I’ve started a greywater oasis project and am reusing kitchen sink water thanks to this book.
I live in a home with a slab foundation. This means it’s really darned hard to access my greywater before it hits the septic tank. My washer is located in the dead middle of the house, making it impossible to run a pipe outside… the showers and baths drain directly into the floor… and only one of my sinks was located next to an exterior wall: the kitchen sink.
So I did what any reasonable man would do. I punched a hole in the wall, ran a piece of PVC from under the sink (after the P trap), put an elbow on it outside and ran it off into a bed of mulch by my banana trees. Reduce! Reuse! Recycle! Punch a Hole In Your Wall!
I also added some papyrus or bulrushes of some sort, a few malanga plants, and a few more little banana trees.
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Great plan, throw some can as in there when you get a chance. Also you might move the pineapples…like any other bromeliad they don't like roots that are too wet…more of a rainwater and water from above type of plant. :) just a thought.
You're right on the pineapples. You can't tell from the pictures, but they're a tiny bit uphill from the water… and the pipe that cuts over doesn't have any drainage holes in it until about 18" down from them. I've left them there because they need the thermal mass of the wall to protect against frost.
And… I've got some cannas I started from seed but I haven't planted them yet. Good idea.
Cannas.
youre my gardening hero.
If the salt built up too much couldn't you just flush it for a few minutes with tap water? Or perhaps the rainfall would be sufficient… I'm sure it'll be ok; I have a few friends in Miami that have their waste waters drain out into their gardens using all kinds of soaps, detergents, etc, and it seems to thrive. :)
Funny you'd post this as I was considering doing this with my sink just today..lol
That's good to hear… I'm not sure how much the salts will flush through. Probably pretty well, considering the sandy soil. I know bananas aren't saline-tolerant, so hopefully they do okay. I'm interested to see what kind of growth the area exhibits when the weather gets hot again.
And hey – go ahead and drain your sink out the wall. It's fun!
Excellent idea! The cannas should do great. And with more hand washing, the electric bill might even come down a bit. Right?
It may indeed. Between this, the clothes line, and plenty of no-AC days… Progress Energy is probably feeling the pain.
BTW, Dave – I enjoy your site.
Sweet!
Some people also add a valve so you can still direct water in the septic when you need to and a way to flush the system, as it will accumulate enough gunk to clog the little holes every once in a while.
Yes – I've seen that design. Instead of doing that, I made the end cap on the irrigation pipe removable for clean out. Probably a little more labor intensive, but also easier on the plumbing end of things. ;)
BTW, did you go to the Permaculture Convergence? I had to skip it this year.
I sure did … Man, I feel like my batteries have been charged 125% :) I was literally bathing in the energy for 3 days there + solved quite a few practical issues just by talking to people, in one case for like 15 seconds. The dude spent 5 years experimenting with things I was just kinda planning to get involved in and just had all the answers already. Amazing. This is from my e-mail to a friend on the subject –
"The Convergence was a blast – I had no idea so much stuff was going on in FL and so many people were doing it. There were about 200 people attending and another 600 or so who are doing something relevant and sent their info but couldn't attend. As it turned out, Pasco is boiling with projects (mostly East Pasco, naturally, but still – I had no idea; Tampa/St. Pete delegation was about 20 people strong). Sumter looked like a dead zone until I told everybody about BSF and it was like magic – this project got so much attention, and so many people offered help – way more than what I expected. This thing actually may have a chance …
On the Convergence it was decided that we need a FL information sharing/networking website which will include You-tube channel with documentaries about all the projects that are going on and there are people working on that already. It did feel like the movement has reached the critical mass – it's almost a mainstream in some areas already judging by the sheer volume of things going on there – farms, schools, markets … Mostly big cities, naturally, but still … "
Are you coming to Agritunity? A friend of mine (who you definitely need to meet, BTW – he's also a plant genius like you) and I will be doing a little intro PC class there. There is usually a bunch of people from your area there and list of classes looks pretty good this year IMHO.
Oh, and I brought like a 100 chaya cuttings from the Convergence – someone left a big box there after a plant swap and I didn't want them to die :) Planted them in pots already – hopefully I'll be able to find a place where they can survive next winter (this here place has a bit of a weird micro-climate when it comes to cold – stupid I-75 cuts us off from warm and moist air from the Gulf, so we can have 19F when people 10 miles West have 29F). Need to build some sun-traps before Fall.
"So I did what any reasonable man would do. I punched a hole in the wall…"
Chuckle.
I thought greywater had to be filtered through a reed bed first?
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