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Deep South drought kills crops, threatens herds, dries lakes

ATLANTA (AP) - Six months into a deepening drought, the weather is killing crops, threatening cattle and sinking lakes to their lowest levels in years across much of the South.

The very worst conditions - what forecasters call "exceptional drought" - are in the mountains of northeast Alabama and northwest Georgia, a region known for its thick green forests, waterfalls and red clay soil.

"Here at my farm, April 15 was when the rain cut off," said David Bailey, who had to sell half his cattle, more than 100 animals, for lack of hay in Alabama's scorched northeast corner.

"We've come through some dry years in the '80s, but I never seen it this dry, this long," Bailey added. "There's a bunch of people in a lot of bad shape here."

The drought has spread from these mountains onto the Piedmont plateau, down to the plains and across 13 southern states, from Oklahoma and Texas to Florida and Virginia, putting about 33 million people in drought conditions, according to Thursday's U.S. Drought Monitor.

Wildfires raged Thursday near Birmingham, Alabama. Statewide, the blazes have charred more than 12,000 acres in the past 30 days.

"There are places getting ready to set records for most number of days in a row without rain. It's a once-in-100-year kind of thing for this time of year," said John Christy, Alabama's state climatologist.

The South has historically enjoyed abundant water, which has been fortunate, because much of its soil is poor at holding onto it. But the region's booming growth has strained this resource. A legal battle between Georgia and Florida over water from rivers and their watersheds goes before a federal court official Monday, and the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to review his recommendations.

The dry weather is only making things worse.

"We're 10 days away from a drought at any given time," Christy explained. "Unlike the Midwest and other places in the country, we are closer to a drought than almost any place else."

Parts of northern Georgia and Alabama have now seen their driest 60 days on record, Thursday's national drought report showed.

If the drought persists, authorities said it could lead to the kinds of water use restrictions that are common out West, but haven't been seen in parts of the South in nearly a decade.

In 2007, police in Atlanta's suburb of Alpharetta were given the power to criminally cite anyone watering their lawns. In Alabama that year, people were fined for watering on the wrong day and many homes became infested by thirsty ants and cockroaches.

In west Georgia this month, the Tallapoosa River dropped below the intake the Haralson County Water Authority uses to provide water to at least four small towns. Some major cities are spending big to prevent future water shortages: Atlanta has begun a $300 million project to store 2.4 billion gallons of water - a month's water supply - and pipe it under the city.

This summer was particularly hot as well as dry, with 90-degree temperatures day after day that evaporated what little moisture the soil had left, said Bill Murphey, Georgia's state climatologist.

This summer was the second-hottest on record in Atlanta, where seasonal rains still haven't arrived: During the past 30 days, just over two-tenths of an inch of rain has fallen in Atlanta, 94 percent below normal, and in Cartersville, about 45 miles northwest of Atlanta, the weather service has recorded no rain at all.

The South's usually temperate forests have turned into tinderboxes, worries Denise Croker, a chief ranger with the Georgia Forestry Commission in northwest Georgia.

In the arid western U.S., cigarettes tossed from cars have been known to start forest fires. In the South, higher humidity generally keeps that from happening, but not this year. Even a spark from a chain dragged from a truck could set the northwest Georgia woods on fire, she said.

"Our dirt is like talcum powder," she said.

Outdoor burning has been banned due to fire risk across parts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, and burn permits aren't being issued in parts of Georgia.

"This is the worst drought that I've ever experienced and I've been farming for 45 years," said Phillip Thompson, 60, who spent Tuesday night trying to snuff out a smoldering, 150-acre brush fire near Scottsboro, Alabama, where he farms corn and soybeans. "It's just a bleak situation."

Some of the South's best known crops - cotton, peanuts and sweet potatoes - have largely escaped damage, because they're mostly produced outside the drought area, and in some cases got rain from Hurricane Matthew and other tropical weather, trade groups said.

Peanut yields will be down due to heat, drought or hurricanes, but that won't likely affect consumer prices, said Dan Koehler, who directs the Georgia Peanut Commission.

As for sweet potatoes, the drought has been both good and bad: Hard ground can damage skin and lead to rot in stored tubers, but they also start curing in the ground when it's really dry, which means "they're really sweet," said Sylvia Clark, secretary of the Mississippi Sweet Potato Association.

___

Associated Press writer Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Alabama, contributed to this report.

In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, a sunken boat is exposed by receding water levels on Lake Lanier as U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Natural Resources Manager Nick Baggett looks on in Flowery Branch, Ga. Some of the South's most beautiful mountains and valleys this fall are filled with desperation, as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/David Goldman) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, a floating swim line rests on the sand as Lake Lanier water levels stand about eight feet below normal as U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Natural Resources Manager Nick Baggett stands on the shore in Buford, Ga. Some of the South's most beautiful mountains and valleys this fall are filled with desperation, as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/David Goldman) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, a sunken boat is exposed by the receding water levels on Lake Lanier as U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Natural Resources Manager Nick Baggett looks on in Flowery Branch, Ga Some of the South's most beautiful mountains and valleys this fall are filled with desperation, as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/David Goldman) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, a floating swim line lays on the shore as Lake Lanier water levels stand about eight feet below normal as U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Natural Resources Manager Nick Baggett casts a shadow in Buford, Ga. Some of the South's most beautiful mountains and valleys this fall are filled with desperation, as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/David Goldman) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, a boat ramp runs onto the dried up lake shore of Lake Lanier as U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Natural Resources Manager Nick Baggett walks by in Flowery Branch, Ga. Some of the South's most beautiful mountains and valleys this fall are filled with desperation, as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/David Goldman) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, a floating swim line lays on the shore as Lake Lanier water levels stand about eight feet below normal in Buford, Ga. Some of the South's most beautiful mountains and valleys this fall are filled with desperation, as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/David Goldman) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, buoys warning boaters of underwater hazards sit exposed as Lake Lanier water levels recede about eight feet below normal in Buford, Ga. Some of the South's most beautiful mountains and valleys this fall are filled with desperation, as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/David Goldman) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, a floating dock sits on the shore as Lake Lanier water levels recede about eight feet below normal in Buford, Ga. Some of the South's most beautiful mountains and valleys this fall are filled with desperation, as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/David Goldman) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Natural Resources Manager Nick Baggett fixes a sign posted at a closed off boat ramp where the Lake Lanier shoreline has receded in Flowery Branch, Ga. Some of the South's most beautiful mountains and valleys this fall are filled with desperation, as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/David Goldman) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, farmer Michael Womack shows smaller than usual soybeans harvested this year due to drought conditions in Tallapoosa, Ga. Womack estimates a normal harvest brings in 45 bushels per acre compared with 14 this year. Some of the South's most beautiful mountains and valleys this fall are filled with desperation, as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/David Goldman) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, farmer Michael Womack meets with his insurance adjuster after his corn and soybean harvests were affected by drought conditions in Tallapoosa, Ga. Womack estimates his corn production was cut in half because of the drought. Some of the South's most beautiful mountains and valleys this fall are filled with desperation, as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/David Goldman) The Associated Press
Brad Lang, a firefighter with the Alabama Forestry Commission, sets a backfire to help extinguish a wildfire near Brookside, Ala., on Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016. Wildfires have burned hundreds of acres a day in the South as a drought worsens across much of the region. (AP Photo/Jay Reeves) The Associated Press
Alabama Forestry Commission firefighters Jim Junkin, left, and Brad Lang talk about strategies for fighting a wildfire near Brookside, Ala., on Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016. Wildfires are burning hundreds of acres of land daily across the South amid a drought. (AP Photo/Jay Reeves) The Associated Press
File - In this Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2016, file photo, a couple walks near Lake Purdy where water levels have dropped several feet due to a sever drought, in Birmingham, Ala. Hotter than normal temperatures combined with the below normal rainfall have worsened drought conditions across Alabama. The very worst drought conditions are in the mountains of northern Alabama and Georgia. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson, File) The Associated Press
File - In this Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2016, file photo, a thin line of water is visible in the distance of Lake Purdy as the water level have dropped several feet due to a sever drought, in Birmingham, Ala. Hotter than normal temperatures combined with the below normal rainfall have worsened drought conditions across Alabama. The very worst conditions are in the mountains of northern Alabama and Georgia. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson, File) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, one of the remaining cows on Alabama farmer David Bailey's farm, walks towards a pile of hay to be fed, surrounded by dirt where ankle deep green grass use to be, according to Bailey, in Dawson, Ala. Some of the South’s most beautiful mountains and valleys are filling with desperation as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, an abandoned boat sits in the remains of a dried out pond in Dawson, Ala. Some of the South’s most beautiful mountains and valleys are filling with desperation as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. The very worst conditions are in the mountains of northern Alabama and Georgia. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, cattle surrounded by dirt and dead grass can be seen following a tractor to be feed with hay on David Bailey's farm, in Dawson, Ala. "Here at my farm, April 15 was when the rain cut off," said Bailey, "We've come through some dry years in the early '80s, but I never seen it this dry, this long." Some of the South’s most beautiful mountains and valleys are filling with desperation as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson) The Associated Press
File - In this Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2016, file photo, Lake Purdy which has receded several feet due to drought, leaves dry, cracked ground where lake water should use to be, in Birmingham, Ala. Hotter than normal temperatures combined with the below normal rainfall have worsened drought conditions across Alabama. The very worst conditions are in the mountains of northern Alabama and Georgia. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson, File) The Associated Press
File - In this Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2016, file photo, a couple walks near Lake Purdy where water levels have dropped several feet due to a sever drought, in Birmingham, Ala. Hotter than normal temperatures combined with the below normal rainfall have worsened drought conditions across Alabama. The very worst drought conditions are in the mountains of northern Alabama and Georgia. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson, File) The Associated Press
File - In this Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2016, file photo, a thin line of water is visible in the distance of Lake Purdy as the water level have dropped several feet due to a sever drought, in Birmingham, Ala. Hotter than normal temperatures combined with the below normal rainfall have worsened drought conditions across Alabama. The very worst conditions are in the mountains of northern Alabama and Georgia. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson, File) The Associated Press
File - In this Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2016, file photo, a deer walks towards a receded Lake Purdy where water levels have dropped several feet due to a sever drought, in Birmingham, Ala. Hotter than normal temperatures combined with the below normal rainfall have worsened drought conditions across Alabama The very worst conditions are in the mountains of northern Alabama and Georgia. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson, File) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 photo, Alabama farmer David Bailey feeds his cows hay and sits in the middle of a dirt pile where he says use to have ankle deep green grass, surround by hungry cows, in Dawson, Ala. Bailey had to sell off half of his cattle heard, more than 100 animals, because he doesn't have enough hay to feed them through the winter. That was hard to take, he said, because cattlemen develop close bonds with their animals. ome of the South’s most beautiful mountains and valleys are filling with desperation as a worsening drought kills crops, threatens cattle and sinks lakes to their lowest levels in years. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson) The Associated Press
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