
Showing posts with label water conservation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label water conservation. Show all posts
Goodbye Grass?

How Dry I Am

Residents are expected to reduce their water usage by 15%. You have been assigned a "Tier 1 allotment". If you can stick with that, you pay for water at the lowest current rate. If you exceed it, "Tier 2" pricing (a much higher rate) is applied. To find out more about how this affects you, visit the DWP website at at www.ladwp.com.
Here are rules to remember:
- Sprinklers are to be used only on Mondays and Thursdays. (Hand watering is still allowed on other days.)
- No more than 15 minutes per sprinkler station.
- Watering (by hand or by sprinkler) may not be done between 9am and 4pm.
- Don't water hard surfaces (sidewalks, driveways, etc.) or allow excess runoff to enter the street.
- Don't water if it's raining.
- Leaks must be fixed.
- If you wash your car, use a hose with a shutoff valve.
- Don't run a decorative fountain unless the water is being recirculated.
- Restaurants may not serve unrequested water.
New Ways to Annoy Your Neighbors

So, the Department of Water and Power has issued these official-looking door tags, listing broken sprinklers and three other items that violate our new watering restrictions. They encourage us to nag our neighbors (anonymously) about sprinkling more than twice a week, and sprinkling in the middle of the day, and excess water on the pavement. The other side of the tag offers suggestions for saving water, including the use of "synthetic turf". I haven't seen that around here yet, but no doubt it is coming.
In the meantime, while Valley residents give up their lawns and replace the petunias with prickly pear, other states continue to experience heavy rains, storms and floods. How much better life would be if someone could invent a technology that would make it possible to spread the water around a little more evenly!
Reducing Water Use

On a recent weekend, I ripped out a flower bed and replaced it with this "rock garden". This enabled me to cap off one sprinkler head, and convert another to cover a smaller area. This is my first effort at rock gardening. I think it's too simple; while I was taking the picture it occurred to me that instead of just red lava rock, I could have made sections using two colors to make it more interesting.
In future posts I'll include photos of some of the interesting things my neighbors have done with rocks and succulents.
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