Build Your Own Rain Barrel Oakland CA

The following article offers tips for making your own rain barrel. If you're looking to conserve water for your lawn or garden, making a rain barrel to catch rain water in is a great way to do just that.

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Remember that old rain barrel at the corner of nearly every house in town?

Probably not. Rainwater collecting was eclipsed by municipal water systems.

Well, the rain barrels are back. Gardeners are rediscovering these water recyclers that save money and offer the benefits of untreated H20 from the sky.

Nearly everybody already has the most important part, a gutter downspout shunting roof water into a drain pipe or yard. What a waste.

Rainwater is good stuff and worth collecting. It has none of the chemicals added to sanitize drinking water. It’s naturally soft and, of course, free.

The barrel isn’t. I haven’t seen any in stores, so I headed online. There they were, but the prices were astronomical. A plastic barrel with fittings ran $135 to $250. Then you must tack on a $50 shipping fee (these items are considered oversize packages).

I could build one myself for a fraction of that.

I bought a 35-gallon, heavy-duty trash can, a few plumbing fittings and a washing-machine hose. A half-hour later, I had my rain barrel.

CONSTRUCTION

Here’s how to build your own:

If you’re lucky, your downspout will have a slip joint close to the barrel top. If not, cut the tube to fit your barrel. Keep the remaining spouting for reconnecting.

Barrels must be stored over winter. Water in them will freeze and expand.

You’ll need an overflow that doubles as an air vent as the barrel fills. I drilled three holes in the lid and covered them with screen pieces secured with silicon caulk. This does double duty as a mosquito repellent. Rain barrels can be perfect habitats for them.

Finally, clean out your gutters to increase water flow and avoid debris.

For high capacity, you can link two or three barrels with short lengths of hose near the tops.

Is this worthwhile? A mere 0.3 of an inch of rain on a 1,200-square-foot roof will fill a 35-gallon barrel. Without a rain barrel, this will wind up in the storm sewer, a terrible waste of an increasingly valuable resource.

HOMEMADE RAIN BARREL

1 35-gallon heavy-duty round trash can with lid, $10

1 3/4-inch hose bib faucet, $4

2 galvanized steel washers to fit the bib, $2

1 PVC nut to fit the nipple of the bib, $1

1 washing-machine hose, $6

Piece of window screen or plastic mesh

1 tube silicon rubber sealant, $4

Cut your downspout, leaving enough length to fit through the lid. Place the barrel under it and mark around it for the top hole. Cut the hole on the lid with tin snips or a knife to fit your downspout.

With a 3/4-inch hole saw, drill the drain hole 2 inches above the can bottom. Place a washer on the bib nipple, install through the hole and add the second washer inside. Screw securely with the nut, placing the spout at a right angle.

Glue around both washers with silicon. Install washer hose.

Drill three 3/4-inch holes in the lid. Spread silicon around them on the underside and install squares of screening or plastic mesh. Allow silicon to dry for 24 hours.

Form a double hook with coat-hanger wire to fit under the lid and store the hose.

Attach the lid to the downspout and then to the can.

Use the washer hose to fill a watering can or attach to a garden hose.

Canton (Ohio) Repository

author: By Jim Hillibish

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(510) 548-8686
3120 Telegraph Ave
Berkeley, CA

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