Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Comments from CRC President and CEO- New Agricultural Water Use Report provides invaluable information

By Tim Johnson, California Rice Commission President & CEO

It’s not often that a report on water use in agriculture gets it right. I can't remember a report that ever got it right twice. The recent report “Agricultural Water Use in California - A 2011 Update” by the Center for Irrigation Technology at CSU Fresno sets the standard for an unbiased, honest look at water use in agriculture.

First, the report correctly states that water is used very efficiently in California agriculture. We know that in rice water use efficiency has increased by some 30 percent in the last decades. Rice farmers have developed shorter-stature varieties, shifted production to heavy clay soils and precisely level their fields prior to planting. These steps help them maximize efficiency and get “more grain for every drop.”

Second, the report notes the often overlooked and significant impacts of crop shifting based on the amount of water used. The report correctly characterizes this impact in rice, "Also, one of the fields in this example is rice. Irrigated rice fields have been proven to provide much needed waterfowl habitat. If this crop was shifted to one with less seasonal ETc and/or no standing water in order to leave more water in the river, this habitat would be reduced or lost altogether".

Stated simply, ducks don't live in wine grape vineyards or almond orchards. They are very prevalent in Sacramento Valley rice fields.

These findings aside, many won't like them - especially those who continue to labor under an incorrect view that some crops are more valuable than others. Unfortunately, rice is often used as a poster child for high water use and low value.

Often lost is the honest assessment that a crop, like rice, perfectly suited for the heavy clay soils where it's grown, in flooded fields is intimately connected with the environment where it is grown. Rice provides an invaluable contribution to millions of ducks and geese that winter in the Sacramento Valley each year. Take rice away and the whole ecosystem suffers - small rural communities, salmon in the flowing rivers in the Sacramento Valley and 230 species of wildlife from reptiles to raptors.

Looking at value at this level, an ecosystem level, tells a much truer picture of how well water is used in ricelands and all of agriculture.


Tim Johnson, CRC President & CEO

Monday, November 28, 2011

Video from Charley Mathews- Winter in California Ricelands is for the birds

Family farmer Charley Mathews Jr. discusses the large populations of birds in California rice fields.




Fifth-generation farmer Charley Mathews is continuing a family a legacy that began in the 1850s. Their first rice fields were planted in the 1940s and are still going strong in Yuba County. Charley is a graduate of Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, with a degree in Mechanical Engineering. He and his wife Hilliary have two sons, Parker and Adam.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

New blog from Sean Doherty- Let it Rain

What a challenging year! More so than last year I'd wager. This last weekend was the first one that I've had off since September and what a nice wet one it was.

These winter rainy days are one of the "perks" of being a rice farmer. The crop is in the warehouse, the equipment is back at the shop, the mountain of paperwork can be pushed off for a day or two, and you can spend the day at home with the family.

Not that the family isn't out in the fields with me. Quite the contrary, some of the best days of harvest season is when I forget my lunch and my wife Melissa and some or all of the kids bring it to me. Or if its a weekend and my son spends the day in the harvester with me, talking about all the things that second grade boys talk about. It's just that the winter is when you're able to relax a bit, unwind and not have to worry about much until, say.........March. As for now, let it rain.


Sean Doherty is a 3rd generation rice farmer living out his dream, being a rice farmer in Dunnigan.

He farms in Yolo, Colusa, and Sutter Counties with his wife Melissa, and three kids, Hannah, Gus, and Mary. He enjoys being in the fields, watching the seasons, and sharing it with his family.

Read more about Sean in Rice Farming magazine

Monday, November 21, 2011

New Guest Blog from Ducks Unlimited: Conservation takes flight

By Mark Biddlecomb

Ducks Unlimited, Inc.’s (DU) mission is to conserve, restore and manage wetlands and associated habitats for North America’s waterfowl. It’s DU’s vision to have wetlands sufficient to fill the skies with waterfowl today, tomorrow and forever.

What then, does DU and California Rice have in common? Well, a lot! If you’ve ever been to, worked on or even driven by a flooded rice field in winter, you may have seen thousands of waterfowl either wheeling in the sky above or feeding in the flooded field.

Wetlands and winter-flooded rice are very important for the food resources they provide to the millions of ducks and geese that winter in the Central Valley. Wetlands provide a wide variety of food resources including a variety of seeds and invertebrates and also provide shelter for resting birds. However, in many areas of the Central Valley, there are not enough wetlands to fully provide the food needed by our wintering waterfowl.

That’s where rice comes in. In some basins, over 50 percent of the food resources necessary to sustain our ducks and geese through the winter months comes in the form of rice left over after fields have been harvested.

Ducks Unlimited is science based. And science tells us that given the current number of wetlands available, without winter flooded rice fields waterfowl would be running out of food well before they are ready to migrate back to their breeding grounds in the north. Ducks in the Central Valley need rice!

And as rice growers know, winter flooding has other benefits. Flooding and the subsequent use by waterfowl help to break down rice straw. And many winter-flooded rice fields are also leased for waterfowl hunting. This provides growers with a little extra income and hunters (many of whom are DU members) with an opportunity to hunt private lands. Hunting on some rice fields can be excellent, given the right location, weather and other factors. Blinds can be in high demand and this is a good indication of the interest people have in hunting winter-flooded rice.

These are challenging times and we all need to work together. Congress seems bent on letting conservation programs whither on the vine and with the world population just hitting the seven billion mark, our natural and agricultural resources are being stretched ever thinner. Ducks Unlimited has worked with many rice growers in areas that are potentially threatened by urban expansion to protect their operations with agricultural easements. Funding for these easements is becoming ever harder to come by, but we continue to work with our funding partners to ensure they know the importance of rice. Federal conservation programs, water quality issues such as methyl mercury, nutrient and pesticide loads and water availability are all issues that DU and the California Rice Commission coordinate and work closely on together.

Conservation is defined by Merriam-Webster as the: …planned management of a natural resource to prevent exploitation, destruction, or neglect. Ducks Unlimited and California rice growers both fit that bill and working together we can keep rice on the table and California’s skies filled with waterfowl, too!


Mark Biddlecomb is Director of the Ducks Unlimited Western Regional Office. For more information about DU, log on to ducks.org.

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Multimedia Presentation- Family rice farm finishes 2011 harvest

Rice farmer Brian McKenzie talks about the 2011 rice harvest, as their family farm wraps up the season.




Brian McKenzie proudly represents the fourth generation of rice farmers in his family. Following his graduation in 2005 from The University of Nevada Reno where he earned bachelors degrees in Economics and Marketing, Brian returned to the family farm in South Sutter County to farm full-time alongside his father, Chris. Brian and his wife, Ashley, grow several varieties of conventional and organic rice. Brian enjoys the challenges that farming brings and takes pride in producing food for the world.

Blog by Brian McKenzie- Family rice farm finishes 2011 harvest

Rice farmer Brian McKenzie talks about the 2011 rice harvest, as their family farm wraps up the season.




Brian McKenzie proudly represents the fourth generation of rice farmers in his family. Following his graduation in 2005 from The University of Nevada Reno where he earned bachelors degrees in Economics and Marketing, Brian returned to the family farm in South Sutter County to farm full-time alongside his father, Chris. Brian and his wife, Ashley, grow several varieties of conventional and organic rice. Brian enjoys the challenges that farming brings and takes pride in producing food for the world.

Blog by Chris Crutchfield- California Rice Season Update

Chris Crutchfield, President and CEO of American Commodity Company, updates the year for California's rice industry. Harvest is nearing completion but the milling and shipping of rice continues.




Chris Crutchfield
President and CEO -- American Commodity Company

Chris Crutchfield is very proud to represent the third generation of his family to be involved in the rice industry. Currently Chris is involved in all aspects of California rice from production all the way to the grocery store shelf.

Shortly after graduating from the University of Missouri in 1996, Chris moved back to California and joined with his father Paul Crutchfield in the formation of a rough rice pool for direct marketing to Turkey. Chris was responsible for the day-to-day management of the pool. That partnership developed into the formation of American Commodity Company (ACC) in 2000, and Chris assumed all direct management responsibilities for ACC.

Prior to establishing himself in the California rice industry, Chris worked in the press offices of Governor Pete Wilson as his Assistant Press Secretary. He also briefly taught secondary education in the California public school system.

Guest blog- Fish Screen helps Sacramento River Salmon

Watermaster Pat Kennedy of the Glenn-Colusa Irrigation District provides information on their 1,100 foot long fish screen and describes how it helps Sacramento River salmon.

Friday, November 11, 2011

New from Ducks Unlimited: How California Rice helps Ducks

A Banquet for Ducks- Flooded rice fields help support the majority of the nation’s wintering dabbling ducks

By Mark Petrie, Michael Brasher, and John Tirpak

Download article here

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Blog post by Peter Rystrom- Finishing by a whisker

The End of Harvest is here. For nearly six weeks my family and I have been working nonstop to bring in the crop. Though early rains had everyone imagining worst-case scenarios, three straight weeks of sunshine and 75 degree weather quickly came to our rescue. There is no feeling like cutting the last load of rice in the field. The level of physical exhaustion can typically be measured by the frantic pace at with every machine beelines for the home shop where we park for the winter.

But the work is not quite finished...You might imagine that the harvesters, bankouts, and trucks return safely to the shop unscathed by mud, rice, and straw. You would be wrong! It will take well over a week of pulling mud, blowing off rice, and scrubbing metal before we can truly welcome winter with relief. I like to think that I get handed these "dirty jobs" because I am a stellar employee or because the family trusts nobody else with such important tasks...common, just let me believe that!

I would like to think I learned a lesson or two from this years harvest.

1) Duct tape can indeed fix anything. (If you are unhappy with your duct tape fix, you should have thought of that before you broke it).

2) Apparently, you can further your education in a bankout...if you are weird. (Completing six hours of ukulele practice per day or 50 pages of Russian literature is not uncommon)

3) Girls love rice harvest. (Seriously though, not one dude has ever come out to visit!)

Finally, the single greatest achievement in the history of harvest was on display this year...The Harvest Mustache!


You may not know the fullness of what this life has to offer until you have walked amongst 10 mustaches, all gathered in the same place for a common goal. Full 'staches, sparse staches, all were welcome this year as my family and I demonstrated what solidarity really is.

After two months of heavy mustache persecution and shunning by the female gender, we are proud to say that we are clean shaven...but the fond memories will live on in our hearts forever...now feast your eyes on these photos, and I will see you soon!





After completing his college education, Peter Rystrom is happily back at work as a fourth-generation farmer in Butte County. Working alongside his father Steve, grandfather Don, uncle Gary and several cousins, this family has a century-long tradition of rice farming in the Sacramento Valley.

After graduating from UC Davis with an International Relations and Spanish double major, he worked with Community Enterprise Solutions in Guatemala and lead tours across the United States for Trek America.

Peter enjoys the change in seasons on the farm and the freedom of being outside all day.

When he’s not on the farm, he enjoys backpacking trips into the mountains as well as world travel. Other passions include being involved in the lives of others through church small groups and friendships, both at home and abroad.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Video from Sandy Denn- Snow Goose Farms wraps up harvest season

Family farmer Sandy Denn in Willows describes how the 2011 rice harvest season treated her.




Sandy Denn and her husband Wally own and operate Snow Goose Farms near Willows in Glenn County. She holds a law degree and has served on numerous boards and committees dealing with water in the North State. Sandy and Wally have six grown children. Her passions include hunting and fishing, and she used to fly a hot air balloon and a stunt plane for relaxation.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Video from Dennis Lindberg- 2011 California Rice Harvest wrapping up

Family farmer Dennis Lindberg of Richvale, Butte County describes the challenge and success that came from the 2011 rice harvest.




Dennis Lindberg has grown rice in Butte County for nearly 70 consecutive years.He’s a well-known author and metal artist, taking scrap metal and creating beautiful animal sculptures. His civic work and love of community is evidenced by his being honored as “Outstanding Citizen of the 20th Century” by Lundberg Family Farms. He and his wife Charlotte have two children – Gary and Sherry. Gary farms with his father in the historic community of Richvale, which recently celebrated its centennial.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

New Video- California Rice field trip

Students from Richvale School visited with family farmer Josh Sheppard during his harvest near Chico.