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Posted: Tue Feb 09, 2010 5:01 pm
Easy Ways to Conserve Water and Save Money posted by: Beth Buczynski 9 days ago
"How many times a day do you give thanks for the clean, potable water that comes flowing out of your faucet? Although we may take it for granted, the fact is that less than 1% of the world’s fresh water (or about 0.007% of all water on earth) is readily accessible for direct human use, and over 884 million people in the world lack access to safe water supplies.
This is approximately one in eight people. (Now do you feel lucky?)
Many people are worried about global warming, and the climate change crisis that is occuring all over the globe. However, experts are predicting that soon the number of people without access to clean drinking water will climb past 1 billion. This water crisis will have repercussions all over the globe as different cultures scramble to secure lifegiving water for consumption and agricultural uses.
It's important that we all do our part to make the best use of the resources we have, which means finding ways to reuse water and reduce our daily consumption.
Here are some easy, inexpensive ways that you can get started:
1. If it's broken...fix it!
It might seem like a no brainer, but leaking faucets and dripping shower heads are some of the biggest household water wasters. In fact, just a small drip from a worn faucet washer can waste 20 gallons of water per day. Larger leaks can waste hundreds of gallons!
Don't forget that toilets can leak too, but it's harder to spot. Put a little food coloring in your toilet tank. Don't flush it, and if the color begins to appear in the bowl within 30 minutes, you have a leak that should be repaired immediately.
Take a few minutes to check on all the faucets and toilets in the house, and if you notice a leak, break out your wrench, or call up a plumber.
2. Install aerators
We all take showers and baths to stay clean, and use the bathroom sink to brush our teeth and wash our faces. But have stopped to think about how much clean, drinkable water is rushing down the drain during these hygiene rituals? The average home shower blasts out about 7-10 gallons of water per minute, which means even if you're only taking a ten minute shower, you've already waster 100 gallons of water before breakfast! If you leave the tap running while you brush your teeth or shave, you could be sending 5-10 gallons of water down the drain.
The good news is that both of these problems can be solved by installing an inexpensive device called an aerator or restrictor into your faucets and shower heads. Aerators work by mixing air into the water stream, which gives you a nice even pressure, even though you're using a fraction of the water.
3. DIY low-flow toilet
If you're shocked about the sheer volume of water you're wasting at the sink and in the shower, get ready to brace yourself. Toilets use about 30 percent of the total water used in a household, and if you're still using a conventional single flush toilet, you might be wasting up to 3.5 galllons of water in one flush.
If you don't have the money (or desire) to replace your conventional toilet with a more efficient one, it's easy to convert your existing throne to a low-flow toilet all on your own.
Put an inch or two of sand or pebbles inside each of two plastic bottles to weigh them down. Fill the bottles with water, screw the lids on, and put them in your toilet tank, safely away from the operating mechanisms. Or, buy an inexpensive tank bank or float booster. This may save ten or more gallons of water per day (from EarthEasy.com).
4. Catch it if you can!
The average American family uses about 400 gallons of water per day, and you might find it hard to believe that a staggering 30 percent of that isn't even used for drinking, cooking or cleaning: it's used to water lawns and gardens, wash automobiles, maintain swimming pools, and cleaning sidewalks and driveways.
It's important to remember that while we can't necessarily drink the water that falls from the sky as rain (air pollution!) we can use it for these other, non-consumptive applications. In order to take advantage of this free, and often squandered source of water, you can install rain catchment systems on your roof or rain barrels around your home. In some states, there are restrictions on who can capture rain water (unbelievable, but true) so check with your local government first.
5. Be smart
Even if you can't manage to make any of these upgrades or additions to your home right away, there are plenty of behavioral changes that can be made to reduce your family's water footprint.
* Turn off the water when you're washing dishes by hand, brushing your teeth or shaving. * Only run the clothes washer or the dishwasher when you've got a full load. * Avoid baths and take shorter showers. * Plant drought-resistant lawns, shrubs and plants in your yard, and put down mulch wherever you can to help water from evaporating too quickly. * If you must water your lawn, be sure to place your sprinklers in such a way that no water will fall on sidewalks or driveways, and only water in the early morning or evening, when the weather is cooler. * Use a broom, and not a hose to clean your driveway and sidewalks. * Avoid flushing the toilet unnecessarily. Dispose of tissues, insects and other such waste in the trash rather than the toilet. * Use the garbage disposal less and the garbage more (or better yet compost!) and you could save 50 to 150 gallons a month." http://www.care2.com/causes/environment/blog/easy-water-conservation/
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Posted: Tue Feb 09, 2010 5:08 pm
We have a few leaky things in my house. But we don't know how to fix them, and we don't have the money to have someone else do it. I try to always put a dirty dish under the kitchen faucet so that at least the drips will fill up and soak the dirty dish rather than be completely wasted.
No money for an aerator.
We don't flush every time we pee.
We do not water the lawn. I water the garden with rainwater. I'm a fan of local and low-maintenance plants anyway. I water the houseplants with rain too in the spring and summer.
I only run the washing machine when it is full. We don't have a dishwasher or garbage disposal.
So money is definitely our biggest issue. sweatdrop
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Posted: Mon Feb 15, 2010 9:00 am
I live with kind of the most environmentally unfriendly people in the world. It's a pain in my a** and I hate it. Money is a big problem for me, and though I'm handy I'm terribly afraid of ******** with plumbing having had some really bad experiences with it in the past. Also it's a matter of changing out the whole faucet in our bathroom to stop the leak.
I was trying to catch the drips with a large bowl and use the water from that to flush the toilet but my room mates complained heartily.
As it stands, I do almost all the dishes because they're lazy ******** so I run efficient loads. However, it's not all workable sometimes.
As it stands I take 5-7 minute showers and am hoping to shift to a basin kind of washing system, where by I use no more than two or so large mixing bowls of water for cleaning myself.
Between my extreme showering and my room mate's 20-45 minute showers I might cancel out one of them. It's a pain in my a**.
Does anyone remember the commercials from about the early 1990's with the singing water drops about wasting water while we brush our teeth?
"They wasted waaaaaaaterrrrrrr"
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