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Flood irrigation is practiced on the valley floors of the Yampa River in the Big Bottom <br />area and the Williams Fork River near its confluence with the Yampa. The four gulches <br />(No Name, Johnson, Pyeatt, and Flume) lack sufficient water availability for flood <br />irrigation. According to the Natural Resources Conservation Service, local irrigation <br />requires approximately 5 acre -feet of water per acre, after allowing for evaporation losses <br />(letter from Hill, 1980 referenced on page 2 -539 of permit application). Summertime <br />evaporation in Moffat County exceeds precipitation by approximately 30 inches <br />(Evaporation from Lakes and Reservoirs by A.F. Meyer, 1942, Minnesota Resources <br />Commission, page 58). The largest annual water yield for any of the four gulches is <br />calculated to be the 225 acre -feet yield from Flume Gulch (page 2 -412 of permit). This <br />amount of water would irrigate only 45 acres based on the 5 acre -feet of water per acre <br />requirement, rendering flood irrigation an uneconomic business venture. Flood irrigation <br />is generally the only type of irrigation practiced in small stream valleys in northwestern <br />Colorado where wheat, alfalfa, and hay are grown; the 77 -day growing season limits <br />farming in Moffat County to these or similar crops. <br />Sub - irrigation Agricultural Potential <br />OSM's Alluvial Valley Floor Identification and Study Guidelines (page C -10) explains <br />that in terms of alluvial valley floors, sub - irrigation occurs if enough water is available <br />for a sufficient time to have a recognizable effect on the species type and the productivity <br />of a plant community. Agricultural crops or rangeland must receive enough sub - <br />irrigation that the community is notably more productive or more agriculturally useful <br />when compared to dry land areas. <br />Sub - irrigation of agricultural plants can be expected to occur in the wide, flat valley <br />bottoms of the Yampa River and Williams Fork River. The four gulches (No Name, <br />Johnson, Pyeatt and Flume), though, lack sufficient water availability for sub - irrigation <br />agricultural activities, based on examination of those valleys in connection with renewal <br />application RN- 04/PR -05. Two Division representatives and two representatives of the <br />applicant jointly examined Flume Gulch in order to verify the presence of AVF features. <br />No evidence was found for the increased agricultural plant productivity that would be <br />expected in the bottom of the drainage if a significant amount of sub - irrigation was <br />occurring. Agricultural species types and productivity appeared uniform across the <br />drainage. Wetlands plants (cattails) are growing in the lower end of Flume Gulch within <br />the channel area, but the wetlands preclude the potential for sub - irrigation agricultural <br />activities. A Division representative also inspected parts of Pyeatt, Johnson, and No <br />Name drainages. Agricultural species types and productivity appeared uniform across <br />those drainages. <br />Alluvial Vallev Floor Determination <br />Based on the presence of unconsolidated stream -laid holding streams and the presence of <br />water availability sufficient for flood irrigation agricultural activities, the following two <br />alluvial valleys have been determined to be alluvial valley floors: the Yampa River in the <br />Big Bottom area and the Williams Fork River near its confluence with the Yampa River. <br />Trapper Mine 34 July 9, 2013 <br />