|
Water Conservation

Things you can do to save water in the Bathroom
1. Check your toilet for leaks. Put a little food coloring in
your toilet tank. If, without flushing, the color begins to appear in bowl,
you have a leak that should be repaired immediately.
2. Stop using the toilet as an ashtray or wastebasket. Every time
you flush a cigarette butt, facial tissue, or other small bits of trash, you
waste five to seven gallons of water.
3. Put plastic bottles in your toilet tank. To cut down on water
waste, put an inch or two of sand pebbles inside each of plastic bottles to
weigh them down. Fill them with water and put them in your toilet tank. In
an average home, the bottles may displace and save ten or more gallons of
water a day.
4. Take shorter showers. Long, hot showers can waste five to ten
gallons every unneeded minute.
5. Install water saving shower heads or flow restrictors. Your
local hardware or plumbing supple store stocks inexpensive water saving
shower heads or restrictors that are easy to install.
6. Take baths. A bath in a partially filled tub uses less water
than all but the shortest showers.
7. Turn off the water after you wet your toothbrush. There is no
need to keep water pouring down the drain. Just wet your brush and fill a
glass for mouth rinsing.
8. Rinse your razor in the sink. Fill the bottom of a sink with a
few inches of warm water. This will rinse your blade as well as running
water. And far less wastefully.
9. Check faucets and pipes for leaks. Even the smallest drip
from a worn washer can waste 20 or more gallons a day. Large leaks can
waste hundreds.
Things you can do to save water in the kitchen and laundry
1. Use your automatic dishwasher only for full loads.
2. Use your automatic washing machine only for full loads.
3. If you wash dishes by hand, don't leave the water running for
rinsing. If you have two sinks, fill one with soapy water and one with
rinse water. If you have only one sink, gather washed dishes in a dish rack
and rinse them with a spray device or a panful of hot water.
4. Don't let the faucet run while you clean vegetables. Just
rinse them in a stoppered sink or a pan of clean water.
5. Keep a bottle of drinking water in the refrigerator. Running
tap water to cool it off for drinking water is wasteful.
6. Check faucets and pipes for leaks.
Things
you can do to save water outside
1. Water your lawn only when it needs it. A good way to see if
your lawn needs watering is to step on the grass. If it springs back up
when you move, it doesn't need water. If it stays flat, fetch the sprinkler.
2. Deep soak your lawn. When you do water, do it long enough for
the moisture to soak down to the roots where it will do the most good. A
light sprinkling can evaporate quickly and tends to encourage shallow root
systems.
3. Water during the cool parts of the day. Early morning
generally is better than dusk since it helps prevent growth of fungus.
4. Don't water the gutter. Position your sprinklers so water
lands on the lawn or garden, not on the paved areas. Also avoid watering on
windy days.
5. Plant drought resistant trees and plants. Many beautiful trees
and plants thrive with far less watering than other species.
6. Put a layer of mulch around trees and plants. Mulch will slow
evaporation of moisture and discourage weed growth too.
7. Use a broom, not a hose, to clean driveways and sidewalks.
8. Don't run the hose while washing your car. Clean the car with
a pail of soapy water. Use the hose just to rinse it off.
9. Tell your children not to play with the hose and sprinklers.
10. Check for leaks in pipes, hoses, faucets and couplings. |