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Klamath Basin USDA Radio Features
Join USDA Radio reporter Brenda Curtis as she explores conservation issues and
solutions in the Klamath Basin. Hear the stories of Klamath Basin residents in their own words.
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Removing Thirsty Western Junipers
Ranchers are removing invasive Western Juniper trees from rangeland in order to conserve much needed water and forage vegetation.
Brenda Curtis reports on an interesting way that USDA's Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) is being used by ranchers in the Klamath Basin.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and Tulelake, California rancher, Jerry Scanlon.
Time: 00:02:11
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The Klamath Project
Oregon and California's Klamath Basin is the focus of one issue: "water rights."
There are many diverse interests needing water from the two Klamath Lakes as well as the Klamath River. The problem is there is not enough water for everyone.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and George Allen Wright, Member of the Natural Resources Conservation and Development Council, and Gene Kelley, District
Conservationist for the Natural Resources Conservation Service in Tulelake, California.
Time: 00:05:00
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Farming on a Wildlife Refuge
Farmers and ranchers who farm on wildlife refuges show a closeness to nature
that may surprise you. Brenda Curtis talks to two Klamath Basin landowners who farm
on both a national and private wildlife refuge
Participants: Brenda Curtis, Tulelake, California farmer Scott Seus, and Klamath Falls Rancher Bill Kennedy.
Time: 00:05:01
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The Klamath Tribes and the Right to Water
The Klamath Tribes of Southern Oregon and Northern California claim the original rights to the area's
water supply. What does that mean to the area's farmers and ranchers? Brenda Curtis traveled to the Klamath Basin
and talked to the Chairman of the Board of the Klamath Tribes, Allen Foreman about the complex issue.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and the Chairman of the Board of the Klamath Tribes, Allen Foreman.
Time: 00:05:00
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The Day the Water was Turned Off
In the Spring of 2001 a serious drought combined with the impact of the Endangered Species Act
caused the irrigation water to 800 farms in the Klamath Basin to be turned off. Brenda Curtis
examines what happened then and what has happened since then.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and Connie Mack, Martin Kern, and Jim Chapman,
Klamath Falls, Oregon farmers and ranchers. Allen Foreman, Chairman of the Board of the Klamath Tribe.
Kevin Conroy, team leader, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Klamath Falls Oregon.
Time: 00:05:00
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A Producer of Natural Resources
There are farmers and ranchers who farm on both Private and National Wildlife
Refuges. They have a very special relationship with the wildlife they protect.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and Klamath Falls, Oregon cattle rancher, Bill Kennedy.
Time: 00:02:48
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Lessons Learned in the Klamath Basin
Over the last four years much has been done to help farmers in the
Northwest's Klamath Basin to use less water.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and Klamath Basin ranchers, Jim Chapman and Louis Randall.
Klamath Basin area leader for NRCS, Kevin Conroy.
Time: 00:02:52
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Diverse Uses for Water in the Klamath Basin
There are many, many diverse users of water in Southern Oregon's and Northern
California's Klamath Basin.
One group of volunteers called the Resource Conservation and Development Council is working to help people learn
to live with less and water while also keeping an economic base intact.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and George Allen Wright, member of the Resource Conservation and Development Council.
Time: 00:03:00
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Who Owns the Water?
There is no easy answer to who has priority to the much needed water of the Klamath Basin.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and the Chairman of the Board of the Klamath Tribes, Allen Foreman.
Time: 00:03:00
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Protecting Marshland in the Pacific Flyway
There is a stopping place in the Klamath Basin for migratory birds that will be preserved forever.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and Tupper Blake, the owner of Marshland Island Ranch, Klamath Basin, California.
Time: 00:02:54
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Water Rights in the Klamath Basin
Water rights continues to be the complex issue surrounding who gets how much water in
Oregon's Klamath Basin.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and Connie Mack and Martin Kern, Klamath Basin farmers.
Allen Foreman, Chairman of the Board of the Klamath Tribe.
Time: 00:02:58
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EQIPPING Farmers in the Klamath Basin
A cost share program called the Environmental Quality Incentive Program or
EQIP is helping farmers in the Klamath Basin to use less water.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and David King, Tulelake farmer and Gene Kelley,
District Manager for the Tulelake Natural Resources Conservation Service.
Time: 00:02:24
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Ranchers in the Klamath Basin Turn to NRCS
USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service is helping farmers
through some difficult times in Northern California's Klamath Basin.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and Mike Byrne, Northern California rancher.
Time: 00:02:15
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Turning Plastic and Wood into Alternative Energy
Want to get rid of unwanted trees and used plastic? Turn them into energy.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and Jim Vancura, Coordinator of Ore-Cal Natural Resource Conservation and Development Program.
Time: 00:02:14
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Getting the Conservation Word Out
The Agriculture Department wants the public to know about all of the action
being taken to save threatened species like the Coho Salmon.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and Linden Brooks, California NRCS Assistant State
Conservationist for Field Operations. Peter Townley, Resource Conservationist for the Natural Resources Conservation Service.
Time: 00:02:00
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High Tech Farming
Farming organically also means farming with the latest technology.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and California farmer, Scott Seus.
Time: 00:02:22
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Saving the Coho
Farmers and ranchers in Northern California are doing their best to help save the endangered Coho Salmon.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and California Conservationist, Ernie Wilkinson. Bill Micke, Northern California Rancher.
Linden Brooks, Red Bluff California Field Operation Assistant for the Natural Resources Conservation Service. Peter Townley, Resource Conservationist, NRCS.
Time: 00:05:00
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Northern California's Aruja Dam
A proposed project in Northern California's Shasta Valley will help provide the threatened
Coho Salmon with more and better water to swim upriver for spawning. In addition, farmers and
ranchers will only need half the water they currently use for irrigation.
Participants: Brenda Curtis and Northern California NRCS Hydraulic Engineer, Tom Benson.
Time: 00:02:26
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