Originally posted by Omaha 680
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The Official Drought Thread
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bro living in the city must be kind of making you a puss if you're feeling guilt about almond consumption
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link?Originally posted by myboynoah View PostI'm not surprised. Prophets have been saying for years that California would fall into the sea.
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I'm not surprised. Prophets have been saying for years that California would fall into the sea.Originally posted by Dwight Schr-ute View PostEl Nino part of a land grab of ocean front property along the California coast.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/...b01a3ed123bd2f
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FIFYOriginally posted by Omaha 680 View PostI define it as affordable, guilt-free consumption of all the almonds I want.
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I define it as guilt-free consumption of all the almonds I want.Originally posted by Jeff Lebowski View PostI suppose it depend on how you define "out of the drought". One good measure (in the west at least) is the status of your reservoirs. Sometimes it takes several wet years to fully recover.
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Originally posted by Sullyute View PostI have zero sympathy for home owners who build places like this and act dumb founded that their home is destroyed. Same thing with the homes built up on eroding hills in Bountiful or homes built in flood plains next to mid-west rivers. I also have no sympathy for real estate developers or the city councils that approve it either.
(At least until an earthquake levels my house. Or water stops coming out of my pipes.)
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I saw two very interesting pieces on the decline of two great civiliztions. The Mayan's and early Egytians. I guess the Egytians reigned for a long, long time but there was a dark period of about 200 years.
The Mayans were basically wiped out.
The conclusion in both cases was weather change that wiped them out. This guy had been working 20 years on his theory droubt was the terrible event that took out the Mayans. While most were skeptical at first mainly because having a droubt in a tropical forest seemed highly unlikely. However, based on scientific work the droubt theory seems very credible.
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I suppose it depend on how you define "out of the drought". One good measure (in the west at least) is the status of your reservoirs. Sometimes it takes several wet years to fully recover.Originally posted by Omaha 680 View PostBump. I'm curious about this in light of bluegoose's post.
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I have zero sympathy for home owners who build places like this and act dumb founded that their home is destroyed. Same thing with the homes built up on eroding hills in Bountiful or homes built in flood plains next to mid-west rivers. I also have no sympathy for real estate developers or the city councils that approve it either.Originally posted by Dwight Schr-ute View PostEl Nino part of a land grab of ocean front property along the California coast.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/...b01a3ed123bd2f
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So far so good, at least up north in California. Big Piney's hood is still lagging behind a little bit. Going to hit the slopes of Mt Shasta this weekend with the kids where they have about 70" at the base and 94" up top. Last year at this time they didn't have a drop of snow at the base.
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El Nino part of a land grab of ocean front property along the California coast.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/...b01a3ed123bd2f
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Saw this great post on FB.
Winter is not even over yet and we're already at 100 to 120% of snow pack in Utah in most areas
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