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#1
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"Benign Vanilla" wrote in message
... I think you are refering to a roof scrubber, as I have read about. As we are not using this water for drinking water, I don't think it is worth worrying about. I am also not convinced that it would be necessary for pond water or garden water. snip -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com You're going to wash a fresh supply of bacteria and organic matter into a closed tank every rain. It'll smell loverly after a few days cooking when it warms up. Also, you won't have a good bottom drain to rinse the accumulated gunk out. OTOH, if you're just filling a barrel or two which will be used quickly, don't worry about it. |
#2
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"Benign Vanilla" wrote in message
... I think you are refering to a roof scrubber, as I have read about. As we are not using this water for drinking water, I don't think it is worth worrying about. I am also not convinced that it would be necessary for pond water or garden water. snip -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com You're going to wash a fresh supply of bacteria and organic matter into a closed tank every rain. It'll smell loverly after a few days cooking when it warms up. Also, you won't have a good bottom drain to rinse the accumulated gunk out. OTOH, if you're just filling a barrel or two which will be used quickly, don't worry about it. |
#3
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![]() "grubber" wrote in message ... "Benign Vanilla" wrote in message ... My first phase plan is to create a system to water the herb garden, and then a second to water the vegetable garden. I have put together a spreadsheet to calculate potential gathering capability, and can see this being a great source of water. I've even found some pages for people that use it for their house water. I don't want to go that far, but if these numbers are right, it'd be a great source of water for the garden and the pond. -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com There's a good bit of rainwater collection in this area (central TX). My parents had a whole house system put in when they built out in the country. Their cistern is 20-30 ft across! In areas with regular rainfall, smaller cisterns can be used because they are frequently refilled. Basically, between your gutters and your main tank, you put a T into a small tank that fills first. That way, all the dust and bird crap gets washed off the roof and ends up in the first tank, then clean water flows to your main tank. Drain the small tank after every rain. I think you are refering to a roof scrubber, as I have read about. As we are not using this water for drinking water, I don't think it is worth worrying about. I am also not convinced that it would be necessary for pond water or garden water. snip -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com |
#4
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In the old days, my family used rain water for cooking an drinking. Since we
were living in a tropical area, we had frequent rain storms. We divert all the rain water away from the holding tank during the 1st 30 mins of heavy rain. We didn't want to drink craps. Here in SoCal, with the tar emulsion roof on our house, it's not safe to use rain water for anything. Benign Vanilla wrote: My first phase plan is to create a system to water the herb garden, and then a second to water the vegetable garden. I have put together a spreadsheet to calculate potential gathering capability, and can see this being a great source of water. I've even found some pages for people that use it for their house water. I don't want to go that far, but if these numbers are right, it'd be a great source of water for the garden and the pond. |
#5
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"Benign Vanilla" wrote in message
... My first phase plan is to create a system to water the herb garden, and then a second to water the vegetable garden. I have put together a spreadsheet to calculate potential gathering capability, and can see this being a great source of water. I've even found some pages for people that use it for their house water. I don't want to go that far, but if these numbers are right, it'd be a great source of water for the garden and the pond. -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com There's a good bit of rainwater collection in this area (central TX). My parents had a whole house system put in when they built out in the country. Their cistern is 20-30 ft across! In areas with regular rainfall, smaller cisterns can be used because they are frequently refilled. Basically, between your gutters and your main tank, you put a T into a small tank that fills first. That way, all the dust and bird crap gets washed off the roof and ends up in the first tank, then clean water flows to your main tank. Drain the small tank after every rain. If you don't have a metal roof, particles from the shingles get in the water, so I wouldn't use it for ponds, but it will be fine for ornamental plants. I'd be a little wary of using it on veggies and herbs, but it's probably not too much of an issue. |
#6
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In the old days, my family used rain water for cooking an drinking. Since we
were living in a tropical area, we had frequent rain storms. We divert all the rain water away from the holding tank during the 1st 30 mins of heavy rain. We didn't want to drink craps. Here in SoCal, with the tar emulsion roof on our house, it's not safe to use rain water for anything. Benign Vanilla wrote: My first phase plan is to create a system to water the herb garden, and then a second to water the vegetable garden. I have put together a spreadsheet to calculate potential gathering capability, and can see this being a great source of water. I've even found some pages for people that use it for their house water. I don't want to go that far, but if these numbers are right, it'd be a great source of water for the garden and the pond. |
#7
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Funny... where I live, they sit on the power lines over my car and crap.
I'm glad elephants don't fly. wrote in message ... birds sit on roofs and crap. rain water will bring all the parasites in the crap down into the pond. use the rain water to water plants instead .. especially orchids that like a very dilute fertilizer. Ingrid "Benign Vanilla" wrote: I am planning on building, and have SO approval to build a rain collection system to harness the roof of my shed and the roof of the house. My plans are currently not very fully formed, so I was looking for opinions from anyone that has done this. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#8
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![]() wrote in message ... birds sit on roofs and crap. rain water will bring all the parasites in the crap down into the pond. use the rain water to water plants instead .. especially orchids that like a very dilute fertilizer. Ingrid snip My first phase plan is to create a system to water the herb garden, and then a second to water the vegetable garden. I have put together a spreadsheet to calculate potential gathering capability, and can see this being a great source of water. I've even found some pages for people that use it for their house water. I don't want to go that far, but if these numbers are right, it'd be a great source of water for the garden and the pond. -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com |
#9
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birds sit on roofs and crap. rain water will bring all the parasites in the crap
down into the pond. use the rain water to water plants instead .. especially orchids that like a very dilute fertilizer. Ingrid "Benign Vanilla" wrote: I am planning on building, and have SO approval to build a rain collection system to harness the roof of my shed and the roof of the house. My plans are currently not very fully formed, so I was looking for opinions from anyone that has done this. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#10
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"Benign Vanilla" wrote in
message ... I am planning on building, and have SO approval to build a rain collection system to harness the roof of my shed and the roof of the house. My plans are currently not very fully formed, so I was looking for opinions from anyone that has done this. -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com I have been able to find some 55 gallon plastic drums used for coca-cola syrup that clean up nicely, for about $20 at a local feed store. If it's storage you're looking for, you might check for such barrels. But my system is nothing special, just catch rain in buckets from two downspouts and store the water in a variety of containers, including 33 gallon trash cans (bought new for that purpose). I use the rainwater mostly on roses, but will top off my ponds using captured rainwater, alternating with treated tap water. So far I haven't killed any fish, but maybe I've been lucky. One possibility is that, because my collection "system" isn't automatic, by the time I get around to emptying buckets, the roof has been "washed" already quite a bit. I have rainwater in sealed containers for over a year with no smell (although I wouldn't drink it myself!). Re collection systems: Do a google search on "austin rainwater collection" and you'll get a bunch of articles, some from retailers but you can weed those out. As someone else posted, rainwater collection is big in southcentral TX. Gail near San Antonio TX Zone 8 |
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