Dishwasher Grey
Dishwasher Grey
What is recycling is a "gray water" from their home to use for irrigation?
Gray water is water that is used and goes down the drain your kitchen and bathroom sinks, shower and dishwasher. I heard that water makes excellent irrigation water for lawns and gardens, if you can capture. This Thus, you are not wasting clean, potable water in your garden. The problem is - my house is set in the traditional way, where all the gray water meets the sewer. Is it possible / possible economic adaptation, or should I wait until I build my next house?
just ask a plumber. Me I think it's the "code" in everything in the counties and cities and you may or may not be allowed to go through the piping system. I know that time there in my grandparents had a receptacle under the sink like a big bucket that was on the outside to water the plants. It would seem too heavy to drag outdoors though. You may find it easier to open the kitchen window or a door near the kitchen you could swing your lawn and water bucket without going outdoors. When I was a kid, my job was to wash the sidewalks, but I'd use a mild detergent to wash and rinse first .... and all that watering the grass on the sides, but the other good thing was that the soap gets diarrhea errors and keep the bugs away from home too. The water goes back into the system county is treated and recycled so if you were thinking that it is being wasted, so it is not, it's just that the county is doing instead of you. Then the county or the city that sells it back to you as recycled water for your lawn. You may only use less water in the showers help you save money you could invest in a program water recycling in the county.




