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Freshwater Tank Refilling - What Do You Do?

katet78
Explorer
Explorer
When in a campground without potable water (either none at all or the spigots aren't turned on yet for the summer) what do you do to manage your water use and/or refill your freshwater tank as needed?

We have a travel trailer with a 20 gallon freshwater tank. We find that with "normal" use (dish washing, toilet flushing, filling the coffee pot, etc.) it lasts about 24 hours. We carry bottled water and a rubbermaid jug (I think it's a 5 gallon) for drinking and dog water (a giant St. Bernard need lots of water). If we conserve by using paper plates we can maybe go about 1.5 days. We carry along a 7 gallon potable water jerry can to refill our freshwater tank and it has a wonderful spout that makes it easy to pour directly into our freshwater tank. We'd like to purchase a few more but haven't been able to find them in stock. We have some of the basic plastic jugs that you would find at say a Wal-Mart, but those aren't as easy to pour into the camper and they tend to crack pretty easily. We'd love to find a solution to lugging along 10 jugs or being worried about running out of our water when there isn't a spigot to refill from at the campground. If you have a solution to using less water, or have found great products for hauling water from home, I'd love to know.

Thanks!
2013 Spree Escape 243S
2013 Ram 1500 Hemi
2 camp cruiser bikes
1 140 pound camper guard (Saint Bernard, the King of the Camper)
1 90 pound camper guard in training (Puppy Saint Bernard)
40 REPLIES 40

pfidahospud
Explorer
Explorer
To conserve water, we use gel hand sanitizer when washing hands isn't completely necessary. And since showers take a lot of water we take "washcloth" showers when necessary. In a very tight circumstance flushable wipes can also be used.

Our trailer only has a 15 gallon freshwater tank. With two adults, we can make that last about three days. I also bring along at least one 6-gallon blue container like has been mentioned previously. I did make a PVC funnel to make filling easier:
Finished funnel
Funnel pieces

pianotuna
Nomad III
Nomad III
Hi caveman,

I get an invalid url when I try to follow your link.
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

CavemanCharlie
Explorer III
Explorer III
This is what I do. Then I have to carry water in a 5 gallon jug to the funnel. Holding up 5 gallons is to hard for me these days so I only put 4 gallons (or so) in each jug. Then I can pour them more easily without spilling.

http://www.coilnwrap.com/products/Fresh-Water-Tank-Filling-Funnel-%252d-Easy-to-use%2C-hassle-free-f...

SprinklerMan
Explorer
Explorer
Food grade 55 gallon plastic drums are cheap. Friend of mine has a park model , the place is open all year , but they shut the water down Nov 1 . He takes 4 in the bed of the truck last him for a week .

pianotuna
Nomad III
Nomad III
Hi,

From the subject "Freshwater Tank Refilling - What Do You Do?"

No one seems to have answered that.


HappyKayakers wrote:
pianotuna wrote:
I thought the "thrust" was where to find water....not how to conserve it.


From the OP: what do you do to manage your water use and/or refill your freshwater tank as needed?
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

Lynnmor
Explorer
Explorer
jwstewar wrote:
Jack_Diane_Freedom wrote:
I have a 25 gal plastic tank that I put into the back of the pickup and just drain it into the fresh water fill using only gravity. Works fine.


I've heard of other folks doing this, but I can't. Our fill location is above the floor of the bed of my truck therefore I have to use a pump.


Well then just use the pump already installed in your trailer. With a few changes to your system, this can be done.

Passin_Thru
Explorer
Explorer
You'll learn the first time you have to drive 60 miles RT to get water. We have enough water for 3 days if we take a shower the second day only. Otherwise with 2 it supplies all our needs. The greywater tank fills up first.

jwstewar
Explorer
Explorer
Jack_Diane_Freedom wrote:
I have a 25 gal plastic tank that I put into the back of the pickup and just drain it into the fresh water fill using only gravity. Works fine.


I've heard of other folks doing this, but I can't. Our fill location is above the floor of the bed of my truck therefore I have to use a pump.
Jim
2009 Jayco 32 BHDS
1999 Chevy Silverado 4x4 ECSB 5.3 w/ 3.73

Jack_Diane_Free
Explorer
Explorer
I have a 25 gal plastic tank that I put into the back of the pickup and just drain it into the fresh water fill using only gravity. Works fine.

ktmrfs
Explorer
Explorer
for "remote" filling I mounted and wired a RV water pump in the pass through near the fresh water fill. Output of the pump is plumbed into the fresh water fill hose. Input to the pump goes to a length of plastic tubing and a SS dip tube.

for carrying water we use the 7 gallon blue water jugs. Fill the jug, stick the dip tube into the jug vent, turn on pump, repeat as necessary. If we don't know if water is available I carry 4 of these jugs in the truck bed, gives us about another 30 gallons of water.
2011 Keystone Outback 295RE
2004 14' bikehauler with full living quarters
2015.5 Denali 4x4 CC/SB Duramax/Allison
2004.5 Silverado 4x4 CC/SB Duramax/Allison passed on to our Son!

WandaLust2
Explorer
Explorer
2oldman wrote:
Although these suggestions are excellent for saving water, they are not a comfortable way to live. And using minimal toilet water is the main reason for black tank problems.

I'll spend my effort and money on carrying more water. To each his own.


Even though we don't need to scrounge water and use plenty to flush, we still need to use that "tank flush" gizmo that came with our RV. And if we stick a hose down the commode itself, even more "gunk" comes out. This goes for all 3 RVs we've owned. Using loads of water alone to flush doesn't do the job completely.
Mrs. WandaLust. Retired. Middle TN
1999 Fleetwood SouthWind 32'
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

WandaLust2
Explorer
Explorer
katet78 wrote:
Thanks all! These are some great suggestions. I think our biggest strategy will just be conserving, which will take practice.


Taking a cross country trip in a van-conversion with nothing but large containers of water and no toilet, I really learned how to conserve water. Especially important in the desert where there was nothing for miles around but cactus and lizards. 🙂 All we had was a bed, fridge and tiny stove. Showers were taken every few days at truck stops with sponge baths in-between. We never ran short of water.

To conserve the most water you can do all or most of your cooking on those grills we all have with us. We only used a pot or pan when there was no choice. Use as much disposable kitchen stuff as possible, from plastic silverware to those cheap plastic or paper soda cups. You can even use those disposable Styrofoam cups for your coffee. We had cereal for breakfast and sandwiches for lunch - which left nothing to wash but our hands. 🙂

If you want to live as you do at home and use water as you do at home (or close to it) with everyone showering daily etc, you will need to find full-hookup places to camp because everything that goes down the drain will end up in your black water tank which will have to be hauled to the dump-station, another PIA. Not all places allow gray water from dish washing to be dumped on the ground which means everything used and washed ends up in the GWT.

As for refilling the fresh water tank... most truckstops have water taps as well as state, federal and COE campgrounds.
Mrs. WandaLust. Retired. Middle TN
1999 Fleetwood SouthWind 32'
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

WandaLust2
Explorer
Explorer
katet78 wrote:
When in a campground without potable water (either none at all or the spigots aren't turned on yet for the summer) what do you do to manage your water use and/or refill your freshwater tank as needed?


We only dry-camp on the way to somewhere else where there *are* hookups. But we have learned to scrounge water by using Truckstop showers or taking brief "Navy" showers, using little water. You're camping and don't have to smell like a rose. There are also those products called No-Rinse-Body-Bath made for the handicapped and bed-ridden. You use only a few qts of water and they do an excellent job. 🙂

Pots and pans - one of you stand there outside and tip the water container so the other can quickly wash/rinse the stuff. Use disposable plastic silverware, plates and bowls. Use and throw them away. Try to make food that can be made in one pot or pan or use the BBQ grill to cook on - no pans and pots to wash. Get a few more 5g containers for extra water.

We have a travel trailer with a 20 gallon freshwater tank. We find that with "normal" use (dish washing, toilet flushing, filling the coffee pot, etc.) it lasts about 24 hours.


Try less flushing. Flush only after a few uses or after a BM.

We carry bottled water and a rubbermaid jug (I think it's a 5 gallon) for drinking and dog water (a giant St. Bernard need lots of water). If we conserve by using paper plates we can maybe go about 1.5 days. We carry along a 7 gallon potable water jerry can to refill our freshwater tank and it has a wonderful spout that makes it easy to pour directly into our freshwater tank. We'd like to purchase a few more but haven't been able to find them in stock. We have some of the basic plastic jugs that you would find at say a Wal-Mart, but those aren't as easy to pour into the camper and they tend to crack pretty easily. We'd love to find a solution to lugging along 10 jugs or being worried about running out of our water when there isn't a spigot to refill from at the campground. If you have a solution to using less water, or have found great products for hauling water from home, I'd love to know.

Thanks!


We just use those 5g containers from WM and haven't had one crack or split yet, plus as many washed milk containers of clean water as we think we'll need. Watch the balance on your RV as water is heavy. Don't store it all in the back or the front. You may be better off camping where there are full hookups if possible or you know they have the water turned on.
Mrs. WandaLust. Retired. Middle TN
1999 Fleetwood SouthWind 32'
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

HappyKayakers
Explorer
Explorer
pianotuna wrote:
I thought the "thrust" was where to find water....not how to conserve it.


From the OP: what do you do to manage your water use and/or refill your freshwater tank as needed?


Bolding added.
Joe, Mary and Dakota, the wacko cat
Fulltiming since 2006
2006 Dodge 3500 QC CTD SRW Jacobs Exhaust brake
2017 Open Range 3X388RKS, side porch

pianotuna
Nomad III
Nomad III
I thought the "thrust" was where to find water....not how to conserve it.
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.