Home » Green Home

Which is greener? Bath or Shower?

24 October 2009 247 views No Comment
If you do not live in Southern Britain, probabilities are that you won’t have spotted the water deficit problem in the United Kingdom, but you may have heard of the hosepipe ban and were left puzzled by London’s Mayor Ken Livingstone plea to Londoners to stop flushing the toilet after relieving themselves! Two atypically dry winters have left the reservoirs only about half full in Southern Britain . In the Thames water region, around London, there was less than 70% of the rainfall that was predicted since November 2004. The English are likely not aware that Londoners use a mean of 165 litres of water each day, higher than the nation’s average of 150 litres and about one-third higher than other Western european towns. These must be depressing figures for any English household, but you do not have to panic yet! By educating yourself about preserving water in easy methods, you can breathe simple and maybe even use a hose or sprinkler to water your garden after all! In this post, we’ll debate the big questiondoes it takes less water to take a shower or have a bath? Firstly, let’s have a look at a few facts : A full tub holds roughly 140 litres of water Standard shower heads dispense 20-60 litres of water per minute Shower heads with flow restrictors dispense 10-15 litres of water per minute a mean bath requires one hundred to two hundred litres of water. Depending on your showerhead and whether it has got a flow restrictor in it and how long you shower, the answer could oscillate either towards shower or bath. The average shower of 4 mins with an old showerhead uses eighty litres of water.
With a low-flow showerhead, only forty litres of water is employed.
If your home was made before 1992, possibilities are your showerheads force out about 20 litres of water per minute. Multiply this by the quantity of mins you are in the shower and the litres add up fast! If you would like to test the quantity of water wasted yourself, here’s an experiment you might try at home. Put the plug in the bathtub next time you take a shower ( but not a stand-alone shower as you could spill over the lower shower wall ). After you have showered, inspect how much the tub filled up.
If there’s less water than you would customarily have in a bath, then you may doubtless save cash by showering rather than a bath. Though the probabilities of the in contrast occuring are unknown, if it’s the case for you, then as well as the delight you get in a bath, there’s more excellent news for you. A good, long soak in a bath can replenish the spirit. Hydrotherapy, which loosely interpreted means ‘rejuvenation by water,’ enables bathers to re-energize themselves. Some modern systems even contain air jets that have been cunningly placed to target the body’s pressure points, relieving stress and stress.
Bathers can also enjoy the advantage of chromatherapy, which uses colored light in the same way aromatherapy uses smell to excite different mental and physical replies. Bath time for a young family can be an important playtime and social occasion to be shared with other family members. A number of folk find baths a relaxing way to chill in today’s fast-paced stressed life. Herbs and concentrated oils ease painful muscles, tense nerves, and skin irritations, melt the skin, and guarantee a good complexion. The Environment Agency would endorse short showers, not baths. Based on its latest research, it announces a 5-minute shower uses about a 3rd of the water of a bath and can save 50 litres each time. The time brought to take a shower isn’t the sole variable though . As formerly discussed, water consumed is also conditional on the kind of shower you use.
Power showers can use more water than a bath in less than 5 minutes! Low-flow showerheads deliver ten litres of water or less per minute and are comparatively cheap.
Older showerheads use twenty to thirty litres of water per minute. If you still are of the opinion that a shower can’t equal the gratification of a bath, then it is advocated to partly fill your bath to cut back water use. That option might appear better if you consider the plight of sailors on board ships. Thanks to lack of fresh water aboard ships, sailors were taught to become wet, switch off the water, soap and scrub, and then briefly turn the water on to wash. We should hope UK residents don’t suffer the same destiny in one or two years.

shower_head

If you do not live in Southern Britain, probabilities are that you won’t have spotted the water deficit problem in the United Kingdom, but you may have heard of the hosepipe ban and were left puzzled by London’s Mayor Ken Livingstone plea to Londoners to stop flushing the toilet after relieving themselves! Two atypically dry winters have left the reservoirs only about half full in Southern Britain . In the Thames water region, around London, there was less than 70% of the rainfall that was predicted since November 2004. The English are likely not aware that Londoners use a mean of 165 litres of water each day, higher than the nation’s average of 150 litres and about one-third higher than other Western european towns. These must be depressing figures for any English household, but you do not have to panic yet! By educating yourself about preserving water in easy methods, you can breathe simple and maybe even use a hose or sprinkler to water your garden after all! In this post, we’ll debate the big questiondoes it takes less water to take a shower or have a bath? Firstly, let’s have a look at a few facts : A full tub holds roughly 140 litres of water Standard shower heads dispense 20-60 litres of water per minute Shower heads with flow restrictors dispense 10-15 litres of water per minute a mean bath requires one hundred to two hundred litres of water. Depending on your showerhead and whether it has got a flow restrictor in it and how long you shower, the answer could oscillate either towards shower or bath. The average shower of 4 mins with an old showerhead uses eighty litres of water.

With a low-flow showerhead, only forty litres of water is employed.

If your home was made before 1992, possibilities are your showerheads force out about 20 litres of water per minute. Multiply this by the quantity of mins you are in the shower and the litres add up fast! If you would like to test the quantity of water wasted yourself, here’s an experiment you might try at home. Put the plug in the bathtub next time you take a shower ( but not a stand-alone shower as you could spill over the lower shower wall ). After you have showered, inspect how much the tub filled up.

If there’s less water than you would customarily have in a bath, then you may doubtless save cash by showering rather than a bath. Though the probabilities of the in contrast occuring are unknown, if it’s the case for you, then as well as the delight you get in a bath, there’s more excellent news for you. A good, long soak in a bath can replenish the spirit. Hydrotherapy, which loosely interpreted means ‘rejuvenation by water,’ enables bathers to re-energize themselves. Some modern systems even contain air jets that have been cunningly placed to target the body’s pressure points, relieving stress and stress.

Bathers can also enjoy the advantage of chromatherapy, which uses colored light in the same way aromatherapy uses smell to excite different mental and physical replies. Bath time for a young family can be an important playtime and social occasion to be shared with other family members. A number of folk find baths a relaxing way to chill in today’s fast-paced stressed life. Herbs and concentrated oils ease painful muscles, tense nerves, and skin irritations, melt the skin, and guarantee a good complexion. The Environment Agency would endorse short showers, not baths. Based on its latest research, it announces a 5-minute shower uses about a 3rd of the water of a bath and can save 50 litres each time. The time brought to take a shower isn’t the sole variable though . As formerly discussed, water consumed is also conditional on the kind of shower you use.

Power showers can use more water than a bath in less than 5 minutes! Low-flow showerheads deliver ten litres of water or less per minute and are comparatively cheap.

Older showerheads use twenty to thirty litres of water per minute. If you still are of the opinion that a shower can’t equal the gratification of a bath, then it is advocated to partly fill your bath to cut back water use. That option might appear better if you consider the plight of sailors on board ships. Thanks to lack of fresh water aboard ships, sailors were taught to become wet, switch off the water, soap and scrub, and then briefly turn the water on to wash. We should hope UK residents don’t suffer the same destiny in one or two years.

Leave your response!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.