Do you deny women your essence?They’re stealing our precious bodily fluids.
Do you deny women your essence?They’re stealing our precious bodily fluids.
They have to payDo you deny women your essence?
I deny all of them except the one with my ring on her finger.Do you deny women your essence?
General Ripper does not approve, Captain Mandrake.They have to pay
Mistakes made again.Didn’t watch the entire video but All I can think about is the Ogallala Aquifer and how much center pivot irrigating we do on crops up here in the OK Panhandle. Scary to think about that someday it will be dried up.
water doesn't dry up. it is in constant cycle. the areas of low rainfall are usually the most fertile. look at the average yearly rainfall in your area for the last decades in your area. you will see that there is little variation.Mistakes made again.
Perhaps if we weren’t growing corn in a desert it wouldn’t be such an issue, when milo can be grown on dry plots. But, I don’t entirely blame the farmers, they need to grow what pays the bills.
I just hope that change comes before the water dries up for everybody and makes the Plains barely habitable. But there seem to be pretty varying estimates on when that “drying up” may come.
It does when the water is from thousands of years ago and does not replenish in it’s lowest levels for that amount of time. I’m sure everybody who’s wells went dry or had to be drilled much deeper in only a few decades are all just misreading precipitation levels, as well as the Beaver River that went completely dry in a few years from groundwater irrigating.water doesn't dry up. it is in constant cycle. the areas of low rainfall are usually the most fertile. look at the average yearly rainfall in your area for the last decades in your area. you will see that there is little variation.
the water didn't disappear. the aquifer may have dried up or have been depleted by having it's source cut off or diverted. maybe the precip levels in that area won't keep up with depletion??? but the water even if it isn't in the river still exists. can you tell me for sure that it isn't normal for the beaver river to be dry? from time to time? what about the time maybe thousands of years ago ??? before the beaver river even existed?It does when the water is from thousands of years ago and does not replenish in it’s lowest levels for that amount of time. I’m sure everybody who’s wells went dry or had to be drilled much deeper in only a few decades are all just misreading precipitation levels, as well as the Beaver River that went completely dry in a few years from groundwater irrigating.
You seem to have some fallacious arguments. In that case, we should be very worried since the Midwest would appear to have once been entirely underwater.the water didn't disappear. the aquifer may have dried up or have been depleted by having it's source cut off or diverted. maybe the precip levels in that area won't keep up with depletion??? but the water even if it isn't in the river still exists. can you tell me for sure that it isn't normal for the beaver river to be dry? from time to time? what about the time maybe thousands of years ago ??? before the beaver river even existed?
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