That's what 80% of Germany looks like. What about your country?
More or less the same here
>>221672176>all of germany is the norf
>>221672176Mato Grosso, near Pantanal.
>>221672176The central european experience feels very foreign to me, it's so flat it makes me anxious
>>221672176Looks like northern Poland but with smaller hills and of course I can tell the grass is greener in germimi
>>221672455In the woods in the left of the picture.Good fishing spot for wolf fish.
>>221672176
all cities in south korea are surrounded by mountainseven seoul and busan are the same
>>221672554>>221672503>>221672468>>221672686This is so beautiful to me
>>221672176It depends. 80% of the country is too huge landmass including various terrains.If we talk about the largest "terrain type", it's just swamps and bogs, literally. With parts of tundra and forests.
>>221672705I like this pic, it was made on the territory of my city.
>>221672176Eastern Siberia looks like this
>>221672705>>221672775Very nice, I wish I lived in Siberia, I have no idea what would I be able to farm there but still, would give it a try.
>>221672705>>221672895Looks like shit
>>221672699nearly 90 percent of south korea's territory is mountainous terrain, filled with mountains below 2,000 meters above sea levelfurthermore, all of our mountains are located near citiesfor those who enjoy hiking, this country can be a very interesting placefor many south koreans, hiking to the summits of mountains within the country is a hobby of their livesyvon chouinard, the founder of patagonia, lived in south korea for several years when he was young, and there he established the hiking trails he liked, naming them the "chouinard courses"
>>221672176More or less the same, but flatter in most parts.
>>221672907Most of the swamps are actually in Western Siberia, followed by European part. Easter Siberia and Far East don't have as much.>>221672922Idk, I kinda like swamps. Only if there were no parasitic blood sucking insects...
>>221672176needs more hoffenhousen but otherwise ok
>>221672922Eurobaby is afraid of nature?
>>221672895>>221672952/comfy/Some blue and yellow macaws flying.I live close to Pantanal which I think it's one of the biggest swamps in the world.
>>221672895I want to live next to a mountain or a large hill at least, so I could hike on it at the evening and spend some time alone there.
Canada has a very diverse geography. It's a big country.
>>221673003There were cool hills around my village, I always went through one on my way to school, but they've built a lot of copy-paste wooden houses on them and a school.
>>221673044Grim...>>221672983> Pantanal which I think it's one of the biggest swamps in the world.Look at the wester Siberia on the pics or from the satellite images. You probably might like it, if you're into this shit.
lots of thorny plants and rocks. Had a cactus growing in my gutters and on my shed.
>>221672176Ayy that is my pic! :D >>221672324>he thinks this is the norfL M A O ! >>221673311Are water prices higher in the more arid regions of the USA?
>>221673770Yes but i have a water collection system and get most of my water from a cistern and rain barrels and have a solar panel set up for electricity.
>>221674288I've heard some states in the US charge taxes for collecting rain water. Is this true?
>>221672176WHat??? but all the germans I talk to say its way overpopulated and you cant walk 15 minutes without running into a town. Is this in East Germany or something?
>>221672176you dont svffer in germany
>>221672176*mampf* *mampf* *mampf*
>>221674396We do thoughever
>>221674388You can clearly see some building there and they're much closer than in 15 mins.
>>221674403heheheh cute post
>>221674288Do you use the rain water as drinking water? And if so; how do you treat it?
>>221674441you have keen eyes, i didn't spot that village. actually this reminds me of DayZ, sort of.
>>221672176>>221672481proofs
>>221674333Yes depending on the state States like Texas, Arizona, Florida, Hawaii, and Washington actively encourage rainwater harvesting for homeowners. Many of these states offer municipality-level rebates on rain barrels, tax exemptions on equipment, or even using collected water for both potable (drinking) and non-potable usesColorado: Allows private residential collection, but it is heavily regulated (often limited to a maximum of two rain barrels with a combined storage of 110 gallons).Utah: Caps collection limits at 2,500 gallons and requires homeowners to register with the state for legal harvesting.Other Regulated States: Arkansas, California, Georgia, Illinois, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island, Virginia, and Wisconsin all impose specific volume or usage limitsKansas: Requires you to apply for and obtain a permit to harvest rainwater.North Dakota: May require a water permit depending on the intended use and scale of the catchment system
>>221674497Most of Germany is strongly affected by suburban sprawl. Those houses in the background you see are a village of ~ 30 houses. Then a few fields. Then a similarly sized village again. Then fields again, then villages aing, etc. And then a larger town or city.
>>221674598Sounds terrible. You need something like Soviet megaprojects. Like gigacanals, large teelines to stop the winds and make higher humidity. Or connect rivers by nuclear explosions (yes they've tried it).
>>221674495For the rain barrels i use a countertop reverse osmosis system and for the cistern i use natural sand filter with mesh & carbon filters with a inline UV water filter system hooked up to a solar panel station.
>>221674642seems logical to me.>>221674720ah, that would be awesome. The government doesn't really do stuff like that. Maybe the only megaproject that everyone interacts with is the interstate highway system. The treelines thing was done in the Great Depression to stop the dustbowl. Before, everyone chopped down trees constantly for firewood. But now we have natural gas, and encouraged to leave the trees alone anyways because it prevents erosion
>>221674796have you tested it? does it get the lead and other pollutants out of the rainwater?
>>221674858the reverse osmosis system removes lead and other pollutants that is what i use for drinking water. My water has a red tinge to it if it is from the cistern but other than that it is fine.
>>221674944I've thought about using a cistern, I have a well. But when the power goes out during a storm, my well's pump goes down too. And the well is hundreds of feet deep. So, a cistern would be a handy secondary source of water. My concern is, my great grandparents had a cistern, and all sorts of shit would fall in there and die. I'm guessing yours is cleaner. It can't hardly be worse. What's it taste like?
>>221675076Invest in a solar power station i used to have the same problem. Check out you-tube and do your research. As for my water it has a slightly metallic taste if it is from the cistern but taste like bottled water if from the rain barrels.You can slowly build up your solar panel station till you have everything instead of getting everything at once if money is tight.
>>221672176Basically the same