posted 15 years ago
The filters that the Rotary gives away are small plastic units, maybe 40 gal. The family hauls water from a spring , stream, or river in most cases. That is why the filters are needed, the streams are polluted. I have not been there personally, my involvmant has been to donate money. From what I understand the Bio layer can build up and get thick over time. They just scoop some of it off the top and continue to use the filter. The sand lasts for several years befor it needs replaced. The people have to be trained to use them, as an example, when you haul the water in one bucket, you dont use that same bucket to catch the water from the filter. The filters are gravity flow, as you pour a new bucket of water in the top, water is forced down through the filter and out the spicket that is att to a line that runs from the gravel botton of the tank to the top. Your 1st drawing showed that design very well I thought. The water line is not separate though. It runs along the inside of the tank. That way the tank is always full of water being filtered.
Haveing an in-ground cistern is not uncommon. I live in western pa and we get alot of rain and have a good water table here. There are still some people for one reason or another use cistern water to run their homes. In most cases they do not drink it, they drink bottles water of some sort, or haul drinking water from a spring. The cistern water is not general filtered much at all, maybe a settling area to take out large particles and leaves, that is about it. The water is used for bathing, washing both you and your cloths, cleaning and flushing. If the cistern gets low in Aug, there are milk truck drivers that will bring you a load of water pretty cheap.
Never doubt that a small group of dedicated people can change the world, Indeed it is the only thing that ever has. Formerly pa_friendly_guy_here