Tips on Saving Water — Inside and Out
March 26th, 2009 | Published in Featured | 2 Comments
Using excess water or having leaks can cost you hundreds of dollars a year in wasted water. A simple toilet leak can use 50 extra gallons of water a day, and a faucet leak can waste up to 5,000 gallons a year. We’ve got some tips for keeping that water bill down.
Saving water indoors
-
Think you might have a leak? Check by reading your water meter before and after a 2-hour period when water hasn’t been run in your home. If the reading isn’t exactly the same, you’ve got a leak.
-
If you’ve got a well-water system and the pump comes on when no one is using water, you have a leak.
-
Find out if the toilet is leaking by putting a few drops of food coloring into the toilet tank. If the color leaks into the bowl, replace the flapper.
-
Get those dripping faucets repaired. Usually it’s a simple matter of replacing worn washers. Check all the washers in the house and replace them all at once.
-
Replace “sticky” toilet handles.
-
Make sure the flapper ball in the tank seats correctly.
-
Don’t use the toilet as a wastebasket or ashtray. Avoid unnecessary flushing.
-
Install faucet aerators to slow the flow of water.
-
Rinse vegetables over a large bowl and reuse what would have gone down the drain to water plants.
-
Keep drinking water in the refrigerator to avoid letting water run until it gets cool enough to drink.
-
Defrost foods in the microwave instead of under running water.
-
Insulate water heater and water pipes. (65% of the water you use is hot water.)
Saving water in the bathroom
-
Don’t let the water run continuously when you are shaving, brushing your teeth, etc.
-
Replace two-handle systems with single-lever faucets.
-
Shower instead of bathe.
-
Install low-flow showerheads that reduce water use up to half but still give a great feeling shower.
-
Get a showerhead with a “shower off” button to conserve water while you lather up.
-
Take shorter showers. Five-minute showers per day for a four-member family use about 28,000 gallons of water per year.
Saving water in cleaning
-
Older standard washing machines use up to 50 gallons of water per load, Newer models use only 11-30 gallons.
-
Don’t wash half loads, and if you do, adjust the water level.
-
Presoaking prevents having to re-wash heavily soiled clothes.
-
Soak dirty dishes instead of rinsing each dish separately.
-
If you’re washing dishes in a double sink, wash them all at once and rinse them all at once.
-
Replace an old, water-inefficient dishwasher. You can save 10 to 20 gallons of water per wash cycle.
-
Select the water-saving cycle on your dishwasher.
Saving water outdoors
-
Landscape with plants that need less water.
-
Don’t overwater. Buy a gauge to measure the rain your lawn gets.
-
Water lawns during the time of day when temperature and wind speed are lowest to reduce evaporation.
-
Put a timer on your sprinklers so you don’t forget to turn them off.
-
Over-fertilization increases your lawn’s need for watering. Don’t over feed.
-
Use a soaker hose instead of a sprinkler system to better target the water to your plants.
-
Mulch plants well to retain moisture.
-
Make sure your sprinkler system isn’t watering the sidewalk, driveway or street.
-
Set your lawnmower blades to 3 inches or higher to encourage you lawn to grow deeper roots and hold moisture better.
-
Use water-saving filters in your pool.
December 8th, 2008at 4:52 am(#)
If you are serious about saving water, want a toilet that works and is affordable, I would highly recommend a Caroma Dual installing Flush toilets. Caroma toilets offer a patented dual flush technology consisting of a 0.8 Gal flush for liquid waste and a 1.6 Gal flush for solids. Caroma, an Australian company set the standard by giving the world its first successful two button dual flush system in the nineteen eighties and has since perfected the technology. Also, with a full 3.5″ trapway, these toilets virtually never clog. All of Caroma’s toilets are on the list of WaterSense labeled HET’s http://www.epa.gov/watersense/pp/find_het.htm and also qualify for several toilet rebate programs currently available. Please go to http://www.caromausa.com for more detailed information or visit http://www.ecotransitions.com/howto.asp to see why they actually work so well. Best regards, Andrea Paulinelli
December 8th, 2008at 6:19 pm(#)
When installing faucet aerators keep in mind there are many levels of water saving aerators. Most low flow aerators start at around 2.5 gallons per minute but there are aerators with levels as low as .5 gallons per minute. Here is a link to some, you can’t buy them on the site but it will help you see what to look for at the hardware store.
http://www.faucetaerators.com/faucet-aerators-c-21.html