Archive | Grey Water

Join the 350 Garden Challenge

All across the nation people are converting their front and backyards, vacant lots, and other spaces into thriving and productive food gardens. To help encourage new gardeners along this verdant path, The 350 Garden Challenge will bring thousands together over a a single weekend, May 15-16, to transform 350+ Sonoma County landscapes into bountiful gardens. The goal is to save water, link local food production and carbon savings, grow food and habitat, promote greywater, and encourage lawn to food transformations. The project is inspired in part by the 350.org international campaign to find and implement solutions to climate change.

It’s clear that the time for growing food through community is here and cities across California are joining efforts to save water, unite neighborhoods, and build a strong movement for local food production. The Victory Garden Foundation in Oakland aims to match Sonoma County’s Challenge and install 350 gardens over the same weekend in May. In Santa Monica, the third annual 100 Garden Challenge, pioneered by Gardens of Gratitude, will take place April 24 and 25.

“Sonoma County’s 350 Garden Challenge seeks to inspire our citizens to create a healthy, homegrown food supply, save water and cut greenhouse gas emissions,” said Trathen Heckman, Director of Daily Acts, a Petaluma-based nonprofit that provides education about greywater, home food production, and a range of sustainable living skills.

Key projects to be undertaken over the weekend include:

On the 40th Anniversary of Earth Day, April 22, 20 members of the U.S. Coast Guard will revitalize a garden at Burbank Heights Apartments in Sebastopol; community members will plant this garden on May 15 and 16.

Green Sangha, a nonprofit group of environmental activists, will install a model garden at Community Market natural foods store near Santa Rosa Junior College.

Wine barrels, plants, and soil will be distributed to the nonprofit community organization Nuestra Voz to install container gardens at 60 households at Spring Village, a low-income housing complex in Boyes Hot Springs.

The 350 Garden Challenge initiative, which also seeks to educate and empower community and support local businesses, is a collaboration of Daily Acts, iGROW Sonoma, GoLocal, and Living Mandala, in conjunction with the Sonoma County Water Agency (SCWA) and dozens of other community groups and companies. SCWA, in turn, has provided a generous $25,000 matching grant for this project.

Want to get involved? Join the 350 Challenge Facebook page. Garden sites and participation is being coordinated online and in individual community meetings and events. Get ready to dig in!

Naomi Starkman Huffington Post

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Water Prices Poised to Rise

Across the globe, more and more people are starting to focus their attention on water. This is due the the increasing scarcity of clean water, and price is the controlling mechanism. Water issues in South Africa

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in a speech on World Water Day, that “more people die from unsafe water than from all forms of violence, including war. These deaths are an affront to our common humanity, and undermine the efforts of many countries to achieve their development potential.” He announced this year’s theme focuses of “Clean Water for a Healthy World.”

“Our growing population’s need for water for food, raw materials and energy is increasingly competing with nature’s own demands for water to sustain already imperiled ecosystems and the services on which we depend,” Ban said. “Day after day, we pour millions of tons of untreated sewage and industrial and agricultural waste into the world’s water systems. Clean water has become scarce and will become even scarcer with the onset of climate change.”

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) believes one way to get smart is to better price water. It says putting the right price on water will encourage people to waste less, pollute less and invest more in water infrastructure.

Tariffs for water and wastewater services vary, according to the OECD. For example, a bathtub of water in Denmark and Scotland can cost 10 times more than in Mexico, while Irish households pay no direct fees for water, the OECD says. Water bill increases over the last decade have been primarily driven by higher wastewater charges. In many OECD countries it now costs more to get rid of wastewater than to bring in drinking water.

Pollution, in other words, is adding up to a big and costly problem. Businesses are beginning to get wise to this. We should, too.

Just five beverage companies consume enough water over the course of a year to satisfy the daily water needs of every person on the planet. Of course, we may not be able to control how much water is put in a can of soda or a beer, or the amount it takes to make paper, but we can control our own use at the workplace and even influence those who manage supplies. It may not be our nickel that gets spent on the utility bill at work, but the gains are certainly ours when we reduce the corporate water footprint on the planet.

Water prices are poised to rise due to increased water stress, and corporate growth is expected to be impeded as resources dwindle. Make no mistake, all of this comes out of our paychecks in one way or another.

Many people are still unaware of how they are charged for wastewater disposal. If you are looking at reducing you wastewater charge on your municipal account there here are a few easy solution. Keep in mind that your waste water charge is calculated at 70% of your fresh water use by volume.

  • Harvest rainwater from your roof and use this water inside you home or to irrigate your garden.
  • Reuse your bath,shower water (grey water) for either toilet flushing of garden irrigation.
  • Use your fresh water wisely and only where needed. Clean fresh water has become a scare commodity. By saving as much water as possible you will not only be doing the next generation a favour but also helping the environment.

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Grey to Green in California. The case for Greywater.

ABC News
If water is the next battleground for a globe facing dwindling water resources, then this 1960s-style community center at the northern end of Los Angeles’ Koreatown is at the forefront of the fight. golden-gateOn this day, Laura Allen, cofounder of Greywater Action, a group that encourages conserving and reusing household water, is in her fourth of a five-day workshop teaching Californians how to reclaim and recycle what has been dubbed “gray water.”

Typically, gray water includes the discharge from washing machines, sinks, showers, and tubs, which is then used to provide moisture for outdoor plants, from backyard rosebushes to large orchards. While progress has been made — many institutions, corporations, and municipalities around the world use gray water — activists say there’s still a long way to go. And it’s groups such as Greywater Action that are helping to drive change.

“Grass-roots efforts — seeing an issue and trying to do something by acting individually and being responsible stewards — are very important,” says Kathy Robb, founder and director of the Water Policy Institute in New York.

As an example, she points to the fact that before regulations in California were changed last August to make it legal for homeowners to install or alter a simple gray-water system without a construction permit, there were already an estimated 2 million unpermitted systems in the Golden State.

This is evidence, Ms. Allen says, that, given the opportunity, state residents will embrace the technology for both economic and environmental reasons.
‘Laundry to Landscape’ Systems

‘This is the way the world is going. We all need to learn to save water,” says Trent Cawthon, a handyman from Redondo Beach, Calif., who aspires to be a contractor and feels that expertise with gray-¬water systems will make his services more valuable.

Mr. Cawthon is part of a four-person team that has designed a simple “laundry-to-landscape” system. They will practice their skills at the community center, running plastic pipes from the laundry room to the front of the building, where the rinse water will irrigate four fruit trees. Cawthorn’s teammate, Allan Haskell from Echo Park, Calif., runs a green consulting business that helps restaurants find compostable containers for takeout food. He hopes to expand his business to encompass gray-water planning.

Diana Lawrence, a former urban planner, is attending the workshop because she hopes to downsize her utility bills through gray-water usage.

Landscape architect Robin Grabs of San Pedro, Calif., has come because two clients requested gray-water systems. It’s fascinating, she says, but the amount of information is overwhelming.

Allen understands this reaction. “Fitting all the important things that gray water brings into a five-day class and a manageable package is a challenge,” she says. The course has to cover plant and soil information, plumbing, and landscaping and design skills. It’s aimed at a wide range of users – from those who must work within small budgets to those with larger ambitions, as well as people who simply want to water the plants in their yard inexpensively and those who might have a large commercial landscape.

Legalization Boosts Demand

In the months since California changed the gray-water permit requirements, demand has begun to build statewide, says John Leys of Sherwood Design Engineers in San Francisco, which has clients across the United States as well as abroad.

Mr. Leys recently consulted on new ¬water-planning regulations for Abu Dhabi, capital of the United Arab Emirates, which has water needs similar to those in the American Southwest.

‘Ten years ago, we were not seeing any demand for gray-water systems,” he says, but now clients of all types are requesting projects that range from simple and inexpensive backyard irrigation retrofits to complex, multipurpose gray-water systems that are part of the design from the beginning.
Leys notes that as pressures over drought regulations and energy conservation have started to build, many businesses have begun to see that reclamation and reuse make sense from both a business and an environmental standpoint.

For instance, if a development of 10,000 new homes reduces its overall potable water use by as much as 25 percent, he says, that means a huge savings in construction and utility costs.

Most of the momentum toward greater use of gray-water systems is not being driven by economics — yet. “But that is inevitable,” Leys says, “if you consider that despite the vast oceans covering the planet, less than 1 percent of the world’s water is both fresh and accessible for human use.”

He believes that it’s important to plan for solutions in advance of a water crisis, and that when and how that’s done will become critical.

Today, even with conventional water-supply strategies and technologies, water shortages are common in communities around the globe. The World Health Organization reports that more than 2 billion people — roughly 1 out of every 3 people on the planet — live in a water-stressed area.

Commenting on the importance of reclaiming and reusing water, Leys says: “History demonstrates that properly managed water resources can be the deciding factor in determining the habitability of an individual site, the sustainability of a community, or the survival of an entire civilization.”

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Rainwater Harvesting

Rainwater harvesting using water tanks are becoming urban lifestyle trends, saving you reliance on municipal water. Water Rhapsody can provide rain harvesting solutions as simple as a water tank and a filter, to our full blown Rainwater harvesting system that also pumps rain water back into the home from a water tank, and only uses municipal water when the water tanks are empty.

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No 1 in SA in Water Conservation

Against a global rainfall average of 870mm per year, South Africa receives a pitiful 450mm, making it the world's 30th driest country. Water Rhapsody, with 16 years experience in water conservation, is number 1 in South Africa in Grey water recycling systems and Rainwater harvesting systems.Get a quote for your water tanks and water conservation systems now.

Rainwater Harvesting

It is now viable to harvest rainwater for your whole household. This includes rainwater harvesting, storing in a water tank and pumping rainwater for bathing, showering, toilet flushing, pool, laundry and irrigation. Rainwater harvesting together with other Water Rhapsody products can save up to 90% of your municipal water bill. Get a quote for your water tanks, rainwater harvesting systems and other water conservation systems now.

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Grey Water

A bath uses 120 litres and a shower 80 litres of water. When used, that water is called grey water. You pay for it, and then it all goes down the drain. Water Rhapsody Grey Water System uses this grey water to immediately irrigate your garden, saving you a substantial portion of your water bill. Get a quote for your grey water system, water tanks, rainwater harvesting systems and other water conservation systems.

WWF Green Trust Award

Water Rhapsody a WWF Green Trust award winner can save us up to 90% of our municipal water bills. Get a quote for your water tanks, rainwater harvesting systems and other water conservation systems now.”
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WWF Green Trust Award
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