Albuquerque Journal

‘I am going to be out of water’

NM rancher fears deep Mexican farm wells will leave him high and dry

- BY LAUREN VILLAGRAN JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

This is the last in the Journal’s five-part series about the growing demand for groundwate­r on both sides of New Mexico’s border with Mexico. The previous stories have focused on the impact on New Mexico when Ciudad Juárez started pumping water from the Mesilla Bolson, the giant aquifer that straddles the border. Today’s story, which concludes the series, is a snapshot of a New Mexico rancher whose private water pumps compete with those of Mexican farmers along the Bootheel outside the Mesilla Bolson. But the issue is the same — no agreements govern binational use of groundwate­r, which means, once again, the biggest straw wins. Previous stories were published on June 25 and July 2-4.

FIFTH IN A SERIES

U.S.-MEXICAN BORDER — As binational water controvers­ies go, this one may matter to only two people: an American rancher and a Mexican farmer.

More to the point: It may matter only to the one most likely to get hung out to dry.

It was a warm February day when rancher William Hurt, who grazes cattle in New Mexico’s Bootheel, came upon the 75-foot drilling rig just over the border on the Mexican side. He pulled his big diesel truck over and ambled up to the barbed-wire border fence that runs northsouth on the eastern side of New Mexico’s Bootheel.

He had heard from a ranch hand about the rig, that it had drilled down 1,000 feet in search of water. But this was the first time Hurt saw it up close.

Mennonite David Fehr, a tall, English-speaking

man, came up to the fence. Not his farm, he said, but it was his rig. Hired to drill, he was now 1,500 feet down, he said.

The land — covered in brush and grass on the U.S. side — had been plowed flat in Mexico to the edge of low mountain ranges, in preparatio­n for the crops that would be planted. Hurt amiably chatted with Fehr and then climbed back in his diesel truck.

“If they’re going to 1,500 feet, I am going to be out of water,” Hurt said.

There is no treaty between the U.S. and Mexico governing groundwate­r. The internatio­nal line is only a superficia­l barrier. Whichever side sticks a straw in the deepest and drinks it up the fastest gets the water, as hydrogeolo­gist Alfredo GranadosOl­ivas at the Autonomous University of Ciudad Juárez explained later.

Back in Hurt’s truck, the reporter asked: Is there any recourse for you? “Not that I know of,” he said. Three months later, farmer Pedro Suderman rode his big diesel truck out to a field on the Mexican side. A team of migrant workers was clearing stones from the dirt under the hot May sun.

Where the rig had been, a well purred loudly as it pumped a thousand gallons per minute onto a field combed neatly into rows. Onions would go in soon, Suderman said. He pointed out the water-saving drip irrigation system he recently installed on half his fields, which are leased from local communal landholder­s.

“The closer to the border, the deeper you have to go to reach water,” he said. “About 5 kilometers (3 miles) in, the water is closer to the surface.”

Drilling a water well that deep “is expensive,” he said. “But a man has to work and there is really nothing else to do. It’s the only way.”

Inevitably, farms use more water than a ranch ever could.

Hurt runs comparativ­ely tiny wells that fill watering holes for his cattle that come to drink, at a rate of 5 gallons per minute.

The Mennonite community to which Suderman belongs has grown from about two dozen families at El Camello, Mexico, to 90 families over the past 20 years. They cultivate thousands of desert acres, growing wheat, alfalfa, green and red chile, and onions.

“They’re farming this just like miners come in and mine — all they can, for all they can get, no considerat­ion given,” Hurt said. “Ranchers used to be called miners, when they’d just graze the country into the ground, leave nothing and move on. That is what they are doing here with these farms. They are gonna run out of water here, too.”

 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? New Mexico rancher William Hurt waits at the border fence to talk to David Fehr, a member of the Mexican Mennonite community who was drilling a well for farmer Pedro Suderman.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL New Mexico rancher William Hurt waits at the border fence to talk to David Fehr, a member of the Mexican Mennonite community who was drilling a well for farmer Pedro Suderman.
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 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? Mexican Mennonite farmer Pedro Suderman checks a drip irrigation system for his field in northern Chihuahua in the pueblo of El Camello, just east of New Mexico’s Hidalgo County.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL Mexican Mennonite farmer Pedro Suderman checks a drip irrigation system for his field in northern Chihuahua in the pueblo of El Camello, just east of New Mexico’s Hidalgo County.
 ??  ?? Rancher William Hurt rests after patrolling his land near the Mexican border in New Mexico’s Bootheel.
Rancher William Hurt rests after patrolling his land near the Mexican border in New Mexico’s Bootheel.

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