The clay soil around my house compacted over the French drains in my side yard. Water pools instead of drains before, during, and several days after a rain.
It’s perfect breeding ground for root rot and slime mold that kills everything in your flowerbeds.
Guess how I know?
I lived with the dead front garden for far too long
My Home Owner’s Association is supposed to take care of things like this but the Queen of No likes to half quote the rules so it’s on my dime instead of the HOA’s. As much as I would
love to rent a backhoe and dig up my yard (seriously), the thought of laying out big dollar signs to do it stop me.
A cheaper solution is to install a rain barrel on that side of the house. I hope a rain barrel will solve my poor
drainage problem and encourage me to water the plants in the front yard more often.
Free water for my garden makes me giddy too.

My rain barrel is a rock.
Specifically, I bought a
Water Stone rain barrel from Amazon 
for under a hundred smackeroos. By going with a rain barrel that looks like a garden doodad I don’t need to get special permission from the Queen of No because guess what the answer would most likely be?
Exactly.
How to Install a Rain Barrel Diverter
You will need:
Rain barrel and platform
Measuring tape
Level
Pencil
Safety glasses
Do it:
1. Build the rain barrel platform. The platform allows you to access the water in the bottom of the barrel via gravity – it’s the law you know.
I made my rain barrel platform from two rows of bricks
2. Put the rain barrel on the platform.
3. Use the measuring tape and level to mark a cut line on the downspout that is level with the rain barrel.
It's more level in real life than in Photoshop.
4. Put on your
safety glasses
.
Safety first!
5. Use either the hacksaw
OR the
Dremel
I used my Dremel
. Powertools = wheeee!
to cut the downspout along the cutting line.
Be careful. A rotary tool's cutting wheel is high speed sharpness!
All cut!
Cut it out!
Keep this part.
7. Attach the downspout diverter to the downspout.
It sticks like magic! (for about two seconds without screws.)
8. Screw the rain barrel diverter to the downspout using either the drill to drill a pilot hole and a screw driver to drive the screw OR the
right angle impact driver.
No pilot hole required with this baby! It's speedy too.
I used the right impact driver because I did not have to haul extra tools from the garage because that's. too. hard. (not really, I'm just lazy.)
9. Attach the rain barrel diverter hose to the rain barrel.
All attached!
10. Wait for rain!
My rain barrel with a secret works! It collects rain water and its secret function fooled my neighbor into thinking I hauled a giant bolder into my garden when she wasn't looking.
Hopefully the yard will be less soggy too.
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haha, Lisa. You are so clever! I've been wanting a rain barrell for the longest time. We are on a water meter now and I think it would save a lot of money in the winter and spring. And I love how sneaky you are, or have to be!
ReplyDeleteI don't think i've ever seen the rock ones before! Love it! I need to get a rain barrel for over at my bf's house...so much "wasted" water that we could be using for the garden!
ReplyDeleteGreat idea- I am wondering how much water this holds?
ReplyDeletethis is an amazing idea for us gardeners with this problem. perfect solution, hopefully they darn snakes will not crawl under it...
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An under-cover rain barrel - what a good idea;)
ReplyDeletevery clever and stylish!
ReplyDeleteMy hubs is so afraid of cutting the gutter....that's why we don't have one.
Your directions may change his mind.
thanks
Julie
Where did you find a rain barrell disguised as a rock?
ReplyDeleteMuch cuter than my huge purple(!) barrel. I'm impressed.
ReplyDeleteMary Ellen - My Waterstone holds 40 gallons. There are larger Waterstones that hold more. You can also link more than one store up to another to store even more water.
ReplyDeleteSteve - I bought my Waterstone from Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Emsco-Group-2284-WaterStones-Collection/dp/B0026T5576?ie=UTF8&tag=conblu-20&link_code=btl&camp=213689&creative=392969
I would also like to save rain water to use on the garden but I wonder if the stagnant water sitting around would bring harmful insects?
ReplyDeleteMichele - most rain barrels have a mesh screen on the overflow holes to keep out insects. Mine doesn't. I ordered a liquid version of the mosquito disks and added it to my rain barrel to keep them out.
ReplyDeleteClever...looks great!
ReplyDelete