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Biglerville, PA 17307 |
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The Journey of an Apple From a tiny apple seed, the apple takes a long journey from the orchard to your house. See if you can find out about the journey of an apple in the exhibit at the Yakima Valley Museum.
IrrigationThe Yakima Valley in the late 1800s was not a very appealing place to develop an agricultural industry. With only eight inches of annual rainfall, our valley is a virtual desert, and, after the short-lived sheep and cattle ranching boom of the 1870s and 1880s, the valley floor was an over-grazed wasteland. Despite the volcanic soils and flood deposits excellent for growing plants, the Valley was as semi-arid environment with its grasses gone and sagebrush rapidly taking over.But our valley had the potential for a great agricultural industry. The land only needed to be cleared, cultivated, and provided with water to produce some of the highest fruit yields in history. The Yakima Valley landscape was graded and cleared of sagebrush to prepare the ground for orchards. In the early days before tractors, this was accomplished with horses and plows ...and human hands. After the introduction of the tractor and other motor vehicles to farming technology, the job of clearing the land and maintaining the cultivated orchards got easier. Yet, in many parts of the Yakima Valley, where steep hillsides and narrow ravines made tractor use impossible, something new was needed. And something new was invented right here in the Yakima Valleythe Lindeman Tractor. In 1939, Jesse Lindeman modified a John Deere tractor specifically for use in Yakima Valleyıs unique orchards. The tractorıs wheels were removed and it was refitted with tracks, allowing the vehicle to climb and traverse the precipitous valley terrain and squeeze between and below the narrow, low orchard rows. This first "Lindeman-John Deere Orchard Crawler" was tested in the Congdon orchards and was soon in mass-production.
The Yakima, Tieton, and Naches rivers run through the semi-arid Yakima Valley. They are fed by the immense Cascade Mountain watershed, which receives over 100 inches of annual recipitation. Transporting the water from the waterways to the valley floor was a formidable challenge. The irrigation of the Valley was first accomplished by individuals to irrigate their own crops. The first irrigation canal is credited to Chief Kamiakin of the Yakama tribe; he built a ditch in 1852, near the Ahtanum Mission, to irrigate his garden. Some settler families followed his lead, but the job of bringing enough water to the dry valley floor for all the farmers was too immense a task.
In the early 1880s local entrepreneurs, both singly and banded together, began a series of privately financed irrigation companies. James Gleed was one of the first; he started the But even with railroad money and wealthy investors from the east, only limited amounts of land could be irrigated in this manner. What was needed was a massive public project. After passage of the Reclamation Act of 1902, the Federal Government became involved with the irrigation of agricultural land in Central Washington. The Yakima Project, begun in 1906, built six reservoir dams at the headwaters of the Yakima, Tieton, and Naches Rivers between 1909 and 1933. It also created large canals to carry water to orchards and fields. The Tieton Project was one division of the Yakima Project. The Tieton Canyon, where the canal was to be built, could only be reached by pack train, and the difficult task of canal construction was indeed a job for the federal government. In May of 1910 the new canal began bringing water to new trees and seeded fields that had been planted in anticipation of its completion. The Roza division of the Yakima Project diverts water from the Yakima River at the mouth of Yakima Canyon. This water is transported, via concrete tunnel, through two mountain ridges on its way to the lower Yakima Valley. The diversion dam also generates the power needed to pump the irrigation water to higher ground. The Roza Project was begun in 1938 and completed in 1951.
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and The National Apple Museum 154 West Hanover Street - P.O. Box 656 Biglerville, PA 17307-9442 - Telephone: 717-677-4556 |