*1. Go low-flow.* Listen up, water wasters: With a few twists of the wrist,
you can save 25% to 60% of the water it takes and 50% of the energy
necessary to shower and shampoo you and your family.
How so? Install a low-flow shower head, which restricts the water output to
no more than 2.5 gallons per minute, the federally mandated limit for new
fixtures. The shower heads generally run $10 to $20 a pop (some utility
companies give them away) and screw into existing fittings.
You'll squeeze the most out of the low-flow strategy if you live in a home
built before 1994 and if you haven't renovated your bathroom: Older shower
heads send as many as 5.5 gallons per minute down the drain. The new
fixtures go as low as 1.5 gpm, saving 7,300 gallons and $30 to $100 a year
over their 2.5-gpm counterparts.
Unlike older versions, which put you under a sprinkle, one new low-flow
maintains decent pressure by forcing air into the mix, and another channels
water into massagelike streams. A third type, the H2Okinetic Technology
shower head, by Delta, shoots bigger droplets at a higher speed than the
other two, approaching the feel of an old-fashioned soaker at a parsimonious
1.6 gpm. The fixture runs about $55 at retail stores.
If you haven't a clue how fast the water runs through your shower head, put
a bucket under the nozzle and time how many seconds the water takes to get
to the 1-gallon mark. If it's less than 20 seconds, head for the hardware
store.

 *2. Retrofit your faucets.* As you browse the plumbing aisles, check out
faucet aerators -- doohickeys that screw into your faucet threading and cut
the water flow from 3 to 4 gallons per minute (the rate on older fixtures)
to as little as a half-gallon. As with shower heads, you can figure out how
fast your faucet flows by putting a quart container under the stream. If the
container fills in less than five seconds, your faucet could use this fix.
As their name suggests, aerators blend water and air, reducing the flow
without sacrificing pressure. At 50 cents to $3 apiece, the devices are some
of the cheapest green gadgets available. Your utility company may even offer
you a rebate or hand them out free.
Aerators come in a range of flow rates, up to 2.2 gpm. A faucet that flows
at 1 gpm gets your toothbrush and washcloth plenty wet. But unless you want
to grow old waiting for your pasta pot to fill, you'll need to give your
kitchen faucet a bit more oomph. Use an aerator with a flow rate of at least
2 gpm.
*3. Have a little **WaterSense*
<http://www.epa.gov/WaterSense/index.htm>*.*Soon, you won't have to
worry about bringing home products that promise a
deluge and deliver a dribble or that don't live up to their water-saving
claims. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recently launched a
certification program that vets devices for water efficiency and
performance, and awards the WaterSense label to those that do the job right.
You can already find the label on high-efficiency toilets; bathroom faucets
and aerators are next in line. The WaterSense program also certifies
landscapers who have been trained to use water wisely. Here's a
list<http://www.epa.gov/WaterSense/pp/lists/irr_partners.htm>of
landscapers certified by the WaterSense program.
*4. Go with a trickle.* For kitchen chores that demand an open spigot, go
with a trickle, not a torrent. Restrict the water flow to the width of a
drinking straw and save up to a gallon of water per minute.
*5. Stop the flow.* Turn the water off while you brush your teeth. Running
the water for two minutes -- you are brushing for two minutes, right? --
sends 2 gallons of water down the drain.
*6. Forget to flush* once in a while and save up to 4.5 gallons per memory
lapse.
*7. Use the right setting.* The permanent-press setting on your washing
machine uses 5 gallons more per load than the regular setting. Reserve it
for clothes that need line-drying.
*8. Shower.* Switch from a bath, which requires 30 to 70 gallons, to a
shower, which uses 25 gallons in 10 minutes under a 2.5-gpm shower head.
Then shower shorter. Can't do it? Jennifer Aniston takes three minutes to
get the job done, according to "The Green
Book,"<http://shopping.msn.com/prodlink.aspx?ptnrid=18&ptnrdata=24001&AltType=ISBN&AltValue=0307381358>and
you don't hear her complaining.
*9. Plug the leaks.* A leaky faucet wastes as much as 2,700 gallons in a
year -- if it doesn't drive you crazy first. So fix it already.
*10. Fill 'er up.* Run the dishwasher and the clothes washer with full
loads.
*11. Raise the mower blades.* Adjust your lawn mower to the 3-inch setting.
Shaggy grass holds moisture longer, requiring less watering.
*12. Test the toilet.* Put a drop of food coloring in the toilet tank. If
the color shows up in the bowl, your tank is leaking and you're wasting up
to 200 gallons of water a day.
*13. Turn off the water* while you shave and soap up. If you shave in the
shower, outfit the wall with the nifty Shower
Mirror<http://www.frontgate.com/jump.jsp?sort=-1&itemID=129&itemType=PRODUCT&AS=1&keyword=shower>,
complete with clock, razor holder and light, from Frontgate for $59.50.
*14. Water early.* Water your outdoor plants in the early morning, before
the sun can burn off moisture.
*15. Don't overwater.* Before starting your sprinkler, step on the grass. If
the blades spring back, hold off on watering for a day or two. The average
lawn needs only one hour of watering a week.
*16. Get your car washed.* Take your car out for a shampoo and rinse.
Commercial car washes save up to 100 gallons of water per wash over the
do-it-yourself kind, and they often reuse the rinse water, according to "The
Green Book." If every American took the lazy way out just once, total
savings would amount to 8.7 billion gallons of water.

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