Not to bust your bubble but those are 275 Gallon containers. As of 2021 there are only 2 sizes of UN registered composite IBC's on the market. 275G & 330G. We recondition IBC's for a living and STRONGLY recommend that no one use a used IBC for storage or transportation of consumables. I realize that you "know the source" of these particular bottles but in most cases that's is simply not accurate information. If, for instance, a bottle carried an organic peroxide in it. The High density polyethylene that the bottle is made from is damaged at the molecular level. The surface of the bottle becomes permeable and is therefore no longer viable. ITS IMPOSSIBLE TO DETECT!! We recommend that you purchase reconditioned totes that have a NEW inner bottle for storage of any product meant for consumption by a human or animal.
I think it’s always better to play it safe versus sorry. Any small or medium city municipality will have these totes and if you can the deal I got on them it’s hard to turn them down!
Essential means the integrity of the container is no longer effective. Meaning there is a possibility for the water to leak out or for the container to leak into the water etc.
Excellent video. You describe in detail every thing I need. I acquired four 275 gallon storage tanks that had some left over soy sauce in them. I live in East Central Florida. The only thing I have to change is the black plastic around the tanks. I did a experiment by painting a plastic gallon milk jug with black spray paint. Another plastic milk jug with white spray paint and one more with silver spray paint. I placed the milk jugs in the early morning outside where the storage tanks will be. It was 85F that day. At 3:00 pm I checked the temperature of the water inside the milk jugs. The black painted jug was just over 130 degrees Fahrenheit The white jug was just over 100 degrees Fahrenheit and the silver painted jug was just over 95 degrees Fahrenheit. These temperatures are way to hot to water my vegetable and flower gardens. So I had on hand some 2” thick polystyrene insulation. I made a box out of it,that fit a gallon milk jug inside. The next morning I put it outside. It was 87 degrees Fahrenheit that day. At 3:00 pm the temperature of the water was just under 80 degrees Fahrenheit. So I’m going to insulate the storage tanks with 2 inch thick Polystyrene insulation. I was given the four 275 gauge storage tanks. By a neighbor that I barter with. I have always given this neighbor lots of fresh picked vegetables that are strictly organically grown. He offered me the storage tanks and I said absolutely. I am scrounging for the concrete blocks on Saturdays. At the Mulching Facility that is close by. You can drop off all vegetation,Wood, Bricks ,any concrete and hazardous materials. I’ll just hang out where people drop off concrete. I’m certain that within a few weeks. I’ll scrounge the Thirty Two 8”x8” x16” concrete blocks. I need for the base. I already scrounged enough old school pressure treated 2”x4” lumber for the base for the concrete blocks to rest on. I also got 2 tons of crushed concrete from the mulching facility that was loaded on my trailer by their front end loader. To Fit inside the 2”x4” base. I’ll definitely scrounge the 2” schedule 40 pipe. This mulching facility also takes hazardous materials. That you can take for free. I picked up a few bottles of PVC glue and the Purple Primer. It has been quite a few years since I purchased,brake cleaner,Acetone,spray paint,WD-40 and other hazardous materials people drop off. You can get 5 gallon bucket’s of outdoor paint for free.That the county makes. Mixing all the water base plants together.That is run through a fine mesh screen, before mixing it all together. But the color is always beige. The only materials I will have to purchase is the PVC fittings, pieces and the polystyrene insulation. That I’m hoping I will get for free. If someone is throwing it away. I’m by no means cheap. I do believe in recycling anything that can be reused.
@@themyrtlewoodshomestead9371 I Always try to help others out with good advice . That I’ve learned over the past 50 years. It stinks to learn anything the hard way. Learning the hard way has happened to me more than I care to think about.
You have a gold mine for recyclers like us. I have a "town recycle site" by me but they do not accept much of what yours does. Plus you have to be quite to pick up anything of value. The town crew have their pick ups loaded. But I do manage to get an item here & there to make a repair or repurpose video for my channel. Stay well, Joe Z
i just watched a 22 minute video of a dude talkign about firewood and the last minute was about where he gets the totes.... Thanks for not unnecessarily padding out the video
I buy these for $50 each. They had fertilizer in them for pecan orchards. Fertilizer is water soluble so it rinses off easy enough and the small residuals go away in time. Plus its plant food!
Hmm.. Just searched internet for cheap food grade IBC's and found 330 gal. used food grade, for under $70.00 and free shipping! Cool...-I enlarged one of the picture thumbs and the container manufacturer info/assistance help number for the Mauser 330 gal. (unspecified rating) is clearly visible on their tanks. That is an important #. The other numbers/codes displayed on tanks probably identify safety aspects. They have to be MSDS compliant.
@@zuutlmna Willing to point me in the right direction? I'm typically seeing 150 for a used 275g food grade. I did find some for 65, but that's a 4.5 hour drive each way. I know the people selling them for 150 are gouging, but the best I've found locally is 110 for a used 275g food grade. Thanks.
I believe those are 275 gallon IBC totes. Tractor Supply has them for about $375 right now. But some suppliers will sell them for about $100 already cleaned out. Getting them free to nearly free is always a good deal if you have a place to store them.
@@themyrtlewoodshomestead9371 Have you tried the hand pumps that fit the top center opening? Or do you find it easier to use the valve opening at the base of the tank?
@@johnsmith4900 Great question I do use a valve at the opening of the base. I also have a Submergible electric pump I use. For something like this gravity is really your best friend.
Thanks for the great info! I'm looking for water solutions for our local community garden. Our council is a long battle away from installing a tap and we are heading in to growing season in New Zealand
These make great vessels to hold Johnson-Su bioreactor compost too. I'm going to check out my municipality to see what they have. Great idea, thanks for the video.
About how much do they weigh? I have had 5 rain barrels around my house for over 20 years and would like to replace 1 with a large capacity IBC tote but that would require getting it into the backyard. I would hate to make arrangements to pick one up and then not be able to get it into the truck because I didn't bring enough muscle.
Agreed with other commenter. I just moved two 275-gallon totes today. Picked them up with a 5x9 U-haul open trailer with ramp. Empty, the totes are around 135 lbs each. Offloading from the trailer was easy, tipped it against the usual red hand truck, and pulled/rolled it to the back yard to put on a concrete slab. To move into place, tip and twist around a corner of the tote. It was pretty easy. Now for stacking, you'll want two strong people to lift the upper one into place.
@@idrissasylla9157 Everyone must judge for themselves. However according to the science literature out there in this subject they are permissible for drinking water. I would recommend everyone ensure they clean any container they drink out of to the best of their ability.
I never heard of IBC totes. I'm glad that you're covering this!☺️Not having enough water may just be the biggest challenge of a homesteader - unless there are wells available in the area.
I can’t imagine you would be able to use that for potable water though right? plus wouldn’t you be worried about the run off from cleaning out the bins?
The containers has Lyme which is used as a PH buffer for water treatment. So literally this whole IBC tote gets put in your municipal water supply lol. So really there isn’t anything to worry about once you give it a good rinse 👍
I'm actually ok with a municipality giving these away to it's citizens for the betterment of the community. That;s a good use of tax dollars. Some of these other officials that a making a buck by selling them off ... no. That's theft.
You and your city are breaking EPA regulations! Once any chemical has been in that tote it MUST be washed and recertification by a company certified by the State and EPA. The liability of this tote is still on the city!
The truth is, I don’t care about policy regulation. Technically if hunted a deer or dispatched one of my livestock animals and harvested it to for you and I accepted a penny from you that’s a felony since it wasn’t certified by the USDA. I believe two adults can decide what plastic containers they want to use and which ones they don’t lol.
@The Myrtle Woods Homestead while I agree. I will also disagree, because of the chemicals that are transported in totes. Not every tote is cleanable and needs to be recycled in accordance with EPA regulations!
@@vancechapman I agree therefore doing your due diligence to know what’s in the tote is important. So in this case I know the tote was used for water treatment. They literally took the contents of the tote (lime) and dumped it into the cities water supply lol. So yes I feel with great confidence that I can clean and reuse this tote for aquaponics, livestock etc. Like anything else use solid judgment and common sense is how I live my life. When a manual is needed follow the manual. But I certainly don’t need a government bureaucrat with the EPA to clean my tote lol. Remember the quote “Good enough for government work” is a real thing.
Good grief. Some people are so mind numbed into believing the govt must approve, disapprove, regulate… any they actually believe the govt cares about people! Nope! They care about money and themselves.
Not to bust your bubble but those are 275 Gallon containers. As of 2021 there are only 2 sizes of UN registered composite IBC's on the market. 275G & 330G.
We recondition IBC's for a living and STRONGLY recommend that no one use a used IBC for storage or transportation of consumables. I realize that you "know the source" of these particular bottles but in most cases that's is simply not accurate information.
If, for instance, a bottle carried an organic peroxide in it. The High density polyethylene that the bottle is made from is damaged at the molecular level. The surface of the bottle becomes permeable and is therefore no longer viable. ITS IMPOSSIBLE TO DETECT!! We recommend that you purchase reconditioned totes that have a NEW inner bottle for storage of any product meant for consumption by a human or animal.
I think it’s always better to play it safe versus sorry. Any small or medium city municipality will have these totes and if you can the deal I got on them it’s hard to turn them down!
Yep, that's what I thought it was too. 275 gallon containers. I was like how come the 500 gallon size looks like the 275 gallon size. lol
Hi! What do you mean by "no longer viable"?
Essential means the integrity of the container is no longer effective. Meaning there is a possibility for the water to leak out or for the container to leak into the water etc.
Excellent video. You describe in detail every thing I need. I acquired four 275 gallon storage tanks that had some left over soy sauce in them. I live in East Central Florida. The only thing I have to change is the black plastic around the tanks. I did a experiment by painting a plastic gallon milk jug with black spray paint. Another plastic milk jug with white spray paint and one more with silver spray paint. I placed the milk jugs in the early morning outside where the storage tanks will be. It was 85F that day. At 3:00 pm I checked the temperature of the water inside the milk jugs. The black painted jug was just over 130 degrees Fahrenheit The white jug was just over 100 degrees Fahrenheit and the silver painted jug was just over 95 degrees Fahrenheit. These temperatures are way to hot to water my vegetable and flower gardens. So I had on hand some 2” thick polystyrene insulation. I made a box out of it,that fit a gallon milk jug inside. The next morning I put it outside. It was 87 degrees Fahrenheit that day. At 3:00 pm the temperature of the water was just under 80 degrees Fahrenheit. So I’m going to insulate the storage tanks with 2 inch thick Polystyrene insulation. I was given the four 275 gauge storage tanks. By a neighbor that I barter with. I have always given this neighbor lots of fresh picked vegetables that are strictly organically grown. He offered me the storage tanks and I said absolutely. I am scrounging for the concrete blocks on Saturdays. At the Mulching Facility that is close by. You can drop off all vegetation,Wood,
Bricks ,any concrete and hazardous materials. I’ll just hang out where people drop off concrete. I’m certain that within a few weeks. I’ll scrounge the Thirty Two 8”x8” x16” concrete blocks. I need for the base. I already scrounged enough old school pressure treated 2”x4” lumber for the base for the concrete blocks to rest on. I also got 2 tons of crushed concrete from the mulching facility that was loaded on my trailer by their front end loader. To Fit inside the 2”x4” base. I’ll definitely scrounge the 2” schedule 40 pipe. This mulching facility also takes hazardous materials. That you can take for free. I picked up a few bottles of PVC glue and the Purple Primer. It has been quite a few years since I purchased,brake cleaner,Acetone,spray paint,WD-40 and other hazardous materials people drop off. You can get 5 gallon bucket’s of outdoor paint for free.That the county makes. Mixing all the water base plants together.That is run through a fine mesh screen, before mixing it all together. But the color is always beige. The only materials I will have to purchase is the PVC fittings, pieces and the polystyrene insulation. That I’m hoping I will get for free. If someone is throwing it away. I’m by no means cheap. I do believe in recycling anything that can be reused.
This is absolutely great advice thank you!
@@themyrtlewoodshomestead9371
I Always try to help others out with good advice . That I’ve learned over the past 50 years. It stinks to learn anything the hard way. Learning the hard way has happened to me more than I care to think about.
@@mdlanor5414 I completely agree, it’s always better to follow a successful template
You have a gold mine for recyclers like us. I have a "town recycle site" by me but they do not accept much of what yours does. Plus you have to be quite to pick up anything of value. The town crew have their pick ups loaded. But I do manage to get an item here & there to make a repair or repurpose video for my channel.
Stay well, Joe Z
@JOEZEP54 Thank you for watching and thank you for comment! Glad to hear that you are able to recycle what you can!
i just watched a 22 minute video of a dude talkign about firewood and the last minute was about where he gets the totes.... Thanks for not unnecessarily padding out the video
Thank you I always keep it 100%
I buy these for $50 each. They had fertilizer in them for pecan orchards. Fertilizer is water soluble so it rinses off easy enough and the small residuals go away in time. Plus its plant food!
That’s a great idea!
I suspect IBC's (plastics) are rated for types of contents. So I'd want it to be a food rated plastic, for storing my potable water.
Hmm.. Just searched internet for cheap food grade IBC's and found 330 gal. used food grade, for under $70.00 and free shipping! Cool...-I enlarged one of the picture thumbs and the container manufacturer info/assistance help number for the Mauser 330 gal. (unspecified rating) is clearly visible on their tanks. That is an important #. The other numbers/codes displayed on tanks probably identify safety aspects. They have to be MSDS compliant.
@@zuutlmna yeah if you price them right you can get great deals on them!
@@zuutlmna Willing to point me in the right direction? I'm typically seeing 150 for a used 275g food grade. I did find some for 65, but that's a 4.5 hour drive each way. I know the people selling them for 150 are gouging, but the best I've found locally is 110 for a used 275g food grade. Thanks.
I believe those are 275 gallon IBC totes. Tractor Supply has them for about $375 right now. But some suppliers will sell them for about $100 already cleaned out. Getting them free to nearly free is always a good deal if you have a place to store them.
I agree and most small city municipalities receive their water treatment chemicals in them. Great way to get them nearly free!
@@themyrtlewoodshomestead9371 Have you tried the hand pumps that fit the top center opening? Or do you find it easier to use the valve opening at the base of the tank?
@@johnsmith4900 Great question I do use a valve at the opening of the base. I also have a Submergible electric pump I use. For something like this gravity is really your best friend.
Those are definitely 275 gallons each.
275 gal gbc tote
We use that as water containers here in the Philippines.
@@alexlara841 Thank you for watching!
Thanks for a great video!! I'm calling our local water company tomorrow. Blessings to you!
Thank you for watching, let us know how it goes!
I thank you for sharing a good idea. I need some gardening water too!
Thank you for watching!
Thanks for sharing a great idea, and how you carried it out.
Thanks for watching
Good find. I've seen people used these to make any where from dog kennels to aquaponics tanks.
Yes these are great!
Thanks for the great info! I'm looking for water solutions for our local community garden. Our council is a long battle away from installing a tap and we are heading in to growing season in New Zealand
Thanks for watching, this is definitely a great solution for a local garden! Good on you for being forward thinking!
These make great vessels to hold Johnson-Su bioreactor compost too. I'm going to check out my municipality to see what they have. Great idea, thanks for the video.
They can be used for a lot of different purposes for sure. Yeah check them out and see what they can do for you.
About how much do they weigh? I have had 5 rain barrels around my house for over 20 years and would like to replace 1 with a large capacity IBC tote but that would require getting it into the backyard. I would hate to make arrangements to pick one up and then not be able to get it into the truck because I didn't bring enough muscle.
If it’s empty 2 regular people should have no problem moving them. I can move them empty by myself.
Agreed with other commenter. I just moved two 275-gallon totes today. Picked them up with a 5x9 U-haul open trailer with ramp. Empty, the totes are around 135 lbs each. Offloading from the trailer was easy, tipped it against the usual red hand truck, and pulled/rolled it to the back yard to put on a concrete slab. To move into place, tip and twist around a corner of the tote. It was pretty easy. Now for stacking, you'll want two strong people to lift the upper one into place.
I agree I haven’t had any issues moving them myself
Are totes that used to contain glycerin safe to use for water storage for human consumption?
If you cleaned out the tote throughly I don’t see it being a problem based upon the literature.
Are these containers good for drinking water?
@@idrissasylla9157 Everyone must judge for themselves. However according to the science literature out there in this subject they are permissible for drinking water. I would recommend everyone ensure they clean any container they drink out of to the best of their ability.
Excellent!
Thank you 🙏
"Each one holds approximately 544 gallons".
You mean both together hold that much? These look like standard 275 gal totes.
You are correct I misspoke
great idea!
Thank you!
I'm watching the replay..I want a couple of these ...
They are great you should get a few.
@@themyrtlewoodshomestead9371 I'm going to I was thinking about getting one ,but you got me wanting 2-3 now..GREAT VIDEO BUDDY..
@@tennesseetactical1864 Thanks, I have big plans for these totes!
You're so slick!
Thank you! 🙏🏾
275 gallons each 🤔
You are correct I misspoke
I work at a truck/tote wash, these are expensive!
I got both of mine for under $50
I never heard of IBC totes. I'm glad that you're covering this!☺️Not having enough water may just be the biggest challenge of a homesteader - unless there are wells available in the area.
IBC Totes have a lot of practical uses. You’re also right about water it’s a must have.
@@themyrtlewoodshomestead9371 I just added this video to my list of "solutions and strategies." ☺️ I know that others will find this more than useful!
@@AgoristsRising I’m glad this was helpful!
@@AgoristsRising Read up on water storage. Microbiology could be your enemy.
@@BeeRich33 Read up on:
1) Fire
2) Filters
3) Charcoal
4) Bleach
5) UV
They could be your solutions
I can’t imagine you would be able to use that for potable water though right? plus wouldn’t you be worried about the run off from cleaning out the bins?
The containers has Lyme which is used as a PH buffer for water treatment. So literally this whole IBC tote gets put in your municipal water supply lol. So really there isn’t anything to worry about once you give it a good rinse 👍
Thank you
Thank you for watching!
Koelpin Lakes
@@GaskellCarr-h8f Thank you for watching!
I'm actually ok with a municipality giving these away to it's citizens for the betterment of the community. That;s a good use of tax dollars. Some of these other officials that a making a buck by selling them off ... no. That's theft.
I totally get where you are coming from. My locality dropped them off at my house which is in the county so I don’t mine paying the fee.
Cole Mall
@@AnitaCarmon-i8u Thank you for watching.
552 Deonte Landing
@@UlyssesAlger-k5l I don’t understand the content of this comment but thank you for watching!
for sure is not 500 gallon totes ,, ..
You are correct I misspoke
Susanna Squares
@@CarpenterAntonia-l9n Thank you for watching!
Matilde Summit
@@ValentineHope-z4e Thanks for watching! Matilde Summit
You and your city are breaking EPA regulations! Once any chemical has been in that tote it MUST be washed and recertification by a company certified by the State and EPA. The liability of this tote is still on the city!
Na, Sayer!
The truth is, I don’t care about policy regulation. Technically if hunted a deer or dispatched one of my livestock animals and harvested it to for you and I accepted a penny from you that’s a felony since it wasn’t certified by the USDA.
I believe two adults can decide what plastic containers they want to use and which ones they don’t lol.
@The Myrtle Woods Homestead while I agree. I will also disagree, because of the chemicals that are transported in totes. Not every tote is cleanable and needs to be recycled in accordance with EPA regulations!
@@vancechapman I agree therefore doing your due diligence to know what’s in the tote is important. So in this case I know the tote was used for water treatment. They literally took the contents of the tote (lime) and dumped it into the cities water supply lol. So yes I feel with great confidence that I can clean and reuse this tote for aquaponics, livestock etc.
Like anything else use solid judgment and common sense is how I live my life. When a manual is needed follow the manual. But I certainly don’t need a government bureaucrat with the EPA to clean my tote lol.
Remember the quote “Good enough for government work” is a real thing.
Good grief. Some people are so mind numbed into believing the govt must approve, disapprove, regulate… any they actually believe the govt cares about people! Nope! They care about money and themselves.
275 gallons more like it
Yes more like it!
Quitzon Rest
@@LeopoldOdelette-g6r Thank you for watching.
41150 Antwon Hill
@@EugeneBurke-p3w No idea what this means but thank you for watching.