[Rockhounds] [SPAM] [Spam] :Re: This Is Why It’s Illegal to Collect Rainwater in Some States

Axel Emmermann axel.emmermann at telenet.be
Wed Nov 28 13:18:41 PST 2018


On Maui we did the 'road to Hana'.
Lush jungle until you round a rock that sticks out in the ocean. In about 150 feet you go from jungle to desert... the first thing that I saw there was the skeleton of a rather large animal. A large dog or a sheep or something like that. Amazing how the frontier between two climates looks like it's drawn with a rule and a pencil.

Axel

-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: Rockhounds <rockhounds-bounces at rockhounds.drizzle.com> Namens gary brown
Verzonden: woensdag 28 november 2018 21:15
Aan: 'Rockhounds at drizzle.com: A mailing list for rock and gem collectors' <rockhounds at rockhounds.drizzle.com>
Onderwerp: Re: [Rockhounds] [SPAM] [Spam] :Re: This Is Why It’s Illegal to Collect Rainwater in Some States

Don...  depends on which side of the island!  On the east side you can stand still and be covered in moss in about 30 seconds.  On the west side... not so much!

GcB

-----Original Message-----
From: Rockhounds <rockhounds-bounces at rockhounds.drizzle.com> On Behalf Of Don Halterman
Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2018 2:00 PM
To: rockhounds at rockhounds.drizzle.com
Subject: [SPAM] [Spam] :Re: [Rockhounds] This Is Why It’s Illegal to Collect Rainwater in Some States

  Indeed it's a rural western thing.  In Nevada I have the right to drill a domestic well with rights to 2 acre-feet a year, which is pretty generous.  However I do not have the right to impound any flowing surface water--not that there is any except during spring runoff.  I also cannot collect rainwater--all 11 inches of it a year in Elko County--though the state website says that this not generally enforced.

LOL Kitty I don't think Hawaii would have any water issues... plenty of rain water there I'm sure.  :)

Don


On 11/28/2018 10:48 AM, Tim Fisher wrote:
> I hadn't even read the article but I immediately knew what it would have to say about Oregon. And I also knew that the news media had screwed that one up, royally. He can't build ponds to collect the water without numerous state and federal permits, which for that size pond would easily take a year and thousands of dollars to obtain. Somehow this got twisted into "collecting rainwater is illegal". Building structures to impound a stream, spring, seep, wetland, surface runoff, or just plain old rain from the sky without any permits or water rights whatsoever is as illegal as it gets in the west. Even a removal/fill permit (not necessarily from the Corps, that usually applies in flowing water or wetland situations) is necessary to move that much dirt (in our county anything deeper than 2 feet). Googling it, even Snopes has weighed in. Which is news to me, and a great summary of exactly while the guy had the book thrown at him.
>   
> https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/man-gets-prison-sentence-for-collect
> ing-rainwater-on-his-own-property/
>
>


_______________________________________________
Rockhounds mailing list
Subscription Services:  http://rockhounds.drizzle.com/mailman/listinfo/rockhounds_rockhounds.drizzle.com
List Usage Policy: http://Tomaszewski.net/Kreigh/Rockhounds/Rockhounds.shtml



_______________________________________________
Rockhounds mailing list
Subscription Services:  http://rockhounds.drizzle.com/mailman/listinfo/rockhounds_rockhounds.drizzle.com
List Usage Policy: http://Tomaszewski.net/Kreigh/Rockhounds/Rockhounds.shtml





More information about the Rockhounds mailing list