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Flooding could recharge dry soil

Agriculture industry waiting for water to recede to assess damage

JOHNSTOWN – Surging waters in Colorado swept away barns, silos and fences and left houses covered in mud in this northern agricultural town. The floodwaters were so powerful they uprooted irrigation pipes and spread them around the fields here, leaving lakes next to which cattle now graze.

They also brought instant relief to drought-hardened areas, with the promise of moisture restored in deep soils and the possibility of reservoirs refilling to help farmers well into next year.

“There is a silver lining if we look down the road,” said Ron Carleton, deputy commissioner of agriculture for the state. “We just have to get past these near-term impacts.”

The damage to Colorado’s agriculture industry – the state’s third-largest industry at $8.5 billion last year – is vast: Aerial footage shows broad swaths of inundated farmland. Rows of crops up and down the South Platte River were submerged, including corn, lettuce, onions and soybeans.

“We’ve seen these rivers come up before. We’ve never seen it like this,” said Ron Kline Jr., whose family runs Kline Farms in the region.

Carleton, who has been touring the flooded areas, said officials won’t have a full picture of the damage until water recedes. However, they’ve begun to identify potential trouble spots. The corn harvest had just begun, and there could be losses there, as well as in produce farms in Weld County, Carleton said.

“Just from driving around, you see land underwater. That tells you a lot right there. It’s land that’s certainly not producing right now,” he said.

On Kline’s farm, the waters pushed a shed and the equipment inside down a road. A semitrailer was turned 90 degrees. A 700-gallon tank of engine oil is nowhere to be found.

“It’s somewhere between here and Nebraska,” said Kline, who farms corn, wheat and alfalfa.

Troy Seaworth, whose family owns Seaworth Farms in Wellington, on the northern edge of the flooding, is one of the farmers who will be looking to see how much water was captured in reservoirs. It will take time for that to become evident.

“If we capture this year for next year, that’s a good thing – that’s a great thing,” he said.

Seaworth, who plants sugar beets, wheat and corn, said his farm for the most part was spared. But the storms have forced him to delay corn silage harvest and the cutting of alfalfa. Still, he’s not expecting major economic losses.

Delaying harvest of crops could mean reduced quality in some cases because they’ll be past maturity, said Keith Maxey, director of Weld County’s extension office for Colorado State University.

Maxey said damaged roads also will have a big effect for farmers and ranchers. With transportation routes impaired, it’s going to take them longer to move their products, adding fuel and labor costs.

Weld County commissioners agree, and say they’re already looking at how to get temporary roads pending permanent fixes.

Local government officials say it’s too early to get an assessment of how much the damage will cost.

“I don’t think we’re going to know for a while how much damage is out there,” Weld County Commissioner Mike Freeman said.

Officials also are assessing the extent of damage to irrigation ditches that some crops depend on. With hay and alfalfa underwater, it’s also likely that feed prices will increase because of limited availability.

The Colorado Cattlemen’s Association, which represents about 13,000 beef producers in the state, has been communicating with members to find out what help they need. Beef is one of the largest contributors to Colorado’s agriculture industry.

“At this time, CCA will continue ongoing assessments to determine if some level of relief assistance is desired from our members upon evaluating infrastructure, livestock and feed impacts,” the organization said in a statement.

For now, all of the possible long-term benefits mean little for the farmers who’ve seen their work immersed underwater.

“Large areas of the state will see some agricultural benefits from this storm system,” said Nolan Doesken, Colorado’s climatologist. “Then comes the flood corridors. The flood corridors – wow.”



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