Clothesline Construction
Build Your Own Clothesline
Using a clothesline to dry
clothes can save you money. Clothes line are inexpensive to
build as a DIY project. Clothesline in your back yard do not
have to be unsightly. Drying clothes out side in the fresh
air is better than drying them in a drier.
Did you know that your clothes dryer
is the third largest user of energy in your home next to the
washing machine and refrigerator?
Clothes
dryers use ten to
fifteen percent of all the domestic energy in the United
States.
Depending upon the size of your
clothes dryer and the rate you pay per kilowatt hour for
electricity, or cubic foot of gas, your cost to run a dryer
per year runs between $130 and $160. That may sound
insignificant but when multiplied by the approximately
100 million household dryers in daily use it adds up to a
tidy sum, approximately $1.5 billion in the nations annual
energy cost. Of course that does not include industrial
driers.
The energy cost of clothes dryers can
be greatly reduced by constructing a clothesline, at least part of
the time. Using a clothesline or a wash line may be inconvenient or seem a
little old fashion in the modern world but if you want to
reduce your carbon footprint and save some money it is an
effective place to start. There are many households that
have no alternative but to use a dryer because of local
zoning restrictions. Most of these households are apartments
or condominiums, although there are many community
associations that do not allow outdoor clothesline
construction. They
deem them as “unsightly”.
However, if you live in an apartment,
condominium, or other areas that prohibits the use of
clothes dryers you still can reduce dryer use by using
clothes racks or indoor clotheslines. Clothes drying racks
come in a variety of different sizes and styles to
accommodate most any situation.
Some are free standing and others hang on the wall in
a bathroom, stairwell, or kitchen. If your apartment or
condominium has a garage or a basement a clothes line can be
easily strung in these locations.
Most home supply centers have a variety of
clotheslines and dryer racks that are adaptable to individual needs.
If you want to reduce your energy cost and carbon footprint I
recommend that you consider using a clothesline or a clothes drying
rack for at least part of your clothes drying requirements.

Fig. – 1
Drying Rack
Constructing a Clothesline:
The
"t" clothesline is the easiest to install. If it’s a store
bought clothesline simply make two holes in the ground with
a posthole digger or crowbar and place the post in the hole.
The hole can be filled with earth or cement to stabilize the
post.
You can build your own
clothes line by fabricating two "T" structures using pressure
treated 4X4s. Secure them in the ground with cement and string
clothesline rope between them. Position the "T" post approximately
five feet above the ground and eighteen inches below the ground.