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20 Signs The Drought In The Western United States Is Starting To Become Apocalyptic
Prophecy Newswatch ^ | July 17, 2014 | Michael Snyder

Posted on 07/17/2014 1:12:09 PM PDT by Maudeen

20 Signs The Drought In The Western United States Is Starting To Become Apocalyptic

July 17, 2014 | Michael Snyder

When scientists start using phrases such as "the worst drought" and "as bad as you can imagine" to describe what is going on in the western half of the country, you know that things are bad. Thanks to an epic drought that never seems to end, we are witnessing the beginning of a water crisis that most people never even dreamed was possible in this day and age.

The state of California is getting ready to ban people from watering their lawns and washing their cars, but if this drought persists we will eventually see far more extreme water conservation measures than that. And the fact that nearly half of all of the produce in America comes out of the state of California means that ultimately this drought is going to deeply affect all of us.

Food prices have already been rising at an alarming rate, and the longer this drought goes on the higher they will go. Let us hope and pray that this drought is permanently broken at some point, because otherwise we could very well be entering an era of extreme water rationing, gigantic dust storms and crippling food prices. The following are 20 signs that the epic drought in the western half of the United States is starting to become apocalyptic...

(Excerpt) Read more at prophecynewswatch.com ...


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: california; drought; water
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To: Maudeen
THERE IS NO WATER SHORTAGE AT ALL IN CALIFORNIA. It has the world's largest ocean lapping its shores. The only shortage California has is the political wisdom and will to divert water from endangered minnows to human beings and to install sufficient desalination plants. Instead, California's Lunatic*-Democrats are building a $70 billion choo-choo.

* "Luna"="Moon." There's a reason the governor's well-earned nickname is "Moonbeam."

Here's a way Moonbeam can pay for his choo-choo: sell and export desalinated ocean water to other dry states. If he's so eager to build great structures, why not his own Keystone water-pipeline?

101 posted on 07/17/2014 7:10:20 PM PDT by Hebrews 11:6 (Do you REALLY believe that (1) God IS, and (2) God IS GOOD?)
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To: Mr Rogers

rainwater harvesting systems austin tx

https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=rainwater+harvesting+systems+austin+tx


102 posted on 07/18/2014 5:00:33 AM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: newbie 10-21-00

You don’t get it. There is no rain falling off the roof.


Sometimes there is. The problem is not that it never rains. The problem is that it is not raining enough.


103 posted on 07/18/2014 5:32:01 AM PDT by cuban leaf (The US will not survive the obama presidency. The world may not either.)
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To: Maudeen; thackney; taxcontrol; The_Media_never_lie; silverleaf; NorthMountain; riri; freemama; ...
Over and drought: Why the end of Israel's water shortage is a secret

Over and drought: Why the end of Israel's water shortage is a secret

Remember all the years of being told to conserve 'every drop?' Well, times have changed: Today, Israel has so much affordable water, it can offer to export it. So why is this achievement being kept so secret?

By | Jan. 24, 2014 | 2:23 PM | 7
     
National Water Carrier
The National Water Carrier. Diverting water that would otherwise have flowed through the Jordan River into the Dead Sea has caused long-term environmental damage. Photo by Daniel Rosenbloom

 

Daniel Rosenbloom
The National Water Carrier. Photo by Daniel Rosenbloom
אייל טואג
***** Eyal Toueg Photo by אייל טואג
 

In ancient times and even during the years of the British Mandate (1917-1948), the shortage of water in Palestine, as well as among its neighbors in the Middle East, had a decisive influence not only on the area’s economic development, but also on the political strife between Jews and Arabs. Technology has changed all this. Now, the ability to produce all the water that's needed, whether for human consumption or for agriculture, may soon change our way of life and perhaps even, if our neighbors agree, bring peace closer.

There is now a surplus of water in Israel, thanks largely to the opening of several new desalination plants - and the development of natural-gas fields that can power them cheaply. Since water is the source of life, the well-known Israeli imperative to “save every drop” should still be respected. But the price the Israeli population is charged for its water supply should be reduced by more than the 5 percent drop announced on January 1 of this year.

If you’re wondering why you haven’t heard about this revolution, you’re in good company. Simply put, for political and economic reasons, the government continues to play down these achievements.

To understand the situation, it helps to look back to a time before Israeli independence, in 1948. The violence that rocked Palestine in August 1929 shocked not only the Yishuv, as the Jewish community in the country was known at the time. It also stunned the government of Britain, the country that had been awarded the mandate over Palestine by the League of Nations. London decided to determine whether the condition of the Balfour Declaration, of November 1917 (which set out Britain’s intention to establish “a national home for the Jewish people”) about “nothing [being] done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine” was being met.

As a first step, the British government decided to send a well-known agricultural expert, Sir John Hope Simpson, to the land to investigate. His conclusion: Palestine was so densely populated that there was “no room to swing a cat.” This finding, together with the report of a committee that examined the situation at the Western Wall, where the 1929 rioting had its origins, brought about Lord Passfield’s “White Paper” of 1930, which recommended limiting the number of Jews permitted to enter Palestine.

Hope Simpson’s historic error was to take it as a given that there was a serious shortage of water in Palestine and the immediate region. From this it followed that the only feasible agriculture must be based on rainwater irrigation and on relatively large plots of land for the fellah to feed his family. Hope Simpson found, however, that Jewish migrants were willing to pay high prices for land owned by the effendis, with the unavoidable result being that the fellahs had less land available for themselves. He apparently did not consider the possibility of developing additional water sources for irrigation purposes. Also disregarded was the fact that almost unlimited water-well drilling was possible (at that time) in the coastal plain for the irrigation of citrus orchards.

City dwellers, too, needed drinking water. Having grown up in Jerusalem in the early 1930s, I remember the shortage of water there in rain-poor years. The Ein Fara spring in the east and “Solomon’s Pools” south of Bethlehem did not provide the minimum amount of drinking water that was needed. Jerusalemites had to dig cisterns to store rainwater. It was not until the late 1930s, when water began to be pumped from the coastal plain, that relief arrived for the city’s chronic water shortage. Still, the problem persisted to some degree and became acute during the siege of 1948.

When it came to the water supply, the policy of His Majesty’s Government was not the Yishuv’s only political problem. The issue was also at the center of the struggle with the Arab states. The Arab League, as their representative, took the offensive against Israel’s exploitation of the waters of Lake Kinneret and its tributaries. The Israelis, it was argued, were infringing on the water rights of Jordan and Syria. In the 1950s, the war over water resulted in bloodshed between Israel and Syria. In September 1965, the Third Arab Summit meeting decided upon the diversion of the Jordan River’s tributaries by force. Although that decision was not implemented, the conflict over water was a key cause for the eruption of the Six-Day War less than two years later.

Since 1967, the conflict over water between Israel and the Arab states has dried up. In the peace treaty with Jordan, signed in 1994, Israel undertook to transfer 50 million cubic meters of water to Jordan every year from the Kinneret tributaries. The amount was increased in 2013, when it emerged that Israel’s water supply exceeded expectations.

National asset

Since its establishment, Israel has considered water a national asset to be protected and expanded. It follows that the government alone can decide on water policy. In regard to the Hope Simpson report, the Zionist movement and the Yishuv rejected outright its conclusions regarding the potential for the asset's expansion. The simplest way to challenge its findings was to argue that the country’s water resources were far larger than claimed in the report - and, if possible, to prove it, too. With this in mind, local experts frequently arrived at exaggerated estimates. A case in point is Simcha Blass, an engineer who was involved for many years with Mekorot, the national water company and with Tahal, the water-planning authority. An incorrigible optimist, Blass believed that Israel’s water potential exceeded three billion cubic meters a year. In stark contrast, others, including the late Prof. Hillel Shuval, an expert on water management, thought that even if Israel drew on all its potential water sources, it would not be able to produce more than two billion cubic meters a year.

Overestimating the potential of water sources was a useful tool in the Yishuv’s dealings with the British, and perhaps also made potential immigrants less leery of settling in the country, both before 1948 and during the period of mass immigration and economic hardship in the state’s first years. Indirectly, though, this approach caused serious damage. It brought about over-pumping and the consequent salination of the wells of the coastal aquifer; led to unnecessary and expensive water projects, such as conveying water from Lake Kinneret and the Yarkon River to the Negev; and it encouraged the introduction of water-thirsty agricultural crops, such as sugar beets, cotton and peanuts.

The sugar beet crop was especially harmful, because in addition to the intensive irrigation they required, because once sugar beets stopped being cultivated, the country was left with two unused factories for sugar production, in Afula and Kiryat Gat.

The cotton industry fared better. Cotton was brought to the country at the initiative of Sam Hamburg, a resourceful farmer from California. Its advantage over sugar beets was that the former could be irrigated with brackish water. Disappointment, however, arrived from a different direction. Initially, the large cotton mills that were built in Israel’s remote southern towns provided employment for the residents, but in the long term they could not compete with cotton from the Far East.

The mass immigration that accompanied Israel’s establishment demonstrated that the existing sources of water were insufficient. The groundwater could not supply more than a billion cubic meters a year, even if the wells were over-exploited. Rainwater, recycled industrial water, brackish water sources and sewage water – which had just begun to be purified – would add no more than 350 million cubic meters a year. All told, this would not be enough for the needs of a constantly growing population and for farming, which at the time was a major aspect of the economy.

The decision to build the National Water Carrier, for the purpose of moving water from the Kinneret southward across 130 kilometers was made in 1948. Implementation of the project, which involved diverting water from three rivers as well - the Jordan, Yarmuk and Litani - from north to south, took until 1964.

The idea to move water southward to the Negev was first broached in 1939 by an international soil conservation expert, Walter Clay Lowdermilk. His book, “Palestine, Land of Promise” stirred the leaders of the Zionist movement. But today, 50 years after the National Water Carrier was completed, it is clear that the costly project added less than 500 million cubic meters of water a year – less than a third of Israel’s water usage at the time. Immense collateral damage was also caused: a drastic fall in the level of Lake Kinneret, the conflict with Syria and Jordan over water and, perhaps gravest of all, the enormous damage to the Dead Sea due to the vast decrease in the amount of water entering it from the Jordan River.

Radically altered situation

Almost secretly, Israel’s decision makers, including the Knesset’s Finance Committee, which was heavily influenced by the farm lobby, decided to build seawater desalination plants in Israel. There were strong arguments made in public discussions against desalination: the enormous costs involved; the problem of choosing which method to use; and accompanying environmental problems. With the technologies available in the late 20th century, desalinating a cubic meter of water cost more than $1. No farming industry could bear that expense, so urban consumers would be saddled with the cost.

Desalination in Israel began in 1973, when Mekorot built facilities that operated by reverse osmosis; these supplied the Dead Sea, Eilat and communities not served by the National Water Carrier. It was only 35 years later, in 2008, that the government decided to establish five large desalination plants along the Mediterranean coast, with the aim of providing 505 million cubic meters of water a year by 2013 (a forecast met in full) and 750 million cubic meters a year by 2020. However, since 2008, two technological revolutions – both of which also have far-reaching political implications - have radically altered the water situation in Israel.

The first revolution is the immense decrease in the cost of desalination - from $1 per cubic meter to 40 cents, and even less than that in desalination plants built in Hadera, Palmahim, Ashkelon and at Sorek. The savings will grow further thanks to the use of Israeli natural gas instead of electricity to power the plants. The second revolution is the success of the plants used to purify sewage water that were built adjacent to Israel’s cities and towns. Thanks to efficient usage, this water now irrigates most of the country’s field crops.

What’s odd, though, is that the same people who brought you the abundance - the government, Mekorot and the companies that invested billions in creating the desalination and purification facilities - are not blowing their own horn. The public learns about this success only incidentally, as in the news that Granite Hacarmel Investments, part of the Azrieli Group, made a handsome profit of 100 million shekels ($28.5 million) by selling the Palmahim facility shortly after it was built. It was also reported that the pumping of water the Kinneret via the National Water Carrier has been reduced.

There are at least three explanations for this uncharacteristic silence, in the face of success and the concomitant abundance of water Israel now enjoys. One is that even though the cost of desalination has fallen considerably, the government promised the investors a high price for the water. The government can reduce the amount of water it buys from the desalination facilities, but it cannot pay less than what it promised.

A second explanation is the authorities’ fear that if the Israeli public finds out about the true situation, it will demand a reduction of water costs far in excess of the five percent declared earlier this month. (Unpaid water bills in Israel in 2013 totaled more than 200 million shekels.)

Concern that Israelis will waste water if they know how plentiful it really is, is the third reason for keeping the facts mum. But does this justify the authorities’ policy of hiding the whole truth from the public?

There is also, perhaps, another reason - a political one - for the authorities’ lack of candor about the water revolution in Israel. This is the hope that Israel will succeed in exploiting the water issue as a means for improving its relations with both Jordan and the Palestinians. A dire shortage of water exists in the Palestinian Authority, the Gaza Strip and in the Hashemite Kingdom - in the latter of which the problem has been exacerbated by the influx of refugees from Syria. Israel’s neighbors welcome its readiness to supply water immediately from the partly idle desalination plants and to establish similar facilities in the Arab countries.

Indeed, Israel is already sending large amounts of water to Gaza and Jordan. Under Article 6 of the peace treaty with Jordan, the two countries are obliged to cooperate in developing water sources. Thus, Israel supplies Jordan with 50 million cubic meters of water a year from the Jordan and Yarmuk rivers, while Jordan pumps water in the region opposite the Israeli Arava for the irrigation of crops there. Recently, and again almost in secret, Israel decided to increase the supply of Jordan River water to Jordan by 20 million cubic meters a year.

There were also other efforts to help out in the water realm. For example, a Mekorot delegation suggested that Jordan, with its help, build a desalination plant 50 kilometers north of Aqaba, to be fed by water from the Red Sea. Amman eventually decided to forgo practical cooperation with Israel on this project and to avail itself of other experts and World Bank funding. All that’s left to Israel from this project, some of whose water will flow into the Dead Sea, was the participation of Energy and Water Resources Minister Silvan Shalom in the signing ceremony last month in Washington.

Despite the veil of silence and the political situation, which is still making it difficult for Israel to become a regional water power, there is no longer any doubt that, like the natural gas that is now available from the Mediterranean, the expected bounty of water will also effect a change in Israel’s economic and political situation. That change is likely to have a beneficial effect on everyone in Israel.


104 posted on 07/18/2014 5:41:39 AM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: ckilmer

IOW, the southwest needs to look at desalinization. That was the 800 lb gorilla in the room that I was avoiding.


105 posted on 07/18/2014 5:49:20 AM PDT by cuban leaf (The US will not survive the obama presidency. The world may not either.)
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To: ckilmer

The first revolution is the immense decrease in the cost of desalination - from $1 per cubic meter to 40 cents, and even less than that in desalination plants built in Hadera, Palmahim, Ashkelon and at Sorek.
............
fyi 40 cents a cubic meter works out to about to roughly 493@acre foot. That compares to the poseidon desalination plant huntington beach California under construction whose costs are slated to come in somewhere north of $1600@ acre foot of water.

Israeli desalinated water goes to the cities first and then its cleaned up enough for agriculture and shipped to farms.

California could do the same.


106 posted on 07/18/2014 5:50:41 AM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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bttt


107 posted on 07/18/2014 5:54:38 AM PDT by deport
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To: Maudeen; thackney; taxcontrol; The_Media_never_lie; silverleaf; NorthMountain; riri; freemama; ...
Amid Texas drought, this rain man bottles water

Amid Texas drought, this rain man bottles water

 

Richard Heinichin at Tank Town.

by Dan Weissmann
Wednesday, February 5, 2014 - 05:10
 

Drive west on U.S. 290* about 20 miles from Austin, Texas, and turn directly into Richard Heinichen’s driveway. A sign overhead reads, “Tank Town: World Headquarters, rainwater stuff.”

From this 10-acre plant in Dripping Springs, Heinichin installs home rainwater-collection systems for his neighbors in the Hill Country, and sells “bottled cloud juice” to cafes and hotels in Austin.  

Collecting rainwatwer may seem like an unorthodox proposal to address the record water shortages that have gripped the drought-gripped state. Heinichin says it's no problem. "You got enough square footage" on a rooftop"you got it covered."  

He's got the square footage at Tank Town. Two barns have 20,000 square feet of rooftop that rain can run off of. Instead of downspouts, the gutters run to across-spouts, like aqueducts, to 17 above-ground tanks.

Those tanks hold a quarter-million gallons, and they’re full up, even though Heinichin bottles about 37,000 gallons a year.

That’s not enough to keep up with the rainfall, even in a drought.

"It rained 11 inches on Halloween," he says.  "Over 100,000 gallons went out on the highway out there."   

Heinechin says it’s not just the quantity of rainwater that makes it compelling. It’s the quality.

"I didn’t realize rainwater was so good," he says, "till I drilled a well."

That was in the early 1990s, when he moved to the Texas Hill Country. At first, well water— hard and salty-- was the only option.

"Took a bath in it— I smelled like rotten eggs," he recalls. "Almost threw up in the shower. And you try to go to the shower to get clean!"

His clothes stood up by themselves. His coffee tasted awful.

So he decided to give rainwater a try. As a trained blacksmith, and a tinkerer, Heinichin did the work himself, installing the gutters, the aqueducts, and the first tanks.

He liked the result, but he didn’t think of it as a line of work. That came to him.

"My neighbor comes over and says, 'What’s the deal with your dishes? They’re so clear!'" he says.  "And I say, 'I know!' Because before they were foggy and looked like hell.  And he came over and just noticed it, and says, 'I want— I have to have that, too.'"

That neighbor told others, and a business was born.  "Tank Town just grew by itself," says Heinichin, "Bbcause there was such demand for what I did."

The cost — around $15,000 — is comparable to having a well dug.

"People say, ‘When is this damn thing gonna pay me back?’ And I say, ‘First shower.’"  

Heinichin says he does about 30 home systems a year — and he doesn’t want more customers.

"We weed ‘em out," he says. "If we do their system, then they become a Tank Town citizen — one of our people — and we have to take care of them. And some of these — you don’t want to take care of everybody."

However, to start the bottling business, he did need to do some convincing. Just not to customers.

"Government said, 'You can’t do that, because government’s not approved as a source for water,'" he says. "I say, 'OK, where do you get your water?'  They keep thinking, and I get ‘em up to the highland lakes.  ‘OK, so what fills that?’"

The Texas Commision on Environmental Quality eventually certified Tank Town as an approved public source of water.

108 posted on 07/18/2014 6:11:39 AM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: Maudeen; thackney; taxcontrol; The_Media_never_lie; silverleaf; NorthMountain; riri; freemama; ...

The solution to the drought for the southwest is to strip off the 10-20 feet of Missippi flood waters north of the Ohio river during flood stage March to June and pump them over to south pass in Wyoming. From there the water would roll south to refill Lake Meade and Lake Powell plus make a couple more lakes.

A similar program could send water to western Colorado and Nebraska to refill the Ogalla aquifer during spring flooding on the Mississippi.

Further south, a pipeline or canal could ship spring flood waters of Louisiana to Texas.

This would all be expensive work but the USA currently spends about 4 billion annually to fund Army corp of engineer flood control work on Mississippi and FEMA damage control.

Stop the flooding on the Mississippi by shipping the water to points west and Army Corp of Engineer and FEMA costs no longer apply.

Then of course too the refilling the Ogala Aquifer and shipping water to southwest solves a lot of problems there.


109 posted on 07/18/2014 6:29:03 AM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: ckilmer

So for $5/barrel we could ship a product worth 5¢/barrel?

Quite a solution.


110 posted on 07/18/2014 6:33:19 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer.)
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To: ckilmer

This guy had a great idea! We lived in Galveston in about 1960/61 the city water was the worst I have ever tasted. It was so salty that when you boiled any food, beans, spaghett, etc you didn’t add any salt and it was still too salty.


111 posted on 07/18/2014 6:56:56 AM PDT by Ditter
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To: thackney

well if you’re talking about the rainwater—I’d agree. Except that if you wanted to set up a killer business in california, you could bottle rain in Oregon or Washington or Ketchikan Alaska which receives the most rain in the USA. Then sell it into the California bottled water market as bottled rain (from the spruce forests of Oregon/Washington/Alaska)for $5.00 a bottle.

For someone going into Whole Foods in Silicon Valley or San Francisco whose about to buy bottle water. Will they choose bottled water or bottled rain (from the land of sky blue water)?


112 posted on 07/18/2014 6:58:06 AM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: ckilmer

Drinking water and the associated volumes are not the problem. There is no shortage of bottle water or lack of overpriced bottles in CA. Competition is large in that market.


113 posted on 07/18/2014 7:07:17 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer.)
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To: ckilmer

Or drop a pipe into a nice, big, high altitude lake, Yellowstone 7700’ so pumping is not an issue, siphoning will work just fine, run the pipe down Jackson Hole, across Wyoming into a tributary of the Colorado river.

Just ignore that volcano under the lake


114 posted on 07/18/2014 7:09:49 AM PDT by HangnJudge
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To: ckilmer

Cool idea!


115 posted on 07/18/2014 7:15:08 AM PDT by The_Media_never_lie (The media must be defeated any way it can be done.)
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To: thackney

Drinking water and the associated volumes are not the problem.
...............
Agree.

There is no shortage of bottle water or lack of overpriced bottles in CA.
..............
Agree.

Competition is large in that market.
...........
But bottled rain is (especially from spruce forests) is a killer app.


116 posted on 07/18/2014 7:48:12 AM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: The_Media_never_lie

Cool idea!
...........
Which one.

I just dropped in about six different ideas.


117 posted on 07/18/2014 7:48:51 AM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: ckilmer

Very interesting. You seem pretty up to speed on this issue. Do you work in that field?


118 posted on 07/18/2014 7:51:11 AM PDT by Disambiguator (#cornedbeef)
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To: Disambiguator

No I just wrote a blog on water issues for a number of years. I went to water conferences and such. I haven’t done much writing recently but its a slow changing field.

In any case the big stuff that will make all the difference is happening off court in R&D in 4th generation nuclear power plants and either carbon nanotubes or graphene membranes.

What is just a total slack jaw killer here is that the pubbies don’t get how this stuff is the real bread and butter issues of the day.

The US interest in ever cheaper more plentiful water and energy —plus an understanding of its strategic importance— died in the 1970’s. Its slowly reviving but its happening almost despite the government. The pubbies of course ever behind the curve, don’t understand that the USA is on the cusp of some seriously momentous stuff that they could seize on and run with.


119 posted on 07/18/2014 8:00:19 AM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: HangnJudge

All good ideas but the marketing is not as good.

Yellowstone water does not sound as good as Bottle Rain (From spruce forests. The land of sky blue water.)


120 posted on 07/18/2014 8:03:02 AM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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