When Water Was Cheap to Use
I moved here in the fall of 1984 and started gardening, hauling leaves full
of earthworms in the outer foot of the piles from the leaf dump near Riverside
Park. Come spring of ‘85, when I started
watering, the water bill was just over $25 in base rates: $20 for water; and $5
for sewer. Water unit rates were pennies
on the dollar and no unit rates on sewer.
In July and August, it got just over $26 from irrigation. Our City was clean, green and beautiful and
forest fires were far from any cities.
We had thunderstorms nearly every weekend of that summer. I was enchanted by thunderstorms, but
wondered: “Why only on the weekends?” Sixteen
years later, taking Landscape Management at RCC, I learned that most people
couldn’t afford automatic irrigation and had to water on the weekends, hauling
a sprinkler around and using mechanical timers.
Back in 1985, I learned that if I didn’t water because it looked like
rain, it wouldn’t rain enough to make a difference, as many other people felt
the same. I created what I called a
gardening superstition: “If you don’t water because you think it will rain, it
won’t rain enough to matter.”
10-1-25-2025 2-minute Speech to Grants Pass
City Council
Published at GardenGrantsPass.blogspot.com and shared on
Facebook and Nextdoor
Like Ratepayers for Fair Water and Sewer Pricing on
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Rycke
Brown, Natural Gardener 541-955-9040
rycke@gardener.com
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