Drips in your home can waste thousands of gallons of water Dripping faucets and whistling or hissing toilets waste water, even when no one is using them! Toilets often have "silent" leaks, too. |
||
Here's a handy way to discover a leak (do this with an adult): |
||
| Step1: Carefully take off the top of the toilet tank | Step 2: Put 12 drops of red food coloring into the tank. |
Step 3: Wait 15 minutes. If any red dye appears in the toilet bowl, water is leaking from the tank. Ask an adult to fix it. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
Using water wisely saves in more ways than one! Energy - such as from electricity, oil, and natural gas - heats water for washing, and runs appliances that use water. So, when you save water, your family spends less money on energy. | ||
|
Drip, Drip, Drip One gallon of water is made up of about 15,000 drips.
That's a lot of drips, but they can add up
quickly! | ||
Now that's a lot of wasted drips! |
||