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Largest Lake in the west.
Tulare lake is forming again due to the rain and pending snow melt.
Last time was 1983 Farmers want to pump the water out, others want the aquifer replenished. |
West of where ;)? That's still cool.... won't last :(....
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Used to be in California, pumped it dry growing cotton. Blew out a levee to save the populated areas.
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Tulare Lake's size fluctuated depending on rain and snow fall. It covered in 690 square miles in 1879. Lake Tahoe is 191 square miles.
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Wow, Tulare 1875
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped..._Lake_1875.png and 1898 https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...kebed_1898.png |
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Ha! Or “bomb cyclone”.
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So idiots in the government allowed homes to be built in a dry lake bed and now they are flooding. What a surprise. I bet the people that built along the rivers in the flood plain are having flooding issues as well.
Ya can't stop mother nature or stupid politicians looking to make short term cash and stupid decisions. |
Wow that sucker is huge . I wonder how long it'll take to go dry again?
https://www.latimes.com/environment/story/2023-03-24/as-tulare-lake-reappears-floodwaters-raise-tensions-in-san-joaquin-valley |
In Kalifornia, six months.
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Maybe not that long. They ought to be doing this regularly, flood the dry lakes and empty lowlands. Might slow down the subsidence
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This is a natural cycle, but may not be yearly. Man has a long history of growing crops in dangerous places because 1 they are flat and 2 they are very fertile. Folks love to live and grow crops in the shadow of volcanos too.
Clearly, if this lake floods once every 100 years, the secret is to 1 build your home on a hill (you may have to have the hill brought in and built up) and 2 be prepared for when that happens because "once every 100 years" could mean 5 years out of 10 and then not again for a couple of hundred or it could be different. Climate changes and goes through cycles. It sucks and is a shame for these folks that are impacted now. It's amazing to see mother nature doing her thing though. |
The current 220% snowpack represents about 58 inches of water. If it all melts fast there are going to be a lot of tree fruit dying of root rot in flooded orchards say the tree farmers. All the farmers want the water pumped away. The past pumping lowered ground levels and there are those who want to conserve the water for the aquifer and restore wetlands for the future
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More info:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulare_Lake |
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I'm guessing the farmers don't have insurance coverage for this sort of thing which is a shame. |
Doesn't CA have a need for fresh water?
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