I learned
that it’s World Water Day today. This precious resource is so often taken for
granted.
I did a
cash job a week back providing drinks for a wedding reception. A catering crew
had set-up behind the bar and were feeding the guests. One of the catering
staff had got béchamel sauce on her hands and came to the sink where I was
cleaning glasses to wash it off. In her struggle to turn on the mains tap, she
turned to me and said “Oh, I’ll just use the rainwater tap, it’s easier”. To
which I reached across, reefed on the mains tap and turned off the rainwater
tap and with an attempt at a polite smile on my face I said “I wouldn’t use the
rain water because it hasn’t rained” and appropriately got her front wet from
the splashback of the mains tap.
I
reiterate: Water is a precious resource.
Not enough
rain fell in South Australia last winter. Rain came in Spring. By this point, a
lot of crops had already died and the drift was already working its damage
across paddocks. Farmers were lucky to break even if they did, so many suffered
losses. So many people are currently feeding all their stock. The price of hay
and feed is set to continue to soar.
The lack of
rain has mucked things up for the beekeepers. Flowering gums came on later than
normal and were often dry of nectar. Commercial beekeepers have flooded certain
areas with their apiaries where they wouldn’t normally go because of the concentration
of flowering natives. Ordinarily, they’d be quite spread out across the state
right now. Hobby beekeepers have noticed
their bees dying and after providing me with a description of the level of
stores on board in their hives, my conclusion is often that the bees have
starved.
I look
around me at some of the properties in my area. There’s a defined line between
my neighbours and Meaford. Meaford still has pasture. You can see the soil of
my neighbours place. Meaford wouldn’t look like that if the place hadn’t been
destocked late last year. I only have to juggle two horses, two alpacas and
eight sheep. I’m having a moral dilemma about fencing the ovines out of a
paddock that leads out on to a road (the paddock doubles as an easement). There’s
good pasture there, I want them to be able to graze it. I don’t want them
wandering off and having little adventures either.
The water
for our creatures is being trucked in. The bore has crapped itself. It did so
in late December. I feel as though we’re being mucked around by the guy that is
supposed to fix it. A season with no rain and we have no working bore. The lawn
is dead. It will remain dead and until a sufficient amount of water is being
held in the dam again. I’m keeping certain trees and roses alive on request. I
don’t flush the toilet every time I go. Flushing is saved for number twos and
before I go to work. My shit and piss doesn’t need water to survive. Animals
do. I do. The trees and roses do.
El Nino, a
weather pattern associated with dry conditions (in comparison to La Nina which
is associated with wet conditions and neutral which is self-explanatory), is
expected to hang around this year too.
The Top End
is only just getting the rain it needs so badly. Tens of thousands of cattle
are currently being trucked off the Barkly because it got no rain. There are
plans to sink bores on some places because the surface water did not get
recharged. In the 16 years I’ve known the Top End, this is the worst Wet I know
of.
Queensland
and New South Wales is running into their seventh year of drought. Some of the
kids on the stations in these states have likely never seen rain fall on their
properties. Certain parts of Western Australia are copping drier than usual
weather.
People are squabbling
over the Murray Darling Basin drying up. Some point the finger at climate
cycles and drought. Some point the finger at mismanagement by bureaucrats and
politicians. Some point the finger at irrigators, especially cotton growers.
And do you know what? They are all right. ALL these factors have contributed to
the Basin being dry. Not one factor… ALL.
Things are
not going to get better. My rural brothers and sisters don’t need these words,
the strain to be measured in their water use is ingrained in them. But my city
friends, I urge you this:
Don’t take water for granted although it freely flows from your household taps. Change to grey water safe products and recycle your water where you can by putting buckets under taps and using that to water your garden. Forget your lawn. Take shorter showers. Turn the tap off while brushing your teeth. Fix leaking taps. It’s the little things, they all add up.
Don’t take water for granted although it freely flows from your household taps. Change to grey water safe products and recycle your water where you can by putting buckets under taps and using that to water your garden. Forget your lawn. Take shorter showers. Turn the tap off while brushing your teeth. Fix leaking taps. It’s the little things, they all add up.
Mad Max: Fury Road, 2015 |