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-   -   So how does California deal with a drought? (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/showthread.php?t=6778)

Morrigoon 10-13-2007 01:25 AM

Water your lawn at 2am, cut down on the amount of water you give it (you can, you know, since there is time for it to be absorbed by the ground without losing much to evaporation.

Restaurants no longer automatically serve water to you - you have to ask for it.

Don't wash your car so often.

Fix running toilets - a "slow" leak in a toilet can waste a TON of water. If you hear your toilet "running" on its own, it means there's a leak.

I can't remember a time when we weren't being told that we were in a drought, so it's really nothing new to me.

BDBopper 10-13-2007 06:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Morrigoon (Post 165946)
Water your lawn at 2am, cut down on the amount of water you give it (you can, you know, since there is time for it to be absorbed by the ground without losing much to evaporation.

Restaurants no longer automatically serve water to you - you have to ask for it.

Don't wash your car so often.

Fix running toilets - a "slow" leak in a toilet can waste a TON of water. If you hear your toilet "running" on its own, it means there's a leak.

I can't remember a time when we weren't being told that we were in a drought, so it's really nothing new to me.

All very good ideas. BTW I love your sunny avatar. It's so cute! :)

Stan4dSteph 10-13-2007 10:46 AM

Turn off the water when you're brushing your teeth.

~MS~ 10-13-2007 11:44 AM

Run full loads in the dishwasher and laundry. If you own your home redo your yard to require less watering, if you don't have the new models of toliets, use the brick or 1/2 gallon milk jug trick to reduce the water capacity in the tank and the toliet will still flush just fine...take shorter showers, if you have a hand held shower head, turn the water off in between shampoo'ing up your hair and rinse and the same with conditioners. Like Steph already mentioned, turn the water off while brushing your teeth/shaving.

figment1986 10-16-2007 05:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Morrigoon (Post 165946)
Water your lawn at 2am, cut down on the amount of water you give it (you can, you know, since there is time for it to be absorbed by the ground without losing much to evaporation.

Restaurants no longer automatically serve water to you - you have to ask for it.

Don't wash your car so often.

Fix running toilets - a "slow" leak in a toilet can waste a TON of water. If you hear your toilet "running" on its own, it means there's a leak.

I can't remember a time when we weren't being told that we were in a drought, so it's really nothing new to me.

Now the Floridian news stations never said anything about watering the lawn at night after sundown... that sounds like a great idea for the people who have homeowners associations, myself my front lawn is either dead or weed grass while my backyard grows with the creek as a water source.

it seems FLA and southern California are similar with having drought conditions for long periods of time...

perhaps we could get a tropical storm to restart the weather cycle in fla and GA.

Not Afraid 10-16-2007 06:16 PM

Florida and Drought are two concepts that should not be in the same sentence.

BDBopper 10-16-2007 06:28 PM

To conserve water has anyone ever tried taking a shower but stopping the drain? I just tried that today and my shower wasn't as long and didn't use up as much water.

figment1986 10-16-2007 06:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Not Afraid (Post 166389)
Florida and Drought are two concepts that should not be in the same sentence.

it should not... But it happens, almost every year it seems we get a bad dry season. I think we're still under the old average even though July - early September was rain every afternoon or evening depending where you live.

they have yet to loosen the watering restrictions... which is not too bad. The water management even built a desalt plant to get water from the gulf to help when needed, but it doesn't work perfectly yet.

BarTopDancer 10-16-2007 06:47 PM

Nearly every shower head sold and installed now come with flow restrictors. Personally, I remove them - can't stand them and they make my shower longer.

Fix leaky faucets and toilets. Put a brick or milk jug full of water in your toilet tank. Water your lawn at night, don't wash your car, don't use water you don't need.

Alex 10-16-2007 07:01 PM

If you have a modern low flow toilet (and if you're toilet is newer than 1994 it should be) you probably don't want to do the "brick in the tank" trick since it will probably reduce the flush capacity to the degree that you're flushing multiple times which ends up using even more water (and this is a problem with poorly made low flow toilets without even putting a brick in).

Second, don't actually use a brick. Bricks dissolve in water and can damage the toilet tank when chunks get into places they shouldn't. Also, a standard brick doesn't really displace that much water. If you have a pre-1994 toilet then you can put something of larger displacement capacity that won't dissolve (such as a ballasted gallon milk jug) in there. Of course, if you're committed, simply replacing the old 3.5 or 5 gallon per flush with a modern low flow toilet would probably be a better idea.

There's no reason for every shower to be a luxurious experience and it really shouldn't take more than five minutes and if you start taking a "navy shower" you can cut water use from 60 gallons for a 10 minute shower down to 3 (in a navy shower you use water to get wet and rinse off and turn it off the rest of the time).


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