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December 5, 2007 1:21 PM PST

Sands through the hourglass count time in the shower

by Elsa Wenzel
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Showering can waste a gallon of water a minute. Yet a daily shower is one of those nonnegotiable, guilty pleasures I'm unwilling to sacrifice.

The 4-minute shower timer is an instrument of torture.

The 4-minute shower timer is an instrument of torture.

(Credit: Green Deals Daily)

Still, the number of water-starved regions is only set to grow. For those who must watch every drop, a shower timer could be the next best thing to installing a high-tech, low-flow shower head.

A $3 timer from Envirosax, which makes trendy shopping bags, sticks to a shower wall with a suction cup. Its blue, pink, green, or gray sands take 4 minutes to pass through the hourglass.

Four minutes? Hair conditioner alone takes 2 minutes to work its magic. I would probably flip over the timer or ignore it, and feel guilty in any case. However, those who use the timer correctly could save hundreds of dollars a year on water bills.

The timer looks like an ideal stocking stuffer for green gift givers, although it's unclear how eco-friendly its plastic parts may be. Receiving one could be about as fun as a cardigan sweater. Those who are more eco-conscientious and self-punishing than yours truly may consider taking a Navy shower instead, which involves turning off the water while lathering, and then rinsing in a hurry.

(via Green Deals Daily)

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Add a Comment (Log in or register)
Save hundreds of dollars?
by jimothyGator December 6, 2007 8:23 AM PST
Shortening your shower might be a good idea, but it's not going to save you
"hundreds of dollars a year." Assume a gallon a minute. Assume the average
shower time of 15 minutes, thus a reduction of 11 minutes and 11 gallons a
day. This'll save you about 4,000 gallons a year.

Where I live (DeKalb County, Georgia), water rates are $2.19/1000 gallons,
plus $3.22/1000 gallons for sewer. Total: $5.41/1000 gallons.

So, I'd save a whopping $22 dollars a year by shortening my shower. My
county is one of the drought-stricken areas, so there's still benefits to
shortening my shower, but my finances aren't among them.
Reply to this comment
Money savings
by PolluteLessDotCom January 12, 2008 9:49 AM PST
I assume you are taking cold showers if you calculate the costs for a shower only to be costs for water.

Water is (still) relatively cheap. Energy is pricey and hot water is getting expensive. That is where you save the real $$.

Unless you have a solar shower.

Karsten
--
http://www.polluteless.com
Practical Advice to Pollute Less
Reply to this comment

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