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Getting More Water — by Magic?
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Getting More Water — by Magic?
about further planning by Front Range cities to get more water out of the Colorado — the already over-allocated Colorado River.
The graphic is helpful in explaining that much of the water used from Colorado Springs north to the Wyoming border is "transmountain" water.
Note that Denver is outside the gray area—the upper Colorado River watershed.
I still meet people from Colorado Springs who think that their water comes from the snow on Pike's Peak. For the Denver-plex, would that be the snow on Mount Evans?
Reading that piece, I can't help but think that a magic wand is being waved. The Front Range cities still think that there will be more water available when they want it . . . somehow.
The graphic is helpful in explaining that much of the water used from Colorado Springs north to the Wyoming border is "transmountain" water.
Note that Denver is outside the gray area—the upper Colorado River watershed.
I still meet people from Colorado Springs who think that their water comes from the snow on Pike's Peak. For the Denver-plex, would that be the snow on Mount Evans?
Reading that piece, I can't help but think that a magic wand is being waved. The Front Range cities still think that there will be more water available when they want it . . . somehow.
Category → Getting More Water — by Magic? » Colorado , Colorado River , Colorado Springs , Denver , water » Southern Rockies Nature