geologic
Old Pharmer
Supporter
- 1,912
- 263
The correct number of words in the definition is 320,@geologic You know your definition is bogus when it comes from the state of California and has 10,000 words to define it. Another words, bureaucratic B.S. I will stick with the universal, used by all people of the world, definition. Thanks for the post though.
The correct number of words in the definition is 320,
9,680 less than yer bombasticism;
next time you're in court have your lawyer
use yer Internet Dictionary,
instead of Black's Law Dictionary--
all them pesky definitions an' all...
Or just go to start conversation and type a few letters of their name and it will give you a list, the more you type the more it narrows it.Click on my username, a box should pop up. Then click "start a conversation." It took me a full minute to figure it out, too!
Nice way to diffuse the situation . Funny as well. Gotta love that shit.So what's more expensive a pound of weed or a pound of California's precious water? Lol
It was 135% of average snow pack last week. Still not enough rain and snow to stop the drought but It`s going in the right direction. Every drop counts! Mostly we need the ground water to return to normal now!
I'm curious how your county is responding to the state's new legislation. My county has responded by making cultivation even more difficult and restrictive, and they've now made violation of ordinances a misdemeanor with financial penalty and/or jail time.I think the correct way to say that, IMO, is the drought is over, lets hope enough water falls to recover our reservoirs. Which if our governments don't squander the rain, California will continue have plenty of water.
However, I did like the fact that my packs sold faster and for more money this year. Hope the scare talk of the drought continues to raise the prices for next season.
Just my opinion.
Agreed, Mark was reading somewhere that NASA predicts around 11 trillion gallons of water will be needed to come anywhere near what you all need to recover. Not sure if El Nino will pull that off. But it is a start. Much good karma and vibes to all of those affected by this drought. Thing is most don't realize that its not only Cali farmers that are affected. The ripple effect will be felt nationwide.The reservoirs have a long ways before they will be full again but that`s not what worries me the most. I don`t take much advantage of that water as it is shipped down south. I`m more worried about ground water. I get my water from a spring and hope to drill a well at some point. It could take years for the recovery of ground water. It seems to be in the worst shape of everything. The bad is know one knows how to help it along. Flooding large pools of water over great amounts of land doesn`t really look like something that`s going to be doable. Only land available for this would be rice farms. But while they can be planted while flooded, they need to dry up for harvesting. California has taken a big hit, mostly in agriculture. It will be some time before we can produce like we used to. It will take years alone before any newly planted orchards produce. We will need to shift to other crops in many places. But even this will be in the past at some point. As for cannabis prices they may continue to raise for the next couple years slightly but should rebound much faster than tree crops. We`ll just have to see what happens. A lot depends on how our state and local governments handle things. I`m less hopeful of government working right than the weather myself.
This is the type of restriction and regulation that really gets my hackles up. Dont get me wrong we all have to do our part in water conservation. But I would posture why is it it is typically only the small fry in the pond that get whacked with fines and regulations while corporate entities get to be more wasteful than anyone on the planet.I'm curious how your county is responding to the state's new legislation. My county has responded by making cultivation even more difficult and restrictive, and they've now made violation of ordinances a misdemeanor with financial penalty and/or jail time.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?