Truro News

A fabulous summer – or was it?

- Chief Meteorolog­ist Cindy Day

There was no lack of sunshine or heat this summer, but where was the rain?

Last weekend I was at a lovely function in Truro – the NS Country Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony – and had the pleasure of chatting with many people from one end of the region to the other. With very few exceptions, the conversati­ons didn’t get very far before the topic came up of how dry it’s been.

An older gentleman mentioned the groundwate­r levels were getting low, following a few very dry summers. He was right, of course, but I wondered how many people understand the difference between groundwate­r and surface water.

The water found on the surface of the earth, like water in a river or lake, is known as surface water. The water trapped under the earth’s surface is the groundwate­r. Groundwate­r is used in households for drinking, cooking and other activities. The surface water may be used for things like generating electricit­y.

Groundwate­r circulates as part of the water cycle. Precipi- tation becomes surface water, soil moisture, and groundwate­r. Groundwate­r circulates back to the surface, and from the surface all water returns to the atmosphere through evaporatio­n and transpirat­ion. This will sound familiar if you were paying attention in Grade 5.

According to a study conducted by Statistics Canada, Environmen­t Accounts and Statistics Division, on average 30 per cent of our country’s population is reliant on groundwate­r for municipal, domestic, and rural use only. Locally, over 60 per cent of the population of New Brunswick relies on groundwate­r; in Nova Scotia, it’s 46 per cent while only 34 per cent of the people of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador do.

I was surprised to learn that 100 per cent of Prince Edward Island’s population relies on groundwate­r to meet its domestic needs.

Beach weather is nice, drinking water is nicer. Let it rain.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada