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On 5/9/2025 1:21 AM, Martin Brown wrote:Yesterday I heard on the news that most cities in the USA are sinking down, due to water extraction from wells.On 08/05/2025 22:18, Don Y wrote:We always had ample water -- so it was *common* to use a hose as a broom.On 5/8/2025 12:51 PM, KevinJ93 wrote:>When the coal miner's strike power usage reductions were in effect I was working at Marconi-Elliott in Borehamwood. We were not allowed to have the lights or heating on but it was permitted to use test equipment so we would huddle around our Tektronix 547 scopes to keep warm, they used to put out a lot of heat.>
The only "utility" that I can recall being VOLUNTARILY rationed was water,
back east, during a period of drought. We were "strongly discouragd"
from watering lawns, washing cars (car washes are far more efficient
at this as they recycle the water), etc.
We also live on the watershed for that. Just far enough north to be on the copious Northumbrian water supply (intended for all the now defunct steelworks) but with sewage outflow going downhill to Yorkshire Water.
Or, to water a lawn, wash a car in the driveway, etc.
The "drought restrictions" were a bit of a shock to people as everyone
always thought water was limitless. Driving around town there were
many reservoirs -- some in places where only a single lane road would
separate you from the reservoir to your left vs. the one on your right.
It has great advantages - Yorkshire Water has many leaks and not enough reservoirs so hose pipe bans are almost inevitable every summer. One particularly bad year they were moving drinking water in tankers from Northumberland Water to Yorkshire to maintain supply. When it gets really serious they have had to resort to stand pipes in the street.We've (here) been in a state of drought for ~25 years. And, that's
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Looks like this year will be a bumper year for drought orders as there hasn't been any significant rain here for nearly a month now and we have have broken record temperatures for May already. Reservoirs in sensitive areas are at abnormally low levels for this time of year.
with an normal annual precipitation of ~11 inches. The shift in mindset
is astonishing -- to go from ~50 in/yr to less than a quarter of that.
And, for it to be confined to just 2.5 months out of the year...
We "store" water in the ground. The hope being that we can extractHere, of course (desert southwest), peer pressure and threats of fines>
tend to keep folks inline.
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The idea of using a garden hose to "sweep" debris off your
driveway or sidewalk would be met with a gasp and a glare.
Fair enough. Where I live the water supply is the huge Kielder reservoir built to service a once thriving major steel industry on Teesside. Even if it didn't rain at all for a year we would still be on supply.
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Next village is on Yorkshire and often get hosepipe bans in summer.
it when the time comes.
There have been some foreign companies exploiting our water supplies
(deep wells to farm and then export the farmed products). I htink
there is some action being taken to confound this practice.
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