Center For Invesitgative Reporting - Mark Schapiro

The Latest Dirt on the California Ag Road Trip by Mark Schapiro

From the outside, farming appears as something akin to magic: Put water together with soil and sun and voila--food. But of course, no farmer thinks of what they do as 'magic'; just using that term is a dead giveaway of the life that I have spent in cities, far from the more sparsely populated rural areas of the state. Peter and I went searching for the impacts of climate change on California agriculture; they were not hard to find. And the effort to understand the complex imperatives at work in California's food growing regions seemed somehow akin to those in trying to understand, say, the constituencies at work in the new government of France. Farmers, too, have constituencies to satisfy, imperatives of a more primordial sort: the health of their soils, access to water, protection against pests, and trying to control, as best they can, against the adverse affects of the
increasingly volatile weather. All of those constituencies of the farming life, from the largest to the smallest, are now being disrupted by the impacts of climate change.
For if we are all at the frontlines of climate change, farmers are at the frontlines of those frontlines. Disruptions high up in the atmosphere triggered by climate change come down to earth to alter the forces necessary for successful farming. Those challenges include the increasing stresses on the state's water supply, the increasingly volatile weather, and the steady rising of the Pacific Ocean—all of which prompt an array of new tensions for farmers trying to conjure food from the earth.
