What I find interesting though is that I've lived in two regions where there was hardly any water. First, in Windhoek. We used to stand outside in excitement when it rained, which wasn't often. We were told to save water, but whether there were restrictions in place I don't know because I was in the hotel business at that time and lived in. It certainly wasn't a disaster-situation as it is in the Cape now. I often used to drive from Windhoek to Jhb. and all the riverbeds which I crossed were just dry and cracked earth. So where did - and does - Windhoek get its water from? How's the situation where you are @The_Ice?
Then I lived in Oman, in the Middle East. We used to get "rain" once a year in June/July. It wasn't rain as we know it - it was just a fine drizzle that lasted for a few days. This time of the year was called Khareef and hundreds of holiday-makers from Saudi used to flock to my area - Salalah (3 hours from the Yemen border). The "rain" was always an exciting phenomenon and locals and holiday-makers would park their cars on the side of the roads leading up to the mountains, spread their mats on the sand and just sit, enjoying the drizzle. Again the question - where does Oman get its water from There were never any restrictions in place and we never ran out of water.
And how ashamed I am now when I think that in all my years in Windhoek and Oman, I never once thought about water or the possible lack of it. It was just an automatic assumption that when I open the tap, water will come out. It takes a crisis like this to make one appreciate every, single drop.
Then I lived in Oman, in the Middle East. We used to get "rain" once a year in June/July. It wasn't rain as we know it - it was just a fine drizzle that lasted for a few days. This time of the year was called Khareef and hundreds of holiday-makers from Saudi used to flock to my area - Salalah (3 hours from the Yemen border). The "rain" was always an exciting phenomenon and locals and holiday-makers would park their cars on the side of the roads leading up to the mountains, spread their mats on the sand and just sit, enjoying the drizzle. Again the question - where does Oman get its water from There were never any restrictions in place and we never ran out of water.
And how ashamed I am now when I think that in all my years in Windhoek and Oman, I never once thought about water or the possible lack of it. It was just an automatic assumption that when I open the tap, water will come out. It takes a crisis like this to make one appreciate every, single drop.