By Fred Owens
ducks geese and rice
Rice fields use water -- we could force California farmers to stop
growing rice and wasting water because of the drought. But it's not so
simple -- where will the ducks go? Migrating geese and ducks depend on
California rice fields as rest and feed stops.
Rice acreage has been cut 30%, down to 375,000 acres. This is bad for water fowl. Not good for rice farmers either.
My
friend Warren, a ten-year veteran of the Santa Barbara Rose Society
lives on one acre abutting the Santa Barbara Arboretum. He had 35 rose
bushes. Now he has only 7. It was the water bill, he said, up to $400 a
month.
Lake Cachuma has been the principle source of
water in the Goleta Water District. The water flows by gravity from the
reservoir to farms and homes. But the lake water is almost gone and the
groundwater is being used more extensively. Goleta is reasonably
well-supplied with groundwater -- not facing problems of subsidence, not
having to dig deeper and deeper wells.
But
groundwater takes pumps and pumps cost money. Groundwater is more
expensive than lake water, which flows by gravity. That's one reason the
water district budget is going from $32 to $39 million this year.
So we're just hanging on here in California.
Drilling Down. They
say follow the money. Look in the really boring places where things
happen with little notice. The Goleta Water District spends $123,285 per
year for liability insurance from the ACWAJPIA, a government agency no
one ever heard of. That stands for Association of California Water
Agencies Joint Powers Insurance Authority.
It simply means that the water districts pool their money for insurance costs -- which makes sense, but with too many initials.
I
am drilling down into the data as a public service, sure, but also for
networking purposes. I want people to know I can understand this obscure
but necessary agency.
People don't seem to know who they are anymore. Who am I? Really, that's not such a difficult question, but it seems we need to review the basics.
It's all about gravity. Gravity is
crucial and relentless. Gravity is the law of nature. You can fly to the
stars above, not in defiance of this law, but because you obeyed it.
I
am bewildered by this identity discussion and what manners we should
use and how we should speak. I am in a strategic retreat. I am going
wherever Tim Hunt is hiding out these days. He's the British scientist
who said, "women, you can't live with them, and you can't live without
them," and then he smiled and shrugged.
He resigned
after that. I would resign too, if I occupied a position that I could
resign from. But I'm already pushing a broom, and my speech is never
recorded.
Maybe Hunt plays chess. He and I can get up
a game wherever they put fellows like us, we have much in common. I
have done poorly with women in the workplace. I flee, I hide, I stammer,
I bow, I let them win, and I often say the wrong thing at the wrong
time. I have not managed to do it properly.
Balzac. The antidote to the current madness is a good 19th century French novel. Cousin Bette was
written by Honore de Balzac and published in 1846. The story
illuminates the variety of gender roles in the prosperous levels of
Parisian society. I use this book as a guide for manners and personal
conduct. If it's all right with Balzac, then it's all right with me. The
tone of the book is generally good-natured. Persons who fall from grace
are often resurrected in subsequent chapters.
But there is no point in learning the current rules because they will change tomorrow.
Gravity's Rainbow. Water
flows downhill and seeks its own level, according to the law of
gravity. Gravity is immutable and water is life. Water unites us. Every
living creature needs water. All people. Think of all the people you
know. Judge them well or judge them ill, but as they live they need
water as much as you and I do.
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Fred Owens
1105 Veronica Springs RD
Santa Barbara, CA 93105
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Fred Owens
1105 Veronica Springs RD
Santa Barbara, CA 93105
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