Showing posts with label Rainwater collection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rainwater collection. Show all posts

January 13, 2016

Get Cash Rebates for water cisterns, septic upgrades and more!

The Regional District of Nanaimo is one of the most conservation-minded, progressive, local governments in Canada. 

Check their site regularly, as most years they offer a wealth of rebates and incentives for homeowners to reduce costs and their environmental footprint.


Septic system rebates, water sampling and testing, well protection, rainwater collection cisterns, etc.


Check out RDN Rebates on their site.


April 8, 2013

Spring roof cleaning 101



Time for a good cleaning: sweep off, clean the gutters and bypass from your cisterns
After pollen season . . . after a winter of moss and algae growth . . . cedar buds, fir needles and arbutus bark, it is time for a good roof and gutter clean. 

If you are hiring someone to do this, make sure of these 4 important criteria are met:

  1. Make sure your collection system is diverted and bypassed so wash-water, debris and any cleaning products used do not go into your cistern! It will foul your water and make it unusable.
  2. Ensure your contractor has WCB or other insurance coverage for injury. This is slippery and dangerous work
  3. Confirm they use BC WorkSafe practices for fall prevention.
  4. Make sure roof is rinsed thoroughly with clean water before putting your rain collection system back online to your cistern.
Take care and happy rain harvesting over the spring and summer. Be sure to divert first 10-20 gallons of rainfall after an extended dry period (week or more).

March 19, 2010

Rainwater collection in the “shoulder season”

With about a metre of average yearly rainfall (almost all of it in the winter months), the modus operandi is collect happily in the winter months, but become a careful rain-farmer in the spring and summer.
Pollen season on Gabriola is already starting. After a week or two without rain, allow the first solid rain to wash away atmospheric pollution, roof dust, pollen, etc. for an hour or two, before collecting water again. (The essential formula--extensively researched in Australia, the Caribbean and other jurisdictions -- is divert 10 gallons per 1,000 square feet of roof collection surface.) Keep up with this practice until the winter rains return. Swing your fill pipe “off-line” or there are simple, yet very effective, homemade and commercial bypass systems called “first-rain diverters” to help with this. Clean-out roof gutters, screens, roof and piping after pollen season.

November 30, 2009

Rainwater collection system ready for cold weather?

With about a metre of rain falling on Gabriola during the winter months, this is the time to make hay for rainwater harvesting. Check to make sure your cisterns are clean and vents are screened, gutters are cleaned and collection piping is connected. Ensure your pumphouse, exposed collection and distribution pipes are insulated and protected from rain and cold. If your rain collection pipes are a wet-system (i.e. a portion of the pipe always holds water), you will need to watch the thermometer and drain out the exposed wet pipe, before sub-zero weather hits or it may freeze and crack.