poosmate wrote:what is wrong with using the 23lt containers of drinking water ( 10 Baht).
I would think a houshold should be able to manage - one for the toilet one for washing and one for drinking cookink ( plus one for any animals). 30 Baht per day expensive?
ADW how do you to up your pool ?
I believe it is a requirement that every home connected to the mains water supply should have a storage tank. This is to ensure a fault inside a property ( burst/ broken pipe ) will not leak at mains pressure. This will also ensure a back up supply in the event of the mains being cut off. I have a 6000 lt concrete in ground tank at my home cost about 20k.
I do have a tank. It ran dry after 3 days of no water.
I do not have any transport, so it's difficult to bring in those heavy bottles. I have been getting one of those a day, but buying countless 6l bottles as well, as carrying 2 or 3 of those at a time home is easier than trying to lug a huge bottle. And those 6l bottles are expensive.
As for 'any' animals, it's 20+ dogs, 5 of them paraplegic, which is why I need to clean their bedding as it gets frequently soiled. Any ideas how I'm supposed to wash bedding using bottled water?
ADW, I would have been more sensible about rationing my water, had I realised there was a problem & the tank wasn't getting refilled. As it was, I spent 3 days carrying on as normal. By the time I realised there was a problem, it was too late.
I'm now wasting an entire day sitting in the house on the offchance that one of the Tessadban water trucks that I've signed on for/requested (twice) does turn up. Oh, well.
So, we're looking at tomorrow at the earliest? And probably far longer before the pressure is high enough to actually fill the tank?
Thanks for the info, guys.
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