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Water

'Savior Bud' Sucks Moisture From Trees for Drinking Water

By Jaymi Heimbuch, TreeHugger. Posted October 28, 2009.


This concept design, modestly called the Savior Bud, is one idea to help gather up moisture from a tree's respiratory process and create drinking water.
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savior bud moisture collector image
Image via Yanko

For dry areas, every drop of drinking water is important. Moisture collectors are a big help, and this concept design, modestly called the Savior Bud, is one idea to help gather up moisture from a tree's respiratory process and create drinking water.

Shown off at Yanko Design, the Savior Bud - designed specifically for African landscapes - is hung from a tree branch with the tree's leaves inside. It collects the moisture expelled from the leaves.

savior bud moisture collector image

The process goes like this:

1. Find a broadleaf tree with lots of leaves.

2. Opening the Savior Bud like a giant clamp, surround a few leaves, and release. The Savior Bud should now be containing the leaves like you see in the picture below, sort of like a greenhouse.

3. In about four hours, the leaves will have produced about one cup of water. Turning the bottom of the bud like a faucet will release the water to be put into a separate container for drinking.

An obvious issue is hanging the device from a tree that won't also expel any toxins along with moisture.

savior bud moisture collector image



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Jaymi Heimbuch coverrs all things techy, gadgety and green for TreeHugger.

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Good Idea if it was for a rain forest...
Posted by: MizuInOz on Oct 30, 2009 10:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The respiratory process of a tree is such that it would be impossible to accumulate a cup of water in four hours from a few leaves. The design is a good idea but not for arid climates. Actually, the design is a bit to far fetched. Read the comments on the original website.

It would be wiser and easier to dig a hole in the ground, place a cup in the hole and cover the hole with a plastic sheet, secure the edges with dirt and a place a rock in the middle of the plastic sheet - above the cup and wait. the next morning, you would have water. Not sure about 1 cup every four hours because the collection is directly attributed to the ground moisture (where trees get their water, by the way) but this process has worked for a long time. It is called a solar still.

But I do not think it would be acceptable to submit in a design class.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Upsetting the balance
Posted by: donrus on Nov 11, 2009 4:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So where does the water go if it isn't collected? If you keep taking water out of a system, pretty soon you don't have enough water. What happens when the trees die?

Maybe people are living where they shouldn't? In our country, maybe we shouldn't have big cities with massive amounts of electricity running air conditioners and lots of swimming pools in the middle of the desert.

Working with (instead of trying to dominate) Mother Nature...what a concept.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

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