Gov. Brown and the Drought in California

Today the governor of California went on national TV and told climate deniers to wake up and smell the drought. While this was theatrical and effective, it was no more or less showman-like than what the senator with the snowball did a month ago in Washington. Sorry, Mr. Brown, but the fact that it has been dry in California for a few years by itself if proves nothing about climate change. I would have expected more substance from our governor.

The drought in California is serious. I have never seen our lakes so low and our hills so brown. And I am very concerned about our water use.

Front Yard

This is the view I have when I back out of our garage. The gate in the middle of the picture is our front garden gate. Everything behind it is our responsibility to groom and water. The home owners association if responsible for everything in front of the gate. It’s lush and green, because it gets watered heavily, and much water runs off the driveway and down the gutter. Hundreds of houses in our neighborhood are watered this way. Millions of houses in California.

While I have the power to flush my toilet less, I am in dismay when I realize that a month of no toilets would probably save less water than is getting spread over my front lawn every day – and I have no control over that.

Here is the water usage in California:

Water Use in California

This is worse than the 80/20 rule. 80% of our water in California goes into agriculture, and it produces 2% of our economic output.

Yet, the governor in his directive has targeted the 20% residential and industrial users to curb their water use by 25%, while the agricultural community is just given “guidelines.” This makes no sense to me.

The biggest use of water in agriculture is alfalfa, which is largely a crop for feed for cows. The next largest is almonds. It takes more than one gallon of water to grow a single almond. We also grow a lot of rice in California.

Here is an interesting chart from Mother Jones:

la-vs-exports_v3_0

It show how much water the entire city of Los Angeles uses in a year (about 0.8 billion cubic meters). Then it compares this to the amount of water needed to produce the walnuts exported overseas from California (1.0 billion cubic meters), and the water needed to produce the almonds exported overseas from California (2.3 billion cubic meters). Ten percent of all our water is used for almonds. Almonds cover 940,000 acres in California.

I say, we forget about producing almonds and shipping them to the rest of the world, and we have plenty of water for all the cities in California for a very long time.

None of this makes any sense to me.

Governor Brown, wake up and smell some common sense.

 

Know : Countrywise Percentage of Arable Land

A very informative blog entry with lots of statistics about arable land by country. There are many surprises here. Europe has a high percentage overall, so does India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, surprisingly. The United States is lower on the curve than I would have thought.

Ten Most Famous Authors of All Time

What a phenomenal success J.K. Rowling is. Born in 1965, a single mother in the 1980s, she wanted to make a living for herself and her children. So she started writing a story about a boy wizard. Now she is listed together with Shakespeare, Dickens, Joyce and Dostoevsky. It’s almost like the story of a little black boy born to a white college student mom in Hawaii in 1961, who is now and forever on the same list with Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and Roosevelt (as they look down from Mt. Rushmore.

Hard Lessons on Mount Saint Helens

Here is the harrowing report of a “badass hiker” with tons of experience, doing a winter climb of Mount St. Helens, showing how a seemingly simple trip can get very dangerous. I have hiked and had my scary moments, but nothing like this.

Hubble captures the sharpest ever view of neighbouring spiral Galaxy

In this image of a smaller section of the Andromeda galaxy, from left to right, the Hubble space telescope shows a span of 40,000 light years from left to right. I used the zoom tool provided by NASA and zoomed in on a tiny section on the right edge, and I was able to make out individual stars. It is a fascinating time we live in.

NASA prepares to wake New Horizons ahead of historic Pluto flyby

After a comet landing by the European Space Agency, NASA is now getting ready for a Pluto flyby. This will be very exciting stuff. We have never had a good look at Pluto and its moons.

Visualizing the Motions of the Solar System

I have posted before about the motions of the Earth in My Coffee Cup is Moving before. The post below illustrates two of these motions, the motion of the planets around the sun, and the sun within the galaxy.

[Nov 14, 2014: The article below has been debunked and corrections and elaborations are posted here]

Convenience vs Truth

They will not care that some coal jobs were lost when some solar jobs were gained. They will not care that China and India were burning more coal than ever in 2014. They will not care what Fox News said, because there will be no Fox News then. They will care about energy, about food, about comfort, something to live for and something good to pass on to their children.

just say no to pharmaceutical ads

In the couple of hours after coming home from work and eating, I like to flip back and forth between MSNBC (my primary interest focused on the Rachel Maddow show) and Fox News (to get a dose of the other side – although I don’t last too long over there) and I feel that I am bombarded with pharmaceutical ads, mostly to cure erectile dysfunction, but constantly trumpeting awful and horrible side effects. The ads have me convinced that even if I had erectile dysfunction I would under no circumstances use any of those horrible drugs. Do those ads actually work? Given that they play night after night, year after year, they must.
Get off my TV, I yell, before I switch the channel, hoping the get a break on the other one.
Then I saw this blog post here by The Honking Goose, telling me to just say no.
No!

Oh Hello Dere!

Minutes after I published my scare-owl post below, I saw this Northier post in a blog that has been hibernating for a number of months. How fitting. Welcome back Dan. You have been missed.