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1.
Water your lawn only when it needs it. Step on your grass. If it
springs back when you lift your foot, it doesn't need water. Set your
sprinklers for more days in between watering. Saves 750 to 1,500
gallons a month.
2. Fix leaky faucets and plumbing joints. Saves 20
gallons a day for every leak stopped.
3. Don't run the hose while washing your car. Use a
bucket of water and a quick hose rinse at the end. Saves 150 gallons
each time. For a two-car family that's up to 1,200 gallons per month.
4. Install water-saving shower heads or flow restrictors.
Saves 500 to 800 gallons a month.
5. Run only full loads in the washing machine and dishwasher.
Saves 300 to 800 gallons a month.
6. Shorten your showers. Even a one or two-minute
reduction can save up to 700 gallons a month.
7. Use a broom instead of a hose to clean driveways and
sidewalks. Saves 150 gallons each time. At once a week, that's
more than 600 gallons a month.
8. Don't use your toilet as an ashtray or wastebasket.
Saves 400 to 600 gallons a month.
9. Capture tap water. While you wait for hot water to
come down the pipes, catch the water with a watering can to use later on
house plants or your garden. Saves 200 to 300 gallons a month.
10. Don't water the sidewalks, driveway or gutter.
Adjust your sprinklers so that water lands on your lawn or garden where it
belongs---and only there. Saves 500 gallons a month.
More Indoor
Conservation Ideas to Consider...
- Put a plastic bottle weighted with
pebbles and filled with water in your toilet tank. Displacing water
in this manner allows you to use less water with each flush. Saves
up to 300 gallons a month. For even greater savings, replace your
water-guzzling five-to-seven-gallon-a-flush toilet with a
three-and-a-half-gallon, low-flush or one-and-a-half-gallon,
ultra-low-flush model.
- Take baths instead of showers. A
partially filled tub uses less water than all but the shortest showers.
Saves 15 to 20 gallons each time.
- Turn off the water while brushing your
teeth. Saves three gallons each day.
- Turn off the water while shaving.
Fill the bottom of the sink with a few inches of water to rinse your
razor. Saves three gallons each day.
- If you wash dishes by hand don't leave
the water running for rinsing. If you have two sinks, fill one with
rinse water. If you only have one sink, use a spray device or short
blast instead of letting the water run. Saves 200 to 300 gallons a
month.
- When washing dishes by hand, use the
least amount of detergent possible. This minimizes rinse water
needed. Saves 150 gallons a month.
- Keep a bottle of drinking water in the
refrigerator. This beats the wasteful habit of running tap water to
cool it for drinking. Saves 200 to 300 gallons a month.
- Don't defrost frozen foods with running
water. Either plan ahead by placing frozen items in the refrigerator
overnight or defrost them in the microwave. Saves 50 to 150 gallons
a month.
- Don't let the faucet run while you clean
vegetables. Rinse them in a filled sink or pan. Saves 150 to
250 gallons a month.
- Use the garbage disposal less and the
garbage can more. Saves 50 to 150 gallons a month.
More Outdoor
Conservation Ideas...
- Put a layer of mulch around trees and
plants. Chunks of bark, peat moss or gravel slows down
evaporation. Saves 750 to 1,500 gallons a month.
- If you have a pool, use a pool cover to
cut down on evaporation. It will also keep your pool cleaner and
reduce the need to add chemicals. Saves 1,000 gallons a month.
- Water during the cool parts of the day.
Early morning is better than dusk since it helps prevent the growth of
fungus. Saves 300 gallons a month.
- Don't water the lawn on windy days.
There's too much evaporation. Can waste up to 300 gallons each
time.
- Cut down watering on cool and overcast
days and don't water in the rain. Adjust or deactivate automatic
sprinklers. Can save up to 300 gallons each time.
- Set lawn mower blades one notch higher.
Longer grass means less evaporation. Saves 500 to 1,500 gallons
each month.
- If you have an evaporator air
conditioner? Direct the water drain line to a flower bed, tree
base or lawn.
- If municipal ordinances don't prohibit
it, drive your car onto a lawn to wash it. Rinse water can help
water the grass.
- Tell your children not to play with the
garden hose. Saves 10 gallons a minute.
- If you are working around the yard,
clean up with waterless hand cleaner rather than washing under a steady
stream of water. Saves 7 to 10 gallons each time.
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