Use Rain Barrels To Collect Water For Your Garden
Did you know? Natural rainfall is one of the best sources of water for your garden. You don’t have to wait for it to rain in order to get natural rainfall for your garden though. Instead, you can simply gather the rain into storage containers, to save for watering your garden during the dry spells.
An average sized home can shed hundreds of gallons of water from its roof each time it rains. And in most cases, this water is directed to the ground or local sewage system through the use of roof rain gutters.
Gardeners in the know however, don’t let that water go to waste. Instead, they place rain barrels in strategic places around their home, and gather the rain water that’s shed from the roof. The rain barrels collect and store your rain water until it’s needed, instead of letting it go to waste.
Using rain barrels for your garden can be done in several different ways. The most common method is to simply collect the rainfall run off from the roof of your home, and then fill your garden watering cans from a spigot or faucet in the barrel. If you’d rather have something a little more automated though, you can attach a garden hose, sprinkler, drip system, or soaker system to the faucet of your rain barrel instead. Then when you want to water the garden, simply run the hose to the area which needs water, and turn on the faucet. The natural rainfall you’ve collected will then be drained from the barrel.
You can also connect multiple rain barrels together to make the system much easier. In most cases, the barrels you’ll use to collect the rainwater from your roof will hold about 50-60 gallons of water. By connecting 3, 5, 10 or more of those barrels together though, you can be sure you’re collecting as much rain runoff as you possibly can. Sometimes you can get over 300 gallons of rain water from just one rainfall.
Rain barrels can be purchased online or at local garden centers, or you can make your own using discarded plastic barrels. You’ll want to be sure you’re using food quality containers though, and not barrels which have held harsh and dangerous chemicals in them.
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