Catweazle wrote: ↑03 Aug 2021, 20:50
clv101 wrote: ↑03 Aug 2021, 15:57
"This article was first published in the Financial Times"
I don't read it any more, not since I ceased working for them and couldn't get it free.
( Not as a journalist I hasten to add ).
If you're looking for a paper to put down in the guinea pig hutch I wholeheartedly recommend it, very absorbent.
Perhaps I'm getting too doomerish, it's probably going to work out OK for my generation, but I have kids and grandkids. Can it possibly be "OK" for them too ? Is the orchard I'm planting and the soil I'm building worth the effort ?
I'm thinking of drilling a borehole, even though I'm on mains water, as a backup against mains failure or summers dry enough for my garden to need more water than I can afford to buy. Is that doomerish ? A bit too "prepper" ? Or just a reaction to a heatwave and lots of news about climate change.
Honestly, I don't know any more. It seems that my plans were clearer when the future seemed less clear, now I read more and more predictions of collapse I feel less certain what to do about it. Perhaps the advice to see less news might be good for me.
A borehole or well is IMHO an excellent prep, but with one drawback. AFAIK, some form of licence or permit is needed and a fee is payable for this.
Payment of this wastes money that might be badly needed for other purposes, but also probably places you on a database of "emergency water sources that can be requisitioned, think of the babies"
A private borehole on a property served with mains water might attract attention and suggest the presence of food or fuel stocks that could be requisitioned. Or perhaps it might be better to take over the whole property, in the national interest of course.
Not telling anyone and paying no fee might be tempting, but is presumably an offence. And of course you cant use an illegal borehole on a significant scale during a normal drought, since your well watered garden would attract attention.
Any well or borehole should EITHER be reachable with a bucket on a rope, or should be equipped with duplicated pumps, either hand operated or off grid electric.
Remember that lift umps cant lift water from deeper than about 10 meters, and that cheaper types are unreliable at a lift of more than about 7 meters.
A force pump can pump from any depth given suitable design and enough power.
In a TEOTWAWKI situation, a hand pump as used for real ale in a public house can be used as a lift pump for a shallow well. In any serious disaster, pubs would soon be looted of food and drink, but I doubt that the average looter would consider a hand pump worth looting.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"