After the Deluge – the Drought?
Chiang Mai is at “medium risk” of a drought, the Director General of the national Water Resource Department stated on the 2nd day of the annual water-throwing holiday.
As tens of thousands of litres of water washed down the drains of the province, Kasemsan Chinnavaso said that Chiang Mai, like Lamphun, wasamong 33 provinces at medium risk, while our northerly neighbour Chiang Rai was at “high risk.”
The average rainfall for the past week had been only 8.8 millimetres nationally, he said, and the highest temperature of 43 deg had been registered in both Tak and Kanchanaburi. Forty-one degrees has been seen on some Chiang Mai thermometers.
Our main reservoirs of Mae Kuang and Mae Ngat are well above the levels seen immediately before the last major drought of 2005, when water was cut off to different parts of the city at different times of the day and night. That drought cost the government 7.5 billion baht, said Kasemsan, as it hit 71 of the nation’s 76 provinces.
Today is officially the final day of the “water war”, which originated as a gentle, ceremonial washing of hands of older people to show respect and to encourage the rains to come early.
Editor’s note: There have been renewed calls for the government to restrict water wastage to one or two days at most when drought threatens. This was most effective in Lamphun in 2005 when the then Mayor, Praphat Poocharoen, successfully appealed on behalf of farmers to restrict water throwing to two days.
Article contributed by David Hardcastle, Copyright David Hardcastle 2010
The first water pistols of the annual Songran ‘water war’ were seen at Thapae Gate on Saturday April 10th, and by Monday the 12th the fight was well under way, only one day ahead of the official start of the soggy Thai New Year holiday festival!
Apparently linked to the charges against Pettit, a Buddhist monk and a layman accomplice have been arrested by the same Chiang Mai police team, accused of procuring under-age boys for rent to foreign paedophiles.