jfleck at inkstain

A few thoughts from John Fleck, a writer of journalism and other things, living in New Mexico

Water in the desert: not exactly nature, but close

Lissa and I were walking in the Rio Grande bosque, the riparian cottonwood forest, last night when the sun dropped below the clouds just before sunset and lit the trees across the pond with the most exquisite light. All we had was a cell phone camera, so I went back this evening at the same [...]

Water in the Desert: Tempe Town Lake

Great essay in High Country News by Jackie Wheeler about the strange and wonderful (and currently empty) Tempe Town Lake and our quirky relationship with water here in the affluent desert southwest: In so many ways, Town Lake was frivolous, artificial, and naïve. It didn’t produce hydroelectric power. It wasn’t built by beavers or glaciers. [...]

Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: It’s the Water Bottles

A bloggy bit from an ongoing project with Journal photographer Roberto Rosales on the trash in Albuquerque’s flood control system, and the people who try to catch it before it reaches the Rio Grande: “The vast majority of the floatables were plastic water bottles,” Daggett told me. “You buy your plastic water bottle and it [...]

Drinking Fountains at the Ballpark

When Albuquerque’s new AAA baseball park opened in 2003, the drinking fountain by the restrooms on the third base side was somehow connected to a hot water line. I’m sure it was an accident, right? We’re dealing with the flaws of arguing from anecdote here, but Peter Gleick’s piece this week offers a number of [...]

Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: Measuring the Weather

Eleven years ago next week, I stuck up a rain gauge in the backyard and starting dutifully writing down daily data on NOAA WS FORM B-91, “Record of River and Climatological Observations.” Today, my employer kindly indulged my little hobby, affording me space on the front page of the newspaper for a riff on the [...]

Rutledge on Climate Change and Peak Stuff

Caltech prof David Rutledge’s “peak coal” argument is getting a lot of traction of late, and came up in a discussion on twitter this morning. The question was posed: if Rutledge is right, does this mean greenhouse gas regulation is not needed? Rutledge, in a talk two years ago here in Albuquerque, said the answer [...]

Moving Water, Moving Silt

One of the central struggles in moving water out of the Colorado River a century ago was the silt. Moving water moves a lot of it, and when you slow the water down, the silt drops out. It was siltation that kept clogging Charles Rockwood’s Imperial Valley diversions, where he was taking water from the [...]

Moving Water, Pakistan Edition

Scrawled on the whiteboard in my home office is the phrase “moving water”. The phrase is Lissa’s. It seemed to capture the set of problems I’m trying to write about. As the hydrologists among my readership can attest, water is an enormously powerful force that tends to want to do what it wants to do, [...]

Save it for next year?

Water law in the western U.S. doesn’t generally allow a user to save water from one year to the next. You use it, or you lose it. That, for example, is the situation faced by the Imperial Irrigation District this year, which faces the prospect of (horrors!) having Los Angeles get the extra water if [...]

Elephant Butte

This week’s bit of western water history comes from the archives of the Library of Congress. Elephant Butte Dam (originally Engle Dam) is on the Rio Grande upstream from El Paso. Completed in 1915, it is currently the subject of a fascinating New Mexico water rights adjudication battle, nicely detailed by Sig Silber.

keep looking »