Tauranga’s peak water use days have reduced by an impressive seven per cent since the city brought in its Water-Watchers Plan two years ago.
The year-round plan helps people to plan their water use, and explains when it’s a good time to use sprinklers and water-blasters, and when it’s not.
Tauranga City Council water services manager Peter Bahrs says he is encouraged by Tauranga’s water-saving efforts. A keen gardener himself, Peter has some water-friendly gardening tips to share.
“We know people want their veggie gardens growing through summer, and we’ve got advice to help,” says Peter.
One of Peter’s top tips is using mulch to protect plant roots during hot days.
“Before the weather really heats up is the perfect time to put mulch in the garden. Mulch keeps soil cool, the moisture at plants’ roots, and weeds down – it’s a win-win-win,” says Peter.
He also recommends gardeners ‘toughen up’ their plants by watering less often for longer.
“Plants can become too water-dependent if they get light watering often, as this encourages shallow roots.
“Give them a good drink at their roots once or twice a week in the evenings so the moisture can soak in.
“Water can be reused for gardens too – put a bucket in the shower for non-edible plants or collect rainwater with buckets outside.
“It’s the little changes we make that add up to a big water-saving difference and keep our streams in good shape. Check the Water Watchers Plan on the council website before turning the tap,” recommends Peter.
See: www.tauranga.govt.nz/waterwatchers
3 comments
Have the bureaucrats noticed the excessive and continuous unseasonal rain we have had the last couple of years?
Posted on 11-12-2023 18:49 | By Murray.Guy
I am convinced that the reduction in water use is largely as a direct result of significant rain experienced coupled with excessive increases in the cubic meter cost to home owners.
We know the appointed commissioners would have you believe their role was to ensure critical infrastructure was in place when in reality they're focus has been destroying the CBD infrastructure and planning for the ego aspirations of a few parasites such as a museum and stadium. Were that not the case The commissioners would have championed many of the alternative options to enhance water recycling and rainwater catchment uses.
7%?
Posted on 12-12-2023 14:37 | By morepork
It is highly probable that we are heading for rising temperatures in general, and a consequent concern about water. If a scheme has returned a 7% saving, that is commendable, but we would need NO schemes and NO concerns if we simply built a desalinization plant, as I have mentioned here on several occasions. $NZ 90 million (one-off, returned easily over 5 years and then covering ongoing operation costs, WITHOUT increasing water charges) would provide around 80 million litres a day (Tauranga uses 60 million a day, currently). There would be no squabbling about land water rights, the supply could be plugged in to current distribution reticulation, and it makes a lot more sense than spending $NZ 300 million on a CBD vanity project.
Water Storage
Posted on 13-12-2023 07:07 | By Thats Nice
And yet, we're still not collecting and saving our water. I will not be letting any of my plants die from a lack of water that's for sure. Collect the rainwater for goodness sake, it's not like we've not had enough.
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