Ryan Jacobsen with the Fresno County Farm Bureau says water levels on the Kings River are nothing to brag about either.
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"You know the indications right now are somewhere near the 25 to 35 percentile of where we should be as far as normal. So we are way behind. The end of January helped a little but we have a lot of catching up still to do," said Jacobsen.
The lack of rain and above normal temperatures have growers concerned not just for a shortage of water deliveries this summer but also the impact of spring crops.
"With the warm weather we are expecting you will see an acceleration of crops, you will see those blooms start to push, you will start to see grapevines really start to swell. This is indicating this is going to be a really early spring unless things change here very radically," said Jacobsen.
Holding on to last year's record rain and snowpack had the Bureau of Reclamation looking ahead to 2018.
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Officials say the 200 percent of normal precipitation runoff from Friant Dam is still in the bank.
"The contractors are certainly trying to conserve what they can and they are in the ballpark of around 10 percent or a little less than that of water that they didn't use last year that they are holding on," said Michael Jackson.
Jacobsen says there is still time to make up for lost ground after a disappointing start to this year's rainfall season.
"But we still have about 40 percent of the perception season left in front of us. So there is still that opportunity for two, three or four more storms to roll in and that can really make a substantial dent in the hole that we made," said Jacobsen.