Volume 15 Issue 1 Jan WY

Introducing the Wyoming Edition

By Kris Polly

This month, I am proud to launch the new Wyoming edition of Irrigation Leader. Wyoming is a state with a great agricultural heritage and high-quality agricultural products, and as this month’s stories demonstrate, its irrigation projects are of regional and national importance.

Everyone involved in irrigated agriculture in Wyoming is familiar with the scale and significance of Goshen Irrigation District’s 2019 tunnel collapse—and can probably only imagine the challenge involved in finding a long-term solution. We give you some insight into what that process looks like by interviewing executive personnel and board members from Goshen as well as the Nebraska-based Gering–Fort Laramie Irrigation District, who recently went to Washington to meet with their congressional representatives.

With its Farm and Ranch Enterprise, located in the Four Corners area of Colorado, the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe is one of the largest irrigators in the state. In our interview with General Manager Simon Martinez, Irrigation Manager Michael Vicente, and Tribal Development Corporation Board President Michael Preston, we learn more about this successful undertaking.

Central Oregon’s Arnold Irrigation District has recently broken ground on a 12‑mile canal-piping project that will eliminate severe seepage loss with benefits for agricultural users and instream flows. We speak with District Manager Steve Johnson about the project, the district’s environmental obligations, and the challenges posed by rapid urbanization in the area.

GroGuru’s in-field water monitoring solution has a unique advantage: Its probes can stay buried for 5–7 years without needing to be removed either during harvest time or to replace the batteries. This allows the collection of uninterrupted, comparable data across numerous seasons and in between. We speak with Chief Agronomist David Sloane about the system’s benefits.

Prospera Technologies, an artificial intelligence–powered agriculture company that was acquired by Valmont in 2021, uses satellite and camera imaging to detect irrigation and crop-health issues and then provide information and recommendations to users. Vice President and General Manager Philipp Schmidt‑Holzmann tells us more about this exciting technology.

DripWorks serves Northern California with drip irrigation solutions for garden, greenhouse, and agricultural applications. Product Specialist and Lead Designer Heather Dabney tells us about the company’s irrigation kits and about its commitment to customer service.

Then, we speak with Andrew Urda, the vice president of sales operations for LS Electric America, a leader in power and automation solutions, about its variable-frequency drives and other products for the irrigated agriculture market.

Finally, we speak with David and John Thom, the president and vice president of T-L Irrigation and descendants of cofounder LeRoy Thom, about the company’s history, its distinctive hydrostatic drive pivots, and its new innovations.

Ingenious technical advances are allowing farmers to stretch each drop of water further—something that is important during these times of widespread drought. These advances, however, point us back to the basic fact that major water conveyance projects are the foundation of the tremendous agricultural production we see across the American West. Let’s value those projects and continue to fund them.

Kris Polly is the editor-in-chief of Irrigation Leader magazine and the president of Water Strategies LLC, a government relations firm he began in February 2009 for the purpose of representing and guiding water, power, and agricultural entities in their dealings with Congress, the Bureau of Reclamation, and other federal government agencies. He may be contacted at kris.polly@waterstrategies.com.