Saint_D420 t1_j6eywy0 wrote
Reply to comment by milkytrizzle93 in Eli5....can you dig a well anywhere and hit water...and how did the early ranchers in the West know where to dig for water. Especially in the really dry areas? by pinkshrinkrn
I’m from rural country land and everyone’s has well water there, pretty rare your in an area where you can’t hit water
Roobar76 t1_j6g4tb9 wrote
There’s a bit of confirmation bias there. Rural areas developed where there was water and didn’t where there wasn’t. So where there is a long farming history there is generally surface or ground water, and the bits that ended up in national parks/reserves it’s either deeper or not there.
CyberneticPanda t1_j6gm8w7 wrote
Not really true. In the 19th century people in Congress believe that" rain followed the plow" and God would bring rain to the west if people turned it into farms. They let people homestead places like Arizona and it went terribly for the homesteaders. Later they spent lots of money on water projects to bring water to the places that needed it. But by that time the holdings have been consolidated and the homesteaders who survived had sold their holdings for next to nothing.
milkytrizzle93 t1_j6ez51e wrote
The comment I replied to was (jokingly) insinuating you could take water from the ocean on the other side of the planet. I understand ground water is plentiful
Saint_D420 t1_j6ez7h3 wrote
My bad 😂
crono141 t1_j6fdgv8 wrote
Is this the rare double woosh?
GoldenAura16 t1_j6g0b3v wrote
MOM! MOM COME QUICK!
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