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The Accidental Backyard Gardener

My Experiments in Backyard Gardening, by Mark Kurtz

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  • Fruits
    • Blueberry Home
      • Blueberries
      • Blueberry Soil mixes
      • Poor blueberries didn’t make it
      • Adding a new/replacement blueberry bush
      • Expanding the blueberry patch
      • Expanding the blueberry patch – Part 2
      • Blueberry plants in the Winter
      • Blueberry plants that I am growing
    • Raspberries
    • Strawberry Home
      • Strawberry
      • More strawberry plants
      • Even MORE strawberry plants!
    • Pumpkins
  • Flowers
    • Lavender
    • Speedwell
    • Mums
  • Our Rain Water Collection System
    • Collecting Rain Water
    • Rain Water Collection Upgrade
    • IBC Tote Beautification
  • Irrigation system
  • Worm Farming
    • Worms!
    • Week 1 worm update
  • Building a Wildflower Garden
  • Chores and activities
    • 2024 Activities
      • Tristan strawberries plants
      • Fertilized the blueberries
      • Planted pumpkin seeds
      • Purchased 3 Ozark Beauty and 1 Silver Dollar blueberry plant
      • Checked on the worms
      • Planting Mums
    • 2025 Activities

Collecting Rain Water

As part of my experiments I realized that we were losing out on FREE water! That’s right, FREE. Every time it rained all of that wonderful water coming out of the gutters was just washing down the driveway or into the yard (which wasn’t a bad thing) but I could be using that for the garden.

So I found a guy on Facebook that made, and delivered, ready-to-use rain barrels to capture the rain.

I bought 2 of them.

Two 58 gallon rain water collection barrels
Two 58 gallon rain water collection barrels

These are 58 gallon, food grade, plastic containers. They have screens on the top to capture the water and filter out debris, a spigot on the bottom to fill your watering can, and an overflow on the back.

I bought 2 of them because I wanted to capture as much water as I can.

Rain barrels on a garden wagon

I added a crossover connection between the two so as the first one fills it will simultaneously fill the second one. I set them on a garden wagon that turns out is just the right height for either a 5 gallon bucket or a watering can.

2 barrels connected together with a crossover tube
2 barrels connected together with a crossover tube

I can extract the water out of either one until the level falls below that crossover connection. At that point I will have to extract it from the individual barrel until they get refilled.

Both barrels have overflow outlets on the back but I capped one of them and added a length of garden hose to the other one. When the barrels overfill it will drain out of this outlet and away from the house. I may reroute the hose into a bucket to try and collect another 5 gallons of FREE water.

Rain barrel overflow hose
Rain barrel overflow hose

I now have a way to collect over 100 gallons of FREE water for the garden.

Just waiting for Spring to arrive

Spring!!!
Spring!!!

The Accidental Backyard Gardener 2025 . Powered by WordPress