Our Severe Drought: water restrictions?

Reply
Thread Tools
  #1  
Unread 04-23-2025, 09:53 AM
Smalley's Avatar
Smalley Smalley is offline
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2018
Posts: 325
Thanks: 761
Thanked 245 Times in 110 Posts
Default Our Severe Drought: water restrictions?

Have any of you lived here long enough to have seen a drought this severe? The ponds are so low it's sad to see. But I haven't heard anything about water restrictions. What's the next step? Do we have enough water at this point that it's not a threat?
  #2  
Unread 04-23-2025, 09:59 AM
Ruger2506 Ruger2506 is offline
Member
Join Date: Mar 2025
Posts: 30
Thanks: 12
Thanked 19 Times in 8 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Smalley View Post
Have any of you lived here long enough to have seen a drought this severe? The ponds are so low it's sad to see. But I haven't heard anything about water restrictions. What's the next step? Do we have enough water at this point that it's not a threat?
Not sure about the effect on the neighborhoods. But I can tell you the healthy life cycle of a pond includes drought and low water levels. Many of the Villages ponds look terrible unhealthy. They could use a good drought.
  #3  
Unread 04-23-2025, 09:59 AM
Altavia Altavia is offline
Sage
Join Date: Jun 2019
Posts: 4,426
Thanks: 1,880
Thanked 3,397 Times in 1,618 Posts
Default

Must be plenty of upper aquifer water available.

The lake at Eastport and retention ponds in the new construction areas are full of blue, clear water...
  #4  
Unread 04-23-2025, 10:04 AM
Bill14564 Bill14564 is online now
Sage
Join Date: Nov 2020
Location: Village of Hillsborough
Posts: 6,768
Thanks: 2,072
Thanked 7,203 Times in 2,808 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Smalley View Post
Have any of you lived here long enough to have seen a drought this severe? The ponds are so low it's sad to see. But I haven't heard anything about water restrictions. What's the next step? Do we have enough water at this point that it's not a threat?
Many (most? all?) the ponds can be fed from one of the aquifers if needed. Some ponds just provide additional storage capacity and can go dry without causing a problem.

At least between 466 and 44, the fire hydrants are fed by irrigation water which comes from the ponds. The District will be paying very close attention to that.

When restrictions were announced last year by the two water authorities (SWFWMD and SJRWMD), it looked like the Villages' recommended irrigation schedule was in compliance.

It would be useful to see a statement about the drought in the District Weekly Bulletin.
__________________
Why do people insist on making claims without looking them up first, do they really think no one will check? Proof by emphatic assertion rarely works.
Confirmation bias is real; I can find any number of articles that say so.


Victor, NY
Randallstown, MD
Yakima, WA
Stevensville, MD
Village of Hillsborough
  #5  
Unread 04-23-2025, 10:06 AM
biker1 biker1 is offline
Sage
Join Date: May 2014
Posts: 3,572
Thanks: 1
Thanked 1,199 Times in 684 Posts
Default

We are definitely below normal for YTD rainfall but we are also still in the dry season. June, July, Aug, and Sept is the rainy season. It will start raining regularly soon.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Smalley View Post
Have any of you lived here long enough to have seen a drought this severe? The ponds are so low it's sad to see. But I haven't heard anything about water restrictions. What's the next step? Do we have enough water at this point that it's not a threat?
  #6  
Unread 04-23-2025, 10:11 AM
Jim1mack Jim1mack is offline
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2014
Posts: 128
Thanks: 17
Thanked 47 Times in 35 Posts
Default

IMO the ponds were drawn down way, way, way too low after the last two hurricanes. Grass is growing where water levels should be. No appreciable rain in my weather apps 45 day forecast. I golf executive and championship courses five days a week and fear the courses are headed to the deteriated conditions they were last year.
  #7  
Unread 04-23-2025, 10:18 AM
biker1 biker1 is offline
Sage
Join Date: May 2014
Posts: 3,572
Thanks: 1
Thanked 1,199 Times in 684 Posts
Default

There are 3 month outlooks (for regions) for precip and temperature from the CPC but day by day forecasts are limited to about 15 days and the skill that far out can be nonexistent depending the larger scale flow.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Jim1mack View Post
IMO the ponds were drawn down way, way, way too low after the last two hurricanes. Grass is growing where water levels should be. No appreciable rain in my weather apps 45 day forecast. I golf executive and championship courses five days a week and fear the courses are headed to the deteriated conditions they were last year.
  #8  
Unread 04-23-2025, 10:37 AM
tophcfa's Avatar
tophcfa tophcfa is online now
Sage
Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: Wherever I happen to be.
Posts: 7,327
Thanks: 3,459
Thanked 10,704 Times in 3,383 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ruger2506 View Post
Not sure about the effect on the neighborhoods. But I can tell you the healthy life cycle of a pond includes drought and low water levels. Many of the Villages ponds look terrible unhealthy. They could use a good drought.
Happens every year. Before you know it the daily intense thunder and lightning storms will fill the ponds to the point where they start pumping water out of them to make room for the dumpings when a wave of potential tropical storms start blowing through.
  #9  
Unread 04-23-2025, 10:45 AM
Stu from NYC Stu from NYC is offline
Sage
Join Date: Feb 2020
Posts: 15,021
Thanks: 1,250
Thanked 16,015 Times in 6,259 Posts
Default

Lots of brown grass around here, hopefully rain will start soon.
  #10  
Unread 04-23-2025, 10:50 AM
mraines mraines is offline
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2013
Posts: 322
Thanks: 586
Thanked 250 Times in 119 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Smalley View Post
Have any of you lived here long enough to have seen a drought this severe? The ponds are so low it's sad to see. But I haven't heard anything about water restrictions. What's the next step? Do we have enough water at this point that it's not a threat?
This is Florida. Not much caring about the environment.
  #11  
Unread 04-23-2025, 10:52 AM
Ruger2506 Ruger2506 is offline
Member
Join Date: Mar 2025
Posts: 30
Thanks: 12
Thanked 19 Times in 8 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by mraines View Post
This is Florida. Not much caring about the environment.
Sadly that's true. I've never seen a state with so much natural beauty to lose care so little about it. FL, the land of the all mighty developer dollar.
  #12  
Unread 04-23-2025, 04:10 PM
kkingston57 kkingston57 is offline
Soaring Eagle member
Join Date: Mar 2020
Posts: 2,058
Thanks: 62
Thanked 906 Times in 524 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ruger2506 View Post
Sadly that's true. I've never seen a state with so much natural beauty to lose care so little about it. FL, the land of the all mighty developer dollar.
Seems this year is worse than the last 3-4 years. Never seen any pond/lake bone dry before. Most people do not know this but in 1999 wildfires were all over north central Florida. Might be the same this year
  #13  
Unread 04-23-2025, 04:20 PM
Old Traveller Old Traveller is offline
Junior Member
Join Date: Mar 2025
Posts: 23
Thanks: 0
Thanked 7 Times in 7 Posts
Default

The dry season ends the last full week of May. Write it down. Mother Nature flips a switch and the heat, humidity and afternoon storms roll in. The Villages drained the ponds pretty good before the last hurricane of 2024, Milton I believe. However, the Villages didn't get the anticipated rain, thus a shortage. But, that's better than homes flooding if Milton had dropped 20 inches of rain. Homes in the Villages north of 466 use all potable water from the aquifer. Homes south of 466 use non potable water for landscaping and potable water for homes and our outside hoses from the aquifer. However, if the ponds dry up they use potable water from the aquifer for landscaping. Tom Hanks is narrating a series on television called "The Americas". Hanks said Florida's aquifer is over a thousand feet deep in some areas. He said every rain storm drops billions of gallons of water. The rivers flowing into Crystal Springs Florida, where the manatees hang out in the winter, delivers between 800 to 500 million gallons of water per day.
  #14  
Unread 04-23-2025, 04:22 PM
Bill14564 Bill14564 is online now
Sage
Join Date: Nov 2020
Location: Village of Hillsborough
Posts: 6,768
Thanks: 2,072
Thanked 7,203 Times in 2,808 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by kkingston57 View Post
Seems this year is worse than the last 3-4 years. Never seen any pond/lake bone dry before. Most people do not know this but in 1999 wildfires were all over north central Florida. Might be the same this year
Florida wildfire map
__________________
Why do people insist on making claims without looking them up first, do they really think no one will check? Proof by emphatic assertion rarely works.
Confirmation bias is real; I can find any number of articles that say so.


Victor, NY
Randallstown, MD
Yakima, WA
Stevensville, MD
Village of Hillsborough
  #15  
Unread Yesterday, 03:55 AM
AZ SLIM AZ SLIM is offline
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2021
Posts: 222
Thanks: 3
Thanked 283 Times in 99 Posts
Default I guess I'm fickle

By the end of last summer with all the rainfall I became tired of fighting the cinch bugs and fungus in our St. Augustine grass. I swore I would never complain about lack of rain again. Well, I am ready for rain. Does this make me a bad person?
Reply

Tags
water, drought, restrictions, severe, step


You are viewing a new design of the TOTV site. Click here to revert to the old version.

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:24 PM.