water Archives - Big Green Purse https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/tag/water/ The expert help you need to live the greener, healthier life you want. Thu, 30 Jul 2015 15:00:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 If You Don’t Have a Rain Barrel, You’re Losing Water and Money https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/if-you-dont-have-a-rain-barrel-youre-losing-water-and-money/ https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/if-you-dont-have-a-rain-barrel-youre-losing-water-and-money/#respond Thu, 30 Jul 2015 15:00:25 +0000 https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/if-you-dont-have-a-rain-barrel-youre-losing-water-and-money/ Rain barrels have been popping up all over my neighborhood lately. I live in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, D.C., and water is expensive here. It can also be scarce in the summer, especially in the hot months of July and August, when flowers are in full bloom and trees and bushes are supposed to …

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rainbarrel post

Rain barrels have been popping up all over my neighborhood lately. I live in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, D.C., and water is expensive here.

It can also be scarce in the summer, especially in the hot months of July and August, when flowers are in full bloom and trees and bushes are supposed to be growing.

None of that happens if the plants don’t get enough water. In fact, I’ve had a lot of vegetables, azaleas, hydrangeas and even hundred-year-old oak trees die for lack of moisture.

Why Rain Barrels?

We’ve turned to rain barrels for three reasons:

1) They’re a free way to collect water.

2) They reduce our water bill.

3) They reduce run-off and help manage storm drain and sewer overflow.

How Does a Rain Barrel Work?

water-saving rain barrel→ A rain barrel is a big barrel, usually a 55 gallon drum made from heavy duty plastic or wood, that collects and stores rainwater from a roof.

→ The barrel is attached to a gutter that drains water off a roof. So, rather than all the water draining down into the gutter then out into your yard or the street, it drains into a barrel you can use whenever you need water.

→ A lid keeps mosquitoes and debris out.

→ A hose connects to the bottom of the barrel to make it easy to drain the water out.

You can install a rain barrel at each corner of your house, a garage, a shed, a barn, or any other structure with a roof. This one my neighbor installed blends completely into his garden.

How Much Will a Rain Barrel Save You?

The U.S. EPA says rain barrels can save most homeowners about 1,300 gallons of water during the peak summer months.

Lawn and garden watering make up nearly 40% of total household water use during the summer, so using a rain barrel to get water for free is pretty much a no-brainer.

Plus, capturing rain water from your gutters rather than letting it flow aimlessly onto your property or into storm drains significantly reduces the impact of runoff into streams.

A rain barrel is an easy way to get clean, fresh water to use outdoors for free.

Where Can You Get a Rain Barrel?

Of course, we sell rain barrels in our very own Big Green Purse store on Amazon. Here are three we like:
[show-logos orderby=’none’ category=’rain-barrel’ activeurl=’new’ style=’normal’ interface=’grid’ tooltip=’false’ description=’false’ limit=’0′ ]

 

Most hardware stores and stores with gardening departments sell rain barrels, including Ace, Lowe’s, Home Depot and WalMart. You can also find them online if you search “where to buy rain barrels.”

Gardener’s Supply sells options that include a double barrel system with the couplings you need for your hoses. Plow & Hearth sells a beautiful terra cotta urn whose top serves as a decorative planter to hold flowers.

Rain barrels can cost over $100, and upwards of $200 or more. You’ll eventually save that money on your water bill. But you can also make your own water barrel. Care2 shows you how here.

 

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7 Ways to Shrink the Size of Your Water Footprint https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/7-ways-to-shrink-the-size-of-your-water-footprint/ https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/7-ways-to-shrink-the-size-of-your-water-footprint/#respond Tue, 28 Jul 2015 16:00:51 +0000 https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/7-ways-to-shrink-the-size-of-your-water-footprint/ You’ve probably heard about your carbon footprint. That’s the amount of carbon dioxide you generate when you use fossil fuels, like coal, oil, gasoline, and natural gas. Your carbon footprint matters because it indicates what you’re contributing to the global problem of climate change. Knowing your carbon footprint can help you figure out where you …

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water footprint

You’ve probably heard about your carbon footprint. That’s the amount of carbon dioxide you generate when you use fossil fuels, like coal, oil, gasoline, and natural gas. Your carbon footprint matters because it indicates what you’re contributing to the global problem of climate change.

Knowing your carbon footprint can help you figure out where you can save energy and shrink your footprint overall. If we all took our footprint down a few sizes, we’d make a big dent in the rate that climate change is increasing. The same goes for water.

Why Shrink the Size of Your Water Footprint?

In many parts of the U.S. and in many regions of the world, clean water supplies are shrinking so rapidly  that knowing our water footprint has become essential if we’re going to use the water we have wisely.

√ Only 1 percent of all the world’s water can be used for drinking (nearly 97% is salty, and the remaining 2% is tied up in the polar ice caps and glaciers).

√ There’s no “new” water. Though H2O cycles through a series of phases – as water on the ground or under ground, precipitation as rain, snow or sleet, and back again – the actual amount of water on earth is finite. We have just what we have, so we need to use it wisely.

√ You use more than you think. Right now, in America, on an average day, you’ll probably use about ninety gallons of water, which amounts to about 107,000 gallons for the year – enough to fill your bathtub almost 3,000 times.

We use water to grow lawns, wash dishes, rinse food, shower and shave, and let the tap run when we brush our teeth. About 14 percent leaks down the drain.

Older toilets waste more clean water in a single flush than many Africans use in an entire day.

fix leaky faucetsFind and Fix Leaky Faucets & Toilets Before Drips Drain Your Wallet

We use water indirectly, too. Every product we buy has its own water footprint, and part of that footprint adds to ours every time we consume.

If you’re a “meat and potatoes” kind of person who loves to shop, your water footprint will be significantly larger than that of a vegetarian who is into recycling, swapping and sharing.

How to Measure Your Water Footprint

→ Read Your Water Bill. The easiest way to measure your direct water footprint is by reading your water bill. Most of us receive a monthly or quarterly bill from the utility company that supplies us with water. Look for these two pieces of vital information in every bill:

1) Your “average daily consumption” that is typical per person in your area.

2) How much water per person per day is being consumed in your household. My bill also shows how much water overall I used during the billing period, which in our area is every three months. I keep my bills for a year and compare them from bill to bill. Doing so, I can see both how much water I use and when I use the most.

My water usage is actually only about 50 gallons per person per day, compared to the “typical” person in our area, which is 70.

I also use almost twice as much water in the summer as I do in the winter, probably because I’m making more iced tea, taking more showers to cool off when it’s hot and muggy outside, and watering my garden.

Confused?

If you find your water bill confusing, you can try the clever Water Footprint Calculator created by Grace Communications Foundation. There are many calculators online, but I like this one because it’s got state-by-state options and the graphics are clever. When I took it, it calculated that I use about half as much water as the average American! It also suggests these ways to reduce the size of my water footprint even more:

7 Ways to Shrink Your Water Footprint

1) Take shorter showers. For every minute I shorten my shower, I can save 2.5 to 10 gallons of water (depending on how much water is coming out of the shower head).

2) Turn off the faucet when brushing teeth. That could save 4 or more gallons of water each day.

3) Use a dishwasher. Believe it or not, dishwashers are far more efficient than hand washing dishes, because you can wash so many more dishes at once. Hand washing one load of dishes can use as much as 20 gallons of water, compared to an energy-efficient dishwasher that clocks in at as little as 4.5 gallons. NOTE: If you must wash dishes by hand, don’t leave the water running nonstop. Fill a pot with rinse water, use a sponge to rinse off all the dishes, then soap them up and rinse them off.

4) Wash clothes less. I don’t mean that you should wear dirty clothes! But much of our attire – like blue jeans, sweaters, dress clothes – don’t need to be laundered if they’ve only been worn once. Washing less will extend the life of your clothes, as well.

shrink water footprint5) Fix all leaks. And I mean all! Check bathroom, kitchen and bathtub faucets, toilet tanks, hose attachments outside, and any place else where water can just leak away. Fixing leaks will save you money on your water bill, too.

6) Replace your thirsty lawn with native plants that require less water. If you must have a lawn, water it deeply and during the cooler parts of the day, to promote healthier root growth and to make sure most of the water goes into the lawn rather than evaporating into the air. If planting new plants, choose those that can tolerate the amount of rainfall normal for your area. Don’t miss this post:

reduce lawn watering

8 Best Natural Alternatives to Growing Grass

7) Eat less meat. I’m not much of a meat eater to begin with, which is good when it comes to water. FYI, it takes over 1700 gallons of water to produce just one pound of beef, so switching to a plant-based diet helps reduce your water footprint significantly.

To get a sense of how much water other products use, check out this handy reference at National Geographic.

And remember: don’t just pay your water bill the next time it comes. Read it closely to see how much water you’re really using.

 

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