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The Rural Voice, 1990-07, Page 32HOW WELL IS OUR WATER? Groundwater in Rural Ontario by Wayne Kelly Durl Hopper and son Shawn drilling a water well near Exeter, Ontario: While optimistic about the availability of good quality groundwater in most of rural Ontario, Hopper does not minimize the growing threats this natural resource is facing. "Water, water, everywhere Nor any drop to drink." Few lines of English poetry have been remembered like those two from Samuel Taylor Colendge's poem "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" (1817). The ballad was penned in the "romantic period" of English verse, when imagination was exalted over the power of reason. But there is nothing romantic or reasonable about the prospect of running out of drink- ing water. Still, a growing number of Can- adians think the prospect is possible. In a Gallup Poll published in October of 1989, 95 per cent of those surveyed expressed concern about the quality of drinking water in Canada. As each month passes, hundreds of Canadian households are switching to the use of bottled water only or are attempting to purify tap water by filtration devices or distillation. With scientists now able to detect traces of toxic substances in parts per quadrillion (1 quadrillion = 1 million billion), the presence of dozens of chemicals can be detected in virtually any sample of drinking water. And with growing awareness of environ- mental issues and regular environmen- tal reports in the media, Canadians will continue to express their concerns about the water they drink. Neil Hopper, though, thinks some of the concern is unfounded. "I think the media is kind of pan- icking people these days. They hear all kinds of stones about bad water and they just don't know what to believe," says Hopper, the co-owner of W. D. Hopper & Sons Water Well Drilling in Seaforth, Ontario. As past president of the Ontario Water Well Association (OWWA), Hopper believes the public needs to "hear the other side of the story" and be educated about the advantages of groundwater over surface water as a source of both rural and urban needs. Surface water comes from lakes, rivers, and streams. (Ontario contains or borders on one-fifth of all the avail- able fresh surface water on earth.) Groundwater, on the other hand, comes from wells and natural springs. 28 THE RURAL VOICE