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Yup we're in North Carolina right above Charlotte and we've been in a pretty serious drought pretty much all spring! Oh sure it's rained here and there but not enough to make a dent in the water shortage! That bad weather front that you're talking about is pretty much staying to our south! We've had a couple good downpours then it's gone 2 or 3 weeks without any measurable precipitation! If this keeps up we might not take the boat out this year!I'm going to assume Big Kahuna, that in your avatar, it seems you're either from or in North Carolina, correct? Well, then using my serious power of deduction, (and with the help of Google maps!) that lake Norman is also in North Carolina, correct? Well, we're out here on the Mars landscape of Lake Havasu in western Arizona and our news comes from Phoenix. And from what we've been seeing lately, as in the last few days, is that it appears that the almost the entire eastern seaboard and almost from east Texas to there, that it's been flooding and hurricanes, tornadoes and what not and to me, that means that, if, IF you've gotten any of that bad weather, that your lake Norman should, I SAY should, be rising back up to full pool sometime soon. At least that's my guesstimate. I could be way off here (imagine that!) and maybe your are has not seen any of the bad weather that's been reported to us here.
Scott
Holy total information document there Batman!!!!!!Scott - I understand it is less about the "law" vs Water Rights and Contractual Agreements. It is a fascinating series of issues, where downstream agriculture started a 100+ years ago, then, using some rather crazy laws at the time (politics?), were given a high priority water right, which supersedes communities that actually live and have drawn water from the same River for longer (but have lessor rights - see crazy laws). Then the Tribe Lands have top-tier priority rights all up and down the river, with a different set of allocation rights, which they then can sell to some degree. Havasu is used as the reservoir to feed those downstream water rights that actually have a much higher priority all downstream from the big upstream cities. I have spent some time compiling data on this, starting back about 5 plus years ago when I became interested in investing in the area, and then used AI earlier in the year to summarize it into the attached report. Far from perfect, but interesting. I concluded Havasu has some strong rights, but I wonder if they become irrelevant if/when the upstream cities consume the water, and ask for forgiveness later!?
Thx! Rained a bit last night but not enough!Kahuna, hope you got some relief last night. At Lake Keowee, just a bit south and west of Norman, we have had plenty of rain since the dry conditions in the early spring. In fact over the past twelve hours, we got precisely 3 inches more with rain forecast for both Sat and Sun. Hang in there help is on the way (El Nino is kicking in)!
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