Tauranga City residents are being encouraged to tick off some tasks around the home before Tauranga City Council's Water Watchers plan ramps up in November and December.
Water Watchers is a year-round plan to manage Tauranga's water supply – at home, work, and in the community, with restrictions on sprinklers, water blasters, hoses, filling pools, and other outdoor water use as we enter summer.
Grouped into months, the plan restricts outdoor water use, either outright or at certain times of the day, depending on the method used.
When it comes to washing down the house, driveway, fence and cobbles, or prepping surfaces for home DIY jobs, it pays to be familiar with the Water Watchers plan.
Water blasters and high-pressure cleaners are fine to use at home until December, but if you're planning to use a hose with a trigger nozzle to wash down any hard surfaces, you should act fast, as this is prohibited from November 1.
Water services manager Peter Bahrs says in addition to following the Water Watchers plan, resident should be mindful of their water use year-round, regardless of the weather.
'Despite all the recent rain, after years of dry summers, the flow in the streams that supply our city's water has improved but is still not fully replenished.
'Tauranga uses about 30 per cent more water over summer, so it's important we all stick to the plan and get any water blasting, pool filling or car washing done at the appropriate time.”
Peter says there's so much more we, as a community, can do throughout the year too.
'Installing a water-efficient showerhead can save 50 litres per shower, turning off the tap while brushing our teeth saves about 30 litres a day, and scraping your plates into the food scraps bin instead of the waste disposal unit in your sink can save six litres a day.”
Tauranga City Council is building a library of water-saving tips and tricks for Tauranga households that will be added to over time. For more information, visit: www.tauranga.govt.nz/water-conservation.



12 comments
Water
Posted on 24-10-2022 09:04 | By surfsup
How about the commissioners put the plans on hold for downtown and sort out the water storage issues, the roads, the waste management Centre. When these are done then perhaps look at the wonderfully expensive downtown development.
Again!
Posted on 24-10-2022 10:58 | By Larny
Once again the city will nearly run out of water from lack of further water capacity! But yet the 4 in charge of Tauranga city, can spend 300 million dollars + on a Civic center!! Is water not important? I'm pretty sure they will needs taps in their new Council building!
Water
Posted on 24-10-2022 11:43 | By peanuts9
One solution to the continual water supply shortages would be to build some storage but that seems to be an unpopular idea. Excuses I have heard from various elected members, over many years, are as follows. 1/ Don't need it, we have plenty of processing capability. No mention of large increases in households or droughts. 2/ Can't afford it. Too broke to borrow more and if the rates go op to cover the cost, we will lose the next election. 3/ No profit in that. and finally, 4/ I'm OK, I have a bore. There are probably other reasons as well but in the meantime, resident's gardens suffer, watering in the evening only is ridiculous, both for the plants and for shift workers. Allowing the topping up of swimming pools and washing of boats, trailers etc. while vegetable gardens die is elitist.
Growth
Posted on 24-10-2022 12:31 | By Kancho
struggle with basic infrastructure and yet huge development continues to breaking point I predict. Tauriko industrial development is huge and buildings to get be connected to infrastructure. Particularly the new Wallboard plant which is massive and a water supply required for all this development? . I can't imagine how wallboard raw materials from the port will affect traffic with fleets of trucks nor the finished product onto congested roads . Just one factory under construction. So at some point soon we will completely run out or so severely restricted gardens will die. I lost enough last year and yet it will get worse . A depressing future yet council spending on non priorities continue along with steep rate increases . No democracy here as central government calls the shots and borrows and spends on ideological non priorities
So Sorry
Posted on 24-10-2022 14:49 | By Yadick
I pay for Mahuta's water, I pay for my gardens, I pay for my vege garden (shops are too greedy), I pay for my lawn, I pay, I pay, I pay and therefore I will water as I need to. I will also be washing my car every week over November and December. Just perhaps Council needs to re consider their spending habits and stop giving us the same spin year after year, after year. 3 waters - gardens, lawn and car.
Progress?
Posted on 24-10-2022 15:31 | By Centurion
When we built in Tauranga 20 years ago we were forced to buy and install a water meter. This, TCC informed us, would solve all the city's future water problems. Has storage increased over that 20 year period at a rate that would keep pace with development? No, water meters and controls are apparently expected to make up the shortfall in supply. Former councillors and now appointed commissioners were and are focussing big spending on nice-to haves, while cheerfully ignoring the must-haves. Why am I not surprised?
Sensible
Posted on 24-10-2022 19:31 | By Slim Shady
It’s fine to use water for veggie gardens as that is providing affordable food since Grant and Jacinda made it so expensive with their socialist money printing. But I draw the line at lawns. Not needed. And as for the activity of sad men washing their car every weekend - get a life. I think it’s true what they say about men and their cars - the car making up for other deficiencies.
Not keeping up
Posted on 24-10-2022 20:31 | By Johnney
So with all the extra residential and commercial development what has happened to all those fees council have collected. No mention in recent years of new water storage facilities being built, and waste water services. Plenty to build a big new Civic Centre to full up with beuracrats.
@Yadick
Posted on 25-10-2022 08:09 | By Equality
Well said. I too will continue to use my water what and when I like. I will not have a dirty car and not one plant in my garden will die due to councils inadequacy! Until we actually run out of water they will continue to ignore the problem.
@Larny
Posted on 25-10-2022 14:13 | By morepork
I agree 100%. However it seems we are not even allowed to talk about my solution as SunLive have failed to print it.
Hilarious Morepork
Posted on 27-10-2022 07:36 | By Slim Shady
Seriously? Do you really think people fall for that?
@Slim Shady
Posted on 27-10-2022 17:53 | By morepork
Can you clarify your response? I'm not expecting anyone to "fall for" anything. I made a post in which I was fiercely critical of the establishment (consistent with most of my posts here...) for not even considering a solution that would solve the water problem indefinitely and cost far less than the propsed CBD "beautification". Sun Live never published it, which I accept is their prerogative. Larny posted something expressing the nub of my post (What's more important than water?) so I endorsed it. There is no attempt on my part to get ANYONE to "fall for" ANYTHING. Please clarify what you mean by YOUR post. I call 'em like I see 'em... always have, always will.
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