We Can Make Rain
A famous
comedian said he was told that Las Vegas is at least a dry heat. He retorted, “So is a match.”
We don’t have to have such dry, smoky
heat in Grants Pass. An article in
Science News shows us the way. We can
make it rain and maybe put out these forest fires around us: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/347691/description/Watering_fields_in_California_boosts_rainfall_in_Southwest.
“Farmers
in California help make it rain in the American Southwest, a new computer
simulation suggests. Water that evaporates from irrigated fields in
California’s Central Valley travels to the Four Corners region, where it boosts
summer rain and increases runoff to the Colorado River, researchers report
online January 12 in Geophysical Research Letters….”
We in the
River City should water like our lives depend on it, because they do, and so do
farmers downwind and uphill of us in the Klamath basin. This study is just a great
illustration of the simple hydrological cycle we learned as children: Water that falls on the ground from rain or
irrigation evaporates or is transpired by plants; builds up into clouds, and
falls as rain, part of which evaporates from the wet ground and thirsty plants. More falls at higher, cooler elevations.
The more plants we grow, the more water we put in the air, because they suck it out of the soil efficiently. That grass lawns take a lot of water is a good thing; please love and care for yours. Or plant a thirsty ground cover like creeping jenny or blue star creeper that you don’t have to mow.
We live in a city on a river, from which we take our water. We are relatively close to the ocean, from which our prevailing winds come, and they blow upriver. The water that we throw into the air with sprinklers and misters cannot be wasted; we have plenty of it, and throwing it in the air makes more. It’s so clean that you can grow pitcher plants in it.
It cleans the air where it runs and cools and humidifies the neighborhood. It blows up river and falls as rain, filling our Rogue River and the Klamath. It makes rain in Medford, a slightly higher elevation. It can even make wet thunderstorms here, instead of dry lightning. It can cycle several times in the course of moving east or even in our bowl of a valley, if we just throw enough water around.
We used to do just that in the mid-eighties, when the vast majority of us were still watering lawns, and the farms around us were being fully farmed and irrigated. I remember wet thunderstorms nearly every week when I lived here in the summers of ’85 and ’86, rather than dry lightning and forest fires.
The farmers in the Klamath basin cannot use the Klamath River water because the Indians have claimed the salmon’s share; they are at the top of the river, not near the end. We in the Rogue Valley can make rain for them, and for us. Please water your yards, and spread the word.
8/2/2013
Join Garden Grants Pass in gardening classes at Greenwood
and Schroeder Dog Parks.
Rycke
Brown, Natural Gardener 541-955-9040 rycke@gardener.com
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