so im trying to put a numerical value of water harvested by a swale so that i can give a customer something to chew on and realise the value of the ditches im diggin
the swales in question are 12 ft long, 4 inches deep storage capacity at the lowest amount and about 1 foot wide, so how much water would these be harvesting per inch of rain?
does anyone have a formula for this or know where to find one?
i do, just about every water harvesting system has a formula. im on the bus atm but ill dig it out of brad langcasters rainwatef harvesting book when i get home. try his book name plus the word formulas maybe you can find it on the net in the meantime
Forgive a question from someone just learning? Why wouldn't it be 30 gallons?
At 7.5 per cubic foot, 12' holds 90 gallons. Divide by 3 since it's only 4"deep would put it at 30 capacity. Presumably percolation rate, runoff and rainfall amounts change the equation but I haven't learned those details yet.
^if the swale is full then i think that 30 gallons is the correct answer, however, one inch of rain would be 7.5 gallons from my calculations... apparantly there was another thread on here and i did some calculation after figuring out an acre inch of rain is 27000 gallons
^thats a good point, and in our soil applicable because the swale isnt likely to collect ANY water unless its coming down fast enough not to sink into our sandy soils immediately