Does our neighbor's current very well affect ours? We live in an nouns of severe-drought-stricken Virginia and have a 55ft....

We live in an nouns of severe-drought-stricken Virginia and have a 55ft. all right. Our neighbor has a similar in good health. He just cleared a full acre contained by front of his home, put in an irrigation system and planted grass. He run his well dry three times trying to wet his huge new pasture, so he had an artesian (really deep) all right dug, JUST for watering his grass. It is a little disturbing to drive through this nouns and see the dusty yards and shriveled crops, next his golf-course lawn beside sprinklers spraying away.
Hey, he's retired and it seems to put together him happy, this green heaven. Does his water use affect our in good health? As I said, ours is a 55 ft. well. We are conserving during this drought, doing smaller quantity laundry, timing showers, not washing our dusty cars. His behind the times well, which he still uses for house dampen, is about 45ft. reflective, the new one in the region of 500 ft. deep. What do you devise? Am I just controlling? Is his water use during a drought irresponsible?
Answers:    his latest well should not affect yours. it's so much deeper than your capably and than his house well that it's contained by a different water pocket. while this same pocket may emerge upwards into shallower pools, it's not going to drain the water table. hose down that deep is usually spring feed, which means it's continually replenished. as for the shallower in good health, they do in reality affect each other during period of drought because they are much closer to the surface and tend to be replaced through seepage from rain a bit than through springs. as long as you are not having problems beside your water supply i wouldn't verbs too much. just be glad you don't hold his electric bill to pay running that in good health pump all the time!
It is a rugged question to answer. It would depend on the geology of the bed rocks, wether within pourous of not etc. best thing to do would be to agree to local geologists and get nearby opinion.