
Last year, the City of Toronto sent every residential building a new garbage bin as part of a program to limit the amount of trash going to landfill. A side-effect of this program is that there are now thousands of obsolete garbage bins that we can't use. Well, we can't use them as garbage bins.
I spent 15 minutes and turned mine into a grey-water barrel. I'll show you how to do it. (Please also see the update I posted here.)
There are, essentially, three categories of water: clean, grey and black. Clean is what you drink. Black is what flushes down your toilet. Grey is the stuff that's somewhere in between: it's your washing-up water and bath water. My barrel will be getting water from the bath. That water is fairly clean. It contains some dead skin cells and some soap, but nothing toxic or particularly nasty. Good stuff to use on the garden.
I started this project with a fairly standard plastic garbage bin, the kind with wheels on the bottom and a lid held in place by two handles. There are no holes in the body, so it should hold water. The axle for the wheels runs through its own tube and not through holes drilled into the body of the bin, so no worries about leaks there.

The project also requires some teflon tape (it's cheap, and worth having on hand for minor plumbing repairs) and a bit of silicone (I had some left over from sealing leaks around a window). Unlike normal plumbing, the water in the barrel will not be under pressure.


Check that the male end of the connector fits snugly into the hole.
Next, wrap the male threads on the faucet in teflon tape, then screw it into the connector. The teflon tape provides a watertight seal.

And shazam! You're done. Now let it dry, then take it outside and test it for leaks, as I will do with mine in the morning.
***Note: The "indoor/outdoor" silicone I used proved to be a mistake. It wasn't water-resistant and broke down. A better caulk might have worked, or the faucet kit from Lee Valley (There's a link to it in the comments section). I later fixed the problem using nuts and washers, and wrote about it here.***
4 comments:
Excellent idea, Craig. I have a couple of garbage bins left by the previous owners, and there's nary a raccoon bite in them...
In fact, the first place I looked I found a barrel tap:
http://www.leevalley.com/garden/page.aspx?c=1&p=44757&cat=2,2280,33160&ap=3
How do you collect the water? Is that for a future posting?
This might make a good & cheap rain barrel as well. Or maybe I can use it to keg homebrewed beer. Hmmm.
Thanks, Karen. I should have checked the Lee Valley site. I'll probably pull out the one I installed at some point and replace it. But it'll do for now.
As for the water collection, it came up in a post a couple months ago (http://greentenant.blogspot.com/2009/01/water-on-brain.html). There's no easy way here, so I'll be scooping it into buckets and carrying it out to the back porch.
If my apartment were laid out differently, I'd rig a siphon hose through the bathroom window. I'm only planning to use bath water. Dishwater would have food particles that could attract rats. And I hate rats.
Cool story as for me. It would be great to read more about this topic. Thanks for posting this material.
Joan Stepsen
Computer geek
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