The Verdict -- Robert Gardner
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Once upon a time, we used to call Orange County semiarid. Now strike
the “semi.” We are about as arid as the Sahara. Were it not for the water
we import, we would have a few million very, very thirsty people. We
usually don’t get much rain, and when it does rain everything always
seems to flood. A good storm finds me in the backyard, readying my ark.
All this is a roundabout way of getting to why Orange County in those
early days was only semiarid. Believe it or not, there existed in the
northern part of the county and in Los Angeles County what we called
artesian wells. These were spontaneous bubbling bodies of water that
gushed from the ground without any help from man. They proliferated in an
area surrounding the present town of Artesia. Oh, the water didn’t shoot
up in the air like Old Faithful in Yellowstone Park. It just bubbled out.
Nevertheless, they existed.
I used to come from the city to Balboa on the Pacific Electric and
looked forward, in my boredom, to the artesian wells. Having grown up in
an arid area of Wyoming, I was fascinated with and by water. Let others
worship snow-crowned mountains or flowered meadows. For me, it’s the
ocean, and if there’s no ocean around then an artesian well will do. The
wells are, of course, long gone together with the saber-toothed tiger,
the giant sloth and quicksand.
As I write this, it is raining, so I have to stop now and go out and
finish my ark. When it’s done, I’m willing to bring aboard the obligatory
animals, two by two, but I draw the line at snakes. Noah had his place,
and he did a great job, except why he had to save snakes I have never
understood. Rats, toads, scorpions, OK, but snakes -- ugh.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
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