I'm a new garden coordinator for a school district in north Texas. The district guidelines require gardens use rain water in catchment tanks from the roof's only. How do I work around this so that the harvest can be fed to the kids.
As soon as I learned this I went the the extension office and other gardeners, and no one see's a problem using the water to water the crops. The problem is in washing the tools, containers for harvest and the produce itself. I would think there needs to be a protocol for not using the the rainwater on edible parts within 24 hours of harvest. This would allow some time for solar sanitation of any funk there might be.
USDA Food Safety tips for school gardening mentions testing the water in cisterns annually. This leads me to believe they think rainwater catchment is fine. But where do you get the water tested, and what are you testing for?
Slow Foods protocol in the GTC says water supply must be municipal.
I've been told the reason for the policy is the expense of the water and that rainwater is the only way to be fully sustainable.
Anyone else use only rainwater in your garden?
It was suggested I bring buckets of water out to the garden for washing, however the second you dip dirty hands in the water it's non potable so what you really need is running municipal water. Thoughts?