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Twenty Tips We Can Use To Conserve Water

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Date: 04/22/2005 Topic: Home Improvement > Conservation  
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Presently in some parts of the U.S. there are drought conditions. Ness, a regular "Clipper" contributor sent us these tips. They are from Rodale Press and we received their permission to print them.
  1. Place a brick in your toilet tank to reduce the amount of water used with each flush.
  2. Keep an empty gallon jug near the sink, and pour any leftover water from cooking or drinking into it. Once the jug is full, use water on plants in the garden or home, which should be watered in evening to reduce loss to evaporation.
  3. Pour leftover water from steaming vegetables into a bucket, add a little ammonia and use to mop floor.
  4. Keep a gardening can near sink, and put under faucet when you are waiting for hot water to warm up. Once full, use for gardening.
  5. Mulch around plants with grass clippings, compost, straw or ground bark. The mulching will reduce evaporation and hold moisture in the soil longer. In fact, long term mulching with organic materials reduces the amount of water your garden needs because it increases the soil's water holding capacity.
  6. Place a bucket in your shower to catch water that is wasted while you wait for it to warm up, and during your shower.
  7. Take dirty water from bird baths, flower vases, or pet dishes and reuse on potted plants.
  8. If you have a dehumidifier, use the water it collects to water plants or garden.
  9. Install water saving shower heads, faucets, etc., and for long-term savings, a low-flush toilet.
  10. Draw a small amount of warm water in the basin before your shave, and use that to clean razor rather than leaving the water running.
  11. Drink bottled water such as spring water instead of tap water.
  12. Repair all leaks to faucets. One drop a second wastes 2,400 gallons of water a year.
  13. Only run dishwashers or washing machines when full.
  14. Instead of using hot water, defrost foods overnight or use a microwave.
  15. Keep your garden weed free since weeds drink up any available water in the soil.
  16. On those rare occasions it does rain, leave buckets outside to collect water for washing cars, watering plants, and gardens.
  17. Turn off ice-makers for refrigerators and use trays instead until drought passes.
  18. Cover tender plants with light sheets or even tipped over patio chairs to reduce excessive sun exposure.
  19. Use recyclable plates and cups to cut down on washing of dishes.
  20. If you use non-phosphate detergents, and no bleach in the wash, rinse water from the washing machine can be saved and used on lawn and garden.
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Post by BeanTownSteve (16) | (07/29/2006)
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I reject #11. # Drink bottled water such as spring water instead of tap water.

This will mean we not only had to produce a bottle, filter and otherwise process water, run a production line to fill, package it, truck it to a store, and transport it home from the store. Additionally if I'm drinking a glass of water, I'm drinking a glass of water. If it comes from a different place, it still means a glass of water. I guess you could go to a neighbor's house and drink their water and save that way!

I don't figure this saves anything over drinking tap water. Exception made for those whose tap water is somehow undrinkable.


Post By Uham (Guest Post) (03/13/2006)
Save water and reduce frequency of watering with your Plants in Pots & Polybags or other Containers. Simple & Low cost technique developed by Dr. Raj, at UAS (GKVK), Bangalore 560065 India.

Visit : http://watertips.rediffblogs.com


Post by beth.colvin (4) | (01/02/2001)
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Yellow=Mellow, Brown=Go Down. If you follow this rule for flushing your home toilets, you will save hundreds of gallons of water a year, even if you already have low flow toilets. Of course you can't let it get too full or it will need to be plunged.


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