Nate wrote:I was in the Navy for six years. I am capable of taking a 1 1/2 minute shower. *wins*
Sheesh. I can't even do my hair in that time.
I've been keeping up with news about the drought in Australia since you posted about it a while back W4J. I was thinking about you the other day when I was reading an article about the flash floods the major thunderheads were causing down there.
I don't know how many Americans can really appreciate a good drought. When I lived in New Mexico, water was a HUGE deal. There were very strict rules on water and heavy penalties for breaking them. Albuquerque, where I lived, got its water from an aquifer under the mountains, but it was slowly being drained dry and the government was worried. Also, most of the rivers were being fought over by different cities and states for water rights, and those rivers were heavily burdened as it was. Its been decades since the Rio Grande actually reached the Gulf.
Spain was pretty bad, too. Their drought meant lots of fountains and ponds were dry in places like the Ahlambra. They had commercials advertising water restrictions.
Of course, the biggest reason I know about this is where I live now. You would think living between two rivers would prevent water troubles, but no. My dad is the manager of our county's water and sewer systems that actually branch out into neighboring counties. Here lots of people still use their wells because the houses are higher than the water tanks on the hillsides (my mother and I were listening to that song 'Seasons in the Sun' when she said, "I remember listening to this song while pulling rainwater out of schoolhouse cistern with a pail and haystring.") Because the wells are limited, lots of old folks have no washers or anything like that because they use too much water. My mom said her whole family of seven would reuse the same bathwater (all one inch of it) after duties like throwing hay. Yuck. Nowadays, the problem is people being wasteful. They move in to these old houses with wells and squander the water in no time flat, running the old wells dry. Of course the biggest problem is people stealing water. I mean thousands of dollars worth of water by breaking their water meters, and because they're on state assistance, my dad can't prosecute.
And then there's the wells that my dad uses. The river water isn't safe to drink because of the amount of industrial run off in it. So we use wells. We actual have some of the best water in the country in terms of cleanliness and taste, treated to the minimum government standard because it doesn't need it. So whats the problem? Coal mines. The nearby coal mines are dangerously close to the wells and deeper than they are. We could lose the entire series and most of our water, not that the coal companies care.
Oh, yeah, and then we have droughts, too. A few years ago our levels were dangerously low, so naturally people squander water more than normal on important things like filling up their swimming pools. But my dad was told not to issue a water warning because the last time they did that, the water drained away completely as everyone hoarded it before it was gone. Fun stuff, water politics.
[color="Red"]As a man thinks in his heart, so is he. - Proverbs 23:7[/color]
The Sundries
Robin: "If we close our eyes, we can't see anything."
Batman: "A sound observation, Robin."