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16 answers

People are going to say no, no, no, don't take away our freedom for a lush and beautiful lawn. But I think you'll be hearing different opinions when there isn't enough water to drink. Maybe it shouldn't be illegal, but there should definitely be restrictions. In the grand scheme of things, a green lawn is pretty unimportant.

2007-06-01 07:17:20 · answer #1 · answered by rhythm.nbass 3 · 0 0

No. It shouldn't be illegal. People just need to learn how to water their lawns properly. I give my lawn about 1 inch of water per week until the temperature reaches the triple digits, then it gets 2 inches. This is over a period of one to two days a week - not all at once so there is less runoff. I raised the blades on my mower to the highest setting so that the grass will shade its own roots and retain the moisture longer. This also reduces the need for fertilizer and herbicides. A green lawn helps keep your home cooler, too, thus cutting down on the need for the A/C to be running. Using "greywater" (from your washer, dishes, showers...) is a great way to recycle it to gardens and outdoor plants (not great for houseplants). Hope this helps!

2007-06-01 12:06:11 · answer #2 · answered by ♪♪BandMom♪♪ 5 · 1 0

I don't believe it should be illegal but I do believe it should be cost prohibitive to have such unrealistic lawns in the middle of the freaking desert in the first place. If they want a lush desert oasis then they should have to either use greywater or recycled rainwater to water the greedy little roots or pay a premium for the water they use above a certain metered amount from the community resource.

2007-06-01 14:36:48 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you want people to stop wasting water on their lawns that shouldn't even exist, jack up the price of water. This way, people who really really really want a green lawn will pay for the resource, and all other people will figure it out and grow plants that are indigenous to the land there.

This way, you don't have to make it illegal and spend money on enforcement, and people spend their efforts conserving instead of trying to avoid detection.

2007-06-01 07:02:11 · answer #4 · answered by Tats 3 · 0 0

We can regulate water on lawns right after we regulate Sun.... When we move to solar power, how can we waste a natural resource on like the SUN and Water to create a GREEN planet.... Where do some of these questions come from?

2007-06-01 08:53:31 · answer #5 · answered by Joey_Pit 3 · 0 0

I agree that subsidizing water leads to its waste. We do not pay the actual cost of water. Big government Shields us from market prices. Let us pay what it really costs and lower our taxes and I guarantee that there will be more efficient irrigation systems and less wasting. We do live on a blue planet because it has so much water. We are not in danger of running out though wasteful usage should be minimized and costs should be real.

2007-06-01 07:17:32 · answer #6 · answered by JimZ 7 · 0 0

I somewhat have discovered maximum British human beings to be extremely well mannered and intensely exciting. i'm an American, the son of a Scotsman, and if there grew to become into ever a human beings to dislike the Brits, it might the two be a Scot or an Irishman. becoming up, I spent a minimum of sooner or later each week enjoying soccer with foreigners, because it grew to become into no longer a nicely undemanding sport decrease back then. the alterations in our cultures clarify lots of ways we perceive them as such, yet once you get to comprehend the folk, you will discover they are somewhat a exciting loving bunch and make as lots exciting of themselves because of the fact the do others. that's fairly much a British comical cultural factor. They make exciting of each others' famous communities, lots as we do, yet their style of humor comes in the process somewhat "off" with the help of our standards. So, merely attempt to realize our cultural alterations are what makes us see them because of the fact the "severe and powerful, self-righteous assholes", (that and the certainty that we beat them for our independence and an incredible style of contain nonetheless bitter approximately that.)

2016-12-30 12:17:01 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

That would be kind of hard to get passed.

However, I think people should learn to recycle rain, bath, & dish water. That's what we do & we have cut our water bill in 1/2. We did it to reuse what we have & save money on bills. It's just the smart thing to do...

2007-06-01 06:38:59 · answer #8 · answered by lilzoo411@yahoo.com 3 · 1 0

i dont think we should make it illegal but i do think encouraging government to use recycled water to arrigate lawns would be a better idea. we recycle waste water anyways mind as well just out them to good use instead of send them straight to the ocean.

2007-06-01 11:28:40 · answer #9 · answered by SouthParkRocks 5 · 0 0

Only if the majority of voters think it should be, because we live in a democracy. I would rather live in a democracy that runs low on water than in a Nazi state with green lawns.

2007-06-01 06:33:31 · answer #10 · answered by campbelp2002 7 · 2 1

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