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Every Thing Else Board
Well vs Rural Water
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<blockquote data-quote="backhoeboogie" data-source="post: 279918" data-attributes="member: 3162"><p>There used to be flowing wells in this country. My wife's grandaddy told me the had flowing water on his farm when he was a child. Now you have to go 400 feet for good water. The water table drops a little each year. </p><p></p><p>Alice, Willow Park is totally out of hand. My daughter's development was strategically designed so that people could punch wells. You had to have something like 3/4 of an acre. Then the city changed the rules. Their neighbor had a $1400 bill. </p><p></p><p>There were lots of folks who put in developments there and now they cannot sell the property. It is a pitiful situation. Drought has wiped out all the landscaping and folks can't afford to water. Told my daughter to save the oak trees she planted and I'd buy new sod for her next year. There is no need to spend $800 to water the grass once a week. I can buy the sod grass from a cousin for $65 a pallet.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="backhoeboogie, post: 279918, member: 3162"] There used to be flowing wells in this country. My wife's grandaddy told me the had flowing water on his farm when he was a child. Now you have to go 400 feet for good water. The water table drops a little each year. Alice, Willow Park is totally out of hand. My daughter's development was strategically designed so that people could punch wells. You had to have something like 3/4 of an acre. Then the city changed the rules. Their neighbor had a $1400 bill. There were lots of folks who put in developments there and now they cannot sell the property. It is a pitiful situation. Drought has wiped out all the landscaping and folks can't afford to water. Told my daughter to save the oak trees she planted and I'd buy new sod for her next year. There is no need to spend $800 to water the grass once a week. I can buy the sod grass from a cousin for $65 a pallet. [/QUOTE]
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Well vs Rural Water
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