Thursday 25 July 2013

DIY Rainwater Harvesting System made of Garbage!

                                      
The cabin I live in has no plumbing.  Although I shower and often eat on the other end of town, we've had to cart water over to the cabin from the gas station which is a 5 minute walk down the highway.  Well, we're now harvesting rainwater to cook and clean dishes with.  Things just got a little easier over at the cabin.
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The premise of this blogpost is that paying to live an environmentally and socially responsible lifestyle is backwards.  Paying for sustainability is a contradiction, and if we really want to live environmentally and socially responsible lives (in other words, if we want to be accountable for our actions when it comes to the environment, labour and our consumption), then what we have to do is radically decrease our personal consumption.  By saying this I don't mean that we should all start buying hybrid cars or ride the bus once a week and deem ourselves "doing our part".  Nor am I saying that we should merely lobby the municipal government to build bike lanes and then conclude that the "crisis is averted" because the government will save the planet for us.  What we have to do is change ourselves.

Re-skill yourself and learn how to problem solve.  Little by little.  

It's empowering.

In this blogpost I want to display how cheap, easy and creative it can be to repurpose existing resources which are found all around us.  I'm talking about resources like barrels, PVC tubing, old bike frames and tools.  In an overgrown field amongst rusty cars these resources are seen as garbage.  On a clean store shelf they are seen as commodities.

You don't need money to accomplish things.  You need skills.  And creativity.  And maybe some guts to hop into your first dumpster. 


A facilitator at the Florida Earthskills Gathering I went to in January told stories of how he took the concept of "dumpster diving" to the next level.  He was interested in making his home more sustainable and energy efficient but took a unique approach to retrofitting his home.  His goal was to spend as little money as possible.  So he started searching through dumpsters on construction sites, behind mechanics shops and big box stores.  He told us how he built a rainwater harvesting system out of things he found in the dumpster.  He spent zero dollars in its construction.  And he now doesn't use municipal water.  He collects his own, and is now one step closer to becoming off the grid.

After hearing this story I decided I wanted to do the same.  And now I have!

Wrap your head around terms like "repurposing", "reclaiming" and "radical resourcefulness".  Did you ever move old couches from the curb down the road into your bedroom or basement during Spring Cleaning when you were a kid?  How about searching through milk crates of old records which were a dollar a piece to find something you thought was rare?  Dumpster diving is just like that, but next level! 


But enough with trying to make this seem cool.


I used an old barrel, an empty cleaner tub, a bucket, 7 milk crates, some mesh and a bunch of used vacuum hose to build what collects my water for me.  I salvaged them from around the property of the cabin (there's a bit of old junk laying around from when the owner still lived here..) and from the garbage at the hotel I work at.  I also used silicon and nails.  I don't drink it, nor do I shower with it.  The water will be used to cook with, wash dishes with, and brush teeth.


1. Rain gathers on roof, flows into eves trough

2. Rainwater is diverted into used vacuum hose

3. Rainwater drains into "silk catch" (bucket filled with rocks, covered with mesh).
This filters out sediment and decreases velocity of water.

4. Rainwater drains from silk catch and is filtered for sediment
once more before entering primary basin.

5. Primary basin.

6. Secondary basin, with nozzle. 




Wednesday 24 July 2013

Pie time

Whoever planted a patch of rhubarb on the hotel property years ago had a good idea.  Hidden amongst 5 foot tall fireweed was a huge rhubarb patch which now belongs to the kitchen and which will soon be in pie form.  My sidekick Carter and I harvested it from the hotel property today.  Good work, we do.



Sunday 7 July 2013

The Perks of Growing in Greenhouses

Harvest #1: Radishes.
Three weeks.
Even though we only have about 24 - 28 square feet per greenhouse, they're proving to be pretty productive.  We're using raised beds in both greenhouses.  Some of the soil was purchased in Whitehorse whereas some of it had been salvaged from planters.  

If you want try growing food but don't have the land, knowledge, nor patience to wait a whole season for a harvest, then grow radishes!  We were eatin' these things within 3 weeks of planting.