Friday, May 31, 2024
May 31st
A pretty Cactus at Marylyn Masons
Lots of pictures being taken of the motel getting bulldozed.
It's been said Murphys gas station is going in
Wednesday, May 29, 2024
May 29th
Of course you all know how terribly hot it is here in the Valley. I have been here since 1987 and never saw such hot temps. day after day the same
A few showers the last couple days did not bring much relief. I did not attend the Memorial Day Potluck but there are quite a few pictures on Facebook. Ken did a great job on the chicken and the Mariachi band that entertained was really neat. Here is what I read today on my computer about our water supply down here
As the spring sunshine continues to scorch, the combined storage at the two international reservoirs that supply the bulk of the Rio Grande Valley’s freshwater has done something it hasn’t done in decades — fallen below 20%.
“Everything that we had forecast is happening. We’re dwindling in our supply. There’s no indication that Mexico will do anything for us,” Sonny Hinojosa, general manager for Hidalgo County Irrigation District No. 2, said Tuesday.
“It’s pretty bleak,” he said.
Together, the United States’ share of water stored at the Falcon and Amistad international reservoirs stood at just 19.7% total conservation capacity as of May 18, according to data published by the International Boundary and Water Commission, or IBWC.
The IBWC publishes the report every Saturday using data that are about a week old.
That’s how much time it takes for the commission — which oversees a binational 1944 water sharing treaty between the U.S. and Mexico — to figure out how much of that water belongs to the Valley.
That May 18 figure is a worrying number for Hinojosa. It represents the second-lowest volume of American water in nearly 30 years.
The last time the levels fell below 20% was in August 1998, according to Jim Darling, former McAllen mayor and president of the Region M Water Planning Group.
It’s been a tough year for Valley water.
The binational treaty obligates Mexico to deliver some 1.75 million acre-feet of water to the U.S. in five-year cycles.
But well into the fourth year of the current cycle, Mexico has delivered only about 384,000 acre feet, or about one year’s worth, of water. That has, in turn, caused the two reservoirs to hover at dangerously low levels for months.
Each week the reservoirs continue to plummet at a rate of about four-tenths of a percent per week, Hinojosa said.
Tuesday, May 14, 2024
Note
Just a note to show you all our "privacy" fence
The word is it was mandatory to put up. We had 11 for a game of "tic" last night
Mexican Train tonite, may be hard to find enough players. Ken and Sue got the
donuts last Friday. Not much else going on, some of the palms were trimmed last
week. The park looks nice
Saturday, May 4, 2024
Yesterday I furnished donuts and made coffee, we had about 14-16 , last week Jack & Donna Haney furnished them. New folks that bought Pat and Bills mobile were there. Kay and David.
I hope you all don't think we are getting rain and storms down here. We have not had any rain at all. North of here they really got some bad weather, tornados and rain, and N. of Houston terrible flooding. We are having lows in the 70's and highs over 90 every day and of course the wind has never stopped!!!
I had the dog out this morning and noticed how nice the Park looks. Even the 99"s are mowed so nice and everywhere looks great. but need rain so bad or our nice green yards are going to start getting brown
We have been playing tic Mon. Wed. and Fri. nights we had 2 tables last night
But soon Sharon and Paul will be leaving and several others for the Summer. But I am sure we will be able to get a table up most nights
I don't think we will do a photo album next Fall. We just did one for 22-23
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