Zip code 80808, Calhan CO is in USDA Hardiness Zone 5a: -20F to -15F. Using updated climate data through 2010, 80808 is in the Plantmaps Hardiness Zone 5b: -15F to -10F. The average first frost in 80808 is between September 21 - 31, while the average last frost occurs between May 21 - 31. 80808 is part of Ecoregion 26j - Foothill Grasslands. 80808 averages 1 - 7 days per year where the temperatue exceeds 86°F. The average annual high temperature in 80808 is 61°F and the average annual low temperature is 30°F. The average high temperature in July (Summer) is 81°F, while the average high temperature in January (Winter) is 41°F.
Gilbert Fritz wrote:Hello Jennifer,
Thanks for the answer.
For hypothetical situation like my own, I can't see any other way of going about it. (Greywater is illegal here in Colorado; but I want to design a greywater system in, so that when/if it becomes legal, it is already a functional part of my design.)
I would want to water annual vegetables, since they are the most water hungry part of the design. Raw greywater can't really do that.
I don't always have to water; we can get two inch downpours, and not have to water a well designed landscape for a few weeks. So I would want to store rain and grey water in a gravel filled pond, for dry periods. This climate has HUGE extremes of all sorts, and a main part of my design is to even them all out. Raw greywater can't be stored, except in the soil. And a fairly clayey soil basin being supplied with greywater just before a two inch downpour seems like a disaster waiting to happen.
Any other method of using it would be complicated and expensive (underground distribution) or have a potential ick factor for fussy neighbors. And if that potential was converted to reality just once— I would be in trouble.
Finally, I would want the whole of my small lot stuffed with edibles in every layer; thus the danger of raw greywater in a mulch basin touching edible leaves and fruits.
As far as volume, the system is being designed for a household of eight on a smallish lot.
And due to the current illegality of greywater, I don't know of anyone who has a functioning system.