COEngineer
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2016
- Messages
- 1,526
It actually goes for 300 years (includes a table with depletion numbers for each year).senior is sort of misleading there
misleading because any well is going to be junior as all wells postdate any true senior rights that were appropriated before the irrigation well was even invented. you can typically think of a true senior right as pre 1890, or 1900 if you wanna be generous. and further misleading because denver basin groundwater is in it's own bubble outside of the priority system.
you'll probably see some stuff in that decree about the decreed annual use limits, which are function of the volume of the water under the area of the owned land used to decree the right and a 100 year aquifer depletion factor (i.e. the annual use of the well shall not be a rate that would deplete the volume in less than 100 years) for the nontrib stuff and likely see the rule that not more than 98% of the water is to be consumed for the not nontrib stuff
so it's a good water right. can be used for anything, successively to extinction, and on lands not belonging to the well itself. but seniority has nothing to do with it's goodness so to speak. it gets to operate regardless of it's seniority, so even better. there's likely even a paragraph in that decree that talks about the water not being adminsitered in accordance with the priority system.
overall a great water right that will be valuable until the denver basin runs dry, which will probably be long after you've sold the house and died of extreme old age
still whether or not it's worth it, or will increase the value of your property enough to make it worth it, i really have no idea for sure. but my gut tells me that value of that water will certainly increase
My problem is that I think it could be worth $7500 to someone, but not me and probably not to the next buyer of the property when I sell in 10-20 years.
I asked my realtor's opinion and she said that unless a buyer was looking to put in a huge garden or an outdoor pool, they probably wouldn't have any use for that much water, and I may not get a return on my investment.
As I understand it, I could never sell this water right to anyone without selling the property, so it's not a liquid asset.