I love getting experience from those who have so much more of it than I. However, sometimes lack of clarity makes me wonder if an issue was addressed at sufficient length and with sufficient accuracy. For instance...<br><br>Chris, you said:<br>"So far, I've found clear, opaque and black listed in various references on constructing one!"<br><br>You also said:<br>"If you succeed remember that a series of holes must be dug after the immediate water has been distilled from the first hole."<br><br>Lastly, you said:<br>"Now try the plastic bag wrapped around living vegetation. As John Wiseman points out in his SAS book, The water may be 50' down. The tree is a natural waterpump."<br><br>However, aardwolfes's original comment was:<br>"...that the green [plastic] would absorb the sun's heat and increase evaporation from the soil underneath." (emphasis added)<br><br>And his original questions were:<br>"Would clear plastic work better? Did I just wait too long?"<br><br>Now, my understanding is that "heat" and "evaporation" were not the point of a solar still. My understanding is that solar stills were designed to take advantage of the fact that plants give off water vapor when they transpire (during photosynthesis), just as animals give off water vapor when they respire. My understanding was that you filled your pit with fresh green plants and covered them with clear plastic. The water comes not from the Earth, but from the fresh plants. The water is given off not due to evaporation, but due to transpiration.<br><br>If this is true, then he didn't build a "proper" solar still to begin with, and thus it should be no surprise that his results were poor. If I understand the theory correctly, the plastic must be clear to let the sunlight through, because plants only photosynthesize when in the sunlight. My understanding also was that you had to constantly replenish the plants as they gave up their water and dried out. And that this was the reason why, as you suggest above, it would probably be better to just tie a (again CLEAR) plastic bag to some leafy green vegetation still on the plant, so it can constantly replenish its supply of water via the natural pump of the root system, as it gives off water vapor during through transpiration during photosynthesis in sunlight.<br><br>Now, I have no experience with solar stills at all, and I have a great deal of faith in your opinions. But aside from your dissatisfaction with their performance, we ought to all at least be sure we are comparing apples to apples. A solar still with no plant material utilizing opaque plastic and a solar still with abundant leafy green vegetation utilizing clear plastic would probably produce significantly different results. Indeed, neither may end up being worth the effort at all, but I still feel a distinction should be drawn between a solar still based on heat and evaporation from the Earth and a solar still based on photosynthesis and transpiration from plants.<br><br>Stay safe,<br>J.T.