Michigan
truly is a water wonderland. As residents of a state surrounded by twenty
percent of all the available freshwater on the entire planet, we might take
water for granted. Yes, our little mitten shaped portion of the globe gives us
access to one fifth of the fresh water available to the world. Let that sink
in, will you?
Julie
and I recently took a work vacation trip to Las Vegas to attend a jewelry show.
We stayed some extra days so that I could check a visit to the Hoover Dam off
my bucket list (more on that later). For most of the daylight hours during our
six days out west the temperatures were triple digits – the highest was 111
degrees. Sure, it is a “dry heat” compared to Michigan with the humidity levels
at 10 to 15 per cent. However, 111 still feels like walking around in an oven
and the decided lack of humidity, read WATER, is the subject I want to address
here.
In
case you are unaware, many parts of the Western US have been experiencing
draught conditions over the last few years. The fight over water in areas of
California that produce a huge percentage of the fruits, vegetables, and nuts
that the entire nation consumes is getting very ugly and will be getting
uglier. The Great Salt Lake in Utah has shrunk by two-thirds from the level it
was at in the 1980s. You might be tempted to ask: Who cares? Well, Salt Lake
City is home to almost 75% of the population of the entire state of Utah. I
just read an article that explained scientists are concerned that one terrible
result of the massive evaporation of the Great Salt Lake is that Salt Lake City
could begin to experience toxic dust clouds from the arsenic on the lake bed
that is being exposed. So the answer is that the 1,192,000 people who live in
Metro Salt Lake City should be very concerned.
The
Hoover Dam is considered one of the modern wonders of the world. By placing a
dam on the mighty Colorado River at just the right place in Black Canyon, with
its perfect combination of bed rock strength and narrowness, it seemed at the
time to be the perfect answer to providing water to the dry areas of Nevada,
Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming, California, and even a part of Mexico.
As a bonus, the dam provides enough electricity for 1.3 million people. Sounds
like a win-win situation, right? Well, it was indeed eight decades ago. Things
are looking very grim in 2022.
On
my visit to Las Vegas I learned how the population has blossomed (ballooned?)
to over two million people. The lights of the Vegas strip are surrounded by the
lights of homes and businesses that spread out to all corners of the valley and
made this small town resident slack jawed at the twinkling beauty after dark.
The
very technological miracle that allows the neon circus of the Vegas Strip as
well as the twinkle from hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses has
brought about its own approaching demise.
|
The water level of Lake Mead behind Hoover Dam. |
As
you can see from the picture, the level of Lake Mead behind the Hoover Dam is
falling like a stone. We spoke to a Ranger at one of the Visitor Centers on the
Federal Land that surrounds the dam. She grew up there and told us how there
used to be five large marinas with thousands of boats. That number has been
reduced to one marina and she said they have to move their docks every two to
three weeks because the level of the lake is dropping so fast.
Speaking
of the parks, State and National, that surround Vegas, there are signs
everywhere in them warning visitors of the importance of staying hydrated. This
is not for sport, just to stay alive and healthy. I found this out first hand
on our third day there. For some reason I neglected the constant sipping of
water I was diligent about for the first couple days. Between the trade show
and wandering around, Julie and I walked 13 miles that day. By late afternoon,
I thought I was coming down with something; then it hit me as I drank 16 ounces
of ice tea in record time that I had neglected to keep fluids flowing into my
body. When it is 108 degrees with low humidity, sweat does not drip down your
face; it evaporates as soon as it shows up!
While
the importance of water is emphasized at every possible place in the
surrounding desert, a perusal of Vegas gives the impression that there is more
than enough water for everything. The Bellagio Resort is a prime example. The
famous fountains sit in a man-made lake that holds 22 million gallons of water
in its eight and a half acre boundaries.
Sounds cool, yeah? Well that same lake loses an estimated 12 million
gallons a year to evaporation. Mandalay Bay has 1.6 million gallons of water
just for the shark tank. The Venetian has over a quarter million gallons
flowing, and evaporating, from a system of canals that are in and outside the
resort in which you can ride a gondola. Can you say “swimming pools”? Every
resort has at least one huge pool and many of them have several. Fountains
abound all over the strip – inside and outside.
Don’t
get me wrong – I love pools, swimming, and lakes with all my heart. Lake
Michigan is my Happy Place. However, the situation in Vegas reminds me of the
story of Emperor Nero, who supposedly was happy to jam away on his violin while
his city burned to the ground. I saw no evidence of any effort to conserve the
most fundamental element to human life during my Vegas visit. We can live a lot
longer without food than water. Our bodies are 60% water.
So,
who cares how much water is used/wasted in Vegas and the rest of the West?
Well, for starters the two million people out there better start caring. While
we were there a news story popped up on my phone about how the leaders in the
states who get water from Lake Mead are trying to decide how to begin water
rationing because there seems to be no end in sight for the dry conditions.
|
This is the water level 20 years ago at Lake Mead. At the bottom of the picture you can see the one remaining marina. |
People
blew a gasket at the suggestion they wear a mask for public health, can you
imagine the reaction when they get notified they will have to let their lawn
and flowers die, shorten their shower time, and stop washing the car?
If
you think none of that has any effect on Michigan, hold on. How are you going
to feel when Nevada et al want to build a giant pipeline to get some of our
fresh water? Are we going to want to share with open arms and hearts?
All
of us need to wake up and smell the water. We need to take care of this most
fundamental element. Don’t waste it, don’t pollute it, and do not take it for
granted.
this small town resident slack jawed at the twinkling beauty after dark.
The very technological miracle that allows the neon circus of the Vegas Strip as
well as the twinkle from hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses has
brought about its own approaching demise.
As you can see from the picture, the level of Lake Mead behind the Hoover Dam is
falling like a stone. We spoke to a Ranger at one of the Visitor Centers on the
Federal Land that surrounds the dam. She grew up there and told us how there used
to be five large marinas with thousands of boats. That number has been reduced to
one marina and she said they have to move their docks every two to three weeks
because the level of the lake is dropping so fast.
Speaking of the parks, State and National, that surround Vegas, there are signs
everywhere in them warning visitors of the importance of staying hydrated. This is
not for sport, just to stay alive and healthy. I found this out first hand on our third
day there. For some reason I neglected the constant sipping of water I was diligent
about for the first couple days. Between the trade show and wandering around, Julie
and I walked 13 miles that day. By late afternoon, I thought I was coming down
with something; then it hit me as I drank 16 ounces of ice tea in record time that I
had neglected to keep fluids flowing into my body. When it is 108 degrees with low
humidity, sweat does not drip down your face; it evaporates as soon as it shows up!
While the importance of water is emphasized at every possible place in the
surrounding desert, a perusal of Vegas gives the impression that there is more than
enough water for everything. The Bellagio Resort is a prime example. The famous
fountains sit in a man-made lake that holds 22 million gallons of water in its eight
and a half acre boundaries. Sounds cool, yeah? Well that same lake loses an
estimated 12 million gallons a year to evaporation. Mandalay Bay has 1.6 million
gallons of water just for the shark tank. The Venetian has over a quarter million
gallons flowing, and evaporating, from a system of canals that are in and outside the
resort in which you can ride a gondola. Can you say “swimming pools”? Every
resort has at least one huge pool and many of them have several. Fountains abound
all over the strip – inside and outside.
Don’t get me wrong – I love pools, swimming, and lakes with all my heart. Lake
Michigan is my Happy Place. However, the situation in Vegas reminds me of the
story of Emperor Nero, who supposedly was happy to jam away on his violin while
his city burned to the ground. I saw no evidence of any effort to conserve the most
fundamental element to human life during my Vegas visit. We can live a lot longer
without food than water. Our bodies are 60% water.
So, who cares how much water is used/wasted in Vegas and the rest of the West?
Well, for starters the two million people out there better start caring. While we were
there a news story popped up on my phone about how the leaders in the states who
get water from Lake Mead are trying to decide how to begin water rationing
because there seems to be no end in sight for the dry conditions.
People blew a gasket at the suggestion they wear a mask for public health, can you
imagine the reaction when they get notified they will have to let their lawn and
flowers die, shorten their shower time, and stop washing the car?
If you think none of that has any effect on Michigan, hold on. How are you going to
feel when Nevada et al want to build a giant pipeline to get some of our fresh
water? Are we going to want to share with open arms and hearts?
All of us need to wake up and smell the water. We need to take care of this most
fundamental element. Don’t waste it, don’t pollute it, and do not take it for granted.
Water Is Life – We Cannot Take It For Granted
Michigan truly is a water wonderland. As residents of a state surrounded by twenty
percent of all the available freshwater on the entire planet, we might take water for
granted. Yes, our little mitten shaped portion of the globe gives us access to one
fifth of the fresh water available to the world. Let that sink in, will you?
Julie and I recently took a work vacation trip to Las Vegas to attend a jewelry show.
We stayed some extra days so that I could check a visit to the Hoover Dam off my
bucket list (more on that later). For most of the daylight hours during our six days
out west the temperatures were triple digits – the highest was 111 degrees. Sure, it
is a “dry heat” compared to Michigan with the humidity levels at 10 to 15 per cent.
However, 111 still feels like walking around in an oven and the decided lack of
humidity, read WATER, is the subject I want to address here.
In case you are unaware, many parts of the Western US have been experiencing
draught conditions over the last few years. The fight over water in areas of
California that produce a huge percentage of the fruits, vegetables, and nuts that the
entire nation consumes is getting very ugly and will be getting uglier. The Great
Salt Lake in Utah has shrunk by two-thirds from the level it was at in the 1980s.
You might be tempted to ask: Who cares? Well, Salt Lake City is home to almost
75% of the population of the entire state of Utah. I just read an article that explained
scientists are concerned that one terrible result of the massive evaporation of the
Great Salt Lake is that Salt Lake City could begin to experience toxic dust clouds
from the arsenic on the lake bed that is being exposed. So the answer is that the
1,192,000 people who live in Metro Salt Lake City should be very concerned.
The Hoover Dam is considered one of the modern wonders of the world. By placing
a dam on the mighty Colorado River at just the right place in Black Canyon, with its
perfect combination of bed rock strength and narrowness, it seemed at the time to
be the perfect answer to providing water to the dry areas of Nevada, Arizona,
Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming, California, and even a part of Mexico. As a
bonus, the dam provides enough electricity for 1.3 million people. Sounds like a
win-win situation, right? Well, it was indeed eight decades ago. Things are looking
very grim in 2022.
On my visit to Las Vegas I learned how the population has blossomed (ballooned?)
to over two million people. The lights of the Vegas strip are surrounded by the
lights of homes and businesses that spread out to all corners of the valley and made
this small town resident slack jawed at the twinkling beauty after dark.
The very technological miracle that allows the neon circus of the Vegas Strip as
well as the twinkle from hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses has
brought about its own approaching demise.
As you can see from the picture, the level of Lake Mead behind the Hoover Dam is
falling like a stone. We spoke to a Ranger at one of the Visitor Centers on the
Federal Land that surrounds the dam. She grew up there and told us how there used
to be five large marinas with thousands of boats. That number has been reduced to
one marina and she said they have to move their docks every two to three weeks
because the level of the lake is dropping so fast.
Speaking of the parks, State and National, that surround Vegas, there are signs
everywhere in them warning visitors of the importance of staying hydrated. This is
not for sport, just to stay alive and healthy. I found this out first hand on our third
day there. For some reason I neglected the constant sipping of water I was diligent
about for the first couple days. Between the trade show and wandering around, Julie
and I walked 13 miles that day. By late afternoon, I thought I was coming down
with something; then it hit me as I drank 16 ounces of ice tea in record time that I
had neglected to keep fluids flowing into my body. When it is 108 degrees with low
humidity, sweat does not drip down your face; it evaporates as soon as it shows up!
While the importance of water is emphasized at every possible place in the
surrounding desert, a perusal of Vegas gives the impression that there is more than
enough water for everything. The Bellagio Resort is a prime example. The famous
fountains sit in a man-made lake that holds 22 million gallons of water in its eight
and a half acre boundaries. Sounds cool, yeah? Well that same lake loses an
estimated 12 million gallons a year to evaporation. Mandalay Bay has 1.6 million
gallons of water just for the shark tank. The Venetian has over a quarter million
gallons flowing, and evaporating, from a system of canals that are in and outside the
resort in which you can ride a gondola. Can you say “swimming pools”? Every
resort has at least one huge pool and many of them have several. Fountains abound
all over the strip – inside and outside.
Don’t get me wrong – I love pools, swimming, and lakes with all my heart. Lake
Michigan is my Happy Place. However, the situation in Vegas reminds me of the
story of Emperor Nero, who supposedly was happy to jam away on his violin while
Water Is Life – We Cannot Take It For Granted
Michigan truly is a water wonderland. As residents of a state surrounded by twenty
percent of all the available freshwater on the entire planet, we might take water for
granted. Yes, our little mitten shaped portion of the globe gives us access to one
fifth of the fresh water available to the world. Let that sink in, will you?
Julie and I recently took a work vacation trip to Las Vegas to attend a jewelry show.
We stayed some extra days so that I could check a visit to the Hoover Dam off my
bucket list (more on that later). For most of the daylight hours during our six days
out west the temperatures were triple digits – the highest was 111 degrees. Sure, it
is a “dry heat” compared to Michigan with the humidity levels at 10 to 15 per cent.
However, 111 still feels like walking around in an oven and the decided lack of
humidity, read WATER, is the subject I want to address here.
In case you are unaware, many parts of the Western US have been experiencing
draught conditions over the last few years. The fight over water in areas of
California that produce a huge percentage of the fruits, vegetables, and nuts that the
entire nation consumes is getting very ugly and will be getting uglier. The Great
Salt Lake in Utah has shrunk by two-thirds from the level it was at in the 1980s.
You might be tempted to ask: Who cares? Well, Salt Lake City is home to almost
75% of the population of the entire state of Utah. I just read an article that explained
scientists are concerned that one terrible result of the massive evaporation of the
Great Salt Lake is that Salt Lake City could begin to experience toxic dust clouds
from the arsenic on the lake bed that is being exposed. So the answer is that the
1,192,000 people who live in Metro Salt Lake City should be very concerned.
The Hoover Dam is considered one of the modern wonders of the world. By placing
a dam on the mighty Colorado River at just the right place in Black Canyon, with its
perfect combination of bed rock strength and narrowness, it seemed at the time to
be the perfect answer to providing water to the dry areas of Nevada, Arizona,
Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming, California, and even a part of Mexico. As a
bonus, the dam provides enough electricity for 1.3 million people. Sounds like a
win-win situation, right? Well, it was indeed eight decades ago. Things are looking
very grim in 2022.
On my visit to Las Vegas I learned how the population has blossomed (ballooned?)
to over two million people. The lights of the Vegas strip are surrounded by the
lights of homes and businesses that spread out to all corners of the valley and made
this small town resident slack jawed at the twinkling beauty after dark.
The very technological miracle that allows the neon circus of the Vegas Strip as
well as the twinkle from hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses has
brought about its own approaching demise.
As you can see from the picture, the level of Lake Mead behind the Hoover Dam is
falling like a stone. We spoke to a Ranger at one of the Visitor Centers on the
Federal Land that surrounds the dam. She grew up there and told us how there used
to be five large marinas with thousands of boats. That number has been reduced to
one marina and she said they have to move their docks every two to three weeks
because the level of the lake is dropping so fast.
Speaking of the parks, State and National, that surround Vegas, there are signs
everywhere in them warning visitors of the importance of staying hydrated. This is
not for sport, just to stay alive and healthy. I found this out first hand on our third
day there. For some reason I neglected the constant sipping of water I was diligent
about for the first couple days. Between the trade show and wandering around, Julie
and I walked 13 miles that day. By late afternoon, I thought I was coming down
with something; then it hit me as I drank 16 ounces of ice tea in record time that I
had neglected to keep fluids flowing into my body. When it is 108 degrees with low
humidity, sweat does not drip down your face; it evaporates as soon as it shows up!
While the importance of water is emphasized at every possible place in the
surrounding desert, a perusal of Vegas gives the impression that there is more than
enough water for everything. The Bellagio Resort is a prime example. The famous
fountains sit in a man-made lake that holds 22 million gallons of water in its eight
and a half acre boundaries. Sounds cool, yeah? Well that same lake loses an
estimated 12 million gallons a year to evaporation. Mandalay Bay has 1.6 million
gallons of water just for the shark tank. The Venetian has over a quarter million
gallons flowing, and evaporating, from a system of canals that are in and outside the
resort in which you can ride a gondola. Can you say “swimming pools”? Every
resort has at least one huge pool and many of them have several. Fountains abound
all over the strip – inside and outside.
Don’t get me wrong – I love pools, swimming, and lakes with all my heart. Lake
Michigan is my Happy Place. However, the situation in Vegas reminds me of the
story of Emperor Nero, who supposedly was happy to jam away on his violin while
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