

Chorus: Rain, rain, don't you stop, Keep falling till my heart's on top. The rain is falling, cleansing my soul, Making me whole, making me whole. Bridge: The thunder crashes, lightning strikes, But I'm safe and warm inside. Wash away all ache and pain, Bring me peace in this endless rain. A lonely soul walks alone, In the rain, he's found a home. Verse 2: The city streets are slick with dew, The neon lights reflecting through. The rhythm of the rain is all I hear, As it washes away my tears. You can see the extent of the cities, the remaining forests, the huge extent of agriculture, and how water fits into all of it.” A new website called River Runner, shown here on June 8, 2021, follows the path of every rain drop that hits the United States, including the route from Mount Hamilton east of San Jose to San Francisco Bay.Verse 1 || Endless Rain (lyrics below) Verse 1: Raindrops falling on my window pane, Another lonely night, and I'm feeling the pain.

“When you flush your toilet, where does it go? When rain runs off your roof, where does it go? When your house gets flooded where does it go?” Lund said. “Most of us don’t know where our water came from and where our water goes.” “I often hear people in the water profession say things would be a lot easier if people knew where their water came from,” Lund said. Jay Lund, director of the UC Davis Center for Watershed Sciences, said the maps can help the public gain a better understanding of how watersheds and water systems work. As I started looking at it, I realized I could really expand the project.” “I was thinking about the Continental Divide and how water falling on the east side of it travels hundreds or thousands of miles, and what that looks like. He said he got the idea for the project while thinking about the famous spot in the Rocky Mountains that defines which direction water flows. Tri-Valley bids farewell to water restrictions as end of drought emergency declared The map - located at - zooms across detailed 3-D topography showing natural features, buildings, highways and other landmarks. The small creek near you eventually turns into the Mississippi River.” The way you take water out, or what you dump into it, affects other people. “People seem to be pretty surprised by how far water travels,” said Learner, who lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. “It has implications for where our pollution goes, and how everyone lives downstream of somewhere else,” said Sam Learner, a 27-year-old web developer who built the map in nine days using massive databases from the U.S. It allows anyone to click on any place where a raindrop would fall in the United States, and then track its path through watersheds, into creeks, rivers, lakes and ultimately the ocean. Now, as California and other Western states find themselves heading into a severe and worsening drought, a new interactive map is providing a breathtaking journey that shows where America’s water comes from and ends up. Most people don’t think about it much until it’s gone.
