Water
Find wells, rainwater harvesting, tanks, pumps, filters, purification systems, greywater, septic, and emergency water solutions for off-grid homes, cabins, farms, RVs, and survival properties.
Wells provide groundwater for homes, farms, livestock, gardens, cabins, and off-grid properties.
Well drilling services locate and install water wells for rural homes, farms, cabins, and undeveloped land.
Hand pumps allow water access without electricity and are valuable for backup water, cabins, farms, and emergency preparedness.
Solar well pumps use solar energy to move water from wells to tanks, homes, livestock troughs, or irrigation systems.
Springs are natural groundwater sources that may provide valuable water access for off-grid properties, livestock, gardens, and cabins.
Creeks and streams can provide water access, recreation, wildlife habitat, irrigation potential, and possible micro-hydro opportunities.
Ponds can support livestock, irrigation, aquaculture, fire protection, recreation, and wildlife on rural properties.
Rainwater harvesting collects and stores roof runoff for irrigation, livestock, household use, or emergency water supply.
Gutters capture roof water and direct it into rain barrels, cisterns, tanks, or drainage systems.
First-flush diverters improve rainwater quality by discarding the initial dirty runoff from a roof before water enters storage.
Cisterns are large water storage containers used for rainwater, hauled water, well water, or backup water systems.
Water tanks store potable water, irrigation water, livestock water, rainwater, or emergency water for off-grid and rural properties.
IBC totes are reusable bulk liquid containers often repurposed for rainwater harvesting, irrigation, emergency water, and homestead storage.
Bladder tanks are flexible water storage containers used for temporary, mobile, emergency, or hidden water storage.
Pressure tanks help maintain steady water pressure in well systems, pump systems, cabins, homes, and off-grid plumbing setups.
Water pumps move water from wells, tanks, ponds, springs, or cisterns to homes, gardens, livestock, or irrigation systems.
Gravity-fed systems use elevation instead of powered pumps to move water from tanks or springs to homes, gardens, or livestock areas.
Ram pumps use flowing water pressure to move water uphill without electricity or fuel.
Water filtration removes sediment, contaminants, taste, odor, and impurities from drinking or household water.
Gravity filters use no electricity and are popular for cabins, camping, emergencies, and off-grid kitchens.
Ceramic filters remove many particles and pathogens from water and are used in gravity systems, portable filters, and emergency setups.
Reverse osmosis systems remove dissolved solids and many contaminants from drinking water using membrane filtration.
UV purification uses ultraviolet light to neutralize microorganisms in water.
Distillation boils and condenses water to remove many contaminants, salts, and impurities.
Survival water filters are compact filters used for hiking, camping, bug-out bags, emergencies, and wilderness survival.
Backpacking filters are lightweight systems used to treat water from streams, lakes, and springs during hiking or backcountry travel.
Water storage includes tanks, barrels, jugs, cisterns, totes, bottles, and emergency containers used to preserve water access.
Water hauling involves transporting bulk water to rural properties, cabins, dry land, livestock, or remote sites without wells.
Greywater systems collect water from sinks, showers, and laundry for reuse or safe disposal.
Septic systems treat household wastewater on-site where sewer service is unavailable.
Alternative septic systems are used where soil, water table, land size, or regulations prevent standard septic installation.
Constructed wetlands use plants, gravel, and biological processes to treat wastewater in some sustainable designs.