Lake Lanier drying up?
On Oct 29, 8:07 pm, "Calif Bill" wrote:
wrote in message
oups.com...
On Oct 29, 5:03 pm, "Calif Bill" wrote:
wrote in message
oups.com...
On Oct 28, 9:56 pm, John H. wrote:
On Sun, 28 Oct 2007 10:50:55 -0700, wrote:
On Oct 28, 1:18 pm, John H. wrote:
On Sat, 20 Oct 2007 07:49:40 -0700, wrote:
On Oct 19, 9:25 pm, Jack Redington
wrote:
wrote:
On Oct 18, 7:35 pm, Jack Redington
wrote:
wrote:
On Oct 17, 4:58 pm, Tim wrote:
wrote:
On Oct 16, 2:29 pm, Tim wrote:
wrote:
From Lake Lanier Army Corp of Engineers website:
Constructed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in the
1950's, Lake
Lanier is a multi-purpose lake that provides for flood
protection,
power production, water supply, navigation, recreation
and
fish and
wildlife management.
Same way with Lake Carlyle . that is with exception of
power
production.
It is fed by the Kaskaskia river, and it's level has
dropped
considerably. it is a huge man made lake and is about 4 mi
wide and 10
mi long. But in many places the shore line is rather
shallow. in some
cases un aprochable with a typical runabout up to 150 ft
from
shore.
But when the lake is full, these spots are usually
navagational within
50-75 ft.
Still plenty deep in the middle, but unhandy for reaching
beach lines.
Lake Lanier is fed by two rivers, each runoff from the
mountains, so
there is a LOT of water being pushed down, normally.
Because
of
downstream concerns plus Atlanta's thirst, they are still,
even with
drought conditions releasing anywhere from 600 to 900
million
gallons
per day. Lanier is a really cool lake, because of the
mountainous
conditions, there are many coves and what used to be creek
inlets to
explore. How far is your lake down? Lanier is down 12 feet
(so
far).
I don't really know how much it has dropped and really
don't
know how
to find the actual stats, but on the south end the lake is
dammed, and
there's very little coming over the spill way.
kaskaskia isn't a large river, but now it's about like a
creek.
I saw a bit ont he Weather Channel about Lake Hartwell. It's
in
bad
shape too.
fortunately for our area, it's been raining fairly steady
for
the last
three hrs and I did look and saw its steady on Carlyle too.
But it
won't effect the lake much at all, unless the rains start
saturating
up north to flow down.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Tim, if it's an Army Corp lake, you can get current stats,
predictions, etc from the Corp's website. Yes, Hartwell is in
bad
shape too. Oconee is the only one in these parts not
suffering.
I think Hartwell is down about 10-11 ft and things do not look
good.
Last weekend I had 15 ft under my dock in Gumlog creek. But
our
place is
blessed with deep water. My biggest concern is getting out of
Gumlog
Creek to the main channel. There is one point that is rather
skinny, but
I check it last weekend and there is a skinny, but deep path
threw it.
At this time I am considering if I should get a trailer for
the
runabout
and pull it. If this goes into next year I don't want to be
stuck
with
the boat on the lift and no way to get it out. ie ramp access
etc.
Capt Jack R.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
I've fished up in Gumlog creek. Had a friend who had a place
close to
there. Lake Lanier is now down 14 feet, they are saying
there's
enough
water for 80 days. Army Corp of Engineers, because of their
attitude
that no one can make a decision unless it's in some obscure
code
or
law, won't stop; discharging even now!
Well if you are ever in the area again let me know.
I'll do that, thanks!
And I agree, the corp is going to keep doing this even though it
really
does not make any sense to me. Where I live they pull water from
Lanier.
I guess when the place is dry they will stop :-(
Capt Jack R..- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
As of last night, the state has filed an injunction to try and get
this madness stopped. I've dealt with the Corp, and have vowed to
never, ever take a project that they are involved in. They get to
use
zero engineering judgement, and can only do what is spelled out in
a
manual, or code book.
Bull****.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
John, your trash mouth simply shows your blanket *Army can do know
wrong* rhetoric. I've dealt with the corp. Many times. I know how
they
operate, as opposed to how civilian engineers operate. And my
statement is true. They get to use no judgement. Let's say that I
design a simple span beam. Now, I've done the math, I know the loads,
I've added a factor of safety, etc. etc. Now, the Corp wants to see
any and all calculations. If I take one step in those calculations
that is known good engineering, but is not completely spelled out in
a
code book, or one of the corps manuals, they will not approve it.
I've
even had a corp engineer tell me that he understands why I did what I
did, understands that it works, understands that it is good
engineering, but can't approve it because it's not their SOP.
You're probably correct. I was in the Corps (note the 's') for only 24
years, so I'm sure your many dealings with the Corps (note the 's')
makes
you an expert on the operations of the Corps (note the 's').- Hide
quoted
text -
- Show quoted text -
Very good, you know how to spell Corps, so you ARE an expert! Now,
let's see here, what was your capacity with the Army Corps of
Engineers? Are you a civil engineer? Structural?
And what school did you graduate from with a Structural Engineering
degree?- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
I have a civil degree, structural emphasis, but I know you don't
understand much about degrees like that. And, I looked, the schools I
attended don't offer B.S. or M.S. degrees in handyman or deckbuilder,
sorry.
I have a degree in Engineering. But you are the one who claimed a
structural engineering degree from an institute of higher education that did
not offer a degree in that discipline. Just because I like to do home
repair and am good at it does not mean I do not have an engineering degree.
Just happens to be an EE. I retired at 59 and got bored. So I work when I
want to. You, on the other hand have to work as a scutwork draftsman.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Here's a way to FINALLY prove that you have some knowledge. Please
provide the proof you have that I:
1. Don't have an engineering degree
2. Work as a "draftsman".
3. that you DO have an EE.
4. where you got this information.
|