The California Drought and Water Conservation
By now, most of you have probably seen this historic image of the California snowpack. In January, NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) released photos showing the dramatic effect the California drought has had on the state’s landscape and snowpack.
As the picture below shows, much of the greenery, snowpack depth, and precipitation in California’s Sierra region has dramatically decreased within just a year. According to Southern California’s NBC affiliate station, the runoff from the California mountain range is a key source of water for California communities and growers. It accounts for about one-third of the state’s water.
1 comment
Nath
Lawns, grass, turf…these are the biggest culprits when it comes to water use and water waste.
Of all the landscape features such as bushes, flowers, veggies and fruit, trees etc. Lawns/grass are the biggest consumer of water. 80% of your outdoor water use goes for the lawn. We must quit insisting on having large lawns in the driest states in the nation. Utah consumes more water per capita than other states and yet is the second driest…somethings not quite right.