Thursday, July 28, 2022

Water Catchment System

 One thing about living in Missouri, it can either be a week of rainy weather or no rain in sight.  When summer hits, and we found ourselves watering almost daily to keep our garden alive, it made us cringe to think about what it is doing to our well.  So with the addition of the goat barn, we decided to try our hand at a water catchment system.  

Our barn has a roof that is slanted in one direction, with the low side on the back of the barn.  We put a gutter on that side only.

We found the barrels on Marketplace locally for $10 each.  These are food grade barrels that once contained soybean oil.  We also had to purchase concrete blocks so that they could sit evenly and be off the ground.  After getting the blocks level, we had to put connectors between the barrels, so that the water can move freely from one to the other after it comes off the barn roof.  


                                        

Hubs had to do some digging and leveling to get everything lined up.  To connect the barrels, we had to order the parts from Amazon.  We needed two hoses to go between the barrels, and the connectors that attached the barrels to the hoses.  We looked at several hardware stores, but I found them on line and ordered them.  The thing I did not do was order both set of parts from the same manufacturer.  So when the came, the threads did not match up.  Oh, Geez.  Luckily, we went to the local hardware store and were able to buy the parts we needed, but of course that added to the cost.

                                        

Probably the toughest part of installing the connectors is that the top of the barrel is sealed except for a smallish hole to pour from.  So it is difficult to get the connector down to the bottom of the barrel.  So hubby attached a socket to a long pole via duct tape and fed that into the barrel. 
To get the connector up to the hole that was cut in the bottom of the barrel, we threaded a rope through the openings and put the connector on and let it travel down inside the barrel.  Worked like a charm!




The rain fills out each barrel evenly and simply moves to the next barrel as the volume increases.


Once the gutters were installed, we used this flexible gutter to catch the rain into the first barrel.

 



       This was pretty much finished.  We did invest in a small pump that we purchased at Harbor Freight.  It pumps the water at a full stream so we are able to water our garden easily without using all of our well water.



This post is from last year.  A bout with cancer and some other life changes have delayed this post but I hope to catch up soon!  There are some things we learned.  

  1. A half inch of rainfall just about fills up these barrels.  I can get about three waterings for the garden out of these three.
  2. Missouri has heat and drought.  After draining the barrels it took a long time before they were full again.  We need more barrels.  This week alone we have gotten over 4 inches of rain and we were unable to save all of the water.  

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