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[–]udo0 points
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(edited ago)
Cistern size laws in some countries, to limit "selling" or "speculating" , if you construct beyond three barrels or so. Bermuda is the most lenient and 14,000 gallons per bedroom allowed for a building. ( 1870 sq feet of water, or 12x12x12 feet max) Not allowed to have more than 14,000. Bermuda also makes you prove your water tanks are emptied and cleaned once every six years, leaving you with no water that day, until rains return, or rely on other nearby cistern, or order a "load" of water for a couple hundred dollars. It's a $1,000 dollar cost to clean.
Well I can tell you in the USVI there doesn't seem to be restrictions rather then just the size of your house. Hell I know of houses with their own desalination systems
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[–] Pylote ago (edited ago)
The fuck you talking about? Everyone in the Caribbean collects rain water and has water cisterns...
[–] udo ago (edited ago)
Cistern size laws in some countries, to limit "selling" or "speculating" , if you construct beyond three barrels or so. Bermuda is the most lenient and 14,000 gallons per bedroom allowed for a building. ( 1870 sq feet of water, or 12x12x12 feet max) Not allowed to have more than 14,000. Bermuda also makes you prove your water tanks are emptied and cleaned once every six years, leaving you with no water that day, until rains return, or rely on other nearby cistern, or order a "load" of water for a couple hundred dollars. It's a $1,000 dollar cost to clean.
[–] Pylote ago
Well I can tell you in the USVI there doesn't seem to be restrictions rather then just the size of your house. Hell I know of houses with their own desalination systems