Photos: A journey into drylands
Farmer Robert Godfrey and his wife, Sarah, cool off in the low waters of Spicer Meadow Reservoir.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Marci Ward hugs Murphy.
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Marci Ward has a condition that is sucking the moisture from her cells.
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Tanner Watson leaps into Indian Creek near Taylorsville as he vacations with his family.
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A blue moon rises over the South and Lower Forks of the Feather River feeding into Lake Oroville.
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Rock formations emerge and plants grow where water once was in Spicer Meadow Reservoir.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Visitors to Spicer Meadow Reservoir travel along a boat ramp that normally is many feet under water.
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Ronald Bretherton, 85, tends to his rose garden, saying, “When my wife was alive, we were growing the roses from bare roots.”
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As the setting sun sets its rising riverbottom a blaze of orange, a lone kayaker circles Lake Oroville along the banks of Foreman Creek.
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An afternoon rainstorm delivered large sizes and sums of hail to the forest and roads in Stanislaus National Park.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Night settles over houseboats snuggled together into the shrinking Bidwell Canyon at Lake Oroville.
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E.J. Pulley repels down a rocky hill to work on the Bidwell Canyon Marina.
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A blue moon rises over the confluence of the South and Lower Forks of the Feather River, feeding into Lake Oroville below the Bidwell bridge.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Boaters sunbathe on a small island located in the Foreman Creek area of Lake Oroville.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
A blue moon rises over Sycamore Creek at Lake Oroville.
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A boat speeds by the ever rising banks of Lake Oroville on it’s way past Bidwell Canyon.
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Carl Stead, 74, left and Monroe “Whitey” White, 78, sit together every day on the porch of Young’s Market.
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Monroe “Whitey” White,78, slowly walks across Main St. after spending the afternoon with his friend Carl Stead, hanging out on the porch of Young’s Market.
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The right hand of Monroe “Whitey” White,78, rests against his walking stick as he spends the afternoon with his friend Carl Stead, hanging out on the porch of Young’s Market.
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Carl Stead is quick to proudly show off his tattoos. Stead, 74, was once a boxing lumberjack who stood 6’7” and weighed 300 lbs. Now he moves slowly and uses a quad runner to get around.
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Landon Watson feels the freedom of summer as he joins his brothers on a trip to Grizzly Hideout campground. A beautiful spot on the river recently purchased by his father, Robert, who vacationed there as a child.
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Bryce, Morgan, Tanner, Landon Watson jump into Indian Creek.
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Landon Watson dries off and warms up after swimming in Indian Creek.
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Andrea West, a native of Taylorsville, looks over the community bulletin board as her son, Rowan, 2, explores nearby.
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Joey Caniday, vacationing from Southern California, prepares to kayak on Blue Lake.
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At the Lakeport Auto Movies Drive In in Lakeport, Calif.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
At the Lakeport Auto Movies Drive In in Lakeport, Calif.
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At the Sunfire Equestrian Center, west of Sacramento.
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At Sunfire Equestrian Center, west of Sacramento.
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A massive plume of smoke from the Wragg fire rises behind a barn in Napa County.
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Wilting sunflowers glow in the afternoon sun as smoke from the Wragg fire floats eastward.
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A massive plume of smoke rises over the hills behind Lake Berryessa as the Wragg fire burns for the second day.
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Pedro Perez sips a drink of water while taking a break from picking pears at the Steamboat Acres farm.
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Mike Neuharth cradles an armload of peaches he picked as he follows a newly hired crew working its first day at Steamboat Acres.
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An aging boat dock along the Sacramento River.
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A heron soaks up the sun on the banks of the Steamboat Slough.
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Boater Zach Taylor is given a hand in clearing piles of hyacinth plants from the boat ramp as he tries to load his craft onto a trailer at Hogback Recreation Facility.
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The Discover the Delta Farmstand stands at a crossroads along the Delta Loop.
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Drought has severely reduced the fish population in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)Charles and Jim have named their female dogs Judy and their male dogs Sam since 1951. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
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Sam Lippert laughs it up at the Panoche Inn bar, where hundreds of dollar bills hang from the ceiling.
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Mexican troubadours Alvaro Gonzales and Miguel Alvarez play in San Juan Bautista.
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Sunday morning on a San Juan Bautista patio, two Mexican troubadours play beautiful, yearning songs.
(Diana Marcum / Los Angeles Times)
Houseboats are propped on blocks in a parking lot at the McClure Point launching area. Hundreds of boats have been pulled out of the water because there is so little room on the receding Lake McClure.
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The receding waters of Lake Isabella uncover long forgotten evidence of life that was there before the Army Corps of Engineers built the dam in 1953.
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A rafter traverses rocks that are usually underwater as the Kern River flows toward Lake Isabella. For residents and businesses, each year is a year closer to the next wet one, but staying afloat hasn’t been easy.
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“I caught depression. But my body is fabulous in the water,” said Aunt Elidia.
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Frank Enstad, left, and Michael Krause of Eagle Rafting lift rafts from the banks of the Kern River.
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Young sequoia saplings grow in the footprint of a tree thousands of years old that was felled during a prescribed burn in 2011 in the Giant Forest at Crescent Meadows.
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A fire-scarred sequoia tree remains standing at Crescent Meadow.
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Chris Harp is a ditch tender; he doles out irrigation water. He grew up in the Riverdale area and would like to retire there, but things look grim.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Fourth of July revelers find seats among a row of boat docks on the shore of Bass Lake. After years of drought, the once-floating docks now rest on sand.
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Marta Zepeda of Lathrop sits along a row of beached boat docks on the shore of Bass Lake. Before the drought, the docks had floated above about 10 feet of water.
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Water flows along the Kings River for the first time in six months, carrying confused fish and tons of debris over the parched riverbed.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Rick Jackson treads through the debris-laden flow of the Kings River as water runs along its parched floor for the first time in six months.
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Water flows down the Kings River for the first time in six months, bringing along young fish and tons of debris.
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Murphy walks along the rocky shores of Millerton Lake. The lake’s water level is 35% below normal.
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Murphy jumps into Millerton Lake.
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Fishermen are dwarfed by the banks of Lake McClure, about 40 miles east of Modesto. The lake is at less than 10% of its capacity.
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Declining water levels are evident at Castaic Lake. The reservoir, which holds supplies from Northern California, is the end of the west branch of the State Water Project.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)