TheBanyanTree: San Diego Report
Jena Norton
eudora45 at sbcglobal.net
Sun Oct 28 07:55:24 PDT 2007
I can remember years ago (over 30, probably) both Allatoona and Lanier were
so low you could walk out maybe half a mile. You could see the channels left
by the digging (actually glorified ditches). I haven't seen Allatoona and
Lanier in person yet, since I'm on the other side of the country, but will
see them in December. I lived on Allatoona for 4 years, as well as went
there from the 50s on. And I watched Lanier being built and filling up.
Friend on the NE side of the mountains say the reservoirs are fine there and
apparently Lake Hartwell is still pretty much full.
Jena Norton
-----Original Message-----
From: thebanyantree-bounces at lists.remsset.com
[mailto:thebanyantree-bounces at lists.remsset.com] On Behalf Of B Drummond
Sent: Sunday, October 28, 2007 6:57 AM
To: thebanyantree at lists.remsset.com
Subject: Re: TheBanyanTree: San Diego Report
On Monday 22 October 2007 08:12:39 pm Tom Smith wrote:
> I _read_ the reservoirs the Atlanta area
> of the globe are at record lows, with rivers starting to
> resemble creeks. I'd like to hear about that from an on-scene
> witness.
I'm not sure that they're at record lows as I am not privy to that
information. One of the lakes, Lake Allatoona on the NW side of Atlanta, is
very low. Lower than I can remember seeing it be before when I drove by it
2
weeks ago, but I have only lived here for about 11 years so I am not a good
reference on the matter.
>From what I've read, part of the reason for some of the alarm is that the
rivers on the downhill side of our reservoirs are not being put on the same
diet that our reservoirs have been put on. Some are saying that we should
discharge less because of the shortfall of rain but some government policies
won't allow it due to previous legislation and agreements with other states
that are downstream from those reservoirs.
As I mentioned in a previous post, the dearth of tropical storms moving
into
our area for the last 2 years has exacerbated the lower than normal rainfall
that we've had this year.
When I moved to where I live now in the metro Atlanta area, which is over 60
miles from Lake Allatoona and Lake Lanier, which are two of the largest
lakes
in the metro Atlanta area, we, in this area in particular, were in the
middle
of a drought that lasted almost 7 years. The worst 2 years were very tough
and we went through a series of water restrictions that ended up with an all
out ban on outdoor watering, period. By the way, that drought didn't affect
the north side of Atlanta just 60 miles away. We adapted and, when the
drought lifted, we kept the restrictions in place because our area was
growing by leaps and bounds. The drought woke up us to the knowledge that
it
was a matter of time before we would be facing similar conditions even
WITHOUT drought mucking up the picture.
I live on the SW side of Atlanta's metro area. Now, due to the drought
mainly affecting the north side of the metro area, it's time for them to
wake
up and smell the coffee.
The vast majority of the growth in Atlanta has been on the north side,
especially the NE side. It's time for them to wise up and conserve and
realize that our water resources are finite and must be conserved as if we
are always in drought conditions as there appears to be no stopping the
growth in the area. There are millions more people depending on those
lakes'
water supply than just 10 years ago and the lakes have not increased in
capacity one gallon in the last 10 years. Something had to give and our
lack
of the remnants of tropical storms passing through the area has brought
this
point finally to the forefront. And sadly, the north side of metro
Atlanta,
and Atlanta itself, is just now getting the picture. In the
vernacular, "Whut were they thankin", man?"
With all that growth comes loss of natural habitat, increased concrete and
asphalt covered areas which affect groundwater supplies and reservoirs'
storage. And most sadly to me, loss of our beautiful trees. All of these
affect the water situation in the area and it will only get worse, come
tropical storms or not. At times it seems that we're on a irreversible
course that has one goal in mind: get rid of anything naturally green,
especially that which promotes transpiration, photosynthesis, and breathes
out oxygen. Do you ever get the feeling that society at times is borderline
suicidal? The thought has occurred to me more than once.
And isn't much of the same kind of thing true in the southern part of
California? Most of southern California is a desert climate and therefore
prone to wildfire outbreaks, which occur, as I remember, yearly. Isn't
increased population, poor resource conservation and poor planning of
development, increased fire risk from said things, and now, especially along
with nut cases setting fires, leading to headlines like we've read lately?
I see much more plain evidence of that being the cause of the fires than
some
of the other "causes" of both our water situation and the fires in southern
California.
Could some of the comments in the news media lately that I've read and heard
be due to certain parties trying to cover up poor planning and reckless
development due to their greed and that of their contributors? I feel
pretty certain that's the case around here.
Something to ponder, I suppose.
bd
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