Arkansas Drought Continues…

Posted on Jul 15, 2012 | 7 comments

Larrapin Garden July 2012

When I look at the vegetable garden in this photo, it doesn’t seem like we’re in a severe drought. Walk out there and clouds of grasshoppers (who thrive in parched conditions) fly away like those horrid flying monkeys in Wizard of Oz. I try to walk in a direction that sends them into the chicken pasture, to the delight of the hens as they scramble to catch them with moderate success. Mendy prefers to catch them with a minnow net and using them to fish for catfish with great success. In the garden, the wonderful t-tape irrigation system seems to be keeping most things going. We’ve even had a bumper crop of tomatoes this week and already the freezer is filling up with tomato sauce for winter.

tomatos and purple hull peas

But any drive out in the countryside these days—like the one I took in Madison County this week—will show the drought very clearly. The fields that have tall grass are pure gold at a time the fields are usually still green. With the lone oaks in all that golden grass it looks just like parts of California I once visited, not Arkansas in midsummer. Many fields have been grazed down completely (and probably finished off by grasshoppers) and the farmers are having to feed cattle hay already. In midsummer. That’s not good.

This map puts Northwest Arkansas in the best portions of the state, and Fayetteville and eastward seemed to get some rain this week. But Larrapin Garden is on the Oklahoma side of town and not a drop has fallen. I think we’ve had one good rain of about an inch here back in May, and a couple of days with a less-than-half-inch shower that didn’t even wet the dust under the trees. I have a feeling this particular microclimate, a rocky high plateau, is a deeper shade of orange than most of NWA. And if this is merely “severe,” I really hope I don’t have to see “extreme” or  “exceptional.”

Drought is obvious stress to the land, trees and wildlife. Less obvious maybe, but it’s a wearing stress on people who love the land, trees and wildlife. I’ve been feeling a lot of that lately.   I’ve been reading about the projected climate for our region in the upcoming years, and frankly, the news isn’t good: more heat, droughts more frequent, and when it does rain, more heavy rainfall events more associated with flooding rather than those long slow soaking rains that get deep into the ground.  The projections sound a lot like what I’m reading so often in the paper now. This week it was drought in the midsection of the country, flooding in Houston, or was it Florida..no that was last week.

It’s sobering, to say the least. Then I started reading Bill McKibben’s latest book Eaarth—trying to really educate myself on the changes I’m seeing in the land —and well, the first half of the book can certainly make a person wish to be much, much less sober. As in, eat, drink and be merry because… well, you know.  I’m pushing on through, because he says that creating hopelessness and apathy is exactly what he’s trying NOT to do. No Bill, the depressingly well-documented facts you quote will do that on their own! As in current facts, not future projections. Still, I really want to get to the ‘what to do’ portion of the book —which sounds akin to the Transition Town movement — and past the current climate-facts portion. Yikes.

Meanwhile,  I’m spending  time studying on techniques for resiliency for the land and gardens here at Larrapin, mostly found in permaculture books and websites. The small applications of permaculture I’ve tried here at Larrapin have been quite convincing.  On a grander scale, this set of before/after photos of these permaculture techniques in action in climates far more inhospitable than ours is grounds for realistic inspiration in my opinion. I’m particularly amazed at the size of some of these successful projects…the kind of news I only wish I could get via mainstream news instead of still-obscure Australian internet sites.

So it seems the challenge of climate change for me is this:  how to stay grounded in both gratitude and reality.  As usual, I’m finding lessons—both somber and hopeful—on both in the garden.

Our Lady of Larrapin July 2012

Thanks for stopping by Larrapin Garden. If you are reading via email, please check out the website for recent posts on garden spiders, how “nurse” gloves are handy in beekeeping, how to cool off with a stock tank, and hints for keeping wildlife and trees alive in dry summer heat.

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7 Comments

  1. Thanks for all the informative posts! I also live in NWA and dealing with horrific dryness and heat. ,
    I have been reading your blog for quite sometime and enjoy it very much. I have recently started a blog myself and I just wanted to let you know I nominated you for the One Lovely Blog Award. This award promotes garden blogs and encourages readership among blogs. If you want to accept, take a look at my post @ http://www.theblondegardener.com.
    Thanks!
    Brenda

  2. We’re still in moderate drought in Middle TN even after a nice bit of rain~Too little, too late…But, I am not trying to make a living off my land; I would like to try to make a healthy vegetable garden and appreciate your links. gail

  3. I’m watering my garden nightly (each side gets watered every other night) so it’s staying alive, but it’s easy to tell that the plants just don’t like city water like they do rain water. It’s enough to keep them alive, but not enough to keep them happy. Still, we are managing to eat quite well, and I’m hoping for rain before fall planting.

  4. Thank you, Leigh, for a wonderful and educational article!
    Pamela

  5. Thank you Leigh for the nice post and inspiration. Considering the local weather conditions and the “pretty bad” world-wide situation, we need hope. Because of the lack of rain, I have shut down about 1/3 of my garden, but I must say I have had a great corn, bean, tomato summer crop. In June, I dug 150 pounds of my best-carrots ever. In fact, all of the spring veggies were early and productive. So folks can see that real production is possible in a small space, I am weighing everything this year. So far, on the 2500 square foot garden, I have 800 pounds of produce. I am also using buckwheat as a short-term (30-45 days) cover crop. Its been useful with the dry weather. I found you can keep planting it all summer. I will be teaching a class on August 4, emphasizing nutrient dense production and fall gardening. Thanks again for a nice post.

  6. Things are dry here, too. It rained for about five minutes yesterday. ‘Grateful for every drop! Our chickens are gobbling grasshoppers. It’s suprising how quick a plump hen can be!

  7. The birds are loving the grasshoppers in my yard. This afternoon when I came in from church I was looking out my back window at one of my perennial beds. Just as a grasshopper jumped hight out of patch of Shasta Daisies, a male cardinal & a thrush dived after it at the same time. They both flew into the daisies digging around in the plants trying to catch it. I hope they each got some – there sure are enough for both.