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WATER CONSERVATION FOR THE NOTTINGHAM
COUNTRY MUD
Why conserve water?
The Nottingham Country MUD
is currently supplied by groundwater wells,
which have a limited amount of water.
Additionally, our MUD is not expected to go
on surface water from the City of Houston
until around 2030, if then. According to the
Texas Water Development Board, Texas’
population by 2050 will increase by 90%.
Water demand in Texas will exceed available
resources by 25%. Thus, water is clearly an
issue.
The average, single-family
indoor residential water use is 69 gallons
per person per day. This usage can be
reduced by a third by changing water-wasting
habits, installing water-efficient fixtures,
and reducing leaks. In addition, outdoor
water use in the summer, which adds an
additional about 50% to total residential
water use, can be reduced significantly with
proper water management while homes can
still have beautiful yards.
The Nottingham Country Mud
is a Water Smart Partner of the Association
of Water Board Directors. The goal of the
Texas Water Development Board’s Water Smart
Program is to make Texans aware of the value
of water everyday, not just in times of
drought. Water is precious, and everyone
must learn to use it responsibly without
waste. Water conservation tips from the
Water Smart Program, as described below, can
save many dollars in water bills and will
also save water for future generations.
Indoors
Bathrooms
- Use low flow shower heads. They
are inexpensive and are the single
most efficient conservation step
that you can take inside the home.
- Install inexpensive faucet
aerators on bathroom sinks.
- Don’t let the water run while
brushing teeth or shaving.
- Replace 1980s toilets with new
low volume flush toilets that use
less than half the volume of water.
If you can’t replace, at least use a
displacement device such as a
plastic bottle or bag filled with
water in the tanks of older model
toilets. By the way ... don’t use
bricks which can crumble and damage
fixtures.
- Before you leave the house for
an extended period, check toilets to
make sure none are accidentally left
running. An open flapper valve can
waste 280,000 gallons of water in a
month! An open flapper valve can
increase a water bill by more than
$500 per month, and the resident is
responsible.
- Listen for leaks and dripping
sounds. Check for leaking toilets by
putting food coloring in the tank,
waiting ten minutes, and checking
the bowl for color. Replace the
flapper valve if needed.
- Replace visible leaking sink
faucet washers or O-rings. If you
aren’t handy, hire a plumber to
perform routine maintenance on
toilets and faucets.
Kitchens
- Wait until the dishwasher is
full to run it. Just scrape your
dishes, don’t pre-rinse them. If
there is baked-on food, soak the pan
or dish awhile to loosen the food,
and then put it in the dishwasher.
Don’t scrub dishes under running
water.
- Install faucet aerators on
kitchen sinks, and don’t ignore
leaking faucets.
- Keep a bottle of drinking water
in the refrigerator if you don’t
have a chilled water dispenser on
the refrigerator.
- Use your garbage disposal for
big messes, and run it only when
it’s full. Put piles of peelings and
bones in the trash.
- Don’t leave the water running in
the sink when you’re not using it.
Laundry
- Try to run full loads of wash,
or at least adjust the water level
on the machine for the size of the
load.
- Use short wash cycles if clothes
are not heavily soiled. This will
also help your clothes stay new
looking.
Outdoors
- Don’t over-water your lawn. St.
Augustine grass needs only an inch
of water every 4-5 days to stay
healthy. It is better to water
thoroughly but infrequently.
- Use automatic sprinkler systems
wisely. If you don’t have rain
sensors, turn off the system during
periods of heavy rain.
- Water in the evening or early
morning to avoid waste due to
evaporation.
- Maintain your sprinkler system.
Frequently observe the sprinkler
operation when you are home. Check
sprinkler heads to see that they are
covering the yard properly and not
watering pavement. Make sure no
sprinkler heads are clogged, broken
off, or mis-oriented.
- Adjust the timing for the season
and for different zones in the yard.
Shrubs need less water than grass;
consider drip irrigation, which is
more efficient for shrubs and beds.
- Don’t scalp lawns. Taller grass
holds moisture better and should be
cut to three inches in the summer.
Mulch the clippings into the grass.
- Mulch heavily around trees and
shrubs and flower beds to retain
moisture. Plant drought and
heat-tolerant shrubs and ground
covers.
- Don’t clean driveways and
sidewalks with a hose. Sweep them
instead.
- If you wash your car at home,
use a hose nozzle to cut off water
while you are soaping the car.
- Cover pools and spas to prevent
evaporation. A 30 x 15 pool in our
district can lose 1.5 inches of
water a week or 1,800 gallons of
water a month.
- Turn off decorative fountains on
windy days.
- If you don’t have an automatic
overflow device on your pool, delay
backwashing until the pool level
becomes too high from rain and needs
to be lowered anyway. Backwashing
wastes as much as 150 gallons of
water.
Overall Leak Detection
Periodically turn off all
water-using appliances in the house. Read
your water meter. Read the meter again after
twenty minutes, and if the meter reading has
increased, look for hidden leaks.
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