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Thread: Water.....

  1. #601
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    Quote Originally Posted by MagnificentUnicorn View Post
    Go for a walk and take some mushrooms


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums
    I’m trying to get my dad to do this exact thing. He’s cool with gummies and even has his own vape now. We’re getting there…

  2. #602
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    I prefer to take the shrooms and then go for the walk.
    I have been in this State for 30 years and I am willing to admit that I am part of the problem.

    "Happiest years of my life were earning < $8.00 and hour, collecting unemployment every spring and fall, no car, no debt and no responsibilities. 1984-1990 Park City UT"

  3. #603
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bunion 2020 View Post
    I prefer to take the shrooms and then go for the walk.
    That works too


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums

  4. #604
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    Take shrooms and go ski bumps, it's therapeutic. I haven't done that in 30 years, maybe I should try it again.

  5. #605
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    Quote Originally Posted by TBS View Post
    Just had an “interesting” chairlift convo today with a recent arrival to Central OR from (judging by his accent) New England.
    He was telling me about seeing Lake Mead and how depressing it was.
    “And all this rain in California but no way to keep it from flowing straight into the ocean. What a travesty”

    So I asked him if he knew
    1. How much power it would take to hold and move all that water to where it was needed. Sort of surprised about needing to double California’s power generation.
    2. How smart it was to build dams on known fault lines. Uh yea…
    3. what crops are grown on Colorado river water. He didn’t.
    4. How much water it takes to grow one almond, one pistachio or one pecan. Or enough cotton to make one Tshirt & pair of jeans. No clue
    5. How much of those water-intensive crops are exported. No idea
    6. How many salmon runs are endangered by agriculture drawdowns, specifically the Klamath where all the dams are being removed after the tribes sued. Blank look.

    “Well, there must be a happy medium”

    “Yea, start by cutting off the welfare queen farmers growing water intensive export crops that should not be grown in the fucking desert. And then quit building fucking golf courses in the fucking desert.”

    Told him to read Cadillac Desert and Kittridge’s A Hole In the Sky then study up on the Klamath Project and what happened when drought hit the Ancient Puebloans.

    OK maybe it was more of a diatribe by me than a conversation. But I did not ask if he was a Trumptard…

    Welcome to the West, Pilgrim
    I hear the Upper Klamath dam removal mentioned a lot in central Oregon. I often wonder how much is actually understood about the Project, the salmon fishery, and the lawsuit.

    Fun facts: the K has very few salmon that return for spawn. Why? Bush Cheney decided minimum flow data was a libtard fantasy. They used some pseudoscience by a fish biologist that believes the Earth is 6,000 years old and lowered it to abysmal levels. The resulting die off was catastrophic. Indigenous, fishing guides, basically anyone who witnessed it report it was the most horrific thing they’ve ever seen. Dead fish piled up, rotting in every eddy.

    Fun fact #2: the Klamath people won the lawsuit based off of population numbers and species health of a freshwater fish that lives in the lake, not Salmon.

    Fun fact #3: The majority of the electrical power for southern Oregon comes from the dam at Copco. No plan for how that power will be replaced. Current predictions all include coal burning generators.

    I guided rafting trips on the Upper K. Like most paddlers I think dams are absolutely devastating to riparian ecology. I also like flipping a switch in a dark room rather than looking for a match and a candle. There are no easy answers whether you live out west or back east or any where else. My solution? Stop the moratorium on nuclear power plants, but that certainly has its own set of risks and rewards, too.

  6. #606
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    Quote Originally Posted by gravitylover View Post
    Take shrooms and go ski bumps, it's therapeutic. I haven't done that in 30 years, maybe I should try it again.
    Last Friday, good times. More untracked settled powder than bumps though


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums

  7. #607
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    Quote Originally Posted by TBS View Post
    Just had an “interesting” chairlift convo today with a recent arrival to Central OR from (judging by his accent) New England.
    He was telling me about seeing Lake Mead and how depressing it was.
    “And all this rain in California but no way to keep it from flowing straight into the ocean. What a travesty”

    So I asked him if he knew
    1. How much power it would take to hold and move all that water to where it was needed. Sort of surprised about needing to double California’s power generation.
    2. How smart it was to build dams on known fault lines. Uh yea…
    3. what crops are grown on Colorado river water. He didn’t.
    4. How much water it takes to grow one almond, one pistachio or one pecan. Or enough cotton to make one Tshirt & pair of jeans. No clue
    5. How much of those water-intensive crops are exported. No idea
    6. How many salmon runs are endangered by agriculture drawdowns, specifically the Klamath where all the dams are being removed after the tribes sued. Blank look.

    “Well, there must be a happy medium”

    “Yea, start by cutting off the welfare queen farmers growing water intensive export crops that should not be grown in the fucking desert. And then quit building fucking golf courses in the fucking desert.”

    Told him to read Cadillac Desert and Kittridge’s A Hole In the Sky then study up on the Klamath Project and what happened when drought hit the Ancient Puebloans.

    OK maybe it was more of a diatribe by me than a conversation. But I did not ask if he was a Trumptard…

    Welcome to the West, Pilgrim
    pretty funny, ha. I've read both books but can't say I have a good grasp on water in the west, but I'm at least trying to learn. It blows my mind people who don't read anything about western water issues just start shooting from the hip their top-of-the-head solutions to everything water and also their lamentations about how CA could do more. The story of how CA got water in Cadillac Desert shows how faking ruthless CA was back in the day to get water and store it by any means necessary. "No way to keep it going into ocean" - yeah bud, nobody really tried in the past, buncha lazy fuckers those guys.

  8. #608
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    Quote Originally Posted by TBS View Post
    Just had an “interesting” chairlift convo today with a recent arrival to Central OR from (judging by his accent) New England.
    He was telling me about seeing Lake Mead and how depressing it was.
    “And all this rain in California but no way to keep it from flowing straight into the ocean. What a travesty”

    So I asked him if he knew
    1. How much power it would take to hold and move all that water to where it was needed. Sort of surprised about needing to double California’s power generation.
    2. How smart it was to build dams on known fault lines. Uh yea…
    3. what crops are grown on Colorado river water. He didn’t.
    4. How much water it takes to grow one almond, one pistachio or one pecan. Or enough cotton to make one Tshirt & pair of jeans. No clue
    5. How much of those water-intensive crops are exported. No idea
    6. How many salmon runs are endangered by agriculture drawdowns, specifically the Klamath where all the dams are being removed after the tribes sued. Blank look.

    “Well, there must be a happy medium”

    “Yea, start by cutting off the welfare queen farmers growing water intensive export crops that should not be grown in the fucking desert. And then quit building fucking golf courses in the fucking desert.”

    Told him to read Cadillac Desert and Kittridge’s A Hole In the Sky then study up on the Klamath Project and what happened when drought hit the Ancient Puebloans.

    OK maybe it was more of a diatribe by me than a conversation. But I did not ask if he was a Trumptard…

    Welcome to the West, Pilgrim
    What about using that run off water to try and recharge aquafers instead of just flowing over concrete to the sea? You seem to operate off the assumption that reservoirs and pipelines are the only alternative, but what about just letting it flow into the soil in places?
    __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ ________________
    "We don't need predator control, we need whiner control. Anyone who complains that "the gummint oughta do sumpin" about the wolves and coyotes should be darted, caged, and released in a more suitable habitat for them, like the middle of Manhattan." - Spats

    "I'm constantly doing things I can't do. Thats how I get to do them." - Pablo Picasso

    Cisco and his wife are fragile idiots who breed morons.

  9. #609
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    My grandkids asked more intelligent questions when they were 4.
    Seeker of Truth. Dispenser of Wisdom. Protector of the Weak. Avenger of Evil.

  10. #610
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cisco Kid View Post
    My grandkids asked more intelligent questions when they were 4.
    This is a very stupid answer.
    __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ ________________
    "We don't need predator control, we need whiner control. Anyone who complains that "the gummint oughta do sumpin" about the wolves and coyotes should be darted, caged, and released in a more suitable habitat for them, like the middle of Manhattan." - Spats

    "I'm constantly doing things I can't do. Thats how I get to do them." - Pablo Picasso

    Cisco and his wife are fragile idiots who breed morons.

  11. #611
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    Quote Originally Posted by leroy jenkins View Post
    What about using that run off water to try and recharge aquafers instead of just flowing over concrete to the sea? You seem to operate off the assumption that reservoirs and pipelines are the only alternative, but what about just letting it flow into the soil in places?
    recharge is a very slow process, that's one problem. And how do you get it to "recharge" and not "flow over concrete" without running the risk of massive flooding?

    Please don't start gunning for SJG's status in this thread.
    "fuck off you asshat gaper shit for brains fucktard wanker." - Jesus Christ
    "She was tossing her bean salad with the vigor of a Drunken Pop princess so I walked out of the corner and said.... "need a hand?"" - Odin
    "everybody's got their hooks into you, fuck em....forge on motherfuckers, drag all those bitches across the goal line with you." - (not so) ill-advised strategy

  12. #612
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    Not to mention this was already covered in this thread.

  13. #613
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    Quote Originally Posted by Danno View Post
    recharge is a very slow process, that's one problem. And how do you get it to "recharge" and not "flow over concrete" without running the risk of massive flooding?

    Please don't start gunning for SJG's status in this thread.
    Controlled flooding? Tuscon Pheonix etc seem to use a flood control system that channels some amount of water back into the soil in small localized places. Seems like a good idea.

    Sorry I haven't read every post in this 25 page thread.
    __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ ________________
    "We don't need predator control, we need whiner control. Anyone who complains that "the gummint oughta do sumpin" about the wolves and coyotes should be darted, caged, and released in a more suitable habitat for them, like the middle of Manhattan." - Spats

    "I'm constantly doing things I can't do. Thats how I get to do them." - Pablo Picasso

    Cisco and his wife are fragile idiots who breed morons.

  14. #614
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    California prop 1 funded projects included GW recharge projects and new surface water storage projects. Everything is moving slowly. It’s also new for the state to try to combine water storage projects with public (environmental and recreational) benefit.

    https://youtu.be/Dk4bz5rskn4

  15. #615
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    Quote Originally Posted by leroy jenkins View Post
    Controlled flooding? Tuscon Pheonix etc seem to use a flood control system that channels some amount of water back into the soil in small localized places. Seems like a good idea.

    Sorry I haven't read every post in this 25 page thread.
    Groudwater recharge through the heavy clay layer in the valley is a very, very slow process. Would result in lakes spanning thousands of square miles to make any kind of significant impact, which is a problem for the cities and farms that exist there already. Evaporation is an issue too, since the valley is hot AF in the summer, and these would be shallow lakes.

    Pumped groundwater injection is promising, but energy intensive and very localized. I threw together some rough numbers on what that looks like on a big scale some pages back. TL;DR, it takes more money and energy than anyone is willing to spend.
    Wait, how can we trust this guy^^^ He's clearly not DJSapp

  16. #616
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    Quote Originally Posted by TBS View Post
    Just had an “interesting” chairlift convo today with a recent arrival to Central OR from (judging by his accent) New England.
    He was telling me about seeing Lake Mead and how depressing it was.
    “And all this rain in California but no way to keep it from flowing straight into the ocean. What a travesty”

    So I asked him if he knew
    1. How much power it would take to hold and move all that water to where it was needed. Sort of surprised about needing to double California’s power generation.
    2. How smart it was to build dams on known fault lines. Uh yea…
    3. what crops are grown on Colorado river water. He didn’t.
    4. How much water it takes to grow one almond, one pistachio or one pecan. Or enough cotton to make one Tshirt & pair of jeans. No clue
    5. How much of those water-intensive crops are exported. No idea
    6. How many salmon runs are endangered by agriculture drawdowns, specifically the Klamath where all the dams are being removed after the tribes sued. Blank look.

    “Well, there must be a happy medium”

    “Yea, start by cutting off the welfare queen farmers growing water intensive export crops that should not be grown in the fucking desert. And then quit building fucking golf courses in the fucking desert.”

    Told him to read Cadillac Desert and Kittridge’s A Hole In the Sky then study up on the Klamath Project and what happened when drought hit the Ancient Puebloans.

    OK maybe it was more of a diatribe by me than a conversation. But I did not ask if he was a Trumptard…

    Welcome to the West, Pilgrim
    Haha, so he asked pretty much the same question I did when i bumped this thread, and then got berated for an entire chairlift ride for it. Too funny.

    Gonna add water to the usual list of religion/politics to never bring up to people on chairlifts, lest someone goes balls-deep on me for making some sort of (albeit ignorant) observation. Just stick to what I know, and only ask questions about the terrain. This is the way.

  17. #617
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    Quote Originally Posted by leroy jenkins View Post
    This is a very stupid answer.
    Well, it was a very ignorant question.
    Seeker of Truth. Dispenser of Wisdom. Protector of the Weak. Avenger of Evil.

  18. #618
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    Quote Originally Posted by paulster2626 View Post
    Haha, so he asked pretty much the same question I did when i bumped this thread, and then got berated for an entire chairlift ride for it. Too funny.

    Gonna add water to the usual list of religion/politics to never bring up to people on chairlifts, lest someone goes balls-deep on me for making some sort of (albeit ignorant) observation. Just stick to what I know, and only ask questions about the terrain. This is the way.
    I would trade a water diatribe for the guy who spent the whole ride on Monday telling me how much money he makes.

  19. #619
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    This site has some good visualizations of the snowpack and reservoir status
    https://engaging-data.com/california...-and-snowpack/

    Recharge acquifers = turn Central Valley back into seasonal lakes and marshes it was, an idea with obvious problems

  20. #620
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    Yeah e.g. mosquitoes/diseases

  21. #621
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    Quote Originally Posted by Not DJSapp View Post
    Groudwater recharge through the heavy clay layer in the valley is a very, very slow process. Would result in lakes spanning thousands of square miles to make any kind of significant impact, which is a problem for the cities and farms that exist there already. Evaporation is an issue too, since the valley is hot AF in the summer, and these would be shallow lakes.

    Pumped groundwater injection is promising, but energy intensive and very localized. I threw together some rough numbers on what that looks like on a big scale some pages back. TL;DR, it takes more money and energy than anyone is willing to spend.
    it seems to me like drilling wells through the clay layer but not bothering to use a bunch of energy to actively pump through them, just holes that fill with water when it floods that are drilled to permeate the clay, would be a happy medium. But I'm sure theres more to it than that.
    __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ ________________
    "We don't need predator control, we need whiner control. Anyone who complains that "the gummint oughta do sumpin" about the wolves and coyotes should be darted, caged, and released in a more suitable habitat for them, like the middle of Manhattan." - Spats

    "I'm constantly doing things I can't do. Thats how I get to do them." - Pablo Picasso

    Cisco and his wife are fragile idiots who breed morons.

  22. #622
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    Quote Originally Posted by alias_rice View Post
    I would trade a water diatribe for the guy who spent the whole ride on Monday telling me how much money he makes.
    There is a lift chair/hot springs appropriate way to talk about philosophy politics religion or sex but money is always crass.
    __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ ________________
    "We don't need predator control, we need whiner control. Anyone who complains that "the gummint oughta do sumpin" about the wolves and coyotes should be darted, caged, and released in a more suitable habitat for them, like the middle of Manhattan." - Spats

    "I'm constantly doing things I can't do. Thats how I get to do them." - Pablo Picasso

    Cisco and his wife are fragile idiots who breed morons.

  23. #623
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    Quote Originally Posted by leroy jenkins View Post
    Controlled flooding? Tuscon Pheonix etc seem to use a flood control system that channels some amount of water back into the soil in small localized places. Seems like a good idea.

    Sorry I haven't read every post in this 25 page thread.
    I lived in Tucson. The flood control "system" is to let the water run down the streets into historical washes and into the dry riverbeds--like the Rillito--and out into the desert. In other words there is no flodd control system. Most of the water evaporates before it reaches the aquifer. https://ca.water.usgs.gov/pubs/FLint...eling_2004.pdf The same is true for a number of rivers on the east slope of the Sierra--like the Truckee, the Carson, and the Walker.

    The water the Tucson is recharging with comes from its excess allotment from the Colordo--an allotment that will almost surely be reduced. It's a lot easier to pump water down into an acquifer a little at a time than trying to capture monsoon runoff where a third of the annual rainfall can fall over a couple of hours in a single summer afternoon.

  24. #624
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    am I missing some zeros or reading this wrong?

    Central Arizona Project $165.00 per acre foot wholesale water
    Denver Water $18,980.00 per acre foot wholesale water

    https://www.denverwater.org/contract...opment-charges

    https://library.cap-az.com/documents...e-Schedule.pdf

  25. #625
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    Quote Originally Posted by dunfree View Post
    This site has some good visualizations of the snowpack and reservoir status
    https://engaging-data.com/california...-and-snowpack/

    Recharge acquifers = turn Central Valley back into seasonal lakes and marshes it was, an idea with obvious problems
    That is a pretty interesting visualization - am I interpreting correct that for the current total volume of water (in the sierras only?) about half is in snowpack and half in reservoirs?

    Earlier in the thread someone explained that the snowpack storage volume relative to reservoirs was several orders of magnitude more? I know I’m probably missing something.

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