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The rice fields "looked more like an ocean", says Tito (uncle) Juanito.
After the heavy rains, and under a low, misty sky, the fields looked as ruined as a battlefield.
Klever told me that in the early spring, before farmers started irrigating, Belcampo's fields looked as though they'd been getting water for a couple of weeks.
The fields looked like high speed so new-mown was the hay, then the dark blue Italian lavendermet overhead, a strange maize deeply planted as mass javelinsin the hoed floor of the land.
Two years ago, when the drought turned the leaves of street trees dry as paper and farm fields looked like wasted deserts, many of us gardeners lugged buckets of water, heavy with despair, to pour on our most precious plants.
It was, and remains, one of the most chilling things I've ever seen: Whole neighborhoods, the size of four football fields, looked as though a tornado had swept back and forth over them for a week — but this was not the work of Mother Nature.
Similar(50)
Even deeper in the countryside, the fields look different.
The soil in windblown fields looks -- and is -- iron-hard.
Flying into Des Moines, the corn fields look surprisingly green.
Projects in Canada's oil sands, in deep-water and Arctic oil fields, look worryingly costly.
Little boys riding the ox or buffalo, rice fields looking kind of like velvet.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com