Page 11 - Issue 2 Kyalami Connect
P. 11

Left: During heavy rains a spruit becomes a
            torrent carrying valuable topsoil with it


            north of Johannesburg and south of Pretoria
            received between 100mm and 130mm
            of rain in 24 hours. Being of a certain
            age, I automatically translate 100mm
            as ‘four inches’ a figure that sticks in
            my mind, because I recall ‘four inches’
            falling where I was living in Bryanston in
            1970 and being told it was a record.

            That much rain (100mm) falling on a
            square kilometre, which is about the
            size of the estate in which I nowadays
            live, would weigh 100 000 tons.

            Despite appearances South Africa is, and
            always will be, short of water. A neighbour
            has just sunk a borehole in her driveway
            which yields 1 000 litres of groundwater a
            day - plenty, as a supplement, for most
            people’s purposes. Ground water will
            save Gauteng one day

            For a book I wrote for the World
            Summit in 2002 (Coming Back to
            Earth), I ascertained that the reserves
            of groundwater in the PWV region
            (Pretoria, Witwatersrand, Vereeniging)
            were estimated at 10 000 million cubic
            metres. Compare that with the Gariep
            Dam’s 6 000 million. Groundwater can
            be stored for as long as we like – and,
            while it is underground, it’s evaporation-
            free.

                                                Above and below: A flooded wetland - note the sacred ibises
                                                gorging on creatures rising from the ground







































                                                                The impact of floods on our

                                                                vulnerable ecosystem



                                                                              Kyalami Estates • CONNECT • Issue 2 • 2020 9
   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16