Water use is regulated by water districts, which are public entities that manage water rights. How they choose to regulate is subject to federal and state laws. Private water rights are also available but those are fewer than in recent times.
Are you asking if it is metered? Secondary water is mostly not currently metered in Utah, though this could vary district by district. Culinary water is metered.
If you are interested, I'd urge you to listen to and seek additional resources from this Speak Your Piece podcast episode.
Pipeline trail up milcreek should be good. Raining in the valley tonight, so might bet a tiny bit of snow.
Perfectly flat, can go full 13 miles, if you have the legs for it.
​
https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/utah/mill-creek-pipeline-trail
Bonanza mine in Park City. It's a 1 mile hike and there's a map available on all trails. There's a mine shaft that I never really explored, but the star of the show is a massive building that sits on the side of a hill at 6 or 7 stories tall! Bonus: last I checked there isn't a single sign about trespassing.
Edit: link to Alltrails with GPS map and pictures of site.
You can also get a Bluetooth FM transmitter. I have this one and its been very good for a couple years now.
I've seen ads for 103.1 for The Wave, if you're interested in New Wave.
I would head north to Pine Valley. There are a lot of dirt roads once you turn right at Central that lead to a lot of isolated spots, my go to was Grass Valley.
Here's a lesser known trail that's close to town - https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/utah/hellhole-trail
Depending on your budget & how many guys you're splitting with, I would suggest trying Airbnb. My boyfriend's family is coming from all over the world around the same time and they have been able to find lodging in SLC & PC for a fairly decent price. And you get a bigger bang for your buck that way.
Even a pair of good binoculars is useful here. If you don't own a telescope, the Salt Lake Astronomical Society has a telescope loaner program for members, which includes several 8" dobsonian telescopes. Membership is $20 a year, and for just the advantage being able to borrow one of those bad boys is well worth it. They have smaller scopes too, if you don't have the means to transport an 8".
If you're not an astronomy scholar, download the free software Stellarium which will allow you to input your location and help you find anything in the night sky with ease. It even has a red-light mode so you don't ruin your night eyes!
You can actually do it yourself. Buy some Petri dishes with agar, Like this, then cough into half with a mask then without a mask.
I live near the U of U. Product name: SturdX Full HD Dual Ultra High Definition Dash Camera Wide Angle Night Vision G-Sensor Front and Rear . That should link to the Amazon page for it. Just so you know, when I bought it, it was $60. Like I said, I am open to bringing the price down.
Not sure if you're specifically looking for a hotel, but the KOA in Cannonville is nice, pretty quiet, and has a good selection of cabins available for reasonable prices. It's also close to Kodachrome State Park: http://koa.com/campgrounds/cannonville/
If the weather stays clear, and you're interested in a little non-technical slot canyon exploring, Willis Creek Canyon in Cannonville is very cool. If Skutumpah road gets wet, though, it's basically impassable: http://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g56945-d6942219-Reviews-Willis_Creek_Slot_Canyon-Cannonville_Utah.html
Yes. Here is the trip advisor link so you can see reviews and traveler photos of the rooms etc. have fun! http://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g61001-d1130977-Reviews-Cable_Mountain_Lodge-Springdale_Utah.html
Took the family up to Primrose Overlook yesterday evening. Timp still has tons of snow, lots of runoff and probably few more weeks till it can be climbed.
​
https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/utah/primrose-overlook-via-horse-flat-trail
Depends on the time of year. I love the outdoors so my recommendations gonna be a little biast but city creek + memory grove especially in the fall.
https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/utah/city-creek-park-to-memory-grove-trail
It was originally so the sun would be rising when people would wake up so they can maximize their use of sunlight over artificial to save fuel for the war.
Ha ha, any time. I've lived in Utah for 23 years now, so I'm used to all the quirks of the weather.
I'd plan on a 5-15 degree drop in temp in the valley during the nights in central and northern Utah, 10-20 degree drop in the mountains in central and northern Utah, and a 10-20 degree drop in southern Utah. Since southern Utah is a desert, expect the nights to be chilly and windy.
Here's a link that gives you the avg temp in St. George, UT. You can see the highs and lows in the second graphic: https://weatherspark.com/y/2380/Average-Weather-in-Saint-George-Utah-United-States-Year-Round
Believe it or not, Century Link had more to do with stopping that from happening than Comcast did. I am not saying Comcast was on it's best behavior though.
The old mill in cottonwood heights.
The weird cement structure north of Brigham City: https://maps.google.com/maps?q=brigham+city,+ut&ll=41.56204,-112.069237&spn=0.00338,0.005724&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&hnear=Brigham+City,+Box+Elder,+Utah&gl=us&t=h&z=18
The kilns up above Federal Heights.
And... BYU.
You can always order your specialty items from Amazon.
For St. George, go south out the Arizona strip. There's two ways to get there.
From downtown St. George get to I-15 and go south to exit 2. Take exit 2 and go east bound on Southern Parkway to the River rd exit. Take the exit and turn right onto a dirt rd. You immediately cross the state line into Arizona. Take the dirt rd as far out as you feel safe and then gaze away.
Hit River rd in the center of St. George and take it south until you pass over a cattlegrate and hit a dirt rd, same as above.
Edit: You could also go here: https://goo.gl/maps/vkxwPTL8yLu
edit 2: Great app for stargazing: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.PYOPYO.StarTracker
Most of the people I've met at Eccles have been working, so I don't believe most people quit. Some of them are given time by their employer to do this, or simply work during the day and do school at night.
You're very welcome to try the online program, it's just so expensive and I don't think it'll be much better than other other schools. Part of what you're paying for at Eccles is name recognition, faculty connection, and networking, none of which you seem to need. If you're wanting to go online, and aren't worried about prestige I would look just look at alternative, cheaper schools Utah State, for instance, or things like coursera.
Just my two cents.
Check out Hildale! it's very quiet at night, and the stars are incredible. We're at the foot of Zion National Park. One of these is my friend's place, and it's incredible, but I am no advertiser. Safe travels, friend!
Much of the formerly available rental real estate in Moab has turned into vacation rentals.
https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/category/propertyrentals
Kids? No. That’s why I said a few. That book is probably the most explicit out of the list and It’s easy to point at and say “can you believe this???” And there are others that are probably inappropriate for some ages as well, but it’s representative of all the books on the list. Hell it includes a conservative book about abstinence:
https://www.amazon.com/SEX-Youre-Scared-Truth-Dont/dp/1575373572
In addition, this is just the first 52, this is the foot in the door. If you’ve been following UPU you know they are anxious to ban any book about LBTQ topics and experiences of POC.
I just bought an electric tire air pump for this exact reason. It was like $30 dollars on amazon and is way more convenient than getting off of work early just to refill a tire at a tire shop. Pretty portable too.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07YC12FW1?ref=ppx\_yo2ov\_dt\_b\_product\_details&th=1
Fine. In Sacred Loneliness: The Plural Wives of Joseph Smith written by LDS historian Todd Compton.
Also, you know, family history. Hence, myself as a source.
Veet Sensitive Hair Remover Gel Cream Pink, 13.5 Fl Oz https://www.amazon.com/dp/B001KYPZ4G/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apip_4qjuQiwirMNsa
Almost as smooth as wax and no burn. After we tackle racism, bigotry and violence we need to take on not shaming Manscapers. :)
One of the people who took over the oregon wildlife refuge in 2016 was a rancher and wrote dome dystopian novels about ranchers at war with the federal government, he was killed by the Federal police up there,
https://www.amazon.com/Only-Blood-Suffering-Regaining-Freedom-ebook/dp/B079S6B434
Looks like there are some recent ascents on AllTrails!
https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/utah/mt-timpanogos-timpooneke-trail
I'm not a fisherman but I have friends that enjoy fishing in the Uintas and doing a trail like Island Lake might be nice. I've also seen fish jumping out of the lake up there. It may be a bit too long of a hike if you're dad doesn't do very much backpacking but there's some closer lakes that may have good fishing along the way.
Nahh, I saw a couple of people with snow shoes, but you really don’t need it. So many people hike that trail that it’s been packed down quite well. I’d suggest Micro Spikes or something similar and some good hiking shoes.
Definitely recommend going! If you go on a weekday it will be a lot less busy. That area is awesome!
Nearby is the natural bridge hike which is more of a nature walk. You cross through the calf creek four times (one way). For both hikes I recommend shoes that can get wet like Tevas or something.
Bring plenty of water and a small first aid kit as it gets toasty and there are not a lot of amenities very close by. And be careful with cacti. There are prickly pear cacti all along the trail. Once I came across a family who’s little girl fell on a cactus, it was very sad. Luckily I had tweezers in my first aid kit (highly recommend).
The kiva coffe house down the road is a neat little place to check out and has a nice view. There are camping grounds nearby or you can stay nearby in the town of Boulder
https://utah.com/hiking/calf-creek-falls-lower
https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/utah/escalante-natural-bridge
Glad to hear, thanks for replying! :D
BTW I recommend the lava tubes trail:
https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/utah/lava-tube-trail?u=m
Check out the rain accumulation forecast! Widespread rain incoming!
Sorry, I'm just excited for the change in weather. This storm actually looks like it's going to produce some much needed moisture and help clear the air. I also really love this weather app. My pilot buddy recommended it to me. So many layers to explore!
Yessir, there are two. Here is the trail I followed to get to this lake. Beautiful spot, not too demanding.
Check out this trail on AllTrails. https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/utah/silver-lake-trail?p=23637769
It’s actually really amazing. It keeps getting better and better the further you get in. True slot canyon stuff.
And this picture isn’t even representative of the best parts.
https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/utah/little-wild-horse-bell-canyon-trail
Lower calf creek is pretty and all, but I would recommend hitting up the hole in the rock road to peekaboo/spooky slot. Beginner slot canyon that doesn't require any gear.
According to Accuweather Salt Lake City was averaged 8.4 degrees higher than the average high for the first 15 days of Jule.
I think that's pretty significant.
I am right.
We're near 50% fully vaccinated. If it did not have preventative or mitigative effects on the disease, you'd see hospitalization numbers closer to 50/50 for vaccinated vs unvaccinated, across a statistically significant sample size, which we have. That's how stats work.
Spend $10 and learn. Schaum's Statistics
Or read the distilled version of the whole point of vaccination here: Relevant XKCD
So this is some major cognitive dissonance. The hyper concern about Chinese Democratic relationship, what?, leading to conspiracy that the Dems and Chinese purposely collaborated to create a worldwide pandemic to own the GOP?
Meanwhile, no concern when Trump cozied up with conservative anti American dictators from Russia, North Korea, etc?!?
And no concern about the the strong ties, for DECADES, between the American Right and the Nazi party from before WW2 and lasting well into the 80s?!?
These are facts that a reasonable person can't deny, once they bother to go get educated about them. For the historical account of the GOP/Nazi relationship that saw our CIA built from Nazi sympathizers, their executives being transformed into American businessman, etc i recommend The Devil's Chessboard The Devil's Chessboard: Allen Dulles, the CIA, and the Rise of America's Secret Government https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B00SFZB93Y/ref=cm_sw_r_apan_glt_JQTMVN709BYPKMY2W938
It's hypocritical to be ultra concerned about the one but not the other. For the record, i am absolutely concerned about any ties between any politician and any enemy of America including Democrats being in bed with the Chinese. But without evidence of the assertion, it's a giant leap to just assume that they conspired together to create COVID so they could control America. It's a nice hypothesis, but without evidence you provide no facts from which reasonable people can debate together: it's just a wild ass guess (which is what we call a conspiracy THEORY).
You shouldn't be spreading theories as truth, nor operating your life based on theories: that is dishonest, counterproductive, and harmful; both to yourself and to America.
You can't establish facts and learn truths by sitting in your armchair just accepting theories that align with your worldview.
Recommend one:
Here are the ones we use
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01LXVVH1I/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_62l8FbC3R7D7K?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
My one complaint is the bio degradable bags only do an okay job at masking stinky poops.
If you're interested in this topic (and it seems you are), I would recommend Iris Marion Young, Justice and the Politics of Difference (1990); and Elinor Ostrom, Governing the Commons (1990) (Ostrom is a Nobel Prize in Economics).
Although "pure" direct democracy has been largely discredited in modern-day constitutional unitary and federal systems, the concept of deliberative democracy has been offered as a workable alternative by some scholars. I don't see any reason why local politics (city/county/state) cannot incorporate these elements. These are the same principes behind self-rule in the US.
At the federal level, however, things get more complicated. There is a long jurisprudence confirming that "direct democracy" exercises at the federal level do not have the power of law and are merely advisories to Congress on the general feeling of the electorate. We would need to use Article V to change that.
I hope you find this useful.
DeLorme Utah Atlas & Gazetteer is a favorite for the 4WD crowd
You should also go to a local forest service office and look for a USDA Forest Service Atlas of the area you want. It is Forest service maps in book form.
I use the Benchmark Atlas for most of what you mention.
Can you be more specific?
This is a good (balanced and accurate) biography of Brigham Young.
Car Camping by Mark Sundeen is the funniest illustration of Moab I have ever read. Moab 20 years ago though.
Here’s a travel guide. I was just talking to one of the authors of this book yesterday! Lots of information in here :). Have fun!
I highly recommend this book. I found the author to be spot-on with his trail ratings and he includes trails that are easy enough for your Acura to handle on street tires. I think Eye Of The Whale trail inside Arches is doable for you, when I have a chance I will look it up in my copy and double check.