Rain Barrels
Posted: Mon Mar 09, 2009 1:22 pm
Just got my ugly electric blue rain barrels painted the same color as the house(important when you live in a subdivision) and since they are now pretty, I decided to post for comments, questions, snide remarks etc.
Atlanta has been in a class 4 drought for 3 years. Our drinking water supply got down to a few months last year. The fine for illegal outdoor water use in my county is $500 first offense and water shut off for the second. In order to keep my beloved flowers alive I put in a rain barrel system. Not wanting to rely strictly on rain or lack thereof, I also channel my A/C condensate and shower warm up water to the system. The A/C system (good for 5 to 10 gal a day in the summer) can be switched back and forth from normal outdoor discharge to rain barrel with the turn of a valve. The master bathtub is right beside the shower and I run the water in the bath until it gets hot (3 gal per shower). Then when you jump in the shower, it is ready to go. There is a valve between the tub drain and the shower drain to switch from sewer to rain barrel. There are 3 55 gal (60) barrels for a total of 180 gallon capacity. The downspout that empties into the rain barrel catches about 300 square feet of roof area and .1 inch of rain will fill me up. When the barrels get full, the overflow system diverts the water form all sources back into the downspout drain pipe and into the creek below. I can keep my deck flowers in great shape with an everyday dousing and hardly see the levels decrease. I can also divert the water to the front flower beds using a line inside the basement connecting the outdoor spigots. There are anti back flow valves at each spigot to keep the treated water separate. Since I have a 10 foot rise to my front yard and 12 foot to the deck I installed a submersible fountain pump with a head of 18 feet. That gives me about 3 gpm on the deck. That's enough to do hand watering. There is a switch on the deck to turn the pump on and off.
http://s125.photobucket.com/albums/p77/ ... 20Barrels/" target="_blank
Atlanta has been in a class 4 drought for 3 years. Our drinking water supply got down to a few months last year. The fine for illegal outdoor water use in my county is $500 first offense and water shut off for the second. In order to keep my beloved flowers alive I put in a rain barrel system. Not wanting to rely strictly on rain or lack thereof, I also channel my A/C condensate and shower warm up water to the system. The A/C system (good for 5 to 10 gal a day in the summer) can be switched back and forth from normal outdoor discharge to rain barrel with the turn of a valve. The master bathtub is right beside the shower and I run the water in the bath until it gets hot (3 gal per shower). Then when you jump in the shower, it is ready to go. There is a valve between the tub drain and the shower drain to switch from sewer to rain barrel. There are 3 55 gal (60) barrels for a total of 180 gallon capacity. The downspout that empties into the rain barrel catches about 300 square feet of roof area and .1 inch of rain will fill me up. When the barrels get full, the overflow system diverts the water form all sources back into the downspout drain pipe and into the creek below. I can keep my deck flowers in great shape with an everyday dousing and hardly see the levels decrease. I can also divert the water to the front flower beds using a line inside the basement connecting the outdoor spigots. There are anti back flow valves at each spigot to keep the treated water separate. Since I have a 10 foot rise to my front yard and 12 foot to the deck I installed a submersible fountain pump with a head of 18 feet. That gives me about 3 gpm on the deck. That's enough to do hand watering. There is a switch on the deck to turn the pump on and off.
http://s125.photobucket.com/albums/p77/ ... 20Barrels/" target="_blank