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Share your best water-saving tips with the world

Posted by Ryan on Friday, January 23rd, 2009 at 11:48 am

At Water – Use it Wisely we’ve been dedicated to providing people simple tips and tricks to save water. But we got to thinking that it shouldn’t just be us providing tips. Undoubtedly, there are some of you out there that have discovered some creative ways to save water that we haven’t even dreamed of yet.

So we’re asking for help. Share your best water-saving tips with us and the world on our Facebook page. Why not make it fun too. Take a quick video of yourself in water-saving action, snap a few photos, or just send us a note. We’ll do our best to make sure your tip is heard around the world.

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Freetoiletreplacement.com says:

Freetoiletreplacement.com
We’re a participating ally with the Save Water Save A Buck program and we’re offering FREE High Efficiency Toilets + FREE Installation in a Free Toilet Replacement program for Commercial + Residential multi unit buildings with 3.5-gallon toilets and 10 or more units.

Our customers are saving water and cutting their monthly water bills by 30%. We’ve saved condo owners, big brand hotels, apartment owners, University dorms and commercial buildings thousands of dollars a month, and hundreds of thousands a year!

We have replaced over 10,000 toilets.

To qualify:
• Commercial + residential buildings
• 10+ (min) units PER water bill
• LA or Orange county water bill required to apply.
• You must have 10 or more water-wasting, 3.5-gallon toilets

How do you know if you have 3.5-gallon toilets?
Flush them. If they flush rather quickly, you have a 1.6-gallon. We don’t replace those.
If your toilet seems to flush forever with a lot of water circling and circling, you have a 3.5-gallon toilet.
freetoiletreplacement.com
email us for information.


Fewer than 5 toilets?
Sorry, unfortunately we cannot qualify you. Please contact your local water department and ask about their rebate program.

Jeff Goodman says:

If you’re doing a bathroom remodel, install an eco-friendly toilet. I got one from Toto that looks great and works great. Uses a lot less water, but you’d never know it.

I also just got a tankless hot water heater, that heats water as it goes. No sense in always keeping a big tank of water hot. Now, I just have to make sure not to take really long showers because I never run out of hot water.

Park says:

Thanks for the tip, Jeff. It’s great to have you sharing your product reviews so others no where to go for appliances that actually conserve.

Nancy Nemes says:
Jenni Hilton says:

We live in N. Atlanta on Lake Lanier and have changed a few things to conserve water during the drought.

Stop rinsing dishes before putting them in the dishwasher
Use a bucket in the shower to collect water while you wait for it to heat up and water your plants with it
Turn off the faucet when you brush your teeth

There are many other ways to conserve – if we all make an effort, we can make a difference.

David Hoff says:

Revolutionary Use of Half Pool Covers

Every year swimming pools are wasting billions of gallons of water that can be saved. This paper addresses the problems with the current use of full pool covers and how half covers are the solution to pool water conservation.

It is well known that pool covers can reduce water evaporation by up to 95%, yet less than 30% of pools are using covers. The current limitations imposed by full covers for the most part boils down to two problems.
The Twofold Problem

First, full covers are difficult to stock. Full covers are bulky and must be stocked in 50 or more sizes requiring a sizable amount of floor space to have covers on hand for the myriad of pool sizes. If a size goes out of stock, the customer has to wait until the warehouse reorders another truckload of covers. This distribution and stocking problem severely limits the available stock on hand at any one time and prevents the customer from being able to purchase on demand.

Second, full covers for the most part fit only rectangular shaped pools. Covers initially come off the production line as sheets in rectangular shapes and are heat seamed together for various widths. They can be further cut into oval or round sizes, but nevertheless most of the pools built today are irregular free-form shapes and custom designs. In order to accommodate free-form pool shapes the customer many times must oversize the cover which means ordering an even larger than needed cover and cookie-cutting the cover to the free-form pool using the inside of the pool cove as a guide. This however can create a lot of waste. And how do you accommodate say an L-shape pool?

The twofold solution is that by using half covers, the number of cover sizes for distribution and stocking can be reduced from over 50 to just 4 half cover sizes (see below) which can be mixed-n-matched to work with almost all pools up to L-shapes solving both of the aforementioned issues.

Encouraging the industry to distribute half covers allows more people that ever to cover their pools. This practical way of using half covers revolutionizes the way covers are stocked and distributed, never incurring oversize charges and allows dealers to have covers in stock so pool owners never go home empty handed. By solving the problems preventing all pools to use covers, in wake of water shortages that are only getting worse, it becomes a mandate to encourage all pools to be covered.

see http://solarfactory.blogspot.com for the entire story…

Alan D. Scott says:

With water rates among the highest in the State of Maine, my wife and I developed a two part solution that has cut our water consumption in half.

Part One is to follow the “If it’s yellow, let it mellow, if it’s brown, flush it down”.

Part Two is to discard the notion that the toilet needs to be flushed with fresh, potable, water – it clearly does not. We collect hand washing, dish rinsing and cooking water in plastic jugs having the identical capacity to the toilet tank.

Water transfer from sink to jug is done with the inexpensive plastic squeeze-bulb pumps that siphon automatically after a squeeze or two.

It is not necessary to completely remove the toilet tank lid; we just leave it slid sideways sufficient to allow pouring from the jugs.

It seems to us that for areas such as the U.S. Southwest, the Los Angeles basin and any other areas where the future of an adequate water supply is problematical, this simple procedure by each household could have enormous benefits in assuring adequate future water, reducing pumping costs, the need for new wells, and reducing the need for water supply and wastewater treatment facility expansion.

One area of resistance that may be encountered is the notion fostered by the companies that manufacture cleaning products that all “household germs” are bad and must be eliminated. This is patently false and serves only the sales of products. Water in the toilet bowl containing residue from hand washing, dish rinsing or boiling rice does no harm, in fact the soap in the water continually cleans the bowl.

Happy Water Conserving!

NHB says:

1) re-use water left soaking in dishes for plants

2) decrease volume of water when washing hands to a stream the thickness of a pencil

3) only run water when rinsing toothbrush

4) eliminate baths

5) shower for 3 – 5 minutes

Ryan says:

Thanks everyone for the great tips. It’s exciting to see how people from around the nation are finding ways to conserve. Keep the tips coming!

David Hoff says:

You blog is now being fed to http://www.solarfactory.com. Let’s work together for a better world.

ps. Let’s also work together to press SRP for pool cover rebates. They are completely non-responsive to my effort, so will take group pressure unfortunately. There’s power in numbers.

Note: the latest Inventor’s Diary at inventorsdiary.info for dramatically entertaining stories of the shadowy world of big business.

Zashkaser says:

@Laura many thanks. Afraid I don ‘t have time to sign up though it sounds interesting

Zach Smith says:

Our washing machine at home is one of those household appliances that consume a lot of water. Start contributing to water conservation by investing on front load washers. Its gravity-defying drum will only need a fraction of the water you are using in your top loader. Water will be infused in your clothes through its tumbling motion. Also choose those with sensors. These sensors will help detect the amount of suds or dirt in your clothes so it can measure the right amount of water needed to clean your clothes.