› Forums › Geocaching in Wisconsin › General › Another what would you do question
- This topic has 21 replies, 14 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 8 months ago by
The Pirate Monkies.
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05/10/2011 at 4:21 am #1948064
@zuma wrote:
My friend thought the most likely cause of the manure that I saw was that sometimes pipes break and spray manure all over until they can shut it down.
thanks for all the feedback.
z
Yep. Shht happens………. 😉
05/10/2011 at 11:01 am #1948065Once again, another post where a question is being asked and when an opinion is given that differs from the majority the nastiness and sarcasm rears its ugly head. Wonder if this type of stuff has any bearing when potential new members are looking to join…
Sorry for the steal, off to post something under the topic “What will kill the game” now…
05/10/2011 at 4:46 pm #1948066I would hope new members would see how strongly we feel about protecting our Natural Resources instead of “passing the buck” on an enviromental issue.
05/10/2011 at 7:08 pm #1948067@JimandLinda wrote:
I would hope new members would see how strongly we feel about protecting our Natural Resources instead of “passing the buck” on an enviromental issue.
Yeah, that is my take on it too. I do think most cachers, being so exposed to the wonders of the outdoors, tend to be environmentalists at heart, and want to preserve what we have that makes our land special.
z
05/10/2011 at 7:11 pm #1948068@zuma wrote:
I do think most cachers, being so exposed to the wonders of the outdoors, tend to be environmentalists at heart, and want to preserve what we have that makes our land special.
That explains all the guardrail P&G caches. The placers are just preserving the great outdoors by avoiding it. 😉
05/10/2011 at 7:12 pm #1948069@CodeJunkie wrote:
@zuma wrote:
I do think most cachers, being so exposed to the wonders of the outdoors, tend to be environmentalists at heart, and want to preserve what we have that makes our land special.
That explains all the guardrail P&G caches. The placers are just preserving the great outdoors by avoiding it. 😉
LOL.
05/10/2011 at 9:09 pm #1948070Having been in the wastewater treatment business for 12 years, I am pretty sure that this commercial farm has a DNR discharge permit… The lagoon is a type of treatment process that isn’t uncommon for agricultural waste… It seems however that it is over loading for some reason, either because of too much waste or too much rainfall… If this farm does have a DNR issued discharge permit, the treated wastewater is required to be sampled and tested to ensure that the permit limits are not exceeded… I agree with most of the posts here that the DNR should be notified ASAP as it could take considerable time for them to notice this on their own…
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