| DENNIS 
 
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| GUADALUPE VALLEY WILL REMAIN "WINE COUNTRY" 
 
 "Baja Winemakers Cheer Decision To Block Urban Development In Guadalupe Valley"
 
 http://www.kpbs.org/news/2014/feb/05/baja-winemakers-cheer-d...
 
 
 
 
 "YOU CAN'T LITTER ALUMINUM" | 
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| Hook 
 
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Registered: 3-13-2004
 Location: Sonora
 
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Mood:  Inquisitive
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 Wasn't this issue portrayed as a fight over water by the growers? I'm surprised nothing was said about that in this article.
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| EnsenadaDr 
 
Banned
 
 
 
 
Posts: 5027
 
Registered: 9-12-2011
 Location: Baja California
 
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Mood:  Move on. It is just a chapter in the past, but don't close the book- just turn the page
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 That place is growing like a weed, it looks at least 30 businesses have sprouted up compared to a few years ago.
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| wessongroup 
 
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Mood:  Suicide Hot line ... please hold
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 Speaking of "growing" ...
 
 "California’s reservoirs are holding just 39 percent of their combined capacity, when typically they should be 64 percent full by this time in winter.
That has prompted the state to do something it’s never done before: At the end of January, officials cut to zero (pdf) the amount of water that local
authorities could draw from the series of reservoirs that supply 25 million Californians and 750,000 acres of farmland. Snowpack is at just 12 percent
of levels typical this time of year, leaving little hope that the reserves will be replenished soon."
 
 http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2014-02-05/californias-...
 
 This is NOT a localized issue ... the western states are not doing too good ... with water reductions on pulls from Colorado River too ...
 
 Baja does get water from the "north" in many cases ... a difficult time for growers on both sides of the "border"
 
 Hope they can hang on with the "permeant" plantings ... some think "dry" years make better wine
 
 [Edited on 2-6-2014 by wessongroup]
 
 
 
 
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| Whale-ista 
 
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 Location: San Diego
 
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 I thought I had heard that Tijuana has plans to send a lot of treated wastewater from San Antonio de los Buenos facility to Guadalupe Valley. anyone
else hear of that? Wine from treated sewage....
 
 Used to be, If you drive by the treatment plants on Hwy 1, you could smell the discharge. Has that improved? They use that water for the golf courses.
 
 Reclaimed/recycled water will become more prevalent/acceptable as dry conditions continue.
 
 Right now they are skiing on treated sewage in Snow Bowl near Flagstaff.
 
 
 
 
 \"Probably the airplanes will bring week-enders from Los Angeles before long, and the beautiful poor bedraggled old town will bloom with a
Floridian ugliness.\" (John Steinbeck, 1940, discussing the future of La Paz, BCS, Mexico) | 
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| DENNIS 
 
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 | Quote: |  | Originally posted by Whale-ista Used to be, If you drive by the treatment plants on Hwy 1, you could smell the discharge. Has that improved? They use that water for the golf courses.
 
 
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 They were going to run that through Donald Trump's lobby to the ocean, but he bailed out.
 
 Whatever it is, the forest of palm trees and other plants around that treatment plant couldn't look more healthy from the road, but we don't eat palm
trees, do we.
 
 
 
 
 "YOU CAN'T LITTER ALUMINUM" | 
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| Whale-ista 
 
Super Nomad
      
 
 
 
Posts: 2009
 
Registered: 2-18-2013
 Location: San Diego
 
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 I used to see hoses dipping into the open canal, draining water down the slopes to the corn growing below... and then see them selling elotes from
carts while waiting in line at the border.
 
 This is 20 years ago. I think (hope) that has improved since they closed over the canal...
 
 
 
 
 \"Probably the airplanes will bring week-enders from Los Angeles before long, and the beautiful poor bedraggled old town will bloom with a
Floridian ugliness.\" (John Steinbeck, 1940, discussing the future of La Paz, BCS, Mexico) | 
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