, which resulted in very little snow melt to feed the river, and the dry spring and summer in the tributaries to the Mississippi and Ohio rivers.

    What will it take to get the Mississippi back to normal? Says Jones: “Rainfall – which will occur, it’s just a question of when.”

    Slideshow: America's farmland baking in drought

    Drought conditions plague much of the United States after a summer of scorching temperatures and a lack of rain. The dryness is affecting America's farmland, threatening crops like soybean and corn.

    Launch slideshow

    More coverage of the drought: 

    ‘Best year ever’ for some farmers outside drought region   

    Forced to sell cattle during drought, dairy farmers ‘just keep praying’ for rain

    Drought expected to take toll at checkout

    Americans tell their story of #Drought2012 

    In drought-stricken Wisconsin, farmers helping farmers  

    Emergency well drilling brings relief to farmers stricken by drought

    Have you been affected by the worst drought in more than 50 years? Share your photos with us on Instagram, Tumblr or Twitter with the tag #Drought2012. You can also upload your photos in the box below. 

     

     

    318 comments

    We've had plenty of rain here in Connecticut. Hang in there midwesterners. Droughts have happened before and they'll happen again. They all end eventually.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mississippi-river, featured, barges, john-yang, droughtof2012
  • 14
    Aug
    2012
    6:11pm, EDT

    Americans tell their story of #Drought2012

    The United States is currently in the throes of the worst drought in more than 50 years. Special coverage begins Wednesday across the networks of #NBCNews.

    See some of the images and stories we have begun collecting from viewers and readers showing how the drought is affecting them. Show us how you've been affected by sharing photos tagged #Drought2012 or use the drop box below. 


     

    More coverage of the drought: 

    Drought sends Mississippi into ‘uncharted territory’ 

    ‘Best year ever’ for some farmers outside drought region   

    Forced to sell cattle during drought, dairy farmers ‘just keep praying’ for rain

    Drought expected to take toll at checkout

    In drought-stricken Wisconsin, farmers helping farmers  

    Emergency well drilling brings relief to farmers stricken by drought

     

    Have you been affected by the worst drought in more than 50 years? Share your photos with us on Instagram, Tumblr or Twitter with the tag #Drought2012. You can also upload your photos in the box below. 

     

    10 comments

    If anyone, and I mean ANYONE, complains about too much snow this winter, they need to look back at these pics. I am with Sionyx, "let it snow, let it snow, let it snow..."

    Show more
    Explore related topics: photos, featured, share, droughtof2012
  • 14
    Aug
    2012
    5:08pm, EDT

    Could genetically modified seeds be a drought solution?

    CNBC's Jane Wells reports on some genetically modified seeds that are specifically made to fight droughts.

    See our full drought coverage here. And on Wednesday, Aug. 15, watch NBC News, CNBC, MSNBC, The Weather Channel and Telemundo for daylong, network-wide coverage of the drought.

    Could genetically modified seeds be a drought solution?

    While farmers across the country struggle with the worst drought in 50 years, CNBC's Jane Wells reports on some genetically modified corn seeds that are specifically made to fight droughts.


    And the global seed business is not small change -- it was a $46 billion in 2012.

    But how do these seeds play into the debate over genetically-modified food? Watch Wells report above. 

    More coverage of the drought: 

    Drought sends Mississippi into ‘uncharted territory’ 

    ‘Best year ever’ for some farmers outside drought region   

    Forced to sell cattle during drought, dairy farmers ‘just keep praying’ for rain

    Drought expected to take toll at checkout

    Americans tell their story of #Drought2012 

    In drought-stricken Wisconsin, farmers helping farmers  

    Emergency well drilling brings relief to farmers stricken by drought

    See a full play list of drought-related videos here.  

    Have you been affected by the worst drought in more than 50 years? Share your photos with us on Instagram, Tumblr or Twitter with the tag #Drought2012. You can also upload your photos in the box below. 

    2 comments

    You are correct, denver... in a year like this, nothing would grow with what mother nature has provided us. In Kansas, though, a typical year provides us with most of our precipitation in a short amount of time with several weeks of hot, dry weather in between. The new "drought tolerant" varieties h …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: cnbc, corn, droughtof2012, super-seeds, drought-proof-seeds
  • 14
    Aug
    2012
    3:24pm, EDT

    In drought-stricken Wisconsin, farmers helping farmers

    AP

    The 1,000-foot view from inside a Blackhawk helicopter that Gov. Scott Walker and officials from his administration took to survey crop damage across southern Wisconsin on July 20, 2012, in Burlington, Wis.

    By Steve Wende , NBC News

    WEST ALLIS, Wisc. – Farmer Scott Bayer normally looks forward to the Wisconsin State fair, spending all year, preparing his prize beef cattle. But this year’s preparations have been a lot harder for him than normal.

    See our full drought coverage here. And on Wednesday, Aug. 15, watch NBC News, CNBC, MSNBC, The Weather Channel and Telemundo for daylong, network-wide coverage of the drought.

    Bayer’s cows are losing weight since they are not eating as much as usual. And he is getting a lot less sleep because he has been forced to do most of his work at night: all due to the searing heat wave which has blanketed his farm in Central Wisconsin.  

    “It takes a lot more work to make sure cows are cool and relaxed, to make sure they put on weight. The drought has been very difficult on us producers, our stress levels are definitely higher,” Bayer said.

    But it was not all doom and gloom at the 161-year-old state fair. Despite the record heat, attendance at the 11-day fair reached record highs, and some farmers found help – from others farmers.  


    ‘Farmer to farmer support’
    “There is a real feeling of let’s get together, let’s be a team, let’s be a partner, let’s make this work and get through this tough time,” Wisconsin State fair CEO Rick Frenette told NBC News.

    “The fair has brought rural and urban people together. It’s allowed rural people to get together as one big family and talk about what’s going on with the drought. And it lets our urban guests know what’s going on with this drought and how hard it is for our people in Wisconsin right now to put food on the table,” added Frenette.

    CNBC's Jane Wells reports on some genetically modified seeds that are specifically made to fight droughts.

    Farmers in the southern half of Wisconsin have been hardest hit, with many losing their crops to the historic drought. Some have been looking at reducing livestock numbers due to a lack of feed, but farmers in northern and central parts of the state are all chipping in to help. 

    In central Wisconsin, potatoes, sweet corn, beans and peas are grown with the help of irrigation, harvested in July and early August, and then the fields normally sit idle until a new crop of vegetables is planted in the fall. But this year, farmers from that part of the state are planting an extra crop of grass to be used as feed by their drought-affected neighbors.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “That’s farmer to farmer support,” Wisconsin’s Secretary of Agriculture Ben Brancel told NBC News. “In mid-July I would say the farmers were very depressed. They had put all their effort into planting their crops, only to see them start, and then wither and not produce anything.”

    But with recent rainfalls easing up the situation a bit, spirits are lifting a bit, too. “Farmers are very resilient and there is a lot of optimism they will make it through this challenging year,” said Brancel.   

    The state government has also opened up conservation land for the growing of feed. Brancel has also urged farmers to consider alternatives for getting feed – since negative cattle sales have a ripple effect. It can mean there are fewer cows to produce milk for Wisconsin’s cheese companies and a reduced need for equipment and supplies from other businesses.

    In addition Wisconsin’s Gov. Scott Walker and the University of Wisconsin-Extension program have collaborated to create a “Farmer to Farmer Network” to help connect farmers online who are in need of feed because of the drought, with others who have it.

    Since most show vegetables and plants are grown specifically for the fair, and prize fair animals receive special feed and care, the drought had little impact on the size and quality of this year’s exhibits, according to Kristin Chuckel, the state fair’s media relations manager. Although, one sign of the drought might be that no state record ribbons were awarded this year.  

    More coverage of the drought: 

    Drought sends Mississippi into ‘uncharted territory’ 

    ‘Best year ever’ for some farmers outside drought region   

    Forced to sell cattle during drought, dairy farmers ‘just keep praying’ for rain

    Drought expected to take toll at checkout

    Americans tell their story of #Drought2012 

    In drought-stricken Wisconsin, farmers helping farmers  

    Emergency well drilling brings relief to farmers stricken by drought

    Have you been affected by the worst drought in more than 50 years? Share your photos with us on Instagram, Tumblr or Twitter with the tag #Drought2012. You can also upload your photos in the box below. 

     

    30 comments

    That's what people in Wisc. do for each other. Maybe the sorry case East coasters could learn from this. Your neighbor can be your friend, not someone to compete with.

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    Explore related topics: wisconsin, featured, state-fair, commentid-featured, droughtof2012, steve-wende
  • 14
    Aug
    2012
    1:40pm, EDT

    Emergency well drilling brings relief to farmers stricken by drought

    The governor of Missouri has enacted an emergency measure to drill new wells in areas where water is scarce, providing much-needed relief for the state's farmers and ranchers. NBC's Thanh Truong reports.

    By Thanh Truong, NBC News

    WARREN COUNTY, Mo. --  There's a desperate search for water under way throughout Missouri where 95 percent of the state is enduring extreme levels of drought.  In the rural area of Truxton, farmer Rusty Lee estimates he'll likely lose 40 percent of his crops.

    See our full drought coverage here. And on Wednesday, Aug. 15, watch NBC News, CNBC, MSNBC, The Weather Channel and Telemundo for daylong, network-wide coverage of the drought.

    We walked through his withering fields where rows of yellow squash lay shriveled under the sun.  Lee said he's been trying to explain the severity of the drought to his 6–year-old son William.

    "I try not to talk about our losses money-wise, economic-wise, but I want him to understand that this drought … will go down in history and that he probably won't see something like this in his lifetime," Lee said.


    He is one of more than 3,700 farmers and ranchers in Missouri who have been approved for emergency well drilling.  Gov. Jay Nixon issued an executive order last month for the state to pay up to 90 percent of the cost to dig new or deeper wells for farmers severely impacted by the drought.  The farmers will pay the remainder of that cost.  So far, the state has set aside more than $18 million to dig these new wells.

    "We've been praying for rain, you don't know how much these wells help us," said long-time cattle rancher Michele Christopherson.

    Early Thursday morning, her farm was bustling with noise.  A two-person crew, equipped with heavy drilling equipment, started digging the 540 feet necessary to hit fresh water.  Christopherson's current well doesn't have enough capacity to keep her 100 head of cattle hydrated.  She's had several die from the heat and several others have lost their calves.  Between the $10,000 she's already had to pay for hay and the estimated $12,000 she'll have to pay for the new well, Christopherson said this year will be one of losses.

    "We're tough, that's how you got be when you're doing this kind of business, but nobody can sit there and say they can handle that kind of hit.  We certainly can't," said Christopherson.

    Peggy Ebbesmeyer's ranch in Truxton, Mo., has been hit hard by drought.

    By noon, the crew hit pay dirt.  Water gushed out of the ground.  Christopherson stood near her fence, smiling at the sight.

    A few miles down the road, fellow cattle rancher Peggy Ebbesmeyer was eagerly waiting her turn.  The pond that usually serves as the main watering hole for cows is drying up and the little water left in it is warm and green.

    "My cows lose five pounds a day by drinking this water.  There's not much I can do without rain," said Ebbesmeyer.

    To supplement the rancid water, she's been hauling water from a town 12 miles away to her farm.  That's been a daily trip for two months.  Ebbesemeyer figures she's lost between $40,000-$50,000 after several head of cattle died and others were sold early.  

    But for now, she will likely have to wait until the end of August -- along with thousands of other farmers -- for the drills to arrive.  

    Have you been affected by the worst drought in more than 50 years? Share your photos with us on Instagram, Tumblr or Twitter with the tag #Drought2012. You can also upload your photos in the box below. 

     

    213 comments

    We walked through his withering fields where rows of yellow squash lay shriveled under the sun.

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    Explore related topics: water, drought, missouri, featured, well-drilling, droughtof2012
  • 14
    Aug
    2012
    11:49am, EDT

    Firefighter killed as wildfires rage across the West, destroying dozens of homes

    By NBC News and wire services

    Updated 12:28 a.m. ET: Wildfires raged in several Western states on Tuesday, destroying dozens of homes and threatening hundreds more. In Idaho, one firefighter was killed by a falling tree.

    A fire in central Washington grew rapidly overnight and destroyed more than 60 homes, spurring the state's governor to declare an emergency in two counties, NBC station KING of Seattle reported.

    Anne Veseth, a 20-year-old who was in her second season as a firefighter, was killed Sunday as she worked a fire near Orofino, Idaho, the U.S. Forest Service told The Associated Press. Her older brother also is a wild-land firefighter in Idaho, where 12 blazes are burning.


    See our full drought coverage here. And on Wednesday, Aug. 15, watch NBC News, CNBC, MSNBC, The Weather Channel and Telemundo for daylong, network-wide coverage of the drought.

    "The Forest Service is devastated by the loss of one of our own," Forest Supervisor Rick Brazell told the AP.

    Federal officials investigate Idaho wildfire death

    Officials were investigating the death, which came on the same day that another firefighter narrowly escaped a wildfire in southeastern Oregon.

    That firefighter was forced to deploy her emergency shelter in an area overrun by wind-whipped flames. She suffered minor burns to a leg and forearm and minor smoke inhalation.

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com 

    The rest of her 20-person federal crew made it to a safety zone and was pulled off the fire. The blaze scorched about 653 square miles in remote terrain straddling Oregon and Nevada, where five ranches in the Kings River Valley were evacuated.

    A crew in central Washington state also barely outran flames at a wind-driven fire in Kittitas County. The firefighters managed to drive to safety as they got ahead of the Taylor Bridge fire, said Richelle Risdon, a county fire spokeswoman.

    That wind-whipped fire, burning in rugged terrain near Cle Elum grew from 2,800 acres to more than 20,000 acres in a matter of hours overnight, KING reported.

    As of Tuesday afternoon, it had destroyed more than 60 homes as well as 40 other structures. Another 450 homes were evacuated as winds shifted northeast, blowing toward several pockets of homes and subdivisions.

    Washington Gov. Christine Gregoire declared a state of emergency in Kittitas and Yakima counties to make available more resources to fight the fire.

    With the wind howling late Monday, the fire quickly burned through rugged timber, crowning in trees and glowing across ridge lines. 

    Incident commander Rex Reed said the fire was 10 percent contained on Tuesday evening, KING reported.

    Firefighters from around the state, as well as 140 state prison inmates, were called in to help regional firefighters and the Department of Natural Resources, KING reported.

    Officials said no injuries had been reported so far. Washington Department of Natural Resources spokesman Mark Grassel told The AP that the fire crept within six miles of the city of Ellensburg, though crews were able to stop its advance.

    Some property at a chimpanzee sanctuary outside Cle Elum burned but the animals were uninjured, Diana Goodrich of Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest told KING.

    The Kittitas County fairgrounds has been set up as an emergency shelter for large animals evacuated in the area, which is home to many horse and cattle ranches, the Ellensburg Daily Record reported. Owners and volunteers were rounding up stray horses amid reports that people had opened gates or cut fences to let the animals flee the fire.

    Authorities said the blaze started on Monday afternoon by workers at a construction site east of Cle Elum, Reuters reported.

    In Utah, a lightning-sparked fire consumed about 34 square miles, threatened a herd of wild horses and shut down the historic Pony Express Road in the state's western desert.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    Meanwhile, crews in Northern California made progress against an aggressive wildfire in Lake County that grew to more than 9 square miles and destroyed three buildings. Officials lifted evacuation orders for the residents of nearly 500 homes late Monday, said Daniel Berlant, a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

    Berlant told NBC station KCRA in Sacramento on Tuesday that the fire was still advancing, though in a remote area.

    "This fire will likely make a number of runs on us today," Berlant told KCRA.

    A separate wildfire to the north was threatening about 600 homes, prompting some evacuation orders in the Seneca and Rush Creek communities in Plumas National Forest.

    The so-called Wye and Walker fires have charred 7,000 acres and are 30 percent contained, Berlant told KCRA. About 1,100 firefighters were on scene of those fires.

    Fires across California have affected some national parks, including Lassen Volcanic National Park and Joshua Tree National Park.

    In Lassen Volcanic National Park, which is inortheastern California, a fire that burned 33 square miles of pine forests and thick brush forced the closure of a highway and several trails.

    At Joshua Tree, park officials said a fire burned up to 300 acres of rocky, tree-covered hillsides, closing the scenic Keys View Road.

    Several other fires in hot and dry Southern California were sparked by lightning, including three burning out of control northeast of Julian. None were threatening any structures.

     

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    115 comments

    RIP Anne Veseth. Thank yous to you and your family for your sacrifice. From the wife of a former USFS fire fighter.

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    Explore related topics: weather, washington, wildfires, oregon, california, idaho, utah, droughtof2012
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