© David Edwards, 2008
PRINCIPLE: LDS leaders have encouraged us not only to store healthful food but also safe, potable water. They have promised us that as we strive to do this fully, we will be richly blessed (See, for example, Bishop Keith B. McMullin, General Conference, April 2007).
PRACTICES: The Church has described some basic practices for storing water to prepare for the eventuality that water supplies become contaminated or shut down. These instructions can be found at www.providentliving.org/content/list/0,11664,7446-1,00.html
Today, we discuss three ways to store water. Later, we’ll cover emergency sources and purification.
Bottled Water. You can store water in food-grade PET (recycling symbol 1) bottles in shrink-wrapped cases of 24 to 35 bottles per case. No pretreatment is required. This can be a simple way to store potable water. A two-week’s supply in the Lower Sonoran Desert is about 7 cases of 35 half-liter bottles per person. For a family of six, this totals about 42 cases, weighing ~1,600 lbs. Cases can be stored on heavy-duty metal shelving units (rated >400 lbs per shelf); units must be securely placed on a concrete floor or a floor resting on a concrete foundation. Alternatively, cases can be placed one case high along bottoms of closets (with shoes placed on top of the cases), underneath stairwells (this may require modification for access; see future article on this), or under beds in each bedroom (if space permits). Some families incorporate storage in home-built furniture. Be creative!