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Showing posts with label Rain Barrels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rain Barrels. Show all posts

Saturday, October 6, 2012

# 356 - Rain Water Catchment Systems

Part of my classic movie watching included "Night of the Living Dead" and it was creepy. I think I've seen bits and parts of it through the years, but never all the way through. It was odd.

Speaking of scary, a group of family members are addicted to the AMC television series, "The Walking Dead" because it has a mixture of survivalist concepts combined with a virus of some type that turns the dead into The Walking Dead or you'll become one of them if you are scratched, bit or infected by a "Walker."

If you watched "Lost," I am finding that this series is very similar. Bands of people, good groups, bad groups...the monsters that you must avoid...it's compelling and addicting. It's hard to watch scary things, but it is October. BOO!

As for interesting details, I've been studying the possibility of setting up the cabin with a rain catchment system to use for most water needs. With a dad who is a plumber and a brother who loves to be a naturalist himself, I'm in good hands. Even the deputy has good ideas and a strong drive to lean toward such a system --- between these three men, I think a great system can be put in place for the country cabin. A good system can provide all the water needed for cooking, washing, gardening and more.

There is a man here in Texas, West Texas, where it is high and dry with problems getting water and he got around the lack of water sources by putting in a rain water catchment system. He built an incredible log cabin on five acres with his system at work every day, he's been an integral teacher for others to learn this system. He's my hero of the week.

Below is a link to create a rain water catchment system.

http://texaswater.tamu.edu/conference/feb05/kniffen.pdf

Billy Kniffen served as the first president of the Texas Rain Water Catchment Association. Billy's family has lived using a rain catchment system in that area of Texas that can be dry and brutal and without suitable well water. Rain water has been his family's only water source.

With a rain water catchment system, you won't have to rely on public water, you won't have to worry about paying a water bill, you won't have to worry about the high expense of digging a well and the limitations that come with having a well, you won't have to worry about a well going dry and you can set up catchment systems throughout your acreage, where needed, large or small.

Internet picture of Billy Kniffen's home in West Texas.

He set up a system where rain is capture from the rooftop of the house and the barn and he stores captured rain water in 3,000 gallon tanks. His system gives him a supply that would last about 7 months. Of course, he and his family utilize practices and tools that help reduce their daily water consumption, but those are not expensive to put into place and developing proper habits can be easily learned.

He takes what he calls the "Two-Minute Military Man Shower." Actually, I was laughing out loud when I read this because I lived for three years in Germany where our water was an extremely high priced commodity As part of our Introduction to the base, for those of us who would be living on the economy (off base) we were going to have to learn how to ration water and electricity on a level we'd never been forced to do before.

This meant were were given detailed, serious instructions on how conserve such resources. For showers, we were taught to turn on the water, just long enough to drench the body and hair, turn off the water, lather up and scrub, then turn the water back on to rinse. For years, this is how I showered. In fact, when we purchased our first RV and it had the shower head with the easy one-flip switch to turn off the water without turning the knobs for temperature change, I thought it was brilliant and wondered why household showers don't have these same kinds of shower heads as standard equipment? If they came standard, the public might have a tendency to use less water. Of course, there will be those people who will never flip the switch, but for those who do, they are making the world a better place.

As for the training in electricity, Germans have incredible windows. The best I've ever seen. Their windows have the capacity to be covered by outer roll-down shutters that completely block out the light and protect the windows from a single rain drop when it storms. The shutters are great for home protection and to block solar energy. To this day, I miss having those shutters. Ours were the hand-crank variety and a couple were rolled up and down through pulling a sturdy strap built into the wall. To this day I would love to have those on our windows.

The Germans also had bright light in every room and a power switch was rarely used during the day. Even now, I live every day without hardly ever touching a light switch. I prefer natural lighting, even as it dims throughout the day. If I'm doing task-oriented work, then I will use a light. However, my power usage is minimal. The one thing I splurge on is air-conditioning. However, I  know that when I'm in the country and beneath some shade trees, there's no need for cooled air, it feels perfect beneath the trees.

Billy Kniffen now travels and trains others through rain catchment workshops so they can also learn to live without purchasing water. It's one way to live a little off the grid.

Additionally, he uses a wood stove to heat his log cabin and he built his cabin with a three-sided porch to avoid solar gain and to make outside living space more enjoyable. In Texas, outside living space is important to most people.

His family uses the grey water from the washing machine to water the yard.





All of the diagrams help to make some sense out of this rain water catchment system.




The below link is more of Billy Kniffen's work and it has a great photo of his own home that I love. There's also a rain water catchment system behind a varnished wood fence that makes the system non-intrusive and beautiful.

http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/hawaiirain/Library/papers/powerpoint%20files%202007%20conference/Kniffen.pdf

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

#38 - Old Whiskey Rain Barrels...I'm in Love

Houston, we HAVE rain! All morning, into the early part of the day, it's been raining here in the Houston area and this is great because we have been in a serious drought. Hearing the sound of rolling thunder and the pitter patter of rain has been awesome. Actually, the sound of rain is a bit drowned out by the many fans we have running in the house, but it is still incredible to see rain!
After experiencing a long drought, again, I am further convinced that having a few rain barrels strategically installed around the house would be beneficial. Once we move to our acreage, we will definitely utilize rain barrels, especially around the cabin for our landscaped plantings.

I love this old barn with the improvised rain barrel and the watering
can nearby for dipping to water where needed.
However, I don't want just any old rain barrel, I want the old-fashioned style that will go with our rustic wooded land. Any rain barrels that we get for our house in the city will be taken with us when we move to our farm. So, when we sell our home in the city, the rain barrels will definitely be listed as an "exclusion" to the sale of our home. But, I'm sure every potential buyer who comes through will love the idea and want the barrels to stay. Well, I'm fairly sure...

There are some rain barrels that are made of plastics, but they aren't my preferred choice. They look very utilitarian, but I'm wanting a rain barrel for practical purposes to harvest rainfall, yet my preference is an old-fashioned whiskey barrel configured to catch rain.

Plastic style, nice, but not exactly what I want.
I checked out a great site http://www.kentuckybarrels.com/ that have some awesome barrels and they will put one together the way you want...the prices are pretty amazing, so this business is surely going to stay around because people are more likely to be able to afford their prices more than other sites. They had some beautiful pictures of half barrels being used as a water feature.

From Kentucky Barrels - Beautiful.
Another aspect to having a rain barrel that adds interest is to use a rain chain which adds beautiful sounds and is another nice water element to add to your rain barrel setup.

A Houston Man writing on his blog at "The Accidental Gardner" posted
these pictures after writing about rain barrels he installed for his fiance.
Since we are finally getting rain as I type this post, I have been thinking more about drought protection. To help provide a water solution during a drought, you can use rain barrels. You simply set up a rain barrel beneath your gutters and use a downspout diverter to send roof water through a filtering screen into the barrel. When not in use, the barrel should be covered with a secure lid to provide protection from mosquito infestation and to protect children from a drowning hazard.

"The Accidental Gardner" blog and his beautiful pictures of his
old whiskey style rain barrels with rain chains.
A rain barrel can lower your water bill and reduce damage around your home due to storm water run-off. With a good overflow system in place, you can better control the moisture level around your house and foundation. In Texas, this is a good thing.

A 3/4" attached spigot near the bottom of the barrel allows for gravity fed water to sent through an attached standard water hose for free watering of your landscaped plantings. There's no need to use tap water for this kind of watering around the house, you can save the drinking water for cooking, bathing, washing laundry and dishes, and for drinking, but use the captured water in the rain barrel for your plants or to even help wash your lawn tools. Actually, plants grow better when watered with non-chlorinated water from your rain barrel.

More Kentucky Barrels water feature pictures from their website. I am definitely
buying our rain barrels from their company. Their website is full of information, a bit
jumbled, but it is also a sign of their determination and willingness to provide
as many details as they can for the customer. They know their business.
A rain barrel is a nice, money saving feature to have at your home. For us Southerners, it is really a bonus. I never have seen myself as an overly eco-friendly type of person, but somehow, owning a rain barrel will give me an artificial feeling of being eco-forward thinking. Yes, I harvest water from Mother Nature!

Additionally, I've never seen a rain barrel in person, other than a cheap spare bucket type of "rain barrel" placed beneath a spout.

But, today, as I watch all of this long-awaited rain falling from the sky to my thirsty gardens, I feel like celebrating. Then, I had a new feeling as I watched all of that valuable rain water become wasted run-off as it flowed toward the gutters in the street of my city home, I felt bummed. This wastefulness bothers me.

This will have to change; I am more eco-aware today than I was yesterday. Even though I've been researching rain barrels for several months, this drought has sent the message home. Rain barrels aren't just a cool feature to have at the house, they are useful, valuable and practical. I can only imagine all of the plants I could've watered on a hot day with today's storm run-off. Oh well. I am taking steps toward being bit less eco-enemy as I plan for our rain barrels.