I think I’ll start a GoFundMe account to raise money for Ripley to buy a calculator. According to the Dept of Agriculture, an average farming field takes about 1.5 acre-feet of water. That’s the equivalent volume of 1.5 feet of water over a surface of one acre. Something above 300 thousand gallons. Let’s say 400. And let’s say a 400-acre golf course, kind of a heck of a golf course, bigger than half a square mile. It means 160,000 gallons of water for a golf course so big that doesn’t exist at a farming standard ratio, more demanding than just grass. And, here’s the catch, the ratio is per year!!
Do the beaks on the crossbill alway cross the same way? Always the upper crossing to the left, as shown, or do some cross to the right, making some crossbills left beaked and others right beaked. Just curious.
That’s over three thousand Olympic swimming pools, or 168 pools per each of the 18 holes. Or, more directly, if you’ve got an average-sized course of maybe 150 acres, that’s 6 million square feet, so 318 gallons PER SQUARE FOOT PER DAY. Or, in a different way, that’s a 42 foot depth of water over the entire course. Yes, I’m an engineer, why do you ask? :)
The 2.08 billion gallons figure is quoted at as the average daily use from 2003 to 2005 for all golf courses in the United States, not for a single course. The same source says that golf courses account for about 0.5% of water used for irrigation in the USA. The amount used by any particlar course varies according to local conditions. I am not a golfer, and not in the USA, so I have no axe to grind here.
Wait a minute! 2,080,000,000 gallons of water is 3,336,666,666 cubic feet. That’s 31,311 olympic size swimming pools. It’s also 17,326,400,000 pounds. That can not possibly be right!!
Bilan about 1 year ago
Too bad the Otagi Nenbutsu-Ji Temple doesn’t have room for humans.
The Duke about 1 year ago
That’s a lot of water. I wonder if it would be feasible to use artificial turf on golf courses?
James Wolfenstein about 1 year ago
I think I’ll start a GoFundMe account to raise money for Ripley to buy a calculator. According to the Dept of Agriculture, an average farming field takes about 1.5 acre-feet of water. That’s the equivalent volume of 1.5 feet of water over a surface of one acre. Something above 300 thousand gallons. Let’s say 400. And let’s say a 400-acre golf course, kind of a heck of a golf course, bigger than half a square mile. It means 160,000 gallons of water for a golf course so big that doesn’t exist at a farming standard ratio, more demanding than just grass. And, here’s the catch, the ratio is per year!!
therese_callahan2002 about 1 year ago
Ah, the first emojis.
oakie817 about 1 year ago
i have a crossed beak too
ladykat about 1 year ago
What a waste of water.
goboboyd about 1 year ago
The pooch’s potential in-laws – ‘So, tell us a little about your family’s background.’
poppacapsmokeblower about 1 year ago
Do the beaks on the crossbill alway cross the same way? Always the upper crossing to the left, as shown, or do some cross to the right, making some crossbills left beaked and others right beaked. Just curious.
Angry Indeed Premium Member about 1 year ago
If there were such things as a bird dentist, that Crossbill Bird would be diagnosed as having a severe overbite.
markhughw about 1 year ago
and they named the puppy Goth
mindjob about 1 year ago
They still can’t open macadamia nuts
ragsarooni about 1 year ago
A green-spotted Pyrenees? Really?
LAFITZGERALD about 1 year ago
Wowsville on this Sunday panel of facts!!
djlactin about 1 year ago
Fortunately, the water evaporates and rains down again.
dpatrickryan Premium Member about 1 year ago
That’s over three thousand Olympic swimming pools, or 168 pools per each of the 18 holes. Or, more directly, if you’ve got an average-sized course of maybe 150 acres, that’s 6 million square feet, so 318 gallons PER SQUARE FOOT PER DAY. Or, in a different way, that’s a 42 foot depth of water over the entire course. Yes, I’m an engineer, why do you ask? :)
Ooten Aboot about 1 year ago
The 2.08 billion gallons figure is quoted at as the average daily use from 2003 to 2005 for all golf courses in the United States, not for a single course. The same source says that golf courses account for about 0.5% of water used for irrigation in the USA. The amount used by any particlar course varies according to local conditions. I am not a golfer, and not in the USA, so I have no axe to grind here.
51 Champion about 1 year ago
Wait a minute! 2,080,000,000 gallons of water is 3,336,666,666 cubic feet. That’s 31,311 olympic size swimming pools. It’s also 17,326,400,000 pounds. That can not possibly be right!!
[Unnamed Reader - 14b4ce] about 1 year ago
Don’t worry about the golf course—-Trump will pay for it