The Southland Times

Nebraska: From dust bowl to farmland

- Pat Deavoll

A party of 25 farmers and irrigation experts has returned from

Nebraska, United States, with some fresh ideas about how to improve environmen­tal management in New Zealand.

‘‘Nebraska was one of the states that were devastated by the dust bowl storms during the depression ‘‘One of the worst dust storms and farming families had to leave occurred in 1935 on Black Sunday the land,’’ outgoing Irrigation­NZ when strong winds blew an chief executive Andrew Curtis estimated 300 million tonnes of topsoil said, who was part of the group. from the prairie states as far as

‘‘By 1932, 750,000 acres [300,000 the east coast, turning the sky hectares] of farmland had been black in its path,’’ Curtis said. abandoned in Nebraska due to soil After the Great Depression, erosion and dust storms. Nebraskans started to adopt better land-management practices. They also invested in irrigation systems and the state is now productive.

However, Nebraska shared some of New Zealand’s problems. Nitrates in groundwate­r were a significan­t concern. Historic poor nutrient management and poor irrigation practice had resulted in nitrate concentrat­ions well over the US drinking water standard of 10 parts per million.

‘‘They have a water supply issue as well. There are allocation issues that need resolving and other places where there is enough water to go around, it just requires reconfigur­ing. Their overalloca­tion of water is far more challengin­g than ours,’’ Curtis said.

By 1932, 750,000 acres [300,000 hectares] of farmland had been abandoned in Nebraska.

 ??  ?? Nebraska was one of the states that was devastated by the dust bowl storms during the 1930s. GETTY IMAGES
Nebraska was one of the states that was devastated by the dust bowl storms during the 1930s. GETTY IMAGES

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