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To: Maudeen; thackney; taxcontrol; The_Media_never_lie; silverleaf; NorthMountain; riri; freemama; ...
Amid Texas drought, this rain man bottles water

Amid Texas drought, this rain man bottles water

 

Richard Heinichin at Tank Town.

by Dan Weissmann
Wednesday, February 5, 2014 - 05:10
 

Drive west on U.S. 290* about 20 miles from Austin, Texas, and turn directly into Richard Heinichen’s driveway. A sign overhead reads, “Tank Town: World Headquarters, rainwater stuff.”

From this 10-acre plant in Dripping Springs, Heinichin installs home rainwater-collection systems for his neighbors in the Hill Country, and sells “bottled cloud juice” to cafes and hotels in Austin.  

Collecting rainwatwer may seem like an unorthodox proposal to address the record water shortages that have gripped the drought-gripped state. Heinichin says it's no problem. "You got enough square footage" on a rooftop"you got it covered."  

He's got the square footage at Tank Town. Two barns have 20,000 square feet of rooftop that rain can run off of. Instead of downspouts, the gutters run to across-spouts, like aqueducts, to 17 above-ground tanks.

Those tanks hold a quarter-million gallons, and they’re full up, even though Heinichin bottles about 37,000 gallons a year.

That’s not enough to keep up with the rainfall, even in a drought.

"It rained 11 inches on Halloween," he says.  "Over 100,000 gallons went out on the highway out there."   

Heinechin says it’s not just the quantity of rainwater that makes it compelling. It’s the quality.

"I didn’t realize rainwater was so good," he says, "till I drilled a well."

That was in the early 1990s, when he moved to the Texas Hill Country. At first, well water— hard and salty-- was the only option.

"Took a bath in it— I smelled like rotten eggs," he recalls. "Almost threw up in the shower. And you try to go to the shower to get clean!"

His clothes stood up by themselves. His coffee tasted awful.

So he decided to give rainwater a try. As a trained blacksmith, and a tinkerer, Heinichin did the work himself, installing the gutters, the aqueducts, and the first tanks.

He liked the result, but he didn’t think of it as a line of work. That came to him.

"My neighbor comes over and says, 'What’s the deal with your dishes? They’re so clear!'" he says.  "And I say, 'I know!' Because before they were foggy and looked like hell.  And he came over and just noticed it, and says, 'I want— I have to have that, too.'"

That neighbor told others, and a business was born.  "Tank Town just grew by itself," says Heinichin, "Bbcause there was such demand for what I did."

The cost — around $15,000 — is comparable to having a well dug.

"People say, ‘When is this damn thing gonna pay me back?’ And I say, ‘First shower.’"  

Heinichin says he does about 30 home systems a year — and he doesn’t want more customers.

"We weed ‘em out," he says. "If we do their system, then they become a Tank Town citizen — one of our people — and we have to take care of them. And some of these — you don’t want to take care of everybody."

However, to start the bottling business, he did need to do some convincing. Just not to customers.

"Government said, 'You can’t do that, because government’s not approved as a source for water,'" he says. "I say, 'OK, where do you get your water?'  They keep thinking, and I get ‘em up to the highland lakes.  ‘OK, so what fills that?’"

The Texas Commision on Environmental Quality eventually certified Tank Town as an approved public source of water.

108 posted on 07/18/2014 6:11:39 AM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: Maudeen; thackney; taxcontrol; The_Media_never_lie; silverleaf; NorthMountain; riri; freemama; ...

The solution to the drought for the southwest is to strip off the 10-20 feet of Missippi flood waters north of the Ohio river during flood stage March to June and pump them over to south pass in Wyoming. From there the water would roll south to refill Lake Meade and Lake Powell plus make a couple more lakes.

A similar program could send water to western Colorado and Nebraska to refill the Ogalla aquifer during spring flooding on the Mississippi.

Further south, a pipeline or canal could ship spring flood waters of Louisiana to Texas.

This would all be expensive work but the USA currently spends about 4 billion annually to fund Army corp of engineer flood control work on Mississippi and FEMA damage control.

Stop the flooding on the Mississippi by shipping the water to points west and Army Corp of Engineer and FEMA costs no longer apply.

Then of course too the refilling the Ogala Aquifer and shipping water to southwest solves a lot of problems there.


109 posted on 07/18/2014 6:29:03 AM PDT by ckilmer (q)
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To: ckilmer

This guy had a great idea! We lived in Galveston in about 1960/61 the city water was the worst I have ever tasted. It was so salty that when you boiled any food, beans, spaghett, etc you didn’t add any salt and it was still too salty.


111 posted on 07/18/2014 6:56:56 AM PDT by Ditter
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