Posts Tagged ‘rainwater calculator’

Rainwater Catchment – Why and How?

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Why Collect Rainwater?

When it comes to saving the plant, most people think rainwater catchment is insignificant and not worth the effort. Fortunately, they are wrong.  Let me explain:

stormwaterImagine a typical house with no rain catchment: Rainfall lands on the roof, flows to a downspout, and out to the nearest storm drain.  Along the way,  the water picks up surface pollutants such as oil, grease, chemicals, and fertilizers and carries them to our rivers and the ocean.  These pollutants are called Non-Point Source Pollution, or NPS.  Since the water flows over concrete and asphalt, very little is absorbed into the soil, meaning no groundwater recharge.  Later, the homeowner has to use city water for landscaping.

Now imagine a house with rain catchment: Rainfall lands of the roof, flows to the downspout, and into a rain barrel or cistern.  Once the rain tank is full, the overflow is directed into surrounding planter boxes in order to allow water to infiltrate the surface and recharge groundwater tables.    Since little water left the property, significantly less Non-Point Source Pollution was transported to the nearest river.  A week later, the homeowner uses collected rainwater for landscape irrigation, thus increasing groundwater recharge and reducing demand for city water.

Now imagine if an entire community participated!!

How To – Article 1.09:

Rainwater Catchment

Step 1 – Volume Estimate: Estimate the amount of water that falls on your watershed  during a  storm.  Use the following equation:

Eq. 1.09:  1,000 square feet = 600 gallons = 1-inch of rain

Instruction: Estimate the size of your watershed (or roof) and use Equation 1.09 to calculate the amount of rain that will fall in that area during a solid overnight rain (1-inch) and over an average rain season (about 20-inches in Santa Cruz).  For roofs, estimate the percentage of roof space that flows to each gutter and calculate the  resulting volume of water per storm (in gallons).

Example 1.09:  How much water falls on a 1,000 sq. ft. roof?

(1,000 sq. ft roof) x (600 gallons/1 in. rain) x (20 in. rain/season) = 12,000 gallons

rainwaterhog1Step 2 – Decide where you want the rainwater to go:

  • Locate the downspouts at your house that drain the largest rain area – these will be the best places for collecting rainwater.
  • Use whatever you can to collect and store rainwater: buckets or barrels work, but are not ideal.  If you can afford it, hire Allterra to install a RainwaterHog, which is ideal for residential settings.
  • For areas where you can’t collect and store water, simply divert your downspout into a flower bed or lawn.  Make sure to properly mulch these areas to maximize water absorption and infiltration.

Summary

For simple, low-tech rainwater catchment, that’s about all there is.  For people that want to go bigger and badder, Allterra can help.   How about a 3,000-gallon rainwater cistern underneath your driveway?

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