{"id":12375,"date":"2018-03-06t13:05:31","date_gmt":"2018-03-06t13:05:31","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dpetrov.2create.studio\/planet\/wordpress\/the-tourists-role-in-the-cape-town-water-crisis\/"},"modified":"2023-03-07t19:39:39","modified_gmt":"2023-03-07t19:39:39","slug":"the-tourists-role-in-the-cape-town-water-crisis","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.getitdoneaz.com\/story\/the-tourists-role-in-the-cape-town-water-crisis\/","title":{"rendered":"the tourist’s role in the cape town water crisis"},"content":{"rendered":"
amanzi<\/em>. this is the isixhosa word that would prove to be one of the most crucial and problematic topics of my study abroad experience in south africa. my host family in langa township taught me that amanzi<\/em> means water. the following details my water conservation journey during the cape town water crisis of 2018 as a study abroad student.<\/p>\n with the news of day zero breaking just weeks before i was set to board a plane to live in cape town for four months, i panicked and bought an excessive amount of hand sanitizer, body wipes, and a new reusable water bottle. day zero was set to occur during my program, meaning that all of the taps in the city would be turned off in mid-april, and capetonians <\/em>(roughly 4 million people) would have to fetch their government mandated 10l per day per person from one of 200 water distribution stations across town. <\/p>\n as i stepped off the plane on january 26th, the first signs of the crisis confronted me right away in the south african border control line. a poster covered the main wall from floor to ceiling; it urged with optimism that tourists can easily conserve water to avoid the dreaded day zero to help residents. this was just the beginning.<\/p>\n conservation, it turned out, was actually incredibly simple once i learned to break habits and forge new ones. in the bathroom of our study abroad office, tips and tricks on how to best utilize our 50l per day allowance covered the wall tiles. i quickly picked up the phrase, \u201cif it\u2019s yellow, let it mellow,\u201d meaning that we should only flush the toilet when it was more than our own urine. to take the conservation even further, we were urged to throw away all \u2018yellow\u2019 toilet paper into the covered trash can. the logic behind this being: the less toilet paper that goes through the pipes, the less water that will have to be used to flush away any clogs.<\/p>\n our sink system was innovative too\u2014when washing our hands, the soapy water was collected into a bucket that was eventually poured into the toilet tank to flush. with every bathroom use, the more i thought about how potable water is severely overused. why flush down human waste with water that could quench a person\u2019s thirst?<\/p>\n