For a century, the Colorado River has been managed in pieces. Legally and politically, it’s divided into two basins, with each state and community focused on securing its respective water supply. But that is not how a river functions. The Colorado River is an interconnected system, sustained by Rocky Mountain snowpack, rainfall and groundwater.

It is fragile, and under increasing stress. Two and a half decades into this century, the river that built the modern West has 20% less water flowing through it than it did on average in the last century. As heat and drought intensify, so do the stakes: Failure to recognize the severity of changing conditions, managing the river in parts without considering needs of the whole and inadequate planning for long-term shortages put the future of all the basin at risk. 


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For the last five years, I have documented how the Colorado River Basin’s farmers are navigating water shortages and uncertainty amid deep political divisions about the river’s future. This project, called American Adaptation, examines three agricultural communities whose survival is threatened by a shrinking river, examining what happens to people when policies and water management struggle to keep pace with a changing climate. 

In one of the river’s northern watersheds, the Ute Mountain Farm and Ranch Enterprise is adapting its management as the water it relies on becomes less dependable. In central Arizona, farmers have returned to well water after becoming the first communities to have their supply cut off completely due to the basin-wide shortage. And in California’s Imperial Valley, the farms that receive the river’s largest water allocation are under growing pressure to share the burden of shortage. 

Together, their stories illustrate the stakes — and rising tensions — of the  current negotiations over the river’s future management. States, tribal nations and the federal government are reckoning with 100 years of developing water infrastructure based on assumptions of continuing abundance and expansion. These ideas — and the legal frameworks built around them — are colliding with the reality of a river with much less water than expected, raising complex questions about what the Colorado can sustain, how its water should be used and who will shoulder the necessary cuts.

A 40-mile canal carries water from Colorado’s McPhee Reservoir to the Ute Mountain Farm and Ranch Enterprise. The reservoir also supplies drinking water to the residents of Towaoc, on the tribal nation. Regardless of how much water it gets each year, the farm is responsible for covering a majority of canal maintenance costs.
A 40-mile canal carries water from Colorado’s McPhee Reservoir to the Ute Mountain Farm and Ranch Enterprise. The reservoir also supplies drinking water to the residents of Towaoc, on the tribal nation. Regardless of how much water it gets each year, the farm is responsible for covering a majority of canal maintenance costs. Credit: Caitlin Ochs

When Water is Uncertain

 𖡡 Towaoc, Colorado, at the foot of Sleeping Ute Mountain

Trees and bare earth line a depleted McPhee Reservoir. Under Western water law, the most senior water users have the most secure rights during shortages, based on their priority date. When the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe settled its water rights with Colorado in the 1980s, the tribe agreed to give up an 1868 water right in return for a 1940s right and infrastructure funding. At the time, models didn’t show the long-term shortage risk. Now, modeling shows much greater uncertainty
Trees and bare earth line a depleted McPhee Reservoir. Under Western water law, the most senior water users have the most secure rights during shortages, based on their priority date. When the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe settled its water rights with Colorado in the 1980s, the tribe agreed to give up an 1868 water right in return for a 1940s right and infrastructure funding. At the time, models didn’t show the long-term shortage risk. Now, modeling shows much greater uncertainty Credit: Caitlin Ochs

On 7,600 acres painstakingly carved out of desert brush, the Ute Mountain Farm and Ranch, a tribally run enterprise of the Ute Mountain Ute nation, produces cattle, alfalfa, corn and wheat. Its operations are led by Simon Martinez, Eric Whyte and Michael Vicente, who have deep personal connections to the enterprise. Martinez helped build the dam for the reservoir that provides the farm’s water, while Whyte cleared desert brush and mapped where the fields would go. Vicente, as the lead irrigator, can account for every drop of water that’s used.

In good years, the farm’s circular fields flourish in brilliant green bursts. But the past decade has brought increasingly erratic access to water. Each spring, the local irrigation district announces potential cuts after assessing snowpack runoff and the available water stored in nearby McPhee Reservoir. In 2021, the farm received just 10% of its water allocation and was forced to leave 6,000 acres unplanted. In 2022, 30% of the water came in, and last year, 34%, which the farm was able to increase to 50% after leasing shares from other water users.  

To survive, they adapted. Every year, the farm’s leadership creates numerous plans for different water scenarios. They have applied for grants, implemented low-flow nozzles in the irrigation system, installed small-scale hydropower generators. They joined a Land Institute pilot program to test crops that use less water. 

Sprinkler lines hang from a disassembled center pivot near a fallow field at the Ute Mountain Farm and Ranch Enterprise
in Towaoc. Credit: Caitlin Ochs

“We still haven’t thrown the towel in.”

Alfalfa is harvested at the Ute Mountain Farm and Ranch Enterprise. While water-intensive, alfalfa is one of the farm’s top-selling crops and integral to its economic survival.
Alfalfa is harvested at the Ute Mountain Farm and Ranch Enterprise. While water-intensive, alfalfa is one of the farm’s top-selling crops and integral to its economic survival. Credit: Caitlin Ochs
Irrigation manager Michael Vicente pauses for a portrait after repairing a center pivot. As a tribal member deeply familiar with the farm’s operations, he plans to step into a leadership role managing the farm in coming years.
Irrigation manager Michael Vicente pauses for a portrait after repairing a center pivot. As a tribal member deeply familiar with the farm’s operations, he plans to step into a leadership role managing the farm in coming years. Credit: Caitlin Ochs

“We still haven’t thrown the towel in,” said Simon Martinez. “Nobody ever thought, when the reservoir was built, that there wouldn’t be enough water to supply the farms that have been put out here. It’s not only us; it’s happening all through southwestern Colorado.”

Low-water years leave their mark. Brush and scrub quickly reclaim unplanted fields. Employees laid off during dry years are hard to replace. During consecutive years of heat and drought, farms that rely on the basin’s many smaller reservoirs become even more vulnerable. As the number of dry years grows, it is increasingly uncertain how much shortage the Ute Mountain Farm and Ranch Enterprise can sustain in the long term, despite the farmers’ determination to adapt.  

Tracy Weeks checks one of the farm’s center pivots for clogged nozzles. During the summer months, this is a full-time, labor-intensive job — one essential for the farm’s survival. As the center pivot rotates, if the water is not distributed evenly, plants will either get too much or too little, affecting their growth. Credit: Caitlin Ochs
Morgan Quick checks the moisture content of a bale of alfalfa during a busy season at the Ute Mountain Farm and Ranch Enterprise. Baling at night is more efficient, due to the cooler temperatures. Credit: Caitlin Ochs

When Water Disappears

 𖡡 Pinal County, Arizona, in the Sonoran Desert

The Sawtooth Mountains are reflected in a flood-irrigated field. Flood irrigation is the preferred method for most farmers in Pinal County. It’s water-intensive but effective — and it also flushes salt out of the crops’ root zones, helping them grow.
The Sawtooth Mountains are reflected in a flood-irrigated field. Flood irrigation is the preferred method for most farmers in Pinal County. It’s water-intensive but effective — and it also flushes salt out of the crops’ root zones, helping them grow. Credit: Caitlin Ochs

Hundreds of miles south, Will Clemens manages his uncle’s 2,100-acre farm, cultivating cotton, alfalfa and Bermuda grass. Farmers in this region operate with a year-round growing season punctuated by dust storms and summer monsoons. 

In this intense environment, wells were the only water source before Colorado River water became available. Until the 1980s, farmers drew their water from deep underground, contributing to fissures, land subsidence and drying wells. The completion of the Central Arizona Project alleviated the pressure, delivering farmers cheap imported river water that was classified as lower priority and the first to be cut during shortages. Deliveries continued until 2022, when low water levels at Lake Mead triggered federal cuts, and central Arizona farms lost access. In response, Clemens’ local irrigation district drilled a dozen new wells. 

Workers prepare to put tarps over a stack of hay ahead of a monsoon rain. In summer 2023, hay prices dropped so low that any farms that were able to do so stored their bales until prices recovered. Fluctuating commodity prices are a constant source of stress. Credit: Caitlin Ochs
Groundwater is pumped into a canal to irrigate a field. Due to Colorado River water shortages, farmers in central Arizona rely completely on water pulled from underground. How much pumping the aquifer can sustain is unclear. A majority of Arizona’s groundwater remains unregulated. Credit: Caitlin Ochs
Farm manager Will Clemens dips his hat in a canal to cool off during a 100-plus-degree day. Extreme heat has become an expected part of daily life here. On some days, Clemens and his team rise at 2 a.m. to bale hay and avoid the heat. Credit: Caitlin Ochs

“I’ve been asking myself, does America really need to be in the agriculture industry?”

Without the river, Clemens and his neighbors have seen the canals’ water drop. At times, their irrigation district will cut off water before a field is fully irrigated, or struggle to keep up with the farmers’ water orders. More pressure on groundwater raises questions about what is sustainable in the future. Large parts of Arizona have no legal limits on pumping water from the ground. Even areas with legally protected groundwater have failed to meet a safe yield goal set in the 1980s to balance groundwater taken each year with naturally replenished water by 2025.

Will Clemens cleans a solar panel that collects data for a company interested in purchasing the land. With uncertain water access, some farms are embracing the transition to solar as a better use of resources. Others, worried about food security and the health of rural communities, argue for preserving farmland.
Will Clemens cleans a solar panel that collects data for a company interested in purchasing the land. With uncertain water access, some farms are embracing the transition to solar as a better use of resources. Others, worried about food security and the health of rural communities, argue for preserving farmland. Credit: Caitlin Ochs

Some central Arizona farmers are selling or leasing their farmland to solar developers, as water dwindles and energy demands grow. Miles up the road from where Clemens farms, sleek black grids of solar panels gleam next to green alfalfa. For years, Arnold Burruel, Clemens’ uncle, has been in talks with a solar developer about selling the land. 

“I’ve been asking myself: Does America really need to be in the agriculture industry?” Burruel said. “America is not totally enamored with agriculture when it comes to pesticides, herbicides, groundwater, GMOs — all of the above. We are at a crossroads. Are we going to continue to farm the way we are farming and heavily subsidize growers that can’t make ends meet? Society has to come up with an answer.”

A driller examines a well log of an area being drilled for irrigation in central Arizona. After the water supply from the river was cut, federal and state funding allowed the local irrigation district to expand its existing well field. Credit: Caitlin Ochs
Workers rest after clearing dried mud from an irrigation canal. Less water flowing in canals means increased sediment deposits — yet another challenge for farmers during shortages. Credit: Caitlin Ochs
Fields of solar panels border farmland in central Arizona. When Pinal County farmers lost their Colorado River allocation, a number of farmers sold their land to solar developers. Some counties have passed laws limiting solar expansion.
Fields of solar panels border farmland in central Arizona. When Pinal County farmers lost their Colorado River allocation, a number of farmers sold their land to solar developers. Some counties have passed laws limiting solar expansion. Credit: Caitlin Ochs

When Water is Abundant

 𖡡 Imperial Valley, California, just north of the Mexican border

A team harvests green cabbage at Vessey Farm. Each day, hundreds of seasonal workers spend hours on buses traveling from Northern Mexico to Imperial Valley fields. Their labor is essential for the harvest.
A team harvests green cabbage at Vessey Farm. Each day, hundreds of seasonal workers spend hours on buses traveling from Northern Mexico to Imperial Valley fields. Their labor is essential for the harvest. Credit: Caitlin Ochs

From above, the All American Canal forms a stark blue line, slicing through the Algodones Dunes. One of the world’s largest canals, it is fed by the Imperial Dam, which diverts up to 6.8 million gallons of water each minute from the Colorado River.

This is the only water source for 500,000 acres of Imperial Valley farmland. Farms here are protected by senior rights at low risk of cuts and receive regular releases from Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the United States. During summer months, the sun looms over the valley’s dusty, flat horizon, and temperatures often climb above 100 degrees. Despite decades of drought and growing water shortage, water has flowed uninterrupted to the Imperial Valley. 

“I have a responsibility for the people who work here to make sure we survive.”

Workers harvest cabbage through intense manual labor — bending, cutting, trimming and sorting fast enough to keep up with the tractor, often in triple-digit heat. Credit: Caitlin Ochs
Jack Vessey (far right) speaks while co-leading a meeting with farm manager Bartt Ries. These pre-sunrise meetings allow local leadership to coordinate complex irrigation, harvest and production schedules. Credit: Caitlin Ochs

Fourth-generation family farmer Jack Vessey, who oversees a 10,000-acre produce operation, knows the canal system well. Growing up, he searched for places to swim on hot summer days.

Portraits of generations of Vessey family farmers are displayed at the Vessey & Company farm office. With water rights dating back to the early 1900s, the agricultural producers in the Imperial Valley hold some of the most senior water rights on the Colorado River.
Portraits of generations of Vessey family farmers are displayed at the Vessey & Company farm office. With water rights dating back to the early 1900s, the agricultural producers in the Imperial Valley hold some of the most senior water rights on the Colorado River. Credit: Caitlin Ochs

“We take water seriously,” said Vessey, who added sprinkler systems, which are more efficient than flood irrigation. In recent years, the Imperial Irrigation District joined other communities throughout the basin in voluntarily cutting water through 2026 in exchange for federal funds. The district’s compensation was several hundred dollars more per acre-foot than other participants. But as funding set aside for Western water by the Biden administration is drawn down, it is unclear how much will be available to pay for future voluntary cuts.

Vessey is aware of the growing pressure on the river and the valley’s farms, but he emphasizes that the community has helped with shortages and is protective of its water.

Jesus, a member of the farm’s irrigation team, uses a shovel to help spread water evenly across a flood-irrigated field on a 118-degree day in the Imperial Valley. The Imperial Irrigation District is, by volume, the largest water district in the country.
Jesus, a member of the farm’s irrigation team, uses a shovel to help spread water evenly across a flood-irrigated field on a 118-degree day in the Imperial Valley. The Imperial Irrigation District is, by volume, the largest water district in the country. Credit: Caitlin Ochs

“I have a responsibility for the people who work here to make sure we survive,” he said. “I have to be a little selfish at some point and say, ‘Keep giving us the water we need.’ I know we’ve got to do our part, but I can look in the mirror and say we are not wasting water, we are growing food people need. 

“If it wasn’t for that canal coming off the Colorado River, this would just turn to desert.”  

The High Line Canal carries water from the Colorado River to the fields. Creating lush fields in the desert in one of the driest, hottest places on Earth, this system makes farming in the valley possible.
The High Line Canal carries water from the Colorado River to the fields. Creating lush fields in the desert in one of the driest, hottest places on Earth, this system makes farming in the valley possible. Credit: Caitlin Ochs

This project was supported by the National Geographic Society’s World Freshwater Initiative.

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This article appeared in the March 2026 print edition of the magazine with the headline “The Shrinking River.”  

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Caitlin Ochs is a visual storyteller and National Geographic Explorer focused on creating compelling, authentic visual narratives that inspire people to learn more about the world and illuminate connections between communities and their environments.