I'm lucky that my house sits up on a bit of a hill, so I don't have to worry about flooding, and all these puddles will be gone a couple hours after the rain lets up.
What I call my (in my snootiest voice) courtyard:
Sorry for the blurriness. I was holding the umbrella in my left hand and aiming and shooting one handed, and it was hard to hold the camera still.
My driveway:
I had to fill the Aldabran tortoises' mud hole with scrap wood, chairs and big feeding bowls in order to keep them out of it. They sit there and don't go into the shed to warm up, and it's awfully hard to get a 200 + COLD tortoise to move.
The pond is all the way up to the top of it's boundary:
And take a look at the bottom of my driveway. There's a culvert under the side street to carry the water over into that field across the street, but that guy has disced so much in a circle that he has pushed dirt in front of the exit end of the culvert:
So, Come On all you drought ridden Californians. Post your drought pictures here. Let's all commiserate!
What I call my (in my snootiest voice) courtyard:
Sorry for the blurriness. I was holding the umbrella in my left hand and aiming and shooting one handed, and it was hard to hold the camera still.
My driveway:
I had to fill the Aldabran tortoises' mud hole with scrap wood, chairs and big feeding bowls in order to keep them out of it. They sit there and don't go into the shed to warm up, and it's awfully hard to get a 200 + COLD tortoise to move.
The pond is all the way up to the top of it's boundary:
And take a look at the bottom of my driveway. There's a culvert under the side street to carry the water over into that field across the street, but that guy has disced so much in a circle that he has pushed dirt in front of the exit end of the culvert:
So, Come On all you drought ridden Californians. Post your drought pictures here. Let's all commiserate!