When the wind picked up from the south on John Schweiser鈥檚 farm outside Rocky Ford, Colorado, the sky would go black. A charging wall of dust would force the 80-year-old farmer and his wife to hunker down in their ranch-style farmhouse.
鈥淵ou鈥檇 look up and here鈥檇 come this big ol鈥� rolling dirt,鈥� Schweiser said. 鈥淵ou couldn鈥檛 see how high it was.鈥�
The dust storms looked eerily similar to the ones you鈥檇 see on the pages of a history textbook. But it鈥檚 2014, not the 1930s, and many of the same stretches of prairie once devastated by the Dust Bowl are once again dealing with terrible drought and massive dust storms. now than they were when thousands of families abandoned their farms. Still, many farmers have managed to avoid tragedy.
While big swathes of the Great Plains have partially recovered from the extreme 2012 drought, some sections are still desperately dry. The drought has settled in what historians consider to be ground zero for the Dust Bowl of the 1930s: southeast Colorado, western Kansas, northeast New Mexico, and the panhandles of Oklahoma and Texas.

Portions of southeast Colorado haven鈥檛 seen a lack of moisture like this since we started keeping weather records. Farmers have seen some relief with the summer鈥檚 monsoonal rains, but moisture deep in the soil will take longer to recover. The cracked, dusty ground has been sapped by heat.
鈥淲hen you put water on it, after it鈥檚 been that dry, it won鈥檛 absorb any,鈥� Schweiser said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been bad as I ever remember seeing.鈥�
How, then, is a farmer like Schweiser making a living? None of his neighbors have skipped town like Dust Bowl refugees. 2013 was a rough year, but he made it through. Farmers aren鈥檛 marching on Washington demanding relief.
鈥淢ost of them have been around to know that you have to take the good with the bad, and most people just accept that,鈥� Schweiser said. 鈥淚f they didn鈥檛, they wouldn鈥檛 be farming in the first place.鈥�
The reason more farmers haven鈥檛 gone bankrupt, even in Dust Bowl conditions, is far more than sheer persistence. It鈥檚 the culmination of decades of agricultural research, technological advances and changing practices.
鈥淭he 2012 drought was -- is -- severe. And very comparable to what we saw in the Dust Bowl,鈥� said , a soil science professor at Colorado State University.
Farmers like Schweiser are able to keep their farms up and running even in Dust Bowl conditions, Kelly said, largely due to adaptations and adoptions of new technology. Farms in the 1930s relied on primitive horse-drawn plows. Now, large-scale crop farmers are testing conservation practices like planting cover crops, limiting tillage and updating irrigation, with financial benefits.
鈥淚 think they鈥檙e able to sustain the production in some of these areas,鈥� Kelly said. 鈥淏ut that came from a lot of research and a lot of work in developing cropping systems and farming systems and learning a lot about the damage a plow can do.鈥�
That damaging plow made the Dust Bowl one of the largest and most destructive human-caused ecological disasters in history. Homesteaders dug up marginal lands to plant row crops like wheat. Without rain, the soil dried out and sprung into dust clouds miles long whenever the wind kicked up.
In the decades since, former U.S. Department of Agriculture conservationist John Knapp says a suite of conservation programs has gone into effect. Those programs pull sensitive grasslands out of agricultural production and keep the soil intact.
鈥淭hat really changed what was the Dust Bowl,鈥� Knapp said. 鈥淏ecause those lands are in grass now. And that鈥檚 some of the most highly erodible anywhere in Colorado.鈥�
Though some farmers have been able to adapt to a harsh environment, the economics of such a transition can wreak havoc on the small communities involved, Knapp said. Even though farmers like John Schweiser are able to keep their heads above water, times are tough. Selling off cattle or relying on insurance is taxing on farmers and on the surrounding towns.
鈥淓ven prior to this particular drought, we have been on kind of a slide in terms of the economics. Just because we weren鈥檛 able to sustain some of the higher value crops,鈥� Knapp said.
When irrigation water was easier to come by, farmers grew high value crops like onions and melons along the Arkansas River in Colorado. But as drought persisted and worsened, packing sheds have closed, Knapp said. Farms then need fewer workers.
Some farmers are selling out completely. Mirroring a national trend, Otero County, Colorado, where John Schweiser grows corn and wheat, and a 19 percent increase in the average farm size. Those are larger economic issues not necessarily caused by drought, but certainly exacerbated by it, Knapp said. And playing out in many of the hardest hit areas.
Life in the modern Dust Bowl isn鈥檛 easy. But it鈥檚 certainly easier than the other epic droughts farmer John Schweiser has lived through. He grew up as a child of the Dust Bowl having been born in 1934. He says at the time he was relatively unaware of the historic event taking place on the family farm. He remembers speaking to his mother about the tough times.
鈥淪he said, 鈥榊ou kids never went to bed hungry, but your dad and I did.鈥� That鈥檚 how tough it was,鈥� Schweiser said. 鈥淏ut I鈥檝e never known any bad times in comparison.鈥�
The current drought will leave a mark on those who live through it. It remains to be seen whether the next generation of farmers in this region will be able to adapt quickly enough to survive even more extreme conditions in the future.