How did watering your lawn go this morning?Anyone calling the authorities over watering your lawn needs a reality check.
How did watering your lawn go this morning?Anyone calling the authorities over watering your lawn needs a reality check.
Sprinklers finish before everyone gets up in the morning. Had no problems!How did watering your lawn go this morning?
Nitrate levels in the Raccoon were expected to plateau, but haven't. I believe the big rains upstream put another scare into them. That likely flushes more NO3 our direction.WDMWW sent out a notification at 2 am on Thursday morning about voluntary reduction and by mid-afternoon it had switched to an all out ban.
Or just try talking to them. There will definitely be some a-holes who think they know better and dont have to follow the rules though. Pretty sure there are a few in this thread.If you’re going to call the snitch line, do it for the Elwell/commercial properties, not Joe Neighbor who may not be aware yet.
Everyone likes clean waterNo one likes a rat.
[but no one wants to do anything about it]. The reason I laughed is because that's Chris Jones' byline. He's the former DMWW worker who likes to torment our resident polluters.Everyone likes clean water
That involves human contact, no thank you. I enjoy my peaceful cave.Or just try talking to them. There will definitely be some a-holes who think they know better and dont have to follow the rules though. Pretty sure there are a few in this thread.
Whatever happened to the experimental wells the Army Core Eng were drilling to dilute the crap river water with the aquifer?They're also pulling out of Moffit Lake right now because the Raccoon River is completely unusable due to Nitrate levels.
You don’t think that DMWW has investigative and enforcement officers? Obviously they don’t.Anyone calling the authorities over watering your lawn needs a reality check.
Sprinklers finish before everyone gets up in the morning. Had no problems!
Throw some oats down on that dirt. Who needs grass anyway.Moving to a new construction house in a few weeks. Looks like sod will be delayed, which i'm 100% fine with.
More like just peak America these daysThe idea that someone wants or needs to water their lawn to make it more difficult for everyone else in the metro to get clean, better drinking water is peak Iowa…
The idea that someone wants or needs to water their lawn to make it more difficult for everyone else in the metro to get clean, better drinking water is peak Iowa…
And more so, the fact that there are people who think they need to water right now. I've ran my sprinklers a whopping 14 times this season so far, and my lawn looks healthier than ever. I don't get it.The idea that someone wants or needs to water their lawn to make it more difficult for everyone else in the metro to get clean, better drinking water is peak Iowa…
We moved into our house in May, got our lawn in late July.Moving to a new construction house in a few weeks. Looks like sod will be delayed, which i'm 100% fine with.
gotta pay premium. lots of fert in that water. helps your kids grow big and tallWe moved into our house in May, got our lawn in late July.
Our first water bill was $900. Just hope they delay it until like mid-August.
Not all soil is the same. Our neighborhood is built on a square mile that was previously four family farms - all potato fields. All of the soil is a few inches of black top soil on top of sand. We never have to worry about flooding because it drains so well. I have a sump in my basement that in the 30 years the house has been here has never had a lick of water in it. However without regular rain - or watering - the yard and garden is going to dry out very fast.Yup, I was just thinking the same thing last night when I was playing with the kids outside. Just mow it a bit higher too and the dew it catches also helps keep a little extra moisture too. Part of the reason yards brown out faster is setting the mow height too short. I see it in my neighborhood where guys think if they mow it shorter they won't have to mow as much but leaving it a little longer and not mowing it as frequently is going to keep it green longer when it gets hot and dry.
As far as the cause to the nitrate levels we are just as much to blame in the city as there is blame in rural areas too. All the development and concrete that is replacing farmland and the over-fertilizing of commercial and residential properties that just runs off into the storm sewers and creeks eventually wind up in our rivers too. And as mentioned some of the high water users are commercial clients that weren't here before that add a strain on the water supply. Not trying to turn this into an argument but everyone in general both city and rural need to do their parts to help limit the nitrates that wind up in our water sources.