Stuff You Should Know - Selects: NYC Water: An Engineering Marvel
Episode Date: November 25, 2023Getting the rain and melted snow from upstate NY into the taps of every NYC resident and business is one of the great feats of engineering. Does it taste great and make perfect bagels and pizza crust?... Sources say yes! Learn all about it in this classic episode.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hello, everybody.
I hope you're having a lovely Saturday where every you are in the world.
Chuck here with a Saturday Select selection, and I'm going to go with from November 2019,
not even so long ago as the crow flies.
The episode is NYC Water, colon, and engineering marvel.
I love New York City. Everyone knows that. I go on and on about that city on the show and
I'm constantly amazed
That city runs and that the trash gets taken away and the mail gets delivered and that people
Have enough drinking water and water to bay then and cook with
And so it's a pretty unique situation there in New York,
how they get their water.
And here's that story.
Please, to enjoy.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of I Heart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark, there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant, there's
guest producer Andrew, this is stuff you should own, let's get busy.
I'm excited about this one.
This was your pick and I was like what is Chuck talking about?
Were you really? Yes and then Chuck, I happened to stumble upon, I don't know what I was like, what is Chuck talking about? Were you really? Yes. And then Chuck, I happened to stumble upon.
I don't know what I was looking for.
But an email from somebody who sent like a Google Doc
or something that was a list of episodes we said we should do.
And people have sent those in before,
but this one was kind of condensed and that was on there.
So I've stumbled upon your dirty little secret.
I don't think that's where I got it.
Oh, really.
I don't think so, but maybe.
Okay.
I just know that I am always fascinated
by not only New York City,
but by the fact that New York City functions.
What, with that many people and all that? Everything. It's just all amazing to me that that city functions. With that many people and all that?
Everything. It's just all amazing to me that that city functions with that many people,
that many buildings, that like, I want to do an episode on trash removal.
Okay. I want to do one on a mailed.
On wastewater treatment.
Yeah. Oh yeah, that's just New York in general.
That's been long brewing.
Are you okay with that?
Yeah. Just just, I mean, we can mention New York in general. That's been long brewing. Are you okay with that? Yeah.
Just just I mean, we can mention New York or whatever.
Right.
Big thanks to Dave Ruse, though.
One of our great writers, they put this together
and it's really, really fascinating.
Dave's just an amazing human.
He's great.
All of our writers are amazing for sure.
Dave is great as well.
He's one of a few select amazing people.
Right.
So the the
reason why New York why anybody would ask about New York's water is because if
you've ever interacted with a New Yorker, they talk about their water a lot.
It's like kind of a thing in New York where they're like our tap waters the
best water in the country and they have like a lot of stuff to back that up with. And so much so that
they say this water is actually the reason why our beggles and our pizza are so good.
Yeah, we were both just there for our final shows of the year at the Bell House.
Thanks to people who came out. Yes. They were great. A lot of fun. And by the way,
the guy that fell asleep on the front row
on night number two, I think it was night number two.
I was walking down the street and he randomly passed
by driving in a car and rolled down his window and said,
hey man, he said great show the other night.
Right, I was waiting for him to say,
is that freedom rock?
And I said thanks dude, I was like, front row. And he was so rock? And I said, thanks, dude. I was like,
front row. And he was so excited that I remembered that's and he said, front row. And he drove on before
I had a chance to say, you fell asleep. He's like, I feel like I was there. Maybe I felt like a dream,
too. I don't know. But we were just there. And there are many, many restaurants in New York where there will
be like a water cooler or a place where you can help yourself to your own cup of water.
And it will have a big sign on it that says New York City tap water and proud all caps underlined
letters.
Yeah.
And they mean like they're just getting water out of the tap or is in other cities, that's a dirty shameful secret
that people don't talk about.
That's right.
In New York, they proudly boast about it.
And just the fact that any New Yorker in the city
gets water at all is pretty spectacular.
It's like you said, there's a lot of people,
there's a lot of buildings and something like more than a billion gallons of water flow into New York through the taps
every day. I said, day with the D. Yes, it is the largest water system in the United States.
People from all over the world, government officials, fly in and take meetings
government officials, fly in and take meetings with the New York City water people just to see like how have you done it?
They're just a gog.
How could we do better?
So, that's impressive enough that a billion, more than a billion gallons of water is delivered
every day to New Yorkers.
Pretty great.
But the idea that you can just drink it straight from the tap and it is
90% unfiltered, that is a truly impressive feat. Yeah, and by 90% unfiltered, we mean
90% of the water is unfiltered and 10% is filtered. Right, and you might say,
well, how can you just filter 90% of the water? Well, it comes from different places.
That's right.
So 90% of the water comes from two places, two watersheds that combined are called the
cat-skilled Delaware watershed or water system, I think.
And then the other one from the Croteon, I always want to say Croteon,
but from the Croteon reservoir, that 10% is actually filtered. And we'll get into all of that.
But 90% of New York's water is not, it doesn't go through a filtering process.
And that makes New York one of only five major cities in the United States to get a waiver
from the EPA that says, your water is so deliciously pure and delightful that you don't need to filter it. Almost every other city has to
have a filtering process before it gets delivered to taps. That's right. And the other four, naturally,
Seattle, Portland, Oregon, San Francisco. The one that's a bit of a surprise is Boston,
Massachusetts. What? That's how surprising it is, Chuck. Yeah, that's right.
So let's talk a little bit about the history of New York and their water.
Because back in the day, we've always talked about how what a disgusting disease-ridden poop
and horse urine-ridden place New York City was.
Yeah, supposedly there's a good 12 inches of horse manure on the street at all times
before they really started cleaning their place up. Yeah, supposedly there's a good 12 inches of horse manure on the street at all times before
they really started cleaning their place up.
Yeah, it's pretty bad.
I think that was in the Winchries Typhoid Mary episode, which is a great one.
Another great New York episode.
So if we're talking New Amsterdam, pre-New York City, they got water where you would think
from ponds and natural springs underwater springs and
They had a 48 acre pond. It's about 60 feet deep
And Tribeca what is now Tribeca called the collect and also the little collect that was just south of there
And that name comes from the Dutch word
caulk
which means small body of water
And the collect was where they got their water for a long time until the city let the Dutch word, kalk, which means small body of water.
And the collect was where they got their water
for a long time until the city let
some tanners built a tannery on the shores of the collect.
Not smart, knew you were.
Which ruined everything.
Yeah, because it started to get polluted.
They also were able to drill wells and stuff
around places where people pooped and peed and then dumped their poop and pee.
It was a dirty, dirty place because this is pre-germ theory, or at least around the time that germ theory was being developed and people didn't understand it.
And I think it was our great stink episode where they traced a cholera epidemic to a public well, a public water pump.
John Snow, if I remember correctly, did that.
And this would have been around the time
that New Yorkers were suffering from cholera epidemics,
one of which took place in, I think, the 1830s, 1832.
It killed 3,500 New Yorkers.
And that was a substantial amount of the population
at the time, and another 100,000 New Yorkers
had to flee just to get away from this caller epidemic.
And it was because their sewage and their water was coexisting in very unhealthy ways.
So New York said, maybe we should try something else.
Let's look a little further outside the city where we're dumping our waste and everything,
see if we can get our water from there.
And they did. They built the Croton reservoir. They dammed the river and
reservoir collected and they said, now we have some beautiful pure water. We will never need to do
anything again to get our water. That's right. Previous to that though, in the 18th century, they had
these public pumps like you were talking about on street corners, about every four blocks or so,
like you were talking about, on street corners, about every four blocks or so, a big wooden pump
where you would get your water from underground streams
and springs and stuff.
But there were only a few of these
that actually delivered good water.
A lot of it was really brackish and gross tasting.
And Americans and early European settlers
obviously love their tea.
And so they marked, this is almost like an early yelp or whatever.
They had these pumps that actually delivered,
like the two or three good pumps in the city,
that delivered good water labeled tea water pumps.
But like it was good enough to use for tea?
Good enough to use for making good tea.
Okay.
And so they would go to these tea water pumps
you would have to buy the water.
The best one was apparently at Chatham and Roosevelt.
There was another and sort of what the lower east side is today
that was a good tea water pump.
And this worked out for a long time
until the collect and all this stuff,
it started to sort of get nasty and stinky.
And so they built a canal to channel that water
into the river, like we gotta get rid of it
and drain this thing.
So they build this canal 40 feet wide,
they channel it right after they finish it,
this canal begins to sink.
And in 1821, it got so bad, the smell was so bad
that they eventually just covered up the canal
and guess what that became.
I don't know.
Central Park Canal Street.
Oh, how about that?
How about that?
I wasn't even in the right part of the city.
That's all right.
We've even done an episode on Central Park and that wouldn't forget it.
Yes, Canal Street, obviously.
That's where Canal Street came from.
There was literally a canal and then eventually an underground sewage system under running, Canal Street, obviously. That's where Canal Street came from. That was literally a canal and then eventually
an underground sewage system
under running under Canal Street.
Right.
And there's another cool little tidbit
if you want, like your little New York history,
if you like to walk around on subways
and tell people about cool things.
Yeah.
One of the first public reservoirs in the city
was dug by Aaron Burr and his Manhattan company.
And that didn't work out.
They transported it through wooden logs as pipes
buried beneath the city.
Somebody found a piece of that wooden log.
It's in one of the museums up there now.
Oh, no way.
Yeah, that is very cool.
But the water didn't taste great
and it didn't work out for Aaron Burr.
So he, Shane, he still kept the Manhattan company, but he got into
banking, and the Manhattan company became Chase Manhattan Bank. I saw somewhere that that was his
aim all along, that the water thing was just basically a fleece to raise money to found this. Oh,
really? And that that's why the water was so shoddy and the delivery was so shoddy, but what they
were selling was so bad, supposedly the horses wouldn't even drink it.
So it was a scam.
It was basically a scam.
Aaron Burr was not the greatest historical American shot Alexander Hamilton.
I know.
That lets it enough right there.
Right.
And then also scammed a bunch of people out of their water investment.
That's right.
Because I mean, if you want to invest in a bank, you want to invest in a bank. If you want to invest in a water outfit, you want to invest in a water investment. That's right. Because I mean, if you want to invest in a bank,
you want to invest in a bank.
If you want to invest in a water outfit,
you want to invest in a water outfit.
You want people to be above the boards with stuff like that.
That's right, above the Hollywood dogs.
That's my tie-ray.
So you mentioned the Crotin' Dam and the Crotin' Res of War.
I want to say Crotin' is well.
Yeah.
That became, and that aqueduct became operational.
And things were okay, but then a tragedy struck
with the Great Fire of 1835.
Yes, which actually I guess that the Great Fire took place
right before the reservoir was opened,
which is why the Great Fire was so bad.
Oh, yeah, that's true.
So in 1835, on a night in December,
a warehouse caught fire, and it just leveled lower Manhattan,
like just destroyed something like 17 city blocks, 50 acres of the most densely populated part
of New York at the time. And luckily only two people died, two was too many, but considering that it was 17 city blocks
that got reduced to ash, that's not bad actually, especially considering that the way that
they ended up fighting this fire was by setting buildings on the perimeter on fire because
they didn't have the amount of water that they needed.
Yeah, the reason for that was just sort of really bad luck. There were two smaller fires that drained our hour, like I'm a New Yorker, listen to me. You're
an honorary New Yorker, I would guess. It drained the sisters, the reserve sisters that they
had. And because of those two smaller fires, they didn't have enough to fight the great
fire. And the long and short of all of this is New York said, we got to really speed up
this curtain reservoir work.
Yep.
And they did.
And so the curtain reservoir was brought online in the middle of the 19th century.
And they had a big old parade and everything.
And it delivered something like 90 million gallons of delicious pure water to New York in
the middle of the 19th century.
It was a really big deal.
It worked really well for a very long time, but there was also the Murray Hill Reservoir.
So the Croton Reservoir would be where the water collected upstate, and then they
built an aqueduct system, which is still around in parts today, an elevated aqueduct,
to what's called the Murray Hill Resvoir, which is a four-acre
above-ground swimming pool, basically. It's pretty cool if you look at pictures. Yeah, it was like a real
spot in the city while it was around. I think something until 1842 to 1900 it was around. People
used to take strolls around it and make paintings of it and that kind of thing. And it is where the New York Public Library is now today, where the
Ghostbusters did some of their early work. But it worked really well for the time, but then
as New York grew and grew and grew, it became very painfully obvious yet again that New York
had outgrown its water supply. Yeah, they needed more water. 90 million gallons a day wasn't enough. And then what
made matters worse was in 1898, New York City officially made it a declaration that we are
now not just lower Manhattan, of course, they didn't call it lower Manhattan at the time.
That was just sort of where the city ended.
They called it Manahata.
Yeah, Manahata.
I saw that episode, by the way.
It was one of the better ones ever.
Which one?
Of, uh, think of what we do in the dark.
Oh, that's right.
Where they go to party in Manhattan.
Manahata.
Yeah.
Um, what we do in the shadows?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Um, I'm so stupid.
That's all right.
The five burrows were included in 1898 officially.
So New York and the water needed to get to the people
was officially grown to more than three million people
by the time the 20th century turned.
Right, which is just precious today.
Three million New Yorkers.
Oh my gosh, they really do.
So they started to look up state again
because they had hit upon like a pretty good idea.
The city is a cesspool.
We need our water from outside of the cesspool
and they started looking up state.
So this time they looked up to the cat skills
and they found two watersheds,
which we did an episode on watersheds
that I would love to forget,
but it came up just now.
Oh, I thought it was good, no. Oh, I thought it was good.
No.
Oh, man, it was horrendous.
Was it?
Yes, I thought it was terrible and boring.
January 2017?
I don't remember when it came out.
Like I said, I tried to forget that it ever happened.
I thought it was pretty good.
But anyway, so watersheds basically a specific topographical
area where rain, snow, whatever precipitation falls down into this area
and is delivered to a specific creek, river stream, something like that that eventually empties
into a lake or reservoir or something like that.
So there's two watersheds, the Delaware and the Catskill, that put together create something like 2,000 square miles of water
catching goodness.
It delivers it to a number of different reservoirs, and that is now today where New York gets
like 90% of its water.
Yeah, so obviously they had to dam up rivers to create these reservoirs, and this all happened
to, you know, in the early 1900s.
And then finally, they were like, great, we've got all these reservoirs and and this all happened to, you know, in the early 1900s. And then finally,
they were like, great, we've got all these reservoirs and the cat skills. But let me remind
you, we're on the lowly side of Manhattan surrounded by horse urine and a lot of it and poop.
We need our fresh water. How do we get it here? So in 1917, the engineers of New York City completed the 92 mile cat skill aqua duct.
Yeah.
Which is amazing.
It's basically a big concrete tunnel that sends water 92 miles from the cat skills down
to New York.
It's as wide as 30 feet in some places.
It is not a tunnel the entire length, as we will see here in a minute.
Not a continuous tunnel.
Right.
I'm not sure what that means.
What is it just like open?
It's something.
No, there's parts of it that aren't technically a tunnel in that.
It's a covered trench.
Okay.
If they cut a trench and then they cover it back up, which I don't know how you do that,
but it's not technically a tunnel, like a circle or a tube.
Interesting. And here is to me, one of the facts of the show. You get this water down there
in the aqueduct and you get to the Hudson River. And what are you going to do? You got to go
under it. Right? To me, it just be like, just pump it in the Hudson and hope it comes out
the other side. But then I would have gotten fired immediately when I used that idea. He's no engineer.
No, he's a shamp.
He's a rap scallion.
So it gets to the Hudson River and then it goes way down into the ground about 1100 feet
below sea level and then climbs back up the other side and it does all this via gravity.
Yes.
And they did that not just to show off,
but because they decided, I read this awesome art,
you know how I'm always like, read the contemporary articles.
I read one from 1907, where they were talking about
the construction of the aqueduct,
and they said that the reason why they were going down
that far is because they wanted to hit bedrock,
because it would be fissure-free, meaning there would be no leakage
and they could just pump the water through the hole that they board in the bedrock.
Well, they thought the bedrock was gonna be about 500 feet down.
And by 1907, when they wrote the Scientific American article,
they'd reached like 700 feet, still hadn't hit it.
It ended up being like 1,100 feet below sea level,
where they finally hit bedrock.
And that's why they had to drill so far down. ended up being like 1100 feet below sea level, where they finally hit bedrock.
And that's why they had to drill so far down.
And they drilled a tunnel, a vertical shaft,
from the Hudson down to that tunnel,
and they built like a tube to pressurize it.
So the water 1100 feet under the Hudson
is at like 15 tons per square foot of pressure, which also helps.
But the fact that there's no pumps or anything, it's all gravity and pressure driven.
Yes, and sadly, though, that story has a sad ending because it took so long that their
Fisher-Free and O3 T-shirts were all rendered useless.
What?
No? I don't know. That was a great joke. I'm gonna go back and listen to it and I'll probably think it's hilarious. So, it's compliments on it in advance.
Oh, man. That was a quality joke. Oh, three. Oh, it got to okay. Sure, sure. Yeah, yeah,
I got you. All right.
I got you.
We're all together now.
Okay, that was a pretty good joke.
Gee, should we take a break?
After that, yeah.
All right, let's take a break.
We'll talk a little bit more about this so-called aqueduct
right after this.
Mm-hmm. The assassination of President John F. Kennedy is the greatest murder mystery in American
history.
That's Rob Breiner, Rob called me, so would Ed O'Brien and asked me what I knew about
this crime.
I know 60 years later, new leads are still emerging.
To me, an award-winning journalist,
that's the making of an incredible story.
And on this podcast, you're gonna hear it told
by one of America's greatest storytellers.
Well, ask who had the motive
to assassinate a sitting president.
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and then he screwed us after the Cuban Missile Crisis.
We'll reveal why Lee Harvey Oswald isn't who they said he was.
I was under the impression that Lee was being trained
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The American people need to know the truth.
Listen to Who Killed J.F. iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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Okay, Chuck.
So we've got the CAT scale aqueduct delivering water.
There's another one too called the Delaware aqueduct.
And this one actually is like a genuine tunnel.
Yeah, since 85 miles completed in 44, I'm not Not gonna make a t-shirt joke about that.
And it is still the longest continuous tunnel
in the world at 85 miles.
And they did this all, you know, just this digging process
is amazing in and of itself,
digging these tunnels and these trenches with steam shovels
and pouring the concrete tunnel, which I was like, how
do you do that even?
Yeah.
You do the bottom half, let it set, and then you do the top half.
And let that set.
So they were like Charles Bronson in the greatest escape.
They were digging tunnels.
Yeah, I mean, we're talking like dynamite and stuff like that.
Like, they really did it the old school way to build these aqueducts, and they're still
in use today so much so that there's three tunnels.
Tunnel number one and tunnel number two have been an operation since 1917 and 1936.
They've never stopped operating.
They've never been stopped up and drained and inspected in over a hundred years for tunnel number one.
Yeah, I think the current memo going around is, I'm sure it's fine.
Well, so they're building tunnel number three.
And they decided to start building tunnel number three in 1954.
They actually started in 1970.
They are still not done with tunnel number three.
It's amazing.
The parts of it are online.
And when it does fully come online, tunnel number three will have a capacity enough so
that they can
individually stop and drain and inspect and repair tunnel number one and then eventually tunnel number two.
So that's the plan. Yeah, tunnel number three will save the other two and it's good that they're
doing it now. But I saw that it's going to be fully operational in 2021, they think. Oh wow.
So we're almost there. Almost man.
Yeah, it's the New York's longest running municipal project,
$5 billion price tag so far, and counting I guess.
And then those three tunnels, or two, and then however many parts
of three are working, deliver 1.3 gallons of water a day
through a network of mains and then individual pipes leading to
apartments and homes and businesses and skyscrapers and all of those pipes if you total them up would lay out
about 7,000 miles. That's pretty impressive. I would also like to point out that I think
you met 1.3 billion gallons.
What did I say?
1.3 gallons?
Did I really?
Which would be hilarious that they went to all this trouble,
spent all this money, and they're like,
we can crank out 1.3 gallons a day, New York,
gather around and get your water.
I was still thinking about my t-shirt joke.
It's a good joke, man. And here's the kicker too, another great fact to the show, only 5%
of all of the city's water relies on pumps to get to its final destination, which means your tap.
It's pretty awesome. Yeah, so that means that it can't break down. Or if something does happen,
they still have things like gravity to help things along.
It's great.
So the reason why the EPA gave New York a waiver and said, you don't have to filter the
water coming from the cat skill and the Delaware watersheds is because, because Julie because Giuliani greased the palms of the EPA. Exactly. Well, it started out as so pure and pristine
and just great water to begin with,
but they have taken steps along the way
to ensure that it stayed that way.
Because one of the things that happened
with the Croton reservoir is development
was allowed to grow up around it.
Agriculture was allowed to pollute it.
It just got, it turned.
And after that EPA, I think in the 90s, the late 90s said,
yep, you guys have to start filtering that water.
It's no longer unfilterable.
It's not drinkable as is.
So they had to start filtering.
It used to be 100% of New York's water was unfiltered.
That Crote and Reservoir now is 10% that is filtered. But so they learned a valuable
lesson from that. And now they're very proactive in keeping the Delaware and
Cascot reservoir or watershed water from becoming corrupted by things like
development and agriculture. Yeah and by know, the lesson they learned is money,
because you might be thinking, like, what's a big deal?
Why don't they just filter all of it?
It's a lot cheaper to take care of the land
and make sure you never have to filter it
than to install a filtering plant.
Yeah, because they estimate that a filtering plant
would cost something like $10 billion up front
and then $100 million a year to operate. New York is spending something like $10 billion up front and then $100 million a year to operate. New
York is spending something like $1 billion every several years to protect the Delaware
and the Cascale Watershed. So it is an enormous investment, but also it's great because it's
natural water that's unfiltered. Yeah, and you know, they do this in a number of ways, aside from
buying up 40% of the land, which was a good move and making sure nothing happens to it.
Yep, so New York City owns a lot of land upstate.
Oh, yeah.
Just FYI.
Yeah, 40% yeah, it's a lot of land.
Not 40% of New York State, but 40% of the property around the cat skill and Delaware watersheds.
They also did things like,
hey, let's look at all the wastewater treatment facilities
upstream and let's invest a lot of money
in upgrading those.
Hey, all you people that have septic tanks
that are falling apart, that matter.
So we're gonna reimburse you, 5200 homeowners.
Yeah, that's impressive.
Yeah, install a new septic tank and we're gonna pay for it.
Yep.
They remove dead trees, they replace those with little sapling trees, who apparently
have roots that are young and can absorb a lot of harmful nutrients from that rainwater.
And here's another good fact of the show.
Some of the water from those reservoirs or from that watershed can take up to a full
year to make its way down
to the tap that you're drinking out of.
That's a good one.
I like that one.
It's almost like how long it takes sunlight to reach us.
I knew you were gonna say that.
It's the same thing.
It's the same thing.
They also did you talk about farmers?
The only difference between those stats
is you don't have to explain what a photon is.
You can just say water.
It's a tiny packet of light.
It's the carrier of electromagnetic energy.
That's right.
What did you ask right before that?
Did you talk about the farmers?
How they train farmers upstate, too?
I did not.
So they say, hey, you Hicks, you're going to learn these techniques
to, I'm just kidding, I love farmers.
I would actually as a matter of fact,
Chuck, when I retire, I really, really want a small working farm.
Oh yeah, very small.
Like what do you want?
Like a tenth of an acre or small.
No, what kind of stuff do you want to farm?
What do you want on it?
Oh, I don't care.
Yeah, oh yeah, some animals, but just having pigs
around not to eat or milk,
but to like basically,
but to like, to churn up like a field
so that I can plan it the next year
and move the pigs to the next part of the land,
that kind of stuff for chickens to just walk around
and eat their eggs and things like that.
All right, so you want some chickens, some pigs,
you want some, probably a couple goats, a couple goats, chickens, some pigs, you want some... Probably a couple goats.
Couple of goats, you want some planting,
you want some farm, some plants and vegetables.
Sure, yeah, but mainly just to have something to do
like with the earth.
So I was 100 million percent teasing when I said
that New York was calling the farmer's hicks.
New York probably did call the farmer's hicks,
but I wasn't condoning that.
I was just making a joke.
Right, you're the guy who wants a 10th of an acre one day
to do something on that year, not sure.
Those pigs are gonna be like,
this is some pretty tight quarters around here.
Oh, you know what else I would do?
What?
And I would need more of a 10th,
more than a 10th of an acre for this.
Raise bees.
That is where I will eventually raise bees.
It's on Josh's farm.
Well, brother, you better get some land soon
because it's leaving at a rapid pace.
Land is leaving?
Yeah, I mean, people are buying land.
I remember my parents looking at land when I was like 10 years old and they didn't buy
it.
They said it's leaving.
And it's a different deal now.
It's a lot harder to find the land that you want.
You know, people bought it all up.
I know, and you can still get it, but you got to pay through the nose for it.
Yeah, or it's up to them if they want to sell it or not, you know.
Sure.
We're getting sloppy seconds.
Oh, come on.
Oh, man.
That's going to be one of those things that our younger listeners is going to be in college,
smoking pot in a dorm room, and it'll just hit on what you just said like 15 years on.
Oh goodness.
So you mentioned the Crote and Watershed needs the filtering and they're trying to avoid
that at all cost with the other watersheds.
But the Crote and Waters supply, when they built this filtering system, it costs $3.2 billion
and it's under a golf course in New Jersey.
It's just so appropriate.
That's where the tainted water is under a golf course in Jersey.
In Bedminster, perhaps.
Sure.
I don't know what that is, but it sounds right.
Oh, some people will get that one.
New York's like, hey, you hicks, build a golf course over this.
New York just calls everybody else Hicks in my opinion.
That's right.
When we fly in, they say, welcome, Hicks.
So, um, if we take our second break yet?
No, we probably should though.
This is a good time.
Okay, we're going to take another break and we're going to come back and explain what
New York does do to its water and whether or not it is a secret ingredient in
bagels and pizza.
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Hi everyone, I'm Katie Curric and I'm back with the new season of next question. Yay! This season, it's all about being more conversational, but I wanted to mix it up a little bit. So I've been inviting different people
to join me to be my plus ones to ride shotgun, if you will, and sometimes actually getting the
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By the way, I'm not totally abandoning
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All right, Chuck. So one thing that you're gonna wanna say,
if you're a New Yorker and you're boasting
about your tap water, there are some things you should know.
Number one, it's chlorinated.
Number two, it's been run through a UV filter.
Even if it hasn't been filtered filtered, there's still things that are done to it.
It's not like it's coming straight out of the cat skills into your tap.
Yeah, they take it very seriously, obviously.
Here's a good stat.
In one year, there are more than 15,000 water samples taken and analyzed at the source.
So this is upstream. They have AI, well not AI, or is it AI?
There's AI involved somehow. They're always this.
I always ask, if it's AI, I always ask you, because you know.
Sure, I know.
Thanks, too. The end of the world with Josh Clark.
Oh, thanks for the plug still available on iTunes
the iHeart
Podcast app or wherever you find your podcasts
Wow, that wasn't just a plug. That was an ad
So they have these robotic buoys that monitor the Kinsa Co reservoir
one of the reservoirs that feeds down into New York and
These things take 1.9 million measurements a year and wirelessly
transmit that back to the Department of Environmental Protection in New York.
Yeah, which is pretty awesome. And they had a buoy before, but they had to remove it in
winter because ice would mess with it. And this new one apparently is ice-loving.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
They also, if you walk down the street,
there's something like 1300?
No.
965.
965 little gray boxes that if you could open up,
you would find a little sink and a faucet.
It's adorable.
Maybe a little sample size of loxatane soap.
And that's a water sampling station.
It says NYDEP, Department of Environmental Protection,
and scientists walk up to these things,
unlock them and take samples and test
for all sorts of different things
to make sure that the water getting to New York is good.
Yeah, it's just more than that.
It says New York City drinking water sampling station on the front of it.
Oh, wow. They really spell it out.
Yeah, they said Fisher-Free in 03.
It's the same down there.
So they're testing, they take 1,300 water samples a month.
I'm not sure if you said that, but they were
from these particular stations.
And they do all kinds of tests,
they're testing obviously for turbidity,
which is cloudiness, pH, chlorine, bacteria.
Does it stink like all kinds of tests that they're doing?
Right.
And usually the New York City water
is going to pass all these tests.
Like there's not to be a problem.
This is just an extra little quality assurance that they're doing.
Because by the time it reaches these testing stations,
that's where it's going to the taps anyway.
It's tapping into the tap water basically.
That's right.
So that 10% of water goes through a couple of extra steps
that is that the other 90% doesn't go through.
One of the first things it does in a treatment plan
is it's mixed with alum,
which is a component of aluminum, right?
And alum attracts organic compounds
and basically says rise to the surface with me
and it creates flock, which is a white frothy sludge
and all that is just skimmed off the top. That's step one.
Yeah, this sounds so gross, and it is.
Yeah.
But like in the end, you get your good water.
The next thing that happens is it flows through these giant water filters.
Dave put it as like these giant brittofilters.
It's essentially sort of the same thing.
And this is just going to further purify the water,
passing through layers and layers of stuff like sand and this is just going to further purify the water, passing through layers
and layers of stuff like sand and anthracite. And then comes the ultraviolet light that you
referenced earlier, right? Yes, and 100% of New York's water is sent through a UV filter because
UV filters are really good at disrupting reproduction of bacteria. And so all water is zapped,
but that 90% of water that's not filtered,
that goes through a separate UV filtering plant
that's built just for those.
That's right.
And that's where like a billion gallons
of water a day are zapped with UV lights.
But so all of that gets combined together eventually
and comes out your tap.
And New Yorkers drink it straight from the tap literally. All of that gets combined together eventually and comes out your tap.
And New Yorkers drink it straight from the tap literally.
It is very bizarre because I don't know if it's a placebo effect or what, but I feel like
it does taste pretty good for tap water.
It does.
But at the same time, I typically don't drink just straight tap water, so my frame of reference
isn't necessarily right there.
You want to hear something funny? You know what my brother's favorite water is?
And what? It's probably just a bit but he claims it's true. What?
Hose water. Oh I know what he's talking about. Yeah. Like when you're watering the car
or watering the car when you're washing the car. Here's the right. Grow car. When you're watering
your mini so it grows into an SUV. Right.
So, I think the reason why Scott is on to something is because when you're drinking from
a hose, it's summertime and it's hot out.
Yeah, and you're probably working hard.
Mm-hmm.
Maybe so.
It definitely does taste different for sure.
So when it comes to New York water, everyone says it's the best in the country.
There are rankings actually, and it is 13 out of 100 metro areas in the US.
So it's not the best literally by definition, not the best water in the. No, you got to move to Arlington, Texas if you want.
And this was, this was from 10 years ago, but I'm not sure what the current status is.
I imagine Arlington's still up there though.
Sure, but you're going to have to have a lot more reasons than that to move to Arlington,
Texas.
Ouch.
That one I'm not taking that.
What are some of the problems, though, with New York water?
Well, there's two big problems.
Terbidity, which you mentioned earlier, which is sediment suspension in the water, which
gives it kind of a cloudy or dark or gritty kind of look,
which is, it's not just that it looks bad, it's pathogens can cling to that sediment,
so it's not something you want to spend it. Plus, it also makes it much more difficult
to filter that stuff out. It's like extra work that has to be done.
That's right.
Get rid of that sediment. And if you're not filtering your water to begin with,
that's kind of a problem.
And then secondly, the other one is nutrients.
It's over nutrient, meaning it's just packed with riboflavin.
Well, what it actually is, is fertilizer runoff.
Right. You know, those farmers are doing their best.
But there is fertilizer that goes downstream
and runs into the watersheds.
And phosphorus is one of the biggest problems
because farmers do fertilize with phosphorus.
And if it runs off, the phosphorus alone is not great
because it can cause algae blooms and stuff like that.
And it can taste bad and stink.
Yeah, because when the algae dies, it decays
and it does not smell good.
No, it does not smell good.
But a bigger problem though, is when you combine that
with the chlorine, because like we said,
New York water is chlorinated and fluoridated.
We have the T-shirts to prove it.
Right, I don't think we said it was fluoridated,
but yeah, everybody knows.
Yeah, it's fluoridated.
Right.
And when you combine that chlorine with the phosphorus, it can create byproducts called disinfection
byproducts.
And that is no good at all.
No, those are nasty.
They're called DPPs.
And they are basically like chemicals that are accidentally made from sanitizing water,
and not just with chlorine, but chlorine, chloramine.
There's a bunch of different stuff that they use to disinfect water,
and all of them can combine with organic compounds
to create really just nasty stuff like carcinogens.
Carcinogens, some can produce miscarriages.
It's just really, really bad stuff that can be produced in the drinking water.
Chloriform is one of those byproducts.
Yeah, which is why New Yorkers frequently faint when they're drinking tap water.
But this all sounds super scary.
New York City, they are, I think there are eight known
contaminants, but they are still apparently
well under the legal limit, depending on what you think
about how the legal limits are set of course.
Right, exactly.
It's a good caveat.
But New York City drinking water is 30.9 parts per billion
chloroform, the national averages 11, so they're way
higher on chloroform, and the national average is 11, so they're way higher on chloroform,
but as far as all of those DBPs total,
they're far below the legal limit,
and just a little bit above average nationally.
Right, and then the total number of DBPs that they have
is actually less than those in Arlington.
So, interesting.
Chew on that Arlington.
That's right, chew on that.
Bad pizza.
Speaking of chewing
chuck and pizza, let's just answer this question. Is New York City's water the key ingredient to New
York City bagels in pizza? I think, I mean, you can't definitively say, but I think it does have
something to do with it for sure. It's got to. Because science is involved. So here's the thing. The water from the cat skills and from the Delaware is naturally soft, meaning that it's
low in calcium and magnesium.
Where do you fall on loving softer hard water?
I'm a hard water guy.
Same here, man.
When I lived in Arizona, they had soft water where I lived and my sister's house that I lived in, and most of the houses had water, soft,
or I guess hardening units or whatever in the house.
Yeah, because you can't feel clean.
Like you never feel like you got the shampoo
or the soap off.
It's awful.
It's just awful.
I don't know, does anyone like soft water?
I don't know, weirdo's probably.
I mean, hard water, sorry. No. I had it all backwards. Okay, so you like soft water? I don't know, weirdo's probably. I mean, hard water, sorry.
No. I had it all backwards.
Okay, so you like soft water?
Yeah, that's why I actually, that's why I misspoke.
They had water softeners in Arizona
because the water was hard.
New York water is soft. I like soft.
Okay, I like hard water, typically,
because I feel like I'm clean afterward.
But soft water, like just the New York water is fine with me,
but a softened, chemically softened water I can't stand.
Oh, really?
Yes.
Interesting.
But New York's is naturally soft,
so it doesn't have calcium and magnesium,
or it's very low in those things comparatively.
And that actually has an effect on taste.
Like calcium and magnesium can provide like a bitter taste to water.
So there's one thing that they're saying, like, okay, the dough isn't going to taste naturally
bitter because of the calcium magnesium.
That's something.
That is something.
And it also interacts with the flour.
If you're going to make a bagel or a beale or a pizza crust, you're going to be, or,
you know, a lot of things when you're baking
But those are the big three in New York. Yeah, you're going to be using flour and water as your base for your dough and hard water the minerals
In those tap water are going to fortify the gluten and they're going to make it tough and less flexible
You don't want it too soft though because it'll have the opposite effect
And it'll be gooey and you won't be able to work it as well.
Right.
And apparently the American Chemical Society says New York City tap water is the Goldilocks
of bagel water. It is just right.
Yep, not too hard, not too soft, just perfect for a bagel and for a pizza. And that American
Chemical Society quote came from a Smithsonian article, and they went on to say,
probably though it's actually the techniques
that New Yorkers used to make bagels,
like they poached the bagel dough first,
like they boil it.
That's the only way to do a bagel.
Sure, if you're not.
If you're not,
No, it's not.
That's like a baked donut,
that's not a donut.
Basically, and then they also will,
they'll let the yeast sit for a little while to make it for mint, which creates volatile flavor compounds.
So it just tastes better.
They're saying probably those are the reasons why New Yorkers make better bagels or pizza, and it's not really the water.
The water just contributes a very small amount.
I think it's all those things.
Why not?
No one can say for certain, so let's just say,
yes, it is all those things.
Well, if you all know more about New York City's tap water,
go on to New York City and try their tap water.
And since I said that, it's time for Listener Mail, everybody.
I'm going to call this house rolling.
And we talked about teaping houses.
Yep.
Love the podcast, guys.
Just finished up trick or treating.
And you were talking about rolling houses.
I grew up in Franklin, Tennessee,
where we used to roll houses all the time.
In Franklin, Tennessee, for people don't know,
is where a lot of big shut Nashville big wigs live.
Cause you can buy a huge house with lots of land.
That was Chuck speaking. Right. Funny thing though guys, I'm back to being Brandon.
Okay. Funny thing though guys, my neighbor was Brad Paisley. There was a couple of years before
his first Grammy award and once we found this out we knew with it we had to get him.
So my sister and I gathered all of our friends dressed in black
and snuck out to roll this country music stars house. We were halfway through the job
when his freaking tour bus rolled up on us. At first we all ran away frightened but we were pretty much caught in the act nowhere to go. He got off the bus and was super nice about the whole thing
actually. He gave us a quick tour of the tour bus, chatted us up for a little while,
we even cleaned up the a little while, we even
cleaned up the little bit of mess we had made, and left Star Struck. I highly doubt he remembers
that night at all, but my friends and I will certainly never forget. Anyway, that's all I got,
guys, I have a spooky Halloween. That is from Brandon Saunders. That is very nice, Brandon. Thanks a
lot for that email and hats off to Brad Paisley for being so cool.
He doesn't take his hat off.
But all right, exactly.
But also, how about just a hat tip then?
Yeah, or actually I was thinking getting
Chasnick because he's bald.
None of those guys take their hats off, dude.
So also he hangs out with Peyton Manning,
which means that he must be a good guy, right?
Oh, yeah?
Isn't Peyton a good dude?
Sure, I'm just tired of seeing him on my TV.
Oh, that's not gonna happen anytime soon.
Pretty soon you'll see him in augmented reality
and you're gonna see where you go.
Like it or not Charles.
Okay, well if you wanna get in touch with us
like Brad Paisley did, you can go on to stuffyshino.com
and check out our social links
and you can also send us a good old fashioned email.
Wrap it up, spank it on the bottom with it, some good old country goodness, and send it
off to StuffPodcast at iHeartRadio.com.
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What happens when the person you idolize
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