• World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought

    From Mike Dippel@954:895/1 to All on Wed Jun 17 22:41:48 2026
    In 1994 the United Nations established World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought
    on June 17.

    The date coincides with the June 17, 1994, signing of the Convention to Combat Desertification.

    Observances draw attention to the need for cooperation between nations in order to stop
    desertification and respond to drought.

    Full story: https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/World+Day+to+Combat+Desertification+and
    +Drought

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  • From Arelor@954:200/1 to Mike Dippel on Thu Jun 18 16:31:03 2026
    Re: World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought
    By: Mike Dippel to All on Wed Jun 17 2026 10:41 pm

    In 1994 the United Nations established World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought
    on June 17.

    Funny I read this today. Rain has been strong the last days and the horseyard is flooded. I was planning to clean a field at the other side of the yard but I cannot get the chart to it through the flooded zone.


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  • From Ogg@954:200/53 to Arelor on Fri Jun 19 08:20:00 2026
    Hello Arelor!

    ** On Thursday 18.06.26 - 17:31, Arelor wrote to Mike Dippel:

    Re: World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought
    By: Mike Dippel to All on Wed Jun 17 2026 10:41 pm

    In 1994 the United Nations established World Day to Combat Desertification >> and Drought
    on June 17.

    Funny I read this today. Rain has been strong the last days and the
    horseyard is flooded. I was planning to clean a field at the other side of the yard but I cannot get the chart to it through the flooded zone.

    Your property is in a flatlands, no drainage? Is the soil mostly clay?

    We've had quite a lot of rain pre-summer already. It rained for neary 5 days every day last week and this week, in Ontario, Canada.
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  • From Mike Powell@954:895/54 to ARELOR on Fri Jun 19 09:10:24 2026
    In 1994 the United Nations established World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought
    on June 17.

    Funny I read this today. Rain has been strong the last days and the horseyard is flooded. I was planning to clean a field at the other side of the yard but cannot get the chart to it through the flooded zone.

    Same here in Kentucky, USA. A few nice days but more heavy rain coming by
    the end of the weekend.

    When I read the above, I can understand combating drought.
    Desertification, OTOH, I thought was a natural process... nature's way of telling people don't build big settlements here. Places like Palm Springs being indications that we don't listen too good. ;)

    Mike P


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  • From Rob Mccart@954:895/54 to MIKE POWELL on Mon Jun 22 07:35:24 2026
    Funny I read this today. Rain has been strong the last days and the horseya
    >> is flooded. I was planning to clean a field at the other side of the yard b
    >> cannot get the chart to it through the flooded zone.

    Same here in Kentucky, USA. A few nice days but more heavy rain coming by
    >the end of the weekend.

    When I read the above, I can understand combating drought.
    >Desertification, OTOH, I thought was a natural process... nature's way of
    >telling people don't build big settlements here. Places like Palm Springs
    >being indications that we don't listen too good. ;)

    It's nice to think we have some control over that but that control
    is severely limited, plus we have short attention spans when looking
    at time over hundreds or thousands of years. Like, at one time most
    of the prairies in central Canada, some of the finest growing land
    in the world, was once mostly all desert.. and there's nothing to
    say it won't revert back to that some day, maybe sooner than we think.

    When the 'First' Nations came to Canada, they got here by walking
    across a land bridge from what is today Eastern Europe to Alaska.

    They don't want you to know that when they got here Canada had
    already been colonized for about 1000 years by Asians who came
    here by primitive ship before the land bridge had formed.
    So the 'First' Nations were actually not the first inhabitants
    here, they were the first Colonizers to steal the land from the
    people living here when they got here.. B)

    The leftovers of those first people are the Inuit, who are
    ironically Not included in the 634 Indigenous Governments
    and Bands recognized in Canada as 'First' Nations.

    Plus things like Florida at one time was totally underwater..
    (..and probably most of Manhattan.)

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