TheBanyanTree: Harvest Moon
Jena Norton
eudora45 at sbcglobal.net
Tue Oct 5 08:03:48 PDT 2010
Jodene, I'm in TOC (The Other California, AKA the San Joaquin Valley,
northern part). Friends and I try to decide where the line should be when we
divide CA in half. Nobody wants Bakersfield.....
Where are you?
Jena Norton
-----Original Message-----
From: thebanyantree-bounces at lists.remsset.com
[mailto:thebanyantree-bounces at lists.remsset.com] On Behalf Of Jodene
Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 10:46 PM
To: A comfortable place to meet other people and exchange your own
*original* writings.
Subject: Re: TheBanyanTree: Harvest Moon
Dale - I am older than you and I have
Learned Spanish in the last few years.
Costa Rica is a wonderful country and the people are very nice and
they like
Americans(wonder of wonders!)
Re: water wars- northern Californians
have hated southern Californians ever
since they "stole our water" more than
half a century ago.
Take care.
Jodene
Sent from my iPhone
On Oct 4, 2010, at 8:43 PM, "Dale M. Parish" <parishdm at att.net> wrote:
> I'm starting my sixty-third winter now, and today was a reminder of
> six more months of weather cooler than I enjoy. Friday, I stepped
> out of the Driver's License office and they were loading hay in the
> same hay field from which I used to haul 45 years ago, and I
> remembered the warm weather and being slathered with hay sticking to
> our sweat-soaked bodies. I wonder if I lived in a more temperate
> climate, if I'd miss cool weather. I think not.
>
> I think of the equator-- is that an extreme? Maybe. Couldn't say
> until I'd tried a year or two there, but real estate on the equator
> outside of Brazil doesn't appeal to me. Costa Rica! I remember
> reading recently that Costa Rica abolished its army in 1949 and
> diverted the money into education and social services, and now has
> one of the highest literacy rates in the world. That appeals to
> me. I don't speak Spanish, but I think I'm not too old to learn,
> although language doesn't come easy to me. Johnson O'Connor rated
> me at the sixteenth percentile in language ability. But to get out
> of cold weather, I think I could learn Spanish.
>
> How high is the retirement age emmigration from this country. Two
> friends of mine left here and moved to northern Thailand, and are
> still trying to talk me into joining them when I retire. They make
> it sound encouraging most of the times, but then they talk about
> having to leave the country every month and go to Cambodia to cross
> the border and return to keep their visas current. Not sure how
> that might work if one of them were to become hospitalized or
> incapacitated to the extent that they could not make that trip.
> Hope not. For their sake.
>
> I've been thinking for twenty years that I'd like to retire to
> central Texas, in the hill country. But I know nothing about living
> on that land-- I'm concerned about water rights. Texas is about to
> become divided politically over water rights-- while east Texas has
> enough water, the Dallas/Fort Worth area has long since grown beyond
> its means to provide water for growth, and a dirty fight will be
> fought in the court rooms of the state trying to decide the fate of
> the water from the Neches River soon. T. Boone Pickens wants to
> water-mine and destroy the Ogalalla aquifer and pipe it all to
> Dallas, and would if he could. The largest aquifer on the planet--
> formed over 200 million years-- would be gone. It seems to me a
> shame to allow that to happen, but the white man's laws seem to
> permit destruction of such things with little or no recourse for the
> future.
>
> Texas has some strange laws regarding water. The state owns it
> all-- surface and subsurface-- but if you own the water rights,
> you're allowed to take it from the guy downstream of you. In some
> cases you can use it but must put it back when you've used it-- in
> others, you can use it all and return none to the stream from whence
> it came. But water is not a mineral-- you can own mineral rights
> that give you the right to pump the oil or mine the minerals from
> under your land, but you don't have to own water rights to pump sub-
> surface water. Yet. If you don't live in a MUD-- Municipal Utility
> District. If you do, then you can be forced to buy water from the
> MUD's well or treatment plant. Strange.
>
> So where do I go that I feel like I can get enough water to
> subsistance farm the rest of my days out? Land's getting expensive
> in the hill country, and water already is hard to come by there.
> Guess it's getting tough all over.
>
> Hugs,
> Dale
> --
> Dale M. Parish
> 628 Parish Rd
> Orange TX 77632
>
>
>
>
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