8 Tips for Maintaining a Water Bubbler

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While water bubblers are a great way to keep everyone in the office, gym, home, or school hydrated with clean, potable water during business hours -it’s also important to remember that even though the water you put through them is clean- germs, bacteria, mold and mildew can accumulate within the tubes and other parts relatively quickly.

The more humid the environment and active its use, the more likely it is that a water bubbler becomes unsanitary. They’re typically made of plastic, and in just about every case whether they’re stainless steel or not, the tubing which carries the water around is certainly food grade plastic.

Plastics are more prone to bacteria, so maintaining a regular maintenance and cleaning schedule is important for to follow through every few fill-ups.

However don’t be alarmed, it isn’t as difficult as you think. Read on to learn how to clean and maintain your trusty water bubbler.

How to Clean and Maintain a Water Bubbler

In order to clean and maintain a water bubbler, you will need the following tools;

  • Bleach
  • Bristled brush or a sponge
  • 2 Buckets
  • Rubber gloves (optional)

1. Disconnect the Power

It is important to remember never to attempt to clean a water bubbler with it still plugged into the power outlet; you wouldn’t want to get a shock –you’re working with an electrical device and water- not a safe mix unless it’s unplugged.

2. Take Away the Water Jug or Bottle from Above

It is probably most convenient to clean your water bubbler right before swapping an empty bottle for a new one.

3. Remove any Excess Water from the Reservoir

Before you begin, first you’ll have to remove any water from the reservoir into a bucket and make sure the water bubbler unit is completely empty.

4. Make a Bleach Solution

Once you’ve got your water bubbler’s water reservoir free and clear it’s time to make your bleach solution. Use the second bucket with one gallon of clean water in it & add 1 tablespoon of bleach.

5. Pour Bleach Solution

Now it’s time to refill the water bubbler’s reservoir with your bleach solution; simply pour in the solution until it fills the reservoir. Any excess solution you have can be stored for a month afterwards for subsequent cleanings. Let the solution sit in the chamber for about 4 – 5 minutes.

6. Drain the Bleach Solution

After 4-5 minutes empty the bleach solution through the faucet. This will also clean the tubing between the chamber and the faucet.

While you’re at it, let some solution fall under the screen below the faucet and use your sponge to clean it up. Clean off the faucet handle and the body of the water bubbler as well.

7. Rinse, Repeat

After you empty out all the bleach solution, run clean fresh drinking water through the reservoir just as you did with the bleach solution 4 to 6 times, and rinse the screen/shelf below as well. This will ensure no harmful chemicals are left behind.

8. Put it All Back Together

“All back together” sounds like work; oh no – put the screen back over the little shelf under the faucet, put in a new water bottle. You’re all set.

See? Nothing to it. We suggest assigning this task to one person in the office so it doesn’t get shirked around and avoided. It’s easy enough to do!

 


O Christmas Tree! Special thanks to Cambium

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Last year was a comedy of errors as far as the Christmas Tree goes. We had just moved house, I was heavily pregnant, and we left it far too late to buy a tree. We debated not getting one and tried to tell ourselves we didn’t need one, but seeing the hundreds of pretty trees posted on Facebook, I eventually snapped and barked at Craig that we had to have one.

So two weeks before Christmas Craig virtually had to perform an Indiana-Jones-style-roll through the doors at Homebase before they shut for evening. Rushing through to the plant section he had to literally wade through scores of broken and deformed trees to find one large enough for our lounge. I remember that tree very well as it ended up living in our bath for two days. It had an abnormally large base and didn’t fit in our planter. We had tried laying in down in our kitchen and hacking at it with a carving knife (in hindsight - the most inappropriate tool ever) to try to slice off some of the excess - but it’ll come as no surprise this didn’t work.

In desperation we posted on Twitter and Facebook appealing for someone to help us track down a planter big enough to hold up our tree. As the only response we got was from Cumbria, we ended up waiting for an auction to end on eBay for a resizable one in London (50 miles away). Craig then had to take time off work to go and pick up the bloody thing. With a tree languishing in our bath, it literally couldn’t come soon enough - it had begun to show signs of mould and had developed a kind of curvature of the spine resulting in a very prominent bend in the trunk.

When we finally got the tree up, the wonky bit threatened to tip it up at any moment. We ended up propping it up against the wall and giving it a wide berth for the 3 weeks it was up. With the lights costing us £80 (as everywhere had run out of the cheap ones) that tree was nightmare from start to finish!

So this year, when an old friend messaged me on Facebook with an offer of a tree delivered to our door, we bit his hand off. The offer was from Stuart from Cambium - a specialist corporate plant supplier that I have worked with before in a professional capacity. I’ve actually been an office manager for several London-based firms, and always took Cambium with me from job to job. They’ve supplied me with perfectly manicured indoor trees and ornate flowers that always got wonderful comments from colleagues and office visitors. Cambium were always such an absolute pleasure to work with and the plants always looked fabulous (despite my considerable knack for killing plants just by admiring them).

As a special thank you for inviting them to tender for a few big contracts, Stuart has given us the most beautiful tree for our home. It has to go down as the best tree we’ve ever had - fantastically bushy and smells divine. It’s certainly made up for all the stress of last year and we’re so grateful.

We had lots of fun decorating it and I only hope we’ve done it justice - what do you think? I’m not sure we’ll be winning any prizes soon…

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