brianslater
Industrial
- Aug 20, 2003
- 34
Help
I'm not a water expert, just a humble engineer working on the borders of Laos/cambodia. We have a simple rain water harvesting system collecting into 5000l cement jars - a long established practice. However we do get outbreaks of jungle belly which I believe is due to poor management of the jars (I smelled and tasted the water). They dont practice roof flushing of first run off (for 10 mins say). we have a lot of birds and worse, the jungle chickens. they dont have effective covers over the jars, they dont flush out the gutters (not easy), we have a lot of trees and leaves.
It seemed to me that 4 drops of household bleach (sodium hypochlorite 5%vv) per litre would help sanitise the water but I cant find anywhere on the net that admits this as an ok practice. Do you see any problem with this?
Once the water is disinfected it should stay that way (assuming the covers are in place and no new rain arrives. After a week or so the chlorin will have gone anyway.
If this is ok, why dont they use this in Bangladesh, say?
Its cheap and cheerful. All this pious advice about boiling water for 15mins is of no use when you dont have firewood.
Secondly I was proposing to use a simple form of sand filter for the local pond/river water which is sometimes available, mainly to remove turbidity and vegetable matter, then dose with bleach. Any comments on this
Please excuse my ignorance if I am stating the obvious here. Its very frustrating to read the learned dissertations from 3rd World water.org to find they have told you nothing useful
Your guidance may reduce the incidence of child jungle belly, which I also get sometimes.
I'm not a water expert, just a humble engineer working on the borders of Laos/cambodia. We have a simple rain water harvesting system collecting into 5000l cement jars - a long established practice. However we do get outbreaks of jungle belly which I believe is due to poor management of the jars (I smelled and tasted the water). They dont practice roof flushing of first run off (for 10 mins say). we have a lot of birds and worse, the jungle chickens. they dont have effective covers over the jars, they dont flush out the gutters (not easy), we have a lot of trees and leaves.
It seemed to me that 4 drops of household bleach (sodium hypochlorite 5%vv) per litre would help sanitise the water but I cant find anywhere on the net that admits this as an ok practice. Do you see any problem with this?
Once the water is disinfected it should stay that way (assuming the covers are in place and no new rain arrives. After a week or so the chlorin will have gone anyway.
If this is ok, why dont they use this in Bangladesh, say?
Its cheap and cheerful. All this pious advice about boiling water for 15mins is of no use when you dont have firewood.
Secondly I was proposing to use a simple form of sand filter for the local pond/river water which is sometimes available, mainly to remove turbidity and vegetable matter, then dose with bleach. Any comments on this
Please excuse my ignorance if I am stating the obvious here. Its very frustrating to read the learned dissertations from 3rd World water.org to find they have told you nothing useful
Your guidance may reduce the incidence of child jungle belly, which I also get sometimes.