No, we get huge amounts of rain especially in the wet season. (Two seasons, wet and dry basically). In wet seasons it really has to pound down to have water running over the earth or the land. It all kinda disappears quite quickly into the earth and underground rivers - the land is quite porous.
I was just thinking about the overall environment ... there are no big bodies of water, or rivers. There are rivers, but they are underground - for example, if one digs a well, you will find water mostly anywhere and everywhere, the first aquifer being as little as 7 meters down in areas, or 20 in other areas, and the 2nd aquifer being just underneath that in our area. It is like .. well, if our environment does not have water in dams or in riviers, are we doing the right thing with a system of berms and swales and all the other permaculture standby basic methodologies? are we not working against our environment?. Basically I am now questioning again, and from the beginning.
Refining this permaculture design has now given me a curved ball. Is there anyone here that understands this geology?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karst