Saving Water and Having a Barrel of Fun
Effort Also Helps Protect the Anacostia River
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"Well, it starts with rain," says Mara Moran, 12, a Girl Scout in Cheverly Troop 1706. "My teacher says that the water we drink is the same water the cavemen drank."
"Yeah, people think you can make water, but you can't," says Deirdre Harder, 9, as she helps Mara push a big plastic barrel.
"It doesn't regenerate," adds Emily Castelli, 13, who is tugging at the same barrel. "It's the same water over and over we get from rain filling the rivers and lakes and things."
"We have to learn how to keep that water clean," pipes in Helen Marie Castelli, 11, Emily's cousin.
That's what brought them and four other Prince George's County Girl Scouts to Bladensburg Waterfront Park on a recent Saturday: to learn about the environment by learning about rain barrels.
The workshop took place beside the Anacostia River, which flows through Montgomery and Prince George's counties, past the Capitol and the new baseball park, before joining the Potomac across from Reagan National Airport.
The Anacostia is said to be one of the dirtiest rivers in the country. By learning to make rain barrels, the scouts were working on their water badge and helping the river at the same time.
Big Storms, Big Problems
The Anacostia Watershed Society, which organized the workshop, says the biggest threat to the Potomac and Anacostia rivers is runoff after a big rainstorm. The water surges down sidewalks and across roads and parking lots, taking with it the pollutants from millions of vehicles and the fertilizer from thousands of acres of lawns. It then dumps it all into creeks and streams that feed both rivers.
"Those little raindrops are something," says Jim Connolly, who heads the watershed group and has a rain barrel at home in Arlington. "Just an inch of rain -- which is a good-size summer storm -- falling on the roof of an average house around here will collect about 1,200 gallons of water. Imagine what a shopping mall parking lot or highway collects!
"The problem is that it rushes all kinds of bad stuff -- trash and grease and fertilizers and chemicals -- into the river quickly, killing the fish and vegetation, and eroding the shorelines. We don't have factories or farms in Washington polluting our rivers. It's this runoff rainwater."

