Lawn
Water your lawn only when necessary. If
you step on your grass and it springs back, it doesn't need water. Adjust
your sprinklers accordingly.
Driveway
Use a broom instead of a hose to clean your sidewalk
or driveway.
Sidewalk
Adjust your sprinklers so they water your plants
and not the sidewalk or driveway.
Groundcover
Many shrubs, trees and groundcovers utilize less
water than grass. Landscaping with native, drought-resistant plants can
save lots of water.
Washing Your Car
Wash your car with a bucket and a hose equipped
with a shut-off nozzle or at a commercial carwash that uses recycled
water.
Sprinklers
Utilize a drip irrigation system when possible
and try to group plants together that require the same amount of water.
Adjust your automatic sprinklers according to the season, and have them
go off more frequently in the spring and summer, and less frequently in
the fall and winter.
As residents of Southern California, it is
important to remember that we live in a semi-arid area that receives
unpredictable amounts of rainfall and has limited local water
resources. Therefore, we must all work together to conserve as much
water as possible, to ensure adequate supplies during those hot
summer months in the years to come.
It’s a simple equation: if we use less water,
our existing supplies will go further. That’s why conservation
has become a significant component of SMWD’s water supply
planning strategy. Over the years, SMWD customers have been able
to save thousands of acre-feet of water through rebate programs,
plumbing retrofits and improved awareness of the need to use our
water resources more efficiently. And those savings not only help
the District, they help you too. That’s because the less water
you use in and around your home, the lower your monthly water bills
will be.
Click on the images below
for indoor conservation tips, for information on
how to reduce urban runoff or to return to the conservation page.
|
Conservation
|
|
Inside Your
Home
|
|
Urban Runoff
|
|