Gauteng Smallholder April 2016 | Page 51

Our water crisis O n our plot we've always had two sources of water: a municipal supply, which flows into a tank and thence, via a booster pump, into the house, and a borehole, albeit a weak one, which pumps into an old portable swimming pool to supply water for the garden, fields and animals. For the first 20-odd years of our occupation of the property this arrangement worked just fine. Visitors comment on the quality of the water that comes out of the house taps. That's because, I maintain, the municipal water, which is treated with chlorine by Erwat, the East Rand's water authority, loses this chlorine during its spell in our tank, and emerges from the tap clear, sparkling and taint-free, and thus greatly superior in taste to municipal water that comes directly out of the mains. Watering the garden etc with a weak borehole has been a bit of a challenge but we've become masters at water-wise gardening, mulching and other water saving interventions such as recycling our grey water (which, because it is nutrient rich, turns bright green when exposed to sunlight). And on the odd occasion that our municipal tank has run dry (more often than not because of an undetected leak in the pipe between the tank and the house, or a stupidly left-open tap) we've been able to temporarily refill the tank with borehole water (adding a cup of Jik to the tank because I'm none too sure of the state of cleanliness of the borehole stuff) using a hosepipe into the tank from a garden tap. And so I confess to having been a bit smug. I thought I had any potential water supply problem sorted. So it's amazing to find how much a real water crisis focuses the mind… Lately, you see, our municipality has become less-than-efficient in ensuring a continuous suppl K