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41   HEY YOU   2012 Jun 22, 8:43am  

If I have a 5 gal. bucket full of water & use it all , does quibbling about how I used it fill the bucket again? LOL

42   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2012 Jun 22, 9:10am  

if i have a five gallon bucket and i pour the water into another 5 gallon bucket, then pour it back into the first bucket, have i used any water?

43   HEY YOU   2012 Jun 22, 9:17am  

YesYNot,

Where can I get another bucket? Forget it. I would still have an empty bucket.

44   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2012 Jun 22, 9:20am  

Hey You. Are you serious? Did you read the article?

45   freak80   2012 Jun 22, 10:44am  

YesYNot says

The 'water use' of the farm is the net amount removed from the water source. Drip irrigation systems increase the net water use per acre. They do this through increasing yield, so water use per unit product is not increased.

Either way, who's bright idea was it to do farming in a friggin desert?

46   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2012 Jun 22, 11:07am  

^They started when they found a big underground aquifer in 1903. Probably someone back then. It really wasn't a bad idea at the time. I'm sure that they will do less and less as they run out of water.

Roberto has a point that the farming will be cut before the cost to residents is driven sky high.

47   HEY YOU   2012 Jun 22, 12:48pm  

YesYNot,

I can't read. Sorry you missed the symbolism that Arizona might be looking at an empty bucket.

48   lostand confused   2012 Jun 22, 10:38pm  

They already cut water to Imperial county farmers and routed it to San Diego residents. Though I wonder why they can't build a pipeline from say WA and/or OR and bring it down here. MS and LA too have surplus water-they could route it to TX-that is reeling under a drought.

Oops-I guess public works/big govt??

49   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2012 Jun 23, 3:13am  

HEY YOU says

I can't read. Sorry you missed the symbolism that Arizona might be looking at an empty bucket.

OK, I guess I still am not sure exactly what you were talking about, but that is fine.

50   pazuzu   2012 Oct 1, 7:54am  

“the Southwest must cut its water use by about SIXTY percent to bring water supplies into balance, given projections of longer, deeper droughts in the decades ahead”

http://www.paysonroundup.com/news/2012/sep/21/studies-show-southwest-faces-water-shortage/

51   duckhead   2012 Oct 1, 9:33am  

WAH WAH WAH doomers QQQing about everything? Listen up!! Take the time you post all this water stuff in the LAND (real estate duh) section and instead spend it FANTASIZING about your future riches from buying as many houses as you can and renting them out to idiots you will be rich in no time. You gotta trust the duck on this one, it’s a can’t miss strategy! CHOOBACHOOBACHOO (Also Patrick please delete this thread it is Liable!)

52   pazuzu   2012 Nov 28, 5:06am  

"Increased groundwater pumping to support population growth in south-central Arizona (including the Tucson and Phoenix areas) has resulted in water-level declines of between 300 and 500 feet in much of the area."

http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/gwdepletion.html

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