It's an early blog today because my youngest son is coming to visit this afternoon and I haven't seen him for about 14 months. He has been travelling in Ausrailia and Thailand and working as a film extra I am really looking foward to seeing him! We have just had lunch outside because it is a really lovely day, very sunny I have been hoeing my veggie plot. My peas are shooting!! High excitement!! Only drawback is that we have had no appreciable amount of rain for about 6 weeks so I have had to fill watering cans from the burn. This brings me neatly into what I wanted to talk about today which is water conservation.
One of the most fundamental needs that human beings have is fresh water and there are so many people in the world who don't even have that necessity. Anyway I found an excellent blog with some suggestions on how you can save water.
By
practicing water conservation at home we encourage our children to
accept that natural resources are not in endless supply - a reality
their generation will be forced to accept - a reality our generation
too often chooses to ignore.
Saving water at home helps reduce or eliminate costs for
infrastructure such as new or upgraded reservoirs, water treatment
facilities, or sewage treatment plants. These are huge expenses which
are passed on to homeowners through municipal taxes.
Enough said. Here are 12 ways to save water in your home:
1. Check for leaks. If you have a water meter, read it before and
after a two-hour interval when no one is using any water. If it doesn’t
read exactly the same, you have a leak somewhere in your house.
2. Find and fix leaks. Replace washers on dripping faucets. A drip
rate of one drop per second wastes 1,000 litres per month . Toilets are another common source for leaks.
Check by putting a few drops of food coloring in the tank. If the color
appears in the bowl after about half an hour, you have a leak. Replace
worn parts. They’re cheap and the repairs are easily done.
3. Toilets are responsible for 30-40% of household water use. Avoid
flushing unnecessarily. Don’t put anything down the toilet except
toilet waste. Don’t be afraid to let it mellow if it’s yellow. Tissues,
dead spiders, hair balls and other assorted trash belong in the garbage
can, not the toilet.
4. Replace older toilets. The current standard is 1.6 gallons per
flush. Toilets 10 years old or older may use anywhere from 3.5 to 7
gallons per flush.
5. Take shorter showers. If you don’t have a low flow showerhead,
get one that uses less than 2.5 gallons per minute. You’ll never notice
the difference. In fact, if you have low water pressure, you’ll get a
better shower with a low flow showerhead. Some models have a control to
let you easily stop the flow while you suds up, then resume for
rinsing. What a great idea!
6. Turn down one tap rather than turning up the other one to adjust
water temperature. It’s just as effective and uses less water.
7. Don’t let the water run while brushing your teeth or shaving.
8. Put aerators on all the faucets in your home.
9. Run only full loads in the washer or dishwasher, or adjust the
water level for smaller loads. Choose water-efficient appliances.
Front-loading washers use about a third less water than top-loading.
Some washing machines are available with a suds-saver option that
drains wash water into your laundry tub to be reused for another load.
10. Start a compost pile in the yard to avoid wasting water by using a kitchen sink disposal.
11. Keep a jug of water in the fridge for drinking so you don’t have
to run the tap waiting for the water to cool. If you’re on municipal
water, this practice has the added advantage of reducing the chlorine
content as some of the chlorine escapes from the water into the air
while it sits in the jug.
12. Collect the water that would otherwise be going down the drain
while you’re waiting for the hot water to reach your faucet. You can
use it for watering plants or cleaning.
I think this blog was American but you get the gist I'm sure. If anybody has any further tips we would love to hear about them.
Linda