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"As a professional in the California water utility industry, I've started a blog to reflect my personal views, observations, and comments on general issues of interest to me and to those interested in California water-related topics. I hope you'll visit regularly."

Bill Moorhead

Director

Moulton Niguel Water District

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Any content contained herein does not necessarily reflect the views of my employers (City of Anaheim and Moulton Niguel Water District) and should be considered my view and opinion only. In this forum, I do not speak for my employers, and any questions or concerns about these entities should be directed to the appropriate contacts through official channels at the respective agencies. As a public employee I cannot conduct business-related communications outside of the official channels.

July 17, 2019

What I've been reading lately

I will try to keep this short, but many of you know me well enough to see that this could be a challenge. I have a collection of books I like to recommend to those with a passion for water, and I will start with this entry by working backwards and recommend my most recent “read” (actually I listened to this as an audiobook on my daily commutes). And here's a plug for your local library. Did you know you can check out audiobooks for free through the library app and listen to books on your smart phone? I found this one in the LA Public Library audiobook collection (actually, my "live-in librarian," Beverly Kelly, found and checked it out for me).

 

Anyway, the book, The Dreamt Land, by Mark Arax, focuses on California water, particularly as it has shaped California agribusiness and development in the Central Valley. Mark Arax is a journalist by profession, and the writing itself is worth the read (or listen…also narrated exceptionally well by the author).

Here's a review of the book from Kirkus Reviews:

Journalist, biographer, and memoirist Arax (West of the West, 2009, etc.) offers a sweeping, engrossing history of his native California focused on the state’s use, overuse, and shocking mismanagement of water.

“Our water wars,” writes the author, “began 150 years ago, at least. What’s changed is our old nemesis drought has been joined by the new nemesis of climate change—and thirty million more people.” Traveling “from one end of California to the other, from drought to flood to wildfire to mudslide,” he chronicles in absorbing detail the transformation of the state’s Central Valley from modest seasonal farms to huge agribusinesses exporting pistachios, almonds, mandarins, and pomegranates.

 

His story begins in 1769, when Father Junípero Serra, reporting to the Spanish king, combined religious fervor with sophisticated agriculture, building dams and wells and diverting streams to grow wheat, apples, citrus fruits, dates, olives, and grapes. Yet while the land yielded a bounty, the Native American laborers and converts fell victim to European diseases. “In the matter of a single decade,” Arax reports, “tens of thousands of natives from San Francisco to Santa Barbara died from foreign germs.”

 

After the demise of the Spanish missions, Mexico stepped in with “the first great California land grab,” doling out thousands of acres to gentry. That land grab was hardly the last: The author offers sharply etched portraits of some of the most imperious landowners, including Johann August Sutter, who in the 1850s became the state’s “biggest farmer, storekeeper, innkeeper, distiller, miller, tanner, manufacturer, enslaver and liberator”; “cattle king” Henry Miller, who from the mid-1800s to the early 1900s controlled more than 10 million acres, including a few rivers; and Stewart Resnick, the wealthiest farmer in America, perpetrator of clandestine deals and secret pipelines.

 

Drawing on historical sources and nearly 300 interviews, Arax reveals the consequences to land and wildlife of generations of landowners who have defiantly dug, dammed, and diverted California’s waters.

 

A stunning history of power, arrogance, and greed.

(Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2019)

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