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MELTDOWN: As water dries up, Creston Valleysa国际传媒檚 farmers worry for the future

RDCK is studying the feasibility of additional water sources for the area
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Retired fruit farmer and agricultural economist Don Low, who advises the Regional District of Central Kootenay on water issues in the Creston Valley, says the Arrow Creek water plant expensively treats water to a level far beyond what is needed for irrigation. Photo: Bill Metcalfe

In the finale of this four-story series, we look at what the reduced snowpack means for agriculture in the Creston Valley. In case you missed them, read part one on , part two on , and part three on .

High temperatures, a declining snowpack and impending water shortages are a climate change trend that have farmers in the Creston Valley worried.

Raj Smagh, who has farmed just under 100 acres of cherries since 2010, says farmers have had several bad years of either no crop or poor ones.

sa国际传媒淚t has been like this for three or four years,sa国际传媒 he says. sa国际传媒淪urviving has become very hard for farmers. Usually you can have a bad year and survive, but this is the fourth year. The scale is not balanced any more.sa国际传媒

In February, all of the 35-40 commercial cherry farmers in the area lost this yearsa国际传媒檚 crop due to an extreme frost that fell to -28 C in February. The frost killed the parts of the flowers that make the fruit.

But it was not the frost alone that did the damage, says longtime Creston orchardist and market gardener Frank Wloka.

sa国际传媒淭he cold was the final straw, but the part that killed the trees was nine weeks of abnormally warm temperatures (beforehand).sa国际传媒

Because of the unseasonably warm weather, the trees had come out of dormancy, making them vulnerable to frost when the temperature dropped.

Wloka says some of his trees are now collapsing and dying because of damage to the cambium layer, which feeds any buds that may have survived.

sa国际传媒淭his is my first experience of losing a crop and then losing the trees,sa国际传媒 he says.

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sa国际传媒淚t has affected our crop, almost 100 per cent lost. Itsa国际传媒檚 going to be a tough year,sa国际传媒 says cherry grower Raj Smagh following an extreme frost in the Creston area in the spring. Smagh has farmed cherries in the Creston area since 2010, and before that for many years in the Okanagan. Photo: Bill Metcalfe

In 2021, much of the crop was lost because of heat and drought, and the two ensuing years were worryingly dry, with concerns about whether the areasa国际传媒檚 main water source, Arrow Creek, was up to the task of irrigating the crop through to harvest time.

One morning in July 2021, a group of 38 residents of South Canyon got a surprise when they turned on their taps. sa国际传媒淣othing,sa国际传媒 says Brad Ziefflie, one of the residents. sa国际传媒淣o water.sa国际传媒

In the rural community southeast of Creston, the water bubbles up from a groundwater spring into a containment structure, then flows into a local distribution system. The residents had been observing a drastic drop in the water level over a few days, and then suddenly it was dry.

They relied on bottled water as well as on water transported from Creston for 18 days until their supply inexplicably returned.

Ziefflie says nothing like this had happened before, and the community lives with the uncertainty of sa国际传媒渘ot knowing when it is going to happen again, and knowing it probably will.sa国际传媒

The South Canyon incident acted as a wake-up call for the Creston Valley, heightening local awareness of the precarious nature of their water supply in a time of climate change.

The Creston area is the most extensive and productive agricultural area in the West Kootenay, with open, wide valleys that produce and export field crops, tree fruits, beef, dairy products and wine.

Concerns about water led to a decision in April by the Regional District of Central Kootenay to commission a $100,000 engineering study on possible additional water sources for the area, with the initial report due in December.

Wloka says it is sa国际传媒渆xtraordinarily importantsa国际传媒 that the RDCK is doing this, but he fears that it has come too late and the process will take longer than the urgency of the situation requires.

sa国际传媒淲e are in a terrible situation for water supply in the whole area,sa国际传媒 he says.

Arrow Creek: is it enough?

The West Kootenay snowpack was only at 72 per cent of normal this year on April 1, according to the provincesa国际传媒檚 monthly Snow Survey and Water Supply Bulletin.

sa国际传媒淭his year because we had such a warm winter, we did not get the snowpack accumulation we normally getsa国际传媒,sa国际传媒 says Calvin Beebe, a provincial government hydrologist based in the Kootenays, sa国际传媒渨hich means in order to get through the summer months we will be more reliant on precipitation to feed stream flow.sa国际传媒

Water supply depends not just on the snowpack but on the timing of precipitation. The ideal situation, according to Beebe, is sa国际传媒渨ater in the right place at the right time for people to use.sa国际传媒

Southeastern B.C., he says, has seen drier conditions over the past three years than in the previous 10, and that this amounts to sa国际传媒渇airly significant drought.sa国际传媒

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Water Plant operator Allan Richardson surveys Arrow Creek above the intake. Photo: Bill Metcalfe

Most of the domestic and irrigation water in the Creston and Erickson area (with the exception of some wells) comes from Arrow Creek, a tributary of the Goat River that flows through Creston and Erickson before it joins the Kootenay River.

Beebe says what determines water availability for the community is the low flow, rather than year-round average. This is because minimum flows usually occur in the late summer, when demand is the highest.

Since 2017, minimum flows in Arrow Creek have been well below the average annual minimum. August streamflows in Arrow Creek have also been below the long-term monthly mean since 2012.

The water plant on Arrow Creek, owned and run by the RDCK, diverts water at a maximum rate of 320 litres per second from the creek, treats it, then releases it into the water distribution system to about 600 users sa国际传媒 a mix of farms, residences, and businesses.

In a hot summer, this diversion and treatment takes up more than half the creek, says head plant operator Allan Richardson. Some farmers say that in the late summer the plantsa国际传媒檚 maximum output is sometimes not enough for their needs.

sa国际传媒淪ome years we can just barely keep up,sa国际传媒 says Richardson. sa国际传媒淚n the heat of the summer, agriculture takes the majority of the consumption.sa国际传媒

The treatment process that Richardson oversees includes screening and settling, and then treatment with membrane filtration for physical removal of microbiological components, and ultraviolet light and chlorination disinfection of bacteria and viruses.

Don Low is a retired orchardist and agricultural economist who, from 1992 to 2003, was the district agriculturalist (a provincial government job that no longer exists) for the area. He currently sits on an RDCK advisory committee on water issues in Creston.

Low says treating irrigation water to such an advanced degree is unnecessary and expensive. He says the plant, constructed in the late 1990s, is sa国际传媒渁 Mercedes Benz system, when all we needed was a Chevrolet.sa国际传媒

The RDCK built the water plant in the late 1990s, he says, after Interior Health decided the water from Arrow Creek needed treatment. To avoid a conflict with a local anti-chlorination lobby, the RDCK installed a plant with advanced technology that would require only minimal chlorination but rely on an advanced filtering system that Low says sa国际传媒渇ar exceeded anything that would be normally put in to treat irrigation water.sa国际传媒

The filtration plant costs hundreds of thousands of dollars every four years just to replace its filter cartridges, Low says, adding that this contributes to the high rates farmers pay the RDCK for water sa国际传媒 about $350 per acre this year, up from $20 per year before the new system was installed.

sa国际传媒淭here are two issues,sa国际传媒 Low says. sa国际传媒淥ne is the peak demand of the plant sa国际传媒 they are at their capacity sa国际传媒 and the other is a decrease in Arrow Creek flow, which is alarming. So wesa国际传媒檝e got an extremely expensive water system that sa国际传媒 barely provides enough water for current demand, and doesnsa国际传媒檛 provide enough water for future demand.sa国际传媒

Will the Arrow Creek distribution system run out of water?

sa国际传媒淒uring the heat dome in 2021 it was close,sa国际传媒 Low says. sa国际传媒淭heresa国际传媒檚 a lot of water comes down in the spring. But in the summer, it can be just not much more than a trickle.sa国际传媒

Low says the water for irrigation should instead be pumped into the system from the Kootenay River. This may be one of the options considered in the new RDCK feasibility study.

The scope of that study includes a forecast of water needs for agricultural, domestic and other uses; recommendations of feasible additional sources; and an estimate of the costs and required infrastructure for each. The budget for the feasibility study is $100,000, with $75,000 of this funded by the provincial government.

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The Goat River just above its confluence with the Kootenay River. Most of Crestonsa国际传媒檚 water supply comes from Arrow Creek, a tributary of the Goat River. Photo:Bill Metcalfe

Yaqan Nukiy

To the uncertainty about water for households, orchards, gardens, vineyards, and businesses, add Yaqan Nukiysa国际传媒檚 (Lower Kootenay Bandsa国际传媒檚) concern about fish.

sa国际传媒淲esa国际传媒檝e always been interested in making sure that the kokanee have a good spawning habitat,sa国际传媒 says Isaac Dekker, watershed stewardship co-ordinator for the band. sa国际传媒淚n theory the Goat River should be a good place for fish to spawn, and yet year on year we have noticed very few spawners.sa国际传媒

At the Arrow Creek water plant, there is a fish ladder in the creek so fish can bypass the infrastructure. Plant operator Richardson says he rarely sees fish using it.

Dekker, who is a PhD candidate in hydrology, says the band is doing water monitoring on the Goat River, looking at volume, temperature, and sediment in the river.

sa国际传媒淲esa国际传媒檙e not saying that bad habitat in the Goat is the cause of lack of kokanee. I think that would be too simplistic. Theresa国际传媒檚 many causes for the kokanee collapse.sa国际传媒

This flow monitoring is a part of a much larger multi-year Yaqan Nukiy project: a Goat River cumulative effects study that is looking at the cumulative impacts of land use changes. This includes agriculture, but also forestry, which Dekker says can have a significant impact on snowpacks.

Will the various demands on limited water set up a competition between different user groups?

sa国际传媒淚 think there often is (a conflict of priorities) with water issues,sa国际传媒 Dekker says. sa国际传媒淏ut I donsa国际传媒檛 think that it necessarily means that we cansa国际传媒檛 find a common solution.sa国际传媒

MELTDOWN:

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Bill Metcalfe

About the Author: Bill Metcalfe

I have lived in Nelson since 1994 and worked as a reporter at the Nelson Star since 2015.
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