I hesitate to contribute to this thread on a technical forum, but it's been 
tagged as OT, so...

If you're living in the American west (or if you're just interested in 
historical info), I'd highly recommend Marc Reisner's "Cadillac Desert".  It's 
both a book and a 4-hr PBS miniseries from about 15 years ago.  The book a few 
years older.  Fascinating, and highly recommended.

I was out at the Grand Canyon 10 years ago, listening to an evening Ranger 
talk.  The Colorado reservoirs were way down, even back then (Lake Powell at 
less than 50% of capacity).  He mentioned that the Southwestern drought was in 
its 7th year (then), and that, historically, droughts in the Southwest had 
lasted as long as 50 years.  Many believe that Powell will never be full again.

Specifically for the California folk, Reisner also wrote a book about the 
earthquake possibilities.  Haven't read it, but I do have an Amazon credit I 
may use it on.

If you live out that way, what's happening now may be the new normal.  Tough 
love, for Valentine's Day?

Frank Ress
(Finding some advantages to living in the rust belt.  We do get tornados, but 
they limit the destruction to relatively small areas.)

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Richard McClary
Sent: Friday, February 14, 2014 9:59 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [NTSysADM] OT: NE snow

UGLY!

I can't help but wonder if a "Central Valley vs Los Angeles" fight will break 
out, "Chinatown"-like, over access to water
--
richard

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