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  1. #1
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    Question How much rain would it take to really make a noticeable difference?

    Was watching it rain/drizzle here in Florida over the last few days, and it made me wonder what kind of a rain we'd really need to have a noticeable impact on the water level in the caves. I've heard a few folks say that we're at the point where we really need a good couple of day long storms, and still a few others that say we need a good steady drizzle so it doesn't all just run off. If we had a good week of rain storms in the north Florida area, would that be enough to raise the water level at a place like Cow or Peacock Springs by a couple of inches? Or does it take more than that?

    If I lived in cave country, I'd probably slip up to a place like peacock springs for a couple of days after a good long rain to see what effect it was having on the spring itself. But maybe some folks with better knowledge of the effect of rain on the aquifer can help me out by volunteering some information on this topic?


  2. #2

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    If you see a guy building a large boat, and rounding up local wildlife in pairs..... we're on the road to recovery..


  3. #3
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    5 years + of above average rain fall

    "Not all change is improvement...but all improvement is change" Donald Berwick

  4. #4
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    5 years + of above average rain fall
    +1- With a few large tropical depressions and/or hurricanes stalling out on North Florida.

    In reality, water consumption in this area is unsustainable, and has been for most of my life. The aquifer drops a little on average every year, and never quite regains it's former levels.


  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Leslie Sapp View Post
    In reality, water consumption in this area is unsustainable, and has been for most of my life. The aquifer drops a little on average every year, and never quite regains it's former levels.
    You are right. Noticed them installing a new center pivot near Mayo in some land just cleared for farming. Agriculture accounts for a huge amount of water usage,but development in north Florida has grown,and that is more straws in the ground. Plus,you have thristy metropolitan areas screaming for water,and tapping into ground water. All this vertical training that is being offered may come in handy because you might need it one day to get to the water at Orange Grove.

    "Not all change is improvement...but all improvement is change" Donald Berwick

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Kelly Jessop View Post
    You are right. Noticed them installing a new center pivot near Mayo in some land just cleared for farming. Agriculture accounts for a huge amount of water usage,but development in north Florida has grown,and that is more straws in the ground. Plus,you have thristy metropolitan areas screaming for water,and tapping into ground water. All this vertical training that is being offered may come in handy because you might need it one day to get to the water at Orange Grove.
    Such a true statement. It is going to be a sad day when we are all labeled as sump divers.

    It's not the years in your life that matter, but the life in your years.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by JamesK View Post
    .... It is going to be a sad day when we are all labeled as sump divers.
    And just why is being a sump diver "sad"?

    Forrest Wilson (with 2 Rs)
    Any opinions are personal.
    Sump Divers

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    One thing I can't quite get my head around is "where is all the water"? It's mostly all still in Florida, just in a different place, right? A person pulls it out of the aquifer, waters his lawn, then it goes back to the aquifer. Water is circulating through pipes, people, water bottles, etc, but it all goes back at some point. Maybe there are just so MANY pipes and people now carrying the water that that is the new aquifer (joke). Water doesn't disappear, it just moves to another place, right?

    Someone please educate me. Other than a small percentage that gets bottled and sent out of the state, where is all the water?

    Sorry in advance for sounding like a dumba$$.

    Chris Hill
    www.ocda.org

    "Every man dies, but not every man really lives." William Wallace - Braveheart

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by FW View Post
    And just why is being a sump diver "sad"?


    It would be sad because the water level would be so low that we would all have to dry cave to the water, which would now be a sump? I think . . .


  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by FW View Post
    And just why is being a sump diver "sad"?
    I think you took that the wrong way. Nothing is sad about being a sump diver, heck I want to learn more about it, what will be sad is when we are sump divers because places like peacock have become dry caves and sumps. That is what I was getting at.

    It's not the years in your life that matter, but the life in your years.


 

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