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Hose Thread Adapters for the Kitchen Faucet

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There's a garden hose spicket on the outside of our building. We use it to water the planters around the trees out front. But it definitely won't reach our windows or flower boxes. With this handy little adapter, though, a garden hose can be hooked up to the kitchen sink...

 
 

0707_danco2.jpg This one by Danco screws into the faucet where the aerator is genarally located. Just remove the aerator and replace it with the adapter. Be sure the threading fits by bringing your aerator along with you to the hardware store. (Photos via naturalchildbirth.org)

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gardening, faucets & hardware - kitchen & bath, garden hose, thread adapter

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Comments (9)

I think a watering can is ultimately easier to use -- and store -- than a hose.

Plus I have this funny visual in my mind of a dropped hose gone out of control and spraying all over the apartment while the user runs desparately back to the sink to shut the water off!

Hmmm -- definitely sticking to my watering can/

posted by Mid-C Frank on 2008-07-07 11:05:46
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Spigot.

posted by Joan A. on 2008-07-07 11:11:48
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If you're lucky enough to have a washer / dryer hookup, you can actually attach a hose to the cold side - no modifications necessary! I snake mine out the back door and am able to hose everything down the deck, patio furniture, water plants, etc. Yes, it's a lot more labor-intensive than a watering can, which I use most of the time, but every few weeks things need a good soaking.

posted by rubyred on 2008-07-07 11:11:50
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I use this in our kitchen and run the line outside for the kiddie pool. The cold is too cold so I can run a little hot water so the kids don't need to wait for the pool to warm down.

posted by funstraw on 2008-07-07 11:14:24
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I think for everyday stuff a bucket would suffice; in case you REALLY need a good amount of water for X reason, going back and forth with a bucket wouldn't be easier, you'd make a mess and by the time you're done you'd be so tired you'd wish you had a hose. lol

posted by Djluckyonline on 2008-07-07 11:47:54
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I had our plumber run a cold water line from the basement to a SPIGOT (!!) on the front of our building, with a shutoff on the inside (no worries about neighborhood kids deciding to turn the water on when we're not home!).

I keep one of those coil-type hoses hooked up to it for watering window boxes, flowerpots, etc. in front of the building -- much easier than trying to deal with a giant garden hose. (Mid-C Frank, you can buy trigger sprayers for hoses, no need for I Love Lucy-esque garden hose mayhem!)

posted by Anna at D16 on 2008-07-07 12:18:17
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Spigot, not spicket.

posted by Ingrid on 2008-07-07 12:27:56
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Is anyone else getting fed up with the spelling and grammatical errors on this site? Some of them are absolutely cringe-inducing.

posted by Molly Margarita on 2008-07-07 13:20:17
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Molly, I also cringed at "spicket". How hard is it to use a spell-checker?

posted by LilyC on 2008-07-07 13:29:32
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