In most cities, you can't put in a well. In rural areas, yes people have wells, but many would like to have city water.Does anybody out there avoid meters by putting a well in, or is water too deep to drill a well. Around here everybody out of town has a well.
A few have them in the city but annual backflow testing required and they were often put in many decades ago.Does anybody out there avoid meters by putting a well in, or is water too deep to drill a well. Around here everybody out of town has a well.
After watching a Project Farm review, I bought a Zerowater dispenser. It works! The well water tests well within municipal water specs except just within the upper limit for acidity. The filter's element should be replaced when ppm of Total Dissolved Solids exceeds 35. (It comes with a ppm tester). I changed the element after a year even though the raw and filtered water continue to test 0 ppm - compared to just under 50 ppm for municipal at home in town. Recommended!Now that we live in the county, we have a well. We're lucky that it's pretty good here, too. Out on our rural property, it has a lot of iron.
Yea, I was thinking about that damage as I viewed the vid.That's the spillway that failed 6 years ago and washed a lot of the hillside down, plugging the river below.
The article notes that this present release has dropped the reservoir level less than a foot. And it's interesting that the volume in the spillway is 1/3 of the total release, the other 2/3 is going through the powerhouse.
I'm 70 miles downstream from there and it's been raining extremely hard, with winds that might be making new records. I'm not aware of any crises here like we read about in southern California, however.
Are they pumping excess storm water to recharge the aquifers?In most cities, you can't put in a well. In rural areas, yes people have wells, but many would like to have city water.
Why? Because then it is someone else's responsibility to make sure that there is enough. Lots of wells have gone dry, and water tables are much lower than they used to be.
A few years ago, California voted to manage underground water with a goal is sustainable water use. It is not yet fully enacted, but in principle the state is divided into water management districts that have to plan and regulate the water usage within their districts.
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Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA)
In 2014, Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. signed three bills known collectively as the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) . For the first time in its history, California had a framework for sustainable, groundwater management - “management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be...water.ca.gov
As currently structured, it regulates larger users, and exempts household sized wells.
No definite plans yet about restoring aquifer levels, and managing contamination. Step one is stopping the depletion of the aquifers.
All the best,
Peter
Not that I know of.Are they pumping excess storm water to recharge the aquifers?
I’m not a hydrologist, but I’m aware of groundwater recharge programs in western Arizona where they drill injection wells and pump flood water into the aquifers. There are also weir and drainage basins in New Mexico where flood water is allowed to pool and percolate into the Rio Grande groundwater basin.Not that I know of.
Areas like Yolo Bypass get flooded when the rivers are running high but I don't think water percolates down fast enough to capture it before it runs to the ocean. Too many impervious layers between surface and aquifer. As I understand it aquifers aren't replenished mostly from surfaced water above, but rather from far upstream. But someone who knows more might explain it better. [ I see ponytug posted while I was drafting this. Listen to him.]
There is one project under development that is unique: Sites Reservoir. It doesn't have enough upstream watershed to put much water in it, rather, water is to be pumped uphill into it from the Sacramento River when that is running at full capacity. It's the last site in the Sacramento River drainage with geography suitable for a reservoir, everything else is already dammed.
Promotional stuff. Your Tax Dollars At Work!
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This reservoir on the Sacramento River has been planned for decades. What’s taking so long?
The Sites Reservoir — a $4.4 billion system to add dams and store more water to be sent south — is still years away from completion.calmatters.org
Critique: Sites Reservoir project is not the water solution California needs
There apparently is an effort to deliberately flood fields to allow water to soak back in.Are they pumping excess storm water to recharge the aquifers?
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