Author Topic: Drought news  (Read 178764 times)

0 Members and 8 Guests are viewing this topic.

Offline Wrightwood

  • Administrator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Wildlife Gateway
Re: Drought news
« Reply #60 on: Sep 17, 14, 04:45:41 PM »
I wouldn't have thought I'd be posting beach statistics in a drought topic but I find theses statistics interesting.



Offline Wrightwood

  • Administrator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Wildlife Gateway
Re: Drought news
« Reply #61 on: Oct 05, 14, 07:00:05 PM »
Sunday, October 05, 2014
SANTA ANA, Calif. --
California swimming pool companies just regaining their financial footing after the recession are now facing a new challenge: a devastating drought that has put the state's ubiquitous backyard pools under the microscope.

More than three dozen water agencies and local cities are cracking down on water use in swimming pools with rules that range from requiring a pool cover to prevent evaporation to banning residents from draining and refilling older ones that need repairs.

So far, the rules implemented by water districts haven't put much of a dent in business, but those in the industry worry that could come if the drought lingers and restrictions tighten.

And, at a time when wells are running dry in some parts of the state and water-conscious homeowners are ripping out lawns, swimming pools have an image problem that could affect the business long-term if dry conditions persist. The uncertainty has pool builders looking at other bone-dry locales as far away as Australia for ways they can adapt.

"They've got a lot of pressure and it's only getting hotter, it's only getting drier," said Alan Smith, the owner of Alan Smith Pool Plastering Inc., which drains and repairs 900 aging pools a year in Orange County.

Backyard pools range in volume from 10,000 to 30,000 gallons of water and the biggest Olympic-sized commercial pools hold more than 650,000 gallons. A typical backyard one, left uncovered, will lose around an inch of water a week due to evaporation, depending on weather conditions.

Thirty-seven cities or water districts statewide have implemented some level of restrictions on swimming pools, said Jennifer Persike, spokeswoman the Association of California Water Agencies.

The California Pool & Spa Association has pushed back hard and says that by the third year after installation, a backyard pool uses less water than a traditionally irrigated lawn would and using a pool cover reduces the water footprint even further. Currently, only about 30 percent of pool owners use covers, which can cut water loss from evaporation by up to 90 percent.

"What agencies ... should be doing is trying to get savings across the board instead of targeting specific industries. You don't see nurseries on the list, do you?" said John Norwood, the pool association's president.

In southern Orange County, where new pool rules sparked anger, the water district will vote later this month to pull back the ban on filling new pools if the homeowner can show that the pool and decking would use less water than traditional turf, said Jonathan Volzke, water district spokesman. The agency has designed an interactive program so homeowners can do the math before applying for a permit, he said.

Still, the pool industry is working to find ways to stay afloat in a worst-case scenario.

The drought comes at a particularly bad time for the industry, which saw many pool companies go out of business during the recession while others lost up to 70 percent of their jobs. Shrinking backyard lots and a trend toward large community pools at new housing developments instead of a pool in each backyard also hurt.

"It's just one more nail in the coffin, one more thing to hit us, one more difficult thing," said Ed Sotto, of Aquanetic Pools and Spas in Laguna Hills. "There's so much uncertainty."

Some pool builders are repositioning themselves to move into pool repair, instead of new pool construction, and are investing in gigantic plastic bladders that can hold water drained from a pool so it can be reused.

The industry is also looking to Australia, where a six-year drought led to the development of a so-called "water neutral pool" that, in some cases, can even generate a water surplus by using rain-collecting tanks, advanced filter technologies and an invisible chemical shield that locks in heat and reduces evaporation.

Smith, the Anaheim-based pool plasterer, will soon visit bone-dry Lake Havasu, Arizona, to research new filtration technologies and others are asking regulatory authorities whether they can use reclaimed water - not drinking water - to fill pools.

On a hot fall day, Smith watched as a work crew smoothed the final layer of eggshell-blue plaster over a drained pool before filling the 9-foot-deep pit with 25,000 gallons of drinking water from two garden hoses.

The pool was an older one behind a large, two-story home in Santa Ana - an area not yet affected by any restrictions. As he surveyed the work, Smith was still crunching numbers for a drier future.

"Everybody's concerned," said Smith, who has 100 employees. "What if the drought goes another three, four, five years? You have to have a contingency plan in place and that's what we're talking about here."

http://abc7.com/weather/california-drought-worries-pool-industry/337552/

Offline SkierBob

  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: 1894
  • Hangin' out Down the street
Re: Drought news
« Reply #62 on: Oct 05, 14, 07:18:05 PM »

In wake of drought and fires, turtle habitat becomes death trap


Biologists strode along the cracked, dry mud surrounding this evaporating north Los Angeles County lake last week, pausing periodically to pick up an emaciated turtle and wash alkaline dust off its head and carapace..

"A lot of these animals are severely ill and starving," said Tim Hovey, a state Department of Fish and Wildlife biologist, as he gestured toward a group of turtles bobbing in the murky water offshore.

After three years of drought, this natural 2-mile-long lake, about 15 miles west of Lancaster, has become a smelly, alkaline death trap for one of the largest populations of state-protected Western pond turtles in Southern California.


http://www.latimes.com/science/la-me-1005-turtles-20141005-story.html

Offline Wrightwood

  • Administrator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Wildlife Gateway
Re: Drought news
« Reply #63 on: Oct 06, 14, 04:51:33 PM »
Watch California Dry Up Right Before Your Eyes In 6 Jaw-Dropping GIFs

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/09/18/california-drought-gifs_n_5843534.html







Offline Toolman

  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: 874
  • You can't fix stupid
Re: Drought news
« Reply #64 on: Oct 07, 14, 03:06:20 PM »
Todd posted this elsewhere yesterday, pretty scary stuff.

Offline Wrightwood

  • Administrator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Wildlife Gateway

Offline Wrightwood

  • Administrator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Wildlife Gateway
Re: Drought news
« Reply #66 on: Oct 21, 14, 04:21:32 PM »

Offline RobertW

  • Moderator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Clear Skies!
Re: Drought news
« Reply #67 on: Oct 21, 14, 04:35:07 PM »
"14 California Communities Now on Verge of Waterless-Ness; Mass Migration out of California Seems Imminent"

"A few months ago, the official count was 28 communities bordering on complete waterless-ness, according to the Water Resources Control Board. Those that have since dropped off the list were able to come up with a fix, at least for now. The other 14, though, face an unprecedented resource collapse that could leave thousands of Californians with no other choice but to pack their bags and head to greener pastures."

And I thought it would take another earthquake to get people to leave...

Offline RobertW

  • Moderator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Clear Skies!
Re: Drought news
« Reply #68 on: Oct 21, 14, 05:11:47 PM »

Offline Wrightwood

  • Administrator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Wildlife Gateway
Re: Drought news
« Reply #69 on: Dec 05, 14, 07:54:37 PM »
So how many more storms like the ones California experienced this week would it take to end the drought?

The easy answer is: a lot. But the more complex answer involves looking at historic rain patterns and reservoir levels in different parts of the state, and making a series of calculations.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration says 18 to 21 more inches of rain over six months would do the trick for most of the state.

More: http://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-me-1204-rain-drought-20141205-story.html


Offline Wrightwood

  • Administrator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Wildlife Gateway
Re: Drought news
« Reply #70 on: Dec 05, 14, 07:56:10 PM »

Offline Joe Schmoe

  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: 686
Re: Drought news
« Reply #71 on: Dec 06, 14, 05:50:39 AM »
Bah!  What a bunch of downers.  News flash: NWS predictions for hurricane numbers have been 100% wrong for something like 5 years now.  I don't think they have much idea what's going on.

Offline RobertW

  • Moderator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Clear Skies!
Re: Drought news
« Reply #72 on: Dec 06, 14, 06:02:06 AM »
Our best snowpack years were not El Nino years.  We don't need an El Nino to have a good "water year".   Let's keep our fingers crossed and don't buy into the El Nino scenario.

Offline Wrightwood

  • Administrator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Wildlife Gateway
Re: Drought news
« Reply #73 on: Dec 09, 14, 10:13:53 PM »
Calif drought map USGS

http://cida.usgs.gov/ca_drought/

Offline Wrightwood

  • Administrator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Wildlife Gateway
Re: Drought news
« Reply #74 on: Dec 14, 14, 04:47:49 PM »

Offline SkierBob

  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: 1894
  • Hangin' out Down the street
Re: Drought news
« Reply #75 on: Jan 14, 15, 04:41:19 PM »

Offline Wrightwood

  • Administrator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Wildlife Gateway
Re: Drought news
« Reply #76 on: Jan 30, 15, 04:57:14 PM »

Offline SkierBob

  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: 1894
  • Hangin' out Down the street
Re: Drought news
« Reply #77 on: Feb 01, 15, 04:25:16 PM »
More Ski Resorts Close Due to Lack of Snow

http://unofficialnetworks.com/2015/01/more-ski-resorts-close-due-to-lack-of-snow

Last week we reported that ski resorts were closing due to low snow levels. This week we have gotten news that more ski resorts are suspending operations due to the unseasonably dry conditions.

California and Oregon seem to be the hardest hit this season. California is experiencing its fourth year of extreme and exceptional drought. Snowfall this season has been measured at just 33% of average. Resorts that have not flat out closed are holding on by the skin of their teeth. Homewood Ski Resort in Lake Tahoe, CA has shut down all but two bunny hill rope tows and are are essentially closed.

Offline Leftfield

  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: 757
Re: Drought news
« Reply #78 on: Mar 14, 15, 05:20:44 PM »
I just read that heavyweight water agency from Los Angeles has come calling on Sacramento Valley rice farmers, offering up to $71 million for some of their water.

The price being offered is so high, some farmers can make more from selling water than from growing their rice. Many are willing to deal: Nine irrigation districts, mainly serving rice growers along the Feather River basin, have made tentative deals to ship a portion of their water to the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California and several other water agencies later this summer.

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/news/state/california/water-and-drought/article13908632.html#storylink=cpy

To me this makes me wonder if water allotments for farmers are too large AND/OR what is LA doing to conserve water these days?   Also in the news, a bunch of ski resorts worth $100s of millions from several states, including California are being bought by one purchaser.  I dont think our local resorts are on the table. 

Offline Wrightwood

  • Administrator
  • Raccoon
  • *****
  • Posts: Plenty of Posts!
  • Wildlife Gateway
Re: Drought news
« Reply #79 on: Mar 22, 15, 03:37:04 PM »