Rain Water Tanks for the Garden

water tank hidden in a city garden
rainwater garden sign
rainwater tank attached to play house roof
water tank waiting to be installed

We have a few water tanks at the farm but I think it is time to upgrade them to these closed tanks with a tap at the bottom. Yeah?

27 responses to “Rain Water Tanks for the Garden”

  1. In the UK we call them water butts, l love mine. Also haven’t heard charcoal stick in that phrase, we always say sharp stick. So interesting these slight differences.

  2. We have two rain barrels with hoses attached at the bottom. We use mosquito dunks of environmentally correct Bti. Works like a charm.

  3. We have been using rain tanks for a number of years. We are having to rethink our setup now though … our tanks have an open grate on top – about the size of a mail slot – to allow for overflow. When working in the garden last week we realized our tank which sat up against the house had hidden how the wood siding was rotting behind it. We have had so much rain this spring and summer we’ve often had overflow. Will have to figure out a way for the overflow to escape to the front and not the top …

    • I had one like that too – it is not wood next to it but I am sure it is not good having the water flow back to the house – now I have a soft hose running the overflow through the garden and into the trees. Water is easy to direct but so destructive if it goes the wrong way.

  4. We have a big tank in the back yard which catches all the shed water and is there for the chooks and the garden. I really should hook one up for the house roof as well, but the amount of rain we get in the Wet means I’d have to dig a ditch for the overflow when it inevitably fills up. It’d be great to have rainwater for the laundry, too…

      • We get absolutely masses, a real excess, and much of it is pouring away. Our neighbours have commented how much greener their grass is these days since the rain washes all the chook poo out of our grass and into their yard… I really must look into getting another tank for the side of the back porch…

  5. Hi Cecilia!!!! Yes, I am still around, just not on the blog much. Love rain barrels! I remember my grandmothers well. It was rusted metal and she said it provided iron to her garden. She always had the best tomatos.

    Question: What is the board with the colorful flower things on it? Is it a frog ladder by chance?

    Safe travels….. P

      • It is something to help frogs escape. Instead of a flat piece of wood – it has something on it to help them down. Who wants to watch a frog fall butt over head all floppy and such. My grandmother had them on her large planters back in the 70’s. (Now how a frog got into the planters….. I think she put them there so the kids would have a giggle)

    • It is only when you live in an area where you have to consider every drop of water that we truly understand how lucky we are to have running water – melting snow for the bath must have taken ages! There is just not a lot of water in snow!

      • Mom filled a huge canning pot with snow and melted it on the coal and wood stove before she poured it into the bathtub. Since I was a girl, I got to have my bath first. Then my brothers each had their bath in the same water. I think she added a bit of fresh water each time. Then she poured the water back into the pot and reheated it along with fresh snow, and she and my dad would have their bath. Yes, the water was recycled! Different times.

  6. Rainwater for her tea?!!! Wowza! Kinda wonderful, but yet…!
    We had two rain barrels growing up in Washington State, but only used it to water the garden. And to breed mosquitoes, inadvertently!

    • The mozzies will always be a problem! Here in Melbourne all the tanks are airtight and plumbed so no mosquitoes can get in there at all. But on the farm I often see mosquito larvae in the cows water.

  7. I dislike chlorinated town water… when we lived in the city I’d boil and filter our tap water for drinking. Now we only have rainwater supply I love our rainwater tanks, concerningly the levels are getting very low. We’re using as little as possible but need rain or we will have to buy water.

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