Tag: drought

  • Drought May Prompt Californians to Let Personal Hygiene Slide

    Drought May Prompt Californians to Let Personal Hygiene Slide

    Drought May Prompt Californians to Let Personal Hygiene Slide

    The drought is affecting everything.. From BLOOMBERG:

     Drought May Prompt Californians to Let Personal Hygiene Slide – Bloomberg Business                      

     

     

    Dry shampoos already had started to gain traction because more consumers want to keep their hair’s natural oils intact and avoid harsh substances. Sales of the products are growing five times as fast as the 2 percent gain predicted for the total shampoo category through 2019, Aitken said, citing Euromonitor International data.

    “It is now a case of skip a wash, or even two, among some of the users I know,” she said.

    People who feel compelled to keep skip showers entirely have some waterless options for keeping clean. There are a number of personal cleansers geared to medical caregivers that don’t require water, including a version made by CVS Health Corp. for sale in its stores.

  • Untitled post 13492

    Southern California, heavily hit by the epic drought of the 21st century, is saying goodbye to their rollup lawns..

    People have mixed emotions as they watch their amazingly green grass get rolled up and taken away.. A new turf in town as the drought drowns the state of California..

  • Untitled post 13559

    An article linked from think-progress:

    Nestlé CEO On Bottling Water In California: ‘If I Could Increase It, I Would’

    You probably heard that there’s a drought in California.

    You might have heard that food and beverage mega-corporation Nestlé (as well as lots of other companies) is bottling water in the drought in California.

    This is not Nestlé’s fault. This is your fault.

    The article goes on to explain:

    This is not Nestlé’s fault. This is your fault.

    At least, that’s what Nestlé International Waters’ CEO seemed to be saying in an interview with Southern California Public Radio this week.

    “If I stop bottling water tomorrow, people would buy another brand of bottled water,” Tim Brown said. “It’s driven by consumer demand, it’s driven by an on-the-go society that needs to hydrate.”

    Nestlé came under attack last month, when it was revealed that the company has been bottling water from the San Bernardino National Forest under an expired permit for the past 25 years. The company has repeatedly said that its expired permit with the National Forest Service remains in good standing.

    “We feel good about what we’re doing,” Brown said. “In fact, if I could increase it, I would.”

    The interview was part of what seems like a bigger push by Nestlé against the idea that its business practices are related to California’s drought.

    This is going to become an increasingly tough position for Nestle to maintain.. as the drought intensifies more *it is* and the circumstances become more dre *they are* Nestle may have some trouble being able to defend their business model.. 

    I think in our modern age, it may be time to accept tap water. With a filer. And a FLUORIDE FILTER is you can get one. If you have well water, test it. If it’s not good enough to drink go with public water (FILTERED and fluoride filtered) .. 

    There are solutions that are safe… and plastic free.

  • The Dry Age

    The Dry Age

    Catastrophic California drought is having another scary side effect: Rodents are climbing trees and taking water from bird baths Learn more: »

    Everything needs water to survive..
    And rodents know survival at the fittest.

    One creepy tale:

    Tina O’Keefe of Dirty Rats Rodent Removal told NBC, “There’s no water source for them right now so they’re going outside to get it. They eat plants. They eat meat. They’re going to the dog park because there are water bowls. They’re going to horse stables because there’s water.”

    Heron Head Park, which is situated just south of San Francisco, is one example where rats are coming out and taking water from dogs.
    “This has not happened before,” Renee Dunn Martin of the Port of San Francisco told the San Francisco Chronicle.

    “It’s an open space, and a natural habitat for a lot of creatures, but regarding the rats, we are definitely on top of that issue and doing our best to address it,” Dunn Martin emphasized.

     

    It’s been said that even after nuclear strikes, cockroaches will crawl like nothing occurred..

    But rodents without water? That is a scary premise for their species.

    As much as it is ours..
    Scary times we live in.. Dry as well.

     x x  x x

    Lake Mead is considered “operationally full” when the water level is at 1,229 feet elevation above sea level. On May 2, the water level was down to 1,078.9 feet above sea level, the lowest since it was being filled in May 1937. It’s down 15 feet from the same day a year ago »